The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, August 04, 1864, Image 1

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    THE prne.sliii,
moDIBM II3, DALIIhNITIEMI I B.-EXCEPrzp),
BY
OFFICE, No. 111EtINIg V tI ru mum.
THE DAILY rims,
To City liftWattoill,'ls taw DoLLAss Psa Asses. Is
&wince; or Twarry Ciurra Pas. Wass, payable to
the Canter, ,Ntkiled. to Subscribers out of the ottlf..
rimy. DO LAtio t rau ANNUM; FOha DOLIZILaS - AND YIPTI
4 ITS Irckle MONTEte; TIAZIXOLLAILI AND TWeellr
,ve °Serie '7Ol Teallß ' filar& iabli in advaniti'
pr the taxis , °Herod. • Is
sa-Advertttionientr inserted it the utast
THE TRPWERELLY PRESS, '
bisileclto buten - Were; Prat Dota.Alui ran szcznvir
=M7M3I
DTATZO:NA.L LOAN
AT :PAR-
EMU* tiO fort:
coifTi'dY4et ATT464lri,.
; *. .
AND" • ...•6 •
,OEti EAO Bra MONTHS.
The ealtelpal4e payable le lawful monerat the, end or
tree leearft Wro the holder hat' the right to•deniand at
CHB SAO 110 AT, I1l811141) (00 : 9 ,
This privilege iavalitable, awthesea.galoads are our ,
post (popular Loank and are now Wilzig at eight Pet
wmt. premium. • • •• -• •
6uhseriptione rececsed in the srsa.S44iii,:and
Inveal and, ,propo egle,ot ,the
nether with our gifonlani, *Ad. all airelatorrita•
ton, will be hunlehed smappliet VR at cur office.
'JAY*. OcooKka
•
Do, flit SOUTH THIRD STRERT;
'OURTiI NATIONA.TA BANK,
•
y2Blot s
PHILADELPHIA ,
72.8 Arch Sreet,
DEBIGNATI.D DBP . O BlToii DFIN ilfatiLL
AOANT OF TUB UNITE STAMM..
f •
, •
7 3-10 TREIS11111! NOTES,
DERE
irho
l Ati l bea .. iA4 w M , .. .. l ive
Rubiloi i it a n i itio
TEM NEW NATI AL LOAN,
: 4: .
in the form •of THRB3.YNAIIB TRBABOI4
LB, interest. payable sotni•artnnally in laWfUl.
it, on the 16th days.of nbrniry, and August rfs•
&Tell' of eitoh year.
'hese Treasury Notes are ooeyertible at maturity; et
8 option oi t tfie 'holder, Into: 11. g. a per cent. Bolide,
tteresi payable in COIN, and redeemable after die
td payable twenty years from August 15th. 1867,
)eee Notes will be homed snits of $60,.5100, $5OO,
.000, $5,000. Interest•will be'allowed to the 16th of
must eeXt on subsoriptione; prier to that date: Sub.
(patents subseqnent to that date Will be required to
the /warned interest. * contmission of•X of one
:ent. will be allowed okrall milisoriptions of $25,000
upward.
SAM'L J. mutram
SHALL 1.30 11. S. ThIIABITItI y NUM
ISYRN-THIRTY 107110, of the denozninittoa II
aad 100 e, can now be 'cavorted in
HORDE; OP Tsl WAR 07 IBM •
same denomination;
Information apply at the Mhos of
JAY COOKit & Co., liiinkars,
• THIRD fitful
8001Lfil.
JOIII SCMI
,Litt orCompanth, itteir Otic€M, 16,4 1 4 14 .•
mama. and boonitoilita We are also PrIGNICSiII*
ti Comp 4ith
'CIRTIPIOIII23 07 13"7001r.
TRA.III3IIII. BOOK,
ORDER 01 TILL3I37IIA,
ST , 3I3K Ll:bent.
FITOOR LIDOIB'B►L►NOEB,
Blom= 0104.prrit STOCK,
DIVIDEND 8008.
11/10/ntlite rirrir
►OOOODIT OT BALD.
01 good wotaint: odd at Low Priorvt'
)TOSS CO., *
avaripui;
INET FraNll
BIL-:
AD "ADDIS.' ' .
M ot) ORE . & • CAMPION,
Do. DM SOUTH SWORD STREIT, •
coned of with their eztensiTe OaDirtetlualless,
low mahrtfaettiriug a superior article of
BILLIARD TABLES, • -
lithe wiyarlinVoid a. tali 'supplyeiletted with the
'ORE a GAM - PION% IDIPROY D OU4ll[ofiEl,
el
"•otintled by ,who yd teed themlo
•11 others. For the quell* slid tioleh of
1m ennfaeturers refer to their nomerone
who are tams' Koh
COOKE. •
WHOLISALK AND, 14±4,1L DidALAR IN•
I'AIPMII,III9,WPTPS , ;
609 ARCH Ebioond Doer above SIXTH,
: Eolith Elide. • c
attention or the Public is invitettlkhk
LARGE AND lIARIED,',AESDETI:Dr..
PARER El ANGIACIA-
Embracing all atialltlarroas
CENTS. TO TM FINEST 004).
DtCOR-0401: • *, . •
a,ri aew artliitakik 0 , , • e •
GOLD AND' BILK PAPERS
110
SO. 1151 BRoADVrAy. NEW itoarc.
AITORTILItS 01
CIA: 'LADIES'43I4.IO I O*
' AND ENGLISH HOSIERY,.
GOODS,
tiouragaspirvfmnitrw,oB: .
• t
112 417R4 1 V 461 •1!:•
XOISI.BIOB 4 P'HAMIS''
04,1, MS 81111 IS Tail WORLD.:
majnoWritil , 1 1111LESS . 211UNDit$
Y.'i rintoLIMILSIOIL"
414. o ,r
E ttgtorgNEß zro 00..
Maargar.DlCALl6l43,
' • '
54111111c00014011# •
.1(3:Z tab* • 92 •
tei1i.611i1341.42141. ...
' • :/ :1141
. 144 If ottlt.43o=l4 l trost, • .t.!••••
and Rao' 1 1 11/5h01,,.g
anted " 1121(311110 "Al ,iI411; :'
Co. fin g pecraltni• t 4 -7, the
FAMILY pfus, an
. of 41,1toicrda
, pleasant UAW of gait, and IX*
nworiar to Aar now" fnevul
G GLABSEB.
AMES S. EARLE & SON,
816 CHESTNUT. STREET,
ow to store a very fine assortment of
0011IN,G . GLASSES,
or every obaritotir, of the
BUT KANDPACTUBB AND LATEST STYLES.
OIL PAINTINGS, ENGRAVINGS,
PICTURE AND . PHOTOGRAPH PRAM
COS
IN - iliAl i OlY ANTILLES
.i cra 'COSMETIC' forbeantifying, whit en _
art
i t
g the complexion, •it is the ;nos t won.
311 of the age. There to neither chalk,
sou , bismuth, nor Whin Its oompoeltion ,
op° entirely of DEMO Nizen Wax; hence
itnecy tinaltties for prase the skin, mak
smoath, fair and trap rent. it makes the
• yoricg, the homely- ban spine, the handsome
itifnl, hod the moat beautiful divine. Price 25
is. Fropareilonly by HUNT it CO, Purl/m
-.lth NIOBTFI Street, two doors above Chest
/ swab similarly - it, above Walant.
tancatae (Front&
4.
---1-'--
— ll hiding email. pox
r "
"I=lllll4 e ' - ' 4 '
Ithont Injury to
. blank scam ko.,w
ma.
~, tomplarlon. .rlte areas are tray . ..
ma
,?4 Drift one ffollayliti_dkooll°4l4,ll
Prnttlotoro, / aottw ''"
' ~., 1 11 , 4 e Chestnut.
isyltgoa
9 133 Ili, ' OrilinTE
;--;-
,31.1a01liVLONDON Krrpp
-
Poop HANGE 4 ',at iffil . :
*la i niktltntions fn ATY am u i.xl
. NIP& ta p gundolollin iti ..
' 1 4. 5 " 11140 tors, Lowdown Ora cc, '
15, .tti 8014 8410104 Pintos, Broil. r
.
',„''',,,, 140 .. *a 14 1%064 azui 'MAO. bl
VaABIS SR ..*.- •
it°, apk t21.191g 8 9N. '
' ;
„ w .. e‘ .
8.17 : 1 11
II .1
- • ••-•
' • ' . *ow
~ • •
•
~;r4r4r.
W.A..ILEGA.V
s. ;
4 .
. . •-tt
(18130088.SOR TO W. H. OARSTL.I.
;Tg
RASOMC HALL -43! :1;
, '
.;sad ri iir
. 719 CHESTNUT STEEBIAt gts
- • • • JA-r..3
• , , v • ••: 1 ;0410 ileiVirefe
I• tgt !lief
• ,41
e 4,, , - 171 1 0 , 4 9
ViIIENDOW .
T. 3. rt. TAA. N s •
•
• • . . •
iiiQUl.W r ia
t •••:.•••• • 1 :
COMMISSION`IIOIISES.
=EMI
THE ATTENTION OF , 'THE
Is called W •
Bun sTootioF
OXON! *DO DO all 001Y1rin MAIM I
TELIF!LED,YLAISE •, , ,
NZali 6 illuSit 66 in G ray, Sc ar let, Dark Blue
PRINTED SHIRTING-FLANNELS: ' •
PLAIN OPERA FLANNELS. • ' ' • '
'BLACK COTTON WARP CLOTHS.
I 16. 16. 17, 18, is, so, 21, Et or.
• - nyary DASSIMERES AND SATINETS.
..
.NALMORAL SKIRTS, all Grades.
COTTON GOODS, DENIMS, TICKS, STRIPES,SIIIRT
ING 8, &0., from various Mills.
RAWW.,& HUTCHINSON,
**:# ll4/1 "" sTEßjrr ' i
ICONIMEEZION-IVIERO HANTS.
•
los iris slim 07
myl4-finil PHILADELPHIA-MADE GOODS,
EpiVA.RP,j: ; ,•MDLLY,
JOHN KELLY.
at lo w
~ Osibandt:li brie stook of Fall and Winter Goode
lliin*.bill***tie. which they will, sell at mode
r=r==
.
ENDS'.imutismar 'Goons.
PATTEII#.B.II3IO
WARRAMD TO I . IT AND GIPS BATIBINLOTION
Nii..l auip 8 ifORTH , StiTH STREET
6412 . WIMMIII•nff TIIIINISHING GOOD)
LINEN . MUSLIN. and FLANNEL SHIRTS, and
DRAWERECOLLARS, STOOKS, • TRAVELLING
sums, i TIES, WRAPPERS, dm., dm, • .
OF'I4BOWK bi&XIMACTITISK
408181S tas.
• SpSANDERS '. l
I :2; BEIZHINIke n
CY , S, — &0.,
. Sold at remosisble— as. • apl6-ent
. ' 7 ' 131
SPRTNg . AXF : . l47ffiaER.
ENURE NEW STOCE
U..IN ICI CI TH. N .
THE LATEST NOVELTIES IN
. , .
, GENTLEDIEWS:•FFRNISHING GOODS.
r •>.f • I • - . •
'IIIIIiTIRE 'a - BROTH:Et
.
cpcnks.soit To HILL & sv49rso
1.0315-OHESTRUT.ST,I! , EET.
'Fitt 611111 T MANOVAdTORY.
,The subscribers would Inv Ito "Wet:titer
IIIIEROVEDAOT. saig. . ,
.whlttio y Wolfe 111 spootaty i 4 .11 "sir 12 Also,
ricrfingijOit ClitiTLlthaßi'a WEAR.
J. W. SCOTT -6b ' CYO. ,
• • O.IIIETLEMENT"PERNISHING
No.
(TasCatovw.T4,7l.-.TIL
NAT CV! papa B 9 78L:
& Co.,
iittd,at our establishment a tall ashortmaent • 4 '
of Impdcted and Domestic DrpoP.optilar Pa, • .
tent medicines. Paints, Coal OH, fldt,Nc . Glass,
Prescription Vittia, eta., at as lovr.prtees getat
hoe, Dhatillastiggods can be sold. •• - • , n • .
ESSENTIAL t ,OILS . '
Bar Confectioners, tall,yarlety and•ot the best)
gaaUts-
Coottioesd. Bangal• Ash,
Cadbear, Soda Ash, Alum; Oil of Vitriol, eanat
-•
to ' ' C P -PPe r' R t S C lAttgg e gg i ! *0"
' A. 17 apton.obandoitidw+ist net-assa DHOW;
SU#ll/.-T
c r, .
r • Ik
.ROBERT SHOEMAKER'I6 '004;
•, • ; L et AVit 111.4104 -;(.,
N. E. 00M,r,(>149V.Ntatariet RAOEStesetei:
PHILADEPHIA.
WHOLESAL,D4rDIIITOCi-I(l3rEgt 4
r • neolazas Aso ;
•
;•%,"..; .; FOtigg3NAINNDONiitio... , 4 ,
WINDOW AND PLATE GLANS:' ,
kaimrAcitritliul Opt ,1 "
7WEDlrStrallillD 'AND ZINa
-tAGErre FOR THE CELlMltalp)..7zi;
•E r IitENCA , .41:N C t .
IlMvial•zapppßited at . .
itiAt Vick! PAlcw POI
I'
T0 :74:5421 111
T . . , RE
00inkti v itt:
We are prtynab lbaretorore, to xiipply famlllea
at th eir Coen Besidepote, , with every .doseription of
113 . TEAtr i ibe ° ar,a
FERE 19ROpER , , .
AL B 41,013E*TS;
1 " 3 " ' 441 0/ 1. Elr EMIA"1166.171t0,1011.,
•
AROREt 6
K,t REEVES ; ...,,,1,,-;.! 9,,,, , , . •
I HOJASALE GROOEMpe*
No: h North WATSIt Wreieattd,, , 4 , :,,,,!
No. North DNLAWINE titYegitth' '_,.
Offer for sale, st•pe, lopweit. .ltiOrditlesig aullnr
stook of ' '
SUOAR. ' ' .., lIMOLASBI3B.'"' • Wu%
Tles, .1 A . , BPicle, 1, _ z ~-, BA ..1..2;.
And Orocerten ginnere,PY,..p,reft9 l T - M 11 , 01 44 -104 / 1 ••1
country trade. i g
Bole Agents fon tke prodo,ott Of IrIVAN g . 009 11111 . '.
Extensive Fruit Canning yaecory MI 441itetO 1 r SI. •b: '
sow-etc 1, • '
, . , „ „ , •
MACKER*imHERBENG,'SHaVair •
—2,6C0 bblig Xesel, 9,..and Naekeilli.NNlti. :
caught fat flab, tifessofted Psekagell•
.„,2,000
tinting bble. New 'lnstpore. FortUZ° Ba7. t Rat" I
600 boxes tnbee, Sealed: iddlfo.
160 bblis new Mee., Shed, 4 so , ‘ l4l.
260 boxes Berkfu4r wai l ; tith* 4 • " •
in,moniato. *nice br, ,
Ma. tf Nei NO NlfilaN
, Bioicue..g-too lama
hiltkkit. sti•ts , r 4
it 1 4QO `L sit Etes do.
Aflot ee T l I ala
LIONS k NIFILIAMS,
04 1 7$ • I UM Ikea WATIX Ma.
411 RX, ,11!1;15°
TRADE
DE CODUSEY; lIIILTON,' & 'ETINS,
33 LETIT,Ik Street, artd.
fe2Pcsni, 32 South FRONT Street.
HMG.
TAIL' OILS
612 BTAVET,
WM ? 4,ll , lllS;date, 'sell
. BPRINE3eAIi'D BUMMER . CLOTHES
MADE BY
•7029[DT AXLIIMSCTT,
CONSTANTLY "ow. HAND;
DRUGS.
WIGHT
its mak= stain.
Betwiet nolo aid BOND streets
EEO
DiIIGGISTS, PHYSIMANS, AND GE•
. • IPIERAL STOREKEEPERS
for kee'mjng•clAer sweeteafrkerfoctry ban:Olen
preparation. put up. with full direetiolut for nee,
in packeiimi containing no ffiopint for one barrel. .
• Ordorik by. niniihirciEjqpoeit ' will' meet with
prompt attention ftre.ealtilitilLOtthlatiOneWill
fornishild whoa yefigestoo..., .
W R I GI-EVA &) • STDpAVE,
wß " iu *. I n ° • ItM;liousE ,
do 4 stui t y c . o rp li9, l )44.4K3l' , EtreetoabovvitzoNT.
.attic
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,
r',TxtutiDAY;.GßAyr 4, 181'
pflfineelal Correspondence of The PressLj
• • Haanmetre!, August 3,1864.
• ' ' TITS INVASION Exorriscaztr.
The exeltenient here, over the' l'o*ing of Chum
',,,berabuig by the rebels, is Atli , atlever heat. The
yeep)e, are justly inflamed at thiroutrages perpe-•
traced upon a defenceless peOPIC and their indigna
mtlorthita strengthened their resblations of fidelitylo
the cause of the Union and uncompromising hostility,
'lfsttralters.
. •
SISOPLS INOESSSIIAGAINST*EDISLPITSONSERS.
• • 4,_yeral rebels who pititiolPitti , d, in the destruction
liklhaMberiburg were captured byithe citizens and
forwarded to this city on Monday,. Considerable
feeling was exhibited, and thiionliiion expressed'
that these Marauders were not entitled to the treat
ment usually aecorded.tto -prisoners' of war. The
;citizens were strongly inclined to• inflict terrible
re ributleb upon these Phindereia and incendiaries,
and when. theylooklhe train, at ncion yesterday, en
route for Fort Delaware,.the mutterings of the by
standers were 'HO terrible that one or twq of the
rebels who Were captured previous to the vandalism
at Charoberiburg announced that met, with regrets
at the !outrage, with a view of escaping what they
thought was coming—a punishment for thili crime at
the hands of an indignant people. • traitors,
whose souls, are blackened by this dastardly atro.
oily, were sent from , here heavily.tronedr-aze- evi
dence that the authorities are disposed to &eat them
as public criminals, and not as prisoners 0f49*...
NEORO treaccialia.
.This city is orowdedwith refugees, generally:Mai'
,the Oniliberland Valley, but the' most likely to at
•tritat,itilsMtlim are the negroee, whoseAitiefitution
• and.snlr are strikingly manifest. They . are here
• inkling numbers; and are Mostly quartered in the
Pennsylvania dePot, whose officers, for , this geie.
• Welty, *ill ever- be remembered by these grateful
people, C The tottering patriarch, the romping OM.
• dren, the women of advanced age and tilde younger
in year% with Mit few, if any men of a healthy de:
.velopment, may be seen there•in , their unfortunate
state of:mental anguish, lamenting over, the oalami
• ty which has driven them - from their.hemes. 'These
people are, however, too jubilant to allow even their
presemttaidietioni to reduce them to despair, bat
with a 'faith in the prey - Menotti of God not Sur
passed by any race, they look beyond the dark
clouds of the present. ' They Oven smile in their
misfortunes, and trust God that He 'will deliver
them out of all their sorrows and troubles. The
• patience and forbearance,of this people: in vlow 'of
the afflietions,through Which they have passed, and
the uncomplaining manner in which they submit to
calamities of every character; are excellent traits,
!ditch, till recently, were never appreciated or re,.
cognised. , , • • • ,
GOV. otnrrrx GOES TO 011AIIIIHRSBIIRO.
Gov. Curtin left here at noon yesterdayfer
Chain
bersberg,'to cheer by his presence the 'sufferers, and
afford by his personal and 'official infinenee all the
aid and! assistance which he can render. His du
ties here, pressed as he is with important' responsi.
hardly admit of his absence fro m the capi
tal, but the humanity of his Excellency impelled
him to visit. the sufferers in person, and 'relieve, as
far as he can; their wants, and commlecrate them
In their 'disaster. '
Ba.PORTED , DEPPLT OP THE REBELS.
A gentleman from Bedford reported at:the State
, Thinsey Yesterday, that the rebels were 'defeated on
'Monday night in Maryland, and drives in the di
, .reetion of the Potomac. Therehre all 'kinds Of rn
mot s afloat, some of which are ,ludicronSliextrava
gant, but nothing definite is lrnown. by ,tlfle author!.
ties as to ule.place or position of the rebels..
• .• WHEILB IS TEX XXXII]," l •
On inquiry at the Executive Depaitolent late yes
. terday aftbrdeon, from an eminent official , person
age,ll. was infbi*med that the -authorities were with
' int inforMation as to whether the rebels had loft
the State or not. My informant lie/dated - to express
an opinion that they had gone b,eyond the, borders.
A few hours, however; will develop the truth. It
113 stneritily thought here there are none but etrag
. giera.in roimsylvapla. ~ •. ,
• ary!nrri.rintrcrs. , •
"No appo intments ; since my communication of
'Monday' of , reerniting agents have been made.
. There will be none .until Colonel Quay, ,military
secretary, who went home to vote yesterday for the.
'right of the soldiers tounjoy,the elective franchise,
;'returne to his post of duty. He is ohargetliwith the
entire enperyliion or thle matter.
•'•- • . -
iyso
taltiaktilaer*Ave . 4Hrove7llW- - .getelii . 4itirtirsok
irtatuat of their Operations.
Mena the Missouri Democrat. July SD.)
'The‘southern counties of Illinois are known to
abound In rebels of the vilest kind. We learn that
on the sth instant, a :lamp of the Ir:etches was
found near the Village'of Van Bfirenbtirg, nearthe
line betvieen Bond and Montgomery counties: The
party Daui bared about one huzidred, but, on occasion,
could be soon reinforced from the Inhabitants,to'
two or three hundred. The leader is one Captain
Clitsgmanra iomparative stranger to that
but tvho commanded the band tiara Some time ago
took postiession of the telegraph and stopped a train
at Vendetta,. - . .
The bandit's near San Burenbarg have been en
gaged, alintait constantly in plundering the Union
people'othay; stook, fie., but' seem to have perpe-'
;rated no sot of personal violence till the night of
the 22d instant, when .number of,them attacked ,
and robbed - Mr. Brise Prater, at old man and an,
'estimable Union citizen of Bond county, taking from
him $lBO. On the kilidwin'g eight, Saturday, they
attacked. Squire Lindley, of 'Montgomery county,
and.robbed him of $2OO.
Last Tuesday night twelve of the miscreants paid
a visit to the residence of Mr. John A. Leverton,
four miles trom'Greenriille. in Bond comity. Mr.
Leverton is an' earnest patriot and' en exemplary_
gentleman, highly.reepeoted by his. fellow-citizens;
At 9 In the evening, as .he sat reading before re
tiring, the doors being open to admit fresh air,
he suddenly found himself bet Ween two strangers,
• each presenting,4 apistol; and threatening to blow
his .brains Out unless he gave up hie arms.* 'His
wife brought. .an old shotgun and a xevoiver, all
the weapons, in thp house,. and, handed them over.
One of the illaine then attenipted .to, strike Mr.
Leverton, with • a pistot,' - wheh' 111. r. clenched
him, the! light was • extinguished,' and the two
wrestled .In , the dark. Mr, L. got the scone-•
drel 'down, when the. comrade, supposing Mr.
•L: was beneath; 'struck the. „adversary
several times in the head with a pistol' before disco.;
voripg the blUnder. He then attaokedlalr. L. who .
hearing footsteps In the hall, and .pereeivit4 the
others were coming, extricated, himsellOsprang into
a side room; thence out of, a window, than was • soon
concealed: The vilhtine:nd**a full ' dozen, made a
li g ht and searched the house for Mi';'Leverton. En
raged*,
.they demanded of Mrs. L. that. he should at
once show where he was, and threatkned, if she did
not, to ;destroy her child.'' One of tliem seized the
Infant by the feet, and, swore he- would dash Its.
brains out unless she Complied. Slut, sprang for
ward and oanght her little one, refnsing to betray
her husband, endthe fiends at last left the premises. ,
Whitt an honor to the great free State Of Illinois
that a petty band,_an insignificant enotimpment, of
such beastly robbers shonld'be tolerated within her.
borders, for whole weeks. We were yesterday
'waited upon by a citizen of Greenville, who related
the above; facts,_and..a.d.tled,•the following: On the
24th, a lady passing in the vlolnlty, of tthe camp ,
noticed a number of scraps of paper, and found on
one, the name " Captain 'Cilogman*, , !*Which /die
took horhe. Others revisited the place, and picked
up the rest . of the storaps,alL they cou ld: discover,
and afterWardi arranged them upon a sheet of ,
paper so ae to show that they were fragments of a
letter written to Clingniah by one J. J. Adams,
promising him important co- operation In hls schen:les.
.Kdeme,eapt our informant,is an outspOken traitor,
!Who had llittid* Bond county for some, seventeen
4years,land! commanded a companyln ,the raid on
-Vandenc last:Ai:4ost: 4 , •
.A. dospaitch, Springfield,' Ili.; tells na that
application ha
d been, made there to. Colonel Oakes
to send a iforbe snd break, up that nest of,outlayss,
buttbat declinediiiiyiog that 'Obi/ protest must
first be resorted to! Our informant from Greenville
makes ittibittantially the same statement: e
- .
. . ,
, .
The .Prastlione, in Stoblessvily."=-11rettal ,
• Treatment of a tinspeaVd . •
Vouncillor Blatrenfeldt,Hardesiogt (Oodernor) at
Flekkeby, in bohleswig, who was snorted' by-she
Prussians ' shortly after their entrance -igto , the:
Duchy upon the charge of acting:rut :s . spy , in the
Danish interest, has issued a mimphiet detailing the
treatment to which he was subleoted - dfiringhls cap
' tiVity.: •
According,to this statement, Blanenfeldt's arrest
was occasioned by. the denunciation of a retail
sholikeepet named Otto. Some blue to this man's
Character hr._ afforded • by the ' , fact that he had
previously' advertised In the :Hamburg Il*WBpa.
pers offering . his services to persons about to IDe
. come bankrupt, as a discreet and trustworthy agent
in the disposal of goods. Being informed e ( tue
steps abobt to be taken. 'against him, "Blanehfeldt
endeavored to obtain protection from the Fri:N
-."l*ns on the,f February, but , was not allowed
to pass.the outposts, and was arrested almost im-,
Metliately Inter hie return home. He., was brought '
to a field-pest; where, notwithitrinding his age'fas),-
The was eoinpelled to page a cold February night,
dying upon 'a bundle ol straw between-Prussian sot
„diers,:expot to wind and rain. ,Next morning he:-
1 wita l kept an open field; Where tie was bitterly
abused. hy !live or six cavalry oflicersc-vrho called
. him "rascal ,". " spy," "dog , ' and the like, Jr de
..,endesvoredl Ti)' reply, he was saluted with " Held
-yonritsw3"i and orders were given' tothe seberies to
shoot him if he opened his mouth. During the
• march he Was further abused and insulted, especi
ally hi the village of Borrebye, occupied by Bran
denburg artillery of Regiment No. 3. These men
vied with the mob in foul language and "curses.
Thelprisotter was unstilted rit'thia place,
pelted with 'stones and mud, and ,his ,cap storni from
his head ,and trodden in the, dirt after..oe Danish
ccickade, h been taken out, while the. ascot t. re
mained en lymserdve. .• •
The folio g day Blauenfeldt was conducted fur
ther by Fru •ctrisgoonsi.hhi arms tied behlnd4ds
back with s rope, mild!upon each aide connecting ,
him with 'the 'mounted 'esobrt In this position he
wee kept for an thenr before Field Marshal Wren.'
• gel's headquarters, without obtaining speech of the
General. Here, however, as Austrian officer showed , .
him some little kindness. In the same ,manner he,.
was marched on for the distant* of twelve ( fl og-
Doh) miles, some of •the more humarteldisposed
privates assisting him. In •Bendsburg Tilanehlbldt
was brought up before the ,qcosetercoL4 the cons-:.
rtiandant, where the populace began. to .ablun almt.
' Math him, acusing him of all imagina b le crimes ,
, even'that of murder. When wpwardwoolf - half-an
I.; ll" .coun Pit e aled to th t e ae t c O a b niza r aanaddaaorde'Cred-olotnheeldWriecniinter
juhereiit the house to move his horse sinew-pstreaLtd
ligiresi, that the ladies "might have a mead look, at
, Ithe op y : e tlllahenfeldt was subsequentlyled off to,.
tbAgu l l l . B •
a t rdhouse, where two men ' were p laced over'
41 eonisfes . .arith orders to shoot him if
AyiseteroPt st flight. •
icilt-elooftfon the guardhouse in which Bbsden..
Bildt was contined'had 'two windows, one looking on
to the orept,,the.other.on to an open space. oth •
const anuy,oecupsed by dense mosses of the - po-' - ''
ris enw on r - ,
rin of
hill ted irn to P
men tltayet . e n v
ail roan,. Whert 4110 ted aud it
abused hi.
the trifsttu4insmotfeowwf,e,thredaeypesprisoner
there, ri :Tt: e t i ;l: r r i s ili andVfflit
sr able toOkaln any proteotion. Da
i'o,ll4°At"blia- a - gads .lartairotwiltion the mrl-:
rlrg• the I M,L en . 138 " heaut,— ; that to, shown;
coder 11 1 4141 alpiOtt Pke.A.lurnevor cleaned, and he
flit mon • /P 36 " 4:411 11 " h theanswerb
to wag e
eiceuld.beeprocured,
'lPL_ki"l'99'7sAttrbgi.i.t6;kuldes 'newmraltal
..oorod not even obtain water .. itat;not , fur: ,
r• 1 1p
'11 ,•• • rmune B tO Wo
Me e dress ' in (lie fifty
dlrys ha P assed io llendeb g
ur . tie waz Luce
HARRISBURG:
PHILADELPHIA., THURSDAY ? , AugTiT..,...4, 1864. .„
eirandived . for- 'Wis . -Bret " tint, .when t weS
mediately seen • that the accusations brought
egitimit bins Were entirely untenable. From the
11th of February, whelf his examination took place,
Witte Ist of June, when he was set at litierty, he
was 'never , examined againonor was any sentence'.
passed. He was Insufficiently supplied with food,
and . not furnished with soap' and water until
the latter half of February. He was deprived of
fresh air and employment,-and it was long oefore he
was permitted to read. At the end of Difarch the
prisoner was transferred to Flensburg, where he
was 'better treated. When he arrived here he was
greatly emaciated;. his dunge wereaffeeted,,and he_
could only speak with difficulty ; but he gradually
recovered part of his strength, and was tinnily set at
'liberty upon the 2.13th.0f May, but accompanied with
an order to leave Schlesaig imtnediataly..;
' The younger Tilauerifeldt else, who managed his'
father's farm, has to complain of gross ill-treatment.
When arrested, at the commencement of February,
hews trboimd to, two other personinwho were found -
in .a ditch uptib the road, and they were brought to
a mill, where they passed the night. Next morning,
tied•with a rope to tour others, and, escorted by six
• soldiers, he was brought to Fokiirriforde. Here he
was insulted_by.the p,opulaets-and beaten, notwlth
• standing' . life being a'prisoner, • Without *the • escort
taking' any steps for big protection Afterwards he
• was' 'taken to Kiel and placed in Th - irfeirn prison.
The sentry received,.orders ,to sheet his, prisoner if
he noticed anything he , might•eoneider enspiaions,
e the man was a great criminal.
Blauenfeldt was ooniltiainit *car Miami - entirely
...dark; forbidden,any oimapation, and furnished only
withlbe . commOn prison rations. When taken' to'
Flensburg he was not allowed any refreshment, even
at his own expense, althongh the journey lasted the
greater part of the day.. He wita *never +submitted!
to any examination, and Waallberated at the same
time as ids tattier. ' '' •
Councillor Blauen feldt , s successor' In office has
given in a report Of the manner .in pri.
sener's property , was • disposed of. The stores, er,
grain, banstraw, turf r and wood have been carried
away; the cattle have been maltreated, and render
ed worthless; provisions and liquors have. disappear
ed ; and his papers, among which was a bond , for 010
rigsdalers,,were tessed„luto . the street , before the
house, arid lost.
A Dollish War 1-Rgenol—The Story of Niel.
An' en thtdde stic Dane, writing. from Copenhagen
to the London Athenceum, states that .Denmark,
Ways's small kingdom, has been so frequently at.
tacked, that its preservation " would lead to the be
Merit a. higher will and necessity proteettng kur
'national I existence. Like our , beautiful • green ,
islands ciloatitg .on the waves,' we have been
lluesitenbd for centuries by hostile elements, and in
great storms we have been override; but 'the 'oppo
sing foe has never been able to do more than leave
;his frbth on our shores.", Hethemproceeds 'to give
thie instance of an invasion as far back as 1840.
"The weak, wretched Government of Christopher
the Sbcorid had broright the country not only to the
brink; but to the very depth of the abyss. German
princes, among 'whom figured especially the 'Hol
stein 'Count, Ghert ,the Bald (by. Germtulii called
Count Gerhard the Great),..had divided the *hole
country among theinselvee, so as to leave to Waking
only the small .town of Skandenborg; 'in'Jdtland,
and the island of Lolland. Wherever the Danes
3:0E43 to recover their independence, they were mar
. cileMly trampled down. Of three royal princes, one
was killed in the battle of. Lohede, another Was made
prisoner at Tap-Reds, and a third became an exile:
All hopes of future recovery seemed extinguished,
when , . Danish knight;the Jutlander Nista , Ebbe-:
sen; meeting with Count Ghert r upbraided
his injustice and "(nullity. The haukhty , Count
threatened Niels Ebbesen that he would have hint
hanged on the highest-tree ;' the Danish knight
then, loudly proclaiming deadly feud between him
self and the Count, made his escape. According to
the rules of chi Valry, they were now at each other's
mercy wherever they should meet.
"Count Gherf made his advance into Jutland—
sacking, burning, and murdering on -all sides! He
took the town,of Raiders, and was lying there
with tout thousand men, when Niels. Eitbesen,no
companied by only- sixty followers, retelved to
attack him. As his little band, approaching in' the
dead of the night., came to a small river, young
Svend, Niels Ebbesen's page, refused, to pass the
bridge ' 'and, :SC ithollt,. a word .of - complaint, the
knight le ft him theft', Entering Randere by -Bur
prise, he stormed the house wherri the ' Count had
taken, up. his abode, and the Count, seized in - his
bed, was, beheaded, ,his bedstead serving as 4'
block. ideanwhile the alarm sounded in , the
town,. and . Niels Ebbemn wltil forced' to retire
before, the' oVerwhelleing'nfititherfl of the enemy.
On again reaching the other side riftheiiver, he
.ftund • Toting. Svend, his page, -who; having. taken
out, the nails from -the . bridge, now threw it
down,: and thereby . „put . a stop Co .the pur
suit, and saved his master. Onbe during the period
of the feud; it was Said that - Ti iela Ebriesentiet in a
wood a ocke.burner's , widow, who hati.but two small
loavenleft for herself andsher ) children ; but on re
cognizing NielriEbtiesen, the bane of the Bald ()punt,
shergladiy offered to share his...bread with him and
she.blessed:iiim as •the savior of the country. But
the. knight • declined , to , accept her offer, and, pro
mising tier better days (or the women and children
of Denmark; rodb on to meet Els fate—death on the
battle field !
"Tileanwhile,ftoin his deed at Bandona an electrie
spark spreadt among the.people of the, land, and,
without dlplOMatio intervention, Without any re
marknble event abroad Coming to their atd,lhey not
. only regained their country, step by step, from the
Invaders, by dint of courage and perseverance; tait
• In the; 00111110 of some thirty years rose.to a pokier
that extended aver, the three' Scandinnvitin king
doms." •
'A Fiend fora Finaband.'
In.the London Diverse Un t ..
Hop
is/at/01,K s ß :l,ration from her husband title
kit 'and of cruelty. ' This brute was a schoolmaster,
and 1n itke was emir:4oo M_ aid,
'4l4 t i eh
oflthripupilsoiateed - Oan I or, and . Ben c to
four years''penal se;vitude. He only. recently ob
tained his relense bY a ticket of leave. The plain.
wr stated that in 185Eshe made the acewaintance or
the respondent, who was a private tutor, living on
the Grand Parade, Eastbourne. lie was a 'highly
educated man, and was about 36 years of age. She
was little more than 18. SIM was attracted • and
fascinated by hint, and; at last., was induced to con
sent to marry him. . , The marriage took place on the
24th of. July, 1855. He drew .up .a number of rules
for her guidance on almost ,every subjeot, and made
• het' learn them, and constantly refer to them. The
Blightebt ihriaCtiOn of these rUles, or any Inatten
•ticn in the learning of the_lessorl he Bet her was
punished With barbarity. On the first day .of her
marriage, the stated in the examination—. we went
to FolkestOrie, and I began to write a letter to one
of my sister& lie objected to the style in which it
was written, and his, conduct seemed to me very
' , harsh and unreasonable. When we • arrived
at . Paris I' once inure began writing the let
ter and he' Was very ; angry indeed , with Inc. We
du not occupy the sumo bed tor the Brat two or three
bights,' The reason he gave was that I was not yet
fitted to be the mother of his children, and he caw
no reason why our children should not be model
children„ and 'second (Arista.' During the wed
ding trig he told me he had been much deceived nn
'me, an had made a great, mistake. We returned
to Eastbourne In about three weeks., He Wrote down
rules in a 'book, and I. had to learn and study
them every day. (A great number of these rules,
written at - Aliterent times were put in . evidence.
1 hey contain minute " directions respecting the
management • of *the household, the conduct of
The petitioner, the bringing up,,of children, and a
{number of other suhjects..) He told. me his object ,
was to make a 'model wife.' One day in January,
1856, when I was pregnant with 'my first child, 1
. Wlll3 repeating a lesson to him in his study. lie was
• very much annoyed at some mistake I made, and
struck me a violentblow on'the head, whlch seemed
to Stun use. That was the first time he used personal
viblence to me. In February, 1858, I was made
very 11l - by Ida violence. HIE acts of violence were
so frequent 'that, I cannot remember-alt: of them.
When I, woo' ,attended by . a medical man,
he represented that I' was suffering from in
digestion: In ,March 18 5 a. a ward ••WitS wrong-,
•ly spelled in something
me
had written. He
abused me , end struck me twice on the,head, and - I
tell dovrn.. I have frequently had marks.on my back.
and arms 'caused' by his vioience, and sometimes he •
has kicked me in the ba,ck. In my first confinement
I had no nurse or medical man to attend me. •My
husband said a nurse was not necessary, and that it
would be l indelicate to have a medical man. The
child wad born in July, 1856. The housemaid and
thecook Were present at my confinement; but they
could nOti,,render me any assistance. Five days
after my cOnflnement I went. out in a • fly, •
by his • claire, and tne °laid was taken with
us. It was placed in afish hamper. -When
the child was not more than a fortnight, old he
beat It with his hand: Ho often beat it and shook it
when it was crying for its food. I have seen marks
ar.d 'bruises. on it. ,One day.hadurnek me on the
forehead vihile I was Buckling the child, because,.he
said, I had neglected some of his rinse. I have suf
fered in • consequence of his shaving prevented me .
from suckling the child. HeMas put the child into
a hot bath and poured cold water on its. head. He
has often • thrown ,books, at me when I have .been 4
learningor saying my lesson: He' pat in my face, on.
two or thrib occasions.' The last oecasion'waa in
' February,'lBBo. It was a cold, snowy day, and he
- had sent the children sout fora walk.. I beokoned
them .in. • He was very angry, ,and came ,down
to : the door, - sent'Out the 'children and' nurs emaid
again, used very violent language to me, and spat
in'osy face. has told me that•he hated'me, and
loathed the, very eight of me. I once had' a. fishl
bone in , my throat, and he told me that he thought
a great blessing was about to befal him , and.l was .
, going to be choked. He has fertilddereme'to caress',
'and fondle the children, and toleine 'that I only
cared for them as a oat did for her kittens. He
used often to say that I wasmptrit to say mY • PraYerB
with ban at night, that I was altogether deceit, and
I every day dew in the face of Almighty God. He
said he felt inclined to take a poker and dash my
brains out." .., ,• . ~. •
• A Ram OF THE LONDON OP LAST CENTITUT.—
• Wirw that the final closure !.of Old :Bliidkfriarti
Bridge has taken place, andr the,werk of, its demo
lition begon.4 few jottings about it may not be out
of place. The bridge was built by order of the cor
poration, lldr:•Roberr Mylne; a native of Ediziliurgh,
neing the architect The first pile wile driren on'the ,
7tb. of Jane 1760, and the first stone laid on the 31st
GI October is the Sante year,,by,Sir Thomas Chitty,
• then 'Lord Mayor. 'lt was finally opened ; or traffic the 10thOP.I.Zoveinber,1760.'• When first opened . '
a toll of one halfpenny:each on week days, and one'
penny on sunditysores taken, and continued- until
the 22d of January, 1785, when, Ahey were re
deemed by GRrieinment: The following records as
to the laying of the first stone,'and *hat may - be '
peeled to be found -when that ston'e• agiin
brought to light, are jest now intereating.• .Tbe--An
nye/ Resistor for the year 1760 kays, after describing
the ceremony : "Several pieces , oCgold,silver, and..
,copper coins of his late Majesty
,were
„placed pnder the stone,together with a silver medal'
given tO Mr. Blyine,,the vs:Mite:it, by! the Academy
Of St . Luke, with ikebpper rhn,round It , havingthe
:frollowing inscription'. On the one side,, "In arohi-,
testnra t prmatanste (irisa! Roma judicial, 'Roberto
)Zylne,pontis,..huus. arehitectort grato animopois.
suit"' 'ln the n's,Mapaz-ine, of the same
• dete,-weare told that there was ,upon "a plate or
plates of pure tin a:'Latin inaortption, written at the
reqtiest of the court of Common Council, and of
rich a:verbatim account is given." The following
is an'English translation. It will be •seen that it
•deiStaliss a tact not generally known as the. naming
nf the bridge, worthy of notice': "On the last of
October, in the year 1760; and In.the'beginiting of the
ro tst auspicious reign ouGeorg,e , lll.,,Sir Thomas
Chitty,Ent., Lord Mayor, laid the, first stone of
:Ids' bridge, ' andertaken' by the 'Common Council
of. London (amidst, Wit rage - or an extensive war),
'.lor accommodation and ornament of
ithecitl,..Eobert ltdylue being architect. And that
' h t remain to.poatwity t a monument-of this
, 11.'N's affection to' the •mari'who, Victim strength of,
MB genius, thosteadineas of his mind,',and a certain
kind of happy. ctntagion Of•hla probity and Spirit,'
(ender the Divine favor and fortunate auspices of
George
Brit i Empire In sii , ,Afriesoand , Americai sad
restored the snclea Asia ,
arid'ilifluense of this
coniiiry amongst.tbe nation's of Etiroo; the °Maids
of Lmadon.unanimously voted this bridge to be in
scribed with the name of William Pitt . Although
114'0i/ens did vote this inscription, it is now,qufte
cliar tliarthe interitiori was not carried out. Black
triara.brfdge It always has been called, and ' - alweys
will be in future histories. The "foundation -stone"
and IV insarlinion,.when taken up, should be care.
fully preserved and deposited in the Guildhall.
London Cif)) Pros* , . • ,
A STFLADIID LLAST ATIZELING.—The Wheel-
Anidoimicer , ague
_Abet. on Xriday evening .last
tbere"was much vivid lightning. After penis:at--
larlyAterriblo flash, persons who happened to be
passingalong the pike east of. the city experientied'
a strong Blatt 01 sulphur,. which swept down the ,
Wheeling creek, valley, and was : almost , stifling.,
fr4tCheavisn" brought What people were
irduoled to 'Tose were blasts from the regione of.
Old Barry., tsis.supposefethaVsorisejef 'the nuniel'
roue coal bed alongthe valley bad been disturbed
by the electric
SCIRMO ART.
The New York . Sun,. following in the wake of.
Ilan', :Journal of Health (one of the moot valuable ,
periedlcals in the country), combats' the prevalent ,
opinion that people cannot be healthy unless they ,
eat meat : • •
't When feels' worth 'twentY.flve to : thirty 'cents
per pound, potatoes two dollars a bushel, and other,
articles of food in proportion. it becomes important
to know what poisesses the most 'nutriment, and is
at the Earle the most economical. Without I
doubt that article is bread, as the, eisperience of all
who live to map's estate abundantly proves. ' It 111
the first and almost the only food known to phildisk
appetites, and of which children ot a larger growth
sworn tire: A stronger argeunentin avor of bread i
could tot be given., than that, the natural, unsAtis,-,
tied longing tot itthorhich, all'thehoriet breves •Crats
shows it , to ,be nature's main 'support, As tot ipso
nourishing properties, it it asserted that It &natant,
hie° times as innolr suet el; rag' beef. Five hobs i
dred • pounds, of tour .giya. to the body?thlrtyd
pounds of the substance that makes bones, while
the Seme quiddity of bran gives, one •hundred' and
- terenty: pounds. „This bony substance is one, of the '
indispensitble •eleritente ci the hiiman bedyfoind t s
which is thou ghtdo be imparted by broad In *greater
degree than by any other food. As to its economy,
!float% hardly ever AO expensive,relatively;teihnest. •
Even:tit the present time the price O f one pound Of;
meat would buy three pounds of flour, or *pad; and
those threes:pounds of - bread furnish as mai/1011654
ishinent to the eater as ,nlne pounds of,Recdrwi l
beet. In dollars and cents, three poutW,qt‘
are worth &bill* twenty•five cents; anddlinisyStalla
.of heell are worth two collars and twenty Ave
leaving a• bateau of two dialers in °tithe'
bread,. A person .once tried the experimegtgtelsee,
how . cbekply he - could live - for tkoertain letigof
-.„ time, and frOMMltteh food he derived the moat n&t.
. at the,. least , cost. The result . was: hoLllv or;;
-thirteen weeks, and atathreameaLs a day,'"AteCeeet
Mr - milt cents a.vieeity - or six dollenstsaddirty
tent eforytte while time, and s bread was hts,prtnemal.
:0,131'01,1 of Toad. NHte health' was remaricaluird
dalilgithatV
ported,
lillgsatA i tlke : e
horstlthatdiedwhetider)od was rd7o one oat
..lervo yiiitsbattat, toBttetiti
oiix2
vperitbent,wis made at a time whenflour was. much
,obeafet than atpresent itithOUgh the relative diFtr-
Alinein the eat Of tirtioles now wouldfaiake r tho test,
egluallY fair.” •
• Sul prise has beenexpressed.that -vessels going
to Sebastopol take a smaller cargo than if they were ts
Only going to Constantittoplet, or that they diminish
'their cargo.ln 'the latter port before entering the
Black §ea, - Than:aeon' Is thin: the density of wa..•
ter of (I,.l:brent seas is more or lest considerable, and
the . vessels sailing in them,sink more or less, apeord•
bi g to their density. "The deneity arises from the
• etiantity of salt contained in the'water ;'and, coiise-;
qriently 4 the salter the Bea Is, the leis a Tasselltinit
in it. At, too,, the more Bail, a :vessel carries, the
'deeper She penetrates the ester, it. fidlows that more
' salt the water thergreatirillie - quentit'y of sail that
&in be carried. ~N ow,'as.tile`Bleck:gea is sixteen
times less, salter than I the,Xediterranean„a, vessel!:
whicg,leayes TottloxiMarstAllm for Sebastopok
must take asmaller clop than one that'only glum !
to Constantinople, aid a still timelier one it it Is tb '
enter the Sea of Azofforhich is eighteen'
salt than t he megtsrrigkeals The I ttladtterraneart!
salt..asitlte Atlalitie,i 2 encto more then the
'Atiriette,tive times More :than the' CatiPitin Sea,
t‘Wildye times More then the lonian Sea; and seven
teatimes .more than the ,See of Dlarmora. The •
Deed Sea contains more salt than any other sea;.it!
, on, good, authority that two, tons of ita,
water yield five hurfdttl and eighty-nine p 0
. 11 6 lif T
.salt and magnesia, . • • • ' '
•
A oorrespondentnthesScientific`AmericcteSayi
Bsime• one of your numerous • readers will pro-,
.
. duce a.Mruple and convenient for raising and
lowering 'the flre-grate in our common cooking.,
ranges, he will confer a public favor, and find a
ready sale for it.. • Flange tires are placed some:
twelve or fifteen Inches below
~.the, itottle, bottoms,
which at times is necessary forithopnritUse.of hest-.
ing the ovens and 'water Vaoh. 'Bit It 410 &sp•
pens in thework of 'therkitchen bat a sharp gait
.wanted at the top of the - range; and, although a.
suilkiency of:coals may .betburning On. the'grate,
the.distance down is tooxreat to make it.,eitiggye.
A. new fire Mint be made, a bucket of coil tusef and.
an hour's ilme , reqbire , whiohcould be saved Mat
grate with its fine ceuld raised and lovieliail•ii•C•
pleasure.. The Invention should. be inane. aliplida.f.
ble to any. and, all ranges alreay.# ul use. • One•halt
the coal' now need in my 'range could be saved by
the use of such a device. whb Wiffpredeca it 1"
Dlgitallne, discovered in` 1.8110" by E t e'llcikei in
the digritaly purpurea, 'or (foxglove, is a plarit4os•••
Bening an electric action
. fpf the e pillsatisn- sortite,,
heart, the Vitill, finctieris ofphich, it, can stem. en!!
tirilly,therbbk occasioning death.
in very &fall tha 'leek< bit'
even then it must be used with caution, .bneAsser 4 fl'.
accumulaies in the!ysteni, •
anAthek racti , t ,
io .
vip
lonothgetbisurprised'acthe Au4(ten liatit, m
..
P4l9nt;.tie# some 04?*fter 44 f1941.64f1ge
of•ll • ,t , •
:Viieqcdres
Anti a shori tlmd 'for ' . ehlerhform,
which is exposed•to•thi-sun i if inksTto undergo de
compesition, hyArochlofie add - being developed,. and
a etrsug- odor, pktihig4l,l
preiezttedlf tee hiaroinfniiii
isteelt hairumlergchie diconiPosition by, eippatuis ic
M. BOettger finds ha
M. eighty' purlilitr for
shaking it up with tk. few fragments of , catuitici soda:
As ldrig,' indeed, as it Is in oontaot yrlth the. caustic
soda it may be preierlrMi fox' 1.11
diffused ' • ' ' '
At the last meeting of the NeviTotk Fanners'
Club, Carpenter,naid, !!I have read and,ohsei+ed
great deal on the subject of the.:potato.rot,:and the
sum of the whole seems to be that potistoesplanted
in moist, tenacious soils are Mich Mine s sntiject to
rot than when 'pi/silted in dry .giound."
remarked, "I had a field, half:pf.which was under
drained, and I plinted it tp jx!tatosis., On the un- .
der-drained part mine' rtitied; othei half all roi
ted."—Exchange.
Mr.. Field has • chosen- "Heart's , Ooritent,”
Trinity Bay, Newfoundland, as the plape for land
ing the Atlantic cable. Ile proposes tir be,ild,one
hundred miles of land c linwthende b:;'Placentle, and
to connect Placentia with Cafe Bleidn bronble. '
= Clvil engineers report that the.volunie of water
which passes over the • Falls of Maoris Is ninety
millions of tons per hour. ri - • -
- —ln a iiingle town Criellonere;to,ooo
: souls are
engaged in nicking thelamiAii ,
A Confedeitime ilitok.
Two years ago an- enterprising .rebel pitblisher
limed the speeches of , Mr., Tallandigham,,in a
reading•book for-schools, and' a hwitorous editor in
New Orleans a "Confederate Aritheietic 66 -
of exaggerations to match. An Atlanta publisher.
'has now Contributed, a 'spelling-bodk - to teach the .
young Confederate idea how to ; shoot: It has the
followingititle-page :
"The Elementary Spelling 'Book; revised and
adapted to the Youth of the,Southern Confederacy.
Interspersed with Bible" Readings' on Diunestio
Slavery. By Robert Fleming: l6 c ..) • -
The preface announces the purpose of the bpok :
, 66 Thosisfelendly relations whicll'once existed be
'tweets thejsiorthern and Southern States:have been
fevered by protracted;' unjust and oppressive Fade.
?al legislation, and thus we h e ave been driven from
them, and the channel through, whlgh wp have hith
erto been accustomed to obtain our supplies Is now
closed by blockade, the.offineing Ofllll unjustifiable
and tyrannical war,vrhichis waged. against us by-,
those who should have continued to be onriiiends."
It contaßif some choice information on political
subjects:
"The Confederate Clohgress'ineete yearly on the
twenty-seyond day of February, it. being Washing
ton's birthdiy. His memory is cherished by thepeo
pie of, the ',Southern 'Confederacy." '•.•
• - "The Adadnistration of-Abraham Lincoln is '
despotismr , • •
..I..egislative enactments ere •Sot 'despotic when
they. ate wIthIA the bounds of constitutional pro
-918.10118."
In free itiegernmentei like , the Government' of
the Confedesate States. of America,, the, , peopy?
ehoosetheiraeglrlators." ' • 4 , • •
" The legislative councils' of • the'. Confedersibit.;
States should feel , their depeedifice, under God, on.
the willbf a free'and virtuous piloplei"-•
The young Confederate mind Is thus instructed •
on morals: . ' •
.
s: - '
"Slaves are; our neighbor'property:as muo a 8 ',
his house."' , „ . 1
*ld " te' ti '' '.
f‘ , r'
' "We detest robbers, piniies a-- ex r oilers.
$' The Confederate States are usseJly,tavorrxi with.
abundant •harvests; we Should acknowledge the
gondness of W. 61 In thiftp ,, , * , -, ..- - . -.• P. i
t i
The ant tir quotes' ist Timothy , 8,1 , 6-" Let as
many sir 'ts as are under •the - yoter ,, ace., and,
~ If amp ' teewit.„etherwtse, and .ebnsent not to •
a
-whet om °MI!, even the,words of our 1.. i mil Jesus
.chrif o ~ "Yrcim such' 'withdraw thyself . '" . , lie
' S tithe A_ ,- -ChriSilans have withdrawn: from
Northern bOntiiinisni pn,thltvery ground:s,i ..; :, •
it 6 Alton nklnd are brethren anO„des o stndmitsOf
-oom
yr
mongiarente. , 'How iinnauril and icieluidjKis,
to "make , par our brethren; to conquer them; otto"
• pltrndertlicim and destroy:theca!' So says Dr. Web.*
i ster In the inee of all. hie Northern friends. 4 ,This
sentiment deserVes* e ixioiluritint to his memory.
Every true Southerner must appreolayllfirl#9,o.
God-ledrlngman will . endorse 1t. ,0 ' • • .
• win
. .
•
, A nu,nibe4 of young. Men in - the Vicinity of
..ikteyr
. ark, Dela,ware; engaged •in a very dangerous sport
on the Mghtl,of;the 14th ult., and it was more by good'
lack than the, exercise of Sound judgment that some
Mille partidtpantsi were not,. injured. • The people of
that village were at that period much excited by
,the reporte in relation to the rebel raiders, and were
in it: lit state of mind -to rhe disturbed bythe '•atost •
'trifling 'cireOmstances. On the night in question a
e
gang of men; numberfn about ' forty , dreesed in
Ruch garbs atti So•disguised94 , l6 - oreatethe !mores-
Mon thst t he y were genuine , rebels," made their
appearance c. either, end 'of the town.. The good ..
citizens hadong since retired; nd, were somewhat
startled do eing aroused 'from' their sluotheis, by
the sound o a horn ,' 4-7,1 bugle, anti lhevoliarke
pi; a troop I', horsemen . th rough •the.:Plaiiti." •Th- ,
1 )
(inity Wes I Stituted, and the people were told.
'that they longed to' the invading army, of Jell
Davis; and , eld the town* '
at' all points. • ,Thay ,
committed a •kin'ds , of depredations. A number of
,persona cm ilg..to the; Onimingtort market' wore
stopped, and alter ouestiening o themm to: their bust- •
sites and aeitirtiction; they were sent through the
mown , leder guard, and permitted to pass.beyond
the lfnes. They repaired total, resPlemoes of .the ock .
lured leople,rnd in 'genie - iristances,took the,,male r •
members and compelled tfieeto-iTiwallogiance to
the 2. So'uthe a Confederacy." We arcs told that an'
aged colored woman,iwhose house they.vialted• in
quest of; her sons, in her flight fell•down stairs, nd?
WllB badliimpred. At last an aged (linker gentle
man was iatiting, en route for. and:was'
hisittd • ..by • the guard. The, gentleman knew the.
voice of "Rebel," and Called hiMby,rianie: An old_
colored man afro knew'mrieral of them, and assured
diem of the fact. Finding that , there was a nevi
peot Of getting themselves into trouble by a. disco
very of their names, they raised the slege,andew-.
ark muted Its wonted - q u iet. 'Tide Is a very den-
Kereaft sport,,and those participating An it; run a,
greet risk ocilot only receiving injury;• hitt .betng'
kr,"l3 ll t Oilmq N u ' 9,1 lustiPob 4 4 A Mit4eponaltylot .
anoh reptatemilble conduct: .. ,j, ~... 2,c . t. ,
• 22 • -• :r to, ..r* .• •••• 2
. ,
. ' California Warder. -1,1" . et
75
The Sacramento Union of Julytifooritilniii6l:i
" ODe of the, raert.mysterions murders wliMileser — "
occurred. - in Sseramento or vicinity took plate at
about one Q
, efook yesterday morning, on.the Mary&
elite road, twelve miles from,the
alapchman eniKtearnifter,,wholkill„ resided 418 VPritt
cearp at that lecallry, was ilia ad •11:111:6 - 41 while, in
bed and asleep . = at the time this blur:leen - se %Ong.'
'witted hip wins lay asleep by Ids side . andlife pistol
ti - ed was held so MAX herhead that the burning
'l,t , wder'scorcheill her face.
"Tile hoise oetraified by Selby le one story high, ,
lend Irdivicted into our or lave rooms. On Monday
night Iheraiw,era tat the Imes 'Selby and 'lds wife,'"
0.13. Gimpbeil, Moses Ildannadra.-iiiiiirsithiaria
Andielli o 'aged sixteen and Toirteen years, and Mar
enret Jameson. Selby bad made a bargain to trade
Olt hlrratiokfOr g iunck aeJlr Austin, N. T., stud
MMM
, ;.
Oempieltapd:Mrs. Hlldretil , and her:sons arrived
severaldaytka,go totalte:possassten of , th% cinch at,
which 1 the 'Murder iillB cOnitlitted• . Mini was ki
hired tha,mtho had•beenintbelby ) s . employ ((Maar , '
eral years. - , , ~ •
( "Mrs. Jameson is connected In mannersom with
the. i .. Selby Jamily by (ma e . • She' resitienricti '
Froinklitt tnwnshipAnd "hit . 11 visited,the ,ogy to
wit 'ere the ceremonies of t tHourth, aeccimpanledl
, Spy to Ms residence in,tbfevening.„ One of the 1
' Ind' ng rooms in the hurtle as ciccuhted by Selby
~stin ids wife, another i lby Tara; •Htlareth. ana MrS:
7ameson, and a third by q ..pboll. For want ,of
Wedin at the house,3disniti , , d 'the* two Hildreth
I boysislept at the atraw-etac4oonie little distance
1- ire= the house. -
:I'. IClAtlabout oneVolooli, ae.ileirly;as can be agoe t.
teined; those who occupied -the „house were aroused
> *II su dd ea rn o i s e ; •: Birra:ng'ilitey found herself sud:
dvily aroused. and . on inkilfir without- being able'.
,tetell what welts her up - „ er husband seemed to„
fliefiti,lng to talk,'and sheAnike to the coitclUmbh"
. 1-•Shatt, ale was suffering frotu s ssAlt,or someicliariuger„
, On arousing thli other ,parties and striking a.
;11gtib, it was found thithe hadfbeeni abet in tlieletV
eye...and that death must inelltably ensue. The.
bedding about the head was covered alth blood. It
,;wits - evident from _the eharcoteraefcthe wound-that
the murderer had approached the bed from • the side
aliehuhled ihf Mrs:..Selbyi , aidi,Artiachinienver her
head had fired with therdstelevery 'abet - Flier face. •
"Of the persons' in thelfonga :at thetitiat,gurs. ,
lijenieson is. the only one whtildiStinetly Auld the .
repoit, of the pistol:; She vfltafatthe time in'edeze,
tut not sound asleep. Induedlitelpallar the Bildt'
i was tired she, heard some. Ohe riPPilibut,flirilliiilgle.
, room. occupied byi bliaripbellrarid - paeatne out the
Aoor. The pereen-icrioolteli ttvent,One ',or tat.ohairs,. ,
4 and also trod on a cat, or otherwise hidnred it, estiffl
tag it to make t(nolietta thiingfi Mate : i ; 1 •
f " Campbell states that he ) rk. a. . anddei4 arotuaal
• i hy a noise, wmph'he'enitoies must live been the
report or the pistol, and lmmedfittely s o Menne rtisha
through hla room to the ou ,r. Mann, and the,
two -Hildrelh buys 'blew 'II of *hat 1.10 cic
)*. cursed until,theytwerwo
,• `and'ilifarniea'of
i : faetall Ctarepbcp. . ‘ ‘• -.: I ~ L .4•' • • .ft
• t The. coroner biongh - the ienfalne drum aim
' d ented man to the city and-held an inquest;" . • • • )
. ~ .
'
, A f'en. Pletprit sir the loldieene• star Joins
' 1. j -• .!. 4 • 'ist9 l o+ AtirmY. /.. 's. ...; I .
CCeireesondence of the Columbia Carolinian:l •.„ , •
While at -Oitslotille I- saw %TRAM% worthy of the
• hrk Fli of .Ir,andyke: ,„ Qeneral -Johnston'A . quattert! I
Were lei a s
,Oneh ,Iroodi. Be "formed the centre
of, a group . of ' offieeiii imedediatelY reeognized.
Opposite iltehreo, and ohol4ing one„ corner e(
li the map,. - was the fine-looking soldier - and
gentleman,ltientenarie • Genirel , PPolk; and -on I
Polka i 1,,, also •Aokling end. oesptnietingi , the ,
map;, sto od • s "gen6rel 'be renefened :reputatibli.'
Ina. ,small , gray, eyetokiirpoi-and, easnest,
look proclaimedglelpirrte., Beading over .the map,
: and wearing. Si Meek far 'bee,' tieined - n it' OteOrie 81413
with a star ,was spotlit* widely ) known to fame,
The bat, with the erubzik under his arm, and the
..tngie.ll.l his left , hatith deolired the 'dashing Hood ,
;
the hanker of.thiefirsky. :yonder, reolining In the nor. '
1 her of tkelfilffiln. a gray uniform, is an officer whhse
~gray, b4sis and., eingullirly ehrvid head <me *.ould
readily yereogaire,,eyen did he not epilog up aa Gen.
Folk calls ost;'" frardee;oednaliate !,, • These officers
are tracing s.resil on the' nuip, and intently .watott.
fug' them with new, and then a, quick _toss of the
head, lartheelifi`while Sedition twins lezilY'heol4
in . an attitude, that;; bespeaks the love of his:came_
" Yollder;hitivy-bearded man, is . Steycnson, the best
officer in illeiribeitislol' libny,' *lO It Yaikkig '"to
Stowe*. The offieer.who, appuutchesiand;.raisee ,
r his - hittlso ' Wifely lillitiqinak, Ttiere stand Wal
ker and - "Loring', !in earnest tonVeittititafe; and
Gen. blacken, 4%ohlef of at if," is wandering about,
now greeting some staff °Meer, and now despatch,-
Ing some courier. f The gallant li ate, the /jolls . bat
"fiery' Oheatbam, and the eomposed,.dignifiAutesh
• ekrt; forne"anetffer githip; ' difeatham adently'
coming to.:t.ba point.;, A,gay retinue of, staff officers
marbling this distin guished gathering of , the most
of the et leigeNtit opltito In 00 6•11 ant °A.rait of Tosn
n:efs,f,q. i .., : ...a. t ) t..!.. i . • , ...:... ~.,- ‘. :
- . .
, , •
Tine Itxcnoisr.=The ,
very - of Petroleum. in Green and Fayette' CountieS
has caused no7lttle excitement in, those - localities,'
and owner% of land in the vicinity of tdO dilterritory
aro apprs,isiisg their.property . at handsomo ligures.v
7,corretikindent, who recently visited those coun
ties, remarks', that. after , can miming Vie nift•ed.%
in? variouq portions of the cen4les,,tlieral
seemed to' •be no very great iinoturragefnent to,
Abe oil hunter •antil /he , begami (to /near .what is
-knovin 'se the " Dunkard 011 - .11e,gi0.0. ,, , The ro
qmple.nce this section ofcountry bears , to 'the'VE••••
fang°, MA , t regions. is ;sot marked.; thakiop,Cwould ,
almost imagine hiniself , in the centre of arkoildom
.on his Arrival. .Duiiitard•• Creek ) is Vstretini Mout
' the•size of„p•Creek, pad seeks an outlet through
a =he r'd e'd and hilly (if possible): count'. 1
i tWoltrifit eitsOrne firtiall Mita up the'oreeltrearel•
fully rntniag. the Various sites, and from our ex
pee iencii hi 'the VentrigooCanswea, and' other oil
regions, we a re 414 satis fi ed that the aunkard'i
will proVe 11.8 rich ' '- if not the richest • bird-,
tory • ;yet dlicoverede:. There hav %lien • hu
few wells ,_suuk ,okay „depth ere let, eaoh:llelding
a good supply of op. • The largest well on the 14a.
~ple, e tract la pnromhigifrom sixty' to elgb,tyhairels
rid day, and, with - proper management atui constant
putaptag, doubtlise wcald Vela ahOiillddre'd barrels
• for, allY• hitni°athlg•ilViniim?a the'Pkinkskill
' tooonsidered superior AA ityet-ts: 11se
eteilt 'Ptllk Velar „ mo o irox those
711 11 1 A-iiiceration to make a nice consideration for
-,biltallsts in the absence of oil. Companies are ra
-Iy:forming, and operations are being commendid
at various points for miles up the creek, and we feel
like congratulating the people of Green count Mr
their greasy prospect in the, future.",
.
. .
• FATAL RAILROA D Aqcxxlesix.—The!Bikton.Tchigx
• says ; train
,of eitiptf, freight I:x4 : going north, ,
ralCfrom the .; track, at _the- • "Blue roat , !:
llffehm.; aboutenvenfelekieltrOffMillfikrali'Mo* , , •
lag .last. The switch:tender at theidductlon of f
'the' two main tracks' :' discovered i' •-
,• St. •IW thug.
'train:Was approaching„that he had o at hja. ker, I
and was unable to a djust' the track for 'running,
north, He went doWn the, road a short •distaitorr
• with his flag, - but he ,was either not seen by the
engineer Or the diStellee Ifiwi;l9o . short in which'
id eh - 6k tho apeed of the Arain. However' this'
:.would have made but little difference, as the ' trallt
would have ;run' on another track; but some .
employee of the , company had early in the morii-
Jim got out with' a hand-car and opened one of
,the side switches a , short•-dliitance above; the
• main' one and neglected to ,close. it again, end,
when coning to this the engine'ran off and con
tinned' along the. road for. some ten or Anemia
' yards, ',when she stopped,,te, freight cars
up,,in .all 'ebriceiiiible • posi ti ons' tehind,. and di&
pinch* the traek, some, extent. :Three }or teat'
of the ;front cars were badly broken,. while , the
greater portion bf tlintrainreniained on the track:
By this mishap .Thomso Hiss; , a brakesman on the.
train,.eldeat son of yfr. Mohr - 11as Hiss, of this town
was instantly 'He 'put down 'his Own ,
another brake, and,rwas running on•the top of: acar
top* down a third one; when the shook - came whiCh
threw Dim somedistpnce in tliel:afr, and he fill: on
• his;head.' He was quite : young, about 17 years, r and
had been entire ettraler aticnit a year. fie 'WU 416V0Z .
tee ly.'iittached, to the,baeineag, having taken a - great
liking:to it when very yoting. It is supposed he.was
the only bnikeameno on the 'train irho was at , his
post when the'alarm was given. •He was very careful
and efficient, and a gmeral favorite with the officers;
and employees oftheeompany.: His remains werei
•
immediately taken to the residence of his father, a;
few,huildred yards ;front 'the •sceneof the accident.
With this exceptlepinorpio was' injured on the tral6ll
”
.The 'ffrreoking train" Caine down from Wilming; ,
• ton,iind in aishoit time the debris' Was cleared awity, •
t the track replaced, and trains.passlogoveras
• , ;•3 .„
FATAL A.QCEDERT- 1 -021/7WWLKILLED AND Suva. ,
•shat,
i ;lar.rututo.—On Sunday„last, about 'mom.*
number of Men:- m the employ of the Philadelphia,
Wilmingt.on,•••aush Baltimore Railroad Company, •
•were; engagad r ,in repairing the bridge over
ley_ Amok, - neiir 'Chester, When the guy railer
!attached ,te,a derrick broke, and the whole se:
`u
• fell: One man named John bra
ney, who ,realded in Pine street; below Third,
in s Ay,„„Trecag ! beneath the derrick and;
tantly kilted body being crushed in a horrible
' manner': 1111414rdlblaioney was badly, though not
seriously hurt about the head. John Healy received
slight injurf.‘f"Thir remains of Maloney, and the in
• lured men were brought to •thedr hbmes in this city. '
• •Anothen map, whose name we could not learn, was
badly hurt attTtbri'esime time. At last amounts he
was not expectinifto,,recoyer., There was 'a large
number,of men Working on the bridge, and several
of them made ti.antrri)w • escape with their lives.—
Wihirtrigum 5 5tetr,Joitrnali
eut • • _
A Parierti;rwrißotinTy-Justraii.--41 deserter,
named Thomaawneyiattived at, Concord, N. H.
on Saturday; lloni'Vortgefluth," hind-doffed, and
with his'right let badliyiniWed, if not•broken. He
.was formerly.a member, of the 14th United Slates In
fantry, but deserted itio§ .- afterwiideenllited
orPortimouth, the, )Arm rffampshlre Cavalry..
,1011 the way to Ccncord e leaped from thetoinand
eecaped,,but iratrested, serried beak to
‘Portsmolith, and .eoptpuig..44,ithe• third, story of .fs
, that' cley'fased -for it to Pure& • •
Early,pn TuesdayunbtfiltiglliegOt o 'this Win
dew, of th e room where he was confined and at.:
,tempted to slide down to the
,groinid the Wad
*out:. 'This' support,aholwviver waY;'aia-he'
was suddenlyprecipltated,upc6, ths,,sidemalk and .
seriously bruised asid.injUred. Finding himself' s
able to walkls said. that he actually rolled over,' .
and over until he reached the srlix•r,,whigg'he
'sealed himself in a (hi Saturday the
captain of the YA7asellinf9raed,thei,giltitarrautiuirlio
I ties of the where Choate sof Vowney; arid he was im•
medistely arrested and sent•td,,Ooneord as 'above
'stated:.
The offender Is Irish„and twenty yearii Of age. Ae
he related his story to Provost Marshal Eaton , the,
tears flowed freely, and he gars no appearance of a.
haidened ' • " •
GREAT GRASSHOPPER Rain.--Chir,,Fort Ridg
ley letter reports the appearance of a new and ter..
ribie enemy to thacrops- r auother destructive Cgra.
hopper-invasion.' Weeks ago, the appearance of
army oripeetstreearmotinced.: in 'the 'valley of
Bed Itlier, where they-were announce&as
Acting up everii ' "green 'thing." They are now.
tpailing . their , .way southeastwardly doWirthe Minifew
' sots valley. We presume wheat, and .other Small
grains,t ale sufficiently' far advancedto bid them d
Rance—lnit other and:. later crops'irillvbe ravaged
;without mercy, finless their progress stayed by
"head winds.".'Mhat With the ehintlebtig . In the
p
East and the laspapperyiln the Waet—our
'ors; we fear, wifi have to run a gauntlet of dangers
before the haMetishompleted.--Sfl'Paisi firm.
. • ,,,,,...
, ‘•• i 'it l• - ‘,.....• •... .. - "
"ipefillalperinselyili Nailer On hi' lislii , ltemy •
, , ,I • '-'. - 7 f ; • v %ile: '
[From Tennison 'irNow)*olinne. ] •
' The Maintain, wpoded to the, peak, th e lawn ; . :
And l winding glades high'uti like waya to Heaven,
The elendericocoPli dionjoingierown of plAtiiiiiri ' • • I-
The llghtzdvif flash of insect, and of, bird, • • ,
, The lustre o the lwag bonvolvoluses
, ,ThatnelPd arpund.the stately stems; and , ran- -
' 'Evin to' the ilmlt'of the land, the glows .
And glories Asthe'broadlielt of the world',
All these he saw,; but what he fain had seen •
lie,,cmild notsee; the kiiidly:kuminface, . .
Nor hear fikindly,volo•;,batihaard , , ~ ' '," '
.The myriad Shriek of wheeling ocean•fowli , -
The league-long-roll er thundering methe.reef, ''
-The loving;' whisper of hugctreeeltlutt'brani3hbi
And blossomed In the tenith,,or the sweep, ~ •
Of some Preeipltbus rirullitil to thti wave,
r As dowmthelshouhhe,rangest, or OK dayddizg," r
Sat often In tigQiifird-gating gorge, . •
i f h
A shlpwreo &Filler, wa ft ing for in staff n• r ll. •' " '
No sai l day to day ,but every day r. 8 . 0 41...
, The sunrise return Into scarlet 'shank '-'' -
"Amon* the palmikand ferns andlprecip.lo44 , f :
i The blaze un the waterz.to thc,eaSS 31. 1 A ;,
The:blaze upo po rfhls iihndeoverhead; ' .
Tkablazaur(on,the waters ( to tits:ewe:it iikapd r : .: ...
Then the great ptarifthat globed tbliall t lr/111 hea^
Veni 'l 1 , i,.7/ fiS lif !;.,1 - 'IS_ .. . . .
&The hollower bellowing., and again. , f. . •
'My scarlet shafts of sunrise = —hut Mihail,
'd.... ,
7 'rhere'often as he riniiiii'd;Or seem' 4 d to 10)14 , n, ~,
tSo sUll,.the golden , llzard on , himpadoed; ' •
,A. phantom *ado or r mauy r oantoixiwovel :, . , :. ,:
' Beiore him Oriting'hith,'or he himself • ; ,
..
adcved hann ngpeofle,lthirlitVand , placee,.iriawk, -
~Part i n a dar ke r tale beyond the line i„. _.. may „. a ~. t
e batii, t elf , bab le, /Minis,' tile Sukill'hotue, • .
• Tbe 'dlinibin etteeti ,topr mtil, theitel f l i anek. t zi
1
• Tlicspeaeock si r tree kiidtbe forlely 4 rot
~ , .
'The norsii,be exectre,lthelboak 1NOlie , 141; irellitu • l .11.-.
:.TN b o e vetober'd Wllltaß44daWn i ng li nlClAW ll oiir:h]* *
pa ti o. , ow.r,'the orno4 or ayinoeatea l
And,the low die of4loadenrecblOrd Seas.(4/. i l'iif
' Onoe,Zike epAiiitheirtnigliklothmiiiaiieu!zil*PT
..Tho.talfitly, o r ri llliii ffi 'M'i & vfrinflifdl pr...
Belheard the ruling - of Tali Betts • '
Thin, 60,11 0 ansfir not wiutr rabigedif tt porrp‘mirl
Shiddering, and.wkeNthe a dlsle., „ yr
aßettirtivd upon hltri;draof no&ittlM .
Fooken with That, which being everywhere,
Leta none who sneaks a ith Him, Seem all alone,
laianii Gamma Lai died of gilimads.
FOUR . cm & _
'rtc,
IK )TiRRIBItir 901:97 DVIOTPF 0 ACOUrred inWest
,Cheater, Chester county, about 9 .9,'ock on Setter
'-;dalf- night last.'' It appears thet"Hannah Smith,
wiref J. Smith, living on. New. street, had taken
,
lief three children to 'bed In Che third story of the
bovise, and,'ln descending the 'limier flight of stairs,
„either drOpped. the lamp she wall. carrying or fell
' - dciern the stairs herself. The 'oldest or the children,
a lad ten ;.years of age, finding smoke coming into
'the room, jumped out of bed, ran down , stains and
fonnd ,his mother all on fi re. lie 'got a buciet of
water and threw it over her ; that lia'ving but little
effect,' he commenced ;hallooing. The,,nolse of the
fell of, thelhunp, dr' that of Mrs. Smith, and' the
cries, of „the •child were , heard hype residentaof
theadjoinin houses, who ran Immediately; the
„house.. Una b le to net the door unfastened, It was
broken open with an axe. On opening the door
leading u f f il stairs aged spectacle watt prosemted. The
stairway or some.dletance up was all In a flame, and
Illfs.'Sm Was aefited near, the bottom of the stairs,
burned in many placesto a crisp, making motions
to those who came not to , touch her, and only. able
to say "letne die,'" weed she became insensible.
In getting her,awayrfrnm , the lire the flesh peeled
from bet - KAY. She bobsled a great deal , of the fire,
. and Mt hOpTeb i‘ril entertained 6f her recovery. The
fire was soon
,extingniebed. 'The lad who fi rst' gave
, the , alarm jinnped from, the second•story window
while an. attempt was being made to get Ink , the
house, and wag caught by a gentleman without, sus
taining amyl bijbry. The youngest of the dhildren
was found lying on'ttie,floor up stairs; from whence
' it'sras rescued but not,until it wasnearlyauffeested
by, the smoke.' Had theltocident oceurred an hour
or two.later the house, with all its occupants, would
no doubt have been burned up - • ,
TEE Ortagnrasiono St rstperurns,..-The Flank
lin Repository printing office, in Ohambersburg, wee
totany_ destroyed by the rebate, all the presser!,
books, type,. stibsoriptitm list, and 'accounts ; 110-
` thing being , rayed. W e,,, ara.,..inforrned* by, M essrs.
f Meolure 'at,,Stoner %hit as
- soon - as material and
Weasel?. can be supplied, they will testime the publi.
'cation oc.the Repository, and also . The Old f7a94a,
eampalgn paper 'that ' has attained a Very large olr
ouiatiob. - The subacriPtionlioni of :both papers are
destroied. „Four copies were secreted , in alifferent,
parts of the town, but are ' burned : With* their lista
their subsorlption aboountirwere also deatroyed; and .
snbacribera should at once inform McClure* Stoner
:of their address, and the state of their subscription
accounts, and all , subscribers ahould promptly re!
mit' arteantgee and advance 'subscriptions, to. aid
the pnblishera.v In, addition to their offices; bothfof
them' had their, residence§ burned, 'with all their,
furniture and personal effests—the rebele not allow
' ing t - em Ao save, their,olothieg. Mr. Stoner war
-- fired at hi his own home for attempting to save the
, • firm books;•and•the men who binned 1111'1 McOltrie's
tesideoce had i special,order,s that nothing belonging
•; tO him should be shved. . • . ~
, At e a formai:meeting of the 'einploYees in the vari
' 'one department& of, the, Harrisburg. Telegraph, tit
snbjeet of thd burning of Claainberstutrg was undß
consideration, ;whin, on' 'motion ' of , i, Wien' Foineyi
the - following preamble res9lol9ns a rfere Wl' ;
mously atiorited : •''; ' r. " • , .41:
Whertter, We have heard,"With inekruessible
nation and deep regret, of the rebel oatr ~,_
Cbetribersbars. the airing andburning of that. t ' e. ' 4l-
, .iioB it
".a'blob hundreds of faantltee have been dePtt , t ow b
.. bnizgl . t.biltr ia neane of living; therefor.,'" re d oftwil:
JkirE, reporters, an:INIIItta e c = it 'ul't , . - •
nrfate'ene,dlty's iabor for the ret ie'• Air tiTli s r p. adi "
fAlbantork,barg '. " ,of the pglnno
_ iivolved. That *e, recotert*si - Pie of
de-, oiabor to our craftemsay a like devotion of a
eatablislogaints of the State at r - the different printing
tnoirs ll
ys.—h few looter' • fe' l3 flrania.. -
amee
in
this
vicinity. .1„,- . 1 : _i_ Ave made theirappear
wince"; of the mighty
t h ey tteT are the gad.
invade
this
portion of
,t - 1 L..):
su th.eir kind that: will
our , readers rut btleas. remembe te 1111868' ltlany If
Of °Pi kßate by laid Remits fn ifor the "meaPation
VINAN ( U!eA2pi.C4ilMgRail g .
i .
• The deinsual fel money, has :somewhat lacreseed,
' .112ongh the rates
,of interest are unchanged, the
1 pressitie notbetagsnificieni.: to justify higher liguresi,
It, is „stated that Mr. Pessenden, will, oontinue the
1
i v iresent plan of- obtithihig ••• niOney thrimgli Sab
i seriptions, to the.' vsyekthirties, •, as long rad
there' 'is no • dimiiiitlito. 4 ln the -volume •of receipts':
.1$ Abe l subsorltimik tell liii low it may be that
le i . Will O.flen , fail litili i • Mt the . thirty-three mil:
llMis - of the ,6' perl faints 'of ' 1881; which "hi
'Jtitit l eatie he, willeffer Mtt•11011t0 lorm'or .othert : The
usf the ".new loan continues so large, how:.
ayitr c froni day to day, thei'it is not likely the Seem
itimwill be ci the niarketlrlth the balance of the
631106 time long time 'to` come; The Deptirtfrimit
,'le usillg the comVeund 8 11 eolith and will•bontinue
rAitdo•so until the revenithirties are' better known
mid taken more freely. For the moment the use of.
impound (I 14 cents baB much the same effeot iii
inflating prices as' would be produeed by issuing'
.1)1aIn regal tenders, but the expaneloriis hot so,pro.
tracted, from the feet that the 6 4SI cents wilkbe ab.
sorbedafter a few moiitik lutenist has accumulated
.lipoll tiiem. . '
The 'stook market; under the influence of the hot
weather, is extremely dull. There was but . one
Board held yesterday, and the brbkers adjourned to
mein again on Friday o.6:merrow). Business will
• 'be generally - suspended to-day, in consequence of
the observant* of the National Fast. -• .' ' '
,The,. 1 51. loan. gold *yesterday. at a. del.iline 0f.)4,
while, the five-twenty bends advaneed ii. The do
:and' for theoatter; asyeAlaill ysel
M ,foreign accoant.
IlQiiiiimis Mak, and there Is good raison to b elieve
.. a much larger advance will soon be realized. i City
Aim. (new) were a fraction lewei.: The, sales of
company bonds show gelierally a decline. Phlle..
arid • Sunbury sevens sold at 111;4, a fall of 3.since
'ist sale; Philadelphia and Erie 63 declined 2,a6.lEl
;Mira 5s sold at 76. Tluishare list 1V313 •weak ; Read
,, InAciecilnia ,44', CataViesa ommion s, and. North
P*ll3llolvania 1411r:ie.:I .44r.' - Ponnsylviiniaßainoad
eaidllinehillwere a trifle'hetter: The enlist:le-of
taliele was Schuylldil ,Navigatlon • andthfiewas at
'ariBe 7 athe preferred,ltock; advancing to i4Oll. and,
the ememoilUBl. Thiceil companies were, not so
aitive,,and prices werMees firm. , •
• Poi* Bankstocks the highest bids were as follows: •
• 'Ninth Amerirs ' ' 157 . •
Philadelphia" ' 4 131
' Parmere • and, Mechanics' ..:. ..... . . mg
Commercial ....... 57 .
'Mechanics' • 1, • ' " 7 " .. " • " ..
. 28,4
Girard, 46
Manufacturers' and' MecbaniCa' t••••• ...... ........ • • • • 27 %
City tty. eye'. s .; 55
Commonwealth .. ' ''' " , 473 i
• The fellowliig werethe closing prices for the /Woke
.neahed i
' Bet Ask
edaronette do—l 234,—'4 •
Conn do.. . 34
iAlsace Iron ••••• •• 1 ••
011 Creek 7
Meets shade Oil IS t "
McClintock Oil. 4%. 6,
Penne Pet' 0W... 3
Parry 011.......... 53( t .6
laineraloll....:: ' 2 Mt
Kerstonelill—;. •• • 235
Iveliene 011—:.
limos - • 2%
i Organletoll—.... . 1.5 G
Prankl intOK. l _" ! " ' 2
ileve"s Eddy Fill 1 2
1 rid es• oil • 3 • '4'
Butler Coal 134 .23‘.
Keystone Ztnc:. 7 7
Densmore 0i1... 734 7
Datzell`Oil - ' 6 6
MoElbewy• 011-:..- 3..;
Roberts OIL ••••• • . .
Olmstead ' 3,‘ - • 3
Roble & Del U 14
Max:lgor • 1 1 1•18:
Air
rp.eid:LP. 68% .6 8 31!
nn '73 74 I
LOU* ' 19 21. -
, CatawitsFa prer. 41
'N'Penna E 92 82%
Site B. a 3 339 1
Vole leland•B • 48 •• 60
Fmk .. . ... 80% ,
','Seb Nay pref.... 40%
Tinton Canal. • • 2 ..,2
Union pref 11 1
Snag Canal•• • T . 20
yojton 836 . 9
Motrnt Coal. 7.)8 .8
• 94.1 rat M Cl Fld. 19/420.14
OriMorint Coal • 6%
:•N ai 2 • 9
N Cre e k Coal..: 134'
lieederDam Cl.
Clinton C0a1.....
'Ain' Kaolin 2E - L. -
Penn Mining... 9
• -Girard .'do 4 • 6,
Etna. do 13 14
Ph & Bo* BlIn!g •. . •.4
.Mandan. d 0.... 2% 6
STOCK EXCHANGE
_ • , _ .I•2l6gogi
200 Readies K 68
100 do '-:::.e6:8
100. d 0.... ....cash. 6834
100 do " blO.-
1(0 'do ' b10..68,1(
• 112/31. 1
4 Keedianks' Bank- Sig
100 Felten Coat - B
100
110 00 do t
8 •
1 On
d Cree k -
o
SW Rock Ott 44
70 IdeCllnbick 011—, 6
100 Echnyll Nay .91 •
• 100 do prer.ciel• •40
100 'do pref 4131
100 , •db pref WO. 40
100 Reading IL • 68
100 do 68)41
100 do ... ... .... • BB
0 Penns R 73 1
. . 1 8 do 79
, amen' ritij
67 Kentucky Bank..lll
3 do ' 'lii'
1000'1113 6s '51....3dy5-106
brolltroir re
-1900 • e 5.......... 78
03 Mcell ri Lc clr
AO Union Pat - _ 2be
0.A3 Oimeiead
-ICO Nay_ pref ' 40SI
• 100"Mcneny 834
000 .
• ; Beadle:. ...:,.s5 6 04
100 ,Densmore 7
.100 Nay oreb3 o 90
103 !Wier ..... 19 I
" 73fe8e1'1k Co. quote: , • •
Pew trill£3d States Bonds, ...
New Unit! d States Certt. of Indebtedness. ••. 943 i , •
'New United States 78 . 10 Notes 106 • 108 95
Quartermasters' Vouchers 91 92 .
Orders foil Certificates of Indebtedness ' 4 414
Gold • • •
Sterling Exchange: 2s7
tso 103
:11ve-twenty Bonds • ' ' 107- 10711. •
eintrenly to Several irosefries, ActlngOommissioner
,Rollins tleoldes Mat; seven tliree-tenth bondi and
geitifielstes of Indebtedness are not included in th e
term "U. S. bonds,nas define:lln the bank seotkst of •
the revenue law, but that the term "United, States i
bonds" is confined only to that class of securities
kniiwn as registered 'and coupon bonds, :of various
denominations, payable in' ten yearn or . '
tisingh redeemable In some oases laden time,
:And thief. only such securities can be deducted from
the onpitsi of a bank in determining the amount of
'Re napltai stook subject to taxation. This is an ln
jgirtintibiestion to 'banks subscribing to the new
7.30 loan."
The annexed table.shows the number of national
banks which are at'Vres s tint organized In each St ate, ,
With their J aggregate capital ; and the number and
eapitaliof the State , banks. , .The figures referring
5 14/the latterlnstltutlons in the loyal sections of the
,T.lnion are taken tiom the repertemade in 1803 and
1864, and yes° reliting to the iebelliotis portions
• sire made up from the officiaLreturns of 1880 : •• "
111 Palltisats:
NW • Cued;
• ..Bearp.
itft - =tM
erYstru:
r.qpnectieni •
boalformig..
'Florida
'
-1111110'A
Indiana
lowa. • . —
Kan ma •• ' "
Kentnok
I Loulirlanii.
Maine
AfanoebOtettil ...
bisu7land • ' •
' tcbtgazl.!'f..".
"
ew 8an 1 1414 .
t0.:4..
ow , York:4. . .
°W JOrser. ( ...
;XXI
Ohio
"Cir_ eibn * "
r%D.lllqlvezdai . ... .
'ltbode fel ''
B crithleMoUlas.seo , 4 l. .
Tenn'essee..,'
Verzoolt. .. .
'IT I filallpEr..
Wog o . . „
tDfAttlb!'of ma la ..
Elfin 10
Oregon, the coutittal
incorporation..
/Lambe gibe tiMl9.4 moil MT,
mar
+Mrespltal soffielently to make the aggregaUlt
.
'lllneUlitt of the whole $19,842,550.
:Thatartto.pan_ Framolsoo. from New York has
been advanced to $4OO by all the routes. The At
lantio and Pkolflo`M&ll ships are making very large
profits, and the liater hiss coat enough to nearly re
present its eapftfil Stook.
The New YOrk'Eveiting Post of yesterday says :
The loan market Is active, with an abundant sup
ply. The rate is 7 per eent. and the augmenting
mass of capital seeking iereporary investment. •'
citifies the terine to Incline more inlayer of the bor.-
rOWer.
Brig Thomas Walter, Weatardyka, 8 days from St
Barth, with mplasyea , cotton, &a, toJauretche.&. La- -
vergne.
Brig San Antonio • ackson,lS days from
Henry Hew Or
leans, in liallast to enry Simmons.
Brig Abide Ellen, GiliaOre, 4 446 from bliflrli;
in ballast to "TIMIS•A CO. ,- .1 7 •
Sok' Vir ri Cargill, Wasiak, 4 days from !Provi
- &nee, with tads. tb Crowell & Collins.
Schr IC Hammond,, Paine, 7. days from Boston,
with Indus telCennedy, Stairs, & Co.
withJ. P Ames , arnrner, 10 days from Baiksport,
with spars to captain. • , .
• Schr Lath Rich"Bonholf, 10days from Pensacola,
no ballast toKlurtis & Knight..
" Schr John, Irons, 11 days from Pensacola, in bal
i last to D S Stetson k Co.
Bohr Mary Nickerson ,, from New Haven, in bat
lento capta in.
;* Schr •L D Jarrard, Fenton, froni Fortress Mon
roe, in ballast to captain.
' Schr D E Wolfe, Dole, from Penn's Grove, in bal
last to captain.
Schr 0 S Grove, McKee, G days from Beaufort,
in ballast to It S Stetson & Co.
spar Biala, Quillin, 2 days from St. Martins, hid.,
with grain to James L.Bewley & Co.
, Steanier Hope,•Warrim, 24 hours loom New York,
with mdze to W P Clyde. • • •
Steamer, J S Rockwell, . Edwards, 8 days from.
WaltMgton,.l). C., witbomdze to. W X-Baird & Ca; •
, Steamers Fannie, Fenton 24 hours from New ,
• York;Witli mdse to W reßard & Co. .
7 Steamer Vuloan ; Morrison;l2* hours froze 'Near
TOrk; with radze to Wm X Baird be Co. ,
Steamer. D Utley, Phillips; 21'. - hours from New
York ' with mdze to Wm Mi3aird A Co.-.'
Steamer.
Steamer Manhattan, Ryther, 7, hours from Cape
! May, with 75 paStiellgtri. "Baaled'iii the bay; bound_
... e fo n srp t, nz.r bt iv.F l po lF o il vo l : o (ift i - obr Ei ri4 arte ti r nusrtr fo ici r xel P e6 tri, ifctio imps l g i atntedistur. „.. ii.ga
:' - , , e` zw: -,
Cienfuegos; alld Mary A es, Mr Halifax. Ship
'Etta, for Liverpool„ and bark White Wing, Mr
Sagnayra, below 'Reedy Wind, going down in tow.
Pissed above Bombay Hook, bark Enterprise, from
Naples ; brigs Ella Vall,from West Indies ; Georges
Crump, 'from Olenfingos ; Mary E Howland, Oliva,
Emma, and ,glary Stewart, with., ligM-+ •
sehooners.
- •AT QUARANTINE. • : ,
Brig Speedaway, Atherton, from Remedlos,iirisibt . *.
molasses. , • ...sdit:1111 ithi"t
,
CLEARED.
Steamship Frances, Austin, Havana, Bisho," Nolgra l "`"-
& Co. , , 7 ',TV!, i':7 2
Bark naiades, Miller Port Royal, Tyler
.kOO. ,
Brig Albert (Br), Irvine, Demarara; 'Thee' 'Waal' '
son & Sons."
Brig Geo Burnham, Thornton,'Port Royal, EA.
Souder & Co.
Brig Bush, Owens, Fort Monroe, .1 H Atwood. .
Brig Jeremiah, Fort, Cow Bay, tei B, J E Barley
& Co. _
Sohn S J Vaughn, Vaughn, Weymouth, W Hun
ter, Jr, & Co. - . • . .
Schr Ocean ,Traveller, Adams, Boston, Sinnlck-
SOO & Glover.
Selar,W Carleton, Packard; Boston, Slnnioksan & .
Glover. I, .
Schr' "Eliza'Neal, Bnckaloo, Boston, Day &
RuddelL 1 ~ •
Behr 0 4 Meiviok,'Nfontgomery, Hingham, 0 A r
Bookseller & Co. '
_ Schr J M Bayles, Thompson, Plymouth, Catitnar. : , +.
'Stiokney, & Wellington.
Schr 11 W Wallington, Wells, Boston, D . .1 Winisis• • 1 •
Scbr Silver Magnet, Perry, Boston, Wannomaeb.-
ex & Maxfield. •
•,' Sohr Solidi B Strong, Tyler, Boston, Blakbiton,
Gran, & Co.'
Bohr R X Price, Kelly, Plymouth, j 43. 1. & a s
Reppwir. ,
. •Sehr 0 A Greiner, Young, Providence, ''' l. 4lo
,sdk i - West Wind, Ruchins, Fort Monroe, •H A.
'Adams. •
Seta. Henri Nutt,,Howe, Beaufort, , _ , .• do
eh
Little) liampt!on Ro
Schr EB
DMlOrri. Keaton
s. APP ' 11 1 1 , ''' k -' 7 4 'do ads, do
do
•Schr May, Kelly , ,,..,;.• ,
...a o • do
Schr N ma. Weaver: H owell, do do
& Co. I
Sobr A El Martin, Brows; Fort Monroe, Tyler
Sebr Mary 11 Banks, Halksif i lkiii,Mtairoe, Tyler
, k 0 0 . ..,
A I,' .',* ' ?'t, •:-/ +ll 'S:ll f• 1.1••
.4. ' - is ..f -•
schr ...m c Frances,. t Tellemlai, im
Tye& gee. ‘, 'T ; • -, ';5 ;- tit tftri i.a. t ' ;
• Schr, I l k. , / e lk . bar P l Od i t
ffi l lint,
Stea'm'er 4 14TiarraptilitAbleiM MOWlEflita;"W •, . : .
Iril e & • • ,5u.......t.20 Me w -rs . ..• - •,••
• t TO r ' • zoipahire, IFOrk,t 4 V It “ -.
434 / 1 00 /AjNY. •• , i ire ifiggfiaw • 5t.m .....tt 0 ~:', : ~o)
itiMilif t rfo , 1 . 1 - cniE ,r. , - - , , ,. , , , ,.‘ 3
• T. •.r . ti ~...1 ; 1 •
e i l t 4ll rovea Tr ri t . i i . : jr 4ll /Ste J k2l.l9t i ff i t . ai,#! I Y I"I N ,
... , . Alegi
..),:si I -ocro23lxtelboo ,p Lo onn rq et it
inik.g; il ri liii, u, , 46, 7 4 , i6i1L14,14,&,1 Moira
l e d- L . : std o p e - a if put seetvillielMitlikag oa t--4.1 5
a i reet
the followin cargo: 28,089 bush. w eat, 30
tallow, 10 da quereltrou bark, 37 bales raga, US
bogs 01l cake, HO kegs butter, 0,11011 bids flour, Le
INN 0144&
SALES. AUGUST &
600 ltezidone Zino ....
4011De1m11 0 1 .... ..
600 IdeCilzuoolc
11X0 Feeder Dam• AI
. .
ao.a.RD.
100 MIAMI' R 62' -
12 do 611 ,
2' do 0/ . •
•20 „ do t ., 02
.103 Worth Penis t....' 3/ '
900 qiii 6-20Foncps ....101
9C(I do' ' ' 107 '
ICOO, do b.... 107 •
6(o' do
107 6. 1
1500 • do .• t ± 2 p *** eta • .10i
'222)Gity•6.44911Few;.1..a •
1 300 do
SO 'do ''' • 1061
1000 Phil& & Bauble:, • LI
110001%11a & Erie 62..• • 110
• , T;soditii.
50 Cot:Com 203 f
1500131rolra 6+l ' 78
100 Ifie pre( 10) .
'loo' 8.0 ek 011 ' -8,4 G '
1000neral , 2 . •
200 . Oil Creek bkg 7 '
10000 X Penne 8e..;.b5A01 •
100 Heidi mg.. •. ....... .141.3 i
200 'Dalreil...... .. ... . 71..
100
tkri oelin et ..'..... ' 6 f
100 -Noble & Dol. - • 13
100 Ns , / pr'ef... .. : . b 3 0 .40% ' 1
400 Noble 4 Del 13%
ICE=
ffM
34,976,010
.
4. 2,000,000
426,01 X)
ti.lo, 000
• 784 079 t
797,970
r • 98,1.90
t3 3 .a,080
17;560,160
98:11,004)
• MTN, 700
42,(1)1,309
410,e00'
• I . 318. 1 :01
1,110,6(M)
111.:MIC6
• 4, G7B 700
141- •
8, iff7,162
4 1,00i,465
5,674,000 i
15.917, 65 D'
'21.144,5£0,
11 10"
69.
.407P°3 -
.. •
1 63. x.
• 2 17723
4 OCO
248E4 500 I
1815, 000
r 100, LOG
/1460
t 0 "
000,C00
P1i 1 411 5 43
J 1 , 0000
M 10. 0:11)
1• ..M;000
.14.660.003
4.10,00)
bnis7B;ooo
..,419101000.
y 9']b7.100
,P. 120 Ij 99
'IS9?
30 9; 036 ,
-1,110 000 40
a.,, noo:000
g c t r o . 14:
600 60.00 P .000 • •
•
• •
72;,121,790..1
.14.732.785
kAS
409,090=fy
Effi
hose fitattefo.
..r4cpw,wMPsi,
(PUBLISHED
Tire Wen Penes win be sent to sotheortbere)T
raw (per ti mi gh hatievitfee) st.. i . Pt 00
Three cOPt - •• • • 041
riveocifies '-
Ten copies le 00
Lamer Clubs uutt
rate. 111. 50 per copy. • • ' '
The money must always accoinvermteheffirdervatmg
in no instance can there terms bextetrfrtterMfro. 4 o ll Ner
niford very tiUle more than the east of paper.
*Jr POetaniiiaters are reoneeted to act as -sirens
Tips Vier. Piens.
To.the setter-itp of the'Clnb often or tweety. Oat
Olin coif of the Paper will be even.
T4e stock market opened dull, but firm.
Stkte Stocks are Leavy. Bank shares quiet. Coal
.stoeks Strong. Mining shares advancing. Railroad:
bonds firm.
Railroad shares are inactive in com4equence of
the disposition to hold for a the. Quotations hava
advanced 3f i 3 per cent.
, Governments are steady. Coupons of ism at.
MN, Seven-thirties at 107 tor .October and IoSK for
Ansi:lSt. Certificates are dull et 94x.
Befote the Board gold was quoted at 2.3SXfPI,
Canton Company 31, Cumberland Coal preferred
et%, Quicksilver 80@j81, Erie 112%@112%, Reading
,187 X, Michigan. Southern 9034, Illinois. Central
129 X, Pittsburg 113 X, Chicago and Rook Island
MI% Fort Wayne. HS, Northwestern ISTX, North
western prefeived - 90%.
The appended table exhibits the chief movements
,at the Board ifinntaired with the latest prioee.oC
'Tuesday:
. .
__ , • Wed. - Tote. Adv. 'Doer.
DOW States SP, 1881. rex 105 . 106 ,•• .- • -I
'Vetted States es. 1884 K.
c0u5t..•.105.34 ~ 1•31,3"
United States 7 . 808 • 10834 • Icrryl .1%
• Untied States 6-204 cone. 1075 A : r 3071 ' -'•
- dleld States cost eut . 04K 93 ...
'-Iteidtlean Gold 25334 257 .. ..
TespeteeeStzes
C Wooer' Sixes
iya,7llB7diC MAU • .1...... • rllt 171
.. - ' de_e Mall - 281 240 n
Ii • • fer•Tork Cenral 4A.111101141...-'IBOA 178,%,, 23 ,
......-. ?arose • • MX 112
• t is 4 Preiferrea. : N 11l 110.1 •
•
Hudson Pltijei nvic DO.
Aftertie board oumherlaad c ow'
silver at 8034, New York Centrtel
Erle-Preferred at. M., Eke
jug at 137 ytiiii3hlgark
ISotttbre
trat dt Th:l 3 Plttsburir, at'
11143 ' Fort sure-116,V
and Ddlastratyptanskx,
There ftvsor ..elphise Markets.
AUGUST 3—Evening,
en/ f '
F4/ea4G4 r l , 4 titre shipping demand for Flour;
aa
trade, • .Ise about 4,000 bbls high-grade family
e:'
.y Western on private terms; the home
ere buying in a small way at from 99&..k.t0 for
, ertine, $9.50@10 for extra, $ 1 0.60@11.50 for extra
.imily, and $12@12.50 gR bbl for fancy brands, as to
4itillity. Rye Flour Is selling in a small way at 89
, Age bbl, Corn Meals scarce and firm.
Git:Airt.--Prime , Wheat Is In demand, with sales
. of ibpnt 9,000 bus at 25043252 c for old reds, and new
do at 2600 V. bus; white is scarce, and worth 2705 g
275; ft bus. Rye is scarce, with - small sales at 1750
1600 tor Southern and Penna. Corn itimanted, with
Sales bf 2,500 bus at. 173 @17 61 2; ga bus afloat - and in
store., Oats are rather scarce, and quoted at 83@850
for new arid 95@90c WI bus for old.
Belis.-113t rte.l Quercitron is in steady demand
at $5039 ton.
Corrow.—Prices have advanced, and the market
is firm, with hales of Middlings at 40.66@Ln
cash.
Grtoonums.—There is little or nothing doing in
either Augur or Coffee.
PET.kol.ain3l.--There is no change to notice ; sales
of crude are making at 50@filc, relined, in bond, at
80@83c, and free at 90@92e tip gallon.
bEnDs.-LOlov.er continues scarce. and small sales
are making at $14#115 Bs its. Timothy Is selling
In a small way at 5 . 115 t bushel. Flaxseed sells on
arrival at $8.75,./P bushel. •
. metal is rather scarce, but firmly
held; small sales of Anthracite are making at 0. Sme
ton for the three numbers... Manufactured
Iron is in demand, and selling at full prices.
lii2SvaiSTOBES continue scarae and high; small
sales of Rosin are inching at from $45@i5010 barrel.
• gqairlts of qnrpentine is selling in a small wa at
83 6563.75 la gallon. • y
1:141.7. 7 -flaled lain demand, and selling at Ming
1/ ton. . • •
Itiforszone.—There is little or . nothing doing In
the way, abides, and pricei are .wlthont any mate
rial change. Mess .1 - ork• .is quoted' at $10(4)4.2
bbl • prime tierce Lard Is held at 20e,qp g,. •
is very .1141 e doing ; small sales
of bbl arc e a rtad.at;lBoo,ll gallon.
The follo wingarktal rvoaliput4 Sour sm a grabs
at this port yt • • • •
FR:oft. 1,430 bbla.
Wheat ' • • - T,OOO
Corn • ' ' '• •
.2,700 bug.
•
Oats ^ ' 2,300 but.
New Teak Markets; Anima
ASErill are quiet and steady at'sl3,so for Pots and
$15.25@15.50 Our Pearls; , • • •
'Bracanirrnros.—The market for State and West
ern Flour is 5fXlOO lower; gales 10,000 bbls at $9.15
f 9.30 for eli t iorfine State; 89.75@i0 for extra State ;
• 11101.0@lia Or ohniell d 0; $9.15@9.20 for superfine
Western; $9.60(410.20 for common to medium extra
Western ; $19.214/0.50 for common to good shipping
brands extra round-hoop. Ohio and $10.55@12 for
trade brands, Southern Flour i a dull ; sales7oobbla
at $10'.7601r.80 for common, and allAdfdlii.3o for
fancy and extra; Canadian Flour hi dull, sue 5410 e
lower; sales WO bbls, at 1119.19©10 'for common, and
*10.115@)12 for good to choice extra. ~ .
Rje • Flour, is quiet. ' born Meal is quiet, and
steady. Wheat is dull, and 2e lower with sales ,of
195000. busbebr at $2. 21@2,89 for Chicago spring - ,
112 24§ . 2.39 for , Milwaukee Club; $2.40@2.44 for
,amber I:4lll4Slikeq;
,$2.51(02.57 . f0r winter red West
lrri ; and $2 59@2.63 for arrilier Michigan, the latter
for very choice. Rye is quiet, and unchanged. Barley.
is dull and nominal. Barley Malt is quiet at 152.20
.62.25. Oats are dull, and declining, at 51@1.01 for
Canada, and SLO2 for Western. The born market
dull, heavy, and one cent lower; sales 51,000 bush
$1.56@1.55at far new mixed Western, including one
load very choice at 41.59. -
•....WRlSKT.—The'lriarket closes heavy, with sales of
4800 bbls at $1.73 for State, and $1.74 for Weitern.
• Ter.Low 10.1 n moderate request. Sales 115,000
.at 19c for Western and 193..0 for city. '
.P.novisions.—The Pork , Market 15 lower, with.
Moderate demand sales 2 900 'bids at 635 for mess
..$38.50040 for , new do—closing at the inside rate, s3i•
- rot new prime, and $37 for prime mess also, 1.000.
bbls prime mess for August, b. 0., at $37.50 Tee
Beef market is heavy and very dull; sales 200 bbls
at about previous prices. Prime Mess Beef is quiet
at $32635. Cut Meets are quiet and witi,out decided
change, at 15c forsherdders and 17c for hp.ms ;•8111611
25,000 its extra choice hams in dry salt, it 19c. The
Lard market is a shade firmer; sales 10)00 bbls
20;46.211-0. . . • •
irrrws luLeal
.TRI XB3IOIIAFTB' ZXORaZIOE,
Etark A I Harvey, Fade; EtarbadOmitom.
Birk Tinto (Br), Davison Aga.
Brig Astrom•lazDoagail
Brig Sarah Larson, BA:Plans «Baringistift Mg"'
Jarvis • %Barmao, sopa.
Brig
ms Pplertick, Madan, Hamm iusd od.
. di .
PI32.I2ADFILPHI.4I , BOABB OP. TRADE.
JARanis NJLLIKluiri. : 1 ...• • • "
ANDREW rWiueszap, Committeeof as X.Outl&-
ErrwPD Y; Toinmsloga, .
MARINE. INTELLIGENCE. , t
PUNT or pntamilrein4 exp.
Sun In Son Seti...:lf 4 I High water: 's 23
ARRIVED
.6 Lif #
a at-62, quick
at. 150 X, Erie at )
.1/3011 at 13'13‘, Read
n at 90X, Illinois Cell. ,
1.1.3 X, -Rook Island nit
Jrthwestern at STX, Ohio
• soon.