Zitt clitariettiatt. JIM , Ora.. SATURDAY, JANUARY 24, 1863. 13- Messrs. MATHER SiL ABBOTT, No. 335 Broadway, New-York, are duly authorized to act for us in soliciting advertisments, &C., and r eceipt for the same• Gr The President has sent a message to Congress, announcing that he has signed the joint resolution, recently passed, providing for the additional is sue of $1,000,000 Treasury ,notes, to provide for the prompt payment of our soldiers and sailors. He takes occa sion, however, to express his regret that it has been found necessary to authorize so large an additional issue, andmirges the importance of adoptink some scheme whereby a further inflation may be avoided. He suggests a reasonable tax ation of bank circulation, and the estab lishment of banking associations author ized under a general act of Congress, as suggested in his Message the beginning of the session. Ifir The coal diggers' strikes are be ginning to attract attention and resis tance on the ground that their opera tions as becoming extortionate in their demands. It appears that an ordinary coal digger can earn from $lOO to $l5O per month, and yet the fraternity of miners are demanding an increase of this sum. Their endeavors to extrot an increase while they can do so well as this, is s piece of imposition which the public ought not and will not submit to. er A committee from 'New Ydrk, headed by the Mayor, representing a large amount of political and financial influence, called on the President, a few days since, to try and persuade him to make a change in his Cabinet, as, the only way to insure scccess and restore confidence in the North. Sharp words were used on both sides, and they left without receiving any " assurance that their counsel would be. heeded. The Hartford Times is informed by a Venable gentleman who recently visited Falmouth, that a number of Union soldiers, a few days since, took three "contrabands" across the Rappa hannock into the rebel lines, and tra ded them off with the rebel soldiers for three sheep. sr A. bill to authorize the issue of $100,000,000 legal tender,notes, for the immediate payment of the army and na vy, has passed both Houses of Congress and is now, a law. Our gallant soldiers and sailors will soon have their pockets lined with green-hacks. or The Richmond Examiner says that John Miner Botts has recently pur chased an estate in Orange county, Va., of 2,800 acres, for $104,600, and has left the city to take possession of it, with the intention of devoting the remainder of his years to agricultural pursuits. or The President has sent a message to Congress protesting against any farther issues of legal tender notes.— Fie is in favor of a paper currency to be issued by banking, associations an; thorized under a general act of Con gress. l It is stated, on the authority of a letter from Paris, that Messrs. Baring, of London, have five million dollars on deposit belonging to citizens of the South, who aro either now in Europe or on the wig thither. ' Mr. Hopkins, of Washington county, has offered a resolution in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, instructing the judicary Committee to bring in a bill for the restoration o of the Tonnage Tax. or Pm paper manufacturers and dealers are besetting Congrers not to remove the duty upon foreign paper.— It is believed, if they succeed in this, that paper will be put up still higher as Soon as Congress shall adjourn. sr Admiral Farragut has sent the Brooklyn, Scotia, and half a dozen of his best ships, to recapture the Harriet Lane at all hazards, and if possible, de. strOy the rebel gunboats in Bayon Buf falo. Harriet A. McLaughlin, of Chica go, asks for a divorce from Henry A., her husband. She is only fourteen years old, and has been married but a single month. sr Repot t says;GoilJ Fitz John Por ter has been disinissed from the service. the finding of the -courtbeing against a;Three more English vessels in ittempting to run the blockade, have fust'been captured by our cruisers. Q' The. rebel congress is again in ses *Waal. Richmond, and Jeff. Davis has sent in a long, tambling message. The funeral of the late General Mitchell took place from the Brooklyn Church of the Pilgrims on Friday after noon the 16th instant, the wish of the deceased being followed in the permis sion of no military parade. At the com mencement of the war Major-General Mitchell was a partner in the book-pub lishing house now known under the style of Blakeman & Mason, and was giving his whole attention to the sale of his astronomical works. Routed to patri otic enthusiam by the •"notes of awful preparation" which followed the fall of Sumpter, he impulsively declined busi ness, offered his services to the Govern ment, and was accepted. His brilliant career at the , West, and sudden death by yellow fever in South Carolina, are matters of history. ar A New York correspondent of Forney's Press, in speaking of Gen. Geo. B. McClellen's retard to Gotham, says : General MeClellen's return again, with his whole suite, to the Fifth Avenue Hotel, refutes alike the current stories that the President would reinstate him on the Potothac, and that the sages of tho Trenton Legislature would send him to the Senate. As it grows more evi dent that the "young Napoleon" is per manently laid upon the shelf for the full term of the war, his late Democratic worshippers slink away from him one by one, and soon there will "none so poor to do him reverence." Vallandigham made a speech in Congress, a day or two ago, in which he took the ground that our army ought to be disbanded, an armistice declared, and s National Convention called to com promise matters with the Rebels. He received an unmerciful castigation at the hands of Hon. Hendrick B. Wright, of this State, and Mr. Bingham, of Ohio, both Democrats. Vallaldigham is losing caste even with his own pariy.— Democrats, with a spark of royalti, are ashamed of him. ar Four of ocir iron-clads which were lying at Fortress Monroe last week, suddenly took their departure on Wed nesday and went to sea. Destination not stated, but pretty accurately guessed to be Charleston. Their names are the Monitor, (which has since been lost,) Galena, Montauk, and Passaic. They will be joined by two others at once— Patapsco . and Nahant. They have been followed by transports having on board some ten or twelve thousand troops.— God be with Ahem. or A New Orleans conispondent says : "A most remarable affair occur red recently in the former headquarters of Major General Butler. Captain J. C. McClure, of General Bank's staff, who had occasion to enter the office, found a rose lying upon one of the desks and taking it up to smell its fragrance, he no . sooner applied the rose to his nose than he fainted. It is supposed the rose contained a poisonous powder, which caused the insensibility. The flower has been secured, and will be analyzed by a skilful chemist." Cr It is suggested that the Federal office-holders take their tarn in waiting for pity and the soldiers be allowed in iustalmentof the arrears for them. Why should the men in com'fortable civil berths, with big salaries, be all paid promptly, whilst`the poor soldiers, toil ing amidst cold and hunger, and danger and death, and having destitute families in their homes, are ofted in arrears for half a year? Sir Considerable scarcity of food pre vail; among the fishing population of some portions of Newfoundland, and a petition to the Governor tells them that the fishing • all summer was good, and those who worked then were not suffer ing now. He refused to assist them and says that if they were - too lazy to work then, they may go hungry now.. That'a the kind of charity that , in many cases we might profitably adopt. - gir A Union Teague has been organ ized in Philadelphia, the main object of which is to sustain the Government in crushie out the rebellion. None but those whose loyalty to the country is unqualified, are admitted as member's.— About 500 of the leading citizens have already enrolled their names. The fine, large, old Kuhn mansion, in Chestnut street, above 11th, will be occupied by, the League. dr The bill introduced by Represen tatives Bingham, to aid Maryland in the abolishment of slavery, appropriates ten millions for that 'purpose, and Sen ator Willey's bill approPriates two mil lions of dollars for a similar purpose in West Virginia. The latter provides two hundred thousand dollars for the deportation and settlement of the-freed: men. • tir Jeff. Davis has just sent a mes sage, to his Congress, in which he de clares that the South will Helton to no compromise with the North, and will not give up the fight until their indepen dence is acknowledged. What do the LocofOcos of the Vallandigham school, who are eternally preaching up compro-' mise, think of that ? Daring-the last two , weeks.neariy ,ten millions of dollars have been paid to the army. .The payments will now go on daily until the whole army is paid: --len'aTHE Or An officer in one of the colored regiments in Louisiana says in a recent letter : "You would be- surprised at the progress the blacks make in drill and in all the duties of soldiers. I find them better disposed to learn, and more orderly than the whites. Their fighting ,qualities have not yet been tested on a large scale, but I am satified that know ing as they do that will receive no quar ter at the hands of the rebels, they will fight to the death. As an old Demo crat, I felt a little repugnance at having anything to do with negroes, bat having got fairly over, am in the work. They are just as good tools to crush the re bellion with as any that. can be got. There are three regiments in the service the first is composed of freemen, the second has some that were slaves, while the latter is composed almost wholly of the latter class.' '.Gov. Seyinonr, of New York, in his message is exceedingly severe upon the President for suspending the writ of habeas corpus. A gentleman named Thomas Jefferson; supposed to be quite as good a man, and possibly even better authority than Mr.. Seymour, filly sus tained Gen. Wilkinson in , stispending the writ• of habeas corpus' in New Or leans at, the •time of Aaron Bizrr's expe dition, saying many years afterward in reference thereto, "On /rest °cessions every officer must be teady to risk him self in going beyond the'stilet letter of the law when the public preservation requires it. 'rlis motive will be a justi fication of the act." If this be true of so small an affair as Burr's conspiracy, what shall be said when a gigantic rebel lion imperils the very life of the nation ? eir Gov. Tod of Ohio sent his mes sage to the Legislature on. Wednesday. He fully sustains the National ,Govern ment in proper efforts to crush the Re bellion. Ohio has 115,20,0 volunteers, 60,000 of whom arein the field •; 121000 men have been drafted into the service, but part of these enlisted afterward for three ,years. The balance have. been diminished by various causes, until only ; ebopt, 2,400 have been drafted into the service. The Governor recommends thorough reorganization of the Militia, and the establishment of a school -for military instruction. He j ustifies _ the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus, advocates the passage of a law punish ing resistance; and also a law alloiting soldiers to vote. or There seems to have been great destruction of Government property at Island No.-10, causelessly and uselessly. The facts, as we have them, are these : Gen. -Davies, understanding it to be a part of rebel policy to take island No. 10, and thus cut off •river transportation, and fearing they might be successful, sent an order to spike his guns, destroy his amunition and evacuate the • place. Thia order was not executed:. Davies then sent another order to his Adjutant to see thatit was executed, and seventy nine gum; were spiked last Monday, and about 10.000 rounds of ammunition'roll ed into the river. The 150 men on the Island protested, but the order was ex ecuted. ar The commissioners under the 'act for.the abblition of slavery id the Die trict of Columbia having concluded their labors, andc. made their report to the Secretary of the Treasury. The TRIM= ber of applicants for the benefit.of the' act was about one thousand, for nearly three thousand slaves, who were duly examined and valued by -a slave dealer of :Baltimore. The law appropriates $1,000,000, but only $900,000 of- this sum will be paid the authorized average for each slave being $3OO. Some of them were judged' to be worth nothing, such as as infants, the aged, and inva lids ; so the amounts withheld foethem have been added to those estimated of higher value than $3OO. er The recent threittened disturbance at Harrisburg, on the occasion of the selection of, Ueitod States Senator which drew hundreds of Democratic bullies from Philadelphia, is a burning disgrace to the State, and every man who formed one of the intended 'mob should be:made to feel the severest ptin ishment due to insubordination. While such demonstrations 'are indulged can we expect'peace in this country Y orirA few days since: a young man named Woods, in Lowell, (Mass.,) shot his young wife and then shot himself.— He is dead and the wife is, in a precari ous condition. The , two had separated on account of a family quarrel about some property, and the difficulty is sup posed to have deranged Wood's mind. sr Seven Hundred Volunteers Sick in Camp!-Young men, be' warned in time, supply yourselves with Holloway's, Pills & Oiatment. They are guaranteed ` to cure the worst of cases of Sores,'lll cera, Scurvy. Fever &Bowl Complaints. Only 25 Os. per Box or . PoL 218 ' sir Canova, the celebrated sculptor,': refused the offices of a priest when 3 dy ing, because he,said, - that the erucifix which he brought; as• so bunglingly ex-. seated. • Another instance of the - ruling, passion strong in death: ear Be what yon are. _,This-is the first eteri . toward bilcoming better than you are. PEN. PASTE AND SCISSORS., A rumor was current at New Orleans that Jeff. Davis was preparing an expe dition to retake that . Counterfeit slo' dollar notes on the Farmer's Bank of Reading are in circu lation, altered from an old plate of another bank, which is . an entirely dif ferent from the genuine. The Pope was too unwell to officiate at the Christmas festivities in Rome. It is said that his nervous system is seri ously affected by any sudden change in the weather, and the cauterization in his leg .produces a feverish excitement. A 'contemporary mentions a curious fact, that Gen. Scott, at the opening of the war, predicted that the decisive bat tles of the rebellion would be fought in •opening up the Mississippi, and of these • ho judga4.therewotild be about eight. The train,an which Gen. Butler was a passenger foi Boston came in collision with another, on the morning of the 10th, and all the seats . except those of the , ear in which he rode were smashed. The General escapOd• without injury. tientenant Colonel Garesche, chief of Roseerans' staff, had his head taken off by a cannon ball, the same"missile injuring two others of the staff. Ga resche was a fine officer, and greatly be loved by all Who knew him. The rebel pilot: captured by Capt. Sumner, of the Cambria, and brought to New Orleans, states , that all the , crew of the Harriet Lane, except eight, were killed in the struggle on board that vessel before her capture. Stephen Bates a surviving veteran of the Revolution, residing near Akron, Ohio, hae•a family of children and grand children amounting in number to thirty two.voters, -who are:. all zealous and devoted: Republicans". The 'limber of banks , in 1862 was 2,. 482 of Nirhich' 622 were in the New England states, 502 in the Middle states (including Maryland,) 24,2 in five south western out's, and 294' in the western stites. The Cheater County Democrat, which opposed Gov. Catlin's election in 1859, now warmly urges his re-election. The ability and patriotism which has char acterized Gov. Curtin's administration has won , for him many new friends. The latest accounts from Vicksburg say that all the troops and transports had been withdrawn from the Yazoo river, and that thiassault•on Vicksburg hid been abandoned. Ge'n. Sherman is superseded by McClernaild. Mrs. Borah Benton. Jacobs, wife of 001. B. S. Jacobs of the Kentucky Vol unteer Cavalry, and daughter of the late Hon. Thomas Hart Benton, died at the National Hotel, in. Louisville, on •the 4th inst. Our consul at Liverpool writes that there areirow four large vessels fitting out at that port, to follow the piratical example of the Alabania—three of iron ind'one of wood. Nine vessels are pre paring to run the blockade. Postmaster Wakeman of New_York , gives notice, that the redemption of soiled postage ceased. The amount re deemed is not , much . below , a quarter of a million of dollars, at least $20,000 of stamps „have been rejected, as having been use4.on letters, and subsequently washed. • One of the gun furnaces in the ord nance foundry at Washington, contain ing. about 25,000 pounds of heated met al, burst on Friday afternoon, injuring slightly three of the workmen. The ac cident was caused bra defect in the fur nace, and which could not easily_ be de tected. • Minnesota has just disposed of-forty thousand acres of her school lands for about one , quarter of a million dollars. There--yet remains,two and one-half acres..to be sold, If hf,innesota makes,wise use of school lands she by-and-by, possess an immense fund for the : instruction of her children., The Cincinnati Times states that Mrs. MdryAnn i Kidney, the wife of a linion'soldier,"died of•starvation in thai city . recently. Her • husband has re ceived- nic pay for . months, income - queues of which this poor woman died from actual want of food to' sustain life. The next wheat crop in Ohio pr,omis es to be slim. The editor of the Ohio Farmer has lately travelled through the State, and gives it, as. his opinion that upon the whole he has never seen such 'a .. leeblO start for the . winter crop, as there was in December. A. part of-the-family of Gen. Beante gard arrived in Mobile December 20th, tinder permission given by Gen. Danlti, and are on their way to Georgia. Ile wife' of Gen.. Beinregard'Ves "too 11f-to biliainoied, and she still remaida in Nevi Orleans. At, the Republican caucus of ;the Legislature of Ohio, the. Lida. Banjo.- min F: Wade was nominated on the first Billet for re-election to the Senate of the United States. The vote stood, for Wade 65, for Gen. Schenk, (the memher ofUongress elect in the VAllan dighem distilet,) 56. PROFESSOR MCCOL—We find the fol lowing incident in a letter, written from this city, says the Harrisburg Telegraph, and published in the Bradford Argus : We must acknowledge that we have never heard of the occurrence, but pub lish the same as we find it in that pa- per : "An amusing little incident occurred here on the evening of the New Year's day :—Professor McCoy, a public lec turer, who will be recollected by the 12th Pennsylvania Militia, as the man who delivered a very patriotic address to them on their being disbanded at this place, on the receipt of the Presi dent's-proclamation of freedom, about ten o'clock that evening, wended his way to the capital, and finding the night watchman demanded to be let into the House of Representatives, and on reach ing there he requested the gas should be lighted ; and he then walked up to the Speaker's chair, and seating himself in the venerable "John Hancock chair," read aloud the . proclateatiom and- com mented upon , it as he read, addressing himself to the empty seats. After clos ing, he says to the watchman 'You are Ale only person who has heard the Pres ident's proclamation read from the •place where it should have been read to thou sands,' and.wOked quietly back to his hotel. U; S. SfiNATOES.--Eleetions - for Uni ted Stites Senators have been held re cently'. in , the following States : We give the names of the Senators chosen and their politics : /I.fissouJohn B. Henderson, Em ancipationist. Delaware—James A. Bayard, Brock inridge Democrat, re-elected: Illinois—LWm. A. Richardson, Doug lass Democrat. Mirinesota—Alexander Ramsay, Re publican. , • Michigan—Zachariah Chandler, Re publidan, re-elected. Indiana—T. A. Hendricks and. Da. vid Turpie, Democrats, the latter for the short term. New'Teriey- - •:-James W. Wall, Brook inridge'Demoninan 1860, and arrested for disloyalty in 1861. . . Massachusetts-Chas: Sumner, Be- Publican,"re•cilected. Maryland—Ex.Governor Ricks, Un ion, appointed by alb GOyernor. EXPIRING ENLISTMENT :—From present appearance,—the Army of the Potomac will, in a few , months, - be curtailed of nearly one-fourtkof its present strength by the expiration of Ihe terms service of the two years' men and nine. months' men. Thera are some twenty or thirty regiments of New York troops enlisted for two, years, whose term will expire early in the spring, and, the term.of the nine months' men, raised in August and September last, will be out in May and June. The subject no doubt, 'en gage the attention of the Government, for it is highly important that the effec tive strength of the army should be maintained. CAMEILIZIN'q DEF E AT :—Tine, Harrisburg Telegraph, in speaking of General Cam erOn's defeat for the Senate of the Uni ted States, says : "We have undoubt ed evidence in our possession that if Mr, Laporte bad voted for General Camer on, at least two Union.Demecrats would have also supported him, and his elec tion would have been certain,; but when those gentlemen saw one Republican unwillling to support him, - they expected that others of the same party would fol low,otherwiiieihey would have still voted for General Cameron and elected him, notwithstanding Mr. Laporte's refusal to support him." PAPER MADE OF Vi r OODThe Bosion Journab is printed on paper made of wood by a new piecess, The pai)er pre sents a clear surface, is•of soft and firm texture;- and admirably adapted far newstiaper purpp,ses. The Journal states that this 'paper is not a fair test of what the-manufacturers propose to do,-but it ' 'certainly' proves that there are other materials than rags•which can be used suceessfully in the manufacture of white paper. • rftgliErtyr OF _ REBELS . IN , WASHINGTON, . Attorney-General Bates has decided that sll property seized by the Military Governor of the District of Columbia, dn - abcorint of the treason of its owner, shall be tamed over to District Attor ney Carrington,ivho will proceed against the property in accordance with the provisions of the Confiscation Gen.'Martindalo will hereafter act it obedience ttzethe decision of the Attor ney' General. •CoLoam). Trtoors.—ln Congress, on Monday, Mr. Stevens introduced. a bill setting forth that, as the terms of en *tine* soldiers: will -soon expire. and rti .r it is .expedient to, have soldiers whose constitutions peculiarly fit them for the -Southern - campaign, that the President authorited and required to raise, equip, and orgunize a hundred and .firtYthoisiand persbys of color of African descent to serve five years: • oar Ex-GoTernor. Wisner, of Michi gan, died at the camp of ,the 22d Michi gap,lnfantry, loxington, Jan. 4, 1863; of which, regiment he was colonel, in !,ke,, 46th nar 0-his Age. .His wife' was with him during . Tus CHAMPIONSHIP IN ENGLAND.—Jem Mace hopes that King will not make a match with any foreigner, but will give him the first chance of retrieving his laurels. Mace is mach surprised that a man of such immense power and youth should so easily forego the high. est and most valuable trophy any pugil ist can attain—namely the champion's belt. If King does not make a match then any man in the world who may fan cy Mace can be on for the belt and the championship, and any amount .from £2OO to £l,OOO a side. Mace need not fear Sing fighting any one else for the belt until he has given -Aim a chance, By all ' rules King is. hotrod to make is match with the first comer, and there can be no doubt Jem stands in this position, as s money was down by three o'clock on the day of the fight. Sing .however, has distinctly intimatedthat he will not fight again.— Bell's Life in Lon4oth. SHOT BY k. THAOHBR,Th,O county of Sent, Maryland, was thrown,into a state of excitement on Tuesday, the 13th in . stank by the fact that a, gentleman by the name of Wood had come to his death by a pistoiin the hands of a school master named Perkins. The facts as we have received them, are these :—Per kins-having previously had occasion to correct a son of Wood's the latter swore -vengeance, and, 'accordingly, attacked the teacher as he was sitting upon a fence near the school-house on last Tuesday morning, striking him violently over the head with -It club, and then knocking him down. Perkins at once drew a pistol and shot him twice, killing of the dbed, the perp'etintor'gave him self up quietly-to the proper authorities ; but the affair has caused a stir which has not been ,known-there. for many a year. . THE CAUSE OF Fr.—One and the main reason why the war for the suppression of the staveholding Rebellion has not been more successful is, ,has the Go vernment at Washington has not only the Rebels jn the Aeunded States to contend against, but a powerful and welt organized'pro'slaiery party in the North who call themselv,es 'l:lemocrats." These latter, though: they profess 'to be loyal, havei'from The :srart, been giving all tlie aid and comfort possible to their pro-slavery brethren South, by the most bitter and vindictive opposition to the Administration. • The leading politi cians of the border States, too, have thrown all the weight of their influence, consistently with tliel 4 r 'personal safety, in favor of The Rebels. Had the north ern people acted as a unit in putting down the rebellion the war would have been closed ere this. FE.ENCEI CONSUL AT NEW ORLEANS.- The Washington Republican states that Count Mejan, who was accused by Gen. Butler as baying acted as banker to Jeff Davis in keeping the money which went to pay for clothing for the confederate army, and which Money was paid over to the rebel contractor after the inves tigation of the lion. Reverdy Johnson, has been dismissed from his post as Consul at New Orleans, and M. Fan connet has been recognized by our go vernment,_,This was done by. M. Mer cier, the French Minister, .after exami nation of the record of Mejan's acts, and without any otheir attibn'en the part of our government except the presentation of the case. EATING Boasc-FLEso : A letter •has been received in Washington from - an unconditional Union lady; resident of Nashville, Tennessee, stating that When Wheeler cut off the supplies to Bose cran's army, our soldiers had to live off of horse flesh for forty hours. The cheerfulness with which these brave men submitted to this "military necessi ty," and the courage with which they met Bragg's army, is a triumphant refu tation of the base slander circulated by the copperheads, that the soldiers desire peace on any term. . THE CONTRAEANDS.—Negroes- who have come within" the United States lines on the Potomac, state that many of the slaves are carried away and sent South. The greater Portion, hoivever, on the long neck of landletween the Rappahannock and Potomac, have al ready "Made their esCape within the Uni on lines; bringing with them . their"inas" - tors' teams and other property. "'nor avail themselves of the night for their exodus. COAL MINE IN MlCHlGAN.—Preessor. Winchell, State Geologist of Michigan, reports that the , whole central.. area or that State, embracinglB7 townships, or 6,700 square miles, is underlaid by coat seams,‘ranging'in thickneas from three to five feet. Mines &ye . - been opened in several places ,. ; three.at Jackson and. one at Corntina, which last year yielded over 25,000 tuns. The coal resembles that in the Illinois beds ;n quality, GOOD FOR TEE NAVY,-it appears from informatitin derived from the Navy De* partment that the proceeds`from seizures which have been made by the navy amount to about $40,000,000, nearly enough to to defray the entire expenses of the Department, thereby making it. eelf-sustaining. The amount expeisded, last year wa5.541,000,000.