THE DAI LI EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA,' TUESDAY; JUNE j 12, l86fl,' THE NEW YORK PRESS. EDITORIAL OPINIONS OF LEADING JOURNALS UPON CURRENT topics COMFILCD IVrllT DAY FOB, EVENING TKLEOnAPH. Milligan at Dlvflion. From the Tribune.' I'roverbiallsts tlk of the llkeiioss of two peas, but two pea are wld ljL dissimilar when con trasted with the photo rapiiic idemity of two CoopiThead speeches. Though one star may differ from another Mar in glory, yet both are glorious, and so, thoueh one disloyal speech may differ from another in lenotniny, yet both are Ignoroiuions. The truth i, a so-called "Democrat," sore as to his head and sour 83 to hid heart, with a ereat appetite for political proflls, and a small aptitude for the present emergencies of polit'.cal serrlce, can do nothing clue as well as he can find fault with the doings of others. They all play, these out-at-tue-clbows political pcrt'ormers.upon a single snarling string. While they cannot be loo sharp ftpon New Knfj land, they lavish all their elaborate suavity of phraser upon South Carolina. They keep tbeir cen sure tor hoiuecunsumptiou.ancil ash their iriends and nelprhbois as If those were the conspirators and ihe Rebels. Men of threadbare phrases and of mouldy platitude', like Colonel L. 1'. Milll can, of Indiana, really bf live in their Inmost hearts, it hearts they may be considered to have, hat the .secessionists are the genuine martyrs. A'.illlgan, who came very near being hung by a military tribunal lor treason in his own KU e, Is just out of the Ohio Penitentiary on bail. II. lellow-crfuturcs in Blutfton jrave him a re ception, with plenty ol brass baud and Dlauk cartridge enthusiasm ouo of those ovation -which always, upon being reduced to their Dual elements, yield only bad whisky with a trace of tobacco. In his oration ol grateful acknow ledgment, Mill:gan militated, not without glory, against the Puritan; tilth, considering that they have all been dead for about tw centuries and a halt, Millu'on put himself Into small jeopardy by domg. This is a avonte-devtce. With nothing else to say, which it would be Erudent to say, it is always in order in a Copper ead Convention' to cast loul scorn upon Ply mouth Bock. Milligan followed the rule. Poets have prased the Puritans, and historians have eulogiied them, and painters have depicted their advent; uiilli -us of honest folk hold their memory in crratotul admiration; but Milli gan, ot Indiana," Colonel of "The Bona of Lib el ty," det pises them John Alden and Elder Brewster and Miies Standish he holds them all in an equal abhorrence. With a .erocity quite remarkable in a Western man, he abuses them for killing the Indiuns. With a theological insight not to have been looked lor in a Colonel, lie aliirms that their hearts were desperately wicked. Theu Mllligan, greatly to the delight ol Bluffton, assaulted Boston for boasting of "a higher civilization than common Christians can aspire to." In ttat citv, as he aliirrocd, "suc cessful crime is made th standard ot respecta "bllity." "There," he said, ' people are educated to villany there villany is most respected.'' From that Sodom ' animal supplies of school masters, preachers, lawyers, and bankers arc aent to plunder the people." And so with a frightfully brutal allusion to the murder ot Mr. Lincold, Mil.igan passed to the consideration of other topics. . There are more Milligans than one in the country, we regret to say. They are the spawn of popular ignorance, and it is upon the popular ignorance tliat thty feed. It is true that there 9 re men here in New York who talk the same lingo, and mouth the same misrepresentations, and tra vestry history in the spirit ot attorney s-at-law grappling with a desperate case, and who know that they are retailing falsehoods and misleading the popular mind. These men are responsible lor their uiich.iel: they are respon sible for the tins ot such fellows as Millignn, who, perhaps, believes that he is really speaking the truth. Mr. Calhoun, we regret to aver, was the grand ancestor of this brood of blackguards, lie set the lashion ol sneerinc at the Puritans, and it has been kept up, with spirit if not with vigor, ever since. It was a line thing for a patriarch, perspiring from his exertions at the wnipping-posT, to aver mat ine roruans were also slave-whippers, though the reason why he should like them the less for that was not so Apparent. To prove that the Puritans hanged tbe Quakers was held to be the end of contro versy by those who were al ways ready and eager to harg Abolitioaists. To recount the story ot Salem witchciait was esteemed a perlect de fense of property in man, and New Lnglandera were held to be in equity estopped from protest ing against ' modern ciuelties, because their great-great grandfathers were bigoted, superati Btifous, and intolerant. Yet, no doubt, in Mr. Calhoun's opinion, the shareholding of Massa chusetts was the brightest feature in her early iistory. He bad no particular respect lor Quakers. Ks had no particular sympathy for bitches. Yet to be able to say that the New Ex. "land of 1620 was behind the New England ot 1820 in all that appertains to civil justice, was thought by Mr. Calhoun to be a rare privilege and rejoinder to which there could be no response I Yet it was after this fashion that Mr. Calhoun, himself a man of New England educa tion, besotted the intellects and betrayed the judgment of thousands of his disciples, man owneis, and the lack a lis of man-owners, until it became the established usage to assume In Con xxesc, in convocations, and even, we are ashamed to say, in religious conventions, that all the crimes of the South, in 1800, were at least palliated by the crime of Plymouth and Massa chusetts Bay in 1630. What Bluiiton may think of Boston may ba of very little consequence; but when many of these loose-toiigued Milligaus are striving to create cettionalealou8ies, there being already at the West some tendency in that direction, it is well to show how utterly empty and untrue is the Milligan style ol declamation. It. only proves what everj body might have known beiore, that there are bad men even in the loyal States, and that a few decided Union reverses might have exposed us to ail the perils of treason and in surrection at our own doors. It is the hope and desire of Milligan, as expressed in bis speech, that what he calls "The Democratic Party." may "again come into power." He tells his Bluffton neighbors that the Government is rob bing tbem to enrich New Eneland. He tells them that political power "is in the hunds of a privileged oligarchy." He is indignant that Indiana should be taxed to pav the interest on national securities held by bloated Bostonians and New Yorkers. That is, be appeals to pockets and passions and prejudices he is seiving the ends of disaffection, and when "the Democratic party" gets once more into power he expects to reap the full harvest of confiscation axd repudiation. The Great Work ot Thirty Days. FrottL the Timet. It is nowthlity days elnoe the first cry of pressure in London and of alarm in the Liver, pool cotton market, against which our own bankers held enormous drafts running to matu rity and Imperilled by the great decline in prices, -was made known on this side. It was followed Jn a few days by the news of actual panic in "both markets, though our merchants and bankers tad not waited for this before despatching ten millions of gold to their relief. And as t'ae news continued bad, the shipments of gold were re doubled, so that in the thirty days we have sent to Europe, chiefly to England, thirtuflo millions of gold, the equivalent of the whole amount having been supplied by the United 8iatci Gov ernment by sales In the open market from its surplus stores in the treasury; besides having disbursed, in the same period, sixteen or eighteen milUoBi of gold by way of May luterst on the 6-20 bonds of the United States. A ad these sums, aggravating over fifty millions of dollars, still leave in the treasury another fifty (and odd) millions in solid gold, ot which the pum of thirty millions is in the absolute owner ship of the Government, nd the remainder held on deposit for our banker an1 broker', and tor the accommodation ot the p c at Isifre who irelerfhe gold notes of the United Stales to the gold coin itself. ,ln addition to all this, ih work of the Trea sury during the month for the public credit wai iiiofl remarkable. lis ii terest payments alto pettier were fZO.OCO.OOO. and it-, support of the army, navy, awl civil service, including the ds tr.biitlon "ot a large amount ol prize money, lrqmrid f 10,000,000 or $12,ii(Ui,0l)) more. These nin s wore paid, arttf tho public deb reduced $IV01,475, all in one monib. ThU la -t and most in poitant item, we may add, was grea'ly uroinotcd by the premium derived Irom the 35,000,1.00 of gol so timely supplied, as we have yhown, to our foreign coniiiifrc(.'. The ie maiiiiucr d sburspmcuts were afforded by the current excise, customs, ana miscellaneous re sources of the Ooverumeut. Bexond tht Interest, the prompt protection of vthich might be called, in one sense, cell'-preser-vaiion. our American gold will carrv relief to hall'-a-dozcn o'licr trades and interests of the ! uttnoft importance to England and the Conti nent, at the present Juncture, and leave Its moral Irr.prefs upon the linanclnl and political miud of Eincpe, the couscqucnces ot which cannot fail, f ooner or later, to react most favorably upon our own public and mercantile credit. But tne good work of the thirty days was not confined to tho Government. Our mercantile and banking Interests, encased in foreign com merce and exchange, acquitted themselves with a Dromntncss and rase never, we believe. equulle Ortiuuly their resources were never en severely taxed on snoit notice, and never so creditably administered. They not only paid for the :old sent abroad, but, at the ame time, rcpurchiised trom Kuro ie $12,000,000 or $l.r,000, 000 of United S ates o-20, and paid iuto the Ticanirv $lo. 000,000 gold customs on taeir cur r nt impoita'ion. The hrst fruns of this combined work of thirty days are now returning to i s from abroad, not in all their fulness for less than one-third ol our gold had arrived out hut in a form so palpable,' so tub?tanti l, so timely and important, as to adn it no doub'- of the great, good already ac complished. We do not allude so much to the rise announced this morning in our torelgu news, in United States 6-2()s. They will take care of thrmselves at all times and under all emergencies, or be taken care of at home when fc.ii rope is no longer ablo to hold or appreciate them, but to tho relief of tho Liverpool cotton trade, and the assured security to the vast Amount of American bills running against It. Their bills are owned, for the greater part, by our own bankers. They were placed with their English correspondents (ome of them branch houses) lor collection, or cash advances, where the proceeds had been antlcioated. When cotton fell from 19d. to lid. this large interesf and these heavy credit became critical. The latter was all impoitaut to recover wit U gold aealnst all possible contingencies. The very first arrivals out ot this gold have advanced the mar ket value of 400,000 bales of American cotton now in Liverpool, the equivalent of $12 or $15 per bale in gold, and at once placed 0,0( 0,000 or 8,COO,000 of the exchange drawn aud still run ning against it from this side, beyond reasona ble "anxiety. The extent ot English credit in volved 'in this cotton is ot course much larger, for the Liverpool speculation in all descriptions ot cotton since last summer has been csaeutialiy Engl'sh; even the exchange made Ir.jm this side, and now or recently at the risk of our own bankers, was made, for the greater pait, on Liverpool and Manchester account. The Exodus to Europe. Fmm ihe World. Another week of the early summer closing Saturday contributes its quota to the noble army of American travellers tj Europe, an army never so large as during the present season, and whose cry on all the piers of Havre and South ampton, Liverpool and Bremen, still Is, "they come 1" It Is nt easy to get a more vivid notion of the condition of things on the European con tinent during the tremendous national and Na poleonic wars of the beginning of the present century, than one receives from an inspection of the hotel-records which In towns, toen the great centres of continental travel, are still to be si en, and in which, lor a space of twenty years, no entry ot an English name 1 to be lound. in one ot the most curious and interest ing of these monumental accoun e-books, alter fully twenty years of exclusively continental en tried, appears the whimsical but signidcant re cord, "Mr. and Mrs. Gotobed, of London; on their way to tne uongres" at Vienna !' What a world of historical ' suggestion, reminiscence, and illustration is comprised in that single sentence I The downfall ot Napolton I; the constitution of that "European system" of which, alter filtv 5 ears, we are now witnessing the complete .overthrow aud abolition; the liberation of France find Germany and Italy from the pressure of the most gigantic military organization which the modern world has known; the emancipation of thousands of Bnti. h subjects enriched by the high prices an 1 fat contracts of a long war from ine prosperous confinement or their little but opulent island all these are shadowed forth with quaint but striking emphasis in the ap pearance of "Mr. and Mrs. Gotobed, of London," rejoicing to shake German dust from their swift Lonpacie wheels, and bent on gazing upon the gorgeous convocation of "the princes and the powers" about to assemble in the capital of Austria. "How rich a heaven! star on star! VI ho knowetu and can name themf " With (be exodus of British wealth and curiosity vh ch followed the long wars Irom 1793 to 1815, that now traditional creature, the British milord, startling Europe by his ecceutrtel ties and charm ing it by his extravagance, eame upon the stage. The opera ot Fra Diavota still preserves his prait-e upon the lyric boards, but "Lord All cash" has died out from the living reverence of hotel-keepers, and no longer shakes the post loads with the golden thunder of bis coming, from Cologne to Naples. First the Russian, and next the American, have supplanted him. Dur ing the civil war, there was a very perceptible cessation, however, in the flow of the tide of American dollars and American inexperience towards the centres of European attraction. Now. the war beintr over, dcsnita the etlorta of Congress to persuade mankind to the contrary, we see the movement ol our countrymen towards the eastward taking upon Itself a fresh impetus which curiously recalls the British outbreak after 1815. Thousands of our citizens are seeking in for eign travel a wholesome recreation ot minds faggf A by the incessaul strain of the passions of four years of civil strife; thousands more, sud denly enriched by the tides of paper money so freelv liberated upon us during those years, are rushing to Paris and London and Home in search of the mysterious waters of fashion and refinement which are supposed to be forever welling up In thoe spas of civilization. mere is a little German town called Suuian- genbad which exists by virtue of certain mineral baths to which the virtue Is attributed ot so com pletely renewing the freshness and beauty of the human frame, that, as a clever Frenchman ones said to Sir Francis Head, a person emerging from them positively "falls in love with himself!" A similar result is not seldom found to follow from the sudden plunge of some "western barbarian" into the social waters of .the great European capitals. Many a Cymon, leaping Into tbem, comes out again a Narsisaus. The old maxim, that "there is no fool like a travelled fool," is too often forced upon the mind when OLt comes la contact with the new Howadjt of a tingle summer's brief and bewildering European tour. Those who make the voyage to Europe, and hurry nnder steam-pressure from Paiis to St Petersburg, and from Liver pool to Naulea. in oueat of some miraculous transform alTon where dt they shall be suddenly metamorphosed from ignorant boors into ac complished men of the world, ought, for the most part, if they would but be as honest wittj themselves as their neighbors are orettv sure to he for them, to take upon their lips the confes sion of Uobeit Wace when he returned from hhi trip in search of the Breton stone of youth: "Like a tool on a fool's errand 1 went forth, and like a fool 1 have returned attain ." But even J tbebe children of unwisdom, perhaps, may biirg back from their foreign gallop more nnd better freds of thonght nnd development tiinn we, at first, are willing to believe. It cannot but be well, in the long run, icr any man lo liavo learned, no ma' tor how hastily or hligl.tly, that the World is a vi ry laige world, and that there arc mill ons m i' of industrous, piospercus, and estimable people, who know noihing and care nothing Bi oiitihe things which, In his i wn village, or ct iiniy, or State, on ation, be had been uncus tr.med to regard as the great objec's of the crea tion ot the universe. Apart from all ihe obvious ccnsiiJeratioiis iu fvor of 'oreien trial which must occur to the mind ot everv American who remembers how much more ripe and lull the ctvlizaiion ot the Old Woild.twio especially the h cher civilization of the Old Woild, necessarily is tban our own. it is indubitable (hat the tone ot our national thought and temper must be elevated bv the Increased contact of the Amerl ciiii populations with the facts of human lite and experience beyond our own borders. Every man is not a Ulysses, but even a Tliersiles may piolit by seeing "many nations and manners of men." It is made a si:bject"of lamentation sometimes in our press that this great outeoing ol America towards Europe now takes place almost exclu sively under the European flags, the Arayo and the i'vitvn alone of the old New York and Havre steamship line now sustaining the honor of our American passenger transportation service on the Atlantic. There are aspects in which one may leMMtnately regret this, no doubt; but when we consider how vast a field lies open and clamorous for American capiial in the restora tion of the South, the opening of the far West, the development ol the whole country, it may v eil be doubted w hether the phenomenon, after aM, be not a proof of the practical goof sense of our people. In regard to steam navigation, ns to all other branches of human industry, it is bot that a people should do what they can do most profitably. The most infatuated protec tionist becomes a practical free-trader when the question is how he can pass from oue point to another most swiftly, saiely, nnf cheaply; and it American capiial and enterprise find other things better werth their doing than to bridge the Atlantic, which Fiance. England, and Ger many can more cheaplv br'dge, we do not see how we are the losers by their doing those bet ter thintrs, or should be the gainers bv com pelling them Into less advantageous pursuUs. SPECIAL NOTICES. PARDEE SCIENTIFIC COURSE IN I.AFAYE1TE COLLEGE. In addition to (lie g. noral Coarse of In traction In 1h i I cpiirinxnt. orsitneil lo ly a subfltnntlal baalt of ki o ict (.c hi a hcnoiariy ciiiiuie, Biucen s can puniue tu so brandies vtlilch are essentially practical aud U ctnl ni y7. i EMilKKKMNG Civil. Tonoffrnnhlcal. and Mecha- nunls MlM.vGt.and JlETAl.LVJRUY ( AKCHirrC- ii nt, nun iie spi in anon oi uneiuisiry vo auiuuuii 1 l lti ana the AKT.-4. 1 t'i'le in aieo ut.orded an opportunity for special atndv of HAD, and (OMMFlUKj oi B OIl KN LAS i.r.M.l and 1-HII.OLOGY, and of the U18TOBY and JXiTITUIU'lih ol our countiy. for I licuiara apply to lieBident CATTFLt. or to Clerk of the Focaity. T. aston, Pennsylvania April 4. 1S66. 610 UNITED STATES TREASURY. Philadelphia, June 8. 1866. Holders of twenty coupons, and upwardH, ol United States Heven thirty loans, due 15th Instant, are hereby notified that thov uiay present litem for examination and count, at this office, on and alter the 0th instant. N. B. BROW NF., 6 9 St Assistant Treasurer Ualied Stater. jEiF NOTICE. ON AND AFTER THE 15th instant ihe UNITED BTVTE8 HOTEL, LOXG Bl.ANtU, N. J., wl I be open for the reception oi visitors. iiEKJAMIN A. SHOEMAKER, 6 8 lni Proprietor. rjT BATCH ELOR'S HAIR DYE. It2 THF BEST IN THE WORLD. Baimless reliable in-tantaneous. The only perfect dve. No disappointment no ridiculous tints, but true lo natcre. b ack or brown GENUINE 18 SIGNED WILLIAM A. BATCBELOB s ALSO, Regenerating Fx tract oi Wll fflenrs restores, preserve etid beautifies tu faair, prevents badness. Sod bj aU liruufclsts. Factory No. 81 BARCLAY tt, N. Y. 3 3 JUST PUBLIBHED By the Ph Helens of the NEW YOfcK TdUSETJM, the Ninetieth Edition of their FOUB LECTURES, entitled PHILOSOPHY OF MARRIAGE. To be l ad tree, lor lour stamps b; addressing Secre tarT New Ytrk Museum of Anatomy. 7 17$ No 618 BROADWAY, New York. fjiF DINING-ROOM. V. LAKEMETER, zs& CARTER'S Al ey, would respectml'7 Inform the I nolle ceneially that he bas leit netting undone to make this place comfortable in every respect lor the accoin n edition ol guesla. He has opened large and coru n odious Dlniug-Room In the second s ery. His SIDE BOARD la lurnlshed with BRANDIES. WINES, V HMT, Etc.. Etc ot SUPERIOR B BANDS. U SHIRTS, FURNISHING GOODS, &o J W. SCOTT & C O., SHIET MANUFACTURERS, AMD PIAXIRB HI MEN'S FURNISHING GOODS, No. 814 CHESNUT Street, FOTJB DOOBS BELOW THE "CONTINENTAL," 8 Jfi jrp PHILADELPHIA. pATEXT SHOULDER-SEAM SHIRT MANUFACTORY, AND GliNTLEMEN'9 FURBISHING STORE. PERFECT FITTING SHIBI8 AND DRAWERS made Irom measurement at very short notloe. All ctber aitlcles of GENTLEMEN 'tl DBESS GOOD9 in lull variety. . WINCHESTER & CO., 8 24 S So. 10 CHESNUT Street. J3 J. WILLIAMS, No 16 Torth SIXTH Street HAi.XlfA01UKfc.RO V KN F.T1 Al IILIN1 S W 1NDO W S H A U JJ S. The largest and finest assortment in the ctty at tft low est pnoes. C6 J linrp 01 ORE SHADES WADE AND LETTERED. JJIE SHELL'S MAGIC OIL CUKES TETTER. EHYSIPILA8, ITCH, 6CALD HEAD. AND ALL SKIN DISEASES. WAftHANTrD TO CURE OR MONEY REFUNDED For sale by ail I lugglsu. PRINCIPAL DEPOT I No. 03 South THIRD Street, Atove CbcBDUt. Price 25 cents per bottler 4 24 3m4p SAFE F O II SALE. A SECOND-HAND Farrel & Herrintr Fire-Proof Safe FOB SALE. APPLY AT THIS OFFICE. 44 n FOR SALE STATE AND COUNTY R1GBT ol Capeweli A Co. s Patent Wind Guard and All Heater for Coal Oil Lampst it prevents the Chimney trom break Ins;. This will warrant. Also saves ens third tbe oil. CsU and see tbtm they eot but ten ceutr No. 201 BACK btreet. Philadelphia Sample sent to am part ol the United bUtea on receipt of ii not. Hit P A C Tv T N (1 "BOXES JL Of a'l kinds, and for all use,supp'ted at short notloe. My Sflvartagea foriuakinR are the bos' In the cliy. uud trice Utcrtl. fail lor a list of prloes beiore you buy, Fruit dealers supplied. 5 a In ALBERT D. COOKE DRY GOODS.' JJIIEIFUSS & BELSINGER No. 49 North EIGHTH Street, II at 'ast pened et'inplela stock o BPHINO GOODS, consisting o Laces, embkoidebies, and FANCY GOODS. S(C pieces plain ond afr'ped Jaconets, the newest stylei r b Irre d and 1 licked M usllns, vt blch art ottering at low price. (fndoren Pemsfrtched Handkeroblefs, at Old prlo'et 25, 37. 40, and 00 cents. A lull attornment of Ihe newent deottrn LACK COL LA 1.8 and CGLLA1: T l t 8, Irom .17 cents up to 10. GLOVES-GLOVES. A complete lire of .101 VI N Kit) GLOVES, to whlct re Invite at trillion, vthich we tier at low figures. GABIUFLLE fcKlRTS. OABRIILLK SKIRTS. Ite newest, moct desirable, and stylish skirts now worn. ItTKID FKIBTING, a cheap and desirable article lor ladies weur 411 No. 1024 r'TlENNCT HI REET. K. M. NEEDLES, ATo. 102i CHESNUT HTltEET, ' : offebs at low rrucF.s, 2000 PIECES WHITE GOOD8, : ! Incliidlna all varieties Shirred, Puffed. Tn.-ked. - I Plaid, htrlnrd, Plain and Hgured MUSLIMS, . ;inltable for V hlte Ilodli s and IireKscs. ' 1C0 pieces PRINTED LINED LAWNS, deelr ! able styles for Dresses. I Cluny. Va enclc nne and oher Laces; Tnsert- int'B, rnpiriks fiouncints ana nanus, uauaker clilels, V ells. Collars fleeves, etc 'I lie sbove are otlered lor ea e CBHAP, and in great VARIK'l Y. LADIES WOULD DO WELL TO EXAMINE. HOQ II o p k i n s' rQQ OZO HOOP-SKIRT OZO Wannfnctory. No. 628 ARCH Street. Above Hxth street, Philadelphia. W hnlesale and Retail. Onr assortment embraces all the new and desirable styles and sizes, or every length and sue waist for Ladles, MiiEex, and Children. 1 hose of OiH OWH MAKE" ate $upfricr In rTnii and durability to any other Skirts made, and warranto to give satls'action. Skins made to order, altered, ami repaired. 14 FINANCIAL. JAY COOKE & CO., No. Hi South THIRD Street, BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES U. 8. 6s OF 1881. 6-20s, OLD AND NEW. IO-Mb; CERUFICATES OF INDEBTEDNESS, 7 0 KOTE9, 1st, 2d, and 8d Soriea. COMPOUND INTEREST NOTES WANTED. INTER ST ALLOWED ON DEPOSIIS. Collections made. Stocks Bought and Sold on Commission. Special business accommodations reserved for LADIES. 6 7 2m U, S. SECURITIES A SPECIALTY, SMITH. RANDOLPH & CO., BANKERS & BROKERS, 16 S. THIRD ST. PHILADELPHIA. 3 NAS3AU 8T. NEW YORK. STOCKS AND GOLD BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION, HERE AND IK NEW YORK. 1 1 RATIONAL MM OF THE REPUBLIC, Ncs. 809 and 811 CHESNUT Street. (Organized under the "National Currency Act,' Mai oh JO, 1886.) A regular BAKKIKG BUS IN ESS transacted. DEP08I1S received npon tbe most liberal terms. Especial attention given to COLLECT IQSH. C6 7 16t JJAVIES BROTHERS, Ho. 225 DOCK STREET, BANKERS AND BROKERS, , ' BUT AND SELL CNITKD BTATES BONDS, 1 81 s, 4-20., 10 40s. UNITED STATES TS-lOs, ALL ISSUES. CEBTIS lCATXb OF INDEBTEDNESS. aJercantlle Psper and Loans on Co laterals nsrotiated Btocis Bontht and Bold on CosamissloB. 1 si JJARPER, DURNEY & CO." BANKERS. STOCK AND EXCHANGE BROKERS, No. 55 8. THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. Stocks and Loans bought and sold on Commission Cncunent Ban It Notes, Coin, Etc. , bought and sold, Special attention paid to the purchase and sale ol Oil 8'ocks, Deposits recelTed, and Interest allowed, ae per agreement. 85 8m IlE FIRST NATIONAL BANK DAS REMOVED Lurinp the erection ol the new Bank building, to 1174p No., Q5 CHESNUT STREET 5'20S-"F I V E T W E N TIES. 7'30s -SEVEN-THIRTIES WANTED. BE HAVEN & BBOWEB, 1 7 No. 40 8. Third Street. ROBERT SHOEMAKER & CO., WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, MANUFACTURER, IMPORTERS, AND DEALERS IN Paints, Tarnishes, and Oils, No. 201 NORTn FOURT1T STREET It 9m K. E. CORNER OF EACE SUMMER RESORTS. gUMMEll HESOIITS , ON LINE OF Rcadin? Knllrcad- and Brandies. MANSION llOUfr, MOUNT CARBON, i rs. Caroline Wundrr, t ottkvllle P. O., Bctnylkill CO 2USCAE0RA HOTEL, Urs. Hannah AilJler, Turcarora P. O., Fcl.oylklll co MA1IA OT CUT HO TEL, n. W. Frost, Mahanoy City P. 0.,8chnylM11co. WHITE HOUSE, sirs. Susan Marsdorf, Reading P. O ANDALUSIA, James 8. V adelra, Reading P. O. LIVING SPRINGS HOTEL. Dr. A. 8 a;lth, WeidersvilleF. O., Berks co SOU 1H MO UNTA1N HO USE, II. U. Msndarbsch, Womelsdorf P. O., Berks oo. COLD SPRINGS HOTEL, t Lebanon co., Charles Roedrrmel, Harrlnburg P. O. . BOYERSTOWN SEMINARY. J J. B.Utnky, Boyers'.OTtn P. O., Berkscd YELLOW SPRINGS HOTEL, 8. It. r'nydrr, Yellow Springs P. 0., Chester co L1TIZ SPRINGS, Baruuel Lkhtenthaltt. Litis P O., Lancaster eo EP HR AT A MOUNTAIN SPRINGS, Alexander S. Feathei, Ephrata P. O., Lancaster co Aphil21.10. 4 233m fJNITED STATES HOTEL, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Will open for tbe reception of guests on WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27, 1866. DODWOBTH'8 BAND engaged for the season. Persons desiring to engage rooms will address 13ROWN & WOELPPER, PROPHIEXORS, ATLANTIC CITY, Or No. 827 BICIIMOKD Street, 69 2mrp FhUadelphla. QONGEESS . HALL, CAPE ISLAND, N. J., WILL REMAIN OrEN UNTIL OCTOBER 1. There bas been added to this popular House, since last season, the entire Ocean Boose property, glrlnii an ocean iront of over 12 0 leet, and over 3V0 rooius irouiing and in iuii view ot tne sea. A Deflect svBtcm of sewerage and dralnaoe has been completed, a leatare possessed by lew hotels outside of targe cities. 1 lie appointments of the House throughout hare re- ceivea a roosr. careiui aupeivieiun, sugesveu vy ute 2. perlence ot oast seasons. Jb or apaitmenu, aufress J. F. CAKK, Congress Hall. Hnssler's Brass and String Band. 42J THE PI Ell HOUSE. PORT TENN, DELAWARE. JONATHAN DRAPER, Proprietor. The Proprietor haying purchased tills well-known house, Is now prepared to teceive boarders at 8 u per week. The lovers of good gunning and fishing can here fully enojr that luxury. Excellent bathing, and a magnificent beach extending for mites. . 8 26 1m COAL. Q N E TRIAL SECURES TOUR CUSTOM. WMTiXEY & IIUIILT0, LEHIGH, SCHUYLKILL, AND BITUMINOUS COAL, o. 035 Xorth MMII Street, Above Poplar, Kaat Sld. 62 JAMES O'BRIEN, BKALSB IN LEHIGH AND SCHUYLKILL COAL. BT TBS CABGO OB BIHGL1 TON. Yard, Broad Street, below Fitzwater. Bas constantly on band a competent supply of tbe at ore superior Coal, sui able for family use, to which, he calls the attention of his friends and tbe public generally. Orders left at No'. 206 South Fifth ttreet, No 82 South Seventeenth street, or through Despatch or Fost Office, promptly attended to. A SUPERIOR QUALITY OF BLACKSMITHS' COAL. 7 8 RENDER'S COAL AND ICE DEPOT, 8. W. C0RMER OF BBOAD ASD CALLOWBILL 8TBET8, Offers the celebrated West Lehigh Coal from the Greenwood Colliery, Mora. kg. and Beater size ai-Wj lutatt6M). Also, the Tery superior ttehuylklll Coal, from tbe KeeTctdale Colliery, ut sise, a w. All other sUea SI W All Coal warranted and taken back free of expense to the purchaser, it not as represented. Also, the Coal for teltta it not lull weltiliu Sit 6m ILLWARD & WINEBRENER. WM, MILLWABD, D. B. VIKEBBINKB. MACHINERY AND MANUFACTURERS' SUPPLIES, No. 118 MARKET Street, PHILADELPHIA. PA. AOSST8 FOB TBB BALB OF Cotton and Woollen Machinery, Dealers In Manufacturers' Supplies of erery do. scription. Oak Tanned Leather Beltine:, AND MACniNK CARD CLOTHINGr ' Of lest quality and manufacture. 4 25 8inrp MISCELLANEOUS. JpITLER, WEAVER & CO., Mm.s , 'w tuna Ke Manilla and Tarred Cordage, Cords, Twines, Etc., No. It Worth WATFR Street and o Zlliortb OKLAWARK Aieuuo, ' , . .. rniLAbBLTBlA. 1 . Inwis U. FiTLm, Mirr,ALWK Tn. COKBAO V CtOTUIXB. lUt QEOROE PLOWMAN, CAKl'ENTEIl AND I3UII.DERI No. 232 CARTER Street And No. 141 DOCK Street. Machine Vi oik and MIllwrHhUng promptly attends , to CORN. EXCHANGE B AC M ANUFACTORT. J u l! p T. II A I I, K V A C O,. No. Ill M. FROKT and No. 114 N. WATEB Atreet I'm adniiibla " DEALERS I.N BAt.ff AND BOQ1NO Gisin, Flour, Bait, Unper r hophate ot Lune, Bone- tS1S.e,.,an0 ,ni". OhY'BAtis canatautiy on band. cJOUM T. BAII.KT. J AlfBS CASOABHV. 1 J, McG U I G A importer and Wholesale Dealer a FASCT GOODS, NOTION8, Ero, llllKUOIiKH, FLA OS, Eto MATCHES AND BLACKING, NO. Q STltAAVHKHltY 8TREET, First Htreet aboTS becoud between Harketand cbesaut 8 f BIL1DILTH1A. MONUMENTS, TOMBS, GRAVE-STONES, Eto. Jnt completed, a beautl.nl variety of ITALIAN UABBLE MONUMENTS, TOMBS, AKD U EA VEVSTONK3 vV 111 be sold cheap tor cash. Work sent to any part of the United States. 11ENIIY H. TAItlt, Mill ItT.V. mkLuTa 124wftt Bo. nOGEkKM Street, Philadelphia. MONUMENTS AND GRAVESTONES. ON hand, a lane aoortuient of Gravestones, of Tart ous designs, mode of tbe finest Italian and American Aarb.s at the Marble Works of 3 27 tuths3m RIDGE Avenue, bel'ow tieventb stree J, P E R K INS, LUMBER MERCHANT Successor to B. Clark, Jr., No. 824 CJJ K1STIAN STREET. Cot tantlT on liand a large and varied sssortmeut or Bui dirr Lumber S24f B1DESBUKO MACHINK WORKS' orriOE, Ho. M A. KROHT BTBEET. PB1LSDKUDIA. We are prepared to till orders to any extent for ear well known MACHINERY FOB COTTON AND WOOLLEN MILLS, nclading all recent Improvements in Carulha. BnlnnlBiC a nd earing. We invite the at ontion ot manufacturers to ear exten sive works. 1 IS ALFBEP JUNKS BOH. I L L I A M H. O B A N T. COMMIs-RION MERCHANT. NO. 39 8. DEXA W ARC Avenue, rbliadolphla. AortNrvoa Tu rent's Onnpewder,Ke fined Nitre, Charcoal, Eto. W. l aker A Co 'a ( hocolate. Cocoa, and Itroma, Crocker Bros. & Co 's Yellow Mvtoi bbeaihing, Bolte. and Kails. a ALEXANDER !. C ATT ELL A CO. PRODUCE COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Ho. 26 NORTH WBARVES, AND NO 87 NORTB WATER STREET, FHILADELfUiA. 18 ALEXAKDKB 0. CATIELL. ' ELIJAF O. OATTKLb ' 0TT0N AND FLAX SAIL DOCK AND CANTAH, . ot all numbers and brands. Tent A worn-. Trunk, and WKon- overbook. Also Paper Manniacturera' Drier Felts, trom one to seven feetwideifaulirui. Belting, Bail Twine, eto, . JOHN W. EVERMAN A Co., 6S NalulJONE81AlWi, FURNITURE AND BEDDING. .-. TALNUT CHAMBER. SUITS, IN OIL OB POLISHED. GEORGE J. UENKELS, THIRTEENTH AND CHESNUT STREETS. OUITS OF .WALNUT PARLOR FURNITURE IN OIL OB POLISHED. GEORGE J. liENKELS, THIRTEENTH AND CHESNUT STREETS. gUHS OP L'OSEWOOD CHAMBER FURNITURE. GEORGE J HEN EELS, 6 412trp .- , THIRTEENTH AND CHESNUT STREETS. FUHNITUItE. RICHMOND & FOREPAUGH, No. 40 South SECOND St., West Side, MAM'FACTL'BEBS OF SUPERIOR CABINET FURNITURE, UPHOLSTERED GOODS. Parlor "ults in fMtisn, Reps Hair Cloth, etc Mulnn-Kocin. Dlnlng-Uorm, and Chamber 8nlts ht Walnut, Mahogany, fak. ( besout. etc, rogether rlth trained imitailuns ot the above woods, whicb eome vary low. Khontd von desire anyiblos in our line, It will be to jour advaniaseto ea 1 and examine onra ock. wuiea la as lurtieand varied as can be louud any where, and riUCKS THE LOWEST. RICHMOND & FOREPACOH, (28 ko, 40 Boulh SECOisD Street FDBNITUB E.-TUE LARGEST, Cheapest and Heat Stock of Fainiiure Is the it orld is lo be touml at Ul CLD CO.'S 1 TJIO' FVBNIirRE DEPOT, CORNER OF MkTIt AND MARKET STREETS, atd os. S7 nnd 19 N. (KOMI Street. Parlor Sails, In Hu, Brocade, Piiuh, Damask, or rjinlDSyroom, Cbr mber. Library Kitchen, and Offloe Furniiure, at 11 u ouaiy tow piivts, and the newest stv es and pattern. Public Building School, College, and Shep Furrltura In endless variety. All kinds of 1'oriillure wanted by housekeepers at exceedingly low pi Ices at eitherol their luiinenMt esiab. llnbinents It vcu vi ant to save money and get well served go to GOULD & CO. belose purchasing ele vtbeie. Corner of NINTH and MaRKLT, and Nos.II and 39 N, BUCOKD Street. lie So g V R I N O. " " BEDDING OF EVEY DESCRIPTION, IIOL.ESALE AND RETAIL, ASD KATBIALS WO TUM SAMS. BEST QUAL1IT AND 8TYLK OF 6PRINP MATTRESSES. J. 8. FULLER, 4 lisiatbSm , No. 9 g. SEVEN ra Street. THREE GENERAL AGENTS' WANTED TO act in important locations for the New Terr AevW apply to KHAMK. O. AL CUi-SNCTBtrtet. Asuly ALLKN, Bram Oulue, Mo- 410 soon. 111