The New York Herald Newspaper, October 27, 1862, Page 2

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2 NEW YORK HERALD, MUNDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1862. a Y= - eye. (4 my ~ " ‘ ‘ al poe tor off, in this respect, than somo of the best soldiers and | that be had not the: meral y the uame the famous Ciscten One touching Aran goetionen tal ne and eke ae cir oie peop and the of Ui paraea or arse taking forthe ‘ habe Se ae ead : erteert d the government y (or- | scienge, t manner from other wet - pa. to General Leo's army over 20, 000 gar: and | With such a as this before the Lincoln adminis | por It the limits of Avy, auction: * * thie e we finda or of ‘H BERTAON, Secretary, alarge shipment of shoes. This number uf garments, tration, what ‘their own people think of the madness | may and the same for and seven — . the “o tag as eabalets 7 Spoken, ae. allowiug & coat, pair of pants and sbirt to @ man, will | of their government in precipitating a war upon the coun- | notice. One dullar and thirty two cents. = aortain umber of wooden putmegs, Ship Sylvanus Blanchard, from Dalhousie for Falmouth, furnish suits say (or 10,000 needy men. This wili go far | try, the end of which no man could or can see? What of if the supply of salt manufactured be not amounted to upwaras of fty thousand dollars ‘which gost him one-fourth of a cent a picco, with real nut- | ay, wo iat he. towards relieving (he more destitute, The government | Mr. Seward’s repeated ictions that the war would | furnish the people of this Commonwealth with a market continues animated, and speculators are baying S36 tere , and selis ee sears Wa Wait, from NOrleans for Havre, Oct 3, lat 23 bas in its employ in this city Gfty-eight tailors, who cut | end in thirty or sixty days, when he bad before lim the | quantity of salt for home consumption, then as soon as | with avidity. 46, and $3 75 by tho fraud. How ine Fanos ciieh ined. pm esse out the ‘clotm, aud 2,700 women, who make it up into | declaration of the most experienced military man in the | such fact shall appear to he will exercise a i 1 Bute were there? P. 124. > Oct 19, going out com timore Remeron, garmonts—the whole turning out on an average 9,000 | United States that,even under the best military guid- | the authority vested in » and an} the oe one te otha. Coavention, held at Syracuse, ‘Bark ie ous yo for Boston, O¢t'11,\lat 82 | arments per week, or coats, pants and shirts for 3,000, | ance, a war of invasion would be a war of years, attended | tract made with the States of the Conf (From tim ington -) souraal, . ) = ’ 4 fon77 3 frere are other establishments in other parts of the con- | by frightful destruction of life and property, and ending, | States”’ until the State of Virginia is supplied. 06.i- te Faverternas, Oct io : Foreign Ports. federacy where omnia is being nuanufactared for | i/ successful, in the destructicm of @ free form of government? wet salt 18 procured b} the, State of «Virginie, and une = ae oo tat, Fags. re \ enc m7 us nite Sept aS--Arr ships Jumns, Preoman,, 6 inca the army, force engaged is sufficient, per- constituted agents shail ‘game for transporta- + Becswax, 00. Corn, i ‘Corton, | there % 7 " haps, to turn out 20,000 garments a week. At This Trouble in the Rebel Navy. tion on the route of any canal, railroad, or other im- fae Cotton yarn, id & 84 50 por, a saomm Ber geen mit nes trthdix. ee 13th San Vint Be ry rate, estimating our army’ {a the field at 400,000 men, [From the Richmond Enquirer, Oct. 14.) Provement company, the same shall bo immediately .. For Family, $37, aper, 628 _— Prosbytorians 0} maa)’ 8 Giliersiecver MoCuliues,, Ghiscnee fend, sid it would require more than A year to furnish each man ‘70 THE RDITOR OF THE ENQUIRER. Sransported 10 the depot designated, wiless such trass- | Grosw, 180-6 Ue: Gey, ano. Garcia. Poff FT dy ord est ae for Holland); Atalanta, Eastinan, London for Chinchas Ds i Pleiades Winslow Rio Janciro (and sid 18th for Ontuches): or | : i! ‘tation will interfere with the trangportation of troops, with a sincle suit of clothes. If we suppose the ‘The article under the caption “Promotion i the Many Lat - -— ~~ 50. Gais, | deliver one of his powerful and olaborate sermons. A bE ki, Gould, Acapulco (and ald 20thfor C} 3 y- | chas) ietta, various government establishments will be able to supply | which has recently appeared in your columns, is 80 munitions of war and army supplies of the Confedorate 200,000 met: by Christmas, there wil still be 200,000 leit, | juistakably the reduction of an individual recipient of | €overument. Upon refusal of such company to trans. | $1 25. Swe a} Bae Ey Sr nee | ieee oorigune Was Blurgis, Cook: Go Candia and fcr Rage who will have to look to the at home for their | he favors flowing from the late enactment of Congress, t the said salt, the constituted agent of the State will pwede] ‘Balt—Sound, $12 60 for 60 ibe. when the President ‘ in ‘Y+ | jand); 224, Astrea, Simpson, do (and sl ‘26th for do); 234, utats, or go without clothing, “Ifthe government shou! | glowing a limited number of uaval officers to be pro: | D@ Suthorized to take control of any such work, and to | Dsnaburgs, fre. Salt souna, $i and latroduced a gentieman | 100) ,5. Lene, do (and ald 24d for do), Provide for $00,000, the number left for the country to | moted for ‘gallant or meritorious services,” that in this | Manage ‘he same watil the transportation be accom Corn whisky, o's 88. “Apple bres, 85 Fe eee Outeaan Sem! aemeom Mectends i tom Vitula, Bursley, Chine! f # ! m clothe would still be frightfully large—100,000 men. reply | shall be constrained to keep prominently in view ‘These figures are merely rough estimates, and are oly | this fact, or assumption, that I may the better illustrate | pareial Suspension of the C intended to serve the purpose of directing the atteation | (ho evils flow ing from the execution of the law as it is, By a general order, dated inchs, 28, ship Enoch Talbot, Talbot, from Chiu- THE QENERALS, | mat {© conversation with some of gins top peek Gages ah om le Aasombiy while FE ere, Sas presen tock, bis a eit . ‘rbd "Freda i u i ‘of the people to the magnitude of the labor before them. . the 2d ingt., issued from the "Oct 10—Arr Peterson, Phi After the goverument shall have done all it ean. there | ber than for any purpose of attacking the law itself. | | army headquarters in Richmond, ‘the execution of the foro am Matas orks nother Beta eer Seat will sti be much left for the warm hearts of the people {snot moruly fo conviuce the navy, ihe poagle at | Sct approved April 16, 1862, cotamoaly called the Con- ‘The Rebel Major General Holmes. NYork, to perform. If they would accomplish this labor in timo | taree and th a Seana navy, ‘at | gcription act, and of all the amendments thereto, is sus- wx, PEI, Oct 9Arr sehr Cecilia, Jenkins, bod esses pA on ge are - yin fest vol yd me Sosarem ca she. aes Seopeiats of the See Be pended by direction of the President in the States of Ken- The rebel General Holmes, of whom wery little wae £ ® the vieieity, into whose family Genoral | NYork. i dank eT ' : Set about it too soon. The weather among the mountains | gt indeotng Congress, at least, to conclude that, the pay, ane nena. 09 53 those States will, until | heard in the early anes his connection with the rebels, py married. This was the oaly glance wo s Bansen Oct vessel in port. t i0—Arr schr Enchantress, Devereux, Boston; ealoy. Monit. SaEl 17th, set “Anua Clapp, Prat, Seon: was the danghter of Dr George Junkia, ig California, Camm, Mariel, i 3 abe Oat are ahta Gaselé, Swain, Philadelphia; pie, Smith, Malaza, io Northern Virginia is already cold io the man who | jaw itsoit being a geod one, no evil eclrad sieeps upon the ground, with no teat to sbeiter him from | Spnrehonded froma firm adherenoe to it. This being the | wader the act passed by the Cont the rain and dew, with no shoes upon his feet, with bo | prominent intent of the writer—well knowing, as hedoes, | {2 she wnted.>> Dianket to cover him while he sleeps or stands guard for | the universal dissatis{action occasioned among naval men | *# S¥#Pe 8 33 i & i z & B H : & i a & ing. For some time he commanded the Nerth “ Ec us, ind with only tattered, dirty and threadbare gar- | py the recent promotions under the law—I shall procced The ‘tion La: State troops ; but uow be commands im Arkansas, having Jacuxt, Oct $—In port Br brig John Butler, for NYork 3 Mente upou his manly limbs. to refute his arguments by a simple narration of facts rene Roananbenshens: Hest or his immediate opponent the Union General Bugeoe : poy Let the peopie, then, everywhere, and in whatever cit- | leaving the instructive moral to be deduced therefrom. (Prom the Bich onvabar 8.) py Poaske SHIPPING NEWS. J veRreOt. NS, Oct 19—In port new brig G Wheelw: umstano’s, commence the good work as soon as possible, | “But frst, let me deny the writer's assertion that nav: ‘or parties in NYork. loaded, and ready to sail for tl It and vever leave it off until the best and bravest army in | oficers ‘Object to the principle of promotion, by for the world shall have been furnished with all the comforts | merit, or for gallant achievements. It most probably | ‘2% it may be in our power to bestow. Let usnot stop to in | guj ie ory caee ty lates tue fad adier elbte he Oe Siting to eptne Prov lene, ¥hieh. hago heen. shawn Gilge our indignation against the government for 1ts having, as F believe, “studied to live long and 9 Wants of provident foresight and its cruel neglect, but let | ably,” achieving only the merit of baving achieved bis | courts of the South, of ‘competent jurisdiction, that tho Us rather clothe the naked and supply the army first, and f hi ‘in rank, as in , then hold the authorities to a just accountability. promotion Seite: beds ol Say Preto Mn Wiehe. a pron cannot recover debt due to eiten, enemy's ; | : ! . brig Machias, Shoppy, Tatragona; Sd, ix years of age, but looks several yours older, in couse Machina, Sb racer quien of duagpelseants oad @s walter taed BuO ostomy Au ci ae ene led on the frontiers and elsowhore in bis younger days, ‘| Port of New ¥ ‘ i when he first hold a United States commission. He is « eee Oe MOM, enreln One Po rele tae ith, Mohawk, And who is so indigent aud who so miserly that he can- a y citizens of the Confederate when it aj y | native of North Carolina, and was appointed from thet ARRIVED. * Staples, Baltimore. i aot goutribute something to the relief of such troops as | own Auvvoacy of the ugerity systema,” The peactice | Me AUEWEF Of the debtor that the same are evidenced LY | seate tothe West Polat Military Acadewy is 1435, grate fraens Mins Commandec Debuiguos Aydaey, | ronan lig: Br beiga ADOY P Penis for NEark S anja; La @urs? Though destitute, ag we have represented them to | of the navies of vhe Old World is to promote for gal- ald oo p nermcren ae pig -teen inn tue, for’ FOS Me Feeds } ting four years afterwards in the olats «f which the rebel General Kobort K. 120 is mow the best knows reprewn- | O%,'® 5 tative, On the 1st of July, 1820, Cadet Holmes became aS and though many of them have gone without feod for | jane and meritorious seryices—the conjunction, and not , . days together, and that at time when they were making | tho preposition “or,” has been used in framing our law— | Would almost entirely fail in the — Beery oa Tong marches and hghting bloody battles with the eme- | peing deemed the essential concomitant to entitle one to | Stcs*, As it Seer ia Gentine ia reeeind mies of our country, still they are cheerful. patignt and | the houore under the law. ‘This seems perfectly plain; | Quemies te, oeidemced by negotiable netes, probably in Fesolute as ever, and are ready now, as they hive been at | but, however it may be, I belfeve it to have been the un: | {he'hande of ‘the alien credwors, and which ae produced! Strarrs or Dover, Oct Passed, ship Expounder, rope Antwerp for Kiyande eee eR ee Soutuamrtox, Oct 10—Arr steamship New York, Wenke, NYork for Brea id ). Brevet Second Licutenant, and was attached to the pnts. Oct Pmart brig Goean Abid Morton, NYork. Sid wee itr brig Planet: Coombs, NYork. Seventh regiment of infantry, iu which be served for be sete Gone, pyr Pate. Liverpool, 3 | ee yin Nis, Oct W—are coh Boyd, Kirwan, NYorks, long period of twenty-six years before he obtained is Rees, (Pres Hill, 69 cays, with coat, | Tain:Dad, Out 2—Arr bark Mary, Gibbs, NYork: J all times, to assert their birthright to be free. If the in- i Yader thinks ditferently be has only to se:k them where | moted the eiliioncy ot the canal mvice ehersbg Tan, ‘they are, and he wil! soon be cured of his folly. unable to say positively that the framer of the law had R " vii — maiority, J March, 1835, 0 for @ full second, “oy, jonas, America: i. ‘ b ls ebel Rat improvements, mite ” merges f <Sor), Martnosem, Cardiff, 42 days, withcoat | nostom, = i Wo pubis Tom the Mobile Tribune, Oot 1. guly in view the prométion of @ favorite, who aspired | Ip the rebel Senate, on the 24 instant, the House bill to | lieutenant occurred in the régiment of dragoine, and Liew ~ Cook onk etre ni ones een, ates . sland: : » Philadel tenant Holmes was appomted to it, but declined the pro- motion, preferring to remain in the infantry. After this he acted a8 regimental adjutant for some time, and finally wes promoted to a first Houtenancy in his own regimen (March, 1885). Three yoars afterwards, in December u 18 Morning @ sad accountof the condition | {2 4istination fn paths allied to the service,” The sphere | enabi jent te provide means for military trans- Of our Virginia army, Iu reference to it the Savaunah | of naval action is legitimately upon tho waters; the r8- tation’ vy the 001 of a rend: between Blue Regublican, whose language we adopt, says: — wards should be rigidly confined to performances within fountain, in Alabama, and Rome, in Georgia, passed: Ti att no force to be urgency of the appeal, and that. sphere, exept a ory Fare canes, where _anere | Ayes 1 ; hays 4. é : ¢ melancholy and hewt-rending pic- | morit, uncouy wi ry. may be so conspicuoue 7} ppeat a Me heart of every patriot will bleed as his eyes | as to have elicited the attention of the nation at large. pie Sipeecutly: ecter thie importest work The oval sis record of Suffering and distress. In bea- No one will deny that Commander Mathew F. Maury is | entire grading is to be completed by the ist of May next, ¢ « schrs Juniata Fate iT mond, Gerrish; Ellen, Rawley; Ella, Martin, and Wm Gre- ore; Trade Wii son; Pearl, Brown; jaxter; J R Pla- 8 Ed. wey Saar & ‘ ord, Olangow, tas, Kibo, Stauth, Turks ant myth RTE. faves at on te ae Haldia, Brove tangs, mhelast toll Bester. nd, Co Haitha Wiaehtington Be f bi Eyirag is ncklin, Baltit to im in. . "wh f 8 is Sait b wes ee M Dyer, and Yor fn, Bait wv Heiter the, of buntorinn’), Pialay, Oreonock, 8 | eeiie Miday Demis tines Fines teeta goa | ballast, to order. inet, lot ‘7, passed | and Chariotte Shaw, ves. Philadelphia; Erie, Coombs, # tata AW) ‘Suhe. Ocean Wi ‘ven’s nam it not be a record of our shame. And now | & Mevitorious officer; bat his merit is intrinsic rather | under a heavy penalty. Already a mile or go of it is | 1838, he was made full captain, aud, therefore, took ve. Jet the people go 10 work all tho people, men, women | than manifested by special actions, and #20 ke could not | one, and a ia eee ey tee Aes engaged upon it | command of company ©, Duriag the ictenn warts wan | “take hake Gee Retin, Wnoes he Oe 9, wien coatbe bc, f SPA ren Belen: Sachs Rilleabete ports: Coons a aad childrea—and d6 suznething for the brave, yet nuked | hope to be promoted. every day. e number of hands will ‘increased a , pe, rf Gated tn onmpeny with Br Orig. |. Gon. Pruner Wie, Neevanted abo uate Minnesots, ‘and half starved soldier Whe 18 lighting for their liberties, | But to facts. Those who are not conversant with naval | shortly to titteen hundred, and it is said the grading will | °ngéged with his company in several conflicts at Monte. | jy for omy from Ouit of Resins bare Nougaturn. frou Liverpoats aise: Many are able to do very milth, and a little Com all | affairs will be surprised to learn that, out of the five com- | bg done by Christmas, perhaps. rey, and was brevotted major for galiant and merttorious ‘AV Goothur (Br. of Yarmooth, NS). Williams, Man. bark Arthnr Pickering, ftom NQrieas Haig will pjace the entire ‘army beycud the reach of | mauders made under the law, but one—certainly not conduct, the brevet being conferred in April, 1847. It Oct 3 with to Tdames, ith inst, int $4.15, | from Baltimore. | 8 for one bark and two want and suffering. Let it be givem,aud promptly. | more than two of the number—have been under the fire ‘426, passed robe from Mansauilla for N sweamer Saxon, Mat! ‘8, Phila ; barks We trembie for our noble troops when we think | of theenemy during the war, Tho purpose of the law | The Keeper of the Richmond Bastile. of the approaching winter. To work elficientiy thare must | Was to promote ‘or gallant and meritorious services some | The Richmond Beaminer of the 3d inst., bp hpi bs unton and organtzation among the people. Then, let | very few, five being the highost number eligible in any | 7. D. Jeffress, C.S. A., has been assigned to the command Soldiers’ Aid Assvciatious be formed in every county and | grade, Spe Doaiedecate Rashes smllitary psinote: Kngwa, 98 thy Reighborhood of the Confederate States—tho smaller the | Those who are not conversant with naval affairs will be | Libby,” corner of Twentieth and Cary streets. Captain distrfet the better—and jot all lend a helping hand to the | surprised to learn, further, that the conspicuously gallant | Jeltrees was attached to the Fifty-sixth Virginia regiment, good cavise, Lot the men supply the mouey and the ma. } and meritorious officers (in the world renowned action of | 8&4 was with Gener John 2 oa a ake tees terials, and th: women seo that the latter are wrought | the Viiginia, alias Merrimac) Tucker, Barney, Parker and | Kentucky and poy cer A also serv rye nto comforts for the soldier. With but half an effort, | Catesby Joncs—all with separate commands—hayo not | Of Gaines’ Mile and Hrazier's Dam, around Richmond, even in spite of the great scarcity that pervades the | obly not been promoted, but they havo M@ffered the mor. | Where for gallant oe woven me Toon whole country. we can plice our army beyond reach of | tification of having had’ their juniors placed over their | 2onorable mention in the brigade report. was, however, dated back to the 23d of September, 1846. After the conclusion of the Mexican war, Brevet Major Holmes served with his rogiment in various parts of our Western possessions, chiefly in Texas aud New Mexieo, He also served sn Miasouri. 1853 be was stationed at Fort Washita, Choctaw Nation, his company the fort; and in 1857 he was commanding Teloor a1 Bort Stanton, New Mexico, which, at that time, wee an im- portant post, garrisoned by companies of the Mounted Riflemen, Seeond artillery and kighth infantry. In 1960 Major Holmes was detailed for the general recruiting ser vice, and appointed Superintendent of the Kastern divi- vip rot. Ri ‘amt Coast of Africa: Fury, Ray, Gibraltar wait Basle Me, of Boar River, 8S), Parker, Bast Harbor, FY Wits Banh ou Baittnores Tige devo Ui), Ravn Se mae i. Packer, Cape ytien ; rs Edits ek {Be tray, Dorchester. KB. 1Odays, with | Raker, Weuera’ Calan ng i Philadeiphia: "i's d eateges Cry Sine nie Bid, wind 8 hip Od Dominion; brige Eastern State Scie Ponsa, | ORAL om, on 2 ag tr Rumbas (Mog re, Be % ath: 5 Bre foodiand wen, 448 tone), Peoscntt, Dep, River, Ot, | fund, and lack, Alexandria: sches'E MeLaia, B wom bere'by evna ming dM Lewts | tan, Portland; Wave, Bally lle Cla ach HAG he Manet, eof Aaaa sie, Delty, Saccuel, Oot | ama, itineu Nev eltord Commerc, Danicls, N York. rt \ Howell, Sehr Hace Coombe, Gridin, Lingsa, CBM days, © B—Arr sehr Yankee Blade, Colby, donas for lifork. Bid whip Hope (new, 147 tons). flat want. Begin immediately, work diligently, and work | heads by the snap judgment under which the existin Thead \ ENCE Ulleore, Cheer, Washingwe, 6 tage, Oittabe Comme withdel Sealnge ap lye work jaw ip left to be executed. 3 Carpets for Soldiers’ Clothing. pacts ay Serie teecnoren preeoen thoy of Yon Schr Bice Faneeen? re eH, Weta Te aR: A hadds ‘The other day a member cf Congress stated that the ‘he command of Farrand, at Drary’s Bluff, saved the (From the Mobile Tribune, Oct. 7.) Stanton to Capt. Claiborne, then an officer in the Mounted An ‘extern ‘Isle; © A Greiner. ¥¢ ney apprehension for the comfort of the army next winter is | City of Richmond from certain capture. His reward was Savannah is up and doing in behalf of our suffering upnecessary—that the government will be abundantly | displacement after having made the fight, and more re. | soldiors in Virginia. A public meeting has been held, able to supply it with clothing, &c. This was not denied | cently his junior has been passed over his head. And so | 8nd prompt feasures taken to secure at once clothing for by any of the members. We must, however, doubt its | it has been with Cook, whose gallantry at Roanoke Island, | the army. Messrs. W. H. Wiltberger & Co., proprietors accuracy, for how is it possible to suppose it to be true | im the defence of his vessel, was most meritorious. There | of the Pulaski House, have offered the outire stock of when such a picture ws that we are alluding to stands | are other cases, but the most grievous one remains to be | carpets of their establishment to be converted intocover- Riflemen, now a rebel, and, proceeding to New York, re- lieved the late Colonel (then Major) Electus Backus, on the 30th of June, 1860, and took up his quarters oa Governor s Island. In the meantime he had beca promoted to a full majority in the Eighth tufantry, his commission Dearing date March 3, 1855. For some time Alen Downing. Rice, We ‘oung, Rox: yary ; Knach Mosre andy. Boston; BE ‘Bont, Ferra, Union, Heard, ory: Iaabel Alpert, wo Reet tA Hoduers, Bodgers, Newt N ow! 4 hateit Portland; ilelen’ Mar 4 right before the face of the government? recited. I allude tothe appointment of Bullock to the | ing for the soldiers. Some idea of the munificence of the ‘ ker, Parker, NI A Natt, grade cf commander; trom elvil life, over the Reads of ail | donation may be formed shen we state that it comprises | Prey “tual autor ““itutmes “would relimyuiga ns "Norwich: Fx iene Peres iowony Car We Cannot Live Together. the lieutenants of the navy preper, some seventy odd in | the carpeting of one hundred and twenty rooms, and when “ . eLnliee. 3 ver, Young, Bristol, RI; atom, ‘Taylor, commission as 300n as the secession of North Carolina, his native State, ia which he had considerable property. a tila ge Queen. narenet, Hal both in land and slaves, was au fait accompli. Not toug cute, Lord Pre a From the Richmond Dispatch . 18. number, including se who have since been promoted | cut up will make over five hundred arial Hughes, iu aopecen which wo sete to the | fF «gallant and mecitorious services,” and quite a num- | sized blankets. fortable and good Lewis, Del, Oct 2A. bark in this morning, sup- ee) 9 be the Washington Kutoher yn Trimidad. scish Dabo declared “24 7 ber who have not been promoted for gallant and merito. ae bet 3 sinned ie d... " he vit Z ty inde a nor of Bullock, 5 . 4 oe tipo chore ang oe focamrtish'd | piaced on record his protest against being made, touse | Tue Knoxville oorrespoddent of the Mobile Advertiser | te step he subsequently ‘ook. When he resigned ne Bruith Portian!, Conn, 2 days. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. looked like a prematurely old and broken down man, notat all likely ever to*be capable of going into active service again. In the Army Register for 1861 Major Holmos stood num. ber nine in the liueal list Of majors of infautry, and by this time wou'd Lave been a full colonel had he remvnod true to the flag under which he fought bravely in Mexico, His eldest son, The philus, was appointed bby President his own lavgnage, a firebrand in the navy, by being | and Register, under date of the 25th uit., says of the ord- solution. This, we believe, was substantially his cleclara ‘Of mon who had always ranked | nance department in Kpoxvilie:— tion, though we have not now his speech before us, and | Placed over the i sp! é ‘ d vy Department that all that he I visited yesterday the foundry, armory, magazine, deca th “ was, that he mig! upon the naval register in ; wee arc ialined 0 hing that dey are ninceros snd tyes | the Flative position he would have occupied had he never | Thi department is ove of the most important in the scr- rather than give up the bovefits of the Union the North | Tesigned. Mea Leys ap ated Harrap ral pace poe -girenDheat br caine Es ponent Bear 0 Rehr § Rookitll, for Row Bewnay, Oct. 26, 1862. Sant Jonathan te a ee Priedet | ‘The export of produce, merchandise and specie transport), Allen, Washington, | for the week ending yesterday was more than mT Cipde (U8 tremapert), Langhiia, Witming twiee the aggregate amount of the importations ‘ r ‘There is much magrstirity in his course; yet had his | Tience tn its admivistration. The department at this post i a . Wel, tan bon ign goods. Besides and . Tosh pomnngenbe merely phen “Rne | Wishes merely been complied with there would stilt have | bas Sted out thousands of mon with arms in ail ts dit: | MCh wen ut ‘hie father's, resignation bay 1" | “Rieamer Alita, Rubianon. Phitetsiphin, of foreign produce specie, of London Herald scems to labor under apprebensions of the | Femiined some forty leutenants who would have felt | ferebt branches, and has been conducted with the great- | ni. “going there. Young Holmes, now almost cizhteen proses: Wesoboume on 2 expat 6 ahish we hewe on sushantie Fecery possibility of such a result, and justly concludes that ir | “¢¢0!y, as all have beoa made to feel, the implied stigma | est ability by the chief of ordnance, Major 8. H. Reyuolds, years old, is a captain in the Confellerate States army Br ‘ + ~ Provicense ot the Custom House, there wad sent abroad last She South was not safe undor the old constitution it never | WO thelr professional capabilities in having an outelder | who, in the discharge of his arduous duties, has won uni- | "AS" 4° cantain, Gcueral Holmes is extremely well | Woodland in tow. nn tT cai of ould be under any {ramed by human hands. The South | Maced over their heads, and this done at time when, for | versal esteem and popularity. en of by men who have served under him | Wind at sunset a ase amount-of Amesican. ccoust- never asked a etter constitution than tn? old Am:rican con. | the moet part, these very eiticers were serving, us they | I tears that (he, Rresdent nos subwitted to Congress looked after the affairs of his company porsoually, in- * om, oem tion, chiefly Illinois Central stock and bonds. Se yet it pre és opty could, will arny, ere DO nays ti i , = > pore any wane aby melt. gg oa Reith aking pet a ila lal ag seal ‘© | volunteering, aa well as allowing regiments to be formed Fy eecpeants' fae’ cosaegiiaiad ces, thas roees: Seager Shipbuliding. &e., in New York. Whether @n equal amount was received from y violated with impunity and ber tanthitons tree: Whilst no one pretends that the country bas not the | and recoived, instead of sending the volunteers to Oil up | Homes had the most ehicient company in the Soventh TRON FOUNDRIES AND MACHINE SHOPS. Harope-it ia known thet some securities heve ened with overthrow, more gradual, but a3 inevitable unquestioned right to,pince any of ber sons in positions | other regiments, as is dono in the Case of conscripts. infantry. It has been stated that Holmes was ag habitual | fn addition to the work beiug done im the Morgan free | been coming over—there is no means of ascer- that which Lincoln has lately proclaimed. “| where their merit can most conduco to her interests and drunkard. ‘This {3 not correct. Asa young man, he is | Works and the Noveliy Works, we presem! our roadeus with No payer tan, boweret plaialy ‘and: explicitly success tn this great strnggle for freedom, all feol the Prise ners from Bomsncein. tinderstoad to have. been rather *faxt;” but afior his | the folowing information ato what deus aes eke’ bes | MME: ‘The Pritish journals, in their exaspers- ¥ ~ ~~ | slight—nay, @ act }, Oot. T. ~ -~ timable lady, to whom be was m :ch attached, died rather suddenly soon after he took command of the rocraiiing servieo, and this metancholy event had a great effect upon the Major, who never afterwards appeared like the same man, Mrs, Holmes is buried in the graveyard on Gover. nor's Island, and the tablet orected to her memory boars, underneath her name and age, thie touching inseription:— “She made ber husband a Chr It is a pity that listory wili have to add “But he became « rebel , ; " eleven prisoners, who were taken about a week ago by @ tod with their own rights under the ld constitution | !@e:mmand, by deliberately passing over their heads, h e ° tl i ; ty of our cavalry about threo miles from Pensacola. x ae If more commanders were needed why were not the A we e SE ee ae ory are weae Of man to tame | selections made from the naval Meutenants for the pur- | that if they will lay dowa thelr arms and give themselves = ae pdateranincueae ialfio es oh, phe ~ | pose’ Tt cannot be pretended that such were unavailable; | uP they would be paroled and their paseage bome would Sethe South han mupered at Northern hande, couid’eh, | either that the requisite qualifications were lacking | be paid. These cleven are mostly Irish, and say that hich the § hands. she they and the balance of them at Pensacola are completely sheet within the range of their numbers. In proof of which pathvon port ft roa eg Tri te live under the same gee | vositicn it is ouly necessary to point to the subsequont | tired of the war, and would willingly give themselves up | | promotions from the list of Cook, North Pogram; and, | On any opportumity if they were certain that they could ¢ care acne Aol ater probably, the author of the very article in question him: | get home without being disturbed or put in prison, They monstrous. ingratitude. et the Sout has givon her | “elf, And, just here, I must draw the contrast of the state that the troops in Pensacola are totally iguorant of 1y, chivalrous couduct of Pegram (in protesting | everything that is going on. They knew nothing of the- blood without a murmur to this contest, it is not be. | Satty: ieee to the service by bie beta place! over | Datties near Richmond or since, aid were under the inn dries and machine shops in this cly and vieiatty. to fart, a | ane At the unshaken resolution of our people in history of the shipbuilding now in progress would wet b | carrying on the war, congratulate themselves that complote without this summary, aa the greater propertion oF river pavigation closes those enormous the vessets being built are wom nere pore hay di which have J for our foret, ct ian Chant asin. BOORLT SA THE AT | imports, and kept the outward flow of coin down it (his enigbliaaamans thoes ane now 10 procemmol comple | to & moderate point, will fall off suddenly, The Two inclined engines for the ferry boa's Hiemion and | London papers are willing to inflict upon theirown of crlingen wre! nwo wanes of people the hardship of dear food, provided only Suit by Webb & Belt for the st nian Perey Sompany “fics | they can thereby injurows, But there ts ne prop iter engines for the vessels now butting jor tive cw that these charitable anticipations will be realized. Death of the Rebel General Anderson, The death of the reve! General George B, Anderson was cause she does not yalue that blood: but because she 4 ression that MoCiellan held Richinond and that the con, | *PB0vnced in a late issue of tho Raleigh Standard. He | Vink ana on tne as ¥ Be : values freedom more than lie or any eartly possession aa tapendueod exatann’s ceet ss Carcieienmel tederlopuee Medi Welecon "* Y died on the 16th inst., at the house of his brotier, Col. | mensions of each 44 in ster eylinder, Btw We were enabled last winter, by the aid of our Precious, more precions than aught else save her honor. ney to be the author of the article signed “Navy”— | We would advise all those who wart to kuow what is | w.G, Amterson, in Raleigh. yx eased was born in Wil Tein erences: | Tllways, to bring to port produce enough to keep ee ee ee ee If promoted—who, whether he be the same person | going on in this war to leave the federal ranks,as they | yyy gton, N.G., in 1837,a d entered the Wost Voint Ac hott. menvore ant | the balance of trade in our favor, and we shall do one om fe flake hands again, under on | cr not, has nevertheless an entity. Non-entity he might | Will stand a good chance olclosing their eyes in’ total ig- “ cram 1 wae ballt by the gorermment. with men who Nave made so many vacant place: } ive been for me but for hia covert attack upon the uavy | BOrance of everything. slemy at the age of seventeen yours, graduating in 1892, e Railway Cou pans. the seme this winter. Most energetic arrange- tn Sowhern households, and whose steel i8 dripping with (he (ho tenth 1 a.class of forty three members. It may not be Lo A ng Soomitmny ety "uk | ments are being perfected on all the trank lines Blood of our brethren and children. in his late transparent effort to defend his own unassailed Exchanged Union Prisoners, For rm Nonwer ‘ ij : pa sti 31 chang’ a have bs eter of eyliuder, 10 f Henceforth we ave two people. If conquered—it forced | Pasition perdu a From the ffichmond Dispatch, Oct. 18] ninteresting to record the changes that ten years nator of ay 4 jor the increase of their carrying capacily, It may P into provincial varsalage—we must deur our condition | autitio me te brouction over the heade ol my bromher | Five hundred and thirty.Gye Yankeo soldiers were | mado im the prospects and positions of these forty-three (orm ty the Ke safely be predicted that more produce will be t with such fortitude as we may. ‘To that which is inevita- | Scors who have (or thirty years stood above me—men | S6nt yesterday, about ten o'clock, to Varina, under a flag | graduates. The cadot who graduated with the highest S:tinter, stroke of Bitoe 18 ae moved by rail to the seaboard this winter th plo to that which involves no culpabilicg of their own— 1 sno have never been found wanting,” &. The other | of truce, to be exchanged. There were uone but privates | pouorg is Tl omas L. Casey, son of Goncral Casoy, andat | [abet eh (ret for the ste: ¢ ben The butti arn the and bravest men may submit. But to volustary | vty eeys, “ the more he considers the subject the more | in the above lot, most of whom looked exceedingly dilepi ce A @ 4 oe “ bh 0 inen: sver done before. ion export continues debasement, to willing paternity with the robbers and | POTIY S038 iit any one can be fuund sv oblivious to | dated, more £0, in fact, than any parcel we have scen | present a captain in the United a noderate, and will mot iacrease very mate! murderers of our people—never, never. The South las | ii7 verite as to object 10 his promotion.” Modest worth, | deapaiched from this place, Some twenty-five or thirty | Of the others, five—viz: Alexauter McD, McCoo'. Meaty ye : ‘ery materially ‘no atnbition to govern (he North. Sho is fighting for no | o.en patriotism that so manfully defends the law, | Vobicles were brought into requisition to iransport the W, Slocum, Milo S. Hascall, David S. Stanley and George | Kis strcct, near the A unless our imports receive a further development. Such object. She only asks now what she asked in the | ihe abuse of which alone makes him meritorious. who were unable to walk. The party, after their arrival | 1, ‘Hartanit—are generals of volunt e colonols | ide Bs 200 ph oe May oy ‘The leading importers agree in the statement that begtaming—to be tet alone, We desire not to make siaves, | “"y, "ie ‘then, most apparent, from this brief history of | at Variua, ewbarked on board the steamer John A. War- | of volunteers; one is a ar army, fif they have ‘and ere sei but tow te Subjects or fellow citizens of deatly enemies. We mut | the promotions under the law, taat the aim and legiti- | Der for For trees Mouroe. , Another fag of truce will start | Yoon are explains: four, iueludis seracn,are | are now cumploy ei in the var . y sent nding orders dire apart. mate onds of the law may be perverted, and the esprit de | ina few days. ees eee dead; tive resicoed previous to the outbreak of the rebel: | wouRpRY OF DANIEL ¥etgo0, ues Gum the other side, But we have so often seen this : canadien. corps of tue service thereby injured. By a simple f cight si ce, while two have boon dismicsod MEL | McLEOD, (From pores ng: ri reno in: paanhinets, dnecting:> eave, tenes St Gome-aeee The bt feet ld! sna i everal Andersen's first appointinent, after leaving the | yrere are being papas ci 4 assertion followed heavy arrivals of forcign 5 Was antatinnis te cined fof reupountbtitcy) which » or twelve it number—cbosen for the most part from fa bE pepe fod y tart Tesas eame time since, | Academy , was to the Second ing constructed by goods that it mast always be received with caa- ‘ Gvageupenthe tathsval tne: Wenn anh ooeaed grade above the individual nominee, to pass upon, the Dy hte Croat th Ore about’ “becing’ | the brevet rank of secoud the Chin tien. mots who, by years of oiland. Inbor, ‘brought upon the | Merits ofeach case rent up for prometion, The opinions } AVte%, EOLA th A made on cronsny the Miseic- | ‘ult 1852. Alter the usta The f he official tables rade ouuntry this bisoay war? Time ‘can bever develope ter. | Of this advisory board will be worth more in arriving at | ‘Bole armies of the fulorals, and, on crossing the Missi. | ‘ines granted to cadets on gradu! he reported for following are t cial tables of the t cnredhiarteatatenieh ave. flicted bye there | tbe fclative merits of naval men than can possibly be the | SIPPi. bo got bea Stories about ‘Texas. We take the | “vty to the commanding cficer at Cariisle Barracks, same style of this port for the week and since January L:— : coumihaieerednenn Y deen iattioted by their | vigmeat of a single individual, who is, under our sys. | Courier a batc crane Stories about Texas. We take the | vengeyivania. and remained there until he joined his i: 2 ieee cook psa co ‘the Souththe ruin is incalculable, One hundred } te™: Necessarily ignorant of both naval men and matver. OO ee eee cxtonded for every family to leave | Toximent out Wost In March, 1856, he ws promoted toa nginre w pre ae a teen penn. . - QUASI NAVY. _ An order ne Mi a 2 Magmenen Bryhn fall second lioutena: ey in the Second cayairy, bat declii UWO inclined engines Ament gw OST OT? thousand brave meu have either died, or their constitu Galveston, it having been determines, as in the case of | 64 the promotion. not wishing to lt outs (the hulls are being built in some ate), SA ined Wry goods. n $ 455,208 865,140 tious broken down, or they are maiined, rendering them Vicksburg, to defend it to the last. This order had been | tween whom aud the cavalry a very stroug fo diameter of ey! . yn Coneral midse..... 1,005.288 090,215 = 2 081.372 & Varden to themselves und to society. The joss in pro- New Rebel Seal Defeated. complied with, €: a by some seven families. The par- | sevorse of uminble, has always existed. Un the 13th of About the 18th of Au propelies Ker) eat tortrey f <EE eheeenieae cbdnaelais Perty cannot now be estimated. Aud where is the ruin | The rebel Congress could not settle upon a seal for the | ties being suspected. their houses were searched; when | [yvomior “urs. he reorived his comtnlactan as frst y dinexster of cyl Zo inches agaas wil the | p:eOlAl for week. $8,062,506 1.400.002 | 9,960,618 to end? From ‘he North there is nothing to hops—fiom | bogus confederacy, and adjourned without adopting one. | the Stars and Stripes were discovered, intended to be | Fic vtouant 1" in August, 1858, was appointed Regi pcp Tae wie Prowtounly rept'd 102,700,420 105,404,088 144,000,968 Earope we cau lok {or no sympathy, Nothing, perhaps, | ‘Ihe two hou-es could not agree upon a device, and acom- | hung out should the (ederals take the city. All those | [lontenait. tne v gindns ‘ . Marat hig eonty orernment for baild. — j could gratify (x emen more than the utter ruin | mittee of conference failed to settle the matter, The fol- | guilty of this treason were taken out immediately and When North Carolina becan.e openly part and parcet of | tng the engl the wheel guniaat Rout to be eon Since Jan. 1... .$196,861,764 106,000,611 147,016,476 of both North and Souk lowing was the Senate's design:— ung. the “Confederate States ot America,” In -April, 180, | stztcied by Tucker: of Brook ym Are te be of the eam Barons oF Proovcn amp Mence annie, ~- = An urmed youth in classic costume; standing beneath, — Lioutenant Ande son, with {early every North’ Caro’ | “WN. tect now omplayessout BO men 1960 1861 tee. rhe Reconstruction Idea. a woman is clinging. The whole is surrounded by a mar. News from York River. linian in the army, resigned bis Commissin,and trans. ea aha i For the week. .... Rene B516A70 6,077 496 {From the Kichmond Enguirer, Oct. 14.) cip of rice, cotton, tobacco and sugar cane. Motto, “Pro [From the Richmond Euquirer, Oct. 14.) ferred hia allegiaice wo the south. He was appotated | DELAMATER'S [RON WORKS, WEST THIRTEENTH | Pfevloenly reptd 494.204 101.596.1168 113,902,008 The Charieston M- wt the ith, pursuing iis -‘phan- | tris ef Focis.”? Late advices from Gloucester county represent (hat at- | iiUidier general. in the Confederate States army, and STREET, NEW YORK meen nena ‘ toms,’ imagives thai the Enquirer bas some idea of a * fairs continue quiet in that vicinity’, the enemy having | PoC ele iin the battle of Sharpsborg, Ml, | , TH iron battery Dictator, one of the ten ordered to be | Since Jam. 1......S7F M0626) 105.191008 Te, reconstruction with the * {ree Siates."" The ground for Stonewall Jackson Administers the Sa- | made 1o offensive demonstration reecotly. ‘Two or three where he received a wound in the foot, which ultimaely pee &, : 4 ne Sa) tact tone over oll ] at Deiaun Exrents 0p Srave, q this «illy apprehension it finds in the following garbled crament. * | gunboats passer up the York river not long siuce to the | Caiced his death. He bas beea-spoken of ns a gallant | hea, and 24 feet depth of hold’ Her twoengines 1861 1882, exteact from the Enquirer of the stu septomber — (From the Knoxville Register, Sept. 30.} Pamunkey, but returned without annoying the inhebi- | SO4'tromising young officer, and Waves a wife and child | tee fouow tan ns:—dlianieter of + . For the weet 409 200t i The only terma which the Confelerete Staies can accepts On the morning of a recent batile near Harper's Ferry, | tants. to lament bis antimely death, stroke of pist She be br Vrevieasly rapt's 6404 95 dinte x be tas impenediasy Soe gop ap ef she grevent Coo ederate | afior a sermon by one of bis chaplains, Stonewall Jack: The puewe per ‘Aanhomns ~~ romeo en pes - | Sa tates, cond the perurioion fo the over Stare ta dotckearom | sou, who, by the way, is an elder in the Presbyterian r A * i rals D. nim ot Someta f Saal bole ‘ae Stee Jan, 1. SP GATE eas te Groen marc I OREM the Coe ch, administered the sacrament to the church mem. (From the Petereburg Express, Oct. 14.) GnesMabel Cee iaskioan eee ae capigen for the lures iees ban send participate We learn from # letter received at this office, dated Weriae Mt Gremes! mau and Cat last Monday's mo statement showed @ specie o der a age oe 256 decrease inches stroke of pistou=the sume size as thacot tho. orig? Le fhe vor ba POE, Being | © bad Moalior, which, wa bull al this esta shine $503,830 from the previous statement; « loans engines of dl belng bull hete fora steamer now beingesmstructed iy Ae, | AVCrARe Of $1T2,512,085, being an incrense of te, Conn., for Charts o! that er $2,907,076; and a deposits average of $164,387,458, ork One, hort for the being an increase of $1,972,104. the bank move- s Haze, a = ° wile Lighter Bagle, velonging to ! f line, hod | Ment, Under present circumstances,” is governed 1o1 ‘0 boats buildi hs ‘oon. . . detveen New: York and New Itaven. “Toe sine of those | OF OX6d laws, and cannot vary materially. Depo- engines 19: 20 inches dimmer of esltuder and 47 sits must continue to accumulate in excess of the 4 atroxe of pistow. All the above boats (ex now Im government service, hw wants of the mercantile community, money must for the folowing. So much the Mercury quotes, as though that wae wi | Wg. is arms. He ti te an ee es ae his tect, | Greeisboro, Alabama, October 7, that a very short erop in thie ceremony, b that was said by the Enguirar, when the fact is, we con. | | “ ‘ " of cotton was planted this year, and the yield is remark- tinuedt— thoroughly itnbued with the ides of close communion, | thiy short. Ik is sated. that. it will net average tree We are of the opinion that the p:taciple of election shoul! | presided, overcame ‘bis scruples, and thus it has hap. | hundred pounds of seed cotton to the acre, when there be npplied not only to the border viave States, but to each | Moen that the prospect OF & git and the eloquence oc | Ought to have been made from ono thousand to fifteen aut all of the resiniming Cid St a that any of tit | Tit son made e Bapirt forget chat, baptiem ere door | Hundred pounds. ‘The corn -erop i also very short, but ledguent of tue right of secession, for whieh this war has | into the chureb. Iu all Jucksou’s army an cath is rarely | (he planters, gonoratly Wit move, enough for ant ere been waged. utt A religious enthusiastn pervades it which makes cotemted drought, Protracted through ewlvendinn the When we tised the expr ermussion to the other | ver¥ man a hero, | Conselous of the justice of our cause, | Cetented drenune, Penman tito) 1, States to elect their own a ‘Ke,, We alluded i> | and imbued with the strongest convictions of patriotistn , a entie fallaree. Maryland, Kentacky aud Missour | and expressly negi Irresistible. In this incident we have at The Troops Furnished by Texe the tilea of vecrmstruct tthe Northern states." i Jackson's tavineibility, avd we | ang Houston Folagraph says tne State of Texas, ‘We opposed any prociatnation to the Northwestern States erstand why his men areall / ting population of sixty-live thousand. has now sixty- are also being built her: They are exch to be In former days, General D. H. Hill was Professor of Mathematics, in Davidson College, North Carolina, which position he leit in 1869 to become Principal of the North Curoliua Military Tustitute, at Charlotte, He was then familierly known as “the Major,”’ having won that degree in the army of the United States, which bo resigned to outer upeo civil life, He was born ia South Carolina, oducated at West Point, and fought under General Scott from Vera Cruz to the City of Mexico, and bears still on his person some hororable scars which he received in thay great contest. He ig a small, siender man, witha qui8i, determined air; not genial, but quite reserved, if vot morose in manner, aod gives the impression genor ally of one who is content to mind his own business, horigot tof a VI . ¥, " Steam iug Charlovte and - ‘ . - ~My coma he Causes € 7 oan . nd, and to some have beep sent as many as * of ey inder creaw, e e urns © COR SE compiaiut th: ise irom its twieting aud turning during the war. W Unedin th om het pos eomen five bundred men. Texas is clearly matitied |. In bis house be is calmly, coldly: polite—vothing moro. | bniit In California, an eng a ane On onal ap of the actaslepecie . en ‘ them about to out what we have suid, in order | Honor euough for any 1 fay)“ T belonged to the | tO ye considered the banner Stato Bo was an admirable professor, being thoroughly versed | mensions. Oue engine for the stem in any deg tent aal specie streng: to find compiaint against the goveruiment army of Stonewall Jackson. seins in the studied of his departmeat and stimulating the stu- ered by gorernipens, 36 ee co of the banks, ‘They show oesely thirty-nine It was on the Sth of September, in that same article _———— ev. Dr. Wheat, the Father of Gen, | dents to unusual exertions, but so much of @ martinet ag ore’ te * " United Btaiea from which the Mercury quotes, that we exirosad ung | General Jeff, Thompson's Llttle Rifle, a Wheat. to wish to falroduce the btrictness of Wost Point disci. | Mercbans, smamers, (the Crege, vi emead 36 te willious, whereas it is understood that their actual ; sition “to connection with ot the free States,’ and From the Richmond Dispatch, Oct. 18.) {From the Little Rock (Ark.) True Democrat.] pline into the college. He is # religious man, and was a | of piston--all now iy government tranaport gery ioe. strength is tn the neighborhood of twenty-five. reiterated these views on the 29:h Reference was made in yesterday's Dispatch to the fact The Rev. Dr. Wheat, with bis wife, returned a feve days | ruling elder in the college church, aud cortainly discharg. | the steam tighter Wail nia cley. ome engine of 14 ine The Saldtes Gonelate of special deponita of erin, of ‘As to what comm Congress through majorities | that a number of the friends of the above distinguished | gince from Camden, where he has been upon a viett, to | ed all the duties of his oftice in the church conscientiously Pergo - eke dae cotutame sold hich ad aoe i" wrt we Can Ouly say thatsomo | General had presented bim with a splendid Southern | rogame again his pastoral labors in the Episcopal church | and diligently. He taughta bible class on the Sabbath, com- Giant paire o ed rey City, Mystic, | Of SOM on which advances have been made. Ob- times they pursue ws many “phanioms | and assuneas } made rifle, in token of their appreciation of bis sorvices | of this ciy. Buta stort time since we mentioned the osed of the more advanced students, and having carried | aren and Ang jection has been taken to the apparent fraud in- many ‘fanciful grounds’ even as Mr. Rhett: | it is n aiding to resist Northern aggroesion The followin, death of the Dootor’s son, Capt. John Thomas Wheat, bis clase throngh the “Sermon on the Mount,” be after. About eight hundred mea are now employed tn these cived ta the peta of & i amusing to see the Mercury exe Mr. Rhett ard Lis | correspondence, which took place on the occasion, Will | who was killed in the battle of Shiloh. and now we have | wards published the result of his studies on this part of | works. vor hese special deposits as “phantoms” by be nding up the ¢ le of C mat ve perused with interest by our readers:— to announce the death of his eldest son, R. ©. Wheat, we omlpe in agg ig ads Gene A rope 8 | sane Rorentinna ton parions to the tons of | SeHOral deposits, and some banks have been named committoes as Justify ing Pprehensions of Mr Ricumoxn, Va., Oct. 16, 1862, | Colovel of a Louisiana regiment, whe fell in one of the | various quarters. i ies of are - , ae 4 onesie General Jerr. Taowrsow, Bxchange Hotel :— Fecent bloody battles before Kichiiond. ‘They were both | ticles for the North Carolina Presbyterian, which wore | sie shin Reporter, hence for San Fran an be found in | as being expecially obnoxious to censure in thin Gen. Scott's Letter. pes Pt or tg witht our hearts & due appre mn of the distinguished for their gallantry and courage, and were collected on fre he tat Geant by PRvnstirs) regard. The point was mode fn this column some ol id Mispateh , ( } rvices you have rendered the Conrederate t exalted patriotiem. | Croerfixion ist.” t 1 Goneral ‘ " . The teller er general donut to Mr. Beward, puélleued i Or ite dune, Vourfiicntact GEORGIA AND VIRGINIA, Hrithe'nghe, lendiag thelr mento victory, they: both ieet | assembly yrhich met at ladianapols in 1859, gubsequenty take mica aN puie came on | Week® since. So far ae the public interest this paper of Friday, will go far to redeem the repuiation ee BACHANG? Howes, RICHMOND, Vie, Oct. 16, 1862, their lives, | History will mention the two brave brothers General Hill is @South Carolinian in ail his footings, | gy compelled the pllot boat to abandon her, is concerned, it would be better for the of the old soldier for military wisdom and judgment, ane | Messrs. Pocttas & Co., Preseny and accord them bh marks of honorable distinction, | principles md prejudices, end doubtless rejoices that Lauxcnep—At Bucksport, 224 inst, from the yerdof We | bangs to make distinction in their to place his character in @ more amiable light tian 1 Graruamex—The beawlful lide rifle whieh the Georgians | We goeply sympathize with the aflicted parents, We | ta such. He has oursed bis hatred to the North tosuch # | #1 Ginn & Co, a bark of 364 tons, owned by the builder, NT t ’ het 1“ bas recently occupied. This letter, written Ma 5 | fed: Virginians ha re been kind enough to send me, ihrough know tbey loved their gallant boys, and poignantly feel | degree that it has become uenr to a passion as his cold | Hill, and a party in New York returns between their speeial and = their 1961, ts, tu its Sagacity aod general toue, tar above any. | })"" i liae wen received. You wiil please conves to | heir loss: but they innat be conanled by the remem: nature permits. Cl Bead be dehvered a lecture Notice to Mariners. general deposits, #0 as to aveid confusion and thing that we ever conceived General Scott to be capabie | favor, and assure them that I sill brance that (beir sons generously gave up life in a gto. | at several places io North Carolina, in which he complain- HOREHWKST KNOW! BUOY. error tn tho pudile tulad Gpee eo tnpertent of, a4 proves him to have been, at the time of its wri Yours, most respectfully, ™ T rows cauge, and are mourned by A gratefnl com ed bitterly of the injuatice which had been done tothe A Buoy, Biove black pnd while Je Moho eed im pal po important a wab- tag both » statormen and a woidler. Ho seme to, have : mt biel a : Sale of Negroes. oar an tm whic be sansrtod, ta ouoevanest teat oi 16S fire pater Fvring tdeas widr the Tollowing warts sad com: | Jeet. Alurge namber of loans on guld were called been fhe only mon in the Uwited States who a! all appr ome a war, + i 9 °, nga: — ; ete tor elated the mag vitude of the enterpria: which Mr. Lincoln Proclamation of Governor Letcher. (From the Petersburg kxpress, Oot. 11.) battles gained in the Revolution by Northern troops were PeSrightlingsen Church Tower, in line with Nol Martete in last week. In calling in these loans the tenders raken in endeavoring to subjugate (he South Governor Letcbor kes issued a prociamation regarding The following sales of negroes were made at auction in | a series of Yankee tricks,”’ and that the real, hard, open | ower at Brightlingsea Creek, bearing N by EE. wore not unaware of the fact that it is cntirely as ines ; and yet that oven he underestimated its dit the distribation of , in which he says: — this city yesterday by the Mess fighting, had been done by the South. So inveterate is The Eastern Marielio Tower Bema ale ip Appar out of the power of banks wnd brokers to wouk ficulties te shown from the fact tha large a8 was the No rajlroad, canal or other internal improvement com- Hiecoethy aged $6, and ehild this enmity to Northern men and the Northern character | breadth open to the 8 of the Western Mart wer At tho pre’ in General Hill that it creeps ont in unexpected plasce ‘amonnt of treasure and foree whicli, in bis opinion, was | pany in this State shall undertake to transport auy salt | Martha, aged 12 sak place, beat RW, 0:10 of «0 ed the appreciation of gold. They were, however, is . \ by * moun beyond the limits of the State, unless under | Jon Bull, aged and in moat remarkuble ways. 3) omit ‘ been ar entrap wand" the Wotien States 5 ye acendy, existing with theCunfederate States or some tate inivabetb, aged 14. It would povzle the ingenuity of most mon to impart ney 10 ma roeeaingond up gehen record evidence of their will- far from its 1g as ever! The conciliatory spirit of | of the Confederate States. Before said salt shall be William, aged 18 (diseased)... scotional feelings and prejndices inte the neutral oat rate ingness to do whatever in them lay to oheck the the letter, Which not only recommends compromise and | moved the person asking for such trauaporiation shaH | Kmmet 2 veeeee pore mathematica; but General Hill bas succeeded in con. RL read ite "tk orisenta} ateipes, haw | Cepyedintion of the mational ourrency. Asa gone oe he Fm ta, tho at we rottate our bankers are animated by a hearty na- b Zin, tine with tho Weat Rencow on 7 ONAL apicit in this matter, and though it is ob- Foarne NR oe she | vions, as thoy woll kavw, that w temporary refuse. veying covert sneers by algebratcat bols, and insinn- forbearance, but goes so far as to suggest as one of the | make oath or affirmation that the romoval asked for is of | Charlot é 4 vey mes: meet: igencies of th furnished under euch existing contraet. Withoutguch | Robert, ‘ ) 1g disparagement thi problema, th Fa Ll, cles, wayeure sinnare, depen age,’ bath the salt shall be eoized 4 the superintendent or Sandy ‘aged 85 (injured) . ieorhe published a vex oak called the" Wemonta Al. exalta General Boett from the abyss into which be has t of the transportation company for the use of the we of a private Bale ma ‘9 obra,’ of whioh “T. J. i! ae freon ‘ Waen dragged by Seward. and makes us regret the moro omman wealth, and notice be immediately given to the of a girl, 15 years of age, at $1,460, ral and Fxperimental Phitoeouhy in Virginia, y

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