11 H Ofirit istrinr. SATURDAY ,NOV. Ai, H, 1263 VlO/I.4Ntit at rex Pgoru 101 'mg Pales Or Ainnucuut Lawry —atiutrelo Adam. Anortrzit Vtcroay.—The telegraph gives are particulars of a great victory achieved by Oen. Giant's army over the rebels near Chattanooga. Our., forces are in }tomes sion.of Lookout.. Mountain l and other im portant Emmitions, 'rind Bragg' 7 - ai , l to ba retteilting... We are reported to have , taien from 5,000 to 10.000 prisoners with `many cannon. our loss is given at 300 killed and 2,000 wounded.. It is prolmble _that a still heavier battle has since taken - grace Who Are tAe Disuttiontst, t It is one of the most curious features of the timeil that reheat leaders and newspapers aro allowed to rks fir their influence over the minds of sinue people, when they prove by their course their total uutvorthines%, to lei reorderl as sound or .ste :furl.-; Thu, we notice. with aniweuielit, not uutaitigird with sorrow over the tel of the . tr th rt. Ole raJleal leider4 iroume the indigmation of the radical voters agaitat` particular candidat es , by saying of them' ”they were opposed to the war, they were in favor of secession," &e., &c. In most ca ses the charge is untrue, but what is curious- is that it was these radicals themselves who were opposed to the wa rand in favor of secession. Why, Chi New York Tribune' originated the phrase in common use, that condemned "pin ing one part of the Union to another by bayonets," and the same paper urged the strongest reasons in favor of the righi•of secession and the wrong of coercion. Other radical sheets were . earnestly in favor of a dissolution of the Union. It was the original plan of the abolitionists to destroy the Union, and they have not to this day abandonild the plan, No one can persuade a radical newspaper now— Tribune, Eeening Part,. or any other of the stripe—to say that they cle*.re "the old Union." or that they wish the war prose cuted for the safety of the, Union which existed in the year 1660, when Lincoln was elected to the Presidency. The most thorough enemies of.the Union are the'radicals,who, for the sake of success at the polls, are so fond of professing hoe for the Uaion, while they pour out all manner of abuse on the old Union and its methods of action. The radical party sr has in fact . come to regard the Union as dead, a thing of the past, 'never to be revived. They expect to create some new government, on their plan, with their "social systems," and if there were to-day a visible prove& of restoring the Union as it was, they would join hands and hearts- with Jefferson ,Davis and his 'N \ allies to prevent the consummation.— ' And yet these are the metr that claim to be loyal, and shout vigorously against all who love the old Union, calling them traitors, copperheads, and rebel sympath ' tzars. • The Delaware Outrage. One of the foUnders of this republic uttered a timely voice of warning when he spoke of " overgrown military estab- lishments which, under any form of gov ernment, are inauepicioui to liberty, and which are' to be regarded as particularly hostile to republican liberty." The Dela- ware " election," if such a misnomer can be .tolerated by the intelligent reader, shows whit are some of the evils to which republiesO institutions are exposed, in the presence of the overshadowing power of a military organtratioa„._ A State on which the foot, of a rebel army never trod, and where all the appliances of civil government were unobstructed in their operation, was virtually disfranchised by a military edict, Forms and qualifica tions were imposed to which no high minded citizen could subinit without sell deprailation and conscious dishonor. Ae• corilinely the c , m , errstive, men of the State wlthdrew firm the contest, sati,,tied to leave the interpretation of their acts with 'tlie jutlifineni of their fellow coun trymen. "\Vhi-n one's 'adversary is play ing with marked cards and loaded dice, the only remedy is to retire front the game." This was done; and in the forth cz.mting Congress Delaware wilt be repre sented by a bogus: member, with no legiti mate constituency. The same is true, to great degree, of Maryland The .con servative men of Dalaware have asserted their manhood as true Americans, in whose breasts the spirit of freedom still ' ‘•WAti Dcmoorars."— When the radicals praise a man for being a "War Democrat," says the Louisville- ,7010u4/,. they do not mean a pemocrat who is in favor el the war, but a Democrat who is in favor of the radi t cal aim and management of the* war,—aDemocrat, in :lion, who supporta the' radical ticket. They mean such a Democrat cs Benjamin F. Butler or An drew Johnson, or Robert Dale Owen. In a word,', the phrase " War Democrat" in the moths of the radicals is merely ano ther forts of expression for abolitionized Deumerat. • And this the public now Coin prehendl. Hence - the phrase has lost whatever power to deceive it may have once pnsaessed. It • is — fast beComing a name o opprobium and of weakness in stead oil a name of power. The radicals have disgraced it, as they disgrace or tend to disgiace everything else they touch. lir irics' of the difficulties which envi rou the whole basiuess of recruitiug, it is apparent that 04e tone of abuse and cal unmy which the radical papers and ora tors maintain towards their political op - ponents is exceedingly injudicious. No thing can be better adapted t# bring about the necessity of , ss draft thane this contin ual simians 'of the very class of persons from which s large majority of th e re . croits Must come. The radicals have done quite enough to retard recruiting in days - gone by, and they ought to behave / themielvei Tui official vote of New York at the ' , late ' erection ,la as follqw*: Abontion, 314,442 j.Perocecratic,2B4i37; total tote, '599,319; Abol i tion majority, 29,505. Ass..lbcolittowexetutageleys: "We re. jolowthet the President hey ordered s dor ONTLINO iferrent ibeffeaker is Ili vimOSO "Charity Begins at Bowe." Out of all the movements now taking ' place in the cities among the laboring classes for an increase , of wars, that - 01 the sewing wourn in Noa York *till at. tract the greatest attention and the largest , sympathy. ' About 400 of :these women assembled lest week,.."inct - made - some statements about their wages, which, it appeared, ranged from $1 to $3 per week for board, not Including washing, thus en tirely absorbing their earnings, and they are compelled to work 'from 11 to 12 hours' per day. The aattiunditig fait was also made evident that the sewing girls are now paid frord 25 to 50 per cent.. less than two or three , years ago: while the price, of everything they 'are obliged to buy hat nearly doubled There were pre sent at this meeting, cloak maker. dress makers, tassel makers, burnishers. tent makers, corset makers, hook ie we r s, hoop skirt m s akers. hat binders, aftiit,leivers, umbrella makers. press feeders, wool sort ers, cap makers, bobbin winders. vest maker= and Relying machine operators, and they gave the rattily/4m as the prices paid them for their labor For making hoop skirt sprinvs the price averages fr 15 to-25'retits a hundred; and from two to three hundred ran be made ie a day. Formerly the'price was $l. Acent apiece is paid for burnishing silver table spoons, and it is agood day's work to burnish 35; and if the work is not wet/ done, the girls must do it all over the next day without compensation. Sixty cents a do. zen is paid for finishing shirts, and it is a hard day's Work to finish half a dezen. One dollar a dozen is paid for fine shirts. From four to , six cents each is paid for flannel shirts, and from nine to a dozen can be made in a clay. One dollar a do. zen was paid in 1880 for the same that now bring about 80 cents. Overalls 50 cents a doien; large cloaks, taking a day, 40 cents; small cloaks, taking about eight hours, 25 cents. By working early and late $3 a week can be made at this. Caps, 35 cents a dcizen, taking a long day ; cor sets, $250 to $3 a week. At book sewing about $3 a. week is made. For button holes on coati about $4 a week can be made, but it is very hard work At dress making $3 a week is made, working from 7a_m. to '7' _ p. m. Linen coats 18 to 20 cents each ; two of them is a good ten Wours' work. The girls ,iron and finish them, and have to buy their own thread, which costs 10 cents a spool, and of which one spool is used on two coats. Press feeders get $4 a week sometimes. Shelter tents, with 46 button-holes and 16 eye lets, broughtTast treason 25. cents : they are now made for 8 cents, and only four can be made in a day, working as long as one can see. Cavalry tents are Fl cent; a piece for basting, and four can be basted in a day. Vest makers get 25 or 30 cents a day. Sewing-machine operators get 5 cents for stitching 50 yards. Parasols and umbrellas are 50 cents a dozen eight can be made in a day. Some of the employ ers, if a girl is five minutes late, charge her 5 cents for it. In Rome of the estab lishments, if a button is - left off a shirt, it is a rule to deduct 25 cent; from the pay, Let ,that philanthropic portion of our community, well meaning enough, no doubt, hitt wholly run astray in their charitable intentions, who waste so many sighs ever the condition of the Southern slaves, reflect over these facts, and tell us whether there are not objects . nearer home that call a thouand times louder for our generosity, than those poor degraded Africans, who are now the almost exclu sive subjects of benevolent attention. While never failing to pity the enslaved negeo,:and wishing from the bottom of our hearts that human bondage every where might be wiped from the face of the earth, we have never forgotten, either, that we have countless hosts of suffering white men, women and children here, in the North, - who deserve the first place in our thoughts. In short, odd and unfashion able as it seems, we remain a staunch disciple of the sound old faith, that "cha. rity begins at borne." If every commu nity ware to first empley:Aself in alleoi sting the distress which prevails within its own limits, and making all its citizens ,equally happy, we suspect that enough would he found to do, without sending off missionaries to the Hottentots, or taking up contributions for the Patagonians, or bewailing by night and day, the institu tions of sister States. The Comlig Draft. The quota of this State, (says the Chant bershuig Repository, setai•otficial,) under the taste call is 38,268 ; but the adminis tration calls for all .deficieuces under for mer requisitions, and 'thus increases the demand now made upOn our State to over 91,000. The number of men due from Peunsylvania - on the 17th of October last, when the requisition was officially issued, was as follows : Deficit prior to daft of 1863. .16,071 Deficit oa laat draft, 36,754 Quota under the new call, 38,268 Total, • - - 91,093 The item of 16,071 is made up of men drafted in 1862 and never reported for duty. The draft at that tims was made for the entire number of men then due under all requisitions to that date ; but many deserted or never reported, and now.they will be liable to be drafted for three years instead of it months. . Ins following extract frau a letter re._ ceived by a gentleman in Bald°, from the army, she*. how they treat soldiers who do not vote as the Administr at ion desires them : °cross" 26th, 1863. * * * There was one man in one of the ,Louisvihe Ilaspitabt who voted a Vat landigham ticket, but he gets well paid for It. Gen. Boyle had him arrested and court-martialed, by which he was sen tenced to lie in the Guard House for 21 days. He Is taken out every morning and mods to stood on a barrel two hours, with a card on his back reading thus: "From God thou matt, but to the Devil shalt thou return." Besides this, be has to saw wood ten hours each day tor twentpone days. After his time is oat at Louisville, S then be will be sent to Chattanooga for herder punishment. Tea lialsigh7:C.)&trndosdolaints that the Conservatives of dna State lave Cleo. ted eight members Out of ten to the rebel Congress. Those of them who announced, theloselles in favor of peace, and who wire most severe in their occulettination . of the rebelAdminiaration„ received the sedgetitiet. The Coneervetive can dilates eiee ,reciived icalgjatity of , the 0014ber.19140.,:c% Md.tonal 'Canary-A People Drunk on Paper Stoney. The New York' Eri.ireir shows the folly of the attempt to account for the Demo- - optic 'reverses either onthe tpleories` iir1,....„ ,....„ *at/W - 6i the ..kisliicti Ihiaioe'riii*," tr the 4 •War•Dettocrsicy..:" Atilt:v:44lam fired no wOrse,in Ohio than did' the brave and patriotic Gen. Tuttle. in lowa. It advent- . Cal its OWil theory as tbliows : . ! "Detnoeravy is doomed to d i ", 55 long es the people are drunk oil paper ; money. When the delirium tremec-i is; over, ' aid the appeal is taken from Plebs drunk to Plebs soher,—Reaoon will re - -mue its , reign over paper; whiskey. and -irych- i num. and oxygen, 1 nitrogen, and hy- amigo*, ate. Too , ship builder is getting ' his three dollars itllld abhaif it day, isn't i ' he P• The former is getting .3•2 cents per pound for butter.isn't lie? Money was litiliFr before si) , Plenty, was it ? Califor nia and Australis are its Washington, are they not? and nuggets aro, riper pulp, fllacked over with' printer's ink, are they not? War is n hthssing, not a curse, does not everybody see? :The "Sermon on the Mount,'! is ii. humbug. isn't it? An not sit Abolition ministers so expound it ?: The Siviour hinvelt is Anti.tfliri,t, i= he" not end Attila and Genghis Khali were the Chri-t-. were They not? Is not this the Go-pel a, knight now in the pulpits of Ne. E.,4311.1. and in all their offshoots? • ••Theii- i, ~ nawataaiitialiat of Outiolitt, as of wel l . net when nations t.re lunatic, their is no tuore ro,asniiiiiii with them Goo, with such men. : Wtieu Frenchmen Ones , down Gu.l. t,il , exalted up a Cypri ot* to he worshipped as God. —a whole na tion was beyond reason_Wheu such Jud ges as Sir Is/tallow Hale, upheld witches even iu Old Engliunt, - to say nothing of the witch, mania isi New England. what was the use of 'reasoning against witches? Wherk Baptista were hated in New Eng land as slaveholders are now, and exiled to Rhode Island, pr mobbed, or slain,— what was the use of preaching against Baptism? The SOuth Sea lslandere,when there is an eclipse of the sun, beat and drum with sticks" to . scare off' the Fish that is swallowing iup the sun or the moon. The Paper Money Fish is swallowing up our sun, and our moon, and all we can do just now, is, in imitatiorrof the South Sea _lslanders, to beat the tattoo and the rev eille." ' Maryland -Electlob. The,radical newspapers, and even some conservative Republican sheets, are en deavoring to glois over the foili wrong done to RepubliCan institutions by the course or the Administration in its mili tary interference:, with the election in Maryland. These papers assure their readers that every loyal man had_an op. portunity to votel The assurance is un true. The fact isltoo plain to be denied, that not only wily the order made that none but loyal men should vote, but the definition of loyalty was also made and published, by which all 'tho.te who would have voted against the Administration candidates were ,declared disloyal, and thus forbidden to. approach do polls, un der penalty of arrest. Read the following Order of a military offico , i• am a specimen: "iirsNtisairits 3D CAVAULY, efiIVTERTOWN, Nov. 3. /863. “Wherem, the 'President of the United States, in reply io a letter addressed to him b¢ lion. Thomas Swann, of Baltimore city, has stated `that ell loyal qualified voters should bare a 'right, to vote, it therefore beconititi every true loyal citizen to avail himself of the present opportu nity offered to place himself honorably upon the record} or poll book at the ap proaching election, by giving a full and ar dent support to the whole gnuernment ticket, upon the platform adopted by the Union League Osnverinon. None iother is reeogni:ed by the Federal authorities us loyal, or worthy of the support of any' one ,who desires the peace and restoration of this Union. "IaIAiLLIS CIIIROLL Lieut. Col. Commanding." A Hird Hit. Sunan Suawt.j----Btewert, the celebrated importer of dry goods, has now in hie store a magnificent shawl imported by him at a cost of three thousand dollars, expressly for Miss Kate Chase, daughter of Hon. S. P. Cbase,'our distinguished , Secretary of the Treasury. It is said that; the young lady's whole outfit in all re. apects corresponds with this costly article of dress." To which a lady correspondent replies "I am the wife of a .Democratic soldier who volunteereil when he supposed the war was to be conducted upon the princi ples of the Crittenden rs...soisition; and al though he was Promised one morrth's pay in advance,-and that his family would ha well taken care of, yet for cc% r seven long months lie never received During ttwke long month] of dreary winter, while 11tr. tiltie.e got rich enough to buy a three thousand dollar shawl, I at the wash tub of -my Republican neigh bors, managed to earn a bare subsistence for umilf and khe helpless family of the neglectdd and hiall-starved soldier." 'Cut original dtaft of the EinauCipatiou Proclamation; .over which the Abolitiiiii ists have made such a fuss, and which was sent by the author all the way to Chicago, to be put up at auction and sold to the highest bidder; for: the benefit pf the soldiers,". has found a purchaser at last. The successful: person is a certain U. A. Whittier, M. Di, of Chicago, a doctor of nameless disefises. He 1 11118 not • yet in- formed the pliblie to what purposes he intends putting the famous document. Regniationo Ciniterning E.nrollmerkto for Drafting. It will be seen by the following important Circular, that the War Department has at last hit upon a plan for securing a perfect enroll meat of all the able-bodied teen liable to the draft. The navies of those already enrolled are to be printed in alphabetical order,. and the lists are to be lett in places where they can be inspected by thelpoblic and corrected. , It will, of course, -be thi i interest of every one already enrolled to add to the list ill who are legally liable. This airitig of the lisle wilt purge them of all the bogie 'end - non-liable names. All who are not lliblo on account of disability, alienage, or non-residence, are to report to the board previous do the 20th of next December. Under ibis arrahgemeat the next draft will, in all probability, iohig either the men or 'the money, and will riot be such a farce as was the last attempted conscription. In view of the certainty of the omation of the next draft It will be well to hurry on the volunteering, so be to escape Its burdens; • WAR DIPARTRINT, • • Plievoer liaas net's Orrick Washington, Nov. 17, 'Ga. Ozone" NO. 101.—As complaints bare been made that errors have occurred fit the enrollment of the national trees by the omis sion of persons triune names should have been enrolled, and bf the addition of the name of pumas who, by reason of aliesage, and for othlw nines, ought not to bare been enrolled, sad m it I. desirable that the department amid ham inch information as may be m emory la orlet i to do full justice to ail part*, it is fety or*no& • 1, no Board of MaroUmeet of each district shall ham printed Usia of the names and rind dlMOM At 114 ,pernOw enrolled la each Mb .taletrict peeped m 4 to On, *it keg pl an odorentratriet, sad in as many more as the Board may deem ne cesalry. The names will be placed upon these lists in alphabetical order. 2 Public niiios will be gissia by.advertise. meal noon the 11814' lid le the news - . pipers. that any. penal ad nay appear before the Board aad ebbs la bare his wain 'Stricken off the list. if he cu **is, to the . satisfaction of the board, that be is not. and _witl not be at the time axed for the nest draft. liable to military duty on account of—first, , alieuage ; second, non-residence ; third. un suitableness of age ; fourth, manifest perms. Dent physical 2. Persons, who may be cognisant of any other persons liable to military _duty. whose names do not' appear on Mee enrollment are requested to 'gouty.- thelloaill of Enroll- I who shall tberenport'direct the enrolling officers of the sub-districts In which-the par ties reside, to ascertain the facts and enroll the persons so reported if they are found to be subject to enrollment. These may avail themselves of the privilege of appearing, as -specified in paragraph one, as if they bad been originally enrolled. 4 Boards of Enrollment will use genre in collecting the necessary Information and matting ihi requisite notes to perfect the enrollment list. Boards of Enrollment. will hear, owes as provided in paragraph 1, until the 2Uth of December, 1863, after which no cases will be heard. As soon as possible thereafter aye tort of proposed corrections Will be made out according to the printed instruetiuus, and transmitted to the Prurost Marshal Oeneral. The name• anti rolkleyee of Abuse proposed to he •%rickeu off ur 'aka will be writteu up su ~heel, of consolidated enrollment lists [(ur W. 37 :tud 3SI and, transmitted to are Pro• yost Marshal lieu .ral tor the purpose 01 cur re.litig the 'Bert no rile. JA.1119 B. FRY, Provost Marshal General Latest War News. —The caigoes of seven large Steamers which ran the blockade off Wilmington in que night, are advertised in the Rebel papers for sale. ; —ln answer to inqttiries,Oen. Meredith writes from FortreasMonroe that nortgents for the relief of our sick and wounded soldiers, prisoners ifi Richmond, will be allowed by the rebel authorities to visit that city. —The news from the Army of the Po tomac does not justify the dispatches sent over the wires a few days ago, that a for ward maim:tient has commenced. The roads are said to be so heavy from therein of Saturday as to render them =practices ble for wagon transportation, and there is no sign of an immediate advance. Deser ters slate that Lee has from 50,000 to 60,000 men, is strongly intrenched on the Rapi dan. unil confidently expects to repel the anticipated attack --At_ the late battle of Pine bluffs, Ark., Col Clayton 19f the siith Rastas, after five hotirs' eiard lighting. with 550 men put to flight 4000 of the enemy under Gen HarmadUke. Our loss was 17 killed and ,19 wounded, and I missing. The enemies' loss was 53 trilled, 164 wounded and 33 prisoners. A few days before C3I. Clayton took 350 men and 4 pieces of light artillery, and, by making a circuit ous route, and marching 90 miles in 33 hours, succeeded in surprising and com pletely routing Col. Dobbin's cavalry bri gade at capturing one stand of liis.camp and garrison equipage, quartermaster and commissary stores, med ical supplies, transportation, r. Trauste, —One Iswindling opt/wit)). has got has deserts. John B. Steller or Stetter)peho undertoo to furnish pure coffee for army use; failed in funaishing the stipu lated qtiantity, and adulterated that which he did furnish. He was tried by CouriMaitial, and sentenced to five year's sojourn in Suite Prison. -4-The Corn motion ers of ,Worcester Cohn ty, have received a notification from the United States Marshal to hold themselves in readiness. to receive and keep in close custody, et the jail in Fitch burg, ten or twelve female secession spies now held by our" aovernment as prison ers. —The people of Massachusetts and oth er Eastern States are working with a will to raise volunteers. 'Meetings are held in all the large places, and tempting bounties offered. ;The town of New-Ipswich, N. H.. is said td be the first;towu that has raised its qutitt4 under, the new call. " • --ChaOeston dispatches note the con tinuation of he- bombardment. On the 19th,eleyen shots were thrown into the city; three or'four buildings were Struck, and one person was injured. Twelve shells were,tht,?wn in the next day. , • —Thei Steamship Creole, from New- Orleans,) bringing dates to the' 10th Mat, arrived i on Tuesday morning. Further ' account from the Teche county, concern ing the , attack on Washburn's colUmn. represent our loss in killed. wounded, and taken prisoners, at - 677. The Indiana G7th was captured almost entire. The GOth Indiana and thei96th Ohio lost large : ty." Thg rebel force Opts five to oily. It le reported that the Army Corps, now in 'Ceche county, is liteicd to Texas by way of the Gulf, - —A dispatch from fialttmore says "In telligence from our Prisoners at Richmond is most gloomy. No meat has been fur nished to them for twelve days. •The prisoners on Belle Island had actually killed and eaten dog.; to sustain their lives. The supplies furnished on TAe Baltimore American Retif are going forward daily. These supplies. however, are not sufficient to feed ,13.000. men. —Chat Government now bolds 31,000 prisoners. 'fliers are 40,000 negroea armed and in the service of the Government. —Rebel istp.:rs say that their great ram Missouri. built at Shreveport, La., is a to tal failtite. She cost 6,500.000. — Oen- Kelley telegraphs that there i 6 not at i ihis time any organised Rebel force in. West Virginia. Itnboden's command has been dispersed by Oen. Sullivan, who says : -My cavalry have returned, having been up the valley to near New-Market, fighting Oillmore and White's commands at Mount Jackson, bringing in 27 prison ers, two commisniotied officers, 90 bead of cattle, three four hone Wanes, besides 30 tents, and all the horses.and equipage of the prisoners. They destroyed a number of tents and a quantity of salt. Our loss was two men killed, three men wounded, and three men missing." Scot:moans PITMEILD AT LAST.—The court-inertial of which Gen. Slough was President and Major tlaines Judge.Advo• cats was dissolved on Thursday. Its find ings in the following CUM are officially announced : Isaac Frederick McCarter, found guilty of stealing $46,000 on/overt:- ment money and sentenced to five years in the penitentiary at Albany. Capt. J. W. Haw d, A. Q. M., convicted of stealing $16,400, sentenced to be cashiered, Isom pelled - to refund the money, and confined five years in Albany. Capt. Claire M. Levy, A. Q. X., convicted of signing a 'false cer tificate of pay of men under his command, cashiered, compelled to refund, and be forever aisqualified from holding any of doe of profit or trust in the UnitedStatee. The instances of punishment for fraudu lent conduct have been so rare 'under this Administratitin, that we are glad to wel come these few instances. • —The rebels say they have almost noth ing wherewith to feed the Usike prisoner. at Itichniond, yet tbeCommon Council , of that city has just voted $60,000 to buy a hoiise for Gen. Lee. - —A.letter from the blockading squadron off Motile reports-that a rebel ram recent y cline out of the harbor and attacked the *at. This ram is an iron-clad vessel, built iby the contribution of the ladies of and presented by them to that, city. together with two steamers and a noatiwg battery, M utes the natal defenoe of Mobile. in, after read,- ing three shots from the Colorido 'add two from the Genesee,vesselt on the Mobile the' pr blockade , otection o inattediately H of FOft hack_. ,alpst .wilder f thi guns -.4:kw Welt d. Ceti. ste .fie that 141 . 0 It* : 1 0; 419401&114i; 211 i Ell i Knoxville 4 and had i notified the citizens that he should certainly hold the ,town. Heavy fling was beard.;frost there on Sunda', 'The rebel finch hi editnated at 36010..... - Thethaireeittuirtiwit:: from the south stile of r i p er', with:this thought to in tlietite a ecidwpulle. brig. Gen. Sanderit e !4ho Ivos4!st 'Campbell's Stations fewdaysige has iiinaildied. At last 'ao'zotintli Goa. . =side's command PM in extreme peril. He bad but all of East Tentiessee save Knoxville, where be was invested and in danger of capture. TlsesditiOistration 'reports him safe ; but the hbuntil has lost all faith of such, tin ikiiiiicittekite oh the part of thi War De partinest., • Hatters haves veergrive look in that quarter. Longstreet is .en able general, 'Osile Burnside is not ' —The RichtziondlSagairer the 11th inst: 'conisins the following rt e s : - "Si nce'the bombardment of 8 inter coin menced (on the 17th of Augtist) up to 1 Thursday last, 15,563 shots havelbeen fired at it, of which, 12,302 struck. lif the gar rison, twiinty-seven Were killed sand sixty nine wounded." The flag during the same time has; been cut down :14 .times. The average 'Weight of shot being 200 ,pounds, or 115,429 pounds ,to each man killed, 30,370 pounds - of iron to each casualty. If the charges of powder *veined 15 pounds, we have M 3,745 pounds of powder used, or B,os7 s tunds of powder to each man killed, d 2,434 Fig:ands to each casual ty. Subtler in ruinS:hughs at theenemy, who KW( fears to p+ he battered walls. Charles ,_n will have a Valuable iron mine in the r uins of Si/niter / and even now, \ when iron is so scarce and sells high, in- 1 .lustry, it very little risk, might make a' fortune.V —A litter from Chattanooga states that on the Otb inst. a lilat-boat, while cross ing the. Tennessee with the equipage of the 33dIftegiment New-Jersey Volunteers, sprung 4 leak and slink, Thirty-six of the crew wese saved, and five loft. —AseistantQuartermaster Chapman gives uOtice,through the St. Louis papers that the Governmeat wilt no longer pay extravagant prices for hay. If a good ar ticle of hailed hay does not come forward at. $25 per tun, the government will seize it wherever found, fiend it to St.. Louis or Cairo, tend deduct the transportation from the above price. : —The payments for all branches of the publio Service for the fiscal year ending with the. last of June were 903,000,000, of which imnunt $600,000.000 were for the Army, had $66,000,000 for the Navy.- A sufficiepcy of money has been placed in the heeds of all the Paymasters to pay our ar4ties up to the first of the present month: . ' —Seine excitement was astir on Satur day eking the Canada border, near Rouse's Point (Lake Champlain), by a rumor that a force of Rebels were coming to take Fort Montgomery, destroy the draw-bridge, and plunder Platteburg and Burlington. Im mediate steps were taken to give the rear oils a swarm reception, but they did not come. I • " _w r have i retort, by way of Wash ington that Gen. Thomas is about to take advantage of the Rebelettack on Burnside to make a forward movement. The-Atlantic and Great Western Depot at Meadville. • 4Thehnost oompleti and magnificent railroad ' I stationlin America, we presume, is the grand depot tind its appurtenances at Meadville, the dining ipoine of thsl great continuous broad gauge tailroad 'front Now York to Bt. Louis, the forFal opal's 'of which wee celebrated at Cleveland on the t Bth inst. The annexed paragriph, from th 6 Cleveland Leader, con tains slimier descripiion of the 'railroad palace at Meadville : , ; ,f, , Meradville is the ehief , town upon the line of tbepttlanticlt Gtrat Western Railroad, and the moil important. i One year ago there was not a „&all , laid or i stick of timber on the gronti4 at Meadville,. To-day there is in fall operation and use the finest depot building we know if is the century ; and the iron horse, otter *using herei tci take food and drink, rusher on away off into - the hills i f Ohio. • This depot building is three hundred and twenty. seven feet in length Itud about eighty in height. Throui h its centre !run three tracks for pas eenge4 trains. Wide platforms extend aloag both sties. Upon one side are the ticket office, reception rooms, and all the main offices of the company, elegantly and fully arranged for the transaction of business, On the opposite side tits new hotel, which is to be kept? by that prince of landlords, Taylor, formerly of the Atigier, in this city: The great feature of this hotel is the immense railroad dining hall, two hiindred feet. lOng, about thirty feet wide and thirty-five feet high to the ceiling. It is profuhely lighted upon both' sides. The finish and aulorning of the rooms ,is superb, being all in black walnut ; Overhead the rafters and stringers are is inn view; titter the style of the lnest Episcopal chinches, while : at the easter end agreat, stained glass window in. cresi'es the resitablance. It is altogether the demo hall fur the purpose we have ever seen. in rilige with the dining hall are the, o ffi ces, of the hotel, ; while - the hotel proper ex.. tendi as - an L (rim the western end of the depot two hundred and ten feet. This will be elegantly furnished-sad supplied with all the conveniences and jnxuries of which any me tropiiliten'bouse tin boast. As for the cuisine, nobody who tarried with Taylor at the Angier needs soy assurances. The grounds about the hotel are being graded sod laid out artistical ly. Five acres iinmediately about the hotel will be laid out as a pleasure garden, with walks, arbors, foUntains, Sc. short, the 'McHenry lionselwill be one of =the best to be found in all the States. The railroad company are in possession(of a large quantity, of land adjacent to the depot, which has heretofore been farm,meadow Land, and are erecting very extenNelrj.rks, which will be models of their kind. Of Meadville proper it can be said that few inland towns have imago steady and substantial trade. An old merchant who has resided there twenty-seven years stated that there had been less. than a doted business failures in that tithe. The population of the ,town in 1860 wits about five thousand. To this number probably two thousand have al ready been added', and the impetus given by the railroad will 'increase it to ten thousand in' two years snore. I There are many wealthy ia, habitants and fine residences, mostly located upon the elevated sites which the railing char acter of the landlpresents." SAPONIFIER, OR CONCNTRANED LYR FAMILY 110 i tif MAKER. WA R makes hi prices ; Saponifier halos to turtruis them. It sulker !leap tor thaw antes putrid by Iola; your Wars prow. ' CAUTIOICi As spurious Lyoo ore ouzel Moo, eardal sad cal/ OILY the ' , Algoma artbrio put apli iiitocuar, ill other! hill/ 16111tisthitIN PICANSTLVANIA BALT lIIANDVACTOIRING Phl44fdphir—No. 127 Wawa Stmt. PittabargrPttt Eltriatmil /house Way. aarllll24a. rikhousT Call i lagas a Card*, Inane I 4 CARD TO CONSUMIPTITTS. the Ssilisslgest is,* Sow sistorst_to loath is s wits bys vskiffilsois iersitrAlNOOme anal 0. 11 4 40 ,40.11 1 4;41.0 Cksoiptiss— "sloe Si asks Mess le bis the vistas el Sari' 14 ) an 110 EllP•iito b 611 / 00mM 111 0 OPP 1 0 01 , 81 k*Werie, it 1 1 1*), Okt4 4l llMOsaft ;Qlatißlm Ad* thy Ilat a Was coact,' I',JVAno-root ,9 . 41/f UNIVCMTIr. &r rim only obi; ,11 the athrrthior in ..eft.fili t r the Yr‘.•ttti. Ulm to tb tottent tba atliictr t , igui +krt. t turort....tt .tt wak,h i.e COLIC•OreS ti he h0p.... try gcloryr trill trikla it ,'il l l root tbf 1114411111 pt evr raytiya 406..4. , • .1: '1 002 el:v* BfiLAND Byaggireite..P.Ha ccc on•!Otol• I rv#Solincb, SplUsati;lolA 01 a pp titt, sick hafiLethe. ..121* of bloating alter roesls, dizsloess,' , llo4 - eird.pp,c , l cr Amp. os , kakis .antl'all di t ordero of thi'? litotigteht and OSE OF VANY nr Otiintli,eiter ';rx Y. rk IC. COOL plibllPhet .11 1401 I, uoutilo, tau, Vt., ...Lye ' ll ' ` .11 4 uttliel...4 itli ' iNiPP:P44. scot earirred sec...rely (tom it tba s 1..• p•ru-v of hoot cuald be .mull 61th .ut th• cociaisirtittiit wro,ttoisi ..$ Pe I..it• Le snaeted'tr./. this cruius,lutut. 1... BRANDitEifi'zi P/1.1. 4 Hie brat b ., . irroi to lbeiabt Mat w uct„ but 'lb. .6,1.04 , 1yru314,:rd a ehattke. Lod b, the date to 444 CUBE ellet.te.l Ile n. e: us out,* ant ay exi,orveace .4 . “ ‘tialr deutt, rras,b.. i " citAl rat, I,s Y ort 4 aid tly nr Eric, ins to umt,llcsue , A . rlrlf A 1 :411 11 , 1) 0 V Ir N, t ' 'l' 14 • Coureculok , ta•eiTAlloflol 4 kiAllt Uli t: '. , lt i. i Ore, , . • poiroblellrl. iuctantaueon", • . ; • I tuldit Le a len fect black, • or a uratallfreatt brOtro, to the apace or tru labiate. ; ta ttdarlea., .1.. e. not stair+ the Atm, and hal neter been tun II a , in fail' CUL !STA Utllift.Pei EXCELI9IOI.I. HAIL( OYU, ii•nufsetured by J. CRITCADeIitt), No 8 Alto? House, New Yore Sold everywhere, sad appitei by .J Hair Dreams. Price, SI, 11,60, and SS por nos, recording to 1 nos 7 Im. • Cristadoro's Flair Preservative, . A tavaittable watt hie Dye, Abe tt wee., t. the uttau.t *eft • , ans, the moat beautiful gto.s, and great. vitality to the ' Hatt. ?licitly() (teats, St wad $: ipor 44ttle, a,:ea4diag to A;te •wjleB'Yly T° fillitati OIL OLD. Mal* or rooialo, ',you hart Imo suffering from a hatit iwiulgad- IL to • ' OH, " YOUTH OF BOTH SIEN.E:t; 'ERICH CAUSES 80 MANY ALARMING SYMPTOMS, witite llaa fer Barrio" lad U the greatest evil which can MAGI MAN OR WOMAN. ' See symptouu estuote rated la AdvertaseuteuOuld ,tiou are • =Serer, Cut out the Advection:twat.' lad wad for it at mem Delays are daaawrous. • Ask ler Beltubold'r, • Take ea ether. 'Cartaguirsataod. Bowan of Coaatarfoltaand Imitations. ao7l-21a. • B. Tootkre VENETIAN 11-. F A certain curt far paths in Ithats and bast, tore Wog% 616116, rheumatism, ca. - , etc. A perfect Welly lataidne, and never Ws. Read t h.ead Rees !If LtTOXLI, WAINT. Ca ;11/Cll., Juror 16, 18t9. This is to certify that my wife wan taken with ttalneer Sore Throat: It mramsnalt to swell, and was so sore that she could not arridloi; and coughs. violently. lased tour Liniment, and made aeat earn in Goa week. Athol/ Wises that bat the Wilmot Met would have lost her lee- .1011:16 B. EIANZAIL! Price 26 and 50 centa. tth146:1116 *MI. . all p, 66 Covelaadt Wed, New Yock • ferrMitt. 'kis CONFESSIONS 6t IMPAIR! WICK . OF A NERVOUS INVALU). lashed for the benefit and am • 'aligns to young awe. and other; who suffer from SWIMS Debility, tar ty Dom', and their kindred .ailments-supplying the means°, self-curw. ily one who has cared himaeU atter Wag • widisaaf adsaland onaddeaas in lbw:lice haw bug and quackery. By enclosing • post-pald eneelope, single copies maybe had o! them:Allot N ATOLY I ILL MAY • ran, £a., DadtordaLinva Couety, New York. isZiliel. JAMES P. CROOK, 10174 H AND Pt " Afi x ED LUMBER ! 4KD irIIWCFACITM Or Window lash, Frames, Doora and Blinds ! lIDULDLNG9 AND PICKET FENCE. Scroll Ss ping, Xstehing & Planing ! DONE TO ORDER Sher on Peat* St., between us and Sth Sts., EH IE, P E A. • . , -------. 1 1 reepeettfahixesli the attention of the pub& to my facilities for doubt Work to the best of style, promptly and on neesonemle terms. Haring bard up crassly nen shope t .enth superior machinery, I feel confident of luring tsar* ifttssfectloo. or Orden from obroid will recaire prompt attention • norlenatt. . • JAM 64 P. CR U 1) li. Teachers' Notice. TWILL .EXAMINE Applicants for ern: I)loysssat u tauders in this count!. is dm several dualists. and on the dais al designated below. Tim siouninationa will be held in the schoolhoneee at *l' nicest the please indicated in the fatevimar.: Noe. lb at Peireteler CttW.. Genus &al. Jaekaeira Starn Mahar% Iliattabaro,Wsial tattoo sad rtnalls, Rd, gborp Union sad Union " 91 'Baton Borough, Laitoes/ .............^" 23 0 LeßDomf Waterford ta, sad bor., " " Waterford. Wanscue. " 25 " McKean Canfrs art. 31453. - J DKOMEIIeR. Stray Cow. STRAND km the plaudits at the sub actiber, at ths South-West corner of Parade and itlerenth Streets, Ene, on the meriting oflneeday, October :Moth, • and- Alin Bind LIGHT EEO COW. tihe hes mall horns and a abort as* orbs of the horns hes • hole bared in it— thintlt hi On the right side. Any prrsqa returningher, or giving Information rt her whereabouts. will be well rewarded: Apply to V. 11A80. State . (1r to the to. Unload. vAtzvriNE HEAPELEIN, oct3l-3to - • Car. Parade g Sic . - uv!s. r PLANTATION of)FFC.i, The best Hotels * Restaurants. Steamers and l'neate Families an waving nearer fifty per cent. be using Galles' Old Plantation Coffee, Gillies' Old Plantation Coffee, Old Plantation Coffee, Lo Place at Other MlDOrted COnINK Stich duJataor.lioclat. It has been fully tested side by aide with the buret Java, and pronounced folly equal in utiforinity of strength and titillates of Savor, so Met we cat * with more that ;mud confidence, tecotutoeud to our friends and the public our , due fiarroold OLD PLANTATION COFFER. OLD *PLANTATION COPPICE; 1 OLD IFIAPITATIOIII COF/11{E, ds our late ilitolooll Ors by for superior to former ship , meets. ?tubes:. or kernel is Int t,pltunp, and very much lite the Mocha or Mountain Coffee in shape, and when ineantactnred by oat new process is decidedly preferable to the beet grades of /sited Coffee; and Ire would advise all who daidn • roily reliable and healthy beveraee„ to_ Drink (tithes' Old Plantation Coffee, Drink ()Mies' Old Plantation Coffee, Drink dillies' Old Plantation Coffee. It tepid:4 only Wong pentad tit foil wan% Mad postal hi nesse; each package having a fac•slatile of our signatare. The OLD PLANTATION CORFIthi Is foe sale by awl, all the leaditg grocers and country stone throughont the United tittles. at Überal discotnt to the Jobbing Retailer Trade. Lie Old Plantation Coffee should be prepared the some as say other pun caws good cream, with the addition of aa egg, boiled with the cotTaa, will ,add Mack to the U- V:R. =sir, faLLIES ir, iIItOTHER, ONLY 1111NULACTURRR3, • ilaZie IP3, 937 Wasslasitoss-11treet, octMetit-am. ERIE RAILWAY. ginitimmigmageop cIANGE OF SOURS, COMICENeI rio; voszi.y. NO". 16. 1161. Will Navy Diisitlik &Vilma Ike (cam a b. dim Oa I , • ! ' lastward Bound—Depart. RiOt pima 4 13 p. ze a r"........ .............. ... ... "9as i. 11 . Put, ....„...... ...... , ..... .....9.40 A. M. WV i 154 A. la. Nuu , Tait riper aisal fitock Expresa run every day CHAS. MINOT, 060'1 ~vl,l Stray Steer. _ . CAME to tho• premises of the notaeriter, in tha north-out corner of Ilf eatable= to.. lee Co., Pa, . me the 26 of November. NA o Stray . Steer. dark Brindi.. with a star on foroimod aad broad bones.—abortk/ you aid. Th e 0 " to regulated to mei lieribmtillere Plepeety, pet eh , . re sad take the aehost,lerray: etbseedev_ he eft be d -1 ew! of wooldind to bklf 1• bi .oa ,_ .-30 ONO: GOOVILICO w iii id ag t ea eip., Nov. 4. c r. The aboveliteer has been on the comemi a a , tey settle du y o . Q. c Administrator's- Notice. Errus of Ad/C44traiiQtt have b#t I itested the andszirmmt auvim ty, th estate o_f hi lair . d l ei 4 e/ lf g M are " homy ooti led tnik milieu sad thaw lilting claims eirgil woe pseud thee. del: actthenticat to the sniettlvid. • 313.. fo! l P 9 Polti i n cr i "kl. A I I be '. 44l. a A•••LP•1 0 8 MONDIAL' AND 4, OY -Sl'll% P 0 T. xlissittmaw,B,lls "It"! 3 4 1 " , • out"„ Roam ' 'vtai tie glw Asa* , • ‘6•01 pa FOR HOLIDAY I A L. \ S'f O,C (if • CONFECTIUNE TOYd. FANCY GAZO, ASUBRZENt 31, b —i=l 4.IIItIVING AND IN ANWIA? cBENER &-Bti Variety Sr, A LARGE, ASSIBT OF FIN? ~! F RENCH C CANDY TOYS, GUM DROL C LATE And everyiVikriety 01 STAPLE CONIECTIO FOREIGN ID DOMEBT7C PRESERIiD FR PRUNES, TAMARINB, !CANNED P4CHES AND Tel PREPRVES & JELLIES, Brandiedes, " Pi ckles, Sancti, k "I.4ii A elect Assortment 'o Rockingtorses, Drums, La4Beso Wkir Baskets,, Bede Rotes, Gent'eons' Dressing Cases, Fitly Boxes, Opera DOLS AND DOLL..HEML DRESSED * DOLLS, Cat& DOLLS.. BISQUE DOLLS. WAX OLLS, CRYING & KID DO HEADS, +ISQUE• HEADS, RUBBEIt HEAL DOLL BABIES, ETC., Btubraeimg all the new Styla, ousGssgi. lixestis watams, mccaam ENGIN,EB, R. R.IRAIN3, AMA TRClF'gri, SWORDS, GUNS, k,C. SUNDIit TOYS AM GAM} roe Hoops, Battledores, Ohba Tea Sett '.• Tastes, Bellows tlys, rooeleaToys, Coble togilcr.ks, Sottaite, Loto BiC and Emma, Ptisopkter, Author? Game, Tiotillar Qaolatio, a tety ot Card GUM 4124 Anseansts. AN ASSORTMENT OP CtQrER BOARDS, CQUER MEN, CHEM Ink . - 1 DOML ES, wool roc ', ,Theriewiticas, dcenniseu Mused lezi. 1 ' i PERPIIXERY, rushes, Combs, Pomades, W AND LADIES•' PURSES, HOLIDAY ; Cif VI * A SMALL 1133011;111111 OF Meerseimuus, Pipes sad BOAR, GUTTTA PERCIIA AND 8091,110 PUBS, BOWLS nd S A AN ENDLE4 VARIETY OF NOTIONS' lieludiug elwrithlng socially kept is 4 VARIETY . STORE! Wesakoac friends to extzgat oar Sip,* 404 ird maw iiiidsctieta la quality sad prior. juE 9 4-4100 , Tuba =RAW oo Liberia too° devote Pattlettlat Attention to th• /401111 SANER # BURGESS , 10.1 w MOM ILO 11121 .111041-td." C0:077N0 OF FM CITRON, 'CURRANTS, Iron ouid W. TIN . TOYS Dam Gammas ao A LAIGIC ST4;!4I: OF SUITABLE POB ---r ~