g4t !Imes, FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1565, arpre can take no notice of anonymous commu nications. We do not return rejected manuscripts. Apar Voluntrtry correspondence issollelted from al/ parte of the *orld, and espeeiallyfrom our different military and naval departments. When used, it Will be paid for. THE NATIONAL FINANCES. The official report of the public debt on the 31st of July, showing it to be $2,757,• 253,275.86, with a balance of $116,739,- 632.59 in the Treasury, is universally re garded as a more favorable presentment than was anticipated, in view of the im mense sums expended during the last few months in paying the soldiers anti the heavy claims created during the gigantic campaign which crushed the rebellion. It is now tolerably clear that our whole debt, after all outstanding accounts are adjusted, will not exceed $3,000,000,000. A large portion of this bears no interest, and it is not likely that the annual charge for inte rest will ever amount to more than $150,- 000,000. The interest payable now is $64,521,833.50 in coin, and $74,740,630.78 in greenbacks, or less than $140,000,000. Some writers suppose that ultimately the debt will be consolidated into a long four per cent. loan, bearing an interest 'of not more than $120,000,000. It will be seen by a telegraphic report, prepared from official data, which we pub lish this morning, that the receipts of the Government for the quarter ending with March, 1865, were—from customs, $20,- 519,000 ; internal revenue, $65,262,162 ; other sources, $4,21.1.,700 ; or, in round numbers; $90,000,000, which is at the rate of 000,000,000 per annum. This sum is sufficient to provide for the payment of the interest on the public debt, supposing it to be hereafter, $150,000,000 per annum, and to leave a surplus of $210,000,000 applicable to the current expenses of the Government. This simple fact is a striking and convincing proof of the ability of the American people to bear with ease the heavy burden thrown upon them by the war for the Union, and to set at rest forever and nt once all doubts of the solvency of the; nat.on. Our finan cial triumph is as complete as our military success. We conducted the most gigantic conflict of modern times without begging from abroad the aid of men, money, or munitions ; and, though we necessarily resorted to loans from our own citizens to defray our unprecedented expenses, we es tablished during the continuance of the con flict a novel and untried revenue system, which Was sufficiently productive during the last quarter of the existence of the Con_ federaey to defray all the expenditures that will be required after order is thoroughly restored, and (probably) to provide for the payment of the national debt. Every Ame rican should be devoutly thankful for this grand proof' of the patriotism and wealth of the nation. It adds new lustre to our glo rious victories, and a most gratifying and invaluable assurance that we have not proudly outrode the storm of battle to be Ivrecßed and ruined on a .bleak coast of financial embarrassment. This one great main truth should and will sink deep into the hearts of the people ; strengthening their unalterable faith in the tinion ; renewing and increasing confidence in the public securities and proving more conclusively than ever that loyalty " is the best policy," and that those who generously resolved to risk their fortunes in their coun try's service displayed, unconsciously and disinterestedly, as much more of , worldly wisdom, as of patriotism, than the selfish speculators who traded upon the necessities of the nation, and who derided and en deavored to depreciate its credit. • That this trgth may in no measure be - weakened, much yet remains to be done. The public expenditures have already been greatly reduced ; but this reduction should be confirmed until the lowest standar:l com patible with the requirements of our changed condition, and the stubbornness of the re bellious States, is reached. All unneces sary appropriations should be avoided, and all unnecessary officials, in the military, naval, and civil service, be dismissed as soon as possible. The nation wishes to pay every dollar it owes; but it does not wish to be called upon to pay a cent of future ex penditures for which it does not receive a fair and essential equivalent. It battled for the Union regardless of the cost, and deter mined to hazard all for its preservation ; it will battle now to preserve its credit untar nished, and to keep down its expenditures to the lowest point consistent with national security, honor, and welfare. Our internal revenue system needs revi -61011, to guard against the flagrant frau& which are frequently practised. Hastily constructed, it has been much more pro ductive than the most sanguine could have anticipated. But many disreputable parties have managed to evade its protisions, parti cularly those applicable to excise duties, and it is probably not an ciaggeration to' estimate that under the existing laws the Government is defrauded of more than enough revenue to pay the interest on our national debt. Experience, the investiga tions now in progress, and careful attention . to this vital subject by Congress and the Treasury Department, will no doubt enable our authorities to lighten some of the bur dens which are at present most onerous and prejudicial, and yet at the same time to great ly increase the gross returns. It will be re membered, too, that no revenues from the South swelled the returns which we quoted at the commencement of this article. That section may be slow to recover its wonted prosperity, but it must soon be in a position to assist materially in defraying our public expenses. The earnest support which the project we have frequently advocated in these columns, of levying export duties, especially on cotton and tobacco, has re ceived from the press and public men of many sections of the country, clearly indi cates that it will eventually be adopted. And then, when Southern industry is re organized and an approximation to its former production is reached, we will be in a position to exact from foreign nations money enough to provide for the speedy extinction of the national debt. We will turn antighty tide of wealth, Wrung from our foes abroad, into the national treasury, by wisely and honorably availing ourselves of the peculiar qualities of the soil and cli mate which were welded to the Republic by the valor and heroism of our brave soldiers. We will, in the end, without injury or in justice to future loyal and industrious culti vators of Southern plantations, extract, year after year, coin from cotton, until every dollar the rebellion has cost us is repaid to the nation by the unfriendly coun tries which fomented, assisted, and pro, tracted it. Hopeful as our financial prospects ap pear, however, everything depends upon the continued prosperity of our industrial interests. The transition from war to peace necessarily caused many important changes. But various manufacturing interests, espe_ eially those connected with iron, have al ready suffered a marked and grievions de pression. It is absolutely essential that the Nation should not be plucked and plun dered, as of old, by foreign manufacturers, and that our own people should, as far as possible, have an oppor tunity to do all our own work. We wel come the citizens of all nations here, and are willing and eager to purchase the varied products of their industry, but on condi tion that they in turn shall live among-us and become purchasers and consumers of OUT w promactS. We cannot afford to con tinue an impoverishing traffic, in which a few raw materials are exchanged for a great many expensive fabrics. We want the labor that effects these changes to be per formed here, so that all the profits may be retained at home, and that all classes of our citizens may have abundant opportunities for the display of their talents and capa cities, and the honest enlargement of their incomes. WEER SOICTMERN CLERGY We yesterday published the letter of Wsnsinn, the Episcopal Bishop of Alabama, to his clergy and laity, adVising a new re bellion, by asking them to refuse to pray for the President of the. United States until the military are removed, and the civil; which means the old rebel governments, are re stored. The same course.has been adopted by W. M. GREEN, the Episcopal Bishop of Mississippi, more offensively. In his letter, printed in the Mississippi Clarion, dated July 10, he says : Being now convinced that the military au thority at present over us has no disposition to interfere with our services, and wishing to conform; as near as may be, with the worship of our brethren in the more Northern dioceses, I now request that, so soon as the military rule shall cease to be exercised Oyer us, and our State Government shall be re-established in the exercise of her constitutional rights, you will use the prayer for the "President of the United States, and all in civil authority, ,, as prescribed in the Prayer Book. To use that prayer at present would be equivalent to wish ing the success and continuance of a domina tioll - which, even in its mildest form, is repug nant to the spirit of any people. I will take occasion here to reply,. as well as I earl, to a question which has been frequently asked of me since the late reverse in our poli tical affairs, : " Will the Southern Church return to its former connection with our North ern brethren, or will she retain her present re oyganizationr No satisfactory answer can be given to this question until the meeting of our next General Council. nut, for my own part, I hesitate not to say that my decided prefer ence is to remain as we are, two separate and independent organizations. The Methodist Bishop of Georgia, G. F. PIERCE, not to be outdone in disloyalty, thus addresSes the preachers and members of his Conferencel under date, Sunshine, July 20 : In various ways I have learned that some dis- - cussion has arisen, and that some anxiety is felt in relation to the future policy of our Church. The question has come up—if the Methodist Church North proposes reunion . , shall we accept its Opposed to this proposi tion, Seine have suggested that we seek refuge from strife in the bosom of the Episcopal Church. Now, I beg to say that Me agitation of these questions it premature and fraught with evil. in the first place the Northern Methodists have not proposed reunion, and I predict will not, except upon terms so degrad ing and repulsive as to preclude even their entertainment—much less their acceptance. I found this opinion upon their past history— their antecedents before and during the war t and their policy as declared, in a recent meet inz,, by their Bishops. Xs to the other alternative it is compassed with embarrassments. Many difficulties are involved. We have not been Invited, and it is indelicate to presume upon a welcome. Withal these are questions of etiquette and con science—Of canons or ordination and forms— of itinerary and di sciplinn, winch no man or congregation can settle. 'They belong to con ferenees and conventions. These are the men who have been teach ing religion to the Southern people. The two first formally refuse, and advise their followers not to pray tor the President of the United States, unless the rebel civil government is restored The Methodist proposes to reject all terms of re-uuion with his old Northern associates, be cause the terms would be " degrading and repulsive "—including, doubtless, the Heaven-offending condition of oppoSition to the ``divine institution" of slavery. Not the most gentle introduction to a peaceful restoration of the Union ! They are, however, good reasons for maintaining the provisional military governments in the lately acceded States, and for keeping out all representatives in Congress who do not - come up to the full measure of obe dience to the laws and the national au thority. If the Southern clergy preach and teach such criminal passions as these, the laity will not be brought to their duty until they have a new realizing sense of the stern determination of the Govern ment And if the laity can - wait, we pre same,the Government will not be im patient or hasty. NAMES AND NAME-GIVING. Of the Church of England, Queen VIC TORIA is called " Head," because her amiable ancestor, HENRY received the title of " Defender Of the Faith " from Pope LEO X., for having written a book against LumnEu, in 1521, whose doctrines, soon after and for the remainder of his evil life, he endeavored to force upon the consciences of his subjects. To the Church of England belongs a regulated-by-law Book of Common Prayer only used—none other—in all her places of public worsldp. This was first given in English, (not Latin) in the nixie of King lIERRY ; was Teeon structed by order of EDWARD VI. ; was cast aside by MARY I. ; was revived and revised by order of ELizABETII ; and has subsequently been revised, by authority, in the reigns of JA2uns 1., Cumu.Es IL, and VICTORIA ; the latest and most sensi ble alteration being the omission, a few years ago, of the four State-services—for Gunpowder Treason, November 5; for King CHARLES' Martyrdom, January 30 ; and for the Restoration of cRA-RLES May 29 . The Protestant Episcopal Church. in ArneAUL, still using the English Book of Common'Prayer with a few changes, long since. rejected the three State services in question. They did not think, perhaps, that CHARLES L was a " Blessed Martyr;" that there was much cause for thanking God for allowing monarchs to be restored, in the person of CHARLES II; and that Goy FA'wkEs had been burned so long in effigy in the streets that it was full time to get rid of him in the Churches. The directions in the English Book of Common Prayer as to Baptism of Infants, are very spe.cific—namely, that each male shall have two god-fathers and one god mother, and each female child two god mothers and one god-father. One might think that Queen VICTORIA, as "Head of the Church,"• would respect the regu lations as set clown in the Prayer Book for the orthodox who belong to the Church of England. Not • she. The other day, at the baptism of the Prince of Wales' second son, Her Ma jesty personally assisted in violating the Rubric. What is worse, she allowed the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Bishops of London, Oxford, and Worcester, and the Deans of Windsor and Westminster to do so too. All of them, like other clergymen of the Church of England, had pledged themselves, at ordination, to observe these Rubrics. Instead of having the regulated number of sponsors, the little Prince had seven, viz.: the Queen of Denmark, the King of Hanover, the Princess Louisa of Hesse, the Duchess of Cambridge, the Duke of Saxe Cobourg and Gotha, the Duke of Cambridge, and the Prince of Leiningen. Of these seven, only the two last were pre sent. The others were, represented by proxy—Queen VICTORIA standing up for the Queen of Denmark, the infant's other grandmother. It is not stated, in the elaborate description of this ceremonial, whether there was anything particular, as to the water used in the baptism. When the Prince of Wales was chris tened, the King of Prussia was his god father, and the water used was brought from the river Jordan for that spe cific purpose, and was not, as might have been expected from the King's predilec tions, a liquid supplied by the Widow Cm- QUO'S. The newly-made Christian, accord ing to the English custom, was let lightly off with only four names— GEORGE PREDERICK—ERNEBT—ALISERT. In Aus tria, the usual average of royal names is four; in Prussia, it is three; in Russia, it is two; in Belgium, there are eighteen names among three royal children. In Brazil, Portugal, and Spain each royal Christian's given names are so numerous that it-must be quite an effort of memory to remember them. The Emperor PEDRO of Brazil has fifteen names, his 'eldest daugh ter eight, and her sister the same number. In Spain five royal children have forty-four names among them. Icarolsor: 111. and his wife have three names each, and the Prince Imperial has five; but others of the BONAPARTE family have many more. The ORLEANS children aver aged five each, and the BounnoNs four. The Queen of Hanover has twelve; VICTOR EMMA NUEL, seven; his eldest son eight; and his sister-in-law twelve. The deposed Duch ess eof Modenar c e Queen Victoria's daughter, has six names. One of the Saxe Weimar Princes has ten, but the Royal Houses of Portugal and Saxony carry this absurdity of bearing many names to the extreme. King Louts, of Portugal, has nineteen names, while two sisters and a brother haveforty-two among them, and three more of that family rejoice in twenty-one names apiece. The King •of Sakony has sixteen—but the average of his House is one lower. some of the inferior princely houses of Europe are very strong in the Dame line. Very much in contrast with the strange practice of loading children with a crowd of names, is the generalpracticeln countries wholly or partly republican. Out of seven teen persons who have occupied our Presi dential Chair, all except three had only one Christian name. In England, too, among the great political rulers and leaders, the ROM may be observed WALroLE, the two PITTS, CANNING, GREY,PEEL, BROVerrAM, GRATTAN, ConDEN, BRIGHT, DISRAELI, and a great number of one-named persons might be counted up, and a comparatively small number of eminent men with more than one—though in this minority arc Fox, SHERIDAN, and CURRAN; Lords DERBY and PALMERSTON, and Mr. GLADSTONE. Among the single names are the two BA CONS, (RocEm and FRANCIS,) SHAKSPEARE, JONsoN, MILTON, COWLEY, MARVELL, DONNE, DIVATDEN, PoPE, PRIOR, GOLD SMITH, SAMUEL JOHNSON, COWPER, SCOTT, ROGERS, MOORE, EDGEWORTH, SMOLLETT, FIELDING, GRIFFIN, and DICKENS. All this, -however, is a digression from the original question, whether VKronrA, "head of the 6htireh," has riot Yi6lated her own Rubric by giving seven instead of three sponsors to her little grandson ? It is to be hoped they will make a good Christian of him, at any rate. Grax.vnAL Cox, the Union Candidate for Governor of Ohio, has written a letter ac cepting the nomination of the Union party, which is calculated to excite much discus sion by the frankness and the freshness of its SUggestions. We print an article, giving a condensation of the letter, from the Cin cinnati Tines, with the comments of that paper. THE SOUTHERN NEWSPAPERS that refuse to yield to the national authority, and cir culate the speeches of disloyal •and disaf fected preachers and politicians, copy the articles of the New York World and News, as the best reading they can giire to the Southern people. Thus, the rebei still bor rows hope in his new treason from his old sympathizing. friends. TILE CONSTITUTION of lifassachusetts contains the following article, defining the right of suffrage : ART. XX. No person shall have the right to vote ; or be eligible to office under the Consti tution of this COunnonweaith, woo atom not be able to read the consApition in the English language, and write his Atine. JOHN S. DOUGHERTY, who died in this city a few days ago—a partner in the enterprising, news and publishing house of Elias Barr, at Lancaster—was one of the most esteemed and patriotic men in the State. His loss is severe ly felt by the community in which he was so useful and respected a citizen. What of the Night?" But a day or two ago I penned an article (" The Under-Current") in relation: to the pre sent treaeonahle aims of the Southern leaders and the reasons for their readiness to adopt the theory that their States have never been out of the Union, viz.: that they now desire, as soon and as quietly as possible, to return to State Government, and then, proclaiming all their old theories again, to put them into practice, acting upon "State rights," and re instating slavery, in One form or another, in spite of both the wish and power of the nation. I did so not so much from any concerted, re cent action on their part then known to me, as from my thorough knowledge of the animus with which the rebellion was commenced and has been carried on from beginning to end. I did it because I saw the whole North running mad with foolish theories Of universal pardon and immediate universal suffrage, both full of error • and ruin. Strange, indeed, that the lessons of thirty years' agitation, the bullying and murdering in Congress, the final treason, the• four years' systematic butehery, and the tortures of Andersonville and Libby, have given no wisdom to Northern men, who have not only looked upon but suffered by it all. But strange and veracious verifications of my declarations are before the nation almost before the warning is in type. The papers of to-day are full- of Southern threats and trea- SODS. Worth Carolina is not to come back unless she keeps her slaves. Tennessee is to do as she pleases, and Virginia to elect the idols of the rebel troops—or else, or else, whati Or else, they say, there is to be no Union!! ! The announcement has come: earlier thau I supposed; but the spirit is exactly what I wrote it was. I have suffered by this rebellion much, and expect to suffer more. I have earned the right to speak my mind upon it ; and both the right and duly remain the same, though the nation is determined to make itself both blind and deaf, and will neither see nor hear. The warn ing Shall be spoken all the same. It May. Wale to its senses yet. The Southern leaders never for a single mo ment have cherished an idea of giving up slavery, - educating the negro, and returning in peace and with peaceful aims to the bosom of the Union. They . do intend to return ; but to cheat et , bully the nation when they come, and to keep the old bone of discord in their midst, and do their work-by slavery again. Tula may God and the nation forbid ! lie who gave us victory has given the strength to keep the grasp we are holding. The demon of treason is down,but is not dead. The nation's lingers are around its throat. She has the power to keep her grasp till it 1.5 strangled dead and cold. In Heaven's name, hold it to its death, and keep an extra hand on all the mourners at its grave! Let the nation, by its Million voices, daily declare that treason must perish from the land, and with it all that stirs its ugly blood ; that slavery is not only hewn flown,nd its roots must be dug up; that (his is a Govern ment of freemen, and shall so remain; that no power on earth shall Step between the na tion and its peace; that though the territory of the Southern States has over remained within the 'Union, its rebellious inhabitants have put themselves beyond the pale of its protection and forfeited their every right; that they can onlyresurne them again through mercy,. and not by right; that mercy will never reach those who are plotting further crimes ; and that until they are xestored they will be restrained, and then the Government will enact the nation's will,'and the war will not have been wholly in vain. But in all con science let us hear no more of universal par don and immediate universal suffrage, with treason Still thundering at our doors; and slavery wriggling back into life again. Atreus , '" 1, ISlis. GLOVER. American Dental Association. [Special Correspondence of The Press.] CHICAGO, Augustl, 1865 The fifth annual meeting of the American Dental Association, a representative body composed of delegates from State, county, and local deptal societies and dental colleges in various parts of the Union, was in session for four days during the past week in Chicago, Il linois, one hundred and forty delegates being present from Massachusetts, Vermont, Rhode Island, Connecticut, icw York, ennsylvanin, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, lowa, Mis souri, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Georgia. The Association assembled on Tuesday, July 25th, 1865, and was called to order at ten o'clock by the President, Dr. J. II MeQuill en, or rliiiaaelphia. An address of welcome, by Dr. W. W. Aliport, chairman of the committee on arrangements, was delivered, and briefly responded to by the president. After the or ganization of the society, the following gen tlemen were elected officers for the ensuing year: President, Dr. C. W. Spalding, of St. Louis ; First Vice President, Dr. C.D. cashing,. of Chicago; Second Vice President, Dr. James McManus, of Hartford, Conn. ; Corresponding Secretary, Dr. L. D. Shepherd, of Salem, Mass.; Recording Secretary, Dr. J. Taft, of Cincin nati, Ohio; Treasurer, Dr. J. J. Weatherbee, of Boston, Mass. Dr. Spalding, on taking the chairolelivered a brief address, thanking the members for the honor done him, and then called on the re tiring President, who delivered a farewell ad dress, embracing a concise but complete his tory of the formation mid progress of the American Dental Association, in accordance with a resolution of the preceding meeting. The reports of the various standing beim:nit t ees on the Science and Art of the Profession were, in addition to a number of volunteer essays, made the subjects of discussion, elicit ing thereby not only a great deal of interest, but proving also highly instructive to the members present. Drs. Fitch, Spalding, Atkin son, Chase, Buckingham, Ellis, Hill, Perkins, Taft, Watt, MeQuillen, Shepard, Clark, Mc- Manus, Morgan, Forbes, and others, participa ted in this. At the request of the Association several lec tures were delivered before the body. The first of these was by Dr. Daniel Brainard, Professor of Surgery in Rush Medical College, Chicago, upon the 4, Special Branches of Medical, Sure. cal, and Dental Studies." The lecturer, in an eloquent and attractive manner, sketched the rise and progress of dentistry as a specialty, from the time when it was considered a mere mechanical art to the present time, when it bits developed itself into a most important special branch of the medical profession. This rapid progress he considered in a high degree due to the fact of its having been studied as a speciality; men haying devoted their entire time and attention to its pursuit. This special study the lecturer considered to be of great importance, and worthy of consideration and adaptation in other iiffindieS Of medical science. Ile considered the path Of progress in medical science to be by the way of special study; by this he did not mean to advise the separation of the various branches, or to sug gest that they should be distinct one from the other. lie believed that dentistry should not be separated front the medical profession, and hoped to see the day when there tihould be a chair for diseases of the dental organs in every respectable medical college of the laud. In conclusion, Dr. Brainard, on behalf of the THE FRESS:-PIiIf:A_DELPITIA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1865: medical profession, heartily welcomed the delegates to Chicago. A lecture was also delivered by Dr. Hildreth on " Diseases of the Eye." Two lectures were delivered by Dr. McQuillen, one on "the Anat omy and Physiology of Vision," and the other other on "the Circulation of the Blood," spe cial applications being made to each to the practice of dentistry. During the session of the association, a num ber of entertainments were given In the even ings to the delegates, by Dr. W. W. Ailport, Prof. Miller, and Prof. bt. S. Davis, President of the American Medical Association. At the residence of the latter, to the following senti ment by Dr. Spalding, "Medicine, Surgery, and Dentistry, practical departmentS Of a COM. mon science, whose disciples should constitute a common brotherhood,"Prof.Davis responded in an able and eloquent address, setting forth the importance and necessity, to special as well as general practitioners, of possessing a thorough and complete knowledge of medi cine; whilst favoring special lines of practice, he advocated the maintenance, by constant study, of a thorough knowledge of the entire range of medical science. The meeting was truly a national gathering bringing together practitioners from all sec tions of the country. The deliberations were eharacteried by the Utmost harmony and good feeling, and they were of such a charac ter as to exercise a powerful influence in ad vaneing the interest of the dental profession. The interest manifested by the leading meth cal practitioners of Chicago, many of whom - were present during the session, as well as the kindness and courtesy received at their hands, Inn. - -I.s naxv era in the relation Whieli dentis try is to bear in the future to the parent science of medicine. The next annual meeting of the Association is to be held in Boston, Mass., oathe last Tues day of July, MR * THE. REBELS IN CANADA. MOVLMBWTs or SOM OP THE REBEL-CONW. There are at present at Montreal, besides George Sanders, ex-Governor Westcott, Bever ley Tucker Dr. Palley, of Missouri, ox-Medical Director d the Western rebel army, awl Gen. Carroll, of Tennessee. All these gentlemen stop at the St. Lawrence Hall. " - -CION - EA' iL WHWITOTT, THE MAN WITHOUT A. Ex-Governor Westcott is a quiet, Ordinary looking old gentleman, somewhat neglectful in his dress, of considerable ability, a little soured in his temper. yet retaining the frank demeanor of a gentleman. lie professes to have very little association or sympathy with the more rabid Southerners; &WS that he has done nothing except defend the St. Albans raiders, which he justifies on the ground of his profession, and declares that he should not hesitate to return home to-morrow, as the Go vernment can have no charges against him. _ - But he is evidently distressed in his mind, and declares that he haS no country ; • that the united States Government has killed his boys and taken from him all he loved, and that he only wants to spend the four or five years re maining to his life in peace. Does not his con science sometimes tell him that - Upon himiand not upon the United States Government, rests the responsibility of his bereavements; that his example and his advice shaped the career and chug the early graves of his sons? Yet one cannot but sympathize with the bereaved father, and mourn the terrible crime that en tailed such suffering upon our countrymen. Tat NEGito-AuPPIZADE QITESTIOIf. Governor Westcott, like most of the South erners here, favors the extension of the suf frage to the 'freedmen of the South. They are made free, he says, universal freedom has been proclaimed, and it is now a stultification to deny them the right to vote. He does not believe they will vote with their former mas ters, but they will give the South a larger basis of representation, and raise her in im portance in the nation. He is peculiarly bitter on the Democratic party. They are cowards and traitors, too, he says, and he will never. again in his life, if he votes at all, vote for a Democrat. He will vote for none but Repub licans. There is no issue now, ho argues, be tween the South and the Republican's. Slavery is gone—secession is forever dead. Tile South should now unite in keeping the Republican party in power, and in preventing the restora tion of Democratic ascendancy. The Louisville (Kentucky)Doily Union. Press, of the 31st ult., has the following items : We had thought that gnerfilua had ceased to operate in our State. it has bean Some time *ince we have chronicled any outrages per formed by them, and we had come to the con clusion that all who had not been arrested had left the State. We we* mistaken. Yester day, the military arrested a man by the name of David Fern, who lives in Jefferson county, and who is charged with operating in that line. A United States detective Arrived from Owensboro, last evening, with William Francis Spalding, a noted guerilla from that section of the State. Spalding is charged with burning the courthouse at Owensboro, and with having committed several murders. He will be tried before a military commission. A STUMM MO) ROMANTIC CMCIINSTANcE.— Atilalf-past two o'clock on Wednesday morm ing, while the steamer Philadelphia was en route for Hilton Head, having on board the 131st New York Volunteers, when about half a mile below Fort Pulaski, a citizen, clad in re bel uniform, for some unexplained reason sud denly grasped private Henry Cameron, of Company C, 131st New York olunteers; and attempted to push him over the deek-guards into the river. Cameron supposing the fellow was joking, or trying to play some kind of a trick, clinched his opponent closely, and- held onto his clothing ; but he soon discovered that the man was in earnest, and really intended to put him overboard. Before he could extricate himself from the would-be murderer, both partiCS lost their. balance, and, almost ;mob served by the large number of soldiers on board. fell into the river. Cameron says he heard the citizen strike the wood-work on the paddle-boxes, and in a few se conds heard stifled groans, and lie thinks the paddle-wheels struck the drowning _mart and killed him, as he saw nothing-of him atter the occurrence. camuron being a geed switn mer, at once struck out boldly for the shore, nmclr was half a mile distant, experiencing great difficulty in stemming the swift current with his clothing on. He finally succeeded with great difficulty in divesting himself of all his clothing, and pressed rapidly for the dim outlines of the shore, which he reached in a nude and terribly exhausted condition. Cameron landed on an extensive bed of oys ters, cutting hiS feet badly, and here he re mimed till daylight, waiting, like MieftWber, "for something to turn up)) His eyes were gladdened at daylight by beholding the white sails of a fishing smack, which he hailed, and was soon taken on board by Valentine Martin, a fisherman, who at once conveyed Cameron to his house, at Sebastopol, on Long. Island, fed him bountifully, and gave him sonic clothing. The next day Valentine Martin con yeyed Cameron hi hie yawl to. Fort rtlitteki, where lie was supplied. with more clothing and transportation furnished to bring him back to Sayannah,--Serannah Repubtican,l9th. ANOTRER DASTARDLY ATTE:III.T TO INFLICT PERSONAL INJURY UPON GEN. GRANT:It will be remembered that when Gen. Grant gave a public reception at the Astor House, New York, sonic iiihO since, some dastardly fellow tllade an attempt to wrench the General's arm out of joint, by seizing his hand with a vice-like grasp and twisting it around in a painful man ner. A similar attempt to injure the General was mad e at the Fan evil Ilan reception, in this city, on Monday. While the throng of ladies auil gentlemen were paying their personal re.; speets to the distinguished hero; an individual approached him and seized Ms Mina in the same manner that it was grasped in New York, attempting to give it a sadden twist, which the General succeeded in - preventing only by forcibly withdrawing it. One of the Aldermen who witnessed the operationseized theman by the neck, but the reseal escaped from him. and was quickly lost in the crowd which washutk r rying past. There is no doubt but that it was a del iberate attempt to inflict personal injury upon the General, and we understand, also, that he was identified as the same person who tried the same game in New York.—Boston Courier, 22d. CENSUS STATISTICS.—The following estimates are deduced from census returns now in pro gress of preparation, with a view to the publi cation of a volume on-manufactures. The work is being urged forward,. and will proba bly be issued about the opening of Congress : New England represents an increase in the manufacture of woollen goods of sixty-two hundred per cent., the Middle States seven and three-tenths per cent., the Western States ten and two-fifths per cent., the Southern States one hundred and forty-three per cent., and the Pacific States—Oregon and California, which made no return of manufactures in lEso—report two hundred and thirty-five thou sand dollars as the total manufacture of wool lens. The total increase in the States and Ter ritories is forty-two hundred per cent. on *43,524,288 in 1850. All the States show an in crease except New York; Delaware, Ohio, Michigan, and Illinois; and - the only State from which there is no return for the manu facture of Woollens is Arkansas. STEEL Loctourivcs.—The Manyport and Car. lisle Company have, for some time past, erna ployed steel,. to a great extent, in substitution of ordinary iron for the working parts of lo comotives, and, as we arc informed, with the most satisfactory results. The traftlee, on the line is principally coal and mineral. It has been found that, with the ordinary iron tires on the engine wheels the distance ruu was not more than 00,000 miles—in many eases not more than 00,000 miles—and the wheels re quire to be taken from under the engine for every 20,000 or 30,000 miles run, for repairs and I'turning up." In the case of the steel tires, however, the wheels will run 100,000 miles before they require "turning up" or repairing. The result of a very careful ex amination of the effect of wear leads to the opinion that these Wheels will run front 150,000 to 000000, miles , or equal to some twelve or fifteen years' work of a daily average of about 100 miles. • A SMART OLD LADY.—Mrs. iiaycten , L smart old lady of seventy-five, in Braintree, Mass., was out berrying last Wednesday, when she caught sight of a rattlesnake, with raised head, about ready for a spring. Seizing a Stick, she thrust it into his open month and down his throat, thus holding him to the ground ; then drawing a stone to her by the aid of her foot, she, with stick and stone, de. snatched the " varmint" by severing the bead from the body. Shouldering the snake, she started for home, with a .pail of berries in each hand, but confesses to being a "little startled" when the headless body was Sadden ly coiled around her throat, and concluded to transport her prize some other- way, The snake measured nearly five feet, and had ten rattles. REWARDS FOE THE CAPTER.E OF THE ABSAS7 SINS.—We hear it stated that Judge Holt, Ad jut ant General Townsend, and Assistant Se cretary Reitort have been appointed by the Secretary of SrW a board to hoar and decide claims on the Government for rewards for the capture of the assassins. These officers have been giving their attention to this business Mr several weeks, but no rewards have been paid out as yet.— 'Washington Chronicle, of yes terday. THY CAPTURE OP MUM' story that General Kirby Smith was taken prisoner, with his four hundred companions, by a Mexi can Governor, turns out to be untrue, as we were half inclined to suspect from the first. The information was received by one of our correspondents from rA member of Cortinas , stalf, but be has since learned that it was un founded. We regret that the story obtained eirculatiOn through our columns.—Zfew Or leans TIMM, .7011 t. Italy now possesses a fleet of i 5 vessels, 74 of which arc ships of the line, and 24 are trans ports. aim ships of war consist of 18 iron clads, T.f screw steamers, 21 paddle-wheel steamers, and 10 sailing vessels. The nominal power of engines sailing the war Steamers is t,140 horses they. reckon 1,260 cannon and 2(6363 men. JTI the transport service, the en gines arc 4,350 'home-power, and the ships are provided with q cannon, and manned by 1,ed . .1 seamen. 1:102E3 Guerillas in Kentucky. THE SOUTHERN STATES Advice to the Provisional Governor of Alabama—The Opinions' of the Peo ple, as Expressed by a Mobile Jour nal—They Want Congressmen by the First Monday in December—The Ken tucky Election—An Order from Gen. Palmer. (From the Mobile Register, 22d ult.] We announced yesterday the arrival at Montgomery of the lion. L. E. Parsons, the lately appointed Provisional Governor of Ala bama. The intelligence will be received by a multitude of persons with great satisfaction. In the history of the State it has never hap pened to any one man to occupy a - position in which the hopes, expectations, and interests of a whole people so largely clustered around him. Re is the Palinurus whose skill is relied upon to steer the ship of State, lately wrecked upon the billows. 01 revolution, back to the safe port, from which, with excited pilots on board, and stem-sails set, she turned her prow seaward four years ago. We need not impress upon Gov. Parsons the importance of as speedy a restoration of the Slate to the dominion of civil law as is possi ble. The present amphibious condition of things is embarrassing to all parties and inju rious to all interests. We are a people in a perlod of profound peace, living under mili tary government. According to the declared policy at Washington, we have never been out of the 'Union; yet, for any practical purpose we are not in the Union. The State itself is in a - condition of complete political and civil dis integdation, without organic law, legislature or judiciary. Gov. Parsons is the civil archi tect appointed to reconstruct the broken edi fice of f3ovcriiment, to re-assemble the law-ma kers, reinvest the judges with the ermine of their exalted offices; and to renew the broken ligaments which are to bind her in political fellowship to her peers of the Federal Union. The sooner all this grave work is completed the better, provided it be well and wisely done. We hope to see it ihilshed, so that by the first Monday of December, the Senators . and Representatives from Alabama may pre sent their credentials in the Congress of the United States, and be there cordially wel comed by the sitting members of that body. And so they will be by all who have supported the late war upon its ostensible ground; to wit: that it Was a war for the preservation of the Union—a war to Maintain the integrity of a great empire: Any man or party in Congress that throws obstacles in the way of the ear liest return of the delegates from the South to seats in the General Council Chamber of the nation, at once ignores this Union theory, and proclaims the falsity and insincerity of his adherence to, and adoption of, the. war :policy and principles declared by the United States Government to the whole world: The arrival of the Southern delegations at Wash ington, will apply a test to the Unionism of the members of Congress, and will show who made war from motives of passion and revenge, and who, from a patriotic devotion to the - Union. It will be a severe test, but a wholesome and. instructive one. We look, therefore, with so. licitude for an early prOthUlgatioll Of Gover nor Parsons' proclamation for a Convention. We have lost much valuable time, and are be hind, we believe, all our Southern sisters; who are passing through the same political travail. Meantime we renew our advice to our readers, and the people generally, to lose no time in qualifying . themselves to vote, by renewing their allegiance to the United States. TUE ELECTION IN KENTUCKY. General Palmer, commanding the Depart ment of Kentucky, has issued the following order, in which the persons in this State who are disqualified from voting under the laws of the State and the act of Congress of March 3, 180, are specified. He is determined to aid the civil authorities, by military force if neces sary, to execute the laws strictly in every County of the Commonwealth: HEADQUARTERS DEPARTMENT OF RENTITO - Kr, LOVISTILLE (icy.) July 26, 1935. GENERAL ORDERS No. 51.—The near approach of an important election ' to be held in all the counties of the state and Military Department of Kentucky, renders it proper in the judg ment of the General Commanding to require all officers commanding troops to give •to the officers of the State, charged by law with the duty of conducting elections, and to the legal voters , of the State, the most complete protec tion. Martial law prevails in the Department of Kentucky, and certain classes of persons are especially under milititry surveillance and control. These are : 1. All rebel soldiers, whether paroled or not, and without regard to the fact that they have Or have not taken an`- of the oaths prescribed by law, or executive or military orders, or have registered under orders from the head quarters of the Department of Kentucky. 2. All guerillas and others who,-without be longing. to regular rebel military organiza tions, have taken up arms against the Govern ment, or have in any way operated against the Government or people of Kentucky, or any other State er Territory. 3. All persons who, by act or word, directly or indirectly, gave aid, comfort, or encourage ment to persons in rebellion. This applies to all persons who have voluntarily acted as scouts or spies for rebel or guerilla forces ; who have voluntarily furnished any rebel force or person with information, food, clothing, horses, arms or money, or have harbored, con cealed, or otherwise aided or encouraged them. 4. All deserters from the military or naval service of the United States who did not re turn to said service or report themselves to some provost marshal within the sixty days limited in the proclamation of the President of the United States, dated the 11th day of March,.lBls ; and all persons who deserted from the military or naval service of the United States after the 311 day of March, Ma, and all persons duly enrolled who departed the juris diction of the district in which they were enrolled, or went beyond the limits of the United States to avoid any draft AU persons who were, or have been, directly , or indirectly engaed in the civil service. of the late so called LConfederate Government, or of the so called Provisional Government of Kentucky-, or who have in any way - robin - tartly submitted to either of said pretended governments-all agents or contractors with or for either of the said pretended governments—all snch per- SODS are disqualified from voting by the laws of the State of Kentucky and the act of Con gress Of March 3, 1815. All persons of the classes aforesaid are required to abstain from all interference with,, oloaticmer Mitt - Irtu—ir they shall in any manner ii.tei fete therein, by voting or attempting to vote, or by per any other person to vote, or by ap pearing at the polls be at once arrested and Weld for military trial. . It will be given to the civil authorities to enforce the laws and to preserve the peace. Any person who shall counsel, advise, or en courage any judge of any Q•lection, or any other person, to disregard or disbboy the law, as de clared in the proclamation of the Governor of the State, will be at once arrested. The peace of the country can be secured only by obedi ence to the law. ' By command of Major Gen. John M. Palmer E. B. HARLAN, Capt. and A. A. G. Official: B.v.N. W. SULLIVAN, Lieut. and Act A. A. G. WAIFS FROM THE SOUTH. RICHMOND. Brick walls are gradually rising in every di rection in the burnt district along Main and Cary streets, and taking the place of the mournful ruins left by the April tire. The Governor appointed, on Monday, J. M. Perdue notary publio for the town or Mall cheater and the county of Chesterfield. •The 14th 'United States Regulars left Rich mond on Wednesday for New York. PETERSBURG . The 6th New York Artillery was yesterday relieved from duty in this city_, and left for Norfolk last evening. The 2d Pennsylvania 'Veteran Artillery takes the place of the Gth. Lieutenant Colonel F. Winger, command , A log the 2d Pennsylvania Veteran rtiliery,re• lieves Lieutenant Colonel Stephen Baker, as commandant of this post. Captain B. F. Everett, 2d Pennsylvania Ar tillery, has been appointed Provost Marshal of the city, in place of Captain E. Getman, re. The City of Petersburg has, by order, been embraced in the Sub-District of the Vita, water, General llicßibbin commanding. ~ The system of having Assistant .Provost Marshals in the several districts of the city is abolished. There will be only one Provost Marshal in the city, with an assistant in his oilice.—E2press, During the month of July there were twen ty-eight marriage licences issued at Peters burg, This number is almost unprecedented in the bymcnial annals of Petersburg, and it may be considered the more remarkable in view of the fact, that for ten days during the month the clerk was prevented from grant ing licences, because his office was declared vacant by the Governor. He can only account for the large increase of marriages on the ground that better times are here,. everything is ebeapi Our population is increasing, and the negroes adopting the system of marriage. BEIM! Sales of cotton took place in our city on Tuesday last, the 20th instant, at the following prices : Middling fair, 37% cents; good mid dling, 35 cents ; middling, 33 cents; strict mid dling, 30 cents; ordinary, 27cents. We believe this range of prices is higher than any other Point in theinterior of our State.--Inteiligen cer,2Blh. Du Rma'sn DisTnicm—We are glad to see that the energy of property-holders in the dis trict which was the scene of the late desolating explosion is being exerted in the repair of damages and reconstruction. That was the most cruel blow Mobile received during the war. It ruined many and reduced others from comfort and affluence to straitened circuit], stances.—ltegiater and Advertise', 22d. Wonder what has become of the forty-four men whose names were enrolled by Colonel W. 33. Stokes, in 3861, when he boasted of " re sisting Lincoln and his usurpation'! at "the point of the bayonet?" Will some of Colonel Stokes' friends be kind enough to furnish this desirable information to the loyal men of this section I—Gazette, 80/1, ANOTHER. IhSsivE FROM. EX-SENATOR FOOTE-- NEGRO SUFFRAGE ADTOCATED.—EX-SellatOF Foote, of Tennessee, who is now reluctantly chewing "the cud of sweet and bitter fancy" in Canada, for want of permission to return to the United States,an_ d who has inflicted a good many long epistles on the public, is out .with a letter to Mr. A. 0. P. Nicholson, of Ten nessee. lie discusses the state of the South in general, and the subject of negro suffrage in particular. He says slavery is clearly now at an end, and its revival impossible, and the sooner the South realizes this fact the better. But, more than this: "We must, in order to be free ourselves, agree never hereafter to interfere with the freedom of others. We must amend our State Constitutions as soon as possible, and embody therein our consent that the four millions of bondmen and bondwetnen heretofore existing upon Southern soil shall be henceforth as free in all respects as those of the white race who lately dominated over them ; in other words, we namt formally recognize the state of thin :gs already existing, mid bind ourselves to do nothing . to disturb it in all future time. We must, in order to assure our own return to liberty and happiness, not only recognize the colored denizens of the South as now free, but VCElnst n'uoai them the same means of pre. serving their freedom that we ourselves de sire to Possess. They must be freemen in titet as well as in name. "We must consent to their being invested with the elective franchise,. and this must be done, too, no matter what cherished notions we may entertain in regard to the mental Inferiority of those whom some of us have heretofore re garded as the doomed posterity of Ham. NM, can we now safely talk about carrying them through a course of special tutelage and prOba lion, such as I understand you to recommend, ere we make them our own equals before the law of the land. These are not at all matters for our regulation, but are to be attended to by those who hold in their hands exclUsively the sword and the puree of the nation. "I tell you, my dear sir, and through you I wish to urge upon the - whole mass of my fellow countryman of the South, that these things must be done by us, else our States will not be allowed to have Senators and Representatives in Congress, or even be permitted, without molestation, to ,administer their own muni cipal concerns. This, I say to you emphati cally, is a settled matter ; it is resfrudicatai and there is no appeal for,us in the ease." • Mr. Foote concludes with a plea for equal rights to negroes, on the grownd that it will open a gloriouS era for the South. " Our true friends and oar future allies in the North are those who are now pleading in our behalf for justice and for a - kindly and Politic forbearance as to the past. If we fall not to be equal to the demands of the present critical exigency, we shalt in a few short years at most and ourselves once more happy, and safe, and prosperous. For I am not among those who at all doubt the complete success of the new system of labor now being introduced in. the South; nor do I agree with those who apprehend any great injury of any kind as likely to arise from the proposed extension of the elective franchise to both classes of our Southern population alike. I doubt not at all that with proper judg ment, diligence, and thrift, Southern planta tions will be as prosperous under the new sys tem of agricultural labor as they ever were under the old one ' • and I am decidedly of an opinion that there will be as little of fraud and unfairness in our elections hereafter in the Southern States, and upon tho whole as judicious and beneficial an exercise of the right of suffrage as there has ever heretofore been:, Governor Sharkey, of Mississippi, Tax ing Cotton. Governor Sharkey, of Mississippi, recently placed a tax of one dollar upon each bale of cotton sent to the 'Market, for the purpose of assisting in paying the expenses of the coining State Convention, and several persons re fusing to pay the tax, Governor Sharkey has issued the following order doubling the tax, and ordering the sheriff to seize the cotton and sell it at public auction, in cases where parties refuse to parry the tax F.xi,ear.,vn AerAnTltreNT, JACKBON, Mist., July 21,18i1. Whereas, It has been represented that mer chants refuse to pay the tax of one dollar im posed on each bale of cotton taken or sent to market, as required by the ordinance of the 15th instant, it is therefore ordained and de clared that a tax of two dollars per bale shall be assessed and collected on every bale of cot ton taken or sent to market the owner of which refuses to pay the Tax of one dollar per bale ; and the sheriff shall seize and imme diately sell at public auction sufficient cotton to pay the taxes. And in all eases when a tax of live per cent. ad - valorem is ordered to be assessed and collected on property purchased during the war, by the ordinance aforesaid, double taxes shall be assessed and collected When parties refuse to pay the taxes, or ren der a false report to the assessor; and the sheriff shall, in all cases for non-payment of taxes, seize and sell at public auction, live days notice in case of real estate, and imme diately in ease of personal property, sufficient to pay the taxes. Given under my hand and the seal of_ the State, the day and year aforesaid. By the GOVernor: Wx. L. Sim AWKEY. JAMES Secketeey Of State. rml PLANTERS AND FREEDMEN ON TM/WM Assistant Superintendent of Freedmen, Lieu tenant W. B. Stiekney, makes the following report on the condition of the freedmen and planters in Western Louisiana : FREEDMEN'S BE REAI7, SHREVEPORT, LA., July 15, 1865. Copt. Thos. W. Comm", Assistant Commissoner: Sin : 7. am happy to be able to report that the Planters and freedmen in this section are gene rally entering into written contracts, which are binding for the rest of the year. Where there are many infirm and helpless to support, and the planter has but a small crop to secure. the contract is for food, clothing, houses, fuel, and medical attendance ; but working hands are receiving as compensation from two to twelve dollars per month in some cases; in others, from two to thirteen and a half bushels ,of- corn per month, or a share of the crops, varying, according to cir circumstances, from one-fourteenth to one quarter and one-third of the whole amount raised. There is a great demand for labor now,and there are no idle freedmen about the city. Not a ration has been drawn for any freedmen here, except the sick and attendants at the Freedmen's Hospital. Very respectfully, your obedierft servant, W. B. STICKNEY. Free Trade From the Chicago Tribitne We take the an "Free trade and tariff is, in fact, only a ques tion of work and wages; for free trade forces us to compete with the pauper labor of Eu rope, while a judiciousprotective tariff brings those laborers to us, shelters, feeds, clothes, and educates them, as they can never be shel tered, fed, clothed, and educated where they are, and converts thetfk and their posterity from paupers into good citizens and valuable members of society. "Free trade carries the farmer's grainaeross the ocean, and takes the price of transporta- tion oat of his pocket, while a judicious pro tective tariff takes his wheat, his corn, his oats, and every other thing that he raises but cannot send away, sells them to the manufac turer at his own door, and puts the price of transportation into his pocket. "Workingmen'of our country, keep your money, and close your ears to the sophistry of English traders and their alders and abettors, who, having burned our ships and ruined our commerce, under the pretext of 'neutrality and belligerent rights,' are now ready to spend millions to force us to buy our goods in their market, and thus freight their ships both ways over the ocean "It is a remarkable fact that the Board of Trade. Convention, comprising about four hun dred of the most active and intelligent busi ness men from all parts of the United States, voted by acclamation and with hat one dis senting voice for Congressional discrimination in favor of American manufactures. " Such unanimity in favor of agreat National question, that has vexed pOlitjelann during the past generation, and one, too, upon which commercial men have generally been on the free trade side, is a most significant fact, and indicates the growing sentiment of the people in favor of an ample tariff on foreign manufac tures. - " Every other question that was brought be fere the Convention was discussed with zeal and ability, and with strong parties on eithet. side. But the great question of protection to American industry raised but one feeble No, in that great assemblage of the most practical talent in the United Stat... hood the signs of the times, af for the people are mov s hi the right direction. , " W. News of Foreign LitOratnre. (Frain the American Publishers' Cir Man) CLEn/CAL ACCURACY.—A writer in the Lon don _Athenalnn, of July Bth, says: "One of the most interesting and readable accounts of Cordova may be found in a book upon Spain, written by Mr. Slidell, of Trent notoriety, - when a very young man." It happens, how eveT, that ttle book referred to, "A I ear in Spain, by a ;Youn Ameeicati," published in 1829, was written-by Alexander Slidell, wile took his mother's name of Mackenzie, in 1837, and who died in 1848. John Slidell," of Trent notoriety," is a lawyerl who never published anything but a political speech, and who was "Confederate" minister in Paris during 1802-S5. Lik , NILATURP. IN PARLIAMENT, —AnlOll, O the tnemberg of the House of Conn - al:ins) 111144 elected, are John Stuart Mill, for the city of Westminster, Thomas Hughes, (author of "John Brown's Sehooldays,”) for the borough of Lambeth, and Sir Charles Bright: the elee trician, for Greenwich. Sir Charles Wentworth lke, proprietor of the Athenteum, has also been elected for the borough of Wallingford. N.LvotuoVe CASAII.—It is Baia thatthe se cond volume Of this political biography, now in the press, will be prefaced by a memoran dum giving its Imperial author's views upon the civil war in this country. Napoleon has published, for private circulation, one hun dred copies of a pamphlet upon Algeria, with plans for its future government. CROQUET IaTIMATIIRE.--About twenty tree,. tiros upon the now fashionable game of cro quet have been published I'l:Eng-tend, and four or five in this country. It is now declared that this is only the old game of Pall Mall (hence the name of a street in London), which Charles IL was so fond of playing in St James' Park, as Pepys mentions. 111.1ounn.—Two new translations are forth coming in London : Of the Iliad, put into Eng 11th in the Spenseriftn stanza, by Philip Stanhope Worsley, N. A., Fellow Of Corpus Christi College, Oxford; and of the Odyssey, in blank verse, by the Rev. George M. Alas grave. AVTOORAPII.—AniOng the gems lately sold by auction in London was an autograph letter from Anne of Cleves, fourth wife of Henry 111., of England, whom, disliking, he repu diated and sent back to Germany. Only two other autographs of this princess are known. Nu. TITOZVEPSON, the keeper of the Royal Museums of Copenhagen, is dead. His works on numismatics and arelneolo,gy have made his name famous in the learned world, and he was the founder of the celebrated society of Scandinavian Archteology. TIMMS, THE lIISTOBIAN.—It is rumored that Mr. Thiers, who has been for many years making collections for such a work, is writing a" History of the Restoration from 1811 to iaio," the first volume of which may be ex pected early next year. THE late P. J. Proudhon left seventeen works in MS. behind him. The first, " The Po litical Capacity of the Working classes, , ! has appeared; the second of them, "The Princi ple of Art, ,, is in press, and the others will ap pear as soon as may be. BkrrnovEN.—Eighty-three letters from the great musical' eoinpattale to the Cardinal Arch duke Rudolph of Austria, a great patron of pianists, have been discovered, and will seen be published. Their existence was whol!y un suspected. CARISTOPTIER COLIIMULTS is to 1)13 canonized for a saint. The first steps have been taken at Rome to give him this honor. Who would ever have drowned that Washingtolllntillfy, would one day be a contributor to the 66 Acta Sauc toruml,o HISTORY of Scorim.—Mr. John Hill Burton announces a new "History of Scotland, from Agricola's Invasion to the Revolution of MSS." As one of the best Scottish antiquarians, Hr. Burton is well qualified for. this self-imposed task. ANTIQUITY OF Maw.—Sir William Denison, who has been successively Governor of Van Dieman's Land New South Wales, and Madras, Colonel of Engineers, has published a brochdre entitled, "Dian not so Ohl as Supposed." NEWSPArnt LTODus. Inconsequence of Flo rence becoming the capital of the kingdom of Italy t Turin loses that distinction. More than half the Turin newspapers will shift their pub licly) ion to Florence. Ducat - Ws RsuArss.---There appears to be a chance that a farther portion of H. T. Buckle's "History . of Civilization," which the author did not, live to complete, will soon be pub lished. THEODORE PARKER.--it is stated that lil, Re a writer in the "Revue des deux Men des," and a rationalist preacher in Holland, is about publishing a life of Theodore Parker. ROUSSEAU".—A collection of letters addressed to J. J. Rousseau has boon discovered in the town library of Neufchatel, and has been pub lished in raris. GEORGE SAND.—" lif. SyIVCSiTO" is the name of a new novel Just commenced in the Revue des Deux ArOndes,by George Sand, alias Madame Dudevant. THE BONAPARTE FAMILT.—The first vehicle of a history of this family, by Prince Napo leon (Jerome,) is said to be in the press. fg,ELEGANT SILVER WARE, FURNITURE, &C.— This morning, at 'Birch & Soil's auction store, will be sold a Splendid Set of silver tea ware , also, a large variety of elegant parlor, dining room, and chamber furniture. Fon.nrox EXPORTS.—The following are some of the principal articles exported from this port to foreign ports for the week ending August 3,1865: PRANCE. . ' Petroleum, Crude, galls 73,737 $4701 Ale. galls 2 OIA VOOlLonl, .. . $1,933 Coal, tens 99 6l Potatoes, Ush. 600 700 laul, ... . .1,639 999 BRITISH PROVINCES. tons 3 bi)ls 50 *2OO NVE4s , 111f111.q. Reef, 1011 a.... 75 *2,200 bl.l Own, bus, 200 231 Tleead, bbls.. 145 5111110 Meal, bbla. 450 2,:195 Butter, 6,308 1,5851r01t, M 1)1)14 156 4,623 ('ltlulles 6,000 1,200 Rice, s 4,010 320 Cheeft,lba..• 702 110 Flour, 0,016 t!FILA. Petroleum. e fined, galls., 500 x2O 'ranuw 1t5,...21,G93 .3,100 Butter, lbs.:. 5,000 $1,2611 Lard, Zs 38.471 8,205 larmber 00 Flour, bbls,.. 2,366 20,EN' Address to a Veteran Regiment. HEADQUARTERS 50TH PA. VET. VOL., HARRISBURG, August 5,1855. OFFICERS AND SOLDIERS: The great work is finished. By your gallantry in action, and Steadfast devotion in the service of your noun try, yen have won a glorious victory, an honorable peace, and an illustrious name. The tendrils that have wound around our hearts, and held us together, in stronger than fraternal affections, are about to be severed. Companions in war, we be friends in peace. The story of the old regiment, with the incidents of the past four years, will always lie remembered and cherished with the memory and virtues of our noble com rades, whose remains are mouldering in ten different States. Your deeds of valor and trials of endurance, with the achieve ments of thirty-two battles, will brighten many pages in the annals of your country's fame. You will be welcomed to your homes to enjoy the advantages of the Government you have so faithfully protected. In civil life guard carefully what you have gained and so well sustained in battle; let moral goodness and integrity characterize your course, and a grateful people will bless you, and a proud nation claim and reward you as her most de serving citizens. With sincere thanks for your uniform courtesy and cheerful co-opera tion in the performance of mutual duties; fer vent prayers to Almighty God for your happi ness and prosperity through life, mid warmest sympathies for the bereaved families of the heroic dead, your Lieutenant Colonel bids you all farewell. S. IC. ScHwrio: Lieutenant Colonel, Comd'g Regiment. Dn. J. 41. RAN', President and Chief of the Six Nations . , who fought for the rebels, passed Evansville en rente for Washington On Thurs day. Be IS a half-breed, and was born in Vir ginia. Ile was dressed in ordinary civilians , costume ; wore his hair long, and combed be hind his ears ; has large, eagle-like eyes, high cheek bones, and receding chin, and in height stands about Rye feet eight inches. De reports a high state of civilization among his race, and says that scholastic institutions are rapidly springing up among them. the secretary is a whito malt, the wife of whom is nearly a fell blooded Indian womax.—Fart Mum. (Ina.) Oct zeite, July 31. A NawsrArrat Susrinisung.—The Buffalo Sen tinel (weekly) has been suspended. The pub lisher, Mr. Hagan, gives as a reason that the lion. John Magee has brought against him three suits for alleged libel the damages claimed being respectively $1015,000, $25,000, and *75,000 ; that it is not eofrveitient for him to furnish the bail required, and, that as he does not wish to go to prison, he cannot remain in the city and attend to Ins business. It is un derstood that Mr. Cagan is now in Canada. CITY ITEMS. THZ BUT FITTING. b'unvx , 030 'TUB AAR is Si The Improved Pattern Shirt," made by John C. Arrison t at the old stand, Nos. I and 8 North Sixth street. Work.done by hand in the best manner, and warranted to give satisfaction. Hie stock of Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods cannot be surpassed. Prices moderate. Tan "Crunssa Sun HAT," sold by Wood & GARY, 725 Chestuirt street, is really indispen• sable to every lady about leaving the city. Their entire stock of Straw and Fancy Goods is now selling off at Tana below cost. VISITORS TO 1 , 11/1 SRA•SHOBB 61101.11 d provide themselves with BATHING DRIZEISES from JoxN C. ARRIBON'S, NOS. 1 and 3 North Sixth street. DEESS AT SAuivrooA.—Shoddy is cutting a queer figure at Saratoga ; some of its disciples making a sad mess of it in respect to dress, reminding beholders of premium cattle be declied for agricultural fairs. One unfortu nate dunce of oleaginous development, actu ally went through the martyrdom of dressing fifteen times before supper on Tuesday. Sen sible men, upon the other hand, need but few changes, especially where they have sufficient good taste to procure their wearing apparel at the Brown-Stone Clothing Ibsit of duckbill &Wilson, Nos. ON and 605 Chestnut street, above Sixth, NEW AND 81100 ND-HAND PIANOS FOR RENT, and portion of rent applied to purchaSe. Also, new and elegant pianos for sale on accommodating tonna. GrouLD, jyltdm Seventh and chestnut. FINANCIAL AND. COMMERCIAL, The stock market was moderately active yesterday, but prices were irregular. Govern ment loans Were generally weak. The are twenties sold to a limited extent at losg, and the ten-forties were steady at N. The second series of seven-thirties brought 99%. State and city loans were dull. State war loan sixes sold at par. New City sixes declined ; the municipals sold at MN. The share list was inactive, excepting for Reading, which sold to the extent of 3,100 Shares, opening at 5:1%, and subsequently advancing to 5 - 3 , 4' 3 , and closing, at 53. Camden and Amboy sold steady at 123 ; Catawissa common at 12 1 4, and Lehigh Valley at 63. 29 was bid for Little Schuylkill ; 56 for Norristown ; 57% for Pennsylvania Railroad ; 547,1 a for Minehill ; 24 for North Pennsylvania; 45 for Elmira preferred; 1:44 . for Catawissa common '• 25 for preferred ; 22% for Phdadet. phia and Erie, and 44% for Northern Central. The Coal 011 stocks were moderately active, prices generally being firm Maple Shade closed at about 8%. The report of the failure of the Coquette Well depressed the pri.e of the shares, but the Company have resorted to pumping, and it is believed the well will soon be in good order. The Coal stocks continue hr active. There were gales of Clinton at Nc, and Fulton at G. Passenger Railroad, Bank, and Canal stocks arc very dull. A sale of Heston yille Railroad stock sold at 1534 Company bonds are saleable only at a concession prices. Lehigh 68 of 'B4 sold at 05, and North Pennsylvania (is at 84X. A lot of Allegheny county coupon 5s brought 73. The following were the quotations of gold yesterday, at the hours named : 10 A. M 144. 1 11 M. . 144 , ' 12 Id 1.141/ 1 P. M. 140 1. 3 P. M. 145 Hewes, Miller, & Company report anew coun terfeit, which made its appearance on the street yesterday, as follows: It is on *the Thompson Bank of Connecticut, vig. two fe males, shield, eagle, &c. 5 a female, 10, and X On right end, and 10 on left. • The apprehensions of a short crop in wheat and barley are exerting a strong influence, as it is evidently believed that the crop will not reach much more than one-balf what was first expected. The effects of this may be seen in au :Advance of forty cents per bushel, on wheat in thirty Clays, and a speculation which made a temporary advance of sixty cents. This - effect is not usually felt until the last half of the year, for we have enough grain gathered to live on this year, but for this season an ex ception is made, and we shall have to pay the price Tor wheat grown last year on account of the heavy rains last month, which so greatly injured the present eroP. It is stated that the committee of New York brokers had an interview with the Secretary of the Treasury on Monday, asking a recon sideration of the order directing the brokers' till"' to be collected, and that air. McCulloch having fully considered the matter with Mr, Orton, Commissioner of Internal Revenue, hag decided adversely to the application of the committee representing the brokers and bank ers of New York, for a postponement of the collection of taxes on sales for themselves, pending a decision of the United' States Su preme Court. There is a strong feeling among the New York gold operators for a rise in the premium on coin. The argument is this : That the dis bursements of the national treasury will ple thorize the money market, and, as there is no national loan now to absorb the surplus, a de mand will be created for gold for the purpose of hoarding until such time as another Govern meat loan may be authorized, which cannot take place until Congress meets in DeCeMber. The increased importations have also a ten dency to raise the price, under the anticipa tion of a foreign demand. On the other hand, it is held that the Government, with a surplus of twenty-live millions, can at any time pre vent a rise by throwing from two to five mil lions upon the market, or any amount suffi cient to break down the operations and antici pations of the bulls. Drexel SI Co. quote : U. S. Bonds 1881 new 1093/1g)107 U. S. Certif. of indebtedness, new.. O. S. Certif. of Indebtedness, 01d.... 918,id 99X IL S. 7MO ..Nefea, new 19 @ 99 Quartermasters' Vuuohers 98 a 97 Orders for Certif. of Indebtedness.. 98 03 11l Gold 1.4514@up,e, Sterling Exchange 5-20 Bonds, old 5-20 Bonds, new-- 10-40 Bonds sales of Moe SALES AT THE FIRST ICO Crescent City.... N ICo3loCrezt a Cherry Run 400 Royal Oil Ms, - August 3. '1313 - IAC 110ARD. CALL. 1000 Walnut Issl.'d.b3o .04 300 Eureka 34 300 Dalzell. 4'l! SECOND CALL 108 Dunkard „ 010 .091 500 lioval 1630 iCtrilleCrea&Cl,l2l3.. 200 St IN leholas..l)3o 141 Al! Tllr. ItP.GULAR BOARD OF BROKERS. Reported by linos?, Miller, & So 5, Tlaira etrart. FIRST /WARD. ICOO IT S 5-201 coup-IOW,: 700 -1630 2 31 45101 J S 7-3lls.Ju ne.lts 094 500 Royal Petroleum hi 21 . 1 e State war lia. ors.loo 500 St XL:lmlay 011..1 I,ltl .2000 city 68 13ew..6ilys Irt7 • .:3,ll;Or t a• lyb 41* do 1 115 i =ooBh-t'dtk. 1000 do 1 11%500 Dalzelloll 5000 N I'ol3lllo Os 84.35 100 Tart-liumustead. 4 Cent & Alll/1 ..12:1 1001)1315)10 shittie.;b3o Bpi 10011004110 g It ...2dys 112-ii 038) 110:. 0.4 100 do 52;i8 00 do' 100 d 0.... 2(lys 521 200 (to 834 1(81 do —.620 52. i 100 do 315 834 .15 do 513 10) do 0.1 , 4 .50 "5w,. 0214 200 Dinviutore 05 ri 100 Fulton Coal 4) 100 do 1,5 11 , 6 100 11)0 do 09 1) 300 Iltra bard 011.10 td NI 100 do 01 100 1110C1111toe53 011...:'16 BOARDS DETWEE IRK* A Ilegbany Co 50- 73 50 51intira1 011 100 1 lest o nville It 10000 U S 5-20 13.011410-105 , 4 17000 do ea:sll.loTh 27 Foltmi Cool 0 suo Corn Pia lite r.... 1 7 100 /{olodone 011 3.!.4 7.00 1,04.0eit 4)11 4)1 100 do 400 20000 U S 7-10 Tr N Anti 0316 100 IT S 10-40 131/1148.. 101 4700 City On .sturdriintl 02 1300 d 0...• • • ........ 92 • 1200 d 0.... 01 5 BOARD. 100 idalde Shade 8)4 2(10 do 1 to 100 b3O goo ;10. .. •10tS.1131) I 500 DllOOll.. ...... bi 4 .10 100 do 4Si 100 Caldwell 01i.ea0lt 2%; BOARI/S• 250 "Excelsior 50 700 11104110tock 0. Its 2,4 10*IIoyal 011 81 SCO du 'ti 100 Reading:7l bi 53 100 do &i 53 100 do L'ilys 53 too do s 5 53 100 -do 300 do 100 d 0........ ..100 533 100 do 1)30.52 81 400 ' 1)20 53 1 1501.0) Nov Stl: 158 10L00 I.eltlgli Os 'B4 SECOND 650 T.T :57-30 Tr .N 24115 r 00% low City 04 Municipal Dig 6 Lehigh Ytilley... 03 16 Be:4011v tile 1t.... 1034 100 d 0 ...... .. 1034 100 ell ta w I ssu 1{..• . . 12' , 100 Clinton Coat • g l 100 Mnple Sinitic-140 His)l AFTE.IOI 1000 City Os new 01% . 100 Reading:it ....MO 52.011 100 do 00 SAT.I:S AMT 500 Big Tuuk bOO 1.4 500 Royal .81 110Iteading 10..... b3O 53 100 dO. 050 do 14 5275 0 do 135 521 1 , . The Now York Post; d 1 Gold is steady and no 700 Mizell 011....1.)30 41 1 ‘ 300 St Z.:it:ll6l.ns IIE CLOSE. 300 liendbag n blO 53 100 110....:.......... 53 100 d 0...,.... ..... s 5 63 100 do b3O 6311 000 Dalaell Oit 4 , 1 100 Tarr Ilona:stead 4!41 ryestoklay, says: ve*itettyo at .1154iS 144%. Foreign Exchange is did; •,. 1096108 1 ,4 for bankers, 1111 0197, 3 e, fr,"," , :. The loan market is moderai., , ; ) , ;:,''' , l•• cent. Commercial paper is in tnr,i '' ; passes at 7@fi, the supply not h i .i,;;;!4,• dant. The stock market opein.4 . 1 7 '''''r,' 'active, and closed steady. (4,,... ,1 1.,. , stiffer and the holders have lat,,: ill 'f , , Railroad shares are irregular, iihi'''''' Northwestern preferred, ano_ it,,. -,p, fag the chief attention. ••:. • •.! Before the first session New y,,. was quoted at —; Erie at as - ;';i i ii , , i' at 113 ; Reading at 104%. itz, \,11,7:,:i ; t. , , The following quotations wero board, as compared with yester,l„,?:' U . S. cs eo.potg, .131 . S. 5-20 coupons it. S. 5-20 coupons, new 10P: 1 U. S. 10-40 coupons 00i '''i U. S. Certificates 4 Tennessee Ss ; ( ; f7, t!':' _ , Missouri 0s - 0 I V. Atlantic Mail 154 , 4 t!'' q New York Central ),, •'• • ) Tii .e H 9 Ere Preferred t 7 ,''', Hudson River i,i II:: Wading 151 ' , .,: 1,,1 • Dliehlgan Central 107 ! , lo!., • After the board, there was as i hi ', ;- of 3I %, receding 1 4, and ehNn,,. r ,: York Central at 92, Erie at ,59,,, , t•. fi ii, !)k Reading at 10534. Later, Erie ',old . ,`, 30,41"aaphis Ma..tin% The Flour market is very clan , suer rates; 300 bbla fancy family vate terms. The retailers m v i buying in small lots at from superfine, $7.5068 for extra, family, and $lOQll$l for fa 7 cording to quality. Rye Flour small way at $ 5 . 50 @ 5 .7 5 0 13 0. (.4.4 11 dull, and we hear of no sales. Ottatat.—There is more Wheat sa,, the market is dull and drooping; bush red sold at 190@,201e for fair Southern, and 200@2050 bludt f4' tylvania a nd Western. in wiaa;','.: nothing del.s_ nye is selling 1,, at 105@110e VI bush. Corn IS rather ' , ll ' bush sold at ilSe for yellow, white. Oats arc also lower, with Mc for new and Ikeiee /I hush for 13Ank.-1 , irst No. 1 Quereitroit is. in demand at Ch1@32.50 'fl ton, COTTOM—There is less doing, see th,, is dull ; small sales of middling.; at, 47049 e 1111, cash. Gnommies.—There is more neiir, at full prices ; (100 hluls Cuba. sold li:Xe in gold. Coffee Continue, we hear of ue sales. P.WlROLtitM.—Prices remain al)0111 as last quoted; 1,800 1)1)15 sold, in 32C03e for crude ,• 51@120 for rellio.,G and free at from 70@7_e'1,7 Sititug—Cloverseed caMtllllleB heat" demand at *l5. Jlll si Timm at $5ta.5.21 pima. [Flaxsectl is sellts;4 lu way at $2.4r) IR bus. Paomstoss.—All kinds, as We ism,. for several weeks past, continue 11;4.: the market is firm arid prices arc %r twined small sates of Mess Pork arc :r at $34(7',35 Bacon Ham, are lots at from Nicole, ti D. r m . fumy etti . , Lard is selling at front 21tZe It for V, tierces. Witieuir,—The demand is limited,but are unchanged ; small Sales ( - )f ibis are ed at 225 e gia gallon. The following are the receipts of Flo Grain at this port today: Flour .................. Wheat ... ..... Corn Oats New York Markets, Angina I, BREADSTUFFB.—The market fur ' Western Flour is rather more steeply 0,500 bbls at $5.05W.45 for superfine m 4 049.70 for extra State ; $ 9 .75t9•H5 for phri 0,115@0.50 for superfine Western; common to medium extra Westein4i i 8.40 for common to good shipping brml, round-hoop Ohio. Canadian Flour m is firmer • $9.70@ti.93 for comon, and .s fur choice extra. Southern Flour is innu sales 400 bbls at *7.7008.76 for cominen,,;j 642.25 for fancy and extra. Rye flou t Corn Meal is quiet and dull. Wheat is quiet and tinu, closing nttl sales 50,000 bus at 110.40cia.4 - 0 ter httiwnt t 51.45 for amber Milwaukee, and , 1.44 for winter red Western. is quiet. Barley is dull, Ilarky dull. Oats are dull at tio34g.olc The Corn market is dull and droolliu 70,000 bus at So@BBe for unsound, and sound mixed Western, PaorlsioNs.—The Pork malkot I sales 7,000 bbls at 4135.25017.1 for 1(0 +29.251G30.25 for for 1 634 do ; $25:25§.24 for • and $27.50(•35.50 for nrime mess. The Beef market is quiet ; sales obP about previous prices. Beef Hams are quiet. Cut Neat are sales 570 packages at 15@17c for shoulde; 214033, , c,c for Hams. The Lard Instrko. and steady; sales 1,170 bbls at iti( ll 4l , e, lArnisitv is scarcely so aria salt: Western at $2.19©2.20. TALLOW i 8 firmer; sales 250,000 11, , a: New Orleans Markets, July li, COTTON.—The letters by the steane to have stimulated the Moveinenl,L,' tO-41a,y summing up fully 2,000 700 taker, by one patty , and MO, 1111, others,. Factors met the demand tr: buyers were enabled to obtain lartb,r, sions of about lc b. We now at 28@ale,good ordinary at 33 , (0.1.! r tiling at 301g3Se, and middling at 407, quotation of 46c at New York ycinpla benerally known some time before Ow e usiness, but did not appear to have itv mice, except to make hoiaora otter tliv2, more freely. &MAU AND MOLASSES.—The market i; of Molasses. The stock of Sugar is very and the business doing is altogether of character, at 11@12e 'ft for common Da sugar, 1i@1411,0 for fully fair, ant it strictly fully fait .to prime. City lit Molasses is retailing at 00e V gallon. MARINE INTELLIGENCE. PORT OF PHILADELPHIA, AnglA Wuze nasvm. ILICiR WATEM Arrived. Ship John S Harris (Dr), Cli3e,ll dog;: Sagua, with sugar to S W Bark Deney, Smith, 0 days from Clrtrla in ballast to J E Barley & Co. Bark Chas Gumm, Gallison, 3 days nom) port : RI, in ballast to Workman S Co. Bra Cuba. (Br), iloimos, Ii dssl sor, NS, with 500 tons plaster to U G va;)4 Brig Abby Ellen, Gilmore,7 days tau: fast, in ballast to Makiatoniralt, OZ to. Brig Omaha, Robinson, 3 days frua in o York, ballast to A ifeekscher La Sala American Engle, Alclfarland, from St George, NB, with lumber to Sehr F3aelia, Hale, days from Yo NJ, with mdse to captain. ' Sehr ILA Price, Kelly, 5 days from ballast to J T Justus. Schr Active, Foxwell, from Borebv,:.: ballast to J 'V Justus. _ . . Behr S A Parsons, Sharp, 5 days from E. in ballast to Day Malden. Schr Chase, rainier, 1 day from Amv:'l2, with offs to Jas L Rowley& Co. Schr Arisdne, Thom% 1 day iron Del, with corn to Jas L Bewley ,V Co, Sehria,Tapley, 19 days from Mogv, cotton to n Sloan. Schr Jos Maxlield, May, 5 days from I with hemp to Mier, Weaver & Co. Schr Georgie Deering, Willard, s Portland, with liaise to Crowell & Coll> t3chr Dr lime, Ryder, ti days from DI With lumber to Ii 'trump, 3611 l CO, Seim Westover, Eldridge, 6 days fromll with mdse to captain. Schr W C Nelson, Rose, from Nem ballast to captain. Schr Alliance, Shannon, from Forts, roe, in ballast to captain. Schr Lizzie Maul, Frambes, from lto: ballast to captain, Senr U - ickery, IsaUUitt, front inglr ballast to Castner, Stickney, & Welilind , Schr John Rodgers, Roethel, from no,: ballast to L Audonried & Co. . - - Sehr Zampa, Johnson, from New Yo:; ballast to Illakiston, Graff & Co. Seam I. S Levering, Corson, from Baiv: ballast to C A Heekseber & Co. Seim Geo It Conover, Jones, from Nev yen, in ballast to Tyler & co. . Senr Pearl, ltrowll 7 from Beverly, 111 to Wm H Johns, _ . Behr S S Lee, Somers, from Boston, In to JG&GS Repplier. Sehr C A Greiner, Cruise, from l'rov! 1 in ballast to captain. Sabi:. Eliza Wenner. front 11°4- ballast to Quintard & Ward. Schr If A Rodgers, Frambes, from ballast to Quintard & Ward. Solar A Bartlett, Bartlett, from ballast to Quintard Ward. Selir Louisa Frazier, Steetman, row in ballast to Castner, stickne•y& Schr Rockingham, Frisbee, from PoLvt; in ballast to captain. - Schr Marla Fleming, Willimag, with, in ballast to captain. Schr Annie Sheppard, Iku !Wu; deuce, in ballast to Blalliston„ Graff+ Schr LOlllO4 Gray, Bowen, item auxl;t. ballast to L Andeuried k Co. Schr Fly, Cheeseman, from Lynn, in' ,, to L Audenried & Co. • Scbr S J bright, Shaw, from Pro Wen` ballast to Bancroft, Lewis, & CO. Schr F 1l Baird, Ireland, from Nov ILtt . - ballast to 'IV limiter, Jr, & B Chr W cox, Houck, from Prov idetWe. last to Biakiston . , & co. Schr A Pharo, Shourds, troth ballast to Biakiston, Graff S: Co. 1 ,, .44 Schr D Townsend, from ilosion. • Sinnickson & Glover. Steamer E N Fairchilds, Trout New York, with mdse to 'IV it fbird s IWrals7 . losfoolag lot h lploix WigP 97 Cleared. Bark DIE Corning, Thom Ago% (.ro" A “ Brig Glendale, Guthrie. lio..ttm , Brig Peerless (11r,) Bonbon'. Nana • Brig Valencia, Small, Boston. Brig Omaha Robinson, Boston. Brig Abbic Gilmore, Iteltn4. Schr Pocahontas t Berry, Boston , Schr B M Price, holly, ilo• Behr J A Parsons, Sharp, do. Sehr S S Lee, Somers, to ' Mir A Tirren, Higgins, 4 ,0 - •.• Solar J Weldon, Mreavcr. Schr Georgia, Gilchrist, NewlituirT lo , Schr Bee Vanderbilt, Masten, Fe" urg, Va. Sehr W P Cox, Houck, Providence , Schr A Pharo, Shourds, Sehr A Sheppard, Bowditch, do. Tr %amps., Johnson, saii , ihney. ir W 0 - Nelson Rose, Apphar" Schr D TownSeml, Townsend Pogo' • Schr lAzzie Maul, Frambes, 11 , ° ' SehrF,Edwards, Babcock, Seth! Eliza Neal, Weaver, do . Schr H A Rogers, Frambes, Schr A Bartlett, -Bartlett, to Schr E Magee, Magee, do. Sehr F It Baird Ireland, do. Stair L Levering, Corson, `;•: Scar II Newell, Gould, Sehr II W Godfrey, Weeks, " L " Scbr C it Vickery, Babbitt, nigloolti Sala J Mercer, Somers, Wcyntoot Schr Louisa Frazier, Stec:Minn. , Me n ' Schr Louisa Gray, Bowen, Roxbury . Schr John 'Rodgers, noethel, Nahant . Sehr Fly, Cheesemaa, kWh Seim! GOdiff,,:41110111. Sehr JSydne S Bright, Price, Shaw, Prov S idenee . Sehr Pearl, Brown, Beverly. r F ~„ Sehr Maria Fleming, Will lan Sehr Elwood Doren, Jarvis, Sal Schr Geo It Conover, Jones • WaAdog ' SYr J 8 Shriver, Dennis Syr Commerce, Crosby:Sassafros thremerAnd*. • ' Bark Zulma, Hewitt, hence at TOP . ult. Bark Mina, Hoßowan hence at Si. ult, and sailed 2.lst for New York. Lark Helen Mar, Eno, cleared at Bo' inst for Valparaiso. Brig S V Merrick, Norden, hence at 28th nit, Brig L T Stout, sailed (No''' . 21th aft for this port. Brig Sea Lark, Collins, sailed front 25th hit for this port. Brig Sussex, Lawrence, sailed from 20th ult for this port..l l Sehr Thomas Jefferson, Phillips, itn: Cardenas 27th ult for New York. 5 08 I suit SETS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers