The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, November 16, 1863, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    lenUrd.
191NLEMED DAILY (SUNDAY% sXOIIPTIDI.
ifaux, , w. FORNEY.
017102; AII"SOUTVI FOURTH
_, , TIM DAILY P
MMO
!I Oninlii PIZ WERE, PHYabill to thi , , ssaiii l i,
"sailed to Subsestners out a the City ' at Siiiii , Dnuakis
els iIIUM; Thin DOLLARS alro ripnr..oarre pi:pills
14osummoDmx Dommr. AND SECNINTI41 . °e =
.. rrs son
Mitsui KOXTIS. inTatinblY in adYanoe toy tea time ort
AlleiiiL ' ' ' • -
sp . A o hydboineets inserted at the %mud . Teta& Ws
tines ionstitute a same. . • . . .
Tam Titi-WETEKT.Y PRESS,
..m it uod, to Babaoribers oat of:the City, itt FOUR Domes,
flat Airivg. • ,
C.OlOl - si r anus
THE,AVT,T.gXI. N O F
._„
• • lir. ; TRADE
CALLED TO
4D - C,UR. STOCK OF
SAXONY.• WOOLEN 00. all•wiiol Plain Flannels.
TWILLED FLANNELS, •
Various makes, in Gray, Scarlet, awl Dark Ellie.
'.PRINTED SHIRTING FLANNELS.
SLAIN OPERA FLANNELS.,
~P REMIERE QUALITY," • •
square and Long Shawls.
, WASHINGTON MILLS Long Sbawls.
••13L.A.0.11 COTTON WARP CLOTHS,
~.. -15, 18, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22 oz.
, FANCY CASSIMERES AND se.nsErrq..
13A.LmoRAL *STETS, all'grades.
BED •BLANKETS, 164, 11.4, 12 4, 134.
COTTON GOODS, DENIMS, rums, STRIPES,
SHIRTINGS, 3r.0., from various Mills.
• COURSEY, El A MILTON, &
EVAN S,
33 LETITIA Street. and
32 Sontb,FRONT Street,
oc Imw2m
4CLOTHEII CLOTHS!
WILLIAM T. iitiODGRAI3B I
01.401r11 I-110 ILik4 31E1.
NO, 34 SOUTH SECOND &CREEL
PRESET STOOK
:LADrEB' CLOTHS AND MEN'S WEAR
, .
VELOURS, NEW STYLE COAT
AJB.INOBILLAS, INGS,
'FROSTEDS, BA.S 11. E r,
'VELVETS, FANCY. MIXED,
KOSCOWS, BE A.VE NS,
, ESQUINAME . PILO CS,
SCOTCH TWISTS, OA.S rotts, ozo.
Our stook is full of the :
vety choicest styles in the
country. With this lot, weclose our npply for the sea
eon. Come promptly, as the best will own be exhausted.
THE
,AR•M`Y AND NA VY
oontinuos to receive our special attention.
boys in store an shades and. grades. _
NOTICE :TO GRAIN DEALERS AND
A-1 sacrum. •
20,000_IINION A, SEAMLESS BAGS,
• All Linen. weight 20 ounces, • •
The Beet and Cheapest Bag in the market.
Auto, •
•
BURLAP BAGS,
Of all Sizeii. for Corn, Oats,Bone-dnat, Coffee, die.. are
manufactured and for ralefor net cash, by
CHARLES -H. (3-Rfaa, Meat,
No. 137 MARKET Street (Second Mors).
ailS-3m Late of 21.17 flbnrob alley.
RHIPLEY, HAZARD, & HUTOHIN-
Ika SON.
No. US auswrznyr STREET,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
FOS THE SALE OF
PHILADELPHIA—MADE GOODS.
osat-ft
BAGS I BAGS.I BAGS I
NEW AND SEOOND HAND,
MUMS, BURLAP, AND QUINT
BAGS.
conntnntly, on hand.
JOHN T. BAILEY 00.4
. Jo. us imam MO! T maw
Mir WOOL UMW FOR SAMS
MN AND DRY-GOODS JOBBERS.
OROICE
1863.
FALL AND WINTER
DRY GOODS.
ROBERT POLLOCK" & 004
lECPORTERS iIND JOBBERS,
KO; WU MLREBT STRUT.
Osadltr for gals a /attn. sad toell-stlected Stook ofMuds
DRY GOODS,,
^frindraUT of U:Lds
OWN DEPORTATION,
Tividins the West Styles in
ISHAWLB AND DRESS GOODS,
N&ny of Whieb. an !ontb.tod to their sales, said cannot to
toned elsewhere.
Ali of whfeh theyoffer on the moat favorable term'
TOR CASH. or to approved short time buyers. 006/2M
- 0 -- U--EL_E
IL L. lI&LLOWELL & CO.,
'LYN NOW IA OTOW4
DRESS GOODS,
BLACK AND FANCY BILKS,
SHAWLS, BALMORALS,
RIBBONS, SID GLOVES, Ao., &O.
soasht ezelesively ;ash, and which will b.
sold
mt I mull adelutee.
THOS. MELLOR &
IXPOR TER S,
os. 40 and 411 NORTH TRIED STREET
Wit limits the attention of the trade to our Lam stork of
WEBBY, GLOVES,
SHIRTS, DRAWERS,
GERMANTOWN FANCY WOOLENS,
LINEN CAMBRIC 111:011113.,
41.4 LINENS, AND SHIRT FRONTS.
,ell-8m •
CARPE'rINGS.
C.ARPETSI CARPETS!!
JAMES I COILNE,
CARPET WAREHOUSE,
CHESTNUT STREET,
BELOW SEVENTH STREET,
I have received.
AZ LATE ARRIVALS PEON sinzors.
• large assortment of
51W OTTL'ES /CARPETING,
ilhwigrifillisofne new kin& of goods never before offered
In this gonatrg, for parlor foretelling.
Included in our variety will be found the
TISSPICE AUBUSSON CENTRE CARPET'S ;
MAO,
1101INTAI VOLANTE.
11131PLITON'S EIGLISE AXMINSTER CARPETING.
.13101ISLY fk . SOX'S WILTON VELVET and TAPES
TRY Do.
CROSSLEY 00.13 eelebrated BRUSSELS Do.
With a large variety of other makes of BRUSSELS and
CARYSTIIta.
IMEISOWS CELEBRATED VENETIANS.
• With a full 'misty of American makes of three-ply and
lamln goodr, all of which can be offered at considers
tie redaction from last season's prices.
JULES E. BRIM,
OMISTNOT erazirr. mow smarrn antsmr.
• . se2B-d2st
JLBCRISTREET
,CARPET WAREHOUS.Ij.
411 1 rmivo r4 v.a... 3 Rup 3 Erracm - cwEs.
All the Imams styles of
irELITE'T, BRUSSELS, THREE-PLY,
INGBAIN, AND VENETL&N
CAMIPIETINGS;
mow la etas. lad ii•Ualtß ' st THE REDUCED PRIORS.
lot Cask. J. BlilekWOOD,
582 ARCH STREET,
Nmaii two Dome below NINTH. South Side.
4 4 GLEN ECHO" MILLS,
0311NWITOWN, PA..
PdOCIALLAUM ' dr 00.4
IMPORTIBIL AID DEAL= ER
C A.UPV.IVINGAg,
OIL COLOTHEIi &Oa
WAREHOUSE, 609 CHESTNUT ST.,
OPPOSITE MiIirEDTDENCIE
SAU IFECTVRES," ices
-617. ABM STREET.
C. A. VANKIRK & 00..
xiinnuortriums OF
CHANDELIERS
E=l
GAB FIXTURES;
thisCiltnrielt Brum llama wad Orasamte. !medals
aid Mira ilikadat, and a variety of
FANCY GOODS,
110141115 AL E. ,A1 4 111). :BISTAIris
.
We now
no 3 tno2l .
1863.
615 OHESTNOR STEN=
'--- '''''' ' ,1 : ‘ , ".... ~,,,- --, -' • . i" :' ' ':' '.
* i.l r i • r : ' : . . ': . 4 ' ' -s
'. ' .7. , T 'i '.i. '1 7.:. ‘ ,4 . ; F: 3 1' .1 . 7 ./14.'.:1 kt x - ~- - t , ', gr:// 4:
. . „ . .... .. .
„,... _ , i-
. .
. .. . - .
.--''... F . !. ' ,r.r. , ~:,,0b.,.,• ••• • • ~.., ~,m ,. J.,,./ 7 _,..., ~ , -- t ..,_:: :-; . •
,1„.:,....1: • '-. - tr Jr
~. . , ~_ , ~,' ,
. .• • .
.. . ,:,-:, .: • ... • .fx ... „.,, t7 7 „-';:22li.V.- - :„ - 1,-1.1-- .-- .4 ,-- ,-, • ‘5::,0`,! , 1).----tS- 1 4 - -.--,---„ '•• - • - . .
.? _., ~,- .1',....:•:: ',:-- ...?' ' , =.10! :--72 - 11 1' . . -i ' . . ~., , ._:.,_ 1,-- ,: ' . (.•••°---- . ..W zC-- ' 7 = :; 'l 4-1. --t__•4%.,7 -- -- • - . ...00% 1. - 7 1 t -.. . ( i.- -. . --1 .. '.: 'f, t' - -- - - 7 „-- •• - --, •
-. . •
, . . .
„ ~„ ,-,_,, ~:, -.,,,, •• - -...:-.: A.-,- ...Ai, .;...---•:
... , .... _.. _,_. : .. : i i „ . ,..„. r - : , , 7 01,,,A iii,: -,,,--.:,-.-.,.--.,-- i iiii i i ".. ±, -...,mmit -, !g .,,- .: „..: .... r.t . - -. 7. , t .: :.,. ,:,...- i - e , : ~_ .
... .
~._,,,, - wina
~ , ,i , .
~ ,
.
.•-•i.,
...:,....„, „...._ , \••••
......_„.
~„,,.• . :,,._, • ~,
_.__
....__.,._—...,. . ‘ ......„ . „ . .,,,,,.,....,..„..,.., 4 ,.., ; ,_...„,..,.. : .,,, : ,... ; ,.., : .-, :.
jii ,,,......,.,... : n 7 , 7 ,-----,..., ; ..: t.... _,...., :... „,.., 2 „
,-....•:..„......„.„.„,..,_•7 . Ll l - Lrt
_,„„,,,,,, . _• •...
_ ••_.....••
- ---- 7"" .
- - - ..3..."41.?, _ - 44,,,irxreiti tz i,....... :1 -, : : ::::, ,I , 1111
.. Je d 4,........z" .17: - .. -.............._-.. 1,-, ,-,-: . _f, •- • v 2., . ' 1 ,- - - - 1- .. - --:;.- ..: - '''.--*"••• : 4, ' ,
..,.., , .< B. : , ... .. , ...
.....---.16,*,....L.14,
................. ,„,..
....4..._ ..............tlie ',
. I .
_ . ...
- ' - !' •
.. ~. , . .
- . - •
•
. . .
......... .„........ .
VOL. 7-NO. 91.
RETAILS .DRY GOODS
FALL 'TRADE.
M' . NEEDLES,
1024 CHESTNUT STREET,
Has Jost opened a large stock of New Goods, eorage.
Sing ail desirable Novelties in his line, most of which
having beenbonght when Gold was at a low prowl=
he offers considerably below present market rates.
_LACES OF ALL KINDS.
Coiffures, Barbee, Colbire, - Sets, Hdiclis..
VOlll3, Capes, &a., in all varieties.
WHITE GOODS.
Jaconets, Cambrics, Nelneooks, Mulls, Swiss Checks.
and all descriptions of Plain and Fancy, Styles.
EMBR,OT.DERIES.
Collars, Eels, Banda, Flouncing's. Infants' Waists
andßobes, Edgings and Ineertings on Cambric, SWUM.
and Linen; 200 different styles.
HANDKERCHIEFS.
Plain, Hem-stitched. Embroidered. Reviered, Ruffled.
Lace, Printed. bordered, , for Ladies, Gentle•
men, and Children. comprising every variety, including
many new styles not heretofore in the market.
N. B.—A. liberal discount to those who purchase to
sell again. Manufacturers Ladies', and Children's
Clothing are invited to examine my stock. not-t2s
NOW OPEN.
BICH AND RISLIKHLE
FURS
Of our own Importation and _Manufacture.
HUDSON'S BAY SABLE,
ROYAL ERMINE,
DARK SABLE MINK,
REAL CHINCHILLA,
DARK' SIBERIAN, SQUIRREL,
Ln everyflushiousble style, for
LADIES, .
MISSES,
AND
CHILDREN,
FURS MADE TO ORDER
AT. THE
P'A.IIAS MANTILLA , CLOGS,
FIIR EMPOItIIIM,
920 CHESTNUT STREET,
J.' W. PROCTOR & CO.
nob-frzavilm
CLOAKS AND CLOAKING CLOTHS.
COOPER & CONARD,
NINTH AND MARKET.
31F' XTV M CLOAIECO9
CLOAK CLOTHS
MODERATE PRICES.
fILOTHS FOR OLOAKR.
Velvet Beavers.
* Frosted Beavers.
Tan Colored Flushes.
Gray Idol:Wis.
Black Pastore.
In - great - vasuatv.
SEARUESS BROTHBEFI.
CHESTNUT arid EIGHTH Street&
SHIRTS I SHIRTS I SKIRTS
111, JONES'
NE PLUS ULTRA SKIRT
Mut only be found at
No. 17 NORTH EIGHTH STREET,
PELLADRLPHIA.
OVBE TB WAX neuzz.
Air Koste genuine ludess stamved
N. A. JONES'
IS PLUS 'DIM/ sKritv.
17 N. EIGHTH STENS!
Bell fram
PLANXETS I B.T, A NKETS I BLANK.
x - srs! -
The Largest Assortment of
N . 3K 30 711" 8
AT THE LOWEST PRICES,
MITRED WHOLESALE AND ENTAIL, Dr
COWPERTH.WAIT & 00.;
N. W. DOR. EIGHTH AND . MARKET STS.
xel6kl6Bl - •
CHEAP DRY GOODS, CARPETS,
OIL CI OTHS, AND WINDOW SHADES. —V. E.
ARCHAMBABLT, N. E. corner ELEVENTH and MAR
KET Streets, will open THIS KOHN ENG, &am Auction,
Ingrain Carpets, at 37c, 60e, 62e. 76e. 87c. $l, and $1.25;
Entry and Stair Carpets, 25 to 87c; Three-ply Carpets,
$L 50; Rag and Hemp Carpets, 31, 57. 60. andi,B2c; Stair
Oil Clothe, 26e; Floor 011,Clottis. 45 to 75c; Gilt Border;
ed Window Shades. 73c to $1 50; Buff and Green Sha
ding, 37 to 6.2 e.
DRY GOODS AND TRIMMINGS.
Sheeting and Shirting Mnslins, 12% to 37c; Chintzes,
12 to 2.;:c ;De Laines. 29 and 31c; Plaid Dress Goods, 31
to 60c; PoPlins, 31 to 62c; Paromettas and Alpacas. 31 to
76c ; Blankets, $5 to $l2; Marseilles. Lancaster, Oriental,
and Allendale Quilts, *1 73 to $10; Comfortables.s3 ; Gas
simeres, 75c to $2; Coats' Spool Cotton. 7c; Skirt Braid,
Sc; Pins. 3c; Hooks and Eyes, - '3O; Palm Soap, 8c; Cash,
12Y 2 c; Napkins and Towels, 12 to 37e; Table. Linens, 600
to $L Flannels, 37 to 75c. •
Wholesale and Retail Store, N. E. corner ELEVENTH
and MARKET Streets__ 0028. wf&ml.m,
JAS. R. CAMPBELL & CO„
• No. 727 CHEWED!' STREET. _ _
invite attention to their fall assortment of SILKS, in all
colors and qualities. which they offer, together with a
full line of MERINOES, REPS. POPLINS, DELAINES,
and other desirable DRESS GOODS. at LOW MOSS.
Also, OPEN-CENTRE LONG and SQUARE BROGHE
SHAWLS, in elegant designs.
BLACK THIBET LONG and SQUARE SHAWLS.
PLAID WOOLEN SHAWLS.
FLANNELS, BLANKETS. and QUILTS.
LINENS, DAMASKS. NAPKINS, and. TOWELS.
JACONETS, SOFT OAMBRICS, SWISS MUSLINS, &e.
SKIRTINGS and'EALIKORALS. •
HID and SWEDE GLOVES.
- BLEACHED MUSLIM and CANTON FLANNELS.
nol2-1.2t
E. M. NEEDLES
IS REOEPTING DAILY
ALL DISIRABLE lOVELTEIN
LdTSBT .TZPORTATION&
la 1401143.
lIMBROIDNEIES,
'ffIaDEBROMErE.
:0:614194:W04:} J
•
OPENING OF FALL :DRESS Om
H. STEEL & SOIL - •
Nos. 71S and 115 North TANI% Sheet.
Hays noirAreLn AND
wigiria
a choice assortment of goon.
Plain Silks,Ohoice colors, sl'2o to SI. •
Plain. Moire Antiques, choice shades.
Plain Black Silks, 90c to $2.50. •
In •
sured Black' Silks ; Fancy Silks.
Plain All-wool Bops and Poplins, allteoloire.
Plain Silk and Wool Repo, all colors.
Figured and Plaid Baps and Poplins. -
• Plain grouch Merinoes, choke colors.
1 lot PIM= French Mertnoee. choice colors,
FRENCH MERINOES.---- -
Desirable colors at the right prices.
French Poplins, bought early—prices low.
Cheap plaid and plain Poplins.
g 73 cent Magenta plaid Reps—a bargain.
Black Alpacas at 21 to 75 Cents.
Just opened Auction lots at 44, 60, 62, and 76 cents.
$l.OO doable widths Lupine' Black wool Detains are
very fine and hoary. COOPER & COWARD,
cc* tf S. E. corner NINTH and MAIMT.
T ADIES' CLOARTNG CLOTHS. -
A-41 Black Beaver and Tricot Cloths,
Brown and Black Water-proof Clotha.
Dark Brown and Mode Cloths,
Fineillack Broad Clothe,
Superbvality Scarlet Cloths,
Chinchilla Cloaking,
also, Clothe, Osasimeres. and Satinets for Men and
I Viiiinge. in Great variety, at
. • v: -JOHN H. BTOHIR,
- • 703 ARCH Street.
N. B.—Jack Straws, made by and sold for =lnvalid.
A new invoice Just received. . oaf
EDWIN HALL - .& CO., 26- SOUTH
SECOND Street, would call the attention of Pur
chasers to their stock of •
. .
Colored and Black Moire Antiques.
Colored and Black Corded Silke. '
Black Arinures and Venitienne. g
Black faffetas and White Silks.
fancy Silks, - Brown Figured Silks
Black Figured Silks. and Gros de Rhines.
Oared, 'Wine Green. and Brown Silks,
White Corded , Sks . .-: no4.tt
,BILK THREADS AND COTTONS
Tor
SEWINGMACHINES,
Wholesale and retail.
LAING lc MAGINNIS.
nol4-Im* No. 30 North THIRD Street
I3RA SS STENCIL ALPHABETS;
jiTT,9.A.R &
45% frifihrEffiliff, BOSTON. MASS.
The only mannfaotarere in the United States. of Braes
Alphabete and Apnea, to any Feat 'extent or in any.
warie tq; Bola. at - wholesale at the LOWEST OAS W PRIORS. Also.
the BIIST,OLINDELIBLE STDNOIL INK. very cheats.
itancil.Plettaadoll kinds of ptesieag,toek.. Inquiries or
braes% pAIICIDUD att ende d - .144/a
•
Vi , EUTE GOOD&
VEILS. &r.
RETAIL DRY GOODS.
OPENING.
AT THE
ARCH-STREET CLOAK STORE.
A HANDSOME ASSORTMENT OF
, •
LADIES' -AND MISSES' CLOAKS
nob-tf r
WINTER DRESS STUFFS
Frn;ch Milne.- -
ErnPil3Bit Cloths.
Corded
Silk-faced Popllne,
Neat Plaid Berm
Colored Spinglenle.
• SaLliPhiSSB BROTHERS,
WANLY DRESS SILKS,
-a- From the late auction Sales,
AT REDUCED PRICER
OURVEN STODDART & BROTHER,
No. 450,153, and 454 N. SECOND Street,
nol4-ht Abovo Willow
P ARIS 'POPLINS,
Froth the lute A notions, en mprlsin
Minn* . fi t 4 t iVAlfr n e2 o lla i gliEß;
4-80, 452, and 54 North SECOND , troet:
n014.3t Above Willow
ENCIE MERINOES.
T Of all Oradea, from 87% to $l.BB per yard, from
late Auction Sales.
OURWEN - STODDART & BROTHER,
450, 452, and 454 North SECOND orreet,,
nol4-30 - Above Willow.
BROCHE LON Et SHAWLS OF SU
PERIOR GR &DES AT $9 —Just from • Auction a
large lot, which we are running off'at the above:low
prier; and a- fall line of flue Goods in Paris and
Viennese Fabrics, comprising new designs and color.
Lugs at less th.en regular prices. '
OURWEN STODOART & BROTHER,
450. 45;4, and 454 North EiR(3O.$D Street.
nol3-31. above Willow.
fILOAKING.CLOTBS.-A FULL AND
varied stock from recent Auction Sales. at lees than
usual prices. ,
OURWEN STODDART & BROTHER, •
Nos. 450.45&., and 461- North SOON 0 Street,
nol3-3t - above WS
GENTS; • FURNISHING GOODS.
EMOVAL.
LINFORD mitTxr.Ex.rs
HAS REMOVED
No. 31 SOUTH P VIITH STREET,
TO
N. W. CORNER SIXTH AND CHESTNUT,
Where he - nom offers a
LARGE AND ELEGANT STOCK
. • OF
. GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS,
Embracing all the latest novelties.
PRICES MODERATE.
Air The attention of the public is respectfully so•
/lotted.
SHIRTS MADE TO ORDEIL
G ENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING
GOODS.
McINTIRE, & BROTHER;
• No. 1035 CHESTNUT ETEEET;
AN ENTIRELY NEW STOOL
SUPERIOR IINDERCLOTHING, HO
SIERY, HDRES, -. CRA.VATS, (to.
NE - Stonke and Napoleon Ties made to order.
Sir Azielegant assortment of Kid Gloves.::
AGY - Gentlemen's Dressing' Gowns In great variety.
/Or The "HODEL SHEET" always -.on ' , hand and
made to order. ' os2l3ra
JOHN O. ARRISON,
NOB. 1 AND 3 N. SIXTH STREET,
' HAS NOW IN STORE
A FINE ASSORTMENT OF
GENTLEMEN'S FITRN.LSIL&G GOODS
"POE •
FALL AM) WINTER WEAL
. -
Also. bianafastures from the Beet Material and in a
Superior Manner by HAND:
Fine SHIRTS and COLLARS.. '
Shaker Flannel SHIRTS and. DRAWERS. . .
Heavy Red. twilled Flannel SHIRTS and. DRAWERS.
English Canton Platmel SHIRTS and. DRAWERS.
Buckskin. SHIRTS and DRAWERS.
Cloth TRAVELLING SHIRTS.
WRAPPERS. STOCKS, TIES. as.
And sold at the most moderate prices. Oil7-8M
VIITE SHIRT MANUFACTORY.
The euteariber would invite attention to his
IMPROVED OUT,OF SHIRTS,
which he makes a specialty In his business. Mao, !01.
sllutl itt e 'rnT
eelvl2 lBB FOR ONNTLEMEN'fi WHILE.
- SCOTT Y '
• ONATLENSWIS , PIIENISHING STORE.
No. 814 CHESI7Ntrr STBEET,
11.11-tf. Form doors below the-OlontinentaL
WATCHES AND JEWELRY.
t j E. CALD WELL & CO.,
822 CHESTNUT „STREET,
Have received: a large assortment of Rich Goods, of
their own importation, comprising -
NOVELTIES OF THE PRESENT SEASON
OPERA AND FIELD GLASSES.
RICH FANS, entirely new designs.
COMBS, in Gilt, Shell, and Steel. -
ENGRAVED GLASS VASES AND CARD.
RECEIVERS. •
SPLENDID DECORATED FRENCH PORCE
LAIN VASES. CARD-RECEIVERS, AND
FLOWER STANDS.
DRESSING CASES for Ladies and Gentleinen.
RICH JEWEL CASKETS, GLOVE BOXES,
_WRITING DESKS. LIQUOR CASES. &o.
CORAL, TORTOISE, SHELL, AND STEEL
JEWELRY. _
BRONZE STATUETTES, ANIINIA.LS, INR
-
STANDS, MATCH SAFES, CANDELABRAS.
IVIANTEL ()LOOKS, Marble, Bronze, and Gilt.
RICH JEWELRY, Diamond; Pearls, and all the
Precious Gems, Gold and Enamel.
SUPERIOR WATCHES, American, Swiss, and
English. •
SILVER WARE, of every description.
PLATED GOODS, American and English.. -
nol4-ide24. : "
ARRANDALE & CO., e fh
IMPORTERS OF AWL
WATCHES,
NEW YORK,
Will send followingflon receipt of price:
SILVER COMPOSITE WATCH.-for the Army, cylin
der movements, Hunting Cases, Time Indicator in cen
tre, 1 o save trouble of opening case. Handsome and re
liable, beet and cheapest made. Sold , in the army at
SOLDIERS' OWN, Patent Lever, in sterling silver
engraved hunting cases. Jeweled, regulated, 814.50.
SPLENDID GOLD COMPOSITE WATCH, Jeweled.
either medium size for, gentlemen, or small size for la
dies, beautifully engraved' cases. Very Elegant and
Accurate, often sold for $5O-3115.-
GOLD COMPOSIrE, Patent Detached Lever, Jeweled
In 13 actions, gold balance, Warranted a perfect Time
keeper suitable in size for either lady or gentleman.
richly chest d cases—a really splendid article, often sold
for $75-82.5.
beautifully•fluished Ladles' Lepine, fine
16 carat gold plate Watch, beautifully ornamented cases,
nextally sold at 14107427.50.
Denis ! or Officers massive gold plate Watch, chro
nometer balance. fullruby jeweled, detached patent
lever. heavy. beautifully- finished cases. Warranted a
Splendid Timekeeper. often sold. for 8100-435.
ASTRONOMICAL -WATCH 1. In massive gold plate.
beautifully-engraved cases, jeweled in 15 actions, gold
balance, and all the recent improvements. In addition
to the stink seconds. &c.; peculiar to first-class Watches,
it has a hand pointing villa unfailing accuracy to
the day of the month. A magnificent article I the great
est invention of the age! just imported by Arrandale dt
Other,ladies' and gentlemen's_Watches 'and Chains In
great variety. Send for circular fully clever-Zing
%above and other Watches. Agents wanted. A reduction
made on wholesale orders. Money may be sent at our
risk, if properly sealed.
ARRA.NIjALE & 004 .
. 26121 BROADWAY, NEW YORK,
ocl9-ravrflm W4t 3 doors from Barnum's Museum.
G. RUSSELL, 22 NORTH SIXTH
Street has jest received a very handsome assort
ment of FO , E SEAL RINGS. oat-3m
;/1 FINE WATCH REPAIRING
1 attended - to by the most experienced. workilien.
and every Watch 'warranted for oneoi.
l.
tjKl3 - 813111,L,
22 !forth SIXTH Street._
MUSICAL BOXES.
TN SHELL AND ROSEWOOD. OASES
TN
playing from 1 to 12 tunes,_ choice Opera and dined
ean Melodies. FARR-St BROTHER, Importers.
selem ZIESIt CHESTNUT Street, below Fourth.
DRUGS.
ROBERTBHOEMAKER elk 00.,
Northeast Corner FOURTH and RACE Streets.
PHILADELPHIA.—
WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS,
IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC
WINDOW AND PLATE GLASS,
YABICEACTOTtERS OF
WHITS LEAD AND zurc PAINTS, Furry, am.
AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED
FRENOISL ZINO PAINTS.
Detilers and consumers supplied at
VERY LOW PRIOES FOR CASH,
CABINET FURNITURE.
(IABINET 'FURNITURE'. AND BIL.
WARD tABLBB.
MOORE & - CAMPION
No. 7{6l' SOUTH SECOND STREET.
It conneetion with their, extensive Cabinet 'amines,. are
SOW llliiirdaettlibigfil, superior article of
BILLIARD TABLES.
and hnie now on hand a full sy_plicEniehed with the
HOORN & OAMPION'S BUM .00SNIONS,.
which are pronounced by. all who have used them to be
ra_perior to all others. • • • .
Yor the Quality and finish of the se Tables, the manna
Wastrel . ' refer to their numerous patrons throughout
the,llnton. who are familiar with the character of.their
work. 4402 Sis
1863
WILLIAM D. ROGERS
.
Coach and. Light Carriage Bnilderi
- • Nei. 1009 sad 1011. CIIESTNUT'STRAM
, . . -;
s ao_a m . , . PHILADHIPHLI6
SCOTCH 'WHISKY. GRAH A
calebrated.flootch Whlnky for sale in boilded.w4.o
hOLIIIB, by B. & JAB, CARSTAIRS. -
001 1.38 WititUT l iawial gliAll/Tll titrooti
PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, NOYEMBER 16, 3863.
SEWING MACHINES.
L i ma.]Loom) FOR
COMB AT LAST!
14 :s t. 67i fi *0 CO 10 wf Awl .;• p cp): rro :IE-1
TBg CALEBEATED BEVEREABLE FEED
MIME EINWIN WIMP,
No. tvso onsmarr mu%
where All persons Interfmted in sewing' innehines are in.
Mod:Wail and OXILMiIIe this wonderfol Machine. ,
It , has been the, object of the VLORliffoll' sßivnto
IAOHINS COMPANY .• to supply , a : machine free from ,
she objections'attiched to other Bret-class Machines,: and
Mel the patient, untiring labor of y ears , and a liberal
tirpgriditure of sapling in securing the first , mechanical
talent, their efforts haye - been crowned with'eneeess ;and
they are now offeriiicto the public - the MOST PERFECT
MAGRINS , IN VHS , -WORLD. Among its
starmadvantagee oyer all other machines, maybe mam
ba. it makes four deo - rent «Mae& on one iiwt the
lime machine, each stitch being perfect and Watt on
00th sides ofthe fabric
••-•• - • • .
Id. V 4 anfinF from. one kind,.'/ ditch to another, Xi
ae the ength ofthe stitch; can readily bedose while
dna machine to In motion. -
Id. Everettddth is Perfect in tteetf, making the seam
~ 4anre and uniform. combining elasticity, strength •and
4th. It has the , rive rafble feed motion, whiatintanthlee , -
he'operator to run the work to either the right
stay any part of the seam, or fasten the ende -of swum
vithout turning the fabric or stopping the machine.,
lth. It de the most rapid &goer in the mortddtactialeirt .
ice stitches to each revolution. and theolsWelnixtither.. ,
isachine which will do so large a range Orlwork
fLORENCE. " - • ,
6th. It doee the heaviest or final Mork With isqoalfa.
Slily. without change of tension or breaking of thread..
7th. It hems, fells, binds; Where, braids, quilts, and
athers and sews on a raffle at the same time.
Bth. Its eimptteitst enables the most InexPerienied to
'perste it, Its motions are allpoeitive, and there are
to gilt springs to get out of ord - er, and it is adapted to
-.1.1 tirade of cloth-work, frmxt thick to thin, and is ad
Moat noise? 'ma.
Rh. The FLORENCE SEWING MACHINE is unequal•
led in beauty and style, and must be seen to be , appre
•
0111 and see its mamma, at No. 4330 OHNETI4I77
eel-9m
CLOTIIM,G.
WANINARER & BROWN.
FINS -..CLOTHLNG.
• .
OAK HALL.
S. E. Corner Sixth and Market.
CUSTOM DEPARTMIINT.
INt 0. 1 BOUM SIXTH STREET
EDWARD P. KELLY,
JOHN KELLY.
TiILORS,
142 8017TH -THIRD STREET.
FORMERLY CHESTNUT ABOVE EIMEEMI.
Have now in store ' a LARGE STOCK and somsle4 u
sortment of
FALL AND WINTER GOODS.
TEEMS CA EL—Pricer much lower than any other
Iret-elase establialunent. 00111-tf
BLACK ()ASE. L PANTS, $5.50, -
• - At 704' MARKET Street
BLACK CASS:PANT& 14.50. At 701 MARKET Street.
BLACK CASS. PANTS, 1450. At 704 MARKET Street.
BLACK OARS, PANTB..S6.OO. At 704 MARKET , Street.
BUCK CASS. PANTS, !A 50, At 704 MARKET Street.
GRIGgr .& VAN GUNTER'S, No. 704 MARKET Street.
GBIGG & VAN 'GUNTER'S, No, 704 MARKET Street.
GRIGG "at VA.III — GUNTENI3, No. 704 MARKET Street.
GRIG G.. do . VAN GUNTER'S, No. 704 MARKET Street.
GRIGG & VAR aurriirs, N 0.7011 MARKET Street.
se24-6m , -
- - purthAmp.m.Y. GOODS.
FAL 4 . 1863.
WOOD dr , CART,
TAS 011BSTNIIT STREET.
Han now open -
• LARGE STOOK ow
STRAP AND FELT G 1001313,
FRENCH FLOWERS,
FEATHERS, RIBBON'S,
, -
And a general assortment of
MILLINERY GOODS,
To which they invite the attention of
THE TRADE. sel7-3ra
IMRS: M. A. KING HAS CON
STANTLY on hand a lieanti_fal assortment of
WINTER. MILLINERY;.st 1020 CHE4TNIIT
Street.
0e29-Int.
MRS. R. DILLON, FANOYAND
STRAW' MILLINER, 3213 SOUTH street, Phi
ladelphia. Mourning Bonnets made at the short
est notice; Bonnets dyed, cleaned, pressed. and altered
to the latest styles. An assortment of Feathers, Flow
ers, Ribbons, Caps, Eni., always on hand. Orders from
Country Stilliaers and others solicited and promptly at
tended to. . oc2l-Im*
1 1 FRENCH FLOWERS, 1863
FEATHERS, LACES, RIBBONS, &
NEW - STYLE HATS,
MIST 0P511333 AT
THOS. KENNEDY & 1313.0.'8,
No. ISM ORESTNUT Street. below Eighth.
se9-Sm
XADIES , FURS.
LADIES' FANCY FURS.
JOIN PAR-MIRA,
Fe. '7lB ARCH 110PRERT, BELOW EIGHTH.
Importer and Manufacturer
LADIES' FANCY ,FT.313.13
Mr assortment of LOOT PURE for Lather and OM
.
dren is now complete, and embracing every variety that
Will be flusldonable during the present season. All sold
at the manufacturers' Prises, for cash. Ladies. Please
OPENING OF FANCY FURS.
v.?
JOHN .
A.-BTAMBAGHa
IMPORTER AND - NANITFACITURNN OF
LADIES' FANCrY FURS„
NO. S32I!V AEON STREET, BROW - NINTH.'
, . a
, •
Hu now open splendid shieli of -
LADIBEIOD fuss,
much will be sold at the
LOWEBT. CASH TRION&
URSI
GEORGE F. WOMRATH.
JOB 4111 AND 4127 ARCH MEM
HAS NOW °PAN
A. FULL. ASSORTMENT
Ic.A.DIVAS 9
To which the attention of the trablia !slatted. 10'28 ' -6
W 0 0 L.
On hand, and consignments daily arriving, of
TUB AND FLEECE.
Compton to Fall Mood, choice and clean
WOOLEN YARNS,
18 to 90 onto, fine, on band, and new annpliee coming
COTTON YA.R4S,
lioo. 6 to 30s, of first-class makes,
N. B .7-All numbers and descriptions procured at once
ALEX. WHILLDIN 4Sa SONS,
no9•mwftl
IMPORTERS - OF •
WINES AND LIQUORS :
- LAUMAN, BALLADE, &
No. - 1213 SOUTH NINTH , STRIIBT.
_ - .
Between' Chestnut and Walnut, Philadelphia,
G: LATIMAN,
A. N. BALLADS;
J. D. BITTING.
R.HERRY - WINE.—VERY 'SUPERIOR
Sherry , Wines of 'different grads% to bo!lned Winitw
house. For sale.br
"IX LICWALEUT. gad al:OW=1 btxr
, : . yf .1,14 •
FURS!
YARNS.
In liarp. Dandle, and Qop.
on orders
18 North FRONT Street.
Philadelphia.
E4t Vress.
MONDAY, NOVEMBER t 6; 1863
New Publications.
“-The We and . Times'of John Husskof, the B&
Bernina Beforreation of the Fineenth Century,” by
E. IL• Gillett, liss been published: intwo volumes'
Biro, by Gould sr.' Linceln, Boston. The subject has
- here been treated by a writer' of considerable erudi
tion, much industry; thorough knowledge'of his sub
int, great patience in research, and free command
of -language. Mr. Gillett has spared no-pains to
produce a work, at once full and faithfuloind , we
predict for it a'high and permanent position among
the standard.histories in which the present time ind
oor own country' '
have been so productive. Not find
.ing the name in Dr. Allibone'd Dictionary of Authors,
we presume that this in kr. Gillett's tint published
book.. It is rare for a writer, at the first spring,. to ,
attain a place so high as Mr. Gillett is destined'to
occupy among living authors.
The life of John Huai really, is the history of the
'Heformation before the time of Luther. Hun and ,
:ferom'e Of Piague, joint laborers in the vast field of
„religious reform, worked together and were mar..
`tyred nearly at the same time, a century before
.Mertin Luther, binke from the Church Qf Rome.
Hass, p native of Bohemia, perished at the stake,
July 14116, • at the early age of forty.two. A learned
man; and a popular preacher at Prague, the writings'
of Wickliffe greatly impressed him, and he spoke
and aeted sMainst the Papacy, preaching and writing
against a bull issued by Popa John XIII 1., autho
rizing a minadirmainst Ladislaus, the excommuni
cated King of Igardes. He was backed in.this op
position by Jerome of Prague, and when placed under
an interdict by the Pope, appealed to a General Coun
cil, to atteild which he went to Constance, under' a
mate-conduct from the Emperor Sigismund, but was
there arrested in November,l4l4, despite of the re-
Monstrancee of the Bohemian and Polish nobles,
brought to trial in the following July, and, on' de
olining to recant, was convicted and burned as a
heretic. Sigismund, who gave him the safe-ctinduct
to Constance, presided at the trial, conviction, and
judgment;-hie Majesty must have had a face of
brass and a heart of stone. The whole of the fast
and a small portion of the second volume of- Mr:
Gillett's book is devoted to the biography.of Hun.
What follows traces the Reformation in Bohemia
down to the close of the Thirty Years' War, A. D.
MO; including the rise of the Moravians and the
Reformation in Germany, by Luther and others.
,
"Though he treats of , a great religious movement,
Mr. Gillett writes in a liberal and catholic spirit.
He has fully investigated his subject, and the result
is a work which the world will not willingly let die.
It is 'rendered easy for reference by 'a copious and
excellent index. .
Mr. William Leonhard Gage, who lately gave to
the world a good translation of Professor Heinrich
Steffin's silly-and •unsatisfactory autobiography,
now has' tranalated an infinitely better German
wink, "Geographical Studies," by the late Proles
nor Carl Ritter, of Berlin. He has rendered it into
admirable English, whereas:the original is very
much involved. Mr. Gage studied under Ritter,
then Professor of History in the University of Ber
lin, five yeara ago, and bait, therefore, been addi
tionally capable of sketching his life. He died in
September, 1859, aged eighty, and shares with Hunt
boldfthe credit of being founder of the now gene
rally. accepted system of Physical Geography. The
Cosmos of one and the Erdkunde of the other
opened a new and wide field for thought, research,
and philosophical deduction. The volume, pub.
Bulked by Gould & Lincoln, unfortunately has no
index. A portrait of Carl Ritter faces the title-
=Mr. William GOWans, of New York, who disfi
gures his cover and title•page with a sprawling
effigy of a pigeon with a letter in its bill, has re
printed, in an otherwise neat volume, Goethe's
shorter poems and ballads, translated by Professor
Aytoun and Theodore Martin, authors of the famous
and amusing " Bon Gaultier'a Ballads." Of course,
the whole of GoOthe's lyrics are not given here;
many of his minor peems are not above mediocrity,
some are not suited for English readers, and some
cannot fairly be done justice to in any translation.
There has been some judicious sifting and window
ing, and the result is a volume of good poetry, by a
great:writer, spiritedly translated. In one'instance,
however, we have very plain prose broken up into
short lines, to-look like poetry. :Here is a sample
(p. 136), entitled " Limits of Humanity." It opens
time
When the Crea`or.
The Gieat, the Eternal.
Bows with indifferent
- from the rolling
• Clouds o'er the earth; His
L 40 4-nimilin blessing.
kise the nertrernms, -
Hem of hie garment.
lowly
inclining - -
In infantine awe.
Now this, pitifully deficient in rhyme and rythin,
is simply poor prose. This has no euphony, and if
printed as prone would be bald and. commonplace.
English poetry happily does not. recognize such
inane balderdash. The only thing at all resembling
it can be found in the small volume of small
"poems," by Thomas Babie Aldrich, published
in, New York some months ago, which has a song
obnimenCing,
'I have placed a golden
Bing upon
the hind
01 the blithest little
Lady in the land."
The severance, here, of the adjectives golden and
from the nouns ring and lady, is very much in
the manner of the translation of the "Limits of
Humanity," where indifferent and rolling are simi
larly,divided from hand and clouds. But Goethe was
a great poet, in general, whereas Aldrich is but a
mere rhyme-spinner, a mocking-bird of song, rarely
successful, except when he borrows ideas from Shel
ley and Keats and imitates their manner. His
quatrain about the "little lady in the land" evi•
dently is_ copied, as to construction, from Dr, Sohn•
son's famous lines, -
" I put my hat noon my head
And walked into the strand.
And there I met another man
With his hat in his hand."
W. A. Townsend, New York, has published "The
Physician's Mind-Book of Practice for 1864," by Wil
liam Elmer, M. D. This useful vale 'mecum appears an
nually, and the present is the seventh volume. Some
iinprovements have been made, without at all alter.
ing the character of the work. These include a 1.1.11
index of, the common names of remedial agents ; a
new method 4n cases of. Asphyxia, in place of
Marshall Hall's ; a slight change in the arrangement
of the Classification of Diseases, and a large change
in directions for their treatment. As it now standi,
the Hand-Book of Practice will be invaluable to
Physicians; its coMpactness and portability are addi
tional advantages.
, Of Mrs. Fremont's " Story of the Guard ; a
Chronicle of the War,” a translation into German,
has been published by Ticknor . & Fields . It is called
"Die Leibgarde ." -Whether the book was worthy of
being rendered into another language—except for
the politicil and personal purpose for which it ap
parently was eeniPosed—is very doubtful, but, if
translated at all, ought to have been well translated.
On the contrary, the German version .is badly axe.
' maid, and. Mrs. FremOnt 3 s language is almost
traVestied,. so commonplace and vulgar is the trans
latien. It cannot have been done by a well-educated
person, and, in justice to Mrs. Fremont, ought to be
~
- Withdrawn fro i
ny culation.
.... . , -
-.is—
Eifthaiiniium, pr General Sprague and
.
Miss Chase.
JOEL. BENTON.
.
Wind of aumnier, eat And sweet,
Blowing,up the coast to-day,
.11.1esing all the snowy fleet
In o
and ilt.the ailver.bay—
Wait up joy on rosy feet—
.:Tan,all clouds and care away.
- Sing, 0 bird, the hero's praise,
Bird of. splendor, do your best ;
Ile who holds henceforth - as his
The fairest girl irvall the West ;
Make, 0 Tate, - his future MIS- '
Greater than he ever guessed.
Deck, 0 flowers, this bride so rare;
Come with beauty, - blush; and scent ;
Roses twine her'sllken hair—
queen of all the continent.
The bravest wade the one moat fair, •
And 1. Ye Ja.lilied with content.
-. • 7i;.•F.. • A.'l7' TV. • -
Idly pass, 0 summer hours,. , • "
For your fairest talk is done; ,
Nulls floats from and bowers,
Deep purpled in the setting sun. •
Sweet benedictions, heavenly' powers, • •
Pour on these two hearts Linked in one.
AtrOUBT, 180. —N. Y. litdepettdent, Nov. 12/h.
A.. Letter from LAbbyPrlson.
(From the'Darton (0.) Journal.)
.The editor of. the Journal received the following,
yesterday, from.his brother in Libby Prison-:
LIBBY PRISON, Rionimisin,lVa., Oct. 24.1863.
DEAR BnoTrtEß : YOU are probably aware of my
captivity., , I was captured,. together with all the
officers iff my, regiment (19th U. S. Infantry) nava
I am here, and a tittle ungry.
, y principal occu
pation is skirmishing - with 'graybacks (not field
graybacks). - - I have no reading matter whatever,
excepting a catalogue of damnable lies, gotten up in.
newspapers here for -the- benefit of F. F. V.". I
wish you would tell to fix me up a little_box of
things to eat, EAT, ELT I 'No end to htinger here—
butter $lO per pound; ham not to be had; sugar
$2,50 a smell ; greenbacks worth slo,of rebel curren
cy ; ,molasses $3O and s4o.per gallon. lam terribly
afraid we will have to stay here all winter.
Do send me a box of papers and books ; also a file
with lists of Copperhead wounded:
Affectionatelyif;q:2l;TßAT. BIOME:UM
BRANDF.D SLA-vits.--oolonel Hanks, who recently
arrived'at the North`from New Orleans where he
has been in charge of the Louisiana ' freedmen, brings
with him : a man who is hranded' on the forehead
with the name of his late master; a woman whose
bark and ,shosilders are scarred with the,lash of her
oppressors a preacher of the Gospel, until latelY
slave three' little white - Mris, with straight;
a
lightbrown hair and blue eyes. They are good.look.
ing ahildren, indeed one of them is very handsome.
The werewere born in slavery, and held as slaves until
the resident issued his proclamation of freedom.
-- Err OUT TO' SIMPLY LILBOWBB.I3.—WeIeara from
Queen Anne's county that a number of farmers of
that county,-who-havelomt.,their eaves, have sent
.to Germany, for a chip load of laborms. .They re
Yule to emploi,the freed negroes .in their vielnitii
and if they.would employ them there in not !Whole:it
of them `to- fill - the places of 'the abducted iliwea;—;
TILE SIATEN IN IitIBET,-tosi,
Correspondenge Between rßrigadier ge
neral Heredgiii, union Commissioner
for the Exchange of Prisoners,
and Robert Ould An
Rebel Agent.
The Rebel Government Assailed for not Dis-
missing all Defeated Officers,
'ANK MINNSSION OF DISASTER' AT KELLY'S FORD;
SEPTEMBER SEVENTH;
A LOSS OF' 7WO THOUSA'fii, ADMITTED,
Shotirqnred , in:to SumilAkr-12,360
Struck.
DE , FIOIC COintraSIONER son Menne:nes,
FORTRASS I/toxemia, Va., Oct. 29, 1863.
Hem. R.ld, Agent of ExehAnge," Richmond; Ye :
Srn : I em in receipt Of y our communication of the
20th instant, the tenor of which induces Lae to make
some explanatory statements of facts, wittrwhieb, It
would seem, you need-to be reminded. '
The system of exchanges of prisoners of War, de
- terroinee in the existingcertel, was first interrupted
?by the declared purpose of the Confederate Genera
ment to make certain distinctions in the treatment
of a` particular class ortroope, officers, and; men,
in violation of the provisions of the cartel. Thiaap
pears to have-been the first - step towards the irregu
larities which have- culminated in your unequivocal
declaration, reported by me - to My Government , on
the 13t11 instant, that"you-will proceed to declare
exchanges whenever you conneientiously feel that
you 'have the right' to dee so, for the purpose - of
putting men into the field.:' , •
There can be no objectionsto your - acting commie
entiously in any given case-so long as • your con
science is enlightened and guided by those laws of
war which require obediexce between belligerents
to eolemnetgreements entered into , by authorized'
commissioners acting in the name , of .their respec
tive superiors. But, if you mean by the expression,
- "your conscientious senate of rtght," , to substitute
this sense of right for the requirements of ,an exist
ing cartel, I can'by' no Means concede to you that
right • and if you do not mean this I cannot under.
stand what you do mean by so,vague and generals
declaration. Judging by your recent proceedings,
it seems that you have declared exchanged all Con
federate officers and soldiers on parole within what
you claim as your lines up to a very recent date,
without having any proper right so todo, either un
der the cartel or under the laws of war. •
The history of this matter, as I understand it, is
briefly this : While my predecessor, on duty at this
place, was here in dlicharge 'of the duties now com
mitted to me, you, at one time, made a'declaration
of exchange embracing no great number of prisoners
of war, not in accordance with the rquirements of
the cartel, and you invited Colonel Ludlow, my pre
decessor,' to make a corresponding declaration - of
equivalents. Such a declaration was made by Colo
nel Ludlow; doubtless, without anticipating -the
magnitude of the evil; which appears now as the re
suit of that'departure from the cartel - first inaugu
rated by yourself. Subsequently to my, coming on
duty here, the events, of the war threw upon your
hands a large body of paroled officers and men (over
20,000) captured by General Grant at Vicksburg,
and not 'long afterwards sonic 6000 or more, clap
•tured by General Banks at Port Hudson.
Suddenly, and without any proper conference or
undereianding with me, and but a few days prior to
the important events a tChickaManga, as if forthe
express purpose of increasing the force of General
Bragg against' Gen. Rosecrans. you gave me notice
that, on the next day after the date of that notice,
you would declare exchanged a large portion of the
troops which had been captured by General Grant.
When your declaration was made it covered en in
determinate number of• troops, designated by com
mands, brigades, divisions, and corps, no definite
number of either officers or men being designated.
Up to that time you bad delivered at City Point .a
certain number of prisoners of war, for - which you
bad receipts, by which you ' must have known the
number you might claim the right to discharge front
' their parole. You did not think proper to limit
yourself to this number, nor, in any proper manner,
. did you refer to it, but made your declaration of ex
change in such indefinite terms as made it next to
certain that you did not to be governed by
the cartel. -
On referring to the data furnished by the reports
of .General, Grant, and now in the hands of the
commissary general of prisoners at Washington, it
was ascertained that you had discharged from pa
role, by your declaration, every considerable num
ber of your men, over and - above any claim you
might.pretend to, founded on receipts for prisoners
•
of war delivered from the South according to the
cartel.
Without referring to fractions, it appeared, from
the best data in our hands, that you had discharged
three for two, or one-third more than you were mai
tied to.
, You suggested that I should make a correspond
ing declaration of exchange, when, as I suppose,
you must have known you had not delivered to me,
nor had you valid paroles of our men sufficient to
cover the number declared exchanged by yourself,
and, when I proceeded to make the declaration
extending ' to - those men you had delivered, and
stated to you my objection to yourproceedings, you
insisted that you had valid , parolee for more than
-the number , that you had declared exchanged,
though you failed to produce those paroles or to
give any account or histore , of them ; and,you then
proceeded tom ake a further declaratioirof exchange,
ignoring the cartel altogether-ebasing your action
,01,...the whole pro.
ceeding - reetleg; suppose .you will say, upon
your sense of right, as if you were the only party.
having , a right to an opinion on the subject—
acting evidently in anticipation of the for
mal declaration referred to at the commence•
ment of this - communication,- . _ "that you will
proceed to make declarations .of exchange
for the purpose of putting troops into the field when
ever you think proper ;" and, having now exhausted,
by a declaration of exchange, the paroled prisoners
in your hands, you propose to me the delivery of
prisoners of war in our hands, for whom you have
no equivalents—or, comparatively, but very few—in
order, as it were, that you may obtain posses
sion of many thousands more men of your own,
delivered or on parole, for the purpose of declaring
them also exchanged, and putting them into the field,
not in conformity with the existing cartel, nor in ac
cordance with the usages of war, but whenever, in
your individual judgment, you may think it proper
Respectfully, your obedient servant,
e. S. A. MEREDITH,
•
Brig.. Gen. and Com'r for Exchange.
CONPEDERATR STATES OP AMERICA.
WAR DEPARTMENT,
RICHMOND October al, 1963.
Brigadier &nerd S. A. Meredith, Agent of Exchange:
: Your communication of the 29th inst. has
been received, and its extraordinary and groundless
statements read with surprise.
You first represent me as having informed you
that I would proceed to declare exchanges whenever
I conscientiously felt, that I had the right to do so,
for the purpose of putting. men into the field. In
another part of your letter Cam charget with having
stated that I would proceed to make declarations of
exchange for the purpose of putting troops into the
field, whenever 'I thought proper. Both of these
paragraphs are between quotation marks, to - indi
cate that I had communicated them. Moreover,
they are mentioned as being my - " uneoutvocal de
claration.ll Upon a faithful examilLS'isirrsaf my cor
respondence with you and your predecesio4 I can
End no instance in which such language has been
used by me. Will you inform me of the date of any
such communication, or furnish me with a copy of
it 1 If you cannot, you will certainly deem me Jug
tided in denouncing your, statement as utterly with
out foundation in truth. '
You are wrong, also, in your , statement , that the
-Vicksburg capture was subsequent to your "coming
to dutN ,, at Fortress Monroe. I received official com•
munications .from Lieutenant Colonel Ludlow as
late as July 22,1563, weeks after the Vicksburg sur
render, and none from you until the %th of the same
You charge that the declaration of exchange bear
ing date September 12;1863, was made "as if for the
express purpose of increasing the force of General
Bragg 'against - General Roaecrans." - This, also, is
untrue: :=The declaration was not published until
several days after. the 12th, although it- bore that
date. Not one of the officers or men named in that
declaration of eXchange was on the battle-field Of
Ohlokamauga.
You further say I must have known that I had
not delivered to you, nor had I valid paroles of your
men sufficient to cover the number declared ex
changed by mg. I knew exactly . the contrary, and
so informed you. - On the 12th of September. 18ee,
in - annotmcing the declaration of exchange I would
make on the following day, I wrote to you that I
had Pin my possession more valid paroles of your
ffi
ocers aria men than would be an equivalent for
the officers and men enumerated in the exchange
notice.” I have made the same statement to you
MOTS than once since. lam prepared 'to prove that
it was true each time it was uttered. .-
- You say your declaration of exchange extended
to those whom I had delivered. If you mean that it
was limited to snob, you are incorrect; for it de
clared exchanged all officers and-men of. the United
States army captured and paroled at any time pre.
violas to the tat of September, 1863, and included
many thousands , of prisoners taken and paroled by
our cavalry and .other forces in many States of the
Confederacy, never delivered by me. Lhave already
furnished you a memorandum of at least 'sixteen
thousand of these paroled prisoners.
You say I failed to produce the paroles or to give,
any account or history of .them. If you mean Ire
fused ; to do so, it is not true. I offered to produce
them it'any time,`and impOrtuned you to agree to
some rn Maple by which they could be computed and
adjusted;' When Utast met you at City Point, you,
requested me for the- first time to send to you a me
morandum of.the paroles claimed as valid by me. I
furnished you with the Hat on the 27th instant, that
being the first day after your request on which a-
flag-of-truce boat appeared at City Point.
You say I then proceeded to make a further deeds
' ration`of , exchange, ignoring the cartel altogether.
and resting the Whole proceeding, as you suppose, on
my sense:of right; There again you are mistaken.
I did not restthe proceeding entirely, Upon my,sense
of right—l relied, in some mesture, upon yours `and;
to that extent, its propriety may be doubtful: In
communicating to you Exchange Notice IVo.7—which
is the one to which you refer—l wrote to you as fol
lows; "I herewith enclose to you a declaration of
exchange, which I shall publish 4n a day or two. YOU
will perceive, is based upon the declaration of ex
change communicated to me in' your letter of the
24th of September last. • In my-notice I, followed
your phraseology. I _would have preferred another
form of declaration, more in accordance with the
circumstances of the case, Inaimuch, however, as
my declaration to a'considerable extent, is retalia
tory of yours; f have deemed it more appropriate to
follow your own form of expression." Your letter
of the 24th of September declared that "all officers
and men of the United States army, captured and
paroled at any time previous to the Ist September,
1863, are duly 'exchanged."' On -the 16th of October
following,-I deciared exchanged. ":all (Confederate)
officers and men captured , and paroled at any time
previous to the ist September,lB63." If that was
"ignoring the cartel," as you charge, Y only followed
your example. Our declarations of exchange were
precisely similar, except that. in another part of
my notice, 1 reserved from itfy operation-the larger -
part of the Vicksburg parolee. If I had followed
ye ur " sense of right; l• as I then had, and still claim
the right to do, :I would have included all.
- The Confederate authorities take it unto them
`selves, as a proud and honorable ' boast, that they
have determined all these matters of parolee ander:,
changes according to their "sense of, right," and not
by any views of temporary expediency. In follow
ing that guide, ',they havesst least shunned some ex
amples furnished by,your Government. They have
never, in violation of.their. General Orders, and
=without notice to the adverse partyordered their:'
paroled officers and men to break their solemn cove
nant, and, without exchange, lift their arms against
their
captors. , They 'have, therefore,, escaped the
pangs of that retributiVe justice which 'made' your
General Orderer July 3; 1863, though so well suit
ed to the meridiem of Gettysburg, invalidate the pa
roles given at Port Hudson on the 9th of, the lame.
Month. Upon hirther reflection; lam sure you will
be satisfied that it doesnot become your authorities,
who have chosen, whenever they felt so disposed,
without notice , or, consent from us, to repudiate the
eetablished usages of 'exchange and put new eon;
ettuotioni uponthe cartel, to. complain that others
have acted, according to their lame of right.
'Not noantent .ulth .all the misstatements :of 'fact
which lbave cited; ;mu' have; in yotir letter of the
29th inptaut i dettatagnd t 0 Blogignit,24 RucltWtkulcut
- ' . • • Wait= , r.et
THREE CENTS.
aspersion of the motives of the Contderate &tithe.;
rities in making the proposal contained in my letter
- of the 20th instant. You were asked to agree "that
all officers and men on both Sides should be released,
the exam cin one she or the other to be car parole."
It would have been injustice enough tothe many
thousands of your prisoners in our harxia, and to
those of ours in yodr custody, simply to have de
clined the proposal. but you have thought' proper,.
To add to your refusal the gratuitous insult to.'the'
Confederate States - of intimating that their fair and
honest offerwae made for' the purpose of putting
into the field officers and men fraudulently ex
alleged. This calumny is as destitute of founds.;
lion in fact as it is despieshie in spirit.
In conclusion, let me tell you that the purposeof
your letter is apparent. It has been well known gr
a long time that your authorities are opposed to sr
fair and regular exbhange of prisoners under the
eartel. Tb rr-jecting my proposition, you have en
deavored to conceal, ender a eland of vague charges
and unfounded Statements, the determination .at
which your Government long niece arrived.' Why
not be frank onset Why not say, without any. fur
ther subterfuges, that 'you: have reached the conclu
sion,that our officers and soldiers are more valuable,
men for man, than yours I
. lieePectfally, your obedient servant,
ROBER.V OULD,
Agent of:Exchange.
DISASTERS" TO THE REBEL 'AIMS
[From the Richmond-Enquirer, Nov. a
The people and army of the Confederate States
have been so mush complimented, upon the prOwess
and gallantry or their &rem, so much flattered UPOCIL
what has been sacemplished that they have lost
sight of .the fact that' more surrenders have been
made, by their armies , than by , the armies of any
Other nation. What nation in three years of war
ever lowered their leg eleven times in surrender?
Therehave been elevsn , Confeeerate surrenderp since
this war began. Near Rich fdeuntain, at Hatteras,
at Island No. 10, at Fort' lanry, at Fort Donel
son, at Roanoke Islandiat - Porta aner.Tack
son, at. Arkansas Post; at -Vickeburg, at Port Had
son, and at Cgmberlanf(i-apt And then there has
not been an instance of punishment in this 'long list
of disasters ; but, on the - contrary , promotion has in
come instances followed swift upon the surrender.
If the history of this war will show as much gallan
try in the fight as that of- any other war, it will also
exhibit more surrenders than ever befethe arras of
any other nation during the same per iod of time;
and we cannot point to any Saragoses, Girona, Lon
donderry, or Genoa to oftezt , this long catalogue of
unsuccessful sieges.
If our people cannot understand- why European
nations hesitate to recognize'our nationality, per
haps they may find the cause in• the+ text that the ,
flag we seek to register among. the nations of the
earth, though often crowned with glorious victory,
has, unfortunately, been lowered! very often in un
mitigated disgrace. And as long as , foreign nations ,
see surrenders so complacently made, and promotion
often following them, they are -uncertain whether
some steamer may not bring the news of our ninon oitional surrender to the terms of3our enemy., The
nations of Europe, accustomed to snob defences as
the Spaniards made in the Peninsula, or, that of the
French at Genoa, or that of the English at London
decry, cannot understand our style of defence.
The surprises of Kelleyerille, Brandy Station,
Williamsport, Bristow Station, and now the late
disaster on the Rappahannock, show how leniency
to the first dereliction of duty may entail continued
and repeated ditiesters,and carelessness inflict lasting
disgrace upon the army.
It has not yet transpired where the brigade of
Hoke and . Hays were when the enemy pounced
upon them ; it is not yet stated how they came to be
so completely isolated from the main body of the
army that they could not be reinforced, though the
fight is represented to have lasted without inter
mission from 2 o'clock in the afternoon till dark...
No explanation has been made why reinforce
ments were not sent to their rescue; nor are - we in
formed hew these, two small brigades eame to be
thus exposed, inviting almost their capture or anni-
hilation.
We hope that there are good and sufficient rea
-801111 for alt these strange circumstances, and that
General Lee will, upon investigation, be satisded
that his two brigades were lost in one of the ordi
nary eventualities of war, which no vigilance can
prevent, and no activity remedy.
Surprises are more injurious to military pres
tige, • more destructive to men and material,
than defeat in regular battle ; and as they are so
easily prevented, the officer who suffers himself to
, be surprised and pounced upon so suddenly by an
army that the men "seemed to have risen out or the
ground," deserves the severest punishment.
The array of General Bragg - has lately suffered greatly
from a surprise, by which an important position was
gained by the enemy, and one which, it is feared may
neutralize much of the advantage gained by the battle of
Chickamauga. We might, by, reviewing the history
of the war, swell the number of surprises to the
equal of that of the surrenders, but it would be
useless; men, and officers, and people, and the
enemy, and the world, know and understand the
injury they inflict, and military discipline in every
army has sought to correct such evils by the se
verest punishment. We must do as the world does";
our officers must be held to the same accountability
that has always been applied to negligence. We
cannot afford to be as lenient even as Napoleon was, for
our necessities are greater and our cause holier than
was that of the Emperor of the French.
ITEM LATE BIGHT ON THE 8.-A.PPAHANNOCH:
EFICEI the Richmond Enquirer. Nov.ll I
On yesterday several officers and privates, wounded
in the dieastrous fight-near Kelly's Ford on Satur
day, reached the city, having been preceded on Mon
day by about one hundred and fifty wounded in the
same right They corroborate the general report of the
affair, namely: That the two brigades to which they
were attached, Hoke's and Hays'—the former num
bering 1,150 effective men, and the latter 975, and the
Whole commanded by Brigadier Gen. Hays—were on
picket duty on the north side of the Rappahannock,
not far from the ford, when, about eleven o'clock in
the forenoon, they were apprised of the approach of
an overwhelming Yankee• force. They, however,
bravely determined to stand their ground, and they
performed their duty nobly.- One of the most despe•
rate fights of the war ensued. The enentyhad fear
ful odds against them, his forces,..being - estirdateu - av
-yz-ar—earzuren
fought after being wounded, and both the infantry
and artillery behaved splendidly ' ; but the Yankees
were too many for them. About eleven hundred
were taken prisoners, three hundred were killed or
wounded, and the rest, over six hundred, escaped in
the confusion, Among the escaped was General
Hays. The Yankee loss is estimated at 600 killed
and wounded. '
STATISTICS OP THE BOMBARDMENT OP SIIMPTER.
Since the bombardment of Sumpter commenced
(on the 17th of August) up-to Thursday last, 15,583
,hots had been bred at it, of which 12,302 struck.
Of the garrison, 27 have been killed and 69 wounded.
The flag, during the same time, has been cut down
34 times. The avera% weight of shot being 200
pounds, the weight of iton was 3,116,000 pounds, or
115,439 pounds of iron to each man killed, 30,370
pounds of iron to each casualty. If the charges of
powder averaged 16 pounds, we have 233,745 pounds
of powder used, or 8,057 pounds of powder to each
Man killed, and 2,434 pounds of powder to each
casualty. Sumpter, in ruins, laughs at her enemy,
Who still fears to pass her battered walls. Charles
ton will have a valuable iron mine in the ruins of
Sumpter • and even now, when iron ' ls scarce and
sells high, industry; at very little risk, might. make
a fortune.--/bid. • •
A FEDERAL MOVEMENT ON TUN PENINSULA.
The Examiner has the following in reference to
affairs on the Peninsula:
"It appears the enemy on the York peninsula are
again making , a demonstration. 74D/formation was
received yesterday morning, by parties in Richmond,
that they were in considerable force, consisting of
cavalry, infantry, and artillery, at Diascuud bridge,
a point some forty miles east of Richmond, on
the Williamaburg, road, and -that they were mo
ving on Richmond. The York-river train, which.
reached here about five o'clock last evening, brought
tbe report that the enemy were between New Kent
Court Rouse and Barhamaville: The object of the
demonstration is, doubtless, to distract Gen. Lee's
attention, and embarrass his movements by threat
ening his communications, and it is probable that
these are some of the same troops that, - last week,
made a show of- landing on the Carolina coast. If
so, their numbers are, no doubt, augmented by the
addition of Spear's cavalry, white and black."
FROM RASP IENTIRSSER.
The War Departmentireceived yesterday the, fol
lowing despatch
NARROWS via DUBLIN, NOV. 8, 1863.
The following has just been received from Blount
ville : "Our cavalry, under Brig: Gen: W. E. Jones
andtlol. entries, yesterday captured at Rogersville
850 prisoners, four pieces of artillery, two stands of
colorsMxty wagons and 1,000 animals. Our loss;
two killed and six or eight wounded.
" R. RANSOM, Major General:,
JEFFERSON DAVIS 'AT SAVANNAH.
[From the F, &yams ah Republican.]
Our city has been in an uproar of 'pleasurable ex
citement for a day or two past, occasioned by a visit
from the illustrious standard. bearer of the Confede
racy, President Jefferson Davis. We do not recol.
lect to have seen our people, of all ages and classes,
and w e may add colors, evince so intense interest in
any man, living or dwell The anxiety even to catch
ai glimpse of the chief magistrate was common to
all, When he spoke all ears were erect and all eyes,
riveted upon him. When an opportunity to grasp
him by the hand was offered, the spontaneous out
gushing of every heart was too manifest to be mis
taken. All seemed to regard him as the nation's
benefactor and friend, and all were eager to evince
their gratitude and do him honor. We doubt if any
public man ever made a better impression among
strangers. "
Greatness is too apt to grow dim as we become
familiarized with the object that bears it, but Presi-'
dent Davis has nothing to risk by commingling with
the people. He is a man=a man not by accident,
but a man in his own right, upon a basis of moral
•and intellectual merit that 4an never fail. And,
then, to this he adds that which never fails to com
mend a Man to the people of the country—tine
powers of elocution. He speaks well to the cill-.
zen, better to the soldier, and even better still te the
ladies. His voice is shrill, and can penetrate a
large audience, while thought 'and language ,wlth
him are ever ready, and of the strongest and purest
kind. On the whole, we have every reason to bo.
lieve that the President's visit to Savannah, whilst
it was a source , of unalloyed pleasure to him, has
produced the most , salutary results on the minds of
our people.
NO PEACH WITHOUT RESTORATION
We have the pregnant admission of the Whig that
there is no party in the free Statess in favor of peace,
and that even the triumph of the Copperheads would
not be followed by a recognition of the Confederacy.
We quote again :
With these impressions, we are not at all sur
prised to find that the Atlanta Appeal says, upon the
authority of, k gentleman of observation sad intelli-
Bence, who has lately enjoyed opportunities of stu
dying public opinion and feeling in the United States,
that there is no party therein favor of peace, except
it bring with it restoration; that even the success of
ultra Democracy would not terminate the war, un
less the South would return to the Union,;.that the
political battles lately fought were for possession of
the' Governments, State and National, with their
power and patronage;.that the difference between
the two parties consists only in the fact that` the
Abolitionists are for extrememeasuresi confiscation,
rmancipalion, plunder, ete.—and what is known as
the peace party & for the Constitution and laws, and
for the war until the rebellion is put down and the
Union restored.' No single voice is raised for peace
on the basis of, separation.”
Tan Lenrers.-"Nrai. Virginia Lorini Wati, the
prima donna of Grau's troupe, last winter ; Pane.
Vera Lorini is his present prima donna ; and hence
the puzzle. We refer to the doubts` existing in the
minds'of the Brooklyn public, because we overheard,
last Evening. some funny, remarks upon the subject.
One rather stout gentleman who sat near us assert
ed, with a show of knowing all about-:the Matter,
that Dime. Virginia Lorini is an American prima
donna f that she married the tenor Lorlni, the son
or lame. Vera Loririf ;, and tence.the confusion of
Lakes. We are sure that this lady would.have pet
rified the speaker-with-one of her grand tragic looks
could she have overheard this remark. -Other per
sons asserted, with wise shakes of the bean, that the
*hide - affair ^is a humbug ; that there is but one
Mine. Lorin and that maretz.ek. and Gran have ar
ranged the matter between them to'create an opera:
tic sensation. • : • 1
To those who indulge in doubts upon the subject
we will state that there are two bents _fide prime don.
ne bearing theAame of Lorini. The , one, Vera Lo
rini; an
.orfiste well known in Lurope, where' she
has for many_ years ranked high in her profession.
The ,ether, Lorini, is an American lady;
wheOsea'prima donna, has also established a revel
tatters in 'Europe, where. she Sang successfully in
London A Paris, Berlin, Vienna, TiEllan t _and, Barre
-lone. • Previono to her European tour, lame. Vire.'
; tan Lorini yang with great success in. Soutti.Ame*
Ca. That, as - en'Ainerinsh, she"attained eintijenog
in' her: profession:in Europe' is a matter
14.14(4114 to our puldlo,—il. l's.„
Wimp. WAR
aI:MUSSED WEEKLY.)
-
Tut WAR PatenVerill 'be sent to anbaerthers by ...
rnall4per itehrim to kit/awn) GO
Three ^ Les
five copies s3'r*
Ten
Larger Claim thin Ten Will be charged' at the lIARIG
ate; SLSO per copy.
The money *Wet altOttys accompany the order. and
in no instance can these terms he deviated from. email
afford very are inore thaii;the cost of the payer..
Toarmasters inn' requested ta , aer is Aganlig fog
WE WAR Pkits.
Oa" To the getter-np of thiClub of teA or twenty. sa
with. copy of the Parka will he even.
An. Army of Llberatori to go to Mamoru!
To the Editor of . The lime:
Sri : The fait is bemiring more unplesearrE and
certain every day, and there is no lenger any reason
fOr doubting, that our brothers and friends areactu.
ally - stirving in the Elotonond dungeone. If be.
comer our dirty to give the rebel authorities a lesson
in humanity ; ' :for it ix .31mA( they cannot feed pri.
limners they ought to parole them. They will do
neither. rtePrived of liberty,`•tingering" in disease
and squalid misery, and neglected even to sterns.
'lion, our gallant soldiers - nre mitering pangs as great
as mortals ever endured. Let them be freed Let
an army of Liberators 7.* raised for the special and
only object of going to 3iichmcrad; Let the Presi
dent call for one hundreh thoUszial volunteers (or
,this purpose—the special:Ay of titeir duty to be
clearly Net 'fortX and that.' term of Bernet: , noted.
There are•eufffmt militibsorganlintions, drilled
end eqUipped, maire a formidable armsq and a
majority of them would come forward on a quick
atop, glad to be in the front rank for arch service.,
By all means let ca have an army of Liberators ;
every feeling of manhood calle , for it, sad the re
sponse will be overwhelming....FßEEMAN;
PZILM)ILLPICIA, Pr:l7, 15, 1863. - -
113nInn Piisoners in thx-Sonttt.
TIT& HOSPITALS AT ATFFriPOLIB-ICFAFTFL PIO.•
?Tr - RE OF Ems= oatriererir:
A corrscpondent of tho - rime's, having 'visited the
hospitals at Annapolis, where our prisoners return
ing from Richmond are sent for treatment. gtvee as
account et' what he saw' cad heard. The matron
gave him an' account of ihrarrival of 180 . 'men on
the 29th
Many were- - unahle to walk, - and were;*carried.to
• the hospital Those that cnuid "walk presented a
aight never - koslielorgotten 2br, before Icsving, the
rebels not °Mk atr:r.p. ped them.of socks, [shoes, and
blankets, buttookfrom them - their shirts and pan
taloons, except where the ragstrrould scarcelfold to
gether. Men come - without hots or caps, with thin,
cotton drawers; and 'bodies. &ate to" Mt waist4'-their
nakedness rind bleeding feet coVeteil only by what
tatters their erect ea - store had left them; not from
mercy, but because they were toclilthy to keep:
These men had Wen on Belle rilfand (which seems
to be a barren waste)` without anyprotection against
the weather, except what they hadetbemselves con
structed. Theylrad 11,11 on the sand, which was to
them both bed an&covering, expocnd, both sick and.
well, to alI - extremes of heat - and, cold, without
clothes; without fond, (except smalrportiods of the
most repulsive kindS;) - for weeks araYmonthi; many
having been taken prisoners at the battle of Gettys•
burg. Many were suffering from What they ,called'
sand sores, and the an - rgeOns in Yens attempted to ,
produce general cirinlirtion of the bloods the en
title in many initance* amEmingly dried on the bone
from exposure, andfneariy the color and consistency
of parchment.
Of' what he 'rawly. thishespital this correspondent
Writes
The next - patient was c,• - respectable-looking, mid
die-aged German, with thh bed clothes drawn tightly
over his head, moaning and writhing in his agony.
My friend begged me to Brien. I could only distill•
gull& these words: "I am so tired, something to
eat, what tOrment," and then the ejaculation; " Oh,
Holy Christ I" Then we saw others, emaciated to
the last degree, several of Whom were trying to eat.
Some, after taking the longed-for article, and put
ting it to their lips,would tarn away with an- ago
nised loathing expression; as if eager to swallow,
but incapable of the effort. Others, after eating
with famished halite, would, after a few moments,
eject it all, their stomachs being too much weakened
to
- bear nourishment either solid or liquid: There
were other patients who-were better; they could di
gest light food; and had some hope of life. /t . war
then the sixth day since they came '
- and out of one hun
dred and eighty men, fifty-three had dial of tll treatment
and actual starvation. The surgeons said at least two
thirds-of the one hundred and eighty would die, and,
if any recovered, it would be with broken constitu
tions, utterly incapable of supporting themselves.
And yet we are told there is •no prospect that
terms of exchange will soon be agreed upon. But
clothing, food, and medicine are being forwarded to
Richmond, and we may hope that the worst is over.
I?.•ECIPRCiOITT AS TO PlUSOls'ltlii.
A Wasbingtorf correspondent says: We under..
stand that the War Department have requested the
insurgents at Richmond to inform our authorities
what the rations served out to the 'Union prisoners
confined at Richmond are composed of, with a view
to serve cut to Confederate officers in our heads
similar fare."
THE PRISONERS IN RICHMOND*AN •RXINUTIC
TEMPTED.
From the Exam Mer,
On Wednesday night a "spy" from , Lieut
Bossieux's guard, on Belle Isle, while perambulating.,
in disguise, through the Yankee -prisoners, over•
heard one of the' prisoners say, " Well, they're
going to plant cannon around us tomorrow, and alt
who don't want to istay here and freeze to death this
winter must make a break to-night."
,The "spy " immediately sped to Lieut. Bossier'.
with the information he had , obtained. The latter
communicated the alarm to the guard, threw the
sentinels, forward, and sent to the 'barracks for one
hundred edition al men. '
No attempt to break the lines 'was -made, and it
was plain that _if any was contemplated, it wait
checked by the demonstrations Of the guard. , '
,
Five pieces of cannon are now 'planted in posi
tions bearing on the prisoners' camp at shOrt range,
aid any demonstration to overpower-the guard will
result in the thinning out at their number arms*
singly; -
An Interesting Ceremony.
TEE LATE SENATOR BRODREICR'S CANE PRESENS.
ND TO NEWS:DENT LINO( .N BY SENATOR': CON."
Prim the Washing - Eon Obronicle. Saturday.l
In accordance with theannonncement in the Ch,res.
wide yesterday, the Hon. John Connell!, Senator ha
Congress from. California, accompanied by-a number
of gentlemen, most of them citizens from Penney'.
vania, called upon the President of the United
Steles for the purpose of asking his acceptance of as
can, which was the gift to him of his great prede.
censor and exemplar, David Colbert Broderick. We
noticed in the President's Cabinet chamber the fol
lowing named gentlemen : Hon. A. P. Usher, Secre
tary of the Interior; -Hon. William H. Seward, Se
cretary of States Hon. Gideon Welles, Secretary of
the Navy'; Hon. P. C. Shan.non, General George 111."
Lauman,
_Colonel Alexander Cummings, Fleet Sur.
geon J. N. Foltz, Colonel DlcKelby, of the .Convit
les:mutt:imp,. A. Al. Sallade, Esq., William Carney,
Captain William X. •Baban ex•G-overnor William.
F. Johnson, Colonel John W. Forney, DI. E. Flan
nigan. of- California, General Richard Busteed, of
New York, and George .C. Bower. Jr., reporter of
the Philadelphia Press and Daily Morning Chronicle.
The day was exceedingly:lovely, being the begin
ning of the second Indian summer, and the occasion
one of -rare interest. Mr., Senator Connese, who
seemed to he somewhat Surprised at witnessing so
many Pennsylvanians around him, and still more
surprised on being informed that nearly all these gen
tlemen, like himself, had-Acted with the Democratic
party, until the .party became sold to slavery, ad
vanced with the cane in his hand, and, in a line,
bold, and clear voice, addressed the President:
SENATOR.OOMIESS' SPEECH.
He said that this interesting gathering had no ob
ject in view other- than that of witnessing the- pre=
sentation of a cane which he held in his hand to the
President of the. United States. He tookgreat plea
sure in bestowing it upon him. It was a gift of
David 0. Broderick to - himself, who was not only a
friend of his tint a friend of the people. lair. Brode
rick, he said, was a great hero, and one who had bat
tled and died for the salvation of his country in the
hour of its trial. Retook especial pleasurein tender
ing the cane to the President as a token of his re
spect and admiration for him in the-issuing of that
great edict, the proclamation of emancipation, and
in resolutely maintaining it as the public law. The
President had made himself a great leader in the
civilization of the world, and the Hon. Senator re
peated-that it afforded him heartielt-pride to pre
sent and consign to his keeping this memento-of his
late esteemed friend. David O. Broderick.
•
TRH .P.I3.BSrDIENT'S- REPLY: '
The President then accepted the cane, and, with
much replied that he never personally knew
the Senator's friend, Mr. Broderick, but he had al
ways heard him spoken of•as one sincerely devoted
to the cause of human rights. Testimony to . this
point of his character had been borne by those whom.
he had not intimately known,,as also by those with
whom he was personally andintimately acquainted,
and, with all of them, the testimony had been uni.•
form. The memento which was presented him by
Senator Conness was of that class - of things ' the
highest honor that could be conferred upon him.
If, in the position he had been placed, he, had done
anything that entitled Min to the honor the Senator
had assigned him, it was a proud reflection that his
acts were of such a character as to merit the affiliation.
of the friends of a -man like David Broderick.
Whether remaining in this world or looking down
upon the earth from the spirit land,to be remem
bered by such a man as David O. Broderick was am
fact he would remember through all the years of his
life. The proudest ambition that he could desire
was to do something for the elevation of the condi
tion of his fellow men. In Conclusion, he retinue('
his sincere:thanks for the part the Senator bore in
this presentation, and to the, memory of his great
friend.
The cane is a betifully polished one, made of oak.
The original inscription on a gold plate on the end of
the round of the cane was "Broderick to Conness."
Encircling these words the Senator has had inscribed,
" Common to the President," and thus these two in
scriptions are blended together. - -
The Carbon County Thugs:
(Prom the Pottsville Journal] •
We have some additional details of the .cireum.
stances attending the assassination of Mr. George
K. Smith, and desperate wounding of Mr.; Ulrich.-
The man who first entered Mr. Smith's howreore.
tending that he bad a letter for him, was a tall Irish.
man, wearing hia beard in the shape of & goatee.
He had.on a military*coat. The man insisted on
seeing Mr. Smith, but Mrs. Smith and Ms:Ulrich
said Mr. Smith was too stick to get .up, and Mrs.
Smith would hand him the letter. The man had hit
band in his pocket, and in pulling it out, a pistol in
his pocket exploded, the ball passing through the
floor and the powder setting fire to his 'pantaloons.
The, man then caught Mr. 'Ulrich round the neck.
and tried to shoot him in the head, but Mr. Ulrich
seized the man's hand that held the pistol, and pre
vented him. Five -shots, however, were fired, all
passing close to Mr. Ulrich's head, the powder burn
ing his face.
While this was going on a crowd of the fellow's
companions rushed into the house, and beat Ulrich.
over the head and body with clubs and billies. Du
ring this cowardly assault upon a single man; one of
the party shot Mr. Ulrich through the thigh. Ul
rich then broke loose from them, drew a revolver,
and fired at his assailants. He is certain he shot
. one, and thinks he hit two. One of the wounded
was the man who-first entered the house. As Mr.
- Ulrich fell:exhausted in the hall of the house, Mr.
Smith, aroused by the disturbance, came downstairs.
- without taking time to dress, entered a room where
the mob was, and attempted to speak to the ruffians.
While he was in the act of addressing them, a thug.
• sneaked up behind him ; placed the muzzle of a pis
tol to the heels of his head,'and shot him dead.
fore they: left they-fired several shots at Mrs. Smith
and her sister. A ball passed through Mrs. Smith's
clothing, and through the front door. The- sister
saved herself by hiding under the house.
Twenty.two of the Thugs have been arrested and
sent to Reading. Three who went to Readingto see
their companions were arrested there. An are now
in close mutody, with no prospect of &repetition of
the Mauch Chunk jail affair.
On Monday Mr. Milner!, a heavy coal operator at
Teanesville, wait notified to leave. Bement to head
quarters at Yorktown, and aaked,for protection.
By this time, we preaume, he has. it, as we under
stand the 10th New- .Tersey Reghnent has been sent.
by Gen. Sigel to that region. .
It is to be hoped that the men guilty of these cold--
blooded assassinations will becentleted, and hun's
and that thoee guilty of other acteof violence to per.
eon and property may be dincovered, and punishid tat
the full extent of the law. Severe examples are im
peratively required.
Tam lowa. Omastre.,Themnsus returns of loWih,
for 1862;.8gure uP as follow:- re;'.' .
11alee .. . *** . .... •• • •,...etts,••••••.•••• ....... 364,681
Females.. . .. .. . •.• • • • • . .... 3 46 , ist
Five counties not ',l;ieetelfromi had, in 1860.... '216
t . • l'•• • • • ••••••• 000000000 702 3 01
PM WOW 4 21003 6 0 ih 4.0