cirtss. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1864. _ We can take no notice of anonymoull OOMMU mications. We do not return reteoted manuscripts, Air Voluntary eorreepondence is solicited from all 'parts of the world, and °Specially from our different :Military and naval departments. When used, it will les paid for. THE SITUA ETON. The news of to-day does not materially change the previous View of the situation. The boasts of the Richmond papers have no Inclining, and they give little but boast ing. But we do not find one word that justifies any fear that SHERIUN has met with any serious opposition. The Whig supposes that its readers are aware that his march has been thwarted, but none of the other papers make any allusion to such a rumor. All the calamities of SELERMAN are in plum and exist only as rebel predictions. The Examiner admits that he " risked much in appearance, but perhaps little in reality, by destroying his communications ;" dreads the results of his march, and insists that "`it is highly important that Smunara; should never take Augusta or. Macon, and should never reach Beaufort." None of these journals reveal the existence of a rebel army in Georgia, though some of them vaguely assume its existence. We infer from the very few facts they print that Sumatra; Ups avoided MaCon, and is pressing onward to his desti- Tiation, there to begin the grander move ments of which this march is but the bril liant prelufle, and which the Examiner so justly fears. Already rebel preparations for the evacuation of Virginia are reported. From either Beaufort or Savannah, SEMI MAN can compel it. General Tnolitas' retreat to Franklin is sound, for his policy for the present should be defensive. The longer he defers a bat tle the stronger he will grow.; the nearer he is to Nashville the more easily will he be reinforced, and the more dangerous will be defeat to Hoop. Franklin is 24 miles from Columbia, the position at which Tuoid - As was last reported. It is 18 miles south of Nashville, and connected with that city by turnpike and railroad. The Barpeth river, a small stream, runs by the town.' If Richmond were as safe as Nash ville we should feel gloomy, indeed ; and, by the way, it is not an unimportant ele ment of the situation that, though the weather has been cold, GRANT'S army has not gone into winter quarters. The whole situation is in process of transformation, and in a few days we trust to have results Which shall prove our hopea well founded. Northern Friends of the Rebellion. Mr. HENRY S. norm is, with all his ec centricity, one of the ablest and most ac tive legislators in the rebel Congress. As a personality, Mr. FooTE has some points of resemblance to the notorious Mr. ROE BUCK, the Anglo-rebel leader in the British House of Commons, popularly known as " Tear-'em." He is a long talker, a bitter enemy, always an opponent, and is doubt less "never at peace but when he is fight. ing." But Mr. FooTE has been one of the most candid, even if one of the most bitter, enemies of the North, and has shown a prudent policy, it must be confessed, in the stand which he has taken against some of the measures of the rebel Government. He - was one of the most prominent upholders of what we may call the reciprocity-peace doctrine of the South—a doctrine designed to meet the Chicago platform in the inte rest. of Southern independence. To show Mr. FOOTE'S shrewd knowledge of his sub ject, we present the following passage from his recent debate with Mr. Mnss, of South Carolina; "The gentleman from South Carolina (Mr. Wiles) Says we have no friends in the North. I make issue with him. I say we have friends—good, true, va liant friends—in the North Every vote given for McClellan was for peace. Every vote givenfor Mo 31ellan was a vote against Lincoln's African. policy. Every vote given for McClellan was a vote given for an armistice. If McClellan had been elected, ho (Foote) was prepared to make from his Seat a proposition for a Convention of the sovereign States, North and South, and be believed. tbee tee South would have secured from it peace and her in aependence. If the South-and--met the North in Convention, she would have proposed a league, of fensive and defensive, with the North, for the strict enforcement of the Monroo doctrine, a liberal oom normal treaty, and we should soon have oitola North American domain, and perb-e. Cubs. We had no friends in Europe. It ..'" 8 folly to talk of it. We had more sy m pow-ing friends in the North than in all the of the world." Iyf,iau of this was sound and true a month - ago, and much is now measurably false ; but the spirit of the whole is appreciative. There is not a doubt that the mass of votes for McCLELnerf was recorded against the "African policy" of Mr. Lamour, and (miens volens) given in favor of an armis tice. Mr. FooTE correctly judged the Chicago platform as a. Southern doctrine, and gave it the interpretation of this Nia gara commissioners. He had a perfect right to speculate, that, failing to obtain Union, the North would be willing to agree to the next best terms, rather than resume a war paralyzed by an armistice. This was the hint and meaning of •the Chi cago platform, and the Southern statesman was blind who could not see it. Northern friendship for the cause of the South could not go further, or make a deeper kneel ing -down. The Chicago platform offered itself as the camel's back to bear the wounded rebellion. But Mr. FooTE did not speculate far enough. It is not in the nature of the rebellion—always misan thropic, hypochondriac, feeding upon its own bitterness, and destined only to de stroy or be destroyed—to candidly favor any terms. JEFFERSON Davis, with greater foresight .than Mr. FooTE, also saw that the success of such a platform as that of Chicago, and such a candidate as Moen - a - 1,- I,ex, was an utter impossibility. The North could not so far forget its cause and its manhood as to commit hari-kari for the sake of appeasing an implacable South ; and anything less than independence Mr. DAvis, for his own sake, could not accept. If he showed little or no statesmanship - In his handling of the peace question, be was perfectly well aware that all the statesmanship in the world would do him, no good. Therefore, the only use the re bel chief made of the peace question was to encourage and reinforce his armies, in order that the South might be able to take the best advantage of chances. FOOTE %MS a keen politician ; DANIS a " stern statesman,!' who justly reckoned that mili tary success was most important to the Peace party. Failing to reciprocate the peace offers of the North, VALLANDIGHAM and Noon would not be less friendly than ever ; while a - rebel victory of any import ance would become.the best " plank " in the Chicago platform. We have thus pointed out the difference between Messrs. .FooTE and STEI'H.F.ES on the one hand, and Jnimanflon Davis on the other. But there is one point which all may ponder, and it is the soundest part of Mr. FOOTE'S logic ; "We have, no friends in Europe. It is folly to talk of it. We had more sympathizing friends in the North than in all the net of the world." This was the case, but how is it now ? Orin of the immediate &sults of the great Union victory in Illinois Must be the abo litionof the infamous black code of that State. Under the existing law free colored men who enter the State are punished by being sold as slaves for twelve months, and heavy penalties are incurred by those - who harbor colored persons, whether slaves or freemen. We presume this shameful law must be now a (lead letter, but it still disgraces the State, and one of the first acts of the Legislature should be its absolute repeal. We are about to prohibit slavery in the United States by an amendment to the Constitution, but we must also rid our selves of the slave spirit if the free North. PROBABLY no class of Americans ob 'served Thanksgiving Day with more earn estness than the colored men freed by the war. None had more cause for gratitude. General BAxTost's circular to the Freedmen in the, Department of the South is a picture of the blessings which even sudden freedom has distributed in the Sea Islands of South Carolina. The Incendiary Plot. _ . . The attempt to burn seven hotels in New York proves beyond cavil the existence of the plot against Which the Government warned the mayors of our cities. We were among the first, if not the very first, to take the incendiary hints of the rebel journals at their proper significance. It was impossible to misconstrue them. More than two months ago the project to burn our cities was broached in the Richmond Sentinel, which boasted that plenty of good men could be found for the work. In the 1174 of July 24th appeared the following proposition : "THE DEVOTED DAED.—It is believed that there are five or ten thousand men In the South ready and willing to share the fate of 'Cortina, and devote themselves to the salvation of their country. It is proposed that all who are willing to make tate Sacrifice shall arm themselves with a sword, two five•sbooters, and a carbine each, and meet on horse. bask at some place to he designated, convenient for the great work in hand. Fire and sword must be carried into the houses of those uio are visiting ikon blessings upon their neighbors. Philadelphia, and even New York, Is not beyond the reaoh of a long an brave arm. The moral people of, these cities ealinot be better taught the yirtues orb:maiden than by the blazing light of their own dwellings. "None need apply for admission to the Devoted Band' but those who are prepared to take their lives in their hands, and who would indulge not the least expectation of ever returning. Thiy dedicate their lives to the destruction of their enemies. ".A. S. B. D. 8., Richmond. 14 All Southern papers are requested to give this notice a few Insertions:, We bave most to marvel at the fool-hardi, ness of those journals which, in the face of virtual proof; have endeavored to scout and ridicule the well• founded apprehen sions of the public. Some of these papers rather chose to place their Government in the attitude of a conspirator than admit that the Western treason was anything else than a meal-tub plot, or that the threatened incursion from Canada was other than a partisan election - trick. The cordon of rebel conspiracy so thoroughly revealed throughout the,North was aided and con cealed, to some extent, by the wilful folly of these journals. The atteMpt to burn New York may, we' hope, teach them the lesson which the fearful riots there could not. The rebellion lives upon its plots, and never fails to make attempt - at ]east to carry out all its menaces, however wild and daring. The failure of the scheme to burn r. ow York should not lull our authorities into fancied security. COMMENTING on Mr. HEN/Ws resoru tion, that peace can only come with recog nition of the Confederacy, unanimously adopted by the rebel Congress, an ex change well says : " The South - ern ,leaders will never succumb. They know nothing but disaster or success. Shall we not dis tinguish between them and their constitu ency ? Shall we not make plain our dealt% to do the people no harm, while we exe cute justice on their betrayers ? Or are we, to confound the misled and their seducers in one common ruin ?" These are ques tions we believe the President will answer in his next message, to the satisfaction of the whole nation. The policy of discrimi nating between the people of the South and the leaders of the rebellion is not only just but wise, and has already had valu able result's. THEODORE TILT* the editor of the ' New York _lndependent, will lecture this evening at Concert Hall, upon " Thr State of the Country." As well knoivn as the journal he edits, Mr. Trurox is one of the foremost representative young men of the country, a.leader of liberal opinion, and an eloquent champion of the truest freedom. His reputation and ability are sufficient to seenre_him a. general hearing, but his thoughtful eloquence will make his welcome cordial. TER New York Daily Yews fears that SHERMAN is "directing Ms footsteps, in a sense very different from that assigned it in the newspaper rumor, to the prison grounds at Andersonville." It would not be safe to buy gold on the rise, in expecta tion of this event. WA~I3INGTO~--- .-__:-- WASHINGTON, Nov. 28, 1864. THE BEEIGNATI(HT,oF JTIDEM BATES Judge as AttoOsey Geeeral will tar• & dace on Wednesday. THE TRIAL OP COLONEL NORTH. The trial of Colonel Norma and Messrs. JOrrwe and Comm, charged with acting contrary to law in the matter of obtaining New - York soldiers' votes, will not be resumed before the 9th of December. A liit : WAnistY CORPS TO BIejtECRUITDD—OIt- mtrraTt=,M3Ml The following order lies just been issued WAR. DEPARTMENT, ' 'ADJIITANT GEBBRAL'S OFFICE, WASHINGTON, Nov. 28,1884. GENERAL CEDER, NO. 287, FOE RAISING AND OH" GANIZING A NEW VOLUNTEER ARMY CORPS: First. That an army corps, to consist of not less than 211,900 infantry, and enlisted for not less than one year, to be designated the let Corps, shall be organized in the District of Columbia, commencing the Organization on the Ist of December, 1864, and tontlnuing until the let day of January, 1805. The privates to consist only of able-bodied men who have served honorably not less than two yearicand there fore not t abject to draft, and the officers to be som missioned from such as have honorably served not less than two years. 'z Second. Recruits will be furitished transporta tion to Washington, and will be credited to the die. Wet in which they or their families are domiciled, and will be paid a special bounty of 16300 from the substitute fund, upon being mustered into service. Each recruit who preserves his arms to the end of his term may retain them as his own, upon being honorably discharged from the aervioe. Third. Details of the organization will be pre" rented by the Adjutant General. The heads of bn reaus will detail competent officers for the prompt examination and organization, arming, equipping, ,and supplying the corps. - Fourth. Major General WltirxruLD S. Eiatrooos is assigned to the command ofthin corps—headquar ters at Washington. By order of the Secretary of War. E. D. Townerinn, Assistant Adjutant General. Cityler Ktospital—ill Card. As a report bas been circulated, and, I am in formed, has obtained general credence, that I re. fused to accept donations for a Thanksgiving dinner at this hospital, I find it necessary, in justice to myself, to pronounce It an absurd fabrication. It is my Intention to provide a suitable dinner for Christmas. and if there are any persons who desire to make contributions for the benefit of3tte soldiers, for that or any other day, they may rest assured that they will be received with pleasure. IL L. SOIDELL, Burgeon In Charge Onyler U. S. A. Hospital, Germantown, Pa. Noviisrmin 28, 1864. [Dr. Schell's loyalty is above question, and his prompt denial was all that was needed to stop the unaccountable charge against him. There is some thing wrong about the slander. We have received several communications, which we declined to pub lish, denoomoing the surgeon in charge ; but most of them were anonymous, and in no case was the reef• deuce of the writer given.—En. Tens Palms.] NEW YORK CITY. - Nnw YonX I Nov ! 28,1884, inia BASK, STATEMVINT. The following Is a statement of the condition 4),r the banks of New York city for the week ending No vember 28 : Loans, increase.... - $2,000,000 Deposits, do 3,000,000 Specie decrease ' 1,000,000 Cironlittion, do 80,000 TEE EVENING STOGIE BOARD Stocks were dull at Gallagher's Board this even ing. G01d,232%; New York Central, 3.21x1 Erie, 94: Hudson River, 119 ; Reading, 188 ; Michigan Sontbern, 69 ' ,7i • Illinois Central, 127 Y; ; Cleveland and Pittsburg , 1083; ,• Cleveland and Toledo, 108,i‘ Ohicapro and Rock 107;;; ; Northwestern, 42%; Northwestern preferred, 7734 ; 01110 %go aria Fort Wasne, 102 ; Cumberland preferred, 41)4 ; Quicksilver, sox Gold, after the call, 231. THE PIUCE OY 9ot.p. Evening.—Mier the oloee of the board gold fell to 228%. ISIAMINE lITTELLIGSNCE. Arrived, ship Albert Gallatin, London • bark Clorinda Toganrog ; eohcponer Lane, St. John ; , P. A Canal Break—StoPpage of Mills. Boa Tow, Nov. 28.—Nearly all, the factories and mills in Lawrence have stopped running, owing to a break in the canal. Repairs are being rapidly made; and they will soon resume work. Mnnicipal Election at Hartford. HAILTPOB.D. Nov.2B.—The Hartford town election was carried by the Democrats by an average main• city of 170. The total vote was 4,002. ENOCH Atrium ILLUBTRATED.—Mr. liammatt Billings, Who has just added two years' European study to his already umpired fame, has ilhistrated Tennyson's ",Enoch Arden , ' in some thirty or forty drawings, Which have'been engraved by several of the boot American artists, and the volume printed by the celebrated Alvord, of New rYorkon rich, heavy plate paper, and published by Messrs. J. E. Tilton & Co , of Boston. As a work of art, this book has not bean excelled in Europe or this country. LARDS POSITIVE SALE OP BOOTS, SHOES, BS& GANS, Anicr GOODS, TRS.VELIJNO BAAS, PELT BATS, OAPS, &S.—The early attention of purchasers is requested to the large assor tment _ of boots, shoes. brogans, &e., embracing samples of 1,100 packages of first Mass seasonable goods of city and Esitern , manufacture, to be peremptorily sold by catalogue. on four months' credit, cominebaing this morning at 10 o'clock, by Tobn B. Myers /lc CO., .av,otioneers Nos. 282 and 284 igarket street. THE WAR. THE ADVANCE OF SHERMAN. EXTRACTS FROM REBEL PAPERS OF SATURDAY. A General Panic in Georgia. tiSi; L M 1 a M j .&RMY FULLY Great Things Expected from an ArMy in Buckram "RETREAT OF THONAS TO FRANK. TAN, NEAR NASHVILLE. f!:11;(04:?iaW14L 1 ):K.IM7 4 :. 4 4i11:41:1 1 ):ist;S:$0 , ' , 4 The Florida Suck in Chesapeake Bay. SOME REPORTS ABOUT HER ADJUDI- - CATION CORRECTED e „.• Arrival of the Rebel Admiral Buchanan at Fortress Monroe. BURNING OF GEN. BUTLER'S DESPATCH BOAT, THE GRAYHOUND. Narrow .Pecape of the General and Admiral Porter. FULL PARTIOUIARS FROM 011 K SPE.. CIAL CORRESPONDENT. LEE'S SOUTH CAROLINIANS . SENT TO SAVANNAH. " Their Place tlopplied by Troops from Early. RIJMOBED REBEL MOVEMENT IN THE SIIENANDOiR VALLEY., Late News from North Carolina, ADVICES FROM NEW ORLEANS GENERAL GRANT'S AIMMY. ". R. H. MoBRIDR'S CORERBT'aNDBNCR THE COLD ITEATEIBITISESONA.L—THE FORMLTION OF A COLORED CORPS. Correspondence of The Press. BI33OII.3IPSTERSIIITEG, NOT. 24, 1854. Our appetites for Thanksgiving dinners will be sharpened by frostif weather. Already ice has formed over the numberless pools abounding in this region, and the roads will soon bear travelling over. All the men not upon actual duty confine them selves to the inside'of their huts, so it is difficult to determine the deuree of happiness that softens their hearts when their faces are not visible. These are times when soldiers get home-sick. Old letters are produced and perused through the smoke that wilt escape from rude chimneys; pest scenes of plea sure are recalled and ruminated upon for long hours at a time ; strong, stern men grow weary :of inacti vity and thinking. If the expiration of term of ser vice be near at hand, these unhappy feelings be come more oppressive daily, till finally they really believe they would piefer being an angel to a sol dier. - Captain J. W. Burritt, 58th Regiment Pecullyl vania Veteran Volunteers, has been mustered out of service. His resignation, tendered on account of physical disability, resulting from wounds received in the service, bee been accepted. The captain is young man, and got his first wound at Gettysburg. Afterwards, while acting as aid to General Rice in the Wilderness, he was wounded, and again the third time when the rebels made their desperate Sunday assaultupon the Weldon Railroad. Brevet General Hoffman, upon whose staff he has lately been'inspector general, and his comrades In arms, part with him regretfully. One or tivolegiments of the colored troOpS, from the 9th Corps, passed over the Apponsattox to. Geri. Butler's departhaent. It is designed to form an en tire corps_ of these sable- soldiers, and leave the Army of the Potomac with nothing in Its ranks swarthier than the few Indians who may be found scattered among various Winoonein and Michigan regiments. Generals Ord and Weitzel are spoken '.of in connection with this new command. Un doubtedly this is the best plan to pursue. Kass to gether these troops, give them an opportunity by themselves, - and see if` there be anything in them of an extraordinary nature; There le mottling in the world to hinder them from making excellent - ed. diem _ Coolneso, annum, no - mobility, are the attri butes of tb0—.4.1--,oterans, and can be learned by soldiers Of any complexion. More care is required in officering them than white troops, because their* spirit of emulation and imitation is such that they en deavor to copy as correctly as possible every notion of their superiors. In the hands of, the white oni. airs reposes.the reputation of the black Soldiers. 'Prom the long extent of ourdines, can be gleaned nothing unusual. An unoommon Burliness on the part of the enemy's pickets has been discerned, but this is attributed to cold weather, and the inclination many of their'companions have to visit the Yankees on Thatthsglving. But little firing has been lately heard, and we are growing forgetful of cannon sounds. None of these deserters bring us any ink ling of Sherman's whereabouts or doings. They are all wonderfully or wilfully "ignorant or Innocent. Opinions vary; some maintain that Savannah if hie ultiniate destination, others Mobile. Very soon we may expect a. movement of troops on their side the Appomattox. _Since their cavalry has been mustered oat by Sheridan, A. P. Hill's corps are trotted about or. 6 . footback? to any point of their lines supposed to be threatened ; and it is more than likely his or some other command will be hurried from our front when the weather permits. Lee needs every teen here, bat his situation increases fn desperation. What is left the poor man but some terrible remedy I TROOPS SENT PROM LEE'S ARMY TO - SA.VANNAH-- • UNEASINESS .TN RICHROND 0 VSE aromas IN GEORGIA-TRTERSBURG SHELLED NO LONGER— DEPARTURE OF GENERAL HANCOCK. ErFORB PBTEHEIBUSG, Nov. 26.—The enemy's* pickets have been very pacific for four days. Last night they .began shooting with mach acrimony, end continued the wilful waste of cartridges till daylight. It was not general along the front, being confined to the vldettes in front of different brigades. .Wallace's brigade of HUM corps were this morning withdrawn from-the rebel lines, and their place taken by other troops. They were South Caro- Mans, and are said to have been marched to Sa vannah. Sherman , s movements cause much uneasiness to the good people of Rlclunond. It is unforttinate he - should select the route now being pursued, when the inhabitants of that country have their affection& alienated from Davis and his Confederacy. Many of the deserters who persist in coming to us main. tain that Georgia and two other States had actually named a day to assemble in convention and consider the policy and practicability of a reoonstruction. This reconstruction, say the knowing and devoted sons of the South, 4 .• means destruction to our cause. It must be prevented. We will oppose it." , All our cannons are silent. The artillerists will grow out of practice. Petersburg, shelled, shot at so much a few months back, .113 now scarcely noticed. Negroes and old men are gathering up , the irpn missiles we hurled among the houses in the town during the first three months after our arrival here. They turn the old iron over to the rebel ordnance officers, and get in return a receipt or certificate. Of course,,this has its value. So has the bounty bond for one hundred dollars which they give their soldiers. I have met some ungrateful fel lows, fresh from Lee's army, who question the munificence of these a uthorities. Would you be lieve it I the faithless rogues said of those bonds that the obligor paid four per cent. interest, and exacted five per cent. taxes from the obligee. They even laughed knowingly In your face when the generosity of the powers bestowing that liberal sum apon patriotic soldiers was mentioned, One fel. low came into our lines yesterday, about-day break. He liaA . (02 hlin a Caltelsoh-box. In com -pintnee with an order gruffly and profanely pro pounced by an unfeeling Yankee.picket, this diney South Carolinian, with the -dingy garments, un- Imokled the belt.; and threw ripen the damp ground his bruised dila battered cartridge:lt:ex. (living it a kick, he muttered the following apoStriVie : "Lie there and rot I I've worn ye three years, and ye'ye been growing more and more irksome. The old gun lies deep in the ditch, and now you're the last of Jeff Davis' harness. Lie there I" And with a look or Unmitigated contempt at the shabby and wrinkled box, the wretched-looking creature moved off Under guard. General Hancock has left.= at last There have . been various reports of this officer, and his where abouts, but I believe him to have been with his com• mend until yesterday morning, when Gen. Humph ries assumed control of the 2d Corps. The weather has moderated too mush ; last night the rain came again. Let us hope it may soon be over. GENTB:&I. BumEws ARMY. [ROLLIN'S CORRESPONDENCE .3 HOW THANKSGIVING DAY WAG GErmooATED-- YEBTIVITINS IN OAMP—ACOLDRIPTAL; FILM-PLOSION NEAR. maanto2m. HKADQUARTDES 2D BRIG., 3D D/Nr., 18TEE 00B,PB, BEFOND BIOHNOND, Nov. 2:5; 1864. Yesterday being Thanksgiving day in the loyal States, the good people of the Worth, in their abue dance, did not fagot the brave men in the field. The twkeys and other good things—which were for warded, reoeived,and distributed among the soldiers, and of which they partook heartily—had the ten decoy of recalling many oherished recollections, and suggested thoughts of home and kindred, when each and,all were gathered around the family hearth to partake of the Thanksgiving dinner in times of peace. After the copious showers of rainlwith which we have been favored for the past five or six days, It was exceedingly gratifying to welcome the genial rays of the sun, and experience the refreshing influ ences of an unclouded day. The dull routine of martial affairs was diversified :by the unusually exuberant spirits which were everywhere man'. tested throughout the various camps. From early dawn until into in the evening, cheerful voices, songs, and bands of made playing national airs, were invigorating the monotony of martial pais tence,, and giving evidence that the "old folks at home," in their kind remembrance on Thanksgiving day, had -struck a chord in the, hearts of the defenders of the Union which vibrated' to the highest note of general ezultidion. As the' TRE PRESS. PHILADELPHIA',' TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1864. brass bands, with. more than ofdlnary melody,. played,!' Rally round the Flig," the Soft cadences of "Filch Boated far in the distant*, the bravedb- - fenders, who caught the inapirinir strains, joined in the chorus with animation, until. the united har mony was wafted into the camps of our mistily. As if to remind us that :one still dwells amid the ~stern realities of war, the dull heavy roar ofthe enemy's mortar batterie belched forth their terri ble missiles of destruct ion for.the benefit-of those is hot ing In the Dutch ciao Canal. Otherwise the day passed off with uninterrupted quiet. Could the good people of the North have seen the radiant faces of the soldiers, as they were seated around the campfires cooking their turkeys, and "wituestied with what peculiar gratification they discussed their qualities, they would, oitother occasions of national significance, cheer them with bountiful supplies of eatables out of their abundance. . Last night was spent in singing patriotic songs and sentimental melodies. A string band was im provised from the sth U..S. C. T., and under the in etdration of some of the 'bilkers about these head quarters, discoursed very"good music. The officers of the 86th H. S. 0. T., now COM reanded by Major Hart,enjoyed together a Thanks giving dinner, which was distinguished by the pre sence of Brigadier Gleneifil Wild. Ohaplain Ste vens, a gentleman of whir, war also present, from which I would inter thskthe guests were not at ail afraid of his color rubbing:off by association. Other dinneis were given by regimental and staff aneurs, which were enjoyed withipecullar feelings of watt. Station. As they gathered a.rouird the taoles they thought of the loved one at home, for whose re tor mbrance of them they cherished the most en• (leering recollections for affording them a cause for genuine thanksAlving. , _ The explosion to which r referred in my despatoh of yesterday was, as I inferred, the result of care. leanness. The Richmond' papers of yesterday say that-" while some hands were unloading , a wagon load of shells , at the testing-greund , above the Tretegar works, one of the shells exploded, Setting off the balance." Three negroes and a white fore man, Nicholas Ingleson, were killed, while several others were wounded. A, FATAL OBELL—HILITART HEXlCHl , Tiow—oAl o Ptrizu OF pissenTlno ROUNTT JIIHTFIRS—REBEL 08. FlO4OBB NORTH OF TWO Ji;.H.l4-11.113 LAROIBI . ' n.sixwortOen BY 4/ELY , . IlivA:l3ql7S.B.Tßltatin THR Eirti?" Revolts MOHRONO, Cloy WY. t. J With propriety •I lei , / ray that 01 is quiet along the lines, except the usdal cannonading in the vi cinity of Dutch Gap. Oooasioualig, in this quarter, we are apt to experienoNa spasmodic manifestation-- 1 n of surcharged _ venom : bef e yesterday the enom. ' programme was a little,varied fro the customary. routine Instead of thevemy beigiusing y our bat teries rear the .110wIett r Xouse toedit:the Initiative, giving to him a specimen of our artillersy.ppatice. In a short time a shell, einatainingLGre&fire, was thrown thrown into Fr house which the plemy 0642 ''!JW 7 Ir _picket post, which, expirdifig, issinetitjately wrapt the hulloing in flames. This -seemed to eiagne. 4 4. 0 the rebels. For almost immediately his batteries In the vicinity of the "grave : yard" oeemid upon' a &hotpot, which was at this place, withertsvoi and fatal effect; Three ShelliVpassed through the house, doing it• fearful daipage, and killing John Richmond, Co. F., oth U;r` S. 0. T., and Andrew. Newham, Co, (1,-36ttt U: S. 0. y., and wounding Silas Hollis, 28th U. S. th,..T..itterhyreSYlll.!: the loft hand. The bodies of Richmond every d id' for Sixty raids around. Quivering pieces of:fiesk indicated theiocality of the frightful scene, rhilei fragments of the hearts an4lntestlcLeS were 12,nglog upon the branches obitruseigAboriog trees. - These men died at iheir post, and thiti bodlea,,or as *inch . of them as Gould be collecteg. together received Christian burial on the spot Where thefleirtiPds fence of the Union: - . '''ke lf . . About the same hour another scenes vital berg enacted in the 10th Corps. Viillians. Tiomps n Co. E, 3d United States Light ilixtilleryr, suffered the extreme penalty of militarVaW l in the preweihm of his own company, and the 3tV• Brigade, 34 Diel. Edon, for endeavoring to encourage desertion to "the enemy from the 9th Maine, from "whloh riiittirnatit the tiring party was seleoted. The evidence agalusr the accused was strong in every particular, art j dick no doubt as to his guilt. He (114 protesting kftriii. , noeence ; and with a degree of fortitude vrtabli ex I cited special admiration and regret that so bra St a man should - meet such an Ignominious fate , Ile took his stand by his coffin, and When a look( con. vinced him that he would likely fall kgainett, it, he, with much composure, stepped a littie aside, bu is id his blouse, and, as an Indication' for. UlO. , struck his hand against his left; breast, At requesthis hands" were left - free and 1113,01,1 re unbandaged. - Nine shots -struck tiii condom ed man, eight ' of which wisre , mortal, And three of which passed through his heart. major J. L, ,B , provOst marshal of the 10th Corps, ()endue d the execution. . On Thanksgiving day a number of reornitiw4io to the 6th, 7th, and 10th Connecticut Itegimentl; in the 10th Corp, and on the same evening it naial i clls- Covered that a number of teem- were missing irons camp. General Terry Immediately sent out In Or suit, and overtook some nine of them pressinq, to the right of our line, where the vldettes far apart, and the opportunities fornsoaping 4 intlthe lines of the enemy are most 'lnvorabl e . bonnty•jnallusre will probably be tiled o n ". nYi T and shot on Tuesdair - The _aniniuts, mann in which Gcneral Butler will deal- n wttis this : clam of persons will- materolly diminish! the umber of bountyjiiinpers, should, thdy attempt ta.aatstice their profession in the'.:Aimy - of the Tamer:. One thing Is evident, that the manner in whi/h these persons struck for the rebel lines shows a feAlltarity 'with the country and the position of.the tie amiss; which favors the impression that they hit gorteAlle same way 'Afore. Enlisting under the - antrplees of large bounties, coming to the„,xinpriniii ui . , to the enemy ,- Ay whom they are sent- the North to repeatthe iniquity, have beoome q Ito h business, and one In which it is to be fes. toe many have succeeded. General Butler has ter mined that - this practice shall cease, and 'you lay rol l rely upon it that he will make short wort of altwho may happen to fall into his power..l l The untiring industry of the enemy to defend" eh. mono onthe north side of the river, in front - the ri i a Army of the James, Is manifest In the covet tiou of every conceivable means of defence; Wha bey lack in men they snore than make up In ad ably built works. In front of Fort Burnham, for erly Harrison, they have three lines of palbsane rise one of torpedoes, and then — a well constrneted line Of breastworks. The torpedoes are placed in the ground, about lour feet apart, withlcerillttlq dirt thrown over them, that they may relidlly erpiodas should an advance take place in that direct:ten, of which the enemy is in daily fear. j fluehrod Johnson and Lee's brigades are in front of Burnham. For some days past I have bsained that Early's troops from the Valley were in faint of n i i the ]oth Corps , but hesitated to mention It n I could do so beyond all possibility of a doubt. - t is now certain that Kershaw's division is here, a it Is fair to suppose that the information whic re• ports more of the rebels from the Valley in our front is correct. Early has not yet -left that ne of operations, but may be expected here daily.. . The custom of saying fine,things about °freers has degenerated into Snob ludicrousness that l is almost a compliment to pass over in silence the merit:of a good officer. But when't - noldkei c t like Captain Charles N. Cadwala-der, of .t3i - e 2/1 :ran- Sylvania Heavy ArtillerY, does his country sash eminent service, It would meth—Lilo ingratitude to fail to acknowledge his merits. Throe years ago he personally recruited some two thousand men in his monster regiment., and, with the discipline , of a soldier and the chivalry , of a gentleman, he has followed the fortunes of his regiment through the trying ordeal of the stammer's campaign down. to the recent reconnoissance on the 27th of Ootobir. His health having become- Impaired by the hard. ships of a life in the field, he lass been mustered out of service, and leaves to-day for the. North, amid the regrets of a large circle of faillosple. belongingp his own and other regimente... . TER BERNING OP TDB aTnewine ORA:MOUND, DANOBROUS POSITION OP GEN..IIDTLIDI AND AD. NniAr. PORTEN. • " • •- ' STEAMER DANIEL WEBSTER, JANES RIVER, Nov. 27, 1864. -We have just been the witness of one of thee, river conflagrations which are so_ generally destruc tive in their remits. The Grayhonnd, Gan. Etta. let's fast-sailing and spledidry fitted-up steamer, took fire to-day, about 1 o'olock, under the following circumstances, and was burnt Otto water's edgo. Gen. Butler and staff, with aliveral of his personal friends, and Admiral Porter, were on board at the time, all of whom were saved by the timely assist ance rendered by the' steamei'Ploneer and tugboat Columbia, which happened to be near the scene of disaster. About 1 o'clock, while those on board were at dinner, the - Greyhound was being diV• van with- a little more pressure 'of steam than , she Could bear, when the furnace doors were burst open, and the fire spattered about in such prOpision as to render it impossible to extinguish it. The wood being dry, the flames spread rapidly. As the penhant of Gen. Butler was flying above the flames, it was evident that that officer watt on board, for whose safety no little appialreilliftioeasexperleneed, As soon as Captain Deering gait the filelie drove the Webster on to render, whatever sa sistanee might be rn his -power. His boats were all manned, aid. his hose gotten ready, but. by tilt^ time he reached the point opposite Hog laland, where they Grayhound was burning, the general and all on board had been placed on the Pioneer. It was fortunate that the steamer and the tug-boat Columblr'were at hand to reader snot timely assistance. AB we passed the Pioneer, Gene ral Butler called out to Captain Deering to take him on board, but when the captain sent a boat for him, he declined ooming, preferring to reach Fortress Monroe in the tug-boat Columbia, in which he and the rescued passengers and crew had taken passage. Some Jolly tars safely lowered the stars and stripes while the Grayhound was nearly enveloped in roaring flames, and after everything else was brought off, they ventured on board and 'secured the broad pennant of General Butler. It may be well to state that the Grayhound, when not used for the General's .transportation, ran be tween City Point and Varina Landing we a de spatch-boat. She left that landing as usual this morning with the mail, and being some what behind time, did not reach City Point until after the Web ster had left. The Greyhound having overtaken us, the mails and passengers were put on board thi boat. She soon !lamed us with her distinguishes company for Fortress Monroe. The scone of conflagration was about half-wa; between City Point. and Fortress Monroe. Ot , thing is Certain, as mely, that the party on beat bad a very narrow escape. GENERAL SHERMAN* ARMY. EXTRACTS PEON GRORGIA PAPERS - ATLANT. NEARLY ALL RIIIINED-THE GEORGIANS PERIOD OVER SHEERAN'S BOLD ADVANCE.. FORTMIBB MONROB, NOV. 28. The gavannasl Daily,l7etos of the 22d Met says that a body of trool , enteru gA theists shortly after it was evacuated repot . that the larger portion of the business section of tt town was burned. An editorial mentions that rei led govlllo was evacuated, and that the archives an-4, all valuable Government and personalproperty hat been removed. The columns of the paper are filly' with anathemas against the invaders under She, - man, and with proclamations from,generals of big rank aLd eminent men, calling npon,the citizens t' Georgia to time on mato., and 'mingle') all Interest In - oae desperate effort to crush and &mallet* Sher. 'man la his solar irreelstible adVanOe, DEPARTMENT THE TENNESSEE. THOMAS 11BTESATED TO intariSLlN. Lertnevirrac, Nov. SO.—General Thomas's report ed to have retreated to Franklin, Tennessee. The fhilltart authorities here say that if the report Is correct he roust be preparing to receive large rein forcements, on the way to him, before giving battle to Hood, and that he has fallen back for no other purpose. atrzarmas ROUTED. Lomsvu.l.3, Nov. 28..—A Federal force of 200 men Was Bent out from Donaldson end Olerkeeille yes terday, and attacked Multiage , guerillas, neer the Yellow Creek, routing them. They will probably capture the whole gang. OEN. COIICH SN . 8013T8 FOE VI3OM AB' ARNET. BOSTON, Nov. U.—Major General Conon, who has' been transferred from the Department of the Suagoehanno, and ordered to report to Major Gene• ral Thomas, left Taunters today for Tennessee.. DEPARTMENT OF WEE OULF. .OAPPIIEB OH 11103NL8 AND A LA fI.GZ AKOUNT QP 11ILB Oa. EXONANGE—PECOVKIST ON GENERAL OANDV—COTTON NNW& Ciento, Nov. 28.—The steamer Continental has arrived with New O,leans papers of the 21st last. Twenty-seven rebels were captured while cross ing from the east to the west side of the Mississippi river at Choctaw Bend, and had arrived at New Orleans. Among them was Capt. M. D. Mont gomery, who was moving to Texas. He had a large an ount of stock and t 8260,000 in foreign exchange, all of which was captured with Five notorious rebel female smugglers and mail. carriers have been banished outside of our lines by Gen. Davis, at Vicksburg, Gen. Canby Is rapidly recovering, and will soon be out again. lie 12 able to attend to business at his house. The demand for cotton has been somewhat Wreck ed lately. Sales have been made at 180 for low mid dlinge and laS for middlings. The strainer Darling has passed here with 2111 bales of cotton for ()Inolariat!. FORTRESS MONROE. NOTIOB TO MOTS-TROT ARE lISIZTOBTOD TO OIVE MORE ATTENTION TO THEM. DUTY. Polarizes Mormon, Nov. 20.—The following•i111. 'irritant circular, relating to the fature government of pilots, has been lamed by Rear Admiral Porter Norma ATLAZITIO SQUADEION, FLAG-83311. PtIALVBRN, NOV. 23, NU. Complaints are frequently made by the oont menders of naval vessels that pilots are seldom Seen until close into Cape Henry, and often not until•they get inside. In tlwe of war, when a de lay of an, hour is important to the Government, this neglect on the part of pilots to do their duty (for which they are so amply paid) will not be tole• ..val ed. ..,The beats roust cruiskfurther out, and be on the ioOltutit at all times for Government vessels. I will _ have a register kept of those pilot boats that do not do their duty ; and when brought to my notice, I will order them to, anchor them for the 'rest of the season, and not permit tLem to pilot in theBo fa. tei. Ia case an accident happens to a• Government vessel, owing to a want of energy on the part of pl lots,'er an &bares of pilot boats from their beats, without good and sufficient cause, proceedings will be instituted and the parties made to suffer for their negligence. Pilot boats, when they oan do so, must cruise at least eight (8) miles to the northward, and ten (10) miles to the southward of Cape Henry; and, when the weather will not permit them to cruise, they must anchor near Cape Henry, ready to give any Tend a pilot that may require one. Preference must at all times be given to public vessels. Naval officers are directed to report to me any de linquencies on the part of pilots, and are always to note in their log•bouhs how far outside the light -house the pilots offered.their services. One pilot boat must at all times be in port ready to take vessels out, and be prompt in complying with signals. DAVID D. PORTER, Rear Admiral, • Commanding North Atlantic Squadron. DITRIIING OP A MUTED STATES STEAMER—NARROW ESCAPE OP ADMIRAL rOnman, ORRItnaL sturLkil, AND STAYS. FORTRESS Dimino]; Nov. 27.—The mail steamer Webster, from City Point, reports that the steamer Grayhound, while coming down the James river, caught Ere and was totally destroyed. Gen. Butler and staff, and Rear Admiral Porter, were on board at the time, but all escaped without injury. Wasartrerrow, Nov. 28.—The steamer Gray hound, Gen. Butler's deepen% boat, was burned to the water's edge, yesterday, near Hog Island. Gene. Butler and Schenck, and Admiral Porter, were on board at the time, but the Pioneer Came up - and took them oft. Another vessel received the passengers and grew. ABHYVAL OP THE 888 BL ADMIBILL 81:88LANAN WABIUSZEITON, Nov. 28,—A despatch to the Navy . Department, from Admiral Foster, dated at For tress Monroe today, says: "The United States steamer Fort Morgan ar rived at this-port at 10 o'clock P. rd: on the 27th instant, with the rebel admiral Fravklin Bactur nan and his two aids on board." - Also the following telegram TSS riTtlerr fu:olarui. slam 131' A coma-Ea-ow. FORTRESS MONEOS, Nov. 28, 1864. To the Hon. Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy; I have just received a telegram from the com mander of the prize steamer Florida, Informing me that she had sunk In.nine fathoms of water. She had been run into by as army steamer, and balmy damaged. I have not heard the partionhum, but,wl.ll ,inform-the - Departmentlehen I reoelve the written report. " DAVID D. POIZTBR, • Bear Admiral. THE SHENANDOAH VA rx,Ey. A RIIMORA`T. .T UL LICWONSTAAT/011 AT NEW OBRBK can PIRDMONT BALTIMORE, Nov. 28-11 P. M.—lt la rumored here that the rebels have made demonstrations at New Creek and Piedmont; on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, but nothing definite is known in re• gard to the matter. THE FLORIDA CAPTURE. A VITIDIOATION OF THE "ASSOCIATED iaussn—inre inAL OP THE REPORT THAT THE FLORIDA WAS SENT TO BAHIA—REAL PAOTS OP TER OASE—AR." RIVAL OP TER 0113 W AT BOSTON. WASHINGTON, Nov. 28—Evening.—A statement appeared in one or more of to papers, errone. orally attributed to the Washington agent and re porter of the Assoolated Press, that Commander Collins has been ordered to return to Bahia, Brazil, with hie quasi prize and her officers and crew, and purporting to give the result of the action of the Government upon that subject, with other assumed facts - in the same connection. No such telegram originated with the agent and reporter of the Asso ciated Press, but there is the best authority for say ing that all statements to the effect that differences of opinion have arisen in the Cabinet concerning the ease of the pirate Florida, or that a decision has been made for or against, her restitution, are with- out foundation. No action of the Government has been taken in the case and no discussion of it has been held. The Navy Department anthorizes the following statement : The original order for the,Wachusett upon her arrival at Hampton Roads was.to proceed to Boston for repairs taking with her the prisoners captured on the Florida, to be consigned to Fort Warren. Before the order reached the vessel the prisoners bad been sent to Point Lookout, and, in a day or two, were transferred by the army authori ties to the Old Capitol. They were immediately ordered bank to Point Lookout, to be returned to the Wachusett,whiah at once sailed for.Boaton, arriving these on Friday Jut. The prisoners are doubtless ere this in Fort Warren. BOSTON, Nov. 28.—The captured MOM and men of the.pirate Florida have been sent to Fort Warren. [The despatch above referred to was pubUehed in these columns yesterday, just as it appeared in a Sunday contemporary, In the midst of Associated Press despatohes. At the time we supposed it to be bona fide, but it was afterwards discovered to be a special. of - a Pity evening paper.] NORTH CAROLINA. DESTRUCTIVE FMB AT NEWEERN.--REBEL RD.- TITLES AT 'PLYMOUTH—RETORTED PREPARA TIONS DT THE ENEMY TO EVACUATE VIRGINIA. NEWDERN, X. 0., via New York, Nov. 28.—The bre here last Saturday night destroyed twenty buildings, mostly business houses, some containing large stooks, mostly uninsured. The principal sufferers are Hurlbut do McLean, Robert Dunn, J. B. Oxley, J. A. Thompson, J. N. Allen, John McSorley, J. Lewis, L. Baer, L. Mon tanus, John Good, R. MoElvey, J. J. Schillinger, R. Berry, and Mr. Bangert. A skirmish occurred at Plymouth a few days since, in which the epemy were repulsed. It is reported that the rebels are fortifying the Roanoke and Ohowan rivers, with a view to the evacuation of Virginia. A daily line of steamers now runs to Fortress "Monroe from this city. Private Letter from General Lee. The original of the . following private letter from General Lee to his eon was found at Arlington House, and is Interesting as illustrating a photo in his character : ARLINGTON HOUSE, April 6, 1852. MT DZAh SON : I am just 'in the eat of leaving home for New Mexico. My floe old regiment has been ordered to that distant region, and I must hasten to see that they are properly taken care of. I have but little to add in reply to your letters of March 26, 27, and 28. Your letters breathe a true spirit of frankness; they have given myself and your mother great pleasure. You must study to be frank with the world ; frankness is the child of honesty 'and courage. Say what you mean to do on every occasion, and take it for granted you mean to do right. If a 'friend asks a favor, you should grant it, if it is reasonable; if not tell him plainly why you . cannot ; you will wrong him and • wrong • yourself by equivocation of any kind. Never do a wrong thing to make a friend or keep one; the man who requires you to do so, is 'dearly purchased at a sacrifice. Deal kindly, but ' firmly, with all your classmates; you will fled it the policy which wears best. Above all, do not linear to others wha tyon are not. If you have any fault to find with any one, tell him, not others, -of what you complain ; there is no more danger ous experiment than that of undertaking to be one thing before a man's race and another behind his back. We should live, act, and say nothing to We 'injury of any one. It Is not only best as a matter of principle, but it is the path to peace and honor. In regard to duty, let me, in conclasion of this hasty letter, inform you that nearly a hundred years ...ago there was a day-of remarkable gloom and dark ness—still known as the dark day—a day when the light of the sun was slowly extinguished, as if by an 4011pse. The Legislature of Conneotiont was in see glidon, and as its memberasaw the unexpected and un- . atimuntable darkness coming on, they shared in. the general awe and terror. It was supposed by many that the last day—the day of judgment—had come. Some one, in the conliternation of the hoar, moved an adjournment. Then there srnse sn old Pa.! ritan legislator, Davenport, of Stamford, who said, that It the lest day had Qom., ho desired to be! , found at his place, doing his duty, and, therefore, moved that candles bahrought in, so that - the lime m aid proceed with its duty. There was quietness in that man's mind—the quietness of heavenly wis. doni—an inflexible willingness to obey preeent : duty. Duty, then, Is the sublimed word in our lan guage. Do your duty in all things like the old Part. tan. You cannot do more ; you should never wish to do leas. Never let me and your mother wear one gray hair for any lack of duty on your Part. • Your affectionate fathe r, R. E. Lae. •. TO CliMf. GOSTIS Lsti,• ThaPhagiving among the Freedmen. The annexed circular was issued by Gen. Neaten to the freedmen In his district: BRAT/FORT, S. C., Nov. 6,1884. To the Freedmen in the Depot fount of the South: The President of the ; United States has appoliited Thursday, the 24th day di November, to be a day of public thanksgiving and pram. In Ito Cadence with his proclamation, I advise you all to refrain as much as possible on that day from year ordinary avocations, and meet in your respective places of worship to render thanks to Almighty God for the continued blessings which he has vouchsafed to you during the past year. Your harvests have been abundant, and have been railed and gathered with out the sound of the drivers whip and bombe these fair fields, which have been for so many years the scene of your toll, sorrow, and degradation—oolong, that scarcely a vestige of your humanity or manhood seemed lett. Thank the Lord that In these early days of yourjourneyings towards the promised land of liberty. He has sent kind friends to guide you in the paths of knowledge, where in slavery you could not go. Thank the Lord that your sons and bus bands and brothers have been enrolled under the starepsegled banner, and have struck brave blows for Liberty and Humanity. Praise Him for the glorious successes of 'our armies In the field fighting for Freedom and the Union. The golden mellow light which LOW brightens the daWnlng future, and bids us hope for another four years of freedom or war, gives promise that a mighty nation will soon sepal the ballot.box, "Liberty antfUnion forever," "you are forever free I" and if so, you can thank God for the re.election of Abraham Lincoln. In the free North, where the Pilgrim Fathers lived, and taught their descendants to love liberty and hate oppression, the now time-honored custom was established and handed down by them, to meet at the close of the year. when the harvests were all Fathered in, to thank God for all His mercies, to settle' the balance between duties performed and neglected, and, guided by the fallureS of the past, to pray for strength and - progress for the future. Year after year, as he read the Governor's procla mation to the assembled people, the minister hag been seen to close the book, and, with reyerent face, as if his soul were in the prayer. repeat its olOsing Words, " God gave the Commonwealth." Although the footprints of liberty in South Caro. line are only found on the sands of these Sea Is lands, .and are kept there by cannon, still let us also add it here, and say from our hearts, "God says the Commonwealth of South Carolina." • • R. Siorvort, Brigadier Germarand Military Governor Tra SOUTHERN STATES. We have received all the Itichmond journals of Saturday, the 26th, and present our readera nume rous interesting extracts from them. The tele graph, however, maintains a studied silence con cerning the operations of Sherman—all the news the .journale give from him being extracts from Georgia papers or brief editorials on the informa tion derived from snob sources. They assert that this reticence Is observed, not because Sherman is punning a victorious career, for they insist that they have very "oheerfal and agreeable news from Georgia," but because it "may furnish information to y,te enemy." The reasons are thus generally, stated Lille .1 1 . 4 Ptl 1 ch: . 1 "The information-tent Georgia is of the Edisti -, . hopeful character. But all the New York papers 1 admit that they have had no intelligence from Georgia for two Weeks, except what they got from Southern papers, n makes It the more important that the Southern papers should preserve atria silence in regard to military movements in that State. This explanation should relieve our people of any uneasiness arising by the reticence of the press. , What this information of such a "hopeful charac ter" is they do not say, but they strive to make their readers believe that there is =army in front of Sherman never before heard. of. This assertion, which MUM to be rather empty, will be found included in the italics in the following article com menting on an editorial which appeared a few days ago in The Press. The article from the Whig is entitled : THE I'ELLADELPHIA PRESS" UPON SHERMAN. • "Every additional mail from the United States strengthens us, in the belief that the people of the North rely for success, in Sherman's " grand' cam. pulpit," upon the hypothesis the,:, he will bnallo wed to march uninterruptedly through the heart' of the South. They have an instinctive fear of the least opposition to his progress, and they foresee, In a delay on his art to reach the heped.for goal, the moat disastrous Consequences. For this reason, their press bolsters up the people's hopes by pro claiming that Lee can afford no succor to the cause In Georgia; that Wilmington, Savannah, and Charleston are dependent upon their garrisons for safety ; that Hood, watched by Thomas, Is incapa ble of sweeping down upon Sherman's rear; that, In brief, Sherman has nothing to fear from any: armed Confederate force in his advance, and that, therefore, having nothing, to fear, he cannot be otherwise than successful. F,ollowing up this idea, the Fbiledelphia, Press thus gently balances itself into delusive dreams, in an editorial entitled "Sher man 'Unopposed :" "To us the military preblenieeemil not what Sher man, but what the rebels will do. For the first time in the war, a, great Union army has been liberated from the necessity of defending a position or eon fronting a rebel force, and is able to move inde pendently In any direction its commander may choose. The presence of an army as large and well appointed as that of • Sherman in the very heart of the Confederacy, inspired with a just confidence In its strength perfectly untrammelled and almost unopposed, Is a new elemeet in the war, and rave-- intionizes• the entire situation. Sherman moves Into_tho granary-of the South and upon the centre of its great railroad communisation. Unless his march is thwarted, he will cat the Confederacy into pieces." Our readers are pretty well aware, by this time, that Sherman has been "opposed" somewhere in Geo 7 gia ; indeed, that his march has been. thwarted," and that the poUoy of prancing uninterruptedly through a vast tract of hostile , country, burning, pillaging, and destroying, has been contested, some where, by an army that, possibly, Sherman may never have token into consideration in the formatton of his Impressed, then, with the agreeable fancies thakit, has pictured to itself to glance at the ab. ject condition of•theConfederacy, The Press thus satisfactorily disposes of the whole sabject in a grand review of the situation : " We hold it to be self-evident that Lee Can extend 'no help to the Cotton States, and has difflealty enough in taking can of the rebel capital. Nor Can Heed, still at Florence, escape the vigilance of Thomas. In the meanwhile Sherman is advancing with fifty thousand men on Augusta, and every tranip of that steady march makes the hollow ground of the rebellion tremble. What is his ant mate object we do not can to gnus, bat all around him are the storehouses of the Confederacy. It is not what he will do, but what the rebels can do, that excites speculation, and unless there are armies in the South of which nothing has ever been heard, we must believe that they can do nothing.” The Press,_ In the above,• repeats the stale old rumor that Sherman has a beggarly array of fifty thousand men only with him. Why not enter into the spirit of the occasion, and, with the New York Herald, award him his due meed of seventy thou sand '1 In the picture of the future that The Press conjures before its imagination, does it see the vi sion of Sherman entering Charleston or Savannah, or Wilmington, with banners flying, and with the tread of an " unopposed" conqueror 1 If it does, it sees that which shall oome to -pass when Vanden: decken comes to 'life again, shall discover El Do- rado, and when Prester John, seated upon his ole pbant, shall appear once more—about the time of the Greek Halends. The bitternesS of the following article from the Examiner is accounted for when we know that it has been, almost from the beginning of the war, a consistent opponent of the administration of Davis. It has more courage than any of the other Rich mond papers, and consequently, on most occasions, How LITTLE SHERMAN REALLY RISKS—HIGH IMPORTANCE OF AILHASTINO HIS ADVANOR.— No doubt can now be entertained of Sherman'a designs, or of his destination. When Davis sent, and Hood took, the only army apparently in the country sit his shoulders, and carried it through the mountains to stick it In the mud between ruse n rabbi aid Florence, Sherman determined to make an at tempt on the lines of communication between Vir ginia, the Carolinas,, and the rest of the Confer. Levitz States. His work In Northern Georgia was done, and for ulterior operations any point on the sea-coast would be a better base than Chat nooga. Be risked much injuppearance, but perhaps little .in reality, by destroying his communications. A marching army can transport ammunition for at least three pitched battles, and for suip• piles at this season of the year he might partly rely on the country through which lie proposed to pass. If he could take Macon or Augusta by..the way, he would accomplish great things ; but the destination of those towns was Dot his main object. Hie design was to destroy the ratlgistes as far as he could, which ran from Southern and . Western Georgia to Vir ginia and the Carolinas, and to rest his army at H ea ufort and Port Royal. That he would go to that point rather than Savannah is nearly certain, for if he directed hie coarse to Savannah or to. Charleston, he would find fortified and well-defended cities, and his troops ex hausted by a long march, both in strength and ammunition, would be wholly unfit to re duce either place. But the enemy already has possession of Beaufort. He would have no fighting to do there, and he would find transports laden with every. species of supply await ing his arrival. It is, therefore, reasonable to be lieve that Beaufort is the point of destination, and that if he fails at Augusta, he will make his way thither as fast as the Confederate troops permit him. if the reader will glance at the map, he will perceive that when Sherman has passed from Chattanooga to Atlanta, and thence to Beam/dart, he will have severed every railroad between Georgia and Virginia. This Severance will be easily re paired ; but if he can establish himself permanently at Beatkfort, he may be able to operate against those roads repeatedly. Furthermore, Eteasslort Iles be. tween Charleston and Savannah, and can be con veniently used ne the base of land operations against either city. It is evidently highly important that Sherman should never take Aligned or Macon, and should never reach Beaufort. The Milledgeville Recorder, says the Dispatch, °obtains the following cheering announcement— that Is, if Sherman will keep his troops in town for awhile : "Some excitement has prevailed in the city for two weeks past on account of the existence ofsmall pox amongst us. We believe the cases are decreasing In number, and no fears are entertained of ailkirther spread of the disease." CHRISTMAS DINICERS 808 THE R3DIII. SOL- D/BIM—Two gentlemen informed us yesterday that, In accordance with Our suggestion, they would send turkeys to the army for a Christmas dinner. We have Informatlonthat their example will befollowed very generally in the country. Let the friends of the soldiers, however, see that the conscript law against ablabodied gobblers Is rigidly enforced, so that there may be a big dinner and a merry time in camp on Christmas day.— Whig, Saturday. CONDITION OB THB REBEL TROOPS AT PSTRIIS BURo.—The Sentinel says : Oar troops are In One condition. Clothing, blankets, and shoes are being daily issued to them, and full rations of floor or meal, beef or bacon, sweet potatoes, sugar, mo lasses, toffee, rice, salt, and soap are daily given to them. THE WBATEIBR AND GITNICUAX. GRAFT.—The quiet of the military lines in front of Petersburg and Richmond was unbroken yesterday even by a solitary gun. if there was any tiring at Dutch Gap, the cannon were not beard in this city. The wea. ther was clear and drying ; should, it continue for three or four days, the ground will be In the condi. Bon for which alone Grant Is waiting to resume ac tive operations. But the Season when any conside. table length of good weather can be expected has passed. The period of snows and winter rains bi at hand.—Dispatch, Saturday. Tan DUmon GAP GAWAT.,—We have reprmts the Northern papers of the near completion.of the Dutch Gap Canal. This alumna an improvement much needed, and will be of signal benetlt to those of our citizens engaged in navigating the James, when the enemy are driven from Virglttia, our in. dependence achieved, and our ports opened to the commerce of the world. It will prove of very little use to the enemy In their operations against Rich mond. FMB IF Pirruisszhao.—The tobacco factory of Warrington 8: Brooks;14 Petersburg, Virginia, was burned on Wednesday night. The loss In fixtures, building, etc., was $lBO . OOO, of whia about $BO,OOO wss covered. by Insurance. Besides this, 250,000 ponnds of et*sms, 700 boxesbf manufactured tobacco, and MOO:pounds of leaf tobacco, were deetroyed.— Emeriti:mfr. • PREraOIIALI3.—We and the following personnle t one olif which Is addressed to a Philadelphian : RicutrOtin, Nov. 22, 1868. To. Mr. Asbury Bailey, South aired; bottom' Fifth and Stith, pitandripiriii: Wlll you be kind moue/ to let um 4.1141 W lOW 'AY brothers J. and S. are, and what they are doll; I Tell them to answer this personal through the New York News, and le; us know how sister and faintly are In Baltimore. Father, mother, and all the Well), are well. How Is A.unt Elisabeth, Unole Joe, Aunt Liza,_and all of their families , D) write to mother by flag of truce, and let us bear by personal. Tell the boys to send their pictures in a letter, and let us know if they have seen Miss IC,te, and oblige their sister, Mae. S. T, BeCtlll6oll. lerrinttnuatt, Nov. 23,1664. To Parties in Frederick City, Md.: Jenrte's health is very bad her husband, GK. S., Mac, and I, are well ; Isr. R. P. and brother, and Brad St are well. Carrie, Texas, , and their fa milies are well ; Jimmy and family are. well, but looking anxiously for the children, Will (3-. and Aunt E. grant two requests to one whom they may never see'? viz : please assist Ow tic P., and have an iron railing put around Bettie's grave. lam is One spirits, end shall continue so in any event.- Are the dear ones on the mountain, in the city and lane, well? I think of on all constantly, and shall Ore you to the end, wherever my home may be. Yours only, /8/111A1BL, Convention for the Amendment of the Committal ion. A convention to secure an amendidelit to the Con stitution "which shall nonor God, by thankfully avowing Him as our Supreme Father and Ruler, and bless man by securing him universal liberty end all of his other inalienable rights," will meat ln the West Arch-street Presbyterian church, Eigh teenth and Arch, at 7 3L this P.M., and will °Outlaws on Wednesday. The movers in this measure have a petition in circulation which prays Congress to take steps to have such an amendment adopted. Attached to the petitlion is the following argument in favor of its object : God made our country for men, and men made cur Constitution for the country. The country; in cluding the people, stand first in order of time and value. Everything human is Imperfect, and to tat Constitution its framers made twelve amendments in fourteen years. The last amendment was made in 1804, and sixty years of the most marvellous increase in population, territory, science, art, wealth, and education, and two foreign wars, and a most 'Alvin. tic contest with an utterly infernal rebellion, have certainly to schooled us that we can new see what amendments are neEded. and how to make thorn. The authors of the Constitution were only men, and we should be unworthy of our sires, If, with all their light, learning, and experience to start with. we failed 'to surpass them after the lapse of the sixty years, in which the steamship, railroad, steam-press, and telegraph have began to bless the world. 3 0pr present Constitution excludes the word slavery because our fathers thought that it would soon die out, end leave nave of its hideous scars to mar their fair fabrio: - Our proposed amend. went *lll, Ifadopted. expressly exclude the Word and Me accurstd thing. PROGBEsS Is A Dory, AND WHAT Or 0 HT TOES 545 BP litre pray with faith, end work Ulbelp answer our owe prayers. Our new (law-ism comes Into power March 4th.1865, and In It we have a majority of ever two-thirds la favor of truth and liberty, and it ix our duly to make sure of fall and permament protection against the &gnasin as nuns of slavery upon liberty. Without this emend. meet some future Supreme Court may possibly annul the Emancipation Proclamation, and some pre pillar puppet may, for pelf and power, pander to the greed of gold and lust for dominion, so as to continue the "sum of all villanies,” and seem to heal its "deadly wound" long after it ought to have been buried from off the earth, on which it has for ages been such a grievous stench and dire scourge." Moreover our present Clonsttyption shows striking traits of French Infidelity. If was LESS OP CHRIS TIANITY IN IT THAN THE DECLARATION OF IRON PREIDENCR, OR THE ARTICLES OF 001 , TPNO RATION. Many wise and sincere patriots havernourned this fact, and, is high time that we should now amend the organic law of Mir -4;;;;', lft this most important particular. GOD nye (1 Sam: 11. 301: t Them shat honor sos, I will honor, but they that despise ms. shall be lightly esteemed." All history proves that this Is true of individuals and nations. The desire of the is, that over a million of eignatures be appended to the petition in time to present it to the President on the 4th of March nextAwben be enters on hie second term of offtte. All interested in each an amendment are requested to use their energies to collect signers. Pnbne Entertainments. CHEEVITPUT•STESET TECRATRF.,—The beautiful drama of r "l'Pauvrette " will be plodneed here this week, to be withdrawn at its close in favor of another novelty. The excellence of the acting in this play the completeness of its stage arrangements, and the beauty of its scenery; became more apparent to wards the end of last week, as all concerned In the production of the piece acquired experience in Its difficulties by practice. The avalanohe now falls so satisfactorily that it is greeted nightly wity rounds of applause. The exquisite chorus of the peasants, while conducting Pauvrefte to her mountain home, charms every listener. The acting, too, is generally very meritorious. Miss Germon has taken a part as different from her usual line of character as Robert Brierly was from Mr. Cilarke's ordinary persona tion, and has succeeds comparatively as welt She exhibits as Pa:uvrette a tenderness and depth of pathetic feeling for the possession of:which she had not. prey lowly you acknowledgment from the public, although we had given her credit for it sines her per formance of Diavoline in the "Seven Sisters," a character which, though comic in its entirety, eon• tamed some well portrayed touches of pathos. The "Good-night" song to the "Alpine rocks, which o' , r the clouds arise, And rear their heads anddet contiguous skies," is undoubtedly the gem of the play, both in its con• caption and rendition. Occurring just before the Introduction to the hut of a stranger, whose abode there Mines at first such_ misery to its tender °cou pons., his Mansly-toisTahing- "The siek'ning swan thus Ungs her silver wino, And, as she troops, her elegy she '&1301. " The oharacter of Bernard, an heroic veteran of the "grand army," a survivor of the retreat front Moscow and a long imprisonment in Siberia, re ceives ample justice , at the hands of Mr.. Baker. The incessant effort of Bernard to escape from his captivity, his laborious starchier his wife and child; his discovery of the latter., his grief at her rain, his attributing It, to her friendless and unprotected state, and his invocation .of mercy for her sin, render the charactOr a very amiable and interesting one. Mr. Baker's performance is good in every part, and is particularly effective in the scenes in the chateau Grandval: ' Maurice is not a part calculated to display fully Mr. Mardaunt's ability, yet It is played in that ac tor's accustomed good style. Mr. Ward, although he impriived, we think, towards the close of the week, is not well cast in Michel. He gives but little force to the • character, apparently not properly entering into Its spirit; be sides, he does not look at'all like a soldier, despite his military trappings. Bliss Vaughn and Wm. Chapman are tolerably good In their roils i'the latterlady Is, however, cast out of her tine of chse radars, which Jo aSSentlally comic. Mr. Murdoch, a 'nephew of the well known actor and orator of the same name, has recently made hie appearance in the afterpleoes at this theatre. He acts with much spirit, and, being yet very young, evinces considerable promise of achieving an envi able reputation in the future. The altarpieces at the theatres are generally the least esteemed — portions of the evening's perform , since!, but are sometimes decidedly the best. Tula is the case with the Chestnut•street Theatre, which is fortunate In having two clever low comedy men— Mr. Walter Lennox and Mr. Ward. -The humor of Mr. Lennox Is melancholy, but is often irresistible. His characters are either sick, convalescent, or half starved, but his fan is of a distinctive character, its specialty being the exprosion of nausea, hypo chondria, sadness, and helplessness. A more vigo. roes Instance of Mr. Lennox's talent is his Worm wood, in - the farce of the "Lottery Ticket." This character, a sort of farce Mephistopheles, abound ing in morbid mischief and bitter fun, is ono of his very best. AROMSTREET THEATRE.—Mr. Clarke had a grand house last evening on his return to the city which has been the scene of so much of his best humor. "Watitillove," which many of our theatre goers have seen him play a half dozen times, was witnessed with renewed pleasure. His bill for this evening presents another generous treat. A Rowan Arave.—Buried alive ! What fearful' import is eonve) ed in those two words ! What visions of horror do they conjure up, COnsti- Luting in anticipation, at lea% one of the most erquiatte tortures linaginable! An unnatural death is at all Wiwi linked in thought with the feelings of indefinable awe, but the idea of dying under such horrible circumstances, conscious of the inevitable fate which a few momenta will bring—struggling to be freed from the dread chamber of death but unable to avert the certain doom—is maddening. One oan almost imagine the choking suffooation, the frenzied and ineffectual ef forts to break through the dull earth and buret into the free air of heaven, and the imagining - causes the blood to curdle and chill la horror. The very possi bility of such a fate haunts many people like a spec tre, and invests death with a frightineall it would not otherwise possess, One of the most curious oases of this genus which hes ever been recorded, has just occurred at Hyde Park, near this city—goose which has almost batted the skill of physicians of known ability and high re pute. During Wednesday night last, Alex. itloLeod, a young man of 17 or 18 years of age, residing with, and the sole support of an aged grandmother, was attacked with severe fits of vomitingg and pugging. Re did not, however, appear to be dangerously in, and told his relative, who was aroused from her bed, to return to her room, or she would make herself ' sick. The old lady did so, and, finding that her grand son soon became quiet, went to sleep and thought no more of the occurrence until morning, when, on entering his room, she iyas horrified at finding him dead. Those who assisted to prepare the, corpse for burial noticed that the flesh was re markably pliable and undeathlike, the eyes re mained naturally closed, the features had not the. rigidity of death, nor had the face lost its natural , freshness. These circumstances aroused the at tention of the friends, and Dr. Bogue, of this city,. was summoned to give his opinion regarding the. death of tue youth. Atter an investigation, . he affirmed that life had certainly departed. and that the patient bad died of cholera morbus. On. the strength of this decision, an inquest was lick. upon the remains, and a verdict of "died by natu ral causes , ' returned. The body was then plowed in a coffin, and the funeral ordered for the neat day. On Friday, however, blood commenced be flew rather freely from the note, and the burial-was : de: toned until Sunday afternoon. In the interim, the corpse was closely watched. but atIU • tbs. features retained their lifelike pliability. On. Sunday morning, a funeral sermon was preached la the church, by Rev. S. S. Smith, of Oleaverville, - who, in the afternoon, was invited to ofilolateat the ba nal services, but when the time for the flineral arrived, the friends still declined to takathe nlapork. sibility of burying the body, and it was left unlit tarred. Yesterday evening a number of physicians' left the city for the purpose of thoroughly investi gating the body, and In our neat lame we will be able to give the result of their deliberations. The body is deactribed as presenting the appearance of restirg in a natural sleep—the eyes are not sunk, nor have the features set. There la ne death-like smell proceeding from the body,. and the blood appears to still be retained In the veins. If death. has really enE.ued, this hi one of the most estraordi. nary cases which has ever been noticed, and will well repay medical investigation. McLeedt Watt a young man of full florid habit. He had been a mem ber of the 134th Illinois (hundred day) Infantry, and for some months previous to being mustered out of the service had been in delicate health/. still tin meow consequences wet o anticipated, triad the day previous to his death. If death it be, he viirar,(o 3l , o2 l health and spirits.--Bosion Post, 28th , Tint Tortow2o "Puma" TO BE taros= UP —The Toronto Webs of last Wednesday says "At noon yesterday Judge Harrison gave Judgment in the case of the pikes. He said that, after haying spearebed np the law as fully as possible, he had:come to the conclusion that there was no course. lell apes for him to pursue but to order the Issue of Urn writ of replevin for the recovery of the pikes from the au thorities. His Honor gave his reasons let this j u d,,,, ment, and referred to the anthoritlea Wider whieh lie acted. The writ was, we believe, at once taken out, but, from all we can hear, chore 'will be some difficulty experienced in finding the pikes, as they have mysteriously disappeared from th e room in which they w ere placed. Provided they cannot be fc und, McGuire's only course will be to sue th e ae .. tboritles for the value of the articles. It is expected that he will havei,a very interesting time of it b e f ore be again gets htdd of his toOthlsteka,' as some Ot his fellOWectOtil;llo4 them." IMPORTANT INDIAN Tairure.—florrwe n aa Snakes/ ' Surerintiindent of Indian Affairs for bi.,,,. tory, held a. greed council with the sh r ;,2; tilaDA (commonl know Idonday last, the loth Ins t., and a tria'trri3O, fur all the land thirty miles each ride of fro the sorce to Ito morph. Twa l e ,d lit ty m Indians u were present. Tani Terantl r f' Civil Chief, and twelve headmen r ept , s , .shoshones. Color el Maury, Maier Tror; b ., l otter LfElcers of the garrison were witrie,;;!. contract. This treaty Is all that could b e . . i .:' the rattlers in the Territory, and will Senn clop to Indian troublea. The f lovernor L with us but a few days, and km saeotriL4 work of months, and in some l ustanevs r Be will leave in a .evr cols for the tnith.- the Territory. for the purpose of effesti with other Indian tribes —Moho Sfatemee. St, Loaf, Iffeurketts No v. 29. Cotton firm ; receipta for three Pretty Beinp firm, with an nnward tendency; rat a1..95; dreseed, 32 t 6Q2 70. pnperflue.. 4.7 76 ; extra. ).14, *9.60(t10 25. Wheat 2ese. lower, rat. , for prtree to Owlet. Oats beavy at 78(4900. Biwa active awl hb her ; sales at 41.709 i 7 5 11 - 1 e following Government e •ntractg 1 . 0.097: 3.000 bbls bless Pork, h 33; 2 , 45, bt Beef, slB@/-8.75' ~3'TY I'lC~ ';ids A GIIACWIML 11111 i VALUABLE prm 2i , readers may feel inelired to knew our persistently advocating a prero ronce Wheeler k 'Wilson" over all ether S;o ok chines. We - will here tell them at le,at ire o , reasons why. The Wheeler k Wu," machine In existence that Is therwlrdy ' all kinds of family sewing. Other maeldsetare, to work well on certain grades and elo!es date bet this operates with equal ea,,, neti and precision - on.all fabrics. from the ticot is to four thickzeisekof the hearten brqviS)V, with a number of other snoetisr ehrraver renders the Wheeler Sr Wilson Itlacht,e ty.e. above all others suitable for pee. mt i, ts , wife, daughter, sister, sweetheart, or resale, this accounts for thastfe.l me o ndltnert th=e dally ebb sand flow at the Wheeler te ta blishinent, No. 70; Chestnut attest. E ver chine warranted, and the money n tor , est ii ttrely satisfactory. _ - N 00,0316,00 of the•Wheelar & wa loa atsld' in Philadelphia. CALL R.LT TOISB taFt134,11.014, IeD,VP.—& Pennsylvania garner, in an to Etsistitzrons. ear. " The minor wants geat tallow candles, whisky, linen, beeeway, • ani thing else he oar. get." If he would 111 Q gaxit melt, ate. Moderate cost we can ermacle: commend him to the Brown Stone Cietain4 , Rockhtll & Wilson, Nos, GO3 and 606 Uhogr above COTTON ..&ND CORM— Cotton and Corn were mighty ghu o ., , Who differed at times un different Wp m To the country's dire conitulx Corn waspeaceible, mild, and jolt, But Cotton was fond of saying y o ,, So, after he boasted, and bullied, r _ Ho got np a revolution. But to the course of time the bubble it And Corn was King, and Cotton woe% Now, Corn was loth to make it a fight, But. he felt that Cotton would crust it So be came to the law's protectior He rtdes,rar a rply a million strong To lift up-the right'afitl pat doma ti And it certainly seemed that he, ere i Should wipe out the Insurreatio; Clothing made of ail materlato, and worsted, at Chas. Stoios /fc. Co,'s "one under the COlttLuentaL - Baseaanre i Clurrnma, Bargains In Olethlng ar Bargains in Clotblie Bargains in Olothiag, At Granville Ste 1 311 At Granville Stokes= V. At Granville Stokee Old At Granville Stance , Pl.' No. 609 Chestnut Street. No. 609 Chestnut Street. No. 009 Chestnut Street. Me. 609 Chestnut phi:et. Art lanantorre Poomnr-Boom—The be l books are those manufactured by Mes Era. Hughes. No. 44 North Sixth street. They; of one piece of loather, by folding which with the necessity_of stltoblng, makha and durable book. Warm VIEELGIA WAX O ILATILLES.—.. site °osmotic hee no equal for beam:lrvin ing, and preserving . the complexion. It i from pure white wax, hence its extraordin; ties for preserving the skin, making :t smooth, and transparent. It is most soothin, ■having, Mires chapped hands or Dpi, removes plea, blotches, tan, freckles, or sunburn, on; parts that pearly tint to the face, neck, and e 7 much desired by ladles of taste. Price So, 10, Cents. Hunt & Co., 183 South Seventh 41 South Eighth street. PCISCHASNIN may rely upon getting the , at Charles Oakford & Son% Continental 11( GET THE Plasy.—Olergymen, as & clam recommend an article unless they have go , to know It to be valuable. Procure of ani one 01 Mrs. Allenla circulars of her Work Restorer and flair Dressing, and you ean read twenty testimonials of our most eminent clergy each one recomMendlng in the strongest term use of these preparations. They restore, !aril and beautify the hair... If you wish to rest( retain your hair through life, use them. druggist sells thein. ' n29-tuttmg, HUNT'S BLOOM or Roes'—A charming col( the cheek, does not. wash off or Injuro the Manufactory:4 only by Bunt ft 00., 41 Soutv. street, and 133 South Seventh street. Avraarriou le directed to the advertleem Mr. J. C. WickerEham, Cancer Doctor, to be In another column. SHAKER FLANNEL SHIRTS AND DEI Gentlemen 11111 find a large assortment, all n C. Henry Love'e Famishing Dept, nortewet ner of /Q- Fifth and Chestnut streets. Doti Lesoass Fars—An elegant assort:toast Oakford Sr. Son's, Oontinental HoteL Osomin &max & 1110. , s Pianos, and Hamlin's Cabinet Organs, for sale only by Gould, Seventh and Chestnut streets. not, Pn.fiers Da Torrarrra FRAnownm—For ling the skin, eradicating wrinkle], si marks, pimples, &a Price $l. Hunt hCc Seventh street, and 41 S. Eighth street. Sc) Era, EAR, AND 0AT1..111334 INWOOSettilj by J. Isaacs, BL D., Oculist and Azalea, MI Axtifietal oyes inserted. No charge for • Lennie' Alt]) Camtaratn's Reoro—Lat, at Marisa Oakrord h Son'/ Continental 1.1, UNDERSBrETS WAD D114.11r2138, of silk, lambs' wool, cotton, and &aim* may be had Henry Love, Air Fifth and Chestnut. no 7 VA1413 KELM 011, Paorawrsas.—Parties of purchasing Oil . Lunde in Wen nango county, may secure some Tallnablr applying early to no'ffpat Gwarnamor's Hats—An the latest strja Cha - ase thadttril & Son% Qpntinental Rota URITILS AT THE HOTELS, The Con Eamon Hodrignes, Hexleo Jobn Idendenball,Pittab'g J E TJ aches, Boston NCatper,Doston T Campbell, &Wanes, 0 P T Shins, Sandusky, 0 H D Neays & wf, Tows P Dwyer & In,Cliteago Copt J P Gill es,V N him)) Sherwood. Altentwn i F N nrclier, Palm. P D Townsand,Bostoi J Pot %yr B N C C Blsir k wf.Pitisiirg J V Guy, Pew York J Keith. Boston J Dunckelbergor, Pa Cletar,Coba k Marano & la Mrs Dr Dodge,. Baltimore W Clark at stall, Balt J Collln, New York Jae kobestook, New York , Gee W Snyder Pottsville Lt Cll3 A.:felted & wf, MIA Maj El Davis II S A Mrs Jonas liPiencli Boston! CO Miller, New York Fronk Jan don, New York Jas C Lndlow,Newark,N J ti Bobadman,Bew York - 13 is Boar dman, New York Mrs Wallin gton. Mew York W Beasley & wf, Chester H 6 McComb, Delaware Jab Benderson, Brooklyn Garretson, Pottsville W Torrey, New York N Wilson, Workington G P Clarkson dr wf, N Bricahead, Ohio H k Bursa John A Ripendmf. N Y B Wilitams,Waskington. B F Woolman & la, N W H Efenok, Washington N Curtis .dr. is, Boston S Barker & wf. Boston J T Ford, Waskington MDnpont ES pear, II S A A F mirk, New York C W Wright. Delaware R E Emmert. New York E L Dodge, Little Book A S Strurtatant & wife,fdd Wm Smory, Iraland W A Bayley, New York C B Beydon, Brooklyn • B B Peterson. New York L B Downing. Row York D I Bungerford, Conn SW Torrey & wife. N Y W BYlntoher Sr. wi1.„21 , Altrothner. Boston Norman Nordlinfrereir Issac,S Lloyd. New York C &Stone, Beg , York • E.Wood. New York E Archer, New York J P).ewis. New 'York C. A Marriott. Maryland J. M Ridenour, Indiana B It Tracy, New Yolk B Bessie, New York G W Sewall, Maryland John Black, Maryland T X Murphy, Wow Jerney Panreaat, Raw York J kyle, New limey The Met lira Moyer, Ilarriabryg Airs Repenter. Harriaburg J Stewart. Penne J B Ibutholomew.Ariionia S Ports?, Boston W T Cady. Boston .7 i Diraendall, Bear Crk W Hi rkendall.Wilkeeb' T lamareux, Wilkesbarre .1 A Denther, litteton AB Weil, Pennsylvasla Cant N Way. SewieltleY F Sample, Allegheny J Fuffman ' Carlisle B Woodward ei A hiclibennY W York F Holland°, New York BB Clayton. New York J Keeley, Pbronlxville W I) Chillson, Illtnoia W It Johnston. Huntingd'n Mentaer. Pittsburg J Bovril. Pittsburg 1 ()eke. Wheeling, Va B Nesbitt, Wt eeltn g, Vs H B MoCanlley, New York J L Drutmath &Ist Penns PKesuedy. Brigeton. B IT /Kennedy, Belvidere .1 Davis &let Harrisburg ralmer, New Itims JOHN B. Lon, 16 South Front stmt. mental. T A &loop( & la Pen W Armstrong. J r Dire J Carpet ter, Pits` W Y Irwin k wr, CU; A W Leirearing. M Ct Miss KT t itzterald m , 9' Mies 2 Fierold, Bal Wash Booth,Talpirai J S Morrill * wr. Yen Mies Swan. Tennant Caps Henry &IL N r W )1 De With& la, Geo-RSkilltoaa. Nulth D X Bowker, y Y Mrs Gov Sprague, 8.1 Ot W H Slack. r P Ketcham, NC G r : T W : ,l Ts bet Dwight, Yw o ° : e e s .w r e l 1 "1 1 l 1 , ,D foShoemater.lich ,} na IC "")"' e/ , w A Mullin, Carlisle If L Beeman, Pit , s'iart !Mrs A 0 Carlin. ilarr . .. l Garda, flarrio Col T S Mather. Ham, Sorg W H Sloe & la. re. J N Dubarry & wf. 14a R J D Cameron, Barri . ..hi , A VT Gridley. Mena W N Whey ; LAUCtel . f H Mublenherg, Loci' Jno B Hlestand. len"' F. H Cooper *wt. Balton Bre H D Cooke A ',mg ! B 11 Brown. New York Brown. Nem Yerk G Van Winkle & Pa J BiCarlile It son, VA IC Hendrickson IWD Reap, New HIM J . Green,New York Greer, New' York CA Burnell • W Furlong 'brother Mrs Pextoa L Paxton John McFarland, P A Roberteon. Pa • lAS im l p Lewis. A llent ll o C Kiss H uf e e S D w(. iee. re', (Biles 80Plits 9 1 cP 11)". 1.1 Ltisourtur, Churl B Leimaring• M a-A 2 C R Reed & wife. Pa Joe p Xendol, New T Oklernaedr. Choer Joshua Doug's.% "'''% ' SG Bowman,Si.ce ° ' - C L Bowman . Hardtbarg A Iff Brown U S Teti Col J Turner, Neg. J C Cotter, New 10 1. Blake ar wife, 0r... Mica Blake. New Y0, (1 ,,t. H Bernstein, G.' J Green wag. new '" R N Allen, Claret's. ] j . A Hancock. Marigi W A linibegt. New , R CI Taylor.* la. 9 .` W H Beckwith. Ob i t IJ B Peyton. Nevi" — ; J McClure ;W Whitne.Y. P4a •ehants% Ritchersou, Jr• Dr S H IJC Everhan. H Mazer, Utite rs J Shaffner, Ran'toi, 3 Thompson, 1.0 1;t: Moaoyst-s. Jr. hilts S E Laurehf• e i. .1 A Lanacaan. g" W Archer, W Greg • 3 J Moore. DilLen . ra o T Bearer. L Lauer, Baltinon g . 0 D J C ua ne obur. New N n. trei la rA, J is rt Wright.No" IlleCiLams,Cbo u '; B Elmer rldeo' K Ware:Brit e ;"l' , ' J E silderPon Mr Reed, Nude J S Borer. Me 4ha f 0 Brower. Liebno_. 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