CZ alpraurg Ifttssayr. WEDNESDAY, ..,pogor 29,19.3 CAMPAIGN MESSENGER. 3yo will furnish -the Atessenger frptn this date till the first of No vember for FIFTY CENTS.' Our friends, and all who feel an interest in disseminating correct in- /orals-Con on' public 'affairs, are re- quested to gat up clubs and forward us lists of subscribers. ' .. s DEIKOCRATtIC CourtirMast -11tating1 A MASS MEETING of the De re9e racy 'of Groono . County will belhvkl at WAYNESBURG " Oa iehtirliday 4 the 20th of -Au k i. gust, 1563. Hon. JACOB ZEIGLER, of Butler. Hon. S: . A. tHLKORE Aral Col 'T. 'B. BEA - RIGHT of Fayette, Col. EVIL LIAIt — ROPKINS and R. kt."GIB SO*, Esq. (A . Wit111114k:41, and Other distinguished speakers will positive ly be present and. address the peonle. .;azidid'rnen, of all patties,' are earn estly intfited' to attend. ' ' TURN OUT! TURN OUT!! One and ALL! • By 'order of tho County . Commit- We i • • D. CRAWFORD Clen. :Pourer4tic Toi*nship . ingi in accordance with the usages of Ihe'beinocratie party, which on all j oefte A lons has boldly challenged free Iliscipsiou of its principles and claim ,ed the right to criticise the coniinet of plihf!e, servants, public meetings wiyibe_Liald in this county at the tiem arid places mentioned below: At CARMICHAELS on Saturday; August 15th, at 1 o'clock. . At. Mt. MORRIS on Saturday, Au gust g2d. At, .B.A.ILY'S STORE, in Wayne tovrnehip, on Tuesday, August 25th. At RpG.ERSVILLE, in Centre tp. on Thnrs4ley the 27th of August , AtjACii.SONVILLL, in Richhil/ tp., Soiarday, Augndt 29th. ,At DAN'S STORE, in Morris tp., on Monday, August.3lst... . At SUTTON'S STORE, in Wash ington tp., on. Wednesday, Sept. 2d. At JEFFERSON on Saturday the sth of September. At—GILEENSBORO on Tuesday, iSept.Sth. At TAYLOBSTOWN on Thursday the 10th of September. At NEWTOWN on Saturday the 12th of Septmuher. At JoidArrowN on Tuesday, Sept.l.sth. , At UI4.ARKSVILLE on Saturday, Sept. 13t,h.... . Several Speakers will be in at tendance at each of ,these.meatings, and itis confidently hoped there•will be a large turn out of, the people, at all of them. In these days. that try metres 8014 a,nd when the greatprin isipiesef. popular liberty are endan gered, it behooves every Democrat give,orie day,to his country. • The kallot QX IS the, only, remedy for tape ills amt evils now,upon the coun try, and no one can understand too , well the grave issues pending in the present contest. By order of the Pounty Committee, DAVID CRAWFORD, Cii'D ELEGANT EXTRACTS FROM CABI NET LITERATURE. The following elegant extracts—rare specimens -of rhetorical beauty and flour , ish—are taken from speeches made by Mr. (Lincoln and Cabinet officers at the Wash ington celebration of the capture of Vicks burg : Mr. Lincoln—The cohorts turned tail and.run. ,Dltr. Stanton--The sneaking Copper hegde . 4:0 the North would be driven holes. • lialleck—The Copperheads, as my friend, the Secretary, has said, were driv en hissing to tbeir:holee. . , • -r 4ny one .Citk /lee that Lincoln, Stanton, sod lialleek are "statesmen"—shining successors of Washington, anti Jefferson, and Jackson, and Marcy—by the remarks they made. ' • RELIEF FOR CRAFTED MEN 'The Philadelphia Oeunnimi Co*n cite have negatived the bill appropriating 4409,4900 to pay exemptions for, drafted men. 'file vote stood eighteen Democrats for the bill, and eighteen Republicans and: lour. Democrats against. A bill subse quently paesed.appropriating $lOO,OOO for the relief of the ramifies of drafted men. sorptia is what . -Wendell Phillips calls postanister Blair: "The huckstering poll ciitasof the Cabinet"—"the matt who haft Attuned the most stupendonalie of the can tgre—"gie bajdeftt liar on the .conti nent"—"a nibagTol polititeitut"—"anoth ing"—"a truck ,•and t apostate ;" and he mays the whole Cabinet is "ignorant," "braialets," "hybrid." Mr. Blair is op potAted to: negro equality and .ainalganui- Lion. • . This "no }*arty * ery of the Aboli tioitiata- reminds nwed tire sanctimonious Ptfritilige'•who in &Mot their marmite re eared that the - earth belonged to the agate, and thew xeselved that they 'warm aleaaia.ts. 800tia AtaalitivaiSttilvvrittg•tio party, and au .oplerthso it f tnaphe,oo, they want all to tweorqe Abolitionist, THE DIFFERENCIE. Senator Rankle; of ffpiingdeld, Ohio, in a recent Ittioiitionispeech at Cohilnbus, xpeak;ug orthe Cr.onatitu*n, said WOULD BLOW IT AWAY AS A CHILI). A" FEATHER fliTo • ••• • TSB AIR.' Mr. Vallandigitam says "1 am a Democrat—FOß CONSTITU— TION, FOR LAW, FOR THE UNION, FOR LIBERTY." Mr. Henkle, since denouncing th,e Con stitution, has been rewarded with a fat office under the Conicription law, and Mr. Vallandigham is banished to the South ern Confederacy. Is it not the traitor that is rewarded, and the patriot punished in these two instances? We ask for informa tion.—Starke County Democrat. SCRIPTURE CORRECTED. "Blessed are the peace makers," means hang every Democrat. "Love thy neighbor as thyself," is in. terpreted : "Don't speak to that family— they are secesh." "Love one another," among the church members, now means "love the Abolition brethren and curse the Democrats." "My kingdom is not of this world," is now discovered to be misconstrued. It means, "my kingdom is the kingdom of Abolitionism—whale away at the Butter '•nnts." "Give unto Cfesar, Ctesar's ; unto God• God's ;" leads in the late version, "giVe unto the Lincolnites the spoils ; unto the Democrats curses and bastiles." "Do not steal," does not refer to Gen erals engaged in cotton speculations, or the filching of Uncle Sam's money. "Do not bear false witness," relates to Democrats exclusively. Abolitionists may perjare themselves with impunity, if Dem ocrats can be placed in limbo by the oper ation. "Teach your children in the way they should go," meats "persecute and abuse the Democrats, lie in wait for them that they may suffer,"—ifamilion True Tele graph. ABOLITION IDEAS ILLOGIOAL. It has been often said, that the Aboli tion mind is illogical. There is that in itds construction which refuses to yield to the simplest rules of logic, and hence it is at fault, whenever feeling (or in a lower view) interest is involved. It this needed confir mation, we have it in the way the editors of minor Republican journals treat the Vallandigham matter. They are unable to separate the individual from the funda mental principles violated in his cane; they urging anti-judicial impressions of his guilt, as sufficient apology for the man ner of "his taking off." On the other hand Democratic papers do not "defend" Val lalidighatn,—they would leave that to him and his counsel before the courts. But they protest against martial law being ex ercised where martial law has not been proclaimed, and where civil law is still su preme. This is the distinction between Democratic and Abolition views of the matter. One is logical, the other is not. --Allumg Argus. RESPECTABLE MOBS The President's organ in this city rec ognizes two different species of mobs—a respectable and a disreputable one. A mob is respectable, according to the notion of the President's organ, when it is com posed of Abolitionists bent on the destruc tion of Democratic newspapers, and it is disreputable when there are Democrats among the rioters who seek to wreak ven geance on the demagogneism of the Abo litionists.. The distinction is nicely taken and shows the abject servility of Govern ment logic. A "respectable mob" is about equal to a "gentleman blackguard" who rails at "Copperheads" and wishes them hung. Chesterfield had a different no tion. He called any number of gen tlemen a mob if they met without a mod erator to vreserve order and decorum amongst them. We look on a mob as the most terrible infliction on society, and hold that it must be put down under all circumstances, by every available means in the possession of the prnpei ly consti tuted authorities.—Phila. Aye. AN lA,PORTANT DECISION We will get at the true intent and mean ing of the Conscription Act by and by.— The other day we published an order from the Provost Marshal's office to the effect that the payment of $3OO was equivalent to supplying a substitute, as it threwmpon the Government the responsibility of his procuration, and now we learn from a let ter addressed by the Provost Marshal Gen eral to Gov. Andrews, that if it shall be made to appear to him by the Governor of any State, that particular towns to which quotas have been assigned have heretofore actually furnished a surplus of men over their quotas, an order will be issued dis charging from the service of the United States a number of men called into the .eeivice by the present draft from said 4owns equal to the surplus proved to have been - furnished, heretofore. Towns will thus get credit e.ctually for their excess on former cant?. Mie number of men thus discharged from the service will be added to the next subsequent quota of the Lou gressiopal District to which said towns belong' • ri:=3 NO NEGRO SUBSTI TUTES Provost Marshal Roster, of Pittsburgh, gives the following important notice • In pursuance to an order frm►► Acting Assistant Provost Mars,hal Generalk J.. V' Bomford, Lieut. Col. lath U. 8. Infantry "Any person who is equive.leut to the per son drafted, may be received as a substi tute : but a negro, under existing law, is not a military equivalent." Therefore, under existing orders, this Board cannot receive them as substAntes. By a similar order, minors and persons over 45 cannot be receked , as substitutes. or So it appeais our girgra adttiiri ng, negro Worshipping, negro equality friends are getting too large a doss of tlie . "Ft es Americans of African descent." A negro way hire a white substitnei, hut a white wan can't hire a Into —Al'as/nnyteu Re- Hon. 0. L. Viillaildigham AjtepteibeNonilho4illon fur Gov ernor and Deemer kis 'Peonies. His Address to the People of Ohio, Mr. Vallandigham reached the Clifton House, on the Canada aide of Niagara Falls on Wednesday of last week, The following stirring and noble address, issued by him :o the people of Ohio, was presented to the tele graph ollico fur transmission to souse .44 the trading papers of the country, but the admin istration censor refused to permit it f,o pass over the wires. The mail, however, carried it to its destination. NIAGARA FALLS, CANADA WEST, July 15, 1833, Arrested and confined tor three weeks in the United States. as a prisoner ol State; banished thunc to the Confederate States, and there held as an alien enemy and prisoner of war, though on parole, Mirly and honorably dealt with and given leave to depart, an act possible only by running tlx blockade at the hazard of being tired upon by ships (lying the flag of my own country, I found mysell first a freeman when on British soil. And to-day, under protection of the British flag, I ant here to enjoy atm in par tto exercise the privileges and rights which usurpers insolently deny me at home. The shallow contrivance of the weak des pots at Washington, and their advisers, has been defeated. Nay, it has been turnedagainst them ; and 1, who was maligned as in secret league with the Confederates, having refused them when in their midst, under circumstances the most favorable, either to identify myself with their cause, or even so much as to remain, preferring exile in a foreign land, return now with allegiance to my own State and Govern ment, unbroken in word, thought or deed, and with every declaration and pledge to you while at home, and before I was stolen away, made good in spirit and to the very letter. Six weeks ago, whem just going into banish ment because an audacious, but must cowardly despotism caused it, I addressed you as a fel low citizen. 10-day, and from the.very place then selected by me, but after wearisome and most perilious journeyiugs for more than four thousands miles by land and upon the sea ; still in exile though almost in sight of my na tive State, I greet you as your representative.— Gratetu certainly, 1. ant for the confidence in my integrity and patriotism, implied by the unanimous nomination as candidate for Gover nor of Ohio, which you gave use while I was yet in the Confederate States. It was not misplaced ; it shall never be abused. But this is the last of all considerations in times like these. I ask no personal sympathy for the personal wrong. No ; it is the cause of con stitutional liberty and private right cruelly out raged beyond example in a free conntry, by the President and his servants, which gives public significancy to the action of your Convention. Yours was,indeed. an act of justice to a citizen who, for his devotion to the rights of the States and the liberties of the people, had been marked for destruction by the hand of arbitrary power. But it was much more. It was an ex ample of courage worthy of the heroic ages of the world; and it was a spectacle and a rebuke to the usurping tyrants who, having broken up the Union, would now strike down the Consti tution, subvert your present Government, and establish a formal, and proclaimed despotism in its stead. You are the Restorers and Defend ers of Constitutional Liberty, and by that proud title history will salute you. I congratulate you upon your nominations, They whom you have placed upon the ticket with me, are gentlemen of character, ability, integrity and tried fidelity to the Constitution; the Union, and to Liberty. Their moral and political courage—a quality always rare, and now the most valuable of public virtues—is beyond question. Every way, all these were nominations tit to be made. And even jeal ousy, 1 ant sure, will now be hushed, it 1 espe cially rejoice with you in the nomination of ietr. Pugh as your candidate fur Lieutenant Gover nor and President of the Senate. A scholar and a gentleman, a soldier in a foreign war, and always a patriot.; eminent as a lawyer, and distinguished as an orator and a statesman, hail his acceptance as an omen of the return of the better and more virtuous days of the Re public. I indorse your noble platform—elegant in style, admirable in sentiment. You present tne true issue, and commit yourselves to the great mission just now of the Democratic par ty—to restore and make sure, first, the rights 'and liberties declared yours by your Constitu tions. It is in vain to invite the States and people of the South to return to a Union with out a Constitution, and dishonored and polluted by repeated and most aggravated exactions of tyrannic power. It is base in yourselves and treasonable to your postertty to surrender these liberties and rights to the creatures whotn your own breath created and can destroy. Shall there be free speech, airee press, peace able assemblages of the people and a free bal lot any longer in Ohio ? Shall the people here after, as hitherto, have the right to discuss and condemn the principles and policy of the party —the ministry—the men wno, for the time, conduct the Government—to demand of their public servants reckoning of their stewardship, and to place other men and another party in power at their supreme wilt and pleasure ? Shall Order 'Mix ty-Eight or the Constitution be the supreme law of the land ? And shall the citizen, any more, be arrested by an armed ' soldiery at midnight, dragged from wite and child and home, to a military prison; thence to a military trial ; thence condemned and then banished as a felon for the exorcise of his rights? This is the issue and nobly you have met it. It is the very question of tree, popular Govern ment itself. It is the whole question—upon the one side, liberty; on the other, despotism. The President, as the recognized head of his party, accepts the issue. Whatever he wills, that is law. Constitutions, State and Federal, are nothing ; acts of legislation nothing ; the judiciary less thattnothing. In time of war there is but one will supreme—his will ; but one law—military necessity, and he the sole judge. Military orders supersede the Constitution, and military commissions usurp the place of the ordinary courts of justice in the land. Nor are these mere idle claims. For two years and more, by arms, they have been enforced. It was the misston of the weak and presumptuous Burnside, a name infamous forever in the ears of all lavers of constitutional liberty —to try the experiment in Ohio—aided by a judge whom I name not, because he has brought foul dishon or upon the judiciary of my country. In your hands, now, men of Ohio, is the final issue of the experiment. The party of the Administration have aceepted it. By pledging support to the President, they have justified his outrages upon liberty and the con stitution, and whoever gives hie vote to' he can candidates of that party commits himself to every act of violence and wrong on the part of the Administration which he upholds; and thus, by the law of retaliation, which is the law of might, would forfeit his own right to liberty, personal and political, whensoever other men and .another party shall hold the power. Much more do the candidates themselves. Suffer them not, 1 entreat you, to evade the issue; and by the judgment of the people we will abide. And now, finally, let me ask, what is the pre text for all the monstrous acts and claims of arbitrary power which you have so nobly de nounced? "Military necessity " But it, in deed, all these be demanded by military necess ity, then, believe me, your liberties are gone, and tyranny is perpetual. For if this civil war is to terminate only by the subjugation or submis sion of the Southern people by force and arms, the infant of to-day will not live to see the end of it. No, in another way cnly can it be brought to a close. Traveling a thousand miles or more, through nearly one-half of the Confed erate States, and sojourning for a time at avidely different points, I met not one man, woman or child, who was not resolved to per ish rather than yield to the pressure of arms even in the most desperate extremity. And whatever may and must be the varying fortunes of war, in all which I recognize the hand of Providence pointing visibly to the ul timate issue of this great trial of the States and people of America, they are better prepared now every way to make good their inexorable purpose, than at any period since the beginning of the struggle. These may indeed be.unwel , come truths, but they are addressed only to candid and honest men. Neither, however, let me add, did I meet any one, whatever his opinions or his station. political or private, who did not declare his readineas, when the war shall have ceased and invading armies withdrawn, to consider and discuss the ques tion of re-union. And who shall doubt the issue of the argumentt , I return, therefore, with my . opinions and convictions as to war or pence, and my faith as to final results from eutand policy 'and wise statesmanship, not only unchanged, but con firmed and strengthened. And may the God of Heaven and Earth so rule the heart, and minds of Americans everywhere, that with a Coast/Onion maintained, a Union restated and liberty henceforth made secure, a grander and nobler destiny shall yet be ours, then that even which blessed our fathers in the first two ages of the Republic. C. L. VALLANDIGUAM. MR. VALLANDIGHAM IN CANADA. Soon after Mr. Vallandighanes pres ence in Montreal became known, a dinner was offered him at the slob. He declined it on account of his having to leave town by the first train, but the director of the road offering him a special train instead, he finally accepted the diifner, which was partaken of by a goodly company, Mr. Walker, of London, well known in the Hudson Bay Company negotiations, pre siding. A correspondent says : "Mr. Vallandigham confined his re marks to general principles of liberty, law, magna charta, habeas corpus, without any personal application to his own case, and dwelt upon how much the framers of our Constitution were guided by British barons, of ltunnymede—my Lord Coke— the extorters of the right of petition from King Charles, the persevering energy that drew out that British writ of liberty, the habeas corpus. .&. His remarks were ad mirable, and did honor to the American name. TLe people were urgent that the demonstration should be public, but Mr. V. would not cohsent to it. All Canada would have turned out, if there had been time, to testify through him to magna charta and habeas corpus. At 11 P. M., he went off in an extra train which Mr Bridges had provided for him. Our Mon treal gentlemen were delighted with Mr. Vallandigham's understanding of, and comprehension of, the great struggle we had in England to preserve British liberty —which had cost our fathers two revolu tions, one of blood, and one of peace, in which we bad dethroned a king and taken a queen (William and Mary). One of the speakers—Mr. 12.—said. in compliment, the pleasure of seeing Mr. Vallandigham would fully repay his voyage across the Atlantic. ter'Mrs. C. L. Vallandigharn and Son, with a party of ladies and gentlemen front Dayton, tassed up by railroad on Satur day, on their way to the Clifton House, Canada West.—CuluZus (0 ) S'lateSinan Ihe Philadelphia North American, speaking of the riot in New York, said, "we owe nothing to Democratic leaders and newspapers." While the history of the past few days proves that the leaders of the Democratic party struggled with all their power to suppress the riotous demon • strations in New York, the record of the past few years clearly establishes the fact that the incendiary and inflammatory teachings of the Abolition leaders and newspapers originated the present learlu 1 disregard of law and order which prevails throughout the . coutit , .y.--Philadelphiu Age. SUBSTITUTES IN PHILADELPHIA. The demand for substitutes in Philadel phia is not so lively by any means as it was here, and any number of them may be had at hom $2OO to $250 each. 461,5 turf gay. Important from Jackson and Vicksburg. Federal Forces in Natchez, We have Jackson, Mississippi, news to the 17th, and Vicksburg news to the 18th. General Sherman ordered a charge on Johnston's forces, on Friday, but they had so far escaped that capturing was out of the ques tion. We only got a few stragglers and a few guns, and some ammuni-. tion. A portion of General Sherman's army is now in Jackson, at which place is his headquarters, while the remainder of his army is on its way back to Vicksburg. Gen. Johnstan's army swam Pearl river on Monday. Gen. Ransom, occupied Natchez, with twelve thou sand men. Immediately on his arri val he captured four rebel officers, 2 Majors and two Captains, and five privates. General Ransom then crossed the Mississippi and captured a battery consisting cf nine guns, four of which are twelve pound Par rotts, and then marched back into the country nine miles and captured two hundred and forty-seven boxes of ammunition and nine more guns. The rebels fled in consternation, On his return to Natchez be found five thousand head of Texas cattle and four hundred hogsheads of sugar, all of which be took posession of in the name of the United States. Reb el deserters came to Natchez, on Tuesday, with the information that the rebel General Logan, was thirty miles back in the country with four thousand men, but had heard of the captured of Natchez and was retreat ing. Two steamers left Natchez for New Orleans with large loads of cat tle, and three more for Vicksburg with live stook. The steamers Louisville and Elmira were captured up Red river, and ar rived at Vicksburg on the Bth. On Saturday information was re ceived at Cairo that a force of rebels, three or four hundred strong, would encamp that night at. a point three miles West of Rienzi, whose inten tion was to attack camp Davis, a strong stockade fort six miles south of Corinth, the next morning, they being under the impression that the garrison was nearly all away upon a scout in Alabama. A detachment of the 66th Illinois and the 3rd batalliun of the sth Ohio cavalry were imme diately sent foi ward, who completely surprised and captured the whole forces. Our Dead at Gettysburg A dispatch from Chambersburg says:—Every arrangement has been made at Gettysburg, by Governor Curtin, for the removal, upon applica tion, to David Wills, residing there, of the bodies of Pennsylvanians killed in the late battle. A map of the bat= tle-fiekt has been aloft(); which shows the exact locality of.every grave. A list of the Avonfided and=niek Penn. sylvanians is also being made, and' pmemitnia LOST OF TUE every facility for the finding of sol. J e al son Aentitural Fair for 1863. diers will be afforded. Official from Vicksburg Through the the courtesy of Mr. Harris, clerk of the 3. D. Perry, says a correspondent of the Chicago Times, I send you a synopsis of the rebel loss in Maj. Gen, Grant's department since the lAnding of the army at Grand Gulf May Ist, 1863 : Loss in men up to May 1M 40,000 Prisoners taken et Vials Mug, July 4th 31,000 Total 71,000 Citizen prisoners 5,000 Of whom women and children are 1,500 Prisoners sick and %untitled 13,220 Prisoners tit for duty 18,000 Tents captured 4,000 Mules captured 1,500 Horses captured 1,000 Freight cars 200 Locomotives 5 Large siege guns 188 Field pieces 153 Rounds of ammunition 300 Stands of small arms :15,000 Shot guns, &c., &c., 36,000 Value of public property captured, iron} 510,000,- 000 to $15,000,000 Approved by order of [Signed) JAmr.s Wizscm, Lieut. Colonel and Provost Capture of Morgan 7 s Command Large Number of Trimmers Captured. CINCINNATI, July 20. -A. AL—The following has just been received at General Burnside's headquarters : HEADQUARTERS U. S. _FORCES IN TILE FIELD, G UGER'S CREEK, July 20, 9 P. m.—Lieut. Col. Richmond, A. A_ Gen.—We chased John Morgan and his command over fifty miles to day. Often heavy skirmishing for six or seven miles between the Forty-fifth Ohio of Col. Walford's brigade, which was in advance, of the enemy, we succeeded in bringing the enemy toa stand about three o'clock this after ternoon, when a fight ensued which lasted an hour, when the rebols fled, and took refuge upon a very high bluff. I sent a flag of truce demanding an immediate and unconditional surren der of Morgan and his command. The flag was received by Col. Coleman and other officers, who came down and asked a personal interview.— They asked au hour for consultation. 1 granted forty minutes, in which time the command. excepting .Nior (ran7 who deserted his command, tak ingin with him a very small squad, bu r - rerdered. It was my understanding that Morgan himself had surrendered, and learned that it was the under standing of Morgan's officers and men. The number killed and wound ed is inconsiderable. The number of prisoners is between 1,000 and 1,- 500, including a large nnmber of Col onels, Majors and line officers. I captured between 6 and 700 prisoners yesterday, and I think I will capture Morgan himself to-mor row. [Signed] SIIACKELFORD. Brigadier-General Morgan's artillery and about 2,500 prisoners, including Basil Duke, are expected to arrive here to-day. CINCINNATI, July 22—At last ac counts Morgan, with about 500 men, was making his way towards the centre of the state, and when last heard from was at McArthur, Vinton county. He has forfeited all claim to consideration by violating his promise to surrender. We have, in all, about thirty-five hundred of his men prisoners. Terrible Accident from a Fail ing Wall--A Number of Lives Lost. NEW YORK, July 22.—During the gale yesterday, the wall of the Eigh teenth precinct station house, in Twenty-second street, fell. The building was destroyed last week by the mob—one wall alone remains standing. The ruins at the time of its fall were, filled with women and children, searching for coal and wood. Eleven bodies, mostly of chil dren, have thus far been taken from the ruins. Sven are dead, and one past recovery. It is unknown how many yet remain in the ruins; the police think not more than three or four, while others estimate the whole number of victims between thirty five and forty. Official Report of Gen. Grant. WASHINGTON, July 22.—Tne follw ing has been received here : Vicxs- BURG, July Th.— To Maj. Gen. lialleck: Johnston evacuated Jackson on the the night of the 16th lie is now in full retreat. Sherman says most of Johnston's army must perish from heat, lack of water, and general dis couragement. The army, paroled here has, to a great extent deserted, and are scat tered throughout the country. Gen. Ransom, who was sent to .Natchez, captured a number of prisoners, and 5,000 head of Texas cattle. In Lou isiana they captured more prisoners and many teams loaded with ammu nition, Over 2,000,000 rounds of am munition were brought to Natchez•— They also destroyed 68,000 rounds artillery ammunition. U. S. GRANT, Major General. Our Losses at Morris Island. A New York dispatch has the fol lowing : During the operations a rebel steamer attempted to land re inforcements on Morris Island, but was driven off and destroyed by our gunboats, and the troops barely escaped. It is reported, also, that the rebel gunboat, venturing too near our vessels, was captured. Our losises in the capture of the Morris Island batteries and the at tempt at Fort Wagner, foot up as follows :—The 7th Connecticut, 100, a large number of whom are missing; 3rd New Hampshire, 8 killed and 91 wounded; 76th Pennsylvania, 149 killed,: wounded and misusing; 7th New Hampshire, 5 wounded , 9th Conneetieut, 4 killed and H wound ed; 484,1111eir Irotir,4 killed and . 23 PlOotsided; 62d4:11iki; 1 •toitided; 9th *Mine; kittedi trod. lie twitin fled HORSES ' Best Stallion, $5 AO 2d do 3 00 Best S yr olditation, 3 OU 24 do do 200 Best brood mare 4 00 "id do do 200 Beat draught hors, 3 00 2d do do 200 Judges—Zado. k ..:at „ion, ‘',. ihiant Stewart. 3. C. Flenniken. Bost 2 yr o'd horse. cutt 5 00 2d do do IOU Best 2 yr old mare colt 2 00 2,1 do do 100 Best yearling horse colt 2 00 ild do d. 1 1./0 hest yearling mare cok 2 00 2d du do 1 00 Beat spring horse c It 2 00 24 11. do 0 00 Best spring mare colt 2 Of 24 do do 1 U 0 Judges—Jacob Greenlee, lilt flowli,,, Milan, Bell Best pair matched horses 6 00 2tl do do 3 o 0 Best single harness horse 3 00 24 do do 2 IA Best riding animal 3 00 Best trotting animal 15'00 241 do ill) 5 00 Best pacing animal 10 Ull 241 do do 4 U 0 Judges—George Moretlock, Jacob Lonmiecksr, Fay ette county, Reed Riggle, Washington county. CATTLE. Best boil 4 00 2d do 2 UU ►test 2 yr old bull 2 00 2d do do I Best yearling bull I 00 Best bull ea mos. MO I 00 Judges—Mail: Gordon, Jeremiah bong, dilas Barnes. COWS nest cow 2d do Pest 2.51 old Cow 01 Meier 24 do do du He yearling heifer Yd do do Best r calf (6 mos. old] eke of oxen 2,1 • do do Best beet aninul 'dl do do /thigto—lsaac liiddthr, Eli Long, 1 F. Randolph SHEEP. 81 . 21 e4panish buck G 00 'Lt do do 3 00 Best yearling BGck 3 00 •lil do t. s. 2 00 Nest buck lamb. 2 00 heat grade buck • 3 U 0 Judges—Jaincs Ross, Washington. county, Moses Mostou., EUOs Bally. , EVES Belt ewts Ili in number] 5 00 2i.1 Jo elf) • 2 UU Best tot of. Landis [0 in litunlier] 3 00 Vest !muffn. sheep [lO iii Intranet] 3 00 Judges--Mirl Evans, Washington county, Morgan Wise, .1a awes Kea. SW [NE. =I 24.1 do l Ult Best Lrood sow 2 00 Best litter of pig* 2 Ott .24 du du 1 00 Judges-4,Am Claytwo, Michael McGov,rn, Thomas Altree. POU I LTR Best Rooster 50 2d do 25 Best lot of belts 50 62(1 do 25 Judges- Dr. W. B. Gilbraitlt, Dr. W. D. RogevA, Dr. S. Go'yen MAN IT FACTU R F.l) ARTICLES. Best fulled loth Lie yds] 2 00 241 do du 100 Bsst home made red flannel 3-4 yd wide, 10 yds 200 241 do . du du 100 Best flannel 1 (hi Best pair blankets, i JJJJJ le-1118,1V I 00 2d do do do 50 Best factory blanket 1 00 Ju Black, WI II A. Porter, James Barnes. Best pair of boots I (JO Rest calf skin tanned 1 00 Beat side of nipper leather 1 00 Best solo .fsole !tallier 100 Best double harness 3 PO liebt s:d.! saddle 2 00 B at man's saddle 1 Oil Judges—Jonah F, Randolph, Samuel McCollister, Juno 'Smiley. B a d ess c oal 1 00 Beet pants 50 Bea , vest 50 Judges —John Prior, Joshua Phillips, Richard MOM. Best Cal ridge, exhibited by 111 tau tactorer 3 00 Best bug .ly 2 00 Lest farm wagon 4 U 0 hest is t I U 0 li,st sulky I 00 Best wi,cell•arrow SO Beet two hone plow 1 (10 Best corn plow 50 Best harrow 50 Best cultivator_ 50 Best feed cutter. 1 00 Best grain cradle 50 Best mowing machine 5 (10 Judges—Solomon Doge, Job n Munne 11, Win. Cree, Sr. Best secretary 2 00 Best bedstead 50 Best `ntreau 1 00 Best washing utacliitte I 110 Best set ut chat's I 00 Best churn 1 00 Best marble work 2 00 Best cooking stove 2 00 Best parlor stove I 00 Best pair draught chains 50 Bei t ax 50 Best mattock lAt Lest spade. made by exhibitor 50 fleet shovel do do 50 B. at manure fork do 50 Best hay bark do 25 Judges—David Rose. Juno Snyder, Eli Atea. Beet barrel ot Hour nest coon brooms dozen Beet honey, 5 pounds Best sugar ..atie molasses, 1 gallon Hest sorghum sugar, 5 you 1 00 Judges—Jobe Hewitt, Ba/sit/el Sedgy Augu.tus Miller. Heat coverlid 2 00 do 100 Best white quilt 2 00 2LI do 1 00 Jud g es—Mrs. .1. Pullin, Mrs. M. Dell, Mrs. P. Neel, Mary - eraue. Swab Mack, Mary Slllllll. =I Best scrap quilt 2 00 2d dot lOU Judges—Miss Fanny long, Miss Nana• Bayard, Miss Flute line Gicentee. Best pair woolen hose 50 241 do do 25 Best pair cotton hose 50 2.1 do du 25 Best socks 25 Itcst cotton socks 25 Judges—Mrs. Benj. Way, Mrs. Isaac Randolph, Mrs . Isaac Buison. Best piece of houte-utade carpet 2yd wide, [lO yds} 2 00 2d- do do do 1 Ott Be t pie it home-made linen, [IP yds] 1 00 2.1 do do do 50 Judges—Mrs. Wm. Stewart, Mrs. Thos. Sharpneck, rs. A brallaill F. Randolph. .. Best bonnet 1 00 2.1 do 50 Best made dress, 1 00 2d do do 50 Best made shirt 50 Judges—Mrs. Caroline McCollister, Mrs Jan:: Ham ilton, Mrs. Silbert Ritchie. Best lady's collar 50 Brat uudersleeves 50 Best pocaet hand.rchief 50 Best silk embroidery 50 Hest tapestry 50 Best lamp mat 50 Rest stand cover 50 Hest hearth rug 50 Judges— Misses May Flenniken, Lizzie Lindsey, El len Ritchie. Best collection of flowers i 00 Best designs 50 Best Cactus 50 Best boquet 50 Judges—Misses Lizzie Black, Martha Bayard, Lucy V. Inghrain. Best peaches 75 2d do 25 Best quinces 50 Best marmalade 50 Best quince jelly . 50 Best apple jeliey SO Best grape Jolley 50 Best currant jelley 50 Jut ges—Mrs. John Dowlin, Jr., Mrs. Sam. Bayard, Mrs. John Bell, Jr. Best loaf of bread 50 Beet light cakes . 50 Hest pound cake 50 Hest sponge cake 50 Best fruit cake 50 Best cucumber pickles 50 Hest preserved corn 50 Judges—Mrs. Jos. Randolph, Mrs. Dr. Rogers, Mrs. John Cotterel. Hest butter, 6 Its 50 Best cheese, 12 lbs 50 Beat solid soap 50 Judges—Mrs. Dan. Moredock, Mrs. U. C. Houle worth. Susan Lindsey. Best selection of apples I 00 2tl do do 50 Beet specimen of apples [I peck.] 50 2d do do 25 Best collection of pears 50 Best collection of plums 50 Beat collection of quinces 50 Judges—Thomas Ross, Thomas 51cClenathan, Judge Pollock. Best specimen of wheat du do torn do do rye do do oats • do do barley do do a weet potatoes do do Ir ish do do do beets, I bush. do do punipktus do do Talbage Hest collection of gardenido vegetables fd do , , Judfca"-Ilkft MonlennerY 4 , John Belt, Br., Beni. Best rentals Rglestriaol i, . 500. do Id .„. , ' , ele .. 300 Juiges—.carob Rush, John Flenniken, Bumf! Ann along. . -. . . . THE LATEST NEWS! It is.asserted by Blebs).. that Gen. Lee took over into V:rginia with him 3,000 Union soldiers .tnd many officers captured at Gettysburg. .1t is also said Lee left be hind 11,000 wounded, 5.,0 00- wounded tak en away by him. 4,500 buried by the fed erate, and 17,000 taken prisoners ; captur ed at Filling Waters, of Gen. Pettigrew's command, 1,000 prisoners and 4,000 killed and wounded—making an aggregate of 42,500. Fifteen thousand wounded soldi ers in all have been taken iron) the field at Gettysburg, and sent to the different hos pitals throughout the country. About 5,- 000 still remain there. Of those removed, 3,000 were rebels arid 12,000 our own men. One of the New York papers contains a list of seventy-six persons killed daring the brutal riot raised in that city ander the pretext of resistence to the draft. The loss of lite above stated is greater than that suffered by five regiments of the Ex celsior Brigade, who were in the hottest of the great battle of Gettysburg. New Orleans letters state that Generals Weitzel's and Dudly's brigades, under Gen. Grover, left Port Hudson on the evening of the 9th and went to Donaldsonville, to clear out rebel batteries near there ; when within a few miles of there, the 30th Massachusetts regiment, in advance, was suddenly attacked, and one hundred and fifty men killed and wounded, and three field pieces captured. Every effort will be made by Gen. Banks to recover Braehear City and Opolousas Railroad. At last ac counts the enemy were reported to have fallen back beyond Bayou Latouche. An expedition is said-to have also gone by the river to Alexander. The gunboat Scotia was sunk in the Mississippi river ix collision with gunboat Antoney. An ex pedition from the Squadron off Galveston has destroyed three schooners and three hundred bales of cotton in Galveston Bay. Ott return of the party Lieut. Deavinport was severely wounded by rebels in ambush. Lee's pickets oecupy the Potomac river from Cherry Run, thirteen miles west of Martmsburg,down to Harper's Ferry, On. Friday night they drove iu our pickets at the Ferry. They are in force at Shep herdetown, Martinsburg and Charleston. Mead's army has attained already an advantageous position, and will force Lee to a decisive battle north of the Rapphan noek river. Gen. Meade has probably cut the line of Lee's supplies. HEADQUARTERS ARMY OF TUE PoToNtAc, July 25.—The rebels were in force yester day near Front Royal. We drove their eavallry from Manassas Gap about sunk. It is believed the rebels intend to cross the Blue Ridge at Chester or Thornton'e Gap. They will meet obstacles at the former place. The Richmond Whig of the 23d, says : The evacuation of Jackson, Miss., lett in the hands of the enemy the rolling stock of the N. 0., Jackson and Great Northern, the Mississippi and Tennessee Railroads. The motive power alone, consisted of over forty engines. The loss is incaloolable, important and irreparable. Nothing goes well in the Southwest. The Federal cav airy raid from Newbern, N. C., reached Rocky Mount on the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad on the 20th, and captur ed two miles of the track. The bridge over the Neast river, 1,000 feet, was burn ed, thereby cutting off communication for come weeks, An official order has been issued for the monthly pay of Provost Marshals under the enrollment act 129 50, and that of the Surgeon and Commissioner, 112 83. A cavalry expedition under Col. Toland of the 34th Ohio mounted infantry and. Col. Powell of the 2nd Virginia cavalry sent by Brig. Gen. Seammon from Char leston, Va., to cut the Virginia and Ten nessee railroad at Wytherville has been successful. They captured Wytheville after a severe fight and took 120 prisoners two pieces of artillery, and 100 stand of" arms. Our loss was about 15 killed and. wounded. Col. Toland and Capt. Delaney of Cincinnati were killed and Col. Powell. severely wounded. The enemy lost 75 killed and a large number wounded. Our troops were fired on by citizens from houses. The town was totally destroyed. The corumand reached Fayetteville, July 23, after a hard march of over 300 miles. 2 b 0 John Morgan Still at. Large CINCINNATI, July 23.—Morgan crossed the Muskingum river at Eaglesport, 18. miles below Zanesville, at ten o'clock this morning. Scouts report his force one thousand strong, with three pieces of ar tillery. Col. Lemont of the Stith Ohio, sent hia regiment and a large number of militia after him, Col. Chandler, of Zanesville, and twenty-live citizen scouts were captured at beavertown last night. A Fight with Gen. Morgan— Our Forces Following Him Closely. CINCINNATI, July 24.-Shortly after Mor gan crossed the Muskingum yesterday, tie was attacked by milita under Colonel Hall, with two pieces of artillery. Fif teen rebels were killed and several wound ed. His progress was checked twice by Colonel Hall, but he finally escaped via. Cum terlanti, Guernsey county, which place he left last night at seven o'clock. This morning he crossed the Central Ohio Railroad at Campbell's, but so close ly pursued by Gen. Shackelford that be had no time to do any damage to the railroad beyond burning the depot and tearing up some of the track. At nine o'clock this morning Morgan reached Washington, Guernsey county. where he did a good deal of damage in plundering, &c. Shackelford is close be hind him. Stirmish with Morgan CI NCI NNAet, Jttly - 24.—Maj Krause had a skirmish with the rebels at eleven o'clock this morning, driving them out of Washington. When last heard from, Morgan was at Winchester, twelve miles northeast of Cambridge, mooing towards the Steubenville ilk, Indiana railroad, closely pursued by our forces. More of Morgan's Men in Cincinnati. CINCINNATI, July 25.—Fourteen hundred, more of Morgan's men arrived here last night. They will be Isrwarded to Indian apolis to-day. Twenty-four hundred have arrived altogether. Capture of Morgan and his men. The guerrilla Morgan and his men were captured, on Sunday last, one lot near Salinevillo, Ohio, some six-. teen miles from Steubenville and another near West Point, 'which is eight or nine miles. sesta nT.New Lisbon, Celumbiana Co., Ohio. The rebel force had dwindled 1:10WO . to some 500 men. 'Throe tOgiirtellts Of Pennsylvania militia, *ere 'lout by Gen. Brook's from Pittsburg, to as sist in the attire and lent material assistance. • liipibibifeik hive been sent to Indianorills aVlCfdurabog' Ohio. 1 00
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers