The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, June 21, 1865, Image 2

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    gitt Vrtss
WEDNESDAY, SUNS 21, 1865.
1111. We MI tin no MON of anonymous commit
uaottkar. We do not return rejected manuseepta.
Ir" Telaatary eorrespondenee is maenad &omen
parts of the world, and espeelally from our dm rent
annisary and naval departments. When used, It wiu
be paid for.
The Conspiracy.
The trial of the conspirators charged with
•complicity in the assassination plot is rapid
ly approaching its close. The counsel for
the defendants have presented their in
genious pleas, and Judge HOLT Will soon
•sum up the case in one of those compre
hensive and eloquent expositions for which
he is justly Celebrated. The decision of
the court in reference to the, individual
guilt of the prisoners will speedily be made
public. Whatever it may be, one great
purpose has been accomplished by this
protracted investigation. The American
people were naturally anxious to ascertain
all the ramifications of a crime that robbed
them of a beloved ruler, and aimed at the
destruction of the foremost men of the Re
public. A free and untrammelled scope
for inquiry was required to unravel a plot
that was as extensive as it was wicked.
The latitude properly permitted by the
Military Commission enabled our authori
ties to explain all the transactions their
-witnesses were acquainted with that bore
intimately or remotely upon the great
crime of the age. This was no ordinary
murder trial. The victim and. the instiga
tors of his assassin were alike men whose
careers will fill one of the greatest pages of
bistory—the martyr, as the type of good
ness ; his foes, as the representatives of in
famy.
Hereafter mankind will know not only
who aimed the fatal pistol, but who fired
the heart of the Murderer that was hurried
into eternity so soon after the death of the
good President he had killed. The most
sacred secrets of the rebellion have been
penetrated. Its damnable machinery has
been dragged into the clear sunlight, where
horror-stricken multitudes may gaze upon
it without further fear of its deadly evolu
tions. We see what horrible and desperate
means were adopted to support a bad cause.
War is fearful enough in its best aspects,
but the rebel leaders did all in their power
to rob it of all its ameliorating features,
and to employ the most diabolical agencies
and systems of destruction. They starved
prisoners, burnt steamboats and hospital;
and endeavored to destroy our cities by
sweeping conflagrations, and to kill their
inhabitants by poison and pestilence. Na
tures steeped in guilt of this character could
easily conquer any conscientious compunc
tions against the organization of a conspi
racy to take the life of the chosen victims
whom,• of all mankind, they most hated
and feared.
These serious accusations are substan
tiated by a huge mass of evidence, bath
circumstantial and aired. It comes from
friend and foe, from our own citizens, offi
cers, and detectives, and from the very men
who were instruments of treason. The
connection between DAVIS and the agents
in Canada, the manner in which they se
cured speedy communication through our
lines, and the official deference of the latter
to the authorities at Richmond, has been
completely illustrated and proven. The
nature of the disbursements of the large
fund deposited by THOMPSON in the bank
at Montreal, has been indicated, and his
payment and employment of robbers, in
cendiaries, pirates, assassins, and villains
of every grade, has been established in the
most conclusive manner. To believe the
bold, bad men, enumerated in the Procla
mation of the President, innocent, we must
believe dozens of witnesses guilty of perjury.
We must treat the positive declarations of
such witnesses as CONOVER, MERRITT, and
THOMPSON, as base inventions from begin
ning to end. We
_must suppose that the
poor wretches, whose fate is shortly to be
announced, did the vilest work of the
agents in Canada, after consultation with
them, without reward or encouragement,
at a time when they knew that inferior
crimes were richly recompensed. We must
discredit our own courts and witnesses,
ignore history, and become as blind to the
crimes of the traitors as a fond and over
indulgent mother is to the petty faults of
a favorite child.
British Championship of Treason.
It is no secret in London that the leading
writers in the Standard and the Morning
Herald (Mrs. GAMY' and Mrs. Hiarns,)
are renegades, who really do not believe
what they are hired to produce. Three or
four wild Irishmen, who sneaked out of
punishment in 1848 ; two or three broken
Scotch lawyers, who filled up years of
non employment with dreams of a repub
lic, and themselves at the head of it ; and
one great Oxford scholar, with such a
bid character that, though an ordained
clergyman and M. A., no pulpit in
the Church of England has received
him for years—these are the men who,
in Lord DERBY'S brace of party jour
nals, declare that Tory principles are the
best, and that the Southern traitors are
"chivalric gentlemen," and the Northern
Ihnonists nothing but, the merest mudsills.
We have already shown what beastly lan
guage, what audacious Billingsgate, these
hireling scribes have employed against
the purest and the best public men in
the late Lnicomv and the present JOHN-
BoN Administration. The London papers
in question are generally believed to be
the voluntary organs or mouth-pieces
of the Earl of Derby. That he has
ever g iven money for their championship
may be doubted. In 1851-'52, and again
in 1858-'59, when The Times was against
him, Lord DEBBY, who then was Premier,
may tacitly have accepted the volunteered
advocacy of these journals, but few can
believe that he ever favored them with his
confidence—that he told them, beforehand,
2,13 Mr, OLKIISTON.II told The Times, during
the present session, what taxes he meant to
reduce, and told it so as to have a leading
article, full of boast and promise, appear
on the very morning of the great fiscal
development in the House of Commons.
But Lord DEBBY, whether in or out of
office, has not vindicated himself by re
pudiating the championship of the 'Stan
dard and Morning Herald.
That " silence elves consent" is an apho
rism which used to be in vogue among the
Hellenes, at least twenty centuries ago.
Thence, it has been generally believed that
Lord Drany's opinions are represented in
the two London dailies already named.
These journals have been strongly, even
violently antagonistic to the Union cause,
as represented, in the late four years' civil
war, by the loyal North. So has Lord
Danny. But when that noble Earl, whi
lora "the Hotspur of debate," said that
Jespensoa DAvis had created a great
nation, the two London dailies made a
point of personally complimenting that
arch-rebel, as if he resembled a Paladin of
yore. The enthusiasm with which Mr.
Wackford Squeers eulogized his ill-con
ditioned boy as being "next door to a che
rubim," has been equalled in these later
days only by the vehement adulation which
the 'Standard and Morning Herald (the for
mer, by the way, being only a cheap after.
noon reproduction of the latter,) have
always showered upon the Jupiter Smiths
.of the South ; even now, when that episode
of the attempted escape in crinoline and
veil, cloak and jack boots, has made " Pre
liddent" DAvrs very thoroughly ridiculous
andpunromantic, the Derbyite twin jour
pals--" Arcades ambo I" —consistently
persevere in praising him, As a matter of
course, their abuse of President Jontison
is in something like an equal ratio of their
praise of the "stern statesman," who tried
to evade capture by sneaking off in his
wife's crinoline.
President JOHNSON, therefore, is but an
di ignorant, rough, fanatical tailor," thirst
ig for the blood Of Davis, resolved to have
Wm condemned by foul means ; using
forged evidence in order "to murder his
old foe," and so on—more vehement than
polite. But Bons is represented as a man
Who had done his duty—whO "had de
fended the cause of freedom and of right
with almost superhuman energy,"—and
now, in confinement, when his chief in
dignation has been at not having as fine a
table at Fortress Monroe as if he were a
voluntary guest in a first-class hotel, de--
daring that the dignity of . his bearing is
somewhat princely.
In a later issue of the Morning Herald we
find a comparison—antithetical, after the
manner of FLITTAROIi of the mock and
the real President. " The one," JEFFER
sON DAVIS, to wit, " the champion of in
dependence, the undaunted patriot, the
bigh-souled and generous statesman, who
let his enemy go free when he had him in
his power," and the other merely "the
Tennessee renegade, untrue to his country
and false tolls principles when he foresaw
in the end that the North would win,
is now enthroned as the complacent
conqueror, whO, as 'President of the
North, is breathing out threatenings and
slaughter against traitors to the Union."
If rebellion and perjury be independence,
then, and not before, has DAvrs been its
champion. If treason constitutes " the un
daunted patriotism," then is DAVIS a
patriot. Yet, though we have carefully
watched the events of this Mir, we have
never yet heard of one instance in which
JEFFERSON DAVIS "let his :enemy go free
where he had him in his power." Most
certainly, with the Libby Bastile under his
nose, it did not happen in Richmond.
"Every one," this same London paper
proclaims, "is heartily sorry for Mr. Davis,
and regrets his fate." Not so, in this
country. He took up arms to perpetuate
Negro Slavery in the United States. He
failed, and he must pay the penalty of his
treason:`:' He may have the opportunity of
showing how " brave " he is, when, if
condemned as a traitor, he has to meet
death on the scaffold. It would not sur
prise us, as he was haughty in power, such
as it was, to find him pusillanimous in
sight of the gallows- His friends of the
English newspaper press, we take leave to
say, are not taking, the surest steps to have
his great crime treated with leniency.
Joseph Paxton.
The architect of that modern wonder of
the world, the Crystal Palace of /851, is
reported dead. He was born in 1803, and
was the seffnth son of a small farmer at
Milton-Bryant, in Bedfordshire—essentially
a very English county. His early educa
tion, which was not much, he received at
Woburn free-school. His taste led him to
be, a gardener, and he held a small situa
tion at Chiswick, a noted suburban fancy
place near London. when accident threw
him in the way of his employer, the late
Duke of Devonshire, who, taking a fancy to
him,removed himto Chatsworth—that great
Derbyshire show-place. known as " the
Palace of the Peak"—where he soon was
installed, with a large salary, as forester
and chief gardener. At Chatsworth he
raised miles of glass hot-houses, edited
various horticultural and botanical periodi
cals, and obtained so much of the regard
and friendship of his liberal ducal employer
that, for many years, both of them travelled
together over the greater part of Europe,
garden-viewingand p_ l
ant-collecting. Re
married one of the two nieces of Mrs.
Galloon; the housekeeper at ChatswOrth,
through whom he obtained a large fortune,
which was doubled when the other niece,
dying unmarried, bequeathed all of her
money to her sister. He invested much of
this money (estimated at $500,000) in dif
ferent railways, and had the good fortune
to pass unscathed through the speculative
times of 1845.
While attending a meeting of the Mid
land Counties' Railway, at Derby, late in
1840; he heard of the proposal to build a
Palace of Industry, for the World's Fair
of 1851, and, on his way to London,
plumed and sketched the Crystal Palace,
using ,glass instead of brick and mortar_
His plan, thus hastily conceived, reached
the Commissioners after the day prescribed,
but was immediately adopted. The sheet
of red blotting-paper on which, at Derby,
he made his first sketch, has been care
fully preserved. The Crystal Palace was
PAXTON'S entire design, and those who
have seen it know what a marvel it was.
At the suggestion of Prince ALBERT, the
amateur-architect was rewarded by re
ceiving the honor of Knighthood from
Queen Trerortra. But he was recognized
before that, having been elected a fellow
of the Horticultural Society, in 1826 ; of
the Linnrcan Society, in 1838 ; and of the
Society of Arts, in 1850 . . Nor was he
without foreign recognition, having been
created a Knight of St. Wiadimir, by the
Emperor of Russia, in 1844. He was
elected M. P., for Coventry, in 1854, and
represented the same constituency ever
since. The writer of this notice can boast
of a friendship of over thirty years with
Josurn PAXTON', and can truly say that he
never knew a more honest, ingenuous, and
unassuming man. In politics, he was a
strong liberal.
The Grain Elevator.
The grain elevator located at the Dela
ware terminus of the Pennsylvania Rail
road, near the Navy Yard, was completed
nearly two years ago, but has never yet
been used. It is a wonderful structure,
and will presently form an important fea
ture of our commercial organization. It is
built on the most approved plan, is of im
mense size, and capable of holding a vast
quantity of wheat. The great granaries in
which JOBBITE stored the products of Egypt
during the years of plenty, were doubtless
insignificant structures compared with
these modern storehouses of agricultural
wealth. All its machinery is moved by
steam, We will not undertake to describe
it in detail. The general plan of opera
tions will be sufficiently indicated by the
mere statement that whole trains can be
loaded in the far West with grain, in cars
expressly adapted to that purpose, without
the aid of bags, barrels, or boxes—that on
the arrival of the cars at the elevator, the
raising of a slide will deposit their contents
in vaults underneath the building—that the
machine will at once hoist these deposits
and place them in such vats as may be
be selected (the term vats meaning
cylindrical tubes ten or twelve feet in di
ameter,and reaching from the floor of the
second story nearly to the top of one of the
highest buildings in our city,) that when
ever it is desired the same machinery will
discharge the contents of any one of these
vats by a long movable canvas chute,
directly into the hold of some such Liver
pool steamship as is now lying at the
wharf, or any other vessel that may be se
lected. All this can be done by no farther
human labor than that involved in the
simple task of so regulating the machinery
as to fill or tap the proper vats.
The economy and superior convenience
of.. similar establishments have made
Chicago the great centre of the grain trade
of the West, and equal prominence may be
given to onr city by the structure of which
we speak, when the contemplated arrange
ments now rapidly approaching comple
tion are in full operation. We have supe
rior railway channels of communication
with the West and with Lake Erie ; we
have an ocean line of steamships running
to Liverpool, established on a solid and
permanent basis, and we can transport to
or from the interior, in the most convenient
and inexpensive manner, exportit or im
porta of all kinds, including grain. The
want of these facilities almost transformed
us from a commercial into a manufacturing
city. Now, since we have regained them,
proper energy and effort would do much to
restore our foreign and internal trade
without Weakening our manufacturing
pre-eminence.
A FAIR ILLUSTRATOR of the poverty and
destitution to which some of the wealthiest
planters of the South have been reduced
by the rebellion, is furnished by the letters
from the South written to the Freedman's
Friend, a journal published in this city as
the organ of the Friends' Association of
Philadelphia and its iridnity, for the relief
of colored freedmen. - There is, for in• '
stance, a colony of NOMA uow galtlyat
ing the farm of a certain BAYER WYNNB,
for their own benefit. He has lately
sent word to his former Slaves that he
would feel obliged if some of them
would "save a barrel of flour for him
when he should come home, which will be
next autumn, if he can raise money enough
for the journey." A freedman who had
lately seen the wife of this impoverished
planter at Danville, N. C., made the fol
lowing report of her position ; " The last
time I saw my Mims, she was picking up
chips and cryin'. She said her niggers had
all gone off, and she would have to cook
for herself, and she did not know how."
Bad as is the condition of some of the
freedmen, they are inured to toil and in
spired with the hope of a bright future,
while many of their old masters find them
selves stripped of their fortunes, and inca
pable of making diligent exertions to se
cure a livelihood. The dignity of labor
will presently be understood in the South
as well as in the North.
THE LINCOLN HOSPITAL.
CFrom the if. Y. Commercial advertiser. .inne M. 3
A triangular portion of the plain east of the Capi
tol, at Washington, containing' about ten acres, wee
set apart for the largest of the military hospitals
which the rebellion has nailed into existence, save
one, at Philadelphia. It bears the revered name of
our late chief magistrate, and hes accommodations
JOT three tholleand patients. At the apex of the
triangle is the administration building ; it Js Ma
pled for emcee, dispensary, linen, knapsack - and
other rooms. On lines parallel to the administra
tion building are the wards, ten on each side,
twenty feet apart.
ATTIEDIDANTS THE WARDS.
Of the sixty-two beds In a ward eight are occupied
by attendants, a ward•master, two night watchers
and four nurses or dressers with a "sister's care ;"
the balance are for the patients. The attendants
are isoldiera WhO have sufficiently recovered, al
though not yet fit for the ileid. Besides these, fe
male unites have boon hired in some hospitals; bat
have given so much dissatisfaction that their tiSe
has been relinquished. If hired women have proved
failures, volunteer nurses have proVed a success
and a blessing. Two of the hospitals, Lincoln and
Stanton, have been eared far by the Sisters of Chari
ty, while other hospitals have been tended by 'adieu
from our homes.
SISTERS OF CHARITY.
In Lincoln hospital there are twentv.tive Sisters
of Charity. The whole number In the United States
fa about one thousand. who are under the direction
of the Lezarite, in Emmetsburg, Maryland: All
the medicines which are administered, save by night,
are given to the patients by , the Sisters.
The laudable ladles whO quitted their oomforta.
Was homeS to minister to the wants of the wounded
and dillealled rebilore or the republic, have also
proved sisters of charity. Muth of the credit 01 thle
effort 11 due to DIM Dix, Among, those who are
held In grateful remembremce, for more than Night.
Inuale devotion, are two lades of New York, the
Misses Doremus.
THU MIGNON'S.
Each ward is visited morning and afternoon by its
setueon, who sends to the surgeon in charge morn
ing reports. The surgeon, besides prescribing for
the patients, dressing or superintending the dress
ing of wounds, in which he sometimes Ass the aidef
a medical cadet, makes out a diet and stimulant list.
The surgeons, each in turn, act as medical Wiser of
the day, whose duty it le to make an inspection of the
entire establishment in theforenoon; and agate after
tape, when the lights are extinguished, and finally at
midnight. He Is required also to see that the dietary
regulations are properly carried out, and to re.
port every irregularity. He must likewise hold him
self hi readiness to attend to patlehtS Whine ear-
E. oo lls may not be within can , and to all night onus.
The surgeons act on examining boards to decide on
the fitness of patients for duty, furlough, or dis
charge. The surgeon in charge is always a corn
miseioned officer ; being a full surgeon, he Is of the
rank of major, and exercises supreme military, as
well as proiessiocal control, over the several thou
sand inmates. These Include always *leveret com
panies of the Veteran Reserve Corps, who are needed
for provost duty in such a place. An exoellant band
and dress parades serve to enliven hospital ufe.
TB POLICE OP TUB HOSPITAL
If you had been there lately you would have ob
served a man in dress, with his head and
face bandaged.- Who is It 1" It is the detective.
His profession wising all. Having been met by
night beyond the hospital precincts, he was fear.
fully pommeled. Stealing in the army IS lees conk.
mon than swearing and lying, only because these
vices are more facile In execution. A detective,
then, in such an extensive establishment, does not
enjoy a dnecnre.
HOSQIJITOMB.
The annoyance of mosquitoes is in this locality a
most Serious one so serious that Dr. Hacgowati re
cently called attention to the need of a fanning
machine for hospitals, pointing oat the peculiar re
quirements, nolseleSsnesS, and cheapneSs. The
Sanitary Commission agreed to award a prize to
the inventor of the best contrivance for accomplish.
ing the desired purpose, and appointed Dr. Also.
Gowan to adjudicate in the matter. Several wards
in this hospital have been assigned for the use of
those who wished to try experiments. At considera
ble expense to himself, T. B. Bunting, Esq., of New
York, has caused a contrivance to be put up in one
of the wards, which admirably accomplishes the
work Of fanning the whole -side of a ward without
noise - , keeping away MOolltilleell and JINN, the ma
chine being so simple that one convalescent may
work
CONTAGIOUS DISEASHIS.
A large part of Lincoln hospital consists of tents
arranged in rows at the base of the triangle ocon
pled by the institution. Into these tents are sent
all typhoid oases; also, all who are attacked by
erysipelaS, hospital gangrene, or oth,or oontagiOns
diseases.
DETAILS OP THE HOSPITAL
In the large triangular enclosure arethe bhildings
ommooted withthe hospital. Flret,the lannelrYswkiloh
although it has the aid ef a steam engine, requires a
large number of women ; next are the engine room,
and an elevated lofty tank, which supplies the
whole establishment with water. There are the Sis
ters' quarters, and their chapel. Passing these you
come to the mess-room, with accommodations for
dining a thousand patients. Adjoining are the ape-
Mal diet 'Molten, where Is prepared, under the su
perintendence of a Sister, the diet adapted for those
who are very low, and the general kitchen ; from
the former a miniature railway extends into each
ward, through a covered passage that connects
them.
The cars, containing hot viands, are pushed rapid
ly from ward to ward, and Served out before they
can cool. Near these the stewards and clerks mom
Next is traroporating room. Thence you come to
the commissary building, whenoe supplies are
issued. Near by is the sutler's. The stables,
wagon and ambulance houses, come next, and then
the contrabands! quarters. Some two dozen ne
greet! find employment as scavengers at $l5 per
month, with rations. They gladly avail themselves
of the school Christian benevolence has opened
in the hospital chapel for their children. Then we
have photographic galleries—one where our bronzed
heroes get taken for the sake of absent friends ; the
other for surgical purposes. Also, sometimes after
death. Alas! here is the dead-house! The mo
ment a patient expires he Is borne thither, and the
next day, unless the body is claimed by friends of
the deceased, it is borne on a bier by a detachment
of soldiers, a drummer and a Woe boy playing the
Head March," to the front of the hospital chapel,
where a service is held. The little procession then
goes back to the dead•house. The case is ex
amined, notes are taken of the result, when the re
mains are deposited in a decent coffin, and carried
by night to the great cemetery, Arlington Heights.
The other buildings of the enclosure are barracks
for the Veteran Reserves, two buildings for sur
geons, a guardhouse, barber-shop, carpenter• Shen
slaughterhouse, hose house, and a few tatt•htlilel ,
lugs.
IVELTGIOITS INISTRucrioN
. .
The chapel is supplied ny a regular chaplain, but
the chief labor devolves on a member of the Chris.
tian Commission, Bev. Mr. Plumby, a most devoted
Man. Daily prayer meetings, frequent preaching,
and almost constant visitations at the bedside of the
siek and dying, give little rest to a zealous spiritual
laborer. A. readimproom, a temperance Society,
and occasional readings or lectures on science, at *
ford varied entertainments to the intelligent patri.
ots who constitute, I am glad to say, a large class.
It is no exaggeration to say that in one hundred
private soldiers of Our armies, you shall find as
many men who may be styled intellectual, as in the
same number of Moors, in any other army. Among
the soldiers who are most active in Carrying on re.
ligions meetings at Lincoln Hospital is Sergeant
Boston Corbett, a man who is held in high esteem
by all his superiors for bravery and amiability. Let
me close this letter by , copying what he wrote the
other day in a lady's album "Andersonville, the
blackest spot on earth, was made bright and glo
dons by the saving presence of God. His provi
de:loe also was manifest In delivering me from that
place, and making me the agent of His swift retri
bution on the assassin of our beloved President,
Abraham Lin:min: l Rosso.
Zhe Pennsylvania Bead Near Nashville.
A correspondent of the Pittsburg scants, writing
from Nashville, Tennessee, sends the following ilst or
Pennsylvania soldiers burled in the graveyards of
that vicinity :
885. Francis P. Sohivner, Co. 311, 9th Pa. Cavalry.
806 J. S. Tatter. Co. 0, 77117 Pa.
299. George L. Butler, 9th Pa. Cavalry.
158. John Essen, 00. A, 77th Pa.
765. John Halpanny, Co. K., 7th Pa. Cavalry.
896. Abraham Troy, 760 Pa. Cavalry.
It. Harpies, Co. P, 4th Pa. Cavalry.
337. Charles Parke, CO. AL 9th Pa. Cavalry,
Abraham Plummer, Co. E, 9th Pa. Cavalry.
177. Judson Knight, Co. 0, 7th Pa. Cavalry.
H. Timmins, 00. B, 77th Pa.
O. K. Smith. Co, E, 7th Pa. Cavalry.
Samuel Groff, 7th Pa. Cavalry.
. Samuel lfflOolbaugh, Co. I, 9th Pa. Cavalry.
L. 0. Blondin, 610 Pa. Cavalry, aged 36
years-reeerved in Signal Corps.
D. Dart:a, Clo. K, 76111 Pa,
C. Ditzell, Co. E, 77th Pa.
Daniel Washy, Co. F, 78th, Pa.-klUed twelve
miles from Nashville, on Cumberland river,
T. Rocky, Co. G, 79th Pa.
J. Brown, Co. E, 7th Pa. Cavalry.
G. M'Cready, Co. G. 78th Pa. .
'A. Voutgamer, Co. IC,l7tl6Pa.
163. T. For, Co. E, 7th - Pa. Cavalry.
0. Mau% Co. E, 7th Pa. Cavalry.
S. Snider, 00. D. 7th Pa. Cavalry.
D.E. SOolr, Co. H. 69th Pa.
1575. A. Snow, Co. F, 77th Pa.
1858. R. I.VOrevack, Co. B, 78th Pa.
2376. D. Murphy, co. a. 76th Pa.
2960. S. P. Henryeoo. K. 78th Pa.
3207. W. B. Conner, Co. H, loth Pa. Cavalry.
3288. R. MlCanghlin, Co. D, 78th Pa.
3356. J. Batt, Co. K, lath Pa. Callalry.
3338, .I..Greashead, Co, 0, 7th Pa. Cavalry.
The following are the names of Pennsylvania 1301.
Were burled in Triangle Graveyard, near Nashville,
which were taken on the 21st of May, 1885:
5196. Win. Buchanan, Co. B, 25th Pa. Battery.
5000. L. L. Angles, Co. H, 78th Pa.
5368 Wm. Reader, 00. E,7Bth Pa.
6821. J. S. Rickey, Co. 77,15 th Pa. Cavalry.*
481/. B. Hestsell, Co K, 16th Pa. Cavalry.
4807, Flinlintley MlShitne, CO, a, iota Pa. Cavalry,
died July 1,1863
4949...1. Lewis, Co. G, 15th Pa. Cavalry.
4819. H. B. Fretts, Co D, 15th Pa. Cavalry.
5738. P. AL Barber, Co. F, 109th Pa.
6801. A. E. Wortman, Co. E, 78th Pa.
5708. T. J. Plotts, Co. B, 7th Pa, cavalry.
5919. W. Develln, Co. D. 78th Pa.
5624. J. Hebler, CO. B, 75th Pa.
5991. D. MlQulston, Co. H,78111 Pa.
4953. G. Downey, Co. G, 78th Pa.
4458. D. D. Clark, 00. 0. 7th Pa. Cavalry.
4856. O. Pelserger, Co. 1, 9th Pa. Cavalry.
6941. IL Keesen, Co. B, 28th Pa.
6039. J. A. Huthan, Co. A, 78th Pa.
6787. A. Goodman, Co. C, 45th Pa.
6090 . J. ArKleleY, Co. F, flth'Pa. Cavalry.
6187. J. Coalhouse, Co. 0, Bth Pa. Cavalry.
7065. S. B. Rider, (Jo. G, 50th Pa.
6540. H. Bookies, Co. 0, 147th Ps.
8936. M. C. Bower, Co. K, 78th Pa.
4016. W. Charles, Co. D. 78th Pa.
3916. C. Hipeman, Co, 1, 78th Pa.
282 a. Mortimer, Co. B. 785 h Pa.
3659. D. Dugan, Co. F. 78th Pa.
5743. H. David Size; 00. L, 9th Pa. Cavalry.
5017. John D. Shields, CO. A, 78611
4815, H. H.
4814. N. Bavlea, Ce. C, 7611 Pa. civalry.
5766 . M. Thotnits, Co. 151.77 Pa. Cavalry.
4329. Woollies , Co. G. 78th Pa.
5792. S. A. Minton, Co. K. 78th Pa.
Arrest of Geo. A. Treuholm, Rebel Secre
tary of the Treasury.
Geo. A. Trenholm, Mg., was arrested at Oolum
ble, S. U., by Lieut. McMartin, of Gen. Hatob's staff,
and arrived in this city on Monday night. He was
placed IA the custody of Maj. Pratt, provost marshal,
and committed to the city Jai. It was supposed he
would be sent to MOM flu 4 iniMeAlately.eCernier
tow Courier, Who
TEL PRESS.--PHILADELPHIA;
The Lancaster hiteitlyencer of Monday has the
following:
"The good people of this City—snob of them, at
least, as purchase and reed Forney's Frew —mast
have been slightly astonished at the following very
abort but important announcements which appeared
In Saturday's edition of that paper:
" 'The new theatre in Lancaster is nearly
linisbed.
The weather is very warm InLancastsr. ,
ti muz puzzle any mat, woman, or child to tell
where the foundation of our beautiful new theatre,
so nearly ilniihed, stands ; bat all hands will readily
discover the truth of the important announcement,
that the weather 15 very warm In Lancaster."
We did announce, on Saturday, that "the new
theatre in Lancaster was nearly finished," bat said
nothing whatever about its being " beautiful? and
believe what we announced, as we were so informed
by a gentleman from that city ; consequently the
imputatton is upon Laneasterian Math, not on
ours. As for the weather being warm,it was warm;
very warm, In Lancaster.
A meeting of the County Committee of the
Union party of Lancaster county was held in Lan•
cater city on last Saturday. The time for the
holding of a county convention to oleot delegates to
represent the county in the Union State Conven•
Hon was fixed for the lath of July, but the meeting
will not take place at that time, inailinthM as the
time of the meeting of the Union State Convention
has been postponed. A time for the meeting or a
Convention for the nomination Of Candidates for the
county Mem to be filled at the eleotion this fall
was also agreed upon. It may become necessary to
change the time of the meeting of this convention
also, In order to snit the time of the meeting of the
Union State Convention.
-- We clip the annexed from the Harrisburg
Tekgr apt: Southerner was arrested at Me•
Obanlosburg, a few days ago, charged with robbing
a farmer of Cumberland 'county. Singe his arrest,
the accused has made a confession, In which he
states that an organized band of Southerners, ogled
the White Moe:B,le scattered through Pennsylvania,
for the purpose of robbing the people. Papers were
found on his person giving the names and locations
of different individuals In the valley, as well as a
list of the towns and distances between them, from
Williamsport to Lancaster."
-A red. mint weesll Is compratttnnhaAptveletim
growing *seat In thelloinlty of York. ' While the
grain Is Ida milky stage the insect smite the Jule.
therefrom, thus rendering it worthless. Some fields
are largely Infested with the vermin. As many as
ten or twelve weevils have been found imbedded in
a single head of wheat. The Insect has a partiality
for bearded wheat ; indeed, we ate not aware that
any have been found upon smooth stem; bat they
will doubtless attack every variety of this esculent
grain.
While 00ine Of theca enthneleStii were proSpeo
ing for the precious 010314 enango county, they
discovered the foundation of 17%=-7111611 - must
have been built there years ago by the French.
Over the waits StOOd the stump of a chestnut tree,
two feet in diameter. Near the house was a kettle
cut out of a solid rook, which evidently had been
need for smelting metals, either lead or sliver, which
Is supposed to abound in that neighborhood.
-- It seems almost incredible, but it Is true, that
there is a house in Norristown, a handsome and
convenient house, which stands empty, amid the
'great ocarofty of dwellings, because it has the repo•
tailor' of being haunted. ThIS in the year or grace,
18651 Do we progress I—Norristown lircraid.
—The Reading Record says: ,4 Onr town presents a
very dull appearance jolt now, owing 0 the fact
that all the farmers of the county are busily engaged
gathering their hay crop. In a few weeks we fumed
a general revival of business.
-- The bonds for fifty dollars, Issued by Alle•
gbeny Minty, for recruiting prirpOsee, will be re•
denied to the amount of $30,000 on th e let of Sep.
tell:mbar.
While a little girl, eight years of age, was
placing pine on the track to be flattened by the
wheels, at Williamsport, one day last week, she was
run over and killed.
The Norristown Flerafd suggests that the new
hotel shortly to be erected in that borgugh be celled
the Lincoln House, in memoriam Of our late Prod ,
dent.
The meeting of the Union Montgomery County
Convent!On Will take place on Monday, July 17th,
in Norristown.
The Pittsburg Gazette justly ridicules the die
graoeftd sumo which took plate in Councils Thurs
day last.
Another hotel thief was arrested in Pittsburg
on Saturday.
Two Germans were drowned in Pittsburg on
Sunday. They were out rowing and the boat upset.
A New York theatrical company is playing in
Reading.
On Saturday afternoon last a boy waif passing
through Fulton street, Brooklyn, with a bundle of
new clothing, when he was stopped by a man who
desired him to carry a note to some person in the
upper part ore building just above, and volunteer
ing to hold Ids bundle for him until he returned.
The boy agreed, but Mild find BO One in the build
ing to take the letter to, and, on returning, found
that the gentleman (1) had disappeared with his
bundle.
A exit is reported in the New York Court of
Common Pleas, brought by a lady, who, tendering a
bill In a store in payment for articles, was detained
there until the money was asoartained to' be genu
inq now sues the proprietor for falser imprison
=ant, claiming *lO,OOO damages. A 'verdict was
rendered for defendant.
Levin E. Strangb*., Boum of Maryland well
known throughout that State as an active member
of the Union party, and for some time 'Peet editor
and • proprietor of tht.,..beeitioencer, published at
Cambridge, Maryland ? died at the relidenoe of a
relative in Baltimore or , Bunday.
A soldier was droWned in a singular manner
from a steamer, near Madisonville, Ohio, hit Sa•
turday. The steamer was blowing her whistle ; he
was asleep at the time, and, being frightened at
the whistle, leaped. overboard with his blanket
around him.
The Boston Post says : Butter sells at twenty
cents per pound la Philadelphia." It butter is Sell
ing at twenty Dente a pound In this city, we do not
know it. Perhaps the Post will inform us where it
Can he purchased at that price in Philadelphial We
pause for a reply.
The stately elms, on the United States hotel
grounds, Saratoga, are all destroyed, and the pre.
miser, a few days since the pride of the village, and
the key to Saratoga, are now a mass of ruins,
'Marred bricks, and broken furniture.
-A file of the Richmond Examiner, from the
commencement of the war to the evacuation of the
city, has been sold to a literary institution In Boa-
Van for dye hundred dollarii.
Commissioner Lswis, of the Internal Revenue
Brireau, decides that Odd Fellows' travelling cards
and withdrawal cards do not require a revenue
stamp.
-- The Cincinnati Commercial states that tlfty.two
thousand soldiers have passed through that pleas
within the last ten days, and that thirty, thousand
more are coming.
Last Saturday the "Indian store " of a Moo
Davis, at Niagara Falls, was seized, as the custom
house oftherhad detected the young woman's mo
ther In smuggling from Canada.
-- A highway robber, whose depredations in Pots.
wattOnlie County, lowa, have been rather frequent
of late in that quarter, was captured iaat Sunday
and hanged at Council Bluff.
The MOO beautiful city of Jackson, Miss, is
now Callon .obltnneyollbt,” an expressive of its deso
lation.
4 John Xorrisey, the prizelighter, has made a
match at Oincinnati, to engage in a prize fight for
e 2,000.
It Is stated that seventy-flea Mesas of , property
in Richmond, Va., have: been already libeled for
confiscation.
-- A bear, weighing over a hundred pounds when
dressed, was shot at English creek, Atlantic county,
N, J., on the 3d tusk.
-Ilia said that in his plea fa' pardon ex. Vice
President Stephens still Insists on the righteous
ness and necessity of slavery.
Dir. Edwin Booth is stated to be now domiciled
at New London.
Copper mining haS recently commenced at En•
field, Connecticut.
There are 6,000 hogsheads of tobacco at L7neh
burg, Va.
A negro in Cincinnati chopped a man to death
With a hatchet for invading his domestic peace.
Two conviots escaped from Sing Sing on Wed
naniay night last.
is so prevalent in Rolla, Xo., that a
genuine panto prevails.
The largest of the Indian tribes at the Wen Is
the Comanches. That tribe numbers 20,000 in all.
A love-sick young man in BrOoklyn committed
suicide on Friday last.
Robberies in open daylight in Richmond are
becoming quite frequent.
Dr. Manning, as titular Roma* Catholic Arch.
bishop of Westminster, will have authority over
twelve suffragan bishops—those of Newport, Bir
mingham, Newcastle, Southwark, Salford; Shrews
bury, Nottingham, Liverpool, Plymouth, Clifton,
Northampton, and Beverley. In his own immediate
diocese, which includes all London north of the
Thames, as well as the counties of Essex and Hert
ford, there are two hundred and fourteen priests
with one hundred and seventeen churches and
chapels.
The Royal Academy of Sciences, Letters, and
Fine Arts of Brunette elected M. Louis Wolowskh
the eminent economist, member of that body. The
Academy also eleoted as members M. - Thiers and
M. Leon Bernier:oG M. Wolowski had already ob.
Wined the same honor from several of the Made.
mita of Europe, and 18 president of the Academy of
Moral and Political Science.
-- The celebrated rebel elder, the Abbe Staid&
Una Moose, and his lieutenant. Francis Wilet7n
ski, who were recently arrested, have been brought
before a military tribunal and convicted of having,
among other criminal acts, both formed part of dlf•
ferent bands of rebels since the commencement of
the ineurreetioe. For this they were condemned to
death, and hanged on the 23d of May.
-- A new literary venture Is to be added to the
numerous publications which have of late Sought
the public favor in London. The Argosy 18 the
name of the journal which is to number among its
writer* Mr. Clbsrlee Readeoniee Dinah Moloch,
and some of the Temple Bar. writers. '
The French Emperor, whin at Genstantlne,
vited nye Arab chiefs to dine with him, on which
occasion he Bald he desired that every Arab in the
army, by services and Intelligence, should be able
to rise to the highest grades.
The Dante Festival has been brought to &Mae
with unabated spirit, and with a uniform success in
an its phases and scenes. Not a single sof:Meet or
mistake, not the slightest disorder or brawl, have
saddened Or troubled any portion of the festivitisol.
In the debate on no French' Budget, M. Thkia
described the financial condition of France as de..
plorable, while a EL Vintry stated it to be
satisfactory. We think that M. Thiene was right.
In the Spanish Congress a proposal for eleetoral
reform has been brought forward, but the Govern-.
moat opposed the proposition, which was Saber
quently rejected by HO against 105 Total. '
The Emperor of Austria has arrived at Path,
and I# oat IQ have stated that, in a ompname with his
STATE ITEMS.
HOME ITEMS.
FOREIGN ITEMS.
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21, 1865:
own Wish and that of the country, he would Submit
to the ceremony of coronation as Ring of Hungary.
—A mounted battery of English volunteer artille•
ry is in course of formation, to bear the title of “The
Antler:ie . and to be composed of gentlemen more or
.1560 connected with literature.
Contrary to what is Stated In an oMoial organ,
it was believed that the session of the Pruden
Houses of Parliament would last tome weeks
longer.
—lt is announced that Carrera, President of
Guatemala, Is dead. Like Juarez, the republican
President of Mexico, be was a fall.blood
and a man of much
There were in Parte Hee strikes Of workmen In
contest with their employers—locksmiths, carriage•
builders, tailors, hatters and dyers.
Communication with Boors del Rio and the in.
Ceder 01 Mexico is cut off, In consequence of the
capture of Monterey and caroargo by the Justiati.
The side of M. de Mortara picture gallery has
closed in Paris. The total amount realized 18
1,666,8201 (upwards of £67,000 )
The town of Toulon 18 going to present the
Prince Imperial with a handsome chateau, to in.
habit when he Is big enough.
A Roman Catholic Church has been, opened at
Nagasaki, Japan.
The second volume of Omar, It 10 Said, will
appear In Paris In the autumn.
The demand for labor in Canada 18 much
greater than the supply.
The Empress of Austria MAWS to hold her
Court at Eisaingen this summer.
Obituary
DEATH OV TUB MILXICIAN GENERAL D. Kamm.
Dommeno. 7 —General D. Manuel Doblade, one of
Mexico's most distinguished generals and states.
men, died yesterday afternoon, at a quarter to four,
at his late residence in New York, aged titty•three
years. General Doblado was born in the town of
F'edre Piedra Gorda, in the State of Guanajuato,
in the year 1819. AS early as IBM, General Dahlia°
gave indication of diplomats, and 'forethought.
Mooning With hie teacher the war Whin his iio•
vent:sent was to wage against Texas, he .Main•
tabled that Mexico was In danger of an invasion
from the United States and that the best policy for
Mexico would be to Bell Texas to the Americans.
Even before being atlinitted to the bar he was elect.
ed as secretary to a departmental convention of the
State of Guanajuato. Belonging always to the
:liberal party, D. Manuel Doblado has served his
country faithfully In the capacity of Governor of
the State of Guanajuato, anti secretary and subset.
rinently judge' of the supreme Clonrt Hie ability as
a statenuan was well known to the French, as was
proven by the following fact: Marshal Bassin.
wrote to him, inviting him to join the empire In its
scheme of intervention in Mexican affairs.
General Doblado removed some time ago to this
city, where he was still serving his 'Government at
the time of his death. He will. be deeply mourned
by all his republican countrymen, Tor In him they
have lost their right hand. It has not been decided
when his funeral will take place, as Senor Romero,
the Mexican minister, has been telegraphed to at
Washington, and he will take charge of his remains
on his arrival here.
.13.8ATH Or Silt GRABLES E. Gney.—Prom Eng
land the death is also reported of the Right Honora
ble Sir Charles E. Gray. Like all of that ilk hwhas
hem, from time to time, a number of ministerial and
dtploatatie posts ; but he IS beet known in America
as Commissioner for Lower calms& in MS. Sir
Charlie Gray died at the patriarchal age of eighty.
A Disastrous tire in Brooklyn
A very disastrous fire occurred at about three
o'clock on Sunday morning, at the corner of Frank
lin and Ohio streets, Brooklyn. The property de
stroyed was a planing mill, belonging to the box
factory establishment of illr. David Onodwillie. It
had heerwiloSed during the winter, but commenced
running about two weeks since. The building was
two aria a half stories high, and covered about half
a block. The rear portion was built of brick, the
front being constructed of wood. Two new rotary
shingle machines had recently been put up. Besides
these, the building was filled with valuable ma
chinery, including a steam-engine, which was en
tirely destroyed. In and around the mill was a
large amount of lumber, which was not spared.
There was no insurance upon the property. Mr.
GOOdwillie estimates that evo,ooo will not cover the
damages, The fire-alarm telegraph Seems to have
been at fault in not giving the alarm. Persona
living in the immediate vicinity of the fire strove to
do so, but did not know how to proceed. So little
attention has been paid to the location of the boxes
that no one at the fire was able to tell where one
could be lowed. So the building fell in before the
alarm was given. Several houses across the street
were blackened, and a residence in the rear of the
mill was much damaged. The cause of the lire is
unknown, but it probably resulted frorn heated
bearings coming in contact with shavings. The mill
caught fire in this manner last summer, but was ex
tlngniehed by the employees. No other cause can
be assigned for the conflagration.
BETURNSD 00143TBDIIRATES IN Riousrown.--Over
five hundred Confederate prisoners arrived here
3 esterday evening, from Point Lookout, consisting
plinelpaily of Alabamians and Virginians. We
understand that the Confederates at Point Lookout
are being sent off alphabetioally. Those low down,
of course, will be the last to get home. Their
friends must, therefore, be patient.
One hundred and slaty of the Virginians were
quartered last night on Capitol Square. The
United States Government furnishes them with both
rations and transportation to their homes.—Rscl.
mond Republic,l6lll. •
A HEALTH ORTICSR 8011 RICELMOND.—The medi
cal director has recommended to the Governor that
the present sanitary condition of the city requires
the Immediate appointment of a health officer. Tao
Governor perfectly agrees withilhim as to the im
portance of having, at this time, an experienced
medical gentleman, whose duty it shall he to loves
gate the sanitary Condition of the city, but regrets
that he has no power to make the appointment.
He, however, in his reply, suggests that the military
authorities should appoint one. Dr. William A.
Spence, formerly of Westmoreland, has bean re
commended for the position.—Ricamond Republic,l6.
MIES Anne. E. DICKINSON IN RaJECMOND.-11118
Anna E. Dickinson, well• knoWn as a lecturer and
politioban in the chief Northern oities,.reaohed the
city, on "a tour of observation, Thursday evening,
and stopped at the Monumental hotel. Yesterday
evening she changed her quartetB.to the Spotswood,
where she is nely stopping. One who has created
SO Marked a senstititaa in a vets monopolized entirely
at the South by the lords of creation, cannot MU to
attraet attention while here. Miss Dickinson, we
presume, will pay the Libby, Castle Thunder, the
negro schools, and the battle -fields a visit during
her sojourn,—.Ridesoned Republic,l6th.
Psnearcren Penn.—A few days dote we re
oeived, from the preserving house of Prof. Benjamin
A. W. Nice, A. M., in Cleveland, Ohlo, several
bunches of fine Catawba grapes. This fruit was
taken from the preserving house in Cleveland, on
tho 11th, and brought to Philadelphia In a carpet
bag but, strange to relate, lOU nOne of Br 'flavor
by the journey. The grapes arrived perfectly safe,
and were as sound and as luscious as if fresh plinked
from the vines. Not only grapes, but every other
kind of fruit is preserved by Prof. Nice, at Cleve
land.
CITY IMIDIII3.
GBICTIMICOWS FI7RNISBING G00D5.311% George
Great, 610 Chestnut street, km jest added to hie
superb stook in this department a handsome assort
meat of new things,'lnoludlng novelties In Shirting
Prints, beautiful Spring Cravats, Summer Under
clothing, &o, lits celebrated ss Prize Medal , ' Shirt,
Invented by Nr. John P. Taggart l lB Unequalled by
any other in the world.
Matadi:RS I 1 FAHRIONABLIt OLOTRING.--MeSSIS.
o:Somers & Son, No. 625 Chestnut street, under
Jayne , s Hall, have the best stook of Clothing for
the prices in Philadelphia. Their fits are unsur•
passed, and their selection of goods unequalled. Oar
returned soldiers will find this the'plarie of all others
to get suited in oivilianst dress at fair and reasonable
charges.
Tim BEST FITTING SHIRT Or TEE AGE 111 " The
Improved Pattern Shlrt,” made by John C. Arrlson,
at the old stand, Nos. I and 3 North Sixth at. Work
done by hand in the but manner, and warranted to
give satisfaction. Lib stook of Gentleman's Filrnlsh•
ing Gbods cannot be surpassed. Prices moderate.
PnoToOZIETHS PROM Liam BY GIITBRUNST,
Mr. F. Gutekunat, 704 and NO Arch street, him just
published photographs, from life, of various sites,
of the Rev. Dr. Vaughn, General Pritchard, (the
captor of Jell Davis,) General Collis, GeneraiS
Meade, Howard, Fisk, and other distinguished per
sonages, duplicates of which can now be had at hie
counters.
CONFECTIONS. HOTHOUSE GEAFES. &O.—Mr. A.
L. Valliant, Ninth and Chestnut, manufaotures the
finest goods in his department. His Chocolate pre.
potations, Roasted Almonds, French and Amerloan
Mixtures, and a thousand other novelties, are un
equalled. His delicious hothouse Grapes and other
fruits aro very tempting.
ELEGANT EATS YOE Lemus.—The Mixloan san
hats, made by Wood & Caty, 720 Chestnut street, are
indispensable to every lady about leaving the city
for the country or Bea-shore. Prices moderate. En
tire Mock of straw goods selling off below Cost, to
close the season.
RATICIVO ROBES of every deeoription for gale by
John C. Anion, Nog. 1 and 3 North Sixth *Meet.
BIWA= BU O T - ms MIL LIM/OWL—Prom Messrs.
Warner, Miskey, Ss Merrill, we yesterday revolved
a Metes bust of our late President; Abraham Lin
coin. The likeness has been well preserved, and
the bust le an ornament that would greatly adorn
the parlors of our loyal citizens.
Enna STEOK 14. Ctn.'s Promos (little need) for
Sale at bargains. These ?bums have been used dn•
ring the past winter and spring at tioneertd, at pub.
lie Wins, and In private houses, and show no marks
of nse. price $2OO leo than new ones of same style,
atough an new ones have been rednee'd $75.
je2l.BBt J. E. GouLD Seventh and Chestnut sts.
A Gomm Wanninia.—The golden wedding of
English and French peace is to be celebrated In the
Crystal Palace, fifty years having passed slue the
two Whine were at war. All the chief dignitaries
upon both sides of the channel will be there, and all
will wear elegant and comfortable garments, made
at the Brown Stone Clotting Hsu or 'oakum &
Wilson, Nos. NM and 805 Chestnut street, above
Sixth, Philadelphia.
Ho I 7OR TRH SBA•SHORH OR 001711 TRY.
Ladled' , Stamina Hate.
Ladles' Sundown Hate.
Ladies , Chinese Sun Hate.
Ladles' Twilight Hate. Lie2l et*
H. OKAWAIRTISR, 54 N. Eighth, below Arch.
Maxurriam Sirsnowner—These aelebrated Hate
for aea.idde and °entity wear axe the Nag for the
season, as exemplified by the quantity daily sold,
only at OaAhh7lB OATLYORD & SONe.
j 01044 Continental Hotel.
Tun 'worm is cautioned against an imitation of
the Photograph Of Lieutenant General Grant, the
original of which was taken by F. Gutekunst, 704
Arch street. It is a bad copy. The original will be
known by my imprint on the back. jel6.OE
PiHWesT STTLRA STRAW AND SOFT HATS' fos
gentlemen and youths, now open •t
ORARLSB OAKPORD & 8018',
Pallet Continental Hotel.
A RAIIN MAXON TO Mess NoNNT ON A SMALL
Cerrren.—The Petroleum Vapor Stove and Etas-
Light Company, 810 Aroh street, is now in maoceea•
ful operation, and is ready to grant agencies in an
the prinolpal counties in Pennsylvania, Delaware,
sad New Jersey. Valuable county rights may be
rewired by applying at once at the office of the Com
pany, 819 Arch street, *7-n
rou WANT to get rid of a Cough or Oold, or if
in need of a remedy for Bronchitis, Asthma, or any
Pulmonary Complaint, try at once Dr. Jayne's Ex
pectorant. Prepared only at 249 Chestnut at. jel7 at
Itnef -Eta, AND OATARREi intoomminlly treated
y J. Dunk M. D., Mullet and Strulet, ma Pine et.
Artilinial 'yea luseritd, No obargi f4g
111081 LE.
TEO IniViVaL OP TRA.DP,
The following, from the Mobile Newt of thefetb of
Tune, Is of Menet : "It affords us pleasure to 1 /9 -
cue the advancing strides which trade it age 112
taking In this city. A few short weeks ago Safi IVO
had, in a business point of view, seven Sundays In *
week ; but Mille have taken a great change. The
change of currency and the atrineeney of the Mili
tary organizations made It at first somewhat diffi
cult to effect mercantile transactions of any note,
mid those who could ran In goods and provisions
found ready sale and enormous profits ; meanwhile
it was discovered that money was far more abun
dant than at first supposed. The removal of
military restrictions Imposed for the time on trade,
and the unseeing of the port, caused an immense
Influx or goods of all descriptions; In fact, a cargo
met with ready sale almost as soon as it landed.
The city trade alone offered the most tempting in.
ducements to merchants. Day by day new stores
are being opened, and desirable stooks of goods are
being thrown on the market. The opening, of the
flyers and the resumption of business by the rail
roads has added much to the trade of the city, but
nothing as yet compared to what it will be when
boats land their cargoes at the wharves of Mobile,
and said cargoes are sold in this market and shipped
thence to such other cities of the world as the
shipper may wish. Just now the merchants of New
Orleans are enjoying a good trade and doing a very
lucrative business. The old through trade system
Is paying. Commercial affairs Cannot be arranged
In a day, but we expect in a few short weeks to note
the arrival of many cargoes from the North, and
the flocking to the city of merchants and planters
from the interior, and Mobile again snuffle her
busy, beetling oommemial
FINANCIAL AN U comMERCIAL
There fe very little movement In the stock market,
and with light sales prices remain at about last qui} ,
tailor's. Government loans were somewhat firmer,
notwithstanding the decline in gold. The Rats
sold at 110%, an advance of % ; the 6.20$ were steady
at 103, and 10405 at .96. There were no company
bonds offering, of any account, and the sales were
consequently light. There was little Said in oily or
State loans; old city 6s were steady at 97. The
railroad share list Showed a failing•eff in prices;
Reading declined to 47; Norristown to 54%, and
Catawissa preferred to 25%; Pennsylvania Rail
road contlutted steady at 55%. The oil Mocks are
very dull, and prices show no sighs of improvement.
City passenger railroad shares were firmly held
and in fair demand, with sales of Restonville at
16%; 49% was bid - for Chestnut and Walnut; 64 for
West Philadelphia; 18% for Arolostreet ; 11%
for Race and Vine ;-s1 for Green and Coates ;
28 for Girard Collage ; 13 for Ridge avenue
11% for Lombard and South, am 11 for Union.
Bank 6100k8 are inactive, the only sales being of
Figment , and Mechanics' at 120. DO wag bid for
North America; 49 for Commercial; 28% for Me
°hanks' ; 46 for Penn Township; 51 for Girard; 29%
for ELanufacturers , and Mechanics', and 56 for Cora
Exchange. Canal shares continue very quiet, but
prices are without any material change. Lehigh
Navigation sold at 54%; 20 was bid for SChuylkill
Navigation common ; 27% for preferred do.; 116 for
Morris Canal preferred; 7% for Susquehanna Canal,
and 29 for Delaware Division.
The following Is a comparative statement of the
earDlnge of the north Peonsvivanla Railroad OOM
Pang
Earning In May, 1804....
" 1805....
Decrease
The board of managers of the Philadelphia and
Erie Railroad Company have rejected the act of
assembly passed last winter, authorizing the nom•
puny to Issue a preferred stook for the purpose of
completing sale UlifiDifibed work on the line of the
road, and in the harbor of Erie. The board of
managers have made satisfactory arrangements
with the Pennsylvania Railroad Company for tire
completion of the work.
The following were the quotation for gold yea.
terday at the hours named:
10 A. M 100 v
11 A. Al
_ _ l39y
137
1 P. X 138
8 P. X 148
4 P. X lassi
The subscriptions to the seven-thirty loan, re
ceived by Jay Cooke yesterday, amount to $2 , 117,.
4C0 3 including one of $200,000 from Third National
Bank, St. Louis ; one of $60,000 from Second Na
tional Bank, St. Louis ; one of $lOO,OOO from Third
National Bank, Cincinnati ; one of $lOO,OOO from
Second National Bank, Boston; one of $lOO,OOO
from First National Bank, Wheeling, Pa.; one of
$106,000 freer Ninth National Bank, New York ; one
of $BO,OOO from Filet - National Dank, Dar Moines;
One of $50,000 from first National Bank, Marlboro,
Mass.; one of $102,000 from Union National Bank,
Chicago; one of $lOO,OOO from N. Holmes & Son,
Pittsburg; one of $lOO,OO from National. Bank of
the Republic, Boston ; and one or $lOO,OOO from
National Bank of the Republic, Washington. There
were 1,487 individual subscriptions of $5OOllOO each.
The Central Pacific Railroa.:l Company of Cali
fords, having completed the first forty miles of
their track, have received from the United States
Treasury the amount oft bonds authorized under
the act of Congress of July 2, 1862, entitled “An
act to aid in the construction of a railroad and tele
graph line from the Missouri river to the Pacific
ocean, and to Rode to the Government the use of
the same for postal, military, and other purposes ;"
and are offering the securities for sale through their
agentB New York. The bonds are issued in de.
nominations of $l,OOO, and are payable thirty years
after date, maturing 4anuary 16, 1805. The interest
le at the rate Of 6 per cont., payable half yearly in
lawful money. The issue and delivery to the com
pany of these bonds constitute ipso facto a first
mortgage on the whole line of the railroad and tele,
graph, together with the rolling stook, Natures, and
property of every kiaft. And Azt the event of the
refusal or failure of the company to redeem Said
bonds when required so to do, by the Secretary of
the Treason, in accordant* With the provisions or
the act of July 26, 1862, the road, *Raton the swat's,
functions, immunities, and appurtenances thereto
belonging, and also all lands granted to this coin.
pany by the United Statee, which, at, the time or
default, shall remain in the ownership of the said
company, may be taken possession of by the Seem
tary of the Treasury for the use and benefit of the
United States. So that the bonds have not only the
ordinary guarantee 'of United States securities, but
have also the speoltio pledge of the largest railroad
enterprise on the continent.
Secretary MoCull:Mh having 00111pleteil the ap
pointment tif commissioners to investigate and re
port upon the sources of internal revenue, the nom•
mission has taken up its quarters at the New York
Custom House, and will commence its business this
week. The members of the commission are: Ste
phen Colwell, Philadelphia; S. S. Hays, Chicago;
David A. Wells, Troy ; with E. B. Elliott, of Bos
ton, Secretary.
At the tobaooo-growers , meeting in Louisville,
last week, it was decided to hold a national oonven
tion of tobaceagrowers on the second Wednesday
In September. One subjcct to be considered Is the
Just method of taxing tobacco. A committee was
appointed to correspond with the tobacco men in the
different States, and make- arrangements for hold•
fag the convention.
Confederate bonds show no signs of improvement
abroad. The English press is grumbling over the
fact that the rebel loan has already entailed upon
the nation a loss of ten million dollars. Seeking for
a scapegoat, they muse Russell of having led them
Leto Confederate semnities, by his constant riser•
tions that the Government Of the South had duly
constituted itself, and that a restoration of the
Union by force or arms could not be imagined.
The Iron and Steel Association, at their resent
meeting in Chicago, adopted a resolution in . favor
of the use of the ton of 2,000 pounds! - in all transao•
tions. The discussion upon the Subjoin Showed that
through the action of the internal revenue laws and
the regulations of many railroad companies, 2,000
pounds is in large use throughout the country, that
many lron•Workers now employ no other ton in their
accounts.
Dining the week ending June 17, there were
fcrty three Lew national banks organized with an
aggregate capital of $10,962,871.
A national bank has been organized in Savannah,
which is the first institution under the national oar
unify act establlshed in the State of Georgia. It is
called the A. First National Bank of Georgia."" Its
omeers are—L. 0. Norvell, president, J. Spivey,
cashier; Francis Sorrell, T. W. Lathrop, Robert
Erwin, Noble A. Hardee, and Henry S. Fitch,
directors. •
The Controller of the Currency has decided that
no certificate authorizing the commencement of
business should be Issued to anybank while its State
circulation exceeded the amount allowed by law for
a national bank of the same capital. This deolsion
does not prevent banks from perfecting their con•
version by filing papers and depositing bona; but
certificates of authority will not be sant to theta
until the circulation is brought within the proper
limit.
The following la the amount Of Nal tranapOlted
ever the Lehigh Valley B,allroad for the Weak end
ing June 17'1000;
wens. 1M.01401381,7. TOTAL.
Where shipped from. Tons Owt Tons Owl Tons Owl
Hazleton . .... 1,742 03 • 81.997 01 83.739 01
East Sugar Loaf. •8,148 C 6 49.408 14 46,646 00
Blount Pleasant 617 10 10,817 06 11,131 16
Jeddo 1.27616 - 47,26100 98,476 16
Raleigh. ....... 1,8 , 6 00 23,983 06 24,839 ea
Bbervale Coal Co, ..—..•••• 263 01 11 841 02 12 124 03
Stout Coal Co 686. 12 18,316 17 18.931 (0
Connell Bidge.• 1,675 e 8 43,609 00 40.382 08
Beek Mountain. 1,201 06 27,121 7.0 98,52.7 16
New York alld Lehigh,. 73919 .20.78218 31,522 16
Honey 8r00k....
.. —. 1 890 14 41.086 11 40,71 7 06
German Penns . Co al Co.. 489 16 18,017 12 /8 487 88
Spring 14.7,6.11 34 776 11
Coleraine .. 18.812 14 18,892 14'
Beaver Meadow D. .. 607 08 607 06
Lehigh Zinc •—• . 6,1139 01 6,095 04
John Conners 162 19 1 657 03 1,710 01
Mahoney 158.11 73,340 04 73,629 16
Baltimore 695 16 12,069 01 12.009 (6
Franklin 641 01 9,957 e 0 10,498 01
Consolidated ... ... 19.808 18 19.808 16
279 03 9,737 11 10.006 14
Lehigh and _Bagemehanna 688 02 10,893 01 11,68103
Landmeasee's 121 12 6,989 16 5,612 08
Wilkesb'e Coal & Iron 00 941'13. 8,60312 4,645 06
Lehigh COO and Bay. Co, ..164. 07 164. 07
Other nipper. .. ... 10 196 10 203 00
Warren Bun-- —••• 22 11 22 11
Totall2 698.192 04 616,644 16
Correspondlat week last
year...-. ... 00 676.830 16 711,1C0 16
Decrease— ..... 06 77,638 11 94,465 19
Statement of the Delaware Dipision Oat tim
pani of Poll2loV.Vellia :
Tolls received for week ending 17th inst... 1117,2130 17
Do. corresponding week 11680 year.. 0,145 02
IxLoretta, for the week 1 0 135 11
Total'amount tong to Suns 18,1864 $68,080 90
Total amount toile to Jun. 17,1866 49,084 76
Decrease in 1885 4517,628 15
Drexel & Co. quote:
New United States Banda, 1881 109340110
. 1 " " Certif. of Indebt'sg. 98 IfIP 99
Old U. S. Certificates of Indebtedness. 993;1fg 99;,7
New U. S. 7 3-19 Notes ssragtoo
Quartermasters' Vonohers 96 (1 97
Orders for Certificates of. Indebtedness. 98349 gg
Etold_ 188 1139
1.51. 15s
1 0 2341210 RM
/ 02 - 1 .08
98 gog
gtorlling Exonall110..•••••
6-20 Bonds, Old
6.20 BOndo, DOW
10•!0 Bonds
,ne, June 20:
O BOARD.
820 Bolsi. 81
200 Olen Rook 4.X
200 d 0........... » 4X
100 2 44
800 011 °reek d< 03. blO IX
bales of Sto4
_ THE PII111•1
200 Caldwell. 2,‘
'MO do eb 2 44
200 Jersey Weil IN
foo do ... . ... ...• • 1,%
220 •,..«
ITO Ma ple bhado• .•• • 1M
.1°4.11Y
Olive Breach 1-IS
KO Blg.Tank 128
CALL.
100 Wei 154
200 , Wattial Island..., 1
200 Bllllllioß Vera.-- 1
203 Walnut Island d9O .94
200 .94
100 .94
500 Tionesta. bgo
200 Bit
100 min,0.•..... •
100 Keystone . blO 1Y
300 D 221841111....“. 190 .09
t(K)
SSCOAI
100 I,X
Tank 134
2eci Dunkard .81
100 tit 12 1 44
200 Timm sts ..... ..blO .81
100 do blO . 81
200 blO .81
000 do.-- .81
110 gala nt bland...ll-16
2001-15
200 do 1
I,OIQ X
BALES AT THI EBOIILAR BOARD OF BBOKSRB.
Reporttd by Hewes Mittsr, & Co., No. IND S. Third St
BEFOIDI BOARDS,
NV Beading It
47
FIRST BOARD.
10(0 II 86s. '81.....a0npD033. 203 /anew Well 1/‘
IWO II 8 6-20 a.... .eouplo3 100 Iltallheawf -_!•• 2
BUD V/3 10 40e.cah coup 96 100 Caldwell 011 2 / 4 .
100 Celts 6a, 01d...C&0 87 810 /auction Oil Own
7CO d0..87 100 do
1(0 PO /1/119 - • • oak 400 Atlas ...•....,•••••. .66
do.---- 55X I bll 60 • • ell I 0.114 •68
]CO Catewlwas Pref... ABC 100 Reading R 4736
100 Olen Nock Of 100 do-- 4739
690 do• b 8 el/ 1 100 . do • 47./i
100 ..... X. 100 cash 47X
DETWSEN BOARDS.
_
200 Maple 86ad5....6.20 111nd01)11.....b30wa 21i
000 do Wi1233 liastonville K.. lots 1036
100 do. . . .... 13X 000 Caldwell.oll..cash 2.16"
Dradrard, %NDReading 47
ee Mt Nicholas ].44 , 100 dn. -
Lshfah lgav stock.. 04%100 do,
30 do ...•.•« Iwo- (to. • 402
0 Norristown 21% t 100 Solzyl Prof .13.18 27
SECOND BOAID;
Penns 65X4100 *loading 8. »»a2O 43; . 4
6 .. 60%400 de . —.453 46%
100 Fehl 1 :env Prete%) 27%1103 40%
2%0 Walnut Island-1 1 16'110 do.. —6W46 55
66 4 Farb mesh 8k....120
400 ~ . ... 66 ISOOTetr Homestead.... 4
WO Reading 46% 200 do . 4
100 do •—•—•-•- - - 630 46% 1 160 0 - orn Planter. 2
APTIM LEDIEI.
100 Green Mountain 8.161 S O
100 St Nicholas Oil 1%
103 Excelsior 661 100 Reading 11, 45 46%
NO Green Mountain 8 8 16. IGOBoyers Oil, b3OlB-100
100 Beading B .000 Jersey Wall ••• 1%
MO Walnut island 11-1 6 6 1 1(0 47
100 Sanction . --16 2%1
The New York Poei of yesterday says :
The loan market Is Inactive, and abundantly sap•
plied at 806 pet cent. Governments are steady.
Gold le lower today ; the opening price was 139;
the highest 189%, and the !Omni 187%. At the close
188% was bid.
Peters the board, New York °antral was quoted
at 91%, Erie at 74%, Hodson River at 108, R ending
at 98%, •Bliohtgan Southern at 62, Cleveland and
Pittsburg at 66.
The following quotations were made at the Board,
as compared with yesterday
, re Mon. Adv. Dee.
17. II 6e. coupon 110
II S 8.48 coup One..--..........-10334 USX ..
it. S. 6520 cannons. neter.......19334 103% • • hi
IT 8. 10 40. coupone.•..-...... 964 913,%
c'eritiloates 999', 99,0 • • •
Tennessee 70 70%
Idissouri 71 0.956
Atlantic Mail- •. . ..... 172 X
New Ton 91% 92% • •
Brie .. 74 ............ 701 • . 134
Erie pxeterred. 8311 82 ,Ye • •
Hudson 140 - 234
Beadin ..
0214 91
Michigan 11 0
1
Michigan bouthern..-........ elk. 63m, . I,f(
Atter the board the marker rallied, and . Bnbse•
queutly declited. At the cloce Erie was offered at
74, and DlMllualt Southern at 6134. Later, Eriese
covered to 7231.
semi. Weekly Review of the Philadelphia
The produce markets are very dull to-day, and
prices are unsettled and drooping, owing to the de
cline in gold. Flour is very quiet. Wheat and
Corn have declined. Cora is without change. Cot
ton is in fair demand, but prices are rather lower.
In Iron there is rather more doing. Petroleum is
less active, Provisions are very firm, but the
sales are limited. Whisky is without change.
Wool continues quiet atlabout former rates,
The Flour market continues very dull, and holders
are more anxious to sell. The only sales we hear or
are in small lots to the retailers and bakers, at
from $6@6.60 per bbl for common to good superfine,
$8.75@7 50 for extra, $7 76@8 76 for extra family, and
$0a10.60 per bbl for fancy brands, as to quality.
Eye Flour and Corn Meal continue duilat about
previous quotations.
1 198,899 El
58,182 98
. $2,758 00
Gamy. —There is very little demand for Wheat,
d prices have fallen off; about, 8,000 bushels sold
in lota to the
at from mono. p baghel far
Mir to prima reds, and white at from 2000220 e /ti
bushel, as to quality. Rya is selling in a smati
way at 900 It bushel. Corn is dull ; small sales of
mime yellow are making at 980 bushel. Oats
have declined; 6.000 bushels Peneylvanla and
Delaware sold at 72#1660, Closing at the latter rats.
Pnovierons are rather firmer, but the transact-
Rona are in small lots only. Small Sales of Mess
Pork are making at $28@29 bbl. Mess Beef is
held at $17022 g bbl for country and oity.paaked.
Bacon, as we have noticed for some time past, eon.
dunes rather scarce; about 100 molts of plain and
fancy eanvased Hams sold at 19 y,e3se qg h, Sides
at 1643190, and Shoulders at 163,10170 16. Green
Meats are without change. Rams in pickle sobi
at 18ii:@200 /I it, and Shoulders in salt at 1440
lb. There is very little doing In Lard ; Bales of bids
and toe are making at 198200 /I it. Butter continues
null ; small sales of solid.paaked are making at
from 16@250 19 it, and Goshen at SO©sic 'ft Small
Sales of New York Cheese are making at 15@170 fR
lb. Eggs sell at 28©30c dozen.
M./STALLS. —Pig iron Is more active, with sales
of No. lat $35 ton. Scotch Pig is quoted at 110
@42 ti ten. Manufactured Iron continua quiet at
about former rates.
Baas.—QUereitrek le In . good demand; email
sales of let No. 1 are making at $32 50 ton. Tan-
Ears' Bark Is selling at slB@2o ig cord.
CANDLEB.—TaIIow Candles continue quiet at for
seer rates : Adamantine 65 are firm at 23@250, and
Hotel at 27@280 lb. In Sperm Candles then Is
little or nothing doing.
Corrine continues scarce, and there is very little
(Meg ; small lots of Rio are reported at 18@22y4•i
a lb, in gold.
cokr..—PrleeB continue unsettled, and the mar
ket Is very dull; cargo sales are reported at Port
Richmond at from s6@O 75 $1
COTTON is In fair demand, but prices have de
clined ; about 200 bales of middlings sold at ela
lb, cash.
'neg.—Codfish are selling at B%GO /I lb. Mack
erel are rather quiet at from $24.g25 t) b 1 for shore
is ; $14015 for Bay do ; 817 for snore o. 2.3 ; for
Bay do, and 02.5001 ft bbl for large and small
No. as. •
FEATHEML.-SELIOS are making at from 601/630
ib •
FAVITS.—In foreign there to Wiry little doing;
small sales of Orangell and Lemons are malting at
36010 O boa. Dried Apples are rattier dull, and
quoted at 7@tior lb. Pettotles muffling at 200220
tor quarters, and is§27o % lb for halVes.
NAVAL STOEBB Continue very quiet, with small
BMW of Rosin at $74311. bbl. Spirits of Turpen
tine is selling in a small way at $1.745@1.80 id gal
lon.
OlLS.—Lard Oil is Doane; small sales of winter
are making at 11155a4.613 VI gallon. Linseed Olt Is
selling at 81.1861.22 qii gallon. Petroleum Is less
active, lair demand, with
and
at alias° for orude,
51603,10 Jur en....i..1n band- and Wand If gallna
for free, as to qualltf,
Rios.—Small sales of Rangoon ate making at 93i
@No, and Carolina at 11@i2e ID.
SlCYLlS.—Flaneed is selling, in a small way, at
62 5062.36 bn. Clover continues scarce and doll;
we quote at 68400 IF 64 Its. Timothy ranges at $3O
3.50 per kn.
SPlll.l7l3.—Brandy and O-Inaravory quiet at about
former rates. New England Rum sells In a small
way at $2.30©2 35 gallon. Whisky continues dull,
ard Prices are unsettled ; about 200 Ms POtt/tBV.•
Mita and Western sold at $2.06@2.09 gallon.
SlMAle.—Holders are Jinn in their, views. Small
losB Of Cuba sold at from Maga in :gold, and Porto
RICO at leygOiSo p It in currency. ,
TaLtow.—Sales of oltrrendered at 10,/1.0340
IR lb-
WOOL.—The firmness of holders limits operations,
and the market is dull ; small sales are making at
60670 e for common to fine fleece, and tub at from
750780 114 ib, as to quality. •
The following are the reoelpts of Flour sod Grain
at this port to , day :
Flour 1 660 bblB.
Wheat 4,200 bus.
Corn 2 800 bas.
Oats 3,700 bus.
New York Markets, June 20.
BREADErtrITYS.—The markot for State and. West.
err. Flour is dull and 104150 lower; sales 6 000 bbls
at $6 600616 for superfine &sty ; $6 lO@6 20 for ex.
toe State $6 R 606,40 for ohcfee do; $5 oo@s 75 for
superfine Western; $6.1006 60 for common to me
dium extra Western ; $6.7606.90 foroommon to good
shipping brands extra round-hoop Ohio.
Canadian Flour is 60100 lower; sales 850 bbls
at $6.1606.46 for common; and $6.6008.80 for good
tc choice extra.
Southern Flour is lower. Wog 500 bbls at $767 80
for common and $7.90@12 for fancy and extra. Rye
Flour is quiet.
Wheat is dull and 5o lower; Sales 7,000 bushels
choice No. 1 Milwaukle at $1.41 for extreme. Rye
is dull. Harley is quiet. Oats are dull and 2a30
lower. The Corn market is dull and 20 lower; sales
29 000 bushels at 80@85o for mixed Western, and
86@870 for kiltbdried.
Pnovreforre.—The Pork market Is lower; sales
2,000 bbls at $26.70(027 60 for new mess ; $25 60Q25
for '6B-64 do, cash and regular way, closing at $24,10;
50@19 for prime, and 1 22E0)20.25 for prime mess.
Cut meats are quiet; sales 860 pkgs at 11@l3ge
for Shoulders, and 16vallo for Hams.
Tim Lard market Is lower; sales 750 bbis at
watswir 15 dull ; sales 200 bbls at $2.02@2.03.
TALLOW Is lower; Sales 80,000 Its at 10/21030.
Pittsburg Petroleum Market, June 19.
The Petroleum 'market, particularly refined, in
bond, has been annually active during the wash
which has just closed, and while the general tone
of the trade is firmness, there is no improvement
to note in prices. Crude was firmer yesterday and
to•dey than it wee during the early part of the
week, and with a good demand, both for home me
and shipment, an advance of fully one.lialf cent
Aaiun has been established-216213i0, barrels re
turned, and 20@2e3i0 barrels included, according to
gravity. We note sales today of 800 bbls at 21e ; 307
at 2l e• 800 at 2130,find 500jat 20c. A despatch
from 011 City to-day reports crude at .5.25@6.60 'lll
bbl, at the wells, and thirty inches of water in the
Allegheny river at that point and rising. Refilled,
in bond, was lets active to-day, though the market
is, it anything, a shade firmer, and holders general
ly unwilling t ll at current quotations. We note
a sale of 200 bbis for immediate delivery In Phila
dilphia at 550, and 500 for August--15th to 8011 a—at
550, delivered in Philadelphia. Free oil Is drill and
without quotable change. Ilundium is is fair de.
mend and sells readily at $8.60 i bbl. sales and
no change to note in Naptha.
Providence Market, inns 10.
PRINTING. VLOTen.—Nrarket active. Most Of the
sills Sold from one to four months ahead. The
printers threaten to Import gray goods from Eng.
land, but It Wall never known for any money to be
made on Imported gray printing cloths. A piece of
gray goods weighing six pounds may be tat Waisted
to contain about a pound and a halt of starch or
May, called Fuller% earth. The following are the
sales 8,000 pleees 02802, private terms ; 20,000 do.
50x60, 150, to be made; 6.000 do. 56060,180, on hand;
25,000 do. 64664, private forms ; 41,000 dO. 24E03, leo,
to be made ; 25,000 do. 04804, lege, to be made;
so 000 do. 64x84, 170, to be made ; 8,000 do. 64864,
173.0, to be made; 24,000 do. 64x04,180, to be deli.
vered in June and July ; 8,000 do. ROI, 190, on
hand. Total number of pleoes, 177,000.
PHILADELPHIA. BOARD OP TRADE.
TgourroN BsowA,
EDWARD LAPOIIROADI, C l Oll. OP TUB Marra'.
HURRY LIM'S,
MARINE ISTELLItemcm.
POET OF PHIL&DELPIEM, JUNE 20.
SUN R18N8e4.89 I SUN 51T8.7.21 I HIONWATER 12 . 41
ARRIVED.
Brig Kalamo, Morris, 17 days from Cordenait,
with =clams and Began to Harris ac Stotesbnry.
Brig G T Ward, Willoby, a days from Port Royal,
In ballast to Workman & Co.
Brig Hunter (Br), Faulkner, 18 days from Som.
brero, with guano to Moro Phillips.
150 hr Addy Ulrich (Sw.4l), Robinson, 18 dayS IBM
Sombrero, with guano to IWorb Phillip.
Sohr .7 M. Lewis, Shute, 7 days from CharleSton,
in ballast to Carman, Merchant, & Shaw.
&Mr. Central America, Phinney, 8 days from
Fortress Monroe, in ballast to Workman & Co.
sem. Wm Gregory, Regan, 14 dap from Matan
zas, with molasses to E O Knight & Co.
Sohr Philanthropist, Romer,lo days from Bangor,
with lumber to captain.
Steamer Chester, Warren, 24 bourn from New
York, with mdse to W P Clyde &
Steamer. Bristol. Obatles , 21 hours from New
York, with W P Clyde & Co.
Steamer Buffalo, Jones, 88 hour; from Washing
ton, in bailligt to W P Clyde & Co.
Steamer Sid. Bacon, 40 hours from Riobtoond,Vit,
in ballast to W P Clyde & Co.
Steamer E N Fairo lands, Trout, 24 hours frOm New
York, with mdse to W M Baird & Co.
Steamer Anthracite, Green, 24 hours from Now
York, with mdse to W .21 Baird & 00.
CLEARED.
Stealnahlp Gltana (Span), Sagas, Havana.
Bark Eliza (Br), Holloway. St Jago de Cuba.
Brig J Blokmore, Tracey, Boston.
SW Thomas Jefferson, Phillips, Cardenas.
Behr E. Richardson, Pinney. Boston. •
Sour Starlight. BIT Wide, BOrton,
Schr Maggie Van Dusen, Onion, Belton.
Sekr Ariel, Treworgy, Portsmouth*.
Bohr .O W Elwell, Hart, Jtalllinere.
Bohr Mary Mimes, Onsimplon, Alexandria,
Str H L Gaw, Iler. Baltimore.
Str Glee S Olen% Boi len, Waektplopa,
ISAIAS AT THE CLOSE.
Markets.
Jura' 20—Evening.
MEMORANDA.
Stearin%lp Constitution, Greenman, from Ne
Orleans 10th Inst., via Key West, Fort Fulani,
Fort Monroe msh , at New York on Monday.nd
stecoaddpjJolorado. Bradbury, from New
nit yrA„,,
for Panama and San Francisco, at Rio Janelrysti:
old and ready for sea.
Ship Regent, Hamblin, for Nerf York, wal loo„
fog at Calcutta 6th nit.
shHust o nchtneOrt, and Gobands,
the ton, for Hun, were proteeding down the rize r
from Calcutta oth un.
Ship 014 of New vortr, days from Li.
verpool, at New York on Monday, with Die pais ail.
aers. 27th alt., lot 40, ion 85 'A, panted ship w e,
Tapfoott. from Liverpool for New York'
Ships Golden Hind. Davie; McMahon, Thatchaf,
National Eagle, Matthews,
and Hate Prince, hey
b,‘
were loading at Calcutta 6th tilt. for Boston.
Bark HI J Smith, Smith, sailed from Rio Janeiro
Bth ult. for Callao.
Brig Romance, Duncan, hence at Cape
-Bth haat , to sail for Nassau.
Scbr Martha, Baker, hence for BostOn, at Nee.
port 17th inst., and sailed again.
Sohn W L Darling, Barter, hence for Pont,
mouth ; ii w Benedict, Gate. hence for Salem ; pa,
oahontas, Berry, and Mercy Taylor, Nioltortot,
hence for Roston, sailed from Newport 17th hit;,
Sohr W H Rowe, Harris, hence at Provident,
18th inst.
Behr John Dorrance, Hewitt, sailed from Pro*
dance 17th inst. for Ude port.
Scbr Jesse Williamson, Jr, hence for Buhr,
sailed from New London 17th inst.
Bohr H W Benedict, case, hence at Salem 'nth
instant.
Sobr 0 S Edwards, Gandy, salted from Salon
17th Ind. for thla port.
s c h rff Buena Vlata, I.loLane, hence at New nee.
ford 17th Inst.
Sohn Ida L Howard, MoDudie, and Cora, gel,
ley, cleared at Portland, Masa, on Monday, for We
port.
ARRIVALS AT THE HOTELS.
The Von
R Newton, New York
Owen 0 Owen, N Y
George G Porter. N Y
0 P 40 Henry, N Y
J W Gregory & le, N Y
B Smith & wr, N Y
tinenUil.
John S Dickson, Bo,Wore
Robt A Fisher, Be'throe
T Hatier & la, Linton
E A Sanborn & is, Vs
Jas W Sweet, Bluth/ors
S L Hershey, Penns
W A Mellon, Carlisle
,J Criswell, Shirmenva
'Arthur Blair, Jersey Oki
Gee H Mu, Now York
F Steven, Trenton
R E Tkompsov, ity
L Keever, Cincinnati
Ge Redman , e, Oily Point
Mr Washington
A. Bell, Maryland
W 0 Todd, Boston
B J Cromwell, U S N
De Vonage, N York
Irks Carroll Virgiola
'R N Neblett, Virginia
J M Williams, aI U, ye,
B Snyder, Pottsville
MiceGambrili, Halt
A. Gambrill, Baltimore
E H Purdy, New York
Chas E Forman, N York
F Oemblos & 2 oh, N Y
S Bryant, Massaohasetn
Mies illagtisson
W A Logan, Pottsville
Jacob Reese, Pottsville
W W Knox, Pottsville
3 a Polfrey, Boston
&eroded, °Maim:at!
Geo W Gage, Mow
J 0 Sager, Middlet, N Y
w 9 Presby, New York
A S Sturtevant, N y
wlt Mlneot, N Y
J V Satterly, N Y
E J Baldwlo,N Y
Eyeaktians, N Y _
IP Brackett & la, MEM
J 11 FainSWOrth and wife
W Einstein, St Louis
John Black, New York
John U Kayser, N Y
B U Kayser, New Yerk
James Murphy, N Y
Geo Leary, New York
W D Booth, New York
A Glikeson, New York
B D Gardiner, New York
J U Fuller and wife
D G Campbell, Md
Geo C Hubinwtil, N Y
Henry Heath, New York
E M Gladden, Ninv York
E W Page, New York
B Peters, Georgia
W Duncan, Georgia
Hush Bone, Virginia
Edw B Gruen d la, N j
F A Babcock, New York
H F Williams, Mass
J L Moses, Augusta, Ga
J A Gunn, Brandon,Miss
J . Lathrop, Boston
C P Muidenterg, Read'g
It 11 Phipps 81: wI, Balt
0 D Jones & wt, Bait
J B Carroll & son, Maine
Cohen,Sarannah,Ga
141 Tabett, Chicago
S L Allen, Cleveland
W H Clark, ra.
R. Clark, Pa
G B Barnes, Hartford
Miss nestles
W J James, New Jersey
Ci W oowperthwalt, A J
G N Morels, New Ylrit
G S MeOullough&wf,ala
,P Burgess, New York
G Oofiln, New York
A B 'Knapp, New York
A. Gillett New Yorg
0 J &Oton,utu
laslnnallo
J W Moseley & la, La
J D Bradley, Warn, D C
S S Morrill, Boston
F F Neel, Va
P Simon, Chicago
J H Jones, Pa
W Wreuareld, Baltlnvot
J M Vanetdel, Ohloago
i 3 0 Illasdale, N Y
Max Mclntyre
3 N Lightner, N Y
E M Keith & wt, Balt
I Entwiele, Alex, Ya
T L Johnson, Lynchburg
Lutons, N
- - -
EMO, Springing Mass
P Mangan, opring, Slug
Nits E P Winslow, Wash
E O Potts, Norristown
J. Tor es, Norristown
J B Harvey, Del
J Moore, NJ
J Wateon, i 7 S N
C H Wells, N Y
W L Helfenstein, Pottsv;
B M Sager, Paiddlet, NY!
J K Zook, Port Kennedy
S Walker, Pori 'Kennedy
Mrs t)ol Dolman, Wash
W G Vermllye, N Y
W W Bucking, N Y
B Van Voorhies & la p L I
J W Iloblzeon, Attleboro
W Ridgeway, N
P E Toles, N'Y
Join Gait, Newburg
Adam Pontare, N Y
J R ()Tooker, N J
T Eloyerdatd : lir Y
J F whitney, N Y
J Friable, N Y
olan Jackson, N J
The
Jos L Swoyer, New York
R Hammond, Boston
P T Jones. Washtugton
J DaUOD, Forrest larore
F K Dearborne, U S N
J Dugan & wr, Wash
3 F Berry, City
G Brown, U S N
W F Watson & wi, MO
S Parker, Penns
Gowiley, Phila
S F Norton, Washington
C C Grogan, New York
1-1 Schutz, Washington
JOLD P Fentress, Md
Lt H N 0-nbittes, U S A
Mrs Gublues,
Jos H Wlieon, N Y
F.Talbot, New York
W ft Holmes, Boston
B F Bragg, Boston
, Frank Miller, N Y
IFredk Jarrett, 14 ROM
E Bobbins, New York
M T Sporry, Conn
T B Oumings, Penna
Frank Weiner, PODIA
0 T Tauber, Lancaster
John Fisher, Lancaster
B Abrams, Reading
S 11 Adams, Reading
G Hopkinson, Ala
Airs HOMEIIIBOI2 Zr. oh, Ale
B Thornton, Ala
O Kauffman, flolumbla
Potthager, N 0
()apt Lavallorie, N N
Ferrier, Landastor, Pa
D Biy, Pittsburg
O B flare, England
W Wright, England
0 J Hall, Delaware
Oapt McCracken, Pa
C Mullin, Harrisburg
E Curyon, Harrisburg
J Whitman, Harrisburg
L Kauffman, Penna
J A Althoure, Reading
G Neaye & la, Litiz, Pa
S G Scott, N
S J Hildebrand, N Y
B F orbiscn, New York
G Bosull, Kentucky
R F Elliott, Eentuek,
Miss E Elliott, Kentucky
Raster 0 Elliott, Ky
G S Hannan, Washington
E Perry, New Bedford
D W Courtney, Penns
D P Ellie, Penna
H liNyinettouse. PhUa
Mrs H D Lyon & dan,N Yl
J Swinburn, New York
Gen R A Nelson, N 0
Geo Mears_ Penna
Mies Fisher, Delaware
A G Sargent New York .
Glover,Boston
II Templin, Easton
S oDlokey, Penne
G 11 Rumple, Penn&
G W Oars, Pittsburg
J Burns, Lewistown
J . Potter, Lewistown
J R Burns, Lewistown.
J K Obildrey h wf,
L Plikanton & la, Va
N Wilson, Virginia
E Greenbaum, Balt
R WHOA, Del
Jan Freud, BtooklYn
B 11.111 man, Y
Onlbroth, Del
3 A 3 . 01103, Penns
Rii_ , lttierow, Po
1O 0
0ttft7:11,%6 T : 4
i.P Gostlor, Pa
J Chaswiair, Md
N 166 H Otaswidk, Md
Manes.
lega. nft
L M Stapler, Worcester
P /Away, U S N
J Duffy, S N
J Chester, Witch, D 0
J Williams, Maryland
R L Korean, Maryland
A .1 Pritchard, USN
A klarabborger, MiQ Ok
G K Fort, Savannah, GM
'r H Tuthill, U S A
T X Whitlock, U S A
E R Noble, Money, Pa
E Holder, Felton, Del
S Kremer, Phoenixville'
S B Beeme, Allentown
Miss A DI Yeager, Agent
Miss Lowell, Allentown
GO3l B F Bell, Pa
o L. WhttO HIM
W Chapman, Bethlehem
A Wool.), Bethlehem
H W Mathews, Lima, Pa
P P Collins, Smyrna, UI
J E Bailey, Texas
0 BleCanty, NOW York
E A. Miller, Now York
Immo Ward, Pottemsie
S Llohtenthaler, Pala
J F Anguattin, Batten
J A Lemon, Blair
D Biy, Pittsburg
J 4 1.1 Celderwood , Tyrant,
.7 Haignett, Ligonier, Pa
L Fulkerson, N C
S F Dußois, Bridgeton
D Schwartz, Elmira, NY
W Whitaker & son, Pa
W H Brisbane, Sr & la
W H Levan, Sebyl Have
E Twaddell,Hanoosk,NY
T Osterhont, Tunkhan'ck
Miss A Darlington, Pa
R Darlington, Pittsburg
C Fleming Stia r liarristig
P H Thompson & son, Pa
Cleo S & la, Bag-do
W H Baker & las Banal°
W Canning, N °tisane
Col J 11 Willets N
R Eastman, Boston
MIEB A Stopp, Allentown
Miss Stopp, Allentown
W Brooks, TM:MOSSO
Alex Berenton, N York
A Fortenbangh, Patna
3 - Stan:QUO, Penne
la Id Brubaker, Penna.
Mrs E A Mowry,Plttst4
ericali
J A Parsons, New York i
NE Sherwood, New York
W L Blrokhead, N Y
J B Nemil, Middletown
W Longman, New York
09sen Haves, Marylon
IE4W Shinier, Poona
F Wertz, M D,Berke
ID 0 Smith, Pottsville
L Chamberlain .4c le, Ya
J Saundent New Jersey
A H Bennett, Wash, D C
E E Johneon, New York
I W M Willies, Wash, D C
0 Seat, Vermont
G Sicitley i New Jersey
T Slokley, Now Jersey
J L Dawson, Virginia
E F Crane, Baltimore
DASawyer,V aN
ffi P Sperry
1' Linton, Prov, IL I
F Angell, Prov. It I
W Smith, Prov, R I
J R Wilson, DONNAS. ,
J H Antrim, New Jersey
G Hese, Ooltinabla
J S Dean, Waah, D 0
J S Houghton
H Curtis, New York
C G Minor, Vermont
Jos C Brown, Reading
H Fonderamith, Penna
C H Sharer, Trenton
W Liminirg, Trenton
G A Simmons, Prov, R I
Thos O Dann, U S N
D W Chambers, Del
Isaac Maltose, Reading
S H Sibley, Portland
Geo Hunt, Prov, R I
F F Sanborn, Boston
D Smith, Boston
C W Knight, S N
J E Wiles, Penn
L B Turney, Pittsburg
F R Brown & la, Wasidn
FHHudson&in,NY
David Hand & Wl. N J
S R Magonagle & wf, NJ
F Spenoer, Maryland
J 15 Brown & la, Bait
T Tailor, New York
Min Taylor, New York
E M Hood. Bridgeton
ORM JR Wells, Wash
The
G M Wheaton, N Y
Jthn Brotherton, 11l
Geo W Heebner, Penns
M Rosenberg, Belt
I) W Boyd & la, Oonn
J fi. BoczerN J
T II Lytle, Maryland
MISS 0 L. Taylor, Evans
Klee S M Twyier, Patin'
A K Blanohard, 1.00,
Thom Ferrate, Elizabeth
Asa Daly & wf, Maze
J B Okeeen, Penns
G K Booth, Ohio
A G Davie & la, Conn
F E Oassaday, AT. D, & et
A HMIs
H Kendall, Philada
H W Long, N J
Mr Kurtz & la, Easton
L D rea , t9n, LOUigville
M Lilienthal, Gs.
0 A Fox, Pottsville
E T Burke, Ashland
J P 'Kline, Ashland
A W Daly & wt, N Y
Mrs Kellum & son, N J
Copt & 0 Thompson, Ira
J H. Houston. Pittsburg .
N b Wolle, Penna
es trlllol3ll.
The Mat
W H Ward & la. Penns
lU T MareAsli , Nashville
Mao Kaitenbrun
E R Barton, Wllm. Del
Albert Reniniavr, U S N
J B Roberts, Oil City
W H Wickes, Toronto
Too Gilfillan, Chester en
Mr Lannon & wr, Wash
B Robinson, Wash
HIE Blanoberd,Newvine
Semi Landner,Doyleillln
W A Patriak, .JolllollVifie
B T Steward, Coatesville
A B Long, Lewistown
B 7 Bing, Min :quid
Dennis, OblAtor 00
Jan linnor
W W Wetterfle
D R Burkholder, Poo
E Reel, Duncannon
H B Miller, Indiana oo
H D Garber, DRAM:mop
A. 11 lola, Altoona
J B Joke, Altoona
B tia.maton,Olinton e
001 T Morrison re rain,t'a
5 MoGornmee, Lan&
Lt 0- W Glynn, N Yon
crawl.
W E Reiff, Pottstown
J I 3 Westorook, POAnd
Sae Detrick, PattOffing
J IdoCandy
W B Solltday, Pena
Wm 0 Pugh, Poona
Wm E Williams, York 40
L Bachman. Poona
Tugs It stagy. Wastages
Sohroders MOontoli o g
Jae M Lowia,_oanfonta
John Knapp, - Delaware
Wm Eyertusit,W Mester
0 S Rdday, Oxford, Pa
The 430
jos H Batley, Petter oo
Jos H Kent, Mester 00
Mrs M. E Davis Vs
Miss H H Wood, Penna
Miss B Wood, Penns
E D MoOlenahan, Md
F Good & to, Chester
H S Worth, Oxford, Pa
B T Hoopes, W Chester
1 B Bowman, Lancaster
J Kennedy, Jr, Lane co
1) H Kent, 'Delaware
O H Ackerman, N Jersey
James W Howard, AN
John Cornell, Parkereb'g
The Sal
A D SLIM. Myerstown
R S Paul Quakertown
Miss 0 Ritter, puma
Tryider, Zionsville
13 Kommerer,Zlooerille
Kemmerer,Ziormllle
J Martin & la, Del 00, Pa
Lieut Jos A Kauffman
d Es gle.
L Miller Penns
D Mover, Alientowa
3 Albright, mientowa
Jos Mom Alienown
W uoivpawpt,
Jos Emery, Batztat
0 Bitter, Rltterevllle
The Sl
Levi C Moyer, Penns
John B Romlnger, PS
Alex Rigor, Trenton
Carl Bauer, Trenton
Jonas B Minor, Penns
P Lionerson, Hazleton
T Engart, HarterMo
H Mi ler, Holtman
1) P Rohm, Delaware
, k Bear.
NM Yorker, Hatboro
KM Rudy, 131stlagion
E W She Emil% Nu"
A Backman, Penn s
John Hersh, - Penceborg
Henry Smith, Peons
Frodk Witt & le, 1'0 11145
T G (*strict ! AtePanag
ey Sheaf.
Wd wa u dCom l ß y u , Pal ce
W Mack. Naie 14 0 Pe
A Staten, Backe co
G 0 Jennings, N
E Smith, Oladtanhata
The Bar
GH HoHew, Now York
W Mettler, New Jeraey
C P Holcomb, N Tersely
A Edwards, kngland
Col Paid, Phlla
Oadwalader, F Ohara
J Burrows do hi, Mt Airy
1600.
E Watson ; POP'
Be L E v v i n N t e a p b o o sk o t
s m o r hn e N
r t
janahoeley,tv.Bootr4l,°o.os,
The '
J 1 Brine, New Hope
A B Stlmeon, Hattoook
J E Chunk Ala,Brldgept
0 DI Wine. Boatoill
Jae Wileon, New York
nary 7 Math. thatimor•