Anadis for the best crossing place to Asia. It is 
GOO miles wide, with an island in the middle. 
The land work is to go on at once on the whole 
line from New Westminster to near the month 
of the Amoor River. 
TO INVENTORS AND PATENTEES, 
List of New Advertisements 
having charge of the undertaking will keep a 
journal of the trip, however, to be furnished to 
the Associated Press immediately after the arri¬ 
val of the Great Eastern at Heart’s Content and 
a connection is made with the shore at the ter¬ 
minus of the line. 
As the cable across the Gulf of St. Lawrence 
between Cape Breton and Newfoundland is ma¬ 
terially deranged for the irst time in seven or 
eight years, it is probable that the messages 
from there will have to be sent across the Gull 
by a steamer. Should there be enough of the 
cable left to stretch across the Gulf, eight miles 
in width, it will be immediately laid. 
The General Superintendent and Secretary of 
the Atlantic Telegraph Company, (Mr. George 
Saward,) publishes the arrangements made by 
that Company for the transmission of messages. 
We give the tariff of prices, which includes the 
whole cost for the. sending of messages from the 
place where sent to their destination : 
u From any Telegraph Station in Great Britain 
or Ireland: — To any telegraph station in Amer¬ 
ica—twenty words or less, including address, 
date and signature, not exceeding in all one 
hundred letters, twenty pounds. 
For every additional word, not exceeding five 
letters, twenty shillings per word. 
The letters in all words after the first twenty, 
will he counted and divided by five; each five 
or fractional remainder will be charged a single 
word. 
All messages in code or cipher will he charged 
double the foregoing rates. 
All figures intended for transmission must be 
written at full length, and will he charged as 
words. 
Messages destined for places beyond the raDge 
of the telegraphic system will be sent forward 
by mall. 
From any Telegraph Station in Europe :—To any 
telegraph station in America — twenty words or 
less, including address, date and signature, not 
exceeding in all one bnndred letters, twenty- 
one pounds. 
For every additional word, not exceeding five 
letters, twenty-one shillings per word. 
The letters in all words after the first twenty, 
will be counted and divided by five; each five 
or fractional remainder will he charged as a word. 
All messages in code or cipher will be charged 
double the foregoing rates. 
All figures intended for transmission must 
be written at full length, and will be charged as 
words. 
Messages destined for places beyond the 
I range of the telegraphic system will he sent 
j forward by mail. 
From any Telegraph Station in Africa, Asia 
and India . — To any telegraph station in Amer¬ 
ica-twenty words or less, including address, 
date and signature, not exceeding in all one 
hundred letters, twenty-five pounds. 
For every additional word, not exceeding five 
letters, twenty-five shillings per word. 
The letters in all wordB after the first t wenty, 
will be counted and divided by five. Each five 
or fractional remainded will be charged as a word. 
All messages in code or cipher will he charged 
double the foregoing rates.” 
We have an order from the Illinois State Board of 
Agriculture for printing a large edition (10,000 copies) 
of the Premium List, Rules und Regulations, and 
other matter relating to the State Fair to be held at 
Chicago this fall. The Board has authorized the in¬ 
sertion of a few advertisements of the leading and 
representative interests appropriate to such a publica¬ 
tion. It will be issued in neat pamphlet form, with 
an ornamental covor, and provided with eyelets and 
tape to hang up in (arm bouses and country stores for 
reference during the several months preceding the 
Fair. A part of the edition will bo retained for circu¬ 
lation on the Fair Grounds. The cost, will be as fol¬ 
lows For the cover pages, $100 each. The inside 
advertising p 8 gcs,wtll be printed on “ Colored Paper” 
to make them more conspicuous. Price, $00 for an 
entire page; $36 for half a page; $20 for a quarter 
page. No extra charge for cuts. The price hardy 
defrays the cost of printing and expense of circulation. 
So many small bills could not be printed and circula¬ 
ted for so little money. Address 
DAILY COURIER OFFICE, LaFayette, Ind. 
Great. Prize Distribution—'T Benton & Co. 
Pioneer Sorgo Machinery—Clark c oreo Machine Co. 
Green Prolific Stra-wherry- A M Purdy. 
Great AcTlCORurtst Htraa’hen v- J Kecch. 
Agents w'„nted Scranton Burr. 
CUter Mm Screw-J A Kmueiy * Co. 
Snow While forkey Feathers-Mrs M Davy. 
Rasphc'rles uml Strinvbei re*-Wm Parry. 
Demurest'# Monthly Magazine W .lenninirB Demoreet. 
Stud Composition 'Utils American Bell Company. 
Belleville Union [dietary iTistime—Rev B A Smith. 
Sheet Music and Music Books—Oliver Ditsou & Co. 
Elmira Pcmale Collette—Rev A w Cowles. 
Flail del*' New Bee Book—W A Flanders. 
Agents Wanted—B B Russell * Co. 
Lasell Female Seminary— C W Cnsblnjr. 
Walker'* Patent Ycectable Sheer*- JasEdgar. 
Young Ladies.' Institute—0 D Spear. 
To Invci.toT"—leaser & Co. 
Shepherds Wanted I» WT1 Howard. 
Grape Boxes—C S Brace. 
Secret Art oi Catching Fish—J Rising. 
SPECIAL NOTICES. 
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. 
Nursery Products-Mark D Willson. 
From Euglaml. 
Advices from EDglaDd to the 14th inst. is 
received. The English elections are the all- 
engrossiDg topic. The returns thus far received 
show a net Liberal gain of seven. 
The London and Metropolitan boroughs re¬ 
turned to the House of Commons 16 Liberals, 
Including Baron Rothschild. 
The ship Mercury from New York, reports 
having picked up, on the 28th of June, 38 passen¬ 
gers from a boat of the burning ship William 
Nelson, Five others were picked up from pieces 
of the wreck. 
The cotton market has been dull, and prices 
somewhat declined. Wheat is tending upward. 
“ Let hells in every tower be rung, 
And bonfires blaze abroad; 
Let thanks from every loyal'tOBgne 
In thunder rise to God. 
The doom of Rebeldom is sealed. 
The conquering sword of Mars 
Alone the patriot can wield — 
God bless the Stripes and Stars.” 
®l)c Nettie Condenser 
— The 4th of July was celebrated in London. 
— The mackerel fishery is prosperous this year. 
— The apple crop in Missouri will be abundant. 
— Figs and peaches are abundant in New Orleans. 
— The village of Lyons, N. Y.,has 3,285 inhabitants. 
— The eugar and cotton crops of Texas will he 
short. 
— There have been several fatal cases of cholera at 
Chicago. 
— The Prince of Wales won $50,000 at the late Der¬ 
by races. 
— Cannel coal haB been discovered near Grand Rap¬ 
ids, Mich. 
— Cars run regularly between Washington and 
Richmond. 
— CaiTornia has ten mountain# which are more than 
13,000 feet high. 
— There arrived at the port of New York last week 
3,39S emigrants. 
— There arc now at Johnson^ Island, Lake Erie, 
only 118 prisoners. 
— The grape crop in Illinois will, it is thought, be 
very large this year. 
— Providence, R. I., has abolished separate schools 
for colored children. 
— Miss Minerva Tuttle has been appointed Post-mis¬ 
tress at Palmyra, Ohio. 
— A wild buffalo weighing 3,500 lbs. was killed near 
Des Moines, Iowa, lately. 
— Gen. J. D. Cox has accepted the Union nomina¬ 
tion for Governor of Ohio. 
— About forty lottery dealers have been arrested and 
held for trial at Cincinnati. 
— Iowa public schools contributed $4,500 to the 
North-western Sanitary Fair. 
— An anaconda in a museum in Cincinnati recently 
gave birth to 33 young reptiles. 
— 5e altered from Is on the Harvard Bank of Cam¬ 
bridge, Mass., are in circulation. 
— The pay of the Provisional Governors of the 
Southern States is $3,000 per annum. 
— Haines, the American skater, has made $20,000 
in Europe by his novel performances. 
— The sum subscribed lu build the Lincoln National 
Monument at, Springfield, HI., amounts to $35,800. 
— Four valuable 3 year old steers and eleven sheep, 
at pasture In Shelburne, N. H,. were killed by a single 
flash of lightning last week. 
— A woman living in South Boston whose husband 
is in the army gave birth the other day to four girls 
weighing five pounds apiece. 
ROCHESTER, N. Y., JULY 29, 1865. 
From Haytl. 
Tbe latest intelligence from Hayti shows 
that the insurrection is still confined to Cape 
Haytien. President Jeffirds has issued a proc¬ 
lamation to his people. He oilers an amnesty 
to the inhabitants of Cape Haytien, and urges 
them to expel the rebellions leaders. General 
Morris had been assassinated by the insurgent 
leader Salnaner. A grand funeral ceremony 
took place at the Port au Prince Cathedral, at 
which the Arch-Bishop and President assisted. 
The port of Cape Haytien is now in a state 
of blockade. 
SUwlwto, tfomwnw, 
News Summary. 
One night last week the brook running 
through Leavenworth, Kansas, after a heavy 
rain, overflowed its hanks, carrying away houses, 
bridges, liorses, wagons and all sorts of prop¬ 
erty, Seven dead bodies have been found, and 
it is supposed that other lives were lost. 
Gov. Perrt, (recently appointed Provisional 
Governor of South Carolina,) has issued a proc¬ 
lamation calling a Convention to revise the 
Constitution, to meet on the third Monday in 
November next. 
North Carolina earnestly invites emigrants 
from tho'North to settle within her borders, and 
will at once open offices in our principal cities 
to furnish information to such as may wish to 
go there. 
Four bnndred and ninety-five of the graduates 
of Harvard University have taken part, in the 
war, of whom ninety-six have died in the service. 
Henry Leslie, who is making money by walk¬ 
ing across Niagara river on a rope, has been 
called upon to pay a license under the Internal 
Revenue Act* He demurred on the ground that 
Ms line was an international institution, and that 
he himself was a resident of Canada. The U. 8. 
authorities were unrelenting, and took him into 
custody. He was released on $1,000 bail to 
abide a legal decision, and permitted to continue 
Ms performance until tbe decision is made. 
On Saturday morning last tbe great iron-elad 
Dtmderberg, the largest in the world, was suc¬ 
cessfully launched at New York. Her arma¬ 
ment will consist of sixteen of the heaviest 
DaMgren guns, and she will be ready for the 
service in six months. 
The railroad between Washington and Rich¬ 
mond is now fully opened, and two trains will 
be nut daily between tbe two cities. 
Tbe Teche Dist rict in Louisiana is at present 
infested by a desperate band of guerrilla thieves, 
who have, so far, defied all efforts of tbe national 
troops, with the assistance of the citizens, to 
capture them. They not only plunder rural 
districts, but have on several occasions entered 
Franklin and other towns and robbed the stores. 
A letter received by the Land Office from Ar¬ 
kansas recently, says “ the mineral resources of 
this State are enormous. Coal, lead, silver and 
gold are all represented, and the abundance of 
petroleum is undoubted.’’ 
The subscriptions to the 7:30 loan on the 21st 
aggregated $6,375,100. On the 22d, $5,140,400. 
Gold sold in New York on Saturday last at 
142% —the highest figure. 
NEWS PARAGRAPHS, 
The former keeper of the Andersonville (Ga.) 
prison pen is to be put on trial in a few days, be¬ 
fore a military commission, for violating the laws 
of war. 
At a hotel in Oxford, N. H., there hangs a 
root of rye containing 152 stalks from one ker¬ 
nel. Also a root of wheat with S6 heads from a 
single grain. 
Three thousand three hundred and fifty-one 
acres were last month (June) taken up for actual 
settlement at Brownsville, Nebraska, under the 
Homestead Law. 
A strong emigration is setting into Liberia 
from the British Possessions in the West Indies. 
Three hundred arrived at Monrovia from Bar- 
badoes a short time, since. 
Sergeant John Mills, principal musician in 
the 1st U. 8. infantry at New Orleans, is the old¬ 
est enlisted man in the army. He enlisted in 
180S—the year Gen. Scott entered the service. 
On Monday last, the 17th, a warehouse in San 
Francisco was set on ttre by the spontaneous 
combustion of petroleum and entirely destroyed, 
involving a loss of twcAiundred and fifty thou¬ 
sand dollars. 
The National InteiliJencer of the 13th inst., 
contains the report ths4 Mr. Charles O’Conner, 
of New York, has been jetained as senior coun¬ 
sel for Jeff, Davis. ThJtime and mode of trial 
are yet unknown. 
A movement is on foot by colored men to pur¬ 
chase the Charleston Mercury and publish it as 
an anti slavery journal. Some progress has been 
made, and money is being subserbed with agood 
prospect of success. 
The Mayor and most of the magistrates of 
Alexandria, Va., boldly declare their determina¬ 
tion to adhere to the old State law, and say that 
sooner than receive the testimony of a negro in 
their courts they would resign their offices. 
Gen. Howard has issued au order that if the 
planters In lower Maryland do not cease turn¬ 
ing off their old slaves to starve, or neglect to 
employ them, the Government will take posses¬ 
sion of their farms and use the freedmen to work 
their lands. 
A horse stealer, on Ms way to the Iowa State 
prison recently, while on a steamboat, threw Ms 
manacled hands over the neck of the man who 
was guarding him, and making a desperate leap 
forward, threw himself and the man into the 
river. Both were drowned. 
Asa Packer of Pennsylvania, who recently 
gave half a million of dollars to found a college, 
left Mystic, Conn., thirty years ago owning noth¬ 
ing but a little bundle of clothing tied up in a 
red bandanna handkerchief, He has been a Gov¬ 
ernor of the Keystone State. 
A Californian, speaking of the progress of 
the Pacific Railroad in that 8tate say6, “ the hills 
are being cut down, valleys filled up, bridges 
erected, and all kinds of railroad work going 
on as fast as 2,500 able-bodied men, with a full 
complement of teams, can do it. 
Attorney General Bowden of Virginia, in 
answer to a note of inquiry from Governor Pier- 
pont, gives it as his opinion that according to 
the State Constitution persons who have held 
office under the confederate government arc not 
now eligible to any constitutional office. 
During next month 12,000 horses and 14,000 
mules will be exposed to public sale in the Bta- 
bles of New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana 
and the District of Columbia. This will close 
such sales by the Government Since the 1st 
of March the sale of animals have netted $22,- 
000,000. 
A Nashville disjiateh says President John¬ 
son’s timely indorsement of Governor Brown- 
low’s course relative to the approacMng election, 
has greatly cooled the excitement existing. 
Arrangements will be made to compel submis¬ 
sion to the law where violence is to be appre¬ 
hended. 
G. W- Gayle, the man who once offered a 
reward of $1,000,000 in a Southern paper for the 
murder of President Lincoln, Vice President 
Johnson and Secretary Seward, arrived at Hilton 
Head, 8. C., from Washington, on the 12tli 
inst., under guard, and thence was sent to Fort 
Pulaski. 
TIIK PROVISION MARKETS. 
NEW YORK. July iw.-cotton, t'aricfor middling. 
Flour.—S uperfine Slats $4, S05JH), extra State, tS.SS® 
6,50; choice Slate, fd,5506,*9v auperflne Western, $5.45® 
5,90; common to medium extra do, $4,4506,75 common 
to good shlpplnc brands extra round Loop Oblo, Il.'-’n® 
7,85; trade brands, $ 7 , 1008 ,«. Canadian flour la dull, at 
$6A0@8,75. 
Grain —Wheat, Chtcsco spring *1,8MGA0; Milwaukee 
club, fl.3OriI.I0; winter red Wmutu, H,70«ti,'. "«; Inlet Un¬ 
do, |l,.v.r„ ! bu; .imher Mlelitiroii.l.TtOgil.RLS; wldte Mich¬ 
igan, $ 1 , 10 . Rye and Barley dull and nominal. Coro,sates 
at KlotHlv-c for DllXCd Western. Oat* 
Provisions—P orK, C81.25d32.35 tor new mews; »LV>0@ 
28,00Tor iu«; *23.00023,40 lot prime. Shoulder* 150)6'»c. 
Hams. tflk®23c. Lard, lr®2Sc. Butter. 180270. for Ohio, 
and 27095c for Stale. Cueeae, 901S;.C. Hops 10033 for 
common to prime, 
ALBANY, July 22— Flour, city brands $S@9,73. Corn 
meal, 1(0 ns, $1,6901,81. Wheat., no sales. Rye OOeOtc. 
Barley matt Is quiet. Corn. 80081c. Oats 54059c. Mess 
and clear pork. *3*040. Hams 21025c. Shoulders HH\— 
Smoked Beef 22c. Butter 2 032c. Lurd firm. 23H®2lJ4c. 
Cheese l-lts 10 tor new,— Journal. 
BUFFALO, .July 22. —Flour. Bales of Indiana red and 
white at C6.750S.OO : X and XX Ohio tpriug and white at 
I8.5O0&3& | Kentucky white at ♦;*. 
GRAIN-Whcat. red Ohio fl.34 j white Michigan $1 65. 
Corn, OsJi'.’JOc. Data, 5 i>,iS 3 c. Barley,75c6t.fi. Kye, ; 8 ® 
75c. Peon Cl,20. Beans Cl.250l.37k. 
Provisions— Pork, K!9,5U0SO,au for mess and light.— 
Hams, 2202HO. Sllotfluem, ffelsc. Lard, 21R'®22c. Salt 
Butter 28027c. Cbcwe i-teiskc, 
TORONTO, July 19.—Flour, $4,6505.70. Fall wheat at 
|l,oo@i.08 * huitael; spring do. 95c0$l,uo. Bariev,Tala'sOc. 
Peas. 60083 c. Oats. 400 lie. Butter, 14015c. Cbe&e, 11 
®12. Erne*. 12X0170* Uam. 13H01SC. Bacon, 11'-,018c. 
Lard, 11015c.. Tallow, rough, 5c. Green apples, $1,500 
6 : dried do, 70S V ft. Pc,tutoea, 70030 c hush. Carrots, 
30c. Turnips, 25e. Beets, 75c. Onlona, AU*. Beet. 80 
lO^c. Mutton, *0100. Dressed hogs, fD$0Oy.. Mess 
pork, (122; prime, CIS. Shoulders, 'JetllHe. Ray, f 7 @ 10 . 
Straw. CIO, 50. Hides, trimmed. $- 301,00 S 100 ft, a. Calf¬ 
skins. 7r,ti',ic. Sheepskins, Clttfl.'JO. Sheep pelts, 15025c.— 
Lambskins 25085c.— Globe. 
Petroleum. 
A writer in the N. Y. Tribune discusses at 
some length on petroleum. The amount of 
business done in New York in the present year 
is not so great as two years ago, when the busi¬ 
ness was in the achrne of its furore. Neverthe¬ 
less, the shipments arc greater than those of 
last year. In 1803, the exports were 10,657,004 
gallons, and in 1864, 21,283,465 gallons. This 
was from New York alone. The following is 
the quantity in gallons exported from other 
ports, from Jan. 1 to Dec. 81: 
1864. 7863. 
From Boston .1,696,397 2,049,431 
“ Philadelphia.7,760,148 5,595,238 
“ Baltimore. 929,971 915.806 
“ Portland . 70,762 342,642 
Total.10,457,278 8,903,117 
Total export from the U. S. .31,740,768 19,560,721 
Same time in 1863. 10,887,700 
Of the exports for 1863, 25,000,000 gallons 
were refined, and more than 8,000,000 gallons 
crude, representing a money value abroad, at 
the price of two sMlllngs a gallon for refined 
oil, of about £3,250,000 in gold. At the current 
rate of exchange, during the past year, thi6 has 
given ns a purchasing power in European mar¬ 
kets amounting to $45,000,000 in United States 
currency. 
The export tables show that onr petroleum is 
skipped to every quarter of the globe. Ant¬ 
werp received over four million dollars—the 
highest set down to any one party. The East 
and West Indies, Africa, the Central and South 
American States, are heavy consumers, bnt of 
course the contineut. of Europe takes the great¬ 
est amount. The exports for the present year 
will probably not compare so favorably with the 
last year. The quantity received in New York, 
in the present year, will not equal that of 1864, 
and will probably hardly surpass that of 1863. 
“They Cure!” What cures ! 1 A VEB’S 
C II E It It V PECTOKALfora Cough, 
AlfEB’S PILLS for a purgative, and AYER’S 
SARSAPARILLA for the complaints that re¬ 
quire an alterative medicine. 
Affairs at Washington. 
Attorney - General Speed decides that all 
cotton taken by military force in insurrection¬ 
ary districts is captured property, within the 
meaning of the statute of 1863, whether owned 
by loyal men or not. He also holds that re¬ 
course must be bad in disputed cases to the 
Court of Claims. 
There is reason to believe that Government 
will soon announce its policy in regard to the 
Monroe Doctrine and tbe occupation of Mex¬ 
ico by the French troops. 
In accordance with the War Department's 
order for mustering out of service troops whose 
terms of service expire before the first of Octo¬ 
ber next, between 14,000 and 15,000 of General 
Sheridan’s men will be discharged. 
By direction of the President all prisoners of 
war, including rebel Generals, are to be released 
on their taking the oath of allegiance. 
Col. Baker, who commanded the force that 
pursued and captured the murderer of President 
Lincoln, has been made a Brigadier-General. 
A delegation from Lynchburg, V&., has arrived 
in Washington to urge the repeal of the $20,000 
clause in the Amnesty Proclamation. 
Mi6& Mary Harris, who murdered Burroughs, 
the treasury clerk in Washington several months 
since, has been tried and acquitted. 
John T. Ford, through Ms attorney, made a 
formal demand for his theater on Wednesday of 
last week, but the reply of Secretary Stanton has 
not been made public. [The theater was closed 
by the Government immediately after the death 
of President Lincoln.] 
The Secretary of the Treasury has ordered 
that no more of the live cent postage stamp 
currency shall be issued. 
The Agricultural Bureau has most cheering 
accounts ol large crops throughout the whole 
country—much larger than last year. 
The Atlantic Cable. 
A private letter received in New York last 
week lrotn Cyrus W. Field in England, states 
that the Great. Eastern would probably leave 
the Nore on tbe 11th inst., and Valencia (Ire¬ 
land) on tbe 15th, to lay the Atlantic Cable. All 
representatives of the press are to be excluded 
from the Great Eastern during the laying of the 
cable. The telegraph construction company 
BY THE DOZEN, HUNDRED OR THOUSAND 
Standard Apples, Standard Pears, Dwarf Tears, 
Standard Cherry and Plant Trees, Grape Vines, Cur¬ 
rants, Raspberries, Gooseberries, Strawberries, Scotch 
and Austrian Pine, Norway Spruce, Balsam Fir, Japan 
Lilies, Angers Quince Stocks, &c.T &c. 
AU Inquiries for Nursery Products promptly attend¬ 
ed to. Address, with stamp, 
810-tf MARK D. WILLSON, Rochester, N, Y. 
CATTLE MARKETS. 
NEW YOEK. July 18.—Beef steady: receipt* 5.000 
head ; quotation* tasSlU'iC. Sheep steady • receipts li,- 
000 head; quotation* I® He. Swine—receipts U)U0 head; 
quotations 1LH012HC- 
BRIGHTON AND CAMBRIDGE. Jnl.v 19.-Beeves, 
raueeat $n&si2. Oxen, $1500300♦> pnlr. Milch Cows, $30 
0100. Bandy Steers, MO0M). Veal Calve*. $G»tO each — 
Two-year olds *35080. Three-year olds *«ii 3,4». Sheep 
and Ltuubi J‘,0 e % ft Shouts -Whole-ale 1201.1 r.eois; 
retail Witr.c, sucker*. 20095c: Wee. coarse slioats 120 
12c; fat nogs lO'.wallc, live weight. Hides 50be V ft. Tal¬ 
low 607HC. (Jalisklns 17c. Pelts 50070c. 
ALBANY. July 17.—Beeves range at $1,3009,00. Sheep, 
stiles at 400c. Hogs, sales at 10011 He. 
CHICAGO, July IS.-- Beef Cattle, sales at $0,5007 25 V 
100 ft>B. tor fair to good flint class steers ; $1.5005,40 tot 
light steers and food cows: $3,000t.SiS for common.— 
HoRS, sale* at ft',0000,40 * 100 V>S.—Republican. 
TORONTO. July Jib—First r.la*» cattle, from $*,5005,50 
* too fts, dressed weight; 2d do, $4,0004.50; Inferior, $3 00 
03.50. CalVtt. $30? etttb, Urge quantity inmarket. Sheep 
$3 500 1,00 each per car loud. Lambs, $203,40. Yearlings 
Cancers Cubed without pain or the use of the knife. 
Tumors, White Swellings, Goitre, Ulcers, and all 
Chronic Diseases successfully treated. Circulars de¬ 
scribing treatment sent free of charge. 
Addrees Drs. BABCOCK & SON, 
809-tf No. 27 Bond Street, New York. 
Employ the Wounded Soldiers, 
All persons In Rochester or its vicinity who are 
disposed to employ Wounded Soldiers, are requested 
to call at this Office, where a list of such is kept—de¬ 
scriptive of name, age, nativity, former occupation, In 
what manner disabled, reference, &c. It is especially 
important that the returned wounded men Of our own 
gallant regiments have an opportunity to earn what 
they can toward the support of themselves and their 
tamllies, and It la hoped our city business men, and 
farmurs, horticulturists, etc., in the eurrouuding 
country, will give them employment so far as is con¬ 
sistent. D. D. T. MOORE, Mayor. 
Mator’s Office, Rochester, June, 1865. 
ITCH. WHEATON ’8 ITCH. 
SCRATCH. OINTMENT SCRATCH. 
Will cure the Uch in 48 hours —also cures Salt Rheum, 
Ulcers, Chilblains, and all Eruptions of the Skim Price 
50 cents; by sending 60 cents to Weeks & Porrxn, 170 
Washington 8 t,, Boston, will be forwarded free by mall. 
For sale by all druggists. 791-261 
GOOD READING VERY CHEAP 
We have a few extra copies of Vol. XII of the 
Rural New-Yorker, (1861,) stitched, and in good 
order, which we will sell at $1 per copy at office or by 
Bxpress—or $1.60 sent by mat) post-paid. If yon wish 
a copy, speak quick. A few bound copies of same 
volume for sale at $3. We can alBO furnish hound 
copies of most of the volumes Issued since 1855, at $3 
each. Bound volumes of 1864, $4. 
Address D. D. T. MOORE, Rochester, N. Y. 
average quality, at liute over we, in ,11 n- - 
Ohio, H '* said its high us 70e has actually been |>»m, 
TORONTO, July lu.- Getting scarce; quoted at 40013c 
$1 tb for good fleece*.— Globe. 
Wool in Canada.- We take the Jollpwtnir fluotaaoM 
of prices at different polo ta, fromthe t' 1 obe°fJ 
London. 12011c HamOtWj, 40043c Galt, 41«42o. Bar 
rie, 800850. Guelph. 88040o» Duudas, 8Je. Belleville, w 
0!3c. Brantford, 35087XC. 
