ouo PRESS. EnTllsy JOO AIL N W. Y (SUNDAYS FORNEY EXCEPTED) , D <P, NO. 111. sougort FOURTH STREET. TOE DAILY PRESS, (No s,thsaribers, is MOIST DOLLARS PER g advance; or FIFTEEN CENTS PER A•rt,pAytable to the Carrier. Mailed to Sub y~,nLF out of the city, SEVEN DOLLARS PER Ir t ,. h t.; VMS'S DOLLARS AND FIFTY CENTS FOR '4 O ,ITEIS; ONE DOLLAR AND SEVENTY-FIVE arc -vos Tana& MONTHS, invariably in advance time ordered. AdTe rttsements inserted at the ustial.rates. " IRE THI-WEERLY PRESS,- to subseriberS, FOlrit DOLLARS FRE AS :. advance. - - , "----rirJESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1865 " THE NEWS. trial twits continued yesterday ; each newhorrors accumulate. Three ral,ioners, named Clarke, Forney, and 1 ,..:;4 testified to the shooting of numerous for approaching the "dead line,” • then' being deprived of life because, ,phtLy for water; his hand extended a too far over that fatal line. A Mr. ehp had been torn by bloodhoundS ttempting to escape, shewed his and, also, averred thntfor this attempt o eiin his liberty he was placed in irons • •wo days in a very sunny place. He Weis Order the shooting of a man, who ;T r:cried " became he .asked fOr Thirty-fice thousand men were at one eere tied in the sr - Ockade. A Mr. Bassenger OM when our men asked for bread or On. response they received was in the Dr . leaden bullets. This was corrobo ;'aed by a Mr. Terrell, of an Ohio regiment. 1 1,,tert Morton, of this State, had seen Wirz ta;:riee clothes which had been sent by the ..,unary Commission to our men, and this e mment was reaffirmed by a Frank Mattox, ,00lored soldier- The latter testified to the 4ipping of colored Men in a beastly manner, :,1 also lo hearing Wirz declare that "he gave Yankees all the land they came to fight f o re meaning, of course, a grave. 1;c bailiff of the Wirz military commission c i r . Emerson) who was sent South by Colonel . o ,loean, Judge Advocate, to . summon wit • for the defence, has returned to Wash. if,T ion, after having travelled over North and sotth Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, and Flo rfe, Me Emerson states that, after great 11:11icuny,he succeeded in finding thirty-three of the sixty witneeses summoned by Wire., the Other:J.' having gone to Texas and M.exieo, and f .ome to Europe. In the list of those sum :nimud are the commissary, Quartermaster, siid sutler of the Andersonville poet. Officers of all gyrates have been summoned for Wirz, 1,.a many of them refused to conic to Wash_ eleton until they received positive assurance A they would be allowed to return. Major W. G. Dickson, formerly inspector of !initto.v on the staff of Major General Barry, te• received the OPPOintment of United States e,:takal for the state of Georgia. The major • a resident of Savannah when the War ;,:eke ant, and although all his materiel lute -1,3,ts lay iri the South, yet they were sacrificed what he conceived to be his duty to the eamtry. i#e canoe North and entered the ger c, u here he distinguished himself in the reartigns of the western army until the sur pr of Johnston. txropean advices of the 27th have been re- Ceivol. The news is Unimportant. The At- Ladle Telegraph Construction Company feel cAahtent of laying the cable next year. The • tack of a line to this country via the tiny Islands, at Cape de Verd, to be cola 'eh led in five years. The Emancipation So- Las been dissolved. There is no political united States Five-rwenties were sell in London stt 63AR69. Consols, 89A039%. • cotton market was firm. )I,,rdevi continue to multiply in England Six steamer Queen brings us an account of two. One where a mother cut the throats of .rwr three children to save them, she averred, from starvation, although her brother-in-law say: her family were in tolerably good circum smutu, This occurred in Southwark - ,London. in 1 tazi.ltre, a young man killed a lady and icuther because she refused to become his .;k. lie then attempted to commit suicide, P.ll , ss prevented. .t Judge Carter, who has returned to Raleigh pill making a trip through the South, says et!,,L the white people are generally cruel to V!e negroes, especially where there are no troops stationed. Homicides are frequent. A outhern paper boasts that when' - the troops Aro withdrawn they will dispose of their for 3rer slaves. The cotton prospects of North. Carolina are good. Large exports of tobacco, stores, and cotton are being made. if the vote of Wolfe county, Kentucky, could he counted, Seal, Union candidate for State Treasurer, would have fifty-two majority. As, I.:owever ; they have-been thrown out, not has :mg been properly returned, Garrard, Demo nut, Inc a majority of one hundred and forty e!Llln. In the Lexington District General Fry cemes:t his opponent, Shanklin 7 s, election. The 'funeral of Governor Brough, which took vaee in Cleveland on Friday, was the most siuteme a:tilt of its kind which has ever taken place in that city. Most of the distinguished nit nof the State were present. The remains vc , re interred in Woodland Cemetery. &The New Hampshire, election occurred. yes. it.nlay. The returns are meagre, but enough 1 known 'to warrant us in saying that the Union State ticket was successful. The ma jority is even probably greater than it was IW. year. Fifteen hundred and twenty-sis steerage I , assengers came across the Atlantic on the British steamship Queen, which arrived at :tiew York yesterday. This is the largest cargo of humanity that has ever arrived in any one on the lith inst. an ocean yacht raee, be tween two New York boats, the Fleetwing and Henrietta, will take place. They sail from :only Hook, pass around the lighthouse at Cape May, and. return. base-ball match between the Camdens and :Keystones, of this city, was played on the grounds of the former club yesterday. The leyeiones were beaten. Fine boiler of a locomotive on the Yennsylva rilthailroad exploded yesterday, near Dun.- Canon, killing - the engineer, fireman, awl a stranger. Mr, D. C. Whitman, Chief Clerk of the Internal Revenue Bureau, is acting as Commissioner of iutcrnal Revenue during the absence of Mr. Orlon, tile i indisposed, jjresident•Johnson has received an invitation to visit Itkiunoncl. Fie expressed the hope that he would soon be able to accept the invi tation. General Howard, of the Freedmen's Bureau; ha. 4 um ad upon certain rules and regulations in regard to abandoned and connscated. pro-- hich will be found in another column. The Secretary of War has discontinued Camp Pennison, Cincinnati, as a rendezvous for re p:ruing troop's. . _ Jeff Dads 11a.5 50 far reeoverod from his at tack of erysipelas as to be able to resume his balks. Hon. Edward Gordon, Solicitor of the Trea .snry, has returned to Washington, and Pe- FRuned the duties Of hiS Once. On Saturday last, the receipts of intertial rex enue were• 42,285,700.56, and on Monday they amounted to *1,800,000. secretary McCulloch is paying the Texas in demnity bOndS, When presented by loyal men. Major General John C. Robinsonhas not bean. Mustered out of the service, as was reported. There arc no material changes to notice in The stock market of yesterday, excepting an intrrased fineness in Government bonds. The litas were z 4 higher. There is little or no ipeculation in the share list, but prices are generally well sustained. Breadstuffs%-were very dull yesterday, and Twines are barely maintained. Quercitron ].lurk is in good deilland at full prices. Cotton is inure anth - e and prices have advanced Ito cents per pound. Sugar is in good demand ea full prices:. :Provisions, as we have noticed fcr some time, past, continue very scarce, and /here is little or nothing doing. Whisky is Emily held} small sales of prime barrels are Making at :In eents per gallon. SECESSION BiTRIED IN MISSISSIPPI The Mississippi Constitutional Conven lion not only - adopted an- amendment pro libiting slavery forever, but it buried the doctrine of secession. This was done by a resolution-declaring that the "ordinance of 1861, to dissolve the union between the State allisgissippi and other States united 'with her under the compact entitled the constitution of the United States of Ame rica," was - "ltten and void." A proposi tion was made to amend this resolution by flyirig . that the ordinance of secession be, bud the same is hereby abrogated." The author of the amendment pointed out in an elaborate groament that, by adopting -the ariginal :resolution, the Whole doctrine of secession NVOuid be formally repudiated, be cause by declaring it null and void, the original right to adopt it was denied, and the crime 9f treason was imputed to the lolly which passed it, and to the citizens 'who . yielded to their authority. The de leaders of the original resolution virtually adniitted that this view was correct, but 2 4Y were willL g and anxious tO put on rceord -their antagonism to secession. One biarriber, Gen. llrfennx, is. opposing the amendment, said : anything has been settled by the war, it is tide doctrine of secession. .I opposed it in C 1 so strenuously, that I was accused of not 6 tfing a friend to the south, though there is not a itrop of .Northffrn blood in my veins. The i of seeess .. on is a right I don't want. It is a rope Mesita. It is, ladeed, no right at all, 2Ce State ougltt to have If ally cme Ims, I alit ib favor of taking it away. Revolution i 3 right no one can take from us, because it is a natural one. When gentlemen talk about seces sion, itsimply means war, with all the horrors ( )twat . . It means long and hazardous tilareheS, 7n uell. an - Miring, starvation,death. That what the "peaceable secession, 7, as offered 10 us, means. I want no man deceived in the tature as our people were. in the past. Ido not want this people again, for coinparatively trivial offences, to go into revolution, for that ig what it was. It was because I regarded it av rerOlutiOn. that I elainasty SPA because • • • v.' ' l ll 11.1110 Irt I 1 - .11 1 1 ) (74. • . _ \. . 44 , 1111 , 11 1 • - 44:re- arr - r , "!..t ----- • VOL. 9.-NO. 32. my sympathies were with the South. But hereafter let there be no secession—no revolu tion, unless without it we are called upon to endure things more Than death. If ever Igo into war again, I want those who persuade me to take such a step to go withme and share the hardships—not to stay back and talk about peaceable separation, which is an impossi bility. No, sir ; this doctrine is dangerous. Men are deceived by it ; and if ever I had any Such idea It would have been whipped out of me ere this. I hope we may bury secession be yond the power of resurrection. Many times, sir, after a victory,wh en we were exulting, did the thought come over me, What, after all, are we fighting for I What will be the result ? Bow long will the Government we are trying to establish hang together with its rope of sand—knit by the doctrine of secession?) "It is the list duty of this convention to throttle forever the fallacy that there is a re served right to these States. I want no more of it in the future. There is not, and cannot be, any such constitutional right." After a debate of considerable length the amendment was rejected, and the original resolution adopted by a Tote of 81 to 14. Thus Mississippi, in her new Constitution, presents a clear record against slavery and against secession as a "reserved right." She concedes that it is a purely revolu tionary privilege for which no legal war rant can .be found, and which no State of this Union has in any other way than the people of any country have. risking a rebellion against their established government. We hope thatthe other Southern States which seek recognition iu the Union will lie equally emphatic in their condemnation of the dangerous heresy with which the followers of CALuovic poisoned the minds of the people of the South. WE ABE apt to forget that in the late war there were a few Northern men who hold proMinent commands in the armies of the Confederacy, and that there were many Southern men who faithfully adhered to the old Bag. This fact is nevertheless im portant, not only because it illustrates and proves the nationality, of out struggle, but because it will tend to facilitate the work of reorganization by impressine• the Southern people with the idea that they were con quered not by Northern men alone but by the Government with the aid of many of their own citizen& At the celebration of the Fourth of Ally last, in Buenos Ayres, this point VMS powerfully illustrated by a speech of Mr. HELPER, the author of " The Impending Crisis," who said : " Virginia Ilan given us twelve generals plausel, - whose names are AB fOligiVa ; Thomas, Terrell, Cooke, Reno, Prentiss, Newton, Da vidson, Stevenson, Denver, Amnien, Hays, Gramm. " Maryland, ' My Maryland,' has given us ten generals, namely: Ord, Cooper, Beaton, E incr. rv, French, Henley, l'untlever, Sykes, Judah, Lanman. Delaware has given us three generals, namely : Lockwood, Torhet, Thomas. "Kentucky—the birthplace of President Lin coln. the martyred and immortal patriot— Maud s ill grelt measure redeemed in the num ber and eilleumes of the soldiers Whorn she has sent into the field for the defenee of the Union. She line given us twenty-eight gene rals, whose names are: Canby, Anderson, Rousseau, Reynolds, Nelson, Hobson, Harrow, Oglesby, Blair, Boyle, Crittenden, MeClernand, McMillan, Clay, Clay Smith, Morris Palmer, Pope, Burbridee, Fry, Shankelford, ' Gorman, Johnson, Jackson, Wood, Ward, and two Bu fords. " Tennessee has given us five generals, mme ly : Carter, Harney, Campbell, Abercrombie, Spears. ,6 The District Of Columbia has given-us five generals, namely: Hunteri Dane , Pleasanton, Brannan, Getty. " Alabama has given usthree generals, name ly Two Birneys and one Crittenden, "North Carolina has given us two generals: Meredith and Johnson. - "South Carolina has alBo given us two gene rats [Great applause] Hurlbut andriemont. " Missouri has given us Iteng ; Louisiana, West, and Georgia, Meigs. [Constant ap- Please.] Here we have a list of seventy-three Southern generals of land forces, many of I hom have already with. their 'Valor and blood. intermingled with the valor and blood of their compatriots from other sections of the country, added strength and indissolubility to the Union. [Cheers.] " Uwe turn to the navy we shall lind.from the South four names at least which will be fatuous in history so long as itoating batteries or memof-war shall be found upon the water. You know to whom I allude : Farragut, of Ten nessee [great applause] ; Porter, of Louisiana [aPplause] ; Goldsborough, of the District of Columbia, [applause] ; and Winslow, of North Carolina—that brave and dauntless Old Coon who captured the pirate Alabama.. [Deafen ing applause and cries of hurrah for the brave Old Coon.] WASHINGTON. IMPORTANT REGULATIONS OF THE FREEDMEN'S BUREAU. ABANDONED AND CONFISCATED LANDS Jeff Davis still Suffering from Erysipelas. PRESIDENT JOHNSON INVITED TO RICHMOND WAsuncerrozc i Sept.s 1.865% [Special Despatches to the Press.] Camp Dennison Broken-Cp. Camp Denn4son, Cincinnati, is discontinued by the Secretary of War as a rendezvous for returning troops, and Will be broken up imme diately. Return of the Solicitor of the Treasury. lion. EDWARD JORDAN, Solicitor of the Trea sury, has returned to this city, and on Monday resumed the duties of his office. Internal - Revenue Reeeiptti. The receipts from internal revenue on Sa turday last reached *2,255,799.56, and on Mon day amounted to $4,500,000. We believe that this is the largest sum, for one day, every re alized frOM this source. The Commissioner of Inteenalßovennie pro tem. In the absence of Mr. ORTON, who is indis posed, Mr. D. C. WHITMAN, the chief clerk of that Bureau, is acting as Commissioner. 01 In ternal Revenue. [By Associated Press.) The Wirz Trial. The Government has only between thirty and forty witnesses more to be examined in the Winz. trial. Their testimony will 1;e on particular points. A few only have as yotbeen subpoenaed for the defence. It is now supposed that the trial will terminate about the first of October. The first negro witness was exa mined today. Ile was remarkably explicit in his narrative, concerning the treatment of pri soners of his own color at inclersonville. It is understood that the prosecution will soon introduce some record evidence of an impor tant character. Messrs. RITTENHOUSE, Tow- Lan, & Co., of this city, hove consented to re ceive donations to aid the prisoner now on Texas Indemnity Bonds The Secretary of the Treasury is now paying the. Texas indemnity bonds, 80 called,. which were issued by the United States to the State of Texas, under the act of September, 1350, when such bonds are presented by loyal hold ers, with evidence that they have passed•only through the hands of loyal citizens. Taxes on Incomes. It appears from the books of the Collector of Internal Revenue for the District of Columbia, that the nett individual incomes for the last year of about one hundred citizens on which they severally paid taxes, was between *3,000 and *1,000; 75 persons from $l,OOO to 0,000; 31 from $5,000 to $0,000; 28 from $6,000 to *7,000; 20 from *B,OOO to $6,000; 21 from $lO,OOO to $12,000; 20 from *12,000 to *15,000; 10 front *15,000 to $2O,- 000, and 12 each paid taxes on $25,000 and up wards. The last named includes three hotel keepers and four bankers. Major General Itabiniton. Brevet Major General JOHN C. Ito' sow, of New York, commanding the Department or Northern and We stern New York, was recently bindvertently mustered out . of the service. By an order of the War Department, the mistake Has been corrected from its date. It will be remembered that General RorenmON•loSt a leg at Spottsylvania Court-House, and has recently been breveted brigadier general in the regular army. The service cannot boast amore gallant and meritorious ofileve. " Internal Revenue Decision. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue having decided (decision No. 140) that the live twenty bonds issued under the act of June niel, had not been put into the market, lie now rules that said. bonds Should be in eluded in the list of United States securities, to !be deducted from bank capital under the section of the revenue laws. The president Invited to Richmond. CHABLBS PALNEft, of Richmond, who was deputed to invite the President and his Cabi net to visit that city, arrived here on Satur day. He has been most cordially received, and to-day at noon was presented by Mr. Smvetao, a compliment due to Mr. P...xiara, who, during the war, was in - wrist:died with Mr. Bern for his devotion to the 'Union. The President and Cabinet expressed to Mr. PALXVI the hope to ;be able to accept the invitation of the people of IllehMond as SOon as the weather and bust. ness will permit. Important Regulittio nsßurea or u the Freed. men's .- Major General HOWARD, Commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau, has issued rules and raw.'" lotions for the purpose of establishing a do. finite and uniform policy. They provide that, according to law, property, real or personal, is to be regarded as abandoned when the law. - ful owner thereof shallhe VOlaatuily, iibeent therefrom, and engaged either in arms or otherwise, in aiding or encouraging rebellion. Property will not be regarded as confiscated until after the decree of the United States Court for the district in which the property may be found has been made by which the property is condemned as enemies' property, and becomes the property of the United States. All abandoned lands or real property, and all land and real property to which the United States shall have acquired titleby confiscation, or sale, or otherwise, that now is or may here. after come under the control of the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, is and shall be set apart for the use of loyal refugees and freedmen. Whenever any land or other real property that shall come into the possession of.the bu reau as "abandoned" does not fall under the definition of "abandoned," as set forth in sec tion 2 of the Act of Congress approved July 24 1554, it will be fOrrnally.surrendered by the As sistant Commissioner of the bureau, for the State within which such real estate is situated, upon its appearing that the claimant did not abandon the property in the sense defined in the said section and act, Former owners of property held by title bu reau as abandoned, who claim its restoration on the ground of baring received the pardon of te President, will, as far as practicable, forward their applications to the Commis sioner of the bureau through the Superhitend cut and Assistant Commissioners of the dis tricts and States in whiehproperty is situated. Each application must be accompanied by— First. A copy of the special pardon of the President of the United States, or of the oath under his amnesty proclamation, when they are not embraced in any Of the exceptions therein enumerated. Second. Proof of title. Third. Evidence that the property lies not been confiscated or libelled in any United States court,' or discontinued office of the bureau through O whose hands such application may pass, will endorse thereon such facts as will assist the Commissioner in his decision, stating especially the use to which this property is put by the bureau. The above has been approved by the Presi dent of the Malted States. Jeff Davis' .11enttl3. General lfftr.us, in command of Fortress Mon• roe, says that Jrzyr,..D.kvis has been and is still suffering with erysipelas, and with carbuncles on his legs. EUROPE. The Atlantic Telegraph Co. Coni'dont of Laying their Cable Next Year. A FRANCO • AMERICAN TELEGRAPHIC ENTERPRISE TALKED OF. THE MISSION OP THE EMANCIPA TION SOCIETY FULFILLED. SANDY ROON, Sept. s.—The Royal mail steam ship Scotia' s from Liverpool via Queenstown on the rth, passed this point this afternoon. The political news is unimportant The Telegraph Construction Company have offered to contract 'for the laying of two new cables to America during the next 3 - ear. The Royal mail Steamship Asia, from Boston, arrived at Queenstown on the 27th. The Hibernian, from New York, arrived out on the 25th. .La France says the Western Powers are con certing a pretest against the division of the Elbe Duchies. The Telegraph Cable. The Telegraph Construction Company are so confident of success with the Atlantic cable that they offered to contract with the . Atlantic Telegraph Company to recover and complete the present cable, and lay a second during next year. Le Horn explains the position of the French scheme for a telegraph line to Anaeries Pia the Canary Islands, Cape de Verd, and the south ern route, and says there is no discouragement from the failure of the Great Eastern. The line is to be completed from Paris to the Ca nary Islands in three years, and the whole line in lite. ENGLAND. The London Times-has an editorial on the ir ritation of Americans towards England, and denies that there exists any pretext for war, and seriously salts for a dispassionate con sideration of affairs by the Amesioans. The Emancipation moiety has issued an ad dress announcing its dissolution. Owing to urgent demands from Ireland, on account of the cattle disease, the importation of cattle from tircat Britain into Ireland is prohibited. A mutiny broke out on the ship St. Mark, in the Mersey, bound to New York, It was soon - quelled, but the second mate and some of the Crew recets• - cd de-'ere injuries. The English squadron returned to Ports- Mouth from Brest. FRANCE. The Emperor and Empress have returned to Pontainbleau from their Swiss tour. At Neuf thatel one of the carriages of the Imperial suit was upset from the horses running away, and the Princess Anna and other inmates were somewhat injured. The Paris Temps, alluding to the Austro- Prussian proceedings with the Duchies, points out that France way appropriate a point on the Rhine when it suits her, with just as much right as Prussia appropriates Lunenburg. The Austro-Prussian diplomats are to con tinue negotiations ias to , the question of suc cession to the Duchies. THE rittiteli PII.o3ECT YOU A TnlrnOnArn To 102112! The Nerd says : The. faipare of the Great Eastern has not discouraged the shareholders of the Transatlantic Cable Company, or the new french company,which has obtained per mission to lay down a cable between Trance and the United States. M. Alberto Ililestrine has undertaken this enterprise at his own risk. But this time the company does not intend to submerge a cable for any enormous distance, as there will be intermediate stations. The following is the track atpresent contem plated ; From Paris to Lisbon, and thence to Cane St. Vincent, by land; frOm this last place to the Canary Islands along the coast of Mo rocco ; from the Canary Islands to Cape Verd, along the African coast, with stations at St. Louis (Senegal) and at Goree ; from Cape Verd to Cape St. Rogue ; on the coast of Brazil, a dis tance of less than one half that of the cable in tend ed to be laid by the Great Eastern ; from Cape St. Rogue to Cayenne, along the Ameri can coast, and from Cayenne to New Orleans by the coast, or probably by cables connecting the principal West India Islands. The enter prise is more easily practicable than that con ceived in England. The only dilliculty will be to secure the pre servation of the line on the African coast, and that security may be obtained by means of guard stations. The company will have a con cession for one hundred years, and the French Government will abandon the right of making any other concession allrilitt that time. A sub vention of four million of francs, payable by instalments, will be granted, when the com pany shall have obtained the authorization .trom all the Governments over whose territo ry the electric cable is to pass. The electric communication between Paris and the Canary Islands is to be completed within three years, and the whole line within live. The iiiverpo rPost, of the. 26th, Says; " Sir Morton Pete, Mr. James McHenry, Mr. Bras sey, Jr. and a party of friends, leave by the Scotia to-day for America. It is their inten tion to - visit the oil wells and inspect the works for the International Bridge s which is to con nect the American and Canadian lines of rail way. Sir Morton Peto has taken the contract for its construction?, It is stated that Queen Victoria had caused the attention of the Prussian Government to he directed to the wanton murder of Prince Alfred's cook - by CountEnlenhurg. The Count had received orders to confine himself to the house, and a mixed commission was examining into the affair. The English squadron, after being filed at Brest in a manner corresponding with the pre vious proceedings at Cherbourg, sailed front :Brest for Portsmouth on the 21111 of August. SPAIN. the Marquis Moulin had lipen appointed Spanish Ambassador to London. Cholera is said to have reappeared at Gibral tar, but was disappearing from Barcelona and decreasing at Valencia. PORTUGAL. The Government candidate has been elected President of the Chamber of Deputios, by 95 to 74 votes. ITALY. The Minister of the Interior, in order to pre vent disturbances, has ordered that 'religious Processions shall sot in future take place in the public streets, - without previous authori zation of the authorities, the latter being eat powered to prevent them if necessary. AUSTRIA AMR PRUSSIA. The Sehleewi&-liolstein arrangement con tinues the principal theme in continental po litics. A dispatch from Salshurg of the of August says : "The succession to the Duel-l ies is still unsettled. A conference of Aug.. trian and Prussian diplomatists is to be held, and they are to continue the negotiations." The official Weiner Zeitung publishes thetext of the Convention signed at Gastein by, Count Biome and Herr Von Bismark, and sanctioned at Salzburg by the King of Prussia. and, the Emperor of Austria. The following is the sub stance of the most important articles of the Convention: Article second declares Kiel to be a Federal port, places it under the command. of Prussia and states that both Powers shall have the right to use it for their men-of-war until the Federal Diet have passed resolutions relative to the future occupation of Kiel. Prus sia is empowered to erect at Kiel the xiecessa, ry harbor fortifications, which will also be un der her command. The garrison at itondsburg, which is to become a Federal fortress, will be composed for the preseat of A 11411,11,11 Ewa Prussian troops, the SupXemc command to be each year alternately assumed by the two Powers. By articlesix the two contracting. parties express tlikeir illtelltAm that the Duelues shall join the Zollverem. Artiele aevan empowerS Prussia to Construct the canal uniting the German Ocean and the Baltic Sea through the Holstein territory, and relieve Lauenhurg from her share of costs of the war, which wilt be divided between Schleswig and Holstein. Austria receives two hundred and fifty thou sand thalers as an indemnity for relinquish ing her claims to Lauenburg. The Separation of the co - dominion will, at the least, com mence QU the lath Of aeptember, The Weiner . PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1865. Zeitteno also reproduces the article of tile (7ene ral CorrespOndenz, which defends the cession of tanenburg as not antagonistic to the tra ditional policy of Austria. It is assorted that General Gablenz has been appointed by Austria commander-in-chief in Holstein, and General Von Dlanteuirel to the same post in Austria. A telegram of the 19th July, from. Shawnee, says: 4, The Nigenbie rebels are encamped in the neighborhood of Pekin. It is rumored they have taken the city, and the report is gene rally believed. Hurfevine is still in custody. The L'aeping rebedion Appears to be extin guished. A severe typhoon had occurred in the vi cinity of Hong Kong, and several shipping casualties are reported. Intelligence from Japan states that affairs in that country were quiet. NEW ZEALAND. DIELPOURII; July AM.—The Maori King has agreed to the peace arrangement made by 'William Thompson. ' NEWS PEI!, STEAMSHIP QUEEN The steamer Queen, whieh left QUeenstOwn on the 24th .of August, arrived at New York yesterday. The following news is interesting: The At'rattle Telegraph. The Daily News of the 22d says : "Captain Andersen, Mr. Canning, the en. gineer in chief, Mr. Clifford, the mechanical engineer, Mr. De Sauty, - the electrician of the Telegraph Construction Company, and Mr. Cromwell Varley, the Atlantic Company's electrician, met the dirActors of the compa nies interested in the Atlantic telegraph; yes terday. We are informed that those present were unanimous in their determination to de fer the next cable laying enterprise until May, 1SGO ; in the resolve to prosecute the enterprise vittt all possible vigor." The Atlantic Telegraph Company publish the following : The several boards of the companies bite' rested in the Atlantic telegraph eill)le held meetings this day, August 21, to consider tlnir position under the temporary disappointment which has occurred. Of course at so short a notice no specific course has been definitely settled, but we are at liberty to state that a spirit of the utmost confidence in the realiza tion Of a great success during the sprint of next year prevailed in every till9Ntkr, The necessary overhauling of the Great Eastern's boilers, the construction of the new hauling in gear, the manufacture of new rope, and other work, would, it is found, occupy too much time to allow another expedition being sent to sea this year with.. a certainty of success, but not the slightest doubt exists as to finding, with the greatest precision, the` position of the broken end by solar observa tion ; or of raising and repairing it, with Proper apparatus, in May or June next. The several companies are animated by the single principle of determination to perfect the telegraphic communication between Europe and America, and are acting in per fect harmony. • Immediate and energetic action will be taken to not only complete during next spring the laying of the present cable, which recent experience. has proved to be perfectly practi cable, but to submerge another bw its sidQ, it being the unanimous opinion of the directors of the Constructing Company, and of those of the Atlantic Telegraph Company, that cep nomy and permanent efficiency will be most ..toecluaryealya e a o tt o e n ri d d c e a d w b e y s p i t m e ul oa t i a i i n le g at i i m s mod - lately simultaneously with the completion of the first. THE CHOLERA The journals continue to, give accounts of the progress of the cholera. At MarseiliMit there is apparently much alarm. Trade and navigation are suffering se verely in consequence, a strict quarantine nay big been imposed in Spain and. Italy on ves selS from Marseilles, so that the steamers have in general suspended their service with those two kingdoms. The vessels of the Messageries Impezkiales.uontinue, but only for passengers whom they are oldival to tranehip at the all proaelt to the porta of those nations by houtS sent by the sanitary authorities to conduct them to the lazaretto. [From Galignani.] A correspondent states the curious fact that on the filth„ a short but violent, storm broke over Ancona, andthat immediatelyafterwards a great improvement in the public health be came perceptible. Not only did the number of cases diminish considerably, but the state of languor and prostration in which the pa tients lay ceased in most instances. We beg here to remark that this is a most important fact, since it goes .far to prove the correctness of the supposition, already con firmed by other observations, that the viru lence of cholera is peculiarly owing to the ab sence of ozone in the atmosphere. Now, ozone being electrified oxygen, is amply. supplied during storms; hence the diminution of cho lera at Ancona is probably owing to the sail. den supply of that substance produced by the electric fluid evolved during the storm. The cattle disease continues to absorlathe attentlon of the agriculturalists and breetters Throughout the eorultrr 4 and meetings are every day held to concert measures of nre vention. In London, owing to the disease among cows, milk is now charged sixpence per quart, instead of firep.enee. Commercial Intelligence. LIVERPOOL, August .25.—The circulars of Messrs. Richardson Brother and Messrs. Rig land quote Flour steady. k Wheat easier, under finer weather; sales of winter red, 9s 9(11098 Canadian has a downward tendency. Frovisions.—Messrs. Wakefield Bt, Gordon quote Bacon firm and unchanged. Butter quiet and steady. Lard in small supply, and Prices still advancing the quotations are Ida @a2s. Tallow fOire at 455@45s 6d. LONDON, Anglia 2(l—Breadstuff's active, with an upward tendency. Sugar firmer. Coffee firm. Common Cengou Tea quiet. Rice firm. Crude Petroleum buoyant, and the stock scarce. Tallow 4is ad. Sperm Oil 100 s, Lin seed cakes inactive. The Latest Commercial Intelligence. Livnaroot, August 46.---Corrox.---The sales on Saturday amountedtol2,ooobales, including 4,000 bales to speculators and for export. The market is firm, - with an upward tendency, al though the quotations remain the Same. B READS Tußps.--The market is quiet and firm, with the exception of Corn, which is easier. .PR OVISIONS.—The market Is firm. Lard has still an advancing tendency. LUSDON S A ugust 20---Evening.—Consols closed at501,V89, 5 1,1 for money. Illinois Central shares, 7834e79 i Erm Itaiiroad, .53%e55%. United States 6.265 closed at 097069. • The Paris Bourse is firm. Rentes closed at Of. 52c. Marine Intelligence. Arrived from Philadelphia, the Thames and Bosphorus, at Liverpool. From Colorado. DENVER, C. T., Sept. s.—The Constitutional election took place to-day. The returns ate sufficient to indicate that the Constitution is carried lq a large majority. From Ita HALIFAX, N. S., Sept. s.—The freight steamer St. Lawrence, from London August 23d, ar rived here to-day, and will sail for Montreal during the week, The Danbury Bank. DANBURY, Conn., Sept. s.—The report of trouble in the Danbury Dank, is entirely in correct. The bank is stronger than ever before. NEW YORK CITY. lcuw Youx, September 5, 1805 AIIItIVAL OF THE 13TNAM6FICP QUEEN. The steamship Queen, from Liverpool Aug 23(1, via Queenstown Aug. 24th, has arrived here. Her aelvices are anticipated. SALE OF GOVERNMENT VESSELS The following vessels were sold at auction at the Prooklyn nary yard tO-dity Steamer Augusta Dinsmore, $lO,OOO ; steamer Fort Morgan, $70,0410 ; steamer Home, 535;000; steamer Honduras, $27,000; steamer Oleander, $16,400; steamer Delta, $5,700; steamer Goma, $3,000 ferry boat Commodore Hull, $ 12 , 100 ; steamer Shokokan, $43,500; brig Bahiaati,soct Another sale will take place in a few days. POE. RIO JANEIRO The Express states that the steamer Monta no, which sails to-morrow for Rio Janeiro, takes out:Minister Washburno to Paraguay, and also a number of Southerners to Brazil• The latter go for information, prior to effect ing a permanent settlement by others from the South. Beef quiet ; receipts, 5,000; sales at Sgrl7e Sheep steady ; receipts, 22,000; sales at 3 1 ,07 1 /0 Swine lower; receipts, 13,000 ; sales at 12@12.-Mc THE STOCK EXCHANGE—SECOND BOARD, VO,OOO U S 6s 6.-20...c.1.07! 100 Quick kr Co.. 11,000 Treas 3-10 100 'second series. 90%1 14,000 dol 991 30,000 0 & Miss Cer..,..273 30,00 C ... 2794 90 3,1ee1l Rank 110 100 Comb C0a1....pf. 43 100 do ....... .. .. 4334 12E10621 93 92% 50 10 100 00 The Chicago Gratz' Market. The way the Chicagoites have been keeping up the price of grain is thus ventilated by the Times, of that city: "A Combination of operators, owning or con trolling the greater, portion of the wheat nOW In store in this city, has been formed for the purpose of sustaining these artificial prices. It was formed at &time when the market was larely oversold, for-the purpose of securing high prices from .the numerous 'short sellers, whose maturing coatracts compelled them to buy at whatexer, cost. The market has bosh 'maintained in the same condition—largely oversold-mince that time, each 'short seller; on filling a contract at existing prices,. sell ing short? again,. in hopes to ronair on the second transaction the losses sustained, on the first. 'Thin OK influeetnent for these artificial prices was continued, and their maintenance made, simply, a question as to the ability. Of the operators in the ring to carry the im mense quantities of grain in store,. and ab sorb a sufficient portion of the daily re ceipts to prevent prices from giving way beneath them. As long as the teseipte were light, the ability of the combination which had advanced prices to sustain them, was beyond all . question, but with liberal receipts the task becomes one of much more difficulty. We have, within the last few days, produced a reaction, because we believed it impossible te maintain prices in Chicago at letlec above the New York - market. The receipts during the pact twenty-four hou these quite liberal, and 'We are verging upon when We may confidently expect thOM to be large. Then this combination of operators mustt - abandon their present enterprise and prices rapidly sink to their proper level. Already the mar ket is beginning to reepopil to these facts, and with but slightly unfavorable intellionee from the east we have witnessed a decline of 154/20e on flour, about ac le but on wheat, 3c cal corn, Selee on rye, and some 5e on barley. There is room for a !Ain further decline in. prices, and as the receipts booms more libe ral, and the difficulty of cornering' the infxr ,ket largely increased, we may expect still more of a reduction in prices:, !Markets by Telegraph. BALTnsfeaa, Sept. s.—ltiour heavy. Wheat quiet prime Verysearee. Corn dull, and la 2e, lower. Provisions dull. eats steady 44 46 0 4 7% WIWOLY, itusi 0 - 4 welitQcD, CHINA.. 100 130 elm 100 0:0 SIM 400 00 ..... 2d call. 510 100 Mr.wiposak Co.. 12,, 1 4 300 Erie .90y1 4013 •do 9056 700 do 90 40 do do sw. so3i 100 Erie R Dr!' 83 MB Till OF Ell. ANOTHER CHAPTER OF THE ANDER SONVILLE HORRORS. The Prisoner's Vigilant Efforts to Guard the "Dead Line." Men Shot. Because, in Dipping for Water, their Hands Overreached the Line. • APPEALS FOR WATER AND BREAD AN SWERED BY LEADEN BULLETS. Winn OBITUARY ON OVE MEN WHOM HE HAD SENT TO TRH GRATE. lie Deebares he 6 . Gore them on the Ground the come to Fight for." WAshINOTON, Sept. s.—The Wirz trial was resumed from Saturday. J. Nelson Clarke testified that he was taken as a prisoner to .Andersonville about the eSth of May, 1851, and confirmed the previous evidence as to the crowded and filthy con dition of the stockade, the sufferiAgs of the prisoners, the Coarse, dirty, and in seiliment amount of rations, &c. ; in Au gust of last year ho counted one 'hundred and eighty-four dead men in the stockade; the witness mentioned the case of an insane soldier who wandered up and down by the stream, refusing to wear clothes, and who had not sense enough to know that he must cook his rations, and who ended his life by suicide 5 another prisoner destroyed himself by hang leg, having previonsly declared that he would rather die than remain in this stockade; for ty-one men in witness' company - when cap tured were taken to Andersonville ; twenty two or them died, principally at that prison; he saw six (Omen shot at different times ; two of them, he knew, died; one of them extended his arm too far out over the dead line while dipping water out of the stream, when the sentinel fired ; another of the prigoners hap pened to get slightly beyond the dead line, when the. sentinel Erect, but, instead of hit ting him, struck a man who was. lying in a tent; the - witness mentioned the circum stance attending the shooting of the other four (4) prisoners ; they crossed the dead line ; he did not, however, see or hear Capt. Wirz give the order for shboting. Vincent Forney of the 72d New York, who was a prisoner at 'Andersonville, having been conveyed there on the first of March, 1851, tes tified that while at Capt. Wirs's he-adquarters he heard Wirz give orders to have men put in the chain gang, and to have irons placed mind their feet, and also to tkp guard to shoot the first man who should ere SS the awl. Wits threatened to shoot any man who would not promptly fall into line. .The witness tes tified lie had seen the - marks7on the bodies of men bitten by the dogs, and described the pitiable and suffering condition of one hun dred and fifty rues who had been vaccinated with poisonous matter. On the cross-examination by the defence the witness said some of the men in the chain gang had previously attempted to escape. Edward P. Kellogg, 28th New York Cavalry, testified that he saw. four men shot for cross ing the dead line ; and such shooting , was quite a common occurrence - the Witness was bucked for six hours because be bad failed to renorta man who bad escaped, and another prisoner was bucked at the same time; bucking con sists of first tying the wrists together and then fastening the arms over the knees. Cross-examined by the derence.—He never saw a man bucked in thb United States army, although he had heard such things had been done; the reason why he was bucked was he did not comply with the rule for reporting those who attempted to escape. Joseph It. Acirutf, 24th Ohio regiment, a pri soner at Andersonvfile, testified that 'laving gone out with a rebel guard, he jumped on the rebel's back, while the two prisoners who ac companied him took away his gun ; hearing the dogs in chase, he and his two companions scattered. The witness ran into a swamp, and seen saw live hounds and seven rebels on horseback ; the hounds were not taken oil of him for fifteen minutes, during which time he bad to fight them with nis fists ; he had noth ing upon him but a pair of pantalOons, made of two rebel meal sacks; heistill carried the marks of the biting on his legs • the horn was blown as a signal to tear'-the hounds off; he was taken before Captain Wirz, who ordered him to be put in- the stocks; he was exposed to the sun, though they pretended to give him shade; he was thus punished for thirty-six hours, and during that time had only two :drinks, out of the muddy creek; when he spoke to Wirz about this treatment he was told to "dry up or he would have his brains blown out;" the witness, after being taken out of the stocks, was ironed, the rings passing around his ankle, and the legs separated by an iron bar eighteen inches long ;the legs of 'the witness were sore, and scurvy fell into diem; he was kept thirty-two days in irons LT order of CaptainlWirz 5 it was pretended that the irons were removed by direction of a rebel surgeon; the fact was they were afraid of Sherman, and had a white flag hang ing out all the time ; this was in July, and, when a squad of Sherman's men were brought in, they were stripped of everything ex cept pants and shirt; even their buttons were split open, Wirz saying he had hoarded' money sometimes being Stowed away in buttons ; the men were sent into the atocaade, and Wirz said they were raiders and ought to be hung ; they belonged to Stoneman's cavalry; Wirz struck a Michigan boy over the head with his revolver the result or - wbich was that the boy died of iitsi the witness said he saw the man called Chickamauga killed the men had nick named hint "Mutton-head . ;' , he belonged to Illinois, and was silly and had lost a leg ; the boys having plagued him, he applied to Wirz to go onparole ; Wirz cursed him, and threatened to blow his brains out; the man was at the time inside of the dead-line; Wirz ordered the guard to blow his brains oat . ; the guard fired, the shot striking the man in the left side ; the victim was carried.ont, and died. The witness saw Wirz lay out the dead line in April, 1864, and heard him give orders at that time if any . man crossed the line to shoot him ; the first night he went into the stockade, on the 20th Of March, 1864, lie saw Wirz kicking a poor skeleton around there, and heard Wirs cursing him • he named four Officers who also witnessed the same cruel occurrence; the squad of ninety men to which witness was attached., being in tolerably good physical condition, could stand up in line pretty well, but others could not ; Wirz said he would not give the latter any to eat for forty-eight hours, and kept his word ; on the Id, 4th, and sth of July, rations were cut off throughout the whole stockade, because some one had escaped ; the-number of prisoners there ut the time was asps ; on the 15th of July there was a great crowd at the gate; men trying to get out with the sick ; only one could pass but at a time; there were at that place two guards between the dead line and the stockade ;Captain Wirs gave orders- if any one stepped over the dead line to blow him through ; the guard said he could not keep the crowd from encrOnching upon the lime; the sentinel at the time had the muzzle of his gun at the stomach of a line looking Pennsylvanian, when he was ordered to fire, and shot the man dead ; whenever a man was wounded and carried to the hospital, he would never come back ; George White, of German town, Pennsylvania, belonging to the Marine Corps, after being wounded, was carried off to the hospital,. the young man requested him to tell his mother he was not afraid to die; subse- - quently he saw White's dead body at what was called the dead-house, where Wirz was in company with two guards ; witness asked him whether he could not take a lock of his hair'? "No ;" said Wirz ; "if you do, VII blow your damned brains out about one hundred and fifty of our prisoners were down the creak 'bathing ; a woman on an eminence was seen to nod and wave her handkerchief to a sentinel, who fired and shot one of theta in the head; the sentinel for this obtained a furlough for thirty days ; so he had been informed by a Georgia soldier. The witness described the character and suf tering of the prisoners; he applied to Wirz to have the filthy grease stopped from being thrown into the streets, as the water was thus injured; Wirz replied. that the water was good enough for Yankees,. and that the wit ness did not deserve such. AFTERNOON SESSION After the recess,Achuftwas cross-ex amined by the defebee. The witness was in the stockade six months, but was never in the hospital ; as to the guard whom he and two companions overpowered, and whose ,gun they took away, they did not hurt him., but only choked him a little ; the guard ran back to the prison crying murder; he never heard or saw a eoldier in our own AVM y placed in irons ; a half dozen otherperSOns accompanied Captain Wirz when the dead line was laid out. The witness did not hear Wirz give orders for taking watches and other, valuables from our prisoners, but saw him himself searching the men and appropriating.their possessions; the prisonerS were stripped of clothinr„ jack ets, boots. and hats in the presence of Captain Wirz • he had previously been robbed by Gene ral Wheeler of his pocket-hook, containing thirty-live cents and three, postage stamps; ?SWOT General Hindman also robbed him, taking off his hat and placing it upon his own head. Daniel W. Bassenger, testified whenhe and his companions wore eonveyed tO Anderson cil le, they were, during four hours, exposed to the burning sun; some of them were sun. strucicand Wirz, who was there, gave orders that if any stepped.ont of the line, they should. be shot; Vrirz also said if any asked fur water; they should be shot, accompanyin.. the re, mark with a denuneiation of the ; while men lay fainting, Wiry. said if it was in his power he would make the victory cornl plete; he saw a man shot early in July for gettin water, although he was not. over the g. oead line, and another man was shot while lying in, his tent; the rations of . some sick men were stopped, and the witness: shared his rations with them ; three of• them, died namely,Hugh Lynch, William rtiger, and, William Waterhouse, of the 3d Pennsylvania. Cavalry.; the distress among. the men was great 5 he had seen prisoners searching . *the filth which had passed through men for the, undigested partioles of food, and for scraps from the jailors' camp ; he had seenvegetables,, such as potatoes, onions, peas,and also.apples, peaches, and melons in the vicinity of the camp; two men were buried inside the. stock ade ; the body of one of them, which .bad laid four days, was too much putritled to. be taken Out. Thornton Ph TUrgt)ll, wa Ohio Regialleitt, tes , titled that he was taken to Andersonville on the 19th of June ; Wire threatened the men, using vile language, and calling the men -- Yankees to man who showed Captain Wirs his ration of corn bread, and asked whether bet ter could not be flint/shed, was met with the response, "---- you, 1 , 11 giVe you bul. lets for bread;" there was not sufficient accommodation. for onestwentieth part of the prisoners . The swamp was more than a foot deep with human excrement, and this spoiled the water in the wells; on one occasion be saw forty.six corpses in the dead house; on another, seventy-five or a hundred ; the bodies were thrown into the crock like dead hogs, -fif teen or twenty being a load ; when the I.3risci.. ners went there Wirz came forward and read the rules, saying the prisoners would be shot if they entered the dead line., and that any one speaking W suga would. be 4/1.95 by 04 guard ; Wirz also said that 'if any of the Yankees traded with theguard and did not get what they batgained for, and then com plained to haw he would say, "Good for the Yankee, and bully for the guard they were also informed that if any our men were found disturbing things the rations would be cut off until the perpetrators were found and pun ished; about the middle of March, when an exchange was talked of, some of our men gave money to the guard; twenty dollars or less for the first chance. On the cross-examination the witness said he did not know that Captain Wirt had for bidden the acceptance of money. Robert Merton, belonging to a Pennsylvania regiment, testified that be had seen Captain Wirz wearing shirts sent to our prisoners by the Sanitary Commission ; it was a common thing for our men to be put in the chain gang, and he had never seen the stocks empty ; he saw one man receive seventy-five lashes for carrying onions into the hospital ;saw Wirz kick a sick man, and heard the dying state ment of a black man who was shot in the back ; a young man was shot by a guard, who said lie would shoot another if he could get sixty days furlough; Wirz remarked if he could have his own way not twenty-four men on 'the South side would get away either by exchange or parole. On being cross-examined, the witness said rations were stopped because some Of the men, twenty-five of them, had been engaged in dig ging a tunnel in order to make their escape; the tunnel was dug with tin plates, oyster shells, and whatever the men could get. Frank Mitttox, colored, belonging' to the 35th United States,testifled that after he received his wounds in the head and foot, he was put to work at the prison;.a colored man was whipped with two hundred and fifty lashes ; he was stripped naked, and laid upon a log, and whipped all over ; the man was afterwards o w f i a th lll tre m ilr o e n d a hh t e la r c e k la e t c r b l i t s h f e fte c e i , r a c ti ar m sta ix n e c a e gang of colored Men, in order to make his es cape; the man was discovered and whipped, Wirz saying as the man blacked himself to be a negro, he would give shim the negro's law, namely, thirty-nine lashes; the witness had seen twelve men together in the chain gang for an entire week ; he had seen a - man tom by the dogs in a shocking manner; t t h h e e s n t i cc an ks w a as co n u e p a i r e ly of d d e a a y d s , a a f il t d er w thV w p l u t t n e i s n s buried the men; this was in September,lB6l; Wirz, while in the grave-yard, with several other officers, said "We have given the Yan kees the land theycame to fight for," meaning Six feet Of ground ;_ this was in October; Wirz, some of the doctors who were with him in the gerave-yard, looking at the corpses whose skulls had been sawed off and green appearance of the bodies whichiliad been vac mated, laughed at the sight exhibited and the killing of the men;he had seen thirteen of the an boxes ,z u seandt on by one e the of Sa the ni t shirtsa and Commission, a llir pair of pantaloons. - Cross-eNamlned by the defence : The witness had seen four or five of the colored prisoners whipped with thirty-nine lashes ; the trenches were seven feet long and three feet deep ; the dead men were laid side by side with faces up and the earth thrown in; a Confederate ser geant superintended the burial and gave in structions to pack the bodies in close_, which Vas deenntly done; there were- no coins, nor boards with which to make them. By the Court: The doctors in the graveyard with. Captain Wirz were speaking about the shocking effects of the vaeomatiOn, When Wirz said : " lea, God d— them, we gave them Ulu land they came to fight for.” The court adjourned till to-morrow. THE NEW HAMPSHIRE ELECTION The Union State Ticket Undoubtedly Elected. A GAIN OVER THE MAJORITY OF LAST YEAR. IllowTraLiwp., Sept. s.—The eleetiOn for State and county officers and members of the legis lature took, place taday. The vote is the lightest east in many years, being not more than three-four:llS as large as last year. We have the vote for Governor from tweaty-iive towns, embracing oneilifth of the - vote of the State. The Republicans voted for Paul Dillingham, of Waterbury, and the Democrats for C. N. Da venport, of Rockingham: Dillingham. DilTeuPort. St. Johnsbury 380 43 MCltOO 220 52 'Rockingham 187 186 Chester 227 2 Waterbury 272 64 Stowe: 172 14 Forthfleld. 'at 311. Bradford 168 140 Montpelier 278 90 Burlington 280 167 Cavendish 115 0 Woodstock 373 13 Windsor 168 4 Barnett 1.03 Brattleboro 260 18 Randolph 249 41 Twenty-five towns give Dillingham 5,076, and Davenport 1,554 votes. The same towns last year• gave Smith, Re publican, for Governor, 6.334, and Redfield, Democrat, 2,275. Taking this vote as an todi cation, the majority for Dillingham will be relatively larger than that of Smith last year. We have the representative vote from forty. eight towns, all of which go for the RepoOlL cans but live. Some of the members elected from leading towns are as follows:` Portland, John Pout; Middlebury, John W. Stewart; Poultney, Merritt Clark;`Burling ton, Lawrence Barnes ; St. Albans, Bradley Barlow; Waterbury, General Wells. NORTH CAROLINA. More Cruelly to the Freedmen—The Cotton Crop—Large Exports of the Staple ArtieleS. RALEIGH, Sept. I.—Judge Carter, who has re. turned from an extensive trip through . the South, states that the cruelty to the freedmen, and the number of homicides among them, by the whites, are increasing to a fearful extent, espeCially in places where the troops are being withdrawn. Judge Carter has a copy of the Southern Sun, which says : "If the Yankees are alarmed at the killing of a few hundred niggers a day in States where they have the protection of Yankee troops to a certain extent, what will be their alarm after the departure of the military forces, and the readmission into the Union of those States as sovereign Powers, who will then have a com plete organization of military in each county, which will give the South a standing army that can bid defiance to the WorldV' NEWBBATT, Sept. 2.,--The steamers Louisa Moore, El Cid, and Argo, and a fleet of schooners left here to-day for the North, heavily laden with cotton, tobacco, naval stores, and other products. In the extensive cotton-fields, in slight of Newbern, the cotton-pickers commenced gath ering a crop last week. The worm has not made its appearance in this part of the State. The yield of cotton this year in Eastern North Carolina is good. There is a great lack of hotels and boarding houses in Newbern. Portable houses, brought from the North, are bringing extravagant prices. It is an impossibility to rent a build ing, or Obtain lumber here for less than its weight in silver. heal "estate and city lots, strange to say, have not yet taken a - flight up wards, owing to the fear of confiscation, and unsettled condition of this kind of property. FORTRESS MONROE. Recovery of Jeff Davis front his Attack of Erysipelas. PonTnnss. Monnoe, Sept. 4.—Jeff Davis has so far teeovered from the ftgack of erysipelas as to be able to resume his accustomed. Walks daily. The brig Nellie has arrived in Norfolk, from Turk's Island, with a cargo of salt. This is the first arrival of the kind since the war. The steamer Connecticut has arrived at Norfolk-. Henry A. Wise passed hereto-day for the Eastern Shore, Virginia. The steamer Escort has arrived from City Point with the 124th pndiana Regiment, Col a-, W. On-, bound home, via Baltimore. The steamer Magenta has arrived from New York, and it is reported that she is to be placed on some. passenger route from this place. Anothor.//aßroad Aceldent- , ExPIORIoII of the Boiler of a Locomotive—Three Persons Killed. RAmosanue, Sept. s.—The Erie express train on the Pennsylvania Railroad coming east,. this morning, when near Duneannon, met with a dreadful accident, by which three parsons were instantly killed. The boiler of the locomotive burst with a fearful explosion, killing the engineer, George Dougherty, frightfully mangling the fireman, and killing a stranger who was riding on the-engine. The baggage master was also slightly wounded. ~coroner's inquest is to be Fluid this eve. ning to investigate the affair. AL Great Ocean Yacht Race in Prospect. Xr,w Yonk, Sept. 6.—„,An ocean race will take Ilan, on the 11th hist., between the leei:. wing, owned by Mr. George A. Osgood, anal the Henrietta, owned by ,lames G. Bennett, Jr., two of the largest yachts in the Hutted btatee. It will be the first ocean race that .has ever taken place on this aide of the Atlantic. The yachts are to start at noon on the .11th, from the light-ship off Sandy Hook, and sail to and around the light-ship off Cape lilAy.and back to the starting point. This match is to be sailed by the sailing regulations of the New York Yacht Club, with the exception that no difference of tonnage is to be allowed, and that one or two taysails can be used in heavy Weather if they are required. Immediately after this race firAther is to be run on the lath, inst., between the Restless, a very fast schooner yacht, and, the lienrietta L from Land's. Point to New London, Othint ocean races are in contemplation. Wire at Troy, New York. Tact, Sept. 5.—A deStrnetive and threatening fire occurred at West Troy this afternoon, be low Qanal street, taking. both sides of Broad• way, from and including lUfford'a & Lap. ham's eteam-planing mill, to Exchange street, some twenty-five valuable buildings, Vagliing a total loss of .14000 to $lOO,OOO, including Wis. nall , s Mansion Rause block and other stores. The fire was stopped at Exchange street by great exertions, The Democrat 00300 was de• THREE CENTS. SOCTII AMERICA. Iti,.L•riuoing, September i.—The Danish bark Agll, from Rio Janeiro, arrive(' here tide- af terncion, She brings the Hon. James MOrcroc, United States Consul at Rio Janeiro, as bearer of despatches from Minister Webb. Mr. Mbn roe proceeded to Washington this evening; FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL: The fall trade has set in in good earnest: Already the indications are that the business of this season will be unprecedented . ' in our mercantile hidtory. From all quarters the Purchasers come, and. our hotels are strained to their fullest capacity. The briskness of trade is confined to no particular branch, hilt extends through all the various departments and channels of industry. There are many features of the present season that are espe cially gratifying. Thus far . the purchase and sale of goods are conducted on as sure and firm a basis as the condition of things will permit. It is mostly, if not entirely, a cash business, This iS not owing to any want of confi dence, for it is quite kenitirkable that there should exist at all any confidence, in view of recent events in New York city and other quarters. It is because of the general belief that the greenback currency must soon appreciate, and the fear of having to pay when the paper dollar is near worth the dol lar of gold. "pay as you go,” is now the ac cepted motto ; and, in the fact of its general acceptance, we sea the prudence and foresight of our people, Not the least gratifying sign of the times is the resumption of the Southern trade; and it is exceedingly creditable to our merchants that they welcome back this trade with an expressed willingness to give credit, while not so willing to extend the same indul. gene to the West. The South is, as we know. exhausted of money; gnu to renew thc rola; Lions which existed ante-bellum, some such encouragement must be extended to the mer chants of the South who show the - disposi tion and will to re-establish Southern pros perity... The AMIE Market was dull yesterday, and prices generally drooping. Govern:Meat bums, however, were in good demand at better figures. The sixes of 'Si advanced ;14; the five twenties sold at 106@106A, and the ten-forties 944. State loans are steady. City sixes were in dematal, and the municipals a Shade better. The railroad list was lees active, and prices somewhat off; Reading declined 1 4, and Catawissa common PA. Philadelphia and Erie sold at 23, an advance of 1; 127 was bid for Cam den and Amboy; 57% for PcnnBy/Vaaiit Rail road ; 29 for Little Schuylkill ; 57 for Norris town ; 5G for Minehill ; 2634 for North Pennsyl vania; 2734 for Catawissa preferred, and 42 for Northern Central. In city passenger railway shares there was nothing doing ; 18 was bid for Thirteenth and Fifteenth; 93 . 4 for Seventeenth and Nineteenth; 22 for Spruce and Pine; 18 for Arch street, and 10 for Race and Vine. Bank shares are firmly held; Commercial sold at ;42%;,115 was bid for Farmers' and Mechanics' ; 28 1 4 for Alcchanies', and is for City. -Canal shares are less active; 26i4 was bid for Selmyl. kill Navigation common ; 34 for preferred do; WA for Lehigh Navigation; 120 for Morris Canal preferred; 93, 4 1: for Susquehauua Canal; 30 for Delaware Division, and 5294 for Wyoming Valley CanaL ' The following were the rates for gold yes terday, at the hours named: 10 A, Itl.. 11 A. M.. 12 r.lst DI • s P. M 144 1 4 ... 144 114% The statement of the New York banks for last week shows an increase of legal-tender money of three millions. The specie average is far. ther Oecreased a million and a half, making 46,169,809 out of hank in the fortnight, which chiefly passed into the Sub-Treasury for cus toms. We are not advised of any further ship ments to the New Orleans market sinpelhst week's report. The English agricultural Organ, the Mark lane Express, of the 21st ult., in its weekly re view, gives a gloomy view of the prospects of the British corn trade at that date; and adds : " Foreign accounts too much agree with our own as to defective and injured crops, to give much expectation of a return to very low prices. France, Belgium, Holland, Germany, some parts of Russia and Southern Europe, all tell the same tale, and prices generally pave risen." The same authority judges from " Western failure and Southern dinollteilti n that the United States will be a very uneer. thin dependence for breadstufrs in case of ex tremity. The Express is mistaken as to the crop prospects of the United States. Taking the whole country through, the yield of wheat will be Very large, and the Corn crop will be enormous. We shall be able 'to furnish Eng land and all Europe all the breadstuffs they need, at fair prices, and the appearances now are that they will take all we give. The following are the principal changes in the items of the statement of the public debt i dated August 31, as compared with the state ment of July 31 Five per cent. temporary loan Inc. $11,530,130 Mx per cent. ternpoe ary loan Dec. 3,469,453 One year Certificates of ladelnedness.Dec. 21,613,005 One and two year flreper cent.notes. Dee. 6,99(Y00 Three years compound interest notes,lnc. 4,993,600 Fractional currency inc. 594,710 Suspended requisitions Dec 11,625,000 Coin in. Treasury Inc. 10,097,914 Currency in treasury Dee. 38.619,491 Legal tender circulation Dec. 1,097 110 %lie following are the receipts of the Dela ware Division Canal for the week ending Sep. tember 2, 1865 : Tolls for week ending 2d inst Previously in 1805.., Total in 1865 $129,605 89 Corresponding; week last year 7,234 73 rreviettaly in 1861 132,617 56 Decrease in 1865.. The next sale of the useless vessels lately employed by the Navy Department is ordered to take place at the Washington navy yard on the 15th of September. The ship Lookout sailed from San FranelEco for New York on the 25th ult., with 38,000 sacks copper ore, 8,800 hides, 310 bales wool, 100 cases and VI pipes California winos, • . The Chicago Tribune says "Some little talk was created ingrain Circles by the failures of one Mr. Seoroder. The amount of his liabilities has not transpired. It is reported that he had sold 'short' On wheat to a large amount," A vigorous effort ti now being made to reor ganize the Pittsburg, Maysville, and Cincin nati Railroad Company, and to recommence and prosecute the work of rebuilding the road as far as McConnelsville. The Atlantic and Great Western Company have taken hold of the matter, and purpose cominen . oiiiff the work the coming winter. The public debt of Russia amounts to about $1,450,000,000, one-half of which is non-consoli dated, two-thirds of the latter portion being paper money, and one-third eonsisting of treasury bills and other bonds bearing Inte rest. The annual revenue, of the country is nearly two hundred and thirteen millions of dollars. The total value of the itireign esports at Portland, Me., during the week enclineSeptem,. her 2 was $33,421. All the banks of Boston are now under the, national currency act, the last to come in being the old Webster Bank, Witt its capital of a million and a half of dollars. American securities in London on. the 22d ult. were in active demand, and showed con siderable strength. United States five-twenty bonds were dealt in at 65%, 93%, 69, 69%, and 693, leaving oft at the latter figure. New York and Erie Railroad shares, ex coupons, were sold at 53% and 53%, closing firm at 53%. mi nas shares were steady at 78%@78%, and be fore the close were held at 79; Atlantic and Great Western BABWay debentures at 861%. Marietta and Cincinnati Railroad, 06 to 68. The rebel cotton loan continued on the mar ket, but was dull of. sale at the prices claimed by holders, which were 640 8.. DMel & Co. quote : New U. S. Bonds, 1091......., .. ....:.:, ,1.07,1/4103 New U. S. Cer. of Indebteanella I, l la Doy„ U. S. Cer. of Inbebtednees, old 99/@lOO New U. S. - 7 3.10 notes.... 99 1 49 99 1 X Quartermasters , Vouchers.— —.. . ... 991.4.2 97 ' Orders for Certif. of Indebtedness.. 98X 98 Gold 144 1444 Sterling Exchange ... 158 151 . 5.29 Bonds, old . 107 Y 101 V 5.20 Bonds, new 105) 100 1040 Bonds en 4 @ GO 2 eke, Sept,. 5. : OARD OF BROKERS Sales or Ste AT THE REGULAR B , & Co., Ea. 54) S, Third. St, ; OARD. Zeportedby Helves, Xiner EtRAT LSO Lehigh Nay 68 'Ol 100 Reading R...„.„ 0034 100 Catawissa R..1krt , 56 100 do 15 .100 do UK 200 • do ' 14 60 New Creek...,... tat Maple Slade..,., 7 180dO7 100 Sugar Cr00k....01 - 0 " 6) BO A.RDS. 100 Reading W.... 1010.53.81 100 d 0... •• 6394 100 40..,,,,,,,,',, , ,53, 68 200 d 0..„ "010. 031 i 200. do'Llo.o3l, 100 CataMeaalt.. „ 11 1 0 0 Blnle. Shade 7 100 do, 135. 67i 400 ItleCtlnt' icol» , s. 1.01 600 CarA es `B9 in loon 99M 700 1414 Greek. 1 0- 16 50 I'ersey Well ~,,, 1 0-10 5 0. do , . .... ..... 3-10 -2100 US 5.20 Bds..egao7l4 , 1000 do small..cp.lo6 600 do small,,..cp.leo 5000 du 10t5.,..cp.10711 300 do ....ell .106 400 do new saul ep .10114 600 TT S6a lEdt . ! ...CP .19'1 1000 U S 10-40Bus..Cp , D 4.4 350 State -30 rlits,. woo W,sit Ln 65.100 RETIVRE 260 n S 7-30 T N 99%1 1000 INX to Philtv fc Erie R c• 71 Lehigh Zinc cash 76 16 LelJgb N Stock:. 59M 89 deb 5. 5939' 300 Walnut Island.tN 5 Comm:wren 8an . k.42.14 100 Qatawissa pt b3O, 28 200 laity 66 New 100 Sugar Creek 3003 Union Gni Deal,46 22 200 itingo 011....b30. 2i 100 Reading R.,..b6. 5835 SECOND BOARD. MOO rhils & Ntie 69.. 94 Reading .50 36 400 City Osnew. 91 Catawiesa ... 54 260 Reading' '11,..bia.53 60 Oro do b3O. 141 100 33.% 100 Schn N pre116.40. 31% 100 do 115, „sag 10 U 0 nion Canal prel: T 4 100 do,: b 5. 's.di 500 dO. ..... r••• 3. 1 3 AFTER BOAttDI. 500 Gibson 0R... 1330. 54 ;COD Feeder Dm Its 9.30 500 St Nicholas On.. Mlles° City 69 new 90 2000 Lsidgit Valley Es. 93 11000 do..zataadval 91% CLOSING SALES. 160 City essew 91;4 GOO Caw. & Amb G9oloo l[ 1000 do..aiuntelpal 9/6i .18 . 8 7435 JM@ VS leo Rending It ..... b 5 53% ZOO Wen Roc* 1,5 I The New York Post of last evening says : Gold is rather more In. ditteasa i re princi pal transactions being at 14.1 1 /.02 . The loan market is easyt but a iittlio More ac at 5@6 nor cent. Commercial paper is wanted; and the little, offering passes at 6%W. The stock market VI strong, but rather feverish and fluc tuating. -Governments are steady. Railroad sip; 00Petled etti9nBl l /00.ina Mir; and szaoaad, TWEE NITINJEt P 1130004. (PUBLIMED WEEKLY.) Taig, WArt Brin;r4 will be sent to Subscriber' rip luau. (per aubuio ath sue(,) at SAS SO Five copies 10 00 Teo copies 90 Larger clubs than Tea will be ellarged at the same rate, 32.00 per copy. The money must always accompany the order, and to no instance can these terms be deviated from, at they v4ford very Mite more than the eeet qr paper. Sir Postmasters are requested to set as agouti for TUB W AR runs. Ate' To the getter-up of the Club of ten or 'Wreath extra copy of the paper will he given. e itehrovetnent 1 at w ith , 60m Via at 6365931, , , =-• •-•- 4200 -ew York Cen, tral 0 . , ,,, /co io r z ., / , ) Erie at 916.91 K, 1,21* Remit ng at 1 - Befor, 'e the Gat se;;Ion New York Central was quo. tea at 9314, Erie at 91X. thalami Et at li&w o ;leading at hay Mani •• ver o _,„ On Southern at WM. yin quotations The,fN • B notations were made at the Board fte co. nnpared with yesterday: Tues. Mon. Ada. Dec. U. $ o Os, coapon.• ' Bl I° M KIX - % Tr. s. 6.20 compel. Er • WM 5p7, 4 Si - U. S. 5,20 collPon 74 new-1 .%. ° 1 1 % 34- Si U. N. IDA° coupon. q . . • s•!: DCA - - U. S. certificates-- •. 76 96h 76 . . 85% .... Tennessee 6s - - Xissouri Ss, ...... ... • •‘...,„ 7 / „ 7 1 - Atlantic MAIL • • •"' - 1 New Torii Cetaral ...... ..-- 93Si 98. 1 / 1 ,p; - Erie . pal 907 S - 54 Ilinisan River. ~ ....auf,, 11056 - :fr , Reading. -,,-...... L, 417 6 4 1 ,,, 4 1 " 4 , * ye ngsn ' cenr,ra' —4 ---- g mi.:W*4n 80Uthetn.....•. 11 % ..4 - Illinois Ceutru - .. 124:4 • rid - - After the 13.3a.1'd New York Central was quoted at 53 1 4. t Er, le at 907(0'Ecacling at lON ; Miehlgan*Centrai a t 108%: Michigan Southern at 64, Later : Frio sold at 9') Semi•Wcekly iteeview of Mho Phllsdel. pUs Market*. The prcurace 'market Wahines very dult, and prices are unsettled. Sit Flour there is very !Attie doing. Wheat is rather loslvvr. Oats Are also lower. Cotton Is more actiVe and fi rites leave - advanced it/ 2e 'f lb. Fish and Fruit aria rather firmer. Iron Is scarce and In good demamd• Provislens continue dull at former rates'. Petroleum In 'Milting up. Sup), In In good dernand at fan prices. needs have advanced. S 1 i.ls iyiu Imlay timid= Wool is wlthoul change. There is very little 'demand for Flour, either for export or home use, and the market continues very dull. The only 'sales we hear of are In lots to the home trade at prices ranging from gr7.25®7.75 for su per/Inc. 1.0a8.75 for extra, P 01 0 .50 for extra family, the latter rate for good Pennsytraula and Ohio, aad $11012.50 per bbl for• fancy brands, according to quality. ltye Flour is without change; 1001045 sold at 403.25 per bbl. Corn Meal is dull at about former• rates. ORAIN.—The demand' for Wheat is iimlted, and the market dull at about former rates; sales reach about MOO linSlielk, ID lots, at 12.04 V bushel for new Southern reds, and $4,1.42.2114 bushel for old Penn. , sylranla and Western, chiefly at the latter rate for prime. White ranges at from $2,30@2,40 V bushel. Rye is selling at 0501.05 V bushel for Delaware and Pennsylvania. Corn is (past; small sates are making at ISe for prime yellow; and We 11 bushel for white. Oats are rather lower, with small sales of new. Delaware at 52c, afloat, and 2,000 bushels at 50e, In the ears. , . PROVISIONS.—There has been Veryllttle doing 111 the way of sales, and the market is dull. Small sales of Mess Pork are making at 033e/31,111 bbl. Beef Hams are held at f„3obbi. Bacon continues very scarce. Small sales of plain and I:limy-bagged Ham are making at 2C®3oe V lb, Sides at 19e, and Shoulders at 18E:618.1he V. lb. Creel; Meats are also scarce. Small saie.§ of Pickled Hams are MO N' at 210V23c, and Shoulders lit salt at 185®17c V lb, Lae sales of bbis and tierces are making at 256 V lb. Butter is unchanged; sales of solid packed are making at 2212126 e lb. New York Cheese is selling at laelelr,e V lb, and Eggs at 25§28c Vi dozen. hilsaALS.—Pig Ironsi scarce, and la demand at fish pricea; 800 lulls sold at $410042 for No. 1 and *4O for No, Z. Scotch Pig is quoted at $47 tOU, Manufactured Iron continues lit demand at former rates. . BA RR.-Quercitron is scarce, and In good de mand. 20 hitds first No. I sold at $32 . 3013 too, Tan ners' Bark is without change. CANDLES are more active; 'adamantine sixes sell at .28@ti4c, and twelves at 24X(4/2.30 ih. Tallow Candles art in deinand, COAL continues in fair demand, and prieeS are well maintained ; Cargo sales are making at from ty7e57.75 't ton. COFFEE. -The market is Jinn; 600 bags of Rlo sold at 20,ti0a 2t.16c, and 400 hags of Laguayra at 2234@22,4fie, In "gold. COTTON.-There Is more doing, and prices have Falbaneed I©2a /a It; 3091Mit-' 8 of middlings sold 4ggs 46c t eaSh. FRUIT.-All kinds of foreign contititte Stare& Small sales of Lemons are making at 03489 00 box. Green Apples are selling frecie at $2.5000* bbl, and Peaches at from 01@:1 13 basket. FISH.-liackerel are in steady , demand; salesot shore No. 1 are making at $26; 20.2 at 1116.50; Bay No. Sia.SM No. at $13.50, and large No. as at , g0,5dl 73 tibla Codfish sell at Sc 't4 lb. PEATH IiRS.- Small sales ur Western arc making at K@IODe 11 lb. 0U.A.N70.-Peruvian is very scarce; super rhos pltate of Lime sells at $5O 14 ton. HOPS.-New continues scarce, with small saleS at 00c and old Eastern and Western at from 30 to 450 Nn.V.AL STORES.^-All <lase:Apt - WM totitinne scarce; small sales of Rosin are snaking at 49;,108161w bbl, which is an advance, and Spirits of Turpentine. at 30.2C©1.25 14 gal. • OlLb.-Linseed Oil is in fair demand at 41.57 g LEO - 44 gallon, which is an advance. Lard OR Is scarce; No. I, winter, sells at 82.051142.10 11% gallon, Petroleum is rather Muer, and prices have an upward tendency .1,000 barrels sold. mostly relined in bond, at b1169,53e, Madding crude at 31C1:31Ric, and free at 68(gn20 thl gallellAaS to color. . RICE is scarce and arm, with sales of Rangoon: at Waddle, and Carolina at 11@i1Yse -Cloverseed is rather dull; small sales are making at *bushel, TlMOthy la ill de mond; 300 bushels sold at Stig4.oo bushel, ' seed has advanced, with sales at g3Q3.10 Duane!. SriltiTS.-ltrandy and Gin are In demand. New. England Ruin is selling at 42.3631 gallon. In Whitt. by there is snore doing: 300 inns prime Pennsylva nia and Western sold at $2.30 *gallon, which is an Davila ea. 1444' 144 • . SUGAR.—There is a good deinand,and prices are th 1,100 hilds hobo sold at 12k:@14, 1 ,fic, in currency, WOOL.—The market continues firm, but the sales are limited at from 63077 e rst n) for common to fine fleece and 'if/WU V% for tom The following are the receipts of flour and grain, at this port to-day: Flour • 1,055 bbts. Wheat 4,700 inlB. Corn 2,750 Dux. Outs 8,100 Dun. Pittsburg Petroleum Market, Sept. 4. CIMPL.—The Crude market was remarkably quiet to-day. the transactions being remarkably light, whlep is owing mainly to the feet that there is little or none bey., The demand, howeytl, appears leas active, as buyers are bolding oil in auttetpat)en Of It swell in the river, increased receipts, an a tower prices. As yet, gowever, Mere is no change in values, and we continue to quote at bbls re turned, and 2410§25, bbls included. Sale of 37 bbls at 20,and%40 at 2036. ltarlNlCD,P^Wrilere Hi g continued active demand for bonded oh. both forprcemit and future delirefri and the market is man, and prices are still looking up. Sale of MI bids " Pre troll te, on the spot at 46: • Nonpariel, for ()atelier, buyer's option, at and 100 bite, on the spot, at 45. Free Olt steady, with small sales at Bleeos for prime city brands. EINIDLTITM AND NAPTDA.—There is a moderate shippiny demand for Nesloonm, seri are note Wee atSagami is exceedingly dull—AeellltllglY salea *.s. ble. New York Markets, Sept. 5. BREAnSi'ves.—The market for State and Western Floor is 501.0 c better, with more doing; sales MOO pills it .$l3. AM.135 for aupertlne 5tate,47.601p7.70 for extra d0,5...50.7.8.5 for choice do, 5,0007,05 for supernne e5tern47.260.18.20 for Common to medians. extra Western, and e8.85@9 for common to good. shipping brands extra round-hoop Ohio. Canadian Flour !sift. better; sales SOO bbls at Wm) @mil for common, and 4Z.16(0.10 85 for good to choice extra. Southern Flour is firmer; sales 1,200 bills at SD9 300 1(1,:10 for common, and $10.40614 for fancy and extra. itic Floor is outet: 1' heat is lefie better on Whiter and Ofgege• higher on Spring; sales 81,000 Ida U 41,6301,02 for Chicago Spring and Milwaukee Club, $1.60u2,1.58 for Anther Milwaukee, and $2,11122.12 for new Amber State. Oats are steady at 57@.58c for Western. The Corn market is heavy; sales 111,000 bus at 850, Sae for sound, and te.Coele fur unsound mixed West ern, • Puorisioss.—Tito Poiit Market is aative, Xciteli, and higher; sales 10.000 bids at 4130.60.021.9 i, closing at *31.75 cash for new mess; $1,0€1 , 20.22 for 054 dot $2.16,24.25 for prime, and V:.10 , 213.121is for prime mess; also 3.000 s new mesa for September, b. 0., at re.75e . 32. The Met Pillrket is firm; sales 0,000 bids at 0011.0 t for plain niece, aha $10.4500.50 for extra ine , s*,„, Cut Meats are steady; eJilidS pkgs lit tt.si@leNe. for Sbonlders, and 10e29C for Hams. The Lard market Is brill: sales DUO blip at t01.A.25e. Butter is steady, at 23@100 for Ohio, and 31,1.A@1.9e. for State. 33,906 43 120,759 41 139,017 50 $9,951 61 Cheese Is active at I.IPIR. COTTON ,—Vllder large receipt and a failing off is the demand, the matltel Is lees active, and seareoY so firm; bales 850 bales at 4.1©44e for mlclUllaft. WHISKY is heavy; sales 100 Ms Western in tots at $2..25. TALLOW is quiet: sales 420,000 the at 141.(015o. AT THE witCHANTS , , EICICANOE, PUTLADELPIZIA. Stemner Bropontis, Ilig . glason....Liverpool,Bentaa Steainer leritannia, Cialragber. ~St.Tbomas, Pernambuco and reto Janeiro, Sept. BOARD OF TRADE. THOBFTON BROWN, LAPMIIWARE, COMMITTIig QF TIIH MONni HENRY LENvIA, DIA.RINE INTELLIGENCE. PORT OF PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 6. sts SUN StJti .. is I SETS.. 21 Hiatt wean., aIV Steamer Saxon, Matthews, 98 hours from Boston. with nulre and passengers to H. Wiusor & Co. rilt,:sfl off the Buoy on the Middle, brig Castilian. steamer blillato, Reneari 60 BOWS from Moll mond, with pulse to Latlibury, Wickersham, & U. I:Steamer Chester, 'Warren, 24 hours from Net York, with 'noise tO W P Clyde & Co. Bark Zulnut, Hewitt, from. Trinidad de Cuba, Aug 1510. with sugar to 8 & W Welsh—vessel to Jau retche & Lavergne. Brig Allston, :Sawyer, from Wail River, in ballast to Dititei'& Ca. kicbr A Corson, PriCe, from Wilmington, 111 Sas last to captain. Sehr Mary H Stockhnm , Cordery, from Seiclity . - port, in ballast to contain. Behr W Krebs, Carlisle, from Baltimore, in bal mat to.; T Justus. b'cln , Reading it R No. IS, Baker, from Baltimore, in bailln 15 Tyter & Co, ' Bcbr L P l3mith,'Cobb, Sdays from nostOßl With mdse to Geo B Kerfoot. Mir Mary Haley, Haley, from Boston, in ballast to Blakiaton, Oran & Co. iSa b t i o SVH Simmons, ns r G , A RaOo, from Boston, In bit s e b r DTA pod, Lee, from Marblehead, In ballast to samain. Bete Sarah Elizabeth, Kelly, from New switorti 9 in ballast tb captain. Sehr Beading R It 'No 48, Nickerson, from Nor folk. in ballast to Illakiston, Graff, & Co. Sehr Exchange. Brawn, from Providence, in bal. last to L Audenried & Co. 'BCllr lion - nab Matilda . Gray, from Pall River, in lc.allast to ginniekson & (Amt . . Seta' C 8 Carstairs, Naylor, born ealielmity, lit .ballast to captain. Behr Williams, Golding, from Oommereial -Point, in ballast to'captain. • Behr Ellen Perkins, Perkins; front 3{lngor, with 'lumber to captain'. Behr Monter eu,,Couhlin, from New:Mork, bat ,lassetbtro D ea trlw t a ldn all . e, Beetle, / (4/1 from,emyrna, with grain to James Darrati. Sehr Nild, FOwfer, 1 (Inv Mot Snirlin, Del, With grain to Jas L Bewlwr & 00. nelit Olivia,. Fox, fromOdassa, Del, with grain to J L ;Bewley Lt Sam 8 Castner, Jr. Robinson, 1 da7l, from , New York, in ballast to eastner; titidkney,'& Welling.. Eon, 80w Sidney Price, 00 , 100 r, From gem in bIU . last to ca,pbta. Behr Julia B.' Pratt, Brown„ slityk from Fort Mow , roe. with mdse to captain. _ C schifforel, Elliott, from, =kWh, in ballast to J E Baxley Sr Ochr Lemturit, Spofford, from Glpucoster, in bat ift,t iqmptains Steam -tang E A Bouilur, 0 4'0,4r0 from Dunk Creek. ;lett. Brought nil_ bark Zbibm, &OM Trfuldactde Cuba. Passed OR - Reedy island, brig Lewis Mark', with gusuo: otr New CastlO, brig Amon, from Turks Island; at Quarantine, sent. Isabella, from Turks, island: below Chtster„. bark Oen Deo 11'0430110,,. 0911184100/. CUM:ed. Steamer Liberty, Pierce, NeW York Steamer M ougali James, New York. Steamer Whindin, Biggins, Sassarrati. Steamer B Meinder, Ntommsburg, Sassafras, Steamer Leader, Callahan, Sassafras. Steamer J S Shrlver, Dennis, Baltilnorm, Brig Mercedes (Br). Kohl, Cienfuegoe, Brig Albert Dew,is (BM pewit]; Antwerp. Brit tart , in ed i e r, 11 heeler, BostOn. Brig C Nichols, RhileroOk, BestK Brig C H Frost, Small, Boston. • Brig S G Adams, Barrett, Galveston. St hr Exchaage, Brown, Pawtucket, Sehr S Sitranons,taantly, Providence, Behr Mary Haley, Haley Boston. • Sehr Beading RE. No 48, Nickerapa, Norfolk. Behr Saran Elizabeth, ROW, Boston. Seta Dresden Davis, Boston. Behr Bannah Matilda, Gray, BostOtt, Seim H Perkins, Mayo, Boston. Behr D B Doane, Redman - Beaton. Behr Beret,Eiliott, 9655 Lealatt Frartr, Spielman, Bodoni, , Behr Reading RE o as, B444l,WaShillgtOne Behr Beebe, Norwich. Behr J E Pratt, Brown, Providence. OR M' J Doustitn Vamp, . *.EPTEMNAnt s—Evening. LETTER BAGS Arrived,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers