Ti!r,r gtt Vrtss. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1863 TAE NEWS. AFFAIRS, in the Southwest have their usual cha 'fader of alertness and enterprise. A deg:latch from Knoxville states that East Tennessee is at present cleared of all important rebel forces, the latest fight, whiob occurred at Roan Springs, having resulted in 'the rout of the rebels. A gallant cavalry fight or -coked at Lawrenceburg, Ttnn., where lea men under Major.Eitzgibbon defeated three times their number of rebels. A large force of guerillas have made a raid upon Western Kentucky, tearing up railroads and burning bridges, and capturing a num ber of prominent citizens in the neighborhood of Union city. Price's forces have mini been defeat ed at Pine Bluff, Arkansas. The meet operations on Canton, Miss., by Mcnerson's forces from Nieltsburg, are thought to have been successful in preventing a formidable raid by rebel cavalry on Idemphie. Refugees are still flocking into our lines from the rebel territory. A COICSIDERABLIt engagement has occurred at Colliersville, Tennessee, on the line of railroad from Chattanooga. The enemy attacked a body of Rooker's troops in heavy force, but, after a severe fight, were repulsed. General Geary and staff are reported prisoner& Garranat Baa.oo's forage train, sent up L;)oltout 'alley, was recently captured by the forces of Ge neral Thomas. In the same army,an altercation oc curred between Colonel Loomis . add Major flerrod, •of the 9th Illinois Cavalry, resulting in the death of the former. Rerrod's life was with difficulty Bared from the fury of the soldiers. Ireretmorseu from North Carolina continues favorable to the cause, of the Union. The Raleigh Standard regards the elections in the North as a blow to the last hopes of the Confederacy. A new rebel ram, built at Wilmington, is mentioned in come. ponder= as being ready to make an attempt against the blockade. A avrAirsnir arrival from Europe has brought some interesting news of the progress of the Mexi can and Polish questions. In his, speech to the Mexican deputation, it is remarked that the Era- Teror made no mention of the Archduke Maximi lian, who may Possibly be abandoned for a French place or general, as doubt exists whether France 'will offer the guarantees which the Archduke re. quires. A parting breakfast was given to Mr. Beecher at Manchester. Ten speeches of Jefferson Davis to the troops in the Southwest are reported in the rebel papers. He recommends conciliation to what he is pleased to term his misguided brethren of Tennessee. Tux Mexicali papers state that quarrels between the French soldiery and the people are of common Occurrence in the capital of M.exwo, and numbers of the French have been assassinated. The guerillas are growing bolder and more numerous, and lately a republican demonstration occurred in one of the theatres. The rumor that France desires to aban don Mexico is current in British,correspondence. Fonmnarn news of the elections enlarges the aha• 'raster of the victories achieved by the Union party. *Nearly all the unconditional Union candidates for 'Congress in Maryland have been elected by ent. phatio majorities. Colonel Creamed], of the First district, is perhaps the only exception, having been defeated by Crisfield, the present Representative. The returns from the West convey no definite result, though it is very probable that the Radicals have carried Missouri. IN behalf of the Episcopal clergy who signed the protest against Bishop Hopkins , view of the Bible through slavery, Rev. A. De Wolfe Howe has writ• ten a strong and unanswerable letter replying to the Bishop of Vermont. The South not a Nation. :When Mr. GLADSTONE ventured to affirm, somo time ago, to a British audience, that "JEFFERSON DAVIS had made the South a great'nation," he was going one step farther than even the editor, of, the Richmond Whig would care to tread. Some time last month JEFssnsott DAvis made a speech to some .of the rebel troops in Alahama, in which he was reported to have said : "May you live to see the hag of our infant Repub. lie the ensign of a great nation, floating proudly among the national colors of the world." The Richmond Whig is not well pleased with this species of rhetoric, and gives utte rance to its displeasure in these words " We do not think the President could have used the language here attributed to him ; but, if he did, -we feel sure that it escaped him inadvertently. The people of these States are protesting now with all the energy and all the means they possess, with life and fortune and sacred honor staked on the issue, against the Yankee theory that the Union of which they were lately members was a Nation.' Their belief is that that Union was, and still more clearly and indisputably this Confederacy is, an association of nations, a partnership of Republics, and they re cognize no such word as nation and ' national When applied'to that association." We incline to the belief that the candor 'with which the Whig propounds this princi ple of government will cost it more than one subscriber; for, to say the least, it is the coolest attempt we have yet seen to denationalize the "0 -called Southern Con federacy." And yet the theoryis not an ex traordinary one: It is the old doctrine of disintegration, of State sovereignty, of which south Carolina was = the .foremost champion, and which to-day numbers among its warmest advocates the REEDS, and ThnDLEs, and INGEnsoLLs, of our State. Mr. GLADSTONE could not have offered a greater insult to the South than he did in affirming that it was a " great nation." As for the Richmond Whig, however, in combatting the theory of the centralization of power into which Mr. DAVIS inadvertently fell, it is guilty of the grossest plagiarism. At least three months ago, a New York Copperhead paper called the Daily News, denounced our present Adminis tration for its "attempts at centralization," upon the ground that a "military despot ism" was sought to be established ; and the News itself did not claim the issue as a new one in American politics. More than this, its Richmond coteruporary, not content with plagiarism, makes that plagiarism the occa sion of a nice bit of sophistry. It is untrue that the people of the South have refused to cognize the Words " nation " as applied to tineir pseudo government. How long has it been since a " national " conscription was ordered by the " Confederate" government? How long since a "national currency" was decided upon by the same august body? How long since Confederate M. C's waxed eloquent upon the question of a design for a - Confederate flag ? Nevertheless, we are con tent to accept the argument of the Whig as just, without any: very close scrutiny—for it is not every species of argument that will stand the test, as is abundantly proved in this instance. We accept the admission that the South is not a nation, and does not aspire to be a nation. Upon this basis it will be a very easy matter to re• establish our Federal Union, when the military power of ibe Rebellion has been destroyed, and peace dawns upon the land. Mr. Seward's Speech at Auburn. The Secretary of State has not made many speeches since he accepted a position in the Cabinet, though there are few men whose utterances are as welcome as his; few, who, by reason of ability and experi -ence, are entitled to declare the dangers and duties of the nation. But Mr. SEWARD can serve the people even better than through counsel, and his responsibility as --a Cabi net officer is sufficient reason for his usual silence. When he does speak it is with the influence of a man trusted by the peo ple, who does not waste his words upon topics of secondary importance. His speech at Auburn, New York, has, there fore, weight and emphasis ; it is the un premeditated utterance of a mind which has thoroughly studied the causes of na tional misfortune, and perfectly understands the methods of removing them forever. The important truth which is the basis of Mr. SEWARD'S argument, - which he so repeatedly affirms and undeniably proves, is this—J.' ABRAHAM LINCOLN must be Presi dent of all the States by - virtue of his -election of 1860, or not only the peace of the Union, but the Union itself is forever lost." Justice must reign, and this war must enthrone it in South Carolina as well as in Pennsylvania. The whole country was insulted when the South ern States refused to abide by the decision of the country when it elected Mr. Lirworx. Those who voted for Mr. Doti 'WAS, Or Mr. BRECMIsTRIDJE, or Mr. BELL, were as much insulted as those who voted for the successful candidate, for the mo ment the decision of the people was out 'raged the question ceased to be of party, and becamb national. -is now purely na :tional, and the nation must decide it upon '6lie principles which Mr. SEWARD has so -ably set forth. We are to remember that the Administration cannot be divorced from the Government, and to understand that it is only through the Administration that the people can exert their energies in defence of the country. "The instinct of enemies is infallible," Mr. SEWARD shrewdly says, and our enemies have instinctively hailed all victories over the Administration astheir ‘ovv.u. But, after all, is the it.merifta pee, pie to be taught by the Richmond journals that a Copperhead success is a Union de feat? . We commend this noble address of our distinguished statesman to men of all par ties, for to all it is addressed. Its author has recognized the loyalty of the Democra tic masses, and, discarding party himself, has calmly and earnestly appealed to the people alone. To eloquence the address makes no pretence, for the simplest state ment of these great truths is most forcible ; yet, Mr. SEwnito is eloquent by necessity, and closed with a definition of that peace desired by all loyal men, in which his thought, because it is rooted in truth, blos soms more purely into beauty. General Burnside's Position. The statement in our telegraphic column, that East Tennessee has been cleared of the rebels, would be highly cheering, if it were a little better authenticated. Knowing, as we do, that the life of the rebellion, de pends upon the recovery of this territory frorn our possession, we <cannot so easily believe that it will be relinquished without a desperate effort upon the part of General BRAGG. A Chattanooga letter, dated Oc tober 27, says: "It is believed hero that BII.RNSIDE will very shortly find himself menaced by a strong force from LEE'S ar my, by way of Lynchburg and Bristol, Va , and that between the two forces his only safety will be retreat, and the relinquish ment of the u of East Tennessee, save the Chattanooga corner held by the Army of the Cumloerland." We do not entertain a single doubt that the rebels contemplate effecting such a pur pose as this. They are urged to it alike by, the voice of military necessity and by the cry of starvation that comes up from the rebel capi tal ; and, so far as we can judge, no other plan of campaign now remains to their choice. It may therefore be expected that a combined movement of the force under BRAGG, and a portion of that under LEE, will speedily be made against Knoxville, if in deed, its execution has not already com menced ; and it may further be expected that it will be of a most desperate and de termined character. If these...views are col.- rect, a forward movement of the Army of the Potomac must become absolutely neces sary. The situation grows decidedly inte resting. lisw French Fiction and Mexican Facts. The Honiteur is the official paper of the French Government. Established over one hundred years ago, it has long been_ the avowed medium through which successive Flench rulers have communicated to the world, openly or by inuenda, such political views or information as they may desire to publieitate. The first NAPOLEON used to write in it. After . him, Louts XVIII., who was rather a man of letters than a monarch, frequently contributed to its columns. Crum - Ims X. was too lazy to write even a paragraph for it,` and his Ministers spared Lows PlarirrrE exer- him the trouble deed great personal surveillance ever- the 111aviteur, scarcely a day passing without some paragraph from his pen appearing in it, and, while he was in or near" Paris, proof:slips of each day's publication being submitted to him for;correction. After the Revolution of 1848, the actual editor of the Monitevr, for some months, was L TINE, then Foreign Minister. When Louts NAPOLEON became President of the French Republic, DE PERSIGNY virtually edited the paper, at the Palace of the Ely see Bourbon, where NAroLEox resided Empire, up to this time, M. MOCQUARD; private secretary to NA - romlorr, super vises the ' = Moniteur, but his master, is be lieved to dictate many of the semi-ofb.'cia but sometimes very significant paragraphs In fact, the ilfoniteur communicates pre cisely what the Emperor desires to have known, believed, or dreaded, and is there fore a power in the land. It is very dif ferent from the London Gazette, which is the organ of the British-Government, con taining official, parliamentary, and bank ruptcy advertisements, but not one syl lable of AWNS or politics, if we except an- nouncements of royal births, deaths, and marriages, or formal notices of promo- tions, preferments, dismissals, or changes of official appointments, and in most of these it is generally far behind the daily London journals. The Prime Dlinister, it is true, generally has some layored journal through which official changes are first announced, or some par- ticular policy asserted, vindicated, or de nied. 'With Lord PALMERSTON the Globe and the Morning Post are understood to enjoy this confidence, which is sometimes given to the Times also, and when Lord DERRY was in office, the Standard and. Morning Herald were understood to be his especial papers; but there is no journal in London at all in the position occupied by the Moniteur at Paris. We do not suppose that Queen VicaorisA ever wrote or dictated a newspaper paragraph in her life, whereas " the fine Italian hand" of NAPOLEON is frequently to be seen in the Moniteur, and his Ministers write largely.in it, under his inspection, when occasion may seem to re quire their inspiration. The 2tioniteur has lately published couleur de rose despatches from Mexico, evidently intended to impress Europe with the 'idea that everything has become Frenchified in that country ; that Jrr.tauzz is utterly friend less there ; that Mr. Lificoix• was deter mined not to acknowledge or receive Seiior RomErto, the ambassador from the Repub lic ; that San Luis Potosi was eager in its intention of recognizing the: alue- of French intervention ; that NAPOLEON'S fete, on the 15th of * August, was celebrated by the Mexican population with the utmost enthu siasm ; that the voice of that population was overpoweringly in favor of the suppression of the Republic and the establishment of the Monarchy ; that the Indians Nl , ere espe cially 'desirous of seeing the Archduke MAXIMILIAN at the head of, the new Mexi can empire ; and that, in one word, things were progressing so entirely in accordance w'th French views, wishes, and interests, that the "Golden Age might soon be expect ed to return upon eartb, with its scene in Mexico The news from Mexico, received in this country and known to be true, is very dif ferent from the rose-tinted statements in the Maniteur. The French are -in actual pos session of only a very small portions of Mexico. Though, after a campaign of eighteen months, they penetrated from the port of Vera Cruz to the city of Mexico, whic;h they now occupy ; , they are unable to attempt any further advance or conquest ; the guerilla, bands of JUAREZ hover around the capital ; the populatioi of the Republic, which is about 8,500,000, has not accepted the political change which a few traitors, calling themselves "the Notables," and acting under instructions from the Tuile ries, framed as far back as October, 1.861, have impudently proclaimed ; MAXIMILIAN of Austria is personally neither known nor desired in Mexico ; to maintain him on the newly-erected throne, a French army must permanently and powerfully occupy the country, and-it is doubtful whether France will allow this to be done ; finally, not only has Senor MATIAS ROMERO returned to Washington, as minister from the Republic of Mexico, but he has been cordially received by President Lrncornw, who thereby virtually , ignores the pretended empire which a few traitors proclaimed, under the pressure of French bayonets. The Moniteur has forgotten to announce, what other journals state as a fact, that Frahm refuses to guarantee the loan of $150,000,000 which it 'was intended should be raised to give MAxrurriew a start in Mexico as Emperor, to discharge part of the former indebtedness of Mexico to Eu ropean countries, and to defray the cost of the French expedition. In consequence, it is further stated, there is " a screw loose," in the arrangement between NeToLnox and MAxihrmAn, and less prospect than before of the Austrian Prince ever reigning- in Mexico. His acceptance of the crown was too conditional to please NAPOLEON. Ere long, most probably, we shall have the ,ilfrniteur Confessing that Mexico was not quite well pleased with the prospect of a German ruler, but was willing to accept -a j3Ol4Ai ARTS 0r Multafx from iiArOLEON. The rapid extent to which the petroleum trade of the country has increased within a few years past, lies added materially to our national wealth, and has_ probably con tributed more than • any • other source to swell our national commerce. American rockoil is now exported to almost every quarter of the globe. Frdm the first of January until the close of October, 1862, there were 5,195„481 gallons . shipped from New York alone.- For the same period this year New York e has exported 15,503,106 gallons ; Philadelphiai• 4,208,244. gallons ; Boston, 1, 004, 840 gallons; Baltim 0re,806,001 gallons. The increase of the New York trs.de from over five to over fifteen million gallons in a single year, may be taken as a fair average of the increased shipments of the other ports, and shows how rapidly the traffic is being developed. In round num bers, the total value of the exports from the ports abOve named, from January first until the close.of last month, will not fall short of ten millions of dollars ; so that hereafter petroleum is fairly entitled to rank among the staples of the country ; •and Pennsylva nia, which for the past three years has yielded almost two million barrels annually, according to the beet estimates, may claim thglargest share of credit for having swelled the commerce in this article to its present dimension& It has never been a secret that rock oil, or Barbadoes tar, as it is sometimes called, is indigenous, if we may use the term, to very many counties, including the British West Indies, which Philadelphia has, never theless, supplied with 22,682 gallons thus far this year: But it would seem that the Pennsylvania and Canada wells have a mo nopoly of the markets of the world, what ever be ,the cause. In the Antwerp, Liver pool, Hamburg market reports, and the case is the same with a hundred other European cities and towns, the price of " Pennsyl vania crude" and " Pennsylvania refined" is a standard quotation ; just as " the fiend ish spirit of Abolitionism" is a favorite quo tation with some of our Copperhead news papers. Whether it will always be thus we cannot say. In the course of a few years other nations may become our rivals in the production of petroleum. Already we hear that' a district has been discovered in Russia of similar formation to that of the oil-producing region . of Pennsylvania, and other parts of America," and a late Paris letter states that Col. Gowaw, made famous by clearing the harbor of Sevastopol of the `sunken war vessels, has obtained a grant of fifty thousand acres from the Russian Go vernment, which he is about to "prospect" for oil, being now en route for this country to obtain the necessary machinery. A gain, we are informed that mineral oil has been discovered at Gaspe, a thriving part of Ca nada East, where its existence was indicated fully twenty years ago in the geological re ports of that section. The well is a flowing one, and the oil "of a pale greenish-brown color, and, even in its crude state, less offen sive than some of the refined oil of Ennis killen." But notwithstanding these disco veries, and others that we cannot now recall to mind; we do not much fear that our com merce in petroleum will ever suffer from foreign competition. If the trade should ever fall off, it will only be when the wells have become exhausted ; and, from the enor mously-increased yield of the past year, it is safe to infer that the possibility of such a result is yet very remote. ONE of the Copperhead papers devotes a half column of editorial ethics to the ex planation of the late election& " Why we were defeated" is the tune it sings to. So many words and sentences might have been dispensed with. The elucidation needs but few. Why were you dofeated, quotha ? Divide the dividend of loyalty by the divi sor of disloyalty, and the quotient will be the answer. Copperheadism has been de feated because it is Copperheadism. Why were Satan and his cohorts compelled to break acquaintance with., the angels of Heaven? or why did Adam and Eve quit Paradise at short notice ? The Copperheads have sinned in the sight of the whole world, and it is just that, in the sight of the whole world, such base defection should be signal ly rebuked. Along the turbulent stream of time, our ships of State, forming the arma ment of the nation, shall sail secure, not to be stranded in the shoals of Copperheadism, not to be caught and held to destruction by its insidious snags In our Union we have erected an edifice which no power on this earth can destroy. The sacreligious hands of traitors may be the first to attempt it. The rains may descend, and the floods may come, and the winds may blow and beat upon that house, but it shall not fall. It is founded upon a rock. Under'``the IiVA_SELIN farTON_ Special Despatc,lies to The Press. From the Army Or the Potomac; Information received from the Army of the Po tomac state that the rebels still hold the river. line from Sulphur Springs to Falmouth. Our cavalry are on the front. Nearly all of, our al& and wounded have been sent away. The 2d, 6th, and 7th Wisconsin Regimen* of the Iron Brigade, in voting for State °Misers, on Tues day, gave 574 Republican and 9 Opposition votes. _ The return from the sth Tirisooricin has not yet been received. By the accidental falling of a shell, this afternoon at the arsenal, five men were injured. There wan a large amount of explosive material in the immediate vicinity, which fortunately eacaped ignition. Treatment of Our Prisoners at Richmond. • Mr. BOHAN" who was captured in the vicinity of Occoquan last Christmas, and lately returned to his home in Alexandria, has, among other things, informed the Journal that Castle Thunder is the only prison in Richmond where prisoners are al lowed to purchase anything. Shortly after the bat tle of Chickamauga, about two hundred wounded pricOnms arrived at Richmond from the field. TheY were almost all in a fandshing and -starving condi , Ron ; being three days on the road between the two points, and all they had to eat during that time was four hard crackers each. On their arrival at Richmond, they were taken to the Libby Prison, where they laid two days longer without having , their wounds dressed, and during all of which time they were not given -a mouthful : to eat. Some of them who were fortunate enough'to have a little money offered as high , as five dollars for a loaf of bread, but the officers in charge would not let it be carried to them. -Sir. BOHANA.IT left Richmond on the flag-of-truce boat in company with about tyro hundred other Union prisoners. When the vessel neared Drury's Bluff, the prisoners were made to lie flat down on the deck of the boat, and a special guard was placed over them, that they might be pre vented from seeing the fortification& One of the most reliable detectives in the Govern ment service, at Alexandria, states that a large num ber of persons belonging to the rebel army are now infesting the counties of Stafford and Prince ham. These men are mostly residents in these counties, and lie around home during the day, and at night go out, committing depredatiorui on the property of Union citizens. - • The certificate of indebtedness, homed prior to the 4th of • March last, wee recently ordered to be re- deemed by the Secretary of the Treasury. The amount of it is said to be $84,000,000. The LTte Treaty. Jouu G. NIOOLAN. the President's private Beare• tarp, has returned to Washington after three months' absence in the West. He has brought with him the treaty recently con• eluded with a bend of Ute Indians, in Colorado, by which the United Staten acquire a title to all the mineral lands discovered in that Territory. Commander CHAELne CorAnn has been ordered to command the Wachusett, and Commander OLAF= the 3/scotch. The iron-elad monitor Sangamon, which has been doing duty for some time in the Chesapeake, and on the Manes and Rappahannock rivers, arrived at the navy yard this morning for repairs. From New Orleans by River Telegraph. Canto, Nov. 3.—The steamer Live Oek arrived this evening from New Orleans, having - left on the 26th. She brought 60 hluts. sugar for Memphis!, 160 for St. Louis, 20 for Cairo, and n bbls. molasses for Cairo. She was fired into, going down, at St. Francis Island. Several shots passed through the cabin and pilothouse. No one hurt. Saw no guerillas coming up. New Orleans paper's of the 26th contain no news. SAN Fa/amino, Nov. 3.—Sailed_, ship Young America, for Liverpool. The jobbers continue doing a fair , business with the interior, otherwise there are unmistakable signs of an early closing fall trade. Iroportere are selling but few goods. James Allen, formerly editor, died at Washoe on the slat, . P-Nir YOEK, NOII. 6.—The ship Europa reports that on September 28, in latitude t° 36' south, and longitude 26° 23', she was chased by a full•rigged Drigi but It co m ing On 114514. Cm) boat iiiett Of ker. THE PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1863. Petroleum. ASHINEITON, D. C., Nov. 5. Detective Service. Debts. Naval. Sin Francisco. Vessel Chased by a Pirate. THE ELECTIONS. 35,000 Union Ilkalortty hi -New York. MARYLAND FOR EIVIANCIPATION, Webster, Davis, Thomas, Holland, Golds bortiught and Crisfield Fleeted to Congress 'rite 301Lect1on m New Jersey. IVMVir New YOnrc, Nov. s.—The Times estimates the Union majority in New York State at thirty-five thousand. It makes the Demodratic majority in the city 10,000; the Tritmrte makes it 18,992 ; the World 20,182. The World makes the Legislature stand as foL lows : Union Opposition; Union majority' „t 4 34 The Times makes the Legislature as follows : Senate. House. —2l 83 .11 46 Union Opposition Union majority .10 37 Concerning the oityjudgea elected the Times has he following: Supreme Court—Joitah Sutherland, Dem. Superior Court—Samuel B. Garvin. Dem. Common Pleas—Albert Cardozo, Dem. Marine Court—Florence McCarthy. The only candidates in doubt are Judges Bos worth and Mequon. As the returns stood last night, Bosworth's majority was 484. Front the Fifth and Seventh districts, Twenty-first ward ; Twelfth district, Twenty-second ward, and Second district, Eighteenth ward, McCurints vote had not been re• eeived. According to the 'ratio of last election for Comptroller, these districts would elect REC01111(1 by 412 majority. It is to be hoped, however, that he has been suocessfully`cut there. The Tribune makes MoCurm have 600 plurality over Bosworth. MARYLAND.. BALTIMORE, Nov. s.—The returns come in slowly, and acme doubt exists as to the result in the 'First district, but it is generally conceded that Crisfield has been elected over Creswell, the Unconditional Union candidate; the former having received the aupport of the anti-Emancipationists and many Se. cession - hits. who are said to have taken the oath of allegiance to vote for him. ebs ter, Davis, and Frank Thomas, are, of course, elected in the Second, Third, and Fourth districts, there being no opposition. The Fifth district is un certain. Holland, Union Emancipation candidate, rims well, and poaaibly may have defeated Calvert. In the vote for Goldaborough, the State has em phatically decided in favor of emancipation. NIONV JERSEY. TRENTON, Nov. 6. We stun up the result of the he election in this State as follows: Senators holding over.. Senators newly elected In the House the Democrats elect 31 members, and the Republicans 20, leaving one in doubt in Burling ton county. The Legislature will now stand Be.n Dem. Senate '7 14 Assembly 20 39 On joint ballot, 63 Democratiand 20 Republicans with one in doubt. • ILT-Th OILS OAIIIO, Nov. s.—The returns indicate that the Thirteenth Congressional disti jot has gonein favor of the Union candidate. ST. Louis, Nov. s.—The county election in 1111. note, as far as heard from, shoWs large. Union gains. The following counties give Union majorities: Sangamon 260, Morgan 200, Grundy 400, Marshall 200, Logan 200, Will 350, Ford 41, Lasalle 600, Ma. con 500, Madison NO, The following give Democratic Majorities : Peoria 400 Tazewell 260, Adams TOO. The Republicans in Sprin,glield had an enthusias. tic jollification last night MISSOURI ST. Louis, Nov. s.—The foUovving, counties give Conservative majorities: Potter:.. . ..... . ........ . .. ........ 86 De 'Kalb BS St. Francle ...300 Clinton 467 Clay county, one of the most rebellious counties, 1,260. SacksOn county gives a Radical majority of 411. THE 'WAR IN THE SOUTHWEST. Fast Tennessee Clear of Rebel Forces. THE REBELS REPULSED AT PINE BLUFF, ARK BRILLIANT CAVALRY FIGHT AT LAW RENCESURG, TENN -'The Guerillas in West Keittucky. from Gen: Thomas Desvatell - Guerilla Forces Defeated, and Bragg's Forage Train Captured. THE FIGHT AT - PINE BLUFF, AVM A BATTLE AT COLLIERSVILLE piar*o§Tter..4 , =3ll 11)14!=iniz**wrilluksinlisi GENERAL GEARY A PRISONER. WASHITTOTOri, NOV. s_—Major General Thomas officially communicates to Major General Halleek, under the date of Chattanooga, Nov. 4: That Col. Fitzgibbon, of the 13th Michigan Infantry, over. took the combined guerilla force of Cooper, Kirk, Williams, and Scott, numbering 400, on the morn ing of the 3d, at Lawrenceburg, 35 miles south of Columbia, and after, a severe hand•to.hand fight, defeated them, with a loss on his part of three men Wounded and eight horses killed. The rebel loss was eight killed, seven wounded, and twenty.four prisoners,' among them one captain and two lieu , ten ante. Brass's forage train, sent up Lookout Valley, in front of his position, was captured, the train sent to camp, and the train guard captured. FROM EAST TENNESSEE AND ARKANSAS. CINCINNATI, Nov. 5.—A despatch, dated Knox vine, November 4th, says that East Tennessee is once more clear of the rebels, except guerillas, who infest our wagon treble and mails above. The light at Roan Springs resulted in a rebel rout and lose of 17 killed and 62 wounded. Colonel Garrard pursued them beyond Kingsport. The situation isaatielactory, the weather flue, and the troops in good spirits. Arkanaas advice's' say that Mannaduke attacked our forces at Pine Bluff, on the 28th, and was re pulsed with considerable loss. Most of the negroes in Mississippi have been run off to Georgia and Alabama. FROM NASHVILLE NASHVILLIE, Nov. 4.—Major Fitzgibbon, of the 14th Michigan Cavalry, with 120 men, met at Law renceburg, fifty-flve miles beyond Columbia, the combined forces of Cook, Kirk, Williams, and Scott's rebel cavalry, numbering 400 men, yesterday. After four desperate charges, resulting in a loss to the rebels of eight killed, seven wounded, and twen ., ty-four prisoners, the rebels retreated. There were none killed on the Federal side, and but four wounded. Major Fitzgibbon had his horse killed under him. A fleet of boats arrived here yederday by Up river. There is eight feet of water on the shoals REBEL PRISONERS AT . NASHVILLE. NASHVILLE, Nov. 3.—Rebel prisoners of Wheeler's command continue to come in: One hundred and twenty. nine were at the headquarters of the army police today, seventeen of them officers, ranking horn lieutenants to majors. Nineteen took the oath of allegiance—conscript Tennesseans principally. THE GUERILLAS IN WESTERN KENTUCKY. COLUMBUS, Ky., Nov. 3.—A large force of gue rillas, supposed to number 1,000, passed between here and Union City on Sunday night. They were commanded by Newsom and Faulkner, and tore up the railroad track, burned bridges, cut the telegraph wires, and committed other depredations. A train of discovery went out on the road yester- day, taking one company of infantry, but returned last night. The telegraph was working last night to Union city. It will require about ten day' to repair the railroad. PADUCAH, Ky., Nov. passenger train to Mayfield was captured by guerillas at Mayfield yes terday. A freight train was also captured at the same time and place. Considerable excitement pre. veils here, but up to ten o'clock nothing further has occurred. The rebels were scattered along the road at different stations for ten miles this side of May- field, but did not show themselves until the train passed up. Report says several persons were taken prisoners;among them Hon. Lucien Anderson, John Bollinger, and E. B. T. Wyman. The telegraph Wires leading tram Paducah to every point were out. THE FIGHT AT PTE BLUFE', ARKANSAS- RhtitAY OF Quito, Nov. s.—The Memphiepapere of the 2d have an indefinite account of a fight at Pine Bluff, Arkansas. Marmaduke attacked the place *with 3,000 men, and was repulsed with considerable loos. The garrison consisted of 700 cavalry, under Col. Clayton, and lost 12 killed and 15 wounded. Loring's rebel division is around Canton, Miss. He has about 8,000 infantry; 3,000 guarding Mobile and the Southern railroads. General Lee's cavalry force is about 10,000 strong, comprising four divisions under Jackson, Crosby, Rose, and Rodney. Crosby's force is between Jackson and Vicksburg, Ross' is between l3enton and Mooree Bluff, on the Big Black; Chalmer's is between Grenada and Ox ford, and Rodney about Corinth. At last accounts Lee was above Corinth with 6 00 men. Pillow's headquarters are at Columbia, Mimi& sippi. An attack on Memphis, in great force, WAS only preventedby our recent demonstrations in Canton, Numbers are said to be heartily Nick of the war 'and would gladly give up their negroes to stop it. Accounts from Little Rook report that Prioe's force has retreated beyond the Red River, his ca valry only occupying Atkadelphia.. Major General Ord pawed through here to-day, en route for Louis ville.' AN ENGAGEMENT AT COLLIERSVILLE. earimo, "ILL., Nov. 6.—Another attack was made by the reboLi on Colitorivillo, on the Memphis and Charleston Railroad, on the evening of - the 3d in stant, but after a brief fight, the enemy were re• pulsed. Brigadier Geniral Geary and thirteal of his staff* are among the prisoners taken. Lieut. Colonel Loomis and Major Herrod, of the 6th Illinois Cavalry, had an altercation when at the suppers table, in Germantown, in the evening. Her fired four shots at Loomis as he left the table, killtng him instantly, Col. Hatch, of the 2d lowa Regiment, was obliged to draw his sword on the soldiers to prevent them from lynching Herrod on the spot. The remains of Loomis were taken to Memphis, and Hcrrod was also conveyed there in irons. Reinforcements are being sent to Colliersville. The above news is brought by the steamer E. Perry, which arrived here to-day, from Memphis on the 4tb, with 400 bales of cotton. General Grierson left for below today. THU sarcums OF EAST SENNESSIIIII. Worrestondenee of the N. Y. Times. I em told by the best informed citizens here and at Jasper, ten miles above, that we' are virtually in poeseesion LOW of the only coal mines on whloh the rebels have depended to supply their important foundries, and shops at Rome and Atlanta. At Tracy City, Tenn., in the Cumberland Mountains, a abort distance from the Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad, in the Raocooa Mountains, Ga., three or four miles from Sbellmound Station, on the came railroad, and again in the Cumberland Mountains, on the north aide of the Tennessee, and not far above Chattanooga, are the only mines worked by the rebels for coal, previous to our occupation of East Tennessee. The mints in the Raccoon Mountains are of large extent, and ale connected by a railway track down to Shellmound Station, the first station east of Bridgeport. They are known as the Gordon mines, but as the Gordons failed some time ago, they were purchased by the rebel Government, and have been latterly worked on Government account. Severed thousand bushels of coal now lie at the mines, ready for use. We will use it. In the mountain, near the station, is also an immense cave, known as Moira jack Cave, containing very large supplies of nitre, which has been extensively used by the rebe s, they obtaining most of their saltpetre in this- region. The cave is a great natural curiosity, and is scarcely lees interesting than the Mammoth. Cave of Ken tucky. It has been explored for three miles, and through it runs Nickajack creek, a stream upon willed" you can launch a "dug•out," and with a glaring torch pursue your winding way, and inspect ilightiul chasms, dismal caverns, and all the won ders and terrors of nature's inward commotion to your hearVe content. Bragg is said to have remarked that the loss of these coal and nitre works was a greater blow to the rebel army than the loss of a battle. If we may believe the assertions of people here, relative to the condition of rebel resources further South, then the loss is really of vast importance to the enemy. THE OAPTURIE OF LOOKOUT MOUNTAIN . . This movement completely opens communication both by river and rail, and is hailed with much joy. Wagon train' and pauk•mules can now have a rest. The railroad will not be in full operation for a couple of weeks yet, in consequence of the un finished state of two very important bridges, the one over the Tennessee at Bridgeport, and one over "Running Waters," a small but rapid stream which runs through a ceep valley or ravine, rendering a bridge one hundred and twenty feet high-necessary, though of but three short spans. The military wilt soon construct this, however, as they already have that over I , fickajack creek, at Sheilmound. But the important bridge over the Tennessee which was commenced sixty days ago, under a contract to 'be finished in forty days, is not yet half done; and unless more vigor is put into the work, will not be for forty days more. BILVS.RE FIGHT EAST TENTMEISIZE. A correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazette, under 'date of Knoxville, November Ist, writes as follows : At B o'clock cn Friday Col. Adams, with the Ist and 11th Kentucky, attacked Ashby's brigade; and recaptured a wagon train, which had been taken by the rebels at Sweetwater a few days before, and three hundred prisonefs. Ile commenced falling beck, and found the brigades of Vaughn and Cleve. land in his flank and rear. The rebels in front charged and recaptured part of the train and the prisoners. Col. Adams drove them two miles, kill ing fifteen and wounding forty-five. Though sur rounded, he held hie ground till night, and under the cover of darkness rejoined Wolford near Lon don. Rep. Dem . 4 9. . 5 3 Next day General Sanders advanced and drove the enemy four miles. They charged on this advance, the Bth Michigan and 112th Illinois, driving them back, Sanders advancing steadily. The fight lasted all day. Our loss was four killed and forty-five wounded. Major Owens was captured, and Captain Stanley wounded. Lieut. .Tones, of the 45th, was killed; Captain Buck and Lieut. Clark, of the Bth Michigan, were wounded; Capt. Martin, of the 11th Kentucky, was wounded. Our loss during the three days was four hundred and :eighty-three killed, wounded; and missing. The rebel loss was over six hundred. A detachment, under Colonel Pennebaker, had an engagement south - of the river, near Marysville, with 600 rebels, and drove them back with a loss of 1 killed and 1 wounded. The rebels had 20 killed, 48 wounded, and 6 captured. A fight occurred at Ashville' between the new tat North Carolina and 600 rebels. The recruits behaved splendidly, punishing the rebels Severely, and got off with two killed and six wounded. A train escort punished a guerilla party of eighty near Tazewell on Friday. Although' uniformly successful at all points, you perceive the occupation of East Ten nessee is not altogether so pleasant. Matters above remain quiet JEFFERSON DAVIS IN THE SOUTHWEST SPEECH AT . MOBILE. Mora the Mobile Register.] The shortness of the notice caused the turnout of the local forces to be less thin it would otherwise have been, notwithstanding there was a larger, force in line than has been seen an any former occasion. These impromptu reviews are beginning to have the effect of transforming the city companies into minute-men, and they already answer the call for their appearance under arms much more promptly than would have been expected. Though the hour of three o'clock was named for the review, the de lay caused by waiting for the arrival of some of the more distantly-posted regiments, made it almost sunset before the parade closed. After the parade was diemiesed, Royal street was filled with the brigades returning to their respective quarters,and about the Battle House, the balcony and corridors of which were tilled with ladies, a dense mass was packed, impeding the march of the troops. Loud and repeated cheers and calls for the President were, made, in response to which he made his appearance on the balcony, and addressed the soldiers and citizens in an off hand speech. He con gratulated the people upon the fact, which he assured them he felt to be the fact, that our cause is now in :a better condition than it was a year ago. Having just come from the scene of the great battle of Chicka mauga, it was impossible that he should not refer to that, and though- - it-could not-be expected - that he should allude to contemplated movements, yet he, was happy to say thatthe brave victors of that bloody field stood ready and anxious to strike the blow which should secure the complete fruits of their glo rious victory. He could say more—that he believed they. would strike that blow, and that Rosecrans' unwieldy legions would be destroyed or driven for refuge to the Ohio. The same spirit animated our armies elsewhere, and all they needed was to be properly seconded by the people at home to send the hordes of Yankees back to their beloved Boston, or any other place from which their return might be more difficult. He saw before him a Texan regiment. Those thinned ranks reminded him too plainly of their situation, cut off from the homee to which they should look for recruits, and of their deadly conflicts upon many a field whet e they had fought as Texans always fight. He exhorted them to be of good cheer. Such deeds as these are never in vain, and would surely secure to the country the estimable prize for which they are contending, and to themselves undying honor and renown. There, too, w ere Alabamians who, he felt sure, were worthy the name which had been immor talized on go many battle fields in Virginia, Ten nessee, and Mississippi. And here he referred to the youthful coloabearer at Chickamauga, who planted within the - ,enemy's barricades his regimental flag, pierced with eighty-nine bullets, and its staff shat tered. The President had the pleasure of promoting him for his gallant conduct, and such was his mce decay, that in presenting hie flag to the President, he appeared unconscious of having performed any thing extraordinary. The citizen soldiery, also, he believed, were emu lous of the reputation of their brethren in the camp. He had been much moved, as he rode along thelines, at seeing among them young boys—some very young—and men whose heads were silvered with the frosts of many winters. He could remind all these, regulars and others, that they are not common so], diem They present a spectacle which the world has never witnessed—the best population of the country poured into the army. Such men may be appealed to from other incentives than that of rigid military discipline. The times, the cause, all con siderationa require efforts which may be demanded of an army of heroes, for such they are. Besides -these, there are some too old to bear arms, but they, too, can do something. Let them contribute their means to the support and relief of those who are contributing their blood; and let those who are too poor for this, contribute their influence. There Is something that all can`do. Self must be entirely forgotten; and let those who are deaf to any other -appeal remember that he who is hoarding.up wealth in such a time as this is hoarding up infamy, the mark of which he and his posterity must bear who shall have grown rich by this war, . ''JEFF DAVIS' SPERM TO TRH TROOPS AT. MISSIONA RY RIDGE. He began by paying a warm tribute to their gal lantry displayed on the bloody field of Chickamauga, defeating -the largely superior force of the enemy, who had boasted of their ability to penetrate the heart of Geetgia, and driving them like sheep into a pen, and protected by strong entrenchments, from which naught but an indisposition to sacrifice unne cessarily the precious lives of our brave and Pa triotic soldiers prevented us from driving them. But, he 'said, they had given still higher evidence of their courage, patriotism, and resolute determina tion to live freemen or die freemen, by their patient endurance and buoyant, cheerful spirits, amid pri vations and sufferings from _half rations, thin , blankets ragged clothes, and shoeless feet, than given by baring their breasts to the enemy. lie reminded them that obedience was the first duty of a soldier, remarking that when he was a youth a veteran officer said to him : "My eon, re member that obedience is the eoldier'a first duty. If your commanding officer orders you to burn your neighbor's hause down, and to sit on the ridge pole till it falls in, do it." The President said, this is an exaggerated statement of duty, but prompt, unques tioning obedience of subordinates to their superiors could not be too highly commended. lithe subordi nate stops to consider the propriety of an order, the delay may derange the superior's whole plan, and the opportune moment for achieving a success, or averting a defeat, may be irretrievably lost. He alluded to the boast of our enemy, that, on the occupation of East Tennessee, they would heavily recruit their army, and subjugate us with the aid of our own people ; but the boast has not been ful filled. He said the proper course to pursue toward the misguided people of East Tennessee was not to deride and abuse them, but to employ reason and Conciliation to disabuse them of their error ; that all of us had once loved and revered the old flag of the Union ; that be had fought under its folds, and, for 'fifteen years, bad striven to maintain the Constitu tion 01 our fathers in its purity, but in vain. It could not be saved from the grasping ambition for power and greed of gain of the Yankees, and he had to relinquish it. The error of the misguided among us was that they clung longer than we do to what Was once a common sentiment and feeling of us all, and, he repeated, they must be reasoned with and conciliated. In closing, he expressed his deep conviction of our eventual success under the blessing of Providence, and expected the Army of Tennessee, when they should resume active operations, not to pause on the bank of the Cumberland, but to plant our ban ners permanently on the banks of the Ohio. This, he believed, would be done. As the bumble repre sentative of the people. he returned their grateful 'thanks to the Army of Tennessee for what they had already accomplished, and fervently invoked the blessing of- Almighty God upon all officers and men composing it. SPEECH OF GENERAL BRAGG. General Bragg was then lustily called for and re• sponded briefly and pointedly as follows : • MY BROTHER SOLDIERS : It WOUld be presume tion in me to attempt to address you after what has 'been said to you by our distinguished Executive. You can make better speeches than lean—such as you have made from Shiloh to Ohiokamauga, at ; Richmond, Perryville, and Murfreesboro. It is my office to record your speeches for you, and this I have endeavored to do to the best of my ability. I therefore return you my thanks, and beg you to excuse me from further-remarks. This good hit was received with cheers/and the , Soldiers separated. t , COEDS IN DEMOPOLIS. ' A correspondent of the Salem Reporter writes from Demopolis, Ala., Saturday, October 12, as follows : Today has been a grand occasion in Demopolis. sesidenst Davis and staff arrived here by the eastern train, and were' welcomed by a vast concourse of -Intl zena and soldiers, the sweet strains of a military band, and a salute of thirteen - guns from Moore's nitery. The President, Gen. Johnston, Lieut. fseri, 'Hardee, and Bon. F. S. Lyon, rode to - the resi ence of the latter in a handsome phmton, followed y a number of open carriages, containing the Pre idea's, Gs ns. Johnston's and liardee's staffs. At 3 o'clock the President, acoompanied by a plendid cortege, reviewed the brigades of General it.ookiell, General Petnus, and General Panora. The he wag formil osi the owl of the stroetw of the town, NEKI was nearly a:mile long. The troops made a credit& ble appearance, and elicited the high eat encomiums erom the ohm( magistrate. Each re giment, as the Y+-evident reached its colors, present ed arms and drchOped its ensign, and greeted the Prehident with rm,•turous cheers. When the Presi dent came opeoaas the flag of the Ist bilssouri (Bowen , e regimes:O. he halted and made a few stir ring remarks, as follahOs : enitiklizarr's ADD 13,898. GALLANT Dilliisool* . ANll I I look with sadness u a p v o e h n yeoaurrd of redu l e e e a t i l i r h a e n r ke iehv. aid feel it a high honor to he in the presence of stsCh chivalrous soldiers. I h of the West, and must e i xtsit r u e p m on to th 3 r ou b t l h o e ody hig fi t el r d e s . Bard which I cherish for yen, privations and positive sufterii.gs in the cense liberty; I thank you from the deepest seat of my), heart, from its every fibre, for your dauntless coun tge and untiring devo tion to our common cause. .140 assured that I ex press but the sentiments of out entire countrymen when I address you in the rack It fervent terms of gratitude and admiration. You 1, eve but to be true to the past and the memory of yt w ascended chief, yet to see the realization of your .e riro t u b d e e n s a t g d o e f si o r u es r for our country. May you live toe , infant republic the ensign of a great, nation, floating Whenamong the national colors of the world I When this vision of joy is yours, it - 411 be due to your own brave hearts and stout at ins. Again I thank you. NORTH CAROLINE Extracts from the Ra.letglt Stands* rd — The . South without flope—The O, tv aL ial Se cessionists to be Hurled from Pain 'r• Nuw Yong, Nov. 6 —The steamer Tern% , from Newbern,N. C., on the 2d, has arrived. here.- The Cogressional election of North Catty, ' , Una takes place on the 4th. Ex•Cfov. John A. Gil will probably be eleoted from the Sixth distrini t, a 8 the independent candidate. The Raleigh (N, 0.) Standard appeals to thet eds 1- Servatives to rally at the polls against the °° - Eli - struotives" on election day. It adds that there is no chance for peace- =Uttar. original Secessionists are hurled from power. In alluding to the recent defeat of the Democrats in Ohio and Pennsylvania, the Standard says :_'"The last ray of hope for the South from the North' has departed. The North is banded against the South by immense majorities. The war will go on and be, prosecuted by the Federal Government as - a matter• of business. "Lincoln will be re•eleoted, and the prospects of peace will be more distant than ever. The Southern people stand alone with the world against therm and they had better make peace with Providence or the North very soon.',. Freak regimehte hey* arrival horn to. twlzo-'oo place of the veterans, which have gone elsewhere. The rebel ironclad, which is being constructed on the Neuse river, is reported nearly ready for a raid in this direction. - The war debt of North Carolina is being rapidly extinguished by the proceeds received from blockade runners, which are making regular trips into Wil mington. The report that Major General 0. G. Foster la to take command of the Army of the Potomac, has given assurance that, should it be true, liichmond will soon be in the possession - of the United Statea Government. EUROPE. The riteamer Adriatic Off Cape Ram, THE MEXICAN AND POLISH QUESTIONS Pile .3ag.:1.1513. Papers ST. JOHNS, Nov. 4, via PORT MOOD, Nov. 6.—The steamship Adriatic, with news from Liverpool to the 27th ult., passed off Cape Race at 6 o'clock. on Wednesday evening. . . The Adriatic left Liverpool at 8 o'clock on the morning of the 26th, and Galway on the 27th ult. The steamer Sidon arrived out on the 26th, and the North American on the 27th ult. _ GREAT BRITAIN. General Lee's advance on the Arms of the Poto maohaa attracted much attention. The Daily News says that "while the Confederates are unable to dislodge Rosecrans, Lee's movements are so inconsistent with ordinary principles as to baffle all attempts at explanation. Meade had no thing to gain by delivering a battle in the centre of Virginia, and wisely declined to challenge his oppo nent until be had reached his selected field, when no doubt be will be ready to receive him." The Times says that " The last blow is yet to be gtruclt, and the Fede rate will have extraordinary good fortune if the third battle on the scene of two defeats reverses the asso ciations connected with the ill•omened field of Bull Rim." - The Times thinks that Rosecrans Will have to ca pitulate or retreat, and says the former appears most probable. Rev. Henry Ward Beecher wass entertained at a farewell breakfast, in Manchester, on the 24th. Thanks were voted to Mr. Beecher for his various addresses, and congratulatory speeches were inter changed. It is semi-officially announced that thd Princess of Wales may , be expected to become a mother in Marsh next. THE MEXICAN . QUESTION The Maniteur gives a report of the reception by Napoleon of the Mexican deputation. In Ma speech he does not in_ any_may allude to the Archduke The Paris correspondent of the Times thinks it doubtful whether the French Chambers will accede to the guarantees demanded by the Archduke, viz : the integrity of the new empire, and the guarantee of a loam FRANCE. The political news is unimportant. The Emperor presided at the ministerial council on the 24th. THE POLISH QUESTION The Memorial Diplotnatique hag published a despatch to the French minister at Vienna, containing propo sals for guarantying Austria against eventualities in cane Thistle refuses to adopt the course suggented by the allies in reference to Poland. It was dated in June last. ' A great number of important arrests are reported to have been made in Warsaw, including 40 mem• berm of the municipality. -- The consul has been confined to his house and his effects sealed up. NuMerona angskgAmantsi and the dispersal DE some strong insurgent bands are reported. The Nord says that there is no truth in the report that Russia is building war vessels in the Black. Sea, and her relations with Turkey been disturbed. DENMARK It IS said that Austria anti Prussia have agreed to decline the arbitration of England in the conflict with Denmark, regarding it as of purely German character. Private telegrams from Calcutta, of late date, re port an excited market for cotton goods, causing a renewed firmness in Liverpool. THE VERY LATEST Marshal Neil goes to BMWs on an extraordinary mission regirding Poland. The Morning Post says that the Federals must be aware that any serious reverses just now would leave the neutrals no alternative but to recognize the South. Mr. W. R. Lindsay, in a letter to the Timer, de nounces the policy of the Government towards the North as inconsistent with neutrality or honor. The King of Denmark. in a speech, declared that if he was overpowered by Germany he would pro claim the Danish Government a republic. M=MM2= LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET. Monday.-The sales of Cotton to day amount to - 15,0:0 bales, including 6.000 bele.s to specuMtors and for export. The market was buoyant and..prices advanced Rel. STATE OF TRADE. —There has been. no Manchester market since the c oparture of the China LIVERPOOL BREADS.TRFFS MARKET. —Breadetuffs are generally. inactive. Messrs. k ichardson & Spence. Ryland. Athya. & Co • and others repo* t Flour inactive. hest quiet. Corn — Mixed, stead at 2Ss. LIVERPOOL PROVISION MAR'KET. —Provisions are reported quiet but steady. Beef steady. Pork steady. 'Bacon dull. Lard drill at 40.,@f1e. LIVERPOOL PRODUCE MARKET.---Lard steady. Ashes steady. Sugar steady. Coffee inactive. Rice active and still advancing. Rosin quiet. Snirits Of Turpentine inactive. Petroleum firmer at 1.11092 for re fined. LONDON MARKETS. —Breadstuffs dull. Sugar firm. Coffee quiet. LONDON MONEY M 4 .1 . 1K8P. Consols closed at 'M. 20@19 `ti ct discount. Erie Railroad, 66. THE LATEST. LIVERPOOL, Oct. 27, P.M.—The sales of to-day amount to 15, COO bales. Prices continue to adylince. The Flour market opens firmly, bat no business has yet been done. Provisions are steady. Lard dull. LaNnoN, Oct. 27.—Consols, 93@a33x. BOSTON. A Vessel Among the Icebergs. . Bos'row, Nov. 6 —The schooner Camilla, from St. Johns, N. F., brings passengers, Hoxie, the second mate, and six seamen of the whaling brig Payilion. The Pavilion Railed from Fair Haven on June 16th with a clew of 21 men. On August 4th, near the Islands of the Gods of Mercy, the brig was crushed by the tee; and filled with water. The crew got out the boats, three in number, and landed provisions on the rock, remaining there eleven days. On the 27th they started in the boats and landed on Resolution Islands, where they remained ten days, when they again started and attempted to Cross Hudson's straits, but a heavy gale separated the boats, and the third mate's boat, with six sea men, is supposed to have foundered. On the Bth of September Hoiden boat landed on the coast of Labrador, but, not finding any inhabi tants, they started the next day, and followed the coast until the 25th, when they fell in with the Bri tish bark Ocean Nymph, from London for Hudson's Bay, who . took them on board. On October 3d the Ocean Nymph fell in with the captain's boat, and landed both boats' crews at St. John's. N. F., on October 7th. During the long pas sage in the boats, their only food was ship-bread soaked in salt water, and a- little pork. Their suf ferings were ;very great, as the weather was in tensely cold. Quite a number rn of the men had their fingers and toes frozen. Captain Handy and the remainder of the crew were left at St. John's until a vessel should leave for Boston. Tile Revolution in St. Domingo. Nrw Yonx, Nov. 6.—The steamship Tuba! Cain has arrived, from St. Domingo city on Octileth, and Mayaguez on the 19th, St. John's on the 21st, and St. Thomas on the 23d. By the arrival of the steamship Tubal Cain, we have the following intel ligence Mrs. ex-President Tyler had arrived at Bermuda, having run the blockade. The following blockade- were in port, bound to Nassau, or more pro perly Wilmington, N. C. : Steamships Dee, Flora, A. D. 'Vance, Lady Davis, Robert B. Lee, Boston, and Ella and Annie. The United States steamer Rhode Island Was at St. Domingo on Oct. 23d, on a cruise. The revolution in St. Domingo was in full blast. The rebels held possession of the entire island, with the exception of the capital and the eastern por tion, and they were last reported to be within a few miles of St. Domingo city. Two recent victories are claimed by the Spanish, in battles fought near Dramas° and Manta Plata. In one engagement it was said that one piece of ar tillery, many muskets, and numerous prisoners, had been taken from the insurgents. The Captain General of St. Domingo had been re moved, and Don Carlos de Vargas, Marshal of Spain, been appointed in his place. Be is said to be a man of great ability, and is expected to crush the rebellion promptly. From Mayaguez we learn That the fall rains lied tat in and the sugar looks well. There are a great many political prisoners from St. Domingo in St. Johns, P. R., and many reitgees who are in a state of entire destitution. Ship News Naw YORK, Nov. 6.—Arrived—United States steamer Dacorah, from Wilmington (N. C.) bar; ship Whampoa„ from Calcutttc; hark Con:mobile, from Glasgow • bark N. R. Garton , from Barbados; bark }Termer, irom St. Thomas; bark Geo. S. Rout, from Matanzas ; brig Janet kiloton, from Salt Gay; brig Walter gieetti U9M MEIUM4dOfil Fortress Monroe. FORTRESS tflonnon, Nov. 4.—The United States steamer Daeotah sailed from Hampton Ronde this forenoon. The steamer New York sailed early this morning for City Point, in charge of Major Mulford, gemeral flag•of truce officer. The -U. S. steamer Convoy arrived to.day from Beaufort, having on board tifteen rebel prisonere, captured at Plymouth, N. C. J. W. Monfort, the agent for Governor Morton, of Indiana, arrived this morning, on the Baltimore boat Georgians, with two hundred entire suits of clothing, and other articles of comfort, from Indiana, for their soldiers now priseners Of mar in Richmond. Mr. Monfort will leave here, for City Point, on Saturday. Books and Authors. The American Publishers' Circular and Literary Ga zelle, published by a. W. Childs, of Philadelphia, commenced its second half-yearly volume last Mon day, and will be known in future as the American Literary Gazette, a title which it well deserves, from the variety and fulness of its European correspon dence, and the great quantity of information about books and authors which it communicates. Dir. Willis P. Hazard, who has long been at the bead of one ofthe best supplied book-stores in Chest nut street, has sold his retail business to Messrs. Ashmead &Evans, and, it is said, will devote him. self to publication. Mr. Ashmead is eon of one of the oldest printers-in the city, and Mr. Evans has had twelve years' experience in the trade, having been connected with Martlen'e,Comperthwait's, and, more recently, Superintendent of the Presbyterian Publishing House. Meters. J. B. Lippincott & Co. have published a small volume, with an excellent map, showing, the relative position of the sombatanta, entitled" Notes on the Rebel Invasion of Maryland and Pennsylva nia, and the Battle of Gettysburg, July tat, 2d, and .24), 1865." The author is the Rev. Dr. Jacobs, Pro. kiwi of Mathsruaticss and Chemistry kr the ve raity of Pennsylvania, Gettysburg. What he has des, cribed ho saw, and his book, explicit *hough brit f, is a reliable contribution to. the history of the war, " Contervative•Essays, Legal and Poliklsal," by S, S. Nrcholrs, Kentucky, filling. an 06 tavo volume" discuss mane subjects—some very re tionally, others' in a crochetty manner—csii with ability and general good temper. "Day. bv..ToeeplNL Nunez, U. Sr A., is a colleotion of original occasionally poetry, rarely conatnonplace and• sometimes riaing.into posi4 tine beauty of thou#it and expresaion.- "I Wish lie Were Here" is a lyric which deserves:tease mar ried to immortal music. Mr. Nunes' facetious dilate are the poorest thingsln his book. Measra, Lippincott announce a one-volume "Life of Gene ral McClellan, with a Bastorrof Militesu Cam paigns," by George S. Hillard,. of Boston. "-Medi cal Diagnosis," elegantly illustrated, by J. Da Costa, M. D, "The CU:teeter of the Gentleman,"' by Francis Lieber, LL. D., and a •new novel by Isu gusts J. Evans, author of "Beulah." The " History of Charles the Bold," that ISM Duke of Burgundy, whesse annals were writ by Phi lip de Comines, and who was made .known ito mo dern times by Scott's "Quentin Durward " and "Anne of Gieratein," has been composed by Mr. John Foster Kirk, and will be simultaneously pub lished in Philadelphia and London, by Y. R•Lippba colt and John Murray. The friend and secretary of Prescott, the historian, Mr. Kirk, has here taken up a subject which, properly treated, will plan him, among American writers, by the side of Prescott, Bancroft, Sparks, and Mottey. lYlessrs. Lippiacott will publish it:in two volumes, Bvo., with a portrait. Charles the Bold was contemporary with Edward IV., of England, and Louis JCL, of France, and the Low Countries lapsed into the possession of •Maii.- within L, of Austria, by his marriage with Mary, of Burgundy, daughter of Duke Charles. Messrs. Lippincott have forwarded to the President a splendidly bound copy of the "Annals of the Army of the Cumberland," by Judge Fitah, which they have recently published. The volume (pp. 671 octavo) is beautifully printed and profusely illus trated. The copy in question is bound in Magenta morocco ; has the emblems of war impressed in gold on the edge and one corner, and on the other is an inscription, also in gold, to the intended recipient of the volume, by the author and his fellow-officers of the Army of the Cumberland. The binding, which is extremely neat, was executed by Messrs. Lippin cott's own workmen, who, in a manner, are opera tive artists. T. P. Peterson & Brothers, who have just issued "The Lost Bank Note' , and two other of Dirs. H. Wood's abort stories, in an octavo volume of unu• Dually large type, have in the press a new work of fiction by Para. Southworth. They have just pub- lished a new edition of " The Law and Practice of Euchre," which is entitled to be accepted as authori ty on the game, "though the author has weakened what he says by frequent and miserable attempts to be facetious as well as scientific. Mr. Ct. W. Childs has in the press an octavo volume, by B. F. Morris, entitled "Christian Life and Character of the Civil •Institutions of the 'United States, developed In the Official and His torical Annals of the Republic." Mr. Childs' juve nile books for the season will be the Rollo and Lucy Books of Poetry, in three volumes, illustrated with many fine engravings froin good original drawings. These books will contain a selection of poetry for children of all ages, compiled by Jacob Abbott. The "National Almanac and Annual Record for 1864" is in hand, and will be published before Christmas. It is principally edited, we believe, by. Mr. W. V. McKeon. Sheldon and Company, of New York, who have removed from Nassau street to Broadway, have , lately published two novels of more than ordinary. merit. " Peter °anodize," by Caroline Cheese bro', is a domestic story, of a religious turn, with out much incident, but with the various characters - clearly and delicately distinguished and developed. The other book, called " Broken Columns," is a more ambitious and inferior attempt, though un doubtedly written by an able pen. Oddly enough, ore has to get far into the story ere he can discover that the scene and personages are English. The plot is complicated and the narrative too much spun out at times: On the whole, it is a readable, second-class novel, which one Peter Bayne say; in hisjudgment, is "superior to Adam Bede." Sheldon cc Co. an nounce a quarto edition, illustrated by Harley and Hows, of Dickens' Christmas Stories; also, " Bleak House," in four volumes, and "Sketches by Bos," in two. This will complete their Household Edition of Dickens, in forty-six volumes. They prondse new editions of several standard juvenile books; " Husks," a new story by Marion, Harland; " The Rice and Progress of Sunday Schools," by John Carroll Power; a revised edition, in four volume; of Ballam's "'Literature of Europe," completing Hallam's works in ten volume; crown Svo ; Charles Lamb's works ; Bunyan's Progress and Holy War, with new original illustration; and a number of new juvenile book; by Jacob Abbott, D. (.'Eddy, D. D., "Peter Parley," Caroline Hadley, and others, including additions to the Florence Sic- { rtes, the American histories, and the - Rose Morton SE riE S. Public Entertainments. GERMAIN OPEAA.—Perhaps the most popular of the new operas presented by Mr. Anschutz, laser win ter, was A Night in Grenada," by Rreatzer. It was certainly not the beet, though its manic is very charming. Its melodies are those that every one can appreciate and love, and gratify at once the mere love: of music and the musician. The story' of the opeta is very pretty ; Areutzer haa interpre ted it with a delightful simplicity and sweetness. When it was sung last year, Madame Rotter was very popular as Gabrielle, but owing to the im perfectione of other artists, the full beauty of the music was not displayed. "A. night in Grenada'' needs a first class baritone, and Mr.:Hartmann brought to the music but an ordinary voice and me thod. To the Huntsman is given the finest music; it is the great rble of the opera, - and we have reason to believe that Herr Steinecke, who will make his first appearance tonight, will prove to be one of the finest baritones who has visited this country. His voice is said to be full, strong, and sonorous, of unusual range and flexibility, and his method that of -a true artist. It is said that it was the intention of the management to reserve him as the novelty for the season in New Yolk, but we have no reason to believe that either Mr. Anschutz or Mr. Birgefld would consent to any arrangement of the kind. We shall be much disap• pointed if Steinecke does not justify his reputation, and the public may reasonably expect from hint a performance of a very high order. Mademoiselle Can/181% will sing the part of Gabrielle with much sweetness and grace. Herr liabelmann will also appear. We must again thanir. Mr. Ansobutz for an orches tra that is beyond rivalry. All the operas he will produce will have the benefit of a perfect instrumen tal performance, and when the music of Beethoven, especially, Mozart and Weber, is given, this advan tage cannot be,overrated. On Monday night the greatest of operas, ','Fidelio," will be sung, with a very strong cast, including both the tenors of the company. THE CHESTNUT STREET THEATRE.—WO are sorry to say that this is positively the last week of 51 , 11 e Vestvali's performance in Philadelphia. Her de parture will be generally regretted, since the com paratively short time she will have t been with us Will hardly have furnished sufficient opportunity either for the remarkable variety of her talents, or for the 'entertainment of all who desire to see and hear this highly attractive lady and artist. The few nights that remain, however, will compensate as far as possible for the prospective loss, and soma of the highest qualities of Vestvali may be witnessed on this and to• morrow evening. Though not thoroughly adapted to the best ideas of our stage, Yestvali has an individual charm and power which always renders here performance im pressive. Her singing is quite as powerful and more brilliant than her acting;: and there- is doubt less much pleasure for those who will hear her this evening in BellinPs "Romeo and Juliet. Miss Mary,Provost, who last season performed so profitable an: engagement in this city, will appear next Monday evening at the Walnut-street Theatre. She has many admirers who will be glad to. re-wel come her. SAL& ov Caneßruins, &O.—The attention of pur chasers in requested to the assortment of ingrain, Ve netian, list, cottage, and hemp carpets, &xi., to be per emptorily sold, by catalogue, on four months' credit, commencing this morning at precisely half past ten o'clock, by'John B. Myers & Co., Nos. zn and 231 Market street. TILLED. —A little :child, named Louisa Btehrit, aged four years, was run over by a lumber wagon, yesterday afternoon, and blatantly killed. The sail affair warred in Girard avenue, above Leithgew street. The 'body was conveyed ' to the residence of her lather, No. 12:25 Leitligow street, 'where the coroner was summoned to hold an iriqueat, but no witnesses being present the ease wzla post pcned till tn.day. FIRE.—A. large stable, located on Haver to] d street below Thirty.fifth, was nearly destroyed by tire about five o'clock yesterday afternoon. The fire originated from some small boys having a bon fire too near the stable. It was owned and occupied by Samuel I. Gear, who states his loss at Vine, TnE subscription agent reports the sale or 42,050,000 five-twenties on Thursday. Dliiveriea Qt Ponds sle made on pubseriptim Susqueluanna Canal Company. [PACTS FROM THE. Csofdrattre BRPORT.] The Annual. Report of the Susquehanna Canal Company, for the year 1862, gives the total earnings for the year. $1.77,000. Instead of the earnings of 1863 showing an increase of 60 per cent, per week over those of 1862, the pub lished returns up to the Ist of November only Dhow an increase of 16 per cent., making the total earnings for 1863, at the same rate of increase, about $244,000, The expenses in 1862, were $35,000, owing to the in- creased cost of labor and materials, involving full 26 per cent. increase. The expenses for 1863 may fairly be Bet down at $44,066, giving a net increase of only $lB,OOO this year. On the Ist day of January, 1863, the State of Karr land had claims for unpaid intermit of $148,000. The interest due and unpaid on bonds pilor to 1866, was $19,000. The interest due and unpaid on suspended debt was $193,000. The amount of scrip lamed and unpaid was $33,000. Tbe total amount of interest unpaid on the iscday, of January, 1863, was, therefore, $393 000, none of which (Co far as is known) has been paid this year : and in addition to this already over.bovering debt, this year's interest will increase the burden. Admitting that the Canal Company will have an increase of $20,000 this year, what a small propor tion will it bear to the amount of their liabilities! The report states that therewas a balance to the hands of the treasurer of $86,000, but $53,600 of that amount came.frorn 1861, anti the policy of any com pany may well be questioned when they admit hav ing such an amount of cash on hand, at the same time exhibiting such an array of unpaid bills, aerip, intert at, &c. Admitting all the past interest, scrip, and unset tled accounts Lto be funded, they would then be oubject To an interest of B per cent. on $1,060,000=880,090 And say only 6 per cent. on 1;712,000=102;TM Making a total interest per annum.... SIBS,T2O With the iecreased business of 1663, giving a total of receipts $204,000, and deducting the estimated ex penses, $44,000, there 'would/ only be a balance of $160,000 to pay above $133,000. Why, then, should the question he asked, " What is to prevent er dividend being declaredl" From the foregoing it must be admitted that a dividend is impossible, with the present state of their buninees ; and granting an increased trade Ia the future, no allowance has been made in their maculae tionn for extraordinefy expenses, tkatare as likely to arise hereafter, such as the Susquenanna Canal hae experienced in the past. It is not in the leelt degree probable that the State of Maryland will agree to fund hat $146,000 of unpaid interest, while the company admit haring a balance of cash on hand of $86,000. .riNANCIAL AND ettiffIBIERCMI6 MONEY MARKET. PITILADELFEETA. Nov. 6.113 EN lidoriey wag - re.toer twat to-oay kr int Bei. ea per cert. sw a ruling inure. It array be some days ltsfors the "market' is entirely freer of the results caused b 7 the late heavy conversions Into the five•twenty loan. The activity in sold was atime/ated by ''veras runterg froze Tennessee, and by the oemand of patties preparing. for eo•morrow 3 irfeteamer. it opened at 10 - and rose te • 147. Government sec - cattle& are steady and brdemand. Tb 3 Stock market, owing te, the search y of teensy, was Sat prices generally were steadier. Bnyere were cautious, and boldarawerelirm. Ihe bond ll:lenras de cidedly dull. City sixaa, old, sold at 103; Nortterena sylvanii eixeP at 955 f Camden and Amboy. 1.87 P at WS; State fives at MX; Stimylltill Navigation sixes..len, at 92; late at;i3o, comprising the only sales. Bids for the remainder were without change from the last prirmr. . Heading enures were steady- at 68. Catawlasa mamma at 1034 ; tbepreferred at 32038;4. Elmira at `6B. E r atik Pennsylvanla declined'/ : , Panneylvania was steedynt gq; Philadelphia and 3134;,. Camden and Amboy at 1743 i; Minehill at 6A; Beaver Meadow at 73; Little Echuylkill fell °iris% Schuylkill Navigation sold at 19. the Preferred at 945 i @if 'Union preferred at 9; Wyoming Valley at 79; Sus quehanna at 18N:: shares : Paeeenger Railways and Aiming Companies were dull. Drexel & Co. quote: United.Statesl3_onds, 1861 109 40109 X • N Certificate of Indebt'ss.... 98Vot 99 " " Old Certificate of Indebt'ss 102 102,44 " ' 7-30 cotes - If6Y. Quartermaeters' Vouchers ••• SBK 99 Orders for Certificates of Indebtedness . . ... had 1 de Gold 46540 471£ Sterling Exchange .. 181 @il62 Jay Cooke & Co. quote Government securities, &0., ollows : 11. S. T 3-10 lioteB Cort:ikcatps oflzidAtcdp.eas. old Certificates of TriTat;;lniaB, Quartermasters' Vouchers.... ..... 'Demand Notes 001 - d Seaes feve-twenties, $2,050,001 The- Wyoming Bank, at Wilkesbarre, has de clared. its sixty-seventh' semi-anneal dividend of time per cent:, .clear of-National and State-taxes. payable . the 13th inst. The following .shows the. amount of coal transported over the Lehigh Valley - kailroad for the week ending October 31. 1b63. and. previous since. December 1. 1861, compared with same time last year:. Week. Previously. Total. Tons. Cwt. Tons. Cwt. Tons. Cwt. 3,6k2 1.4- 1.9 . ,54!810 101„%16 0L MT2BB aaaleton..•••• East Sugar Loaf. _2.910 06- 135,21717 1u2.223 _ Council Ridge 1-854 10 84.556 16 86.497 05 Mount Pleasant :47 07 31.616 03 31..663 10 Spring Mountain . 2;329 ;0 98.924 03 101.263 13 Coleraine 767.00 42.61442 43.31 L Beaver. Meadow 3.846 06 3.840 06 2 , 14;v - 0:116 Lehigh. 84 15 30E543 64.65 . 3 08 N. Spring Ilettutain..... 3 051 08 104,019 18 107,671 06 Jeddo 1,827 06 111.912 10 113 799-15 Hirleigh 846 17 49.376 10 63,223 07 German ...... 1,4 , 1 15 50.494,93 51 931 55 'Percale 829 39 36 762 - 12 37,63211 811 18 33,310 17 39.222 15 Buck Mountain. ... . . 1.917 GA 11,923-11 13,146 la Other Shippers 1,322 19 23 ISt 07 34,204 06 L. IL Coal 775 15 1,081 01 3, 56 11 Total 25,287 18- 1,1157.915"68 1,033,27' 06 Corresponding week /am , year 23,091 11 771.466 16 794.501 07 2;196 07 236,15061.5 D 38,70110 The New York Evening Post says Before the first session Weld was selling. at ivati67_ lsrEtv ork Central at 15734@137%. Erie at 1 BYifallati. Pittsburg at 13 uthon River at 131.1.53. Illi nois Central at 12e3,'g12335, }lock Island at 10Y, Read ing at 1`26, Fort Wayne at SFAS-9; Harlem at IPAIO'2, chigan on them at 86.. 1 4 . @e7. Galena at imam. Toledo at and Cumberland at The appended table exhibits the chief modements the market, compared with the latest prices of yester day Thur. Wed, U. 8. 88. 1810. reg . 108108 ET. S. 6s, 1881, con 1683-i 1081 U. S. Seven-thirties....lo7 107) U. S. 1 Yr .103 102 U. 8. 1 yr, cur 98.3 i 9834 11raerican 1963 Tem:mesas 8a... 61 ' 61 Nissonri .... . . 66 esx Pselito Nail. 235.0 23214 flew York Cem.Railr'd.lB7,l; Eric 1C88110,84 Erie Preferred 101 10111 • • Hudson River.. 132 133 Harlem— . • ........ ...JO° 103 Harlem Preferred .110 112 Reading 116 M 614 Michigan Ventral 1261' 1226 . n Michigan Southerm.-.... 86 86,14 Michigan Eolith. guar..l6lK 161 Illinois Can. Scrip. ••• .123 . 124 Pittsburg 110 1111 Phdlada. Stock Exchange Sales, Nov. 5. (Reported by S. E. SLAXMA_XER, Philadelphia Exchange.) - FIRST BOARD 100 Cata R Pref..bD) . 32%1 1 Seaver Meadow... 76 100 31% 1000 Ca-m &A. 6s, 1875..123 60 do 81% 53C0 Pennsylvania Is.. 991 E 50 do 32 SOO do 9931 665ReadingR.....lots.. 68 25 , ConsolidationBk— 33% 100 do • --tin.. 63% SOO City 6s, new 106 60 do cash.. 63 2000 do —lOB% 100 do. ..... arc 50 Susquehanna Cl 16% 100 do cash— 60 51 Fenno R....ca5h... 72 1000 801[71 Nay 6s. 1882. 92 50. do cash • • TI% 100 Little Scaly). B 62% 3 Minehill B 62% 60 do . . 53 14 Cam & Amboy R-17434 20 do • •-• 52% 3 Schnyl Nay Prof .31 500 North Parma 65.. .. 96% 50 Wyoming Valley-79 BETWEEN BOARDS. ICO Catwis RPref.b6 32 BO Philo and Erie R-31.% 8 Puma R.•..eash._. 72%.1 SECOND 50 Little Sehl R... 55- 53 60 do b 155 3.. 360 Philo and Erie R.. 31% 100 do evil... 311.1 00 1,30. • 31% 500 City 6s• •.•• • • ... 103 6 Pennsylvania 72 128 Catawissa R 10% 92 do 10% AFTER I CO Elmira Railroad... 38 25 t , chlNov..bsBrint.. 19 200 do..' 560.. 19 CLOSING PE 800. Asked S es 'Bl 108% S 7-30 N0te5....106% 107% Philo 6s 15231 103 Do new 108% 108% Penna. 6e, 993 99% Do Corms Reading R 62 h 63 Do Os '6O '43.110% 112. Do bds '70..1(36 Do bds'66 c0nv.125 126 Penna R 72 72 Do Ist in 6s. .-111% Do 2d na. 6a.106 Little Schnyl R.. 53 62% lifDo orris rfdl37 140 consul 74 76 Do Do 25 Mati• • • • Sebuyl NEM.. ••. 19 193' Do pea"— 34% 3436] Do 6s 'B2. 91% 92 Simira R 37 08. Do prfd..... 64 55 Do 7s '73-110 111 Do 10s • ••. L Island B. • • Do bds Lahigh liav 6s-. Da shares.. 6014 62 .Do scrip—. 60% 5I 1 :4 Penns II 20% 26N, Do 6s ...... 96 0 6.* Do lOs 123 Philadelphia , Markets There is very little demand for Floor, either for export er I erne use; sales comprise about 1,200 bbls, in lots, at • gfi.7s©6. 37 for old stuck extra family. and $7147. 50 71 bbl for fresh-ground-ditto The retailers and bakers are buying at from $5 250)0 75 for superfine; W 03.0 for Ba ba; 36.7f.(37.50 for extra family, and $3 scglo bbl for , fancy brands, as to quality. Rye Flour is io. demand at. 36.'5@6 gni . 78 bbl.': Corn Meal is also scarce; Brandy wine is held at $5.25bb1. • at/Ala.—Thera is a steady demand for Wheat, and prigs are without change. about 3,000 bushels sold at 147©:50c for Western and Pennsylvania reds, and 152fg1 bushel for South , rn do., the latter for choice. White is selling at frensl7sQ7ooc`f bushel, the latter for prime Kentucky. Rye is rather drill at 1190ialc Oh bus. Corn is also dull, and prices have dec`ined; 3.700 bushels sold at 101 c for white, and 103 c bushel for yellow. (MIS are in request, with small sales at SOc, weight. BARK. —A sale of 52 hhds l.t No. 1 Quercitron was made at $36 7 a ton. COTTON. —The sales are in small lots, but holders acre.rather firmer in their views; small lots of Middlings are reported at 57c' lb. GROCERIES. —ln Sugar there is very little doing, and prices are rather firmer. Coffee is spina; entail lots-of , Rio have been disposed of at bl@a• c 3P.RDS.—Timothy is selling ar *2.50. and Flaxseed_ at 1fg.3.15 bushel. Clover Seed is in demand at, $7.25(47.50 B- bushel. PROT-1310DM —There is very little doing, bat tirlcea Are rather better. Mess Pork is held at $16013-50TabbL Buyer is ti rut but rather quiet; 200 packages. Glades sold. at : , 71@r2Sc fb :50 casks new pickled Rams also sold at 11c , P lb. Lard is in demand at llne .1b , for prima. tierce WRIFICT is unchanged; 250 bbls sold at Sic. and, Drudge at 190 Oh gallon. The following are the receipts of Flour and Grain at this port to-day Fleur. 'few York Ylnakoto. Nov. 5. ASHES continue very scarce and firm at sS.Zifor pots, and $9.60 for pearls. BREADBTIIRFS. —The market. for State and Weeders. Flour remains dull and hearry.for common grades. I Flth. an accamulating dock while trade brands arc in entsit supply and firm. The sales are 5,000 bbls at $5.50@6 65 for superfine State; $6 arig6.lo for extra State- $5.500.2.75 for sul'arina low a, Ohio, 3r.c.; $8.95(a7 - .% for extra= do., including shipping brands of round- hoop Ohio at $7.1047.25, and trade brands do. at $7.30© 9 . 20 . Southern Flour is dull and unchanged; sales 600 bbla at $7 0607 60 for superfine Baltimoro, and $7.66%10.6/ for extra do. Canadian Flour Is dull and heavy for common, at steady for extra: sales of -IC* bbls xt $6(§)6.20 for ce mon, and $6 2°@,3,60 for good to choice extra. Rye Flour ii, Arm and selling at $5.69006.60 the range of fine and suPerllno- Corn Meal is quiet and firm at 55.50 for Brea ywin . 4 and Caloric. ;.; er, with 'Wheat is buoyant, and fully 3@5 cents a. very aellve and excited market. The demand la almost exclusively for speculation on Wes.terf, account. The sales are 100.001 bushels at 5t.35(gt1.40 te it Cticaca springs $l.F6@l 40 for Milwaukee club: $1:450N.4 3 for amber Milwaukee; 1 41'0$1 5`2 far 'winter red Western. and 32.62@ 7 57 for amber Michigan. _ care aro I@2c better, and active at &41 , 64 c for Canada, a2.1.51@,553;c for Western and State. Pr.ovismas -. , :the speculative datrarmi for Pork in-.._ creased to-day. and the market was quite rampant, Pries advanced 60 ate bbl 'for mess, and there was a very be.tv y bnainess transacted. The sales are 7.800 bble at 117 000017.6534 for newmess,sl6o l . 6 . 3l i. 4 for old mesa. sl3. l 2!;:gti a: 50 for.sour me55,514,96@16 60 for 'art me mess, $O2 for onme. and $12.10 for very choice do. Beef is dull. .with small sales at $l4 Tor.. plain mess. aujd $l6 for extra mess. Tierce Beef is firm, with salsa of 600 tea India mesa, to arrive, on private terms. Cat Meats are Claiati at f@fili for shoulders, and nide for-hams; sales 100 poricbsros, ts arrive; at ltic. Bacon is qnlet and firm: salesl6,o6o lbe Ekt 10. in bulk. Lard is flrm anti tyt fair retintrati bales 2,0Q0 biala awilvg , 11}011X. - 1 - 9 WI 99 147 lan 147 147'" Ally. Dos. BOARD. WO Cate R Prat .b 30.. .324 32 Schuylkill Nay— • 19 4 North Penns R•_... 26,4 300 do cash.. 26, 100 do Ways. • 26K 100 Union Canal Pref.. 5 100 SchL Nay Pref-b 5.• 344 50 Reading R.b33tint. 63 150 do • ... b 5 &int. 63 BOARDS 200 Reading R .30 63 100 Schnyl Nay Prof.. 'SIX 1272 Schnvi Nay 63, '7B 3) tiCES—DULL. Bid. Asked. Catawissa R. Con 10i4 34 Do prfd 'I,N 52 Seaver Mead R..• ltlinehill It Harrisbnrg Wilmington R.. Snan Canal .... . . Alle co Lehigh Val R... Phila. Ger & iior. Care & Amb R..... i . • Phila & Erie 6a.• .• . • Sun & Erie 70.... . Dte o wariz d D s iv..... Fifth-street Do bonds... .. Second-street R.. 91 Do bonde... .• Race- street R. 9 10 W PhDs • VI . • Do bonds.. • Spruce-street R.. 15 15,4 Green-street R. • 46 47 Do bonds... Cbestnnt-st Arch-etreet2skill Thirteenth-st 10.. 30 33 Seventeenth. at R 12 14. Girard College 11 27 21 X 'Tenth-street R.... 46 .. NOVEMBER s—Bvening VAN 10.461 bus. . 5,800 bas..
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers