The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, June 22, 1861, Image 1

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    TEE PRESS.
00 0 DAILY, (SUNDAYS EXOEPTHD,)
B y .3-O.IIN W. FORNEY.
N O No. 417 CHESTNUT
•STREET.
DAILY PRESS,
1315 rt, rot Whim, payable to the Cartier.
sew:alters oat of the City at Six DOLLARS
V x ' ss ,g, Fore_ lloLLi_litS FOR &oat: hits:ass.
' sr Nam', 'FosSts MONTII9-Itivailably in ad
the time ordered.
ri o n virgEßLY PRESS,
. 1 1 / 41 to subori bare Ont of the City at Tanas Dox.-
r A .rme. in armee.
•
COMMISSION HOUSES.
I.ltA y FLANNELS.
BLATE-BRAY FLANNELS.
.GBAY FLANNELS.,
-.11.1M-MIXED FLANNWSI
(111 WEST IN THE MIIRKET.
(IRAN FLANNELS•
vOR BAIA
ifY tat; MOE OR BALL
FOR CASH,
JOSHUA L. BAILY.
ovue33 NO. SIR MARKET BILLEIS,II.
initY, &4WD , tt HIITOEMON,
$0.11.2 WIENTNIFT 311:,
00J MISSION IDIROHANTS,
Fort ESE SALE OF
t igILADELPICLA - MADE
GOODS.
03,4,
SILLINERY GOODS.
me WHOLESALE STOOK AT RETAIL.
iiOS. KENNEDY & BRO.
714 CIOSSINUT Sthtet,below EIGMTK.
Are offering their Stook of
FRENCH FLOWERS,
AND STRAW GOODS.
AT RETAIL.
Ott CHEAP POE CAM.
GROCICRIES.
FAMITIES RESIDING IN TIIE
AURAL DISTRICTS:
„ e ;, prepared—ea heretofore. to Moil families et
wy wintry 'Nelda:Leos with every desoripUon of
pIHH iIdt.OMNRIEM, Tstsia, &c., &c.
ALBERT O. ROBERTS
oU ELBVSISTX AND VIBE STREWN&
assimi■
gy,,oar_sioß HAMS.
s, g. MICIEENELIC. & 00..
iiSSEILL PROVISION REALM=
£I OM= Or MIN
aRLNBRANED
-EXCELSIOR
1111011.-13 111 F.D NAM.
ROI US AND 144 NORNI FRONT iiviusAv
(PM= Arok and lass Street%)
191131.SDRLPNLI.
rAige.l,-6elobrated Rzetelmor Hale Si. 0111e4 by
,11. X. & CO. 04 I, style poonhar, to therassives), ex
-0.73 ferfereir err Si. of deliolona flavor,fras recla
inleasent Ore of mat. sad are prononnead eel
ase espenor to arty now offered for wile. SWIS-Ihn
LOOSING GLASSES.
LOOKENG- 4 3 . 14ASSES.
totally "Tidbit= inn iMiTtOloraiT Re 7 azt ots"= 4 -' 9 =
sis of
LOOKING -GLASSES ,
MISISRad aq sk• West isadrossisonts ant &OMER
li-
Caifaotare. -
has soire.tios in Walnut and GoLi a.E tossorto4
Flamm for 3111.1015.
lru 101 l satsakor• sad varied assoraassi is dor
JLEEB S. EARLS is at m,
SAKLIS 8' GAL zisE.i,era,
dl4l MS GKS6lnirr IST
BANKING.
uGIIST
8 e: ir 1.2 S
80 WALL 5113. LET, Kiss► YORK,
pN *tuft .1 arstrl t 1 Usvellers, *Whilst*
..*g.p.s.thraittl the Malin. latiumainli ra
"WAGE. Frisaktort. lispla, Inonna, and their ow-
insuients.
FINE WATCH REPAIRINC.
PERSONS HAVING FINE WATVRES
Oat have hitherto riven no autinfaution to the
rem, are invited to bring them to our etorki, where
L defeats min be remedied by thoroughly Wolin' and
canto workman. and the watch ttotoottod to ulna
er.re ratiiri r sotiOrt.
Mantel Cloaks. Musical Boxes, Ice.. easefully Ina m
eerlecr order.
2.151.11 ec BECITHEIta
taunters et Welshes. Utmost Boxes. Oklaki.e.ta t.
1 04-3111 *ll4 CaLiterPNIST Street. below .ne
Ll_aLiuAJL=UAL=fi
CABIN ST ITRNIVIRE AND all.
MAID TABLES.
MOORE al CAMPTON.
Bch 961 SOIITR SECOND ETBEEP,
teeseeetion with their entente@ Cabinet Buinees,
to now nuennfeeturm a MOM:Pr article of
BILLIARD TABLES,
Mt tare rune on hand a fan sepply. &ached With
teORE ta CAMPION'S IMPROVED CUSHIONS,
'finch are pronounced, by all 'who have used them.. ta
impenor to ill others.
tar the quality and Slush of these Tables the mans
'sowers refer to their numerous 'patrons throeshOitt
na 'mon. Who are ferailiar with the character of their
rain fsls-
TOILET AND FANCY ARTICLES.
DO YOU WANT
DO YOT WANT MUM
SO IRA WANT A 111.0AISTACES?
DO TOW WANT A LOOTDDLODE?
BELLINGHAM'S
OILSSSATED STIMULATING
°Nat:FENT.
rut IKE WIISIZERM AND 6aii
eateertben take Meant, to 111110111101111 to the
tuna of the United Mates that they have obtained
Aimmy for, and are now enabled to offer to the
&airman lOW the above Jeatly-gelebrete4 aai
tali-resowsed artiele.
TRH 671MULA7ING UNGUENT
mowed ti r Dr. C. P. BEIr INGHAM, an eminent
of London, and ill warranted to bring oat a
4am set of
Wlllnintlust, OR A IdellinTACHl:
hem three to anx weetob !hie article is , the eras
ne of the kind Ind by the French, and in London and
fuel Ain in untyerial U.
_it la a human', economical. soothing, yet =mule,
+.4 compound, acting ea If by magic upon the roots,
latti.„ rig a beautiful growth of luxuriant hair. If an
tad to the acatlwill onto boleros:, and cause to
Rent p in the p of the bald spots a fate . stowth of
Let him Applied aonordinz to diroOtiOni, ki 1,111 tarn
ID Of Tow! bur Warr. and venture gray hen so Ise
Ti, 'neenal color leaving it eott, =oath. and flexible.
" ONG is an indemenesble article in every
tendeman 7 a toilet, and after one week'. tugs they would
I t i t p eu r a l l aWbo ni tr e a ti it lalw r itha i llig , for the article
Vatted Matta, to whom an order. must ho ad
eubd.
one dollar a box; for sale by call Diturrida and
Lan.: or a box of the "ONGIMOM ' " warranted to
4 "e the desired eniros, will be sent to who desire
.t,br direoL esenrelY oohed. on lomat el liflee
4 1 mows, SUL Anly to. or address
101LACCE 111:13GEMAN k
Druglsts, as.,
$4 WILLIAM Etreet, New York.
eioll & Co.. NO. 231 Marti 2222021215treet, Pei
4.44 Lis Agents. aidelba
OPAL DNNTALLINA.—We speak tram
~I,..E.r.celoalexperierneelorheztA4riza, that theoPAb
ALLINA made by Mr. MINN. of BROAD seat
be.E. etres, is decidedly the mood etimaistir
Z l Par t atrit t i e httir at "err. Vlraii,
i'Retalted by the most emineat tlientiats int otoi.e.orl
rye it a M il_—ThllatiaL
PLOPOSALS FOB WOOD AND COAL
MINT 01 TEE UNITED STATES, •
.PrEELP =ulna, June lt_lBlsl.
MUSS
/910P0fitlal for siopPlima - tED In t
COILI for ono year from lot July. Ida. vm
• 61 'ed by'the undonnined until a o'olook P. M.
jag:poi tut
De
COM Must be of the beat and hardest Anthracite.
Ur and lamp Rill& Kid Inc from lime, elate.
3,0%• 11,04 l a lt i e r n o bA r tanoe pou ree da.
to r
iwa to
i ir tr or th hero . coainhi
-11,.d to hr._ savaged will be ooneidered in deter
c. 41 114 the Otto.
' sad Wood to be dry and of the beet quality of Lek-
I BPrupe
" 1 " 4 . 6 w u•L be detivered at the Mint.. i it mob
• and in mob quantities 118 may be s r6l*-Tlid. free
i :jrtioc or other oaargda.And attbloot to the ta-
P;Wall and approval of the Dl:actor of LEE Nun,
w.t r e :oa fo ls ao mode for took artiolo ovraMetr:
r Aws andmod •' Proposals for Coal _7_ rr
letv-tbr JAMBS POLLOus..
Throated,.
WOKS, LAW AND KINONLLANBOUN,
.„. _ev and old. boannt, sold. and exottannoti 11 4.1 1 2
NitiVELPRIA-BANIL 1300$ 8 rosz. o. 4 w
" street. iiibrariee at *diatom" peroluseed.
ga 114.1{, if at s 411.4**q*, Jinn stale
1 / 4 0 sites bindings dates. editio
a "natione A f drelrliff--"Books ptietpd D• 1 41_.• ,-
F ,_malla...ea Tau ar early Boatel ..ut mom
Alconranh. Loiters rortraite ear
lus:-..-amseJet Lam* fonnicylirandin for Ado. Cillaer•
mi le prem, orit tree. iebrankeseiMa s.
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VOL. 4.-NO. 279.
PA -B IT illtiG.---The UNITED STATES
HOTEL. ATLANTIC. N. J.. is now mum for
visitors. This is the largest and hest- furnished Hotel
on the Island. and being convenient to the beech and
surrounded by extensive end well shaded grounds, is
desirable House for families. It is lighted with gas
and well supplied with pure water. The Germania
Society will furnish the music for the season. The
oars atop at the door of the Hotel for the onnvenienoe
of. guests. IhREISIAH hIcKISBIN.
jell-tf Proprietor.
WRITE SULPHUR AND CHILLY
EATE SPRINGS.
ALT
DOUBLING GAP.
Thees ler;age are In Cumberland emit!, Ps— thin/
miles west of Harrisburg. on the Cumberland Valley
Railroad, and a-e now open for the reception of visitors.
Board from Ave to eight dollars, acoordeng to rooms.
Promo. yourthrough Wham at the Peensylvania Real
ms.] Moe. at a reduced prime Of th °ugh.
Call on B. B. Janney, Jr., & Co.. 6e5 Market street.
for information, cards. &a.
COYLY. AHL,dc BF.AMER,
jegn.ltm* Proprietor.;
SM/IACR BOARDING—BROAD TOP
MOUNTAIN HOUSE.—A romantic spot for SUM
MER. RESIDENCE, on one of the MOUNTAIN TOPS
of Pennsylvania, reached daily by Pennsylvania Cen
tral Woad and the Broad Top Mountain Railroad from
Huntingdon. The Douse is one of the finest in the in
tenor of the State, handsomely furnished. with all the
requisites for comfort and Convenience. Pure air. de
hoimot spring water, romantic scenery. end everything
to restore and invigorate health. Telegraph station
within a few miles or the Rouse. so that daily ooramw
nioation may be had will' Philadelphia. The Penximi
yards Railroad will furnish exoursion tickets through
the season Persona leaving Philadelphia in the morn
ing can take tea at the MOUN JAIN NOOSE in the
evening.
The unbsoriber has kindly been allowed torefer to the
following gentlemen (residents of irnikepipb,eo wh o
have been patrons of the MOUNTAIN HOUSE:
Wrn. Cummings, tsea., David P. Moore, Egg.,
Samuel Casmer, rore• Thos. clare.. eau
fir Joseph Leidy. 1 ewis T. watteon, Hatt,
Hon. Henry D. Moore, G. Albert Lewis. Idea .
John MoCanles, Req,, Richard D. Wood, hen.,
John Hartman. Eva.. Dr. S. Henry Dickson.
Informaton ea to term can be obtained of JOHN
Mc 'ANL, bS. or HENRY D. MOORE, SUB WALNUT
Street. For farther information address
JOSEPH MORRISON, Proprietar,
Broad-Top City, Powelton Post Office.
Huntingdrm, orninty. Pa.
BRIGGS HOUSE,
CELCAGO, ILLINOIS.
The undersigned respectfully announce to their
friends..,patrons. and the travelling public generallYi
that owing to the stringency of the tinies t they have
reduced the prise of board to TWO DOLLARS per
day.
Thankful for the patronage so liberally bestowed
on them. they Jespeotfully ask for a continuance of
the saute, assuring' their patrons tivit the " Eißteeff"
will be conducted on the same liberal plan that has
heretofore characterised their establishment.
WM. F. TUCKFIR & Coe
jel7.lro
QUAF HOUSE , ATLANTIO PITY, NNW
Ps.- 7 RSEY.
This HOTEL,, wth its first-Glaze accommodations for
over 400 guests..will be opened on the 17th at June.
Situated wi th in siritY yards of the Cioesn, at a point
where the bathing in the beet and eafent on the west and
remarkable for an unusually dry and healthy stool
.he re. the SURF 1001. 1 914 will be found one of the most
attractive places or summer revert near Philadelphia.
the table will be most liberally supplied. The house
is lighted with gas and plentifully supplied with good
cistern water.
A fine band of mode and the services of several
fast-sailmg Yaohts have been encased. and on the ve
inal, are Billiard Tables. Bowl ng Allays, and a auffi
oient number of Bath House., The Fishing, Gunning,
and Bailing at Atlantic City cannot be surpassed.
All train. 'don at the BUKF WARBI . to land and take
ecassmsers.
Forayy information. apply at ASHIAVIP HOUSE,
MUM Street, Philadelphia. or address the .Subsariber
at the Surf Rouse.
el2-36t R. S. BENSON. Proprietor.
CONGHBSti HALL,
CAPE MAY. CAPE ISLAND, N.J.
Thirwerlknorrn Post on
Hotei van Junepened for
the reoeption of guests on TO URSD A Y. 2O.
WEST fr. THOMPSON.
Proprietors.
COLUAIBIA HOUSE, Oape Island, N. J.
This celebrated house will be opened for the re
ception of guests on Jane 13.1861.
'she situation of this: house is one of the mast beauti
ful on the bland. commanding an unobstruoted view of
the ocean.
A band of /angle has been engaged egclasivelv for
thus hawse for tne geese,.
A large number of bath house ere connected with
the establishment. Good stabling for homes attached
to the eremites.
Applications for rooms or other particulars will meet
with prompt attention by eddreeetteethe sabsortber.
jAg_ B. LAIR 0, Proprietor.
-
Cape island, It J.
YrON TINE HOTEL, NEW HAVEN,
CONNECTICUT —The Bubsenber refurnished
thus fashionable firat-olare Hotel entire lest Spring. re
modeled the eld Dining Room, added a nes Ladiea ,
Ordinary, and put in complete order his Billiard and
Bath Rooms. Families can have suites of Rog= at
either House as low as at any first-Maas House in the
country. Boarders can go to and from the TONTINE
to the HEAD, three times a day, by rail, and take their
meals at either Rouse, without extra charge. Iticrutt
purchased and clocked a large Farm at tiaatleffel Head
aureole', the two houses will be fumisbed with Meals,
Poultry. Kilt. Butter. Vegetables. and Fruit, daily.
from the Farm. A Telegrap h Line has been put up at
Asehem's Bead and at the Tontine, at the Proprietor's
own expense. which connects with all the lines in the
United States. H. LEE EIGRAHTOM
SAOHEWS HEAD HOTEL, GUILFORD,
CONN.—The proprietor of this well-known. first
oleo. fashionable SU hiMER-HOUBIS would inform lta
former patrons, eta the public generally, that ha bail;
on three hundred feet last aiming. malting savants , four
new bed rooms, new dining-room, forty by one hun
dred. new parlor. forty by ee•enty. Every room in the
Ileum is newly furnisued, with new carpets and new
lantage furniture. The Hotel is of modern eonetrue
tion,built on an exteruuve scale. with accommodations
for four hundred guests; beauhfully located on Long
Island Sound. fourteen miles east of New Haven, on
the New London and Mouington Railroad; new bil
liard-room, with three new table's ; two new ten-ran
&hays, at a oonvenieat distance from the home , and
twelve new bathing- houses. Fishing is not inrcassed
on the Sound. A new yacht of forty-five tons,aril
several small sail - boats, be 'momently on hand,
'ready foripartiee.
Uoing from ffew Tort to Elaohenee Head, take the
3 a. at. train and 3 M. train ; °lase& end ticket to
elschem's Head direct, chiming ears at New
time through hours. From New Haven to the Head
at 7.1( A. 211.01 N., M.. and 6P. M. timel6minutes. At
the eamhomlt Head depot will be found one of Cook's
best four-horse Omnibuses, new and clean, to cam you
dimes to the house.
A new Earn. one hundred by fiftv-two feet. vu built
lad irenng,which will accommodate fifty boreal. Fif
teen acres of land have been enclosed. and filled with
ornamental and fruit trees, walks, ko.
The hottin will be opened for the reception of com
pany on the 26th day of June next, under the Immediate
superintendence of the owner.
N. 11.—hlosmutoes are never seen at the Head.
jes-lm H. LEE SCRANTON.
inftWON BPRILIGS, °ANIBAL& OM,
P4.—Thie delightful and popular pltoe of eummer
resort, located directly on the line of the Pennsylvania
Railroad. on the commit of the Allegheny mountain',
twenty-three hundred feet above the level of the ocean.
trill be open for 'nests the 3nth of JUNS. nines last
wipe the grounds have been greatly improved and
meat:LUC rendering Groom one of the moat romantic
end attractive places in the State. The furniture is
Lein' thoroughly renovated. Theaeeker of pleasure.
and the autfeyer from heat or disease. will find attrac
tion-hero, in a first-class Livery Stable, Billiard
Table., Tenpin Alleys. Bathe, &0., together with the
pOl6ll air and water, and the moat magradoent mown
nun scenery to be found in the country.
Tickets good for the round trip from Ptuladelphia,
*7.60; from Pittsburg. $3.06.
For farther information, address
a. W. MULLIN - L
joilm Cresson Springs, Cambria Co., Pa.
140WLAND'S HOTEL.—
S6A BATHING. LONG BRANCH, N. .1
The subscriber will Qpten hie hotel for the
"iican/4r OF VIFITORS
on saturmZ"nuelD,"
ryal-i H. go pVD P
ro to
r.
FP II RATA MOUNTAIN SPRINGS,
. 4 LANCASTER COUNTY. PENNSYLVANIA.
Shin oelebrated Watering Place will open for visi
tors on the go day of JUIIB. with all the attraction. of
former seasons. -
Situated on a mountain 1,190 feet above tide-water.
overlooking_ the noheat agnoultural country in the
world, the air perfectly Mire and dry at all times, ren
ders it proverbially healthy,
There are anmie accommodatilme for we 114 itonr—
/no graded walls through the forest to the various
springs and summer-houses" on the mountain and to
the obaerastor7. from the top of which is presented to
the
. eye one of the Anent and most extensive Pane'
ramm neva to be son. A good h Yerr kept on the
place, and atatatkrar drives around bet and cold lath.;
a splendid band of Mingo. (from the Germania. of Phi
ladelphia;) bowlwy alleys and billiard saloon., with
the latest uotoroved tables. Large gardens attached to
the place, from which all the vegetables are taken
freak . for Um table. whioli, too, will be applied from
the rhilaclesphis and omit/more markets, as wan as
Mon the noh agricultural country around. Careful
and attentive mervanta.
Having tern. connected with the establishment for
some POSSE With the late ropnetor , the endorsement
wa r m the old piltrons o f theplace end me public
gencrenr inet tro-at be eoaduoted., is every depart
ment, in it. former popular war.
Visitors to the Spring@ will take the cars to Lancas
ter, thence 13 miles staging over pleasant roads and
through a beantifel eenntry. Thrtaigh tickets lamed
at the Penuatintue office, .bLEV-kaNTR and
MUSKET Istreem t naiad*
For farther Forreoulors or mroniam_the erouietor
refers to JOG. 13. IdlEßt3,oorner Tnixjp end VINE
Stneets, and to JAMES R. BRYSON. No. 2 North
SIXTH Street. Plutadelphis t or. addrene
8. C. 81.8.1 7 h1AIEER.
mall-!m if Ephrata P. 0.. Lancaster en., Pa.
BEDFORD SPRINGS.—A. O. ALL
respectfully informs the pnbluk that this well esta
blished and popular 'antenny place is now open for the
noeption and accommodation of visitors, and will be
ii - est open =A it
il the .et of October.
persona wishing Bedford Mineral Water, will be rap
plied at the 14pringe at the following prices, els :
Forbbl (oak)--- 00
" (mulberry) _ aOO
" ifi " 200 .
Bottles, 34 pint. per dos_ 50
Parties wishing rooms, or hey information in regard
to the place. will address the .WdlOrd Mineral I m ir a .
6 ints
Company. Bedford. Yenarrbrania.
HERE'S HOTEL,
The management of this well-known Hotel having
been leased by Mama COYLE & REHR, the r esent
Rouse
beg leave to inform_tbe_ publics t the
Rouse te now heimL thoroughly RENOVATE. RE
PITTED
.euxd IMPROVER, with a view to the proper
and comfortable emsommedation of thou who may
favor the establiihment with their (Ingo= Ovate
will receive due attention and courtesy. end no ex
pease will haapared that may conduce to maintain the
Hotel to a foot-olaia stale.
'smiles and others desiring to sojourn in Harris
burg Minn the mummer months will find pleasant
Boardjag sad large and well-ventilated Rooms our
establishment, upon moderate terms.
SCOTT COYLE,
mrl7-lm J. GILBERT HERR.
BUSINESS CARDS.
D. WILLIAM ALEXANDER, NO. 340
EL POITHTiI Repeat. above Pieta. 'Mae hoar,
from 9 o'clock A. M. tell 9 P. M. m 3.11-19/
Tow! - vrzunt, PRACTICAL SLATE
ler ROOFER. THIRD Street end GEANTOWit
Reid. is wonted to put on oarontount oi l Roofing. on
the Met latotlerato to Witt guareaty vo mac
every building perfeetly water-tine Orders promptly
attended to. my7-ty
jUlit4 JCIALIOTT, and Liguosz,
/40... 219' and 219 WALNUT anent. thealimell
store!. betwe4u Tb2rd and Fourth, north snino ruin"-
teishin. N. B.—Fine Old Whisloisa Milir6Y. band.
Matablinhed in MS) lelo-ly
.A.WS9v & brIOL(OLSOP,
BottEDlNDElite
Aoth #l9 and #9l M!NOI(
detirsda Market end Chratnit utredu
PILL LA OF LPH/A.
JAYE'S 21W50.R.
1317-111`
FLLS
int KEW d
Piles and RASPS of evert description.
madeeslsbl'• l In
to 'mut.,
iimagemtarer's
sterol - qui ;ea* la a wager/or
apt-dfiza 1.111.1"- S. B.
,LF A M3U.I,I 4 :4J:
VIER SLUM MANIFIFAUTORY.--J.
socapg, 814 CIFICRIBUT Etreel. 47 doOra
MS" Goatiaitatah" The &Meta:ion of
__WOW.
jig Wittig to kis IMFROV&D Ow OF
of simmer 81,, make, eat Malaria. %al
Ile seer Nmalme maw
Vrtss.
SATURDAY, JUNE 22. 1861.
A. Decided Contrast
The moat glaring beam committed by Loa's
Philippe d'Orleans, as King of the French,
was his compliance with the suggestion of 4.
Thiers, his Prime Minister inlB4o, that the
remains of Napoleon the First should be
brought from St. Helena to Paris. Louis
Philippe, no doubt, calculated upon a great
accession of personal popularity, portion-
larly from the Bonapartists, and Tbiers, in all
probability, desired to participate in it, be
sides having the chance of placing England
(which be hates very heartily) in a false posi.
tion. Here he was disappointed. At once,
and in the most graceful manner, the British
Government acceded to the request, Rua, in
consequence, the remains of Napoleon I. were
removed from their resting place in Rupert's
Valley, Ht. Helens, surrendered to the Prince
de Joinville, taken across the Atlantic with
Imperial honors, and received with magnifi-
Cent 8010MnitieS at Paris, on December 15th,
From that time, with dead Napoleon lying
in state in the Hotel des Invatides, the Bona-
'artists first began to see land, after their
miserable wreck in 1816. The nation had, in
a manner, recovered its great leader, still po
tent in his coffin, and the restoration of the
Empire ceased to be an improbability.
At the present time, we learn from good
authority, the Orleans party in Paris are
thinking of proposing that the remains of
Louis Philippe be removed from the little
country chapel near Claremont, in whiCh they
now rest, and brought back to Paris, with
kingly honors. The proposition has already
been made in the party journals devoted to the
Orleans interest, and it was expected that it
world be mooted in the Leginletnre.
Napoleon might safely consent to it, for the
Orleanists are few and feeble, but he is not
'Wily to do any thing so foolish as thus praeti-
cally to admit that Louis Philippe was at all
worthy, living or dead, of an ovation. Nor
was there anything in the character of that
crafty and miserly man to warrant any post
humous honor being paid to him.' No man in
France was the better of Louis Philippe's
death, but Napoleon, like Julius Omni., made
large bequests to his followers.
On the 15th August, 1854, the anniversary
of Napoleon's birth, the Moniteur ' of Paris,
published a report made to Lords Napoleon
by Achille Fonld, Minister of State, relative
to the payment of the elder Napoleon's lega
cies. Two imperial decrees accompanied thiS
report, end ordered the payment of the lega
cies, the appropriation of eight million of
francs for that purpose, and the appointment
of a Commission, of which General Gonilt
d'Ornano was president, to make the payment;
under Napoleon's will.
Such a document is in existence, and its
history is not without interest. Napoleon
died on May 5, 1821. Thanks to the fidelity of
Dr. F. Antommarehi, (the Corsican physician
sera over by the Bonaparte family to attend
him, after the British Government had dis-
missed their own surgeon, Barry. O'Meara, in
whom they thought he placed too ranch con-
fidence,) we are enabled to trace when and
how the cg last will and testament" of Napo-
eon was made.
'Rho complaint 41 which ha died, (hereditary,
for it killed his father, but which might have.
been nullifledhy proper practice, in a; favora- -
ble climate, as it was accelerated by the
scorching heats of St. Helena ' ) was approach
ing its climax in April, 1821. Day by day, in
that month, he grew weaker. On April 15,
shutting himself up with General Montholon
and Marchand, (his faithful valet,) Napoleon
devoted flve hours to ticketing his effects and
making his last will
. and testament. On the
following day be executed his well-known
codicil, written wholly by his own hand, in
which be said, «It is my wish that my ashes
may repose on the bahks of the Seine, in the
midst of the French people whom I loved so
well."
By title will, Napoleon gave separate money
°poles to the amount of 6,600,000 franca to
a variety of persons. The largest legacy was
2,000,000 francs to Count Montholon, who bad
lived with him at St. Helena for six years.
Bertrand, another faithful follower, was left
500,000, and" Marchand 400,000. Among the
other legatees, (usually for 100,000 franca
each,) were Las Cases, Lavalette, Larrey,
(the surgeon, of whom the testator added,
(f he is the most virtuous man I have known,")'
the children of the brave Labedoyere, and
others, who had been connected with Napo
loon in his brilliant career.
To pay these legacies, (amounting to some
thing over $1,000,000,) there was a won of
6,000,000 franca which NapolOon bad depo-
sited with Lafitte, the banker, on leaving
Paris in June 181.5, together with nearly six
years' interest. Whatever the surplus might
be after the legacy disbursements, was Lc to
be distributed as .a gratuity among the
wounded at the battle of Waterloo, and
amongst the officers and soldiers of the bat
talion of the Isle of Elba." Here we may add
that the money in Lafltte'a hands was paid over
to Napoleon's executors, though not without
some difficulties—partly caused by the French
Government of that day, who desired that the
legacies should not be paid,end partly through
Lafitte% own disinclination to take so Mee&
money, though he had it only on deposit, out
of his banking capital. It was Lord Brougham
who, (at the request of Lady Rolland, with
whom Lafitte's receipt had been deposited,)
made the banker pay over the money.
But Napoleon, besides these 6,000,000
francs, ceniiidered himself further entitled to
200,000,000 francs, as his "private domain."
This amount he calculated as arising out of
about 12,000,000 which he had saved, every
year during fourteen years, out of his Civil
List also, the furniture of his palaces, not
only in France, but in Rome, Turin, and Flo
rence, and personal property, ( D ick as money,
plate, jewels, &c.,) in Italy. The whole of
this "private domain" was bequeathed thus:
One-half to the surviving officers and soldiers
of France who had fought from 1792 to 1815,
and one-half to certain districts and towns
which had suffered by either .f the two inva
sions. In the towns of Brienne (where he
had been educated) and Miry, 2,000,000 were
also left. The disposition of Napoleon's per
sonal property to his relatives; though also
provided for in this will, need not be partion
larized here.
On April 24, 182/—nine days before his
death—Napoleon executed a codicil, in which
he disposed of 2,000,000 franca, which, be as
serted, the Empress Maria Louisa had received
from him in October, 1814, (when lie was at
Elba) and still owed to him. Many of his
servants were in this. new batch of legatees.
He also left 300,000 francs additional to his
guard at Elba. And, reckoning on two mil
lions more out of his property in Italy, which
he hoped Eugene Beatiltarnals, ex-Viceroy,
would pay, he gave other legacies—particular
ly to the severely wounded at Ligny and
Waterloo and his Elba gitards. By a third
codicil, he claimed tiro or sin hundred thou
sand frahcs value of diamonds, his own private
property, which the French treasury bed
taken posseeeion of. This amount he also dis
tributed in legacies, including 10,000 franca to
Cantillon, a French subaltern, who had been
tried and acquitted on a charge of attempting
the assassination of Wellington at Faris.
The whole amount, bequeathed in separate
legacies, was 6,800,000 franca. As none of
the hypothetical property Wing realiged—for
Maria Louisa and Prince Eugene declined ac
knowledging themselves indebted—there re
mained only the six millions in Latitte's hands.
The legatees eventually agreed to accept pay
ment, pro rata, as tar as the funds would go.
But before this liquidation took place, (and
it was very partial and scanty, the fund being
much-lessened by costs of litigation,) Nitpole
on's will had to be duly administered to, in Doc
tors' Commons, London, which was done by
Montholon and Bertrand, we believe. On the
PHILADELPHIA. SATURDAY, JUNE 22, 1861.
/7th February, 1858, on the request of Loofa
Napoleon, the original document, transferred
from the Ecclesiastical Court of Canterbury,
was delivered up by the . Englieh to the French
Government.
Louis Napoleon, desirous of standing well I
with the French army, then appointed a Com
mission to examine how far his uncle's dispo
sition in their favor could be carried out. The
200,000,000 trance, ($87,500,000,) out of his
"private domain," which was to have been
distributed among the soldiers, &c., was never
realized, and there was no property of Napo
leon's to dispose of.
The Council of State recommended, and
Louis-Napoleon ordered that 8,000,000 trance;
01,500,0000 should be appropriated out of
the public revenue, in the following pro
portions : 300,000 francs to the officers and
soldiers of the battalion of the Isle of Elba, or
to their widows and children; 200,000 francs
to the wounded at Ligny and Waterloo ; 1,500,-
000 francs to the officers and soldiers who
fought from 1792 to 1915 for the glory and in
dependence of the nation ; 400,000 francs to
the town of Etienne ; 300,000 francs to the
town of ItUry ; 1,200,000 francs to the pro
vinces which suffered from the two invasions;
or 4,000,000 francs to the private legatees, to
their widows and direct heirs.
Such was the disposition in lieu of what Na
poleon had made. Longer delay, it was urged,
would be injurious to the soldiers of the Re
public and Empire, who are dying off. The
sum of eight million francs was stated to be
"a feeble compensation for the 117,000,000
which properly belonged to the Emperor, and
which the decree of the 6th of August, 1818,
brought into the public treasury ; and it is also
far from compensating for the 200,000,000
which Napoleon I. had appropriated out of
his private domain in iti7Or of the victims of
the war ; but the disasters which the Emperor
had then in view have been relieved by time,
and the country has already in part repaired
them."
What a contrast between Napoleon and
Louis Philippe I One, *all generous, even in
his grave; the other, mean and selfish ; flying
from Paris, in 1848, with all his tradesmen's
bills unpaid. The present Napoleon need not
anticipate evil to his dynasty were he to grant
a French grave to Louis Philippe.
ROUND ABOUT WASHINGTON.
The Wanderinge, Peaderiagt, suid Ont-of.the-
Way Lotto:we of a Rovlng Yankee.
NO. XI-ILASKED BATTERIES.
Correspondence of The Press.)
I spoke of our “Doys " pienicking in the
green groves of the Old Dominion. Bad I
said they are masquerading among the ancient
habitations of the New Dominicans, I bad
used fitter terms. It proves less a fete chain
petre, than a masked ball. EVery croak-road
imp, the by-gone resort of small politicians,
now turned into soldiers, hits a barricade.
Every bush conceals an ambuscade. And you
scarce tern a rr grand curve " - but you come
upon .a masked battery. These things demon
strate clearly the leading idea of a recent let
ter of mine concerning the advantages of lo
cation, which almost equalize the physical
proportions of the two armies, as they lIOW
stand. I doubt whether the Federal troops
today on the other side of the river seriously
outnumber those of the rebels; and in the
event of an encounter, the moral force, which
musters beneath the two , eagles, must make
up the preponderance.* I still think, however,
that too many soldiers cannot be thrown into
Virginia. Judge Douglas, when he advised
the calling of two hundred thousand men into
service, knew precisely what he was talking
about. Ile foresaw with, the sagacity of a
statesman the difficaltias which would beset the
Government. He did not underrate the charac
ter, capacity, or condition of the enemy. He
weighed the many items of climate, of poet
lion, of resources, and the thousanthand-One
contingencies and emergencies which neces
sarily attach to an invading army, and when
he estimated at so gigantic a rate, he simply
predicted with , marvellous accuracy, as he
usually did, a now generally conceded neces
sity. If this, the most extensive revolution of
modern times, is to be quelled, it should be
queued quickly. And men-men in abund
ance-alone can do it. It is all bosh to sup
pose that the enemy , will not fight. It is bosh
to question their resolution. It is bosh to mi
-1 derrate their strength. This is a serious and
immense contest, and it is idle to conceal
from the popular sense and reason its strong
points, just as it is idle to point out its weak
Ones. WO see most truly &deplorable specta
cle of the corruption of party and the tricks
of politicians, the head and front of a useless,
unreasonable, and dishonest treason against a
great, good, and wise Government. We
see a depreciated credit, a bankrupt trea
sury, a vacant and blockaded coast of starv
ing ports, empty marts of commerce, rot
ting fields of grain, with but vague, unsettled
Mess at the helm, to rescue the already
rising scene of desolation from the certain
ruin of a great marching army. We see, too,
division and discord. Out let not these things
blind our eyes to a few other facts. With the
desperation of men engaged in a criminal
straggle of life and death, by the sudden im
petus of a mistaken enthusiasm, a most for
midable array bas been precipitated into Vir
ginia, whence the field of operation ensues.
These troops, thoroughly armed by the hands
of treason in high places last fall, le officered
well. Geographically they have every advan
'tage. Now consider how such a body of men,
who hover on every ridge, dash trom every
ambush, advancing,; retreating, now in guerilla
squade, now behind masked batteries, are to
be overcome by an equal force only, frequent
ly commanded by inexperienced civilians. It
is not to be done. The Government, which
sees the whole question with discriminating,
judicious and truly patriotic eye, compre
hends everything. The people cannot be too
Isaiah of their confidence. In times like
these we cannot pause to argue over legal
niceties nor atop to count pennies. We
must trust to the integrity, zeal, and ability of
these man whom the nation has chosen to di
rect us through the crisis. Observing them
here—that too,
not as a partisan—l am
bound to say that for prudence and en
orgy, for magnanimity and firmness, I have
never seen each a display. The Admi
nistration has cast off every vestige of the
narrow, sectarian ' and partisan views' which
usually prevail in Washington. It wields the'
broad, national sceptre with a bold, brave
wisdom, which awes the foe, and will shield
the friend. Its foreign policy, its campaign
programme, He financial arrangements, All
-flourish, as powerful and enlightened schemes.
of political economy must flourish. The end
will crown them with triumph. Bat that con
quest may be, through expenses which, com
pared with the lazy items of peace,-shall, per
chance, seem prodigal, and loss of life, which
_cannot but sadden tins heart of the nation.
Such are the trophies of war. •We shall all
be the better, doubtless, when it Is over. It
is a war of purification. I am really beginning
to believe it was •needed. It certainly cannot
leave the wheels of State so rusty with eor
ruption as when it found them. So far so
good. It will, however, firmly knit the frame
work of our great system, forever and ever.
It will test and prove our metal, it will estab
lies our institutions, and it will free us from
the intolerant and intolerable pest of Sacks
sion,which has for years clung anti crept round
our pillar of the Constitution in Congress,
like a cobweb over a living branch of bright
oak leaves. Asa Taracmartn.
WAJELINGTON, Jane 19, 1861.
A. Rune of Robbers Broken. Up.
(From the Cleveland (Ohio) Herald, Juno 17.1
On Friday, as City. Marshal Minokley was pass
ing along the street, he suddenly noticed a fa
miliar fees; turning to look again, identified the
man as Jackson Levi, the chief of a gang of
thieves whose operations have extended over the
whole continent. Minokley had o nce seen the fel
low la the Tombs at New York, and last week saw
his portrait in the rognee' gallery, at PtUibarg, m
that he was sure of his man. Levi's gang are all
Jews, and a policeman, whose couritenanoa ex
hibited traces of that race,- was at once instructed
to get into their oolidonat, if possible.
On Friday night the policeman informed the
marshal that be had suoceeded in getting into the
confidenoe of the gang, and that they had given
hint a new black broadoloth trowsera and a satin
west far the privilege of i( working" lb* railroad
dep9t. Arrangements were at ones made for ar
resting the gang as soon as goof ooald be ob
tained against them.
The thieves were arrested and taken to the
watobhou.e. The names of _the men are Jackson
Levi, Philip Adana, Hyisum Greenbaum, and By
' man 8. Rosenthal. All are dietinguished members
of their profession."
Levi is the chief of a gang of burglars and Oak
prokets of .national reputation. It. has been um
mooted with many of the most extensive robberies
in various parts of the country, and is now it is
said, out on $5,000 bail for robbery In New York
city: He is wealthy, having land in different
parts of the country, besides money invested In
various wave, and le reported to he worth eat we
than $200,000. When arrested he endeavored to
bribe-the officers to let him mospe.
A Exam EXPREBSITATIVIS OF JAM= FRANK
LIN —On Wednesday, ,'. l2th instant, Ito Newport
INorcurp completed itsons hundred and third year
of publication, ha vin boon „aitablished Juno 18,
1758, by Jamas brother of Boajantin.
RELIGIO
US INTELLIGENCE
Some of the Rules for the Army.
By reference to the ' r iirtielee a War," pre
sented in an sot of Congress for establishing rules
for the government of the armies of the United
States, (which the resider will find in convenient
form appended to Menu; J. B. Lippincott ds Co's.
recently issued pocket manual of United States In
fante, Tattles.) it will he aeon that the elitime of
relfgion have not been overlooked. In them it it
is earnestly recommended to all officers and sol
diers diligently to amyl divine service; and all
officers who shall behave. ndeoently or irreverently,,
at any plates of divine wopihip shall, if a ommistiOngi
officers, be brought befo agenend court-Maitittr .
there to be publitilj: 'end severely repriniand
by the president ;"ztrkitommisioned officers or
privates so offending alo he purishej bi l ifetts:,r
deducted from their pay?' the 80.111 . 5 penaltiesktilit ,
are attached to the ohoare taro a ffi xedig iiftgOrs
or privates t. using any roams reetlC9l.:4#o4,
tiers"
,It is time seen t swearing like n Sot
dier" is a fiction, at le T` se. fir as its being
ii:..
ti
garded by Uncle Sam le a r martiartirtneill con
cerned - . .
The dither of chaplasa4 aie also defined. Every
chaplain oommissioned a the arm, of the United
I States, who shall abseni t idmeelf Dem iiiintes as
.
r signed him (exoepting in iif siekness orlimnf
absence) are, on oonvieti :thereof before a coal
martial, to be deed, n ideeatitt Ifni ilisth'il
o r
err.
pay, or be diettarged. ~-;
The guards against fa thood and deception - 1n
I I
the army are also striand comprehensive; so
.., a - f alse
return
So, that an officer, kinivingly, making false
retuin 9 e men or
,horees p teitti`eviee to securing
more than a proportionatd - allowanot. Of dap,* Sap;
pliei," ipon conviction, is liable to be eashiered,
Audis ever after utterly disabled to hold any,ifite r e,
or eniploymentin the service of the United - Steins
Duelling is also strictly prohibited, and a Mintriiii:
cloned officer, either sending or accepting a ail
lenge, is to be cashiered ; for non cominisalened
agleam the penalty is at the discretion of the adult
martial. Provision is altki r made fir the piopier
observance of the Lord's Day, and fir preirenting
the sale of liquors after.serfain hours. According
to the twentar•Math article, no antler is allowed
to sell liquor or viotuals, or to keep his house 'or
shop open for the entertelpment 'of tuldiers after
nine at night, or before the , beating of the reveille,
or upon Sundays during divine service or sermon,
on the penalty of being dismissed from all future
`sitting.
The rules against traitors, in any form, are also
stringent, and if striotlyintrried out in the present
conflict will - fall heavily upeasome in onrfraidet who
are secretly playing at this desperate game. "Who
soever shall relieve the anted, with money, Victuals.
."
Or ammunition, or shall knowingly harbor or pro
tacit en enemy, shall suffer death. The same
penalty is also attached tit the offenee of holding
correspondence with, or giving intelligence to, the
enemy, either directly or indirectly."
Theist are a few of the daties—reiigiens duties
devolving upon the soldierand the eivilian, in time
of war, and the penalties of their violatloo.
LAYS SUNDAY-SCHOOL .NIIDENSS BY anti Ilium or
Pour Sonoran —Thornr_of our patzioth &fleece
who are interested in the Sunday-sohool cause,
will he glad to learn that they tnive in thsir ranks
so noble i soldier and faithful a patriot as Colonel
Anderson. The following brief address, delivered
by hien in a Sunday-school at Cincinnati, since his
return from Challeston, meats for itself: 1 ,
B I did not expect, my dear children and friends.
whoa I came here, to be asked to - addrees yea, but',
It is well, perhaps, for me to say a few words. I I
have been placed, providentially, in a position I
that has attracted the attention of our annals; to
me, and to my little band. Bat I would not have
you misunderstand me or my position, and the
nausea which have led me safely through the dan
gers by which I have beettliurtounded, ,t'fia mortal 1
assistance, no individual,aid, would have sufficed : ,
to that end. lam willing, and lam not ashamed,
frankly to tell you, my young Mends, that no
eventino transaction took.plaae there, in any, day,of
any intereat or importance to our clause, without my
-drat appealing to God in the morning, to give me
a spirit of wisdom to understand, that I. mighk
comprehend His will, or give me strength of rem ,
pore and resolution.to know my duty to Him and
my ahuntry_ Thereto's', the credit of whatever:
WWI done does not belong to me. Before I left,
Port 'Sumpter I received letterwfrom friendr,.tollii,
lux rce-attat E stiedild-irellEmiive dimmer from - my
friendathen I was frata my sineuthat r must be
eereful net to be moiled by flattery... The adVioB was
meibtimed ; but I trust thet.God hiiii saved me
from the dangere,in Which I 4as planid.' Periling,
believing,and ` hoping thus,l;itonfeas I have not
believed, in my own mind lhatl Wee entitled to
the least credit for what I Lail:done because eod
put it in my heart to do that Ithiehl did. There
fore, my young friends, I won -,urge upon all of
you, in the transactions of :11 ` that you will he
called on" to perform, and . l e h' Individual has
s l
transactions to perform as momentous to him as
what I have performed is to me-'his eternal hap,
pluses depends upon,it—l would have you all put
your trust in God. Do thatwith an humble heart,
and you will be Weaved in this life and prepared
for everlasting happiness in that widish is to come.
I can ray no 'more." ,r 1 ..2 ,
A DAY OF FASTING AID ?•PIZAF i ga —The New
School Presbyterians of this ruby have act apart
Friday, the 28th of this month, as a day for fasting
and prayer. Arrangeminte, 'we learn, have been
made for holding three IhilOnTrayer Meetings, at
4 o'clock-PAW., on thatday r" one. at the Clinton
_l
street: 'Church, at which Rev.'. Dr., Darling is to
preside, to be addressodity Soya, Jenkins, Adams,
Robhine, and Meese; aritherailinttoziwood street
Church, at which the pMter, Riv. T. 3. Shepherd,
will 'preside, to be_ addressed by Revs. Barnes,
D. Di, Wallace, D. D.i.Newbervy,'azd Culver; and
a third at the LogarrEquare Chnreit, to be eon.
duetted by the Hey. Dr. Patton, which will be ad
dressed by Revs. Brainerd, Chambers, Eva, and
Johnson. In each of these churches it is the de-
Aga to hold a Union Praysr hinting in the eve
ning.
THE NOON-DAY PHATEB.M.IINY7O DECLINING.-
1 g It is smatter of the deepest iegret," says the
Sunday-School '-ntnes. gt '&l4 a large felling off
is noticed in the attendance at the noon meeting.
While there is_ne disposition on' the , part of the
faithful ones who have from the very outset stood
by the meeting, to desert it idea:: it 'l4, yet dis
couraging in the extreme to findthat this precious
means of grace has not a deepe r hold on the affec
tion of Philadelplila ChriatianeA4
A speech delivered withinthelist few daya-at
one of these meetings, front which we quote the
following, explains the preeent_eondltiat and pros
poets of theeomeetinge, inaugurated in-the fall of
1857, and intended to be_ continued -'.' as. a perma
nent institution;:" . . . . _- - -
"Three leers ago last November," said, this
speaker, this meeting waseterted , 71,er Om int
twelve months, we netiknot-alinsinpt to cloak it,
we have been gradiaillyAilmintsldng in numbers.
We have gone dawn frts m c d,oo6 . pimple, which IM.
Jeanie m e itibide we Q.*, on ineinloccasions seen
at the old Jayne's Bell; until Simi; on a pleasant
day, I have counted sometimes as few as 103
woieldprers, and when the weather has been a lit.
tie stormy only 70. Now I ask ...vex, man here,
how much has an declined during this time 1 In
like ratio ? How many less men swear now than
then? flow maw fewer tweak the' Elabiataill-day ?
Have ging:Skop othilpialiedl Nes iniquity hid
den itself, and lost iny boldness ? Alas,
brethren, no ! There are more dienkards, and
profane enamors, and ganalidere, - sua
and infamous, and infidels thin there: were then.
And where is our proportionategrciirth in grace, in
holiness, and seal, and fruit ?
Dsiveti OP tHI FOtr/Dii Or.ltlrOEDl3 or OEfr
'LATIB Or MAZY fictucoxamw—We have with
deep regret to &anomiee = the, death, on the 21st
nit., of -tbs. EL Rev. Charles AjcilePh Buena Da
Hemmed, Bishop' of Marreilles,Snberior.general
and Founder of the oblates of Miry Immaculate .
The life of this venerable prelate will.form an im
portaat page in the history of the Church, he be
ing the founder of a religions order now laboring
in every quarter or the globe to :he work. of even
elising souls, especially the poor. and the most
Jpiritnally destitute. He lived to - see fifty houses
of his Order rise itp In different parts of the globe,
including misery establishments in Southern
Africa, in Ceylon, Canada, Texas, and in the Hud
son Bay territory. A solemn Riquiem Mass was
offered for the repose of his walla the Chore& of
the Immaculate Conception, 'nabbing, on Tues
day, the 28th ult --Boston Pilot.
•
Smarr Wenn BIECK:NI in , extremely desirous
to secure the reception of a Brooklyn regiment
called the Phalanx. Re met with poor success at
the War Department, when he turned So Mr. Se
°rotary Ohms. He took the Seeretary by storm—
represented that he had over. 800 men ready ,for
mustering, and that while such Men as Cochrane,
who had for years fought the principles of the Re-,
Publican party, were Eke to-gat all thug coked
from the uevernment, - he, who hadiought Hs bat
tler and served in its oanse,weinniible to obtain the
acceptance of a regiment already formed and
anxious to serve,. The resat was the speedy
acceptance of the maul.
Ray. Taos. P. Him:, better kniown as "Father
Hunt," a celebrated lecturer on temperance, has
been ideated chaplain of the Eighth Regiment of
Pooneplisiosia colonisers. -
Srr CABBOS HAS A Fern.—Kit Carson, the
adventurer, is said to have had a very narrow
escape from being killed istely--the narrowest, in
fast, of the 'many "hairbreadth 'llCaPits" ho h° 4l
known. While crossing, during April, the "di.
vide" between the Rio Pedro and Rio los Pines,
in Utah, With a train, one of the nudes boo:haling
Muth it Careen ottomptiol to. manage 'him.
The male reared and threw itself over a - proolploo,
carrying himself along with it, his foot having be
come entangled in the mule's lariat. They fell to
gether, a distance of - nearly. two hundred feet,
lighting finally in a very deep snow-bank, fortu
nately withont injury, eicapt the &Mak and a few
braises.
AT NAVAJAS, Cuba, eonsiderable blood was
damanded and obtained for-the revenge of an oat
moclhusband. Juan Mavoelo lagribiroct rife
ohild, and also the former's ;onion - ions, and
then out hie own throat 'foini vac 'to ear. The
ohnd was only two winks old. •
LATEST FOREIGN NEWS.
EMIL ANA
Teri EXHIBITION or 1882 —About 800 men are at
present employed upon the ereotion of We build
ing. It will -require 18,000,000 lirkilm -22,000 tone
of mortar, 500 tone of glare, 600 tors of paint, said
10,000 torts of iron. There will also be no fewer
than 600 - miles'ofplanking fro& seven to nine Indies
- wide, 108 Miles of window meshing, and 600,000
elvers feet of-felt., Half the spree in the building
is eanigned tfi'Etightnd and this Colonial The up-
Plioatione from England were for six times the al
lotted extent ; and proportionate reductions have
had to be made. The guarantee fund is reported to
commissioner. as amounting to 1,407,000
TitrpastreliCE of the statute 'under which Mr.
ildivingaraes is seekinglo arrange-with his eredi
'torsi &Irani:ag, was held, at which .the 'proposal
Midi Id that gentlemen - for the ultimate 'discharge
of his; Ifsibilithis- was unanimously - agreod- to by
- those prepent.„:::, ' ' • '
ntlid " G 81147 Eastritr."--kt the,speolal meet
-
lag of 'the - Great Ship Company, on. Mar 31:itlivas
Stated; that' t the employment of thil.`ship;by .the
redertil.floverntnent _ofAmerica-would . not be
'atrispichstpoe with the proolanmstion 6f her lidejso3°.s
eroyernment " The agents Orate ship - bad therefore
'been instrnoted to , maitre - freisht, and arrange!.
igents:tawl bpen made - to ship 3,000 tons.
GIAND national mOnnosent.to Bbakspeitre.is to
he inaugurated :at the - trioentenary 'festival in
1884, ; A public meeting will be' held shortly in
Gomm tide
with:the above o bjec t at:the Theatre
Royi/ rurplaso •; •
40 i us a — a;ThorntonH unt; slid Horace 81 ,
..,Tokn, *bier - writers in The Daily Teter'
-iftajoh!dVimisdonr : :
'Animaa from the Sandwich Islands state that
Farmirm Island , aitaatrd in let. 80.40 If., long.
159:2r„ was taken posvession of in the name of
the'Q win of: , Great :Britain. and the British flag
raised, over it,-on the Bth of fehruary:laat.
,FILANCE,
Tim Indepoildaitei eve that, at a amain held
by the Emperor during'the Masonic disputes be
tweet'', Prince Napoleop,and Prince Murat, it was
alit/04 ,proposso to.abolish Freemasonry in
`Franco, but that the proposition was not carried.
l'enpite just drawn up, from the most authentic
mattress, at the Froniiti Ministry of War, show that
whilst' in the battle of Solferino the loss of the
Frenah and Riidipontatio was 10 .par ant , that of
the Austrians was only eight.
Ms Government of Holland has just 'concluded
an arrangement with France, by which the visa
of posiporta is suppressed for their respective me
lon!.
WI havi moon to know (says the Nord, if
Bromide.) that the Belgian Government has opened
negotiations with England for a treaty of nom
metse, orilbc haal of that just eonclnded between
Erato, and Biii6um.
GERMANY
A COPENIIIIGI2IjOIIIII4/ attar's that the nott-tter
than Power/ are actively endeavoring to effect as
arrangement of the dispute between Denmark and
Germany, and that Sweden hae made a propoeal
whioh the German Ciovernments are willing to
aooept, "with some modifloationa,"
HIINGFAILY
" 7ns amount of the taxes," says the inde
rendance, which Hungary pays annually to
Austria, is 66,000;000 - florins, and of that sum
there is at present an arrest of /5,000,000 doting,
which, In spite of military executions, cannot be
got in."
RUBS IA
" finnan," of the Russian stamp, hes not yet
been established at Warsaw. There was a pro-
Cession in the oity on the 24th of May; but, though
the aolditsra are still encamped in the streets, they
did not interfere, and everything passed off
quietly.
IlitaßY
Tumor is said to be about to conclude with
Pruseiaa eommeroial treaty Elmilar to that it has
negotiated with France and England. •
Spanish Admiral Pinzon threatine Morocco
with a bombardment-sad invasion if the 90,000 f.
(13.600) yet owing for the war indemnity shall not
be paid on the day it baoonica dno,•,
ITALY
Tao Opinsone, of Turin, announces that the
Italian Government has placed the army on a
pease footing from motivoti of obonomy ; there he
In at least, for this year, no probability of war.
Tau Italie states that Kossuth has been on a
visit to Duke Litre, at his villa at Liinate. Gene
ral Klapire is 'stated to be oonetantly moving back
"wards and forwards between, Caprera and Milan.
FaAcras If has burned" a ner protest. This time
he . -protests against the loan which the King of
:Italy is about to contract, and wares all capitalists
that:he will never. himacif:oonsent to recognize it
in cc far as it applith thlgaplie 11111 Sicily.
&mew telegram.states that three veirseia
laden with counterfeit money, bearing the effigy of
Frauds 11, have sailed for Amalfi .
" A LS7TER from Rome," says the Gazette de
1 1 ,...,4., +I annonneeith probable the marriage of
tiro Neapolitan prineesses sisters to King Frannie'
IL It is said that Donna Isabella is to marry the
Grand Duke of Tuseany, now a widower, having
loot his first wife, a Baton princess; and that ne
gotiations are in progress for the marriage of
Donna Annunsiata with Count de Flandree, second
eon of the King of the geigians
GARIBALDI ADD LARDoR —The following inscrip
tion has been written by Walter Savage Lander
for Garibaldi's house at Nice " His in mdibus na
ttus est Garibaldus, miles etrennne, impiger, duz
sagex, providue, victor element!, imperator modes
tete, vie peanut." In this house was born (lad
baldi, a brave and daring soldier, a prudent and
sagacious general, a merciful conqueror, an unos
tentatious ruler, an honest man.
A BIBOLDTION BY GARIBALDI —The Maas
ItaliGna, of /bitten, a Maszinian organ, publishes
the following letter from Garibaldi, ceted Caprera,
10th ultimo : " Sir : I am muoh obliged to the Ilni
tary Italian Society of Palermo, for the honor it
has dons me in choosing me for its honorary provi
dent. Raving learnt from the English papers
' that there is a plan afloat, for giving Sar
dinia to the Pope, 1 have conceived the idea of
submitting to the consideration of your Society, to
Which / have the honor of belonging, the following
resolution, the prineiples of which should be pro
pagoted, not , only among the members of the
Society, but also among the Italian people gene
rally : t Considering that Christ, by ooneeerating
upon earth equality among men and waitron, hal
deserved gratitude and love, we belong to the re
ligion of Christ; considering that the Pope. the
Cardinals, the Stinfedista, all the mercenaries of
Italy, and the spite assembled at Rome, are the
chief obstacles to the unification of Italy, by their
provoking and fomenting civil war; we do not be
long to the religion - of th e Pope In consequence
of the above eensiderationii, +Nese/vac That the
Pope. the Cardinals, Ito., shall abut up shop (cam
triar botteca) at once, and betake thaneelves to
same lionntry, as far away as possible from Italy,
thus allowing this, unfortunate- Italian nation,
which they have been torturing for ages. to cOnsti
lute itself definitively.' I am, with affection and
thanks, yeArs, ••• GARLBALDI."
- MOROCCO
kr IS aleerte+plat a civil war has fairly broken
out in Maroon: vie brother of the Iltuperor Laving
assembled a considerable force in the neighborhood
of Fez.
- AUSTRALIA
A twoMisr nearly tour hundred oune es in weight
has been found in a deserted claim at Bendigo by
a bay. Assuming that it contains only 150 oaneee
of pure gold] the value will be about £7,000.
Kentucky and• the Union.
CRITTZNDER'S VIEWS
/dr. Contests. made a speech at Lexington,
sy" last weak, thus defining hie poaition as a Gan.
didete for Congress :
The first great object which he ardently desired,
wall that this war should be put an end to; that
the longer it continued, and the more devastating
it became, the more difficalt would be its solution ;
and to the end of pacification and the restoration
of the kindly feelings which ones prevailed.
among the happy and pp:mite:Quo people of & dom.
Mon Government would hiswhole energies be de.
voted, if it should be the pleasure of the people
to confer upon him the responsible trust of repro
muting them. To a war of subjugation he was
opposed; and while he wee mauled thab the Go
vernment did nothing more than its duty in the
preparation it had made to defend the National
compile!, yet he would be prepared at any moment
to loud ot helping hand to arrest the farther pro
gress of this unnatural cordial. Mr. Lincoln. he
declared, was not the President of his selection;
and he was neither responsible for nor prepared
to sustain the polioy of that functionary. Lincoln,
however, was not the Government, although
charged for the time with its administrative fano.
tions ; and while he repudiated all allegianee to
him or his creed, he wan, all he had always pro
fessed to be, loyal to the Coal titlttiOn of hie (MEM
try, under which the nation had been so peeper
one, the people so free and happy, and the bless
ings of which are priceless and Innumerable.
Mr. Crittenden declared that, in hie judgment,
every means ihonld be resorted to, to MAW) the
blessings of peace, to preserve the Union, and to
band down unimpaired the noble institutions which
have some down to us, hallowed by the sanotion of
our Revolutionary fathers. To that end he de
clared, first, that the Southern States ehonid pre
sent to Congress, when it meets, a fair statement
of the grievances under which they labor ; that,
when presented, the Congress of the United States
should promptly grant a fall measure of redress
for those grievances ; and that, if Congress should
not do so, he would not vote one dollar to the pro
motion of the war. In the next place, if the
south should fail to present their grievances with
a view to adjustment, thou *Let the North should
promptly concede such assurances of redress and
smarmy as were just to the 'South ; ..and that, bt.
side these, all other possible means should be em
ployed t hat would have the effect of maintaining
the Union preserving the iloverament, and put
ting a period to the unnatural war in which the
country is involved. In the event that all the
means employed for this patriotic and noble pur
pose siseuld fail, and the war should still rage on,
thou he was of the opinion that Kentuoky, poising
herself upon her proud position of neutrality,
should summon all her judgment and reason; and,
discarding all passion and prejndioe, should de
cide for herself whet position oho should eimme.
Re declared that, " nifiloient unto the day is the
evil thereof," and that, while he was not now,
under the continually shifdng seance of the politi
cal drama, prepared to say what position Ken
lucky should weepy in the eentingeney mentioned,
he would be prepared, as a native and loyal son
of Kentucky, to fellow her destiny, be it what
it int: ht.
WE THINE that the appointment of 0. H.
Browning, Esq., of Qniney, Ininois, to angered Mr.
Dangles, in the "United States:Senate, is a very e x.
6enent one. We hare enjoyed Mr, IL's elegant
hospitality, and we think we know :him well: :Al
thoogit a itapnblinan, lie in one of the Most Gower.
votive of all that bear the name. Rik wadi are
el,a high order, and we _regard his patriollna as
unquestionable.--Loulayitie Journal.
TWO CENTS.
Box.. josEpg W►r.r.TlMe , a didirtglliehed
oilizon of Toledo, died on the lath. lie was a
natty'', of Now itodfora, Mtoeo a grade:Ma or
Yale, and a member of the bar o f native town.
In 18.35 be moved to Toledo He had been editor
of the Toledo Blade, president 'of the State Ag
riouiturst College of Miohigun; elected to the
State 'senate, of whioh be wee preoldeiat, and, at
the time of his death, was rioting Lieutenant Go
vernor of the State. , .
A GENTLEMAN informs •lae that he hoard a
prayer by Rev Mr. Spurgeon, in kid chunk in
LondOn, on a recent Sunday evening,' in fever . of
President Lincoln and the oause of the North,
which the obarsoterizes as the most beautiful and
Powerful prayer he ever heard in hie life. The
whole audienoe was moved to tears, and even
sobbed aloud at the eloquent preatdiees. appeals to
God and to oiTilized mankind in aid of so holy
and to iighteous a eauie SI that in Web the North
it engaged.—London Car. tr. r Times. '
F AND •.CODUICERCIAt.
TaeMeney Market.
PitILII7)IILPHI4, June 21. 1881.
Blight t. U.Shielli Way transacted at the stank
hoard td4114, though prices Were well maintained,
iseeptingloi ; Reading Railroad stook, which fell
elf to 161, and i olosad 161 bid, 16 44 100 asked. •
The Opinion of able finanoiers and experienced
Mefi:Of business favors the ilea that the times are
inmoileg. Emmert:lW affairs wear n better as
peot,ehrd;financial matters show more ease.ihaSa
was epgerent , a fortnight ago. A wholesome trade
has spiung up between the Rea( and - the Worth
west, where the infamons currency With which'
the peoPli t hive 'been long tifilleted has given
place to gold' 'airdearilinti •The houses that have
had no means offstruidrug• up through this storm,
except snob - as were:derived from :Southern trade,
have all gone:by the hoard, and it will not be long
ere a renewal of confident,e will give " aid and
comfort," and a new trade to those that remain
The:annual report - of the Morris and Essex Exit
road shows that, for the year 1860, the receipts
we re 1265 405
The epeneee
The net earnings
The steamship Africiz, from Liverpool, brought
nearly $400,000 in speeie
There . is in ciroulation in. Chicago a dangerous
counterfeit ten dollar bill on the Blue Hill Bank,
Dorchester, Massachusetts, which has recently
made Its appearance. Vignette, on upper laft end,
man seated beside anvil, hammer, ; train of
oars, in the distance; TZN below; large X in cen
tre of note; farmer with sickle and sheaf, one
rootresting on stone ; ten above on right end.
Peterson's Detector sends us the 'following
description of a new and dangerous counterfeit
five-dollar note on the Cumberland Bank, Bridge
ton, New Jersey : s'6—Vignette, spread eagle on
sea shore; V on eaob, side; medallion bead at
Washington on each end, with word " Five " Well
done.
®We are informed that the notea of the Antbritoile
Bank, of Tamaqua, which have hitherto been
quoted at 11 per cent discount, are no longer pur
chased by the brokers at that rate. Meagre. John
E. Fox & Co., No 11 South Third street, will pur
chase them hereafter at 2 per cent. &mount.
. recapitulation of the marine Imes during May,
shows that there were 5 steamers, 26 ahips, 75 barker,
17 brigs, and 32 schooners log, the aggregate valuer
of which were as follows : Vessels and freight,
$1,174,300 ; cargoes, sl,62B,Boo—total, A 2.803,100.
The total losses in April were 111; , March, 158;
February, 80; January, 110—total, including May,
M. The total value of venal; freight, and oar.
goes, $12,4.03,450.
From a synopsis of MaTille loam of the present
year Compiled by Mr. Humans, Beeretary of the
New York Chamber of Commerce, and printed for
the me of the leading , marine instumese eompanisa,
it appears that the marine .106E4 forth° month of
May, in the American trade only, were $2,803.000;
and for the Ave months ofthis . year, $12;403,450..
The' treasurer of the Reading Railroad Company
givec notice to the holders of 'the et:Japans of that
oompiny to leave them at the office, 73' South
Fourth street, on or before the 29th Inst., when
reectpta will be given, and cheeks will be reedy
for delivery on the let proximo, in exchange for
said receipts :
The following is the amount of Coal transported
over the Philadelphia SIZI Reading Railroad, for
the week ending Thursday, June 20, 1881:
Tons. Cwt.
'rota)l anthracite cool for weak......---. 97 IN 00
Harrisburg, total bituannotut—...- 4,000 00
Previously l this yea Alto weak"....... 41.199 00
this year— -500,526 52
Total-
same time last yaar X 0.103 03
The Inspections of Flour and Meal in Philadel
phia, during the week ending Jane 20,1861, were
as follows
Darras of supotane.------ 18.4201
do. fine 110
do. 26
do. Com keel. 2 112
do. 2.26
Total
The following le the amount of coal shipped over
the Huntingdon and Broad Top Mountain Rail
road, for the week ending Wednesday, Jane 19,
1561, and alone January lat, 1851 :
Week. Previously. Total.
Tons. Tone. Tons.
7,088 .10.1/20 88,01 S
zee° 4.871 • BOAS& 86,518
Increase 9,019 466 :Ass
As our readers are aware, the bank note curren
cy of Illinoie, for some time known as stump tail,
has been utterly ruined by_ the depreciation in
the market of the. State bonds upon which it was
based.. Since the explosion of this eurrenoy, the
Auditor of the State has had a lively thee with the
holders, who expeet him to turn the bonds into
cash, and pay off 'the notes without delay. A Chi
cago paper thus describes the - way to get " stump
tail" redeemed in the best manner'
"Where the securities of a bank ander call are
all bonds of a single State;a bond Gan be taken
out upon presentation il
o(' ourrenoy to the
amount at whioh the bonds are depOliteal. Where
the bonds are mixed'—free and slave State—a
general average of the depreciation is made, and a
pro rata value placed upon the hoods, so that it is
no more advantageous to the bill-holder to take out
one kind than another. Take the Bank of Alblort,
for example, whose securities are Minnesota bonds,
put in at par, with Twines/row, North Carolinas,
and other BOUthillTElllsoAiltiell. 0 wing to the depre
ciation of these latter, the Minnesotas are held pro
portionately higberand it requires about 51.,400
to get a 5 1,000 Minnesota bond at that bank. So In
other oases: if bonds of one State have fallen 40
per cent. einee they were deposited, and those of
another 50 per vent., instead of permitting the
best bonds to be taken out at their deposit valne,
an amount suffloient to make up the greater depre
ciation of the others is added. thus keeping the
value of the notes the same.= Of course the price
of these bonds varies with every fluctuation of the
stook market."
When persons do not bold a sufficient amount of
one bank to take out a bond, the best way to re•
alien the value of their anrieney Se to send it to the
olearing-house DYE. I. Tiakbam .h Co., Chicago, or
to N. IL leidgely; Springfield. These gentlemen,
who have constantly mehand a quantity of stump
tail, will gramort your Warfeany, and substitute that
. ,
which is of equal 'value in sufficient quantity to
enable you to take out a bond at fair rates, so as to
realise the full value of, the whole of your db.
eredited at the market value or the bonds when
taken out.
The New York Post, of thin evenihig, says:
BOW/a are lower and .heavy to day. The stirring
BOWS from the vicinity of Washington emoted
mestizo to yell, and prides have fallen off *al per
cent. The decline in quite _general, extending to
nearly all the speculative smoke, though at the
close there in a fair degree of Eteadlipu.
After the Board New York Central aOld at 73f
cash ; Ll3noia.Ceatralut 65.1; Galena at 60*.
Cleveland, Colambent and Cinainnaii is 95* bid,
96 asked ; Milwaukee and Prairie due Chine 13/kl6.
Harlem continues heavy. The old stoOk fell . to
Q and the preferred to 22, which are the lowest
points touched for a long -period. It is. reported
that some of the directors of the company ire
largely '° short" of the stook at hlef prieaL The
new mortgage will be tuned in a few days.
The Coal. stooks are quiet. Pennsylvania sold
at 76 • Par Laokawanna audiffeatern 70 is bid.
Bank abates are gelling at rather better prices.
Metropolitan sold to day at 80. The Commeree
at 78. The low prices have brought in buyers,
and there is more bidding for stain.
In State stooks there a dealing of one per cent.
in Missouri sixes, while other.descriptiesa show no
important alteration. California omens are the
firmest of the list, and are wanted at 77. New
Torii State , sixes are In good demand at 996100,
and several hundred thousand would And buyers
at a fraction within par. Illinois and Didiona
bonds are negleeted.
Philadelphia Steck igzehauge Sa.les,
lane al. OM
RopoitrzartP.R.PLAlMAKllß,Meranantergialianaa.
FIRST BOARD.
2 Iffinehill R....._-. : - 55 100 Read 1t...---,bass jai
a Penns R............ 37% 3800 Hood 66. '4t ...._.... m 6
Si d0g.....:..:. 37)* /9 Lohisq Val a,....., ca
I BiIOVIIT 311811,8014.... IS Iwo Pleura R. Th. IR
36 Lehigh rry-sdars 4 7 % Medi is. K 0 &,"p_ 87}
2 do _ _ ~_ 47K 600 d0......._ .- SIM
1
do
--....—..... 47K" 800 ' a. „, gni
I d 0—,...,. -- . 4734 lOU do-q & P WM
4 Maattantni Bank .. Rai Si far Ea l'lne.st li ,„ 7 3 i
1
fellead R --town ina
is
ammo Das,,aqs 30
10 do.. ---..barrn ia,g
BETWERN BOARD&
7000 Poona i 5...... 78 1.2e00 Palm& 1.,15t intr. 98
sr Lehigh Sorip--- Male Cam &.. Ara Bs
A, 80
_ . BSOOND DVAD,D;
0000 City 6s. amp.-- $9 4 Lehigh 'Na y.— 4 1
24 Ph " Bank -ea aLi ro Island IL 84 . .s 6 77
Moi Patina K. /15 mtg . 51551 200 West Chiller 74.- 70
MOO do--..---. 9113£ JO eels tc. Tourd-st It.. 38
CLOSING 1,11055-FIRM
, Rid. A s i o d.,l , Ds a. ,Askod
Bala he- .int on sm as I 131soiro l's '73--. 69 61
nasal; Lint or arag 88 Long Island it-- 63( 2
P OD= 96 Leh Gi. & .N-47% 47
POD= as._ am 8.14 bah CI k. N Sop-33X
Reed 1L..,7.7 . - MK 16 7-16 North Beano it _ 1,% Ile
R 40 4 bdirfly, _, fa 81 id Pal es.. -_- -*et iaN
Re a d wawa, la to _. N PerseOl. R lait-.....5Um aa
Read mt.*, Leo •a
74 74 I eatawisea R eon_ 1,4
rum 5....,-....- 113% . 87.96 / thotlisinsi K imam - ,
Snap JIL 25 Mt es 54 - Fronk tc &a R ...,36 It
`Morris Con coo. es MI id .8.101-401 K 3 -.. 3837 ...
Morris Cad PM lat - AposikVide-st R. 3 - ...
see-a_.-- - 43 Wolk Phil& IL- --e4
1
gai Nror leo as...- 74- rm.& slam_ Lg. 'S
Ash Nay Profit_ U. awn* COWS -I9
Dianna Pref.. 7W ;..
THE WEEECLIT MESS.
TIM Wilma Piles will be sent to inibsoribers by
mail (per MUM in advanoe,) SLOG
Three Copies. `• 6.00
Five " " a 8.00
Ten " " " 12.00
Twenty " " " (to one address) 20.00
Twenty Copies, or over, (to address of
sash subsoriber,) each-- 1.20
Por a Club of Twenty-one or over, we wilt send an
extra copy to the getter-Wp of the Club.
rrir Postmasters are requested to act as Agents for
Tint Wilma.: Pizzal.
CALIFORNIA PRESS.
Tamed three times a Month, in time for the California
Steamers.
Weekly Review of the Philadelphilt
Markets.
Painacornrare, June 21,1861. .
The Produce Markets continue very inactive,
but without any material variation to note in any of
the leading arttoies snoop our last weekly review.
Queroitron Bark Is in demand, and on the advanoe.
In Breadstuffs there has been less dohig, and, for
most kinds, prices are unsettled. Ooal 15 firm.
Cotton also continues firm but quiot. °reclaims
me more isquired for, and holders of Coffee. and
Sager are asking an advance on previous quoted
rates. .In Metals there is nothing doing. Fish
and Fruit remain inactive, and:vices about the
same. • Proviaiona—Very little doing in the Way of
taloa, and quotations nearly nominal. Lumber,
Naval Stores, Oils, and Plaster—Very little doing,
and no changes to win, Rice and Pitch are very
inactive. Salt is dull. Teas are firmer. Tobacco
very quiet and Wool unsettled and dull. —ln Dry
Goods there is no new feature, and a limited bud
neu to.noto in the way of Mies.
The Baaans:ures market has been inactive, and
without any material variation to note since our
last review. There is very little inquiry for Flour,
either for export or home nee, and the market is
quiet but steady at previous rates; Melt comprise
some 8 000 bbls, including small lots superfine at
$4.50a5 25, the latter for -good straight brands,
extras .at $55550, some city mills do., end 2,500
• bble good•Weste family at a private bargain,
fancy do. et $6 2 5m6 50, Mid - I,foo bbls Jeony Mad
do. at 80 85 per bbl Holders-generallyterstree,
• Berl° at them rates,,and. the 111,4.'ert-b.a.
mOderitely within . tbe above 'rage of times ror
etiporbtle and extras, $5 62i up tO $6 for family,
and: $6 25 to $1 per bbl for fancy brands, as to
quality... The receipts ate falling off. Rye Flour
and Corn Meal are dull, sod prices nearly nomi
nal at $3 50 for the former and $2 8.71 per bbl for
the latter. A sale of 400 bbls Brandywine was
mado et that rate. ' .
WRSAT.—There is a fair demand for Wheat, but
with moderate receipts, prices have favored the
buyers, some 22 000 bus having been dispam.d of,
la lots, et $l. 18e1 25 for fair to prime Weetein sad
Pennsylvania . reds, is store and afloat, end white
at $1 80-1140, as in quality, Rye is quiet, and
Penns:vivant% selling slowly at 63-64 c, closing at
600 corn comes in slowly. hat the demand for it
is limited, with sales at 20 000 bus, mostly .prime
Southern yellow, to note. at 510, afloat, including
Pennsylvania at 49a00e in store, and Western
mixed at 46a48s at the deants which is a deeline.
Cots aVe unchanged, and 12,000 bus sold at 29a300
for Southern, afloat, end 310 for Pennsylvania, in
store and afloat.
METALS.—There fe do new feature in the Iron
market, moot of the furnaces having stopped opera
ting, and makers are not pressing their . stooks on
the market in the present unsettled State of the
times ; there. is no quotable change in either pig
or manufactured Iron, and the market for both is
pretty. mush at a stand still. Load isquiet,- and
no sales have Come under oar notice.COTOPOlill
dull and prince unsettled and drooping.
BARK.—Qaeraitron °lndonesia' request, and lei-
ling at $2B for let No. 1, and some at something
more, said to be $29. ReoelptS are li3ht. Tatum's
Bark is doll cad : lower; sales of Spanish Oak
having been made at $lO per cord, and Chestnut at
$7 5001
Bataan is more active and prices unchanged.
BCISOWLIC —Good yellow is quoted at Ma le.
without sales to any extent.
Pnoyisiona —The market for all kinds• is: dull
and drooPing, and the sales mostly in a small way,
at irregular rates. Mesa Pork is quoted at - We
17.50, and City MINB Beef at $14a16 per bbl, and
little ttr nothing doing. Of Ilatoon the sales are
sloe limited, at 10s11c for plain and fancy Hama,
8:93 for- Sides, and 6s7e for Shoulders., Green
Meats are also quiet, at 6580 for Hems, in salt
and pickle, 5./.5-13 for Shoulders, and no for Sides.
Lard is lower, tierces and bbla selling, as Wattled,
at 9a914 cash and time; kegs are worth 9.41.0 e.
Butter continues dull at Sage, the latter for prime
packed. Cheese moves off slowly at 7a8.1 per lb.
Eggs are scam and worth 123 per dozen.
WiNDbILli —The transactions in sperm and tallow
Candles are limited, and prices about the same.
Adamantine sells in lots, as wanted, at 17al8c for
city made.
COAL is moving off freely to supply the Bailterri
markets, and prices are fully sustained and Arm.
For home use there is a fair busliless doing, with
out any change in quotations.
Corral -Stooks are much reduced, and the
markit firm. ssloe , inoludle4 2,000 hake Leguay
ra at 13141310 ' Maraaaibo .1.915, Rio 12a13e, and
Bt. Domingo atl.2ie, all on the usual credit. ,
Corms. -- There has been rather more doing in
this staple, and about 400 bales have been-disposer .
of at from 1245150 ossh; the latter for good mid
dling Tennessee. The demand, however, eontinnes
limited, and holders firm in their views, with a re.
drioed `stook to operate in.
The following is the movement since the let of
September lest, as compared with the pretrimui
three Years ;, - •
. • 1881. 1300. MM. MI&
Receipts aterts. 3444009 4 41000 9.617.000 2.9 t 8.000
Export to tilritain..2,l6s 000 9,695,000 1.6.6M11 Lassjcoo
Export to France— 671.103 666.000 098.000 359.000
xport to other F. P.- ammo 664,906 895.000 !MAO
Total export.— ._...3,109.500 8420,000 2.766 000 Zr 6.1100
Stock on haw-- 73.031 215,000 243.000 354,000
Of which, daring the past week, included in the
above:
goannta at porte; *0.660 19.096 dm Kin
Export to o't Britain.. 50.000 /SAE MAXI 35,091.
Export to France.„.- 1,000 1,000 6 000 7,010
Export to other F. 7.000 5 050 18.900 5 0.000
Totem:ports- 67.01X1 4.9.1X41 46,90 D sa.ooo
The figures for - the past week" Jocund& pre.
vious omissions, and are now op to the latest mall
dates.
DRUGS Am) Drug —Business is very Inaotive.
Among the sales are some Bengal and Kurpah to
also, eactsite Alkali, Soda. Ash, and Refined Cam.
phor within the range of preview quotations.
Lsgwood is scarce and wanted, at an advance on-
previous quotations.
FRUIT is inactive, Some further small Bales of .
Oranges and Lemons are reported from the 'Vend
at $ll2 50 per box, and Bahama Fine Apples at
ssa6 the 100. In domestic Dried Fruit there is
little or nothing doing. Strawberries are aim
deriatima
Fisu.—There is very little doing, and for hlsek+
erel store prices range at $12a13 for medium Ir,
$l6 for large is, ssasl for medium 23, sss6 per
bbl for So, and the market very dull, most of the
recent arrivale having.been , stored. Pickled nea
ring are also dull, and selling as, wanted at
$2 25t2 50 per bbl ; a cargo just arrived remaining
unsold. Nothing doing in Dry Cod to establish a
quotation.
rit..ntenra —The offerings of produce are light,
and The market very inactive ; we quote at Is 16d
for flour; Sans for grain to Liverpool;,and 25a
30s for weight to London. A vessel is loading for
Deiftiat at Od for grain, and twatatill have bean
taken up to carry coal to Havana at $4 per ton.
Boston freights are dull, and Coal freights steady
at $1.25 to Boston, $1 10 to Rhode Maud, and 90a
Oa par ton to New York from Port iticbmoll 4
Gosaso.—There is no alteration to note in prices,
and very little selling
Hater is quiet, the stook being nearly all In the
hands of the manufacturers.
HOPS are firmer ; the sales continua light. prices
ranging at from 12 to 260 for new crop Eastern and
Western.
Bross ,AND LII&TIESE continue dull, with a small
business doing in the latter at previous rates.
Lumens is ; very little diditeln the way of
fiunitehmma board* rangsrat $12a15 ; -Le-
high hemlock do. at $10; and raft Lumber SS.
Laths and Pickets are plenty, and prices unsettled
and drooping. Southern Shingles are all out of
first hands ; of white pine do. sales are Makizig at
$14a17 per which is an advance. -
16145x,satins.—The Market is quiet, and the only
tranuotions are some small sales of Cuba at NUM°,
months.
KJver Svonas.—There is rather more demand
for Spirits Turpentine, and sales have been made
at 75a783 par gallon—now held at the latter rate.
Rosin is scarce, and selling in lots, as wanted, st
from $3 for nommen up to $8 per bbl for good No.
1. Nothing doing in Tar and Pitch, and both very
quiet.
Ogg —The demand for Sperm and Whale is
limited. and prinell about , the Pante. Lard Oil eon.
Untie! dull and unsettled. Of Linseed, the males
are light, to supply the home demand, at 63a540,
weight. : ,
Imports of Sperm and Whale 011, and *hete
t.. ~,to the United States, for the week ending
June 11, 1861 -
MAL Sp. Skis. Wh. lbs. Bone,
Total for week...—. 1,650
_ate 15,800
l'revfoustr,—.— 50,5 M 79,894 175,400
From lan. !iodate. 62,111 90.101 792190
Same time last rear. 29,74! 100.47 d 911.791
PLASieR continues very dull, and, in the alr•
ranee of sates, quotations are altogether nominal:
RICA.—The sales are in a retail way only, at
&babe per pound.
SALT is very . 'dull, and an arrival of Turk's.
Island Was mold on terms kept private; two int
ports Liverpool remain unsold.
Sens are very quiet, and there is /ittle 'or.
nothing doing in either Clover or flaxseed ; some'
mall sales of ,the former are reported at Pad pet
bushel.
Eirintra.--Brandlea are selling, in a small way,
at MI pricea. dies are lam bat quiet. N.
Rum sells slowly at Me. In Whisky. aerate very
little doing; hhis are steady at 1 6 / 1 .170, and. Ude
at 16k, with light receipts and sales. ' .‘
8170elte.—The market is firmer ang:n l aes
(jutted for, but the difference in the view. of buy
ers and sellers limits operationi, and there is very
little doing in the way of sales this week. A few
small lots of Cuba sold - st 41454, on time. gigged
Sugars are Arnie!. ' •
Taaaow is lower • we -trbote at Slats for ally,
and 83 for eurratri rendered, but there is very,
little selling.' •
EiritAlti6X.-At saleot 1,000 lbs was made at 9a:
per ib, a) days.
Inds -ere firmer and more active. -shehy
views'of holders, however, limit the operations ii
- both - blacks and greens. Some holders have with
drawn their stook* for the present..
Vasco° is quiet but very firm, and temall bill
nestr.doing in both leaf and manufactured.
Wooz.—Tbere is little or nothing doing . this
week, and the market continnee unsettled and
dell a smell sales, mostly low add medium
qrua lity, only having been midis, at about previous
ranging from 30a354 cash.
Tirn DAME Funnel to mit 'CRIMEA.— :- The
vicinity or the Baden, she hillakorr, the Olwiez.
Battery, the heights of the Alma, and other forti
fications, are yet the some of almost incessant
labors on the part of the poor Jews and Tartare,
who. have dog to the depth of twenty-rive feet
below the forts month of guns, and shot ate
shell, loads of which are being daily carted away.
Of bonis, - too; although =tumorous carves have
been brought.over to England, the stook does not
app,ese to be a:haute&
Thasitratz portion of the body
of Charlet/latest was found on the railroad trot
at Darien, Conneatient, one night last week, it
having been horribly mutilated by the down and ip
trainof the sew n'even railroad. 'GOO of hla lose
was found in shoed' pan of the locomotive ! , where la
had b een thrown after being severed from the body
by the wheels of the engine. The finding of Ws
limh led to nowt' for the remainder of the boar
When lan Deep, dummied woe waiting urn Abe
Sunk with a jug of whhery by his 'hie.