new york weekly herald. f 4 r 1 i...among thu itiicllijreni tanners mid biii*in

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ms & INTELLIGENCEK - ¦ - - A. W. BATEMAN. Editor., v f 4 r " 1 B ErL AIR, Ml)., Friday, August 19, ISG4. hn* a more eitended ciiculoiion t among thu itiicllijreni tanners mid biii*in<?a mcu t ! ifnctml, than y other inp*r in the county- No 14 Ij'H'K (focpitnP* mi t(hef olMPcne or l.oiiery’*dver. 1 i H.-mviiiH will appear in our columns at any price. A i.<ri!a ntMnhff m mrr i*mwcrH*i> pay for thetr paper.ln d vapec, and consequently arc Just che digs advertiser* do j sie io rM(‘h. The Rtteiuion of n-*pectat>le and iogitiinnte advertisers If directed in the above faCU. To Correspondents. II All coinoiurilcuuon** lor publication lr( hr eccr-m ! pninu'l wall the ten I name of the author, or no alien tinn will be pAid to them. The real.inmic of the huilio ' Mili i'Oi h; puWislicd unions dcairnd. hot wn ennnot rniMint to upon coniiiiuuicatiuiui unices we know ihe 1 : wntf r. TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS. . .Tbc great increase in the price of all printing I material, ns well ns the labor about the pub- ' lishing of a newspaper, compels us to adopt the course l.ieh nil our cotenipornrics have of lafe indicated, us <lte oflly safe one for the con- ductors of a newspaper. We, like the rest of the community, are bnrthcned with an unusual expense, owing to circumstances over which we | have no control. In view of this state of things, wo are reluctantly compelled to say to one sub | ecribers, th;'t from ami after this date we shall charge One Dollar ami Fifty celts a year for lire A'ejit .j' htitlUgencer— invariably in advance; \ and Two Dollars if not paid until the end of the j year. Those persons now indebted to ns for snbscrip- -1ioi(, who settle their bills before the first of Oc- tober, will only be charged sl, but after that date $1.50 will in all eases be demanded. One dollar nnd fifty cents has always been the price of the paper w hen not paid in advance, but we have never demanded it, and would not now, if j circumstances did not peremptorily require such i n course. The enlargement of oitr paper has im- posed upon os tin additional expense, and cer- j tainiy made the paper that much more valuable j to onr readers. We feel that i; adopting this course we arc i only taking such steps ns every judicious man, \ in the present condition of affairs, finds himself compelled to adopt; and without saying more, j we return our thanks to' the public for the verv S liberal support ol the last two years, and pt'om- j ise, that to the extent of our feeble abilities, the ! ¦ F.r/is .j- Intelligencer shall he a welcome visitor. [ In this connection, We refer our readers to the following well-timed article, from the Baltimore Sun of the 15th instant; Increase in the Price or Newspapers.—The extraordinary increase in the price of paper and every other material connected with the printing business, has forced almost every newspaper in the country to advance its subscription price. The Washington Daily Chronicle lias raised its price to thirty cents per week to city subscribers, nnd leu dollars a year, in advance, by mail.— The Washington Star and Xuional Republican of the same city, will hereafter charge twelve and a half cents per week to city subscribers, and three cents a copy at the counter. The Boston daily papers also announce that an increase of price is agreed upon in that city. The Journal, j Traveller, Transcript, Advertiser nnd Post will j hereafter sell for live cents, and the Herald for' three cents. We have heretofore staled that all [ the daily journals of New Voik, Philadelphia ! ..n.J other vit.rs, had increased their prices. Most of our Maryland country exchanges have also advanced their rates. The Alexandria Oa- \ retie, in an article on the shove subject, makes the following remarks ; “Even at the increased rates, newspapers con- tinue to bo tire cheapest of commodities, giving more in return for the stipulated price, than any other article offered to the public. The advance lias been made, in most instances, too late do prevent heavy loss, and even at the advanced prices tlie enterprises arc far from remunerative, so that many of ilia best know n and most ageea- ble caterers at the daily' banquet of the people, have been compelled to seek in oilier avocations, the support denied them in their legitimate sphere. “The consideration of these things should in- duce communities to give a generous support to those local papers which being established in their midst, have become household words—- which have been the chronicles of home life in shadow and sunshine—which are the record of the marriages, deaths, and the thousand other incidents which make up the history of commu- nities—which are endeared to the public heart by many ties, none the Jess so, because they' have supported local interests equally when such sup- port was pleasant and profitable, nnd when it entailed personal inis.ortune or private loss. ‘'When a local journ il, honored for years be- cause honorable in all its dealings with men and measures, deprived of its accustomed resources, is still maintained, under the most adverse cir- cumstances, by the energy of its conductors, and sometimes without remuneration, it establishes a claim upon the community to whose interests it is devoted, which a discerning public will free- ly acknowledge, by lending it a cordial, hear- ty and generous support.” WAR NEWS. Admiral Farragut’s official report of the first days’s operations in Mobile Bay confirms the intel- ligence received through unofficial sources of the capture of two Confederate gunboats, the Selma and the Tennessee, but says Ihe gunboat Gaines, ns well as ihe Morgan, succeeded in getting back to the protection cf Fort Morgan. All the fleet had passed Forts Gaines and Morgan at 8.30 A." M. on the 3th hist, when it was discovered that the ram Tennessee was still in their rear and uninjured. Admiral Furragut gave orders for the entire fleet to turn back at once and bear down upon the ram. After being run into two or three times, and broadsides of heavy shot fired into her, the Tennessee sur end-red at ten o’clock, with twenty office is", including Admiral Buchanan, who was wounded, and one hundred and seventy men. The casualties of the Union forces in this day's engagement was forty-one killed and eighty-eight wounded. An Associated Press telegram says the Cincin- nati papers have received advices from Atlanta which report that on the Ctb hist, a partially un- successful assault was made on the enemy's lines, in which the 33d corps lost over 500 men. The latest, intelligence from the Army of the Potomac indicates that important movements are I cing made on ihe north side of the James river against Richmond. 'I he correspondence of the Associated Press'says that (he Second and Tenth Corps were landed on Ihe north hunk of the ! James river, about twelve miles from Riehmond, ! nt an early hour on Sunday morning last, and tlmt during the day they succeeded in carrying two lines of the enemy’s earthworks—the centre one being about nine miles from Riehmond. In addition to this, the Union troops are reported to hate captured one of the butteries that boro upon Gen. Butler’s men who were digging a canal. Major General Burnside was relieved of his command on .Saturday, an 1 passed through Bal- timore on MondiW, 1 with his stall- , oh his way u, hij tejidencc in Rhode island. Ocn. Wilcox is ¦ temporarily in command of the Ninth Army i Corps. -- -i. i Tho steamer Empress, from New Orleans on the Clh instant, was attacked on the 10th by a Confederate masked battery near Gaines’s Land- j ihg, on the Mississippi tiver. Sixty | I shot and shell struck the steamer, killing the cap- tain nnd four others, and wounding eleven per- sons. The Empress was finally lowed to a plaie of saft-ty by a gunboat which arrived althatcrlti- | cal moment. A despatch from Boston gives some further ac- I count ol the depredations by the privateer -Talla- hassee. The captain of one of the captured schooners, who was on board the Tallahassee for six hours, represents her to be 800 to 1,000 tons burden nnd very fast. Secretary Stanton announces in an official bul- letin that be has received from Major General 1 Cnnby an official report, dated on the9th instant, of the unconditional surrender of Fort Gaines, with fifty six commissioned officers, eight him- I : died and eighteen enlisted men, twenty-six guns, I and provisions for twelve mouths. This fort, to- ] : gether with Fort Powell, which was abandoned I w ith an armament of eighteen guns, has been oc- i enpied by Union troops. —¦ - i The Draft. —We call the especial attention , of all enrolled men in Bel Air District who hive failed to contribute to tbe furnishing of substi- j tales to exempt this District, to tbe importance I of meeting here on Saturday, the 2dlh inst., and contributing at once for the purposes above ! mentioned, as we are informed that it is in con- ! tempiation at the War Department to relieve only those from draft who contribute to the pur- i pose, and that those who fail to do so, will still I remain subject to the draft of tbe Stb September ( next. * We have ourselves but little interest in the draft, other than such interest which every man should have for his neighbor. We have there- ! fore chosen to call the especial attention of tbe . enrolled men of this District to the subject.—- ¦ 10ur information is such that we think there is ittlc doubt that the facts stated above are literal- ly Iruu, and lienee tbe necessity of at once giv- j giving attention to them. Festival. —Wo see by a published handbill, j that the Mount Tabor Methodist Protestant j Church is to bold a Festival, on Thursday next, | the 2olh of August, in Iho grove of J. Alexan- ! der, Esq., one mile east of tbe Hickory, and near j the Cunowingo Road. It promises to be a fine i affair, and as tbc object is to complete their ! church edifice, we bespeak for them a liberal pa- tronage, at the bands of a generous public. Opinion of Judge Russell Ihe people vs. John. A. Dix and oth era. —lt is unnecessary for me, in deciding this matter, to rehearse the facts ot this case. The defendants, through their counsel, place* themselves under the pro- tection of section 4, of the Act of Con- gress of March 3, 18C3, entitled “An act relating to habeas corpus and regulating judicial proceedings in certain cases If that provision is constitutional, it assimi- lates the President of the United States during the existence of the present rebel- lion to au absolute monarch, cldthus him I with all the imaginary perfection of that I monarch, and makes him incapable of do- ing any wrong. This is a very novel and slat thug doctrine to advance under a re publican form of government. I hove ¦* given the case a most careful considera- tion, on the one hand seeking to avoid an undue interference with the agents of the general government in the performance of their duty, and, on the other, keep- ing before me my own obligation to up- hold aud enforce the laws of the state. I do not deem it proper to state in detail the view 1 i u ertain upon the legal prin- ciple so ably discussed before me by the counsel on both sides. Such an exposi- tion of the law would be more appropriate should this case come before the court for trial. It str kes me, however, as a fit oc- casion to enable the great questions involv- ed in it to be brought up iu such a shape us to admit of their being absolutely and finally settled. If the ao. of Congress in quesion is constitutional in the particular contended for by the defense, it does look as though it imparted to the President powers raising him above the instrument which creates bis office, and giving him the right, in his discretion, to obey that in- ftrument or not. Thu principle is not mooted for decis- ion in this case as to bow far the Presi- dent can act upon a state in which insur- rection or rebellion prevails, nnd where the power of the civil authorities have been suspended, aud the civil law substan- tially explokd. In such a condition of things he must and ought to have very great powers iu order to restore and main- tain the laws. In this stole the civil pow- er is and has always been, in the ascendant. Our citizens arc supposed to enjoy the blessings of tbe federal Constitution, and repose under the benign operations of their owu immediate legislation. If a rebellion in tiny of the insurrectionary slates can de- prive*tbem ot this, then the government of every state iu the Union is at the mercy of every other state. It cannot be possi- ble that any effort to suppress an insur- rection in a seceding state iu tbe Unisn re- quires any disturbance ¦ f the institutions of toe loyal states. If the President can direct anything to bo dune in this state be pleas- es, and fits order is a perfect shield to those who obey bis commands, be becomes a despot, and is no longer tho chief mag- istrate of a free people. The distinc- tion, then, is between wbat he can order to be done in a loyal state and one which is rebellious, and claims to have retired from our confederacy. It be is empowered to bring back the latter to its allegiance, and to force it to submit to tbe federal Constitution and the laws enacted iu pursuance of it, is he em- powered to obliterate, and, for the time being, to wipe out all constitutional guar- antees in favor of the former? It ought to be the law, if it is not, that the will of | *he President is not supreme in a loyal , State. To a certain extent, the federal ¦ government, like tin individual, is protec- ted by State laws, and iu return is to re- spect aud obey them. Those suggestions would appear to bo fairly deduciblo from the healthful principles established by the i Supremo Con it of the United States in J.ittlc vs. llaireme 2, Ctance 170, and B tiller vs, liar on 7, flow id U. S. Up. I. 'lhey certainly sanction' the doctrine I i hut governments, like individuals, must 1 ! not only enforce but obey (lie laws.— ' jTUe provisions if (bo act of, Congress ; i relied upon upon by the defense, lias; come under review by the Supreme Court | of rbo Stale of Indiana in OriO'en v. Wil-, I efts, 21 Indiana R 37(5, which court pro-! I nouneed against itsconslituiionnlity in ref- erence to the rights of its citizens as se- cured and exercised under its own laws. The prize-cases, 2 Black, United Slates I!. (535, do not conflict with the greunds ta- ¦ken for the prosecution in this ease. Tito {xisiliun of this Slate, in my view is this—internally, we are enjoyintr our civil government, us though no other Slate had repudiated its allegiance to the Union externally, wc arc participating in un effort to subdue a number of refractory Stares, In reference to the point of in- tent, which was so zealously discussed by tf>e defendants’ counsel, the law is very plain. If the defendants’ nets were un- lawful, and they wore sane when they commuted them, they are presumed In have intended the necessary const quen- oes of those acts. Every intelligent, mor- al agent is supposed to design every con- st queuce inevitably flowing from his eon- duct. Intention, which is said to bo the soul of crime, eati never bo made out but by and from external conduct. And, if it should pr-.ve in this case that the defendants have no legal justification for their acts, the same presumption will reach them which would attach to auy oth- er violation of the law. The complaints will, therefore, pass to the grand jury iu the usual way for its actiou. The defendants %rced not enter into any written recognizance with sureties.— Having submitted themselves to the juris- diction of the lows of this S'ate, and, with the consent of the district attorney, been enlarged on their verbal recognizance, it it is reasonable to suppose that the same will be ample security fur their future appearance—especially as, during the ar- gument before me, asnne of their learned counsel expressly ratified the same. from the National Intelligencer. The Reaction. In the great political reaction upon which the country has entered during the last month or two, it is gratifying to ob- serve a revision and modification of cer- tain extreme opinions iu quarters which we might have supposed would bo among the last to confess the meliorating influen- ces under which the public judgment is gradually but surely regaining the bal- ance it bad lost. Every student of histo- ry has lived, of course, during the last two or three years, in the sure expectation and foresight that a rebound from the modes of thought and action into which the peo- ple have been plunged by a spirit of phrenzy, was inevitable in the course of events. Its coming’ was a question of time, dependent in part upon the pru- dence with which cxtieine measures should be pressed by tbeir patrons, and in part upon the greater or less degree of success which should attend the operatious ftf our armies. If I lie bplrlt. uf ililiut oiiuil Qini <P oocidl reform had graduated its measures accord- ing to the exigencies of the crisis through which we were passing, and had nut sought to build anew the foundations of the He- ublio at a time when the ground was quaking beneath our feet, we might have witnessed such a wise adaptation of means to ends, as would have carried us through the arduous struggle without spasmodic tits and starts, and therefore without the revulsions of feeling by which they never fail, soouer or later, to bo followed. And so, if we could have bad an unbro- ken succession of military successes, (omit- ting from our view for the moment the fact that such successes were rendered im- possible by the policy into which we drift ed under the sway of our passions,) there would have been little inducement to re- vise the theory on which the war was con- ducted. .And accordingly we obsei ve that it is in the shadows of military disappoint- ment that the national conscience has come to be quickened and the national in- telligence eulighteued with regard to the true ends and objects of the war. As a single illustration of the amendtd thought which is now pervading all class- es of the the people at the present time, inducing them to revise opinions adopted under tire promptings of revenge, mistaken for the instigation of patriotism, we cite the significant fact that the New York Tribune , within the last two or three weeks, has formally renounced the policy of confiscation, to which it once looked as a thunderbolt of war. In bis celebrated “prater of twenty millions” addressed to the President Mr. Greeley wrote : “We think you are strangely and disas- trously remiss iu the discharge of your of- ficial and imperative duly with regard to the emancipating provisions of the confis- cation act.” “We complain that the con- fiscation act which you approved is habit- ually disregarded by your Generals, and that no word of rebuke for them from you has yet reached the public ear.” “We require of you, as the first servant of the republic, charged especially and pre- eminently with the duty, that you ex- ecute the laws. Most emphatically do we demaud that such laws as have been re- cently enacted, which therefore may fair- ly bo presumed to embody the present will and to bo dictated by the present needs of the republic, shall be carried into full effect, and that you shall publicly and decisively instruct your subordinates that such laws exist, that they are binding on all functionaries and citizens, and that they are to be obeyed to the letter.” “This demonT’ we thought misplaced and inapplicable at the time, but every reader will perceive the higher and wiser inspiration under whieh the Tribune now writes, when it holds the following lan- guage ; ‘.‘The zauies in the Loyal States who talk as though a broad empire could be' subjected to military execute.o supply the venomous, desperate traitors in Dixie with the very aliment they u.ed; and wo deeply regret that one of the resolves of the laic : Baltimore Convention scorns calculated to igivo them a lift. Gen. Fremont did a ! wise, generous, manly act, iu stamping iu- j stead of standing on the wholesale conlis- | i cation plauk of tiro Cleveland platform, thereby aiding to smooth the puth to ; peace.” Weighed and Found Wanting. t ; Where there is smoke there is lire, it is 1 said; and where the universal voice of a' free people charges an individual or an administration Willi crimes or reprehensi- ble errors, we may assume, without hesi- tation, that there are substantial reasons for the general clamor. Arguing hence, the incumbent Administration at Wnsb- I iugtou stands convicted of cirois so grave, , and unconstitutional acts so numerous and despotic, that its eviction from fdliee at the coming election is ardently desired by those who would preserve ouv national purity and tho republican form of gov- | eminent of our freedom-loving forefathers. From East and West alike come the sumo , reiterations of charge upon charge, and | the same earn st murmurs of disappruba- ; don. Weakness, vacillation, tho debauch- I Client of every true and Constitutional - principle iu po ilies, and a thorough d< - basement of sub-nfll- iais to the intrigues , ! | of those who hold the ruins of power, aro II pronounced characteristics of those very ¦ j men who are now straining every nerve to secure n re-election, by means whieh as- i i suri-dly will not stand the test of correct 1 I and upright principles. ¦j Mr. Lincoln and his associates have bem weighed in the balance, and found wanting in those qualities which should i 1 be con-picuous iu those who assume to govern a republic. Led on by an insa- liable thirst for the spoils, and ignoring : ¦ j tho rights of the citizen, they yet present ¦ | their stained record as a certificate enti- ! tliug them to a monopoly ot toe Govern- i inent, as though it were a legacy —a po- t liticui residuum to their heirs and assigns ¦ forever. Were the general dissulisfic- | J i turn of the people based only upon parti- 1 ¦ san feeling, the case would be intrinsi- -1 cully different, although it would not j negative that wholesome one-term priuci- j pie which is one of the fundamentals of ! | the true republican theory. But even this poor excuse cannot be alleged. Tho [ Administration stands convicted upon | i facts, not upon inferences; upon patriotic i > | not upon party feeling. In every true . essential it has lacked, while in vicious- . ness it has abounded; and it is the duty i of the people to relegate it to that obscu- I rity front which, to the misfortune of the . country, it was heedlessly emancipated.— i iV. Y Mercury. Peace Suggestions and Specula- , tiOns—The New York correspondent of I the Philadelphia Ledger writes : , The sudden conversion of two of the most clamorous war journals, here, to ¦ “peace’’ as soon as possible, if not, peace f on any terms, to which attention has been [¦ called in this correspondence, as one of the must curious signs of tho times, con- linucs to excite universal remark. In the case of the “Herald" it excites in- i , ; quiry, as well as curiosity, and the inquiry 1 j is, has the editor any assurance from pri- j 1 vatc (Southern) sources, that the rebel [ gOVPim Mintil -*• r,. :y to .tup tl.o 1 p :as the Herald of this morning recom- mends, three peace commissioners are sent :to Hichuiond, with these several proposi- ; lions: i ] “First, for an armistice for six months; . land, second, for a convention id' all tho j . 1 Stales, to ccnsist of one delegate from each i Congressional district, and two additional , delegates fit large from each State, and . said convention thus constituted shall meet, . say iu Baltimore, on the first Monday in December next, to consider the ways and means of peace.” There arc many strange whisperings in , the air, iu connection w ith this suggestion, . which may mean something or mean noth- ing. If your correspondent belonged to , the sensation school, he would put them . in print, and send them to tho Ledger, . but ns it is, he can only advise tho reader ¦ to keep a close eye to movements in this . \ quarter between now and the time for s the meeting of the Chicago Couveh- . tion, if he would discern queer things, , which, just now, can only bo “seen as through a glass, darkly." What the Democrats mean to no. —lt is often asked, (says the Old Guard,') | what tho Democrats mean to do ? { They mean, as. a first step, to fill the , Executive chair with patriotism, and to banish faction and despotism from tho , Administration of the Genual Govern- , inent. What next they will do, depends upon I what they can do to restore peace and ( prosperity to our country. The Democrats are in the condition of a skillful surgeon who is called to a man , who fell into tho hands of assassins. Jf his wounds are not mortal, he w ill restore | him. if Abolition has not killed the Union, tho democrats will restore it. But, at any I rate, they will save Constitutional Libetty [ from going entirely down in tho whirlpool , of blood. Petition for Suspension of the Draft. Mr. Vernon, ()., Aug. ti, 1864. , Editors of the Age, Philadelphia: . j Gentlemen—Petitions similar to the , enclosed are being generally signed in j 0 io and other States. Many llopubli- ! . cans sign them who will vote with us this i.fall. Respectfully, G. W. M. | "To the President uj the United Slates: “The undersigned, citizens of the State j :i of Ohio, without regard to party, and in | ¦' sentiment devoted to the Constitution and | i the Union, respectfully petition and ro- i quest that the draft for half a million more .; i men, oirtered to take place on tho sth day | [of September next, may ho postponed un- i | til an attempt has been made by negolia- ¦ lion to secure peace, based on the Consli- , tutlun and Union. j “August, 1864.” Qjr- A substitute broker in Poiighkoep; sie got rightly served a few days since.— I ; In trying to gel a eojin try mail drunk he ! took too much himself) and was enlisted 1 by the individual whom he h qjvd to sell. 1 lie did not find out his mis! Jio uu'd the , next morning. 1 j The Burning of Chambersburg Explain- j ed. Jnt bcl’iirc leading Williamsport, Gen. Early made some .pbbliu remarks iu re- j gurd to the burning i f Cbambersburg, { : which are of inti rest, lie said that lie or- j dend one hundred thousand dollars in i gold to bo demanded of the town, and (hat ¦ ,it the demand was not complied with in 1 three hours the town was to be burned ; i and the sum of money demanded was in- | tended to reimburse Andrew Hunter, ( Wm. Lucas, Edmund L. Lee and Hon. \ Alexander R. Bolder, for their losses j I i caused io the destruction of their proper-I ty by order of General Hunter, and that 1 ne felt perfectly justified in the course he 1 j had pursued. , He explained how General Hunter had M burned tlio h use of h's (Hunter’s) cousin !' iu J ffeismi county, Virginia, and taken ] ; that c main (Andrew Hunter) off as priso- i oat, and said that iho act was a brutal one, 1 | because the iumales of the house were not allowed time to save even a portion of their , do king. In concluding be said it would ' he the future policy of the Rebel Govern- : mein to retaliate iu Iho severest manner ' tor nil the barbarities practiced against them, lie delivered these remarks in a calm, firm manner. In a private conver- j satiou he said that no man more than him ] .'df deprecated the uects-ity of such an i actus the me committed at Chambers-i burg, hut that ho sanctioued it, believing | he was only doing his duty to those pen- i' pie w ho had suffered by General Hunter’s j orders, and again because ho believed that . by retaliation such barbarous practices | would be sooner discontinued than in any other way. Ho was particularly severe! lon General Hunter, and said that, should j lie fill a prisoner into their hands, his lot [ would be a bard one. Increase of the Pennsylvania ; ' Coal Trade. —The Pennsylvania coal | trade, so far this season, shows an increase ¦ !of 706, 6lit) tons over the, corresponding pen d of last year. Tho Philadelphia ! Ledger, referring to this important subject, remarks : The supply of coal continues largo, but j would be much heavier if transportation I were equal to the production. The de- ! mand and prices of coal was such as to iu- j fuse the utmost energy at the mines, and the carrying companies abate nothing in tbftir efforts to swell their tonnage to the largest possible portions with limited} means. High tolls are influencing them j as much us high prices of eoal stimulate j production. Everything in the shape of a car and eyery description of motive pow- er that can be made available is pressed . into the service. The trade is unusually spirited. In this connection we may men- tion the fact that the American Govern-j inent has consented to permit anthracite I coal to he exported from the United States : into Canada on tho condition that the j Canadian government would forbid its ex- ¦ porta lion from Canada. A cabinet coun-I | cil was therefore held at Quebec oh Thurs- j day, and a proclamation issued forbidding | the exportation of anthracite coal from the province. That description of coal tun inetcfoic now be imported into Cana- da. Shoddy Dash. In noticing instances of foolish estrav- | agance, so prevalent at this time iu the I j great metropolis, tho New Yotk Tribunal relates the following; We heard the other day of a most ridic- j ulous “dash’ 1 made by a New Yorker of| ' reported wealth now, but who was not [ 1 long ago a citizen of Rochester in very | moderate circumstances. The distinguish-1 (¦¦l gentleman made his appearance in Broadway in a coach and four, with as many servants in livery as could be ac- commodated. Close by was bis wife, in a separate carriage drawu by two horses j 1 with servants in livery as above. Next j ciinio another carriage with like appoint-] inent, containing the children of the very j distingu sited couple ! Could a more lu- \ diorous or a more melancholy spectacle be ! presented fur the contemplation of men of sense ? DIED , At ber lute resilience in Harford county, on Saturday, August 13th, 1864, CLARA H, wife J of Benjamin K. Carroll) aged 42 years. She leaves a husband ard six children, be- -1 sides a large circle of relatives and friends, to i mourn tbiir irreparable loss. A kind, nffection- ! ate wile, a devoted mother and true friend, her loss is deeply felt ; yet their loss is her eternal 1 gain. “None knew her but to love her, None named her hut to praise.” A faiEKO. NOTICE. TO THE TAX PAYERS OF THE 6TH ELECTION DISTRICT. TJERSONS desirous of availing them- J7 selves of the benefit of the deduction of 5 per cent, on their Taxes, will meet I , me at Isaac W. Scarborough’s Store, on WEDNESDAY, August 24th; at Pyle’s! Mill, on THURSDAY, 25th; at Me I Cana’s Hotel, Dublin, on MONDAY, 1 29th, and at B. H. Hanson Si Co’s Store. | Darlington, on TUESDA Y, 30th August,' 1 After the 31st of August no deduction J will be inada, as the lime will then have ! expired. It will he well (or the lax-payers to ; bear this in mind. 1 have adopied this course for the convenience of the peopl , and to relieve them as fur as I can from the burthens of taxation. T. C. WORTHINGTON, anl9 Collector of stli District. LOST. —In Bel Air or neighborhood, a lew days since, a brown silk PARA- ! 1 SOLv which the finder will please leave at this office. . A. PRESTON GILBERT, AWW&MSJBf AW tkJLWf Bel Air, J\ld. Office witli 11. D. Farnamlis, Esq. au!9 WA NkT El).—One or two JOURNEY-1 MEN BLACKSMITHS. Enquire of MARTIN CAI.DER, ! 010 Federal Hill, Harford Co., Md.. TUB New York Weekly Herald. Th© Cheapest Paper in the World. The extensive and comprehensive facilities in its possesion eimlilcs the pßoraiETou of the " kekly Herald to guarantee the latest and most reliable information possil.lv to be obtained, not only from all parts of tbe United Plates but from all parts of tbe world. Its Lome correspondents, engaged at heart cost and connected with each new naval anil military expedition of the government, prove that it is determined to leave no spot uncovered by its operations and no event cun occur that shall not find immediate report in its Columns.— it costs the proprietor over one hundred thous- and dollars per year to maintain Its corps of cor- respondents in thefield.. In its collation of Foreign News the HibaLo has forbears held a high position, and it will en- deavor in the future fn maintain the stand it has assumed. It has special correspondents stationed in all of the principal cities of the world. Its telegraphic arrangements extend to wher- ever the electric wires are stretched. When th* Atlantic cable is laid, wlnch feat will soon be ac- complished, telegrams will he received from Eu- rope and Asia, as well as from the United States. Then our readers will have the events of the week in all parts of the civilised world regularly and clearly laid before them The proprietor devotes a portion of the paper to Literature, Fashion, Agriculture, the Mechanic Arts, Sporting Matters, business, Theatrical and Financial Reports, (tattle Markets, General News, and reports of pit events calculated to firman excellent metropolitan newspaper—a weekly pho- tographic view of the events of the world—ami all at a very low price. The M eekly lllkald is issued every SsUml morning, and furnished at the following rates;— One copy ~...52 Three copies ' n Five copies $ Ten copies Any large number, addressed to names of sub- scribers, si.so each. An extra copy will be sent to every club of ! ten. Twenty copies, to one address, one year, sjn, 1 and any larger number at same price. An extra copy will he sent to clubs of twenty. Advertisements to a limited number will be in- -1 serted in the Weekly Herald. The Daily Herald, three cents per copy.— Ten dollars per year forthiee hundred and sixty- three issues. Fire dollars for six teenths. Two dollars and fiftv cents for three months. JAMES GORDON BENNETT, Editor and Proprietor, , Northwest corner ofFnllon & Nassau streets, New York city, N. Y. There are no traveling agents for tbe Herald. aug 19-3 t REPORT OP THK GRAND JURY. ON THR CONDITION OP THE JAIL. AUGUST TERM, 1864. To the Honorable JOHN II PRICK , Judge, of the Circuit Court for Harford county. i The Grand Jury of August Term. 1864, respectfully report lo your Honor that wn visited the Jail td'the county, on the Bth instant; and we think the inmates are as comfortably cared for us the keeper can have them, the building being contracted and badly arranged for such a purpose. The building is in a rather dilapidated j condition, and unsafe for the purpose of sale-keeping 01 pri.ncrs, anil we recom- : mend the building of a new jail,entire. We find confined at ibis lime seventeen persons, for the following offences; Five while men lor robbery, 2 for ttfc- : sank and battery, 1 for milrder, 3 insane; 1 while woman for larceny ; 1 colored man insane, I for assault with intent to 1 kill, 1 for larceny, 1 for arson, and one woman for larceny. J. C. PARKER, | an 19 Foreman. $5 REWARD. STRAYED away from the subscriber, about the 3d of August, a dark red STEER—horns turned in, lip of tail white, 1 a small white spot in one of his flanks; j no other marks remembered. The above rewaid will be paid for his 1 return to the subscriber, and any informa- j lion in regard lo bis whereabouts will be thankfully received. JAMES BILIINGSLEA, an 19 Near the Hickory. NOTICE. ATOTICE is hereby given that the | J.M LAWS of the last Legislature have j been received at the Clerk’s Office, and are ready for delivery to. those persons enti- tled to the same. an 19 W.M. H. DALLAM, Clerk. f LOST.' ON Friday evening, 12th inst., on the mad leading fiom Bel Air to Wether- j ill’s Mill, a lady’s black silk C' i.\T I Any person finding the above will j 1... u ¦ leave it at Dallam’s Hotel. COAL! COAL! Baltimore company’s coal, of the various sizes, and the best BLACKSMITH’S COAL, for sale ns low as it ran be had in Harford county, and DELIVERED at low rales, if required. R J. JACKSON, o 9 Deer Creek Landing. FOR RENT. f|AHE subscriber will rent his LONG JL BAR FARM. Possession given in March. SEPTIMUS D. SEWELL. Abingdon, Aug. 10th, 1564. anl2 wantedT A BOY from 12 to 20 years of age, to whom the highest wages will be paid. Apply at this office, or to Du. J. W. S. NORRIS, my 23 W'oodside, near Thomas’ Run. O.MERRYMAX. B. P. KERCH, D. D. 8. MERRYMAK & KERCH. DMTIBTB, No, oJ North Calu rl Street , mh2s BALTIMORE. HAY WANTED, JJRIME RAILED TIMOTHY HAY wanted at I I I,API DU M, llarli.nl county, Maryland, for I which the HIGHEST CASH PR IGF. will b ¦paid. ANDREW ABELS, Agra; 8cp1.6. for Davii! A Pttglt.

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Page 1: New York Weekly Herald. f 4 r 1 I...among thu itiicllijreni tanners mid biii*in

ms & INTELLIGENCEK— - • ¦ - -

A. W. BATEMAN. Editor.,v f 4 r " 1

B ErL AIR, Ml).,

Friday, August 19, ISG4.hn* a more eitended ciiculoiion t

among thu itiicllijreni tanners mid biii*in<?a mcu t !ifnctml, than y other inp*r in the county- No

14 Ij'H'K (focpitnP* mi t(hef olMPcne or “ l.oiiery’*dver. 1i H.-mviiiHwill appear in our columns at any price. Ai.<ri!a ntMnhff m mrr i*mwcrH*i> pay for thetr paper.ln dvapec, and consequently arc Just che digs advertiser* do jsie io rM(‘h.

The Rtteiuion of n-*pectat>le and iogitiinnte advertisersIf directed in the above faCU.

To Correspondents.II Allcoinoiurilcuuon** lor publication lr( hr eccr-m !pninu'l wall the ten I name of the author, or no alientinn will be pAid to them. The real.inmic of the huilio 'Mili i'Oi h; puWislicd unions dcairnd. hot wn ennnotrniMint to upon coniiiiuuicatiuiui unices we know ihe 1

:wntf r.

TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS.. .Tbc great increase in the price of all printing Imaterial, ns well ns the labor about the pub- 'lishing of a newspaper, compels us to adoptthe course l.ieh nil our cotenipornrics have oflafe indicated, us <lte oflly safe one for the con-ductors of a newspaper. We, like the rest ofthe community, are bnrthcned with an unusual

expense, owing to circumstances over which we |have no control. In view of this state of things, ‘wo are reluctantly compelled to say to one sub |ecribers, th;'t from ami after this date we shallcharge One Dollar ami Fifty celts a year for lire

A'ejit .j' htitlUgencer— invariably in advance; \and Two Dollars ifnot paid until the end of the jyear.

Those persons now indebted to ns for snbscrip--1ioi(, who settle their bills before the first of Oc-tober, will only be charged sl, but after thatdate $1.50 will in all eases be demanded. Onedollar nnd fifty cents has always been the priceof the paper w hen not paid in advance, but wehave never demanded it, and would not now, if jcircumstances did not peremptorily require such in course. The enlargement ofoitr paper has im-posed upon os tin additional expense, and cer- jtainiy made the paper that much more valuable jto onr readers.

We feel that i; adopting this course we arc ionly taking such steps ns every judicious man, \in the present condition of affairs, finds himselfcompelled to adopt; and without saying more, jwe return our thanks to' the public for the verv Sliberal support ol the last two years, and pt'om- jise, that to the extent of our feeble abilities, the !¦ F.r/is .j- Intelligencer shall he a welcome visitor. [

In this connection, We refer our readers to thefollowing well-timed article, from the BaltimoreSun of the 15th instant;

Increase in the Price or Newspapers.—Theextraordinary increase in the price of paper andevery other material connected with the printingbusiness, has forced almost every newspaper inthe country to advance its subscription price.The Washington Daily Chronicle lias raised itsprice to thirty cents per week to city subscribers,nnd leu dollars a year, in advance, by mail.—The Washington Star and Xuional Republicanof the same city, will hereafter charge twelve anda half cents per week to city subscribers, andthree cents a copy at the counter. The Bostondaily papers also announce that an increase ofprice is agreed upon in that city. The Journal, jTraveller, Transcript, Advertiser nnd Post will jhereafter sell for live cents, and the Herald for'three cents. We have heretofore staled that all [the daily journals of New Voik, Philadelphia !..n.J other vit.rs, had increased their prices. —

Most of our Maryland country exchanges havealso advanced their rates. The Alexandria Oa- \retie, in an article on the shove subject, makesthe following remarks ;

“Even at the increased rates, newspapers con-tinue to bo tire cheapest of commodities, givingmore in return for the stipulated price, than anyother article offered to the public. The advancelias been made, in most instances, too late doprevent heavy loss, and even at the advancedprices tlie enterprises arc far from remunerative,so that many of ilia best know n and most ageea-ble caterers at the daily' banquet of the people,have been compelled to seek in oilier avocations,the support denied them in their legitimatesphere.

“The consideration of these things should in-duce communities to give a generous support tothose local papers which being established intheir midst, have become household words—-which have been the chronicles of home life inshadow and sunshine—which are the record ofthe marriages, deaths, and the thousand otherincidents which make up the history ofcommu-nities—which are endeared to the public heart bymany ties, none the Jess so, because they' havesupported local interests equally when such sup-port was pleasant and profitable, nnd when itentailed personal inis.ortune or private loss.

‘'When a local journ il, honored for years be-cause honorable in all its dealings with men andmeasures, deprived of its accustomed resources,is still maintained, under the most adverse cir-cumstances, by the energy of its conductors, andsometimes without remuneration, it establishes aclaim upon the community to whose interests itis devoted, which a discerning public will free-ly acknowledge, by lending it a cordial, hear-ty and generous support.”

WAR NEWS.Admiral Farragut’s official report of the first

days’s operations in Mobile Bay confirms the intel-ligence received through unofficial sources of thecapture of two Confederate gunboats, the Selmaand the Tennessee, but says Ihe gunboat Gaines,ns well as ihe Morgan, succeeded in getting backto the protection cf Fort Morgan. All the fleethad passed Forts Gaines and Morgan at 8.30 A."M. on the 3th hist, when it was discovered thatthe ram Tennessee was still in their rear anduninjured. Admiral Furragut gave orders forthe entire fleet to turn back at once and beardown upon the ram. After being run into twoor three times, and broadsides ofheavy shot firedinto her, the Tennessee sur end-red at teno’clock, with twenty office is", including AdmiralBuchanan, who was wounded, and one hundredand seventy men. The casualties of the Unionforces in this day's engagement was forty-onekilled and eighty-eight wounded.

An Associated Press telegram says the Cincin-nati papers have received advices from Atlantawhich report that on the Ctb hist, a partially un-successful assault was made on the enemy's lines,in which the 33d corps lost over 500 men.

The latest, intelligence from the Army of thePotomac indicates that important movements areI cing made on ihe north side of the James riveragainst Richmond. 'I he correspondence of theAssociated Press'says that (he Second and TenthCorps were landed on Ihe north hunk of the !James river, about twelve miles from Riehmond, !nt an early hour on Sunday morning last, andtlmt during the day they succeeded in carryingtwo lines of the enemy’s earthworks—the centreone being about nine miles from Riehmond. Inaddition to this, the Union troops are reported tohate captured one of the butteries that boro uponGen. Butler’s men who were digging a canal.

Major General Burnside was relieved of hiscommand on .Saturday, an 1 passed through Bal-timore on MondiW, 1 with his stall- , oh his way u,hij tejidencc in Rhode island. Ocn. Wilcox is ¦

temporarily in command of the Ninth Army iCorps. ---i.

i Tho steamer Empress, from New Orleans onthe Clh instant, was attacked on the 10th by aConfederate masked battery near Gaines’s Land-

j ihg, on the Mississippi tiver. Sixty |I shot and shell struck the steamer, killing the cap-

tain nnd four others, and wounding eleven per-

sons. The Empress was finally lowed to a plaieof saft-ty by a gunboat which arrived althatcrlti-

| cal moment.A despatch from Boston gives some further ac-

I count ol the depredations by the privateer -Talla-hassee. The captain of one of the capturedschooners, who was on board the Tallahassee for

six hours, represents her to be 800 to 1,000 tons

burden nnd very fast.Secretary Stanton announces in an official bul-

letin that be has received from Major General

1 Cnnby an officialreport, dated on the9th instant,of the unconditional surrender of Fort Gaines,with fifty six commissioned officers, eight him- I

: died and eighteen enlisted men, twenty-six guns, ’

I and provisions for twelve mouths. This fort, to- ]: gether with Fort Powell, which was abandoned I

w ith an armament ofeighteen guns, has been oc-

i enpied by Union troops.—¦ -

i The Draft. —We call the especial attention, of all enrolled men in Bel Air District who hivefailed to contribute to tbe furnishing of substi-

j tales to exempt this District, to tbe importanceI of meeting here on Saturday, the 2dlh inst., andcontributing at once for the purposes above

! mentioned, as we are informed that it is in con-! tempiation at the War Department to relieveonly those from draft who contribute to the pur-

i pose, and that those who fail to do so, will stillI remain subject to the draft of tbe Stb September

( next. *

We have ourselves but little interest in thedraft, other than such interest which every manshould have for his neighbor. We have there-

! fore chosen to call the especial attention of tbe. enrolled men of this District to the subject.—-¦ 10ur information is such that we think there is

ittlc doubt that the facts stated above are literal-ly Iruu, and lienee tbe necessity of at once giv-

j giving attention to them.

Festival. —Wo see by a published handbill,j that the Mount Tabor Methodist Protestant

j Church is to bold a Festival, on Thursday next,| the 2olh of August, in Iho grove of J. Alexan-

! der, Esq., one mile east of tbe Hickory, and nearj the Cunowingo Road. It promises to be a fine

i affair, and as tbc object is to complete their! church edifice, we bespeak for them a liberal pa-

tronage, at the bands of a generous public.

Opinion of Judge RussellIhe people vs. John. A. Dix and oth

era. —lt is unnecessary for me, in decidingthis matter, to rehearse the facts ot thiscase. The defendants, through theircounsel, place* themselves under the pro-tection of section 4, of the Act of Con-gress of March 3, 18C3, entitled “An actrelating to habeas corpus and regulatingjudicial proceedings in certain cases ” Ifthat provision is constitutional, it assimi-lates the President of the United Statesduring the existence of the present rebel-lion to au absolute monarch, cldthus him

I with all the imaginary perfection of thatI monarch, and makes him incapable of do-ing any wrong. This is a very novel andslat thug doctrine to advance under a republican form of government. I hove ¦*

given the case a most careful considera-tion, on the one hand seeking to avoid anundue interference with the agents of thegeneral government in the performanceof their duty, and, on the other, keep-ing before me my own obligation to up-hold aud enforce the laws of the state. Ido not deem it proper to state in detailthe view 1 i u ertain upon the legal prin-ciple so ably discussed before me by thecounsel on both sides. Such an exposi-tion of the law would be more appropriateshould this case come before the court fortrial. It str kes me, however, as a fit oc-casion to enable the great questions involv-ed in it to be brought up iu such a shapeus to admit of their being absolutely andfinally settled. If the ao. of Congress inquesion is constitutional in the particularcontended for by the defense, it does lookas though it imparted to the Presidentpowers raising him above the instrumentwhich creates bis office, and giving him theright, in his discretion, to obey that in-ftrument or not.

Thu principle is not mooted for decis-ion in this case as to bow far the Presi-dent can act upon a state in which insur-rection or rebellion prevails, nnd wherethe power of the civil authorities havebeen suspended, aud the civil law substan-tially explokd. In such a condition ofthings he must and ought to have verygreat powers iu order to restore and main-tain the laws. In this stole the civilpow-er is and has always been, in the ascendant.Our citizens arc supposed to enjoy theblessings of tbe federal Constitution, andrepose under the benign operations of theirowu immediate legislation. Ifa rebellionin tiny of the insurrectionary slates can de-prive*tbem ot this, then the governmentof every state iu the Union is at the mercyof every other state. It cannot be possi-ble that any effort to suppress an insur-rection in a seceding state iu tbe Unisn re-quires any disturbance ¦ f the institutions oftoe loyal states. Ifthe President can directanything to bo dune in this state be pleas-es, and fits order is a perfect shield tothose who obey bis commands, be becomesa despot, and is no longer tho chief mag-istrate of a free people. The distinc-tion, then, is between wbat he can orderto be done in a loyal state and one whichis rebellious, and claims to have retiredfrom our confederacy.

It be is empowered to bring back thelatter to its allegiance, and to force it tosubmit to tbe federal Constitution and thelaws enacted iu pursuance of it, is he em-powered to obliterate, and, for the timebeing, to wipe out all constitutional guar-antees in favor of the former? It ought tobe the law, if it is not, that the willof

| *he President is not supreme in a loyal, State. To a certain extent, the federal¦ government, like tin individual, is protec-

ted by State laws, and iu return is to re-spect aud obey them. Those suggestionswould appear to bo fairly deduciblo fromthe healthful principles established by the iSupremo Con it of the United States inJ.ittlc vs. llaireme 2, Ctance 170, andB tiller vs, liar on 7, flow id U. S. Up.I. 'lhey certainly sanction' the doctrine I

i hut governments, like individuals, must 1

! not only enforce but obey (lie laws.— 'jTUe provisions if (bo act of, Congress ;

i relied upon upon by the defense, lias;come under review by the Supreme Court |of rbo Stale of Indiana in OriO'en v. Wil-,

I efts, 21 Indiana R 37(5, which court pro-!I nouneed against itsconslituiionnlity in ref-erence to the rights of its citizens as se-cured and exercised under its own laws.The prize-cases, 2 Black, United Slates I!.(535, do not conflict with the greunds ta-¦ken for the prosecution in this ease.

Tito {xisiliun of this Slate, in my viewis this—internally, we are enjoyintr ourcivil government, us though no other Slatehad repudiated its allegiance to the Union

externally, wc arc participating in uneffort to subdue a number of refractoryStares, In reference to the point of in-tent, which was so zealously discussed bytf>e defendants’ counsel, the law is veryplain. If the defendants’ nets were un-lawful, and they wore sane when theycommuted them, they are presumed Inhave intended the necessary const quen-oes of those acts. Every intelligent, mor-al agent is supposed to design every con-st queuce inevitably flowing from his eon-duct. Intention, which is said to bo thesoul of crime, eati never bo made outbut by and from external conduct. —

And, if it should pr-.ve in this case thatthe defendants have no legal justificationfor their acts, the same presumption willreach them which would attach to auy oth-er violation of the law.

The complaints will, therefore, pass tothe grand jury iu the usual way for itsactiou.

The defendants %rced not enter intoany written recognizance with sureties.—Having submitted themselves to the juris-diction of the lows of this S'ate, and, withthe consent of the district attorney, beenenlarged on their verbal recognizance, itit is reasonable to suppose that the samewill be ample security fur their futureappearance—especially as, during the ar-

gument before me, asnne of their learnedcounsel expressly ratified the same.

from the National Intelligencer.The Reaction.

In the great political reaction uponwhich the country has entered during thelast month or two, it is gratifying to ob-serve a revision and modification of cer-tain extreme opinions iu quarters whichwe might have supposed would bo amongthe last to confess the meliorating influen-ces under which the public judgment isgradually but surely regaining the bal-ance it bad lost. Every student of histo-ry has lived, of course, during the last twoor three years, in the sure expectation andforesight that a rebound from the modesof thought and action into which the peo-ple have been plunged by a spirit ofphrenzy, was inevitable in the course ofevents. Its coming’ was a question oftime, dependent in part upon the pru-dence with which cxtieine measures shouldbe pressed by tbeir patrons, and in partupon the greater or less degree of successwhich should attend the operatious ftfour armies.

If I lie bplrlt. uf ililiutoiiuil Qini <P oocidl

reform had graduated its measures accord-ing to the exigencies of the crisis throughwhich we were passing, and had nut soughtto build anew the foundations of the He-ublio at a time when the ground was

quaking beneath our feet, we might havewitnessed such a wise adaptation of meansto ends, as would have carried us throughthe arduous struggle without spasmodictits and starts, and therefore without therevulsions of feeling by which they neverfail, soouer or later, to bo followed.

And so, ifwe could have bad an unbro-ken succession of military successes, (omit-ting from our view for the moment thefact that such successes were rendered im-possible by the policy into which we drifted under the sway of our passions,) therewould have been little inducement to re-vise the theory on which the war was con-ducted. .And accordingly we obsei ve thatit is in the shadows of military disappoint-ment that the national conscience hascome to be quickened and the national in-telligence eulighteued with regard to thetrue ends and objects of the war.

As a single illustration of the amendtdthought which is now pervading all class-es of the the people at the present time,inducing them to revise opinions adoptedunder tire promptings of revenge, mistakenfor the instigation of patriotism, we citethe significant fact that the New YorkTribune , within the last two or threeweeks, has formally renounced the policyof confiscation, to which it once looked asa thunderbolt of war. In bis celebrated“prater of twenty millions” addressed tothe President Mr. Greeley wrote :

“We think you are strangely and disas-trously remiss iu the discharge of your of-ficial and imperative duly with regard to

the emancipating provisions of the confis-cation act.” “We complain that the con-fiscation act which you approved is habit-ually disregarded by your Generals, andthat no word of rebuke for them from youhas yet reached the public ear.” “Werequire of you, as the first servant ofthe republic, charged especially and pre-eminently with the duty, that you ex-ecute the laws. Most emphatically do wedemaud that such laws as have been re-cently enacted, which therefore may fair-ly bo presumed to embody the presentwill and to bo dictated by the presentneeds of the republic, shall be carried intofull effect, and that you shall publiclyand decisively instruct your subordinatesthat such laws exist, that they are bindingon all functionaries and citizens, and thatthey are to be obeyed to the letter.”

“This demonT’ we thought misplacedand inapplicable at the time, but everyreader will perceive the higher and wiserinspiration under whieh the Tribune nowwrites, when it holds the following lan-guage ;

‘.‘The zauies in the Loyal States whotalk as though a broad empire could be'subjected to military execute.o supply thevenomous, desperate traitors in Dixie withthe very aliment they u.ed; and wo deeplyregret that one of the resolves of the laic

: Baltimore Convention scorns calculated toigivo them a lift. Gen. Fremont did a! wise, generous, manly act, iu stamping iu-

j stead of standing on the wholesale conlis- |i cation plauk of tiro Cleveland platform,

thereby aiding to smooth the puth to; peace.”

Weighed and Found Wanting. t ;Where there is smoke there is lire, it is 1

said; and where the universal voice of a'free people charges an individual or anadministration Willi crimes or reprehensi-ble errors, we may assume, without hesi-tation, that there are substantial reasonsfor the general clamor. Arguing hence,

’ the incumbent Administration at Wnsb-

I iugtou stands convicted of cirois so grave, ,and unconstitutional acts so numerous anddespotic, that its eviction from fdliee atthe coming election is ardently desiredby those who would preserve ouv nationalpurity and tho republican form of gov- |eminent of our freedom-loving forefathers.From East and West alike come the sumo

, reiterations of charge upon charge, and| the same earn st murmurs of disappruba- ;

• don. Weakness, vacillation, tho debauch- IClient of every true and Constitutional

- principle iu po ilies, and a thorough d< -

• basement of sub-nfll- iais to the intrigues ,! | of those who hold the ruins of power, aro

II pronounced characteristics of those very¦ j men who are now straining every nerve to

secure n re-election, by means whieh as-i i suri-dly will not stand the test of correct 1I and upright principles.¦j Mr. Lincoln and his associates have

bem weighed in the balance, and found• wanting in those qualities which should

i 1 be con-picuous iu those who assume to

govern a republic. Led on by an insa-• liable thirst for the spoils, and ignoring :¦ j tho rights of the citizen, they yet present¦ | their stained record as a certificate enti- !• tliug them to a monopoly ot toe Govern-

i inent, as though it were a legacy —a po-t liticui residuum to their heirs and assigns¦ forever. Were the general dissulisfic- |

J i turn of the people based only upon parti- 1¦ san feeling, the case would be intrinsi--1 cully different, although it would not

j negative that wholesome one-term priuci-j pie which is one of the fundamentals of !

| the true republican theory. But eventhis poor excuse cannot be alleged. Tho [Administration stands convicted upon |

i facts, not upon inferences; upon patriotic i> | not upon party feeling. In every true

. essential it has lacked, while in vicious-. ness it has abounded; and it is the duty

i of the people to relegate it to that obscu-I rity front which, to the misfortune of the

. country, it was heedlessly emancipated.—i iV. Y Mercury.

Peace Suggestions and Specula-

, tiOns—The New York correspondent ofI the Philadelphia Ledger writes :

, The sudden conversion of two of themost clamorous war journals, here, to¦ “peace’’ as soon as possible, if not, peace

f on any terms, to which attention has been[¦ called in this correspondence, as one of

the must curious signs of tho times, con-linucs to excite universal remark. Inthe case of the “Herald" it excites in- i

, ; quiry, as well as curiosity, and the inquiry 1• j is, has the editor any assurance from pri- j

1 vatc (Southern) sources, that the rebel[ gOVPim Mintil -*•r,. :y to .tup tl.o 1 p:as the Herald of this morning recom-

mends, three peace commissioners are sent:to Hichuiond, with these several proposi-; lions:

i ] “First, for an armistice for six months; .land, second, for a convention id' all tho j

. 1 Stales, to ccnsist of one delegate from eachi Congressional district, and two additional

, delegates fit large from each State, and. said convention thus constituted shall meet,

. say iu Baltimore, on the first Monday inDecember next, to consider the ways andmeans of peace.”

There arc many strange whisperings in, the air, iu connection w ith this suggestion,

. which may mean something or mean noth-ing. If your correspondent belonged to

, the sensation school, he would put them. in print, and send them to tho Ledger,. but ns it is, he can only advise tho reader

¦ to keep a close eye to movements in this. \ quarter between now and the time for

s the meeting of the Chicago Couveh-. tion, if he would discern queer things,, which, just now, can only bo “seen as

through a glass, darkly."

What the Democrats mean to no.—lt is often asked, (says the Old Guard,')

| what tho Democrats mean to do ?

{ They mean, as. a first step, to fill the, Executive chair with patriotism, and to

banish faction and despotism from tho, Administration of the Genual Govern-

, inent.What next they will do, depends upon

I what they can do to restore peace and( prosperity to our country.

The Democrats are in the condition ofa skillful surgeon who is called to a man ,who fell into tho hands of assassins. Jfhis wounds are not mortal, he w illrestore

| him.if Abolition has not killed the Union,

tho democrats willrestore it. But, at anyI rate, they will save Constitutional Libetty

[ from going entirely down in tho whirlpool, of blood.

Petition for Suspension of the Draft.Mr. Vernon, ()., Aug. ti, 1864.

, Editors of the Age, Philadelphia:. j Gentlemen—Petitions similar to the ,• enclosed are being generally signed in j

0 io and other States. Many llopubli- !. cans sign them who will vote with us thisi.fall. Respectfully, G. W. M.| "To the President uj the United Slates:

“The undersigned, citizens of the State j:i of Ohio, without regard to party, and in |¦' sentiment devoted to the Constitution and |

i the Union, respectfully petition and ro- iquest that the draft for half a million more .;

i men, oirtered to take place on tho sth day |[of September next, may ho postponed un- i| til an attempt has been made by negolia-

¦ lion to secure peace, based on the Consli-, tutlun and Union.

• j “August, 1864.”

Qjr- A substitute broker in Poiighkoep;sie got rightly served a few days since.— I

; In trying to gel a eojin try mail drunk he! took too much himself) and was enlisted

1 by the individual whom he h qjvd to sell.1 lie did not find out his mis! Jio uu'd the

, next morning. 1

j The Burning of Chambersburg Explain- jed.

Jnt bcl’iirc leading Williamsport, Gen.Early made some .pbbliu remarks iu re- jgurd to the burning i f Cbambersburg, {

: which are of inti rest, lie said that lie or- jdend one hundred thousand dollars in igold to bo demanded of the town, and (hat ¦ ’

,it the demand was not complied with in 1three hours the town was to be burned ; iand the sum of money demanded was in- |tended to reimburse Andrew Hunter, (Wm. Lucas, Edmund L. Lee and Hon. \Alexander R. Bolder, for their losses j I

i caused io the destruction of their proper-I •ty by order of General Hunter, and that 1ne felt perfectly justified in the course he 1 jhad pursued. ,

He explained how General Hunter had Mburned tlio h use of h's (Hunter’s) cousin !'iu J ffeismi county, Virginia, and taken ]

; that c main (Andrew Hunter) offas priso-i oat, and said that iho act was a brutal one, 1| because the iumales of the house were notallowed time to save even a portion of their ,do king. In concluding be said it would 'he the future policy of the Rebel Govern- :mein to retaliate iu Iho severest manner 'tor nil the barbarities practiced againstthem, lie delivered these remarks in acalm, firm manner. In a private conver-

jsatiou he said that no man more than him ].'df deprecated the uects-ity of such an iactus the me committed at Chambers-i •burg, hut that ho sanctioued it, believing |he was only doing his duty to those pen- i'pie w ho had suffered by General Hunter’s jorders, and again because ho believed that .by retaliation such barbarous practices |would be sooner discontinued than in anyother way. Ho was particularly severe!

lon General Hunter, and said that, should jlie fill a prisoner into their hands, his lot [would be a bard one.

Increase of the Pennsylvania ;' Coal Trade. —The Pennsylvania coal |trade, so far this season, shows an increase ¦

!of 706, 6lit) tons over the, correspondingpen d of last year. Tho Philadelphia

! Ledger, referring to this important subject,remarks :

The supply of coal continues largo, butj would be much heavier if transportation

I were equal to the production. The de-! mand and prices of coal was such as to iu-j fuse the utmost energy at the mines, andthe carrying companies abate nothing intbftir efforts to swell their tonnage to thelargest possible portions with limited}means. High tolls are influencing them jas much us high prices of eoal stimulate jproduction. Everything in the shape ofa car and eyery description of motive pow-er that can be made available is pressed

. into the service. The trade is unusuallyspirited. In this connection we may men-tion the fact that the American Govern-jinent has consented to permit anthracite Icoal to he exported from the United States :into Canada on tho condition that the jCanadian government would forbid its ex- ¦porta lion from Canada. A cabinet coun-I

| cil was therefore held at Quebec oh Thurs-j day, and a proclamation issued forbidding

| the exportation of anthracite coal fromthe province. That description of coaltun inetcfoic now be imported into Cana-da.

Shoddy Dash.In noticing instances of foolish estrav-

| agance, so prevalent at this time iu the Ij great metropolis, tho New Yotk Tribunalrelates the following;

We heard the other day of a most ridic- julous “dash’ 1 made by a New Yorker of|

' reported wealth now, but who was not [1 long ago a citizen of Rochester in very |moderate circumstances. The distinguish-1(¦¦l gentleman made his appearance inBroadway in a coach and four, with as

many servants in livery as could be ac-

commodated. Close by was bis wife, ina separate carriage drawu by two horses — j

1 with servants in livery as above. Next jciinio another carriage with like appoint-]inent, containing the children of the very jdistingu sited couple ! Could a more lu- \diorous or a more melancholy spectacle be !presented fur the contemplation of men

of sense ?

DIED ,

At ber lute resilience in Harford county, on• Saturday, August 13th, 1864, CLARA H, wife J

of Benjamin K. Carroll) aged 42 years.She leaves a husband ard six children, be-

-1 sides a large circle of relatives and friends, to

i mourn tbiir irreparable loss. A kind, nffection-! ate wile, a devoted mother and true friend, her

loss is deeply felt ; yet their loss is her eternal 1gain.

“None knew her but to love her,None named her hut to praise.”

A faiEKO.

NOTICE.TO THE TAX PAYERS OF THE

6TH ELECTION DISTRICT.

TJERSONS desirous of availing them-J7 selves of the benefit of the deductionof 5 per cent, on their Taxes, will meet I

, me at Isaac W. Scarborough’s Store, onWEDNESDAY, August 24th; at Pyle’s!Mill, on THURSDAY, 25th; at Me ICana’s Hotel, Dublin, on MONDAY, 129th, and at B. H. Hanson Si Co’s Store. |Darlington, on TUESDA Y, 30th August,'

1 After the 31st of August no deductionJ will be inada, as the lime will then have

! expired.It will he well (or the lax-payers to

; bear this in mind. 1 have adopied thiscourse for the convenience of the peopl ,

and to relieve them as fur as I can fromthe burthens of taxation.

T. C. WORTHINGTON,anl9 Collector of stli District.

LOST. —In Bel Air or neighborhood, alew days since, a brown silk PARA- !

1 SOLv which the finder will please leaveat this office.

. A. PRESTON GILBERT,

AWW&MSJBf AW tkJLWfBel Air, J\ld.

Office witli 11. D. Farnamlis, Esq.au!9

WA NkTEl).—One or two JOURNEY-1MEN BLACKSMITHS.Enquire of MARTIN CAI.DER, !

010 Federal Hill, Harford Co., Md..

TUB

New York Weekly Herald.Th© Cheapest Paper in the World.

The extensive and comprehensive facilities inits possesion eimlilcs the pßoraiETou of the" kekly Herald to guarantee the latest andmost reliable information possil.lv to be obtained,not only from all parts of tbe United Plates butfrom all parts of tbe world.

Its Lome correspondents, engaged at heartcost and connected with each new naval anilmilitary expedition of the government, provethat it is determined to leave no spot uncoveredby its operations and no event cun occur thatshall not find immediate report in its Columns.—it costs the proprietor over one hundred thous-and dollars per year to maintain Its corps ofcor-respondents in thefield..

In its collation of Foreign News the HibaLohas forbears held a high position, and itwill en-deavor in the future fn maintain the stand it hasassumed. It has special correspondents stationedin all of the principal cities of the world.

Its telegraphic arrangements extend to wher-ever the electric wires are stretched. When th*Atlantic cable is laid, wlnch feat will soon be ac-complished, telegrams will he received from Eu-rope and Asia, as well as from the United States.Then our readers will have the events of the weekin all parts of the civilised world regularly andclearly laid before them

The proprietor devotes a portion of the paper toLiterature, Fashion, Agriculture, the MechanicArts, Sporting Matters, business, Theatrical andFinancial Reports, (tattle Markets, General News,and reports of pit events calculated to firmanexcellent metropolitan newspaper—a weekly pho-tographic view of the events of the world—amiall at a very low price.

The M eekly lllkald is issued every SsUmlmorning, and furnished at the following rates;—

One copy ~...52Three copies ' nFive copies $

Ten copiesAny large number, addressed to names of sub-

scribers, si.so each.An extra copy will be sent to every club of

! ten.Twenty copies, to one address, one year, sjn,

1and any larger number at same price.An extra copy will he sent to clubs of twenty.Advertisements to a limited number will be in-

-1 serted in the Weekly Herald.The Daily Herald, three cents per copy.—

Ten dollars per year forthiee hundred and sixty-three issues. Fire dollars for six teenths. Twodollars and fiftv cents for three months.

JAMES GORDON BENNETT,Editor and Proprietor, ,

Northwest corner ofFnllon & Nassau streets,New York city, N. Y.

There are no traveling agents for tbe Herald.aug 19-3 t

REPORTOP THK

GRAND JURY.ON THR

CONDITION OP THE JAIL.AUGUST TERM, 1864.

To the Honorable JOHN II PRICK ,Judge, of the Circuit Court for Harfordcounty. i

The Grand Jury of August Term. 1864,respectfully report lo your Honor that wnvisited the Jail td'the county, on the Bthinstant; and we think the inmates are ascomfortably cared for us the keeper canhave them, the building being contractedand badly arranged for such a purpose.

The building is in a rather dilapidatedjcondition, and unsafe for the purpose ofsale-keeping 01 pri.ncrs, anil we recom-

: mend the building of a new jail,entire.We find confined at ibis lime seventeen

persons, for the following offences;Five while men lor robbery, 2 for ttfc-

: sank and battery, 1 for milrder, 3 insane;1 while woman for larceny ; 1 colored

man insane, I for assault with intent to

1kill, 1 for larceny, 1 for arson, and onewoman for larceny.

J. C. PARKER,| an 19 Foreman.

$5 REWARD.

STRAYED away from the subscriber,about the 3d of August, a dark red

STEER—horns turned in, lip of tail white,1 a small white spot in one of his flanks;

j no other marks remembered.The above rewaid will be paid for his

1 return to the subscriber, and any informa-j lion in regard lo bis whereabouts will bethankfully received.

JAMES BILIINGSLEA,an 19 Near the Hickory.

NOTICE.ATOTICE is hereby given that the

| J.M LAWS of the last Legislature havejbeen received at the Clerk’s Office, and areready for delivery to. those persons enti-tled to the same.

an 19 W.M. H. DALLAM, Clerk.

f LOST.'ON Friday evening, 12th inst., on the

mad leading fiom Bel Air to Wether-j ill’s Mill, a lady’s black silk C' i.\T

I Any person finding the above will j 1... u¦ leave it at Dallam’s Hotel.

COAL! COAL!

Baltimore company’s coal,of the various sizes, and the best

BLACKSMITH’S COAL, for sale ns lowas it ran be had in Harford county, andDELIVERED at low rales, if required.

R J. JACKSON,o 9 Deer Creek Landing.

FOR RENT.f|AHE subscriber will rent his LONGJL BAR FARM. Possession given inMarch. SEPTIMUS D. SEWELL.

Abingdon, Aug. 10th, 1564. anl2

wantedTA BOY from 12 to 20 years of age, to

whom the highest wages will be paid.Apply at this office, or to

Du. J. W. S. NORRIS,my 23 W'oodside, near Thomas’ Run.

O.MERRYMAX. B. P. KERCH, D. D. 8.

MERRYMAK & KERCH.DMTIBTB,

No, oJ North Calu rl Street ,

mh2s BALTIMORE.

HAY WANTED,JJRIME RAILED TIMOTHY HAY wanted at

I I I,APIDU M, llarli.nl county, Maryland, forI which the HIGHEST CASH PR IGF. will b¦paid. ANDREW ABELS, Agra;

8cp1.6. for Davii! A Pttglt.