T gE Pll, - EAS, LBNED DAILY (SUNDAYS EXCEPTED) ill JOHN H. FoONCY. cr, No. i SHOX:MTH STREET. THE DAILY PRESS, ;icy Bubseribers, is Eialrr DOLLARS PER bi advance; or FIFTEEN CENTS PBS payable to the Carer. Malted to Sab re out of ri the city, WES DoLi.ASS PEE TURNS DOLLARS AND f'rPTY CENTS Pula loNTns; ONE DOLLAn AND SEVENTV - PINY I POE Taegu MONTH'S, Invariably In advance I time ordered. rldvertiseinents inserted at the PRESS usual rates. ,THE TI-WEEK EY , id to SubscriberS, UR. FO DOLLARS PBS AN , advance. ljt Vrtss. THURSDAY, JULY 13, 18115. THE .111EwS• steamer Persia, with European advieea fy 2d, arrived at New York yesterday. A: lrlo on the -financial condition of India, , to rarlizilneni, showed a satisfactory re ; g 5 1,,, net revenue for the year ending i i, ~,,4 , „„ F , £35,6:19,989, and charges .£26,018 7 - ,1 _rent deal of comment was indulged in rOy Oil the failure of the negotiations be n the Il Mimi Government and the Pope. i li t erect in the Champs de. Mars the a eN hibition building, was passed by the , th legislative corps. A new lake, the ild 'et irt source of the Nile, had been dia.. rol ill Central Africa, which had been k .l the Albert Nyanza. The Great Eastern ,i,ected 10 depart on her reissiOn of laying I.t hull is cable on or about the 10th of Judy. ul Howard, Commissioner of Freedman's cat., • • • l iss ued instructions to his dePuties ms the effect that no fixed rate of wages to roes will be prescribed for a district, the agent should sec that all such per reeeire it fair rate, and he is to protect a from extortion or avartee. Wages had ,er he secured by a lien on the crops or lof the employer. No agent or assistant r ini s sioner is to tolerate compulsory labor, epl f or the legal punishment of crime, nor c ompulsory system of apprenticeship. he Committee on the Conduct of the War I, ninth! a supplementary report, which I be found in another column. The corn ice have investigated many subjects prin. dly , :clumeted With the armies and navies Nrsliag in the East. In order, however, to aim a complete military history, they have ress ed certain questions to the principal ers who were connected with the armies he West, the South, and with the Army of Potomac during its last campaign; the , ers to which will be transmitted to Con- :s at its next session. the trial, :it Washington, of Miss Harris kinh , : the treasury clerk, Burroughs, tes way of an intimate friend of the accused, , also of a Mr. Bradley, ono of her counsel, ks brought forward to show the insanity of ss Barris. The former stated that for some ;lc previous to shooting Burroughs she be red in a manner which showed her mind shattered ; and Mr. Bradley testified that ir conduct since her imprisonment was very 'it'. rent from that exhibited by sane per us. he International Trade Congress, yester. adopted a resolution affirming that it was c duty of Congress to regulate commerce lb foreign nations in a manner which will prase the resources and revenue of the Go aiment, promote the prosperity. and pro. 1, the labor and industry of this country ; ;o, e resolution forming a decimal system of b, ; 11;,t and measures, and a uniform systeni nmtSUring liquids in the several States. o,a Height had sent a letter regretting ids , I,;iity to be present. _ _ In the Adjutant-Generals' Convention, yes General Lindsey, of Kentucky, said jr, state had furnished to the Union army ixty-two thousand nine hundred and thirty iglu white, and twenty-four thousand four ordred and thirty-eight colored troops, be ..oete. other troops which were not on the A New York despatch says that the rumors f an invasion Of St. Domingo by the Haytiens ere daily - increasing,. It is said that the Pre ent of the republic, with four of his Minis ,rs, had conic within two miles of the capital, and had proposed to make new treaties with n. Spaniards. The Fenrth Of July - was celebrated In Ifavyt n by firing salutes morning, noon, and night, I they were appropriately acknowledged the Spanish warvessels and authorities. Cotton is commencing to arrive at Savannah Augusta. Three hundred bales were rought in, and one thousand more were ex teetril soon. foreign vessel, since the opening of by port <>f Charleston, arrived there on the instant, from l3erinnfill. Item are now nearly fifteen hundred na !Dna] banks in existence. The subscriptions to the 7-31) loan yesterday, nnounied to $6,110,`200. The flour market was more active yesterday. :xtra family sold at $7.50@7.75, and superfine Rye flour and corn meal were , not ed at former rates, but the prices of corn ad advanced. Sugar sold at 11%@1:2 1 4 cents per pound. Cotton advanced, middlings W ing at 5:457 cents. Whisky was quoted at , 23:2(1.:2.14. The stock market was inactive yesterday, Uthough ketiding shares advanced 1, Tensyl.. Timis Central, and Camden and Amboy 'A ;by railroad shares were sold at the old quo tations, and in Government bonds there was K, material change in prices. City loans were n demand. Gold was active, and advanced 2 mar cent. Gold closed last night in New York at 141% THE FETIIIRE OF THE SOUTH. The reports of profits occasionally ac mired by the freedmen from the culti -ation of a few acres of eotton, 'cannot NI o astonish Northern agriculturists. The dea of malting three or four thousand lollars clear profit by the single crop of ;env acres of land, and the labor of not core than two persons, is novel to those emtomed to the moderate returns of 'enos,ylvania husbandry, Even at the Ad prices, the growth of cotton on the nw lands of the Southwest must have - :en extremely profitable, or the planters :ouid not have afforded to purchase slaves for the large sums which were readily paid for them. It is evident that the Southern States have been much more richly en dowed with natural advantages than the rugged but prosperous commonwealths of the North. If the same amount of labor, energy, and skill, that has been exerted on our side of Mason and Dixon's line, during the last fifty years, had been displayed for that same period south of it, that region would now be the garden-spot of the world, and riva in wealth and productiveness the proudest empires of Europe. Intelligent and inte rested labor is all that is needed to convert the scene of the rebellion into one of the fairest and most productive portions of the `tabitable globe. Its agricultural capacity It almost unlimited. It can supply the mthl with an abundance of the products it most needs, and for which it is willing pay liberal and even extravagant prices. At can add sugar, rice, cotton, tobacco, !wine, fruit, rosin, and turpentine, in bound less quantities, to all the food needed for 'domestic consumption, and, if it chooses, to many species of domestic manufac tures, and the development of its vast mineral wealth. It cannot be that, to a people endowed with such advan tages, the perpetuation of the horrible curse of slavery is an essential element of prosperity. The whole history of civiliza tion unerringly teaches that the -exact re verse is true, and that Freedom is as indis pensable to the development of the varied resources of a great country as it is to the intellectual and moral growth of a human being. Now that the experiment is being tried, all who were concerned in its inauguration are interested in its success, and every new development is keenly watched. As yet, the people of the South are too much ab sorbed in the temporary troubles produced by the Rebellion and by the pressing anxie ties and troubles of the hour, to cherish san guine or even hopeful views of ,the future. They are apt to regard the, enfranchisement of the negroes merely as an act of North ern hostility and Aggression ; they stub bornly accept it as an obnoxious necessity, but show 'little disposition to recog nize in it any promises of advance ment for the white race. Yet, sure ly, this, too, must come. The ban has been removed from labor. The millions of poor Southern white men who have suffered sadly during the war, and who have by their valor borne the brunt of battle on countless bloody fields, should be, if all his tory and experience is not at limit, im measurably more benefited hereafter, by their defeat, than they could possibly have been by victory. No greater calamity could have happened to them and their descend ants, than the perpetuation of a system which degraded in their own eyes, and in the opinion of the districts where they lived, the honest toil by which alone they can hope to improve their condition and ad vance their prospects in life. Henceforth the working power of the South, should be I;roatly increased by the new life and eller- . gy that will be infused into the ;nasses of ... ..... . - ~ ...,.:9. -. (.. " • -....t. AF - . . • .„. . . t i ) ....- .. '1H41:'......--"ss 'olll' ... - .. ":;;;11 ".. .*:.:'' . 10.0 , " \ ' t ...,,-;:: „., ---....!....„ : • ..„_.--- 7 -.... : . -, gibm. - -:,-., , • L All _,........_ ....,1,.. ---------- - • 0.1--r-A--- - 1-1,;‘, , ,,,v,_,:nir7--- . ..,„ ~.. _....,,... _ • .....,...,.. ND ••••;7" •-.............. ......... --"'•••••,--..._ __,..:DI . - . ...........a..-..." $,: ---- ..-..-- (/' . .. , i • VOL. 8.-NO. .215. the white population. It is reported that DI many instances our quartermasters ob tained more serviceable labor in seven hours, from freedmen, than their masters had ever extorted by the use of the lash in a whole day ; and eventually the gross pro duct of the labors of the free negroes will doubtless be greater than was ever obtained from the shirking slaves. It is not only in quantity but in quality that labor will be improved. As 'education be comes general the nation will number in the negroes four millions of intelligent pro ducers, instead of four millions of beings purposely kept in ignorance ; men who will know what and when to plant, and bow to render advantages of soil and climate availa ble, as well as the more mechanical routine work of handling a hoe or bearing a heavy burden. And in the eight millions of Southern whites, let us hope we will find hereafter men who will grasp a grander conception of life than that implied in the creed which . made the perpetual enslave ment of the negro the one great object of existence—the faith which led to a fearful rebellion, and all the numberless sacrifices it entailed, and which, amid manifest signs of decay and ruin, and against the verdict of civilization and the protests of humanity, clung to African slavery as the only stable corner-stone of republican liberty, and the only true conservator of the prosperity of the white race. Either the advocates of slavery or the people of all non-slavehold ing countries have formed radically errone ous views of the effects of that institution on society, . viewed as a whole, and regarding the interests of the dominant race .with as favorable an eye as the wel fare of the class held in subjection. It cannot be that all these States who, long since emerging from the barbarism insepa rable from involuntary servitude, have dated from that era their rapid growth in humanizing arts and in physical and intel lectual capacity, are wrong. Theory and experience 'so thoroughly attest the indus trial superiority of Freedom, that calm reflection and fair experiment must soon satisfy the embittered South that the decree against which she struggled so fiercely, in vain, is a blessing in disguise ; that the "loss of her slaves" is the gain of her people, black and white; bond. and free; that free labor is the true philosopher's stone that will transmute her exhausted plantations into fertile farms, and make her wildernesses bud and blossom as the rose. SUPPLEMENTARY ImPolvr JOINT COMMITTEE ON THE CONDUCT OF THE WAR. What. It has Done—What has been In quired Into. ITS WORK NOT YET COMPLETE. CsPeeial Despatch. to The Press.) • WasultiOTOrr i July 13,166;. The Joint Committee on the Conduct of the Present War submit the following report; Your committee, at the close of the labors in which the most of them have been engaged for nearly four years past, take occasion to submit a few general observations in regard to their investigations. whey commenced them at a time when the Government was still engaged in organizing its first great armies, and before any important victory had given token of its ability to crush out the rebellion by the strong hand of physical power. They have continued them until the rebellion nas beep overthrown, the so-called Confederate Government been made a thing of the past, and the Chief of that treasonable organizatiOn is a proclaimed kelort in the hands of our a,U thorites. And soon the military and naval forces, whose deeds have been the subjects of our inquiry, will return to the ways of peace and the pursuits of civil life, from which they have been called for a time by the danger which threatened their country. Yet while we weICOMe those brave veterans on their re turn from fields made historical by their gal lant achievements, our joy is saddened as we view their thinned ranks, and reflect that tens of thousands, as brave as they, have fallen victims to that savage and infernal spirit which actuated those who spared not the pri soners at 'their mercy, who sought by mid night arson to destroy hundreds of defence less women and children, and who hesitated not to resort to means and to commit acts so horrible that the nations of the earth stand aghast as they are told what has been done. It is a matter of congratulation that, notwith standing the greatest provocations to pursue a different course, our authorities have ever treated their prisoners hntannelY and gener ously, and have in all respects conducted this contest according to the rules of the most civilized warfare. The investigations of your committee have embraced many subjects. The results of their investigations under the directions of the Thirty-seventh Congress have already been made public. The subjects of their inquiry under the directions of the Thirty-eighth Con gress, , some of which have already been re ported upon, include the following: Army of the Potomac; Battle of Petersburg; Red River Expedition; Fort Fisher Expedition; Massacre at Fort Pillow; Heavy Ordnance; Light-Draught Monitors; Rebel Treatment of Prisoners ; and Massacre of Cheyenne Indians ; all of which are, or have been, specially re ported upon. Testimony has been taken upon Other subjects, which is submitted Without reports, either because of the incomplete charecter of the evidence, or because special reports were not deemed necessary. The investigation in relation to the Army of the Potomac has been continued from the point reached by your committee in their for mer report, to the time when General GRANT assumed the active direction of that arrny, and began the campaign which has resulted in the Anal overthrow of the military power of the rebellion. The operations of that cam paign, with a single exception, specially di• rectcd by the Senate, your committee have not investigated. They did not desire to enter upon the inquiry while the campaign was still in progress, and it was concluded too late to enable them to investigate it as fully as its importance demands. . . . Your Committee have still been unable to devote that attention to the operations of our armies in the Western and extreme SOnthein parts of the Union which was desired, and which they so amply merit. During the ses sions of Congress the members of the corfl rnittee have been obliged to attend to : their duties here, except when some special subject of inquiry called them away for a short time. And during the last recess of Congress, when their presence wee not required at the Capitol, theinterest and importance of the Presidential campaign then pending were so great that they felt it necessary to take an active part in it, thereby rendering it impossible for them to pursue an investigation Which could pro perly be carried on only by visiting our armies in the held in distant parts of the country, and engaged in active operations. For the purpose, therefore, of placing upon record a history of the operations of our West ern and Southern armies, and of the late cam= paign of the Army of the Potomac, which shall be more permanent and satisfactory than is contained in the transitory publications of the day, your committee have prepared and for warded to the principal officers engaged therein a series of interrogatories, with tiro request that full and complete answers to the same be transmitted to the chairman of the committee in season to enable him to lay them before Congress at its next session. Your committee would refer to the record of their labors to show the spirit and purpose by which they have been governed in their inves tigations. They have not sought to accom plish low purpose Other than to elicit the truth; to that end have all their labors been directed. If they have failed at any time to accomplish that purpose, it has been from causes beyond their control. Their work is before the people, and by it they are willing to be judged. In COnetusion, your committee must return their thanks to those who aided and assisted them in their laborS. The officers of the War and Navy Departments have been prompt and ready in furnishing them with such papers and documents as • they desired, and in supplying all facilities in their power to enable the com mittee to visit the various places to which they, have been called in the performance of their duties. To oil - leers of the army and navy, who have everywhere shown themselves willing and anxious to promote in every way the com fort of the committee, and to aid them by every means in their power, the committee desire to offer especial acknowledgments for their:lc-ind ite:if' and attention. To them the committee owe to a great degree the success which has attended their ettorts for the last four years. • Itespeetfully submitted : B. F. WADS, airman of Comttee. From the above it Ch will be semthat th mi e Com mittee on the Conduct of the War has not yet completed its labors, that large additions to the important literatUre Of i the etAmpaign may he expected. WASHINGTON. WAsrirmerrowt July 12. Circular from General Howard Con cerning the rreedinen. Major General I-low - Ann, the commander of the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Aban doned Lands,. has issued a circular to the as sistant commissioners and other officers, say ing: 44 No fixed rate of wages will be prescrib ed for a district, but in order to regulate fair wages in given individual cases, the agent should have in mind the minimum rates for his own guidance. By careful inquiry as to the hire of an able-bodied man, when his pay went to his master, he will have an approxi mate test of his value of labor. fie must, of course, consider the entire change of circum stances, and be sure that the laborer has due protection against avarice and extortion. Wages had better ho Secured by a lien on the crops or land. Employees are desired to enter into a written agreement with employers, set ting forth stated wages, or securing an interest in the crop or land, or both. In order to en force the fulfilment of contracts by both. contracting parties, the commissioner of the bureau lays down no g e n eral ru l e. The assistant conthiosioners must use the pri vileges and authority he already has. No assistant commissioner or agent is au thorized to tolerate Compulsory, hard labor except for the legal punishment of crime. Suffering may result to some extent, but suf fering is preferred to slavery, and is, to some degree, the necessary consequence of events. In all notions the ()Dicer should never forget that no establishment for slavery, like appren ticeship, without proper consent or peonage— that is, either holding the people by debt or confining them without consent to the land by any system—will be tolerated. - • Posi.OMee Appointments. The following, among other appointments and reappointments of Postmasters, have just been made! Richmond, Va.—Alexander 'Sharp. Newark, N. J.—David Price. Bpston, Mass.—John G. Palfrey. Worcester, Mass.—John M. Earle. Cambridge, Miss.—George M. Osgood. Springfield, 111.—Presco Wright. Oswego, N. Y.—Aaron J. Cowles. Palmyra, N. Y.—Charles J. Terrill, Norwich, Conn.—Harlan Bennett. Pen Yan, New York.—Samuel H. Wells. Jefferson City, Mo.—Allen P. Richardson. ' Altoona, Pa.—George W. Patton. Pottsvine, Pa,—Mrs. Margaret Sillyman, Washington, Pa.—William C. Wiley. Carlisle, Pa.—George Zinn. Hollidaysburg, Pa.—James Bingham. Bath, Me.—Charles F. Greerdief. Saco, Me,—J. M. During. Bangor, Me.—J. Weeks. Augusta, Me.—James A. Bickell. Brunswick—Benjamin G. Dennison. Evansville, hid.—James H. lffelieeley. Richmond, Ind.—Achilles Williams. Danbury, Conu.—Edward A. Brown. Norwich, Conn.—Henry H. Starkweather. The Nation!.l Loan—s6,llo ,ZOO Sub- scribed Tesierdsi. The subscriptions to the seven-thirty loan on Wednesday, July 12, amounted to $6,110,200, including the following: First National Bank, New York, $1,000,000. Ninth National Bank, New York, $523,600. Tenth National Bank, Now York, $300,000. First National Blink, Boston, $lOO,OOO. Second National Bank, Boston, $300,000. First National Bank, Portland, Me., $lOO,OOO. First National Bank, Albany, $lOO,OOO. First National Bank, Indianapolis, $lOO,OOO. First National Bank, Des Moines, $75,000. Second NatiCoal Bank, Chicago, $130,000. Third National Bank, Buffalo, $lOO,OOO. National Bauk of the Republic, Boston, $lOO,- 000. Vermyle & Co., New York, $300,000. D. Clews & Co., New York, $150,000. Franklin Bank, Columbus, $lOO,OOO. First National Bank, Bridgeport, Ct., $125,000. There were 4,278 individual subscriptions for sums less than $lOO. War on the Dogs. The dog slaughter by the municipal authori ties Continues. For the past week the average per day has boon nearly two hundredi Large Contract. Secretary MAILLAIi has signed a contract with the Architectural Iron Company, of New York, at $146,000, for extending the Congres sional Library. The Number of National Banks. The number of National Banks continue to increase. Twenty new ones were Chartered yesterday, and sight to-day. There. are now nearly one thousand five hundred of them. TUE INTERNATIONAL TRADE CON• GRESS. BECTON]) DAY'S PROnnieDyNcla r.Puorr; July 1.2.---The International Trade Congress reassembled this morning, and the balance of the committees were appointed. Mr: Scamman, of Chicago, offered a resolu tion to change the basis of voting to make it according to the population. The resolution was rejected. Mr. Scamman then mounted on a seat and read a protest against the action of the Con gress, and Concluded with a declarationthat the Chicago delegation would withdraw from the Congress in consequence. Much excitement was caused by this action, and a special committee was appointed to con sider the subject of representation. The Congress then took a recess. Among the resolutions proposed was one for a decimal system of weights and measures and a uniform system of measuring liquids in the several States. Tile special committee on representation in the Convention reported that each State sham have the same number of votes as each Mato has in the electoral college, deducting there from one vote for each association here repre sented; the ohairman of each delegation to determine the manner in which the remaining votes of each State will be given. The Chicago delegates expressed satisfac tion with this arrangement, and withdrew their protest. Had not this arrangement been effeeted, Buf falo would have gone with Chicago, and the Convention would have been an abortion. Messrs. Chesney and Summon of Chicago; Pruyn, of Albany; Layton, of Missouri; Hill, of Massachusetts; H. B. Bridge, of Detroit, and others, were added to the Reciprocity. Committee. AFTRUNOON SESSIOXf The Convention adopted the following TOSO lutiort : Resolved, That it is the duty of Congress to regulate commerce with foreign nations in such a manner as to increase the resources of the Government for the payment of the na tional debt, to promote the independence and prosperity of the country, and to effectually protect the labor and industry of the people of the United States against the conflictoig policy of other powers. General Ord appeared in the Convention, and was received with rounds of Cheers. A letter was read from Hon. John Bright, re gretting his inability to visit America and the Convention, and favoring reciprocity. Mr. Littlejohn, from the ComMittee on Tran sit, presented a report in favor of the Niagara Ship Canal. Mr. Prosser presented a minority report, and the discussion Called out Messrs, Ran dolph, Yonnglove, Littlejohn, ➢fcClellan of Montreal, Hon. Malcolm Cameron, Martin J. Townsend, and Davis of Cincinnati, but before any question was taken, the Convention ad journed until Thursday. THE SOUTHWEST. Interesting News from nromos.. NIZW ORLEANS, July lit—Cotton dull and un changed. Checks on New York steady at discount. Gold firm at 141@142. rflm steamer Connell, from New York, had arrived. An extensive lire in Mobile had destroyed property worth SIO,OOO. The Times , special Brazos correspondence reports a terrible storm there oil the 30th of June. Generals Weitzel and Steele are at Bra zos. A large number of their troops have moved up to Clarksville and White , s 4 Ranche. Steele has demanded of the Imperialists the surrender of the ordnance given them. The rebel General Slaughter's division of cavalry, under General Merritt,. soon leaves Shreevepoi:t for Texas. THE RIGHT OT YRANOFII&E. IN LOUISIANA NEW Outraxs, July ll.—The inquiry for cot ton is moderate., at full prices, Gold ; ILI The steamship Monterey has arrived from Now York. The 'Universal Suffrage Committee has ad dressed Governor Wells, requesting that„bes fore ordering tho State elections, lie shalt enfranchise all loyal citizens, without regafd to race or origin. Wells replies bitterly, declining . to comply, and states that the fall action of the National Adnkinistration of the President has enunci ated a policy of reconstruction whim he .will cordially support. FORTRESS MONROE. MINERAL GRANT'S LOG-HOURS TO Eli PLACED IN A SQUARE OP THIS CITY. Poirrimss MeiumE, July 12.—The steamers Illinois and Empire City, which sailed with the Texas expedition, arrived here last night, via :New Orleans, with a number of refugees and discharged troops from Louisiana regiments. They sailed for New York to-day. The steamer T. E. Cahill arrived this P. M. from City Point with the log-house used by General Grant while engaged in the operations with his army before Petersburg. The Cahill sailed for Philadelphia this P. M., via the Dela ware and Chesapeake Canal. It is the inten tion of Mr. Stuart, to whom the househas been presented, to place it In one Of the public squares in Philadelphia., Boat-Raee at Poughkeepsie. POIJOAKEEPSIE, July l2.—The great four-oared boat-race between the Poughkeepsie and New York crew, for $B,OOO and the championship of the American waters,.will. come off opposite WO City ou Ttwoclay next. PHILADELPHIA. TRIAL OF MISS MORE LOVE-ASSURANCES BURROUGHS. flow he Gained the Affections of the Pretended to Desire Them. EVIDENCES OF THE INSANI THE LADY, Strange Actions and Strange Words and During her Imprisonmen TESTIMONY OF EREENDS,, STE AND MEDICAL MEN. What Prompted the Washington J [Special Despatch to the Press.) WASHINGTON, The court met at teu o'clock, Jud o presiding. A large number of spectators arse witness the trial, many of whom were Miss Louisa Devlin was recalled and that, previous to the time Miss Harris those letters, she was of ordinary - IL afterwards she had fallen away in fib was in worse health. Miss Jane Devlin was sworn, for the efence —First became acquainted with Miss I rris in Chicago, March it, 1803 3 the lady of th °met ing house introduced them; she Was tll her all the time but about two weeks, i en she (herself) went into the country; sh vas in good health; saw Mr. Burroughs con to the boarding house in March,lB93 ; he asks if Miss Harris was in ; said she was not; ; -e him her card; he called next evening, an was in the parlor with Miss Harris; had It in his lap, and was twisting her curls; we. here a few evenings after, and told Miss If •ris she must keep in her bedroom till she g. well of her Cold ; saw him during the Sumnt ' at the store; be was again in the store; Isis the let ter Signed "J. 1.. Greenwood;" this li about five weeke after she saW 111111 in 1 ' store.; saw Mr. Burrough s, letters; saw the lot rs often enough to form an opinion we to whe or those signed "J. P. Greenwood" were v tten by the same hand that wrote the other believe they were the same handwriting ; s saw the letter of September 8, 1861, witli iti Harris, at the store; her sister was presen took it. front her and said she would answe t; could not guess who had written the lette none of them had any suspicions of who • 'as; saw the letter of S'eptemberle 1863, will its Hal , rig, at the store, on Monday; don't now the day of the month ; her sister a ed Miss Harris to ,go with her to aseci in who took out the answer - to the do letter ; they Started, and from their inquiri learned that it was Burroughs' letter ; Miss and wit ness rung the ball at the door, 94 Quin y street ; asked the lady if a gentleman had 1 n there, and stayed an hour ; lady did not c ne ; said be had lived on Clark street, ,• her amd was Miss Harris ; h/t Ile Said she need no ere to the door' he would go tonic door hints when lle saw Miss 11. codling' she said th hen bad black hair and eyes, round should.: ; was of medium height; had heavyblack hiskers ; said he used to live in Chicago; w. now in Government employ in Washingto 'witness asked her if she would call at the st • • and see a picture, and see if it was B roughs; Miss Harris showed her the pieti at the store, and she said it was the same j hen Miss Hams Ora -went to the door she as calm; afterwards troubled, and became ueh et. cited ; said, "01 that was Mr. B •oughs ;I , said he had cruelly wronged her, a taken her away from her home; when t woman saw the picture at the store, she s d it was certainly the same as the man who , s at No. 94 ; . Mr. Burroughs was in town a c y or two before the receipt of the letter o .1M 'ln. ; witness thought she saw him net Ito a car; before the receipt of these letters the had a good complexion, and was as flesh as most girls of her size; afterwards went tethe coun try; the first time she noticed a ehnge was about the latter part of September,tit, when - W she struck her ith the window-Urus ; she got greatly excited often, and would tear up books, &c.; she slept very little of its; she got up often, and went into the next oin and laid on the door, where there was fire, in her night-clothes, in the winter' on second Sunday in January, 1864 she attack( witness with a carving-knife; ; she had a let r in her head; asked , WltheSS if she wished read. it ; said "no! did not wish to hear amyl g about such a mean contemptible fellow e' guess ab sent about half' an hour ;on her retra Miss H. wanted to get out of the window; he 'ster let her out the door; Witness follow to see where she went 5 she finally went int he Tre mont House ; tins is the best house in hicago ; witness and her sister went with Mr. arris to --I.l....E'rerane.ets-trifreriC 1 -. 0110,6jf• , 0 . with them; she came home herself at d ark ; she would. sit looking at something ' about an hour. Cross-examined by Mr. Wilson: leteused is about twenty-one years old ; saw r. Bur roughs at the boarding-house the seco d time ; he was caressing Missllarris , hair ;su Mr. B. get into a car at State and Monroe s cets, in September; this was aboutthe timetln letters eFf the Bth and 13th of September Vera re ceived' does not remember the] (UV of the week she saw him; spoke of this ti ii 88 H. ; a few days after heard of his inarlige ; witness. expressed her opinion as to wl wrote the letters only when they were at o. 94 Quincy street; had often' seen his let rs; she re membered herself of saying the andwriting looked like leis' went to No. 91 o the 16th or 17th of September' went there i the after noon ; had beard the character the house before she was there from a detttive officer and others ; all knew that it could tot be a very good house, being on the street' was; up to this time had lived in Chicago se n or eight months 5 does not know how log had reason to mistrust the house in Quincy treet z • Miss H., the first inquiry, then becamexeited, and witness inquired the - reumindeel after she got home She said it was eertainlelnurroi ~tedis who had been there; don't think OP told 3diss Harris at the time that Burroughsead been in town; when she first saw prisons she was of very good temper and disposit in ; always said her sister, Miss H., was era y and she would forgive her for anything sl. - 3had done ; witness is engaged in busmesswit her sister; thinks three days was the lenOt time she was subject to these attacks; hard accused. often say she would sue Burroughs for breach of marriage. Witness never knew Miss Harr t to receive attention or letters from any otl.ir than Mr. Burroughs; the accused left Janesville in December for Washington, to S i Mr. Mir roughs fora breach of promise marriage' witness had no control over the gin; she would go where the pleased; said. she Wltilld soon be Mack; did not say how long she 'could be ab sent ; heard her sister tell her atom to drop the subject, and have nothing furtha• to do with it; intended to take her into thelstore again when she returned. i By Mr. Bradley :. Witness and ster kept a fancy store on Clark street,near Q limy street, and consequently had an opeortunity of learning what kind of houses wee in Quincy street; they bad no male friend whom they could call to go with Miss Hai is to No. 94 oit QUiney street;.never saw the oman who keeps the house after she was 8116W11 tile Pic ture at the store. / Charles A. Lenstaek, who halbeen exam ined for the prosecution, was re Iled by Mr. Bradley, for the defence. He test ed that the clock in the ball of the Treasury:landing was suspended against the wall, midway in the hall, and against a case; the case Set out from the wall about eighteen inches; Burroughs came down the stairs on the arml)f a gentle man ; witness carried Miss Harrisin the room on the south side of the hall. i . _ • A recess was here taken to . awa the arrival of an important witneSe. When the court re-assembled eseph ,Brad ley, Sr., was swormand testified that he first saw Miss Harris, the - third day Of ler impris; onment ; he declined, at first, toc counsel ; only went to see that she had coup 1; saw her seldom first live or six weeks ; saw her again in February; had paid particular Mention to one species of insanity; did not site her again until some time in Starch ; did not see her again until 2.5 th of April ; she hadatery severe attack of erysipelas in the head.; during this attack he knew her to suffer seVercly;from that time tothe trial made notes Of tie facts that clime under his observation ; ha the latter part of Marel4-found her in some axoiteinent, and found her more disposed to talk of Mr. Burroughs than she had men . ; stone one had' sent a Boston paper to her, "%filial it was said he bad appeared in spirit aidd. mode cer tain revelations; the back part rf her head was hot ; had hard cold; the pupi of her eyes was dilated; pulse at hunchd and ten ; during that time she spoke of Mr) B, and Ills brother more than any one else; the 2,5 th of April she had, in the meantime, every severe attack of erysipelas ; she was bathing her head with bay rum and water ; it was. a cold and the weather was cold, and the windows .were open—so cold witness had to keep his coat on; she showed extreme insensibilityto the cold; the top of her head was hot, and pulse at 120; her features were fixed as wax.; she was look ing as at vacancy as if beyond the wall ;asked her if she was thinking of past events; she said "Do you think -me a bad girl? they say she had killed Burroughs; and they had locked her up she said she could not realize it to be so; she loved Burroughs, and had seen him while in there; she had been beaten and scourged ; her church had persecuted her without any cause; she loved those who were kind to her; she changed. fre guently features—Sometimes - cold and rigid, sometimes in tears ;••visited' her again, and, in the meantime, she told him her whole history as freely as she would to any one else she has much high female pride; she has had but little chance of education, bat she lhas' improved her chances much; she never spoke 'harshly of any one but Burroughs' brother, and not very harshly of him; she writes rapidly, and well for the opportu nity she has had; she gave him her whole ; history, us between her andßurroughs; t here )rts nothing until the 2,2 d of-May that attracted lila attention; on the 22t1 was sent for, and went to see her ; she had a Wet towel in her hand, and was bathing. her head.; had carried her some purchases the day before; asked her how the purchases and bay-rum suited her; she had not smiled up to this time 3 her eye had a look of mingled pain and anguish, or both ; witness sat down, and she came towards him fiercely, and said she would go out, she hail stayed long ; witness said; look at those bars ; she said, bbars I - what are bars where there is a will I quieted her, and found her pulse at 120 ; she showed that her eyes were fixed; she said that she could not sleep ; had not slept for some nights ; heard men in the hall,and overheard crying murder., and shrieking; said thew should take her and hang her; she asked again if she -was a very bath girl, and asked if witness thought Mr. • Burroughs hated her; She changed. again ; again she said; does She halo met h. used. to love her, and loved her now better than he does his, wife; she said she had no 'friends; witness told her she had friends, and named General Falos and others, who had spent much time with her ; saw her next day; spoke to her of 'a statement by a newspaper reporter; said she had not read it; it reflected on her character; she got excited; pure wtidi at 120, and head cold; she said she _ HURSDAY, JULY 13, 1865. had an article that a man of the, Ch ron i c l e h A d written, and brought it from her trunk ; but witness did not review it, but diverted her attention from it, and quieted leer; on Tues day,' lice e liim; e rial t s lt‘ t t h o-o e e 'g r a l : t ( : l6 l k: la :c l e ell i i t l a e of ffxss home theu t t asollifirst k t es t e C r e l: ul i d O il i f i a i t a lc 'st i i k t hi lie t t wo L uld he there who i.,11-I,ot of the :t a : a t i l n ia t t tet l e it article; e h l e y, said there hey n d e i l elnirac : r t u (; s a7l i o t t7h e e s i; 9 s, 7e clw\aleanln•ieeglded from one l to her; next day took Dr. Nichols to see her; got her to road the Chronicle article, and she read seine parts with great ease, but it hurt her to read others; said Mn.S Abbey had been to. see her, and Mrs. Burroughs; she said she hoped Mrs. Burroughs did not bate her; she desired 'to see Mrs. Burroughs' little child and kiss it ; saw, her again three days afterwards; Saw nothing - again worthy of note until the of June; spoke in good terms of many of those who had been friends to her in prison; she wished him to bring B's letters to her; she read some of them, and exclaimed, " this is the way Mr. B. had trained her to believe he was perfect, and to shape her mind to his; she would have married him at all risks." By Mr. Hughes: He bad no hesitation in say ing that she was periodically of unsound mind; generally has a sound mind 5 in certain phy sical conditions of the system, her mind is not allected by nervousness alone, but by moral causes; that when facts or circumstances connected with moral cansae are suddenly presented to her Mind, or during this state of excitement to her mind, she is inca pable of thinking and acting in regard to I. tat subject with reason or discretion; and that she is 'subject to Certain impulses which control her will in reference to the Seine matter; and that is what I Consider to be paryoxismal insanity from moral causes. Wit ness is not expert, but has hail much experi ence, having began to study this subject twen ty years since. Her case is not a case of hys teria ; but the .rffeet ion,what n eituayb proceeds fiemp hysic eatl:al causes eonbhea.ri erel asut oisitecttimt seemed torelations ttlis t o il f rblh i e r b o a n ka j i l i s c e in of h h is e r m in lifetimemind— the and reference to his widow or family. Witness did not comumakette to Miss Harris, nor did any ono else, the nature of her offence, or the nature of the until after the juicy was sworn. This was ft.. first time she appeared to break down ; this is the first tithe she appeared to know the conse quences of such au offence ; she said she would rather die than set up such a defence as the defence had marked oat, and asked witness if he thought her insane; thought her unexpect ed meeting with Burroughs would affect her mind very much; if laboring under a deranged system, nstest aldkeha leerN qi u l e e e ; f e n t l iN g - O h i t l e ' s it et would him with tenderness and affection at certain etro n t h ." conditions; it would have been an action of impulse, and not governed by sound reason. I y Mr. , Carrington: Had put in the defence of insanity in four cases ,• had been connected 'With other such cases ; John Day's ease bears no analogy tp this case; in the case of Sickels, insanity was put in as a plea of do- I fence ; the accused was much shocked when 1 She learnt that her letters would be read in open court ;she said all the world might read them, however; directly after reading ono Of the letters in court, be felt a nervousness, and felt her wrist, and found her pulse at one hum fired ; to-day she cannot stand up, as she was very nervous in the knees ; she Showed an ad mirable disposition for truthfulness in court. Robert Beall, warden of the jail, was sworn, and testified that on the next morning after Miss IL. bad been confined her door was mien, and she had her hands together, and said she and would have died for him, but he woUld was sorry she had killed B.; she loved him, have ruined her. . Miss Anna McWilliams sworn.—Resides in Baltimore, and is a clerk in the Treasury; lives at 314 Exeter st„; was acquainted with Miss H.; saw her oh the Saturday nightbefore she came to Washington; left her awake at two o'clock that night;. she said she would get through her same day to Baltimore; on Saturday night business in an hour or two, and return the went to Sleep and left her awake asSOrting let ters, which she intended to place in a lawyers said she would return on the three o!elock bands, to bring suit against Burroughs; she train if no accident occurred; if so, she would give notice of those facts, so that they could meet her at the Baltimore depot. The prosecution objected to declarations made by the accused prior to the commission of the offence in question. It mightbe she was Infnittracturing, evidence for herself. Judge Wylie Said tljat the prosecution had chicago With the intention of - committing the attempted tq prOVe that the_fteensed had left act with which she was charged. The defence wits entitled to the privilege Of trying to prove, by her previous conduct, that silc;.l was not her intention. She arranged to return to Baltimore, and attend a colored scheol, hear Henry Ward Beeeher speak. She left Baltimore on the morning of the 30th, at 9.40 P. M., for Washington. She left two letters muter her pillow. By Mr. Wilson.—Saw her purchase her return ticket Of XL Fleming ; heard her speak of going to Washington several times ; had an idea of going • a week sooner, but took sick ; said she had no desire to reco ver anything of Mr. Burroughs ; lie was poor, but said she wanted to show her friends in the West that she was net the person they thought her ; he had taken her away from her hone,. and then-married another woman; she spoke of going again to Washington, after she should have placed the letters in the hands of a law yer; she wished to find out if Mr. Burroughs was in the city. Dr. C. H. Nichols, chief physician of the In cane Asylum in the District, testified : I have been in the AsyluM thirteen years, and have studied the subject of insanity for eiwlitn hyr --4-11 T _ - I m4S wile it a, seciaittry iss Hare ms urare-v= , and have. heard evidence as to the state of her mind; and nervous system are large and active; she I have come tolbe conclusion that her brain has been afflicted with aiSnlenorrheia since 1803; her mentalfaculties are strong and temper sensitive and spirited, but kind and placable; she has apparently not enjoyed the advantages of mental or moral training ; site appears to be sprightly and engaging, and has attracted the admiring attention of respectable gentle men and ladies of Burlington,. Indiana; her peettliar susceptibility to physical or moral causes of insanity was the primary cause of in love was a great check to her moral her painful disease; next, her disappointment sensibilities; after this material change in ably insane at times from disappointment; spiritS and health she was unquestion there seems to have been a continuous morbid sensibility to mental disturbance, and the homicide was an act of insanity ; Miss Harris had much delicacy in answering questions as to her sickness, and they were written and answered upon a card; this disease is a frequent cause of insanity among women 5 knowledge of right or wrong in the abstract is no test of insanity; in such cases insane people reason correctly on all ques tions but one. • stifled •eived Al, but it, awl WESTERN NEWS. IMMENSE EMIGRATION OVER THE WESTERN PLAINS-THOUSANDS OP PEOPLE 'MARCHING OVER THE PRAIRIES-THE NUCLEUS TOR NEW IMMEMI FORT LARAMIE, July 12.—During the sixteen days ending June 30th, ?„247 emigrants passed this point bound west, with nearly 18,000 head of cattle. Nearly as large a number passed during the fourteen days ending June 14th; and during the month of May, over 15,000 teams and 40,000 head of stock passed for the West, If emigration Contintiee M 41114 rate, it will not take many years to erect States on the broad prairies of the far West, and build cities on the slopes of the Rocky Mountains. These large bodies of emigrants have, with a single exception, passed through an intense= ly hostile Indian country, escorted by officers and soldiers of the General Government. ST. DOMINGO. An Invasion of the Country Expected by the Hastiens. NEW Yawl, July 12.—The rumors of an inva- Sion of St. Domingo by.the Ilaytiens were dai ly increasing. It was reported that the Pre sident of the Republic, with four of his minis ters and an escort of 250 men, had come with in two miles of the capital, to confer with the Spaniards, and had .proposed to make new treaties, but the result was unkown. Celebration of the Fourth in Havana. NEW Yomr, July 12.—The steamer Eagle has arrived at this port from Havana, from which place she sailed on the Bth inst. She cele brated the youth of July at Havana by firing salutes morning, noon, and night, and they were appropriately aß.kmowledged by the Spanish war vessels and authorities. The ex-rebel steamer Owl, Captain Maffitt, hadleft for Montreal or Liverpool. The Convention of Adjutant Generals BOSTON, July 12.—The Convention - of Adju tant Generals had a short session to-day. General Lindsay, of Kentucky, stated that the number of white troops raised in that State was 62,938, And of eolOrea troops, 24,408 besides - some 8,000 colored and 20,000 white troops - of whom there are no rolls. Remarks were made relative to the proposed memorial to Congress concerning paynient for services , ;as pension. agents. This afternoon the members of the Conven tion makbz en eseurgion down the harbor. A SOLDIER'S PRT SENTENCED 'CO TilanarenT.A. TM:V.—OIL Thursday, ft noble specimen , of the Highland deer was landed on Greenock-quay from the Dublin steamer. Much interest was • centred around the box hi which the animal , was confined, and frOm the fact of a tall High-; land soldier, dressed in ." belted plaid, phila 'beg,. &c., mounting guard over the animal, inquiry soon began to be made as to the,pre vious Watery or the deer. it appears Chat Capt. IdelEenzie, of Seeforth, Ross-shire, made a present of the animal to his brother °dicers and priVates of the 98th Highlanders about three years ago, when it was very young, and :since that tiumit hag been stationed With the regiment. at Dover, and latterly at Harlots 'Barracks, Dublin ; where the regiment is at present stationed, becoming a universal fa vorite with every one connected with the .corps. The animal \YRS so trained as . to ,be able' to precede the band of the regi- Ment when out on parade, and of course, it received very special attention from visitors, :from the stately appearance it presented. 110. fortunately, however; for its reputation, as it grew in :size and 'it began to form . `very bad habits, usually asserting its likes and dislikes by rushing headlong at the object 'of its regard; its towering antlers giving it a means of offence which eventually made the ;hitherto universal favorite to be regarded with fear by many of its best friends. At last its conduct became unendurable, and a "noun. 'ell of wee , was called to decide upon' what should be the .fate of the recusant. The Mil. cers of the 78th resolved to offer the deer to his Grace the Duke of Hamilton and Brandon, who was pleased to accept it, and desired that the animal might be forwarded' to his Arran aistate.—Glavow Herald. pANOTHEU WODIA'N HllNCi DiAssApurrkwri , i3. .An aged'cltizen of the North End, states that seventy years ago this month, Mrs . Spooner was hung at Worcester for murdering her hus band. She employed three men to commit the murder., Her husband bad been to, ride, and 'on coming home at night he was seized by the men, pitched 'into a large barrel, and mnr-' dered. The wife and her accomplices Wel:e hung.—Boston Herald, CUBA. CHARLESTON. Naw Tons, July 12.—General Wilmer° visited Charleston on the sth, and was consulted by a large number of civilians on matters relating to their personal interests. In the evening he proceeded to Orangeburg. The only iron-clad in the harbor, the }Cat skill, has been ordered North, The first fo reign vessel since the opening of the port ar rived there on the 4th, with an assorted cargo from Bermuda. SAVANNAH. The Fourth of . July Movement of a Regiment—The Cotton Trade. NEW Yomr, July 11.-The steamship Americo brings Savannah advices of July oth. The Herald says the Fourth of July was cg,lebrated in Charleston in an appropriate manner by ex cursions down the harbor, a parade by the Homo Guard, exercises in Zion Church, a pa rade by the firemen, and a fair. A Fourth of July Association was formed, with the Hon. A. H. Mackey for president. The 47th Pennsylvania Regiment has gone from Savannah to Columbia, S. C. The Repubtican announces the arrival there of three hundred bules of cotton from Augus ta, and says that as soon as fiats can be con structed a thousand bales of cotton will come -from the same direction, Arrival of the united Skates Stamper Powhatan. nOsTON, July 12.—The United States steamer Powbatan, with Admiral Stribling on board, arrived from Key West to-day. She fell in with the United States ship Dale, and kept her company until reaching the capes of the Dela ware. Escape of Brechinridge to Europe--The Voyage to be Made from HAVAIIII In an English Steamer. NEW Youx, July 12.—The steamer Eagle, „ ry k Havana, reports that General J. C. Breek inn„ accompanied by Major C. T. Helm, , te agent at Ha vans,left on the 7th of oi a tf u e l c y i .. 11 Thomas and to steamer Conway for St. Before embarking Major Holm was detainr. the wharf by' a, SOuth ernar fora debt Of and the Major was obliged to give bond7t, e satisfy the party. The Colt%eave an agent to M l ~ having waited an hour ove g F v fla t at six P. . giving Helm an opportunity to itin, thus. AFFAIRS IN VIRGINIA. Joe Johnston's Opinion of Jeff Davis- Maury Gets up an Emigration Scheme —Henry A. Wise wants his Property A correspondent of the New York lferald, writing from Richmond, gives the following interesting items. He says : General Joseph E. Johnston, in a letter to a I friend in this city, remarks that the Southern cause could not have failed with anybody else but Jeff Davis as its leader. That opinion seems now to gain ground very rapidly, and public sympathy with him is diminishing U in proportion as this fact is being realized. 01. Northrop, Davis , Commissary General and pe culiar protege, condemns without reserve the policy which he pursued. The Colonel says that so disgusted did he become with his whole cause, that he refused to speak to him for nearly twelve months before the evacua tion of Richmond. Davis' mind was very un settled, so much so that he rarely issued an important order which he did not afterwards countermand. He changed his opinions con stantly, except in regard to someenerals who were obnOXious to hlm. ills hostility to them, and his opinions of their inefficiency, retnaintal uniform and unabated. 1 understand that M. F. Maury, formerly of the United States Navy, and more recently of the rebel navy, is now on his way from Brazil with a plan of emigration from the South to that country which is said to be' very en couraging. it is known that the Emperor has already agreed to donate a thousand acres of land to each actual Settler; but Maury is um. derstood to have obtained additional terms which willg inia dsetrattehel was 14 nI gi ig a r t a e t n o The stronger. lrii, with great care and at an enormous ex- State sent for that qs been robbed of its most valuable penSe, books, valuable bought in w Eu o i rk4 e b AS a e n ri. i f; o o n f t purpose, lave disappeared, SA Wen S; Many other important standard works, which Can not now be supplied, Some valuable manu script copies of old records Of trio State, found among the archives of tile English Govern . went at London, were also purloined. The beautiful library is aperfcct wreck, beyond the possibility of reparation. ' The old Virginia State banks are now in pro cess of liquidation, so that parties who hold their notes in anticipation of their revival are doomed to banks will i cy s e t ie l i r dsi otitnl ther disappointment. do t. or more dollar, some aitnotes twentyooffthesethemo r less. The State, being a large stockholder, will lose considerably by the operation_ During the last and previous sessions of the rebel Legislatuty , Vir&iniu matie oy tne menus Or Some of the ming lines of railroads in the State to obtain thv consent of that body to pay off their in de.,iledriess to' the State in rebel money. The effort, fortunately for the State, was effectual ly foiled, for had it succeeded she would have lost the most profitable source of revenue -which she had. It is said that some of the rebels of Virginia have the impudence to suggest that ex-Gover nor Wise be nominated as a successor to Go vernor Pierpont at the next Gubernatorial election. BY the way, whilst in Norfolk, a few days since, General Wise sent an application afloat, through the military channels, asking that he might become repossessed Of his plan tation, situated at Rollisten, a few miles from Norfolk. In his application, Wise sets forth that he is a paroled prisoner of war, belonging to the Army of Northern Virginia, and that he received in due form a paper at the hands of "Major General Jolm Gibbon, on the occasion of the, final and total surrender of Lee's army, granting him the privilege of going about "undisturbed and unmolested." Wise further alleges that his old home, which he seeks, has been taken -possession of by negroes, "or so called freedmen," and for this reason he can not regain it to himself and family. He there fore asks that he may be put in "undisturbed and unmolested" possession of the plantation tion, in accordance with the alleged stipula tions of his parole, whose spirit, he thinks, in pludes this feature. The destitution among the people of SpOttsylVania Courthouse is said to be appalling. THE LATE HORRIBLE OUTRAGB NEAR ALBANY. fitrauge Scenes in a Court-Roost—The Attetapt to UM the Prisonere--Lyneh Law Frumtreited. The Albany Argus, of the 11th MAL, gives the sequel to the horrible outrage perpetrated on two sisters named Burns, by father and son, near Albany, New York. When the prisoners were on their way to emirt, threats of lynch law were frequently made by the populace, and would have been enforee,{{l but for the firmness of the pollee. The Argus thus de-. seribes the scene in court: ' ' While the exambiation was in. progress, Rle - Prisoners, Major and his son, sitting; beside each other near the Justice, Patrick Burns i brother of the girls, appeared at the door. He was armed with a revolver and knife, and had come with the determination of taking sum mary. vengeance upon the destroyer of his two sisters. He opened the door a few inches, and, taking abn, fired at the old man, the ball taking effect in tbe fleshy part of the forearm, about three inches from the elbow, coming out at the wrist. Major jumped up, and out ? "I am shot,. catch that man," pointing to oung Bailie, The excitement was now in tense. The crowd rushed in, while Burns was more fierce than ever to finish the work lie bad determined to accomplish. To add to the frenzy of the crowd, the mother of the girls now made her appearance as an accomplice of her son in the work of vengeance. The two then rushed towards the prisoners; the son with a revolver and knife, the mother with a hatchet, which she had until now concealed about her person. She aimed a blow at the head of the eldefgajer,alreadysuffering from his wounded arm, cutting him badly. It might have proved fatal but for the interference of ex-constable John Scanian, who interposed in_ time to break its force. Deteendned to com plete the work now began, young Burns fired another shot at the same man, taking aim be tween two officers who were standing near him the ball this time passing through Major's tht. T e crowd had now largely increased, all deeply sympathizing with the mother and son. A rush was niade for the prisoners, with the intention of lynching them on the spa. The cry for vengeance - from the frenzied mother and infuriated brother was taken up, and it was with the utmost difficulty that the officers removed the prisoners to a place df safety. In the confusion young Burns got at the young er Major and some say, made an attempt to stab him, Jelin Scanlan caught Burns, and accused him of having the knife, whfell he denied, but it was afterwards taken from his pocket. Seeing that the force there was -insufficient to guard the lives of the prisoners, word was sent to Captain Hagedorn, who immediately proceeded to the scene with three officers and speedily restored order. The younger prisoner bad fled for safety, and now sent to the police- to say where they could find him. Ile was ar rested, as was also Mrs. Burns, the mother of the unfortunate girls, and her son and the two majors were taken. to Troy at seven o'clock: The mother of the girls was in so crazed estate that it was deemed necessary to handcuff her, and even then she had to be placed in a cart . and held by three men. Patrick Burns, the brother of the girls was accompanied to the depot by another sister, who seemed fairly heartsick, and her weary lamentations as she trudged bareheaded over the dusty road were mournful indeed, and scarcely one saw her but pitied her.. Her sis ters had been beaten and outraged by the ruf fians, and were suffering in their lonely homes; her mother and brother, who had - madly at temptedto wreak vengeance upon the destroy. ers of their happiness, were handcuffed and borne off to jail in company with the hated villains. The unwise attempt to use unlawful means to secure satisfaction, though urged forward by - the unreasoning crowd tothework, bad but added to the calamity under which the family were suffering. Themotheramd brother, who sought to vindicate by force the good name of daughters and sisters, were borne to the same prison with the wretches who had ! deliberately plotted and executed a hellish crime. We learn that the elder Major was formerly an enginceren the Hudson River Railroad. He was discharged from the road about a year ago for abandoning his train below POUghkeepeie," and leaving the fireman to run it through to New. York. Helms abed reputation formers-Is. The son is known as a bounty-jumper and a fellow of low habits and base associations. They deny the crime of whiehthey are charged, but' the circumstances are so a ti l it l eivi a ce g et a hh i ae n rm s a t ogu A t h eir e tt m oyi. N an o d th r g ei c i an tire b e e o s m a m id un ag i 71 ) tee girls thsY sQ %%oily outraged; THREE CENTS. EUROPE. THE GREAT ATLANTIC CABLE. SOME FACTS ADDITIONAL TO THOSE PRESENTED YESTERDAY. The Cable Tested in Various Ways and Pronounced "Satisfactory." Communication between. the Two Continents Expected by the 28th inst, AWFUL RAVAGES OF THE CHOLERA IN EGYPT, One Hundred and Twenty Thousand Deaths, thus far, in Two Cities alone, Victor Emmanuel's Negotiations with the Pope, and the Pope's with Mexico. THE BRAZILS, Additional telegrams: litretioS AV/1104, 'May 27 .“ -}70 ; 50,9 8' 9 1 . 4 s t *f i hides quiet and unaltered; wool dull and tue , changed. MONTEVIDEO, May 22.—Exelianze, 50%; wet salted hides, 5.75, and dull ; dry American, 4.20 fe4.lo—stock small. Wool—Fine. declining, in• fcrier firm, there being no stock. Tallow, New YORK, July 12.—The royal mail steam- 1 . 78 %. ship Persia, Captain Lott, which left Liver. Commercial Intelligence. Tlie fund. Ara pool at one o'clock on the afternoon of the Ist, Lennox MONCY MARKET *-- - quiet but steady. Consols, on the 30th ofJune, q and Queenstown Oft the 2d of July, arrived closed at 900 , 00 W, for both money and accounts here this morning. The demand fel' discount at the bank was The steamer New York, from NOW York, ar. heavy—as usual at the end or,.' tile ilaif year. The rate remained D. al ) • "-- rived at Southampton, on the mottling of the .The Weekly bank stateeaent shows an tn. t ,4 10 1 0011.1” , 29th Of June. crease in the bullion of i 5112,756 sterling The steamer Bosphorus, from Philadelphia, Baring Brothers & Cm. , quote bar Silver at arrived. at Liverpool on the 29th. 5s 'd ; Dollars, 4s lid @4 s wad ; Eagles, 76$ 311. The Caledonia, from New York, arrived in ' amBRI CIAN bICIIIVITIES.—BitiIng Brothers & Co aav • BUslneS , ' 4 le Clyde on the 30th. • " - • continues to be almost on , tit conflneo . a t DsCnitea. States frigate Niagara arrived bonds and Er to United States flue-twenty • •on the gisti the 20th of June, and sailed again mentioned. ...e and Illinois sbares, The Alst o• , after having at one Ulna been sold. • rsiestward, 1 1 1, - 1N,4 , . '4O, may toalay June 30th . ) be quoted Mail,. sa, sri s se ; Erie and Ills at 84. , The London TIaiTTIO T . P.tlednALl.. . „ j a il ,. dmi. u _ . al wa " - 1, - 0 h t „ n ,.. , . article on the Atisof the 30th ult., has a long fet'e' s 121 n et ' 4I I n n°49 Were T 4. .. .ii facts we anticipated reCable. Many Or thO ...mei - moor July I.—CoreeeaKet was rather . day, those especially in re article of yeefsee. , • Circutar says: The cries - on Saturday became parations for the laying of ttsee to the r pre- fi s ns , quieter on us.. -or receipt of adyleeS per • nit in - N w York, and /I. '-':" "df I eber prices eel the departure of the Great Easble istel,the ers•" -5 t ansacted cm MelidaV ou pend, however, an interesting exts, - es e ap . Rage business was 1 sday, .Tuesday) t advancing rates. On We i dr u ,_...., the article, concerning the arranaemOrrAsam I - _!.j. 1 .2 . board the leviathan. .- upon accou heavy restrictio s up in - the apprebensions and also a q. uieter tone . "The paying-out machine is being fcxecl I, luz export of cotton , t dmand became very limited, . on board the ship, and the leading trou, oaf ' aa 'r k ,' aim - 11"1"- hemOSt lustunees were trirrigns also been completed along the decks tar anaate On Thuiedisai' This la the week elosil latter is a plant thuber frame, sums , vs Jrting a quietly all&r, c•- , I 'tautly Supidle. fit he 4uota semicircular trough of icon, down which the tions. For sell. ' l slicrid there is aar hantry, cable is clrawn to the Paying to u 4: '' t ' - machine, the tvithout change es -'i value. Alnerie 1 . was in friction of its passage se, ' '..ne to keep it• great request ill m s early part of lie week, 'taut,' and obviate all eh.aufe‘.. of • kinks' enter- and continues in . goastemanclatal Ilt W I SAIr ing the machine. Ail tb i 'laic * tanks containing advance. Egyptian, after advanei g: 001181 r" the cable ha Ilft and W amen completely filledrablv, closed at a decline of 16" !,4d on the with Water, and t•les, wire in fact, is as much week. For other descriptions the quotatioes submerged now - as it wiii be at the bottom generally are alum .1,,„ same ti e isst weele i of the Atlaue • ...e—with this difference, that elm antes add lin 0 6 0 00 pa''•• villein- 9.8,1 for speculation, and 14,0 1 ,0' fe ~,,„„e. The the pressure. of the immense depths of the . ocean wir' - i • t materially improve the condition 9.0 f - I ll' notations mit c in , tc are . itplano• NW, Texas 20d, Orleans, 203/ 4 1 , of the • . cable by the compression of the gat , Yesterday (Friday) the business was diont, 1 I these three tanks the tem- • ...pert: ia. n . 7 000 bales, prices gen,erally firmer, and cot P (r ...liture and quantity of water are kept pre- -: mgyptiau, in particular, rather dearer. The ~ isely , equal, and a series of electrical tests actual stock at the end of the half year is have been taken for the last three days, and found to be 808,030 bales, or 31,100 above the es - }Fill be continued for five days more. in Order, from the results of all, to e tgnill a standard of innate—the increase being all in short Stapled description. The stock of American is 28,480 what the condition of th cable should be bales. At sea, front Ilene, 431,000 bale*, while paying out. The contents of the three Trade at Manchester yesterday *tea Very (10. tanks—that is, the entire length of 2,500 miles pressed, tied prices were again lower, of cable—have now been coupled up, and sig. BlTEADaTtreS.—Alittle mucleneeded rain has nals are sent through morning and evening, ease, Messrs. Richardson, Spence, & Co. and These signals show the insulation and eondue- Wakefield, ;Nash, & Co., report flour quiet for tivity of the . wire to be almost absolutely American, but rather dearer for French. perfect,. even in an electrical sense. Thus, Wheat very drrn, and prices yesterday hi to 2d even with the rough instruments, a mss- , Per cent. clearer • winter red, 8,864.1 to Ds. Corn sage of four words was sent through yes quiet, and about. easier; mixed, 27s to 4.83. teraay in a minute and a quarter. The corn- PicoviSirvs.—MeSsi•S. Big,land, Athya & Co., pany, however, believe they have succeed ,, Gordon, Bruce, & Co., and others, report: Beef ed in designing inatrUnnalta whiall mil more 0 demo than double this rate. of signalling. ;B i s sssassittut eeen fine qualities, but otat steady prices for the her kill 18 are very irregiv taking the four words in a minute as a fair tar, dull, aPork is very Bacon, little doing standard, the yield of profit from such a wire and prices are in favor of buyers, Cheese has at the rate of £2 per word, which we believe declined Is to 2s 'al cwt, owing to large Tallow in is to be the charge, would be immense, and, Lard quiet hut steady at 66s to 68s. Tallow in allowing for repeats and service signals, fair inquiry at rather clearer rates, Nokia* amount to more than a million annually. Cot- American, 40s to 41s. thinly all that science and skill can do has PRODUCE.—AaIieS tpliet at 28s to 288 6(1 for been done for the -cable, and everything now Potsond.Ree . f's'ss' - ', ls a:" (1 "' l 'i ,"1rt0.3" depetah Oil Hl_Otlerate/y Mir Heather f°l. - .), n" l- P i : I • 1 f e r l a ' lli 'Ands: _ _ ............. only lie vouchsafed to the un el a ing u. 6- I V'''. FITZ, -.Hy Stockl , unc restrictedcle y o o Mee quiet hnt steady, Unwed in good do communication with the most distant regions mend at an advance of WM lifi (in, rah OW—, of North America may be confidently looked Winter Backed Sperm 1:05; heal £4, Linacee. for on the 28th of July next." , Oil Steady at 33s ed. Rosin freely sold at las PROCEEDINos or THE 'ENGLISH PARLIAMENT. to lls ed for common. Spirits of Turpentine The Parliamentaryproceedings were mainly dull at 539 lit cwt, formal and of an unimportant nature. In the House of Commons Sir Charles Wood had made the usual financial statement with re gard to India. lie showed that there was a continued general advance in prosperity from one end of India to the other. Her net reve nues of the several presidencies for the year ending April, 1864, amounted to £35,636,898, and the charges to £26,olB,3BB—leaving a surplus revenue of £9,618,510, which surplus was nearly all consumed in the payment of interest, guaranteed railway dividends, &o. Sir Chas. Wood detailed the assistance afforded by Go vernment towards the cultivation Of Cotton, which, Ile Said, had been attended with great Success. Indian capitalists were preparing to weave a description of cotton goods that would not interfere with English manufactures,. but would supersede the wasteful profits of hand 100m weaving, and allow the person so em ployed to engage in agricultural pursuits. Electioneering addresses, by the various candidates for Parliament, were the order of the Islay. Mr. John Bright had issued his ad dress to the electors of Birminghwals He de clares, in most emphatic language, that the Parliament about to expire has been disloyal to its pledges, and that tyro Minintry which climbed into oMee on pretence of de% sstion to the cause of reform has violated its most solemn pledge. For i • himself he claims to ho held free of any share in a betrakal Of the popular: trust; and he orpkast 2 .( 9 _ , t aOpe that the coming election will show that the cause of freedom, based on a true representation of the people s is advancing irresistibly to a triumph. Mr. Bright states that he is ready to accept again the duties of a representative of Birmingham, and to speak for the Gen etituency and the cause of reform M tae 1 urlywkarhament. INTERESTING NEWS-GENERAL, POLI TICAL, AND FINANCIAL GENERAL EIieILISK The revenue returns show a net balance of C/24,000 for the quarter ending June 30th, which is all accounted for by the reduction in the custom duties. The net decrease for the year ending June 30th is only £-1G4,000. The Board of Trade returns for May, COM pared with those of the corresponding month last year, show a falling off of about seven per cent. on the declared value of the shipments. The reduction from last year is almost entire ly caused by the fall in the price of cotton and other important staples, and not by any dimi nution of employment. ANOTUER GREAT LAKE IN CENTRAL AFRICA. Sir Roderick Murchison has received a letter from the Foreign Moe, stating that two tele gramp, dated respectively the 27th and 38th of June, have been received, Men, though im p'srfectly transmitted, clearly convoy the intelligence: Mr. Consul General Colquhmin reports from .tkleiandria that letters, dated the Nth of May, had been received from Khartoum, stating that " Mr. Baker has succeeded in discovering the second great source of the Nile, second, not in importance, but only in order of dis covery, to theNictorim Nyanza of Speke." Mr. Consul Stanley, also from Alexandria, speaks of the discovery us that of " the second and main source of the Nile, in Lake Albert Ny anza, north latitude two degrees seventeen minutes." kr. Baker was , expected slionly to arrive at Alexandria. In communicating this letter to the' Times, Sir R. Murchison says: "As one of the tele grams informs us that this second great Nilo tie lake lies in north latitude two degrees seventeen minutes, we may fairly surmise that it is the Luta Nzige, heard of by Spoke and placed hypothetically in about its true position on his map,. but which he was pre vented from exanliumg." 'AWFUL RAVAGES 01? THE OHOLTHIA 101 HOVPT. Advices from Alexandria to Juno 28th report continued ravages by the cholera, both there and at Cairo, but the epidemic was considered to be assuming a less alarming character. A letter from Alexandria, on the 19th ultimo, says: "The measures taken by the Govern ment have proved entirely useless to meet the extent of the evil, the first case of which was observed here on the 10th or 11th ult. The dis ease preVaiied lirst in the northwest subarbS, near the railway station, which arc inhabited by sonic 2 0000 , Arabs, Greeks, and Maltese, belonging to the lowest class. It is remarkable that the epidemic has hitherto only attacked the port of Alexandria, while hot and populous Cairo, together with the internal portion of the country, has remained entirely free. During the first few days 4, 5 to 8 persons died daily ; then the deaths rose to 30, 39, and on the 17th, 61 fatal cases were reported) ) An official tele gram from Alexandria dated to-day (Mb), es.: timates the number of deaths hitherto at 1,01, the great majority of which belong to the native population. On the 25111083 persons died out of a total population of 180,000. Large numbers of persons were leaving the town. The same paper publishes a report from Alexandria as to the cholera in Mecca, an tin perfect account of which has previously am .pearcd. it says The Mussulman iblitiVals of the Aurban Bairam took place during the first twenty days of May, when 000000 or 700,000 pilgrizns annually assemble in Mecca and upon Mount Ararat to celebrate their pilgrimage with the usual religious ceremonies. The modes of life, utterly opposed to all rules of die tetic prudence, pursued by these crowded masses for ten to fifteen days at the Holy Places, yearly entails a number of diseases to which many aro sacrifled. This year the cho lera, or as the Government prefers to call it, cholerina, Was added to the customary pests, and is said to have carried off 200 pp 0 . 010 ILG Mecca and upon Gebel Ararat within the short space of two moths. Private accounts place the loss of Pilgrim life at 10,000—au esti mate obviously , exaggerated, as these do not even include the deaths by cholera. FRANCE. The Weekly returns of taua naak of France show en increase in tb. cash in hand of MAN; COO francs, making the total hellion £30,000,000 sterling, a sum nigher than has been touched for several years. The Paris Bourse WAS unsettled. Routes on the Seth advanced to &Lea The Corps Legisintif had passed the bill pro viding for the construcn Chum the Great E bition building in theps de Mars. An imperial decree dissolves the ministerial COUnCits. The noW elections aro to take place On the 22d of July. The Minister of the Interior, in a circular, says that, as local questions only have to be decided at those elections, he recommends to the ntieets that the electors should j)e al- THE WAR Framiz 3 / 4 3. UV/MIMED WEEKLY.) Tan WAR PRESS will be sent to subscribers l advance,) (per annum in advance at 4111 gtt Fire copies 10 00 Ten copies 00 00 Larger Clubs than Ten will be charged Mille mum rate, $2.00 per copy. The money mum allompe aceemyanY the order, AMR in no instanoe can these term° be aesiatect Imo, al they a f ford tery little more than the colt of paper. in" Poatmasters are requested to set cc agents for Tlia WAR PTIEBB, *4- To the getter-op of the Club or ten or twenty, an extra copy of the paper will hv,. given. lowed to manifest their choice spontaneously, and sbould,only he interfered with if Impru dent persons attempt to alter the character of elections by importing questions of a political nature, ITALY The failure of the negotiations between the Italian Government and the Pope was the leading theme in Italy. The Oninicae, of Florence, had stated that the Pope rejected the tletnand that the bishops should be re quired to take the oath of allegiance to the Eft' Of Italy, but he had consented to order them to yield obedience to the laws Ana to the Slate. The Nazione states that the negotiations had not only been interrupted, but broken off. It further declares that the above statements by the Opiniorte are incorrect, and says it le true that the Pope rejected the proposal for the bishops to take the oath of allegiance ; but It is not correct that the Pope consented to order the bishops to promise obedience to the laws and the State. Rome has made no counter premeds. It is equally Incorrect that the Pope requested a Med illeatiOn in the beading of the ezeenainr. The Roman Court declared that it could neither accept the (ae rator nor enter into any discussion upon_ the form that might be given to it. Florence pa pers assert that MM. Bach and Reimer have both actively interfered on the part of the Vi enna Cabinet to prevent an understandi»g be tween Italy and the Pope, and add that the Austrian Charge (PAtlitirs at Berlin has ad. dressed to the berth). Cabinet some strong re numstrances against the project of a commer cial treaty between Italy and the Zell Vertd The Paris Patric states that the negotiations. between Ronne and Mexico are still pending. AUSTRIA The ministerial crisis still continued at Vienna,. Florence papers assort that bib''. Bach and - Hubner have both actively interfered on the hart of the Vienna cabinet to prevent an un derstanding between Italy and the Pape; and. add that the Austrian Charge diAffaircs Berlin has addressed to the Berlin Cabinet some strong remonstrances against the pro , sect of a commercial treaty between Italy and the Zolivercin. Sharpers on the Hudson River Care. [From the Poughkeepsie (N. Y.) Engle, July 9.7 The u three•card I,llOnten men still practice their game on the ears of the Reason MVO Railroad. Hardly ft clay passes but some um , fortunate individual gets his loose change taken from him. A ease in, point occurred oft Monday last. Passengers in the second car of the 9.29 A. M. train from this city on that day were attracted towards the forward part of the car, soon after the train left this ststion, by seeing three "nicely dressed gentlemen ), alillarentlyenjoying a quiet game of euchre. As two or three g ondemen Were gazing at the trio, one of the -" nicely dressed gentlemen,! , in a casual manner inquired if any one wished to enter the gain°, A man about thirty-five years of age, dressed rather showy, hat'ing on a diamond eluster-pin, worth . tiop, easily responded by Immediately seating himself with the party, The cards were dealt two or three times, the game going on pleasantly, when of , a sudden. one of the three "nicely-dressed gentle men" remarked that his hand was asp - lendid one for a game of " blnfr;" at nos would like to het a little on 'Tre, m atrunner who sat down last shuttled his Mae hastily and folel,l td his Joy that he held four kingo. This being an untliMal occurrence in carets, lie thought lie would oblige the "nicely-dressed gentleman" with a bet, and, therefore, wa gered, the little matter of $lOO on his hand. The "nicely-dressed gentleman" didn't want to be backed down, so, in the vulgar phrase of the game, be "seen" the stranger $lOO and raised it 000. The latter repliedthat he didn't but he would Mit up his diamond oars oq • • ttOt hrinli as i 1590, 0,11 pin, which rallied j call his oppolientig ;land. The "nicely-dresp= gentleman," Of Course, would - oblige the gen WM an, and the hands were called; the stranger holding four kings, as above stated, and the sharper four aces! Thus, in about live mkt. utes, the stranger was fleeced of a magnificent diamond pin and*loo. When the cars reached New York the man who won She property got out at Thirtieth street, end left for partfl 1111- known. Yesterday we saw him get off the cars hero, and, walking to the river, he gOC aboard of the up boat, on which vessel. he has by this time "scorched ,1 some one else, NEW YORK CITY. .Ifuvi , Toxic, July Pt SALE . OP GOVERNAMNT VESRELS Thirty vessels were sold at auction to-day by order of the QOM/ Pleat/ all the steamers but two realizing prides larger than was antiespro ted, viz : from 0,600 to $81,500. The total ailment of the purchase money was $05.1,000. Tim steamer Kensington was sold to Y. /1. Brown & Co. for $Bl,OOO. One of the vessels is to be prepared as a yacht to take a party to Newfoundland to witness the laying of the shore end of the cable. -;! spzom you: Eirßorm The Cuba sailed to-day for Europe, with kie39,000 hi specie. The llothschilds have oticreil tó become agents for the sale of 15440 flasks annually cif the product of the Quicksilver Company% mines. An attack was made on some street-sweepers employed by the contractors, in Broome street, to-day, and ono man was badly injured. tto arrests wtre Made. The ilaSanallte were 10.1,04 lug men, and probably belonged to an wont. zation against the contractors. GENERAL HOOKER. General Hooker will assume command here on Monday next. THE STOCK EXCHANGE. SECOND HOARD. 17000 U S 6s 'Bl c. 10734 5000 do /0 7 S 1000 - Er SBB, 6*,.,-d-10Mil MOO d0....new.it5.105 2500 T N, 7.3-10—.8 8.100 6000 U ti 1 yeti's—al is 95g 2000 Tenn St Os 72 16000 0 MCt 280§ 10000 Am Canton Co 100 Canton Co 41;( 200 do 42 JOO cum) com pref. 44 TAM 3Primista lITOOR MAUD, '''' "- 98 498 Reading R !RV 200 Er IWO d ie o R 713)(p Gold 141%, closing at 141%; Now York Can trill, 96; Erie 78%; Reading, 100%; Michigan Southern, ; Pittsburg, 61%; Rock Island,. 109; Northwestern, 29%; Northwestern pre ferret:if 03 Y4 ; Ohio and Mississippi certificates,. 2f 1 / 3 ; QuiekSilver, ow, ; Canton Company, 41%. 801 P bikW/3 Arrived--sbips Alhambra, Manilla; Tyro. G ar ai-it 'mule]Rua, Phtlera - Cardenas. Brig Hoary I.* tiro, Alatan.MlL, Tun Pittsburg Post, speaking of the rowil,r. ism of that city, has the fallowing: We thought, when twenty additional police men were saddled on the city, at an expense of *lo,ooo in addition to that already provided. for, that we should have peace in those die. tries the disorder in which was assig . qed as the principal reason for the increase. We OM. , eat saniIOWITY Cr, Pat any such )lensing re sult has been achieved. II! the Algilth Wards or that portion of it at least, lying in the vi cinity of the Birmingham bridge there is more rowdyism and disorder than have been known there for years, and the most shameful excesses are committed, without the_perpetrar tors ever being brought to justice. Peaceable men are assaulted without cause or provoca tion, and women insulted, and we have hoard of one case in which a house was Telienii7 stoned by the ruffians, and the lives of the in mates placed in the greatest,jeopardy, We mention these facts, not complainingly, but to show the necessity for stirring up the police who do duty in the neighborhood to which we have referred, or putting men in their place who Will not permit' excesses like these to be committed with impunity The people out there have to bear their fulishare of the bur den which the support IA per police entails, and it is only proper that they ohotod have: protection from the lawless= ruffianism tai wilieb they heNe so Ign been OXPOiled. Quicks , r X 64 100 do 3 00 00,..".zd ra§ 300 maripot). $s 00 do 60AUMBS 00 1E6 2.4. 100 20 Y . Cent 910 98
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers