puBLISEIED DAILY - (I3IINDAYS BXORPTED). BY JOHN W FORIWCY, OFFICE. No, 111 SOUTH FOURTH STREET. THE DAILY PRESS, To City Subscribers, ie TIM DOLLARS PER ARNOW. in *Wpm or TWartry Cairn Pea WEEK, parable to she Carrier. flailed to Subscribers out of tae city, 'PINS DOLLARS PER ANNUM; POUR DOLLARS AND FIFTY .CIHROS HO* Six MONTHS; TWO Dowerte AND TWENTT• 414.DONTS . NOR THRUM MONTHS. tztrariabli In advance ,for the time ordered. 41ir L dvertisemente inserted at the usual rates. TBI•N'EESLY PRESS, 4112119 d le gnbseribeis. FIVIL DOLLARS PAR ARNOW in 4dvainge. FINANCIAL. N BW NATIONAL LOAN A.T P.R. MEREST. 'TAO IN UNITE WEL COUPONS ATTACT4Ett, rSTHREST Ws:Thaill,ll EACH SIX •MONTHS, The yottitiipsi Irmagable-In lawful money at the end of kthree years; or, the holder has the right to demand at , Chat time 'THE E. MO BONDS AT PAN INSTEAD OF THE CASH. This privilege le veinable, az theme 6.70 Benda are our Mel {Popular Loan, and are now lolling at eight per oeut. premium. thibsorlptions received in the usual rimier, and the appeal and proposals of the Becrretary of the Treasury, (together with our (hroulars, and all necessary informa tion, will be varnished on application at our office. JAY 400.0KE CO.. No. 114 130HTII THIRD STREIT. TF T NATIONAL SANS PRILADELPHtL ;DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY FDN'A'NCILL AGENT OE THE UNITED MAIM 10-40 LOAN. Th Beak bee been authorized and is new Prepared O leoelye subscriptions to the NEW GOVERNMENT LOAN. This Loan, isened.under authority of an act of Con-. gross, approved March 3i DK provides for the issue of Two Hundred, Millions of Dollars (8200,000,000),Delted states Bonds, redeemable after tee yearaond payable forty years from date, IN COIN, dated larch 1, DIM,. tearing interest at the rate of im* CENT. .per arm= IN COIN, , payable semi-annually on all Floods over I/100, and -on Bonds of $lOO and less, an- Dually. Subscribers will•receive either Registered or Coupon Bonds, as therms) , prefer, Registered Bonds will be issued of the denominations of eft,. dollars 050), one 'hundred 'dollars (11100), five hundred dollars '($000), one thousand dollars (1,000), five thousand dollars (6;0W), and ten thousand dollars (10,000), and Coupon" Bonds of the denominations of fifty dollars (00),.0ne hundred dollars (Stet), five hun dred dollars ($600) and one thousand dollars (411.000). INTEREST trill commence from date of subscription, or the scorned interest from the let of Mai& can be paid in coin, or, mail further noticeein United States notes or notes of Vutional Henke. adding fifty (60) per cent. to the amount for premium. C. H. CLARK, ap3•tf President. FOURTH NATIONAL BANK, PHILADELPHIA. 12:3 , Arrelt Street, • DESIO BATED DEPOSITORY AND Fnuirafm. AGENT OF THE UNITED STATES. 7 3-10' TREASURY NOTES, •This Bank la now prepared to reoelye subscriptions to THE RE W 'NATIONAL LOAN, • • zeetted in the form of THREE-YEARS TREASURY NOTES, interest payable semi. annually in lawful money, on thf) lath days of February and August re spectively of each year. • Them Treasury Notes are convertible at maturity, at the option of the bolder, into U. 8. 6 per mint. Bonds, Interest payable in COIN, and redeemable after five and payable twenty years from August 15th, 1857. These Notes be issued In eums of $5O, $lOO, $506, -31,000, $5,000. Interest will be'allowed to the Mth of August next owsubsoriptlons prior-to that date. Sub eariptions subisequent to that date will- be required to p er cent , will be allowed mall subscriptions of $25,000 dud upward. • sA.m , L, J. mAo muLT,AN, iY9O-lit CASHIER. DIEw LOAN: 14. 1040 s, JAY COOKB:St CO, 071 , 311 FOR SAM THE NEW GOVERNMENT LOAN, Bearing Fire'Per Cent. 'lnterest IN COIN Redeemable any time after MI YEARS, at the plea. are of the Government. and payable FORTY YEARS fterßoh COUPONS and REGISTERED BONDS re Issued for t tbis Loan, of same denominations as the toe. Twenties. The interest on $6O and 0100 payable Yearly, but all other denominations half yearly. The TEN-FORTY BOVDS are dated March 1, 1864, the half- Yearly interestlalling due September 1 and March lof tab year, tlutil , lst September, the *warned interest Ist March is required to be paid by -purchasers in 1, or In legal currency. adding SO per cent. for pro m, until further n office, • All other Go : remnant Securities bought and sold. JAY OCOEE & CO.; : 11.4 SOUTH THIRD Ii!TREIT NOTICE TO THE HOLD. B OF IM/1.1.14 7.30 U. S. TBEaffuzir =TBS. Ri -111111 TY MOTO, of the denomination oi 100 e, can now be converted In FORDS OF TIM Waif OF 188 L , came denomination. information apply at the oece of ,TILY COOKE & 00., Bankers, 114 South TRIED Street; PhUL ~'.~ Y~I ; r ~~ir# f:3 t # IR:11~ ~ :~ 5)014114u .DIREOTOAY-CON at:-.. 1. • s List otOonitooffiles , their Offices, President., mgesers, And iloototorioo. We aft 410 Prearod tO rui6h ffiesirthenvollOol With • orarrrialiTir 4)7 STOOK. TRANSFER BOWL ORDER OF rs - ArerlL STOCK LEDG)Nic STOOK' LNDOILR VALA/5 030 * REGISTER 07 oA7riArl EMOK. DIVIDEND BOOS. BROKER'S PETTY LEDGES, AOOOlOl3 Olt BALMS. •Of good matactols and At Low Plied& )10118 wfir, COW, vrATitsinum 431 canoritTstroet. CAUINET FURNITURE. , LBINET FIIRNITIIRE AMID BIL LIAM) 'TABLES. MOORE it CAMPION, No. 2.61 Bovril SECOND STRNET, In connection with their extensive Cabinet business, now manufacturing a superior article of BILLIARD TAB LES; have now .131 hand aletll en ply itnißhed with the OORB CAMPIOR'S IMPROVED arsalows, ch are pronoUneed by all who have used them to ap.rtor to all others: or the unallf IF and finish of se Tebtee, the manufacturers refer to their numerous tone throamlont• the union, who are familiar with IhilriLeta or their work. WM dm .S 0 CO., 4 . 10. A 57 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.. impoznas op :13 etc LADIES' GLOVES, MAN AND ENGLISH 1108wRy, 'S FURNISHING GOODS. de DRESS TRIMMINGS. to which th e y 171 TUX WHOLESALI TRAWL . . .. • ~ .. .. - l i mw s • • . .. • . ... . . .s. . • ~,,,,- - ~ ,.., . 3.,-44.,.-z, , ,,, ,, -,, ,,,,,, , tr . ! , . 44 . , ~,.. , .. . .. , , . ~. ~ :• - ' - 12 , - ".. . _,, 'JP—% :7 111 1- * ----...,%:=; 4 1;:fti ';' -- -s - -;=% - - '' . -, ' - c -- '?-:. •.- ./: 4 ; fx ' ..,. c • . ~.. -----' ,11.-- -- ori ':"----fi1L,...., ~.• , . L i , 6, • - Itif' - • .. . ._. .- ----....11;,. '''. A 1,..,,, T .,,,,ap, 1 4 ,.... ...r. ...._,_____,..„,„ 7 ppitillti 1-, ''', ,,, . i. mai ~.., ~-.4....4 At , c . . i —.. \ . . • . .).„, ~.„...7.. ),... PP! b ... A _.., ..._ .. . ....,:is...' ..-.77-....114 — ..e. ,- --...* .....!,,, _ ~,.---.. . ~ ....... .,_-; „ 7 ~ . .::._.:. ..., ...,.;:ii , „ • , _,...,,,, . ,-_-z, ---------- ....------, - . ~,, : :.: „ --__-.,„......___,..__,4 -:-...,____,....'--' so ~... , . VOL. 8.-NO. 3. Shred's "Mmatl de Parisi," Ter MsimmellilmE the Skin. ' This secret of enamelling the skin being only known to Juice Jared, he honorably elates that ildiffers from all other preparations, being scientifically composed from plants and harmless gums, which produce the most brilliant complexion, and give a soft, eventexture to the akin, like that of an infant. L'Emall de Paris cleanses the pores from those nit sightly black worm specks and small particles which CVO coarseness to the complexion: and by °lounging produces a healthful glow. It effa c es, snare few week's, moat happily, all scare, and is especially successful in eradicating the marks left by small-pox. "L' Email de Paris" is endorsed by Testraii, Mrs. Waller, and many other , ladies in private life, '1911.0158 commendatory letters cannot be published for obvious reasons. Jules Jared's "Email de Parts" Janet a paint, not a Powder, not a paste, but a most delicate preparation that gives both the complexion and texture of polished ivory to the skin. Ladies sojourning in the country, or at the watering places, will find the .. .Email de Paris" Invaluable for removing diecolorations cs.usedby sun burn or salt air. EUGENE JOCIN, No. 111 south TENTH Street,.be low Chestnut, le the agent for "L'EMall 'de' " Orders by mail should be addreesed to JARED & RENE, Importers of "L'Emall de Parte. Phillidelphia. jy2- To watt CURTAIN GOODS. I. E. NVALat,A.Ii7EAN, cauoolssou TO W. H. OABILTI ft i HAWOW HALL, 719 CIIESTNUT STREET. WINDOW SIA.A.DES, CURTAINS, 310SQUITCO Nimurxicists kyl-tt , COMMISSION HOESES. THE ATTENTION OF T.EIE TRADE- Is called to • • OLYE STOOK OF, SAXONY WOOLEN CO. all-wool Plain Flannels. - TWILLED FLANNELS, • Various makes In Gray. Scarlet, and Dark Blue, PRINTED SHIRTING FLANNELS. PLAIN OPERA FLANNELS: BLACK COTTON WARP CLOTHS, 19, 16, 17, 19, 19, 20, 21, 220 z. FANCY CASSIMERES AND SATINETS. BALMORAL SKIRTS, all Grades. COTTON GOODS, DENIMS, TICKS, STRIPES,SIIIRT DIGS, &c., from various Mille. ' '• ' • -BE COHRON, HAMILTON, & EVANS, ' 33 LETITIA. Street, and re27-lar !Indeed 32 South FRONT Stioet. HAZARD & RITTOKINBON, No. in CHESTNUT STREET," COMMISSION MERCHANTS, myl4-6m] PHILADELPHIA-MAIM pOZDB• EDWARD P. RALLY, • • JOHN KELLY, " '• TA-Moits, Will, from this date, sell *. BENING AND SUMMEM, CLOTHES at low prices. , On band a large stock of Fall and, Winter Goods, bought before the rise, which they will sell at mode rate prices. Terms net cash. iy3D GENTS' FTRNISHING. GOOkloS: THE INfLOVED PATTER -suIRT WARRANTED TO FIT ARROWS 'SATISFACTION JOIN C. i-klErltlStari, Nos. 1 AND 3 NORTH SIXTH STREET, MANUFACTURER AND DEADER IN " GENTLEMEN'S FINE FURNISHING GOODS CONSTANTLY ON HAND, LINEN, MUSLIN, and FLANNEL SHIRTS. and DRAWERS. COLLARS, STOCNS, TRAVELLING EMIR re, TIES, WRAPPERS, &c., acc., . OF HIS OWN MANUFACTURE. • ALSO, HOSIERY GLOVES, SUARPa. SUSPENDERS HANDHARCHI&FS SHOULDER Sta.CES, bcc., Jko Sold at refteOltable Price!. apls-6ro QV'iI.NG 419 BUMMER • ENTIRE NEW STOCK' trriz.o3P. 'tic 1.4 c) Er. Iry G. THE LATEST NOVELTIES_ IN GENTLEMEN% FURNISHING GOODS. *MIRE & BROTHER, (SOCESSOR TO HILL & EVANS,) 1.436 CHESTITUT.STBEET. . • ihe , "Model Shoulder-Seam Shirt.", my4•wfm4m R 26 ARCH STREET. rt 825 U 1 IVI 0 V A. X... • G. A, HOFFMAN, I:IEST"I'RENRIM SHIRT e n WHAPPICE :w.,..iirAiiiNporr , AND GENTLEMEN'S i'VEN TOtTING EMPORIUM, 'REMOVBE FROM 606 AEON STREET TO TEE NEW STORE, 825 ARCH STREET. 825 jelo fsmatm OOKS VINE SHIRT MANUFLOTORY. The anbacribers would invite attention to their IMPROVED OUT OF SHIRTS, which they make a specialty in their business. Also, constentif receiving. - NO EMIRS FOR GENTLEMIN'S WEAR. J. W. SCOTT & 'CO., ' GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING STORE, No. 814 CHESTNUT STREET; Four doors. below the Continental. ROBERT BIIONMARBR & 00., N. E. Corner of FOURTH and RACE Streets, PRILADYLPRIA„ WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, IMPORTERS AND DEALERS-IN FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC" ' -WINDOW AND PLATE GLASS. MAPOPAOTORERS OP WHITE LEAD AND ZINC PAINTS, PUTTY, &o. dozers son THE CELEBRATED • . FRENCH ZINC PAINTS; Dealers and consumers supplied at mate- VERY — LOW PRICES Pint cApfi PAPER HANGINGS. LARGE ASSORTMENT OF PAPER EMT GING& • T. d. COMM, wgOLEBALE AND RETAiL DEALER DT . 14.ANG - nvos , No. 602 ARCH Street, Second Door above BIRTH. South Side. The attention of the Public is invited to his • " LARGE AND VARIED ASSORTMENT OF PAPER -HANGINGS, Enibracing all qualities front 18% CENT& TO 49311 FINEST GOLD AND VELVET DRGGRATIONR. Also, air entirelytew artiele of , GOLD -AND SILK PAPERS mil-omwer • JUST Rgosii.ED. HEATON' 80 . DE14011.14, : f , " 0 'L-L- WARS COMMISSION Iif&RCHANTEI, isor con. MERCK. and. 819 8 OATS: Wrests, __offer for sale: inehorßrerel-19faVrteonth MU lave* _ ,__. • W. lit 8. Batoher'A - Mal; EaAccabinet imp% 'L i ttman's Horse ilte, Mickel Moollnat 4s . - V,__°PPerilreosise.BB4oii.Wirs; CottoitZeiliz::, "",/ a ZU I 4 mating' ori.lasn liariwavi NWIII won THE SALE or CLOTRING. NADI BY DRUGS. •((iljt ttss. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1864 TEE ASSAULT ON PETERSBURG. Complete Details—Grautts Plan of At laelt.=The .111 hoe Espieslori—The Charge upon The Breach—A. Feud'Enfer—Con duet of the Colored Troops—The Final Repulse. The letters of half a dozen different correspond ents furnish us with abindant 'details of the late well-planned attack on the rebel entrenchments be fore Petersburg. We havefarefaity colleted - them, and are now able to present aofall and connected account of the battle, from its, inception to its dis astrous end. The failure, and the slaughter of our troops, is ascribed on all hands to somebody's blun dering, but who that somebody, is no one seems bold' enough to say. There seems to be a general desire that the causes of the failure be ascertained by a court-martial, and the author or authors of them meet with severe and merited punishment. • THE Trials. • The strategy.of the affair; wholh is to be credited entirely to Gen. Grant, is assumed to be faultless, and the main complaints hinge on a series of mis takes in the tactics--of stupidity in carrying out the orders of the commanding general. The mine was admirably prepared, but there are some, complaints that the abattis - In front of the works was not in cluffed'in the destruction. Our, troops, - when they .charged into the yawning chasm, were thrown into some confusion by the obstructions in front of the works. This, however, is-an objection ofalttle im portance, since however steady nil have been the Imes orour troops, th . e . terrible fire ea the enemy would have broken and thrown tiiiitanto disorder. General Grant- early discovered' (hat with 'the passage of the James was exhausted-all possibilities of 'a movement by the left flank; with Richmond as the objective point. Nothing, therefore, remained to General Grant but to assault the rebel lines. From day to day with shovel and pick oar men ad vanced, until the intervals between the rlfie-pits of their enemy was In some places less than 150 yards. The ground is broken by hills and eminences sloping loto ravines Intersecting each other at every angle, .and some of the eminences - are very thickly wooded. Over this almost impracticable ground our men have slowly advanced, until only one hill remained to be taken so that our guns could" entirely com mand the city- It is called Cemetery Hill, and, like.. its nalnesake at Gettysburg, has now become his., toile. Its crest, frowning with guns, Is not more then 600 yards from our advanced works. Its sides are indented with earthworks, pitted With redoubts and redans, edged with serried sellouts, containing all the skillful defences known to skillful military engineers.- The point - to us was of- vital impor tance, and accordingly Generals Hancock, Sheri dan, and Kautz were, as we stated yesterday, sent across the James river to the vicinity of Mal vern Hill. The demonstration is alleged to have had ; -Its effeet, although, in view of the heavy columns that opposed usat the assault, It is- to be presumed that Leo was not weakened to any-great degree. Be this as it may, correspondents assert that the Petersburg and Richmond Railroad was kept busy all day Friday and Friday night transporting troops to the rear. The bearing of these stratagems was an entire secret in our army, being only known to the oorps commanders, - whatever may have been suspected or known by Lee. The tac t tics proper were assigned to Gen. Meade, under whose direction- the subsequent assault was made. His arrangement of troops an order of bat tle were as follows: On Friday night the 9th Corps was withdrawn from its position in the centre of the main line, and massed to the rear and right of the mine: Behind it was the colored division as a relief and support. The 18th Corps was also to be withdrawn from the main line, relieved by the 3g. Division of the 2d Corps, that had the day before recreated the James river and mused in a position to the right of and in close supporting distance of the 9th Corps: The sth Corps was to leave its line thinly picketed, and to be massed to the left of and close to the 9th-Corps. The let and 24 Divisions of the 2a Cerps were to-re cross the James under cover of reserve: before the commencement of the attack, to the right of and be hind the 18th Corps. The cavalry corps was also to return to the rear of our line around, the rebel right, and move upon and attack Petersburg from Its southern and southwestern approaches. The Ist Division of the 9th Corps was to avail itself prompt ly of the consternation created among the enemy by the explosion of the mine, push forward - formed In column of attack, and carry the intervening rebel - work& The '2d and 3d Divisions of the 9th Corps were to follovr the Ist, to the right and left of -it, and take position with It on Cemetery Hill. The sth and 18th^Corps were to close up as soon as the enemy's line was - broken. ' ' Collateran but 'Uniso.ll.vritik„th)stkrance„of e. 7 re - Err e r g tiff') en ted along the line was ordered to open simultaneously upon the enemy at a given signal made by the, ex- plosion of the mine containing eight tans of pow der, which was placed directly beneath the rebel battery which Burnside was to assault. Not, only were the siege pieces to open a fierce fire, but all • the field artillery wihich could be got into position after the opening of the battle ,was to advance as opportunity offered, and bring their . batterles into play. Upon this awful fire of heavy guns It was 'natural that great stress should be placed, in the expectation that the shock of its suddenness would have a demoralizing effect, and so make the way of the infantry easier. MX1.1,091017 .0P THR NINA Thus"far the plan was very good, but now for the execution of it. EVerything seemed favorable. No ;noon illione ' the morning was black in its darkness, the hour of the explosion-3 30 A. M.—was come, and the fire was lighted. It went out ; again it was lighted, again was It extinguished. This was a mis fortune unexpected. An officer of the 4Sth Pennsyl-, vania ventured into the shaft, and found that the fire went out at each splice of the pine tube. Time was consumed, and when all Was again _pad) , it was broad daylight. A third time the Tire was light ed, and required no relighting. The army waited in suspense, crouching on their 'arms, behind the earthworks in the gray light of the morn ing. None knew the locality at which the ter rible upheaval was about to take place. But suddenly there was a dull, rambling thud, pre ceded by a quaking and upheaval of the earth in the immediate vicinity. The earth was rent along the entire course of the excavation, heading slowly and majestically to the surface, and folding sideways to exhibit:a deep and yawning chasm, comparable, as much as anything else, to a river gorged with ice, and breaking up under the influence of a freshet. But there was a grander effect than this observable also. Where the Charge In the burrow was heaviest, directly under the rebel work, an Immense mass of:dull red earth was thrown high in air, in three broad columns, diverging from a . single base, 'and as suming the shape of a Prince of Wales' feather; of colossal proportions. While the huge mass stood poised for a moment in the air it was a magnificent object of confemplation. The interstices within—it seemed made of layers and shafts of sand—were lit up with the lurid flash of the exploded gunpowder and the variegated aspect 'of the whole—here dark, .there Illuminated—reminded one of the pictures of _Mounts Vesuvius and Etna in. eruption. After pausing a moment, down it sank again, like a foun tain when the water is. suddenlyshut qff, and the air became filled with dust. 'Those near the spot say that clods of earth weighing at.• least a ton, and can non, and, human forms, and gun-carriages, and 'small-arms,wele all distinctly seen shooting upward In that fountain of horror, and fell again in shape. less and pulverized atoms. The explosion fudync complished what was Intended. It demolished the s x•gtin battery, aaa acted as the wedge whichopened the way to the assault. - The awl ul instant of the explosion had-scarcely passed when the dull morning air was , made stag nant by the thunder of outertHiery.4grom ninety five pleceS, niched in every hillside .'pommanding the enemy's position' there belched . out sheets; of flame-and milk-white smoke, while 4 th.e•shot - and shell sped forward, screeching,. howling, rumbling, lihe the rushing of a hundred railroad trains. But why attempt to glve an idea of such indescribable and awful sound 1 The sudden transition from ut ter silence to fiercest clamor was terrible. First a Rodman thirty 7 two pounder on our front was plain ly distinct; but soon the whole length of the line became enveloped in the - discharges, and the air was filled with the tre dous concussion. At first the rebel artillery did respond, but soon their thornier was .added to ours, until the very earth seemed to sway and rock beneath the awful din. THII CHARGE IN TNN BREAM. In the midst of this fire, our men were to rush through the breach, and beyond upon the second line Of works-crossing the crest of Cemetery Hill. The 14th New York Heavy Artillery and the brigade of Colonel Marshal] had the advance, but as • the ter rifle mass of earth looraeduP so suddenly andso near them, a momentary fear was felt that it was one of our own forts which had been mined by the enemy. The delusion was an optical one, but still had its ef fect in restraining the impetus of the first onset. We will not say that the men became panic -stricken; - but they hesitated, and the line of battle swayed. At last the efforts of the officers prevailed, and the brigade—but not until some five or ten minutes had elapsed—charged with a wild cheer: 'The Ist Bri gade, 'under the gallant Bartlett, was at their heels, and together Ledlie , s whole division charged through the breach. What few of the enemy were near by surrendered without a . shot. . But the sight' that met them must have 60E4 palling. Bodies of dead rebels crushed and mangled out of all resemblance to humanity, writhing forms partly burled, arms protruding here, and legs 3truggling there—a very bell of, horror and torture, (Maine(' to a space of fifty feet in-length, and half as many wide. But the time was not favorable to the play of humane prompting's. This ehaoo of Mangled humanity mixed , with debris of Imple ments and munitions of war must be unheeded. Eiengh for' the storming party to do w i asSound in exhuming two pieces of rebel cannon with ,their .caissons, and, in obedience to the law of self-pre-! tt u h r r n o i w n i g ng the m se to guns urui rittir th a e , c .,s n h e o m wer y, a- shells and Mule balls from the hill be iol2/3,lind from points on either-aide, whioh they still held on this first Lie,. Getting these pieces Into position. prompt* and under cover or their, reforixied,: and, at tohrett' assaulting column : ft, ,d i il a 13 . 1 is d w er ward once more to It wits,s task too 4 great. 764°fit ,: r : er e j-71 :1 h a e arot a iy " essaired . : illiCilearinfillied litre PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, :1864. summit, subjected all the time to a withering tire, Which increased in .Sorceness at every step, until they became the centre of a converging storm of shot and shell. Attacked on the right flank and the left flank, in front and rear, they were compelled to fall back to the partial protection of the crater, leaving their course thickly strewn with the dying and the dead. THE (MARGE Or TIM OOLOHIDD In rear of the main column of attack' the colored division had been formed with a view to passing the other divisions, when they Wide mincal the outer line, and 'making this a starting point for the continuance of the charge. Theist Division belittle centre, with the 2d and 3d on either flank, and now the 4th ad. vaneed beyond. The troops were in two ,columns each brigade constituting a column. Their splen-, did discipline could not but be• observed, and in the early part of the contest -no. soldiers- behaved more gallantly. They charged upon the next and an interior line of the enemy,. and for a time gained decided advantages, as• is- attested in two rebel battle-flags whioh• they captured and brought off with them. But the rebels-, exasperated as we know them-now to have• been at sight of the negroes, ;plight with the fury of devils, and rein forcements coming to their aid--our signalofficers counted six brigades hurried from a camp-beyond the town—the tide of battle turned. The Colored troops gave way, broke in confusion, when the rebels, having repulsed their charge; charged themdnturn, -and then they ran, a terror-stricken, disordered mass of fugitives, to the rear of the whiter troops. In vain their officers endeavored to rally them with all the persuasion of tongue, sabre, and pistol. About 1,000 of them rushed over the parapet, into the interior of the crater, which the exploskin had' caused to make a pit-like form, and was, already. crowded to overflowing with officers and men. The negroes tumbled headlong down the sloping sides, when a scene of inextricable confusion ensued. Ef forts were made by officers- to . { get them out of the work and form outside, but they failed, and the strangely mingled mass of• human beings continued to crowd the pit, the upper portion of, which was' about one hundred feet in diameter. • Sappily about this time the rebel cannonade ma terially slackened, the white troops recovered their stamina, and our lines were straightened just in time to receive a fiercerebel onset. The shock was fearful, but was repulsed. While this fighting was going on, some of the colored troops, estimated at five hundred, clambered Out'of the crater, and - fled in wild disorder to the rear. Th,e white troops now left In. the works wore ex posed to enfilading and cross-fires, but soon the order came to fall back". The whole army returned to their old positions, but retreat for those in the crater was impossible. Ileinmed in on every side, they were captured. General Bartlett and all his staff and many regimental officers were among the pri soners. The losses of this dististrons day were great, too !great when we consider nothing was gained *here so much was promised by the known ability of our leaders. The bare figures are furnished in another portion of thle issue. The Burning of Chambersburg The Town Desolated—Sufferings of the In habitants—An Appeal for Aid. (Correspondence of The Press.) • likluttenuna, Ault 1,1884. I avail myself of the use of your paper to-acquaint the public with the deeds done at the ill-fated city of Chambersburg. Ido 'this in haste, on behalf of the sufferings and distress of her sorrowing people. I will simply narrate what my own observations and the undoubted testimony of her best citizens have taught me to be facts. I propose no sensation story to arouse the sensibilities of our Christian people, but will present an unvarnished picture of the realities, which are enough ,to cause the most Stony hearts to cry out for vengeance. A chapter of woe has been written at Chambersbarg that will startle the whole civilized world. On the morning of the 30th July, at 4 o'clock, a squad of General McCausland's cavalry, in charge of Major Harry Gilmer, approached the suburbs of the city with caution, firing some shots, and meeting with no opposition, they stopped at the residence of Colonel Boyd, of the 18th Pennsylvania Cavalry, and asked for breakfast. The Colonel being absent, they were met by his estimable lady, who was - aroused from her bed, and proceeded to comply with their demands. Her servants having all left in fear, ahe informeil themahe could at once give them some bread, • butter, and milk, but that.it would take her some time to prepare a cooked .breakfast. They chose the former, which they - took away to their pickets, and,, after . some time, returned with the vessels. They then occupied the town, which they found unprotepted. A large number went to the . Franklin Hotel and demanded breakfast, which was procured. In the meantime, General McCaus land had Made a peremptory demand upon the city for 3500,000, sloo,ooo of which, I believe, was to be in gold. The banks had removed all their money, all the councilmen but one had left, and the people were utterly unable to retpond to this dogaand..44g.. ulialt.jgnino,4he . : pe - ""dpie - tieYe'glcan fen minutes to leave their build logs, when a systematically arranged plan of firing, the whole of the burnt district was commenced. No pen can delineate the scene of confusion and grief that followed. Camphone was poured pro- fusely over the most combustible materials, and in the time that it takes to write this the city was in flames. ' The inhabitants scarce knew what they - did, or what to save first. In ono instance, ,a man had to bury his dead wife in the garden to keep her body from the devouring flames ; 111M:tether, a father his child. The sick barely escaped, barna upon the shoulders of their friends; cows and pigs were con sumed alive in their stables. Two colored women who hid fled for safety into the garret, fearing captivity, were consumed alive. A sick colored man, who was so feeble as scarcely to bo able to leave his bed; was FO burned beforehe escaped as to die the same day. A gentleman told me he begged for a little time to get his blind and aged father and mother away, but the house was in flames ere they left it, losing all their clothing. Through walls of tire on either side, and crackling flame and suffocating smoke, the father, mother, and little children had to fly for safety, carrying such parcels as they could bear. In very many oases they saved nothing but the clothes upon their backs. The horses had. all been sent off, and the only means of transportation was what they could boar away in their arms. Delicate women put forth su perhuman efforts, and carried immense weights, while others could barely, in their anguish, support themselves. Pistols were pointed at the heads of innocent and defenoeless women, and they were made, in the presence of their crying children, to ask pardon for their frenzied remarks. By some they were jeered as they labored in their suffering. Oh, God! are there any still who sympathize with tiose who' did this thing! Let ,them go to the blackened and desolate homes of hambersburg; let them see the broken hearts that death will soon claim ; let them go to the asylums for the maniac, and ask if there are any from Chambersburg; let them go to the alms-house and ask if any have been affluent, and how , came their poverty. Let the reader draw a picture: to-day you are in the enjoyment _of wealth and luxuries, .to-morrow the clothes upon you are your all. - If you have a family of _children. depending upon you, in sooh an hour of trial,' what will you do with them 1 If there is a mother in oar whole land who can feel, let her'respond to. the feelings of a mother, and give to these afflicted. Let the little children who are blesses( with comfort and plenty respond— Jet the manufacturer, the merchant, the contractor, who are growing rich, respond, and.quickly brighten the gloom of these desolate homes. Organize in counties and tittles, without delay, and appoint your treasurers to receive for the " ohambersburg fund." The people appeal to you in words of searching lire for aid. They will appoint their 'committee, and will:equitably distribute your alms. In the name of God and humanity, let me entreat :you to this. If your hearts are still unmoved, go to Chamber burg and hear the sad voice of the broken Spirit, and your eyes will be baptized with tears of kindness and charity. The immense paper-mill, the Ellouring-mills, the axe factory, the chair factory, the carriage tau 'tory, the distillery and .biewery, and all the places 61 business that gave enitgeYrdent to the pool!, are swept away. The court-house, the print ing Offices, the city ball, the bank, and all the hotels are gone. The finest private residences, two churches, and all the stores are destroyed. The jail, public school, railroad shops, and the warehokse of Oaks & Caufman, are undisturbed. The railroad took down to-day some oar loads of provisions, and they will be looked for with anxiety daily, as those who are left with homes are seriously taxed in supporting their destitute neighbors. As the kind offering of a lady who had her hortse. - filled with thirty of these, I carried a basket full of pro visions to a poor family, whose all to eat was but a quarter of a loaf Of bread. Send flour, moat, rice, potatoes, groceries, candles, materials for clothing for men, women, and children ; send money to build up again these once happy homes ; or shall they, like the Acadian farmers of Grand ?re, be driven from their homes by fire and sword, and, with the ever-yearning spirit of Evangeline, wander forth hopelessly seeking rest and peace. Dr. Richards, their surgeon (formerly of Eutaw street, Ealtimore,) upon the pleading solicitation of a lady acquaintance whom he met to .save her house, would not brook the meeting of the magnant mous general, but gave her his horse, .which she rode, saying that "McCatisland was drunk, and a perfect devil." It is said that some of these "devils , ' wept at the misery thoy,had created. A. young lady told me that one carried a large bundle on horseback out of the city for her while she led her little brother and sister through the fiery streets. , At one point she had to turn back and seek some other outlet, as to proceed would have been destruction. Individual oases of sufferi n g and losses eould.be given, almost without number, that would harrow your souls to their very depths. I leave to the just indignation Of the American people the choiceof their own apt. theta to express their teelliage.at Duch a diabolical and fiendish act. My vooabulary falls me. - 'From the most careful estimate, not less than $4,000,000 would be required to restore to thepeople what they have lost, at the present high prices. Nearly three hundred Incases, factories, and mills were consumed, with all their material. The loss of some was not less thou $60,000. Chasaborshurg was a wealthy place and a beautiful tows in the heart of Cumberland valley. I have nothing to offer as to why this city was not better protected by the military. The general im presidon was that if General Caeca had remained even with two or three hundred men, he conidlutve kept the rehabs at 'bay untilthe arrival of Geiaeral AverllPs command. There was great indigestion expressed. There were not over from:3oo to 500 re lAA Glunak'AVerill is 'la da rapid pursuit as theljaded, fatigued* condition of his command will admit. Yesterday evening they were. certainly back in Maryland. W. W. r. [We are indebted to filer author of the . ,wbove r a prominent civil engineer of Baltimore, Maryland, for an Interestthg nmap'of Cliambeinburg atompany log this letterovhich shows very clearly the' diStrict devastated by the fire. Territorially,• agent one half of the, town is burned, which, however, eta , braces the 'centre of ivealth 'and - population. Did. our columns permit we should willingly publish.the snap.—En.] . . , Down] East and Three of her GeneralW. To lee Editor of the'Prese : Sin: What say-you-to a-glass-of soda-water from Down Eastl The atmosphere being luminous - just now, and the fogs haiing retreated 'to. the hyper-. • *wean regions of Our Nova Scotia neighbors, per-. lisps a - whipped syllabilh, or a tumbler of sparkling , tien t may not be nnwoleorite' or: untimely for your - Philadelphians:' - - - ;Nave you ever happened • to-set your foot in Port !Sind 1 `lt not; the SoOne'r You 'de.; tile better It will, he for you. - You remember - the - answer of a Down -Easter to somebody who, meaning to be severe, said to him : " Ah I from. the East, hey I , ~Why I thought the Wise'men came Wonte - East."' a.Well ; and tho further you go West the more you'll think so," said the Yankee. - - ' - . , , .. .... - just _pow Portland is waking up,Or turning over iii her sleep rather,- and. revealing' ten thousand bionties-heretefore overlooked. 'Her large houses are finding their' Way - into, the outskirts, and bean-' tiful grounds are fast embellishing, themselves, at• the western end, where one of the most beautiful phiportiretii, including the White lioutitilns and-thw, broad, blue sea, with many a snug village and strptch of wilderiesS, opens upOn.you at 'every step, with a contihnkfly chtidigibg variety. At the othe'r, on easterly end,. the elevation .Is. literally heaped a-o, iteßses '44another esrp", comfortable, roomy, tendifig, raliin anineetiragement for people I ' derate drown:taw:Wes. " °.". ... •- .... - — lTannfactures are increasing, and movements are In progress for establishing another large public house of . the very best character, a marine railway, ,U.',..dry-doek, and' ''a "rolling4:111, -- ana , ter , sup plying the city with an abundance of thebest water ' froiti.Lebnge s lake. The popedation,.has ; increased by hbout One.sixth - stnCi fast fall, OWlng - ti the estab lishment of ship yards, a glass fs4tory, and a shovel factory. • It Is now-somewhat over SO,tido ; ,and what is More, the people, who know where the nrst blow is likely 'to fall in ease if a rupture with England, arebeginning to arm - for the - defence of the city. Tolnight three new coMpanies wilt be organized, and they are'to be got ieady for service at the forts, anct there drOled by men who have smelt gunpew deri.' By the twelfth of next month a thorough in_ spedtion of the coast defeneei, from Portland to the furthest porter Down take place, and the Washington Cabinet; and all the chief bureaus, and the - Wax Departnient, will _be personally repro.' stinted: If we are caught napping now we deserve to lose net only Portland, (the Halifax and Quebec of our seaboard, and the best of breakwaters for Boston and New York in case of war,)' bpt more than we lost by the settlement of that northeastern• bowialary swindle. adly enough, ttiire - are no hiss than four generals here just "now : Gen. Franklin, Brit'. Gen. Dow, Brig. Gen, Fessenden, and Brig. •Gen. `Shepley;.Franklin waiting 'orders, after his marvellous escape' and rapid . renovery ;. Dow, so 'Mali better f.hat he will be ready for service at the exiiratioli , of his furlough next month; Fessenden fullipf courage and hope, gaining every hour, and. impatient for action ; and Shepley, at homeyor Week or so on business, and getting ready for the , fall campaign. ' - . - Airson*.have never heard the truth about Frank linibscape, suppose I give you the whole story in brief: Soon after he was captured he grew very sieelpy—couldn't - keep awake, but lay still and waited for a chance of escape. Two openings oc curred, but on the whole he forbore. it ,was very dtiii4 and he'might jump and run ; of Course, the chance (glinting him with a ball was not worth mentioning; but then, if he were' not hit, there vela be so many after him that he would certainly Teo retaken. At last they, stopped, and four men were detailed to guard Win. He grew. More and More sleepy, and got stowed away in the angle of a fencOpon a pile of straw.- One man stood sentinel overihim, but two others lay down, one on eacheide of hie. After awhile, the fourth man, and the cap tainf,a, Marylander. by the name of Gilmer, came to finish the arrangethents. :Finding the: sentry on the aleiti he cautioned .hirn about -keeping awake, telling him it was a matter of Mb and 'death. "Oh," said.'; the man, "you needn't be afraid of me." Beintsatisfied that the sentinel' was. wide awake andl i he .prisoner sound asleep, the captain threw himself down on some straw, and Ma few minutes irasltst .a.sieep., , Soon after 'this the sentinel sat dow 1t -and then threwhimself back. for a few zoo men , and then lost himself. ' "Now for it said • the ' . saner to himself;. and he began moving about and 4naking et little, noise; but nobcidy stirred: Tliejpie,Asit up, and then slipped away. from be. tti 13 two guards,-ancl -sauntered out to look at - .- . 7.:Findipg-41, er wm nete4felieweeleihe , :atole 4CiwaVelthe bank, and; steering by the shadows of the, trees, kept, on, with no little suffering on account' , of his lameness, for the severe 'con. tuslotl, of his leg. Was not healed, across a wide, open space, where any moving object might be seen,,dack 'though it Wu, by sweeping the horizon. lie was 4 not followed, nor was there any bustle or' diaturbanee. ToWards daybreak, ho made for some low übdorbruilt on the outskirts of a thick wool', and concealed himself there in the neighborhood of some good water, having not a mouthful to oat nor anything to drink bdt -a few drops of brandy, on which he breakfasted. After this, and towards the second morning; he Soli some signs of Habitation, and, working. his way to the spot, found all the re. freibment and all the help he needed front two loyalists. Orie of these he sent off to Baltimore, with order's for a'gig and an escortof cavalry. Both were sent., and after a few Lours he was in Belli- More, out of danger;and free as he could wish. But what became of his log I He brought it back with Lim, all the better for the terrible strain it had gone through. -He did not "run" at any time, though people have told the story that way; but being wholly.unarmed and unencumbered, he might have 'out-manoeuvred a pursuer laden with musket or darbine and pistols. , But enough. You want the foam and net the dregs for your paper. • A DOWN-EARTHS., PORTLAND, July 29, 1864. insane Asylums. To the Editor of The Press: ' SIR: We have read with deep interest an article from the New York Evening Post, under the caption of " Insane - Asylarns-The Necessity of Strict Su pervision of Them:" .It is 'gratifying to know that the public mind is at length waking up to the Im portance of a rigid scrutiny as to the treatment re ceived by a Class at once the , most unfortunate and , helpless of any of our community. . • Our citizens have been startled - at times by the appalling fact brought tolight that individuals have been incarcerated within the' walls of our insane asylums who were in no sense proper subjects for such institutions. And what has been done may be done again, and no one knows who the next victim may chance to be. Is it not, therefore, of vast con sequence that each individual of our community, as a matter or self protection, should exert all his influ ence to bring about a reform, where it is of such vital personal importance 1 The article referred to says: "The management of these institutions should be conducted by persons of well-known ability, great benevolence, tender sympathies, as well as judicious. tact. No others should have these persons in charge, and even then abuses - must and will Creep' in, without they are narrowly watched." We may see from this, then, the importance of having, not only the most reliable physicians, but the very best nurse* that money oan procure for these peculiarly unfortunate beings. A very careful selection should be made, which, we re gret to say, is not , always the case, as in this age, when "public economy " la so much in vogue, the cheapest, not the best, are often selected. But is this not economizing in the wrong direction I for al though this system gavel dollars and cents to the Institution, It gives not back its inmates to their State or country. The cure of patients in all those asylums should be demanded at anycost; and if they are pronounced incurable, they should be restored to their families, provided they are harmless, and their friends able to support them ; and this, in order that they may enjoy as "much_ home-happiness as their nature is capable of during the remainder of their ells ee.• Andwe must say we have but little eon- Aden° in the benevolence of heart or soundness of Ifidgm t of.altitkiclan who would not facilitate tel o the removal o ' are:Clem, incurable patients to their own eotirfertahl _homes, whenit is In his power to •• d 0.50.. . . r Several, oases of injudicious treatment of the par tially insane have at times come under our notice. We here • mention tint one as an Illustration: A. young gentleman of a wealthy family, some years since, trout the effects of brain fever, become par tially insane ; that-is, his mind was weakened for 'the time. His friends most injudiciously placed him in an insane asylum. lie always. loathed the place, with its frightfully unnatural sounds and horribly cetera associations, and pleaded for years to be removed. Toth's his. friends-always turned a deaf ear, Persuaded, no doubt, by the physician to let him remain. Is there not a moneyed temptation to keep vich men 7 s eons in these asylums for life 1 And all this did very well while. there was any chance of the medical treatment of. the institution effecting a cnre... lint at length being .pronoutmed. incurable, why was he kept therel He was per featly harmless, and could read; Write, and. con verse as rationally .as any other Individual.. That be was rendered inourable was. not to .be wondered at, as he was placed in a hOme against his will, one which evory feelineef a weak, and sensitive nature rerolted'ironi ; where he found• no genial also stations,: no friendship's sympathies, none .of the every-day pleasantries of lite which give a charm to existence, and to which this youth had been. ao customen from his childhood ;,and. all this, with no ' hope of change: We , thithk this would have been enough to have, deranged -a strong mind ; what wonder, then, if a weak onesankunder such a hope less fate I If this younK man had, according_ to our juslgment, Been - placed in, charge of a, very dheerfat , intelligent travellipg • Companion,of 'en, 'wised ' 'mind and moral . worth, and mae. with Lim a lour either through our own vast and_beauti ful country or Europe, he usight.have been. restored to p..sound mind and_ a life of usehil activity and happinesi. This wile certainly' *erne .trying for ,• and he had a sight,. which wealth -gave him, of having ,the oppoitunity.of,resorting to any. means. `which might have resulted in his restoration. Agate, the article from the Post says : ." Many, are irlearaerated against their will; thrust in by friends (1) who wish to rid themselves of them, in~ order to oesess power over their wealth or their persons. The misguided judgment of friends keeps many there, Who ought to be restored to horns and the loving are of relatives." Also.: "All asylums, city, corporate, or .private, should be examined strictly, and often. a: Now, then, . here is business of great importance for som e of oar noble- Mind'ed philanthropists. 'Lot a thorough inspection of these inatitutions take place forthwith, by a die, interested committee,' without any bias whatever, f r om either directors, guardians, physicians, or nurses, and let all who are harmless, or not proper subjects, be restored in their homes, if they have them,. e nd our word for it, some of our "model In stitutions" would be' thinned oil about oned'ourth, We speak from experience, having given the subject much attention for years, as well is having had, now and then, a peep behind the scenes. In this connection we beg leave to 'refer In the case of a 'Silty, hartalises-being, whom our eltizona will remember by the name of ? John Toby, who was in the habit of atteeding our lectures, concerts, ho. some tbiiieineivre missed. John, from our ppwea of , realLionsble mod, and spot; 1;19.u1:7 Nana 49 hod been sent, since hig 'father's' depth, by his relatives; to an Insane institsition. w,?:porp, roupkohooked at this; as he was as Intreilesp'asiin Infant, and his father would - never gV his-bonspnt to have blur confined while he live, and,by his making a very handsome provision TOl , 2stat: for life; no doubt in tended him.to have a pinrlibrtable home -and enjoy his liberty as heretoforei Wei do not knew to Which of the Institutions he hakteentent4 - bnt Pave heard it was Illockley. We trust proper imithisrities may investigate into this carer, ae wall as that of many others who are derived, of their 1100•17 by the heartlessness or cupidity of Mob..relations'. Yours, very respectfully t Juinsiers LIED &ORM ABREBT OP REMIT, SYMPATHIZED:I:e rif wanz.—Provost Marshal Wilmer, accompanied by his deputy; T. M."Oulherti and Capt. Smith, with a detachment of slaty men„ of the 114th Ohioltegf7 Merit, proceeded" last Thursday afternoon to the pie-de , being_held In MeCrone's woods, near Hare's Corner, for .the benefit •bf the rebel prisoners at Fort• Delaware, and , arrested 'the 'following "man agers" of the affair : JOhn Cochran, Charles Ash, John Smalley, Tose'ph. , L. Baldwin, Chas. Cannon, H. 13. Cochran ; H. 13: Jefferson, Douglas McCoy, John Rodney, r George W'hlte, Fletcher price, Isaac Grubb, George P..MoOforie,'E. 13..Vochran, R. k. Ran kin, James • MoCrone, Cha rles . J-Fran Hazel; Samuel 'Danforth, - W. L: Weir, Wm., H.. Cann - W. - NV. Stroup, Philip• Marvel, .Thothas Ogle, ' DelawareDavis, Merrit. They were kept in confinement' at: the corner of Third and Market streets' throughout the day, and• in the evening were sent to the guard-house, corner; of Ninth and Walnut, streets; where - they passed the night; with the ofjohn-MoOsone, Charles. Lum, and Dr. Merritt; Who were - taken sick and paroled until morning. 'Or:Saturday:forenoon, they were "sent by order of Major General Wallace, lu charge of Captain Philip Smithand a - gear& front the Ohio regiment, - to, - report- to ,Gederal Morris,' commanding at Fort Xrelaenrri'pLear Wiimingtbn (Del.) Republican. ; SEVJOIP SZNTENOS QP A SIIHBTITUTE —The llfeholiing Colint_t(Ohlo)oo.isfer of Thursday. states that Peter •ConitHis, an. Easterndrover, has' been sentenced to the nit - tary in Canada for year's fore in -to come to the United States and „et . •n=OUrmies.• It seems that he - had been wig east, ness,'obtaiting men in U disellingthem out In ,tht - United states. He o wes' arrested some time eince;•but got offat a% expense of- eight hundred dollars. - Since theri:lM baCkepten..tlsis side, opera,. ting in Canada by agents. .:Recently,lie ventured slyer hi disguise; buV was recognized,.arreated; and . sentenced as above stated. ' • , EPOA:PZ OP UNION PM ' S Oinithil.—VOlLt, men of Company I;lst hlassachusetts Heavy Artillery, who were. taken prisoners about 'the last of June, at .SpottsYlvaida. Court House, escaped on'the first of July,during• the march from' Lynchbtfrg, Va.. to N. - o. They made their escape in couples, by crawling into the: bitshes/whide halting to rest, and in seventeen days travelled overthree ;hundred miles before reachingthe Union Untie. They eon .trived :to ,exchenge-• their own for Confederate uni • - ' forms, and thus passed themselves off as .belonging to the rebel army. Two of them came into our lines on, the fourteenth day. The names of the four are A. Henderson, W. C. Bale, P. Fish, and -West eott. Gitte&r.,Sroire AND MIIRIMER AT SBA MY A. GIUMIL - Seibelt , "A strange story is told In Mm tion with the report of the murder at deafen board of the bark Pontiac, of Liverpool', hy" . ..Tean ado - kakis, , a Greek sailor now in custody in Edinburg. On the 18th - October last, five days„ after the Pontiac _left Oallao,Jean Moyates murdered one of his fellow-sea, men, and stabbed anbther inane& a dangerous man ner that his life was despaired of. Two nights before the fatal occurrence the mate of the Pontiac was standing near the man at the helm, no other person being on the quarterideck at the time when the latter ingreatter tor called out," What la that near the ca bin door 1" The mate replied that he sa whothing,and - looked about toffee if any one was near, bat he tailed to discover any person. The; steersman, then, much _terrified,,Saiti the figure he saw was that of a strange lookinganan of ghastly appearance, and almost im- " mediately afterward exclaimed,: "-There he is again, standing •at the captain's window!) , The mate, though. in view of the captain's window, saw no tigers near it, nor at any other part of the quer- , ter-deck, though he looked round andfound. Next day the ; report went from one to the other that a • ghost imas,on board, which filled some of the sailors with alarm, while -others made a•j est of it. Next night a boy (a stowaway) was so dreadfully alarmed in his bunk by something he saw or felt"(we do not knovr ivhichi that he cried out so loudly as to awaken ' all the seamen in. ed. The boy was sure it was the ghorit seen the previous nlghs that had frightened him end others:of more mature:y ears.were inclined to think So too. Perhaps more than one-half of those on board believed that something supernatural was 'on board, andthat some calamity was about to happen. But , there were two on board who did not believe the, ghost stories, and these Infere.the man= ho was - Murdered, and his companion who was stabbed. The former joked with the boy about the ghost, and said, he would . have his, knife well sharpened and ready'for the ghost if it appeared the next night. Re would give it a stab and. " chuck" it overboard. The latter joined in the joke, saying. he also would help tomtit))) for ' the ghost, and others said they would have letters ready for' the ghost to carry to their friends in the other. world. Jean Noyatos overheatd what was- , said as to stab bing and throwing overboard, • and in conse quence of his imperfect knowledge Of the English language, and having. previously , supposed there was a combination against hill', thought the threats, were made against hind. and therefore re.. solved- to protect himself)." A few lours after the jesting We have briefly explained took place he stabbed the men who principally carried on the jest, with the fatal result known.. - The murder, As might be. expected, filled' eVe rjr, one - on board with horror; and the terror of - the sailors, who believed there wee a ghost on board, wit(s overwhelming. night, whether in bed: or on watch on deck, they had . great dread, which wad heightened by reports e that strange noises were heard below. Not even at :the end of ,the'voyagehad the fear been overcome ; for, after the ship was -moored the docks, two of '4 )3o, erellev , whi ) .4 , E4-Ytetcl'a .. 10 #14 4 4.4 1 tdrbiliellave , so frightened after elf eomfiasnion were paid off that they refused to maln on the vessel at night.—: Scotsman. YALE OOLLEGB ABTY.lll4.—Among the gradtp ates of Yale Oolleir„e who have lost their lives in this contest are thefollowing : Brigadier Generals James 0. Rice and • Seimes — E. Rains, both of the class of 1854 the former killed while fighting for his country, at Spottsylvarda . Court House, Va., and the latter while fighting against it at Alurfreesboro t Tenn. Capt. William Wheeler, of the class of 1855; Capt. Charles E. Balkley, of Hartford, of the class of 1856, of the Ist .Conneotiout Artillery; Dewecs Ogden, of the class of 1859, and Peter V. Daniel, of the class of 1859;.b0th killed in rebel service; Lients. 0. Ogden, of the class Of 1860; J. P. Pratt, of the class of 1841; R. Skinner, of the class of 1862, and H. 1. Bloom, of the class of 1860, chaplain of a. colored regiment; C. B. Whittlesey, of the class of 1858,• Sohn N. Salmon, of the class of 3861; Wm. W. Home, of Hartford, of the class of 1862, and Ira B. Alexander, of the class of 1882.. Bev. Daniel Waldo, of the class of 1788, is now the oldest living graduate of the 'college. He will be 102 years old September 10. Tun Farm, 21st or JULY.—The Cleveland Herald motes the following singular facts respecting a fami ly which the war has made famous. A remarkable fatality has attended the well-known McCook fami ly of this State. Charles, the youngest brother, and but seventeen years old, felt at Bull Run, July-21st, 1861 ; Brigadier General Robert MoCook,_another brother, was murdered by guerillas in Northern Alabama, July Mat ; 1862 ; Major McCook, the father, waskilled . July 21st, 1883, In tho pursuit of Morgan in this State, and Colonel Daniel IVlcOook, a third brother, died from wounds July 18th, 1864. &bent the '2lst of July, 1863; General Alex. alcD. McCook and Col. Daniel 'McCook were serving in the Army of: the Cumberland. They spoke to an other officer of the remarkable fact that two bro thers had died on the 21st of July In each of the two years preceding, and remarked that that had made the family at home supeistitlous as to that day. When the 21st of July was passed, they again re ferred to. the subject, and telegraphed to their friends that they were safe. Just then they received a despatch from home, saying that theiffather was killed In the Morgan raid on the ihtal 21st. • VANN - MALTBY& IN 0111NA.,-Several populous dia. tracts in Asia have been reduced to a condition of misery almost inconceivable by the continuance of the war between the Imperialists and Taiping& Such la the extreme destitution that In some places the people are driven to.the terrible resort of feed ing on each other's flesh.' The Shanghae Shipping Litt has the following: "A correspondent writing from Gordon's head quarters, on the way to Chang-chow, mentions that the slaughter among the rebels, after the capture of Bwoeoo, which we recorded in oar paper on the 16th. Instant, was terrible. 'Upward of 9,000 were taken prisoners, and of these it is estimated that 6,000 were killed or drowned, principally by'the Imperi alists. They were all old rebels, and richly deserved their fate, for the diabolical cruelty they had prac ticed during.their present raid. In one village only eighty inhabitants were butchered, because they. had pulled away - wooden bridges which the rebels happened to require. During the pursuit the bodies of villagers, whose throats were cut because .they were unable to keep up with their captors, were found at frequent intervals. The villagers followed 'up the Imperialist troops and ferreted out rebels who had escaped notice by hiding, stripped them and bambooed them, after which they were allowed to go free. . " Outside the north and east gates of Chang-chow, - about half a mile from the city, are ranges ot. huts, amidst which, seeking what they can pick up from the Imperialists, are hundreds .of gaunt, wretc hed o people, dying f hunger altd lilsease r horrible and oathsome to look upon..„,Thp .111E14 are too week , and indifferent to buryttuadegilAthe bodies remain where they fall, and dedernposerinthe roads, unless eaten by the doge. We cermet . describe the horrors that meet the eye at every: stop,, than by quo ting the words of our correspondent : " 'lt is horrible.to relate, it is horrible to witness. To read that people are eating human flesh is one thing; to see the bodies from which that flesh-has been cut is another. No man.. can eat a meal here without a certain degree of loathing. The poor Wretches have a wolfish look about them that is in, describable, and they haunt one's boat In shoals, in the hope of getting some scraps of food ; their lamen tations and,moanneompletely take away any appetite which the horrors one has witnessed might have left one. I ought to be tolerably callous by this time ; but no one oould witnees, unmoved, such scenes as these." I, BtrRIIRD TO DRAM—Pam Silal„RtiMp, of Bran don, says the. Springfield Republican, was burned to death, a few days since, under the most shocking circumstances. With her husband, who is almost helpless, Using a broken back, she. had for some time manufactured Matches on asmall scale.; and, on the fatal day, finding imoke coming fronitsoian where the phosphurus was kept in wafer, she, took ft up to remove it from the house, when it onpioded, enveloping her in dames. She.. managed...to, reach the react where her husband was and, with,tha little assistanee he amid give, tear the burrdng• clothes from her body ; after which she rolled upon the floor in dying agony, there being no one tocara. for her but beriausband, and he was helpless., A. rain was falling at, the time, and she rolled ont.oe doors and remained' there hoping it would quezush the fire. She lived in thili condition, peifectbg cunsoiouit, for three hours. _ Illowtorr. STonfas.--Classell's "Regular Natural History" means to be cntertainigur i lf it is noel* ways accuratecas We may see from the two. follow _ leg extracts : When some men of salami,. were engaged In South it modes making . obsenations:. on tlip figure of the earth, they were greatly annoyed by the.do 7 mosticated apes, which weco very numeeous,look ing through their telescopea, plantingrun ning to the pendulum they used, taking. Unit.. pens and trying to Write." But the ethunx is the folic W. 11315 story , "The Snail pex halllngrefta fen utiy. amongst the monkeys cir.seutb, /ism oe;pr,Pluakard, score tary to the Skionciburpstrat Venaination SOeitity, was struck by the idea of arresting its further •pro. grass. Vaccination was, of course x tii.bo the means of staying the .plague; and lilakehenie for its intro duotion was singularly ingenions: He bound two or tines boys hand and Riot, and then'vaccinated them in the presence of an old monkey, who was observed to be closely attentive to his proceedings. He:then left him alone with a young monkey, with Some 'of the matter on the - table ,, and - beside lt a lancet, narded, that It might not Mit' too deep, by a pro fecting piece of 0. 8 0 - . The Doct4 witnessed the re sult from. a neighboring room; the old monkey Hire* Abe young one down, bound Istm without de. bey t and -vaccinated him with. all the skill of a pro. lessor." • • c LTO: liontutnErzna: --,0 4,0rs •from bollix's'', ham, &cot. ineant.rnity be prevented. by throw ing red popper-podB, or a few ple7cet'of chgreAt , too , , the Tening When; they aTQ boiled, FOUR CENTS. PERSONIL —Another Now Jersey editor, Mr. Eben Winton, of the Bergen County DelnatTat, was arrested on Sat.. nrday by command of Gen. Peck, in the temporary. absenee of Gen. Dix, for art article dlscoursging en liatillent and opposing the execution of the draft. Navas released on parole,. to stand etandnation Tuesday morning. -a. Samuel HaDeg, a well-kerma brokerand finan cier or New York., was shot in Kansas recently by an cmgibeer of the Pacific RO!head Company, of which Mr.liallettwassuperinterrboot. Dl r. lifenett, publisted a col:march) circular fay New York city for some years. —A false lllioralln le In Pails, whin on a roper, at - - the height of the column of the P/hee - Vendocilei cooks an omelet= wilt% lighted by hitronm hands,. and lets its doled by a cord to the peoplbtelow. —lt is reported thatiamong the heaviectindividnal orders for Maid) States• five-twenty bonds reCently executed in ;Lair Londbumarket, and poitedly honed to by the liondon Times and Kerok7,/wespne from The &Donoghue, an' Irish represerdittie hi" the Imperitill'arlfament. The Rochesicelfnicie of Friday says t folio Gen. Jill. Dlortindale, arrived'hOrne last night, having. resigned his commission, wo• un derstand. General M. has - bean for a long titre in active service, ?atterly in command of a corps. in Grant's army. .lle Las ttnpairel his,. health Souse- - what* the disohargolif tis duties ' and -hi:miff:reit for restoration." . Oapt. Burton, the iraveller, fipeaking of fliipP• Speke and other Nilotic explorers;- sails he lepSif future travellers with stroller objects wilt ruitretUrp home "with such a maximum of cry and such a minimum of wool." Gov. Ramsay has recently had conversations' with Gen. Grant, who told hnn to mill:mat the peo ple of.the North to ipossen their souls' with, par , lienice,” that all willpome,out right. The Duke of Bredwicihne settled down - n Vienna, and last accounts .from':that capital iep resent him as dining with the Kaiser, en faraille. Gen. Howard, appointed to 161'1:Larson's place, lea good fighter and a . good man. VIKANOIAIi 'AND WIIIERCIAL. There was only one meeting of the Board of Brokers yesterday, and consequently there was very little doing. The money market continues easy, there being no difficulty in obtaining ample amounts at ordinary rates. The sale of the new 740* loan was not so spirited as on the previous day, yet the subscriptions were quite large. The' interior has scarcely yet been reached by the agents for the sale of•the bonds, and it is quite likely that when the people generally become fully•acquainted with the merits of this excellent investment, the receipts into the treasury daily will be largely in times "of im mediate wants. The Government loans were not so steady in the market yesterday, the 6-20 s having fallen off %. There were some sales reported of the United States 'Si loan at 10634. City loans Were somewhat better, the old selling at ietx„, and the new at 106%. Company bonds were very sparingly dealt in ; a lot of Allegheny Valley Is sold at an advance of 1; Camden and Amboy Se of '59 at 118‘, no change ; Williamsport and Elmira chattel 6s at 78. The share list was inactive, but prices were firm ; Reading closed at • 6834, Benaeyl- Tanis Railroad at 7331, and Catawissa preferred at 4034, all a slight advance ; Minehill Railroad and Morris Canal sold at a decline of %, but Schuylkill Navigation preferred was slightly better.; Green Mountain declined 2, and Fulton advanced X. Ea oepting for Green and Coates, which sold at as, there was no demand for passenger railroad se= curities. A sale of City Bank at 55. Gold opened at 258%, and at one o'clock reached 257%. Theist,- sent rates of exchange are as follows: London, 60 days' sight, 2780/260; 'London, 8 dart, 2806282 ; Paris, 60laysi sight, 2f.012E.02g ; Paris, 8 days, lf. 89%@2f. ; "Antwerp, 60 days' sight, 2f. 02%.; ' Bremen, 80 days' sight, 1990200 ;'Hamburg, 60 days' Bight, 90 ; Cologne, Lelpsic, Berlin, 60 days' sight, 133; Amsterdam, Frankfort, 60 days' sight, 16353 106 ; Frankfort, 103. Market firm: 011:stocks are looking up. • Rock advanced to 3%. The following are the closing quotations for some of the oil stocks • Bicl. , As 011 Creek 6 • 6X• Mkt& Sbade 01113 15 McClintock Oil. , 5X Patina Pet Co • • . • • S Perry Oil . 53‘ 5 •• }antral Oil , 23 Ileyttanii 0i1.... S V.onango X 2 Orgtinic 11‘ 135 The folliming are the el of the, canal and mining s Bid. Ask. Seh Nay .90 31 leader Dam 01. • • % 1 Ea Nay prof... 39 40 Clinton Coil.— .• Union • Canal. . Ain S do pref.. • Penn Mining.— 8 10 Snsq Canal ..... kb • 81% Girard d 0.... ... Fulton Coal-- 89( 9 LEuta d0......15 15 Big Mount Coal '7% 8 11.11 & Bos Ming •• • • N Y & ti CI Yid 20 20% Mandan d0 .... 2% 9 Grn Meatiit Coal 63G 5% . -Marquette do.. 1 • 4 19 Car Coal 2% 2% Conn d 0.... 1% N Creek Coal—. 1 l i Alsace Iron 1. 4 The bank compared with that of last week, khows a decrease of more. than lite.millions withdrawal of of temporary. deposits from tlia s Sub• Treasury, and which will doubtless load tcilan in crease of the amount under -the head of circulation in the next weekly statement of the national. \ debt. The deposits show an increase of nearly five mil lions. The banks are, therefore, in a much gdonger position than they have been for some months 'past, and they stand ready either to meet a run' on their deposits, in consequence of Government loan sub scriptions, or to increase their ordinary line of loans and discounts. Three new national banks were authorized last • week, viz : Fame. Location. . Capital. Fir.t. Elizabeth, N. J. - Sloe WO First... V ewtou b l ase • ' 100.000 First St. JobA M bary, Vt " 100,003 Total $300.000 The following have Increased their capital: - Former Present Name. Location_ Capital. Capital. First Aurora, N. Y s.st 000 . 100,000 Second Allentown, Pa 00,000 135,000 First Downingtown. Pa —.50,009 • 75.000 Delaware co.. —Chest. r, Pa 100,000 000,000 First.— ....... Newton, N. J.•. ... 103,000 • . SCO, 000 First West Greenville, is. 54,460 72.460 Total Total capital authorized . Whole .number of intake STOCK Exciumaz SALES, AUGUST./ spreons BOARD. 150 Meßllieny 634 60 Rock Oil—, 9% 100 do WO. 6% 700 Lamberton 011.... 1% 100 Reading R ' 88% ',400 Densmore Oil blO- 10% 60%1 60.011. Creek • . 6 • 2~Sohl Nay rieriL•4l-.39 3 100 do .. cash. 39 25 Morrie eartal.• ..• . 97 1 Per B• • .... .... 78 75X 10 0 - do X 1 do.. 73X ICOO lm.Chat 6a. 78; "BO "W at E do 78 15 North Am'calna. 2E35 900 NewsCreet AMR .• • ICO Cataw 11-140 prof *I 4000 U S 644'61 100 %! 60 Pease Oil Creek... 6 200 soh Nay ...130pref.89.3i! 2000 leg Val Is—. —lO6 6 Minebill 200 Degamore 7 SOO Beck Oil 200 Bedroll. 2d371 100 Fulton Coal ICO Oil Creek COO WE/heady - 34 100 Noble At Del 1B f /00 Beading 100 Bong Wand 700 Dcasmore.lotB b3O • 7 600 do 1010 City 68, new 106 . Drexel & 00. quote Government secaritles, as follows : • New United States Bonds, 1861. ..... lakg New Certificates 9f Indebtedness 94 BO New. United States 73-10 Notes 106.. Quartermasters' Vouchers.: 91 C 911 • - Orders for Certificates of Indebtedness.. ..... 104 .Gold • Sterling Bard singe 277 r Five-twenty Bonds 1063 f ,34 The following ..table ehowa the amount of coal tranepsrtod over the Lehigh. Valley. Railroad for, the week endingJuty'so,i2o4: -..-,,, Week: Tear.'" Where abipped.fus. Cwt. .reta„. . Tone. C wt. Ton - e. Mines - - 3.216,17' 120.36;.06 East Suunr Loaf CQUOCiI RUMS . ' • 1,V4.02 68.375 . 11. rth.ll3.lat Plea.ant ' . -••• 686I•11 26,834 IM. Spring Mountain.. 3,439.19 62.83219 Coleraine 549.07 17,32'208 Beaver Meadow ' 26'14 . 1,32114 'Bew.:2ork Bt.Lehigh).., • 090.12 • 260E05 17 Honey Brook ' 2,827 07 97,454 14 P. H. &W. El ..R. H . I 421 12 15,515 09 ieddo ' 1,889 01 79,714 11 Barleigh. - 977 16. 32.253 17 German Peep. Coal. Co . . , 915 0 5 35.051 15 Mbervale Coal Co ' .....,. 666 01, 26,233 LS Milneaville 835 18. 31.574 (1 Muck Mountain ...I. 079 (B 98,309 01 blahanoy••• ..• ... 6,6930?- _ 74,571 14 L. C. & NI Co 25,123 13 other eldmra • 141 11 , 10,346 09 _ Total ......... ...... 31,1 M 17 875,871 03 Correapondint wiek hist year ...24,041 18.. 778,256 08 Increue Thafollowing showathe amount or ooal transport ed over the Etelaware,, Laokawamm, and West ern Railroad OotowiNfor week em/ng Saturday,. 'July 30,1864 . . ... . . Tins Cwt. Tou. Cwt. ilhipvool North .4,836 la- M,179 9 booth - - 20.030 Oft'. 680,646 18 . Total ' . 28867 CA For oorreepoadiAg timajast year Shilsed Fronk" 'TM& 99 177.941 00 South 18,39 VI 606,196 09 —, —. ._...—_ , Total '26,121 14, 694,186 09 ammo 65.088 18 ReCt1111410f• tale TN:Await , . Dlriotou Canal, Go. for . Week eadlug July .90, l/364. , '96.9 1 8 VI Frey) oca in 1%1, 96,629 21 ... • .- 7 ----711102,647 06 Week ending August]. 1606 .. .........11„?, N. 96 Prov Sous in 1563. ....... . ......... .. .... 76. 1 gi sk . ---- - --,---1 884.819 84 : Increase inles4 • $21,6 0 7- 22 The Now York Ersraing Pod of yesterday says Gold opened at 25e7g, and after felting, to 250.8 closed at 858 k. Exchange is moderately active.al, 109 tbr spools. For ourrency the opening price was 282; at the close It is dull at WO. The loan market Is Wily aCtdve. at 7 per cent., but the lending institutions are More willing to lend on miscellaneous securilies, and the accumu lation of capital seeking . investmest leu - ge that borrowers are readily supplied, The stockmarket opened with more animation, and there Was a conatilerable but irregular dis tributed Improvenient is - 4notationa . GOTernieehtl are.stredy. Five-twenties are, in greater request, and hive Improved g per cent. Grsilioates an sereit-thirtieri are rather lower. state Aitnoks are arm, bank shares heavy, coal stooks edam:icing, mining Shares more active, and railroad bonds firm- • • •:, • • . . Railroad sluing advanolng, the Western din! dend,paying roads being very strong. Before the Board fold vas! selling at 257305 M; Erie. at mg; Ream "River at IWO M, Reading an IMMOM, Minh's= Southern and - Northers Indiana. at MMO M; Illinois Central at 1280 OlevOjandipra. Pittsburg at - 1.11M0112 M, Cleveland a n ii ,Toledo 129giphirmge and Bookislitud at 1.14M0M. Tag aipended table astibita the ekler giurgant4 44. ' Bid. Ask. Keystone Zino.. 2 • • Densmore 0i1... 7K 7 K Dalzell Oil 7,K 7 McElbeny 6M, 6 Robertsoll ...... Olmstead 33G 24 Roble St Del 12,4 1211 Union Petrol •• •• 20 2M . Petrol Centre... 24 3 °sing quotations for some • Locks: X 16,160 S9S :460 $79, 842, We 489 100 U S 6-20 Bonds cp1.0734. 1000 do reg-107g 5000 do coop-107 1000 do coup•lo7 600 do • •conp-107X 500 do -•conp.lo7X. ' MXI City 6s New 1063 a 103 do ' 106 X MO do • •106 X 1000 ' 'do 0141.100 g 'MO Cam $t .4..mb mortg 1 . tra 'es.uoi, 600 McClintock Mi. 60 (assau's.. ••• • prof 4036 300 Reading , • • • :be) 684 . 30 City Bank, 65 20(X) 100 Navigat s 'n•pret b 30107 MIX Er 8 6 Sit *Green& Credos.— 36. • 500 Union Pet . • sig NO Roek Oil Mt 100 Green Mt • 53 200 Maple Shade.... bi• 13. 200 Navigation .pref 393 300 Phil tk DU Creek—. 1 100 Union Pet 2-65 100 Noble & Del 121 i •3 Perry 011 Perry 011 . 6g% 99,11515 7.163 740,7213 07 TIEM WAX, PitkAus, (PUBLISH:RD WIWILY. I Win be sent to subsoitbera will per autumn in Meats) at —11514 00 Three copies 00 Five esPles T 8 00 . . Ten copies l5 00 Larger °tube t,bea "es will be ebrirged et the uni, rate, $L 50 per copy. .the money must ailiewt accompany the order, rend Os no fnstance caralaeseterrasbedevia(alfrons, as meg Ilford very tulle more than the oix - tt 9aPer. MMI= •4 11 if" To the gettee-up of the Cldb of tenor titenty, sir extrs copy of tbi Paper will be Klyea. 41 tie Board tampered with the letcal, prim or . 001137: TSB. Ik Vslll4 BLsies &.1831.&.1831. reie......i00 ir6on. Aar, Doe .. . _ Lilted Steles Gs, 1881. eoup....tri zs il .. ieWEI. Stetee 7- Ms Miffed. kitateeo-376. 0111eP• 107 • El United States cent cur . 6:1% M - i AmeliditB Odd - - • 46 5 7 11 K In , i ,... TenneesetSixee• . 07 .. 1 87 06 1 • • litee - oupes —177 rn •• Atiotie •••••• .•.• 1 ,00 • . Paellle ell' liver Yon Central • • lan d . '130% lB3 lit - - Erie - - 11236 111 Ai -- Erie Pre -.See!rti.. 11036 Pi 1. - • andeol tiller ' - Nit pi. • • • weeding • • . • Beni -Weedy Rolle* el tae PlWhde liNga markets. • ThioProdtter,aftrkets cmthiue drill; and there la very , Dmei doing% the way of sales. Bark - is in de mand /*fernier Mites. Cotton is firmly held. I* Bread**its there ib very little doing. Flea. and' Fruit areimehangell. Naval stores aro mares and high: Se*is' are' Andy held. Whisky is rather firmer. Weal is quiet: The'riour,market intuit and there is very little' doing. • : eller comprisof about 5,0;."9 bble, including 3,600'b101s Olt7Millg cans and extra family on pd. vateaerma,ar4l,9oobUltoNOrthivestern extra family •at $lO bbl.' The tetailinn and baker, -nre - buying at from, $969.5,7'f0r Superfine, s9.Bo+slo for extra, Mewl. tor extra family, and - $11.60@12 59 bbl for fanny brands, as tO , cpiality.. Rya :Flour is wane, vita, anion Baled Sot' $9 - It bbL Coin , Aiwa Is also Scatty. • , GiSalw.-- , NStheat Win fair deldand:With sates of about .14.000 bus 'at rt..400r/.40 !Or fair to prime old red r aisd i 2.5582.65 for prime new do ; • white Is qua ted at 32.6562.7676 V bus, as to quality. •Ilye gin de- Mand, witn sales at Wilt@BASl - V bus. Corn is . •.scares and wanted, with- sales , of 10,000 bus prime lellevrat $1.73(01.76 V bus: Oats are firmer, with. .apses of 52" bus at 8.34 , 85 e for new, and 88@90d V We for obi Pennsylvania, i-L.Vitioviisiows.--The tranissetione continue limited iket unsettled and . very dull: Mess Pork `is . at $ 40@42 V bbl - enta il sales of Mess Beef like ' warce2o@so V to: - quality. bbl, aa quality. Bawls aVar IS SOL4IO and thedemand is limifedramall sates of Huila are leaking at 21@23e for plain and 214226 a iqpibler faney.bagged. bidesat 17c; and Shoniderr . etb lee' lifl lb, In Green Meats there . Is very little :doing; sales of Hams in salt are making at 18@l9e; and in pickle at .9@2oc It 12 . and 'Shoulders at / 60 ift lb. La rd—The stock is light and there is very little tieing; small sales of bbls and tierces are making at 200. Butter is in steady demand, with. sales of solid.packed atBO@Bsc Vili. Cheese liaelbing at 23@rhic for Tiew :York ; and :Eggs at 20e . lit dozen. 'Hon.—There is mot much doing in Pig Metal and prices are unchanged, with sales of anthracite to is+ tice at $66070 per ton, for the threenombers. Scotch pig is scarce andheld at $9O per ton. Manufactored Iron is .in good demand and prices are looking up. - Lawn is very scarce, and we hear of no sales worthy of notice. Corrals:isquiet; small sales of yellow metal are making at &Wide-VI 10 Banic.,-Quereisand is in steady demand at $5O at ton fortint No. I. Tanners' Bark in selling at 2:3 for Spanish Otk;and elB@l9 ft cord for , chest- ()ANDLES.—Adaroantitie are rather scarce ; small saletkare making it:244335 for short weight, and 344 Wro fl lb for full weight. Coai..—There is a good demand at full prices, with sales of Sebnylkill, at Port Richmond, at 810 ton;-deltrered on, board; prices are looking up. COPWER.—Thereis verylittle doing and prices are rather lower ; about 400 bags of Rio sold at 48@515 VI it. COTTON.—Pricei are rather better but the sales are limited ;18a-bales of Middlings sold at 108g1040 yp It ; cash. Fisn.—New Mackerel are firmer, with small sales - of No. 2 at $16@17, and No. 8s at 411.50@)13.50 for medium and large; old No. la are selling at 417@11l bbl. Codfish are selling at 734(a8c -• rianT.—There* Is very little doing in foreign. . Green Apples . are coming in and selling freely, 114 Aram 41;75itia bbl ; Dried Apples are selling atiumewo ft , • FRATE4IIB.—Good Western are worth 870 to 00e its, • • GUANO is firm and rather more active. Hors are in better demand, with sales of Ist sort at 27E082e IR T. HAY is in,demand and prices are lower, with sales at $22625 ft ton. • Luunra"---There Is a fair demand and prices are firm, with sales of White Pine Sap Boards at 433fii 35,ad Yellow Pine do. $274/29 VIM feet. IV w A.VAL Sronns.—All. kinds continue scares; small sales are making at $450050¶ bbl. Small sales of Spirits of Turpentine are.niaking at $3.650 8.7,5 It gallon. 011.6.—Lard Oil is firmly held, with sales of No. 1 winter in a small way at $1.10f31.75 V gallon. Lin seed Oil is rather lower, with sales at 31.75@1.78 • gallon. In Petroleum there Is more doing. Small sales of erode are making at. 50@51e ; 5,000 bbis refined at-80@85c 4n bond, and 90@92c fl gallon for PtasTER is rather scarce ; sales of soft are re. .ported at 66 ton.! Rios —Prices are firm ; small sales of Rangoon are nia.king_at 14c ift lb. Herne.—Oloverseed is Very scarce and prices have advanced, with small sales at $12@14 V 64 Its. Ti .lnotby is also better ; sales have been made at 11.50 ON. Ift bus. Flaxaeed sells on arrival at $8.70 ft be. Sunert. —There is not much doing, and the de ;nand is limited; ebbed 800_bhds sold at 204t1/2210 for Cuba, and =Mc 'ft ibior Porto lliCo ; 400 boxes Havana sold at 19@20e tlp Sriarrs.—There its very little doing in foreign, but holders are firm in their views ; N. E. Rum is dull at s2'2t gallon. Whisky continues dull, and there is. very little doing; small sales of bbls are making at $1.78@1.80 gallon. TALLow Is rather better. Sales of city rendered are masking at,lstin9-30; aad country-at iSo Tonscoo.—There is Very little doing In either loaf or manufactured, and prices are without change. VINROAR.—Large sales of Corn • Vinegar are making at 26c V gallon, in bbls, Woor..—The market continuos quiet, with sales of 110,0(0 lie medium to fine fleece at from 1.00¢3105* aft fa, cash.' ' The following are the receipts of flour ana graft .at this port today: Flour ' Corn Oats Weir York Markeei t - Augnst, 2. BIIZADSTUFPB.—The market for State and West ern Flour is a little Brater, with a fair demand. Sales 13;000 bble at $9 2t@OAo for superfine State, 60.8 1 12 10 for extra State, $10.1b@10.25 for choice do, $9. 9.4 . 0 for superfine Western, 39.65@10 23 Tor common to medium extra Western, and 810.250 10.55. fbr common to good shipping brands extra round•hoop Ohio, and $10.60@19 for trade brands. Southern flour is a little more steady sales 1,500 bbls at $10.76@11.30 for common and - 011.40@13 for fancyand extra. Canadian flour Is Breton ; sales eoe bble at $9 904W10 . 2& for common and .SIO.2S@LII for good to choice extra. Bye floor is quiet. - Corn meal Is quiet and steady. Wheat Is rather more steady, with Estee 98,000 bus at $2:29@2.40 for Chicago Spring, $2.2.5102 4l'for Milwaukee Club, $2 42,4945 for amber liifilwaukee, e<2.52a1.58 for winter red Western, and $2.00@2,61 for amber Michigan. I ,BIe is quiet at 81.90@1.95.. 'Barley is nominal. Barley Malt is steady at $2.2002_25. Oats are dull at $l-01@1 02 for Canada and State, and $1.02@1.0234 for Weatens. The Corn market is firm, with sales 35,000 bush at $1.58 for new mixed Western. Pnovzsioss.—The Pork market is a shade firmer, with a fair demand; 5,000 bbls -at $35.60@36 for mess; a 4 0 040.25 for new do; 035 for new prime, and ear for pnrne mess. .Also, 1,000 -bble new mesa for August, b o at ri.42 50,,and 500 bbls . do for Sep tember, bo, at i 43. The 'Beef market is very quiet and heavy; rale& 25ebbls at about previous pries& Prime Maas Beef is quiet. and =chanted. Out Meats are quiet and setherheavy ; sales 76 rikgs at ibe for shoulders, and 1.7. c for hams. We notice sake of 125 bhds bulk sides at 1610. The Lard market is without decided obanae, with a fair busineas doing; sales 1,500 bbls at 20@ble; also, 2,600 bble for Au gust, b o, at. 2262234 e; and 500 bids, b o, up to An gnat 20, at 22340. , LETTER BAGS A.l. TER 111111WHATI28 1 arzonalinA PHILADRLPHIL. Bark A THarvey ..... Barbadoes, soon. Brig 8 V Merrick, Norden, Navana and Oar-. dense ems. PICELADELPM.A. BO ARD OF TRADE. Ursa MiLwow, Astourw WHaar.F.R, Committee of the Notifk. Buy'', Y. TOWNBIRVIO, ;fl4!‘iiiidokootqd))kcoA PORT OPPSYCLARTELPHIR, AVG. 3,lset. Sun Rben..4 59 t Sun 5et9...7 1 i High Water. 2 65 ARRIVED. Steamship *Orman, Baker, 48 hours from 805t00,,. .with,mdssalp tz passengers to Henry Winsor & Do. Bark Sea.. le, Howes, 15 days from Orohilla, with guanot6 hot Wattson & Son. Baik W 'E Andersen, Bartlett, from Sauna It -Grande, Daly 21st, with sugar to S &:, W Welsh— yessettod E Batley & Co. , .' - • trig Lillian, tlwasey, 12 days from AistantaS, ill ballast be E-A,Souder &IX: - • - •- ' • Brig Alfred Hsifnagitli Aar! from Beaufort, in ballast to caßiain. W r . Brig•m iehols, Ames, 7 day, from Calais, with lumber to Oilskin &Galvin. • • • Saha Eveilne, Langhlin,.l.2.• days from Havana wit h.eld• hon and tobacco to G W Bernadon.A Bro. Star Tonathan.May Cobb,s days from Fort Mon roe, in ballast to maptain. Sahr C I. Bayles, ;Vroman„4 days from New York, will salt tb.Wm Blown .w Son. SehrStatesman, Clark, g days from New. York, in ballast to captain. Schr Forest King, Briggs, 18 days from New Or- Isa.ns, in ballast to captain. • - - • . Schr Lady Ellen, Doughty, item Salisbury, Mass., in ballast to taptain. Soh*. Memento, Hazelton, from Newborn, in bat. last to. Captain. Solar E B Wheaton, Wheaton, froraßoston, in bal last to oaptain. Solar W e is Jo hns McDevitt, from, Norwich, Ginn, In ballast to captain. Sohr Warren 0 Nelson, Rose, from Egg Harbor, In ballast to captain. , • Schr Diamond State. Still, 2 Up{ from muf or d, Del, with grain to Jas Barra.tt. Steamer Liberty, Pierce, 24•howsfrom New York, with mdse to W P Clyde. Steamer Novelty. ShoW,24 bOttrs from.brawYork, with mdse to Win Baird, Co.. - Steamer Monitor, Jones,2ionrafrom . NOW York, with mdse to Wirt M. Baird b. Co. QUAILVITINE. Bark Linda, Lindsey, born Pdstanzail. OLRARED. Bark Col Virildep, Wado, New. YoSr„T E Bawler, & 00. - Bark White Wing Mr), Wind" LOV IA PA and , Porto Cabello, John Va.nett& Ca Bark Adelaide, Prince, S IT Pass, Com H Adams. Bark Drosdon, Reed, New Orleans. Workman. & 00. BrigH Broc&s, Miler, Milton, Masa [not as before], L Andenried & o. Brig Milo (jr), Smith,. Liserpool, F. A Sondes & Co. ~Seta. 8 Small, Cole, Portland, F., A, Sender & Co. Schr T R joins,. Stuart, Beaton, Qulntard do Ward. Schr 0 Newkirk. Weaver, Boston, It rfl Fuller. Schr Heroine, Champlin, pinvidenoe, 14 Andros. reid & Co. Schr S Sawyer, Gamage, Manohester, hja. do. Schr W H Fowe, Haab, New Bedford, illatork. Graff, & Cu. Sobr Carlton Jayne, Rowland, Pros - hien" R Powell. Bohr Martha, Hudson, Fort M.onrcar, Com H A. Adams. SOhr Reading RR, No. 411, Smith, do, do. • Sulu Potomac, Corson, Fort Monroe, Tyler & 00. Sobr John McClain, McClain, Alexandria, do. Behr Caroline Frances JeiVarson,_ do do. BChr.ll S tan. svrirL Gsw, Tier, Baltimore, A CirOV , BB, Jr, 4;'; Aw/ Waal /lOW% rlotf xork, w r ovia4; 1.900 bbls. • 7.700 bus. 2 400 bus. 2,700 bus.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers