THE JOURNAL Coudersport. Pa. Wednesday, May 6, 1863. M. W. IicALARNEY, EDITOR. NEWS li'EDIS. Our news by mail from the lianpahan ,ticok is up to Sunday snoring. At that time our left wing was in possession of Fredericksburg and of the first line of redoubts on- the hill behind it, and was \ feeling its way to the second line. The river was crossed, and the redoubts were carried with great ease and with very - slight loss of:life. 'The Rebels. had marched in the direc tion Of Chancellorsville (ten mites above Fredericksburg) to attack our right wing - there posted, leaving at first only 10,000 •"inen, isubsequently not more 'ban 5,000 '"tti 7.000 'in their works, as was aster ` taine 4 by reconnoisance from Lowe', bal. • A 'great portion of our Falmouth bat : *Cedes were engaged on Sunday with the Rebel batteries, tiring across the river and Oily. ' The firing, , both - of musketry' and - 'cannonading, on the right, in the three 'Olin of Chancellorsvilie; was very heavy. The' enemy had been forced to fight on grisund of Gen. Hooker's choosing, as he , :''promised his soldiers in the general order published this morning, should be the Rase. • It was believed in both wings that Gen. Stdoeman's expedition to cut the rail "-roadi between the Rebels and Richmond ) ;li4d,p , roved successful, thus cutting off the - pply Path of retreat. SiCconfident was Gen. Hooker at Fab . simith of : sitccess that in conformity with " his iar:der: a force had already commenced to rebuild a bridge over the Rappahao ioci; • The troops are in the finest spirits and •everythinig looks propitious. ••1 • • - . Special Dispatch to the Philadelphia Press. 1 , 7 , • , WASEIINOTON, 111 3, 1863. n • PisTatohes from Gen. , doter have been received by the Presi nt. lie,has successfully crossed the Rap :44[lfmk, and has severed ,the cornmu . nipakions of the enemy between Bowling Green. aud Hanover Court- !louse. The wait body of Hooker's army crossed first below Falmouth. About : crossed over. Falmouth, under !.Geo. Sloonm, who Made a detour of the .euerny's position, and captured some fif teen hundred Rebels. It is said that our communications with ,fren. Stoneman have been cut off by guer 4:iit, band,, botwawas Sri o.yrochou Junction aid Bull Run, but will soon be reinstated. ien.. Eiooker hopes to capture all of the Rebel forces north of the Pauinnkey 'River, and will probably move forward to .the,lefi, of his present position. Tliciknew! thus tar is most encouraging Louis, May 4, 1863. •' • A.dVicies front Cape Girardeaulay that Raids, under Gen M.:rmaduke, uf. ter having, 'their rear assailed twice and atiffeVin4.seiere.los'a, finally . escaped across 'the Whodwater - River, burning all the ; bridges behind them, and disappearing by various routes in the direction of Chalk :Bluffs, on the Arkansas line. :"'The result of this raid to the enemy is ,:repeated - humiliation's, - disasters, and a li.Ociwardly flight, before . greatly inferior numbers. • . • the *relit: Samuel C. Hulse, Capt .! ,Bates, from Port Royal 9 days, in ballast to master, arrived this morning, reports : When 30 ,miles ease-of Murrel's Inlet. 'eras; boarded by a boat from the steamer Lieut.•Cemmanding D. L. Bra*, :who reported that he had de stroyed two warehouses'filled with cotton. -pn - ci!.three large schooners, with cargoes of. ;snots, shoes, &0.,. for the Southern inarketiin the above inlet. HAVANA, April 29, 1863. - Our latest dates from Vera Cruz are to the 17th inst. 'Puebla had, up to that time, not been tarifa: The French had- been repulsed three r times in trying to take Fort St. jar rer, when it was finally abandoned by the Mexicans, and the . ruins were quietly ta ken possession of by the French. All the accounts in 'regard to affairs at Puebla vary and contradict each other— victory being claimed by both the Mexi cans and the French. General Burneside has created a sep nrate millitary district out of the state of illinois, and has assigned lirigadier•Gen -wah-jl cral Amman to its Tdotninand, ' us headquarters at Springfield, where he at tired ouTuesday and immediately ent red Upon his duties. General Ammon - is a graduate of West Point, and is said to bo ft thorough and efficient soldier.. ENCOURAGEMENT FOR. LOYAL WO MEN.- --Letten from soldiers in the field any nothing' hitherto has inspired them With so , much enthusiasm and'courage as the pledge of Wertheim women in recent meetings in the various states, to make comnion-canso with them, and care for their dear ories . :at home. Gov. Saymoi:r has vetoed the bill, passed by the New York Legislature; authorizing citizens of that State in the military Per vice of the United States, to vote by proxy. That. veto will be held by every Copperhead to be conclusive evidence that thiee (patters of the volunteers are of their Dumber. By people of common sense and common honesty it will be taken as sub stantial proof that the great bulk of the volunteurs are republicans, ancL therefore the coppeitcadS want to disfranoiAse Radical Speech bya "Conserv- ' Among the speakers at a great Union Meeting at Springfield, Ohio, on the 11th inst.; was Gen. S. F. Carey, of Cincinnati, well known thereaboutsas a Conservative gentleman of the striciewt sect. In c!os• log ` is remarks General. Carey said:-- "ls,low, a few word on the politics of particular men. I was not in favor of Fremont's proclamation, but I. bava got teligion since then. - [Laughter] This war will not cease until slavery is sunken. It has been the economy of God in all past history to make slave holding nations tight for the removal of the cause. "tot at first, but now I am in favor of using Degrees in any way to assist in put ting! down rebels. [Cheers.] [Voices, 'that's so.'] Let us save the Union and the 'constitution, and God will take care of the white and black races. "When you hear a wan vaporing about Mr. iLincoln's breaking the constitution, with nnthing to say Elbow; Jeff. Davis, set him' down as a traitor. "If you think Mr. Lincoln weak, then the greater scoundrel you are if you do not Ihelp him. [Cheers] "A. rebel has but two rights ' —a con stitutional right to be hung and a divine right to be d—d--[terrific cheers. God bless Mr. Lincoln, with all his faults. [t oaring applause.] "ye are making history. let us pledge each other to make it well." the speaker then spoke at length of rhelmarvellous work accomplished by our government in the last two years. He spoke of the sacri6eesl of mothers and fathers, and in the flowing blood of thou sand s - to leave the heritage of a free goy erctuent to their grandchildren in great peace, and scorned the idea of the nation not' being able is meet its debt. Ho wanted, and should ever demand, the right of way to pilgrimages to the graves of Washington and Clay. "The rebels are guilty of a crime, but we frhall be guilty of aigreater ono if we do not crush them." • .Some conservative gentlemen, who left! the United States, some time since, because it was engaged in What they called abOlition" war, and pecause they were determined not to be conscripted to fight for the "nigger," hare!, been heard from in berm& They bad escaped the ser vica of Uncle Sam, and; had entered that of Samba. They were paying for their daily rations by sawing! wood for British subjects of American 'birth and African descent, who emigrated: a few years since. from the sacred soil so hotly defended by our Southern brethren, 'and found homes in the dominions of the beneficent Brit ish., It is a happy escape, surely, for Outiact irttirre gclitictmen, to avoid the Abblition war by sawing wood for Diggers in CaLada. Tith.: LANCASITIRE pPERATIVES.—A WO ement is going on lin England to as. sistl ., the Lancashire operatives to emigrate. it s believed that. there will not - be a full supply of cotton for seine time to come, an that it would be better to reduce the surplus cf . labor. The .Spectator says that "three millions sterling would per hags enable us to export a hundred thou. 1 , san ) e !persons, and so got rid of the worst 1 Of the pressure;" and. other jou; nals, as well • Ins such writerOni Rev. Charles Kingiley and Rev. Sydney Godolphin Osborne, urge that both' private and pub Ho rarity should be :devoted freely to thi object. . 1 1 Ta r .. CONFEDERATE, DEI3T.—The ra ful,6l of the Legislatuk of Georgia to guaranty any portion Of the Confederate delt, will hasten the collapse of the rebel finances, as tt will still further knock down the quotations for Confederate 1 bonds abroad. The quotations, it is now apparent, were inflated when the loan was put upon the market, and the sudden fall has already caused a panic among the see l ession sympathizers. Withput any mo l 6y or credit the supplies which have heetofore been furnished to• the rebels byj mercenary Englishmen must soon cease, and this will hasten the downfall of the rebellion. . . Where ie great dullness in trade in New Irerk, and much anxiety Co sell, particu larly on the part of holders of cotton goids and foreign fabrics. Several large sat s of foreign dress goods are announced at, Unction. - Those who are shrewd in reading the signs of the times infer that there will be no foreign intervention or wto, and that the prospect of speedily IHttitig down the rebellion is considered to pre much brighter. 'co COUNTRY FOR COPPERUEADS. the recent state election in Michigan, in I the towns of iatertowo, Dement, W l isner ' Wells and iugston, all in the county of T,useolu, not a single copper head vote was polled- 7 ev/n.y one for the Union. In the town of Wells the only man that was a democrat last year came oat for the Union, and was elected SU p4.visor. LIBERALITY or Pnystcr i sss.--It has always ben , said that physicians would disparage ari remedy, however viilaable, which they did not originate themselves. This - has been .1 dt proved by their liberai course towards Da. J. C. AYER'S preparationS. They have adopted th m into general use in their practice, which shows a willingness to Countenance articles that, have intrinsic merit's which deserve their attention, ;This does the learned profession grieet credit, and effectually contradicts the r . prevalent erroneous notion that their appo si ion to proprietary remedies is baesd in flit it interest to discreld them. -We have al ays had confidence in the honorable mo ti es of our medical men, and are glad to find i sustained by the liberal welcome they rte., cdrd.to such remedies as Aysr & Co.'s inim itable remedies, even though, they rare not orderer!' in the book's, but are made krown to the people through the, ntrcesrpeis.--Ne ze Orleans Detect. THE LOAN.—The subscriptions to the five-twenty-Joan at the office of Jay Oook:e; - are largely. increasing in amount. As previously stated, the aggregate for last week reached ten millions and a half, and the . opening Monday givei prothise of much heavier results during the pres- ent week.: :The subscriptions •of yester- . _ day' footed $2,250,000. An encouraging feature is the fact that the demand fur the loan is thoroughly awakened in sec tions of the country from Which there has hitherto-been no . call for this. class of in '%realm-Gut. ' From Maryland the oraers are steadily on the increase, and for Wes tern Virginia and Kentucky sates hello been very considerable. An order was received yesterday trout Key West, Flor ida. A soldier in the Army of the Po-, Winne sends to the subsc!iption agent his surplus earnings, with the remark, "If I fight hard enough my bonds' will be good." knottier- "brave defender". sends from Suffolk five hundred dolla'rs . tO invest in five-twenties, and says, ' 4 'l. - am much pleased with my purchase; lam willing to trust Uncle Sam. If he is not good, nobody else is;" While soldiers exhibit such a spirit there can be no such word as fail. An agent, writing from Louis ville, says, "I am crowded with applica tions for five-twenties ' and trust the or, ders I have already forwarded will j'be speedily filled. lam getting letters Rom all parts of the state, making inquirtes, and look for large sales."—Forney s War f'iess, Atay 2. - The Hon. Reve:dy Johnson; a South statesman, and distinguished Senator from Maryland, in a recent letter to ; the Union League of Baltimore, said : "The sole .ministers of peace at present are'our gallant officers, soldiers and sailors. Let these be used as they way be, and she end will soon be accomplished • and let i-us in pressing on the foe, not halt so crit io;',:e the conduct of the Government.— Let us, oa the e,,..ntrary, give it a hearty, zealous support : whilst !-he peril is upon. us, reserving fora period of re:4lored peace whatever of ensure we way ;;;Ive Lo . pass on the conduct of the Mon who ad-1 ministering When Mr. Johnson, with sympathies and associations in the 'past that might have inclined less patri otic weu to the Southern cause, -can af ford to speak such bravo and cheering words, what will bo though: of Northern wen, who have lived all their lives it Northern States, who boast that their tics of home, and family, and friendship; and_ association, are all in the North; and yet, who; in their devotion to slavery and re• bellion, endeavor to destroy the Govern ment which protects them.? T.I.moN SOLDIER. KILLED EIGIIT REBELS.—A young man named Austin Dlacy, uT Montgovery county, Ohio, sta tioned at Camp Dick Robinson, I(y., with his regiment, .was recently sent out on .a scouting . expedition. After a tithe be became separated, and soon discovered a party of Sccesh, who did not notice him. *Concealing himself, he- fired on and sue iceeded iu killing seven of them. before Ithey saw where. he was . hidden. There being no further chance Macy attempted to esci.pe, but unfortunately his horse threw him, severely injuring, and disab ling him. In this way he was eurily.cap• tured by the rebels, who deliberately shut him seven times, wounding and mangling hint. He was still able to raise up, and , shot his eighth man ! An end was then put to this gallant hew by bayonetting liiin,and his mangled , reinains were thrown iutu a mud bole. Macy .was between 21 l i and 22 years of age. The above partic ulars were obtained from a Union ivoinam, who witnessed a part of the 'affair. It occurred on her farm. She pleaded un pecessfully with the leader of the rebel; party fur the privilege of. burying -Mr. Macy's corpse, but was refused. : THE FASHIONS IN RICHMOND.—The wife of a rebel , officer writes in a letter recently intercepted concerning dress and parties in the _rebel Capital : "A calico dress costs thirty-six dollars, that is three dollars per yard. White cottons, three dollars per yard; lawns and ginghams the same. The 'most or dinary merino or silk one hundred dollars. A simple bonnet fifty dollars. A parr of ordinary three dollar gaiters, twenty dol lars. Notwithstanding these prices, par ties were very numerous till Lent began. There was a wedding' next door to us, which five hundred Teeple attended, and whore all liquors were abundant, and champagne, and other wines flowing like water. (Then follows a description of the bride's underclothes-the finest the writer ever saw.) * Everything elegant. Tho oranges at the wedding cost one dollar and fifty cents apiece, nod everything was as plentiful as of The whole of the wedding paraphernalia and supper must have cost twenty thou sand dollars or more." THE RIOTOUS SOUTHERN LADIES.- Oa the 10th of April, there. was a cvo- Men's riot at Milledgeville, Ga. There were about three hundred won) zn, many of them well clad, "and some Of them el egantly clad," says the Confederacl's correspondent. They pitched into the dry goods store of Mr. Gans, "a Jew," and seized his flue goods. After a fright ful flurry. the.delicato creatures were dis. persed tby an eloquent appeal from Judge Harris; of tho Superioreourt. The cor respondent said ;he women "didn't want any thing but the fine advs.' A short:time since the safe of the pay• master of the Brooklyn Navy Yard was opened and $126.000 stolen. No clue to the rabbsre has been found. A 1 4firlted Phetogrppli. "One ,ho has lived 'in Georgia' . anti South, Carolina" writes to - the London Daily Netcs to say that thoselstatel, will pzobablyi Wake' to pill together in the long run', for the reason that' Georgia possesses; an industiial community who are by initure honest, 'nottirithstanding their 'drift into secession, while iSouth "was settled by poor nobility,idecayed`ar: istoeracy; discontented Canadians, out:at elbows gentleumo, polite swindlers, and riffraff of 'broken down noblesse; gotti biers and deini•reps of Paris rind London. Tliat was thei original smelt. I Much of it has since, bytheir beCutiful domestic system, been ;improved, strenjthened and wade wbre athletic and indirstrions race known. in history as the descendant® of Hain." . The vyriter, tifterlaying oti I:iese,streng colors, fah his canvas thus : I . "South Carolina may be celled a lazy, genteel, I ambitious, piratical! fillibuster; while Georgia is a modest hodiespun,,un refined, Plodding, honest tiller of the soil. Query, Will Georgia submit •;to bear part of the burdens of taxation in a debt of six hutidred to a 'thousadd millions, brought ion by a war that was entirely due to Soutb Carolina originally,.and of terwards-backed up, aided and abetted primarily by; Virginia and blississippi7 Let the slippery speculators,whe are.anx ions to buy Confederate 'bonds and then sell out to a parcel'of simpletons and 'lame ducks' in twenty-four hours, give an answer." . Cotton and Sugar In Illinois- It is riot at all improbable that cotton and sugar will soon rank mdong the sta ple productions °Milt:lois. A large (luan tity of cotton teed brought frOw the South Ims been disposed of in. Southern Illinois this : spring, and during last Week no less than six carloads, were sent out of Cairo and distributed at stations ott the Illinois ICentral Railroad south of iCentralia.— The experimental, planting la4year proves I most .satisfactorily that - the seuthero por- Ilion of Illinois is. well adapted. to cotton v - ,-,rowing, and the- present high price will stimui6,le its productiOn immensely. But even :mire attention ns directed to the cultivation or the sugar beet and sor ghum. ,At Chatsworth a facory seventy ty-five feet by one hundred . find fifty feet, has keen erected,:and machinery adapted i especially to the refining of beet sugar:is now going in. We read accOunts that at Chatsworth, in the neighboOiood of the reffnery, fifteen hundred acres will be planted :for . beet root this siring. Sr.o ghnat Was a very ttnportant crop last year supplying enough syrup fur home . use, and furnishing' some for • exportation to other stutvn, and now that lrs cultivation has paSsed through the experimental stage:!, 'we may, reasonabl' expect_ to see its production doubled iti the coming season. ' , . 1 NOT PLEASED-WITH CONNiOIIOUT. - The "Peace" Democrats hOped to carry Connecticut with their favorite Seymour, (who has been Giivernor heretofore,) and were ne'yer so dissappointca. It seems by the foliowing, frNo a Ridhmond patch, that the. Rebels, aisC, don't like it :' "The! ConneCticut election has gone against ! the Democrati , --:,-IThe import ance of this defeat canna well be exagger ated,, for, if the result had bebn Otherwise, the .11 7 4thwest would hav risen, , the, Peace Party would have been•organized C7L a peilmanent 6asis. the net meeting V Congress would Piave been Billowed by a sumnittiy abrogation of he imperial !powers bestowed fpon Linco n by the .46- I . olition Congress just ended, and a ces.4 la -14,4*(h of hostilities might have been •confi dently looked for, at or before the close iof the y present year." • The Rebels are so near exhausted that "a cessation-of hostilities" is,now the only !hope: they • have Could they get the: IGoverntbent to recall all its! forces, giver up all itlhas recovered, and !thus save the!! Rebels time to recruit, raise crops, and, import all the arms and antunition from EUrope they need, the Rebels hoped (in' the toidSt of a t'residential! canvass) to secure Secessia .as an independent power, or to make Slavery the iuling elementin the old 'Union. j This was !their 'hope,' which cruel Connecticut hae blasted, and the Rebels have ! either • te . cenquer jar! be conquered. ' • ! ! , A very large Union League meeting was held in San; Francisco, 1 participated in by the best arid strongest wen of Cal ifornia, without 'regard to !former party distinctions.' Among the i i speakers`was John Conness ; the new U I S. Senator, who indignantly, denied tha he bad any i l. "Copperhead" about him, ut eulogized' the President, the CaLinet, and all others; engaged in puttingdownthis Rebellion.' 1 A Rebel schooner, the Alabama, Was . captured on the 17th inst off Mobile.; She was trying to get in with a contraband, cal go from Havana. The British schooner Tampico was captured abo i ut the sante, rime, having ruu the blockade off Sabine Pass with a cargo of cotton. -California is pushing the Pacific Mall road vihorously. Beside the regular State aid, sereral counties have also voted assistance, and it is said that the road will sot be finished acros -the Sierra Nevada:; The first division is already araded. The Treasury Department has stopped. printing Postage Currency. , Hereafter. all that is taken ; in by Gorroment,will, be destioye4 ) and new sheets issued when; wanted.!- I NE : - Purchased g no l in ba !El OE DR Ladie SCE 13,eadiih !ffl HAT an BOOTS EU GR PR • CR ran ail T .itte NAILS,! and 1.1-WARE. WOO to cull; ftAing confident 7e . r . espectally ij RE wants of all on terms .that yre.can sop to' their satisfac g Ting better Goods for can be bad at any ether leis MONEY tix djainiog . coantles House in Potter .r == We have also avM .mplete stock of of goods, a new n DRUGS. PUR N Chemicals, Me dicip. • Paints ' Chi 11!: Varnishes, lye Stuffs Glues LE SQAP.,. CAS oaks. Bottles Sponges Lamp-Globes Vials an ~~ &c.l WHICH ME 'e sold ]the ST RATES VERY• LO CI SH. Call and See ! Don't Fail to P. A. ST CORNER or 2; IN AND SECOND STREET.E, Axya l imiw JONE S' COLUMN ODDS = In New York. OODS, ss Goods. Clothing, ,• CAPS; SHOES, TR?,subscribers at their WAD STAND ON.' MAIN STREET, rats lONS, ERY. Offer their old customers * and j.lio . puhlis generally for Cash, United. States; Treasury IGood, Notes (wltich by the Way et•e„tatio ,) ,ONS, Wheat, Cucn, Oats, Buckwheat, Buttur,theeie, Hides, Pelts, Deer Skirks, and_sll_oe4j44s Wall• Paper, of Skins, such as Calf :Skins, &c., also; Beane, itens, Venison, and some other tiiings thtt GLASS. can't be thought of, A LARGE AND WELL-SELE.gED DRY GOODS, DEAtiYMAPE CLOTHIN G GROCERIES, our well-known stock Hats & Caps, Hard Ware, Together with some of the best KEROSENE OIL, Far superior to the Oil OVA Titlie'ulti Oil LAMP d;, LANP'FIXINGp, Also a few more of those Superior ; CANDOR PLOWS, SLEIGH':SHOES, GLASS, SASH, PUTTY, &c. INK, PAPER, ENVEL And other kinds of STATIONARY. WALL PAPER, • 1) WINDOW CII,TAINS' And other articles which time alone for bids us to mention, all of which will be sold as.low as the WAR PRICES .will allow—for,strictly And for those articles we take;; the 4igh : est market_ price will be paid. •- - We are also General Agetits7for DR. D. JAYNE'S Family Medicines, . DR. AYER'S Medicines, BRANDRETIPS KENNEDY'S Aled l ical DiscoverY, • And all the standard Medicine& of thejiy CALL AND SEE ! C,: S. _A: - JONI.ES; INS & CO. .N.-B. 'The pay for the Goods must be on band when the Goods are delivered, i+.9 we 'at* determined to live to the motto .of: "Pay sit Yon Go.". - • Jest one thing more. The Swignientifigeles and book accounts whiCh we have on band must be settled and closed np immedianilfor we tear they will t?e incrgased usual rata clf int eieo. WC IY -- ---- l' NE GOODS AND SOMETHING ELSE NVW •••-•• r • • COUDERSPORT, , ASSORTMENT tUF BOOTS & SHOES, PROVISIONS DRUGS St' MEDICINES,- Paints, Oile, and Dye Stuffs, POCKET CUTLERY, READY-PAY!! EEO • :-.-.=:;, - e. 'd ,;: 0 V _ 11111 INC ' SSI ll =BM .:~~;~~ , OE INEI =I Iron', Mil