IXIIII pIZ S, DAILY. (111INDAY . 8 ILICCEPYID;) ST JOBS W. FORNEY. I, No, 111 BOMB 101711TH %TWIST. TIM DAILY PRESS, 4orlbei a, la Tea DOLLAREI Pea ANNUS In TWBNIT CHM Pia Wliat, payable to Matled to Subscriber§ out of the atty. Sea .I.2tllvat t Fotra DOW.Mte 41.11) .rirrr Voterast TWO DOLLAge AND TWONTT. TURBO MONTHS, Invariably 11 'draws Jed. temente ineerted at the octal Yates. TRIWEEKLY PRESS, slibert, FIVE DOLLARS Pali ANxtrx, In . SST 011.....111. OffWM 00.. Amt. under the care of lam P. 0. SVILNIS, competent touters. will be opened for the pupil, on THUSAIDAY, the MI of Septena containing term. and other information de , hod on application to the Principal. a Ltlkl, and n.._ _ ___ i ,d t No , r Stree t,. on MONDAY d. Kr. mAßlifilit may be seen at /lo Owe street. BADGER HAS REMOVED TO 1639 SPRUCH Street, where ehe will femme of her Lnetitnte lieptember 19, !nom bee been fitted an for healthfal exercise iiarni;tl4%lliViTy - Zod - fietitattiliy torttod a~tnlrto of Attlboro, Books oonotf. la 011011 ita whiter Session, Tema left Or 011etstie, obtain throttler, by Ad , Principe Att ele+re P. 0., Books rlO,, BRAM, J. UtieflAgAt J ANZ P. °RAP ,obool for Tonna' Pll. :he 12th of Ninth (Bepgaber). GARDEN INSTITUTE, FOR • YOI7P 0 LAMBS tDING AND DAY SCHOLARS• - , Arced on tatifictt September. LI. Mt. M. As .1.1 and Organist of t'uc /dentist Church, ,e Ws lessons September let. Help once, 9212 'ARDS, Street. an2.9-Im' HANNAH MORE ACADEMY, :rfieroN, polawire. Suasion will eommonoo &TO= 564. Bor port; ilota a opply to tai — kiILOTTS Streets, we . si MOND).T. mber Stb. - L. BAB,- .INO. G. Lic/LBO Prlnelpals anlll4.m, ;8 HOOPES WILL REOPEN HER tOARDIRO and DAY SCHOOL for Yonnir Ladies. LOCUST Street, on VirEDDIDSDAY. theLith att2iLlut _ANTOWN FEMALE SETtIV. ORBEN Street south of Walnut lane, win Yt'F'&NESDAY. 7th. liar-, setting forth the Coarse of 'llan:Lotion, , r. may bo obtained at the Seininan , . rrOf. WALTAH S. 70ETBSCUB 1,7 d. ALUBIA INSTITUTE --4 HAMS ,hItDING-BOHOOL YOB BOYS. Lt Andalturbi. Tulles from rhiliAllkis i kt nts A 31 '.,fist.D. M. Asiiiiisi7 ioininanasa on Um ,DAY, the eti of Beptombor next, and elortee t July followiag. Ind voting paou yroparive for Collage or EtuSIIHM 'lone riquiremeata. Jdoni launages are aughtwalrus fue ,41 41 a. who hay. no souheatiod with airy other Ames sad fall Information apply to WM. F. PrreßS. A K., • Prtoolpall Or. J. IiIIINTIII WOILIZALL. A. M. Ph_ D. Aesoolate Prlncdpil, WEST CHESTER. Parma. ENGLISH AND CLASSICAL )(L, N . W. corner CHESTNUT and Streets, will reopen on MONDAY, SePlan. ar of pitidta Ilmited to forty. of tuition same as last year. foregoes and particulars see Clrenlars, whirl had at-Mr. Elassard's Drug Store or at the School wherhe PrlnolPal, (Successor to Charles Short, ) may be Mill every 131011 Li nir ko.titsra.lo and 1.1 4 miles beyond MC- A miles from Wen - Riddie,on the West Ches. .oad• Thorough course in Itsthentatice. tacos, Languages, and Runtish. Practical les ha:vain and Civll Engineering. rtTlelbrarr *tuns. :lumbar of unpile limited...NW-us Sept. cwiL. shave twielts of a.koms Seers to John 0. t.. 0. ID notch Third street; 'Rhos. J..Clatoti. inn sod Pram John U. B AR Y O N SX) Rev. J. HENRY "DARIO_ A. X., VILLAGE ORRMJI. Penni. ADELPHIA. COLLEGIATE M ATTI. FOR TODNO LADIES, No. MO ARCH Rev - CHAS. A. SMITH. D. D., IL CLARENCE A. M., Principals. Year. Throe Departments: Primary, Acad.- Ad Collegiate. Fall college course in Classics, mastics. higher English, and Natural Science, far ,wbo gradaats. Modern Languages, Musie, Faint sad Vocation II the beat masters. For etrauler ,s y at No. 1530 ARCH Street. or address Box MU . Philadelphia. • next salami will sommence on Monday, Septian sp2lo-am. ALB COLLSOBiI3ORDENTOWN, :VaL-ZA,./Vnitti" to Dleasantll iriega°72,l •aheyough Instruction is given In Cm mon o oat hither brearoheibqf and ettperlot 'stages are furnished in the Ancient and Roden 1.111041, Drswing, Painting in all IN branches, ant instrumental MAW*. For Its.logries, scl• Roy. JORDI H. BIitAIEZ.,. ' Preeldant. 'INESS EDUCATION.-YOUNG Neu prepared for the Counting donee and business t EMU'S COMMERCIAL COLLEGE, No. CiIIISTIVUT Street, corner of Seventh. rt-sal ruction,. to Bookkeeping, in all its in • ; P‘miutinship, plain and ornamental; Mer An" &c. :ek. , ,iphiny by Sound and on Paper taught by MO of a.. 4 practical Opes eton. itkotn tuetinoted separately, and recelveli at any Diplomas with the Seal of the Institution at iii..iwarded on graduating. ~,,..gue,,, contishing particulars, tarnished gratis se3-flt• , RTR BROAD.BTRERT ACADEMY I , sR YOUNG OINTLIDIEN, No. 909 North b &reek, Philadelphia. Protoseor J'in 'I.M. Tilt; Inatttation opens "Veptember (ith for ' , loll, and Bepteraber rah f9(tUltWa. F.• wUI tea preparatorc e add an Adadekeleal Da. ••at. 1.1 which the num r of , papila alkali be 11. to • ct.i :be inotmetioa thoronaltie. Musical. " 4 1 6, 4kf and Modern Lengqagea..- Pdr Tek e eir%.4.4 rt. mid other particulars. aPPiY at _ 'sea. deirkiat• VOL. 'B.-T-NO. 34. MRS, T. B. „ Ra t / UDDI7 - - - TRBTHUOTION THROUGH BOOKS -a• OBJNOTS, AND PICTIIRIi, ,, ANN Diossort wth irjtwTmtpe rfeoert 1 t Ut a . t 2-1:4-11Ltitifth ISTRITCTION IN FRENCH. —RA.- THEN UNNSHAL facilities are &Worded la C S. HAL LOWELL'S SELECT MOH SCHOOL, No. 110 North TENTH Street, for obtaining a rapid and thorough ao quaintance with the Wrench Langusae and Literature. Tke department . % in charge of a .natire French genii.- man of large experience as author and teacher. He ia assisted by an American Linguist of known attain ments, who attends constantly in the School. and is ready at all times to solve difficulties, and en courage the students in thslv acquisition of the lan guage. Rxeroiste will be resumed on the 19th last se6-ot* WEBT GROVE BOARDING SOB OOL FOR GIRLS, CHESTER COUNTY, Pa., THOMAS P. COWARD, Principal .— The 22d semi-annual session. Of thle • Initiation will commence on the SECOND DAY, the 7th of Eleventh month next. The lactation 1.4 pleasant and healthhil, near West Grove Btation t on Balt. Central A.R. The course of instroetion le thorough and extensive, including Latin,French, Drawing, Book deeVeg. and Telegraphing. For circulars, dos , address Book toe rincipal. an antire• atild•th2a MISS C. A. BURGIN'S-SCHOOL FOR YOUNG LADIES. No. 1037 . WALNUT Stmt. wilt REOPEN on THURSDAY, dept- 16th. so7-Im* BOARDING SCHOOL FOL • BOYS.- The Diller "Academy at Matitorough Montgomery county, Pa., le now open for the rece*tion of pupils. For Cftvtaars,. address R. MORRO , Principal. Terme moderate. • see-tuthalle Number 11l aommenoe 'EL, Principal. SIGNOR P. RONDINRLI,A. WILL 11.11. N- 1 SVC& his Singing Lessons and Private Classes on ttie 8t or Setae=ler. Address 1324 SPRING GAR DRS Street. • in9s Alsatians* OLDBMY Itt MRl3'. OERTRITDE -3. CRY WILL . rsevune the duties Of her BOARDING and DAY SOBAOL for Yount Ladles. at 1532 SPRUCN Street, on wIDNRSDAY. , nept. 14th. aun-tnthelme rrHE MISSES ROGERS, 350 SOUTH PINTEENTH Street, will resume the duties of their Boarding_and Day School for Youna Ladles and Chil dren on MONDAY, Sept. sth. ardri-sttithlYt• "PIRCILDOWN BOARDING SOROOL FOR OIRLS, Broildown, Chester County, POUJIIIL The winter term will commence 20th mo. 10th, 1864. Term, $7O per session of twenty weeks, for Bulb& PFnehes and. Languages. Drawing or Painting, 4664 te,_ $lO. Circulars can be obtstned of B. DA &- UTON, 133 South i II.OTIL Street, or of the Principal, RICHARD D .17.11 TTIGTON, Jr. Chester co., Ps. an.U.stutlant IVIP. GIBBONS INTENDS REOPEN . MG the SCHOOL on ORANGE Street, (seoond gate below Eighth, north aide), on the 12th of eth . SEPTEMBER, sel-thati26o B RISTOL BOARDING SCHOOL FOR GIRLS will reopen on the grit Seoolul.der in the Sixth month. For otronlare BAWL to stuS•tothe4et• MTH ARIA ?num. Principal. CIALBB B. HAI LOWELL, A. M.., WILL REOPEN his SELECT HIGH SCHOOL for young men and boys No. 110 North TENTH Street (neer Aga) an the Igth of the 9th month (September.) R*- olden ce , 1501 GREEN Street. anitit.tathelDis UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA:- DSPARTMENT OF ARTS.--The First Term of the College- year will open on THURSDAY, the Bth inst. Candidates for admiseion wilt appear at the University, for examination. on that day, at 10 o'clock, A. N. Tuition for each Term Thirty-five Dollars. GBORO AILS% ee6 41 . Secretary of the Paonity of Arta. MARY E . WILKINSON'S SCHOOL FOR LITTLE GIRLS. 118 Itortt ILSTRITTIIBI. Tbotonth izastr optical to Frengli, sad . Drawbag. Six pupils aim be received at boittlett • 896.0 t MR. THUNDIR, 284 SOUTH FOURTH Street, hooirconmed Lis Professional Pmie At home from 2 till 4 o'slock daily. .. ete " egsain SCHOOL FOR BOYS, 1625 E T 19T.REBT.—RQB11.11T H. LA and lt IirALD H. CHASE have associated themselves tor the pnrpoee of conducting a School, la which Boys will be prepared either for college or bush:leer,. The Antuzon Session of the School will commence on MONDAY, September 12, 1861. Until that date the Principals can be even at their school-hone dally,be tween the hours oflo and IS A. M. se.4- le t. FaBLEYAN FEMALE COLLEGE, - WILMINGTON, Delaware. —The next Sesaion williegn on THURSDA September Bth. BeWifft" ' : JOHN WILSON. 'President. M 8 BITC811113"8911. REOPEN 4.ER UNCH WWI NNODISH 1)&11 - scaooL for Young Children. at 1800 ORSSTIctin Street, on MON DAY, September 12th . Private French milable Leeson given. . . (19LLRGIATE AND COMMERCIAL •-• ACADEMY for BOY S t 355 North TENTH Ohl*. TOOVIDe MONDAY. Roptenthor 12. Call for a otronlar. se2-121* ' J. HARRIS. PrinelpaL FEIRIb)Sc..A.CADRAIY FOR BOYS rear of 41 North Blirvarcrii El•reet, reopens On the 6th inst. per term of 9t weeks All Slumming,. Mina adistitted. Eserlzal N. WitITATZ. • pOLITECELNIC `0 OLLEG B-EKTI STITIFIC SCHOOL for the general Student of Ma thematic., 11xpeamentat Beienee. and Natural Rigor., wLI re-open, with enlarged apoommodations, on MON DAY. September littn. TISCH NIC A L SC HO 0 LS re open SepLam ber 19th. Appl at COLLEGE BUILDING MARKET Street and Wa i t Fenn Square. eel-lOte iOOL Street, 9th. The etton, with 'ainting,ato. M MoMIILLIN RESPECTFULLY IN -40-a • POEMS her Mends and patrons that she will open her School-en MONDAY, 12th Wt., at No. 411 South EIGHTEENTH Street. ael-121* UTM. B. COOLEY, A. M., WILL RE OPEN his Classical and English SCHOOL. at 1112 NARKS.T.StresIN an.2h ptembee. anso.lla* CHESTER - VALLEY ACADEMY FOR young' Ladles and Gentlemen' will Reopen Math (lberylitb, 1.91%. J. K. TAYLOR. Prinel - VOATRRVILLS, Chester comity, . an2o4m* THOMAS BALDWIN'S ENGLISH Mailtkomatiosl mid Classiest School for Boys, N. weer of BROAD and ARCH Streets, will moot UP . EMBER 6th. an. 27-1.10 MISS MARY R. - THROPP wriz-88, OPEN her 'ENGLISH and FERNIIME BOARDING end DAT SCHOOL for YOUNG LADIES. at No. 1841 CHEST DT Street. Ph il adelphia, on the 12th of Sep. Water. For circular*. apply at the School. so3-6w• (I.IENWOOD ACADEMY, DELA. N-A WARE WATER OAP. MONROE MX, PA. The fall 'session of the above .institution wil eom. wines on the 12th of the 9th month (September). Poi particulars apply to SAMUEL A.LI3OP, Principal 3730.2 in Delaware Water Gag. MOM. Co.. Fe. CENTRALI N BTITIITE, TENTH 'LI and SPRING Streets, will team Sept. dth. Boys prepared for any Midst= of the Public Grammar School,, for College, or for Iltudneea. Speeds' attention given to small boys. Sn 26. ire H. 0. Dicolllll.l3, A. IL, Prlnaltel. i 1,30. W. PETTIT WILL RE-OPEIi hie Etudio for the reception af Pnrille In the arts of IPRAIVING and PAINTING, at No. 100 NorthTENTN Street, on the-15th of September. au26-11e. PLASS' El A L INSTITUTE, DEAN 'Li Street, below LOCUST. Dates resumed BM. TEMBER 5. J. W. FAIESS,D. D.. • • PrlncipaL ANNA-ITAIGHN'S •SCHOOt FOR YOUNG LADIBS will be reopened Ninth month, Fifth. at No. 510 , 14 MOUNT VERNON Street an2S-Ult. )ptember itierA l t Ina p&L .;EN AT Ai REOPEN - ID FON BMW. . 'FULTON. DASLINOTON. SCHOOL BOOKS AND SCHOOL STATIONRRY, It the lowest price, end delivered te.any address, by CIIALLEN. Wholesale and ;Wall Booksetler, 1309 CHIST3UT Street. A MERICAN ANNUAL CYCLOPEDIA. • - ros 1E163. Thiel valuable registr r of important events embraces information on Political, Civil. and Social Affairs Pulite Documents. Siography.Statistioc, Commerce, Finance,' Literature, Science, Agriculture. ato.. &0., invaluable awe work of reference. It should be in the library of every intelligent reading AME RI CA N r •sale in Tsid.lll6 styles, matcling the MEW escrAPE DLL JAMES K. 8111101 c, 33 South SIXTH Street' is agent for the above important books. __ A. -- Iva, (late of the. >pens September r Young Ladle*. Aid, choice, and wale- tf 'OR AY. ASHCROFT'S L 0 W=W ATE R DB. TECTURS. Ashcroft' a Steam Ganges.. Justice & Mercurial Steam and Blast Salim. Clark's Damper Regulator. • Water Gannon. tieoteh Tubes, &e. ALTOS. k. BATTLES. Agent, 24. North SIXTH Street, Phila. NEW 800 : S NEW BOOKS I DOWN IN TENNESSEE, and Beek by way of Richmond. By Edmund Kirke. JOHN GIIILDERSTRING'S SIN. A Novel by 0. French Richards. QUEST. A. Charming New Novel. DRIFTED SNOW FLAKES; or Poetical Gatherings from yearly authors. ENOCH ARDEN. A Poem by Alfred Tennyson. D C. L. RATH H4LL. A. Domestic Tale of the Primal. Time. BY Fanny Fern. THE ItiatLY DAWN; or Sketches of Christian Life in England in the olden time. By the author iff the Schonberg-Colin Family. For sale by WLIALLAX S. ALFRED KAMEN. an.211-tf 606 CHESTNUT Street. TER MOVEMENT CURE. A 9EW EDITION. inns orasouy.-AND PRACTICE OF THE MOVE - MEIT CURE; or, s Treatment of Paralysis, Indiges tion. Constipation, Consumption, Curvature. and other Determines, Derangements of the Nervous STRUM. gm , ,bo 13y „ by the Swedish System of Localised rnante. Charles Bayette Taylor, M., * D. WI h o ll instrations. • A NEW REFIEIED EDITION. • . PUBLISHED THIS DAY HT LINDSAY & BLAKTErrow, ' Punilehers and Booksellers, No. l 5 South SIXTH Street. APPLETON'S NEW. AMERICIAX OYOLOPIDIA. . . . . . . . . . -._ ... . . • . , • - 4...nvittait , •li P / : IC - 00: l'''''-"T ''' ';'l'..-'''4:4•P' tet it le . ; ... . . . : . c- ....., - ~,.,:: ••• .. , 4•••:... . • .:5 , ... /dia.. .._ .. -..,,,. : .--:, ,, ,w,11, , „„ ; ..._ , .. , _.•••:: . ; .,•,.;,, f,. ; ..* ' 4 ('''--- .. - , :.....' 1 - '''' v v ...,_.„',....'..,....• - 7 .. 1 :'• vi v. " . • 71 .T. "v ‘1 101 :1 ‘. 7117".. r i1k.. .%.,1 ,14 4, - :Na \. . 6, ' . 1 ‘:. : 4 :-....;', ,:V - ' -----.:.• , ..., - 1111111W 1 ••--- • ' - 7 . s ' "' '. . 4' f . . . . . —. \ . , • •--- • .:: - ..- 1 / 4 .... ....• ... 1 1,N,1d.9.,,,tt,N ...- : . '7• -, .. 5!. , . , -".•-,,..--.:•. - ••••••;-.- -71 7 - -...7-.''''':: .;-.:**-- . - 4111P1'- '-';').l.. * 1 . 111111111. 1 ' ' . ,t i ,•• • N k,..4:514. •.• .• • ... c.• or .. •IN 1 ... t.- • . • -,..• ...f., % I I-.. , •.!•‘F.• - • , -, . #.1.4..„ ~ .., ...... :414 . '- - -. .... --. ."‘..":;. 0 " ,-.. . . `• - •^ 2 i-mk . _.. - -:_— .-,;.; • • vi - - d g.-- ---- ' -----: - ."-- , --- , t-=• - ' :' It..'_ --..:.. ?- , 4..i.1.,::•- ~-, • •-•-•: , --7!:: - .. , .. ____., , ._.•,..,-.°-: - - :__-,.-ei.-. 'N . '.7-... • - v Oi l ' . . . . - EDUCATIONAL. The Agency for this luvalsable Library of Thervertiel Information to at 33 South SIXTH Street. second story. UAlso. RECORD 07 THE BEBILLION. By Frank nnvo sal3-tathaSm CABINET CABINET FURNITURE ARLO BM LIARD TABLE& MOORE• & CAMPION, • No. 201 SOUTH SECOND STRUT, ' In 1101111eCtiOli with their extensive Cabbie. brushings ire now minnfactruinn a snnerior article of BILLIARD TABLES, trig hgte now on hand a full supply, Wetted with the MOORS & OINPIOII' B IheßovBD Cl3BllloliB, trhisth are pronounced by all who hay* need them to *superior to all otbere. For the quality and trash of .nose Tables, the mannfactarent refer to their nutuerout „t rout throughout the % anion. who are familltu, ul9 with tl.ats war a-6ro AII'UHTANT •TO HAY DIZA.LERE L. AIM CONTRACTORS. Farmers, Shippe r% ani others interested in Atte Prewilnit and transportation ol g er /o d straw, Witt do well before rnaltine their er . rengementa for the reason to examine the " Sento> Preto," now - trtnperation on the corner of SEcolir street and COLSBWIA Avenue. This hay in compressed direct, and ten tone can (Wally put lit an erdinat7 box car, and no toward whet mint it. flyer is incurred by the road in tranepo The bales average 400 potinds,_and are prepare d only 21 !liteast h e , r •Y irtahat , by 4 feet elm we a dd s to l ,at countles. and the facilities we ware rive soperta .sloe to the product by this Press. • • For frirther particulars addreatooooS TiLOOll ~npertuteodent PODaylYAbil Preen Company pbpao ar a t i a , itaEOP ll il TATINNY HOUSE; DELATARB AO , - WATER OAP.—This place having been 30 alual crowded during the the month of July and August SAO . In event Meal parsona.from visiting it, notice is glirei that the place. Will be hcpt open during MO Tenr , eiford• the an OppoTtanity w those who wish to tit dorini the months of September and October, the moat delight lel season of the year. L. aye Kenon Depot at 7.10 A. M., and arrive or the Oar , at 1. P.M. L. W. BRODHEAD, Proprietor .. . . • .. . szTF,AM:I3,IRATERS FOR FIi.OTORIRI3,: I L 7 MILLS. 'Aka. .- hosted with exhaust or direct SWIM , also, CotlalosEestoro Condense:l, EYsPorittormk." " 88 -Ara M. FOkßlthN. 24North SIMI Itt. T_LWTON BLACKBERRIRB.—, NEW • soottsiot e , sealed, pretsthid this seiliOn', sad r•-• osiveddirsettrom oar htottry:estracidgetoo , 11: J.., ask for sate by RHODFS W lig WE W TALthier su22-tt mi both ATIA ok CURTAIN GOODS. . . E. WILLIZELI7 , 111 M (ittcosesos To cursri., 111180M0 719 CHESTNUT STREET, WINDOW 813.41.33.1i38. CURTAINS. emu laosca - urro Pari e rMa'S #l-11 SEWING miCEM‘ES. FLORE.NOE . THE YLORENCE. THE FLORENCE. THE FLORSECB THE FLORENCE THE 'FLORENCE THE YLORENCE THE FLORENCE SEWING MACHINES, - SEWING MACHINES. SEWING MACHINES. SEWING - MACHINES, SEWING MACHINES. SEWING MACHINES. _SEWING MACHINES, SEWINGmeat - lass. 530 CHESTNUT STREET. 633 CHESTNUT STREET. 630 CHESTNUT STREET. 690 CHESTNUT STREET. 69) CHESTECT'STREET. CM CHESTNUT STREET. 690 CHESTNUT STREET. 650 CHESTNUT STREET. SILK & DRY GOODS JOBBERS. FAIL ,1 FALL, ists.4.) NOW IN STORE. ( Digks4. EDMUND YARD & CO., tOih 617 Chestnut and 814 Jayne Streets. DEPORTEES AND JOBBERS or SILKS AND FANCY DRY GOODS) SHAWLS. LINENS, • AND WHITE GOODS., • LARGE AND HANDSOME STOCK OF , DRESS GOODS. " FULL LINE or FOREIGN AND IKABOTIO 33A1.3101:14iLa5, INCLUDING DEIIN3II% AND OMEN NM& ado-3M ' COMELSSION 110111SES. Et awat. & MAMMON, so. crianunrr kITREBT, COMMISSION MERCHANTS. *9ll 213 BALM 01 • PHILADELI4III,IIIDI GOOD& GENII , :sr tri I I: italZ --:-- 31111CFROVI3D Platirant • SEltßT The Fifth Corps. Ar • • • . • aILAVQII.I2.TERI3 STH ARMY CORrg • - . - ' ---7-.' -.7".. .. ,--"" ' ' '-. ' '...'-.-- - " r ..:' 'r -- ' - '%ititertiber cliPfi '' . friItRAAMID TO PIT AND en'l DATMADTION- 'To the Editor of The Press : - . • Ste : I beg respectfully to trill your attention to a NADI BY 'matter of injustice to this corps and its commander. JOHN C. ANtRISON, In the lest number of the War Press, that reached `us to-day, in an an editorial on " The Welkin Rail- Noe. 1 AND 3 NORTE SIXTH STREET, road," I read the assertion that the enemy, in re cognising the value of this road; has made repeated XANIYPACTITBSR AND DIALER IN attempts to drivathe Tinton forces-. from off it, but that all such attempts have signally failed to drive ffirniNNELPS FINE FURNISHING GOODS. the 2d Corps from its entrenchments. This is maul.' featly unjust. The ad Corps does not, and never did,' OoNSTANTLY ON RAND, "hold the Weldon Railroad." It is the sth Corps , LOIN, _NDSLTIIf, and PLANING SHIRTS, and that gained possession of the road, and which has 3RAWKRS. coLLess„_tiTocKS, TRAVELLING held it against all the attemptibof the enemy to die. MINTS, TIES, WRAPPERS. Ato., 40., lodge it, with one exception, and the sth Corps now, eV BIS OWN NANUFACTIIIia , holds it, being entrenched upon it in such a position AOBIBBY A LSO ` as to render its repossession by the enemy an int. oLo'fas - possibility. • :Thebth Corps has received but little of • WIMPS iiildlribllly,___ the credit duo to-it in the operations in this quarter, RAlSDlEssollillet, .and without wishing to detract-from the- merits of SHODLDRE Dff•ACE I3I . DA. 11 °. Gen. Hancock and his gallant corps, I think a oor- Bolt at reasonable swifts. . 1 ,154 E, rection of the above is dup Oen. Warren and the brave men of his command, Respectfully yours, VVINE SHIRT. MANUFACTORY. { The subscribers would invite attention to their IMPROVED CUT OF SHIRTS, which they make a specialty in their imminent alga. omotantly receiving NOVELTIES FOR GENTLEMEN'S WEAR. J.. W. SCOTT. & CO. GENTIMENN'S FURNISHING MAL • No. 814 CHESTNUT STREET Form doors below the GontineitetL.. S.got $ 4.1 g ar.• qo., SW. BiODWAY. NNW TOBX.. INPOSTIBS 01 MEN'S t% LADIE S' , GLOVES , GERMAN AND ENGLER HOSIERY, MEN'S FURNISHING GOODS. E;ACES Qt DRESS TRIMMINGS. to told& they IITI .I Tics wzigsaAra VIADIL wlO-dar STATIONERY & BLANK. BOOK. OIL COX:PA= DIRECTORY—COW wain suit of Companies, their Ofliotak Presidents, Traumata. mad SeerstAries. We are also prepezed to famish New CoraPsnles with • CERTIFICATES OP STOOL TRANSFER BOOK, ORDER OF TRANSFER. STOCK LEDGER, STOCK LEDGER BALANCES, REGISTER OF CAPITAL STOOK. DIVIDEND BOOK. BROKER'S PETTY LEDGER, ACCOUNT Olt BALER, Of good Materials and at Low Prim. : ItACVS!St* CO,' >• STATIONERS, CHESTNUT Street. mr4-ti DRUGS. WIT GASH DRUG-HOUBE. ~yiaGuT & SIDDALL, .• , • 119 M ARKET STREET. IRetONn non and SECOND Streets. . B. W. WRIGHT. .7. H. ISEDDALL. DMIJGGISTS, PHYSICIANS, AND GE * NMItAL STOMMEVEIPERS Can'ind at mu establishment a full assortment of Imported. and Domestic Drog%_Popniar Pa- - tent Medicines, Paints, Coal Oil, Window Glass. Prescription Vials, etc. at aa low !Om" as ma- Dm, firet-elses goods can Nimbi: • • • •. FINE ESSENTIAL -OILS, • or Confectioners, 'atoll variety and of the best Cocbtneal, Bengal Indigo.' Madder, Pet Ash, ? o rt , dld e ear, r ir e d . a. g .gieljtm, Oil of Vitriol, Annat- Logwood, FOR. DYERS Always on hand at lowest net cash Prices. SULPHITE OF LIME, for keeping cider sweet; a perfectly harmless's preparation, put up. with NI directions for ase, ' Ing r a d ta sta y cont a ining lae s t r y tta: 4 2, , f i x il on i atr , f , e4 6, fi r t= s ed sit t t e i ii .n iegeett el ci"tathme will be Ql RIGHT & SIDDALL, WHOLESALE DRUG WAREHOUSE, • no. 119 HAMM' Street, above MONT -• 4.L11.114 Pl= TOLI3: 'BRA TEf3. PHIL!? WILSON do CO., . INHICIFIESTNITr Street: . 'Nfintractnrers and Impbrtere of Fine One_,a Pistols. Gunning and Flaking Tackle, Canal, Powder, Shot, Wads, Caps, die. enne:Reatooked, Rebored, and Remind 'the best HATIEr. • SKATES OF ALL KINDS. 409 OHESTNIIT Street. T. • 'Vlach , : PALM OIL SOAP.—THIS SOAP 1 to w id e of pure, fresb Palm 011,. and is entirely 4 yegytable Soap: zoom suitable for Toilet use than NMI Made from animal fats. In boxes , of one dozen cakes. for $2 per Lox. Xanufaotured by ' • L_ GEO. 'X 10Anniox & SON. No. MG feeIfGARSTTA Straete bemoan E rm a and tiegivia4, aivre 1 1 4 I I :4 . 4 hi: AT SEPTEMBER 8, 1864. tt Vrtssv THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1864. TIM COLORED TROOPS:- The .lbohafrint Rebel Cooneoliding Blyentery—/Itoeso of Geo. Wm. Hirney— . Caumalttes. [Special Correspondence of Tha hiss. J BEFORE PETERSBURG, Sept. 5, 166 . 4-8 A. M. ' We bare been speculating . in camp .to -day as to tbe Jesuit of the shoC and shell which were ?eared in copious showers during last night and quite early this morning, among the inhabitants of Secesid a. - Yesterday wall the quietest Sunday we have had along this pith of - the line for some time. The ab sence of the usual cannonading Produced - the im pression that it was caused-by , the neutral respect which the belligerenisentertoinfor thoilay. During the night, however, the artillery duel was severe.' "Where must be somtinbject In the incessant artil lery and musket firing by the enemy in front of Petersburg. livery inducement possible his been made, on the part of our troops, to cease this barba rous practice, but the overtures have been met by re newed malignity and vindictive bitterness. When leis limown that the enemy is especially anxious to discontinue this murderous propensity. everywhere' else but in front of Petersburg; It gives 'cause- for simpleton that the rebels are_ endeavoring, by_tbe_ report of cannonadtog, conceal some terrible purpose. The fiiture can only develop° the nays- - levy of the present. _ . . . The new railroad which is in progress of Con— struction. is 'rapidly .advanoing to completion. It begins at the terminus of the road from City Point, which runs to nearly the limits of Petersburg, and will run along the line to connect with the Weldon road. The rapid manner in which it-is being laid gives assurance that but a few days will be required to complete, it. This Woks very much like' over the usual objections. and obstruotions to prosecuting B. winter campaign. Brigadier. General Birney,•commanding the 3d Division, 10th Army Corps is now quite. 111-with the dysentery, and, with a view to assist in his recovery, he has been removed to the , Cheeapeakeliaepltal at Fortress Monroe. The absence of this gallant officer Is a source of serious regret to the colored troops, who: have the most Implicit Cerifidenie in God and General Barney. Colonel Howell, of the 85th Penn. sylvaida Volunteers, is the lemporary commander of the,division. CIABITA.LTiNG AMONG THE GOLOEUED TROOPS. Dennis Portlong, Company 0,22 d lir fted States Colored Troops, was killed on the Ist, and Daniel Company IC, on the 2d, in the trenches be• . fore Petersburg. ' ' The following persons, of thb came regiment, have been wounded recently Sergeant William .11.:Iviathews, Charles Middle. worth, Isaac' Young, CoMpany 0 ; James Hanle, Co. I; Jamee•Murry, Joseph Wilson, and Samuel Leaton. - - _ The 22d was raised in Pennsylvania. John WU eon, Co. A; Sohn-Ford', Co. C William Jonas, Co. K; and Charles Stiortes, have recently died in the hospital. Shortes died-from the effects of a Wound reieived at Fort Powhatan on the 91st of May. In the IthUnited States Colored Troops, recruit ed in Maryland, George Young, Co. E., was wound ed slightly in the left shoulder ; Sergeant John Eundlok, CompanyK, on the 2d ; E. Mooney, Com pany D; and on the 3d Sergeant John Gross, left hip, and Simnel Mender, Co. G, side of the foot; Samuel Burton, Co. K, and Henry Parker, Co. I, 29th (Connecticut). U. S. C. T.; were killed on the Ist inst., and on the 8d Ohas. I}. Ennings. The fol lowing persona were wounded during the last day or two o Dennis Williams, Co: E, knee ; Abraham Johnson,- Co. It, flesh wound - in the cheek ; William Lambert, Co. G, back, a oontrision ; Gee. F. Porter, Co. 1), shoulder; George Odell, CO. E, toe, and Theodore Ax:derson, thigh. /010111 - ENTAL DA.NDS. The colored bands attached to the 22& and Bth U. S. C. T.- were discoursing me/lent music yester day evening-till dark. The band of the Bth, under the_ instruction of Captain Joseph Anderson, tL e loader of Prank Johnson's greens band, has pro greasedto an efficiency in music whiehhaS endeared it to the officers and men of that eacellentregiment, and is calculated to surpass in eorreet playing any of the shriller institutions which have had their ex istence in this rebellion. Captain Anderson is still instructing them, though they. can execute, to the satisfaction of competent judges, some forty pieces of scientific music. He Will probably visit Phila delphia In a day or two, from whion oily he has been absent since the Bth Regimen:it left Vamp Penn, about nine months ago. ' ROLLIN. A Question to the, Belief Committee. To the Editor of The Press: Stu : An article appenred in the columns of the Philadelphia inquirer of the eth instant on the sub ject, - of reCittits. IC states There Is one Impor tant fact that Philadelphia, recruits should not for get—vie :-.that if they havoc themselves credited to organisations in other cities .and States, their.fami lies lose the benefit of the relief money so generous ly voted by the city of ,Philadelphia.” Now, we would beg leave to inquire of-the writer . (who states that he is attached to the Belief Com mission) hol it happens.that the families and chil dren of the large number of colored soldiers no- oredited to this city and- State are - deprived of thii. relief? Application heabeen made frequently, and always refused, as fan ns wo have heard. The re sult has- been that numbers of women, with large families of Ohildren, finding themselves unable AO.. support them , have to do what our people geners,ll7 detest—rescirti to the Almshouse, their husbands.: . being absent battling for Elie Glivernment, : that, with their aid, they may succeed in quelling, this stupendous rebellion. Yours, to., Ia a letter to the editor of La. Nation Suisse, • Olitalbaldi soya: "I desire to add my name to the four thonsand °items of Geneva who have addressed the United •Statelin favor of the maintenance of the Conatitar tion and the abolition of slavery, and I hope, in so doing, to obtain the approbation of the Liberal press, and of all my fellowarldzena. Glory to Swit zerland t That old homed liberty deserves to stand in the vanguard-of human, emancipation. From a. fatality now weighing on nations, we see great peoples grow less, and even disappear before the lying flattery of despotism, and the ahem pions of freedom become the police of tyranny. Well, let Switzerland take tie lead till . tlone repent. Tyrants pass away ; nations, are immortal. What avails a' minority I We shall' conquer by aid of our old traditions; and we shall again see tyranny : melt before the popular phalanx . - as snow before the Ban. We shall conquer because: we have right, justice, and brotherhood on oqr side. . Let me now call the - attention of Switzerland to'a . :groat fact. =The •Amerlearr Republics present to the , world the spectacle of the connection of thapeoples.. An aggresaion.agairaft the Peruvian territory, 0003- pleted - by the' Spanish Bourbons, has raised a cry of shame and vengeance froin all her sister natlona. If the older sister of Republics will send one word of comfort to her suffering sister, It would be a striking contrast to the shameful league of tyrants against liberty, which. we now see In Europe. Mind this : Poland swamped by Russia, amid the apathy of all, is the first step to a return to the barbarian of the middle ages. If the: , partition ' disgraced the eigh teenth, the destruction of Poland is a lasting blot on the rdhettenth, century. Alas our olvLlization, as yet, is but false." • John Wentworth, at the late Chicago meet ing, said: JeffeMon Davie entered Congress about the same year that I did. I have met him often and knew him well. But there was this difference between Jeff Davis , and me. I paid for my education, Jeff didn't for his. Be was taken at a tender age . and .laced at West Point, and your father and mine were taxed to pay for the instruction that rescued; him from oblivion. We made the very common' Mistake of judging by his , head rather than his heart, and did not notice the tper that was .0011111 g, .there, and which we nursed WO life to sting us if possible to death. When his schoolboy days were I over, Jeff was sent out-West—out West here at the Government expense—and spent a year or so mar cellos! around Calumet, ilahMg, and lounging, and shooting grouse at Government expense and eating tLen, himself. • (Laughter.]' He then metaled Into the Government; his wile being a daughter of Gen. Taylor, Who was supported by the Government; wets to the Mexican war and returned to become eoretary of War and to villify the gallant/soldiery el Illinois for their part upon the neld of Buena Vista. For this Governor Bissell called him out, but on this particular occasion Jeff didn't come out. [Great laughter — . jenny Kompton appeared In "Linda" with .Inlea :Wettings, and the Cedijornian says that "the new contralto has a voice of considerable power and pathos—rich, -full, and sympathetic ; a. pure style, mad what is rare enough for commendation, singe recitative remaritably well. She also enunci ates her words clearly and distinctly. 'Her farther attractions are those of a good-looking blonde, with,a tine ngure, but her movements were some whatastroatralned by the habiliments of the ruder sex. On subsequent nights she seemed more at ease in her boy's °lethal, and could she have been Induced tit have regarded her guitar more as a mu sical etrument. than an article of clothing she would have Cone better. • Yet, for her first operatic per termer ce— as we are told it was—=she acted fairly. enough. Her 'Savoyard song—the first strain of which is Continually recurring through the opera with an inexpressibly tender and touching. effect— was very beautifully given, as was also her duet with Ltr,da (Miss Richinas) in the second act." , • Frovoilivo • EtaloTionnanino.—The arts of cid. lleation are rnaldns fire progresain the pandwlen. ,A:t a recent election In 'Honolulu, the ball, weiround 26 contain 788 ebtet after 373 VOWS had been! recorded. And now Klag•Kauteharneba Comes &ken upon the abutted conelltutioll With e eetViretat ,tatt a Unntaroll, Qi PERSONAL. BrIBCH BY BEORITABY BEWMID. Review of the iltilitairy and Politica" Mination—Masterly Exposition or the Niageris and Chicago Conspiracy—The Safety and the Peril of the 'lcon/410 'l4w Secretary annoluseen there will be no Draft. Elhon the Auburn Union, Sept 6.1 Saturday was a _gals day in Auburn, over the ' splendid 'victory of Generalelherman in the capture of Atlanta. At an early hour elf the flags in the. city Were run up, giving It a very gay and ,patriotio appearance.. At 6 o'clock P. Id. all the belle st?ack lip a merry peal, and about the same' hour' a salute of one hundred guns Was fired; Immediately 'a large crowd, indluding several hundred volunteers who were waiting to be mustered in, assembled In • front of the Western Exchange, and were briefly addressed _by Hon . Christopher Morgan ' and Provost Marahal Knapp. Alter the speeches it was proposed that the aa3emblage form in procession and march to the residence of Governor S e ward. Therbsind led -of "a lilt a lively tune, and the line Of March was -immediately takeit up. • On arriving in front of Go-, nt veer Sewardli residence the assemblage tiedame so large that it was foundiseceesary tb continuo the , march to the. park adjoining Governor ,Sewartle grounds. After the procession had halbed; Governor Seward was called for, and came forward and eddreseed•the crowd in one of his most earnest' add effective speeches, which was received with unbounded en thusiasm. After he concluded. three cheers were . called for and given with a for the fellowing persona Sherman; Grant,' Sher Man Illmede,"6 tan. ton, Fanagut, Lincoln, and Seward. Three more' rousing, ones were given -for .the soldiers and the' Union. The crowd.then separated. In the evening Governor Seward was 'serenaded by' the Auburn'. band;• and reeponded.te the compliment in a brief • speech. The feline-Mg ja the speech of Governor' Seward •dellsereil intheffirk str."..rt MY; Thus Taming it is so that I like to' see you cpme—maroldhg .to the time of national airs, under the folds,ef.th,e - old national flag. thank you fir' this hospitable' and patriotic welcome. It proves that:though you deal rigorously' with your public servants,,exaoting reasons for their policy, energy In their odnduct of affairs, and explanations fur failures and ffisappolntinonts in their adman's trattoria, yet you are, nevertheleesOust, because you willingly allow thorn to rejoice with you when • you • have 1 successes, .victories, and triumphs, to Cele brate. The news that brings us together Is authen. -tie.: [A Voice.: Do you think it is reliable 71 Yes, Here Is a telegram whioh I received. this - morning'. from the Secretary of War : _ van Dozer reports that Sherman's advance en-- tered'Atlanta about noon today. Partionlani not yet received. Ewwris IW. STANTON. [Three cheers wore given for Atlanta.] • - .17ARRA01:12 awn . 6tH1RX.:124. . • Now, this news comes in agood shape. It is plea -sant to have a grand result at the first, and it pro tracts the interestof, the thing to have particulars . coming in afterwarle. [Yes, yea, we can wait far the particulara.] This victory comes in the right. connection. It falls in-with the eohoei oT the capr" turn of Forts Gaines. and Morgan, which I under stand. to be the particulars of Farragat's glorions• • naval battle in the bay of Mobile—a battle equalled by no other in Ainerkan history 'but the naval . achievements of the same veteran admiral at'NeW.: ,Orleaneand Port Hudson; and all thate':have no parallel, In naval warfare but the battles piths Nile and Tnfelgar.' [A. voice : " I wish we were all Far raguts I") - Well, my friend, I know the' Admiral' well, and I confess that we all can't be Firrragets.' Indeed, very Jew of us can. But we may take We. comfort to, ourselvoa, that, as a whole people, we can- appreciate the veterans. • We can also ago.. preolate General Sherman, who has performed the most sacrament and Splendid march thronghl a mountainous - .and' hostile country recorded in modern history, and in doing this we show onr.- selves inferior'in virtue to ne other nation. By the' way, everybody adMired Farra gat's heroism 'in -climbing the topmast to diredtthe battle. But there was another: " particular " of that contest that no less for cibly illustrates his heroic character. "Ad. intral," said one orhis officers, the night before the battle, "won't yen consent to give Jack a glass of grog in the morning—not enough to make him drunk, but just enough to make him fight cheer fully 1" " Well," replied the Admiral, "I have been to sea Considerable, and have seen a battle or two, but I never found that I wanted rum to enable me to do my duty.. I .will order two cups of good coffee to each Man at 2 o'clock and at e &cloak, Twill, pipe all hands to,breakfast in Mobile Bay." [Har rah foe Farragat 5 And he did give Jack the coffee, add then he went up tothemasthead and did it. The victory at Atlanta comes at the rightplace. • The rebellious district is in the shape of an egg. It presents equal resistance on its whole surface... But :If you could breakthe Shell of either of the two ends. • Richmond and Atlanta; the whole mast crumble to pieces., While Sherman, under Grant, has boon striking the big end, Meade, under Grant, has bn striking Judas hard blows upon the lesser end. The whole shell will. now 'be easily crushed, for ithas grown brittle with the exbaliatipn Of vitality within. • Tow 2.milloit woven WNW: 711:11D vies IllitiOSED ICESISTANCY. TO 411111311.AWT. Vita glorious victory comes in good time for all other reasons. 'Just now.we are calUng•npon you for'Boo,ooo more volunteers, if you will—dratted men if we mnst—to end the war. You were getting& little tired of Meg delays ad disappointed expects- Bons. :In Indiana, a portion of the people, insti gated by rebel plotters, at the Clifton House, in Canada, were importing British: *evolvers in boxes, .which passed the custom-house nil Btationery, under . pretence of timing to defend:abstain:ana l but really do resist the draft, and -bring 'the Government down to ruin, through a subordinate and auxi liary civil war. True, no arms have been imported hire. Yet delegates went .out . from amonli you and • sat down in• control]. ' at CbiCago with those Indiana conspirators, and .agfeed with them not only that that importation of • armaishould defended in the election canvass, but aiso to dente; e ereasatiort of the war .upon,the vont d inrestoring-the Union, is ..unsits. tainable. Already, under the influence of theoriser lug news from Atlanta, all this discontent and this .deepondency have dirappeafed. We shall have no drat t because the army is being reinforced at the rate of five to ten thousand men per day by volunteers. [Hurrah for the volunteers.] May I not add that this victory at Atlanta comes in good time as the • victory in Mobile bay does, to vindicate the wisdom and theenergy of the war Administration. Ferm enta fleet did notaaake itself, nor did he make it. It, as prepared by the Secretary or the Navy, and he that shall record the history of, this war truthful: ly, and impattlally, ri ill write that ranee-the days of ustroot, no man has organized war with the ability of Stanton. [Cheers for Stanton, cheers for the Se cretary of the Navy.] THE WILLOONTIGNT .But, auspicious as the occasion is, it has neverthe less' failed to bring out some whom we might have expected here. Why are they. nothere to rejoice In the victories that Will thrill the hearts of the lovers of freedom throughout the world. Alas, that it meat .be confessed, it is party spirit that holds them aloof. All of them are partisans. Some are Republicans, ho cannot rejoice in the national victories because, this war, for the life of the nation, is not, in all re. • 'vette, conducted accordlng_to • their - own -peculiar' • radical ideas and theories. They want guarantee's for swift, and universal, and complete emancipas . tion, or they do not want the nation saved. Others Stay away because they want to be assured that, in coming out of the revolutionary storm r the 'Ship of State will be found exactly in the same condition as when the tempest assailed it, or they do not want the ship saved at all, as if anybody could give such guarantees in the name of a people of thirty milliona.• Others are Democrats. They recetved from their fathers the axiom that only Democrats could cage. the country, and they must sieve. it' by.Demooratiti. formulae and combinations which the progress- of the age has forever exploded. They.cannot oomoup, to celebrate achievements whicheronetren their nays row and hereditary bigotry. Others, of both the Republican and. Democratic parties, aro willing that the nation shall be saved, provided it is done by some ono of their chosen and idolized chiele, which chief they mutually denounce and revile. They cannot hence. Grant, and - Sher man, and Farragut, and:P.orter, because by such homage they fear. that Fremont and. Meathella,n's fame may be eolipeed. • Nevertheless; there are enough hero of the right sort, [" Yes, that's true,"] enough of men who once Were Republicans but whir, taking' that word is a partitan sense, are Republicans no longer, and men mho onoe were Demeerats, bat who, taking that ' word s in its narrow application, ara Demoorats no ' longer, all of, whom Fare now. Union men, because they found out at,thelraginning of this tremendous civil war, Or at. some perloatn-its progress, that no man, no pasty, no formula, no creed, could save the Union, but that only the people could eats it; and they could save:it only by ceasing to berome s tarti- - sans and becoming patriots and_Union men.' [ core for the Union.], . th Yes, y friends ; when this war shall be ended in the restoration of _the Union, no man then living will exult in the recollection that during its conti nuance he was either a Radical or a Conservative, a Republican or a Democrat, but , every man will claim to have been throughout an unreserved and unconditional Union•man. • But why should party spirit, ,especially at this juncture,. divide the Amerpan people. , And why should I, a member of the ' Executive Administra tion, allude to it on such an occasion as this 1 The answer la at hand. The Constitution of our coun try commands that Administration to surrender its powers to the people, and the people to. designate agents to assume. and exercise tnem four years. You receive the Executive Government in a condition very differerit and highly improved. We found •it practically expelled,from the whole country South of- the . Delftware, the Ohio, and the Missouri h , wit -the mestof the army and navy betrayed er fallen into thsatawds of ineurgents, and a now and tree iranable Confederacy, with the indirect but effective co-Operation of foreign Powers, establishing itself on the. Gulf of Mexico. •We cheerfully give the Go vernment back to you, with large and conquering aisles, and trtriumphant navy,- with the hateful 'Confederacy falling intapleces, and the rebellions 'Statesoneafter.anether, returning to their alio- Regarding :myself now, thereiblei not as a Seam thrit,anit simply as one of the people, I, like you, am • called by my vote -to determine into whose hands the preelOus trust shall now be confided. we might with to avoid, or, at least, to postpone thataluty until the .present' fearful crisis is passed. But it cannot and it ought not to be avoided or adlon.rned. It tee censtitutional trial, and the nation must go through it deliberately and bravely. . I shall, therefore,'eheerfully submit for your con sideration the-co urse which I have concluded to adopt, and the reasons for it: , • TEE TILBeB:ST NO CONSION PRESIDSNTIAL IMIC- TioN—Boat NATIONS AIIEIIIN.ED BY PASTIES. - First, I berg you to remem ber that the present IS no common or customary PresidenUal election. It oca curs in the midst of civil*ar, arising out of a dis puted summation to the Executive power. Disputed successions. are , the, most, frequent causes ,of civil ware, notionly in republics, but even in monarehiel. A dispute about - the succession - of the Preeldent pus loolcally begets an abortive or a real' revolution in each ohs of the Spanish and American 'Repub lics. So ,the disputed , succession 'of the Spanish throne begot that memorable thirty-years war which cenvulsed - all -Europe. A dispute.whether Juarez. am the lawful President, brought on the present civil war, with the consequence of French interven tion in litelico. A dispute whether the present King or Denmark, who succeeded to the throue last winter,thlawful heir to the Daddes of Schleswig and 'Holstein, brought about the -civil war la that enuntry, which, through German intervention, has just nuer'iended with, the dismeniberment of the .Lanitti Kingdom. It is remarkable, alga, that (nail wars, prutuced by disputed SIIOCCIMOM, Invariably bigin with resistance. oy 80111 e one or more of the States or provinces which constitute the kingdom, empire, or republic which is -disturbed. It was so nail the United States of. Mealier. - It was so in the -United States of Columbia, and .the ease was the lame In the United States of Venezuela. Now, it is certain that ,in 1800 we elected Abraham; Lincoln lawfully and constitutionally to be President of the htleUttled States of, America. Seven of the States in nrad lately thereon rushed trito,clisunion, and aura stoning eight more to their alliance, they set up a evointiomers Government. They levied waragainst us to eflect a separation and establish a distinct tovereiguty and independence. atm lea-fmacrow or Annan:us LINOOLN A VIN DICATION OH Tale CONSTITUTION AND LAWS. We accepted the war in defenee of the Union. The only grievance Of the insurgents was thattheir choice of: John •0. Breckforldge for President was totatitetionally. overruled by the election of Llta min They I-greeted Lincoln and set up a usurper. The raeoutive power of the United States is now, 01 erelore; by force practically suspended, between the ustar.er Jefferson Davis and that constitutional Prcealent Abraham Lincoln. The war is waged the usurper to expel that constitutional Presi dent -from the capital, whielt, lit some sort, is con. stoutly Veld in siege, and to conquer the States rlhich loyally adhele ilitnin• tallied on our aide Co suppress the usurper, and to bring the insurgent &Jades back under the authority of the constituftunel E'resident. The war is at its crisis. It is elear,ahertafore, that we are fighting to make Abrahani Ufncoin • President of the whole United States, under the election of IRO, to continue until the eth of March, 186 b. Ir.-voting for a grea t. dent of the United States, can we-wisely and Safely vote out the identical person whom,with force and !arms, we are ligh.g; into lao Presidencyl ["No,no!"] You justly say "no ." It would he nothig less than to give tap the very object of tile' war.at the ballot box. Tile moral mrength whittle makes - our loyal position' irepregnalle - would Ipasir from us-, and when that more& strength:Bee passed away material forces are no' lenger effeetlea, or even available; By such a proceeonng we shall have agreed with the enemy, and shall have Oren him' the victory But in that agreement the Constitution and the Union will have perished, because When it shall have once been proven that's atinortty cantaby , force or circumvention, defeat the - 'full accession of a constltutioaally chosen Presidita, no President thereafter, though elected by ever, so large a ma jority, can hope to exercise • the Executive pownre • nnopposed throughout the whole country. Onseof two things must' follow that fatal error. Either e contest betwee - A• your newly.eleetea - comProintar President, and the same usurper, in which day. usurper must prevail, or also a combination.between* them through whfth the usurper or hie secoessor, subverting your Constitution and substituting his own, will become President's King, or Emperor of the ' United States with foreign aid, if•he can; with fo: • reign intervention if necessary. [Ttuttalato.l To be sure it is so ; nothing is more certain thanthat either. the United States anti theirecOnstitutional Fred: -dent, or the so-called Confederate States anft their , tuturOng President, inset rule within thfr pf' this Republic. I therefore regard the pendire.Prea tddential election as involving the question whether hereafter we shall have a Constitution and' a corm fry-left hs. How shall we vote, then, to *saver our coentry from • this fearful dangers [Vote Limo% in again.] You have hit it exactly, my friend. We must vote Lincoln in again, and light 121 Min atthe.• same time. If we de this the rebelliori wilt perish, and leave no root. Uwe do otherwise ate intato only the alternatives of acqpieseence in &A:Teethed usurpation or of entering endless succession of civil and social wars. Uponahmie grounds, entirely irrespective of platform and candidate. I consider the recommendations of theConventiori at Chicago. as ttaiding to subvert the Republic. [lt's so f• that's a fact. • It ft seenta hard thing when I imply that a . ike the Democratic party can either meditate or b indly :ptiblic. Alt experience, however shows that it is by the malice or madness of, great:arties that free =States have been brought down to destruction. Yon often hear alarms that a party in power is subvert.. ing the State, and IL sometimes happens so. But nine times-out of ten it is a party, out .0f pewer that in its inipatterme or ambition overthrows a Re-. public. . • • now REBELS lltto 'coriiimenthim nava (mown zotorragarlie New eassaltaten pearrar. . The Democratic party, of course leaving off the • loyal 'Union Democrats, opposed the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1880. In doing so, they di vided and organized in three columns. One, a treasonable column of State-rights disunion Da mocrate, under Breekthridge. A second, a loyal :Northern column, under Douglas. The third, a conciliatory eying column, under Sohn Bell, who bee since .joined. the insurgents. We therefore invited the two , loyal columns to combine with the- Republican party to. oppese the disunion Derdoomtle 'column, They declined. On the eve Of the election in 1880 I told the followers of Douglas • and of Bell that When the election should have closed' they would find 'that they had inadvertently favored disunion and rebellion. They persisted, and the attempted revolution came. Disunion then presented itself, in the practical form of preventing Abraham Unbent from assuming the Executive - authority , . Thus the 'Democratic party produced that 'calamity, the Southern Democrats acting e). from design, the Northam Democrats pas • give t hroe inadvertent's: The disputed succession • still remains unadjusted. A new election has come on. For a time, the Northern Democrats, with no table exceptkme, gave a more or less liberal support to the Government, against the Democratic insur gents of the• South. But the saute Democratic fortes which:figured-in the election of 1800, now appear in the political field, with positions and policy un changed since that time, as I think, except for the worse. The Southern Democrat is still in arms under the usurper at Richmond. The Douglas and columns, - consolidated,:are' found at Chicago, and all three of the parties are compassing the re, jectlon of the Constitutional President,of the United States. They agree not only in this attempt, but they. assign the seine reasons for it, namely, that Abraham. Lincoln's &tyrant. . w They agree, alto, that the real usurper at Rich mond is blameless and pure ; 41east the Richmond Democracy affirm-it, and the Chicago Democracy do not o..insay - '. To me, therefore, the Democracy at Richmond and• the Demooracpat Chicago, Gear and Pompey, seem to retain all their original family resemblance.- They are very much ,alike— especially Pompey. But it is not in mere externals that-their simMrity. lies. They-talk very much alike, as I . haye • already shown you. .When you consider that among the Democrats at Chicago the Inditina'Dembertite were present, who have im ported arms to.resist the national authority and de test the national laws, and that all the Democrats there assembled agreed to justify that proceeding, .I think you will, agree with ins that, the Richmond Democrats and the Chicago Democrats have lately come to act very much alike. HOW TAM ORIOAGO CenrrENTIoN 'OBBYED" THE masa, Prithintersina. I sball•now go further andtprove to you that they not only, have a common policy, and a common way of defending it, but they have even adopted thst policy in concert with each other. Yod know that when the Chicago Convention Was approaching in July last, George Sanders,Clement C. Clay, and.l'. .P: Holcomb appeared at te Clifton House, on the Canada bank of the piagara river, fully invested with the confidence and acquainte d with the pur- Es i es of Jefferson Davis and his Confederates at ; almond. -You know, also, that Chicago. Dein& fa reeditestthere-tactmeidefahlessumbeemtmems4 ter with these emissaries of Jefferson Divis.• Here . . Is the fruit of that conference, and no one can deny the authentioityof my evidence. ' It is extracted from the London Times, the common organ . of. all the enemies of the United States. The New York correspondent of the London Times, writing from Niagara Falls, under date of August 8, says " Clifton Home has become a centre of negotia tions between the Northern friends of peace and :Southern agents, Which propose, a withdrawal of &V. .ftwences from the arbitrament of the sword.” The correspondent then goes'entoexplain that " an effort is to be made to nominate a candidate for the Presit , *clammy on the ground of an armistice and a Conven tion of the States, and to thwart by all possible means the efforts of Mr. Lincoln for rmelection.” Mark now, that on the eth of August,lBB4, North ern Democrats and Richmond agents agree upon three things to be done at Chicago. Namely : 1. The withdrawal of the differences between the Government, and the insurgentsfrom the arbitrament of the sword. 2. A nomination for President of the United States on a platform - of an armistice and ultimately a Convention of the States. 8. To thwart by all possible means the re- - election Of Abraham Lincoln. Such a conference,•held in 'a neutral country, be tween professedly loyal citizens of the United Statens and the agents of the Richmond traitors in arms, has a very suspicious look. Bat let that pass. Po litical elections must be free, and therefore they justly•exouse many extravagances. 'We have now seen what the agents of Pompey and Omar agreed at Niagara that Pompey should do at Chicago. Here le what he actually did : ' Resolved, That this Convention does explicitly de glare, as the sense of the American people, that, after four yearesof failure to restore the by the experiment of war, during which, under Un the ion pre,. Lance of a military necessity .of war power, higher than the Constitution, the Constitution . itself has been disregarded in every pert, and public liberty " and private right alike trodden down, and the mat' tonal prosperity of the. country essentially impair, ed,justice, humanity, liberty, and the public wel fare demand that' immediate efforts be made for a cessation of hostilities, with a view to an ultimate ' convention of all the States, or other peaceable means, to the end that at . the earliest practiced mo ment peicie may be 'restored on the basis of the Federal Union of the States. The Democracy at Chicago did there just what had been agreed upon by the Richmond agents al Niagara, namely, they pronounced for an abandonm ent., . military (defence of the Union against the i - with a view to an ultimate National Convention the defeat of the election of Abraham Lincoln. That is to' say, they proposed to eject Abraham Lincollt from the Presidential chair at Washington on tiM 4th of March next, and at the same time leave the usuiper, Davis, unassalled, secure and unmolestal in his scat at Richmond, witha view to an ultimate convention of States, which, that usurper's Condi tntion will allow no one of the , insurgent StateetO • enter. 'What new, if there, be no Conventionat all, or 1f the eimmontion fall to agree on a submission th• the Federal authority I Jefferson Davis then re. 'mains in authority, his. Confederacy established, 'end the Union, with all its glories, is - gone forever. Nay, more, if such - a thing could happen as that the Chicago candidate, nominated upon such an agree ment, ehoild be elected. President of the United States on the first Tuesday of November next; who can vouch for the safety of the country against the rebels during the interval which must elapse before the new Administration can constitutionally come Into power t It seems to me that Inch an election . would tend equally to demoralize the Union and to • invite the insurgents. to renew their efforts for its destruction. NEBEL AND COPPERHEAD 'UNDERSTANDING WITH . THE LONDON. TLXOB. • • It remains for me now only to give•you the proof , that, although the wayin which the Chicago Demo-. army did what liad been agreed upon In their behalf . at Nitigaramas not altogether satisfactory, yet, what they actually did was accepted as afull meouuou of the previims compact: • • • ST..OS.TIOIRrariII3,, Q. W., Sept. 1. - - To Hon. D. Wier, Halifax: Platform and Presidential nominee nue atisfactor y. Vice President and speeches satisfactory. Toll Philmore not to oppose. GEORGE N. Sertrisas. D. Wier is a Riobmond accomplice at Halifax, and Philmore is understood to be the conductor of the insurgent organ in London. Here then we have a nomination and a platform which were made by treaty formally contracted be tween the -Demooratio traitors at Richmond and the Democratic opposition at Chicago; signed, sealed, .attested, and delivered in the presence of te Lon don Times, and already ratiftednt Richmond. t" By BeilYeD, we've got , em P) lint them, to be sure you've got them, my friends. They say I am al ways too sanguine of the fineness of the nation. al candidates and of 'the national arms- But , It seems to me that the veriest croaker in all our, loyal, camp will take new courage and, become. heroic IN hen he sees that the last hope of the rebel lion hangs upon the ratitication of this abominable • and 'detestable compact by the American people. ytu have got them ; but how. did you get thenal. Not by any skill or art of the Administra tion, or. even through the sagacity or activity of the ' loyal people, but through the (running of the•conspi raters overreaching itself; and., thus : working out their own defeat and confusion.. They do say that the father of evil always indulges his chos.en disci . pies with ouch an excess of subtlety as to render their'ultiresite ruin anti punishment inevitable. . • A POLICY CONCEIVED IN TEBAOICEILY—IDENTITT. OP TRH BUCHANAN AND II'OLELLAN SYSTEMS. And whet a time Is this to procialm•such a polls*, .coneeived in treachery and brought forth with • shamelesS effrontery ! .A cessation of hostilities on the heel of decisive naval and land battles; at the very moment that the rebellion, without a atingle fort, in Its possession on the.coaat, or on either the great rivers or lakes, is crumbling to the earth; and at the garnet-Imo a dozen new ships of war are going to cemplete the invernmenthy sea, and three trn. dyed thousand volunteers are rushing to the lines to. complete the work of restoration and pacifloatien ! There Is .a maxim which thoughtful teachers always caiefully. inculcate : it is, that Inconstancy ia imbecility, and that pereovetance is necessary to In.. sure success. This maxim was set forth in the form , of a copy the writing-book when I was young— " Perseverance always conquers." Even infantile hereineerstencountexed.the instruction in the form of.. a fable In W ebsterls Spe ll ing-book. The story was, that - after' using soft words and tufts of grass, the . farmer trieffwhat virtue there was in storms; and by, tereistence in that application he brought the rude h o y, w ho was positing apples, down from the tree, and mailer ask the farmer's pardon. Chir eagii teat ere tell us that _jug. as the rude toy le c oudtg - deeeek, we meet lay down the' stones and re- Fort /maid to the Use: 01 grass, with • the come. (justice. of course, that the farmer must beg pardon of the trespasser, lint what. makes this Mono puney 'contelEpUblit and even ridiculous, Is aut. A i ri ming .different 'froin - the policy with 'which. the same parties now contracting actually' ushered In disunion:m.lB6l, In thelelosing hours of the Administration of James Buchanan. 'Yea, my deer friends, when we of this Administration came Woad' places In allarCti, /Ot t We /mid ttiere exist. FOUR, CENTS. inq just the system shuck it, now- recommena M ieago. Namely. flreVa treasonable ‘Cor _ utiO in arms against the Pederai authority:. .. 5 3tilgr a truer' between the Government of titkl...L States and the rebels', a veritable Imo , " was so construed that while the 'maternal p,ortS and fats were' thoroughly invested. along the sea 'meet and rivers by the lneurgenet' they. could be neither reinforced nor supplied, oven with food, by therGerernment.' 'Third, sclang - nidr deothate ka view to an ultimate 'National Convention, which the rebels haughtily dear/Bode:ad contimptn ooely. rejected'. What weretim alternatives left Either to surrender ourselvee and the oFivvernsueut, at dhlcretion, or to summon the people to arms, Germinate the anntitiee, adjoutn the domoralisibg debate, and "repossess" ourselves of the nation - at lints and ports. Aim now has all the tr.:nature that has been spent, and all the preotims blood that hale been poured forth, gone for nothing else tut Ursa cure an igneminietarretreat, and rettrn at the end of fonr years to the 'tapeless imbeetlity and rapid,- procmaof national dissolution wideh existed when Abraham Lincoln toelt into his hands the reins of overitment. Every one you' knefflit that but' for , that settle Mon of A.ratram• Lincoln inn at that time, the *Union wotild it leathers three months have !alien into absolute and irretrievable' ruin. I will noadwell long on the'complalntwhieti milt guided but not intentionally perverse men bring , against the' Adinlaistratior of Abraham Lincoln. , They compledb of military arrests of spies and lurk ing traitors in , the loyal State% as if the Govern silent could justify itself for waiting without proven tire measures for more States to be invaded or to be carried off intO secession. TheY complain that when we' call for volunteers we -"resent tee alternative of a draft, as if when the shipima been scuttl•xi the captain oughtto leaverthe sleeping passengers - to go to the bottom without eelliMgthem to take* their turn at the ptimP. They are not mutant with plottingliedttion in se cret place's, but they go up and down the public Streets:uttering treason;vainly seeking to provoke arrest, in order that th ey may complain of a denier of the liberty of speech. The impanitythey every where enjoy under the protection of constitutional . debate shows at one and the same time that their cgiuplaints are 'groundlem, and that they'll/Mon, in tile element of moral stab y, is stronger - than they know. ' , . TVE OBLCP COMPLAINT AGIMXST THE PROMO/Ml7. .1 .117 SIONIPISANT THIS QITISSTION OP • . " . The chief complaint against the President Is that be 3,111 not accept peace °tithe beets of Integrity 'Of 'the 'Union; without having alenthe abandonment ofelavery. Whem and where have the insurgents of „fired him.peace on the basis of the integrity of the Union? Nobody has offered it. The rebels never will offir They are determfned and pledged to rule this Republic or ruin it. I told you here a year ago that practically slavery tom no longer re question ; Merit wasperishing.under the operation of the war. That ateertion has been confirmed. The Union men in all the slave States' that we have delivered are even more anxious than we are to abolish slavery. Witness Western Virginia., Maryland, Missouri, Louisiana, Tennessee, and Arkansas. Jefferson Davis tells you is effect the same thing. Besays that it is not slavery, but in dependence and sovereignty, for which-he is con tending. There is good reason for this. A hundred dollars In gold is only a yearaparobase of the labor of the working. man Inavier part, of the .llnited States. At less than half that price we could buy all the: slaves in the country. Nevertheless :our opponents want a distinct exposition of, the 'Plaid denVa views on the ultimate solution of he slaVery . question. -Why do they want it! For the same reason that the Pharisees and Sadduceee wanted an autherttas • five resolution of the questions of the casuistry whisk arose in their day. One of those sects believed In a Kingdom to come,' and the other dented the resur rection of the dead. Nevertheless, they walked to gether in loving accord in search of instruction con cerning the spirlt-world. "Master," said they, "there was a man of our nation who married's wife* and died, leaving six brothers. These brothers suc cessively married. the widowed woman, and after wards died ; and, laet of all, the woman died also; In the resurrection, which of the seven shall have' this woman to wife 1" Now- what was It to , them whether one or • all • sbould'have the woman to wile in Heavent It could be nething to the Sadducees in any case. What was it to any human being on this side of the grave What e was it to any. human being in Heaven except • the woman and her seven husbands'? Absolutely nettling, Yet they would have en answer. And they received one. The answer was that, while in this mortal state men and women shall never cease to mares , sad to die, there will be in the resurrection neither death nor marrying, or giving -In-marriage.' Although altogether unauthorized to Speak for • the President upon hypothetical questions, I think I can give an answer upon the subject of slavery at the Present gay—an answer which will be explicit, and I hope not altogetheir'unsatisfactory. While. the rebels; continue to wage war against the Go vernment of the United States, the military men- • Pines affecting , slavery; which have been edepted from necessity, -to bring•the war to a speedy and successful end, -rill be continued, except so far 'as practical experience shall show that they can be modified advantageously, with a view to the same end. 'When the lusurgents shall have - disbanded their armies and laid down their arms, the war will instantly cease, and all the wax measures then ex isting, Including those which affect slavery, will cease also, and all the moral, economical, and po litical questions affecting slavery as others which shall then be existing between individuals and States and the Federal Government., whether they arose before the civil war began, or whether they grew out of it, will, by force of the Constitution, pass over to the arbitrament of oourtsof law, and to the councils of legislation. - • am not umsophistios,ted enough to expect that conspirators 'while yet unsubdued, and exercising . Air ninresistedi despotism i n the insurrectionary 'States, will either- see for, or even accept, an asa .kiesty based on the surrender of the power they hive SO recklessly netirped. Nevertheless, I know that' • 11 any such conspirator should tender his submission upon suoh terms,. that he will at once receive a :candid hearing, and an answer prompted purely by Asealesire•-for- peace, with the Asiptertance.. of the • 'Union. On the other hand, .1 * ho expbbrifergiliMO of peace with a 'restoration of Union, to come not from the Confederates in authority, not through them, but from citizens and States under:and, be hind them. Arid expect such propositions from citizens and States to come over the Confederates in pewee,just" so fast as those citizens and States I shall be delivered -by the Federal arms, from the usurpation by which they are now oppressed. All , the world knows that so fat as I am concerned, and, I believes so far as the President is concerned, al l s u ch applications will receive just such an answer as it bec omes - a rat; magnanimous, and humane people, to grant brethren who have come bank from their wanderings to seek a shelter in the com mon ark of our national security and happiness. The sun is setting. So surely as it shallrise again,so surely do I think that the great events we e now celebrated' prelude the end of • out _national troubles, and the restoration of the nattenti authori ty with peace, prosperity, and freedom th roughout the whole land, from the lakes to the Gulf, and from ocean to ocean. And so I bid you good night ; and may God have you, with our whole country, always in Ills holy and paternal keeping. Enthusiastic cheers were given at the" conclusion (lithe speech. • - Fllimicm sxn COMMEROLIL .. There Is a good supply of money offering at sip per cent., and the demand is 'quite active. 'The tendency is for a higher• range In the rates. The stock. ,market opened . with considerable firmness . yesterday, which was continued.. throughout, the day. The brokers had large orders,. more partici- . larly for the oil stocks, the holders .of which were loth.to part with them exoeptat anadvasee. There - is no accounting for the "oil fever," as it is called... Unlike other stocks which have been bought: and sold at the Stock Board for years, the rise and de. cline.of their prices 'have been irrespective of re. Ports as to the demexite or merits of- the companies. • A rumor that a:firmly- established railroad would dc- Clare a dividend. in a "short time .was alwaya pro- . ' dru3tive of an increase at once In . the price of its stock. A falling off in 'revenue, occasioned by nits , management or misfortune, is always the forerun ner of .a tumble in the quotations for all securities of-good stock corporationi. The old-time dividend paying suid • reliable' stocks appear almost aban donednow, and a new deseriptionecenples thetime - and brains of thousands who, until. within..a.feW months, never visited a broker's. office, or desired to do so. Oil stooks %aye been the rage for many months, and it is quite likely, from. present appear , ances, they. will continue to be so for many,More. The characteristic of the new fever is that . the parties Infected With It show a reckleatmais 'and blindness that have never been eqUalled. The broker. receives his order to buy. an stock, ,and if heAsks . which one is wanted, out of the; lillndreds. on . Um list, the reply II Made; "Any.Orte 'at all." There. are no 'questions 'asked as. to reliability, or mutter' and the infatuated Operator. goes off. In the. teller . that hc.is soon to be a rich man. occitsionally the, traffic In oil stocks macs, the prices go. down, and no one is able toessign the cause. A week or two. and another reaction takes place, and all tidies. ; are quoted higher,, and equally without reason. An advance in one carries all the rest with it: A good oil stock company (for there are many snob among:the worthless trash that are forced on the market) may have struck. a newoilwell, a fantwhioh never fails to enhance the price of its stock. Right, away np goes the whole broodof oil stocks , and the fever again rages. It Is In this way that so many worthless concerns are kept alive. They prey neon the better kind, and owe their existence to the fact that there are some companies in which it is sate and profitable to invest. It requires no great effort of judgment; after all, to discover the good stocks 'from the bad. Those which are known to declare dividends regularly, aridwhich have earned a stand ing and character, should one be tolerated. Government loans were ii steady demAnd yester- day, thonghpricee were rather weak. The 5.20 s fell off a fraotlon, as also the 7.305. The 5425, coupon off, sold at 103%, and the Ile at 107% ; the 740 notes A.&O. end. at 1103(, and F.&A. end, at 110. • State securities were' more inquired for.. State 135, war loan, sold at 105, the coupon be at 101, and State Is . at 97K ; new City Ss were steady at 100. K. Of com pany bonds, we notice sales of North Branch at 38 ; Susqueharma Canal Is at os, and Union Canal Ss at 213(. *Camden and Amboy Railroad shares sold at 165 rPennoylvanialtallron.d at 74K; Catawiess pre. ferred at 40%; Northern • Central at 65 Philadel phia and Erin at 84 ; North Venneylvanie. Railroad at 84%, and Minehill 4.02%. Canal shares were rather better. Schuylkill Navigation preferred sold at 40K; Union Canal 'Bonds at 2134; and Susq.no hanna ()anal bonds-at 65. Bank shares continue trin, with Bales of North -America at 162, and Me chanics' 23. 84% was bid for Consolidation, and 40 for Commonwealth: There was little Or nothing doing in city passenger railroads. 60 waB bid for - Fifth and Sixth, 39 for Spruce sad Plne, 70 for West'` Philadelphia, 24 for Aroh-Street, and 27 for Giraill College. Gold opened at 242%, and at 4 o'clock was qua* • •: at 241. . - The follOViing were the closing bide yestgdoi Int the day previous for the mining and oil itooks Tues. Wed: • Taos. Wtia. Fulton Coil 934 • 9% Peary 011 ' enc .Big Board Coal. • 7M19LE•1191011..,... 224 2% N T & M , 2 9 , 3( Nid Coal. M reystone 011..:. 1 1 Green Rol:mush' 5% • 6 Venango 1 N Carbondale., -2K 2,14 Seneca 011 • ..13‘ New Creek Coal . 1K /145 Organic Oil ' 15.16 Feeder Darn.... '1 1 Pm:atilt 1 .Clinton Coal:— 1X 'l% llowe's 13( W' smer'a 2 2%t .. Irving Oil 6 L ,4 6)5 Fenn '6 8 I{99lltOlio Z 11110.• Etna IS Densmore 0i1... 1 I§ !do • • ...... 1234 it - Won — erte 7 4lo ~. 8 3 i'onnecticot dO., X' • X sisacelron........ 1 6 1 1 1 On Creelt• ' .... - • WC mktpie shaL oil. n is blecllnteek Oil: "7 73 I The limit .of $81,000,000 on 6 IP oent..lBBl, gap 1 lbearing *rids, asked for by the Government, on 1 Friday noFt, 9th inst., is attracting Increased lati i /eat as the day for proposals draws near. The terms i of payment an mato ag DEM pitt wpm NI ti t La. Mar-. .WA.1131 PEGIDISIS, (PUBLISHED WEEKLY.) Tr" Watt Pateewtll be seat to subscribers by mail (per annum to adlranee) • ea Three copiee.••••-• Oat Five c0rdee............. 8 CO Ten &Pies 15 oe Lazier Mute than Tea will be charged at the sum rate. $1.50 Per cony. Themoney mete altiaye accompany the c!rdtv. ani in no instance Can thew rims be deviated from. at they °d° l4 WV Little more than the cost of paper. rtir•Postrosetera are retincided to sot as "4""*. Taa Was Parse, air- To the getter.ny of the ()lob of ten or twenty. lie *Ur* copy of the Paper will be airell.. 'nue the favor of banks land other capitalLsti, and the military sows, tills week, greatly encourage' itotlidenoe in the credit, as well as In the power and determination Of the Government. Bidders for the loan are reminded that their proposals should ice forward by the man this afternoon Of not sooner - sent), as the awards will be made at Washington on Friday at neon. The reneweag IS a statement of coal trawls-rum on the Delaware and Hudson Canal for the woes ending September ; 1864: , Week. Season. Delaware and Hudson Canal Fro, KIM A-18,61# Pennsylvania Coal Co v 18.206 320.187 Total; tone 0,232 1V8.8.1 For the same period bud year: Week. Seams. Delaware and Rndson Ceuta Co.• • ^ 28 . 872 ponnsylvenieCoalro • 26.5a3 397.900 . Total, tons 54,875' 891. .orkle ehipments of Pitte.on coal by ate Peranyire lea k t 'oal . Company for the* week ending Septeinbee ar sees', were • Brcanal 85,,eallroati . fm ra : an, sedate, 186:3 : . Jo mouse, 1854 - . .........• • •••• maw Itirexei ae,Co. quote: • isr em troxd s;atet tends, 1561 lin cm. ri ev Tr n it t u se it& Certi: of IndebteSties• •• • (1,4 g 43( 4 n e ws unity} pus tee 7 3-10 Notes 112 MS Qssetermitaers'.. Vouchers 9/ oy .(h.dere for CerIILLOMOS of Indebted/wait 4 44 tIol4 Sil 2 42 Stelling Estigmeg, .. 269 213111( Flue-twenty NoOli •11.03 i 11134 STOCK lIKSTUISIS SALES, SEPT§MBEK 7. A122 , 92CH 210413.D8, . . 300 llotue baud' ....;:•-.1-82011 triton Pettyloam- 83E 200 do -•• • . ••••.,.• 7.4100 Briggs O il ' 1,00. 0 -104 Reading RI ramti.,..B6 400 Story Farm- I .400 Mokiheur 0i1.......... 8 SOOPIr & Oil Creak. -b2. 1 Ado ._, (14 ~....,.:5.3 db Rehear. 011 ....... .... i'14440 Ribbalds• •• .% • • —... .2 ,(717 Sell Creek _... . - .... 4 op mil .91 O il Et '4900 Petroleum Centre-. 4 "NO do za .12 311:1 Sable & Delaware ..1111i. ' -100 , d 0... 10a1att.1234 LW McClintock blO. 736 186 Isee/a/or.Oil t 1%600 do 85.77‘ - 3o0• do _!. ... .1-81!700 1. do.-..... 73( :100 Globe ON 11:60 MO do , • - 73( li_ . ' ''' 3rsarr poem% rrAmorktle4':',..loB 2 , 4 Cam skm It lets: Ist Eltiochatiet Bdnk.. 28 880 Noble & Dela 1430. 18 200 , 011 Greer lots: blt 00 Penns- 1i..-- -00.1 Ural oClintoei 011:-. IX, SO do . -... .01.7 64 mhos Shodo• .r... • 18• 26 do ” •-• • •••• .. ! . ... .- 7 /00 lien eta ore .« 117 . _2l Norristown 7/ lots. ' 100 ' do • 15.. 100 *later .41.:••.b30..'47/14 . ICO Obtidyl lid.bl3oprf: 90X 1 0 1 do ......b97. 0734 100 d0.....ba0 pre : 40X 35 Mleelllll B:.-lots. IPXI4. • . 18 Wyoming Thdley4 93 HO North rem .11...... MX. • 800 Mailheny On lots. .83‘, Z do . • ..........•.. XX ' - .300 W'Cbeater 8.. ... 6 . 1‘ . StMe So..- thl.. . .........84M 1000 II 411.201..e0u,0ff103X : 1 , . S AM roupoe-.. 101 10110 do .... 4:maven - Mx 00000Cit7 68 sneW-Garth 1069 r. 100 dill 4 ... . coup off•11X1 20100 •do ' rash lotiK mop . de..... ......... Mg -MY . do. ,_--000poit /06X MO deli" . .......446 111% isoo•USle. 'Bl . lli 1 6 7:906 A 640 emit 1/0% 1030 'Velma CaUB.l 6a..:. 1,,,_,d0. Fts A. end liana 109 D Stumeimal 65.... e 4000 State thi.. warloan.lo6 20% North "Ardnoh 1x144. 99 1000 State t 7 6- - awn Mg BET - 4i71121N 611Piiila it Erie )1.. • . 34 . 200 Boso Cra.al • ss._. dote 201 1 5114orrietown E•lots 88 , • 1880010 . . • 100 • NorthenvCentraL _A -100. do 65 I 100 MiElbenvO ll .b3o s .' 100 d0..........b10. .8 100 d0............... - 8 HO o 2tlye 3 . - • 50 Cat d aw I ma leprof. tee% 600 Hebert Out .1. z 3Y liv6o Dolmen, OR " • • 30 do .64•••16x 103 do do 15 - 100 • 100 do 36': ICO sdo 18 • 5 Cam & AM1L,....115 . 41.1211111 50 ' MeClintocir 200Idel4Thenr.../”.... ,400 d 0.... ..... •9 • 400 Bruner ee...•P6 200 Porn Planter.:..... 4 211 100 Dairen lOC Union Petro • 8 100 Mibberd ' 250 Weald & 50 Mcillbeny .914 400 Bruner ..... 1 200 Curtin Oil 3 50 Molten Mk 'Story Farm 200 Egbert. • 334 100' Nxceleior 200 Philo & 011 C blO. - 500 P Mallzeny. - .....b.50. 11X . 400 ..... 300 Story Perm-- 4t 300 Melding R.•••1:030. 67.' 2PA Mineral Oil . ' S 2(43 Reeding E. , . WO. 56X 50 Densmore 134 ]to Excelsior tijii 100 Irwin .200 Reading b 30.061 1000 S 5-201 • coup 0ff.103 100 Roble & De 1....... Et, I , The New York Evening Post ofyesterday says : From the number of- bids for the new loan which are going forward today, it is believed certain that at the opening to-morrow the amount will be large ly In excess of the 81' Aillione offered. We are an. thorlred to state that the bonds-for this Vial loan havqolready been printed, and that all bonds, re gister ed and coupon, will beforwarded to the proper parties, or •to their orderrwithin fortpeight hours atom the time oertificatesof fpayments are received by the Secretary. Gold opened at 2411,atilgradually sold down t• 241 1 40241 N. Exchange le-dull atlo2-for gold. Thy loan market is less active than yesterday. The rate IS 7 per cent:, and+thereis more disposition toiend .on railroad securities than -on mercantile paper, which is freely offering athigher rates. The stock market opened-strong, and closed heavy. Governments are steady, State stocks firm, bank therm inactive, railrOad bonds quiet, mining shares fbfriftratiWtbal stocks-eative,- and railroad shares 'unsettled. . Before the first session wokiiiitui• quoted at Mx. 242%, Erie at MX, Hudson at .I.2iN, Reeding at 1323, Michigan Southern. at 81%, Illinois Central at 1293, Northwestern at 82%, Northwestern pre ferred at 811%, Rock Island-at 108 X, Fort Wayne at 110, Mariposa at 41 Xi ASchellver at 82M. The appended table exWbite the eider movements at the . board compared with the latest prioel et yesterday: Wed, Tn. Ally. Dee. United States Se, 1981; reg.... 107 107 United States Se, 198 1, coup.. .107 X 107 X , • United States 1-20s.reg. ..... 109 X .. United Mateo t-Ms coup .. . .. 110 1% • - United States 7 SOs 100 109 X .. United Staten cert. =senor— 9b ' 93% Tennessee Ss ... _. .. Minoan es ' ... 450% ii ii • .. Atlantic Nall • 155 184 h .. Pacific Nail VJ 475 Bleie w York . Cantral....... leeg 128 k, .: Er • .10SX 107 N 1 .. Erie Prefoned •• r....•.10e7i mg .. .. Reading-- .......... t........ 1533 lee 1 .. Irlthola CientralandP Ife MX li .. Pittsburg Railroad . 11134' 111 5i 2 .. • After therimard thamarket wee heavy ; New Year Central closed at 128 x, Erie at 108, Reading at 128, Illinois Central at 1211 x, and Pittsbmg atrEax. • At the open beard the market was steady ; New York Central closed at 12X, Erie at 10854, Rellang at 132 K, and Pittsburg at 111%. -• The Flour ,market is dull, the demand, bott for export and homeouse, being limited ; salsa comprise about 1,000 bble at $lB for good Penner extra, and $12@12.60 . f0r extra family, including 500 bbls Blne Ridge do on private terms; the retailers and bakers are buying, in, a- small way at $10.50411 for super fine, 011.50,012.10 r extra, $12@12.50 for extra family, -and $lB bbl for fancy brands. Bye Flour and Corn Neal are unchanged. , - Gam - rt.—ln Wheat there is very little doing, and prices have.declined ; about 3,000 bus sold at $2.500 2.65 for old recta, and 826:0@2.65'17 bit, for'new do; white. ranges' at -from , 82.8063 ft bu, as to quality. Ityeis oelitogln. a - small way at 81.86@1.881 be. Corn fahald firmly ; 2,600 bus sold at $1.71 for prime yellow, and• 81.12 ft , ha for Western - mixed. Oats axe ste a dy , with sales of 2,000 bus at 119@900 for new Ilelawareand Pennsylvania. Banxa—litwercitroa is offered at Safi ton for Ist l 0.1, butNnt hear efno sales. Comwori.7-Prices hav,e advanced, 244 c 11, and theAsiarket is flrm, with small saleaof middlings to notiowat,lBso fl 2, Dash.-' G Gailg.stizs,•,—Coffee,. continues Quist, -at about forraar rates. Sugars &reran:llr held ; 100 hhds Cu ba sold at 22428 c ft lb. .11:urasnatum.—There is very little doing, and the market! is -quiet ; groan sales are,making at 494050 c fontMide ; 80601 , a for refined , iwbond, and , 85@90e *lpal. ‘ for free, as to quality. ' sell on arrival at 83.e5 $8 int ; Ifimethy is firmly held, with 'Small sales to notice at - $5O , 11 bu; Cloverseed continues scarce; small '4lallB ire repported.at.sl4@l6 W46IAs. -ZlKOS.—Manufactured Iron. is in good demand, BM - jelling at full rates; 'ln Pig Metal there is surty l little doing. Small sales o. Anthracite are %Slaking at ffini76 If ton for. the three numbers. Seotch Pig is selling ln a sopliway at 017@20 , 101 ton. Fiturr.—Domestio Fruit lima. %truing in less freely, and prices are better. Appps. are selling at ide ' 1000 ft basket, and Peaohes at, foom 75@ 200 c sBbaa , ke_f, as to quality. NAVAL STORZB are dul,,snd tower. Small sales of Spirits of Turpentine are,making at $3.501073.60 ft gallon.. Resin is selling small lots at $42@i45 yt bbl, as to quality. Paovisfons.—There ls,vary little doing In the way_ f sales. The firmnesaof holders limits opera tions. Mims Pork is rolling in, a email way at t4o@ 42 per bbl. Bacon Ha }s are selling at from per lb for plain and fancy. bagged. Lard In scarce and 'high, with small . sales. °rotas and tiercodAt 240 25c per lb. Butter Is,Arm ; solid packed is saling at 48651500 per lb. W'niss. - r.—The demand, is limited and there is very little doing ; =tall sales are reported at 185(# 186 c for Pennsylvania. bble, and 18701880 per gal lon for Western Vols. The following arc the receipts of Flour and Grata at this port . to-day,; Elour 1,800 bbla. Wheat 7,85 n bus,: •Coni' . 1,875 bus. 4,800 bus. pew Mark markets. Sop.- Aantra are . quiet and steady at 503.50 for Pots, and.sls.solor Pearls. 4 .- _ Busans•rupx3.—The market ibr State and West ern Flour is a shade firmer with more doing., sales.. • of 12,000 bbleat 46.60610 for saperiineState; 810.16 010.28 for extra State ; 00.35010.40 for choice do; 88.60010 for superfine Western ; 810.20011 for com mon to Aral= extra Western; $11.10011.30 for common to good 'shipping brands extra round-hoop Obto, an 15M 31018,25 for trade brands. - Southern Flour is rather. more steady ,• sal3s 800 bbls at 82). 10012 fir _common, and 1412.11014.25 for hinny arid extra. Oansatan Flour is si shaoeme sales VeCtbble at $0 . 28010 . 40 for common , and 1 4 .10.46 012 fg• good to' choice extra. Rye' Flour is quiet. Corn 4.eal is dull. k • k . • .. • ... . . Wheat is is ; ales' 22,0001nat $2.2202.23 For Chicaao spring ; • 1r2.28661t' for Milwaukee club;. c 2.2,442 3W for amber *Milwaukee ; *2 W 302. 4 ,1 for winter reu Western, and 8'2.4202.44 for amber Michigan: ••• , 'nye is quiet, apd•ur.changed. Barley is dull. Bar-, "ley.malt quiet at 82.342 40. Oats sae tithVy at • 21-14002 for. Canada. 0254 for stare, and 93x tor . Western. The Corn market 15 10 better; ; saiea 47,000 bus at e 1.6061 .62 for mixed Western. PREIGIDTS.—To Liverpool 14,000 teuryikeat at. 54 ; .12 000 bias oorn of 43i•d in bulk. Per neutral 21,0031 but wheat at ligd fn bulk, and per steamer 2,500, pkge butter at 358 2,000 boxes cheese at 86(040x, and 7,000 but wbeat ; and to London per neutral 60, tons oil cake siii2Sts 6d. A British bark to•Londors with 16,000 bug wheat at 6d. ireatiy o l l TO% 2 Rolsrtsoll ... • Olmstead 2 2 Noble & Dela•• •la la Pee Cie Week . For the Seam**. 13, ^47 32t,767 6,"110 isplag BOALIODB MO Ha•letos Coal 80 aboo State 5s 3000 Worth Breach bds. BOARD. /00 Bgliert , 0t1... .... .. 3 44 50 Penes It 7434 do 6 5 0 'do - • ng . ' 434 21 Faro; & Mesh - Bit. 673 100110Metoolc 0i1.... ~ ICO' do - , HO Densmore ' Ml.—. • Di • 100 Nebte-Br. D el .. BO Bch - 21si.nref ' 43 4 r ICO Plata &Oil Creek- oi . 10 Nortistotnt • ll • 66 8300 Cley es pow.— —4" •.106, 1 IBlMStatoDoupon 5a....101 SO Rtiadinr It. ' 200'Catemistaqt, pref. ea, ICI) Sal Stardom b3O. 34 • 100 Fraton bid. 500•Comt Xining . 100•Hdading 1it........'.. SS 2000111 Creel... -.,..... •a( 100 Hanle Shwa' UV 3001deClIntook b 5. i de- 690. -DX) Triton Petro. 3 :1 Irwin -- --6% 100 00 Dilltell• 12X 1000 do-- ... —IWO. 13 200 ilibberd..-.--....• DO:Densmore li 1000 U S 5-20 s con - roil-103 200 Maple Shade. IS 200.011 Creek -300 Corn• Planter 100 AfeEnen i y.... b 3 0.. 1 11/o.Perrr, 0 blO 631' 2000 •IT' 11-20 s reg.lol4‘ . X/015g El bert • 344 .190 Phlks& 011 Creek 134 500.Dnunond Coat.... Si . ICO Densmore 1521 le. do ' -...' .". lalt 'lOOOO 17 SsCertrn . 6e 'II 101% Philadelphia Marketg. SEPICEIdBra 7—Evening. Baotou Markets; September 6. Ftourt.4The receipts thane Saturday have beat 2,109 bblx. The market is steady, with a moderate demand. Sales of Western super fine at IEO beau common extra $1.1.37MA11.50 ; medium do 111.76411 1246; good and choice.do $12.60@16 l bbl. Guam—The 'receipts slime Saturday have been 3,900 bus Ceti, 516 do Short& Corn 12 steady, with a fair dernand. Sales bus. estern mixed at PM Southern yellow *LSO Oats are dull. Sales -of Northern and Canada, at 9506111 VI bus- Bye is 5k....2.0Taa /5 bus. _Shorts are selling at $4004_23 .r4ne Feed $44045 ItS ton. , Fnovisions.—rork• is firm, but the demand is mess $ 40 0 42 ; moderate. Sales of prime $380.15; clear 1144e46 bbl, CllB/1. Beef /8 in moderate de. 'mend. Sales of Eastern and Western mess and ac, tra mew at ifirsit29 if; bbl, cash. Lard is seises. t=alee in bbis at Via 111 easii, Eeille ES 00111114. pi 19421 C llcoos,