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i e ' eels THIRTY-FIRST YRAR, ) S'MBER 10,060. ‘ The Latest N ews By Telegraph to the XN. ¥. Sun. PROM GRAVTN ARMY. Our Forees Still Advancing Upon Richmond ATTACK ON AYRES'S DIVISION. Livody Repulse of the Rebels. DECISIVE CAVALRY VICTORY. A GREAT BATTLE IMMINENT. Uur Army Strongly Entrenched. AUGITI UNDA Ds, News from General Sherman, HIS ARMY IN MOTION, ANOTHER EOLD ADVANCE. THE INVASION OF MISSOURI. Rogecrans to Take the Field. Details of Rebel Operations. INTERESTING EUROPEAN NEWS, ke, Ko, &o, GENERAL GRANT. Operniions on the Left Wing. A}} the preparations { General Mewdo's army i over a week Sine, but the marching orlera, which were ex. pected for some d. not! Thure- ran ® hal been ¢ 4 Were @ay night, when Genera! Gregg') Cavalry cere or- dered to prepare for an advance on the followings worning. They accor i} ved towards the extreme left, on the Weldon Railroad, Bour on Fridey through the va @ idiers were stan early Potiuas, Bod as they pmwsod ticed that the teats, and pack- tog knapsacks, so as to be ready to fall in at @ mo- tents notice, The cavalry, ons camps, they 1 everywhere etrikiu on passing the ruil- road, turned southward, in the direction ef the) = Boynton Pleok road, ani ad- venced to the Varinw rood, when the tosin body halted, and sey ral revi petobed io dilferent directions t eances, These branched out te + returned fn a abort time wit) cuc mation, ho entire broad yodition nearja rayire, An attack wus made upon them soon after five o'clock, the enemy opening with artillery, which was promptly responded to by our field spicees, As the enemy had the advan. tage from thy use of infantry, a couple of our regi- wents were dismnounte! and the men foughtespirit- e@Uy until it was too dark to see anything, when ©e firing ceased as if by mutual consent, Thescasu- eittes on our side were inconsiderable, aud much valuable intortmation was obtained, The enemy's pickets wero found to extend on the Vaughan road, with beadquarters at @ ernall chapel calked Poplar Bpringy Church, The roads were found Diveckaded o ahort distance the other ride of the ecapel, bus the works did not seem of @ fornddalle © aracter, General Warren's compe, supported by aportion ents were make reconnois- me extent and valuable infor. 1 fell back to o othe Nth Corps and two divisions Secasalry, moved on the following day very nenriy the @ rection of the ous nn The.ene my's Ores line was encountered avout noou by General Grifin'a di Lar ptyle; and ihe sevoud line,which was wuch strong. er, Wee ry rec sunce, Dy aod arried in socaptured, The Ninth Corps were then piwed in the advance, ont sbout five ko @eneral charge was tasde to capture the enemy's podition at point of bayoret. This movement war made up a hill where enemy had concentrated ® argo artillery and infan A board fence placed at tho top checked the impetuosity of the attack. A deadly fire was poured in, aud ow troopa were forced to fall back, Tle e y then tuade a counter Gaarge, which was checked and rolled back Ly @ portion of the Fifth Corpa, sl- vauced for that p\.rpowe by General Warren, This wriainated the proceedings of the dey, BY TELEGRAPIL More Fighting Federal §\accens, force, Waalingtom, Oct, © She latest receive Department: City Point, Oct. 2 Halleck, Chief of 8 The following dispatch is om Gen, Grunt by the War a0 P. a Alas. Gen. HW nthe right of + irg, oceupy the same pasition as y There has teen but very little fighsing to-~l few prisoners bave been captured, Last evening Butler seat two brigades of infan- tre, with a little cuvalry, within a few hundred yards of the inner Ive of works cast of Richmond, meeting with po opposition, us sterday. 7A Gaast, Lieut, Gen, Additional Accounts, Ueadquarters Army of the d'otomac, Oct. 2— T.e enemy attacked tle division of Ge rea yeaq terday morning, and were repulsed with Leavy hea. This was the only frhting which took place on the left yesterday, with the exception of an attack by Wade Hampton's cuvalry on Gon. Ciregg's cave alry, on the Vaughan road, when the rebela were criven back with » good dea! of ues and we cap tured some prisoners, Our loss was very slight, ) The army is now strongly entrenched, ond @ battle may occur at any inowent. Our losa on Friday is not yet definMely ascer- tained, but it will not vary much from what I stated in yesterday's letter, The enemy claim to have number of prison- ors from the Ninth Corps on that day. The Rickinond pavers bosst of a vibry one | the@ames river, and Meade southwest of Peterne Bartlett, and othera, were on fire when our inform- NEW YO! | Sheridan in the Valley, treatiog. Oar troops took some thirty prisoners yesterday, srnong Whor ts @ Lieutenant on General Renham's siaft, A heavy rain storm bas prevailed all day, and anid asy thet he waa re. Prevented moveruents to an Washington, Oct, & rousidetable extent, Passengers who leh City Pont yesterday morning, at 10 o'clock, «tate that at that thine there was heavy firing on the right and left of Petersburgh, but very little in the front. The entire army was in potion, and the tndi- arrived with @ loved of trom (he James River, Forty deserters fron the rebel gray arrived here th # morning. They taken the osth of silegianes, and are op t North, preaoners beve r way Reports via Kertrem Movror, Fortress Monroe, Uct. id, eva Baltsmore, Oct The taall boat Webster, from City Polut, has arrived bere. The rumor that Petersburg has beea evacuated by the rebels {a {Incorrect thie morning from the north Heavy firing has teen heard al! ede of the James River, but nothing unportant has been received aa to resulta Rebel fugitives of all classes are pouring into Bermude Handred in e Some are coming down the river on rafia io their eagerness to escape from the perila of the Confederacy. Rebel of prisovers in our bania say that they think tha Richmond ery conceivable manner ere, OW cannot much siege now im progress. success. Arrival of Gen, Stannard, Wounded, ete. Washington, Oct.3.- City Point brought to Washington Gen, & r commanding the Ist division of the Fighteenth Corpa, who loet hie right arm in the ree ment, Four of hi then Captain Ker longer withetand the Allbere are full of hope of The mail bomt to-day trom t engrave. aida were also wounded, among pand Lieut, Hubbell, The body waa killed at Chay en, Darnham, who hae been embalued, previous t tilssion ot Maine, GENERAL SHERIDAN, lorrtetaL.! Wisk ngton, Oct, U.-A Sheridan, dati at Harris! dispatch from General ury, Oct. Lat, 0:30 P.M, Tt wtatew : “Lbave been to Staunton aod Waynesboro’ with the cavalry, destroyed the fron bridge on South K ver at Waynesboro’, throwing it into the river; aloo the bridge over Christiano Oreck, and the rail+ toad from Braunton ty Waynestoro'.” Details of future operations are for obvious reasons ornitied. Epwrs M. Stason, Socretary of War, GENERAL SHERMAN, Operations Against Wheeler and Forrest. Washington, Oct, 3.—No dixpatches have been received for thive days frow General Bherinan, but Vigorous tneasures—which, it is belleved, will be muccessful—have been takon by hina to protect bis communications from the rebel raiding parties un- der Wheeler and Forrest Fowin M. Branton, Secretary of War. The Lonsville Jovnnat of the 30th ult. says :— “ It is believed that Sherman's army i# in motion, am! the movement ultimately will compel Forrest speedily to withdraw from Tennessee. Shertnan, as we tinderstand !t, is not detaching » force to look afer bis rear, but Lay concentrated bis entire com- mand for a bold advance and an cagle-like swoop down upon the arroy under Hod The blow will be marked with dlapateb, and, itis believed, will prove decisive, We shal) be much surprised if the news of another glorious victory is not flashed over the wire The Invasion of Missouri. ‘Rosecruus to Take the Field-—Continged Ravages of the Kebela, etc. St. Louts, Get, 8,—Burgeon Carpenter, Metical Director of thie district, accompanied by a rebel Bag of truce, arrived here last night to procure | medical supplies for the wounded on both sides, The rebels loat about 800 killed and 900 wonnded | in the assault on Pilot Knob, Major Wilsor , Missourt Militia, com:uandant of the port, and ¢ tain Dinger, 47th Missouri, who were captured | y | the rebels, were badly treated, Major Walker, who bravely defended Potosi, and several other persons | vere murdered in cold blood, after the surrender ' | bas been received by thi# Dep tment, of the place, hero as nothing reliable as yet from General Ewing, The Iron Mountain Railroad is pretty badly damaged; it will take two months to repair it, There is nothing new from Franklin this morning. Two brigades of enrolled militia of this district have goge to Laclede Station on the Pacific Railroad, eig! jles from here. It in un- derstood that Genel Statrans will take the fleid to<day. Among the rebel wounded at Pilot Knob are Col. Thomas, Cul, Monroe, Major Surridge, and | eevers) captains, (By Mail.) Bt. Louis, Sept. 80.—Late information is re- ceived from Charleston and Bloomfield, Stoddard Bloor field has been moatly burned, eounty. The court-house, the residences of Henry Buford, Orson left. Tt was supposed that the whole town would be burned. At @harleston guerrillas bad een iu possession furgeveral days, aud had burned a large lot of bay belonging to Captain E. P. Det! and a house belonging to Dr, Gol which had been used as quarters for coutrnbande.s Lieut, Weat, C.8. A, in command at Charleston, and P. Conyers at Bloomfield, Lieut, West took pos. ecasion of the bocka of Geo, M, Keyser, enro'ling officer for Mississippi county, and declared his in- tention to collect the commutation tax as stated on the Look, and to put in the service all those who bad been eurolled in the militia, They got but tew recruiu some elyht or ten have not been molested in those places, but mueb excitement exists, and many ere leaving and have lett for more peaceable places, There are reports tr frorn the Southwest Branch that Ewing had ched Marrivon'a Station, with the rebels at bia la and fighting him, thia moruiny, Rinaller bands of revels appeared on the rood thirty or forty moles this mde of Harrieon's Biation, captured a bridge euard of one somp any, ond tore up the track. Ewing is thus cut o again trom the city St Louts, Sept, 30.—About noon yesterday, Col Mills, commending Smith's advanced brigades, | sationed at Big River, six mfles beyoud De Soto, saw two revel brigades approaching on the opposite side, After brief skirmishing he retreated to De Boto, and to-day Bwith's whole force is on the back to Jefferson barracks, only five miles fe the lower limits of thecity. & ‘S below refugee frera the country alive with rebels, They and conscrips al! Gn ga “Ay Ubon alae Bd | Bo far the citizens | —— ad et = = and coming to the cite, The rebela are ales oetting | mand of De A number of | J A number of volunteer reeriiia dratted men have al pped off from St. Louts and joined them, note itastandiog Rosecrans’ order to »ot all persons capture! ou the way to the rebel Mines. Bi bt or nine fave been captnced tn thie county — Anew order las been famed, compelling the cloaing of al! places of businces balf of the dar, until farther orders, Eh thousand militia are at the city limite, Ther ha been furniabed with Un forma arn, ard rat sand Will Le ready to Move under Gepers! Piso in the course of the vers tweove hours. Persome are vot allowed to leave the eity without apermit. Mlitery squads ave patrol. ine the city, compelling delugventsto come up end organize, Mayor Thowne « making ay peals to Giasons, odd tellowd wn all Sorte of societies ty take arts Louis, Oct, 1 spatebes coutirming ¢ --Gienersl Rosecrans has re. ceived duassacre ol Ma, | Jobuson's command near Centra im and the seslp } tue and mutilation of the victiiae, The bodies of llers taken from the train at ( Na and mur. red, are being buried, Atm the slain are any prvates of the Orat lows cavalry A pi nger from Movies to-day, say# General Fisk has called for six thousand Union ui litin to take the field, and bas aasurauces they wil! respond. It is orted from Joffersou City that au armed boat is | ney ling the r.verto prevent reiuforcenents going uth to help Price, From the Southwest. Cairo, TU, 8 pt %.—The steamer Belle has ar- rived bere with Memphia papera o! the 30th Sey | tember, which contain Davalits Dluif dates of the | 24d Gunboat No. $0 waa atincked atthe foot of | Little Island by guerri'las on both sides of che | river, The gunboat shelled them aud killed eyht or ten. The steamship Benton was fired into be. low Clarendon, on the White River, and the Adan Jacobs was attacked at Tiponsville, on the Miwa. *ppi River, No one was badly burt, Pederal off. cerg furaished the following summary of items | from the rebel papers: The Miawiening) Leootelatir Was ty meet at Mont- g yone ith of Sentember Phe Selina Appear nove that Henry LL Foote looks on M.-C )olian as of the Peace party, and Sols Uiat tho Confelerates ab come peace overture rhe same paper a that gly fortify ing Atlanta, probally for making ane other movement ere tong. Our army id ab dened bore, with pickets six miles beyord the fortifica- WA Feauiness to Wel He The Bouthern journals look for @ reign of ter- ror at the North, and a wrest financlal revelation | The Montgomery Anverrisen of the 8th of Sep | tember, saya that the deportation of the ettizens of by the SUMILY y for sup} » had to mlopt that course to seve bie artny from etarvation Tt does not see bow Gea. Hod could have retamed Possestion of Atlanta, but tka Chat uo punish. | ment is too #evere ordly mildcrea: te who took the Sherman to save their property, and went North, The Montgomery Matt gaye that the Misalaaipp! River {# patrofied by the Yaukeos with aloeplear watebfulness, rendering it tupossi ble to cross any- where, The Public Debt. Washington, Oct. 8.--The statement ismied trom the Treasury Department this evening, exhibiting the condition of the public debt, shows @ oor able increase within the past month, which is tnalnty due to the fact thatthe Socretary of the TVroasury has thoughs it right and just that tho en- tire srrearages cue for military service in the army acl navy should be paid up to the beginning of the month, Some of these payments have been long delayed, and they involved aa ee diture of about 000,000, The whole amount being provided for ud Sucluded in this stateruent, future ones will consequently show # comparatively souall increase of the debt,” The reeapituiation on the Sukh of Bep- tember is—Debt boariug luterest, 028,056,041 50 ¢ fuleresty §54,0606, 445 debt beariug interest in lawful money, 9564, 466; juterest, $27 107 72; debt on which intarest has ceased, $454,- 970.00 ; debt bearing no luterest, $407,44,029 71 Inaking the amount outstanding $1,006, 16 46, and the interest, ho in coin wud currency, $81,773,043 12 The above statement, a4 contrasted with that ex- hibiting the public debt on Aug. 80th, shows an increase of the princ pal of sbout seventy-seven and oe half millions, aud of interest #4, 501,551 The unpaid requisitions, Aug. 84 were nearly 79,000,000, ad the amount in the Treasury $17. 190,000, The unpaid requisitions Sept, 30 were $54,041,000, and tho ammount in the Treasury G24 659,400, The amount oustand ny of the duly 17 | wud Aug, 6, 1801, alc per ceut bonds, exchanged for 7-20, io QL 507.0", or uu iucreaw for the past moni of @f0 157,000, Th duly 17, Issl, 7-20 three year. tes have Leen decremsud frou 71,000,000 10 25,40 00, and the Bix per cent, bonde of aul) Indy ane: | 845, 265) OTL wince the ot last, dhe March, Ist, 1504 six per t. certiticates of § brediess have heen increased fro | #208.067,000 to nearly $50,000,000, The sbate- jment ulso shows th t the whe ue 1 150,000,000 of two-s * notes, with five per cent, iuterestunder the ret of March |, 150%, the arnount Jens Withdrawn and desiroved, or reniy to be dee wiruyed, as 55,15 ty lewving 305,06", 250 in cir- ‘The frasweusl currcucy Las been in- nO, Additiova! Vorcign News. The arrival of the Peruyisu from Boutbampton the Zlst of September pisces Us in possemion of the fulowing additional detaia ot foreign news + The London Trurs gets over ft¢ conetant reitera- tiona of the impossi> » General Sherman's success ot Adanta fn the fU! wing manner + | The results of the achievement are still to be reen, nor fe ft, Indeed, t cerciin that General Sherman will beable to remin btay ize, but it ta a prize, neverthlees, for it nta the object Which the Fecers! cominauce: proposed to hinaeit { frow the beginning of blee sporet the commencement of the war 1. | plunged so intrepidly into Conf the army of Georgia, The ¢ on laportant postion, and be | campaign, They have uot, howeve J not any considerably quant of s Federal force ritory os have lost u unsuccessiul iu @ wan army, ) vunitious oF ttores The Federals have taken wh in # State hitherto inseceasible to ther arr can boast of an ariny qiartered in Georgina ofthe great | ebjects of the campaign in Georgii os well agin | Virginia, waa the destruction of the Confederate arioy, aud that has not been attained, Gen, Hood retnains in eenunand of a force, whieh, though it is Rot maten for Sherman's army, if Deverthe- leas, strong, well organized and safe, General Garibaldi, m an address to an [alien Ritle Club, said ; Practice with the rifle, The rifle ssteily const tutes the Justice of modem civiimeion, and when handled by stout arms like yours, ut vives uieu the mbt to bave no masters hut themselves, | The unsettled state of the Dav oGeruan question | still excited diseussion, The Vienna Purse of | Bopt. 19th, asserts that the Danish Cabinet is wil+ | ling to consent to the proposal thas tho claims of the Duchies on the public property of the Kingdom should be satisfied with the payiuent by Denmark of @ round sam ; this arrangement to be Be eded | by one detinively settling the respective allotment | | | of the assets and liabilitios of the country, Finane cial difficulties only delay the conclusion of peace, The negotiations on the prolongation of the armie toe bas exatred, are near the and. Thee the Yankees ara | | | ' | ' | i} i | enmark thatthe troopacf the alliea in dard are not to be provimcued by Denmark, bas been sbeolutely resected br the Gerinan powers The semi-official Noap-Dertows ALLonwere Zuitxa@ says: “The intention of extending the teres of the armiattce for a longer period has | * ahandoned, the protrastion of pesce negotiations on the partet Denmark not haviuse been without ine fusuce on that point, In fect the politieal «itn. Hon fn © penhagen Las assumed a pooullar chars fer, Not only do Swedish papers eines, in the toost peonted manner, Scandinavian tendencies, but n Copenhagen journala openty avow gent. | thouta favorabie to the formation of w Seandinay iar | | t | i} | | | th dy nasty, The Moscow Gaaerrm publishes a frightful lit of few suce April last, have taken place tu diferent parte of Russia, and it adds Wat the ac. eountof the principal disasters te vot couplete The work of jucendiaries commenced at the cad of April, in the Government of Halonga, by the destruction of 64 houses; next at O} Tansk, 206 bonses were burnt; at Serdobsk, white four-uMhe of the town were destroyed ; at Mozity | one-half of the house, end at the Pair of Ni 148 houses, At Patro Ju 6 The pow toagazined of Nizan, aod that 6° Okbta, neor St, Petersburg, were blown up. At Risa, two firey occurred + the anme at Tunien, “here the finest bas of the town were con @uied, At nburg, 600 houses were burut, aud Tink! ta only ah eap of ruina, Four coutlayrations took place at St. Potersbury, six at Simbirk —« town whieh, as well as Yaroslavl, is cow in ruins, Previous to April two Tiaperial cannon foundries were laid waate, Fresh d.saatere are apprehendet, fod the Roesian Govern tin culloc Bopt prompt nod riyorous measures, The London Moksixa Pour states, in relation to the vew treaty between France aud Traly, that it Provides for the gradual withdrawal of the French troops from: Rote within two years: thatthe King: of Teddy ehadl un ske to preserve fuviolate the sseations of the Church ax at present detined, fad WUArRO tee Dot to countenance or amaist the na. Chinatens of what ie termed the party of action in 1 t { that the capital of Ltaly shall bo resuoved to Florence Ar + at Mologa, n Novgorod, aud ek, there were six fires in at isagtrona fire raged for some houre on the 10th, in a block of hor In Gresham street, Wert London, The warehouses were stored with of honiery, clothe and other goods DU gS woo the topany One of the ancient Hall of the How Soldiers and Saflors Vny Vote. For the tnformation of soldiers and satlora be longing to this State we publieh the following in fructiony iaaued by the Soeretary of State, at Albany: FraTe or Naw Your, OF THE DeOuRTANY OF STATE» Annany, Ls0d Nona of the Soldiers’ Voting bin, ug tO yore at any veneral or +pec'al elections to be beld in this State, ia required te fil ont and execute @ power of attorney (for whieh a blank is berewith eent), ewear to it !efore guy th tlicer, captain, adjutant or pmandaut of any ompany or detachinent on detached ser- vice of the United States any commissioned aw offi- cers tn the volupteer foree of the State of New York, or the captain or commandant ot any vesse! in the Davé) services of the United States ; also having witness to sign hia name thereto, and authorizing fome person, who ia @ legal woter, at Ate home or place of rewdence in tive State, residing in the same town or ¢ty where such soldier resides, to erst for hm hiavote or ballot Mo tt aust fill out the blank affidavit, which will be found print. ed on the outside of the accompanying envelope, een it and swear to it before one of the otlicers abeve named After having executed the power of attorney and fwork to the affidavit on the en ~which may Orrick be ether written or printed—be must fold and eu- close the vote or ballot he desires to o toyether with the power of attorney, and placet together inside the envelope Which baw the printed or writ- fen affidavit thereon, seal them up carefully, then plice thin enve #0 souled, inaide suother en Vel ope, te be marked on the outside, * Soldier's nd direct it to the person to whom author ty in given by said power of attorney to cast tor ai toa vole or balol and transuutthe sane to the person to wher it is directed by mail or others wine The officers before whom the affidavits are taken must attach to their signatures their official desipustious. I be borne in mind that the person whe eive the weldierte vote or ballot, and cast the mine for Lin, must be # loyal voter ov the day yf election ; and soldiers should be cautious to send their votes or ballo# to none others, Groat care should also be taken in dirveting there letwerm fo write ino lovible band, the name, town and county, ip order t prevent thelr misearriage. By reading section two of said act carefully the soldier will be able more clearly to see the course be is to pursue, Cascnosy M Dargw, Becretary of State The following is w copy of the second section of Hie Soidcor? Voting act Claws of 1364, chapter 465), referred wo by Mr, Depew: Breh absent elector shall, by an instrument exe- ented by him, not move than alxty days previous to eoy general or spectal election to be held in this Hrate, authorize and empower auy elector of the town or city where the said election ia held to cast | for hia his vote or ballot, fu the mauner presger bed by this aet, for all officers for whom he woul have eryht to vote if he were present at auch election ; sald Instrument ehall be siymed by auch absent elector, attested by a subscribing witness, and evorn to before any field officer, captain, adjutant or commandant of any company or detachment on detached service, in the service of the United States, aod comuiasioned as officers in the volunteer force of the Beate of New York, or the captain or com- tusndantof any veasel in the mavai service uf the United States, to which the @aid adsent elector muy | belong or be attached ; and such officers are hereby | | i duly autborized to administer oath for the purjosew weitied iu this act, and they shall attach to suer # gnatures their official designations, (By Telegraph.) Wash ngton, Get, 3. —Itie understuod that orders v. Never giuce | will sovu be isvucd, under proper authority, for tuking the suldiers' votes for Premdout and Vice- Prowident !n the arvdes The detuila have not yet transpired, but it is believed that persona will be empowered to receive the votes at the Various Lh ik the abeeuce of epeech-mking Larangues, aod other open & ectioneering, civia Geverul Banka, The departure of Gen. Beaka, from New Or- loans, Was attonded with impomng demonstrations of respect. The members af the Legis!siure assem- bled during the forenoou of the day of departure, and repaired, ina body, to the residence of the General, to bid bim farewell, On the day previous # comulttee of the workiogmen of New Orleans waited on hia, and presented an address signed by # thoussud persons, In bis spoech of thanks he 1 to hing writ to his own early career iu the worksb:p, and struck the key-note of the future tn the following terms: In tines bke iene, gentemen, every man, ao to speak, is tested to the core, Thera are but few classes of meu Upon which onr Government can rely iy such great trouble. The men of wealth are blind. The meu of bigh intellectual attalument are overned by their ttadies tn the heir recel- Jections, and besiteave to grapple with and control the grout roeasures that the country weeds aud the American vecole Bus the masses of the ailuded, i ann? and entire quarters of the town were con. | Upon to | SUN. Cn XK TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1864, | SPRICR ONE CIT Nn Can, TWO CRNTE IN CURRKNG American peopl, attmotatied onty he the natural Impulae af honest hearta know what to de. and ore never aien Of vee what iether duty Tsay to you, gentlemen, aad will any tothe pe ple of the North, that ther tay rele upon the inte ring popus Istion of Lonislana for everything tia ta necessary to paant this State upon the bamaof prosperity, and of the uu ‘ew otion ane | to the Government of the Ur te) Stator General Ranks in @ letter to the New Orteane | Chamber of Commerery tn relation ty an address of | that beady to the President on the subject of trady fevervly beveta the Charuber on the apaty of ite Teethers in got taking the oath of allegiance. He weibly adda The whole world teoma with labor. Nothing te Tore abundant, nothiug more easily toanawed, Te eis are 4 vl sod the lesson it teaches he toe experience of many centuries, dese r than blows. Braing are better thea ‘e us an annual average of trun, and the colsts of even~ Vertiliouy os the dews of Heaven vwhen invited, and depart whea Whiskey repudiated, and virtues ! live Jong enough, and if wise Vtorlarce lvidendapmnd @ ‘8 tomer foont moatertal de- jure ber } Diood, | thirty three ing are fre | Yelopment may be ¢ stant, but it is certain. The central fag of the Republic will be plauted im this | valley 0 whole family of man will be tnpressed. earth vibrate Te will be tinpossble for the ‘werce to sleep qwetly during thie Ww Orleans inuat be the depot of ite the entrepot for the commerce with the Id, Who will sound the call to the people P ; Merchant of ‘te wark orthe laborer of the | jevee t | With the purpose of ite people, and the | to their movements, | Charnber of | tranaaction products lw The New O:leans papers of ti 4th publlah @ lenythy letter from General Danks to Senator Laney of Ransay in relation t the reeonstrnetion of Lous ay and in vindication of President Lincoln¥ poley which had been so bitterly assailed by Sous. tor Wade and Kopresentative Davig in their farm las } prote nat the Presicent's alleved arbitrary vet vation. Genera! Banks shows that all i ‘ be for State recoynition have been fulfitied He foes into partion. lara to disprove the statement thes the 4 loyal Goverment does got contre! halt the territory and. p pulation of the e. The states that thia may | e trie on the boa mor the ceusus of the population OF 1S, bub is has been reduce | by the operationa OL the war, aud the se govertunent is clearly estabtlehed on the leeal « of the present actual popalation. Upon this subject General Banka gives: Aue following high! important state Wo State bas sullered greater boss than Loulsiany Frou nt: in population forty-two to forty-tive thousand able-bodied men have enliatet in the debel army, Hie remnont of whch ts ip other States, Aw tnany vegroes aecompinied the army, or fled with their owners t surrounding 8! Europe ea or te yiorm bos been busy with slaves in 1500, nearly one= roeft the Sinte, Tho mortality of the blsek population in the commencement of the strugvlo util furnished with aad feet and tia doubtful tained auch Death tn ev confortable hows, was Srightsyl Wf any people in any aye ever au lonaca from ouch ecusea, Tneluding enlistments, Ceuta, exile and removal to other Southorn Sates, to the Norti oud to Europe, the reduction of the White popolaticn te newsy equal to the loss am the blacks Q) Vosj000 whited and blacks in 1 there are pow net more than 451,000 within the Biate, two-third# of whom are within the nes of | ourariuy. Aliost the entire nero populations pot | | only of Northern Louisinu®y but of the surrounding Btatey nnd) onemerous white families, have taken refugs here, "he population of New Orleany, thi# cause, is larver now than over while any other parishes have been uearly cGepopulated. A gentleman, twenty years a chuven of Louisiana, writes me up. der date of the 1th instant, that of twelve hundred voters the largest number ever voting in bis parish, tea fall companies had been aent into the revel army frou that parish, and that every other | able-bodied man of the parish was either im the Union army, a refuges, or resident within the Union lines ree ) travelied through Catahouby,* be say “and tound italmost depopulated.” This will account for the paucity of our vote, Incredi- Ve aw it may appear, Pdoubt if an election could have been held in the usual menner it eould have | given argervolo.”’ Uber pariahes lo thas j Of the stato have suffered equal lose, The mows pecaiabe evolt, the most causeloss war of human history, bes thus already been followed by unpare sileled retribunon | blow unjust to the People, [an unwise in legisintiou, how inefwbly base, in the impostor, wh er he may be, to represent or aa. fute that the population of thee pariuhes ia that of dow," Major General 8. A Horlont bes assumed coms taand of the Department vi the Gull, in place of General Buuks, from before, News \tomsn (Ly Telejraph to the Sew York Suny Apuriat Porter let Cary Hl, youtordsy, fn the North. 5 In the town election at Danbury, Ce, the Union ticket was eloctod by an average jority of 175, Mason-Gremnay Hoower bast eosnmed commend of the Northern Dey Cincinnati, Major report at Wheelluy, In the election tor elty officers at Bridgeport, Couns yesterday, w Inrge vote was polled, The Democrats elect the Mayor by 116 majority and their whole tieket by about 100 majority TOR Sulmeriptiona to the Sevon-Thirty loan, ray ported to the Treasury Department yesterday, amount to #1,086,700, and for the iast two duys 1,591,000 Weak With headquarters a » Uontleman fe ordered to Invormarton hax heen received atthe Navy Des partinent, of the capture of the bloc cado-runuiug Btearner Matavorda, about feventy-five miley off Cape Antoma, Cuba veston tur Havana Hor ecurge conrieted of eutt: nm the deck load of which, some YOO bales was thrown ove Lourd be a splendid: steamer TAR new Government loan which was w She was from ( She ts ani feed a Yeuterday's Bus, it venderad vecoseary by the hoavy paymemts now making to the army, aud, alia, to prevent the necessity of epreciatins the currency by further issues, V, five-twenties, aud it is tho: dispose of ment bondain Karope will stitnulate thelr amle Tie new rebel dearer Caroline, nine daya fron, Glaszow, paused Cape Race at oP Mo on Sunday, the 2d inst, and was boarded by the news vachs, Bhe reported *bonnd tur Wilmington via Alalifax, with machinery." The C roline is a beautifully Blinped, wide-whee!l fear er of 470 tons register, aud is very fast. The Car line nae reports thas her wlater ‘#hip, the Colonel b » will pase the Cape on Tuewlay, for the mare ‘ination, onda will be geht the The increasing demand fer G will be rowdily rm: Tux gang of rebel guerrillas who are tofest Westers Virginia ore co omaaded by @ Gol Wiehe and number in the neighborhood of 9 thousand ‘Tooy robbed oll the stores in the villages through: which they have passed, Major Long, with forty tallitia, left Clurs sburg in pursue of the rebelaand got oa far as Buckhannon, When they were all cap- tured by the raslors, The tdications, at last ec- counts, were that the rebels were mak retry grade movement ing & (Continued 4” Wass yous a -