(d')ljr Vrtss. THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1865 FORNEY'S WAR PRESS. This Journal, for the week ending SATURDAY. June 15, 1565, is now out, and copies can be had at he counter of "Tin PnasS." Aside from its very handsome appearance tit Is clothed in new type) it contains news of surpassing interest. A 'fun account of the execution, at Washin;,ton. of 1 he sour conspirators; Atzerott's confession : a 10241.1rf f the first and present Atlantic telegraphic under taking, and a complete list of all Peniriylvanhi sol diers who died at A-nth:ray-ovine. the cause and time of their decease, mother of grave, etc., are among the contents of this number. The following is a list of contents: I. POETRY.—The old rsnlin — llYmn Of Faith— Alle Sorelle. Key; or, A Night in the IL STORY.—Thc Lost Cathedral Library. EDITOEIALs.-3fr. Stanton — A Liberal DoIII. liation — The Growth and 31anufactnre of Wool—The Fate of the Assassins—Punishment of Treason and Conspiracy —Womanhood and. Crime-Our Two -Leaders—Our Sisters of Mercy—LincOin Monument Fund. IV "OCCASIONAL. "—Five Letters from "Ocea nional." V. THE CONSPIRACY.—FuII account of the Exe cution of the four Conspirators—Confession of At serid t—Sketehes of the Assassins. VI. TIIE ATLANTIC TELEGRAPH.—History of the first and present undertaking. VII. CORRESPONDENCE. Country Rambles— " Letter from "Graybeard." STARTLING-CALAMITIES. — Burning of a packet ship—Terrible tornado in Wisconsin. HORRORS OF ANDERSON VILLE. Com plete list of Pennsylvanians who died there. X. MI:3OEL LANE 0 IT S.—Curious Chapter of Crimes—The Death-warrant of two Philadelphia Murderers signed—lnteresting from Utah—The con dition of the crops throughout the country—Sketch 41).1 - a 'Passenger Railway Trip. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. The WAR PRESS also contains a large amount of interesting matter, not included in the above enu literal ion. Specimens of the "WAn PRESS" will be for- Warded when requested. The subscription rate for. Music copies is in.so a year. A deduction from these terms be allowed when Clubs are formed- Sin kite copies, put up in wrappers, ready ior mail ing. may be obtained at the counter. Price, FIVE . CENTS. • . DITTIES ON EXPORTS. It was lately stated, in a magazine arti cle, by Mr. FREDERICK A. CON - KLING, that 41 in 1860, the year next preceding the re bellion, the quantity of cotton exported from the United States, according to the returns of the Treasury Department, amounted to 1,'767,686,338 pounds, averag ing in value 10.85 cents per powid, which is equal to the sum of $191,800,555. An export duty upon this quantity of five cents per pound, which the American staple can 'ihly bear amounts to $88,384,316—a the as-steadily applied, adequate to cancel ' wit hin tNThrbdiedebt, as officially stated, tion." It'will b e - s iiii3v., &resent genera before our production of cotton that of 1860, but it may be taken 41 ; granted that, from this time, there will be a revivid of the cotton-trade, and the more so because it is DOW gel acknowled l i M far at the cotto grown in India is • tk rior to that w 'eh was produced i i , .a : 11\ \ southern States. ~, Capital and ec.aPn'e Au - ill naturally units in producin: the sup ply, seeing that prices' and mans will in evitably increase. The proposition to impose exoart (hales, With a view of oigma---ing the national revenue, abolishitra many small but vexa tious items of laternal Taxation, and even of finally liquidating that National mill stone, the 3,000 Millions . Debt, has repeat edly been made, but has invariably been Illet With the reply, "The Constitution ex pressly forbids any tax or duty being laid upon exports." In the North American - Review, just published, is an article, by Mr. SIDNEr G. FISHER, entitled " Duties on Exports," .which strongly denies that such duties are unconstitutional. Mr. FISHER goes in for a tax upon exports of our own growth and manufacture, more especially of raw material ; "a tax on these," he says, "would be paid by the foreign consumer. A moderate tax would scarcely check expnrtation ; and one that Lars this effect would, by lowering the price at home, encourage our tures." This is very true. At pre sent, by way of encouraging (?) r our own manufactures, of enabling us to wear our own calicoes and muslins t instead of giving Manchester a profit on manufactu ring oar cotton, we have one tax on the raw ]material and another tax upon the home manufacturedarticle. Meantime, with great liberality, while we tax the cotton worked 1m by our native industry and capital, we levy no duty upon the cotton which is sent abroad, to come back in a manufaitured state, and drive our own goods out of the market. Thus we give a bonus to foreign ers, which, we dare say, they accept, with a derisive smile at our folly. The Constitution says: " No tax or duty shall be laid on articles exported from any state." It was held by Chancellor KENT, Mr. Justice STORY, and that eminent juris consult, Dr. WILLIAM RAWLE, that this prohibits Congress from imposing any tax on any exports; and there is no doubt that this certainly was the intention of the ma jority of the Convention which made the Constitution. It was, in fact, one of seve ral concessions to the Southern States. Mr. FISHER says: "The South got the= slave slave trade, but only for twenty years; it got slavery; it got the representation .of three-ffilhs of the slaves,' and it got the pro hibition of a tax on exports." The pro hibition, carried by a majority of the Con vention, has ever since tied up the hands of Congress, and now withholds, in the nation's need, a large portion of thenation's resources. It seems intolerable that ex ports, which can very well hear a reasona ble tax (really to be paid by the foreign purchaser,) should be exempt. Whether this exemption is constitutional, or, we should rather say, just, has never been tried, for no tax upon exports has Yet been imposed ; but there is a general impression that exports ought to be taxed, and it can not be contended, for a moment, that the _producers of the exports would pay the tax. It would go into the gross payment for the articles, by the purchasers. Mr. FISTIER suggests that the clause in the Constitution may be read as prohibiting the putting a duty upon articles imported from any one State ; that is, of singling out Pennsylvania for an export tax on coal, Iron, or petroleum, or any other State for any of her peculiar productions. But he also suggests that the tax on exports might be made general in all the United States. At any rate, the difficulty can be got rid of by altering the Constitution. "This," he says, " is difficult and cumbersome, and not always possible." Moreover, it might occupy some time. Mr. FISHER suggests that the people, in 1787, adopted the Con stitution " as they understood it, and we are at liberty to interpret it as we under stand it," and that "we are not bound by their circumstances or their opinions, but are entitled to put such a construction upon 3t as may suit our circumstances anti accord also with its letter and spirit." In England, where the Constitution is un written, it has an elasticity which admits of gradual change, by circumstance and progress ; but with us, who have a writ ten Constitution, such, if .desirable, would be very difficult. There is no reason upon earth, however, why exports should not be taxed—for the impost would be paid by the foreign purchaser. There is a way of getting the money with out violating the letter of the Constitution— say that a duty of five cents per pound were laid upon all cotton put up into bales for the market, domestic or foreign, and that a drawback of the whole five cents a pound were allowed on what was retained for home consumption. The balance, sold to the foreigner, would have paid the tax previous to becoming an export. • It is expected, in Europe, that Congress w ill levy export duties, and it is contended that whatever duty we lay upon cotton will serve as a protective bonus to all other cot ton-growing countries. The question was discussed very closely in the Times as far back as May 24th, and it was there said 6 , We must bear in mind that they [the Americans] have other exports they can afford to tax heavily—say, tobacco and pe troleum—ma& they are not likly to commit commercial suicide by laying all the taxa-. tion on cotton. Taking their cotton ex ports at 3,000,000 bales of 440 lbs., a duty of gtl. (two cents) per pound would yield £11,000,001) sterling."t 1 t_t e SiIDIC writer mentioned the probability of eight cents per pound being levied ; though that amount, be argued, would so much raise the price of cotton that the demand for American would not be extensive. A duty_ of five cents per pound would not be much objected to in England, while the necessity for our raising a large revenue is well understood. The question is—how to impose the duty. ENGINES OF WAR. A paragraph lately went the round of the English newspapers, and has also been co pied by the American press, to the effect that an invention had been made in France, and exclusively secured for the French navy, by which even iron-clad ships of war could instantly be destroyed. It was stated, with due particularity of detail, that the Prefet of Toulon had blown up a small ves sel from the shore, by electricity, without touching it, and that the process, which pos sessed unerring and fatal powers of destruc tion, was applicable far out at sea. It was argued that this would insure maritime peace, inasmuch as no ship of war could re sist the destroyer. Of course, there would be no safety for the twenty-six iron-plated ships which England now has afloat, nor for the six additional which she is building. In the Corps Legislatif, of Paris, the other day, when this matter was mentioned, it was officially , explained that it was not new. It is called a submarine torpedo ; was in vented (?) by Vice Admiral DE CHA BA-IS-WES, Maritime Prefet of Toulon, and consists of a water-tight receiver, contain big from sixteen to eighteen pounds of pow der, so arranged as easily to attach itself to the keels of vessels in their submerged part, and then be fired by an electrical apparatus. Something like it was used by the Rus sians at Cronstadt, in 180, and has also been applied in this country during the late war. One of the Southern torpedoes, which so greatly injured our navy, would be worth a dozen of the articles of destruction used at Toulon. Much more dangerous, if all accounts be true, is the new steam-ram called the Tareau, lately constructed and launched at Toulon. It is said to be an iron fortress, navigated by steam, drawing little water, and there fore well adapted for coast service, yet capable of going to sea, and with such tre mendous power that her sharp metallic prow, a stupendous battering-ram, can be driven, at the speed of twelve or four%e r miles an hour, by five hundred hopt e , sse l, of steam, right into any 0 1) . 13 0 5 . f splitting with a certainty (it is hoMiliately sinking her in 'Mehl, and e!,,its. She is to carry 1 --r into the"ocean can discharge a ball a single gun.umdred pounds. weighing important discovery, if not ex- Anted, is said to have been made by GALE, an eleCtrician, residing at Ports mouth, England, of a process by which gunpowder can be rendered non-explosive, and its combustible properties restored, when required. The WestArn Morning News assures us that " The discovery pos sesses every element of an important and, practical invention. The process is simple and effective. It cannot injure the powder. The cost is very small, and it has the advantage of being readily applied. In five minutes "a barrel of powder can be made non-explosive, and in another five minutes it can be restored to its original condition. We have seen gunpowder subjected to this process, and stirred with a red-hot poker without au explosion. If a shell burst in a store filled with the prepared powder it would not fire it. The process can be readily applied to the largest or smallest quantities, and it does not require any cum bersome apparatus. The invention will solve the serious difficulty which has been felt as to the storage of powder in time of peace; and in war it will avert the danger which now arises from the necessity of fighting in the neighborhood of an explo- Qivematerial." If this discovery has been made, it is atm- nrtyou-arairtynantl Vtr modern times, and a real boon to humanity. Of Course, the details of the process will be made public. IT IS CONTENDED by a writer in the North Arzerita'n Review that the prohibi tion of duties on exports, contained in our Constitution, is not absolute, and that it may be construed to mean merely that the products of no One State shall be taxed ex clusively. It is barely possible, but not probable, that this intrepretation would be sustained by our judicial tribunals. This whole question deserves, and will doubt less receive, the serious consideration of Congress at the approaching session. If our Government has not the power, in some shape common to the Governments of all other countries, it should seek to ac quire it as speedily as possible, that our tax-payers may obtain the much needed relief which a duty on exports could readi ly afford, and that a new impetus may be given to American cotton manufactures, by the incidental protection that would result from a judicious export duty on cotton. LETTER FRONI "OCCASIONAL:, WASHINGTON, July 12, 1865 You may secure the exact measure of the patriotism of the men who assert that the rebellion is at an end, by the aid of the fact that without the war power and the suspen sion of the writ of habeas corpus, Jefferson Davis and the other conspirators against the lives and liberties of the people could not be held in the strong arms of a military fort, but would be consigned to a county prison, probably at Richmond, Virginia, or Jackson, Mississippi, to all practi cal intents free and forgiven, to go and to do as he pleased. You will per ceive, at a glance, how deeply inter ested the detected conspirators are in the declaration by the President of such a policy as would enable them to resort to the civil courts for trial; to set at defiance his entire system of reconstruction ; to re store slavery wider the old State laws, and tore-establish a system nearly as defective as that which has just been destroyed. The moment, therefore, the President withdravirs the machinery by which he is enabled to confine traitors and to punish them ; to enforce the laws of Congress in the different seceded States, and to sustain his provisional governors; the power to restore the Union on the right basis is lost, never to be. regained. Remember that there is not a single Southern State that was carried out of the Union by fraud in 1860-61, that is entirely back in its former position ; and also, that not one of these States can be permanently fixed in its former sphere without the strong arm of the National Government, backed by the army and the navy, and assisted by the authority conferred upon the President in the act of Congress of March, 1863, in which he is empowered to suspend the writ of habeas corpus, and to keep it suspended as long as the rebellion shall continue. How extraor dinary, in view of these plain facts, that there should be a clamor against military courts, and for the immediate re-estab lishment of what is called the " civil authority,'' by the very men who are struck with terror lest President Johnson should permit or encourage the G original conspirators against the overn ment to return to the Union and be re stored to their scats in Congress, there to form a party 'which is ultimately to defeat the Republimns or Unionists, and to give the power .and the patronage of the Fede ral Government to the so-called Democra tic party ! Even in the face of this demand on the one hand and complaint on the other, the men who make both know well that the only process by which the traitors Can be put back into Congress, an d by which Jefferson Davis can es _ cape just punishment of his infamous crimes, and by which, if you please, slave ry in a new and odious form may be rein augurated in the South, is to take from the President that war power by means of which we have been enabled to conduct She struggle with so much vigor. OCCASIONAL. THE NiTlo2C—ln our notice, yesterday, of }ils new and able weekly journal, we omitted 14 mentionthat Mr. T. 11. Pugh, corner of Sixth and chestnut streets, sole agent in Philadel ];liia,Will receive subscriptions, and supply ills Paper to all concerned. - JEFF DAVIS. His Present Condition—A Rebel Sol-. dier's Solicitude for him—How he wanted to Help him. A special despatch from Washington to tke New York Tribune says: A gentleman just from Fortress Monroe re ports the health of Jeff Davis much better than it has been at any time during his in carceration. His meals are sent direct from the table of Dr. Craven, his attendant physi cian, by his daughter, and by her delivered to the officer having immediate charge over hint. The Doctor is keeping an accurate journal of his professional interviews with Dir. Davis, which will hereafter throw some interesting rays of light on the imprisonment of the arch traitor. The following is a copy of a letter addressed to his Excellency President Davis, and recent ly received by the commandant at the For tress : 'Mr DEAR OLD FRIEND: YOU must by this time be nearly out of money. I send you the enclosed. Take it, and pay your fare to hell with it.. The enclosure consisted of $l5 in Confederate money. The writer of the letter is an ex- soldier, and if slightly heartless and atrifle profane; his letter serves to show the feelings of thousands of J. D. 78 dimes and victims. The report that Jeff Davis and C. C. Clay would be tried by Military commission does not seem to be without confirmation. it is said on good authority that at least one of the members of the former court has received an order assigning him as one of the new com mission. Exploded Ideas. From a long editorial in the Norfolk (Va.) Post of July 10th, headed "Exploded Ideas," we make the following extracts SUMO fawning sycophant, or adept in the art of flattery writing in the Richmond Re public, has revived that old, wornout, and most . disgusting cant about the superiority of the people of Virginia—wain:dug that they are much better than their equals, and are en titled to more consideration than their fellow citizens of other sections. With all due re spect to this individual from abroad, who ap pears so auxlcms to become a toady, and in gratiate himself into the favor of a few vain, brainless, and unthinking young men and effete old fogies, who still cling to the idea that the soil df Virginia was first peopled by demigods, while the other States composing the Union owed their settlement to an inferior race of mortals, we beg to say that we differ with him entirely. When he calls men who have come into this State, who have crossed the imaginary , line which divides Virginia from Maryland, Pennsylvania, or Ohio, aliens, we tell him plainly and emphatically that we do not view it irk that light. We look upon these States as forming one common country, and do not believe that a State line makes any difference in the feelings, opinions, com ploxion havenitelligence, or blood, of the people. We no doubt we have as geed men in Virginia as:there are to be found in Maine la Texas; but there are no better men, apih.„,.. more of them, than any other StateSad-his ngVweilth pre ' duce. The several States,if we li p t 7 0 y 0 e a d r aright, were from the's w a e me tli s i e n u lr fffile ; that is, in a eisely the same kind of v * * * general way. * . the duty of every fair- We think it ought tQ.i. of his country to en minded man and.Z„ these heretical and per deavor to eradtherthan foster and encourage nieions idefrpeople of this Commonwealth. them as we view the matter, are as The Ville people of any other State t but they gond° better. We have been much. among .Deui, an Our travels through the country have extended from Maine to Texas, and from the Pacific to the Atlantic, and we confess to our inability , to perceive the least difference in the habits, custems, manners, intellectual acquirements, personal appearance , _ patriot ism, or bravery of the Virginians when com pared with the people of any other portion of the country—North, East, South, or West. We forget ; there is one slight difference, and that consists in their inordinate vanity—a weak ness which, we regret to say, has made them the butt for the scoffs and jeers of the world. It is not the fault of the thinking portion of the people that whenever the higb.-sounding Phrase " I am a Virginian" is used it is met with an ill-concealed smile by natives of other States, and subjects the party using it to ridi cule. Why is this so? .It iS not the ease in re gard to any other State. A man may say lie is a Texan, a New Yorker, a Louisianian, or a Vermonter, and the announcement calls forth no remark front those to whom it is addressed. * * * * * * * If we would avoid unpleasant truths, we should not challenge criticism. In . other words, when we live in glass houses we must be careful how we throw stones. We repeat, for the benefit of Hie Richmond scribe, that the people of this country are one in nature, enename,and one in destiny, as they are one m birth, rank, station., and condition. There are different grades in society every where, and the aristocrat of Virginia finds Ins counterpart in the aristocrat of Massaehn setts—which State, by the by, is very badly afflicted with the same disease which has be come chronic here. The "white trash" ot Vir ginia and Tennessee and the white trash of New York and Pennsylvania are as near alike as two peas—except that the school master has been a little more liberal in his attempts to beat a tew ideas into the dud heads of the latter—but that don't change the nature of the men. The exotic writer in the Repubtic has much to say about Northern men, and calls them aliens, and objects to their taking part in the politics of the sacred State of Virginia. We know of no Northern man in this country, or aliens, except alien enemies, who, by - their acts, have disqualified them selves iron taking part in the politics of the country. Every American, no matter from what portion of the country he may come, has an inherent and inalienable right to express his Views, with regard to the policy of the country, and take an active interest in whatever political issues may arise. The accidents of birth have nothing to do with it, provided he be a citizen of the United States. His home for the time lwAgjsa go place where he is' upposed to act he be a Virginian inVeasYWilniirWr i o9s-- sylvanian in Virginia. Whoever'heard of an objection being urged against a man in any other State of this Union—against his political rights or advancement because' he happened to lie a native of Virginia? A 5 she claims to be the mother of States, of course every State must be filled with her sons. Why, the people of Kansas might with equal pro priety object to a man because he came from Ohio or lowa—for the reason, forsooth, that they are old Kansans, s and the new comer is an alien! Alien to what? To the coun try, or to the State of Virginia! If a citizen of the one, he cannot be an alien to the other. Has he not the same interest in the govern ment of the State of Virginia that those born on her soil have? In electing members of Con gress and Senators, do the people and Legisla ture of Virginia elect them merely to repre sent their own particular interests, or do they elect them to represent the interests of the entire country? We have always supposed that they were the representatives of the coun try, and not of any particular State, section or party—and as such we think they are paid their mileage 'and per diem out of the public treasury at NVashington ; and as such they vote on all questions in volving the interests of the whole country, and direct our foreign and domestic policy. * * * * Then, again, we come to the State government, in which it is alleged these aliens are taking too nnich interest. What is this terrible State government? Little more than - an expensive luxury—and which the people would not miss were it abolished entirely, to gether with all the State lines—leaving us to get along with our county and municipal or ganizations, and saving an immense amount of taxation to support its costly. machin ery. However, we don't object to the State government, and are willing that it should be continued, as some kind of organiza tion may be necessary ; but we do object to the writer in the Republic objecting to a number of gentlemen in Alexandria criti cising the action of the Governor, because, as lie says, they are aliens, nd were not fortu nate enough to be born in Virginia. Perhaps the two hundred thousand American soldiers whose ntouldering bodies enrich the "sacred soil' , from Washington to Richmond, were aliens too, and they should not be permitted . to have a further voice in the restoration of a loyal government in Virginia. .In his opinion, the men who sought to destroy what these men laid clown their lives to defend, must alone be heard, while the representatives of the 'dead., who fell at Manassas are declared alione, and arc told they have no right to a voice in the work of restoring the South to the Union and to loyalty. Trinity Church, New York. CURIOUS FACTS CONNECTED WITH. IT-THE VAST AMOUNT OF PROPERTY IT OWNS, YET. IS POOR. The history of the real estate transactions of the Trinity Church corporation, says a New York journal, would make an interesting and readable volume, extending from the days of King William the Third and Queen Anne to the present day. The land owned by Trinity was in the time of William known as the King's Farm, and the endowment was made for the purpose of providing for the Church of England in New York. The estate originally consisted of two thousand and sixty-eight MS, Of Which, since the year 1745, three hundred and eighteen lots have been given away, six hundred and ninety-one remain, and one thou sand and flfty-nine have been sold. The six hun dred and ninety-one lots now owned by Trinity, which are all occupied by various buildings, are located in Barclay street Broadway, Bar row street, Broome street, Clarkson street, Charlton street Clark street, Chambers street, Canal street, besbrosses street, Dominick street, Fulton street, Greenwich street, Hant. ersley street, Harrison street; King street, Morton street, Murray street, Renwick street, Reade street, Spring street, Sullivan street, Varick street Vestry street,yesey street, Van dam street, Watts street, Washington street, and Warren street. Nearly all the leases of the lots in these streets, which were made before the Revolution, will expire in a few years, and revert back to the corporation. It is estimated that the property of Trinity will then be worth more than twenty-live millions of dollars. It cannot be saidto be badly stricken with poverty if this valuation approximates near the truth, But the Corporation has on several occasions found it hard to make both ends meet at the cud of a year. According to the testimony of General Dix, ex-Gover nor Bradish, R. B. Minter,,, and others,.her expenditures exceeded her income at various times by from nine thousand two hundred and twenty-six dollars and ninety-four cents to lifts - one thousand three hundred and sixty eight dollars and forty-six cents. At one time it was proposed that the property be so dis posed of as to provide for the various Episco pal churches of the city which might be in need ; but the bill, after a passage in the Senate, met with a negative at the bands of the Assembly, and the matter was dropped. Notwithstanding the miles of real estate under the control of the corporation, the church is said to be poor ; and, in support of the fact, it is stated that bills for ringing the bells of Trinity on national festivals have been pre sented to the Common Council, and that part of the old graveyard in Hudson street, between Clarkson and Leroy streets, belonging to Trini ty, is to be sold. Mr. Actor's lease, obtained in 1767, expires on the Ist of May, 1a66, and the property will go hack to Trinity. He had three hundred and thirty-six lots at the low price of seventy-five cents each. The lots are situated in Charlton street, King street, Hudson street, Windom. Street, Damersley street, Varick street, Green wich street, and Spring Street. Mr. Astor pays Trinity church two hundred and sixty-nine dollars per annum for all the lots,being seven ty-five cents for each. If we estimate the rental from each building on these lots, at the low average of live hundred dollars, the fortu nate leaseholder must receive, on an invested capital of two hundred and sixty-nine dollars, an income of one hundred and sixty-eight thousand dollars per annum. Some of the ban dinASS, however, are let at higher rates. At least, Mr. Astor is no loser by the contract. A JOKE. UPON BRITISH OPPICER.S.—At the Richmond celebration of the Fourth, a Joke was perpetrated by the humane and gallant Miss Surgeon Walker. Among the visitors at the late rebel capital, were the officers of the British gunboat Styx.' Miss Walker, M: llonistaking them for °Mears of our own navy invited them to a seat on the platform. The English officers accepted, and when they were comfortably seated, miss Surg_don , "Walker arose, and read with good erapllasi§ and discretion t the "Declaration of The cancers of- the , Styx. " corn. They patiently listened ac kr t n o na t ° l e T l e r t d h tig a ee r i g lte e he s e. against George 111. They never heard them before in so conspicuous a position enunciated by a fah! lady. PRESS.-plittAwlyiTlA,_ VITIRSD*Y, w . J 13, ,1865., PASSENGEITIAILVAY TRIPS--NO. IV. SPRUCE AND PINE STREETS THE HEADQUARTERS OF LAFAYETTE Horrible and Astounding Harder—ln- THE SHERIFF'S FOSSE COMITATUS PROGRESS OP INTERNAL IMPROVEMENTS. We have directed our attention to several railway lines extending to the beautiful sec tion of rural magnificence iu the northwestern part of Ph iladelphia,;to-day we desire to intro duce the Spruce and Pine-street line, that con nects the - Merchants , Exchange with Gray's Ferry on the Schuylkill, in the southwest part of our city, that has an interesting history ancient and modern. The ears, starting from the Exchange, proceed down Dock street, over immense subterranean structures that drain a large part of Philadelphia; thence down Second street, passing a number of houses of Revolutionary history, then turning into Pine street, pursue a „westerly. course. The first object of especial interest that at tracts attention, is ST. PETER'S EPISCOPAL CREECH EDIFICE, with ground extending from Third to Fourth street. This building is venerated by ago. It stood in its primitive condition until about twenty-three years since, when a brick tower, and tall spiry and a cross were erected on its west end. A clime of bells in the tower ring the people to this elinrch on Sabbath days. The blank wall which encloses the building and its grave-yard, is not very high, yet it has altitude enough to prevent a direct view of the tombs and monuments within. OLD PIliErSTEEs mr C/lIISCIC. This building,...erits an admirable appear- Alice w i m p- row of fluted columns. It is also one or —o oldest churches of the rresbyte,- .. i . r .m OUT city, it being the third one of this erected within the boundaries of Phila delphia. The front is on a line with the street, and is almost surrounded by a burial ground, with iron railing enclosure on Pine street. A line front view of this old and substantial building is obtained as the car passes along- the route. There is no long, blank wall here to dis. gust the eye and shut out the beauty of the edifice. A few years since a private subscrip• tion was made for the purpose of removing a great portion of the blank wall on Pine street and substituting an iron railing and base in its place. It wouldhe a great improvement if the railing extended around the entire structure. The splendid building appropriated to the instruction of the deaf and dumb will attract more than ordinary attention, as the car crosses Broad street. It is a fine, large edifice, with plain massive columns, the front being enclosed with an ornamental iron railing. The Church Home, a very pretty brick build ing, comes next in the order of especial atten tion. It is located at Twenty-second and Pine streets. This institution is one of the noble charities for which Philadelphia is proverbial. This may be considered an Episcopal Home for Children. It was founded in the year 1855. Its projectors organized the institution be cause they thought that every Christian con gregation should find a comfortable home for the children of the poor of their number. The inmates generally •attend St. Marks Church. The Home has accommodations for about fifty children. The Right Reverend Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese is, by virtue of his official position, President of the Home. There is nothing more to particularlyattraet the attention until reaching Gray's Ferry road, upon which there is a double track extending to the Arsenal. This beautiful, well constructed, and hand somely arranged, palatial residence for old sailors is worth a 'visit. The grounds extend to the. Schuylkill. They are laid out in a spiel], did style—the nicely gravelled walks being shaded with ornamental trees that scarcely admit the radiance of the sun. Flowers exotic and indigenous here greet the eye, and fill the air with sweet perfume, transporting the visitor on the wings of ideality to the banks of the Guadalquiver, that catch the spicy gales of Andalusia. Each old Jack tar here is a eking in his palace, with no entangling, alliances or perplexities to distract his mind. It IS a home that kings, queens, dukes, and nobles general ly might envy. The old salts who And an abid ing place here, spend the morning and noon of their existence in the service of "Uncle Sam," and now, in the evening of their life, the .venci4l.9 "old fellow" exhibits his gratitude to tid;ni in the- of a palace of comfort, .p.eolo, and plenty, Th. - sitors at all seasonable hours. It is a place that every respectable citizen, tourist, and stranger should visit. We hear much of the beauty of Fairmount, its adjoining parks, Sic., but little is ever heard of the handsome and attractive dominions of the General Govern ment, that remain in the shades of retirement on the banks of the Schuylkill, some live miles above its mouth. Just below , the Asylum, will be found. the United States Arsenal, guarded by a portion of the 185th Regiment P. V. This establish ment is simply a vast business place. It is not remarkable for any particular beauty. It is so well and generally known that further note is Unnecessary. Those of our citizens familiar with the general appearance of this locality a few years back, will be astounded at the alterations and vast improvements which have taken place, and others still progressing. On the northern part of the Arsenal the great Pennsylvania Railroad sweeps along, the connection to the west side of the Schuylkill being by a hand some and substantial bridge, and as pretty a piece of circular trestle-work as can be found in the country. This whole arrangement is a splendid specimen of civil engineering. The scenery on the western side of the river is diver sified, and of great natural beauty. The exten sive "paupers' palace," the shady Woodland Cemetery just south of it, are objects that will attract especial attention. Over this bridge, and thence to the very heart of business in Philadelphia, immense trains of cars pass, bringing the rich productions of the Great West. As we write this a long train of the Union line, laden with farm produce from the lake region, is thundering across the bridge. Close cars filled with butter and eggs, open cars filled with refined petroleum, other cars crammed withproduce generally, that add ac tivity to business, pass the Schuylkill, and speed their way towards the Delaware. Such an internal improvement is of inestimable value. It connects the benevolent, charitable, and patriotic city of Philadelphia—where all Union soldiers have ever found a home in its Cooper Shop and Union Refreshment Saloons— to the vast lakes and prairies, and hills of wealth in the western country. To accom plish all this, it was necessary to excavate rocks that once east their craggy shadows in the placid waters of the "Sans Souci" is no more. Several years since this once splendid rural retreat was removed from its rocky foundation, to make way for the onward march of improvement. - The railroad here is simply a link in the great iron chain that binds Philadelphia to the five Northwest ern States. In a few years—now that domestic hostilities have ceased, and tranquillity is about to throw its peaceful mantle on the shoulders of the nation—an incalculable amount of cereals and other produce from the hardy Northwest will be diverted from the great water communication of the Mississippi to the Delaware, within a Ave or six-hours trip to the Atlantic Ocean. So much for enterprise; so much for the indomitable per severance of men of capital; so much for the mechanical genius and labor of the hard-listed sons of toil. Who can estimate the vast magnitude of business that must in crease in the no distant future 4 Philadelphia, in this particular, will have no rival. Instead of one, there will be many steamship lines - connecting the Old World with the New, through the medium of the City of Brotherly Love. But we let this train of thought pass with the train of cars. Here let us say that the passenger, desiring to go to Wars Ferry Bridge, will find a one-horse car, omnibus size, in readiness every thirty minutes, or. oftener if an emergency requires it. The dia. tance from the Arsenal to the bridge is about half a mile. In its course, it sweeps along al most parallel with the Philadelphia, Wilming ton, and Baltimore rail track—an institution that will be ever held in grateful memory by the patriots of the North, for the admirable and enengetic•manner it was used by its Presi dent, Samuel M. Felton, in 'forwarding troops to defend the capital. The western part of the bridge that spanned the Schuylkill at this point, was accidentally destroyed by lire a year or so ago, the roof igniting from the sparks of a locomotive. A new bridge has been erected in the place of the old one, and it is so far completed that the trains are continually crossing it. It is a splen did structure of iron and timber, resting on seven piers of dressed stone. The visitor to this section will observe an'old, yellow frame house, located a short distance from the line of the ferry road. This house was reported about twenty-two years ago, as being the scene of a MOST HORMIDLE AND ASTOUNDING MURoutc, and the excitement attending it increased to an alarming extent for three or four days, when the agent of the property called upon the Sheriff of the county for avow contitatus to Protect the place and its surroundings from the crowds of people who congregated there. This house was one of the most beautiful pri• vate residences in the southwestern section of Philadelphia. Its gardens were valuable, with fruit-trees of almost every kind. Black and white mulberry, several specimens of pears, apples, quinces, cherries, plums, green gages, apr i cots R ua pesehes were carefully cult'. -vated. A portion of the territory was arrayed in the choicest specimens of floral creation: The house itself, although simply fraine, erected on brick piers, evinced a considerable degree 04' taste in the arrangement of its pro• tense Excitement. BY "a 11178." PENNSYLVANIA HOSPITAL DEAF AND DUMB ASYLUM THE CHURCH HOME IMBIEEM . . . , . . . , portions. Its origin : owner had vacated it, and it stood idle for • everal years. One day, in the fall of 11513, a dog grit into thu, house, but could not readily get out again. It was supposed that a dompay have been slammed to by-the animal, rosining through the rooms, and his only means of egress was through a window and Venetivn shutter of the second story. The canine, lrobably half starved, in attempting to breal through the sash, cut himself on the glass, tad was forced back. In so doing, his blood; as sprinkled over the floor, on the (loot, gad upon a bedstead and Sacking bottom. wi dog, finally, effected his escape through the tindow, tearing away, in his mad efforts to r ain his liberty, enough slats in the shuttert allow him to go through. This story was seiz upon by a sensational reporter, and a tale f horror was published in a paper in those ( ys known as the Ameri can Advocate. The c mmunity was startled. Great crowds of pe de congregated on the corner of Third and oek streets ; extras were Issued. The Pubiie edger, and its then rival, the Daily gun, were c sidered " slow coaches." The American Advo to was the only paper that had the news, it advance of all competi tion. The reporter vas a pretty fast young man, and bad, what as known in those days as a hard cheek. Tli fertility of his youthful .„,3 imagination enable( im to spin out a " yarn," on any horrible s eet, to any extent re quired. The points • sunned by the genius of the reporter, in reg d to the dog story, were these The fors ren mansion. laidni it revelry. Astound kg disclosures. A most II rible tragedy. The victim obably a female. A bed-rOOM li a slaughter-house. A dilapidated bm et found in the eater_ Blood stain:. pon the bonnet.. Bloody hair I the window sash. The bloody and ..ken window shutter. The excite 'at increasing. Where : the police? The people d' for the dead body. The myster • ore deeply dark. Trees and s bbery destroyed. Arrival of the sh'ill's posse comitatus. The ghost o ray's Ferry road. The final: ads in mystery. The above were t principal points chosen, upon which the rep ter dilated to the extent of seven columns o gate type, in one edition of the paper, and was found necessary tO• Issue thousands of 'ans. The excitement was kept up for tl - e days. There were no omnibuses running •. the scene of murder ; the Baltimore Rai ad track was not then laid, and thousand.... f people wended their way through the he of the sun of sultry Sep ternher afternoons. he house was sacked ; excavations were rde in vain for the dead body ; the blood w examined by a friend of the reporter ; it wa I ronounced human ; the people became high incensed, and threaten ed to burn the hoes: the people of the Neck were excited upon eading the detailed ac counts of this most ysterious, shocking, and horrible tragedy. F ally the Sheriff was ap plied to by the agent of the owner of the place, and posse of men were sent to the infecte district to preserve the property from ther destruction. The genius of the repor r loathed to give up so exciting a subject; •. d after the authorities had made a proper • . stigation of the Whole affair, and pronounc it a "hoax," he intro &lced to the public t . story of the Ghost on Gray's Ferry road— headless woman, with white sheet, standin: on the porch of the M ated house. But th , ory was soon forgotten. The then beautiful g wilds have given way to the ravages of time. he house is torn almost down; and, wherece was a pretty flower I garden, is now the s' of a coal-oil refinery in process of erection. few of the fruit trees still remain, but thes nust necessarily fall, to make room for bus" ss improvements. It is stated, upon good au ority, that to the author of the above exciti hoax,'is attributed the more recent story the "gum man," that gave rise to more or ss newspaper comment and general conver ion, two or three years ago. oB LAVAYETTE. the above place may be with gable-end front , and presenting a heavy base to match. In the the shade of two very sycamore trees. This HEADQIIKAT Not far distant fr. seen a brick dwell ing towards the ro raking cornice, wit afternoon it catch. large and handso afayette , s headquarters to Philadelphia,- in the . It was in this house any plans to aid Wash he brightest Jewel from ritain. The edifice is by 1 - nports with the style of undred years ago. As an house was General 1.1j)011 his first visi American Revoluti where he suggested ington in plucking the crown of Great no means ugly. It architecture of one ossessing historical in- ancient landmark photographed terest, it ought to b 'tly erected. &depot, front -1 and Twenty-third street, ear, on the trip from the depot on Twenty- The companyree ing on Twenty-seco below Spruce. T Gray's Ferry, eut:, third street; and .re`a change of cars be come necessary if : . erson is in a hurry. There Is no delay in the ovement. One tap of a ,i,;,,,,,, , ,,,m,,.a0.idm .;p r efereme 1-... ... -ovanbling ce, . whistle, off the starts, and curves into Spruce street. H e let us remark that for several squares th yelling houses are erected in a style of prize y magnificence, similar in their appearance o the pretty mansions on West Green stre . There are quite a num ber of houses of similar character being erected in this be tiful part of Philadelphia. At Seventeenth steer, the imposing edifice, known as the - 1 , WEST STEI.IOEI"REET CHURCH, Of the Presbyterian denomination, rears its lofty spires; seeming.it penetrates the ceru lean arch of the unive e: It is a magnificent structure, graceful in i proportions; its front being embellished wit handsome designs, in perfect harmony wit the sacred object for which the building w erected. This is one of the choice section of the city that Phila delphia/IS may refer to with pride. Nor far distant is located Eitnhouse Square, one of the prettiest public picks in our City. Further down SprinE street are rows of pret ty, commodious buillings, some of them being erected on the site owe occupied by the Alms house, known in yeinsiagone as the "Better in, House: , We welkmmember, in the days of our boyhood, standitg in front of the Alms_ hciuse, eontemplatiM'lthe amount of power necessary to turn leadmill upon which a number of lazy, good{ r-nothing paupers were at work grinding out corn for the inmates of the institution—an irvention that would be profitable if introdued in the paupers' palace at Blockley. HOLY TRHITY CHURCH. This is one of the Old temples of worship erected several g,eneiations ago, when black headed bricks weriOn demand. They are hard and water-proofi The church is attached to the Catholic den6nination, is located at Sixth street, and it his an interesting history. Of late years it was the subject of considerable litigation, and so lateas 1819 or 1850, a riot took place among certain members relative to the POSSession of the proilrty. At a later period the roof was entire; i destroyed by fire, and the interior of the clifieh, solemn, grand, and imposing as it was, wis greatly damaged. The fire was occasioned 1 a piece of fireworks known as a "doubleibeaded dutchman , fall ing on the roof near tie northeast angle of the building. It burnt trough the shingles, and the flames spread in Ric loft to a considerable extent before the smike was observed curling out beneath the eave4.l When the flames haat, through the roof thi !combustion was very rapid. A new roof wsi speedily constructed, and since that time t] congregation have had nothing to mar the haltnony of their religious devotions. PRESBYTEIIIAN CHURCH. The Sixth-street I cSbyterian Church, lo cated on the north si of Spruce, below Sixth street, soon passes in the panoramic view. It recesses some twent feet from the street-line. It is a plain brick edi e. The front enclosure consists of a base witit ) iron railing. • BAPTIST cumicii. The Fourth Baptist; Church, a modernized Structure, will please the eye of the observant spectator. It is looat i id on the south side Of Spruce street, above purth: ANOTHER PRESUPTEHIAN CHURCH, The Eighth Presbyterian Church on Spruce street, above Third, lies a Revolutionary his tory. It was known for many years as the blue stocking Presbyterian. Church. It was here that the Rev. Wm. 1. hicCalla, a Kentuckian by birth, challengedka.rehhishop Hughes and other distinguished ,relates to a theological discussion, that cal= very near ending in a riot. In the ReVOlutfonary period, this church building was used by the British for their wounded who fell in the battle of German. . , IZENINACENORS. The car now turns Into Third street, a sec tion of Philadelphia thathas a very interest ing history. The whole of the space bounded by Third and Fourth streets, Wil alley and Spruce street, belonged anterior, and subsequent to the Revolution, to Mr. Thomas Willing anti Mr, WilliaM Bingham, who were related by marriage ties. The old residence of Mr. W. was pulled down a few years since, and in its place , a monumental pile of handsome architecture has been erected, as the °Mee Of the great Pennsylvania Railroad Company, the most extensive and enterprising organization of the hind in the country. The Bingham mansion was built after the model of the palatial abiding place of the Duke of Manchester, London. It was located about forty feet from the street line, was three stories in elevation, and had a circu lar carriage drive in front of it. The grounds a ttached to the mansion covered nearly three ,scree, diversified with walks, Stattlary, &O. The building was noted for self-sustaining, pure white marble stairways. Mrs. Bingham wa s a daughter of Mr. Willing. She was re puted to be the handsomest lady residing in Philadelphia in her time. About twenty or twenty live years ago, the mansion was do roycd by lire. It was kept asp public place ;)y a Mr. Head, and was known simply as the " Mansion House." A building on the same site, known as the Washington Hall, was erected a few years since. ST. PAUL'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH The venerable churcliknown as St. Paul's was erected many 3 - ears ago, and some time before Third stleet was reduced. to its present grade. Consequently, a part of the foundation walls aboVe the • level of the street. The emelt. :tire of this edifice consists of a stone base and I:rcttiriron railing. This passed, the car sweeps into Want Arcot, and halts near the eastera front of the Merchants' Exchange,a pretty mar.. ble building, erected, we believe s in tile year lfitt. Thus we close our trip on this road. We may say that a number of now and beautiful oars have been introduced by this company. STATE ITEMS. The act.of the Legislature authorizing the building; Colebrookdate Railroad, pro vides that it shall commence at or near Potts town, and extend to Boyertown, with the right to make a farther extension, from any point on said railroad, in order to connect with the East Pennsylvania Railroad, in the county of Becks; and also to make a branch to connect with e t a ]. i v e r t c a a l t s a t s o n c u k q i u s t m an:l ooo F , o n g e e a ls r y iy il a l i e } R of ai w lr h o i a c t h i : we understand, has been. taken, the Philadel phia and Reading Railroad Company owning a considerable portion. —ln Reading, on the sth instant, a Mr. Her man Sticker, a respectable citizen, went into a drug store, bought a quantity of hashish, and immediately swallowed it. The druggist urged him to take an emetic, or he would die. He said that was what he wanted, and refused to take an antidote. It seems that he was overcome by despondency and grief. By the efforts of the druggist and a physician, how ever, his life was saved. Last Wednesday, a man named David Hei ler was arrested in Sharrisburg, Allegheny county, on charge of bigamy. While the offi cer was taking him across the river, Heiler in sisted on rowing the boat in the wrong direc tion, and a scuffle ensued. The two grabbed each other, and fell out of the boat. The offi cer was the best swimmer, . and got into the boat. The other was nearly drowned before he could be recovered. The 100. th Pennsylvania Regiment (Round heads) has been ordered to Harrisburg, where it will do guard and other duty in connection with the final discharge of returning troops. • - - The next term of court for Montgomery county will commence on Monday, the 21st of August. Court will continue one week, and only criminal cases 'will be tried. A distillery in Bridgwater, Beaver county, was seized last week by a Unified StateS reve nue collector, Tor alleged fraud in making re turns. —llysentevy prevails to a considerable ex tent in West Chester and Chester county, both among adults and children. Many cases have proved fatal. There is a proposition under discussion among the prominent colored men of Penn sylvania, to hold a National Convention in Harrisburg. The State railroads did not reduce their coal freights, last week, as they were expected to, and are said to have postponed the matter indefinitely. The assessed valuation of the real and per sonal property in Chester county amounts to $27,N18,000. Vegetables are scarce in Titusville. HONE ITERM. -- We know of many instances of young , dies performing daring feats of swimming in our waters, says the Cape May Wave, but we are now called upon to notice the most re markable ease. Two misses, aged thirteen and fifteen, guests of Mr. X. C. Little, at the Ocean House Steamboat Landing, while bathing the other day, went to the outer end of the wharf, and, jumping- off, they swain merrily to the shore. The distance from the wharf to the water, and from where they plunged in to the shore, is so great that we never considered that any lady had the courage to put her tender life in such a perilous condition. Few men would accept a challenge to perform this feat. A negro was arrested last week, near For tress Monroe, charged with stealing two thou sand dollars from a book-keeper. He denied his guilt. He was tied up by the thumbs; when,in his torture, he admitted he bad stolen the money, and said if his thumbs were un tied, he would show where he had hid it. He was securely haneuffed,. and started with an officer to find the money. While crossing Mill Creek bridge, the negrce handcuffed as he was, bounded over the parapet into the water be low, With his hands shackled, he sank at once, and rose no more. Whether guilty or in nocent, mortal judges can never decide. -A delegation of five'lndians from each of these tribes—the. Cherokees, Choctaws, Creeks, Camanches, Chickasaws, Caddoes, Cheyennes, 'Seminoles, Osages, Lipans, Kio was, Araphoes, Northern Osages, and Ana docsees—are on their way . to Washington, to have an interview with the President. It is proposed to erect tents fOr their reception. Some wags at Saratoga rigged up a man to personate General Grant and suffered the in telligence to leak out that the Lieutenant- General was to arrive by train on the afternoon of the 4th. A vast crowdgathered at the Opera House to bear the man who never makes a speech. After staying about, for a while the crowd suddenly lett that part of the town. The Portage (Lake Superior) Mining Ga zette says that paper pipes, six inches in di ameter, aro used an the Pewabie copper-mine to convey air from one portion of the mine to the other. The pipe is six inches inside di ameter. The paper pipes are quite strong, and can be joined perfectly air-tight by a strap of canvas and a coating of tar. A writer in Georgia describes a Govern ment tannery, grinding bark by no power visi ble at first, or suspected. The machinery is run by an underground creek—a great curiosi ty. There are several similar streams in that region, soft limestone beingfavorable to sinks and submarine channels. A woman was hung on Boston Common about seventy years ago. Her crime consisted of snatching a bonnet, and reticule from a lady, on one of the streets leading from Fort MIL She was indicted for highway robbery, was convicted, and suffered the extreme pe nalty of the law. An immense grain elevator is going . up at St. Louis, to cost. 5450,000. It will contain one hundred bins, with It capacity Of ten thousand bushels each, and accommodate forty thou sand barrels of rolling freight. A number of the Brooklyn friends of Miss the contralto, have made up and pre sented her with a purse of $2,200, to enable her to study a year in - Italy under an eminent pro fessor. • - _ - -&-taan at Taunton, Mass., who received a sunstroke a week ago, and has since been con.. lined to his bed, has been gradually growing deaf, and is now unable to hear the loudest sounds. —A young and handsome woman of Vin cennes, Ind., forged her uncle's name and Ob tained fifty dollars worth of dry goods. She avoided arrest bye rapid movementeastward. Au k agricultnral soeietyoffered.a premium for the best essay on. irrigation. By mistake it was printed irritation, whereupon an honest former sent his wife. —lt is a curious fact that President John son was married at Greenville, Tennessee, by plorcleeal Lincoln, Esq., a distant relative of the late President. The income of John Roe; pork.packer, at St. Louis, is V 71,000. The income of Ames St Brother, pork packers and provision dealers, is over *700,000. Two new papers commence their existence in the far West this month—one at Silver City, Idaho, and the other at Susanville, California. With their nice little fire-crackers some festive lads burnt up the Congregational church at Woodstock, Conn. Governor Pierpont is expected shortly in Norfolk, Virginia, where be will, doubtless,.bc well received. Nashville wants to know whether the city is still under martial law, or whether civil law be restored. The Richmond negroes are growing more and more troublesome, and riots among them are feared: The Jersey City Common Council will re sign. The dead lock frustrated all business. The printer's strike in Detroit was unsue eessfnl. The - Union there is dissolved. Two-thirds of the Catawba; grape crop has been destroyed by rot. The new opera house at Saratoga was in augurated Monday night. Tlieje is a soldier in Norfolk, Virginia, over seven feet four inches tall. Stuart the alleged.murderer of the Joyce children, will not be tried for - some time. Gold mining in Vermont averages about four dollars per day. The foxes are killing off the poultry in Connecticut. The poisoned cheese case, in Cincinnati, is creating great excitement. A new daily paper has beenlstarted at Sara toga, New York. Nebraska City is the laxgost town in Ne braska Territory. Sickness is greatly increasing in Rich mond. Cholera is making its appearande in Chi cago. FOREIGN ITEMS. —lt is said, writes the Liverpool Mercury, that between.lB63 and 1864, twenty-eight years, 73,355 persons emigrated to America from Nor way. This emigration first became consider able in 1849, and it reached its maximum in 4861. Two-thirds of these emigrants went to Canada, the rest to the United States. From 1820 to 1860, 5,530 persons went from Denmark to America; and from 1851 to 1860, no fewer than 14,865 left Sweden for the same destina tion. It is believed that this emigration has been the result not so much of poverty as of religious excitement. It is noted that a large number of the emigrants were Quakers, Mor mons, or members of other peculiar sects mud that nearly all the emigrants from Denmark were converts to Mormonism. The' health of the Archduke Rodolph, the heir apparent to the Austrian throne, is im proving. Instead of taking four or five lessons a daT, tbc child now does nothing but Plan and drive about on a donkey-cart, employ ments which seem to be more to lds ta3te than the learning of languages. The friends of the United States in Lyons, France, have opened subscription lists for the purpose of raising money for the manufacture of a deg of 'honor, to be presented to this country in memory of President Lincoln. The subscriptions liavb been fixed at two cents each. The Emperor of the French is going to give the Parisians something novel in the sol dier way to play with. The idea struck him while he was hi Algiers that he would have a regiment or two of blacks or the most inky color that could lie found, and all to match. • —A congress of German schoolmasters opened the first week in June at Leipsic. About two thousand five hundred were pre sent, and, during several days, discussed a number of questions concerning primary in struction. Adah Isaacs Menken Heenan Morrison Sullivan Sayers, %e., it M said, is to build a new theatre, next autumn, in London, pro vided she can spare time Irma her matrimo nial engagements yet unfilled. Portugal is about to send to Mexico a mi nister, one Viscount Sodomayer, who will con vey to the Emperor Maximilian the three mi litary orders of Portugal, and to his wife the Order of Saint Isabella. The original estimate of the " New Houses of Parliament," not yet completed was seven hundred and fifty thousand pounds; the cost SO tar has been close upon three million pounds. The Royal Society of England is to print a catalogue of 180,000 papers and articles in all the leading transactions and journals of the present century. It is done at Government expense., Sothern is said to be as big a snob in London as any of those he nihnies on the stage. His servants, footmen and lacqueys, arc as nobby as any in Hyde Park. The weather is dry and hot in Scotland to an unprecedented degree, the mountain streams are drying up, and the sportsmen aro in despair: . In the newest. and most elegant hotel in London, a bedroom may be obtained for eighteen pence per night. The Duke of St. Albans 'will shortly be united to in chrietolther, a lovely heiress of greet Wealth. The latest mentioned bonnet worn by Eugenie was white tulle, pulTed and adorned with two yellow roses. , Ninety millions tons of coal are annually brought to the surface in the eolleries of England. Thereis a parrot in France which is known: to be sixty-five years old, and is believed to be at least, seventy. . . Blondin is performing most Wonderful feats in Paris, and attracts immense crowds. One swoop of the cholera in Turkey carried otf fortysix thousand people. • -_,--- OININCIAL AND COVNEROAL. The stock market was inactive yesterday, with the exception of Reading, which con, tinneB eXCited, and prices advanced 1. About 5,500 shares sold at from WA up to 51, closing at 50%. Pennsylvania Railroad sold at 57, an advance of %; North Pennsylvania at 2/, and Camden and Amboy art-129, an advance of %, 54% was bid for ; 24%" for Catawissa. preferred ; 22 fOr Philadelphia and Erie; 55 for Norristown ;68 for Lehigh Valley 12 for Catil wissa common, and 28 for Little Schuylkill. City passenger railway Shares are without change. Race and Vine sold at 10, and Reston villa at /O. 20 was bid for Thirteenth and Fif teenth, and ny r , for Lombard and South, In Government bondstbere is no material change to notice. 6.20 s sold at 10514; ese 1881 at 107, and 10.40 s at 97 1 4 99% was bid for 7.305. City loans are in better demand, but prices have fallen off, with sales of the new issue at 92@92 1 %---the former rate a decline of 1 1 4,. Bank shares are firmly held. Mechanics' sold at 29, and Girard at 51%; 130 was bid for Phila. delphia ;116 for Farmers' and Mechanics'; 70 for Tradesmen'a ; 57 for City; 36% for ConsolF• dation ; . and 57 for Corn Exchange. Canal shares are in better demand, and prices have advanced, with sales of Wyoming Canal to notice at 65, an advance of 2%; Delaware Divi sion at 32; Schuylkill Navigation preferred at 20 . ; and Lehigh Navigation at 55 1 4, an advance of %. 20% was bid for Schuylkill Navigation, common, 122 for Morris Canal preferred, and 7% for Susquehanna Canal. Coal Oil shares, as we have noticed for sometime past, continues very dull and depressed, with sales of Dal zell at 3%@3%; Franklin at 1; McClintock at I'm ; Mingo at 2 ; Caldwell at 2; and Walnut Island at %. 10 was bid fin: Maple Shade; 3 for Junc tion ; 1% for Corn Planter; and % for Big Tank. Gold was more active yeoterdan and prices advanced 2 per cent. The following were the quotations yester day, at the hours named: 10 A. X . 140 11 A. X • . ~ 141 11 P. . M . 141 . 111 141411 P, 3 P X 4, 4 P. M 141 The demand for the 7-30 notes continues strong in all directions, and in the absence of other employment for capital, are taken by parties generally using their money for specu lation. The labors of Mr. Jay Cooke have been so successful that over one hundred million of these notes are in the hands of the people. The aubßeriptions continue to Increase, and yesterday reached the enormous sum of *6,110,• 200. The subscriptions to the 7-30 loan received by Jay Cooke yesterday amount to $6,110,200, including one of $1,000,000 from the First Na tional Bank' New York; one of $513,600 . Irons the Ninth National Bank, New York; one of $300,000 from the Tenth National Bank, New York; one of $lOO,OOO from the First National Bank, Boston; one of $300,000 from the Second National Bank, Boston; one of $lOO,OOO from the First National Bank, Portland; one of $lOO,- 000 from the First National Bank, Albany; one of $130,000 from the Second National Bank, Chi cago ; one of $145,000 from the First National Bank, Bridgeport; one of $200,000 from Vey milye & Co., New York; one of $150,000 from Henry Clews & Co., New York. There were 4,278 individual subscriptions of $50(43100 each. The Pacific Railroad is extending eastward from the shores of the great ocean from which it receive its name, as fast as enteprise, energy, money, and the combined labor of two thou sand live hundred able-bodied men can force it. The road bed is now being constructed through the mountains of Placer county, Cali fornia, and the locomotive has already reached a point forty-three miles from Sacramento, which is one thousand eight hundred feet above the sea. By September 1 the rails will he laid to illinoistown. A letter from Altenct, near Hamburg, Ger many, dated June 24, - isrz, as published in the Evening Post, refers to American securities abroad thus: , . It is highly gratifying to observe here a daily increase in the price and popularity of our stocks. While all other securities are de predating, only United States stocks seem to gain ground. The largest amount of business done in those securities hitherto was last week, one person having bought the enormous amount of five hundred thousand dollars for himself, beside being a permanent holder to the amount of two hundred thousand dollars. The price on Thursday was the highest yet reached being 73 ; they are now at 70, standmg firm. Large investments are made in these stocks, and a very good reason for it, as at pre sent rates they will pay about eight per cent. interest, a price not to be had in any other equally safe investment. The Germans are a thrifty and a safe calcu lating people, ever choosing the safest and best markets for their products, whether money or goods, and they seem to bo, now the war is perfectly satisfied to deposit their savings in American securities. Money islvery plentiful in Europe—never more so than at this moment —and at such low rates it is no :wonder our bonds are so inviting. With the war over at home, and no difficulties in the way abroad, it iS onlya wonder that the gold premium should keep up so high as at this moment, as every body knows there is no actual cause for it. 2he best and staunchest men here think the gold premi um will decline, and that by October or Christmas United States stocks will rise to par. Tim Toircio Mode llaS the following. addition. al particulars of the recent important railway consolidation from that city to the Mississippi . river, heretofore but 'briefly referred to: "We have already announced the organiza tion of this corporation, being a consolidation of the following companies, to wit: The Tole do ajld Wabash. company, from Toledo to the Illinois State tine ; the treat Western, from State line to river at Meredosia • the Toledo and Quincy, from Ideredosia to Camp Point; and the Illinois and Southern lowa, from Clayton (on the Toledo and Quincy) to Hamiton, opposite Keokuk. This consolida tion of these companies went into effect on the Ist inst., and the onerous work of arrang ing and systematizing the operations of the new organization is betn , " pushed forward with all the energy and for which its eel cersnre tlistinguislied. It may be some days before all the details of the new arrangement are reduced to complete order, but the delay will not seriously embarrass the traffic of the line. From Camp Point to Quincy the Toledo, Wa bash, and Western Railway runs on the track of the Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy road, in common with that company, and at Quincy connects directly with the Hannibal and Joseph road to the Missouri river. At Keokuk connection is made with the Keokuk and Des Moines road. It is expected that an improved running connection will very soon be secured with the Chicago, Alton, and St. Louis road, at Spring field, whereby traffic between Toledo and St. Louis will be greatly facilitated. The di* tame between the two points by this route is only 4.58 miles, being 67 miles shorter than any other. The distances from Toledo 'to the connect ing points on the Mississippi river are as fol lows : Toledo to Keokuk. Toledo to Quincy.. Toledo to St. Louis The following is a statement of coal tran sported on the Delaware and Hudson Canal for the week ending July Bth, and for the sea son • • • • .Week. Season. Delaware and Hudson Canal C0..24,69S 324,5 M Pennsylvania Coal Company 240 17,010 Total tons For the same period last year: Delaware and Hudson Canal C0...24,018 330,100 Pennsylvania Coal Company 18,761 170,044 Total tons The following is the usual monthly state molt Of the Hon. Wm. H.. Ramsey, Rank Comp.._ troller of Wisconsin, giving the condition of e banks of that State on tale Ist of July : The circulation has been decreased during the last month... $240,380 00 The whole amount of circulation outstand- ing is: Par banks Banks wincling up Total Secured as follows Wisconsin (i 5......... United States Ss Indiana Ss Treasury notes...—. Coin T0ta1............... The earnings of the Chicago and North western Railway for the first week in July were as follows 1865. 1864. Increase $44,554 • Drexel & CO, quote; 'New 'United States Bonds, lost 10S14 107,4 1 ~ ~ ••• new our, or indbtis.... ow 98.% 66 66 . 6 old core of itidbt's 9934 10U 73-10 notes, old 99X 100 Quartermasters , vouchers 9534 97i¢ Orders for certificates of Indebtedness.— 9854. 9914 G01d14054 141i4 Sterling E , xchange 153;4 155 5-20 bond, Old 105;44 Law new 101 , 4©105 10-10897; , 441 98 Sales of Stocks, July 19. THE PUBLIC BOARD. , 100 T/ITT bionle'd..blo 3.94 1100 Junetioll MO 3 SECOND CALL. 500 Densmore "4'1200 Winfield • g 27 Tilton Coal '5 200 Atlas .31 400 Walnut Island.... 69 MO Drinkard a15...b30 44 100 do .430 69 100 do " 1)10 44 100 do 1)30 09'.34 100 Dalzell 55 M 100 Win Penn 131 200 El Dorado 5.4 SALES AT REGULAR, BOARD OP BROKERS. Reported by Hewes, Miller, & Co., 50 South Third Si. FIRST BOARD. 2000 IT S6s '81..eh.cp.107 1 Z 1 Reading R 50% 2000 II S 5-20 Rds..cp•losi4 1100 do 50% 1000 IT 1110-40 Rds.cp• 97% , 100 do...sswn&int. 50% 40 Penni' It 571290 do 50.). 100 Race & Vine-st 1100 do ell. 50% R sswn. 10 1200 do 91s-00.50-31 5 Mechanics , 8k... 29 100 do 810. 5076 20 Delaware Div ... 32 100 du.....55wn&1ut.50-1-1 100 Reading R...b15. 50%000 do' 50% 100 do 1)15. 50341 50 Dalzell 3% 50 do 50A , ...IV do 3% 100 do 50% 100 o 3,46 100 do 1115. 50% 100 Franlin On I 100 do ell. 50% 100 McClintock 0i1,.. 1% 100 do 50% 400 Mingo Oil 2 16 do ..... Its ..t rs. 50%.5M1 do. 2 BETWEEN BOARDS. 1100 City& now 5e..% 20 Wrom Val Canal 55 300 Reading It I ts.b3o 50% 100 Schttyl Nay pref. 20 15 do 50% 10001.1 S6s 1 88 1 ..e0up.107 :100 do 8 30 so% 12000 US 5-20 b sswit r. 10514 100 do SOdys 5154 350 do c0up.1044 400 do l o t s so% 100 Hestonville R..— 15 100 do east) 50% 100 do 1130 15 100 do bs&lnt 50% 200 00 WO 15 100 do 030 50% 100 dv 1474 100 do 1160 50% 4 POlllitil It 57 100 do sswn 1074 100 N Penns. It ..rush 2.4 100 do b 5 507 s 500 Tarr Farm 1 100 do s 5 50% 300 •do 1 200 do sal lots 5034 100 St Nicholas 011.. 1 100 do 910 50.5.1 22 Girard Bank...bs 51% SECOND BOARD. 110110110.5-20 bs Its ep.10534 5000 Union Can bds 11.5 19 IMO Cltv 6s new 92% 1000 Penna. It Ist m0r.103 11.300 ilo 92% 3 Cam St Am It2ds-129 1000 fin . ........ .... 92X 1000 Caldwell 2900 410 lots MI 600 Walnut Island Its z g MX/ do.. municipal 102 .A_PTER .1 400 Walnut Island.bs , _45 100 Reading R.slOwn 50% lei do .... . . .....sl5 50% leo do s3O 50.56' 100 do s3O 5045' SALES AT 9 100 Reading It .. ._ ~ 50% 20)0 do . . . Idiclin 5034 ICOOTIOnesY . . s Oil .69. 100 Reading It 1/5 504 E 500 Dalzell 011 3% 100 Rending R..... s3O 5014' 24 LehighNav stock 56% 700 liestonville 12.1)30 15 10005-20 s .smalLcoup.lo434' HE CLOSE. 200 ROading R MOB bo Pemiti, is 300,111ing0.... • 2 800 Reading It ....boo 51. The New York Post of yesterday says Gold is more active, and has received an up., ward impulse from . the news by the Persia. The opening price was tw o and the lowest 140 1 // s . The principal transactions have been at 140%@140 1 %. At the close 141% was bid. The loan market is well supplied at 46'5 per cent. Before the first Higdon there was consider able excitement in Erie and Michigan South ern, but little business In other stocks. Brie opened at 81, closing at 72%; Rock Island was .quoted at 100 , 4; Reading at 100% The following quotations were made at the board, as coMpared with Tuesday: Wed. Tues. Ad,. Dee, U 8 65,, coupon, 1881 107% 107 3 . U 5 5.20 coupons 10544 105% ;i .. U 85.20 coupons, new 105 . WS% 11 S 10.40' coupons 97% 97% .. i Tennessee 6s - 72 71% ',. blissou ri W. ~• .. . 72 72 Atlantic 15814 MK 1 .. New York Centro 96 90. Erie 7914 80 i! Erie Preferred 57 875 C .. i 7 Hudson River • 110 X 11.0 .. t„! Re ad ing..... 1W 99 14' '. After the board the market was better. Ne w York Central closed at 264, Erie at 80 1 4, Real'. ing at 102, Michigan Southern at 674ifilinois Central at 188. At the one o'clock call Eri e fell off to 79%, the rest of the market being fairly sustained in the face of an increasing disposition to sell. Later, Erie sold at 7% J 111.17 /2--Eyonin g. The Flour market is rather more active, and holders are firmer in their views. About 2,001 bbls sold, in lots, at $7.50@7.75 for extra family Including 1,100 bbls Broad-street Mills extra', en private terms. The retailers and laiket,, are buying at from 66@0.5e 0 f0r suPerill‘e,Vimg 7 for extra, $7.500/8.25 for extra family, and sln 10 ift bbl for fancy lots, as to quality. ny e Flour and Corn Meal continue dull at former rates. is firmly held, and the SMICA are in a small way only at +L65941.70 for good prime reds—the latter rate an advance—and white at from $1.8061.001ff bu, as to quality, Rye is better ; 2,500 bus sold at 82@s5c bu. Corn is scarce, and prices have advanced ; small sales of prime yellow are making at Wig/ 95e 99 bu. Oats are without change 5,000 bus Pennsylvania sold at 88c bu. BARK.—First No. 1 Quereitron is in steady demand, with sales of 80 hogsheads at $32.50 99 ton. COTTON.—Prices have again- advanced, and there is more doing in the may of sales; about 3.50 URI OS of middlings have been disposed of at 5507 e /9 IL Cash. GROOEBIIO3.--Sugar is without change; 250 hogsheads Cuba sold at from 11W212 1 /0 99 B. Coffee is firmly held, but we hear of no sales. PETROLEUM is firmly held, with sales of about 1,500 hbls to notice at 336 , 83tte for crude, 52@rgle for refined in bond, and 726 1 75 Vg e allon for free, as to quality. HAv.—Baled is selling at 9201§22 /9 ton. NAVAL STORES are firmer. Small sales of Rosin are reported at $8(010 bbl, as to quality. Psovisions.—The stooks are light, and the market firm .at an advance. Small sales of Mess Pork are making at 928 bbl. Bacon Rams are selling, in a small way, at 28c 'ft lb for fancy bagged. - Green Meats are scarce and prices better. Pickled Hams sell at 22e, and salt Shoulders at 15e /9 m. Lard is firmer; sales of tierce are making at 20,§2.010 WBlSKT.—Prices are firm, but there is very little doing in the way of salmi, Small lots are reported at $2.1.242.14 IR gallon, for Pennsylva nia and Western bbls. The following are the receipts of Flour and Grain at this port today: Flour.. Wheat, Corn... Oats.. BnEADSTePFS.—The market for State and Western Flour is Sc better and quiet; sales 0,500 bbls at $5,90@6 for superfine State, $5.65(1 8.75 for extra State, 8i11.80@6.85 for choice do., *5.55@e for superfine Western, $0.65@6.85 for common to medium extra Western, $6.80@7 for common to good shipping brands extra round hoop Ohio. Canadian Flour is 5c better ; sales 550 MS at $6.00(§6.75 for common, and 326.80@f155 for good to choice extra. Southern Flour is firmer ; sales 600 bbls at d 7 7.75 for common, and 57.85(4111.60 for fancy and . extra. Wheat is dull, and I@2e lower; sales 49,000 bushels at $1.38@1.40 for amber Milwaukee, $1.60@1.65 for winter red Western, and e1.70@1.72 for amber Michigan. Itye is quiet. Marley is dull. Bar ley Malt is quiet. Data are dull, and 2c lower, at 65 for Western. The Corn market is dull, and 2c lower • sales 50000 bushels at 700180 c for unsound, and 82@ 82 fOr Sound mixed estem PROVISIONS.—The pork market is lower; sales 9,000 bbls at $27.25Q27.62 for new nteSS, *25@2.5.50 for 83-4 do, cash and regular way; $19@19.50 for prime, and $21.50@i21.75 for prime mess. The beef market is dull ; sales 400 bbls at about pre vious prices. Beef hams are quiet. Cut meats are steady ; sales 400 pkgs at 12©14e for shoul ders, and 18@2le for hams. The lard market is steady; sales 1,200 ibis at 16 1 /a2O l / 2 e. WHISKY is steady, with sales of 15 bbls West ern at 8+2.05.. . . TALLOIv is quiet ; sales 60,000 ihs at 1094a11/e. ramonTs.—To Liverpool 7,000 bushels corn at 3341, and 100 tons mahogany at 20s. Pittsburg Petroleum Market, July 11. .tusineo in the oil way was moderately ac tive. Prices for all descriptions were uniform ; crude ranging from 2142114 e, without pack ages, and 20@26 1 ,0, packages included. Cnuns OIL.— he market remains steady with a fair demand for home purposes and for export. Among the sales were 100 bbls at Ole, packages returned; 700 bbls F. 0. B. at No, packages included ; 100 bbls prime at 20 1 4 c, bids included; 100 bbls do on same terms and conditions ; 600 bbls F. 0. B. GO bbls taken from wharf, 26e ackages included, and 54 bbls of Duck Creek 'Oi p l at 4525 per bbl. REFINED OlL.—The market yesterday pre sented no particular change; there was a good deal of negotiation that resulted in but few sales L - what may result from what took place may ill out another report. The only opera tions closed were 1,200 bbls bonded delivered in Philadelphia at once at 52y 2 ; 1,000 bbls do same conditions, 52e ; 500 bbls bonded for Au• gust delivery on the spot, 47e. Louisville Tobacco Market, July 10. The sales of the week have amounted to 1,091 hluls, with rejections of the prices bid on 166 hhds. The aggregate sales for the month of June were 6,938 hlids against 9,737 hhds the same time last year, being a falling off of 2,799 hhds. The sales from November 1, 1861 . , to June 30, have been 24,197 against 43469 hhds for the same period last year, making a decrease in the eighth month, as compared with last year, of 20,972 lihds. The market to day manifested some depression, and prices, owing to the low grades offered; 'were less. The break amounted to 191 hhds, 'with rejec tion of bids on 38 hhds. Sales 9 hhds trash at $2.2003.95; 31 factory lugs at $404.90; 32 at ag. 5.90; 10 do common lugs, $146.70; 8 do heavy do *7@7.85; 9 at sB@B.Bo • 1 do common leaf, 40.405 11 at *10010.75; 13 at $11611.75; 7 do heavy do, *12612,50; 11 at $1403.76 ; 8 at $14018.755 8 at $141@16.75; 7 at W 610.75 0 at *i2@17.75; 6 good to line leaf at $ 18@1835; 2at $15419.75; 2 at *20@20.75; Oat $22.25@22.75; 1 at *23.25; 1 at *24.25. Markets by Telegraph. .—F BALTIMOIO, July 12lour closed at an ad- Vallee, of ke for high grades interior very heavy. Wheat firm; sales of a,OOO bus Pennsyl vania red at *LK Corn dull, and no solos. Provisions quiet and advancing. Sugar alma. Whisky firm at 1t2.11@2.12 for Western, CINCUMATT, July 12.—Flour more active and higher.. Whisky steady at $2.05. ' Provisions firmer ; Mess Pork $26. Cmcwoo, July 12.—ylour quiet. Wheat dull; sales of No. 1 at $1.11@1.14, closing at $1.11@1.12; No. 2at 9814@97c. Corn active at 57c for No. 1, and 55c for No. 2. Oats dull at 41@1134c. Freights advanced %e. Wheat B%c to Buffalo. Ilighwines unchanged. 5 Rece 6 ipts. 'Shipments. Flour ,500 1,00 Wheat 45,000 21,000 Corn 174,000 • 83,000 Oats 45,000 28,000 ...475 miles ...489 miles —458 miles LETTER BAGS At the Merchants' Exchange, Philadelphia. Brig Anna (Br), Morrow St Thomas soon Brig S V MOrnOlc, Noradn.... ..... Havana soon PHILADELPHIA 13 ARD OF TB/BE. THORNTON BROWN, • EDWARD LAFOURCADE , }dom. OF THE MONTH. HENRY LEWIS. 24,938 341,542 MARINE INTELLIGENCE. PORT OF PHILADELPHIA, July 13. Strx RlB/0 //W8 WATER... Bark Paramount, Deshon, 10 days from Ma tanzas, with molasses to John MA.9011. 2t Co. Brig E P Swett, Chadbourne; 12 days front Pensacola, in ballast to Workman & Co. Schr Lamartine,Baiggs,lB clays from St John, B, with lumber to Gaskill Galvin. Saw Cora, Kelly 11 days from Portland, with lictu/ings to Isaac Hough Sr. Co. Schr Neptune, Malan, 4 days from Hartford, in ballast to captain. Schr John Dorrance, Hewitt, 4 days from Providence, in ballast to captain. Schr K V Edwards, Allen, 4 days from Fall River, in ballast to L Audenried & Co. Schr W Collyer, Taylor 5 days from Provi dence, in ballast to captain. Schr J D McCarty, Youn from Boston, in ballast to Blakiston, araff, & Co. Sehr Caroline, Fox, 3 days from NOW rork, with salt cake to Baugh & Son. Schr Thos Holcomb, Godfrey, 7 days from Key West, in ballast to Peter Wright & Sons. Schr C L Vandervoort, Parker, 7 days from Boston, with mdse to captain. Schr F A Sawyer, Keen, 10 days from Calais, with lumber to Trum Son, & Co. Schr Mary Farrow, Corson 12 days from Ban gor, Me, with lumber to captain. Soler Mechanic, Myers 1 day from Odessa. Del, with grain to Jas L bewiey & Co. $352,680 09 119,450 03 45112,130 00 .$299,600 00 . 22,000 00 . 7,000 00 $328,000 00 . 159,537 15 . 8,356 33 4008,495 48 $143,381 108,827 Cleared. Bark Chevalier, Bruce, Hamburg. Brig Saint Welch, Hoecker, Port Spain. Brig P It Curtis, Atherton, Portland. Brig Jas Davis, Clough, Bath. T Brig Daniel Boone, ucker, Portland. Schr Hannah, Wall, Plymouth, Mass. Schr Mary Tice, Tice, Norfolk, Va. Schr John Dorrance, Hewitt, Providence. Sehr Kate V Edwards, Allen, Providence. Schr Grace Watson Nickerson, Providence Schr Win Collyer, Taylor, Providence. Schr A E Martin, Brower, Boston. Schr 2' 111: Wheaton, Somers, Boston. Schr I) McCarthy, Young, Boston. Sew North Pacific, Webb Norfolk. Schr Ellen Perkins, Perkins Boston. Boston. SchrWhite Squall, Adams, Schr W G Bartlett, Connelly. Schr Win Kennedy, Christy, Georgetown. Steamer J S Shrive; Dennis; Baltimore. Shi Odessa, Nichols, cleared at Bangor Bth hist, for Searsport,to finish loading for Buenos Brig Peerless (Br,) Perm forthis port in two days, was at Mayaguez, PR, 22d ult. Brig Shibboleth, •fohnseri, from Warren for this port sailed from Newport kith inst. Brig Olive, Harrington, hence at Boston on TUesd ay. Sehr Geo T Adams, Fisk, hence at Baltimore on Tuesday. Sehr R G 'Porter, Crowell, sailed from Provi dence 10th lust for this port. Sehr Amos Falkenhurg, Sipple, sailed from East Greenwich 10th inst for this port. sebr Salmon Washburn°, Thrasher, home at Dighton 10th inst. Sehr Palos, Davis, hence at Now Bedford 10th inst. Marine MinceUMW. Captain Metcalf of brig thlogiphorouBwllloll put into New York 10th inst for supplies, re port that while Vin o ."' at Tonala, Mexico, the former Captain, Reuben Card, together with four of the crew, were drowned by the upset ting of their boat while returning from sur veying a wreck on the coast. (The O. sailed again_ on Tuesday , for Falmouth, Eng.) Ship Carrier Dove, Andrews, at New York on Tuesday from Shields, has a cargo of 2,06 ti tons coal. QUAitAIITINU NOTICK.—Pilote will observe that, during the time the Hospital Ship is at anchor in the lower bay, all vessels arriving from the following ports will be boarded in the Lower Quarantine; viz.: Key West, Nassau, Ni', all the ports in the Gulf of Mexico, all the West India ports south of 24 degrees north lath tudthe Spanieh Nein, North/ern Brazil, and the nest Coast of Africa. JOHN SIVINHURN, Health Officer. Health Office, Quarantine, K., July 11,1885. , Philadelphia Markets. New York Markets, July la. 4 49 I BUN SiTS Arrived. Memoranda. Notice to Mariners. 1,650 bbls 10,200 bus. 2,600 bus. 3,700 bus. NEEMINI