The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, June 15, 1861, Image 1

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    THE PRESS,
..„,joisD DAILY, (SUNDAYS NXCEPTNA,)
P.">3Y .rosEN W. FORISI.rix,
aricE No. 417 CHESTNUT STREET.
DAILY PRESS,
0 . 8 clin-6 Waniv. payable to the Gathers
i:oed to Subsoribere out of the City at Six DoLLAIIe
wrx. Fore DOLLARe 7011. EIGHT MONTHe,
f DOWD!" yOT BIX MOHTHS—IATOTHIbIy
11:,, or the thee ordered.
6d. 'SRI -WEEKLY PRESS,
101 610 Eubso berm out of the City at maxis D oL _
advance.
COMMISSION HOUSES.
,BAY FLANNELS.
BLUE-GRAY FLANNELS.
GRAY FLANNELS_
SLOE-MIXED FLANNELS.
cHEAPEST 3N 2 1 118 .314122.21 1 .
GRAY FLANNELS.
701% SA Ys
BY TEE PIECE OR BALE.
FOR CASH,
DT
JOSH ESA L. B ATT ,y,
00-00 140. ALS MARKET IMES'S,
ffal. HAIM, it lIIITOMNIKIN,
NO. 112 OWINIII
COMMON KKIIOIIANTR.
FOR IMF. MILS OF
PHILADFT-.VITIA-MADE
max -04
CARPRTINGS.
FOSE( CANTON AIATTING.
J. F. it E. B. ORNE.
OPPOILLTE MATE HOBOS.
Nava new worn their
Refit I'4 rhsPORTATIONS
or
votartat EXTRA TIIIIIRIAL
wArtins.
rvirix, ant
RED ORROXER
°ANTON MATTING.
IA ALL IRE DIFFRARNT WIDTHS. AT
goIDERATE PRICES.
J. F. & E. B. ORNE,
reltim OPPOSITE /STAIR HO' SR*
GROCERS.
r FAMILIES RESIDING IN TUN
RURAL DISTRICT&
Ire law ;wowed, as heretofore, to imattly Wallas at
air °miry Residences with every demotion= of
PINE ttioaranta, TRAB, &c., ecc.
ALBERT 0. ROBERTS
;MEEK EIiEVBEVA AND VINE IITREE7B.
sou
EXCELSIOR HARM
, H. MICHENER & 00..
e.RISKRAI PROVISION WALESA
Lino Cutninl or TIM
CIELZBRATED
**EXOELSIOR"
11 1 10AX-CVIRD lUMB.
ICA 149 .4118 144 BOIT, "FIOBT 11111151ST
(Between Aron and Uwe Streets.)
YLLADBLPHIA.
fhejastly-aelebrated Exoelsier Hams are oared by
B. it. & Co. tin a style peculiar to themeelves). ea
red, toffees:isms • are of delicious flavor,free f rom
esupleasant taste dealt, and ere pronouneed ent
rees moaner tO ally now oared for sale. sula-Si
o
LOOKING GLASSES.
LOOKINCk-CILASSES.
irir daily Mibaing sad seriudattat raw sad alionitt
Wee of
LOOKING-GL 422 RS,
im b ilang ail taa faMpirs unpro , eilligati inAL nsittuaini as
frost 'novelties to Walnut arta 110141 and UISWMd
tad Bold rtILMNS for RIBULOita.
eh. asteraiite and mitt witortment ui +No
vverlg. S. EARLS k SON,
6.4111,1i5' OAiaLEB.ISS,
aki - ST tneMalriffir macrit.
BANKAiG.
tHlrffi'r BILWOPIT CX)..
}IAN 1 3 1 1.3
ge WALL STILFIET A NEW TOSIL)
14.111 *WM .rent to travellers, fiverEiele in al
rim of Versos, selvage tee Messrs. Illtetlursiell et
es. Lenten. Fraskfert, Naples. Vienna, and their sec-
reopeedesta f•lgMka*
JEWELRY, &e.
PAIrEpANI:s7ZPS! if&
ITDlmproved Patent Lever Spiral Spring _SAFETY
B, end the Patent PEARL . CMTRE. having
thoroughly tested, and possessing advantages over
every other intention, are being very generally adopted
by Castleman of taste.
Soli Wholesale and Bistail ONLY by
ELI HOT .1)E14„
toin MARKET STREET.
ImoOrter of Moots, Watches, and wren.
&pl3-ainthilat
FINE WATCH REPAIRING. I
PERSONS HiVING FINE WATOIIEB
that hare hitherto Wen no aatiaraction to the
*mem are 131VitOO to term them to our atom .where
an demote can be remedied by thoroughly aiital and
miebocten, and the meta warranted to litre
mitiremmeentien.
Mantel Conks. Metal Bones, oaterollr vat an
eemplete order.
FARS. &
r e meara of Ware& 9,_,a,.rdoweal Boxes. Cloolay._
391 onstarrin Street. below roam.
liTnirTTrr7rM7. l7 l7lM l Mil
D o YOU WANT WHISKS:RP
DO 1 - 011 WANT
00 7011 'WANT 31011511MIELE
DO YOU WANT A MOIIITAODEP
BELLINGITAM'S
OSLIBRATED STIMULATING
ONGUENT,
roa TDB WIIIII*AS AND DAM.
Irkti snbearibets tate pleurae in announoins to the
*Rise= of the "United Inane that they have obtained
the Mena, for, and are now enabled to offer to the
Arnertein pnblio the above jnally-oelebrated and
world-renowned Artie&
TBR STIMULATING ON OffENT
Is prepared by Dr. C. Y. BELLINGHAM, an eminent
stmatas' n of London, and is warranted to bntt oat
Una set of
WWlVan, Olt A'.111011,101111
IA trent three to gut weeks. This article is the only
sae of the kind need by the French, and in London and
Pans it is in universal rms.
it rs a besatifah ecoacamiesi,aoothut . g, yet Albumin,-
tint tolliCalldrlOU WI If PI magic upon the roots,
swam a besuAtui crowd, of luxuriant hair. If sa
shed to the Noah, at will cars brddress, and Gann to
surtegrop la the ghee of the bald spots a fine mirth of
new hair. Applied according to aireatiatt. will turn
AZD or TOWY hair Dale*. and restore gray hatr to its
T The me O NGUNI I P a P w i r ing ru t nd oft o . r in s i m sab o e ar tic le n a oavbelrey.
tentlenura'send after OUP week's one they would,
"&fOr $ll3 oanWeration. be without it.
flit subscribers are the only .bgeats for the article
In the 'United States. to whom all orders must be ad
harso,
?nee gue *Mar a box; fora,tebyall lamina and
ilwatne.; or a bag of the w OWGIMIII7.' warregiled
Sive the desired effect. will be sent to any who decire
1 1,b, wail, direct. securely paoked,on receipt of ones
tot mum aug, Apply to, ca adduce
'MUM lk, BBONNIAN /keel.
Drumm, lt****
St WILLIAM attest, New York.
IMOTV & CO.. MI6 232 North SECOND afraid, rid
Wapitis Amato. -
OPAL DIENTALLINA.--We speak from
I na o u d ex p er i e a t owelmowriAt that the OPAL
t ri WeifilnA =Vie br Mr- NNN. of BROAD and
rft sm o l t 's deeidedkv the Tama orevarst a
otthe month teeth that We have ever tood. w e
believe Midrib shot is elairood for it. and boles re
" Mini qi4o4 b711103094.11=1 1 0 dootials we Moue all
to rt.*
lATTY TZSTAMENTARY TO-THE
-•-• 'SWAT& FUJogN R. WEEKLICR; dammed.
late Tracer, MN eli
ev kdArimb a rd par = b k 12111
e l fe'reeneetlel
Ito payment, nal anyone=
°llinum
are
: d e
Arrarta arra,
407 WALiNu Street.
NORMAN B. wiEsztatii. mho continues the Ore
ten and Tea nominees. southwest isomer of THIRD;
and LOMBARD streets. is dolt authorised to receive
Payment of debts due said Estate. midsections. sitainkt
n•••- be 10ft inns him. - -
TrUte'
EIELMBOLD'S
G-EINUINE PREPARATION_
HELMBOLD'S I -11ELMBOLD'15--HELM /OLD'S
RBWIT. BOLD'S-WEL MBOla 1113-. H IS Li M. DOLT"EI
NEL MUO LIYB-11E L OLD 8--ILELAI go L•D'A
MIA& I , IIIL 0 , 14-112 LIT 'ROL niE1...14 ELM BOL IV 8
lISLMBOLIPS-RELMBOLVB-HELIVIBOLDIT
14 MLA OL'E-fl BO LD'e-li ELMS 01.1r8
E L M 011,13'19-HELMBOL D'FI-H ELMBOLD'S
KLNI aLD'S-RRLINIBOLD'S-HIMM BOLD'S
Famanliwa—aut.mßoues—H - Faanßowym
tsb. BM, Fre- W.W.I BO L 1:08-4in L 11.1 ROL OW
HELM BOLD'I3-HELMEOLD'A-RRIALBOLINI
RELIMBOtD"4--TIELMNL 0 1 15-HELMBOLADIt
ERIACHO IrS-F1 IADNI MIA taiitnav
is ELM BO D'B -libla BOLDVY-ITALUDOLD'S
HSLINBOLD is--HELME9LIPB-HELIIIIIOLD'S
FOR DISEASES OF THE
BLADDER, KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY,
BLADDER, EIDNEYS, GRAVEL. DRTY.
BLADDER. xnvEr. GRAVEL, DR 0 sY.
ti
BLADDER, M INE s, (RAVEL, Dito S y,
BLADDRX, ICIDtVE S, GRAYEL, DROPSY,
BLADDER,
EIDNEY. GRAVEL. DROPSY,
BLADDER, KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY,
BLADDER, KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY.
BLADDER, KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY,
BLADDER, KIDNEYS. GRAVEL, DROPSY,
BLADDER. KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY.
BLADDBLADDER, XIDNEYS, GRAVEL, Duke:- Y,
ER, KinNsys, .p•ROPSY;
BLADDER, KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY
BLADDER. KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROPSY",
NERVOUS DIEEASEN,
DilinlEgal OE VIBION.
The mart eminent flasiciani ; endorsed and recom
mended by dlatingshillad CISITYMen , Governor. of
States, Judges+, the Press, and all Who nee it—ecer7-
Where--evidenoe of the most reliable and responsible
character open for inspection. IT 18 NO PATENT
NOSTRUM. It 11 advertised liberally. and its basis is
merit; end depending upon that, woofer our pitmans
lion to the afflicted and estiffering Numanity with entire
oonlideneek
THE PROPERTIES OP THE DIOSMA CREHATA
Were known an far bank as tie hundred gears, and its
peculiar effeoto on the Mental and Physical Powers are
When of in the highest semis by the most eminent
authors of the present and *natant dote, among whom
wiU be found aliakespeare. Byron. end others.
JOAN C/1.881.141 2
313 trruoti Street
t -
- I / '-/-
N NN\ 1
, ,
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eff / 111_402V1..-,
I all
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VOL. 4.--NO. 273.
Mr Dit-INAL.
I.IES . TRACT Hp_cau
EATE.ACT BucOU
EXTRACT RUCRU I2
NTRACT Brca
TRACT BRCEu
TRACT RuCHU
EXTRACT EU 'RD
EXTRACT EllOBll
EXTRACT BU - 101.1
Er; RACT 81-CHU
EXTRAcT BUM]
RA
tXTCT
g ot TRACT IMMIX,
EXTRACT BUCffu
EXTRACT 13CCHU
TEE GREAT DIURETIC.
THE GREAT DIURETIC.
1
T E GREAT
T GREAT
DIURETIC.PIURETIC.
TR GREAT
GREAT DIURETIC.
T R GREAT DIURETIC.
T eRDAT D.URRTIC.
E GREAT. WURETIC.
THE GREAT DIURETIC.
THE GREAT DIURETIC.
TILE G RE AT DIURETIC.
THE DIURETIC.
A POS4TTIv E AND SPEcIFIC
POSITIvE AND SPFCIFIC
FosiTIVE AND SPECIFIc
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITV AND SPECIFIC
PostrlrE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A PO- ITIvE AND SPECIFIC
A FOSITTris AND SPRCIFrc
A rosiTIVE AND SPECIFIC
A EOSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
A POSITIVE AND SPECIFIC
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL DIS PAsES
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL ME AS&S
AND ALL DISEASES
AND ALL
DISEASES
AND' A LL DISE AS E S
AND Akl. DISEASES
AND Aki , DISEASES
AR MI in
rar
N E r
ING F ROM
ARI Irre ZGOM,
A AR RMING FROM
lAING FaoM
oc6 f ROM
ARI'NG ROM
G ROM
ARIA
ARMING FROM
M TIES OF THE DI,
_OOD, &o.
linus OF THE BLOOD. ico.
tap R 7 B OF THE BLOOD. &o.
MP HIT ES OF TRE BLOOD.
&o.
Mr HIT KS OF THE BLOOD. Rco.
Lair arms OF TELE BLOOD, to.
IVPUI t if I TIN ° 11; Rit limp.; to.
IMPURITIES OF THE BLOOD, .t.o.
IMPURITIES OF THE BLOOD, &c..
IMpURITIES of THE BLOOD. &o.
• IMPURITIES OF THE BLOOD. &o.
if i IIBITIES OF THE BLOOD, &o.
'UNTIES OF ir W s BooD, &..
i nirisTira OF LOOD, &o.
CONBVMPTION.
EPILEPTIC FIT%
ErlnveroU Leektude of the Atheoxim nevtem.
INKAMITY.
PALLIp COUNTENARGE,
SOIIR BTOMAGE,
SICK HEADACHE,
ABLIKBOLIPS EXTRAtYr NUCHV
NO FAMILY SHOULD BE WITHOUT rr.
NO 'FAMILY SHOULD DE WITHOUT 17
Prepared scoot dun to
PHARMACY AND CHEMISTRY;
PEEMBIBED AND BOND BY
Prom this filet it has Droved iMiittatttli moomalld is
those symptoms of a nervous temperament, ruining
from *Montan habits and protracted abrdobetorn to
bulimia. literati tinrintiti, and. oonfinement ,from the
open air, sad is taken by
MEN, WOMEN, aND OHM DARR
RELIEBOLIPE EXTRACT RUCRU
is 111.01111111IIt iii itr taste and odor, and immediate in its
action, and nee from all Injurious Propertied, GRIN
at Little Expense.
Ltirmt OR 210 ORANGE IN DIET.
LITTLE OR NO GRANGE IN DIET.
If you are suffering, send or ,
call for the remedy at
once. Explicit directions sooompany. Price ONE
DOLLAR per bottle, or six: for FWD DOLLARS, de
livered to any name, initial, hotel, post, =promo office,
or store.
TRY ONE BOTTLE.
TRY ONE BOTTLE.
REURBOLD 8 GENUINE PREPARATIONS
RIBIALROLD'S GENUINE PREPARATIONS
EXTRACT BUCIEIb
EXTRACT SARSAPARILLA.
fifYiilGlAliet YUBA= NOTICE
We make no secret of ingredients. The Compound
'Mahn i• composed of Suchue, Onbebs. and Juniper
Berries, selected by a competent Itrositat, and are of
the beet toraftr.
PREPARED, Is Tatum
H. T. lIEEMBOLD,
roAcTwAL AND ANALYTICAL CHEMIST,
BOLD AT
MELMBOLIPS MEDICAL DEPOT.
NO. 104 SOVTH TENTH STREET.
- BELOW CHESTNUT.
Where ad Lettas must be &Jeremiad.
BEWARE .07 COUNTERFEITS.
ASK IDE s* EIELMBOLIPIL”
TAKE NO OTHER.
Notx.—Besot No. IX &path Tenth 'West. Sone, owl.
or irrits at ono,. The medicine, adiested to each and
Ovary coos. Wild. BB PREEKEED. If Itemagliffe ou
t:111141W patient to the benefit of advise. and all.eadY
and dannanant Care.
THE" BITD
SO KWH DESIAND.
m3lO-fialdea
ASR FOR KING & B AIRD'S EDITION
O pttr
ZMJAVE DRILL DOOR.
It ia illudrated with over Thirty Bagravinge, show
mg the 'various posii loon in the
BAYON
nd
ET XERCISE
KiRMIELUR RH' DRILL.
se Mee DV
ELLSWOHTti'a ZOITAVES.
Also. hinto
FOR. THE VOI L NER WtIEIT IN DATI'LN,
to whith is added a pifograPhy and
ttaft...o t t e. t: v
nr Color liandeomely P
•• Tin .e the beet Z I OURVO Drill Hook published."
One vol .12tno. Pries }..5 Cents.
Copies mailed 'tree of poetage atm° reoeipt of the
urine, by KING & BAIRD.
Printer. and PulAishnre.
3t No. set RANSOM Otreet, PhitadOlphie
BaXTEIV.I VOLLINTZERS' MANUAL
—FART
ROW READY,
And for gale by all Iklokstillerlii hue ze rents.
n A XTER,B VOLUNTEERS ) MANt
„RAF —PART sr
Containing - full instruction* for the
B°l,OlEl IN THE SIBOOL OF THE COMPANY,
With sixty engravings illustrating the
COM PAN Y hatlV RAI KNTS;
FUNERAL RuNORS ; COLOR SALUTE;
MANUAL OF ARMS FOR NEWMAN - 173j
MANUAL OF TOE SWORD OR SABRE FOR
OFFICER.
The whole arranged acourainit to
SCOTT'S trtartim OF TACTICS.
and in conformation with the rules and regulations of
She ited Mate Army.
M
th . work is irctispensablp to the officers 4 f
f gram; 'Volunteer Companies."
cnin vnl,, 1Am0.,15 popes. Price Stomata.
Cornea mailed 'free of Issetege upon receipt of the
prtee, by RllrO tt BAIRD,
Printers end Publishers.
je'4-3t No. GOT SANGOM. Street. iduladelphm. _
NEW EDICALInII BuOK.s—imported and
L for sale by MerLROY te. CO., No. P 7 South
SIXTH Ktreet, above Chestnut.
BUCELE's CIVILIZATION IN ENGLiAND, Vol.?,
Bvo, cloth. IP
LIFE OF PROF. PORSON. the celebrated Greek
sone'er. Br. the. Rev. J. 8. Watson, AL A. Finnan
and No-simile. Ss°. sloth. 04 re.
UINTA ON FlOtteElliANstrlP ; or, Common Eense
and Common Errors in Common Riding. By Colonel
Greenwood. Illustrated with fourteen woodcuts, Smell
Stro cloth. $2.
MANUAL OF MODERN GEOGRAPHY. •By the
Roe ales. Mackay, F. K. G.B. Thick limo, cloth.
/173.
PIiViICAL GEOGRAPHY. By Sir John F. W.
Rereohell, Post. rico. cloth, Az.oo.
vouiv( BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. or, The Right
Road Through Life. By Henri Illaihew, limo, Mott.
THE NEW EXAMINER; or, An Inquiry into the
Evidence Relating to Certain Peg/atom in Lord ideetan
lae History. via.
ORD IMINOONALIVS AUTOBIOGRAPHY. Cheap
edition, with fine portrait, maps, ,to., limo, cloth, gilt.
eI D v 5.
nAN RAMEIATS REMINISCENCES OF HOOT
TI 411 LIE c: Mir) CHARACTER. Second series, ISmo.
Cloth antique. f led.
tretateiLLlPS TRAVELS IN THE GORILLA
COUNTRY. illustrated with AtIMISTOUI plates and
maps. (Pro cloth. SO.
Foreign Books imported to order by every steamer
blontnly catalogues of new and old Emitlien end Franca
Hooks furnished gratis on application. Jell.St
SO D L R UtE4t. t. --111 5 cA c i en il ta ll.—A new book by
JOHN fiLOFAO LAN, 33 !Tooth MTH Bt.
Agents wanted tn the nith and state 1012-6 t
Boußs, LAW AND ALINIAGLLAMBUIA
new and old, boned, soid, and exchanged, at the
PRILMADELPRIA- BANK BOOK BTORE, tio. 4111
ORBSTN UT Street. Libraries at a distance purchased.
Those having' Books to sell, if at a distance, will state
their names, sites, bindings,_dates. editions, ruses,
sad ...conditions. WANTED ...Boehm printed Py Belga
= Franklin, as well as early Weeks printed in and
upon America. Autograph Letters and Portraits ear
chased. Pamphlet Laws o[ Pennsylvania for itals. Cats
tognes. oats, sant free. Labranem appraised by.
fese-tt Yowl CAM PB ETA.
REMEDY
SURF HOUSE ,' ATLANTIC CITY, NEW
J FRSEY.
Title ROTRI., with its fitst-elass itosoniMOdationi for
otter 400 nest', will be opened on the rah of June.
situate d within stryyards of the Ocean, at a point
Where the bathing is the beet and safeeton the coast and
remarkable for An unusually dry and, nealth. abode-
Phere. the SURF ROUSE will be found one of the most
plume of summer re•ort near Pniladeiphia.
Whe WAe will be most I;bandie The housti
is lighted with gas and plentifully supplied with good
cistern water.
A fine band of music and the services of several
fast-sailing Yectite have been engaged, and on the pre
mises are Billiard Tables. Bowl ng Altera, and a milli
cleat camber of lieth Popes.. The Fishing,
and Sailing at Atlantic City cannot be summed.
All trains stop at the SURF ROAMS, to land and take
up romeengere.
.'oresy lefurrn hia.etlee. apply at ASHLAND HOUSE,
AR Street. /Philadelp
elt-Stt R. S. BENSON, Proprietor.
VOISPEEdt.3 LULL,
CAPE MAY, CAPE IMAIND, N. J.
This Well-known fiat ohms Hoed will be opened for
the repetition of geegies on TITURBD AY. Jobe 20.
WEST k THOMPSON,
Jelt-6a ' Pronrtstora,
fIOLUMBIA HOUSE, Cape Island, N. J.
Il•-•" This celebrated house will be opened for the re
bel/tit/II of guest. on June 25. BR.
. be intuntion of this booms in one of the moat beauti
ful on the Island. 'commanding an itimbatnuttad mew of
the MUM.
A band of mimic has been engaged etobleiveir for
this house for t-e sewn. • •
Alum number of bath houses are connected with
the eetabbithinalit. Good Oda= for hones attacked
to the womb ea.
Applications for rooms or other amitticubwa y 1111604
with prompt attention togadatimeingthesabeeriber.
- - -AULD PrO
TONTINE HOTEL, NEW HAVEN ,
OONNECTICUT.—The Subsonber refurniehed
this DUthionable first-e'ass Hotel entire met Boring. re
modeled-the-old Dining Room, added a new Ladies'
Ordinary, and put in complete order bill Billiard and
Bath Booms, Families can have suites of Rooms at
ut tier 11011 , 59 ar low ass at any Ent-slats HOMO in the
country. Boarders can to to and from the TONTLBE
to the HEAD, three times a day, by rail, and take their
meats at either Howe, without extra charge. Having
purchased anti stocked a large Farm at Be a em's Head
thin germs, the two houses will be furnished with Mean,
Poultry, Milk, But.q Vegetable.. and Frail , . dalty.
from Ilift Farm. A. Teletraph Liao hoe been put up at.
Baahem Head and at the Tontine. at tr.e p ro pypicerom
own expense, whioh conneets with all the lines lin the
United States. H. LEE SCRANTON.
jel-lin
Q AOHEM'a NAD HOTEL., GUILFORD, II
CONN.—The proprietor of thin trell-known. first
tease, fashionable SUMMER-HO uSIS would inform Its
former patron/. and the nubile generally , that be built
on three huno red feet last similar. malting seventy- four
nave bed room,. new "dining-room, forty by one hun
dred. new parlor, for%hyse-enty. Every room in the
hone!' is newly furnied with nest carpets and new
mane furniture. The Hotel is of modern construe
tion, built on an extensive scale. with 80 , ommodations
for four hundred guests; beautifully located on Long
Island Sound. fourteen miles east of New Haven, on
the New London end Eltonington Railroad: new bit.
Hard-room, with three new tables; two WM ten-pin
alleys, at a convenient distance from the home, and
twelve new bathing , houses. Fishing in not env Lied
on the Sound. A nem yacht of forty-five tons and
several small nail-beats, will be constantly on hand,
ready for parties.
Owns from New York to Sachem's Head. talne the
8 A. M. train and 3 P. M. train ; cheek and ticket to
Bachem'a Head direct, oharigier oars at New Haven'
time through 33i hours. From New Haven to the Head
at TX a. M. l ll • , &ride NL—tinie 40 minutes. At
the mtebem new depot will be found one of Cook's
best four-honseennsibueee, new and mean, to ourrY You
direct to the house.
A new Barn. one hundred by fifty - two feet, 1155 built
last spring, wh ich will accommodate fifty horses. Fi (-
teen sores of land have been enclosed, and filled with
ornamental and fruit trees, walla! Bso.
The hurtle Will be op ened for t a le reoention of com
pany on the 35th day ouin nett, under the immediate
enperinrendence of the owner.
N. 11.—tdoesuitoes are never seen at the Head.
H. LISTS SCRANTON.
LANGUOR,
RVOIJDNESB
CRESSON SPRINGS OAMBRIA 00
. 7
delighthil and pognlar altos of 2111111001"
resort. located directly . ..on the line of the Yenneyivanta
RaWend. on the mamma of the Allegheny mountains,
twenty-three lomdred feetabose the ev e of the ocean.
will be open for guests the 20th of JUNE. Since hurt
season the grounds have been greatly improved and
disabled. rendering Crosson one of the most romantic
and attractive maces in the State. The fornitnre is
hem thomugely renovated. The seeker of pleasure.
and the sufferer from heat or disease, will find *Brae
noes here, in a first-olase Livery Stable, Billiard
Table,. Tenpin Alleys, Baths, .to..
together with the
purestpurestair and water, and the mom magni ficent moan
tam scenery to be found in the cloeutry.
Tickets good for the round top from Philadelphia.
457 A; from Pitbiburg.
For farther information, address
G. W. MUI‘LIN,
jeg-fm Creagan Springs. Cambria Co.. Pa.
uzarie PLUM, ka.
HOWLAND'S HOTEL.—
SEA BRANCH, R.
The subscribes will ern hie hotel for the
RitCEPTI 14 OF VISITORS
on Setup:lap June 18. - 1881.
mill-Sul a. ROW LAND. Proprietor.
-AP H R A T A MOUNTAIN SPRINGS.
LANCASTER COUNTY. PENNSYLVANIA.
Thte celebrated Watering Place will open for visi
tors on the 3d day of JUNE. with all the attraction of
former seasons.
Situated on a mountain 1,100 feet above tide-water,
overlooking, the nohea eartoulterel country in the
world. the air perfectly pure and dry at all times, ren
ders it proverbially healthy'.
There are maple accommodations for WO visitors—
fine graded walks through the forest to the various
sorrows and mummer-homey on the mountain and to
the observatory. from the top of whiob is eneeutod to 1
the ere one of the finest sad Met extensile pano
ramie views to be seen. A good livery is kapt on the
place. and beautiful drives around ; hot and cold bath,;
a splendid band of Plume, (from the Germania, of Phi
ladelphia;) bowbsig alleys and saloons with
the latest improved t o Largo gardens attac hed to
the place, from which ail the vegetables are taken
fresh for the able, which, too, grill be supplied from
Use Philadelphia and Balt i more markets, ea well u
from the rich agricultaral country around. Careful
and attentisaservante.
Saving men unlimited with the eetablishment for
some years with the late _proprietor, the undersigned
assures the old patrons of the place and the puolio
generally that it will be o onduoted• in every depart
' meet, in its former popular war.
Visitors to the Senn gs will take the oats to Lauer
ter, thence IS miles staring over pleasant roads and
through a beautiful country. Throte .ilekets issued
at the Pessisrivania Railroad SVANTH and
MARKET streets, Philadelphia.
For furtherparticulars or (Arnim' the proprietor
refers to Jo+3. MYERS! corner TFILR.,P and VINE
Streets, and to lAMBS h. BRYSON. No. 2 North
BOLTS Street. louadelphia • or, address
11.:O. SL,AYRIAREE,
Ephrata P. 0.. Lancaster eo.. Pa.
BEDFORD SPEINGIS.-A. 0. ALLEN
resteetfuLls informs the public . that this well eats
bliehed and powder watering place is pow open for the
reception and exwommodatioa of vimtore, and will be
kept open until the first Of 00iober.
Persona wishing Bedford Mineral Water, will be sup
plied at the Rennie at the folk wins pnoes,vis :
For 1 bbl— —l3 00
.•X " (mninerry)--.---. _ acs
" (0610—. 200
Bottles, X pint, per dos-- .. _ 10
Parties inishing rooms, or any iriformation ip regard
to the p _will address the Bedford Mineral d Sprin
lace_,
Company, Bedford, Pennsylvania. mil-lit
lIERR'S .110TBL,
JIL-R. HARRISBURG, Pa.
The MIIIIIKOMOItt Of this wen-known Hotel having
been loaned by Manna GOYa.B & HSU R, die t rasent
nroprietors bet leave to inform the public st the
House le now bemgthoronghly RENOVATE , RE
PITTED ,and IMPROVED, with a view to the proper
and comfortable accommodation of those who may
favor the eatabliahment, with their custom. embalm
will receive due atten tion and courtesy, and no ex
pense will beggared that may conduce to maintain the
Hotel in .& Ent - also style.
Farsibea and others desiring to Mourn in Harris
burg durum the sum Mer months will find pleasant
011tliblidlinenti Upon moderate
Boarding and large and well-ventilated ROOll l / 1 at our
nVet coos
mv7-n J. 61.31Rr ,
F t.
oR Nn iPA
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
SUMMER RESORTS.
mv tra i f
DRUGS AND MEDICINES.
MR. CHARLES M. BREAKER DE
SIRES to return his sincere thanki io the pttblin
geneitioga f or the very genegewg engem given to his
fejf,w YOTRXCARY tlTOftm, nt the flicjiheaat oor
=rot BHtrAD end WiBBTt4 UT Streets. The business
having. since h. a opening a fey weeks mace. exceeded
his moetsanshine expectations. has sn , onreged him to
snake entangles additions to his awed, well Wasted
eceok,top ether with ewes appliance nee Exam to the en
tity sansfactiontof hie patrons. Raving purchased ea
esti. eir
FlthSli SUPPLY OF DRUGS AND CREMICALS,
and s-outed the services of a Sist-class rimeeentist
end tiliemlst for the especial Conduct of the Dispraising.
department. he would salient the Massa scrutiny of
physicians generefig. and guarantees a einitintiancos or
the high satisfaotion which has already been expressed
by the rapid iciness* of this branch o the holiness.
PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1861.
gije -41"
SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1861.
RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE
VOMpliment to a Philadelphia Divine;
The General Synod of the Reformed Protestant
Dutoh Church convened on the bib instant, and
has been in session ever since, In the Reforined
Dutch Church on the Heights, instate oily eflintoli-
Ism. Among the moat important business presented
for the action of Synod was the eleotion of a Pro
fessor to the chair of Didactic and Polemist Theo
logy in the Theological Seminary at New Brune
wiok, which on Tuesday last ranked in Cm
selection, by a unanimous vote, of our distingoishet.
townsman, Rev. Joseph F. Berg, D. D., pastor*
the Second Reformed Dutch Church in this °its'
Seventh street, above Brown. The Didactic OW
of this old and respectable institution Is regard
as the highest position in the gift of that 46130
nation. It has hitherto had but three occupants,
Rev. Dec. Livingston, Binh:dollar, and Van Vrank
en, the latter having died on the first day of the
present year. Considering tha Immense bade
pace, wealth, and acknowledged talent embraced
in this esolosiastical organisation in Amerkia,
the election of any trail to this reeponellia
post Is a high compliment. This cornplimmit,,
we are pleased to add, has, in this inetante,
n every respect been worthily bestowed Dr.
Berg had no. less than fourteen eompetitore for
the position, all gentlemen of learning and abi
lity, the most popular of whom, judging fry
the ballots as published in the Christian in
tellveneer, was the Rev_ Dr Campbell, at pretiont
the occupant of another chair in the same institu
tion. Having been chosen on the fourth ballot by
a large majority of all the votes east, hie election
wee, amid much enthrutiasm, declared unanimous.
On appearing before the Synod, at the instance of
a committee deputed to notify him of his election,
the whole body rose en -nzad.4.6 to receive him. Thie_
mutual addremes were then made, Dr. Berg eta
tins that, as lie bad neither expected nor taken
any part to secure the honor which had been con
ferred upon him, he accepted the result as a - cult
from the Great Read of the Church co a duty
*blob be did not feel himself at liberty to de
cline. HU • Installation in the chair, wa have ,
since learned, will take place at New. Brunswick,
on the litkof September, the sermon to be preached
by, the Rev. Dr. _Bethune, and the charge to be
delivered by the Rev. Di. Campbell. By tills
election another of the three Reformed Dutch
'Churches in this city will 'be left without a pastor:
the a First," on the corner of asventh and Spring
Carden, having lost its minister a year ago by the
resignation of Rev. Mr. Wilts. It is to be hoPed
1 that the difficulties consequent upon Mr. Willits'
removal from the "First"-Church will not be re- .
=soled in the ft Second," although, should the
people of the-latter be bent upon securing DI
Berg's equal es his successor, they can hardly hops
to make a speedy choice. -
A WORLD'S Cearaniseen or RVANSILIOAL
CHBIBTI4IIB.—/irrangememte have been made for
holding a Conference of Christians from all parts
I
of the world at Geneva, on the 2d of next Septem
ber, to obese on the 12th, and the Rev. Dr. Merle
'D'd.ubigne has written a letter to the London
, Wears, giving the programme of He prospective
' deliberations. It is expected that all the proud
eclat church questions of the day will be folly aid
freely discussed by distinguished representatives
of different oountries. The notion of this bodj
will be looked for with considerable interest.
MILTON'S ALLEGED lINITIMIANISM.—The As
-1 &mac Monthly lately contained an article, chime
' leg the immortal author of '- Paradise Lost" es•ii
Unitarian. • Slim thane eotemporary has furnish".
ed the following explanation in regard to Milton'?"
' book on " Christian D:ctrine," upon which 114 i
[ this opinion depends : ;
"It must traffics to say that this Christian Deol.
trine is proved to have been a very early work of ,
Milton's unsettled years, .suppressed by himself as
trasearthy of prblicatton, and wholly inadcguntsi I
at a bade of the classification of its author annum
lite IhtiTeSISHI. That the illnltriolM prie tK
' site pintlitteolVeid ophonir . —,ifilleNelmer -
• one wm - tissert wh o has mastered the iTvl.7lo2otin
volved in a fair settlement of the date et ahe tria
-1
tire ow which the eontroversy tarn."
, ..
• CRALPLSINO.—We p e rceiv e that thO ohaplalab
of our army, at a meeting at Washington, ex-
pressed their thanks to the Secretary of War,
the Commander-in Chief, the Adjutant-General,
and other officers of . the War - Department, for aid
and interest in the sporal and religious instruction
of the trOOpEt; also to the resident clergy of the
dietrlot, and the Young Men's Christian Asada-
tion, fee assistance and courtesies; and to the
Tract Society of New York and Boston, and the
New York Evangelical Alliance, for books, papers,
As., for the army in end about the capital.
CATHOLIC OPINIONS ON THII OATH or ALL..
Garton —A correspcsdeet of the Cincinnati
Catholic Telegraph mks the question "whether
a naturalised eitisee, even in the South, can take
part with the Southern Confederacy without the
guilt of perjury ;" to which the editors reply :
" Au oath binds a man under penalty of perjury
to what he 'conscientiously considered his wows to
promise. Apart from ignorance, prejudice, or
false representation, we believe that every nata
relieed citizen has, according to the Intent at _the
Term of naturalisation, sworn to support tti
legally constituted Government at Washington.
Many a poor man may have- been taught, how
ever, that his obligations were not of this charac
ter, and may therefore,,without willing to perjure
hissseelf, be carried. away by the w a vas Of public
opinion about hiat to the wrong side. ~,
To this reply, the Boston Pilot adds the follow
ing : "It becomes the duty of every clergyman in
the seceded Matto to abeteln trete any Hit that
may lead their people to.believ• that they are re
leased from the obligation-of . their oath of al
legiance. The appointment to a chaplaincy in e
rebel regiment does not imply that the chaplain
sanctions the violation of the oath He only lends
his services to reconcile with God a dying soldier
who may have been guilty of perjury."
The New Peorasson re Parrscuron CovLseN.—
The Sunday School Tioioe of this week speaks of
the Rev. James C. Moffat. D. D , recently cleated
professor of church history in the Theological
Seminary, at Princeton, as follows :
" Dr. Moffat has qualifications of a very high Or
der for a theological chair; and his reading and
study have been each auto tit him peculiarly for
that to which he has been now promoted. Cburob
history in the United States has heretofore been
taken too much at second hand. We need, in this
department, a few men, at least, of eminent lin.
gerstio attainments, who cam give to church history
original Investigation, and who can speak and
write on this subject with authority."
MIAT•EATINO. IN Lanr. Recently the Pepe,
through the leading Maronite clergy, gave permis
sion to the people of that faith in Syria to sat meat
in Lent. The privilege, however, was othipled
with the condition that each man availing himself
of it should pay four cents a day. This oendltion
has given some trouble. The Dapple argued Abe,
point with the clergy an this fashion : "If the vio
lation of the fast be wrong, the payment of four
cents cannot make it right; and if it be right, why
pay for the privilege of doing right?" There not
being any answer to this reasoning, the people re
fuse to pay the money.
A RILIGIOIII3 ILIGINIITT.—A regiment is now in
progress of organisation in which Ronde Webster,
LL.D., and Dr. Byard, N. D.',"both - df the fess
York Free Academy, are to hold the podtious re
speotively of colonel and lieutenant colonel. Dr.
Webster is a graduate of West Point, and Dr. By
ard has been a colonel In the militia service. The
regiment is to he formed of men of sound moral
and Christian character, without respect to sect Or
ereed—men who will enter into the sereloe of sup
porting and defending the Government from a
principle of right, and not from any mercenary
Motive. A notice of the formation of this regiment
was read in the various churches ot New York On
Sunday.
Brunson 021 Warr' CHAVATS.—Spurgeon, the
eminent Baptist divine of Ragland, in • late speeds
before the Baptist Home Miseionery Society, ex
pressed his contempt for certain ministerial badge,
as follows: Re was calling for men to assist in the
work, adding that they were were* articles : "What
I mean by amen," said he, " is not a person with a l
white cravat and a black coat. From my heart I
wish that these white °mate were done with. No I
person wears them but waiters at tau, assistants
in drapers' shops, undertakers' men, and ministers.
I believe they are a badge of servitude. I believe
they were originally invented by the old sort of
deacons who need to aontrel the ministers. They
are all dead now-a-dam lam happy to say. What
I mean by a man is just this kind of person : One
who has got a thing in his heart, and means to do _
it—lf he smash the earth and shake the heavens in
doing it."
C.NAPLATNCT —We understand that the Rev.
Janice hi MoOarter, of the Philadelphia Confe
rence, is to be appointed chaplain or the Twelfth,
Pennsylvania regiment. This will be a good ap
pointment, as-Brother - MeCerter is an energetic
and reliable man. .Chaplains rank as captain' la
the a, and Twelve the same salary.—Chrss
rrari Adv ocate and Journal.
Nauman PansureauriXis Os:mortar To Dtiltill-,
MIINTAL Music —The Spud of the Praebyterian
Church of England, in their last session at Liver
pool, would not accept a congregation at. Exeter,
because they had an organ in their ehuroh. Fi;
natty, however, the Synod remitted its decision;
end agreed to sarrOtion the congregation, providsd
it was 44111% within a reasonablatime to abandon
the we of instrumental mud*.
Dn. Pommit, Or' Bu.,niong, Itivibg failed to
Carry Maryland out of the Union, and to 00Z1Vill4)0
Patient Lineolp that treason wee Christianity,
ha. dbtermined to discontinue hie pastoral oonneo
tion with his thumb. .Irho Dr. still maintains his
,abominable . tdetiersion doctrines as tentnioualy me
, e ver, While hie eongregatiim aro 'Dahl to On about
equally divided into the follotting throe ingre ,
clients : one third out-end.odt Unionists, ohs third
against seassalen, and the ether thiid devoted 10
)seeeesion.
NAV JlClteltlr CHAPLAINFI —00 , 701110 r Olden, of
New Jersey, has appointed an Episaepallan, a
f'resbyterian, a liniverseliet, aid ft ROUIIII Catho
lie as chaplains to the Ave regiments from that
State. The Roman Catholic eheplain is Rev.
George H. Doane, of Newark, a Son of the late
Bishop Doane.
Tus'Losmon BOARD OF BAPiIBT MIRISTRRB
vited Christians of all' denominations to set apart
Monday, the ad day of 3,sne, on which to prey
unitedly for the' abolition' of slavery , in America.
TRAI SYRIAN (117E911011 AGAIN --From a raris
ptiblisted in the Dublin Irishman, we glean
the following interesting points of a mulct debate
in the French SIAMe on the Syrian question
There was perfect unanimity expressed in the
deletinination to maintain the principle that the
Eallierit Christians are not to be abandoned,
though Syrian soil is to be evacuated for the mo
ment; Next, all agreed in attributing to the mean
jealousy ef. Reglatd, and English intrigues upon
the Continent, the difficulty in procuring the eel:-
sent of Europe to a continued occupation by
trance. And the debate was also remarkable in
biting brought to a Mose by a formal declaration,
on the part of the Government, that although
the troops now stationed in Lebanon under the
European treaty must be withdrawn on the day
appointed, yet France will, from that moment, act
alone, without the consent, or against the will, of
any other power in the world. *
Der friends, the Anglo Barone, this writer Con
tinues, were spoken of on all sides in no nattering
terms. " What must be our indignation." said the
Cforote Segur D'Agnemean, against that Govern
ment which, from a feeling of rivalry, pastimes
thelstrorts of Prance with other powers—a Govern
ment whioh has friendship on its Ilpp, but hatred t 1
zee. heart ?" You never spoke a truer word, M. le
ilomte
it 1111 generally admitted that - the terms of the
ooneentien meet be honorably observed.
When M. Bataan rose there was a " movement
of attention." His said shortly, that !Prance baying
Accepted the task of protecting Christians in Syria
for this time, under a oonvention of the Great
-Power', has no choice but to conform to - the terms
of that convention—the troops will-embark-on the
sth of June; but from that moment France will
consider herself free to act upon her own reepon
albllity—tbat a. Fretiott fleet will ramie* off the
coast, where a large English fleet is also lying, and
on:the first shedding of Christian blood will go in
and take order both with Turks and Drumm, let
"Europa" say wliat It will.
The coast of hyrfa, then, is going to be periloha
ground for the intents cordials. The strong and
tlititillbtati indignation expressed in this debate
against that people " which has friendship on its
Ilps, but hatred in Its heart "—the °eget adhesion
of tke whole Senate to a Arm declaration of the
Government which must be extremely offensive to
Ragland—all this le a warning to the Eniperor,
that the English alliance hue gonotabout tar enough.
So far from the Syrian question being over, It is
jot now going fairly to begin. 'There is at this
moment lowa more serious danger of war break
ing out upon that one point than on - all other mat
ters of controversy' put together.
To Clitistitee of every name and dime, and
more 'especially to intelligent student" of prophecy,
the solution of this peculiar =Eastern question has
an almost unparalleled interest.
The National Guards at Locust Point
[For The Prese.)
PHILADELPHIA, ITU= Is, 1861.
it was our privilege to be present at a roll
glens service at Lomat Point last Sabbath,
conducted by the Rev. Dr. Bringhurst, of our
city. Per the benefit' Of . tke Mends of the
volunteers encamped there,' we would give 'a
brief sketch of the proceedings on the coca
sion. At ten o'clock the reverend gentleman
took his stand beneath a tree, with Vol. Lyle
at bis right, with the other officers and a full
brass• band on his left. After an opening
pieemely tligr hand, Dr. Bringhmet - led the soi-
TAy was
.
ft e o t r i t - divi„ . , -thw:-Lettert-pftreffi sort several
otwarrirvincluding the prayer for the President
of the United States, and a chapter from the
New Testament. Another hymn (air, ,‘ Home,
Sweat Home) was sung. A sermon was de
livered from the text re Watch ye; stand last
in the faith; quit you like men; be strong.'!
The preacher urged upon them the duty of
watchfulness ; the necessity of building on
that faith taught in the Bible; and the value
of a manly character, which;was always a vir
tuous one. lie dwelt with great force on the
evils of profanity, wicked companions, end
intemperance. .After an address to Col. Lyle,
the other officers; and our flag, therband played
with fine effect the Star Spangled Banner,
which was followed by tbe doxology and bene
diction. Th 6 Col. then returned the thanks of
the regiment to Dr. Bringimrst, and cordially
invited him to_visit them again. As be loathe
Camp, and as we heard the different squids
admiring his sermon, and the kindness which
he manifested to them in many ways, we
could not but indulge the hope that he would
be persuaded to become the chaplain of the
regiment. We axe informed that the same
clergyman preached on the same day at
Federal Bill. Srszs axe &raves.
Letter trom ilarre-de-Oraoe.
tCorrooroodortoe of The masa
CAMP Roam, Havaz.DE-GRaos,
Tuesday Afternoon, *Tune 11, 1861.
It is just now unusually lively in Camp
Riley. Orders have been given out that the
11th Regiment of Pennsylvania Volunteers are
to march for Chambersburg to-morrow morn
ing. Asa consequenCe all b confuein and
bustle. The troops - are busily eugaged 4 n Pre
paration, and are happy at the idea of being
constituted a portion of the army to march
upon Harper's Ferry and assist in regaining it
from rebel hands.
Two weeks ago last night our regiment as
sumed the duties of guarding the Philadelphia
railroad from the attacks and annoyance of
secret enemies. During that time they did
their duty bravely, and exercised a commend
able vigilance which effectually prevented
every attempt that could be .conceived to de-,
lay the passage of trains and troops over this
road. Every rumor of an attempt was promptly
met and successfully guarded against. So
much for the labors of the 11th regiment Qom
far, which is determined to do its duty upon
every occasion, be the result what it may.
The lat iteghnent of Delaware Volunteers
have taken our place on this road. That they
will properly protect it, not a doubt exists.
The officers and men are a fine-looking, able,
and stalwart body whose every appearance in
dicates their peculiar fitness for any duty they
may be called upon to perform.
This camp is situated near and in sight of
the Chesapeake Bay. The ground is even,
solid, and nicely grown with grass, which
makes it excellent for drilling. The situation
is in every respect delightful, and we find but
one annoyance ,• that is, the prevalence about
ns of the abadAly, by the residents here called
the May.fly. These flies are extremely an
noying, and Ily upon yonrperson in such num
bers that it is impossible to keep them off.
At night they are much worse than in the day
tikie.:4 o ' • •
Havre-de-Grace is most beautifully located at
the month of the Susquehanna river. Though
not a large place, it covers a great deal of
ground. The buildings are not built com
pactly. Perhaps the population will reach
1,700. No elegant residences adorn the town,
but the dwelling 'houses generally present a
very comfortable appearance. The hospitali
ty of the people here, like it • bas been else
where, merits the:praise and thanks of every
parent, brother ' sister, and friend, who has
relatives or kin In the army. Where it is de
served, there it is conferred by the kind and
hospitable of this place. Only to-day, in view
of the departure from among them of our regi
ment, they manifested their hospitality toward 1
us in the formal presentation of elegant cakes
to companies A and B. Speeches were made 1
on the occasion, and fine music discoursed by
the regimental-bend. Cheer upon cheer rent
the air in plane- -the ladies who had thus
shown themselvei - On the side of those new
engaged in-thodelenee of the country. The
occasion wee-moat happy one, and was great
lyenjoyedly
Beterenoncluding this hastily-written letter,
allow me, Er. Editor, to congratulate you and
your readers upon the very proper and sensi
ble views contained in the leader of your Issue
taday, concerning the contemplated appoint
omits in the army, to be made by the Secre
tary of War, General Cameron. The views
which you have therein expressed meet with
the universal approval Of all the troops, and'
all the citizens here who have read them. And
so they should. The strictures and censures
heaped upon the National Administration, in
view of certain contemplated appointments to
high positions in the army, by contemporary
journals; are not endorsed here. Every eon
fiderice exists in the Adminietratien to do its
duty, and.especially do the_people confide in
the admialatrative sad executive abilities of
the;Secretary of War, than whom a more ener
getic man never before ffiled'this position in
the Cabinet of the nation.
When we again pitch our tents, I will write
yen a more interesting letter. Until then,
good by. V,1 4 , WWI? BRANCH.
ROUND ABOUT WASHINGTON•
The Wanderings, Ponderinge, ana oute.the.
way Loiterings of a Roving Yankee
Corrosoondenoe of The Prem.!
NO. VIII.—THE BATTLE OF BETHEL BRIDGE.
On Tuesday afternoon ' at dusk, the o Ave
nue," as seen from the editorial rooms of the
Chronicle, wore the moat animated appear
!Mee, since the fourth of March. At noon,
the netts of a pass-at-arms, near Fort Monroe,
had come in. Before two 0 9 cloels, s bulletin
extra spread the vatiOns rumors and reporta
throughout the city; and, by stift-set, in the
cool of the evening, from every quarter of the•
town, citizen and soldier flocked to the re
gions of Brown's and the telegraph-office, for
the usual purposes of receiving the latest in
telligence, of gathering the most reliable
opinions, and joining the general diecneelon,
which of course follows the reception of in
teresting and important tidings by a mixed
concourse of motley and gossip-disposed
groups. The moral arising from this miscel
laneous hut arbitrary court of is-ljudiostnre,
where plausibility constitutes reason, rumor
I passes for fact, and notions the result gf im
pulse, report and prejudice, assume the di-
Mensiona Of opinion, presents a mingled
"comedy of errors' , to judicious reflection,
which is recognized and laughed over on the
I nserrow by the populace itself. As usffial,
most of the substantiated facts turn out to be
fictions of the most idle character; and nearly
the whole, of the pre-judged verdict is reversed
by the mere positive diatomof actinide de.
tail. The pliant grace with which the fiercest
commenters upon o first tidings" fall hate
the coned and prevailing judgment of fact
and reason, exhibits a striking inatance of our
national capacity for a liberal, enlightened
self-government ; whilst the patience, pre
deuce, thoughtfulness and fairness of the final
decree proves in a clear light the magnani.
I MOUS spirit of our- character as a nation and
people.
The official report of the battle of Bethel
Bridge, together with the descriptive accounts,
which may be taken as reliable, vary materi
ally from the rumors which were circulated
among the anxious citizens of Washington '
and were canvassed by the exalted crowds
upon' the Avenue on Tuesday evening. Its
consequence as a hostile encounter, its Im
portance as a military measure, its force as a
moral disaster, are considerably diminished i
Whilet the lesson it inculcates and the expe
rience it teaches are calculated to impress the
I loyal Mind and heart more sensibly and seri
ously than would. naturally be produced by a
'conflict of but little or no physical result, one
I way or the other. lam myself but vaguely
conscious of the basis upon which many very
sensible people build up accusations of negli
gence, incapacity, and want of prudence and
foresight. Not at all sure that the unfortu
nate accident which exposed the object of
the *expedition might not have occurred under
the command of any and the most efficient
"commander; and, quite certain that popular
pride has pitched the hopes and expectation
of the mass of our people beyond the natural
reason of the case, I am inclined to view thie
first onset and repulse as among the inevitable
consequences of war. One of the most °ne
in:WS ideas with which men and. nations enter
a personal or gener
a_ engagement, and one of
the most common, is a foolish exaggeration of
their own strength, to a proportionable un
donating of the courage and skill et the enemy.
Prom the beginning of this contest, this die
astrous idea has governed the minds of a large
portion of the Northern people. They forget
that the contending race is, in almost every
respect, physically like ourselves. They for
get that by the aid of official treason the re
bellion has been ushered in, armed and
equipped in the full panoply of war. They
forget that our troops march upon strange
territory, whose geographical advantages to
the enemy almost balance the superior force,
martial and moral, Which the Government em
ploys. In a word, the spirit of sproad-eagleism
—which however glorious in calling into action
the energies, impulses and patriotism of the
masses, is not the most effective implement
upon the battle-fleld—has to a.sertseles •
blinded.mannit_psi- s-I. l .l. l, lfitiderit eau
o''''''"*.b.—S:WaWn censured by rash-brained
- stifiliteicri, has appreciated' it. The Adminis
trntionderstande its-and this repulse will'
" fi26ll'ee gOligialittnii-ta ' a faller conapm
hension of it. Who.. sta. oDeniting armies
meet, somebody has to be beaten, and. many.
must fall. On the present occasion it fell to
lot to sustain a comparatively trifling de
feat, which will react with treble force one
favor. As to the sad accident, which could,
not have been fore-thought-of, which in the
darkness and in consideration 01 the striking
similarity of the enemy to oureelves, was
liable to happen to any one and at any time,
we mind view it as a warning. I do not see
the justice of placing any blame upon General
Butler. I believe I am the last one who
would feel disposed to cherish kindly feelings
towards that officer ; for being in the late
Baltimore Convention as a warm partisan of
Judge Douglas, the political course of Gene
ral Butler there, and his subsequent action,
was calculated to .excite a feeling of
which his more recent actions have scarcely
effaced. Bat here—in this eneounter—his
conduct has been in no-wise that of either a
negligent or incapable chief. It seems to -me
that his misfortune—for, however unjustly, the
brand of prejudice will fall on him—was the
result of many inevitable matters beyond his
personal control. I believe, too, that such
is the general opinion prevalent in this city at
the present moment. -
Doubtless there are many private woes,
which spring from the disaster, whose eeho
can not bat inspire a deep and prevailing sor
row. To one who but lately witnessed the
departure or the troops from the capital for
their destiaation, a bold, fearless, brave-look
ing band of men, who had clustered and mus
tered from highway and byway, in response to
a patriotic duty, and enrolled themselves un
der the fair free flag of liberty,
"Old and battle-worn awl torn
With many wounds,"
As it once again waves into battle ,
_gushing
blood at every hallowed rent achieved in
blither wars, the catastrophe excites many sad
reflections. But in war times, a nation's and
a people's duty is to philosophize lees than
moralize, and to hearken more to the calls of
sinew than the claims of sentimentality. Ac
tion--action is the word. The blenchless cheek,
the dauntless eye, and the firm lips, which
stamp the face of our national divinity, best
fit the faces of men, and women, and children,
from whose homes and hearths the grand
image of Patriotism should wipe away the tear
of sorrow. Glory to the dead, and God and
liberty to the living ! It is better to strew
roses upon the biers of a thousand heroes
than blush for a spot of dishonor 'no bigger
than an agate's eye. Roll forth the drums
anew. Plant our banners OD the outer wall.
Let the smoke of battle rise as thick as the
clouds of the winter storm. It is not for brave
women and men to quake when the thunders
roll or the lightnings flash. It is not for hearts
to oink when screams break upon the air from
the wounded or groans from the dying. It is
not for freemen to pause till they have as
serted their liberty, integrity, and honor be
fore the world; have secured their Eight to
domestic perpetuity and foreign respect, and
have placed on field and fort, on tower and
crag, where no hand can tear its blessed. folds
asunder, the emblem of their nationality—till
out before the lion of Britain, and the , eagles
of France—out before the crescent of the
Turk, or the sword of the-Ruasian—out before
Pagan and Christian, in every quarter and cor
neree-out before the nations of the earth—
,' O'er roof and spire,
A living fire,
The stars shall blase forever!"
Proudly, freely, immortally!
Ase TBBNCHARD.
WASHINGTON, June 13, 1881.
Publications Received.
From W. B. Yuman:
Temple Bar, a London magazine, edited by
Q. A. Sale, June, 1861. Art Journal, for June,
with three eagrevinge on steel, and numerous
Illnotrated article& National Quarterly Bo
tany, edited by Edwird J. Bean, A. 8., Nen
York.
From CALLUDZR k CO., South third street :
Illustrated London News end Illustrated
News of the W'orld, June 1.
From B. C. Brutus, 310 Chestnut street:
Cor-nhill Magazine, St. James' Magazine,
and Tompto Bar; also Illustrated London
News and Punch, of June 1, and London Jour
nal and C053611'.1 Illustrated Family Paper,
of June 8.
We shall have occasion to speak e. to write)
about some of these publications on Monday.
Meantime, we may notice that with the Illustrated
News of the World is given a portrait, on steel,
of Professor Bterndale Bennett, Mae. Doc., who,
by the way, entitled to the title, se ProfeBBoY of
Mole in the University of Cambridge With the
Illustrated London News is given, as a supple• I
mint, a large and handsome map of the United
States. It is clear, u well u minute, on the Innis
of one hundred miles to an bob, and includes not
only our portion of North America but Upper and
Lower Canada, New Branswiek, Nova Bootie, and
British Colombia, Mexico, Cuba, junks, et,
Domingo, and the Bahama Islands. It ban been
drawn by T. Ealing, and has been Pantoographed
by Gillet, of -Parte. This map, in which the
tioeusion Kates are distinguished by & difference
In tint, would be cheep at a dollar.
TWO CENTS.
Trouble in the . Rebel Camp.
iBA cilAnsiiarom abanctrsit ntwerNCilfd Tl Remr
Ann an ClOrAlDit.
(From the Charleiton Mercury, Jane &I
The reported retreat of two companion of tr
&fa cavalry before the advance of a single com
pany of United States troopere, Witbottt oven ozone
rag swords with them, is almost incredible news.
We do not know. what to make of it. Is the thing
possible ?•• It is said, in.extenustion of Attie appa
rently deetardly eandlet, that one company of the
Virginia cavalry were Without, piste's. Bat what
a vain and. empty exam !- What is the use of pia
tole In a sabre tight ? .The sabre, not the pistol, is
the weapon for 'Labarge of eaValry CtiValrY•
,still farther, it is Stated" that the other company
of 'Virginians ki;:f :pistols They were two to one
against the United States troops, and basked, be
Eiden. by a companyotritiamen. • Good God ! is this
the sort of Ogtaing BOutlaera tr6opi intend to mike?
Why, with their riflemen, end:Awe sabtoe to one,
they ought to have tint up the Liscolnites to a man,
and pursued' the. last man' into the very ormatuP"
meet of the enemy. Is the banner of the (Mk Do•
minion lobe thes trailed. In the dint? Are thew
men found in Virginie..thus to rob her of every
vertigo of her anefentprentige, and, more than all,
her honor, her glory in erns ? Will, then, no Mar
talon rieb.to upbraid them?
wiry tfeeerre tere(ve Imo-toter hint•-
• Wee re's Ham Meet?. Fita'Enettee.hrtintlr.."'
Oh'. for ad hour foe old Light Siren Haul ones•
more to yield his daring, dashiog,bladis Unless
our nicogre awl:mote' from nich..aa pews arc
strangely inoorreot, the epaulettes should be torn
from the shoulders .of the ofliiiers , who have than
stained the honer of theirstste, and a court mar
tial should Oxpel Mein from the rinks of the Con
federate alley." That therefore breve Mtn ha Vir
ginia who will maintain bar, integrity, the pliant
cionduct of the singly company of rides, unsup
ported' and without baYonetir t *bo drove back the
enemy with their holloke, will Willy. Let those,
then, who have no stomach for the fight be spurned
from the ranks of the army—objeots of contempt to
mankind. •
FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL.
The Money Market.
Pair.4oiLratt, lone 14. 18M
Stocks were in better demand to-day. Beading
Railroad stook advanced, under the intlaenee of
news from the Now York Board of Brokers, to
181, and there was more inquiry for all the better
class of ritlroad seouritiee.
The „Boston Traveller gives the following ac
count of Mr. Lindsay and his probable motives for
- the remarkable epeesh to which he lately gave
utterance irr the British Parliament :
"Our shipowner!. who feasted and flattered' Mr.
W. 8 „Lindsay, M. P , last year, were somewhat
astonished that he had taken ground against them
in a long rambling speash which he delivered to
his constituents at Sunderlaud on the .224 alt. He
wants Boglend and SPIDCIP to interfere, ostensibly
to prevent blOOdehed;bnt in reality to aid in break
ing up theNdlon, that England may have a mono
poly of the carrying trade of the South. Ile also
raised the cry of Southern privateers, end the impos
sibility of our being able to blockade the rebel ports.
This wag simply a shipbroker's dodge, to injure
our shipping abroad, by causing distrust of tnetr
safety, thereby inducing the ownen of meninx,-
dice to give the preference to British bottoms. As
the fellow's views of statesmanship are concentrated
in making money, be thinks that be perceives in
the dissolution of our Union a riot field in the
South from which sharpen like himself can reap
a golden harvest. He does not think that any
privateers will be fitted out in British ports to prey
upon ems eemmeree, but he has hypoefitiolll fears
that they may be fitted out from the ports of
Spain _ Upon this point we can calm hie fears.
Spain is conscious that we can not only blockade
the rebel ports, but those of Cuba at the
name tine. a suffiefent consideration to keep her
neutral. Besidee, most of our valuable merchant
vowels are now heavily armed, and abundantly
able to defend themselves. We do not entertain
the slightest apprehension of privateers, either tit
home or abroad, for the simple reasons that foreign
nations will not allow any to be fitted out in their
ports, and because the rebels are strictly blockaded,
and have neither ships nor sailors. Mr. Lindsay
is a ship agent, not a statesman—a greedy money
maker, not en enlightened merelsant his opinion',
therefore, are not =tided to more oonelderatiOn
than those of any other demagogue, although be is
a member of the British Parliament. lie will
DM learn that 'the shipowners of the North nu
'deratand their own bushing beet, and will °endue!
it successfully without hie advice or interference."
The St. Louis Repablecan lays of the efforts
making to provide for the July interest on the
-Missouri sonde:
afr _ ets ue or them
" We learn tkatj e arrangements for
o nicyment were, we have been informed,
entirely sedsfaotory to the holders. Nothing de
finite Is yet known as to the prospeate of the pay
ment of the interest due in July. The opinion is
freely expremed, in some pretty well Informed
,quarters, that it will be FRO."
Families Cotunterfeit Detector for Jane 15th
'is pnbTfalyetl to EMT retailer, and irde Ad
ail whose business brings them into the receipt of
any number of bank Mlle, should take a counter
felt detector, as the loss by a aingle bad note equals
the coat of a detector for a year, aid in this
ishlng state of the ,counterfeiting business, the
probabilities are In favor of many deceptions upon
those wbo are eeproelded with the safeguards that
deteotore afford.
Philadelphia Stock Exchange Sales,
June 14. 1881.
itIrORTY.Ta ES. n.ELA.
MAW B
3 Cam to Amb
8 Beal? Mead R 66
8 do • 66
20 2d g 3d-atg. 37
to do— 37
12 d0—r.:..37
• ZS Meohamor Bit-- 20
MOO Poona 66,---- 77
too do .-. 76Y,
1000 97 Parma R 10a 86
S Phdadalohla ilk._ al
2 do.-- .66
BETWEI r .
60 V eading R.— Ltfil
60 &Mutt rimy Prefds 10%1
4000 Clay 66..t1aw.C.t1 91361
NRIIOIIII/
6 lAmehi
ettl U.
li ; ._..R.Cgr 67tfi
66
6 Spruce to 736
4060 Reading ita 1 I
0. 80
2000 do '44-0 for
Labielt &Rio ....L. 33 4
27 63
2 . 33
20 goading . UK I
CURIUM I'
Arksd
hilefL...illtoff 6731 OEI
rhiss 6x /cant car amass
Phila Ea new inoff 96 96
Penna 56.....-- 763 i 77
Read. R. LW 45 13 16
Read baWitt77., toK
goad mt 66'80 '1.7 8934
Road mt go 'At-. 70K 7134
I Paula R--- 57X
Penn 6 It 241 mt6a 8336 64
Morns Can con. 69 -3956
Biome Can. Pfd 106
Soh
Nay vs 17 is
ao
Soh
Soh ,Nap Moak. 4 7
The New York Post, of this evening, says
Stocks show renewed firmness to-day, with more
speculative activity in the leading ritilroad'shares..
New York Central war unummlly active, and all
the time bargains, it will be Dean, were on sellers;
option. About 1,500 shares changed handl! for
°ash, and 1,000 on time. There was elan Dome
buoyancy in Galena, whioh roes d per cent.
The market gathers tone from the firmness in
New York Central, which advances .under the
daily wants of the bears, who have largely over
efald the stook. Mnoh of the stook has also gone
off the street, it being a favorite with persona who
Book employment for their large balances, because. '
of the facility with which it may be turned into
money again. Then, too, it is earning a dividend,
and its safety is beyond question.
New York Central closes firm at 731.73 f. ICl
riOil Central Is very quiet today, at eea66# Ga
lena la in demand at S9is6o.
Pacific Mail and Panama are quiet at former ;
prices. The letter is 105} bid, 106} asked.
The oval stooks are dull. Delaware and Hudson
79;180, Penntrylrania 76a77i,'Lsolutivanna and:
Weetern 7247.
The following is et approximate statement a
the earnings of the Pittsburg, Port Wayne, and.
Chicago Railroad Company, daring the month of
May, 1861, compared with the 883410 period of last
year, viz
From 1161. MO. Increase. Decrease
Freight......... 3137 .343 64 $9B 493 SI $38,06147
'Passengers. 61 ter 84 72 a 97 It —. 10.09Z5
Express.—. 2 700 CO 2.7u0 00 --
Matto_ 7.826 to 7 SD 00
R't of s itOad 7,083 33 7.00 53
a. 7 76 34 40 216 76
Total_ ,0217 857 66 ens 830 66 $59,036 90
San. 1 to
31-031,171,672 30 MS SOO 31 NOM id .....
The following is the amount of coat shipped over
the Huntingdon and Broad Top Mountain Rail
road, for the week ending Wednesday, June 13,
1861, and since January let, 1861
Week. Previously. Total.
Tons. Tons. Tons.
7. 1 91 73 723 03,919
3 903 76 251 80.464
/0
se6 O :
3.585
Deoreme—.--
The following ie the amoral t of Coal transported
over the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, for
the week ending Thariday i Jane 1; 166 1:
Total siothrsoito ooal for SS 460 00
Harrisburg. total tatoottnows—...— 6.000 00
Total of all kinds for the week—.
PrOVIOIIIII7
--
Total --
To same tint, last year—. —.— 03
The following is the statement of omit transport.
ed over the Hazleton HttHrOlui for Ike week end.
tug joins 8,1881
Week. 'Previously. Total.
Tone. Cwt. Tom Cwt. Tons Cwt.
liazletern 2,47 07 20427 00 02301 10
Orenberry--.....—. 2,129 is a Sea we* On
4.743 13 0120 06
East spear 2.262 09 411,281 14 4700 WI
Connell Ridge 2,242 10 ggo eg 14 46 300 01
311:0121,1'10041124--- 24 12 2 524 07 ' ll ° B "
Harie{ah..... t /80 JO 28 291 '9
Jeudo _ 3,616 11 35 BO 20 2'41 12
9 42E
sou 06 of
.13 120 09 st 6 IS 240 961 of
Last, 24,1 E of 2317,799 u 6 8414 5/0
-• "
The Ltwoccootions of Fleur and Meal in Philhdel: -
.
phlie-iferhog the week ending' June 18,1881, w ere
ea !allows " - -
narreie of
do. fine -- 486
do. Ile
do.
do. Corn Ideal—.
300
Tana
TIME wEETcuy PRESS..
Tun WeeLy Flees will be sent to itobeeribere bT
mill (Der KRUM in edirerttled I%t..e...rtr*.+O"°
Three Copies. .• 11.. * 00
......• .0.11.••••. 0
Five " ii "
ed.. 9.90
Ten " ~ " .... 19,00
Twenty
Twenty Conies. or over. --
each ettliyoriber.) each
For a Mob of Twenty-one or over, we will mend an
eats copy to the getter-up of the Club.
sir postmasters are requested to ei , t 6i4 Asento for
Tat WISZELY Pans.
CALIFORNIA FRAM
bolted three times it Month, in time for the Qattara , a
Steamers.
Weekly Review of the Philadelphia
iliftrketit
Parr.Anavrind, Jane 14,1561.
Business generally continues dull and neglected.
Quercitron Bark is scarce and firm at the advance.
Breadetudis are unsettled and lower, with a mode
rate demand for Flour, Wheat, and Corn. Coal le
in good request to go East, and prises are firm.
Cotton rasing very 'quiet. 'Groceries have at
treated more attention, and the seliif are confined
to Coffse, which is firmer, In Metals there le
nothing doing. - The • Provision market is very lo
cally.), and prieal AM nominally nnobangsd, bah,
Fruit • and Leather continue. dull. Naval Stereo
and Oils quiet. Plaster, "aloe, and Seeds, little or -
nothing doing. Bait is inastive, and Teas, Tobacco,
and WOOl tritlioqt any,Partialities . ehangs. In . Dry
Canis there is no new feature, and a limited bud
sere doing, Mostly 'hi' All army contrasts ; and Orr
•
ton fabrics" are "well held and AM. " -
The Breadstuffi market is dull and drooping wa
der the &dykes from abroad. There la Some little
export demand for Flour and the market gene
rally is unsettled. 12,000 fable sold at $5'2645.37i
for good Pehisdylverds superfine, , at sahib rata,
isiormereasawoodiritt
westr m ' 0‘
,oenset ride
.I '5OO bbi extra and 'ettra• nail off
kept private, and piat,sit :from -5616.050iper.bbh.de,
in quality, The trade are baying is a,*+.ll etay„,
and at very irregular *loge, ranginiTrbMss44,
$5.50 for Western and Pennsylvania soqiiiiine and
extras, $5154 50 for Rood and oheiee s extrannilt
extra family, and $0 2037,09 per bbl tot filmy
brands, as in quality. The reoeipto are on the
crease, and some conalderable sales of Ammon
extra are reported at $5 per bbl. Rye Floor and
Corn Meal are not Winfred for, and freely offered
at $5 00 for the forreofand q.2l.ri rot Perinsyleania
meat. without sales. ' '
.
Wnaczr.— T . he receipts of most kinds have fallen , .
off, but shippers are not disposed to operate, and
the market is anti and droop-log. The sales remelt
20,00 G bin common to, good and prime Western
and Penna. - reds at $1 250.'35 in store and *gnat,'
closing at 1127; -white ranges at from $l. 4A.to
$1 50, U in' quality ; Rye is dull, and Penna. le
milling at 42 , t645. Corn is in Malted retina% lirith
sales of /0,000 bus to note at 540 for prate South
ern and Penne ; yellew afloat 50552 c for fail' quali
ty, and 465500 for Western mixed in store:. Oats
are steady at 20.4310 for . Southern, Mid 3lit3io for
Pinnn , and a small business doing at thermos
rates from store.
Paovisions.—There le Ilttle or nothing doing,
and the sales of Pork in a retail way only'st $lB
per barrel for mess Beef it steady, hat Anil, at
$14a16 for Western and City mesa In Batton and
green meats the oaten are limited, and prioes no
minally unebanged. Lard moves off as wanted at
0,018 for notintiy, and 100 for prime western in
tee. and bbls ; kegs are worth lOtallor oath and
time. Butter is dull, and roll is - selling at Baloo,
and a sale of packed wee made at 9to. Chime is
dull at 6590 as in qiudity. Eggs are better, and
selling at 12e
_per &Zen.
tiaveLs —There is no new feature In the Iron
market and nothing doing to alter • quotations
which are nearly rtominal, both for pig and mann
featured Iron, the former ranging at from $lB to
121 for the three numbers of maltreat.; en time.
Lead-3410TM is unsettled and low, owing to the
difference of exchange -with the West, and a sale
of 1,000 pigs new made in a neighboring"market
ta Immo bete on terms - kept pnvate. Pot-sign is
held above the dews of buyers: Copper, sethieg
doing to establish a price for either sheathing or
yellow metal. ' -
Beau —There is very little Queroltron arriving,
and Ist NO. 11s SUMO and wanted at $2B . per ten,
at which rate about 140 hbde sold. of T a naeigs
Bark the sales are limited at $1151154 for Spanieh
and $8 50 per cord for Chestnut Oak. -
Banu.—Businese is moderate, without ehang,a
in . quotatlone. ,
BIIIIEWAX.—But little offering,. and the sales
light, at 30a31e per . lb.
Outman —The inquiry for all kinds oontlnues
limited, with a small business to note in Adaman
tine at 1811180 per lb", .
COAL —.There is a fair demand for Anthracite, to
go East, at fully former rates, say within the range
of $3 25a3 50 per ton for white and red ash, free on
board, and a moderate business doing for the ma
inn.,
Corroc—The market eontinnes at a itaidetlli,
and without any partionlarohange to note inea
V it
or demand, most of- the mills being idle °Ewer
short time The demand -from mennfaoturers
1 ver/ limited within the range of 12418 e per pound;
The following is the plovarna..+--` ---
September last. -- - 2061. we&
.11.heetortat porta, .000 4 MS,OOO 3 093 000 MU 000
Export to ere 8ritain...3.107.00 9469.000 1.801,1910 1.510.000
Export to France 570.000 665-000 383.000 833
Export to other F. 867200 '419.000 510.000 - ant
Total export. .......3,00M00 5,676 t 2 7 10,002 21 222 41 0
Stook on hand..... 48.000 &So 392.000 426,000
Of which, during the pest week, incindedin the
above • • -
Receipts at ports.- .. 4.000 13.000 11.400 124/00
Export to 19't Brita in.. 20,000 47.000 21.000:, .4e,001
rort to Franoe....- 8,000 9.000 4an 2,090
Dort to other F. P.-- mew 8.000 10.000 6 000
opp i ngports.--... 13.000 89,0119 30200 vies
Nrsmniirk.t.•-ttletriplas Deerease. at tiny
nate
compared with teat year, 975,000 bales. Ritiorte--
Decrease to Great Britain, 40/000. bales ; increase
to Prance, 5,000 bales; increase to other foreign
• ports, 91,00: Total deorease export:li, 537000
bales • •-- '
• Cerven is firmer, and the stook light. We
note some further small sales of Rio, mostly front
second bands, at nail!,; 1.600 bags Laguaynt at
131..121c-ter venni, and 1,500 bags Maracalbe at
131 e, all on time. .
Davos saw Dreg.—littsittese continues lititottimi.
-Among the sales are some Gusts:hale Indigo, Ben
get do., refined Camphor, Soda Ash, and balSoda,
ill within the range of former quotations- All
kinds of Logwood have advanced., The Moot is
light, and the demand good. •
iteenners —There is very little produoe offered;
the going rate, 2+l 68 for flour and 101 for 'troth to
Liverpool; 31 forliour and io.i for grain to Landes,
and 255301 for weight. West India freights are
dull. Nothing new in Boston freights, and badness
very moderate. Colliers are in steady demand at
110 s to New York, /100 to -Abode Island,- and 1250
par ton to Boston, .fronr Part Richmond, -
Fan —Most of the recent arrivals are going into
store, and the market very inactive; tiro outputs
of new Magdalene Bening, in /kaki sold on-terms
•itent prints. Store pfillelftlf Maillffel mpge at
$l2 50a13 for medium lit, $l7 for is,rge de, $5 50a6
for medium 2s, (large fish are - scaroth)'and s6*7 for
larges3a. Pickled .Uening are quoted at $2.504.75
per bbl, and dull-. Dry• Ced—no sales.
Pam? cantinas' dull. Two cargai Of Silltiona
Tine Apples have arrived, Wand tales are - making,
in lota, froni theveasel, atSTaillbe the 100 Oranges
and. Lemons are- jobbing out at from $1 to $2 . 50
per box, an to condition.. Inalomeitio dried Fruit
there is nothing doing, -thirsentitur biting ova.-
-Guam" i-rTheroAsnoqdyg - doing,' butaberet is no
alteration in . .
HAIM Stook being nearly all is thebands
of the mateaftletundin, the market-is gimlet.
Hops.—A small Wings:Mt° pelt Woo mating
from 130 t 0,25 for new. imp Eastern and Western.
018 flops are riot inquired' for. ' • - -
Eines mirainarmse are quiet, with moderate
business doing in the latter at steMy rates.
LUAU;dull, and in white anti yellow Pine
there is very little doing 'lithe wiLy of Wet; Bit&
queliannai-130arde ranged at $12415, . and Lehigh
flintlock do et SlO. Lathe and Pickets are, plenty
and *Flies - unsettled Without any large sales.
Southern Shingles are out •of first hands, white
Pine do sell at - 1512.15 M., • ••
Nougat:lL—The market is steady and t he only
transactions we hear of are some small sales Cuba
at 1.6a18e, 4 months. • • -
21.sitiujivonna.—There is little or nothing do-
ing in any kind, and Spirits of Turpentine is sal
tins in a small way at 75e per gallon. No Change
in Rosin, Pitch, and Tar, and the: limited.
Ores —Sperm and Whale sell se wanted from
store at about previous rates. Linseed meets with
a mcdorate home demand -at 545550, weight. Lard
Oil is very dull at 751600. Of Coal 011, whisk if
more In request, we note sales at 550 per gallon
" Iniperta of Spann and -- Whale' Oil, and Whale
lime auto the 'United States, for the week ending
June ISSIL
Bbla. Se. Shia. Wh. - lbs. Bone.
'Total for 1.910 Uhl . 12 900
18,01576,780 101,400
. -
From
limo. to date, 00 2 22 7 2 - 222 . 275.400
29.210 time lag year, MeV 91,34 ammo
Peasettia.—There is little or none selling, and
we quote soft dull and unchanged and nearly no.
19111101 at $2 per ton. • •
Rica is quiet, anti the sales ins retail-way only
at 5i,163.per pound. ,
S.&vr Is dull, and the arrival of Turks Island,
noticed last week, has been taken by a packer on
terms kept private.
Senua.—There is nothing doing in any . kind
worthy of nate, and no change in the market
Sadnzes.—Brandias continue firm Auden the nil
vane* bat there is little or nothing coins_ in the
way of salts. Gins are steady ; and New Ragland
Rutn.very dull at quotations. Of 9n:take the re
°Mph, and sales have been limited- at-16tine for
barrels . 18018#o for drudge !lab Is • sesrce, and
161 for hhds. • •
61341545.—The 'market is firmer, With more dis
path:ion to operate in most kinds, bueno large tales
Imre 001110 under our notice. Refined Sugars are
rather better. •
Teniow continues firm but qttiet, Stilts9io for
city and Bfo for nountiy rendered, and a small bu
siness doing in the latter.. - ,
Ties.—There are very few selling, but prices are
well maintained and inn.-
TOBAOOO is firof at the advance, but most of the
dealer; are , supplied, and there is little or nothing
doing._ • '
Wool; The market continues unaettled and dull ,
and the eaten mostly confined to small 1011 Of the
low and medium grades at irregular rates, Inn
ing from 30 to 400 per lb, as in quality. -
• Ifferahante &dant&
OMIT.
ISO Catania& R Frafd 5
1000 sun% R tat no— 913 E
a Minekdd R.. . 541
100 City' es 86
IMO cam & klub de 'B9, 74
4 Penns L.. ---.... 5 ni
do .
500 N Penns 11.60-- ait ,
1000 do. .241311 67%
no Lehigh Nay 55---155
IMO Lehigh V 4144— 06
BOARDS.
1000 Penns R Is m— 9731
10 Beaver Meadow R 86.
2000 Penns - - --11
BOA N.D.
8 Reading R
100 do — '
18g
100 field tiav Fred... 11
eOO Cam & am Oa '64— 90
MO Penns R 2d ra
-3 d 0..... 373 i
WOO do Ist 9754
IWO Penns iss. —.—. 7?
MIMEO
Bid. Asked.
Long blond R_. 8% 9
Le 1 & N.-47 48
Leh CI & N 800-873 i 88
North Penn* R - 6 731(
NPa A to, .ant 48
renps R UM. -84 Ng
Gonswuna. R wed I 6.,54
Freak" flo R. , ,;,D6
let & 3d-ate It - sax . 1 / 4
Rnoo&lrine-st R. 3 37 _--
West Philo 66
irnoe & Pine..-
pson &.(loatoo_lo
I Chest It Wan't. 20 30
.153,07 14 43 44511
.00
_..soo,ssa ss
" (to one address) 20.00
(to address of
-
How re VOTE ITNION astono" TRAIToati,,—A
resident of Alegendris 00Mmunittatee an account
of the way in whioh Union men there secured a
free expression of opinion against &suasion_
" Whioh way do- you vote?" shouted the emitted
and armed rebels at the pelts.- -"one To t e l e
'iA,i,t,tt he replied, dreiring a revolver; - "but I
shall not use tt until I have thrown this," showing
a Union ticket. lie was unmolested. A few snob
suds of heroism would redeem a State, and should
not go unrewarded. • -
AT A Diattnlon COXYlitTiox of the Third Con
gressional District at Jamestown, Koottivki. the
4th inst.,..tbe, Simonton speakers annotated their
determination to " wan this fight "--pearesbly it
they eould—but to win it *Wen 'if they SWAM hkee
'attend hytheir Musket& The 7 8.14 they= heei the
ellettelliAcand were resolved, it stecrii!!,!7.,,te tie
•
To !berm :Away lidOSOMTo l l. — Canspber is the
aAOat
_ p earti rov e e h an oriblie ctwa y'hmas u isp in ,
sier to their entrance. amphora ad7erililf, ap
plied 'as perfume to the Tome and haitdriisig4,roee
**':effectual preventive; but whets _litho .by them,
aromatic vinegar is the best antidote.
ga _lb .
Dioirop of ALABAMA ItEr.—e Noisome'',
Advertiser says that -Rey. - Pundusey wee
ideated Bishop by ttia clergy; but that be was not
attosptable to the - laity. The furthersliation has
Pith of next llermaher.
.
!!!=i