XIXVIIIth CONGRESS..-2d SESSION. SENATE January 17. —Mr. Sumner presented, as a substitute for the House resolution on the sub ct, .a resolution that the notice given by the PPresident of the United States, to the Go vernment of Great Britain and Ireland, to terminate the treaty of 1817, regulating the naval force upon the lakes is fully adopted and satisfied as if the same'had been author ized by Congress. The resolution was or dered to be printed. The day was spent in preliminary legislation, January 18.—The Military Committee, through Mr. Howard, of Michigan, reported a resolution, which, after characterizing the starvation and brutalities practiced upon Union prisoners in the South as paralleled only in the lowest savage warfare, proposes to the President the employment of a terrible retaliation as the only probable means of se curing an abatement of these abhorrent inhu manities. The retaliation proposed is, that insurgent officers, now or hereafter prisoners in our hands, be placed in the custody of those who have been prisoners of the rebel army, under instruction that in respect to the quality of food, 'clothing, 'fuel, medicine, medical attendance, personal exposure, and' other modes of dealing, they shall be treated as nearly as possible according to the treat ment which their custodians have experienced or witnessed in Southern prisons. The re solution is not mandatory on the President ; it simply gives the Congressional approbation of such a policy, should he adopt it. No ac tion was had upon it beyond an order that it be printed. Mr. Sumner's resolution of fered yesterday, concerning the treaty of 1817, was discussed and adopted. January 19.—Resolutions of thanks to General Terry and Admiral Porter for gal lantry before Fort Fisherovere Amanlinously passed. Several bills and resolutions intro duced were referred to the appropriate com mittees. The Senate' adjourned over until Monday. • HOUSE OF REPRESENTATivIS January 17.—Among the matters of inci pient legislation, was a bill introduced by Mr. Holman of Indiana, providing for a donation of public lands to the several 'suites and Ter ritories, to the extent, of thirty thousand acres for each Senator, Representative, and Dele gate, for the founding of homes for disabled soldiers and seamen, and for the support and. education of orphan children of deceased soldiers and seamen. A resolution was adop ted, in view of the somewhat general belief that our Indian troubles are the result of a bad Indian policy and abuse of the Indians by the whites, providing for a committee to in vestigate the alleged abuses, with power to send for persons and papers. The bill for the reorganization of the insurgent States was de bated, and posponed two weeks. January 18.—The committee on alleged abuse of Indians, ordered yesterday, was ap pointed—all men of the region: Windom of Minn., Hubbard of lowa, Ross of Ills. Rig by, of -California, WorthiNAon, of Nevada. After a smart debate, the House, by the deci sive vote of 136 to 5, passed a resolution di recting the Military Committee to ascertain and report to the House the number of per sons confined in specified prisons, with va rious particulars, such as whether they are confined without written charges, whether their trial is unreasonably detained, &a. January 19.—A resolution was adopted di recting the Committee on Ways and Means to consider the expediency of assessing a tax of one per cent on incomes of $6OO or leas, now exempt. The day was chiefly spend on matters pertaining to finance and appropria tions. January 20.—Resolutions of inquiry, the public loan, and the passing of the Post Of fice appropriation bill, were the principle business of the day. MISCELLANEOUS. TEE INDIANS.—General McDowell has for bidden the' indiscriminate slaughter of the Indians in California. We notice that the overland mail route is again infested, and on the 7th instant a party of Indians attacked the overland mail coach near Julesburg, Colorado, robbing the express mail. They also attacked a mule train near by, killing one man.. The troops at Julesburg were at once in pursuit, and a fight ensued, in which thirty five Indians and nineteen whites were killed. The Indians finally retreated southward, but it is said that they so largely outnumber our troops that offensive operations cannot at present be prosecuted with much chance of success. The Denver City News reports that Colonel Kit Carson, with a few of the com panies of the Frst New Mexico Cavalry, lately ran against a band of one thousand Indians, Kiawas and Camanehes, on Red river, south of the road from Fort Union to the States, and was badly repulsed. He had to fight his way back. PETROLEUM IN BURMAII.—It seems that the discovery of petroleum is not, after all, quite the last wonder of the age. According to the statements of Shaw Loo, an intelligent Burmese convert to Christianity, now receiv ing an edUcation at the Lewisburgh Univer sity, oil wells have existed,. and their product has been in use for centuries in that distant empire. His account affords, however, a re markable illustration of the progress and power of' American invention, for the Bur mese have to dig large- shafts hundreds of feet deep, down which men -go by ladders, and bring up the oil on their backs in proper vessels ; while by our deep pumps and steam engines nineteen-twentieths of the work is saved:,. Nothinc , could more strongly mark the contrast between Burman civilization and *tars than the want of the least progress in Aheir method of obtaining oil in that country compared With the ingenious processes that have sprung by the hundred from the inven tive brams of our never-satisfied people. LONDON VIEWS OF THE LATEST INTELLI GENCE. —An arrival,. with London dates to the 4th, brings no news of interest from any quarter. • Great satisfaction was expressed in England at the action of President Lincoln in disapproving of General Dix's order in rela tion to the pursuit of the raiders into Canada. The English press complimented Mr. Lincoln for his promptness. The Times, editorially, is very much inclined to sympathize with the Federals in the matter of the St. Alban's raiders. It maintains that the authorities ought to have taken the risk and responsi bility of detaining the raiders till the warrant was signed by the Governor-General. It says that whatever fault may attach to the Cana -dian authorities, the Government and people of England had no power in the matter, and have no other wish than to carry out the ex tradition treaty with the utmost fairness and fulness. Cardwell, the Secretary of State for the Colonies, in a speech at Oxford, ,asserted 'that the Canadian Government would main tain inviolate the neutrality of the British territory, and if the existing laws prove in sufficient, they will not long remain so. The war news from America further depressed the rebel loan, and it had declined to 52, a fall of' 10 in a week. The Times says that Sherman's skill and daring is rewarded with brilliant success, and the mass of victories -must raise the spirits of the Federals, and confirm them in the belief that throughout the South they have no enemy capable of opposing their chief armies. THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1865. THE CANADA COURTS RIGHTING THEM SELVES. —A Toronto date of January 20 says : —" In the case of Burley, the Lake Erie raider, judgment was given to-day by Re corder judgment The court was crowded, and many Southerners were present. Burley is committed as subject to extradition under the treaty. The prisoner's counsel applied immediately for a writ of habeas corpus and a stay of proceedings." THa CANADIAN EXECUTIVE ON RAIDING. —The Canada Parliament opened in Quebec, on the 19th. In the course of his speech, the Governor-General, referring to outrages within our territory by persons who had sought refuge in Canada, said :—" In order to pre vent the organization of such enterprises within the provinces, and to enable me to dis charge my duties effectually towards neigh bering and friendly powers, I have seen fit to organize a system of detective police on'the frontier, and, with the same design, have called out for permanent duty a portion of the volunteer force of the provinces. Similar considerations suggest the propriety of arm ing the Executive Government with stronger powers than it now possesses for dealing with persons, who,.while availing themselves of the right of asylum always allowed on British soil to political refugees, may be unmindful of im- plied obligations, which by-residence amongst us they contract, to obey the laws and respect the policy of the country. A bill framed for thisurpose will be laid before the Houie, and Task its early consideration." THE WAI. ADVANCE ON CIIARLESTON.—Dates from Port Royal, January 17, contain intelligence that the monitor Patapsco was destroyed off Charleston at 2 o'clock on the - morning of the 17th, while doing picket duty, by a rebel tor edo. Forty or fifty of the crew went down with her. Their names were not ascertained at the time of the sailing of the Fulton. On the night of the 14th the Seventeenth Corps and the troops commanded by General Hatch advanced on the Pocotaligo bridge, on the Charleston and Sairannah Railroad, and captured it, tOgether with the fortiacations and twelve guns, losing in the charge forty men killed and wounded. The guns were spiked. The enemy had evacuated the place during the night, and fell back to Ashep's, towards Charleston. It is thought the enemy will make a stand at that point. Among the Savannah items is one stating that the Christian Commission has opened rooms at 147 Bay street. The institution is in great favor with the soldiers. • - FORT FISHER.—We received the intelli gence -of the capture of Fort Fisher just in -time to crowd the welcome report into our last number. How important an accession it is to our late brilliant list of victories will ap pear when it is considered that it releases a large number of blockading vessels from a service of comparative inactivity, and brings them forward to aggressive duty. The very mischievous rebel pirate Tallahassee was in the port of Wilmington, and is there en trapped. Her piratical career is probably ended. The following despatch from Admiral Porter to Secretary Welles, dated January 16, is a more deliberate account of the work accomplished : " SIR:—I wrote you yesterday that we had all the forts. The army has captured 1800 men and a large number of officers, including Gen. Whiting and Col. Lamb. The gunboats are now in the river, and Wilmington is her metically sealed against blockade-runners. The rebels have destroyed the works on Smith's- Island,,:and if they do not destroy Fort Caswell, it is of no use to them, as we yin go there after a little while. You must v not expect too much at one time from us. "These worksg-are tremendous. I was in Fort Malakoff a few days after its surrender to the combined armies of the two nations, the French and English, who were many months in capturing those strongholds, and it don't compare either in size or strength with Fort Fisher. The fort contained seventy-five guns, and many of them were heavy ones. I have not yet learned what our casualties are in killed and wounded, but I thinkthree hun dred will cover them all. "We had a bad explosion in the fort this morning, which killed and wounded a number of men; about one hundred of our seamen were blown up, 'and. Paymaster R. H. Gil bert, of the Gettysburg, was killed. I will send a de'tailed report as soon as I can get off the wounded and arrange matters generally. The world never saw such fighting as our soldiers did. 44 - ." 4. am, 'very respectfully, your obedient servant, D. D. PORTER,‘ "Rear Admiral." From Fortress Monroe, January 19, we have the following :—" The steamer Black stone, Captain Berry, arrived here thiskaorn ing from off Fort Fisher, bringing 210 Officers and privates, wounded in the late assault against that fort. The latest news from the fort is that, shortly after the surrender, the rebels blew up Fort Caswell and the othOr minor works defending the entrance to Cape Fear river. At the time of sailing, the smaller gunboats had entered the river, and were ac tively engaged in searching for torpedoes, preparatory to an advance against Wilming ton. Shortly after the capture of Fort Fisher, a diagram, containing a plan of the whole system of torpedo arrangement in Cape Fear river, was discovered, and our naval officers were making search for a key to the diagram, by which means the infernal designs of the enemy would be completely frustrated." 4- PEACE-STRAWS. We notice that several of the least excitable papers are beginnin g to think that the nume rous peace rumors of the past few days are not all smoke. The late missions to Richmond are, as yet, veiled in mystery, and for aught that appears on this side of the lines, we should unhesitatingly discredit their having any official or semi-official character. From the Executive Departments no indication is given of anything extraordinary going for ward ; no sign of any relaxing of the condi tions prescribed by the deliberate vote of the nation—unconditional submission, and then peace. But the nervous excitement of the Richmond and other Southern papers over the visit of Blair—a nervousnessthat is all the more apparent from the affected indifference of the articles which betray it—show that the wish is father to the thought of some unrevealed purposes looking toward peace. Nothing is clearer than this, that the South, from centre to circumference, is tired of this now hopeless experiment of rebellion, and feels that in the contest the point of exhaustion is nearly reached. Davis' Government is ob stinate of course. To him personally return, or resistance to the end, is about the same thing. Personally he has nothing to hope from peace. It is but natural that he should raise rather than lower his tone, and use all his remaining. influence to keep his people keyed up to the point of not treating for peace except as. Southern independence is an as sumed preliminary. But the confidence of the South in Davis is utterly gone. We give below several extracts in point : The Ramond Sentinel of Jan. 16, says : " Mr. Blair left Richmond on Saturday morn ing, on the flag;-of -truce boat, on his return to Washington. There are many rumors afloat as to the object of his visit, and as a matter of interest to our readers, but without vouch ing for its correctness, we give the prevailing opinion : It is said that Mr. Blair sought an interview with the President ostensibly for the purpose of procuring certain captured documents, and that, in the course of the conversation, Mr. Blair touched on the sub ject of peace, but admitted that he had no authority to negotiate on the subject. The answer of President Davis is said to have been that the Confederate Government was now, as it had always been, ready to receive pro p_erly authorized commissioners from the United States, or to send commissioners to that Government to negotiate a settlement of the difficulties existing." The visits of Messrs. Blair and Singleton have been eagerly watched by the Sentinel, Examiner, and Enquirer, in all cases with about the above result. The Rockingham Register treats the chivalry to the following contrast between LINCOLN AND DAVIS " When Abraham Lincoln took the chair of the Presidency of the United States he promised, in his flatboat lingo, to 'run the machine as he found it.' Whether he has strictly kept his promise, those may doubt who choose to consider the subject. It is enough for us to know that, whether `running his machine' in the pathway of his prede cessors or not, he has run it with a stern,in flexible purpose, a bold, steady hand, a vigi lant, active eye, a sleepless energy, a fanatic spirit, and an eye single t& his end—conquest —emancipation. He has called around him, in counsel, the ablest and most earnest men of his country. Where he has lacked in indi vidual ability, learning, experience, or states manship, he has sought it, and has found it in the able ,men about him, whose assistance he .unhesitatingly accepts, whose powers he applies to the advancement of the cause 'he has undertaken. In the Cabinet and in the field he has consistently and fearlessly preS.sed on the search for men who could advance.his cause, and has as unhesitatingly 'cut off all those who clogged it with weakness,timidity, imbecility, or failure. Force, energy, brains, earnestness, he has collected around him in every department. Blackguard and buffoon as he is, he has pursued his end' with an energy as untiring as an Indian; and a single-' ness of purpose that inight almost be called patriotic,. If he were not an usorupulous knave in his end, and a fanatic in his politi cal views, he would undoubtedly command our respect as a ruler, so far as we are con cerned. Abroad and at home he has exer cised alike the same ceaseless energy and circumspection. We turn our eyes to Rich mond, and the contrast is appalling—sickening to the heart." The Charleston Mercury, (intense anti peace,) under date of January 12,. says : "We presume there is no one in this de partment to whom the condition of our pre sent military organizations is less satisfactory than to the general commanding. Probably there is no one so thoroughly aware of the lamentable disorganization that prevails in certain corps and sections of his command. Yet it would searcely be fair to hold, him re sponsible for this condition of things. His department has been newly turned into his hands, and many of the troops are new to him and to this department. They came to him under the command of imbeciles; he has received them, a herd of stragglers and out laws. What has been done to eradicate this fatal evil, we shall not stop to inquire. The time has been short to do much, and the forces have been much scattered. But tht - very last moments are arriving, when all must be done that is to be done ; when all must be done that can be done. The enemy does not intend to wait upon our leisure. And there is much to do. ' The path we are now travelling is straight to destruction. The crisis of the Con federacy has arrived in fatal earnest. ?he result of the next six, months will bring the Confederacy to the ground, or will reinstate its power. Without reform we are doomed. There is more than one department of govern ment in which reform is important But re form in our armies is essential, is vital. With out it, the death-knell of the Confederacy: s already tolled. With the proper reforms made, he is a coward who carries his heart in his boots. There are men in the land ; there is fight in the land. It is the imbecile that is sick at heart; it is the coward whose sto mach is weal. There is nothing before ns that cannot be overcome ; but to do it, there must be a new state of things instituted. We say again, there must be nerve. Men in com mand must not be afraid to die ; they must not be afraid to kill. Officers must be killed, not mere privates. Reform must begin at the top, not at the bottom of the service. To reach the private, captains must be shot. We want no child's. play ; we want an army. Let old things pass away—let us have a new Con dition of things. We want no more Jeff. Davis foolery; we want one atom of brains, one spark of nerve ; North Carolina, Georgia; and South Carolina are in, no mood for trifling. They have had enough of this sort of thing. They don't intend to have much more. South Carolina don't intend to be conquered. She intends to fight. She don't intend to be hampered or turned over to the enemy. When she is thus dealt with, ther6 will be reckoning—a reckoning where there will be no respecters of person." To these extracts from rebel papers, we add the following from the National Intelli gencer, Washington, - Jan. 21, in relation to the Senior Blair 's immediate return to Rich mond :—" the pertinacity with which the Intclligencer has determined to adhere to a grave, view of the Blair mission—based on its confidence in the veracity of persons in high position, as well, as on the signs of the times —is strengthened by what appear to, he very reliable rumors of the action of the rebel Congress in regard to peace commissioners. Conjqintly with this apparently accurate in telligence from Richmond occurs the general ly conceded fact that Mr. Blair is again on his way from Washington to the rebel capitol. It is for the public as well as ourselves to draw inferences from these coincidences, which tally so remarkably with all the spec ulationg,made in this columain regard to this mission.' In another paragraph the same paper says :—"We have good reason—not to say authority "for stating that Mr. Blair Sr., goes to Rhmond upon no hollow or heart less mission, but upon one of substance, giv ing hope to patriotio men that an opportunity for the highest reason will be afforded to statesmen ttiring the present civil war to a close by negotiation." Since preparing the above a new manifesto from Davis haiVi?ome to hand, It is in reply to an inquiry from the Georgia Senators in the rebel Oongress,wking his views of sepa rate State action on :the subject of peace— such as is agitatekin some of the rebel States. He condemns' it unqualifiedly, and then gges on gratuitiMsly to express his hos tility to any attempt to-procure a convention of all the States, North and South. GENERAL ITEM. The rebel prisoners at Elmira, N. Y. are fast becoming weary of the bogus Confed eracy. Two thousand of them have offered to take the oath of allegiance.— , -Daniel S. Norton has been elected, by the Minnesota, Legislature, U. S. Senator in' place of Sena tor Wilkinson whose term expires March 4. Mr. Norton is a sound and able Unionist of Wi nona County.—Four rebel spies have been apprehended and confined in Fort Lafayette. One of - them is known to haVe been connect ed' with the plot to burn New York. They are to be tried by a court martial.--Alex ander T. Stewart, the well known dry goods merchant in New York, reports his yearly in come .at $5,000,000, and ppays thereon an in come tax of $250,000. This is probably the largest income in this country.— The-;Tex an. rebels are spinning cowhair mixed with cotton as a substitute for wool.—lt is said, on the authority of accounts on file in the Department at Washington, that, since the rebellion began, Government has rendered assistance to forty thousand more Southern whites than blacks.—The manufacture of the cable for the new Trans-Atlantic, or ra ther Sub-Atlantic Telegraph, is now progres sing at the rate of 80 miles per week. 750 miles had been completed on the 30th of De cember, and it is expected that the whole will be ready by the first of June.—Go vernment means to make no child's play of the passport s,ystem. At Gen. Dix's Head quarters, an Englishman of the name of Smedley has been tried by a military com mission for crossing the line in ylefiance of it, and sentenced to six months in Fort Lafay ette, and deportation to England at the expiration of the term.—Mrs. Myers, wife of a rebel officer, ran the lines of our block ade, and was arrested in New York while: preparing to return with an invoice of goods. She was fined $1,230, and is to be sent South at her own expense.—A band of 200 In dians burned fbur ranches and one Mall sta tion, west of Valley Station, Colorada, on•the 14t11 , instant. They stole horses and cattle, destroyed, property, tore down the telegraph, and carried - bir 'the wires. There was some fighting, and% few *ere killed.—There is a dead lock in the Lower House Of the New Jersey .Legislature. As elected, there was a tie between the two parties, 30 to 30.. It was broken by the death of Col. FoWlet, a Demo cratic member. But previous to his death the House had bound"itself by a resolution, which required 31 votes to elect officers, and 31 votes to rescind the resolution. With this resolution in'their hands, the Democrats, now in the are able to, prevent •an or ganization. LA.TEST.-- Congress. In the Senate, it was voted almost unanimously not to increase the pay of "iovernment employees. 67,687 credits for enlistments in the navy were re ported, as made or ready to be made to va rious districts. The bill defining the rank and pay of paymasters in the navy was pa§s ed.. In' the House, a bill was passed, redu cing the duty on printing paper to 3 per -cent. ad valorem. A. B. Field, claiming a seat 'from Lousiana, was excluded from the privileges of the House, until the assault upon Hon. Mr. Kelley had been examined by a committee of the House. A threatemn_g note from Gen. Butler to a copperhead M. U. was the subject of a long debate. A resolution has passed the rebel Con gress, creatinc , b the office of commander-in chief of all the armies of the rebellion. . " I THINK the intimacy which is begotten over the wine bottle," says Thackeray, "has no heart. I never knew a good feeling come from it, or an honest friendship made .by it; it is only a phantom of friendship and feeling, called - up by the delicious blood and the wick ed spells of the wine." MONEY. •Caeh Acknowledgments for the week ending Janu ary 18, 1865. • Philadelphia Contributions as Follows :• G. F. Curwen, Philad'a $lOO 00 Mrs. Mary R. Mitchell;Philad'a 10 00 J. M. Duncan, Philad'a, per J.E. Busby k Co. . . .10 00 Irving Secondary School, Brides burg, Philad'a co. per Flambe A. Barton, . . . . 7 00 Mrs. Robert Patterson, Holmes burg, Philad'a, . . 5 'OO , "Cash," Philad'a, . . 1 00 "C. L. C." Philad'a, . . 5 00 "E. If. P." Philad'a, . . 3 00 "Cash," Philad'a, . . 15— 141.15 Presbyterian church, West Ofies ter, Pa. . .. . 335 50 To which the Faculty and Sta.- ' dents of Westchester Academy contributed, . 185'50 Staff and Cadets of Pa. tary Academy cont'd, 100 00 J. G. Thompson, Westchester, 2 00— 337:50 per W. E. Barber, Trees; Chester Co. Auitiliary Commission. Ladies' Christian Commission, Bridge ton, N. J. per Mrs. Emily R. Davis, 15 00 Army Committee, Cleveland, Ohio, per B. H. Mather, Treas. (for chapel tents) 1000 00 M. H. Merriman, Rochester, N. Y. . '5OO 00 Fourth Street Methodist Church, Wheel ing, West Va. per R. Crangle, . 70 00 Christian Commission, Rochester, N.Y. per O. D. Grosvener, Treas. . . 900 00 Chris. Commission, Bangor, Me per T. G: Stickney, Treas. . . 600 00 Centre Church Congregational Sabbath school, Brattleboro', Vt. per A. H. Wright, . . . - . 10 00 A. R. Burroughs, Livingstonville, . 10 35 D. W. Cook, Lime Spring, lowa,, . • 150 John Wullsehlezer, Berger Station; Mo. per Rev. B. K:Brc•bst, Allentown, Pa. ' '3 00 Wm. T. Barckley, Searsville, Orange co. N. Y. . . 20 00 U. P..Church,Chemung, 111. per Daniel Todd, . . . . . 20 00 Ladies' Aid Society, Blysburg, Pa. per Miss Annie M. Robbins, Seey, . 5 00 Citizens of. Burton, Allegheny co. Md. per Rev. Benj. Merrill, . . 50 00 Mrs. H. Van Syckel, Bridgeton, N. J. 5. 00 Congregations and Citizens' of York, Livingston co. N. Y. per Rev. Thos. M. Hodgman, .. 193 12 . . Collected by C. W. Smith at Cinein natus, Cortland co. N. Y. . . 20 00 Ladies of Beavertown Congregation, per J. P. Shindel, Middleburg, Pa. 11 25 Presbyterian ,Sabbath-school, Rural, Wis. per C. 'W. Phetteplace, . . 2 15 Ladies of Ithaca, N. Y. per J. L. H. . 10 09 Anonymous, Harrisburg, Pa. 5 00 - German Lutheran Congregation of Rev. C. Steinnauer, Syra cuse, N. Y. • • .14 00— 19 00 - per Rev. S. K. Brobst, Allentown, Pa. Mount Kisko, N. Y. add'l, per John Jay Wood, . 12 00 Proceeds of Fair held by the Young Ladies of the Ladies' Aid Society, Belem, N. Y. per Mrs. Daniel Hawley, 100 00 Coll'n at Mount Holly, N. J. per Rev. Samuel Aaron, . . 21 20 Meeting in Rahway, N. J. per A. C. Watson, Treas. . . . 340 45 Mrs. "Z. J. A." Mercersburg, Pa. 5 00 "M. J. A." " 5 00— 10 00 Mrs. Eliza Culbert, Phelps, N. Y. . 50 00 A Lady, Saratoga Springs, N. Y. per H. A. Wilson, . . 5:00 Three 'members of Rev. Jas. B. Ken- nedy's Ch. Huntingdon Valley, Pa. 3 00 Ladies of Brooklyn, ill. per Miss Helen Seevers,. . 10 00 . . Chris. Commission Central Branch, N. Y. per R. S. Williams, Treas: . 1000 00 Collection at Bradford, McKean co. Pa. per Rev. Samuel Porter, . . 75 00 Total, 48,872 67 Amount previously acknowledged, $1,058,043 87 Total Receipts, $1,063,616 54 JOSEPH PATTERSON, TILMASHRER CHRISTIAN COMMISSION, Western Bank, Philadelphia. STORES. The United. States Christian Commission begs leave to acknowledge the receipt of the following additional stores, up to January 19, 1865 : PENNSYLVANIA. Philadelphia—A. P. D. 1 package; Mrs. Stod dart, 24 pads. Germantown—Ladies' Chris. Com. 1 package. Kingston--Ladies' Aid Society, per Eliza S. Hoyt, 1 box. Grey's Va lley—Lathes' Chris. Cora. 1 box. Troy— Aid Society, ,per Mrs. C. C. Paine, 2 boxes, 2 barrels. .14rektoinvilie— Aid Society, per, Miss $. L. Teinplin, 1 box. 1 1 / 4 .Eloensviite--1 box. NEW JERSEY Tom's River—Aid Soc. per F. Armack, 1 box. Princeton—Ladies, per Miss Julia T. Smith, Seey, 3 boxes. NEW YORK. New York—Branch U. S. C. C. 121,650 religious papers. Buffalo Branch U. S. C. C. 1200 religious papers. Greenfield Centie-1 box. Sing Sing—Ladies' Christian Commission, per Annie Rockwell, 1 box. Parishville-1 box. Albany—Branch U. S. C. C. per Wm. McElroy, 1 box. Utica—Branch U. S.C. C. per Dr. D. W. Bristol, 3 boxes, 2 barrels. Daneinora—Aid Society, I box. Deposit Ladies' Christian Commission, per Mrs. E. McKinnon ' 1 box. Poughkeepsie, Dtachess Co.—Ladies' Christian Commission, per Mrs. C. W. Tooker, Sec. 3 boxes. Troy—Branch U. S. C. C. 2 boxes. Sector—Friends, per D. W. Dirge, 1 box, 1 firkin. *Waterford—Ladies' Aid .Society, per Mrs. G. W. Eddy, 2 kegs. Bufalo—Ladies' Chris. Com. 3 barrels 2 boxes. Sandford--Ladies' Aid . Society, per Miss Sarah M. Buck, 1 box. - MASSACHUSETTS. Boston—Army' Coma Young Men's Christian Assosiation, per L. P. Rowland, 4 boxes, 98,000 religious papers. • , Fall Rtiver—Citizens, per g. A. Chace, 1 box. Whiteasville-Per Edward Whiten, 1 box. RHODE ISLAND East Greenwich—Mrs. Rev. T. H. Baker, 1 box Provide,nce--Geerge.T. 'Spicer, 1 barrel. CONNECTICIIT. Hartford-Aid Association; per Mrs. S. S Cowan, 1 box. Forrostville—A. M. Miller, 2 barrels. 01110. Cincinnati—Branch U. B. C. C. 10,300 religiouS papers. WEST VIRGINIA. aarksburgh—Emily Y. Dodge, 1 keg UNKNOWN 1 box, from Thomas Askine. GEORGE H. STUART, CHAIRMAN CHRISTIAN COMMISSION, No. 11 Bank. Street, Philadelphia. • -gig' colt'llo, &f. - -11 ‘ 7. L 4 i bl°ll. l 9 • • tt . c.T4 Fourth an.d . Arch, ESTABLISHED IN 1840. 1865. CARD FOR THE NEW YEAR. 1865. _ . We have always adhered to good Goods, and depended on FAIR DEALING for Patronage. . _ HUGUENOT SHEET3NGS.—DOUBLE WIDTH, DOUBLE WEIGHT, and only double OLD PRICE; 304 'Huguenots for Hotels. 11-4 Huguenots for Families. 12-4 Huguenots for Families. Fine Large Blankets. 1000 Soldier Blankets. Quilts and ToweEYRE ec LA lings. wholesal ND e. ELL. Fourth and Arch. B z , LAA h Fourth Arch, S 'l' A. 33 Mr Sll FAD I IVAS4O. 1865.—CARD FOR NEW YEAL-1865 CLOTHS AND CASSIMERES. SILKS AND' DRESS GOODS. SHAWLS AND SCARFS. sTmETINGS AND TOWELINGS. HOUSEKEEPING GOODS. BALMORAL SKIRTS. krbiing- Barijitto. GROVER & BAKER'S CELEBRATED SEWN lIA,CRINES WERP, AWARDED TAB HIGHEST PREMIUMS OVER ALL COMPETITORS, For the best Family Sewing Machines, the best Manu facturing Machines and the best Machine Work, AT THE FOLLOWING STATE FAIRS. New York, Vermont, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana Illinois, Michigan, lowa. Kentucky and Oregon , be side a'score of County and Institute Faire. The work executed by the GROVER & HAR'Tilt MACHINES has received the FIRST PREMIUM at every State Fair in the United States where it has been exhibited.' The Grover & Baker. Sewing Machine Company manutacture, in addition to their celebrated GRO VER & BAKER STITCH MACHINES, the most perfect SHUTTLE OR "LOCK STITCH" Machines in the market, and afford purchasers the opportunity of selecting, after trial and examination of both, the one best suited to their wants. Other companies manufacture but one kind of machine each, And cannot offer this Opportunity .of selection to their customers. • .4Q-• Pamphlets containing samples of Sewing, Em broidery, etc., sent free to any address. OFFICE No: '730 CHESTNUT STREET, • fe2q-eaw PHILADELPHIA WILLCEIX& IBBS Sewing Machine It entirely noiseless. A patented device prevents its being turned back ward. The needle cannot be set wrong. The Hemmer, Feller, and Braider are acknowledged to be superior to (folders. It received the Medal of the American Insti tute in 18133. It also received the first premium for "TER Axial' Swum Its.caista." at thcgreat "New England Fair." the " Vermont State Farr." the " Pennsylvania State Fair," and the "Indiana State Fair," HSI. Bend for a circular containing full information, no tices from the press, testimonials from those using the machine, dic.JAMBS WILLCOX; Manufacturer, SOS BroadwaY, New York. elmpaniso. M'FATE FARM OIL CO CAPITAL, $200,000. 200,000 Shares Subieription; $1 per Share WORKING CAPITAL, $25,000* PRBSIDENT. JACOB THOMAS. TREASURER. E. B. HARPER . SECRETARY. FRED. B. REIHLE DIRECTORS. JACOB THOMAS, Philadelphia T. A. DURNEY, W. BARTON, L. J. DEMUTH, W. H. KINTER, llfcClintockville, Pa This Company owns in fee simple, eeventy-four acres of land, situated on'Therry Run, between the Reed Well and the Humboldt Works, being about three-quarter% of a mile above the former (Reed Well). Twelve acres of the property have been leased on which gm WELLS have been commenced, and, according to the lesilss a sixteen more are to be drilled 7 from theie twelve acres leased, the Company re ,ceive one-half of the Oil free of any expenee. The remaining property can be leased at a heavy bonus, whenever the Company see proper to do so. The Company having a working capital of $25,000, can develop° the property if they desire to do so. In the vicinity, on the properties of the Royal Pe• troletim and Springfield Companies, great activity prevails. The Company do not claim that they are receiving an immediate yield of Oil, but if the character of the surrounding property be taken as a test, there is no reason to doubt that out of nine wells now in progress, some. of them cannot but be productive. as all wells so far sunk on Cherry Run have pro duced OIL Tux Rams, 250 barrels; Attsoas, 10) barrels; GaANGER, 160 barrels, and BASES, 100 bar rels, are but a short distance below; and the nett well lately struck on the Humboldt ! property above. Subscriptions received for a limited number of Shares, at the office of HARPER, DURNEY & CO., BANKERS, 55 S. •Third St., Phila. Critrai garb. COAL AT FIRST COST. COST PRICE TO STOCKHOLDERS $7 50 PER TON. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • OF COAL OF THE BEST QUALITY. _ . . SHARES. each entitling to one and a half tons, at cost, every year, for TWENTY years, and to cash Divi dends of Profits from the sale of all surplus coal, may now be obtained at $lO, payable half on subscribing and half on January sth next, of the mutual BEAR MOUNTAIN FRANKLIN COAL COMPANY Oilier 121 South Third Street, Opposite Girard Bank. STOCK CAPITAL, 8500,000, In 62,560 Shares. Reserved Working, Capital, 12,500 Shares. Subscriptions of 4 shares, $33; of 10 shares, $9O: of 20 shares, $175; of 50 shares442s; of 100 shares, SS• S ; of 250 shares, Sp:100. Each Shire entitles the holder to receive, ever! year, one and a half tons of Coal, at cost, for 20 years, and Cash Dividends every six months, of the Profit from the sale of all surplus coal. Stockholders who do not want any coal may hat! their proportion of coal sold by the company for then especial benefit, the profits being paid over to ties of the regular cash dividends to which they are also entitled. The company possesses large and well built Coi. Works atDonaldson,(near Tremont,)Selnylkilicoa ty, with extensive mining and timber rights, an a. cellent double Bro.a.ker. Slope Works, large Steal Engines, Railroad., and all other Machinery and .41'" paratus in full operation, capable of mining fit;,ee tons, to be extended to 150,000 tons per year. It' coal is of the best quanta', chiefly of the Black lieaL and Primrose Veins, which, with. several other ado- Able coal veins, extend within the lines of this coal pant for two miles in length. A branch of the Rol ing Railroad extends to the mines of this colaraer over which the coal is daily sent to market. Stockholders may order their coal in any of usual sizes, via,, lump coal, broken, egg, stove sr.; nut coal, all at the presentnoSt- price of $7 50 Per. u '', delivered at the house, within the usual distances th e company's yards, -in the northern, middle sr , ' • southern portions of the city. Subscribers of stock are immediately supplied coal. • , For_ circulars and subscriptions, apply at the OFFICE. No. 19. South - -,THIRD Street, second Pi opposite Girard Bank. The Compixiy and all its Mining Works are e } - 4 , of debt, - and all operations are carried on on the Pritie4Plt. . BOARD OF DIRECTORS. Wm. Schmoele, President, E. P. Ring, William Ford, IL Schmoele. D. B. Wolfe,, A. B. Barden, Swear'', THOMAS CARRICK & CO., C,RACKER AND BISCUIT BAKER' 1906 J3Karket Street, Philadelphia . SUPERIOR CRACKERS. PILOT and SHIP BREAD, SODA. SUGAR and IVIS, BISCUITS__, PIC *ICS. JUMBLES , GINctER NUTS, APSES, and other Cakes. Ground Crseker in any qOantity. Orders Draw,.' filled. SIB DOLLARS FROG FIFTY CO Call and examine' something urgentlyne ac < everybody, or sample will be sent free by uMl f f cents, that zeds for $6. ft,„ WOLLu. : 681-17 170 Chatham Square,