: fSll|A \ H v Tilt* l!ni«fu t%% II irntit Tlir CniMtltnlibn ns It In! Democratic State Ticket. AUDITOR OENERAL, ISAAC SLE3TKEB, ATuioa Cmsif. surveyor general, JA7IES p. BABB, Allegheny County. On this, our nation'3 birthday, we eteclure to our foes, who are rebels against the best interests of mankind, that this ar my sho t enter the Capital of the so-called Confederacy, that our national Constitu tion shall, prevail, and that the Union, winch alone can insure internal peace and la, * ec ‘ ir,t !t to each State, must and snail Oqpreserved. jrS>MEETIVO OF THE ISF.MOCRAT 1,3 COMMITTEE OF CORRESPOSD fc'CE—Tho Democratic Cominltieo of C rrtts poTturne.* for the county of Allegheny, will meet " *'7 » T ‘ CHARLES HOTEL, in the city of PI tebarsh. oa SATURDAY, the l»th day of JULY, A. It. Ivj a t II o'clock a K. A general nrt.ind.iß 0 la rcßttoated THOMAS DOVNELLY. Chairman. 'VVEDNESIIAY MORXING, .IDLY 16. itiHMfroti every |mv*^ THJE SD&VJBYOB QEIYERAT. lho ingenuity of the Gazette is only • palled by its abolitionism) it is astonish iug in both. It goes away np into Union county to find out the political character of ihe editor of this paper, which it oopies from the Union County Star, and is as follows! „ P- Barr, of Pittsburgh, was nominated for Surveyor General. He is editor of the Post, and is described to us by gentlemen who know him as a slippery. 01 y politician, fit for any desperate work. He once nominated Buchanan for re-elec tion— nest came out for Douglas—and is _iow in full faith with those who killed Douglas at Charleston. Professedly a war man, he hinders the Administration measures necessary to success/* Slippery ana oily' 1 do not ftpplv in onr case. Open, candid and ingenuous, we know nothing of the “slippery and ody” tricks of the professional politician. TVe were nominated without resorting to any “slippery or oily” expedients, and **e intend to be elected in tho same hon orable manner. The allusion to our being ia faith with those who “kilied Douglas," together without - “hindering war measures necessary to sueoess," we leave without comment to the pleasing contemplation of oar readers. Alter they get through with it we wish them to bestow but a Single thought upon the mtannessof the wretch who wrote it and the no less reckless creature who copied it. But the Gazette has lost all the reputation it ever hud; it doesn’t now aspire beyond publishing such a paragraph as wo have quoted, or garbling a speech like that of U overact- Johnson, of Ten nessee, to suit its purpose. What else it is capable of doing we may readily con clude by examining what little and mean things it has accomplished. Let the Gazette editor offer himself for a State nomination in its approaching Abolition Convention; we will venture something that with ail his whining and lamentation overslavery, he will not be able to secure the delegates of this county. But should he get their votes, and with them the nomination, we will risk some thing handsome that we will beat him ever, in Allegheny county. No one con nected with a p ß per that follows the lead of. Wendell Phillips and Fred. Douglass, and who advocates natural and political equality, cau receive the public endorse ment of a majority of the sag«cious and j respectable citizens of this cotuity THB WAB ON THE PBESIDENT The Abolitionists are daily growing more savage l a their warfare upon tho President) be is nut quite fast enough for the revolutionary pack. The ; Oaxttte of not city, the other day, gave him the fol lowing thrust i Washington correspondent Xe Ltd M am C ot eT “««« » com b“t l Mr J ' Stanton ia vindicated: thnt Simuon had ordered McDowell’s EH«“ WDlStwTfcOWUa, butlhe Prl " lattu ftad countermanded the. order,' 1 3tß namesake of Cincinnati, the organ o nnadnitcrated Abolitionism there, speaks cl the President as folio we: Pr«!den?Lt™? > WBt i er eiement * of which i resident Lincoln s character is composed “a’c iU b j - -Proclamation calling for 800,000 more troops ‘to brine this unnecessary and injurious civil war a apeedjr and satisfactory conclusion 1 Unnecessary and injurions, forsooth!- the gemie old soul seemed to be afraid Ol iurther imtaung and firing the Sonth eru heart by using adjectives properly characterising the enormity of the most hi‘storv? ,! ' J u l l !C ' lrBed reb ®“* on of which nbl» p fu . r !“ oh es any account Most ami t'ear rat! J"'* high lime von der !bi2°um S Q p 01 ,7 calculated to ren to iChSE"** Sli * ht, r ‘«Juri b,ought it onf ifyoT? T a °, Wbo self into a frame ofmTnd to 700 a of it in Suing terms, VM aii? S . tBpe,,k Parson Browulow to write yo ??J!f lt f r ?et tieua.” -me your proclama- If a Democrat were to print such scur . nlny as tin, an Abolition correspondent would immediately suggest tbe propriety ol locating bim in some remote spot, away from the turmoil of political eacitement. out Abolitionism is a queer compound of inconsistency, f.natidsm, and nonsense. Marriages at the South. A from t be South reports the mar j w HoweU ' “«er Jetferaou Davis, to George W Cusus Lee, of tbe Confederate tm, e ld’ - is# & it- £-**» £. bomb me also reported those TrhULfc* dies, who were imprisoned in ilrs. tireenhow, in ** t ho , a * * f mer, yir: itiasAlarthb twi?. 1 **?' Jlu. i'uuny gjranwhi lips, late ot the Idea. Hr. Pbiliipiffiffifr frames of GEO. if, AT CL ELL AN. Nlggeps. Ihe niggers of this city are of late be coming lazy, saucy and unmanageable.— 5l a d 8t “‘ ght ° fr . ee , dark ?,y na “«d Joe flow “rr«»ted on Oasquet street, on a of tavmg struck 4 and knocked down a white woman on that street. Tl,r «»*enea by the Bebelt-Thelrrerees Aseenib. A considerable force of rebels under Van Dorn, who has recently superseded Lovell, have gathered in the' interYor,and n P 0f ,, 1n5 , tructl , OQ h « been formed Van Dorn declares his intention of reran* now” orlean *> an e Gazette. In the latter paper Th T W °“ r nat ? onal birthday. we find that the editor has stricken it out. eelehrotJr.Uj 11118 ln ' on associations Now, Mr. Kditor, this, as I have already radon «Tr a f br C » a9ing ' the D *«'a- !?‘ d ' *? * T Cry ? mali , ■"»«“•, but it only Hon of Inde pendence to be read and an * b -? 1 h low thß Gdl,ors of the Gazette oration delivered. T • ? tOO P t 0 ‘Snore Gen. McClellan. Hut ear the middle of summer, and the sani- s,ant reader of the Gazette, as also all the. I tary condition of the city has probably ? thur m ? rn j n £ papers, and we have very never been better at this season of the Mm'ilm 7 T? allusions favorable to year. The general health, indeed at ““I , h,s “ovements, in the tele pears to be improving as the season’nro dl ?P atc,les of the Associate Press, greases for the mortuary report of K ,n P“Porm the city but the week shows a considerable decrease nf v ’ , , mortality from that of the week prectd!ng f make b7tM- d °* 3 * be ette ex pert to lhe condition of things is due partly fn m !a-» t 5 th 1 1 80 .“ rse •, How much did it the arrangements made by the Command- tor" -' ” Pushing the letters of “Via lng General for cleaning the streets cart e know, to our own certain ly to the strict quarantine regulations and do over • lat , ll / ICV bad the matter to in a measure, perhaps, to atmospheric con 1° t T" lhe '«'«■’ would he burnt: ditions. 1 atinospnerm con- or \ tutor s statements about McClellan have since ueen proven to be false, and the I writer knew it when he wrote them. K. i\ > The Weather. of . ,he atmosphere has been atthe h.ghest point for some weeks the thermometer ranging from eighty eight to ninety-fire in the shade in fome localities, bat we hare had compensating drench S i’ n r d - “ Merly SOme Meshing nnd drenching rams, accompanied with sheet lightntng, that has relieVed the atmos phere ol much of its superfluous caloric. Yellow Fever. iJr' V Hl°‘ iCe iD Q he mort ality reported by Hp.l7h T re , r ’ of the Board of Health, twenty deaths last week from ve nous types of fever, of which no lew than h “ wer f c “ es °f typhoid, and two of ty phus. In the mortuary report, wo no'ice oue case of fever, which we are justified r/'rr^of such doubts "Lturd that the faculty disagreed with resnect to ts true type) but we regard it as of very little importance, whether it was or was noi yellow fever, or was or was not perni cious or congestive. The appearance of cws °f 6 ? reatf ' r number ol f 0‘ Jellow fever in June or July, do.-s fiJl‘ US j f u the tofrtdoce that thev will be by f B “ ®P ldem ‘Ci and on the other hand, a perfect immunity from the disease in July and August affords no guarantee of safety for the rest of the season Ex-Governor Moore. tl J he D / tta ,he following: -Alter he gunboats had passed the forts, incon noted by the territied Governor, but ns soon ns discovered he at once annlind to .he captain to know whether ‘S sug r did not retard his speed V Being answer ed that it undoubtedly did, ‘,h!n throw the cursed stuff overboard,' rejoined the Governor, with unwonted decision. The mandate of the Governor was of course obeyed, to lus great relief. This little fro C m e p mh? C ? rred ? hen ,he ~e« m er trom eighty to one hundred mile, distant from any gunboat!" '"“aj-asKSH Mrs. Phillips, who made herself the lioness in secession circles in Washington &«* w ! 10 "as banished Into ~*f? ess ‘ a,ha3^ all! f n into the hands of the gfill&Qt Gcq. Butler. Special order No. 150, S avs- Mrs. Phillips, wife of Philip Phillips haring been once imprisoned for her trai torous proclivities and nets at Washing ton, and released by the clemency of the fr?Jt rnm l"t j and * m ’>ng been found train- Sf rn'itod If? t V pit 1 ?P°“ officer a of the United States, for which act of one of those children both her husband aadher self apologised and were again forgiven, i« now found on the balcony of her house during ,h e passage of the funeral proces ~'p eut - DeKay, laughing amfmock lng at his remains, and upon being inquir ed of by the commanding general if this tact were so, conlemptousTy i ei.lies, “1 was m good spirits that day i” It is therefore ordered that she he not regarded and treated as a common wo honn’d , of " hom “o officer or soldier is mnn d h.H ta^ e *“*“*. but as an uncorn ,r ; r fe d d ?- gerous w °“an, stirring I up strife and inciting to riot. | Another oornv.pondeut. in reply to tho Gcutite’s sneer the other day that McClel lan was npvp r und«r 6re, furuishei Iho fol- Oooaoe hi. McCliu.la.v. -Promoted uretet Second Lieutenant, Corps of Kn gineers, jnendU/ jedinas on the question of,, restoration oi the old 1'ni..,,. 1.,, t i,,. understood, however, that us long aslegis intion is carried on in the interest of aboli tionism, so long will the .South combat it with arms, and seek, in a separation, a release from what they consider, under these circumstances, as a “hateful bond.” .conclusion I may remark that about eight hundred negroes escaped from the vicinity of Georgetown, and that thev are now ou North Island, about twelve miles from below that place, where they support themselves by fishing and raising produce, as well as foraging upon the property of tbeir former owners. At the time of the proclamation of Jeff. L’avts, allowing forty days for all Union men to leave the South, I endeavored to take advantage of it, but was told that it did not apply to me, as I came within the category of those who were styled danger ous persons. 1 then attempted to net a t P h n 9 . S tO . E ". rope ’ ' hin , k j D f 'o get home in the. t.aj, but wn3 told I was wanted for other purposes and could not bo allowed to leave Thus every effort which I made, except the last one, failed. Prom the Eighth Pennsylvania •Reserves. HaRRISOS’s LasPisb, V;i., .1 uly ri Mr - Sai >< Editor Pittsburgh Post— Dear Sir : As very many of your readers hare friends in the Eighth Regiment, Pa. R. 0., I concluded to drop you a line more particularly H 3 y OU have no doubt heard of ns having had some sharp work for the last ten or twelve days past. On the 2Gth of dune we had our first fight, or what might be called a fight it lasted from two o’clock p. m i nti] nine at night. We lay upon our arms ?i! i n, ¥? ,t ' a ? d oBr re giment opened the ball in the morning. About eight o clock wo were ordered to fall back B tn Gaines’ Mill, which dissatisfied us greatly them* n oUght We c ° uld have dipped ~ F°T ever L we hari to obey orders, w« d Jfri ba S b 1 j - be p,ace aeiected, when was the 2TO. e ? d W t 0 aCt J On a * ai “- (This was tae 2“gl‘ the Government shouM be overwhelmed in its strug gle tor tho L'mon and Constitution, the Border States will not join their broken fortunes to the Southern Confederacy, but seek elsewhere new alliances and iV» career. 1 *. 1 ’ e , B 'ko le reply Wiil breathe the most exalted spirit ot unionism and loyally. B i , ™ ABBOSl ’ ATE “ F SODA IMLI.S - * ibe most convenient, arreeubif' ami « Cwnor Smithfleld & Fourth streets. T*i ,E t. l s , ‘ Rl '!f s -AT HOME-B Ll" E Lick, heltror. Ledford. t.’iineres- Sarato'*!i hlnture. kissengen unit l.ouHi-ill,, ArtesmnV.i - ters torsuk.,,, . atM'iN J'Jll.N.sruX " • and Fourth sin,el,. P* **; HOLLAS® *ll*. UIRE«'T MT Irom Custom-House. ill alone j u «< eomair or a each: alio 50 iW, rf nf'|. cer s Celebrated London book I'll |r, r s!,l irU . «r.Mu.v .loii.vsniN iru .'"rner .'imihlipld and Kourrli street. ITALIAN VIOLIN STBINGS, HV n All., PONT PAID. |i(; . Thirds orb " •• ‘ " Fourths f,r I, i Itahau... !:„- Ilnst .imjity Fren.-h ..r l,r.rr„Hn l-t™.]' !l.i Oh Mnnas. each. . ’ ’ a.M _ I: “iX* l,,V UuiUrl,: A ' ' BV.IOHN li. MELLOK. *■ »rAl«r„ tot.or fre-h .„7nV&? Zm AL-,. \ ~.l,n s», 0) . Flutes. A.-,v, r ,|j., ne . r«.w.ii£ OU,I,TRY HOMES r !s ! v <: V' ,,, , ,: , N,TKS t'on iiii v "nue !hn-“!„, , ' ,h ’7K it r | u„want. Tv,,,,. ,! o. :!,„a ‘ ftrylune tenth annu.iliv. Aw.lv t» ' jy “ UuA Ar\V»kUmi|'>hi l th : ., i . EASTEfi.\ CAKKIAIiLS, MlltilfS A HACOSS E*fm™ two. .<-n.i'.' e pli‘j r r;';;;- r;\‘ hr i MKN. JONKI'H HII IT I-:, r - n -*»». IVc " *n*t. near the Ttr,>.Mite ||RI4IS! IIRKISI! nitllMni MEDICINES & PERFUMERY, Die larges, and ,n„ 5l r0mp!..,.. „w„„„o n , in iMi.vrw. oils, mi: stiffs. in I'vorv variotv VARNISHES AXls TI RI'I Vil\| , PT Ligroiis. wsßS®SSy«w Pt RE OLD COGNAC' ,v SItINETTE 11KAX HIES: THE FINEST r„.r, RYE WHISKY. ' : A isrgo assortment at PORT WINES. SHERRY WIXES, MADEI RA WINES. HOLLAND GIN AND WEE DROP OIN. SPARKLINGCATA Wiu wrNE, BULL OA I AW BA. PI RE .1 AMAICA REM • t ''- ie - *'•- *o„ JOREPH FLEMISro’N. c-,.nier ..f the Diamond and .Market street. GRAVEL, FKLT, AND CANVAS ROOFING. JVi f ®I A liS i:O\KTA VII.Y ON J.TM. hmnd. for wile with instructions: Also IRON SATURATED EOR Root's Ro o by that of any B - 1 -- SU(,PE -”n h i», JOHN FLEECER, °UNBM l T H , ** corner Ohio and Beaver nta, ALLEGHENY CITY. * toc K Guns of all descriptions, on hand PRICES* 0 or<,er ' Rnth Michigan, Col. P„rk hufsr, COO men; the tl.irrl battalion of the .. Ccotisylvania Cavalry, 22 i, men; Hew itt s battery. CO men, and tho convales cents of the 4th Kentucky, 250 men. The rebel force consisted of one regi ment of mounted infantry, a regiment of lexas Hangers. C.eorgia, Alabama and I ennessee cavalry, between 2,000 and 4 - 000 in number, mostly armed with car bines and allot gnus. Their loss in killed and wounded was heavier than oars. The Seventh Pennsylvania Cavalry lost in killed, wounded and missing, two hun (Jrocl men. I he only otiicers that escaped, so far as reported, are Capt. .r. F. Andrew, Co. O; Capt. C. C. McCormick and l.iout. H. D. f-ooney. 11m Commissary and Quartermaster's departments were recently replenished with new clothing, all of which has fallen into the hands of the euemv. Capt. Hounds, the. Provost Marshal of Murfreesboro, and his guard, shot nine of the rebels before surrenderim;. The rebel governor, Harris, ami Andrew Hwing. active secessionists, are known to have been at Bersheba Springs, near Spar ta, a .ew days since, organizing a raid on Murfreesboro, which, it is apprehended. wiU be exte-nden to the capital of the state, idle public are still in great ex-I cnement Many families have leu for Louisville, and the cars were crowded this morning with alarmed cotton operators unu adventurers. r it is reported that idea. John C. ilreck *•‘"l " : i' ' lM ' Cols ‘ 1 orrest a«d Rains of jvi.h!, commanded the rebel forces at Mnrlre.-sno.-o It is also reported that f‘Z ‘v Vl | ‘• i , “ Ll I lvc 1 r * n <-, fifteen miles , -•aslmHe, and that Kirby Smith is advancintt ~n Nashville from Chattanooga with IG.OiXi men. '-uauauoog.i Murfreesboro i- barricaded by bales 0 hay. and the lederal shells have apt Are iiiaiiv houses. Colonel l.Hck towards Nashville. lleiiii'orccment.-, to tin; Union in by iju-cint train.*.. Kontu.-liy :yriu\t‘r.\ h»< arrived. a ; T. ‘Tf, a? ifcey pa -fj i ,i.- .‘•rj.-.-IS. J (;;ty .j‘ n p-f^ r-mliJcrnly arrival oi' m,- ‘■oiui! tlim.* Jiatr, rio< have h, ". ,n l ~r, ( )i, Rll ,| .. fj! , j'osnj'*. w >--ii:n.,tu .' ,u! - v I’• li,,- l.'nited ; w OHtunk ha- arri\eU at ■ -v.avv lar.l. l.rm«iaK Hi. a j.ri/f a.1iii.1.f.,. .>i,M ni.rir-- ! !l:if thf Ullf-nillns ?' >!;>'•<■ "usn.-'i-.:: aionci!,,. hanks of the • *'“l>l‘»!>aimi>ck river?. • S| " ill v 1... ihi Me... Horn Newborn it,,. ; r ":*‘ ,b!s “ ’«•»•/. >l.O I.rln|ej Ibo Steam,•!■ H..rn.,fiii Las arrive. S.lv.ees Li,v> beet: y.r.l i, ! ~3:...!. 3 :...! ieiu.ANm .:,.h la. biuverm.r U a.h borne announces ihm ih., State ,iovern mem \vi,l pay mV- bounty to each r.-erui, •- r • , u r w ami ;b n=t old i n*-2Uiionis. j STIiIi'TI.V Pi; HE i < -oil I‘l iceN. PITTSBURGH DRUG HOUSE, TORRENCE & McGARR, ('! •I.'.', hi: t'tWHTH ,f. M.UIKLT ST/ff.’FTS I’lTTsBrnGH. 5Z ,, $ ncH ' **"*■>««■. ilakYn/suda' SKgKK? Para Wines and biqncn. f or meiiicins | UM * je!9-to STATE sexate-e. n. iam« STATE SENAXOtt.*'* f “ r th * noa:innti
p3 W.M. SUMNER A CO. Dissolution of Partnersliip. TV,S, !T AR ; r >'E ns H I P HERETO a*/A 0 S R B.^ E tlrafs o d^^ D^ “f ~-in^ h |fiWWCn^ In retiring from the Brewing Business. I -a— fully recommend my former i.arhlil and the public. JAJIESIh VFRtNER I .** 3 •roshua Rhodes, (Successor to Rhodes & Verner.) at theoM'JSei I*® 1 *® Brewi Js “»*<* Maltingßnslneo rittsburgfa, July ], ISR2. iyl-SOtd ESEI" *• f®“*».*«eniey mm* < »-dOauns«lor mt Law, Kittanning, Anataß Second Edtti me IHT MUST IBWRApf FROM 6EN. CURTIS’ COMMAND. AFFAIR* AT ('OKIKTH, General Halleck’s Army in ExceUent Health, BRIDGES DESTROYED BY MOR GAN’S GUERRILLA BAND. OKN*Wi BRACIQ AT TUPELO. TI»o Rebels Advancing on Athens. Corixtu, July JJ.—Official information ims been received nt headquarters of the arrival of Curtiss’ army at Clarendon on the ■ Otb, after almost daily skirmishing in whn-h the rebels were worsted. Six thotis* sand rebels made a stand on the Tth at Couch River, near Round Hill. Col. Harvey, of the 33d Illinois, commanding the advance of the division, afterwards reinforced by two companies, attacked and completely routed the rebels, scatter*, mg them m all directions, mostly all going towards Lutle Rock. Thev also evacuated DunaPs Bluff. Later.— -Curtis' advance has reached Helena. The army is in good condition ana spirits. Provisions are scarce, but supplies are coming from Memphis, i 1 ; e 1 Bulletin says! Morgan’s hand last night destroyed the long bridge j)n the Kentucky Central Railroad, between ; Cvnthiana and Paris. A gentleman re siding near Cynthiana says that Morgan’s m^ve 9 n Frankfort and Lexington were °. u v femts, their real object being to strike the Railroad at Paris and destroy the lownsend viaduct, which would take six weeks to reconstruct, and then destroy the property in Bourbon county, and return to Harrodsburgh or Mount Sterling. Major Hatch, of Cincinnati, renders part ot the above improbable, and reports this evening that the Railroad track between Lexxtigton and Frankfort has been torn un to-day by guerrillas. Cxißo, July 15 —Water has been la* into the canal at Vicksburg, but the an jc.pation that it would soon cut a channel dirough has not yet been realized. The work ot deepening it three feet has been commenced. in 3 verf bnn l!l9 , near - Alem P h!s are •»«»»- s ; h l '7,u b ! ~ burning cotton almost in ; " f th * r!r - v - and disguising themselves as cotton buyers find where it ip sec-eted and come in force end burn it Seven scouts of the 11th Illinois Caval ry, near Hernando, Friday, were ntmeked the ' vou n | l < " i - and captured, lr.it the haJancc escaped. 'ld V Loi . la V f1, . 1j : ,5 -—Dispatches 10 the .-111 tary Authonties received to day, twiJho"' C “i r,IS command is iihonl'four a.thousnnd strong, and has reached He lean, Arkansas, where they are resting at u iiiy are he y.sth J" fo ™„ ati n fr? Corin ‘ h «” I hursday divisions u a ''" k w . as . ,l,e «* and various d tion Hlsa ™y>sm excellent ran fen < “ a?e i r for a, ' nv <' operations. h , as 1,1> onf forty thousand troop, at iupelo. and some' thirty-five Springs ' nn,j m . S r P 1! are said to mdu.aie offensive operations. Kassa-1 City. July 12.—Th ft Santa to flm - ,0 ,h - »>«« »rrivc,L In. news is unimportant. ! *- s n,t,| orr-d ihr.r nil the Texans ,-x -« ept (.no company, have left Ariroe-. mid cni.imeneed the.r homeward march An engagement took place yesterday ; ™»p«»r°»- k, e r,, i! S baud » near Pleasant Hill. Ihe rebels were finally repulsed with a IT °c ; S 'f r ll , Kd , and live mortally wound ■a. tap.. Ivohel. commanding the mili tia, is report’d wounded. Ouantreil’s aThi n me ! “‘ !,rP a I!st of ,h ° names of a.i hi... mpn were token. JvtuK. a. lowa. .!„1 v u ,_ a ., anv> f tends, on Sunday. broke open seiWa dridnc U , t bo M f“ Phi -’ X ° nher “ Missouri, .■ ■er .l n.' .v, j;' o,nsts °t" and capturing several ol the State troops. • j 1 .‘ s r^l hy passengers on to on^Uhc ra ‘ n ' !”■ th, \ rebfils »"* advancing on Athens, and that the people are tWinc 1 roops leave for Athens to-night . Out. a...), .Inly 1;.. .(’ha Governor has issued a proclamation for nine regiment of infantry for three years in response" o the recent call of the President Thirty-Seventh Congress WiSHISCTOV, July 16.—SeVATE.—M r fliile, from the Com. on Naval Aff«7re* vens rt h d auerv nt ? f SOlUt ‘-°, n relatin S to Stt,-’ and iBOSUOtOIt tte JL’ b , e »>«w«dnnd conveyed to the heirs of Kobert M. Stevens. Passed 6 ’ of Kans:ls > called np a reso tion calling on the Secretary of State tn give reasons for the arrest of Lieut r o f Anthony. He modified it so as to make •t» s request on the President, and it was j , r ‘ Howe, of Wis.. introduced a hill | further amending the articles of war j! ! ?!'°, ndes l eT ?T officer of the United states shall furnish .protection to everv 'tsAXss to “!?’ 0f ’ ntr °duced a bill to establish a bureau of migrat ion. . .'lr. Irrimes, of lowa, called un the hill !>n relation to letters of marque P " at all, and it would be a sort of a recogni "on, as letters of marque IT gr After fu X rth Pt Th“ Btr ? co ? n!l!ed nations!^ i •J tle . r , furth ? r , discussion, the hill was I as '“e._and the bill amendatory of the act of 1 1 90, calling forth the militia, was taken up. The question being on Mr. Sherman’s amendment, limiting emanci pation of those who enter the service of the United States to slaves of rebels, Mr. Lane of Kansas said there were « P~ for The sari).' " " m " PH S P nli'eady received i WHS adopted. i eaa (j 4. navs . Mr. Aldrich's substitute for Mr. Colfax's "!'• nay- '"e Rme:ic,e., T° n actors my7-3meo