- al - 7 ljt Vrtss. TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 1885. sr. V. an tale no 110100 of anonymous 00mMM. weaned& We do not return rejected manuscripts. /sr Tellintary correspondence. Is solicited from all parts of the world, litel especially from nor different military mid naval departments. When need, It will ire paid for. The Alabama Damages. Lord PAIXERSTON'S avoidance of a di rect reply to the question " Have the Uni ted States made any formal demand for daniage done to. American trade and com merce by the depredations of the Alabama and other British built piratical vessels ?" was more prudent than dignified. The chief mi n i s t er o f a great nation might to have been superior to the meanness of fencing with such a question as the above— involving, it might be, peace or hostility with another great Power. Instead of tell ing whether Die United States had or had not made such an alleged demand for com pensation, Lord PALMERSTON simply stated that a correspondence, on the part of both nations, had been commenced two years ago, and. was 'proceeding with candor and courtesy. What said correspondence was About, he did not say, and, oddly enough, no member of Parliament took the trouble of asking—not that the question would have been answered, if put. Lord PAL• MSRSTON has a knack of evading difficult questions by a jest or a laugh, or, when simple facetiousness will not answer, by standing on his dignity and declaring, with something between a smile and a frown mantling on his face, that he did not mean to be coaxed or badgered into giving in formation which it Was advantageous to the intereate of the country to Withhold. The Times, more explicit than the reti cent Premier, admits that the correspond ence between the United States aerl land on the uOmpensation for minims done to American commerce by the Alabama and other British-built pirati- Jul vessels, was opened in 18c3; that no thing could be more courteous ; that Mr. ADAMS expressed the desire of the United States to maintain amity as well as peace ; and that " England has many counter-claims for the arbitrary enforcement of the right of blockade and search, and these will have to be examined at some time, and England is unconscious of hostile intentions in urging then." This as we understand it, is a great concenion. Hitherto, when this question was discussed, The Times sturdily maintained that the. United States, in making the demand for damages, had not a leg to stand on, and that England would steadily continue to refuse giving any con sideration to such a claim. Now, with changed tone, it is alleged that England Las claims—or rather has counter-claims— for damages alleged to have been sus tained by arbitrary enforcement of the right of blockade and search ; that these will have to be examined, and that nothing un friendly is meant by urging them. That is precisely what we say—only we must have our rights. We wonder of what arbitrary enforce ment of the right of blockade the United Mateo belligerents have been guilty? In Bri tish ports, but chiefly in the _Mersey and the Clyde, not merely a few straggling ves sels, but literally whole fleets of blockade runners were built; equipped, and manned. Almost from the first hour when news of the rebel bombardment of Fort Sumpter reached Europe, proclamations were is sued, in the Queen's name, commanding British subjects not to violate the laws of neutrality. Yet the blockade-runners, carrying the munitions of war as well as general cargoes into Wilmington and other ports, did violate such laws, and did dis obey the Queen's proclamation, and there by enable the rebels to carry on the war for two or three years longer than they could have done it by their own resources, alone. The blockade-runners had their rendezvous chiefly at the Bahama Islands, where, to say the least, they were not dis couraged by the Governor and other Bri tish officialB. (Me by one, however, at least one-half of this contraband Beet "came to grief," and were captured by our block ading vessels and our swift steam-cruisers. No doubt, the Liverpool and Glasgow own ers of these captured vessels have sustained losses by their capture. Can it be that England proposes to put these losses (result ing, in the Times' words, in our "arbitrary enforcement of blockade and search,") as a set-off against the demands of the United states for damages done to American com merce by the Alabama and other Bri tish-built pirates ? If not, what can Eng land's claims be ? if Ensland has a set-off, and can fairly establish it, we shall frankly admit it—but 'we must be met with equal candor Eng land, we are persuaded, will finally pay our "little bill." Earl RUSSELL himself lately admitted, in the House of Lords, that we had a very strong claim upon Eng land for damages. " The United States," he emphatically declared, " have the strongest reasons to be dissatisfied with England, which allowed British-built pi rates to be fitted out and employed against American commerce." Lord PALMERSTON said quite as much in the House of Com mons. The final settlement of our demand Will be a more matter of delay. Until the General Election is over, PaLm.E.RSTON and his colleagues will naturally desire to let the question rest, for their Tory opponents would make heavy capital, on the hust ings and at the polls, at their consenting to pay over two or three millions sterling, or whatever the amount may be, into the United States treasury for compensation, as claimed by us. The Times is disingenuous—it is rarely otherwise—in stating the case of the Ala bama. It says, "in getting ready No. 290' the Confederates and their agents were too quick for us, and for the Federals also ; they carried their vessel into the ocean before we could seize it in the Mer sey, Or the Foderals could seize it in the narrow seas; if we were slow, the Fede. Isis were negligent." This is a falsifica tion of the fact. In june, 1862, Mr. ADAMS wrote to Lord RUSSELL informing him that "No. 290" (the Alabama) was being built and launched at Birkenhead, opposite Liverpool, and was then being fitted out for the especial and manifest ob ject of carrying on hostilities by sea. Ac companying this was a letter from Mr. Dumps, U. B. Consul at Liverpool, with affidavits establishing the fact, which he had collected. Lord RUSSELL "did not see it," because neither guns nor carriages had been put on board. Further evidence of the character and objects of " No. 290 " was obtained, on which the Judge Advocate of the Fleet, who was also counsel of the British Admiralty, gave two legal opinions that the Collector of Liverpool was juati- Red in seizing the auspicious weasel, and these documents were placed in the hands of the British Government. Excuses were made for not acting on them. At last or ders were telegraphed to Liverpool to seize the vessel—such orders suspiciously arriv ing after the Alabama had steamed out of Liverpool without register or clearance. This was two months after Mr. Anans had first forwarded to Earl RUSSELL proof of the character and destined career of the Alabama. "If we 'were slow," the Times says, "the Federals were negligent." On the contrary, the Federals were alive and active. The counsel whose opinion ,was that "No. 200 " might and ought legally to be seized by the Collector of Liverpool was no petty lawyer. <On the contrary, at he earliest opportunity he was promoted, and is now Sir EI:WM POR,EETT COLLIER, - Solicitor General of England. Whenever this American demand is iliscussed by the British Government, his legal opinion will have to be delivered, and, being an honest man, it must tell PALMERSTON, RUSSELL, & CO., that as•the Alabama was built and fitted out at Liverpool, and allowed to be come a pirate, when she might and ought to have been detained by the Collector of that port, Great Britain must foot the bill of damages done by her in .her_ piratical capacity. One case will settle the princi• pie of all. The Export Duties of Foreign Countiies. Although export duties are forbidden by Our Constitution, they are need as a means for raising revenue by nearly every other nation on the globe. They are not gene rally very heavy, as prudent Governments do not wish to diminish the sale of their products to foreign countries ; but wher ever an opportunity is offered of compell ing distant lands to SWell domestic reve nues it is eagerly embraced. England, Venezuela, and Brazil, are the only com mercial countries which, like our own, have no expovi duties. But England has taken good care to put an export duty upon the indigo and other dyes,.tobaceo, sugar, and rum, shipped from her East-Indian possessions, and indirectly the price of the manufactures which she sells abroad must to some extent be enhanced by her system of internal taxation. When her woollen manufactures were in their infancy, and when it was a common remark that the world was clad in English wool woven in Flanders, she very summarily changed that condition of affairs. Having induced a large body of Flemish weavers to settle upon her soil, she prohibited the ex portation of wool by making it an offence for which merchants, sailors, and ship-owners connected with the trans action were all severely punished, aid meanwhile enlarged the home market by requiring all corpses to be buried in woollen shrouds. This was a very arbitrary and barbarous method of establishing a new industry, but it was successful, and it indi cates the rigid nature of the policy by which England has made herself the greatest manufacturing nation in the world. At the present time, the Continental na tions exact export uties on everything that will bear them. Norway and Sweden tax their rough timber heavily before they suffer it to leave their shores. France, Austria, and the Zollverein, place a light artieteS. Tire itoman States levy a heavy export duty on antiqui ties. Russia, Spain, Portugal, and Turkey, all have a list of export as well as import duties. China is very careful to charge a good round sum on her tea and silks, and she thus makes the " outside barbarians " swell her imperial revenues. We quote these examples to show that there would be nothing novel in our adop tion of a system of taxation that is forbid den at present by our Constitution. There is, perhaps, not a country in the world that would not, if it was burdened with a debt like our own, resort to an export duty on such products as cotton and tobacco, as one of its first and most reliable expedients for raising revenue. The policy of such a change in our fundamental law as will con fer upon Congress the discretionary pow ers that are freely exercised elsewhere, de serves serious consideration. We might build up our cotton manufactures to an ex tent that would more than fill the wildest dreams of those who are interested in their prosperity, by giving them a monopoly of the home market, and an advantage in foreign markets. We might transfer a large portion of the burden of our debt from the shoulders of our own citizens to the consumers of our cotton and cotton goods in other nations. Objects like these are , worthy of the attention of our statesmen. I If they can be accomplished, they will prove extremely beneficial to our people, i for they will increase our capacity to pay the bills presented by the tax-collectors, and make the bills, year after year, grow " small by degrees, and beautifully less." Napoleonic Family Quarrels. The recent ultra-liberal oration of Prince NAPOLEON (JEROME), at Ajaccio, appears to have fallen like a monster-shell among the crowned intolerants and imbeciles of Europe. The Noniteur, acknowledged organ of the French Government, when recording the fact that a statue of the great NAPOLEON had been erected in Ajaccio, his birth-place, did not mention that Prince NAPOLEON, the illustrious Cor sican's nephew, had made a speech when the statue was first exhibited to the people—a speech which, when reported,. filled nine long newspaper columns. Scarcely any other of the Paris journals ventured to say Mere than that the statue had been erected, and an address delivered by the Prince. Two of them, which had ventured to quote the most moderate.parts of the oration, received official notice that, if they persevered, they would be sup pressed. The Independence Beige, which publishes numerous French articles which cannot see the light in Paris, printed the greater portion of the oration, including all the most liberal parts; and its entrance into France, through the post• office was prevented, by order of the French Go vernment, for several days—a prohibition which has made the oration in great request, and, has caused it to be re printed, contrary to instructions, with a view to extehded private circulation. The Empress Regent, by all accounts, was at once annoyed, offended, and perplexed. An noyed that Prince NAPOLEON, who knows her devotion to the temporal as well as the spiritual ascendancy of the Pope, should have curtly declared that, to be an efficient head of the Catholic Church, it was very unnecessary for him also to be a temporal sovereign ; offended, because the tone, and, indeed, the language of the oration was condemnatory of the autocratical policy of her husband ; perplexed, because, in Ms absence, ebe did not well know how to act, and her Counsel of State, even more timid, did not venture to take the responsibility of giving her decided advice. The-Emperor is reported to have sent a letter of sharp reproof, from Algeria, to his speechmaking cousin, and to have followed that by a still more peremptory missive, which has caused the Prince to resign hie Vice Presidency of the Council of State and his Senatorship. More than this, several of the foreign en voys at Paris were preparing (doubtless under instructions from their respective Sovereigns) to hand in a collective remon strolled against the Prince's oration at Ajaccio, but this was put an end to by Lord COWLEY, the British ambassador, who said that Englund was not affected by what the Prince bad said, and that any-colleetiVe step would be offensive to the Imperial Government. This we can believe; for it would elevate the Prince to still greater importance. The pecuniary loss which the Prince sustains by relinquishing his positions in the Council and the Senate is small—say 50,000 francs—and he has yet his appanage as an Imperial Prince, which is secured to him by law, and amounts to 2,500,000 francs per annum. He, therefore becomes a political martyr at a very small cost, and makes a forward step to the throne itself. By.and-by; should he have a fair chance, we may find Prince NAPoLEON a candi date for the Imperial crown. Prince NAPOLEON is tabooed for having asserted ; 1. That NAPOLEON I. respected the Monroe doctrine, which NAPOLEON 11l has violated by his invasion of Mexi co, where he has overthrown the republic and established a pseudo-empire, with a nominee of his own as its nominal head. 2. That the Pope may be and ought to be head of the Catholic Church, without terri tory to govern as a temporal sovereign. 3. That freedom of speech and liberty of the press, to the necessity of which NAPOLEON L became a convert, after he returned from Elba, are the natural rights of all men in a free country, and that, as NAPOLEON 111. does not recognize such rights, France is not free. This, and no more, is the liberalism in Prince NAPOLEON'S oration at Ajaccio, which has annoyed the Empress, angered the Ernperez, perplexed the newspapers, provoked certain European potentates, pleased England, and, we ven ture to say, awakened a strong antagonism throughout general society in France against the absolutism of NAPOLEON 111., - who is believed by few in that country to have one drop of Bonaparte blood in his veins. The Ajaccio oration reads 'very like a political and politic presentation of the man who made it, as a suitable leader of the Liberal party, should the occasion arise for a powerful and popular head. It is by far the heaviest blow that has yet smitten the astute Emperor of the French, and it may be doubted whether, in opposi- tion to it, he will carry out any intention of sending large reinforcements to Mexico—a measure to which France is decidedly op posed. The Great Italian Canard. " Everything for a sensation," ought to be the motto of some journals. Ten days ago, the New York Herald gravely an nounced that the Prince Imperial of France, a child only mine years old, had accepted an invitation to spend the season at Sara toga ; and now the New York World pub lishes a letter, dated "Florence, May 21," which it backs up or endorses in a leading article, stating that King VICTOR Ex- MANUEL and the Pope have become great friends; that the Pope is going to make a concordat with the King of Italy, whom ho desires to assume the title of Emperor of the Romans ; that he will himself place the Imperial crown on the head of the man who still lies under the ban of Papal ex communication ; and that the Austrian A mbassador in Rome had asked the Papal Court what it all meant. Of course, thisis all a canard, and a poor one "at that." There have been certain semi-official communications between the Pope and VICTOR Emu-Nuns. about filling up certain episcopal vacancies in Italy, but they did not succeed, and when the Pope had to communicate with VICTOR Erg- XANUEL on the subject, he addressed hid' as " King of Sardinia," which he was, and not as "King of Italy," which he is. The very strongest desire of the Pope is to re gain the Marches and other "Estates of the Church," and it is VICTOR EMMANUEL'S determined purpose never to surrender one acre of such territory. The idea of the Pope's crowning. VicTba EramAxont, as Emperor of the Momans, thus abandoning the nominal supremacy in Rome which the Holy Pontiffs have always claimed as suc cessors of ST. PETER, is one_of the wilfleat ..toulota IU:4A V C rPlit isito print. We do not believe one word of the double-barrelled statement in question, and; until events disprove it, shall consider it as one of the greatest Diunchausen inventions ever given to the world by the World. It ought not impose on a rational child six years old. The nest and Second, Battles of Ball Mau C,ommemmerated. DEDICATION OT TWO 'MONUMENTS TO OUR PALLBN BRAVES On Sunday there was a strange scene enacted on the heights of Manassas. Two national monuments were then and there erected to our brave boys who had fallen In the two bloody battles on that spot. They are similar in design, and are constructed of rook found In the neighborhood. They are quadrangular pyra mids, about fifteen feet In height, of rough, solid masonry, and are surmounted at the apex by a block of stone and a two.hundred.pOUllder Parrot s hell painted black, with a pedestal of masonry, sodded on the sides, and each corner of the pedestal sur mounted similarly to the apex. One of these monu ments Is situated on the high cleared knoll whoa transpired the thickest of the first Bull Run battle, and the other where raged fiercest the second bat; tie of Brill Run, making thorn only about a mile and a half apart. The first is insoribed on one side, " In memory of the patriots who fell at Bull Run, July 21, 1861," and on the obverse side, Brained June 10,1885" The other Is 111801064, "In memory of the patriots who fell in the battle of Orovestou, August 29,1862,' with the same obverse inscription as the other. These structures had been reared by details from the 6th Pennsylvania Heavy Artillery, and the Mth Massachusetts Light Artillery, at the suggestion of Captain H. O. Lawrence, and under the super intendenoe of Lieut. J. MoOallam, of the Massa. &netts battery. At the dedication there wore up wards of two hundred Chiming present, and the ex. Moises consisted of a prayer by a minister, and ad dressee by Generale Wilcox, Heintselman and Farnsworth, and Judge Olin. The Battle-field or Chickamauga. TILTEILESTING AOOOONT OP A VISIT TO IT-ITS PEE- KENT APPINCRANCE-.-THB FIISLD WHITENBD IN MANY PLACNS WITH TELIA BODIES Or 171Isrtarso / HAD. A. correspondent of the Cincinnati. Commercial has just visited the battlefield of Chickamauga, and giVe2 in a well-written letter Ma imprettlOtte of its appearance. He loft Chattanooga on the morn ing of the 27th ult., and entered the field by the famed . 6 8ossville Gap? , He rays: THE YIELD OP THE }HEST DAY% BATTLE. As soon as we entared the gap our eyes met un mistakable signs of the skirmishing which took place through the narrow defile as the rebels fell back slowly toward the final lines of battle. A squad of tired rebel soldiers, on their way to their homes, sat by the roadsitie as we passed, eyeing us with glum stolidity, evidently debating the risks of an encoun ter with the well•filled holsters that hung on our saddles. We tame upon the scene of the first day's battle—September 19th—on the left of the Lafayette road. Here it had been falsely represented that a rebel brigade was yet this side of Cluelsamauga creek, without support, and that a rapid movement might succeed In capturing titans. A division was quickly hurried Into the woods and ran against, In stead of a "demoralized" brigade, Longetreet's Orps, in good fighting condition, and theesoineteit soon boom o banal It was on open ground, ther party having time to do any % ug more than throw up, In a few pinea l rails or logs so the height of two or three feat. Our loss was very team General Brannan's division alone losiug,lo .a few hours, over 2,500 men. Our lines were torced back to the road and badly shattered. TER AVID/ MOBS OP 001PTIMPION AND DRAM, The ground was not lacking in evidences of the bloody work which had been enacted upon it. Al though Nature had, for two years, been undisturbed In her kindly efforts to restore and to heal, yet the whole surface was Siren with ghastly proofs of the mighty wreck WhlCh had boon made there. No army bad before passed through there; the farms were quiet and prospering ; the cattle were in the fields, and as the destroying columns swayed madly to and Ira, crushing the fences before them, many of them mot death, and in all directions are scattered heaps of bones that show where they fell. The ground is rolling, and about equally divided be- Moen field and sorest, and through these the lines were formed, with regard, mainly, to the fitness of the position, and little to its clearness, or otherwise. As we retie over the field, It was plainly evident where the rebel dead had been burled, and where our own, the few of them that were granted that poor boon. The rebel soh:tie decen tl y in graves, however shallow, andco v ered with earth or stones, and the spot Marked with a neat head. board, labelled, and the whole often surrounded by a square pen of rails. Oar own boys had the herd fate of being left on the field, and, when tae rebels vouchsafed to bury them, they were collected In rows, or In groups of two or three, upon the top of she ground, and a few spadeful.; of earth thrown over them. I do not suppose that one.halt of our dead were burled, even thus slightly, and before spring therein had exposed the extremities of these. At one end of one of these little mounds lay a pair of skulls, bleaching In the sun, and, at the other, two pairs of shoes, full of bones. Better that they should have lain in the open air, wrapped in their blood-stained blankets, than to have been subjected to this mockery. In one of these Skulls the wasps bad built their neat, and, flitting to and fro with busy wing, they were hiving their little stores, and would defend them with boldness against any who Intruded opost their strange dlVolling.pllloo. • SOLITARY LITTLE ETIAP OP BONES. In another place, at the foot of a tree, lay a little heap of human bones, where some soldier had per kited, and remained unburied. Here, mortally stria en, he had, perhaps, painfully dragged himself afew paces from the place where be fell, and leaned heavily against the friendly trunk of the great tree, while the route of battle raged fiercely about him, and his hard pressed comrades Were driven back, step by step, till at last the 4 z breathless darkness" gathered thick about tam, and he bowed.his head in throes or the "stern agony,” and the soul escaped from its prison -house. He shall Waken no more from his dreaming: "•The breezy will of incense-breathing more. Tbe swallow twittering from the straw built &ed. The sock's ghri 4. clarion, or the eehoing horn, lie mere shall sense him from his lowly bed." Tag SECOND DAY'S YrtiLD. Aftersurveyingthls part of the field we rode away towards Orawlish Springs, near the second day's fighting, with a view to discussing, by the aid of Its cool waters, the collation which we had brought. On the way I dismounted, reverently, to pick up a battered bullet lying by the wayside. °famish Springs should he vtsltdd by all Who go to the bat tlefield 01 OhlokamitUga. The water flows oat in a broad, noiseless shiet from the toot of a hill about fifty feet in elevation, and is said to be always clear and of the same proportions in whatever weather. Here, during a part of the time on the mamma hie 1001 and 20th of September, our soldiers sought in vain to slake their raging thirst; for, though neither party were- In possession Of the spring, the rebels, knowing the locality, shelled it so that it was dangerous to approach. On the hill which was rendered immortal by the final rally made by General Thomas, culminated the in terest of the whole field. Here the carnage In the rebel Tann was very great g and in the cleared fields which lie around its base, our horses tread at every turn upon little turf-0990T0 heaps, which cumber all the ground. No mini of earthworks remain to show the positions of the forces; only here and there a slight barricade of logs, hastily thrown to. gather, in broken lines, marking the place where a regiment or a few companies still clung together, and, shoulder-to shoulder, breasted the storm. OA three aides the waves of the rebel hosts surged, and were broken upon that hill, like tides against a rock-bound coast. Forming in the fields, they charged across them with a fury which threatened to overwhelm all in ruin ; but, from among the trees which oovered the sides and summit, there came so deadly a hail of bullets and cannon.shot that they withered and. Lank U. the earth before it. Neatly one. half the trees have boon braken off by shells, and among the fragments of flint. which thickly cover the ground, the relic-hunter may gather bul lets yet, scattered on the surface, like acorns after a storm In an oaken forest. NATIIIIIOS ICINDLIABSS. But here, as in all places where man in his pas. don has maids such wreck, nature has displayed her kindly power in healing her own wounds, and her unwillingness to perpetuate the bloody roonprlnts be leaves behind. Even this barren soil, wonder. fully enriched by the libations of blood poured out upon it, blossoms with flowers, and the vines creep over the tugged ground, covering its hideousness and the bleaching bones from oar Sight, or wind about the shattered trees and lend their verdure to conceal the jagged rents which yawn among the branches. Fragrant roses, self.planted, bloom above the graves, as if set by the hand of affection, and the woodbine and the ten,der • morning-gloritrall over the rude wornelences built by the men over the lowly dust of a comrade. the Cavalry Corp! or the, Army of the Potomac The cavalry formerly attached to the Army of the Potomac, and that which has heretofore operated in the Shenandoah Valley, is now encamped on the Orange and Alexandria railroad, and is being reor ganized and consolidated In consequenee of the annu l -M IS out of those whose terms Of service ex pire prior to Oetober 1. Abeilt 4,000 have aireadi mien mattered out, and but 5,000 of the same class remain to be (discharged as rapidly as cironmstan ees permit. Tt is believed that a coming order from the War Department will direct the immediate die charge of all whose term of service expires before January 1, 1808. A board of officers D in session deity for an examination into the merits of every officer of the entire cavalry corps, and the result of the Investigation is forwarded to the War Depart ment. Meritorious calms making application to remain in the service receive an appointment in the new consolidation, u_pon the recommendation of the examining board. The entire strength of the caval ry chops commanded by Gen. Davies ordered 12,00. 'the let Vermont tiavalry has bleu to re. port to Gen. Dix, in Sew York, and the tith United States bee been sent to Fredoriok, lad, THE PRESS.=-PHILADRI.PIIIA; TUESDAY; JUNE 13, 1865: General Sherman in Chicago. 818 PPPAOS AT THY BOARD OP PRAMS ROOMS. Generals Sherman and Grant are being lionized in Chicago. The former Made *visit to the Board of Trade rooms On Friday, and made a speech in reply to ene of welcome. After giving on nitizong Of that City come good advice as to their paospoote in the future, General S. laid a There are plenty of good men In this country; I myself could name twenty men who have never been heard of, who would have done, at least, as well es I have done, or who, if I had been killed, could have been put into my shoes. I am bat mortal. We are all but mortar, and if all of you here were to be dead today, somebody else would quickly take your planes. You may exaggerate the importance Of I man, We make cacaos the Standard of merit; but I tell you that when a man does as near right as he knows how, the people of this country should sustain - him. • But you may depend upon it that the Almighty never made so great a country to be crushed and torn down by so ignoble a cause as that which threw oar country into such &Marital war—slavery. The idea of slavery standing in the way of the progress of the •Anterican people. Shame unto those who dreamed of it. Nothing can stand in'the way of progress of this country. Still, manhood is necessary. If we would enjoy the lul l advantages of that which IS offered us we must work together with a cheerful heart, and a firm, brave purpose. Nevertheless, so confident do I feel la the progress of our country, that learn not who leads. We are bound to b 0 a united people In the future, one country, in spite of all the e fl o res that have been Made to divide It. We have inhorised a good GOverliMent ; you, the Peo ple, have all the say in the affairs of our Gorr& meat; you make your own laws and you do every thing ; the greatest danger, in my -opinion, in this country is, that the people do not remember their own rights and duties. You are all engaged in your business and you neglect Lour duties to the State. I saw the danger in California, I saw it in the South, and I have seen It elsewhere—a few people, by their shrewd management, get the Control of the ballot• boxes and do their own will. But when the Amerh can people income aroused to the battle they oorreat it and therein la the strength of our Government. We are bound to have these extremes, and the peo-, pie are to see that it does not go too far. Yon have' the power In your own hands. /, a soldier, pray God that never more in this land we shall have to assert our rights with the bayonet, but that we may always In the future be able to assert it by simple vo ting. But you mutt all see that when the vote is 4aken, that the minority shall sabre% to the ma. joelty ; and it they do not do It, make them do it. Do not let the oppoittion again spread over the whole land, Involving the whole of our country In war. I hope it will never 000ur again, and so far as I am concerned, I am 'perfeetly willing that you may have all my military fame to tenure it. I give it freely, for I know that you will abide by your coun try, and, if necessary, fight for it. President Lincoln's Message to the It will recollected that on the evening of his as:. eassbation President Lincoln had a long interview with &talker colfax, who was to start out the next morning on an overland journey to California, On taking leave of Mr. Colfax, Mr. Lincoln sent with; him & message to the miners. In a speech lately made at Denver, Colorado, Mr. Colfax delivered) this message as follows. Mr. Lincoln said: " Mr. Colfax, I want you to take a message fro me to the miners whom you visit. I have," said he "very large ideas of the mineral wealth of our n Ilea. I believe It preattoally inexhaustible. I abounds all over the Western country, from the Rocky Morottates to the Pacific, and its de. velepment has Bartels , Commenced. During the war, when we were adding a couple of millions of dollars every day to our national debt. I did not care about encouraging the increase in the volume of our precious metals. We had the coun try to save first. But, now that the rebellion is overthrown and we know pretty nearly the amount of our national debt, the more gold and silver we mine makes the payment of that debt so mnoh the easier. Now," said be, speaking with much em phasis. "I am going to encourage that in every possible way. We shall have hundreds of thou sands of disbanded soldiers. and many have feared that their return home in such great numbers might paralyze lizdastry by furnishing suddenly a greater repo) , of labor than there mu be a demand fur. - I am going to try and &Mot them to the hidden wealth of our mountain ranges, where there is room enough afr all. Immigration, which even the war has not stopped, will land upon our shores hundreds of thousands more per .year from over-orowded rope. I intend to point them to the gold and silver that waits for them in the West. Tell the miners from me, that I shall promote their interests to the utmoet of my ability, because their prosperity is the. krosperity of the nation, and," said he, his eye indling with enthusiasm, " we shall prove, in a very few years, that we are, indeed, the rusentray or THB wOBLD." Horrible Affair In Illinois. LII4OILIZIG OP. A GIIBULLL4--BTRANGIa SOBS= AT The Quincy (Ill.) Herald of the 8d instant, comes .to us with a long account of the doings of a mob in that town on the Wednesday previous, and the subsequent lynching of a guerilla captain. It appears that the captain, who was wounded, and whose name was Rose, was confined in the jail at Quincy, when the citizens and soldiers to the num ber of five hundred hearing of it, commenced to assemble around the jail, and sent informal de mantle for the surrender of the rebel. On their de Mend being denied, same parties scaled the Mgt fence which protects the entries to the jell-yard, and by means of billets of wood and hammers forced an entrance, seized the body of the wounded and dying bushwacker, and immediately dragged him into the street, amid the vociferous cries of "hang him," "'shoot him," he. The miserable man was then dragged through the street, and taken to a spot in the woods abont a mile out of town. Bete a ring was formed around the man, who, too weak to stand, was lying on his side. A. Milliner then prayed with him, after which a re porter seated himself beside him, with the °Spoons , lion of receiving his confession. The prisoner said he lived in Troy, Missouri; bad supported Douglas for the Presidency, and afterwards dlr. Hendersoe for the Senate, and after his house had been Mune' by the militia, he had joined Kirby Smith's army, After this the ring was cleared, a rush was made for the prisoner, and he was dragged to the place of execution—the tree. He did not display the weakness of a coward on such an 000sslon, but seemed to nerve himself for the worst. There was nothing unusual about his appearance more than a bright and buttons eye. He was placed upon come boxes, prepared as a platform, with hie hands pinioned behind him. _Before the rope was placed around his neck he fainted, and fell groaning back ward to the earth. Considerable confusion resulted , from this, and cries from theorowd were vociferously sounded, "Tie-him where he lies ;" "Hurry him up." Rose was again placed upon the stand, grow ing' weaker every minute. Just before theMand kerchief was placed around his eyes he asked to be clot, and again spoke of his Wife and children, The noose was alijuated. SIM the boxes kicked AVM, and Rote was left dangling la the air. He struggled but little. We thought his neck was broken by the fail. The execution took place five minutes after twelve. Bore was a well-built man, very muscular, • five feet five or six inches in height, and twenty. seven years of age. While hanging, some of the participants in the execution took hold of the body and started to swing it to and fro; others uttered brutal jests.. On the next day the mob assembled around the jail, bent on having the associates of Rose, but this time their Rhos were thwarted. aosieral Prentiss, Hen, Arnold, and others, did all in their power to appease t h e ferocity of the lawless men, but all to no purp ose. Bow among Supernumeraries at the New Bowery. % hestre in New York—A Sword Combat—One of the Parties Arrested. Last Saturday evening. Scene, the New Bowery theatre, New York. Behind the scenes. Ohara°. tare, "autos" to the mystical number of three, and the "captain" of the same, wearing his previously unileshod stage sword at his side. Seldom, alas, do regular theatrical critics accord to rising genius in humble positions the fall mead of praise. SupernUUleraries sot the walking gentle. man with unheard•Or-gracorninots, or utter, in dulcet tones and red-top boots, "Me Lord, the kerridge waits," without winning high encomiums from the press, or grasping at a single bound the histrionic diadem. Inhere are, to be sure, certain parts of the audience that never fall to applaud the -"sups." Whether he appear In tight pants to pat down the stage car. pet or to remove the chairs, or whether he stomata on with a besom and soattereth the dust Ingeniously in the eyes of the sitters in orchestra seata, the gamin from the gallery is sure to greet him. " Ro meo," "Romeo," "Dethdemoner," and other histo rical names, intermingled with eaboallS, are hurled at him. . On Saturday night, Ferdinand Hoofter, captain of the supernnmeries at the New Bowery, mat Sa muel Jacobs, of hie force, and two others, arrayed In Kendal green, behind the scenes. They had en tered R., and requested that he should dispense their usual weekly stipend of filthy more. So Said they all. Hostler, instead of replying, "My graMMIS lords, here is the bag of gold !" responded In effect that Kirby bad not yet expired upon the stage, and that the strong necessities of the time commended his services awhile. First Supe. " Shalt be to-night at supper 1" Captain. "No, not tanight" Second Supe. " To-morrow dinner, Mont" Captain. "I shall not dine at home ; I meet the Captaihs at the °hada" Third Sago. "Perdition catch thy SOM. Who steak; my purse steals trash, but he that niches from me my week's wages takes that with which I got my dollar jewelry. (Wildly.) Arouse, black ven geance, from thy hollow oell.r•r.r. Captain. " Odd's, bodiklos t" Filet Sage. ' , We'll make Rome how-WoworoW wowl." (AU supee, seising olubs and swearing, not by the InConstant moon)-r. , Dror, wllllen P' "Let oorpo• rations thrive P' " Give me another hoes: , Bd. Ind." Then same the tug of war. The eaptain had al. ready shaken aloft big Roman blade, and the ala baster gaalights glenined upon it as ho bravery broached his boiling breast. Above the dbi °acid be heard the following: Captain. " lia.d.ve you said your morning devo. thins this evening VI • All Supes. " We tia.a.ve Captain. "Then thou hadst bettor had have, ha.a.ve." Thus, in the %idea vein, the battle waged, and Rotator, it Is said, made tome slight ile3h-wonudii en Jacob's arm, possibly opening another vein. The supernumeraries lent the nett still resolved to make Hooiter groan, and sweat, and fardels bear, or at least hoping to make him look through a star tion.liOuie grate, with %Wm prisoners, like a grin ning of baboons. A. Complaint was made, and Officer Mailable led Hootter to the halls of Judge Mansfield, who held him in ball In live hundred dollars for trial, VAGABONDAGIA IN D/BOUBSION AND PIILOIVIIL— . comical incident occurred in the Belgian Cham ber during the debate on the vagabondago bill. One of the deputies was supporting an amendment to the bill, when be was interrupted by an individual in the gallery, who exclaimed, "I, who am a beg gar in a black coat, support the amendment: Down with the laws of public safety ! Long live the Em peror I" at the same time scattering a number of pamphlets about. the chamber. It was afterwards discovered that thls_pereati was a AL Roustand, former bookseller at Yereadllas, who wee at one time notorious in Paris for his eactentrialtiee. Onaa he Was at the Theatre Francais when the Ealperor was present, and he began to read some verses of his ccmporitlon between the acts, but the audience did not approve of this addition to the performances, and ha was turned out by a sergent•devllle. The pamphlets, which be distributed in such an.unoere monlous manner among the Belgian deputies, are' headed, "Down with the laws of pablio safety I Long live the Emperor !" and signed " Boustand, volunteer mamelouk of Napoleon III." AH INTsmarriwo ninao.—Oolonel Niles, of Go vernor Oglesby's staff. has been M_ont in poissission of a commission to Jefferson Davie as Arab lieu. tenant of dragoons, signed Andrew Jackson, Pre. olden; end Lewis Oats, Secretary of War, dated 10th of April, 1884, to rank from Mardi 4th, 1833 . This curious relic was captured among the 'folvate papers of Mr . Davis, at Jackson, Mos , by Ser geant Major John Y. Goldsmith, of the battalion composed of the 14th and 15th regiments Illinois Volunteers, and by him placed In Colonel NSW hands.—Springfidd Daily Stale Register. BerAworso -LIfRICAL itOcotrziTs.-41. (liar/man of the Moira of England hes shown recently the power of stating debtor and creditor aceonnt better than hoe ever been done by even the most intelli gent accountant. In his new Chitrah he has two &EI NE% pews. ono Ode or the church being for those Who have paid- pew rent, who are his Ofealtolls the other side having pews for those wholle not Pal pew rent—that is, the Reverend gentleman's debtors. TUB New York Independent, of the Sth tnet., eaI nOUISOOB 111 very complimentary terms the 'with drawal of its publisher, Mr. Joseph H. Rtehards, after a connection of eight years with that prosper ous newspaper. Mr. Richards has been scoured as the publisher of The Nation, the new weekly jour nal of polities, literature, soleness, and art?' which is advertised to appear in New York on the Bth' of July. The post which he leaves 18 the very best argument for the suacess of The Nation under his nuainhelikility—N. Y. Tribunes Miners of like Wess THS GALLOWS. TERRIBLE EXPLOSION AT CHATTANOOGA. WSW DESTRUCTION OF QUARTER- MASTERS' STOMAS. MANY PERSONS KILLED AND WOUNDED. New Yong, JIII3II 12.—The Time* has a special Chattanooga despatch or June 10, stating that a tremendous explosion and Are occurred there on the shrift or the Bth Ina., as le supposed through earelessneor. A spark from a locomotive Ignited the /00Se powder In the ordnance department, exploding save' ral thousand tons of fixed ammunition and loose powder. Shot and shell were sent whizzing through Oniony. and:many persons were kiyed and wounded. The immense quartermasters' buildings took fire and were destroyed, involving a loss of $260,000 worth of stores. Some people think that the fire was the work of an Incendiary, as It occurred simultaneously with the Nashville and Gallatin tires. The railroad is nearly completed to Atlanta. Prominent rebels are being arrested in Northern Georgia. HORRIBLE SoOrel. Ocurrnyroil OW ALABAMA...A Correspondent of the Weir York Times, who has made a tour along the line of the Mobile and Grest Northern Railroad to Montgomery, and thence down the Alabama river to Mobile, has written to that journal giving an aecOlint of hie experienee. He tells a most horrible story of the misery, death's- Con, and, in fact, the starvation he witnessed in his journey. Mazy of the people procure their food from our Government officials. They are lazy and' will not work, saying that negroes only should en. gage in toll. The rebel soldiers are very relentless in their treatment of Unionists, men and women faring alike. The correspondent says they are so bitter in their Views, and no debased in their acts of tyranny, that he is Convinced nahing will bring Order there except bayonet law. Ho heard of women and nil. dren starving to death, and the treatment meted out to the negroes is worse than ever was inflicted by the cruelest masters before the war broke out. He says that so great is the madness of the slave. holders over their defeat and subjugation, that on their return home they wreak their vengeance on their former Waves—cutting off their ears, noses, or lips. Fly, er these poor 'levees came Into Kent- Watery in one day with their can Out off, and in a undo condition; others; have their throats partly out, and bear on their bodies many evidences of the cruel blows inflicted by their masters. General A. J. Smith and Colonel Geddes are doing all in their power to ferret out these monsters and inflict proper punishment. On his journey, the oorres• pendent met Captain Semmes, of the Alabama, who was really too poor to buy tickets for his meals. Semmes acknowledged the country ruined, but he does not understand how defeat followed so "just a cause." Many of the rebel officers met on the way acknowledged that they were going to leave , 1 the country as soon as they possibly OcUld. The British System of Fortifications- Granite Wail and Steel Bolts. (From the flew York Times, Juno 10 .1 Etter expending several millions sterling on gra. nite fortifications at Portsmouth and elsewhere, the British Govanment have' bethought themselves of testing the value of the works, both as to the strength of their potation and the Impregnability of their structure. The scope and character of these fortifications are said to be especially due to the military genius of Lord Palmerston, who brings to modern engineer ing solelee the experience he acquired In the War Office Way , years ago—whatever that may be. And SO wall satisfied has the venerable minister been well- his scheme of defensive armament at home bkherto, that he has urged its adoption for the protection of the two or three thou Sand miles of boundary line between the neighboring Colonies and the United States. The plans of the main works recommended for Canada, in the report of Colonel Jervois, are essen tially framed upon the Palmerston Portsmouth, model. There IS no particular secret, we believe, about that model—so far as the British minister's theory is concerned. Granite and bricks make up the whole thing. And if modern innovation had not brought the eleei bolt and the 800 pounder Into common use, the FalmerSten fort Might have been the model for the world. It Is a Comparatively email matter, perhaps, to find that several of the most imposing of these now 'British forte—such as those at Portsmouth—are Commanded from different surrounding eminences, because these eminences might themselves be fort!. ded, now that the engineer's error has been dis covered. But it is a rather more serious thing, we take it, to find that the granite walls with brick backings are no more impervious to the Steel bolt fairly aimed from a'Boo.pounder than if they wore so much stage etienerr got up to illus. irate the fall of Luoknow. The discovery of this rather important fact would. probably, have been Made earlier, had oar experienoe in the bast neSo Of building and taking forte been Amenable for the British War 012ce at an earlier data. As It happened, it was only the other day that Lord Pal merston and the engineers of the War Office name to the conclusion that' it might be as well, before laying out ten or twenty millions more on the granite forts with brick backing, to make some ex periments with the new ordnance pieces, to Sae how the matter of impregnability really stood. A building, then—oorresponding in all essential respects to a section of the new torte—wait erected en the marshes near WOOIWIOh. It was constructed of granite, backed with brick, and of the proper thickness to make the test complete. A 800. pounder was used, with a small charge of powder, and a steel bolt, at a distance of 250 yards (equivalent to a dis tance of ROO yards with afull charge). At the first shot the building was shaken and the bricks behind the granite began to bulge out. The second shot made a marked Impression on the granite itself, and dislodged the bricks inside, eo that the working of the guns in the oasemates of a fort similarly con structed would have thenceforth been rendered possible. The third shot knocked the granite into splinters, An all directions, and the extemporized fort began to topple. This story conveys very little that is either novel or instructive to no beyond its illustration of the slow growth of military engineering ideas in Eng land in the present year of grace. Lord Palmer ston't ideas naturally shape themselves after the times when he bad a desk in the War Office, about the beginning of the century. And he must rind it falafel to kivelthem outtn-ted at tide late hour on the Weeiginii marches, rritb the Astestrongg an cad the Steel bolt. The Portsmouth forte Wetlia proba• bly stand a. two-hotirs' broadside-from a French or American Iron-dad. Strange Case of Poisoning. An Englishman named Thomas Constantine, re siding on the South Orange turnpike, New Jersey, purchased recently, while on a business visit in New York, a keg, which he intended to use in bar reling older. On Thursday evening last he first drew cider from the cask, of which litswife, daugh ter, and himself, drank heartily. in a abort time WI Were all taken with violent vomiting and purgiags. The daughter,' who was but fourteen years of 'age, having drank less than her parents, was not so violently affected as they were, and, after severe suffering, is reported as being in an improv ing condition ; but Mr. and Ws. Constantine ex pired about one o'clock on kriday morning. The cider drawn from the keg presented an oily appear anent and it hits since been discovered that the cask when in New York contained an "infallible remedy for bugs. ), A jury has been em paneled by the cora ner, and further investigations postponed until Saturday next, when the :result of the chemical analysis will be made known. A PRTNTING EHTABLIBEIMITIT 125 TUII MOMS FAIR, MILWAIIRBB..-..-It t 6 eantemplated to Orbit the Journal In the fair building, daring the MIT, on a steam press. Should this be done, !twill prove quite an attraction to the many who never saw a printing press of any kind in operation, muck loss a steam prese.—Home Fair Journal, Milwaukee. WI HAVE received from Eugene Cummiskey,loS7 Chestnut, a beautiful Photograph, which he has just published. The picture represents Sisters of Charity administering to the wants of a poor, de. seated child. We have seldom seen a more perfect specimen of photograph, every feature of the ohs,. rooters being represented with the utmost nicety. T4AVRI, TO EIIROML—The travel to Europa at the present time is unprecedented. Every steamer tailing irom New 'York eta Bottom le crowded, and it Is said bertha 'Wove Loon engaged in many Of the steamers which will salt within the next five or six weeks. FINE ARTS.—ThE dosing sale of superb 011 Paint ings takes place this and ttocnorrow evening, at Scott's Art Gallery, No. 1020 Ohestnut street, at 8 o'clock precisely. Our readers will do well to at tend, as some of the most valuable opeelmens will be offend, e.ale peremptory. LAROB POSITIVE Sas or BOOrei BROSS, fis o. GARB, TRAVELLING BAGS, Ea..-• The early atten tion of purchasers is requested to the large assort ment of boots, shoes, brogans, laoets, felt and straw bats &c., embracing samples of 1100 packages of tlrst:olass seasonable goods, of city and Eastern manufacture, to be peremptorily sold, by catalogue, on four months' credit, commencing this morning, at ten o'clock, by John Xt. Myers & 00., auctioneers, Woo. 282 and 284 Market street. CITY ',Kraus. Tae MIST FITTING SEM 01 TER AGB le "The Improved Pattern Shirt,” made by John°. &rim, at the old stand, Nos. 1 andB North Sisthiit. Work done by band in the beet manner, and warranted to give satisfaction. His stoelcof Gentlemen's Punka,- lng Goods cannot be surpassed. Prices moderate. A Penman Hkr.—The fatness Sun Hat, manu factured by Meson. Wood & Cary, 726 Chestnut street, is the choicest novelty of the sewn. W. Ai C. are new selling Off their stook of Straw and Fancy Bonnets at very much below Cost to olose the season. PHOTOGRAPHS PROM LIPS, BY GIITEKIINBT.— Mr. F. Gutektmet, 104 and 706 Arch street, has just published photographs, from life, of various Mae, of the Rev. Dr. Vaughn, gleneral Pritchard (the captor of Jelf. Davis), General polls, and other distinguished personages, duplioates of which can now be had at his counters. TVs= or COX'S DYSPEPTIC PFLLI3.—One each night on going to bed. Immediate relief from this distressing complaint. Dyspeptics ehould not 00107 one moment In procuring them of Samuel C. nart. No. 04 South Second street, Philadelphia. A BIG Tama ow Sine.—The value of silk fabric, of all sorts, exported from Lyons, in 1864, was 472,776,1300 in gold value. It would be difficult tO estimate the value of the manufactures Of Woolen goods for the came period. It IS at least certain that the best and most elegant of the clothes Malta factored were made up into apparel for gentlemen and youths at the Brown Stone Clothing Hall of Roonbni & Wilson, Nom. 603 and 606 Chestnut street, above Sixth. A MSORDIMD STATE ON' TEM BLOOD IS the prime cause of many very troublesome complainte. Skin Diseases, KercarialAffeotionS, Scrofula, Scur vy, and Goitre, are but a few of the many disorders arising from the depraved condition of the Val fluid. For diseases of this °lase, Jaynets Alterative Is a reliable curative, By entering into the drew nation, It thoroughly purifies the blood, and removes aty morbid tendency to disease which may exist in the system; it, at the same time, sustains the strength of the patient, and imparts vigor to the whole physical struetnre. To be satisfied of its em. my ) read the testimony of those who have been radically oared by it, given at length in Jayne's Almanac. Prepared only at No. 242 Chestnut street. fe1.3.8t Tux 'pram is amnions; against , an imitation or the photograph Of Lieutenant General Grant, the original of which was taken by F. Gatektinst, 704 Arch street. It is a bad copy. The original will be known by my . Imprint on the hack. jeB et* Enh EAR, AND OATARBS, ettoomerully treated. ny S.leaaoa, X. D. OnDot and Atuist, 519 Pine at. Artftgal eyea imeitttd. Dip Osseo lox andahtice, A NEW LUTHER N ONURUH.--The MOOTS Of St. Stephen's Lutheran fJhurohrin this city, have been so suceessful in their colleotions that , they me now at the Mt thousand dollars necessary to build the proposed new church, at Fortieth and Ara m /Meet% The enterprise is to be commenced 1n July. There are a large number of communicants le the district tbe Chinon 111 Intended to se comtnOdata FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL The following shows the condition of the Phila• delphia banks on Monday last, as ooMpared with the previous week : • June 6. 5u.661% 114,442,850 $14,492,350 63,095 693 61,973,271 Capital stook Loans • Snaffle.,,, ~... /455 752 1.203,025 If. S. legal-iing 20,400,002 18,972,92$ .flopoptte 41,512,570 40,225,172 Ciroulation 0,717,752 5,730,327 WEEKLY BANE STATE34BIS7. The following table shows the average condition of the Banks in Philadelphia for the week preceding non. day, June ]1,1866• ONWAW Itel An g i weidWprpterfnlV E *Vbgat94ll2ll4E i teru,r44.4l4W l m 4g tl freglio. t MIVIEWITIMOgoW494I 400-0,51:4:w0 , ft 0w4 " .• : its.E r,g - galE gg I i e PLEPV , 1 iiio;ligll aVaI!EVAIA s: no .144... ..,... 1110 p :, ;; 1 i • ; iV ' ':I t P ; 1 I ari-• r. i 111:HHiflii;"• 1 '' 4:E ej i . .8:::::1;:r V r r 2.41 P PPYggniEMMIgNM3O I. ` 4 / §//th§l///////gaga///0. ter ...wwwwawit I ;•atelwiials ARMIMP § Pag ta b 2 OPM AN gt 4i§E§AEMiktAntlata§§ol§l ; ; ; tt.lo gkars'toara - • " =: : g e. 1%/ EL...?.,§BgEtzg t e 0 1 41 ROOPIN,Pg.g.III - o.§Prit3F-Ti §§§§§ii§§§tateit§§R§eigdda§ tlithtgkiithWailatNg§ So EIPPPI - APWWWW il kjiagf4 " kl§g§ggagggigAgniingag m.re Prr r.prePPP R ma,cavv./mgmAm4ftgw;l2aitm , BoaBo tgtm§r4m l Tpik ,5 94F.1.5.5.F.4. , a gira§§§FinignlMOWEN P C§§§atE2s2sEME7iF§l4a2saßalli Ocarinas. Balances. Jane 6 S« .06,,663,612 7.3 $461,31280 5.861 0 7 8 7 4 421,081 ft meihays 04 146.611 12 gad.-ga......•••••••••• 6.320,976 27 373,679 10 6 460.336 83 4r7,476 38 " 4.010.094 22 424 803 31 1882.885,274 78 The stook market Is without particular change from its ruling oharaetor of last week, prices gene rally being, weak. Government loans are steady; the 18815 sold at 109 M, and the flve-twentles at 1.0338. There was very little inquiry for company , bonds; new City sizes sold at 90. The share list was loam Live; oamden & Amboy at 126 X; Norristown at fiX, and Lehigh Valley at 5834 ; Reading closed at about 47. 011, canal, and mining Stocks arc vary dull. City passenger railroads continue in fair de• Maud, with sales of Arch street at 20, and Heaton ville at 18 ; 78 was bid for Seoond and Third ;.23 for Thirteenth and Fifteenth; 243,1 for Spline and Pine; 84 for West Philadelphia; 19 for Arch street; 12 for Race and Vine; 31 for Green and Coates, and 20 for Union. Bank shares were !motive; Girard sold at 62; 190 was bid for North America; 118 for Farmers' and Mechanics' ; 48 for Oommar dal; 110 for Southmark ; 46 for Penn Township ; 57 for City; 87 for 04MOMMat1011, and ST for Corn change. The following were the quotations for gold yes terday at the hours named: 10 A. M 11 A. PI .1393' 130 M, 141 12M 1 P. M 8 P. M The subscriptions to the 740 loan Waived by Jay Cooke, yesterday, amount to $0,539,030, including one of $208,150 from Fifth National bank, Chicago ; one of $lllO,BOO Iran Exchange National bank, Pitts. burg; one of $200,000 from Flait National. Des Moines, lowa ; one of $321,750 from Fish & klatch, New York ; one of 4200,000 from FOurth National, New York; one of $200,000 from Ninth National, New York ; one of $lOO,OOO from First National, St. Paul; one of $140,000 from 0. A. Putnam Pa Co., Boston ; one of $50,003 from First National, Zanes ville ; one of $50,000 from First National, Quincy, Illinois, and one of $50,000 from First National, Evanaville, Indiana. There Were 1773 individual subseriptione of %Gaeta° each. Twenty.seven additional National banks were an. thorized during the week ending June 3. Whole number of banks to date, 1,212, with a total capital of A 288,971,020 Amount of enrreney issued to National banks for week 2,835,170 rievionaly Wined 132,02,890 Total to date The following National banks have been designa ted by the Seoretery of the Treasury as additional depositories of the public money : First, Newport, R. I.; First, Blanchester, N. IL; First, Ilarrieburg, Pa.; Venango, Franklin, Pa.; National Bank of the Republic, Washington. D. C.; Indiana, Indianapo lis, Indiana. The Ottawa Copper Mining Company Of Boston bee follawed into obliitiOn theneande or Dimmer bogus concerns, and thoutillide More. which now have a pretended or galvanized existence, will be fore long vanish out of sight in a like manner. The following report of the last annual meeting of the Ottawa Company appears in the Boston papers : The annual meeting of Its shareholders for oleo tion of officers, Sm. was to be held on Tuesday. One stockholder only was in attendance, and to him the treasurer made a report to, the effect that the means of the company were completely ex hausted, and no work had been done at the mine for uffintliS past. lie also added that the Old Meet's unanimously declined a re-eloation—preCtsely way he knew not, though he .thought it barely possible that the passage of the State law making the pre sident and directors of each companies liable for the taxes levied upon them, might have had some ice ihsence in bringing them to this decision. The stockholder linteued calmly and attentively to the developments made by the treasurer, and, at the close, quietly remarked that the elders of the coal pany seemed to be at a "dead look." To this the officer replied that he could not well dissent from an observation that was, unquestionably, so well founded, and after a friendly intorcheoge of a row general remarks upon the well-known uncertain elan attending affairs of a sublunary nature, " the meeting" was declared dissolved. The session lest ed some thirty minutes, and the proceedings throughout were orderly and decorous In every way. The following were the quotatlonn for Amerioan etoeks In London, on the 26th nit. : Maryland 6 per cent.. —• . • ... •• •• • 62 69 United States, 6-20 s, 1482, I per cenl .... . . 68X 675‘ Virginia 5 per cent 45 60 Do. 6 per cent 35 37 Atlantic and Great Western, New York sec tion, let mortgage.lB93, 7 per cent 75 77 Do. 24 mortgage, 1881, 7 per cent 70 72 Pennsylvania, Ist mortgage, 1877 70 77 Do. 2d mortgage, 1882. ....... .••• 70 72 Brie shares. COO (all paid) 5231 0954 Illinois Central 6 per cent.. 1876 . . 78 Si Do. $lOO shares (all 7694 7611 Msrietta and Cincinnati R. bonds. 7 per cent. 67 69 Panama nacre:id, 38 mort.. 1876. 7 per cent.loo /08 Yenesylve,is. maiiroad bonds, 3r/ mortgage 6p cent. convertible 1611 3.2 Do., OD shares 35 w 9 'lO Satterthwalte's London Oiroular thus refers to Amerloan securities : We have again to note numerous and important transactions during the past weak in the London market far American securities. There have been considerable sales by continental holders of United Steles five-twenty bonds, to realize the large profit which has accrued on them; the bondsoffering, however, have been readily taken for shipment to New York, the relative price there being by last aii• views 6 and 7 per cent. above that ruling hero. railroad Shares there bat beet an active business, Illinois remaining firm at 7534', while Erles, on sale by holders who bought 20 per cent. below current quotations, have given about el, closing about 52. There has been a steady demand far the second mortgage bonds of the Atlantic and areat Western railway, and It being evident now that the line is earning much more than sufficient to cover the In terest on all the loans, Investors are seeking the cheaper securities of the company. The debentures are steady at 80@85. Nally Of the national banks have, contrary to law, adopted the plan of having the signatures Of their officers engraved upon their notes. The attert. thin of the Comptroller of the Currency having been called to the fact, he has, as will be seen by the following letter, promptly ordered the predict: , to be dlacontintied : TREASURY DEPARTMENT, 0122011 OP 002IPTROLLRit OP THE CURRENCY, WASHINGTON, June 8, 1866. To your typifies of the Bth inst. I reply, briefly, that, in my judgment, the engraving or printing of the signatures of the officers of national banks on national currency notes IS not annotioned by law. Section twenty-two of the National Currency all provides that tile notes 6hall express upont helr f that they are Ceotired by United States boucle de posited with the Treasurer of the United States by the written or engraved signatures of the Treasurer and Register, and "shall also bear upon their face the promise of the association receiving the seine to pay on demand, attested by the signatures of the president, or vice president, and cashier." The express provision made for the engraved sig natures of the Treasurer and Register, by its limi tation to those offices, amounts to a prohibition as to the signatures of the president, or vice president, or cashier. The engraved signatures of these offi cers, therefore, do nut furnish the , legal attestation of the promise to pay on demand oOntemplated by the act. Engraved signatures are onaracteristiO Of counterfeits, and if national banks sanction and en dorse the practice, they facilitate time business of the counterfeiter by removing the suspicion wits which engraved signatures are usually regarded. and voluntarily give their issues one feature Com mon to spurious notes. The engraved signature of the Treasurer and Re. ;doter are attested. by the imprint of the seal of the Treasury, while the engraved signatures of the offi cers of the bank are unattested, unauthorized, and dangerous. The effect of this mantles cannot be otherwise than pernicious. Though the bank committing the wrong cannot take advantage of it to repudiate its own issues, other national banks would not be obligedAo receive the notes. The issues of national banks ate receivable for all dues to the Government except duties on ImportS, yet the Government, through any of its depositaries or officers- may de mand a legal attestation to these engraved signs tures before receiving the notes. I may do the same before receiving them when mutilated. I shall cer tainly, do all in my power to diseoerage the practice. F. CLARKS, Comptroller of the Currency. Drexel Sz Co. quote : New United States Bonds, 1881 109346109% if Certif. of Indebt'ss. 98 88 9935 Quartermasters' Vouchers 96 a 97 Gold 140 @l41 Sterling Exchange 1623/111164 5.29 Bonne, old Mg/2103X 640 Bonds, new 102,340100,4 1040 Bondi 99 A14* 90 :4 Raton of Stocks, June 10. TM /PUBLIC BOARD. 310 17 El 6 204 e5eh.1931,1 100 McClintock-100 23/ 1000 Densmore —mesh 109 2)f 160D0nkard........ 11 15 los do . 2 3 4 100 Keystone . blO 2 100 St Elebolas. —cab 134 2 200 MIL Sr Logan (irk 2X HO de 194 1(0 McCrea & 1.3 h Run. -k 100 d 0.... .......b6l 2 Ho Jai one 83; 100 do 400 do .L 3 94 209 Wei t 234 MO 0200111 D CALL. 11'0 imam •.......... mi 300 2.0va1.................... 200 Atlas ............ • ••• 0 •• •• 06,131:10 do •••• ••.. 2 4% 76 Do Din Tark.-...--.. 1 44 , 100 Atlas •••••••••2 days .66 300 Caldwell ......b439 2XI MO Royal. •-. bl X 100 Da1ze11.—............ 594 2CO do b 2 X 400 do ...........—...• 8841 300 St Wyk— WO aft 16 1.41 40C Densmore ......... IXI 100 214 Tank • • ....bl6 004 400 Drinkard ............. I 11000 McCrea Jr Oh Han. 100 Jersey We 11...» 114 lon wiasiew .... % 100 Soya] •. ........ 1 4 SW) Caldwell MO 23 ICO St/Nicholas 194 200Beystons 030 2 rzonars STOOK .VICHAINGIL 100 Giles 1.44 4(0 880 .4.380 1.441 eo 100 — l%l 100 d 0.... • e2O 100 d 0...• ....Amen 1.3;; 100 Keystone 011,—. 1 81 800 do-- sash 1.81 11.0 Walnut Island.... 23 16 100 Bin Tan— —. 1.44 100 134 100 ........ lIALRI AT Taa Reportia by Nemo, 80//er BBYOIII 100 Beading • YIEBT EOO3ll R 7.80 Tr N. old 100 KO II 8 6-20 Bds.. e.ep 103 N 100 do-- ...COUP 1 0 276 800 City Ife e&P 80N. 22 Penna It •-.....10ts 6474 70 Girard Bk.,— E 2 100 Clawless pref.e.7o 26 100 Bestonvllle 8.....18 100 do : . . sawn 8 0 R eading B. • .116WII 47 800 d0..........1ets 47 7CO 47 loa do .sawn 47 100 do .647 ` ICYLI 47 IEO do OR 47 lig 47 201 pBTW-g rro Catawissa 2A6 Reading 14....zd Ye 47 100 b3O 47 100 do . . . ... 47 2to d 0 .. ." lobi..b 90 47 . . , 200 30 dys 46% ICO do— .. .6 dwn 4634 6 Plot .town 6434 4 0 Sok Alto es 'B2 —773 i 200 Wm Penn.— —ball 1 69 • • • • • • • HO Walnut 1/4 300 hum , Dale...oash 134 300 Rep , tone 0t L.... 1% 130 80 icholas 0i1.... ISi 24 Lehigh Valley.... . • 101003711 BOARD. 490 Big Tank.......10ta IX' 900 Royal P4rolertin• • X 120 Rebut 0i1......... 234 30 Arch. at R.... • 20 100 Restonville R.— 17% coo Sugar Da1a........ 134 200 ErHon Ceol ba 0 600 Densmore ..... 1.74 11X1 Maple Shado.....— 14% 110 junction 011 , 4390 324. 300 do ..... —14 R Wm 60 54 900 Reading 11. iota s3l 47 36001) b 6 2D k0de.1t5.0p.1035.1", 200 Burnettulut • • •••+•• 4 AFTER BOARDS. ,200 Renione 01.1.sseh 100 coal 1ttdge.....b60 10 Ico do .... • . .attwn 174 11310 Reading '9l. —.ewe 1(0.V, BO Ca m dr. Amb R ....123R 200 433 47 40D Walnut Island.... 134 290 Tarr Romostd.b3o 434 SCO Clip go new. d bill. 90 100 Perry Oil • 134 700 d0.......due bill 90% 3"0 Sob Nay tie 'B2 78 SALES AT THE CLOSE, 100 Eck Nay pc4.---- 27 100 Maple Shade... b3O 10 belt , % Mingo 011,"--448 200 1f6E5a4ing.........al 97X OM Devout" 0/1.-.+. 6(0 Anse .60 100 Mlll5O 241 2 The New NOM Pod of yesterday flays : Gold is more active, and the tendon:ly Of quota. Bons Is upwards. The opening price was 13834, the highest ]39%. At the close 13934 was bid. The bank statement shows an increase In legal tenders of five millions, a decrease of one and a half millions in loans, and a decrease of three millions in specie. The banks now hold five millions less gold than three weeks ago. The stock market is more active than for Boma days past Governments are ratherlower, in conse quence ot the anticipated advance la England not being realized at the latest dates: Five-twenties °gond at 1.023‘: DOW loan at 103 ; Sixes of 1981. at 1(9%; ten-forties are strong at 80% and deVen. thirties at 99X090%. Railroad shares are buoyant. New York Central, Reading, Michigan Southern sad Pittsburg being especially in request. Before the first session New York Central was quoted at 9738, Erie at 7734, Hudson River atI,OIX, Michigan Southern at 6334. Tho following quotations were made at the BOard, as compared with Saturday Mon. Sat. Adv. Dec. Q. R. 01. leaven low 34 U. 8. 15.70 soupons..— ... --1022.1 103 -• U. a. 6.20 coupons, new....... 102% 103 D. Ft 10 90 eintrO/Ilk•-••••••••••••-• 803 y ON •• Q. 0, 1)110005011•••••••••-•••—•- •• Tennessee 72 71% 31 .• Rissourl Gs 218% 68 2•4" Atlantic pox 170 X • . De v . York 91% 9134 334 Erie773l 77% % Erie precrxrei.... 83% 83% Hodson 104% •• 99% 93% 34•• Michigan Central.-- +.4119 109% .. Michigan Southern. 04 34 6234 1 4 7 •• Michigan Southern guar......128 126 2 After the Board, Erie closed at 78%, linden at 104%, Reading at 937 x, Michigan Southern at 6434. Later, Erie sold at 7734. U 721374 62 Pbßaddlphia Jams 10—Everting The export demand for Flour is limited ) and the market' dull at about former rates ; sales comprise 2000 bbls extra family at 1f7.74@8.b0 bbl for low grade and good Western. The retailers and bakers are buying in a small way at from $8.2566.75 for superfine; SO for extra; $7.7508.76 for extra family, and so@lo. 50 bbl for fancy brands, as to quality. Eye Flour and Corn Meal. are with Out change. Omarw.—The demand for Wheat is limited, and mica have fallen off; about 300 0 bus sold In lots at f rom memo bit for , reds, the latter WI for prime Delaware, and white at frail 210(0160 any as to quality. Rye is offered at 87@950 for Deli a are and Pennsylvania. Corn is scarce, and prices are rather better; 6000 bus prime yellow sold at 90@ MO % ha, in the oars and afloat. Oats are dull; small sales wore made at 700, but at the Mose buy. era only offered 650 Baas:.—ln Quoteltron there is nothing doing. Holders ask $32 .50 Ip ton for tirst No. 1. COTTON.—The market is very dull. Small sales or middlings are reported at 4313 iff a, alma. GBOoaurae.—The market Is firm at about fOrlner rates. 300 lads Onto Sugar sol Cat 831@8340 In gold, and 50 bbls Molasses at 535? gallon. Coffee Is scarce and firmly held at full prices. Has..--Baled Is selling at $2O Vft ton. Pnovisione.—The market Is rather dull, but most holders are asking an alvance. Mess Pork Is Bolting in a small way at $27@29 bbl, and Bacon Hams at 21@23e V it. Wirismv continues very quiet. Small sales of bbIS are making at 20861/2120 ILQ gallon for Pennsylvania and Western. $136,307,860 The lollowing are the receipts of Flour and Grain at this port today: Flour 1,830 bbls. Wheat 4,600 bus. t3orn 4,800 bug, 0840 3300 buB,- Philadelphia Cattle litarket. Jana 12—Evening. Th e m emo egg sales of Beer astute eeitihtuipat Avenue Drove Yard reaan about - .IP 211 : 1 head this week. The market is vary dull, and prices have declined I@2o 111 lb, with sales of extra Penna. and Western at 17@16c, a few choke) at 200, fair to good at 14@160, and common at from frame lift ft, ac cording to quality. The market closed very dull, within the above range of prices. SKIMP continue dull at about former rates 6000 bead arrived arid sold at from tiegtgo % it, grim, for cupped. Cows are alro dull; about /7.5 bead sold at front s3o 56 for Springers, and 646 tip to 450 41 . head for :%.3proagers lioos.—Prices are without change; 1,800 head soid at the different 'aids at from ill@l3 the 100 Its Let. The cattle on Sale to-day are from the following States : 880 head from Pennsylvania " " Ohio. 820 " " Illinois. 90- lowa. The following are the particulars of the Sales : 85 Martin, Fuller, & Co., Weal, MAN 102 Ullman Sc Co., ' West, 18@200. 28 E Morition, West, 106170. uo IL Main, wenneylvailia, /40180. 70 3. J. Chain, Pentaylvania,l46l7o. 70 Gust. Shamberg, Pennsylvania, 16@tage. 100 Mooney & Smith, Pennsylvania, 158317340. 00 Christy & Bro., lowa, 14@17c. 105 Joseph Mennen, West, 10@l80. 75 P. Hathaway, Lancaster county, 1603170. 80 J. S. Cirk, Lancaster county, 150170. 17 J. Mot:Nese, Chester county, 14@180. 104 P. Morillen, Lancaster county,ls@lBo. . 45 Owen Smith, West, 15@180. 9 W. Alexander, Cheater county, 1483180. 40 Prank & Co., West, 10@l50. SELIMP.—The arrivals and sales of Sheep at Phillip's Avenue Drove Yard reach about 5000 head this week ; the market is dull, and prices are barely maintained, with sales at WOO IR lb, gross, for clipped Sheep. Lambs ara very scarce ; Bata are matting at irom 111408 $1 head, according to oondh Urn and quality, Clowo.—Tbv aarioala ankaalOO Of cows at Phil lips' Avenue Drove Yard reach Room /it 1:9.4 this week. The market is dull, but prices remain about the same u last quoted. Springers are selling at from $204385, and Cow and Cal Lat, from $B5 up to fBO per head, as to quality. Old lean Cows are selling at from $18@25 per head. HooB.—The arrivals and sales of Hogs at the Union and Avenue Drove Yards reach about 1800 head this week. The market is very dull at former rates, with sales at $1.14213 the 100 las net. 1514 bead sold at Homy Glass) Union Drove Yard at from Men the 100 Ths net, NO bead cold th e lips , Avenue Drove - Yard at &OM suata 100 its net. New York Markets, Jane 12. BREADSTIIPPI3.—The market for State and West ern Flour is dull and drooping ; sales 6500 bbla at $5.3505.85 for superfine State ; $6.2006.80 for extra State; $8.8508.50 for choice do.; 85.5505.85 for On periine Western; $6.2006.70 for common to me alum extra Western; $6 6507 for common to good shipping brands, extra round-hoop Ohio. Oats are scarce and 1020 better. The Corn market's dull and 1f320 lower ; Sales of 88,000 bnSbelB at 700820 for unsound mixed West ern, and 8301370 for sound do. Canadian flour is dull and drooping; sales no Ms at $6.30456.60 for common, and $6.85@8.80 for good to choice extra. Southern flour is dull and drooping ; sales 480 bbls at $7.1004,95 for common, and sBol2for fancy and extra. Wheat is without decided change, with sales of 7000 bushels Chicago Spring, at $1.38, and 18,000 choice amber Michigan, at $l7B. FIZOVISIONe.—The pork market is lower. Sales 7000 bbis at 827.75@)28.00 tor new mess, $24 50024.75 for , 63.4 ditto, cash and regular way, closing at 624.75 ; $lBOl2 for prime, ana 0150020.00 for prime moss. The Beer market Is steady; sales 800 lobls at about pli previous pales. out meats aro Steady ; sales 400 at (§4l 124 for Shoulder, and /2iSe for Rama. Th a e Lard market 18 heavy s ; ealea 1600 @ bbls at mg@ WSISKY Is firmer. &ales 100 bb b 3 Western at st 2 05. Tennow Is more active. Sakai 74,000 14 at 10%@ Baltimore Markets, Jane 12. Flour dull ; BMW of 500 bbl& at $7.50 for Howard super. :Wheat firm at an advance of 50 for red. 4%lra has an advancing tendency ; sales of white at $1.93, and yellow at $19C@1.92. Provisions dull and nominal. Whisky dull at $2.07. PHILADELPHIA BOARD OF TRADE Ar - Dusw WHEELER, EDWARD Y.TowtvanzeD, Um OP 'MR MONTH. TIORAOD J. MARINE INTELLIGENCE. POUT OF PitIIA.OELPHIA, JUNE 124 SUN 1t1688.4.89 j SITS Sara .7.21 I 111G8WATER..5.35 Baru Elba White, L00k,12 days from sagas, with Maar to S & Scr Wets i. Brig S V Merrick, Norden, 8 days from uardenae l with molasses to E V Knight & Co. Brig 11 B Emery, Bradford, 12 days from Sava, with sugar and molasses to S & W Brig Ocean Belle, Morton, 4 days from Fortress Monroe, In ballast to Workman fa Co. . . . Rohr Caroline, Fox, a days from New Wel l With mdse to Wtdtall, Tatum, & Co. Solar Rebecca, Ross, a days from Lewes, Del, with grain L Bewl SohrMechanic, Myers, ey 1 day from Odessa, Del, with grain to Christian & Co. Sohr H W Morrison, Crowell, from City Point, In ballast to captain. Schr Emma, Router, 1 day from New Castle, w ith wheat to Jas Barratt. Stealing MIMIC, - Smear, st hours from New York, vita m a im to whiten, Tatum & 06. steamer E N Faltohllde Trout, 24 hotifS from Now York, with mite to W Buird & Co. Steamer S Walker, Sherif', 24 Muni from New York, •witheldae to W Beird & Cu. st eame r Beverly, Pierce, Se hours from New York, with mete to 'W P Olvde & Co. 4 3LEARED. Barks Alex. McNeill, Small, Shediso, John B. PeATOBO ; Walter, Libby, New Orleans, Qom. 11. A. ammo brig J, Da, LI9UiItOII, Gray, Qin E, 600 ADAM , 11 7). • Is, no Big 200 Dtabs.ra.—....l3lo L I-18 100 Ohm Rock—...cash 100 W do g Ig 100 do 1 800 .8 5588 E BD Mtn „„sis 2j4 100 Atlas- -... ---b3O .51 100 80 Richolas...—s29 1.44 B. BOARD OF BROKERS. Co , NO, IV S , Third Ht. BOARD. cash 47 AID. 000 Reading li.lots. t3O 47 100 do !Awe 47 316 104 Lehigh N stk.—lota 64 400 Fulton 0061— lot, 6% 20 do .............. 100 do • b 5 6% 1(0 Big Mountain...". 6 SOO Wm Penn 0i1..." 1% 200 Glenn Bock—Jots 1% 140 Densmore .." cask 1.% 100 Maple Shade.-.b30 Is 600 Walnut Island its 13% SOO Sugar Dale... lota 1) 2(0,1408A ZOO 10,0 do h .au—e7 •••—• 2% 100 Perri( 011...gt0n 1 946 BOARD& 200 Eleatonville 17X 49 DA lint Ins—lots 3ix 100 :latawissa &etaBo 25 2C431013 667.60Tr,2f1F & L.lOO 8 Camden di Amb 8.126 10 d 0.... 126 ICO Felton a51.....66 6 1130 —.....b5 6 ICO do 6 lea 6 IGO do.. oa "F. 6 SOO Big 1 44 100 Atlas-- —.• .. GO 100 Junction 011:66irn ARRIVED. A. Seeder & Co.; Bohr& Jona McAdam, p, Boston; Slnidokson & Glover; Diary Erb:, Portsmouth J. Atwood; Artist, Storm, Rieb,ig Va.; S. W. Bacon; OBlam, Dlckerdon York, Westmoreland Coal Company ; ? tier, Somers, Boston, Oast:ter, Stiokney, ton ; Diadem, Blanchard, Stockton, C ham ; Steamers ffitilville. Realist 1 0t, Whits% Tatum & Co. ; Ands, Denny: d o t tl,t A. Groves, P. Clyde & CO.; R. Wining, Onnalli,Bal Jr. titx MEMORANDA, Ship Garibaldi, /WPM rre ul Wow rOri t , April BB. for San Franoisoe s woe 13Frokort iota S. lea Bark Jule Nicholas, Nloholas , lonte6 Hayden, no date, for St Ago. at e t Sohr Harriet Gardner, iboveland, eleareg alt York 10th bet. for tide port, Ship CI Q Duncan, from Pldadelebta, to, Baraneas wrecked on Abaco Reef, re,0 8 , 54 ,?? um, rated Alit', Wee built at Woolwich in 185,' owned In Boston by Page, Richardson & 4.10, The port of Three Rivers, abolishd b, CoilliOn th e Wth day Of MOM, zoos, e MI y ant NZ) been reopened a an Ontport under tee Do r i' Quebec. FOREIGN PORTS. I BirswoB ATIIES t April 28.—1 n portelap Nil,. (Br), Freeman, ene, dlechPg ; barks D4lllOll, ell, for for New York, ldg ; Sarah A Dog inath, Cann, for Boston, do; Arctic (Br), Lgvett, i : Equity (Br), Betts, for Antwerp, dOi. Guar; 'Hoyt, from Liverpool, dleolPfe for East liIIN Ellen Dyer, Sheppard, ldir ; Oratee, Brlgcm 14 11140, ditch , g ; Lllltan, Makol2, Ul2O i CO/ Jai s.' kleClieat., ertg ; brig Bt A. n o , rera , E ameir .c. New York, Idg ; Geo F kloDormand t , for c e ih! orderB, O. 1 81 ARRIVALS AT THE UOTELB. tiztenfaL Tito Om Miss Lippincott E M T Worthass7Rl,l,4 B T Wheeler y ri t t D J McCormick? yi d Clinton Bogen, go J H McCune; go - W D McCord, gait H G Disbrow W. wr, t• Olen, Aug,D Van Limner Gad H Hill, Prova,' P 0 Ponrd, Cosso r y', Milabson, N u Dwight Roberts& el John E Dewitt, sr H S Moon, Pirni; o , rr MDR/ S I Sant, A Conover k rre E Metals, Ne w re,, B Graff, id R Hoyt, New Yeti E P Meeker, New y, C Newman, New y„,t W A Shreve & wri Joe IA Selfridge, I;t EIwT l Bally, Kw Win Eyre Ann B easbett, Phew! t I H. Seanten, Phea e l4 - }CO R liettoh lion; W New 1 4, Heist H Little, No w Aohbe r K t Co w n Si ffige ft % G it Blanchard, (Jj I 13 Corns'', Net, Y - 1 J M Cornell, New yr, T J Griffin, New fort' Miss Moulton, 'Mahe N Peterson, New rr B Scofield, New yori t ' P 0 Freer% & mr, Iry I A Colber, ?ger, y r 4 Miss Colber, New y IVIY6 T D Wlityht, N t E P 419 Yr; A Onevaiter, Mr Stornuerg 10 N Tattle, New 'Fos 1E Mitchell, New 1:56 0 H Spencer & wr W T Gleason & rry, K Obuldey & k, E T Pillanton & Is, y S T B Maxwell, ' r . Mr Mahe, New 'York W H Spencer & Is,N Eugene B Wileano S J Chambers, N 1.4 Wm Blackburn J 0 Hard & niece, N Y N Plotte, New York Wm Alexander, 'Pa W Meriden, MO, Quebec Mrs Meriden, Quebec N S Platt, Lonieville Col S Somatiefery,Ensela F J Painter • Mrs H Baldwin, N Y Miss Baldwin, N Y Chas Hart, Baltimore W Favill, N Y Jos Watson, U S N T A Newhall, Lynn,Nlass Geo C M Bieholtz, Pa Henry P Baath, N Y S yen &Waage, N 0 - Mrs Van Armmlo, N T Van Arnomige, N 0 Thos Wilson, Baltimore J B Ltppinoott B W Ham, Providence O G Roberta S B Barnets, Wheeling Wm 'doings Parker Cul H B Tltue A S Maxwell, New York W H Yerkes, Norristown D IT Dards= a icily, Ina P A Davidson, Va J B Murray, Washington J R Ridgely, Baltimore N 0 Washington, MO P Gibbons, Keokuk J Margandern, Pittsburg W Wood, New York W B Newman, N Y F G Terry, Memphis 0 J Acton Cincinnati I X Ranter , ' New York JOhrystal, New York O A Friedenthal, N Y G MSimonson, N Y 0 0 Simpson, Boston Zips Simpson, Boston J Aiken, ChoSUis Valley (7 Rogers &V', Maine J F Cake St *Cape May, Geo Christie, N Jersey W H Marvin, New York! O W Brown, New York O T Jones, Cincinnati, 0 Hasbrook, New York E Riegel*, New York W H Coffin, New York H D Brookman, N York W H Akin, New York J Ballerson, Hartford Geo Knight, England MO 01lt - er Stephens, U S A. Thee Connelly, Pa W H Oxley, Pittsburg Andrew Da'sell, Pittebg W J Capps, Norfolk,Va Mrs Butler, Pa U J Waters & wife N J Geo }Whitt' & la, N J S W W Schatille, Pa J Swift, Scranton Jae F Johnston. rei D B Reynolds, NT Frank Williams, N H B FtOmer, Bolton U H. kliekler, Kure, H H Wainwright, Bit R A. Wallace. Mohr NOW Waterhouse, sr B Shepard. ettarlotki J P McGee, Tennls:e J S Tarbell, Montt* E Stout, Reading T Hughes, Beltl Xlse Price, Ba',Bram Mae Pfeteeint, But J E INeall, Baltimore W H Butielgt, Rau Mrs Burlelgh, Kau R D Jamar, Elkton, X; P Brown & la, Oalt A Bnehwiler, Oregon A B Kaufman, Late J B Illordeken, Pewit Joseph A Ball, Pane J H Jones, Hartisoul James R Roberts A Irlaurras, New Lima L N Stodder, • F Hawn, SN F F PatiefFon, Jitte Harmed, ri W F Troutman, F Kramer John Brokman S Hunter, N Yarn G S Poet & la, Patin L A Ellsworth & O H Brunt., N Una David B Rile • J Albertson, Penn , Cleo B Porter, Penn JAMIE W err r FM BF Delano, Brookk; Chas A Kemby, N Mum lai U-rath, N R 9 Bolling, Virgin, A H Bryant, Delete" W Sanas & lare JBasby, New Yore Dr O F Lea% BOW. I John Afton, Banker 0 X Patterson, N e Banner, Altome B Tomlinson, Nes I P Huber, Harrblburg Dr Lefever, Lancaster M Malone, Leneaster W D Duffey, Pittsburg T Santidel, Alabama E S A Thos S FernOn 0 0 Samßur, lowa N Stern, Knoxville, Tenn DI - Stern, Knoxville, Tenn John Holcomb, Wash J Bustler, Jr, Boston John Barr, New York Hatvy Oohen, New York Win B Jenkins, N York Mr Delany & wt, N York, B Moore, Albany T 111 Rogers, Albany W Howell, Now York 0 lIQCh, NOW York B B Grover, N jergby Mad Lotman & child Joseph R linnkle, N N L Longetreet, Lano F B Miller, Baltimore Frank Toby, Baltimore David jeffetey, Boston B Fuller, Boston H W Odon, Jr, R I O R Janitor, New York El X Jones, Boston Wm Dohal•sn N R Campbell, New York P Johnson, Virginia Col J B Patte, Wash H P Clark & la, Wash Wm Manning, Patina Mad Campfeldt, Farb MAllen, Ohio N K Stevenson, Jr, Ten H W Quitgan, N York • Cept W ill Potts John Burns, Baltimore H R Thomas, Baltimore 6 6 alltM J Klilmartin, LOWEIP 1B F Wood, Florida Sami Seem, Pa Abraham Millar, Ear Enos Werkkelser, La Wm ?Quickies, Fuss Semi E Rays, Atka J V Brewer, Angimm Oeoiiyberte, Neca I'M OA. &Shaffner le, P, D/ra Dr J A ()ashram. I Jos Loilehhelm JVI Harris, Rtottaiod , R F Walton & la, V. T Greenfield, es6l '. 1. J. 1 2b Oarilfis W F winks, New'd' E Oliadtrols, Vene Shiste,Merctl. Jae 111 Maxwell, At t . PAS Bello rogi, y, ririviial Pa W Drummond! A Thompson, Nei J F Dodge, USF B H Sprague, NW, Underhill, New P H A Hawke It la . The Et .3" B Markley & on, Pa (3 Buck, Tennessee Mre Buok, Tennessee Mler N 0 Buck, Tenn P Read, Tennessee E Packer, Tenneisee J Mann% pTaw York a'r,O S grits, ktiorgiand T >r Cropper, Obas Vablen, Balt Bobt L rawer, Georgia T Wimberly's, Georgia S Jenkins, Geollilly D 0 Sayler, Allontoria nos II Foreman Theo Pierce, New York G L Doolittle, New York T N Pearne & wf, Oregon Geo J Bolton, Cape May F T Ile.rrtegton, St Louis De Peebles ! New York N Phillips, New York D 0 Jennings, N York Levi Sevester, U S N Lr A Manok, Delaware Capt Robt Johnson, Ps N a Westoott, Maryland Thou Wallace, Delaware The American. H AI Spaulding W H Allen, Books B 0 Spaulding, US A F., I) Halbert , ClorilSe W a (Joe. U S N A S Beetem, WS! P J Hardy, New York it W Gross, Pesos Jos Newman, New York 'John 0 Gill, Pear` r Oregia . 'l] , CI lawmen, MA James Allen, vS N tat 43 Mae, Bethltir , Jr liavemter, Wash M .1 Walla," U S Nallicon, Siivannah. G B Bard, Neil Yuri Edw J Wikam ..... S 111 Irwin, Penni Jas McQuaid, TIV Acto, s Pau A H Hay, Y n ork, Patas M S Nichols, Po ~ t) ,r - Albert it. Davlß, G L J Painter & Mrs R 0 Dolby, PG? M T Quinton Miss E u Rieman, IV, Miss EC J Ham Pr , G L Cron, NNW: D Rork, Wits BV G W Ivins, New G L Rose, New Yid B Helm, NeW Yolk EFBennett, USN A A Yard, U S A R P Steen, Penns W McClelland, Penna. W B Bower, Lancaster J B Coovert John Walker & la .7 B Casey John Beats & son, N J • B T Huntsman, retina B A Newhall, Prov, It I J Creswell, Penna J H English, Penna G M Meller,_Plttsburg J W Boyd, Pittsburg J 0 Tirtmon, PM OWN • • • S R Markley, liscullt Wm Rhoads, Jr, Ps Reuben Warner, Pj D F. Whltenlght &la A W Shcbor, Pa L S Cropper, NAN Wlederbold, PL uc Mrs 0 0 }Wombs , R R Dlaboroneh, Ice Isaac Ilion . , narktO 3amisS Hamilton!, PI . M Si Ozonise, KW Gilbert, Pa N Holmes & Is, Jas Boyce, Fltresur, John Beat, Greserr 3 E Mule Grean:g Et Best, Made, IJohn A. Reynolds, Lu .E Barlow, Mabsuct,,' ;F. S Sllleman Sc 13os M Brlattbell. W Bell, MarYl' lo . Wr Cs al JlobriS t ames, Neyr °apt J W S S Miller J McGregor, New York John Rogers, Tamaqua Jona McGrath, St Louis M Wlkldal, Canton, rinlo Jae Stevens, Joliet, 11l W E Crane, Joliet, In Bodwell. Kansas Lieut. J Schaefer, Canton J W Laughlin, Pa Y McLaughlin, Pa C West, Pittsburg Danl Leidy, Harrieburg H Rogers, St Paul J E Bowen tk. wf, Del ()apt J Stull, Salem, N J John Absterdam, N Y Geo W Porker, N Jersey T 0 Harvard, New Jersey J 0 Jaggard, Altoona Martin Myers, Maryland John H Gosweller, Pa 0 Wood, New Jersey A G Remingob AllettPu Master Manager, Penns 0 E Boyle & eon L id SohaeOr, Maryland s Vi ton. John W Bullock , Levi L BOMB, re' 1 1 ' aco Jb s YdY, M B Hugh o e r s, Pect,l S R Wleler, A G Damllag: David Oran; W o. G 0 Wheeler, N B J Barton Olford , J morrow, kew , O wows-, So Eveh Herrlebuti, J B J A Haye Wright tte , Meryl; JHBBelw,iNkwMN; The Mai Jos L Baugh, Tenn E Boris John R Simons, Wil, Dal W U Noroross N Jersey Jas McConnel l, Boston Jas Harding, New York Geo B Browne Darb y Wm Sharkey, New York Jae AMID, Pew York John Reid, New York John Burton, R Island Jas Cummings, R Isl and Jos H McConnell, R isld John Ferguson W H Turny, Orangev,Pa Jacob W Hannan, Pe meroial. S Wright, W t w Dosuig l i , John Foeik, Smola David Walten,qp7,: Joe Jalllo3l E 0 Hiekreati, 11. Glover, itroo._ B MeinShe s "% Dales A W Neff Nusa E M Novo, J Beerbower, 01 1 4, R W Levis, %.„%. S Parson, w Geo Fisher, Crest The Co Geo Turner, Bridgeport Geo Moreland, Del Co John Brice, Boston James Antes, Penns P Leathern, Penna J H Witherow,Fannettab A Beekett, New Jersey J B Walton, BUM; so J W ()handler, Mester oo MO 1) 'Verges John A Noble, N J. Josiah Wood,New Jersey A Lyon, Port Depoeft li F Hockey, Harrisburg The Bla J Hie Stand, Pottstown C Unbesehelder, Parma H J Heintz dc la, Penna 'r Mlles, Fox Chase Mrs Mlles, Fox Obese Miss Miles, Fox Chase Miss Untesoheider, Pa Miss }Lutes, Trexlertown ck Bear. SJ G DN. ciett S l{l4 o l B : o a t i ll if: a o r : i e:l i n A : e, }l l : at i;; I Ream, liuneb Iler erg orimiiit RRSandt,am Pentl9o, Y Yor. D S GratlY, 10 1 1 ,.3: T Gerborloni rGtiiron ,„, :::. W Grant. 1201 ;10 J George, All& The Bat J R Gabal;Tottatown F Foelker, Allentown J Hannoa% Penns C H KAerr, Lehigh Val F Stogie, Sieglesville E Hope, Frcemaneburg W P Patell, Indiana T Siegfried, A% Chunk . diBol/ 0 John Sterling+ , p T Runtetwo , 0 it Drake, e#l 4 F Itoexwellr The M s Gordon, II S A. W MOO W V Clam New York Tie (Steamer, Now Y9rk Williams, Puma eT Sheaf, 10 Natio:4l l6 w. ID Nautilus, , Avo H Evans 1. .M iL.t , The Marl M Arnold, Philadelphia R ffi tnl ht, Byberry TEly, NW NOMCy hu Jonah Fiala
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers