TUE JPIIMSS, vr-qAtt,EiND DAILY (StiNDAYs XVOIPTED) /DIM W. FOR FOURTH Y sYNENT. NE, (ADO, NO. 111 SOUTH TAN. DAILY DRESS, ao ray Subserfbers, is Diller DOLLARS PER eo rm, in advance; Or FIFTEEN CENTS PER ;4 payable to the Carrier. Mailed to S Pub ncrlbers ont of the City, SEVEN DOLLARS EE tyloglC DOLLARS AND FIFTY CENTS FOR iltE xpIiVES: DNB DOLLAR AND 81yErry..Frir3 y js , 4 B FOR MIMS DONDIEN invariably In advance Or the One ordered. ....TgEsTUI-enientWEEILLYs Inserted at the PRESS, usual rates. mo o to enbsertbers, FOUR DOLLARS ran AN NUM itt advance. • C't I'Hz. TUESDAY, AUGUST 15, 18135 TOE NEWS. China has arrived The Rope/ MAI steamship at mo a n ., E. S., With advises from Liverpool iq August sth. Nothing had been heard of the crest Eastern since noon of the 25. There are laaay theories advanced to account for the Fadden cessation of communication. The elec t, icians attached to the company considered t . 1 , , have resulted from a defect in the cable, .d report it to be about twelve hundred and t'l) idles from land. If it is not a defect, . o , r argue a great storm may have arisen,. compelled those on board the Great East . • cut the cable, bring it lip, and wait for .0 ; weather. On the other hand, a gentle- M hem our despatches dignify as astrouo invv al the Royal Observatory, says that, at ft,. One the cable refused to Work, ObSer,VW . . both on the electric instruments at era institution widen all the land and sea 16egraphs in England, evinced that a mag lade storm was raging, affecting the currents, m any eases preventing them from pass- .I'ng over the wires. Ancona. on the Adriatic COMO! Italy, about .i s t . c miles from home, a few hundred front Grennen and sometimes the summer residence the Pope, is as yet the farthest point the otera 1 a I• n. as attacked in its northwester The number of deaths there on the 4111 init.. reached thirty•four, Ancona is one of the Fincipal seaport towns of Italy. The too:equhnsc en o of a t h foothold in r E o u f r t op e e , pe n o d p i l n e cns snd thickness of the population, it may spread over the continent. The summer, tmerer, has about ended, and there is hope in that. Howell Cobb, who was recently in Augusta, .tateil that it was his earnest wish to see tioOrgia resume her former position in the Union. Slavery, he said, was forever dead, and in his opinion, it was best for all to sub. adtpromptly and willingly to the authority of de United States. Es-Grovernor Brown was lattly in Atlanta,.havin - b recovered from his Ile expressed the same views as Information has been received by the Go. ulnment, dated May 22, giving particulars of t h t effects of the terrific hurricane which re telly passed over the Society,flarvey, Palmer :on, and most probably other islands. One of the Palmerston islands has been entirely tzited away. -The coral breakers alone re- Several vessels have been wrecked, 1,31,:t.0 far as known, none were American. Erlepean details of the war between Th:Azil Paraguay appear in our foreign news. great naval battle between the two coun triti, resulted in almost the entire aunihila, lAi of the Paraguayan fleet. There is nothing at w m chronicle ou the land. A small detach- Lela of Paragnayall troops are meandering d e structively through Brazilian territory i- Nst:he the Brazilian armies are encamped on the herders, ravaged with typhus fever. la the fifty-mile race yesterday, between the int,elads Dictator .and Agamenticus, from l'ortSlßOUnti N. .11., to Portland, Maine, the Metalor was beam:4l3olns - a mile and a half I...hind when they arrived off Portland. The _Dictator, it is stated, should have an allowance et" seventeen minutes for the stoppage of her machinery, caused bythe heating of the crank .7. W. Fuller, who is alleged to have swindled • IT Coegvesgional Committee out of ;.1 , 00 through the aid of blank, though signed 1 ,-.-cipts, is said to have swindled in no such way. Secretary Harlan, whose business was Agn, never attached his name to blanks, :he proceeds of Fuller's knavery amount ai i•;• only Siee. Captain Wertz, the Jammu. commander QC Andersonville prisoners, is to be tried zo43s.t, at Washington, before the Military torunission, of which General Underwood is he,ident and Colonel Chapman' Advocate ijaeral, About a hundred witnessea have al r,ady been snbpcune,cd. pecial telegraphic account of the base match for the championship of America, RlA(..en the Atimities and telutuals, which ook place in New York yesterday afternoon, ,niting in the victory of the Atlanties, will ioun.l elsewhere. At New York, yesterday, the steamer Chase arrire,d. :she brings Savannah dates to the lush. • The price of vegetables in Savannah was much below that of the New York market. Over cue thousand bales of cotton arrived. at Ste, fq.nah from Augusta on the 9th. for the first time since tile war, we have tdt•graphic communication through from .t:•ckson, Mississippi. The telegram an mees the meeting of the reorganization e.,rention, which has not, however, gone to vrk. A New Orleans correspondent of the Tribune, the Etpreas of last evening, was placed Drier arrest in New York yesterday. Reie (iihrged with unfavorably criticising General t;;nliy's administration. Colorado seems to have become too large a for the Constitutional Convention now session at Mercer has voted almost unani neatly in favor of carving another State out of it. Forged gold cheeks are reported to have been discovered yesterday in Wall street„New York. There are minors of another bank de falcation. Yeyterday, the leaders of the Maine Demo tray assembled in Portland, in preparation for the State Convention which is to be held ilicre to-day. Cm the Swiss mountains another fatal Mei tient is reported. A number of persons were wept away by an avalanche, but, fortunately Cr:7 one was killed. ta Sunday, a quarteimmsterts elerk, pained i;z:zsell, was arrested, in Cincinnati, charged , rich stealing, while stationed at Louisville, t . 2t;go of Government money. A number of citizens of Richmond are in li af,b ingtou, endeavoring to see the President in regard to the municipal eleetions, which lately took place in that city. Charles Francis, convicted in Wisconsin of Octurterfeiting, was yesterday pardoned by the President. He has also amnestied a number C ,7. - 111 :36•01)1111U - M his stated that lien, Frederick Peel has re , gned tLe Secretaryship of Great Britain, and , gat he will be succeeded by F. S. Baring. from the weekly returns of the Bank of ' l'acnce, a decrease in cash of one million francs shown. For Texas and Georgia, collectors and ap •taim:rs of internal revenue have been ap .oin tea. In New York, last week, there were six hun ,ted and fifty deaths, four hundred of which vere children. - Preston King was yesterday appointed by. Pretddent Collector of the Port of New lark. m the 13th a tenement house, in Cincinnati, ftil. One woman was killed, and many other Iler , onz injured. •. - cretary Stanton has ordered the Signal to be disbanded. Pounce the corn crop will be Malley this loon, than it has been for the last two years. The Cattle plague in England still continues. effort is being made to check it. N(•wbeila correspondence continues to speak of Newhern'S growing prosperity and wealth. AIIgUStUS Canfield has been appointed, by die President, Consul at Foo-Choo, China. 4ienes H. Garrard, State Treasurer of Ken : ucky, died on the morning of the 13th. Admiral Farragut was yesterday in Port land, but was to-day to return to Portsmouth. The Great Eastern still unheard from. Gold closed yesterday, at New York, at 1423. roAtaGN SUMMARY. Nothing more about the Great Eastern, r.idi a considerable portion of the Atlantic ('able on board. It is said that the levia thaa of the seas, after the second "fault," hundred miles from shore, had been (paired, had proceeded twelve hundred (or two-thirds of the distance be- Il v lll l Valentin, in Ireland, and Heart's ( oatent, in Newfoundland,) before the cni ninuitatiou from the cable at sea to the (.9 -bir on shore had suddenly ceased. It was apprehended, in England, that the "Ptrimuit of 1865 was a failure, like that of 1858 , but there was hope that the great ship would soon appear off Valentia, bring :"g Particulars of the voyage. Of course, tis, is but a hope—one, too, in which the underwriters do not participate, seeing that llicy have largely increased their insurance of:s for the cable. The price of the tele t!Taplt stock has gone down, to balance the !leeount. It is extremely probable that, even at the worst, the whole of the cable that has been made may be recovered. tiur own opinion, if we might venture to "peculate, in the absence of ascertained filets, is that the cable, in the act of being laid out, broke short at one of the splicings. The last communication through the cable, limn the Great Eastern to the Irish shore, "as received on August 2d. The last news Valentia received in the United States i'•fs one day later. - Without any previous notice, the Bank of England has raised its minimum rate of discount. This is said to have been caused IT a sudden change in the weather. For ia , arly ten - weeks (May 26th to August Ist,) 'mere had been extreme heat, with scarcely (Ten an occasional shower. The result was 1• • . . ...... • .. . :•.... . C.:. *lt *... - , et p , .. 1 . ..- N . - . . - , o ,ki , I ~A 1 / z •li ' -' ". 'a l' k. .;. Na, ..,..,‘‘, ii Ii / /•;,, •/ • - • • , ~:.- _,.••c •- 7 •. Ji.,-• ".... . . • _ r •' ? , (./lIIIL ~. • .k '- ',..,.: ,‘- 4‘ t •lf i lit 7 -4--- ; -- f<7.,,, z! , . IZ ItiPC , . . . . . . ,--'...•;__;...-- 1,,,,........... ..„, ' I ' l*.. 4- • . . , ,s(i t ----- pr --- . 7 A ~ ~. ,)„..„. - s . , , ... ,- -..0.i.- roil. - 0 A., ~.. 1 ''" 1(1 -. 4 - 1111.,-?-1,,,,,,-, --40, ,_. . . __ __..... ..., ...-:,.... -,. 4 1ip 4. ._,.").---- -=_—__ irt LI .. _ ________ ..........„............. ____..... ....._ ----_,,,,,,. • . . VOL. 9.-NO. 13. that the harvest threatened to be deficient in weight, which is as bad as if it had been deficient in quantity. Heavy falls of rain had laid the cereal crops, poor as they were, and it will be necessary to . import wheat and flour into England to feed the population there. This, of course, may draw gold largely out of the l country— though, at the vast rate of extravagant ex penditure here, in which foreign importa tions are l ar gely consumed, this will proba bly be less than now expected... The result of raising the rate of discount has lowered the price of Consols, and of other public seetuitie.s. On the 4th of August Consols closed at 894 to 89-1 for money. - On the 6th of July the price had been WI to 905; and on the.fith of April (three months before,) preeiSely the same. The apprehension of cholera in England, and the sudden rise and rapid spread of a fatal cattle .disease in the vicinity of London, had also con siderably affected the public sentiment in England. There is little from France, where the elections have generally terminated in favor of the Government candidates ill the • country districts, and against them in cities and large towns. The health of the little Prince Imperial was reported excellent. The cholera had appeared in Spain, and in a camp near Gibraltar. In Egypt it had been fatal, but capricious, so to say, sweep ing away thousands in some streets in Alexandria anti Cairo, and . passing over crowded • localities in their immediate vi cinity. The King of the Belgians, afflicted with. a recurrence of his former. complaint, (he was lately tapped for dropsy,) is said to be in an incurable condition. In his seventy-fifth year, he might reasonably ex r . Peet to have his lease of life nearly run out. There is some uncertainty .about the reconciliation of the Emperor of Austria with the Hungarians, whom he has lately . been visiting, holding out to them the pro mise of liberal government, and a full political amnesty. It would appear that the• Emperor had suddenly returned to Vienna, whereupon the funds fell there, which may indicate that there is "a screw loose" in the arrangement. The King of Prussia, continuing to carry matters with a strong as well as a high hand, has announced his intention to collect taxes, though his Parliament had refused to impose any, until he should change his system of misgovernment_ His Majesty, who evidently was intended to have been drill-corporal, or perhaps serjeant-major in a horse regiment, being out of place on a throne, may find himself, ere the end of the year, pleasantly rusti cating in a cottage in England, upon a respectable pension from his eldest son and successor, Queen VICTORIA'S. son-in law. Spain, having recognized the Kingdom of Italy, has so much offended the Papal dig nitaries—Cardinals and Bishops—within her own limits, that, in pamphlet and pas toral, sermon and letter, many of them have denounced the Queen and her ministry, as something worse than heretical. The Queen, with unusual courage, has resolved not to submit to this, and the gowned into lerants will have to answer for their lan guage before the Council of State. WASHINGTON. THE TYRANT OF ANDERSONYILLE TO BE TRIED TO-DAY A MILITARY COMMISSION TO EXAM• INE HIS RECORD. Explanation Concornlng the late 6wJDdlc or the Union Congressional Committee. CONTINUED APPLICATIONS FOR PARDON APPOINTMENT OF A COLLECTOR OF THE PORT OF NEW YORK WASHINGTON, August 14, 1865. The Fraud on The 'Onion Congressional Committee. A statement was heretofore made, and is now going the rounds of the press, that T. W. Fri.t.Al., who is in Confinement at the Old Capi tol, under an order from the War Department, Is the party who defrauded the - Union Congres sional Committee out of forty-five thousand dollars, by means of drafts drawn 'and signed in blank by the Treasurer, Mr. HARMAN ; which drafts the said FULLER is said to have stolen, lined up, collected, and receipted for, using receipts signed and also in blank. This, it now appears, is erroneous. Senator AARLAN never signed either drafts or receipts in blank for that Committee. The drafts and receipts were forgeries, as well as a letter presented by the rogue as a voucher for his authority to more the collections. The whole amount col lected by means of this forgery, as tar as the Committee could learn, did not exceed seven hundred dollars. ' The 'Union Sentiment in Textut. Private letters received here from promi nent citizens of Texas state that very many of those who were intense Secessionists are now equally as fervent and zealous for the Union. The largest slaveholders express themselves reconciled to the changed condition of affairs, and say that well regulated free labor will prove more profitable than servile help, the war having irretrievably demoralized the do medic institution. The crops throughout Texas are represented as good, and the opinion prevails among the leading tuen that no lately rebellious State will more easily return to its former national relations than Texas. The Rates of Freight on Coal. The huge increase of the coal trade, and the scarcity of coasting vessels, Lave induced coal shippers at Georgetown, B. C., to largely in crease the rates of freight to New York, Bos ton, and other shipping points. Disbanding of the Signal Corps. The disbanding of the Signal Corps of the army hae cornmeneed, under orders of the Secretary of War. This corps, starting as a new organization at the beginning of the re bellion, has served at almost every battle and siege from Bull Pun to Mobile, and has the commendation of nearly every general and admiral in our service. Pardoned by the President. The President has pardoned CnARLI.IS FRA.II CIS Howenn, convicted in Wisconsin of coun terfeiting, and amnestied a number of citi tens of Mississippi. Presidential Appointments. The President has appointed AUGUSTUS CAN. YIELD to be Consul at Foo €how, China. Col_ lectors and appraisers of internal revenue have been appointed for Texas and Georgia. Ex-Senator PRESTON KING has been appointed Collector of the Port of New York, vice Sarno:sr Ayna. E=l The President made a few unimportant ap pointments today, and was urged by into rested parties to consider the question of par doning several prominent rebels. A number of citizens of Richmond are here to see about the late municipal election there. The Trial of the Anticrsonville Prison Keeper to Commence To-morrow. WASHINGTON, August 14.—Thc trial of Cap tain Wertz, the rebel commander of the An dersonville prison, will commence to-morrow, before the Military Commission, of which, tieneral Underwood is President and Colonel Chapman is Judge Advocate. A1)0111 one hundred witnesses have already been sub poenaed, and as ninny individual cases of cruelty arc expected to be proved against the accused by them. They will testify from per sonal experience. Deconstruction In Mississippi. 'MEETING OF THE CONVZINTION-ELEOTION OF MEI= Jackson, Miss., Aug. 14.—The Mississippi State Convention met at noon today. Gove nor Sharkey examined into the loyalty and qualification of the members, and adminis tered the amnesty oath to those who had not taken it previously. The Convention WaS organized by the elec tion of J. C. verger of Washington county, as President; J. L. rOWer of Hinds county, as Se cretary ; T. C. Mae Meckin, Sergeant-at-arms, and S. W. J. &Mal; Doorkeeper. The Convention then adjourned until three o'clock P. M. - - _ The rest of the day was spent in arranging the preliminaries to the transaction of import ant business to come before the body. General nuermitit nt St. LOUIS. Sr. Louis, August R—General Sherman ar. rived in this city yesterday morning. SLURRY lAr GEORGIA,. HOWELL COBB DECLARES IT BEYOND ALL RESUSCITATION. Ex-Governor Brown Agrees With Kim and Advises the convention to Declare Likewise. The Savannah Hewed, of the 10th, says : " Rowell Cobb, who was in Augusta recently, expressed an earnest desire to see Georgia re sume her former position 'in the Union. Slavery, he said, could never be resuscitated, and he thought it best for all to submit promptly and willingly to the United States authorities. " Ex-Governor Brown was lately in Atlanta, entirely recovered from his illness, Ile re garded the question of secession as settled, and that any further agitation on that and kindred subjects shouldbe studiously avoided. Ile thinks it would be well for the Convention to declare that slavery is at an endin Georgia, without excitement or discussion:, Military Matters—A Glut in the Sarni'. loth Markets—Arrivals of CottOn. gy:iv Yeas, August 14.-6 The otefOrr Chase has arrived, - with dates from Savannah •t - the 10th lust, The Savannah Herald says that General Arannan has been orderOd to report tog enema Stoneman, commanding the . Department of Tennessee. GeneralsAmes,•Croatomand. De vins have been ordered 'to' 'report' to General commanaind :tlib .. .De:partnient of South Carolina. Generals F. King, and F. D. Stevenson have been °tared: to repoit to General Steedman, commanding the Department of Georgia. Owing to heavy receipts, the price of'Vege. tables in savannah rule below that of thelreW York market. On the 9th inst. over 1,000 bales of cotton: an rived at Savartn. from Augusta, on fiat-boats. A TERRIFIC HURRICANE. s . An Island Entirely Washed Away—The- Society and Harvey Islands Deras-- Irasunityrort, August 14.--The Government has received official inforinatiOn, - dated May 25, narrating the devastating effects of the ter rific hurricane Which has visited the Society, Harvey, and Palmerston islands, and most probably others. One of the Palmerston islands, the rear on the northeast, has been entirely washed away, rendering navigation extremely dangerous. Nothing but the coral breakerd remain, which, in case of t heavy sea, is entirely invisible to the eye, but is ob servable only in perfectly calm weather. All these islands are well known to whalers in the South Sea. Owing to this damage by the hur ricane several vessels have been wrecked, but so far as known none were American. Tahiti also suffered considerably from the same cause. CINCINNATI. ABSQVATULATION OF A QUARTERMASTER'S OLERB -DOWNFALL OF A HOUSE CrtMINNATI, August 14.—A three-story . brick building on Race street, used as a tenement honse, fell down, yesterday morning, burying six families in the ruins. One woman was killed and several persons badly injured. A quartermaster's clerk, named Russell, was arrested here yesterday, charged with ab sconding with ine,ooo in Government funds, Whilst Stationed at Louisville. A RACE BETWEEN IRON-CLADS. THE-DICTATOR AND AGAMENTICIIS TRY THEIR SPEED-THE DICTATOR BEATEN. POP.TLAND, (Me.,) August 14.—The iron-clad. steamer Dictator arrived here at 4.55 this af ternoon. The - thee from Portsmouth was well contested in the fifty-mile run. The iron-clad steamer Agamenticus made the distance in, five hours and ten minutes. The Dictator was, a mile and a half behind her when they ar rived off Portland ; but she should have an al lowance of seventeen minutes for the stop-. page of her machinery, on account of the heat ing of the crank pin. At 2.45 P. M. the Dictator hauled off and bore down the bar for sail, so that the party might arrive at the expected hour; five o'clock. The Dictator is somewhat foul, and the Agamenti. ens clean. The vessels , are evidently fairly matched for speed. The officers of each clam a decided superiority in sailing for their-re speetive vessels. Mayor MeLellen, in company with several members of the city government, went down on the tender to the Dictator, to receive Ad miral Farragut and mite. The Admiral will return to-morrow morning to Portsmouth in the Agamenticus. THE ATLANTIC CABLE. NEW YORK, August 14.—The steameuliremeno which arrivedhere to-day; brings a few addi tional partiCillarS relative to the progress of the Great Eastern in laying the• Atlantic cable, though they are not so late as those brought by the Moravian at Father , Point, and shed no light on the failure of the insulation after twelve hundred miles.had been laid. A telegram to Vslentia from the Great Eastern, dated on the 29th ult., says: "The cause of the accident to the Cable is unknown. There was a total loss of insulation.” - There was no communication with the Great Eastern when she had seven hundred miles of the cable paid out. A. telegram Of the Seth ult. said all was going on well. The fault bad been removed, and the insulation was perfect. A telegram from. the Great Eastern, dated on the afternoon of the 31st, said nine hundred miles of the cable had been paid out, and seven hundred and fifty miles run by the Great Eastern. All was going on well. A thousand and fifty miles were laid sum , eessfully on the Ist of August, when all was going on well. Aar v Ray, August 14, 3.30 P. 111.—Up to this. hour there has-been no arrival from. New, foundland, and there has been no intelligence from the Great Eastern. The wind is north• west, and the weather heavy, with signs of rain. Sentence of Burglars. Ilea.ome, August 14.—John C. Smith, who was convicted last week, in the Court of Quarter Sessions, of counterfeiting, and participating in the Witmar and Ganser burglaries and rob beries, in Tulpehooken and Exeter townships, was to-day: sentenced to an imprisonment of sixteen years in the Eastern Penitentiary. Peter C. Weider, convicted of being con certed in the Ganser bUrglary, and George De Hart, convicted of participating in the Wit. man robbery, were each seamed to . an im. prisoninent of seven years. NEW YORK CITY. NNW YORK, A.l.lgliAt 14,1884 ARREST 08 A JOURNALIST. The Express says that a New Orleans corres pondent of the Tribune, who nas neon guilty of criticising General Canby's administration, reached this city today, under arrest, and has been put under charge of General Hooker. MORTALITY AMONG CHILDREN There were six hundred and fifty deaths in this city last week, four hundred and fifty o whom were. Children. The bank, statement for the week ending on Saturday shows: Decrease of loans $4,000,000 Decrease of deposits 2,500,000 Decrease of legal tenders 500,000 Increase of specie 760,000 Increase of circulation 390,000 FORGED GOLD CHECKS-RUMORS OP ANOTHER DANK DEFALCATION Large amounts of forged gold cheeks are said to have been discovered today on Wall street. Rumors of another bank defalcation are rife GOLD. Gold closed this afternoon at 142%. THE STOCK =ORANGE-SECOND BOARD Go,ooo U s 10656 1,000 IT S Os 5-20.... e 10574 5, WO e —ll is 10476 50,003 f10....e..11 Is 1043, 5,060 U S 5s 10-406 973.11, 5,000 T 1 , 1 7 3-106.2,1 se 08:m 1.444)0 (10 3,1 se 118 y, I 10,0(.3Vre1lo State 65.. 74 i 5,000310 State 05.... 7.1,Y, WINNING STOCK BOARD At the Evening Exchange gold closed at 141; New York Central, ; Erie, DX; Itudson River, 1099,1 . ; Reading, IOWA; Michigan Central, 100'%; Michgan Southern, 03 1 . 4; Illinois Cen trfil; - nom; Pittsburg, 68%; Rock Island, 107; Fort Wayne, 95 1 A; Canton, 37; Cumberland, 40; Quicksilver 54. The stock market was in t Me excited and the transactions large. Gold closed steady. Markets by Telegraph. BALTIMORE, August 14.—Flour is dull and heavy. Wheat firm; new red $2@2.10. Corn dull at 97(P5c for both white and yellow. Pro visions dull. Bacon—Shoulders 181/c. Whisky firma at $2.25. C/NCINNATI, August 14.—The Flour and Grain markets are quiet but firm. Whisky dull, with small sales at $2.19. Provisions dull. ST. LOUIS, August 14.—Cotton: 'Receipts, 667 latles; the market is quiet at 39e for middling. Flour unchanged. The Wheat market is irre gular. Corn dull at 81@85e for white. Oats un- Changed. Tobacco active, and advanced ; sales at it9@la.so for shipping leaf, and d19.751/00 for manufacturing leaf, Whisky unchanged. CRlCAoo,Augustl4.—The Flour market closed active, with an advance of Wee. Wheat is moderately active, and has advanced 3@4c, the market closing quiet, with sales at ii11.2.8@1.28 1 ,4 for No. 1; $1.12 for No. 2, Corn firm at 67% for No. 1, and 004 for No. 2. Oats firm, at an ad vance of %02c ; sales at 46*. Freights Steady. Ilighwines inactive. Provisions dull. Receipts. shipments. Flour, barrels 2,400 3,500 ll'beat,bushels 22,000 stow Corn, bushels 110,000 173,000 Oats, bushels 15,000 lilitwArnim Aug. 14.—Flour active. Wheat firm ; sales at' $1.2431.26, closing at the out side price. Corn steady at 71e. Oats dull. Freights dull. lieceipts-500 bbls of Flour and 40,000 bushels of Wheat. Shipments-3,000 bbls Of Flour and 23,000 bushels Of Wheat, PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 15, 180.5. Arrival of the China at Halifax. VET NO COMMENICATION WITH THE GREAT EASTERN. Theories of the Canoe of the Want of LETTER FROM AN ASTRONOMER CONCERNING I "MAGNETIC STORK REPORTS OF THE ELECTRICIANS VALENTIL ' A SPECK OP TROUBLE BETWEEN AKIRA AND PRUSSIA ABOUT THE DUCHIM, English Accounts of the WarlOween . Brava and Paraguay; DETAILS OF THE GREAT NAVAL BATTLE, Paraguay's Fleet Almost Annihilated, AFFAIRS AS THEY ARE AT PRESENT, AND THE PROSPECTS OF THE WAR, HALIFAX, N. S., August 14.—The Roy* steamship China has arrived here with Liverpool advices of August 5111. via Queens town on the 6th. Communication with t'em , Great, astern re• mained suepended, and I nothing had been heard from her since noonnt the 2d instant. The Very Latest ihY the - China. Livanroot, August s—.E.*(ming.---Communi.. cation with the Great Eastern. remains sus pendo. Nothing has been- heard from her since noon Of the 2d inst. A telegram from Yalentil , to , dhy says there has been no change in thee-eable sines yester day. The original shares of - the-Atlantic Cable stock closed ai 300Q350, and the preference shares at 214@2% per cent. discount. Another fatal accident on tlie-Swies-moun tains.4 reported. A party of 'several persons were swept away by an avalanche; but fortu !lately only one, a porter, was-killed. Ancona remains as yet -the farthest point the cholera had attacked irr , ita northwestern route. , The number of deathsat that place On the 4th inst. reached thirty-f Our; Livratroor.., Sunday P. M,. August ft—The steamer Balbec, from New York,.has. arrived, Nothing, further has transpired concerning the Atlantic Cable. It is supposed:tobe in the same state as previously reported:, The earth currents were returning with , more Strength, showing that the cable had been in contact with the earth, twelve hundred: miles from Valentia. Sixty-seven per cent. was• offered, but no in surance was effected atthalpri.ee•for the cable. The political news is unimportant_ t sEcOxib DESPATCH." HALIFAX, August 14.—The • steamship China arrived here at four o'clock this afternoon, en route for Boston. She has 126 passengers for Boston, and forty for Halifax. The steamship Hayti: from New York, pasSed. Brookhaven on the afternoon of the 4111. Much anxiety and excitement existed con cerning the Atlantic Cable. The general feel ing was one of depression, arising from the apparent hopelessness:ofr the enterprise, al though there were many who retained their faith in the renewal Ot;telegraphic communi cation. The London Tines is: despondent regarding the successful laying_ of the cable, although not entirely without:hope.. The Daily News clings- to. the hope that the accident is not irremediat, as the weather has nig been unfavorable., The Star hopeathat,pu board the Great East. ern, they are employed slowly but surely en gaged in haulimpacktbe cable. A test taken at Valenta station shows the accident to the cable tobe a total loss of hunt lation, nearly one thousand two hundred and fifty miles from Vaientia. This would be in almost the deepest water along the lir/lele route. The Shipping. Gazette says Small insurances were doneat Lloyd's onFriday at fifty guineas, but most of-tbe,underwriters declined taking the risks at any price. The Fall Mall Gazette says it is understood that aNc astronomer of the Royal Observatory has communicated the following facts. to the Atlantic T,ele4„Qaph Company: At noon, on IS ednesday,_when this signals became unintelligible, the magnetic ins.tru meats at the Greenwich Observatory showed that what is termed a magnetic storm had commenced. These storms caused currents to flow through the telegraph wires, and serious- , , ly affected the working of both the land and 'sea lines. He also states that although the stormhas much abated, currents may still be passing of sufficient strength to confuse the signals passing from the ship through the deli•, sate instruments used at Talentia. This mag netic storm is the greatest which has occurred for many years. These explanations are somewhat reassu ring, although the Atlantic Telegraph Compa ny, in their official statements, make no allu sion to this electrical disturbance. There is another theory that the ship may have encountered bad weather, and been obliged to cut and buoy the cable. GREAT 'BRITAIN. It is reported that Hon. Frederick Peel has resigned the Secretaryship of the Treasury, and that T. S. paring is likely to succeed him. The London Times editorially, expatiateson the difficulty of maintaining and feeding the liberated slaves of the South, and says, "It I s easy for a victorious Government, by a few V01(15, to strike off the slaves' fetters and dis locate and destroy the industry of a whole community, but it is not easy for it to find an answer to the awful question, of what are the people to live I one which it has raised for it sett', and which, every day more and more im portunately, demands an answer," The cattle plague continued violent, and c..orcsati" men%"vtts were progressing to check it. The weekly returns of the Bank of France show a decrease in cash of one million francs. The yield of the corn crow will certainly be smaller than it bas been for the lasttwo years, when it was above the average. SPAIN, LtEpoca asserts that orders have been sent to General Gardara to declare war against San Domingo. The statement is considered as very doubtful. Alarming rumors ha:ve been current of the total failure of the negotiations between Aus tria and Prussia in relation to the Duchies, and the Vienna Bourse was affected, all the funds falling. • The latest despatches say that negotiations have not been broken off, but have merely en tered - upon a new phase. The mails from Brazil have been received, with additional details of the great naval vic tory of the Brazilian over the Paraguayan squadron. Both sides exhibited great-hero ism, and the slaughter is described as having been terrific. The battle occurred three leagues below the city of Corientes t and lasted from nine o'clock - in the morning till six o'clock in-the evening. The Paraguayn fleet, consisting of eight Steatners and six gunboats, Mounting eighty-potuiderS, and also a battery of forty rifled cannon, was almost annihilated. The Brazilian force consisted of nine gun boats, and their loss amounted to three hun dred men, including nineteen officers. MO Bruns C'y L Co. DX 300 At M b 5 Co 1.16 100 Mar Mia'g C 0... 12 200 N Y Central R.. 928 100 E rle Rallway4s6o 85 400 lio 21 call 865.6 300 Reading It 1064 500 MSo 66 The main army of the Brazilians, seventeen thousand strong, was encamped on the banks of the ITraguay, and on the Confines of the Brazilian territory another wing of fourteen thousand men was stationed. The condition of the Brazilian army was un satisfactory. The typhus fever and dysentery were making sad ravages among them. A body of two thousand Paraguayans deso lated the province of Corienteii. They after wards burst into the Rio Grande, swept the banks of Parana, and were marching through the province. CHINA. SnAmonAß, June 22.—The silk and tea trades opened. briskly at Shanghae and Foe-Chow. LewDON MONEY MAnitET.--The funds were firmer on the 4th. The discount demand was tight at the advanced rate of 4 per cent, Commercial Intelligence. The weekly Cotton market report was re ceived by the steamer Moravian. LIVERPOOL PREADSTITPBB MARRET.-3tieSSTS t Richardson, Spence, & Co., and Wakefield, Nue & Co., report Flour quiet hut steady. Wheat dull, and TtleSday , s Improvement lost. Corn quiet at 808 6d@lls 6d for mixed, on the spot, and 2as@29s ad to arrive. Livaitrool. PROVISION MARKET.—Messrs. land, Athya, & Co., report that Beef has an upward tendency, mostly for the finer quali ties. Pork firmer. Bacon buoyant, and ad• vaned 1@25. Lard lim o and AdvaupQd 395 s EUROPE. Communication. FRANCE. SCHLESWIG-HOLSTEIN. BRAZIL on the week. The pribes are quoted at 76095. Butter is irregular. Tallow active at 40V425. LIVNIIPOOL ntODTIOS, Maararr,,,Thelirokersi Circular reports Ashes easier for pots, and firmer for pearls. Sugar quiet and. steady. Coffee steady. Rice qUiet. Linseed has an upward tendency. Linseed cakes are firm - at £9 7s 6digi£9 128 6d. Sperm Oil active.. Rosin active, but irregular. Spirits of Turpentine quiet at 4164t478. PRTROLBUis.—Messrs. lioult, English, and Brandon report—The market id quiet and steady at 28 050:428 OW for refuted. Lenoorr liferamrs.---Es.ring et Co. report Wheat firmer, and . advanced I@is tad. The weather has been unfavorable for the crops, but has improved. Iron quiet and steady. Su gar inactive. Coffee active: Tea firm. Rice firm. Spirits of Turpentine has an upward tendency ; sales at 48s. retroleam •steady at 205 for Crude arid 2s 5d for Relined. Tallow ac tive at 425. THE LATEST VIA QUEENSTOWN luvEnrom.—Saturday Evening —August 5. Cotton—Sales to-day' of '5,000 bales, including 1,000 bales to speculators and exporters. The market is flat and the quotations remain un changed. /3 REA nexuays.—iThe market is quiet and more favorable for the crops. . . PnovisioNs.-,The market is steady. Bacon is• buoyant, and 'still advancing. Tallow is firmer. • • • Lownow—_ Satutday Evening—August s.—Con sols. closed at 89,5;WO'for. money. Ausaloax SToms.—lllinois Central K., 79 56 @ 58 %.; United States 5-20 s, £583@68!2? Auguat s—Evening. The Bourse . .eleecl ("net. ltente6 ehme'd. at Marine' Intelligence—The LaiSelst. . Arri - Jed from New fork—Biaggo at Bristol, Rio at 'Btadea, Maggiore at - Gravesend, Betel& in the Clyde, Oden in the Elbe, Herzog Paul at Tarragmia,..llayti at Liverpool. Arnyedfrom Bosteri. !ate. at Malta. Arrived Irom Callao—Carliale at Queens town. . . Arrived' Prom Philadelphia,- July 18th, ship Boulton, at. Rio .I"tateiVo. August 3d, Amelia,. at Queenstown. • • binie . roltties. POIITLAND; , Augu_st 14.--The leaders of the . State Dtkinbaraey are assembling here in pre- Parationa Air- the State einmention, to meet- to-morrow. ,The representation will probably not be very iarge. Judge. Howard,' of Port land, is the promineaft candidate for the nom": nation for Governor. The Convention will assemble at ten o'clock to-morrow morning. " Obituary I.ISI7iSVILLE, August 14.—James .11.. Garrard,' State 'Treasurer, died in tins-city yesterday' Morning. Marine. 805T644, August 14.—Arrived; Ball; Almira Coombe, from Philadelphia; •Btige Harriet, from Cienfuegos, Num° Doomumoi from Phila. delphia, Julia Ford, from Philadelphia, and Valencia, from Philadelphia. IxeineNT AT A WASHINGTON PRISON.--n was - at - Me Carroll Prison, says the At ari that a sin gularly desperate attempt was made toe ' about a year since. Two prisoners were confined in. an. upper , room, One of whom, for some cattse,lburid the companionship of Ins room-mate disagreeable, and resorted to a novel mode of getting rid of him. Coming up from the yard one day, he told his obnoxious chum that he lid seen his , (ebumls)coffin beingmade M the yard, and that he was to be shot at sunrise. The poor fellow was, of course, terribly seared at thisnews, but theinformer slapped him on the back, telling him that while there was life there-was hope, and he would manage his escape -that hediad Once belonged to a circus compAiy, and had learned how to jump with a springboard, and would teach him the process.• ifefore- night _ the victim had concluded to =Rothe attempt to escape, and the couple proceeded.to pry up one of the boards from the floorond thrust ing it from the window, made one end secure inside. All being in readiness.; and. the- posi tion of the sentinel being determined by his solitary tramp in the yard below, the victim crawled out upon the hoard, , ll3B-companion, meanwhile, occupying the other. end of the board, to give, by . his - weight; additional security to thefastening. The • couple then bade each other good hve, and. the victim. getting on bis feet, matte one or two. pre-- liminary springs, and bounded. off into the darkness- He came within a lutiVs breadth of descend - 1141ml the plat of the Sentry's-bayo net, and aIMOSt miraculously escaped break ing any bones, and, springing up, he made for the drphouse, the sentry firing at him,. but missing him in the darkness. He elanibered up the sloping . roof of the dry-house and jumped off outside. But the sentry on, duty there, having heard the shot ou the. inside, was on the alert, and brought the fugitive up standing, and he was secured and returned to safe quarters. Considering the helxlvE, flan from which he leaped—about forty feet—it is remarkable that be was not killed outright. As it was, he suffered for some time from something like paralysis-of his limbs, but at the time of leaving the prison, was in good health, and pone the worse, apparently, for his odd experiment in saltation. STEAM CARRIAGES IN NNW Yomc.—The subject of running steam carriages in the city,. instead of horse-cars and omnibuses, is beginning to be-talked about a good deal. It is stated that every omnibus makes,. on an average, three hundred and twenty- - e pounds-of - dirt per day, and every ear twohundred pounds. One proposition is to hare the streets paved or floored with iron, as the motive• power re quired on iron floors is only five pounds per ton on a level, while.on the present pavement it is thirty-one and a half pounds per ton. It is urged that when steam carriages are made, running on these iron doors, the cost of trans portation -will 'be.- greatly ; reduced; estrtage will coat muck loss lan hOne-Wtagis, and the public: will be relieved frOm dirt, also, that india rubber tires can be used, which will- be durable and almost noiseless On smooth iron floors. It is not probable, however, that the horse will be superseded for everything, as, for instance, pleasure-driving, but many be lieve that steam can be substituted to adtan tage in all the business occupations and drudg ery far which: draught-power is required. New York.puper of yesterday. A ComotsOANE.—We were shown yesterday a Zcane mule by R. T. Woodward, of the 21st Massachusetts Regiment, which is consider able of a cariosity. In the centre of the head piece or handle is a fine portrait of President Lincoln,,surrounded with red, white,and blue circles. Outside of these are the words " Abra. ham Lincoln, died 1136:-1," cut into the wood, and underneath it, "By the Eternal, the Union must stand, were the words of General Jack son."- At the top of the cane is the word "Lin coln," upon each side of which are red, white, ant: blue stripes, and at the outer edges a mourning stripe, Following this are the names of Grant, l'homa, Burnside, gberman Meade, and Sheridan, with these lines: "And all our brave soldiers, to whom great honor is due." Then, cut in a winding groove around the cane, from top to bottom, is the following : "This cane is made of white cedar, and was pat on the soot where the battle of Roanoke Island was longht the memorable Sit of February, ; lBo, by R.T.R. Woodward r _a meniber of the 21st Regiment Massachusets - Volunteers, under Major General A. E. Burnside, which resulted in the capture of the whole island? , The letters are about a quarter of an inch in width, and are beautifully cut. Theneane has a large number of raised knots hi it, which are painted in the national colors. It is vary ingeniously arranged, and must have taxed the patience of 3fr.lVoodwaru to the utmost. Exchange. THE CHICAGO GLABB WORES BIIIrSED TO. THE Gnotrim.—A most disastrous fire occurred this morning at the works of the Chicago Glass Company, corner of North Market and Onta rio streets. The alarm was given shortly after one o'clock, and the engines turned out with alacrity, but when they reached the spot they found the extensive establishment a, mass of burning ruins. When the fire was first dis covered, the flames were bursting through the roof of the principal building, near one of the furnaces, An the wood-work of the structure was as dry as tinder, the flamen spread with fearful rapidity, illuminating the. sky with a lurid glare. An attempt was made by the crowd, who soon gathered around, to save a portion of the valuable stock but, owing to the rapidity with which the fire spread, this was found- to be impossible, and only a. few trifling articles were taken from the burning building. The works have only been in opera tion a few months. The estimated loss on the stock and,building is $15,0.90, which nearly covered by insurance, The origin of the fire is unknown.—Chicage Times, Saturday. ESCAPE OF CONVICTSIom. BLACKWELL'S IS. LAND.—On Monday afternoon, while some of the convicts were taken out by their keeper to the cook-house for supper, about eleven of them ran to the shore, plunged into the water, and swam for Hunters Point and Green point. The keeper, under whose immediate charge they were at the time, was unarmed, and threw. stonesat them,but another keeper corn ing up at the time, discharged all the barrels of his revolver into a batch of six of them, without, however, any of the shots taking ef= feet. The police of the Forty-seventh precinct hairing been notified of the escape, made search for them, and Officers Depew and Dls away succeeded In finding One of them stowed away in the tar works at Hunter's Point, He was brought to the station-house and locked up, giving his name. as John Smith, which, however, is not his right name.—N. Y. Express of yesterday. ADAH IS Acs MENKEN is about to leave Paris for the Pacific. Her carriages, horses, and dogs arc advertised for sale by private con tract, "the present high rate of transit, and the long voyage, precluding the possibility of shipping so many horses and carriages to Cftli fornia.', The stud consists of a thorough bred Arabian horse, a white mare, .a pair of bay geldings, a pair of beautiful white ponies, a bay hunter, and a bay horse. She has also two broughams, a trotting buggy, and a pony pine ton. Her dogs include a thorough bred gray hound, a toy. .terrier, a tan terrier, a French poodle, a Scotch terrier, and four black-and tan terrier pups, - We find this item floating through our fa , reign flies. The sale must have taken place, for the lady, bags and baggage, is now at the New York Hotel, New York City. DWATCVISII IN ANIMALS.—A 'Very curious paper upon the origin of dwarlism in animals has been written by M. Dareste, and read be fore the French Academy. The cause of dwarfism the writer supposes to be an accele rated development. His experiments were conducted upon hen eggs which were under going incubation. Of a number of eggs which were being hatched, some underwent their completion more rapidly than others, and these M. Dareoto examined. On the 3d June, at two o'clock; he opened the Shell of an egg which bad been placed for incubation at ten o'clock on the morning of the 2d. The em bryo had been some time dead, so that tile en tire duration of its life could not have ex tended over more than from:Awenty-four to twenty•six hours. Nevertheless, it had at tained a condition of development, which, un der ordinary eircu2nstances, must have taken sixty hours to arrive at. The left side of the head was bent upon the vitellus, though the .rest of the body had its ventral surface ap plied to the vitelline mass. This precocious embryo was exceedingly small, and its mea surements were far below those of ordinary embryos which have attained a similar degree of development. M. Dareste, employing , the I. expressions of II laire, shows that mat ry ido o r n e ic a p ( ea r o e m Y e n Sa a i Thartelnof two kinds ; first, the formation of definite or+ Bans 'from a structureless. mass—this is de velopment ; and, second, theft increase of their organs—growth. If the latter process be in excess of power a giant is produced ; but IC the former, a dwarf is the result, THE LAIKE DIMON COLLISION. Farther Partlicolluiro of the Appotting enhlomity. CFrera the Detroit Ailvartiser or Friday.] It becomes our painful duty to reeoira the-oc currence of the most appalling disaster that hasdarkened the records of the Western lakes for many years. On Wednesday night, about balf . past eight o'clock, the fine propeller Fe tid 'otto from Otlptti a n k e s o u rf. to this port, .when abreast of. Thunder Bay.latand; and about;six 1 3f or cliay, on her way miles from the Light, collid4ki.with the -*o pener Meteor Captain Wilson,tipwisrd bound, by which the I'ewabie wias*bionediately sunk. The evening was a tolerably clear one. al though it had been somewhat rainy,.and - the lights of each steamer were discernible: by-the lights e e e a t p t t h e e r adiiisetrc and d o f thesix m w i a t te es. .e iv ,::,d ro e t r i a o t h e r The course of the Pewabie was on the Side toward` the' shore, and that of the Meteor on tb e. opposite tack, by which they would steer clear of each other. The movements of each steamer were plain ly observed by the crew as well as passengers upon the other, and the fact of their coming together under such circumstances cannot be explained- except on the hypothesis of an almost unaccountable blunder on the part of some one. When Captain McKay saw a colli sion appeared'inevirable, he blew his whistle as a signal to'the other beat to keep out of the way, which signal, safer as is known; was not responded to. lie then ordered his wheel to put to starboard; which would tend to put her out of danger by taking his boat farther in toward the SilOre. From all that, we can gather, it is rendered probable that the Wheelsruan of the Meteor, not having pro perly understood his orders, or by a mistake of some kind, put his wheel to port, instead of the contrary direction, which he ought tohave taken. lie thus brought his bows in a direct line with the port side of Pewabic, and- the fact of striking the' latter SQ squarely in-the side would seem to confirm• toil theotr of the 413Buseof the catastrophe; although it is possi ble that a full Jnyestigatiom may present the affair in'n different .phase 'so' far as some par tiertlars are concerned: The bows - of the Meteor, yvirioh are long and sharp,' struck, the Pewabiealmost at right angles under the pilot-house, opening her to• the width of tive?ve or Afteen feet, and cutting. her down to the watetzs 'e,dge;. There were,. probably, at least one hundred and fifty per sons on board, including -the crew, and con sternation and dismay atone' fell like palsy' upon hearts which only a few brief moments' before overflowed with mirth and gladness. The scene was one which beggars description,' but was soon over, Within four - minutes of the collision the rewabie sunk; eat tying clown' with her from seventy to one hundred persOns, as nearly as the number could be ascertained. Many of those on the bows 'of the ill-fated steamer had thepresence - ormind to jump' upon the deck of the Meteor; • others were saved from drowning by the heroic exertions of friends, and many were subsequently picked up by the boats of the Meteor. .A 8 there Were two or three sail vessels in the neighborhood, it is possible that a few of these now num bered among the lost have been picked' up by them, but as the Meteor remained near' the scene of the disaster to pick. Aiwa]. that Could be found, this is like hoping against hope. tit' the accident had occurred -a-. few hours later, neatly all would have heew-wrapped spep, and very few would have beenspat‘ed to recount the fearful tale. ' The following is a . statement made by Mr. Russell, the , Secretary of the meeting of. the survivors, held' on the Mohawk, vo-hiclrsteam er brought their down to the city. . The gene rous conduct cif the officers of the -Mohawk. is appropriately referred to in the proceedings of the meeting, which are given belOw STATEMENT OP MR. RUSSELL. About eight and a half on Wednesday eve ning,ath instant, the propeller Pewabie, Capt. McKay, on. her down trip, about eight miles in S hOre, came in collision with the Meteor, Capt. on lack upward vorage. The Meteor struck the Pewabic just under the pilot-house, literally , smashing up her bow. The boats were running at the rate of about twelve • miles an hour, and the crash was awful, causing , the Pew4hic to go down in the short space of three or four - minutes. A number were killed by the Crashing timbers. But few of the passen gers of the Pewabic had time to from her decks upon those of the Meteor, ere the wreck of the Pewabic sunk • entirely out of sight beneath the seething waters. The sight was terrible and heartrending as the cries-and groans of the unfortunate passengers rose upon the rolling swells of the surging billows. The life-boats of the Meteor were lowered in due time and a number saved from' untimely and watery graves. The steward, pilot, each and all of the crew, merit and will ever have our bestrwishesand respect. The night was foggy and forbidding, yet at the time, and before the collision occurred, they were seen respectively by each six miles off. There were about 175 or 200 passengers on the Pewabic. We have the names-of 'seventy. five of the pa§tengets saved, anittlfentY - three of the crew. We are unable to ascertain the • number of lives lost ; as near as it can be -estimated it is supposed to be about seventy. The 3leteor remained near where the wreck sunk until morning, in order to . pick up the floating bodies. The MOhtlAVlC ? :pagsing down, was signaled and promptly came tathe reseue, The pumps Of the Meteor were worked for safety and precaution, as she-had sustained a slight injury from the shock. As soon as it was light the boats cruised around among the floating debris to pick up passengers, but so long a time bad elapsed that none were found. The leak was effectually checked, and she passed on her way up to ibirtage Lake. The Mohawk, with the survivors of the Pewabic, came on to this city. The officers of the Mo hawk have many hearty thanks for their time ly assistance. . . . 11EROIC DEV.DB Several noble and heroic incidents occurred worthyof mention, one ortwo in particular, the most Memorable of; which was performed by Miss Ada Brush (eadaughtar of F, A, Driish, Esq., of this city.) Thislady, by her cool and determined efforts, not, only saved her own, life by . expert swimming, bat that of Mrs. C. M. Wright, whose husband was drowned with a lady clinging to his neck. Miss Brush saw Mrs. Wright struggling in the water some Ws tanee from her, and. with great presence of mind she swam. to her. rescue, pus ed a float ing spar up to her,youlthus saved her from the terrible fate of herbeloved husband. The ma nifestation of such fortitude on the part of this lady will, be ever remembered by those who were witnesses of the terrible catastrophe. Mrs. L. ilianight of this city, and others whose names latve not come to hand, also displayed a . spirit of determination seldom witnessed. _ . Captain McKay was one of the last upon the wreck, and upon leaving the sinxin vessel of - which he was so proud., he saved the life of Miss James of New York. Mr. Cleveland, the mate, worked to the last, and cut loose one of the life-boats just as the ill-fated Pew able went down. He was one of the last air Mr. McKnight did not leave the wreck until he was taken by one of the crew and throWn upon the deck of the Meteor. The affable and ready clerk, Mr. Charles A. Mack, was one of the first in the life-boat, and would not rest until he had rendered all the aid that was pos sible. lie saved the engineer before the boats were got into the water. sTATRMENT OP OBADIAR 0, Woof:. Mr. Obadiah C. Wood makes the following statement About half-past eight or nine o'clock, on Wednesday night, while off Thun der Bay Island, and several miles ahead, we descried the Meteor coming up ; it was raining at the time, yet the night Was very bright; the passengers all went forward to see the Meteor approach ; it soon became evident that she would collide with us; the passengers became frightened, and ran to the after part of the Pe wabic for satety ; Captain McKay gave orders to have his helm put a port, and the Pewabic had just commenced to swing, when the Me tall', whOse helm bad been pot to starboard, ran Into us, striking ue almost squarely in the vicinity of the piliot-hOuse, and Cutting us down to the water's edge. The confusion among the passengers at this time was indescribable; they were perfectly panic-stricken. Many escaped by jumping on board the Meteor while the balance went down with the wreck, which sunk in less than live minutes after the collision. Some of the persons employed on the Pewabic; who had retired, escaped with nothing on but their night-clothes. Moth boats were going at fall speed. I was standing in the saloon door when the Meteor struck us. I ran to the upper part of the boat, and intended to jump on board the Meteor, but found the distance too great to make the attempt. I then got on the hur ricane deck with the same object in view, but bad soureely reached thatl - )lace before the Pewabic made a fearful lunge for ward and sank. I was thrown forward with great violence, and struck against ' the smoke-pipe, and the next instant found myself in the lake among portions of the wreck, the cabin having broken to pieces. a 1 swam to life-boat that I saw partially drift ing, and attempted to get into it, but was washed off by a heavy sea and carried toward the Meteor. Entangled in the bulwarks of the latter steamer was the broken flag-staff of the Pewabic, to which I clun until rescued by a g rope being let down fkOM the Meteor. Captain McKay, of the Pewabic, remained perfectly cool and collected, doing hie utmost to save the passengers 4 by preventing a panic, lowering the boats c. ; but as his steamer went down so quick' ho was unable to do as much as he otherwise would have done. The Meteor remained all night in the vicinity of the catastrophe, and picked up those of the survivors who were afloat on pieces of the wreek. About six o'clock Thursday morning, the propeller Mohawk came along, and the rescued passenget , § and those of the crew Who were saved were transferred and brought to this city ; nothing was saved from the Pewabic. ADDITIONAL PARTICULARS—INTERRSTING INOI. DENTS—STATERIENTS OF SURVIVORS, RTC. [From the Detroit Advertiser, Saturday.) Passengers on the Fewabie inform us that when the collision oeeurretl they were making preparations for a dance. This fascinatin re creation had been indulged in every night g: on the way down,and it being the last night which the gay and happy throng would have an op portunity to enjoy themselves before their se paration, they were calculating upon having a good time. Alas! they little dreamed that in stead of threading the giddy mazes of the dance on that memorable night, they would soon be struggling for life main the angry bil lows, many of them to go down beneath the dark waters unknelled and uncoil:Med and that, in the memory of the agonized survivors, a never-to-be-forgotten scene of terror would struggle for aye with fondest love and affec tion for the mastery. Truly, " what shadows we are and what shadows we pursue.n THE THEORY OF THE CAUSE In our remarks of yesterday, as to the pro. liable cause of the collision, we expressly dis claimed all intention of putting forth a theory as a foregone conclusion; but suggested that it might very probably be modified by facts and circumstances to be developed hereafter. It Must be borne in mind that we have as yet but little more than what may be Called an - ez parte statement ; it being made upon the au thority of the passengers of the Pewabie, who, if there were any question as to the blame, would naturally feel charitable toward their own officers. That statement certainly looks very fair from a landsman's standpoint; but we have some serious doubts as to whether it would stand the test in the critical mind of an expert. They say, for example, that the night was dark and thick, yet they could see the Meteor at a distance of six utiles. Mere is a manifest contradiction ; for, if the night was of the character they describe, it would have been impossible to seeker at that distance. If the weather was thieir, the accident is sus ceptible of being accounted for without blame attaching to any One ; but, if it was Of opposite character, there Certainly was no excuse for the collision. If ever a man earned the distinction of a genuine hero, it is Mr. It, C. Jackson, the first THREE. CENTS. engineer. Last Winter he became the husband of an idolized and idolizing wife, and this was her first trip to the upper lakes. Tlpey were together in the onginetroom whenthe•Ooilision occurred.:. The second etighiw*:,6Arketorhirtt and said, " ' save yOurseif and •WiM i ,./. can:swim, and have no one to taker care;of toy,* - ir-Tae/ 1 " Jackson, hi. all probabinty,-had' no idea. that the boat was on the point of sinking; and • thought only of his duty to stand by his post, • and accordingly replied that he would not de : seri, the engine to the last. His wife became frightened and clung to him, but he told her .. to be calm, saybig he would take care of her. Neither of them left the engine-room, so that iii their doom they Were "not divided." Yet this sad scene was only one of many equally .aftectiag. What a suggestive though unwrit ten history of love and devotion, of terror and death t • A WARSAW' ESCAPE. Mn Charles A. Maelr, the clerk of the Pewit bic, made a very narrow eireape with his life. When' the boat 9 came together he Wars in tile „saloen: Co - mprchencing. the nature of the trouble„he made an effort to escape to the deck. There were two doors, and he , went to the.• one _on the starboard' side, and found it fastened.. He then ran to the hall docw, but the -- Nroodwork bad been so jammed up , in the collision that the way wag closed. He set vigot . ouSlY to work in thruiting aside- the broken L'Os'grnents, and was''soon able to See through the detms. He deseided the rail of the ltle:teeT, - whhth he grasped 4: and the boat disenmkging , herself at that ireornent from the Pewabie, he Was dragged out in safety, but his coat was stripped from his back. A youtla named Thomas' D. Mitchell, sell. of Henry Mitelicil, of ontonagonor.as standing on the top desk ,- aft when the Dolt sunk. As she went down-his amn wag broke' by coming in contact with a frairnerit of the' wreck, and in this heinless:msnoltion he was thrown into the water, from which he was drawn half dead into the small boat et the meteor:. His bro ther, nine years Uhl, who was also on board, obtained possession off a life-preserrer, but Met it again. He then Managed to , tr„et upon a piece of wreck,. and' was thus bilOyeti up until saved by the same small hoat'br which his brother was picked up. • Ma. LYBTNIVS • eTATIMENT. Theodore G. Lyster,- paying teller: - of the Second 'National Bank, of this city, waest pas senger on the Pewabie, and was fortunately saved, A party had been - waiting for the last auppertable to be cleared, in order to • make preparations for dancing, astd at tile =As of the collision he had lefthiettiends for thevue pose of makin c l - arrangement's to secure music for the occaslim. While en this errand; and about half-way toward the bow, on the prome nade deck, the shock came.- Pie saw the Me teor strike, the concussion: making the Pewit bie quiver from stem to 'stem, lik - e an aspen leaf, and he again ran aft, where he intd leittas party, but when. he reacited , there they had left. lie then instinctively began to iirovide for his own safety. Half a- minute after' the two steamers cametogether, they . bectimedis engaged but the Meteor was , immediately , driven upon the other again by- the motion oil the wares,W4 e n ;,44?, Meteor - came second time he seized his opportunity ands leaped upon her, 'landing safely on the taffrail.. The water looked dark, - and although pieces of the wreck could be seen, he. could not dis cern those who were clinging to them. The heartrending cries of those struggling in the• water could, however, be distinctly heard, and they will never be for-mitten:- The loss moneywiso is a very sertous one; and will fall heavily on all concerned, includ ing insurers. The estimated value of the cop per is about *130,000. We have no- particulars , as to the insurance of the cargo, but, as is ens tomary it is no doubt fully insured. , c Lake Superior Express Company " had' about *,55066 in eaSh lit their saffv.whieh they will make an effort to recover. We understand they are about making arrangements through the Home Insurance Company for the services• of their diver, who was to have started for. Buffalo last night, to procure some extra air Pines- lIIISOELLANBOVB The second mate and three others, who had, been left at the scene of the wreck, were pkked up by Captain Harrison of the schooner Wyan dotte, belonging to this port. Afterpicking . up a few articles of no great value, their boat was driven off into the bay, and they .were una ble to get back. They were left. at Port Huron, - The list Of passengers was Made-out frOin• memory, the books and papers of the boat having all been lost. This being. the period. when the pleasure seekers begin to return, from Lake Superior in large numbers, and the , Pewabie being a popular boat, it is doubtless within bounds to, assume that there were in all at least 200 on board. On this hypothesis, the lost will number 100. There are no IMAMS Of Obtain - in 5 - a complete list i iind uneertaintyi. terrible as death itself, will hang for a long time over the fate of many a loved. one. Free Schools in Richmond. One of the young ladies enaged in teaching the freedmen of Richmond, surprised on find ing, as she supposes, that there are no free schools in this City, writes a long letter to a. Philadelphia paper, 111 wide& else draws a gloomy picture of the rising generation. For the information of persons interested. in the subject of education in Richmond, we will state-that, in the year 1800 there were five free schools in the city ; three in 'Monroe ward, one in Madison ward, and one in Jefferson ward; ana that throiiqliceit the trying tiMeB , of the late war our City Councils, notwithstanding the constant drain on their narrow resources to support the city poori. managed to. keep alive ail four of these institutions: They still preserve their organization, though thismonth is their usual time of vacation and they are, therefore, not in operation. They will re sume their exercises On the, first of next month, if the money can be procured to de fray the necessary expenses. Had theeity been organized under civil government, an appro. priation would have been made by the Council for their support. As it is, the civil manager of the city, Mr. David J. Saunders, will take any measure that may seem practicable to sustain them. money is meeessary to support the teachers and proyyle fuel for the winter, and if this lady or her Mends eleelte to per. form a work of genuine philantbrapy, a rare opportunity is offered them in raising a fund for the assistance of these free schools. Our city is poor indeed, and the demands upon her treasury for the support of het tridig.ent popu lation will, it, it feared, be greater than at any former period of our history; and it will not be denied, WO iniegine, that the question of subsistence is even more important than that of education, and must be first attended to. "The self-styled aristocracy here,e who de clared to the lady letter-writer .that they would never pay a dollar's taxes in support of free schools, are a class of whom we have often heard through liorthernnewspapers, but never seen Or known for ourselves. Vire cannot doubt 'their pestilent exictence when it 18 80 fat' quently asserted by such well--informed per sons; we, however, do not, hesitate to say that they are a much less influential class of per sons than the people of the. North have been led to suppose. After inquiry, we can find no citizen who can point out one of them;. and notwithstanding th eir opposition, the City Council, up to the day of their diasollitiOni continued •to vote money fertile support and Maintenance of free schools. But if this lady and her friends are in earn est, in their desire to see the present free schools of this city put, on a more protperous footing, and increased in number, they have only to ,raise the money. Any information they may desire as to our Present System of free schools, will be gladly kiven them by.lift. S. D. Denoon, who has for many years been chairman of the City. Council Committee on Public Schools, If -our system, when ex plained, should prove deficient, or, from any reason distasteful, the young lady and her friends yea proceed to organize on their own plan, being assured cf the mtwaperatiOn of all good citizens, whatever that everlaSting bug bear, the "self-styled aristocracy," may say or do.—Richmond Republic, Avg. O. THE DWELLING-HOUSES IN THE SOUTH.-.-The North Carolina correspondence of the Cincin nati Gazelle says; The dwening-houses of the south present a strange annearanee In their furniture and household equipments. Every thing has been mended, and generally in the rudest style. Window glass has given way to thin boards, and these are in use in railway coaches and in the cities. Furniture is marred and broken, and none has been replaced for four years. Dishes are cemented in various styles, and half the pitchers have tin handles. A complete set of crockery is never men, in very few families is there enough loft to set a table in a manner approaching gentility. A set of forks with whole tines is a. curiosity. Clocks and watches have nearly all stopped.. Carpets have gone for army blankets. Pianos, where any are owned are terribly out of t tune. Clothing, including hats, bonnets, and ladies' and children's shoe's, are nearly all home-made. flair brushes and tooth brushes nave tin worn out, anynhe are twoltell.and are not yet replaced;; pins, needles, threact,atun thousand such articles, which seem. indispen sable to housekeepers, are very scarce. Even in weaving on the looms corn cobs have been 'substituted for spindles. Few have pocket knives. In fact, everything that has noreto, fore been an article of sale at the South is wanting now. At the tables of those who were once esteemed luxurious providers, you will find neither tea, eoffee,sugar nor spices of any kind. Even candles in some cases t have been replaced by a cup of grease, in winch a piece of cloth 18 plunged for a piece of wick. The problem which the South had to solve MS been not how to be comfortable during the, war, but how to live at all. AFFECTING INCIDENT.—AG affecting lll incident occurred in the Provost Marshal's oce two or three days since which brought the tears to the eyes of all who witnessed it. Large num bers of ladies have been recently flocking to the OilieC Ur subscribe to the President's' Am nesty oath, as a preparatory step to drawing rations. A. little boy appeared• at the Mar shal's desk one morning, anti in timid accents inquired if he could take the oath for his mother. His features were handsome, his manner modest, but he had an intelligent and an appealing look. He was informed that his request Could not be granted, but that his mother might take the oath in person. The little fellow turned towards trio door and burst into tears, and sobbed so passionately that the Provost Marshal called him back to ask the cause of his grief: "My mother", he said, "is sick and confined to. her bed; she .is unable to work, has nothing to eat, and is starring.' , This appeal was irresistible, and the Provost Marshal interested himself in the ease and procured the necessary relief. Num. hers witnessed the incident and Were deeply affected by it. It was a beautiful instance of affection in the little boy to offer totake the oath (though too young to appreciate it,) for his mothers sake and in her stead. How many other similar cases of suffering in the community Alas twe fear toomany—too many.—Pefersbure , Express. KB/MICKY TOBACCO error.--From reliable in formation from various sections of the State, it has been ascertained that the growing crop of tobacco will be far less than that of last year, both in quality and quantity. In the more Southern portions of the State,. and in Tennessee, what is denominated as ciarkes "'me l eaf 1 6 &eally Short, the impression pre vailing that the yield will ,trot much 432 " 134 half the usual average. A letter from nxlit county, Kentucky, from au intelligent observ er, who is not a tobacco grower or buyer,states the result of his investigation that, under the most favorable circumstances, a two-thirds crop, as compared with last year, will not be to rown tbis year in that whole region. With a planting Anil the _hazards of early frosts, t that estimate is very liable to fall shorts Talc STATIC HOUSE AT TRIINTON, N. J.—The work on the new addition to the State House i s going on briskly, and the upper hall, in. tended for the State Library, will soon be finished. The pillars on the portico fronting the river have been erected, and give a vastly improved appearance to the rear of the Nile ing. When finished, the Capitol in point of spaciousness and convenience, will compare very favorably with tlaat of any Other State. THE WArt, PIERS: (PUBLISHED WEEK.LY.) TEM Yap ritNIP will be aent to atarscriberi br 111 r, (Der auntl i p la .41v.tneu,),LL In 60 Five copies 10 011 Tr n copies AO 00 Large' Chiba than Ten wilt be charged at the same rate, $2.00 per copy. rhos money must always accompany the order, and tone outatwe eatt them rotor be deviate from? cle they agora very Mite more than the Met Or PAW. air Foam:Were are requested to set u aunts for Tax WAR rams. sir To the getter-up of the Club of ten or twenty, an ex t r a copy of the paper will be given. STATE: ITEMS. Mr. Calvin Pellett, of Paupoek, Pike noun. ty; rccently came to his death in a singular run/incr. A disease, known as the " bloody murrain," had broken out among hia cattle and killed several of theM. He skinned one of the dead animala r nsing a pocket knife for the purpose; On the following day, he removed from his firm, with the sable knife, a splinter which annoyed him. In a short time his arm began to pain and swell, which continued un til the arm was twice Its usual sine, and Quite black. The viitis continued to spread through out his system., and in a few days he died in 'great aginix. Adjutlllft Gcneml Alexander L. Itussell, will be the Chief Marshal at the exhibition Of twerminsylvania. State Agricultural Society, to - lie held at Williamsriort, in 501#001ber. General E. C. Wil!iatio has been appointed Ucneral Superintendent. The subscriptions to the Soldiers' Monu ment otWashington county, to be located ad :Moen tl.o . the county smit,..wlth in the Washing ton cemetery, have reached E 4,000. n 6 ," National lialkit of Lawrence eountyY' has bead designated by tile Treasury 4 Depart. went, BEl'fb depository ot"publie moneys of the .United States. —ln consequence of no one desiring to of ficiate as Pbstmaster at Marr i Lazernecounty t the office at that place has boon discontinued, HOME ITEIVESk During a Service in one of.the ehurehelltin Cleveland, Oldo, last Sunday'evening, one of the stays of thenhanAlolier, which is supported in the central part of the house, broke, and thePebr upset the worn! Ord , 011 lamps of which it is conirMed, The lamps broke in falling,the oil iguited r ond severalpews began to blaze instantly. Three or four ladies were covered with the burning oil, and the flames leaping over theii , clothing, were with dliti culty extinguished: —The telegraph wires , Petween :311ringtteht and Boston Were Florio':1 1 y affected" by the aurcira borealis on Thiresiday, and messages were• transmitted during: the afternoon by natural electricity wholly, no batteries being used. At Hartford, Wednesday night, the au rora was so vivid as to , enable persons to ace the time of night on `he• church elookti after the moon had gone down. The Biddeford, (Pie.) Journal says, the Pepperell. Mills in that , city have increased the wages of their operatives upwards of twenty per cent, so that odd 14ands (females) are making reftiii/Y $1.95' per day. Female operatives are in good demand. The ebrdltant , would run all their iipirldlerfrif tit ey had suffi cient help. -J: D. Howell, a brother-lit-lay of Jefferson. Davis, who was soundly threshedit n Savannah, on the 4th inst., by a Captain... Has% iy, for using language disrespectful to our a varnment, and unbearable lig any WILL mai al has been ordered to pay a fine of $250, or be s oiifiiltd itt the county fail six months. The colored schools in toutsin na, estab lished by General Banks, embrace, it is re. ported, 126 schools., 230 teachers, 15,i 00 in day schools, and a i atra ailicita in night awl Sunday schools ; in all, AIM persons , under iustrue. tion. The Farmington (Me,) Chronicle says, a species of insect is threatening the extermina tion of the Canada thistle. It envelop 08 the top of the plant in a wpb, and' prove) its its growth and flowering. It is said that the Government is atm mt to make a descent on the faro banks of aincin nati, to recover $90,000 lost by A. R. Stone, who, recently committed suicide on account 0 f his defalcatiooo. -- „ It is estimated that the Cat& of $16,00(1 be required to put the streets of Poterslitirg. Va., in order. An appropriation for this amount was asked of the City Councils, but no action was taken in the matter. The Staunton h'peciator understands that it is the purpoee of a large portion of the freed men in that part of the country to emigrate, at an early day, to some of the Northern and Western States. The tower erected by Ben Butler during his temporary command of the Army of the James, is to be conveyed North. It was never of ggy service. The Springfield BiLpubliean says there is ail nn usual scarcity of servant girls in that city, and recommends the Freedmen's Bureau to send colored girls to supply the deficiency. —Barnum's late property in New York, has gone into the hands of Bennett, of the Herald —passed from a luig humMig to a bigger one,.. Lou. Jour. Major General Burnside, since the accept. ance of his resignation, has gone into business in Rhode Island, where he will continue to re. The Salt Lake > Paity megrapa has the name of Brigham Young hoisted as candidata for Governor of Deseret. John M. Botts is at Saratoga. He confirms the report that he has written a history of the rebellion. It is proposed to enlarge the Observatory at Detrint, The fees Of the health Officer of Now Yorlt amount to $lOO,OOO per annum. FOREIGN ITEMS. Brigands are still keeping everybody on the alert in the enviroxiP of Rome. A baud in the neighborhood of Sublaeo has been very► troublesome lately. The architect Moraldi went out the other day to visit the source Of the Mercian water, which it is proposed"to bring into Rome. The spring is situated be. tween Araoli and Sublime. The architect and his assistants were getting a 1/10-nic luncheon there when they were warned off by a patrol of gendarmes, who ;informed them that bri gands were lurking about, and had just killed a young farmer for want of 2,000 scudi ransom. —The Paris Constitulionnel relates that a pribet went into a reStillirant in the Palais Royal on Priday, and made a good dinner, 1 - 16 paid his bill and went away, but a quarter of an hour afterward came back, and, after ob, taining permission from the lady president of the counter, made a speech to the company 4. informing them that he had most unfortu- Dainty fOrgetten all aboutite Doing Fridaband eaten meat on ,a day net allowed by the church; and that, having thus unwittingly given oceai sion for scandal, he thought it necessary to make a public expiation. Thii French Government has just autho rized the piCeliminary surveys of a railway along the coast, from Cherbourg to Brest, This line, essentially maritime and strategical, will establish direct communication between the two great military ports on the Atlantic, as well as between the numerous trading and .flphlTig ports scattered along the coast, which will be piaped in direct connection with tile lines of Normandy and Brittany running to Paris. The Belgian committee for pilgrimages to Rome is organizing a fifth excursion for the list of next mouth, setting out from Brussels, whence the pilgrims will be conveyed by Parte and Lyons to Marseilles, thence by t 41311 t 9 gt• vita V eeehia, and by rail to Items, fora stay of fifteen days. The return trip includes NapleS, Leghorn, Piza, Genoa, Geneva, and Cologne, at a total expense, sight-seeing comprised, of Light hundred francs per pilgrim. f a mous rogp.treo planted a thousand years ago by the Emperor Louis le Dhow more, in the caster.. estlifidral at Dildershelm, has been in particularly nue bloom this season, and looks fresher and greener than ever. Two shoots, which sprang up from the knotty millennial roots of the tree in 1803, have attained already the height of the roof, —A dramatization of Milton's Paradise Lost is played at Paris, in which Eden is represent ed with gorgeous scenery, and the tree of knowledge in the second grooves. Adam and Eve dispute about the fall/1114On fruit in lam gunge not of the elibleest description, Witt Cain's sons dance a ballet with the modern sensuous accessories. The places In London which are devoted to musical and theatrical entertainments con tain room enough for V 30,400 persons. The twenty-five theatres hold 41,000 persons; forty one concert halls, 79,090 persons and the Crys tal Palace, 100,000. A Brussels letter states that King Leopold has just been again punctured for the dropsy, which had gained the • chest. Ills Majesty's strong constitution enables him to resist those repeated attacks, but there is no hope of a de• unitive cure, —Rosa Bonheur, the talented French artist, has lately been beaten la a lawsuit. She 110.4 got the idea that her artistic nature absolved her from the necessity of fulfilling her con tracts. LOUlSQLielitmay is the new prima donna i n Par i s . me is an Austrian, 111111 rPeelvem .7,000 per annum. Lord Palmerston has a horse entered let'. the Derby of 18117. The probability is that the great eable,has " gone under.”—.2bunton Gazette. Ado j snap itienkin returned In the C11,1)a. Tnr. WORK or Tius.—A Saratoga corms. pendent writes: Not the leash interesting bit of history is in connection with a man, young, good-looking, and wealthy, well known at all the fashionable resorts throughout, the world, and who is now here. Ten thousand years ago or less, a merchant in New York sent a clerk to the then village of Chicago, to collect a debt of 03,000 free/ ti,gYediterct with in structions never to return 'without the *paws , - The clerk 'finding the ease a. dmMUM , one, Et& cepted as payment $3,000 in money and a piece of land now in the heart of Chicago, then valued at *5,000. The merchant was so indig nant at receiving almost worthless land In payment for his merchandise that he dis charged the clerk arid cancelled the book ac count with the :MO N , 'placing 110. VIM what ever upon the land, the title of which he had received. Years rolled on, Chicago from a small Puebla had swollen to the proportions of a city, and the negleetelk lots were worth millions, A few years ago the merchant died. In his will he left the disgraced clerk AOKI (It should have been e. 50,000,1 and the young heir to-4V is living a life eteeee and elegance on mousy usgaimi by 11is Tat i i have stated. 11 A. r 4,