El3t Vress. SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1863 CHAIII,:.gsToN. If we can credit the news that comes to - us by Way Of Fortress Monroe, of the occii- Dation of FOrt Sumpter and. Morris Island ; we have gained-the. most gratifying triumph of the - war,. Although we do not anticipate much - advantage from - the occupation of an island fortress .in the middle of a bay, with its walls battered down, its guns removed •or dismounteil, and any permanent posses sion untenable by reason of the rebel batte ries oh Sullivan's Island, and the others-stir -rounding it; yet the war would have been insufficient and purposeless if. we had con cluded it without making an example of -Charleston and the great fort in Charleston harbor. General OILMORE has added to his military fame a renown that every soldier in the Union army will envy. He has shown :what energy and a perfect knowledge of his profession will do. Boldly taking pos session of the lower part of Morris Island, ihe - trained his guns, erected batteries, and threw himself upon the enemy with a zeal and courage that all men must admire. His campaign his known but one repulse, and that will, be remem bered among the bravest events of the war. The - assault upon Battery Wagner showed the temper of the men' who were sent to take Charleston, and to that failure we May fairly 'attribute much of our present gain. His plan of operations seems to have been a bold movement upon the enemy, as soon as he landed, and when he found he could make no impression upon the works by a land attack, an immediate and overwhelm ing assault by every. means in his power upon the works surrounding the harbor. As "Admiral DAnionint says, this has been almost entirely a military movement. The guns of the vessels-of-War were merely em ployed in diverting the attacks of Battery Wagner and Fort Sumpter. The rain of iron..catue from the batteries on the island, and`frona these batteries came the first shells that fell upon the metropolis of treason. The attack upon Charleston possesses a scientific interest. We have shown conclu •,sively one or two results that will go far "towards revolutionizing the of war. It has always been. a debatable question as to the power of stone or granite fortifications to resist heavy guns, and in" England thou sands of : pounds have been spent upon ex periments. At Charleston.we have an ear nest experiment, and we think the results cannot be questioned. It is Fort PPulaski -on a larger scale. In the reduction of 'Fort Pulaski, we showed that, granite and stone were of no avail beffire a well-directed ar tillery fire. Fort Sumpter is another exam ple. Here was a fort of remarkable strength, with :every appliance that science -and money could obtain, and, since its capture by the rebels, strengthened in every possi "ble way. This fort we see shattered into ruins in a few days—its walls, sixteen feet thick, crumbling—its guns battered - out of their position. and swept into the sea—its garrison reduced to a mere forlorn hope, and, according to the news we have this morn ing, its possession surrendered. England and France and Russia will read these re sults with strange interest. If General GIL MORE can reduce Fort Sumpter so easily, how long would the fortifications around the Eng lish cbast, or at Cherbourg, orat Cronstadt, re sist our - navy of iron, or a general of skill and energy ? In addition•to this, much surprise will be manifested at the wonderful range and accuracy of the artillery fire. We-do not know the exact distance, but we think it is ,frorn four to six miles. Sothe of the rebel journals estimate it as high as eight ; but it is farther than we have ever known 'an artillery fight to be made before, with any degree .ot efficiency, and in this case the best witness of its efficiency is General BEArit.EOARD himself, as he speaks of, the projectiles of the batteries as "the most de structive missiles ever used in . We do not know enough of Charleston to. speculate upon the contingencies of 'Ek cam paign in which an army and a navy. are both engaged, and which presents many features of peculiar embarrassment. we ire 'satisfied with what is done, nor do ise,Care Lo pause and sPeculate.upon a cam paign in the marshes, and whether we are to have a long siege, or a short siege. We have gained triumphs. enough for one cam paign. -We have humbled treason in its stronghold, and made Charleston a sealed and deserted city. The country will re joice at a retribution so just, and adminis tered with so much gallantry and skill. General Dix and Governor Seymour. ThQlcorrespondence between Major Ge neral Dix and Governor SEYMOUR. illustrates . very clearly the opposition of their opinions and motives, - and suggests a comparison which will riot add to the Governor's repu tation for sincerity and loyalty. We are indebted to one of the characteristic slanders of the 'New York Express for its publiea- tion, a result which should teach the enemies of the Government a, more cautious method of abusing it. The Express blames the Ad ministration for - withdrawing troops from 'the Army of the Potomac to protect the city of New York from riot, on the ground that it thus suspends the campaign in Virginia. 'Unfortunately, the correspondence, which common fairness obliges it to publish, proves that all blame in this case attaches to Governor SEYMOUR, whose action made the transfer of Federal troops necessary. Governor SEYMOUR is tl us struck heavily by his own friend, who, in amusing uncon sciousness, aimed the blow at the Adminis- tration. The correspondence shows that / had Governor "SEYMOUR desired it, not one Tegiment would have been taken from the Army of the Potomac to insure the peacea ble enforcement of the draft in New. York. General Dix, in his letters to the Governor, emphatically assured him that he desired to prevent the withdrawal of troops from the .army, and expressly asked him if he might rely upon the military power of the State to enforce the execution of the law, in case it was forcibly resisted. "If under your au thority to see the laws faithfully executed," said General Dix in his first letter to the Governor, "I can feel assured that the act - referred to will be enforced, I need not ask the War Department to put at my service for the purpose, troops in the service of the United States. lam the more un willing to make such a rap:test, as they could not be Withdrawn any considerable num ber from the field without prolonging the war and giving aid and encouragement to the enemies of the Union, at the very mo ment when our successes promise, with a vigorous effort,lthe -speedy suppression of the rebellion." This hint about giving aid and encouragement to the enemy was not lost upon the Governor. So long as evasion was possible,, upon the slight pretext that tie hoped the President would suspend the draft, Governor SEYMOUR evaded . definite answer. When evasion was no longer pos aible; at the last, moment, he informed General . Dix that he would, if neces sary, • enforce the law by the power of the State ; but ,Gencral Dix, unable to depend any 'longsr on a Governor who required seven days to reply to a simple ;question, which might have been answered in an hour, and utterly ignorant of what force he could: depend upon to prevent riot, had then applied =to the Secretary of War for troops, arid had received assurance Oat an adequate force would be at once pliw ; ed at his command. Hid Gov. SEYMOUR .chosen to say yes, or no, to a plain ques- Lion a'ar,ed of him on the 30th of July, he would have been spared the necessity of making a clwnsy explanation on the 20th of August., General Dix conducted his part bf-this correspondence wifg,:the utmost candor and fairness: It was his desithat . there should be perfect harmony of 'aCtilin: betty e 4 the Federal Governmentandihltt of , 0.1 , State ; he believed that resistance to the law should be put down by the authority'•of the State in whick it &caul ; he wish/A.4 avoid -weakening the_ armies in thel:fitid.,,.-And all that he asked of the Govern was an answer to this question—" Can I rely upon the military power of the State to sup press possible riot, or must the Government furnish troops which it really needs else where ?" Governor SETMOUVS solitary pretext for refusing an answer to this question was that he had sent a communication to the President, and that he believed his answer would make the question, unnecessary. But this was altogether irrelevant. Governor SEYmOUR'6 speculations had nothing to do with General Dix.'s .responsibility, and if he really believed that. the, President would suspend : the draft at his request, that belief could not have prevented him from giving General Dix-satisfaction. If withthat be lief had been coupled a desire to ob tain harmony of, action between the. Federal Governinent and 'the Govein ment of New York, he might have said, .at once: "I do not think that, after what I have written to the President, the draft will be enforced, but, if 4 it , O, you can depend upon the military force of the State to put down any riotous resistance to the law.". He was forced to, assure General Dix of this at last ; but his assurance was then too late to prevent - the withdrawal of troops from the army. The evasive course he adopted was ingenious but net ingenuous, and in our judgment unworthy of the. Go vernor of a great and loyal State. " Had my application to the. Governor been. suc cessful," says General Dix, " I should not have asked the General Government to send into this State a single soldier to aid in as serting its authority, and in protecting its officers from violence in the discharge of their dutieS.'' If the Army of the Potomac is. weak ened, Governor SE MOUE is responsible ; if any irritable opponent of the Govern ment dislikes to see the national troops in the streets of New York, he has Governor snrmoun to blame ; and if the enemy has received aid and encouragement, he may thank this same disingenuous diplomatist for the fa—vor. An Explanation of the Mystery. Assuming, for the sake of argument, that such a personage as Mr. Justice WooDWARD is now in existence,- we have on repeated occasions endeavored to ascertain Why .it is that everything pertaining to him• is in vested with such imposing mystery. There is a household maxim in vogue, we know, that little boys should be seen and not heard ; but Mr. Attorney NORTHROP has distinctly asserted that Mr. Justice WOOD WARD "is no boy ;" and besides, he has been neither seen nor heard since the day he was nominated with plaudit that almost re echoed the booming of the rebel cannon. We know where Mr. VALLANDIOnAM is ; we know where Mr. FERNANDO WOOD is ; we know where MT. HORATIO SEYMOUR is ; but we cannot tell where Mr. Justice WOODWARD is, or whose system of philosophy he is studying to brace himself against the hu miliation-of his next defeat. In fact, there is much of the weirdly Mystic character of Poe's Raven in the character of the Demo cratic gubernatorial nominee, so far as we can judge from the faint gleams of information we have .had concerning it. It impresses us with the dim feeling of awe that may be supposed to be inspired by witnessing the freaks and strange contortions of a Chinese juggler. We stand aghast, and hold our breath, as we see . him swallow the sword, and tilt the huge globe of iron from his nose - to his chin, and then back again to his nose, and a glow of sublime enthusiasm kindles in our breasts, as we confess that the Orien tal being is nobly and wonderfully gifted 'above ordinary men. So, as we stand and contemplate the -Character, of Mr. Justice WoODwAnn, its more than oriental mysti- 1 cisrn stirs our nature to its very depths, and we confese that we are standing in no ordi nary presence. Its impressment steals upon the senses, and overcomes them like the sweet perfumes of Claude Atelnotte' s ideal orange. groves. We cannot be 'sufficiently Prosaical, amid such delicious surround ings, to ask the strange prisoner .whence it • comes, or whither it is going. In fact, we cannot be inquisitive -with Mr. Justice WOODWARD. It would be irreve rent to play the Yankee with this superior Order of being, and crOss-question him like a common felon at the dock. Still, it would be very interesting to know why he is, in the language of the reporters, so. extremely " reticent." ..Men have sometimes been lent, that their silence might be mistaken for wisdom ; but the mistake is one not likely to occur in the present case. Men have, in * numerous 'cases of recent .occur rence, assumed. to be dumb, in order to escape the draft ; but as the Democratic candidate is a Judge, and of course has a drawer-full of blank writs of habeas corpus, it would only be necessary to fill u g one Of these blanks to escape military duty. Men ha r ve sometimes been dumb, in novels, that they might be restored to speech in the last chapter, and render some special assist ance to the plot. But we know of no plot in which the enemies of the Go: vernment would • engage, •aud this theo ry likewise falls to. pieces: Men of eleemosynary habits have sometimes feign ed :to -be dumb, to ingratiate themselves into the purses of charitable people ; but Mr. Justice . WOODwARD is not of eleemosy nary habits. In fact, it is very questionable - whether he ever begged more than twenty nominations in his life, and in each case, so far as we recollect, the request was respect fully declined. Having exhausted-supposi tion, therefore, in the vain attempt to ac count for his weird and sombre silence, we are, with the utmost reluctance, compelled to accept the only other explanation at pre .,sent within reach. - We find it in the follow ing verse from a pretty poem entitled " Si lence," which has been - going.the rounds of the press for some weeks past : When the heart is bare of gladness, And the helpless sense of ill. Goads the apathy of sadness Onward through a whirl of madness To a darkness drear and shill— Then the palsied tongue is still. The theory is not a pleasant one, but it is confirmed by a late statement in the Har risburg Telegraph, that Mr. Justice WOOD WARD is sick with a "helpless sense of ill," so thoroughly is he convinced that he is desti,ned to be defeated at the coming elec tion. It is the "apathy of sadness," and we may look for "the darkness drear and chill" upon the night of the' second Tues day in October next. THE Distant, men in oil midst whd complain because negroes are not taken as substitutes for drafted white men, are ne vertheless constantly contending that the negroes will not fight. The assertion is as false as the men who make it are inconsist "ent. - A life-long Democrat, now an officer in General GILMoEE's command, writing to a friend in Freemansburg, Northampton county, in this State, says of the :colored troops : " They can hardly be equalled in coolness and bravery. I have fought side by side with them in the late battles'near Charleston, and am able to write and speak from what I saw and heard." The man who wrote these words is a Democrat, such a Democrat as was General JAcEsox, who commanded negrci soldiers in the war of 1812, and who said to them, " You surpass my hopes: I have found in you, united to these qualities; that noble enthusiasm which impels to great deeds." It was the fervent hope of Kr. JAMES BucrrANAIT, and the base men who conspired with him to bring ruin upon,the Democratic party and disas ter upon the country, that when our North ern armies penetrated the Southern country, they would be swept away. by pestilence "like rotten sheep," to: quote his own phrase. That hope has notilleela realized, although the war is speedily drawing to a close, and the military power of the South is irreparably broken. But if it had been as Mr. Buortmcmc Predicted, would it not have been an additional argument in favor of the employment of colored troops, who are by nature adapted to the climate of the South? • MARVELLOUS PRENOMENON.—Before the draft took place, it was said by disloyal newspapers that all the Democrats had gone to .the war. Since the draft took place, it is said by disloyal newspapers tluit none but the Democrats were drafted The Confederate Loan. The unlucky,,capitilists who, by going into the Confederate Loan, have lately proved the truth of the old proverb about the facility With which fools part with their money, appear to meet with very little sym pathy from independent British journalists. The London correspondent of the Belfast Morning News writes as follows : If your heart-is naturally compassionate—as I am sure it ie—you will feel much pity' for a certain class of persona here in London just now. ' I allude to those who have invested their Money in the Southernpan. They do not expect, Poor fellows, to get back 'a shilling of all they have paid out. The early Southern victories were so brilliant, mid the Northern leaders generally proved themselves so miserably incompetent, that ;the feeling here was that the South must win and become a great Power. In qne week the tide of fdrtune - has turned against the South. In one week the South hie lost sixty thousand men. What Power can struggle against such oddel • Lee driven back across the Potomac in his very hour of victory Morgan's army captured in Ohio ; - Vicksburg and ' Port Hudson surrendered, and the Mississippi made free for all purposes of commerce; the rere of Charleston possessed by the Federale, and Bragg& fine army in full retreat—such results in one weekfind no parallel in the histnry of ancient and modern Narfare. All seems to indicate that the poor,Southerne must succumb .: But,-then, what about the debt? Who will pay the Southern liabilities? Surely not the conquering North. The little Jewish gentleman (who is called Sampson, pro bablybecausehetenot five feet lour inches high) who writes the Times' city articles, must feel considera bly embarrassed just now, considering how ardently he wrote up the Southern loan, of three millions sterling. ' The same letter-writer refers to a pam phlet lately issued in London, saying : It is from the pen of a distinguished American gentleman, the Ron. R. J. Walker, formerly Score tory of the Treasury, and Governor of Kansas. Air. Walker is a lawyer of grent reputation, and, noose quently, well qualified to argue an intricate case. Somebody recently hinted that Mr. ..Jefferson Davis was the person who first boldly advocated the "re pudiation" of the "Mississippi bonds," by which English speculators lost such a lot of money. Mr. Slidell, in Southern Commissioner.here at present, was rash enough to deny this, thereby practically confessing that, if Jefferson Davis had done the thing he was accused of, he would have been "a bad boy." Mr. Walker has settled the question com pletely. In his pamphlet, he quotes bir. Davis' speeches and letters word for word, and he proves, beyond all question, "Jeff" was the man who recommended that "repudiation" which robbed English fundholders of so much money. The pam phlet has canned an unpleasant sensation here; for our London speculative friends cry out furiously, " Why, hang it, we have lent our money again to the very fellow , whQ ctia us before We shan't get a shilling bnokOt - • WE murrix we have heard Democrats of the Vallandigham school asert with, ye- Lenience, that they were in favor of " the Union as it was and the Constitution as it is." Judge-WompwAßD, who claims to be conservative, evidently does not pin his faith to this romantic quotation, , for we are told, upon good authority, that he .favors the establishment of two independent Con federacies. CLEMENT li. VALLANDIGRAM is evidently just twice as conservative, for he has expressed himself in favor of a division of the country into foitr Confederacies, " which shall be virtually independent of each other, have a common Congress." So it would seem that neither WOODWARD nor YALLANDIGMAM is in favor of " the Union as it was and the Constitution as it is." Our impression that such is the case is not at all impaired by the fact that VAL LANDIGHAWS own organ, the Ohio States man, has declared that" the restoration of the Union as it was, with the Constitution as it is, is impossible !" WE DID not suppose that any Christian could read the accounts of the atrocities that have been - committed on the defenceless people of Lawrence, Kansas; by QUAN TEELL'S rebel outlaws, without having his synipathies . excited for the victims, and his indignation aroused• against the soulless savages who perpetrated the fearful deeds already recounted in our columns. . The editor of the Harrisburg PaPriat and Union, a Democratic organ, prefers to be the solitary exception to the rule. His sympathies are with QuArimaELL's gang/of desperadoes; his indignation is reserved for the unfor ttniite victims of , their rapacity, and he vo luntarily assumes to justify,the deeds of the rebel guerilla in the following heartless lan guage : " The Abolitionists of Lawrence, Kansas, who in times of profound peace used to make raids into Missouri to steal negroes, . burn and destroy property, and sometimes, by way Of diversion, hang slave holders, have had the poisoned chalice forced to their lips, and have been compelled to drain it to the very dregs." The journal which prints these infamous words is the chief supporter of Mr. Justice Woopwelin's cause in Pennsylvania. That is the secret of its sympathy for QUANTRELL. ALL THE OFFICERS thus far nominated by tb* City Convention are men of high stand ing, and deserving of the earnest support of all citizens who understand the necessity of an intelligent and upright discharge of pub lic duty. The • National Union candidates for City Treasurer, City Commissioner, Clerk of Quarter Sessions, and Coroner, are gentlemen whom we have every reason to believe worthy of the trust of the people. The loyal ticket offered loyal voters will have no name of which they cannot tho roughly approve. -We are glad .that Na tional candidates are worthy of National Union principles. WASHINGTON. Special Despatches to The Press. WASHINGTON, August 28, 1863. The New Governuieut of VoirgiVl,--Adtress of Governor Pierpont. Governor PIEEPONT, in an address to the people of Virginia, announces that he has established the seat of Government at Alexandria. He says that if resistance to the civil authority be , attempted, and the posse comilah,s prove insufficient, the aid of the military, as a last resource, will be invoked to en force the laws. He is happy to be able to say that the President manifests the most lively desire for the restoration of order in the State, and a disposi tion to assist by every , means at his command to re store the civil government, and produce harmony. Mails of the Army of the Potomac Robbed. HEADQUARTERS OF THE ARMY OF. THE POTOMAC, August 28.—Lieut. Colonel Lockwood, coinmanding the 7th Virginia. Union Regiment, reports a 'ekes of robberies of the 3d diVision 2d Army Corps mail, running from the Bth to the 28th of August. Seve ral thousand dollars, in Government and private drafts, checks and funds, have been purloined, and the letters covering them found along the route. The mail.caniers are under arrest. The public are cautioned against negotiating checks or drafts from this division, unless coming through responsible channels. The Sword Presentation to Gen. Meade. A superb sword was presented to Gen. Meade this afternoon by Brigadier General Crawford, com manding the Pennsylvania Reserves, in the name of the division. - The presentation took place near Rappahannock Station at General Crawford's headquarters. The grounds were tastefully decorated by evergreen bowerc, arches, and avenues. Gov. Curtin and stair, Mr. Morton McMichael, and others were present. The sword was presented to Gen. Meade in a brief but approprinte speech, to which the recipient responded, followed by Colonel Roberts, of the division, Governor Curtin, and others. The addresses generally were of a patriotic cha racter, and highly appreciated by the large assem blage present. The remarks of General Meide, as he rehearsed the various battles in which the Re serves. had sustained a prominent and honorable ~,c z ittion, elicited great applause. The f ee Lkl Portion of the programme was progres sing as the report,"_'' left. English Blockade ! l owlier captured. The Navy Department has receii7.° l l ti °minimi sation from Commander TRENCHAIiD, of the Stegner Rhode Island, reporting the capture of the Englidh screw steamer Cronstadt, for violating the blockade of Wapington, N. O. Her cargo consists of cotton, ttirperitine, and tobacco. She has been sent to. 808. ton for adjudication. Serious Capture by White's Rebel Cavalry. Two hundred and 'eighty.three' of. SCOTT'S Nine Hundred,were=vaptured this afternoon, by 'Wl:ma's rebel eaVailynear Edwards' Ferry. T. ommutation of Sentence. A letter from the Army of the Potomac states that about two hundred Germans, of the 20th New -York Volunteers, who mutinied and were sentenced to hard labor during the war, have received a com mutation of their sentence through the exertions of Provost Marshal General PATRICK. The Substitute Deserters. Jewish rabbi from Baltimore, the wife of one of the condemned, and several others, were here to day, to make an appeal to the President for his clemency in behalf of r the five privates of the 118th Pennsylvania Volunteers who are to be shot to morrow, for desertion. Their mission does not ap pear to have been successful. Rebel Movements. Accounts from the Neck show that the rebels have a considerable infantry force at Port Cerny, and are proiecuting their conscription with vigor. Gen. KiLra.Turcar. had a skirmish with them several dayr ago, and was compelled to fall back from his reconnoissance. , The Steamer Ruth. The investigation in the case of the steamer Ruth proves that the Government money was not stolen, but destroyed by fire,• as boxes containing it .were consumed, and the guard of fifty soldiers never left till the fire drove them oft: This is the testimo ny,. given by responsible Officers in charge of the guaid. Rumored Death of Mosby. It is currently reported, and believed at headqusr tete, that the famous guerilla Moser was 'wounded in the fight of Tueiday evening, having been carried through Di snesville to Leesburg, at which place he died on the following day. Pardon. The President has pardoned Wm. DUNE, charged with divers offenses committed by him against the United States and in aid of the rebels in Kentuoky. TILE PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA: SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1863 The five conscript deserters from the 118th Penn• eylvsnia Regiment, of the Army of the Potomac, sentenced to be shot on Wednesday last, Will euffer the awful penalty of the law to day, at 12 o'clock, in the presence of the 6th Army Oorps, The execution was postponed from Wednesday to Saturday, byorder of Gen. Meade, to afford the out. pits time to appeal to the President for pardon, which they have done; but the latter, understand ing the case to have been, flagrant in the extreme, each man having, on his own account, offered to act as a substitute, and received his pay for so doing, and then deserted with the purpose of swindling the Government out of the money, in addition to his services, declined to interfere in the matter, and in structed Gen. Meade to so,notify them.—Washington Star. The repor s ted telegraph of the occupation by our forces on Monday last of Forts Wagner and Sump ter is not fully credited here. Certainly nothing official to that effect has been received hcfre. It is doubtful if Gilmore will deem itlrth while to . occupy at all the now heap of defenceless rubbish lately known as Fort Sumpter and it is not thought that the mining operations,,being carried* in the vicinity of Wagner were sufficiently adianced,to secure the possession of that fort So long ago as Monday last, though its speedy surrender or de struction was sure to follow upon the completion of that work.— Washington Star. Admiral. Porter's River Expedition. - .Rear Admiral PORTER forwards the report of Lieutenant BACHE, relative to the late river expo. dition. Re first stopped at Des Aro, on the White River, and burned the rebel stores, destroyed the tele graph wires, &c., and then sent the Cricket after the steamers Tom Gregg and Kaskaskia, which he had reason to believe were hid up the river, - while he and the Marmora proceeded to Augusta, thirty miles further. There be obtained valuable infOrmation of the enemy, which was subsequently confirmed, namely; that the Grand Southern army was concentrating at Brownsville, to make their line' of "defence on Bayou Pdeto Paton was • there, and KIRBY SMITH at Little Rook. Pda.usrannku . had crossed the river a few days before, and was then crossing the Little Red river; Leai , ing the Mar. more off the mouth, Lieutenant BACHE tvenrup the Little Red with the Lexington. When about twenty five miles distant, he met the. Ceicket with two prizis, which she had captuied at Scuroyi.fifteen miles further on. She also destroyed areliflSKADirk K'S pontoon bridge, leaving a portion of the latter's brigade on the other side of the river. The Ceicket was fired into by IdansiAnu*E's men, and had about twenty eoldie.ra Wounded out of &hundred and fifty.-'Both mach: were atteyaked coming down the river, porn, cotton and a few prisoners were cap- tined with the prizes. . The Tom Gregg is a fine aide-wheel steamer, as is alio the Kaskaskia, though, a little older. They are , now officered and manned, and are retained to co operate with the army. - All along the river the farmers were glad of our presence, and many Union, demonstrations were' made. The captured boats were the only Means of transportation the rebels had on the river, and therefore our taking them is a heavy blow initiated upon them. Lieut. DONNINGTON, who was formerly.captured while in command of -Arkansas Post, is. now fitting out, at Little Rock, the Ponchartrain, the last ram • the rebels have in these waters. If she ventures outside the shoals, Admiral PORTER says she will be captured. ' • Admiral PORTER, in communicating the results of the last expedition up the Yazoo river, to recover the Baron De Kalb (the particulars of whiCh have already been published), says that the visit cost the rebels more than was at first supposed.: Captain WALKER has received information, to be relied on, that besides the live steamers at or near the city of Yazoo, ISAAC Bitowsr (late a lieutenant 111 the United States navy), in a panic, and for fear they would fall into our hands, set fire to and destroyed fourteep others, among them- nine large steamers. Their machinery was intended to be sent to Selma, Ala., for the gunboats building there. There are no more steamere.on the Yazoo. All the vessels which sought refuge there "as the safest place in rebel dam have been destroyed. . Another Fleet of Iron-Clads to be Built. WASHINGTON, August 27.—{Special to the Tri- Itne.]—Notwithstanding the/numerous vessels added to the navy within the past two years, the work of contruction is still to go on. The Navy Department has just decided to build another fleet of . iron-clad vessels. _They will be longer and more formidable than any now in the service of this or any other country, being perfect copies of the great Ericsson ocean ships Puritan and Dictator, which are now building in New York. This last new batch of vessels is to be the most perfect in the entire navy, and in order to render them unexceptionable in every way, they are to be built at the navy yards of New York, Boston, Phila delphia, and Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Naval constructors alone are superintending them. Work on the vessels will soon commence. Each will have two turrets of enormous thickness, and the side armor will be some feet in thickness. Therewill be for each vessel two pairs of direct-acting engines with jet condensers, the cylinders of which are to be vertical, and placed immediately over the ihafts ; the diameter of each is to be fifty-five inches', and the stroke of piston three feet. As there 'are two of these engines, the speed of the vessel will be rendered as great as if the cylinders were much larger. The boilers are to, be of the horizontal tubular kind, with 900 square feet of grate, of not: -exceeding 6,1-.:4 "feet in - length, and 22,600 feet of heating surface. The tubeste De of brace; shell to be three-eighth inch thick plates, with 7 7 16-inch bottoins and furnaces, and braced for a 'working pressure 0f.35 pounds per equare inch. The screws to be of com position of copper and tin, 16 feet in diameter, of 22 feet main pitch, to have 4 blades and lo be 2 feet long. They will be sustained from the counter of the vessel by a brass hanger, and the ehaftwill re volve in a brass pipe connecting the hanger with, the hull. There will be required 8 blowing engines, with blowers equivalent to Dimpfers No. , 45, to blow into an air-tight fire-room. Each boiler will be required to have 811 auxiliary steam-pump. The usual number of duplicate pieces, tools, instruments, store, &c., required in such naval contracts are to be furnished. Tbe Department'will advertise at once for turrets, which are to be built as rapidly as possible.. STEVENBONt Ala., August 28 —lt is probable that the rebels are evacuating Chattanooga and' all of East Tennessee. Deserters who come into General Reynolds lines -report that they are moving their guns and all the useful and important machinery of the foundries at Chattanooga and Atlanta. The rebel cayalry are reported to be concentrating at Rome. • YOux, August 2.B.,—General Dix has fur nished the correspondence between himself and G 0... vernor Seymour rpative to employing the State mi litia to enfeirce the 'United States laws in this city. The Generil says he publishes this correspondence in order to explain his reasons for asking for a mili tary force from the General Goveinment. He says Had my application for the State military to the Governor been suecessful, I should not have asked the General Government to send into this State a single soldier to aid in asserting its authority and in protecting its officers from violence in the dis charge of their duties." The Board of Supervisors today voted an ap. propriation of two million , dollars to exempt fire men, and the militia and police force from the draft, and to provide for the families of drafted men in in digent circumstances. Fonnress MONRON, August 27.—The steamship Daniel Webster 'arrived here last. evening, froni New York, with 700 Confederate prisoners. They leave for City Point this afternoon, in charge of fiag.of-truce officer Major Mulford. The English corvette Jaion, Captain Yon Danop, from New York, arrived in HaMpton* Roads_this morning, and anchored abreast of the Fortress. --"" SCRANTON, Pa., August 28.—Secretary Seward and the party of diplomats accoinpanying him leave for New York this afternoon by special train. - MEMPHIS, August 25.--Advices from New Orleans to the 20th instant, were received here to-day. The papers contain but little news of interest:" The ship a C. - Duncan, from Boston, with 75,000 bushels of oats, had arrived there. : - Eighty bales of low middling cotton had been sold at 56;(c. There was a very BEAU quantity on the catalogue. The steamer Courier, haying aboard the 49th Illi nois Regiment, came in collision with the Steamer. Deg Ere *boil: , thirty miles booty. Nemphis.. - 1 . 1/@ courier was sunk and several littgaengem Were drowned. The total loss has not yet been as. nee ained. - Frol4 Nassau, N. P. NEW YORE, August 28.—The steamer Oorstea, from Nassau on the 24th, arrived here today. Quite a riot took place at.Granttown, between the inhabitants and soldiers. Two or three on both sides were killed. . Several blockade runners had returned to, Nassau from unsuccessful attempts to get into Southern ports. Au arrival at Nassau from Havana states that the old walls of Elavana havebeen demolished. The gunboat Juniata sailed from Havana, on the 12th, in pursuit of the rebel steamer Nate, which hadeailed the same day forlklobile. Advice. from Naeaau to the 22d inst. state that the rebel steamer Oronatadt was captured by the U. S. gunboat R Node Island, off Abaco: She was from Wilmington, N. C. BALTIMORE, August .18.—The gunboat Meigs ar rived at Point Lookout at ii o'clock on Wednesday night, and reports having met the gunboat Curd tuck in Chesapeake Bay. Her captain reported that the gunboat Satellite and tugboat Reliance, Captain Dungan, with the crews of both vessels j were cap•' tuned, on Tuesday, near the mouth of the Rapjpahan• nook river The captain of the Satellite was re ported killed, and the captain of the Reliance wounded. Rebel Reports of National Operations at FORTBB/313 MONROE, Aug. 27.—The Mobile Daily Tiibune, of , August 18th, says: "There are sixteen vessels in the harboiat Pensacola, ten, of which are vessels of war, and six transports. The Yankees are building two immense hospitals at the navy yard, each of them 300 feet long and three stories high. All the negroes are being sent to New Or. leans, to be placed in the Yankee army there." Nsw Yonx,August 25.-Arrived ships Tuno, from "Glasgow : ; Antoinette, from Liverpool ; Cultivator, from Liverpool ; Empire, from Liverpool ; bark Anna Pelona, from Havre ; schr Antelope, from Turks The Substitute Conscript Deserters. Sumpter and Wagner. THE WAR IN TENNESSEE. Reported Evacuation of ptiattduooga. The Draft in New York. Fortress Monroe. The Diplomatic Excursion. From New Orleaus via Memphis. Capture of U. S. Gunboat Satellite. Pensacola. Marine Intelligence. CHARLESTON. OFFICIAL. ACCOUNT OP THE ARMY OPERATIONS TO THE 24t11. Report of Gen. Gilmore and his Chief of Artillery. Forts Magner and Sumpter Reported Occupied -by our Forces on Monday' Last BATTERIES WITHIN EFFECTIVE RAMIE OF THE HEART OF CHARLESTON. Our Projectiles designated by Beauregard the Most Destructive ever used in War. FORTRESS MONROE, August 28:-The gunboat Western World, Capt. Gregory, arrived this morn ing from off Wilmington, N. O, and reports the arrival there of the United ,States steamer Ploridis from Charleston, with intelligence that our forces occupied Sumpter and Wagner on Monday last. OFFLOIAL REPORT OF GEN. GIEMORE. HEADQUARTERS, DEPARTMENT OP THE SORTIE, MORRIS ISLAND, S. C.,• Angora 24, 1863. To Major General H. W. Hailed, Generatin-Chief S. A.,Washingto.:4 3 D, O. e - Sul: I have the honor to report the practical de roolitihn of Fort Sumpter as the result of our seven days' bombardment of that work, including two days during which a powerful northeasterly storm most seriously diminished the accuracy and effect of our firm . Fort Sumpter is to.day a sbapelese and harmless mass of ruins. My chief of artillery, Colonel J. W. Turner,teporta Its destructioniqrfar complete that it is no longer of any avail in the defence of Charles ton. He also says that by a longer fire it could be made more completely a ruin and a mass of. broken masonry, but could scarcely be more powerless fOr the &fence of the harbor. My breaching batteries were located at distances varying between vac) and 4,240 yards front the works, and now remain - as efficient as ever, . I demi it unnecessary .ckt present to continue the fire Upon the ruins a sunipter. - I have,alN Itt great labOr and under a heavy fire frfari James Island ; established batteries on my left Within effective range of :the heart of Charleston city, and have opened with them, after giving Gen. Beauregard due notice of• my intention to do so. My notification to General Beauregard, his reply thereto, with the threat of retaliation, and my re: joinder,. have been transmitted to The army head; quarters. The projectiles from my batteries entered the city, and general Beauregard himself designated - them "as the moat destructive missiles ever used in-war." The report of my chief of artillery and an accu rate sketch of the ruins of Fort Sumpter, taken at 32 M., yesterday, six hours before we Cased firing, are herewith transmitted. . Very respectfully, your obedient servant, Q. A. GILMORE, Brigadier General Commanding. REPORT OF GILMORE'S CHIEF OF ARTIL- LERY. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ARTILLERY, DEPARTMENT OF THE SOUTFI, MORRIS ISLAND, Auguat .23, 1863 GENERAL : I have the honor to report the' effect that our breaching batteries have had upon Fort Sumpter, and the condition of that work to-night, at the close of the seventh day's bombardment. The gorge wail of the fort is almost a complete mass of ruins for the distance of several casemates about midway on this face, is removed nearly and in places quite to the arches, and:but for the sand bags with which the casemates were tilled, and whinh - have served to sustain the broken arches and masses of masonry, it would have long since been entirely cut away, avid with it the arches to the floor of the second tier of casemates. The dEbris on this front now forms a rampart reaching as high as the floor of the casemates. The parapet wall of the two northeasterly faces is com pletely carried away, a small portion only being left In the angle made with the:gorge wall, and the ram part of' these faces is also a total ruin. Quite one•half of our projectiles seem to have struck the parade and parapet of these Iwo faces, and judging from the effect they have had upon the gorge wall within our observation, the destruction of masonry on these two sides must be very great ; and lam of the opinion that nearly every arch in these fronts must be broken in. But one gun remains in position in theie two fronts, and this is in the aligle of the gorge, and, I think, unserviceable. The ruin extends around, taking iu the northeasterly face as far as can be seen._ .A portion of this face, adjoining the angle it makes with the southeasterly face, is concealed. From the great number of my missiles which have struck in this angle during the last two days, it cannot be otherwise than greatly damaged, and I do not think any guns can be left on this face in serviceable con dition. The ramparts in this angle as well as in the South 'easterly face must be plougtted up and greatly shat tered, the, parapet in this latter face being torn off in many places, as we can- see ; and I hardly think _thevlatformit of the three remaining guns on this :face could have escaped. ' ~With the assistance of a powerful glass, I cannot determine that more than one of the guns 'ma be limed, and it has been dismounted once. The car ,riages of the others are evidently more or less chat 'tired, and meals the ruin of the parapet and parade in the immediate vicinity of this gun, that 'it proba bly could not be served for any length of time. In tine, the destruction of the fort is B o far com plete, 'that it la to-day of no avail in the defence of.the harbor of Charleston. , • By a longer fire it can be made more completely a ruin, and a masa of broken masonry, but could scarcely be more powerless for the defence of the harbor. I therefore respectfully submit my opinion, that the continuance of our fire is no longer neces sary, as giving us no ends adequate for the consump tion of our resources. Very respectfully, your obedient servant, JOHN W. TURNER, Colonel and Chief of Artillery. To Brigadier General Q. A. Gilmore, commanding the Department of the South, Morris Malta, &c. EUROPE Additional per the Steamship Hibernia' Sm. :forms, N. F., August 28.—The following Is a continuation of the news received by the steamer Hibernia The London Times, in its "city article," in refer ring to the affairs in Mexico, says : "It is vain to deny the feelings of the London merchants. They believe that the Emperor Napoleon has' done a great service, both political and commercial, to the world—poiitically, so far as conforming to the pre vious fictional Spain in extinguishing the Monroe doctrine, antlillbmmercially, by restoring intercourse with a nation of such importance of territory." A British war ship, from Rio de Janeiro, reports as follows : Passed a ship (name not given) burnt to the' aterts edge, on the 2d of July, in latitude 26° south, longitude 38° west. Shortly afterwards spoke the steamer Alabama, which had captured and burnt this ship. The Polish question remains unchanged. The Poles had defeated the Russians at Searzyat, and captured 200 009 roubles. The Emperor Napoleon's fete day at Paris passed off quietly, and without any political significance. Drotryn de L'Huys had given a grand banquet to the Corps Diplomatique. The Congress of the German princes was in session at Frankfort. It was headed by the Emperor of Austria, and largely attended. The agents of the Confederate loan announce that the September dividend will be paid in due course. - LoisuoN, August 18. —The French Government had revoked the measure of confiscation-irchlexico, and withdrawn the propositions in regard to specie exports. Shipping Intelligence. LIVER'POOL, August lB.—Arrived from New York, Rhuba, at Plymouth; Stedenka and Lady Head, at Bridgewater ;• Renoca, Bristol; Order, at Ham. burg ,• Benefactor, at Hong Kong; Centurion, at Hamburg ; _Examiner, St. Nicholas, from San Fran cisco i Granville, at Hong .Kong; Amphritite, at Dial; Plymouth and American Eagle, at Deal; Au gusta, at Belfast; Eidelia and American Union, at Liverpool. Arrived from Callao, August ii,Erin.go-Bragh, at at Liverpool. Exchanging Colored 'SoldieFs. - - _ Says a Washington despatch to the Daily News: "In reference to the exchange of prisoners,the RichmonCEizquirer says the first decoyed of . the Yankee commissioners' will be,-'that we at once consent to put-the negroes on the footing of our - own troops, and value them against each other, -man for man.' It says , this is an attempted outrage by the Yankee Government, the 'fruit of their tem porary luck in an excess of prisoners. , It finally says: 'Will Lincoln's Government treat us as criminals] If there is to be u o exchange on equal terms, better there should be. no exchange at all: It deprecates the imprisoning of Co!. Morgan and his ofikey tpc - tkiditte`the ral!Als of this logie The rebels have how some thirty thousand prisoners of war, mainly paroled and at home, while we have some eighty thousand of their men in our hands, in cluding the garrison of Vicksburg and some others, paroled. Our commissioner proposes to exchange even until we • shall have exhausted their list, officer for officer, man for man. Why, that is an "outrage," says the Enquirer: "You require us to exchange negroes and all, and that is not equal." But why, gentlemen! We offer you a white rebel of even grade--one of your regular soldiers—for every black Unionist you have on hand. Do you really mean to contend that one of your whites is not equal to one of our negroes? If he is, what are you grumbling at! If you mean to insist that your whites are better than our negroes, then you have the best of. the bargain every ex change we make. Suppose we were to offer you greenbacks for your Confederate notes, dollar for dollar, would you complain that the two currencies were not equal! If not, and your whites are worth as much as or more than our blacks, what is there, to cavil about on your part I—Tribune. SLAVRICY.—A correspondent in the Southwest writes : For over forty years the Abolitionistk of the East have contended against slavery, but were restrained by the conservatives. Now, even these- are for the disruption of a political element, though not on as.. count of its social wrong. By hundreds the no. groes come to the river, clad in scant garments, and a bundle of trifles; their only savings after sears of toil. The great principles of right and wrong seem to be befOnd the control and ken of the wisest, and governea and decided whether we will or not, as is beat for future and present. A. resident just said in my preeence, " I shall- know whether .slavery, is right or wrong, by the result of this war." • TERRITORY OF ARIZONA.-We had the pleasure, 'yesterday, of wishing good speed to three of the gen tlemen belonging i to .the lately.organized Territory of Arizona, namEry : the Hon. John N. Goodwin; Governor; Hon, Richard a. McCormick, Secretary, and the Hon. Joseph P. Allyn, Associate Justice of the Territory. They arrived in Philadelphia, from New York, on Thursday evening, and proceeded last night via Pittsburg to Cindinnati, en route for TllOBOll, the, seat of the government, only two hun dred miles east of the Pai3ific and one hundred miles from the Mexican prOvince of Sonora. WE bivivit'especial attention to-the Oolleotioq of fine oil paintings to be sold at auction by Gillette & Scott, auctioneers, No. 619 Chestnut street,•• this morning at 10;„1 o'clock, and evening at 6 o'olook. PENNSYLVANIA ITEMS: Dlttsw A Trogter.—F.. B. MeOrum, Esq., editor of the Altoona Tribune, says he received a " ticket of invitation to Uncle Sam'. balls ' a series of which are to come ofr ..to the Southern States, during the ensuing" winter. - Astoria the drafted men in Northumbeiland coun ty are four clergymen : Revs. Creighton, of Sunbu ry, Wampole, of Bleysburg, Riley, of pforthuakber land, and Sprecher, of Milton.. DRATII OF All EDlTOR .— Samuel McElhoee , editor of the Brookville Star, died at East Liberty on Sun day, the 1646 Mr. IVicEihose, although in delicate health, on the call of three•months men, shut his office, and with his two boys entered the service of the State to repel the rebel invasion. Re was soon prostrated by disease, and died in camp—a victim to ,the wicked rebellion. Peace to his remains "I MR. 011ARLES ELLIS, of Johnstown, a member of the 21St Pennsylvania cavalry, was killed on Thursday last, at the camp near Ohambersburg, by his horse rearing and falling on him. He survived but a short time. Ton ground having been purchased for laying out a national cemetery at Gettysburg, preparations are being made to fit the place for the reception of the bodies of the gallant dead who fell on the Penn sylvania bathe-ground. It is to comprise twenty acres, and the origization of, the project must be in edited to the Governor of Pennsylvania. CHAIWICD wrrn Plin,runv.—Levvis Aurin was be. fore Commissioner Sproul, on the 21st, and entered into a recognizance in the Bum of .$l - 600 for hie ap pearance at the next term of the United States Dis trict Court, to answer the charge of perjury in swearing that he was the only support of aged and infirm parents, dependent on his labor for support. We are informed, that since the information was made against -Dlr. Aurin, he has paid t4OO, and thereby become exempt from military' duty.--Piffs burg Gazelle. [From the N. Y. Poet ] GeUeral Dix and GOyernor Seymour. nirORTANT CORRESPONDENCE-WHY ==! An important correspondence has passed between Major General Dix, commanding the Department of the East, and Governor. - Seymour, concerning the enforcement of the draft in this city. The corres pondence fully shows the respective positions of the. Federal Government and of Governor Seymout, and explains why it was deemed necessary, to send a bilge force of - Federal troops hither to protect the •officers of the draft in the discharge of their ditties, and to , guaranty the peace of the city and the safety of loyal citizens. We condense the correspondence: GENERAL DIX TO GOVERNOR.SEYROUR The first letter was written by General Dix on the 30th of July: He apprises the Governor that the draft in this city will probably be • resumed at an early day, and desires to know whether the military pnwer ol the State may be depended-on to enforce the execution of the law in case of forcible re sistance to itt He says he is very anxious` that there should be perfeot harmony of action between the Federal. Government and' the State, and' adds that if he can feel assured that under the Governor's authority the laws will be faithfslly executed, he (the General) need not ask the War DepartMent to put.at hie disposal, for that purpose, troops in -the service of the United States, . . GOvanltott. envideumls REPLY.. . . On the 2.:1 of August Governor Seymour replied, informing General Dix that he was in communica tion with the President in relation to the draft in this State . , and that he hoped the President's answer Would relieve both himself anti General Dix from the "painful questions growing out of an armed en forcement of the conscription." Upon receiving the President's reply be FOuld again communicate with General Dix. SECOND LETTER PROM- GENERAL DIE.. On the Stri of August General Dix acknowledged the receipt of Governor Seymour's reply, and pro ceeds to Bay, that hie position as commander of this military department compels him to anticipate'the President's answer by some suggestions arising out of _Governor 'Seymour's reply. Re then explains more at length his motives in soliciting Governor Seymours' co-operation, and dwells upon the object and necessity of the draft, objecting to the-Goven or'a use of the phrase "conscription act," as calcu lated to "bring the enrolment into reproach and de feat its execution." . The General supposes, however, that Governor 'Seymour uses the phrase inadvertently, and. does not believe that he will "throw the influence of his high position against the Government in a conflict for its existence.,, General Dix then shows that the burden, which the draft imposes on the loyal States is not in pro portion to population one-tenth as onerous as that which has been assumed by the seceded States, and argues that we should do as much for the preserva tion of our institutions as they are doing to destroy them. He believes that the people of this State will respond with alacrity and enthusiasm to the call now made upon them. . He refers to the deep disgrace cast upon the city by the recent riots, and says that the courts having done their duty towards vindicating the majesty of the law, "It now remains for the people to vindi cate themselves from the reproach in the eyee.of the country and the world by a cheerful acquiescence in the law." In this connection Gen. Dix declares that those who array themselves against the law " are obnoxious to far severer censure than the mis guided and ambitious men who are striving to sub vert our Government." In conclusion, he renews the expression of his anxiety to be assured by Governor Seymour, at the earliest day practicable, that the military power of the State will, in case of need, be employed to en. force the draft. He is the more urgent in asking this assurance, because, should it not be granted, he will deem it his ' duty to "call on the General Go vernment for a force which shall not only be ade quate to insure the execution of the law, but which shall enable him to carry out such decisive measures as shall leave their impress upon the mind of the country for'years come?, GOVERNOR SEYMOUR'S REJOINDER . . On the lfith of August Governor Seymour ap prised General Dix that he had received the final answer of the President, who, he regrets to say, did not see fit to comply with the requests made to him, and Governor Seymour adds thaVhe was confident that a "generous reliance upon the patriotism of the people to fill the thinned ranks -of our armies by voluntary enlistments would hereafter, as it has heretofore, prove more effectual than any conscrip tion." 6.. With reference to General - DixVim:miry as to the position which will be held by the State autho rity, Governor Seymour says : "Of course, under no circumstances can they per form duties expressly confided to others; nor can they undertake to relieve others from their proper responsibilities. But, there can be no violations of good order, no riotous proceedings, no disturbances of the' public peace, which are not infractions of the laws of the State, and those laws will be enforced under all circumstances. I shall take care that all the executive officers of this State perforth their duties vigorously and thoroughly ; and, if need be, the military power will be called into requisition." GENERAL DIX TO GOVERNOR SETROUR Three days subsequently, on the 18th of August, General Dix reminds Governor Seymour that in an interview had with him on the 18th of July, imme diately after General Dix's arrival in this city, he (General Dix) had expressed a wish that the draft in this - State should be executed without the em ployment, of troops in the service of the United States, and that afterwards, by a letter addressed to Governor Seymour, he had renewed more formally the expression of this wish. In the same spirit, when some of the marshals in the interior applied to .General Dix for aid against threatened violence, he referred them to the Gover nor, that they might be protected by his authority. General Dix again declares that it vps his ear nest wish that the Federal arms should neither be teen nor felt in the enforcement of the draft, but adds that, baying received no answer from Gover nor Seymour, lie had applied to the Secretary of War, on the 14th of August, for a force adequate to the object. That call had been promptly responded to, and .he would be ready to meet all opposition to the law. He still hoped, however, that Governor Seymour's course would be such as to render it unnecessary to use the troops under his command for that purpose. CLOSE OP THE CORRESPONDENCE. On the 20th of Auguat, Governor Seymour wrote to Gen. Dix, complaining that he had received no notice of the time when the draft would be made in the city, owing to which he alleged he bad no op portunity to consult with the generals commanding militia in the counties of New York and Kings, nor to obtain credits for volunteers, as he hoped to be able to do. It will be observed that the concentration of - United States troops, here to enforce the draft, was wholly owing to the neglect or tacit refusal of Governor. Seymour to give a satisfactory answer to General Dix, or make suitable preparations for the enforcement of the laws, while the draft should be in progress. SOUTHERN MARRETS.-FlOm a late number of the Richmond Dispatch, we clip the following: Flour is still quotable $45 for superfine and $5O for extra.. The stock on hand is very light. Corn $lO 50 611.25. Meal $ll. Butter s2@2 50 lb Lard $1 S 5 Th. Potatoes, $11011.50 V bus. Baled Hay $l2 ig cwt. Peas slo@ll 11 bus. Pine boards sell at $95 WI DI feet. Nails $lOO 111 lbs. Brown Sugar $1 80 61.90 g 1 lb. - Molasses sl3@a 141p' Cone $425 4.25 ip lb. Salt 52@58c. Corn Whisky $26a30 gallon; rye $25@30 /9 gallon. Apple Brandy $28@34 ip gallon. Pork 85c.? ib. Public Entertainments. ACADEXY of Music.—This is to be a gala night at the Academy. The performance will be as varied in character and as excellent in style as it is possi ble .for any performance to be, and will embrace tragedy, comedy, farce, and melodrama, interspersed with musical gems by Mr. Bedworth's able orches tra. The occasion will be the benefit and last ap• pearance of Mr. Booth—the announcement previous ly made that yesterday evening was to be his fare well appearance, being erroneous. He will appear to-night as Shylock, in the "Merchant of Venice," and as Petruchio, in the Taming of the Shrew." Mr. J. S. ,Clarlte—the a inimitable, the irresistible Clarke—is likewise announced for the occasion, and will take the parts of Jacques Strop, in "Robert Macaire," and Cousin foe, in the "Rough Diamond.V As the season at the Academy is announced to close with this evening, the house should be crowded. THE REAM GHOST AT CONCERT iIALL.—The cc sence of a ghost is said to be unreality; but, if we may borrow a Celtic' expression, the real ghost will Make his first appearance at Concert Hall this evening, under the protection of Mr. Watkins. The other ghost has not, gratified the public imagi• .tiatiOn of what a ghost should be, and has proved a failure for two nights. The Concert Hall ghost is the original Jacobs, and the same apparition that made Such a sensation at Wallaok's theatre, New York, and previously in London. We can as sure all disappointed ghost-seekers that, to the best of our belief, they will find a first-clasa spirit at Con cert Hall, and a thrilling and satisfactory perform ance. NATIONAL UNION WARD TICKETS.—The ward conventions of the National Union party as. iembled last evening, for the purpose of nominating the ward tickets. In someof the wards the contests were quite: spirited, and kept up until too late• an hour to be in time for The Press of this morning. The' following nominations were made : First Ward.—Alderman, ThomasJ. Dallas; Com mon Council, Jab. G. Peale. Dr. John B. Haines. Second Ward.—Wm. H. Ituddiman. FourtlrWard.—No returns. -Fifth-Ward.—Postponed: Sixth Ward.—Select Council, George F. Ormley ; School Directors, A. B. Sloanaker, Geo. R. Beam, N. Watson, Wm. Taylor. Seventh Ward.—Common Council, John Quincy Adams. School Directors, A. M. Walkinshaw, Lewis Elkin. Wm Lawrence, and G. W. Lott. Eighth Ward.—Seleot Council, Alexander L. Hodgson. School Directors,. J.H. Atwood, Morrie Patterson, and Dr. A. W. Galley. Ninth Ward.—Select Council, John Price Wethe. rill. . _ . Tenth Ward.—Common Council, Isaac Sulger Eleventh Ward.—No returns. Twelfth Ward.—Did not meet. ' Thirteenth Ward.—Select Council, :fames Lynd. School Directors, Philip Fraser, Geo. Rocimnberg3 John D.T.anderson, Chas. Baker. Fourteenth Ward.-- Common Council, Amos Brims, D. C. Orem. School Directors, Samuel Sobeidy, W. Fisher Xitehell, Ed. Leighton, Isaiah. Stratton. - . • - - . Fifteenth Ward.—Select Council, Henry Davis Common Council, Robe Evans. Alderman, Rob Hutchinson. ' • Sixteenth Wird.—No return. Seventeenth Ward.—No return. Eighteenth Ward.—No return. Nineteenth Ward2:--No return. Twentieth Ward —Common Council, Harri son, J. H. BillLngton. School Directors. Charles Reeves, Soo. F. Pdarcer, Chao. C: Colladay. Twenty-that Ward.—No return. Twenty-Second Ward.—Common Council, R. H. Twenty.fourth Ward.—No returns. Twenty fifth Ward.—No returns. TTY" COOKE, subscription : agent, reports the sale of $781,650 in five-twenties yesterday by the various agencies. Deliveries of bonds are being made to July 27th. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIIL. THE MONEY MARKET. PHILADELPHIA, Allglitt 214 1868 Gold was again somewhat excited to-day by the conflicting reports from Charleston, and fluctuated frequently between 123),‘ and 124 g. On the recep tion of the news that Forts Sumpter and Wagner were in our possession, there was no perceptible change, save that it was a little. more freely offered at the same figures. Gold is so _low, now compared with 170, that almost everybody thinks it necessa rily cheap, and not a few are buying it. The most likely change in gold will be a decline, but slow and subject to reactions and fluctuations, - the wants of the importing community keeping it at least 116 and from that to 120. Government securities are firmly held, 1881 s sell ing at 14634Q107, seven-thirties at the same. One year certificates, old, at 101@t01,4, the new at 99%. The conversions into the five.twenties amounted yesterday to nearly eight hundred thousand. The condition of things to-day is the same as that noted at the Stock Board yesterday—some anxiety to realize, but sufficient buyers being on the ground to preserve the tone of the market from weakness. State fives sold at 10034', a decline of %; new city. sixes at . 106%. 108% was bid for 168 ts Government ; 107 for the seven-thirties. Pennsylvania Railroad second mortgages sold at 107; Camden and Amboy 1889 s at 108 ; North Pennsylvania sixes at 96-116 was bid for the tens ; Reading 1886 s at 119 M, 1810 s at 108. 108 was bid for Elmira sevens ; 100 for Lehigh Valley bonds. Reading shares fluctuated between 60@69,44, closing at the latter. Norristown sold at 60'; filinehill at 83 ; Long Island at 96 ; Little Schuylkill at 47, adecline of ; Pennsylvania at 65x ; Pniladelphia and Erie at 27; Camden and Atlantic preferred at 2134. North Pennsylvania declined to 18 bid. Fifth and Sixth sold at 86. 42 was bid for Tenth and Eleventh ; 1234' for Seventeenth and Nineteenth ; 29 for Thirtemith and Fifteenth ; 15M for Spruce and Pine. Canal securities were neglected. Schuylkill Navi gation preferred sold at 2494', a decline of y. Sus quehanna scrip sold at 62k. NOthing doing in bank shares. The market closed dull. Drexel & Go. uncle; United Stater Bonds, ......... ........106 1411034' U. S new gertificates of Indebtedness 09% 89X 11. S. old Certificates of Indebtedness ... . . .101X@IOEi United States 7 3-lo Notes 1064 coal Quarcerruasuirs'..Vonchers 93 984 Orders for Certificates of Indebtedness Ndls Gold t terling Each ange_ 136 137- A LAR6IC Jay Cooke & Co. quote Crovernment Securities, &c., as follows : United States sixes. 1881 10611071 i United States 7-30 notes 10631. 1071:f . . Certificated of Indebtedness Do. do new.. Quartermasters' 'Vouchers. Demand notes Gold' . a~eg 6vB twenties, s7g, 65Q . . The inspections of Piollt and Meal, in Philadel phia during the week ending August 27, 063, were as follows : ' Barrels of superfine do. Middlings do. Rye do. Corn Meal do. Condemned.... • The following is the amount of coal shipped ov the Iluntingdon and Broad Top Mountain Railroad for the week ending Wednesday, August 22, 1863, did since January 1 : . Increase. Decrease The statements of the banks of the three princi. pal cities of the Union for the hist week compare with the previous one and the corresponding time of 1862, as follows: N.Y..dug Poston, Ana. 24. Phila.. Ang.2.4 Total .. Last week Last year. The statement of the Boston banks for the last week comperes with the previous week and for the corresponding week of 1862 as follows : Aug 17, 1263. Aug 24. 1863. Aue.25.1362. ..$71.861,078 $71,447.596 $63,843,323 7,613.497, .• 7,780.905 8.1155.402 27, 638, 073 29,516 154 26,791.627 •• 7.193.917 ' 7.303,757 6,772,215 Loans Specie Deposits... Circulation The statement of the present week, as compared with the preceding, shows a decrease of $412,553 in the items of loans and discounts, $32,592 in specie, $381,919 in deposits, and an increase of $104,840 in circulation. • The New York Evening Post of to-day says The loan market is working with much ease. Yesterday afternoon and to-day several unusually heavy, loans have been negotiated, and from the abundance of accumulating capital, and the in creasing confidence of our money-lending classes in the permanence of our national institutions, the suc cess of the war, and the consequent soundness and value of our chief railroad securities, especially those of the Western roads, that to-day several of them are accepted as collaterals with moderate mar gins, although a short time_ ago they would have,. been instantly rejected. - The stock market is steady. Governments are scarcely so active; border State bonds are - quiet; bank shares dull; railroad bonds strong, and rail road shares lower. Before the first session gold was selling at 124 X, Erie at 11 . 10118 New York Central at 1343@1343, Illinois Central at 133%013,5. and Michigan South ern at 105@i053. The appended-table exhibits the chief movements of the mxrket•"%mpared. with the latest prises of yesterdaV4sienW: 4,1,r.1:3, Fri. "Thrs. Adv. Dec. 17. 6a, 18131Zreg.4•-•••••.-106 106 .. U. S.6s, tow low U. cs, se: en-thirties.• • • 107 107 .. U.S. 1 year Corfu goia• • MN. .1.013 i • . • U. S. 1 yr. Cert. crizr'ney 99% 99% American gold 124% 124 Tennessee . C6K 66 3£ Missouri 70% 70X Penile 229 N.Y. Central ...-334% 35534 Erie 115% Erie preferred • 111 Fladson River--......... 143% 145 169% Harlem preferred 160 Reading 119 193 11ch. South 1951( 10.5.3.4 Mich. So. guar ....136 136 . • Illinois Con scrip ~ . ... .133: 135 ' Cleveland&Pitteburg...lo3,Y; 10334 Galena.. .... 111% . • CleTeland&Toldo..•. • . .17 119 .. ag Chico & Rock Island.ll2 1111 .. Fort Wayne.... 93 Prairie dn Chien 77 79 Alton & Terre Haute.... 6334 6234 1 Chicago &Northwest'n 353 E 36 .. Canton. .. . 2( 3 234 Chicago Alton 85 -1' 1 Phffada. Stock Exch (Reported by, & X tirdericurz FLEST : 20 Pelusa. E 2dys 66.51 4600 0 & Amb 6e,'&) 1.t.108 143 66 Pen= 58,1055....100X £6OO do .... N Penne R 1811 200 Reading R.2daddut 60 • 100 d 0...... .. . b3O 60 SOO do • b3Own 60 100 do 99% BETWEEN 100 Reading R.. 693 1. (.1) ila & Erie 50 do - b 5 27 SECQND 6000 C & Amb 65.,'59 mt 108 2(00 City 6s, new 10634 1250 000 U S 6 dool year option. 1 1.02 % 90 Penna. R b 5 6036 2000 01 S 7-S0 Tress Notes _ . . ' blank A & 0 107 HOU S 7-80 Treas Notes blank F & A 107 Weekly Review of the Phila. Markets, AUGUST 28, 1884 Business is gradually iMproving, but the markets are still inactive; and the transactions in most de partments of trade very moderate. Bark is quiet. Flour continues very dull. Wheat is rather dull and lower. Corn is firm. Oats are in fair demand. Can dles are without change. Coal moves off slowly. Cotton is dull and prices are rather lower. Coffee is very scarce, but holders are firm. Sugar and 'Vio lence are better. Fish are selling more freely. Foreign Fruit is very scarce and high, but domestic is coming in and selling freely. In Pig Iron there is very little doing. Naval Stores of all kinds are scarce and firm. Coal Oil is firmly held, and prices have advanced. In Provisions there is very little doing, and prices are without change. There has been more doing in Seeds. Tallow and Tobacco are unchanged. In Wool there is very little doing. In Dry Goods there is a moderate business to note, and plices generally are firm, and the stocks on sale light. There is very little demand for Flour, either for export or home use, and for old stock prices are un -settled and lower; sales comprise about 4,500 bbls at $5.25@5.50 for extra, and $6.50@6 for extra fami ly, as to .quality; the Inquiry is mostly for fresh ground. The retailers and bakers are buying mode rately at from $4,50(W.20 for.super4ne, $5,24.010 fOr extra, $5.15@6.60 far extra family, and $16)1.50 for fancy brands, according to quality. Rye Flour is selling slowly at $4 766)5 t bbl. Corn Meal is scarce, and there is very little doing ; Brandywine is held at $4.25, and Pennsylvania at $4 ict bbl. • GRAIN.—Da Wheat there is not much doing, and prices are rather lower • about 25,000 bus fair and prime old Western and Penna. red sold at $1.30@ 1.38; [new do, at sl.ls@tm by bu, and white at from $1.36®1.58 bu, according to quality. Rye is without change ; 800 bthunew Delaware sold at 90c, and small lots of old Penna. at $1.03@1.05 t bu. Corn is less active, but prices are firm ; 30,000 bus sold at SlErB2c for prime yellow, and 79@80c bu for Western mixed, which is better. Oats are in fair demand ; about 27,000 bus have been disposed of at 53@We for new Delaware, and 700 weight for old Penna. Barley and Malt remain quiet. The following are the receipts of Flour and Grain at this port during the past week : Flour Wheat Corn Oats' PROYISIONS.—The market is quiet, and prices are without any material- change. .About 400 bbls mess Pork sold at $14@14.50 for new; city packed mess Beef commands $13@16, and country 5124 12 50; cash. There is a fair demand for Bacon Hams; 000 tierces sold at 11@133,10 for plain and fancy bagged, including 150 tierces of the former at 111-,io Wes are selling at 73:1'.®Thcc, and 30,000 its Shoutders void at 6c. In Green Bleats lthereis very little, doing.; sales of Hams in pickle at 10MG410,10 ; 300 boxes do in-salt at fiXe, atm 25,000 ibs shoulders at bi.V(o6d, cash and 60 days. Lard—there is a moderate demand, and prices are better; 250 tierces and hbls sold at 103@I1c casb, now held at 11c. Butter is in fair de mane ; 50,100 lbs solid packed sold at 13@150, and 350 packages Ohio at 19Q20c. Cheese is selling at 11@12c. Eggs are worth i6@170 doz. - METALS-There is very little demand for Pig Iron and the market is dull. Small sales of anthra cite are making at $30034 per ton for the three numbers. Sales of Scotch Pig are reported at $34 035 per ton. There is less dentand for manufac tured. Lead—There is very little stock here and we liter of no sales. Copper—ln Sheathing there is nothing doing. American Yellow Metal is steady at 270, six months. • BA Rl{.—There fs very little demand for Querci tron ; about 40 hhtls Ist No. 1 sold at $3O per ton. Tanners , Bark is unchanged. CANDLES.—There is more demand for Adaman tine with sales at.lS@22o cash. ,Sales of short weight Western are reported for export at 13@20c. Sperm and Tallow are without change.. COAL.—Supplies are coming forward freely, both by railroad and canal, but the demand is moderate, and prices are without material;change. Schuylkill ranges at from $6.50Q6 75 it ton on board at Port Richmond. The toll will be advanced 300 per ton on the Ist of the month. • COAL OlL—The following are the receipts of crude and refined at this port during the past week: crude, 3,190 bbla ; refined, 2,560 bbla. COFFER—The market is firmer, but there is very little stock here to operate in. Small sales of Rio are making at 27@28,3i'e, and 300 bags Oape on terms kept private ; Laguayra is selling in small lots at 29§300.11 lb, cash and time. COTTON is dull and drooping, and prfoes have declined 1@2.3 lb. About 150 bales of middlings have been disposed of, in lots mostly, at front 660 67e IR lb, cash. DRUGS AND DYES.—There is very little de. wind for any kind, and prices are without change. Small Bales. of Soda Ash ere reported at 3X(43 , 3M,e ; .101i(411519 - 1 • 99 9933 991 . 12 lts 124 125 Week. Previously. Tons. Tons. .9.113 3.97,427 .7,915 199,365 Loans. Deposits Specie. Cireorn. '175.713.139 15 , ,,98 9 ,095 31,529.499 5,545,970 71,447,•520 27.516.154 7, 1 80.905 7.303,757 35,376,714 29,975,917 4,113,050 2,323354 1282,537,M 214.0ff1.195 0.414.154 15,17-3,057 'L52,276,796121307.243, 44.300,952 2 1,165,493 257.00.802 19 %1175.8:19i 0,076,09 21.131.268 < ge Sales, Aitgidet SS. Philadelphia Exchange. 3 '3O .BD - 100 Healing R 1000 Read 68.'86—cash 1193( 14,000 do 1870 108 200 City 6s. new 106 X 50 Soh 2Mil; 5 Academy of Music 33 2430 Plula &Erie R. b3O 27,Vi 60 Cam & tl pref... 213 i BOARDS. 50 Little Schwyl R 2000 N reniim" BOARD. 1000 Penna R 2d m0rt...107 15 Lit Sehrty It I 6 do 473 6 -4 150 Long Island R ...s5 46 5 Reading It pref.... 56 6 folinehillß 63 16 Norristown R 60 10 Fifth & Sixth 56 270 Sus/ Canal Scrip.. 62.3; 10,610 bblll. 60,100 buz. 46,000 bus. 45,300 bus. Blue Vitriol at 1.23;@130; Sulphuric Laid at 330, and Logwood On terms kept private. FEATHERS are scarce. Prime Weatem range at Nun 48(050c lb, cash. FISH.—Phe receipts of Mackerel have failed. off, and for No. 3s price. are firmer ; some of the resent arrivals have been stored for higher rates; sales of new Is from store at 818017, 2s at sll.o@i2, and 3s at $6 60 for medium, and $8 for large. In Codfish and Herring nothing doing, and very few of either here. FRUIT.—The market is nearly bare of foreign 4 and Lemons have been sold at very high rates. In Oranges and Pine Apples nothing doing. Domestic Green Fruit is arriving. and sailing freely. Peaches range from sl@2 'basket, according- to quality. Green Apples are worth $2 to $3.60 IfY bbl. For Dried Fruit prices are nominal. FREIGH. I'S to Liverpool and London are en tirely nominal. West India freights are dull. IL - schooner was , taken to Saguia at 505, a British schooner to Barbadoee $179 bbt out, and one for Demerara at the same rate. The Boston packets are getting 35c #3‘ bbl for flour. and s@6c 33 foot for measurement goods. A schoonerwas chartered for Boston to load with petrOleum at 70c bbl. Coal freights are unsettled and lower. GIN&E.Na.—But little offering ; small sates of crude at 88@90c 7p lb cash. GUANO is hut little inquired after. We quote Peruvian at s9s@too r ton for large and small lots, and Sombrero at $3O ton. HEMP is firmer, but there being but very little stock here to opetate in. we hear of no sales. HOPS.—The demand is limited, and sales are in a small way only, at 17@205 3i lb for Eastern and 'Westerik. LUMBER—There is a steady demand for most kinds; sales at $20032 for yellow sap boards ;- $226823 for white pine do; $lOOl2 for- hemlock Joist and scantling, and $45 0 50 for . sawed ship:tim er . IYIOLASSES:The market la firm but quiet ; sales of New Orleans at 40c i v gallon, and Cuba at 35@ 45e. The latter for Muscovado, on time. NAVAL STORES —The market is nearly bare of common Rosin, with small sales at $35@40 bbl. Prices of Tar and Pitch are nominal. Spirits of Turpentine is in limited request and has declined ; small sales at $2.86@ 2 90 "ill gallon. OILS.—For EishOils prices are firmer with steady store demand. Linseed Oil is also rather firmer; small sales at 98c to $l. 'Lard Oil is dull, and ranges from 72c up to 90e for spring and winter. Petroleum is very firm, and prices are better; about 1,800 bbla have been sold at 36@360 for Crude now held higher; 57060 c for refined in bond; and 67070 c Ift gallon free as to quality. - OIL CAKE sale of 100 tone Calcutta was made at $4O, cash. RICE.—Tbe stock is very light, and prices range from 7 to 7% e /5 lb. SALT is firmer ; an arrival of 1,950 sacks of Liverpool remains unsold ; a cargo of Turks Island was taken by a packer on private terms. SEEDS.—The market is bare of Cloverseed ; we quote at $5.25@5.3D Ift . 64 tbs. Timothy is in good demand, and has advanced, with sales at $3.76,3 bushel. Flaxseed is taken by the crushers at $2( 2.20 ift bushel. SPIRITS.—Brandy, Gin, and Rum are quiet, and prices the same. Whisky—there is a moderate demand and prices on the advance ; sales of Penn sylvania and Ohio bbls at 473‘,@48c, drudge at 465, and blids at 463.1 '#t gallon. SUGAR is firmer, and there Is rather more in quiry at An advance ; sales of 1,400 hhds Cuba at - 10@i2c. and 1,500 boxes low-grade Havana brown at 93401024 n, on time. Ta LLOW is unchanged; we quote cityrendered at 101-4"@10,14c, and country at Voxe TEAS are held firmly, but sales have been ex• tremely limited of both blacks and greens. TOBACCO.—There is rather more inquiry for Manufactured, but Leaf is neglected and dull. WOOL.—The market is quiet, and the sales corm /pc about 60.00 ibis at 65a70a for medium and fine iece, net. Buyers and sellers are apart in their -'vleteri. 715 . 458 New York Markets, August 287 Agnes are quiet at $7 for Pots, and $9 for Pearls. BmiensTnees.---The market for State and Wen, ern Flour is dull, and be lower. The sales are 6,000 bbls at $3.8004 45 fer superfine State ; $4.55@4.80 for extra State; $3.80@4.45 for superfine Michigan, Indiana, lowa, Ohio, ; $4.20 @x49o for extra do, including shipping brands of round-hoop Ohio at $5@5.30, and trade-brands at $5.40@7. Southern Flour is dull and heavy; sales 600 bbls at s6@6 26 for superfine Baltimore, and $6.25@8.75 for extra do. Canadian Flour is heavy and declining ; Ba/ea 460 bbla at $4.6004.85 for common, and $4.90@7 for good to choice extra. Rye Flour is dull at $3.60@5.20 for the range of fine and superfine. Corn Meal is very quiet. We quote Sersey at $3 90; Brandywine $4.35; Caloric -$4.245; pun cheons $21.50. Wheat is less" active and one cent better. The sales are 40,000 bushels at 750351.05 for Chicago spring; 860241.13 for Milwaukee Club ; $1.15 li.t7 for amber lowa ; $1.13@1.19 for winter red Western; $620@1.24 for amber Michigan. cjir"V TrirICRIS_ A POPULAR CLOTH.MU EMPORIUM.—Pow business establishments have ever won their way more effectually into popular favor than the re spectable old - house of C. Somers & Son, No. 626 Chestnut street, under Jayne's Hall. They have based their efforts upon correct principles. They buy cheap, and sell cheap. for cash; treat every cue. tomer that enters their store as if he were a mil lionaire, and had come to spend half his fortune; and if he goes out without being suited, (a 'rare oc currence,) invite him politely to call again; and, above all, their garments are always recommended to be exactly what they are. Their new fabric's for Fall sales, which they are now opening daily, dis play the usual good taste of this firm. GREAT DEMAND FOR WHITMAN & CO.'s CONFECTIONS. —Large as is the uniform demand for Mes4rs. E. G. Whitman & Co.'s fine confections, on account of their superior purity and general excel lence, their business has experienced a marked im. petus within the past few days on account, no doubt, of the large addition made to the fashionable part of our population by the sudden emptying of water ing places and inland resorts, caused by the cold weather that has dropped down on us very muck like a chunk of ice in a bowl of smoking-hot tea. Their store, No. 318 Chestnut street, has been filled with customers all the week, and the cry is, still they come." NEW ATTRACTIONS FOR THE ALBUMS.— Messrs. Wenderoth & Taylor (formerly Broadbent & Co.), - Nos. 912, 914, and 916 Chestnut street, have just taken, in their usual excellent style, cartes de ittsite of Major General Doubleday, T. S. Waterman, Esq., Rev. C. W. Thompson, Lieut. Col. Downing, Dr. Bracket, Prof. E. 0. Kendall, and others, dupli. Wes of all of which may be had at McAllister & Brothers, opticians, No. 728 Chestnut street. EFFECTS OF THE COLD WEATHER.— Among the most noticeable effects of the sudden change from heat to cold, within the present week, we have noted, as worthy of record, the sudden exodus of prudent sojourners in the country to their city homes, the sudden change of the beautiful Slur tars in our model grapery from a pale grAm to a rich purple, and last, but not least, the significant fact that hundreds of our citizens have been ordering their supply of winter coal from the famous yard of Mr. W. W. Altet, Ninth street, above Poplar. Fi?-bum sat sapiemti. FUEL CONFECTIONS AND FINE FRUITS.— The delicious Confections manufactured and sold by Mr. Vanaant, Ninth and Chestnut streets, have di vided their fame lately with the cooling and elegant fruits exhibited in his windows and on his counters. The latter are now in great demand for invalids, as in many cases a tempting bunch of grapes or a luz clone orange is of more service to a patient than an other medicine they can take. NEW CARTES DE VISITE, BY GUTEKUNST. —Mr. F. Gutekunst, the eminent Photographer, Nos. 704 and '706 Arch street, has just issued, in his usual superior style, Cartes de Visite of Clement B. Barclay, Esq., Miss Nellie Chase, and Governor Curtin. SUPERIOR HAMS AND OTHER SALT MEATS. —At this particular season, when, by many, salt meats are preferred to fresh, it may be desirable to know that Hamm, Tongues, and Driest Beef, of the choicest and most approved curing, can be had at the popular old Grocery Store of Messrs. Davis & Richards, ...Tenth and Arch, streets, formerly C. H. Mattson's. MESSRS. CHARLES OARFORD & SONS, un der the Continental Hotel, are now selling their entire stock of elegant Summer Goods for Children and Youth at and below cost of importation. FOR THE LUXURY OF AN ELEGANTLY FITTING Smarr go to the popular Gentlemen's Furnishing Store of Mr. George Grant, No. 610 Chestnut street. FIRE MILITARY GOODS, of every descrip tion, suitable for Army and Navy _Officers, can be had at moderate prices, at Oakford & Sons', under the Continental Rotel. UPHOLSTERING, CARPETS CUT, ALTERED, and laid; old Furniture reupholstered, IVlattresses and Bedding overhauled and made up equal to at Pollen's West-End Store, 1408 Chestnut at. Lai jobs•contracted for at lees than usual prises. au2T Mosqurro NETS.—AII the patent frame! or any other simply constructed Net, made to at ti bedstead, at Patten's . , 1408 Chestnut street. au27- WINDow attApEa.—Patten, the old ma. faeturer and dealer in Window Shades ,at No. 1 Chestnut street. sun.: IRON BEDSTEADS, - HUSE, TrATR, Spring Mattresses, of superior make, at Parte'. 1408 Chestnut street. au27 31 OLD CARPETS CET, ALTERED, AND LAID. Upholstering of any description done 'the mome• the order is received ; no one has to wait who L an order to W. H. Patten, 1408 Chestnut et aul THE No. 9 .3192 , 1TIFACTITRTNG 3LkCHI (Shuttle Stitch) recently brought out by Grow - - Baker, and sold at fortptive dotiars, must, we tL take the preference over every other. Examint at '730 Chestnut street. A MAN has a shrewd suspicion that avierfaken hint, when he keeps assuring that he feels as young as ever—and he doesn't but—younger. Poor fellow, he whistles to key courage up ; but, alas ! he Cannot recall youth calls hie pointer—with a whletle. Only one re is left him—that is, to enrobe himself in the and faroinating styles of clothing made to order Granville Stokea, Merchant Tailor, No. 60e C 3 nut street CLE.Ait AS 31nrn."—An English sciern miter, in a recent essay on the "mode of the r formation," says : "A formal idea of the heaven and the earth be obtained by imagining the heaven as at fin effiuviant generation from a monooentral point currying, or creating and occupying space; the ea) as the arrest or end Wench generative action, v the gradual relaxation of central tersion and al gation of such centre, the consequence being formation of < a huge internal spherioal yam termed in the Genetic record ' earth." It is a good thing this writer is not (swa t , write " notices " of Charles Stokes and Co.'s ", price) , clothing store, under the Continental, the public would have no more information ah that establishment - than they have about " earth's formation.” A FRUITFUL FAMlLY.—Spenser, the pot thus describes the family of some ancient genius whom he *iota : t• An happy man in his first dayes he was, ' And happy father of fair progeny; For all so.many weeks as the year has, So many children hedid multiply ; Of which were twenty 'mines, which did apply Their minds to prayse and chevalrous desy - re.” In other words; the respected parent had flfty.t children, and twenty of the boys were in the sol ing • line. •What a convenience it would have jn eo large a famDy to have had inioh an eat meat as the Brown Stone Clothing Hall of bill & t Wilson,. NOI. 603 and -1 606 Chestnut above Sixth, to apply to, where civilian r military uniforms could have been procured 1m Young gentlemen; and the parents of the "faire gent'" saved from considerable trOuble and 601 anon.