THE PRESS. rUDLIEHED DAILY, (SUNDAYS EXCEPTED') Jf Y JOHN "W. FORNEY. OFFICE No. 417 CHESTNUT STREET. DAILY PRESS, 03/1714 Pax WIIL, emeble to the Curter. b oded to aeheeribere Out of the City at dtx DOLL& 1.11 i x MiNOM. FOOL DOLLAIO 101 t EtanT !Ulnae. og . DoLL►te FOR Stx Molting—invariably to 84 Allee for the time ordered. TRIWEEKLY PEEISEI ramled to Subscribers out of the Clty at THILIII DOL !AO FIR Amiunt. in ndranne. SEA BATHING. 'momammigimm. SEA BATHING, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. TWO AND THREE-QUARTER HOURS FROM PHILADELPHIA. ATLANTIC CITY is new conceded to he oho of the wet delightful sea-:lda resorts in the word. Its bath i ss is unsurpsned ; its beautiful unbroken beaoh Isis° miles in length) IS unequalled by any on the con tinent, save that of Galveston ; its air Is remarkable la its &Mum ; its sailing and fishing fiscilitiee are ger tea ; its hotels are welt furnished, and as well kept as them or Newport or Faratosa, while its avenges an d walks are olesner and brcader.than those of any other oes bathing place In the country. Trains of the CAMDEN AND ATLANTIC RAIL ROAD leave VINE-STREET WHARF. Philadelphia, dsilr. at 734 A. M., and 4P. M. Returning, teach Phi- Isdelphia at 9 A. M., and 7:46 P. M. Rare. 31.80 Round-trip tickets, good for three days. 3260 Diu tssos.oo miles. A te'earsalt extends the whole length cut the road. hid if Adroit FOR CAPE MAY AND NEW YORK. TUVIDAYS, TRURSDAYS. end PA:ru al) AYR, a , 9) , ‘ n'olook A. M. 3ew 'tort and Philadelphia Steam Navigation Corn fratliteFitailuEdificfcßoleiraVet,ll6.l,r°glvidats end NS., ORK s _frmin first wharf below Spruces street, even TUESDAY, THURSDAY. and SATURDAY, OM A. M. Returning, leave New York came deye at 5 P. M. Returning, leave Cane May WON DAYS, WEDNES DAYS, and FRIDAYs..at 8 AM fare to Cape May, Carriage , . inolgded. . ei 50 Etre to Cape May, Season Tickets, Carr i a ge Fare in New York, 2 oti Do. Do.Deok— .... • 140 Steamers tmaoh . at New goi ng returning. Freighte for New York taken at low rater. JAMES ALL,DEROWE, Agent. - jyR tm 314 and 356 South DELAW &RE AVOWS°. adroit REGULAR LINE AND DAILY EXCRIRSIOrnt —Steamer co flArfolgY ieaves first Per b c tl i p ARCH' Street, RV' KORN tNo.. 7•34 , (except nuoday,) for. Chester. Pennsgrove. New Ca•tle. Delaware CM. Fort Delaware. and Ballot. Returning, lortve Weal et and Port et t o'olook. Pare rot the Egmarsion —..--, oents. Mims for Bridgeton and Odessa meet this Line. Steamer RHYBOLD leaves A ROR-Street wharf dailr,at o'clock . for all landings names above ex empt Fort Delaware. rye -12t' agiil at FUR CAPE MA.Y.—The swift and comfortable Bay steamer hulttiS witanutiavri." Captain W. Whillan. leaves Aroli-street wharf. for Cane Slay. every Moe day, Wednesday. and Friday morning_ at Pk' o'clock. Returning, leaves the landing every Tueedai, nine day,and Saturday morning at 8 o'clock. Fare, earring° hire 81.E0. " servant'', carriage hire inoliided 1.26. Freight taken at the canal low rates. Mopping at New Csatle going and. returning. • )y4-isel* FOR THE SEA-SHORE CAMDEN AND ATLANTIC WM 1"1,111. R 1 .—I il ht AS 'Aker MOND AY. Jule 17th,trains en.ll leave VINE-STREET PERRY, se fo love: ,30 A. M. Express train —.— P. ....--6 pp P. XL LEAV/33 ATLANTIC I —.— —4 46 P. M. tap 6.13 A. M. Aooommodatton —3.13 A. M. Fare to Atlantic. SUM; Round Trip ilekeis. good for three days. 6.160. Frei ht must be delivered at COOPER'S POINT hi 3 P. M. The Company 'WI not toe responsible for mu goods until reoeived and reoeibted for, by their Agent. at the Point. .10 - RN G. BRYANT Mlll-0 Agent. UODIMISSIOtt HO*USJES. SIIIPLYA, HAZARD; & EMTUEIENSON, *9. /111 OZNIMIT at, 0910(1814pli lIIMZOBANTS, P; O Z 'ALS 07 PHILADELPHIA-MADE GOODS. shilhiloi 'ffil - iintEity GOODS. WHOLMALZ STOOK AT BAWL. 'mos. KENNEDY Id_ Bxto T 29 Clusirrnlrikraig.b./OW MONTS. Aro siraffoiiheir stook of PR.ENOH „FLOWERS. AND STRAW GOODS. AT maim., CHEAP FOR CASH. lIANKIN AUGUST VMONT - & 13ANKE RS. 50 WALL STREET NEW YORK, Issue Letters of oredir to trsvellers, available in al vette nf Europe, through the !desert. Rothschild of Pa rim, London, Frankfort, Naples, Vienna, and their eor tea pondenta. LOOKING GU1.91438. IMMENSE REDUCTION U , LOOKING GLASSES. I .14 PAINTINGS. ENGRAVINGS, PICTURE AND PHOTOGRAPH FRAMES. JAMES S. EARLE & SON, 818 CHESTNUT Street, Announce the reduction of 26 per cent. In the prices in all the manufactured stook of Looking Glasses; also, n Engravings, nature nod Photograph Frames, Oil Paintings. The largest and most elegant assortment in the country. A rare opportunity now altered to make enrolment; in this line for clash, at remarkably low priors, EARLE'S GALLERIES. llfl-tf 816 CH emwr BTRELT. CABINET FURNITURE. CABINET TIWITURX MW 811- MAID TABLE;`. MOORE OAMPION. Ito. 261 60V711 BECOPID STREET, r. ecnneation with their extepilire Cabinet Baldness tre now nianufaabilinn 6 inuirerior article of BILL A..ql;! FABLF.U, r 4 1141 re now oh hend wopoly. aniskied wi_tk OORZ, & CAMYION'S I,ftfitOVXD cvemoNa, blob. are pronounced , by ell who hare need thew. to tv roperlor to_nli others, For the quality an t il ftniAh of these Toblee the mans 'note refer to t OIT ni.Meron* rfttrons thrOlathOit 166 onion. vim Airs nrclllsr with the character O f tkaiT nark, . fan-nal ..___ RO _ ___ RWNIS ESSENCE or JAMAICA . IP OINGSR.—FREDERIOR BROWN, °baptist:sod . Druggist, northeast oortier of Chestnut and's , iftit sta., Philadelphia, •ole manutaeturer of BrOille• Ne/07100 ol Jamaica Ginger, which is reoognisad and Preeortlited by the medioaffacultyand hat become the standard lentil/ medirone of the United States. This Exterior. le a preparation of unusual ezoellenee In ordinary diarrhcsa, incipient cholera, in short, in at oases of Prostration of the digestive functions, it 11 0 inestArnable value. During the prevalenoe of lipid/m:10 oholera and summer complaints of ohildren, it is 000U 'Indy efficacious; no family, Individual, or traveller @herald be without it. NOTICR.—To prevent this valuable Suaenoe from being oounterteited. new steel engraving, executed at a great cost, will be oiled On the outside of the wrapo ver, La order to guar the pureheaer against being im posed upon by worth s inptations-1860. c miirealLai i rit o .4i ti l L L ' a ri . . 4 t, ', D P 1, "at e, ,, ,3 7 . 11 3 :a W E n4 ri . taridi g! " k i litlCit BitoPt u ft ' ft.'s'. rug end Chemical Store, . cilnir or filn d apid Chestnut streets, • C.onti ashlar h otel. rni elphia. Also for sale by an TO inpostablis niggieta in the IC znitisal ntatatt nril-811 1 1 . 1 NOTIOZ.--SEALIED PROPOSALS, en doteed "Proposals for Furnishing the ?Ishii° Schools with Lehigh Or Schuylkill Coal,_" will be re ceived by the underingned at the CONTROLLERS' OFEICH. southeast earner of SIXTH end A DELPHI Streets, until reorwAY, July 21d,1861. at 12 o'clock 111,. There will be two Wail required. lige and Stove, and the place Lof 2340 pounds. The Coal to he weighed at the o fdelivery, in accordance wi h the City Ordi nance to Out efleau The proxisala will inoiride the "tore& eof the Coal at the School Houses, Proposal' w it be reoetved at the same lime for the Charcoal and Rl i rdling Wood that may be required. y order of the Committee on Supple". ROBERT J. HEMPHILL. rll5-3t Secretary Controllers of Public Schools. UNITED VINEYARD PRuPILLETORS, co. (George ralignec, Manager) COE/NAO.—Jest received, by the Octal* Skimmer, from Sordeatim, a shipment of the above favorite " brand" of Brandy, of the vintage. of ism, MI6 ISM. IMO, irthalf, quarter , and eighth pipe., pale and dark, The, poptilanty. of this faratidr„ has induced veriest. imitatons of their '' trade mart, and we now call the attention of the Trade thereto, and to partionlath no tice, in thew purchases, that ail packages of the Vine yard Froprieuirs Company Cognac , bee the name of " George Salignec, Maaaaer," branded In full. For sale in bond by the" solo agents • i t; hi. Vsalim co., Semi FS Street. COTTON SAIL DUOS and . CANVAS, (dap .4_ ambers AM brands. ilarevo .unolo Awning iwi ll s,of all lesoriptlons. for Irelit; wain vi, 'rivals, £O4 way:V..o , Bm Also aver aper irisuutsets_rers Drlet KolVo, from Ito I fsoit loi4•. Tarns'ls._!.. ooltinr• molt runic at. Joan ,w. tvEamitri & co.. IT V4.tt. . ... , 103 JONEB Allay. HAV.ANA CIGA ES.-A 1 -10001 00, - , ohoiee awrtmimt, oommising Nome of the most celebrated Inseam m the Hanna Mar ket. nigh /1A Egam, CabsmpA,.Verdsd E1V.0140111...A6P -1880, Black tk. Yanabipello. &0•• k.OL ca and Wools watch ror le law torh luir Frio**. by Me =Porter , C 1LL166 1.111-11, No Si IA arrest. • 3 7 6 * OASES LESLIE'S , GINGER WINE. —The attention of the Trade is invited to the above pppocgg & gulp, a light, pleasant, and refreatung nom/wigs coverage for !amity use daring.the summer season. For sale by the pnnokpal ea In,llC to the city. 13iNI m l,lOl fr, co . BoOth FRONT Street. EASE AND 00h1E0E.V. TREO/3ALD oak., Who can please or snit every h body! ano Person probably ne t v i r i t wiiro. But those wko know when they pre out In, .ra or 8110E21 are tevitell to sire DIM Da ly lig a g li T ta b 0 :1:71 were Viilenl47lMrt r FIN A L WIRT KAN CIFACTORY.--- - J. WW. aurA 1511 L'iMiallnitnr eVW & u l . llit 114 41 w tke ' uonOttental.'• k• A ttilb tettlitt• to lamitod t• •• t xi rn, of rarest tit. ask*. aait imutunie•t •• ••u• N on. •r •l el •►tMl Wt_. PotATAUE_ 8T AlsifiELL24 Ct., 12 at:, 10 ot., oof and b ot. DTAMPS (or solo Ikt t him aloe. iTiooDO4 the 8 ot. stomp . it, Mgr will be sold ti 411301 Ave per ova. • VOL. 4.-NO. 298. Uljt Vrw. TUESDAY, JULY 16. 1861. EULOGY HON. STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS, Delivered at the Baklthtonlan lentnate) WASHINUTON, JULY 3, 1961, BY JOHN W. FORNEY. Immediately after intelligence of the death of Senator DOUGLAS was received in Wash- ogton, a meeting of his• friends and admirers was held there, to determine upon the beat mode of honoring his Memory. A Committee then formed, of which the.lion. Jour; B. Hes- KIN was Chairman, and Joint J. McEi..troax, Esq., Secretary, decided upon inviting Col. Fortran' to deliver an Oration or Eulogy upon the great departed, and the Lecture Hall of the Smithsonian Institute was kindly granted as the moat suitable auditorium. At night o'clock upon the evening of Wednesday, July 3d, the Hall was crowded— the andience including representatives of nu- merous classes of politics, with a number of ladle'. When Professor Maar, of the Institute, appeared, accompanied by General C.stssitoN, Colonel FoassY, and numerous other gentlemen, who took seats upon the platibrm, ho was warmly•greeted. Professor Thentir, in introducing the Hon. J. W. Poaitzr, in a few compactand expressive sentences, said that the place in which they were assembled was exactly suited for tho de livery of an estimate of Mr. DOUGLAS, because that lamented and distinguished statesman bad been connected with the Institute in an•oilcia manner, and bad also personally taken great interest in its welfare. He was arise that full justice would bo done to the character of Mr. Donates by Col. FORNEY, whom ho now bogged leave to introduce to the audience. Advancing to the lecturer's desk, COL FOR NEY was received with great applause, which greeted him at 'various parts of his Eulogy He spoke as follows: Ms. PRESIDENT HENRY, LADIES AND GENTLE- soot : On the eve of the anniversary of American Union and Independence, we have assembled In this classic hall to pay a heartfelt tribute to the memory of a Statesman, who, in his day and time, has conferred las ting benefits upon his country, and who, in the hour of her ex tremest peril, and in the prime of his life, has been called to his anal account. Mingled with t: he grief which this sad event has inspired—a grief that .has, obliterated party prejudices among the people of-all the loyal. States of this Union—is the sad recollection that to-mor row's celebration of oar national Sabbath will .find us in the midst el an internal strife, which threatens the overthrow of our domestic peace and the destruction of the libertica pUrchased by the blood of our forefathers, and consecra ted in the deathless charter proclaimed from Independence Hall on the Fourth Day of July, 1776. [Applause.] •.. We have, therefore, a double amuse to mourn—first, in the loss of an unchallenged and unquestioned Patriot, and next, in the tact that, in one section of our happy coun try, thousands of misguided men are found in- sensible to Ml the obligations of the glorious Past, and resolved to entitle themselves to the scorn and detestation of mankind. Yet, may we not congratulate ourselves - that, if there are those reckless enough to forget the day, and the men who made that day, immor tal, more than twenty millions of 'people will greet the rising of to-morrow's. sun--will bail the eighty-filth anniversary of American Inde pendence—with a fervor- all the more deep, all the more religions, all the more profound and universal, because the Republic is in im minent danger, and the efforts sind.preyers of all good men are demanded for its preserva tion T [Applause.] When the impartial historian comes to ana lyze the character and services of Stephen A. Douglas, he will be amazed at the wonderful versatility of the man, the vast amount of labor he performed, the events in which he moved a principal actor, and the compara tively short period of time during which he figured upon the stage of American politica. Volumes would be required to do justice to the subject. How, then, can / expect, within the decent and proper limits such an OVAL -81072 as this, to rise to an. ordthary compre henelon of the tinty.whlch has been assigned to me T I must content myself with a mere allusion to certain of the leading elements of the character of the departed ,patriot, and with a -genial though partial view of many of his distinguishing traits and achievements, such as might be anticipated from one who loved him as a friend and believed in the ge neral justice of his opinions. . _ Our greatest national historian, in Mama velloan eulogy upon Andrew Jackson, hi this very city, sixteen years ago, when he ap proached that part of the history of the old hero which continued to divide public opinion, said : (i We tread on ashes where the tire is not yet extinguished." Many of the acts of I Stephen A. Douglas were the acts of yester day. We can almost hear the echo of the; shouts of the hosts in the great conflicts upon one side, of which he was the leader. The theories he advocated still awaken animosities among men; his own passions,and those ho aroused, are yet keenly rememered. For all this, I do not feel I approach a forbidden, though a. Somewhat delicate, theme, when 1- allude, in passing, to some of' his traits as a politician. I am rather invited to this, when I remember that within the last month tho citizen, now President of the United States, who was defeated by Douglas for the Senate, in 1858, and who mounted, in 1860, to the Presidential chair over the prostrate banner of his former successful competitor, directed that the armies of the Republic should crape their colors in mourning for the lose of his former adversary, and that the De partments of the Government should. be closed on the day of hie funeral at Chicago. [Great applause.] 'am• ihrther attracted to the dis cussion el - Donglais as apolitical leader by the fact that, at the portals of his tomb, the whole people of his own State, irrespective of former differences, paid the tiablimest tribute to hii memory—that, when he died, his worst oppo. nents elsewhere forgot their animosities, and that the whole body of the loyal States were struck with sudden grief when his death was preclaimod--struck, indeed, as if they had lost their best, and dearest, and most cherish ed champion. [Applause.] What a scene is this 1 When, partisans for got their hostility to Clay, and Jackson, and Webster, they did so over the graves of old men ; but here they bury the recent and the bitter Past, from out of sight, in paying volun tary honor to the youngest, and, for a time, the extreinest statesmen of hie school. Let me, therefore, with this free charter to speak my own mind, say something of Douglas as a leader and a Democrat. Rep was a very thorough parttime. He be longed to the clams who regarded the Demo cratic party as incapable of error, and created to rule in the administration of the Federal Government. He was so wedded to this idea as to look upon this 'organization as almost infallible, and sincerely believed that it was an aggregate of wisdom and experience supe rior teeny political organization of early or later times. Extending over the whole of the con tinent, and holding.its devotees with almost Masonic attachment, it generally prevailed against all odds, and finally became so strong as to absorb moat other organizations. As an oracle of this party, Judge. Douglas was fre quently severe:upon his opponents, and, by his severity, provoked a retaliatory spirit that often bordered upon personal hatred. Yet, I think hill faith in what la known as the organi zation of the Democratic party tailed him before his death: When he saw the Southern leaders . poweritil enough, with the aid of this organization, to drive Mr. Buchanan from the path of duty into the path of depravity ; to make measures like Lecompton a party test, and finally to bring .to a. candidate tor the Presidency, whose object was unquestionably the disruption of the Government, hundreds of thousands of Democratic votes, be must have felt that the prestige of the Democracy had gone, never-to be restored-until its leaders can resurrect . the great examples, and reani mate the great truths which they have latterly insanely rieglected. [Applause.] It he were no* "alive, and could see the name of this powerful partly flagrantly used as a cloak for treason even ;in portions of the Free s States, he would, to my opinion, feet that it was time to set aside a•machine which has become so potent an ongine of individual and general digester. - • ' He was pre-eminently and always a national man. This was one.reasein of his consistent championship of the Southern people. He shrank instinctively from what be called sec tionalism. He was, undoubtedly, ambitions, and he bad an undoubted riglit to 'be ambi tious. Be believed that ,the election. * el any President by a solid Northern or a solid Southern vote would "be the parent of serious fe26-6m* • " .1 Aj c T ;•,„ . '1 I /. . . . • . ./. .7 • • - it • . - • . . C. m r• /.. "Ak '• -• • vt* - A)3 *. • Iwo • .' "-A:f•Pile , • dpi l; :j - • I k le t tatti .t;.' ". Th . ":" • • 111 : . • . , • UPON THE internal strilb. Born in cold New England, he cultivated from early life the warmest rela tions with the Slave States, and at one time waa their chiefeat favorite , The Southern po liticians loved him for many things—lot his coarse in the Mexican War, and in the annex ation of Texas; for his opposition to the Wil mot Proviso ; for his speeches on the Compro mise measures, and his subsequent gallant bearing when assailed by the turbulent popu lace of Chicago; for his aid in the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, and for his repeated vladleations of that meateire before the peo- pie. No Northern public man, since the com. I mencement of the anti•slavety agitation, has been so steadily and efficiently. the friend of the South. It was only when sternly adhering to his reading of the ginsas- Nebraska biU, he refused to stultify himself by accepting the 'monstrous construction of that measure given to it by ultra Southern men, that he began to lose their confidende. From that hour all his sacrifices and services in• their behalf were studiously forgotten. Their compliments wore exchanged for curses, their praises for proscriptions ; and it Is a me lancholy comment upon the boasted intelli gence, of the Southern people, that so many, 'thonsandis permitted - themselves todeisett the great, leader, only because that leader would, not himielf desert :the troth and degrade his manhood. [Great applause.] Much has been said by heated partisans in regard to tho re peal of the Missouri Compromise. It is al leged, on' the ono hand, that bat for that woi should have hid - no Republican party," and on the other, that if ho had adhered to that,Com promise the Union itself would have stood the shock of battle and of time. , But, hoWever men may differ, when they come to discuss this portion of the record of our departed friend, all most agree - .that the agitation which followed the enactment of the Kan sas-Nebraska bill led to the exposure of the plans of the DiBIIIIIOIIIBtB, and enabled the American people to realize that these plans had been many years in course of prepare. tion. If Judge Douglas, following the • lead of these men, bad accepted their construction of that measure, then the condemnation' heaped upon him would have been just; but when, with heroic fortitude and persistence„ he maintained the principle be avowed When , discussing the measure itself before it-became a law, and, rather than yield its endured the nn= paralleled persecution of the Administration of Mr. Buchanan ; and "when he demanded its recognition tied - re-endorsement by the Na. .tional Convention of which he was the nomi. nee in 18GO, he gave the highest evidence of his patriotism and bia'sincerity. In the last' Congress of the United States an unconscious tribute was paid to his chaiacter by the enact ment of three territorial - bills in which the doctrine of non-intervention with slavery in the Territories—the vital spifit of the Kansas- Nebraska bill—was recognized by the decided vote of both Houses. And how did he bear himself' when his former familiars and friends in the South turned from him, first with displeasure, and afterwards with indignation and scorn? Did he respond to their criminations? Did he re taliate their misrepresentations? No. Put forward as the regular Democratic candidate for president in 1880, be took the field to save them from the fate which has since overtaken them. Denounced by his assailants as afraid to advocate his opinions in the Slave States, he boldly threw himself among the Southern people, and challenged universal admiration. by the dignity, the candor, arid the - eloquence of his arguments. His replies to the cotebrated Norfolk questions were the index of his whole canyasa in that never.to-be-forgotten year. Applauded by the Republicans and the Northern -Democrats as an extraordinary exhibition of moral courage, and execrated by the Disnnionists as a. deliberate defiance of their threats, he never. abandoned the high position thus assumed, but maintained his on ward march. Beginning at Norfolk in August, and 'pursuing his way through North Caro lina, returning to Virginia, thence to - Mary-. latid, and so through Penimlvaula, at ' every point greeted by thousands, and ap•-• proached by servile politicians who attempted. to turn him from his text and to seduce him from his duty ; yet he invariably spoke the same language and advocated - the same doc trine. It was not for the South - alone, but for the country, that he pleaded. ' [Applause.] As an evidence of his singular auselflehneas, I am authorized to, relate an incident by one who accompanied him through alithiise trying, scenes. He never had fell confidence , in, the• probability of hie election to-the Presidency, bat ho was - buoyed up by the faith that was in him, strengthened by the consciousness that if he did not live to enjoy the 'fruits of his labors, others would do so ; and he seemed to be happy in the reflection that he was laboring not for himself, but for the peace, the pros perity, the perpetuity of the Republic.. On the morning after the State elections in Penn sylvania and Indiana, in October of this same year, 1860, while at Cedar Rapids; lowa, he received a despatch from the Associated Press, based upon an editorial of my own, announcing that both these,States had declared In favor of. the Republican party. His friend advised him to pause in his journey, suggesting the long route before them, the labor, and, indeed, the peril of the experiment, and reminding ,him that his health might fail him before he reached the close of his canvass. His reply is worthy of preservation. cc '" ho said, gc Lincoln is the next President of the United States'. I , have no hope and no destiny , before • me, but .to do my best to save the Union from, overthrow. Now, let as turn our course to the South." [Applause.] And to the South they went. The history. of that I tour is yet, to be written. -.Every step of his progress wee watched with solicitude. and stir-. prise by the Northern people of all parties. Although invited by such men as Alexander - H. Stephens, of Georgia, and 'John Forsyth,. of Alabama, then•professing tohe his warmest friends, admonitions were thrown out that' he would not be permitted to speak in Die Slave. States, and more than one of the Southern: journals invoked the spirit of the mob to "pet! hirri'doWn. "But he was not to be deterred,of; delayed. He was net to be put down by lit- man power. Leming Chicago; he parsed cessively through the States of Missouri, Kent tacky, Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama,: apt Louisiana, travelling and speaking night,:mid, - day, and returned through Mississippi, Ton-: nesse°, and. Virginia. Wherever he appeared' thousands greeted him, and although-levee=' tives were plenty and threats hurled at him from the crowds, armed, men watching each other, ready to reak into' open violence. for and against him, he maintained the even tenor of hie way. He reached the city of - Mobile the evening before the Presidential election . ; and addressed an - immense meeting of the people, carrying the district,as tbe result an the night. alter showed, by the , force of his logic and the courage of his character. In all this tour, not content with appealing to the masses from the lusting., he invoked' hie friends in private life to stand fast by , the flag, appealed to the editors friendly to him to keep up the good fight, and never rested, not even atter, the _ . election. of Mr.. Lincoln was ascertained, when he addressed the people of New Orleans, until he , was prostrated by disease.: [Applause:] "It is related that after bid speech at . New Orleans a splendid silk banner was unfurled, hearing, an accurate likeness of Douglas inscribed with the words Oarchoice in• 11364." •liorbear refertintin detail to those who assisted in the welcome of this illustrious patriot during his Memorable mission to the Slave States, and who have since fallen from his standard, and are engaged in the parricidal attempt of destroyieg . that Union in whose behalf he labored so heroically. I have never doubted, that • during this:cam paign the seeds of the fatal diseme that finally carried him off were planted' in his 'constitu tion; He bad passed through' almost 'incon ceivable dangers, accidents, by flood and field, and on one occasibn came neat...toeing his life by what was supposed to be the - act - of an enemy who attemptedAo :throw:the . train which carried him and his family •trom the track. He • survived •them all to return to . Washington. Is it any Wonder that In his celebrated passage. with the Disunion candidate for the Preeidency; during tile .speciel session of April, in this year, that with all this experience in his own recollection and the recollection of the corm: try, he should say that there was no cause for this rebellion against the Government; that all the demands of the South bad been practi cally conceded la recent legislation, and that the Republicans had yielded all that •the Southern extremists had insisted upon? [Ap plause.] And you will observe that no ono was more earnest for paste than Mr: Douglas at this period. An ordinary man would have felt the insults ; and the ingratitude of the SOuthern politiians, but Douglas, when Pre sident Lincoln's inaugural was announced, :gave it such a construction as proved his own earnest desire to prevent collision. Here again he 'displayed his singular sagacity and boldness; for while the Republican leadens were uncertain how to treat the first Message of the President, he put himself forward, and with an. Ingenuity and an audacity, too that attracted general observation, insisted, that Lineoln'a policy was that of an amicable adjustment of our national differences - . [Ap plause.] The secret is to bo found in his earnest desire to save the people of the South from their leaders—in other words, to keep the Union together, and, as it were, to appeal to the men specially interested in the prosperity of tho new Administration,- to. adopt , the same 'course; was only when 'Sumpter - fell ; it was only when ho perceived that , all the'ami cable proffers of the 'Administration had been PHILADELPHIA. TIES AY, JULY 16. 1861. coldly rejected by tbo cobspiratois against our cottntry's honor ; it was :only when these con spirators Mused to ;Wow the starving garri son at Sumpter to be provisioned that ho threw off the tnantle of the pacificator and ap pealed to the God of battles to decide the great question whether we were to hive a Go-. vernment or not. [Applause.] Now, if . his voice had boon for war before, his appeal-tohis friends throughout the loyal States in that dread hour must have been ineffectual. It ho bad faltered before the throats of the Southern Dieunionists after his nomination for the Pre sidency in 1860—if be bad refused to answer the Norfolk questions as be did Sneerer them —if he had broken up his intended journey into the Southern States when the October elections In Indiana and Pennsylvania made the election ot , Mr. Lincoln a certainty—it he* bad not grappled with Breckinridge in the special session of the Senate and pulverized . him [great applause] with the massive force of trite and intellect--ot what avail would his invocation have been when Sumpter fell? its. would_ have been regarded as a mere instill ment of Faction. But when he spoke for wA . , and for the GovernMent, millions rose at his:, call, and the Administration telt that the country had rallied an element to the standard of the, Union which could never be defeated': The most unjust of all the impUtations upon the memory of Douglas, however, is , that cif recent coinage and circulation. It comes ap-, .propriately from those who followed him with obloquy to the gretre-Litom the advocates first ' of a policy which produced a bitter alienation between the North and the Soutb,'and now of . secession and separation. Rejecting the last, and probably the greatest, speech of his life— short, it is true, bat a mine of gold in thought and precious example—they now puttim toe-, ward as the opponent of the righteous causedf his country, and quote him as the defamer of . the Goiernment, and, by consequence, as the apologist.Of the men banded for its deatraction: There ii,Wrsifined injustice in this aspersion of his fame,7a cruelty in this calumny thatwould dishonor any cause- but that which is,initself unrelieved dishonor. Not content with having , ' repaid hislong-years ot servictilii.the South: , ern peopleservice in which be displayed'in noblest attributes of man—sery ic es in rendering which, indeed, he Sacrificed his life-L--with'in gratitude as base as that which.might be skip posed to inflame a recreant son to slay his sleeping father in cold blood, they now attempt to tarnish his memory with the incredible falee hood that he was opposed to the mighty move ment ivhich has stirred the ocean of public ()Pinion in the loyal States. tSensation.T . I need only give a single sentence fro!: his last address to the people of . Chicago in last ."hfay, to establish alike the malevolence ot his ene mies and the courageous consistency .ofdlis patriotism . : I , c The eleotlon of Mr. Lincoln is , a mere pretext. The present Secession movement Is the resnil s of tremendous, enormous conspiracy formed ,more than a year ago. 'Cheers ] This oosisplittoy`to break up the Union, was formed by tire leaders the Southern Confederitoy more, than twelve months ago. They the,,ilavery question as a means to sooomptisirthetrdesired end. Thej de sired a Northern manto be eleoted•Presidentby national vote in order to consider that as evidenoe that the two sections oouid not live in peabc,and Jo they might break up the Union. TApplausilf Whenever • the history of the last two years shaall ba written, whenever the bietory of this ootinkri, from the time that the Lecompton Constitution was . originated down to the last Presidential elt,sAilon, shall be written, it will appear that the scheme was formed to break up thi, Union They destred•to break it up, using the slavery question es a pretext. They desired the election of the Republican candi date by a purely Northern vote, against a united South, and now assign that feet as a reason Why we could not live together. The soheme as agreed upon In Washington - last May was for the Dis union oandidate to carry every bouthern State, and Mr. Lincoln every Northern State, and. the 'Dia unionists then were to seise poseession ef 'the Federal Government, and issue ordain to the; army and navy under the seal of the•United - Ststes. They expected to have porieseion of the Govern ment, and they relied upon_ a divided North ~and a _united South to Jain - civil war to our ;own . doors. The &shorn, was 'only defeated . by the de , feat of the Disuoion oandidate in ileetuaky, ails souri, Tennessee ' and Virginia. - (Applause ] Whenever the history of this country ~sball be written, it will record that grand conspire...3:4 and the present Disunion movement as the rentit of "Bat this is not the time to go into a diemission of the causes that have produced these 'results, The conspiracy to break up the Union is a foot now known to nil. Armies .are being. raised stjui War. levied to accomplish it.. There , can bit 'but' two' sides to thercontroveri. . stair...atm/ DI Oft TitlelilDlrls,olPHlrTni: • .OWACIATAn? is • , [lmmense applause, cheer's, and ones of . k Good ! good !' oto There can be no neutrals in this war (Prolonged sheers . 1 "There can be none but patriots end traitors (Applause J Thank God ! Illinois will not .be di vided on that question. [Cheers J rkiow that they bevel expected to present - a- united South against :a divided North. The conspirators have been led to hope that, in the Northern States, it would ,be made a party question, producing civil, war between, Demoorats and Republicans, and the' South, being united, coed step in with their 16. , gions, and help the one to destroy the other, and then conquer the -visitor: (Laughter and. ap. plause.l Their scheme was bloodshed and all the horrors of civil war in every Northern State . ! There is bat one way to prevent it : netted action on the part of Illinois, closing up the reeks, and thus rendering it impossible that war shall rage on our soil. [Applause J " I repeat that, so long as it was possible to set tle this question by peaceful means, I was willing to make any reasonable sacritioe for that purpose ; bet whin the question comes whethet.the wer shall be transferred• from the cotton fields of the 'South to the oorn.fields of Illinois, I ohoolle to say, 'that the further off that war the. bettir. (Ap please - • " War dins exist 'lt is a sad thought to every patriot. War—civil war—must be reoogniied as existing In the United ktates.. We . may no longer otiose cur eyes, to that solemn fact . This Govern. men: must be maintained, - the' enemies of the country overthrown, and the more stupendous and overwhelming our preparatioas; the less bbod shed and the shorter the struggle " Here, in the capital, which was the scene 01 some of his proudest triumphs, let us resolve to wear these immortal words in our heart of hearts, and to transmit them to endless gene: rations. [&pplause.j I now speak. to the people of .the Free States, who are again ap proached by the enemies of Douglas, and once more called upon to strike at the safetypt.tho Republic.. Be no longer deceived by wicked and , ambitious men. Remember that' every appeal'to party'against -the Government is an argument intended to demoralize the energies of the present Executive and his ministers; is but a crafty preparation for a still more tearful evil:than disunion itself —even to the death of all personal liberty, and to the per petuity of a civil feud before which the wars of other days and'other nations will seem but' the riatlines of a villagb fair. • ' His magnanimity was a leading characteris-• tic: He was less permanently controlled by party,feelings-Or persoilal prejudices than any man I'eier knew. He was impulsive and fre quently dealt in 'harstelnieative, but so 'gene roui a"soul Could not nurse-his wrath to keep it warm. If be said a bitter thing, be soon re gretted and frankly admitted it. If he atiiick a hard blow, the same clenched band that gave it was promptly opened to reconcillation..This trait was, probably, the secret of his populari ty in society and in the Senate. In fac e t, his manner co uld . not be repisted. Re disarmed prejudice by, a double c,harm—by his ability, and . , by his magnanimity. • [Applause.] After the moat acrimonious debate, it was no un common thing for him to jest with the'men had been recently'denouncing: If be offended like a man, he forgave like a Ged. I shall never forget his when the electo ral vote was read, in the-House of Represen tatives, in Febniary last. That waa.a memo rable scene. According to law; Vice Presi dent Breckinridge presided. Only :three Southern States had deserted the hag and faith, of . their fathers. The galleries were crowded, and some interest was excited by the rumor. that violence was intended to prevent the. formal proclamation, of the con stitutional verdict of. the American people. I looked around me to see whether certain men, who,Continued 10 retain seats in that great Onnvention," Senators and Repreeentatives; With all their boasted chivalry, and horior,'and f ootirage, could lend themselves to the studied !denunctation of an election of the ruler of Ilkley millions of people,--conld participate 'in all the solemn ceremonial], belonging...to it,—could bear the vote of every. State read off and recorded, even s while their souls were black with sin, and their hearts filled with the preordained purpose of disrogesditig,thstkkic-• lion, and of making it the pretext of 'a.ivar , Intended to convert this capital inks. a Ges- , henna, a Phleguthon, a very hell dik, earth. [Applause.] The Vice President, caini, cold,' and complacent,—for so young a mati'very `calm, cold, and complacent,—announced every State before the vote was read, and seemed to be the impersonation of Senatorial rectitude and dignity. Before him were the Senators and Representatives from Virginia, North Carolina, and Tennessee; States that have alnee •beetf stolen out of the Union by the treachery or their executives, not to speak of the Senators from other States who lived under a system of successful 'terrorism all aiding bathe care.: mony, and yet " near ly all pledged •to put the dagger to the heart of their country. -The reading had not progressed far ' betortioSitigo Douglas walked down the mainaisle. Every eye was turned upon him. Taking jila seat between Senators Seward and Lane,* soli° now the honored•head of the State Depart ment, under!' President Lincoln, the ()Mersa dishonored &Ciao of the secession conspiracy, he proceeded to enter into a pleasant 'ilde convertration with - both, no doubt in reliance .to thoLstact that while Mr. Seward i had been defeated for the Presidential nomination of his own` party, and Mr. Lane had laded to break up the , Bernocracy, he, Judge-Douglas, s „ „ if reltlis proud of Ids few electoral votes, and of the million of Democrats at his back, as even the successful competitor, then shortly to bo I inaugurated into the Presidency for tour years. [Applause.] No confusion In him • on that great day, for ho indulged in no guilty reservations. lie was, reedy to die for his country. .It.in.the near future there was • a dagger and a bowl for that oonntry, his hand was not ready to drive the ono or to drug the other. Ho had, therefore, no cause for self reproach. He yielded to the decree 'of the ballot-box with a grace and 'promptitude all .Idi own. Around him were gathored the dark conspirators, that he knew were plotting his cenntry's ruin, and; like so many Catilines, affecting a :thew of deference to a Constitution thity were sworn to assail and to trample under feet: [Sensation.] • • . it have spoken of his rare magnanimity. . A &hien instances of this could be - produced—a single one will suffice . : His name was pre. sded for the Presidency to the Cincinnati Convention in 1856., His friends were among tt bold and daring,men of the party, skilful Y Mans, and ardent' young politicians from criory seciiOn. 'They' loved. him 'so warmly • * tliat they scarcely dreamed of yieldieg him to another. Conscious of his .great - deservings .arid abilities, they resolved"- to embarrass • the nos:ideation of ;his leading' competitor. For deys they contended for him and with so much tact and force itti . ..to "prOtract the bal., • lotings toithe close of the week. • -ponglas was in Washington watching the pr,ogrhsis ,of the Convention, and when he . sayv that bad' feeling was being created in the debate and the voting, hO telegraphed' tti his , friend Col. Richardson, a member . of. the .obegress that assembles hers tomorrow, throe dSapatches, demandieg 'Of, "his 'supporters' to yield to Mr. •BuChantin'S —'nomination '11:4 teen' as he receividl tea mijerity Toflthe Cpniention," and aiserting his .:gratitlention , at the unanimous adoption - of tholdatform, in veciaithe popular principle of committing the s very ; question forever to the ,people of the territories, was endorsed,had accomplished all the objects be had in view in allowing, his Wends the nee of his name. lie followed this , . . .. st tof -self-abnegition "py can-011881n Support b liisAnceessfultiiral;,marvelliins for the.elo : g enpn he displafod,:aiiirftn theiiiist'snmeof ,'mini ey.exiiendecrout Cot his private foirtinit;to :siwure him the votelif 'lllinois. '[Applause.] :The' impartial and inexorable historialiwill re tcoratbow this magnaniinitY,tiFis re - elProcatod: The' fidelity of 1866 was rewarded by the Torcki 'aeriptions of '57 and -)68. I.The President nominated by the iriends. of, D,onglas at Din cannati after he had recnived the majority of . the Den:mend§ Ooniention, Teased to accept or 'reeognize l or • iffitrioit the' 'nomination of Do - uglas when ho had received a fair majority t - Charleston, and the platform upon which ' Mr. Buchanan was elected, and without which 'he could, not have been elected, which made 10p,uglas so potential a champion of his cause, ;Was z rejected and broken under.circrumetances citiinblnshing and unparalleled perfidy. [Ap . .• plu • me.] The experience of a. public man, especially One engaged in American polities, is nearly always a thankless and' painful experience. There have been Manrinetances of the truth •41-this assertion. Frorif early'days, with the 'exceptional ,cases of jefferson, Washington, and Jackson, great leaders have beeri,properly appreciated by the people they, have served- Much es we prate of the er:lr ruption Of politicians, - and. of 'their ambition, it is a fact, a thousand times vindicated, that the most faithful of our representative men, after having given their best years to their Country; have died poor. Absorbed in gene ral duties - , they can afford to• give little time to their own interests. It is well known that General, Jackson retired from Wash. ington.debt--thht,.Mr.'.Webater left ne legacy'th his children tiutthe ieeeird of his im- Mortal eloquence '-'--that *an, not a rich m an-in •atiy eense.laiid-Ithat the simple ' manners and frugal taates'of Mi. Calhoun alone prevented him from. being annoyed- by. pe vouniary •troubles. • Harrison, Taylor, Fill- More, and Pierce, were men in brit moderate Circumstance - a.; and in looking along the cata. logue of names that now adorn our history, Icannot lay my hand upon one Who has right ly, served his country In the councils of the nation that has given consistent attention to his • own business • affairs. [Sensation.] In deed, whereier, an, American - statesman has fallenshort in the discharge of his obligations ;to:,.country and.;.•;th% - .Ciistitritioh, - has yf _faction tie expediency, has been tainted with corruption; it-willbe found that his mercenary, and- grasping; anddishonest• spirit has been directed to the accumulation of ( a fortune for himself. Who that knew the departed patriot, whose death the whole liberal world deplores—who that knew Stephen A. Douglas will reinse to say that at ao .period . ot his life could such a .charge be,"laid "at his door?'lt is true that but fin . the great commercial tempest of 1867, jtidge Douglas would have died immensely ;rich; but it ought to be remembered that his :possessions were :the result rather of happy and sudden purchaaes, than of any studied :purpose of promoting his • own welfare. He ;was not a speculator. Liberal to a -fault, :ready ,to serve his friends at whatever risk, prominent in every. public charity, he never gave a vote in Congress that could be tortured his Most ingenious enemy into a selfish !Vote. [Groat applause.] One of the boldest :advocates of every great improvement, the earnest supporter of measures assailed in cer tain qnaiters as extravagant, but which looked Altei *emotion of the' general comfort, and '-to - the increase of the stock of- human know ledge-Li as' for :'instance, the donations of :public land to the several States and Ter ritories. for railroad purposes, the estab lishment of great lines of steam intercommu nication, and the encouragement of overland mail routes to bind the two great seaboards together—it is eminently creditable that, al though bitterly assailed for his opinions, no opponent could make and maintain an accusa tion affecting , his Personal integrity. Other Men in our past public councils—acme in the Cabinet and some •in Congress—have been accused 'of corruption, and the accusation has I been believed, and sometimes proved; but it I will be one of the - brightest pages in the re. cords of Douglas that, in supporting what ho conceived to be the cause' of his country, he forgot himself; and, although surrounded with temptations, and enabled to take advantage of many alluricigzopportanities to make himself a wealthy man, he left the stage of life with no other patrimony than , his -illustrious fame. [Great applause.] • - He was neither a copyist nor an imitator: lie -never waited until others bad spoken: on a great question. Nothing seemed intricate. or •abstruse ••• to him.- The Most embarrassing issues had,. no terrors in his. eyes. Thus he. defended. General Jaekson's.case in resistitig the civil , process for the purpose of saving a great city—an example that may be com mended, to the casuists of our own day in a neighboring State, who think the Law can be mule a cover - for treason, and the Judiciary I the right arm of , rebellion. Thus he con fronted John Quincy - Adams on 'the disputed boundary- of Texas, by quoting a - forgotten I dsspateh written years before, while that exi traordinary- man :. . was Secretary.of State: In• the annexation of Texas he aided to unravel-a tangled skein of diplomacy and double•deallsig. By his speeches in the House 'during ,the pen dency of the Compromise Measures, he almost, divided the honors equally with ()lay, Weeder, and Cass. When the Utah complication came' to, disturb politicians, be suggested a remedy `ow: ally clear and sensible. I, need not refer to his amazing discussions of our relationsi to other Governments, and particularly to the future de - signs of Great Britain nor to his Memorable arguments in the - exciting debates of the Kansas and 'Nebraska Bill, when 'all men bowed to his superior intellect.. Ha was • as original as he :was daring, In the forum and upon the hustings, never allowing his oppo, .rent to recover time from. one surprise be fore turning his flank with another and diking his batteries. -Indeed, the whole lite of Jadgo Douglas . was a succession of triumphs won by his prompt and original,.policy.,. [AriplariatiA He returned to Illinois when he made his can 'vacs for re-election to the Senate in 1858, with the Administration- an Administration almost of his own creation—ia the field against him, and with the : compact and disciplined ranks of the Republicans fiercely eppoxed to him. In_ that canvass, thus . doubly opPosed, with the ableat man in the Republican party against him,-and with the Presidential Issue imme '4lakely before him ' and Still clinging to the or ganization of the Democratic - party, he won hie re-election - by his deflaiiee of-the Admin istration et Mr; Buehanan and by the repeated expressions `of his determination that the ':.rights of the Southern people should be sus tained. [Great sensation.) Ho was the mosentggestive man I ever knew: A subject difficult to others he inade plain and'clear.' - To an 'editor he was an ex ' hanistleis mine of original thought, and many an article for which IhavereceivedCredit was but a tame elaberation of an. idea be had pre sented to me. He did not save and hide his Impressions.- 'Profuse as he was of his money, he was even more profuse of : his brains. He seemed to think, when ho gave so generously of, the one, that it was enduring as the other. Se* titatetene - ii hoard np; their ideas as a Weer i g liards lila , gold, making them common when' they know the return must add to their own fame. Not -so..with.laim. He loved to: enrich °there with the genie and jewels of his own mental storehouse ; and nothing delighted him more than -to , see.them.praised.lcir Oat which helaad produced. • . .2, • He waritelf.relitintv-•Few men lisTemdied so little upon others. In debate, he Was a match for the greatest, and aa agalest a • num ber ho was like a lion at bay. [Applause.] When his adiersaries surrounded 'him, anti their blowa were 'rained fast and' thick upon him, ho never retreated, but, planting himself upon his principles; challenged universal ad miration by the rapidity of his movements, the fertility of his invention, the readiness of his replies, and. the' pro-eminent Courtesy of his language andlis bearing. Many instances of this occur to my mind—one during the his torical debate on the night preirjorial to- the passage of the Kansas and Nebraska bill in the Senate, when, for three horde, he main tained his position against a host of opponents. Mr. Seward, with his characteristic frankness, could not resist the expreaaion of his feelings during that , dobate, when ho assured the Se:: nator from Illinois that he had never adraired him more than during that contest. rr Sir," told Mr. Douglas, rc I , know-hoW to command the respect and the praise of the:Senator:from New York." - He rarely or never quoted poetry. had little taste for the music of the schools, but he was singularly alive to poetry when read by others, and had, his own favorite airs which he loved to listen to and linger over. I have hoard him narrate, incidents of his own life, and of the-lives ' of others which aboundedli the mast exquisite and pathetic touches. His journey through Russia ; his reception by the old Emperor previous to" his death; his con versation" with the' Empress Eugenie; his presence at one of the Greek Islands when ho received:the news of. the -arrest of Koszta by di t ptain , Ingraham, ; ;the , effect prodeced•upon his.imagiration by London and Paris, yo r kre-fte-. scribed with a grace and a .spirit-that•alter- - : irately recalled the delightful 'and the stately style of Macaulay. planae.] This may be .called ,extravagant, praise by those only who hair; 'readttio,direet and unadorned logic of his Congressionare: torts but it will be endorsed by all who iiave. 'sat at his side when, id some genial horn', he threw off those original: impressioire-fiem-his mind ; leaves, as it were, from4hat great machine which, though constantly at -Work, seemed never to tire. • His hnmor was intuitive. Never • indulging -In vulgar wit, he -was so prompt in repartee, 'so npt.in discotering. the weak points of his 'adversary, and; withal, so generally, careful to void offence, that in tbe hottest...controversy gisi:tnitietl.the,lisitgli Upon, ,his opponent, and :compelled hinitd yield - to 'the generalconts.-* 'gion. This man, who - thought so' profandly,and was ever ready. in d 'crisis; was a Clan: of• the gr*itest leirare:' Ittitirsis frequently irrtiociel , ty. He delighted to mingle with the gay and 'the gifted, and was the 'soul of every social' circle. Those Who saw him at a reception or a levee were surprised to find- him in the Se nate next morning, as ready for ; business as if he had given tho whole of the previous night to reading and reflection. _.Nobody ever knew when he did, read, and yet, ho eferrert. vo-, b:line, page, and date, with , ,a, stlicltorrect. ness that surprised all. He wpri d in the :. Senate;‘nottirerk.EVitth...tliti ladies in the galleries, talk. 3vith_thi_ politicians, smoke his cigar • with his friends, • and all this' time apparently indifferent to the discussion • going on in the body itself, aid when leasit expected would phinge . into the billows of the debate, dashing every ob stacle aside, and generally , ; coming out the Actor. [Great applause.] He was great in the parliamentary skirmish, but he waa great er in the protracted battle; His‘ small arms were effective, but his Dahlgrens :were ter rible.- [Applause.] He would laugh•through. or fight through a,contest, precisely as pircum l stanceirequired.His short speeches remindl ed ua, of John Forsyth, in best daye ; tint, when he plinted himself, tor an elaboratp. CUSBIOII, he displayed :Wonderful patience aid! endurance. Thee, he could play the. part'of leader in 'a sudden 'dash or in a long 'siege; with equal success. Death has been buy with the noble little Congressional band that refused to respond to the:exactions of the Disunionists 'on the Kan sas question nearly four years ago. The first called was that type of the gentleman, the soldier, and the statesman, Thomas L. Harris,' of Illinois. I think I can see his pale face and flashing eye now, as he almost staggered, stricken with wasting disease, to his seat in the hall of, the House of Representatives. . I can .almost hear his manly voice protesting against the wrong under which a great party reelod'to its basting - overthrow. He lived long enough to prove his more than human courage, and-lett us just before his repeated prophecies came near thrill' "fulfilment. The next sum.. moned to the eternal bar was Diva) C. - BRODERICK, of California. God had stamped him fora leader. Too virtuous to be bribed, too fearless to falter; too disinterested to. be corruptly ambitious, he sleeps on the :breezy hills that overlook the proud metropolis•of his adopted State, within tho sound of the anthem of the sea, surrounded by a population who loied him Bring and.. mourn him.. dead. [Applause.] Slaughtered for his opinicims, deliberately marked out for sacrifice, his faro well words were a sad presage to the' events of which his death was the equally sad begin ning ; gc _They have killed me because I was 'opposed-to the extensionof Slavery and a cerrnptiAdininistratlon." - - And:then, saddest loss of all, comes the death of the man, who, however criticised during his eventful struggle with Power, was the leader of the most heroic, disinterested protest against political crime in high places our Now World has ever known. The men engaged, with Douglas, in this protest, were Democrats whose whole experience had been"! tbat of close relationship with Southern states- men, and that of earnest devotion to Southern rights. When they took up arms 'against - their party organization, it was not without relric tance. When they arrayed themselves against ' an, Administration new in office, and in the fall possession of undisposed-of patronage, they did not do so without counting the cost of the experiment. They were reminded of others, in bygone days, who lad "grappled with power and had fallen urider'its 'severe, displeasure ; but they were men`of hen nerve and conscientious convictions.: They felt that, whatever might happen to 'them; the truths they advocated must triumph, and so they persevered till the whole work of destiny was , completed. [Applause.] The three characters alluded to wore elm : , ractera of extraordinary .eridurance, fitte4 to give, counsel to common party leaders; cre ated for the bitterest responsibilities of the scenes in which they lived.- They began their movement, lull of determination ; they closed their connection with it by offering their Uvek as an evidence of their sincerity. - I am not accustomed to the habit of studied eulogy. Realizing, profoundly, - the loss of our great national leader, who fell in the prime of life, and at a moment when he would have been most effective to defend the Administra tion of the General Government against the attacks of secret and of open enemies, and; with no disposition to invade the sanctity of that home of,which he was the household: god, I can only repeat in conclusion the appropriate lines of Walter Scott:, - " Ile is gone on the mountain, He is iost to the forest, - Like a summer-dried fountain, When,oar need was the sorest. The font, reappearing, From the rain drops shall borrow, Bat to us comedno cheering— No Douglas to-morrow. " The hand of the reaper Takes the ears that are hoary, But the voice' of the weeper Wails Manhood in glory. The autumn winds, rushing, Waft the leaves that are nearest, Bat our flower wall In flashing • When•blighting was nearest: " " Fleet toot on the corral, Sage counsel in - cumber, Red hand in the foray, How sound , ta thy slumber ! Like the dew on the mountain, Like the foam.ou the river, Like the bubble ob.the fountain, Thou art gone, L arid 'forever !" • The delivery. of this Eulogy occupied an hour. At its close, numerous ladies and gen tlemen gathered around Colonel FORNEY, very warmly expressing their approbation of his estimate of the character of Senator Donanss. The Lecture Room has rarely been so much thronged. From Fort Pickens. Nsw Toms, Silly 15 —The steamship Ca/L.21,75a has arrived from Fort Piokeni, With• dates from that post to' the sth instant;and.fromlierWest to. the 9th. :All:was quiet at Fort Piekeos. Colonel' Wilson's Zonaves were enoamped a mile end a halt from the fort.. Captain Barret; company of Iliht artillery oamo on in the Ca/taro/4: ''Tka.ltealth - of - the troops on the island is good.'' "l -•-. The Colorado was -at ...Lily West, but was to rat on the 11th for Fort Plakens. ' . Wa i t, The Niagara and Crusader Were it - Key and were. to start imrsiediaiely 1n pursuit ot - the* pirate steamer Sumpter. - • • • The steamers .111tssisnitpi,• Water .IVildiataa4 . Vanderbilt were at Fort Pickens. • • .. . Speech of lion. Joseph-lion. , Loutevrine, July 15.—110 n. Joseph: ed Saturday evening, addressed an audienee, mei third being ladies, densely pecking the - largest hall In the oity, in an unconditional Union speech, which was received:with •rapturous applause. Death ; n. Natha n: Appleton. • Bersont,J.nly 14.77 The Row. Nathan Appleteta died fa Ude Ott' yesterday. lie was tilt fetter" of the late Kra. Zioragrellow. • ' -• • ' re,4 44 , • TWO. CENTS. ThO Niagara off Fort" Plckeps :lattoolslnerrotroonctenoe Of The Preel.l ' 'IIIIIIID STAIRS STEAM WILIGATI NIAGARA , "/" . . • Off:Fort Piokene, :July 2, 1861. ," ASlAtttein doe" bad to leek hierevange on hie :boils *eyes," ra Anding, thoie Is ohanoe its yet fora figikt with our reisel neighbors of Floe: 'its, do like many more before me, fly to thee, oh ! powerful Press, to recountmy trimbles, disappoint . . meats, an d vexations . The .pirtsgara., riper a,long voyage to Japan and •baok, arrived home expecting that we would soon • ohs dear and loved ones who had been anxiously iiwakticg- our arrival; but no; our dear fin bad beeu.ineutted, and we were called upon to start off 'at once and be prepared to. eitergelb! wrongs; Uncle, Sevilla' not even allowing btu' irlende to vielt . - be ehlp to eee¢e, th'e short time we wore In New YOrk - litting oat ; away we went, never grumliliaig, . . bat," eager for the fray." That was two months ago, and what have we done since? Nothlig. Bent brat Charleston and remaining there sal Stoutly long to stir up the craven courage of the miserable ours there to a polufwhioh might I)roba- 'KTAiiiti brought op an.. attack frOni them ; then Ordered Adis; Where* Live been ever since—a. •plithit - 4 ilet . eiiii - Would " resolve . itself into)eat, ' 404 AO ,Tnosi asto4 , Where from morning's ear- Nest dawn,to the,going driwn of the sun, our eyes are regaled by the ~sight of the "Sears and bars" of the Confederacy waving over property which, had 'Government used the dame alacrity in regaining :wild' they did In raising funds to build, would not :new be be; -- Could the President be here, but. ono .dv,and„,dtand on "Santa Rosa" and see with whet •pertievrieg activity the rebels keep has ,machine : Pseud other works going, and reflect that etch pont was turning off more infinities of destruo .. tl tip, hurled at us, I doubt . not but that he iiiC o :".would doubly feel that that . :pirate.thiaa s'wevid Acing ir•ongh, 'and that P to o" ensacola id toiiimportant a - point to be left thus inereaslng in Strength. 01. , . . '.. C B r own has again decnanded the surrender • ........ Of the GiVernment property , ' - , t int' the - rebels still • re , f*, and will oentlutie.te'reitaie,- .as long as we' Thai , ~ .... . enly talk, and not act . etlenr t t a loyal man, and full of fight; but ilitieli titifri4f—iiiithing can .be'dOne, for thogg iniierattve - 'ol;difilkil"e us in the 1 face—" act . only on t4o do fen's" i tnl;* 4 And so the .aurae breisid'ighich unfolds our banner of freedom gidesettigiOview its miscarriage waving over Port Meßna, : ,l .se • . .. 1 In.iny last Linentiocied the arrival of Wilson 's .' k Now 'York' Ziurivel, pet Vanderbilt; since then I the - yliiiie been landed, with their effsate, on the Listatid of Sant a Rosa, and baits pitched their tents: i They are, beginning already to feel weary and Me -1 =tented. . No wonder; therein nothing to entioe, Len *this ehadeless, san:siorchlog; mulatto breed lOgieltied ; and, sat took o stroll on the beach the' • other:evening; and saw a number of them 'indtdg log•An the only reoreation they have.--11ne sea ' bOthing---i Gould not but think that if the Govern ment did net soon fled something for them to do, they would do' for themselves ; for "human nate:" assumes strange forma something On Sunday teat, the steamer State of Georgia arrived; bringing•a number of the regiment, who had been left behindi alto, a quantity of ordnance for - the fort. ' The steamer //tar:oas, whose arrival I Mentioned 'in' my list of the 25th ult., WM or dered from here to Tortugas, there to dieoharge her cargo of guns, as Col. Brown has now as many mounted and ready for.use as he needs. Captain Klettearid his company of artillery also left by the steamer as they oen do better serviceelcowhere. The pine schooner Aad, now the Bin gliampton, (the•one taken- by us off Mobile,) - has been fitted out and sent on a cruise down the coast, after " small *game." . • On Sunday night last a large comet was to be seen here, bearing in a notthwesterly direction There is , a matter I-take. the liberty of men tioning to you, friend Press, knowing the great weight your paper has with " the powers that be,' and trusting that Governaient will attend to it. That ia, in reference to allotments lett by men in this ship. to their families. -Every mail brings letters of complaint that these have not been paid by the Navy Agent for the lint three or four months, and in some eased as high as six months. The only satisfaction to he got on inquiry is, " that you. need not fear; Government is good for it." Government can little imagine the misery caused by this treatment, and it is high time some provb glen was made' for the hard•earned, scout psy of Poor Jabk. - The schooner Narragan..ett, of Pall River, ar rived here yesterday, laden withooal, and we are engaged to-day.reoeiving a portion of it on board, as we are compelled to keep,our fi res always going, to be ready for instant service, so that we have got very low, and had intended to have atarted to day,for Key. Wont; there to fill up, - but for the ar rival of this schooner, so that we,will now await ,the coming of the Colorado;, whioh is daily ex peeled, and, if not ordered °thin:wise, will then IWOOOPOIi to *Key West,• and fill up,' then go down 'and join-the Brooklyn end Potohatan, off New • Orleans, on the blockade. So, after all oar anxie ty, I fear that we , will be deprived of taking a hand here when operations begin, if, they ever do . Much discomfort has been felt from the need of igniter here, es that obtained on the island proved ;very unhealthy,' causing dysentery:;. but we have !now got in operation a Condenser,: , making on an Average of 750 gallons of water per day (100 more than the expenditure), which is good, pare, and :healthy, and ell done withoilt ' the additional ex penditure of more coal than we are always oom- I ,pelled to use. Government would do , well to have 1 a condenser pieced in every steamer coming down I here, for it could be done with little extra cost, ' , halides the great' convenienoe, and "last though 'mot least" the health of the men.' ' Tee ,Ilisissocheasects arrived last evening, bring ',lug the, news " that the, privateer .Sumpter had .;seceeeded in running the blockade at New Orleans, :and`-was now Oct on a cruise. The intelligence has :niade quite a stir among us, and we have been or. ;tiered off at once in: pursuit; we are now about getting under way as I write. - Yours, Ao., - Jaly 3, morning: From Colonel Einstein's R',g/ment Correspondenee of The Press.) lier.orthslik „Washington, July 12, 1861 Since I lad wrote you; the uniform quiet of our camp has been disturbed by ivory melancholy and painful affair, restating in ..the death of 'ene Mall, and the'woundlng of another. 'on Tuesday Morning last we marohed to the Washington arsenal, a distance of aboat six miles, to have our muskets eiehanged. The day was very warm, and the colonel, desiring to rest and refresh the Men, made a halt for about half an hoar. During' Wilful*, some of : the men, taking , advantage of the opportunity, went In pursuit of the soldier's greatest enemy-whisky. _Upon reaching our. quarters, its innuendo could be plainly seen. Some of the members of companies II and K, who occupy the extreme left of the encampment, got into a, ditfortity, during which one of Company K received' a bayonet wound in the back, and one : of Company' . BB a ball in the side. Three shots, it is alleged, were tired from the tents of Company K, one of which lodged in the aide of .Bergeant Hanfkolz, of Company B, who was in no way concerned in the dtstnrbsnoe. lie was conveyed to the Washington Hospital, where he lingered till noon on Wednes day: llis body was conveyed to Philadelphia yes terday, in charge of Capt. Tatho, a corporal, and two men. Deceased was a very quiet and inoffen- . .slue Man, and hie =timely death is regretted thithighout the regiment. He leaves a wife and Ave small children. Two men of Company K, one being the into.' who received the bayonet wound, ere now in irons, charged with having Iced their muskets daring the melee. A court of in quiry will be instituted, and if the evidence will warrant it, they will be handed over to the crimi nal court for trial. We have had a great many visitore this week from Philadelphia Samuel Sparing, Brq ,of the Tradeensen'i Bank, .st;sid in 'camp with us for several days, and was very much pleased with his visit Messrs John Reilly, Geo. Road, Samuel A: Miller, J. Fletcher Budd, and several others, also paid us several visite during the week. Lest eve ning lion. Wm. D Kelley, accompanied by aerie ral other members of Congress, was present at our dress parade. :After reviewing the regiment, the . Judge 'made a . ohataaterietia •and eloquent epee& , 'Pointirieto our flag, he said the last time he lie it wee"on' the day of the departure of the regijiiiMt, paining np Chestnut street . : When will it be - Men on' Okestantittreet again? Not till Its eta - ring foldetillik*ivie"'pver the battered wills' SumpteroSumpter ; not lilt visitors are forced to the swamps,' with the alliiielors, and there made to supplicate for pardon from the most beneficent Government on earth ; not till traitor chiefs have bitten the din*" or greoed the gallows Then ft will return to our good old Phtledelphie ; and When you again rasroh with it beneath the shadow of on:: old btate Home; I will be among the boys to °beer yon. At the conolueion of the Judge's spew* three hearty cheers were given for the Re presentative of the Fourth district. Speeches were also made by some of the other gentlemen: - Everythlig concerning military movemeatcia marvellouely quiet here. Those who kiwi *tat appear to know least. We expect to be irtrefliet Potomac before ten days. Our riginient, I Wit, will he one of the tylkif not the first, tolierie forreard. J. M. C. Pennsylvania Harvests FRANKLIN 00111ItY.—OF farmers are busily en gaged in cutting the heaviest wheat that has ever been raised' in this section of country. One of them remarked, a day or two ago, "I have been engaged in every harvest for fifty years, but never ' in one where the grain was heavier than the pre- . sent one."., Surely, If ,we are eUlioted in one way, we have CROON to rtjotoe In another.--Chunsiers. 'burg Dispatch'. , YORK Oobrirv.--Our tanners have been bully engaged for the past week harvesting their grain grope. From aft aeoonnte, the wheat si of thevery' beet quality, and the yield will he the heaviest wo have bad for-yeare —TT rtghtsville Star. . LANOABVIII 001INTY.—ONT mai friends have finished -heymaklng in this nation of country. The atop, if not' quite so large at might hive been * spouted, was housed Inert:4ll4ml condition, which mattes up for the deficiency. Harvesting is now .going, on briskly, and the grain Crop promises to be an average one. The corn, generally speaking, looks ivell'ffnui Sentine/. THE . . WEEKLY PRESS. . , TVs Wizir l ieu will be mese 1 nbeirUnn In nail (ear semen is etveziee,) in-- -- SSA , Three Gimlet, " " Free ,• " " === e i..0 0 0 0 Ten " " —.12.00 Twenty Twenty Copies, or over, eaok sobsoriber,) see►..__ 1.T% Fora Olab of Twenty-one or over, we will Nat fa extra ooey to To getter-se of the Mak. gar Foetus:elan aro requested to sot as Agents ter Tie WssxLy Pines. CALIFORNIA PRESS, Issued three times a Meath, la tha. far the GM &TR la taamen. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. The Money Market. PHILADELPHIA, .Istly 15, 1861 Readiog Railroad shares sold to-day at 18 75 100 and 18 81.100 ; Pennsylvania Railroad shares at 371 ; Camden dc Amboy Railroad shares• at 116 ; Schuylkill Navigation Preferred at 131 ; hllnebill Railroad at, 571 ; Harrisburg Railroad at 511 ; Second and ,Third streets Passenger . Railroad at 38 and Sprnoe and Pine streets at 8. North Pennsylvania six per cent. bonds sold at 56 ; Pennsylvania Railroad first mortgage bonds ac ;. State fives at 761, and City sixes (new) at 95. . The market wee firm, but - OFFICIAL BA NK STATEMENT WIRX.LY AVZ . II.ACT6 Oi THE PHILADEIJITIA. BANES LOANS. - 5.23101.1. BANKS' JOl7 15. July S. July 15. July 8. Philadelphia.... 93,237,000 $3,289.000 881.000 185,014 North America 2.907.673. 9,872.533 - • 932423 813,619 Farm & Meoh- 4457.6524,306,333 1,486,011 1,552,230 Com mercual-.. 1,883.000 , :1,428.24X1 410.800 321.000 alechanie?._. 1065,200 ~ 1 ,466,005 , 389 471 319,509 N. Liberties_. ' . 1,135,000 3,178,000 409,000 388.000 . Southwark.— . • 839,518 858,392 .258.775 274,588 Kensington...-. MO 893 ' 691408 174 683 • 185.135 ' panic •Townshi 1570 883 '692,142 244,516 205.499 Western..., 20- 1.9.521 1421115 -535,366 461,866 Man.•& Mech.. .270,720 962.995 • 373426 , 162.160 Commerce...—. , 581,824. 670.709 199,576 237.848 13irard.; " ' 1,929.727 1,983.076 468 829 507.867 Tradesynen'e..- 455.653 .470.375 181,438 143,716 Consolidation _ 415,518 '413 664 • 86,861 07.800 - Ctßy • . 649,600. - 640.716 352,700. 141,531 Commonwealth 365,924 374.755" 95467' 81.266 Corn Exchange ,374.19:10 . 379.04 )34,003 ' 165.000 . 277.340. *7,515 82,925 73,650 15.993,321 24.127.173 7,255,798 6.956.512 • - • , • . DEPOSITS. CIRCULATION. jJkriker. Jnl7 15. . July 8. July 15. July 8. 1 91,877.000 91,732,000 62115,0011 p 241,000 - North Amenca. 2,031,946 3,01E584 251 012 251,150 Fenn & Mech.. 8,02,(112. 3481.825 ' 366,286 374 595 • Co,inercial...- .8:1490. 728 000 . 120.000 102,11210 Mecharnore3-... • . memo. 7115.373 12 9 .n 0 MAW 74 . Libertiek--- 89 2 4191 , 921.000 87,000 86 000 - Southwark::-:'. ' - 658 686 • - 721.178. 69 500. '69 150 Kensingtonl.,,,• . :539.904 416074 . 103, 7 7 9 110 40 Penn.Toyrneirip 448861, ' 950.294 20475 •54 865 Westerg;_ ' agrz,vo ; 1 918,522 110,155 - - Immo & 482,79.7 ' '457.310 61.810 '• MOO • •286.170 895.588. 62,115 '63:4 7 5 • •Gurard 951.875 1.110,337 182,8 20 174.481 .Tradesmen's.._ 377,074 351 833 58,171 58,559 Cowarlidation:- ' 391,631 ' 191.723 61,220 63 63!) City.-_ - 847A00 • r2O 408' 90,9* 53.396 Commonwealth ; 16/.9581 .••160,814 76.235. 70,545 Corn Eacehanso 301.000 MO* 61,800' 62,00 Union •1 0 530 199451' . 31,299 .33,70 .1 18 129,765. 15 1911:994 2,154412 3,190456 The aggregates of the . kink itatemeat oompare of previous weeks as folloirs.:. , - •• 7 4 . JalY 8. Ju1y.15." Cao/1181.4.55 . 1F . $11,8101,610 $11,807,100„: • 34,127.173 33,526,328 .1)41441 310.1515 6 925.112 7,265,758 .11e. 295.586 Ilucfmotherbanke.• 1252.612'1065 211 C-4414. 113.642 Due 4p cotley hauls . 2,510,189 2,732.190.1n0. 129 301 1546 1 , 531 /5. 136 765.. 3W , / 2 7 1 6 4 1 Circulation.— ; 2.199036 . 2,184,811...D60. 35,223 Loans. . Elppoie. Circulation. Depositig. Nov, 4;1.867.51;199,462 •I 3,071464 • 2,141,111:. - t. 16,536,721 hp. 11,1858.21,302,374. 3,770,701_..1,011,0311 ' 11,466,263 July .14,311,928 - 6,635,817- 2,434.181....':16,666,818 Jan. 5,1469..26,461467 . 6,063.256. - .. 2,741,756,. 17,049,010 July 5 . 25,446,440 4,397,0ev 3,808,308'• 15,481,254 Jan. 3, 1580:45,386,387 4,450,261 3,856,001 14483,912 July 2.-26401496 4,374,649 2,666,165' 1 / 5 ,944.916 Dee, 1—L..26,973.207 3,333.827, 2,00.911111; 12051,130 Jan. 7.1851.26 891,280 4.020486 2,e60,612 . 15,261.928 el). 4 ......25401481 4,638454 2,778.318 •71.6.225.436 • Kay. 4 ......25.086.314 5.026.988 2.811,491 11,864,736 April 1........24 473.496 6,200.063 2.811,263 15,000.147 May 5,398.602 1.716 6112 16.691 997 June 3......24.671,294 /5 71 4 ,826 1,317,067 15,304.666 10.--.14,586.244. 6.767,994 • . 2,294.86716,261.676 17......-34.182.443 5.921.483 1,129.967 - 15.109 606 24,240 983 ' 6.336.744' 3 147.213 • 16.740 622 1.......23,967.200 6 613.393 2,101,313 15,991.943 8— 24,127.173 • 6.956,112 2.121.035 15.851,216 • 16....._.93,036,398 7,233 798 2.154,813 16 129,765 .. • • The following is a Ematement of the traneaotionr . 113 . ~ at the Philadelphia Clearing HOO, for the week eliding Jetly 15 as franirbed by the manager, Geo. ' Arnold,B. A Erg:: • Cleans Le. Balanoes. . . July L.-- .-------- e 2,254,711 31 8140,420 33 " 9 --.—........_ 2,074,630 19 . 210,563 48 . 10— —..-........--. 1.904 140 80 147.688 61 11 -- ---.....:.:.-- ~ 1,743 326 41 103,362 39 /2—.--.--...... 4,672 878 04 116 J09 40 " 1a....—.:.....- —;-:.......:.'-'1,711,906 49 161,219 62 ' - The New York Port of this evening says The Etook market opened quiet•and lowerrou the ' active Border , State bonds, bat when the-railroad shares•were reached an aotive demand set in, and thiCentire ;list presents a decided advance. The speculation to•day runs upon the Meitern: stocks, eepootallyißooklsland, Toledo, and Galena, • New York ,Central, after the board, Sold at 761, Toledo . 283, Rook Nand 40, indiciating •a• strong market'at the - olose. . _ There is a deeline of 1 per rent in Pitelfielgall, ()Wing to the seem:int of depredations by . pri 7 • fathers, publieluid in the' morning papers. The Moor sold at 71, but there were buyers afterwards • at 711 . • Government stocks are firm and - held'higher. The-fifes of 1865 are lia2 per cent- better.- The' convertibletwo!year treasury notes have advanoed- : to 99a991. , Tao weekly' bank Statement shows no material I change 'in either loans or speoieL The f a lling off in mercantile discounts, , appears, -more than eounterbalanoes the investments of the banks in Government notes. Notwithstanding five mil lions of treasury notes were taken early In the weak,- there is no material expansion ID the line of. loans. • . ,The speole.averago represents the amount whieh , 1630h:tally' in tiank to-day, though the'ssyersge is a rising one, assisted by the active disbitriethents of the Sub Treasury and the $1,200,000 by the Cali fornia steamer. The net deposits have increased $1,200,000. - ; rhito.dolphia Stock Exchange Salts, REPORTED BY B.E.SLATEAEBII,Merobante Exobsoge. FUtB7 BOARD. I 180 Banditti' R.—.. 18X 2000 Pen's. R. let wort. 94 ' 60 d 0—.......... . 1864 17 611060411 R 671,4 100 do- ..rswit 315 X 10 Soh Nay wet— 11114 100 . do- -sSwutrint 18X 1 Gam tr. p.mb 1L....116 1(0 d 0:.....- 18 13-16 10180 r & P/110—b5w31 8 • 60 d0..56wn&in.18 13-161- 100 do. z ..... 1 swla 8 60 d0.'..... bswri-18 L3-1A 1000 N orrhYenna 63 - . 55 60 do—, .8.5wa./8 13-16 9 Penns R., -- -- 3736 . 'ICOI Fenno R . Ist mort. 9t BETWEE 1000 Fenno It 1 m.sswn 24 MAIN Top • • _ d0—._.1m,56W11. 94 do - --!.. 11n.F5 wn 91 =3 do - .. BECO.ND . 2Penna R. -.L.— .....1.. tag 12 'do ---..--... 4-15 6 •do ------ 37 i 0 do— ...-...;» ..... 13 C.1.m.1b Amb R-116 ciLoairi a P Rid. Asks,' Bid ~. 4:044. Mils Ge Lint o8 " 87 - -8134 905 thiv prera _13% 1.354 raffia 61....1nt 01/ b 7 • , 87% Elmira a Pref.- 9 )2 Ma 64 new InotT96 ' 9651 Elmira la , 711. .66 60 Penna. 34.....:-..-; 76 76% Long island R.- .10 10% Read - .R.:-:- : —' 19 19% Leh CI fr. rt. _60% m Read Oda '707.-- - -- am . . 83%1 Leh CI & fi ik - iip-36% Read tut 69 '92'43 19 !North Pena:( _ 4 i 1 Keadimt 69 'B6-% 71% ' s.li NPa IL 66.. '' .66% 87 EO/LALI R . - 37% 87% 5 Penns R. 10..._74% .. Penn& 14. 2d mt 64 ea% • ._- Cata,WiDINV FL prat a% 6 Norris Can eon. 40 42 ad & 3d - sta It 3,-37% 38 Morrie Can Pfd 118 214 W Ptuba aex d 61 Soh •7 4 6a'113--_' 66 67 • Bpnme & nue.- 8 8% Balt4av Imp 66; To.. ' (Green & Coates ' /11: - Et& ..hav Eitk-- .4% . - I • • July 15—Evening. Therwis very little export demand - for Flaur.to day; and the market is dull at previous quotations. The trade are buying moderately at s4a4 25 for Northwestern superfine and extracs4.2ss4 75 for family do., $4 5054 75 for standard Western and Peansyliania. superfine, $4 75a5 76 for extra and extra .family do...and., $8 Of 50 for . fancy brands, acalorgiti to The receipts are' moderate, .111 d pikes, at' tho' close, very irregular. Rye • , . tiour and Corn 'Meal are not inquired atter ; we quote the fanner at $3 25', and the latterat•S2 Mite 2.75 for .Pennsylvania Meal. WRBAT.—There; is not much.offering, and the demand is limited at Saturday's qucitations ; about 4,500 .bushels, mostly new tioutkern red, sold at 112a1]30 in the airs and pfiont; old red is dull at about 'longtime' figures, and there is but little of feting or 'calling ;-apring Wheat Is qcioted at 76a. 80o; of white prices range from 110a120c: Rye is qatet .at 58)60o for Penna. Corn is unchanged ; a sale of Southern yellow was made at 530 afloat, atimisli lot at 52e in store.'and 2.ooo:bushels West ern . mixed at 480490. ...Oats are mare active, and 7;000 healiels retina sold at 280 In store. Sonthem Aral:mid irthe lame rate, and eoaree. Baur. -,There is no inquiry for . Queroltrou, and. Ist No. •1 in dull at $29 per ton. Correll —The demand is limited, and holderi firm, with a'emall business doing to day. Gnonsatas are more active, and 300 hhdsCuba Sugar sold at 5; on time • ' Paovistoss —There ie no change in prices, and a small businiea to note in most kinds, including, a sale of-,lttatton Rams, uncovered, at Sio per lb Wnrscr Continues inactive ; selling' as wanted at 16al6fs;the latter for °bolo. Obto;litds are source.:. - . - . ' ; Philadelphia 'Cattle Market The arrivale'of Beef Cattle were Urge this week, reaching over 14300' head :at' Phillips' yard, and prices fell 'off .25137 e the 100 Ins,..with • dell mar ket at the decline. The sale' were generally made at from $7 to $8.150 the , net 100 lbs as to oondition. Some Stooli.Cattle.were also sold at 3a46 per lb , live weight. The.followlng are the particulars of the sales at:the - Avenue yard: • 39 J - . Abrams. :11i risme. at 88 08 ". • 5 31eQuaid Carr, llhnots. amss 75. 24 Kimble, Cheater eounty, IsAlO9. 26 Kennedy. Ohlo r Stlea 7s . 80 Jas , Montan. Ohio and Illinois, Sato. to y Hathaway. Ohloamd.Chester oonnty, 18e571. • 111 F• AleFillen, Illinois. eBOB . .61 McCall. western, 8508.60 " 14 John Todd. Illinois, elonAD. • Fe ,I,neldomodge,, ilham., 68 . 26 0 0. 182 Mooney &Smith, Illinois. 15809. • se nhaambers ec.Co.. Ohio, $70e.75.. is wm. Alexander, , 'heater county, geee, do Worm & Inman. Illinois, wen., 50 Fellheimer, Idipois. Sesta 75. 32 B. Chain, Illinois, 860616. 84 Anil, Ohio. 88429. 64 Fuller &' Bros.. Ohto. 8389. ..21 Alexander & Chandler. 8709. or Smith k Baiter, Ohio. 880550. . 30 Franks. Illinois. 88429. 26 Bloom re. Co.. .Illinois 8708.37. 15 Owen Smith. Ohio. 88 7508 25 Rotheholde. Illinois, 8805 75. 28 It. Neely:Cheerer county. 880880 6i li ammeter & Brother, (AM. 4 7 60. 2 8 , 51. roman Ai man lc Wants, onio. 8.5.10 00 . 3) F. alaffr L Oblo. grar•so. 24 Owen &Muller, Ohio. 8607 50. 'Abotit 80 Co'se were disposed of, Springers sell ing at $2O to $25 asoh, and Colllland Calves et from $2O to $35, as to condition. .0f Hogs, the sates were mostly_ all made at from $5 to $5 75 the 100 lbs net, Including 800 head at Vas Avenue yard, wlthln this range. „ Toe redeisla and Wee of Sheep reac hed 9.000 heed, telling at from 510 Co Bh per lb net, which le a deollne. Svsetctow or Liwaonsr.—A •young woman wan orrented on Saturday, while offering some silk dresses for sale to the lower port of the city. She was oommitted by. Alderman Dallas. • • _ " (to one eddrefer) 20.00 (to Mertes of 811,00 /593 . 24 4870,013 90 July 35, 7861 BOARDS. TOO City 65 cam:- 1 liarriabarg 6t9( 1 4000 l'entta 8a 76 wlttr=cl BOAILD 20 NOrnetown R ..... 48' • 10. do 500 Penna 54; 76* :202d do 3d-et R. . 38 1000 Reguitog 65 1813'80 9) Pl►iladelph►a Markets Joan 15, 1861
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers