1 . . . , ; '-;.:''''.....--,• • t C ' . , ;T - ''..'1.5 1-I`ll ; - '.. , ::"- - f:i . " 7 '.t. ': -- r - ":, 4. 4 r-4-'' -- -: ' • '-''' '' - i:- , .": -•-•• -; - 4 -'' " '',' ,-.---,-: ' - - L"•;7 ,:t_ .',' :I -";- -_-:• „- 2 :I: .7 1. ~': . ;-- - . ' - '-7,,. , ..' , !' :-, •- ,'.. 3: '..:.!'' 1 • ''' i '..... - - i i'-- . ,-- - .. , ~,, . : \ : , . N. ; • ....\:. _. 1 .. .0, - -,•L_ °f l ''', ':,:-. ::.:::, I.t i I _, . .. • 1 1 . •- , , __ . , , _ . ... • : „ .. . _, , . , . MI MI =I OE '.-'t'iliV - CLU.R.--'k .STONER.: 4011*,:ilipiitozi. 6IAXEDLII4G .OPERATION DEFEATED. -10 n 3tonday - ,lnorning of last week a 'Man, giving_ his name as Joseph- . H. Miller, of ,the NoWtirk AdreiOsei, and representing himself as a Unioti:Solo;catne here in 'the Hagerstown traipl And while the cars were ,waiting. he gave Mr. Gilmore, the telegiaph operator, the follow ing dispatch: Cli.tlistatsuctao, June 20. Denning Duer, 53; William - St. New York. aintberland 111J10 lose Imago before night. Bulle tin! will-chronicle startling events this P. M. --JOSEPH R. Mitla% .„ • Newark Advertiser. Viteithove dispatch !waned:upon its face tie ,he'a mere business affair,. and Mr. Gilmore laid it aside'-'to be' forwarded. After the train left he sent it to Philadelphia, but in a short time the dispatches given • :below passed over the wires from Hagerstown, and his suspicions were at,`OneeAropsed that Mr: Miller was the agent Of an association of stock gamblers who had re solved upon treating a paOie in storks by re porting Hie invasion of CuMberland Valley by the rebels; and ho held the . .Hagerstown dis yacht:a:4 here and stopped Mr: I:titer's dispatch inyhiladelphia, until the military authorities eould be consulted-about them. The dispatch- os signed "Union Scout" and "Scout" were; he aseertained,fill sent by Miller, and the fact that he ova's giving information of a rebel - raid - and passing the hey]-quarters'of :Major Geis. Couch, the officer in.6mmand of the I:art:neat; without communicating with him uta4e - . it evident either'that he waspublishing false . 'statements to - create a panic, or that he did not want the military authoeities to know of the rebel advance. The dispatches sent 'from Hagerstown were as folloWs - : • . . IngEnsrow3i, Jane O. TI. - 11. Craig, AsSoeiated Press, New York. teolt for, important letter from this plane by mail 'UNION SCOLT: The same dispatch visa directed to be sent to , 1 R. L. Davis, Inquirer office, Philadelphia. Thei other one was as follows: - . I.lAunnsrows, June 20. Mayor Wills, Trenton, New Jersey. Last nig.ht 2,00 busholi wort, brought over below Failing, Waters and stored two nines this side o,; tomae—l.l,ooo more will, be stores, at same plitiffin -alew'days, as fears exist that the quick mode of communicating is tapped. _ Scout will —gee Curtin in person to-day as to other matters; W inehcher has been occupied by the Con federates. Sigel has a force of one hundred day men, at MartiuSburg, and Couch is at Chantbersburo. Be thr Ara! in market if you con; as yotishatiefired news as to contract, Parker's laborers Will be want ed to-morrow. SCOVT., ''The same man had lent a, dispatch through • the previous Saturday to a man in New Jersey, stating that "tee can_ get as much grain as we stoat:* The , dispatches": and . facts Connected with them were submitted to Gen. Couch, and as the representation's Of - a rebel advance in this direction Were wholly false, ,he very properly suppressed the dispatches, and retained them in military custody; and by permission of the military .authorities we give them publicity. It is eminently proper that the people should know how their tranquility has been threatened by reckless_ gamblers, in ft desperate attempt to de press the prices of a particular stock in New York. „Had the -dispatches been published at "P. M." on Monday in New York and Phila delphia, as was designed, a panic would inevi tably have followed in Cumberland Coal Stock, and before the falsehood could have been cor rected, the gamblers would have bought "twen ty"' below the ruling price. The Cumberland Coal Company works vain able mines near pmniberland, Maryland, and the ; stock is one of the gamblers' "fancies" on the stock-boards—that is it is bought and sold fictitiously, without either owning or pretending to deliver the certificates. Men simply bet from day4o day that it will be worth so much to morrow or next week, and nominal sales are q uide„ When the time expires, the parties set tle by paying the difference—their winnings or leases. 4. combination had evidently been made to depress this stock, and as it would be sensi bly effected by rebel possession of Western Maryland 'and Cumberland Valley, it was ar ranged doubtless that Mr. Miller should act the part of a -Union Scout, and at the proper time spring upon the bulletin boards of the Cities the "startling ever:da f t—that is positive and circum stantial accounts of a rebel invasionand then the gamblers would go in and fleece the holdeks of Cumberland Coal Stock while the panic raged. It Seems pretty evident that Mr. Den ning niter, 53 William Street, New Ycrk; and Mayer Wills, of Trenton, were in the secret, and 'parties to the attempted fraud; and the Philadelphia Inquirer was to be used—we trust by ithpositiou upon its proprietor—to spread , the news and aid in getting up the panic. ' Gov. 'C c uithi was to be called upon "in person!' by the scout,_ and was doubtless to be impressed with the positive information that 2,000 rebels were -already in Maryland and 11,000 more about to enter, for the purpose of invading Pennsylvania, with thelope of inducing him to issue a call for troops and thus add to the gene ral; excitement: But Gov. - Curtin seems not toluive been "taken in and done for" in that Way; and Gen, Couch took possession of the neatlyarranged dispatches—go the Speculation *Cut under and the gamblers were probably sadder _if not wiser .men about the time they confidently expected "Cumberland must lose twenty l" ' ...rart of the grand plan was carried out, but „Owing to the failure of the vital part of the scheme, the little parts that were played were *imply ridiculous: It was evidetitlY arranged ihat a "feeler" was to be thrown out just before tl4 - grand telegraphic deministration of-Mr. Mil ler was to he made, and accordingly the York and kuladelphis papers of Monday we: e tiiatedtri)tAPatch purporting, to come frt ai New 'jersey, doubtless from. Mayor Wills—stating that the one hundred day men at Trenton were ordered to HarriSburg, Mid that "a small three of rebela :tient on. destruction, is stated to have entered the Cumberland Valley. They are reported to be`tlm advance guard of a large detachment." The 4 . - ..),000 bushels"--to be rendered 2;000 re . bels-,—acroie - the Potomac, was to be posted - on the bulletin's at 12P. M., of that day ; .with, the promise •of 11,000 more just coming, and ;theretipen . Cinnberland •Coal was to topple for the amusement and profit of , 'the' combination - of gamblers. Relying upon this, an article appecired in' the Philadelphia Inquirer of the next day, purporting to be a special dispatch from Hagerstown, as follows: IT u;ERsTowN. Md.. MptidnyAlorningvinne 20 During last night a' rebel cavulry force of some two thousand forded the gotomrtc (which is now very low) some. two or three miles below Falling Waters. The scout whet trailed them from Thor oughfare Gap , says the retttainder, b large force, are near 'Winchester, which place has_ been in.rebel hands two or three days. 'No co has yet been done to the Baltimore mid Ohio : Railroad, or to the_ telegraph. but the scout-saps that they have 'die tel- - e,graph tapped between here and Martinsburg. and so Gen,-Sigel does not use it, They will destroy the i:Alltona as soon as, the re mainder of the command' is safely this side. For prudential reasons, the enemy ishciiping asquiotas possible at present. The -,.. - oree is headed by Moseby, who seems to be aiming 'only to secure a fresh Sup ply of cavalry horse', ,The hews the invasion just begins to be whispered , this place. Some persons, who:became acquSinted with Moseby while he acted as Provest 'marshal here during the Get tysburg battle, seem tmite willing to welcome him again. Amang others dui - greatest 'consternation prevails. The foregoing dispatch never passed over tlie ieires; but was evidently; brought'out in Phila. : delphia by some one ;wife was into the opera tion and must have impo'sed upon the Iniuirer. We have notes yet noticed any explanation of it in the columns of thatpaper. —So ended a grand scheme of a combination of stock gamblers to produce a panic in prices by a carefully laid plan. to astound the cities t with details of a , destructive rebel force in our ;Valley. The stock of the Cumberland Coal • Company was a little 'thasettled.by it, but it did not decline one per cent., and the gamblers had only disappointment and expense for their pains. BY a recent Act OfAssembly, the abatement of 5 per cent. heretofore allowed to counties on the amount of all State Taxes paid into the State Treasury prior to the Ist of September: in any year, has been repealed; and in itsstead,- a penalty of 5 per cent. Will be added on all State taxes that remain unpaid on 'and after the first .of August, to be charged in the dupli : , Cate against each delinquent , tax payer-in ar- rears at that date. A FEW Philadelphians,mdmirers of the sol dier's friend have gotten up a magnificent 61i10. king gown, slippers, ran, etc , which is inten ded for our patfiaictitivernor. The articles are made of dark colored velvet, lined with rich silk, very neatly padded, and altogether beautiful. /be cap and slippers are, elabor ately embyoidered with gold bullion, arranged in artistic style. PROM THE 21ST CAVALRY. The 21st in Battle--‘A Brilliant Charge-- Col. Boyd Wounded—The Regiment Complimented—Nine Killed and For ty.nine Wounded. CoriesDondenee of the Franklin Ropository CAMP ONE Alfrbs rao CITICKAHOWN Y RIYEEt. Juno, Bth. 1864. Since I wrote ylon last, our Regiment has gone through some exciting scenes, and has also been marched and worked pretty hard. The night after our arrival at the front the Rebs made a fierce attack upon our lines, and our Regiment was ordered to a position nears copse ofwood, where we had to throw up breastworks and in it'short time we had a pretty good linef works, although the Reba tried tto stop our cork by shelling us. Our Regiment was not attacked, however, but we lost two men while lying awaiting them. •,2d Lieut. R. Water was struck upon the side of the neck with a shell and in stantly killed,and another loan wounded, both of Co. E. Dining the night we weramoved about a good deal and early next morning the fight opened with an awful roar of artillery and mus ketry, and noiv came some hard work for the 21st: We were brought into line of battle were" ordered to gain a position about a quarter of a mile in, front of ourartillery and breast- works, at the command " forward," while a perfect storm of shell ; grape, canister and mus ket balls flew around us e , The screaming of our own shells combined • With the thunder of the Rebel batteries and musketry, was enough to make the stoutest heart 'tremble. But not a man stopped. not one quailed, but onward we pressed and gained all that was required of us. There we lay and fought all day, under a terri ble cross-fire from a Rebelbattery, and here our brave Col. Boyd fell. Such coolness and bra very as was shown by him that day has seldom been witnessed. While sitting down cheering his men and smoking his pipe, he was struck by a ball from somd Rebel sharp-shooter, and had to be taken off the field. I have not been able to obtain a list of the killed and wounded, but we have lost nine killed and forty-nine wounded. The Robs loss must have been very heavy, for they charged upon us once but We re pulsed them handsomely, and they retreated during the night and carried nearly all their dead and wounded with tlieth but in one place where they had a battery I saw twenty-six dead horses. There has not been much fighting for 'three of four days. Old U. S.'is 'after some thing which you will hear of pretty soon. Our Regiment has been eoniplimented by the 'gtMeraloffieers in the Corps, and well may they du so, for to send a body ofmertin such a }flute when they have never : have, been drilled one 'hour iu infantry movements-was a cruel• test. The men are all anxious to hear from home, as d we hp!, not received a mail since leaving C ham bersburg. You will hear from me whenever auy thing of interest transpires. w: CAA inIERSBURG,.PA., WEDNESDAY,` ItTNE '29,, 1864. POLITICAL INTELLIGENCE. -- 7 Sydney E. Edgarton, of Ohio, was;nomina ted by : the President as Govern9r of the Terri tory of Montana. —Thos. B. Searight has received the nomi nation of the Democrats of Fayette county for re-election to the State Legislature. The lastidea of the Copperhead party is to run Electoral Tickets in each State, without naming the candidates for President and Vice President. This is leaving the door open for Jeff. Davis. —Silas Woodson has been nominated to the Senate as Chief Justice for Idaho, in place of Sydney Edgarton, who has been appointed Governor of the Territory of Montana. —The Armstrong Democrat, the old Demo cratic organ in that county, has hoisted the tick et of Lincoln and Johnson. It assigns as a rea son frir this course, the necessity of the union of all-parties for the safety of the Union. —There will be three elections this year; the first for or against the Constitutional Amendments on the 2nd day of-Afloat; the General Election on the 2nd Tuesday of Octo ber ; and the Presidential election in Novem ber. . —The Chicago Tim&s, the - gieat Copperhead newspaper of the the West, endorses Gen. Fremont's letter of acceptance, and speaks in flattering terms of the General. There is noth ing in the world. like a man beibg appreciated by bis friends. —lndiana county has declared in favor of the nomination,of Hon. Win. M. Stewart for Con gress by a vote of 1415 to 540 for Hon. John Covodo. Westmoreland has , instructed for Covode, and Fayette i.vill'prObably instruct for Hon. ',Smith Fuller. —The Lawrence Journal- r a well known De mocratic paper, published 4t, New Castle, saw rence county, has abandoned the Democratic party, and hoisted to the mast-head the names of Lincoln and Johnson, the Union candidates for President and Vice President. —Hon. John Covode has been presented for Congress by the Unidnists oeWestmoreland county, and James R. McAfee and James Mc Elroy nominated for Assembly. Westmoreland elects thre6 members with Indiana, George E. Smith, of the last named county, is the other Union nominee. They shouid all be elected.• I —The Union men Of Washington county have nominated Hon. George V. Lawrence for Con gress ; R. R. Reed and James Kelly for Assem bly and E. U. Smitit.for Sheriff: Mr. Lawrence has servedfour years in the House and six in the Senate of this State, and is an able and ex perienced legislator . . licasrs. Reed and Kelly are the present efficient members. - —Hon..Tbos. Williams has received 477 Ma jority ovor Col. Finley, in Armstrong, for re nomination as the Unioil candidate for Con gress in the Tid •district. He bad previously carried Allegheny, so that two of the three coun ties have instructed for hint, and he will there fore.be the candidate and will be triumphantly re-elected. He is an able man, and has been faithful to the great cause in Congress. —lt, is ascertained, writes the Washington correspondent of the Chicago Tribune, that Fremont's letter of acceptance was submitted to a member of the Democratic National Con vention before being sent, and was modified at that member's suggestion in several important particulars. The paragraph relative to eenfia. FAIR, PHILADELPHIA-UNION. AVENUE. cation, for' example, , being• framed in aecor- 1 —Gen. W. B, Franklin arrived in New York dance with his views, despite the opp . osition . l on - Sunday week; and in the - afternoon left for of some of Pr. - einont's radical friends. BostOn. Tie comes north on Sick-leave `to re meeting of the ' Mozart General Commit. auk his health, as he is still suffering from the tee was hold last week at Mozart Hall, to make wound' received in the Red River expedition. arrangement for attending the Natimial Con- —The Right Reverend Bishop M'Closkey, of vention at Chicago. , Fernando Wood made a, Albany; his received the official announcement- speech, ins Which he asserted that the mamma of from Rome of his .appointment to the Arch= the democratic party were inSaVor of an fin-- episcopate of New York;' in place of the- late 'Bishop Hughes. He will soon, itis understood; mediate cessation - of hostilities, a view of enter 'upon the discharge of histiew duties", reconstructing the 'Union through the medium of peaceful negotiation. Ho contended that it —The wound received by Maj. Gen. Han was the duty of the-Chicago Convention top_ut cock, at Gettysburg, a, year • ago, has again be a clean peace ticket in the field, and hinted that• come troublesome, and ho has been compelled if that course were' not pursued a peace ticket to ask to be relieved for a time. Gen. Han would he, nominated under the auspices date cock expects to resume his command in a few Woods and a few other radical pew ,men of weeks. In the meantime, Gen. Birney will the Vallandigham stripe. From the tenor of have command of the Second Corps. Mr. 'Wood's speech, which wris loudly applaud-1 • —The President has nominated for Judge ed by the meeting, it 'is evident that there ie Advocate-General,with rank of Brigadier, Jos. trouble 'brewing in the democratic camp. - Holt of lientuAy, the present incumbent, and —The Deinoeratie National. Convention has been declared postponed by the' Belmont Com mittee until the 29th of August ; but Col, Thos. B. Florence claims to be•chairman of the gee uine•Committee and ho resists the postpone ment. He' has issued a call for a meeting of the National Committee at Washington to-mor mow,the-Sath, "for, the purpose of general.cOn saltation and the deliberate consideration of important business." He don't seem to relish the Idicawber, system. The following is Bel- , mont's official notice of postponementi.: It a meeting of the Executive Committee Of the. National Democratic Cominittee, held at New York on the 22d day of June, 1864, it wits voted, that in deference to the desire of a very large number of the leading members of the conservative Union Democratic patty through out the Union, the meeting of the Democratic National Convention be postponed to Monday, August 29,4864, at 12 o'clock, at noon, at Chi cago. AZMUST BEIMOTA Pres e t.' Frederick 0. Pierce, Seep. "PELSON AU. - • —Gen. Brooks has been assigned the com mand of the 10th claim in place of Gen. Gil more. -4en. Gillmore, who has been relieved of command, and ordered to report at Washing ton to await further orders, has arrived there. ''''Professor Wm. 11,:Allen; late.Prehident of Girard College, has been elected Professor in the Agricultural College at Bellefonte, Centre . 5 _ county, Pa. —A rebel paper says Pout. Gen. Polk was struck by a cannon shot and instantly killed.— Gene. Johnson,Hardee, and Jacksim werewith hiutwhen he fell." . _ --Hon. Isaac Slenker, Auditor General of the State, who has .been quite ill for some past, is still in critical condition. We regret to learn that doubts areentertained of his re covery.- j—Mrs 'Stephen A. Douglei, while the guest of Gen Cameron, in -Harrisburg, recently, re ceived a telegnuu announcing that her only_ brother was morta4 wounded.. She left ini mediately for Washington. _ , , —Ex-Gov. and Gem Henry A, Wise is WTI pliv, notwithstanding a silence;unaceountable for him, had given rise to a belief that he was dead, It appears he had command at.:Peters• burg when Gen: glints Made .his latO Wise improved the - treeirsion , by,issuing a otin• gratulatory order :as , long us COnareselonal speech. - _ for Assistant Judge-Advocate-Generai, with the rank of Colonel, Maj. Wm. ill'Kee Dunn of In diana, formerly a member of Congress, and now indge-Advocate'of the Department of _Mis souri. • SUMMARY OF WAR NEWS. —ln the matter of resistance to the Enroll ment law in Fulton County, has been de cided by the United States Court of that dis trict that the law is entirelyconstifutional. —The horse stealing raid. of Gen. John Mor gan turned out somewhat disastrously to that valiant knight of the -roads His marauding -gang was; defeated by Gen. Burbridge at Cyst thiana, with the recapture of all the stolen proli erty and the total demoralization of the inva dors. Good-bye, John f - - —Maj. Gen. Smith, in his general order gee. gridulating the Bth corps; says :—" To the coloi; ed troops comprising the division of General' Hincks the General commanding would Calf the attention of his command. With the vela-_ runs of the 18th corps they have stormed the works of the enemy and carried Them, taking guns and prisoners, and in the whole affair they have displayed all the qualities of good "561.: diers " ' ' . —The editor 'of the Albany Evening4oui: .oat, who very recently visited the army of the Potomac, writes The strength of the army is as great to.4lay as when it crossed the Rapi dan. Our losSes up to the first of June, did . not exceed 40,000. These figures are from the official returns, and embrace everything.. Our lasses since have not exceededlo,ooo, and more than 60,000 fresh troops have joined Gen. Grant since the 254 of May." —The President returned from a brief visit to Grant on Friday. Washington dispatch of that 'dap sails The President speaks to day of the condition of tirmy, matters in thp very highest term of , confidence. He sts3ts that: Gen. Grontfeels'as'certain of success as though it wers atrectify au ,accomplished ,faa. 'Redid not importune the President for more troops,' or complain of- want of-support, bat reports' that all goes.well." Anather dispatch of.thO same date sayS t "There is the highest anthori4 ty far the , statement that Gen. 'Grant me.tbei President, when ' -at his headquarters, the assn= ranee of the certaiUty.4 his taking. Rithnwnd. Let the eonntry trust Grant--and bad him*. —Maj..Gen„ Stahl, of the army of ,the Shen andoah, (Gen: Hunter's command,) togethet - with a goittoa hiaatitlF, =Wed .at Martinot; * VOL.- 71.; - ;-.TllKElsica: ;061 burg, Va., .on 1 • Thuraday„-from Stanton:_ lie brought with bini I,2ooConfederate prisonerti,i who were taken in the fightat , that plaieigiozif) ding, them with a detachment oick*atii, tion of Ewin,g's battery, ond,the,2Bth Ottio_regty invent. in the engagement at Stanton Ebel:halo*, loss is stated at some 300itilled' and woundA, and the Confederate' ciii ii'set,dewli in killed'and wounded, and abeut2,po.prisoU7., ers, about one ball of the latter being sick 'lry the hospitals = when taken: Gen. Stahl's wetted. is of slight character. FINANCIAL. =Geld, for -6-oeenlation, bits rea'o!ieti Ne74', Ycirk from Earope.- -The $75,000,000 national loan bag. ; been, ; taken atran average-of fl4i. - - • —The Penns.iliqinin ROlroad'toinpanylk4 , donated $50,000 'to -the Slate orphan' children of sailors and soldiers': . , , . . , —The steamers on the 18th for Europe took 1 out specie as follows: "Edinlinigh; $575,000; Bremmi, $28,000; and tlie.`,Yirginia;,ssoo;oo6. I t The Coiaica, for HaVaia, too 141.50,000: : _, --In univver ton resolution, of the Housethe, SureOm cif the Treasury" fur,nbdies 'a statement of thi,publie debt of the - United States lip to:i June 14, 1864 the totels'.'dsv,hich are; nu fel-, lows Debt bearing interest in coin • $&37,134.1.0b1, ' - Debt bearing interns} in lawful money . -3') , 700.20' Debt on whichinterest hagoeMdd' - • 370.177 -Debt bearing-no interest: •' ' :501,333.104' Total, ' ..$1,719,595,168 , . -The annual' interest in, coin is $50,823,571 ; 45, in !awful money. $20,876,057. 70. Total in. terest ' $71,699,730 15. The ten forty bonds'` athotiat to '570,239,250; the three years thirty , per cent notes t05118:67:7,650; United -ta.teg notes outstanding to $43101,330'; fraction_al - currency outstanding ,to $21,031,948 85.• The, remainder of the debt bearing no interest con. • gists mainly:of unpaid 'requisitions. • • LINCOLN'S VISIT TO GRANT. A correspondent of the Herald, writing 'froth the Army of 'the Potomac mi the :22nd inst., thus described the visit of President Lincoln to Lieut. Ge n. Grant and the army. The en Presidt • , • returned to , Washington on Wednesday even--= ing last, • _lt is announced that, he found Gees. - Grant and Meade unshaken - in their 'confidence of early possession of Virginia: Yesterday- about - one o'eloek long, , gaunt, 'bony man, with a' queer admixture of: the comical and doleful in his countenunce, - that reminded One of a professional. undertaker cracking a dry-joke;-undertook to - reach .4he General's tent by scrambling through a hedge- , row and coming' in the back way-alone. .He - was stopped•bv one of the hostlers, and told td, "keep out of here." The- individual 'in black : replied -that he thought General Grant would allow• him inside,• and strode ahead.. "Yoh% damned soon 'find 'out,". was - yelled in reialy: , On ,reaching the guard he waa stopped with, "No 'Sanitary folka: - allowed After.. some parleying the intruder was compelled.taP:' give his name,-and announced • himself- to he Abraham Lincoln, President of the. United , States, desiring an interview with Gen. Grant. The - guard saluted and allovved him to pass, Gen. Grafit recognized him as he stepped un- • der the large " fly" in front of his tent, rose and.. shook hands with -him cordially. and , then in- , troduced him to such-.members-ofthe staffaC were present and anacqriainted. It was-ascer tained thatthe President: had just -arrived -ort the City of-Baltimore, and was seconipanied by.. his 'sow " Tad," • Assistant- Secretary, .of the Navy -Poi,. Mr. Chadwick, proprietor of - lard's' Hotel, and a marinc•'.giard. The cow, - versation soon took a wide free-and-easy range until dinner was• announced. -The President was only seated; ate. mush' as other mortals,: managed to ring in three -favorite jokes during: the meal, under the plea of illustrating the.top- : ice discussed; and kept . every, one ea the got • sine for others till the party rose. , • • He was very naturelly desirous orridingto the front, se,-at fouro'clocki horses were , brought :I up,-.the President mounted on Gen.:Gra:2or thoroughbred Ciucinnatus, the General, .gas Egypt; "Tad" on the General's block, pony Jeff. Davis, and, - accompanied :by .a large pro?../ .portion of the staff-and escort, the.party..rode the headquarters-of Gen.;Wright,,commandinw, the Sixth corps, where Gen.. Meade and eta* 'met them. The - location cominands. asizoodtii view of - Petersburg as can,yet be obtaintilfroni: ,our lines. Maps were brought out atul cxamin.s ed, the position of the _army explained, itafu-, titre operations 'discussed,: the_ steeples: andk spiret of the city observed-as Well as the dtlit, and stroke would Jallorly dational •Mrs , were , . played by the band; the; enemy's work orktbet opposite side of the Appomattox inspected. atoll after -a stag of an- hour and .a half the potty started on its return •to headqiiartein'. Omaha way -oat'many persons 'recognized the Presi eent's physiognomy._ -The , newa, soon stireadb and on the return ride the roads weralinedizi many places with weather beaten veterans, dra m ions to catch a glimps of Old Abe., One cavalry private recognized limikithe road. 's Mr: tie coin shook_him by the handlike an old, familiar acquaintance, to the' infinate Of the bystanders. , s , ' Perhaps, the feitere 'Of the'ride Wait the• passing et, wbrigaile of ne.groes: ..The troopsyerV• longing by :the rondsidn, but ed to know.by instinct, whnwas approaelfitig.— They came rushing,lnd:•iilmOst to* the hors* feet,. by hundreds; screiimin'g;yeliiitg,ehdnting., " Hurrah for the Liberator !" " Hurrah for. the President!",and.. were :perfectly wild ex citement and 'delight. It, was a spcintanbOus - outburst of genuine love and affection for the man they look upey as their "deliverer .fteni bondage,'! and their ' htiztiihs werii - per. fectly deafening. The President ,uncovered as be rode , through their ranks, and bowed - on : every hand, to his sableadmirers.. The covet,. cade arrived at headquarter about nitie o'clock, took, tee, and chatted a Short tithe, when the visitors departed to 'their staternotea on thee, steamboat. This morning &visit' to Hermtelh; . 11tiodired and Gen: Butler is determined on, oirat: late in the evening the President and his frieW will leave for Washington. ' 1 . 0 tatted to say iii, the proper place: that Assistant Seeretary of War Dana accompanied the' Presidentmid-per, ty to Petersburg and:bank. - - • Tar. Richmond Wiiihyloonteniektint the scarcity of prorisionsin•the rebel( Capital, pro-7 poses tri paper the Irish and Gera •women,. • whO' are zoning from OW 19- Plaeo whey , charity io &Tensed. •=.jest eai2oga.ln *sofa of the year ran fronr ono - aptrkt4ree to another,t* - Tie New York Poxt 1i -that they be ea ehantod, for an equal smatter, of rebel stamen, who are now' crown thsz•boarding bowies ot7 New York, andinreak" tkoms!tod of WkOnt mar: knoyan to the polies lid GE TEEIEM :,• EE Mil EIS ME