monies. We were fortunate in rinding the door-keppsr, who kindly showed us in. However, there is no such thing as refusing us anything "might gives rig!." The furniture around the altar was very neat, though not so costly as I had been led to suppose, from reading the account of those nt Mexico. No diamond and pearl petticoats of 44 Our Lady of Guadeloupe." The painting of the Virgin .Mary was very good; my ad miration of it pleased our cicerone, as he raid it was his property. I could tell you of many nice things but my loiter is spinning out monstrously long, and if I was not '-Officer of the Day" I think I should have cut it short long since; but, as I have to set up, here's for a little more. On the 19th Col Garland was sent out with the Dragoons and the two compa nies of Rangers, to follow and observe the course of the retreating army. lie returned this evening, having been sixty miles from here; about twenty-seven miles hence he fell in with a party and attack ed them at 10 o'clock at night. Two of the men (Rangers) were wounded, lie killed two of the enemy, wounded two, and took two men and two women pris oners, and caplued their baggage. He followed the enemy forty-six miles. His force was small and not intended for hos tile operations. The enemy the first day appear to have been in great confusion; but after that they organized and conduct ed their march in perfect order. They have 1 1 pieces ol artillery, wtm uicra. How much it is to be regretted that we were not strong enough to have given immediate pursuit; a thousand Cavalry would have been above price. Gen. Arista is still at their head, and they are on their way to Monterey. This afternoon Gen. Taylor very proudly divided his Jcaptured cigars a raong his command; such a happy set of smoking dogs you never saw, and all at the expense of the enemy ! There was something very comfortable and consoling in the thought. No men have better earned a smoking indulgence by smoking work. None of the volunteers have as yet joined the main army. Gen. Smith is daily expected with a large number of them from Burrita, of which place we hold possession. From all accounts 'lhe cry is still they come !" I fear for their gratification, the lighting is all over. If all tales be true, there will be enough here to overrun the whole country. I do cot know the intcded movements of the General; I presume he will take all the towns cpon the river, if he does not advance into the interior. I saw to-day something I have never seen or heard of before; it was a horned spiitr! It was a regular spider, with a kind of a shell, if I may so term it, upon its back broadest farthest from the body, of a bright yellow color, with four horns, two small and near the body, and two larger at the farthest extremity. The lioras resembled those upon the horned fro. Did 3 0U ever see a spider of that kind before! jNotaswe know on," but we have seen a horned frog. The army are all in excellent health anJ spirits rcudy to 'o on die ! " Yours trulv, ' G del, P. S. "Davy Branch," the gallant Ringgold's war-horse has followed his luasier. He was shot to rel ie ve him from Lis misery. LATE FROM THE ARMY, COL. WILSON FOR REONOSA ARISTA'S PROCLAMATION TO GEN. TAYLOR STRENGTH OF THE MEXICAN A R M Y ANOTH ER CATTLE EXPECTED. The following comprises all the news which has reaehud since our last, by the arrival at Mobile of the U. S. schooner Walcott, and of the Galveston, at New Orleans. It will be found to be impor tant as wril as interesting:: The U. S. schooner Walcott, Joseph Amazcen, lieutenant commanding, arri ved at Mobile on the 13th instaut, after eight days' passage from the gulf squad ron of the Rio Grande and Brazos Santi ago, with passed midshipman Arnold bear ing despatches from Com. Conner, at Pensacola. From the officers of the cutter, the Mobile Tribune learns the following par ticulars in regard to the movements of the army and gulf squadron. Gen Taylor was at Matamoras waiting for reinforcements to march on Monterey. Seven hundred and fifty men were sta tioned at Barita; five hundred at Point Isabel; and the remainder with the gener al at Matamoras making, in all, about 9000 strong. The Mexican forces were between Matamoras and Monterey, for the pur pose of repelling (Jen. Taylor's advance. Repoit estimated them to be 15,000, but this number is supposed to be exaggera ted. The general impression was that they Mould make a stand there, and, if defeated, the war would be ended. The squadron is dispersed alut the mouths of the different rivers, viz: The SL Mary's off Tarn pico, frigates Raritan and Mississippi, off Vera Cruz; brig Law rence, off Rio Grande; brig Somers, off Alvarado; the frigates Cumberland and Potomac, sloops John Adams and Fal mouth gone to Pensacola for Provisions and water. The brig Porpoise to St. Domingo with a special messenger on board Schooner Flirt left Rio Grande on the evening of the 5th for Vera Cruz with purser Wa'.son on I onrd, bearing despatches to the senior officer in com mand, then off Vera Cruz. From 50 to GO sail inside the bar off Rio Grande and Brazos St. Iago. The Lawrence went to sea on the evening of the 5th, on a crniz for ten days, at the expi at on of which he was expected to return to Pehsncola. I; ianppoed sh will be ordered North Jti having suffered iVora the ef fects of a gale on the 30th of May, and having' been in commission over three years. ARRIVAL OF THE STEAMER GAL VESTON. The steamer Galveston was below at New Orleans on the 12th inst., having met with an accident to her wheels, and reached the city on the 13th. The Galveston had on board Major Bell, Lieut. Hooe, and a number of offi cers and men wounded in the late actions, and 108 passengers besides. The Galveston left Brazos Santiago at uoon on the 8th inst., and Galveston the evening of the 10th. The army was a bout moving up the river to take the small towns on its right bank. The following additional particulars re ceived by the Galveston are rather important: FIRST MOVEMENT OF INVASION OF MEXICO. On Saturday the 7th instant, Lieut. Colonel Wilson left Matamoras for Re inoso, making the first movement towards the invasion of Mexico by the American army. Col, Wilson has a command of 500 strong. Four companies of the 1st regiment of infantry, under the respective commands of Maj" Abercrnmbc, Capts., Miller, Ra dius, and La Mottc; Capt, Price's com pany of Texan Rangers, with a section of Lieut. Bngg's battery, under Lieuts. Thomas and Johnstone, and a company of Alabama volunteers under Gen. Desha, form the command. This movement is highly interesting, because it opens the ball of carrying the war into the enemy's country. Reiuoso is a small town on the Rio Grande, sixty miles from Matamoras, and containing a bout one thousand inhabitants. It is pre sumed that Col. Wilson and the brave soldiers'undcr him, will take it without a blow, at least the soldiers fear that such will be the case. The volunteers are in good health and spirits very few cases of sickness. It is rumored that Gen. Arista has sent a proclamation to Gen. Taylar, ordering him to leave Matamoras witnm a given time, or he should be obliged to come down from Monterey and chastise him for remaining on the west side of the Rio Grande. By the Galveston, the Picayune has received Galveston papers to the 10th inst. They bring up the news from the Rio Grande to the latest dates, and will be found interesting. We regret to say that Gov. Butler of South Carolina, reached here in a very low state of health, but we are in hopes that a few days of quiet and repose will bring him up speedily. Volunteers have at last begun to pour into Galveston freely. From the News of the 9th instant, we copy the follow ing. A full company, under Capt. Arnold arrived by the steamer Samuel M. Wil liams, on the 5th inst. They are from Nacogdoches, ond carry a standard with the words ".Old Nacogdoches" on it. A company from Jasper and Jefferson counties arrived from Sabine, by water, last Saturday the Cih, commanded by Capt. Cheshire, who was in the battle of San Jacinto. These have also been, re ceived, and left for Point Isabel on the schooner Testa, Captain Fish, this morn ing. 1 By this arrival we have received the first two numbers of the "Republic of the . Rio Grande and Friend of the People." The first number is dated June 1st, and' the second June 8th. The motto of the paper is, "Fear not the brave and gen erous soldier is only to be dreaded in the field of battle." The leading articles are printed both in English and Spanish. The purpose is to convince the people of Tamaulipas, Coahuila, New Leon and Chihuahua, of the futility of resist ing American arms, and to throw upon the administration of Parcdes the rcsponsi tyof the war. A separation of the de partments named above from the Central Government of Mexico is the distinct aim of this new paper We have not room for one of its "leaders" to-day, but cull a few "new items," as follows: Movements of the Enemy A trav eller from Tampico met a Government ccrrier fiom between that place and Vic toria, about ten davs so hunting for the Mexican army, for whom he bore orders, to retreat upon Tampico. This would seem to indicate thai the Government con sider the day as definitely lost in this quarter,or were reinforcing their army suf ficiently to enable it to stand another bat tle, and were collecting its fragments for the defence of Vera Cruz. The Port of Tampico was not blocka ded, he states as vessels were entering and departing through an American sloop of war the St. "Mary's was insight Mr. Chatzell 2nd the other Americans, who were so rudely driven from Matamoras by Amptuha, had reached Tampico in safety, though shaken in health by their forced journey of three hundred miles. They took shipping on the 23d ult. for tliis place, where they may be hourly ex pected. Arista's retreat will doubtless continue to the mountains. After losing the day with five to one at Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma, it is not likely that he will make another stand on the plains. Gen. Taylor takes the field with so overwhelm ing a force, and so admirably equipped in that terrible arm, the light artillery, that k would be madness in the enemy to fiht again, where defeat would be certain and retreat impossible. Monterey is the first position of any natural strength, and it also commands the entrance of the moun tain pass to Saltillo. It is there, in all probability, thst Arista will make his great! eltort, winch the importance of the object, his wounded pride, and the advantages of the ground, wiil ail conspire; to make a brilliant, but a bloody day in the history of this war. We understand that Canales is at Olmi tos Ranchos. five learrues on this side of Iteynosa, levying contributions upon the people, and plundering them ot an men mules and other moveable property. Ih has closed the road and intercepts all com munieatinn from Ihis direction, treating a! those who are suspected of coming from this place with the greatest narsnncss. From a letter in the New Orleans Del ta. dated Jnne 7. we make the following extracts; Gen Canales, with his 1800 cavalry. has fallen back, and is entrenched at Re moso. A brush may therefore be looked for between him and the command ol Lit. Col. Wilson. It is rumored here that Gens. Scott and Wool are ordered to Mexico; this intelli gence does not meet with the same favor. On Thursday, the Ricardo Rangers were sent out on a scout, after some arm ed Mexicans, who were discovered prowl ing about in the vicinity of the Andrew Jackson camp. They returned without fiudin" them, but on their march they dis covered, through information furnished bv a Mcxicau, a lot of arms, swords, pis tols, etc., concealed in a Ranchoro's house, about five miles irom camp. These, as well as the possessor, were cap lured bv them, and brought into camp. The proceeds of the booty will be distrib uted among the captors. . Sickness prevails to some extent throughout the volunteers, confined, how ever, to bowel complaints chiefly; but no sisrn of fever. The water and green corn are the principal causes. Major Ringgold's Effects. A let ter from N. Orleans to the Charleston News says: The coat, boots, and complete uniform of the late Major Ringgold, with his hoi sters, "housing and saddle bloody red," were sent to his friends at Baltimore in the brig Architect, Capt. Grey, which cleared for that port yesterday. The boots had been cut from his feet, and the front of the saddle was completely torn awav. From the judgment of a person in horses and riders I learn that Major Ringgold must have been standing in his stirrups, giving orders, with body facing a little to the left. 1 he ball, it is interred, came from the rear of the left and passed in his front, shattering the thigh about midway. ' The Postcript of a letter from Point Is abel, dated June 7, says: Two men died in the Hospital here, yesterday and day before; the balance, with one or two exceptions, are doing well. A number of wounded departed for St. Joseph's yesterday. I saw Capt. Page a moment ago, and saw his wound dressed. He is out of danger, but has made a dreadful sacrifice to his country's honor. Col. Mcintosh is improving ve ry ranch, and the other wounded officers arc doing very well. The Progress of the War, The most important questions in every circle at present arc "How will the gov ernment carry on the war?" 44 Will it at tempt to march overland to the Capitol, or proceed to capture the frontier and coast towns, continue to blockade all the ports, and perchance batter down St. Ju an D'Ulloa, and thus open agate to the Halls of the Montezumas!" These ques tions, we repeat, are being discussed and agitated in all circles, and its is roundly asserted by many to be almost, if not quite, an impossibility for an American army to reach the city of Mexico, over land, from the Rio Grande, should that be the inten tion of Government. The Charleston Patriot, in the course ol an interesting article upon the subject of conquest, furnishes these hints: "To traverse the territories of Mexico, in ap proaching the Capital, would be a work of immense difficulty for an invading army, and its very size would be one of its great est difficulties. To provision such an ar my along the route, unless you have an immense cavalry, and in the teeth of an excellent and numerous cavalry, would be scarcely possible. We must not forget that Mexico is, strictly speaking, a moun tainous country throughout. Its roads are mostly foot paths, pursuing gorges in the mountains which the heavy rains have hollowed out. In the table land contiguous, lives the ranchero. Over these gorges he hangs; in the hollows of the hills he lurks, ready to launch out, at the signal, and dart with the rapidity of the vulture upon the victim whom he sees. Our course, during the present war.shonld be first to close all the ports of Mexi co, at once, by simultaneous blockade; this would be more likely to bring her to terms than any thing else. It would be the only process by which to bring to terms the sixty thousand foreigners with in her territories, most of whom have bu sied themselves in fomenting the hostility of the Mexicans against our people. These people, cut off from a profitable trade, would at once come to their senses. The Ministers, and Consuls of foreign nations would soon bestir themselves to bring about an accommodation. England and France alone, have some thirty-six millions of trade annually at stake in Mex ico, an amount quite too great to forfeit in the philanthropic policy of keeping up bad blood between the countries now sep erated by the Rio Grande. The conquest of Mexico is to be effected by gradual colonization. Let Matamoras be occupi ed by an armed population of Americans as soona taken. Do likewise with San ta Fe, where it would be easy to convince the people that we should be "better friends and neighbors than those they have been accustomed to. If Vera Cruz is bombar ded and taken, let our Government invite settlers by large bounties of land, to take ' possession, and the fear of vpmilo would be no terror to 'natives ol the cities along the low latitudes of North America. Citizens of Charleston Savannah, Mo bile, Pensacola and New Orleans, could go with perfect impunity to the deserted habitations of Vera Cruz, in the depth of August and September. We have ma ny young hawks in all these cities, who require to be fed, and who would relish no better privilege than that of fondling a brave Anglo Norman Colony under the shadow of San Juan de Ulloa. We trust, however, that there will be no necessity for conquest, and that Mex ico, satisfied that she can do no better, will hold out the ovile branch, and that thus the amicable relations of the two countriesmay.be speedily restored. War is a great calamity, and should be avaided whenever it may be with honor." DECLARATION or INDEPENDENCE. In Congress, July 4, 1770: The unanimous Declaration of the thir teen United States of America. When, in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to as same, among the powers of the earth the seperate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opin ions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation. We hold these truths to be self eviden that all men are created equal; tha1 they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; that amonjr these are life, libcrtv and the pursuit o happiness. That to secure these rights governments are instituted among men deriving tneir 1 ust powers irom the con sent of the governed; that whenever any form ofgovernmeut becomes destructive o these ends, it Is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles, and organizing its powers in such form as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dietate, that governments long established should not be changed for light and tran sient causes; and accordingly all expe rience hath shown, that mankind are more disposed to suffer while evils are sufferable, than - to right themselves by abolishing the form? to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing in variably the same object, evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security. Such has been the patient sufferance of these colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their for mer systems of government. The histo ry of the present king of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usur pations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over these states. ' To prove this, let facts be submitted to a candid world. He has refused his assent to laws the most wholesome and necessary for the public good.. He has forbidden his governors to pass laws of immediate and pressing import ance, unless suspended in their operation till his assent should be obtained: and when so suspended, he has utterly neg lected to attend to them. He has re fused to pass other laws for the accommo dation of large districts of people, unless those people would relinquish the right of representation in the legislature a right inestimable to them, and formidable to tyrants only. He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and dis tant from the repository of their public records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his meas ures. He has dissolved representative houses repeatedly, for opposing, with manly firmness, his invasions on the rights of the people. He has refused, for a long time alter such dissolutions, to cause others to be elected, whereby the legislative powers, incapable of annihilation, have returned to the people at large for their exercise, the state remaining, in the mean time, exnosed to all the dangers of invasion j- from without, and convulsions within. He has endeavored to prevent the pop ulation of these states; for that purpose obstructing the laws for naturalization of foreigners; refusing to pass others to encourage their migration hither, and raising the conditions of new appropria tions of lands. He has obstructed the administration of justice, by refusing his assent to laws for establishing judiciary powers. He has made judges dependent on his will alone, for the tenure ol their offices and the amount and payment of their salaries. ' He has erected a multitude of new offices, and sent hither swarms of officers to harrass our people, and cat out their substance. He has kept among us, in times of peace, standing armies, without the con sent of our legislatures. He has affected to render the military independent of, and superior to, the civil power. He has combined with others to sub ject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our con stitution, and unacknowledged by our laws, giving his assent to their acts of pretended legislation r or nuaricruig large Douies oi armea vaues mc city. Scarcely a street can be troops among us: '- traversed in which the closed shutter or For protecting them, by a mock trial, ih hanging crape do not betoken asnd from punishment for any murders which den bereavement. Fathers, sisters, ehil they should commit on the inhabitants of, dren, of both sexc?, indulge in the dep these Hale?: - ; - UufUinentatioa, ' For cutting off our trade with all parts of the world: For imposing taxes on us without our consent: For depriving us, in many cases, of the benefits of trial by jury: " For transporting us beyond seas to be tried for pretended offences: For abolishing the free system of En glish laws in. a neighboring province, establishing therein an arbitrary govern ment, and enlarging its boundaries, so as to render it at once an example and fit in strument for introducing the same abso lute rule into these colonies: For taking away our charters, abolish ing our most valuable laws, and altering, fundamentally, the forms of our govern ment. For suspending our own legislatures, and declaring themselves invested with power to legislate for us in all cases what soever. He has abdicted government here, by declaring us out of his protection, and waging war against us. He has plundered our seas, ravaged our coasts, burnt our towns, and destroy ed the lives of our people. He is at this time transporting large armies of foreign mercenaries to complete the works of death, desolation, and tyranny, already begun with circumstan ces of cruelty and perfidy, scarcely par alleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally unworthy the head of a civilized nation. He has constrained our fellow-citi zens. taken captive on the hisrh seas, to 1 bear arms against their country, to be come the executioners of their friends and brethren, or to fall themselves by their hands. lie has excited domestic insurrections among us, and has endeavored to bring on the inhabitants of our Irontiers the merciless Indian savages, whose known rule of warfare is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes, and con ditions. In every stage of these oppressions we have petitioned for redress in the most humble terms: our repeated peti tions have been answered only by repeat ed injury. A prince, whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people. Nor have we been wanting in atten tions to our British brethren. Wc have warned them, from time to time, of at tempts by their legislature to extend an unwarrantable jurisdiction over us. We have reminded them of the circumstances of our emigration and settlement here. We have appealed to their native justice and magnanimity, and we have conjured them by the ties of our common kindred to disavow these usurpations, which would inevitably interrupt our connex ions and correspondence. They too have been deaf to the voice of justice and of consanguinity. Wc must, therefore acquiesce in the necessity which denoun ces our seperation, and hold them, as we hold the rest of mankind enemies in war, in peace friends We, therefore, the representatives of the United States of America, in general Congress assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world, for tho rec titude of our intentions, do, in the name and by the authority of the good people of these colonies, solemnly publish and declare, that, these united colonies are, and of risht ought to be, free and inde- pendent states; that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British crown, and that all political connexion between them and the state of Great Britain is, and ought to be, totally dissolved; and that, as free and independent states, they lave full power to levy war, conclude 1 peace, contract alliances, establish com merce, and to do all other acts and things which independent slates may of right do. And for the support of this declara tion, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our for tunes, and our sacred honor. JOHN HANCOCK. President. AWJTL CALAMITY. DESTRUCTION OF THE THEA TRE ROYAL AT QUEBEC GREAT LOSS OF LIFE! Quebec has been visited again by anoth er dire calamity. On the night of the 13th inst., about 10 o clock; a fire broke out in the Theatre Royal, at the close of an ex- nbition of Chemical Dioramas. . A cam- phire lamp was by some means overset, and the stage at once became enveloped in flames. The house had been den.se- y crowded, but a number had left before the accident. A rush was at once made to the staircase leading from the boxes, by mosc wno m tne excitement ol the mo ment forgot the other passage of egress. n an mcreditable short space of time (says an eve-witness) the whole of the interior of the building was in one sheet of flame The scene was heart-rending in the extreme; as far into the interior of the burning house as could be seen there was a sea of heads, of wreathing bodies and outstretched arms. In a few minutes from the time the flames envel oped the building, the mass of human beings, who had but a short interval pre vious been in the enjoyment of a full and active life, were exposed to view a mass of calcined bones. Forty-six bodies had been recov ered from the ruins! Most of them had been recognized: a greater loss of life than in-the two dreadful conflasra- tions of last summer. Sad wailin? ner- SAftl'L W. PEARSOX, HAVING returned to the practice o the law, lenders his professional services to his old clients and the public generally; Office in North end of Snyder's row, lately occupied by A. J.Ogle, Esq.-. decl645-3ai Cumberland ESarket, Flour, Wheat, R) , per barrel, per bushel, S3 50 80 65 05 40 00 00 25 50 12 S 5 25 15 7 a 4 a 0 a 0 a 0 Corn, Oats, Potatoes .pples, 44 dried 1 1 o it Peaches dried 44 Butter, per pound, Beef, . 44 Veal. 41 Chickens, per dozen, Eggs, Stone Coal, per bushel. Pittsburgh larkct. Flour, 2 Z7 a 0 00 Wheat 0 60 a 0 C5 ; Rye 50 a 55 ! Corn 37 a 40 Oats 25 a 30 Barley, 65 a 70 Bacon, hams, per lb 5 a $ Pork CO a 00 Lard, 5a 6 Tallow, rendered 6 a 03 44 rough 4 a 00 Butler, in kegs, 6 a 8 44 roll. 7 a 9 CheeseWestern Reserve 5 a 7 44 Goshen, 00 a 10 Apples green, per barrel, 2 52 a 3 00 44 dried per bushel, 110 a 1 20 Peaches, 3 00 a 3 50 Potatoes, Mercer 00 a 00 Neshannocks 45 a 50 Seeds, Clover 4 50 a 0 00 Timothy 2 75 a 0 00 44 Flaxseed 00 a 1 0(5 Wool 22 a 33 BANK NOTE LIST. Pittsburgh, Pa. CORRECTED WEEKLY STANDARD GOLD AND SILVER Pennsylvania. Pittsburgh, Banks, Philadelphia Banks, Girard Bank United States Bank, Bank ofGermantown 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 Lew is town Bank of Middlelon, Carlisle Bank Columbia Bank and Bridge Co. Dojiestown Bank Erie Bank Franklin Bank, Washington Farmers Bank Reading Farmers Bank Bucks County par FarmerVfcDrover's Bank Wayncsb'g li Farmers' Bank Lancaster par Lancaster Co. Bank Lancaster Bank Harrisburg Bank Honcsdale Bank Lebanon Bank Miners' Bank Poltdville Wyoming Bank Northampton bank York Bank Stale Scrip, Exchange bank Pills., Mer. and Manl'a B Issued by solvent Banks Ohh. Mount Pleasant Stenbenville, (F. & M.) St. Clairviile Marietta New Lisbon Cincinnati banks, Columbus Circleville Zanesville Putnam Wooster Massillon "I li t par U 1 par 2 Sandusky Geauga Norwalk Xenia Cleveland Bank Day ion Franklin Bank of Columbus, Chillicolhe Sciota Lancaster Hamilton Granville Commercial Bank of Lake Erie, Farmers Bank of Canton Urbaua, Indiana. State Bank 3ml branches, Stale Scrip, $5s I 41 5 10 13 45 20 Illinois, State Bank 50 Shawnelown Missouri. State bank 2 Tennessee, Memphis 3 j Other solvent banks 3 Xorth Carolina. All solvent banks 2 Sjttth Carolina, All solvent banks 2 yew England, New England 1 JVew Fork. New York city par Other banks 1 Alarilond. 2x!i.r.c;3 "ur v- Other bmks l 23 85 70 70 45 50 25 50 00 15 4 8 50 is 3 par par par 25 par i I par li par '2 par par li U li par par i I par
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers