TII ErEitk:Ste3, 1,01.4.5EED lastirx (GLINDAYS EXCEPTED) Or JOHN W. roimmEr. !Roo, So. III SODTR FOURTH STREET. THE DAILY PRESS, Subscribers. is EMIT DOLLARS PRR r.v ro, 111 Santee; or FIFTEEN' CENTS PRE payable tD the Carrier. Mailed to sub• partners out of the aty. tisvax DOLLARS PM „ o rs; TOBIN DOLLARS AND FIFTY' CENTS FOR 3401 /Tro; ONE DOLLAR. AND SRVENTY.FIVZ j .' 23 , 0 8 ros. TM= MONTI'S, invariably in advance for the time ordered. ApyvrthusmentS insetted at the Usual rates. Via nil-WEEKLY rimless, m oo to entsuirifiert, Foes DOLLARS run AN vo., in advance. tly Vrtss. SATURDAY, ALTGUST 26, 1865 TH E NEWS. We print to -day partial details of a terrible disaster on the sea. The ship Brother Jona plying between San Francisco mid Port 30a, Oregon, was wrecked near Camp Lin coln hi the latter State, on the 30th of July, and all On board except fifteen were drowned. The 's a:ctl! , er.9 and crew numbered between two ilad three hundred. Among the lost was Brig. ocneral George Wright. Brigadier General Wright is not the old commander of the Silt nr „,y Corps, Ile was the colonel of the Rh a.aiment United Stales Infantry, but was ! I t the time of the disaster brigadier general pt v olunteers, and was on his way to take cora , .l of the district of Oregon. He was a _„ldler noted no less for his bravery and judg nent than for his goodness of heart and many peial qualities. Lieutenant R. Waite, of the g l ee regiment, w a also lost. He, too, prOvecl :himself a good and faithful officer. Roth Will la , regretted by friends all Over the country. wednesday midnight, the steamer George hoary. Captain Blakeman, from Baltimore for s „ e fanc, with one hundred passengers, and a :large freight, Collided, when oft Cove Point, aith the propeller Sea Gull, bound from New Vora: for Baltimore. The Leary was cut down to the water's edge, but, fortunately, - the shift :lug of the cargo lifted the injured part above the water line, and prevented the sluicing of the craft. Tile passengers, with theirbaggage, we re put onboard the Sea Gull, and conveyed le eolith:lore. The Leary was towed into the 1 , ,,,,,xent River. The chief steward of the laary was drowned, and the chambermaid, and adeck-hand, badly injured. The trial Of Wirz was continued yesterday. The examination of the rebel surgeon, John C. 'Gates, was resumed. Ile testified to the scar city aml worthlessness of the food given town' soldiers, and also to the almost entire absence Of - medical stores for the use Of the sick. A morning report of a rebel surgeon was also in ireduced, iu which he pointed out the horrible treatment meted out to our brave boys. His a ppeals for relief were, however, unheeded. one of our own surgeons testified to the brutal Ihreata and conduct of Wiry. and Turner, and a- , to their exploits with bloodhounds. Two important orders will be found in an. ether coluntu. One announcing that all paroled arisoners who wish to leave the country can h iv e passports, provided special charges are net pending againat them. They cannot return unless by permission of the President. Other persons implicated in the rebellion can make zl ,plicattion for passports, which will be diS -I,c:a of according to the merits of their cases. The other order musters out of the service : macrons general olliCerS, whose names we I,l,Hish. Among the number are Banks, Cagey,' eilbleday; and Butterfield. Ali ordinances passedfin Mississippi since the act of secession, not inconsistent with the censtitution of the - United States, have been iatifled by the State COnVentiOn, President Johnson has telegraphed Governor Sharkey, congratulating the Convention on the good work it has done. lie promises them to re trove the troops, and restore the writ of habeas ,rpus ss soon as the State makes sufficient - 1 ,, , eate59 in returning to its allegiance. Judge .Fisher was nominated for Governor; after which the Convention adjourned sine die. We learn from Nashville of another terrible railroad accident. A passenger train which left Nashville for Huntsville, yesterday morn f;ag. ran off the long trestle-work, near Bey amid Station. The entire traits was thrown clown, and ten or twelve persons killed, and :darn twenty frightfully mangled. The ex re,a messengers, Mosby and Ilitalett,i were among those killed. At the Ohio Democratic State Convention, uhich met et Columbus on Thursday, General (so. W. Morgan was nominated for Governor, and Win. - ..ong for Lieutenant Governor. The : -cautions will be found in another column. Iddresses were made by General Morgan, and Ne,•srs. Vallandigham and Pugh. -A resolution was presented in the Canadian Peliament on Wednesday, strongly favoring the completion of the Welland and St. Law-. lance Canal, so that our Government may be frevailed upon to renew the Reciprocity Treaty. It was voted down by the Ministerial party. In the Wiry trial, yesterday, it was moved hy Mr. Baker to strike out from the charge of conspiracy the name of Mr. Joseph White, his "Christian name not having been correctly ;ire.n. The motion was, however, overruled lc the Commission ; thus deciding that the Jalaa Advocate was privileged to amend it. Yesterday afternoon a fire broke out in a frework..establishment, No. 16 John street, New York. There were numerous explosions. toe girls, who worked in the upper part of .11:tiding, were burnt to death, and others nar alwly escaped. The ordinance abolishing slavery in Missis ,:hla is not to be submitted to the people. The members of the State Convention, and :floe four hundred ladies, have petitioned President Johnson to pardon Jeff Davis and CA. l .;overnor Clark. A base-ball snatch was played yesterday be. 7ween the Empires, of New York, and the olympies,"of this city. The latter were de featee. Tile score stood---Empire, 37 ; Olym pics, 17. `"'OtarV Stanton arrived in XelY DAC col, Wednesday dvening, frOMWashingldil. lie at once embarked for West Point, where he is to Pend several days for the benefit of. his health. Commissioner Newlin, of the Agricultural Buircan, says that the August reports Show d sligltt falling off in the wheat crop. Corn is mmising. The same can be said of all the , ether crops, except tobacco. A fire Occurred in New York yesterday. One woman in the building burned was killed, and 111111 fatally burred. Some bodies are sup- Eiof,(:(1 to be under the ruins. A National Masonic Convention is called to 10(11 in October, at Louisville. The P. G. M., and P. 0. li. P. of Kentucky has issued an ad tiras, tiring the reasons for the call. : For six months ending with June, the foreign :wedged - ion into the United Stateg OOMPriSed 75,000 persons, of whom 43,000 were 'waxes. 31r. Maurice Delfossee was yesterday pre- ,41, 161 by Secretary Seward to the President Si: Minister from Belgium. Tao usual ad !,,,ses were made. csieent Johnson Yesterday granted six The reports that he had for the pre nt i.ioppetl extending pardons were, of meat,. untrue. . Jelin ti. denkinaa the Union candidate, , Was Teiaelday elected Mayor of NEM - Brunswick, S" , ” Jt . rsey, by forty-one majority. . Colenel Charles S. Buckley and party, of the American and Russian telegraph, have arrived al Westminster. ( , Perac Leaman, ex-Congressman of Ken has been appointed Minister to Den her details of the ravages of the pirate f aamandoith will be found elsewhere. government loans were in steady demand Ye-today, and prices very firm. State and "- 1 1 y !calla were moderately dealt in at rather t...11er figures. The railway list also im lowed, and the general tone of the market is :.ialds favorable. riadstuffs have been more active during 1115 past week at an advance: Cotton continues and the sales are limited, Coat is more olive. Sugar is in fair demand at full prices. IN!' provision market Continues very quiet :Aid the sales are in small lois only at former :41 es. Whisky is without change. In wool I""ere is very little doing, and prices remain the Salne as last quoted. ETTER FRO3II " OCCASIONAL.” WAsnrtiolrox, August 25, 1805. Tiafiugh doubt, despondency, a censtire, c` 1 11 , . 1, int 7 and threaten - Att. Inc, restoration . I'';iVY of the President is winning its way :iengthening its hold. The action of ConstitutiouM Convention 1;, I; . clntlily the Most healthy symptom -' l ll it is not the only one. Considered ' , Y I example, this action is invaluable; ma there is a healthy hope that the neces- Fity of restoration on any, even the n.,st exacting comlitionS, will PreMlitlY IU -V , III( E.) strong as to sweep away all op lK*ition. Better sometimes than the logic tic books and the theories of the school i, ;lie harsh ex), , ,sience of necessity. Nnithern States nced protection. At last They begin to understand that they cannot wake conditions, and that the terms upon . winch they will he receit-ed by the parent flovernment, are not such as will, in any , ense, degrade them_tmling nothing more than obedience to the Uovernment they hare assailed, and a fitil acceptance of the c , blitations imposed alike open those who . 1 4ive, and those who bave not, been faith /id. There is no rule for the South That (lees not equally apply at the North. It is true the people of the free States did not consent to the rebel lion, and are therefore rescued from the prii;::lay,eat of those in the slave States who .lal so consent ; but in the work of restoia there is much, also, Unit they must tun.sent to yield and lose forever. It is the i fr ompling of sheer malignity, therefore, to 3 that these people are not anxious to wel. Cezne the Southern r..itates hack to the nu- • ••:‘ 40141' • • 11'19..-- „Eel* ;11 \ - • — l 4 r -r4r. 411111117. "- {yamll 17(97allerill , 241)/r .„,_.• • -rgaCatt4\ - • .1 1 / 4 /: - • _Azto VOL. 9.-NO. 23. tional hearth-stone. It is equally infamous to say that they are controlled by politicians whose interests lie in the continuance of dissension and disunion. There is no mo tive in the North, not even that of cupidity, for the maintenance of such a condition. There is, on the contrary, an eager longing for reunion. But strong as it is, there is a resolution equally strong that there can be no reunion that is not based upon principle ; and so based as to be fixed and immovable by all the future de viltry of traitors. Hence the value of the action of the Mississippi State Conven tion. Followed up by consistent legisla tion, it will doubtless be responded to by the Conventions of South Carolina and Alabama, both of which meet on the 10th of September, who will in their turn be imitated by the sensible people of Georgia, Texas, and Florida. The rapid acqui escence of these States to the demands of the most earnest Union men of the North contributes immensely to the success of the President's policy ; and if this acquiescence is werfollowed up by consistent laws in the newly organized Legislatures, Congress will be amazingly propitiated, For, after what is done by the late rebellious States, must undergo the revision of Congress. Should their work be discharged with fair ness and humanity, there will be little dis position, (beyond the exercise of a constant and benevolent guardianship on the part of Congress,) to interfere with the progress of rehabilitation. OCCASIONAL. NO IMPORTANT ORDERS. Regulations Concerning Passports to Paroled Rebels. All Except Those Against whom Special Chants 'ire Pending will be Allowed to Lem the Country. THEY CANNOT, HOWEVER, RETURN WITHOUT PER MISSION OF THE PRESIDENT. Numerous General Officers Blustered Out of the Service. THEIR NAmrs AID PRESENT RANK [Special Despatch to The Press.i WASUINGTON, August s 5, 1865. IMPORTANT ORDER REGARDING PASSPORTS To _PAROLED REBELS. EXECUTIVE OFFICE, DEPARTMENT OF STATE, WASHINGTON, August 22, 1865 Paroled prisoners asking passports as citi zens of the United States, and against whom no special charges may he pending, will be furnished with passports upon application therefor to the Department' Of State in the - usual form. Such passports will, however, be issued upon the conditions that the applicants do not return to the United States without leave of the President. Other persons impli cated in the rebellion who may wish to go abroad Will apply to the Department of State for passports, and the applications will be disposed of according to the merits of the several cases. By the President of the United States. WILLIAM IL SEWARD, Secretary of State MIPOT:TANT 011.DRIt FROM TILE WATs DixAwr,t2sl,l, -MUSTERING OUT GEZ.:ERAL OFFICERS. WAR DEPARTMENT, ADJUTANT GENERAL'S OFFICE, WASHINGTON, August al : 1865 GENERAL ORDEns, No. 135.—8 y direction of the President the following named gen3,l olncers of United States Volunteers are here by honorably mustered out of the service of the United States, their services being no longer needed : major Generals—N. P. Banks, Daniel Butter field, Silas Casey, Abner Donnienny, Samuel P. Heintzelman, Geo. L. llartsulf, mad John J. Peck. Brevet Major Generals—A. Asboth, George L. Andrews, William W. Belknap, Charles Croft, Joseph B. Carr, William P. Carlin, Joshua L. Chamberlain, Thomas A. Davies, Elias S. Dennis, Edward Ferrero, Cuvier Grover, Robert S. Granger, Charles K. Graham, Kenner Gerrard, Lewis A. Grant Simon G. Griffin, George H. Gordon, Joseph Hayes, A. J. Jackson, Nathan: Kimball, John R. Kea ly, John 'McArthur, James D, Morgan, John F. Miller, Byron R. Pierce, John C. Robinson, Truman Seymour, Frederick Sale mon, George J. Stannard, Alexander Shaler, Erastus P.: Tyler, James C. Veatch, William Vainlever, W. T, Ward, Walter C. Whittaker_ Brigadier Generals—Richard Arnold, Napo leon B. Buford,Mason Braymen,lieury Baxter, Williain Birney, Cyrus Bussey, Edward S. Bragg, John Cook, Henry R. Carrington, Chas. T. Campbell, Powell Clayton, Alfred N. Duffie, E. J. Davis, Speed S. Fry, Laurence P. Gra ham, Edward H. Hobson, Joseph It. Hawley, Henry M. Judah, Joseph F. Knipe, 11. 11, Lock wood, Jacob G. Bauman, Thomas J. McKean, Sullivan A. Meredith, Wm. M. Morris, Geo. P. McGinnis, Thomas H. Neil, John M. Oliver, A. Pao, Elliott W. nice, Samuel D. Sturgis, James IL Stokes, John P. Slough, Ellakim P. Seammon, Adam J. Slemmer, Thos. W. Sweeney, Alex. Sehemniellinnig, John W. John W. Sprague, Stephen Thomas, Daniel Horatio P. Vancleve, Fitz Henry War ren, George D. Wagner, James A. Williamson. By order of the Secretary of War. ED. D. TowNgtn.:D, Assistant Adjutant General. W. S. ILlxemx. WASHINGTON. Presentation of the Credentials of the Belgian Minister. Official Reports of the Crops Through out the Country. WASHINGTON, August 25 Reception of the Relginn Minister Mr. MAL:RICE DELISOE , I3 was presented by the Secretary, of State to the President to-day in the quality of Minister 'Resident of his ...Ma jesty the ing of the Belgians. On delivering his credentials, he said it was his first duty, and he was happy to fulfil it, to as: ore the President of the Constant friend ship of the Ring, and to express the sincere wishes of his Majesty for his personal happi ness, and for the prosperity and wellbeing of the United States. As for himself, the 'Minister said, he should have no other object in endeavoring to de serAie the President's favorable regard than to maintain friendly relations between the overn went of Belgium:lna that of the United States, and to ilraw more closely the ties of friendt:hip which happily exist between the countries. The Preshlent replied: Mr. Delfosse, I re. eeive yral with pleasm'e as the trepresentative of his 3110esty the King of the Belgians, and I Iwpo that you may find yonr residenee here satisfuctm•y and agreeable. Your Sovereign has performed promptly many friendly 011ieeS for the Uluted States, and he is,. therefore; held in high respect and esteem among the hintrieall people. Our best wishes are coil that given for not only the welfare of your enlightened Country, but for the health and happiness of 'your Ring. Agri:cultural Report. The mentbly report of the Agricultural De partment for _August says the returns of the con•epondents Are Very flip, and show a slight falling of in the wheat crop in the New England and Middle States—something over a half million of bushels, a loss of about 1,750,000 bushels in the States of Maryland and Dela iwnre, end a deficiency of 0ver20,000,000 bushels in the Western anti Northwestern States, Tim corn crop eNbibits the greatest promise, it is everywhere good. The potato crop is almost as promising as thatof the corn. The other crops harvested will be ample for all domestic purposes, mid that of oats will he very large. The prospect i 5, therefore, that the injtkry the wheat crop will be more than compensated by the unusual excellence of the other crops. Time tobacco crop is the only one which exhi bits a general falling off in the amount planted, The heavy internal taxes on the ma nufacture and product, and the apprehension of a tax on the leaf, are assignee by some of the correspondents as a reason for this di mint,bed production. The amount of Wool and the increase! of sheep are ehOwn by the table to bear a like proportional advance to that they have exhi bil ed since 1861. The report says: "The re bellion bas given to this great interest a pros perity winch protective laws, under high tariffs, failed to accomplish for it." The Wirz In the Wu - ix trial to-day, Mr, DARK. moped to strike; out the name of JOSEPH IV UM: from the charge of conspiracy, for the reason. that Wurra's Christian name was not correctly given; but the Commission overruled the mo tion, thus deciding that the Judge Advocate was privileged to amend it. Presidential Pardons. Newspaper reports that the President has stopped for the present extending pardons are contradicted by the fact that to-day he has granted six. Roles of Government HorsES and Males. Gen, Ennizt advertises the closing Sales of Government stock in September. Twenty five thousand animals, without a single inter ruption, have been, sold under his direction during the present month. The entire pro- seeds from this source amount to more than four millions of dolJam Foreign I *ration. The foreign immigration into the United States, for the six months ending with June, comprised nearly 75,000 persons, of whom 42,000 were males. Minister to Dennisrk.ll Ex-Congressman Guonan It. YEAMAN, of Ken tucky, has been appointed Minister to Den mark. Resigned. JESSE L. WILLIAMS, of Indiana, has resigned his position as one of the Government diree tore.of the Union Pacific Railroad. OHIO POLITICS. Meeting of the Democratic State Con- 1 ention CmcDMATI, August %.—The State Conven tion assembled at Columbus yesterday, and organized by electing Rufus P. Ranney Presi dent. The following ticket was nominated: For Governor, General George W. Morgan; Lieutenant Governor, Wm, Long; Supreme Judges, F. Vantrump and Thos. Melity ; State Treasurer, George Spence ; Attorney General, Daniel M. Wilson ; School Commissioners, S. C. M. Wilson and IL 1.1. Barney ; Board of Pub lic Works, C. Basil ; Clerk of Supreme Gourt, D. S. Donor. The resolutions oppose a consolidation of power in the hands of the Federal Govern• merit ; maintain the doctrines of State rights, as laid down in the Virginia and Kentucky resolutions of 1798; declare that the ordinance of secession being void, the Southern States are still in the Union as States, and entitled to all their reserved rights, and to their due re presentation in Congress; denounce all efforts to confer the right of suffrage upon negroes ; discourage negro emigration into the State; 'compliment the soldiers for their valor and. fortitude; regard the national debt as a na tional curse, and demand the exercise Of the most rigid economy; recommend that the national tax be collected by the county trea surers, as far as possible, and that the mili tary commutation tax be repealed ; denounce the arrest of citizens by military authority in States where the civil tribunals are unmo lested; declare that the continued suspension of the habeas corpus since the termination of the war, and the denial of right of trial by jury, and interference with the election by military power, as in recent instances in Ken tucky and Tennessee, are revolutionary of the Constitution ; and the last resolution declares that while we so resolutely condemn all in fringement of the Constitution, and while we regret that the term of pacification agreed to by General Sherman, in April last, were not at once - ratified by the Federal Executive, we will nevertheless stand by President Johnson in all constitutional efforts to restore to the States the exercise of their rights and powers within the Union, Speeches were made by General m —.organ And Messrs. Vallandigham and Pugh. RESTORATION OF MISSISSIPPI. DOINGS OF THE STATE CONVENTION ITS PROCEEDINGS ENDORSED BY PRESITI , ENT JOHNSON. HE MAKES LIBERAL PROMISES TO THEM. NEW ORLEArie, Augnet .enhei desDateli from Jackson, Miss., dated the ISI instant, to the New Orleans Timm, says: "In the State Convention an ordinance has been passed rati fying all laws and official acts passed since the act of Secession not repugnant to the Consti tution of the 'United States or of Mississippi, prior to January, 1811, except the law concern ing crimes, and the acts enabling the railroads to pay moneys borrowed by them. It repeals ail laws authorizing the paying of dues to the State in Confederate scrip, and the distillation of spirits on the State fleCQltint ratifies all offi cial accounts, proceedings, judgments,deerees, ,kc., of the several courts, with all sales made 1)3 , administrators and others acting in a fide_ cial capacity; authorizes executors and others to Compromise with persons against whom they hold notes, as to the real value of the property for which such notes were given; au thorizes parole test imony to betaken to prove whether or not the contracts contemplated specie or currency ; ratifies all marriages con simunated since January, 1861, whether cele brated with the new forth and ceremonies or not." JAcusow, Miss., August 21, via New Orleans. —The ordinance proposing to submit the con stitutional amendment to the people for rati fication or rejection was lost by a vote of five to forty-four. An eloquent memorial, urging President Johnson to grant a pardon to Jeff Davis and Charles Clark, late Governor of Mississippi, and signed by over four hundred ladies, was read, A resolution was adopted requesting the President of the convention to forward the same to President Johnson. The convention gave their President the right to convene them when deemed necessary. aittrAits, August .M.—A special despatch to the Times, dated to-day, says General Sharkey has received a communica tion, by telegraph, from President Johnson' congratulating the Convention on the pro gress it is making in paving the way to re admission into the 'Union. All obstacles will soon be removea, and he says he will restore the writ of habeas corpus and remove the troops at the earliest moment when the State mai:es sufficient progress to have entirely re turned to its allegiance. He hopes the ex ample of Mississippi will soon be followed by other States. Judge E. Fisher was nominated Yor GO - VW:- nor, and the Convention then adjourned sine die. THE PIRATE SHENANDOAH. She Continues her Ravages Among the Whaling-ships HER CAPTAIN DECLARES HE EXPECTED THE ASSAS SINATION OF MR. LINCOLN. Nnw TORT, August 25.—The lastest San Fran eiscO papers received by the Ocean Queen give the following details of the ravages of the pi rate Sbcpandosh : The' Shenandoah had destroyed the bark Susan Abigail near the Gulf of Anadyr. It seems that the Susan Abigail had San Francis co papers of the lath of July, eontaininm fLO• counts of the collapse of the rebellion, bat the pirate; Waddell would not credit them, as they came from Northern papers, and announced his. intention of burning every American vessel he could find. After de sire:ol)g the. Susan Abigail the pirate went , to - „: 104 1y Behringts Straits and he Arctic Ocean. At et.. Lawrence Island lie burned the ship' General Williams, of New London, and the next morning be burned live more vessels. The bark General Tike had arrived at San Franeisco with the crews of the seven I ,, :isels, viz bark Susan Abigail, ship Gen. Williams, bark W. C. Nye, of New Bedford bark Gipsey, of New Befilord; harks Catharine, :Nimrod and 1 abella,.ail of New Bedford. - - paroled prisoners report that Captain Nye m , of the alhail, must have succeeded in notifying sonic of the vcssels of the proximity of the pirate ' as four were seen putting back icon after, and, with those notified by the Ucncral Pike, some thirteen were turned back. The General Pike wee bonded by the pirate fOrf.ils,lM, and two himdtfid and seventy-one Oilicers and men of the destroyed whale ships were put on board for Snit Francisco. Among those turned back by the General Pike were the Addison Pierce aini a Canton packet, both of New. Bedford. It is believed that the pirate will oertainlY destroy fifty more vessels, as they,were all to the northward. The bark Richmond was also warned off, and sailed from Plover Bay for the Sandwich Is lands. In conversation with Captain Smith, of the ship Wm. Thompson, the pirate asked - the news. Captain Smith replied that PreSident Lineoin had been assassinated. "I was pre pared tourer that," said the pirate, exultingly. lie d hl not believe that Lee had surrendered. Among the people on the Shenandoah was an Englishman, who seemed to be prospecting for the purchase of fine vessels to put on a line between Australia and New Zealand, and it was probable that he would purchase some of the captures male by the pirate. The otheers of the Shenandoah talked of arming, two of the whalers, to go up and de stroy the whalers at points which the pirate could not reach, and were very desirous to en list the captured crews. In some instances they were successful la obtaining men in this way. The Kanakas, an English vessel, laden with coal, was seen by the ship William Gifford, bound for the Shenandoah. The Niassachusetts Races. SPRIT:OI , IEIA August :u.--The trot on Hamp den Park to-day was for *.500, and open to stal lions. Commodore Vanderbilt, Volcano, Gen- Meade, and Harry Clay were entered, but the latter was witbdrawn. There were live heats• Voleano WOll the second. Time-2.35M, 2,37, and 2.37. Tbe raee was the "squarest” of the week, and was closely contenea. PHILADELPHIA, S TR TRIAL OP WW. Further Instalment of the Herors of Audersonvillel A REMARKABLE REPORT A REBEL SURGEON. Ills Complaints of the Inhuman Troliirit of our Soldiers Unheeded. NO FOOD FOR THEM FIT TO EIT Roots and Herbs the. Only Netiehe for the Sick. THE STOCKS AND CHAIN•GANGS THE REWAID FIR ATTEMPTS TO REGAIN LIBERTY. WIRZ'S AND TURNER'S ENTI4S WITH BLOODHOVNDS. WAsitutoTotc, August 25.—The court , Om was crowded with spectators this tnornig, including many ladies. Captain Wirz was brought in a few minubs to eleven o'clock. The record of yesterday having been readtt length, the examination of Dr. John C. Ws was resumed. Speaking of the Andersonvffe prison, he said the scurvy there was nex.r.o rottenness; some of the patients could not 4 because there was no mastication ; their teth were loose; they frequently asked him to gve thern something to eat Which would Mee pain; while Dr. Stevenson was Medical t rector, he did not manifest much intereS the relief of their necessities ; the raticis were IeSS than twenty ounces in twenty-hr hours; he did not know but that a man wok starve to death on it, especially if the foil was of few articles and monotonous; 9016. times the meat was good, and sometimes ba ; in consequence of the paucity and unwho soreness of the ration some of the men stary to death; the amputations and reamputation, owing to gangrenous wounds, were numerouj; there was plenty of wood in the neighborhoO, which might have been cut to answer all tit mantis ; there was, on one occasion, an altet cation between Dr. James and Captain Win; on going into the hospital, Dr. James learn d that his chief clerk had been arrested and oi tiered to the buck and gag; the clerk w ,s bucked, and was set outside of the gate inquiry, Dr. James found that the elerk ill neglected to report a man who was inissin Dr. James wrote a letter speaking of Wirzi tyranny t and the clerk stilt continued to ti punished. A sketch in pencil, drawn by one of the in mates. of the prison, was here exhibited to tht tvit116.4.9i who said; Mere was Dr. Dates (NO - the beef; here is Dr. Dates (No. nh giving meat-bones to the cripples. It was his prerogative as officer of the day to supervise the cooking. When rations were to be issued, he would frequently go to the place; some times twenty or a hundred would surround him Imploring for bones; he was represented as distributing' bones; that was Of frequent occurrence ; the sketch was accurate as far as it went; there ought to be twenty or forty figures in the space where one only appeared ; the men sketched hobbled along on crutches ; others crawled On the ground with tin cups in their mouths, because they could carry these articles in no other way; they wanted to mash up the bones to procure their contents for food. Mr. Baker remarked that Dr. Bates looked much better on the witness-stand than he did in the sketch. The witness thanked the gentleman for the compliment. The Judge AdVocate proposed to offer in cyjdonce n morning report of the surgeon act ing as officer of the day, and asked the witness to examine the handwriting. Mr. Baker objected, saying the prisoner was charged with conspiracy and murder. If the defendant had conspired with other parties, these must be before the court. No court could put in testimony in relation to other parties, and try them in their absence. What ever was put in must bear on the penal before the court. He asked whether the cow', could try persons not before it. The evidence, sought to be introduced was not strictly ap-) plicable to the defendant. There was nothing to connect Captain Wirz with this " morning report," and with the surgeon in charge. The Judge Advocate supposed the gentle man was perfectly aware that parties to a con+ spiraey could be tried singly. To save time he would recommend to the counsel " Russell on Crime" and "Starkie on Evidence." - - - - - - Mr. Baker replied that these authorities showed that where conspirators were to be tried the court might, on application of cm set, elect in separate and try the Parties sepa rately ; but in this ease the alleged conspira tors have never been before the conrt to ter for a separation. They were not even in cas tody. They were at large. It was not known that they ever would be tried. In a civil coot he could ask that the charges he quashed. The court decided to admit the paper, whilil was road, AS follows Finso , DivisioN C. September 5, Net Sin: As officer of the day for the past twenty four hours I have inspected the hospital and found it in as good condition as the nature of the eircumstances will allow. A majority of the bunks are still unsupplled with bedding, while. in a isortion of the nmelon the tents are entirely destitute of either hunks, beddingi or straw, the patients being compelled to lie upon the bare ground. I would earnestly call your attention to the article of diet; the corn bread received from the baker's being mails up without sifting, it is wholly unfit for the use of the sick, and often, as in the last twenty-four hours, upon examination, the inner portion is found to be perfectly raw. The meat and beef received by the pa tients does not amount to over two ounces a day, and for the last three or four days no flour has been issued. The corn bread cannot be eaten bymany, for to do SO would be toincrcase the diseases of the bowels, from which a large majority are suffering, and it is, therefore, thrown away. All their rations received by way of sustenance is two ounces of boiled beef and half a pint of rice soup per day. Under these circumstances, all the skill that can be brought to bear upon their eases by the medi cal officer will avail nOthing. Another point to which I feel it my duty to call your attention is the deficiency of medi cines. We have but little more than indigo. nous barks and roots with which to treat the numerous forms of disease to which our atten tion is daily called. For the treatment of wounds, ulcers, &c., we have literally nothing except water in our wards—this article being so limited in supply that it can only be issued for eases under the knife. Some of these wounds are filled with gangrene, and we are compelled to fold our arms and look quietly upon its ravages, not even having stimulants to support the system under its depressing influence. - - I would respectfully earl your earnest atten tion to the above facts, in the hope that some• thing may be done to alleviate the sufferings of the sick. I am, sir, very respectfully, your obedient servant, J. DREWS PELOT 7 Asst Surgeon 0. A. C. S., and officer of the day. To Surgeon E, D. Eiland, in charge first di vision C. S. IL P. Liospital. AFTERNOON SESSION. The Court, at one o'clock, took a recess till two o'clock, when the direct testimony of Dr. hates was concluded. Cross-examined by Mr. Baker.—ls a resident, of Louisville, Jefferson county, Georgia, and was there when the war broke out; up to ,Tune, remained at home as a practicing phy sician, being, in consequence 011dS profession, exempted from service in the Confederate service; he had had no sympathy or wish to go into it; he did not vote or do anything else to bring on the war; he accounted himself a rn ion man • seeing that Governor Brown was resolved to 'bring all males between fourteen and sixty years of age into the State militia,. he became a contract surgeon; to keep out of the State trenches; he took au oath to the Confederacy ; it was forced upon him at the point of the bayonet, and, being under duress at the time, he did not consider it was now binding. liegmtSiliOnS were made on Dr, Clayton for hospital supplies; and not on Captain Wirz . ; never heard any blame attached to the pm. loner about the .badness of rations, nor his Milne mentioned in that connection; Captain Wirz bad always treated the witness kindly, and he never saw him use any harsh means on anybody ; the Confederate soldiers had several AVeng on the ontSide of the p4son; tile witness did not think they were supplied with water from the same source that the Union pri soners were, the latter drawing their supplies from the stream running through the prison; he judged the stream of itself was not un healthy, but the lower part of it might have been, from the drainage of the camps; Ander- Salvino wee merely a - railroad station until the war commenced, when military shanties were put up. The witness was asked he laid any opinion that there was a conspiracy there to cause the death of Union prisoners. The .1 udge Advocate objected to the question. It might as well be asked whether the witness believed the prisoner guilty. It was of no cell sequence. 'Mr. Baker replied that the question was of sufficient importance to cause an objection from the learned gentleman. The court decided not to sustain tile objec tion. The witness was then asked whether he knew of any persons who, by their conduct, conspired to murder Or otherwise ef6040 tho death of Union - prisoners? lie replied he had never been so impressed ; lie had always ob jected to the insufficiency and character of the rations ; the shortness of the allowance was owing to its having been furnished by the Soul horn Confederacy; further supplies could pot be furnished extept by going to the eoun try, and none of the officers had the right to go foraging ; the surgeons always am the best they could, and frequently complained to the Surgeon General about the insufficiency of means furnished. By the Court. Supplies were received from the :.;ortli from the Sanitary Commission, and he saw some of the prisoners wearing the clothes which had been furnished. jir, A. W. Barrows, sworn, , -4fe testified that he had served - as a:physician to the' 7th Mas sachusetts; was taken prisoner at Plymouth, and finally found his way to Andersonville, where he was paroled by Captain Wirz,.and placed in charge of two wards of the hospital ho remained there six months, till the Oril of October, when he made his escape, since which time he bad practiced medicine at home; when he went to Andersonville there were six or seven hundred patients lying on the ground ; they were partially naked, some had broken limbs and gangrene, scurvy, and clyeanic diarrhoea; nine-tenths of the patients were lying on the ground ; while the Others had insudiffient shelter; Captain Wirz would say, when any prisoner escaped or attempted to escape, that he would starve every Yankee for such attempts ; the i n l s oner was puniShed either in the stocks or the eludrilangi the stocks consisted of a frameworti >3 l is&et high, with boucts shut URDAY, AUGUST 26, 1865. together with room fora man's neck; men thus fastened could, some of /them, stand on their feet, while others merely touched the ground with their toes; the chain-gang was sometimes composed of six men, and some times eighteen ; they were handcuffed, and chains passed around their necks and legs, and to these chains a thirty-two pound ball was fastened ; the gang would be held together one or two weeks, the men meantime being ex posed to the sun and rain, which had the effect of weakening and reducing them; he had no doubt of thefact that some died in consequence; another kind of punishment was putting the feet in stocks, the feet being elevated, and the other part of the body on the ground ; the witness never got from Dr. White what he asked for, there always being some evasive answers; anti-scorbuties were much needed but not supplied ; he proposed, butthe authorities refused, to allow the witness to take men and cut timber,which could have been procured ten reds distant: hounds were kept near the hos pital toot the trail of escaping prisoners, WllO, when caught, were brought back and put in the stocks; the witness knew of a ease where a man under such circumstances was mangled in the face by one of the dogs, but recovered ; an other case came under his observation; it was in August or September,lBal, when a Union priso ner was Wounded by one of the hounds; he died indirectly from the bite, but directly from the gangrenous; he had seen Captain Wirz on horseback with hounds, but Turner seemed to have direct charge of the dogs; he had heard Wirz order Sergeant Smith to start tile hounds, as somebody had got away ; sores as large as his hand had resulted from vaccina tion; the matter used was poisonous, and many deaths and amputations resulted; the ration when he went, there was Small, two ounces of bacon, a small potato, corn bread, two and a half inches square, no coffee tea, sugar, and flour; sometimes there was a little rice soup, a gallon of rice in thirty gallons of water I "Itt July they got a few vegetabhip, not a spoonful a day; the morals of the prisoners were corrupted by the cruel treatment ; Medl would steal from each other something to eat, and would work among the filth even for potato° parings or anything else ; a Union man in his ward was shot within the hospital by a Confederate soldier, and wound ed in the thigh ; the limb was amputated, and the man died next day when a raid was ex pected from Glen. lillpatrick the witness heard Capt. Wirz give an order to fire upon the priso ners if they huddled together; there were from thirty-three to thirty-six thousand priso ners there at. the thne, and in the month of August, as appeared from the official report, nearly three thousand died ; on the removing of the prisoners from Andersonville one of them fell back, when the witness saw Captain Wirz knock the man down and it stamp hadirz a upon him ; this was in September, lsi revolver in his hand, but the witness did not know that Wirz used it to knock the prisoner Own. The court, at quarter to four (kWh, 4(1. journed till 'to-morrow. ANDERSONVILLE. Return of the Government Burial Par ty—Report of the 'Work they Aceem- plished. Captain Janice M. Moore, Assistant Quarter master, who left Washington onthe ethofJuly last for Andersonville, Georgia, for the avowed purpose of giving event burial to the remains of our murdered heroes, returned to that city, having successfully accomplished the object of his visit. The Captaie reports that he arrived at Andersonville on the 25th ultimo, after hav ing experienced considerable difficulty in pro curing transportation for himself and his par ty Of mechanics and clerks. The work Of painting and lettering the head-boards for the graves was immediately commenced and finished, occupying nearly the whole time of the parties stay. There were 13,000 neat hette-boards set up, an appropriately lettered, giving the names . , and, a,: far as known, the regiment and companies of the deceased. The Captain found the graves nearly alt marked with a neatly-painted stake, numbered; the numbers on the stakes corresponding with a record kept in the hospital of the prison, giv ing the names of those buried. The Cemetery is about fifty acres in extent, and nearly three hundred yards from the stockade. The dead w ere all buried in the trenches—in many cases over one hundred in a trench. Mounds were created over each body, thus forming graves. A neat white fence has been erected around the cemetery, and the place made to look as inviting as possible. Pleasant walks are being laid out, which are to be shaded by such trees as are indigenous to that region. Captain M. says the country for miles around Andersonville is almost devoid of ver dure Of all kinds, except rank reeds, and stinted pines, and live oaks ; the climate he Considers extremely unhealthy, the heat be ing intense during the day, the heavy dews falling at night penetrating the tents of the Part*, and saturating theirblenkets. Just be fore the party left, a flagstaff was planted, and the American colors were thrown to the breeze. A trustworthy superintendent has been appointed to take care of the cemetery and perfect the idea of Captain M. in the laying out of this modern Golgotha, and the surrounding grounds. A sufficient guard has been placed over the grounds Dy Gen. Wilson, commanding the military forces in that region, and every care is to be taken that the remains of our braves shall rest undis turbed. There were within the enclosure of the stockade sheds about fifty yards iii length and eighteen feet in width ;there were nosideS to these so.called tenements, but they were merely upright poles supporting a roof The stockade, with all the buildings, are to remain standing until they fall by decay, lit monu ments of the heinous crimes committed within their limits. Miss Clara Barton, the, philan thropist, who accompanied the expedition for the purpose of collecting evidence as to the whereabonts of our missin g n , men, returned with Captain Moores party. One of the party, a clerk, died from typhoid fever, and was buried in the Cellfetery. There were about dye hundred buried by the rebels, of Whom no id•-• cord was kept, and consequently their remains could not be identified. The remains of only one body were found unburied, the rest hav ing been interred in the trenches. CALIFORNIA, The Telegraph 'Wires DisturbMl by the Indians—A Fight Between Them and Kansas Troops. NEw Toga, August 25.—A Salt Lake despatch of July 3d, in the San Francisco papers, says that the telegraph operator reports that the Indians have carried off miles of wire, west Of Platte Bridge. On the 920th of June, some 2,000 Indians attacked the post at Platte Bridge. There was heavy skirmishing all the after noon, aid many of the Indians were killed- Lieutenant Collins, of Company G, 11th Ohio Regiment, and twenty-seven men, were killed. Lieutenant Collins was killed while leading a charge of 200 Nansas troops against some WO Indians. The Indians have gone south, A re giment of cavalry was soon expected, who will pursue the Indians. The telegraph will be repaired as soon as the wire eau be pro_ cured. General Ro*cerans received the most enthu siastic welcome in san Francisco. The Pacific warehouse in San Francisco has been burned—loss. $2.50,000. The ship Charger, at San Francisco from Boston, reports having lost overboard, in a gale, J. f, Gould, of mane; George Keigler, or Boston, and an Italian, all sailors. CANADA. NEW Yonx, August 25.—The Herald has re ceived the following ,special despatch from Quebec In the Canadian Parliament, last night, the Oppositidn offered the following resolution, which, after a fierce debate of six hours, the Ministerial party voted down, by a vote of 78 nays tci 20 ayes : Resolved, That the renewal of the reciprocity treaty with the United States is regarded by the people of this province as an object of the utmost importance; and to secure that object, as well as to augment trade and advance the j prosperity of the province, it is ex pedient that the work of enlarging the Wel land and St. Lawrence canal should not be post poned, but should be pressed in preference to any other work involving any considerable expense to the country. NEW YORK CITY. New Tonic, August 25,1863. At half-past four o'clock this afternoon a tiro broke out in the tire-works establishment of Mr. Jones, No. 15 John street. A sheet of flame burst through the doors, and nearly extended across the street. There were numerous ex plosions, and the lower part of the building was soon in flames. Two or three persons es caped from the building with their clothing on tire. The buildin; , was nearly destroyed. Two girls who workdin the upper part of the building were burned to death, and others had narrow escapes. FIRM. A tire was eaufged, this afternoon, by the spontaneous combustion of signal lights. The loss is *'15,000; insured for $lO,OOO. A woman, named Catharine Cleves, working in a fur store, was killed, and John Filow, a fur sewer, was fatally burned, It is stipPoso that some bodies axe buried under the ruins. =EI The steamship Ocean Queen brings nearly a million dollars• in treasure, and a large mini her of passengers. VIE RUSSIAN TELIICIRArn The San Francisco papers publish a despatch from New Westminster, dated the 20th of July, announcing the arrival of Colonel Charles S. Bulkley and party, Who would soon proceed up the coast. =:! The steamship LouiSlt4llll, from Liverpool on the 10th, arrived at this port today. The eteams.hip Edinburgh, hurt). Liverpool on the 11th, has also arrived. Her adviecs have been anticipated. The steamer George Cromwell has arrived. from New Orleans. mu STOCK EXCHAD7O4 SECOND BOARD. 5e(03 xr s ds 'Bl c.lO 'j 200 N Y Cent 1t...530 02 . 4 . 20800 IJ 5 tia 5-20 e 10634 300 do MIN SCOO 1.1 B 5:3 '7l re. 93 100 dO blO 92F8 100000 Tr Noteo 7 3-10 1100 Erie Ratiiray 87 , ,t 3cl serlesi troli 800 do ,:i...1 87:0 201%0 U S Is 1 Y. 0. 200 Iludeon Riv It ....109% new Issue 98it 200 do ....utvg 104.0 Tenn tit Os 7'4'4 GOO Ileatllngit 10544 5000 lido State 68 713.1 100 Al 5 331 , . 1 R.-810 1331 i Itooo 0 & Mae cer..... 24A I 100 do bl 5 01 100 Quicksilver ...an 55 1 800 d 0.... 04 leto 1.10,......, 55N: 200 do., '41.0 GI ; - ANOTHER TERRIBLE DIS ASTER AT SEA. WRECK OF THE STEAMSHIP BROTHER JONATHAN. Over Two Hundred Passengers Lost. Youn, August. 25.—The steamship Ocean Queen has arrived, with San Francisco papers of August 3d. The steamship Brother Jonathan, from San Francisco July 28th, for Portland, Oregon, and Victoria, with between two hundred and three hundred DaSsengers, was totally lost near Camp Lincoln, Oregon, July 30th, Only four teen men and one woman were saved. Among the passengers were Brigadier Gene ral Wright and family, Lieutenant Waite, Sur geon A. Ingraham, of the army, and Captain (lathlook, of the revenue service. No other particulars had been received when the Ocean Queen sailed. General Wright was on his way to take com mand of the Department of Columbia. Among the passengers on the lost steamer Brother Jonathan was Governor Henry, of Washington Territory. IMP.THER PARTICULARS •ros mg./Lerim The Alta Californian of the Id inst. contains the following particulars : The steamship Brother Jonathan had the en gines which were in the steamship Atlantic, Which dragged her anchors, drifted on shore, and was wrecked at Fisher's Wand, Long Island Sound, on Thanksgiving night, risiOvein ber, lsiS. She was cut down and rebuilt under the supervision of Captain Aaron M. Burns, in this city, two years since, and was considered one of the staunchest vessels afloat in the waters of the Pacific. The Brother Jonathan was owned by . the California Steam Navigation Company. she left here on Friday last, at 10 A. M. under command of Cap tainW S. J. De Wolf. e learn that the only staff officer who went up with General Wright was Lieutenant E. D. Waite, his adjutant. Mrs. Wright accompanied her husband. The Gene ral, as has heretofore been announced through the columns of this journal, was on his way to Fort Vancouver, to take command of the De partment of the Columbia, to which he had lately been assigned by the General Govern ment. The following despatch has been placed at our disposal " CAnr Li - neer:lb via Jacksonville, Oregon gi,at Augus tBll.o ( r ltA t ered at San ifrancleco August 1, "lb Col. R. a Drum "At two P. N. yesterday the steamer Brother Jonathan struck a sunken rock, and sunk in less than an hour, with all on board except sixteen persons, who escaped in a small boat, the only survivors of the HI-fated snip. No trace of the vessel is left. I was out last night on the beach with fourteen men • shall keep a party out on the beach. Gem Wright and staff are supposed to be lost. r ull par- ticulars by mail. THOMAS BUCKLEY, "Capt. 6th Infantry C. V., Commanding." "The following is the list of passengers, as from the office of the California Steam Navigation Company. It will be seen that Brigadier General Wright and wife ; Dr. Ingram, U. S. A. ; Captain Chaddock, U. S. E. S. ; Lieutenant E. D. Waite; and Governor Henry, of Washington Territory, were among those W On board. - ho are saved it is imposSible to state at present: Brig. Gen. Wright, U. S. Army, Lieut. E. D. Waite, U. S. Army, Miss Mary Berry, Meyer, David Meffendle, A. L. Styles and wife, W. bl. Logan andservq, James Nesbit, James E . Trites, N. Crawford, T. Dawson, Miss Mary Place, Mrs. Staci:pole, infant and child, J. Weil, Mrs, Anna Craig, Mrs. Lee and infant, Gov. A. C.. Henry, L. G. Tuttle, It li. Stone, wife, and infant, Capt. Chat/dock, U. S. It. S., Mrs. J. C. Keenan and seven ladies, S. B. Morgan, S. N. Luckey, wife, and child, MISS FOrlieS, Charles N. Belden, Albert Micklet, Geo. Wedekind, Jos. Berton, Thos. Moyle and wife, Robert M. Frazer, John B. Craig, Win. BillmiSky, J. S. Dinn, Mrs. Woodlock, t)O"fao Annuls, Fred. A. pound, Gilman Clindruaid James Lynch, J. S. Geddes, lb Mathermli A. Ingraham, M. D., U. S. Army, Jas. P. Richards, , Victor Smith, Miss E. F. Snow, James Connell, J. Li. Gay and wife, Miss N. Witmer, M. L. Defron, Geo. W. Pollock - , Chas. C. Northrop, !J. C; Hunsacker, !Mrs. A. C. Brooks, Miss Hensley, Wm. LO a n and wife, D. Crandall, Mrs. C. Fountani, daughter, and child, D. C. Powell, wife, and four children, A. A. Stone, wife, and infant, Mrs. J. Stanford, Mrg. James attireh i Mrs. Wendell and child, P. Leifer, IMrs. Luckey and two children, Maj. E. W. - Eddy,U.S.A, G. Canal, Moses Bonier, Jog. Oran. li. net:lnnis, Geo. W. Annis, J. Strong S. P. Cr,n* Mary A. wecdle, Patrick Dwyer, John Adams, Two Indiang, .11. S. Manly , Henry nous, Thos. Gullan, C Eisner And Wells, Fargo, & Co.'s Express Mes." Collision in Chesapeake Bay. ONE PERSON DROWNED, AND TWO INJGEED BALTIMORE, August 9.s.—Last night, about midnight, the steamer George Leary, Captain Blakeman, from Baltimore for Norfolk, with one hundred passengers and a large freight, came in collision off Cove Point with the propeller Sea Gull, of the new outside sea line, from New York for Baltimore. The Leary was cut down to the water's cage, but the shifting of the freight fortunately lifted the injured portion above the water line, and preyented sinking. The passe»gers and their baggage were transferred to the Sea Gull, and reached here this afternoon. The Leary was towed into the Patuxent Inver. The chief steward of the Leary was lost overboard; and the chambermaid and a dockhand were badly in jured, the latter it is thought fatally. Schooner Wrecked—Creer Saved And Landed at Cape stay. Early yesterday morning we observed a schooner in distress off Cape May. We looked through Mr. Glossner's telescope, from the lawn of Congress Hall, and plainly saw men in her rigging, signalling for help. No assistance was rendered them until Mr. Andrew Reeves l a i n fe d - ment i to a h t n a ? , .. th W e 'a s t i e e , a k m e e b l o m a r t s l e a f ti tAi l e n Ge l v v e it r h i: . Cap tain Smith, Captain Hewitt, Mr. Lit tle and others, went Mit about one o'clock. hi the afternoon, and took the crew off safely. While we are penning this, the crew are in our office, from whom we gather the following facts : The schooner Bohemia, of Philadelphia, commanded by Captain radley, was bound from New York to Philadelphia, laden with staves. In the storm Whin prevailed on Tties• day evening, a portion of her sails were blown away, and she sprang . a leak. , While endeavor ing to make her way into the bay, at about two o'clock on Wednesday morning, she grounded on Great Shoals. The crew took to the rig ging, and from early morn until noon they signaled in every possible way, while vessels on the Henlopen side, within a few miles of the wreck, paid no attention to their calla ; and bud it not been for the timely and noble help of the parties named, they would have certainly perished. The vessel and cargo will be a total loss.—Cope May Ware, of Thurscley. Thundry Storm and Tornado in Rieh• [Front the Richmond (Va.) 11.2 public of Thursday.] A very violent thunder storm passed over this city yesterday afternoon, about five o'clock, and was accompanied by a tremen dous gale of wind, which Uprooted trees from the sidewalks; and leveled many of the old standing walls from Eleventh street down to Fifteenth. An old wall, part of a house for merly fronting on Main street, near the cor ner of Fourteenth, was blown down, and falling upon the building now in course of creation on the west side of Fourteenth street, between Main and Cary, for Mr. Gard ner, of the firm of Gardner, Carlton, Ss knocked down a large portion of the rear wall, broke about twenty-four of the second-story joists, and materially damaged the side walls. Air. Joseph Hall, a bricklayer, and two negroes, named Bill Richardson and John, formerly a slave of Mr. Randall Maynard, were at work upon a culvert in the basement at the time of the accident. The boy John being a fear feet nearer the rear of the house,was caught under neath the falling wall anti instantly killed. Mr. Hall bad his collar-bone broken, and was se verely injured in the head by a niece of falling timber. The negro Bill Richardson was also seriously injured about the head and shoul ders. Mr. Ball and the negro Bill were gotton out of the basement by sonic friends and car ried to the apothecary of Mr. rowers, where, after having their wounds properly dressed, they were sent to their respective residences. The negro john was dug out from underneath the vast pile of brick and timber last evening about six o'clock. If skull was broken fn several Places, He was apparently about thirty years of ago. A Ham. Git aCAI. BADLY BEATMC—An affair occurred at the City Hotel last evening which is to be regretted by , the friends of the parties concerned. The rebel General Wheeler, who is in the city for the purpose .ofevi dence for the defence the trial of Champ Ferguson, was lying In bed in his room, which was catered by Colonel Blackburn and Cap Lain Quinn, of the lit Tennessee Mounted infantry, 'who proceeded to give the ex-General a terri ble caning. His cries attracted parties to his assistance., and he was rescued from his in furiated Castigators. Tile cause assigned for this attack is said to be that anner,tl Whceleg had threatened to kill Colonel Blackburn, anti had called hint opprobrious names. Wheeler was so badly beaten that medical assistance was required. The weapon used was a heavy walking stick, with which Wheeler's head was terribly contused. Another account has it that the two °facers were shown to Wheeler's room, when Colottel B. inquired if he addressed General Wheeler, who replied that he did. Colonel B. then an nounced himself, when Wheeler extended his band but at once received a blow with a cane, which was rapidly followed up, Wheeler re treating out of the room, shoutin murder, Captain Quinn following up the raid with a pistol in each hand.—Nashville Press, Aug.= A CHAIR FOR PRXISIDMNT JOHNSON.-011Fread. ers will remember that Seth Kin man, the Cali fornia limiter, presented an elk-horn chair, of curious construction, to Abraham Lincoln. ifi. Kinman has now constructed a chair, to be presented to President Johllooll—a chair that surpasses ail his previous efforts, It is made of two grizzly bears, captured by him self. Ind we almost despair of giving any like an intelligent description of the ar ticle. Santee it to say that the four legs, with the feet-and claws in perfection, are those of a huce grizzly bear, While the arms are the arms and paws of another grizzly; the back and sides ure also ornamented with immense claws. The seat is soft and exceedingly com fortable, but the great "feature"of the in stitution', is, that by touching a cord, the head Of a monster grizzly bear, with extended jaws, will dart in front front under the seat, snapping and gnashing its teeth as natural as life. It is wonderful in design, wonderful iu execution, and a worthy souvenir from the bunter of the Rocky Mountains to the Chief Nagis.trate of Uiv THREE CENTS. NEW ORLEANS AND TEXAS. Nzw OutzAws, August Zl.—Sales of Caton to-day 1,750 bales, at unchanged prices. Sales for the week, 15,000 bales exports, 17,000 ; stock, 90,000; sugar and molasses drill and drooping. BROWNSVILLE) August lo.—The railway 40 connect Brazos with Brownsville has been commenced, and several miles of track have been laid. The telegraph line will also be completed in a few days. Brownsville is growing amazingly, and a lucrative trade has been eOnlreeneed with the Mexican rancheros on the Upper Rio Grande, The political news is not important. The ship Francis B. Cutting cleared from Mobile for Liverpool, with a cotton cargo valued at s4o,ooo—being the ilrst cargo shipped to a foreign port since the occupation. General Woods has issued an order forbid ding cotton in Alabama being taken front the plantations or warehouses for the present. Governor Par Sons has proclaimed against cotton and horse stealing, and providing for the reorganization and sitting of the courts to suppress these crimes. An office to procure white labor front Europe has been opened in Mobile. Fire Near Albany. ALBANY, August 25.—Two sheds, each nine hundred feet long, and containing two thou sand cords of wood belonging to the Central Railroad Company, at the a Centro," eight miles from this city, were totally destroyed by lire this afternoon. The loss is twenty thou. sand dollars. The track alongside of the shed was so badly damaged that the trains cannot ',fug, and »assengerS OP the West, to-night, were sent via 'Troy. A Railroad Accident Near Nashville. NASHVILLB, August 25,—A terrible accident occurred on the TennesAce and Alabama Rail road to-day- The passenger trainolVen left here for nuntarille this morning, ran MT the long trestle-work near Reynold Station, and the entire train was thrown down. Ten or twelve persons were killed, and zbout twenty injured. The express messengers, Dloeby and Hazlet, were killed. No farther particulars bays , yet been received. Election at New Brunswick. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., August 25.—The spe cial election for Mayor to-day resulted in the election of John E. Jenkins, Republican, by forty-one majority. Cotton at Cairo. CA !no, August 25.—Three hundred and eight bales of cotton arrived at Cairo yesterday; also, four hundred hales for Evansville, twelve bales for TAverpeOl, anal forty4wo bales for St. Louis. The Ketehutn Derniention—Aggregate Losse.4. The whole iabilities, assets, 1 oans, &c.,which belong to thc churn defalcation, ero nearly as follows t Liabilities of Morris Ketchum Co.& and Chas. Graham & Co., including the redeemed cheeks held by the latter, six millions seven hundred thousand dollars. Arnckunt of assets of both houses, about three and a Quarter million dollars. Deducting the value of the forged cheeks held by Mr. Graham; the total present liabili ties of both houses arc Ave millions three hun dred and fifty thousand dollars. The extent of the abstraction of bonds and the forgery of gold paper by young Ketchum was, according to these figures, sl,2oo,ooo.—Xew rota Pod. Improvements at tile Capitol. The Washington correspondent of the Port land DaiN Press thus describes recent improve ments in the Capitol, at Washington : " On the 18th September, 1713, General Wash ingtoll luitl the corner-stone of the Capitol. Tile edifice has passed t o liscingh various Mtn , lions since then, having been partially then sacked and burned, so far as it was com bustible, then rebuilt and finished, and now in later years so enlarged and remodelled as to change essentially its architectural character, and almost obliterate the original design. Only now at lengthy whenour political insti tutions seem grollllolngthemselves more fully than ever before upon the everlasting and im. - movable principles of j ustice and right, and so approximating assured stability and perma nence, is the Capitol at last approaching com pletion. "The dome, Its grandest feature, is now finished externally, and stands in itsgracefttl majesty against the sky, a monument of mo dern architectural skill. So symmetrieaLand beautiful is it, that you hardly realize its magnitude ; but when you climb its giddy height, and clamber among the network of iron bars and beams between its outer and inner shells, you are not surprised to learn eight thousand tOils of Iron and out mil lion of dollars have been used in its erection. The great fresco that is to ornament the upper section of its interior surface, forming the vaulted ceiling over the centre of the rotunda, one hundred and elghty-sit feet above the ileor, is non - progressing in the hands of hfr. cepatantino ==! "The eastern porticoes of both extensions arc now complete, except a few blocks yet to be added to the one upon the southern or Re presentatives' end of the building. The tym panum of this portico, moreover, has not yet received any . statuary like thosogroups which form sopleasing a feature of its fellows, Beth are supported by double rows of Corinthian columns, and present, now that they are completed, a front of rare magnificence. Four more porticoes smaller than these, and to be supported by single columns, yet remain to be built, viz : one on the northern and another on the southern end. or face of the Capitol, and one on the western front of each extension. The amount of mar ble already used in these Works is truly astonishing, and still the Capitol is musi cal with the clink of hammer and chisel, while huge blocks on every hand are slowly assuming the forms of pedestal and base, shaft and Capital, frieze and. cornice, The time necessary to complete the exterior of tho Capitol will, of course, depend upon the force employed. At past rates of progress two, or even three years will be hardly more than sufficient. I=2 u A very extensive Cnifirgement of the Con gressional Library is now in preee9S. A number of small rooms adjacent to the Libra ry, fornierly used for the meetings of the com mittees and for other purposes, are being de molished, so as to form two spacious hang; one on the north and the other on the south of the library room, and connected with it so to form two L's. The apartment at present Occupied by the library is ninety-feet in length by thirty-three in width, and the new rooms are of the same width, and nearly as long. Since, however, they will contain three galleries, whereas the old part has but two, they will each be about equal to it in ca pacity. The new recims are to be finished in all respects like the other, that is to say, In rich and tasteful style, anti perfectly fire-prOof. The iron shelves and other casting, necessary to lit these spacious halls for their intended purpose, are to be furnished by the architec tural iron-works of New Fork. The north room is to be finished according to contract by the first of January, and the south by the first of July, litll. The cost of the enlargement is estimated to be it 160,000. When completed the library will occupy the entire central part of the western front of ;the Old Capitol, will contain 150,000 volumes, and will be worthy of our capital and nation. The enlargement is going forward upon plans made by Mr. T. U. Welters, late Capitol architect." THE 'MOTHER. OF HAnomi.—There is a singu lar fact with relation to the groat conspiracy which has heretofore escaped publicity, The mother of Harold, the conspirator who was to fl,sMSSinate (it - mural Grout, is a strong Union ist and had many times protested agaillg her sou's secession tendencies. After his part in the assassination plot became known, she stifled all the natural feelings of a mother l and resolutely said that she had tried in vans to teach him better counsels, and now he must take the results of his wicked conduct, with out expecting sympathy from her. Although his sisters visited hint fredUchtly during his imprisonment, and did all in their power 1.0 secure a pardon for him, his mother would do neither, but maintained lier singular resolu tion with more than Spartan firmness to the Republican. Wiiirr 'IV a Realtor.% lINUNR Tilt COMMON LAW. —information has been received at the Freed men's Bureau, from the flop Edward W. MAR, Prosecuting Attorney for Prince Georgels county, Maryland, that the action of a justice of the peace in ordering the dogging of color. eel men for a threatened breach of the peace, was based not upon any statute of the State of Maryland, but upon the common or unwritten law of the laud, Measures will be tracer" to as. certain whether linwrliten law authorized the whipping of any person, and if so, whether a justice of the peace is to be the judge. THE Arrnapcnino CltelEß.V.—The cholera makes slow advances westward. In Italy,S pain, and France, (at Marseilles,) according to a late report, this dreadfiil disease was earning Oil its victims. Excepting a few places, such as Alexandria and Constantinople, the mortality does not appear to have been large, and even in those cities the disease is spoken of as abating. The early appearance of cholera in London seems to be regarded there 119 a fore gone Conclusion, The .Thnes believes, if the cholera cones that way, that "no tpir&antine, no detentions, no fumigation, no lines of demarca tion, will keep it oat." The only counsel given is, that citizens observe cleanly habits, eat suitable food, and abstain from all kinds of excesses. FAIIPPING ON Tile („111ATTA.11000ITIES.—A. pri vate letter from Eufaula, of the 9d, lies been shown us, from which we learn that considera ble trouble is now experienced at that place in forwarding cotton to Apalachicola. The river is quite low, and the boats only carry from two to three hundred. hales on the down trip, Vetton forwaraed to Eufaula is neces sarily oxposvd, or subject to heavy costs nn l waste in storage. It will, we think, be 15011 for parties who design to reach market via Eufaula to advise themselves fully gas to the practicability of the route.—Macon Itiegraph. Markets by TelegraPh• liarminonu, Aug 9.5.—F10ur is fli7e,elosir,~ With an advancing tendency. IV heat ahale demand, mid prices very firm; good new white is quoted at $2.80; common to very fair, idra 2.70 ; prime old red at 41 , 21.0; new rod, $133@*2.35. In Corn the receipts are light; sales of white at 03@07e, and yellow at t.30)9513. Cale/WO, August _t_ Fleur is dull; the sup ply is )10A, A nd holders adic. an advance of Tin. is Wheat dull at Mk. for No. 1, and 184@t2po for \0.2. Corn is active, and advanced ; sales at fr No. 1, and 71 11 . NO. Oats firm at 300. 730 Pr o ovisions firm; o m e ss Pork, $3l, Ilighwines quiet at tAttdelirt. " Receipts. Shipments. Flour, barrels 9,000 1,200 Wium, bushels 23,000 23,000 Corn, bushels 032,000 25,000 Oats, bushels 00,000 18,000 Sr. Lotus, August 23.—Cotton receipts to-day, 107 bales; no sales. Flour dull; double extra p .35g10.23. Wheat has improved ; sales at 1.12 ow,e,, feat common to choice fall )1 beat. White Corn, 780)R0o. Oats. new, 306-iik 50@530. Shipping Tobacco Leaf,tit6.so@lt.7s - insnufae turmg leaf, * 17.45; fine (10, 4tEd.tiPtpll'j, Whisky had ailyli,liced Kitti TIM W.Air. EINEESIO. (PUBLISHED WEARLy.) TEA Walk PENN will be sent to aubscribers b man (per annum in advance.) at SA 50 Five copies 10 011 Ten copies. ......... 1.414 •MI ...... 1411•• •"0 •••••• ..... 1110 00 Larger Clubs than Tell Will be charged at the MK rate, ®2.00 per copy. The money meet atom aeOOMPWSI I the WV and in no instance can these terms be deviated from. at they ajora very Wsts more than the coat of stager. Poetmasters are requested to act as lOW for Tux Was plums. a ir To the getter-up of the Cittb erten er twentril an extra espy of the Paper will be Orem STATE ITEMS. The Columbia County /?..2mtrfr.ar. ewe tt majority of the Copperhead lefulerg are really in a desperate way. They have thrust them-; selves oat anearly all the Christian churehes, became the ministers acted the part of patri ots, in accordance with' their religion, and prayed for the Government an d 4 / 1 sucee" of the cause of right. Their future - ptaspeets are dark, politically and spiritually. They would forfeit their tiny souls to MVO their party. Tito probabilities are that both will be lost. The people of Dauphin county and on the Susquehanna valley generally, are still keep ing up the agitation against the obstructlol2 or the Susquehanna, river by tiaras, which pre+ vent the ascent of shad and other ileh. The fisheries on that river were formerly of great importance and employed many persons, but £ latterly they have been much injured by the obstructions mentioned. Isaac Hell, of West Cain, Chester couat, has a calf, some three weeks old, which has a singular,sbaped head. The upper jaw is doe. ble, and has four nostrils. The lower jaw La single. It has three eyes ; one in the. middle of the fore Dena, The cars are further back than usual. It eats well, and is growing. The Harrisburg Patriot and Union ex presses itself perfectly satisfied' with the species and number of Copperheads at present in that city. The post-office at Forvrardstown, Somerset county, has been discontinued. Mail matter should now be sent to Sou ieriset Furnace, The Copperheads of Columbia county hold. -their County Convention on Monday next, at Bloomsburg. A Lodge of Masons was instituted on. Wednegday night at Titusville, and a new hall dedicated. peaches are scarce and dear in Wilres3. —A show is in Reading; whereat the Re cord rejoices. Titttsvillo boasts of a " VarlOty Sttow.ll 110111 E ITEMS. A young lady moving In the upper circles, at Chicago, was betrothed at the beginning of the war to a lieutenant in the army, Ile was killed in battle, and his body taken Renee and buried by his nearest friend and COMradelwho was with him when he fell. To this young man the lady's affections were very naturally transferred in time, and she engaged to marry Dien, When the happy day arrived, and Just as th e clergyman wfys (016114, to pronounce them man and Wife, the lady suddenly fainted, and being revived, forbade any further procedure, as she said she bad seen the spirit of her former lover, and he was opposed to the match. aha peraged in her decision, and has since retired to a convent. A Richmond firm built an extensive range of corrals and stables for the rebel Govern ment, for which they were never paid. Of course, when Richmond was captured, the bilfitlings were taken 1791:Session of for the use of our troops. A few days ago the carpenter& notified General Terry's quarter Master that they should enter a lieu upon the property for tiler unremunerated services in erecting the structures. if Opposite me, in the ballroom, sits a stout woman in a wide-stripeci silk dreSS. She is the wife of a legal notability, and wad when young a circus-rider of great repute, re nowned chiefly for leaping unaided upon a running horse In the ring. Another flne-look tug e0111)19 graduated from Fulton market— the husband still sells blvaiirei in that famed. locality."—tSarattiog Corves.] The Catholics of Troy are about to erect a large male orphan asylum on Mount St, Vin cent. Eleven acres of ground have been pur• chase(' feu this purpose. It will be the largest structure of the hind in northern New York. The plan has been completed, and the build ing will be one hundred and fifty feet front, extending back sixty feet, and four stories high. A young clerk in Albany saw a beautiful young girl among the Mormons who passed timongh that city, and falling in lore with her at ilrst sight, offered to marry her outrigh4 Ile was scornfully refused, the girl preferring to run her chances of getting the twentieth or thirtieth part of a man in Utah, —The Minnesota State Democratic Conven tion was rather it failure. But twelve 001111• ties were represented, and but one fully. The resolutions approve the President'S struction policy, favor the Monroe doctrine, oppose a protective tariff, newro anircnge, /tc.. and object to the administration of affairs 11x Kentucky and Tennessee, —The people of Port Wathington, Ohio out en ',mese after a snake, thirtytwo feet long and eight inches in diameter, which milks their cows and devours the rabbits and other smalls animals of the vicinity. The serpent Is said to be ell anaconda, which escaped from menagerie in that county senile ten years ago.. —George E. Pugh, of Cincinnati, line re. eeived an intimation that the trial of Jeff Davis will soon take place, in a civil court, and be has commenced preparations for the defence, Mr, Pugh will pin Mr. O'Connor, of New York, in Washington in a few days. The Llnion Convention of Lyeoming Coun ty, on Wednesday last, nominated for Assem bly, Samuel C, Wingard, Esq., of Williamsport. Mr. W. is an eloquent lawyer, and an upright num. The nomination is one of the best that could have been made. A band of seven incendiaries has latelT been discovered in Batavia, N, Y., after they had burned up a bridge and a large number of buildings and barns at various times, One Of the baud bragged of his exploits to the girl of his heart, and that wag the end Of the secret. Au Eastern paper states that Garrett Da• vis, the artesian Copperhead orator of Ken tucky, recent visit to Washington, was the guest of Frank P. Blair, Sr., at Silver Spring, Birds Pr e feather, Vic. A Copperhead at - Verona, Indiana, lately cow hided his daughter till her back was all raw, because she surreptitiously read a menn,„ rial volume on Mr. Lincoln. Governor Parsons of Alabama, telegraphs to the Presitlent to "picase suspend petitions for pardon recommended by me prier to this date.” It is not known what prompted this, The Virginia Degrees are having tourna meats, in imitation of the amusements Of their former owners. Mine jlot, Main, of tiro Ballard Hou9.e, 'Richmond, Virginia) is alMtit 415 marry a iiieca of Jenny Lind. —Marotzek says the price of the Now York Herald's friendship for the opera is $20 ) 000 a. season. The daughter of the late General A. Zola. coffer hab taken the oath in Xashville. The Petersburg I`irgini4 librars , has at. last been thrown open to the public. -- The figs weigh five and a half ounces in San Francisco. One Connecticut bank loses *MAO by itetchiiM, The latest name Irmehted for a c iro US 113 the' " equeseurrieulum.” Hops are looking better in New York FOREMAN /ITEMS. At Colyton, in the west of England, a Man has in his possession the miburied corps aids mother, who died five years ago. When situ 1110,1 x had a leaded coffin made, with a glass. plate let in. Ile deposited the coffin in a shed, and from time 10 MIPS goes there to book upon the face of his departed parent. —"A Carmelite monk," says The Prance, "writes from Bagdad that he has planted in: the Tower of Babel, the ruins of which still exist, a statue of Notre-Dame des Victotres, blessed by Pius IX. There was on the occasion a grand ceremony, attended Dy pmtny Ittuaft sulinaus." " The Countess do Ilontijo, ,, says a Paris letter in the Nominate of Rouen, "who hall - undergone two operations for her eyes, has now recovered, and Is staying With the Em— press at Eedtalnebleau. In a few days the Countess will leave for Matirid,ti A French printer has succeeded in making gas for lighting with the pomace of apples anti pears used in making eider and cherry, The gas is said to be superior to that made. frehleoal, as it omits neither smoke nor smell. The Emperor of the Freitels has laureled, the Xing of Portugal that experiments will be made at the Camp of Chalons on Ms Porta. guese Majesty's newly-invented cannon, and has invited him to be present. The Duke of Brunswick is reported to be. on his death-bed. It is Mid he has left one hundred million francs to the Emperor, tway,i, to the Duke of Hamilton, and three to his aide. dc-camp. • At a concert in Birmingham, England, re.. coguy, gig. "'coati sang a song which bagful. with the Mikawing couplet Dien et' armor, station, inecenek Sing a dirge to Abraham Lincoln :" It is proposed to have an apparatus adapt ed to the bells of Derry Cathedral, Ireland, which will enable one man to ring the whole peal of eight bells, Another duel among WuraberfP, studeatka has had a fatal termination. A candidate of medicine, who had just passed his final °seral. nation, was shot dead by a young jurist, Abel el Keeler loft Englund because ho was not invested with tile order of the Bath as well as the Bey of Tunis. Queen Victoria is reported to be rattail grieved at her daughter Helena's obstinate affection for a British subject. At a recent prairie-chicken hunt in lowa, eight hundred anti fifty-seven birds were killed in four 110 M by nineteen mem A Paris letter says that Dente ache tWo thousands copies per day of M. Dupinis pam phlet on the extravagance of female attire. The Viceroy of Egypt bus been luvesting in ft steam yacht. The Italian Government has ordered fOur iron-clads. The English have completed 8,000 utiles of railways in India. About one in every three Mexicans is said. to be a brigand: Women are ettlPlOyed altoget/t0 lit the, Royal (London) cigar Vaetoly,