DAILY POST. The Union as it Ls, the Constitution as it Is tEr Where there to no , tont there to no freedom. TUESDAY MORNING, AUG. 25 Domoci‘atio Nominations. FOIL 601LE.N('lZ, LOttci 'tv• Wiraot)wA 21'14:6MTOIL J iY VET VIC 11. JAINV I) r,tio en %Tr ens tay MEET pursuar.ce tI thefollowhigßes olutior,of the Denicratiii County Committee, the Democra-t. of the revernt wards, boroughs and townships will meet on the day named to elect delegates to tan Comity Donventien That the Democratic citiaens of the several wards, boroughs and townships of Alle enemy nounty are hereby notified to meet at their usual place of holding prim:tr.? meetings on Saturday, Aug. ',Oth and elt..t two delegates from each, who will assemble upon the f•,llowing Wednesday, kept. 2d. et It) o'elottl, a. La the court house to nominate a a county ticket. The meetings in L. , o elite, and borough : will be held between the hours of 7, and 1., al.. in the townships between the hours of a and 5 o'clock p. m. THOMAS FARLF.I, Chairman. JAS M. RICLEARDs, Soo. THE KING'S JESTER. Forney, having successfully filled the part of the "President's" log—snuffling about the doors and key holes in the vari• one apartments of the White House— has commenced the role of court jester, in view of qualifying himself for that. posi tion after Uncle Abe, or some other man, has proclaimed an Empire. In one of his late productions that joker publishes the following touch of his quality. It is a pretended sketch of a scene in the White House just before the President issued his first proclamation. It proceeds: "Gentlemen," said the President to that little party of patriotic men, "the machinery of the nation is out of order. We must run it as we find it. Its intelligent wheels., its rods, belts, are separated, but the boiler seems to be perfect. W e must repair the work with such skill and in genuity as we possess. There is wisdom in coun cil, and therefore I have called you that we may reason together. What shall we do to crush out this foul rebellion and preserve the country from wreck. I have made up my mind with implicit confidence in, an overruling Providence, to meet all emergencies that may arise. It is time for work," continued the President. •• What shalt I do about issuing a proe:amatiun to the people ?" The President, with his hands folded behind his back, paced up and down the apartment. The :is or seven Governors who formed his auditors, were wrapped in the mantle of deep meditation. Each °appeased their opinion, but their sentences were punctuated with too many "ifs or ands." While all this was going on Gov. Andrew G. Curtin, fresh from his Blue mountain home. was standing at the window looking through the panes, upon which ho was drumming with his angers, while at the same time ho was humming Hail Columbia. Lie was an attentive listener to all that was going on. lie had not yet hem, ap proached by the President. Presently there was profoied silence in that small lest thoughtful party of distinguished gentlemen. Mr. Lincoln finaily broke the :2.11.2,1 ami standing erect in all the pride of n Western con demon, turned to 'lir. Curtis and said, ' Andy, what will Pennsylvania do if I my procla mation ?" ofthe couttry deppruie4 urton - ,tue ----to-be-nuubll degmY , Veigbintl. in ,1 ) 14) balance. Guy. Curtin, still drntruning on the panes with his fingers Its aturesaid. turned, fared the Preot dent, and, with uplifted hands, said: " nut , .11./ II ere he paused. "Ito!" another pause. " (with emphasis,) you icon, you. 4,rooltimation Pennyy/valtit tail( ./1.0•111411 you (1 Aun deed gala in en in et rncrk ''Clive me your hand, A n dy ," said the President, and, as he convulsively grasped the same, and then throwing his arias around him, he tiaeula ted: " Th ank God Jo, thni noble I.e j ,ly. 1 once iSelit The President of the great American nation abed tear:—they were tears of joy—which min gled with those that suffused the cheeks of the patriot tiov,i-ruot t.i tho Istivet“ue butte. The writer of this donlitlesn imagined that he was capping I,e,,rge Lippard's 1110 EL eAtravagant patliaß, but the dittieulty is that, (leorge, Le In piled it on too thii•k -it will riot stick : it in a broad farce. 'file language attributed to the President detnottstraten that he must have been awfully impressed with his reaponsi• bilities. Ho was big with the fate of the Union, because, as the story tells, feet destiny trembled in the balance." The President ditl'et at once proceed to inform the gathering of " patriotic men," that the contemplated issuing a procla• mation ; he prefaced this by allusion to the nation's machinery, in which he re marked that the " intelligent wheels, rode and belts" were separated, but that the "boiler" was all perfect, which was re ceived with great gratification by the "pa triotic" men to whom it was addressed, in view of the fact of there being no immediate danger of the boiler's explosion. Here the President, swinging hie arms behind his back, began to pace up and down the floor, while the governors were " wrapped in the mantle of deep meditation." The grotesque picture of . Mr. Clay addressing the Senate in favor of the compromise measures of 1850, surrounded as he is by Webster, Calhoun and Cass, is a dull af fair, compared to this pen and ink sketch of old Abe addressing governors wrapped in the mantle of deep meditation, about "belts, rods and wheels," which he re lied with implicit confidence upon an overruling Providence to make secure. But while the pensive and thoughtful patriots were lost 'in meditation, there stood one who was not at all affected by the surrounding gloom. Grand, gloomy and peculiar, "like some tall cliff that lifts its awful form," stood "Andrew G. Curtin fresh from his blue mountain home" unaffected by the artificial terrors by which he was surrounded. It was a time to try the mettle of the bravest; one of those rare occasions upon which "the timid tremble but the brave stand still." There he stood, apparently unconcerned, looking at the pane before him, upon which he was drumming with his fingers, to the patriotic air of Lind Columbia. No one knew what. was passing in his teeming brain, until the President, at length, finally brok e the spell by " stand ing erect in all the pride of a western gentleman," and remarkin', " Andy 1,11111 will Pennsylvania do• " Andy's FP ply was worthy ol' duck (!a.1... lio ! do!" replied "Andy," drumming on as afore said, and then n pause, as ii his bones were aching with increased emotion, and then another pause, after which he an nounced "a hundred thousand in a week." Abe and Andy immediately rushed into each others arms, while the big round tears chased one another down their suf fused cheeks in rapid suci.ession, while the others still lap wrapped in th e i „„„ ti , of profound meditation. Forney having OTthis elever.sho.li, by way of amendel'iti' eurtin for having joined Cameron in his Ftforta to defeat III:: ra notninntion. Rlmulti now tell hie readera how " Andy •' and the President gut along when the h., ruler finked aßaiistalice 1,, mive our State from rabbi' de v astati o n " Andy, having furnished a hurdred thou sand" 111P11 in a week to fight for the Union; and afterwards nearly another hundred thousand, asked for n tow regi nn ell 10 drive tile iemlv! ir.el Our State, but there were none to be had. Andy then naked permission it was not granted, t. he e,-sh , te. l uonco which was that Or? " disloyal copperhead Governors of New York and New Jersey" had to come to the assistance of poor, hu miliated and disgraced Pennsylvania.-- The remembrance of this by the people of Pennsylvania, will not be obscured by any fancy sketches which can be inverted be t wren now and next October. .1110. SHALLOW TRICK TO DE CEIVE IRISHMEN. We have been shown au annonymous publication, containing garbled extracts from a false report of a speech of Judge Woodward, delivered in Pl 7, addressed " to the Foreigners of the Third Ward: . This handbill concludes as follows. "In conclusion 1 would say, that if you vote for this tnan Woodward, you will in tact have joined the real Know -Nothing party of the coun try, and will have vnted against your native country, your religion and your (lad." The fellow w ho got this handbill, up has a very tender regal d for the rights of the Irishmen of the Third Ward. The simple CifilitililtallCO of this dirty work, in order to assist Curtin, shows how much regard he entertains for the rights of the people he addresses. "The Irishmen of the Third ii ac are, howev, , r, not to be im• posed upon by such silly twaddle as this handbill contains. There is not one of them who does not understand the poli tics of the day and his duty as a citizen, fully as well as those who are circulating their slanders, of the Democratic candi date. The idea of opposing Woodward, in order to assist Curtin, on the ground of Know- Nothingism, is too stnpid au imposi tion to be practiced upon the Irish voters, of the Third Ward. Thieves Falling Out The Washington City Gluon/eh' was started by Forney, under the auspices of certain patriotic gentlemen, who were "stealing themselves rich in the name of liberty." lt, of course, is for prosecuting the war indefinitely. To give it prestige, Forney claims that his Chronicle is the Administration organ. That claim is de• nied by the Washington City National Re publican, which berates the Chronicle tor its organ assumption in the following style: The Contractors' Organ Putting on Airs. A morning paper which rime into t x hit etwe limit, Government plunder, and has never lived upon any tlilat;rice sin r, except the ten rent pi ores it es, , , oil from the pour of the Army t the Potimiiii lor icliny of its t opies, comes t.i the re, itt the tiear public against a itetve paragraph which we pule lished a tew tint, since, and which it del pio g iA„ t I aq 44 - isswqr :.blackgmarajaw, aultlies• and the write,. T;iiiii ,- 1177ie.1 That is all. Ile knale.• Ilia we I, now he lies, aii,l Mat we riot MO( It, knows that we . 10.1 ill oil t. ,41,• ial relations with the Government are corned, it IS a matter between the v eminent and ourselves, all,' io not a oab joeL for public discussion, notvitiltsimeltitg the contractors' organ sees tit lo intro (Ince the matter into the side le niluil, tl to. Gen. Hooker The farewell speech of Joseph Hooker says the Chicago Times, to the officers who gathered around his headquarters near rederick, Maryland, when the fact that he was removed became known, has had general circulation. It is altogether the most creditable performance of the (lateral chile acting as a commander of the Army of the Potomac. It was excul patory of himself in this : "1 tell you. gentlemen, that at Chancellorville I was engaged but two hours with Lee, while the other twenty-two were taken up with the government, at Washington.'' It was accusatory of the administration in thin: "1 pity any man who ever commands the Army of the Potomac. I encountered many things 1 little dreamed of when I took command. I have been hampered and fettered." It was just as truthful in this: " I always said this was the greatest army of the Republic, and say so still." It was remorseful in this, that being inter• rupted with the question whether it had not always been the case that commanders of that army had been hampered and fet. tered, he r3plied, reluctantly : " It always has." It was pathetic in this: " I have been exiled to 'Baltimore. What I shall do there 1 don't know, for I don't know a d—d woman, man or child there." And it was declaratory in this : " I shall re sign from the army and go to California, where lam respected.' If Wade and Chandler will now swear Joseph, they will get quite as much useful, and proba bly much more truthful information from him, than when he was last before them as a witness. . State Rights. In the debates in the New York Con• vention called in 1788 to pass upon the Federal Constitution, ALEXANDER HAMII.. TON, the most ultra constitutionalist in the Federal Convention, used the following language: " I insist that it never can bo the inter est or the desire of the National Legisla ture to destroy the State Government. It can derive no advantage from such an event; but, on the contrary, would lose an indispensable support, a necessary aid in executing the laws and 'conveying the in fluence of the Government to the doors of the people. The Union is dependent on the will of the State Governments for its chief magistrate and its Senate. The blow aimed at the members must give a fatal wound to the head; and the destruction of the State must be at once a political suicide. Can the National Government be guilty of this madness? What induce• menu, what temptations can they have? Will they attach new honors to their sta tion; will they increase the national strength ; will they multiply the National resources; will they make themselves wore respectable in the view of foreign nations, or of their fellow citizens, by rob bing the...Stattm of their constitutional privileges? But imagine for a moment that a political frenzy should seize the Government; suppose they should make the attempt. Certainly, sir, it would be forever impracticable. This has been sufficiently demonstrated by reason and experience. It has been proved that the members of Republics have beeq, and ever will be, stronger than the head." Ter London Spectator says that the au• dience at a Marmon meeting were aston-r ;shed at seeing small white figures moving over'the floor. A lady pocketed one of these objects, and found it to be a frog dole up in white paper, with the intention w'orking'upon the fears, superstitions or ..t the credulous. Theßochoster Political Gathering The following are the resolutions adopt ed last week by the conservative gathering at. Rochester : Resolved, That this meeting favors an association of conservative Union men for the next Presidential campaign, and that. We invite the union and co operation of all who are opposed to the election to any office in the gift of the people of any per son in political connection or sympathy with Secession, Abolitionism or Nativism of any kind ; that our abiding purpose, in brief, is the suppresaion of the rebellion, the maintenance of the Union, adherence to the constitution, fidelity to the govern• mein, the enforcement of the laws, and opposition to foreign intervention. Resolved, That a national committee be appointed by this meeting, to consist of two members from each State and a Sec retary, who shall be, ex officio, a member thereof ; said committee to have power to fill vacancies; that it shall be the duty of the committee to elect a President and Treasurer, each to call a National Con• veution for the nomination of a President and Vice President of the United States, and to make all necessary arrangements for conducting the presidential campaign, and to confer with other conservative or ganizations, for the purpose of securing united action. R,-,Ndred, That the establishment of the independence of the States in revolt would entail upon the people of the United States evils more grevious and greatly more enduring than all that would result from the continuance of the war; where fore, every patriot should support the ap propriation of all themoney and men ne cessary for a vigorous and successful pros ecution of tlw war against the people in a state of military insurrection until they dissolve their military array against the United Slates, and in good faith return to the : Union under their respective State constitutions existing at the time they re volted, Resolved, That the people of a State, any portion of whom are in insurrection against the United States, should they abandon such insurrection and return to that, allegiance and obedience to the an• thority of the constitution and law of the United States and their respective States, and perform every other act in conducting the Federal Government which the people of any State may rightfully do; provided, however, that all persons who in this re volt have violated any of the criminal or penal laws of the United States will be sutject to be tried according to the forms prescribed by the constitution and laws of the 1 rnited States for such offences. Resolved, That the rights of property, whether in lands, personalty or slaves in the States, is exclusively within the author ity and jurisdiction of the United States respectively; and the owners of all or either of these three classes of property cannot be deprived of it by the Govern ment of the United States, the President, or icily military or civil officer thereof, ex cept for t uhlic use and just compensation, sir 1,,r rimes committed, of which they shall be otivieted according to the !node and t,rin of trial prescribed : by the emisti L'ese/vcii, That the sole end for which the I nit ed States Government has power to carry cu the existing war against the people in revolt is to suppress their in HU horilination and to compel them to .;hey the constitution and the laws of mid is el. -tkeirnitiritarytinhmlaiu'nstoitheimurrirde l „ there is no other lawful end for which the war mild he further prosecuted, and it lieconte the duty of Congress, which the ( . 4 ollAllUtloll charges with the supprea sieli ei the insurrection, at 0111 - 0 to elude the war. That in order to secure a full riipreiientut ion or the entire country in the convention herein provided for. and an energetic prosecution of the campaign, we All upon conservative men of every town and county of the United States to form conservative Union clubs by the election of a president, vice president, secretary and treasurer, and report the same to the secretary of the national cdinmittee. Another Iron-Clad for Charleston The naysl anthoritieg of the Brooklyn navy yard have reported the iron•clad Lehigh ready for active service. She burst a gun some time since, at Fortress Monroe, and came here for a new one.— On her arrival, however, she was taken in hand, and improved in every way. The turret gear, which got out of order in one of the vessels during the first contest, is now rendered inaccessible to projectiles of any description. A huge iron band, no less than five feet in thickness, surrounds the lower part of the turret, and preserves it from all effect of shot. l'he armament of the vessel has been also changed. She has now one of the inch Dahlgren guns, and 200• pound Parrott. titled. The ma chinery of the Lehigh has been also over hauled. and she is now in a better condi• tion than when she sailed first from IVil mington. She is to leave this city to mor row or the day after, it is supposed, for Charleston, to reinforce the 4nnored Heel doing such good service there. An Excellent Law—Troops at Elec By the 95th section of the Act of As sembly of the State of Pennsylvania, of 2d July, 1839, it is enacted that— "No body of troops in the army of the United Mates or of this Commonwealth, shall be present, either armed or unarmed, at any place of election within this Coon • monwealth, during the time o/ such elec tion." The above is from the Philadelphia Age, which journal calls upon the (]over nor to enforce it at the October election. It says "All troops mus. be absent from places of election in this State, on the 13th of October next, or the Democracy will see, if the tioveruor dare not, that the laws of our Commonwealth are not trampled down at Federal behest. It had better be understood thus early in the day, that the farce of the Kentucky elections can not be repeated in Pennsylvania—that we are determined to have a free, fair and hon est electinv, according to Mr laws of our own State —and if the Federal satrap who now rules this Province of the National Government fails to do his duty in the matter, an outraged people will supply the remedy." A Brutal Attack on tho Irish The Boston Commonwealth the organ o Charles Sumner, an extreme Abolitiot print, in epeaking of the Irishtnan, says "We by no means contend that. he is equal in moral and intellectual endow 'limits to the colored man; but we insist that he is capable of a good degree of im provement. When the demagogue is dead and Croton and Cochit ante are universal the will be the the Coperhead's opportu city. Then we will bet on him in small sums and in the race with Sambo, Patrick may nave his distance." This is said of that race that has pro duced Burke, Sheridan; Grattan, Curran, Tom Moore, Daniel O'Connell, Robert Emmett and a host of others, whose names shine resplendent upon the pages of history. This is the race whom itho litsonism place below the negrol What a Rebel Saya of the Negro Soldiers The New Orleans Della, contains the diary of a rebel officer at Port HU(lson, written previous to the .capture of that stronghold, from which we quote the fol lowing testimony, touching the conduct of the negro soldiers, as seen from a iel,pl point of view : "'Me was the battle of the 2701 of May. A demonstration had, indeed, been made upon our extreme left, but it did not amount to a charge. A couple of negro regiments, with a line of white troops be hind them, came up through a growth of willow trees to the edge of the clearing, a distance of between six and seven hun dred yards from a rifle pit we had dug along the Weil which came out at that place. They were tired into by a small party of skirmishers in the woods on their flank and from the thinly lined ride-pit in their (rent, with n couple of small mono Lain howit, , ers which we had there. They broke at our fire, and clustered behind the willow trees, apparently too panic stricken either to advance or run. Our shots tore tlo- fragile willows into frag ments, and the splinters were probably as dangerous its our tire, so that they were stricken down with great havoc. On ac• count of the line id white troops behind Chum, they prof ably had some lillienity in gettin, , , away ; but in% fifteen minutes after they first appeared, none of them were to he seen except the dead, and those who were too badly wounded to crawl att ; and these, some two hundred and fifty in nomber, could be plainly seen through a hpy-glioa among the willows. The nearest ot their dead to our ride pits was two hundred yards distant. This was the last we saw of negro troops at Port Hudson." The "Last Ditch" Abandoned for a "Friendly Tree," The "last ditch" theory has been aban• doned by the Rebels. They recognize rinblegation as possible but insist that they can hold out for a time by turning guer rillas and bushwackers. Thus a writer in the Mobile Neu' that if driven from the open field the can (lire from behind •`friend ly trees,' and seems to have'no doubt at all that this new finality will be quite popular as that which has been abandon ed. lie even looks to Jeff Davis to take the lead in this style of warfare. lie says:-- Our president promised that if the dark• est hour should he forced upon us; when our capital shonld fall,when our last mili tary organization should become scattered or expire, he would join the patriot band of heroes who, from behind some friendly tree, would continue to greet the invader with the crash of the rifle, and make his track one of hlood,famed even in after his tory as the last stand of the freeman. "Friendly trees" will very soon be in wide demand throughout the Rebellious States. Attempt to Assassinate Genera Whipple. The Miner's Journal, of Pottsville, Pa tarn. Whipple, commander at this mili tary post., on Hai urday last rodo out with one of his staff to York Farm, in the af ternoon, and while sitting on his horse viewing the scenery, pop - wont a gun in the distance, and a hall whiz,ed past him. -- His first impression was that some one was at target practicc, but did not dream ounal - nutiormewv4v* such close proximity to the ieneral's body that he was foiced to the conclusion that he was tieing fired at, and by a good marks man. A 'change of base' w 8.9 resolved upon, and as the (leneral t urned his horse to come into town, a third ball came so near the (leneral t person as to cause him to remark that he thought he had never made a Mart' narrow it trape. Good Election Times Among the Kentuckians After the late contest, a Mr. Papineau i of Hastings, sent in a modest little hill, for refreshments supplit it to rot> thirsty voters. lle charge: , glasses of liquor, whii li would to each person present, and 1 !“.r minute for five hours' sternly di le also charges r.igari by the Caine two hundred, each of whom, if the rharges are right, drank over a gallon of li q uor and !flunked seven and a half cigars. 'rho Earthquake at Manilla A few :elditionnl particulars of the ter rible earthquake at Manilla, on the 3d and 4th of June last, have been received. The loss of life among the inhabitants is repre sented to have been very great. The first shock was experienced at about 1 o'clock on the 3d, and several followed until six o'clock the next evening. The Cathedral, the Royal Chapel, and the Churches SL Domingo and St. laabellitT thepalace, military hospital, and Tribunal of Com merce, were all raized to the ground. The San Fernando and French Hotel disap peared, with numerous other houses of note. A Spanish steamer, which was lying off the port at the same time, was wrecked, and all hands lost. The American Bible Society The issues of Sibley and Testaments for the month of July were one hundred and fifty-five thousand volumes, and for the four months of the fiscal yoar, commenc ing on the first of April, the issues were four hundred and seventy-five thousand copies. This is a much larger number than at. any period since the formation of the society for the same length of time. DIED : On Sabbath, Aug. '23d, at 3 o'clock P. M. hire. SA RA 11 LON(1, consort of the late Joseph Long, in the tf3d yea- of hor age. The friends of the family are respectfully in vited to attend the funeral on Tuesday after noon at 4 o'clock from her late residence, No. 39 Ferry street. Religious services at 3% . o'clock. Suddenly of apoplexy_ on Sabbath morning, 211 if:lst J AMFth A. PEW, ER• The funeral will take place on Tuesday morn ing at o'clock from his late residence on Mt Washington• The friends of the family . are in vited to attend• Ou Monday. August 21. at 5.31 a. m . from the effects of a wound received in the battle of M ter( eetboro, ALB KRT RAU PP, aged 26, for merly a member of the 32d Vol• Regiment of Lndiana• The funeral will proceed from the residence his Brother-in-Law. Mr. Edward deither, No 179 First ~ t reat, this morning at 9 o'clock. BIIiRLIA VE'S BITTERS, BtERLIA E'S BIT FEBS, BO:RUM' E'S BITTERS, Tho Groat Cure for Dyspepsia The Great Cure far Dyspepsia, The Great Cure for Dyspepsia iiellinent Hall Price by • SIMON JOHNSTON. ooroor timitlkGold and Jr 0 urth street auL: Itiarnetrs Coeonine. Only cents. The most complete assortment of pun) an genuine Drugs', Medicines, Perfnmery, Liquors, Soaps, Flair finishes, ,te,, de to he loam] in the city. bRA IKE'S PLANTATION BITTERS, Wholesela and Ito si of lowest slidON JOHNSTON. au2.4 Sulithtield and Fourth eta TELEGRAPHIC. FROM GEN, ROSECRANS' ARMY, Chattanooga Attacked by Our Forces. NEMY'S WORKS VERY STRONG CHARLE STON AFFAIRS. ORB WAGNER AND 6REGG MANED eke.. me., 411 c.. dm. L'NRON, ALA,, August 2.3.—The ad vance of the Army of the Cumberland ap peared in front of Chattanooga on the 21st instant, and opened fire on the city at 10 A. U. The enemy replied feom 19 guns, mostly small guns, which did, little dam age, and also with some 33-pounders, which swept the opposite shore, and one fire from which' killed a horse and cut off a leg of Abram McCork, of Lilly's battery. Oor fire was very destructive, and every battery which fired on us was disabled.— Lilly throw shells with great precision into the embrazures of the enemy. The works of the enemy in the retu;are reported very strong. The parapeth are not less than fifteen feet wide. Several water batteries, on a level with the river, have been discovered. Mooted at the wharf they have two steamers, and oppo site the city they have a pontoon bridge of 47 boats. The largest of the steamers was sunk by onr fire, and the smaller one disabled. An attempt to destroy the pontoon was frustrated by a sharp fire of the rebel sharpshooters. Forty prisoners were ta ken, two rebels killed and several wounded. A train of wagons and mules of one bat tery grazing on this side of the river were captured. Contrabands report that Johnston had arrived with two trains of troops on the 20th, superseding Bragg, who has retired to Atlanta. This last statement is cor roborated by citizens. A large fire was discovered near Chat tanooga. No rebel infantry are north,of the river. Storm's brigade of cavalry are in the vi cinity of Smith's Cross Roads, the former at Kingston preparing for a raid. Eleven deserters of company (, let Louisiana, came into Negley's lines last night. They were detailed lately as a crew for the rebel steamer of Point Rock.— They abandoned the steamer on Tuesday, 20 miles below Chattanooga. They report A. P. Hill's and Polk's corps at Chatta nooga. They say the demoralization of the rebel army is complete. 30,000 arm ed deserters are on Lookout mountain waiting for our advance. These men repJrt hundreds of loye mountaineers engaged in piloting desert ors through the mountains. 154A90-,-4(fir,:w; 5 146g:10JLEj t ON nut. Tt, Hun. (;;,I, on Weller, ,` , Y,•rela (II of the Navy Sim Yesterday was begun another en• ries of operations against the enemy's works. Early in the morning General flilmore opened all his batteries upon Fort Sumter, firing over Fort Wagner and the intermediate space,. About the same time I moved up the entire available naval force, leading with my flag in the Wee hawker, followed by the Catskill, Nahant and Montauk—the Passaic and Patapsco in reserve for Sumter. The Ironsides was in position opposite to Wagner, and the gunboats named in the margin at long range, Canandaigua, Captain J. T. Gran; Mehaski • Commander J. B. Creighton ; Cimmarron, Commander A. J. Rages; Ottowa, Lieutenant Commander W. D. Whiting ; Wiseihicken, Lieutenant Com• mender ,1, L. Davis; Daching, Lieutenant Commands'. .1. T. Chapin ; Lodono, lieutenant Commander S. E. Brodhead. As the tide rose the Weehawken was closed to about 450 yards of Wagner, the other three Monitors followed, and the Ironside nee as her great depth of water permitted. After a steady and well direc ted fire Wagner was silenced, about 9:15 m., and that of oar own vessels was slackened in consequence. Meanwhile the fire of our shore bat teries was working effectually upon the gorge of Sumter, which appeared to have been strengthened in every possible man ner. Wagner was silenced, and battery Gregg alone maintained a deliberate fire at the Passaic and Patapsco. It was now noon. The men had been hard at work from daybreak, and needed rest, so I withdrew the vessels to give them dinner. During the afternoon our shore batteries continued the fire at, Fort Sumter, with little or no reply from the enemy, and I contented myself with send• ing np the Passaic and Patapsco to pre vent Fort Wagner from repairing dama ges. The fort replied briskly, but in a brief time left off firing. The fire of the fort coming in steadily, observing the tides to have risen a little, I directed the Weehawken to be carried in closer, and the anchor was hardly weighed when I noticed that the Catskill was also under way, which I remarked to Capt. Calhoun. It occurred to me that Capt. Rogers detected the movement of the Weehawken, and was determined to be closer to the enemy if possible. My attention was called off immediately to a position for the •Weehawken, and soon after it was reported that the Catskill was going out of action with a signal flying that her Captain was disabled. He had been killed instantly, and necessarily the occasion impressed .me deeply with the worth of Capt. Rogers. Brave, intelli• gent and highly capable, devoted to his duty and to the flag under which he passed his life. The country cannot afford to lose such men. Of a kind and generous nature he was always prompt to give relief when he could. I have directed that all respect be paid to his remains, and the country will not, 1 am sure, omit to honor the memory of one who has not spared his life in this hour of trial. 1 have the honor to be, very reaped fully, your obedient servant, Joint A. Ettinonns, 4 Rear Admiral Commanding South A 'antic Squadron. TO-DAY'S AD {7 ERTIBEMB FITS Furniture and Piano at Auc tion. WEDNESDAY MORNING, AUG V 26th, at lu o'clock, at the Magnin mil Auction House, No. 56 Fifth street.will be add a quantity of household and kitchen .furnitura, comprising. Walnut Field Pest Dedsteml,lligh and Low Poct de, 1M abommy Side Tablet, Walnut Spring Seat Arm Chair, Mahogany Sofa r eat i.eirer, Extension Table new, Kitchen aid Dining Tables and Chair:, Venit•an Desk, Ingrain Rag and Lta.r Carpets, Alatrasses, Quoensware, Kitchen Utonsita• A leo, one Piano. T. A. M'CLELL AND, Auctioneer. Superior Household Furni- ture at Auction. ON FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 28th. at 10 o'clock, at the residence No. 156. Third street, will be sold the entire famishment of new and superior Furniture__, Carpets, &c., B comprising in part, Mahogany air beat Sofa, tS Mahogany Hair Seat 011448, Mahogany Hair' Seat Arm Rocker, Marble Top Mahogany Pier Table, alma Hat Rack, Solid Walnut Exten sion Table, IVardrobe, Solid Walnut French and Field Post BedA'erillF, Walnut Enclosed Wash lands, Tams Cane Smt (Mais. do do Stocker, Ottomans, Hitt and Mahogany (Frame Loosing Classes, Char dollars. Gas Fixtures, Mantle Ornaments, Vanitlan and Buff Binds, Matrasses Feather Beds and Bedding, Kitchen Utensils,Large Cooking Stove, Queensware &c, Carpets— ncludecl in the above sale will ha found one rich Plush Velvet carpet, Brussels and Ingrain do, chamber and rag do, Brussels and Stair do, Dining Room, Hall and St_ir Matting. Rugs, &e Special attention is called to this sale, the far • n iture and carpets be rig well kept and in use but a short time, T. A. M'CLEI.L.I.ND, Auctioneer. OFFICE OF TUE CNNTRAI, BOARD OR ETA - CATION, } Pittsbn , gh, August 21,1,1363. rrTHE RE-EXAMINATIGN OF CANDI DATES for admission to the Hitch School will commence Wednesday, August 6th, at 9 o'clock A. M, an24-2t JOHN A. SERGEANT. Sea'y. rikEMOCRATIC MEETING IN T II E Fourth Ward, Allegheny will he hell on Wednesday evening, the 2f.th instant, at 7 o'clock, In Mr. Beilstein's Ball, corner of East Lane and canal. au24-3t 5 ftnnq Od _ 50.7 e g't. dO 5M ct s c.: ml- - ff:t . n • a vat 5 o _ • -,. , 'A W=o ? I gKi";s . W i 0 /?;••• :9 - 4..r , 5. r h.„ Els til F .V O P eM O= 2 1 z tg ... CID Tiej: 0 4 a o rT ,--, 0 V I PW 0 "I 1 4 , * 4 l . : X c '01" b '.4..?4 , .. m c gn,'," r t -1 ~ ; y0 ; o i s T , r, 0 '''4 0 ' 4 .., E.,., 1 i. t tit i f 1..: ? .. 3 f l / 4 • 1 k ' t$ P 4° 3::: A Cr n g.GbU t ii -r 4, ,, '' C 74 •Y'. 4' ... ii .--. z ''' 7:7 ' I' 'g' - -; - `4:L - ',: 0/0 :v g. • Ct '7" a C It' GARIN G & SON s, LLET DAS 0., W P EM ERSON, .1 W TOSE. MILLER, GIBSON & €O. GRUPE & KINDT, .1 elk FISCHER, 18 Pianos From the above Factories. from SMS to O. Just received and for sale by CHAS. C. MELLOR, au22-d Yr 81 Wood street, Pittsburgh SUMMER DRESS GOOD Selling at ONE HALF PRICE RUGUS & RAMIE, Corner Fifth and Market streets INTERESTING TO THE LADIES! We are selling, at a REDUCED PRICE Cotton Hosiery, Gloves, Lace Mitts, Embroideries, li ells, Sleeves. Waists, dir•e., Hoop Skirts, slightly soiled, hall price Wo are receiving the latest style,: of Head Dresses,Ne t P 4, New Fall Dress Trimmings BELTS, BUCKLES, &'c WHOLESALE ROOMS up stairs BIAORIMI & (CLYDE, No, 78 Market St., anls-4Auf Between Fourth and Diamond, 50161 ROS S MeLAITES PILLS AND Vermifuge, just received bi aEO. A. KELLY, Ju3 Eadonaf)6.. Allegbany. BARRELS FRESH PLITTY IF "bladders." Aim received and for sale by, OEO. A. KELLY a ma) 69 Floral Bt., Alleghaily. TO-DAY'S ADVERTISEMENTS i,79.z.ritr-w0 4 4 -= ''' Po ,;6g . .. d ~... ..3 lij opSx.. - 0 .7, - cnw 4 ... t 1 - V ' 0 ~..,' tt 1' COC, 'i. r ,;I 4 g. • IA 0.. , .px.Z.W.:1 t yw. '; g Fa l4l. =s.4±. m CO HI ~.. ..7.ln s e - 2. 1 3 > nl-IV,:nr. ••.,, w C^ ". , RapiP.,...,"..4 ii -- Efic ,. .‘4..'5 - 3 • 5,. ; . ) 1 4 R'i: , _n-. - o MI ~.,. p. c) -'4.op i gopaa-i 2 , 1 AA N.P`'• 173 . I' 4 • ;3,ll.ll2sgAril m ri - -..... p..- ~ .1, ?. F, . et W., I I. PI im 0. 1. AM'g. Tm •,:tZlP. a_ 4Ptim • ..11.. , zi l c 4 - 4 fi -, ''',.TF.•,-a5 ...a ' F.tv= o 4s-: - -! . ,'.t•=. 0 .- at e— 1 .... 4 W ver',ll:Pn.p., l ~.. IT) gC ,, ; 139 -0:1V I ,:r =••• Vri 01 , •,?"r - or.g..m • PA 7:4 ,i.,:,... , -.2g CI .?_.,•° ti (") ' 7 ' ,, :. 1 • - . 1 5 , ---TO ' ll et - 5: M ,14.4 0 5 - ° • ''-,"( • oL ;p-p..P5.1.a.r4 NOTICE. 10/ ACVOUNT OF THE InGilt PRICE 1 1-1 paid for teed the 141i11tnom in the vicinity of Ptttaburgh wall. on and after the let day of t eptember, charges cents per quart. Caah every weak. au24-4t WfiLDoN. JNO. KELLY WELDON & KELLY, Gas airs Steam Fitters, PLUMBERS AND BRASS FOUNDERS, 164 WOOD STREET, NEAR SIXTH, PITTSBURGH, PA Kri- Pampa said and repaired. Proprietors and Manufacturers of Daltin's Patent Water Drawer and Musgrave's Patent Gas Vaoking and Heating Stove:, auZ2 ' Oil EI ALII. A LOT AND IWO STORY BRICK ..tR. house. eebtaining FE , TTR RIoMS AND A CELLAR The lot has a front of 48 feet on Fulton street, and runN bock 114) feet to Crawford street. For 'urther particulars apply to ti NO. EN(ILEKINtI, No. 3V."2 Liberty street. uu22 lwd WANTED, Twenty - five Tinners and Sheet Iron Workers on Government Work, steady employ ment and good Wages, Apply at 121 Linn street, Cincinnati, Ohio. ant? tkd 0. HOLDEN & CO. FINE FARM AT AUCTION. THE UNDERSIGNED EX pose to public sale, on the premises, his farm, cons sting of 80 ACRES AND 23 PERCHES) situate on the Baptist Church Road, about one mile from White Hall, in Baldwin Township, and known as the "CARSON FARM." On Thursday, August 27th, at 2 o'clock P. m. Said farm is all cleared and under good tenee but about twenty-aeres; has.• frame dwel.ing house, log barn, and other fratue buildings erected thereon. Alsb, an Orchard of Fru.t. Is a'so well watered, having three never tailing springs. Said farm is susceptible of being divided into two smaller farm+, as the public road runs through it, leaving 32 acres on one aide and IS acres on the other. It will he sold in two parts if desirable. Sale positive. Tenns mods known on day of sale. Coal is supposed to underlie the whole tract. auls JAM Li.iltintlOWAN. AT TH E piTirsitunan DRUG HOUSE: TR tl 55 EA, 5 17 P pe RTERS, Shoulder Braces, Mastic Stockings, Ritter's celebrated Radical Cure Trtm. Ritter's celebrated Radical Cure.Trusg, Ritter's Patent Infant Truss, m ar ,h, jeoieora , tw u s Patent Umbilical Thlse. ' March's celebrated-Truest!. Marsh's Ladies and limits' Shoulder Braces. Marsh's Youths infant's Shoulder Braces Dr. Fitch's Plain Abdominal Supporter!, Dr. Fitch's Silver Plated Abdominal Rupponers. Dr. Fitch'a Ladies and dents' Shoulder Braces, Bitters' Patent Abdominal Supporters. Mrs. Betts' Abdom nal Supporters. Marsh's London Abdcminal Supporter?, Riggs' Hard Rubber Trues, French, English and American Frusses in great variety. An ex perieni Physic Earl always in attsndanee Syringes, Breast Pnmps, Nursing Bottles, Bandages, &c., At the Piththurgb Drug Muse . TORRENCE & M'GARR, A sdrusosniss. corner Fourth and Market sts.. Pittsburgh. inl2-Iyde LLOYD'S STEEL PLATE Telegraph, Express AND RAILROAD TWA PS . - Cl TIII Caned States, CANADAS AND NEW BRUNSWICK. SIZE S FEET BY 6 FEET. Accompanying each main map is an independ ent map of THE EASTERN STATES, In a scale ten times as large as the main map: SIZE FOUR FEET IN DIMENSIONS: The two maps together show 60,000 'Railroad- Stations. Sold Only by Subseciption. SUBSCRIPTION BOOK NOW OPEN. 30131 N W. PITTOCIL, Sole Agent. anal Opposite the Postoffiee,. TRUSSES, TRUSSES, TRUSSES. TRUSSES, TRUSSES, TRUSSES, TRUSSES, TRUSSES, TRUSSES, A superior article of Trusses. The latest im provement. Hard Rubber Trusses, Hard Rubber Trusses, Hard Rubber Trusses, Those wishing a goad Truss and at a low ce should call and examine my stock before put chasing elsewhere. Superior Carbon Oil, Burning Fluid. Suite Ash and Pot Ash, Perfumery and Patent Medicines of all A large and. complete assortment of Gum Elastic and Hard Rubber Syringes. Remember the Place. At Joseph Fleming's Drug Store, At Joseph' Flemings Drug Stare, At Joseph Flemings Drug Store, Corner of the Diamond and Market streets. Corner of the Diamond and Market streets. an2o it) N I, X' TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS. - IMMIGRANTS brought out from Liver.. Ind pool, LondonderaTt, Cork, or Gal way, to New York, in ST CLASS PdAIL. SUMMERS, for Twenty-Flue Dollars. Parties also brought out by Bailing Vessel at lowest rates. ADP/Y to . O'N.llll. Chronicle budding , 70 Flfth at., D Pittabarah. jyistf 50 Bbls ROOFING- CENCIONT, FOR COATING OIL ;TANKS, For sale by LUOTON, OLDDEN dik aul9 Offic e qtox. Fifth and Wood am, 24 go*,