In the House of Representatives May 2 1 The Bill from the Senate making al terations ia the ray Dcp.nrtfl.cnt of the Army being under consideration, ami an amendment pending, which proposed to abolish the offices thereby created ia six mouths after the termination of the pres rst war with Mexico. Mr. Ha-tobcx remarked that lie was by no means dis poses to withhold from the Govern ment the necessary force for conducting the public Ven ice and prosecuting die war; but he was entirely opposed to a permanent increase in the number cfour officers wi hout some provuiou for rc lurning to the peace establishment after the war was over, and concluded by say in that he was against the repeal of the existing law. Mr. STEWART said that lie thought ihe committee were expending too much of their time m making provision fur the officers of the army, and not enough in making provision for the privates in the ranks. lie inquired of the Chair wheth er it would be in order to move an amend jnent to the amendment now proposed making an increase in the pay of volun teers? The officers were well paid and could take care of themselves, but what was to become of the families of the poor volunteers, who encountered all the hard ships oi military service for seven dollars a month- It was a very comfortable ihingto have an officer's birth and ample provision from Government, while the men did the fighting. Now, he thought it was these very men, who after all had to bear the brunt of the battle, who o glit iirst to be provided for. Mr. "S. had risen mainly for the pur pose of vindicating himself and those who acted with him from a false and calumni ous charge. The Whigs in that House lial been charged with throwing cold wa ter upon the war, disheartening the na tion, and discrying and discouraging the volunteers. Now, actions spoke louder than words, and he should, on this occa sion, appeal to facts to show who were and who were not justly liable to this charge. What were the facts? A few iays since a bill had been return ed Irom the Senate reducing the pay of the volunteers from ten dollars a month to seven dollars a month, and on concur ring with that reduction t!ie yeas and nays had been called; and wfiat was the result? The Whigs in that House went in a body againsl concurrence and for giving the vol unteers ten dollars, while every member cf the Democratic party, with the excep tion of eight, had voted to reduce their pay to seven dollars. Was that the way patriotic gentlemen encouraged volnntcer- es. iie iiu not ask who nattered the volunteers, but who voted to pay them. Apply this test, and how stood the two parties? Who voted to give them ten tloQars a month? The Whigs. Wt1kj were for reducing their pay to seven dol lars? The Democrats. Mr. S. had pro duced this stubborn fact for the indica tion -of himself aud his friends. He ap pealed to the record. There stood the yeas and nays. Let gentlemen deny then own votes if thev chose. What more? Mr. S. had introduced a resolution which proposed to increase the pav of volunteers to ten dollars, and to give them a hundred and sixty acres of land. Here was another test. Every Whig but five voted in favor of the mo tion, hut it was voted down by gentle incn on the other side. Mr. S. had renewed the same propo sition yesterday in Committee of the lYfoole, but it was again voted down by gentlemen on the other side in a body. Jo .v, he wanted the country to under stand this matter. A strong efiort was making to cause the people to believe that the Whigs were opposed to the war; that they xvere throwing embarrassments in the way of the Administration, disheart ening the armv, and discourajririor the vol uniccrs. These slanders were repeated every day in the official, (the Union,) and copied from it into all the party papers, the followers of the Union, in the coun try. Yet how stood the fact? Who was it that discouraged the volunteer? Was it the Whigs, who weae ready to pay him ten dollars a month and give him a com fcjble farm, cr was it the so-called friends ol the Administration, who want ed him to fight for nothing an J find him self? Seven dollars a month! A pretty amount of pay for a farmer or a mechan ic, who could get a dollar a day by labor ing at home, but who forsook his business and his family, and went into the sickly climate of Mexico, encountered the dan gers of the camp, the fatigucsjof the march, and tlce blood and carnage of the battle field! It was said lie went for glory? The Whigs were ready to give him a tract of land; the Democrats voted it down two to one. The Whigs wanted to give him ten dollars; "the Democrats gave him seven. Was not this very pa triotic? Here were gentlemen, flaming patriots too, who received their eight dol lars for spending a few hours a day in le gislation, and who then returned to all the comforts of a plentiful homeland cmid very coclly vot3 a mm fe.en dollars a jaoath (less than what they themselves received a day) for going to Mexico, a distant and uncongenial climate, and ex posing himself to the lances and the bay-! oncts of die foe! These were the men water ou the war and the voh;nt3crs, :nl for the honor of their countp . X.r. . vautcd to fix the ic?pcn. -.wimuuwgcuuur .uwiuvcrsi i ncse 1 Utrecht, up to which Mr. Adams, in J the northern fruits, such as the apple, were : the supporters of the President!! his despatch to Mr. Middleton, of July 1 pear, &c, are produced in abundance, in W hUe the W higs, they say, threw cold 1 r 1823 alle:ed an unquestionrb!e title" those elevated rRHn. Wf.n r iwn ty just where it belonged. When it was proposed to give the volunteers ten dol lars per month, there were but eight Dem ocrats in favor of it, and but five Whigs against giving them ten dollars and one hundred and sixty acres of land; yet the Whis are discouraging volunteers! Re verse the case, let but eight Whigs vote to pay the volunteers, and five Democrats ainst, and what tremendous denuncia tions would follow. Whigs would be ex pelled the House as lories and traitors out- . ft r. i!... wti fit-rt n.f.rkwl 1 . ma 1 ri,rMt. ' Alter Uivn J.sa vi riciu ucw fore tlx: people, let these gentlemen gx i..AMtw1 mrrl ihe nnlrlntif nrwl linnr.st ' iivni i . - - -. farmers and mechanics ol the country, and try to make them believe that Whigs were their enemies, and Democrats their friends, and the mechanics whould hold np to them die yeas and nays, and tell them that actions speak louder than words, the wives and daughters of the volunteers who were left dest'tute to scufile for living as thev could, would frown upon i these men w'lth unuterablc abhorrence and J indignation. For his own part, Mr. S. said he had voted for every measure to ! strengthen the arm of the Executive, and bring th c war to a speed)' and successful termination, and he should continue so to vole. He wished to see this war broujrot to a successful termination; and he should do every thing m his power to promote such a result. War wras a terri ble calamity to any country, and espe cially to a country like this; and no mat ter what he might think of the conduct of the Executive in bringing on this war without consulting Congress, then in ses sion; no matter what he might think of the Executive in determining upon his own responsibility that we had good cause of war, and acting upon" ihatMetcr mination without the concurrence of Con gross, with whom alone resided the war making power; no matter what might be thought of the tonduct of the President in blockading the Rio Grande, andmarch iug the army from Corpus Christi to Mat.mioras and pointing our guns into that city, within the acknowledged limits of Mexi'-o, itself an act of hostility, and leading inevitably to war; how far the Presidcn. could be defended in such a course without firsrsubmitting the alleged causes of var to the consideration of the Representatives of the people who had to jght the battles and bear the burdens, were questions he would not now discuss The President had assumed the responsi bility, and he would have to meet it. The war is upon us; no matter how or by whom brought on, it is our duly to prose cute it to a speedy and honorable con clusion; and to this end he wras ready to give all the money, all the men, all the en ergy and power of the Government. lie would now no further detain the com mittee; he wished not to assail others, but this much he felt constrained to say in vin dication of himself and his friends against the false charges made on this floor and in the public press, that the Whigs were en deavoring to discourage volunteers and embarrass the Government in the prose cution of the war. As to the provisions of the present bill, Mr. S. was opposed to making the of fice of paymasters permanent; and he ho ped, therefore, either that the amendment of the gentleman from New York (Mr. Hungerford) would prevail, or that the socoud section which repealed the exist ing law would be stricken out. He then said that if the motion was now in order, he would move to increase the pay of volunteers in the existing war to ten Cel lars, and to make to each of hem a dona tion of one hundred and sixty acres of lanu. The Forty-ninth Parallel, Mr. Bkntox has made an elaborate ar gument in the Senate to show that our title to the whole of Oregon is not "clear and unquestionable;" and upon the principle damanding nolhiug but what is right, be contends that Mr. Polk's posi tion on that- point is untenable. Our claim to the forty-ninth parallel he con siders perfect, and in his view that line is the best boundary that can be devised in a geographical aspect as well as in re gard to right and justice. At the conclu sion of his remarks on Tuesday he thus spoke of its parallel. It is the line which parts, more suitably than a line following the high lands could do it, the valley of the Columbia and of Frazer's river, saving to us all our discoveries and settlements beyond the Rocky Mountains, and leaving to the British the whole of theirs. It is a con tinuation oi the line on this side of the mountains a line whichjhappens to con form to the geographical features of the continent on this side of the mountains, and equally so on the other. On this side, it parts the two systems of waters, one of which belongs to the valley of the Mississippi, and the other to ib lr.m of Hudson's Bay: on the other side, it parts va,lfiT of Montery was visited by many the system of waters which belong to the of our soIdicrs, during the Federal War, valley of the Columbia from those which anJ tlieT describe it as an earthly para bclong to Frazer's river cutting off the ; disc 5 groves of oranges, lemons, figs, heads of a few streams, of about pmm i J and pomegranates, surround the city; and value on each hand 1.1, I It is ihe line of Utrecht a line which will cow be denied but but by few and te which few, nothing more on this point will ever be said by me. It is the line of right, resulting from the treaty of U trecht; and as such always looked to, in the early stages of this controversy, both by British and American Statesmen as the ultimate line of settlement and boun dary between the'eountries. It is the line of RI3HT, resulting from the said treaty to extend; for only upon that treaty could once get pleasantly located in that dclight a line of ''unquestionable title" be aver- ful tcgion, they will be very unwilling to j - ' A V- A. V ILi M UVC" red. On any oilier basis, it could , only be a line of convention a conventional line of mutual agreement; and Mr. Ad ams was not a man to confound two things so different in their nature. U is the best line for us; for it gives us all the waters of Puget's sound and Bel Iingham's Bay. I do not say the Straits of Fuca; (for those straits, like all the otlicr great straits, in the worlds are part of the high seas, and incapable of self appropriation by any nation;) it gives us these waters, and with them the pictur esque and fertile square, of more than an 1 t am hniliA. mnilAn .itntr irMr I tr 1 1 1 fT 111 I W I 111 iiuiiuicu. uuica v s ihe Straits of Fuca and the Columbia, and hntvpn" ihe Pacific" coast and the - riasrailf ranov nf mountains, and ol which Mount Olympus, near the centre, is the crowning ornament, and from which the whole district derives its classic name of Olympic. All this liue of the treaty of Utrecht wires us, which the line of the valley of ihR Columbia would not; tor that river has no valley, at its mouth, and enters the sea through a gap in the iron-bound coast. The valley of that river is a fan expanded, the spreading part in the Kockv Mountains, me nanuie m mc nw. It is the best line for the British, for it gives them the upper part of north 'fork of the Columbia, where it heads opposite the Athabasca and Saskatchiwine, British rivers and covered by British posts and irom an " wnicn me vaiiey ui nwiwa river would be cut off from communica tion if the head of the Columbia remain ed in our hands, just as Halifax was cut off from Quebec by the northern waters of the St. John s. Thus, the line of right the line of U trccht is the best for both parties, bav in? to each what is convenient and nec- cssary to it, (for the triangle at the head of the Columbia is as necessary to them as the Olympic square iso us)and taking from each a detached district, of little value except for annoyance. The Bri tish could annoy us in the Olympic dis trict; we could annoy them at the head of the Columbia; but why do it,cxccpt upon the principle of laying eggs to hatch lu turc disputes? upon the Machiavelian principle of depositing the seeds of a new contestation while assuming to settle the mischiefs of an old one? Forty nine is the line which Mr. Jefferson pro- nosed in 1807, as I have shown hereto fore to the Senate. It is the line of which Mr. Gallatin and Mr. Rush said in 18 IS: The forty-ninth degree of north lati tude had. in pursuance of the treaty of Utrecht, been fixed, indefinitely, as. the line between the British northern pos sessions ond those of France, including Louisiana, now a part of our territories. There was no reason why, if the two countries extended their claims westward, the same line should not be continued to the Pacific Ocean. So far as discovery gives claim, ours to the whole country on the waters of the Columbia river was in disDutable." 1 0r It is the line of all the American states men, without exception, twenty and for ty years ago. It is the line of Mr. Can ning in 1823. It was the line for the re jection of which by Mr. Pakcnham, without reference to his Government, Sir Robert Peel has lately, and publicly, and in the face of the world, expressed re gret. It is a line which we have never presented as an ultimatum which we have often proposed gently, and which the British have as often gently shoved aside, because they saw, from our own coetancous propositions, that they could do better, and get the whole, at least for a long time, under our own declusive project of joint usufruction. But now. all this gentle and delusive work is done with. The joint use is to terminate events advance and the question must be settled now by reason and judgment, or it will soon settle itself by chance and arms. Forty-nine is the line of right with me; and, acting upon the second half of the great Maxim, sub mit to nothing wrong ! I shall submit to no invasion or encroachment upon that line. Senators may now see the reason why for twenty-five years, I have adhered to the line of the Utrecht. It is the line of right, which gives to us the Olympic district and its invaluable waters, and se cures to us the river and valley of the Columbia. It is the fighting line of the United States. The Uumon can be ral lied on that line ! Summer Quarters ofthe Army of Occupation Magnificent Pros pect. From ihe Ioutton (Texas) Telegraph May 13. We learn from a private letter, that Gen. Taylor has expressed a determina tion to make his summer quarters at Monterey, and there is no doubt that with the force now under his command, and the volunteers that arc hastening to his standard, that he can establish his sum mer quarters in anv nart of the eastern provinces pi Mexico that he desires. The iha .1U -..iu u:i. l """' xtiv;j, wmuu is irrigaicu oy countless rivulets of pure and wholscome water, is but a continuous garden, produ cing various kinds of vegetables, and trop ical iruits in abundance. The climate, however, in summer, is rather too warm to be sgrecable to per sons from the Northern - States ; but a short distance, in the elevated plains a- mong the mountains, the climate, even in that of the Catskill mountains. Even midsummer, is as cool and salubrious as forsake it; and the glowing description they will circulate throughout the Union will ere long excite a desire among all classes to'annex it to the United States. The stupendous chain of the .Sierra Medre is a boundary meet tor a great nation; but the insignificant Rio Bravo is only suitable to define the limits of Slate oreounties. The Frightful Hurricane. The following particulars of the fright ful hurricane, which recently passed over the town of Grenada. Mississippi.are furnished by the Greada Chronicle: It appears that the storm of wind con sisted of two channels before it reached Grenada, one of which was sweeping due North, and the other East. After having torn up trees as they came for perhaps several miles, (and the latter dealing destruction on the house of Gen. Waul, occupied by W Eubanks, killing that poor man, and wounding Mrs. Eu banks and all of her children, and tearing the roof from the house of J. Sims,) they met at or near the residence of D. Rob 'inson, in the western part of the town, when that from the west proving the stongest, turned the course of the other, and together they came in one body, forming a whirlwind, for a mile perhaps, then proceeded with somewhat of an in clination northward. Besides these two, there may be seen traces of three other channels ol wind, though not so heavy. The first sign that was visible in the Heavens was a dark cloud, which thick ened in the west, and as we stood and watched it, we could see clouds of red smoke rise, as if from earth. The roar of the thunder was deafcing and the flash es of lightning almost blinding. A short pause, and the cloud appeared to have blown past us, and those who were stand ing with us, near the Post Office, look ing on the blaek floating element, began to think we should have no rain. Alter a short time, however, we could observe the sudden turn in the wind, and, look ing sonthward, we could plainly perceive another cloud coming up from that direc tion. The wind, in the mean time, was forcibly felt in town, as trees were tum bling down every instant, and shingles from the roofs of some of the houses were seen to fall, even before we had any idea of a Tornado. The wind continued to rise,and die rain descended in torrents; all around us trees and fences were fal ling, and houses cracking, as if to warn the inmates to leave them. This was followed by a scene more terrible than one can easily imagine, and far beyond our power to delineate. When the winds met, we could hear the crash a3 they came togethnr, which sounded like a migthty thunder as as they passed through the town, the noise was heard at the dis tance of 12 or 14 miles. A glaring, and at the fame time a dismal flame burst up on the first appearance of the hurricane in the western part of the town, which continued throughout as terrible and des tructive as it was sublime. In coining together, the tornado took up the house of Samuel King.occupied by D. Robinson; his wife, father, sister, and two children, being in this building,(Mr. Robinson him self being down town.) Mrs. R. was blown a considerable distance in the air, aud found about one hundred and fifty or two hundred yards from the site of the house, literally cut to pieces, the head cut open, and the brains running out; near the house, Mr. Robinson, Sr., was found dead and wofully cut and bruised; Mrs. Dougan and Mr. Robinson's two children were also found dreadfully man gled, and one of the children has since died. Portions of the house were seen several miles from town, and of the im mense sum of money lost by Mr. It., only about $120 has been found. Gen. Waul's house, occupied by Dr. R. F. Purnell, was also torn to pieces, and two negroes killed; but fortunately, as it was singular, Mrs. Purnell, and her children and nieces, who were in the house at the time, saved their lives, though they es caped not being wounded, by getting un der the piano, which was heavy and strong enough to withstand the crush of the falling timbers; all the furniture in the house,save this instrument, was blown off, but a large portion of it recovered, though damaged considerably; the Doc tor, we believe, saved none of the valua ble books which constituted bis library. At the foot ofthe hill on which these two houses were situated, stood a house which was occupied by a poor family by the name of Deal, who were in it at the time, and though the house, with all their clothing, fcc, was blown off, no person was killed: a large oak tree was there left standing, around which, another, e qually as large, is twisted, and the bark taken off as completely as if it had been done by a man, thereby showing in some degree the velocity of the whirl, from the centre of which this is about twenty or thirty yards. The fences blown down we cannot note, as nearly every fence within three or four hundred yards of the immediate vicinity of the tornado was torn to atoms. The trees in the route of the storm were thrown aside, and almost uninter rupted it came upon the Baptist Church a large brick building, and we supposed the strongest house in Grenada, and at the same time it reduced this heavy and noble building to a pile of ruins, it tore the houses of Mr. Plummer, (who taught a school,) Peter W. Gause, James M. Baughan, the male and female Academy, Sept. Caldwell.s residence, and houses of John Foster, T. J. Dullahitc, Thomas S. Land and L. D. Butler. In Mrs. Plum mer's house there were some 12 or 16 persons, of whom several were killed and others wounded, Mrs. P. herself among the former. At M. Cause's no person was killed, but several were wounded. At, Mr. Baughan's that gentleman was killed, and Mrs. Baughan severely if not mortally wounded. The male and female academy was the next scene of horror. Ofthe s'tudents, there were only about 14 or 15 in the school, together with the teacher, Mr. Sample; 4 or 5 of whom were killed, and the rest, with Mr. Sam ple, so dreadfully mangled that their lives are despaired of. At Mr. Caldwell's, four negroes belonging to him were kill ed, and several injured. At Mr. Dol lahite's and Mr. Foster's none were kill ed, though there were several wounded. At Dr. Snider's, where the frame work of a new house was blown down, and the roof of that wherein he lives was ta ken off, we believe one or two persons were wounded. Col. Morton's house and lot were injured, and some of his family wounded. The house of Mr. E. II. Mitchell was damaged, as also of R. L. Bingham, Esq., but no one, we believe killed or dangerously wounded. At Mr. Land's, Mrs. Land was wounded, but not dangerously; two negroes belonging to Mr. L. were also wounded. At Dr. J. P. Tarpley's, all the appurtenant houses to the dwelling were blown entire ly down, and the latter slidden off the pillars which supported it, but no person hurt. LITER FROM THE ARMY- Arrival at New Orleans ofthe Steamers. Galveston & James I Day. CONFIRMATION OF THE CAP TURE OF MATAMORAS AN AR MISTICE ASKED BY GEN. ARIS TA AxMERICAN TERMS DECLI NED U. S. SQUADRON ORDER ED TO PENSACOLA to PREPARE FOR AN ATTACK UPON VERA CRUZ MORE MEXICANS CAP TURED. . From the N. O. Tropic, May 30th. LATER FROM THE ARMY. The Galveston, Capt. Wright, has just arrived, having left Point Isabel on Wednesday, the 27th inst. The news brought by her is confirma tory of the capture of Matamoras. The Mexicans were encamped about 20 miles up the river. Both the Americans and Mexicans were waiting for reinforce ments, when another battle was expected. The Mexican array left a large amount of ammunition atMatamoras,which is a valu able acquisition to General Taylor's sup plies. The Mexicans having previously des troyed large quantities by filling up the wells in the city, and throwing some in to the river. Gen. Taylor, like a true American officer, gave orders to have his army not to take the slightest article with out paying for it its full value. The citizens of Matamoras were per mitted to transact business as usual, with the exception of selling liquors. Com. Connor, with most of the squadron, had gone to Pensacola to refit and re-in force before making an attack on Vera Cruz. Captains Piatt and Ellmore's companies of Alabama volunteers wefi safely land ed at Point Isabel on the 2Gth inst. The James L. Day, Capt. Griffin, has arrived, but brings nothing later. A part of Colo nel Twigg's Regiment of Dragoons, under command of Captains May, Arnold and Kerr, arrived at Point Isabel on the 25th inst. to recruit their horses. From the N. Orleans Bulletin, The Mexican Army had retreated to Camargo. A passenger on board the Galveston has furnished us with some interesting details connected with intclli gence received by previous accounts. On the 17th inst. a large portion ofGcn.Tay lor's army moved up the river for the purpose of crossing. Gen. Taylor remained at the Fortifica tions with about 300 men, as the army were seen by the Mexicans on the oppo site side of the river, to leave the encamp ment and approach the Fort. Arista sent a flag of truce to Gen.Tay- lor requesting an armistice of six weeks, giving as a reason for his request, that he desired to communicate with his Govern ment. Gen. Taylor said that he would give him till 8 o'clock the next morning to evacuate the city of Matamoras, and would permit him to take the public pro perty under his charge. On arriving at the city, it was discover ed that Arista had departed with his for ces leaving only the mounted Battery, .11 the mortars and such ofthe military apparatus as could not be removed in their haste to escape, were thrown into the wells. A party from our army went out to reconuoitre immediately after the entrance into Matamoras and overtook a portion ofthe Mexicans who were retreating, 22 of whom were made prisoners. It is understood that Arista's head quarters arc at San Fernando, about 90 miles from from Matamoras. The wounded of the American Army are understood to be doing well. Secret Service Money The Washington correspondent of the Newark, (N. Y.) Advertiser, says: 4,Ex-Prcsident Tyler is here, and his evidence in the case is being taken. He testifies that Mr. Webster never made use of a single dollar of the secret service fund without his approval; and further, that Mr. Van Buren left as a legacy for his administration to pay off $15,000 due the secret service fund, aad which debt was paid." Effects of the War. The effects of the war are already be ing seriously felt on our seaboard. Mo ney is scarce -produce has fallen com merce languishes, and bankruptcies oc cur daily. In New Orleans, New York, aud other cities the money prcssuro is al- I octcii; 1UU HCHllI VTUIDC. OIULI sof all kmi3 are falling. Pa. Tel. SAHl'L VF. PEAltSOX, HAVING returned to the practice o the law, tenders his professional services to his old clients and the public generally. Office in North end of Snyder's row, latly occupied by A. J.Ogle, Esq. decl645-3ra Cumberland Blarket Flour, per barrel, $3 50 4 23 Wheat, per bushel, 80 a 0 85 Rye, 44 6 5 a 0 7o Corn, 44 05 a 0 70 Oats, " 40 a 0 45 Potatoes 4 00 a 0 50 Apples, 44- 1 00 a 1 25 44 dried 44 1 25 1 5a Peaches dried 14 2 50 a 3 00 Butter, per pound, 12 a 0 15 Beef, 44 S a 0 4 Veal. . 44 5 a0 6 Chickens, per dozen, I 25 a 1 50 Eggs. " 15 a 0 1S Stone Coal, per bushel, 7 0 8 Pittsburgh Xarkct. Flour, f 2 50 a 2 87 Wheat 0 GO a 0 C3 Rye 50 a 55 Corn 37 a 40 Oats 25 a 30 Barley, 65 a 70 Bacon, hams, per li 5 a 6 Pork 00 a CO Lard, 5a 6 Tallow, rendered 6 a 09 44 rough 4 a 00 Butter, in kegs, 0 a 8 44 roll. 7 a 9 Cheese Western Reserve 5 a 7 44 Goshen, 00 a 10 Apples green, per barrel, S 52 a 3 00 44 dried per bushel, 1 10 a 1 20 Peaches, 3 00 a 3 50 Potatoes, Mercer 00 a CO Neshannocks 45 a 50 Seeds, Clover 4 50 a 0 00 Timothy 2 75 a 0 00 44 Flaxseed 00 a 1 00 Wool , 22 a 33 BANK NOTE LIST. Pittsburgh, Pa. CORRECTED WEEKLY STANDARD GOLD AND SILVER Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, Banks, Philadelphia Banks, Girard Bank United States Ban, Bank of Germantown Monongahela Bank Brownsville Bank of Gettysburg Bank of Chester County Bank of Chambersburg Bank of Delaware, Bank of Susquehanna County Bank of Montgomery County Bank of Northumberland Bank of Lewistown Bank of Middleton, Carlisle Bank par nar i par 25 par 1 par n par par par 11 u li par par i 1 par par Columbia Bank and Bridge Co. Doylestown Bank Erie Bank Franklin Bank, Washington Farmers Bank Reading Farmers Bank Bucks County Farmer's&Drover's Bank Waynesb'g Jl farmers liank Lancaster Lancaster Co. Bank Lancaster Bank Harrisburg Bank Honesdale Bank Lebanon Bank Miners Bank Poltsville Wyoming Bank Northampton bank York Bank State Scrip, Exchange bank Tilts. , Mcr. and Manfs B Issued by solvent Banks Ohw. Mount Pleasant Steubenville, (F. & M.) St. Clairville Marietta New Lisbon Cincinnati banks, Columbus Circleville Zanesville Putnam - Woostcr Massillon Sandusky Geauga Norwalk Xenia Cleveland Bank Dayton Franklin Bank of Columbus, Chiiiicolhe Sciota Lancaster Hamilton Granville Commercial Bank of Lake Erie, Farmers Bank of Canton Urbaua, Indiana. State Bank and branches, State Scrip, $3's Illinois par 4 li par n i par o 4 t ( It it 4 it 10 13 45 2 State Bank State bank 50 Shawnctown Missouri. Tennessee, Memphis 3 Other solvent banks 3 North Carolina. All solvent banks 2 South Carolina, All solvent banks 2 Xeio England, New England 1 Jfew York, New York city par Oiher banks 1 Marylnnd, Baltimore par - Othir banks J
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