9<1 * ' ' . 15 (niiinwumwwmmiiiMMj n???inmmmii iwi. P. HOOOTT. Terms of Subscription. Daily paper per mouth $3.00 " " for Six" Months - - - $15.00 | weekly, . $g.01) Rates for Advertising: For one Square ? twelve lines ov lea* ?TW 0 DOLLARS and FIFTY" CENT8 for the first insertion, and TWO DOLLARS for each subseqeunt. Obttuaiit NoTroEB, exceeding one square, charged at adwrtiaing rates.. Transient Advertisements and Job Wonc-MUST BE AID FOR IN ADVANCE. * No deduction made, except to our regular advertisgptronci. . ARMY 1STBWS. # L - FROM THE GEORGIA FRONT. Macon, July 29.?The latest advices from Atlanta by the train apd telegraph yosterday evening. We learn by the train which left at nightfall that the enemy attacked our left extending from the city towards tha Chatr tahoochie yesterday, and were repulsed and ! driven about a mile. Late last evening ordors ? were received by telegraph to send cats to bring the wounded to the rear. A telegraph dated ) yesterday, from. Atlanta, from a high odicer, to Gen. Johnston, received here, says fighting is now going on. We have driven them, but de- | tails not-known. Stewrrt, Loring and Walthall J are 'reported wounded. A private telegram from Griffin reports Wheeler also wounded. A I cavalry force of the enemy, strength unknown, struck the Macon and Western Railroad below Jonesboro this morning, and are reported tearing up the railroad in this direction. The other cavalry force of the enemy, to-day reported near Atlanta, are moving toward this place. i . . ? .FROM TB$ TRANS MISSISSIPPI. ! Mr. Warren Adamg/tvho readied the city this morning from Houston, Te.xas, which place he left on the 4th of the present month, reports all quiet in that quarter. Be is *under the im* pression that there is not a Yankee in the State of Texas, if it be tfue, as-was reported and believed, that they had evacuated Brownsville. There are no Yankees in Arkansas. Banks' forces have nearly all left New Orleans?it was supposed for Fortress Monroe. The crops?in Texas especially?are magnificent, the oldest settlers not remembering a more "prolific yield ofe very thing. The people and the trans-Mississippi array are in'the finest spirits. # He also brings us the gratifying news, that, on the 2jd insfc., a large .steamer loaded with medicine arid powder, reached a Confederate , port not often visited by blockaders.?Ru'.H.-, mond Whig, 2 6 th. PROM JHJROPK Richmond, J uly 29.?European advices of I tbe 16th are at hand. A deputation for obtaining a cessation of hostilities in America waited upon Lore Palmereton on tbe 16th and urged the Government to meditate for a restoratiou of peace between the belligerents.? They argued that the independence of the Confederacy was virtually accomplished, and any prolongation of the war would only result in mutual slaughter. Palmerston, in reply, said : "They who in quarrels interpose, "Will oft wipe a bloody nose." He was not afraid of a bloody nose, but feared* mediatory proposals wonld be premature. . News from the continent indicates a peaceful settlement of the Banish Government question. The Confederate loan has further advanced and ix7An Knrwanf FROM THE NORTH. Richmond; July 29.?TJie New York Herald of the 27th has boon .received. The enemy are again threatening Penusyl vania and Maryland, and there was considerable excitement at Baltimore yesterday in consequence. The intelligence from this invasion is .scattered and unsatisfactory, but sufficient to oauBe uneasiness jn "Washington. HUNTERS TERRIBLE * DEFEAT? THE TRUTH AT LAST. The 12th Ohio, veteran regiment, came down from the Kanawha country on the Allen Collier yeateraay. They, are about to be mustered ont of service. This regim<*nt was with Gon. Hunter in his late Lynchburg expe ditiou.' Tho rebels poraued Hunter in his retreat, af?d a series of engagements were fought, n which our loss was at IcaBt 8,000 irt killed, wounded and miRsing. On the retreat, it is charged that Gen, Hunter filled the ambulances with negroeR, to the neglect of the wounded white soldiers. His conduct is bitterly denounced by all the soldiers.^ . | It is Also said that Gen. Crook has preferred | charges against Gen. Hunter for incapacity ! and cruel troatment of his men. As an instance, it is charged (we hope eutircly 'untrue, for it is almosf incredible,) that Gen. Hunter cow-hided a man personally for ordering a nogro to get off a horse to give place to a wounded soldier. At Connellton, the li&ul of the navigation on t.Ko O nnn ?-f-i o,uuu wijTiuuiHi were placed on barges and lowed down iho riv?r. ri'lio sufferings on the retreat were terrible, and a half dozen soldiers died per houF during the last two days from starvation, fatigue and exposure. The lottent wiu long, horrible and disastrous in the extreme. ? Cincinnati jEnquirer. Fighting in Florida.?Passengers who arrived in Savannah repoit a fight, at Brandy Branch, in Florida. On Sunday morning last the enemy burr.t the bridge over St. Mary's River, six miles above Baldwin. A light took place on Sunday between the enemy and our iroops under Major G. W. Scott, who commands a battalion. The result is not known. Our inforumnts learned that on Monday last the. Second Florida Cavalry, un der Lieutenant Colonel McCoymii-krengaged the enemy nt Brandy Branch, and at last accounts the. fight wa; still progressing. ' The Woiide'rfHl Cabiue,'. The New York Jlcvald savs : The latest novelty of Barnum's Mmeum is a highly successful exhibition of .mechanical skill in the shape of what is called the "Wonderful Cabinet." Out of n hox four feet, six inches high are taken material from which furniture is made to cover the stage of the lecture renin. Chandeliers, tallies, stools, a bedstead, dining tabic, a large throne, a cradle, boxen, books,I etc.. are spread around in unlii'.ited quantities. The wonder at first scenic to he how so nmoh | could ever have been placed in the little .box, j hut as the process goe* on the only question is I how the stage is going to hold the number of I orii^loQ icliinli ' *' ...vii gvcry sine nve springing lip' almost from nothing. . The inventor, Uerr Nadolskn, a Pole, is present at the exhibition, and shows his mechanical skill nearly as much in putting together his'stock of household furniture as he did in the original const ruction. The Cabinet, measures only 4 feet. 0 inches in height, is 3 fret wide and 2 feet thick, and | contains 200 varieties ftf elaborate, full sized, I strong and useful pieces of furniture, including a dining table 12 feat lopg, with 24? covers laid complete, 18 other tables, 9 garden chairs, 7 other chairs, lamps, a chandelier and candlestick, with candles lighted, a full bed and bedstead with hangings complete. A Spunky Darkey.?A Indicrous incident occurred between the Yankee General Hunter and an old negro woman while t.be former had 'his headquarters at the residence of Major donrrrn fl- JTiit.tov nan- *U:_ m ?. .?..vol outs uiiy. ine cabin ol the old negro woman, it appears, wasrinraded by a number of Hunter's vandels, who were in the act of stealing everything, when the old negro rushed to the front of Major Huttcr's residence, where Hunter was sitting in the porch, and thus addressed him in a very excited manner : "Mister General Hunter, your men in my cabin trying to steal everything I got, and if ybu donTt keep 'em out I'll kill some of 'em sure." This speech only provoked a laugh from the worse than vandal^ when, the old woman, worked up into a .furious frenzy, said to him, in a stentorian voice: "You need'nt laugh, Mister Hunter, for I he d?d if I don't git the. axe and smash the brains out de fust man come in my cabin." The manner of the old negrcss impressed Iluntcr with her earnestness, and he. at once ordered a guard around her cabin, which secured her from further interruption.'?Lynoiburg Republican. Collodion has by a new process of treatment, found out by a photographer, been turned from its photographic use into first rate leather.? By certain chemical treatment it becomes as trong and durable as ordinary leather, and impervious to air ana water. [CAMDEN DAILY JOURNAL. MOiUDAY MORNlKft, AtJGlJ&T I. ' Brig. Gen. JElltoti. "We learn by private despatch, roceived tbiB morning, that Gen" Stephen EllIott, although severely wounded, ig doing well. The Battle at Atlanta.?Wo have seen nowhere ' so full, graphic, and satisfactory an account, of the engagement of the 2'2d ult., as that, given by the Atlanta correspondent of the Savannah liepublican. And wo may remark, en passant, that that journal is peculiarly fortunate in possessing a corps of correspondents whose accounts of military movements are always clear, comprehensive and accurate. The letters of P. \v. A. are, unquestionably, tho bout* which liavo | DQflQ written during the war. 1 It appears, from the accouut referred to, that, the most of the flchting waB done hy Cheatham, Habere and Whef.lf.U ; the division oF the latter being dismounted and aetiug as mfantrv. HxKDEEand WiiKKLj er moved arround Shermans left, attadking that wing iu flank and rear, and almost annihilating it. Simultaneouftly with this movement, Cheatham, in coniinaud of Hooii'm old eorps, advanced upon Sherman'.* front, driving in the skirmish line, ynd forcing back his main linp of battle a mile and a half beyond his outer line of entrenchments. Stewart's division took no further part in the fight than to repel a feint upon their lines. j Our#correspondent thus sums up tiro results of. tho j battle: j The results of the day linvo been n\pro than gratify ing. While iho buttle has not heeu so decisive as I was com tempi a ted in thu "plan of the eommanjler-iti: chief, it has nevertheless crippled the enemy, humbled j his pride, destroyed his morale, noarly annihilated some 1 of his commands, partially destroyed his organization, ' and reduced Ins numbers, it. is believed to, something I ' j unu jut tquamy wmii our own. On tho nlhur liaud i J our men 1 nvo learned that they have'it leader on . whose judgment lhey can implicitly rely ; that breast- j ' works are not so tearful tocucouuier as they imagined; | that tin. ir own strength is yet equal to every omer-I I gency, and titially. that by th