THE PI-Ebb, ro uj i tgolp DA/Lilt (8171641 M gx(TErTzna WY JOHN W. FoUN HY. rricE, No. in souTH FOURTH STREET THE 0.111,1 t Pauss, Iwitri GIFTS PER WEIRR, pquhb to the tO tinbeorlbore out of the nity et Mix DOLLARS A , K vbf, FOUR DOLLARS roil RIOEIT 'tiONTUB, lo go poi,Ltos FOR Six MONTBB—lnVarlabL7 In ad. 4 ,04 for lbe time ordered. THE TRI.WEEKLY MESS, wog to Bubooribere out of the Oily of •Tangs Dot• Aexerg, in advance. /:).13 DRY -GOODS JO IR it Ens WSSLEST KURTZ. f'1:1 OALT 811811 Btj&KURTZ, (guccesiors to T. TV. Baker cif Co.) FORMZELY BONN. 1 11610018 L, CO. s o , to NORTH THIRD STREET, PHILAMELPIII/L, • IMPORTERS AND 'JOBBERS BLACK AND FANCY SILKS, ylißlioH, ENGLISH, AND AMERICAN DRESS GOODS, 0 1,0 TBS, CASHMERES, AND VESI!Was, LINENS AND WHITE GOODS, LAOSS AND EMBROIDERIES, EIBRONS, TRIMMINGS, HOSIERY, GLOVES, NOTIONS, &O. SHAWLS. A complete assortment of 0014 LONG AND SQUARE SHAWLS Of the followlni well-known mates: ifiLIDLESEN, WASHINGTON, WATERVLIET PEACH DALE, liltoollE, LONG AND SQUARE BTIMLA q AND TIDEBEIT, LONG AND 'SQUAD.% go which we Write the attention of CI&SH and SHORT TINE BUYERS ee24 ITltirf 2m DAWSON / BRANSON, & 00., s, yr. CORNER OF MARKET AND FIFTH STREETS, Invite the attention of Cash Buyers to !heir entire New. Stock of DRESS GOODS, SHAWLS, ETC. °calm AL L. HALLO WELL do Ck.., No, 615 CHESTNUT STREET, (lALTREI bIABBLZ BLOM) atve jag opened en ENTIRE NEW STOOK' WU SILKS, from Auction, DRESS GOODS in great variety, , 311 AWLS, GLOVES, RIBBONS, TRIMMINGS, Sto., sto., Fhluh h,i re been PURCHASED EXCLUSIVELY r Olt AAA will be sold et CHEAP PRICES, Ihe attention of City end country bluets is invited. *2O tr I non A-4, FALL 1862. HI GEL, WIEST, k DEPORTEES AND JOBBERS DRY GOODS, it 3, 47 HORT/f THIRD STURRT, PU!.&D1L?IIIL ti AND 42 NORTH THIRD STREET. :aOSIERY) GLOVES. Shirts and Drawers, 4-4 Linens. Fancy Woolow ) Linen 0. Hdkfa. Manufacturers of Shirt Frentfi. nll.Bm Ell [862. AMES. KENT. SANTEE. & 00. 0 INPORTNIIO AND JODBISBN Or DRY GOODS,. .41. 234 Pa 5341 Y. THIRD. 82 1 43 MT, A.Belira PAM tft tOW owl their Antal ARGB AIdD OOMPLETE STOOK or rolizro AND DORZSTIO DRY GOODS, 4 /Dat eblte will be found a more than urea; at keel variety of ADIE,S I DRESS GOODS; Also, • fall assortment of AntautmetnE AND 000E1E00 PRIMA, and 1105LADELPHIASAGADB GOODS. rg" Cash buyers specially invited. ktaa.ia, 862, T ALL . 1862. ORNES. BERRY. & C 0.,. (Saeceeprire to Abbott, Johnes, (70.,) t 7 kwazr,T, AND ,524 OOMMILIIOII STBNATI% . 12 1POIITZBEI AND JOBBZU ON SILJEC fiIANC3Y DRY GOODS;, opened Mn anttrel7 StiV AND ATTEAU AVE STOOK, Ell ZiSLISR, FRENCH,, GERMAN, AND AMERICAN DRESS GOODS. 4 bo, eesortmeat in WatTE GOODS, RIBBONS,GLOVES, BRAWLS, &0., I lia UM offer at the rery Lowest Market Primal me 4,, ca tte attention of the Trade. 111/16-8° 317AR D.GirALMORE. 4511 00 .• 41. ".611 CIEIEBTIIIn and 614 lATIII Streets. Have now clan Mb ALL IMPORTATION or rim aro minor ' )4 tBB GOODS, SHAWLS, WWII GOODS, LINENS, EMBROIDERIES, am. 130 t3 1 21 , 11T IN EUROPE BY ONE OF THE FIRM. ! ? ""dot the Ittention Of the trade iswartientarly an3l-tan LUtarigit" OIL WOMB. W . zoo bbbi "Lucifer" Burnlaig On on bud its tiir,Mitee the oil ta be non-elldostval to barn an 1211Uy44 ii l ue p with a etesds, dam . ", wItlio:41 ft atalt i t • ' Wok, end i t 311 1 11 4 2. a n li al Yll6 ll / 1 11, 1"u 41' I QI4OIIII/1 KAMM etiniet. VOL. 6. combusswri ROUSES B .L U ARMY FLANNEL, por sale by GEC?. GRIGG, 0028 ft No. 219 011(180H AIICY. RMY GOO.DSI Sky Blue Kerseys. Sky` Blue Cassimeres (for Officers" Pants). Dark Bkie Uniform Cloths. Dark Blue Cap Cloths. Dark Blue Blouse Flannel& White Domet Flannels. Twilled Gray Mixed Flannels. U. S. Regulation Blanket& 10-ounce and 12 ounce Standard TENT DUCK. in store and for bale by SLADE SMITH, Be, Ao. 39 LEIITLI, AND 40 00IITH FRONT 13T19. 1 au27. 2m PHILADE PRIA , OARPETI.IsTGS. OIL CLOTHS, AND MATTING. WOLFE 80 CO. , COMMISSION lir ET 011 ANTS, No. 132 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIL. 119 A full assortment of Plilladolphia.made Carpeti always In Store 002 2m WOLLTNG, COFFIN, & 00., NO. 220 OICESTNIJT BTRIINT, are premed to CONTRACT FOR THE DELIVERY or ARMY WOOLEN AND COTTON 000DS, elr STANDARD QUALITY. star.ont skupi ;Fly, HAZARD, da HUTCHINSON, No. 112 CHICSTRUT NTRENT, OONNISSION MIDRORANTES rox TEI BALM Or v .. PHILADELPHIA-MADE GOODS. ee29.6m COTTON YARN. SUPERIOR COTTON YARN, No. 10, FOB BALE BY FROTHING:RAM & WELLS. 002-ti ARMY BLANWMTS, GOVERNMENT STANDARD, FOR SALE BY FROTHINGHAM WELLS. AGENTS. an 29-11 OODEN AND WILLOW • WARE. OODEN AND WTT , LOW WARE. A. 11. FitziErcr , a t 33 hiAREZST and 5 North FLFTIL 'Street, rztuart;Lrar.A., WHOLESALE DEALER Dr WOODEN AND W]liLOW WARE. Simla OR band, s full Stock of RIBS ) BUCKETS, ORITRSB, lIIRABIIRES, BROOMS, WHISKS, FANCY BASKETS, WAM, SOBITB, and SWEEPING BRUSHES, LOOKING- GLASSES and WINDOW PAPER, A. FULL ASSORTMENT OF CLOCKS, Nate, Rooters, Mew Buckets, Nest Boxes, BROOM CORN, BANDL.BB, AND WIRE, IVAEBBOARDS, ROLLING and OLOW/718 FINS, FLOOR AND TABLE OIL CLOTHS, 80HOOL, MARHET, and DEtTNEB BABIEETS, Paper Bags, Indigo; Blacking, Matches, Medi, Barrowe t Carriages, Hobby Waves, Igo &a. All goods sold M LOWEST NET GASH PRICES. LARGEST STOCK IN THE UNION. strangers visiting the city are invited to look through this Establishment, which is the largest of the kind in this country. Also, the only Wholesale Agent for IL W. PTITNABVEI CLOTHE&WEINGEB in the State of PenanlYanla. selB-2ra YARNS, BATTS, & CARPET CRAIN. WADDING WADDING! W&D - DlNctr WADDING, B&TTS, TWINES, WICKING, COTTON YARNS, O&UPST GRAIN, &a., &a, THE LARGEST STOCK IN THE CITY, IN STORE, And 808 sent, at MA'NUIPAOTURERS I PRIOR3, by A. H. FRANC3ISC3US, No. 433 MARKET and No. 4 North ENTE Street. sell-2m yARNS, BATTS, AND CARPET CHAIN., The subscriber is prepared to sell when wanted: 50,000 lbs. Carpet Chain—Cotton ) Lin en, and Woolen. 50,000 lbs. Cotton Yarn—Nos. from 5 to 20. 10,000 lbs. Single Jute and Tow Yarn. 100,000 Sheets Black Wadding. 5,000 Bales all grades Cotton Batts, from 12 to 50 ets. per lb. 1,000 Bales all• grades Wick. 1,000 Bales all grades Twino---Cotton and Linen. And a general sesortnrent of TWINES, TIDY 00T. rON O WITS, go., at the LARGE. FOUR-STORY STORE, No. 242 NORTH THIRD STRIANT, (Corner of New St.) As I am ecdely in the Yarn brudness, I am prepared to tell the above goods lower than any other house in this My. se2o-21n R. T. WHITE. yARNS, BATTS, CARPET-CHAIN. 2,000 Bales of Batting, of all gradea. 1,000 Bales of Black Wadding. 800 Bales :of Wicking. 1,000 Bales of Cotton Twine. 12 ; 000 Powids of Cotton Yarn. 20,000 Poundo of Colored and White Carpet Chain. 500 Coils of Manilla, Jute, and Cot ton Rope. Also, Coverlet Yarn, Bed Cords, Wash Lines, and a !all stock of Goods in the above line, for ode by A. H. FRANCISOUS. sa le 2to Vtft VAVICIOT axon 5 Itrarortb IOTTP , PYI sflmoort riIEBRA COTTA MANuFAcToBar. Banging Vases. Tease Flower PO* Orange Poti. Yarn Vases. Ivy Taaea. Jaamln (loupes. Oasmoletti Itenalseanee. Oassolette Louts XVI. Lava Vases Antkne. Pedestals, all !AVM Consols and Oariatadee. Partin Busts. For gale ROO M , ihr an b d ie to r tte Trade. 1010441.XIIITNINE041t. F 1141; APPLE SAP SAGO °REESE, for sole by BECODZEI B WITALIAMB, Nur 10T tiOnth irATIUS eked« . . . • . • ..- -- ' - . , 77.7,-;:_••_._ .........."\-47•"' ~:, it '-, :•°' •:; ---. , . , - '''',.. , r t : :1 - , - • 1:. , , ' 4 ' ' • :'\ \ 1 1 ' t I N \ - • ,,H , •: \ s : ::: .., ' i t i f: :; i f ///' _ix "fr., .40Poiffto,-,--. " ti.;~• , . • ( 1 : , . . . r,-- ,_ Al:l,k, .__ . .... _ ,• It . ' . _ : '.'g ..- L.-'''',.:4 ...ii.-' _ ,/,',<:-, ',..--ii , - : • ~ ' , 4 ,, .. ;,..., : ._:4' .- -. 7 , -v---.‘.,., :--,.1------- -(,‘ ..,,,..i - '*•l'pr,.,----..: - W - - , = - 3.1, t 1---,:,,,.,..,..'",,,inril 4 ' -;;-... `. p' , ..,.. -s k.' _L- - .. :-; r.. 1111 . 1 En ' ''''•-•.---.'-- • ,'''2./.;-- '• ; ,. .A.-';, ; r •- • - ''''': ".,-,--.4..--L-.----,' - './'''' ; ; ; . 7 . ' 7 . •:: • ! ? .; k 17:' r '•" f -V - '';'''''''"'l'' ''''''''" '''''' • !,,,?':- • ;.-1: -.''''• '' -'... -.;.--"-- W. -,- - ...0 - 1 . 4 ' 1 4A '. f • v ; •- '''' '' ''' -• -'''- ' ;g• . • 'r :1 1.1 fq . _ .', ;-7 '-•-,€-',-,,,t,- - . .. 4 „,, - 1 {:' '• k '-'2,',77-'*„ . i",, ..-gtk.„ - -- , i7-..;-•;aiii;,.._ : - .3!m; ArOgolu ,:---&-:-V,:•.':-'0,,, ~.,,/,-'.--,-;-_--',.:, af. :' ~„ :.:. 1 ,„ ...24 tt,9 ----.-----* ..- - - , _: , --_,-,,zr,' •,; ,_ ,-(i..F.7.:i 1, . .::/- .. , ...- - 'r... - -,-10gt,,,--•-'•: ,, , , - - - -- - -----....t. 1 7...., , ...,.. - : ,.t..:57? - . • 4 '', ' 4 -.. ,- i . . , '• ' ' " -0` . . ,- '' , ',--,' "- 7 - tlill , 'P•4I ~-, ....erfli 45 , , ..,,,,,:•=)!,,,,,..-------- _____=_ t*P'A.l:.''' -',.,?-. ~ .1 -r ' .-.]!- :7 3 ‘::- '': r .':' ' ' r;'11:-il.1 10 '-'-- '' .0.:',/ .b.-.'-'''''lrigN, ''k -' ''l :1.. 4 '''''' •:":".' ..'-', -,',,.., tl'' ' '' '' ' '':,cY ' '::'''' • "., • ' ' '',S , 7_ ,: , - i , ; “' : ':; , .. '': :' : ' ~ ' '-.-„,..,,, .:. -7,,,. 4 ..,,514:- . 0 . ':1? ri.:-''''1it:..3.6,,,,,, i. , :,19 ,,, ,N? ; r i 0 . - E - . , f. : . 1 1. ,. .'; . ...;Zi;: . , ---- •: -- 1 - ;11 '_ . 1 ' . 1_40- ! , - 4-,-:- C 1.4 Z. - -' -'- 1- , :d .„. .„..„ ' -; VN -2- ='''':'''''''''''—'-.';': :': ' ! ' ' l' • ' 'I 1- . :;'2"-' ''c l.'-' - 1 .-----" ,;::p...- .7! , :',.= ---:---:.---- '- ' 7 ' . -, ..'•-tu ',-',. ma ii---- —. „_, r 7 r - 40.,f..,, 7 - .. . 4 . ..:' ~...._ . . • . ~...............m 3. - . ~.... ~.„..,. . --......................' , ,-,. • - . . .. - . • _ .. ~ , , „ .. • ~, • ~ . • . . . . - . , tgarm...........=....--.—__ NE sT-.7.•-e. OLOAKB AND tikolll.B It N../ Oland fie. • Fine Black Oloth Olciike. .• C. 4 Black Beavere.fcr Cloaks; BYRE & LANDFILL, 0c22 FOURIR and ABOH. pIA full ageortment of the shove on hand at LO " A LL WOOL BED BLANKRTS , A full assortment of alma-- " 9.4-10.4--11.4 —l2 4; All wool, medium and fine. Extra quality large size Blankets. Also Gray army and Florae Blankets. Knee Wrappers, Travelling Blankets. ocThtf 811 A Rl'Llfo33 B 11,01 ITER& fIOLORED POULT SOIES. %." A i full line of plain coloreil— Brabracing all the rich, dark shades, Neat figures, single and double faced, Bright colored Checks and•Plaide. 813ARPLESS BROTHERS, °err-if CHESTNUT and EIGHTH Streets. r113.010E - DRY GOODB—just re- IL/ cell/ed. Brown Poplins, Plain and Figured. Brown Wool Poplins, Double Width. Iderinoes of all Shades. _ Wool D'Eaines, Plain and Figured. Cotten and Wool WLaines—a nice line. Figured Bietinoee. • A lull Hue of Plain Shawls. A full line of Gay Shawls. One lot of Black Figured lifohairs, at 25c. Biz lots of Brown Alpacas, choice. A fall line of Oassitneres. A'full line of Testing. (JOHN EL STOKES, ocB . TOR .AROH Street. fIOOPER & OONIULD are selling %.„1 rapidly, from a fine stock, the following desirable GOODS: Bleak Velour Bop, from 94 Ma. to $1.38. Blues, Greens, Browns, and Purples at $l. Black French Iderinoen, 75, 87%, 95, and $1.25. Black Alpacas, the cheapest stock in town. Delalnes, Paramattas, cheap Reps, bo., deo. Blue Dross Stuffs. OHBAP AIIOTION LOTS. stripe Brozhe'Shawls, $4, $5, $6, $7, and 118: Broche.hordered Shawls, black centres, $3.5040 $B. OLGAR 11.0051. Water proof and Winter Oloaks. Woollen Shawle, Misses' Shawls. Balmoral and HOOP Skirts. OLG &KING CLOTHS. - BOYD, SC: STROUD, NO. 32 NORTH FOURTH BTRZET, KIM now opens large new stock or CHINA, GLASS, AND. QUEENSWARE. 0c22-1m THE WILLCOX & GIBBS a.. rAMILT BBWIIqG MAOI3INT43 have been great!, Improved, milking It ICITTINIGLY NOISELESS, and with Se)f-adjtuting Hemmers, are now ready for Jule by TAIII.BANIEB A BWING,, ea 2741 715 OHEB/'1•117T Street. WIIEELER . & WILSON. BEwma MACHINES, 628 CHESTNUT STREET, rals-8m PHILAMILPHiI.. RETAIL DRY GOODS. EYRE da LA.NDELOI.4 E. & L. FOURTH. AND ARCH. FOURTH AND ARCH. FOURTH AND ARCH. OPENING FOR FALL:. BALMORAL SKIRTS, GOOD BLACK SILKS, STAPLE LINEN GOODS, BLACK STELLA SHAWLS, NEW WOOLEN SHAWLS, MUSLINS BY TBE PIECE, REPS, ORDERED COLORS, RENCR PLAID FLANNELS, FULL 6TOtli OF WOOLENS, - RICHEST PRINTED GOODS, NEW STYLE DRESS. GOODS, GOOD COL'D POULT DE SOIE, MAGNIFICENT DRESS SILKS, MAGNIFICENT PRINTED GOODS teloonwatt N EW MOURNING STORE. NEW MOURNING STORE. Every aruele for MOURNING WEAR, Purchased by one of the firm in Eu rope. M. & A MYE'R.S, 0e22.6t 926 attEiTEUV Street. cc DEEP Mani NIN G 481'28 " IN EIGHT .:BOURS' NOTIOE, -AT THE “NEW MOURNING STORE,” 926 CHESTNUT STREET. 0e22-Gt M. & A. MYERS & CO. UP STAIRS DEPARTMENT. Fall and Winter Cloaks. ' Black Thibet Shawls. Striped Broche do. Broche Bordered do. - Woollet do. BOYS' CLOTHING. Jackets and Pants. Sacks, Overcoats, &c. Suits made to order. COOPER & CONARD, se4lo-8m 8. E. cor. NINTH sea 1118.1iKET Ste JAS. R. CAMPBELL & CO., IMPORTERS AND CASH . DEALERS fl DRY GOODS. AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, 72T CHESTNUT STREET, Have just received, and are now offering, magnificent Linea of SkLKS, SHAWLS, 84 DRESS GOODS, ESPEOIALLE ADAPTED TO THIS SEASON. °ea-tr. QIX LOTS OF OHAIVE LAINE K. 7 long BEOO.IIB BRAWLS, from • attell on ) 'Wei we Intend selling at last year's prices. Also, Two lots of open centre long Brocbe StiaWia Strips Broobe and Blanket Shawls. . Open-centre Shawls, woven borders. Long and sgnare Plank Thibet ShowlS. ,- • English tesd , water.proef Otoskings. Water. proof Cloaks, ready-made. EDWIN' BALI, k BROTHER-, 0022 28 Sants - BBOOND etreet V ELVET CLOTHS LADLES' OLOAICS. Black mixed Velvet Olathe. Brown-taxed Velvet Cloths. Frosted Beavers, all grades. Black- mixed water-proof Clothe. BYRE. El . LAN DELL, VOURTE and AMOR. lOU OllE2'l% E. lid. i`+TEEDtiE. WHITE GOODS ) LINENS, EMBROIDERIES. MIXONS, to which additions are made of all 0e25-11 NOVELTIES. 1024 CHESTNUT STBEEIT Large lotslOassimeres at 75 ets.,to $1 and upwards. Fine Black Broadcloths. Bibbed Clothe, heavy Tricots, fine Castor Beavers. Overcoat Clothe, Undertaliers' Olathe, ac., &o. COOPER GONARD, oc2O ' S. E. cor. NINTH and MARKET Streets.: CHINA AND QUEENSWARE. SEWING MACHINES. CUTLERY. FORMAN & ELY, Ea. 130 PEGG STREET, PHILLEELPHIA, . , MANUFACTURERS OP • PATENT CAST-STEEL TABLE CUTLERY; Alan, the BUT and CHEAPEST ARMY KNIFE, FORK, and-SFOON*.H: , - -- THE HAItIciT. „ Warranted , • . 0 - AST7STEL :FORK& 'i924-wfin3ni COrTON WC/01., .A ll CARPET MANUTAUTOBEBS, Hardware Merchants, Lamp it anufacturers, Plumbers, &0., NOTION, that every description of Tin Work, Bram Oaatings,fitamp. ing (Including 111 military work), of aunerbir mattes°. qua, can ba obtained on 'order, of, JOSEPH LENNEG, Manufacturer, 1 6 / 6 , 1617, and 1610 FRANCIS Street and RIDGE Avenue. oa2o I.m* B AY RTJM—In Puncheons and. Wine CH444116E3 OAUSTAIRS, 729 WALNUT &Mt gije .4re MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, Current 'Literature. In recent fiction there is - a -steal- g of tli Peterson has published the translation of Dumas' stories hitherto not given in Enirt is called " The Twin Lieutenants ; or, rril is \ dier's Bride," and is a military wee), a good deal of Napoleon's wars in German F ussia, but scarcely any personal inci i , Napoleon and his attendant satellites are ili with force and fidelity. Mira higher inlin t is " Andric de Teverney," also by Dumas, eluding the "Memoirs of a Physician" en three continuations, the famous Cagliostro fig in all. • Of that handsome publication, the Hoes Edition of, the works of C .. arks Dickens, Masi by Darley•and Gilbert, four new volumes wil issued immediatelyliy Sheldon & Co., New •• Tbia new portion contains " Dombey and printed at the Riverside Press, on laid sized pa and very neatly bound in cloth. Darley',s ilia Lions, engraved on Steel by F Girsoh, V. Ha J. Duthie, and S. R. Sohoff, represent Cap Cattle in Ambush, the first appearance of B Cuttle feeling Florence Dombey's pulse, and Mrs. Brown at the feet of her handsome, eon daughter. We have so repeatedly referred to beauty and completeness of thia edition of Diok that we have now only to say, that its attraotie arein no way dimi. ished in the handsel its press spirited publishers. It can be procured from J. Lippincott & Co: , Tiokaor & Fields have brought out, with the usual e!egance, a "blue and gold" volume, co: Mining all of the poems written by that genial wi that wise humorist, that humane philosopher, thi unpedantic scholar, that' brilliant humorist, Di Oliver Wendell Holmes. This , volume will find it way into ten thousand homes, into thrice ten thr sand hearts. It is properly illustrated with aful length portrai. of the author—against whose more character is recorded only one blot—namely, h "Lending a Punchbowl;" We hold , that such • vessel, so well desoribed by him in the ballad whio records its history, never ought to have bsen led , The use of such vessels is to be filled, emptied, an replenished. Were we to visit Boston, we shout almost be afraid to wound Dr. Holmes', insoepti bilities, by a'sking, after the dinner-cloth' had bee. removed, whether that lent bowl had been re turned. Never lend a punch-bowl or a book :.the: are capricious in returning. Probatum. est ! •The above Holmes' Poems, and also " Sketeliim from Nature," are beautifully printed by Welsh Bigelow, & Co , (the University Press,) Cainbridge 4 1 but their chef d'teuvre is a new edition of D Tocqueville's famourDemocracy in America, coral plete in two volumes, Bvo Few books, in thil country or abroad, are so well printed, wig.papen and binding en suite. Is is edited by Frame . ] Francis Bowen, of Harvard, who, taking thc English translation (by Henry Reeves) as the basis has revised and largely .rewritten it, with the ad ditione. made to the recent Paris edition now firs translated. For the first time, we !laic+ an English rendition of De Tocqueville whiCh does him justice. To the "Democracy in America" are here ap pended De Tocqueville's " Demoorady in Switzer land," a. report made to the Academy of the Moral and Political Sciences in 1847; his Speech in the Chamber of Deputies, a month before the• French Revolution -of 1848, and a sketeh of his' life. For a fuller account the reader is referred ti; the Memoirs, Letters, and Remains of De Teague rifle, in two volumes, pUblished some months ago' by Ticknor 41t Fields. The new edition. of "De mocracy in America," which may be procured:, from George W. Childs, 628 Chestnut street, isf . published by Sever it Francis, -Cambridge, ap- • parently a new house. If so, it - has commenced well.- ' 1 Another elegant Boston publication, alight in site but neatly printed and illustrated, is J-. 4. Tilton's fac;sinille reprint Of Thomas kciwbothaata "Sketching from Nature." It is a improve,. American, from the thirty-third Eagliiiii &title(' and contains twonty•aeven fine wood-outs. .. ' Carleton, late Rudd & Carleton . one of the most enterprising • publishers in New York, has' lately brought ou. some.- popular 4 works. Athong these, "Jean Valjean," the fifth and Anal part of. irfctor4 Huge% 'rehei ktddeziserit.iale44lteehfitibial.letie '- tikes the lead. Mr. Ciiiiitiin has bad the transla tion made expressly for himself. The translation by Mr. Laseelles Wraxall, promised by the London book-trade some months ago, has not yet appeared, - ......---:...tiuka._ '..it,.llllble that this American Hugo's romance -.-. -.......„,,.._--.--...1,.._ar.L.t It is spun out by episodes; yet who weald part with with them?" The battle of Waterloo was never. so well described; the oharaoter — of Louis Philippe never so well sketched ; nor the gamins of Paris so truly photographed as in these episodes. The book is a- sermon, in the example it shows and the moral it inculcates. '"-- Worthy of ranking with \pe Gasparin's recent works on America is "The SlaZ , z Power : .Its Char acter, Career, and Probable 4Yetigns: being-an Attempt to Explain the Real Issues involved in the American Contest. By J. E Cairnes, M. A., Lou-, don." Tire author is/Professor of Jurisprudence' and Politiord Economy in Queen's College, El'alway,' (Ireland,} and nothing written upon the iresenf American Crisis has more folly appliod , the . Logip, of facts Re shows that the contest is-not one if• t tariffs, but that •, Slavery is at the bottom of t • quarrel," ar.d,at a distance of 3;000 miles from • e scene, Mr. Cairnes. justifies the action of Presidint Lincoln and his Cabinet, and indeed may be sail to • have predicted its•reoent most important oper4ion. In all respects, this book is worthy of atteition, Very different from the romance of Hugo or the arguments of Cairnes, is Walter Barrett, Berk, whose "Old Merchants of Now York City" cinsti: tutes a fat 12mo. volume of nearly 500-pagei also published by Carleton. These sketchea f eon*ing personal recollections and notices•of the oil New York traders, have a fair sprinkling of /*dote,. and must be interesting in New York. Thiy were. commenced in The Leader, a Sunday papers and attracted muoh attention. They have been collected without much revielon, and added to. &second mries is promiSed. This book will not serve fM; thoreugh reading, for its- repetitions and- desultorY..inanner are against that, but . it will do to-take uplaid•dip • into now and then. It' his 'un Indei T le!nrorst we have ever seen, conbanini.over eiev mired Daises, in alphabeticiirorder i lt is trne,•fit thrown: in " higgledy-piggledy," (as they say ite(lorinecti , out) so aa-to make it a* . trobble 'to find a •sference. Thus, T opens with Trinity Church, fotowed• by. Tontine Coffee-house, Talcot, Theatrical ine,.Tal hot, Towne, and so on. In a new edition, he value of the book will be improved - by having e Indezn properly arranged. The-literary execu n of the work la very careless, and a detestable t..tite of expression runs•through theole. Mr. Barret is not particular in his syntax, t.continu- I idly breaks Prisoian's. head in such ntences as. “It was her that attracted the atterlion of the. Empress Eugenie." With many Until, "The Old , Merchants of New 'York" will have numerous readers. The author runs much* the same track of recollection on which the late pr Francis used to glide so rapidly. All of Mr: Cirleton's-publica-. tions are on sale at Petersons' an. id Hazard's." . . . .. t , Rays of Light for Dark. Ron ; Or . * Comfort for the Afflicted," a a compUatiem-mede with some judgment, from various .4061.4 . tne: Chosen People " is a History of the Jewaresub.up from, the, Bible, and ending with the flnishingnf the'Senond f 3 Temple, in the reign of DariUS, e tholMsS/C4l of This book appears epted•for Sunday Nehemiah. Schools . Published by . Anson . : F, ',R - ,nilolph, New York. *little volume, published by O . IE . P , Burn-' ham, Boston, is of more than.o iiiiiinteiest and merit. It bears the title of "ThiStars anti Stripes in Rebeldom," and consists of dories of papers by. f, Federal prisoners (privates) i L'ew Orleans, Tea % oaloOsa, Salisbury, and Riohm d, from November, o 1860, to January, 1862. Tkiiipi nets, to wile away the dnlnesa of captivity, wro a weekly .journal, which they called The Stars r i d Stripes, - and, on the whole, wrote very well. he dullest things in the volumehe poetry i 3 above par, and the critioal sketch of Coritaiiiporary . Orators, by Philo, aro very good. The political and religious tone of the w le publication might to recommend it, as well as i ability • . . .. "Eyes and Ears," a 124. vol. of •410 -pages, contains selections from coFtributiOns to the New York Ledger, by Henry Wsld Beecher, with a few from the Independent. Sone are good, many aro middling—none are dull, they have been written, sometimes in great hasce,Msupply the press, whioh continually calls out ")tore,mere !" like the Giaour in " Vathek," andimast• be supplied. Mr. Beecher is too -facile a Isiter: Alis style is na tural, and he dresses up Ad thoughts so that the i l multitude fancy them to e new: One of- the best flits here is the new famo s story of the Dog Noble and' he Empty Role, wh* h shows Mr. Beecher to be a: humorist: - LippitoAt, and also Peterson, has this beck on sale. I We notice the Art Jgarnal, a London monthly (W.. li. Zieber, South pird street), chiefly to point out its main feature o attraction just now. This is the illnitrated catalogue of the International Exhibition, now publishing in it, at the rate of 24 pages a month, so that) at the close of the year, these -portions 'may be detached ea as to form a se-' parate and valuable dolume, abounding in first class engravings of tileimost noticeable articles ex hibited. .It I'2 the only . catalogueworth anything hat has yet appeared, The usual atettl'elKravill,gs of the, Art Journal for October , are froth pictures by Turner, R. A., and Dobson, A. I. We have received the following miscellaneous publications : The Beek of Days,- parts T and 8, published by'.T. Lippinoott & Co- ; journal of the. Franklin Institute ; Dental Cosmos, pubi fished by S. B. White ; A Mil:tarsi ; Manual for; Schools, by F. N. Freeman, A. M. ; American. Exchange and Revitle, for October, publisted.by Wheting& G 0,.; Frank Leslie's Monthly Jour nal, from T. B. Pugh; The Sovereignty of God, , a serman by Henry A. Boardman, D. D., published by request 'of his hearers; The Pulpit a Ctvilizer, by Rev. E. B::Adans,lrotrV" Presbyterian Quar terly Revieli:"' The Am er:lean journal of Me dical Sciences, for ),Cteber, 1862, edited by Isaac Rays, M. 'D. by "Blantihard & Lea; Frank's Prferill'; 'O4 'the' Ranipart of Strasburg, by the Rev .:R2 translated Genf the Ger. man. • -• • Blackwood's Magazine, for October, New York , edition, contains a continuation of Mrs -Oliphant's, " Chronicles of Oarlingford ;',.' a - further - portion' of Bulwer's ~,, Ciaxtoniana;l' arid Yery able papers , upon Italy and Trance, and Germany and •her Prospects. The most noticeable paper, howeveir,- ifi the open& one, entitled "Ten Days in"Rieh mond : " commencing with the writer's arrival there,' en the 26th juriel, 1962, and is dated " Washingtoe, July 27, 1862." It is. strongly tinged, or • rather dyed-in-the•wool with Secessionism, attpsing the North for its treatment of the South, predicting the accession of the border States M the rebellion, and Odeolitringlhat "Stonewall" Jackson would moob k irtiz" bably be in Maryland and Pennsylvania in the art- , turon. < Was the writer in the secret:? ; Prom Mr. Zieber we have also received the No vember number`of the Eclectic Magazine, with a portrait of the Empress of Austria, who, by the way, is second - a -direct — desaenda-.t of Josephine Beaubarnais, is -cousin to Napoleon :111. The se t leetion of articles in the Eclectic, from foreign pe. , riodicals, is made with taste and judgment—largely 1 from publications which do not circulate in this , " ceentry. For kample, the personal account of the EmpressEngenie, from the St. James' Maga zine, is entirely new. to American readers. Alexandre Dairies.* Fourtee' year's ago, flushed With the success of Monte Clarzsto , and the ; , Three Mosquetaires, Alexandre Dunks published' his Memoirs ofia Plmeicient, which has been followed by four con thmations, translations of which, all but the last, Andrie de Tavernev, have'been befere the public in English translations published by Peterson, who now completes the whole story, by producing the bale, in two voltimes Bro., to match the other pinta of the series. The long time of twenty-four years, 1770 to 1704, is included in this work, and , among its characters appear the leading personages I . of the French Monarchy and Republic. Louis X V. and Madame du Barry; Louie XVI. and Male Antoinette; Mirabean and Lafayette; Rousseau and Robespierre; Marat 'and Pe Bylines ; Louis XVIII. and Charles X ; Cardinal de Rohan and Madame do la Mothe ; Necker and the Duo d'Ot- leans; Dr. Guillotiu and Camille Desmouline ; Tons i Paine and Edgeworth the Confessor—in short, the notable persona of a most important time figure in this story, drawn with masterly skill, and among them the famous charlatan, Balsam°, or Cagliostro, towers 'like Satan when presiding over an infernal council in , Hades. Here, with And?* de Teverney, ends one of Dumas' most attractive - storiet. Mainly histoiical, too, but full of individual interest. We would especially draw attention to the fact that is conclusion of the tale is new first rendered into :nglish. The London translator never got beyond I The Queen's piecklace," which is the second Of 1 , e five parts -of the work. _Like the preceding Iscions, these yolemeS are printed upon finepaper th good type... ?it Andrte dnTaverney ; or, the Downfall of the French 12imirchy. Being the conclusion of ii The Memoirs of a I,Peysicien," "The Queen's Necklace," "dig Years ater," end "The Comatose of Ghterney." By &Levin r Domes. Bxeressly translated from the French, m easly for this edition, by Henry Li. Firathams Two biases B've. Philadelphia: T. B. Peterson kßro trs. . , 4 , ROM THE _KANAWItei VALLEY. Th.; Rebels Abandoning the Kanawha—Cenjec. tares as to their Object: . „ A gentieden just from Charleatms, Kanawha, recently arrived at Point Pleasant, Western Virginia, bringing the latest intelligence of the operations_of the rebels in that place and its surromudings... Elia opportunities for . . obtaining information were-4 good as -Idly J . 1 .9; al man being a resident of the place up tollie time of leivinifit, - a few daytibefo-e . • • There were no rebel troolisib 'Oharlestosi.*_ the- time :ab re he left-except Jenkins' carattlo' we ••' nroentee--- through the country, hunting - down Union vim", stealing horses, An. The body of their army bad left some days befoye. d. hey had taken severed dap!' rattone wlat au... - together with their sick and.wi.onded, and all al taste _ a _.. ficta_,_and had hurriedly _ retreated up - the valley towsi : Wintiliter. ProminentaiebePoisisens. wife have taken an active part with them were gee leaving in the same direction. Whether they were retreating from the val ley, after collecting all the-available horses and pro party ~• or whether, rolling upon thee uniform slowness of Federal operations, they were going to aid in some km- - portent operations of Lee's, expecting to- get beet in time to meet any advance up the Kanawha ; or whether they had become alarmed for their safety in the sear, are conjectures, of the truth of which nobody could learn. It is possible that Lee, finding himself sorely in need of troops, may have called Lering.to•his assistance, sup. posing Jatkins , forces sufficient to hold the vettev for the vrete=t i and yet it is hardly probable that the holding of ouch en important acquaehion as the Kanawha Salinas would be committed to so snail a force, and we cannot believe that they intend to abandon• it entirely. The meet reaeonnble conjecture is, that certain indications in Mtn r ' onarten have bad an influence-in inducing their retrograde movement. It is not lawful to specify at ere eent, but we treat the quiet of camp-life in this depart ment will ere long give place to scenes of activity. Desertions were common in the rebel army. At least floe hundred rebel troops were left bebindas deserters, some of whom he was personally acquainted with— Witcelirg Integigencer. 'ME INARAPVKENTIJOICY. The Campaign Ended—New•Campaian•Daviweh —Lebanon to be the Base—illorgan's Opera tions. A correspondent of the Gincinnattl • Gazette, writing from Grab Orchard, the headquarters of General Buell on the ldth init., says:. _ I waanp this morning with the can, read?. -booted and sparred., to accompany the•army to its pursuit of Bragg. I rcde forward to the advance camp of General Orttten;* den ' bat there was -no movement. - Wagon trains were' etch in park i• the men were imprgislan tents out of rails and strawi the 'beef contractors were busy supplying fresh beef rations. There ass a lull in rho preparations, I returned to town, and at the hotel 'where Gen 'Buell has his headquarters,' learned that the obese nit& been ebandoned—that'abe rebel was gone. Imagine my die gust---ono hundred and ten miles frommail communisa tion, and tete important information from official Judi vinuals that the chase had bean I/Lyon upland that- Bragg was .The campaign is anoply a failure—a failure. in the completeit significance of the word. Bragg is gone, es- Coped from an army trice his strength, and which could haw overwhelmed him at. any hoar it bad dared to strike. Bat though opportunities have several times been afforded it, its commanding. officer has not had the meral courage to risk a defeat for the chance of a victory of er SD inferior enemy. Bragg it gone—is safe, and gone with 'amanita atoree of provisionaand clothing. Tho .ro tectition and the result of the campaign are alike dis graceful and disastrous. The five hundred dead of Per ryville have died in vain. , Tbs march front*, Harrodeburg to Crab Orchard was ac compliebed at amore rapid me than the march of the. few day. immediately preceding-it. Bragg war' known to be far in tha advance, and on Tuesday morning the march -was reamed, an early start being made from, Harrodsburg. Generale Crittenden and IttoCook's corps. moved by the tame route which Bragg bed taken_ and encamped at Lancaster. The reception of the army at Stanford was encouraging and gratifying, though the are beginning to fail to appreciata.shese grand dis plays of , patriotism from great strapping men, who arkas &bleae any tnliear arms for the carm. .A.IIOTHZ.R. CAMPAIGN. I am told.ilds Morning that a new campaign ha'. been determined on, and that it is to be prosecuted Imme diately and in Gen. BneWs most vigorous style. It is argued—o - s,lt was argued in-a council of war held last night—that Bragg will not be able to hold him army to. gather, and that it must be disbanded or separated into tread ate*, to subsist as best It cast• This is a rondo stioml consider by no means positive. I do not think . Bragg can subsist lila. army in Southern Kentucky or Vast Tennessee, Nat be can Is Middle Tennessee, and this fact is easily demonstrated. It needs no proof to one acquainted with. the productive region to w h ich I alluce 5, and It .ta therefore, to be sttp pk.sed•shat Bragg wilt.penetrate toward Nashville, and endewor to carry on the camtialgn which it is evident the eonfederateast Murfreesboro' are too weak to. ao ccuallab. This supposed alternative of Bragg was Pre-. skn'led in the council as &reason why a campaign from Kentucky toward !diddles Tennessee should be ammo-diately prosecuted. - It to now underatood that it was determined to make a campaign toward Nash -411 e, with Lebanon, ILerattokr, u the base of operations and supplies, until high water in the rivers shall havaehabled ca to take advantage of the Cnoshorland and Tennessee rivals. In confirmation of thie, I, learn the t this morning a deepatch left head quarters here ordering , aLI anpidiee for the .&rmy. of the Ohio to be sent to Lebanon. lam not aware that rail road Communication bas been opened to Lebanon. Yon will remember that a branch road of the Nashville Rosa rune to Lebanon. it is thought that it will be WHIMIe to keep this length of road open. finch a campaign will, of course, necessitate a retrograde movement from this point, or at treat westward toward oo!umbla It will De necessary, I suppose, to keep north of the Cumberland river until thle change of bole has been acoomplished. IMAGO'S ARMY, IN CRAB, MateenAßD. Bragg's gamy occupied inat ten hours in passing through Crab Orchard. moving at a rapid rate. The men stated that.they were being nearly marched to death, and that they had orders on Monday morning to march until Tues day Mien without halting. There was, however, no stragglers; Bragg does not allow them. A. scrong rear guard ►eeps-Shan in line. They know it to be death to straggle, and they keep in the ranks. The rule of Bragg is moat despotic, but he is much admired by his men. The citizens say that Sfiy-six regiments, of ail kinds of arms, passed through Crab Orchard. It was thought the army was about forty dye thousand strong. They took Posses- Mon of all the stores in she town, and the euertermaatere paid for the goods at the most liberal rates, in most ex cellently-engraved Confederate seri p, wbioh the recipients sell at a, heavy 'discount to anybody foolish enough to purchase it. MOISAAA'S OPERATIONS. [From the Louisville Journal, Tbursdity.) .• We have bad vague accounts of the fight at L•xington on Saturday. Company H, of the 4th Ohio OartdrY, under Lieut. Shoemaker, and numbering fifty. five men. was stationed In Lexington acting improvost guards. Com panies A, B, and 0, were in camp on the Clay farm, &bent a mile and • a half from the oily,the only officers with them being Capt Bober and Lieu t. Henry. They numbered some three hundred men. About half pest five in the morning, Capt. Bob., ordered the men to die .They were in the sot of doing so when a large body of hforgan's cavalry dashed in upon them, haritg cap tured the pickets - The Cantata ordered the reee. s trito line of battle, Lieut. Henry ,- throwing out: hie Oien as Morgan had about. Wl* thor4and Men and ER .2 three pieces otartillery, which he brcmghtnp arid played effeentaskrAtionihr forces — - Morgati4eutobed.ta-sportion of his beminand.auff sent them toga is tt And tear; and .coming up thelodured a volley into the :V. - deride 'fleet Robby, teeing 'ilia he Waesurroundsti, and 'that reditance wasetteielese, • rontlrral We lost six killed and airman) , wounded. :ten?, be,greee werilehie After the surrender two 'of the Federal cavalry Were ehot in a stable, but not killed; : tic:abet of Morgan's men were wounded, but how many ()fir informant cannot 'state. Morgan took the hories, hate/Beets, bianketer, 'Au:', from our cavalry, psroled them, and immediately dashed into Lrxiugton. captutinglhe prevant'suerd, and serving them in the Ramie n twiner, and without stopping say length Of time, Moved of on the Versailles turnpike, By this operation he scoured 'about 850 horses, with all their equiphate.s, as many prisoner, and the arms and accoutrements of the Morgan is a thickset, well formed man, weighing about. one hundred end severay five pounds, dark c pl,xiOn, and wearing a moustache and whiskers with a sandy tinge. Re wore a plain suit of gray cloth, with. out any distinctions of rank, patent leather jack boots, ' and mounted on a superb, horse. Ilis . teen were rough, uncouth dare- dosiik, very coarse in their tiniguege, and rude -in their treatment of prisoners They carry no thing .brd their arras, whii h ,are first class, and -their haversacke or any other innumbrarice-.. and live „Utten -the country through which they pass Their horses, are of the beat Wood, flee% enduring, and Well "cared fora They fight recklessly., travel rapidly, and do an immense deal of mischief. The °Moore gene rally stay with the,men. Resistance in Fayette County—The NUM , ber of Men Taken from Different Colin - ties—lnCidents on the Dccasion. • . 'TEe — dfiners , Journal sons: On Thursday morning of last week theionnisioner John P. Hobart. in pareueuce of instructions received by bite, entered upon the work of drafting the number of mem required- in the several dis tricts of dchnylkill county to make up the full quote of each. The courprooioi was used for the purpeae, and large ntrnbtr of spectate' wire present the whole number enrolled in this county was 13.199, of which, at the time of the draft, 4.080 were exempted, leaving on the enrolment, end subject to drsfe, 9.119. of which, up to Satnrday last, 1,251 had been drat - tel. Snick then the commissioner hes received instructions to exempt all liable to exemption by len, and-thus avoid useless expense and trouble which would artee by tending unfit men to Hirrieburg only to he sent back. Tim die • triote will have to make up by draft the men they fell abort in consequence of these exemptions. Up to the time of the enrollment the whole number of soldiers frem this county, in Pennsylvania regiments, wee 8,8343; in regiments of other States, 29; in the rage ler army and navy, 94. TbeQuota nyder all the care was 6,304, leaving to be drafted 1,868. Between the enroll melt and the draft, however, there were 248 sew enlist ment*. reported from all the districts except Cats, ot. eta Korth al anhelm, which,tit ibis writing, have not y et furniehed their reports of new emistm.mts iu full. Their report., we presume, will reduce the number subject to trait to Genie 1 150. The Muter': Journal has also the following version of the riotous demonstration in Oats township, noticed in The Press a few days ego The Journal semi : One plan adopted by the great moguls here of sham Democracy, at the late election• to make sure of the votes ot the miners of Oass, was to feed them le be• lieve that if they voted the Breokiuridge ticket, and it proved - successful, there would be nu draft iu the county. Of course they believed it, and when after the election the drott seineny came off, the people of Oats became excite°, and early hi. week they went from cot • liery to colliery, etopplog the operations, compel. ling the men to join tnem, until they mustered together. eeveral hundred armed men. Some strangers, seirl ; tee be from Lnzerne, delivered the notices at the sairmlst, ccllietiee. demanding that the men should stop work.; ';~' At Tremont Some five hundred of them, well eiiii4" stopped a train as it wee about leaving wi h some dread: men. They ordered the men to get out, and said that these wh i wanted to go could; but that thoie wno did net want to go might remain, and that they would pro tect theta. - The beedeinarters of the rioters war at the house of e 'men named Kelly, Primrose Bill, where they caroused and bad - a good time generally. In fact &meet too much of a good time, for et that place one of the men accident. 1111 ally shot himself in the head and died soon after. We have not learned his • name. At sweterit the notate entered the store of Mr. John Clayton, and demanded goods. To . enforce their demand they Placed a pistol at the bead of the clerk. and threatened to shoot hint. He remained Sim, however. and refusing to comply with their demands, they finally left without obtainte.g what they demanded. At a neighboring liquor store. however, they wine more fortunate: By aid ot the pistol programme, they cleaned the place out, and left the proprietor high and dry. This mate of affairs was carried on until Wednesday, when thinse Quieted down, some of the men aoknowledg • fog that they had been duped A large number of toe men went to work again yesterday. Willie the excite ment was at its - highest, some of the mon came in to „town to tee their political friends; bat: the two Franks were among the misting, ate gayer wen off somewhere exhibiting hie got up•regardless of-cost new snit of clothes, and receiving the cologratelationa of his friends. FAYETTE 001111 TY. The Pittsburg papers of Saturday contain the follow ing item : • 2 here is a " speck of war" corthe horizon. .The draft ed militia of beitlick and Ballikin township, Fayette county, have deterdmied to resist the conscription, end have tat at defiance the orders of the commissioner to report tbemselvesi for transportation to Camp Alirwe. Under these circumstances Col. (Jelling, of Uniontown, wee dispatched to this city, with authority to obtain the , tervicts .of a sufficient Dumber of troops toeciforie the law, end compel - obedience to the orders of the draft commissioner. He arrived here last evening, by railroad, end - we ,preenme that en armed force will be seat neje ca pture and arm. dim the "rebels," if they do not ytellglieother alter native 18 left to the Hovernment,and if- the -men persist in the foolish stand which limy :.have taken, they will doubtless ‘• truth powder" scones thiin they anticipated. Their continent,. isiaide_eritpinal, and It is to be hoped that they will as* their tour - Dent - cue - broodyecenee --aa•inha w ere witnessed in Luzern° county are re-enacted in - - The lownships.of Bieuskin and Saltilck are mountain dietriote, and it ie said:_inat-e-102.•fort hes been con m in en eligible vellum, , „--,,, eratber thati amender. Tne u -4- ---ba-VW S - ..esis mit that these districts have foreteller!, an nerice rmrprujninanekrtufffrif and illegal. Gr anting flits to be true, they '=are taking a' wrong course to secure their rights — and they had better desist in time. • The aoraerset Herald says on - Thursday last, non. Isaac Bogus, the comentesloner, in compkanoo with or ders received from Harrisburg, proceeded to " draft" the epees of men this county fe required to. tarnish; In accordance with the various reqnisitionsof the Preeddeot. In the presence of a large assemblage, in the court room, rolled tickets containing the names of all the able bodied men. in each township, between the ages of 21 and elf., were placed in separate packages. The townships wore then-railed in alphabetical order, the tickets for each placed in the wheel, and the allotted number empire by a small led—Jack Ogle—who was blinidolded. Oaring the drawings a hushed Artiness pervaded the room, and as each township was disposed of, those who Moped rushed forth as mikes:it's' as boys just released from a school•room. As has been the case everywhere else, the luck appeared to s•ron in streaks." Some little neighborhoods escaped entire y, while others were neatly depleted. Some poor men• with largo families orew the unlucky billet,. whde their near neighbors, perhaps sinsle men. or men with a house full 01 hardy eons, all fit for soldiers, entirely es caped. again, two or three brothers would be drawn out of thesame family. One friend of Imre, with three SODS in the MOM bad bib fourth and only remaining one drawn. Another case was where the buebands of four sisters were drawn'; and yet another where a men was drawn who was forti.fire years old the day preteding the draft, bud in the brief interval could get no chance to claim complier). Oa fintard ay 8500 was freely offered for enbeidtates by *me also wet e able, and we heard of one one where 11700 wee given. Yeiderday, at noon, five companies of the drafted-mlli tia from Westmoreland county arrived in the city by railroad. The companies.were properly officered, whe ther permanently or not, we are mania to say, and are a fine-looking body of men. They marched out to Osiup Howe. where theftoolr.up,their Quarters. There are now neatly fifteen hundred drafted militia quar tered at precept at Oamp Bowe, and the number will be greatly sur,Mented by new arrivals deily.--Pittsburg Dispatch,•2:44 °inst. The drafted MOD of this county have gono to•tbe camp of reodeavous at Harrisburg. They were allowed live days furlough. ' The Oheeter county Record time describe's the scene in West Mester on the day the drafted men's furloughs exylrid, and they came into town to go to the came of rm. de arons : Tuesday last was. the day appointed by the .drafting. commiesioner for Chester county, Mr. Hooton, for all those dratted to report themselves st Wert Shelter. Early in the morning the tido of arrivals commenced, end by nine o'clock our streets were crowded, every pub. ho road leading Into the. borough was filled with every description of conveyance. some oame in by large squads in fonr.borse teams, with horses trimmed off with ribbons, and the stars and stripes floating from the wagons. end vocal manic-.- , " We are marching along," &c. ; others treated it more seriously, mad arrived very Quietly, merry bring accompanied by their friends, who were anxious to be with them as long as they could, the short time allowed them since being drafted giving them. but little time to make arrangements for sin absenoe of nine months. After a substitute was. er.arained and painted, he was taken before theconmistioner, and sworn to the follsw lpg oath ,‘ You swear to obey the Constitutn of the United States, the President of tho United Stab a. all your su perior officers. and that you will net absent yourself ithont leave " 'lb° name was then handed.to the clerk, who entered it in a book alongside ot the prinelpea's name as his sub alitnte. The commissioner received a despatch from the autho ritiee 04 Darrieburg, elating that all who wished to return bonze to remain for one week could do so without baying a furlough. We understand That temporary officer's 'will be ap rotated during the week—each to have charge oleo many men. We are inlormed that they will remain in West Chester next Tuesday night, and start f.;r. Philadelphia on Wednesday. In the city they wilt be placed' in bor. racks in the ncrthern part of the town. 7Pae demand for etbetil attar WIWI pretty extensive, and prices ranged horn 8200 ap to s7oo' ; and one or two capes we heard of still exceeded the latur price. AUGUSTA, October 38—The eattStifutionafixt has a special despatch from Harrodsburg, dated the Web inet , which says: .4 Bragg's first pitched battle took place on the Btb, at Perryville. The enemy bad been following. from Bardstown in force, and also threatenod Frankfort. Withers' division was sent forward to support Sirby smith, while the divisions of 'Amebae), Baokner, and Anderten were countermarched to give haat, to the foe in the rear of our lines The fight opened on our right with artillery; atti A. M. At 8 P. M. the whole line moved in splendld•otyle to close quarters with the enemy for one hour- ands half. The enemy maintained Me potted bravely. Or troops fought like heroes until the enemy began to. falter, whoa our boys moved forward and drove ihern.three or font' miles, entirely off the nettle-Held. In the mean time an attempt on oar left had been repulsed • , . We captured twenty. one cannon, and 5(10 t 600 pri soners, and for want of horses, only, eight pieces were brought off. Our casnalties are estimated at 1,600. Night put an end to the cm:ails& The enemy's Wei Is be. Ileved to be ID( re than double °um. Buell bad 30,000 man. W e lomat with only 12,000, and took prisoners from five ' Onr army is in the highest spirits. At Frankfort the matter was soon ended. The enemy Tinder McCook fled before Tirby flmbh. Withers cut off his rear, took seven hundred prisoners, and fourteen salmons. Bragg's depot being menaced, he at once' withdrew his army to protect It. , Immediately a flag of, truce from the enemy abkad periniselon to bury theirdead. At day light next morning aim the Tight not even a Yankee surgeon was left on the field. Their wounded were all left; our wounded were removed. Oorreyal Polk had a narrow escape. General Bragg rays De has the beet troops in the world. Two thontand Relttinckians have taken arms, and more are organising. flmong our killed is Lieut. bol. Patterson, of the First Tenneesee • Lint. (101. 'Evans, of the Tessa Bangers; Ides. W. P ryor, commissary; Oapt. Cartwright. of- Geor gia ; and Wm. B. May, of Gen. Cialborne'e staff. DISTINCT Ibe now prison building at Toronto, two chapels are to be built, so that the mom bere of the Troteetant. and Boman Catholic faiths may hays klistimt plume of worship. , • THE DRAFT IN PENNSYLVANIA. SOMERSET COUNTY. STBIORELAND. COUNTY.. MONTOUR, COUNTY,. CHESTED.. COUNTY. Bragg's Campaign in Kentucky. LETTER FROM CARLISLE. PA. . - „!;Newspaper Office Demolished. (OorOsemoidene . of The Press.] OARLIFILIN October 24, Considerable excitement was ocoasioned this evening by the demollehing of the American Volunteer printing office. The oircomstanoee were briefly as folio we: Yes terday's Issue of this scurrilous sheet contained an edi torial which could only emanate from the pen of John B. Bretton, from which we quote the following sentence: "They have, in the face of his threats and perseoutious, dashed their clenched fists in his very eyes, and branded him end his tluthlingi thieving, rotten Administration with the seal of their condemnation. Come out of that ckair, enaeanx LINCOLN,' is the demand of the people Cl this State made on Tuesday of bet week." The citizens, and tho " Anderson Troop," stationed, here, having their indignation aroused at this foal use, or rather abuse, of the privllrges of . the prette , after a consultation, deoided• that they would sere the United . 'Clete* Marshal the trouble of °losing this setabAshment.' to, at about dusk, they rep4red to the aloe, about one: hundred in number, where, meeting with no resistance, they wont quietly to work and knocked the once into; " pt," ruining the Nine" with hatchets, and eliciting the type into the etreet, and burning the remaining num. bare of the issue. ooaroaiL. LETTER...FR.OA AEW lORK. NEW YORK, October 26,1882 ptrinac MEETINGS. m gtn ht there Wee another Union War hfiveki be another kit . t the goope i t Insiltats, and the pMitical• plotters against't . artt arranging a large and noisy etwortment fortritxt• ,aek M It is to be hoped et in decade ri ter r . civilization will vote these turbulent gethwingit, pnblic nuisance, and put them on barbtutein'a retired*;; When there is such a multi plicity oilnewspapers atewO have in our day, representing all s'idee'it all seolimate, Praising and laboring every bcey, and ceiling ter the ridiculous mite of two cents per another, there is no earthly necessity for the sort of war tocctthge with whiob this unhappy city is now daily and night* inflamed ; and they serve no better purpose than to show that there are still Americans with sound lungs Did inordinate capacity fur outraging grammar and mill. Quoting the hapless poets. There le nolsaiatualßri itithe Meet. who is RlMple enough to place faith in whit Your stomp oraturs say over and over and over a4ain ram one election to another. thowde go to hear the 'speeches Winne they like the excitement and rude treedutn of the thing; but the mental effect is nil, and each 11)(1D kites LtEllb coder the comforting trupreesion that he has helped to make night hideous, and aided in the crush, from which some wretched being hag oome out without his pocketbook As far as mend effect and common fsetlEo are concerned, there Si hot MUCh . cheiffe moos these meetings•, but whenever the eonoruns te• mocracy gore into the bilbilsebe—say fora times a week— it is always found necessary to flourish torches which have a disreputable emelt, bud tire cation, elatch break. all the WilleoWe In a bluck "le this the country of our fathers 1" cretin= the Honorable Mr. (P B / 4 thery ; ..can it be that the despotic heel of military tyranny ca, indeed, crushing the land of Jeffereunll" Esug ! goes the fleld-piece, Grath ! go the windows. Ail the torches smell very bad, And a delegation of ionacued patriots at once waft upon the nearest barkeeper, with orders for a little more mountain dew out" of the same bottle, Yahoo , . d.rme. WO odes, Three cheers for Jett Davis," and then all One reporters take special minis to say, in their soonest° r.poris of the , 6 meeting," that ,‘ Here the eirstnent Sorokin wee greeted with Wog-continued applanie " Lt's e mod worlo, neon ami,•and humbug is ire presiding in sect. fiENZILAL DIX DECLINES TO be en independent candidate for .Gavrirnor,of this State, and writes to a friend iu New York to tell him all about it. Be says 'be cannot leave ms present rainitary duthe lo be drawn into public strife; but he is devoted to Democracy and to conservative principles. and will never consent to any adjustment of the conteer with toe insurgent Stales Winch ati' acknowledge tneir snoozes. I cannot eay_that I understand just exactly what all this means, tho Ugh I presume it to indicate; that General Dix declines to be detested for the Governorship, and is S+.lll of the opliimi that 4 lf any luau hauls dowu the etunirf can flag, shoot bim on the spot". lieu may remember the quotation, though wondering with me, perhaps, toh;st n spat:" Turning from discord to harmony, let me not forget to inform my friends of The Preis was we are to have ITALIAN OPERA. this winter, despite all that has been said to the con trary, Fired by the exeruple of the benign tined-Lutz, wboee German Opera is rejoicing in showers 01 postage stamps, the adventurous Gran hes come to terms with the directors of the Academy of Music, and wilt tannin his Italian curiosities very aeon. The, priocipal feature of the season will be the brat. America!, proonotiun of Illeyerbeirrra Pardon de Ptorretei. ( 44 Moor/sti n t, In Which Mangle Go rrabella (Atinirce Sties Dr. Ward!) will make her debut Miss Otitotta Patti, etas LUalde Kellogg, Madame Lorin! Whiting, dignorl Brit/Doll, do slut and Alticrilerti will also beloug to tne troupe. THE THEATRES . have had another splendid week of it: Walleek's new (to vs) comedy of "Bosom Friends;" Laura Keene's Gino Beet for the Wicked ;" Forrest at tiliolo's; Baoth at the Winter Garden, ana Pauvintte , " at the fdnietn, nave au drawn great honsee daring the pest six eteentags. kineccse oleo attends the concern, of Gottschalk, the Ger man Opera and Theatre, the Bowery temples of high old art, and the negro minstrel persuasions. Tonight Mr. Hackett playe Fsletaff" at Niblo'e, for the benefit of the Widows' end Orpheus' Food of the New York Fire Department. On_ Heim-day_ nest, Mai hlarikla Heron commence! an engagmuent there in Camille " Mies Bau man playa at trio Brooklyn Ace. dewy of Mimeo on Thnredey end Friday evenings. TRE BOOK TRADE SALE closed this afternoon, and booksellers from abroad are starting for home. About $3.50 000 le the amount reads td by the !ale. According to the best report I can find, tbc sale tct'•Crty was opened with the invoice 75lec cny aritifacturing Otannany consisting of school and tb primers They bold Got calf, roan, morocco, '&0, atipt 3 cl l firgi,V. g . kg " '1236 to 60 cents. A private lot of Eli vanities' of Cyclopedia) in French sold at 18 each ;50 copies of the plate of The Defend ers of the Union," by hotipil. wore sold at 10 cents An assortment of Photograph alimma was sold next; very Pretty tnotoceo, panel sines. full- mounted, was sold at $2.50i No. 7 acid at $3; No. 8, for 36 pictures. at $2; Nirlyreir oa_picuires, at $2; No. 44, gilt, for 50 cards, at $3.15 r o. 54 ;" - r' 511 .1. at $1 50 1 , several for 24 pictures, at prices varying from &' so to 753 In cloth, for 12 pio tnrer, at $1 75; tit th, 50 pittu,,,,, s tal pictures at $1; oblong morocco, 38 at . -c " 11 ' --- --..".1$1 , 25 worth . about $B. • Belcher's Religions Demonstrations sold' , fit, la sheep at 8126 do. in roan, gilt, at $1.88; Iftedt.,4,d. s Life et Christ, in cloth, at 90c.; in sheep et 81 in rt , ,, s; full gilt, at $1.46. An assortment of quarto Bibles west , next disposed of at from $1.30 to $4 25. A large invoice of stationery wee sold, and brought fair prices. The en tire stile bee embraced about 160 invoices, in catalogues of &bent 500 pages. The sale commenced every morning at 9'a. M:, and bai been kept op until about 10 o'clock P. M., frequently lasting until 11 o'clock. The following are the sales of stocks at the second board :. 5000_U da 'Bl 0p.,...103%1 1000017 S dem nt5....127 1000 Trees 7 3-10....1053 17000 Missouri 6s. 53% 1000 Otdifornia 5000 Oh &N W Asßd. 59 5000 Tol &W 24 m... 89 1200 Am G01d...—. ,131 10000 d 0.... .. . . .130% 86000 do ....130% 50 Pacific Mail 5....118 60 do .„.....530.117% 150 .50 do.. • ..1173. 60 Nicaragua T C 0... 4% 100 do: 200 N Y Oen P. 107% 100 Brie R« 65 50 . d0.........815 64% 100 do 64% 200 do. ..b3O 05 50 do 64% 100 Brie"Plef. .... 92 50 do 91% 800 do ..... 91% 200 Cleve & Pittsb'g... 37 100 do::....:.:. 37% MA RHETS The business of the week in breadstuff.' has been to lerably good, though below the aggregate of the weeks previous. Flour bee been depressed since Thursday, not sharing the rally in wheat and corn. Petroleum, fish, oils, hoops, tallow, leather, , are all active, and at good prices. The specnla.Uons in foreign produce seem to have subsided altogether. BTUYV.F43/I , i T. POLITICAL INTELLIGENCE. IaZTTICI3. FROM aZfi. JOHN fol lowing lettez from General John A. Dix, to a friend in NEW Yolk, in which he declibee being a candidate In the coming election in that t fate, hoe been made public: Fonzaitss Itionnon, Oct. 22. 1882." -My name, I eee, 18 again need in con nection with a political office, without my knowledge or , consent. I shill .1 - 81/11111:1 et my po 4, doing all I can to sustain the Government in prating.down the rebellion ; and at a moment when the azurtenco of the nation is hanging by a thread; I cannot leave my duties here to be drawn into any party strife. Neither will I: ever assent to any, adjustment of the contest with the insurgent States which - shall acknowledge their encomia- The rebellion began in fraud, dishonor, and violence, and must fond , in entmiseion to the Conetitntion and the laws. The Secession leaders have put the content on gronbds which would masa lumen on their part indelible dintriteli to us. In my sphere of. duty m 7 intention is to carry on the War without either 'violence to the ,Oonstitution or to the priechilts of Inatice and humanity, and to con tend to the last to avert n.triumph over all that instable in Eovernment, or honorable to political companionship. Id, whole comae through life ha. proved: my devotion to Democracy and conservative principles. No assurance should be needtd that thic faith Is unchanged. But at a moment like this, unless all parties will rally round the GOVeralim.r* -tin dor do_wn this rebellion, leaving questions among themselves to be- ..tutd when the no tional honor is vindicated, and our existence +is securt d, there can be nothing for us in the fitters but dis aster and dissrace. JObN A. DIX., A I.IIT I XII SHOW. EON. BDWAIRD BVEBETr— BB 1.1.80L1888 A NOMINATIOS FOR OON t-HESS—Bon. Rdward Everett having been nominated for Oongtiese in the Third 'District, Boston, bas declined the nomination in the following note. addressed to the chairman of the Convention : SuNtantaßroisr. Bosum, October 4 1862 Dims. SIR 1 fear you will think I have too long de layed an answer to yonr moat obliging oommunicatlon. Altar 'giving to the elabject the moat anxious and respect fn] consideration, t have come to the conclusion that I can best serve the country and its holy sense by not go ing into Oongiese. I shell cor.tinne, to the best of MY ability, to support the President, and do everything in my power to promote the vigorous prosecution of the war. But I feel -confident-that what little influence might otherwise have would be impaired by me' becoming a candidate, especially at a moment when we are threat. ever with a new struggle of pante'. from which I am de termined to keep aloof. EDWARD BVBRETr. WI( Wirivitio, Eta. . . THE OHIO CONGBIOLSIONAB DELBGELTIGB— The following it the comeiesion of the next Oonkrassional dtlegstiort from Ohio. Those marked with an asterisk are members of the preeent Congress. Fourtsao of those elt ottd are Breckinridgers, and five Unionßeenblicans:. District. District. * Geo. H. Ftndieton, B. 11 W. A. Hutchins. B. .;.9. Alex long, 8.. 4 12. W. E. neck, B. BobeirolBobenck, U. 13. John O'Neil. B. :4.'J F. Idoßinney.B. 14. Geo:Bliss, B. • b.. F. O. Lklllond, B. 15 * Janes B. Morris, B. , 6. A. White, B. 16. J. W, white. B. 7. * B.' 8' Cox, B 17. IC. E. Ecklee. 11. • S. Wm. Johnson, B. 18. Bans P. 8)&tkiln& 9.. *.W. P. Noble..B. 19. J. A. GarikdA, 10: Jamesll.•Ashiey; TEN INDIANA 00N011 The following are the ninatti for Indians District 1. John Law. B. 2 J. A. ()raven, B. 3. B. W. Barrington, B. 4. 0. W. B. Holman, B. b. G. W. Julian, IJ, 6. Ebenezer Dumont, 11. Boren Drer4ipTido Beig. 300 Haddon B - 70 100 do ...... . 70% 1400 do i)ilb 70% 100 Harlem B 21% 100. . . . . 21% 200 Harlem 491( 300 do.. . .860 49 1600 Mich 8 &W . 1.. 45 400 Mich & 1G.... 82% 545 Mich Central__ 92 160 d 0........... 92% 100 do ... . 92% 100 do b3+; 92% 300 11l Om &rip ... • • 83 % 800 do 83% 100 d0..........83% 100 Hal &Chic 8.-530 86 100 d0..........80% 2vo do. ..... —lB so too . do b3O 86% POO Olev & Tol R..... 721( 1000 do 72 100 do . 71% 100 Clic & 11 . 1 . 8. 85 1200 do ....... 620 85g 1200 • do b2O 85 1260 d0.........,.81% 881021 AL BLICOTION. : — of the Congrenunen elected ThatrioL 7. D. W. Voorhees, B. B. Go.fflove B Orth, fl Botinyler Colfax, 11. 10.. loa. K. Edgerton, B. 11. Jas. F. DloDowell, B rata extd four THE WAR PRESS. (PUBLISHED WEEKLY.) Thu Waft Passa will be sent to enbeorlberS bs Well (per annum In advance) at In. 00 Torte Copies It si n . ft I t 0.011 f t 0.00 Ten ,4 12.06 00 copies Larger Mobil will be rammed at Die game r*Le-,111128 will cost i&24 ;.60 copies will oast 880, end le§ ,Noplee 0110. . - ezer a (nub of Twenty-on e or over, we will seed ailf xtre .'err to the e=t - ter-up of the innb. OT.Poertirserere ere reoweeted to act es Saints lot , Taft WAit t vas. itdvernekvsento nrser:ed es the retuu Mee. eut ;bee constitute, a ofmez The Altoorni Convention IMPORTANT LETTER FRC GOY. ANDREw--orsie ANTI- M'CLELLAN movvitreNT A MYTH. We final the following correspondence to the Bontots papers in relation to the Convent - lot:tor Loyal Governors, whioh met at Altoona, in this State. The reason-of its publication in set forth in the following letter, addressed to the Governor, by Mr. Daniel fienahaw, of Boston. The following is the correepondence:,. llosros. October 22, 1862. To hie Excalencit povernot'Aedrete : I observe, In, Ibe proceedings of the eonventiott called to meet at Fat:wonßall by the Onn J.)el Parker and others, that thiloneli I. , :t i altoultaU•introducid a letter frpm some person is Beltijnore eating that a formal itotsiottlonibid been made,'lt tto meeting of the !oval (low rrors at Aitcoha..toroxeet the President to remove . I Gineral Irtectelian. I believe that Colonel Salionstatk Wis./node a correotion of the-letter; so that it reads, 4 1 There was no formal proposition made to remove Gra. 111c04;111.) , • -Anil, the newspapers and,persons disposed to find fault with the Government BEfitiMo that en informal proposition visa mode by your Excellency, or some other Governor, to tbat.effect. ' The sten Mont is extensively circulated, to the inters , or the cause you represent. Believing it erlirely unfounded, I bring It to your no. . lice: that tf , yoti think proper, it may be corrected. • • With the highest respect, I am yours tr uly, DANIEL EfE11811.&W, GOVERNOR ANDREW'S REPLY. CrOMEIONWEALTE OF Ittsser,orrusemi, EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT, BOSO, O c t o ber 22, 1562. To Danis/ Evy., Bosf T on N' : My Data Sin: In reply to your idoossl*}lllsT-64---- calved ibis evening, I have t...kr Dy the joint invitadort ~.chi. and Pennetiveolor by telegrams, of which the following are copies, and I RULE'S oleo copies of my rPpl les BARIIIIEMORG, Sept. 6, (via New York ) To Governor Andrew, Bolton : In the present emergency would it not be well that Mt loyal Governors should meet at some point in the Border Rates to take measnree for the more active snpoort of the Gmerrment ? An imufdiote reply is requestetL, that as early a daY as possible may be named for the meeting, if approved. A. G. 011 . BOSTON, Sept. 6. 1 9 62. To Governor Curtin, Harrisburg, Pa , via Yew York: Should any meeting be called, 1 will attend. JOHN A.. ALIDEINVt. . COMMIBUS, OHio, Sept 14, 1862. To Governor Andrew: , iVe mute 6? meeting of ?lie Governors of the loyal btetee, to be bela at Altoona? Pa on the 34th blatant. Plume reply to Governor Curtin• . . ANDREW 42 4212T1M, DAVID TOD, F. H. PEIRPONT. • • BOSTON, September 15, INS 2b Governor A. G. Curtin, Harrisburg. Pa.: I have received you invitation, and ace.pt it. JOHN A. AN DEE V, Governor of fd.....eactr.ootte The meeting wee one which, whetaer as citizens or as reasistretee, we had a tight to held. And in the die. chars e of our duties, many of which, connected with the ridlltary service of the United States, (whose th) VA 7 n meat reli, a wholly on the tititee for the ratting and recruiting of the armed are difficult and complicated, it le ems to perceive how mutual o'nsultation might be ad. vantegeons. It is even more easy to eve how ne. feral it wee for the Governors of Ohio. Virginia, and Pennsyvania, at the time this invitation wee ie. seed, to feel the grave importance to their own States of lively anti efficient euppert from every quarter to the National cause. ti , * do I suppose that any person has even dotretel the propriety of the conduct of the 4everuor of Meeeschn setter in joining that consultation of Governors, except the very persons who were swift to observe and exclaim that hie na me did not appear with the names of many other Go vernors en a certain petition to the President last July. And had not the President's prochstr alien of 'reedom ap pearen as it did, just one day before the meeting sadly dieapeointiug certain gentlemen. who had rightly de °limbo tt a great merit and public duty to stand by the President, and bad the Altoona Oonfetreuce been held and ' Ire edrrees published without my name or presence. I have no manner of doubt that I should have felt the heat of their burning inaignation at my slowness to unite with the conservative- Governors who summoned us to Altoona, in helping to strengthen the arm of the President, at d to increase his disposable force. At it was, tboee gentlemen were disturbed. They were cut oft from making war on the President by their own re cent avowals and declaration?. But it was desirable that somebody ebotild be shaped. I was the Republican candidate for reelection; I was a supporter of the ' President's proclamation and policy; wag the COO.. ver itlit scapegoat, and en they took use. I belies...Nage Parker indicted me before his convention, for causing the President's proclamation, by going to Altoona the day after it was princes. Arid I presume that dr Sal towel] introduced the supposed proof that I imagined the removal of General McClellan, as evidence in sup port of Jocge Parker's Indictment. For since Judge Parker seems to have reversed toe order of cause and effect in the mating of hie allegation, I can see no way of supporting it save by a Mealier muddle of logio and the confnefon of bulb with its °pp' tete. And now, my dear str, the sober truth is Erimpty this : let. I read the President's proclamation in print on the horning of the 23d, with al much sui prise as Judge. Parker did, though perhaas with more pleasure; 2 1 . I did not, either formally or informally, directly or indi reed= , at any dam, move or suggen that the Governors should interfere with the potation of Major General. Valentin, or of any other officers of the army or nevy. Ilor do I believe that any such motion was proposed by any one eke I heard none whatever concerning that oc' any otb.r general. But, it yon ask bow so great a blan der heel been made, I can, only reply that when people seek to make a point attained . their neighbors by a eert of eaves-dropping, by attempting. to penetrate the private conversations of gentlemen and to betray their cons ten hal speech, great blundering, ii not something worse, wit always be close at hand. They will usually contrive tie report just what they hoped to hear. I have written this letter with some fullness and with santirw_frhe4oEL,.lontnerable character and longjlee votioo tot iie cae nee. a , right to command me. But now I beg leave to.rents.rit— let. That I utterly deny the moral right of gentleman to carry on political controvereies. by trying' to penetrate private circles and to promulgate private conversations, which cannot affect the community unless mule public. , 2d—Tbatthe gentlemen in queetion need not have sent tot albit& tarpon !to find out what t said at Altoona. I - could have told them myself, it' they bad asked me_ -And . they, know me well enough to know that I am accastomed . --eo ?set openly, -without disguise or concealment, and, ta i on.— ..—wet.X . A - d - ght gooie r ...without much 1-- In concluelon, cennot tob serve to obtrude matters mainly Personal upon the atten tion of the people. It is the great cause of deame;ratigt, constitutional representative government which is now ou trial, not the cause of . any roan on earth. Wo are contending for the very hopes af a future, for a ge and and wonderful people over loose fall at gels might panes to weep. The interests of no public man, civil or ml i tary, demand the thought of a loyal human being among TM And they weaken and belittle our moral Position. while they teed to demoralize the public heart and mind, who attempt to bang the issues of national life on the sword of any leader. Wisdom will still live when all of ibis generation bag gone under the dust; and the people, countrt ano humanity will live when all who are new contteci great, in peace or war, will have been forgotten - nd lost, even to history. Believe me, sir, with high • your obedient servant, MS. VALUABLE- Mkbc'heLofflPTEL—Bing Williams of r.qn , a lB , ham made the Ben'-, Library a vaintbis pre-- sent, fu the shape of imnortant,, ls "-tan manuscripts, tor inerh, beioeglo g to professor Bere a o f Breams. the Syrian scholar. Among these Mealttlei nte are a ootn plate copy of Bar-Bablal's ro-Arable za ~ f rom a codeg in the Bodleian ; the firet halt of these., work. from another manuscript• In the game collection, thionghont with the Cambridge, and partly with a Pi, . renting copy ; a great potion of the older Syrian original dictionary. BOMNifthISULISDI.—L singular otse of somnambu lism occurred recontly at Angel:demo, France. &labor lag man, while on a visit to a friend, Rot uofromhis bed, and opening the window, fell into the street from a, height of fifteen feet, without awaking. He then walked through the town. and did not awake till he bad arrived. at the barrier, where he was surprised to flod• himself' alor in his mightdr.ss. NARRUIX ESCAPE OF AN ANIMAL TAMER.— Accidents in menageries are becoming frequent in Oar- Maw. DI. Many.. an animal. tamer, was recently In the cage of a panther at Bremen, engaged in breaking it in, when the animal, becoming frightened by some noise on the outside, suddenly sprang on one of the keepers who 'wee standing near, and mortally wounded him. It was • with the greatest difficulty that the body of the man cc old be released from the claws of the animal. . BRITISH , GLOVE TRADE.—The glove trade or -Great Britain is immense Here are the figures: ...From • Jrannary to July, 188lt, 4,187,618 pairs of 1. ether gloves were brought into the United Ktnedorn from foreign pat te ;. whilst at a Alta period in 1861 there wore only 3,559,932 pairs Imported, and In 1880 the number was loner etiil, 2,811,8254 airs Thus in twenty. one months alone the enormous total of 10 539,273 pairs of gloves found their way into the country HEAVY PEN ALTY.—A case of inoendiarism, in cite d by jealousy, has been tried at °alai% Francs. A young man, named Bourgeolee, who had paid his ed. dr asses to a damsel named Delmotte, was vexed at her flirtations, and sought revenge by setting fire to her father's barn. which was consumed For this act he wag. sentenced to fifteen yeareirapriaonment at hard-labor. DEATH OP AN AUTHOR —Mr. Mathew.Orawford, x barrister in London. who has just died from the effects of a fractured nose, caused by being knocked down by a cab, was the bueband of the author of ft Kathleen 11. a vourneen," 4 L Dermot /Lahore, and severtiotber bal lads. AN OLD TOIINTAIN.—A marble fountain in the old town of Prague ham been yartly purled door/ally order of the burgomaster. It was balk in 1588, at a great cost, and has always been admired on Account of its beauty. 'lhe governor of the city, as soon as he lsorned what was. going on, put a stop to such an act of vandalism, and• one-half of the fine monument has been•saved. PERSONAL ITEMS. A SRCXSSION RIDGY. IN TR9IIBLIL—On Thnrs-. day, the 2d inst., Judge Birch ',fated Carrollton, klo. s . and addressed the people, urging, la-claims as a candi date for Congress. His audience,, with a few ectoeptions, were rebels*, and, of course, he mades fi rst-rats 6000111d011, speech. When about half through, Captain Wakefield. Stanley, commander of the military post, deeming his, language calculated to fan anew , . aspirit of rebellion and, bushwhacking in this county, ordered Wm to , stork rebel speech, and further ghee him orders to make no more speeches iu Carroll county. Birch,- fearing-he was, dapser from the insulted militia, mmadiately left- tbe• county. THE BOLL OF Et, -.mates, of TI ll role, intends to have the same every private - sommr• from that Stale printed ha the.annual sepelt of the Aeja tant General. The ideals-not orisiaal with tile. Illinois. authorities, for last year the sews thing wee dine in Blaine. The report 'of- Adjutant General El idadon, oft that State, contained taw name of ever, soldier in &teen regimeata Of infantry, Das regiment of cavalry, elm bat tevies of artillery, sad- one company of eharpabooters. The report embraced, moreover, every nateoprthy fact: in the history of each soldier, and gave mans atatistlcalt tat:flitter rare value far. reference. We understand anal a singer report will be made in Maine 'ho coming year. GIN. TOGISISS..—The angneta eironicle ces4 find. of the fth, nays Gen. Toonaba arrived In this cif: yesterday kora' vi t ., atria, ifie.wortad, Sad the very hard :reprice he has men lately, has told very much noon his health and appear.. ante, but we hope that the Quiet and comforts of home, mat aeon enable Wm to resume his plac-s is the field. BE. ZLBOTION OF ET.NA.TOB. not elect a Legislatnre at the late election. .The Efttiosa mon aro largely in the inejority,, and many metaberea wbn voted against Benjamin Wale last year Wave Blade. &elandtheir intention to support him. The friends. confider his re election cer.aln ANTst Dolt. OF GABIBALDI.—A letter from nab' says: "Certainly, good news does not travel fast ICI Italy .The,telegranh wire being hyphen betweea Snerzia and Yerignano. a mein anger was deagatcbed with a speeds horse to announce the amnesty'to Garibaldi. When hea t reached liratignano the Gonersl was sleeping What is it 1' laid be, as be awoke about bed - heard an unusual arise of talking aroma' 'alas,. What le it" ' « 'The amnesty hes come ' Oh.' said be, droopily; and turning renadiqett hit' side he fell off to sleep again." WEALTIIY AUSTRIAN liIINISTRIP"--,Conot Wirlebnrg, ih.Austrien minister of Oommerso,, ha t Km .row hie domain In Wave, in Lower AVitria, to 4.lgtirg Duke of Saxe Coburg, for the *prof mttimeaci '-• -A NEW PATH -FlNDSR.—Ciotain biollen. no* Varty, oho have been for farm /rare el/10 , 604411 . -obn.. . tee ityurtiog a wagon road from the headonarters.of Milill01:111 river to those tt t h e o etem ba s riverois -d .rar. tat , ed to New York.; 7 , 14, roe, )risk oomplogitlit Wag .miteg tong. JOHN A. ARDBEW
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers