ABMY OF m POT0MA6. - NYS Historic...

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MILOXE,TII;BS] *HoTiC«.A-Person»notrtce Ttag their, oofer a furor by leaving n< Bee ot the To pr«*ent atsonderstand lor. # • so«jll Crot«[x]«ttth««t(ab«rofih«p»jnjr " j&i OflillDOif. .'*-- Tp.e Fourth of There will bo no it rmal observance of our ^jhts mysterious, but. wise and holy Provi- nce, in Mate terrible and Woody conflict on '$$> battl4fl$d, suddenly to translate out. broth- ir|»Jtek!ow»^tojie^j(^^ 'therefore,! .' ' » " " ' ^Jbvifadf That we recognize in this afflictive ^ripeWtBnVTdniolenin-resSonof *dm6BUii0ti To ourselves-; to be more faithfully assiduous, vip* lant, and prayerful in our Master's service; for we-knowf neither»th^t ime r 41i0v.place r nor the- manner hi which wo, r?halt ho summoned to render an account of stewardship. Besotted], l That- we- tender to the afflicted fain. national anniversary, in this place, on Monday, nor do weithi^R^ypaAJdfnd displays i universal or throughout the country will be expensive as in form< r years. will be^obseryed in son \p form. , iffae ringing pf bells, "thebonfiires, and the,firing,of cannon will usher it in as, of old, i nd the heart will beat with a prouder putsatic n than ooany other of its three hundjred and Bixty-fivc fellows in the calendar, The ybung will have j their excur- sions, their, picnics, an 1 their merry-makings, but the older and moie thoughtful will avoid the pomps and" extrav sgance tUatf would mark other and quieter timi is. Much of the money that would ordinarily lie spent ml the celebra- tion of this day will fine \ its way, through some of the manychannels thai' need to be replenished i to the relief of our sii k and wounded soldiers in field and hospital. This plan |s taking or- ganized form in many ocalitfea, and there is no way in which, true Patriotism ,can be better demonstrated, or in which we can more suit- ably honor the day, and the memory of those whose deeds made it, [immortal^ than by con the upholding of out tributing in some way) common cause, and th Government for the est lathers sacrificed so nun dulge in costly luxuries when- so many of our kindred are foiling and live. Let our brave del in all that We do, and let us not forget that w enjoy of peace., prospei quality, to our brave maintenance' of that iblishment of. which our It is no time to in ud extravagant shows, eighbors, j friends and suffering, that we may nders be remembered the mids| of oupjoy, owe all that we now and domestic, tran- Idiers in the field who are wasting their health and poori|ig out their' l.fe-blood in their efforts jjo suppress an unnat- ural rebellion, which* if in anarchy and ruin. • Hebel Buccessful,|will resnlt {rarity. Gen. Sam Jones, commanding I the Rebel forces at Charleston, S. fa., has notified Maj Qen. Foster, that be haatlaced.fifty of our-offi- cers—five Brigadier field officers—prisoners of the city \£f Charleston mi of .our funs. The obj< strategy is to deter Gen. the city, andTfe-indefensil Ie on any principles of warfare. Gen. Gilmore, month; Beauregard that the city This- notice ^as given might be removed, and th ren spared from harm, blied that the ndn-cdt be removed with al\ plying lojthis notification "I must however, protes in thns placing defenceless * position exposed to cor It is an indefensible act of designed only to prevent a, flrffupon Charleston. Thjtcltyis a'depot for military supplies. It, conn ins not merely arse- nals, but' also foundries and factories for the manufacture of munitions t If war. In its ship, yards several armed ironidads have already peen completed!, while others are stills upon the stocks in course of corittrtpion. Ibi wharves and the banks of the rivers on bothjides of ,the city are lined with bitteria To destroy these means of continuing the w ir is, therefore, our object and duty. You seek to defeat'thls effort, notbymeansknownto>ho orable warfare,but by placing unarmed and c jfeQielessipfisonere nerals and forty five war, jh that part of st exposed to the fire t of this| barbarous ster from firing upon ago, notified Gen ould'be bombarded, hat non-ejombatanis women and child- en. Beauregard re- ;rit population would ible celerify. In re- en. Fostei - says: against yjpuf action prisoners tef war in \ nt bombardment, cruelty, and can be continuance of pur ily of our! brother our deepest sympathies and commiseration in.vthcir soro bereavement, as well as to thousands of others who have suffered from similar visitations since the commence- ment of this wicked and cruel rebellion, which i3 fctill spreading and thickening the pall of *sn »u J \mourningj over the land, and devastating the toll, the ( day ^fairesLpoiifions of our country. . -•- -» ' Resolved, That we have occasion for gratitude tOjGod that brother Stone left evidence that he was as conscientfonsly and unwaveringly Brave and faithful, commissioned as an, officer in our Federal Army, as in the exercise of his func- tions itflhe Christian ministry, and as a Chris- dan Pastor. J , Resolted, That the remnant of the company commanded by our brother, and before whom, we haye no doubtJ^e set a consistent qhristian example, have oaf earnest prayers to the God of armies; for their protection and salvation, and that he Would istay the effusion of blood, i'turn from the fierceness of his holy indignation against our guilty nation, speedily terminate this cruel war, and forever exterminate from our land that,, horrible system of oppression which has been the primary and principal cause of treason and rebellion .against our national Government Resolved,- That this testimonial be transferred to the bereaved family of the deceased brother, 10 the Chnrch of which he was Pastor, and forwarded for publication in the Malone PAL- LADitM. IJy order of Presbytery. J. COPELAND, Stated Clerk. „JiCxem^ city, ^oiv . .^ ... .„._.„,. tation clause will not be repealed. Even if itfs not,-it will be seen that it really affords but Httlje protection, and that the only safe way, as it Is tbe,bj^j^jto t p,HUn^4^bsUtutow*ejutbe„r^|j 3on drafted cannot-go: , t - .,, , f ( . "Moreover, the commutation clause, as law 'now stands; docs not amount to much. The payment or $800 now exempts a man onl or one* call; and Itf will ndtdottiis'if the sup jlementaryv draftings exhaust- the -enrollmenjt 1st. The man who pays commutation noi? vill again'be liable to draft in July,,' should a Iraft m July be ordered. Under each call the supplementary draftings must be continued uh» lil the number of men required is secured.-*- I Should the list become exhausted, the names of I hose who have paid the commutation money required, must go into the box again, and they ust again take the chanced of the dipft Sucu the* operation of the new enrollment law u$, ndcrstood and explained here. It Is not pre- isely what the House intended, but it is whal be Senate and tho Military Committees a cured." R«snll : of the Draft District* in the I7th % under Art , . ., . , - h ? "I have forwarded your commun; ' ft ^iJPrMdiiCi«th ffi r4nest% .i^aners _ positions exposed to the fi fonjf aaybtfloWtnin^f^ -" communication.'' in my custody an equ u numbe i of theJike-grades,^ be keptl i of yputt , _. rse stated! in your ' It is to be hoped that th will comply with Gen. F. that/the aoffltietf *ill be » can quar tipu. to he will of pris- sy me in of ypuR guns, so War Department r'S request, and disposed:of as ta ,-? the following is the result of the Draft to fill, deficiencies on all calls up to date of draft, in thcja7th. District, N. Y., as drawn June 6tbr, 7th r r 6th Oth and 10th, 1804: DEKALB—Quota 5, exempted 3, commuted 2, deficient j}. Fbwi^at-i-fQuotsi 12, exempted 6, commuted 2, substituted 1, failed to report at the time ordered 3, deficient 9. LoCisvruiE—Quota 7, exempted 2, commuted 4. failed to report at the time ordered 2, defi- cient 4. MACOMB—Quota 8, exempted 2," commuted 4, failed to report at the time ordered 2, defi- cient 4. ' PasKBEPONT—Quota 1, commuted 1. PrrcAiRN- Quota 11, exempted 7, commuted failed! to report at the time ordered 3, defi- cient. 10. ^v ROSSTE—Quota 4, exempted 8, failed to report at the time ordered 1. A effdit of one has been reported through Majo* I'ow.nsend, A. A. P. M. G., leaving a de- ficienjey of 3. CKHOLM—Quotal S, exempted 1, substitut- ed 1{ commuted 2, failed to report at the time- ordered 1, deficient 2. EDWABPB—Quota 6, commuted 4, .exempted 1, deficient 1. FD{E—Quota 2, commuted 1, exempted 1, de- ficient 1. 4 BAXoon—Quota 10, exempted 4, commuted 8, clothed 1, foiled to report at the time ordered 2, deficient 6. HABIUETSTOWN—Quota l, failed to report at the time ordered 1, deficient 1. BANGOE Quota, 4, exempted 1, commuted 1, failed to report at time ordered 2, deficient 8. CONSTABLE4- Quota 10, exempted 6, failed to report at the time ordered 4, deficient 1(1 DtTAHB—Quota 1, commuted 1. . FRANKLIN—Quota 2, exempted 1, commuted 1, deficient 1, . Mouu^Quota 7, exempted 2, commuted 4; failed to report at the time ordered 1, deficient 8. ' ltKCAPrnfLATION. 4 Whole number drafted 95, commuted 80,'sub- stituted 2, clothed 1, exempted 40, foiled . to re- port alj the time ordered 22. Leaving a deficiency of 62, for which a sec- ond draft has been made. ' ' r S. C. F. THORNDIKE, Capt. and Provost Marsha), 17th Dis. N. Y. ,• « -"- Tho Central Grade School Concert. ' the ^Summer Term of the Central Grade IScbooll of this village, will close to-morrow, July ltjt. A Concert, by the pupils, under the direction of ttye Teacher, .Mr. S. L. SAVLES,will be* given at fhe Court Bouse in the evening. In add|ti6n to' th(r music, which will consist of SchooP Songal, Temperance Glees, Patriotic pieces, |fcc.,theie will bo -reading of composi- tions by the girls of the Graduating Clasi, and speaking by tile boys/from the different grades -, the entertaihmeht to conclude by the presenta- tion' ofj diplomas. A'dmission 25 cents. Ghil drch 10 cents. 1 "Booth opeu at 7| o'clock, and to commence; it 8 o'ctock precisely.' The pro- ceeds will be^eittiendeaifl glvirig thepiipilswho iiartici#te1n > «Ms Conb^t, a- ride and picnic. T • , I- !•'• '- ' -.'ii ;• - ,—~. f • y.. j Dealbof a Soldier. CHABLEB HILEONABD, of Moira, wbile en- 'g^eTm^e^ervico^ofhis country nnoer Gen. GrantyM8to^9JAftt^tte njbnta i or 'l^/nMth'e arm, near the shoulder joint, badly shattered by KrSfle=b|aiel; pS was^b%M id one : oF-tbe I tfmrTTpk, wHcire ho >'wMtn/to* ery possible attention, but without avail. His IxHjisa f Leonarij was with him ^nr- Farloughed Soldiers^ Large numbers of our wounded Soldiers aie no^home on furloughs of twenty and thirty days. To such, the following, from a letter from Dr. Babcock, one of the agents of this State for the care of sick and wounded New York soldiers, may be of interest. It says: "Fur- loughs cannot be extended. In order 1 to protect a soldier from the charge of desertion, they must forward a certificate that they are . unable to travel without injury, which must be signed by a United States medical officer, or by a physi- cian In civil life which must be sworn to." The Tax Bill Completed. Tfhe tax bill has been completed and will-be .reported at once. Tho tax im whisky is one dollar and a half, after the 1st of July, and two dollars after the 1st of February next. The tax on a majority of the articles have been put up at the highest point. The tax on incomes, bOwever, has not been increased. Tho amount «£revenue which it is expected to produce will bo> nearly $800,000,000. STBAwnsBBiES.—Jtist in season, yesterday, We found two baskets of strawberries—large, ripe and luscious—on our table. It is hardly necessary to say that wo were indebted to Mr. COBUKN for them—for he only has such. We are sorry to learn that his crop is light this year, owing to the dry weather—but they make up int quality ail they lack in quantity. Those who want a delicious berry should speak for some oiiy OVI can. Coburn's Wilson Seedlings. ' GHBEN PJEAS.—L. Coburn of Const-hie has begun bis mils to our village with his early and choice garden vegetables. A fujl load of Green Peas, last Monday found a ready market among anxious customers who had been expecting him for some days. He will be in town often during the'season and the only safe way to get bis fruits and vegetables is to engage them before- hand. Slavery Abolished In Maryland. The Constitutional Convention of .Maryland, in Session at Annapolis, passed on the 24th inst, by a vote of 68 ayes against 27 nays, the following article of the Bill of Rights: "Hereafter, in this State, there shall he' nei- ther, slavey nor involuntary servitude except 'in punishment of crime, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, and all persons held to service or labor as slaves, are hereby de- clared free." Thus Slavery is forever prohibited in Mary- land. It is an act for which the friends of human liberty throughout the world, and more especially in the United States should be de- voutly thankful The world moves. myself, in thinking ^--^^-^^ .__,, 7 _ who have read ( rMs]|6M^, aputdipe. setirj|hfc in regard to th$ facbTwith reference to the [sale of our] MisslorijGliapel." I therefore enclose my bumble contributhm for this object and beg you^U.puhIUWUn^Jiu^^ Thebuilding^t ou* f ew ^ pe^rs efftjy, and difficult in the extreme. But we have got the walls to the tops of the windows, and still hope to complete and cover tbemfiii; uefbro; the heavy rainscomo.to.destrpy, them. . Our home letters and papers lead us to re- joice, and thankGod for the present prospect that our honest President Lincoln is likely to bo elected for a second term. God bless him and our beloved country. Yours sincerely, R. G. WILDER. . KOLAPOOK, INDIA, April 20,1804. Mr DEAR BB. HERKICX :•—A mutual friend has been so kind as to send me your letter, in which you quote a paragraph from a published letter of mine, and undertake to "set our read- ers right in regard to tho facts with reference to the 'Mission Chapel.'" As you' had your letter published in the Palladium, you will foel it prop- er that I reply through the same channel. I appreciate your motives, my dear brother, in seeking to correct what you thought to be a wrong impression ; and fjpr your sake, Dr. An- derson's and our own, too, I sincerely wish your correction were admissible; but I regret you had not a better knowledge ot facts. The paragraph y'ou quote from iny former letter, was entirely incidental, and yet, on re- perusing it, as quoted by you, I am not able to see how, in the same space, I could have more accurately expressed the combined action of Rev. Dr. Anderson and our Political Agent in tho sale of our Chapel,.and the serious embar- rassment thus caused to our dear Mission. You quote Rev. Dr. Wood, of New York, as testifying in writing that: "Dr. Anderson knew nothing of the matter until long after its ac- complishment, and had no agency 4n procur- ing it." I am sorry Dr. Wood gave you this state- ment, and sorry Dr. Anderson allowed him to do so. If it was important for Dr. A.'s agency in this matter to be denied, why did he not de- ny it himself? Why get his brother secretary to do it for him r Was it that Dr. Wood might be able to say, when the proof of Dr. A.'s agen- cy should appear, if perchance it ever should, that he (Dr. Wood) made the statement under a wrong impression—all hi good faith, of course ? Judge ye, but be as charitable as Death o f L t . Williamson. Lt. JOHN WILLIAMSON, son of JOSEPH WIL- LIAMSON of Bellmont, was wounded in the bat- tles before Richmond, on the 15th of June, b; ball passing through his thigh, and died on 20tb, v He belonged to the 1st Vt. Cavalry. by a ithe pcnftent|%nd? joyful ?disciple of'our Lord and wb*rij liia'funeral" services were conducted by JIM ?wl0jS*tb$ S4tb inst. The cof- ftt«rrtAWithiour.:natioiul banner, and ayftsu* we. conveyed the body of erdtohIsglork»a«gr*ve.4 t Cox. Fot tfablei 9t Jaly at,equitable. •-&m.^)m^p(tiWC:toi the fin- ^Ufe^fbe;pM£ &hwto,l At^O otlodtj.A.> : MtpAffd|e»»fei'-'wi;tt ;l»^||vCh^,byi<iD^iifc l ^Dcn'Nttd ' -am} others, r in- th« t 2PwsbyJ«rkui ^rdirtTlfc^c**^^ Oftbe:Udie<wMb*nUedu^^ of visitor I, with every thingtoplcaw ih« ,«ye, *he «*r,[ a itf^ejti^e^i^^^t^^fec^ and Muifc Dtanerlk^etfr?^!*^ Jfe** ri»f!M that Gen. Fremotrt I. UM. mo* aVailabie candidate for 1M» i*»* Dem«c*cy. **"" mtt'.M^ V-* :--(i^~-~'-<:uif •»::>,*i ;i^:' I '-'=- — - -- tog&& In a letter, Rev. R. G. WILDEB incloses UB tho following item takenfroma Bombay paper: We have, been informed that, in the hill tracts of Orissa, near Pailakemedy, a Hindoo lately sold bis daughter named Gya, to the hill people as. at Meriah sacrifice. The unfortunate girl was taken to a temple and confined thero ; in the night she contrived to escape and hastened over the fields. She was caught again., but her loud cries were beard by the police, who has- tened to her assistance. . The hill people say that they purchased herforfifty-threerupees; and her father now denies the whole transac- tion, Wc tear this proves that these hill people continue to carry on their' terrible system in spite of all the benevolent exertions of the Brit- ish Government. Wo have no doubt that this case will cause further searching enquiries) More than 40 girls have arrived at Baroda to offer their hands in marriage to tho Rajah and his brotheri ; • * • • . | T«rriHe AccWeit •• the Grumi Traok • • -i • • t. Railroad. 4-Train of 12, FaaMag#r Can Ron into an - «• If A»»ENOEM8 KILI^JD. Tbeiday evening last, a train of twelve pa«- sengwa cars, mostly filled with emigrants, run into an tipen Draw Bridge, on tile drand Trunk Railroadi brtWeen Quebec and Mo^^l, foiling; idistance'of about80 feet,smashing theloco- motiveT'aridc^ and killing abont 450 of' the i-The ladiesofthe Con gregationaiChurcb and Society, of this >ill.ge wlllholdaFaira D dFe*tiralatKing'. H»llon S^a^rnes^ceCrea^^nd other ^ will be served, and a variety of Fancy Article* ; dn^^'%r^ia1et*"- : /Atf, : -lMter^^ will b^ very pleasantry e m p l o y Inpatron^i^^ thi.Festlv.1, Dk^drTymtetl* LETT, ; an old «id wdl knowi cltixen, died at h^rrtWeik* in Uk rlllago, d* Monday after^ nobbVl^ at the .dranced age of 84 year*.-J HU bealfh aa. been poor for many moot*. p^t,a»dM.'d*ath wm»^^^^—-—v>.-.-. . '.-•Mj-r-i'- f^-.'-ir".?''-:"^ ^, '* ^^1% ^"i-* f. on tfo Wbvoadfua<« Mate from^ew T«Jrk toSctVwlawaalaidcatleW^aMU*^^ ^mtoMf opt^tA. By tW.route a -''- : '' ; t«m«y^t^bros4|^e«» The fact is, Dr. Anderson did send Br. Wood an order to sell the Chapel. Br. Wood (of the Satara Mission) informed me of this feet before I left America, but kindly gave me to un- derstand that he did not intend to sell it. I bad full confidence in his friendship, snd* replied expressing my hope "that the Prudential Com- mittee would yet give the Chapel to tho Kola- poor Mission, but added that in case they should not, I would buy it, (so much of it as had been charged to the Board in my account,) and he must give me the refusal of it over and above all others. Br. Wood had shown entire.sympathy with me on the great school question, and I had not a doubt he would continuo the kind part he had acted, and keep the Chapel unsold till we reached India. That he meant to dp so, is suf- ficiently apparent from his first reply to Mr. Havelock, as intimated'in his letter to Dr. Wood, which you have quoted. But when he found: Mr. Havelock adopted his suggestion and de- ferred the safe, Br. Wood wrote him another letter which he has told you nothing about— Sir. -Havelock gave me all the official corres- pondence,—shall I quote you a bit r Bear in mind that Mr. Havelock readily deferred the sale, and affirms he would have, deferred it any length of time, if Mr.Wood had not withdrawn his suggestion. Both Mr. Havelock, the Politi- cal Agent, and his Assistant, Dr. Weighe, as- sure me that Mr. Wood wrote them again, and repeatedly, saying that on better information, he found Mr. Wilder was not to return to India, and the property must be sold. They say that he gave specific directions, in unofficial letters, what books and articles-should be sent to Sa- tara, and that all tho rest, Chapel, school-house, site, benches, &c., should be sold. Theso letters arranging details, were not official, and as usu- al, were, not preserved"; but tho books, maps, &p., which I .found with Br. Wood at Satara, and recovered from him, accord with what these gentlemen state to lutve bean, bis instruc- tions to them qu this poim> . , ._,,,,[ Buttheo^fckjnetterawbichl have.lnhand, aria sufficiently definite. After Bf. Wood bad so kindly got the sale deferred, not by ^request, but a mere suggestion, the very nexttmorith, he wrote again; and I, am keeping yon too, long from the bit Iwas about to. quote from this let- ter- IS is as follow* :vb5: flrwefagJTUtpte- tfom from ov/r Secretary long age to tellfhit prop- erty." u l$wppo»eihfbuit#Tigt mUnow be n^P &C. This, mind you, in an official ^ettcr^toijte pomical;agei*t, ^ tt . ^ . , . £ . "'' ; j£„ti^.Btrfflc.?en$r cp^cjusiye^ m y ^ e w broth- er? Does it settle the matter wbether Dr: A- hail any "agency in procuring" the sale of iiio ctiapei? •. :; • •' : ;*, .jlndwhat say you now to theietter 0f3r^ Wood of 8atara, which you quoted; ak defining Ml agency in this matter r-' Is that- letter aatU- vjtojovtt^^ TJli»oltAi*theiau^ott f i#liy Bh^WSood*- olF^'^tari'didt-.nhgtjtaw ^the wl^ thitn—why he dM-not quot* tke above fromoW^of hj* sub«e^^ quotefromsome of hia unofflclal lettert.'-r .per- ' pt you will kindly-aacejrt^fcbout^ 46ingi'8o^pl«^^.;-|lc., J^Miiio^iMKier-' laiMibw^iOjw wna* : p$t<il*t jollaigHMi^iiaiOiinr betjiir«eD Br. Wo&MjtfiiwA : 'm^m^Mi tcrs.- How hecapteto P^iswp^myrfqueirt to give tne the wmsal of the ChapeJ. In cawcRr^ •'»ho|jld,ftii^,.on ; i^|||%|^4^ ^contply: f}Ui^.^^|bA^^ ? |^!^ r tto^ . f j.lhe^mat^'tftfJIr. WH »ni;w»i^%t: # | « a % p ^ u ^ p i | r w . t | r t i | p r e | | f e d j ^ ; an1en%my^'of , 3Wsslonp*fo interfere. .^Ttdojap imply that the Political Agent, Mr. Havelock, was unfriendly—I do not believe he was ; for on meeting him the very day I reachedjiere c«LOurrc v turn.fromAmeri(m,heejtclaJmedwi[h ^emphasis j. "What a pity \ Mr. Wood told me you were not coming back Had I only known you wore coming, I would have had the Chapel repaired andjkjepll^ryjpti?^ And as'some proof ofkisJrienjMyJe^eliag,i!ie. ^as.g^ve^usRs.j0 (abont $35 as exchange now is) each year since. But you know General Jacob declared, with an oath, that no Missionary should be al- lowed 16 livebere again ;-rand another person, a total stranger to me till since our return to India, proved himself an enemy—seized on the occasion of the Chapel's being neglected, and pressed it on Mr. Havelock's attention till he finally wrote to Mr. Wood as he did. Br. Wood's more suggestion for delay was heeded, and the delay- continued some three months after Br. Wood withdrew it Now the defense set up by Bf. Wood, the Missionary, and Br. Wood tho Secretary, is, that our Chapel was sold as a decayed building. But if so, how came the tchool-hoiue to be sold ? That, without a particle of repair, is as sound to-day, from ridge to base, as the day we built it Coul.d that have been sold as a decayed build' ing t And then, why was the site sold ? D o building rites decay f Alas ! alas ! for these dear Brethren! ,Mr. Havelock could never have sold the site or school-house, and never would have sold the Chapel itself, but for Dr. Anderson's order communicated to him by Br. Wood. I hold these two Brethren (Anderson and Wood) responsible to God and the chris-* tian public for. turning a Christian Church into a Mo/iammedan Mosque, (facit per alium fa- cit per se) and sacrificing -' fully Rs. 2000 of mis- sion funds in so doing. Not that the Chapel cost so much originally; for labor was cheaper then, and I worked on it with my o$n hands till the beat induced an attack of cholera which broke my health and drove me to America.— Now, labor and material are three or four times as costly as then—I have expended some Rs. 2000 already on our new Chapel, of exactly the same dimensions as the former, and if I can fin- ish it within the limit of Rs. 8,900,1 shall feel thankful. Here we have toiled some three years since our return, with no preaching place in the city but our small, low, hot scbool-rroms and the open-streets ; our beautiful Chapel where we used to worship, and which I built almost at the expense of my life, changed into a Mosque for the worship of the false prophet! !. Alas for the foots of this case,t.my dear Broth- er ; but you and I can't change them. Brs. Wood and Anderson can't change them now.— But they can be sorry for them—God grant that they may be so ; and help us, in the spirit of our blessed Master, to pray, "Father forgive tijem ." In christian affection, yours sincerly, R. G. WILDER. HIf h Prices—The True Cause. It is quite the custom just now to attribute the present high prices to an expanded curren- cy. We are flippantly told that this is the one cause of commercial derangement, and that if the currency were only reduced to the standard of three, years ago, prices would come down in tho same-proportion. Let us think a moment, and Wjksball see the utter absurdity of such a conclusion. No matter what is the medium for making exchanges, or what is currency, or what Is lawful money—wHether it be gold, or bank- notes, or treasury notes—^pr prices always were and always must be high prices. Europe learn- ed it during her Napoleonic wars; we learned it in the war of 1812, and the same stern teacher compels UB to submit to it now. The reason is clear and simple. Production is diminished, and, by the waste of war, consumption is in- creased. The war draws the farmer's sons from the plow,, and fewer acres are sown and small- er harvests are reaped. The mechanic arts suf- fer in the same proportion. Scarcely less than two-fifths of our adult male population are now devoting all their time anil energy to putting down the rebellion. Of' these, a vast number are in the field with our brave generals, a large part man our ships of war, now counted by hundreds, and many are in hospitals; while those employed in the navy yards, iron works, machine shops, and in the manufacture of military clothing and equipments, and in pro- ducing munitions and supplies, swell the aggre- gate to Uie limit wc haye named. This great class of producers, cannot be withdrawn from their ordinary pursuits without a great diminu- tion in'the products of the country. When the supply is greatly diminished,, and the demand _-.__, •—J ».__. focteggg,^ prices must nsible help for it. If weTSould-rtturn to'i^ specie -basis to-morrow, it wonWslillibiarwarfbwis;atwariprices. < •-, . .Tljercis;but onp exception to this advance in price, and that is .the .Government bonds, and they are noStfceptlola to the rutetsMd only ibl- low the general law of supply and demand.— The necessities of war hard made them abun- dant and therefore they are cheap; but when the jvar ends the supply will cease and theywiH be deajr—and the man who invests in them now Usurebf 4 liberal profit. A reduction of •Sh0«un«ncy-wilj bewell,and f wabavo,the official Assurance of the Secretary of tiie treasury that it is now taking place, but ^ - n p ^ ^ ^ l l | b l i panacea ISFfiiiaciaiaK- ' iltopoae.?^Mr.lCSsco, =thcifc- "I am. tired of working for Yankee task-ma* terei I l^ate their selfish meanness; and there- fore I am in favor of a Western Confederacy." •So lays Marshal Anderson, of Ohio, in a letter igeclming tho nomination, by the Democratic Sllte^Convention, of Presidential Elector. Mr. Anderson, we suppose, is not a lunatic. The Columbus Crisis, which is good "Democrat ic" ^authority, remarked of him that "a more won by gentleman or better Democrat could not have been chosen;" and the Daily News, of this City, .republishes his missive under the caption, "A 'Sound Letter." Whether sound or not, it is 'certainly frank, and therein to, be commended. Of all the manifold arguments against letting \he "seceded" States go, the most decisive by -allodds,isuthsumpraj. certainty that it would •pen the way to other secessions sooner or later. As for as regards'the loss of so much territory, it is a matter of only secondary consequence.— Give to Jeff. Davis and his crew all-Jhat they claim, and we should yet have left stretching through.the temperate zone, between the At- lantic sffld Pacific, one of the most magnificent fields for national empim the sun shines upon —a field naturally capable of supporting hun- dreds of millions of freemen in prosperity and highest civilization. We should have it lett, but the yital misfortune is that it would be left only soon to be broken up by new civil convul- sions. Acknowledge 5 the "Southern Confede- racy" to-day, and unless human nature shall change, five years will not pass be/ore .there will be a movement ft>r a "Western Confedera- cy," a "Pacific Confederacy " and heaven only knows how many other confederacies. The real issue in this struggle is not whether the Republic is to exist on a larger or a smaller scale, but whether it is to exist at all. Tbat which gives the struggle its transcendent-mo inent is, not "that the nation is threatened with the loss of its members, but that its very vital force is in peril. The rebellion strikes at just authority; and without authority, government is but an intermittent revolution, and the so- called nation but an organized mob. To give way to the present secession movement is to loosen every national ligament, and to put our body politic throughout at the mercy, hence- forth, of every wild passion and every sordid calculation. We are literally battling for tlu- nation's life. It is a sort of war that fiajdly occurs once in a thousand years. Wars gen- erally are maintained to vindicate national rights abroad, or to overthrow or reform na- tional rule at home. Whether they do or do not succeed, the nation still lives. They are sometimes waged, as by our Revolutionary fathers, and lately by the Italian patriots, for independence, and an apportunity to originate a new nationality. But in our case it is to save a nationality already existent and strong. With the comparatively. small exception of Poland, there has not been a case like it in modem times. And who can calculate a nation's value? The creation of one is the grandest and u.osi difficult of all human achievements. There is not one, even the poorest, that has not cost un- measured blood and. toil-hardly one worthy of the name that has n*bt required generation* and centuries for even an imperfect.develop- ment. A well-knit national organization, with all its vital powers in full health and force, is infinitely the most precious of all earthly pos- sessions. Its preservation is. the most sacred trust that one generation can possibly devolvi on another. To betray that trust, either by positive act or by default, is to commit an inex piiible wrong both against ancestors and po* terity. It is precisely this crime that, we are askpd to commit, by those who ask an abandonment o. this war. To cease resistance to the demandc of the Secessionists is to inaugurate endless revolution. Tbe vital cord of the Union ona broken, all that follow! will be but the endless shifting of independent atoms swayed only by passion or caprice or temporary interest. This idea of a Western Confederacy is ho nev\ thing, lt was a notion that topk very definite shape in that dark period that followed tin- election of Gov. Seymour and our direful mili- tnry_ reverses in Virginia. Ijt was the real im- pelling motive of the crusade against New Eng- land entered upon by very many of the Cop perhead writers and orators at that crisis, an<i kept up until the great successes at Vicksburg and Gettysburgh gave hope of a speedy triumph of the national cause, and made any further | show of this spirit insufferably odious to the people. Just as sure as new calamities should overtake us, and tbe popular heart again bi weighed down by despondency, we shall, see a 'renewal of these assaul s. And were the rebel armies actually to carry the day, and force a recognition of the "Confederacy," the que*tiqns whether the remaining States should exist to- t ether or apart, and if apart, whether individu- lly or in groups, would at ooce assume the inost formidable proportions. Visionary theo- rists, malignant malcontents, men lusting for power, men goaded by hale, men whose natu- ral work is destruction, would drive these ques- tions incessantly ;'and even if the States should Sill hold together, it would be in such a condi- on of insecurity, of uncertainty about the fu- tjure, as to paralyze every energy and make any- thing like a healthful national growth impos- sible., ' It would be the experience of the South American republics repeated. No nation can prosper without a,sense of security, a moral assurance of stability and permanence. We giive thai up^&rev^er, if we recognize secession, either in principle or in fact We have done well to make mortal fight on this thing at the outset It was issue of life or death to all stable c|vil ; goyernment on this continent It must be maintained to the end at whatever cost "in trea- sure and bigod. We cannot yield without en- tailing untold woes upon ourselves and onr pitstenty. f? order^fhit -many sun ^MatfTtetmniiOtitm Onitedj^fitatesaUSrew York, states that he-has canceUed 41,000,000 of interest bearing legal tenders within two week's, janitMr B^toTFJdlaa^aty^^ bicki-i4irid yet' bretd-and^ buttcifwheat and corn and,cloth are iw cheaper^.; -, •> . x • . •The first cause of the .increased cost of all ,. jinmodltiee, gold included, is" altogether but- increases the nitt^tin?*-but 'doestnol create it. Botpaupposeithe Government- does;cpntract was none at all Had ^.AndertonaDdTtad tab*car* sf O. ^^ .-'^' ; J tf ^ Two rafter* had gtreo lgty.4& ibe "ewtintm lktfoilijualia in iprtc*, They , fkOei. most b«T* atieo fa** / ahd^tarHayl beWkdM,«to«>«Mta«ft4*<to»r*o«a otk**r«to«»ar *•«»)« <*, - - - - ttatgivenoae HqQb#ttf ld& done'itt n tben;c*ob»»ow ernment or Treasury &r dircmatio^wmtql #f>?tfi?^co*uliry%, .Wfctf, paiimeiit' goat for evils that are simply consequi the mc*tglg^tlc'war the world .m So* __*w!Vlf «y4$iyiEai itlhfwgkitJttttfo> utaki the hand " " " it#M*Atf^r>^W#QP#9n»»»r- ^ro¥ffleibrtne ^fif^arj,; f '^lecelptl of -''SrStJcfcfcr •term rfl^ Saturday, the h«»e of N.Iiflter- «ha,ia W«>trill«;WM^tHMk by Mghtah« in tw« pact* soM«tJbMh0aM«i.flr«,..Tk«'ii«« ko^tm^iraniagtkhii •ahwi MM* difl- > CHATEA0GAY June 28,1864. MB. EDITOB:—1 would wish through the col- umns of your papertodisabuse tha^public of a report somewhat extensively circulated wftlch is this: " The Methodist preacher of Chateaugay. iajnrjaU." j : : ! •. , * Notldng could be more false than this, and nonebutevil and designing men could have circulated such a story. And coming from |fi|p,>nc<e»nftliigh in the public confidence, who should hare known tbe truth, and we are inclined tb believe they did, and Who should stand up for morality if not for Christianity, is thiprindpaljasa]^^ fane impression. The persontowhom allusion ts^plStbJrlmMlJto^Be: report is %' person by! the t name Jackson, Ea^earis who is not or in tW'Me*odfat episcopal Church, fesswJb>h,;r4^Ufer is be a s m;ember_of said Church; adr Jiaa Jiebef^fpr at least seven months. 4 Before*hU^xpidsibnfromthe Method disiOiturcbi wfiicii*occurred the 80th day of October .1868, W held the relation of exhorier These are the facts in the ease ana we do sin- «Jet#J^#^^JierBohSj who have been; so officious in circulating such a slanderous report against mtflwaHke'Chureh to #hich I belong wUlhereafterkoep within the bounds of truth ; meanwhile we will prayforour enetnres that t^JJ^rmay j^r«jlkXoitoes|yin^ne^ao| bur holy Christianity profferedtothemfroma Savior's.hand, _,' '*".' .' ..*„.!_ Preacher in charge 0UB fiPiVS fOWMl\D THE PETEHs. BCBfiH AND W ELIHr, UoAU. Tjep Pushing Toward Our Estteme Left. Longstrcet arid A. P. Hill South of $ Petersburgh. THE LOSSES oTwESHESDAY. INTERESTING FROM GEORGIA. Sherman's Work and How it ^.ro. presses. FEOIff CHABLESTON HARB0B. BARBARITIES OP THE 0EOVAI.R7.. Fifty of Onr'Officers 7 Under Fire in the City. ABMY OF m POT0MA6. Newtco FTldoy—Theini*fortnne ofWrdm, day Partly Bppalrcd~-'Ilic B;ni(,i,, Open on PjBtcrsburKli---Tlie Kebels |'i,|> lne Back to Weldou—Scarcity or u alcr— Ample I*rovi»lou for tbe TVouuded. HEAIXJU-ILKTEBS ARMY OF THE POTOM.M . / Friday, June 24, 1MJ4 \ Tb_e temporary misfortune of Wedncs'lnv iif- teraoon has been fully repaired, so far as r.i c «± pation of the ground*U concerned, but \ , t 1. v> not rewwerd+ile 1500 prisoners, 4 piec.-s .-n ,1 <".;. ore lost, nor the 500 killed and wound- d. Tu enemy, it appears, were massed upon our li t, when, the 0>li Corps not getting into posj imi ,.i time, the enemy seized uj'on an openi-i^; "d .-.:- tacked the, second corj)3 upon its flai k, k g A at great disadvantage, and for a tin.i i.«|;.i.r.t up like a piece of paper, and were only repu.*. -i bj- superhuman efforts. This mo\enient was exactly what Gen. Gi i.: attempted to execute at Coal Harbor, and i,.,- force liis way across the Chickahominv, for :i passage of that river was, pmticable at any ;n>, ment by a flank movement, as was Subseqm-ni- ly effected. Had the 2d corps there succeedi .1 in securing the coveted position on I lie emu,', the reoel army, wit4i the Chickahominj\in i'- rear, would have been rolled up like a set.;'. When a simultaneous attack upon the troni Iv the whole force would have annihijftled ih- whole army of Gen. Lt-e, and wiped ont in .r, hour, this accursed rebellion. But th<- iir willed it otherwise, and we have been eonip' I.- ed to stand Uj) again.-t a similar nltem])l ijrf .-. ojir own lines. This morning the batteries of (he 18th c ;•; -. and a portion of the 5th and 2d, opened u] in Petersburg, but with what effecb is not . if- nitely known at. this hour. Certain it *i- •}:.: numerous buildings were set on Are. The Petersburgh and WeJdon iraifroad 1,1- been under our guns for several days. Ye-ier- day the infauiry tore up about 500? yard.- m HH- track, when they were compelled to retire. Tin- cavalry lias destroyed another -imporinn: ]'• r lion of tlii'- road farther south at Reams M is .i.c and is opi r.-iiimr elsewhere at this lime. As I write (10 A. _M.>all is quiel, but an i.i tack upon our lefi Hank and rear is anticipaii d Deserters and piigoncrs from liieeiuniya teue that the rebel army is fulling b,ick 1'owaii.' W'eldon, >N. C. hliotiln this be true, it is p, ,-•,- 1) e that I|M st- attacks upon our left are to o>ur that movement. 1 lie weinner is oppressiveh r hot and the ,-iir tilled; with particles of du.-t wiisi-d by the n:n\i- ment of troops and wagon'lrains. For timr,' than two weeks there has -not been a ^limu-r. •«id the inhabitants hereabouts allege that, im- le-s there is a. fall of rain soon, the spm %• w ill ue all dry. ^Vater is sejirce'' even nna,' F-r- tunately'for the wounded there is a IMUII if •'. supply olice in the country. Tin- 8anit..ry a,:.! Christian Commissions supply lti.xuii'- .iti-i eointiirts : and last, but not least, a bitti r ulu- lated and a better-supplied medical department than any ar-my could heretofore boast, so that- 'll sufferers from wounds or disuse are cim! for promptly and made comfortable. In devotion to the caule the present nruiv will challege the admiration *«of the. world. As 1 ; lusirniing the general principle that pu-viik 1 will give two instances : Tije tiroe-of lift- 11th ' Massachusetts expired some ten days ago. t . Blaisdeli induced a battalion ot officers and n«-;i o r« main awhile longer. Yesti rday 11.101 nii z Oil. Blais.lell was, killed, and last evening tn-,> remains were sent home w'ith ihe regiment.— 1 Col. Stoughton, ot the 2d TJ. 8. Sharpsmx.••• r~ ] was severely injured by 11 shell in one ol tit" battles near Spbitsylvauia Court House, thrt-e, days ago. He returned to his coiunnuid, .-tui unable to turn his head, from the'injury recn\ e-1, and immediately \yent ,to the front. Within n tew hours thereafter, he was again wouii<:>-1, and now languishes in a rebwl pi-is m. Tie- same spirit animates atmajoritv of this » nok- command. ' fe A. PAUL. OfhciaJ War JBulletiu. Cien'l Cirnnt. Dispatch i from /Hi - GEN. mttl&BR'S EXPEDITION. v -Ifi* . All the EailifdMs Leading into Eiehm destroyed. ^PBOIB G^JVEKAL 8BERH1AN. nd Unsuccessfal Attack on the Rebel Posi.icn. Gen. Hooker Mortally W r ou:i«Itii. burgh says that daring thefighton Friday one of~ our boy»^dtl^bet^nj5 short of ammuni with Ow *rtbelkiiMes in lrlix^K I^M» *#ribm Im^mi* *iww &**& e **- dl * WASHTNGTOS, June 28, lhCl. To Major Gen. Dice : A dispatch from Gen. Grant, dated yi-steriLiy. 37th, 3 P. M.,Jat his headquarters,, tepon 1/" operations in front, except from'our own L"H -. which fire into the bridge at Petersburg !'I.N:. •> distance af 2000 yards. The-dispatch giv es tin: following intelligence from rebel-papers: A Petejrsbuug papw^of the .25th stales that Hunter is striking for Jackson River I>po', at^out 40 miles north of Salem, and says tiiai if he ies«b^s>G6yIm|tpn,. winch they suppose ho will do with* m'ost'of ufs'-^rces.^but with loss of material, he will be safe. Thesame paper air.i- ses Hunter of destroying a great amount of private property and stealing a large number- of wagons, horse^and cattle. ? Tho same paper' aTsopMiys ifiat Wilson des- troyed a train^Of -^rs^|f^df#itlfc^tU)ii mid tttrnTtur«p)UMeajfhe^e43^buad^igp=«fcc,, at Burkesville and destroyed spme of the tract and was still pushing south. All ( h e railroad* leading iiitt>-Mehmond>are now destroyed ami some of them badly. A dispatfelr from'<3en. Sherman, received thi» morning, reports that yesterday noon. J i" K ' - •• an unsuccessftil attack was made by our fore * on the enemy's position, which resulted in a lo-s to us of between ?0OO aud 8000. The following ptirficnLiKaregivtm': ••' ' ^tPubnatott^my^iirdersofthea*!!!, ademoa- stration was made 011 e^ch ffank of the enemy, especially dowuthe"sS£ndyHvii road. At & A. <i. Geil." MePherwW alti^ked at the south « est ta.d ot Ken a*# andThouins, ut a point abom mde further south. At the same time the skirmishers audar»illeryin>fiir.th? 'whole 'lihe kept up » suarp tire. Neither aitauK sucoeeJ d, «>i" '-» u^SlumnsrSs^ildj|i^eneBty'i» works. *tt">» ar«- very strong. „' Geu. Md'heruontefiorishis'lHSs at about out) and Tuomas *b«HH|im -3f3w*ios|-ij.p.riicui.ir- ly heavy uj geneMOtid tielfl bin- en?. G.i>. Ho^ifs rS^4|«ibe m«jr.allyTW"WJe4 > abo Col. Dan M6Cook 1 commamtni«Hbi%«de, v-i. Ktce, 57th Ofiio/T*if sferibusly, dis. Bnuhull, aei River canal - it ^ s i n g forward to the Jii 4 to which lie was o 1|§A dispatch from Grai .sjjf§at yesterday's Richm Mfnion cavalry- fj>sce, ut -sMleade's corps at Prince '^ipa miles sooth of Peters M* Up some miles of railroa n 1 also some miles ot t d 1-ailroad, a consia P t ersburg, moved nex S . railroad connecting rg and were, day be > t up also- j «W*|1E#|* AH*usttm55tVl^, fcitlud. and GeiV . ..,.. ,. Thomas abjut as ma»y,;4>ui 100 n«t sup»«*st weinBicied-buayyloas upou the euemv, B as he fcpvctow oeflm* niM*»r*p«i*- - • *»- No other mWta^uOieiligentwAa? been re- ceived by Mfe*T3i|pSfto»fii * ^ , i_„ XT __!*' », Jone^S. THE VIRGINIi The »©»»•* c,ai •nie »^ Wedn. Great Damage DOT Tfce FetefsbWffh *•!< 1 b y o a r The1 Bneimy Forced : Cii-cat ViamHge to our SI 1 T T A C K OIV C E K E 1 The Triburn's army d'n t- s: The rebels attack on on Friday. Bom re allowed to rush int' f destructive fire was open soon surrendered. On •^sixty-five were unhurt, Slltkill' d or mortally wound •iws The riiclwnond Exam victorv on Wednesday.' uen from two lines of nearly two thousand ; pf artillery, and eight sta The Enquirer says not _Iunter's whereabouts. Idone is very extensive. uive been plundered ol s-and other stock. Every jfiic utility was destroyed < m $ The^ r «raW*«brre»p<»i Iff ties/in Wednesdays fig I S and missing, approximat *%Sa rebel officer that ou: §§ South. m The Weld's dispatcli » permanently hold the Pe M Railroad sohfh. This wi M Oth corps driving Hill's ci wp Other important movemc The Wort<Cs dispatch " fight: The whole of Pie ^ of another Were eaj^tured J The Times'" dispatch of Tjeen leirnecl this mornin Hill's corps are moving b i|| Beanreirard's main am m burgh, while LCe's forces S A rebel doctor says ou M is very disastrous. S The rebelB are marchit ti ing to gnar.l against our f The World's ^special sii attacked at Wilcox's L river I>y a t large rebel 1 •p were promptly sent to h *"" lars. , Col. Havyley writes t tli.it a c.tptured Alabamia on the Richmond and said that ouir -men were catching Geu. Lee, who v Richmond- 'W Special TEl IttEBXING, J The Ladles of Trout Riv*r an. •Uw Union Chorch, (Brick 9 n . or '; Eli^r, ut.l o'clock. P. M,. -lolv 4 raWnit- fund* to aW in tho-f Chii-ch A'Wreapes from various 1 An e.1i-!fnt choir will be presenl the fine in singing some select Arnem.-Hn money or 80 cents »ii»- fuuv-tavited to attend P«» Trout River, June 16th, 1864. DftfiSS M^ •I m Jliss JASK G»*bisKB with Mrs. JM.ner's are coOtinaiiUjr receivir fmin new Vork \\.ad)HaipTepa.ttc the u(c»i styles and Dest m»m far liUe* f >r stiiBping. Also, the fa.-li!->iMl>le ami l)eaalifol methnc for .|ie9!H«.cloaks, &e. Ami all em .r.n.lery, *c , will be execatei Malone, April «2S, 18«4-tf. C. C WmTTKUer has made CHARLES PAUD"C£ forfhe purpos : nesa of manufacturing Woolen C Particular attention *iil »lso be r ' Cloth eressing. Our manufactur theoW Cottm Factory buiidini: c lageof Malone. The most of tl and we expect to commenceoi June. ! Mr. PADJIOOK Is an experienced exc'lnstve attention to the manul hope totaerit a-liberal sh»re of tl paid for'WooU 'C. 0. WHITTEL8EY*. A C S I V B K S A L UTED eat, by the atr we breathe, or b can be m»dp 8ie|c; or by fattgoe, by heat, because these effects en. blood. regain health we mas organs of the atymach and bowel -tinuc in the regjilar performanct haa ad^lgned Ihejm. aiid sbonld tt -w.iat does experience point? TO BKANORKTI -which cannot injure, and which w •to the regular performance of thi "The dyspepja the billons wi health, and the »ame may be fait ^ay—take Brandreth's Pills and spectable dealers in medicine*. T H E O R E A T ESTCM SIR JAMES C Celebrated Pe: t PROTECTEl? T BY ROYAL Prepxrtd from, a pi-etcription phtftii-ian Extraoro%iU Th"«tovalnaolemedicine is ui thoBe p*mfai and -dangerous dl» •eonsttttu-ioa U sabject,, It moder all obstacles, surf a speedy enre I ' *0 MABKIBI It Is petmlWrly Sotted. . It will, ii monthly period (with rsiutarity. Each bottle, price One Doll Stamp of Gtttt jBritttoytp pttn i GA.$T*ri Thrie Pittothould nat-betttt i stf-e to bring OH SlUearriaa**.* m are««/«. . _ I .-. , . in *H c«es of NerrouHa,nd;si>l Back »nH liimhs, r«itgn* on slit, the Heart. Hysterics. .Jjl4 WMte cure when «01 other mgant:*W powerful remedy;, do not contain or ahything hartml to the const* - Fdll atrectloOSTn Ihe painj* whitfh shoul.l be carerally presen SOLD BY ALL 3 Sole Agent for theJOntteil States i JOBMOSE»,8T< N B—$100 »nd 6 postage »Ut Ue-i Agent, wlli tnsare a botUe, e turn mail. ^^____ It, thts *JH»ge» at the reridenc. •hv Rev i. K. tlerrick. Mr. it B»ngor, and »ll* JANE « . W81 A i the Baptist Chorch,toC1M ST the «e». «r "tsb Tne, Hr JC U»rriB V BE«aN,danghte»«r ^h-iteingsy f n this town, on the »th ioft., Mr rav»cis'P. BoW&?i > , ^ , JiissjJASEirE M. sUW)WJJoN. : jlni briile^ooo will aeeept ooi >Wtisasiio«>s»i>«ayln||theaboTe.

Transcript of ABMY OF m POT0MA6. - NYS Historic...

Page 1: ABMY OF m POT0MA6. - NYS Historic Newspapersnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83031566/1864-06-30/ed-1/seq-2.pdf · to the relief of our sii k and wounded soldiers ... commiseration

MILOXE,TII;BS]

*HoTiC«.A-Person»notrtce Ttag their, oofer a furor by leaving n< Bee ot the

To pr«*ent atsonderstand lor. # • so«jll Crot«[x]«ttth««t(ab«rofih«p»jnjr "

j & i

OflillDOif.

.'*-- Tp.e Fourth o f

There will bo no it rmal observance of our

^jhts mysterious, but. wise and holy Provi­n c e , in Mate terrible and Woody conflict on

'$$> battl4fl$d, suddenly to translate out. broth-ir|»Jtek!ow»^tojie^j(^^

'therefore,! . ' ' » " " • ' ^Jbvifadf That we recognize in this afflictive ^ripeWtBnVTdniolenin-resSonof *dm6BUii0ti To ourselves-; to be more faithfully assiduous, v ip* lant, and prayerful in our Master's service; for we-knowf neither»th^t imer41i0v.placer nor the-manner hi which w o , r?halt ho summoned to render a n account of stewardship.

Besotted], lThat- we- tender to the afflicted fain.

national anniversary, in this place, on Monday, nor do w e i t h i ^ R ^ y p a A J d f n d displays

i universal or throughout the country will be expensive as in form< r years. wil l be^obseryed in son \p form. , iffae ringing pf bells, "thebonfiires, and the, firing, of cannon will usher it in as, of old, i nd the heart wil l beat with a prouder putsatic n than o o a n y other of its three hundjred and Bixty-fivc fellows in the calendar, The ybung will have j their excur­sions, their, picnics, an 1 their merry-makings, but the older and moie thoughtful will avoid the pomps and" extrav sgance tUatf would mark other and quieter timi is. Much of the money that would ordinarily lie spent ml the celebra­tion of this day will fine \ its way, through some of the manychannels thai' need to be replenishedi

to the relief of our sii k and wounded soldiers in field and hospital. This plan | s taking or­ganized form in many ocalitfea, and there is no way in which, true Patriotism ,can be better demonstrated, or in which we can more suit­ably honor the day, and the memory of those whose deeds made it, [immortal^ than by con

the upholding of out tributing in some way) common cause, and th Government for the est lathers sacrificed so nun dulge in costly luxuries when- so many of our kindred are foiling and live. Let our brave del in all that We do, and let us not forget that w enjoy of peace., prospei quality, to our brave

maintenance' of that iblishment of. which our

It i s no time to in ud extravagant shows, eighbors, j friends and

suffering, that we may nders be remembered the mids| of oupjoy, owe all that we now and domestic, tran-

Idiers in the field who are wasting their health and poori|ig out their' l.fe-blood in their efforts jjo suppress an unnat­ural rebellion, which* if in anarchy and ruin. •

H e b e l

Buccessful,|will resnlt

{rarity.

Gen. Sam Jones, commanding I the Rebel forces at Charleston, S. fa., has notified Maj Qen. Foster, that be haatlaced.fifty of our-offi­cers—five Brigadier field officers—prisoners o f the city \£f Charleston mi of .our funs. The obj< strategy is to deter Gen. the city, andTfe-indefensil Ie on any principles of warfare.

Gen. Gilmore, month; Beauregard that the city This- notice ^ a s given might be removed, and th ren spared from harm, blied that the ndn-cdt be removed with al\ plying lojthis notification

"I must however, protes in thns placing defenceless * position exposed to cor It is an indefensible act of designed only to prevent a, flrffupon Charleston. T h j t c l t y i s a'depot for military supplies. It, conn ins not merely arse­nals, but' also foundries and factories for the manufacture of munitions t If war. In its ship, yards several armed ironidads have already peen completed!, while others are stills upon the stocks in course o f corittrtpion. Ibi wharves and the banks of the rivers on both j i d e s of ,the city are lined with bitteria T o destroy these means of continuing the w ir is, therefore, our object and duty. You seek to defeat'thls effort, n o t b y m e a n s k n o w n t o > h o orable warfare,but by placing unarmed and c jfeQielessipfisonere

nerals and forty five war, jh that part of st exposed to the fire t of this| barbarous ster from firing upon

ago, notified Gen ould'be bombarded, hat non-ejombatanis

women and child-en. Beauregard re-

;rit population would ible celerify. In re-en. Fostei- says: against yjpuf action

prisoners tef war in \ nt bombardment, cruelty, and can be continuance of pur

ily of our! brother our deepest sympathies and commiseration in.vthcir soro bereavement, as well as to thousands of others who have suffered from similar visitations since the commence­ment of this wicked and cruel rebellion, which i3 fctill spreading and thickening the pall of

*sn »u J \mourningj over the land, and devastating the toll, the (day ^fairesLpoiifions of our country.

. -•- -» ' Resolved, That we have occasion for gratitude tOjGod that brother Stone left evidence that he was as conscientfonsly and unwaveringly Brave and faithful, commissioned as an, officer in our Federal Army, as in the exercise of his func­tions itflhe Christian ministry, and as a Chris-dan Pastor. J , Resolted, That the remnant of the company

commanded by our brother, and before whom, we haye no doubt J^e set a consistent qhristian example, have oaf earnest prayers to the God of armies; for their protection and salvation, and that he Would istay the effusion of blood, i'turn from the fierceness of his holy indignation against our guilty nation, speedily terminate this cruel war, and forever exterminate from our land that,, horrible system of oppression which has been the primary and principal cause of treason and rebellion .against our national Government

Resolved,- That this testimonial be transferred to the bereaved family of the deceased brother, 10 the Chnrch of which he was Pastor, and forwarded for publication in the Malone P A L -LADitM. IJy order of Presbytery.

J. COPELAND, Stated Clerk.

„JiCxem^ city, ^ o i v . . ^ ... . „ . _ . „ , . tation clause will not be repealed. Even if itfs not,-it will be seen that it really affords but Httlje protection, and that the only safe way, as it Is tbe,bj^j^jtotp,HUn^4^bsUtutow*ejutbe„r^|j 3on drafted cannot-go: ,t- . , , , f ( .

"Moreover, the commutation clause, as law 'now stands; docs not amount to much. The payment or $800 now exempts a man onl or one* call; and Itf will ndtdottiis'if the sup jlementaryv draftings exhaust- the -enrollmenjt 1st. The man who pays commutation noi? vill again'be liable to draft in July,,' should a Iraft m July be ordered. Under each call the

supplementary draftings must be continued uh» lil the number of men required is secured.-*-I Should the list become exhausted, the names of I hose who have paid the commutation money required, must go into the box again, and they

ust again take the chanced of the dipft Sucu the* operation of the new enrollment law u$,

ndcrstood and explained here. It Is not pre-isely what the House intended, but it is whal be Senate and tho Military Committees a

cured."

R«snll : o f the Draft District*

i n t h e I 7 t h

%

under Art , . ., . , - h ? "I have forwarded your commun;

' f t^iJPrMdiiCi«th ffi r4nest%

.i^aners _ positions exposed to the fi fonjf aaybtfloWtnin^f^ -" communication.''

in my custody an equ u numbe i of theJike-grades,^ be keptl

i of yputt , _. rse stated! in your

' It is to be hoped that th will comply with Gen. F. that/the aoffltietf *ill be » can quar

tipu. to he will of pris­

sy me in of ypuR guns, so

War Department r'S request, and

disposed:of as ta

,-?

t h e following is the result of the Draft to fill, deficiencies on all calls up to date of draft, in thcja7th. District, N. Y., as drawn June 6tbr, 7thr

r 6th Oth and 10th, 1804:

DEKALB—Quota 5, exempted 3, commuted 2, deficient j}.

Fbwi^at-i-fQuotsi 12, exempted 6, commuted 2, substituted 1, failed to report at the time ordered 3, deficient 9.

LoCisvruiE—Quota 7, exempted 2, commuted 4. failed to report at the time ordered 2, defi­cient 4.

MACOMB—Quota 8, exempted 2," commuted 4, failed to report at the time ordered 2, defi­cient 4. '

PasKBEPONT— Quota 1, commuted 1. PrrcAiRN- Quota 11, exempted 7, commuted failed! to report at the time ordered 3, defi­

cient. 10. ^v ROSSTE—Quota 4, exempted 8, failed to report

at the time ordered 1. A effdit of one has been reported through

Majo* I'ow.nsend, A. A. P. M. G., leaving a de-ficienjey of 3.

CKHOLM—Quotal S, exempted 1, substitut­ed 1{ commuted 2, failed to report at the time-ordered 1, deficient 2.

EDWABPB—Quota 6, commuted 4, .exempted 1, deficient 1.

FD{E—Quota 2, commuted 1, exempted 1, de­ficient 1. 4

BAXoon—Quota 10, exempted 4, commuted 8, clothed 1, foiled to report at the time ordered 2, deficient 6.

HABIUETSTOWN—Quota l , failed to report at the time ordered 1, deficient 1.

BANGOE Quota, 4, exempted 1, commuted 1, failed to report at time ordered 2, deficient 8.

CONSTABLE4- Quota 10, exempted 6, failed to report at the time ordered 4, deficient 1(1

DtTAHB—Quota 1, commuted 1. . FRANKLIN—Quota 2, exempted 1, commuted 1, deficient 1, .

M o u u ^ Q u o t a 7, exempted 2, commuted 4; failed to report at the time ordered 1, deficient 8.

' • ltKCAPrnfLATION. 4 Whole number drafted 95, commuted 80,'sub­

stituted 2, clothed 1, exempted 40, foiled . to re­port alj the time ordered 22.

Leaving a deficiency of 62, for which a sec­ond draft has been made.

'' • r S. C. F. THORNDIKE, Capt. and Provost Marsha), 17th Dis. N. Y.

, • « -"- • •

T h o Central Grade School Concert.

' the Summer Term of the Central Grade IScbooll of this village, will close to-morrow, July ltjt. A Concert, by the pupils, under the direction of ttye Teacher, .Mr. S. L. SAVLES,will be* given at fhe Court Bouse in the evening. In add|ti6n to' th(r music, which will consist of SchooP Songal, Temperance Glees, Patriotic pieces, |fcc.,theie will bo -reading of composi­tions by the girls of the Graduating Clasi, and speaking by tile boys/from the different grades -, the entertaihmeht to conclude by the presenta­tion' ofj diplomas. A'dmission 25 cents. Ghil drch 10 cents. 1 "Booth opeu at 7 | o'clock, and to commence; it 8 o'ctock precisely.' The pro­ceeds will be^eittiendeaifl glvirig thepiipilswho iiartici#te1n> «Ms Conb^t, a- ride and picnic. T • , I- !•'• '- ' -.'ii ;• - , — ~ . f • y . .

j Dealbof a Soldier.

CHABLEB HILEONABD, of Moira, wbile en-'g^eTm^e^ervico^ofhis country nnoer Gen. GrantyM8to^9JAftt tte njbntaior 'l^/nMth'e arm, near the shoulder joint, badly shattered by KrSfle=b|aiel; pS w a s ^ b % M id one :oF-tbe

I tfmrTTpk, wHcire ho >'wMtn/to* ery possible attention, but without avail. His

IxHjisafLeonarij was with him ^nr-

Farloughed Soldiers^

Large numbers of our wounded Soldiers aie n o ^ h o m e on furloughs of twenty and thirty days. To such, the following, from a letter from Dr. Babcock, one of the agents of this State for the care of sick and wounded New York soldiers, may be of interest. It says: "Fur­loughs cannot be extended. In order1 to protect a soldier from the charge of desertion, they must forward a certificate that they are . unable to travel without injury, which must be signed by a United States medical officer, or by a physi­cian In civil life which must be sworn to."

T h e T a x B i l l C o m p l e t e d .

Tfhe tax bill has been completed and wil l -be .reported at once. Tho tax im whisky is one dollar and a half, after the 1st of July, and two dollars after the 1st of February next. The tax on a majority of the articles have been put up at the highest point. The tax on incomes, bOwever, has not been increased. Tho amount «£revenue which it i s expected to produce will bo> nearly $800,000,000.

STBAwnsBBiES.—Jtist in season, yesterday, We found two baskets of strawberries—large, ripe and luscious—on our table. It is hardly necessary to say that wo were indebted to Mr. COBUKN for them—for he only has such. We are sorry to learn that his crop is light this year, owing to the dry weather—but they make up int quality ail they lack in quantity. Those who want a delicious berry should speak for some oiiyOVI can. Coburn's Wilson Seedlings. '

G H B E N PJEAS.—L. Coburn of Const-hie has begun bis m i l s to our village with his early and choice garden vegetables. • A fujl load of Green Peas, last Monday found a ready market among anxious customers w h o had been expecting him for some days. He will be in town often during the'season and the only safe way to get bis fruits and vegetables is to engage them before­hand.

S l a v e r y A b o l i s h e d I n M a r y l a n d .

The Constitutional Convention of .Maryland, in Session at Annapolis, passed on the 24th inst , by a vote of 68 ayes against 27 nays, the following article of the Bill of Rights:

"Hereafter, in this State, there shall he' nei­ther, s l a v e y nor involuntary servitude except

'in punishment of crime, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, and all persons held to service or labor as slaves, are hereby de­clared free."

Thus Slavery is forever prohibited in Mary­land. I t is an act for which the friends of human liberty throughout the world, and more especially in the United States should be de­voutly thankful The world moves.

myself, in thinking ^ - - ^ ^ - ^ ^ . _ _ , , 7 _ who have read (rMs]|6M^, a p u t d i p e . setirj|hfc in regard to th$ facbTwith reference to the [sale of our] MisslorijGliapel." I therefore enclose my bumble contributhm for this object and beg y o u ^ U . p u h I U W U n ^ J i u ^ ^

Thebui ld ing^t o u * f ew ^ p e ^ r s efftjy, and difficult in the extreme. But we have got the walls to the tops of the windows, and still hope to complete and cover tbemfiii; uefbro; the heavy rainscomo.to.destrpy, them. .

Our home letters and papers lead us to re­joice, and thankGod for the present prospect that our honest President Lincoln is likely to bo elected for a second term. God bless him and our beloved country.

Yours sincerely, R. G. WILDER.

. KOLAPOOK, I N D I A , April 20,1804.

Mr D E A R B B . H E R K I C X :•—A mutual friend

has been so kind as to send me your letter, in which you quote a paragraph from a published letter of mine, and undertake to "set our read­ers right in regard to tho facts with reference to the 'Mission Chapel.'" As you' had your letter published in the Palladium, you will foel it prop­er that I reply through the same channel.

I appreciate your motives, my dear brother, in seeking to correct what you thought to be a wrong impression ; and fjpr your sake, Dr. An­derson's and our own, too, I sincerely wish your correction were admissible; but I regret you had not a better knowledge ot facts.

The paragraph y'ou quote from iny former letter, was entirely incidental, and yet, on re-perusing it, as quoted by you, I a m not able to see how, in the same space, I could have more accurately expressed the combined action of Rev. Dr. Anderson and our Political Agent in tho sale of our Chapel,.and the serious embar­rassment thus caused to our dear Mission.

You quote Rev. Dr. Wood, of N e w York, as testifying in writing that: "Dr. Anderson knew nothing of the matter until long after its ac­complishment, and had no agency4n procur­ing it."

I am sorry Dr. Wood gave you this state­ment, and sorry Dr. Anderson allowed him to do so. If it was important for Dr. A.'s agency in this matter to be denied, w h y did he not de­ny it himself? Why get his brother secretary to do it for him r Was it that Dr. Wood might be able to say, when the proof of Dr. A.'s agen­cy should appear, if perchance it ever should, that he (Dr. Wood) made the statement under a wrong impression—all hi good faith, of course ? Judge ye, but be as charitable as

D e a t h o f L t . W i l l i a m s o n .

Lt. JOHN WILLIAMSON, son of JOSEPH W I L ­

LIAMSON of Bellmont, was wounded in the bat­tles before Richmond, on the 15th of June, b; ball passing through his thigh, and died on 20tb, v He belonged to the 1st Vt. Cavalry.

by a i the

pcnftent|%nd? joyful ?disciple of'our Lord and

wb*rij liia'funeral" services were conducted by

JIM

?wl0jS*tb$ S4tb inst. The cof-ftt«rrtAWithiour.:natioiul banner, and ayftsu* we. conveyed the body of erdtohIsglork»a«gr*ve.4t Cox.

Fot

tfablei

9t J a l y a t , equ i tab le .

•-&m.^)m^p(tiWC:toi the fin-^Ufe^fbe;pM£ &hwto,l At O otlodtj.A.> :MtpAffd|e»»fei'-'wi;tt ;l»^||vCh^,byi<iD^iifcl

^Dcn'Nttd ' -am} others,r in- th«t2PwsbyJ«rkui ^ r d i r t T l f c ^ c * * ^ ^ Oftbe:Udie<wMb*nUedu^^ of visitor I, with every thing to plcaw ih« ,«ye, *he «*r,[ a i t f ^ e j t i ^ e ^ i ^ ^ ^ t ^ ^ f e c ^

and Muifc Dtanerlk^etfr?^!*^

Jfe** ri»f!M that Gen. Fremotrt I. UM. mo* aVailabie candidate for 1M» i*»* Dem«c*cy. **"" mtt'.M^ V-* :--(i^~-~'-<:uif •»::>,*i ;i^:' I

' - ' = - — - — - - tog&&

In a letter, Rev. R. G. WILDEB incloses UB tho following item taken from a Bombay paper:

We have, been informed that, in the hill tracts of Orissa, near Pailakemedy, a Hindoo lately sold bis daughter named Gya, to the hill people as. at Meriah sacrifice. The unfortunate girl was taken to a temple and confined thero ; in the night she contrived to escape and hastened over the fields. She was caught again., but her loud cries were beard by the police, who has­tened to her assistance. . The hill people say that they purchased her for fifty-three rupees; and her father now denies the whole transac­tion, Wc tear this proves that these hill people continue to carry on their' terrible system in spite of all the benevolent exertions of the Brit­ish Government. Wo have no doubt that this case will cause further searching enquiries)

More than 40 girls have arrived at Baroda to offer their hands in marriage to tho Rajah and his brotheri ; • * • • . |

T«rriHe AccWeit • • the Grumi Traok • • • -i • • • t. Railroad.

4-Train of 12, FaaMag#r Can Ron into an

- « • If A»»ENOEM8 KILI^JD.

Tbeiday evening last, a train of twelve pa«-sengwa cars, mostly filled with emigrants, run into an tipen Draw Bridge, on tile drand Trunk Railroadi brtWeen Quebec and Mo^^l , foiling; idistance'of about80 feet,smashing theloco-motiveT'aridc^ and killing abont 450 of' the

i-The ladiesof the Con gregationaiChurcb and Society, of this >ill.ge wlllholdaFairaDdFe*tiralatKing'. H»llon

S^a^rnes^ceCrea^^nd other ^ will be served, and a variety of Fancy Article* ;dn^^'%r^ia1et*"-:/Atf,:-lMter^^ will b^ very pleasantry employ Inpatron^i^^ thi.Festlv.1,

Dk^drTymtet l* LETT,

;an old «id wdl knowi cltixen, died at h^rrtWeik* in Uk rlllago, d* Monday after nobbVl^ at the .dranced age of 84 year*.-J HU bealfh aa. been poor for many moot*. p^t,a»dM.'d*ath wm»^^^^—-—v>.-.-. . '.-•Mj-r-i'- f^-.'-ir".?''-:"^ ^, '* ^^1% ^"i-* f.

on tfo Wbvoadfua<« Mate from^ew T«Jrk toSctVwlawaalaidcatleW^aMU*^^ ^mtoMf opt^tA. By tW.route a -''-:'';

t « m « y ^ t ^ b r o s 4 | ^ e « »

The fact is, Dr. Anderson did send Br. Wood an order t o sell the Chapel. Br. Wood (of the Satara Mission) informed me of this feet before I left America, but kindly gave me to un­derstand that he did not intend to sell it. I bad full confidence in his friendship, snd* replied expressing my hope "that the Prudential Com­mittee would yet give the Chapel to tho Kola-poor Mission, but added that in case they should not, I would buy it, (so much of it as had been charged to the Board in m y account,) and he must give me the refusal of it over and above all others.

Br. Wood had shown entire.sympathy with me on the great school question, and I had not a doubt he would continuo the kind part he had acted, and keep the Chapel unsold till we reached India. That he meant to dp so, is suf­ficiently apparent from his first reply to Mr. Havelock, as intimated'in his letter to Dr. Wood, which you have quoted. But when he found: Mr. Havelock adopted his suggestion and de­ferred the safe, Br. Wood wrote him another letter which he has told you nothing about— Sir. -Havelock gave me all the official corres­pondence,—shall I quote you a bit r Bear in mind that Mr. Havelock readily deferred the sale, and affirms he would have, deferred it any length of time, i f Mr. Wood had not withdrawn his suggestion. Both Mr. Havelock, the Politi­cal Agent, and his Assistant, Dr. Weighe, as­sure me that Mr. Wood wrote them again, and repeatedly, saying that on better information, he found Mr. Wilder was not to return to India, and the property must be sold. They say that he gave specific directions, in unofficial letters, what books and articles-should be sent to Sa­tara, and that all tho rest, Chapel, school-house, site, benches, &c., should be sold. Theso letters arranging details, were not official, and as usu­al, were, not preserved"; but tho books, maps, &p., which I .found with Br. Wood at Satara, and recovered from him, accord with what these gentlemen state to lutve bean, b i s instruc­tions to them qu this poim> . , ._,,,,[

Buttheo^fckjnet terawbichl have . lnhand, aria sufficiently definite. After Bf. Wood bad so kindly got the sale deferred, not by ^request, but a mere suggestion, the very nexttmorith, he wrote aga in; and I , am keeping yon too, long from the bit I w a s about to. quote from this let­ter- IS is a s follow* :vb5: flrwefagJTUtpte-tfom from ov/r Secretary long age to tellfhit prop­erty." ul$wppo»eihfbuit#Tigt mUnow be n^P &C. This, mind you, in an official ^ettcr^toijte pomical;agei*t, ^ t t . ^ . , . £ . "'' ;

j£„ti^.Btrfflc.?en$r cp^cjusiye^ m y ^ e w broth­e r ? Does i t settle the matter wbether Dr: A-hail any "agency in procuring" the sale of iiio

ctiapei? •. :; • •' : ;*, .jlndwhat say you now to theietter 0f3r^

Wood of 8atara, which you quoted; ak defining Ml agency in this matter r-' Is that- letter aatU-

vjtojovtt^^ TJli»oltAi*theiau^ottfi#liy Bh WSood*- olF ' tari'didt-.nhgtjtaw the

w l ^ thitn—why he dM-not quot* tke above fromoW^of hj* sub«e^^ quote from some of hia unofflclal lettert.'-r .per-' pt you will kindly-aacejrt^fcbout^

46ingi'8o^pl«^^.;-|lc., J^Miiio iMKier-' laiMibw^iOjw • wna*: p$t<il*t jollaigHMi iiaiOiinr betjiir«eD Br. Wo&MjtfiiwA :'m^m^Mi tcrs.- How hecapteto P^iswp^myrfqueirt to give tne the wmsal of the ChapeJ. In cawcRr^ •'»ho|jld,ftii^,.on;i^|||%|^4^ contply: f } U i ^ . ^ ^ | b A ^ ^ ? | ^ ! ^ r t t o ^

.f j.lhe^mat 'tftfJIr. WH

»ni;w»i^%t:

# | « a % p ^ u ^ p i | r w . t | r t i | p r e | | f e d j ^ ;

an1en%my^'of,3Wsslonp*fo interfere. .^Ttdojap imply that the Political Agent, Mr. Havelock, was unfriendly—I do not believe he was ; for on meeting him the very day I reachedjiere c«LOurrcvturn.fromAmeri(m,heejtclaJmedwi[h ^emphasis j . "What a pity \ Mr. Wood told me you were not coming b a c k Had I only known you wore coming, I would have had the Chapel repaired andjkjepll^ryjpti?^ And as'some proof ofkisJrienjMyJe^eliag,i!ie. ^ a s . g ^ v e ^ u s R s . j 0 (abont $35 as exchange now is) each year since.

But you know General Jacob declared, with an oath, that n o Missionary should be al­lowed 16 l ivebere again ;-rand another person, a total stranger to me till since our return to India, proved himself an enemy—seized on the occasion of the Chapel's being neglected, and pressed it on Mr. Havelock's attention till he finally wrote to Mr. Wood as he did. Br. Wood's more suggestion for delay was heeded, and the delay- continued some three months after Br. Wood withdrew i t

N o w the defense set up by Bf. Wood, the Missionary, and Br. Wood tho Secretary, is, that our Chapel was sold as a decayed building. But if so, how came the tchool-hoiue to be sold ? That, without a particle of repair, is as sound to-day, from ridge to base, as the day we built i t Coul.d that have been sold as a decayed build' ing t And then, why was the site sold ? D o building rites decay f Alas ! alas ! for these dear Brethren! ,Mr. Havelock could never have sold the site or school-house, and never would have sold the Chapel itself, but for Dr. Anderson's order communicated to him by Br. Wood. I hold these two Brethren (Anderson and Wood) responsible to God and the chris-* tian public for. turning a Christian Church into a Mo/iammedan Mosque, (facit per alium fa-cit per se) and sacrificing -' fully Rs. 2000 of mis­sion funds in so doing. Not that the Chapel cost so much originally; for labor was cheaper then, and I worked on it with my o $ n hands till the beat induced an attack of cholera which broke my health and drove me to America.— Now, labor and material are three or four times as costly as then—I have expended some Rs. 2000 already on our new Chapel, of exactly the same dimensions as the former, and if I can fin­ish it within the limit of Rs. 8,900,1 shall feel thankful.

Here we have toiled some three years since our return, with no preaching place in the city but our small, low, hot scbool-rroms and the open-streets ; our beautiful Chapel where we used to worship, and which I built almost at the expense of my life, changed into a Mosque for the worship of the false prophet! ! .

Alas for the foots of this case,t.my dear Broth­er ; but you and I can't change them. Brs. Wood and Anderson can't change them now.— But they can be sorry for them—God grant that they may be so ; and help us, in the spirit of our blessed Master, to pray, "Father forgive

tijem ." In christian affection, yours sincerly,

R. G. WILDER.

HIf h Prices—The True Cause.

It is quite the custom just now to attribute the present high prices to an expanded curren­cy. W e are flippantly told that this is the one cause of commercial derangement, and that if the currency were only reduced to the standard of three, years ago, prices would come down in tho same-proportion. Let us think a moment, and Wjksball see the utter absurdity of such a conclusion. N o matter what is the medium for making exchanges, or what is currency, or what Is lawful money—wHether it be gold, or bank­notes, or treasury notes—^pr prices always were and always must be high prices. Europe learn­ed it during her Napoleonic wars; we learned it in the war o f 1812, and the same stern teacher compels UB to submit to it now. The reason is clear and simple. Production i s diminished, and, by the waste of war, consumption is in­creased. The war draws the farmer's sons from the plow,, and fewer acres are sown and small­er harvests are reaped. The mechanic arts suf­fer in the same proportion. Scarcely less than two-fifths of our adult male population are now devoting all their time anil energy to putting down the rebellion. Of' these, a vast number are in the field with our brave generals, a large part man our ships of war, now counted by hundreds, and many are in hospitals; while those employed in the navy yards, iron works, machine shops, and in the manufacture of military clothing and equipments, and in pro­ducing munitions and supplies, swell the aggre­gate to Uie limit wc haye named. This great class of producers, cannot be withdrawn from their ordinary pursuits without a great diminu­tion in'the products of the country. When the supply i s greatly diminished,, and the demand _ - . _ _ , • — J ».__. focteggg,^ prices must

nsible help for it. I f weTSould-rtturn to'i^ specie -basis to-morrow, it wonWslillibiarwarfbwis;atwariprices. < •-, . .Tljercis;but onp exception to this advance in price, and that is .the .Government bonds, and they are noStfceptlola to the rutetsMd only ibl-low the general law o f supply and demand.— The necessities of war hard made them abun­dant and therefore they are cheap; but when the jvar ends the supply wil l cease and theywiH be deajr—and the man who invests in them now U s u r e b f 4 liberal profit.

A reduction of •Sh0«un«ncy-wilj bewel l ,and fwabavo,the official Assurance of the Secretary of tiie t reasury that it is now taking place, but ^ - n p ^ ^ ^ l l | b l i panacea ISFfii iaciaiaK-

' iltopoae.?^Mr.lCSsco, =thcifc-

"I am. tired of working for Yankee task-ma* terei I l^ate their selfish meanness; and there­fore I am in favor of a Western Confederacy." •So lays Marshal Anderson, of Ohio, in a letter igeclming tho nomination, by the Democratic Sllte^Convention, of Presidential Elector. Mr. Anderson, we suppose, is not a lunatic. The Columbus Crisis, which is good "Democrat ic" ^authority, remarked of him that "a more won by gentleman or better Democrat could not have been chosen;" and the Daily News, of this City, .republishes his missive under the caption, "A 'Sound Letter." Whether sound or not, it is 'certainly frank, and therein to, be commended.

Of all the manifold arguments against letting \ h e "seceded" States go, the most decisive by -allodds,isuthsumpraj. certainty that it would •pen the way to other secessions sooner or later. As for as regards'the loss of so much territory, it is a matter of only secondary consequence.— Give to Jeff. Davis and his crew all-Jhat they claim, and we should yet have left stretching through.the temperate zone, between the At­lantic sffld Pacific, one of the most magnificent fields for national empim the sun shines upon —a field naturally capable of supporting hun­dreds of millions of freemen in prosperity and highest civilization. We should have it lett, but the yital misfortune is that it would be left only soon to be broken up by new civil convul­sions. Acknowledge5 the "Southern Confede­racy" to-day, and unless human nature shall change, five years will not pass be/ore .there will be a movement ft>r a "Western Confedera­cy," a "Pacific Confederacy " and heaven only knows how many other confederacies.

The real issue in this struggle is not whether the Republic is to exist on a larger or a smaller scale, but whether it is to exist at all. Tbat which gives the struggle its transcendent-mo inent is, not "that the nation is threatened with the loss of its members, but that its very vital

force is in peril. The rebellion strikes at just authority; and without authority, government is but an intermittent revolution, and the so-called nation but an organized mob. To give way to the present secession movement is to loosen every national ligament, and to put our body politic throughout at the mercy, hence­forth, of every wild passion and every sordid calculation. W e are literally battling for tlu­nation's life. It is a sort of war that fiajdly occurs once in a thousand years. Wars gen­erally are maintained to vindicate national rights abroad, or to overthrow or reform na­tional rule at home. Whether they do or do not succeed, the nation still lives. They are sometimes waged, as by our Revolutionary fathers, and lately by the Italian patriots, for independence, and an apportunity to originate a new nationality. But in our case it is to save a nationality already existent and strong. With the comparatively. small exception of Poland, there has not been a case like it in modem times. And who can calculate a nation's value? The creation of one is the grandest and u.osi difficult of all human achievements. There is not one, even the poorest, that has not cost un­measured blood and. to i l -hardly one worthy of the name that has n*bt required generation* and centuries for even an imperfect.develop­ment. A well-knit national organization, with all its vital powers in full health and force, is infinitely the most precious of all earthly pos­sessions. Its preservation is. the most sacred trust that one generation can possibly devolvi on another. To betray that trust, either by positive act or by default, is to commit an inex piiible wrong both against ancestors and po* terity.

It is precisely this crime that, we are askpd to commit, by those who ask an abandonment o. this war. To cease resistance to the demandc of the Secessionists is to inaugurate endless revolution. Tbe vital cord of the Union ona broken, all that follow! will be but the endless shifting of independent atoms swayed only by passion or caprice or temporary interest.

This idea of a Western Confederacy is ho nev\ thing, l t was a notion that topk very definite shape in that dark period that followed tin-election of Gov. Seymour and our direful mili-tnry_ reverses in Virginia. Ijt was the real im­pelling motive of the crusade against New Eng­land entered upon by very many of the Cop perhead writers and orators at that crisis, an<i kept up until the great successes at Vicksburg and Gettysburgh gave hope of a speedy triumph of the national cause, and made any further

| show of this spirit insufferably odious to the people. Just as sure as new calamities should overtake us, and tbe popular heart again bi weighed down by despondency, we shall, see a 'renewal of these assaul s. And were the rebel armies actually to carry the day, and force a recognition of the "Confederacy," the que*tiqns whether the remaining States should exist to-

tether or apart, and if apart, whether individu-lly or in groups, would at ooce assume the

inost formidable proportions. Visionary theo­rists, malignant malcontents, men lusting for power, men goaded by hale, men whose natu­ral work is destruction, would drive these ques­tions incessantly ;'and even if the States should Sill hold together, it would be in such a condi-

on of insecurity, of uncertainty about the fu-tjure, a s to paralyze every energy and make any­thing like a healthful national growth impos­sible.,

' It would be the experience of the South American republics repeated. N o nation can prosper without a,sense of security, a moral assurance of stability and permanence. We giive thai up^&rev^er, if we recognize secession, either in principle or in fact We have done well to make mortal fight on this thing at the outset It was issue of life or death to all stable c|vil ;goyernment on this continent It must be maintained to the end at whatever cost "in trea­sure and bigod. W e cannot yield without en­tailing untold woes upon ourselves and onr pitstenty. f?

order^fhit -many sun ^MatfTtetmniiOtitm Onitedj fitatesaUSrew York, states that he-has canceUed 41,000,000 of interest bearing legal tenders within two week's, janitMr B^toTFJdlaa^aty^^ bicki-i4irid yet' bretd-and^ buttcifwheat and corn and,cloth are iw cheaper^.; -, •> . • x • .

•The first cause of the .increased cost of all ,. jinmodltiee, gold included, is" altogether but-

increases the nitt^tin?*-but 'doestnol create it. Botpaupposeithe Government- does;cpntract

was none at all Had

^.AndertonaDdTtad tab*car* sf O. ^ ^ .-' ' ;Jtf ^

Two rafter* had gtreo lgty.4& ibe "ewtintm lktfoilijualia in i p r t c * , They

, fkOei. most b«T* atieo fa** / ahd^tarHayl beWkdM,«to«>«Mta«ft4*<to»r*o«a otk**r«to«»ar *•«»)« <*, - - - -

ttatgivenoae HqQb#ttfld&

done'itt n tben;c*ob»»ow ernment or Treasury

&r dircmatio^wmtql

#f>?tfi?^co*uliry%, .Wfctf,

paiimeiit' goat for evils that are simply consequi the mc*tglg^tlc'war the world . m

So* __*w!Vlf

«y4$iyiEai itlhfwgkitJttttfo> utaki the hand " " " it#M*Atf^r>^W#QP#9n»»»r-

^ro¥ffleibrtne ^ f i f ^ a r j , ; f '^ lece lpt l of

-''SrStJcfcfcr •term rfl^ Saturday, the h«»e of N.Iiflter-«ha,ia W«>trill«;WM tHMk by Mghtah« in tw« pact* soM«tJbMh0aM«i.flr«,..Tk«'ii«« ko^tm^iraniagtkhii •ahwi M M * difl-

> CHATEA0GAY June 28,1864. MB. EDITOB:—1 would wish through the col­

umns of your paper to disabuse tha public of a report somewhat extensively circulated wftlch is this: " The Methodist preacher of Chateaugay. iajnrjaU." j :: ! •. , *

Notldng could be more false than • this, and nonebutevil and designing men could have circulated such a story. And coming from |fi|p,>nc<e»nftliigh in the public confidence, who should hare known tbe truth, and we are inclined tb believe they did, and Who should stand up for morality if not for Christianity, is thiprindpaljasa]^^ fane impression. The person to whom allusion ts^plStbJrlmMlJto^Be: report is %' person by! the tname o£ Jackson, Ea^earis who is not

or in tW'Me*odfat episcopal Church, fesswJb>h,;r4^Ufer is be asm;ember_of

said Church; adr Jiaa Jiebef^fpr at least seven months.4 Before*hU^xpidsibn from the Method disiOiturcbi wfiicii*occurred the 80th day of October .1868, W held the relation of exhorier

„ These are the facts in the ease ana we do sin-«Jet#J^#^^JierBohSj who have been; so officious in circulating such a slanderous report against mtflwaHke'Chureh to #hich I belong wUlhereafterkoep within the bounds of truth ; meanwhile we will pray for our enetnres that t^JJ^rmay j^r«jlkXoitoes|yin^ne^ao| bur holy Christianity proffered to them from a Savior's.hand, _,' '*".' .' . . * „ . ! _

Preacher in charge

0UB fiPiVS fOWMl\D THE PETEHs. BCBfiH AND W ELIHr, UoAU.

Tjep Pushing Toward Our E s t t e m e Left.

L o n g s t r c e t a r i d A. P . H i l l S o u t h o f • $ P e t e r s b u r g h .

THE LOSSES oTwESHESDAY.

INTERESTING FROM GEORGIA.

Sherman's W o r k and H o w it ^.ro. presses.

FEOIff CHABLESTON HARB0B. B A R B A R I T I E S O P T H E 0 E O V A I . R 7 . .

Fifty of Onr'Officers7Under Fire in the City.

ABMY OF m POT0MA6. N e w t c o FTldoy—Theini*fortnne o f W r d m ,

day P a r t l y B p p a l r c d ~ - ' I l i c B ; n i ( , i , , Open o n PjBtcrsburKli---Tlie Kebels |'i,|> l n e B a c k t o Weldou—Scarc i ty or u alcr— A m p l e I*rovi»lou for t b e TVouuded.

HEAIXJU-ILKTEBS A R M Y OF THE POTOM.M . / Friday, June 24, 1MJ4 \

Tb_e temporary misfortune of Wedncs'lnv iif-teraoon has been fully repaired, so far as r.i c «± pation of the ground*U concerned, but \ , t 1. v> not rewwerd+ile 1500 prisoners, 4 piec.-s .-n ,1 <".;. ore lost, nor the 500 killed and wound- d. Tu enemy, it appears, were massed upon our li t, when, the 0>li Corps not getting into posj imi ,.i time, the enemy seized uj'on an openi-i^; "d .-.:-tacked the, second corj)3 upon its flai k, k g A at great disadvantage, and for a tin.i i.«|;.i.r.t up like a piece of paper, and were only repu.*. -i bj- superhuman efforts.

This mo\enient was exactly what Gen. Gi i.: attempted to execute at Coal Harbor, and i,.,-force liis way across the Chickahominv, for :i passage of that river was, pmticable at any ;n>, ment by a flank movement, as was Subseqm-ni-ly effected. Had the 2d corps there succeedi .1 in securing the coveted position on I lie emu,', the reoel army, wit4i the Chickahominj\in i'-rear, would have been rolled up like a set.;'. When a simultaneous attack upon the troni Iv the whole force would have annihijftled ih-whole army of Gen. Lt-e, and wiped ont in .r, hour, this accursed rebellion. But th<- iir willed it otherwise, and we have been eonip' I.-ed to stand Uj) again.-t a similar nltem])l ijrf .-. ojir own lines.

This morning the batteries of (he 18th c ;•; -. and a portion of the 5th and 2d, opened u] in Petersburg, but with what effecb is not . if-nitely known at. this hour. Certain it *i- •}:.: numerous buildings were set on Are.

The Petersburgh and WeJdon iraifroad 1,1-been under our guns for several days. Ye-ier-day the infauiry tore up about 500? yard.- m HH-track, when they were compelled to retire. Tin-cavalry lias destroyed another -imporinn: ]'• r lion of tlii'- road farther south at Reams Mis.i.c and is opi r.-iiimr elsewhere at this lime.

As I write (10 A. _M.>all is quiel, but an i.i tack upon our lefi Hank and rear is anticipaii d

Deserters and piigoncrs from l i i ee iun iya teue that the rebel army is fulling b,ick 1'owaii.' W'eldon, >N. C. hliotiln this be true, it is p, ,-•,-1) e that I|M st- attacks upon our left are to o>ur that movement.

1 lie weinner is oppressivehr hot and the ,-iir tilled; with particles of du.-t wiisi-d by the n:n\i-ment of troops and wagon'lrains. For timr,' than two weeks there has -not been a limu-r. •«id the inhabitants hereabouts allege that, im-le-s there is a. fall of rain soon, the spm %• w ill ue all dry. ^Vater is sejirce'' even nna,' F-r-tunately'for the wounded there is a IMUII if •'. supply olice in the country. Tin- 8anit..ry a,:.! Christian Commissions supply lti.xuii'- .iti-i eointiirts : and last, but not least, a bitti r ulu­lated and a better-supplied medical department than any ar-my could heretofore boast, so that­'ll sufferers from wounds or disuse are cim!

for promptly and made comfortable. In devotion to the caule the present nruiv will

challege the admiration *«of the. world. As 1 ; lusirniing the general principle that pu-viik 1 will give two instances : Tije tiroe-of lift- 11th ' Massachusetts expired some ten days ago. t . Blaisdeli induced a battalion ot officers and n«-;i o r« main awhile longer. Yesti rday 11.101 nii z

Oil. Blais.lell w a s , killed, and last evening tn-,> remains were sent home w'ith ihe regiment.— 1 Col. Stoughton, ot the 2d TJ. 8. Sharpsmx.••• r~ ] was severely injured by 11 shell in one ol tit" battles near Spbitsylvauia Court House, thrt-e, days ago. He returned to his coiunnuid, .-tui unable to turn his head, from the'injury recn\ e-1, and immediately \yent ,to the front. Within n tew hours thereafter, he was again wouii<:>-1, and now languishes in a rebwl pi-is m. Tie-same spirit animates atmajoritv of this » nok-command. ' fe A. PAUL.

O f h c i a J W a r J B u l l e t i u .

Cien' l Cirnnt. D i s p a t c h i f r o m /Hi -

G E N . m t t l & B R ' S EXPEDITION.

v -Ifi* . All the EailifdMs Leading into Eiehm

destroyed. ^PBOIB G^JVEKAL 8BERH1AN.

nd

Unsuccessfal Attack on the Rebel Posi.icn.

G e n . H o o k e r M o r t a l l y W r ou:i«It i i .

burgh says that daring the fight on Friday one of~ our boy»^dtl^bet^nj5 short of ammuni

with

Ow * rtbel kiiMes in lrlix^K I^M»

*#ribm Im^mi* *iww &**& e**-dl*

WASHTNGTOS, June 28, lhCl. To Major Gen. Dice :

A dispatch from Gen. Grant, dated yi-steriLiy. 37th, 3 P. M.,Jat his headquarters,, tepon 1/" operations in front, except from'our own L"H -. which fire into the bridge at Petersburg !'I.N:. •> distance af 2000 yards. The-dispatch giv es tin: following intelligence from rebel-papers:

A Petejrsbuug papw^of the .25th stales that Hunter is striking for Jackson River I>po', at^out 40 miles north of Salem, and says tiiai if he ies«b^s>G6yIm|tpn,. winch they suppose ho will do with* m'ost'of ufs'-^rces.^but with loss of material, he will be safe. Thesame paper air.i-ses Hunter of destroying a great amount of private property and stealing a large number- of wagons, horse^and cattle. ?

Tho same paper' aTsopMiys ifiat Wilson des­troyed a train^Of -^rs^ | f^df# i t l f c^ tU) i i mid tttrnTtur«p)UMeajfhe^e43^buad^igp=«fcc,, at Burkesville and destroyed spme of the tract and was still pushing south. All (he railroad* leading iiitt>-Mehmond>are now destroyed ami some of them badly.

A dispatfelr from'<3en. Sherman, received thi» morning, reports that yesterday noon. J i"K' - •• an unsuccessftil attack was made by our fore * on the enemy's position, which resulted in a lo-s to us of between ?0OO aud 8000. The following ptirficnLiKaregivtm': ••' '

^tPubnatott^my^iirdersofthea*!!!, ademoa-stration was made 011 e^ch ffank of the enemy, especially dowuthe"sS£ndyHvii road. At & A. <i. Geil." MePherwW alti^ked at the south « est ta.d ot Ken a*# andThouins, ut a point abom mde further south. At the same time the skirmishers audar»illeryin>fiir.th? 'whole 'lihe kept up » suarp tire. Neither aitauK sucoeeJ d, «>i" '-» u^SlumnsrSs^ildj|i^eneBty'i» works. *tt">» ar«- very strong. „'

Geu. Md'heruontefiorishis'lHSs at about out) and Tuomas *b«HH|im -3f3w*ios|-ij.p.riicui.ir-ly heavy uj geneMOtid tielfl bin- en?. G.i>. H o ^ i f s r S ^ 4 | « i b e m«jr.allyTW"WJe4> abo Col. Dan M6Cook1commamtni«Hbi%«de, v-i. Ktce, 57th Ofiio/T*if sferibusly, dis. Bnuhull,

ae i River canal - it ^s ing forward to the

Jii4 to which lie was o 1|§A dispatch from Grai

.sjjf§at yesterday's Richm M f n i o n cavalry- fj>sce, ut

-sMleade's corps at Prince ' ^ i p a miles sooth of Peters M* Up some miles of railroa

n 1 also some miles ot t d 1-ailroad, a consia P t ersburg, moved nex

S. railroad connecting rg and were, day be

> t up also- j

«W*|1E#|* AH*usttm55tVl^, fcitlud. and GeiV . ..,.. , .

Thomas abjut as ma»y,;4>ui 100 n«t sup»«*st weinBicied-buayyloas upou the euemv,Bas he fcpvctow oeflm* niM*»r*p«i*- - • *»-

No other mWta^uOieiligentwAa? been re­ceived by Mfe*T3i|pSfto»fii * , i _„ X T

__!*'

», Jone^S.

THE VIRGINIi

T h e »©»»•* c , a i •n ie » ^ Wedn.

Great Damage DOT

Tfce FetefsbWffh *•!< 1 by o a r

The1 Bneimy Forced :

Ci i -cat ViamHge to o u r SI

1TTACK OIV CEKE

1

The Triburn's army d'n t- s : The rebels attack

on on Friday. Bom re allowed to rush int'

f destructive fire was open soon surrendered. On

•^sixty-five were unhurt, Slltkill' d or mortally wound •iws T h e riiclwnond Exam

victorv on Wednesday.' uen from two lines of

nearly two thousand ; pf artillery, and eight sta

The Enquirer says not _Iunter's whereabouts.

Idone is very extensive. uive been plundered ol

s-and other stock. Every jfiic utility was destroyed

<m$ The^r«raW*«brre»p<»i I f f t ies / in Wednesdays fig I S and missing, approximat

* % S a rebel officer that ou: § § South. m The Weld's dispatcli » permanently hold the Pe

M Railroad sohfh. This wi M Oth corps driving Hill's ci wp Other important movemc

The Wort<Cs dispatch " fight: The whole of Pie ^ of another Were eaj^tured

J The Times'" dispatch of Tjeen leirnecl this mornin Hill's corps are moving b

i | | Beanreirard's main a m m burgh, while LCe's forces S A rebel doctor says ou M is very disastrous. S The rebelB are marchit ti ing to gnar.l against our

f The World's ^special sii attacked at Wilcox's L river I>y a tlarge rebel 1

•p were promptly sent to h *"" lars. , Col. Havyley writes t

tli.it a c.tptured Alabamia on the Richmond and said that ouir -men were catching Geu. Lee, who v Richmond-

'W

S p e c i a l

T E l I t t E B X I N G , J The Ladles of T rou t Riv*r an.

•Uw Union Chorch, (Brick 9 n . o r ' ; E l i ^ r , u t . l o'clock. P . M,. -lolv 4 raWnit- fund* to aW in tho- f Chii-ch A'Wreapes from various 1 An e.1i-!fnt choir will be presenl the f i ne in singing some select Arnem.-Hn money or 80 cents »ii»-fuuv-tavited to a t tend P«»

Trout River, J u n e 16th, 1864.

D f t f i S S M ^

•I

m

Jliss J A S K G»*bisKB with Mrs. J M . n e r ' s a r e coOtinaiiUjr receivir fmin new Vork \\.ad)HaipTepa.ttc the u ( c » i s ty les a n d Dest m»m far liUe* f >r st i iBping. Also, the fa.-li!->iMl>le ami l)eaalifol methnc for . |ie9!H«.cloaks, &e. Ami all em .r.n.lery, *c , will be e x e c a t e i

Malone, April «2S, 18«4-tf .

C. C WmTTKUer has m a d e CHARLES P A U D " C £ forfhe pu rpos

: nesa of manufacturing Woolen C Par t icular at tention *iil »lso be r

' Cloth eressing. Our manufac tur t h e o W C o t t m Factory buiidini: c l a g e o f Malone. The most of tl a n d we expec t to c o m m e n c e o i J u n e . !

Mr. PADJIOOK Is a n experienced

exc'lnstve at tent ion to the manul h o p e t o t a e r i t a-l iberal sh»re of tl pa id for'WooU

'C. 0. WHITTEL8EY*.

A C S I V B K S A L UTED eat , by t he a t r we b rea the , or b can be m»dp 8ie|c; o r by fat tgoe, by heat , because t he se effects en. blood. T ° regain heal th we mas organs of t he a tymach a n d bowel

-t inuc in t he regjilar performanct haa ad^lgned Ihejm. ai id sbonld t t -w.iat does expe r i ence p o i n t ?

TO BKANORKTI -which canno t injure, a n d which w •to the regular per formance of thi " T h e d y s p e p j a t h e bil lons w i heal th , and the »ame may b e fa i t ^ a y — t a k e Brandre th ' s Pills a n d spectable dealers in medicine*.

T H E O R E A T ESTCM SIR JAMES C

Celebrated Pe: tPROTECTEl?

T B Y ROYAL

Prepxrtd from, a pi-etcription phtftii-ian Extraoro%iU

Th"« tovalnaole medicine is ui thoBe p*mfai and -dangerous dl» •eonsttttu-ioa U sabject,, It moder all obstacles, surf a speedy enre I

' * 0 M A B K I B I It Is petmlWrly Sotted. . It will, ii monthly period (with rsiutarity.

Each bottle, price One Doll Stamp of Gtttt jBritttoytp pttn

i GA.$T*ri Thrie Pittothould nat-betttt

i stf-e to bring OH SlUearriaa**.* m are««/«. . _ • I .-. , . in *H c«es of NerrouHa,nd;si>l

Back »nH liimhs, r«itgn* on slit, the Heart. Hysterics. .Jjl4 WMte cure when «01 other mgant:*W powerful remedy;, do not contain or ahything hartml to the const* - Fdll atrectloOSTn Ihe painj* whitfh shoul.l be carerally presen

SOLD BY ALL 3 Sole Agent for theJOntteil States i

JOBMOSE»,8T< N B—$100 »nd 6 postage »Ut

Ue-i Agent, wlli tnsare a botUe, e turn mail. ^^____

It, thts *JH»ge» at the reridenc. •hv Rev i. K. tlerrick. Mr. it B»ngor, and »ll* JANE « . W81

A i the Baptist Chorch, to C1M ST the «e». «r "tsb Tne, Hr JC U»rriB V BE«aN,danghte»«r ^h-iteingsy

f n this town, on the »th ioft., Mr rav»cis'P. BoW&?i>

,^,

JiissjJASEirE M. sUW)WJJoN. : jlni briile^ooo will aeeept ooi

>Wtisasiio«>s»i>«ayln||theaboTe.