The Daily Pittsburgh gazette and commercial journal. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1861-1863, August 07, 1862, Image 1

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IN 1786.
& co ‘ g^rlBMO,r ’ **•
OILOfSOEKJi COjS’ANyTo'
‘‘OTSOTBIITAHIA.J-OfflM,-Bt-_ohlr
■ ( omr tho Brlilz*; 'Bay aaA'-ntt' OABBOK OJta ®p
mirimlwlnn ~ifti -t rtm* - of alll A*-
•odptumii waaUd, Addreu ;W * AV ?S?J 6 £ 1 ’
' 'BwJttOTandTwaratar; : ' ■'- ■ m>,C:C -°‘
<«*<>^^
Cl a ßdi*Ua>*to *ux» •■S'iSA’v S
■ cnsss*. r*ODDc*,*oj »<»- k »«« '
« - J Frcnt a mati. "gr-
A^CKEOWr'rUNHABTFwTO
fl.wSa?Ltow«l and Lard OU* Dxlid and Groan
' “ *rnit», Timothy, Beo J**
- r TottW iJ.
•I ttan a*» I’ofiVAtnixe Muckiar and wfcok*
*J, dSte In WSSTKUN- >&ESKBVE -
LABD. POBK, BACON, FLOUB, FISH, !*
MT AKD'MABL ABHSB, BAIKBATUB, UN* tf
LAttD OILS, DBIKD FBOIT a&d -
• pyoduw generally, Noa. 141 and 143. Front itteet,
1 Plttitmrgo. . . : 063
*■ <mi anaraan.
■ & BHEPAKD, Cojoih3loii Mee- i „
1 I cnASTAunJ dealers IrTj LOUUiGBAINAND gei
' pSOHOCK,.N<i.»« XiUrty.Attcet, PBtolmrgli, Pa.
■ Cholea btunlaof Flour tor.TJaFMa anil Family tua 1
araatanlly on hand. Particular 'attention' paid :to
aillnironlcra fjrAlgruh&nillzaKrnerallr. oc6:dly
FHAKK VAN UOKUJStt,i'RODUOBAKD
Ooaxwuos in FLOUR, DOT-
T£R;BSooSfI,BEKDS, lard, cheese, pork,
r' Liberal OMMtuen made oneonilgnmente.
* : IMgSecopdetreet,
3AiiJSaC.'iloYA 1 Q 'FoBYrABDrao abd
Oomubzob Mnciußi for., the tale of fwUB,
ORAXS. BAOOB.
.WeatentProduco generally, SttLEuriELD
• BTRBBT. Pint; PUttbureb, Ti. ; f V /.
oocrigomcota foUciteu. jagalyd
- 1 A M KS-Al- KiffP/Ktl Kftttwittnran and
. .el rJ.«MiM<ni» Mmaiiff. for iheealaof-gCOUR,
, SSjU^B^S7LA^BImEB,SEKDB I
' FBOiT, and Produce generally,Ho. WEwW it.,
comßronFiTHt. PUVbnrgb. ' . oc&dly
, i T-*—— 1 ■■•—AASfl*_
1 &" CoHinßaroN
"• n ?<wffltiM.'tnd wholesale doeieri in QBO<pE>
•■ kichJTLOIJR. OBAIE. PRODUCE, Ac., ftQ._«sa
.... street, PllUborgh, Pa. rfel&dly
\ IAJiKS DALZKUi to fciON*
" M a ream* orLeBDOH*, trow Uu
' Siws ibr ibapuwbaw aad CBODB AKD
BEfUTED'PISrEeOLEUMiNoe.<S9aiid7O Water it.,
( i ittabnrgh> Adtancee made on coMlgnaeote-
to J do.
TT a'Gin 4-Boti.'Uol. 183 “Liberty street, Mra
bSh. GKNEBAL PEODDCKrGBOOKBt-AUD
OoaumBIOKiIEKGnAMT.
Oonalgpmwitt ngpectftilly lolldtad.
n whm*—*—-—w** wait*.
fITHITE „BBOTHKKS,; Fobwabdoio
-TV AVD OomssioH UucßJom «nd dealer* in
PROVISIONS AND PRODOCK
Q& Liberty atrectt Plttabnrgh, P&. tpyCT
-a .SokuYKH*CpsoflasiosMßßoaeiT.
AND BETINKD CABBON
OIK, GLASS, IKON, NAILS* Ac., No. 163Xil*rty
street. ■?: / • mhg:_djy_
MEANS & COFFIN, successors, to
irc»aic«; «eaa» * Co.. WHOLESALE GBO*
OBUS, corner of Wood *nd WetcretroeU, Pltuburgb,
"•• *7ggg—
T. H. VOIGT- & <X).,BQCoeasor to UO.
JJl* Greff, PRODUCE AND'COMMISSION MEB»,
* QHftypn.qirT.ibcrtTetreei.Pltttbgrgh.P*.
iou l -~* IJWA,U> uvan.
TOHN I, HOUSE & CO* Whols^lb
- (I GBOCBU Aim
_■ ITSDSiESIViVJ.&J4,i'KWAiaV.WBOia
; lot Wood rtrwt. Pltubtagb. ■; ■: -•
TJKOW^&KiHKPATKIC^^WBOit
M m £»«, PlKd-feu
ustar •..,■■■ . -
■-■--<■ - < - ostvtmisTS.
'*«“ i. wSucT
lIIOKU WBiWfcM.—.w" 1 """".
■MTOOUSIDK & WALLACE,
■*;■■•" • WHOLESALE DBVGGIBTS,
Ho. an LinEtTT SlfiUli
' Ml-lv PmOCMH, ft. |
■ ;tmiM jiiHNW'it)H.D»img Kpbb|
. vinriAS :> AKD -PUSHIMJCKT*
■ ’ &HOTWKJM; BBBJMQ OUB,
ILY MEDICINES, *i, to, of-
gnrfttllT oompoaMad »* » lt *»«»•
B' "i. FAaJsMWJCIt & W., WBOU^
■ Ekl*D*rocUTT •It‘l Elaautetrayr of
, -ttontoPUalmrgh. ■' . ”
.—. ITf, WHOUBAUiteILBa
- (J IK DECQB, PAINTS, 01
hviRTDFTti. Ho. 2?« Lberty imwl, Pittutmrttti.—
- S!^SVriU
B:k (jfiora Kbyskb;
1 10 Wood street, cornar oI Wood «tftef «w
Virgla ettgy,
:; . -
J‘ Ab. VEECU, (lateof Fayette'county,
p«.,) ATTOMii, i=- pirraßrean.Pi.
g. cornar gogrth «>& Qimnt »trwt«:.'.
• • • T >.'tnjraWm■'•
■ nHf«.<+- MAnUOWJiJiiiib. 43*°P M,T '
» a l»J>.omw«roniUi«; Bow
'- • -fflifko'KlDaoonil«t«M..VJ■ , V y .r l A.
. .; T7T&KKS.TRICK A MELLON,
" - iV Mo. IX3 t>wth«tr<*l,Bre<taJri
-—^Sw?eSthtokl.gUUtlmili,J^. - - m
“ftakoiwa .KWiJNO, ATTOSSEirI ASD
irtTMt, oonaj'tj
1 ■■ - ~ • MU:d»4lyT
G u M. ; a&UTtt, Attowngr] a£d
• Corns kxoa at Law, has ntaand to KPIIN B
v, txW TBUILDmS-No- l&.D4mtto4.«tr«ai, next
door to BL Peter’AChofcL. ayl^-dly
, inunt. «•
£?&& c. HCUOYEIi, ATTOENEya .1T
'gj; Xxi?. 'OBM.iE»ToortE Knmt; Pittrtofih.
... -. PHOUVCK.
' r'EKOH
’ l ftJKdebnSd P«JmM* P«*rt g£«s*
..tfUtabcrjjh tw
ifljJMs ~W
- " _ de*&r
«Dd ft^ t »
abore Water, Plttotrergh. ? r ! mya
tASUsa uywusa fom^acx-.
*1 ,«Sa<ilM. lii , con»rrfM«-
kit ind Front utrwti. , J*otiUT
a iTvBXSffiDSTfiSluuSSPt»?*
> ■ £*:
OoMyAMOfc gortb-««t corner Vpod «4
friiird rtrectt.
mmmp
Illlrtl.
: Cmaat, SI TMtt
' • • —" BHr GOODS, ij- 1
'. i 1 «:
«? H sSr‘
'■ |gt
‘IMatKKB*
j . iwntlu PmiWTKb.
u-J> • ItanHW"* '• —■" '
:*.•■ : ‘V : '; ~v' v ';'. '
r i - ’ ;•’ •• -' * . '.\. V ' ;-; • :
OHRIVER t T.A/KAR,
® WHOLESALE OBOOEBS
COMMISSION BEBOHANTS,
Corner Second, ,
jjfrlyd
WnOLXSALX OfeOCKB,
Ho. 271 LIBEBTT' STBXCT, - 7
PITTSBtJUGH, Pa.,
Ha?lb£ pfcrcfc&Hd. thelhlerwi.of W*lAt* partners,
will continue the botlneoa *t the old «t*nd, end wUi
be pleased to tecelTO the patron ago of hie old frte&a*
• audcuitomeia, •; /r-- myls:utf
wfc.' BJ ÜBKYATSIckI M . MM r.XlM*i**tCK.
WM. H. KIBKPATBICK & 00.,
VTaoLUALt Geooqa; Cobbu«ioh Uebohaxts
akd PfciLUt n Cocbtst Paodccb, No. 253 Liberty
itreet, PittitWgh* P»» 1 / •• »l >7
rnae. uttl*. is _ja*q tuuuia.
T ITTLB & TKIMBLE, Wbolesali
jLdidsocciu ajtd CoiuiuaioK MuCttlsts»i dealers
iu PEODUCK, rLODB, BACON, CUKEEE; KlijU,
CAUBON AND LAUD OIL, IIiOILNAIES, GLABE,
COTTON TABNS,end Pittaliurgh. manoiactdrea
•enerally, lia Second etreet, Pittsburgh.
DUNCAJt ■ 'DOBALD....J. AftBUC&LE, 4A....0. AUTCIIi.
MCDONALD & AKBUCKLE, Whole-
Mi-t GOOCKRA, PBODCCXAHD COHXUaiOH Ham*
cuahtb, Jobber* la N, 0. SUGARS and tfOLASSKS,
REFINED SUGARS and SIRUPS, FLOUR, BA
CON, KIGEi CURES B, SEEDS, Ac., No. SM Liberty
strooW Pittsburgh.. •' ~ oul4:ly
| w? attutai^.*j. ;ai axma.....>.«n. d. bstmxb.
PJSYMEH & BHOTHKBS, BUOCCBsora
'£Vtb ReVmer-Jk Andorion, W lioleealo' dealer* In
I/FOREIGN FRUITS, NUTS AND SPICES, CORr
| FEOTIORERY, SUGARS, FIRE WORKS, Ac., Nos.
126 and 12S Wood- street, aboTe Fifth, Pittsburgh,
I •' ; jyAhdiy
OEOBOK a. H«»1> —, .atoooa METSO AO.
TJ Kf n & MKT/.ftA tt, Guocbrs and
_j~P Coxxissiob- Merchant*, and dealers lu ell
kmilwof COUMTBT PBODUCK AND PITTSIDECm fllANU
r*anxua,No. -21 - Liberty urect, oj>i>o*ito heed of
Wood etreet, Pittsburgh, Pa. »P 3:I J .
I |oet. n i> nn) || iii’ti SAMUEL a. aoautoa.
p Wholesale Geo-
C\i. caaa, Coxmusiob Uxhchakts and' dwilrru in
aU Binds of PROVISIONS, PRODUCE, and intts
-1 Lurch manufactures, No. 235 Liberty street, Pitta
bnrih. -I .. tayi
JA M'GEAUH, Wholesale Grooer,
* iVmM** ll1 * *ifa dealer In FLOUR,
UKaIN, PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS, No. «*>
Liberty atrect,' opposite Hand, Pittsburgh, Par
CSirLiberMl advance* mode on consignments.
mbDhlyx
/ IKU. B. JONiSS, Wholesale Dealkk
\3T IS UIIOCKUIES, MANILLA HULL, OAECM.
OILS, PITCH afid Pittsburgh manufactured articles,.
No. UI Water street, alwTe tbs Muuuugahela bridge,
PRtaburgh, Pa. i ' ''
aoautr dalxcu.- ... -’ *»altaix.
KOBEK'i’ DALZELL & CO., Whole
i aaLB Gaocsaa, Coxmraßtoji amd leaWAßnisfl
jUtacUABTS, and dealers In PRODUCE and Pitts
burgh P’-nofacturea, Pittsburgh. .
uxaav - jonn surma.
r AMBEKT & SsHIPTON, Wholesale
1 A Qaocaaa, Paonccs. Dsalx»s and Commission
MaaCBABTS, No. t> Sixth street, Pittsburgh, Pa
no!4:ly
JOUR WATT. .. »>*» WtLSO*.
Watt & wilson, wholesale ueo
/ion, CoxaiaaiOM M EMC oasts, and dealers In
Produce and Pittsburgh manufactures, No. 148 Lib
erty »trper,Htta>urgb.; _
ISAIAH UICKKV 4 UO, WHOLE3ALB
1 MancHAifTS. and dealers in
] PRODUCE, No. A) Water street, and 66 Front»triad,
1 Pittsburgh. . \
ato. ir. -.JOUH §. DILWOBTU.
JS. DILWOKTH &CO-, Wholesale
• G BOCK as, Nee. 130 and 133 Second street, near
SniUhfield, Pittsburgh. po *
jOHB rtUTB.. WILLIAM »tOT».
JOHN FLO VD A CO., Wholesale Ceo-
CSAS AED ComMualo. 21t.Cli.MTS, Mo. 172 W*«d
.od EH, Liberty .Moot, Pittsburgh. J.L'
WIT.T.TAM BAG ALKY, Wholesale
.W*dd 9) jTMt.MiMvntu
minth.-fA iulLdt’
ALEXANDKK KING, Wholesale
.Qtocili 1 mmrtd of DuDi AMI,Ho. E7il Litt'rt,
PnlsLutgll, I'a . cltl ''
Daniel Bennett A son,' ma»d
riCTPUM o? WHITE STONE CHINA AND
CBEAH COLOKED 'WABB. • _
MTomcs a»d Wuihdiii at No. 71 rurru
Staact, Pmsipwa, Pa. mhlSrlyUn
m.n. Mxc»ufTOßH~.-.~J. nwrHUJ. -*• r. aajit-
MACKINTOSH, HEMPHILL A CO.,
iXL corner Pike and O’Hara *tr*eU, near the City
y i r.f Work*. Fittab’argh, Pa., Hanolictartri ot
MACKINTOSH AND UKMPAILL’H IHPIUH ED.
PATENT OSCILLATING STEAM ENGINES AND
SLIDE VALVES, of all an4>c*f ntjte.
And of
the ben quality, wb at» jrft*red to do heavy Job
bing, and fclicit work to this line, trusting that by
promptoem, n»d the character of oar work, to merit
- -to oar BALANCED
VALTE OSCILLATING ENGINES, u combining
1 advAntAcea heretofore anattained in this clam of.
! . ■ JaSQUyd
JOSEPH F. HAMILTON & CO.,
PITTSBUBGH, 1*4.,
■ ■AsmrACxvuu or „
SUPERIOR STJSAII SKOLNE3, IiACUjUKBY,
‘ : • •• - i m 7 \h:tt_
SSEVEKANCK. No. 60 Watk* St.,
0 PitUbntxh, mamUactowrafßOlLKß BIVSTS,
Vi ßouGHT&PiaNs* common AND JIAILBOA D|
«lied or ihttpfld BPIK.EH ud BIV*
BX8» togß or'ttMll* toad* to order at iUort notice.
• | frto»nt constantly on bnA mT'iihw
j aL »#£wu.«...r. t. *. eauwtu*.
GLASS WORKS.—
11l WOLFS, PUJMEETT A CO., lull Uumtui-
Hint. ■ Vm house, Mo. 12 wood .treat, corner
of Tint! PKtefrargb, Pa. _
nrELLS, WHOLE & G 0.., No. 215
Vv XlbestT ttrofct* opposite Stitb, Pittsburgh,
IBiklid'STtfj of LEATHER DBAIUEP
WORK-
Qrder* solid ted from the trade, and modi prompt*
j\y p*i, faatraettooi. ■ fo&alswlyr
a teeth extracted without
„ PAIN. BI'THE UBB OF AN APPABATUB
WUSBKBYNO DBOGSoaGALVANIO BATTERY
tiwl* families hare
their teeth extracted by. ay process, and are ready to
testify u to tbo safety and painlessness of the open*
ttoo-~vbeteT«# hatbeen said by persons interested in
•SMrting tbs contrary, haring oo knowledge of my
'process'.'.
SK-ARTITICIALTEETH Inserted tnererystyl
snd clarges very low',’warranted in all um to
_V
■ faw» Bier*
, AKEH<
,»■ — "
TjrSWH«Ejrts.
Third aao
-AJSTD COMMEB
cfroccbs..
Nia.27.0d2, SmltbQcld Btnot,
PITTSBURGH, PA.
UOKULY,
VMIERS,
Corner of First sad liberty streets,
»EJirrisTßY.
TOSEPH ADAMS, Omat, .Connelly'n
*tf. - pqiM tn Ci^ inrHat of Dlamvnd Mid Ormul atrtwjt*,
A. M.Polloch, Dr. HeUoek,
ttaneU &mtt> • m>d:aiy
BOOHStiiLtIHS, Ist.
WM. G. JOHNSTON & CO., Station
ft ***. Bum* Book IIiUtmcTUMM, a«i> Jo».
67 Wood street, «e3o
l/tAY. & dOi. BoOMELLEM AJCD SIA
JV Irwjtlus, Ho.s3WoodBMeet, tb»
corner of Third, Pittsburgh, Pa. SCHOOL and
tAW 30Q&ScoDitontlr onband. L- • ■ '
BoOKaKI.I.KE - ABD SiA-
I, ' U iUiAV.
0 • TioxiSt Ho. to fourth itreit, Ap&lU> JSU )
~ THiJU.mjraS, »t.
JutjKPH HOBNE, Oum n Tbm
■ixoc, Sitnonrora *s» Btaav Qoob*» No. 77
Plttabuncb, • ■pio. ,
Market atract,
EATUN. MAOKUM & CU., Okalkkaui
Bbuoiphiu, TmiMniae. Hunan, etc., Nos.
ITftftd 1» fifth *itmL Flitaborgfc, ."apld
ESTJiTE
WfI.T.TAM WAKD, Ds&lbr vs Pbom
naott HOT»* -Jkww* Mostoaou, t&d all «e*
eoritlea for money. • ml
pcffraictn.proctix* hOASS through my agency
<m rraaotuNeteftaa. ;
r \7boa» wtitalQi to larett .thelr monoy to good ad
fantaoi am alwayi tod flrrt and Mcond el*u paper
at my uax», fur «U. _y;. .1- •; ■
■ All communication! and Is tan law* atrictly corjfl*
drotiaL Office, Oranl rtmV cppodta St. J’anlV
Oathadrall'.
} A BXIFICIAIi LBGB AND AKMB.
Hotphn’a celebrated Patent AHOUSKA- IM aod,
MtIhoULHAKM. mvumar:
(oppaluei. HioHolußottl,) ■ ■ ■:.
~ eWk faitßlg. i
PITTSBURGH,. THURSDAY
itttslmrigfi teeify.
S. RIDDLE & OO. t
EDITORS A*ND PBOBBIBTOBB,
Publication; Office So. 84 fifUt Btrc«.
HORNING A3IB KTBHDJG EDITIONS, DAILY,
CONTAINING' THE LATEST NEWS UP TO TO*
HOUR OP PUBLICATION. * .
TERMS:
Uouns per annum in adnujoe, or
12 coats per week from carrion.
'Srzmsa Kotnoa-43 per annum Inadraow, or 6
cents per week from carrier*.
giMt.T Eomos—SlagU copies, f 2 per antram;
Pin or more, 11,15; Tea or upwards, ft per annum,
Invariably In advance.
ADVERTISING AT REASONABLE BATES.
THURSDAY MORNING, AUG. 7.
Treason in' Indiana.
Fearful evidbnee of tho existence of treason
in Indiana, to an extent known by few exoept
tho guilty partial, is afforded by the oyidenoo
taken before a. Grand Jury. The United
States Grand Jury at Indixnapolis bare thor
oughly investigatodi theenlyeot, and,on proof
that is IncontoSliblo show that, there are
15,000 members of an order direotly In league
.with Iho Boccaaionista of tho Sonth. They
hare plans to aroid or defeat legal proceed
ings agalDßt them; they are sworn to resist
"the oolTectfonof F.deralUxcs and-go armed
to their meetings.- The Indianapolis Journal
slateatoo this latter point, that daring the
late Copperhead Convention no loss than Svo
hundred revolvers were sold. Silty of tho
scoundrels havo been indicted—sixteon of
them for treason.
Tho Indianapolis Journal sams op tho sab
stance of tho report of tho Grand Jury, as fol-
The testimony Is full, direct end over
whelming, not only as to existence of tho
conspiracy, bnt as to its treasonable eharao
ter. Of the correctness of tho reielaUona of
aienSf-srips and pass-words made by the wit
nesses, some of the Grand Jary BatUfied them
selves by experiment. They mixed with the
crowd at the Convention, on last Wednesday,
and (he tigra they had learned were recognised
and returned by about one hundred persons.
Tho leading features of this exposition are:
Ist. That the Order numbers, according to
tho estimates of the witnesses, nbont 35,000
members is'this State, This, we think,-is
probably above the mark; but whether it is
or not, it is certain that very many of the
members are but partially Initiated, have no
ideaef its treasonable purposes, and will have
nothing to do with any action that may in
terfere with tho laws or their duty to their
Government. " '/' • , .
2d. ThoexisUneeoftheOraerheroisknown
to the rebels, and iU members are instructed
to avoid injuring rebels Incase they should be
compelled to enter the army. By a sign. the
members South can make themselves known.
to those of tho North, and both are sworn to
firo over the heads of each other in cue they
meet on opposite sides in battle.
3d. The oonspirators have devised a plan to
avoid or defeat legal proceedings against them.
By changes of revenae to eoaoties
Judges are members, or by getting membars
on juries, they, propose to keep clear of the
clutches of the law. This is by no means an
unsafe reliance when it Is remembered that a
single juryman can prevent * conviction, and
there is no possible way of preventing mem
bers of the Orders from getting on juries
where they are not known.
4th. Themembers eresworo taseere*y,and
to the resistance to the collection of Federal
taxes and to enlistments. • , A
sth*. Tho meetings are frequently guarded
bv armed sentinels, and the members gener- -
ally come to them armed. In this connection
we may state a fact which is not without sig
nificance. On the day the anti-war Demo
ctatic Convention was held in this city, Jive
hundred revolvers were told, no doubt to mem
bers of thl# Order. . •
’ in these features, brought out by the per
severing examination of two hundred wit
nessee.wesee enough-to warn :tho j>e.ple to
he prompt end- eerneet to patting down, thll
infamous. eeiocielion. Their dot, le plain,
end the crleli imminent. Those bends •»
traitors must be disparted. The Grand J ar,
hee done ite duty b, indict.., e,xtyof Urn
members, but the mein work must rest with
the loyal people. Let them put a atop to the
meetings to their neighborhoods but, ehoye
all, put.the ben of outlawry, of exclusion
from eooiety, of dark end etern determination,
on every man who hee any pert in the con
eiracy. _
Gen. JtcCair* Place Supplied.
Gen, Srruoue, of Pennijlranle, haa been
assigned to the oommandof the Pennsylranla
Reserres, In pleoa of Gen. McCall, who wes
taken prisoner in tho recent battles before
Richmond. Qon. Simona graduated at West
Point, In McOlillan Vclass, and tarred with
great distinction as an artillery oßoor in
Mexico. He was one of only fwo who as
cended 'to the summit of Popocatepetl, the
rest of tho party haring suoonmbod to the «>
treme cold and tho burning sleet; and more
recently, during .a rrlelt to Eoropo, ho mado
tho ascent of Mont Blano, with no companion
but tho guide. After raising a company of
the Pifth United States Artillery, in which
regiment he is a Captain, he commanded
Camp Cameron, at Harrisburg,; for soreral
months. There ho organistd eororal batter
ies, ond was appointed Chief of Artillory to
tho Reserres, entirely re-organised that arm
in the interral betweon Mannose, and Alex
andria. In May ho was appointed a Briga
dier Geheral, and assigned tho command of
Can's brlgada in tbo Bosorros—the brigade
| that won tho battle of Praineerille.
Gaa. Popa'a SoasisTsnce Onnaa.—Rate ad
rices from Gen. Sigoi’s Command, between
Mertinshnrg and Harper’s Perry, say the re
oent order of Qon. Pope, " To subsist on the
enemy," is working admirably. Unionist*
and disnnioniste are now sabsletingonr troops,
and as both forties hare to iprora their, loy
alty l»fore being reimbursed by tho United
States, tho old bitterness of ibe Reactionist,
1> disappearing, and the rebels, nnw. tonofio'l
for the Utat tlmo In the right spot, the pockets,
come ont frequently end nnreeerredlyifor the
Union. In on* locality more than SW bar*
taken tho oath of nllegleno* to the United
States within a few days.
Ta* lanuAA \ B«r««s» | Law.—Tha Al
lowing additional offloora have bam appointed
under tha (Internal manna law:
jCaiitaa—John Spear, eotleotor; Jamoi F.
Legate, aaaetnor.;
New J/exico—Chariei Blammar, eollaator j
[ Jana Marla Bari*, aaaeaeor.
' Ta« offioiafraport of ityiprate art the now
lllinole Conalltutlon, glvaa a majority against
the Confltitdtion of 13,680, without counting
tba aoldiera* rota.. Tha majority againat tha
bankiefattao b B,OtO^ahd, that’againat th*
Congreaaional apportionment 5,661. ■ ■
Osa. Samoa haa bean living in aaolnilon
for tha laat two weaka at a private raaldenen,
on Twelfth atraot, Waahlngton. Ha la Sadat*
and unoommnnleaUra, but, admit* no d.etlgn
of realgnlng aa longaathe florarnipeut will
give him a cormnand'and tnohio^ghtwlth.
BaiTH’a Army Hagiatar iof tha Northwait,
atetaa the number of aolnntaera front lllinola,
TSdbna, Wlaeonaln, j Mlohlgah. Mlaaoarl,
Town, Mlnnaaoia,ianua, Nabraaka and Coir.
tat; journal.
ORNING, AUGUST 7. 1862.
Where is Burnside Goins?
We infer from the following nrtiole, Uhen
from the PhlUdelphiw thet if the editor
ia right, Bnrnaide Unoi. going up the B»p
-pehennook to jo|n Pope, but uptho Jemes,
to land on the south sld* ofthntrirer, and to
marohon (A few days .will, d«-
relop the whole' programme:
The army of the' Polomao will eooh more.
The grand review! of all thoeorpa hare been
completed, the whole grmy reornaieed.ithe
reconnoissanoesmado,' ond .the order* fer
tails and execution spared. In advance or,;
all competitors, wog*V* yesterdayth®
from the army. ead an'Jndicatloa of the move
ment made, of which Wt> present the first an
nouncement by telegraph to-day*. day
more attention is being directed to the • oath
bank of the James river, aa the proper hajo
for operatlone against (ikhmond. The lint
attention paid to thia.rnnto wa» evinced on
Friday last, In a earalry tuconnolaaanoe. to
Coggina’ Point, and tte riolnage, whieh ie di
reotly oppoalte the present position of the
army of the ’ ,
In the exocotion of the plan of this expedi
tion it waa determined to destroy the elegant
.mansion of Edmund, liuffin, Jr„.a weelthy
planter of Prince Ueorgo county, whom Arm
U eltnated On Coggin’a Point—a ! high Mas,
from which all ol tho;moTo'inenta of onr army
and nary oould be aafely obiorred, and from
which point Edmond Rhßo, Jr;, reported to
the rebel gorornnient *nd oowspanera the nd
ranoe up the James river ol the lie lona, Moni
tor, Port Royal, *nd| Aroostook, to-May last.
This Edmund Baffin son of Edmuna Baf
fin, Sr., the man wbo«fiwd the first gnn on
Fort Sumter for amusement.” The latter hM
a large farm in Hanover oounty, Virginia,
some fifteen ml|oi from Rlehaond,; nailed
Mariebone. He Is now in North Carolina,
residing with Jodgo-Ruffln, an ex-.Dnited
States M. a, with Iwhom he hae often been
confounded, though! a mneh better and greater
man.
Edmund Ruffin, Sr., has’ beeh'eallod the
father of Eastern Virginia, on account of bis
efforts to resasoltate her soil by ecientfio culti
vation and the discovery ana application of
the famous shelf' marl, whlelrif found in all
the ravines of that region, about six feet from
the surface of th> earth. This old man has
three sons, vis: Edmund, Julian C., and Chu.
Ruffin. Edmund: as now in command of the
Prince George County Troop of Horse, an old
organisation, which has been increased by ,
conscription to asquadron,and the telegraphic
reports call lt--a~regimcnt of-Ctralry. Its ;
members are the “poor, white trash** of the
connty. Among them are two notorious ras
cals, Edward Marts and Julian- 0. Ruffin,
who have made, of their wealth by
"squatting” upon the farms of»poor white I
meo, and either! making them more abject.
than slaves, or forcing them to leave thenslgh-1
borhood. Charlbs JRaffln, a member of this
cavalry, probably on officer, is a graduate of
the Virginia Military Institute.
On Sunday a nioreextenstvereoonnoiasance
wju made inland;from Coggtn’s Point* Some
of Gen. AveriU’S j cavalry Were landed there,
'and proceeded south to Cox’s Mills, whiob
served for many years to grind the corn and
wheat of the surrounding planters. It is sit
t&ted about three mileiltQn the. James river,
and is operated by Chluluquopla creek, one
of thq tributaries of the James. Taking the
cart-road and mdving east, our cavalry reach
ed Sycamore Church,a Methodist meet
ing-house, situated on the county stage road,
and although GarysvlUe, containing the post
office and some ten or .twelve bouses, stands
immediately to the east, no mention is made
of It in the report. Sycamore Church derives
Its name from the feot that it ia built among'
a grovw of beautiful sycaiaorea—a favorite
shade tree with Virginians.
About five miles northeast of this church,
near and just above Bood’e Landing, stands
the oldest church io'the tfoilbd States, having
been built by the earliest English settlers of *
Virginia, of material England.
Beyond the "Sycamore Church', a'mile south,
the Blackwater toad crosses the stage road,
and at this pointer® to be found * seminary
and blanksmitb and carpenter shops, from
this point it U eight miles to the famous
Blackwater Swiop, through whieh runs the
Norfolk and Petersburg Railroad, flven
should our transports be inadequate to furnish j
sufficient supplies to an immense army from
the James railroad would be quite
an auxiliary, certaioljT*nd could* be; pet iu .
order immediately. ’ . 4 ,
Nine miles west of Sycamore Oboreh stands
Prince George Court Bouse—a strong #nd im
portant point }! seven, miles, west qf this is
BUndford end Petersburg. The march from
Coggins’ Point'to Blandtordrcould be easily
made in a single night. The enemy cannot
cross the Appometo* la force, and as It would
be a safe proceeding, we say, Qa to Peters
burg I ,
Gen. Burnside’s ninth corps a’ermee is
moving, and will be heard from soon. .This
Is the fighting army—we have above described
its field of operations fally, we hope, and we
now only await gild tidings from the hferoei
of Boanoke Island, Newborn, and
Macon. ' • _ -__ _ '
An Evil Which Should. beJUmedied.
Th» following rerafctks New York
World ere Umely :
It is one of the crying erila of the menege*
ment of ibla wer that so few mUlUry end
nevel officers are called to account for ffliore
In doty. In truth, Seneral Stone is fcbout
the only opoar of any rank who has thus suf
fered. We ought, perhaps, to except General
Ben ham whojraajdihirwriufom West
ern Virginia under sever* charges, and, be
fore they were passed seat to South
Carolina, and intrusted wittHhaJames Island
expedition, which resulted to * most disas
trous failore, whsreupon he tu again rwith-.
drawn from active duty, until the time Hornes
for another venture. There has been little or
no right holding of opr officareto their just
reaponaiblllly. bwn. a | great
maiy blunders end, dofahju. wb»wby; W
droda ol Uvea hevobeen eaorlfloedand millions
of treasures bat the ofDwra* guilty of, them
ha., hold oh ,Ufelr way/unpuplebed and nn
rebnked. There rooms to haws’ boon aome
thlbc of the same IndUpoelUon »o hart tho
roollogsbr aSKltriroHifrowptUnt fod.nl
offiooii asthere baa booa tb barb tho prop
erty Of OP.Mt*-. Mt *-
Thor manage- thoio mattota differently In
Dixie, where they haw»n «4 to gelp. ond
ere la dead eataeat aboat It. ■ hare,
little leaity there fob either -neglects o, mla-.
Wise fails iaWeatera Vlrginla.and is
recalled la dishonor. fleaeraV Crltteaden Is
beaten at Mill 'Bpriaga, and baa] to resign.
Gens. Pillow and Floyd rnn away from Fort
Doaelsob, 'andare diagraead. Qen. Branch la
surprised at Hanover Ooart Honaa, and la en
paneded. Gon-Lovell la aubjwtod to a Court
of Inquiry, for retiring fro at Now Ofieent.
I Gen. TJeanrogard te iamovedfrom -entire com-
I mend, for ertoaatlng Corinth.'. Oita. Tatnall
is court taartlated for destroying.theiMeirl
-1 mao la fact, no nemo or position !* a aeon
ritv against being held to the atrlotesttespon
■ibiiitv for erery failnro. The Improving ac.
liStywd cfilSaoy of tho high reb.Toßc.re
is, to a groat degree, attributable to this .torn
system. Untiiiom.thlngof theism* vigor.
U exercised over bar. own aervloe. failtifta will
aSoand. J ; Duty and accountability wafo made
inaapanble, and mnatibe kept loc
A Boidßefbunpluance.!
A, UttirJ«B HuHi<>B , CW“4tng;to th«
Sew York fimti njt':j\ i
Th« Fourth Penneylewilo Cenilry ond the
Eighteenth Meeeoebueette Infentry muds. e
roconnolnoeO* to tho other ildo ot the Chlek
ehoothy leet ThUrodoy.- They; crossed the
rood lending to Bottom's Bridge, crowed the
bridge endproOMdedtoßiapotoh Stedlos, ot
whtoTi ptooe the. Infentry’h»l(ed r tehllei the
eoTolr/jpoetedon towordOolnee.flgiJ They
npprononed eo neor the hill oo], to dltooeer
to DUpotoh Stetloo. ithero, they ofere ogeta'
JoloedVy the Infantry, end.-thel wholp fora
come bnekWeamp wtihootooelng the enemy
la large nmnbete. --- j
sajsssfieessateft
exoeptad.only Mcoedliln.'TaWlhn ‘ft’*,
property by iB,M»,OO»i ti« t»t»r ybla»Uo»-
RGII GAZETTE
Late from Fortress fflonroe««Gen*
Burnside's Expedition*
FobtbissMosme, August 2, 1862.
Tbs sudden taking up, in Sew Turk, of
several ocean steamers of the largest olsss,
and the arrival of the Baltic, the first of the
fleet, in the Roads, with orders to proceed to
Harrison’s Landing and report, are notamong
the least ourioue things in the oonduot of the
war; ' Considering that the. Baltic draws
twenty feet, and-cannot go within seventy -
dye.;piles> of Harrison’s Landing; that the
other steamers cannot do muoh better, and
thatHhey might ; hate been ordered to report
to Brigham Young at his temple in Salt .Lake
with just as much sonse.as to Gen. Ingalls at
Harrison's Landing, it may not be considered
a forced illustration of the manner In whloh
thaßrirernment docs a good many things. I
ass ore the reador that'this is by no means, an
isolafoTcaSe. The Baltio was hurtled off at
four bontsnotioe,' and though Capt. Comstock
assured the Gorernmont agent in. New York
that ft would be an utter impossiblity to take
the steamers up thelJatnei river, his orders
Were not modified hat [emphasised and re
peated. Thero would seem to have been a
lucid moment since the Baltio left, since the'
Illinois/ in the same category, has.had her
order* countermanded,, and it is presumed
that the same is true of the other steamers
harried off to perform the same impossibility;
The Baltio Is here. She can proceed three
miles above Newport News, and.. Capt. Com
stock, io the language of the great-statesman
.he sb much admired, finds himself continual
ly repeating; '** Where am I to go?” The
Catawba has arrived. '
The appearance and movements of certain
other transports' indicate that the period of
encampment of Burnside’s force Newport
News is about to end, and that their desti
nation Is pp James River. A detaehment of
Bomsthtng-lMa.thau oneJhouFand men arriv
ed yesterday from Newborn, to be. followed
by others, it is said. j
Fobtbe&s Mohbos, August 3, 1862.
One division of Gen. ; Burnside’s Corps has
ieftiho Roads, and sailed In a direction quite
the opposite of James River and Harrison s
Lauding. The other divisions are embark
ing, and will sail very: soon. Great secnay
has been obsorved in making the movement,
and the place of destination is known to but
a few. f . ,
It Is unquestionably the.policy of the reb
els to induce ns to mass troops under Gen.
McClellan, so that the way from Richmond
toward Washington, Maryland and Northern
Virginia will be left comparatively clear.
They might even consent to give »p their own
to get our capital. To defend Richmond" la not
thejrhole of thieir policy.
Having by such a .movement as that or
Thursday sight, when Harrison's Landing
and oar shipping were shelled from the oppo
site shore, and by throwing quite a body of
tcodps on the right bank of the James,creatod
the appearance of hemming In McClelianjand
drawn the great body of our troops in the
field to-thia-eeetion-oMhe country, by which
means other parts of Virginia would be left
eipoted, the rebel policy would bo. to make a
dash toward Waablngtonand the upper valley
a trap into which pome of the New York
journals have fallen. It is not difficult tnsee
that this is theft policy. JJutdt Will not mo
eeed. force will takeeare of
itself; nay, mote, it will hold in check the
tuperior force that now guards Richmond, and
stay-any -contemplated offensive movement
from there to the North. Whether, in view
of these things,Burnside has gone tottlfif&SS.
Pupe, or to-somo other point —anew move on
the board—the country will soon enough find
oll The robels appear <o have left immediately I
after theft shelling cpieodo Thursday night,
for thinext morning none'ter be seen;'
and! toward evening, when the force of .regu
lars went over and burned the buildings, they
found no-one to oppose, them. Since then
jwo regiments have been ever and cleared the
bank, for tome distance,, ef the tries which
seryad as aniaak j o lhat now
they cannot approach# exeept at bight, witn
oatpelbg seen. 'Guns are nowin position on
onr side tosileneoaoptherattempf of the sort,
which, by the way, is not Ukely to be made
at once. • • > ‘ -
Quo’could with that the commanders were
a little more fruitful in enterprise and devices,
in which respeot they might Imitate the enemy.
The Riot in Brooklyn.
Tho telegraph informed ur of an Irish "riot
in Brooklyn, tbaobjoct of which was to drive
the colored employee*, mostly women end
children, from the tebeceo fectorier. The
H. Y. ITorW jnitly seyt:
It will he Been.by reference to onr news col
umns thii morning that e very dUgrecefiji af
fair oocnrred yesterday in Brooklyn, to ;wit:
an attempt on the part of certain [ilroomcnlea
Irishmen to drive ont the colored employees
of two tobecoo manufactories. Tho negroes
appear to have done nothing to render them
selves obnoxious to anybody, and the Iruh
man assailed them solely, on account of their
oolor. This proceeding was evidently brought
about by a set of politicians, who are striving
to net up a "popular feeling against the ne
groes. It has been tried in Cincinnati and
Now Albany, Ind., and it will fail here iaa it
did In those plaoes. Whatever opinion* one.
may hold of the prnper pQliCical status of the.
fino colored people, itmust be admitted, that
they have as good a* right to earn an hpneet
living as their irblte competitors; and any »t
-tempt to deprive them of this right ipoula
meet with public scorn end the severest,
tlty of the law. We trust there will pe no
repetition of such *n occurrence m tbs one
whlQhwo record this morning.
The Hew York T»a*4 speaks of this sbame
fol riot as follows.:
Oar local reporters give this morning an
account of one of the most atrocious riots or
modern times, which ocourred in BropKljn
resterday, and in which a mob of low jr.“e“
hundred men, calling themsolree Irishmen,
' assaulted a factory where twenty peaceable
colored persons, mostly women and children,
were at wort,- attempted to batcher them in
eold blood, and sabseouentty actually eft fire
to the bnlldlog with the intent of bumingthe
helpless negroes tn death. It was only by
the mpst superhuman exertions of the felloe
that the lives or the viotims were saved, the
mob dispersed, and the ringleaders attested.
The assault was. Entirely unprovoked—infect,.
Itw&s merely because the assaulted parties
wire negroes—and was of suoh .cowardly as
well as flendlsb natoro that there canbo found
lor lt neither cTousTrorpalllatlon. ," '
The- Whole • toysl People - Enrolled
add Armed. •
The suggestion we-made some days, since,
that every able-bodied oltisen, liable to mill*
tafy doty, should be enrolled, drillddsnd
armed, it echoed In various quarters, The
New York ft®«*says:
The Enlistment Committee of this city has
made a suggestion which deserves apd.'de*
mands the immediate attention of the Got*
arnmenU Ills that “the tahole militia of lAe
iSwfearsJioeW armedytqaipptd and
reads Jo* ffrwee, ancfrtei'Tafw»a< an*d
wUntigu/ellcdto Ihe'xxtmoet capacity/or tjficitnt
j betioii,” This ought to be done without :ett
hour's-delay. It weald put two million.of
I men at the command of the Goverpmebt,
I ready for any emergency, and able, to press
thiswar. to an' immediate and successful
issue. We .trust. the Qorernment In
' suntiy, pat in! motion the machinery re
quired to produce this result. Let them not
halt nor hesitate. The people ut rice and,
come it: ae an indication that the Qorern
jntoC comprehends the great *' struggle. In 1 :
which U is involved, and hat the Courage
and capacity to 1 meet ita awful-issue*.; They,
would ball each a trumpet-call of the nation
to'arms, as worthy at once of the nation Itself
and of the great cause in whlohits energies
are engaged. This isno time for hiir-»pUt~
ting dlstinCtioni/—for nice questions of State
rlKPth or National supremacy; nor. are the.
pedplein amodd- to require or tolsrausach,
4U«wslont. ilowirand liberty:
to iiHke They ere Involved in Wab,
an'd'tW'aak' permission to. wageitj They,
are conscious" of power; ekuitept in. the
atrwitiii*f4 MW °* Natlonel youth, prop*
otww country*. and reedj
towlt perlsh. I All they aak. at tha.i hands-of
the men tbey hare made their nriersla Itadet*
ftipi They'adkhoiio be trifled r !Wth'?-nat to
;bbdis trustod^-fak t "to; bs treated.Uh* m*Mg
aorahtof? the great daties; deTolred-iUpon
tb«B. or unsqualtotheir performance.... jL«
theGbts'rii'mebtthrow itsslf boldlyand eon
fldlhgly n ptintheir p* Mntl,m t * ad 11 ntilbe
toundequal taanyumargancy.- 1^
Tn\3r~' ~ n
VOLUME LXXV-—NO. 224
A. Secession Sympathizer Running
for Congress.
Doctor Edson B. Olds is the Democratic,
.candidate for Congress, in the TwelflhDia
trict of Ohlb. He has token the stump, and.
insists, with Got. WxcKUrrf, that “aboli
tionists are deserving ofdeath, and Umt
the President is in their counsel.’ . On;
Saturday, July 26th, Olds made a speech,
at Berne, in Fairfield county, in which jie,
declared that although struck,
the first bloc, it was because the wrongs ,
inflicted by the North hadforoed them Jo.
strike. He added these, specimens of se-.
cession talk, but was not arrested:
In God’s name, have we not had enorfgh
blood 1 Our opponents forced this war upon
us, and now .they call- on us to help them
out; but I tell you, Ur. Lincoln, that when
you strike down constitutions, trample
laws under foot, and then call on Dcmjfe
crals to help you out, you will not; get -
them. Now, is not this war a war .fpr
these purposes ? I tell you, bellow Demo*
crats, there is no honor, no gain, ho profit,
no glory, in this war. It is all loss. It is
my brother you strike down. No Demo
crat will enlist in this war until the Ad
ministration changes its policy and war
cry.
HB. LINCOLN A TYBAST AMD PEBJUBEE., .
On the 4th of March, 1861, Mr. Lincoln
stood upon the eastern-portico of the Capi
tol, &ud swore to support the Constitution.,
Did he .do it? No; his everjr aethas befn
a violation of it from that Hay tb[Yhis. j■'
I denounce Lincoln as a tyrant; - He has
peijured' his soul He may imprisonl me
jut I wiirstill cry tyrant. ~
DOCTOR OLDS SEES' A VISION OP BLOOD.
And now, my fellow. Democrats* I am
going to have a vision, which, if it were
not, a vision, might be treason, bnt'what I
now say 1 say in sleep, and I am not,
therefore, responsible* .
I see blood at the ballot-box .this fall.
The-President has issued.his proclamation
for three hundred..thousand more troops,
and Congress has aujhor
izing him to draft them.- He;W*Uhaye.to
draft them if he gets .them,, because these
cowardly abolitionists will, not enlist.
There is anelectioji this foil, and theywant
to carry it They wanttodraftDemocrats;
they will draft them to prevent their vot
ing. They have the power, and can so ar
range it. You will not. be cheated. ; I tell
you you will not submit to these wrongs;
You will.see blood. U they attempt to ar
rest us and take us from our families to
support an. Administration in its violatjona.
of the Constitution, we will resist evenj to
blood. IX the Democrats don’t
the ballot-box they will succeed at the point
of the bayonet.
Gcd. Hallecii’s Vigorous Policy.
The Washington correspondent of the
New York -Evening Pm( gives encourage
ment thatTGen. Halleck not only sees the
necessities of thehour, but that he is resolv
ed that all-the resources and powers of the
nation shall be brought to the work of nip-,
pressing the rebellion. The letter sayß,:
Qen. nalleck has talked v6ry plainly of
late , with civilians upon the negro question.
I have it from a member of theOniodepu
talion that recently called upon him* that
he eapresaed himself moro,, decidedly than
of the newapapera v liavft ! fepTeBentejL 1
He. said that he wasnot only :
IhebtAck popnlaiiotf South against;
the rebellion, but that he had issued orders'
to his Generals, requiring); them to use all
the negroes tbeyjwuld get hold of, and that
no questions must be; asked whether the,
negroes be slave or free, or whether their ;
master be loyal or disloyal, except As a
matter of record for after use. Black men :
are to j* seised and impressed Into the ser-:
vice if they do not come 'willingly,' or if
their masters make any objections'. The'
General said: “Slavery is upheld; by. local.-
lawanlone, and.wher»iebclli6h is therdns;
no local law—nothing but the law of the,
land. My Generals and officers must not;
know that there is or is not slavery in any
given*place or territory. They-make use
of the black men, not inquiring into their
condition, and-leaving ihecivUlaws of the
land to determine'their condiUoni u ...
. Older No. 3 was. the .subject of a long
oonversation, and- as: the .-General now in- j
terprets it, it isnoteo bad an order. He
claims that it applies merely to stragglers, j
white and black,-and. not to. persons ,con- j
neoted in any, manner .with the army:.
Able-bodied negroes wbnld: at one# be or-'
ganixed into - regiments .and brigades. Jf;
: workers, and would not be included In the
order. Gen. McClellan wrote a. telegraph
to headquarters some rime since for. specific
instructions on thls.pointj and.-he.gotthe®,
He-was ordered to impress all the blackens
could lay his hands.oa: fov wryioe. In
speaking upon.thia particular s point : Gei£
Halleck said the rebels were making avery.
important use of their, to
enable them to bold out in opposition to th.e,
government, and it was trar 'duty to beat
them at the same business.!- • „? ...j
Voluntary Emancipation.
[From the New. Orleans Ditto, July 23.]
pjßovoa?*MißaHit*BOPf!C*, 1
“New OaLtAsa, July 17n16C2.'|
Major Generalß. P. SuiUr
Sin;—lt has come W; my knowledge toV|
many person* Id this city.and neighborhood
are-ordering their tleves toleave nod igo:to;
the '‘Yankees,” end -when rsneh order U’
obeyed; thleoffiee nnd the polieeaiebeUeged
to irrut and return therriv- ■' As'this aril II
growing and becoming-annoying, iTeapertt'
! fuUyaaKwhit actioinehottldbeteken in the
1 premites; “ r ■} '■
, - Respectfully, yourobSdientMTrent,
-8. H. Staptoed, Deputy Marabal.
Headquabtem, DIPAETMEitt or TB* QOLr,.l,
; New OEleasb, July 19,1861*. J
6m :-rThe .conW^
tons in otdiriDg.th«fr «tare» "<o ¥>.**“*
Ynnkow,’’ "to Jolfftttefodotnlt;"
in y o orttOto,»i>Vk««ti,h»*>wibtOTgtlto
m, notice ftoo
your oommonlentlon, end, certolniy U
Vronc M volt to liegoTornmontanto ttto.no-
T££"inorderto wWt.tttoojU.amfqntt,.
bt ltbo known that nil b /
Uni boner. tolh.lr .iWertH; kytho nnthor
-IUM hoto, to token and doomed nUvtyplm
tar¥“«mttfdontlonT^nd' olnve* mt owty oj
<toaikoj orequirnlent non; wWJ* n f XT f’f
nnd treated " mennmlttod end, emancipated.
Yon will 100 to ll thnt tttia' faoconnjy polten
itgnUUon la carried inlo edoet.^*«pootftaiy.
CnpU Sinnn)no, I)opnty.Ptota»t H»rw,l.
• THiHnw TMitnnr.HoTiibn flitiit.,l>*-
The finliocnl Bnnk HotoPom
non, hnto fornlahed ike. TreaeoryP«p«tv
Eont artih impreaalonaof the onei nnd twoaof
tttn now Waaiur note*.,. Iknnnoo bate opt®,
thorn the likenoM of Bociotnrjr Ghaae, nnd tty
.toot the Ukonm .of, SoeroUry. AUinnder
H»mUtob,thß‘fir.t Secretary .oftkalreatery,
the ft*"* a£ thntupofftbe fir* fanndtfed dollar.
> the pTeaent^inuel'Tfceengiererij
here thus htppUy comblned in tMee note*,
the fint and the ‘present 2 Secretaries[of. U*j
Xreaaury. The one* .era distinguished. : by,
one broad bend aewen tho jbwK; ttoMwee.
here two hands, naditwp wesntri? .droles*
r i -
boxes Lemanjini^riiae
BUUKtUJsa.—A foil. and UeaU etock.
Mr? 1 ” 1 “ 4 Jor '“ u “ -'tMueSSr?.
Ka. lßLlftrrt*Sn*r'
: .
„ bunh'u^kigii ,-.
7lSPfl3gl££.^ t J"- •“.. :
S,iyisJrßs.il -<3 <-■> s., i...-," ’
' '■* '■* J .o f'eittJCtt'V.jf. :-. u--?.-; 6«.*'
• ' - - ••-•',-.-Vi:'-.' ■‘’.•r-n... * • .-'-•-•v-- -
\ S, - ,X J
A r rrf■ • ;-9 J:^ f;-. *•£-^
' J^'-* f : f ■'
PEOPLES SsURANCB COMPANY.
Office, N. E. corner Wood and Fifth bta.
FIRE AHD HABIHE INSUBANCB.
DIBXCTOBSi ;
jerata D. Verner,'' ‘..
Upl.JfehttL.Bbf*!*,
&uaoel P. ShrtTer, ,
Georg* B. Jooe«i
freak. Yao GoTder,
0. Hanson Lcto. '
iWn. Phillips,
Uoha W*tt,
iWn.
Join E. Parte,
£bvla» 8, Blasll,
Kirk,
WH. PHILLIPS, I t mfdaur :
JOBS WATT, Vita JVctbZnl.
iWAL r. QABPCTB, Sem
iniKJS IfIttUttAJSUK, by ims kkET*
_P ANCX MUTUAL IHBUEASOS COMPAMTf
Of PHH.iSMiPHtAV«iBDII.DIHOE, UnUUio
Ac, «a
tcintfOOUbTi OQm-Koi 508 Wilotii rttwt. .
w-taw.ua
OB iaprtareiCttj Prefer- ~
i ty/wortb doakU tb« , . tUvsg” $0
Crowd rent, ttret Hit «,«3 »
Pawn; B; B. Co**. 0 per cent. lftcrrtgßg* - . _
Clty^f'FhSiScfpbii£ 6 per cant. Loan.~T "30,000 00
county 6 per ct.P. 8.8. Lon lOjflOO 00
b<mds r v«U
HwthUrdotr Bad' Brood Top HonnUin
: Battroad Caapaaji.mortcaca tow—— 4,000 00
yfHtjaylwmnlm 'Baflfoad 06/1 5t0ck...4,000 00
Slock of n*««'n** Hatnal Xnrecance Oo_. 24,350 00
Stock at County, yjr* Itanmnca Co.«^ —u 1,060 00
Stock trfD6lrr»r» M. B. ln*ur»aw Oo.„. TOO 00
'«odbus£ r ß*nlr a» ..... *,012 60
■ 1® 00
MSSB«BK^7^»
{Johcn kind iewltabapdi ofag*pta.~.. . 10
• ..-. ■•*•■•*.; A- : ;s3oB#» w
i _ OLIM TINOLKY, Pr«6i«it.
1 DIEJDOTOM
CUn Tinsley, ~ " hTuCmsm^'
Samnel Bupnnza, 2. ot^ r ?P*.
Wa. It Tbompcoo, Bolft ToUca, - ■
1 Bobexvßtemf, .; Cti*-Lalßid, -
.. ..
:*?& •
Jo&o'U’Worwn, {“■
BfMhkU Hill*" - John BtoftlVPltt«bfl«.
• i; j < r/. • B.MliiCttMAK,s#cr«ifl»ir.
” "V 7 J.<?. COFFIN. AgaU,
~mj S' ffortlaMt corner Third anfl'Vood MrteL
iirKSTKRN CJUHrAf
V? WtTSBtrtlGUr ‘
Bi MILUEB. Jr., frttiimi.
' \Gf M. GOBDOH* Betrttary.
Qflkffr.ffQ; QgjWater Bpaog.*- *ft w«
booiiii iiD lubiL Pittsburgh* -
: o/’.Wrt-«d'Jforfv -
■foiW ■ gQJMgw* jy Wr»etoi^w*o
ttrorowptm*** rai I&roW|i *?»"?*“*?/* *7?
etarecicr-mUdb ucy &crr aj’ cferi*g 0* -
iirafnffnwtir ftrrr ‘~ L * »*
, ASSETS, OCTQB Ktt, 30, ) 863J _ _ ~
®3« £
-35&25T" - •swf?
Accoana,
wS^iacsg.—-wrc w
DtBSCTOBS: ,
| Andre* Ackl<r*>•?
Alexander Spwr,
D»Tld IT. tong,
BeceJ. ThOOM,
BenJ.P.Jsa*t>ffeU,
Johtfß. U’Ccue.7
R. Miller, Jr.,
June* llcAaley,
HatbanJel Holmet,
Alex; Himlek,
Oacrg© Jtetßle, > .
WlllUrx H.
O. W. Ricketeoo. ' ■
‘mr3Q- *.
H.QOBPbBt
NUK&LNi’l'* AttAiJNOfi Ult
. IIBK.-JBA HKLIK rIBJC INSD B&BOZCOU
PAVT/OV PHU*AD*L»ttIA; .OOop,iJ6Md 43*
Cbcstnatstmt,ne»r ■' -
Slaumtnt of ’Januafj-Ut, TS®i=FoMi*ho<l 1
' to on »c* of: Awemtly, . .
Amply ■ecqrcil. M J2(|-
teal OO. _ .
oo■wple CaVaxenX - f • -
StaSfSvmt T2)OTt-. - !5
•Koto.*oaßaiß &wdr*bi«.—u^.. ; —... ia*2 •
"..iwrtbe dnij profits too prsnjlum»>hkh lM»
Cotfipany can* divide by law ere totn 'rw* widen
have been determined. - ■/., ~ ;fw
i: Insurance made pa every
In. tows country* a* rates as tow as consistent
withsbeuxity; •
'•6in» their incorporation, a period olthirtyywtt t*
‘ oTthe - advantage* of astlietr abito"
W-aodp dtopSltloa -to>‘ stoef -wlUi promptnos ell
sMlitfw.;:. u
Loeeta paiO during tli© year , r„
oiuinw)i
ghorUoH.Bondttr.
HbrfooJD.linrl*,
SbU* W*gn«r. I^'fSSIiSSSL
Tld S. Brown, •
■
■ ? o. DAI& ftM prmidnu
Bit - - Offlco Hortrroootcof. Woad-* Third «t«.
tpiKl£ ) MAKI*K AHI> »NUA>U i-tf- ' j
OOMEAHI OT ■'•- ; ' '.J
;*ik SBSS^wSl2!S£sa©Mi*-«15#4
■WrS’S^SSiTßOßar.uo*rra,®*u«* ■ r r-
TNBtIBAKCJC .CO.' OF TUEiSI'ATK »-A
. =1
.'■ WILLIAM HABPjtß,S»cr«to«T > > >... ■ ■.■
tjABTKOBDFJBB INSURANCE CO: ?
to^^mO-^U.,|!O(iOOOj
. ...<
ffc AlLTOMmCm*'"r;-'' \t
■ar Invarue* in tb»abo-r* old andtallabla
tiltJJi 81WiUr«tr»et.Banlw'i Boltdtop.; g|
/xmZBS’BINBUBANCBiX)MI , ANr ~v;i
AaP* OfltoSCMw* H»lt« •
Jpgs
rr: 7.;..-L--:---b Ci?'vW»M»o*»* -' - -r
r W/O. JohMloo, ; J*^ l »iOoep6f l
-«Bit. Jocm, -• Har*«{p»i_;
-A'fiLB&HBNT . INSURANCE COM
i wfitPA^T ! oirprrrsßUEOH- G oot*j, Ba.snrmti?
"ffjpumMftl&atftU ktßdi'of Tinu4 UktUi* Btftifc
•Act vjfii i'j<S 20IUF -J
D.IkBQOK* B»eM«gr£i:.: ? . ; .-' l- ‘
~ .. r. . ; .O^UWm.DKAH,o*«*ralJfft«.
"-;"•••■ T'* 1 '-J"
- iiuc JdDwi - ! . ' . * - jFohn D-McCord,
.'•.O-0.-HnaeT^:!---,Cwt; Adam Jacob*
i-HiroXbltf*. • B.B,fitatllDßy :
oSTKu,Onw,' ' CArt, Vta. Itaw.
-> \ vl r BoHJfciJMt*
:•'> ARCUITECTVmiL.
l-tff - AWJBIMC*.
Pmcnt kxreusrWuww “» Sfwariutranf -.
t*M Vu-vit»4«ftl Bnlldlmc*. mOA *op«tttt«ai» Ibeir., -■ - r
•reciltm on rrajonat)!* Wrtni. . ' .
b»-Amaracn'.OT.ljb.tw.mi fauctfkud ■
-flabuaon tUiaU. AUretOT P>tl- i&> .
e. ■ -JBKSICj *«.
lm>
‘wStrtofMolefak*Medalliatnffltaoti..-Sola ageol..
PIAHOS, ftbo for lULLET,
, *«*
,wt JMe»a Ho. 61 Fifth itraot. myB.
t is
Uvuoxl tad sola
llaltf |Ta fHiliTif>iT<l riftTjfrfl, Tfn fil
JPlmbat»b« - ' - - - myg>, .
TOHl*is t'usos"
ftl IH<£ B\~\fatA street* between
tij|ift iM WWh* l • **•» .
'',5 2311 Mi
“ .|2pSM,OR 68