NING BULLETIN. Sisluiday, pocember 21, 1807. inaltcissuarsims SUPPLEMENT. To-day we present to the readers of the . Dow= a triple sheet; with a Cbristingo Mpplement, containing a vast quantity of teading platter, fi l l ft*l fe for the holiday time. . "It 03 1 TV:a original stories, written expressly _ler this number; ' ,sketches, original and selected, poetry, and historical accounts of Cbristmas customs, Christmas games, and Christmas fare, in the olden time. The matter is all of the best quality, and - will bo found well worthy of careful perusal. Wo present it with, the assurance that it will Trove as acceptable to our readers as it is appropriate to the season. The Car riers of the BULLETIN have prepared "Carriers' Annual Calendar," which they will offer to their patrons during the holidays. It is of a humorous character, is unique and original in design; and is handsomely illus trated. Every reader of the paper should bave,a copy. . THE coirToat The debate in the Senate, yesterday, on the repeal of the cotton tax, although it did not result in the passage of the bill, developed important facts, which should be widely -known, especially throughout the South. it is worthy of note that Senators of the political stamp of Sherman, Sprague, Grimes and Drake strongly urged the repeal of , this tax. The notion is industriously circulated Itsr Democratic politicians and Presses, and is readily believed at the South, that the Ra pid:dies° party is moved by a 'vindictive hos tility to that part of the Coantry,lll all its legislation. The falsehood received a prep tical denial in yesterday's debate. Senator , Drake is as radical a Republican as is to be found in the ranks of the party; but '`urges the repeal of the cotton lax because to desires that "a •helping hand shohld be . Ireki out to the South to lift it up to compar :ative prosperity." Senator Sherman argued - that, not the planters alone, but the laborers ''-4111 the plantations are directly interested in removing or relieving this tax. `in most :;places in the South, the planters are working _•lon shares with their hands, and Mr. Sher :tie= said truly that he spoke-as much In the interest of the loyal black men as he did in in that of their employes. The Republican party has always desired the real reconstruc tion of the South and a restoration of all its material prosperity. ,It is easy . to see that the whole country, must benefit by the renewed, jproductiveness of the South, and as a matter of national policy, . as well as of natural humanity, the North really desires, in the words of Senator • Drake, "to extend its helping hand to the ". • South." In the hottest period of the rebel lion the North felt none of that hatred toward the rebels which characterized their attitude toward the North. The only bitterness of • feeling was toward the creeping Copperheads of the North, who, enjoying the blessings of 'a free government, plotted day and night to break it down and destroy it. Ever since thawar ceased there has been a wonderful magnanimity in the purposes and sentiments -- of the Republican party toward the conquered rebels, and had . they accepted the the • lenient offers that were made to them by Congress, they wouldlong ago have been placed in the en joyment of their political privileges and of those great material and industrial advantages which they destroyed by their wicked war. But the debate of yesterday shows that the presentobstaele in the way of the repeal of this onerous tax is caused by the South itself. Under the fostering hand of its worst enemy, Andrew Johnson, the South has put • itself into an attitude of sullen, factions hos tility toward the North which checks its pa . erous impulses, and, prevents the kindly leg-. islation,the relief of which the Republican pir rty proposes for its conquered but still rebel lions enemies. This work has been done by the President, under his, alse pretexts of aiding -. the . South, •and when Senators Nye . and Thayer, yesterday, opposed the repeal of the . cotton tax, their argument, as Mr. Thayer said, was that "the South had shown no con - tritespirit, but a disposition to abuse COn gress, and did not really deserve,any special favor ;" and, as Mr. Nye said, that "the Booth had given no evidence of thankfulness : for the magnanimity of Congress, but the contrary." C' No well informed pew/ at the .North sup • poses that this is the universal condition of - the people of the Smith. There are many la - - telligent ex-rebels who , have accepted their conquered situation in good faith, and who not join in or sympathize with the insane ,hue and cry against • the party which, having carried the country successfully through the - war, exhibited in its offers of terms to the conquered rebels, a degree of forbearing lenience for which history has no parallel. But still these are the exceptions among the Oiouthent population. Tile masses, embit tered by their defeat, impoverished by the rebellion, deceived by their Presidential ally, have none of that good-will toward the north which ought to go before their restoration to the blessings of the American 'Union. They still dream of com pensation for their slaves; of the assumption of the rebel debt; of some sort of restoration of their old relations to their slaves. They spend _their time in idle abuse of Congress, which only postpones the day of their de liverance, and in idler dreams of future po litical power, instead of, in hearty, earnest, honest labor. It' the cotton tax is repealed, it will be done by the Republican patty, and will only be aut9ther proof added to the many already given that the party under whose auspices the rebellious South was conquered Is the party to which it should look with confidence for restoration, encouragement and support. THE 11A1COUK MENSAGE. __:_Tbc Washington correspondents of the Northern Copperhead newspapers deny the statement that the message recommending Congressional recognitlen of the order of General Hancock was a prearranged thing between the President and the Deinocratii ntembera of Congress. They say that it is denied authoritatively on . behalf of the Presi sleet that the massage was sugg , :ste , t to him by any one; and they further say that it was Lis own voluntary set, and his best friends hi the [louse knew nothing,whatever about it until:lVY/as ant to the C.ipitol. There was , encits,lllllo biq who made what he called a thile.wOoden beat, but which was, so 'bid a pie,c'ef butchery that it bore no resemblance THE DAILY EVE to anything that ever miffed upon the wetorS under the propelling intacnee of Mon t 60 or paddles. "And did Andy make ail this himself ?" Ironically asked a visitor, to whom the nautical monstrosity WWI shown. "Yes, I.ll.oecci Pkifl ClQVingiu2 l ll4', "119 '409 t 1 .1 out of' ifs diva hcid !" "And I have no doubt," said the satirical critic, "I have no doubt that ho has plenty of wood there to make a good many more just like itr It is refreshing to be assured that the malignity and wooden-headednesa of the Hancock message was the offspring of the brains and heart of a single individual. Even Hinckley would scarcely care to, be known as a con stitutional adviser in the production of such a document. Mr. Johnson made it all out of his head, and he has wood enough in his addled pate, and wickedness enough in his heart to continue to put forth such documental monstrosities until the 4th of March, 1869, When the American people will happily be able:devoutly to thank Heaven that they are rid of this Presidential botch, whose bungling is only exceeded by his malignity. JAMES BUCK ALNAN. A letter written by Jefferson Davis, at Washington, on the eighth of January, 1861, has lately come to light. It was addressed to the secession United States Consul at Alex andria, Egypt, and it was written in response to a letter filled with fire-eating sentiments, which the Consul had addressed to Davis. In the course of his letter the arch-traitor said: "The confidence heretofore felt in litiriluchanan has diminished eteadily,audie now nearly extinct. His weakness has done as much harm as wick edness would have achieved.. Tboueh I can no longer respect or•confer with him,anci feel injured by his conduct, yet I • pity and would extenuate the offences not prompted by bad design or ma lignant intent." - It will*be remembered' that the date ; at which this letter was written was the time when the •Presidential dotard was making , Lt feeble show of doing something for the relief of the starving garrison at Fort Sumter. The Star of the West had been despatched with provisions for Major Anderson, and this act (A - attempting to feed starving soldiers ex cited the contempt and indignation of the traitors who had been` moulding him like wax to suit their own purposes. It would be difficult to find -in history a public cha racter who figures so contemptibly as James Buchanan. Despised by every loyal man and woman in the land for his weak and „nerveless wielding of the truncheon. of office, when patriotic sentiment, determined ac tion and earnest resolve would * have , crushed rebellion in its beginning, aid checked the sanguinary tide that soon after flowed over the land; hated by the South after he had parted with everything like manliness 'at their insolent dictation; hated by them because he was too weak even to be constant in his weakness, and too craven to be consistent in his shame ful cowardice and irresolution. Detested as the memory of Andrew .Tohnson will be, he can never sink to the level of James Buch anan. Johnson has positive points of char acter, whether for good or for evil, and he is as persistent as Satan in the pursuit of his plans. James Buchanan, when in the Presi dential chair, was a weak driveller, without sufficient courage or political integrity to re tain the confidence and respect of his friends, and too cowardly to meet all the exactions of treasonable keepers. Poor old Buchanan ! AIY UN FOR rim ATE DIFFICULTY Petroleum V. Nasby is allowed considera ble latitude in his use of language, and when he speaks of the rebellion as" "a slight on pleasantness" the term is admitted as appro priate to his assumed character. But when the Chief of Police of New Orleans refers, officially, to the bloody massacre of July 1866, as "the unfortunate digtOulty of the 30th of July," the case is different. Mr. Adams and his poliee, having murdered and mangled the delegates' to the Convention, hauled off their dead and wounded to the Station House, the Workhouse and the. Hos pital, and the chief brute then made out his bill in the following terms : CITY or NEW ORLEANS To Thos. E. Adams, Chief of : July 31, 1863. Cash paid for hauling forty-six loads of dead and wounded from around Meehan- lies' Institute to the Station House, at $3 per load 6138 Cash paid for carrying dead from Station House to Workhouse yard, eight loads, at $3 21 Cash paid for hauling fifteen loads of wounded from Station House to Freed men's Hospital, at $4.... 60 Cash paid for carriage hire for self and aids during riot... . . .... . 75 Total $297 I certify that the above was made necessary by the unfortunate difticully of the 30th of July at the Mechanics' Institute. Taos. E. ADA3IB, Chief of Pollee. - If Adams bad been a scavenger, hauling so many loads of rubbish and dirt and dump ing them upon the commons, his bill would have been the same.. "Forty-six loads of dead and wounded, at $3 per load!" "Haul ing fifteen loads of wounded to Freedmen's Hospital, at $4 per load!" And then, "car riage hire for self and aids during riot, s7s!"' The brutal heartlessness of this fellow is a specimen of the tone of his class. It throws a flood of fresh light upon the horrible ma lignity which conceived and perpetrated the • ,3nassacre itself. The police of New Orleans regarded those loyal delegates as so many cattld, to be slaughtered, shot, hacked, beaten, and hauled oil' by the cart load, 'wounded, dying and dead, the ghastly trophies of an "unfortunate difficulty." When the ministers of the law are suc a mere brutes, is it any wonder that Sheridan should have needed to put a strong hand upon them? Is it not to be wondered at that Hancock should flatter himself that a community that tolerates such cold-blooded scoundrels as these, may safely be treated as ono where "peace and older reign supreme`?" PHILADELPHIA CO Lii EJECT I 0 NS. The largest of all the Philadelphia confec tionary establishments is that of §tephen F. 'Whitman, No. 1210 Market street. The dis play-he makes this year.. surpasses that, of any former season, and for some days buyers of these good things have kept salesmen and saleswomen fairly run down with orders.. No establishment in Paris can MAke a finer dis play, or resent a greater variety of delicious bon-bons, chocolates; candied fruits, and other delicious things. The Ornamental bungs, and other articles fur holiday presents, arc vast in number and prviisite in beauty. Mary of them • are charming works of art, shish will be 'Worth preserving lung after their contents nit gone. A. vh-it to Whit inan's should he made before the crowds be conte'too greatiand before any heavy inroads are made upon the stock, . IN e BULLETIN PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, IMIX:IEDITER 21, 1867,7TRIPLESITEET. T owth of , population, , aed a ogres needing yen grcatei growth of intelli gence irl this co ri, 67 41 3 . 30 0 it one of the 'greatest markets fo ight s literature in the world. There are more tvspapers printed and read in the uniteds, than in Europe; and it is probable that th are also tate, treLl more magazines circulated here; II ughe among them should be included forformtn i magazines and American reprints or compi lations of foreign periodical literature. Time was, and not many years ago, when there were bgt few American magazines pub_ Belied, and their editions wore small. The old Knickerbocker, which was the most popular of the strictly literary monthlies, never bad a circulation of more than a few thousands. It died years ago, beedise• it could not keep up With the times. Graham's Magazine, which was a combination of lit erature and fashion news, was prosperous once, and for some years its circulation was very large. The oldest monthly 'magazine now printed is Godey's Lady's Book, and its, prosperity continues. Junior to it, but not less prosperous, is Peterson's Ladies' National Magazine. Both of those are addressed espechdlito the female population. They circulate all over the Union and more largely In remote States than in Penn sylvania. They .are recognized authorities on all subjects of female attire, find 'as Phi ladelphia taste is acknowledged everywhere to be good, they maintain their popularity' in spite of all competition from other cities. Their proprietors know also how to lilend literary entertainment with fashion news and these two Philadelphia publiCations ex ercise a silent but very extensive influence in cultivating"the lifinds,nd refining the tastes of the young women of America. Harper's Magazine occupies a field of its 'own, and 'has been conducted with such ' intelligence and energy, that it need fear no rivalry. Its circulation is, deservedly, very large. Of strictly literary monthlies the Atlantic has attained the ,greatest age and the highest success. Putnam's, which had tote.suspended some years ago, has lately been revived, with some prospect of succesa. The 'Galaxy,which began as a semi-monthly, is now a monthly and appears to be doing well. There is room enough for all of these; indeed, the populations of New England, New York and the West are large enough to maintain them, even it' they had not also a large circulation in other sec tions. Not one of them, however, can be fairly selected as representing the national mind, and each one is more or less typice of a portion , only of the American people. Here in Pennsylvania, and in the States im mediately adjacent, there is a population of five or six millions of souls, which has been without .a monthly literary publication that could be regarded as an organ of the intellect of theirsection: The great pub; lishing house of J. B. Lippincott. & Co., which has maintained the character of Phil adelphia as a literary mart, amid all sorts of desperate rivalry, has under taken to supply the want that has long been felt for a Philadelphia literary monthly magazine. The publishers have the means, the intelligence and the energy to carry out their design, and the beginning theyhave made gives every assurance of success. There are in Philadelphia about one hundred thousand families, and the average standard of intelligence among these—thanks to eiu cational facilities—is constantly growing higher. In each of at least twenty thousand of these Philadelphia families there ought to be a subscriber to , Lippincott's Maga zine. Throughout the State of Pennsylvania, there ought to be a corresponding number of subscribers, and the same might reasonably be expected of the neighbor States of .New Jersey and Delaware. Throughout the Western and Southern States there are some millions of natives of Pennsylvania, who cherish an affection for their old State, and among whom ought to be' found many thou sands of cultivated people who would be glad to receive a Philadelphia magazine of a high character. All depends, however, upon the new magazine's maintaining such a cha racter. That it will do so cannot be doubted. There will be, "with each pew number, new facilities afforded to theApub lishers, and the editors will also acquire the experience which is even more essential than book-learning and culture. Good as the first number.has been, there can be no doubt. that the succeeding numbers will be' better, and before the first year is over, Lippin cott's Magazine will have established itself, and be able to hcold its own with the best literary monthlies of the United States or Great Britain. _ _ In view of the general crowded condition of our too narrow business streets, there is great need for the reform of a growing abuse. It is no unusual thing for the tide of travel upon a street to be checked, and the street blocked up with vehicles for half an hour or more by the removal into or out of buildings of heavy and unwieldy articles, such as fire proof safes, machinery, &c. These stoppages cause much annoyance and inconvenience to the public, and the aggregate loss of time growing out of them is import ant. Hitch of this inconvenience and loss might be avoided if such work was done very early in the morning, before the streets become crowded. It may suit the purposes of manufacturers of heavy articles to ,take this mode of advertising their goods during the busiest part of the day; but it does not suit the convenience of people who have their passage through the streets thus ob structed. The evil has become so annoying that it calls loudly tor reform, and if those who can remedy it do not choose so to do, Councils should interfere. JoAn 13. 'flyers * Co.. Auctioneers, Moe. , and 234 Market steed, will hold during next week by catalogue, the following important mailee viz. al -- On MONDAY, metlic? 23, at 10 o'clock, on four months' credit, iUJ lota of French, India, Saxony and Britian Uri Goode, op bracing an assortment of Oren Wade Alpaca'', kt,; Maude, Cloakinge, Traveling dhlrta, &Ann>. ral and hooptikirta, Dread and' Cloak trimmings, tltwd reilkle. hit bone,' for cerh, at 10 o'clock, 12 eases Cavalry and Infantry Coate, lei sni ry Pante, Cavalry and Veteran Iteeerve • Jackets, e Afro, a foil aaeurtment of nomentlo Good.. Ulala V, Ike. 24th, at 10 o'clock, on four mouthe Cr. ait. about 1,2t/U packagen Mote, Choed, 13al•uorale, dze. I. Dee. 26, at 10 o'clock ou four ntnnthe errdit, ;W eackapee med. tote of Foreign and Duineetio de, Including Clothe, Ctierimerre, 'Prioote, BUar• Verr, Velveteene, Doeekine, Coat ing,. tio , l3,etr, Itallane Al, o, Dr. Goode, 'Billie, Shawle, dhirt. I • oriety ',levee, Hoop and. Balmoral Skirts, Hewing], t , Ibu racKagee lotton and Woolen Domeeticer ' Ntockto und Rand litedute. , Tholone Bore' Palo, on Tneielay next, will comprise hip . amount of bunk tod other ntoeks, deelrnelt dwell. ae A; o, ieoind today, and adverilko on third and ninth po.111 : , f; resit Fro IcaalFrtra.a.Wst Call the tatteilt• tit of our renders' to the huge eataloguo of woe nor I on., televising Rib lots. to ht powuptorily Arad buY liarritt At CO ,Ouettoneerv, ho. MO Market fersot, For part iculars sec advorttiv:naont unler Auction head. NAG 4.ZINEIN Sales/ isoonaland'Sltdilw:.:Wo vvonld cxll the particular attenHon_of tile trade to Diu' largo sale of:Deetsr i nboes DroganCitahnurals. dtc... to be 'gold' by MrClelinud 1 C0., - Auctioneers, at their dtore, Market Buret, on Monday morning, December commencing fd ten o'clock precisely. FACTS AND FANCIES. 1.7r.153t , .9 S. (4etANT. The siltlicea gnus of Vicksburg, which at first Rebellion planted, when, with rash endeavor It strove In vain a sacred bond to sever; Rio pine -clad hills of Cumberland, that erst Org_stalned with patri9tblpod by hands accurst; And"- , lehmond'a closing scones, transcended nev Proclaim t hero, and will speak for ever. Such are thy dues, le envy do her worst. Yet bate no effort, chliftain meetly great, Though the Sirm tread of Or 'ering hosts cease; 0, first in arms ! 'thy virtues di To country still; she will till - And, wreathing laurels, nobly of late, With friendly olive, crown thee "first in peace.lz. l —lowa has 143 newspapers. . —The•Sultan has the phthisls. —New Orleans is to have a Creole prima donna. —One of the Maine courts has just granted forty divorces in a single tern]. —Chicago jail has a' ghost which is cutting up Didoes. ..—Cul Bono is the singular name of a ncgfo in Mobile, s .,,, ~, —lt is suggested that female suffrage be tried in Utah. ~--' —Blondin broke his arm* a fall from his rope at Cologne. _ - —A mine of platinum, has been discovered in Now Zealand../ ' • —Meal and salt are coated with butter and sold for it irrNashvillo. ....When was Naah in America? When he was 6n the Ark-and-saw. ), —Enormous supplies of guano have been disco vered in South Carolina.. —After Januarylst it will cost but twelve cents to send.a letter to Europe. —The widow of Sam Houston died la Texas (Alpe, stb, of yellow, fever. Bazarlls accredited with a circula tion'uf a hundred thousand. —The great snow storm has laid up all the pe destrians, which is cheerful. —California permits the convicts in her State prison to play faro and monte. —Dumas, Sr., is putting his last novel, "The Whites and the Blues, on the stage. —Semmes has the impudence to compare him self In his lecture to John Paul Jones! —Thirty per/cent. of the population of Great Britain are unable to write their names. —Horace Greeley's autograph is said to re semble "Heroic Bully" more than anything else. —Mr. B. J.. r Wilker huiliimght s icoutitry house" four miles out of Washington and moved into it. -- 3 colony- of-Southernera- have squatted at Belize, where land is only twenty-five cents an acre. —Land speculators expect Sltka will have tiny thousand Inhabitants In ten or a dozen years. —lt is suggested that our national debt might be offered in exchange for Cuba. We go for it. —A man named Wilson six feet and four inches high, Is lecturing on California in New Hamp shire. _ . - —Wendell Phillips got snowed up in Connecti cut, and lived for forty hours on crackers and cheese. —The Kinney 3fessenger says "the frontier is gradually receding" because of the Indian depre dations. —A. Sandwich, MASS., man has invented a pocket 6013 against burglars, which weighs but Your ounces. --Three -young men In Berlin have died while attempting to pass seven days and seven nights without sleep. —A Boston gentleman Is on his way , to Florida In his s -, wn private conveyance. He has reached North Carolina. •—A facetious stage driver in lowa drained a comrade's whisky bottle as a joke, and died. It was bug poison. —Dickens is taking notes for a new volume upon this country. He also takes .notes for an old pocket-book. —Mr. Henry Butley, of London, has sent nine tons of tracts to the Young Men's Christian As sociation of Chicago. —The editor of a Paris comic paper wasso very funny about the Government, that he now laughs all by himself in prison. —lt costs seventy-five cents to have a shirt washed in some parb3 of Ohio, just now, owing to the scarcity of water. —lt is stated that not one of .the professors in the State Agricultural College of Kansas knows anything abont fanning. —Menkin is playing at Birmingham. Besides her new book of 1, oems, she intends to publish a olume of sensational correspondence. —Fall River, Mass., turns out over eighty-five thousand miles of print calicoes yearly, or enough to girdle the earth three times. —At Chicago, on the 10th, Wm. Andrews at tacked Wm. Hamilton, bit a great chunk out of his lip and swallowed it, moustache and all. —Eastman Johnson has just produced a pastel picture of Abraham Lincoln as a beardless boy, reading by the light of the fire in a rough shanty. —The New York milkmen . thought to escape the law by diluting their milk with Ice instead of water. it was a nice point, but It cost them 50. —lf Adelina Patti will go to. St. Petersburg, the government of Russia will pay her ex penses. We will go ourselves upon that condi tion —There Is said to be a region in Peru where the climate "restores consumptive per sons to health as' certainly as night follows day." —An Ohio housekeeper set some arsenic poison for rats. The rats not only ate it, but tracked It over food in the closet and poisoned the whole family. • —Father Hyacinth's First Advent lecture filled the church of Notre• Dame to suffocation. He condemned severely the principle of compulsory education. —The New York Time's, Tribune, and Commer cial A cive raver are said to be about introducing the Alden type-setting machinet in their estab liehments. —The Polish Gen. Langiewicz is said to intend taking service with the Bnitan. The General, we recollect, was polished off by the French at Rome at the late scrimmage. —Lord Amberly is said to be a harmless young man, not overburdened with brains, who has great difficulty in memorizing the speeches his fatter writes for --Mahon,the ruffian who,in attempting to shoot the I !pg . Enlister of a circus at Easton, 111., last fall, killed a younggirl in ibo audience, has been sentenetd to the penitentiary for life. -3irs. Gen. Sterling frier) has recently re ceived 510,000 insurance upon the Woof her hus band in a Connecticut Lite Insurance Company. A sterling price for such a worthless man. —All the women whd were sent from the French prisons to the convict colony of Cayenne have married there. One of them had murdered her husband In FraM:c. Good way to klll utf the male convicts. —Mr. Anton Leitner was absorbed by a quick sand in Nebraska, and his body was not touud for two days. Then it was bound that he W3S only buried a foot, and could easily have been got out. The discovery was too late. to afford am aid and comfort to the then late beituer. —The Postmaster at Montreal, discovering dis honesty enure where among the cores 'underlain, bad the heads of all his clerkei,phrenologically examined.' Three of them developed insufficient or ever-sufficient bumps, and were dkcharged. This la a queer tale, but the Montreal ,Thkgretplt relates it with circumstantial gravity. —Weston talks to a lance audience In Cincin nati, confining his eloquence m ethly to a state ment of the euuses of Ain failure to make the hundred wilco in twenty-four hours. lie is said to use bad English and ,worse grammar, and to have nothing of . any acceunt to say . after all • , In the speech General 'Halpin made in the Thhlin Court where be was cbuvicted, he Said : "Thu. Crown Officers -have laid great stress upon tha fret that I traveled under different names; tle 'Ahem; I'Vms guilty of a vreat eritni , ... I have pre t dints for it when I , read in the papers that acme Continental monarchs travel nailer as sure' d bathes, and I hbar .that the Prince of .Wales fliPo does 1 , !I) when he thinks proper to go , to, the London brothels.", . The •Eriglisla papers subbrtSsed this passage In their reports, but 'the Irish journals published it as quoted above. Gents Overcoats of Chinohila. Esquinutux Beaver. , Fur Edredon it OA r j° 4:t n e n d" Castor y " Fancy Whitney. London Travelers. Black Doeskin. „ 44 Tricot. 130. Velvet Beaver. OfackMoscow. Blue Pilot. " Mixed Cassimeres. Skatinglankets of Blue Chinchilla. Olive " " Fur Beaver. 1 is English Pilot. oterfields of All colors Delvers. ". Cassinteres Busmess Suits of 100 varieties, all colors, sizes and • 1111 shapes. Dress Suits of 100 different kinds, all • desirable styles. BOW SCHOOL BUTS affair, aad Dark Hired Caaatraere made vanclad able, BOYS' DRESS SLITS of Tricot and Deaver., Silb, nixed Coed , meres, and other • genteel and hand. some materials. BOA'S , OVERCOATS of , Good assortment. Taurus , ovi RcoitTit of Eleellent styles. SIESTA' FLIDNISHING GOODS, Splendid stook. CeRD. DterAnnat.l3th.lBa7.—The above Hat comprises apart of our immense stock.which we confidently belleite to be the large/Wand best in Philadelphia. Every articla is of our own cal/ ful Janke. and thoroughly RELIABLE in every respect. Anxious to keep our largo corps of bands constantly employed we will make a largo DISCOUNT to all buyers. 1W Our Custom Department is full of beautiful Goods, which we will/I/Ike up at /Seduced Rates. WANAMAKER &BROWN The Popular Talton & Clothlen, Sixth and Market Stree is Sixth and Minor Streets. LADIES' NOTICE. GREAT REDUCTION Elf PRICES AT JOHN M: FINN'S, S. E. Cor. Seventh and Arch Str_Os. DRESS TRIMMINGS. BEADED GIMPS. WORSTED FRINGES. nuvroNs. BTTONS. RIBBONS. RIBBONS ZEPHYR GOODS. ZEPHYR GOODS, Embroidered Slippers, Gems of Beauty. Tufted Horses and Flowers on BlipNre. • Z.pbyr Cushions, miss and Bd a zo L Tufted Zephyr work, novel d STOCKINGS. STOCKINGS. LOWEST PRICES. LOWEST PRICES. Our 3 and 40 cent stockinga aro fall. regular and dare. bin; Our prices for the genuine Iron Framed Goods are the loweirt in the city. ERINO UNDERGARMENTS. Ladies , Merino Vette' , $l.OO and up. 31ims , Menno Vests. rood. 80 cents and up Children's Merino Yeats, in largo variety. COLLARS AND CUFFS. A large and elegant assortment of Collars and CutP, beautifully embroidered with lace inaerting , also, plain. very handsome. SUITABLE FOR PRESENTS, OPENED TO-DAY AND MONDAY From New York Auctions. Stocking Yarns. Stocking Yarns in largo variety of colors and crades at lowest prices. Linen Handkerchiefs; ALL, ii cents and up. Hemstitched Handkerchiefs, H, $3, 33 cents and up. ZEPHYR SLIPPERS! Ladies requiring Zephyr Slippers, will find a very choice selection, embroidered with Birds, Flowers, and Set Pattenie, in plain and tufted work, at Mr. FINN'S. Hie stock is unusually large and con4Mns some of the latest novelties His prices vary from $1 00, $llO. $9 00, up to ISir 00 per pair, according to quality. JOHN M. FINN, S. E. Corner ARCH and SEVENTH Streets.. dell,gartu.2teo HANDSOME LADY APPLES. Neuchatel Cheese. Almeria Grapes, large clusters. Havana Oranges. Ettra Large Raisins. Princess Paper Shell Almonds. English Walnuts. Fresh Pe( ROBERT DONNELL & SON, 806 Walnut Street. de2l 7t 40 oar THE HANDEL AND HAYDN SOCIETY WILL PERFORM THE ORATORIO OF THE ME tsIA.II ON CHRISTMAS NIGHT , AT HORTICULTURAL HALL, AliffifiT&D MISS LOUISE BOLLIDAY, Soprano. MISS CAROLINE McCA FFR BY. Contralto. MR. (L W. HASELWO 4 D, Tenor, of Providence, It I. MR. M. W. WiIITNEY. Rasa, . , of Boston, Matt. AND CARL BEING'S GRAND ORCHESTRA. Tie% ets for solo at Trompleee, GOuld'a and Boner's Unpin Stone, previous to Christi as Day. and the number will De limited to the capacity of the Mall TICEEIS, ORE DOLLAR—NO RESERVED SEATS. dc214311 • I SILK VELVET'S. LYONS AND GENOA VELVETS, Erika 26 to 48 inches wide, In Quantpies to Suit Puronasere. W, S. gILIEWAJter& CO., NO'. 305 .111141111..b.,T STREET. de2l.2tlv. CEIRISIIWAS GOOIIS REDUOED HAMRICK & COLE, No. 45 North Eighth Street, lIITE MARBLE BEILDIN44 BO FANCY GOODS TO BC 'CARRIED OFCN.'' IiEDUC'T lON REDUCTION t OPICIAL BROWS FOR 188 NEXT NW DAYS VERY SICK VASES NE fARGAIY9• 200•Tollet Seto from %2 Vpwardow CPLOGNES, LARGE AND HANDSOME ASSORTMENT. • Ttrllloraorlio from ill 75 to 812. Work.flores from 75 Como lErpwrirdo• DOLLS! DOLLS ! 5,000 noLts TO DE BOLD IN 7HE NEXT THREE DAYS, AND. PRICES FIXED ACCORDINGLY: Wax Crying Dolls, (31.n.lyjloatlet1 Speaking Dolls, Waking and 1 - lan4l-Shalcing ALL GREATLY REDUCED TO CLOSE OUT. Lad ion' Companion., Cabal, Porteononnaten, &c., &c.t -AT ABOUT HALFTIIR IMOULAJI HAMRICK & CO3, No. 45 Borth Eighth Street. 23. Reductions fur the Holidays. 23. F. SCHT:FALLERMANN'S, NO. 23 NORTH NINTH ST. MY ENTIRE STOCK OF CH 01; Int E.5141 . 1')01/4„ AT AST ONISLANOLN , I: , ,OPEINS REI)(TOt I) 10 k, 75. Prplins, dotibl. , widths, 0 ,, 1r :nYc i l Plain and Plaid Poplins. only *1 i's 3 ilea and Ilwal - ropliu.e.. *l. , CIA)AIIiNO .Tlll4. Aliwool Cloaking of, f 3 tO, all wool Cloaking nt $3. I. buoy, Plain and Mack Closkings In endicta va riety, at 011 FATLY _ _ _ All•woolCru eimeree from e7itec upr.“l., ratortment for _ 31EN AND ROY BROCHI A ND PAIS' 11" SIIAWLB. All.wool Brecht! Long Shawls. 815. 8/1. Paisley $lO Lon; Blanket newt.. 85. SD AWLS AT Dia:AT BARGAINS. GLOVEB AND 110.ilEICIYE1tt [A.M. Cloth Gloves.all.wooLfromMeld. Deward". Kid Gloves. nil - colon'. 81 8 tlont. , Kid Gloves, .sc. LADIES' MEnINII VESTS. $l. • L*l)lEB' MERINO I.loBk. Skating flora. all styles and colors. Beat Calicoes in the market, I 2 O. Heavy yard.% lie Muslin. 1335 e. BLEACHED AND lON Every width and quality, at the lowest market mites. BARGAINS IN 'FABLE LINENS. • • . BARGAINS IN NAPKINS. BARGAIES LN 7 0 WE.LB, LIANDIikatCHIEFS, F. SCHUELLERMANN, d r i 9 7 23 N. NINTH ST. USEFUL PRESENTS Very Low rriees. Fine Ernbroidered Piano Covers, at 11, 16 and 16 dollars. Fine Embroidered Lae. Curtains, at 10, 15 and 20 &man' per war. Fine Marseiiifs at EN 8 and 10 dollars. Fine Premium and Medd Blankets, at 5. 8 and 12 dollars. Fine Dbl. Damask "(able Clothe, 3,4, 6. band 8 yardi long. with Napkins to match, at Reduced Prices. Fine Fringed and Bor'd Damask Towels at n, IP, a and 15 dollnra per dozen. Fine Hemstitched and Emb'd Hdkfs., for Ladle& Gentlemen and Youth. Fine French Corded Border ditto. Sheppard, Van Harlingen & Arrison, No. 1008 Chestnut Street. de3l-7trp PRICE & WOOD, N. W. cur. Eighth and Filbert, HAVE JUST OPENED Several lots of Goods suitable fa i r HOLIDAY PRESENTS Glove Boxes, Pencil Foxes, Work Boxee,Writing Desks, Cigar Stands, Viatcb Stands, Mated Boxes, Tool dots' dr., fie. Velvet and Redid Wire Porte Monnaies, Morocco Porte illonualee, 25. 28, 31, 78, 50, 65, 76. 85 and $L Fine Extracts and Colognes. Bargalni. in Ladle'', and (lents' lildkfm.' Ladies , ' Hein Stitch tidth., 45c.. 21e.,49c.,5)c., 03Me and Ific. Ladies'' rocked Ildkfs., all linen, M. 40, 45, 50, tZe. and 15 cents (Suite , Bun Stitch and Colored Border Lldkre. Lure Border lidkrs, 37'F., O. 75.80 c.. Si 25. rA). SI 75, abd $2 25. • " ;Misses' lito,Stitch iidkrs. Ladies' kind Gent& Cloth Gloves. Ladle s, aud tienth' Kid ud Cloth Gloves, lined. and Boys,t loth Cliov, a. bargains in all.ivool and Boteet Flannel& Ileavy shaker Flunntls. Bret makes Cantru Flannels, Bleached and Brown Mushrui end I %%Indies. PRICE & WOOD, N. W. Corner Eighth and Filbert. UMBRELLAS! tFOR i"" PRESENTS.. SILK, ALPACA AND GINGPIANI UMTIRELLAS, With Ivory, Partridge, Bamboo And New Style. Carved Mandles FOR BALE BY WILLIAM A DROWN & CO., 240 MARKET STREET. de3l lit4p /PANNED FRUIT, VEGETABLES,dirt.--I.OOO . GASES (real Conned Peaches; 6UU ens. fre.lb Canned Pine 'Applee ;Ste) ranee tree!), Pine Apple., In glow LOOO Cl//504 Green Corn and Green Peae ; email (rub Minns, in cane; SOO caret+ treeb Green (*ogee I GOO canes Cherries, in eyrup; 600 easel , Blarkbertiee, in Byron; 500 oases Straw. berries, Jit syrup; bOO eases froth Peors, in eyrupia,Oteblesea Ca mien Tomatoes: 500 ewes Omura, Lobetere an Claims I goo cases Roast Beef, Mutton. N'eal.;donne, &o. For data by JOSEPH a BUSHIER 45 VO., 108 South Delaware , avenue. DOLLS SECOND EDITION.° TELIEGRAPH. TQ-DAY'S, CABLE NEWS. fly Atlantic Telegraph. Lelmes, December 21st, 11.15 A. M.—Consols 52%. U. S. Flve-twentles, 7211-16. 111nols Cen tral,•B93j.• . Brie Railroad, 4931- ' • " LtrsatrooL, Dec. 21st, 11:15 A. M.—Cotton quiet; sales estimated at 10,000, bales. Bread 'stuffs quiet. • Frow•Fortress Monroe. ' Fon:r Moulton, Dec. 19.—The 'steamer Albe _, morle, from New York for, orfolk, has just ar rived at this port with Company G, Ist United -States Artillery, Colonel Henry commanding, on beard, for this place. They-also have about half a dozen musicians, or as the °Ricers call it, a brevet band, with them. The brig Stephen Bishop, which arrived here yesterday from Swan Island, has been ordered. to Wood's Hail, Mass, to discharge her cargo. ' 'Arrived—Schooner Montezuma, Capt. Thilger, • from Bangor, Maine, with a cargo of potatoes fbr -orders. Schooner Frank Frezeh, range league, with lumber for Now'York. Bark St. Jago, from Windsor, NoVa Scotia, with plaster for Baltimore. There OTO a number of coastwise schooners in the Roads for anchorage. The wind hatiabeen fresh all day from the north oast. The brig Eliza and Henrietta, from pa vans, In tallast, has been ordered to Baltimore, , but, has been unable to proceed on account." of head-winds. NEWS BY THE CITBA. I:=1 MEIWO. The InNurrectlon to Yucatan. lI L AvsNA. Dee. thl, 1867.—We have details of the • insurrection that took place"- in blerlda r thenapi till of Yucatan, on the loth inst. Setae ex-impe rialists of Influence managed to a,rouse, the people and the gatrlsons to rise against the local au thorities. Tbe affair, however,.was blood sr ()nil, although Governor Cepeda and his employes had to take flight to Campeche. The rebels proclaimed that they obeyed President Juarez, but objected to (spuds. They made noisy dcuionstrations in front of the American Consulate. Colonel Rios is the new Governor and Villafana the new Commandant,. It was tlimugh these men that order was finally ru st British Nar steamerNiger,:i.locumander Tiger, thirty guns,- was at Vera Cruz MI the lbttt int.t. butt z Uraga has petitioned Congress to be allowed to return to Mexico. The whenaboncs of MartkiterAsmikrtown. Augustin Iturbide de-. Idea eitiiitectleu"'with - thu • empire: Platom tnehez, repnblicaDr had been aasassinatml. het irculatioti of Imperial coin after September nt xt bt rohibited. Diego Alvarez and General Jimuiez bud oven called to the capital on public business.. The resignations of the ministers lid ix en accepted. Counterfeit coin was plenty in the eapind. The American man-of-war Marble /Iced had arrived at Colon*. solriin A ITI EIL ICA. Success of Prude La Peru. Hays.Nh Dee. :).0, 1867. —By the Spanish steamer Barcelona,i Captain San Julian, we have saws from Panama to the'l2th inst. The steamer Payton had arrived at Panama from the West coast ports. President Prado had gained a victory' at Arequipa, and the city was completely surrounded by hit division on the west and General Bustameuto's on the east. Fred() de dcd the surrender of the city within three • , y4s; If refdsed he would take decisive measures. The revelation In the North had been checked. The Chile= Min- Ister to Peru had asked to be relieved. The corporation of 'Valparaiso had taken measures to have more street railroads. Work was progressing rapidly. General Mosquera had ar rived at. Panama on the 'Ala, on the way to Pera. General. Estrada and a body of one hundred men amompauled him. In Bogota the Supreme Court Judges were suspected of complicity In Mosquera's treasons. The Senate, how ever, acquitted them. Congress had re fused to accept General Acosta's resignation of the provisional Presidency, and commuted Mosqucra's banishment to three years. His ruiUistess were acquitted. Gen. Gutierrez had gone to Beyaell. lie had revelled on the State L , gislattare W enstvend the bra preen: Court Judges for 4 ighteen mouths. The Canea State Govern ment had ;been disbanded by the national forces under Payan. HA YTI. 9alttav© Victorious, over .16oCacor. - - .11..vvas.v. Dec. 24.—The news from Hayti is to the 4th inst. President &Wave had repulsed the Cocos. The government W-18 carried ou by Blusson, who was acting ae President during . fialnavr's absence. 'The birch General Utymes ; was cousin.. e' gtueral alarm by measures of con scription. A reign of terror was inaugurated, ,! and the people were concealing themselves. The Piquets, rude savages from the interior, had arrived at the capital. The despotism of Salnave usrs much opposition in the House of Repre sentatives. , The British Consul had asked for protection. MELBOVILSE. A Large Gott _!l,.assiget—Pose!ble Abolt. taws colf Cemititution. HAVANA, Dec. •20, 1867.—Inte1114 . ence has been received from Melbourne dated November 1. A gold nugget weighing five hundred ounces had been found In Sandhurst- The abolition of the Constitution was possible. The Governor asks for .C 600.000 sterling, and will then dissolve the Chambers. Miners were docking to the new digging near Neary's borough. TORS' 0 Privation Among the inhabitants. IIsvANA, Dec. 20.-Intelligence from Tortola to the 13th inst., represents that the people are anffrring greater privations than those of St. Thomas. The dead lie unburied, and a pead lanextwas threatened,which could only be averted by burning the corpses. The inhabitants are al !neat entirely without food. ' The Tortugas are washed away, not Tortola. TRINIDAD AND DEMERARA. The Markets et Trinidad Glutted. HAVANA, Dec. 20, 1807.—Dates from Trinidad to the 23d ult. have been received. Justice Klox had returned. The markets were glutted with ever; thing except codfish. roe weather was fine. Advises of the same date Troia Detnerara state that an Insurrection had broken out In the Interior, but it was suppressed. Shipping was In demand. JAMAICA. Another Earthquake Predicted. HAVANA, December 91), 1867.—Advices from Jamaica to the 12th have been received. Pro fee+or Patebicr prcdlets 144uWer. orthquikelu ST. DOMISGO. Arrival of German Meters at Cares. num'. HAVANA, Dec. 20, 1867.--Advices from St. Do mingo are to the Ist. A corps of Germau valuera had arrived to dig copper at Uarebtabel. SIMI CLAM. Coolies Expected front China. HAVANA, December 20th, 1867. Dates from Surinam to the 18th ultimo report that three hundred coolies were expected from China. IMADOES. Sugar Making Coe DDDDD enred... bread tau. /r btandlutt„ HAVANA, Dec. 20, 1867.--Barb.idoes adviecs to the 25tb ult. report sugar makitur had com menced, and the weather was favorable to agri culture. Oil had been struck, and •one spring gave four barrels daily. Breaglatulfs wer abundant. AttrrootTA. . 3 att.... 14,x !The ,:rll Tux ettrried--Loeses by the u •••" 7 • ' rthqake. • , TIAVANA, Dec. ' 2 1867.—A1161gua dated Of the 23d , he•t. announce that the trayle tax had been relad. A loce of .ClO,OOO was owed by the tarthquak.e. . THE DAILY, EVENING BULLETIN. . -PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, DECE.III3Eit IBp7.77,TBRLF,:S 1014. THE ANGOLA . 11 , 11LROAD • DISASTER. ` DOttille of the Acsidebt by Alalt—SaAl atones and The Buffalo Commereicil AdvMi4er of ThursdaY evening gives a detailed account of the terrible and heart,rendlng calamity < which 'occurred on the Buffalo' nd Erie railroad on Wednesday af ternoon at Angola, about 21 miles west of Buf falo, resulting in the death of at least forty eight persons, and the wounding, mote or less se riously, of over fifty others. The Commercial .4drerllBer says: The most shocking feature of the disaster was the fate of those In the rear ear. Ot course, when. the ear went down the •embankment the stove was overturned, the contents setting fire to the conch, and twenty-thm human beings were liter ally burned alive, while fifteen others were crushed to death. Their cries for succor were truly heart.rending. The car was totally con sumed, but two of all the number insideeseaping. Nene of those who thus perished could he recog nized. The remains were gathered up and re moved to the freight-house. At the little domicil of Frank-E. Griffith, situ ated a short distance from the wend of the dis aster our reporter found Mr, and .Mrs. Bab .coek; of Syracuse, who are. mentioned_ as badly lii,jured. They were on their„ way home from Oil City. They were quite comfortable at two o'clock this morning. W. H. Moore was also here, and was sleeping soundly at the hour above mentioned. Mr. Griffith is apparently an hum ble.. hard-working individual,'•but he And his family very evidently posseas hearts to `feel for the misfortunes Of others, for they are a» kind, attentive and tender to their maimed and'bruthed guests as If they were their own kith and kin. Passing under the railroad to the opposite side of the track—that on which the burned car fell— In company with Dr. Wetmore ' of this city, our reporter visited the residence ofMr.'Josiati South wick, a spacious house, where were Chu. Wood, check agent on the road; Mrs. Chaydyn and her little girl, the latter lying very, law with a.lrac lure at the bate of the ,skull; Missei Maria and Mary Septet, with their fajher in .attendance upon them; Mrs. Laing and two, children ; Mrs.. Fisher and - . her brother-.in-law, A. E. Fisher; W. C. I'attbion, of Oil Creek; IL M. Rub- set, of Franklin, Tenneeeee, and Mrs. Mary Moore, , of Brooklyn. These persons were lying in beds and upon the floor, in almost everyq• room la the house, and not only Mr. Southwick's family, but a ti amber Lsfr the neighbors,.. male and female, who were present, were kirtdly, arid most patiently doing all in their power to assuage their pain and make theitt comfortable, and to assist the physicians. Ottiers. slightly braised, were at difli-rent houses In the 'village. The blackened and charred remains of those perished in the burning car were olieed in large eases—seven of them—and deposited in the freight-house, where the other bodies were lying. Amoug the burned the body of Mr. Stephen Stewart, President of the Oil Creek Railroad, ref Wing at Corry, was recognized. On the re mains of- ono of the passengers in the burned ear were found some cards bearing the name of "Charles E. link, C. E.". Papers were found with the remains of another, bearing the name of "Alex. Brown." A lady's gold watch': Parlialli melted,. was 'round . among 110 I,ealhers- On the back of the (11.9:: were the figures of a man, woman and child. One man who was re moved from the burning ruins after his feet IL id been turned off, was taken to the hotel of Mr. Montgomery, where he died in a short time. Ile did not seem to lie conscious, but frequently mentioned "St. Catherines." ARRIVAL WOI NDED TN Burrm.°. The news of the disaster rapidly spread throughout the- city last evening, and a large truraber of persons congregated at the depot, among them being many who had, or fearful they might have, friends or relatives among the killed or maimed. About 9 o'clock the Cincinnati train arrived at the depot, bringing a - number of wounded, some of whom were conveyed to the National Hotel, some to the Tufft House, and somelo the General Hospital—and all received prompt attention and such assistance as it was possible for the physicians to render. About two thousandpeople assembled at the Central depot this morning at least an hour previous to tbe arrival of the Erie aecommoda-; Lion train due at 10.10. Capt. .Nicholson ' was present with a squad of poll amen, and at the approach of the train, on which were expected the dead and some of the wounded, the officers clewed the depot of the crowd, and admirable order was preserved by all hands. Coroner Rich ards came down on the train and superintended the removal of the Collins to the old 'Soldiers' Home, nearly oppo4te the main entrance to the depot. A largo number of people lined the walks while tin, bodies were being carried out of the de pet, and a most respectful silence was preserved. The dead--thirty-nine of them—were borne into the Home and the eases placed in a row on the Boor, where they will remain. Shortly before 1 o'clock a special train, con sisting of one sleeping-car, in which were wounded, arrived. On the arrival of this, as on that of the other trains, there was a largo, ..con course of people at the depot, and a force of po licemen was necessary to keep the depot clear., The wounded were comfortably plieW on mit tresses, and were attended by Dm Wetmore and Johnson. They were removed to the National Hotel, where they will receive such treatment as the hest medical skill can give them. Ttiere are still retaining at An.gola ten of the wounded and two children, unhurt; all of whom will be brought to the city to-morrow. , FBll►'tl IEW YORK.* NEW Tom:, December 21. , - r -The representation of the "Devil's Auction," at the academy of Music has come to a sudden, and, to the pub lic, a very unexpected termination. The last exhibition was given on Friday evening, the 18th instant, and yesterday the machinery and properties were -removed from the Academy building, and left in the street. The peacocks, angels' wings, and other stage trumpery were dug out of the snow last evening, and depoeita_ in the new Tammany Hall. Pecuniary difficul ties are sail to have caused the collapse. The investigation proceeds relative to Collec tor Shook's seizures, and enough has been de veloped to prove that, for the advantage of the Revenue, the benefit of legitimate importers, and the protection of the people from the Imposition of a spurious compound, the seizures were not made a day too soon. ' No meeting of the Me tropolitan Board was held yesterday, bat many interested dealers congregated in the Board's room, in anticipation of one. Dr. J. G. Holland_ (Timothy 'fftcomb) lectunad last evening upon "he Woman Question." He thought that marriage rather than suffrage is the panacea for the grievances of women. The false pride which forced American girls to seek the workshop and factory was deprecated, and the lecturer hoped that the time might soon return when the offices of cook and chambermaid might be raised to their true dignity. At an adjourned meeting of the National Junior Base Ball Association last evening, thirty clubs were represented. The treasurer's report showed a surplus of $2OO. The Secretary reported an ad dition of 16 clubs, making altogether 141. The Sons of New England will commemorate on Monday the landing of thaTilgrims by a din ner at Delmonico's. THE COURTS. Nisi Pities—Justice Sharawood.—Mary Hogm and-others vs. Samuel K. :Ashton and- others. The plaintiffs in this case were. depositors with the National Safety Insurance and Trust Coln pany, and the defendants were•the Directors in said Company. The bill of coniplaint designed to test the personal liability of the. defendants as Directors, set forth that the Corn pink:lBllle : were induced to ''' deposit in the company. by reason of advertisements which promised to pay gold and silver on de mand, with five iier cent. interest. The com pany commenced operationt in 1860, with a nominal capital of $250,000, consist!tig ,of 5,000 shares. - of fifty dollars each. The officers and directors, in.violation of the acts of Assembly, began the discount and purchase of bills tit hiahly 'usurious rates. The company was 'thus fairly embarked in a business entirely pro hibittd by its charter, and which no: only en dangered the safety . Of, . depositors, but showedg the. false idea Twhich the offic•are and ditcetors had of the mode of conducting such an institution." The hitt then sets forth the finan cial operations orthe company, with allegations of fraud, Scc., and the fact of an assigninent, and the'bill prays th it the defendants may he com pelled, by the decree of the Court, - to mike goal to each and every one of tha orators, and salt other depositors as may .becoate parties' to, the. suit, the moneys by theurrispeetively depositUd in said institution and not drawn therefrom, with lawful interest: . . The case was, under argttmetit this morning , the defeedants plittlng , answer, Rohn) of ' , them denying participatioti in the atf,Lirs the company, ltui othere pleading. the statute , Of QunuTeit ESSIONS--Judeo Bre wster . AQtee. dikposillg of a timber of, writs of '4,ilkss dOrpt4l capes, tho case Nieeser,:. convicted of libel, was taken up a the motion ,for a no* t t i,tl. lt, was ctennienced at 12 o'clock; and trots tinder argument whou our rupert cwased:, 4 Ineldtcnts. (Special Despatch le the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.] WAsiirsGTOY, Dec. 21.--Severai hundred cra plopis about the Capitol have not received any pay for the last four months, owing to the fact that the appropriation ran out. Many of their fatnilles are reduced to great destitution. :" The Deficiency Bill, defeated in the House yes terday, , contained an appropriation , for, These, men, and Mr. Washburn°, who had, charge of the bill in the absence of Mr. Stevens, ap pealed to the House to pass it, nn , the ground that possibly somoOf the families of these parties were "starving. • • The House was in bad humor because the Se nate cut cif the paper and stationery perqui sites, and while the members' were afraid to record Themselves against retrenchment, they, avenged themselves by disagieeing to -the 80,- nate amendment to pay employds, and thus virtually defeated the other clause.euttinedown The allowances for stationer}. It was notorioul; that many members who have heretofore been londest in their demands for retienehmept voted yesterday with, those opposed to discontinuing the stationery perquisites. , 'Special De:match to the Philadelphia Evening Bunetin.) IV.,snugGToN. Dec. 21.—Through mismanage ment and an Inordinate desire to get home; Congress has left several impoytatit subjects of legislation In a disordered and half-finished con dition. The bill repealing the tax on cotton, which the House has already passed, and which the Senate has discussed to little purpose daring the past week, is still pending in the latter body. It is the opinion of parties well acquainted with the merits of the case that the failure -of- Congress to act upon this measure before the first Of the new year - will be productive of great mischief to the cotton interest, and that the delay will cause a light chip next year. Planters are de sirous to know precisely what Congress will do before they make their- contracts for the new year, and numerous letters and petitions, praying for llnmediate and decisive ac tion of one kind or another, have been received by Senators and members during the,past week. Several Senators had pre pared long speeches on the subject while the bill was before the House, and it could not be passed until oach Senator had unburdened his mind. This is really the true cause Qf the delay. [Special De, , patch ti the Philadelphia Vyening Bulletin.] WASIMOTON, Dec. 21.—The Presi.;,ent is said to have remarked, concerning the failure of the bill striking the word "white" out of tho laws of this District, that the members of Con gress were more anxious to adjourn than to carry out their professions lor the, rights of the negro, and as it was known that ho Intended to veto it, the defeat of the bill was their own fault, not his. They Anew when they aPpointed the time of the recess that the ten days authorized by the Constitution would not expire until Monday next, and he alleges that the pressure of public business pre ventcd him from preparing a veto at an earlier day. Even had the veto been sent in yesterday, the bill would have failed had the Democrats pressed the matter to a vote, and it is known that they intended to do so, as the Republicans did not have two-thirds in the Senate any time during the day. ' I.°Non's. December 21, 1.20 P. M.—Consols for money, 92-34;. U. B. Fivt-tmeuties. Illinois Central Die Railroad.. The market closes quiet. LIVERPOOL, Dec. 21, 1.20 P. Iti.—The cotton market Is dull: The sales will be about 10,000 bales. Upland middling, 7 :.16d; Orleans mid dling, 7 9.1. Gd. • Provisions.—Lard, 495. 9d. Beef 112 s. for winter cured prime mess. Pork 675. 6d. fo r prime Eastern mess. Cheese, 525. for fine. Bacon, 40s. 6d. for Cumberland cut. Produce—Refined Petroleum has declined la. Other articles unchanged. Bread stuffs arc unchanged. Corn, 16s. for mixed Western. ' Wheat, 13s. 2d, for white Cali fornia, and 13s. 7d. for Milwaukee red. Barley, ss. 3d. Oats, 3s. Bd. Peas, 4tis. dd. for Cana dian. licrpoN, Dec. 21, 1.20 P. M.—The markets are unchanged. Whale oil, £B9; sperm oil, £112; linsad oil, $37; linseed cakes, £ll for thin; oblong. ANTWERP, Dec. 21, 1.20 P. M.—Petroleum, for standard white. CITY limnAmTv.—The number of interments in the city for the week ending . at noon to-day, was 262, against 252 the same period last year. Of the whole number, 139 were adults, and 123 children-65 being under one year of age; 131 were males; 128 females; 62 boys, and 61 girls. The greatest number of deaths occurred in the Fifteenth Ward, being 17; and the smallest num ber in the Thirteenth Ward, where only 4 were reported. The principal causes of death were.: croup, 7; congestion of the brain, 7; cholera, 2; con stimption, 44;' convulsions, 13; disease of the heart, 8; debility, 11; typhoid fever, 7; . ball mu tilation of the brain, 10; inflammation e the lungs, 23; murder, '2; old age, 9; and palsY, A THAW.—The weather to-day is very mode rate, and the 81:10W is rapidly disappearing:. Tne sin ets and sidewalks are extremely slushy. and the militia(' Is anything but, pleasant—Ws highly important that the gutters should be opened. If an overflow of cellars and other inconveniences are to be avoided, and ourcitizens should see that the matter Is promptly attended to. Tui GRANT-STANTON LtiTTEß.—Tile National tnion Club bee had printed; in flue style, the . . private letter`of General Grant, - In reference to Ow removal of Secretary Stanton. for general .distribution. An excellent portrait of General Grant is on the same paper. Copies can be had at the Club House, No. 1.1.0.5 Chestnut street. Dearing . , the sole iurvivor of the fondly who were butchered by Probst In the First Ward, while playlmt ou the lee In the 1 ":"hooll'ard at Fortieth strk,et and: L'u.rteaster avenue; fell and bud his lee broken, Fligit.24clAL and 001181,ERCIAL. The Philadelphia itioneit Market. 8,1038 at the. etdludolphis Stock Sxclulaire. , rum BOAPT). s3ooolsl Penne It e t ; 88 Ilt 1F enrol 13k 2dlro 54 WO city or , new e&p 09 %1 2000 Read 8a X7O 9061100 oh ' do etiwn 47%94 sth Acad 3110010 7o • ' etirwssa IMARDB. , ittni ) 411 tY,Pts 04P.,90 /1 4h Penns R ; W N 2500 N T ina if di 88 120 el) do * •G Ai 2000 l'enn H 2 mr. 94 1200 eh ?nil Ono •tro2 24 11 1100 Bch •`. 1 '. 0 0 . 02 I 20 eh bell Vol •, 01',{. 0 # • Ili:.11D-....g...1),ITI..QN:1 BY __TELEGRAPH. FROM WASHIN4TON. ----- THE - DELAYED; 'LEGISLATION. .i11igitt.',.....(w..yi1i0.::0fT014,1 . ...,T.AN. THE BAD EFIPEOT OF ,DELAY. Senators Want to Make Speeches. Thelliipiented Deficioney . Fro Is into The President's Veto. By At'suite telegraph. CITY BULLETIN. ! ' .Ri; t l9N ll ,llo.ollh , I WO City We itteit , ai, 98 ; 5-, 45 Bh, Leh 'Hey etk De OW tit* do do WY • WO etiliich Nov prof , . •22}S 7 ' oh COP theeirOhil , , 7 t 4 P.'l Div l4 .' ' . I' . - t Pail? .9 8 ' • . ..,.• . . •'. I ~ . . g;11) Titer° was more doing in Bank Shades. Pataenger a n ito,oaye were atrong at our last quotation,. re vom. le Haven at /Brother, N 0 ,40 South Third .glreet , make the following onotetfona of the rates of exchange, ta.44,, at 1 P. American Gold, 123;,;(g13[1....;; i 28012.03.11. S. 6'll of 11381..11V;i4,11l,'‘l do. IBdI, 105!,;2} 108.".;:, do. VW, 793!,;(4105‘.“ de. 1865, 'old. 105, k i.@ittl',i; do: 184. now, /083.6_tb3'i :I Go. WV. 108,.®108N; U. 8. oval. Temfortlea. 101;',V01?o ; do. 7 810". Jtute. 1, 0 45,;20 1.04.",;; do. JulyactisailAo434; 4on2pound Intereat Nptes— ,Jupe.lBB4. IMO; July., 1864, 18.4t1; Auguat, 1841,10.40; 06. tober, 1801, 19.40; Decelnher, 510i.1865, 170173,f;" Aukunt, 18M.• 163,16 . 516;n goilAtimboi• 1865 . ~ ..treit October, INA 11%Cibl5r". ' • SATI>aoAv, Dec. 21.--Tkeareadstuffs market Ic charism terized by its dullness semen as its firmness. The receipt of k lour small. bnt the demand Is extremely_ limited, being confined to the higher grades for the supply of the home - trade. bales of MO barrels' . good Nprthwcsf;:extra fainfirat *le - 75i ,0 811 - ticibirrel; - I'ennifylvaniti anal/ie do. do., at $lO 001(14112 254 fancy lots at a 1.3 75(a14 : extras at 250 t $9 IS, and superfine 'at 2511 a 26. Rye Flour Is selling at y 6 i0.10:38 625'. In Corn Meal nothingiloing .. A 0 . cluotaii ol l B . The offerings of Wtiiiat continue small, and prime lots command fall rates, but pooklots can only be' eel& at Lola, ,tively.low figures; small sales of good and Prime Western ar.d 1 enns3 Irania Bed at $2 firs?*2 55. Rye commands i1i1 ; 7560131 78 for Btate. Corn is very guletc.thirc Ic LOt ,much coaling forward, and not much iriinted; small sales' of old yeflow at fill 4103514.7• new' do. at ill' lea 3 • $1 20, and 12.060 Ifushels new mixed WeStetil, in the ele. - valor at itl Outs are held firmly, and further Ralf% 01 %NO bushels Pennsylvania were reverted at Ifikego cents, We latter figure an advance of 2. cents hlt hol. ho ' change to Barley. 1,00) bushels New York Barley Malt sold at $1 75. The gold -Market continued. 'steady, 'optwith "ritanr ipg the oho is of a karge majority of the bred:era and ether profer.ionat epeculatont' to produce ;It 'further de 'cline. 'I he extreme range wax irom 134;.;. to witft the chorine troneactions prior to the adiournn tont a[1:13!,. at which price small lore trexe afterwarde offered. 'Phere Was n - fu - irk borrowing- - denrand for coin; and Inane were-- modefre:of. interest , and At- 1ff12.3 It cent.. or. carrying. 77 g_grp e clearing., r mounted to., iffMt:lls,o9l,the g.old bar lances fO . ftti.itier2, and the currency. toalancri )#l - .113;454; It Is gene: ails: accepted ae 'certain that the denote will parr th.- Anti-Ccntrae.ian 081. which has already pi...aert the Howe of Repreaentatires by a largo. majority and which the denote Committee - have reported without a • in any event enable him In contract either in the present month, or January even. if lie were not unwilling to ex. ereise hie power to:eurtail .the circulation without the outwore of Co With the enspn strengthen ontraction confidence in valnee will gradually trade will recover from its' prolonged depiension, and the general prosperity of the country will revive. The circulating medium will be ; more. actively employed, and tide of itself will contribute to : tbe - practical ease of the, 'money , market by inntwing the full use of all tbe currency outstanding. whereas in times of eouht and distrust money is hoarded for want of safe -and profitable employment The New Year will ..open on a brighter prospect all round. and an active. .and buoyant npeculation on the -Stock Exchange may be re garded an an inevitable accompaniment •of thin change for the better in financial and commercial affairs. Money is in.abundant supply at elk per cent. to tint _clam *tack houses; but loans are still made here and there on miscellat covet collaterals at seven per cent. The banks • and 3 ,, Ivate lenders find it difficult to keep their funds fully employed in adyances to the Stock. Exchange, and therefore commercial pimerof the beat grade is nibre in de mand OD the etheet at 711®13 percept. Of this the amount is limited, while the second and inferior grade.. aro super abluidant Tbobanka are still feeling the effect of the Sub. i reasury disb..reement in payment of the interest oh the June seven-thirties and the principal and interest of the December compound notes. The payrneut of the dividends nee en theist of January - trill result in plethora of idle tapital, and there is no ,doubt that much of ti to will sr ek emploment in the purchase of envern ment and other eceurities, thereby tending to stimulate the present upward moNement in prices. . '1 he iliehmend L'aueirethaiyn: , we learn from (s'eneral Rogers, the'Second Auditor of flu State, that on Saturday tan he forwarded to Me-.m. Baring 13 -ethers A: Co., I ondon, sterling to the amount of over iritt.ooo. topsytheinteres; on the sterling debt of the State, due andpayable in Conlon ou the Int of January, Iteks TheNormieh neon says:. • At a recent meeting of the Directors of the 'Midland Railroad, held in Neu York, a resolution was adopted ti of the wimle lino under contractum noon .as otherou of the toWns Lebaeon, Sydney, and one k COM pleted. and it stated thit from Oswego to Oneida,, and from Norwich to Sydney, the work will be let as noon as maps can be made of the censtruetion survey ' ' • The, San Francisco Cimular of Noy. M received y overland mail, remelt , : Ibe money market romaine unchanged, rated rul t '1 lied Ps per met per month for call loans on g-sodtt cral, end le to per annum on real estate ateuri an. Money continues to be Quite an abandant tel at the date of our last isnue. but is itill.treater dniuteid. "The market well nupplied with gold bare, 'nn the, rate at whic they are sold averages 880 for fair, grades.. Silver bars are not so tlentiful; sake are affeeted ot about par for mend iota. Mexidauslailairatind ready melee .t. 434 ter cent premium; a t quote the range at. 9,4re15. The Coatinentsl, from Alea•eapta rt., placed a considerable-amount of Mexican 'dollars upon the Market." . • The Chi Cage Rev itblitalii of Vs ednenday earn:; "Mena: Matterallll/Bili in. about the'same situation as noticed in our last issue. The demand fur currency is very 'brlek: both on local and interior account and we quote the loan mark. , close and stringent at 10 per cent '1 he supply of Lantern exchange is itifideVlitte to Meet the demand. and most of the banks are obippiva currency. Counter rates were firm at par buying, and le premium selling. Between banks sales were made at :31.1 cents pre- - 171111130 from to.day's Times.] Due. 20.--Our informatton from Waihingten, es well as the temper of the debated in the Contrrexmonat Globe. renders it almost certain that the appropriation of 97,20 - -000 ih Goid to connumato the treaty with Russia for the nerchase of Alaska, (hleslan America)w not be granted for some time to come. and ,May be defeated in the House of Reoresentattiemaltosether at the present sm itten. unless the Senate ahead suemuarily reject the treaty ulth Denmark for the acquisition of St. Thomas'. This might add sufficient Strength to the other treaty in the BOUPO, to carry the vote of atmropriation, but chiefly, if not solely, for the reason-that the Russian Territory on the American side of the Pacific has already bean stamen dered to the United States. • ' • atm market tor money continues atiady. The Stock! Brokers borrowed to-day,at U /9 cent., as the rule r with the exceptions at 7 $ cent.. The Bank movement is run ning easy, and most of the National Banks are already heavy for the Jab fiery Quarterly Statement. The very heavy aunts to he disbursed this season in the way of the New Year Dividends on the National. State and hallway seem Wee • will bring a large amount of money into the Street and to the Stock , Ex change foe, reinvestment . . The .Public 'Funds will, as usual, be the first attraction, and al , (fatly the geld bearing 6.20 a and 10.40 s feel the Influence, by anticipation. of this demand. There was a further improvement in this de rstirtment of the Exchange tr-day. The 0 per rents of t; the January and July 6-20.4 of 1966-07 the May. and overran). 6-2e9 of 1862-64-s5, and the 10-40 years 6 Per cot. March and Septeniber intereet, were all in request. The Illinois Central and the Michigan Central Comps, nice have each declartd their usual half yearly! Divi dends of 6 per cent. for January. Thu 1). Maw and Sioux City Company declare 7 per cent, as a yearly Divt. deed on theit preference Shares. The Chicas-,aud North We 4. Company, havo post..oned all .Dividends, on the l'nfcrred end Common Stocks, until the May, meeting of the *Board of Directors. This action, it be said, is deemed hest by the loading frienda of the road in this city, for Roth proprie tary intereits , and tome of them are buying the "referred Edo , k to.day at . advaucleg mires, on the rosult of the conferences of the Board last week and thi-, besides • holding en to their recently acquired heavy interest In they Common Stock. Another rumor to that the Directors of, this eemPalty and the. 11 restore of the lit. Paul Comm. pans are about to be brought into friendly accord, the result of which may be to an•ot the further comtructlon of competng branches...recently .threatened by both par- The Open Board of. Brokers, which for the past two years have used the Long itoom of the Stock Exchange as a public halt tor themselves and, their customem, have coml. dtutto open a Public Room of their own under the Cold Room.. 'rickets may be hail of W. M. Parks & .1k o. 19 Broad street, • . • Time I.lttest. Iteports by Telegraph. (Ihlettgo mitt Ruck tle:taing, P 4; thluton t• oittpuny;4ll'4; 11-E (ley( la nd and 1 °ludo, 10271 Clovelaud ;tud l'itt;bnt t l'itt.dutrAh Port. Wnyitv, ; 31 ichit au Venirul, 112'1; ; loutheru,Ul),.; Ndw, Yuri( 0111;11, 117,4.1'; 1411unin 1 - eidr6l, 1311's ; • tAval4nritutd I•roserred,l24; 3114011r' tiixee. liadxon Iti4ur. Ift; U. 1.3.•1 4 19;"1u 1882, 101 1 4; ;in.. D.3#, lUrei; du.,;1863. lot .; '1 en•E'ortitl , .• 101 N; Noveu:l'hirtien, ;.(11;ta 1 3014. /83Wt.MOTICY. TUr cent ; Earlitie.tio! L ;. • 1. ; ottr in quiet, nt '.l;lour ag; ROOO tilde ',old; State ed. $8 .18g:ell) US; t -1110. if PU(*.slll; Went..ru. 44.! , ..1)11; 4 60 ; nittlie , u. 111;•ta121.1 60; Unliforni 1. ill 25 9. Wlwat ;lull. • Cori; dull Oat 11 /30,101 luau 8%1(1f,1, Art:la -ern 'at linrlty•ll.rm: 2,40111)unh;10100112. , dso. 1; St *1 1551.41 to , lietf Vol* .riaszlerr. $2O 7r. .id . • . PALI /141011.1. flee, 21.- On' ton dolt and m 111141341 11; 10. nod 11$1ChtitIgi . d. td'hunt dull enulPta rertlictiu* opt Tittiottv, nondu 31/ - unutteeed: t),ra act tae , $l. tYl5$ 1 2.$ eltl:rp, , itto,.tow.:r. 4t $1 35F....51 25.• teitt at ,aaseoa bull at $1 0.)4 $1 io ~A•rteleona t at ..... 4tekr,linugut.- • , ' • §TATE b'T' Tlll3 TB EftleerMNTEß TIME; D. 17 ,1 4' • ::,711 - 11.13171 , LTTM,ATIT10E. 10 A. M... 41 deg; ; 19 deg, Weather clohdy" Wlt d NtYtheltet. ' • • , • .ItEdERVED TA A1t111138.--2011.1fatl RTINIU P,Tamtirimla. In ..sutash and fur tittle by . D. (14).. 198 1140111 Delaware velum . • 'Pttlt;Anra.catA, Saticrday. Dec:2l.-The tnoitey market - was characterised by Increased 64tet, and the deposits at; ,the Ambit ore rantdlY aocumulatittg. The notes for tunra lbana ttreis;lq,e tlr cent...and for.good elan; avers 13;s 10 . • The burfnere at the Fltactc hoard " Was .renirokably lighti but there was a firm feeling al I. claqaet eneuri, ties, .Government Loan, were steady at yesterday:el quo. Cations.. ;Stare Loans were Unchanged, 'City Loans were . firm at VP for new and fls for o aidUerilliootos • Reading Railroad cloned at 47.41.rin inereaseei Penn wrlvarttlaßailrond shareit, nava:need rind Philadelphia and RIM Railroad,* 3s; 1.27 was bid for Camden and Amboy Railroad: IN for Mino 1.1111 Railread; 2d!,i. for Sehnylkill Railroad; XI for. North. Pennsylvania 'Railroad; for Lehigh Valley Railroad; Mt..{ for Cittacefssa Railroad Preferred, and' 42!.f fror' Northern . Central Railroad.' 440081 Btocke aro nagloeted. Lehigh Navigation closed nt gol.f ; richlk ill Navigation preferred at`2l . —the coin rnon stock at 13; Susquehanna, at 12, and o 3 fur Delaware . Smjtla,, Randolph 4 Co,. /Liam, Id South. ? hied street. '4Ootto 11 o'clock, as follows: Bold. Uultnd States 1€ . 031, 1125ja United 13tatea 5.110'a. 10Y.,41149:',;: s:2o's Irs34. g1(6 , ,; sahrleoskleaslOsiac , s: 5410'5, July, 1881,108 U ®IOBN ; United States IN'lo , lo'o, 101,%@101:1.': United States 7-30'a.241 series, 1041 10.17.:: &I wine, nyeTi®lo4; l le, Colnlionude. Deaem• her, 180, 119;4 bid. . . Philadelphia Produce Iflarket. The New orkohrey I . l.ftrket. [From To4ars . - - distentlec voice; but; notwihrstandirts, the sooner the tier ate tikes artion upon the bill the better. A east:en :4oD of contraction los become necessary to the public welfare. oud this Important fact is recognized in both hronches of Congress. There is consequently no excuse forclelay: bat it la now so near the time of rile adjorra. , merit that the debate on the measure will doubtless be . . postponed until after the holidays, when it Siffield,and probsbly will, be taken "up immediately and passed. Melina bile. it Is satisfactory to learn officially that. 31r. JlcCulloch a ill not proceed further with his contraction policy pending the' ffinal action of Congrrse. A letter from-. him to fdr.• Sherman, the Chairman of the Finance Committee.. was read -in the Senate. yes terday to this effect, coupled with the statement that the. condition of the tisanes would not .FOURTjt.:E:DITIO:N W 4:04.-1.-:..:.1.P-',Pls-,- ORDNANCE INVESTIGATION. FRAUDS UPON THE 00ViliNMECNT. • Chris , inirt,s HolicJaya,. WASHINGTON EVACITATHI). The Whisky Ring Gono HOMO, Payment of .Soldiers'' , THE LATE,RAILRoAD TRAGEDY. IDENTIFICATION OF ionlzti. The,. futeral ot Rear-Admiral Palmer. The Ordnance In restitution* (Special Deep/doh to the Philadelphia. Evening Dullethx.] :Wssinsottlx, Dec., M.—:-The Bub Committee on Ordnance as In' to-day, examining witnesses the , subject 'Of frauds in contracts for projectiles during the war. The testimony. becomes emote• ' interest-, lag as the committee progresses, and 1 . when its libel's shall Italie completedbeen the country will have a new chapter on frauds'practieed upon the Government during,thn rebellion by Its own , • The Christnias Utipecial Despatch to the' Philadelphia EvOnltig Culletlo.) WASIIINGTO*. Dee. 2.1.--Wlth the exceptlen of 'the roembereanit,Senafore who hitve their fami ne!' nere s !tilid - have takelt residences for' the wig- - ter, there arc sehreely'hity Cengresathett in tenni._ Beverhi Who remained over in enter to trahritet seine hushiess with -the . departments lea' e for home to-day.' - lite Whisky (§pecial Deena, eh. to the P,l1 4 adolphis, Evening Dec: 21.—The whisk:y rim va rated Washington during yesterday and. to-day, 1, •it ,being understoe.d among its members that a recess, in order, to recuperate their wasted en ! orgies made in behalf of their pcor 'cause, would • be had:untiPthe early part of January. at which time nil the members are expected to be on hand promptly, to renew their deniand In Congress for. legislation, and on the President for the re . moval of Commissioner Rollins. The Payment Of Soldiery?, liOuntles. iSpecial Derputch to tho Philadelphia . Eveniug ihiliettua sitz oroN,-Dec;.2,1. ,, -The Select-Committee appointed by Congress.to ascertain the deLly in the payment of soldiers' bounties report that it arises principally •from the want of sufficient clerical force in .the office of the Second Auditor of the 'Treasury Department, where such ac counts are settled. _The committee recommends the_employment of twenty-five additional clerks, and also the issuing of duplitate bounty war rants, so that when the originals are lost from any einise, the soldiers will not suffer delay until new ones can be made 'out. The bill will, pro bably bereported e embodying these'rec'ommenda tlons. Ai usual, much of the delay has been umr necessary, and resulted entirely from the inevi= table windings of "red tat)e.” • The - Angola Railroad Illasgacre. Bumto, Dec. 21.—E. 11:Mattison, of Auburn; N. Y., supposed to have been burned to death at the recent sad railroad accident, and . whosO charred skeleton, it, has been stated, was recog•• nized by a ring Orr his Anger, marked . E: L., Is not dead, ,but went through here on the night train of Ike 17th Inst., add arrived at Albion N' • • Y., next morning,alive and well. A dead body, which hitherto had,be-en thought to be that of Norman Welds, was identified thls morning as Norman Nichols, whose place of-re sidence is unknown. Eighteen charred sn'Eletons still remain nnre coanized. Great preparations hay° beeumade for the pub lic funeral over the remains of the victims to morrow afternoon. All the clergymen of this city and the choirs of the different churcheh will assemble at Central depot to participate, in the solemn' services.' The 'gayer and" members of the city council of Buffalo will, act as pall bearers, • , • kuneral the Late Admiral Palmer. .., Nem Yomi, December 21.—" The funeral Of the law Bear .3.dmiral damns B. l Palltilar j whose re mains'werc brought beam by States steamship Buisquebanna; tank place to-d.ty from ,tbe Comniandanq'hobse at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. =Marge number of distinguished naval and military officers attended. The funeral ser vict a were performed by the Rev. Dr. Francis Vinton, of Trinity Church, New York. From Vi'ashinalon. WASIEUNGTON, Dec. 21.—J. P. Sullivan, Esq., arrived yesterday from Louisiana, and is under stood to be preparing for argument a test case tp be beard In the Supreme Court, which will involve all the issues raised by, reason of military orders issued in the South since 1861. Eminent connsti from both North and South are In conimnbication with him, and the issues will be thoroughly examined. Maxine Intelligetace. BOhTO4, Dec. 21 1 —The brig Meteor, Capt. Davison, for Boston : before reported ashore at Orleans, Mass., vas got off this morning after thmwing overheard her deck load. She is now lying off shore three miles north of Chatham light, with her rudder unhung. She will be towed to ""Boston • - The schooner Jnlia and Elizabeth.from Port Johnson for Restos], which dragged ashore on Chappequidic Point, was got off on the lath inst., by the U. 8. steamer fing,h McCulloch. The Jolla and Elizabeth is leaking badly, and will discharge at Edgartown for repairs. 3ir.w Yens - . Dee. 21.--The steamship Arizona, front Act.lawall. has arrived. • lbw Tons, Dec: 21.--A;rrived—The steamship WO- LAC'. CURTAINS UPHOLSTERY GOODS OF ALL DESCRIPTION'S. ititention is specially asked to the quality of the Goods offered. t Being selected , personally of the best Manu: facdurers in the foroign markets, pur chasers may rely on getting articles of prime quality and at only one profit on iirsl cast, there being 'no intermediate p r ofit to pay. - . 1 . :.:.K 'N'ir:ALßAysx, ; io*re mtLL, . , vat iju ttoz o ix att z ? / . 710 Chesprint Gann . tOt .4.7t, 6 • 13 1( - I ^9 l "var° ivezu.,* • °3:06 FlFTN7Z, , ':Eilf.. , _tiiirYN LATEST nob!' grAginTlGtoitri, e Republfea# ''Sat,(On4r.',;o.o,oolools Complaints of thoi, THE TRE A SURY ,REP4H'Mqr• Iftra , ,lnteprelarteran litaStersitit Coravoritiont tSpechtt peartateh to the PhilioOphiki EveahntAtallefito.l. Nifsentstarox, Dee. 01.--Mhu Southern *dm& now here are making lend emnplainteabegit the action of the' ,Republlean EtreettiveCOMmktee in fixing the data the meeting Of4iffer;rintil dential , Nominating ' Convention • "so"early. They say - there' ' was a in tention ~ ripen the 'flat of *di); ' 6m mittez -to shut , eittt,; ftbm the Convention all the &legations from the Southern &Meagan der the impression that thalf mould not vote for Grant for Preelcient. The Southernmen sit the Committee, which s wan'orrOngftin' favoi of Grant, fixed the datifiol4 aLtime when they thought the sMitiloF,iegofe4 yppid Pet be represented in POtigrees fiiitrApkiAl that the States not , represented :le 6,Ougreek guinald have no delegates in the , ConVentionwittlythe matter now stands. the, Seuthetti - 4thiteraletisay they' will be left Out in the'cold:and they to hold a sepiitate Conventiohj in order " t: 403x press tht4i. yrFreolicp Altilp;; date. A majority oS,themi , ,„lll9ll 1404km/or of tint4 , ' liVdltisYri;vlt,' 'ff'tticifottar, cur rency' printed for the week, $139,5(10: 10. SliiiiPed to the ASBllitautiTre6.surcr eft New Yetrit, l 2W.lo,- 000; do: do. Chariest° ,n 1 tO $9.2`4;60 , 1. : * 7l l- dtat hip ed,11503,- 601-1 Small noted seat to At'silltantlyager at Charleston, $16,006; securities held for' . u luting notes a $341,102,730; du. deposits of vtiblie moneys, ea‘,816,030; total, 5378.920,700. ' National Bank earn ney hi5t:144145,90i Vital issue to date, , $305,930.:511•. Chrireneytetart(ed, i , 5,600,6118; in actual eirculation i clb299,B:l9Ml6; iractivruil currency redeemed, $201,600. , Iri our the N. Y. Joarnal of Cennnorce.l• Body of two Late Emperor, ineuctimit tars. , „ • The following Is an,accouet from our own cor respondent, of the ceieniony, of the delivery of the body of the late Archduke.. Ferdinand_ Mud initial): of Anstila t to Adndfai by - the m.yor of thectry,ol. Vera Cruz.. Weft) Politico), apf Mined by the government. and In accord ance with the instructions as to the manner-in which the ceremony was to bo perforated: 'Vniti Caez, November :nth, 1837.—T0 Editors or the' Journal of arnim4ce : The hody reached 'ibis city on the 25th at 3 P:M:, tinder a. strong escort of cavalry; the commander of the eecort baying in his charge a sealed parcel, eon tainiug the key of the coffin,'Which he was, in structed to place in the hands of the Mayor of the city. The body was conducted and deposited hi the parish c_hnrch, , where were lirwalting - the Mayor, members of the City Council, members of the boards of Health and Charity, and the prin cipal Federal and local authorities. Thetehurch vine (hell ordered to be'. Cleared by the po llee of, the multitude, and sentrln4 placed at the doors, to prevent any. one from entering. ~The Admiral then satisfied that everything rwas ready for .the delivery. He shortly with bus.staff, ill dressed in citizen's clothm; and In deep tnournfruz. The, operation then • cour !seined of opening , a largo *Joel case, which.was found to contain, another case •of slue. Enclosed was found a• bcontiftd rose ' wood coffin, on the top of which ,was et large and beantlfully carved cross,' all • the , work of Mexicali artisans. The Mayor then broke .the seals of the parcel containing the key, arid pre sented It to the person in charge of opening the daft. The key was of also 'the binges of the lido. The lid of the coffin raised, the bod y was exposed to view in its full length. The corpse was dressed In a full , suit of black, and the hands in black kid glOves. The, face was perfect, and although' of the ashy tgetaty. . color common -to all embalmed, bodies, ',l). 're* months allftf• the `opaiatten of enbahnug has been . , performeri, Was.' easily ' re cognizable." The coffin was. lined throughout wilh "rited, and.'thc bossy wali.euebtOned in to prvvent any movement, so that' the freed, hands, e tc., were evidently in the same position in which they'had been placed Originally., The ad miral was then, called upon' to say Whether he recognized in the, body the archduke of Austria, and whether he would reed va It as such. Reply ing in the iffirmative, thc coffin wais agato closed and , tbe key tendered to him. "An official record was then dravion up in.trlpli cafe, witnessed by three notaries ,(one copy.for the Meican goverument, one for the Admiral, and one to be deposited in the axed:Masi di, Oti city), which was signed by the Admiral and tile "staff, the Mayor and all the • authorities, members of the City Council, . ' "All then retired, leaving the body Ire, the church, with ita doorswell guarded, by, a, Mexi can guard infantry,' until the next morning, when it was quietly embarked' withered any mili tary honors, and taken on hoard s the, .Austrian frigate Novara (the same which breinght hiM to the country), and she proceeded :to sea itnnledi ately. , "The coffin was furnished at the expense of the Mexican government, and all the expenses of traesporting the , body to Vera. Crez have been defrayed by it also." A Colvrtreoni,sPlMPlMOY.—A foreign journal aaj a : "M. Bosco,the well known conjuror, apent the' winter or 1850-59 in Berlin, and was one day summoned to lippe.ar at the palace, In order to exhibit hie art; before the present klug, at, that time princeregent, and the court. Among the other apparatus he had a terrestrial globe, upon which ;Pr:nista MS made to appear• extremely Bosco advanged to the,Prince, who was sitting In an artnehair in the front row, and asked him to take the globe ha his binds. The Prince did so, when, to his ; eaten /aliment, the formerly little Pnissia began to as sume much larger dimensions., 'Your , 'Royal Illotra'SB perceives,' said Bosco,, 'how Prna4la will become aggrandised under your hands.' The trlrk was loudly applauded at the time, but little dill the spectators Imagine that 'what was. in untied as a courtly jest was d'istined to' become political earnest within seven year§ from that time." „ , OIED. COLhE'l'.—On Frldav 20th lust., Mary 13,, dsughter of and Jesuit), t feted Ad yparl. reintives and friends of the family nicinvitod to attend her Inners'. frottiller father's reAdenee, 2U37 t,liiest. nut strtet, on ,Ntonday. 2,3 d Inntr. , at 4 A.M. GH RgNIO • CIIROMOSU FOR HOLIDAY PRESENTS, REDIR , EI) pirtruEs. groatept SFOortment in the city or imported'and A nit ri en o canomoe. w hid we will lied fMr glow tha *lllll pricer. tie a call and saYO money, ' • . tir' off Kn. 31P. Sixth St., above Chestnut. r". TO. £ET.—A FINE FOUR•STORY 310PERN Iteddepoo t incorupluto order,' tipruPe otreet. above L tact equtti. CLA RK & - ' 7G7 Waluat titieat. ' po-r Ph.IIANS.-10 HARMS'. ete.'W I.l.ltt)P TEXAve ,rucaue !me l ee. ex-eteeelehipEltar of the Union. 04 r mile by J. 13. HUSSIER &UU leg South StUware aveone. _; 4;41 - MEER SWEET VOEN -26 EALEVMBNE ~irfi 464l cel , -ed and tor aide kV JOSEPH 'S • lOa Smith Halawank. ilAranng. ' r 1.24/111)EN , 8 PREF TEA.—fiAbrAIV Oilkgai 1J extract will make a plat or eiteellmii MO4 few minutes. Always on, hand awl. (as 114161* 8. RES‘iiiili a Co. Booth nfbilvolMl FSERVaI ei114d1114.4. 1 4* k b I.!tdiTON . 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