Baltimore (MD) Sun, July 30 1862, p. 2. The Riots at New Albany, Indiana-We have already given some accounts of the riots at New Albany, Indiana, between some of the white and black population there. The Cincinnati Gazette has a letter from New Albany dated the evening of the 23 inst., and written evidently by a strong sympathizer with the blacks that, besides embodying some further particulars of the riots, warrants the belief that they were not continued after Wednesday. The following extracts disclose the terrible nature of the excitement: Scenes the most shocking to humanity have been transpiring in this city during the last two days. The origin of the difficulty is variously stated, but it is believed the suffering party were not without blame. The mob that had been reigning in our streets since the first announcement of this mess until a late hour this afternoon has been guilty of atrocities that would disgrace devils in hell. When it was announced that a youth had been shot by a negro, a crime that should be promptly punished, scores of our chivalrous whisky bloats, accompanied by hundreds of profane lads and boys from ten to eighteen years of age, were rapidly moving in wild confusion over town in various directions, attaching negroes of all ages and sexes, wherever they could be found, shooting, knocking and beating the poor helpless victims without their knowing for what it was done. Helpless women and children were menaced and set upon in various places, and their cries of distress and humble pleadings were most heart-sickening. Some begged to be permitted to hide in dwellings, and others, as I was told, piteously pleaded to be sheltered from their cruel fate by being locked in jail. But in all these cases, as far as known, but one found protection in this way. Such were the scenes of yesterday. During last night anxiety was very high, but the negroes, having all fled to the woods and fields dragging their wretched offspring with them, nothing was left for the bloodthirsty demons but the deserted dwellings and their little property to destroy. Strange to say, I cannot learn that in a single instance resistance was made by these victims to this inhuman treatment. But what will strike us as most strange is the fact that, amid all this bloody and hand-handed murder in our streets during the day, so far as known, not an arrest of one of the mob has been made by our officers.