again, and being unable to render any assistance to 
the Minnesota, came down the harbor. In passing 
the batteries at Sewall’s Point, going and returning, 
the rebels opened fire on us which was returned 
from pivot guns, hut the range was too great for 
them, while the enemy’s shots fell far beyond us. 
One shot went through our forsails. cutting away 
two of our shrouds, and several shells hurst ove’r 
and near our ship, scattering fragments on deck. 
Between 7 and 8 we discovered the rebels had set 
tire to the Congress, and she continued to burn till 
]. when she blew up. This was a melancholy satis¬ 
faction to me. lor as she had fallen into the hands of 
the enemy it was far hotter to have her destroyed 
than that she should be employed against us at some 
future day. It was the impression of Fome of my 
officers that the rebels bad hoisted the French flag. 
I heard that the Monitor had arrived, and soon after 
Lieutenant Commanding Worden came aboard, and 
I immediately ordered him to go up to the Minne¬ 
sota, hoping she would be able to keep off the 
attack on the Minnesota till we had got her afloat 
Com. Stevens, ol the Stevens battery, has obtained 
permission of the Secretary of War to make use of 
the 11-inch gun at Fortress Monroe, to be placed 
upon his steam propeller Naugatuck, to be used in 
defence of New York harbor, and to attack the 
Merrimac in the event of her appearance. 
An arrival at Baltimore, direct from the Burnside 
expedition, reports the taking of Newbern, N. C., 
the defeat of the enemy there, and the capture of a 
large quantity of artillery after a hard fought battle, 
on the 14i,h inst. Our loss is 90 killed and*,400 
wounded. 
LI8T OP NEW A DV ERTISEMENTS, 
Gonesec Valley Nurwries-Fiost ,t Co. 
For c Plow Manufactory -Henry Bolden. 
Rochester City Scale Works--E. A. Forsyth & Co 
Honey Locust for Hedges Godfrey Zimmermann 
Electric Weather Indicator— Lee h Co 
Cranberry Plants- I*. I). i'hiiron 
1 he Cranberry and its Culture -Oeo. A. Bates. 
Curiosities C. A. Walworth. 
Wanted. 
Grape Vines for Sale. 
HPKCIAI. NOTIONS. 
Brown’s Bronchial Troches for Couch. 
Metropolitan Gift Bookstore. 
JVo MX OJY KJYomFDaF, nuT j, flK 
.tm/.ns FOR ITS IUFFVSIOJY! 
MORS GOOD PAY FOR DOING GOOD! 
PREMIUMS FOR SMALL LISTS! 
EVERY CLUB AGENT REWARDED/ 
AFFAIRS AT WASHINGTON, 
The relations between the United States and 
foreign nations are now entirely free from any 
apprehensions whatever of disturbance. The tone 
ol' all the correspondence is Conciliatory and amia¬ 
ble. It is considered that the English, as well as the 
French Ministry, is evidently gaining strength, 
owing to discountenancing of sympathy with the 
rebels. 
Samuel L. Casey took his place as member of Con¬ 
gress from Kentucky in the first disirict on the Mill, 
to (ill the vacancy caused by Burnett’s secession. 
President Lincoln has approved of the additional 
article ol war, which goos into immediate operation, 
namely:—All officers or persons in tko military or 
naval service of the United States are prohibited 
from employing any of the forces under their com¬ 
mand for the purpose of returning fugitives from ser¬ 
vice or 1 alter who may have escaped from any 
persons to whom such service or labor is claimed to 
be due, anil any officer who shall be found guilty by 
Low that the period of competition for the 
I i emiuins ottered last November for early lists, 
(and the largest clubs remitted for on or before Feb! 
1st,) has expired-and as the large lists have 
already been received-wo purpose giving every 
friend of the Rural who will obtain a sm-dl number 
of subscribers (say 6 to 24 or more.) a valuable 
Reward for his or her effort in so doing. Our 
Programme for the Spring Campaign is in thiswise: 
CASH AND OTHER PREMIUMS. 
X. To KAOI 1 of the Twkntt Kivtc Pkrsons remitting accord 
in f? to our terms, for the largest Twenty-Five Lists uf Yearly 
-A- At.. M. J 
— There are 7,231 Jesuits in the world. 
— Births in Philadelphia last year. 17,271. 
— The Great Eastern is to sail for New York in April. 
The Clarksville (Term.) Jeffersonian has come out as a 
Union paper. 
— The total product of copper in Lake Superior district, in 
1861, was 1,650 tuns. 
— Snow to the amount of seven feet on a level has fallen in 
Vermont this season. 
— New Orleans has sent one hundred and twenty-seven 
companies to the war. 
An attempt has been discovered to blow up the Chain 
Bridge at Washington. 
— Tobacco is extensively grown in York, Lancaster, and 
Chester counties, I’cnn. 
— The municipal taxes of the city of Philadelphia in 1861, 
amounted to $3,080,782. 
— The winter is unusually severe in Russia. Many persons 
have been frozen to death. 
— A fire in Milwaukee, Wis., Saturday last, destroyed 
$75,000 worth Of property. 
— Five young women graduated last week at the New Eng¬ 
land Female Medical College. 
— It U suggested to employ the freed contrabands in cor 
structing the Pacific Railroad. 
1 wo hundred thousand barrels of ale are manufactured 
annually in the city of Albany. 
— The Memphis papers say that the burning of that city 
may become a military necessity. 
boiwpen these two firmed vessels, anti most beanti- 
fuily has the little Monitor showed herself capable 
of great endurance. I have received no official 
account of the loss of the Congress and Cumber¬ 
land. but no doubt will do so, when it will be trans¬ 
mitted to von. 
ri'C'rid do injustice to this Military Department 
*-r l1 -' 1 - I ' 1 ' * was ren- 
did 1 not inform you that every assistance 
dored us, sending five of their tugs to the 
the Minnesota, and offering all the aid in their 
power. 1 would al 60 beg leave to say that Captain 
Poor, of the Ordnance Department.,’kindlv volun¬ 
teered to do duty temporarily on board this ship, 
and from him 1 have received much assistance. 
Verv respectfully, your obedient servant, 
John Marston, Captain and Senior Officer. 
Dispatches from Flag Officer Goldsborougb re¬ 
ceived at the Navy Department on the 15th,includes 
the report of Commander Rowan, commanding 
the Delaware, who furnishes an interesting account 
of bis reconnoissance ou February 11th. lie moved 
his forces and reached Winton; was in the act of 
letting go anchor, when suddenly a force of North 
Carolina volunteers opened a terrible fire of mus¬ 
ketry and artillery on his vessel. Volley succeeded 
volley in rapid successiou, striking her one hundred 
and twenty-five times with musketry, but the 
enemy's artillery overshot her. A fire was opened 
upon the rebels by the ship’s shell gun. The Perry 
being in position, promptly threw a shrapnel 1 
among the forces, which was followed by the ship 
as soon as Captain Quaekenbush could extricate 
her position and turn her in the narrow river. 
Commander Rowan ran down past the enemy, and 
landed her force seven miles below Winton. Our 
troops subsequently entered the town, destroyed a 
quantity of military stores, tents, arms, knapsacks, 
<tc., and the quarters occupied by the enemy. 
Captain Davis, late fleet Captain of the South 
Atlantic, arrived in Washington on the 15tb, bring¬ 
ing official dispatches from Commodore Dupont, of 
the Rchai. Nkw-Yokkbr for 1861 or I860 —price $3; or, if 
preferred to bound Rimac, a copy of Lossino’8 Illustrated 
Historic Of this Unit ho Status—( an Imperial 8vo. volume, 
with 300 ill ustrutioi is—price $3.50.) 
III. To Kvkhv Person remitting, as above, either $15 for 
10 copica, $21 for 15 copies, or $25 for 20 copies, wo will give 
a free copy of the Boral, and cither Thk Hoasa and Ilia 
Disbasrs, (price $1.25,) or Evbrtbodt’b Lawyer, (pnee 
$1.25,) an preferred, or, either one of tho book a, or package of 
flower seeds, offered below, if the person entitled prefer. 
IV. To Evkry Person remitting, as above, $10 for six 
copies, wo will give a free copy of Rural, and either tho 
Manual of Aouioulturr, or LossiNo’a Pictorial Unitbd 
States, (price $1,) or a dollar package of choice Imported 
Flower Seeds 
All books (except bound Rural and Loesirig’s Illustrated) 
and seeds will be sent by mail, post-paid. Persons entitled to 
book or tiower seed premiums can also compete for the cash 
premiums I In order to give all who compete a fair and 
equal chunoe, traveling agents, post riders, citizens of Roches 
ter, and persons (or their agents or aliases) who advertise by 
circular to receive subscriptions (from a distance, at club rates,) 
for the Hokal in their “clubs,” (whether called “Empire,” 
“Keystone,” or by other tiUe,) cure excluded from. competition 
for any uf the above premiums. 
t3?“ Comment upon’the above offers is unnecessary. Kvery 
person who forms a club of six or more is sure of a free copy 
and valuable book; anil as our regular agents have already 
sent in their largo lists, of course the premiums now offered 
wUl be taken mainly by new agents, or those who form new 
clubs, though they are open to all There is yet abundant 
time to form new clubs, to commence with tlio volume (we 
can still furnish back numbers,) or at any time, and we trust 
subscribers, those who have scut for specimen numbers, and 
others who receive this, will at once commence t|,o Spring 
Campaign. 
1KISS1UISHT8 GENERAL WAR ORDER NUMBER ONE. 
, Jo i ^ 0rd Tnl hat on <he 22,1 February, 
lsb2, there shall be a general movement of the lariil 
and naval force of tho United States against the 
insurgent forces. That especially 11m army at and 
about Fortress Monroe, the army of the Potomac, 
tho army ofWwtern Virginia, the army near Mum- 
ordsville, Ky., the army anti flotilla at Cairo, and 
(he naval force in the Gulf of Mexico, be ready for 
a movement, on that day. That the other forces 
both land and naval, with their respective command¬ 
ers obey (he existing order for the time, and be 
ready to Obey additional orders when duly given, 
That the heads of Departments, and especially the 
Secretaries of War and the Navy, with nil their sub- 
ordiates, and the General-in-Chief, with all other 
commanders and subordinates of the land and naval 
forces, will severally bo held to their strict and full 
responsibilities for the prompt execution of this 
0ldcr ‘ Abraham Lincoln. 
Exkcutivb Mansion, March 8, 1862. 
PRESIDENT’S GENERAL WAR OKOKR NUMBER TWO. 
Ordered, First, That the Major-General Coin- 
mantling the Army ol' the Potomuc proceed forth- 
with to organize that part of said army destined to 
enler upon active operations, including (lie reserve 
hut excluding the troops to he left in the fortifica¬ 
tions about Washington, into four army corns, to be 
commanded according to senioritv nr' ....., i- L e.i 
Sir:— I had the honor Jo inform you in my last 
dispatch that the expedition lor Fernand in a was 
equipped anil waiting only for settled weather to 
sail from Port Royal. I now have the pleasure to 
inform you that 1 am in full possession of Cumber¬ 
land island, and the Sound of Fernand inn. and 
Amelia Island, and tho town and river of St. Mary. 
1 sailed from Port Royal on the 281,b of February, 
in tho IVabash, and on the 2d inHl. entered Cumber¬ 
land Sound by St. Andrew’s Inlet, in the Mohican, 
Commanding S. W. Gordon, on board of which ship 
I hau hoisted my ling. The fleet comprised the fol¬ 
lowing vessels, sailing in the order in which they 
arc rumied : Ottawa, Mohican, accompanied by the 
Mien, Seminole, Pawnee, Pocahontas. Flag, Florida, 
James Adger, Bienville, Alabama, Keystone. State, 
Seneca, Huron, Pembina, Isaac Smith, Penguin, 
irrn 11 ,! ^ ai ’ined cutler Henrietta, ftrtnuu transport 
Mcoielum — the latter having on board a battalion 
ol marines, under command of Major Reynolds— 
and transports Umpire City, Marion, Star of the 
South, Bolvidere. Boston, and George’s Creek, con¬ 
taining a bngade under command of Brigudier- 
General Wright,, We came to anchor in Cumber¬ 
land Sound at 104 A. M., and proceeded to make an 
examination of the channel and wait for the tide. 
Mere 1 learned from a contraband who had been 
picked jin at sea by Commodore Lanier, and from 
the neighboring residents on the Cumberland 
ff™, that the rebels had abandoned in haste the 
FerURlidma, retreating from 
TERMS OF THE RURAL Always in Advance, 
Two Dollars a Year, Three Copies, one year, $5- Six 
?"* Jre f -JjknR. $10; Ten, and one free, $15; 
FiJhen, amt one free, &. 1 ; Twenty, and one free, fib and any 
greater number at the same rate — only id .25 pfr co ,f U 1H f 
i w> *ent to different post ofw.es, if desired As wepay American 
postage oneajnes mailed to foreign countries, *1.37 u the lowest 
Club rate Jur Canady and $2.50 to Hhirvyk 
V 'iff nJ&Z r ,'T* rV , tMsmt Banks in 77 
S. and Canacbx taken at par, but Aiients wilt phase re-mil in Crufts 
( roel’.FemBnglaUZW 
per Canada money so far ns convenient. All SubsripbUm Money 
r«{*. Boston, Philadelphia, Albany, 
Ilnchestn ti i Buffalo, (less exchange,) may rr sent at the rise 
ok run Publisher, if made paydleto his order 
O' 1 1’lensc write all names plainly, that they may be accu¬ 
rately entered upon our books anil correctly printed in Mail¬ 
ing Machine, All remittances should be well inclosed, and 
carefully addressed and mailed to 
D. D. T. MOOHE, Rochester, N. Y. 
February 3, 1862. 
commanded according to seniority of rank, as fol¬ 
lows: 
First corns to consist of four divisions, and to be 
Commanded by Major-General r. McDowell 
Second corps to consist of three divisions, and to 
be commanded by Brigadier-General E. Y. Sumner 
1 bird corps to consist of three divisions, and to 
be commanded by Brigadier-General S. P Ileint- 
7<elman. 
I'ourth corpB to consist of three divisions, and to 
be commanded by Brigadier-Generul E. L. Keyes. 
Second, That the divisions now commanded by 
the officers above assigned to the commands of corps, 
shall be embraced in and form part of their respect¬ 
ive corps. 1 
Third The forces left for the defense of- Washing¬ 
ton.will he placed in command of Brigadier-General 
James S. Wadsworth, who shall also be Military 
THE CATTLE MARKETS, 
NEW YORK, if A urn 12.—The Current 
all the markets are as follows: 
„. . ... BUNS' OATTLK. 
First quality. 
Ordinary quality,.!.!!!I!III"!"! 
Common quality,.!!!!!!!" 
Inferior quality,. 
,, COWS AND CALVES. 
First quality... 
Ordinary quality. 
Common quality,.. 
Inferior quality",.."...."1111. 
IV . ... VBAL CALVES 
first quality. 
Ordinary quality.111111111’"’ 
Common quality,....."" 
Inferior quality,.111111111 
„. SHBKP AND LAMBS. 
Prime quality. 
Ordinary,.1111111" 
Common.11!" "1. 
Inferior.1.1111111111111111! 
First quality.... 
Other qualities.HI! 
ALBANY, March 17. Rksvks— Wi 
known our Cattle Marki t to be so compl. 
ih this week, owinu to the Weather. Thai 
lu prices, the buyers from New York, a* ■ 
IP cwt. $K,0(XS)9,00 
. 7,50(318,00 
. 6,5001)7,50 
. G,50@6,50 
... .$4. r i,lXXn)fi0,0O 
.... dO,iXXai 15,00 
30.00(4)35,00 
.... 25,00fe'28,00 
tb 6 (a)6L^U 
. 5 (a‘5% 
. 4%(<i)S 
. 4 
Tint Ru/ut.'s Sphinu CAMPAKiN-PRKMtuMs, Sic. Now that 
the times are improving, Rebeldom caving, and the season for 
active (but peaceful aud profitable) operations in Field, Orchard 
and Garden coming op apaae, many will subscribe for the 
Rural if opportunity is presented. Will not agenbl'riends, and 
all readers disposed to become such, give tho matter attention ? 
Additions to present clubs, either for the Tull yeor from Jan., or 
this date, (or from this or a subsequent date to the end of the 
year.) are now in order at the club rate, aud in proportion for 
loss than full year. New clubs, to commence with Jan,. March 
or April, (when a now Quarter bogins,) are also in order during 
the Spring Campaign, while single subscriptions will prove 
acceptable at any time. For Premiums offered, see above list | 
the neighboring 
whole defences of 
Amelia Island, carrying with them such of their 
munitions as their precipitate flight would allow. 
1 he object, ol carrying the whole fleet through 
LumberltUid bound was to turn their heavy works 
on the south end of Cumberland and north end of 
Amelia Island, but on receiving intelligence I 
detached gunboats and armed steamers of light 
araft (rum the main line, ami placing them under 
the command of Commodore 1’. Drayton, of the 
sloop (Pawnee, ordered him to push 
mough the Sound at the utmost speed, to save 
£™! IC PF?P wt y ,rc j m threatened destruction, and to 
prevuif the poisoning of wells, and to put a stop to 
loLi "f ie 01 , 1 by the perpetration of which 
leaders of thw nefarious war hope to drive and 
exasperate the Southern people. 
! h ‘V‘ U ? n !i Im( ‘ r .went out of the Sound and 
came by gca to the mam entrance of this harbor. 1 n 
consequence of bad weather, I was unable to cross 
the hu until this morning. Commander Drayton, 
accompanied by G. R. v. Rodgers with amed 
farm,IT* \v' :m( - * u , la11 amed companies 
from tee Wabash, had armed several hours before 
me. Immediately on his entering the harbor, Com¬ 
mander Drayton sent Lieut. White, of the Ottawa 
to hoist the flag ol Fort Clinch, the first ot thfl 
mtiomd torts on which the ensign of the Union has 
resumed its proper place since first the proclama¬ 
tion ot the President of the United, States was 
issued. 
From Fortress Monroe we gather the following 
particulars: , 
All the newspaper correspondents here, except, 
alone the agent of the Associated Press, have been 
ordered away by General Wool for baying failed to 
comply with his instructions regarding news. The 
Associated Press dispatches will hereafter be sent 
under the sanction of Gen. Wool. 
In pursuance of orders from the War Department 
for the separation of the administration of the affairs 
ot contrabands from military authority, a general 
order has been issued by General Wool, appointing 
Chas. U. Wilden to the office of Superintendent of 
vagrants or contrabands in this Department, Food, 
clothing, und shelter, will be furnished as heretofore 
until further orders. 
Active operations of some sort have been going 
on at bewail s Point, whether for re-inforcement or 
evacuation is uncertain. 
Assistant Secretary Fox reports the Merrimac 
oadly Injured in the two days’ fight. She had a hole 
oied iu her hull by the Monitor, and was leaking 
very badly when she put back. The Cumberland's 
broadside in the first day’s fight injured her so badly 
tbat she could not then attack the Minnesota or 
oanoke, although they were both aground, lie 
thinks that the Minnesota, now that she is afloat, can 
am t i. Merrimao. The Merriiuac’s snout was 
knocked askew by a ball from a U-iach gun on the 
i innesota. Capt. Buchanan was wounded by a 
shot trom a rifleman on board the Cumberland, the 
ball going through his thigh. 
^tex says that the crew of the Minnesota as well 1 
as that of the Monitor, are eager to see the Merrimac 
. 1 -- UVII* j blAXJ LU Hi 
meiKvment of I he operations already directed to be 
undertaken by the Army of Potomac. 
Vf 1 ! ilth - A tilth army corps, to be commanded by 
Major-General N. P. Banks, will be formed from his 
own and General Shield’s (late General Lander’s) 
dlvlfil0ns - Abraham Lincoln. 
Exkcutivk Mansion, March 13, 
PRESIDENT'S WAR ORDER NUMBER THREE. 
.i M^or-Geiieiul McClellan having personally taken 
the field at the head ot the Army of the Potomac, 
until otherwise orderd. he is relieved from the com¬ 
mand of the other military departments, he retain- 
lflg Command of the Department of the Potomac. 
Ordered further, That, the departments now under 
the respective commands of Generals Ualleck and 
Hunter, together with so much of that under Gen. 
Buell as lies west, of a north and south line indefi¬ 
nitely drawn through Knoxville, Tenn., be consoli¬ 
dated and designated the Department of the Mis¬ 
sissippi and that until otherwise ordered Major- 
General Hal leek have command of said department. 
Ordered also, That the country west of the De- 
inirtment of the Potomac and eastof the Department 
ul the Mississippi be a Military Department, and 
t hat (ho same be commanded by Major-General Fre- 
mom. That all the commanders of departments, 
alter the receipt of this order, respectively report 
severally aud directlv in tho Spcrmnnr 
sir precipitate flight would allow, 
— Fourteen pairs of prairie hens have just been sent from 
Chicago to England. Thcj are intended for Queen Victoria's 
liencry. 
— The Stiip Island Kedcrals recently captured a dozen oyster 
boatu, bound for New Orleans, with cargoes of tho delicious 
bivalves. 
tour hundred and ninety-one of the rebel prisoners at 
AI (ou, Illinois, have taken the oatli of allegiance and been 
released. 
A man named Horsely, from Sumner county, Tenn., one 
of Uie wounded rebel prisoners at 8t. Louis, is sixty-three 
years old. 
— It is so muddy at Cairo that the soldiers call the soil, 
which adheres to their boots, “ bounty laud ” which they have 
1 • drawn. ” 
Twenty-five hogsheads of tobacco have been received in 
Louisiille from the South. The first rccept since the rebel 
occupation. 
— Lord Palmerston is the oldest member in the House of 
Commons, having first been returned for Newport, Isle of 
Wight, 1807. 
— Tim Newburyport Herald suggests that Massachusetts 
appropriate half a million dollars to bring fifty thousand cou 
trabands there. 
— The uumber of letters dispatched through the -postoffiee 
of Great Britain in 1SG1 was 593,000,000, an increase of 
30,000,000 over 1860. 
— A l ille, the breech of which was inlaid in gold, owned 
by a Memphis hotel keeper, and worth $1,000, was made prize 
of at Fort Donelson. 
— Tiie French Minister’s residence in Georgetown was de¬ 
stroyed by fire on the 6th. The invaluable papers of the 
Sjiecial TVotices 
ASTHMA OH PHTHISIC. 
A spasmodic affection of the Bronchial Tubes, which are 
covered with a dry, tenacious phlegm —“ Brown's Bronchial 
Troches ” will, in some cases, give immediate relief. If of 
long standing, persevere with them — they will alleviate in 
time. 
“An old lady friend having tried many remedies for Asthma 
with no benefit, found great relief from the Troches.”—Ruv. 
L>. I.KTT8, Frankfort, III 
JITftrkets, (Hommcrce, &c 
Rural New-Yorker Ofllce, ) 
Kochkstkh, March 18th, 1861. ( 
Flour unchanged in rates, and but little doing. 
Grain— The only alteration we notice is in Barley, which has 
moved upward Scents per bushel. 
Meats are as last quoted. 
Dairy, &c -Butter is advancing steadily'. Choice is in de¬ 
mand at 13(a>]5 cento per pound Lard has put on 50 cents per 
100 pounds. Tallow dull aud drooping. 
Ilocliestcr Wholesale Prices. 
Flour and tiniln. I Eggs, dozen. ISWlMc 
Flour, winter wheat,$5.25^6 50 A-lonev. box . liJOnilc 
Catullus, box!!!!!! g,4(i 
Candles, extra_ I2q 
Fruit and Roots. 
Apples, bushel_ 500 
Do. dried >7 tb... ft,' 
Peaches, do. lia 
Cherries, do ..... ]-j(, 
Plums, do...!! J2u 
Potatoes. 4ft' 
Hides und Skins. 
Slaughter. «a 
LiLlf..,*. 
Sheep Pelts.!!!!!! 512S 
Lamb Pelts. 760S 
Seeds. 
Clover, bushel_$3.5001 
Timothy... 1,50^ 
Sundries. 
Wood, hard.$3.00& 
wood, soft. 3.0<<7 
Coal, Lehigh. 7,U0i<i 
Inal, Scranton_ b.OLXfi 
CoaLPittaton. 5,corn 
Coal, rihamokiu. . s.inr. 
Goal. Char. 7 3 
Balt, bbl. $ia 0<5 
Hay, tun. .... 7uo< 
Straw, tun .6.0»ti 
TIIE WOOL MARKETS. 
NEW YORK, MARCH 13.- The market has ruled 1 
pending the auction mtio of 40(1,009 ffs. Native Kleee 
Providence, to day Our corr espondent there lias k 
graphed us of the results* follows: •• Flue wools sol 
and medium sold well The prices obtained ranged 
51 y.r„ ii- to quality." From this it would teem that I 
sold at li/i IV decline, provided the wool- were w. 
which we have no doubt they were, and tbat the !o 
dium qilaJiliM were well sustained. In our nest is 
peel to be able to give more detailed report of th 
private, ales of some 25,000 tbs. line Domestic Fleeces ' 
at 181 50C,. 6,000 tbs. super polled on private terms; 83 
tenn at. '/lUOStc. and a nuall parcel of East India 1 
terms. .\5iy York Tribune. 
BOSTON, March 12,— The following arc the rat 
week: 
Saxony and Moriuo. 6 ue/> 0 voV 3 Texas. 
F"“ hltHiil, ...(Stahl Smyrna, washed..!! 
.•s) and *4 blood,—..s/todfi I)o unwashed 
Common..15ioL47 -S\ rian_/.!!.!!! 
Pullco, extra.SftaM Capa . 
On. superfine. Crimea....".!’.! 
Do. No. 1.4%‘LdH Buenos Acres,..!." 
Ilp. No. A—..OOfaiw Peruvian, washed... 
i.00@15.00 
.00&13.5K) 
.2.VS 5.00 
.Oka) 5.00 
25@ 1.75 
3(aOc.. 
4('uj4‘ 4 ij. 
tecOe 
DtailOc. 
40@50c. 
tSi.ltC. 
-00f.'!)00 
-27@S5 
A9&SS 
. 25PV60 
. 12(525 
. 17(5X0 
..Viidti 
,00(5)60 
u - — * uuuv fcAAl-T la-IVILl” 
such testimony as they may deem proper: and if the 
fact ot such interest be established, it shall be Rood 
fttlllv’P TAI* O/Inlfl rrt n rv tUn aln.',.. i « L . T.. • ■ ® 
. A V OiJ I IJC 
«ause for adjudging the claim to be fraudulent" 
Edwin M. Stanton, Secretary of War, 
