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ilultmcmii §isuairlr. 11V .1 A COWAKPIN ,\ 00 ~ M, i< Ispubbsheddoily, [fh»luy»e_eept ,, i i »H.« loi tw he mor.ths; t*,n^ „ n, mtht. i i"i lam he I—ra s Mil i »«»l"i ' iu-month, in afrVO—i« . > mail arc at the n-k i I t!,,, --, . . 1.. Ac Ihelll. EDUCATIONAL. M[ss \ E, PARKER WILL RE ... duties of h.r school for 80l B |1 ;.- on I *.-;t\ ■•■« v. nth street, 1., (ween I la] thi Lai, ol NP.PII MB! P. As sl,', pxperi d ■. -he _att< i- in i>. it mtiafiat ti'.n I I, inl,lul 1,, i I \ ll!,vie:lM.-.l . It .1 I-. t« in, ill ■ the - .me Proper atte ation will ■ and ni-'i .l ~! all «ho msj I , "it,,r.\vi'i»i> \i \i,r. SEMINAL, I' i<d this Hi HOOP will , 'ii. --1 ' ' '\ :i\\ ia ti :. l-i n< sl and end i . ■ apply to th,- -ul, . Virginia". T. A CKKNSHAVi TT) il" IL 1I >R BO\ S The next rvi;ii- Kjon *d im m. lit«. H. v. iii i,.Him. ue, ml '- ..:■• i ..i pupils hunted , • _ij summer -. ii.,..! i il - hould apply at \\ il.il AM B JOHNSON, ..i c street, above 1 ighth. Ii M \\{\ SCHtX '1„ ON GRACE, aI I \ [HILDA Nl> I OUR! II Ul : ALk-HAII uili i, -.I'll, th - IIGOL on tin- in-i MONDAY in . i - ISt 1> : ■-. M .i Mh [lELBACIIER* | IIOOL »iil p. ii its Nineteenth Session on V;, ,-, ' D ■ i au 17 s( • BUSINESS NOTICES. tl7 , i'i;|ii:. \ r I . 1..., 1.. I- ,- t , MMI--1..N Ml IIIIN I , Main and ( arj, Pi, ii vi-,»■.,, V i\i i. - :--u- lit ~1 ii -- WINES and 1 IQUOB -. whii b hi .- ' .c-i n, vi.-1 rati - Hi I üblit. i.'; ■ I v.\Mi:i, X W! [SIOER, I " ■ Au ti ii md Commission Merchant, OddFt ■. . 1 imondf V.c, . ; or Personal Pro . "uiiti\. Als.., Men handise, lin, &. . ii, i.licits : i thi Jiii'ie c. le-l .. 10 l"tlu-.Vu UK 1) : HARD S. MASSIF,, late MASSIE & PLEASANTS, - ■ ■ • ORN, WHEAT, FLOOR . iii descriptions of Mercl—en made on i :,-i.-niiii.il-.-. I a. f —at—,. \\ T A RAMSEY k CO., \\ Al i il'i.N AND GENERAL i OMMI ->PiN Mil:. HAMS, | l ii ll Link,) Ai ..I -sl A. GPGUQIA. \ I .-;,,.,'. ■', - : : i-. Hon U. II May, Al- J 11 1 iy! .'. Ri" :-„n. • . \s iii Herring & s,.n i ..lumbus il i i, in n ov Co., Las born & , David Hudson un E Wiiuihip, Saulsbury & Pease. .. ll C. N. Uubert, W. T. Burge,J. Pur i - Linti n. h L. BloomfiekL ; ■ I .-. • ■ .-■ Myers. U il Mil ..u, 11. D. Broader, J. P. Le i :-. E. W. Nelson, John ...-n au - lm RUNAWAYS. rpwn ll j SDRED AND FIFTY DOL | i LED foi my SERVANT, 1.1) --;'■ - ie- \, ii - old, black, iii ii ~r upon one .ar . He It fl my 6u m on Sun -11 l 1-. I believe. 11l ' i .iv, - -ni i friends. He i i a:, I nt the Ah;- in Chun h. oi 1 ptist in .'!"■ - -3t* WILLIAM il. BICHARDSON. V. I X HUNDRED DOLLARS RE- I ' WARD bom my -t.il!,-. on the - th< >'i, ultim i. i,.. t v.: NEGBO MIA' . i i in..-. I, i . in in v — ibout twenty-thr yean .Td. about rive f badly - ■ Alb it is about twenty yean old, . ~ ue !e - hit i', In ight mill itto, with . feet and hind,. I will ihove reward for them, 01 three h una red is for i itb*r une, d.-lA , red t" me at my st-i',l. s, Pnmklin -t t i in evidently making i i thi V ink.-, lines. j \ .i i s i . JOHNSON, \ ~. ,i,c St ibles, Franklin -it.-, t, lot Li. liiii'ui.l. Virginia rp\VO HUNDRED DOLLARS JiE- I WARD I: in away from the subscriber, I last month, August) a Negro Boy ItOI I i,l . about twenty-eight years old"; i, in h, - h.-jli; Lie k ; tin.- s.-t of i inclined to be knock-kneed; quick ils ... tiv.-. He hid ~ii when tie i- it a bis "th, r . 1 ithing not r<- II i in Middlesex county. I " v. i>'i tor l.i- apprehension and deliver !• -.- 8 N. DAVIS \-CO.. ot «i,tin. in, nt in anyjail so that n -•• ', im L.L PA' B. / k \ X HUNDRED DOLLARS RE- W WAltl) i in away, aboul the 1-t of July, pi.l, fion i \ Seay, to whom he was hired to iiu.viil. railroad, my boy JOHN, years old, fivi feet sis or eight in :• high, bright complexion, .-pan- made, and I* Ul pa) tic- above reward for bin liiitnnieiit in jail s., 1 . an get B. A A WATSON, • . .'- -t >i Till 11 y Post,,lll. c, Nottoway county. Virginia. •piIKKK HUNDRED DOLLARS LK ttAPli l.'.n iv iy li'in "in farm, neiir Dun i lay night, our two men, TODD and '•!.. i I uaie si/.,-, weighs pi i hap i -.entv-hve pounds, well made, : i. it\ -fivt years old, and ■ little bald; ul . ■ , plausibly ; be i- about five feet We bought hun of Dr. Wiley a Milton, North Oarolina. He il ii Mi. Wi—iam raylor's, tiv.- mUes from M■' H Hi i WcU c~v ni.led on Pan river Mhu "'■ ii : iii .-, i>. in thai neighborhood. it i i i-.i black, healthy Loom_g, speaks „ . - meuta : h.-i-hi at.,mt five '•■■'' vi ii. hi -, well made, and weighs about one i and fifty pounds, tt',- bought him m I ci hteen months ago, from a gen —l t iiolina. ill lij ih. above reward, oi |190 for each, il 1 red to v- in Danville, oi eonlined ii, •;. it we .an gel ti,. m. THOMAS C. tt11.1.l \Ms .v CO. . i mfd-e 4H ■ 1 Ul' XAW A 1 M\ X HUNDRED L'H.i \i; XI WARD Ban away from the ■ riber, ul ut the Ist of August, my man KIN himseU HERBERT. Ue la black; iranue; quick iv action; about five foet mno inches high, and twenty-two hi twenty-five . purchased in li__umond in July last ••I Wi . . l. Mor bin, i»_io resides near Jude's Ferry. ■.;> ■. 1 will ray the above reward II '"• i leUvered to Lee k Bowman, Pn-hmoiid, i i.. .a . unflned ia jail so 1 get hun. G. A. WHITS, l-'t* 1.. \ington, ViiKiniii. 1 DISSOLUTION OF 00-PARTNER- Jl / SHIP f_e partnership of the subeerihera, in ,i i , .iiiiii.-i.ii buaineae, under the I'OLLI .i\. i ATLETT - CO ,is this day ti. mutual consent Either of the murtnera Un out -tn.due bii-i.i,-— of the linn. Aid XI D TOLLPSOX, THOMAS .1 i ATLETT, WILLIAM BELL Ri liir.,i,l, August 81, IIM un :jl At / IOMMLSSIOM I: I SIB A T OLLEBOX i CO.. No 111 Main street, Bidti—ond, NTrpinia, i"!l.-oii, Catiett * C 0.,1 J) it,mi,- tl„- COMMLSSHiX Kl'.-sIM-.SS ii ioi tin hU-iai patiwnage to our form— ■ b ,j.-.-. bj prompt attention,quit k n_es aJid '■ 'mn- to" merit a share ~l tbepuhh-jm- A. 'IDLLP.SON _ tO. au il ,t IrORSE SJD IKS AND NAILS.— Con -1 tracufoi HORME BIIOES ai.itNAILB will ■tt' 1 1, p.mm. Nt ; Bhuea,ft.3o ** -i; »a.L, *.i p it, j y I'UCJCEBi • .|t..m in ■ hu ;.'. Artillery More, Piehmoiid Arsc_i_l. IL<f,~ Lynchburg and Danviile j—pen, copy one and send un* to K.chmoiid AnkouL as l g| V i\V SONo.—l'ubliuliialTt »-DA V, im.l i* may l«- had ut nil the Hook und Music idorch, 'HIP ALABAMA ! . |SJe\ GEOKOS DL'NN ft 00., P.;, lm ioi id, Virginia. i lO'JTON AND WOOL CAIiDS for \J bale by POWERS ft VALENTINE. <* 2-WottSt* DAILY _DIS PATCH. Y< >L. X X Yll. RICH MONO, VA., MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1864. NO. 58. LETTER LIST. I IST (»F LETTERS reraainino, m Use j RICHMOND POST-OFFICE ou the U day .1 September, X-j 1 ; Persons calling for Letters in tin Pi' will I -. thej ~i. mi kn n-i n U,- i in- p, -:.e.-. wiß be two c_wrs on cs—h bitter . d. LA HI I. V LIST. I Mrs AA, i.e. Mis A .Vl;,ni- I . Mi- I. Al- M.-tt k Anl. :-.n. Mi- s- null Ai,T, i-"i,. Mrs s A Ai„i,-ts,,n, Mrs Wm A I mi. Mi R c Allen, Mi ll B Anderson-Mrs Ella An 1.1- ~n. Mm I. Adams, Mi- N All. n, Mrs Lt. Allen, M s r y Aagyle, Mrs I. Arnuttrong, Mi-s M Alien, Miss a Anthony, Miss \ i a Tv L'e, Mi-s i: Austm :i , Hue M A A td< r -sii, Mi- N R All.-ii. Mi-- M C All. -ii, Mis* C Allen. Mi- P Allen, MiasC And.-r-on, Mist tt Al n, Mim a \-!ii,-,. Mis. a A«hley, Mi- M E Austin. H \lis M,-\ Bate*, Mi-- Mar) Bailey, Mtie .. I iii.N.Mi-. Susan !.. n;i, ,11, M:. Susan E liiuioi'i. Mi,, l'iitlii ma nil-, m,-s Emma Booth, VI '..-., B!\ th, . Miss M ~-c k Blunt, Mi 1. tie M Bl i, kbiii n. Mis Li/./i •' Bi,|.r,„„|, Mi i Vir ginia P Li in, Mi- Beck Boyd, Mist If bB - Hi , Mn; Brock, Mi- MoUie S 8r...:: id.MUsF M Braxton, Mi-. Maggie Itn-.'.-, Mi-s Kanuic i;n.-.--. Mi- Annie I. Bi ■ -. Ms. TJsebia E Brook, Mi* Nellie Browne, Mist Rathe 1. Burroughs, Mis-. Mii v i Bledsoe, Mrs Mary Lintie Btounl I . Mrs \1 iitln A Blank, liship, Mr- Maggit Bowman, Mrs _ I. R.i eliev, Mrs Mary A Bradj I , Mis EUsaJ B k- -' , Mis Lucy .1 Brown, Mrs Sarah AP Brunt, Mi-l.ii/ih th Burnt. Mi Bai >h E Bach-a non, Mi- s.irah Blarsome, Mi- Pannie L Ball, M:- Mary a BoeweU, Mi- Sarah /. Linn. Mi- Eli snlx.-tb Blankenship, Mrs John X Berry, Mi Muv '. Bt theU, Mrs Addie J Hu, kwc-th, Mrs Juh i B in lo. Mi, Beverly li Barnes, Mi Sarah Bath ins, Mi- >;i.iu Bar ham, Mi- Virginia L Baker, Mm B,il, un, Mi-, Mu\ I. tt_ik -~ M, - Annie I. l.a.t — d.lle. i Mi Harper Carnol, Mrsß II Cawthorn, Mm M.uv t Carter, Mi- Hi arietta < aniss, Mrs I. I. ( u ter, Mnt Catherine I alej. Mrs Euney ( happt 11, Mr- Sarah (.li .nil.eil ,111. Mi- ( li iiui'.n.i, Mrs EUe ol'.-th t hilds, Mis M _ M Clark, Mm Ann! C ighill, Mrs M 11 M i ~:. man. Mi- Sarah E I lineley, Mn Maria ' ok-, Mi Elizabeth Cosby, Mr- _ C Coote . Mrs Iran, i- Cosby, Mrs il F Cowman, Mrs Salhc Courtney, Mi- Susan L t'rew, Mm Man A Crow, Mm Maigaret A Crow, Mi - 1.l c.,it,i. Mi-- t, - ri ■ i irtcr, M;- M 11 ( m- r, Mi - Ella 1-' ( ardweU, Miss I, .1 Carter, Miss Carri. Carter, Mi - _ II Car ter, Miss Susan C I irter, Miss EUn I issidv, Miss M W Cotm in, Mi— 3 A I bristian, Miss Va i v iri,, Hiss M W ci, uidb r, Miss'S V i bristi-u, Mi- 1.l i I, .11:- Iv, Mi- Indies i larke, Mis* L athej ( oles. Hiss Liz ~ Collins, Miss M B t in!.-. Mi- L UCourtney, Mi - Liniiie i ml. it, Mi- Hitrtb k :. Mi J I'ummingH, Mi -\i> ' renshaw, Miss Jauie Cren shaw, c|i Ci.ii.1,,,!. E St royper. !>. Mrs Emma Davis, Mis D.HIO, Mi Ml'.ln ridson, Mrs L Dudly, Mrs M L Densler, Mrs S .) Duki . -Mi- M I. Duke, Mi- J E Duncan, Mm L U . -ii. Mr* II ,vi. t Drier, Miss M C Davis, Mi ( i Hii.ii, •., Mi-I. E Davis, Miss Eimnit Dela ney. Miss Anna M Dogged, Miss Marie Droescher. /.' .Mi Bettie Lean-. Miss J N Eggleston, Miss OM Elmore, Miss Bettie A Evans, Miss M E Erley, Mi-Ann L Lai.,i,k 3), Mi- Bluiira Evans, Mm Molly 1,1.1."-, Mi- Lie v A 11, --/-' Mn i arolinc M Parvar, Mrs J A Folkc ,Mm Sitiuhi I'liiei. MrsSalbi tunes Porbes 2 , Mi ll .iv I. Ford. Mm l.n iM 1 i.-t. her, Mrs i; t. I Mi- M vi ,-'i ■ i, i. Mm M A franklin, Mm S T Franklin, Mi E Franklin, Mrs Bettie Flippo, Mm i< Franklin, Mis. Louisa F rinludt, Miss I- Fori ton, Miss Sailie A Finney, Miss M Ftemin, Mist Bettie Foxton, Mi— Annie Fmuie, Mi--. Fannie Freeman. \l, C.tt (i ,iv, M ■ i. A W Gibson, Mis M ii num. 1, Mr.- en irabold, Mrs B C Oat-right, Mm 111. Gooch, Mi Sw Gordon, Mi- Emma ■ -. Mi--.1. ni.i.-P ii.il. Miss Emma. J Gill, Mi-- Mar A < in n. i. Mi - Sarah Goud, Miss SaUie Goode, Miss Mary C Gordon, Miss Nannie W Gordon, Mi- E Godscv, Mint Bettie Goddin, Mist Mattie. Gruen, Mi- Lull .I Gri-ant, Miss Mary D Gregory, II M i.' ih.iiii, Miss B C Ownin, Miss Mar) L Green, Miss Li__e Qrubb _.—Mis-. Bettie Harris, Mist Mary M Hue,.-, Mis- L iiiisa J H.ii-.i,,Mi Ellen 11 lyes, Miss Sarah E H-mblett, Mi-- Sophi i lloath, Miss Ellen Hitl-on, Mi- ( Ilelsmg, Miss Bettie IL iidriek, Mi-s Annie Ueeney, Miss Sailie A HiU, Miss S Hill, Miss M I. Hockaday, Miss M .1 Holt, M;- MoUie S Holt,* Miss Annie V Hanble, Miss Susan Hooper, Miss R M Hove, Mist EmmaC Huffman, MissJ Huflman, Mi- Mary Hull, Mrt I. Harrison, Mrs W A Harrison, Mr- A till iwktns, Mrs W L Harrison, Mrs Cornelia H......-i.-i, Mrs Nanq liii:-, M.s EUsa Harris, Mis E ILi-h, Bars Fannie C Higgins, Mrs 1 I Hub bard, Mm Kate ilii.-_ir.s, Mrs Anne C HiU, Mm J 8 Holmes, Mm Chas H uui. Mrs li P Uorton, Mrsß il 'V.-v.l. Mrs M C HoweU, Miss Howard, Mr- Thos How, Mm ST Homer, Mrs Mary X Hopkiss, Mis M L HoweU, Mrs LA HieL-ins. Mrs J li Hundley, Mrs 3 E Hut' Id-sun. Mrs Paul HiU. / -Mi- Susan Inkjet. / -Mrs E Jeuninss, Mrs < V Jeffreys, Mrs L» --b, ll.i .In vi-, Mi- s A. L.i, -olis, Mrss L Jarvis, Mm Sarah John-c.n. Mrs V E Johnson, Mm Ro John soii. Mrstt JohssonyMrs I*-A Johnson, .\Ls> han nie Jones, Mrs nB Jorian, .\lis Annie HFJones, Mi- Mary Joseph, Mrs Cora 11 Jonet I , M-- Mar- Kan I Jordan, Mrs Nil Jordan, Mrs Jane _ Jones, Mm n. t ivi i ,I.lll'-. Mrs C A Jones, Mm J P Jones Mm Sarah A Jones, Mn I. 1. Jones, Mis Wm E James, Mrs Fannie T James, Mrs B M Jeffery, Mi — J, un,, 1,-nkiiis, Mi-s m C Johnson, Miai Susan Johnson (2), Mist Isabella Johnson, Mis- Sophie Jones, Mi s MoUie X Joins, Miss Lucy Jones, Mil _ ugaret Jordan, MissLettieH C Jones, Miss An nie Jones, Miss Adahne Jack on. _.—Mrs a w King, Mr- A 0 Kuper - 1 , Miss E Knir!, Mis In- J Knot, .Miss C Keeni.iii, Mrs c Knot, Mr- a L Kimbrough, Kingsberry, Miss BPK-ote, Miss M J -endrick, Mrs M Kenney, Mrs L Kirby, Miss M E Kill, Mrs .s a K.-.t . Mis-LKull, MissTKeon, MissG Kennedy, Mi- l; X X, U.y, Miss L Kilby, M's M Keys, Mrs M L Keller. L—l> Lynda, MraCE Lightfoot, MissE Lind say, Mis- i; Lilt.iirn, Miss B Lindsay, Miss _ li l.i-iu-. Wis \ Lean—ount, Miss P Lewi-, Miss A Lewis, MrsN L Lambert, Mm M Laadrum, M.-s H J L indium '3), Mrs 1! J L unci, Mm M Lane. Mn J Laughlin, Miss E J Lamb, Mrs A B Lawrence, L'Hoiniiidreli. If.—Miss A c Murphy, Mrs M J Myers, Mrs J Muller, Mi- L T Munford, Mi-s s. R Munford, Mi N It Mv.itt, Mi-s E Myers. Miss L Morris, Miss J Moore, Miss c Morris, Miss G D Mint, i-, Mi-- 8 Millir, Miss M Murner, Miss T I> Milton (2), Miss X C Moon . Miss W V Morrissett, Mr- C V M,,n.lv. Mrs A G Morgan, Mr* A V Moore, Mis- M Merkel, Mi-s E B Miller, Mi-s A Mathews, Miss A Maguire, Mi-M X Martin, Miss.) Marshall, MrsTMadison, MissM E Martin, Mm 8 Meirs, Miss J H Meak, Miss J Marnn, Misa May Man, Mm A M in, Miss i M diiry, Miss V L Magi_, Miss CM Mum,,,-, Mis- i. M.iliav.MisJ A M_llory,MissC M Moi N. -Miss Sarah E Norris, Miss Georgia CNew cll, Mi - Beiiheiiiit W Newton, Mm Mary J Nea Mi- bertha Newman. O. -Mi-s Honors O'Keefr, Mrs L A Osborni, Mil a Busan O'Nei I. Mi . Mary SOtter. . J'.—Mi.-'.M A Page, Mrs EC Padgett, Mm A Pur ine, Mr- B P.,uls.,n, Mis J Poe, Mrs 11 Pierce ~' , Mrs E A S Pilehers, Mrs L P Peters, Mrs I Penny. Mi- P B Perry, Mm M Perry, Mrs X Paine, Miss ll l'ilte. Ml— N Pttrdua, -Miss Ll/Zle I'll, c, Ml I CE Phillips, Ml— L Perry, Mis- E C Pcuibortoii, Mi-s B Poay -' , Mi- M E Pegram. it!—Mr- Rovhurn, Mrs c Ric_ardso_, Mm A .1 Rodgcrs, MrsN 0 Rice, Mrs A A Rose, Mrs PG Rodgers, Mrs J Roane, Mrs L Roberson, MissM A Regnault. Miss B L Roane, Mi-s M E Reive, Mis- < Rodgcrs, Miss Lime Roots, Miss R Rouche, M.s- K.,te Robinson', Mi'-J Rudolph. 8 Miss M A Smith, Mr- N J Strong 2), Mrs s J St-n-ibury*, Mrs F Bt~wart, .Misa N Spotts, Mi—L A Sinder, Mist E V Smith -' , Mi-. E J Smith, Mn M A Smith, Mi— Al M Smith. Mi- FA Smith, Mn Sue A Smith, Mrs 8 A E Smith, Mis- P Sl.i'.ei, Mr- J sl,, id. Mi> M L s, It, Misa P-haddock, MrsJGM Shannon, Mi-= P Sheppard, Mis- R D Scott, Mi B 1. Suit / Mi -M F Tucker, Mrs V G Tumew, Mr- V P Praylor, Mi-s E Tulb?y, Mis SP Turner, Mi-s P. l vi,.-, Mis E Turner, ktist P A Tyler, Miss A Trust all, MianMTin k.-i. Mi,, J RTyler, Misa J FTucker, Miss L E Tyler, Mrs M Tyler, Misa A Tompkins Mi- M l> p.'.tt. f, Mrs A Thornton, Mrs B Tinsley, Mrs F W TTihcnor, Mrs J Q Thumpson, MrsAP Thomas, Mm* M Tucker, Mrs C Thompson, Mm I. M Temple, Mr- A 1. T hasmts, Mrs M Taylor, Mi- G T'aylor, Mis, a Taylor (_), Mrs P Taylor, Mrs si; ■ Taylor, Mis- j 1j Thompson. P. Mis Mary P Vaughn, Miss Fannie Vimant. W.— Borah W WiUuuns, Mrs W C Wright, Mrs Wm c Wright, Mrs v r Wright Mm Lucy w Walker, Mrs Susan (i Walker, Mrs George C Wad dill (2), Mrs Ann C WaUen, Mrs 8 T Watson, Mr Mary L Woymai k. Mm Maiy E Wekh. Mi Maul. Webb, Mrs Jane E Wilkinson, Mm Lduisa Wicker, MrsM G Wilson, Mrs Elizabeth Wenbola, Knß Ch.y Wiiiuli.ld, Mrs Nannie B Wood, Miss Ann Walker, Miss Sarah E Watkins, Miss Viiyrinia H WoodMn, Mi-s Alice Warring, MissNanuieDWerth, Mim Julia A White (3), Misa Kale E .Whiteheud, Mist Mary White, Miss l.lla Whiteling, Mi- M ir i- t■ .-< tt'hitteii. Miss Linkej Wit, Mim Lissie Wil son (4), Mi-s Eetty Willi- [8), Miss Muv <> W«l --.1run (care of C Waldrop, Richmond, Viiginia Initials-li V, PJ W. OENTLPMPN'.S LIST. A Wli Aydeot.-r, W T Akers, dipt Wm 0 Al len, Hi tt'm E Anderson, tt'm X Armi-t. ad, Col T'h.inas Anderson, TT,-.- Il Allison, IIJI An. i . It Ashley, R Auhr. v, P C Adam-, M Allies, J \ John Alley, Dr J D Aney, Lieut J II All.-n, J An deis,,n, C f Ad—mi. Rev Any, Aiif.'eiei, tt'ni 11 An- I thonv, Wll Add—on, C M Adams. Jt- Parks Guvail Bailey, tt' J Bli.keston. W I. Baldwin, Wm B Rlossoii, tt'illiam Butler, Lt Wm B Ruber, Wm Butler, W Buin.-il, Wm Rru-ill, Thos R Bass, Temple Baldwin, Shadrucli Bailey, R Warren Boyd, ReaJous Baker, Robt B BOash, Lt Kd Bulk, .ol M II Blundlord, John Biding, Bergt Z Rlxnton. I John J Blvi Jumes Barbour, John 8 Boas—eQr. JB I B_aa,BeM-J Beane, John 11 Bruer, J Black, John I II Brown, John R Button, Jumes Railey, James Brookm John J Brown-, Joseph 11 Boxley, J S Rur i. - , Jake 8..P, J.Tin J Bowler, John SBlantoii, J P Burroughs, H Rrooker, Capt T E Bridge, 11 R Buiguin, II II Burnhill, Henry s Bijnson, John li-iwt-is, John Richard Ilea—.y, J I Brown, Jus 1, Bird, J li.ikei, John Uruimui/h, A W Brantley, P R Bensun, Fred Bryun, P B BaugK Capt Frank Bran din, Kdntoiid Bivoks, Corp h BruKKi Edward Bo ruiie, D D Bulk, D U Brown, Charles B.iU.w, Chas I A Uvrri-u, John Bo win, J \\ Beck, J A Bm uuni, | I Tin Ilritntli v, Joseph Billfold, John Bennett (2), J II Bradley, Henry P BewwusesL linwaid tt' linker .» . Hani-. I) lliuin-s, (!,,„ R ]!n, hctt, O M Bat.-*, tin P Brown, Geo R 8.-11. <;,-,, Bailey, George II Bunch, <i ll Hall, Cap* (b ~'\v Bowtan, Q tt' Brown, lie.. W Barker. C II BuUingtou, Barry Braxton, In-Bni.lv. B W Perry, J I IS.-arm, B M Brown, Lt L Betisoty, A J Benett, A I Bneaa, A J Brown, Lt A I. Belisoly, Albert Balm, A M Bulk, Dr A O I Beale. C tt'i.i C H.k, W JCrawfud, Wm Carter, Wm C (Till.l-. Con; Wm H Christian, Capt W L Ciiinpb.ll, tt' l; I ,I.man, tt' I a-parv. W IT; .black, \V Q Cnw, l'h.l- Cauthorn, J J Corfew, 8C Cain, Thee ROal mii. Lieut T J Cannon, Col O (rut hfield, Dr B P christiiin. Capt 8 I! tliismm,- Samuel R Cocke, 8 Chen (5), Root Cooke, It II Cartes, 1' Cole, O E ( bamley, E Conner, Lewie tt" Chambertayae, John 3 i i.nsli.iw, Dr -Lis D Chewing, Lieut J ll Cooper, J tt' iUt In .11, M ij ir I P label, James S Cox, Jim II Cooper,das C Clifton, Lieut .I Ctinedine, J II ci.,ii.,l. Jaa I' i 1,, wing, Jcdediah (locker, J Creek inore, Aaryu Cunrow, A 8 tulleii, Albert Oarri—g ton, A S CrhTon, Serjrt c s Carter, Chas S Carver, Capt Chas 8 Coutree, fj C Capheart, D BCox, Wm II Coik. i.'ll.ivi.l ECraver, li B Collins, E B Cooper, I-. Ii oleinan, Prank Chambey, Penton < labaugh, ■i ,II Campbell, Humphrey Colder, Lieut 11 tt" Col.', Liellt-l ~l 11 D C.i per., John Cumin ill ITS, Jds L Crawley, Isaac tt' t mt. hli.-1.1. Major O W Clarke, LRCoke, Capt J Mill.-r, John W Carey, Eaaa Carvar. /' tt' c Dixon, tt' J Dewett, T i Dunnavant, I F Drumright, Bimon Deese, Serg'tJU Deshielda, i; i Daniel, R P Day, Richard Davis, P H Dawson, Michael Dolan, Dr 1, B in, km-,,n, .in,, tt' Day, Jll lin Him ni. John P Davis, J A Dawson, J Dense—nan, Lieut (i M L li.ivi 2 , lie,, Dowden [_), O W Dur i.-v, Ret ii ll Denny -'~ 1 Dickinson, Balam Dick ens, B tt' Davis, Rev B R Duvull, B N Danaway. E. -TJ l-.cllis, T'heo Pillion-, (I A Lie -s.-oii.CHpt N E Edmunds, T A Evans, tt' B Ea-iton, tt" F Ed monds, Henry Eflnger, <i T Eveaett, Jas Pubank, J I) Eugle, BJ" Eddins. / a Faust, A D Foster, 0 E Fisher, P Farrar, J c i-i, uuikt is, serg'tJ Finher, John Fielder, Lieut—l A Foster, Silas l.n. t, W .1 Fobwm, Wm Ferguson oolored , W I. bTemming, tt' T Fitchett (S). tt' II i-'0:,!,-, tt'm P.,1,.-ii-tull, tt' H Ford "J , W A Porde, II i • i.l, J.un. - Foster, Dr J F Foalkes, John Pm i alili.-r. ..' \ P Green, A (i Gussen, Oen S N Gardner, Dr Geo N Oranthan, H V Graves, Jno B Guy, J _ Uray, J N Green 2, .1 B (aaUvright, Jno N Gary, .1 E Goode, J C Gentry, J 11 Gay, 8 B Greenkm, R A Gray, B A Gurber, R P Grimes, M Goldman, Geo Greenbow, W A George, tt' V Gbunbrook, W B i.ih-on, W A Grubbs, 8 N Orimsley, 8 AGrymes, WCO ''bii-'hi.Av M Gardner, Lieut J RGrant li -!: II lLirt, .1 c 11. in, .lis Humehon, Jno L Hani ~i c n v L.n, J Howard, Dr Jno T Har rrave.CaptN HaseUT Jno Hughes, WJ Hendrick, T J Hall, WM 11,...per. Win Hardee, Jno Hog.-*, Jno Hancock, Jno A Hannah, J tt" lL.iiult..i., \V Hattou, tt I. Harrison, tt' 11 .m- s p Howard, iJr li T Hurt, l: IL'th, R 11 Hill, O Hope, M M 11, 11, Di _ Howard, M T Henderson, L l. Helm, L P Hunt, t 4,t 1. U ii.iMiioii.l, Lis Ho_,Jno tt' Hughes, ac Hancock, Lieut-Col Howard, Alexander II.U, Di Dorsey HiU, Chas 1) Holt, O c Howard (2), C Howard, E Higgins, Hugh Hou.iewight.Jai Hoi eh, Jno ll..Hail, ,1 N Uigdon, Jesse Hill, John ( Ho.-an, Col J M Hanks, A HoLringer, Lgmt-Col Howaid, Jno C Howard. / c P Irvine, Capt Henry Irvin. ./. i W Johnson, Lieut B I* Johnson, John Jones, Jam.- Jentrey, <ol J P Jones, J tt' N John son, J J J Johnson, Maim:.duke Johnson, M li Johnson, John \V Jester, Dr .1 ll Jones, J T Jordan. Lit ul T S .la. k- Capt M J Jones, Lieut T U Jack ai .' . Cai>t T J Jackson, Roy Jones, Theopbilus Johnson. A V (I Kr.-pp-,.R F Kiipv (_), R H Kiihn-, II il Kimbrqugh, <• tt" Kele, 0 Kirk, Q W Keudrick, Q tt' Kii-by, J Kint, J C Kaseyr, J M KeUey, Mr . A X.-11. J X --.-.•, Wi Knott, J Kre-tlei, _ Kirby, E E Kimsbug, E W Kelby, Lieut W W ICukhind. /. - tt A Lewis, tt' Lee, W WLittle, WM l.iomi, T L L.ii.i, L.iivv _ B .ke, Capt B W Locke, J _ Ling, J M Li—dirty, Captain J L Lanc—ster, .1 R Lil.s.U; .1 Lumukins :.J M Lester, J 1 Lemon, J Laydon, J Ling, E G Legg, C P Lynch, Lyo_s&-Co)JA Louvey, A 8 Loyd, A l.vnk, 1. Linn, ni-ui. (ol EG L.-c, R a Long. .1/ ColWm 1. Moody, WB Maret (2), Wm A Miller, Capt "tt'ui 1' Mitchell, \V Miss.-i, Wll Mathews, George Meyers, E McKison Semes, Levi Miliener, Capt Mitchell, Austin Minor, Capt Mad dox, tt'm Miller, Wm Mcl , W B Murphy, Thus l; Medley, InosTMayo (2),ThosD Mierhon,Thp« B Montague, Thos Moore, It Yirg Mabroni, P T AliiT n, N l-i M iger, Nathanii 1 Matthews,J Niidwlaa Moli -. M i .M'.-.-n, (apt Matt li More, DrJohn J Mill.-r, Joel D Merrill,.) JMorgau, Jas W Uuray, Jno 11 Maxwell,. ILMißer, J J Meldon, J Meyer, .Li- A Male,mn, Jas PMatthews, J J Martial, J M Mosel y, Gen Jno _ Moore, J M Murphre, Jas D Moore, EO Malxhor, C F Murphy, Chas Maxwell, C M Moulho, Cupl V has Mm liiur.lo, ■ pri.-. ner of war, Castle Thunder, ceU No. 10, Charles M eeh-v, i i,,-Miiilieii. E R Meredith, C..1 ETD Myers, E Meyer, B 11 Mi-, Huymond V Morgan. .)/, . -li, / McGruder, Frank McGcher, Frank .' H McCoy, Lt J A Ut- Aitlnir. .i.is m:-.v-!i1 in.l, .1 it m. vein,,,,,-, mho,. . Jas Mi Donald, Wm W McCloy, J C McKiuson, tt' >V McChesney, .-Sidney B McDowell, Dr T S B Mc- Kinstiv, P .> Mi ii-n-iek, i'a;,t N C McDuffle, New ton F Si, (aim, Lt N P MeDoweU, i I» McClasky, Collin Mcßey (cold), Charles Meßae, Capt E G M< dure, Anthony .McLean. .V tt' i' Nimmons, tt'm A Neville, W H NoweU, Thos J Notinghanu Theodorick Nunley, RobtNol s.u, X c Nicholas, Jno S 5.'. wton, Isaac P Nixon, J Nil h-.l en, J L Nipper, Cornelius NoeU, Capt B A Nicholson, dipt A B Nicholson. O— C C OrderiLiim, M C T O.Tim, Dr Richurd (I'Lenry, Lt U It Owens, Col lt L Owen, Thomas O'Conner, tt'm Ogden. P. -W N Page, W J PedagTu, W B Pate, W 1 Peters, Wm Padgett (colored), tt' W Potiard, II X Pellam, T C Pearman, 1; Prevatt, Major T J Pavn, R It Prentiss, B P Pulliam, R R PoUard, W Peters, tt'T Parkersun, R Porter, R Pope, M Phillips, Mai L Powers, P O Parker, S C Puryear, 8 C Payne, J ,1 Palmer ■.' , .1 II Parker, J II Porter, J C Proctor, J JlTi.li'.i, Capt J NP.utei-soii, J E Person, J P Perkins, J A Pariah, J B Parker, JW Perry, ii tt' i',,il,„ k, F. T Piin-ent, E L Parker, C 0 Pen son, EJ Pi -. k, i"T Elunkett, Rev Mr Parker, A •M Piper, tt' i- P. ai sail, ij Wm ijinii, R C Quaries. H. - P P Barney, R Robertson, T L Roggers, '1 J R.-mson, Dr T (i Richardson, W A Randolph, W N RedJora, Capt tt'm Rogers, Wm Rouse, Wirt Ro berts, tt' ll Richardson, J W Rus-ell, Mr Ramsey, Alex Reuben-tine, Col Robins, A C RiiUiii, J P Rollins, a Ramsey, B J Roberts (2 , B Bedford, B S Rob.—..n. Redwood, Phillips ft Co, Capt D R ua l.in. Dr F Robertson, G T Rowe, It W Rickard, J R Ruffln, J Robertson, Lieut J C Reeco, J M Robin son, J Reunion, i Rock, J H Rily, J Rot-ur, J R Rowe, M W Rose, O T Royce, N P Rufl .' , P Rliul, P Reynolds ' •v. J H slurp ". , N I Sixer, W Steane, WF Shippey, \V Settles, /. SneUinga, tt' li Sisaford, W St< phenson, tt' J Slade,TSnead,Capt TV Smith, r Spradling, 8 Sublett, 8 M Beaith, RC Sraither, M is li Strange, R B Stone, Col P B Smith, Jes»c 0 S Sydnor, Di Stevt as, A s Sime, A 0 8h up [2), Dr AJSemrnes, A Hmith, E 11 Smith, E It Shtij., Capt C Sullivan, Mai C M smith, C Schroeder. N Scott, >.l Smith, M mdlines, L Sydnor, J C Sprigg, Capt J 11 San .- 3 , J Smith, .1 tt' Smith, J tt'Sid l.-i, J Bengster, John Smith, J M Simpson, i li Bands i, J Smith, J P Siiverhorn, J w Battar white j , J 1. Sims, J Stephens, J II Smith, HSul livan, Hem y Snider, J ll Stockman, 11 Smith, (i E Smith, ' 0 Bcroggins, Dr P B slulford, W R C s.iv, W M Sharp. r-TTuiiiuaii Bio _ Co, A ll Tyler, A A TYuthis. CSTodd, E Thornton, U Perncy, J T TT.iW , .1 ii i'.nslev, J R TTinbeilake, J Ta\l.n, J M Thomas, tt' Tompkins, A l> Trusdale, P M Thorn, s 8 Thomas, Lieut M Thompkm-, TTyler,MEXay ioi, W Turner, J V TTum.-ek (3), 9J) Turner. / -(. has CrgUhard, Jacob S Undcrwoo-J, W s Cnderwood. i 11, in v Vi. tor, Howard Vaughan, Jniuas R Vanhorn,JJ Vaun, Thomas Vest, Washington W Via, Wm Veal. X tt'm Walk, i, Walter s West, tt" W Wells, W (J Webb .S, to, tt'm c tt'oodfin, Wm J Woodward (2), WmWude, tt'm R Walla, a. tt'L tt'iU-", Dr Warren-White, Wm C White, Wm Wi. hum, 0 V Waddle, Samuel s Western S tt' Samuel Willi-, J \V Williamson ('.'), Thomas tt'hiley, Thos H Witts-, Thomas H Woody, T F tt all, Robt N Whit-eld, Root J White, E Vilkins, R li Woo.l -ward, R M Williamson, Robt B Wilten, Jr, Serg .lM.jor Robt Willitiiiis, P P Winston, TTios Whilev,- M 8 Weaver, M P Wise, Levi Wasaernmn, Capt LB West, John A Winder, James C While, I Hues tt'ilkes, Junics Woltcls, James L tt'addcl (i , J 1) Waters, Pol Joseph W.i-i-'cr, Major II T ttiiev, Jackson Wright, John T West, J A Wright, Johnß Wood, John A Wood, Capt J J Waggoner, Joseph M Wells, James Whoelesa, John c Watkhis, John L Williams, John M tt Til, Jaln.-.s tt' Watts, John 7. Wharton, Capt John 8 Whitworth, Joseph N tt'ils.,!,, J If Wyatt, John 1! Wood, 11 11 Walla, c, ti 11 Williams 2 , Lieut O ll Williams, W tt Wilkes, Goo O wicke, Dr P J White, Edmund 11. Walker, Esekiel WeßrnghanuEdward Wilkins, HA Winn, Dora \ c tt.ud, c A WarnTTd, CC Walters it-, C S Woot'ton, A J Wats-.n. A 1» Win fi. Id, B S W-idey, iJudas Whit.-, A J Wagner, Andrew Win ter, Brig-Gen Walker, Mi Wheeler, Thos Whit lock, Majoi Wessdoni, John Werner. P. Henry Yeatinau, Joseph AU.n Yombuldy, Josej.li W Youiii,', P W Youuit, tt'm Father, War lell Ve.ltOll. liuttuli Chief Surgeon Distributing Hospital, Surgeon in charge Bud Island Hospital, B i , Roi. .No 678, T R B T [i :, Cleoi-atra. WOOL (Aims, CO IT OX 1 A It I is, COTTOM YARNS, wholesale and retail. RICK, _c, BOUIS a> SAXDPRSON, se 3— lit* • X" Bj Main street. FTISA, TEA, TEA. A supi'rior lot of OUNI"OWDER TEA for sale by - S. C. ORRENHOW, Thirteenth street, between Main and Cary. se 2-'-3t I)URE ESSENCE OF VANILLA AND LEMON, freshly proparod by ' E. T. ROBINSON, au 91—tit ' Cornet of Fourth and f luuhlia. pdnnonb- fisptdr. ; The Daily Hi-ian v is add tv News Deal.ru at twisty i-KNTs per copy. Cm CAW—itas are author ized to charge iink iioli.ak Al—i ffini tisis per week to regular subscribers. I MONDAY MORNING fl-P-EMBER S, lsbl THE EVACUATION Oil ATLANTA. INTERESTING .ACCOUNTS FROM THERE SHERMAN'S EVACUATION OK HIS POSI TION on our right—History op his PLANK MOVEMENT, _c. The news of the evacuation*! Atlanta by our fori cs gives interest to any newadfroiii there bearing upon the military situation. The movement by which Sherman has gained tins IHv-utage was a bold one, though not ioiiducted ; wjth such --ereey a t-i hide from our comiuaiidersjhere its progress. To enable our readers to comprehend the change of position made by Sherman, we (the from the Char lottesville Chronicle the foil.,w,_g about SHERMAN'S lIIANi.K <>t BAsK. Pour lilies of communication meet at Atlanta—the Chattanooga, Augusta, West Poiirt and Macon rail way,. General Hood relv'S oii-the Macon road. General Sherman is dependent u% a single line. The -enemy's cavalry have tamyor Tv destroyed the Augusta railway. We learn to-day that his armyts concentrated along the West Point road "between Past Joint and pail burn. " This nitelligeiici.' is sig nincaat of an active nmupsisn around Atlanta.— The West Poiut road f—floWS the course of the Chat tahoochee from northeast to southwest. East Point i- di-tHiit six miles from Atlanta. Fairburii is twelve miles farther, south. It will be observed, Sherman's army is on the left flank of General Hood, facing east. His line stretch* s from Atlanta to (and probably beyond Past Point junction of the Macon and We-.t Point roiUTs, facing west. TTiismanouvie of Genera] Sherman is a repetition of his movement around Gallon, with this important exception— at Dalton be operated on both Hanks of Goneehl John ston's—rmy. To occupy tho West Point read, and men ue the Macon road (south of Past Point | he has withdrawn his army from the east and north of At lanta and thrown it southwest of Hood's. Nay, he has abandoned-the line of the Chattanooga road from Atlanta to the Chattahoochee, und eon-mm-—tea with Marietta--his fortified base—-by wagon mute tri.iu l-'urbiiin via Sundrown, on the river below the railroad bridge. Marietta is held ley Major-Gen m. ral McAithur, and the "crossings of the Chattahoochee are strongly guarded." 'Cont—l—niestion between Cliattinooga and Marietta is now uninterrupted— Wheeler being in Tennessee. ill! '\ACIAI|ON ol Till. KNKMY'S POSIIION ON uIH KIOIIT. A letter tiom Atlanta, dated the 27th ultimo gives the following description of the evacuated works of the enemy in front of our light wing, three mili'.s from Atl mts : It is thought that Shennui i- massing on our left to make a de-perate attempt to cut our line ot commu nication and hold the Maeuli and Western railroad, with the belief that it will compel our army to fall hack, thereby giving up the rao-a-coveted prize, At lanta. I visited the Yankee camps to thu west of Atlanta to-day. 1 tin.l their .- iithwoTks to be very substan tial, but not us much so us I ha.d until lputed from the report- of parties who had visited them the day previous. The camps are well arranged. Prom the appearance of everything, each man had a bunk made to sleep on. The bunks are made by driving lour stak.-s in the ground about two feet one way and four and a half feet the other, two cross bars or boards laid across the stakes and fastened ou, and then sin ill pub's, about six or seven feet long, arc laid on the cross bars and fastened nil with withes or ropes, and hemp sacks spread on a great many of them. I have several of the si, ks now in my pos session, which I pit ked up around these bunks. 1 could have pr.icuie.l i— least a thou.—nd. These bunks all have dirt thrown up in front of them, whi'-h makes them very secure from Mime balls.— The camps which the Yankees occupied around, this city ai,-about the best arranged ones I have ever seen. Nearly every camp h,is from one to two Dutch bake ov.-ns, which are made of brick, and put up in the best style. In fact, everything is lix.sl up as though they intended to remain in them lor years to conic. All the houses which the peopl>» vacated between here and the river have bt n torn to pieces, and the lumber used to make shelters of. The houses, where the families remained in them, are left standing, but they look rather worsted. Some of them are pretty Well nldt.'il 'I'lie Tfniik)-e . _npa. are crowded daily with people who are out \ lowing them Everyone you meet has a bag of plunder, whi, h they are bring ing home as curiosities. There . s..ine very fine furniture scattered over the cam;,-. In a day or two there will be nothing left worth bringing off. it is reported here this evening that two brigades of Yankees -crossed the Atlanta and West Point railroad, and Struck out for thu Macon and Western railroad. I give you below a note which I discovered written in a large bold hand with charcoal on the headboard of one of the Yankee bunks. The bunk is about threw miles west of Atlanta. Tho note is as follows : " Good-bye, Johnny. We are going to see you soon, and when we come to Georgia we will remem ber Keiuiesaw. YaNK." A letter dated the 28th says : - Many persons think that the bmg agony is over— that the investment is raised,—M that the city is safe. lam not so fast in my conclusions. Among the prison—rs who are brought in every day, Ido not perceive the slightest demoralisation. They are all plucky, and have no idea of abandoning Atlanta. I see in late Northern papers hints which squint at a movement oil our left ; that is, upon Past Point, the junction of the Macon and Montgomery roads, six miles from town. Sherman thinks—and truly— that if he can seise and hold this seat in our rear he uiU lore.- us out of our works for the purpose of attacking and driving him away, or for our evacua tion and ret—Mh Put, be it "remembered, Wo are us strongly fortified at Past Point, and theme the line of the railroad to the city, as we are around Atlanta. Sheniiun will lie compelled to attack our works if he gam Past Point; and no fear is felt for the result. So that if the movement is au attempt it a tl-tnk, it is still considered highly favorable to US, and among other good things, relieve* the city from l.olnbaii—liellt. lIISTOUY 1,1 IWmSIU'II MOVIMINI We find two wary int—resting lettera in the Au gusta CkrenioU giving a description of what was kftown of Sherman's movements, and how they were accomplished. We give extracts from them : Atlanta, Suuday, August 88, lsbT. Something ot the position of the Pedcral army has been a o ilaiued —enough, at least, to convince every one that the uu- movement from tiij trntjtw was not made wi:h a view of retreating, aud, per haps, suthcieut to warrant reas,.,liable conclusions as to what are Shaman's pui-poses, and where he will next strike. The observations of our scouts, and reports from ' cUi/.eiis ill th« rear of the late Pedcral lines, inform us that for some days back the enemy has been pre paring a line of Wi.iks, commencing on this side of the Cnatfahoochee a shoit distance above the rail load bridge, on the State road, aud running down the river about two miles to a ferry, where they have built a permanent budge. Prom thence the works run to a point at tin- left of their extreme light wmg. PcTiind those works the force* withdrawn -~ quietly on Thursday night were thrown, and during 1-Tiday and TTiday night the centre w is moved to the rear of this line. The works are sai Jto be foi niidable, partiel— ally in front of the railroad bridge. This position leaves the Federal line at leastoiie tmr. shorter lli.ui It was before, and of cuur»e they have u'.-il to operate with elsewhere. At the seeoli'd ferry t-Tow the railroad hiidge their pontoon has also been taken up and a pel—laiient bridge erected. The pontoon will, it is expected, bo moved to ferries lower down the river. These preparations, and the position into which Sherman has thrown his army, indicate \ery ck—_is that all his lato unexpected movements are the le -uit of his having arrived at the conclusion that he could not capture Atlanta by attacking its delencc-s, and a matured plan tor another attempt to flank our army fioin tbe city by cuitiujr its i.tilro-.td com munication to the rear. The riiicung policy was v failure, but the purpose nught be aomseiuhiilieil lij throwing his mam luio a.-ioss the West Point and .Ma ~n loads, and that tills is the grand inclement Ihat will be attempted there can be no longer any doubt. The topography of the country on the north bide of the river Is said to be favorable lor trailsj, u tutioii by wagon, the roads numerous ; and With the I, ilies bridged, as "St-tod, supplies <_■I be moved lioiu Yiinng's statumabove the liver with facility This is the opinion of the old atl—m» who arc ac quainted with the country Atlanta, August 2'J, tsiil. IT., movemeutn now going on are big with iiu poitaiice, alidpromiffj a very early developments ol results. Sherman has so tar progressed with Ins new plan that strategic movements to prevent its fulfillment can be safely made with a certainty that renders an error almost impossible, and the tune is at hand when General Hood will be called UIKIU to demonstrate all tho soldierly qualiti e_ of a great iHJiiuiiandcr it is acknowledged he posse.-se. Ot the result, if his resources are sul—iicnt, teals vie eulei tamed by but few. My former letter mentioned the fact that a heavy force of Federal cavalry occupied tho West Point road Sunday morniug. Iv the vicinity of Ked Oak a battery was at once planted, and of course nil transit by rail at ouce effectually blockaded. We also had rumors that .-kinnishuig was going on du ring the day. The reports from our scouts, brought in this foie ii.,"ii, w. a- to Uie effect that at au early hour Una moruing a strung Federal column of uiianlry and ait—lcry conuuenced iron—ng the West Point road lour mill— below Past PoUit, _ud that they Were- Ui ticuwhuig us tlu-y iijiaucc'P They were, it '.-■> thought, moving for Rough and Re.uly. Counter j movements lire, of course, going on, but of their ! character I may not speuk. Of the progress made by the enemy in this direction, uothine, definite has beeu iisait lined; in fact, the only uifonnatioif I have been able to obtain was from passengers by the Mart.n trahi just Milled, who briug rejiorts current I : at Rough and Beady when the train passed, that the ! I Yankmn had reached « point four miles west flf the j station, and were busy digging. No firing was heard as the train passed up the rood to-day. The movement the Federal commander is now en- | i deHVoritftr to cany Mi is a hazardous one, unless the J i numerical strength of his army has been greatly in- i 1 civa-.-d. Th's is ■ -sert.-l by some, and it may be J the case. There is, therefore, a probability that ! 1 Oeneral Hood may _<*'d more men. At all events, I I the routi—gency should Im* proviileil for at once. Now '. i is the titne, t i hold up his arms. Every available ) , resource shoulerba at once drained, be it from thej' State tones, or the idling and useless Government I officials, of whom then-am so mauv hu+rging safe ) and nominal position* in tl_■ rear. If unring all to li the front who own duty in the tit Tl will not send j them foi ward, let the *uni of tho community nt- j t—eh to them forever. They ale needed now, and ursrontly. It will not do for Oeneral Hood to*mcov.-r At-i Lints by withdrawing all his forces from the long j line around tin- i ity they -.., long and patiently held. ] Some five or six milos must be Watched, while the i more active operations will probably take pie .- M a lint) extending nearly, if not quite, to loneahoro*, on the west side of the Macon road. This laniple ■ statement will serve to show the magnitude of the i v,.,ih the Army of Truism—r will probably ho called J upon to pel hum ; und wUI the situation indnee the ; forwarding of every aid that can be controlled I I am no alarmist, but cannot forego these expressions, i which are freely indulged in at the l'rout, and among ot— cials who cannot well be mistake— us to the situ ation. ADDITIONAL FROM TRE NORTH. Prcmi our latest Northern files we gather soma very interesting intelligence, which we give below . M.irr to Mm:ratk eunraii—_an omena, The fact th;it -lx hundred Confederate officers were Bent to Hilton Head on the Crescent City, to be pined under fire on Morris island, has been stated. A letter t.> the New York Tim< i gives tho following incident of thu voyage : Immediately on Lulling, Captain 11. Prentiss, in comma—d of the guard, reported to Quaere! Feetee his suspicions of an alUtlllpt on the part of William Paster, the teco__ mate of the Vessel, to run her ■shore at Cape Roman, with a view of allowing the prisoners to escape. The Crescent left Port Dela ware Last Saturday under convoy of the naval sup ply steamer A Im.ntl, and, when off Gape Roman, it _ alleged the Creseentforsook her regular conns and made a direct line for the shore. Tho mate was in charge of the steamer at the time —the captain buv iiuj gone to his berth. when the Admiral saw- the Crescent" miking in land she showed lights and sent up rockets, of which the mate took no notice, although he was informed that signals wore being made. The descent ran aground at nearly low tide ; consequently at high water she was enabled to get afloat. While the rac ed WM ashore, it is reported that one ol the prison ers, Lieutenant-! 'olonel Woodford, jumped over board, and escaped by swimming, although the cap tain of the guard suspects that he is concealed on board the vessel. Both tho captain and mate were arrested, and the latter was put in irons by order of General Foster. It is thought that the rebel oillosi • bribed the mate to ruu the steamer ashore; but as to that matter, as well as other matters attending the whole A—Sir, we shall be better informed when fhe Beard of Inquiry, about to be convened, shall have made this report, At present the subject is too delicate to warrant speculation, and I am un willing that the parties under arrest should be made to boar the burden of an unfavora ble opinion until the facta of the case are proven against them. As to the guard, they wen ready to a man to do their duty to the fullest extent. A strict eye was kept on the mate. aud. preparations were made to shoot tho first rebel who should attempt to escape. The guard was composed principally ol the One Hundred aud Fiftv-sevonth Ohio regiment - hundred day men, and volunteered their service on the occasion, their time of enlistment having ex pired on the 23d instant. The Admiral signalled to a gunboat in tlie .vicinity, which gunboat ran up as near the Crescent as possible, in order to repel all) attack that the rebels might make from the shore. Fortunately for thu rebels ny hostile demonstrations were made. One of the prisoners has since stated that if the vessel had remained aground an hour or two longer a coiisidcDtble force of cavalry would come down to assist the prisoners in est aping. The prisoners are all officers, ranking from colon J down ward. YANK—( VlliW OP 'IHK I NIK lUoli SII'PI.Y ol lUXIK. . A Yankee who has convened with some of StoUc m.in's raiders who escaped thus writes their impres sions of •' Dixie," its he calls it : All agree in representing tho Confederacy to be agriculturaßy m a mo-t flourishing condition. Th. whole land is fat with corn and plenteous pork of coin, while negroes arc- huddled in only less abun il lies- th in mules and horses. The legion which tiny penetrated is level and exceedingly fertile ; the women are described as no longer the gaunt, sallow, whining creatures whomwesecm northern Georgia, but bitterly delimit and hostile toward the Yankees; but the men aie absolutely swept out of the country. The vast tra. ts, stretching mile after mile, unbroken by the roadside, formerly devoted to Cotton, now llourish with corn—the Dover—meat allows only a quarter of an acre of cotton per hand. Georgia alone has enough corn in cultivation to subsist the whole rebel army for a year. They found consider able old corn, mid plenty of pork, stored in cellars in bulk. At Madison they destroyed five hundred sacks of genuine Rio CO—be, and large quantities of rebel shoe.-i, made of stout cotton doth. Iv short, the rebels have of imported luxuries but little to spare ; but of thesuhst.—itiuls— the uiaterial for sturdy milscle and the basis of hard lighting— tin il liar, im abiinilamv. liut, so dally considered, the South is described as being BS glooinv and as cheerless as it is otherwise prosperous. Tlie absence of nearly every udult white man from the household, and the redoubled multitudes of negroes, giv>- an air of dismal loneli ness to the whole land, which is described as some thing appalling. We who urn ueui to the army mis-i not—lag, but they wandered for days as through a great desert. Every oii#between sixteen and sixty tive is put into the army; in one county, , they found a gray-haired patriarch, who told them there were but twelve white male persons old enough to be called men in the county. The negroes swarmed about them in vast num bers, so that General St.un-m.tu had finally to es tablish a guard and drive them oft to enable his forces to proceed at all Ka.-h one.brought in, ai the price of his deliverance, a line horse or two, or sev eral mulos of pro ligious size, and au order had to be issued to disencumber the army of them when they began to be hemmed in. Three thousand WON turned away ut one time. lilt UMUBII 9TATKS KLKCTO-—1 '.oil Off lit— Under the present anointments the following is the electoral vote ol the several Stales of the " Union" which will participate iv the coming Presidential election: California. ti IH—III 11 ... ... 11 Connecticut. b Now Hampshire 5 Delaware. 3 | New Jersey 7 Illinois ... lb New York ii Indiana. 13 Ohio II lowa .... ...8 Oregon . 3 Kansas .......... J Pent-svlvauia 26' Kentucky 11 j Rhode" Island. -J Maine . 7 , Yeini'.nt 5 Maryland 7 West Virginia w 5 Massachusetts.. . .13 Wisconsin . 8 Michigan. ............. 8 v Minnesota ............. I SI ■TAX—I l-aollAHl.Y VOUNo Arkansas ."> j Nevada 3 Colorado 3 j Telilie—ce IU Louisiana 7 Virginia (part).. . 5 Nebraska 3 | M The follow—lg.-States, now in rebellion, would have been entitled to fifty-four uleetoral votes: Alabama 6 North Carolina. 9 Florida 5 | .South Carolina. . 6 Georgia 9 ! Texas .6 Mississippi 7 j Virginia (part) 6 In the event of a vote of all those States, the whole number of ch-ttoial Votes Would have been throe bundred and twenty-one, making necessary to a choice tor President and Vice-Prc—dent, one hun dred and sixty-one. If we emit the votes of the States and the districts in rebellion, and include those which will enter the Union, or will have re turned to allegiance, thu whole number of vote* will be two hundred and —ill SQIS—, of which one bun died and thirty-four will he .sufficient to elect. IHI DRAFT IN —ITM—I .\— Tilt E—RI 11.0 Uff—H AN! I To-day the draft takes plan- in. Indiana. There Will be bloodshed there, though uot those '* rivers of blood" which sanguine people in the Confederacy look for. There will bo scrimmaging in odd coiners, large cities, and at various village;-.,*—i which, it is to be hoped, cit_ells of sufficiently piomiiieut peSBt—ML and Federal otfi cere of sufficient Iy high rank, may be killed, to furnish the blood for drawing a clear line butweeu tin) Slate sovereignty of Indiana aud thu central power of Lincoln. As anything about the state of affairs in that Commonwealth is inter esting just now, we copy from tho Indianapolis Daily Jourtml the following addition—l information about tlie treason in Indiana : Ou —aturday aftoruooii Governor Morton received a lifter fioin an Pastern taty, which was its follows, except some names, which We omit for prudential reasons : , August i 7, IStM. OWemef o. li. Mortun .- Sir : The facts hereby stated have come to my knowledge in a manner and from a source such iui to leave Uu doubt IU my Htllid ot li—vi rellubuTt) . The Copperhead.! of ludj.iaa have uidvivd aud — J, -, biid Jte thirty thousand rev,.l vert, With forty-two boxes fixed ammunition, to be TiiTtttnifirl among the antagonists to our Gov.-, uuient'ffSr the-porpose of controlling the President; al election. August oth, the steamer Grtnite Bt*te Tanded in N«-w York forty-two boxes of revhrerSaud ammu nition; August <), the steamer CfJtjr of Hartford landed tweuty-two boxes ammunition, destined for Indianapolis. Thirty-two boxcw of the above ha-, c been forwarded to J. J. Parson*. Ind: uiapolis, via Mereriants' Dispatch, it, 1 marked ■; the bal- I anee is stoied at No — — **•s**» York, I awaiting the eonv<?n. s i-ncp of the Copperheads to pay I for the same before sshippimr. - —. Immediately on -tin- receipt of this letter, GoVer- I nor Morton ptaceil the information it contained in j the hands of policeman John 8. Rusaeli, who was I abb- in a short time to report progress to Colonel J James (J Jones, Assistant Provost-Jdarshal, who, I With Colonel Warner, of the Veteran Ke serve corps, I with a proper detail, made a descent on the printing J nn.l book-binding establishment of H. H. Dodd te I Co., on Saturday night, where they found thirty- j two boxes, such as were the letter." J After the boses were opened, thtsr contents were"l found to consist of four hundred large navy revol- j vers and one hundred and thirty-Cve thousand I rounds of fixed ammunition lor Ac same anu.— I Among the captures made at the gftme place weie the great seal of the "Order of the Sous of Liberty,'' I the official list of the members *f fhe Order at thu I place, and several hundred printed copies or the I ritual; also, a large amount of oerrespoudenee of 1 an unportaiit character, whicti may be giveu to the I public at the proper time. Tiio people will begin I to uuderstand now how muck these unmitigat. I I scoundrels desire peace. ThirT*thousand n.\y v- I voivors, with aminumtioii euOjMfeibr an army, cou- I pied with the negotiations of jrr.*Yoorfic-es lor the I purcliase of twenty thousand Garibaldi rifles, wo .1 indicate that there is a good ileal fft the dispo-ition I of the tigor hid under their Ueepskin garb of I When we look at the large "lira of money whi. h the amount of arms find ammunition named in this letter must cost, the question presents itself of the ways and means. Tho pistols alone would cost close on to one million Of dollars at manufacturers' prices, and the twenty thousand rittes, without the import •duties, would cost two hundred and eighty tie,us..i:T I dollars. Of course no such sums are provided by I the members of the Order-in this State, but there I have been wine peace ee*WJ*testoncia prowling atone I thi' Canada border for several weeks. JohnC. I Walker, and other peace men of Indiana, hive kwsa I visiting them. Some months since the Confed.-i it..- I Government borrowed fifteen million dollars in Pu- I rope, for which they issued eetten bonds, and every Woikade-ruuner carries out cotton to lepay the loan. The object of the loan was, primanly, to-purchase a navy in puropean poits, including the celebrated rams. That speculation having failed by the refusal of the Governments of Pti-'lnnd and Prance to per mit the rams to depart, and they havir*g been sold t-> other persons, the peace are in funds, and they could not make au investment more to the advantage of their master than to pu: arms and ammunition for Norther:* trait..rs, and to I pay Northern demagogues liberally for shrieking for I peace, free speech and liberty. William IP Harri son, Secretary of the Order of which H. H. Dodd is "Grand Commander, " was arrested, and is still in custody. Messrs. John J. Parson and Charles P. Hutchinson, partners of Dodd, were also arrested, but were discharged on their affidavits that they were not members of the Order and were not ad vised of tlie contents of tlie boxes. We have given a brief account of this, the most I startling event in the attempted drama of civil war. I The event naturally Created an intense excitement I in our city, and it will be an admonition to the peo- I pie of the State of the danger which surrounds them. I Dodd is absent from the city, probably making ar- I rengesnents for the distribution of the aims and I cartridgesvoß hand and expected, but which, to his I surprise, will be devoted to other j.urposes than en- I forcing the peculiar peace uotious of a gang of con- I spirators against the peace and safety of the Mi- j The Journal also publishes a number of tin-lam-i- I and letters seized in the office of Daniel W. Voor. hees, member of Congress : ONE HI Nl.ltklj lIIOCSANO Snd To HKI.P TIIESOtTH. Ihßiu-u.'.iattii, February 27, 1861. My Dim Jfeptum . We want you to hold that one hundred thousand men in readiness, as we do uot kiioW how soon We may want theiu. - • ■ « • J. HaRUI.sII Addressed on envelope : Hon. Danikl W. Yuii !!■■■*. Torre Haute, Indiana. ARMa 1-OK vuaßHEKs's ARMY OK UNI UlS'l'llfl) TIIOVSANU MKN. Loxo Bnancp, August 11, ISO, If] Dear Sir: I enclose you two letters fioin a man by the liaiiie of t'arr in reference to anus. A lettur directed to hun simply Philadelphia will reach him. I can vouch for the excellent quality and great efficiency of the rides. Yours iv haste, Jamls W. Wall. Pnvelope endorsed : Tree ] Ja.mi:, W. Wall, CS. 3. lion Daniel Vooihees, Telle Haute, Indiana. t W. CAIUi TO HON. WDS W. WALL. PIIH.ADLLI'UIA, August U, 161',i Hon. James IP. Wall: ♦ Dear Sir: Your letter, with one enclosed about ritles, has been received. If the patties wish to buy them the best way Would be for thetn to have some one in How York appointed to purctiase them and confer with you and me. I am satisfied tnat it is the very article they want, and as you know all about them you can " speak by thu card." You have seen the article tried, and no doubt are well satisfied that it will speak loudly in a good cause. We will sell them iv bond for fourteen dollars, und I have no doubt that if the proper course is pursued the duty can be remitted. The rilb-s are better and cheaper than anything ever offered in this country, or made here, and as good as any ever imported. We challenge a comparison with any rille execution whatever. There are about twenty thousand ritles, and we desire to sell them all at oliee. They are ■ great bargain, and are worth to-day more m Purope than we oiler to sell for here. The price of fire-arms will advance within a year ut least thirty-three per cent., as arms are in de mand all over Europe. As you know, there is no more effective arm in the woild thin tins 1 am, with great respect, yours truly, . P. W. Parr. J. J. bl.-iOHAM To DAN VOWRIII.I.S -HAVt THE SOCTH IttisOt KCtS LNOLOII In lUt IHL SMOI I'ORCES AT SAY ' I.NOi.iNAPoLis, July 11, 18CP My Dear V'oorhees: I should like your private opinion us to the prospect of athnrs, so that 1 may have some basis to go upon. Do you think the Sooth have resources enough to keep Ihe Pnion forces at bay, aud finally force v recognition of their independence, or will Lincoln's army crush them out I You must have sources of infoimatiou which I have not to enable you to form some opiulou upou these ■rotten. If the Conyriniiunai (jlube and Appendix is published and bound, I should be obliged to you for a set, and any other public documents of general interest. I think there is a re-action taking place in In diana in referesmt to the war, and iir. Piinoli.'s message and Chase's leport will aid it. Let I tioin you at the earliest convenience. What ii Mor tou doing in Washington .' Youid truly, J. J. BI.NUUAJi. IUX btKKk.NI.EB ol' fOBS MoKJAN j The New Orleans papers of the 24th contain the following particular* of tho surrender of Fort Mor" gau: All of Sunday aud Sunday night a regular artil lery duel was Kept up between the fort and Gciieial J Granger':, men, about one gun being tired by the en- I emy every fifteen minutes. No damage resulted t»» I either side as far as known. Ou Monday morning I at daylight a combined uttack by the land aud naval I fore** was begun, and shot ana shell were Sen er* I rained upon the doomed place until between six and I seven o'clock yesterday monnng. At this time a I white tlag was hoisted over Morgan, and firing im- I mediately ceased. General Page was given until 2 I o'clock P. M. before the final capitulation took I (toe*, which was unconditional. At two o'clock I Port Morgan was taken possession of. At 5 o'clock en Monday afternoon the inner works and quarters of the fort caught fire from our I shells, but the names woe mwdSy anting... At I o'clock the sumo evening another fire broke I out, which spread rapidly and burned with great fury until 2 o'clock A. M., when it exhausted itself. ' During the whole of this terrible tune our fire was jM.ured in upon the garrison from all bides, render ing the place us neur a hell upou earth as tlie imag ination can well conceive. So tierce und continuous was our fire that the enemy were unable to ren[>oud in a way that in the least interfered with our opera tions, but one gttn was worked by the rebels dunng tlie whole engagement. Our losses during the cor diet are stated at one killed aud three slightly wounded. The rebel loss is about twenty killed and wounded. Port Morgan is badly shattered by our terrific fire, and is but the wreck of the stronghold over which proudly waved the rebel flag on Sunday last. The following is an extra* of a letter from Admi ral Farragut: Plaoship Hahi i.,it'.>, Mobile Bay, I August >3, i«.,i i Dear Commodore: Port Morgan mokes an uncon ditional surrender at 2 P.-M. to-day to the forces of j the army and navy. Page did not "make us wait as ! long as I expected. We will cheer our tlag and sa lute it, when hoisted, with one hundred guns by the Meet. Congratulate General Can by ujion the great suc cess of his first effort in this department. Nothing could have been more h.trtnoiiiou-t thai', cur com bined operations. We had no ambition to excel each other but in the destruction of th* eaemy'* works, which was effectually done by both army and navy. Very truly, yours, D. G. FABaAoiT. ! To Commodort Palmer, commandiug at New Orl«*n * \ Six hundred prisoners captured, and now coming Up the liver vi the Tennessee aud Bieuvtil*. Ueu* ral Page v on board the Teuucseee. j *" 0 x JOB PRrNTINO NEATLY KOdTTfJ) Advertisements will be inserted at the rate of owe i>. ■'. iis ami, rirrr '!."« per square for «nch (r_-r tion—eight tines (or less) constitute a sowar*. Larger advertisements in e_Mt proportion. A 1 v.-: ti-ments published ti!? forbid will be chargod SI -'» per square for every iri«ertion. 11l i -■_----» Tag - P - 3 m» It appear* that Colonel •Anderson rmritori Fort G—mis after being theUed by one gunboat — t The follow—ig v hi, letter, offering to surreadrr on tho 7th, after being shelled by the Chickasaw on thej after-ova of the day before: Hi Abui-.HTsas, Post o_n>s. 1 To Admiral Farrayut, Commtmdimf A'otian-/ Jure** of Doupkin hi and Feeling my inability to maintain my preeent po sition lenger than you may see fit to open upon an* with your fleet, and teetiug also the use!*&--.>.s of eutaiiuig upon ourselves further deali Lull jii gf y- I h ivc> the honor to propose the surrcnier of Pert ' Oainc*. i's c vrrison, stores, *•-. I tmst to your magnauiniity for obtaining honorabl-. ti-Tcs, which I retipectfully request that you. wdltranmut to ue md a 1.,,» me sufficient time to coiuliier them and return au answer. This communioatiun wiQ bo .--..iiil.-d you by Major W. H. Browne. 1 am, sir, very it-pectruUy, Your obedient servant, C. I) Anurftsos, Colonel Mffjajha •ri K-. M OF UXCOLN TO OHIO soj.»ua*. The time of the One Hundred and Ri_ty-<__th Ohio regiment, one hundred days' men, having as pired, they paid their respects to Lincoln, who mad* them a speech in front of the Rxeeufavc mansion. — He said : I suppose you are going home to nee your fan—Use and friends. For the service you have done in this great Struggle in which we are engaged I pre*c_t you sincere- thanks for my-wlf and the country. X almost always feel inclined, when I happen to say anything to soldiers, to imprees upon them tn a few brief remarks the import—nee of success in thiscn test. It is not merely for to-day, but for all time to ui«s*i k-al mn ehtmld perpetuate »e# an* _i_o__»'• children this great and free govemmen*, whlcYw* have enjoyed all our lives I lieg you to remember this, not miircly for my sake, but for yours. I hap l*n temporarily to occupy this big White House I am a living witness that any one of your c_Udren may look to come here as my father's child has. It is in order that each of you may have, through *his free government which we have enjoyed, au voen field and a fair chance for your industiy, eiiterprlss and intelligence; that you may all have equal privilege* in the race or life, with all iv de*ii „bl* I human aspirations. It is for this the struggle ahcidd I be maintained, that we may not loa* our birthright/— not only for one, but for two or three years. T_e nation is worth fightingtor to secure si__, _a mable jewel. Three cheers were then given for the President. A REPUBLICAN VISW Or IJIS PLAirOJU*. [Prom the Washington Chronicle, September _] The platform iiiopted by the so-called Pi—j_ tcra y is an admirable attempt at " how not to do it." It , "iitaiTis nota single expression of opinion upcu any q_mtion of public poiicy, except that in a mild and inoffensive manner it takes sides iv favo: of the Union. This is the purport of the first resolution. The second declares, that after four years ->f failuiM I ton iter* the Union by war, efforts should tie made tor a cessation of hostilities with a view to calling a , .invention of all the States. But suppose the rebels refuse to go into a convention, or, going in, suppose they refuse peace except on terms of final separa tion I What then .' The platform is entvtly _ent mi tins point. It neither indicates the terms wi u.n should be offered the rebels nor informs the country whether the war should be resumed in the event oil the refusal of the rebels to come tack into the * * This forcible, feeble mimifesto from Chicago is more remarkable for what it omits thai* fir w_»S it embiaces. It coiitains not one sentiment of ap probation or ceusuve upon the financial policy of the (•Administration during the last three and a half I years. It neither condemns nor approves the huffs lation of Cong—Hl upon the subjects of tariff dc'n, internal revenue laws, bank-note cuneney, and til* national banking system. It ts silent eve-., upon •ue ii lpiitioii, confiscation and conscription. What are we to infei from tlus silence I Must wo not as sume that the Convention approves the—o measures; that it regards them as settled, and no lousier questions? Of course wo must; and if during the cauipaign any champion of the Chicago no"—nee* shall arraign the party in power on any of these is sues, it will be a sufficient answer to refer him to hi* platform for- proof that they are no loog<_ iv con' tioveisy. The platform is also remarkable for its en*t»e &<c dom from all mn lice nnd uneh*ri_Uile_«—s t* w_r-Ji traitors and reb.-.U. Not a word of tec-ur" tor seoesp sion in theorjl or rebellion in practice is pel—llll—d t j find place in the platform; and all the indi <■ ■al o_ is directed nt the efforts of the Admilust.-a'tiim to suppress the rebellion. Iv a word, the veriest rebel may read the platform without taking offence, while no truly loyal man can fail \o bo disgust—! with its msnttnet tmrklfng to the disloyal eleuoents in th* loyal States. Cpou the whole, the platform is a piti- ful affair, and will be expectorated upon by all sorts of people. uhlli.er's ***_U_3a*_ in ic—MM—ft Tlie following is the h-test Yankee dispatch about Gen<?rul 'Wheeler's movements: Lot isvii.lk, August 30.—Passengers by the Nash ville tram say that Wheeler, with his entire fores, has appeared at the bend of the Cumoerland river, three miles below GUlatin, where they captured a company of United States troops, amd were attempt ing to cross the river this morning for an __*_uoa up,n Gallatin. His for.c is variously S—HffM '-~d at from five to twelve thousand, ithe former number is probably nearly correct.) A report has n..»ih<_l I Cave t ity, Kentucky, that the colonel coramanding I the p'.-t at Gallatin oiii.-red thu depot there to be I binned, as it was without the range of his guns. I Tin: E.nkmy's Tokfkimils at Ch.uilmton. —Qn I Sunday night last the enemy attempted an attack on I Fort Johnson, in Charleston harbor, with th* aid of a torpedo. The Courier gives the following tOff—ft—l of the failure : "About nine o'clock Sunday night a'tenificex- I plosion, which shook the buildings m this city, took place. Many snppoasd lt to be a two hu_ired- J powwder l'arrott ume-fusc shell. It appears, how- I ever, that about nine o'clock some Hi——etry tiring IWM .'und at Fort Sumter. L'poii exanuuji* ~—, I Captain Hugucnin discovered that the —ring wits I about two hundred yards from the fort, in the ■*..:. . - I tion of Port Johnson. The filing continued a few I seconds only, win n thro* Yankee barges were seen I coming vi towards the west fata*. Cap—un Lewis, I v ith a detachment of the Thirty-second G<turgi*, 1 the parapet and opened a fire of si—a—l aril—i I upon the parties, but httd not fired more t_—— <ne or two rounds before a tremendous explosion occurred about thirty feet feoni th»> w«st fact of the fort, near the wharf. Aft. i the explosion the enemy were seen in rapid retreat towards Morris island. Our men kept up the to of small arms until the <ncm> had got entirely out of sight. The Yankees, It ferns, I 1., I _oated down a torpedo fit—v the direcr--n of I Port J..hnsoii Trie torpedo exploded near the wharf I ..! the tort. No damage was done to the works. Tho I shock was distutly perceptible sli over the fort, and I MOM of the o—lec-rs on the southwest ang_i wsw* I knocked down." ■» I.HI HUH CoIBTXSY To THE T X t.LABASUI X —Th* I W_M—Ogton N'.ith Carolina) Journal is informed thai _ ither the Coufeuerute States nor the of—ccrs lor men of thi Confederate cmi-cr TiilLtihnssee owe niiiTi to the court—lW of the British authuriU*s at Halifax. The Halil'ax Chroitule of the ltfth state* I :nai she was only permitted to remain in port twenty-four hours, nor won she, as we learn, allowed to take on board any other supplies than one hun dred Ujiia of coal —a mere trine for a ship of her fften■ nothing at all fur a cruiser. The people of Halifax, and even the officials, appeared to be per sonally friendly to tbe t'oi_Vdei_ey, and pnrato | hospitality was freely tendered to the people of tho [ Talht—_ssee. Hut there seemed to be stringent or ders from the home government oompeUing them to act officially in a very unfriendly manner, —invO the fa dure of the opposition in the British PaiU*, in 1.1 to defeat the mim-try by a rote of want of <o—fidence, the unfriendly tone of Emrl Bu_m*_ and his uui_oiis has been more decided. B—.its in Wii.mimoton.— Tuesday was a teg rent ing day iv Willnuigtou. North Carolina. The ——h- don ts—ctnents went off comparatively high. Ac an Sew, the store about twenty by forty feet, on utheast corner of M—iket and Front siierts for tweiitv thousand doll—r*. The room* m ne building iv ai out the same proportion — This piece of property brought over sixty tl—.us—ad do——rs rent for'the next twelve months, cornier-1. log (first of October next. sown tow's paper says that the late Fedarai jury ug at KnoxviUe found six hundred and aucvy iof indictment tor ireai->u against rvbeis. _L W. Cle-Kstt, AdjuUnt-Oenerei to Vaughn* brigade, is elected to Congress over Bnaod vi thi■ XK utii 1 • au- -_.-c District. Ik P_cini ato*."--Tl_s is the title of a new lie weekly Journal to tit issued in nayvnti>■ Georgia, on the first of October. PnaaoNij ami. D.c<t_._i R-UJ-oa >, . ScrsaiMT—*ui*t'» Orrrcr, J Kicnmono, August li, Ug*. J /*\N AND AtTKK TUESDAY, An|m«t I I Iti, I*o4. th* PVKMNti TRAXX on this rood, leaving It*. inii.iiJ at 4 P. Ai., will be devoted e» clusiMly to the transp rtation of sick and wciatrvl soldiers, and no other persons will be aHowvd *• tf tram until all the soldier* are emafi rUiSiv arvom modated. CUAJUdJS G TAJU'6vP. ' auTH~te huperuitsnden*. T?OU SALK.— Wo have on hnnd nu4 I offer for sales* vermis*** of Bugwy, and Wagon 11 u-uesn, Bildl**, Coi-mw, IliJUt*, Traces, ft ace Chain*, Cart Saddle* and hntuuT)«, Ii ia. -. kc. We ait also pr«par*d to make to ndwt all kinds nt work ofLuf i h» vny Uwt asmterwl* Just revx ivc-d luiTiis aale a small l* JL prm* HAJtNK** LKATHPK at MCUJO * hOVlS'\ *.s-3t* PntJihiiAi *uwsh nnu Uld Mnrwiit