p , of , T'TDTTij' Ji ini inj r i 't EYKWING- T K LI J3 a I U A P. T TT" ' I rmcE TWO CENTS. rillLADKLPIIIA, SATURDAY, JULY- 2, 1SG1. PRICE TWOGENTS. ..... . iiiin,ii mr nib J W'EUKC H4II.Ko.iD. rail Pnrttrnlnr HorrlMn Nrrnn, The Toronto tllobe of iyestenl ly glvet tome additional particular of the awful c.Uiotnphe on the Qucbce lUilroad, near St. Hiluiro. Tlie accident took place nt half-past 1 o'eloi It A. M. The train for Quebec stopped at St. Hllile, aiamt tne mile from the bridge m ro the Itielie lieu river, where tliei o is n tewing bridge. The swing bridge wai opened aloiit a quarter past one, to let a nmulier of hnrgce, In tow of a etcanicr. pa. The proper signals were tnrn'd licf. ro the bridge was opened, and the red light wa burning. The man m charge of the bridim, when he heard the whistle, waved his red biiuel lamp. Tho Handing orders are, that all trains nmstcoinrt to a full Mop ticlore reaching the bridge. This was diyrcg irdcd, and the lr.uu ran Into the open draw. The train which went over the bridge con tiMed of eleven cara and an engine. Th.'ro were .TA4 emigrants in bourd, all flcrinans. The train was prce Ipilatcd on the sum of a b.irpe passing t the time, which lie partly submerged. The rnnilliroeir Tl.ouiAa Vlnn tuL(1n,1. el. a tlrnmn Js'lchohvi Flynn, supposed to be killed. WillUm Dirucy, the driver, went down with his engine, but camped with slight injury. The cara lie mostly a pile of f ragmen's, eruhcd together, renting on tlio I urge. Had the cirs fallen into tho open w.ttcr, M tho number of deaths canned hy being crushed in the smashing of the cara must hare hecn added a van nunVH-r of drowned. All the hargejc in tow of the steamer bad parsed except two. Thtwo on tho barge actually passing through the bridge saw the truiu coming, knew what muat happen, and jumping on the lui r so behind saved their liven. The locomotive lies submerged in the water out ' of sight. The appearance presented by tho wreck it Is impossible to doseribe. The train consisted of two or three sccond-clms cars, and the remainder box cars fitted up with benches for the emigrants. The two or three hut earn, whon we arrived nt the scene of the accident, about seven o'clock, remained On the top of tho pile, eompnrntively unbroken j the rest were a con fused broken heap, some lying on their sides, others upnlile down, broken into, and crushed by those alxA j Miein, while In sumo cases a cur lay flattened almost like s pancake, between two others. The wheels lay confusedly sea tiered here and there through the heap. The kg of a child might ( be seen protruding from under a plank, at au. other pluce a man's head severed from tlio body, which appeared like a shapeless mans of bloody clothes. The bridge, which is a tubular iron structure, the curs running along tho top of the tube. Is some thirty-five feet high, counting from the level of the rail to the level of the water. L The width opened by the swing, which is at tho western extremity or ttn bridge, is about sixty feet. When I arrived, thirty-four bodies had been recovered. During tho forenoon, sevcnil others have been taken out, but tho remaining dead are elderly in a car so wedged in amongst the frag- ' mentsof the others thatmanv have not even yet been reached. As I write, the body of an old grey-hiilred man, respectably attired, is taken out; the lifeless hand still grasps a large long handled china pipe. A quarter of an hour ago, . a lad of fifteen was taken out, apparently lifeless, hi head covered with blood, and presenting a frightful spectacle. On restoratives being ap plied, he was found to be not only alive, but only Very slightly injured. The blood with which he was covered was that " of his mother, beside whose corpse he had been lying in the wreck for ten hours. Within the . last few minutes, tho bodies of two innocent babes, of two or three years, have been got out of the wreck and borne past to the dead-house. The dead are lying in the upper loft of a ihed on the river tide, ubout one hundred yards below the scene of the accident. A number of the more seriously wounded are In the lower part of the same building. Already two or three have been . transferred from the receptaclo fur the wounded to the ghastly upper chamber set apart for the dead. Others of the wounded are in a tavern close beside the scene of the accident, and in the adjacent sheds and other out-buildings. The Coroner, immediately on arriving, had the engine-driver (Win. llirncy), arrested and Bent bim by the delayed train, which passed w ationt ten o'clock, to Montreal, there to he com mitted to gaol. The bridge is nearly 1100 feet in length, and the signal that the bridge is open can be seen 625 feet before entering on the bridge. The signal being beside the drawbridge on the western side of the river, should thus have been seen by the driver at a distance of 1G25 feet. It was a clear night, with no haze to prevent its being visible. Birney says that when tie taw the signal he reversed the engine, but those compe tent to judge say he could have pulled up the train in one-third of the distance. flirnev has been in the employ of the Grand Trunk for eiaht or ten years, chiefly as fireman. It is only recently that he bos been promoted to the rank ef driver. A brother of Finn, the deceased conductor, wne shiver of the express train which brought ut frcm Quebec. It was touching to tee how tho atrong fellow was unmanned, and wept and moaned in the excess of his grief, when, on our arrival at the bridge, be was first male ac quainted with his brother's ruolancholv Cute. The Coroner returns by tho next train to Mon treal. This being a fete dav the inquest could not be held to-day. lie will have a special train to morrow to take a jury to view the bodies, and will then adjourn the Inquest, to be continued in Montreal, lie has telegraphed to the German Society of Montreal, requesting them to come and take charge of the orphaned children, wives deprived of their husbands, c. The Coroner also telegraphed to Montreal to have seventy-tire collins immediately made and scut down. The . dead have not yet been identified, and it has been Impossible thus far to get anything approaching a correct list of thou names. With the assistance of n Intelligent German in the employment of Major Campbell, of St. Xlilaire, I eutered into conversation with a num ber of the survivors. I found, however, that they were of very various nationalities, and knew lit tle of each other's affairs. They camo by tho tieckar, which arrived at Quebec on Sunday afternoon lost, from ISremen via Hamburg. Tbey landed 639 In nnmber, 13 having died on the passage. One, an old man of H2, died after reaching Quebec. A numberleft for the West on . Monday, and 3A4 started bv this unfortunate train. A lew families remained behind. Tbey were Austrians, Prussians, Swedes, Panes, - Bobcmiuus, l'oli-s, and, in one or two cases, Italians. They were bound for Wisconsin, via Chicago most of them to meet friends already sottled in that region. Those 1 conversed with were eliielly from Bohemia. Joseph Koesler, from Bohemia, lost a boy of three or four years. Vincena Waut aing, aged 27, single, from II 'hernia, U among the dead. S. Kolii.kv, from Bohemia, has lost a babe of one year; himself, wife, and three chil dren survive. A boy aged 10, named Kukall, from Bohemia, is among the dead ; bit father and mother are among the severely wounded. Juliana Vrhana is dead ; hit widow is among the wounded. 8. Zoninenatik, from Bohemia, lost two chil dren. Mrs. Kriegir, a widow from Coblenta, ban lost a son, a daughter, atid a son-in-law; two daughters survive, wi.li herself. The appearance of the contents of the chests recovered fiom the wreck betokened that a uiun . btr of the emigrants were iu tolerably well-to-do circumstances. Several bad shuttle and other implements of the weaver's craft. Some of the survivors aay that in the cart that they were in there was no light. The darkness matt have added immensely to tho terrors of the frightful descent into the abyss. The tpai-e between the plert was at first filled with the precipitated cara to suck a hriirht that the bridge could not be closed. The "two or three topmost cars were pulled out of the way by a locomotive, by means of a tope attached, and the slight damage done to the edge of the bridge here the care weut over havl -g been repaired, . the track was In a condition U permit the re sumption of ordinary tratlic befo e ten, wheu tho Quebec train, which had been due in Mr ureal at 7-25 A. M., passed over. It, of coum' , failed to make the connection at Montreal for the West. It it supposed tho total mortality caused hy '.he accident it about 80. ' Momthkai., Juno 20, Midnight. The train for tnnately shunted a little in lallln", to that a por tion of the cart were throv . ......ally on the em bankment, and in these the people fo the moat Cm escaped death, though, of course, many wore tiled and badly Injured. One suffered ampuia tlon for Injury done to tho knee. Up to mid night to-night, Wi persons ire been found dead . nnd it it probable that ten or twelve more are in the cart, many of which fell into ten feet of water and sou of which bad not been got up when the last detpatvh Wat received from toe scene of the disaster. . , Cot t-D Not Pat Thrib IUnt. At a ichool established tor poor children in an Euglith town, the clergyman who wat teaching was asking among other things, "Why as A data and Eve turned out Of I'aradise ?'' I'p juitqwd a boy, and with an eager couutenauce answered, "lio- - cause they could not pay their rent." On inquiry, it proved that hit i'aiuar and mother had been turned out for the same cause, and that the like , catastrophe was then Impending afresh. Pity .was awakened, the cause wtu iufttttucatcJ. and Klirf H afforded, EXTRA! WILSON'S CAVALRY RAID. CAPTURE OF A REBEL TRAIN Portions of Two Railroads Destroyed. ERIDOES, TIES, AND RAILROAD STOCK BURNED. SIIIRr FIGHT 1VITII THE EMttlT. SHELLINC OF PETERSDURC lite r.tc, iitc, r,to nto. Hkaihu-ahtfrs "Ahmt op tut Totomic, Wednesday, Juno 20, 10 V. M. At length Wil son's cavalry expedition, which marched nino daya ago with the purseof destroying the lati ville Itailroad, lias been hoard from through other than Rebel sourcea. Captain Whittnkcr, of Wilann'a Stan", with an ccort of 40 men, left the head of the return ing column at Heims Station, on the Wcldon road, fifteen miles below Petersburg, early this morning, and reached Meade's hcud quarters at II A.M. He slashed his way through a column of Rebel infantry, which was moving dow n to intercept onr cavalry, losing in the dash 25 of his 40; but he got through. S ilson't command consists of hit own and Katitr.'s Divisions. Not halting on tho way out to more than temporarily break tho Wcldon road, which he did at Helms Station, he moved rapidly to llurkcsvllle. the intersection wf the Danville and Itichmimd and the Petersburg and Lynch burg roads, 30 miles from Richmond. Then to the work ot destruction with all tho might of thousands of active men. I p to thit time he met but little opposition. With headquarters at Bnrkeavillo, he despatched commands to each of the four directions whore lay a railroad.. In this way, on the Danville road he burned bridges forty miles apart, and thor oughly Idcstroycd, to tho burning of every tic and the twisting of every rail, some twenty miles between. On the Tctorslinrg and Lynchburg road he ut terly destroyed thirty miles, and tired bridges outskle of that distance. Having effected the object of his raid, he now looked out for his lines of retreat, already threatened by gathering Hebe Is. lie turned to come back. He met skirmishing right, left, front, rear, but nothing not easily ridden through until last night at Stony creek, on the Weldon road, eighteen miles below here. There the enemy had concentrated in his front, and themselves attacked late in the afternoon, and a severe engagement ensued, lasting into the night. lie met the same force that hud been dealing with Sheridan north of liichmoud. The resclt doet not seem to have been decisive, although the losses sustained and inflicted were large. During last night he tnrncd tho enemy'a Hank, coming in between fcim and I'etcrsburg, prefer ring that to the other flank and a longer march. So far as the force he had been fighting it con cerned tho move seemt to have been successful. He eluded it, and would have reached our linea by noon, but for the llebel infantry column which Captain Whittukcr discovered and rode through. What new plac he adopted on meeting thit new element in the problem of his return whether be decided to halt and withstand an attack or march back on the path be had come is not known. Whittukcr bad scarcely reported when General Meade ordered the 6th Corps, the nearest, to march to Wilson's support, as au offset to the Keliel infantry, and tuch of Sheridan's cavalry as had come up from Windmill Point, where it crossed the James, wot also ordored to hasten iu the tame direction. The 6th Corw marched early in tho afternoon, divested of all impediments, strtpiied for march ing and fighting. Such U the situation as far at heard from, but the collision has doubtless already been precipitated. We shall hear from it to-morrow. General Wilton was intrusted with an exceedingly itu- Eortatit mission. He haa accomplished it, and e can afford large loss on his return, and still the raid will be a glorious thing. When tho Danville road wut completed two months ago, the Richmond papers pronounced it worth more than a victory. By a parity of reasoning, the loss of it is worse than a defeat. General Hancock, on resuming command of bis corps to-day, issued a long sjwciid order, re viewing the achievements of the i!J, referring to the disinter of last week in terms of rebuke, which might be construed as a re Meet ion up m the way the men were handled, rather than upon the men, and finally stirring them with breathing thoughts and burning words to still grander deeds. By request, I refrain from tending it for publication. The Petersburg Rrgittrr of yesterday it Ingu briously facetiout over conchology, states that every liody 'in the city is learning the art of dodg ing. Staid and resectable citt.eus dodge into the houses of utter strangers, and penetrate even to the cellars, without even saying, by your leave. The 18th Corps bat adopted a badge, a double triangle inclosed in a quatre loll. Geuerals Grant and Butler during the dav have visited several corps headquarters, whether fur counsel docs not appear. Buldy Smith has dropped a shell into Peters burg every lifteen minute the last three days. A deserter reports that several struck the market house yesterday, that the Hebcl pontoon bridge was destroyed by them, ami that numbers are killed every .day. Smith silenced two Re'iel batteries across the Appomuttox yesterday, but tint morning they disclose two others in position, which be cannot reach. Major Merriman, MJHew York, had hit arm shattered by shell irday. The casualties from tharpshootiug are twenty-five a day iu the lMlh Corps, and at many in the VtU. The other eorpt inaiulaiu informal truce. Lee ban but 3.5,1100 men In our front. The Rebels are now conscripting between the aire of 17 and oJ; hitherto, only between 1H and 1 3. If I were operating, I should write privately a hi Bull Hun Kusseil Act as though, you hud heard good news. Tribune. The Kvcrnt Army lAmtten. The Commercial, cotnplaiuing of the disposi tion to magnify losses in receut engagements, says : We have good authority for asserting that the turn total of killed, wounded, and prisoners, ex clusive of the cavalry and ilunter't column, will not exceed fifty-two thousaud. Take the casualties below the James for In stance. These have been variously estimated at from 10,000 to 10,000. A note from one of our prominent citizens at General Grant's head quarters, dated June 27, contains the following: " Our losses have been wauiticd. Tho entire lost of killed, wounded, aud prisoners, south of the James, will not exceed 7 WO. I went all over the ground on Saturday, and made accurate re turns. There were here then 44iiO wounded (many of them slightly), and MbOiick men. 1 believe all, or nearly all, are in from the front. About 10'HJ wounded were tent off by the Connecticut on taturday, leaving here this morning about 3 100 wounded, all told." Nulla r must it he understood that these fifty, twe thousand men are entirely unavailable dur ing this campaign. Owing to the fact that little artillery wat used In the Wilderness, the woundt incurred by our men ere, iu a majority of cases, slight, to that very many of theui have already recovered and reported for duty. During the l ast two weeks ten thousand have left the Wash ington hospitals for the front. i The Richmond VtHuirer, of the 29th alt., gave a list of 11.130 Rebel wounded who had been sent to hospitals from Lee's army, and 3010 from Beauregard's command. Thit did not include those seut from the Uapidan to Gordensville, Char, lottesville, Stauuum, and other pouts. These probably numlierod at many more. What the Confederate losses hare since been, we know not ; but, according to their own accounts, live generals were placed kor, d oumhat at Cold liar Lor alone, while their total number of general oilicers killed, wounded and, taken prisoner! up to the siege of Petersburg number twouty-elght. Iu addition to thit, seventeen thousand prisoner have been captured and are now iu our hands, .from these tigura we can approximate to the Itebel losses thus, far during Uiul memorable cauipuitjn, PIRATE "ALABAMA." THE DEFENSE OF CAPTAIN' SEMMES. Reasons Why the Kebel Pirates Burn Their Prizes, and the Remedy, Tlie fact that Captain Semmcs had pu'lihcd a l ng defense of his piratical cxpl li: in the Lon don Win, has air. ady been stated. The d a tt ii.ent was accompanied by the following letter ; To ihr F-1iior t fie Timet Kir: Do me the favor to puMNh In the Tim' the inc'ie-ed communication, which 1 deaigu ai n reply to numerous asaults upon me by the l'.t elisli Press, not excepting au oocaMonal 'rumble" from yontselves, on the t'ibj"ct of inv destroying prizes nt sea without adjudication by a Prize Couit. 1 he London Freninij Star nnd kindred negro phiiiKt ussorialcs have been particularly virulent and abusive. Tho tcim "pirate" is a favorno epithet with them, but aa abuse is alwayi evi ilence of the weakness of the r inse In which II is deployed, and at tliit little failing may lie a sort of voeabulilie necessity wiih them, to enable them to pursue their polite calling, perhaps I ought not lo quarrel with it. If in the course of my remarks I have found It nei esMiry to r vii w some of the acts of your (iov ctnnii nt, I tru.-t vou will give mc credit for doitu this in a spirit of justice and lair plav, and not ilh a disposition to be querulous or censorious. I have alleged no fact thut will not be conceded ; and if my reasoning upon the premises be sound, no linrm can have been done to any one, site o tho truth is never unjust. If, on tho contr.irv, the reasoning be tinsouud, you bine the pru'tc and scalpel nt hand. I am, respectfully, Ac, t K. Sf.mmks", Captain C. S. Navv. Conlcdcrate Stab s steamer Alabama, on ' the high teas, April, l!bl. The following extracts from Captain Scmmes' communication show itsrfrift and spirit: "I had the honor to command tho first vcsel-of-wnr (the steamer .Smer) commissioned by the Cotifcdtrate States in tho present war, aud having successfully run the blockade of New Orleans and got to sea, it early became necessary fur mc to adopt some mode of disposing of my prizes. "A blockade of the entire coasts of the Confede rate States hail already been declared, and the enemy was busy in collecting and arming ships to enforce It ; and I presumed that in the course of a few months tho blockade would bo at least sufficient to keep out sail vevsels, and of this class, with rare exceptions. It wan probable my prizes would be. It was ch ar, therefore, that I should lie effectually prevented from tending my prizes into the Confederate ports- "Up to the time of my running the blockado (June 30, lh61 ), I had not seen her Rrtttanic M i jesty't ordert iu council, prohibiting the bellige rents from bringing their priset into llritish potts; and lookiug to the unequal operation of such orders, I had strong hoes that none such would be issued. I made my first priics on the coast of Cuba, and with a view to lest the dis tition of Spain in this matter, I sent them, seven in number, into the port of Cienfaegos. Their arrival was tclcgrnplied to the Captoia General at Havana. "The Cnptain-Genoral wai without instructions, the orders of neutrality of the Queen of Spain not yet having been received. The prizes were permitted to remain until these orders should arrive. The orders camo, and the prizes were afterwards ilk-gally landed over to the enemy, instead of being warned to depart. Spain, a well as France, bad followed the lead of Great Britain, and In due time all the smaller commercial nations dkl the same. To show the objects I bad in view in sending in these prizes, I quote below an extract from my letter to the Uovornor of Cienfncgos . " 'The cargoes of several of these vessels are claimed, at appcari by certificates found among the papers, aa Spunisk property. This foot can not, of course, be verified, except by a iudioial Eroceedmg in the prize courts of the Confederate tales, diut while thit fact It being determined, what is to be done with the property i I have tlie ripht to destroy the vessels and not the ear goes, in case the latter should prove to be, as claimi d, Spanish property ; but how can I destroy tlie former and not the hitter i " '1 cannot before sentence unlade the rargoci nnd dtliver thetn to the claimants, fur I do not know that the claims will be sustained, aud I cannot destroy the cargoes, for I do not know that the claims will not be sustained. Indeed, one of the motives which influenced me in seek ing a Spanish port was the fact that the-e cargoes wero claimed by Spanish subjects, whom 1 am desirous of putting to as little inconvenience as possible in the unlading and reception of their purty after seuteuce, in cats it should be re stored to them.' 'Ti will thut be seen that I wat not onlransiotn to i onilemn my prizes, but to nut neutrals to as little ittconvenlenie as possible. If my prizes tiad iMen received into neutral ports, and per mitted to remain there until they could be adju dicated by our prize courts, sitting In our own territory, no potsiblo Inconvenience, that I can perceive, could have resulted le neutral nutions, and the rights of everyone wot Id have been to nin d the right of the captor to tliu full benellt of hit prize, and the right of the neutral claim nit to adjudication. "Hi at it. convenience to Oreat Britain, for ex simple, could possibly have growa it of tho fact of a captured vessel lying quietly at hui dock In the peit of Liverpool, iu charge of a thlp-Kecper and p.ize agent, until she could be adj'idiea'ud ; and if sbe should be condemned, why could she not have been told as quietly at public auction nt if she bad been seized and told under an execution for debt? It wat my inten tion to follow the precedent set in the Cienfuetoi case of tending all my prizet into the most convenient porta for the partios con cerned ; as, where there were Knglish claimants, into Kngiisbportt ; French claimants into French ports, Ac. This intention was frustrated, at hat been seen, by the orders of the Queen's Govern ment I say the Queen't Government, because that Government gave the cue which was fol lowed by all the other nations. By these orders I was deprived at the same time of tho right of asylum and sale of my prizes, and of the power of adjudication. "What course was expected of me under these circumstances ? Was It expected that I would abandon the right of capture altogether ? or that I would be guilty of the child's play of captur ing llie enemy's ships with one hand and releas ing them with the other? That, in short, I would retire from the high seas, and leave the cutmy to pursue hit commerce; his 'innocent and peaceable commerce,' at Mr. Adams plain tively and naively calls it, without molestation ? If you did not suppose this and 1 will not impute tuch folly to a people who not only know the value of commerce to a bellige rent, but who have alwayi annihilated the com merce of their enemies iu their own wars yon must have known that I would destroy the enemy's ships in every case where it wai possible. Why, then, do you complain of tho course I pursued i Was it just to force that course upon me, and then exclaim against It in pious horror ? Js this the Kind of 'fair play' upon which iig lithuicn pride themselves I" Captain Scmmes then alludes to the relative positions of the belligerents at the commence ment of hostilities. He sayt : "A large portion of the wealth of tho Fedora Statea consisted In their commerce, j and if this could be destroyed, an inqiortant blow would bo struck in the war. The 'Volunteer Corps' of the tea at legitimate at the 'Volunteer Corps' of the land wat tho most effective weapon with which to strike this blow; aud accordingly, in the first days of tho war, several privateers were commissioned, and other were being rapid! j fitted out, when the Queen's ordert ap- Iieared, aud knocked the wholo scheme on the lead. "As If by magic, tho privateers which had alicady been soiumiusiined disappeared from tbe Seat, aud all work was auspended on those la course of preparation, and the little Sumter, after wards assisted by two or three other small ves sels, was obliged to undertake tho herculean task of destroying a commerce aecond only to that of Great Bntuiu, and which covered every sea. The roaton of the disappearance of these private armed ship it obvious. "They are prepared at the coat of Individuals, and depend wholly upon their captures for sae ccat. If these cannot be made available, the en terprise becomes abortive, and the capital In vested in it it tuuk, and they could not be made available by reason of the Queen't ordert referred to, denying them the right of asylum in British waters, the British Foreign Secretary well know log that they rould not be made available in the Confederate ports because of the blockado, the blockade having been proclaimed on the ltith of April, 1661, and the orders in Council not having been issued until the. 1st of the following June. "to far at result were concerned, the British Government might at well have Juid to the (,'on f. derate Mate, B (he words of the 'Declaration' of l'ati", 'PVvahMfHg f and remains abolished,' ajlhtfflt lite ffci 5tote were uvf bound j tho sa'd (Uela'a'lon, the 1'nib'd States, then tho Ketirral mouthpiece, having declined to accede tlien to befotc the war. 'There was no oceaion for Mr. Seward to cn denvoi U sneak' intnthis ' declaration, 'alter the war. In the hope that hy becoming a putytolt tireat Hriinin would llletal y hold tint the Con feder.i'p tides, now acknowledged as he'!igerent, would In b mid bv the act of their enemy. The hritlsli Foteign Se. re'ary knew his Im.inew b tti r than this. With th- Ino-t c immcnd.ildc sa mity, he took cure of his loL'ic and of Ids t r ! ltd Mr. Seward t tlie same Hum, and accom pli hid the object of the 1'ider.il Government by ins orders iu conne I, without permitting its mirlsti r to humiliate himclf. "1 hi- was one re iilt ot me declarition nf neu trality Am Ice pa tiality put forth by tircat Kri'iiin. Hut tlio inischicfdid not end here. The Conic delate Slates be ing compelled to restrict their r 'nations upon tl.c high si as to their shi,t-of-w ar, tlioe ships were also seriously cin'iar ntssed by this declaration. Their inability to in jiidieidc their prizes has already been referred to. As a consequence of this inability they eoulel make no beneficial use of them. 'Not only to, they were compelled in many Instances to release them on ransom bond for the benefit of neutrals that is to sav, to give neutral claimants of cargoes an opiiortiinity af er the war, when the bonds should be tued upon, to vindic ate their claims in a court of justice, which opportunity their own Governments hail denied to tliein during the war bv rendering it Impossible for them to go before a Confederate Prize Court. "Tlie release of these vessels opera'cd strongly, too, in fnvor of the enemy. For it amounted to a loan to him of so much property, of which he bad liccn rightfully deprived, with hich to carry on the war; his bonds, In the lneintime, being of no use to the captors, as It wat impossible to col lect them until alter tho war. This double mis rhief, therefore, ensued In these bond cases the enemy continued to carry on his commerce, and commerce to a belligerent it strength ; whilt the captor's means, itiuail the war, were not Increased by his captures. "The re.ider will now see why as few of thcie ililps as possible wuie released on bond, the iclciifc ben g confided to those c.isct iu which an apparent bnnajiifr netittal claim Wiia presented on the face ol propcily prepared papers. Ne,or tlicless, to show the good fulfil with which tlio cap'or must have acted towards neutrals in this matter, every ship destroyed by him was somiich property destroyed against his own Interest; for the ship being destroyed, no prize-money would be realized, whereas the bond would be valuable to bim nt the end of the war. "And although it was to he presumed thatevery officer wi tild, trom a senso of duty, destroy as many of his prizes as possible, vet we see th it at least he bad no private Interest to urge him to destroy them, when there was a question of neutral rights, his leaning bolug, in fact, tho other way. "This, then, is the working ef thoso British orders in council which, on (he face of ihem, uppc ar to be entirely unexceptionable stripping oil the diplomatic disguit of language (which is so thin and transparent that the wonder is (bat it should have been resorted to at all with the bone of concealment) more unjust, oppressive, and unnatural orders c ould no', have lieen devised. "It the practical effect of these orders is such as 1 have staled, what excuse can lie ottered for adopting them ? Can it be naid that no other course was ojien to tho British Government oncler the laws of nations If so, that would lie a snfllrletit excuse; for where a Government has no alternative it would certainly be unjust to hold it responsible for all the consequential damages ot its nets. "It might be taid with truth, In reply to our complaints, 'We were obliged, under the laws of nations regulating nil controlling our neutrality, to exclude your prizet from our ports; and if, by reason of your inferior naval force aud the con sequent blockade of yonr ports, the rule operates more harshly upon you than upon the enemy, that it your misfortune, not our fault.' But the fuel Is, there Is no such excuse to offer." The writer then gives a number of precedents to show thit it wat equally open to Great Britain to admit as-well at to exclude the Confederate prizet ; and also contends that, had the entry of the prizet been permitted, the captors wonld have been able to condemn them, so at to give an Indefeasible title to the purchaser. In con clusion, he urges that there it no difficulty In the way of revoking the ordert In council, and "re taming to a teute of justice." TbcB "Tlrats" Don't Iti ink Marh af the "Hold Kalllewr ISuy'a" A remnant. From the Ttmti, Jvn IS. The sum and substance of hit argument is that be burned the ships because he had no other means of annoying the Federals, and this is the best account that he could give of the matter. The basis, then, of Captain Semmea' reasoning being radically unsound, the superstructure can hardly be stronger. It is in vain that he accu uiuluiet ami, mines to thowibat if we had not (Npicosly excluded the prizet of both lielli gircnit, the presumption would have been in luvor of their admi,on. Very bktiy it might, though it is a point upon wh.c h the text writers speak with hesitation ; but what is beyond all question, Is that we had a. pcrlc rt right so to exclude them, and that we exercise it. Of course, it would have been very convenient to tho Conlcdcrate States to havo prize courts of their own, sitting at Charleston r .Savannah upon prizes connructiveiy iu their custody ; but in loci lying in the Mersey or too Thunas. l.o doubt, it was extremely vexatious to tee the prime Inducement to privateering cut away by the order in council, for no private adventurer could aflord to adopt the tactics of tho Alabama and In r consort. "As if by magic, the priva teers which had already been commissioned dis appeared from tho seax," and "so far as remits were concerned," the Declaration of Paris was put in force against the Confederates. The inference drawn by Captain Semmea is, that being free to choose one of two alternatives, we should have chosen that which would have been least hard upon bim. This reminds ns of the "sympathy" which tho Nor.hcrncrs used to demand that we should infuse into our neutrality. Had we yielded to such unpeala on either side, we should by this time be playing the part of the Homeric Zeus, now giving the Trojans a lilt, now inclining the scales in favor of tlie Greeks. Again we must protest against so absurd a view of our true position as neutrals, it would have been more to the purpose if, instead of im puting unworthy motives to Ibis country, he had taken the opportunity of explaining the circum stances nude r which the Alabama and other Con federate cruisers have been equipped in fraud of that neutrality which he invokes. Ju-tice is one thing, hut parties who claim something more than justice, because they ure "struggling against odds," must ut least come iuto court with clean bands. lrlatve Itatllea. There bus been very much said about the in deciaixenem of all the numerous buttles of this war. But, in fact, there have beeu very many deciiive ha'tlcs. We may look at tho decisive Dtss of field actions in three aspects; First, battles which are decisive simply of the Jifltt of which we have a favorable example in Mur frcesboro, and an adverse example in Freaer icksbarg. Secondly, buttles which are decisive of the war in large Stutas, or over great surfaces of the country of which Fort Douulson, wliicu ended the war in Kentucky Pea Ridge, which ended it iu Missouri and Vicksburg, which ended it on tho Mississippi, are examples. Thirdly, battles which are absolutely decisive of the wholo fortunes of the war undo! the fate of tho parties or countries involved of which latter class, in ita largest aspect, we have perhaps not yet had an example. Professor Creasy, of Kug land, wrote a book entitled "The Fifteen Deci sive Battles of the World," and by decisive bat tles he meant such battles at affected tho whole com so of histoiy, as regards the groat com batants, and which, had they issued omo sitcly to what they did, would have resulted in a condition of atfuirs permanently different from that which we now see or have seen. Fixing upon sac U battles by tracing up to them throughout the subsequent and intricate course of historical events, as Creasy docs, we say we really cannot yet settle definitely whether or no tuch a battle Lai been fought. We caunot yet tee events through the long perspective as our pos terity a hundred years heuce will be enabled t do, nor can we lake in the full tcope tml bearing o actions that have already transpired or are now transpiring. But may wo not suggest that Gettysburg wul perhaps a decisive battle, even in the largest sense f Had the result of that great day been defeat inatead of victory to our anus, the na tional capital would have fallen and beyond this, what shall we conjecture, either as regards event or consequence f It niuy appear, when the history of this whole war can bo fully sur veyed, that that battle not only saved the tfortu, but really broke the South that it was the crit ical event of the war, the turning point in all itt fortunes. And this by no means belittles the mighty work we now have in hand, or the mighty woik we yet have lo do. Arm and Aavy Jturnai. : IlroadttaUrs Dwa. New Yobk, July 2. Flour hat declined 5D0i 76c. Wheat 16c lower.. Corn dull. Provldou! dull. Wtutky Aowluitl. G.vM& OBITUARY. tolnnrl "llllly Wilson. Colonel William Wilson, of tlie Wilson onivcs, was k.llcd by a fall from hit horse on Thursday afternoon, while riding throngli his farm In West clutter county, Dec-aed was an active poiti ciau, and .-ctvecl as Alderman of the First War I for seicnil ycais. At the breaking out of Die Rebellion bo rul ed a legliuent of volunteers, and serve d his loiintiy for two years iu the Depart ment of the Gulf. During the s'ay of (he rcg -Itn nt on Santa Rosa Island, the Rebels surprised WI son's camp, nnd it was only by dint of some tcirih c fph' ng that the 7, nave escaped being cnitnrt d. The reetiuetit subsequently served In Imisiann, and after an absence of two ye ir, re turned to the city with the loas of about four bundled ineu. A. ). limit. John tinncy. The death of John Clancy, the noted journalist and politic ian of this rity, occurred yenturday morning at fonr o'clock, at his residence, Ni. '.'I F. Nineteenth street, of Inflammation of tho brnln. He leturned Inst week from Lake Ma hopac, suffering from the effects of a sun-stroke, which utterly prostrated hiin, and was the ulti mate cause nf his death. Mr. Clancy was liom in the Sixii Ward on the 4th of March, 1HJ0, of Irish pareutigc. Whit education he received while young was obtained through his own energy unci perseverance. At the age of twenty-one, or thereabout, he removed to Sniaiinah, Gcotgia, and became engaged in nureaniile business, occasionally corresponding with the New York papers. lie returned from the South afiorafew months' residence, and commenced studying law under Peter B. Sweene y. 'lids occupation n et suiting his taste, he relinquished it) and when the New York Isniier was commenced, a'tachccl hitmelf to (bat paper as a writer, the first editoiial iu tho first issue, May 27, being from hit pen. About six years ago he became the sole proprietor. Iu WA and lS"j he held a seat iu the B urd of Couneilmen from tho F.leventh District. He w.w elected liom the Sixth Ward to tho Board of Alde rmen, over which he presided, lor IS Hi and ltW, and again In IHoti. He occupied tho posi tion of County Chrk iu 18 . U and Ike two follow ing years, with honor and credit. His first rntrancoiiito the political arenaw.ia under tlie regime of Tammany Hall, and he has been a prominent and ac tive member of thut organiza tion ever since. When the Peace party of the Tamm inv Society was exerting its utmost effort to carry Tammany over te their side, the most strenuous and active opponent they had was Mr. Clancy, who, after repeated endeavors, brought the Society ovor to the War Democracy. Mr. Clancy was beloved by a large circle of friends, and his courteous manners obtained tho rcspcetof his enemies. Ho leaves three relatives brother aud two sisters, the probablo heirs to bis property, estimated at .30,0u0. .V. y. Tributie. William Kmlth O'llrlrn. the Irish Patriot IM4lfr. From I A .encjem Pott, June 18. Mr. William Smith O'Brien died on Thursday, at Bangor. His name was first rl.lreulous, as a prisoner of tho coal-hole of the House of Com mons; next notorious as tho leader of the Irish Rebels of 1818; again ridiculous, when he fought and was captured In Widow Welsh's cabbage garden ; and, finally, simply obscure. Mr. William Smith O'Brien was born In 1803. He was the second son of Btr Kdward O'Brien, fourth baronet of Dromoland, in tho county of Clare, by the oldest daughter and co-heiress of Mr. William Smith, of Cahirmoyle, Limerick. His elder brother (butter known as Sir Lucius O'Brien, long tlie conservative M. P. for Clare) succeeded bis father at fifth baronet in 18.17, and became thirteenth Baron Iuchfquin in ItiM. Mr. O'Brien, after an education at B irr.iw and Trinity College, Cambridge, entered Parliament In ltcjfi, as tho tory M. Y. for Knnia, and opposed Mr. O'Cotincll at the famous Clare election. He was member for Limerick from 183 ) to 1819, and this was the important part of bis senatorial career the position of a Protestant Irish county member being his Archimedean stand-point, whence he could, as be thought, move the Irish world to O'ConncJIum. It would not be of any use, and it would be certainly of little fnteraat, to mention the honor able gentleman a epeeclies, aud the little skir mishes which were perpetually taking place in conHsqnence, preliminary to that in tho cabbage, garden. But the month of April, 18l', produced a terrible outburst of Col. la iucl.ga ition on the part of the tnemher liom Liuieci k county, which ended in a coal hole. The general election released Mr. O'Brien, hut his ccutintsm'nt had not brought hint w. adorn. The revolution of February la Paris, and the reneral upheaving of the continent of Kmopc, te. nird to produce a land of echo in Irvlmd. O'Connell had bet n dead a year, or lino fun he would have made of Mr. Smith O'Brien's ridicu lous deputation to Paris with Meagher of the sword, O'Gorman and otaers, who axe immor talized by Mr. Thackeray. M. Liunaitine was good enough to let the treason-uiopgc. i a down easily ; bnt be flatly told them that the republic "would not commit au act, would not utter a word, would not breathe an insinuation" against the "inviolability of na tions," which grand phrase merely means doing Iiigland the kindness to let her mind her owu business. The Biitish Gurernincnl did not seem to appreciate) Mr. O'Brien's love for French fashions, and tried him for sedition. lie was defended by Mr. Isaac Butt in the Hall of Four Courts, and the jury did not agree, and the matte r cnuio to an end, though similar luck did nut befall John Mitchell. Nothing daunted, Mr. Smith O'Brien, having been negatively suc cessful at sedition, resolved to make a direct at tempt at high treason. Towards the end of July, be attempted to get up an Irish rebellion on a small scale; troops were sent off to Ireland, and Lord Clarendon issued proclamations. He gathered a lot of ople together by Slieve nnmnu Mountains, and it was rumored of hi n that " if an attempt was made to take him there would be fighting. The fighting may have takea place, but the proceedings ol "the Giant O'Brien," as he was called, were more like skulking. Ho was arrested alTburles on the Ath of August, and so thesiily insurrec tion came loan end. Mr. O'Brien was tried lor high treason and condemned to death. Her Majesty was advi-ed to commute the death penalty; but Mr. O'Brien the ruling passion s re. rg even to death refused the proffered boon, w hich, however, the bigotry and intolerance of the odious Kngltsh Government compelled him to accept. He was sent to Bermuda, and refused to join Mitcheil in forfeiting his word and escap ing. He was ultimately pardoned (1800), and has been only lately favorably known by a most sensible and judicious loiter against enlistment In Ireland lor the Federal American party. The I'ubllr Ikt-lit, The followLng is a correct statement of the public debt, as appears from the books, Trea surer's returns and requisite ns in the Treasurer's Department, on the 28tb of June, 1MGI : I'elil Interest purst.le in ,1a. s.io,l7.7Ks lifl.l interest m .cable la currency tfa,aje,e;; 21 Jlel.l ell which lulrt-sl tnucaeel..... ...... Hill, 17:1 tl.l lieta btuilus uo IliUMre-st .... 4HH.s:s!,(Si-'i 7fl Tc.Ut tl,74U,OJil,SS!l iti The annual liorsrxt on the outstanding debt on June W, payitUln gold, was W')2,0.'t,!li;i rl; interest payable Th currency, 4JtJl,tiJ,315-t.S, making the total annual interest ou the whole debt at thut time, $T.i,i0,lM-2i ; tho amount of fractional currency outstanding was 12J,210, 4.1110. and Ihc unpaid requisitions amounted to 'i0'J,ii2O. The amount iu the Treasury was n,;t),08fi-4O. The gold extectod to be derived from the pro posed foreign loan will bo usod in the liquidation of the three-year 7 .i-10 notes authorized by Con gress July, 18i.l, which become payable Aagust IS and October 1, lsdl. Tho amount of those notes outstanding is $U'.),UTtJM, After that time no gold will bo required to re deem the principal of any loans or bonds until Januaty, 18bj, when the Treasury Indemnity bonds, amounting to a little over $2,1 jO.Oou are redeemable ; also, the 6 icr cent, bonds of Janu ary, ltV.t, amounting to over ".i,iKsj,Ooo, which fail due after December, 18U7, and the 8 per cent, bonds of 184b, amounting to near yj,iH)0,000, which are payable after July 1, 18i8. No prin cipal becomes due alter that date until 1871. AnrNEMENTM. IlEKxriT. We call the attention of the theatro golns public U the aanouaoamont of tkt bottom of If Itt Letts, UuCalllbrela star aotrett, which takaa piaottlus Tntn .! Drrw a Arch Htreot Theatre. Tint psrAlatsncewfTi be cr a mettle? chtraraer, fnttriiotive as btlua MIS Ku.lc anil Mr. liarum Hill appear in lb lraeu vi u., whlla Miss J.olta will appual le tl.e rltll.niilc s fr tl.i aaa.eiiee by tl.a persuinlli-au.ta of "Nan" In the Uoaal tor .VvlAtny, aud bar laaioua Tuutj liaoie ana comic sons. Arrival of the "Heel." Nkw Yohk, July 2 The steamship lfecla ar rived this morning. UoJ advice havs bvon au-UciputvtL TO-DAY'S WASHINGTON NEWS. Spof lul Drapntruf lo Kronlne Ie!ot;rph. Wasiiinotok, July 2. The Mllllnrv lull. The Conference Committee on tho Miitaiy bill bare agreed aud scon will report. Commu tation is abolished, and recruiting 11 certain limned Kebel States is permitted. Foity days' notice must be given befe.ro 11 draft takes place. The Srw crclry. Mr. Fesrndcn has not yet decided to accept flic Treusuryshtp, but It Is considered certain lie will do so. Should Mr. Fessonden accept of tlio Treafiiry appointment. It Is not thought that lie will propose any additional taxation at present, as he was averse to it wheu it was proposed by Mr. Chase. Al.onrnmrnt of ( cinnrcss, Congress will endeavor to adjourn to-day. EX-SECIRETARY CHASE. Wasihsotok, July 2. The conimnnieaion of rx-Secretary Chnse, which he sent to the Com mittee of Wayt and Means on the 2:th ult, says: The aggregate revenue from all sources for tlio year closing with ihu .'10th reached $242,000,0 a). The expe uses, inc luding two months' pay of tlto army, due July 1, 88cl,ior,0ru. 1 The amount In excess of revrnne, .$ol0,00;),000. Taking tlie highest amount estimated, and assum ing that the miscellaneous receipts will reush fc;ti,(KKi,('MHj, the whole amount of revenue for tlie next yeur cannot be set down at more than :il8,fi(iO,(iOO, - 1 Tlie expenditures of the yeir are likely to roach 8.W,i00,HO0, and i4fs0,UlKI,lHKI is to lie raised by leans. The loan hill provides for only ly 000,000, and that is tho largest sum In hi judg ment that can bo reasonably attempted. I There remains, tlieu,.8'2,(iOO,000 to be provided, for all considerations of public interest seemed to him to require imperatively that It be raisotl by the increase of revenue. He proposed tt raise tbedcticleticy, so that the changes proposed ny nun would produce me uiuereuce. Dillcrcnce between the rate of in c tins by the old and new bill. added to the tax of the current year ., Tax on leaf lot.aeco f u.nno.onh ouo.oqu e.ooo.ndi s),(SHI,0i) n.ooo.omi 211,1 Hi.noti 6,(KW,(K1) Income tax on smoking and chew ing Increase of tax on malt liquors Tax on dealers sales.... Tax on spirits on hand Increase of tax on spirits Add the anion nt not increased hut brought from the next into the present current year 20,000,000 Makingan aggregate of actual or vir tul increase 85,00.1,000 FIIOM ltA.TTItUIlK. ronatrrntif ln Among the Gold NMMnlev torn Reported Release of Colonel Fhk Itenlh of sa Old lr lender Teal Imonjr ort'olored Prmons, Ktr., Etc. Ipeetml Daimlth la Tie Brenint tVatfrap. Baltimokb, July 2. Gold speculators hare are greatly taken aback by the unexpected tumble in gold. Many will lose largely. Senator Ftssenden's appointment to the Trea sury Department imparts great confidence to all parties here. The reported release of Colonel Fisk from the Penitentiary Is nntroe. One of Colonel Wooloy's officers taw him In prison two days ago. A dis reputable woman here represented herself to President Lincoln as his sister, and wat near securing his pardon. ' Edward Jay, an old defender of D.iltimore, died in the eighty-eighth year of his ago yes terday. . . The Military Commission, which It now re ceiving negro testimony against whlto portons, is causing some excitement, and much greater cau tion on the part of disloyalists how they act be fore their servants and colored people. Passengers from Cumberland this morning represent all quiet along the B iltlmore and Ohio ltadroad. No guerillas are visible, and the road is strongly (juaided. UNITED STATES CONGRESS. WAsniMoroit, Jarr 9. Hoi FK. The Speaker laid before the Honse a comniitTilratea frnm the Union Demnrratlr Aacia'i.jn, atkins thai. In the event of Inclement weather on tha 4tn eil July, llie. ate of I lie ilaU be graueael to Uiaia la wbleb lo ee'leSrule lite dav. Mr Htevena taid It wwild be proposed tn-day In adlonrn ttll Uoaifav at neon, and benca the IlaU outtld nest be granted lor tcieli a purp. te. Mr. liuvli (Md.) otijc-cied to Ilia Rail being used for any otl er than Ic-Kltletlve purpose. Mr !'. (Cih.o) ,aW ehe flail had bom Bran ted for other and worta pun met by the senileinan'a vote. I Mr. Davie taid thestnllemau was nuetaken. Mr. tlox eonieratuliled llie ifi'iitlc-uiaa for aot SKreelntt With the Jtrpaliliran tide nf the Ueaite. l-a motion 111 Mr. ftlavent the requett wat (abled. Mr. Kenton (N. Y.), reported tlio annate bill providing for Ihec-olleitlon and ttle of capture I and atiantlontid pn.ierty In Insnrre-e-tli.ntry dlttrlclt, and for preventing and piinl.htia: n-atult. I'aateet Mr. Cox (Ohio) ottered a resolution wblch wat obiccteel lo instructing ll;e t'omiutttett on Public expenditures lo report at the licit se.cli.u a but raising die talarlet of fe-niaie ele-rkt In it.e public department- n S'ltio per yesr. Mr. Hicvcna I I'a.) refssrle.! a bell a-hich wat psi-ad, ai.iOirlallrs SIMsi 10 enable tbeAeretarruf the Treasury to tarw enu, effect the act to prevent tiugllag. Slur Piew Flnanrler. William ritt Fessonden, born in Boscawen, N. II., In 1800, settled as a lawyer In Portland In 1829, was elected thence to tho Legislature of Maine in 11)31, and has ever since rauked among tho fore most men of that State. He served repeatedly at intervals in the more popular House, always Willi marked distinction ; and in 1810 waselectod to Congress and served through hit term, declin ing a re-election. He was persuaded to run again for Congress in IHW, and received a majority of the votes, bat tlie tent was awarded to his Democratic competi tor by the canvassers, und he declined to ix.n tc st it. He was chosen United Siatos Senator in WA, by a uniou of Whigs and Pree Soil Demo ciats, und has ever since filled a teat in that body. He has for somo years len the Chair man of its Finance Committee, which is Its fit at position iu rank and importance. Hit discharge 01 the duties uf thut post has rendered hicn thor oughly familiar with every question relating to the national nuances; and there is probably no other man in America who could sljpatonco iuto Governor Chase's shoes and succeed him in lis arduous and trying labors with so little hesi tation or misgiving. Mr. Fessenden it one of tho ablest lawyers in America, and has no superior at a ready, forcible debater. Wo expect to hear toon, through the Copperhead organs, that he is a thief and swindler; but, up to this uour.no man has ever questioned his integrity. .V. X. TnUtii. LEGAL IVIKLLIUEXCE. Qi-artfr Sessions Jud.-e Allison. This morning Charles Bambaugh, who la charged with the killing of John Graves, by ihootiug him with a pistol, had a hearing on habaat corpus. The application was that he be admitted to bail on the ground that In no event could he be convicted of murder. After hearing testimony aud reading tome of the evidence taken befuro the Coroner, the Court granted the application, and fixed tho ball nt 911100, which being entered Bain bang h wat discharged. Desertion case! were then called up at the re quest of Mr. Fin letter, Solicitor for the Guardians of the Poor, aud a number were disposed of. LATEST MIKIXE INTELLIGENCE. CIJIARKD THIS MOBVTSa. Ship ICokoago, e'attidy , Quelwo, K. Taylara Chf. HaMiue letdo Kimball, Clark, New Orleans, II Sinunt. : Barque eiraeulaud, Kver.-U. I'eu.ecolt, W orkiaau A Co , a.-hr Trident, Hunlmou, Rotten, ! Huddell. Sul.r L. t)Us,nl,OoHOU,Caitrlalo, J. at. lo""V bkhr i.C. v. alalia, luimg, 1'uravn, Useumaet. VW idler to. .i"" ... " .. j ,1 til a a..,.. mi ,e liArflaCt. (luBiiailr. T iuo Bi hr alhiiira-itii a.n'Qi, i-"!"' ANurvF I' V notion. lo bAUoal M eapiaaU. Hear J. uadwaiacier, w iinami. ... vpa. He hr a. A. 1 alor. lenart, u. s- o fcrhr J. Lancatler. WiUlaaet. Bo.ton. oraaU A Cos Bear r.rej". " Ke'eiU, .IO.";fTr 1 jrl-r to. k .t . 11 ........ U.l ll.l. Frio. All S " .In . 1, a. uH M. HU. r lUU, 1 Statu or THBRveatRTsn Te-rATv Six A. M, 714. Noon, HI j. One P. M., M. Wind W. Hkavv SToaar lit HaavnirviLi.s Grbat Ta mo p rTA rwitii. Yesterday aftcftjoori the heavy rain storm, followed by thunder and lightning, did considerable tlumage to proiicrty In IlcstonvuW The Col 11 mWa Hotel, kept hy William M Hire, was injnred to a great extent. Thia hotel wa Mrnck bv lightning, which tore the pirrltiona apart and set lire to the building. The flames, however, were extinguished before, any headway bad been gained. Ibt store ef Mr. Bowman, dote, hy, w a'so) slightly darrmged hy being sfrurK by lightning. The fire ran clown the side of the house, aud tor oil the window-sill. , 1 he residents of the place say they have- not witnessed such a storm for many jnars. Hail of enormous sl.e fell In great force, breaking a number ol panes of glass iu the neighborhood, and doing other mischief. Tre es and fences were Mown down In every direction. A man who was driving a horse anil " wngnn along the Lancaster piko narrowly escipeel eleath by the falling of a tree directly In hit front. As it was, his horse took fright srid ran awav, (Itagrliig the driver after him. Fortnntolv-he k .: ..It wjtb but slight inmricev , . " a;.,af was also done In Cathedral , - ... r- 1 - and hnshes were torn up 1 1 d . : r '..-tiier; Daring the '- . . . img to tha . .. 'i - fin. '. - '. - !! !... a tho carriB- ; - "". .; 1 'p Se ine tlvo carina, s i": , tuner above tho Coluiu:. 1 a .....,.- 4, trees fell across the pike. '. , ' 1 ' The storm was very severe throughout U . ' tlons of the Twenty-fourth Ward, and lasted foa. some honrs. 1 In this d y, although the rain fell la great abundance, there wus but little wind prevailing at the time, and the damage done, U any, waa bnt slight. . if: o.'.; 1 Dxtn of a OtD Citiseh. Mr. Btrnjawta Sage, ef West Philadelphia, was ma 'over this morning by the express train of the Pennsyl vania Itailroad coining east, at six o'clock.. T,h deceased was coming to the . city to purchase marketing, and on the bridge attempted to get oa the ears, bnt lost his balance and twtfne; against the aiiutmcnt.wbich threw bim nndnr the) wheels. Death was instantaneous. Mr. Sage was a well-known saddler of West Philadelphia, and was over sixty years old. He waa an eti nial.ie citizen, and took an active part In the pell tics ol the Ward. By a life of rigid probity -he won the respect and confidence of the entire con mnnity. lie leaves a large family and consider able possessions.- He occupied a prominent position in the Methodist Church, to wjilch bo had been attached for years, and in which he had tilled placet of the highest trust. ( Tub G&rat Ckmteal. Fair. The auction, sales at the Fair this morning were confined to the Iiestanraut Department, where a large num ber of bottles, chairs, castors, and crockery wars were disposed of at a very moderate BgureVfiiia afternoon the salo of the tnlsccllaneoqs arJJles will cloae out the auction. ' " ci .,..1 Ail the bids for the lumber, offered yesterday afternoon, were rejected. The Committee stilt awaits the bid of tlie Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany for the lumber of Union avenue. The work er demolition will be commenced on Men day morning,, and the lumber not sold by that time will be disposed of in lots to suit parch ert. Maintaimimo a NrHAKC Conrad Dangle man, who keeps a stand at Sixth and Arch straits, waa before Alderman . Beitler tbiat mora lag charged with maintaining a nuisance and selling dangerons lire-works. He was committed, to answer. This is a warning to those who tell chatert and all other fire-works of a dangereua character. .. , , . ;,, llECBivixa Stolen Goods. This morning man named James Baraei, proprietor of a second hand store, No. SIS Qirard avenue, wasj committed to prison by Alderman 'Beitler. charged with receiving stolen goods. It appears that a woman relieved party of aouie iut dresses, which she sold to the prisoner, , , , s Extectbd AiiRivAt. Onetuudred and sixty six men, the remnant of two rcg'.mente, the 40th, and 42d New York, will arrive In this city thit afternoon, from Baltimore. They will be enter teiinejd at the Union Kefreahment Saloon. ,: ; Mohe Honohs. A nnmber of "the. citiaena of Norristown have prepared for General W., 8. Hancock a service of silver plate of great value, which will shortly be presented to that renown eel warrior. , 1 a .: t Bot ntibs. This evening at eight o'clock, meeting of the delegates of the Ward Bounty Fund Committee will be held in the District Court Room No. 3, corner of Sixth aud Chesnut streets. -.... ' FINANCE. AND COMMERCE rniLADKi.rmA stock bxchanub sales, july tv Beporttd by Clark ton A Co., Broker,, No. til S. Thirst it. HKrUKB BOARDS. t-vnc.MJL mtCs ....lit SO to Head. H. R..a tl'. a. A-sue e. toils;! Us", ah liallcll OU.... 6S1 WO.h do S' jisi.n PeerCei.u-e.... xsl lcwsle KevtloneZc.b. ' louan do et'itf liOaa do. hlAS.V 110 ah do t.2 insitb o. .e nv 90S ta do kit 70 PlIII.ADei.PHIA TKADI KEPOBT, Satvuday, July 2. The unstability of tho rales of told hat ireetually checked all traaeacttona la the variant avenues of trade. That a deektad okant ay takt place before the raantutllaa of batlDeat, aiar toe oanli of July, It to be eajuetuj hoped by all There It but little Uaarcltroa Bark hers, and ft Is heist wlUi flnnnew at 47 flton, for No, I. 1 ha tilth prion deruanted Ibr Prorltloau p saraata trana actiont except to a vary limited degree, t In lour Uie talet for thlpment ware but a few hundred btrratt at SeXuje7 for lupertlne! tn&n far extra 1 tlUM-tl Ibr extra family aad fancy brands. RetaUere and bakers buy only aa their wanrs drattnd within the ran it of theae flgurei. Small tales of Hj Hour at to. Mjth.ua; doln In Corn Ileal. There la a lets active demand Ibr Wheat, and prion ara antuasJy. Tha tale, roach tun to sVAlU bush, go4 aost prime reuna)vania red, at -X'eJ W; whit rauetfruta ttWeoyt'toWbuth. Rye There It hut Utt! here, a ,d it cominaida llCiV buth. There la but little dolne: In flora, with aalea ol tfoti beuh. yellow, afloat, at tl SO 1 and tno bath, white at tl'io. There it a good demand fer Oata, and eIa of 41410 buth. Fennaylvania and Delaware at WciOti, Holding doing la Harley or Malt. Whlityfanot so active, and prieesj art lower. Sm all alea at bblt at tl-U. and Drudge tlU. ' The exetiuueat iu l'ntrvleum tula week, ears the mtrcialliit and Prict Current, owing to tha advance ut gold and iterUnf exchange, at well at the neeestltiai of many of tha " harta" in m.klng good tr.:r auairacte, har beeu uupreceslented, and prices hava again advaared oco,lia;. gallou. At the elota, however, owing to a re ae-tlon in gold, man orders wan withdrawn. and tier waa lata flrmneat la prltas- t The week a aalea eomprtaa 700 bblt. Crade. which la va-v scarce, at 410. up toMlc.i 6000 bb's. Heflned, la bond, part to arrive, at 71c. to 80c. small lots atthK.S-. ; and tuua bbla. free from We. up to Hoc., Including too bbla. on tertna kept tec-ret, and 1000 bbla., fur aU Jnly daUrary, at tOc. Uenilne hat advanced aeAavtoc., and Batldouta to ftt&t jg The barque Cireileia cleared on the tr.th ult., for Llrar pool, with D0M0 gallons Crude, aad tha baniua Jfortftu, on tha : h ult., fur Aatwarp, with lij&t gallons Beflned. The only ahlpoutnu during Uie weak la other aorta ware 360 gallons lt. dned u Watt Indies j aiakliuj t total exnort tinea our hut of 176.H18 galloni. The following vaaaels are now load! ng for rorrtfini rtC. Fhlp laihuruie', lor tiork antl orlcra...obla., llaniae Hicsila, fort'ork audordej-a Ihck m tianiue eluod heenrii, for cork and ertlera...-' ' u ' HrlR Unite. (I.r fork aud ordera...., '-.',4 ling Aurora, for Cork... erode. Ilrui Iiarlau, iorUork and ordert :...ae0J ateauml Brlgl arolluo,lbr Liverpool .''...Inoi) In ig oauiaoa, i.r Liveriiool l..ttos?UO ' t ' Haieiue etol Wilde, for MaraelUe -;' .f ling Albion, for M.r.eillc..-;;-; uuU.; , Ut) H,lM, tills Milo, lor Llverpnoi..-: Cru&e, IlrlgA.lilanaAar.-.i,wp ..10 - llrif lnlor, , ...roam iv Hrig Ban l tro,-r Martelllos.... aselO ' ,"':'.'' M?;:.c-'v,"r Mr,"ua t " oi'B'rk",,MUe " mig ut" stio- .d from ruua.ieripoia tiar Jan. l,l'l, s,ivi,ae w u ttewa uuaa lata ( n. .lfJ3,17 yar-., Daorsaie hi IMS4. if.,...,.MIM.I.,V-t , ' iM.irj Kxported from ValUd Slataa earn Jel l. IrWA, 1J I . I D Do do do taua uiua Uti eat, 17 o : 1 IecreelnI8o4...., 4.1 - ,..si OrHnlnl lrawtate f Ul rW twloj luarwa.aiiiaekjr. ... ic.-ueallWlf I. atat. ' JS, 4S, 61, '), il, 1. . "0, 1 1, id S, 1-', S ' JTireA t'fcaee lltl-Jnly . ir'sl. . AW, 71, II, , ', " i it- ' I tlaraaiare aasu lit adeiiaaait tim,r s tu i iVii-tisst, city nmiiiaENaE. I a j -ti i1 I'; (V-