SPEECH OF HON. ANDREW JOHNSON, SENATOR FROM TENNESSEE. We make some extracts from the speech of Sena tor Johnsen, delivered in the Senate on Friday, on the resolution to expel Senator Bright, of Indiana, regretting the impossibility of printing it in full: THE POSITION OF THE TRUE DEMOCRACY lam a Democrat now ; I have been one all my life; I expect to live and die one ; and the corner atone of my Democracy nate upon the enduring basis of the Union. Democrats niay come and go, but they shall never divert me from the polar star by which I have ever been guided from early life— the great principles of Democracy upon which this Government rests, and which cannot be carried out without the preservation of the Union of these states. The pretence hitherto employed by many who are now in the traitors' eamp has been, it we are for the Union ' • we are not for dissolution ; but we are opposed to coercion." How long. Senators, have you heard that ayren song snag ? Where are now most of those who sang those syrezt tones to us? Look back to the last session, and inquire where now are the men who then were singing that song in our ears ? Where is Trusten Polk, who thou stood here Bo gently craving for peace ? Bo 14 in the rebel camp. Where is John C. Breekinridge ? a man for whose promotion to the Presidency I did what I could physically, mentally, and pecuniarily ; but when he satisfied me that he was for breaking up this Government, and would ore long be a traitor to his country. I dropped him as I would the Senator from Indiana. He was hare at the last session of Congress; and everybody could see then that he was on the road to the traitors' camp. In stead of sustaining the Government, he, too, was crying out for peace ; but he was bitter against "Lincoln's Government." Sir, when I talk about preserving this great Government, 1 do not have its executive officer in my mind. The executive head of the Government comes in and goes out of office every four years. He is the mere creature of the people. I talk about the Government with. out regard to the particular executive officers who have charge of it. If they do well, we can conti nue them; if they do wrong, we can turn there out. Mr. Lincoln baying come in according to the forms of law and the Constitution, I, loving my Government and the Union, felt it to be my duty to stand by the Government, and to stand by the Administration in all those measures that I believed to be necessary and proper for the preservation and perpetuation of the Union. =MU How is this Government to put down domestic violence in a State without coercion? How is the nation to be protected against insurrection without coercing the citizens to obedience? Can it be done? When the Senator says he is against the entire co ercive policy of the Government, he is against the vital principle of all government. I look upon this as the most revolutionary and destructive doctrine that ever was preached. If this Government cannot call forth the militia, if it cannot repel invasion, if it cannot put down domestic, violence, if it cannot suppress rebellion, I ask if the great objects of the Government are not at an end? Look at my own State, by way of illustration. There is open rebellion there; there is domestic vio lence; there is insurrection. An attempt has been made to transfer that State to another power. Let =cash the Senator from Indiana if the Constitution does not require you to guaranty us a republican form of government in that State? Is not that your sworn duty? We ask you to put down this unholy rebellien, What , answer do you eve us ? We ask you to protect us against insurrection and domestic violence. What is the reply? "I am against your whole coercive policy ; I am against the enforcement of the laws." I say that if that principle be acted on, your Government is at an end : it fails utterly to carry out the object of its creation. Such a principle leads to the destruction of the Government, for it must inevitably result in anarchy and confusion. "I am opposed to the en tire coercive policy of the Government," says the Senator from Indiana. That cuckoo note has been reiterated to satiety; it is understood; men know the nature and character of their Government, and they also know that " coercion " and " Subjuga tion " is mere ad taptandum, idle and unmeaning alangwanging. Sir, I may be a little sensitive upon this subject upon the one hand, while I know I want to do ample justice upon the other. I took an oath to support the Constitution of the United States. There is rebellion in the land; there is insurrec tion against the authority of this Government. Is the Senator from Indiana so unobservant, or 56 obtuse that he does not know now that there has been a deliberate design for years to change the nature and character and genius of this Govern ment ? Do we not know that these schemers have been deliberately at work, and that there is a party in the South, with some associates in the North, and even in the West, that have become tired of free government, in which they have lost eonfi dence ? They raise an outcry against " coercion," that they may paralyze the Government, cripple the exercise of the great powers with which it was invested, finally to change its form and subject us to a Southern despotism. Do we not know it to be so? Why disguise this great truth? Do we not know that They have been anxious for a change of Government for years? Since this rebellion commenced, it has manifested itself in many quar ters. Row long is it since the organ of the Go vernment at Richmond, the Richmond Whig, de clared. that, rather than live under the Government of the United States, they preferred to take the constitutional <wen of Gient Britain as their pro testor ; that they would make an alliance with Great Britain for the purpose of preventing the enforce ment of the laws of the United States? Do we not know this ? Why then play "hide and go seek ?" Why say, "Oh, yes, I am for the Union," while every act, influence, conversation, vote is against it ? What confidenee can we have in one who takes such a course? TEE UNION PEOPLE IN THE BORDER STATES The people of my State, downtrodden and op pressed by the iron heel of Southern despotism, appeal to you for protection. They ask you to protect them against domestic violence. They want you to help them to put down this unholy and dam nable rebellion. They call iipen this Government for the execution of its constitutional duty, to gus rantj to them a republican form of government, and to protect them against the tyranny and des. potism which is stalking abroad. What is the cold reply? "I am against the entire coercive policy ; lam not for enforcing the laws." Upon such a doctrine Government erumbles to pieces. and /map chy and despotism reign throughout the land. Indiana, God bless her! is as true to the Union as the needle is to the pole. She has sent out her "hordes "—she has sent her thousands into the field, for what? To sustain the Constitution and to enforce the laws; and, as they march with strong arms and brave hearts to relieve a suffering people, who have committed ito offence save devo tion to this glorious Union; as they march to the rescue of the Constitution ' and to extend its bene fits again to a people who love it dearly, and who have been ruthlessly torn from under its protect ing aegis, !what does their Senator say to them ? 4 - lain against the entire policy of coercion." Do you ever hear a Senator who thus talks make any objection to the eXereiSe of unconstitutional and tyrannical power by the stnealled Southern Con federacy, or say a word against its !practice of co ercion ? In all the speeches that have been de livered on that point, has .one sentence against usurpation, against despotism, against the exercise of doubtful and unconstitutional powers by that Confederacy, been uttered ? °hone ! Have you heard any objection to their practising not only coercion, but usurpation? Have they not usurped government? Have they not oppressed, and are they not now tyrannizing over the peo ple? The people of my State are coerced, borne down, trodden beneath the iron heel of power. We appeal to you for protection. You stand by and see us coerced ; you stand by and see tyranny triumphing, and no sympathy, no kindness, no helping band can be extended to us. Your Go vernment is paralyzed ; your Government is power less ; that which you have called a Government is a dream, an idle thing. Yon thought you had a Government, but you had none. My people are appealing to you for protection under the Con stitution. They are arrested by hundreds and by thousands; they are dragged away from their homes and incarcerated in dungeons: They ask you for protection. Why do you not give it? Some of them are lying chained in their lowly prison-house. The only response to their mur mur is the rattling and clanking of the chains that bind their limbs. The only response to their ap peals is the grating of the hinges of their dungeon. IVhen we ask for help under the Constitution, we • • at the Government has no power to downtrod. etti - ent.--)2 ter_neople are oppressed and were taught to love and respetn,un remedy. They the United States. Wkatis their conditierrniuntof They are hunted and pursued like the beasts of the forest by the secession and disunion hordes who are enforcing their doctrine of coercion. They are shot or hung for no crime save a desire to stand by the Constitution of the United States. Helpless chil dren and innocent females are murdered in cold blood. Our men are hung and their bodies left upon the gibbet. They are shot and left lying in the gorges of the mountains, not even thrown into the caves there to lie, but are left exposied to puss through all the loathsome stages of decomposition, or to be devoured by the birds of prey. We appeal for protection, and are told by the Senator from In diana and others, "we cannot enforce the laws; we are against the entire coercive policy." Do you not hear their groans? Do you not hear their cries? Do you not hear the shrieks of oppressed and downtrodden women and children? Sir, their tones ring out so loud and clear that even listening angels look from heaven in pity. A HISTORICAL INCIDENT Alluding to the defeat of the Crittenden Com promise, and the scene in the Senate at the time : I sat right behind Mr. Benjamin ) and I atli not sure that my worthy friend was not close by, when he refused to vote, and I said to him, "Mr. Ben jamin, why do you not vote ? Why not save this proposition, and see if we cannot bring the country to it?" Ho gave me rather an abrupt answer, and said he would control his own action without consulting me or anybody else. said I, "vote, and chew yottimielf au helmet matt." As soon as the vote was taken, he and others telegraphed South, "We cannot get any compromise." Here were six Southern men refusing to vote, when the amendment would have been rejected by four ma jority if they had voted. Who, then, has brought these evils on the country ? Was it Mr. Clark? Ile was acting out his own policy ; but with the help we hed from the other side of the Chamber, if all those on this side had hoes true to the Constitu tion, and faithful to their constituents, and had sated with fidelity to the country, the amendment of the Senator from New Hampshire could have been voted down, the defeat of which the Senator from Delaware says would have saved the country. Whose fault was it? Who is responsible for it? I think that is not only getting the nail through, but clenching it on the other side. and the whole staple commodity is taken out of Elio smell, Wh o did it? Southern traitors, as was said in the speech of the Senator from California. They did it. They want ed no compromise. They aecomplished their ob ject by withholding their votes; and hence the country has been involved in the present diffi culty. THE REFUSAL OF THE REBELS TO COMFROMISE When we had it in our power to vote down the amendment of the Senator from New Hampshire, and adopt the; Crittenden resolutions, certain South ern prevented it; and yet, even at a late day of the session, after they had seceded, the Crittenden proposition was only lost by one vote. If rebellion end bloodshed and murder have fol lowed, to whose skirts does the responsibility at tach? I summed up all these facts myself in a speech during the last session ; but I have prefer red to read from the speech of the Senator from California, he being better authority, and having presented the facts better than I could. What else was done at the very same session'? The House of Repreeentatives named, and sent to this body j a proposition to amend the Constitution of the United States, so as to prohibit Congress from ever hereafter interfering with the institution of slavery in the States, making that restriction a part of the organic law of the land. That constitu tional amendment came here after the Senators from seven States had seceded ; and yet it was passed by a two•third vote in the Senate Rave you ever heard of any one of the States which had then seceded, or which has since seceded, taking up that amendment to the Constitution, and saying they would ratify it, and make it a part of that instrument ? No. Does not the whole his tory of this rebellion tall you that it was revo. lution that the leaders wanted, that they started for, that they intended to have ? The facts to which I have referred show how the Crittenden propo sition might have been carried ; and when the Se nators from the slave States were reduced to one fourth of the members of this body, the two Homes passed a proposition to amend the Constitution, so as to 'guaranty to the States perfect security in re gard to the institution of slavery in all future time, and prohibiting Congress from legislating upon the subject. But what more was done? After Southern Se nators had treacherously abandoned the CollSkitn tion, and deserted their posts here, Congress passed bills for the organisation of three new Territories, Dakota, Nevada, and Colorado; and in the sixth section of each of those bills, after conferring, af firmatively, power on the Territorial Legislature, it went on to exclude certain powers by using a negative form of expression : and it provided, among other things, that the Legislature should have no power to legislate so as to impair the right to . private property ; that it should lay no tax dis criminating against one description of property in favor of another ; leaving the power on all these questions not in the Territorial Legislature, but in the people when they should come to form a State Constitution, Now, I ask, taking the amendment to the Con stitution, and taking the three territorial bills, em bracing every square inch of territory in the pos session of the United States, how much of the sla very question was left? What better compromise could have been made? Still we are told that matters might have been comproinised, and that if we had agreed to compromise, bloody rebellion would not now be abroad in the land. Sir, South ern Senators are responsible for it. They stood here with power to accomplish the result, and yet treacherously, and, I may say, tauntingly, they left this Chamber, and announced that they had dissolved their connection with the Government. Then, when we were left in the hands of those whom we had been taught to believe would en croach upon our rights, they gave us, in the con stitutional amendment and in the three territorial bills, all that had ever been asked ; and yet gen tlemen talk about compromise. Why was not this taken and accepted? No ; it was not compromise that the leaders wanted.; they wanted power ; they wanted to destroy this Government, so that they might have place and emolument for themselves. They had lost confidence in the intelligence and virtue and integrity of the people, and their capa city to govern themselves ; and they intended to separate and form a Government, the chief corner stone of which should be slavery, disfranchising the great mesa of the people, of which we have seen constant evidence. and merging the powers of go vernment in the hands of the few. I know what I say. I know their feelings and their -sentiments. I served in the Senate here with them. I know they were a close corporation, that had no more confidence in, or respect for, the people than has the dey of Algiers. I fought that dose corporation here. I knew that they were no friends of the peo ple. I knew that Slidell and Mason and Benjamin and Iverson and Toombs were the enemies of free government, and I know so now. I commenced the war upon them before a State seceded ; and I intend to keep on fighting this great battle before the country for the perpetuity of free government. They seek to overthrow it, and to establish a despotism in its place. That is, the great battle which is upon our hands. The great interests of civil liberty and free government call upon every patriot and every lover of popular rights to come forward and discharge his duty. THE STELOGLE FOR WEIGH WE FIGHT We see this great struggle ; we see that the exer cise of the vital principle of government itself is denied by those who desire our institutions to be overthrown and despotism established on their ruins. If we have not the physical and moral courage to exclude from our midst men whom we believe to be unsafe depositors of public power and public trust—men whose associates were rolling off honeyed accents against coercion, and aro now in the traitor's camp—if we have not the courage to force these men from our midst, because we have known them, and have been personal friends with them for years, we are not entitled to sit here as Senators ourselves. Can you expect your brave men, your officers and soldiers, that are now in 4, the tented field," subject to all the hardships and privations pertaining to a civil war like this, to have courage, and to march on with patriotism to crush treason on every battle-field, when you have not the courage to expel it from your midst? Sot those brave men an example ; say to them by your acts and voice that you evidence your intention to put down traitors in the field, by ejecting thorn from your midst, without regard to former asso ciations. Ido not say these things in unkindness. I say them in obedience to duty, a high constitutional duty that I owe to my country ; yes, sir, that I owe to my wife and children. By your failure to exercise the powers of this Government, by your failure to enforce the laws of the Union, I am sepa rated from those moat dear to me. Pardon me, sir, for this personal allusion. My wife and chil dren have been turned into the street, and my house has been turned into a barracks; and for what ? Because I stand by the Constitution and the institutions of the country that I have been raised to love, respect. and venerate. This is my offence. Where are my sons-in-law? One today is lying in prison ; another is forced to fly to tho• mountains to evade the pursuit of the hell-born and hell-bound conspiracy of disunion and secession ; and when their cries come up here to you for pro tection, we are told, " No ; I am against the entire coercive policy of the Government." THE QUESTIOR IN ITS PARTY ASPECT The speech of the Senator from California the other day bad the effect in some degree, and seemed to be intended, to give the question a party tinge. If I know myself. although, as I avowed before, I am a Democrat, and expect to live and die one—l know no party in this great struggle for the existence of my country. The argument presented by the Sena tor from California was, thatvre need not be in such hot pursuit of Mr. Bright, or those Senators who entertain his sentiments, who are still here, because we had been a little dilatory in expelling other trai torous Senators heretofore, and he referred us to the resolution of the Senator from Maine, [Mr. Fessenden,l which was introduced at the special ses sion in March last, declaring that certain Senators having withdrawn, and their seats having thereby be come vacant, the Secretary should omit their names from the roll of the Senate. I know there seemed to be a kind of timidity, a kind of fear, to make use of the word 4 r expel " at that time ; but the fact that we declared the seats vacant, and stopped there did not preclude us from afterwards passing a vote of censure. The resolution, which was adopted in March, merely stated the fact that Senators had withdrawn, and left their seats va cant. At the next session, a resolution was intro duced to expel the other Senators from the seceded States, who did not attend in the Senate; and my friend (Mr. Latham) moved to strike out of that very resolution the word "expelled," and insert "vacated ;" so that I do not think he ought to be much offended at it. I simply allude to it to show how easy it is for us to forget the surrounding cir cumstances that influenced our action at the time it took place. We know that a year ago there was a deep and abiding hope that the rebellion would not progress as it has done, that it would cease; and that there might be eireumehmeas which, at one time, would, to some extent, justify us in al lowing a wide margin which, at another period of time, would be wholly unjustifiable. All this, however, amounts to nothing. We have a ease now before us that requires our action, and we should act upon it conscientiously in view of the facto which are presented. Because we neglected to expel traitors before, and omitted to have them arrested, and permitted them to go away freely, and afterwards declared their seats vacant because they had gone, we are not now prevented from ex kielling a Senator who is not worthy to be in the benate. I do not say that other traitors may not be punished yet. I trust in God the time will come, and that before long, when these traitors can be overtaken in the aggregate, and we may mete out to them condign punishment, auoh as their offence deserves. I know who was for arresting them. I know who declared their con duct to be treason, here in their midst. I told them it was treason, and they might make the best of it they could. IZEMMEM Mr. President, I have alluded to the talk about compromise. If I know myself, there is no one who desires the preservation of this Government more than I do ; and I think I have given as much &deuce as mortal man could give of my devotion -my wife' in... My property has been sacrificed ; dears my Eons I,lllm, ~have been turned out of law has had to run to the Mont my son-i°• deed a large amount of bonds in trying tirgitWn• - __ evidence of my devotion to the Government under which I was raised. I have attempted to show you that on the part of. the leaders of this rebellion there was no desire to - compromise—compromise was not what they wanted ; and now the great issue before the country is the perpetuation or the destruction of free government. I have shown bow the resolution of the venerable Senator from Kentucky (Mr. Crittenden) was defeated, and that Southern men are responsible for that defeat—six sitting in their places and refusing to vote. His proposition was only lost by two votes; and, in the end, when the seceders had gone, by only one. Well do I remember, as was described by the Se nator from California, the sadness, the gloom, the anguish, that played over his venerable face when the result was announced ; and I went across the • chamber and told him that here were men refusing to vote, and that to me was administered a rebuke by one of them for speaking to him on the subject. Now, the Senator from Delaware tells us that if that compromise had bees made, all these conse quences would have been avoided. It is a mere pretence ; it is false. Their object was to overturn the Government. If they could not get the control of this GoVernment, they were willing to divide the country and govern a part of it. TAUS Sot Of OOM promise now. What, sir, compromise with traitors with arms in their hands ! Talk about "our South ern brethren" when they lay their swords at your throat, and their bayonets at your bosoms ! this a time to talk about compromise? Let me say, and I regret that I have to say it, that there is but one way to compromise this matter, and that is to crush the loaders of this rebellion, and put down - treason. Yon have got to subdue them ; you have got to cot qutr them ; and nothing but the sacri fice of life and blood will do it. The issue is made. The leaders of rebellion have de creed eternal separation between you and them. Those leaders must be conquered, and anew set of men brought forward who are to vitalize and de velop the Union feeling in the South. You must show your courage here as Senators, and impart it to those who are in the field. If you were now to compromise they would believe that they could whip you one to five, and . you could not live in peace six months, or even three months. Settle the question now ; settle it well ; settle it finally ; crush out the rebellion and punish the traitors. I want to see peace, and I believe that is the shortest way to get it. Blood must be shed, life must be sacri ficed, and you may as IYOI begin at first as last. I only regret that the Government has been so tardy in its operations. I wish the issue had been met sooner. I believe that if we had seen as much in the beginning as we see to-day, this rebellion would have been wound up and peace restored to the land by this time. TILE ?WIT in LOYAL MEN. • • But let us go on ; let us encourage the army and the navy; let us vote the men and the means neces sary to vitalize and to bring into requisition the en forcing and coercive power of the Government ; let us crush out the rebellion, and anxiously look for ward to the day—God grant it may come soon— when that baleful comet of fire and of blood, that now hovers over this distracted people, may be chased away by the benignant star of peace. Let us look forward to the time when we can take the flag, the glorious flag of our country, and nail it below the cross, and there let it wave as it waved in THE PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1862. the olden time, and let us gather around it, and in scribe as our motto, "Liberty and Union, one and inseparable, now and forever." Let us gather around it, and while it hangs floating beneath the cross, let us exclaim, " Christ first, our country next." Oh, how gladly rejoiced I should be to see the dove returning to the ark, indicating that land was found, and that the mighty storm had abated. I trust the time will soon come when we can do as they did in the olden time, when the morning stars sang together, and all creation proclaimed the glory of God. Then let us do our duty in the Se nate, and in the councils of the nation, and thereby stimulate our officers and soldiers to do theirs. A Pennsylvanian Defends the Pennsylva , nia Troops in Kentucky. The following letter, which we find in the Cincinnati Gazette, explains itself A special correspondent of your paper, writing from Munfordsville, Ky. ' in describing the oonduot of certain regiments on the 17th hut., speaks thus of the Pennsylvanians : The Seventy-seventh anti the Seventy-ninth Pennsylvania remained in. the entrenchments. Four companies of the Nineteenth Pennsylvania were sent out to make a reconnoissance to Horse Cave. Arriving at.that point, they heard firing, which seemed to come from their rear, when they suddenly conceived lhe idea that it was the enemy, and that they were likely to be cut off. This was enough; it is believed the Pennsylvanians became panic-stricken. At Horse Cave, where the railroad and turn pike diverge, part took the turnpike and part the railroad, coming together again at Rowlett's Sta tion, Which party it was that despatched the courier, is not clear ; most likely the party that returned by the pike. Judge of the mutual sur prise when they metat Rowlett's. It was supposed the faring was on our left. and " played the will-o'- the-wisp caper which so frightened the Pennsylva nians." In the hurried retreat of the Pennsylvanians, they nattered the report that the enemy were ap proaching to attack us. These statements are incorrect. Pennsylvanians little desire that kind of bravery which appears only in newspapers; but, when a disereditableunpu tation is cast upon their courage, and bravery, and military demeanor, they are not willing to pass it unnoticed, unanswered, or unrebuked. Now for the facts. On the morning of the 17th inst. a detachment of one hundred and eighty men from the Seventy-ninth Regiment P. V., by re quest, started on a reconnoissance in the direction of Horse Cave.> At one P. M. distant firing was beard—musketry soon followed by artillery. Si multaheou§ly with this a bugle signal was de tected to proceed from some point in front o;ejour outlying picket The signal was thought by a bu gler who was with the remaining companies of the Seventy-ninth (cm tour of duty at the outposts) to come from his bugle comrade, who accompanied the reconnoitring party. As the shrill tones were transmitted from hill-top to hill.top, they were ascertained to be the " rally for skirmishers." Two citizens of Kentucky, and a captain from the same State, came hurriedly in, and informed Col. H., commanding the Seventy ninth, that his scouts were attacked by a superior force, and also that the enemy was advancing in a large body. This same Kentucky captain carried the news to the interior, and not the Pennsylva 11ia2ZS, as asserted by the special correspondent of the Gazette. Col H., of the Seventy-ninth, feeling it a duty to move forward a short distance to the support of his own scouts, ordered a signal sounded for five companies to rally into the centre ; also sent a mes senger t 9 C9l, LI, 9f th 9 tO'retity-Seventh, to Mil py temporarily the outposts thus rendered vacant. Two companies of the Seventy-ninth—one on the right, and the other on the left—remained firmly at their posts. Regiment after regiment Sled over the pontoon bridge ; some occupying positions with in the entrenchments, others passed a few hundred yards beyond, but aside from the pike, the ap proaches by which an enemy might have entered were guarded by unaided Pennsylvanians. -Your correspondent states that the Seventy seventh and,Seventy-ninth P. V. remained in the entrenchments. This is incorrect. Not a single member of the Seventy.ninth was, at any time during the excite• went, within or behind the breastworks. Three companies of the Seventy-seventh were promptly placed under the command of Colonel If., of the Seventy-ninth. The remaining companies were distributed at the outposts, and held in reserve. " It is believed the Pennsylvanians were panic stricken," undoubtedly, by your correspondent, who seems to have been on the north side of the river, at least two miles from any danger. Let us see. The reconnoitring party proceeded to Horse Cave, and was welcomed, or rather greeted, there as the first detachment of the Federal army. The scouts returned in good order, in a body, were not alarmed, neither were they aware any alarm had been given. Those led by Col. H. to aid his detachment marched southward about two miles, when an eclat messenger ordered the forces to retreat. Col. 11. directed no one to transmit intelligence to headquarters, and was really astonished to learn upon his return that the whole division was called out to repel an attack. From the above, it is clear that the "will-o'- wisp's caper" did not frighten the Pennsylva nians ; and, as no retreat was made, the statement that the report of the enemy's approach being scattered, merges into the common error that dis tinguishes your correspondent's letter. " They met at Rowlett's Station." No such thing. They met at the point et' starting, nue are Ad folds. Your readers may decide the question of cowardice for themselves. It is to be regretted that any falsehoods, so grave in their tendency, should ever have emanated from military sources. Doubly so when we reflect that, although from many States, we are one soldiery, enlisted under one banner, ready to bathe its glorious folds in the warmest blood of our bosonis, and as one people looking down to futurity for the benefits and blessings which those who now fight our battles must secure. Pennsylvanians have a profound contempt for un earned laurels. They i do not covet plaudits un deserved, but their indignation at this wanton assault upon their courage and valor can be better imagined than described. They claim (and challenge dispute) to have gone, at this date, several miles further into the enemy's country than any other troops in the central divi sion ; never to have been caught in a trap ; never to have bad buildings or wood fired within two hundred yards of their picket-lines; never to have permitted the destruction of property in full view of their posts. I hare much to speak of the noble manner in which Ohio and other Western States responded to the call for succor from loyal Kentucky. I have much to speak of Kentucky herself; of all the generals, but still more to say to your readers, that, under the lead ership of the accomplished General Negley and three gallant colonels, the Pennsylvanians propose to carve their fortunes by deeds, and to write the glad or mo-ergsful tale of their military earner with their swords. A PENNSYLVANIAN. rfiILADELPHIA BOARD OF TRADE. JOHN E. ADDICKS, THOMAS S. FERNON, COMMITTER OF TUE MONTH JOAN SPARHAWK, LETTER BAGS At the Merchants' Exchange, Philadelphia Ship Robert Cushman, Otis... Ship Atalanta, Wl,itmoro Ship Frank Boult, Morse Bark Isabella C Jones, Holmes ..........Liverpool, soon Brig W )1 Dodge, Anderson Rio do Janeiro, soon San Annie, Le Blanc . Port Spain, soon MARINE INTELLIGENCE. PORT OF PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 5, 1862. SUN RISES 7 7 I SUN SETS 5 22 MGR' WATER .....6 58 ARRIVED Bark Oak, Ryder, 6 dare from Beaton, with mdso to Twolle & Schr Electric Flash, Ayres, 6 days from Fortune Bay, El', with fish to captain. CLEARED. - Bark Sea Eagle, Howes, Trinidad, T Wattson & Sons PT 4RISORIPH. (Correspondence of the Philadelphia Exldtaage.) LEWES, Del.. Feb 4 The barks Washington Butcher and Major Norton, both from Palermo are at the Breakwater, and an English brig, name not known, is coming in. Wind N. Yours, ac., JOHN P. MANZHALL. MEMORANDA. Steamship Kennebec, Garton, hence, arrived at New York LI hat. Ship Arnold Boningor, (Pnis) Hashagen, cleared at N York 3d intt. for Philadelphia. nip Judah Tonro, Hanscom, for Philadelphia 21st, was adv at Liverpool 16th ult. Ship Tuscarora, Bunievy, for Philadelphia 12th Mat, was adv at Liverpool 16th ult. Bark Amy, Hammond, for Philadelphia, was at Moe. sins 11th Bark Howland, Fulton, sailed from Messina 9th ult. fcr Boston. Bark Winona, Gaßison, sailed from Messina 9th ult ult. for Ne;v—i-o--ik—.4- Peacock, sailed from Palermo 23d Bark Sharston, King, from Um ue via Dela ware Breakwater, with 5000 bags coffee, arrived at more 2d inst. 'brig Madeira, (Dr) Norton, cleared at New York 3d inst. Tor Philadelphia. Brig Winn Parka, McAliey, hence for Bath, was re pairing at Bermuda 18th nit, and would get away In Bor 10 days. Brig Andrew Peters, Walls, sailed from Bfessina 11th ult. for Philadelphia. Brig Tronton, Cunningham, from Surinam for iloaton, wax spoken 10th ult, lat 23 42, long 59 30, with loss of topmast, and would put into St Thomas. . . Behr J B Meeker, Edwards, cleared at New York 3d inst. for Philadelphia. Behr L P Pharo, Oranintr, at Baltimore 2d inst. from New York. NOTICE TO MARINERS. MRDITRILILMaiII—BLACI!! SnA—Ll6lll 611 Youisc &IT, BITER BI7G.—TIIO Imperial Ministry of Marine in Russia has given notice that, ou and after the 10th day of October, 1851, a light would be exhibited from a light house recently erected on 'Voltaic Spit, in the river Bug. The light is a fixed white light, wisible when bearing from N%E round by west to BEMS. It is elevated 30 feet above the mean level of the sea, And should be seen in clear weather from a distance of 0 miles. The illuminating apparatus is dieptrie, or by lenses of the fifth order. The tower is round, 36 feet high, and painted red. It stands on piles eastward of a battery, at 10 fathoms from the extremity of the spit, in lat 40 41 X, long 54 40 E of Greenwich. All bearings are magnetic. Variation 6 deg Win 1861 By command of their Lordships. JOHN WASHINGTON, Hydrographer. Loudon, Dec 19, 1861. LLlth, zu.,m JOHN A. ALLDERDICE, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Has resumed the Practice or his Profession at NEW CASTLE, DELAWARE A OPPENHEIMER, MERCHANT_ .L - 1.• DISE DEOKEE in all branelica of trade, and manufacturer of every description of Army Goods, No. 48 South THIRD Street, west side, second story, Phila delphia. den V OPPENHEIMER, AGENT AND Jul,. Manufacturer of ARMY GOODS. Contracts filled for other parties. Terms liberal. Room No. 2, up Moira, 111_ comm. FIRTH and CHESTNUT Sta. STEAM -SCOURING AND TAILOR ING done at the shortest notice. HENRY B. BASCOM, 187 SEVENTH Street, above Walnut. H. BASCOM'S elan for the firma to to recommend gntg Wing their old Clothing to him, and have them mono new. Also, their Clothe, and have them fashion. ably made up. delo-ly JOJELN WELSH, Practical ISLATE ROOTER, THIRD Street and GERMANTO'WE Bead, to prepared to put on any amount of ROOFING, on the moot MODERATE TERMS Will guaranty 10 ask. every Building weedlyler-Bade car Orders promptly attended to. asst-Is 4 - 11ROULAR PRINTIN G, BEST J and Cheapest In the City, at lIIINGWALT 880W203, 34 South THIRD Skint. soWl FORNEY'S "WAR PRESS." The intense interest everywhere felt in the mighty con tent in which the Armies and fleets of the Na ion ire engaged, ON Till POTOMAC, IN WESTERN VIRGINIA, IN KENTUCKY, IN MISSOURI, ON Till BRA COAST, and elsewhere, and the existing demand for a Weekly Journal that will furnish a full and accurate account or the thrilling events of this exciting and ever-memorable period, acceptable alike to Soldiers in Camp, to Peaceful Firesides, to those who wish to obtain the latest war news, and to those who dentre to preserve In a convenient orm, for future reference, a correct History of the Great lisheiiion, has induced me to commence, on SATURDAY,NOV.I6,IB6I„ the publication of s GREAT WAR PAPER, (ln lien of the present issue of the Weekly Preef,) to be called TOBEETTI WAR 1"8E53." It will be inhaled in superior style, on a large quarto sheet of eight pages, and eacl, number will present thejollowilig ATTRAOTIVR FIifatIIKICS, viz A BEAUTIFUL ENGRAVING, Muetratlng an event of the War, or a MAP of gems lo cality where important operations are in contemplation; A RECORD OF THE LATEST WAR NEWS !tom all parts of jthe country. received during each week by Mail and by Telegraph, from numerous 13PISCULL 00/IIikSPONDIINTS, and ill other reliable sources of Information i • THE LETTERS OF 440CCAS1ONAL,” whose epistles from Washington during the Mat three years have been eingalarly correct in Chair etatemente and predictions, and whose comments apen pablio affairs have been copied and read with deep interest through out the whole country ; A THRILLING SKETCH OR TALE, ilhadrative vt the romantic I,,,eldei.to aaaamEad with tka War; GLEANINGS FROM THE RICH TREASURES OF WAR-WIT AI,D WAR-POETRY, that are elicited by the mighty eventa now transpiring; ABLE EDITORIALS ON THE GREAT QUESTIONS OF THE DAT THE LATEST LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS ; A EMENABY OE 85L14101113 INTELLIOENOR Interesting to all Denominations; IMPORTANT ARTICLES FROM EMT-CLASS ACCURATE MARKET REPORTS, Including the Cattle Markets of Philadelphia, New York, and other places, the Money Market, and Reporta of the Prices of Produce and Merchandise. Efforts will constantly lm made to luh-oduce each new features as will render the g‘ WAR PRESS" one of the most popular and attractive Journals of the country. If, contrary to general expectations, the war should be sud denly brought to a close, its columns will be filled with article that will prove deeply interesting to its readers One copy, one year OF 00 Three copies, one year 5 00 Five coplee, one year...., 8 00 Ten coalea, one year 14 09 Larger Clubs will be charged at the same rate, thnst go copies will cost $24; 00 copies will cost $00; end 100 copies, $l2O. We also offer the following EXTRAORDINARY INDUCEMENTS! To every Subscriber remitting us $2 we will forward by mail a first-rate, new, large COLORED NAP of the Southern States, which gives the most useful and corn• prehensive view of the Seat of War, and descriptions of the important localities of the South, that has yet been published. Its retail price is fifty cents, and it is well Werth double that sum. We will also forward one copy of this Map to any per. son who sends us a club of three, of five, or of ten sub. lerileSte- Any person sending us a club of twenty aubscribenh accompanied with $24, will be entitled to an extra copy (tor the getter of the club,) and also to a copy of the above-mentioned Map. In order to further stimulate individual exertion to ex tend the circulation of the "WAR PRESS," we offer the following liberal premiums: ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS IN OASH will be presented to the person or persons who may pro• cure the largest list of subscribers by the Ist of April, iBB2 FIFTY DOLLARS to the person forwarding the second highest nuaiber by the same period, and to the person forwarding the third Urgent number nip to that time. The conditions of the foregoing premiums reanire all subscriptions to be paid in advance for ONE TEAR, at the rates published above. prid other loyal citizens, are earnestly solicited to assist In extending the circulation of the " WAR PRESS.' They may rest assured that the/ will thereby not only secure to subscribers a first-rate journal, but one which will be an earnest champion of the vigorous prosecution of the war and the restoration of the Union. SPECIIfEIf COPIER will be furnished to those who twilled them. Subscriptions may commence at any time. Terma ALWAYS OASR, in advance. All Letters to be addreseed to JOHN W. FORNEY, ursEsa• Tow, 417 OHNOTPI7T BIBEET. PUBS PORT WINE. ifiD4tre DO PORTO WINE, BOTTLED W roidtHat IN 1820. Physicians and invalids In want of a reliable article of pure Port Wine can be supplied by inquiring for this above wine at CANTWELL & Southeast corner GIaRMANToWN Avenue and MASTER Street. ..Liverpool, noon Liverpool, soon ..Liverpool, soon VTENNESSY, VINE-YARD PRO. seems, Biwa, Tricoehe t (10., Mare% Pine% and other approved brands of 00UNAO BRANDY, fete' ode, ill bond and from store, by CANTWELL & KEEPER, Southeast conies CEDIANTOWN Avenue and MASTER Street. QTUART'S PAISLEY MALT WEIS NY. Rnehanan'e Goal Re Whlsk74 Old Tom Gin, Old London Gin, London Cordial Gin, Bolden's Gin, In bond and store. CANTWELL & KEEFER, Beutheiet corner GERMANTOWN Avenue sad MASTER Street. 7 A. OUAVE CHAMPAGNE.— now L. brand—an excellent article. Imported and for sale at a price to .it the times, by CANTWELL & KEE FEE, southeast corner of GERMANTOWN Avenue and MASTER Street. DUDESHEIMER-BRE,G, LAUREN. usniu, aad MOCKMGEKER WINE, in o a B ell or one dozen battles each ;• warranted pare. Imparted and for sale low by CANTWELL & 'EXETER, month east corner • GERMANTOWN Avenue and MASTER Street. ZIMMERMAN'S DRY CATAWBA WlNE.—This approved brand of Cincinnati wine, the beet article out for " cobblers," for sale pure, bot tled and in cases, by CANTWELL k If.linflift, south. east corner liffidtlkiAblTOWlT Avenge and MAST/1Z Street. ma24-11m A CARD.-THE UNDARSIGNED, late of the GIBARD ROMA, Philadelphia, hays leased, for a term of years, WILLABD'd HOTEL, hi Waehington. They take this occasion to return to their old friends and customers many thanks for past far" lad beg tomware them that they will be most happy to See them in their new aaarterm SYKES, CHADWICK, rt 00. WASMINGTORI July 16. 1861. atallair rrIERRAPINS, OYSTERS STEWED JI- AND FRIED, AND CHICKEN SALAD.—Invi. talon Cards and other notices will be distributed in all parte of the city, with punctuality. . The undersigned is at all times prrmered to present, for the inspection of Ladies and Gentle Men, a list of the things necessary for a large or small entertainment, as the case may be, thereby avoiding all unnecessary profusion sad mute ; that by his load ii4o deuce in business, he will be able at all times to give, sie heretofore, entire satisfaction to all who favor him with their patronage. HENBY JONES, Caterer, No. 250 South TWELFTH Street, *hove SPRUCE. RAISINS. -300 boxes Layer Raisins ; soo halt beim Lam Raisins; 800 boxes 111 R Bunch Raisins; 800 half boxes Id It Bunch Raisins. ' New and choice fruit, now landing and for sale by MURPHY & KOONS, N 0.146 NORTH WHARVES. A NTI -FRICTION METAL, Superior quality, For sale by JAMES YOCOM, jell-2m* Bet. Front endeteorlP,'EarsceAarenh.,.. BROOMCORN, HANDLES, TWINE, &c.; Brooms, Bncitets, Am, for sale by G. B. IBLARIBTON, Commission Mordant. ido.3m 22 South WATER Re* ja2B.3m* HANGING VASES. AA Ornamental Flower Pots. Parlor Vases for Growing Flower'. Baskets for Jardiniere. • Pedestals with Vase for Flowers. Antique Vases for Mantels. Vases Renaissance for Parlor. - Rustic and Terra Cotta Vases. Bays Flower Pots and Vases. Clai-deis Vase - :Ad Pedestals. Bracketa for Busts and Figure,. With a great variety of articles imitable for Christ. mas presents, for sale retail and to the trade, Warerooms 1010 CHESTNUT Street, 'Philadelphia. dell S. A. HARRISON. (COTTON BAIL DUOS and OAN vv VAB, off all numbers and Manna Benren's Doak Awning TwIll• .ee all descrlptions, fee Tents, Awnings, Trmiks, and Wagon Offorf• Also, Paper Manufacturers' Drier front Ito $ fest wide. Tarpaulin, Bdlin, Bell Tw TA% ine, JOHN W. WeNk is srektf 1r JOWIII Allay. LARD AND (MBAS/L-50 tieruao prune Leaf lard; • 60 tierces White Grease, Direct from the West, and in store. for We by MURPHY & NOON% Bro. 1.46 NORTH WHisairilf. WRITERS; TERM'S'• TWENTY-FIVZ DOLLAB3 ALL POSTMASTERS, PHILADELPHIA WINES AND LIQUORS. HOTELS. PNSURANCE COMPANIES. DELAWARE MUTUAL SUETY INSURANCE COMPANY, PRIL/DILPHIA. Incorporated by the Legislature of Pennsylvania, 1835 Office, southeast corner of THIRD. and WALNUT Streets, Philadelphia. MARINE INSURANCE On Vaud', Cargo, To all parts of the world. Freight, INLAND INK:MANORS Oa Goode, by Rivers, Canals, Lakes, and Lend Carriages to all parte of the Union. FIRE INSURANCES On Merchandise generally. On Stores, Dwelling houses, &c. ASSETS OF THE COMPANY, Noyamesa 1, 1881. PAR. 0066. $lOO,OOO United States Five per cent. Loan. 8100,250 00 60,000 United States Six per cont. Tree- NOtOil.i. ("la at".l" 49,895 87 25,000 United States ' Seven and Three tenths per cent. Treasury Notes 25,000 00 100,000 State of Pennsylvania Five per cent. Loan 89,561 26 123,050 Philadelphia City Six per cent. Loan. 119,448 11 80,000 State of Tennessee Five per cent. Loan. 20,000 Pennsylvania Railroad, let Mort• gage Six per cent. Bonds 20,000 00 60,000 Pennsylvania Railroad, 2d Mort gage Six per cent. Bonds 46,130 83 16,000 300 Shares Stock Germantown Gaa Company, principal and Internet guarantied by the City of Phi ladelphia 6,000 100 Shan't] Stock roottulTooio Railroad Company 0,000 00 Bills receivable for insurances made...... 90,730 07 Bonds and Mortgages 75,000 00 Real Estate 51,30 155 Balances due at Agencies—Premiums on Marine Policies. InWrest, and other Debts due the Company 43,131 97 ocrfgo and Stock of sundry Insurance and othek Coiup9uimd, 0111,049—satimated va lue Drib on hand—ln Banks . In Drawer DIRECTORS. Samuel IL Stokes, J. F. Peniston, Henry Sloan, Edward Darlington, H. Jones Brooke, Spencer MUlraine, Thomas 0. Hand, Robert Burton, Jacob P. Jones, James B. McFarland, Joshua P. Eyre, John B. Semple, Pittsburg, D. T. Morgan, Pittsburg, A. B. Berger, Pittsburg. MARTIN, President. . HAND, Vice President. ;rotary. jal4-13 William Martin, Edmund A. Souder, TiMophilus Paulding, John B. Penrose, John C. Davis, James Traquair, William Byre, Jr., James C. Hand. William C. Ludwig, Joseph H. Seal, Dr. B. M. Roston, George G. Leiper, Hugh Craig, Charles Kelly, WILLIAM THOMAS C. HENRY MILBURN, Sec] TILE RELIANCE MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, OF PHILADILIIIIA, OFFICE No. 806 WALNUT STREET, Insures sgaired LOSS OR DAMAGE BY FIRE, 4)0 Mouses, Stores, and other buildings, limited or perpetual, and on Furniture, Goode, Wares, and Mar. cbandise, in town or country. CASH CAPITAL, S23I,IIO.OO—ABBETO 6817,142.01, Which is invested as follows, via: In first mortgage on city property, worth double the amount *100,900 00 Pennsylvania Rallroad Co.'s 0 per ma. Arai mortgage loan, at par 6,000 00 Pennsylvania Railroad Co.'s 8 per cent, se cond mortgage loan, ($30,000) 17,900 00 Huntingdon and Broad Ton Railroad and Canal Co.'s mortgage loan 4,000 00 Ground rent, first-class 9,489 50 Jilateral loans, well secured 2,600 00 Oily of Philadelphia 8 per cent loan 00,000 00 Allegheny County 6 per cent. Pa. RR. loan. 10,000 00 Commercial Bank stock 6,186 01 Mechanics' Bank stock 2,81560 Pennsylvania Railroad Co.'s 5t0ck..........4,000 00 The Reliance Mutual Insurance Co. stock. 26,850 00 The County Fire Insurance Co.'s stock 1,050 00 The Delaware M. S. Da/ranee Oo.'a Mack.. 700 00 Union Mutual Insurance Co). well 880 00 Bills receivable 14,202 74 Book accounts, accrued interest, Ac........ 7,104 66 068 h on hand 11,544 64 The Mutual minciple, combbaed with the security of 'Stock Capital, entitles the insured to participate in the PIOPITB of the Company, without liability for UMW. 'boluses promptly adjneted and paid. DI6ECTOIIIII. Samuel Blepham, Robert Steen, William Musser, Benj. W. Tingley, Marshall Hill, J. Johnson Brows', Merles Leland, Jacob T. Bunting, Smith Bowan, John Bi5ElBll, Pittsburg. TENCILBIf, President. Clem Tingley, William R. Thompson, Frederick Brown, William Stevenson, John R. Worrell, Z. L. Carson, Robert Toland, G. D. Bosengarten, Chaska S. Wood, James B. Woodward, OD B. M. liruoraua, Seore February 16,1861. A NTHRACITE INSURANCE 41 - 3- COMPANY. Authorized Capital 4400„090 -- CHANTER. PESPETUAL.i, Office No. 311 WALNUT Street, between Third and ffoitrth Streets, Philadelphia. This Company will intim* against lose or damage by lire, on Buildings, Furniture, and Merchandise gene rally. Also, Marino Insurances on Yowls, Cargoes, and freighta. Inland begone to Fa; part. et the Vialeta DIRECTORS. Davis Pearson, Peter Sieger, J. E. Baum. Wm. F. Dean, John Ketcham, AM ESHER, President. ' DRAW, Vice President. William Esher, D. Luther, Lewis Andenried, John B. Blakiston, Joseph itaxnem, WILL will. W. M. Baum . , Secretary. FIRE INSURANCE. MECHANICS' rusußANcra COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA, No. 138 North SIXTH Street, below Race, Insure Buildings, Goode, and Merchandise gene rally, from Loss or Damage by Fire. The Company gas runty to adjust all Losses promptly, and thereby hope to merit the patronage of the public. DIRECTORS. Robert Flanigan, Michael MrGeoy, Edward McGovern Thomas B. 111cOoriolok, John Bromley, Francis Falls, John Caseady, Bernard H. ealmeniMM Charles Clare, Michael Cahill. WIS COOPER, President. !etaiT. oc2B William Morgan, Francis Cooper, George L. Dougherty, James Martin, James Duress, Matthew McAleer, Bernard Rafferty, Thomas J_ Fromshit4 Thomas Fisher, Francis McManus, BIBINAID B INSURANCE COMPANY OF THE STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA—OFFICE Noe. 4 end 6 EXCHANGE BUILDINGS, North side of WAIn, InfT Street, between DOGE and THIRD 13iirveie, PhUa delyhia INCORPORATED in 1724-OHAP.TZU PERPETUAL. CAPITAL, $200,000. PROPERTIES OF THE 001IPANY, FEBRUARY 1, 1881, $507,094.81. 'URINE, FIRE, AND INLAND TBANSPORTA. TIOZT PLBEGITIM, Henri B. Sherrerd, Samuel Omit, Jr., Charles Macalester, Toblto Wagner, William S. Smith, Thomas B. Watson, John B. Austin, Henry G. Freeman, William B. White, Charles S. Lewis, George H. Stuart, George G. Carson, Edward C. Knight. . .. HENRY D WILLIAM HAmrs/L Score .A MERICAN FIRE INSURANCE 401.- COMPANY. Incorporated 1810. CHARTER PERPETUAL. No. 810 WALNUT Skeet, above Third, Philadelphia. Having a large paid-up Capital Stock and Surplus, In vested in sound and available Securities, continues to Insure on Dwellings, Stone, Furniture, Merchandise, Via. molt is port and Um': GRP% and 9tlacr ?9P.41 7 . 111 4. ?W -PM% All limes liberally' and promptly surunau. DIRECTORS Thomas IL Marie, John Welsh, Damns] 0. Morton, Patrick Brady, John T. Lewis, THO ALDER. 0. L. 13111.W101D, PENN MUTUAL LIFE INSII RANCH COMPANY, No. 921 CHESTNUT Street, Philadelphia. CHARTER PERPETUAL. ALL THE PROFITS DIVIDED AMONG THE 1311.• BURRO. s - Insure Lives for short terms or for the wholeterm grant Annuties and Endowments' purchase Life Inte rests in Beal Estate, and make all contracts depending on the contingencies of life. They act' as Executors, Administrator% Assignee* Trustees, and Guardians. ASSETS OF THE COMPANY, January 1,130 L Mortgagee, ground rento, raid estate 5322,991 ST United States elects, Treasury note% lona of State of Pennsylvania, city of Philadd. phis, go 363,796 34 Premium notes, loans or collateral% dm wow 68 Pennsylvania, North Pennsylvania Rail roads, and County 6 per cent. bonds 106,601 60 Bank, insurance, railroad, sanal stocks, to. 97,641 49 Cash on hand, agents' balances, &c., g 0..... 88,206 14 0,0731,188 U DATTLEL L. MILLER, Pre4delif. SAMUEL E. STOKES, Igoe Presded. Jour W. Hosmros, Secretary. EXCHANGE INSURANCE COM PANY-0160e, N.. 409 WALNUT Street. Fire Lummance on Houses, and Merchandise general, on favorable terms, either Limited or renista/L DIRECTOR& Jeremiah Bonsa i Thomas Marsh, John Q. Ginnodo, Charles Thompson, Edward D. Roberts, James T. Hale, Samuel D. Smedley, Joshua T. Owen Sadie* O. lisle, John J. Grifiltlui. JEREMIAH BONBALL, Preeldist. JOHN Q. GLlWZlODO,lflosEvestdont. Atoms Ono, liaerstimm. fall THE ENTERPRISE INSUBANOII COMPANY OP PRILADRLPHEL (FTGE INSURANON REOLIISMILY.) COMPANY'S BUILDING, B. W. CORNIR FOURTH MID WALNUT IiTURETIL DIRICTOBB. V. Ratchford Starr, 'Mordecai L. Dawson, William McKee, Geo. H. Stuart, Nalbro Frazier, John H. Brown John N. Atwood, B. A. FahaeldoCk, Beni T. Tredick, Andrew D. Cash, Henry Wharton, J. L. Erringer. F. RATCHFORD STARR, Freakiest OILLILBIII W. CONT. Secretors fell FIRE INSURANCE REMUS - MI- - - LlE—The PENNSYLVANIA INSI7BANCR COMPANY. Incorporated 1826. CHART= PER PETUAL. N 0.610 WALNUT Mallet, oppodte Independ ence Square. Tbis Company, favorably !mown to the community for thirty-ria years, expatiates to insure against Lodi or Da mage by Fire, on public or private Buildings, either per manently or for a limited time. Also, on larnitars, stocks or Goods, or klerclusadises generally, on liberal Their Capita, together with a large Surplus Pund,lll Invested In the most careful moaner, which enables than to offer to the 'tutored an undoubted security in the owe of kiss. DIRTOTOBEL Jonathan Patterson, Thomas Dobbs, Quintin Campbell, Daniel Smith, Jr., Alexander Bannon' Jolla Derereux, William Montalto', Thomas Smith. Lane Boalehnist, JONATRAIS WILLIAM 0. CROWELL. PATTIELBON, PraldteL tars. spa "F_T AM B .-1,000 pieces sugar-cured .11.1.414r-an9kt4 Sim for plOr 0. 0. BADLfI a 00., 103 ABM Weer, 2d door above Front. nuD LEAD-8 barrels just received N../ per schooner Assaii6, for sale by JAIIIIZTORZ & OABSTAII69, tool 909 and 906 South FRONT Street. DB/BD A.rniss.--66 sacks new Western Dried Apples; 7 bbls new Western Dried Apples. Just received end in store. For sale by MURPHY & KOONS, No. kW NOUTU WILARVICS. 24,075 00 14,557 60 4,0843 Of) $01,098 03 317 83 81,816 88 $1369,128 37 $317,142 04 BHEBBEED, President, i799-1Z James B. Campbell, Edmund G. Thailh, Chariest W. PonMer l Inset Morrie. .8 B. MAftl President, Secretary. fel2-It On and otter MONDAY, Nov. 25,1881, the trains will leave PHILADELPHIA, from the Depot, N. E. corner of EIGHTEENTH and MARKET Streets, at 8.30 A.M., 3, 4.16, and 0.40 P. M and will leave the corner ol THIRTY-FIRST :ad MARKET Strata, ((West Piffle:: delphie,) a 17 minutes after the starting time front the *Depot. ON SUNDAYS. RAILROAD LINES. THE PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL RAILROAD. THE GREAT DOUBLE TRACE ROUTE.. . lan.i 1862. 1862. THE CAPACITY OF THE ROAD IS NOW EQUAL TO ANY IN THE COUNTRY. THE 9BNAT SNORT LINE T 4 THE WEST, Facilities for the transportatlm of passengers to and from Pittsburg, Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Louis St. lewd, Nashville, Memphis, New Orleans. and all other ticiwns in the West. Northwest, and Southwest, are unsurpassed for speed and comfort by any other route. Sleeping and making cars on alt the trains. THE EXPRESS BUNS DAILY.; Mail and Fast Lisle Sundays oxceptod. Mall Train leaves Philadelphia at............ 8.00 A. M. Fast Line . ....... .11.30 A. M. Express Train. ....... ....10.30 P. M. Parkeeburg Accommodation leave s Phila. at.. 12.30 P. M. Harrisburg .. 2.30 P. M. Lancaster .. 4.00 P. M. West Cheater passengers will take the Mail Train, the Parkesi.urg Acconnuvdallon, and the Limcsaker Le.com modation. Passengers for Sunbury, Williamsport, Elmira, Buf falo, Niagara Fails, and intermediate points, leaving Philadelphia at 8 A. M. and 2.30 P. 111., go directly through. For further information apply at the Passenger Sta tion, S. E. corner of ELEVENTH and MARKET Streets. By Oslo faith, frolehtli Of all iles&lptlehe eau be for warded to and from any point on the Railroads of Ohio, Kentublry, Indiana, Illinois, Wi.conain, lowa, or Mis souri, by railroad direct, or to any port on the naviga ble rivers of the West, by steamers from Pittsburg. The rates of freight to and from any point in the West by the Pennsylvania Railroad, are,at all times, as fa vorable as are charged by other Railroad ficaupaniea. Merchants and ahippera entrusting the transportation of their freight to this Company, can rely with confidence on its speedy transit. For freight contracts or shipping directions apply to or aadresa the Agents °Lathe Company. S. B. KINGSTON, JR., Philadelphia. D. A. STEWART, Pittsburg. CLARKE & Co., Chicago. LBBcB & co., Foe. 1 Astor House, or No. 1 Seep; William street New York. LEECH & 6., No. 77 Washington street, Boston. 111LAGRAW & KOONS, No. 80 North street, Baltimore, H. H. HOUSTON, Gen'l Freight Agent, Mitt, L. L. HOUPT, Gene Ticket Agent, Phila. ENOCH LEWIS, Gen'l Sup% Altoona. onwifNORTH PENNBY.I.- t VANIA NAILItAib. SOB BETHLEHEM, DOYLESTOWN, MAUU II MUNK, HAZLETON, EASTON. WILLEY, 80. WINTER ARRANGEMENT. THREE THROUGH TRAINS. On and after . MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1861, Pas leaser Trains will leave FRONT and WILLOW Streets, Philadelphia, daily, (Sundays excepted ' ) as follows: At 6.45 A. M., (1l.p."3") fee lietLlehera, Alleateera, Manch Ohnnk, Hazleton, &c. At 2.45 P. IL, (Express,) for Bethlehem, Easton, ao. This train reecho' Beaton at 6 P. SL, and makes a dope connection with the New Jersey Oentral for Now York. At 6.06 P. M., for Bethlehem, Allentown, Malmo Chunk, &a. At 9 A. M. and 4 P. M., for Doyleetown. At 6 11,. M., for Fors virvtorromo. _ The GAOA. 111,41inress Train makes close connection with the Lehigh Valley Railroad at Bethlehem, being the shortest and most desirable route to all points la the Lehigh coal region. TRAINS FOB PHILADELPHIa Leave Bethlehem at 7.07 A. M., 9.18 A. M., eml 5.88 P. B. Leave Doylestown at 0.30 A. AL and 3.20 P. M. Leave Fort Waahiugtou at 0-60 A. M. ON 13DNDAY11—Philadolahia for Fort Waahington at L3O a. N. Philadelphia for Doylestown at 4 P. 111 Doylestown for Pldladelphia at 7 A. M. 'Fort Washington for Philadelphia at 2.45 P. M. Fare to Bethlehem....sl.6o l u Faro to Manch OtLunk.B2.6o Fare to Easton 1.60 Thrcrugli Tlctiote ImM o procured ea the Tl:Nei Offices, at WILLOW Street, or BEMIS Street, In order to secure the above rates of fare. All Passenger Trains (except fianday Trains) connect at Berke street with the Fifth and Sixth streets, and Se cond and Third-streets Passenger Railroads, twenty mi nutes after leaving Willow street. an.WINTER AR RANGEMKNT.-PHILA.DEL. FRIA, WILMINGTON, AND BALTIMORR RAIL ROAD. On and after MONDAY, ! lAN. 6, 1862 For Baltimore at a,30 Ba A, At, UAlo A, Ain (Express). and 11.00 F. X. For Chester at 3.16 A. M., 1/.36 A. AL, 3.46 and 11.00 P. M. . For Wilmington at 3.30 A. M., 8.15 A. M., /1.36 A. M., 8.45 and 11.00 P. M.. For New Casa° at 8.16 A. N. and 9.45 P. 51. For Dover at 8.16 A. M. and 3.45 P. M. For Milford at 8.15 A. M. For Salitobwirst 8.16 A. M. TRAINS FOR PHMADELPHIA.: Leave Baltimore at 8.30 A. M. (Express), 1.06 P. M. (Express), 5.20, and 7 P. N. (Express). Leave Wilmington at 7.30- and 11.88 A. M., 4.15, 8 45, and 9.60 P. M. • Leave Salisbury at 2.35 P. M. Leavo Milford at 4.66 P. M. Leave Dover at 9 A. 31. and 8.10 P. M. Leave New Castle at m. A. M. and 8:10 P. M. Leave Cheater at 8.20 A. ra,ollB, Co?, an 4 Mg P 7 8, Leave Baltimore for Salisbury and Intermediate stitioni 16.20 and 7 P. M; for Dover and intarmediate'stationi LOS P. M. TRAINS FOB BALTIMORE Leave (Theater at 8.45 A. M., 12.05 and 11.30 P. M. Leave Wilmiugtou at 4.30 A. It., 9.25 A. K., 12.86 P It, and - 1219 a. K. lITOCIGHT TRAIN, with Pamengor Our attached, will run as follows Leave Philadelphia for Perryville and Intermediate places at 6.10 P. M. Leave Wilmington for Perryville and intermediate places at 7.10 P. SI. Leave Philadelphia for Chester, Wilmington, Stanton, Newark, Elltton North East, Perryville, Havre-de- Grum; and Baitititore at 8,80 I'. H. Leave Baltimore for Havre-de-Grace and intermediate stations at 8.45 A. M. Leave Wilmington for Philadelphia and intermediate places at 2.05 P. M. ON SUNDAYS ONLY At 3.30 A. M. and 11.00 P. M. from Philadelphia to Baltimore. 14 7 from 8i4t139r9 to Philadelphia. The 3..80 A. N. train from Philadelphia to Baltimore will run daily, Mondays excepted. 4e78-tf B. M. FELTON, President. PHILADELPHIA AND READING RAILROAD PASSENGER TRAINS FOR POTTSVILLE , READ ING, and HARRISBURG, on and after November 4,1561 ]!MORNING LINES, DAILY, (Sundays excepted.) Leave New Depot, corner of BROAD and CALLOW:- RILL Streets, PHILADELPHIA, (Passenger entrances on Thirteenth and on Callowbill streets,) at 8 A. M., con necting at Harrisburg with the PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD 4.15 P. M. train, running to Pittsburg; the CUMBERLAND VALLEY 1.30 P. X. train running to Ohambersburg, Carlisle, &a.; and the NORTHERN ONNTRAL ItAILBOAD 1.20 P. M. train running to Sun bur➢. Sc_ AFTERNOON LINER. Leave Few Depot, corner of BROAD and CALLOW HILL Streets, PHILADELPHIA, (Passenger entrances on Thirteenth and on Callowhill eta„) for POTTSVILLE and HARRISBURG, at 3.15 P. H., DAILY, connect ing at Harrisburg with the Northern Central Railroad, for Sunbury, Williamsport, Elmira, &o. Express Train from New York via Easton makes close connection with the Beading Mail and Accommodation Trains, connect lag at Harrisburg with the Pennsylvania Central 3.15 A. M. Train running west. For READING only, at 4.80 P. H., DAILY, (Sundays excepted.) DISTANCES VIA PHILADELPHIA AND READING RAILROAD. FROM PSILADILPHIAi HMG. To Phinnixyille 28 Reading 58 Lebanon 88 H arri sbur g 112 Dauphin 124 Millersburg 142 Treverton Jtuaction.lsB Sunbury 169. Northumberland....l7l Lewisburg 178 Milton 183 Aluney 197 Williarimport 209 Jersey Shore 228 Lock Haven 235 Ralston. 238 Williamsport and Elmira Troy 281 Elmira 287 The BA. M. and 3.15 P. . trains connect daily at Port Clinton (( Sundays excepted ,) with the OATAWISSA, wnadAmsponT, and wan RAILROAD, making Olotia connection& with lines t& Mow.** Pella. Oawnia. the West and Southwest, DEPOT IN PHILADELPHIA: Cornet of inuir pad CALLOWHML Streets. W. E. AIoILRENNEY, Secretary. October 30, 1861. I.IIM2IM.MMIi B -- ANBANGEMENT. PHILADELPHIA., GIRMINTOWN, sad NORRIS- TOWN RAILROAD. TIME TABLE. On and after Monday, October 28, 1881, until further notice, FOR GERMANTOWN Leave Philadelphia, 6,7, 8,9, 10.05,11, 12 A. 81, 1, 2, 8,4, 6,6, 7,8, 9,10 k, and 7.74 P. M. Leave Germantown, 6,7, 7%, 8,63 i, 10)(, 11%, A. V.. 1,2, 3,4, 5,6, 7,8, 93i, 11 P. m. The 8% A.ll. train from Germantown stops at Dny'a and Tioga only. ON BIINDATI3. Leave Philadelphia, 9.05 A. SL, 9,1, and 10X P. Id Leave Germantown, 8.10 A. ld., 1,6, and 9X P. H. CHESTNUT HILL RAILROAD. heave Philadelphia, 6, 9,11, L. M., 2,4, 6, 8. and 101 i P. N. LOave Chestnut 131141.10, 9.10,10.10, A.M., L 9.40, SAO, 1.40, 7.40, and 9.10 P. M. ON SUNDAYS, Leave Philadelphia, 9.05 A. M., 2 and 7 P. N. Leave Cheatnid Bill, 7.60 A. M.,14.40, 6.40, and 0.10 P. N. FOB CONSHOHOCKEN( AND NORRISTOWN. Leave Philadelphia, PM, 9.05, 11.05 A. IL, 136 8.011, 9,9, 11 A, M, 1%, 4N, and I P. M. ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia, 9 A. N., 8 P. Leave Norristown, Im A. H., 6 P. M. FOR MAN/MINK. Leave Philadelphia, 6%, 9,11 A. EI., 1%, &cmh 4%, 0.06, snp 9.015 P. N. Leave Idanayunki TM, 6%, UN A. 3L, 2,9, and 63i P. M. ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia, 9 A. M., 3 and T P. M. Leave Menayunit, 7% A. H., 6% and P.M. H. N.. SMITH, General Superintendent, 048 Depot NINTH and GRIMM Weida. WEST CHESTER ZAIL- VIA MEDIA. WINTXR. ARRANGEMENT Leave PHILADELPHIA at 8 A. M. and 2 P. M Leave West Chester at B A. M. and 4 P. M. The Trains leasing Philadelphia at 8.30 A.M. and 4.11 P. N. connect at Pennelton with Trains on the Phila delphia and Baltimore Bent:rat Railroad for Concord, Kennett, Oxford-, Ac., An. 1111NRY WOOD, n026•1f Ouporintendent jiminime PHILADELPHIA AND BEADING BLUABOAD M I (toe 997 &nab Fourth street.) PRILADILIIIII, 97,11911. !MASON TIMMS. , On and after May 1 , 1861 , season tioketa will be brad by this company for the periods of throb, nix, nine, and twelve months, not trauferable. Beeson wheel-tickets may also be bed at al pee omit. Moonlit These tickets will be sold by the Tremont at No. UT loath 10IIIITH Street, where any farther ean be obtained. I. BRADFORD, ofibble Tramway. HILADEL HIA AND B. 113132 WINTER ARRANGEMENT. 1888 For WILLIAMSPORT, SCRANTON, ELMIRA, and all points in the W. and N. W. Passenger Trains leave Depot of Phila. and Beading B. R., cor. Broad and Cal lowhill streets, at 8 A. N., and 3.15 P. N. daily, except Sundays. QUICKEST ROUTE from Philadelphia to points in &Min% sad WONOVE Ptinry!Yentet Western New York, &c., itc. Baggage checked itirougis to Buffalo, Niagara Falls, or intermediate points. Through Express Freight Train for all points above, leaves daily at 8 P. N. For further information apply to JOHN S. HILLIS, General Agent. THIRTEENTH and OALLOWHILL, and N. W. cor. SIXTH and CHESTNUT Streets. 14141 IlhspipiclTST 011 ESTER ROAD TBAIIIII vla PRIAM SYLVANIA RAILROAD, leave depot, earner TRNTII 6 and NARKST Otreete, at 8 A. M., 11.80 novae NA 11'. D 0246 IOLLIB IMAM, Arent, Philadelphia and lteadiab mid Lebanon Valley R. Ti Northern Contra) Railroad. Suubury and Erie 6. & SALES BI AUCTION. FURN'EES, BBINLBT, & CO., 429 01117ffENUT OTBEET. SALE or ISIPORTED AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS. On 'tidal' Morning, rbrnary 7, at 10 o'clock, by catalogue, tor cash— ,too lots or frroncl , , ftritiah, .nd Arnoricosydry gnodg, compriaing a denirablo aorrrfmna of oearionablfrooodi, Sr Simplon and catalogues early ou morniugor 111DANCOAST & WARNOCK, AUG TIMMER& 100. 213 MARKET Street. ATTRACTIVE AbBOIICT . ATENT or rawly!" Bum 6iOODE. nth Morning, LINEN CAMBRIC lIANDICERCIIIEEB Alan, se ;nil line of ladiete and mentteand h; plain add hemstiched fiber/ eitinlrrie'llandkeraldjr. NeyonS. Alan, on 'invoice of coral jaconet and tiwiao moolins. 6•lao, grata' anti children'n furrier anvf Alan, n Tins of Pogrom-Amok+ nhirb , olsit.t fronts, calm taro, &c., from a pity retail stuck. STOCK OF READY-IRA , DE CLEITNING. Also, at comment mount of sate, 10' o'clock precisolY, the balance of a stock of clothing, contpr:lsing coats, pants,. and vests, for gents and youths. SATINETTS. Alto, 50 pieces superior printed satinetnt &TOME OF A FIRST-CLASS RETAIL Frorarrair, EMBROIDERY, AND TRIMMING STORE, by Catalogue. Thim Morning, February 5, at If/o'clock, comprising neaortment of very fine geode, Heir:eked for the beat city retail molts. Included will be feremd— gents', and children's horn, andlinit hoary kid, Clank arid HU Paris Tams , IStritSON am. broidsrieß, Incas, bandicsrchiefs, bonnet velvet and trim. Ming ribbons fancy caps, hal ag the entire stock of a first-class retail stars. Also, on Wednesday morning, an invoice of ladies', misses', and children's steel spring hoop skirts. Also, a line of cotton hosiery. Also, an assortment of Germantown fancy knit goods,. I HOPPIN & CO., AUCTION . EERB, 242 MARKET STREET. GENERAL SALE OF DRY GOODS, SEIAWLci, BLANKETS. FLANNELS, lIOSIEBY, FANCY GOODS, NOTIONS, Ac., ac. Or, Thursday Morning, January 6, at 10 O r e/OC4, etnll4CiPg 4 Ileffirßto molt meta of seasonable goods, adapted to present sales, and to which the attention of the trade is requested. DUCK OAVNTLET4. Included in soh. of Thursday morning will he found a full line of buck gauntlets, of the very best manufacture owl iltir Goods open for examination, with catalogues, early on morning of sale. PPHILIP FURL) CO., AUCTION EERS, 525 MARKET and 522 COMMERCE Ste. LARGE P 1 SITIVE SALE OF 1,200 CASES HOOT?, SHOES, BROGANS, AND GUM SHOES. Ou Thursday Morning, February 6, et In o'clock. at 10 o'clock, will be roll, by catalogue, 1,200 cases men's, boys', and youths' calf, kin, grain, and thick boots, brogans, gaiters, and Wel. linateli boots; women's, m'ssee', and children's goat, calf, and kip boots, shoes. ai d lasting gaiters. Also, city-made goads, and fret finality gum overshoes. 111f1 Groin own for examination, with catalogues, early on the morning of sale. MOSES NATHANS, AUCTIONEER AND COMMISSION MERCHANT. seuthaaat COMP of SIXTH and RACE &recta TAKE NOTICE The highest portable price is loaned on goods at Na th s' Principal Establishment, southeast corner of Sixth and Race streets. At least axe. third more than at any other estoOlibluneut in this city. NALTHANEr PIIIIOIPAL 111.021111 &6TABLI3H• KENT., • 250,060 TO LOAN, In large or small amounts, from one dollar to thousands, on diamonds, gold and silver plate watches, jewelry, merchandise, clothing, furniture, bedding, pianos, and goods of every description. LOANS MA DE A P THE LOWEST MADAM , RATES. This establishment has large tire and thief-proof safes, for the safety of valuable goods, together with a private wetchroan on the premises. ESTABLISHED FOR THE LAST 30 YEARS. ALL LARGE LOANS MADE AT THIS, THE PRINCIPAL 'ESTABLISHMENT." CHARGES GREATLY REDUCED. AT PRIVATE SALE, AT LESS THAN HALF USUALBTORE PRICKS. Gahl and silver watches of every description, from one &Mar to one hundred dollars each, gold eheina, fashion able jewelry, diamonds, &c. SHIPPING. da . BOSTON AND PHILA DELPHIA STEAMSHIP LINE—SAIL ING FROM EACH PORT EVERY TEN DAYS—From PINE-STREET WHARF, Philadelphia, and LONO WHARF, Boston. The new steamer 8AX0N,1,106 tons, Captain MAT TIINwS, will sail from Philadelphia on WEDNESDAY morning. February 5. at 10 o'clock. Froixiit tnkeu itt fnir Ma, Insurance one-half that by sail vessels. Shippers are requested to send Bills of Lading and slip receipts with their goods. For Freight or Passage (having fine accommodations) apply to HENRY WINSOR & 00. ja27-tf 332 SOUTH WHARVES. WEEKLY COMMUNICA TION BY STEAM BETWEEN NEW YOAII AND LIVERPOOL, calling at QUEENS TOWN, (Ireland,) to land and embark passengers and despatches. The Liverpool, New York, and Philadelphia Steam ship company's splendid Clyde-built Iron screw steam- Ain dire intended to sail as follows: FROM rfiNi fog CITY OF WASHINGTON.... Saturday, Feb. 8, 1862. EDINBURGH Saturday, Fob. 15, 1862 And every !Saturday throughout the year, from PIER Ifo. 44 N. B. RATES OF PASSAGE THROUGH FROM PHILADELPHIA C tblit, to Queonstoiro, OIL LWoi'pool . $75 Do. to London, via Liverpool $3O Steerage to Queenstown, or LiverpooL . $3O Do. -to London. $33 Do. 'Return tickets, available for six mouths, front Liverpool $6O Passengers forwarded to 115 , 7143, Par* Hamburg, Bremen, and Antwerp at through rates. Oertifiratee of passage issued from Liverpool to New York 340 Certificates of passage Issued from Queenstown to New York S3O These steamers have superior accommodations for pas sengers, we constructed with water-tight compartments, and carry experienced Surgeons. tier freight, or passage, apply at the office of the Oom- Pany, JOHN t . .DALE, Agent, 111 Walnut street, Philadelphia, In bliattiool, to wig. iNmeiv. Tower Blotting& In Glasgow, to WIC INII&N, 18 Dixon street. LIVERPOOL, NEW YORK, AND PHILADELPHIA STEAMSHIP COMPANY. NOTICE TO PALISENORIN By order of the Secretary of State, all panel:igen leaving the United. States are required to procure pus porta before going on board the steamer. no6-tf JOHN G. DALE, Agent. THE BRITISH AND NORTH AMERICAN ROYAL MAIL STEAM SIMPs PASSPORTS,-.411 persons leiFflng the United Matta will require to have PASSPORTS from the authorities 01 their respective countries, countersigned by the Secretary of State at Washington, or the Passport Agent re port of embarkation. FR(33I NEW YORK TO LIVERPOOL. Chief Cabin Passage Second Cabin Passage 78 FROM BOSTON TO LIVERPOOL. Chief Cabin Passage ~ ..........11112 Second Cabin Passage 99 The Ships from New York call at Cork /Carbon The ships from Boston call at lialifax and Cork bor.. PERSIA., Capt. Judkins. AFRICA, Capt. Shannon. ARABIA, Capt. J. Stone. CANADA, Capt. J. Leitch. ASIA, Capt. E. G. Lott. AMERICA, Capt. liookleY A.USTRA_LASLAK, NIAGARA, Capt. Moodie 99Pli 499 k, EUFt,.. 0 P.41 OSA Mderegn SCOTIA., (now - bunding,) These vessels carry a clear white tight at mast-heed green on starboard bow ; red on port bow. CANADA, Muir, leaves Boston, Wednesday, Jan. 22. ARABIA, Shannon, N.York, Wednesday, Jan. 29, EUROPA, Anderson, Boston, Wednesday, Feb. 5. AFRICA, Stone " N. York, Wednesday, Feb. 12. NIAGARA, doodle, 66 Boston, Wednesday, Fob 19, ASIA, Lott, U N. York. Wednesday, Feb. 25. Berths not secured until paid for. An experienced Surgeon on board. The owners of these ships will not be accountable for Gold, Silver,Bullion, Specie, Jewelry, Precious Stones, or Metals, unless bills of lading are signed therefor, anal the value thereof therein expressed. For freight or pee see SPPi7 $9 N. OUNABD, 4 noi.ftAtitit MIRY. tiew Or to E. C. A: J. G. BATES, 103 STATE Street, Boston. bf k FOR NEW YORK. NEW DAILY LINE, via Delaware a.l Raritan Canal. Philadelphia and New York Bzpross Steamboat Sot puny receive freight and leavo daily at 2 P: N:, dative tog their eargeee in New York the following dayt. Preighte taken nt reasonable rates. WM. P. CLYDE, Agent, No. 14 SOUTII-WHARVEIIi Philadelphia. JAMES HAND, Agent, anl-t1 Piers 14 and 15 EAST . BITER, New York. 4" FOR NEW YORK. Tha Btorffi Prat.ellar Demeans will commence their baldness for the melon on Monday ISth instant. Their steamers are now receiving freight at Saari Pier above Walnut street. Terms aceommodating. gayly to W. M. BATED g IXI., WAR 1114 Smith Delaware AIM= RAILROAD LINES. 1862. an_g - = - .1_ 1862. ARRANGEMENTS OF NEW YORE LINES. nip; CAMDEN AND AMBOY AND PHILA DELPHIA AND s triENTON RAILROAD CO.'S • LINES FROM PHILADELPHIA TO NEW YORK AND WAY PLACES. Elto3l WALNUT-STREET WHARF. AND KENSINGTON DEPOT WILL LEAVE AS FOLLOWS—VIZ: FARS. At 6 A. 31., via Camden and Amboy, C. anti A. Ac commodation ta2 25 At 6A. M., via Camden and Jersey City; (a. J.) Accommodation 2 26 At 9% A. M., via Kensingtonsand Jersey City, Morning Mail 3 00 At 12% P. M., via Camdt.n and Amboy, Accommo dation 2 25 At 2 I'. M., via Camden and Amboy, C and A. Ex press 3 00 At 4 P. M., Till Camden and Jersey City, Evening Express. 3 00 At 4 P. M,, via Camden lint! JurSel City, 2,1 Class Ticket At 6% P. M., via Kensington and Jersey City, Evening Mail 3 00 At 12 P. ld., via Kensington and Jersey City. South ern Mail 3 00 At 5 I'. M., via Camden and Amboy, Accommoda tion, (Freight and Passenger)—let Class Ticket.. 2 25 Do. do. 2d Class d 0.... 150 Theajg P. M. Line rune daily, Sundays excepted. The 12 P. M., Southern Mail rims daily. For Water Gan, Stroudsburg, Ocrauten, WIPS9OMT9I Montrore, Great Bond, Sc., at 7.10 A. M. from Kensing ton, via Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad. For Mauch Chunk, Allentown, Bethlehem, Belvidere, Easton, Lambertville, Flendngton, &c., at 7.10 A. 1.1. and 3 P. M. from Kensington Depot ; (the 7.10 A. M. Line connects with train leaving Easton for Mauch Chunk at 3.35 P. MI.) For Mount Hally, at 6 A. 31., 2 and 4 P. N. Ear Freehold, ai OA. M., and P. M. WAY LINES. For Bristol, Trenton, .Cc., at 7.10 and A. K., and 3,5, 6.30, and 12 P. N. from Kensington. For Bristol, and intermediate stations, at .11J A: H. from Kensington. For Palmyra, Riverton, Delano, Beverly, Burlington, riOrcilcei P914.9149wPi tkel at 12 i t i , 1, 4, 0 ' and 5,1 P. N. re 7" For Now York, and Way Lines leaving Kensing ton Depot, take the rare on Fifth street, above Walnut, half an hour before departure. The cars run into the Depot, and on the arrival of each train run from the Depot. Fifty Pounds of Baggage only allowed each Passenger. Passengers are prohibited from taking anything as bag. gaso but their wearing apparel. All baggage over flfti Pounds to be paid ter extra. The Comparri limit their responsibility for baggage to One Dollar per pound, and will not be liable for auy amount beyond $lOO, except by special contract. LQ4l' WM. H. GATZREB, Agent, M THOMAS & SONS, ANJL. Mos. 139 ervel 141 South FOI7BUI 240 0 ,4. (Formerly Noe. 87 and 179.) INT PUBLIC SALES REAL I:7tTATA AND STINS ff AT THE EXCHANGE ON TUESDAYS. tar We Irrrre a Page mint of reore MEW, at private+ aain, lash:ling C7CrY qlercripilla or city an+country pro perty. related rtite may ba tott at UM' /Weirton Store. sALE„or SUPERIOR FUItNITURR, rIPSE•PROOF (311c8rIo COUNTER, LAUDA' rit, a as. 11A841:S. AND HIPLIriNG, PA INT( NM( ARO ED'GRA V. IN(*, lIILITAR'r COATS ANfIY OAR PETS; 6.(% CAR D.—.Out.Snittte•truirrowmVtiSig, , tK Otrt Anc tiot store, will compritio MO lots of ottpcelor fat-Mt:me, arr., from families rlecthifilg holpiebrepfig: CARD.—The COO'sbarrorntock v ertisod +far row!v i 4 ,ostponed to 6th BEAL - ESTATE ' hO6 NB, ft.- - 1110B'. 4. VA-LVAIILLI 71.611LTR0-101LL AND - Piaglita, lb neroa t wilt puperior natty-rownotone inumAnn, knn=l hculrea r Arc., four milt!: nom COnteavillo, Cbtatbr minty, Pn. 711NEN-STORY PRICK MEN AND DWleLit IN6, •No . g 2,3 Calloveli:11 s•reet: /40505•4e0kuk, Mt. Pleatosni) and . M urinating rtaiironal Company., for account of %ilium it may concern. 60 sharettMarriaburg Tiri'go Mummy. Auxikrwm :talc (Gonsolidato#)'6tock road Company. 5 shares 1 1 %5ladelphia and liavra dirOrace Stour Tow. , boat Company. b aharee American Academy °Mimic. 1 first morig.neett per cent. coupon Imml• (400) . 0 tho Logan county Xining and Planufnrturina Company of Virginia. I share RIM° onnipany. par $lOO, 6 aharea Amonican Academy of Mhsic, with ticket. $3,000 sV,ATAIIA 10041110 AD. SUPERIOR FURNITtikE, FRENO 3-PLATE MM. ROBS, VIAND-FORTES, BEDS A 144 ), BEDDING, BRUSEELS AND OTHER CARPETS, MINA AND GLASSWARE On Thumlay Morning, At tl o'clock, at the Auction Store, the superior rurni tore, piano-fortes, mirrors, Brussels and other carpets, &c., from families declining housekeeping, removed to the store for convenience of toile. Also, 2 superior fire-proof safes, ?nada. by Farrell & Ben ibg. lIIC7' CMADAiIt , II PFO.IIY thdA4 ISP4 , 01,1111(d. eeie. February 7, at 10 o'clock, at No. 117; North Tenth, street, the neat household furniture of a family declining housekeeping. Also, the kitchen furniture, INT May be examined nt a o'clock on the mornlog or aIMPENN STEAM ENGIN B AND BOILER WORRO.—NEA.FIEB LEVY, PRACTICAL AND THEORETICAL BRO. ZirEIGBI3, MAC - 1112iI&Te, BOILER-MARBBB, BLAOL. WRITHE!, slid FOUNDERS, baring, far Man, ran t been - ln successful operation, and been exclusively ate. gaged in building and repairing Marine and River LA gins, high and low pressure, Iron Beate, Water Tonfup Propellere, &a., &a., respectfully offer their servinee ta the public, as being fully prepared to contract for /11.. glues of all since, Marine, Elver, and Stationar7, hada• wets or pasterns of diliereni elm, are proposed te , sae cute orders with quick despatch. Every descriPOoll Ot Pattern making made at the shortest notice. High Ni 4 Low Pressure), Flue, Tubular, end Cylinder Boilers, of the beet Pennsylvania charcoal iron. ,Porgings, of all WWII and kinds; Iron and Brass Castings, of all da. variations ,801 l Turning, Screw Cunt:lg, and all other work connected with the above business. Drawings and Speciti,ations for all work done it theb establishment, free of charge, and work guarantied. The subscribers have ample wharf-dock room for re pairs of boats, where they can lio in perfect safety, Rag are provided with slicers, blocks, falls, &0., &0., for raising heavy or Ught weights. I. VAUGHAN MERRIOE, JOHR H. 00141, WILLIAM R. MERRIOK, . HARTLEY 11IHRRIHR QOUTHWARK FOUNDRY, 1 1 / 4 ) FIFTH AND WASHINGTON STBIZTI, Mishufocture High end Low Pressure- Reese Biiistoil i p, for land, river, and marina serviso. Boilers, Gasometers, Tanks, Iron Boats, &o.; Oise bags of all kinds, either iron or bran. Iron-Frame Roofs for Gas Works, Workshops, Rail. road Stations, &c. Retorts and Gas Machinery of the latest and sod Unproved construction. Every description of Plantation Machinery, matt al Sugar, Saw, and Gristlle„ Vacuum Pane, Open Stara Trains, Defecators, Filters, Pumping Engines, Sole Agents for N. Elillleux's Patent Sugar Bolan Apparatus; Neemyth'e Paten I Steair. Hatuneer, and At. rinwan & Walser's Patent Centriinga Sugar Draining Machine. sni-ft AEMY CLOTHING AND EQUI PAGE OFFICE. Sealed Proposals %cal be recelvCd at this office until FEBRUARY the 15th, fur supplying the Schuylkill Ar senal with Packing Boxes in such mmutitins as may ha needed until June 80, 1802. They will be subject to in• enaction on delivery at the Schuylkill Arsenal, where samples and sizes may be aeon. E=EM= Ja3o. tfels TO BENT A Desirable HOUSE, Stanear BROAD and WALNUT. All modern COllYe. nienees. Reserving Office. Furniture for sale, if de sired. Apply to E. PETTIT, ja2l-If 1423 WALNUT Street. FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE-4 =S. dwelliuge, prown street, above Fifteenth street; 4 dwellings, Fine Ftreet, beim Second street, Moo, term of 80 acres on Rancocas, near the Railroad; one of 84 acres, near 'ConshoLocken ; 01113 of 100 acres, between 13 olmesbure and Frankford, on the turnpike; 100 acres, 1 mile from Mount Holly; 75 acres, n lar Northeast Sta tion, Maryland; 180 scree in the oil region, Venango county, Pa..; and various other properties, both in the city and country, Apply to J. H. WATERS, f,4 110 nentl, FOURT If str-eot. tp: HOTEL PROPERTY FOR SALE MS by the subscriber, at WOODBURY, New Jorsoy, now doing a good business. Possession given at any time. ja3o.lm* JOHN P. PHIPPS. MITO LET.— The second• story front and the entire third story of our building, FNER 3: BROTHER, ja2o-0m 324 CHESTNUT Street, below FOURTH. FOR SALE AND EXCHANGE .I: A large number of Farms to the adjoining (lon*. tier, States of Delaware, Maryland, New York, and Now Jersey, averaging from 10 to 200 acres of land, Those wishing to exchange or purchase would do well to call end examine my_Rogister of Farms. Aeely . to jta-if M. YET TIT, No. 809 W&L - Drul Street, IARM FOR SALFi.—A FARM, in excellent state of cultivation, containing ilfty-one acres, (nine of which are woodland,) pleasantly situated in Limerick township, Montgomery county, two and t half miles from the Limerick station, on the Reading Railroad, is offered for gale. Price—Five thousand dot tars Ciis 000). Apply on the promises. noltl-tf -o,4„uttEt, 8 , (fI APL sa FOR SALE—A Desirable FARM, —.K.containiu g 95 acres of enperior laud, near Bandy Run Station, North Pennsylvania Railroad, with first class Stone buildings. Principal part of the purchase. money can remain at 5 per cent. Apply to P.. PETTTT, iel No. 809 NALNUT &rod, EPRESS" -- BOOK AND JOB PRINTING. The attention of the Bradman Community IP re• speotfully invited to the New Book and Job kr-Mt ing Moe of Tax Pease, which has been fitted's* with New Material, in the most Complete Manner, and is now prepared to exeoute ) in a satisiaotury !kyle, every variety of Printing. POSTERS, DEEDS, BALL TICKETS & PROGRAM:IKB% BOOKS, BILL HEADS, ERECIIINnth X.&29IFAOTTINIMIS NEOHAII3OII6 LAWTI7OI AIIOTIONZERSI PIMLICO will be supplied with any detaription ot Prbetal required, at Short Nolo, and on the most Noe dedeble Tina. 140. V SALES BY AUCTIOS. UAL MiTATS RT PJLIVAIS IVitat veluAbLE FARM,iihunenvehoster county, PIP GROUND-BENT, RA 4 per nnntnn. LOANS AND' tiTOTK ==2== For account of whom it may concern-- 0 Londe (6600 mil) Bwnhtra Bnlliond Mummy. EXECUTOR'S SALL Estate of Alexander Tower, dee'd -20 share Reliance Insurance Centpeny,per SOO Sale at Nos. 139 and 141 South Fourth Street Solo No. 117 North 'reign &met. NEAT ROLTSEBODD FURNITURE; BRUSSELS CARPETS, &c. On Friday Morning, MACHINERY AND IROI4. JACOB O. NEAFII, JOHN P. ItZVYI BEACH awl PALMER WNW PHILADELPHIA. MERRICK & SONS, INOINEEBAY AND MACHININTri. FROPONA,LN, PHILADELPHIA, January 29. 1864 G. H. OROSMAN, Deputy Quartermaster General FOR SALE AND TO LET. BOOK AND JOB PRINTING. ESTABLISHMENT. No. 417 CHESTNUT STRE.ET, PHILADELPHIA. HANDBILLS, PAtigglSTS' Lmsm3l BONDS, MOItTGAGES, CERTIFICATES, PAPER BOOKS, PAMPHLETS, CARDS, CHECKS, DRAFTS, REOEIpTB,I BILLS OF LADING, 'Arm, HEADINGS, 011710288, BANKS, RAIL- GOAD AND INSURANOI COMPANIZRI. wry, CIRCULARS, NOTES, ETC., EN., ETd.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers