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liuhmoiisi §jjsjafe£ - — \it i• i n v> < • •„,. | I.'lt ( .Mll„t.lV. . *.vpt 1 "" ' .i„ twelve monthsi tuiNii ill " , .- ~> ,„,, i.e.- 1,,| tin.. ,■• ' ' " „,,., i. . ii, n„ nth.in idvanc, ETC. . . \ | '.. foi - '-.to"l li I- '' ' ."' .11 i,d-, i.-U.'d I.J 1..U1 -t iiitttl .1.it.,1 Ci •<■ .. ! ,:,. ,i, v, ~ iini it, • 1 ..,.., t, I A Co ,"I tv :!. \\ I, <>v> I \ a* , i. W .!,:.: i | ~,, -ii,,l. I" I'M- it !!•• I"'T j ~ ~_ • ,1.1, ..l.i KM V. II 1. I> , • ; " ••'• '■';" ;"'• , ni • uer. .. A nb, i.l re ,t .•; .; Uu .tb - It* , . t HOKS- Ciiuic to in\ bum, |, ' ' , ... ~ „i. in, ..ul. Ulot I > | luly, i BAY 1101 l 1., it, both bin I fcvt , ~ .ii,.* I« hind, nu t\it tl i.-t .ii \..ii ,'ld iu re. property, pa) ray, oi I adl ib .1 - •"•• hiui • M i HARDIN ;., \ . *.- . ~ .--.!'-.i,1 l\ I, |~ ,i All PA I id- m iv tli. J . ' 1 l ,11 s>lVi I it let vi 11 to thi-. • -ill ■ V MAHOXK the t-vi ..ii".' ■ t tin -li. in .i.iit. I |~rd lion* -id th. com i LADi • OOLD ■„ \ i. n, i in id <itii.li Nl l it ;,,ii, c- J it—j !..-1 iln t it i. iviusi i! .( tb. . , It* 11 .j i ii,, STOI-EN ii.,iii Tit - \ ' ' ' ' ,' rvuiity, ■ n the .1 t 1 . ,_ >~ ... iiui.-i;, w.il. th.cc ttiiit, md i v.-rj n,.-.<■> \r.. inform iti.ui ti, it in it . I V. uikfuli. . i ~... ,i A I '~. Al;> p. ROWE, ~. • \; i. r ■■:-■ fi ■, Hi uri o 1 m . ::m ii, ■:.. lib iii-t.uit, ■ . • .•-,.,'■ M .ni and «' n\, -. i '. V iji,,! ,-n.i \.. ■o« w., vith | ill! il.lt I. - .. I 1 M I ' 1 ltt.-i .1 VDAIH I 1 RASANTJ 1,, ; | iT..i.,,i;ii, Mayo i.i Ik—ili I . WAT ti KEY and • , : : i : ~ -, due to t—< . . ■ - ibtt ~ -ii (.sl by 1 AUGIITfvR A l 0 , 1 -i Main -tii et. j , i him ■; - ■ ll' j tt;-] .mil l ;-„ ;., t-..-.i-'-. I 'd UGI c i •. ,-. , M -t - pit, :.l ,' The 111 --, b i. 11, md m irki I Ll . ~ ■ - i i i *'.- iv n I. ~ GORDON, -~-:■ 11, FA. c. a. * i I ti.!. W#l ii ! .- itfa •..-. imti ii !•• ;. a ' - i liberal re* nd mil b , lid to ■ .- -' .."i.i" [IAIN, with LOCKET j , fhe iocktt ci utained l , . I friend •'. I i l_-:lil-. I '-. liberul reward will I I ~.-.... ; t bets :. i. i _ia_ .-.:,. 1 on Nintli f > i: t__ live!, ou Sui; li,- ll tth 11 iillll ■ ;'. -:. ■' I m irked ■ • , I a bole iv :!.. left ird foi Its i ■ -i. i \ Li a .1-11 II I ■ ,\ 1.1.1: , \ tiiiLD -i.l.i.v i -.1 I IttN. j , ' ~ii, I'he tinder will bt . . it at thi ■■■.:■ , i ■ \ i HOKS- S\ .- I< ft it mi | , I ii-.i" in lie i.iii, . -.... Uol -i- Ui loi • idei nturii It.; him Ihi owuei nl ■. ~ ;i. i rty, put ••.,;., ill ' ■■' b-uil with ■ rd * "i il : U A ANGI i. S: ' i JM.AI;L ( niii- tn mv house, on nl it ub brown MARE, with one . :..: . , . I \ tb. i :.. 'ii. 110- I '~,-! t l. , ..lee folW.lld, :'. .;, -,i ■ , an \ i ,k, ber .■■'• iv W. T FURD, N't ,i »\..:: uu All. n'a (arm, ia Hi hu > 1/ I'KAi L'umu to mv (arm, on the i . npike, 1 .in uuien _n in the city, . . ■ t a i. ,it, s red- triped COW. 1 hi . .■ ~ :i..- forward, prove property, .■' ■ ud I ike hei uwaj . lili HARD Sl IIUTTE. i;i iI. lit XbltKL) DOLLAJIS RE i ii •-!••■! ■i nt .li :, b '~ niv j n '-.ii,-, . in ! Mr John Is. Smith's iuil . \,i .... i the night ol the . ..,- b,t linli-l. 11.- ia ~'■. _t . old, hut -1.,- .i.t .':, the right side ol . in be • i. by i doing his in ute, and :.:■ . hi ii.!.' lm, i foot; al -,'. i -.'! a ■.- n li and ft. uldei.-. I will give the •ii - hi afedebverj to me. il live ue*i ued plan . oi 1 aill pat that >■ hun : : inj Lij-ormation which will .ecurc a, tn I 11 KNIGHTON, !'■ -t-cthie, I.oUI-a cuunli , Va. OuliGHI VI r,A1;1;1.1,5, eVe »orghun\ i ' ' ■ bn Hu, lut- .\ , aP.t.it on hand. i ' .: ' I -lie, .:.. i i tin t.i;. toi .cc. Tiv iTelali S , (ol .MA A : . lull \> cti, FLO-OIL A. lIID.'.iASE. SIMS, ~i to Sine- A Brother, N , bt. i u\ street |>Oli SALK, I ... I MTOVE i . , \\v t ni is, i , i.c ,•/ V 1't.i1.!., ,"!i.;.1--' --1. 1; MEAMLEY, im M .hi '. C' ■»! I'll J i.li bi i " , N< iv, main stkeei ' ~ ill ■ t " iii 1 mi.-, No In, ; , -'• -«.- b, •s.- t, \* lOLAi L ! » ti .'. I ,: Ri • , 1 : ■ udk,. . MuUs , li . «Thi key, ■it i.i i.i d Svga - I ■ i ;, l PAINE k CO \ uUUI) 111 UN,. fcUIIK'J |H L)E - » : i iv I übtained bj havui. ~■■ lu-iki tlie—i foi , ~, li- P itt, i!.-.. ' , -!' i lhe !„UTt .1 .. .1 ■ t. hi < _U ou Fourth street, « B rUTMAN 11"' I ! ' iti I .!!,,.■„ may 1... 1,., d ■' - a ,- Uu -, ~n,t hou .- above ••:.., ,utb -do ■ j' »lUMAC r..it...' wmhmg '■■■■ bm -, tv th.- I'ot'.'u X river, t with < ,vi. •, in -i ,ii reasona i i ..'ii.-eiith street, b - ■'■ >>■ ■ Parties must be pro- TIIOMAB OIJKi; {•' ' '"'>■ l»0TO__Al I'oraons de - : - it..- l- ton, i , by mdting '- irt -...t in . pie . .mt <oii ' barges Apply mt Wa •-•'•i. '-In t...ui>ot 'J and 12 o'do. k. |<" i: «ALK,thr« hundred feet ono and ••■'• '- UALVANIZED IRON Pl__ ' uooKJNu STOVE, buitab- foi — good "id. i. ~ . DANIEL O'DONN-LL, ! i 10-tle, t, Ninth. J ,, '" ; ' V ,V''' ' w*J faIaaWeSERVANT , , j. t bAItUT.i; mt i-.utliait, y.ai.-clu-.-, would '■' k«bl l.i.a.ueol hOBERT LUMP-XM U , ;: , ; l:!i "' 1 - spbing* ' imaaj taquirira, w« will l-.-ti • » tbr«ugho_| tin month, but . . "S "OU ~ oil the Ut ot Octo ' 'i-t I,\ iUA/.l|;|; _ RANiJOI.I'II, I, ' . Prop— stow. r'iuA,'i ay ":' '""iii ';<•• am J ; ii.i. ,',. ~. •'"-> at the soma ot Graml I C4VALRY ■• ' ' " I UU ... „ , addle., »L. _~** •"Uaew ' : o* mJ. a. nhcniui jgAL-a wm-i-L fei^ , TWIM_WSH 1* .ii llii.k j DAILY DIS PATCH 7 VOL. XXV li. RICHMOND, VA., WEDNESDAY, SLPTEM 1804. NoTfE FOR RENT AND SALE It'KM, v 11iv..- FRONT KOOM, 111 t tb'.,.. (ti11.11...1, -i 111.,1,1.' bl the HC.olll 111,,d11t1, li id T.V.. ~1 111-, le o. l.lhlii- |i .\ I , foi 'I' n. ,i two wsTl-grown mi\v khoaT.s Apply up ii.ii. ~tei Mi A COZKOLINO'- :-i.. No 19 M ,n, -:, ,r. 11 foe th. Obi Market ? It' I vii; HIRE, (..ri!,.- balance ,t lh< yi i I I , m .inn woman. Miv,.,, i,ii i ti.i, \.-t old She IS ~ to „l I ~.,„, W.I h, Imi || 1,, , Applj t,, W <* MiI.I.IK, cornet ol H..\ and \i uu -fie.-t.. - ■ 1"-i>i: tiEN_\ ot—i In.:, and _ctm_bb.ua -1 ton,, hel KOOM, on parka t1,..i oiiMaisball !,, t, It ft-han i side, between Insu and Siath, bltb 4 001 !.. :i. lie ■-• lini ,1 MMli ~,7 It* ■ .-«Mt HT.NT I h,.\.- foi nut ,t vilinMc I 1 '.'.in Kltl STAND ml DWELLINO llu :I. with .. good .til, n ii.d well v l '.v.t.i in . . * 'i ci,' ii at i. :■ I', ii,un • i| pit to Mas I ANNIK A M l.i PERT, . i-i ~i Vctmb- slice! md Me, h ,i,i sVaii turnpike lIUUMH YOU i;i:.\ r a ..in ai pu \ \,it. i itiiilt hitlli r ' li. ae ROOM ;i.■ i. I!., \ I Ull I. li. t • l\llt t p -It!, li ~f thell boll c, \thl b ,it tuiiii Tn-.t, to foui grown per,,.i.s, who wdl have even couveuieuoe Th. a uaeuc. ion Graci ■ti i. .I.i i.."t tie moil d.sii.it.i. in.!., ,it> A bin-.., with name and referenct through th. .it v • •• li i: W " . St* ROOMS ioi; I,'KN I, with gu_, andean bo parti) mri.i bed il ih—ned liuiu ro ... : •i i, ,t Nin< tot nth hOeet, tilth d.,..i fr. , Bro i I T.in. moderate. —tea, aNi I IIA.Nt) i,i -ib : it* ROOMS I'oK UdK-T, Vl.iiV LOW. Ai uifortibli uid coiiiinofWus'teASl—ir.Nr, witli two large ROOMS and » PANTRY, in tb. highest ant Im. • locatiou on Main .ti. t. _v< ■li ■ i iibwvv Thud street, right hand ade. Inquire at tho i eiuptiollei's i-tliei .Arlington Hous. •c 1 If 1708 REM 1, THREE ROOMS, with u_o t.t kit inn. -■■ pond ito- _ma the cornet o! Broad .1. I M ij-o -ii..: Ll't \ KING. net ;• IfcOOMS 1 tU; REN r In tie- building \ known us the '•_dgcraont 11..v .-,-' ~v Main street, laetweeu Sixth md Seventh stre.-t-, foui U\ i I'KMSIHTi BOOMS two in thethird utory and two ia the basettii nt. Tor tains, apply at the 1.1 .-■ a—at 11,.in,-. * i, H* I-oU RENT I will rent m\ HOUSE AND LOT in Sidney for one year. I'•- . i-n given 1-t ot October next Th. ho—. is a hue dwelling witb seven rooms, kitchen, ttablt . ■ v nagi h_u.se audall i.,--, - it houses, with i lit . i irdeli n!l well end. -.1 A So i well •I - it. ■ Ai pl\ t ■ vi' .al Ii it Wi : ig< .' , ~i!i ,-, oi ci li PACK it th* T !• graph . i- • Ift* GEORGE p I.V i: IjHJif RENT, a suite; oi tin,, comfortably funiMhed ROOM- , n ~......1 Boor, togt tbei with l ii-... j intij .ml the use ot k-t hi ii, \ 0 i 11 street, and tool from Twenty-third treet, north side. Al .., thi services ol . COOK ii -1. :, :.. «l. : . -,- :, Jt 17»OR REN i until thu Ul oi January next, the eligible STORK and 1 .SEME-1. ~.in--i - : iii ,■ ~-, t Virgini , -ti. i: __d< moatb th, ..ill-. of*tho tltuttrati i .v,.i, Apply at the offio of B 11 D.brell iIiAKI.IISCAMMaN IXIR REN livi i j i'i...-.,ut FRONT ROOM, suitable for one or more pentlenien Applj :-• Mn WRIGHT, ctirncrol _u_hteuutb and C—.j tn. t {,. •» R li E X T, SIX 11 ItKlSilEl' ROOMS with piivdege ut° ki—hen arid stable Addn Ma S A TIFFEY, . - 6t* A___ud |7»OR RENT, A i I RNISUEJJ ROOM, witbgaf Also, wanted, a tew DAY BO AUG ERS Aiii.. ■ ii Bevcutb street, two dou - t. mi tin. \\,-.-t sute, , i It* I?Uti SALE OR REN I, . NEW I'IiAJIH i -MEM-XT, -.ii :>,. 1.-i-.'ii .ti,. t, m tin.town ■•. l nit -ii, near X... s.-n k oout«iliing two rooms un I ii kitchen. A good, large (wrden bt attached. X r partic—ars, apply to HillN 11 .-UL'IiMA.N, Comer— Main street and old .vl.uk. t. se_ i',t* ri M) LKT, :t SUITE of lint-, bsa RI H IMS, 1 tarnished, with gas and watrn, aa -.-. ond liooi, suit-tide for private or pubbc service, situated on Franklin, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth, streets; en_r_nce front and rear. Price, $-00 per month. .• J -tit*] J. K. LJP3OGMB. ROOMS FOR RENT nt the Exchaiig, Hotel, suitable foi familk_ or .-.ingle gentlc iii.u. Also, by the ni.-ht, the EXi HANOECOX CEBTOB 1.1.. I i'liK Kcki.M, nettly andconveni _itlj fitted up with seats, gas, At Apply on the pieiiii-,,, ~. to J. 11. ACKEN^IK, • 2 ■ f At the L iu—_—a Depot OFFICIAL. Ii ■ ».-'. k\ ll: . —tTMI SI, 1 1n..l I l.i l< MI. - s ! \lt s in AMKBIOS, ■ in. lnuond, Vi, August 26,1 ... I i Q EGULATIONS FOR OARRYINO li, INTO I.HKt T 11*1: ALT OF UOXG11E!?- APPROVED JUNE li. IB6L AUTHOHIZIXG OWNERS OP UEGISTERED EIGHT PER TEST. iKi.NLis, ISSUED UXDEIf THK PROVISIONS OF THE ACT APPROVED MAY 16. IHfel, PO _3_. CHANGE Till; SAME Toil COUI*ON BONDS - Parbes owniing registered eight pel cent, lx.n.ts under the act ol May 16, 1861, desiring to,::,!.an . them toi coupon bonds, will as ign them, in the iii.ii.ii.i pointed out iv the printed endorse—itnt on the. bnk ci the iiitiii.-tt.-, to the "C__bdeiiite Sfcites ct Am—ri. i, ui*t—change fotscoupon U.n-T-.." md ey_etl—mtobe presented tb the Bejrister .1 the Treasury Department, who will thereupon, m compliance with the provisionsoi the actol lune 13, lstii, i-.,u,- coupon bonds S"i the amount sm i ifo J li: the boUlid SO .1 l-'lid O A TRENIIOLM, _v 23 t- 3, ■-. i,t.u> -ct th, Ti,.i ury I'i,l l-l lit J); r \l,. Ml MT, ( <'..:.i i i,i ii \i i. -'.iti,.- ~. A.i.,1. -. I I HANSON THE SECURITY OF THE I_ FIVE HUNDRED MILLION SIX li-.lt il.Nl KON-TA-LABLF BONDS, ONDKH il.l. M.\ I.MH SECTION OF Till. CURRENCY LAW. Deposits on call will be received by the i iv.isiii.-t in this ..tt, As i tant Ti.-. ue i ii it, nl, .;,.!, and Mobifo, md the Dcpo-t_ri< ut Wilmington, Rah'igb, Columbia, Augusta, S_v_tt lt tit md .Moiitj-'ciiierv, and ii ititi-.it- mil bo IS IM t foi the same, be.iin >■ mb nt .t th. rate ~t foui ji i ■nt per .n.iiuiii, and tecurud bj thi hypothecnli-n ,d anamouutol tlie above loi.i- equal t,y It.,- v... ..I th,-.,-loan- Th, bond, to be st apaitbytlie Ti. ..-.in.ii, and the proceeds, when sold applied e_ '.lu-.iv.-lv to tb.- p..un. ni .t tb- said ii t-in...t. The -.'-I i.iitv li.d convenicncx afforded to b..n}. and othei torporation , and to—_ pubhi generally, by thi iti'.l- ot temporary invest—_i-t, m—l the el i - ul it,, measure, if generallj adopted, in keep .i- the ttiii. lo v Mithiii model itebouii i. . it i. I. p. d ttlil . OU—Ot—d It to the t.,\ .i.i b1....11-1 delation of tl„. ...injiiunity und ...' uu theii prompt co-operutiou in carrying i£_-toe_ect. o A rRENIIOLM, Set letitiy ol the Tree v,-/ Ricnnoao,July2_, 1864. anM a T..1.A. I 111 111 lIX Ml ST, I 111.. 11 i.i.ii 11:-: States -.r Aukmta, Bi. lon. uf, Augu iB,WI I ' ('IEK'I'IEHJATEsoi'' INDEBTEDNESS j BEARING SIN PER CENT PER ANNUM INTEREST AND FREE 1-iIO.M TAXATION 'lv the fourteenth seelion of the at to reduce the <v. re_cy, aptwoved February 17, 1-hi, tie St t.uy ol the Treasury i- autharimd t-> is-uc- the above .- t- Soatoa, payable two yours ut. i the rati—catmn uf a treaty ut pea—i atth th.-Uuttcl States. They i v - not be sold, but arc only to be issued to am h credi tors Ot the lioVellUll.-11l a.- il, Willing to WS*—TO thi same in payment of then denumds They must ahfu be aivan at par, though iv.-, from bm lUon. Ti;. ittentionof purcfa i.-in;- agents and disbum ma office— of the Govern—mat is f-U—t to thia .i cs of public securities aa ottering pecu_<— advnutogwt to those from whom the supph-s of tl»- Oovenitaem .lie bought i uud Vi titelllt tte the- Hi' "t tb. ill, check, drawn by disburt—i*; ottcen upon tin- depoaita—m bob—na them fund-, and aia—ard Mzaai the tic. "payable iii en ti!ii;;it.s of indebtedness,',' will hi pii 1 in conformity I_m ii allli Deposit—ru?«are I—twby authorized and i, [Uired, to < omply with thu in uldtion, and to make appli cation to the kegisbar tot rapp—es "1 (ter—t—ates as rci'.iiied. LSi b 'Uidj U A TliKNHl'bM, an S3 t- se.i-ctny of'i'ic.i uiy Tim tsunt l" i .it mi -'.i, i Conm:l'_jiai i. bTATws ~i- Anaan ~ j rnXkebmeremL July 2s, ISbl. I riIAXKD TKKASIJRV NOTES.- la vi f d.r to proliiot'i, as i.H as pra.ll.able, the etUrlf liquidation by the Ti.•__•—y of lha OUTbTANDING TAXED Notes, tki Tmawiii. Haristint Treaaw i.i, «nd Bay Deposit— its in the dill, rent —_too, Ut hereby authorised to rocaitati— .-aid notes, except the ||W notes, at bbj jh.t reiitum, oil mYMeit, I Br lag lor n_m certi—ciiteii of loan, uj«>u liyi>otliis_ tion of lion-!ii_aMe I«m_Li. The MM certlllcMU-H to be payable M deiiuuij aXUr tlu-i-pirutioiiof lunety maim And all apeiitS for the s_le of Gie übove bonds _ie hereby authorised to r«ivive the timed Hote«, with Un-exception aboye a, me 1, iv payiueut of bilds, wi.e-n -.old, ut ibn lt.te id iti. per centum. (J A. i'KKNHOLM, t •iv 4*~—id >**. - 1 1 Vol \ •.'! \i. liv*-Ujyil iv*-Ujyi i !>ielm.oi.6 tliupatclr, ■ • ' * ______ : i i . - -". - The Dtll.V 111-l tT.ll ft sojd to News Dealer-, i.t rwi m 1 1 M.> p<i copy City c MUUMU am author i/c.t to charge oni uot—aa sua nm ctnm pvi *.ek |o ic*—.il .übiciibcl i. WIDNL-iUW MobNLMo SEFT-MBEB ~ V ""■» i r r • i- THE WAX NEWS. At latest .1 .-.ii.;. Bom Georgia ~;;i irmywaa i vi. • ~\ii, tly a 1.,,\. j..v . -t.iti a the Macon i nli,. it, with the in,-nit's iTv.in I picketa ia front ii is • t itod that tl..- fern ml i will re -organba tin ii c : , m l ~,.1.-,t stores at Atlanta before entering up -ti n->tl.ei Movement Atlanta was evactiated bj General Hood ~t two o'clock Friday morning, md tin enemy occupied the*city .it eleven o'clock A» heretofore stated, the extra a__u_ii|ioa was bfowaup md the surplus commissary stores I. ■ .ii.,>..l General Hood formed ,l jun ct—« with Gel—ml Hardee tt Lovejoy's station at one o'clock Saturday, mt tbewhob army is bow con en—-ted ict that point Asa matter ol course,* tho bill ol AtLmt. i- regretted; but ncitl.u the army n,»i the p.->piv are at nil di soouraged Ait was qui*) ttlaat .i I,'init • om army wa., re-organising, and t-.ku.e. the i, -t ... much required The Yankee* have beard ol the capture of At lanta. 'IT—trdispatches my that "tlie Twentieth , ,ij" hi- ,„iii,id the city, while thogw—i '""_• is ,ii the tn_in road near East Point.*' Stanton has .1. unotii, i.d report that in the battle fought near Li.it Point tin- rebel army iv_s cat in two, with v. iy heavy loss t.. tin "enemy," uud that General Har dee was __ed How will the Yankees fed when thej . certain that tin) hive been ess_itiully de .-.... iui then information ' that General -tardea i -tui .dv. .md ready to fight then) it uny mom. ut. nu libit tb, rebel arm) is intact and prepared—>i mt birth— Yankee movement tint uny b, ini tiated I l.ii ;, The follow in;- o—i i.ildi.sputch from Ociic r:d Hood wt- received nt th. W.u Department yi *■ t, id..y . " Luvkjov's, Septembei >, It—4, "Oeneral Bragg The enemy withdrew from my front in "i" direction of Jone*boro' last night "[Signed] J 1« 11, ..,i>, Onlei-id." FROM TENNESSEE Tl. Northern papers Inform v that.. rebel force we threaten—g Nashviße, and tint the Y..u_,-c ti.ii.i.tt Rot— .ni had started out to meet thon,aud had driv. ii th :n tin.-'- miles towards Murfrecst—ro' Parties from Franklin, Tennessee, represent U .' that town l- in tho h.uads of Wheeler's forces, hi tuning captured it on the night ot the Id instant 1 BOM CJIABLESTON On Kriduy last, tin foui hundred and twent) second day of tho aeßc, the encmy'tj batten, j fired —Verity-eight shots at Fort Sumtei and forty at tn, .•■ Om batteries promptly replied, firm- souu i-.:i-. -■-, i, ,i ■!..,:- The Yankee i m.i le anuthci futil. attempt ou Tii'li-. night, to blow up Fort Sumter, the torpedo exploding about three hundred y.-d. from the fort "T't TT 1 I H TH_ PiiL-iOENTIAL CAMPAIGN AT T.l_ VORTH Tin- nomination oi General McCh-u_n for tin Presidency bat produced nit.ii-,. excitement among all classes at the-North The Democrats gel—r—l} ..le 111 .■• -t.n It •-, -.-.hlle —IC ltepUblican.l s.eliltl n r '.nd it with sunn .ippn b-1. ioii rha New _oik //•. aid ,i.Hi ~ iin i i in. ifo 1,, 11 1, andaaj We are now on the eve ■•! two -tat* elections whit b wdl throw inn, h light on thi i vex. J .jue. tion of *• the succession." Vermont wdl vote for Stat. • ,iii. ci- lour dayi from now, and — tine on the 1-th instant. It the Ht-publicaivi increase, or even hob! the iiinjoiitie ,by which they t artied th • tit - in the two [>...,-tin- years, the prospet Is of the, IX mc .. i.itie Pre— tenti—l nominee will 5,,, geriou ly, though not perhapsfa pelesdy, clouded j while if the Demo crat-! can carry, or even go close to carrying, one >.i bcth oi th.--."- Republican Bl it.- -tioiigholds, the dloddyit. - and horse i ontracto—. may at once begin p lying their horn ure to < leneral McCle—an .i i" n. .tt President of the Ciiioii." Let the adherents ot General McClellan, there fore, not crow to., fondly until utt. i the results ol the Vermont and M unu elections -lull have be. ii v vie known The frit nd* of " Little Mac" should lie at work there, and not blowiug th, ii bonih ot.r ■< ric tory whii h yet rem un- to be Won line. Jl'i 1.1 i.l ,:.'.-. No—! I.U ION MAS 1;k. 1 IVI ll Tin following dispatches ..bow ih<- spirit ot iv ),'., in,- through tho North ov< i McCh_—u'h nomina tion: Kimuston, a V., Septembei I. The Democrats oi Kingston arc having .1 large __ebtng heie to night. Addresses have been made by Hon. D M Dewett ..nd oth rs. One hundred mini were tired in honor ol the nom_latfon, und buddings illumi nated. .llti,i.isi.i nu. Pa., September I National salutes were fired by the Democrats neai Fort W.ch_tgton tit - ivi nm.-,, .nut on Capitol Hill thi i —,or__i?, in honor ot the nomination of Met —Ban und Pen dleton. _ I'.i.n ast, Ms,, September 1. Tlie friends: ol Hi (lc-Uaii have thrown out a Hag and fired one bui bred w ue- in honor ~1 his nomination. It., .iii. N 11 , September 1 The Deruo ra< yot -.:.i ity bred one hundred gund to-night in Uonoi oi Met lelliui. 11., In. nd,.no jubilant Ih, folios in • i an extract from -i tetter from b_icago in the New York Herald 1 have -.utiic „:d numerous ratio —tion meeting ,v the do ... oi the labors ol national or pi.- .ideuli il , onvt utions, I but never saw one that would oomp .:> iv _i—insia_in with Uus The gatheriug ,it L.ilti iii-i, to ratify the nomination ot Lincoln,?at the ,I, A the proceedings ol that convention. Was a in. 1. tu—tdfulcompared tv tin When 1 stutt that thi ii wi ie .it tliidchioii-.tt.itioii last night one hun di.d persons to every one person at Baltimore, tv .it least twice c maxtythousanda us there were bun- > Ireds at the Liucolu meeting in Baltimore, 1 am spc.ik;mgwithiu bound.-., .ml, n anything, below the re— i atent .-t tin, i;,iti,eiiii,. The Lincoln i.ttitn,ition macting here in IfiaM, at th . ie iuse.u ..t th. _bow ,•■! the ' invention, ■>.. i mere town nits ting-compared to this. ~j,, tn.iiit ts in II tiki, l.>.ilii.i. ST.VTI: o -1,11!.,.. il THE N.jiil ii The Herald icun-to tliiid. tliit the bittel parti —_ ——ing, already aroused, may leiel to ,t bioodi issue It therefore urges moderation, and ■_—tin- ist_rsthi following wbob ome idrtoi to the con te t.mt.- . 'Th,-I—l, ~,i t-be approaching l'i> -.dential elec i„,i. net.... important fo be ticitc 1 m an] t-Ctluui ,puit \V, had hoped, hnd urged, that both paitn i i, ,iii i mute vi ...ii one candidate, hkeGcucral Giant, uit thus secure the election ot a pure- and honest patriot mibi.•,. dby my pohti—d prejudices, and ,'t, tided Solely to the salvation ol the Liuon In thi - we have h©_i d—appuuite— Th.- Ik mot rati and Bopubhcan journal uud ora tors have begun the work in v wrong sputt .'tiil, as tin. ciiiita-- is just opened, it is not too late tot" the—_u repent and reform. Mi. Lincoln an I Gene ral Alci.'KThiii stand upon d_lenait pl.uibnmTand represent titiunt parties; but ti—i wno ra_am why they should not be treated as gentlemen by tiieii political opponents. Let it be understood ut the civ oilt-t that Mi I.lie olli IS Hot "a m '.in dr- "..ill that Gt-nci al Md b>_uits not** a traitor,' and wi shall _et through theeauvn— muchmore creditably and comfuit.tbly Lot if these pbruaes an to be tin.■ key-notes of the distils n.n, hwW loii(£ ..ill it be bofon Demflcrati and It. publicans will about and i tab each other in our streets ! Alxe_dj the JY\~>e*« hasatartod tho _ect—.acering iieth.it General McCtellaa of—red his award tottierebe— before In- |oiin d the Union army, and the IT« Id baa retorted by threat—stag te expose "the tab—By yea, that's the Wold, ot tllo White lloUr-e " HOW, What Joes tills dls K nicctul st> le ol colitcvt . H) effect I How many rotes does it win I It makes partisan pmraalism despicable and eidtesparttaaa paasioii.s; that is nbout nil it uuiouiits to. \V eiu .Ist that It shall be stopped, and Wo propose- to take mc-sures to stop it. » Another bad tcature ot tUiic_avam i» the *• wn oCKiety business. I_b Democrats ar..' mid to have mvaral secret pohtieal societies, mid the Republi cans certainly hove the Loyal Leagues, which are secret associations, having thorhet—quartets lupn rab arsenals. All su—» so—etfoa are uu-A m awicaa Tbcy are uupttnotic Tbet lead to disorder aud to blo..dsh. d. Il the K.-publiciins have uny of the viiLu.-.s to which they lay daiiii, they will disbuii th. ne U—gum ut —fee. If the Deni -crats am as pa triotic as they prsfe—i to be, they willTmre uothiag more to it" with secret assoaatiens. There is no is- Mie involved in the eomiitg elc< lion which may not bediseua-dopeate Mv oatts, or grips, on**a_iwu*_ls 1 are reauirod. Fan, tnc and ir.ink discussion is the only tuiun needed to settle this election mtbahcto llly Should M carry this election quietly, |tud should the ts-al.n paity submit peacefully, we ahaß have proven ouiaelves a mat pcoplu. flut ll the eleitiou is to be accompanied by blooddicd and tol lowed by a Northorii revolution, there is au l-uu ot tho country TH_ W4K 108 ABOLITIONUM. The Trey Daily Press, m a review of the war from .its uicopUou to Ui* present tune, with the vac-uU tin-.' and -singcUKiUi course ot the Abvbtiou louder*, in t i.i pio. it a war for tbs KstoMttea ot If. C1i1.,11, and liiially „ttllug down to iW.il open|y *a| d Im the do tlUctloli of the lUstilullolM vi t J,e Mouth, s.iy,i : Terms ef negotiation which tern "n unfa in tun ot peace and the integrity ol hliol,- Dnfon," President Lincoln will uot listen |», aak-rn th.-y en.l.ran tbt; further propoMitioii that tin. seceded States shall abaiidou a_vetwl. Hereafter, can thiewai beca_sd ''a w.u f„i the Union'" Kvid. ntly Mi Lincoln ibn-s not m iiiulel st.inil it lie WI—IBS the Union restored, and he V—heS the te tolatloli ot J* ai -e.buthc it I fie , iiclthcl __i I- stavery is abol—hed Tin- is hi ,pi itt.irm ioi tin campdfgU her. is the great object t.u which 'the war c, now prosecuted, a., "l.liug to the Pi, ,id. ut For oumtlves, w- can say we uiVii tavored a war to overthrow th<.' don—stic institutions ol sovereign st it. s, and in vei shall We <an have no 1,.. Nt fa, n.,i words for. such a wai It tins is the object of the contest, tt.r sxinm om ana—a are recalled and ■disbanded the hatter -tor m inch ■ wn we can neither achieve nor dc-.-i v<- sacoeas A war to uiiiii t.UU the ' ..Ilstl.-iitlolinl authority ol the Fedrail Hov el nmel.t in all the States IS one tiling, but au un eolistiautioii.il, l.iwh-.s, nbolltlollciusade, which ——S tin eoiiiiti vto b.inkinipt l'tieli, tax lrtb.r, end to grre millions of null- lives, tlint a boon ~f doubtful value ■_iy be conferred en the negroes of the South, ii ,p,iit, another. The people of the Southern state: ; o\e jiistuted before Ood and all the Worid _i rt_st -11..' ua_i a crusade, aad they will make that resed a—a -,v. c. Jul. There is no hope for tbe Union cause—no prospect of securrag any return f,.i tb. bfood ,tud treasure already spent in the war, but—i taking the management ol tbs <ioveiiim,nt out of the hind, ot thou: who have pel vertid v great na tional t.iu.-ie to (onteliiptlble iind 111 .un-puipons, andgiring power to nun who will initiate a new p'lii y , who will gladty wi Icon— anil i. ceive all pio nositious for peace which contemplate a restored Union, with each .State left in the (M uud lull cii- J.yiin lit.c.t allitiriKhto under flic old C institution ~1 om 6tt_ers. No lli'iiioerat, no ronseivativo man of the Web ster, Clay, IMI and Everett school, evei favored tin war for the puipose whnh President I_acobi now virtußy da—ares it is waged —bey could not do so without doing Molence to their own sense of right and tui uing then backs squarely on nil the proles ■ion. ot then- Uvea. Heretofore there had bf_» w.u Democrats, who favored the w_r*ua the Crittenden resolution quoted at the head of tin . aiticfe , but •' Win lleinoi rats," who ale for the war on the _—coin, subjogatioa and alxditkm platform, will be hard t-> Bad, ami will prove to be only. RepubUi ana when-found: Such should and will vote for Idn coln- a most tit leader, because the most conspicu ous in apostacy from his Union professions, und tin first official Hi the land to deckue the war to be sim ply one tor negroes and not white men -for aboli tiou and not Union All other Demo-ati, and tens, ct tilo—u__s of undeceived and patriotic Bepubh c His, will i ally under a dillel out b uillcl -for the Union and the Constitution. M'iini in a_cd His Fnirsns. The co—_littee to notify General McC——_»and Mr. l'ciidleton ot then■ in'uiun ition, are to incut 111 New York ou the eth of Septembei Tlie, Herald, alluding to the whereabouts of the time:—, says i Fhere was a ium-u current in tl.e uty yesterday that Oeneral McCTellau would arrive m town in flu course of the day, and that jus tin nds proposed to serenade hun at his private residence m Fourth avenue Ou the strength uf tins rumor, Mr Duag- L—Taylor,.of Old Tammany, and other leading Democrats made the mpst complete arrangements toi a successful sen u.i te , but, notwithstanding the most active inquiry, the report of the Qe_end's ;ir nv.il could be traced to do rehable .source Ou the contrary, n. my gentlemen, of good uifoinmtioii, as serted that there w.is ao reason t. suppose Ui.it the Oeneral Would collie to the city :ft pr.-.soiit; at least, not until he had.forinoily accepted the Chicago 11 .nun iDon by letter. Collie when he liniV, hoWoVel, In may be Mire ot a cordial reception. For the present, he is stating iiuietly with tv, i.-.uuly at Orange, New Jersey iili. D—SOCBATIC NATIONAL . UXU !1' 11 F. ti., following persons compose U„- National lie lnoiiatl, Committee lor tbe next foUl ycais. 'Muiie, T a Lyman, of Portbu—,; New Hamp shire, Jomah Meuot, ol Concord; Vermont, 11 S, Smith, vi Milton; Uaasachusetts, F. O Prince, of 1f05.,.,!i; t on:.-ctieut, William —.. Converse, of Nor wich; Rhode Id—dl, Oideon Biadford, oi Provi dence; New York, August Belmont, ofNelrYork' cit\ , New Jersey, N O Steele, ol -, Pen—syl ,,u,,,,, W. A Oalbraitb, of Une, Delaware, John A Nicholson, ol ; Maryland, Odin Bowie, of Cuvingtou; Kentucky, James Outline, of Lou_ villc, and I TTiiiibic, ot Paducah; Ohio, Kufu ■ it. tliiiny, ot Cleveland; Indiana, W. li. Niblu.k. of , Illinois, Wilbur T Story, id Chicago; Michigan, W L, B v—raft, id i.-it Huron; Missouri, Lewis W.Jtogg, ofSbLouis; Minnesota, John 11. AlcKiiiiiey, of Chat—eld; Wisconr_i, Qeorge 11. .Paul, of Mdwa—rie; leva, li. O. French, of lien Moines; Kahsas, Isaac _. Baton, of Leavenworth; l alii. -1111,1, 11.,.,..,. , lismgkmmt, of -Mm TTallcl..o; Oie t;oii, William Ml Mt-li.ui, of '. The committee organised by the election of Au gust Belmont, Chairman, and F. O. Prince, Seere huT ' UIE FDillT A T REAMS'S STATION. A correspondent oi the Washington Chronicle writes a curious letter in explanation of Hancock's defeat on tin; Wcldoii railroad. It the news of this writer may be accepted as correct, it requires but throe yearn to annihilate an army cups, for we arc told tb it the Second corps was composed of entirely i., w in, v, and hence the disaster. Dating ' fow Peters burg, August 27th, the correspondent writes . '• livery m.-tii undergoes au organic .iiiinge once in seven yearn. .'-o we aie infornied by physiofo ijistn. The di—ntegrutiou of human partichi must be very gradual and imperceptible, for, alter the tup ie of time spccitied, when it is presumed the test atom of the 'old man' has departed, the individual retains bis identity, his friends appeal the same, Ins name rem vie, urn hanged. ".- ; u is lt with the Anay of tbe*Potom_c. The d——rent corps become new commands every three years Hancock is the leader ot a corps, of which every member wean tor his _—inctivo badge v club or tiviod This is the Second corps; but h.,w changed id—cc the time when commanded b\ Oeueral Sunnier! The old men of the Second corps ale al io i.t all gone. Of thqpc who twice assembled in bloody congress upon Manassas' plains but a hand ful remain The men who covered Pope's retreat from the Rapidan and battled for us at Bristow sta tion all tllo-e Who held tile ildvall.e at Mi— KuU, and emerged with tb—i hves bom the WUdenu is, - have bed. mustered out ot service c-r slain at Spots sylvo—ia and Cold Harbor. '• Th. iunk-ot tile old coi psjire tilled with in \vmen •All know that three years has been s—bc—nt t,, change the ussy. There is in some way a d—for en, c We t iiiiiot notice It any more tlnin tbe pby sicdog—t can discern a change in hi i own body every seven year- There is no dulcience in the corps insignia The men are fed a j well, and apparantly march and tight as well as ever lt i:- only undei pc-ciiliii circumstances, like those in whiiliO.l, bon's and Milcs's .division-, were pi.tied during Wednesday afternoon,that any di—erencecaa be ob tei v.-d fo_ice the reb—a i hinged, ea< li time with augmented numbers and increased fury Whea oui -.olduirs i.p- tin n b, 1,, ioi tin thir I time, CO— ttmptt.itli.ii foes was only equalled bythecon ftdeuce llicy tell m __—_elvus. Main ol the regiments in Mac'- division were composed ol n< •> nun—. üb.titut.-s-, aliens, and ihr-ftea men Tn>. Suve—th New V.ah had )uit received three hundred' such Most of tb.ui w. re ignorant ot compaaj drill, and knew so uttfo ot v.c msiiTtid ol aims they could scan _y load iind _te Ttn- anthiisiasm ot un i ni'u was unbounded when tho rebels were ic pulsed in their first charge When the enemy ap peared before their maws, %ud asmnlted them the s ti-oiid time,thi.' seemed the moatfoarless 5,.l hers in the line. Every nun, iv hi.-> eagensren to g.-t a jto; ,1 chalice to shool, loiEot lie wad u,,t as n.vuln. rail, as A, hllles, and lleedlie.y exposed 1,1111 ell This regiment aud the Sixty-first New Yoik, also linn, 1 with new recruits, poured a peribet tempeat ot •• bink and ball" into tbe line ol mbolsas tiny siuig. il, a human wave, agani-.t the Works, "Th_a*caa— tlie order lor —ai—tor-charge. Tin l in.; ot rehab had grown uneven; it swayed to and fro as in a drunken tit. TTn illy it bloke and Scat tered These Ulcu, U-fol'e so lvii of elitliU .1 l-m, llow became wild .md anmaaageabte. They _asabered over the pi.rni>.-t, leaped the dltih, and, with lixed bayonet., eh i- <-d th- llecing foe _UOUgh the Woods and across the .tearing bayood. " Veterans would never become thus excited The victoiious commander at Waterloo was exceedingly wroth with h>s ue\v recruit.i beta use tluv clitund tl.e conflict full of enthusiasm. Yo make a long tight, Calm e• liragi; U Heeded the Very thing these 111. 11 never had the oppoitumty of aeiiuiring. The sol dier can only leant tins on the battle-held. " Tho fourth assault robbed the Combat of the last appearali,,- of novelty. Those same recruits, who but one hour a-jo soeui.'l so camtem of danger and woie foremost vi pursuit of the foe, now became tenilbd and ran The old luldieis, firm and re liant, ft 11 back sfowly «nd steadily, frequently forrn iug trout to check the KM*-?, and again ictimig It tIUS ulolio gives udvautago to' the rebels. If llolic- but tilt; old Baca*d corps had beeu at KcUlls's station that al lei MM- We would have lett the held le—ureiy, although two ditiaousof apartiui heroeii could hiivo remained thelc- 110 lollger cjlileUibltg against such odds. Lee's aim) m always the s-,niu His troops mv old and Mad. Their teiui ot service known no expiration ; death alone can discharge the rebel who lights in ihe ranks ot the Army of Novtb ciu Viigiuli. We tuecoutuiiwlly Ughtiua oUe-hall of oui army and ten earnmt the reiuaiuder. " As the enemy MM to follow up their i_i_ht ad vantage, It is pi—i—tt<d they sutfered severely We have been expecting them at Six Mllo htaboll evciy uight and uioruiug. Yesterd.iy they were reported aaatrmnt in the neighborhood ot the Avciy House, which is now ucur tbe ventre ol our line. As yet there has been no dearonsti utiou save heavy vun uouadiug aud occasiou-l outbursts of muskotry" Hope, oui guiding star, shines brightest in the dfiikcrt boiu, and peoples the gloom with hury toims Of its own clcation f -_- __-_ —_-_. __ . ._> J._. - __■___— c.i.v ivi V-Ut Im cv.' [From tin London Vloiui__ Post, July M Un Monday night Mr. Lindsay in.iiured ii it MM the intention ol the Government, iv concert with the other powei> of Kuropo, to use then cndeavoi i to bung about a su ,pt nsion ot hostilities ill Ame rica, Hiid Lord I'aliiieiidi.u replied that, in aRs- fan - est stats ot IMlags, it was not fhmight that* w< ( uld j be tiny advantage nt such a step This un ideut forces BStoaall bow loliK it is i.iillv piobibb- that tin, impl-.i, tic.ible, ah_—sa, hopelci, war will mat Is it all likely th.it it will suivi'.c the pr<- <nt C___ ralgttl It n__net seriously b.- supposed that the Noitherin-rs will go oil ti_'litiii._ louver at the coat of national bankruptcy and universal miv, and the dcr-olatioii ot thai homes, not ..lily without -my taujjible protit or advantage at present, but oven without any pro.pivt ot j ,i --bl, benefit in th.- future, we apaak ot tho de-olatiou of Northern homes, be.uu c, vi the lo.u in killed and wounded ii at leant thrice us gnat ou their .i.le a, oil th.tt of the Coutcdeiat.., there must soon bl not a ■ in-,lc- hilnilv 111 the Federal States but what >ull bit- to in..vi 11 the death of one or liioic ot Iti Un Uibt 1.1, ol to witness the sod spectacle of il hu .bmd, a brother, n son, painfully dragging him self about .1 nipple toi life li lt creditable, is It coin* liable, is it even pos lible, that the Federals .should continue . ueh a war much laager! Then doing so really hc-lni to be IlitoU-isTi-nt with the na ture of ii. vi and of thmgs. Man is not given to mm hiiu-u It sf-femiticuUv for notion g War cannot be carried on open natioo dbaa_raptey Theiuoiin■ tains of debt watch the Federals an piling up, lik.- I'elioit apes Gam, must em long fall with a trmaa_ doiis clash, and buiy the Ooveniinent under then ruins From the numba of manaents widen am eolithlUiiily maichiii,", hu—— oil the expiry 61 their term of -.ci vi<.-, and 1. aviag the armies in the very Crisis id .1 battle, it b evident enough that those who have had one taste uf the war wUI not enter the rankl a ii, oicl tiiiie Tho-;,.- Who have not served may, by the Isibc. ct high bounties, by kidnapping, by enlisting them drunk, and other notable American devices, be induced to go forth as food for powder. Hut at this rate, aB the vi de population haviug gone through the or_e .1, cither as "hundred days' mm" or tor ■ loiigei term, there Will be no inexperienced civilians lilt to bi in;: witliyi the* net of the conscription. This leads to an important eone—bnon. Even the civilians thems—yes, who have hud no taste of the realities ot war, and have been accustomed to view it on its l.iight mid roui mtic _de, bare resisted thu draft by 1..n em moie than olio locality. What, then, willbe the eflect when it is attempted to press trained sol diers who .ue thoroughly sick of campaigning ' There will be another—vii war in tho North, It ban been lightly -ml that immigrants bom th, old World will fill the Northara aranes-bnt tins will not bear serious examination. If Ule North is to depend upon mere foreign mere.-iiaii am, the war will come to an end very speedily indeed; and it it could be carried on by such me*—*, it would be -far more lonmd able to the Government at Wash—tg toii thin to that at Hnhiiioiid. But, at all eventa, iiier. diaries or patriots, foreigners or natives, there must be money to pay the troops , there must be money to satisfy the contractors, whose w.u this has DOW really become. That a linamial collapse is im minent does not itdnut of the shadow ot a doubt. - No soldiers, American bora or alien.-, will fight; no soldiers can without money for the necessurii s of war No contractor will supply flic-:..- necessaries Without money When the crash comes, and come it uud at no distant peiiod, soldiers and con tractor.,, American enthusiasts and foreign merce naries, will leave th. wm to take car.- of itsclt. Tin: OiiiHiT or the War As the war began, so it has continued. The North has fought to subju gate (he South if she- could, to devastate it ii she COttU not Th..- South —— fought solely ill self-de fence. There Liis never I ■■•••_ ■ moiiieiit at which she would not gladly have accept ed peace ; there has uevci been v moment at which peace was in any senm within her reach. Three times the Contiderate Qovenluictit has attempted to negotiate, and three tunes its envoys have been insolently repulsed. It h.ci never done- any act calculated, by retaliating on Northern soil the crimes and cruelties perpetrated by Northern troop: iv the South, to nuke negotia tion diUi' ult oi peace unpopular. The Southern p.-oplt- have shown the world that their subjugation is impossible. They hate 111 tilitiliie 1 then inde pendence and protected thou capital against enor mously siipciioi numbers, and without sustaining ' a silicic defeat approactdag the character of a iti-ian ter, they have, un hall a dozen distinct occasions, __kted a total and crushing overthrow up .11 the main armies ol the North. With every year of tbe war their strength baa increased aad their courage ii.c risen; their determination grows >lniv more stubborn and their devotion more perfect ami liiiiin moiis; and, 111 ih>: word- of the manifesto, tie- worl i uui t ,-c that such .1 people cm—uot be conquered The hopel. ssiius-, ol the Xolthem cause Is recog nized by all except its most devoted partisans. At the same tune, ;UT vie aware that it rests with the North iiloiiu to terminate tin- straggle. Victory dam uot inciea-c the demands of the South mole than defeat culd reduce them. She asks only to In let alone ; she wishm for Bothina except the With drawal of .Northern troop-, fi-om her SOU :,nd N'oltli crn crui-er, tioin her waters. Peace, ther—on , re uuires only Unit the aggressors should abandon tlie hope of reducing bee .States, inhabited by an Bag b-Ji population, to a hateful servitude ; and it ill be comes the European Powers to encourage that hope, and probing the war, by withholding a diplomatic acknowledgment of the universal conviction that the independence of the South 1 virtual-j an nc cumpli-tied fact. — Loud sa Stamttu ..'." Tiik Val.ii: „F a Kir—A sailor who li il''re cetved a considerable share of prise money at Pry mouth w:is on the point of proceeding to Loudon to open I it; but baring heard ottlu- various tucks an.l teiiiptations t.. <• is.- the unwary ot their money, he hif upon an expedient to insure a s de return to iiis ship when she should sail again. He, therefore, at every inn oa the road where the coach stopped for reftvfhmciits.pai.l double, that he might have credit for an equal supply on his return, and agreed with each landlord —utt ho should twirl his hat upon his stick three times iv proof of his bt ing the same who mat—l the payment in advance He also paid tare I b.i.-k by the same i oach. Aa he feared, poor fellow, so it fell out, he was soon coaxed or cheated out of all his money, and took las sea*, on the Plymouth coach to return At every uui on the road i tck was gladly recog nised by bis merry twirl oi his hat, and was nevei a bed t._,i payment Toward the endol las journey, a Jew. who had ,!■ con.ipauii'd him all tlie w..v, aad who had seen how the reckoning was paid by three twirls of h_ hat, could no lotigei rt——in bom expressing hts .Wonder; and the sail,.l to canyon the )o„c, -aid the hit was tbe most valuable article lie possessed, adding that when be alighted at Plymouth he would p_y his fan in the ___*) waj 'This bem r ' really the case, the JeW became quite, aliil.us foi the hat, and of—red him twenty guineas tor it, which, as a vol y pariicul.ii uvor, the saifoi agreed t 1 taint, as he was about to Join the ship, and the hat was no foiig.i useful. It was not loiij,' before tin- Jew was again obliged to travel, and ol COU—~ tin ; valuable li at was his companion; but the very first mn at which be took refreshments ha was undeceived ia .1 way that might have been attended With. SellolH colise qti—ices, toi when the wait— demanded In- sham ot the reckoning, Moses, with a confident look, twirled his hat upon bis-tick three tunes Ujioii this the waiter thought be Was eithel tipsy or mad, and called his employer, who made the poor Jew iwnl the quick— , and it wa- only by the lntertt-rein c ot ume humane pa leagers that the unfortunate few w,i- prsvi litcd li-oiu lo in r ' Jus liberty as well a bis nioiicy. "" 'm** ' ■ # B 'M.in. sor Tin: Nikoi i; TL.- Christian tntell - ./..-.en lb—j I—SCOUT—uI about the e_plolts „i U.c -aim—l " Wb.it 1 wc'tidertul thing is this matta ot ,-.ew -111ig: It began ia Paradise, and w.t. _Ie earbest Crtut of the tall Ai—4 the o.for ot llowers, and by lha iiimiiilwiiig streams and onte -the had* of the dink green foliage, the cowering foixu. of the guilty progenitors of oiu race bowed in anguish aud shame aa they took then- lirxt les-M.ns 111 the art which hits ever-.me. been the iii.uk ,i sciwlude or sorrow. And yet the CUM has UA bccll Without Its blcs , ing " The needle, With the thimbl.t, done lll.ore for maa than the needle of the compass The mm* dlcwoikof tin.- Faberaa—_ is the nuist aucu-nir,cord of the alt Early Used to adolll ihe Ve.-tliu.nt, ol tlie priests, it ira- honored by God hiiusclt, and be came a typo of "beauty and holiness. ' Th, kin r -'s daught— ball aforionswith—i; hardothhm is ot Wiouflht p'old, she .-.h.i1l be brought lint., th, king in r.iinient of nt't'dlewoik.' Tbymsgnrbrcj—e of kingly i .in.p. the spectacle of rehinon oi wealth, the tnbiitc of boner to tho grant, the charm of di|t liidied society, the ictuu'd attractions ot beauty, are dependent upon the needle." How O.iuiioTO'.l-i mi: FiMsiun m —Stßl tso The followuiri is e-traetc-d liolli tb, OuiTialu <'/./ ,/i. . it, an paper: John Croud.i. c and Thomas A—isoli, who were cou- VI, let at the- a-sl/.i-.- _fll Week af |!.tlotterobbelies at .Sundeiliuid, and sentenced, the timei to five yuan and the latter to ten years' *_■*—- servitude, with twenty bates each, underwent the puiiishiui-ut of ut the county piisoii on Saturday. Tlie iii-ti uuieiit of punisluueiit was lUiluufactured by a s—lor, who is undergoing imprisonment in tlie goal, expressly for tbe puipose The utt is iugcuiously couiposed of lime thoiiKS ol st-'Ut leather,iu e.uh ol which ale nine knots, aud the»e to a in-vi bit b mail-, the iHiwer, »lclde.l by strou_: hand-. Is ten—(n At tvtiv stroke the knots cut deeply, in..kin - tie-— aud blood fry iv every direction. Tho prisoners were liuuly tied up iv a reclimug portion, the lower part of their shouldeis expoocd, tho higher and fowt r part of their backs I■. in- protected by pad - ding. The waileis, Hodgsoii and Allison, executed their task *ith the skill of nioiv practi-.d hands. The olUciala of the goal weie preneut, but the pnsouers were kept in their cells. 11 adman and Allison alternately lutlicted ten lib, each oil each uf the prisoners. The tirst lash was i-eceivt-1 with comparative txiua iiiuiitv by each pi t- onci , but on t'u ._:, end, the veil of deep and eXcruciattug agony which burst forth is represented as indescribable. l'beur ellen continued duiiug tbe wbuic of the puiu—intent, aud these, tu fjctlioi with the sight of vie ttyiug Itesh and Wood, the iu.ui_l, t b ick of the -utforci',, uud the clotteu •kciiii ot the cat. mad., up a spectacle of horToi overpowering to Uiom; who witnessed it. When the, punishment had U*m mil,, til, the prtnonem were taken down and removed to the pnsou uitiratal yiu i. state ol rompfete prostration—uide»d, it is .fvorre.l that 111 ith.-r ,d them could have received an.th.i li ti without the greatest danger. Although thu pi 1 sonars did not witness the puiushinent, they could heir the shrieks of the unhappy sufferers in their tekUf und it is to be hoped the coiittuuplaUou of the pain -!__• ut may have a salutary ,-n.-ct on lb, ii iiiinds Ya:.-„ke Krw< hu.m Locisia.xa —General BAnki has ord.ied, as the banks of the State of Louistana have M far failed to. omply with the provisions of law <n to justify the foifeituie of their ch-rteis, that tb'-y arc ri-quircl, .vi a contbtion of any fur ther tnuisHction of 1 .liking business, to receive United States treasury noU-s at par in ,-v ti tie-,- for their own laenea Auv institution aggrieved by tbe order may demand un investigation of its athuis, md show its credit supenoi to that ot the Umted States The—V ii sa ys the recent gunboat expt-di tion tv Chicot Pass, al the head of Grand Like, Louisiana, completed its woik destroying propeity, consisting ot the saw nulls and house* ol Captain F_ler, the uotoilous "Paul Jones of the South," who Was cap tured when the Star of the West was destroyed, and who dicdji pi Homr ou Johnson's island The reported not in New Orleans against the draft is without foundation Fnehj _b (Slco. The family of President Juarez, ol Mexico, have arrived at New Orleans from bia;-os Santiago. The Intel veiitioiu.t forces, glider General Douai, •had occupied Saltillo, and expected soon to be at Batarina, whence, to Monterey, there will b. stub born ICM stance Accounts from Vera Cms uf tho 7th state that the French and Imperiab will advance simulta neoudy—i l.v .1- New l.eoii, CoaiiunU and Tumuu aapm . . <pir_., ' _ On ..ne sid.t, Uiey have .drca.lv taken Ourango , aad on the otter, have reached Victoria Monterey and Matamuiae will soon be attacked. A late dispatch says that tortmas, tho celebrated srueriill.t, estates*] a complete victory retcuUy over' Dmera, ten miles north of Victoria. It wasiiimored that General toitinas, aith hisvictotions army,was marching on Melanin laa to contest the advance of the I'r.nch up the Rio Grande. Tumenl ra Womkn- The celebrated traveler, J- lyard, paid the following handsome tribute to wo men : " I have observed that Wotncu in all COV—tete are civil, c.bligin,.', tender und humane I never ad dressed mvsnl to them decently and fuendly with out getting a friendly answer. With men it has often been otherwise In wandering over the bar rens of hospitable It.-i.iJi nk, and through holiest Sweden and frozen Lapland, lude and churlish Finland, unprincipled Russia, and the wide spread regions of the wainfonug Tartar; if hungry, diy. Wet, cold or >.ick, the Women have been friendly ; and to add to tins virtue, y.o worthy the appellation of benevolence,) those actions have been performed iv so free and kind a manner, that 11 I was dry, I drank the sweetest draught, and if hungry, ate the coaisest morsel with double relish." 1 1 m « CkM——aroas—wia in General Canby has ordered the correspondents ot the New York Herald and IW-awi, who were permitted to accom pany the troops operating 111 Mobile bay, to be sent beyond the limits of his 1 mnmand for having abused the confidence reposed iv tlicm by giving public in formation of value to the enemy, aud' engaging in controversy calculated to disturb the harmony of tin troGps. — I L _ ._*_■ LOCAL MATTERS. • «, . Uu v Coi Men . - The following business occupied the attoUtloil ol this body, 111 called ses ,ioll, yesttjr dayduoruirig ■ Mi liciioou presented a petition from Wilhuni 11. Oavis asking the puvUegi of tittacluug a turn out en the Frederick-burs rallio'id,ou Broad street, to a WOOd-yard Which.be has established on the cor nel ol Second and Bt*ad stietts keferied to the c-oiiiuuittee on Btweta. Mr. rieott offered a lesolutloii having for its ob . ject tl.e adoption <>l some measures lor biniging luel into the city for mis te the ci—sens at reduced prices. Eelerred to a W*map*s\ Coiuimtt.c ou Fu.T, consisting of Messrs. Scott, liciioou and Stokes. A coiMiiiunicatioii was pix-sented by Mr, Hill, from John G. Tuiiimaii, orliiing to furinsh eight thousand bushels ~f coal for the'use of Uie citi-cus at thirty-sis doUan per load, and asking the as.sist aiice ol the Council 111 procuring a detail from tho military set vice of A. F. iK'ilrich to superintend his coal Brines Mr. 'Tamilian furUier State that if the piiceot transpoi-tation ciui be .reduced tLW coal will be brought down still lower. If proper ai r.ing—uent-i can be eflectcd With the Collfed— ate Goveiliiiieiit, Mr. 'Tamilian will tiuiu.-di au unlim ited supply ot gotid lump coal to our , llitu,. al less than half the igicc which is now asked for it. Re teric 1 tO the Col—hlittf. oil Fuel. The tollotviug report frum the Fiuance Committee v..is adopted: " Heducing the tjx imposed upon the James Kivttr Bttd KanawhaCtucilCompany tioUi jl.ihm.i to jI.oUU; refusing to red—ge a tax imposed upon Henry SmiUi for retailing ardent spirits ; remitting a tax ol § .50, erroneously imposed upon Ed. W. Tompkius; al lowing thu City Collector three per centum couuius sioii for collections made, instead ul one and a half per centum, heretofore allowed." A long and general discussion ensued between Va lium, members of the Council with reference to a change in the present tax bill. The following re olutiou, offered by Mr. Burr, was adopted: " /ii aahed. That the Chamberlain beampowtead to ninke the transfer qf any stocks held by the city. and sold under direction ol the Finance Committee." A resolution, ottcrt-T by Mr. burr, was adopted, ap propriating $ 30,001) out of any tunds 111 tho treasury not Otherwise appropriated,' subject to tl.e ordei ot th. Overseers ot tho Poor, for tbe pnipuwi ot paying for the supplier pin hai-Hi by thc-m. Cuuucd adjcuincd Aaazsi oi t Haaai TimV -On tte M mst:uit Mt Jolui C W\un, at New Kent county, had sinliii liom hnu a veiy tine horse, and receiving in formation -.Loitly aftel wards that the theft wa.-, colliuutted by two whit, men hailing from lIeUIICo county, named George W. Allen, ir , and Woodson Jones, Lo proenred a warrant foi thsn arraft, ah—h «„ placed in the haiKU ot Constable X W Hobin soii, of lieiiiieo, ici execntaoa Taking the matte earnestly iiih.ind, Constable Hobiusou immediately set about to Uud the thieves, and, as is usual tilth almost every ease ha ante takes, lus eiforts have be, n clowned with such ess. Joiicswas arrested yes terday afternoon, und bHen's wharaahonU am well known, so that b'.'for., thlg noti, c reaches the public etc he also will probably be in the clutches of thu law. Mr. Wyiin's horse has ate been recovered. It Was found 111 the pos.sm.sMon of Ml Richard Reins, of this city, who purchased him tea Allen and lus companion, upon the representation that the animal was then property and they wen dcspei.itdv _1 want of funds Mi Kerns hold- a receipt from them showing that he paid six hundred dollars tui the Lore. -Ui e-amin itloU will take ph-rt tod .y before a county justice I 'll'll'l li ill: -.1 lIES IlloTUJll COVRT, TIESIi.V radge Halt burton remanded to the custody of General II L K emajm, Evan F KaglaiiJ, whose applnation U—in a writ of hjbcai tew/me foi a te rhatwt frmri mihtarjr ttrript has bam pandiag U fom tbe i.iUlt 10l ,oUlo time back M Krackc-r leliewcd his lecogiii/aliie 111 the sum ol twenty IllillllWllil dollars 111 two casej tor perjury, and gave security 111 the same amount lor his ap peal uuce uli tho lOUi ul September. CuUlt .. ij .11, !.. 1 _mUm_M Cam. A Veiy ~..\ .*T ii.t a_ albs teg the status ot Maiyl.tnd.i:- 111 scrv.ee, will soou cuiue on foi* tual iv Judge llalyburton's Court Tbuty-tlireo members ol Uie Fust Maryland artil lilV, ■_■ tldistcd atthe beglUlUg ut tbcWalfor three years, .uid whose turns ai -hivice have expired. Lav llig been leXUsed then discharge by the nulltary aalhiiiitte. ham sued out wnti* of aateH corpus for the puipose ,t testing the legality of their retention 111 the aiiuy The petitioners have secured tbe ser vices of Mt. John 11 Gilmi 1 a-, couusel, and Uic ihnlaiia ol the question ll looked foi With con siderable intereot by the Matylailulers sojouimug hen and else while in th« Conbderaey. —--——_____—_-——_-——————- • Tin. Waiik Wokks. An accident occurred rc ccully at the I'ump-lloUse, by which olio uf the slialts were broken , but notwithstanding this ta, t, the supply of water to thu city has not been d—uill* islied, the hands haviug been iv tho meantime kept at Wuikday and uight. Wearclidoriuod that, thlough Uie energy ut Mr. J. P. Tyler, the supinuteudeut of thu Fuiup-tluuse, the d image WiU soon be re paired, and everything be working as —iual. At en,km. L—st uight about seven o'duck a ser vant gnl 111 the employ oi Mr. Jacob l'lowi-r, on — ni. street. Hoar the Full Gl'ulUlJs, while chopping wood 111 the yard of her master's premises, struck her foot with the edge of Uie axe, severiug it iv two iv the middle. A physician wn tailed in, who 11, . „ 1 the sepurated patta together aud stitched up tho tb- di , but there is uo cert—uty of thu Wuund boa—ug up, and amputation may yet be neoenaary. Muuii'-i CuvaT, Yxsr-KOAY -Recutdet Oulu presiding. -Jubi' — a free negiv, charaed with burglanoudy efteriug the dwvllm„-houn« of Mr. Alexander R. Holladay, ou the night ul the Sblh of July, aud slealiug a large amount of aiiH-eru-, waa remanJ.sl for e_amiliaUoii befoio Uie 11 ustmgs Court. WilUam r»picor. alias WeStsrood, charged with stealing a cow from Or. Jobu R- Oarnett, un derwent a partid bean-- of hl» «**»• •«" ~«* "- ivuwuiled lor * further uivesUraUon this Hmrtung .|lkr)rrama §i«yaic^ JOB PRINTING NEATLY XXXi UT_U> Advcrtiiwments wdl be inserted _t the rate of osn 1-011 -ts ahi. nrrr ckhts per «|uare tor each tnssr ticu -eight hues (or less) constitute a square. • Larger advertisements in exact proportfou A. I ret ti -se men ts pubi i bed till lorbid wiU be charted $1 30 per square for every insertion I'.l l. .111 1* Whin- w.u discharged from tbe accusation of keeping an ill-governed und dworderly hviua 1 a the neighborhood of the Second Market Harvey I. iti-uii, was vnt on for cast—inaUon bofot* the Mll -.rings Court on tte .bug.; of tornmttting a biu til assault upon Thomas Forsyth, a bo* about light years old, lines wnn, imposed upon Joseph Zhn iii- iru.iiH charged with keeping his drinkl_g-_ou.se opcu on Suuday, 111 violation of the oidiiinui c, and a discharged soldier i.,.tu. 1 M Wynant, foi• buying watiTiiu-lons iv tbe 801-ond Mai ket to sell ar—n melons confiscated. William White, fr«» licirro; Jim, slave of Alln-rt Heath ; ..nd F.lijah Mob*, fre* negro; were ordered to be whipped for rartoUHl otleii,s_s.oninutted by them [lletectiTea Jones and Tomer Were the offleers who arrentrd John Logan the trie negro that robbed Mr Hol—day Ul July last The capture was made at twelve 'O'clock Mou day night ] . *2S5 ,_ = i H!5 i o_»«_______!» I'oLL-ißi.t, Mourn (' <u.>i iv t, September 1; 111 To the Editor of the Ra hmond Dispatch Sir : In tlie editorial of your issue of tho lUth ultimo, which lnu just come uuder my notice, you have represented Mr J—ion Allen—mciuUing for Die Federal army iv " IToUuil, Belgium aud tho rest of Europe,"—to by a Polo. Allow me to correct this mistake The Mr Allen you retei to is a Hun garian fie was colonel in- the lluii.tii.nl army ; -1 ne to_be I'iut.d States in I*,- with Kossuth as * a in, ml. : of lus suite ; and since then leu—u.t-l, and lived, in New York *As to his name, " Allen,'* up..n which you comment that it has "an lulu.su dly small stock of consonants for one of his race,") it shows him to be a Hungarian of the Magyar race, or a descendl-upj ot those Huns who, in the ninth century', invaded and eoiniuercd a part of the an cient Stavonia and established tbe modern Hunga rian -lugd.-ii •• Allen " in. his in the Magyar lan guage what " hurrah " meant in the T-iglidi, or thu " yell" of the I out.-delate State* people, or,at least, of the army The Law of Nation* d'-ftiien the recruiting busi ■M m foreign countries to be a crime deserving cap ital puuishinent by hanging [Tutte!'* Law of Na tions, book 111, chapter 11, section IT] It is surileiciit, therefore, that I should not allow such a charge to by saddled upon the sons of Polaud. And I hope that you will acknowledge my right to have this correction published vi your column. With great regatd, 1 am, sir, Youi obedient servant, O. 0. Maun ■1 ■ f BY TELEGRAPH •. " m FROM MEMPHIS, ETC. Moiiii.K, September 5.— A special dispatch to tho Register, from Scnatobla to-day, say* : :.• ,ut report the capture of Duv.il.'s Bluif, Ar kansas, with tw , limit' -.it and seven transports t/, ii. lil (111. 1 -ion, with cavalry and artillery, has gone across the river from Memphis. Twelve transports loaded with troops passed down the river from Mimpm> Friday uight. Their supposed destination is White riven* The circulation in Memphis of the Metropolian RicHtL, Fieeiiuiii's Journal and Chicago , H_MM has been prohibited. Nothing new befow Three Yankee vessels arouff Dog River bar. DLOLKADE! BLOCKADE!! KELVIN'S BLOCK SHOE BTGRE. ' We have lately r. ccived from Wilmington and Baltimore a large selection of i—ll>__, and now havu the largest stock 111 the South. 3<)o pairs of Ladies' French und English Gjit.n, -00 paii s of superior Morocco Bootees, * Sou pairs of Misses' Leather -hoe*, with other kinds and uuabties. jou purs of Gentlemen's Calfskin Gaiters Thai is decidedly the best Shoe Imported. •-00 pairs of Boys' low-quarter Engli—l -hues, '.• 1.1 pairs of Ai my and Servants' Shoes , with a large assortment of Neckties, Drawers, Undershirts, Men's Felt Hats aud Kid Gloves, Shoe aud other Luces, flaili—MiMat*, Black Thread, . Eyelets, Machine Silk, Hoop Skirts, Corset Springs, Match cs, I'Tclich I'alf.kius, Ac, Ac se 7 cod 1111 • SU N 1) HIES. •Jou bags Salt, 10 ballets, very hue Wh—key, li do. Jamaica Hum, 9 J-casks, Superior French Brandy, -U bales I-l Georgia Sheeting, SO packagus Crushed and Brown Sugar, 1,000 do. Tobacco, all grades, 100 quarter tierces Negrohead Tobacco, lo bales No. a Cotton Yarns, for sale by W. B. JONES A CO. i»c 7—bt JOSEPH ifoDUSUX. WuoI.KKALK Co.UMISSION MkKiUtNl, north -ilt. of tho Ban in, has ou consignment 1 elegaut Side-Saddle, uearly new, Vo kugs Bread Soda, f boxes Sugar, '1 bales light 7-b Brown Cotton, * tt M I'ercus.siou Caps, A beautiful assortment of Pocket Knives, Cotton and Wool Card*, Steel Pens, Note Paper, Fine and Medium Felt lists, Large nine Heavy llroguna, lilac- and White Lawrm, 2U bales White Cotton Wadding. ne 7 lt* I rORSE THIKF.- I will pay fifty dol- I \ lars reward for the a],pit—eicsiou of G KORGE W ALLEN, who sold to me a stolen horse ou tho id lay of tin- pie-cut month Allen l*. about tweuty on.- years old, about five feet ten niches Jug-, slight - ly built, aud lias been badly Wouuded lv hl4 light uiiu neai Ihe wrist joint. se7—lt* BBS JUST RECEIVED, thirty do-on tine REGATTA SHIRTS, fast cufors, also, Oftueu gross IVGKY hL'ITIINS, suitable for Ladl—,' Over coat -i, black worsted binding, Gdt uud Fluted HUMMING bUTTGNS, etc JOHN HART/, Eighth street, betweeu Broad and Grace, u.-ai the Fredericksburg Depot, Richmond, Virginia m 7—iw» ICE FOB .SALE -1 have 5.000 bushel* of li 1: tor sale 111 a housu two miles from Poor house IIIU, 011 reasonable terms. Call ou me, at D. X Welsi-er's office se b--t* OF.ORQK D PACE. FOUND, a sum of L'o-lederuto MONEY. which the uwucr cau get by caUiug at the Fruuklin Fuper Mill, describing the sunw, and pay ing foi thu advertisement. m 7 —lt* 4 EEEAL TO THE PUBLIC. A _ . — The Rclut Committee of Knl_uond, through their Directory, appeal to tbe public ioi aid m o_i_l ot Uie retujiees and s_lclUlg (*ail vi this city. Iti. hiuuiid U at present liiie 1 with refugee* from every portion cd tbe Confederacy, many ul th_m wiUiout > mpb-v in. i.t wi in-- in ', but most worthy of our glia.ilmil syuipatJiy aud support Our ci__u_., 111 thtiriudividuiJ and corporate capacity, bay« U-—1 severely taxed lor the relief of _i« ,c persuu* and tlie ptsji (feUfi.dly since the conuucucviue—t of thti war, aud wl_le Uu-y are willing to bear thou full proportion ol the burden, yet they think an oppur tuiuty should bo afforded to the bvnevohtut and pa tiiotic eveiywhere to mute 111 this good work. Tho -presence ol two great armies in our umuediato tl - ■; ■it \ , and the mterniption to transport_non on thu railroads, have produced a scarcity of supphca, which c iv only be remedied, so far as those for whom we appo—i arc cuiK-t-i n.-d, by coutribuhuns frum iu dividuals »r corporations Every precaution wdl bo taken by the , cuiii_tt-1- to insure the di-tiibunoii id Uie supplies purchased 01 contributed to the fanuhaa of oui ..oldici.- and the worthy poor I_c duty ol prondiug for the —inuu— of our «*l du is has 1 <-.. i.tiy lien ti .111 Uri ci non 1 the Army 1 oiiuiiitt,, of thu Youu •; M'.n's Christian Associa tion to tho Rebel' Comnuttev, aud wo tnwt that thu same liber—ity wbuAi haa heretutorv been __uulWt«d to tlnui will be nt. liled to us. Tlie SouUieni F.tprc.c. CompauT have kindly a^iee.**t.. -.hip all aiticlc-. couUnbulad to the puor fiw of charge. 1'• .mi ibuti--us of money should be aeut to 11 l\. C. Buskerv—t, Treasurer, and all nuppbes should bh . • a-1-11c i to the " Ut bet Com—uttea uf __■aatnd,'* cure ot Messrs. Mai Uu A C-rdoao- Prompt and rwaular couti ibuUoaa are earueaUy reijuwU-d. V?M. P. MVNIX>Ki>. au IS—dltAotw I^naadsnt. QOMEmiNU FOE THE BABIES!— t7> Iflrcbundivddo«eupureßlßli , VURS-KY UIAI'KKS lor mfant pmrpooM, aptuaa, kc , a icalH Uiiutiful ctuabty, warnmted pure das Also, a sp-udid lot ot fuie BROW* UKKN foe aprons and trarelnw dreamt*, at No. 41 Main rtreot. uearly oppe it., St. Charhs But—. au -I -eudtit . UOKtIUUM PANS, BURUHUM PANB. il Sorahum fans oi all sues made tv order at No. I--. bROAIi sTK-KI, betweeu -_th and awmnMl streets. Call at onus, aa them v only a small lot of uvu on hand. m »-ood»t« IjM}H SALE, au odogant BUUUY -1 FU.F.TON. for or- or two hurasa, *____*■__**• two or four seat*, nearly new aad ?„P < Apply at tho old stabLeof h_«tf«T_» UATI4 hSghth -treet, between araoe and k raahha. me S— eoikt* * WIRE—CHm* hwrnlfi ft>mmik vt lto_f«swwt, mm* m, Gkmbm JMrt.