Ebit Vrtsri. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1863 FoRNEvs " wAtt CRESS," For the week ending gATURDAY, November 14 is Just issued. The following is a eamtuary of the principal contents ; ILLUeTRATION. —Federal Prieoners in the Libby Trio en. POETRY. " Rhymes on the Times "—The Battle :field—long-7Th.) Liars and btraies 'Forever Sohn Brown. LIMICARY. —The Mod and the Foil Stonewall ..latiktion—Giratd College Revlsbed, No. 2. il)lToßlet , -1 he Army of . the Potomac—The S mth .mot a Nation—Matyland — Petrolouni — The Vindication of the Administration—Public Oonlidenc..—Russia andA. the -Great Povers—French Fiction and Mexican P4O,E. The Lipton:any of Slavery— Meide of the United States—Mr. Seward's Speech at Auburn. THE WAR N t WS. —Army of the Potomac Rebels :Driven Across the Rappahannock: Occupation of Fredezysksburg — War in the Southwest—Kabala Re pulsed in - `Arkansas—Burnside Assailed—The Siege of inarleaton : Rebel Accounts. VETT ARS OF " occeshai AL." LATTER FRoill NEW YORK, LETTER FROM GER WANT° WN. VA. LETTER FROM CH ATT NOOO A. LETTER FIOM THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER LETTER FROM SECR.ETAR) CHASE. LETTER ERO6I GENERAL ME&GRUI REPLY TO BISROP HoPKthS. THE GREAT -ORGAN INAIINUKATION. - MISONLLAVEDUS.—Tne linamlan Ball—The Pennsyl vania Rekerves—Enincipation in Marvland —lficApa flora & Ri eh mond Prison—tuffaings of the Union Prison erer-A Prise FiKki in California—The Aleuntain of the Lovers. THE REBEL FREES ON THE WAR :Ax.Oxcrrova AETICLE• TOEEIGN ITEMS: ECOENIE AND THE Dtrouois CITY INTELLIGENCE sualidithl OF THE. WEEK'S NEWS WIT AND HUMOR, &c.. &c. VARIETIES THE MARKETS. Specimens of the ' WAR Tunas " will lie forwarded wben requested. woo vohtme commences with this numbei.. The into n rate for .ingle copies is $2 Per - year. A reduction froin these terms will be al lowed when club, err formed. Single repi e, put u wrap Pen, reads for mailing, may. be obtained the neuanter, Price. five ccoh. Til to.; Ni IDIV ON the 10th, Gentitsl Meade made a Speech to the !Wt.( Corps, giving great prsise to his soldiers for their recent success over the enemy. The occasion FolonelUptiiii's brigade, which so gallantly carried the enemy's works at Rapp‘bannocit Station. A. general order of cot gratulation has been addressed to the solders of Generals Salmi* and French, and especially to the storming iMty under G - eneral Russell. Ch M% MUADE announcea.the capture of over 1,9t0 pzicenere, four gunc, and eight Hags at Kelly's Ford. GENERAL MEA➢E'S official report of the battle of Gettysburg has been officially promulgated, and svin goon be, published. The delay in, making it out was caused by the failure to receive the reports of several corps and division commanders who were severely wounded. Pr is reported that a general battle will probably take place soon between the foreee of Generals I'6eade and Lee. GENERAL BURNSIDE has telegraphed that his outposts, recently attacked, were at Rodgersville, about fifteen miles from Kaoxville. The enemy captured six hundred men and four cannon. Gene , r'l Burnside's- main army is said to be in an im pregnable position. Puma Chattanooga are various reports, of which that most important states that Brang is advancing on Knoxville. General Burnside will give battle. The rebel cavalry under Forrest, it is said, will at tempt to cut the communications with Chattanooga. COL. H.A.Ton, 'with eight hundred men, drove the , rebels across the Tallahatchie, on the 4th instant. The enemy was entirely routed with severe loss. Tun cause of the Union advances in Arkansas. Our military movements continue successful, and there are few rebel troops in the State. The cap•. tuie of Arkadelphia, on the 28th nit., Is a heavy blow to the enemy. In addition to these successes, many Arkansans are enlisting in the Federal army, and political movements in the western part of the State are highly encouraging. Ma tenor of the information brought In by dc zerters and refugees, as to the alarm in the South, and especially in Richmond, in consequence of the -food famine, is infinitely beyond what the Richmond papers venture to divulge. TMa rebel newspapers afford us some very in teresting articles, one in praise of the financial ,policy of Secretary Chase, and the other in denun• ciation of Mr. G. B. Lamar, the rebel slave-trader stOW making speeches in London, and Mr. Fer nando Wood, hie distant partner, late of the riots in New Yoik. Ma. JUSTICE LOWRIE, of the Supreme (loud of Pennsylvania, has decided that the act, commonly cased the conscription act. is unconstitutional. We publish the opinion of Mr. Justice Woodward in Tull; it, with that of Mr. Juatice Thompson, sus•. tains the decision. Justices Strong and Read dis sented from their at wastes. Tn Massachusetts Legislature assembled yester• flay in extra sesSion. Governor Andrew in his message suggests means for recruiting the qUota of .1401unteers. Tau announcement of the detention of the rebel xesselsbuilding in French porta is fully authorized by the Secretary of State. The contracts for the veseela were accepted only after the case of Messrs. Laird's ram-ehipa, and were signed by Slidell and Erlanger. The Decision or the supreme Court. The people of Pennsylvania having re fused to return Mr. Justice LOWRIE to the bench, and translate Mr. Justice WOOD -WARD to the executive chair, will see in the decisions reported today the spirit in which - these gentlemen return their confidence. Mr." Justice WOODWARD promised his friends that after the election he would speak to them, and we will do him the justice to say • that he has kept his word. We give a full synopsis of these opinions in another co lumn, and we commend them to the careful consideration of those-loyal Democrats who believed that Mr. Justice WOODWARD was loyal enough to be the Governor of Penn sylvania. Some weeks ago, a case was heard before the Supreme Court of the State involving the constitutionality of the con ecription act of Congress. It was heard be fore a full bench, and was recently decided in the city of Pittsburg, the decree of the court being that the law of Congress was unconstitutional according to the laws of Pennsylvania. This decree was af firmed by Justices Loware, Woou- WARD, and THOMPSON ) Justices STRONG and READ dissenting. We have received full abstracts of the opinions of the majority, and print them in another column. The paper of Mr. Justice WooDwAßn will ex cite the most attention. That jurist seems to write as one who winces under the pain of recent defeat. We desire to do him no Unkindness, nor to speak harshly of him, for he is now on the bench and no longer is .;the political arena. We have great respect for his opinions as a lawyer, and it is with -regret that we find a lawyer so eminent writing in the tone of a politician. Thus, we have this judge saying : "It is the first - instance in our history of legislation forcing -a, great public burden on the poor." Does Mr. Justice WOODWARD forget the dignity of his position ? Does he forget that he is no longer a candidate for preferinent, and that:his words are the law of Pennsylvania,' and not the appeals 6f a parti,san to partisans ? NO respectable Deiiocratic newspaper, even with all the license and absence of responsi bility that belong to the newspaper press, would venture upon such an assertion. This is a charge involving the honor of the Ame rican Congress. Mr. Justice WOODWARD, seated on the bench, clothed with the er mine; and speaking with all the tmphasis that belongs to his high place, tells every poor man in the State that this law of the Senate and the House is a public burden forced upon him; an act of tyranny and op pression. Words like these, coming from men without half the eminence of Mr. Jus tice WOODWARD, excited the poor men of New York to riot and bloodshed. It can not be possible that this beaten and mOrfi lied politician desires to excite the poor men of Philadelphia to similar crimes. We let this pass, however, and look at the decision in a plain light. The conscription law is decided to be unconstitutional upon this ground : that the militia is aYtate orga mization, controlled by the laws of the State, and not subject to the laws of Congress. Therefore, any law of Congress that takes away a militiaman and submith him to the penalty of martial law is unconstitutional. The theory of these judges is, that the power of the State is absolute, and the power of the General Government subordi nate. There may be a rebellion ; the capital may be menaced; the Govern ment itself imperilled ; ; but, until each par ticular State agrees upon calling out ' its militia forces, the Executive arm would be 'weak sand powerless. The great Central Power would be.at the mercy of subordinate powers. Suppose Mr. Wo'Onwenn had llen Governor of Pennsylvania in the be ginning of this War, with his opinions re corded in favor of war upon the North by the Southern men unless slavery was pro tected, and believing ap he did that the youth should be permitted to secede peace ably, wharcomfort or aid would the Presi dent have received from the militia of Pennsylvania? With 'SEYMOUR in New York, and PAnx.mn in New Jersey, he wmildProbably have found a league against him as strong as the league that existed between the Governors of Virginia, Ten nessee, Kentucky, and Missouri. These Governors were' men of the same faith as Mr. Justice WOODwenn. They refused to permit their militia to be called out, and their States have been desolated with war. The loyalty of CURTIN saved Penn sylvania from a similar fate. We can also imagine the dangers that would have over whelmed liberty—for the aid of such men would have given the South strength enough to have taken Washington, and compelled us to make our campaign , upon the banks of the Susquehanna. This danger, in every way probable, would in itself show the folly of a decision like that recorded to-day. Whatever the law may be—and we look for . ward with interest to the exposition that is promised to us from Mr. Justice &motto and Mr. Justice Bran--we are confident that any exposition of it that leads to this con clusion is false and unsound. The Consti tution of Pennsylvania was never intended to be the means of overthrowing the Consti tution of the United States. And this we say at the risk of differing from the gentle men upon the Supreme Bench. The Coal Question Again. The discussion of the reasons which have led to the present increase in the price of coal, is still continued vigorously in the newspapers North, East, and West ; and there seems little prospect of it wearing it self out, after nine days, as newspaper topics usually do. In fact, when we Phila delphians, in direct railroad communica- tion with the richest coal mines in the coun try--; our city the metropolis of the largest coal. producing territory in the world—must pay ten or eleven dollars a ton for the same article we purchased six months ago for five, the question brglns to assume a national importance, and ft panic, no matter how an. reasonable, is a very natural consequence. In Cincinnati the City Councils, so it, is said, have charteted railroad ears to supply the people with this essential article_ofama - creareta — a - Sk — and receive eleven dollars per ton, and further East the ruling rate is twelve and thirteen dolltrs; the price apparently increasing with the coldness of the climate. In this case, at least, it would, appear that the economy of nature is at fault, and the "fitness of things" a mean ingless quotation. Why must we pay eleven dollars, when we formerlypaid five?` No single cause can be alleged for such -a: result. The inference so common with un charitable people, that because coal is high, therefore coal dealers are extortioners, is a very simple one, but is hardly justifiable upon the principles of logic. It is, of course, very probible that there are persons engaged in the business who are dishonestly profiting by the advance in prices ; but that any regular or general combination exists is not to be supposed. Few, very few of the dealers of this city could be benefited by_ such a movement; even should it escape de tection ; for we presume that four•fifths of them, at least, have contracts entered into upon the basis of the old rates, which are yet to be filled. This is undoubtedly the case, so far as the Government is con cerned. and it shows the absurdity of the opinion, as thoughtlessly as it is generally entertained, ;that the coal merchants are reaping a golden harvest from thenecessi ties of the public. ei We must turn elsewhere for an explana tion of the present " situation " of the coal market. How has it been produced ? One authority answers that there are three hun dred and fifty steamers in the Governthent service burning coal ; that the Ironsides alone consumes two tons an hour, or sixteen thousand tons a year ; and that the estima ted amount supplied to this service is a mil lion and a half tons annually. The figures are so very round, that we are half"inclined to set them down as a random guess ; but it strikes us they cannot be very far from the truth. Accepting them as -true, they still do not furnish a satisfactory explanation of the present scarcity and panic. That amia ble authority, the New York World, how ever, valiantly comes to the rescue in this dilemma. It has - discovered the secret. Pennsylvania is levying black mail on the rest of the country ! It occurred to us at first that the suggestion of black mail, in connection with the subject of coal, was a furfive attempt at a joke ; but the italics of the World, in the following vindictive ex tract, show that it is terribly in earnest : " It is intolerable that the whole country should thus suffer. The tariff on coal must be taken off. This will cure these Pennsylvanians of any disposition to levy black-mail upon the rest of the country. Nova Scotia and English coal would come here in abundance were it not for a tariff which is almost prohibitory." Now, as the duty on bituminous coal is but $1.1.0 per ton, and on " all other coals" but sixty cents, as the TVorld very well knows, it is barely possible that its sugges tion is made rather for political effect, than from any belief in the expediency of Con gressional action in the matter. Suppose the duty upon coal were entirely removed, what would it profit - our people ? Just nothing. It must be recollected that coal is a commodity, the lack of which is entailing much more suffering upon the rebels than upon ourselves ; and if we should attempt to import it from England, their swift-footed privateers, roaming about the ocean, would make speedy devastation of the trade. Again, upon the 'Vessels that should reach our ports in safety, the war risks would be so heavy as to render it totally impossible for the British collieries to compete with those of Pennsylvania. And again, in tho thirdt place, leaving all other considerations aside, the mere fact that British coal would have to be paid for in American gold would, of itself, destroy the feasibility of the project. And finally, it is not at all certain that Britain has any coals to spare us. Last year, owing to several unfavorable causes interrupting the trade, the British collieries only yielded 51,638,338 tons, being a decrease of 1,996,- 876 the preceding year. The coal in terests of Pennsylvania have nothing to fear from foreign competition or the World's ill tempered paragraphs. The truth is, that not one, but half a dozen causes have produced the' present rise in prices ; and political economy is quite as much to blame as Pennsylvania cupidity. It is a trite commercial principle that prices are mainly regulated by the supply and de. mand. In the present case, while the sup ply has decreased, the demand -has in creased, and the result was as inevitable as it is apparent. But how shall it be reme died ? The difficulty is one of those which regulate themselves. Capital will flow in the direction of the coal mines, and after capital, labor ; - and after these, a fall in prices. It strikes us that the inventive skill of the country might also be applied to hasten this result. In the . Durhatii and Nolahumberland pits of Great Britain, year before last, nearly two and, a half million tons were wasted, and the case is the same in - this country. We lately saw a pamphlet which proved from statistics that a large proportion of the anthracite coal mined in the United States is wasted in the operation of crushing it to a marketable size ; and months ago the Sci entific AmeTican affirmed that "nearly one half a the coal mined is wasted by being smashed into dust.' ' There is no reason why this should be so. In„,ordinary times coal should never command more than three dol lars a ton in Philadelphia ; and certainly-not over six in these extraordinary times. Per haps it would not if the wastage we have spoken of were obviated ; and if anybody will devise a . coal-crushing machine that shall not convert half of the coal into dust, he will reap a fortune for his ingenuity, and his name will deserve to be enrolled among the nation's benefactors. THE Env. Dn. TYNCI recently .spoke, at a public meeting in New York, of that dis loyal party which calls itself by the honored name of Democracy. The Repress is high ly indignant that a doctor of divinity should call his political opponents " Copperheads," and quotes scripture with the following' aptness: Whesoever shall say to hie brother Race, shall be In danger of the Council. But whosoever shall say Thou Fool, shall be in danger of hell fire !,, The beauty of this self-satire is that it is entirely unconscious. THERE Is a strange story that two rebel privateers are cruising in Lake Erie.. If this be true, it is nothing more than an at tempt at robbery, which cannot succeed, sud will have no serious remits. LETTER FROM "000ABIONAL.” WABHpiGTON, Nov. 11, 1803 Wonderful, s most wonderful, are the changes produced in honest men's minds by the triumphant success of the war policy of the Administration of the General Govern ment. We are now standing not alone in the vestibule of the great future, but on air eminence from which we may look back upon a record, which, reflecting immortal credit upon the President and his Cabinet, ie at the same time evidence of the progress •of certain indisputable truths, and also of the frequent conversion to these truths of many thousands of our countrymen If you will, read the remarkable speech of General Sickles, printed in the New York papers of yesterday, pronounced on Monday evening, at the Cooper Institute, where a meeting-was held for the purpose of receiving subscriptions for the relief and organization of the freed ri in the Department of General Grant, you will find the following most suggestive sentences " I am, perhaps, one of those who, if they had been consulted, would have hesitated to advise the measure ; but I am one of those who, it having been done, Will maintain it." And again, speaking of the colored men: "If the war is for eman cipation, as many assert, then surely it-'is right that the enfranchised race shall share the sacrifices of the struggle. If it is not for tmangipation ; if it is for the restoratiqn of the Deism as it was, then surely we must all admire the unselfish heroism which prompts men to give their lives in a snuggle to which they are strangers." Here, then, are two of the many thousand buys that have unlocked those mysteries so embarrassing less than three years ago (dissipated by as clear a mind as that of Geeeral thekles) and which are now open • ing to universal investigation the grandest problem of this or any other age. Honest men never fear to acknowledge mistakes, and never hesitate to bow before triumph s _ -ant - principle. - But if thousands stand ready to admit either that-their anticipations in re gard to the emancipation police of the Ad ministration have been entirely dissipated by practical reePhe, or that they allowed themselves to follow or believe in the theories and plausibilities of corrupt and designing leaders on this subject, we may congratulate ourselves that the Truth and the Right have been equally victorious on other scarcely less important question& 't\ does not remember the clamor against the enrolling and arming of the negroes ? Who does not recall with shame and re gret, the arousing of ignorant multitudes, of rioting and bloodshed, because of this and other ignorant prejudices? And yet I do verily believe that at the present writing there is not an intelligent citizen, and very tew even of the prejudiced and less-in (wiring chl:sses, who will not admit to him self, or who do not believe in their own hearts, that the organization of the negro TACO in this war, and their introduction into the army, have proved to be efficient elements against the rebellion, and have also rescued ,many whites from what is unjustly called the conscription bill The very able and outspoken letter of Mr. Gantt, of Arkansas, who does not fear to tell the misguided peo ple of the South, after having served in the rebel army, and after having traversed the rebel section, that the success of the Federal • arms is inevitable and that the downfall of the Southern Confederacy is as certain as that death is the;portion of every human being, is but another proof that those great truths, which are subduing falsehood and scattering prejudice in the free States, have produced lasting beneficial results in the slave State& If it.be true that God ordains, controls, as I solemnly believe he does then unques tionably this war was sent upon this con tinent, as well to abolish slavery and to ad just our institutions to a new condition of things, as to bring the minds of our people to a profound and conscientious-considera tion of their duties and their responsibjlities to themselves and to their posterity. But upon this point I s may have something to say in a future letter. Tice National Cemetery at Gettysburg. The inaugural proceedings in the dedica tion of the ground selected for the purposes of a National Cemetery will take place at Gettysburg on the 19th of the present month. Attaching to this inauguration is a national interest, which possibly preludes the este tlishment of similar cemeteries. But the Gettysburg Cemetery will have the prestige of priority. Its conception originated with Governor ANDREW G. CURTIN, the fast and firm friend of the soldier, whom he assists in life, and to whose noble memory, in death, he is among the first to pay a noble tribute. By no means alone in this sympa thy of feeling, he carries with him the hearts of this. Commonwealth, as President LlN coix carries with him, in this as well as in all other measures which he supports, the hearts of the nation. Extensive preparations have for some time been in progresi for the consecration of the Gettysbrfrg' National Cemetery. The object is to 'provide a last resting-place for the fallen heroes of the Union. The wide spread interest enveloping this object is evident, if in nothing else, in the vast num ber of communications sent to newspapers in - regard to it. Colonel LAMON, marshal of the District of Columbia, has been invited to act as chief marshal on the occasion. The presence of the high officials of the nation and the State; and of the scarred veterans, who, ,by spending their own blood, have filled with fresh life the veins of the Ad ministration, will bestow an additional con stcration upon the already consecrated field of Gettysburg. As the representatives of State and nation stand convened on that Aceldama, new associations will weave themselves into the warp and woof of the hour ;' a more dazzling rainbow halo will encircle the glorified brow of the Republic. Standing within that national graveyard, many a scene will. flash through memory, for which even the most bereaved cannot but feel thankful. Through the arteries of the Union the blood of pride will leap yet' more exultant; her eyes will survey the face of the future with calmer, more confi dent contemplation. The public was made familiar with the vicinity of Gettysburg in the July letters of army correspondents. The capital of Adams county, annot very fay from its centre, it is situated in the midst of an ele vated and fertile farming country, at the in tersection of several principal roads with the Philadelphia and Pittsburg turnpike. This very flourishing and progressive borough is. manufn.cturing as well as farming, and its intelligence is vouched for by its churches, printing establishments, college and semi nary. Early in the morning of the Ist of July, 1863, the first heavy engagement in Pennsylvania took place in this vicinity. Meeting on the Chambersburg pike, the rebels, under LONGSTREET and HILL, and the Unionists, under Generals MicADE, and IitYNOLDS, have cause long to remember that day. The determination of General LEE—when, after the battle of Chancellor vine, our forces had withdrawn to the left bank of the Rappahannock—to invade Pennsylvania and Maryland, proved, it is unnecessary to state, most disastrous to him and to his cause. But our vic tory at Gettysburg, followed inimediate ly by the fall. of Vicksburg and Port Hudson, has furnished opportunity for the display of our reverent affection for our loyal fathers and. brothers now nmcibered with the resistless dead. Tears, instead of , blood, shall henceforth bedew the spot; prayers, instead of groans, shall in future ascend froin that battle-field and burial ground. We •understand that an effort is being made in Kentucky to secure the ap propriation of certain ground at Perryville for a cemetery, and the erection of a monu ment to the men of other States,- who fell en that battle•field one year and one month ago. Owing . to the washing away of the burial motinds, it is said that the field is now in a shocking condition. The purity of the motives which impel to these dedications is what all, who love the Government under which they-live, can appreciate. The con secration of the Gettysburg Natiolll Ccme-; tery will be' a subdued and simulffneous ex pression of the profoundest sympathies of the national heart. THE PRESS.-PHELADELPHIA.; THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1863. OCCASIONAL GEO. H. MEADE, Major General.. SPEECH OF GENERAL MEADE TO THE SIXTH CORPS D'ARMEE. HEADQUARTERS OF THE ARMY ON THE POTOMAC, Nov. 11, 8 30 P. M.—On yesterday afternoon Col. Upton, who commanded the brigade which laat'Sat urday so successfully charged and captured the enemy's works at Rappahannock station, mom ,panied by deputations from each of the regiments participating in the assault, presented Gen. Meade with the eight battle flags taken at that time. No previous notice had been given, and the affair was entirely unexpected and unprovided for. Col. Upton presented the flags in the name of his command, naming the regiments—the sth and 6th Maine, the sth Wisconsin, and the 121st New YOrk —the latter being under Col. Upton's immediate command. Gen. Meade responded as follows : COL. UPTON, OFFICERS, AND MEN OP THE 6TH Corcre : I receive with great satisfaction the battle•flsgs as evidences of the good conduct and gallantry you displayed on the 7th inst. The as. sault of the enemy's position at Rappahannock Station, entrenched by redoubts and rifle pits, and defended by artillery and infantry, carried as it was atEthe point of the bayonet, was a work which could only have been executed by the best of soldiers, and in the result of which you may be juatly proud. It gives me great confidence, that in future opera tions I can implicitly rely on the men under my com mand doing all that men tan do ; and although it is my desire to place you in such positions as to avoid * the possible recurrence of such contests, yet there are occasions, such as the recent Ones, when it is the only and the best course to, pursue, and to feel as I do now, that I command men able and willing to meet and overcome such obstacles, is a source of great satisfaction. I shall transmit these flags to the War Department. . I have already reported your good conduct, and received and transmitted to your commanders the approval of the President. I shall prepare (al soon as I receive the requisite information) a general order, in which it is my de- sire to do justice to all the troops who. have distin guished themselves, and it Is my purpose, by every means in my power, to have those soldiers rewarded who have merited such distinction. Soldiers, in the name of the army and the scum• fly, I thank you for the services you have tendered, particularly for the example you have set, which I doubt not, on future occasions, will be followed and emulated. A band of music accompanied the deputation. After a few moments of congratulations and aO. WASHINGTON. Special Despatches to The Press. WASHISTSITON, D. 0., Nov. it. The Recent Attack on General Burnside. It was stated several days ago that one of General Buttriennt's most eastern outposts, on the Teener' see, had been attacked, and that half the garrison, consisting of two regiments and a battery, had been oaptured. General GRANT'S despatch did not de signate the exact place where the disaster occurred, nor did it state the strength of the , rebel force, or the probable number of the killed and wounded on our side. The Republican; this afternoon, says Gen. Roux stoic telegraphs that the disaster referred to occur: red at Reegersville, in Hawkins county, Tennessee. This place is tbe termination of the branch railroad of the East Tennessee and Virginia Railroad, and is situated about fifteen miles from Knoxville. The General also states that the rebels captured six hum dim] men and four cannon. lie does not mention the number of MB killed, and wounded. His main army.is where it was when the attack was m vie on ROBE/MANS, in an impregnable position, in good spirits, subject to the orders of Gen. G-nesrm, who is petfectly well satisfied with its situation. Sueicess of Free Labor in the South: Adjutant Genera/ Tuorans, in a communisation to the War Department, dated at Natchez, says it is a significant fact that, while transports in the river have been frequently fired auto by the rebels, not a single shot has been fired from that line of river covered by leased plantations, ex.tending for sr vtnts -fly e miles above Vicksburg, which shows the importance to commerce of lining the river with lc)), ad population. Be stye on the lath of October a gathering of cot. ton was in full operation. The experiment 'adopted hastily, and from neon sity, and with may misgivings, of entloying freed men at Ni` ages on leaaed plants 49a5.: b e now regards as a complete succrecl AppoiLtment . of Chaplain to the Ist Regi- meat Colored Volunteers. The Rev. H. M. TIIRNICR., colored_ pastor of the Israel Bethel Church, of Washington, has been ap point( d chaplain in the army. and assigned to duty to the let Rfsiment United States colored troops, now in South Carolina. This is _the first colored minister, who has been commissioned chaplain, Irhe Discharge of Minors. The of army gazette asps that the intimation made in several of the daily newspapers that the Secretary of War has communicated, through the Adjutant General, a modification of the order in re fire'nee,lo - discharged minors from military ser -1:;" . civil courts is founded in error. No such _ modification has Deen comnuaic a t ed; -. - The Quota of iroolis, The quota of troops for the District of Columbia, under the ri cent call of the President, is 2;130, to which colored troops will be credited. 'Arrival of a Prize Steamer. The prize steamer Herald, captured off the coast of North Oarelioa, by the steamer'Calypao, arrived here to day. Change in the Commissary Department. Colonel BECKWITH, Commissary of the United Stales army, who has had chargtof the procurement of the immense supplies of food required for the sustenance of the Army of the Potomac ever since its organization, left this city for St. Louis, to which post he has been transferred. His successor here is Captain BELL, who has long been.the chief of the commissary at Alexandria, Va. Naval Vllanges. Capt. SCOTT has been ordered to the command of the De Soto. Commander STANLY is ordered to duty on the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron. Commander B. LYNCH has been detached from the Beaufort Station, and ordered to the command of the ordnance ship St. Lawrence. Litut. Oomreamier QUEEN is ordered to the coin. mend of the Wyahming. Pennsylvanians IT,o Ba Laded in the Late tie. The following is a Hat o from the tight and now at Wahhington : Benj4min Thomas, A, 49. h A:bert Adams. A, 119th Wllltam Frost. C. lt9th James Moore, F, Corp Jas E Elliott, B. 119thl William Moore. F, 118th Edwaid N Karher, G, 119th 147 gt J It W Ilardeson,A,49 John A Rlster, A; 49th 3' Campbell, B. 49th , J C Davis. C, 118th J B,winger, I, lath Claik, B, 119th H Dickey. d, 119th A Cowperthwaq, F, 119th F Sweeten. 119th J Lowry, K, 119Lh D siba)ply, A. 119th J Bony, A, 119th the wounded brought in Amory Square Hospital, '6 McKandlese C, 1.19 th J Cosgrove, K. /18th Wolf, B, 119th A A Ihrnis, C. 82d 1J Buckley, A, 116th McAllister, (1, 118th W Ferris, A, 49th J K llAth D Spicer, C, 119th .1 Smith, K. 119th W Athey, A, 41 h Blondin, A, lath rammer, A 119th J Halhday, B, 49th .K, 119th G Wolf, D, 49th B B bhatTar, B, 119th. G W Smith, A, 49th Willie, A, BA NEW JERSET CAVALRY. D B Fly, F. 2d W Fox. F, 2d Ferman, A 2d P Mg 'moll, C. 2d A Dabow, I. 2d If Pie-co, I, 'ld J F. 241 ATidWall, A, 2d J Hawkins; C, 2d L Mar, L, 2d D Priab, 0,2 d W B F. 2,1 D Deal, D, 2d H Kenn!, L, 2d Preston. L 24 11 Stock, F, 2d J B Reed, 11, 2d Meeting of the Telegraph Operators. A meeting of the telegraph - operators of this city was held this eveniog.to testify their respect for the memory of their deceased fellow•operator FRAN% T. lliclarnme. JAMEB ELVERSON, JAMES MOLAR, and W. E. SCHIERL/IR, were appointed by the chairman a cnm• ruittee to draft suitable resolutions. They reported the following, which were unani mously adopted: Whereas, Having received intelligence of the death of Paymaster F. T. Ma - utter, who for a number of years was one ofour business aseociates, we desire, formally to place upon record this expression of our profound regret at iris sudden and unexpected death, and also our regard and appreciation of him as a friend and fellow-telegrapher : therefore, be it: Resolved, That it is with one heart we most pain. fully tireobriged to realize the truth, which involves the useful lesson of our own mortality. Resolved, That we deem it unnecessary to 'indulge in any extended eulogy on the character of our de ceased brother operator and friend. He was too w ell known to require any set phrase of praise. Resolved, That we will remember him in that true character of friendship, and esteem his memory for the generous qualities and charitable beams with which it is illuminated. And be it further _ _ _ Resolved, That a copy of the above resolutions be sent to his relatives, and also that they be published in the daily papers of this city. H. R BERRY, Chairmatt. W. H. Yormo, Secretary. WASHIVGTOZZ, D. a, Nov. 11, 1863. ARMY OF THE POTOMAC. GEN. MEADE'S OFFICIAL REPORT OF THE LATE BATTLE. Speech or Gen. Meade to the Sixth Corps d,.A.rmee. Reconnolsance by General , Buford. NO REBEL FORCE NORTH OF THE RA- GEN, MEADE'S ORDERS AND ADDRESS TO HIS SOLDIERS. Wastavomorr, Nov. 11,—The following was lent to the headquarters here, the day after the resent engagements: HEADQUARTERS ARMY OF POTOMAC, NiAR. RAPPAHANNOCK STATION, VB., November 8-8.40 P. M. Major Gen. Hailed:, General in•Cidef: This morning, on advancing from Kelly's Ford, it wan found that the enemy had retired during the night. The morning was so smoky and hazy that it_ was impossible to ascertain at Rappahannock Station the position of the enemy ; and it was not till the arrival of the column from Rally's Ford, that it was definitely known that the position at Rappa hannock was evacuated. - The army was put in motion, and the purnuit con tinuell by the infantry to Brandy elation, and by, the cavalry beyond. Major General Sedriviek reports, ofneially, the capture of 4 guns, 8 battle flap, and over 1,800 pH- Boners. Major General French took over 400 prisoners. Sedgwick's loss is about 300 killed and wounded, and French's about 70. The conduct of both officers and men in each at . fair was moat admirable. ciai intercourse, the deputation took leave and re. turned to clamp. RBA DQUARTBILS ARKY 01 FOTO VAOr, November 9. OEDICRAL ORDERS No. 101.—The commanding ge neral congratulates the army upon the recent suc cessful passage of the Rappahannock in the face of the enemy, compelling him to withdraw to his en trenchments behind the Rapidan. To Major General Sedgwick &Ed the officers and men of the 611 and 6th Corps, participating la the attack, particularly to the stormiog party, under Brigadier General Russell, his thanks are due for the gallantry displayed in the assault on the enemy's entrenched position of Rappahannook Station, re sulting in the capture of four guns, 2,005 email arms, night battle flags, one bridge train, and 1,60 D prison ers. To Major General French and the officers and men of the 3d Corps that were engaged ; particularly to the leading column, commanded by Colonel D. E. Frobey, his thanks are due for the gallantry displal en in the crossing, at Kelly's Ford, and seizure of the enemy's entrenohznents, and the capture of over 400 prisoners. The commandLng general takes great pleasure in announcing to the army that the Presinent has expressed his satisfaction with its resent operations. By command of Major General MEADE. S. WILLIAMS, A. A. G. WrastriNoTorr, Nov, it —The general position of the Army of the Potomac is mainly unchanged. General / Buford yesterday passed through Cul peper, and reconnoitred the enemy's position on the Rapidan. From requisitions and invoices picked up in the late rebel camps, it appears that there was no scarcity of the necessaries of life in Lee's army. Sugar, 12y,;(1.; flour, loo.; beef, 10e.; bacon, ; and clothing abundant, but the prices high. Rations amouuted to 76 omits -a day. Salt was regularly issued to the horses and mules. From semtofficial reports, it is known that the larger part of both E well's and Hill's c9rps were at Eneaht len, nearly parallel to the Itappahannorik. On Saturday the right Was resting below Kelly's Fol 0, and the left near Rixenaville, on the Aeeth ante river. Evidence also exists of their precipitate retreat, owing to General Meade's masterly movements, while it is known that no enemy in force now rests north of the Rapidan. GUERILLAS STILL ACTIVE Guerilla parties 'atill hang about our line, ,and frequent coilisions occur. " Last night Private Terr^ who is attached to the Headquarters Quattermaster's Department, was tired upon near camp, and received several severe, but not dangerous buckshot wounds. IMIVIINENCE OF .'A GENERAL ENGAGE MENT-GEN. DIEADE'S POSITION. WASHINGTON, Nov. 11.—A gentleman who left the Army of the Potomac yesterday Aftwoon says Were that the potitlone of the oppose,„ !pro* ••• bc-- llepe~to be such that our reconnoissance IP— any time lead to a general engvement. WASHINGTON, NOV. to.—From the front we have received the following, dated Headquarters Army of the Potomac, Monday night, Nov. 9 : "Buford's c eve'. ry division returned from its reconnoissance to Om• prper at noon to-day, having driven he enemy be fore them down the Sulphur Soungskoad to within a mile of Culpeper." In the opinion of the officers accompanying re connoissance, the main body of Lee's army wit/ not be met this side of the It apidan, although a portion of their troops occupied Culpeper. Scouts from the front to-night report Kilpatrick having thoroughly reconnoitered the country from the folks of the rivers to the north of Culpeper. The report that he has surmised and captured 400 prisoners at Els , s ford lacks confirmation. The disposition of our forces have been carefully made with reference to the possibility of any attacks on our denim or rear. On Saturday night, while the 143 d Pennsylvania - ragtment wee on picket, about half a mile from here, seven of the soldiers stacked their arms, and were standing around the tire, when a horseman, in the dices of a Union °dicer, rode between them and their aline, and, with drawn revolver, commanded them to sun ender and go with him. They all obey. ed, and he marched them to a house, wrote out a par tole, which they accepted, and then sent them back to camp. When they returned, it was found that thiee of them bad revolvers in their pockets when they surrendered! They were all put under arrest, cowaroice. We bold Culpeper today, and our lines extend to the Rapidan below. All Is quiet in tioni to-day, the rebels.h, eying gone to the south side of the Rapidan. ME BATTLE OF GE ITYSBURGe THE OFFICIAL REPORT OF THE BATTLE WA2nrsomoN, Nov. il.—Getiefhl Meade's detailed report of the battle of Gettysburg, dated let of October, was officially promulgated to-day. He gives as a reason tor the delay in making it" the failure till then of receiving the reports Of seve ral corps and division cominandere, who were seve rally wounded in the battle, and says: "The result of the campaign may be briefly stated in the defeat of the enemy at Gettysburg, their compulsory evacuation of Pennsylvania and Mary land, and withdrawal from the Upper Valley of the Shenandoah, and in the capture of three guns, forty-ene standards, and 13,621 prisoners. ..24,978 small arms were collected on the battle. field. "Our own losses were very severe, amounting, as will be seen by the accompanying return, to 2,834 13,769 wounded, and 6,643 missing—in all 23,366.' 1 adds his tribute to the heroic bearing of the whole army, officers and men. TRNEMJELA. Surrender of the Venezuela Fleet—The In surrection in San Domingo. Nnw Yorar, Nov. 11.—Advices have been re ceived from Qualm to the 22d ult. The Venezuela fleet, belonging to the old Govern ment party, arrived at Curacoa on the 17th, stir -rendering themselves to the commander of the Fede ral fleet. It consisted of six sailing vessels, one steamer, and a number of smaller craft. venezusla is now in the hands of the Federals or insurgents. • Hundreds of refugees were arriving from ,St. Do mingo, who report the insurrection there as spread ing,-and that the alaughter of both Spanish invaders and natives is very severe. - Curacoa is suffering for want of rain, Recruiting in Massachusetts. Hoaxer?, Nov. it,—An extra session of the Mas sachusetts Legislature assembled at noon. Gov. Andrew, in his message, reviews the different legis lative acts, regarding the payment of bounties to recruits, and says : "It has been represented to me by officers engaged in the recruiting service, as well as by many citizens and magistrates, that these bounties do not offer sufficient pecuniary induce ments to enable the required number to be raised within the two months which scarcely remain. At the request of several municipal governments and patriotic people of the Commonwealth, I have called together the General Court for the single purpose of devising means to secure the contingent of volun• teers assigned to Massachusetts, and take such action in the premises as may be found expedient," In relation to volunteering, Gov. Andrew says : "I am prepared to assist in committing the Com• monwealth to a policy for the payment of regular wages to the Massachusetts volunteers in addition to all other pay, allowances, bounties, and advan tages hitherto enjoyed." The employment of colored soldiers is strongly ad vocated in the address, and the bravery of the 54th Massachusetts (colored) Regiment, in making the assault upon Fort Wagner, eloquently referred to in proof of their fitness for infantry aervica. BOSTON, Nov. 11.—In the Legislature to-day, the Governor's address was referred to a special legis lative committee, which met immediately after the House adjourned. A bill was introduced proposing to give all sol diers who may hereafter enlist or re-enlist $25 per month from the State treasury, instead of the bounties now offered. Action upon the proposition was deferred until to-morrow., A Singular Story from Lake Erie. Orricirmarn, Nov. li.—Two suspicious vessels' were discovered yesterday holiering about San dusky Bay, and were supposed to be privateers, fitted up by the Secesh in Canada, aided by sympa thizers there and in the States. It is supposed their object is to release the prisoners on Johnson's Island, and commence piracy on the lakes and, pil lage on the land. All that is known about it is that the authorities Were so impressed that a battery of Parrot guns was * ordered forthwith to the island. It may be a scare. There is, however, more least bibility in such an enterprise than in the alleged conspiracy discovered here. Possibly it is part of that abortive plot. Pursuit or a Blockade-Runner. Naw Yonx, Nov. 11.—The brig Morning Star, from Neuvitas, Cuba, reports that on the 6th inst., when off Cape Fear, she saw a long, low, lead colored steamer, with three American gunboats in puisult, and constantly firing at the supposed blockadequnner ; but they had not succeeded In 'Ai:Awing her when last heard from. The steamer was very fast, and was apparently distancing our gunboats. Trenton. TualiToll, Nov. 11. --The U. S. Court is in las. SUM. Two men, winked respectively Smith and Van Buren, were tried for enticing soldiers to desert, and both were acquitted. An argument is going on in the Court of Chancery, In 'the case of the Joint Compinies against the Delaware Bay Railroad, for the violation of the ex clusive ptivilege of the Joint Companies. The Strike at the Boston Navy Yard. BosTow, Nov. 11.—No satisfactory arrangement has been made with the navpyard workmen, and the strike still continues. The boiler andiron- plate workers in East Boston are still on a strike, their employers refusing to pay the wages de mended. The British Consul to New Yorh. MIA' YORK, Nov. 11.—The announcement made in the New York papers, that the British consul at this port (Mr. Archibald) has sailed for. England, is erroneous: Mr. Archibald has not left, and has no intention of leavipg New York. Sailing of the Canada. BOSTON, Nov.ll.—The steamer Canada, for Liver. pool, via Halifax, sailed at noon with 90 passengers and•sso,ooo in spesie. Markets by Telegraph. BALTIMOIte, Nov. 11.--Flour firm ; 2,000 bble Sold"; Ohio extra. $7.37a7 60. -Wheat quiet; Kentucky white, $2@2.05. Corn dull ; white, $1.0201.03. Whisky firm; Ohio, 62@62g0. Shipping Intelligence. NEW Yorix, Nov. 11 —Arrived, bark. Chanticleer, from St. Marks, Hayti; brig Pallas, from Cadiz; brig R. Kirtz, from Matamoros. —Hon. Simon Cameron is now in Baltimore, re sponding to the civil suits brought against him in the United States Circuit Court, in the cases of Wm. H. Gatchell, John W. Davis, and Charles Howard, former police commissioners of Baltimore, when Secretary of War, and the Northern Central Rail road Company, garnishee, for damages for illegal arrest and imprisonment, 8:e. DIVISION OF THE MISSISSIPPI I REBEL 'CAVALRY RAID UNDIR FORREST. The enemy's Movement on xiox:ville. Colonel Batch's Successes on the Tal lahatchie. DEFEAT OF CHALMERS AND CAPTURE OF GENERAL GEORGE. Rebel MoTements In &rkansas and Texas. AIKANSAS LOYALISTS JOINING THE UNION ARMY Rebel Raid on the Memphis and Charles- ttu Railroad, lulc 73 . urned by the,3Paieln.,3- Canto, Nov. 10.--Forrest has been -detailed for special duty in cutting the communication, by river and railroad, With our army at Chattanooga, and all the cavalry in Mississippi is to be moved into the northern portion of the State, and placed under the command of Forrest. CiriOrsuramr, Nov. IL—Bragg is believed to be matching up to East Tennessee, and the reported occupation of London by the rebels is credited. Burnside will not fail bank, however, without giving the enemy battle. THE MISSISSIPPI CAIRO, Nov. 9.—The steamer General Anderson, from Memphis the 7th instant, arrived this morning. A despatch was received from Opliiersvilie, the sth, saying. Colonel Hatch had just returned, after driving the enemy, under Chalmers, eight regiments strong, with six pieces Of artillery, across the Talia hatchie. After the repulse of Chalmers at Collieraville, oa the 2d, the retreat was a route to the enemy, with a loss of 200 killed and wounded. We buried 23 of their killed at this pliice. Six were hurled at water. We have en prisoners, incluit tig 7 com missioned officers, among them Ckes eit a G „ rge, of Colonel Hatch's entirP,. force engaged was 850 men. The discomfiture 1.1 the enemy was complete, and their whole eles;editien a complete failure. 0-eneral Z. G. Geor 6 e is a Micnianippian. He wan known befcre the war an a prominent laws er of that Stste lie 1 2. as been the compiler of Mississippi Reports for many Sears. Els rank in that of a major general. He does not belong to the Confederate army. His family resides in Carrolton. , The ateainer J. S. Pringle arrived in Memphis from Vicksburg -.last Wedneaday. An extensive conflagratios. occurred - in Napoleon, Ark., the re maeris.t discovered in a row - of -• Planters' House, hut f a r u a l m t o e f b a u o i c i i d d i e n n g t o . a - t i t and an consumed. soon extended to the hotel, The loss is heavy. NV ben the Pringle was leaving I acenia Landing, Ark., it was hailed by the;intater of the gunboat Eastport, who warned the officers against landing, as one bundred and fifty guerillas were approachiWg the place to burn cotton. The gunboat was on the way to the scene, intending to shell them. The 'Pringle lest before tbe firing began, but heard can. non, firing in that direction Borne time afterward. The Pringle had a barge in tow, between which and the boat a deck hand fell into the water near Helena and was drowned. His XIRMe was Matthew Mullen. A few days , ago two deserters, Mississippians, from Bragg's army, hailed the gunboat below Napoleon and surrendered themselves. They were brought to Helena on the Pringle, No boats have been fired on during the past few dal s. Everything is comparatively quiet below. Cain°, Nov. 10 —Little Rock advices to the 6th state that Price and liolme'a- rebel command were still at Marshal, Texas. There are but few rebel troops now within the borders of Arkansas. Mar• inadulre's cavalry and some 2,000 men, are in the mountains west of Fort Smith, short of supplies. Politics throughout 'Lida western portiOn of the State is highly encouraging for the Union cause. CINCIIIII4ATI, Nov. 11.—There is little - nerve from below. There is a regularly organized attempt to close the navigation on the Paisairsippi by guerilla annoyance. All the passing boats are fired on, but so little damage is done, and eo much is to be gain by trade in that direction, teat it will have very little effect on businesa, It is orris' important from the discovery that Jeff Davis is in the business, and supplies blank commissions to those organizing to go into warfare on transports and commercial boats —business so disreputable that Gen. Holmes, but a year ago, denounced it and agreed to stop it. GEN. ROSECRANS AND GEN. THOMAS. Cinoricrui;ri, Nov. 11,--Gen. Roaecrans is spend ng some days in this city. 'The semi-official publi cation of the causes of his removal has revived the discussion of the whale qtestion. Bitterness will be added to the controversy by Gen. Thomas' official report of _the battle of Chickamauga,rf it is made public. It is stated that one sentence reads as fol lows : ' , I should have defeated the enemy on Sunday afternoon had it not been that my ammunition train was ordered to Chattanooga by a person in higher authority than myself."—Bulletin. CINCINNATI, Nov. 11.—A letter from Little Rock . , dated Nov. 6th, says that the rebel troops left in Arkansas are Marmaduke's cavalry and 2,500 men in the mountains, west of Fort Smith. Marmaduke, on leaving Pine Bluff, was chased from Benton to Camden, on the Wachlta. The town of Arkadelphia, Ark., was entered the Feder&la on the 28th 'ult., 'and the salt works were all destroyed. The Arkansians are organizing to join the Fede rals. Over 2,000 went into the army before the expe dition to -Little Rock, and five more regiments and four companies of artillery are being enlisted and mustered into the army. A Union meeting was held at Little Rock on the 31st . ult. Dr. Meader, Judge Murphy, and other old and prominent citizens, were prime movers. 141.amPrur8, Tenn., Nov, I.—Capt. A, IL Ryan, chief of staff to Gen. Steele, has just arrived from Little Rock, bringing intelligence of the capture 4, Arkadelphia by a part of Gen. Davidson's cavalry, under command of Lieut. Col. Caldwell, on the 23th of October: Col. Caldwell, with about 700 men, entered Arka delphia on the morning of the 20th, and found the rear.guard of. Price's forces just leaving town. Our forces immediately attacked and s routed them, cap turing a large number of their wagons, and taking several hundred prisoners. Col. Caldwell then de oyed a large porder rain and an immense amount of ammunition and stores. After temporarily falling back, be reoccupied the town, end now holds it. REBEL OPERATIONS IN TENNESSEE. Mampais, 'Nov. it.—The rebel General Richard son struck the Memphis and Charleston Railroad, six miles east of Saultsbury, yesterday morning, and destroyed the railroad bridges at Middleton and burned two small bridges, tore up several miles of track and cut the telegraph badly. The latter was repaired this morning, and the former will be in running condition to-morrow. Roddy Ferguson, Sug - ie, and Chalmer Richard eon are all in North Mississippi, co-operating to an noy this line of communication. Canto, Nov. 11.-Iliemphis papers of the 9th con tain no news. From other sources I learn that luka Was burned by the rebels, after Gen. Sherman's troops left. The railroad and telegraph is in order to Corinth; the stories about their being abandoned are false, ORDERS OF GENERAL HOOKER. GENERAL HEADQUARTERS, &e ' Nov. 1, 1883. It is with extreme pleasure that the Major Gene ral commanding communicates to the troops 3 , a a the subjoined letter from the Major General nom 'mending the Army of the Cumberland, expressive of his appreciation of your distinguished services on the night of the 28th ult. It was a noble tribute to your good conduct from a brave and devoted soldier. The General hopes it will inspire as much satis faction in the hearts of his officers and men *S it did in his own, and that we may all be stimulated to re newed efforts to secure the good opinion of our com mander, and to emulate the courage and , valor of our companions in arms : f HEADQUARTERS DEPT OF THE Ch7MBERLAND, * * 4, Your brilliant success over your old ad versary, Longetreet, on the .night of the 28th, the bayonet ebarge * * made up the aide of a steep and difficult hill, over two hundred feet high, completely routing the enemy from Ms barricades on the top, and the repulse of the enemy [by the trop troupe under General Geary-REPORTICII.] * * * ranks among the most distinguished feats of arms in this Very respectfully, your obedient servant, GEO. H. THOMAS, Mrjor General U. S. Volunteers. Commanding By command of Major General RooKER: Ti. N. PERKIN'S, Assistant Adjutant General Another Russian Bail. In return of compliment, the Ruedan Admiral gave ball to tbe public men of , New York on board hie flag•ship Alexander Nevaky. A portion of the affair in thin! deteribed: Suspended on silken cords on both sides, and running the entire length of the deck, were yenta. gated colored Chinese lanterns forming various de vices, and each surrounded with an eagle bearing the motto " urnaw FOIINVER." In the lower boudoir and grotto, lanterns, shaped Chinese-pagoda form, Ind made of varicolored hues, were banging, and added much to the picturesque general elect. The scene at this time was pecu liarly fascinating and exhilarating. The lustre of the - lanterns shed forth a roseate, mellow light, which brought forth the varied hues of the ladles' dresses in bold relief, and formed a bright contrast with the glittering uniforms and full-dress costumes of the gentlemen. The sweet strains of the bond, the low.breathed murmurs of .happy and smiling women, the tempered hilarity-of the gentlemen, the picturesque and unique surroundings, the novelty of the situation, the ahem of time, place, and circum stance, all combined to render the occasion one not likely to be Boon obliterated from the memory of those who partook of the hospitality - of the Russian rakers. RIIIILIC OPINION IIrENGLANIZ—The Rev. Wm. Henry Cahnning, who came as passenger in the steamer Canada, delivered an address in Washing ton, on Sunday evening, before a large audience, which included members of the Cabinet and many other distinguished Government officers. He gave the results of his recent observations as to the change of public opinion in England. A Washington de spatch says: Mr. Charming named as the causes, the fidelity of Bright, Cobden, rain, and others, the heroin Wend ship of the xvorkingmen, and, above all, our own steady progress toward a position of justice and freedom. Ii was our doubtful attitude Imre, and the apparent hopelessness of our cause in the early stages of the rebellion, that led areat Britain to adopt theratal error as to belligerents, but the people of the realm are now with us in heart and sentiment. Mr. Chancing's tribute to Mr. Beecher's services elicited applause. His chief practical point was the circulation in Europe of American publications, especially the Rebellion Record. He appealed to the rich to aid in the object." A TELEGRAPH has been completed to Sandring ham Hall, the country residence of the Prince of Wales, in Buckinghamshire. The Prince has now direct and private communication with Buckingham palace, and through the palace with Osborne and Balmoral. —Walter Savage Landor, at the age of ninety years, is about to publish a volume of poems, anti tied is Retoio IdY111." Rebel Terms of Peace. The New Orieans True Dells is tke rebel organ at New °deem', and is In communisation and repre sents the rebels beyoLd the line. The following re markable article was published in it on the 25th of October Through separate and distinct channels, probably leading to ntElcial sources, we have learned teat in• tonna/ steps, which it is thought promise to conduct to early let mar negotiations, have been taken !corm rum tionth, to terminate this war on the basis of a reconstruction of the nation on terms that will command popular approval. Both Governments have been, we are advietd, approached on the sub ject, and recent popular indications in the Dotted States and in the Confederacy are said to have greatly quickened the solicitude of the friends of unity and peace, and to have subdued the disposi tion, hitherto unaporoachable and inflexible among a very large and influential number on both aides, to contemplate any terms of accommodation otner than those that ace alike inadatiemole and La piamicable. ha we unuerstand the matter, the following, among other propositions, are to con stitute the groundwork of negotiations for settle inept: I. An immediate suspension of arms for four mantas. 2, A suspeneion of negro enlistments, rind the imintdiate remanding to their lawful masters of all slaves not actually enrolled as so• called enlisted men 3 The consolidation of the United States and Con fede) are debts; that is, toe debt of the former at par, that of lilt Confederacy in a six per cent. stock—oue hundred donate in stook to extinguish four hundred. dollars in ecrip, bills, or funded debt of the Llonfette raey ; inlelEst ps, able ou the latter semi-annually. In gold, silver, or National Treasury notes; ou tue former se at ;avian by law provided. 4. To dellay the interest on the consolidated debt a tax of cents per Core shall be annually oat lecteu trom lane owned or occupied by citizens; two and a half cents per pound export tax on cotton; an itcome tax upon ad incomes over five hundred dot. late per annum of - per cent, to —.per.annum, according to a scale graduated to the incomes—the tax into easing by a fixed standard, 6, Cotatitution at amendments to change the pre. sent mode of eleotieg Senator' of tne United States, th, it term of office, bzo. In lieu of the pre sent system it is proposed to make pop:Alain." sue basis, allowing one Senator for -- millions of pee,. plc; the latter sectionally considered to be as homo geneous as circumstances will perm,t, witrinut re• grad to State lines or other arbitrary regulations. The total population basis to be recognized in the Senatorial apportionment. Elections fur Congress men to remain se at present--negroes, however, to be excluded in all, proportions in electoral appor , tiontriente, as a basis of popular representation. 6. Presidents to be elected for seven years, and tberesitr , : io be forever ineligible to any Federal utilo:- to ivli 3 eh compertsitiun is an:tie/nil, or watch .s other than honoraiy. 7. rebrarrdB in sir per cent bonds to be made for alarms lakerifor !he army of the United States, or oiler. Fedel purposes, according to an appraised value at the mat ket price of the bunts ' • other property of citizens taken or destroyed by the agents ot the Frceral Government to be paid for in like inviner, after at [ceztainment of its title value by competent authorities. 8. The question of slavery shall be forever ex cludsti flout the National Cm: greez, and the States wherein it exists shall have exclusive control of it. The clause of the present Constitution providing - for the rexclition of fugi , ives from labor to the laiviul claimants of theirsel vice to be stricken out. eehes in the Arni of the Cumberland. The following is a stirring picture of the battle of Chickamauga, - aen Mr. B. F. Taylor's er,ce with the °Mosso Jourfial: Tbe rebel forces from the East fought with a gal lantry allied to des, etittioo, and 1 - do not wonder that our boys were proud to say, when asked to whom they were opposed, "Long.xreet's men. '`The rebel fashion of coming out to battle is neenliar ".d you seen them streaming out of the woods --- lines into the 'open field, you could in long, g ... have bueni r d - then, :o n tnin g better than to streams of turbid water pouring And writing of valor, let me say that tice among regiments consists not more in the . Mite- , rial of the rank and tile than it does in the cob!. eau, judgment, and bravery of the officers, and the faith the wieldier's repose in them. That faith has a magic in it that ropes men up and makes more and nobler of them than there was bel ere. It is the prim , cipie recognized by the great Frederick when he ad dressed hie general aend you against the enemy with Sixty thousand men:" "But,`sire," said the officer, " there are amity fifty thousand." " Ah, I doubted you as ten thouaand," was the monarch's wise and quick reply. have a splendid illustration of this in an incident which occurred on the Sunday at Chickamauga. It was near four o'clock on that blown g afternoon, when a part of 0-en. Steedraan's division of the Reserve Corpa bowed their heads to the hurtling storm of lead as if it had been rain, and betlayea signs of bre thing. The line wavered like a great,flag in a breath of wind. They were as splendid material as ever shouldered a mus ket, but then what could they do in- such a blind. ing tempest? Gen Steedman rode up. A great, hearty- man, broad-breasted, broad shouldered, la face written-all over with sturdy cense and stout courage; no lady's man to make bouquets for showy fiPgeTP, and sing "meet me by moonlight alone,". like some generals I could name, but realizing the ideal of thy boyhood when I read of the stout old Morgan of the revolution. Well, up rode Steedman, took the flag from the eolonbearer, glanced along the wavering front, and with that voice of his, that could talk agatost a small rattle of-rousketry, cried out, "Go back, boys, go zack ; but the rag CiiVt go with you i" grasped the staff, wheeled his horae, and rode on. Must I tell you that the column closed up and grew firm, and moved resistlessly on like a great strong river, and swept down upon the foe, ape, made a record that shall live - when their graves are as empty - as the cave of Macpelah I _HOW CHATTANOOGA LOOKS Chattsnooga hes never been co well deacribed at: in the following: Chattanooga must have been -a pleasant little town "in the piping times of peace." Nestled among the mountains, beside a loop in the Ten nee re, embayed in the grandest of scenery, the battlements of "Lookout," Its gray masonry al ternating with the green of its oaks 'and the deeper shadows of its cedars, lifting majestically almost within long rillerange.; M.teeionary, Ridge, less ambitious but not less picturesque. within three flights of the shafts of Robin Hood and his merry men ;, the truant Tennessee loitering along, flowing south, flowing, west, flowing north; the genial air, the generous earth;, all must have rendered it .a delightful nook in this noisy world. From the summit of Lookout Mountain a glorious landrcape unrolls ; you can look upon Ten nessee, Georgia. Alabama; you can see the dim• looming of the Blue Ridge and Bald Peek. and the smoky ranges of the" Old North State," the shadow of whose Ring's Mountain is sacred for- alt time, since out of it came tbe first whisper for indepen dence, which, deepening and strengthening, at last broke out aloud around the British throne; I am not sure you cannot see the misty hills of the "Pal metto State" from that lofty look-Out. Parties of loyal .Tenneaseans are coming in al most daily and offering their sturdy blows 'and stout hearts for the old flag. I saw a strange•looking party the other day, one hundred and fifty strong, attired in butternut and shirt aleeves,'mounted upoa horses of every tint and action, from blue to calico and from a limp to a lope ;.lioainante was there and the steed of Dr. Syntax, and so, for that matter, were Sencho Panza and " the knight of the sorrow ful countenance.,, POLITICS. Ii; WEST correspondent at Whealing, Va , communicates the following re port of some remarks made by Hon. Jacob B Blair, who was recently re-elected to Congress from West ern Virgipia. Ae Mr. Blair has been classed among the anti-Administration members by those who have attempted to ['sure up the election of an anti. A thrirtstration Speaker, his remarks have a spacial interest: "He addressed the people on the eve of the elec tion, commenting at length on his public acts, and defending the measures of the Administration with much vigor and ability ; his denunciation of Copper- M-adiem was hold, fearlres, And uncompromising. What, said he, 'though some war measures may have interfered with the private plans of many worthy people, and individual cases may be cited wt ere parties were arrested and confined without suit dont cause? For every, such instance there were hundreds, if not thousands, in the enjoyment of the largest liberty who ought to he hung " He declared, with much emphasis, the rebellion must and shall be put down. I expect to be elected to Congress to-morrow, and now say to you in all soberness, I will vote away your last dollar, and mortgage your last foot of real estate in aid of the Government in putting down the rebellion. B.nd if this fearful sacrifice must he Made, the war will not have been in vain for Western Virginia; for she has got rid of that rotten old carcass, East.Virginia.' The people next day endorsed these sentiments at the polls, giving Blair eight hundred and fifty-six out of one thousand and ninety-tbree votes cast in TV heeling. He said he expected to beat his adver spry so badly, he would probably deny having been a candidate ; and so he dd." GENERAL Ganymn.—The New York Army and Navy Journal pays the following handaome compli ment to the above named gentleman : "We trust it will not be - oonsidered going out of our way, if we say that Gen. Garfield's career affords a fine illustra tion of the - opportunities which our free institutions afford even the humblest to rise to eminent station. By the death of his parents, while yet very young, he was cast wholly upon hie own resources for a livelihood. At the age of sixteen he drove kerma on the Ohio and Pennsylvania Canal, and rose through the like narrow fortunes until he was able to enter Williams College, DiThesachusetts, at which he was graduated in 1856. After -graduating he re turned to the West, and, during "a period of three years, Was at the head of a collegiate seminary at Hiram, Ohio, and it was from among his pupils and friends that he formed the regiment (42d Ohio) with which, at the outbreak of the war, he took the field. The poor canal hoy, the struggling- teacher - is, to day, at the age of thirty-two, a major general." LABOR POSITIVE SALE OF SEASONABLE DRY GOODS, GLOVES, &e.—The early particular attention of dealers is rEtjuested to the valuable and seasonable assortment of British, French,German,and American dry goodr,&c., embracing 725 packages and lots of de sirable staple and fancy articles, in cottons, silks, 'woolens, worsteds, and linens, including 3 500 dozen winter gloves, &c., the importation of Messrs. John B. English & Co.; 77 bales American cottons, with 595 pieces cloths, cassimores, beavers, &c., with a large lot of damaged goods, to be peremptorily sold by catalogue, part for cash and on four months' cre dit, commencing this morning at tan o'clock, to be continued all day and part of the evening, without intermission, by John B. Myers & 00., auctioneers, Nos. 232 and 234 Market street. WILL IsEAVE.—The number of war ves sels at this port have been greatly diminiahed, within the past two weeks, in consequence of their departure for, active service. The United States side•wheel steamer "Powhatan," which brought the repel ram "Atlantic" here from Port Royal, will leave today for a cruising ground close 'to the Ertator. She has t eceived all the repairs necessary, and is now in excellent fighting trim. Her arms tncnt, which is a very heavy one, consists of fifteen 9 inch guns, one ik inch, and two 100-pounder Par wit guns. The following is a Hat of her officers: Captain—Charles Steed man. Lieutenant Commander-Robert Boyd, Tr. Lieutenant—A. R. McNair. Suigeon=H. 0. Mayo. Paymaster—C. P. Wallach. First Lieutenant Mariner—P. C. Pope. sairtant Surgeon—W. H. 1011(180n. Acting Masters—Cl. R. Wilkins, Lothrop Baker, Paul C. Gibbs, R. Hu.tsce. Acting Ensign—R. W. Parker. Chief Engineer—John A. Grier. Acting , First Assistant Engineer—W. H. Dobbs; SC cond do., Henry Brown; Third do.. R. A. Wright, G W. Carrick, John Pranklin, Albert C. Engird; _Acting third do.,Jas. Stebbins. Captain's Clek—W. 0. MaGonegal. Paymaater's Clerk—T. TI Vernon. Boatswain--Oharles Carpenter—Amos Chick. Gunner—G. W. Omensetter. Blaster's Mates—C.H. Howland, J. F. Bennett. . DEPARTURE or 'iii " LODONA."—The U. S. ft unhost " Lorlona" left this port yesterday afternoon to join the blockading fleet off the ELtlautie coast. She has been in port about six weeks, during which time her hull has been thoroughly overhauled and painted the regulation color. This vessel was among the first prize steamers captured while trying to tun the bloeliade. She is an English , built vessel, of good speed, and well adapted for a gunboat. The renewing is a list of her officers ; ompro n de r Ed_ gar Brodhead ex.officer, Blanchard 5 assistant surgeon, Thomas V. 'Healey ; paymaster, A. rd. Stewart ; ensigns, N. W. Rathhurn, H. G. McKen. nee; master's mates, L. G. B. Brigham, W. A. Byrnes, —.McKenzie; assistant engineers, F. A. Bremen, Durfee. Jas. Mellineaux, O. Wagner, M. Heath, C. McDowell ; captain's clerk, B. Brod bead ; paymaster's clerk, J. 0. Lynn; surgeon's Steward, Chapin; paymaster's steward,—Hughes. GUNS FOR SAN FRANCISCO.—The bark " A One" arrived at the south wharf of the navy yard yesterday, and took on board ten 11. inch guns for san Francisco, to which place she will sail in a day or, two. . STEKNinu SAXON.—The steamer Saxon, belonging to the Philadelphia and Boston Steamship Company, has been placed on Simpson 0., Nears (try dooka to have her hull reooppered aad painted, put•lic Entertainments. Tun GERMAN OPERA.—Last evening the seethe performance in Philadelphia of " MehuPs Joseph" confirmed the Impression of its great worth, derived from its production lar year by Mr. Ansotrubr. Meted, donbtleas the greatest of French composers, has yet to establish an operatic character before tile' musical public of Aminioa, cad of this character the present German opera has laid' the foundation. The genius and fame of the composer have been rightly honored in the intelligent efforts of Air. Anschuta's troupe and orchestra. Few operas give a higher feeling of satisfaction and benefit, for few have so Many impressive end uLexceptionatde qualities. Its mu s i c i s m a w ; massive, and inspiring, and potziesses an original scientific character which musical scholars admire. The tzurh and. reveienee of the old Bible story Is never violated in the style of the music, which is still full of vitality ; and Scripture is not leas divine when it is rendered with so much pathos, grandeur, and beauty as in this opera. Seldom have works of the kind equal legitiMare dramatic merit and inte rest, for all that the story Is so old and so simple,. Simeon's repentaoce is exquisite, and Benjamin's affectionate and appealing music might move to tears. The more dramatic passages have plenty of motion, which tells itself without the need of a libretto; and one scene of almost a dozen voices In dialogue and acclimation is a singular and powerful effect—a splendid hubbub, kept in musical unity and proportion. Joseph's discovery and Simeon's pardon are very eloquent.' The choral prayers heard Irvin tbe tents of Israel, leave an echo of devotion and an impression of solemnity; the chorus of harps and maidene in the scene of the feast has an antique freedom and dignity, with a modern vigor; width* grand finale is a crowning inspiration. "Joseph and his Brethren" is a rare combination or oratorio ard opera, and the religious, as well as the musical public, may improve their reverence of Scripture and art by hearing it. If Verdi's operas are profane in a religious, not to say an aesthetic sense, klehnes "Joseph" is sacred. It is to be regretted that the composer,who lived in litime of revolution, coteizei porary with Cherubini and Napoleon. had not op portunities to accomplish other works as admirable but this sufficient for immortality, As a new opera here, it deserves cordial welcome: In certain particulara, the performance of last evening was inferior to that of the former season, as, for instance, in passages of the chorus ; but the s eneral rendition was very satisfactory. The role of licsjamin, which was charmingly sung by Madame Frederici, has enhanced the claims of this handsome lonise lady to public favor ; and that of Joseph gave new expression and development to the tine tenor of liabelcaann, which, though sometimes slightly harsh, Is generally very intelligent, and occasionally very classic Bild sweet. Mr. Weinhoh, a very ex perienced and useful singer, is excellent as a patri archal ham, Steineclies Simeon was highly ei fective. The orchestra, under the earnest direction of Mr. Anecbutz, gave becoming encouragement to dra matic music of such integrity, and another revela tion of the genius in music. - We would - suggest tp pUsErs. Antchuf z and 'Dim % feld the advantage and importance of employing that noble orchestra in the production of Beettso yen's grand symphonies. Could not the fifth or the sixth symphony be given on an offlnight of the opera I The fifth especially might scarcely need bat a general rehearsal, so well must it be known to those accomplished musicians. On Friday night, "Stradella " will be sung • not intrinsically so charming as" Martha," it is fresher to our public. " Fidelio." we are very glad to see will be repeated on Saturday night. CARL Wormsouri's series of classical soirdes will be resumed this month, as all musical people pro bably know, and this, the filth season, promisee to esnel in value all those preceding. Mr. Wolf soh% one of tho' most brilliant of our pianists, will have the assistance of several of the hest instruinentalists io America. Theodore Thomas of New York, and Julius Eirhberg of Bost m, the composer of the charming operas "The Doctor of Alcantara " and "The Rose of Tyrol,l , are the solo violinists engaged. For the violoncello are those admi rable artists Theodore Ahrend and Chtrles rd. Schmitz. Messrs. Boggenburger, Kammerer, Buch ner, 'Kellner, Koch, Stoll, and aluelMr, are included in the list of excellent artiste, and Mr. Adolph Birgfeld, who has served sonata so well as a manager, will not be lees welcome as an artist. The subscription fore eix sokdes should be large ; the programmes or the entire aeries may be had at the music stores of Messrs. Gould and Andre & Co. Dlr. 'Wolfsolm has positive assurance of suc cess in the very nature of his enterprise, and the ap preciation it has• received during the past four years. NATIONAL HALL.—The CiTcue established attire. tional Hall was inaugurated last 'evening. It hits met with complete success. The house was crowded in every part, and the applause was very munifi cently bestowed. "The Great National Chang and Model Show" is under the management of Mrs. Charles Warner. It is hardly nrceasary for her to inform the public that the organization of ushers and police is perfect. That is taken for granted. It is a long while since a good circus troupe has been here. The present one of Mrs. Warner has beau Well ehoaen, and, during the past season, has been careering round the country with marked success. The new and old artistes are very skilful, and the horsea are exceedinely well drilled. Mrs. Warner introduced " Champion." Mrs. Frank Whittaker Mr. C. King, the Conrad brothers, Mr. Austin, Mr. Wm. Young, and a gentleman named Wambold ' with the prefix of professor, are all very good in their way. Little Johnny Whittaker, and a young lady who, we believe, is known as Elvira, are fea- Tures of the entertainment. If the audiences throughout the season average that of last night, the mandgereas ought to make a fortune. There are two clowns. The first of them is very good, as clowns go, but the second is so " so so, " that we were absorbed in wonder at his pro. falsity and beautiful complexion. There is no wit in a profane play upon the word "hello!" (spelt as pronCUTicer.), and there is neither wit nor honor evident in.clown number two. His jokes canbe pensed with. With this exception fault finding ends. A great variety of performance 'was presented, the prograrilree being strictly followed out. The very _great applause which marked the entertainment must have more than satisfied the manageress, and !Wen an additional source of gratification to the treasurer. CITE' I M3IES. EXAMINE, THE " FLORENCE " SEWTiIfG MAURINE BEFORE PURCHASING. —We volunteer this Advice to our readers, because we believe they will thank us for the suggestion. There is no doubt that, for s all purposes to which Sewing Mashines can he - applied, the "Florence" is fully equal to the best machine in the world, while, in not a few re. spools. it stands unrivalled. It makes no less than four different kinds of stitch on the same instrument it is almost noiseless in its operations, cannot possi bly oil the dress of the operator, is the most rapid sewer extant, and its stitches combine a higher de gree of elasticity, strength, and beauty, than any other. The rush at their elegant new warerooms, No. 630 Chestnut street, below Seventh, to examine these elegant instruments, amounted to a perfect throng. FINE CAT.D PICTURE OF HERR HIMATER.— Messrs. Wet !eroth & Talilor (formerly Broadbent & Co.), Dios. 912, 914, and 916 Chestnut street, have just executed an excellent carte de visile of Herr Him mer, first tenor of the German Opera Troupe. The intense anxiety on the part of the public to obtain 'pictures from these eminent artists continues una bated. , To THE LADIES.—The place, of all others in Fhiladelpbis, to select a recherchg Bonnet, is at Wood .5, Cary 'r, No. 725 Chestnut street. CHOICE HAVANA CIGARS.A fresh im portation of the choicest genuine brands, just re ceived_by Davis & Richards, Arch and Tenth streets. WooD & CARY, 725 Chestnut street, have just opened an elegant line of pretty Hats , for 'DUl dren an'd Kisses. FIND BRANDS OF CITAMPAGNE.—Genu ine Heidseick, Lachelie, Sparkling Moselle, and others, for sale by Davie & Richards, Arch and Tenth streets. LADIES' AND GENTLEIDEN'S FURS—the largest and beet stock in the city, at Charles Oak ford Sons', Continental Hotel. IN A BAD WAY.-The re i tela are getting in a bad way. Food and fuel almost out of the question, shoes not to be hail, and clothing at such an enormous figure that a tingle suit is worth "the pike of a prince's ransom" in Dixie. How Seeeah is to get through the winter is a problem that is more easily started than answered. Upon the other hand the loyal North was never so prosperous as at present. Prices are somewhat high, to be sure, but there is little or no suffering, and every one can get along, not only comfortably but economically, ir he exercises sound judgment and discretion, and pro- COTES his wearing apparel at the Brown Stone Clothing Hall of Rockhill & Wilson, Nos. 603 and 605 Cheitnut street, above Sixth. OANFORDS' BATS, CONTINENTAL HOTErs. FRIENDSELIP.—In life's unclouded morn we gaze on friendship as a lovely flower, and wits it for our pleasure or our pride; but when the stern realities of life do clip the wings of fanenand cold storms rock the warm cordage of the heart, it breathes ahealing essence and a strengthening balm. ik balm for the naked may be procured in-the ehape of a new suit of clothes from the fashionable empo rium of Granville Stokes, No. 609 Chestnut street. LIFE INSERANCE.—Our readers will find the card of the Atne Life Insurance Corapanyin an other column of this paper. This old and popular Company have a branch office located in thincity, at No. 400 Chestnut street. Its peculiar method of doing business renders it one of the most desirable companies in this country for those- seeking. life in surance. nos•thetuBt SOFT HATS, O.9XFORDS', CONII,MENTAL. HOUSESRBEEItS, and those about going te housekeeping, can save from le•to 15 per cent., by purchasing their housekeeping frticles at E. S. Farson Sz Co.'s' Kitchen Furnishing Rooms, No. 29a Dock street, below Walnut. oe4.s.thsns-tL FURS AT OARFORDS, ' CONTINRNTAL. cc WISE SAYINGS OF WISE Mar."—The snow is that downy covering which. God covers the earth with to protect it from the blasts of winter. The stars are holes in the sky to htttheir Maker's glory shine through. Flowers are the sweetest things God ever made, and forgot to put souls into. The Coats, Pants, and Feats, made by Chas. Stokes & Co., under the Oonticentel, the the meat beautiful things of man's handiwork. OAKFOBDS' CONTINENTALS HAT Min,- INFALLIBLE CURE OF HABITUAL D.RUNR- StiliaSe, which one be effected even wit Lout the knowledge of the patient. A. most perfect sure wilt be warranted by Dr. Herman Gunther, New York. In compliar.ce with the request of matey, I have concluded to stay, a few days In . this city, at room 53 Ullman's liotel, No. 312 Race street, wiiere I can be consulted from E. until 12 A. M., and from 2 until s F. iii. _Respectfully, n011.2.1* DR. HERIiIA t CFUNIIIERk C. efAimpatm& SONS, Ccmum_7lTAL. OBlTmainnesTs.—lalthe rowed and but styles for fall wear, in PeIt..SWL, ILUdilauimere, will be found at Wsslyartra's, No. 430 Chestnut street, next door to the Pest Offing. ' 0523-lin NEW sTyLE, Eurts--Chfirles oa/cford solo, Contbientat TiottlL
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