jsss sßs=^r B PRESS, nun DAH/r BXOKPTKD,} l**"E JOHN W FOttWBY* * 111 SOUTH FOURTH STREET. Ofo*' No ' p A I £, ¥ P HESS, S ?oks*ss PBB to th«OMri«. sabiorlbors oat of the City S» Dollars 1M pm Dollars ro» Bn** Mohths, ft* for Bii Motress-InvarlaMy in «d -'rs,* B. -*iio tUfi® oidwoa. <#« 4,ct g xui-WEEKLV PRESS, oat of the Oity at ta» 0 ,-'.. M .ta«dvaaoe. IPTJCATIONAL. <CtTkGIAT®- institute for rtMP tidies, 1630 Arch street, Bev, OhMIM theomhth yen ■ will begirt i gsiitli, D’®’’ *isdresa Poat-oflioe Box 1839. 1 « 1 tftfrtSYliVANIA M I L I T A R, Y at Wont (Ihealer, (for bourda-s only), f * IA ?,„ lV wtit be opened ou THUK3DAY, Sep*, ‘fill* il<v2 In itrt capacious buiidtoga aro .ar* •fitti’r'H'i >«• yg}, w t order for the comfortable auar hundred “ nd Hfty tiTfrßcompetent end experienced teachers will A terf* “LLidwl attrition to the educational depert make their Instruction' thorough and jri-pt. "f Tbortfirartnifntof studies embraces the fol- JL, primary. Commercial, and aolentlflo, iouinl' 1 " 1 ' jjtllitary. The moral training of cadets attended to. Per circulars, apply to *ilt |,0 n nreff Em-. n ' k m Ohrstnnt street, or at the ««» H 'jlf Continental BoM, Philadelphia, or - wrt (WWrtO• H Y AT V, President P, M, A. „ T .„ m advertised that this Academy wen dbe I’. s ;r ! i!rTl Inst, but a sudden and severe sickness subscriber W»a visited compelled ft post gii)i «hic« t terprls# Ky the Messing of God he .oiKinect lieftith tmd fltnesß tor .'active duties. l*w rte'" for cir( .tii„rs or for information con -11 lll ' y "Ks Academy were ur.answtred, the noalect ia eul-Ot THEO HVATT gBMISSARY.— \ (~!nt HOARDING SCHOOL, Mar MEDIA, * t* niK Thotongb ooisrae In Mathematics, Olas- SiStufllcß. So, Biiok-kwi>fiig_aiid Civil JSn twgbt. Kxeroi»en In Military Tactics. S fOlfflHW l** * 2 inltioo,pw4«*r f ■ <*• • ••• • • • B,UU for , BARTON, A. M,, VILLAGE uRBEN, Fonn’a. fVmSTOL BOAEDING SCHOOL jj f or Oida will «p«n Its Ml session on Seotnd flay, ‘'’nitoMM*' James Mott,' Philadelphia; Anne 9OB Vranklin street, Philadelphia; _o> W. ■'.lceWl Hot ill Boventh street, PhttadeleWa; Henry , r .w'i .... (Imtawicks, New Jersey: David J Uriscom, i' Jersey. Forcirculars, apply to RUTH KVA StROK, PrlMiPal, Bristol, Pa. * jy23.2m* rjj T H MOP TAPP AN’S W| nnawHns nod Day School for Tonng Ladlw, No. will fcnpau ou iVEDNBSDAT, . SEMINARY FOR H T m,io I.AOnSSt located tin the Bristol Turn slKoroPh lsdilphia *nd 2 from Tacony., The ,lko, 8 mine.«» ‘“V, ym begins the first «ON -I?xTb*X?%« ths Ist day of Feb * A drooler, containing terms, references, &0., oon be jbttfnwl by flpplicatfou to the . jj-14-Sm* Mira* fiHaPMAN, Princlpala. m MI M Elf_R qukb'house* Atlantic city. n —CdmforlaMe Boom? cxn now be bud at this welU,, £pi (yn.vemnitly-locatod bouse, as Ibere are a num <r fif rfipcrturos d&ily« H. 8. BASSOS. Proprietor. an BATHING. A FAVOIIIT D home. ”* THE '< WHITE FIrtHHE,” tH«SiCHt!SETTS Afeune, ATtiAVTIO OITY, N. J. Tli's popular bon so I# open. Its al tuation Is unite near ill! lieacßJ baa good rooms, all opening upon the ocean, nd Inrnlshfd with spring mottroaeoa, I.s, reputation is „II ntti'Uebed as a flrat-class home. Plentiful table. »,„« attention glten to guests, awl terms moderate. ‘ * WM WHITBHOOBB, Proprietor. «T No Bar at Ihe •' Whltebonae.’’ aus-lm TnHNTBAL HOUSE, ATLANTIC %J OITS, New Jersey. M. I. AVP LOR, Proprietor. Tt*o obovj new house is now open for Boarders. Rooms - inai lo any on file beach, well .ventilated, high ceilings, it Stirsanta atlentive and polite. Approximate to the Bathing grounds. anS-lm* /IRBBSGN SPRINGS, CAMBRIA OODNTT, PA—This delightful and popular place af snniaor resort, looated directly on the line of the PraMfltMilo Railroad, on the summit of the Allegheny Sloantsins, twenty-three hundred feet above the level of st* Mean, will be open for meets from the 10 th of June Hi tbeioth of October. Since IftHt season the ground* ,itre boon greatly improved and beautified, and a nnm ;>sr of deterges have been erected for the accoramoda kta cf families, rendering Oreseon one of the most rcwutlii and attractive places In the State. The for ni ters is. being thoroughly renovated. The seeker of and the sufferer from heat, and disease will find ettrertton* here in a firet-clasß hi very Stable, Billiard •Sabin, Tenpin Alleys, Baths, &o„ together with the Sorest sir and water, and the most magnificent mountain coonen to be found In the country. Tickets,good for the round trip from Philadelphia, il .oo j from Pittsburg, 83.05. Per lnxther information, addroce a. w MtriiLiN, Oresson Springs, Cambria co.< Pa. QE A BATHIN (i O AT . MSG BBAKCH, MOM MOUTH 00., H. J. METBOP'iOrtAN HOTEL, HOW OPEN. Address J. H. & l. W. OOOPEB, iylO'lni# Proprietor.. OIJ A BATIIN9. fj OOEAN HOtJBB, OAPE ISLAND, N: J,, Is now open for the reooptkm of yiedtbm. IttBAEL LAMING, Proprietor. QTAB HOTBij >J (Nearly opposite the United States Betel,) ATLANTIC OICT, N. J. ' SAMUEL ADAMS, Proprietor. H [JU61.................. ......i. ........... 50 eents. Alw, Carriages to Hire. £9* Boarders accommodated on the moat reaeonaWe lories. j je2o-3m QEA BATHING, i (O BBIBAimKE HOOTE.j bbigantinb btsaoh, k. j. Howomb for the season, The Bathing, Fi3hing,jGun ■SiafS, and Yachting being very superior. , Boats wilt await guests attbe Inlet on arthral of trains. Soart per west, 88, 5,0. Address, Atlantic City. H. D.,SMITH, Proprietor. jy4-fmw2m fIOJiUMBIA HOUSE. ' ATLANTIA CITY, BITUATED ON kentookt: avenue, Opposite the Surf House. ISf Terms fo suit the times. ? Jt2o-2m EDW ABO DOT LB, Proprietor. UEA-BIDE HOUSE, ATLANTIC O CITY, N. j. BY DAVID BOATTRBOOOB. A NEW PBIVATE BOABDINO HOUSE, beautiful lt situated st the foot of Peansylrania Avenue. Sow open for visitors for the season. ie29-2m OB A BATHING. r j CAPE ISLAND, N. J. Tbs CENTRE HOUSE is now open, and has superior ftwou'inodation*, Terms moderate. Mansion house, ATLANTIC city, ‘ * * &: LSE, Proprietor. Tbli Houbb baying been thoroughly renovated and en larged,is new opon for permanent and transient boarders, MANSION HOUBB ta convenient to depot} churches, end jest office. The bathing grounds are unsurpasaed on tbs Island. The Bar & conducted 1 by Mr. 258120 L, of who will keep superior wines, liquors, and choice brands of cigars. , ~ Je2o-2m mAG L I HOTEL, ATLANTIC *-* CITY, is now open, with# LABOE ADDITION OF BOOMS. Bo4r<l 87 per tmk, bathing dresses inoiuded. je2o-2m ,/pOTTAGE BITMAT, ATLANTIC OUT, l» new open and ready for Boarders, A few tholcb Btoms can be obtained by applying soon. The •tfrosßetor fnrnisherhis table 'with fresh milk from his towi.and fresh vegetables from his farm, Alf, abont foot hundred desirable Cottage and Hotel uotufcrsaleby , U. HeOIiKES, n2)-2m , Proprietor. « HHE (ALHAMBRA.” ATLANTIC L OITY,” N. J., ft splendid new house, southwest wmr of ATLANTICand MASS ACHDSBTTS Avenues, •wtlle open for vlsltorspn #nd sifter. June 29th.-, The rooms n.uteble ef “ The Alhambra ” are unsurpassed bp any ■miis Idand. There is a spacious - Ice Cream and Be ' '.TMMtrt tialeon attached to the honse. Terms moderate, 0. DUBOIS & 8. J. YOUNG, Proprietors. iIJEDLOI’S HOTEL, ATLANTIC CITY, N.J—At the terminus of the railroad, on 'ihieft, bey»nd the depot This House Is now open for 'Orders and Transient Visitors, and. offers accommoda ':«* equM to any Hotel In'AtUntlo City. Charges ino* ■tate. Children and servants half price. l * r Parties should keep their seats until the oars ar ann front of the hotel. : je2o-2m ;f&TER COUNTY HOUSE—Tina V; Private Boarding' House, corner of TOBK and fflIFlO ATetitifc .Atlantic City, convenient to the ixkp, with a beauittful Tiew ol the Ocean, is now open • season, The accoraaiodatfcna are equal to any, on the Island, . Prices moderate. ' J.K.HIM, Proprietor. #A The Clarendon,” ■M(Wtdy Virgin}*, AVBNCIII, '•’■ha.RTlO piTYuls npw open for the aooommodation .oraoarders. This House is situated immediately on the “»fh, and frqm every room affords a fine view of the y-i [Je2O-2m] J AMES JKHKIS3, M, P, *dDA BATfIING.-- UNITED STATES ■y, EOTKC, LONG BRANCH,''N. J„ Is now open, iitiatM only fifty yards from the Seashore, centred of the i'l i ',! lOU9e fronting the ocean 600 feet: two hours York, .-Steamer leafed Murray street twice ‘•“Mi, H, and 4P. 51.: thence by the B. and D. B. '•ioikoad. Address %• B, A. BHOEMAKBB. ~-^? lm . UIl * CB tl oll from Philadelphia is by the Camden* ,r 4 A»boy BsUroad, by the 6A. M.And 2P. M. traihj. w- jel9-2m* RUMMER. BO ARDING. —DROAD HOUSE.—A romantlo spot for a uMMB® SESIBEMOB on one of the Mountain Tops • reached daily by the Pennsylvania rWlfMjhd the .Broad. Top Mountain BatlrOad from .The Bouse is onAof the finest in the in ilSI 01 tba slat A handsomely furnished, with all the re -uuyitsi for comfort and convenience—pure air, dell ,*»** »Prtng water, romautio scenery, and everything to d.iK ,s ?P d Invigorate health. Telegraph station and a lhat Gaily* communication may be had with 'JP? f’nnosylvanla Ballroad wiH furnish excursion !)? i “rough the season. Persons leaving JPhlladel lß the morning can take tea at the Mountain Bout* -Jeameevening.... - . ~j?-B ob’ C T!ber, h as kindly been, allowed to refer to the ,™wing gentlemen, residents of Philadelphia, who have patrons of the Mountain Home : wm. Cummings, Esq., , David P. Moore, Baa., samuDastner, Bag,,. Mhos. Oarßtalrs, Esq., , . ?“• Henry D, Moore, lewis T, Watteon, Esq., ;®'*2 McOanlea, Esq., S. Albert Lewis, Asq., «oha Hartman, Esq., Riohard D. Wood. Esq. tsailß Mod«*ath. Bor further Information, address IsIAM „ JOSEPH MOBBISON, Proprietor. ll Broad-Top City. Hnntlngdon county. Pa. D r AIN PlPE.—Btono Ware Drain Hrd • B to 12-inch bore, 2-inoh bore, 2fie per n 0 ® 1 IS 0 *® r yard; 4-inoh bore, 400 per fwd. Kv«r^ or 2 2® ?® r yard," 8-inoh bore, dfio per hoppert*^.!” lo °f connections, bends, traps, and TOPa._yitrlfled Terr* raatsd ? aln ‘"““““‘tot designs, war toy cilmatS 041116 Bctto “ of 00lJ e “ or toe weather In variety of ornamenta' tod warram&'E, 1 !?*/!!**® ® lMBloß > designs, all sizes, "to* l4 toe weather. , ™ *ooas lW * Ter " Cotta Works, Offloe and Ware . ielT-a 10W CHESTNUT Street. B.A.BABBWW(, 'DARGAINB IN DRY GOODS. JLI The following lots will be sold at a great sacrifice to close them oot—viz: Two lets Black Silk anti Wool Ohallies at worth 37* c. Five pieces Barege Aogl6 at 4c, worth IQo. Five pieces plain Barege at 12J4 c. Also, a large lot of Shetland Shawls, at very low prices, splendid for travelling or at watering places. At , JOHN H. STOKES’, 702 ABOtf Street. Tweeds and oabsimeass. 1,600 yards heavy OaPßimeres, just opened. Also, 1,000 yards all wool Tweed*, 62 to 76 cents. Summer oud iT&ti Oaeeimeres, a foil stock. Men's and Boys' wear, our stock is complete. DOMESTICS. Bleached and Browii Shirtings. Bleachfd and Brown Sheetings. Cotton Flannels, Domet, all wool, and Saoiue do. Cotton Geode, at lowest market rates. - HONEY-COMB QUILTS. Marseilles and Lancaster Qailta. Bathing Flannels, Mosquito Nets. Linen Table Damasks and Napkins. Cheap lots of 4-4 heavy Irish Linens. i CLOSING OUT. Silk Mantles, Thin Busters, Lace Goods. Boys'Summer Clothing. Thin Dress Goods, Black Tamartines. Chillies, Mohairs, &e. COOPER A CONARD, jy3l-tf B. R. corner NINTH and MARKET sta. SUMMER STOCK. ’ During July and Augnßtwe will sell Summer Drees Goods, such'as Dawns, Organdies, Bareges, and their fabrics, at verj low prices t.j cleftr tho stotk. Tne assortments are still fair, and the goods of thlß season’s purchase. TAS. R. CAMPBELL & Go., y 737 CHESTNUT STBEET, ' f" ' OPFBB A*..- WHOBEBAEE AND BETADj, Very choloe Goods of recent Importation. Black Silk Checked Grenadine, extra Quality. Poniard Silks, elegant styles and fine quality, Black Silkß, best brands. Broohe Barege, Hernanis andMozambiiwos. 8-4 Paris I’ll d’Ohevre. “ Poll d’Ohevre, all wool filling. Qrenadine Veils, in mode and ether shades. WHITE GOODS AND LINENS In great variety, at extremely low prices fl OOP MUSLINS BY THE PIECE. VJT New York Mills Shirting. Wamsnttas, WiliiamsviUe, Whiterockg. Sheeting, Muslins, first quality. EYBE & LANDEOE, FOURTH and ABOH. n OOD FLANNELS, UNSHRINKA \JT BEE.—Welsh and Saxony Flaunots. Ballard Vale Flannels. Magenta'Colored Sackings. EYBE Sc L4.NDELL, FOURTH and ABOH. "VpEW SPRING PRINTS, ll OHOIQK BTTIiSE. KHBBIHAGS, SPBAGUB, PAqmo, Alrli TWE&YB AND A HALF CENTS. A large lot beat Biyles and fast colors at 100. - OOWPBBTHWAIT & 00„ oUB-tt H. W. cor. EIGHTH and MABKET Bt*. jpOOD BLACK DEESS SILKS. VJT Heavy-corded Dress Silks. ' ■ Glossy Black Press Silks. Widows’ Silks, without gloss. EYBE 4s IiNDEPP, FOURTH and A BOH The undersigned, suoces- SOBS to OHAPFEES, STOUT, & 00., haTO THIS BAT formed a copartnership, under the firm of STOUT A ATKINSON, for the purpose of conducting the Wholesale Dry Goods business, and hare taken the store, No. 623 MABKET Street. , THE COPARTNERSHIP heretofore' existing under the firm of BIEGEL, BAIRD, & 00.) is this day dissolved, ' FETEB SIEGES, JACOB BIEGEL, , m S. BALED, JOHN WIEBT. Jdkh 80. jyl-6w XTOTIOE OP LIMITED PARTNER- I* SHIP.—The subscribers hereby give notice that they have entered into a limited partnership, agreeably to the provisions of the BOverai law» of the Common wealth,of Pennsylvania relating to limited.partnerships- That the name of the flcm under which Bald purtaer- Bhip ia to be conducted is BIEGEL, WIK3T, & Efi- YIN. i That the general nature of the business Intended to be trapbbotod Is the Importing and Jobbing of Dry Goods. That the names of the General and S pecial Partners, all of whom reside In the city of Philadelphia, are' JACOB EIEGEIi, General Partner, residing at 62T North Sixth street; JOHN WIBST, General Partner, residing at 322 Now Btreet: D. B. KEVIN, General Partner, residing at 1616.Girard avenue; HENBY S. FISTKB, General Partner, residing at 416 North Third Btreet; JOSIAH SIEGEL, General Partner,, residing at 416 North Third street; PETEK SIEGER, Special Partner, residing at 717 North Eighth street; WM. S. BAIRD, Special Partner, residing, at the Continental .Hotel. >■■■■, .. . ' That the aggregate amount of the capital contributed by the Special Partners to the common stock is One Hundred Thousand Dollars, of which Fifty Thousand Dollars In cash has been so contributed by Peter Sieger, Special Partner, and-fifty Thousand Dollars in bash has been so contributed by Wm. 8. Baird; Special Partner, That the said partnershipis to commence on the first 'day of July, A, D. 1882, and is to terminate on the first day of January, 1888. ■ , JACOB BIEGEIi, V JOHN WIEBT, ' ■ • '' D. B. BBVIN, > General Partners, - HBNBY 8. PIBTEB, JOBl AH BtEGKD, PETEB BIEGEB,) H jyl-flw WM. 8. BATtiP, { ° I, E. AIECRAY, Proprietor. VOL. 5. RETAIL DRY GOODS. SHABPLE9S BROTHERS, CHESTNUT and EIGHTH streets. IOH 4 OHE S T NUT BTBB 11 T. E. M. NEEDLES Invites the special attention of Ladies who in tend spending the summer ont of town to a very large assortment of MADE-UP GOODS just re ceived, in , . SLEEVES, SETB, HANDKERCHIEFS, <£c., in every variety of material. Also, a large assortment of (SUSLIKS, suitable for GARIBALDIS, &0,, together with every v», riety of WHITE GOODS, LINBNd, LAOEB. EMBROIDERIES, HANDKEBOH’FS, VEILS; 4o Just opened per latest arrivals from Europe an invoice of very beautiful and entirely new styles - * PUFFED FRENCH (JAMB RIO, fer GARIBALDI’S, MODE GREKADINB VEILS, and SWISS COLLARETTE RUFFLING for trimming thin Dresses, etc—a new and very de sirable article, Also, an invoice of PURE WHITE FRENCH PLAID ORGANDIES. jyl 1034 CHESTNUT STREET COPARTNERSHIPS. Philadelphia, July 21,1832. HOTELS. jp OW E SS ’ , HO T B L, Nos. IT and 19 PABK BOW, (OrrOSITK TBB ASTO* HQUSB,) Raw YOBK. TBBMB 81-60 PEE DAY. This popular Hotel has lately been thoroughly reno vatodjuad refurnished, and now possesses all the mut sites of a : TIBST-CLASS HOTEL. The patronage of Philadelphians and toe trayelHni pnbllo, desiring the best accomodations and moderate charges, Is respectfully solicited. Jd-Sm H. L. POWERS, Proprietor. A CARD—THE UNDERSIGNED, Xlt late of toe QIBABD HOUSE, Philadelphia, have leased, for a term of years, WILLABD’S HOTEL, in Washington. They take this occasion to return to their old friends and customers many thanks for past favors, ana* beg to assure them that they will be most happy to (ed f them in their new quarters. SYKES, CHADWICK, & 00. Wash moron, July 18.1881. au2B-ly CABINET FURNITURE. riABINET FURNITURE AND BIL LIABDMABIES. I MOORE & GAMFION, .. , . No. 261 South' SECOND Street, in connection with their extuulve Cabinet Business, are now manufacturing a Superior article of * BILLIARD TABLES, And 'have nor on hand a full supply, finished with the MOOBB & OAMPION’B IMPROVED CUSHIONS, Which are-pronounced by all who have used them to be superior to all others. For the quality and finish of these Tables the manu facturers refer to their nuniercus patrons throughout the’ Union, who are familiar with the character of their work. - ■ fe26-Sm STATIONERY & FANCY GOODS. AyfARTIN A QUAYLES LU STATIONERY, TOY, AND FANOY GOODS * ‘‘l EMPOB I .U M, HO. 1086. WALNUT. STBEBT, **tow Htaramw,. Wl-fpty • . PHILADELPHIA. GOAL. pOAL.—THE UND ER SI GNED vV bog leave to inform their friends and the publio that they have removed their LEHIGH COAL DEPOT from NOBLE-STBEET WHABF, on the Delaware, te their Yard, northweet comer of EIGHTH and WILLOW Streets, where they intend to keep the best quality of LEHIGH COAL, from the moat approved mines, at ths lowest prices. Your patronage is respectfully solicited. JOS. WALTON & 00., • > Office, 112 South SECOND Street Yard, EIGHTH and WILLOW. mhl-tf QAUTIO N • The well-earned reputation of FAIRBANKS* SCALES , Has Induced the makers of Imperfect balances to offer them as «FAIRBANKS’ SCALES,” and purchaser! have thereby, i n many instances, been subjected to fraud and impoeition. FAIBB ANKS’ SCALES are manufae tured only by toe original inventors, E. ST. FAIR BANKS A 00., and are adapted to every branoh of the business, where a oorrect aad durable Beales is required. FAIRBANKS & EWING, " Agent*! aplO-H MASONIC HALL. Tl* OHEaTODT ST. fNAUTION.— Owing to tie .popularity V-/ and complete success which our PATENT SEL*. ADJUSTING OLOTHEStWBINGEB : has met witt, other parties are endeavoring to sell their inferior ma chines, by adopting our name of “ SELF-ADJ USTINQ 1 ae a moans to deceive the pnbiie. „ We, therefore! give notice that our name will be plainly Stamped on each Machine and Bold by ns, And cone otheri are genuine.; Any one naing our trade* mark will be dealt wlth acoording to law. Mr. L.E. SNOW, comer Of FIFTH and CHESTNUT Streets, Philadelphia, is our BOLE AGENT for Penn. Sylvanla. HALEY, MORSE, * BOYDEN. imm J. W, STOUT, V. T. ATKINSON. jy22-lm# D.B. EBVIN, K. S. EISTEB, JOSIAH BIEGEL, Ipectal Partners. FINANCIAL. u. s. EVE TWENTIES; 20- YEAR SIX PER CENT. BONDS, PAYABI.E AT THE OPTION OP THE GOYEBN- MENT AFTER FIVE YEARS. I am instructed bribe SECRETARY OP THK TBEABUBY to receive subscriptions for the above LOAN AT PAR, THE INTEREST TO COMMENCE. FROM DATE OF DEPOSIT, Thus avoiding ihe difficulty hetotofore experienced by requiring payment in GOLD of the interest from May. A full supply ef these' Bondß always on hand. JAX COjOKE, SUBSCRIPTION agent, 114 SOUTH THIRD ST. jySSMf W : ... M SCHULTZ & CO. have removed t to No, 16 South THIRD Street, where they win attend to the,purchase and eale of ForeUn and Domestic Gold and Silver, Old Demand Notes and other Securities. aul-ltn# ffn KAA-TfflS AMOUNT WANT tBw.fJvUi ED upon Mortgage, first-class Farm near the city. Apply to ... E. PETTIT, jy!2 No. 309 WAD NUT Street. COMMISSION HOUSES. gEAMEESS BAGS. “ LEWISTON” and “PREMIUM” “A.” TOR BALE BY WELLING, COFFIN, & CO., jy2l.mwflm No. 220 CHESTNUT Street, J^UNNELL •' ■ AND GREENE MANUFACTURING CO.’S PRINTS. 400 Owes NEW FALL STYLES. YOB SALE BT WELLING, COFFIN, & CO., jy2l-mwflm No. 220 OHESTNXTT Street. gED-QUILTS, SUITABLE FOR HOSPITAL PURPOSES. 8,000 10-4 WHITE AND BLUE AND WHITE AND SLATE. ALSO, 8-4 and 6-4 INDIGO BLUE FLANNELS. ■ Bor sale by FROTHINGHAM & WELLS, jyl6-2m 34 N. EBONT and 35 LETITIA STBEET. gHiprjav. hazard. & HUTCHINSON. Ho. 119 CHESTNUT STBEET, DOMMISBIO S I.IBOEABII fo« in siii of . i PHILADELPHIA-MADE GOODS. '■ mhSS-Om - /■ MILITARY GOODS. JjJ VANS & HASSALL, MILITARY FURNISHERS, No. 418 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA. SHLITABY GOOBB, OYEYEBY DESCBIPTION, "WHOLESALE AND BETAIL ffIENT BUTTONS AND SLIPS, U. 3. A, Pattern, mairnfactored and for sale by J. P.-BEED, Southeast comer THIRTEENTH and NOBLE Streets, : iy9-lm* ! - SEWING MACHINES.’ & WILSON, SEWING MACHINES, 628 OHISTNUT STHEET, WATCHES AND JEWELRY. WATCHES, GOLD AND SILVER CASES. JOS. H. WATSON, No. 320 CHESTNUT street;-' 3y3ltßm WATCHESi JEWELRY, &o. A FRESH ASSORTMENT, at LESS THAN FOBMEB PBIOEB. . ;. FABB ftBBOTHHB, Importers, 524 CHESTNUT Street, below Fourth. n»h2o.tf GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS. TBINE SHIRT MANUFACTORY. J? The subscriber would invite attention to his IMPROVED CUT OF SHIRTS, Whlch he makes a speciality in his business. . Also, con stantly receiving NOVELTIES FOB GENTLEMEN’S WBAB. J. W. SCOTT, 7 * GENTLEMEN’S FURNISHING BTOBB, No. 814 OBBSmUT STBEBT, iafi-tf Four doors below the Continental. . DRUGS AND CHEMICALS. ROBERT SHOEMAKER & 00., Northeast• Corner FOURTH and RACE Streets,. PHILADELPHIA, WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, IMPOSTERS AND DEALERS : ' ■>■.■ IN . FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC WINDOW AND PLATE GLASS, ; MANUFAOTTOEBB OP . WHITE DEAD AND ZINC PAINTS, PUTT 7, Ac. AGENTS FOR THE CEI.EBBATKD ~ FRENCH ZINC PAINTS. Dealers and consumers supplied at VERY LOW PRICES FOR CASH. LOOKING GLASSES. JAMES S. EARLE St SON, MANUFAOTUBEBB AND IMPOBTEBS LOOKING-GLASSES, OIL PAINTINGS, FINE ENGRAVINGS, PICTURE AND POBTBAIT FRAMES, PHOTOGBAPH FRAMES, PHOTOGBAPH ALBUMS, ; ‘OABTES-DB-VISITE FOBTBAITS. EARLE’S GALLERIES. 818 CHESTNUT STREET, Jal# 'ynu.Anni.PßU. T\T UT 8 . Almonds, Cream Nuts, It Grenoble Nuts, Bordeaux Walnuts, Pea Nuts, Fil berts, Pecan Nuts, in store and for Bale by * - - BHWDKS ft WILLIAMS, 197 South WAXES Street, PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, AVGUST 6, 1862. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1862. No doubt s many, persons have. lamented, with us, that most prose Actions end in a mur der or a wedding, generally in the latter, ■They show the wooing, but not the muring, ; whereas one would desire to know how the < happy pair got on after their marriage. Did ? pretty Rosa Bradwardine indeed prove a gen- -• tie wife to Edward Waverley ? Did dashing Di Vernon henpeck Francis Osbaldiston? Did Wilfred of Ivanhoe ever repent the daywhen Cedric the Saxon, his father, allowed him: to marry Rowena, the ■ beautiful and proud ? What sort of a life did that exquisite dandy, Henry Pelham, have with the lovely sister of ' Sir Reginald Glanville ? We should like to 1 know, but the novel ends where the interest - ought to begin. It is the ; same with jplays. We wonder how Claude MehioUe got on with his “Lady of Lyons ?”—how Captain Absolute and his My lived ?—how.- the hero and heroine of “ She Stoops to Conquer” passed through society as .man and wife ?—how Sir Thomas Clifford and that fair coquette, Julia, contrived to ex ist?—whether Helen did not sometimes box Modus’s ears ?—-and so on through a • variety of plays with which we are all familiar. Only' the other day, ;musing over : Bbucicadlt’s : • comedy alteration of the denouement of the' actual story of the “ Colleen Bawn, 5 ? we won dered how they' got on, in wedded life—se riously persuaded that JEily O’Connor, peasant" as she was, was much too good for such a worthless wretch as Hardress Cregan. In “ The Collegians, 55 poor Gerald Griffin committed no such violation of the moral pro prieties, as rewarding : Hardress Cregan with a good, trusting, and lovely wife, in the person of poor Eily O’Connor. Cregan had con sented to her being put away, by foul means, and the sentence of the law which doomed him to eternal banishment from bis native land, was the novelist’s gentlest way of meting out the punishment so well deserved. It was a gentle thought, too, to make him die on the . convict- ship before it reached the land of his law-enforced exile. We know that in the ac tual tragedy of life—for Griffin founded his ■ story upon facts—Mr.'Scanlah, the betrayer of the poor peasant-girl, Ellen Hanlon, was exe cuted, on the gallows, in his own native city of Limerick, asserting liis innocence to the lest, though the confession of his Confederate in crime, who was subsequently apprehended and executed, fully attested the truth of the judicial verdict, which .proclaimed his guilt; In previous plays, founded on “ The Colle gians,ss and played in some of the London and provincial theatres, the dramatists lite rally adhered to the events related in the novel, and thus produced, tragic -melo-dramas, but Mr. Boucicault, master of the art of adapta tion, and thoroughly acquainted with the de gree of horror which audiences might be sub • jected JSr7y O’Connors life, by rescuing Jber froni tlie ly made Hardress Cregan a great deal happier than the, wretch deserved, by giving him such a charming little wife, and rewarding high mindod Kyrle Daly with the hand, heart, and broad acres of Anne Chute. lloui Mr. Bouci cault, as Myles-na-Coppaleen, saved little JEily, “ The Colleen Bawn, 55 by plunging into the rushing waters, with that “ tremendous header 55 which has astonished London play goers during nearly four hundred nights,' need not be recorded here. He had previously done it, at the Arch-street Theatre. Two London playwrights, William Brough and Andrew Halliday, working together—like Stemold and Hopkins, or Beaumont and Fletcher—hit, in a happy moment, upon the idea of showing Mr. and Mrs. Hardress Cre gan-in married life. To one of the authors, at least, the notion was not new. Some years ago, William Brough greatly amused the pub lic by writing a sixth -act-to “ Romeo and -•ffppsti”' in which, supposing them to have sirfvive"d J *aTKr , mafried, he showed them not exactly carrying out Jhe jrqmantic- Benttmeu; - tallsm of iheiircdarfebip; The result* of the' dramatists 5 joint laboys was “ The Colleen Bawn Settled at Last,” which was first played, with- great success, 1 at- the Lyceum Theatre, London, on Saturday, July 5, and has been so successful that, as an afterpiece, it seems likely to keep that stage for some months. This drama,, one of v tlie broadest and roost extravagant of farces, is a supple ment to Boucicault’s “Colleen Bawn. 55 : Hardress Cregan and< Eily, now man and wife, reside in a fine house, which does' not ■ make them very happy. The highly-educated husband is disgusted, to use plain language, with Ms wife’s Irish brogue, and her flue, na tural contempt for the. trammels of grammar. Her vtrv footmen show equal contempt for . her, on these points, with her husband. Very fortunately for her, this wild Irish- girl does not realize the condition of her husband’s mind—not even when,: wearied with -hearing the head of the English Priseian damaged .by repeated fractures,, though, she secretly at tempts to correct her cacology, as Dr. Panglos ■ has it, he absents himself from home—of which absence she takes advantage, te give a snug! little entertainment, in the shape'of a quiet. evening party, to some of her old friends — Myles-na- Coppaleen, Fother Pont, and Sheeliih. : : "• ■ ;: * :' : ' PHILADELPHIA. The Colleen Bawn as a Wife. '- As a matter of cotirse,;Jlj7es does not forget liis favorite keg ofwhisky, nor has Father Torn forgotten howto mix it into surpassing' punch. To bo sure, the said keg seemed more in place in the cottage , than in the drawing-room,. •,where places it on the piano, using the vases on the mantel-piece as drinking vessels. Nor werefformer days themforgotten.' Myles remembers “ the tremendous header” ot past time,< tand' takes • it Aver again on to ‘the drawing-room sofa, by means of the pillows of that ihiiitious piece ef’’furniture, assisted by the Colleen who Bhiiffles Tound with him to the Bide, and makes tip With him the tableau of her deliverance—greatly.to.tho amusement., of the pit, it is said. Of epurse, these little . amusements culminate in an Irish jig, and all play-goers win know, equally of course, that, when the mirth runs fast, and furious, Nay : Ureas Cregan should return, in :a deuce of a rage. Return he does, but not i* aDgcr. He has ’ discovered that Arin Daly (nee Chute) plays' the tyrant over her unfortunate husband, Kyrle_ Daly, bo that the poor man is much to he pi*.- tied, atd Hafdress Cregan gets a notion that the occasional eccentricities of poor Eily are. far more tolerable than-the, haughty, airs and hard caprice of the m#re stately. Belle. The loving .wife, all. the world over, rather than, the lovely termagant. - ■.* Besides, Eily turns out to.be a lady of birth and fortune, daughter of Lord Dundreary, an elderly beau, much after the character of his. namesake, in ‘(Our American Cousin,” so very cleverly played by Mr. Sothem. It is not very ,clearly made;out how, but his lord ship appears with a mysterious telegram from Cork which is found to relate to Eily, who proves to bo his long-lost daughter, and heir ess to the Dundreary title and estates. If so, Sam must have been his brother only by the mother’s side 1 Uardress Cregan, who Has got into debt, and is atonce relieved by his noble father-in-law, turns more warmly than ever to his little wife, and the Dalys make out as they beßt can. • The dialogue is 'described as 'very good, sometimes even elegant, •and very effective. The maW cast was" as follows: Eily, by Miss Thompsoh j bj "Mr." George "Weston ; Lord Dundreary, by Mr. Charles Selby. This farce is precisely what one of the Phi ladelphia manageresses ought to open the sea son with. Its novelty and its merit would make it popular.at once, if well played, ( and it would be a relief to the old and too. familiar pieces,,be they “stock” or «star,!? which ; have been "played so often here that'most of the 1 audience* can repeat them a* correctly as the performers themselves. It wag produced last week at the Winter Garden, Now York, by-Mr."Fleming, but, the critics 'ioformsrus, so' inishrably played, by all'except Miss Fanny Brown, who took the character of the wedAo^ Colleen Bawn, that it was performed "only two nights! For the benefit of such of our female readers as-are ignorant of the Irish vernacular, we take leave to say that “ Colleen Bawn” means the yhite or fair girl—as the adjectives me or dim apnendedftd the word colleen, respectively make!/it denote the red-liaired or the dark hairedfgtti:... In “ The Collegians,” which the late Daniel O’Connell used to'read at least once a year, (surely, never was there a greater than Dan!) tis a ballad, which t illustrates the curious felicity with which the . Irish gqjnetimejcombine high-sounding words —a caricature of which tcudency was present ed, by s |B. A. Milikenj 6/ Cork, in .his well- Groves of Blarney.” ' Thefballad we shall quote froiny however, Was composed, not as a huifesque, but as a sober reality.,. It com mences by relating how, he meets “the fair Coljeeifjiiie,” and accosts her,--with equal ten-, derness and learning: ' t Oti wist t Hecthor, that noble yiothor, "Who died a victim to the Greoian skill; Or was Pa Paris, whose deeds were vaarious, , As an afbiihraator oh Ida's hill, V Asiaj likewise Arabia, Or Pennsylvania, looking for you, TbrougksjMre ’burning -regions,- liked famed Or ■ ■. , pkesus, ■ . i For odb§f>mbrace of you, Colleen rue. Aurora'i''6r : rtffb , 'g6aclt^l‘Flora-J." Or Eutberpasia, or fair,Vhnus bright, Of fieFeh fair beyond compare, lYhosia Paris stole from the Grecian’s sight ? And so on. To all which, the- matter- of-fact red-haired damsel sensibly responds: Bir. I pray, be aisy, aod do not'tease me "With your false praises most jestingly ; Your goolden notes and insiniwaysbuns : Are vaunting speeches, deeaiving me. .l am not A urora, nor the goddess Flora, , But a rural faymale to all men’s view, Who’s here condoling my situation, , And mv appellation is the' Colleen rue, The entire of the ballad is to bo found in “ The Collegians,” pp. 231-233, (Sad Ker’s fine edition,) and a singular composition it cer tainly is. . LINES. Men of the Northland! where’s the manly spirit Of the 'true hearted and the unshackled gone ? Sons of old freemen i do we but inherit Their names alone ? Is the old Pilgrim spirit quenched within us? Stoops fhe strong manhood of our souls so low That Mammon’s lure or Party’s wile can win us To silence now? Now, ■when our land to ruin’s brink is verging, In God’s name let us speak while there is time! Now, when the padlocks for our Ups are forging, ■ ' Silence is crime! • What! shall, we henceforth humbly ask as favors Rights a l our own? In madness shall wo barter Eortrcacheiouspeacethe freedom Nature gave us, . 5 God and our charter ? Here shall the statesman forge his human'fetters, Here the false jurist human rights deny, And hr'tba church their proud and skilled abettors ■ "''Make troth a-lis 1. Torture the-pages of the hallowed Bible, To sanction crime, and robbery, and bleed! And,' in. Oppression’s hateful service, libel : Both man and God 1 Shall our New: England stand erect no longer, But stoop m chains upon her downward way, Thicker to gather on her limbs, and stronger Day after day ? Oh, no: methinks from all her wild, green moun tains — , ~JTrtmrTalloys wh oroher slumbering fathers Ji»— r From her blue rivers and her welling fountains, And oloar, cold sky— From her rough coast.and isles which hungry Ocean Gnaws with his surges—from the fisher’s skiff, With white sail swaying to 'the- billow ’a motion ... Round rook and cliff— From the free fireside of her unbought farmer— From her free laborer at his loom and wheel— From the brown smitbshop, where beneath the = hammer, Rings the red stoel— From each and all, if God hath not forsaken Our land, and left us to an evil ehoiee, Loud as the summer’s thunderbolt shall waken ■ A People’s voice! i Startling and stern the Northern winds shall bear '.'lit" " : C - Over-Potomac’s to St. Mary’s wave; And .hurled Freedom-shall awake to hear it. 'f y ■. Within her grave. Oh, lejithat voice go forth! the bondman sighing By Sdptee’s wave, in Mississippi’s cane,.... Shall'feel the hope, within his bosom dying, Revive again. ' Tbet it i - Andunto God devout thanksgiving raising, Blessiua the white. Oh.fatyour ancient freedom, pure and holy, Forthe‘aellver»uo««uragruauliig.earth„ For the wronged captive, bleeding; crushed;' and lowly, Let it go forth ! Sons of the best of fathers! will ye falter "With all they left ye perilled and at stake ? Ho! onoe again on Freedom’s holy altar The fire awake ! , . Prayer-strengthened for the trial, come together, Put on the harness for the moral fight-, And with the.blessing of your Heavenly Father, - Maintain thk Right ! The Drafting. To the Editor o f The Press Sib: The call for a draft of 300,000 men by the President has given rise to some questions in my mindjiujjon whioh X desire a little more light.- The air of Congress of July 10,1802, in providing for a draft, says “ the enrollment of the militia shall , in ail eases, include hallhable-bodied male -citizens, between the ages’ of eighteen and forty- ; five. ”-j According to the laws of Peijnsylvania, the militia is composed of “ all able-bodied male citi zens, between the ages of-twonty-oiio and forty five,” not exempted, by the State or the United States. The assessors now enrolling the militia rifusereccivingany names of males finder twenty one. .Is , this, list to be used for drafting purposes ? Is not the draft a call of the United States, and, as such, must it not include all liable for military duty under the laws made by Congress, and comprise ’"'all. able-bodied -male citizens, between 'the ages of eighteen,and fortyrfivej?” - V, I am, sir, your obedient servant," -r.r.- . Hudson. 1 The Three-Months Men. To the Editor of The. Press: But: Incase of drafting, aro those having served the tern of three' months, in. the service of the United States, liable to .military duty? An answer to the above will oblige - " A Rbadeb. " PHiT.AMLrnxA, August 5, 1862. 1 • ‘ ' ' [Wo kaow of no provision to exempt the volun teers under tho three-months call > from the opera tion of the draft.—Ed. Tub Pkess.] ; A Post-office Curiosity. To the Editor of 'The Press : Pnn.ADKi.pniA, August.l, 1862. Bib 4 The following supersoription on a letter Whioh was recently deposited in one of the country ipost-offices, is'worth.,preserving. As the foreign postage was prepaid, it is undoubtedly genuine, and -1 give.it jrjijbatim} for jthe amusement of readers: ' o' to my Bister Bridget or else to me brother tim ' malony or if not to judy bis mother in law who came to ■' Americayibut did not stay long hut went back to the ould country, to the praate of tho parish of JKillarny in Cork if living, and if not to some dacent neighbor.” To the Editor of The Fress: SiK : A 1 friend writes from- Cape May: “ For some dajs paßt the .flag oyer Congress Hall (Mil ler’s) has not been flying. Upon inquiry, I learn that: theipropnetor had beeffi waited on by some of the Secession sojourners at the house, hailing from Baltimore, and informed that they would not ‘ stay in the jhijuse if the stars and stripes_ were'kept waving over it. 1 In deference to their sensibili ties, the flag was struck. ” Can this story possibly he true? AugUßt 2,1862. UoYALTr. General Clay’s Farewell to Russia. The following were Causius M Clay’s remarkß to the Czar on leaving Russia, to return to this country. Hois expected to arrive in a few dayß: “ Tour Imperial Majeßty will see, from the letter of the President Of the United States, which I have the honor to bear, that he recalls me at my own rognest. Had I consulted my pleasure rather than my duty, I should.not have exchanged the attractions which surround your Imperial Majesty’s Court for the hardships; and dan gers of the field of bottlo. By this devotion to my country; your - Imperial- Majesty will " measure the depth of my gratitude that you have magnanimously atoodby. us ;in dur time of need,"of humiliation, and of national - peril. That gratitude ie felt by every lover of tour great" republic, at home and abroad; Should I survive the war, -to enjoy' that more stable' peace which I believe God re*' serves for our country, it ehall be tho purpose of my life to [cultivate,.and, strengthen (hat gratitude for your Im perial ’Majesty, youf i'hbuSeV and your pedpie." My Obuntrymen ,knowi already what you fhave been: to us—l shall tell them of the clemency, oE the. firmness, of the sublime courage which your Im perial Majesty displays in cu your - magnanimous efforts for. the progress and glory of your own people. To have'personally known‘and enjoyed the gracious consideration of the mo,t illustrious among living moo, who wifl be known,in ail time, hot as the. Czar of all the : Bns'eiaa, bnt as Aiexander 'II., will be’to me the most precious of life’s memories. Sad in leaving your imperial presence, I go to mingle my aspirations with- the great millions of the Western world, that God will prosper and have in- His bpiy keeping soar ImperialMajesty,*your Imperial house,, and; the. fortunate millions.of people under your paternal rule” . CHANGE OF .SENTIMENT IN THE;; ARMY. There is abundant evidence of a radical change of sen! ment oh the war, Its causes and conduct, among those Who.com'pbse the array.—lt has-Already-been stated that Brigadier, General John, A. Bogan confesses to a radical change 'of sentiment. : The Quincy" Whig learns, that Colonel Sane*, of the 50th Uliißis, and .Captain MoFall, of Colonel Carr’s Cavalry, both long-life Democrats, and opponents to “ abolition,” but after seeing slavery in its home, ana learning from scars, wounds, and insults,,the animus of secession, candidly confess to a change of sen timent. . •, - - THE Hudson county (N. J.) Freeholders hay? voted fB,M9 fpr hopntle? to recr#tj. INTERESTING FROM NEWBERN, N.C. Another Brush at Hamilton—A Number of Pri soners, Field Pieces, Camp Kquipage, &c., Taken—Reoonnoissance Towards Kinston. ; Commander O. H. Flusser, of the Commodore, Ferry, who, in the sheer- ce of Commodore Bowan, has command of Albemarle Sound, and all the rivers emptying into it, made another rcctranolssance up the Boanoke, as far as Hamilton, the other day, on learning that the enemy were attempting to refortifj that.point. Oar fleet, consisting of the Commodore Perry, Cant. Flusser; Gen. Putnam, Oapt- Hotchkiss, and Shawsheeh, Oapt. Woodward, as cended the river at a very rapid rate, and in a very quiet manner, and when within a short distance of the point where the rebels were at work; and before they were aware of onr approach, a company was land ed from each of the gunboats, with howitzers, sidearms, rifles, who by a hasty and well-executed movement ef fectually surprised the rebels,.who were.asfull regiment. ; strong. They broke and ran in the,.mos{jprecipitale-' manner, b'eHevhfgdhat tbe|?entfre I BafhMde.Vex#(tfition was after them, os, odo .«f.:tJte-,prisoaora'said:; Aylarge numbcr'of prisoners’ fell intp, 'our*hands, togetifi® with their camp-equipage, commissary stores, some two or three howitzers, three field-pieces, a quantity, of anunu-. ’ nition, private papers, and gome twenty cavalry horses. And all of this without the; loss 'of d nuuLbn our side. The enemy did not lose a man, as otir sailors <conld not get within gunshot of The rebels,' who were too terribly, ; frightened to even look.behind them. The new fot titles tions which they were constructing were again destroyed, *as well as the.obstructions in the river; which bad been replaced. Now the louteyis again, clear to/ Weldon,, which point our may .visit, befoye, the .next mail reaches you.- : ‘ f .b v , KECONNOISSANCE TOWARDSKINSTON. For some tiino'Jiack, a rgpYementjiiflandbas been ex pected by the aimy under 'General Jjfdster, who Is now chief in command of this department; On Friday night ! last, a reconnois>ance in fcree.was made in;the direction of Kinston, an important post half way between h-re and Goldsboro’, on the rtf froad leading inland. Thdexpedi-- Cptonel Lee, of tbe,27 t ih; &rpe.con-. slated of the 27ih,'25tfffaIrd , /l7fe ttap^m®'ftsj9tß:’N'B,w i Jersey, Sd New York Cavalry fiegiment,4ahdjCkptg|h; ' Belger’s Bhode Island Battery. Thp expedition pushed, on rapidly, taking the enemy everywhere by surprise.: Their pickets were driven in, in confusion, and the rebel force this side of Goldsboro’rushed to that point, which is some sixty miles from Newbern, expecting a general attack. A few of the enemy’s pickets were captured, and the expedition, having gone as far as it waß ordered, re , t urni <1 to: New bem, having accomplished more than was expected. . ATTEMPT TO ASSASSINATE A GUARD— THE RESULT. On Friday night lasi tho camps were thrown into no little excitement on learning: that one ef the guards, named Galvin, had been shot. It appears that this is the third attempt, on the part of some treacherous indivi duals who have been prowling about our camps, to shoot onr, sentinels. In less than no time, the 23d Massachu setts, who do guard duty for the city, were Under arms, and at the Bpot where Galvin was shot. General Foster, though it was late at night, was on the ground wlth his staff, including the provost marshal, Col: Kurtz; with his regiment Gen. Fosterogave orders to Col. ICurtz to raze to the ground every house, fence, and tree in that vicinity, and where the seniry was shot to erect a gal lows, on which the assassin was to he hung. Oh the next morning, Gen. Foster’s orders were car ried out in the true Oriental style; buildings and fences were, hewed to the ground,;after the families werere moved, in the presence of a great multitude ot troops and citizens. The assassin has been caught since, and I un derstand a public exhibition of hanging will take place in a day or tvo, in the presence of the entire department. . On Monday last another dash was made, on Batchel der’s,creek, at French House, between T.uacarora and the river on the Neuee road, which is some fifteen miles from this city. This point is the headquarters of a noted band of. guerillas, and also a rebel cavalry company. Early in the morning, long before, day, Captain Sanford, of the 27th Masßacbaietts, with part of companies H and D of this regiment, made a successful dash at this neat, breaking it up most effectually, killing two aDd wound- ing two more of the enemy, capturing eight prisoners, nineteen good cavalry horses, ail equipped, and a large number of other trophitß, without losing a man. The Bate Battles before Richmond. An official list of officers kilted and wounded in the Fifth Corps, Army of the Potomac, Major General Fitz. John Porter Commanding, in the several actions from June 26th to July 2d, 1862: 2d Heine Bfgiment.— Wounded— Adj, L. P. Mudget, liieuts. W. B. Connor, J. O. Quimby. . . , 26th Hew Tork.—Wounded—Oapts. W. W.-Bates, A. W. J’reeion. - ... 22d Massachusetts—Killed—Gol. Jesse A. Grove, Capt. John F. Dunning. Wounded—Adjutant Thos. Sherwin, Jr., Major Tilton, missing Ist Michigan.—Wounded—Capts. B. H.. Alcott. George O. Hopper, Eiret Die nt George H. Eggleston, Copt. W. A. Throop, O. C. Comstock. 14th New York —Killed—Lient. Col. Chao. H. Skillen; Lieuts Edward H. Lloyd, Geo. W; Griffith; Wonnded— Lieut: E. E. Coatsworth; Captains Fred Barren, Edward Warr, O. F. Muller, Lieuts. B. H. Foote, W. A. Bowen, John Stryker, Jr., S. W. Hazen, Fayette M Butler. 4th Michigan—Killed—Col. D. A. Woodbury; Oaptsb Bicherd G; Do Bay, Morrell A. Bose; liieuts. Thos. D. Jones, Simeon B. Preston, Wounded—Captain George Spaulding; Adjutant Francis S Earle J liieut. Col. Jona than W. Sbilds ; Lieuts. Joseph L. Smith, .Joseph W. Beers, John A. Gordon# , ; 9th Massachusetts —Killed—Oaptaios William Mad!-: gaD, John Carley, James E. Oafferty ; Lieutenants B. P. Neugentj Franc’s O, Dowd, John B. Bsfferty, Edward M. Sweeney. Wounoed—Col. Thomas Casß, since dead; Major Patrick Banley; Captains Michael Soanlen, Jere miah O’HeiH,J. W. Mahan, G. W. Dutton; Lieutenants John Doherty, Timothy Burke, M. W. Phelan, James F. McGonigle. ; -C 62d Pennsylvania.—Killed—Col. S. W. Black, Lieut. John D. Elder. Wounded—Capts. B. J. Crozleri Kobt. B Means; Lieuts; John T. BeJl. Alvin King, William-J. Patterson, John H. Murray, Edward H. Little, James Brqwn, William Kepnedy, Detrick Gruntz. THIRD BRIGADE. a 16th Michigan—Killed—Oapts: Thomas O. Carr, B. F. ®sMsber; Liout. lt,William3.__Woua!led—CaDts t .CAMvA, erß, Ettpnen rjniiartinrjwßr.Tirott; LioutB; B-MoGraw, Frank Eddy, 2d Lieut G. B. Chandler, John Long. 83d Pennsylvania —Killed—Ooi. John W: McLane, Major L. H. Kagheil. Wonnded—Capt. D, O. MsOoy; Lieuts. D. P. Jones, A. E. Gale, E. W.Keed., 44th New York—Wounded—Capts. Vanderlip, Alex. Moßoberts, Lieuts 0.-B. Beeker, O. B, Gaskell. - Berdan’s United States Sharpshooters.—Killed—Capt. Dreu, ad Liout. Peetf ‘ Wounded—Lieut, Cot. J. W. Bip lcy, Lionts. C. W. Seaton, O. E. Jones, i . a - 12th New York.—Killed—Captain George Free stale, Lient. E; M. Fisher. ; Wounded—Captain James'Orou-. Die, Lieuts. Ellis Smith, P, A : Oliver, B. A Estes, Ma jor Barnnm, Capt J, Boot. Battery C, Massachusetts Artillery.—Killed—First Lient; Caleb O. E. Mortimer. Sd U. 8. Infantry.—Killed—Major N- B. Bossell, Se cond Lifut. Woods McGuire. 4th U. £5. Infantry.—(bounded—Captain Eoberl N. Scott, First Lieut. Julius W. Attains. 12th U. S. Infantry.—Killed—Captain P. N. Stanhope, Second Lient. Yan Duzen. Wounded—Major H. B; Clifz,*Captain M. M. Blunt, Lieuts. Charles B. Coster, M. H. Stacey. 7 14th IT. S. Infantry.—Wounded—Captain John Mc- Intosh; First! Lieuts J."B. Sinclair, J. F. McElhone; Se cond Lieuts. W.W.:Lyon,G..W. Hoover. ; A,--.-- ' I "SECOND, BRIGADE. . J. ff. Whittier ! 2d Unitfd States Infantry!—Killed—Firßt Lieutenant BicbardVßfindiey ; Second Lieut.; Thomas D. Parker. Wounded—Firßt Lieutenants James W. Long, Ohas.: M. Freeman, W r . H. Jordan, S. A. McKee. ' 6fh .United States Infantry,—Wsnnded—First Lient. H. A. F. Worth; lltb United States Infantry.—Yfounded—First Lient. C. A. Hartwell, Second Lieut. E; 8. Huntington. 17fh United Stattß Infantry.—Killed—Captain Albert Dodd. a , THIRD BRIGADE. , , ■ "6th New York.—Killed—Captain W. F. Partridge;. Wonnded—Captain George Duryea; Lieutenants Balph E Paine, Thos. W. Cartwright, Felix Agnus. 10th New York.—Wounded—Captain Thomas Wilde, J. H. Briggs v Lieutenants James B. Smith, George F." ■■Fait, a.-wa::; ih' . ',aU;, Ahh-'i'Vr'; ’-Cv-fAi Battery I, 6th United States Artillery.—Wounded— Captain S. 11. Weed. Battery 81, 3d United States Artillery.—Wounded— Liouts. H. J. Hayden, James R. Kelly, Henry F. Brown son. . . . sth United States 1 Artillery.—Wounded—First liiout. James W. Piper. Ist United States Artillery.—Wounded—First Lieut. E. Bayard Hill. . Ist 'Maryland Artillery Wounded—Adjutant John Bigelow; lirst liieut. Theodore J. Vanneman. . Ist Pennsylvania Rifles (P. Ji. V. 0.)-—Killed— Capt Philip' Holland.' Wounded—Major Roy Stone, Adit. W. R. Ilattehcrn, Capt. J. T. A. Jewett. Ist Pennsylvania.—Killed—Lieut. Joseph Stewart. Wounded—Libut. Col. F. N. Mclntyre; Oapts. Geo. H. Hess, W. Cooper Tolley, Adjt. Wm. 11. Stewart, Lieuts. Isaiah F. Graham, Joseph F.'McOord, W. T. McPhall... 2d, Pennsylvania.—Wounded—Major Geo. A. .Wood ward : - Captains Horace Neide, J. Orr 'Finnie, P." J. Smith; First Lieutenants Daniel H. Conyers, J. B.: Fletcher, Hugh Pi Kennedy. sth Pennsylvania.—Capt. ■ M;' Sturrock; Cells. G. Simmons. Wounded—Adjutant A. G Mason; Captains Jameß . Foggart,' Thos. Chamberlin, John McOleery; Lieutenants D; H. McMickeh, T. H. M. Riddle, J. A. Mcl’heran. - ’ Bth Pennsylvania—Wounded—Major S. M. Bailey; Captains B. E. Johnston, G. B.. Gallup, A. Wishart; Ist lieut. W. M. Carter;, 2d Lieuts, J, Bradford, H. McQuilken. ' ' " ' 3d Pennsylvania.—Wounded—Capts. James Thomas, H. Clay Beattie; lieut. J. B. Roberts; Capt. Wm Brian, missing; lieuts. J. Leh'snan, missing; D. W. Donagby, missing. ; . 7th Pennsylvania.—Wounded—Oapts. R. M. Hender son, E. G. lantz, missiDg; lieut. Ltvi G. McCauley, mftsiug; Capt W. W. Wright. 4th Pennsylvania;—Wounded—Major John Nyce,Oap T tainß W. 0. Besselelre, Franels'H. Barger, Thomas T. B. Topper; First lieut. Geo. W. Buasier, Capt,E. B. Gates, missingVHent. John C. Chance, miseidg; Acting lieut." Col. R. H. Woodworth, misting. 9th Pennsylvania.—Killed—lieut. J. Beattie, Wound, ed—Capt. Charles Barnes, lientonants John F, Kirkpa trick, J. K. Barbour, William H. Hope, Jacob H. Win cin. ■ ■ y, 10th Pennsylvania —Killed—Adjutant E. A. Gaither, First lieut. John 1. Moore.: . ;Wounded-7-Captaina Thos. McConneH, M. B. Adams, First Libut. Valentine Phipps, Second litut, James 1. Wray. ' ; 12th Pennsylvania,-rrKilled—First lieut. William W, Arnold. Wounded—Capt. Frank Daniels, Thomas D. Born, Captain A, G. Oliver, Second Heat. William H. ■Kerr., ■, - , The Sanitary Condition of the Army. ' The Now York Executive" Oommitteo ot tho United States Sanitary Commission, in a letter addressed to President Lincoln, says: The careless and superficial medical inspection of re cniits made at least twenty-five per cent.j>f ,the volun teer army raised last year not only utterly useless, but a positive incumhrancs and embarrassment, filUng:our. hos pitals with Invalids, and the whole cohntry)with exagge . rated notions of the dangers of war, that, now seriously retard the recruiting of the new. levies we so urgently need. ; We respectfully r submit r that no' new recruits should be accepted uritilithey have been examined by me- : ..died officers of the United States personal interest in the filling up of Any regiment. .If all • the 800,000 men now;to be recruiter; were recruited with out a single new regiment being formed, it ,would, Bave the conniry sooner or later, thbrisands of Uves aud mitHons of dollars. We shouldjget a far. better classofmen. -They would have a'thorough medical inspection, and every man wouid soon cease to bo a raw recruit when absorbed into a veteran regknent. ■Nbwbeen, N. O.y July 30. A GUERILLA NEST BROKEN UP, Major Gen. Porter’s Official Report. BKIG. GEN. MOBELL’S DIVISION. " FIRST BRIGADE. SECOND BRIGADE. BBIG. GEN. SYKES’ DIVISION. ■ FIRST BRIGADE. HUNT’S 'ABTIDDEKY RESERVE. BBIG. GEN. SEYMOUR'S DIVISION.' FIRST BRIGADE. SECOND BRIGADE. THIRD BRIGADE. . Battery A, Ist Pennsylvania Artillery.—Killed—Capt. H. Easton. Wounded—Lieut W. Stitt. Battery B, Ist Pennsylvania Artillery.—Killed—Second Lieut; Thes. Oadwaioder, Second lieut. Henry T. Ban forth. * ■ ■','■ , Battery G, Ist Pennsylvania Artillery.—Wounded— Capt. Mark Kerns. , ' 'Battery : 0, 6th;United States ArtUlery.—Wounded— ■Capt. H. V. Be Hart. . Field'and Staff.—Killed— Capt. Henry J. Biddle, A. A. G.; lieut. J. H. Kuhn, A. D. 0. ; Wounded—Brig. General George G. Meade, Surgeon Anthony E. Stocker, lieut. W, H.Watmaugh, A.D.C, lieut. E. Beatty, Ordnance Officer. . TWO CENTS. THE WAR IN THE SOUTHWEST. Dash on Clinton, Ten'n., by, car Troops—Suc cessful Expedition to Tazewell—From Mount. Sterling—From New Mexico—lndian Out rages—Execution oXa Quantril Guerilla. PROM CUMBERLAND CAP —DASH UPON CLINTON. . Clinton, on Clinch river, is about sixty miles fro u the Gap, and about twenty, a little north'by west, from Knoxville. For. some time It has formed a rendezvous and camp for rebel cavalry. y More than a-y ear sin ce, among others, the rebels drove out of Clinton a young man by the name of Carpenter. At Camp Wild Cat, Kentucky, he was mustered into the 2d Tennessee Infantry. He became the adjutant. Being well acquainted with the country, andthe men who had s driven hies from his home, he was unite willing to revisit them. Genera) Carter furnished him with forty men, on whom he knewhe could rely. On foot they started and threaded their way through the gaps in the' hills and mountains till Friday morning early, when they sud denly appeared in Clinton ; Oh; tbe opposite side of Clinch river were seventy civaby; halfa mile up the stream, onjjbe same side wiih hlmßflt, werefortyof.a rebel picket gusml; yet the adju tant blazed away’atdbe cavalry. At this they; all dis mounted and began to.gather into,canoes, Sc., to cross •the fiver. The adjutant’s men took their positions,to •give the rebels a proper reception.- One: Of'them goon fell aod severs! appeared to be wonn'hd ; they then left Iho river and got tbeif horses,'and mude good thoir escape ■- as hSßtiiy asipdsßible, leaving one of their number ..and several hdrtesJbehind. ' - - », ■While hej and men were refreshing themselves, in • rhnners: to 'the. forty picketa > and Jo six hundred cavalry at WallaceJs'Orosa. Hoads, on Clinch’river; dll between little band and tbsir regi-. mepr, that ithe Federals were 1 marching upon them two thousand strong, and they ail ran, The adjutant arf, •rested lhoeigbtm-n,'for whomhe made this perilous' tlip,,,an(l.broVL«bt'-thom all in safely this nierning.— Cin- ■' ■cimtati Gazette.Mh inslart. ' YORA'aliijfl BipEDITibN j . i REBELS REFUSE TO GIVE BATTLE. ' ' 'Cpvbkhland Gap,'July 28—Col. Bo Courcay, of'the 16th OhlftpaotiDg general pt >a, brigade .made up of the . ■>22d3lfifittioky,'42<l;:Glij.oJ-ajo,d-his nwn'regimont— tarted v i early;on'tbeniprnii)gdf:thd’2sfb : onS'foragihg'eFlie3l'-T - tion.vOn thdrway through tho Gap they were joined by ; ah ifficitatvcorps of-’artillery. Thoy marched in the di rection of Tazewell, to' which' ’place "the- rebel pickets extend. They speedily ran in. The next morning tbo brigade moved in the direction of a camp which the Secesh cavalry had for some time occupied, some four miles beyond Tazewell. When within a mile o* the camp, two ortbree horsemen showed themselves. A line of battle was formed, and General De Courcoy 6ent back for a reinforcement of artillery, For an hour or two he Bhelled the woods in the vicinity of the three terrified cavalry, with what result is not cer tainly known. ' Unmolested, the brigade gathered their forage, without the consciousness that they had done any great things 1 The boys returned to camp this morning. FROM MT. STERLING, KY. [Correspondence,Cincinnati Commercial.! * Mount Btkrlixg, Ky., July 31,1862. finco I wrote you, two days ago, I have ascertained that the number of the guerilla prisoners taken at the battle of this-place on Tuesday, and for a few miles around berr , has increased to over one hundred.' Captain Corbin, of Boone, commanded one company, and Captain Je'sEe, of Henry, commanded another. Corbin command ed a rebe< gang of thirty- nine, which passed through this place, going South, about the middle of May last. He has . been a successful recruiting officer for Jeff Davis, but be is now amongst the prisoners wbo have been taken. ‘The muster roll of bis company has been found. It had on it ninety-seven names, and it.will be published. REBELS AT MOItGANFIELD, KY. The Evansville Journal states that, in the absence of positive news from regions around Henderson, there are numerous rumors afloat. Ths most reliable is to the ef fect that the rebels are,coneentrating a large force near , Morganfleld, represented to be from five hundred to one thousand one hundred Btrong. The Journal thinks there is not a shadow of a doubt that the whole region from Green river to the Cumberland is swarming with rebels. Every one wbo comes from tho Cumberland tells the same Btory, that seuads are coming in daily from the rebel army into that part of the State. COTTON AT HUNTSVILLE—GENERAL MITCHELL VIN DICATED. , We lesrn from one of our,St. Louis traders, who vißit ed Huntsville (Ala.) and returned early this month, that there bad been brought in there about four thousand bales of cotton, purchased at from eight cents in Alabama and Tennessee money to sixteen cents in gold. The cheaper purchases were; made first. A company com posed of some Ohio men, named Clark, McClellan and . Comstock, were heavy buyers. It was with this firm, one of whom is a relative of Genera) Mitchell, that sus picion improperly, and it seems uDjnstty, connected the Dame of that General; In fact, their cotton was hauled in by Govirbment wagons; but these wagons would have otherwise come in empty. General Mitchell was accused of withholding permits to buy, but was accused wrong fully. He gave permits in every case where the applica tion was a bona fide om — Missouri Republican, 2d. PROM NEW MEXICO—ARREST OP SECRETARY HOLMES —INDIAN OUTRAGES. / Barclay's Fort, New Mexico, July 14,1862. East night Mrs. Secretary Holmes passed this place, on her way to Washington city, to prefer a complaint against the commander of this military department, for the arrest of her husband on a charge of treason, based on the publication of an’article in the Santa Fe Repub lican. As there is ho farther' danger from Texans, and as this department, instead of capturing Texans, er fighting Indians, is beginning to tain its attention to negro catching, if wonld be gratifying to see martial law dispensed with, and things resume , their usual course again. Mrs-’Holmes also brings news that a party of Apacheß encountered two men and three women, travelling in a cart, on the public road near San MigueL They shot one man, wounded tbe other, and captured the women. Leaving the oxen tied to a tree, they started for the ; roonntain, taking the women: with them. One resisted and, was killed, the others were forced to accompany them, were shamefully abused, and finally were stripped naked and turned loose. Indian outrages are of daily oc currence, but excite no attention.; The military make no effort to .'check their depredations, and the citizens are not permitted to operate against them. An intelligent gentleman from Anton'Chico informs me that one hun dred and twenty thousand sheep have been swept from this frontier within the last five months, to his certain knowledge, and others from Bio Bajo report the loss of, Upwards of 300,000 from that part of the country since September last. It is currently reported that at least 100,000 are still on this side of the Bio Grande, the In dians net having been able to.cross on aocountof high water. .: . - - . ' 071717—7017 (ITT.V T-'T-PiTIiT. *S. G 7711111 HI.A S^ [From the Leavenworth Conservative; July 20.1 _ Jeremiah Hoy was shot at thefort-yesterday morning, having been found by the. Military Commission, of treason and murder. It was proved that Hoy was a member of Quantrlll’s guerilla band;, that he was acces sory to andguiltyof the murder of Allison, a citizen of Missouri, and of a United Stateß soldier of Major Banz- Jiafl’s command, on the 20th of * March, at" the: Bridge crossing; Jackson county, Mo.; also,,of burning eaid bridge; also, of treasonable Sete in levying war against the .United States. : ; The execution took place on the open field just south of the barracks. Colonel Burris was preseat with the troops at the garrison, and Captain Conover acted as the officer of the day. The prisoner was marched on to the grounds by the soldiers ; he; wore a black suit andta! felt hat; Kis arms were pinioned. Hsy was brousht to the place where he was to he shot, made to kneel arid his hat removed. In thisi position Borne-.clergyman asked the Divine blessing.; The prayer probably lasted ten mi nutes jit Beemed a century. We did not hear whit was said, but the sight of. that poor creature kneeling there with loaded muskets before him, and the delay prolonged and prolonged, Jas if he.wero to bekiUed by inches,was the most torturing we ever witnessed. Hoy was then marched; back to the line of soldiers and his sentence read to him. After this he was placed on his knees again, and his eyes bandaged. He had maintained the utmost ; coolness throughout, but now his composure was forsaking him, and-his frail body swayed a little. There was no delay ; no torture; no bungling in the military part of the programme. A detachment of soldiers' stood about twenty yards distont, and tbe moment the guard left * the prisoner the command to fire was given. ; Twelve volumes of fire leap from the rifles, and- Hoy is dead. He fell over upon bis faces and .died without a struggle. : One. Ball went through his head and two through his body. After an examination'of his body by Drs. Quidor and 1 Sinks;'it was placed in a coffin arid borne to the military buriat ground. The soldiers marched off, the band play-' ing a lively ate Biot in Brooklyn—Disgraceful Proceed The contest .provoked by a certain portion ef tho Se cession press at the West, which resulted in a riotous at tack by Irishmen upon the negroes in Chicago and: else-. where in that section of the country, has been duly imi tated by a portion of the press of thiß city, until, at last, their teachings have* culminated in a similar result. The first; overt act was committed last Saturday night when some colored women and children employed in the Sedg wick-strtot; tobacco factoriOßlwerehooted-andstoned'by a party of Irishmen, but without doing any serious damage. Yesterday afternoon, however, a systematic at tack was made by a party ef between four and five hun-i dred Irishmen upon Watson’s tobacco factory, at the foot of Sedgwick street, and with splendid success. The fac tory; is a large three-story brick building, and devoted exclusively to the manufacture of tobacco. At the time all the employees present wore colored persons—twenty in* number—five men, and the balance women arid chil dren, ; -■ "■ /■; The mob approached the s place screaming like infuri ated demons, and crying out, “Kill the d—n naygnrß,” : “ Bum the naygurs,” and other elegant parts of speech;. The factory was surrounded, and bombarded frith stories and brickbats, and almost every pane of glass in the building was broken; when the inmates retreated to the' upper story. The negroes kept the excited mob at bay i for nearly an hour, on the stairway, and fought with . desperation,'until finally one of them was seized and dragged outside, where the men went at himiriblood > bound fashion j-and'would have carried out their threat to kill him, had not the crowd.beeri so great that only a few of their blows reached the victim. At this juncture, a police force arrived, and the negro who had been so badly beaten - was forced back into' the build-', trig for protection. But this was not accomplished until the police used their clubs freely. -The mob had filled the whole lower part of the factory, :and seeing thapolice in terfere for "the protection of the inmates, their" leader, a -man -named Patrick Keenan, the keeper of a low grog gery in Columbia street, and candidate for.- aEderinan in; the Sixth ward, gave direction to fire the building. A pot of tor'was' upset in the lower 1 story, ‘a-quantity of wood was placed over it, and fire was, applied. It com menced to bum briskly, and hut for the almost Briperhu mEm exertions of the police, the building, would have been burned and-ihe lives of*the employees, who had crowded into the upper.story, must havebeen sacrificed. While the police were engaged in extinguishing the fire, the stones arid bricks thrown by the mob, to nse the words of the officers, “rained upon them-in showers,” and several of the force wero severely injured. ; ' The first notice of'thethreatened attack yesterday was given to Capt. Holbrook by Officer Oates, of, the Forty-third Precinct Police; who sent the reserve'eorps at that station to tho spot. The Deputy Inspector of Police was notified,and soon after the reserve of the Forty-first precinct,'under Oapt Srriith. and the reserve of the Forty-foorth, under Powers, were on the way to tho scene of action. They arrived there, as also did the 1 Deputy Inspector of Police; when the mob had Charles , Baker, the colored man before alluded to, in tbeir power, and were endeavoring ,to kill him. The fight between the police and mob for awhile raged fnridnsiy, and Beveral on both sides were, seriously injured. Officer Barns, was injured by a brick striking on the side of his head. Officer Donnelly was-struck-on the head with a brick. • Officer Oates and ethers of the Forty-third precinct were ' injured. The following narised rioters were arrested and committed for trial: Patrick Keenan; the leader, Michael il euglier, WiUiamMcrrls, John Locg.lticriard itoylia, Thomas Clark, Joßeph Flood, Bliss P. Welder. Charles Baker, ;colored), while defending the stairway, accidentally hit Officer, Donnelly, and subsequently was arrested.' A' number of otherTparticiparits in tho riot are we'l known) and will be arrested to day. When the excitement .had subsided, Deputy Inspector of Police Folk told the employees of the footory' that they could go to .work and be protected; but the women and children'were badly frightened, and,were very anxious to get home, 1 where they went"under protection of the police. The negroes in LorUlard’e factory; on thesame street, to the number of fifty, took the advice of a citizen, and went home before the disturbance had ceased at Watson's fac stoty.—New York Times ' Betel Atrocities in Tennessee. Mr. J. J. Palmer, writing from Fort Clift, Scott coun ty, Tenn.,sajs,: “I was.at thSjnight of tbel 3th Inst., when I was attacked , tiy .ihlrteeli rebels,- who, shot at methree t!mes, »r d mime in the left' arm .with tbr.e,e balls . I then flretf npoih them with myEn-, held and ran them off. The following day, nearly 100 Vflbiin cameto'niy house and commenced an indiacn minate plunder, taking about from $3OO to SiOO worth of , roperty. 1 woe attacked again on„the following Friday by eighteen of Iho rebels at my own house; ray .wife rushed outside and polled thp door to after her, and was then ordered by them to open' the door or they would Shoot her. I seized my guu’and ruehed to the 1 door and threw it open, when one of them fired uppn me -at a dis tance of twelve feet.and T delivered my' fire' upon them! there being-three of,tbemin the yard. I. tiien drew my: navy and ran into the yard, and out to the gate, running them all out of the yard, they firing upon me four or five times while 1 stood at the gate.” THE WAR PRESS, (PUBLISHED WEEKLY.) The War Press will tie sent to eabscribers by mail (per annum in advanoe) at., $2.00 Three Oopiea « « 5.00 «» “ “ “ 6.00 Ten “ “ « 12,00 Larger Olnbs will be charged at the same rate—thus: 20 copies will cost $24; 60 copies will cost $6O, and 100 copies $l2O. For a Club of Twenty-one or over, we will send fin Extra Copy to the getter-up of the Club. Postmasters are reauested to act as Agents ter Tbe War -Press. ’ Aowerfisementa inserted at the usual rates. Six lines constitute » souare. Instructions zn Preparing Claims for Sol- diers’ Pay To enable those who may have claims upon the United States, for moneys due deceased officers and soldiers, on account of military services rendered, whether in the re gular or Volunteer service, to obtain the same, the fol lowing information is furnished: • ORDER OF PAYMENT OF ARREARS OF PAY. Order First —lf the deceased was married, payment will be made—lst, to the widow; 2d, if no widow, to his child or children; (if minors, to a guardian.) Order Second. —lf he died unmarried—let, to the father; 2d, if the father is dead, to. tbemotfa'er; 31, if both; parents are dead, to the brothers and Bisters, col lectively; lastly, to the heirs general—(to be distributed in accordance with the laws of the State in which thede ceased had his domicile ) OF HOUNTT. The act approved July 11,1862, provides “thatsaid bounty shall be paid,to the following persons, and in the order following, and to no other person, to wit: First, to the widow of Buch deceased soldier, if there be one. Second, if there be no widow, then to the children of Buch deceased soldier; share and share alike. Third, if such foldior left neither widow, nor child, nor children, then, »nd in that caso, such bounty shall be paid to th© follow* ;ing persons, provided they be residents of tbs United Stales, to wit: First, to his father; or if he shall not be -living, or has abandoned the support of his family, then .to the mother of such soldier; and if there be neither father nor mother, as aforesaid, then such bounty shall :bo paid J to'the brothers and sisters of the deceased soldier, resident as aforesaid , ; ißy the'seme act, the bounty,of one hundred dollars to widows, .&c.,'Ofj volnnteera, is also given to the widows, f ,&c.j of those persons who have ..enlisted in the regular - forces since the first day of July, 1861, or shall enlist in <t jforces during 1862, to be. paid to the 'heirs ennmed in'this act. Wittows of commissioned officers,ihnd /of soldiers dying' after being discharged, are not entitled 1 ito bounty, nor aib the widowß of deceased three-month* • volunteers.' - ,* .. .IJfoLoyAM'v.—ln section 4of “An act to grant pen- •• ' -sions,” approved July 14; 1862, it iB-provided “tharino modeys ehallßbApaid io;jtbe widow, or cfildr®or i 'any ‘ ! heirSiOf any deceased Bogier, on accpnntdf bounty, back yPay, any way in: rebellion in the xUnited;States; Jut the fight of such; disloyal widowor .bbildrenVlieif or heirs,;of-such'soldier, shall be'vosted in the foyal heir opbeirsjpf the deceased,.if any there bo. 1 * Information mregafd to such,c»Bes will receive the at tention of the accounting officers " APPLICATION, PROOF, AND AIT THENTIC ATION Application.— The claimant or ciaimantVmust make a written application; under oath, and over hia, her, or their own signature, stating his, her, or their name, age, residence, connection to the with the letter or name of the captain of the company and regiment to which he belonged; time of his death, and the nature of the pay claimed—whether “ arrears of pav,” «c.; and the “ 8100 bounty,” under act of July 22, iB6l-. An.appiication by a guardian should give the name and age'of the ward or wards, and should be accompanied by' letters of guardianship, or an authenticatedcopy thereof. In the application of a mother claiming bounty, her hus band: being alive, the facte upon which the claim forbade should be clearly stated and proved If the soldier died unmarried, leaving no child, it must be stated by the ap plicant, and also by the disinterested.witnesses. Proof —To satisfy the accounting officers that the person or persons thus claiming is or are entitled to the money, in the character he, she, or they claim, the depo sitions of two credible wltnessesr will'be required, stating that they are acquainted with the claimant or claimants, the connection held to the deceased, and that they (the deponents) are disinterested. Proof of marriage (record evidence, if possible) must always accompany the appli cations of those claiming to be the widows. Authentication.— Thu application and depositions, above rfquired, to be subscribed and sworn to before# judge, commissioner, notary public, or justice of the peace, duly authorized to administer oaths, accompanied by the certificate and seal of a court of record as to the fact of the said judge, &c , being duly commissioned and acting in bis official capacity at tbe time of the execution of the foregoing papers. Admikistbatioh.—As the taking out of “ letters of ad ministration ” is attended with considerable expense, (seldom necessary,) it is suggested that it be done only when rewired by tie accounting officers. The bounty being no part of the estate of the deceased, bnt a gratu ity to thß heirs, will in no case be paid to an admi nistrator. Discharged Eomiers.— When a soldier (or volun teer) ie discharged, he is (or should be) furnished with a ‘regular “Discharge” and tm (duplicate) "Pay Certi ficates,” and one or more disability certificates, if dis charged on account of disability. Upon those papers ha can be paid by a paymaster of the army upon their pre sentation. Should he fail to present them for payment to a paymaster, or, having presented them, and payment being refused,.they are sent to this office, the applicant must state the reasons forsuch refusal, accompanied by proof of identity and authentication, as in the case of deceased soldiers. In no case should the “oath of iden tity,” on the back of the >' Discharge," bo filled up, as the “Discharge” is returned to the soldier after hie claim has been acted upon. Where “Pay Certificates” and certificates of disability have been withheld, he must send ail other papers given to him at the time of his dis charge, together with the certificate of his captain that no such certificates were given to him, and the reasons for withholding them. In case the certificates are claimed to have been lost, an affidavit of such loss must be fur nished, stating, the'circumstances under which it occur red; that he had diligently .'Searched for them without success, and that he baa.not received pay thereon, nor assigned them to any person. ;■ Ho’ eoldier, discharged under any circumstances, can receive the bounty provided by the act of July 22, 1861, 'unless “he shall have served for a period of two years,, or during the war, if sooner ended ” Pessioxs —Applications for pensions, on account of “ disability ” received in the service, or tor widows and children under the act of July Id, 1862, should be mad* to the Commissioner of Pensions, and not to this office. Mode uy Payment— Payments will be made by an older fre-m the accounting officers on any paymaster of tbe army. Such order wiii require the signature of tha claimant on its face, written by himself, or herself, and duly witnessed. . . • ■ ■ ■-.V ■ Mode ofPhesbntisg OniiMS. —All claims for arrears of pay and bounty may tie sent directly to this office. When received, they are entered upon the register, as soon as practicable they will be_ examined, and if found correct in'form, they are placed'upon the files for set tlement and their receipt-acknowledged. If incorreot, the party sending-it is immediately notified. No “ spe cial cases” wiil be made at the solicitor on of attorneys, but when evidence can tie obtained, cases will be audited in the order in which they are received. The only ex ception to this rule is when, in settling a case in its order, evidence is found Upon the same rolls by which to seta* other claims' of soldiers deceased in the same company, Letter.B.ofJnguiry_i“ relation to a claim, should specify tbe‘»ame of the geceasea-anawne'xumpanyy-madnpwtr' and State Wwhich he belonged, and in all to se cure an answer, the name, post office, and State of thn writer should be distinctly .written. Forms.— -The form accompanying this circnlar is in tended'only as a guide, and must be varied to suit special cases, No claim is rejected on account of the form in which it is presented, if it substantially complies with tho Instructions. ’-.-I To COKKESrosDENM:—letters of inquiry, relating to the pay ol soldiers in hospitalsor on furlough, should b» addressed to the Paymaster General,, Inqniries relating to the pay of deceased teamsters or other employees of tbs quartermasters department, or for the pay of horses killed or lost in the Third Auditor, and re lating to the pay and Bounty of persons in the marine or naval service, to the Fourth Auditor. Postage.— The Government pays all postages on such business communications, whether received or trans mitted by tbisoffice.-' ' EZBA B. FBENCH, Second Auditor of the. Treasury Department, Wash . ington city, D. C. FORM OF APPLICATION FOB ARREARS OF FAY ANB BOUNTY. • X, —v;~-, of ——l, in the.county of ; and State of. —, on bath say, that my age is years, and that I am the of ~, late of , in the State of who was a ——— in company -—— of the regiment of -. anl died in the service of the United States at* ———, on the ——• day of -——, -186 ■: .’i{Jf.thc soldier,died unmarried, leaving m child, it should be here staled. If ihe application is by the. mother, she should also state the name of the father of the deceased, his death, or.abandonment of the support Of. his family, giving\ the date and.att facts necessary to a proper understanding of the case. If the application is by the widow of'‘the deceased, she should here state : her maiden name, wheni where, and by whom she - was married to him, and whether or not there is record evi dence of such marriage] < I make this application to recover all arrears of pay or other allowances due to the deceased trom thB United States, and the bounty provided by the sixth section of the act of July 22; 1861. Statb of —, {„ . Countgof ■ —— Personally appeared the above-named ■' —, to me well known, and enbacribed and made oath to tho fore going sta'ement on this day of - ' , 180 , befijro me. (Kamo of official title.) ■ J r FOUST OP AFFIDAVIT. We, and —,of ■ . in the county of -A—— and State of■ ———, on oath say that we are and have beßh for -—years well acquainted with the applicant, and with the said, ———, deceased, who was a —'■ — in company ~'- of the ——— regiment —, and know- —■ to be the - of the said de ceased— he died unmarried, leaving no : child, if should he here stated ; and if the application is by the mother, the fact (f her widowhood, or the abandonment of lur husband, should be stated as in the application ]— and that we have no interest whatever in this application. (Signature.) ' (Signature.) [Certificate of the magistrate the same as above } From Central America. The excitement in New Granada, growing but of tho apprehensions of . a fight, still continues. The Panama Star of tho 24th nit. says: “ From the best-informed sources, it appears tolerably certain that a largo body of men may soon be expected herefrom Ohiriqui and.Fabrega to aid the Governor in quelling the spirit of insubordination recently displayed here, and to assist him in' re-establishing a fooling of security among the inhabitants. The Governor appear* to be seconded in his efforts to Bupport the State Govern 1 . men t by the leading and most influential'men of the Isth mus—Don Jose Obaidia and Fabregas—who have now one thousand men.under arms;-and iTthe Government can bring anything like such a force as this to Panama we cannot Bee what opposition he can meet with, for, at the best, not: more than three or four hundred badly or ganized and still worse armed men can bo raised to offer any resistance. . : : “ The Plaza of Santa Aha was the scene of extraordi nary excitement yesterday, occasisned by ah order of the .bishop to take all the valuable ornaments and jewels from the churches, and deposit them in , some safe place, to prevent their falling into the hands Of General Mos qnera, should , he issue , an order for their confiscation Behor Jovane had airoady removed these valuables from some of the chinches, but om its being known outaido tbe city-that he intended taking those from Santa Ana, there was a .general outcry among the outsiders, and hundreds of women crowded into the square, determined to resist their removal. Bow the matter finally ended we have not learned, bnt we believe the outsiders got the best of it. .-IV- ■ “The muskets and ammunition belonging to the polico. force have been seized and carried off to the barracks.” There is a famine in many towns of Nicaragua; and tie poor have suffered severely, substituting., pools and pinuelai a species of the agave plant, for bread and meat. 1 The demand for cotton in Ituropo does not seem to 'stimulate the Nicaraguans ,to plant, and what .little ia grown is used. ... , ■ . Indigo iB oh the increase in Nicaragua, several new plantations having slatted, which will prodnoe well. Oa cao’is gradually increasing, and coffee wifi be plentifal by next year. - Seme apprehensions were expressed by the people that President Hnroln was . aiming to get possession of tho Transit and the Isthmus of Nicaragua, in order to trans port negroes thither. ; Strenuous resistance was threat ened in the event of such an attempt being made. BUSHWHACKING IN MISSOUBI —Mr. Scott, who liveß about half way between Clinton and ,Calhoun, Ho., was at bome'ploughlßg in his field,' a few days since, un suspecting of danger, when. four .bushwhackers rode up to the fence,.within a few feet of him, when two of tham , discharged their gnns at him instantly killing him. It ia not known yet who did it, but from all the circumstances it must' have been persons well acquainted in, the neigh-,, borhood., . Hr. S’ was a man of family, and about forty years old. : MEMPHIS KTJMOBS. —A Memphis' correspondent,' nnd'er datoof the 31st, says r- llumors are Afloat to-day , tbftt ft rebel expedition bos started upvtbe riyer to mtOT» cent boats.- and that several field- batieri s will be used in these guerilla attacks. It ie also rumored that tbe rebels Intend crossing our lines at Grand; Junction, mxty miles: from thiscity, a.stretch of, count-y which is.ehtlrely un occupied and unprotected .by our forces.. . j NOT TO BE TBUSTEO— The connties in lower , Kentucky, between'the Green and Oumberland.'river^ 1 are full' of rebels whohave retnrnedlatter thdr.yeqrof: ' service In the Confederate army. They have come ,1a singly and bj squads, bringing their arms and equip ments, bnt professing a desire tq resume the quiet duties of citizenship. (Signature of claimant.)
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