The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, July 07, 1864, Image 1

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    THE PRESS,
PUNLIININD DAILY (SUNDAYS EXCEPTED).
MY aOHN W. FORNEY,
*Ma, Ife. 111.80.11 TH FOURTH STREIT.
Two DAILY rim% •
VI:MU Oma Pint Wzilx. : DaYable .to the Carrion
palled to Submit:mu out of the city at SEVEN DOLL,LIE
PER ASEVIII Tanya DOLLARB AND FIFTY CENTS FOY Six
Monroe: Ora DOLL.iI AND SEVENTT-FIVE ININTB 7011
Tartar Montt. turartabir In advance for the time or•
dere&
•Atr:Advertisements innertod et the anal rates. Six
tines eonstitute a Kure.
TAM TRI•WEEHLY PRESS,
mow to enbseribah oat of the city at FM. Do=lll
rEtt AMY In admen.
- COMMISSION HOUSES.
to. 112 aIIZSTNUT 61111 ff.
COMMISSION MEROHANTS,
. POI TRU MALE CM
I rIIILADELPHIA-MADR 000D8.
fe
ITA.TIONEUV, & ULAN BOOKS.
OIL COMPANY pIRECTORY-CO;
,taining a List of Companies, their Wilms, Presldellia:
!Treasurers, and Secretaries. We aro also nrspared to
Walsh New Companlea with '
CERTIFICATES OF STOCK, •
TRANSFER BOOK,- '
.~ • ORDER OF TRANSFER,
STOOK LEDGER, „ •
, ':ITT2OCK'LEDGER BALANCES, •
REGISTER "OF CAPITAL STOCK,
e DIVIDEND BOOK,
. '" , ,BROKER'S PETTY LEDOER.
ACCOUIa OF SALES,
Of good tuateriala n at Low Prices.
.
• • ''l 7 iOS.S & CO,
'
STATIONERS,
.44 n344 432 CHESTNUT siiat; •
FINANCIAL.
FiTusT
NATIONAL 33AZ411.
naLIDELrma.
- I ,m,ga,.l l l22_;ilaki,.z
FINANOIA.-L AGENT
Of TIM
UNITED STATES.
10-40 LOAN. 4
This Bsak his been anthorlsed ant Is um Nemo'
10 melee gobseriptiont to the
NEW. GOVERNMENT LOAN.
This Loan., tuned nnder authority of an set of Cort•
frees. approved March S. 1661..prosides for the !sane of
Two .111urdrold Millions of Dollars ($200,003,000) United
States Bonds, redeemable after ten soars, and payable
forty years from date. IN COIL dated Marsh 1, IBM.
',Oaring Interest at the rat. of
FIVE 'PFU CENT.
,ter linnnm IN :COLN, 'lntjable semi. annually on all
. Bonds °Ter $11A• and on Sande*: 1113 and /ass, an•
znally... . •
Subscribers !All rev:ilia either Registered or OontsOn
'Bonds as they maY prefer
Registered Bonds will be issued of the donominationa
'Of Arty •dollers ($5O), oos hundred dolltri ($100); Ave
eundred dollars (WAX), ono thousand dollars MAO),
4ve thousand dollars ($6.01%ii ten thousand dollars
(510,000), and Coupon . Bonds' ,the denominations' of
fifty dollars ($5O). one hundreticAllers ($100), five hun
dred dollars ($500). ancLikiind dollars 01400.
.
' . .Ll.p4l l ,lartit ST •
win eatatomiear#,*"atild subset:ll*mi. or the seemed
Interest to ' 4Afkliaroh can be Paid in coin, or.
until f • ~tiktl:. A. notes or note, of National
flariii;ii . 044 titrtier sent. to the amount for pre
uritars
C. H. CLARK,
t ' d tis3-tf President
E • 0 A N .
_• •
II; & 10408'
JAI 0002.1 00. 011101 702 BALE THE
NEW GOVERNMENT LOAN.
Nadas Plve.l*.tieA.PdareaS IA 00111 r.
•
• .•• Mod ,•,-•• • • erfT . M4.1 . 111,118. 14 'the plea.
tire of Ma CE.;Sre Ont. ,kselabli .10 Vt ., : TBAAN
after date. Both COUPON fi aid•RilslF.l3.lll.o MONO: •
are leaned for this Loan, of some denointlittlogniOrtre'
.;;-I , lve.Twenties. The interest on 110 and 6100 payable
• Yearly, but all other datkominattone half yeasty. Tha
115!-FOETY BONDS are &dad March 1, 1101, the hall.
•IfeaSlT , Intetast lklilrirAna 13epteniber l and March I of
each year. Until let SOtember, the seemed Interest
. .from let March ia reduired . to be paid by purchasers In
Oeinit. sin legal enrreney, eAdint go per sent. for
'-prem.M.;:iiihrrinithiV•MAtte.i •
-AU other Government Seearitiestkilt 'and en d.
JAY 000KE do. 00.;
11.4 SOUTH THIRD STRUT.
ard4f
rearGiS.
NET GIBS DRUG HOUSE.
I#,lti&EP^ dr
De NABKET STREET.
TretWiiti FRONT and SEC - 010 Streets.
a. W. WarOWL
DRUGGLST§, , PHYSIOLeINS, AND - GD•_
cIiERAL . STOBRICYFPORS • 4
.41-• •
Can Snd at oar &bit shirbint a full awaritrion
of Isoported and ukutio Drugs, Popular Pa.
tent Medicines. Pa Coal Oil, Window.Olass,
Prescription,Vials. 0., at as low prices's& gawp
Bret-obuie e 1 can be sold.
FIN:Et'ESS NTIAL OILS.
rort os confectioners,' " fall variety, and of the
beaY. •
' Cochineal, Ben( ndigo, Madder, Pot Ash,
Cudhear, Soda Ash,}4lnto ' Oil of Vitriol, atinat.
to, Copperas, Ex of L ockwood, &c.,
• FOE,,tOTECS' CS& •
Always on Niubi at lowest net cash priced.
•
• suLpatirE OF LIME,
- far keeping Glair Sweet; a perfectlyharmless pre
atitiatlon, put op, with full directions for use, in
id:d
packages sordna sufficient for one barrel.
Orders by mail or city poet will meet with
r rompt - Attention, or special quotations All/ be
furnished when requested. . .
. .WRIGH'T &
.SIDDALL,
WHOLESALE mare WAREHOUSE.
. Ao. U 9 iiREET Strad, aboveißONT
de4-thstnlY4P
ROBERT SHOZBIAKEIt
N.F.CQMOr of .1017RTH and RAOB Stew%
WHOLEISALE::-DtkUGOXSTEL
urrownis AND
• 10111110MAND.DONE5TI0
WINDOW AND ..PLATE GLASS.
Juinrokorviimus or .. '
WRITE LEAD ADD ZINC PAINTS, POTTY.
ACIIINTS 1411 TIII,OIILII4ATIM
FRENCH ZINC PAINTS:. •
): Dealer& pd smuronsts supplied at _
1n71.1.8m VIRT LOW PRIDES FON OUSEL
COLD'S IMPROVED STEAM. .
LpD
WATER.HEATINO APPARATUS,
• =or Warming and Ventilating Public Buildings and
Privale-itesidences, -
Jliguntactured by the
IMON-STElal AND WTER-HEATING COMPANY
OF PHILA DELPHIA.
JAMES P. WOOD,
41 South FOURTH Street.
Z. IL FELTV.MLL.'Saperintendent.
• , •
V.EXbEtSIOR" HAMS
ARE THE BEST IN THE WORLD
AONE GENUINE. UNLESS BRANDED
"J. 11. M. 41: CO., PIIILADA. EXCELSIOR."
J. H. MICHENER ea
Co.,. GENERA.L PROVISION DEALERS,
CURERS OF THE CELEBRATED
"EXCELSIOR"
6DOAR•CURED HAMS,
NOB. 142 and 144 North FRONT Street,
Between Arch and VACS streets, PhUadelphlA.
?be Soottpeelebrated "'EXCELSIOR" HAMS two
eared by 3. H. M. & Co. (in a style peculiar to them
eceee) expressly for FAMILY (/SE, are of dellclods
Calor, free from the unpleasant taste of salt, and are
ccrcounced by epicures superior to any now offered for
sal{. my2C-tothe3m
,OOHING GLASSES. I -
I .JAMES S. EARLE ed SON.
sus CHESTNUT STREET,
NA UAW in store a very fine sesortmeut of
OOKIN6 GLASSES',
. • of every character, of the
114 MOT MANUFACTURE AND LATEST lITTIAIS.
'TINOS, ENGRAVINGS,
AND PHOTOGRAPH PRAM.
AND GAB FITTING.
. -
OLLt & RELOADS,
Street, Ph111014)111MA.
Ind )11114, Hydraulic Ham, Pimps of
Tnhe.Waeh Basinks,and other
to tcrat.h I)wellinge In city and
ry modern convenience of Water and
.rand DrAtn Pow. myLl-fmwflat
'TIFUL ANT OF ENAMEL.
ill. —Fate 'ld Toilet Francutee(Prenelt
gtiereetlitut the aid n, h Witte Ismail- pox
baron, scare, des., without injury to
:omplexiou. Ite effects are truly am
price ore dollar. with dlreetlous for
Proprietors, 41 kioath ‘ZIGHTE
tboye Ohsetaatena4 I,M a. SEVIINTH
larlB-131
VOL. 7.-NO. 289.
E. WALRAVEN,
I
9.
' 719 CLIESTNUT STREET.
v - iNgpow
..RHADES,
MOSQUITO . WETTINGS.-
FOB TUB ARMY ANDNikary:;.. t „
( •
*);
, .
• k
TANS.
FURNISHEYRS,
:4,41418 ARbII STREET, •
•
' PIILLIELPHIL
Banners, Regimental ,and Company. Flags, Swords,
Sacheso -Belts, Passants, Epaulets, fiats, Caps, Can•
teens, Haveisacks, Camp Kits, Field Glasses, Spurs,
and everything pertaining to the complete outil t or Aiiny
and Kali , Officers.
A liberal disconat allowed to the trade. .103-lm
EDWARD P. KELLY,
110Mq ImLr_,Y;
M. Ern CHESTNUT STREET,
San Itow on hand tioMplete assortment of
SPRING AND SUMMER GOODS.
sgas-ts
1864. OLOTffl]W.
•
•
LATEST STYLES. , *..
WrIALIAM S. JOBS, •
irdZITORANT TAILOR AND CLOTHIER%
' • -
1101MIEULET CORNER Or SEVENTH AND JUREIT
ETBEETE. PHILADELPHIA.
.• .
. •
•
, .
ileeparthalfr invites attention to hie
magnificent stock Of PINE CLOTH
-3TO; got up in superior style, by teats-
Sal and experienced artists, and offered .
_for sale at um:mazer
•
LOW PRICER. -
Moo, to his large end 'holes varlet" ,
of PIECE GOODS for CUSTOM WORK,
embracing selections from the Inset
tiroductions of both foreign and do
,
Mastic manufacture.
WILLIAM S. JONES.
Y.
SIIOOTAT OS TO ZOOMIT . IL 'AltAiLii
Nosthosti some! Of SSYEbTB faOL-KAZlClff.litisif&
GE ;" FURNISHING
I ,, EROVED PATTERII MAT.
WANBANTIC TO FIT Arai
. ervs SATISFACTION.
=2l
4010IIN C. ARRISOIN",
NOS. I AND 8 NORTH SIXTH STREET,
. - MAVJFACTOREB AND DEALER IN
GENTLEHRIC,I.T , INE FURNISHING GOODS.
CONSTANTLY ON,„BAND„
LINEN, MUSLIN, and FLANNEL SHIRTS gad .
DRAWEES, COLLARS, STOCKS, TRAVRLLIDIG .
SHIRTS. TIES, WRAPPERS, &c., &c.,
Or MS OWN MANtFACTDRI. •.
ALSO,
MOWERY
(WARS.
SCARFS.
SUBFENDERS. - ' ....--
HAVER ERCWrEFS.
SHOULDER. BRACES. &041ili
-
gold at roma:Labia Drleis
VINE SHIRT MANUFACTORY. i
The enbearibers would invite attention to thole .
IMPROVED CUT OF SHIRTS . '
•
which they make a ayeeialty in their business. Also.
seastadtly receiving
NOVBLTIES FOR GENTLEMEN'S WEAR.
•J. W. SCOTT & CO.,
GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING STORE,
No. 814 CHESTNUT STREET •
Four doors below the ContinentaL
aIISAT DU/00VMM!
Aro U IWO% to the
seful Arts.
A law Thin(
IM Combination.
Boot and Doe
Manufacturers
.lewolere
limffl
It is a Liquid
Zostembor
iy7-4tithily
pERrumED PARLOR MATCHES.-
-a- Jut received 2f, additional eases of tbeco celebrated
(Alexander's) niatcnon, for 'ale to he trade only.
114.27-611% ROWE 6.1116T0N.157 & MAD St.
. •
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.. t . /•-•-- - . A. -,---;."".. . 1 . 1 .'11 5‘4 . 1.. r I sr ,-- ...,ii irtil "f 4.; „ , 4 7 ,/ . ~ *•,. , •:.. 1 4 fr ' • ', • •
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z -=, . - -e.„ . ' -h. : .
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„..,_ . . ~!-\ . . -412.
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CURTAIN GOODS.
<SUCCESSOR TO W. U. CARRYL,)
!HAMM RAU,
CURTAINS,
" 1- ARMY GOODS.
CLOTHING.
TAILORS,
(JODIBB' HOTEL.!
LATI 142 SOUTH THIRD STERST:
MADE BY
USEFUL AND VALUABLE
DECOYERT 1.
HILTON'S
INSOLUBLE CEMENT I
Is of more general practical
than any Invention now before the
public. It has been thoroughly
tested during the last two years by
practiced men, and 13ronoancad by
all to be
SUPERIOR TO ANT
Adhesive Preparation known.
HILTON'S INSOLUBLE CEMENT
Is a now thing, and the result of
years o f study t Its combination le
ON SCIENTIFIC PRINCIPLES.
And under no circumstances or
change of temperature will it be
come corrupt or emit any offensive
smell.
BOOT AND SHOE
Manufacturers, naing Mit'cldnen,
will find it the beat article known
far Cementing. the Channels, as it
works without delay, is not affected
by any change of temperature.
1 1 JEWELERS •
Silll find it andlciontly adhesive for
'their use, as has been proved.
IT IS ESPECIALLY ADAPTED
TO LEATHER,
And we claim in an especial merit
that it aticka Patches and Linings
to Boots and Shoes sulfide/WY
strong witliont stitching.
IT IS VIE ONLY
LIQUID CEMENT
Extant that is a sure thing for
meading
TURNITITRE
OICOOKEIN:
TS
• B OY Okit,
IVORY,
And articles of Household um
ItEMEMBER,
Hilton's hisoluble Cement
Is in allgntd form, and RA easily
applied as paste.
HILTON'S INSOLUBLE CEMENT
Is inoolublo In orator or oli
HILTON'S INSOLUBLE CEMENT
Adheres 011.7 substances.
,
Supplied In Family or Menufactu-
Tete racksgee from 2 ounces to 100
lbs.
HILTON BRO. & CO.,
Proprletorg,
PROVIDENCE, R. I.
♦HEFTS Irt
LAING & IdAOINNIS,
No. 30 North THIRD St.
JOSEPH OODFREY &
No. 38 North FOURTH St
( fit Vrtss4
THURSDAY, J LY 7, 1861
Eng Mil and American Booksellers.
A pretty little libel on the American
book publishers has appeared in a London
periodical called The Bookseller, and ,it
may be worth while to notice and refute it:
Miss BnAnnox, as all novel readers
- know, is a writer of "sensation" : ro-
mances t such as "Lady Audley's Secret,"
"Aurora Floyd, 4 .Jobn llarehmont's.
LegapY,2.!-,and : itimys, in each of. which
erime. is • itiongly 'And . Skilfully depicted,
:reaclinetoi . the auspitiOn that -the lady had
' received. het - Attention With "The New
gate' •Caiendarl ., lid *ti text book, • and .it..
curiously haPperks_that.in all her .novels
the clever folks are gifted rogues, and
the wbll:Conducted people, their victims, .
arc fools or greenhorns. Miss MUDD= is
.b.Ow the, leading sensation novelist of the
' day. ...A few years 'ago, however, she was
unknown, • unhonored, and uncared for— .
nil actress at' a provincial theatre iu Eug-'
id;:,not excelling in that :Capacity,,and
e ,catoring to add . to , her . income by •
iting novels and *relates . for Penny
)
journals. ~By degrees,' slie...beeame peply
-1ar,..•- and "Lady Audley's Secret;" -when
.publishekin:.hoo.k,forin, was so ' fortunate
tit; •AO '.plettiCA4o . -orities.. From that ino
. went, everytbinisite. wrote ;Was welcomed,
• and the . : London.'riiagazine called' Temple
Bar was :Considered to , have made n' great
._hit When ; it secured : iiir as 'a
contributor—
ite...fili.nerial . there.being the well-known
.- 4 !.kilicifra . VlciAk'j*liicli hawhad a great :
sale iriAjs - Conntry,'..
..
. . 4;04 4liss ; BaAnnO*.ls: early,. fpilures '
wairinOvel entitled . iiThebuirrist,!' Which
appeared ,in a eicip•*iekly paper; *here
it drew little attention. .., In .fulneSSOf times,
.. . ...
wlien'enterpri.sinn. pUldishers-herelound-it
wOrthividle to 'se p eeolity:COAect; and reprint
MISS -BiabDON'S early iieditcidOns, 4 The
' Outcast" was reprodneed4first; in' a news
paper "down South" (either New Orleans
or San Franciseci) . , and, only4few monthk
agoi; Dim . & tyrzuzitALD; - Ne* . i - ork' - pub-
-]fishers, Who hive reissued. several,of Miss
Bitannag'i stories, broughtout "Mc Ont
clist";in book O form.'
..We'.reanember having
noticed, it tit :_. the; tin*. our opinion being
that it was ‘.14 . once : - crOde •filicl• clever, but
overlaid with ireprolnibWclunneteri. and
incidents. -'—', : •.- ,'..-:.:. .... ' '• : .
,
Miss'PkitAnnoxiliatuntlly enough, : wished
to make the niost of. her wares, and
Joins AllswELL, .her ."publisher, (who is
also her .husband,) 'Wits at; hind to help
her. Accordingly, "The .:Oucast". was
newly printed in three iolumes it a guinea
and a half, and largelyadvertised as " Miss
]Manna ac's' NOW I& due time it
came.before the publie; introduced by the
Prßli..m4io7, ll 2inglerieo, i*
'news-
Pers as an. item of .literary newts, that the .
first edition was completely exhausted . -On
the' first day of publication ; that it . tap.
peered sin ultaneouily in kieneh, Gernian,
and Englis.lr; thaV.the great leading libra
ries hrid•pirchaled:" unprecedentedly large
numbers of "the book,. the public inquiry .
for early Copies. of .whicli.bas lid no pa
valid amongst recent .Wcirks fiction,'.!.
This last was rather a bold assertion, seeing: .
that,'ef.a Latory by picxnxs, 40,000 copies
had- . been . .. sold- in two 'Attys. The- old
novel, to Which the:neknarne of
Dunbar" war - given;:wakient fpr.royiew
to the At4enaltm, a LondOn literaryjOurnal
of great Oirculation: On the 21cit :May ; re
viewing ' the book, the . 2117isaisum- said,
" Publication of a new' Itcri;el . by Miss .
Bnannoil. seems to 'tang, as 'u nratter •of
coarse, a renewal. of -tbe,.olcl . putling..2 We
take the liberty of telli ng all the par-:
ties concerned that the thing is overdone.
People are growing suspicious of books ,
which begin—as far as they can see—with ,
.a second edition.' . '. In fact, except the
.original appearance in the .pennf paper,
there' seems to have been no first edition
whativir. The publisher boldly 'started,
e fitiiPeet, , With a 'second edition!
• The Athenalan, with all its sharpness, was
some time 'before it discolerod that the new
"-Henry Dunbar" was the odd " Outcast."
The storywas that oft convicted forger, who •
had served out his penal time in - the Anti
nodes; ; meeting his old mas-'
ter jug, comeback from India ; murdering
him.; 'taking'.: possession of his wardrobe,
iewOrY, And Papers ; • Rassing himself off
as the •dead — ruillionaire. ; finally detected,'
and escaping; to die, at last, in a charming
;village on the English coast, wrespeetable
gray-kailed man and constant church
goer, " very sorry for what ,he had done."
The moral, that,simple sorrowlor " murder
and robbery atoned for :both, is worthy of
the other improbabilities of the tale.
ert .
Ten days after the first notice in the
.
:14th" - aims the fourth edition of," Henry
Prinbar " was . advertised' in the London
papers, and We believe that a sixth edition,
itt:nOtv annoi teed. good deal de-
perids upon the nuMber in each issue. Of
Misa EvArs's the . FlOss,". the first . .
edition consisted.of 3,000 copies. We be
lieVethat of "The Caxtons," "My No
vel," and "What Will Re: do . with It,"
although each had preViously ...appeared,
piecemeal,. in Blackwood, the2first, edition
consisted of 4,000 copies, and . -litc.wrs's'
new serial had sale, to start With, of 40,-
000. -Such things have been done as
printing a thousand copies,. putting a new
title page to every 'hundred of them, . and.
thus making the last hundred count'as • the
tenth edition.
The Bookseller, cohnnenting on the , puff
preliminary by which. it' . `was sought to
draw
,special . attention to ." 4enry Dun
bar," declared that the practice dates from
•an earlier period than the present an:
stance of the Cdition' t puff will be readily*
called .to mind on the publication of a cele
brated letter .by a bishop of .controversial
fame, when the sixth edition Was said half
an-bour after the publication of the first."
Of- course, this , is an. English. extunple. But
the *titer adds "The practice is a had elle;
it appears to have had its origin in America,
and the infection has been caught by those
who have had much to do with American
novels."
IL is on this point that we join issue with
The Bookseller. -
The . system of book-pulling originated,*
more tha4 forty years ago, with HENRY
CoLnunrc, a noted London publisher of
"fashionable.novels"' no " and Other flashy
works. As far back as May, 1828, Mack:
wood's Afa:qazine' freely and strongly de
nounced the practice, treated it,' with no,
measured words, in tlie "Noctes,'? and again
condemned it, in 1886 and 1841; Conside
ing that, in 1822; When COnturti cons ; ,
menced the pulDsystem, the only American .
novels then publishing were Coorttnis,Nur;-
Drica'.s, and fon NEAL'S, who certainly
were not puffed by bOoksellers or critics,
we cannot admit that the puff-system "
its origin in America." Mr. COLnunx made
himself so notorious by his announce
ments of
. the rank of his writers, the im
mense sums he paid them, •the extraordi
nary snip of their books, that there actually
was published, in London, when his' sys
tem was in full operatiOn, a satirical poem;
entitled "The Puffiad," in Whiely Con - Jai:MN
figured as the hero. • •
At the same time, let us confess that,
in later times, sonic American publishers
have out-Colburned UcimsußN. Many
recent book announcements, particular
ly of works of fiction, are . outrageous
puffs, and "lying like an advertisement
May safely. be substituted in such cases for
"lying .like a .bUlletin." There is• small
excuse:for. it. here, seeing that the honest
do mania for hookS, and especially for Works
of imagination, is very much greater than
PBILADELPHIA, :THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1864.
in England. This is easily accounted for
—our books arc considerably cheaper, and.
the number of readers is immensely larger
than iu England. • • -
The Mettle' or' Pine Kuellk.
(Special Correspcindonco of the Prem.)
COMPLETE Liss , 01P PENNSYLVANIA AND xew JEll
SET TROOPS KILLED AND WOENDED IN GEARY'S
Dl VI9ION , izoorocu , s coupe, IN TAN BATTLE Ox'
PINT; KNOE,VEOIIO7A, JUNE 15, 1554.
Capt. Bt. Voele, mustering officer. Gen. Oearr's afar,:
wounded seriously through chest and lung.
20Th[ PENNSYLVANIA VETP,IIAN VOLUNTEERS:
, .
tit
Jae Hellman. A
Chas Pomoroy, E
Enemy smitli,
• Win Dauell,
Win 31 Peak, 1)
Beni Smith. D .
H Bowers. 1)
Hobs Callahan, E
:Joseph Hudson, E
robs McConnell, E
'Chas Weiland, E
'Timothy Whealin, E
James Doran, E •
Jacob Bununer,
Alex Major, 1' •
Ceo Toropeon,
Win McElwee. G.
Coo blathers. C
IJacoh Selman. 0
IVin Morgan, 11
•
Wm aieone, core, C
0 W Bombe, cot p, - A
RWlgliltuan, Corp, B.
A.Arbucklo, corp,
wOll
Wu) Rickards, colonel
.1 1) wnievu, neuleonot
Cline Miller, sere, b
A Gorley, staxt,
.1 W Giadnoy, seigt, fl '
G VI Jeffries. sergt, K
3 It F.ckeri,.sergt, B
Julio Graham, con+,
Patrick .Kane, corm F
Bell.'corp,
Jobs Salmon, corn, K
.711 Eckert, A
Jos Allen, A
Geo fiteincsetz, A
Henry Nice, b
C Leunon, B
MISSING.
Milani Room 11
VETERAN VOLUNTEERS.
L H Costa, H
rracksrz.v.vgrs
James .614,
,Jogs Bolan, corn B
Fred'k Muter. B
B Zimmerman, B •
Fred'k .11liteher,
`2671.1.-rEwIy:PrAL
•W M tifrocje.•„„
John-onocab; •u.• '- •
J Bart,
Capt T D Amer, Co E
Capt LE Colgan, I
Lient .1 E Littleton 0
Corp Jas C Smith, !A •
Corp /Shire', A
Came Grum,•A
J Wiltlinon, A
NV II inflict], A •
Thomas Watt, C •
Becalm Brown, C
Seto A 11 'Hayward, D
W Atkiw•on, D •
James Fall, .D
Pat rick Murphy, D •
W Weitlan, B .
D Vauban; E •
J D Fries, E •
Corp A Shari, F
.1 Cartwright, F
Jelin T Longi - F
John blaiiiter V
John Varian V, (died)
8 A Lance,
Luke Babe, F
.1 Shupe, F
John Renner, F
147T11 rEN.ms'iMr.emA yCiLMITE.S.TtS.
.• .
BILLED,
Hilderman, A. •
WO UN DED.
W Sheppard.
A C Walker, A
D Mosby, I .
S APP. G
Josiah Shafer. B
W O'Briau„ ii
J Sheen •A
J 8011,.0
I Chester, F
F Bench, It
A Brion, F
Cant J.Q Mercer. E
lieut. IL Ewing, A
'C A Crcigor, A
l.ntz,•A
Eli En nett, C
Capt John Sowers, C
Capt Thos Flinch, D
.1 C Hass, 0
D II Ealtrhart,
C LTnin, II
AV Beal:nem, D
C E Brock., A
• /OM rEITNSYLVANIA VIILUNTEEnS.
KILLED.
Dent'', Felton C
Oco W itgltee
t Eergt /.eleisioung, D
Jolla E
Eergt Henry E p
' . WOKXDED.
Capt F L Olmber,Corn Eogt:lst Sergt John S Hesslor. B
Capt APred McUittingan, D Richard Brooks, E
Ist Lt Wm Mothers, 1) Thomas Fox, E
Jacob Ott, A • - Samuel McCaughey, F'
Ortnet Kessler. A John Emmet, r •
71101C111.4 Barlow,'A Sorg Wm McNally, 11
C F Conley. B Samuel Martin, 11. -
Henry Harvey. A Joseph. Shapley, H
John it Herbert, C &rat I'pha Johnson,l
Chum W Hodge. C Corp Bob t Richardson, I
Chas Brewer, D John Fickle, I
Smith Greco, D Chas F Pr.:Thaler, I
Wilson Dawes, D Jacob Sbuier, I
John C Trover, D Patrick Sheen, I
Daniel Henninger, D ‘‘''illiarn lioties, - 1
Georze Meslinner. I) Corp Chas Miner, K
Corp John Boyenaholts, S
' ,D NEW JERK .
kI
Wit Wm H Cochrane, K
Corp W II Harker, U
P Murray, C
F We.gamon, C •
Jou Osalinye, C -
Jab B Gathrle, C
W B rt:lpp, A
W B Canfield, A
M O'Connor, A
B
T St.ckwell, D
J Cook, B
E W Bowere.
P Lewir, C
Joshua Bnlenahal,
Corp J Poi ter, 1)
'V Sands. I)
Brandt, 1) -
J Queen, D '
Ilickerson, D
0 Davenport, D •
P Mete], D'
E Ryan, 1)
It llcOlnnff D
J hleCorsufek, B
M DJtter E
aboP, E
Beret J L llerman,
Corp J Donnelly, P
Cor 31cDoncild,
73D PEICKSYLVA.24
KIL
A Gansiber. B
Gorp,Patrick McCrvta.l. F
woc.
MajonC E Cresson
Cant.S.l) Miller, B
Capt Slenry Hese, .H
FirstaLient A Harfinger,
ISar g t Eulene !imam,
Wm Berkbart, A
George Ileckart, A
Sere( E A Buell, 11;
George Everitt, B e •
Bawd Gandy, B 1 •••, •.
John Pearson, B •
John Eceley, .13
J Love, B
Henry 'Rena, B
• George Cook. 13 ' -
Sergb Chas Diner, C . .
Fred. Heuniser, C
Chas Osborne, C
Corp J Montgomery,-D
Nebel ACCOMII , Of Wilson and liniitz!s.
liovesnent.
The Petersburg
. Express of June 27 coutain.Sthe
following:
As the raiders advance upon their line of eon
templated operations, and become hourly further
removed from us, we hear less of their movements.
There is no doubt that they contemplated. the
effectual destruction of the Danville railrondoind
at the time this is written the latest we get from
them is up to Friday night, when they were-scat-.
Wed from Green Bay to the Bleherrin. The. latter
locality is about six miles from Burkville Junction,.
and the lortacr a station on the Danville road,
dis
tant teumiles from the Junction.
Ow cavalry, who went in pursuit, laliored . under
serious disadvantage. The raiders, having 'the
start., stole all the fresh horseS they could Bud,
while our men were compelled to do the best they
could with the horses upon which they started. We
are pleased to hear, however, that the thieves and
hotiso. burners have not been allowed to go. thus
far altogether unpunished. Ouz Ibrcos, by great,
exert ton, succeeded In reaching a portion or the
.vandals near Nottoway Court House, on Thurs
dayf and immediately gave them battle. A hot
light:_ ensued, which was continued from two
o'clock until dark, when night closed tho con.,
test. The enemy was severely punished, and
retreated under the cover of darkue.?s. Wo wore
greatly outnumbered and short of ammunition,
but these inequalities were made up for by a con-
selonsness of thejustice of oureause. At one time
we hear that the enemy gained the advantage, and
had possession of three pleces.of: artillery, but-Cot.
Barring.er's gallant North. Carolinians, aided by a
few coMpanies of Virginians, under - Gen. Dearing,
proved equal to the emergency, and by.a bold charge
rescued the pieces. We killed and wounded a large
number of tire enemy, if prisoners taken. are to be
believed, and captured thirty-four, all of whom have
been received in Petersburg. They represent the 3d
New York, 2 0 -11 New York, and oth Pennsylvania_
Graham's Petersburg battery:Was hotly engaged,
and sushi Inca the following. casualties :
lifennled—.Lieut. 1?ollard, slightly, in • the arm ;
Lieut. Britton, slightly, in tho thigh;Sorgt. Aerec,
slightly, in the heel ; Uorp..Toynerolesh wound In
the leg ; Charles K. Hargrove, through the bowels,
and dead ; George Bauer, severei.y, in the thigh ;
Stephen. Black, severely, in the breast; Walter.H.
sounders,
.very severely, la the back; Lewis DI.
hicenrgo, in the foot"Jas: Bl,cAllister, shoulder;
John W. Taylor, in, log;. David W. Savory, in the
head—all slightly.
Captain. Graham commantled;and • the fight oc
curred at the cut in the South Side Hailrbad, :four
miles this side of Nottoway Court House. •
We regret to hear that Colonel -Anderson, of the
-2d North Carolina Cavalry ' was killed.
The enemy, we hear, saade diligent search for
Thomas H. Campbell, klvq., the receiver for this
district, who resides near the court house, but failed
to had bird.
The raiders stole -a large quantity of bacon in
their route. One of their wagons was filled to over
flowing, and a gentleman residings' ' the vicinity of
Ford's - depot picked up fourteen hams after the
vandals passed, which had jostled out.
We understand from a gentleman,who came down
from Nottoway last evenur- that The enemy select
about twenty-five hundred of their best men, who
remain behind to do the fighting, while the remain
der go ahead to do the stealing, burning, and other
pusillanimous:work, in which they so much delight.
For the first time, they have killed all the horses
.wiLich the.
out-from exhaustion. Our informant
states that the entire route of the enemy 14 strewed
with dead horses: They have' also nbollshar the
'practice of shooting the poor animals, hut.cit their
throats.
All are found with ghastly gashes, severing the
jugular VOID, and producing In ovary case a speedy
death.
(From the Richmond Dispatch, Juno 2S.]
At on early hour yesterday morning it was report.
ed that the raiders on the Danville Railroad had
ERA - end a defeat, and this was soon confirmed by the
following official despatch from General Leo :
BEADQUARTICRIS ARAIY OF NORTHER,: VIIIOiNIA,
June 3;46.1.
Honorable Secular!, of War:
Sin : The enemy has been quiet to-day In our
front. A despatch, dated 25th, was received this
morning from Captain Furrinhall, commanding at
Staunton river bridge, expresSing his confidence'in
being able to protect it.
This afternoon General W. H. F. Lee reporti that
he attacked the 'enemy near Staunton river bridge
yesterday afternoon, and drove him until dark. Its
also states that the enemy was signally repulsed at*
the bridge the same evening, and retreated, this
morning, leaving about thirty of his dead on the
'ery respectfully', &c.,
. • E. Lza, General.
The following despatch, received subsequent to
the foregoing, gives some additional partioulars Of
Captain FarrinhaWs achievement:
Ordivir. DaroT, VIA Dews lIiLT., Juno
Captain Varrinhelt, commanding at this point re
pulsed Gen. Kautz handsomely 'yesterday evening,
killing and wounding at least 250. Eight killed and
24 wounded of ours. J. Wigwams, A. A. G.
A PIOIIT WITH WILSON'S CAVALRY.
A tolegram from Richmond, sixteen hours old,
says: Gen. Mahone, assisted by cavalry, came up
with" Wilson's raiders, near Reams' Station, ton
miles below hero, yesterday. lie fought and routed
them,, driving them four miles, capturing tl. places
of artillery, 200 prisoners, tel ambulances, as wagons,
killifig and woundinga largo number of the enemy,
and recapturing d ig stolen slaves. Our cavalry
were in .pursuit a net aeoounts, and a large num
ber ought to be captured. The enemy are retreat
ing in greet disorder by the route by which they
came to Reams.. Our less lit infantry is ono killed
and t.lro vpondOd, •
Lorenzo Moyer. I
urai.
John Weep, D
Fred White; E
litehar,l Kline... •
John' nix;
Geo D Thompson, II
1=3:133
Sergi Conrad Strain,
Corp John Eayeraft, li
W E
F
Thos Beor, F
Corp James Hard,
jalllo6 Loyd.
B*Counelly.
A . Parson, G
P Schnittzenberg,
Chas Smith, 0
DCalmus, H
John Clough, D •
B F Eisenborger. (died)
Sergi P Brute. K
J3B ilanardi.K.—
S King, K
G Horn, K
Evan Edwards. K •
J Li Wright, fi
Jr &dine, K
Seibert, B -
W Disney, K
Thos Clark, K
Corp John Ashton,'D
SI Kennedy, D
Robert Scott, E
Charles Sickels,
James Janniso . a. I
James Griffin, K.-
Hagan Williams, 11:
William Scott,
BE=
F BVIII1N•D
L 'Wash, E 0
Hennessey.
C H Locke, H
.1 Mc:Lillie, I •
Vautterhotr, I
•LED.
iSergt J B
Corp T Dryden, B
I G Steeltcas. B •
II•Broaa, F
J Matthews, F
C Cretan, F
PI Boylan, F
S Pettit,
L CODway, G
P McCay, 0
Corp P Butns,o
W Datch•n, H •
L Letts II
G'll Sall,
Corp JIM litcLaugklht, II
W Cooper, H
Fergt .1C slith r i
Pitte.Manus,
0 De Gran,
Beret W B Frazer, I
if Stapleton. K
Guthrie, C
ISO.
J Lawton, IT
voLunvrErs.s.
LED. -
Corp Hugh Murphy, H
'DED.
David Dennis, D . .
Henry Ktraehener, 11
Sorgt Jacob Mall, D -
beret Win Hendricks, E .
Sergt Fred :3ruith, E
Corp 111 Johnson, E
John Foator, E •
John Carlin, E
John Richardson, E
George Goetz, G
Sergi Jae Murren, .
David Doe., II
Conrad Wagner, H
Chas Fry I
Amos.ELchards, I
I , ,rdtuand linauff,l
John Hager, 1 •
qhu lidtvard, K
Patrick McGranlgan,
Tug OWT. NAVAL BATTLE.
American Aceosintri from 'Parts nod
.I.ontion—Testimony- of 'Minister Hay
ton's Son, op: Board the lienrmitrgm—
Another Yeseeklillt timer Olit for SerillliCS
—Tim question. of Primoners—ltinlster
Day tou'is !Part to the Victory.
gkwrespondence or the New York Times.]
Pan's, Tuotelny, Julio 21.—This time we here a
bit of exciting war news to send you from this side
.
of the'
Theeinting of the Alabama by.the
3C carsarge, off the. port of Ohothourg, occupies, for'
the moment, flie. thoughts and the conversation of
everybody, for itfirer° that so many circumstances
combine to give interest to any one event. The-jo
br. our loyal people•'betels 'as might, bweepectedi
ecenothlng beyond ;description: . •
In ono of the- . many conversations the Ameriean
Minister, has teen ,Obliged to.hold with the ,French
Government Babjectef the asylum which is
furnished to • thebibels.ln the French naval ports;
Mr. Dayton, I,ette4fold, said to the Foreign Minister
that all that, wpi ; moan',to nompleto the hospi
telity -Fratiee?towlird thelrobels was to give re ,
inge to the - Jilstlijkhnitt that then they would.have
given aid • and ,peaffeegon to the whole.Oonfedeeate•
•
navy, and lieleenffretied by saying that,this vessel,
knowing howitrnintAeliad been received In France,
wouldmo doubt EOM enter a French - port to debutna
. the hospitality er-..bleh• heti been accorded the others„.
To;this,..the ortrehltets tcr Is said to have replied.
With Trent ene thlit"„it would not ho permitted,
that he. would et'ellbw the Alabama to come in,
and . that their-ports iebould not be made ' ntilace of
common resortfo theeolveeseis.„
This was throe., months ago: At that Ame :stlz
.
thou hewatching/..witietinterest the . course, oe-the
A labanta, we did not anticipate so earlrevisit from.
her..Ordy a fortnight:atm Mr: Forbes, of New York,
nrriveir from Shinghaeated gratified us all hyena
ring:lli:that we would never see the Alabama again
in Eurapean waterteenethat she was badly used up
by her long and itoUvi) eersice, and from this feet
and the M eiet that the maritimntordictions againit
her ln the Lest had: heen,,seade very severe, she
would:prebibly be solt.t.there. •We wore therefoie
not a little a...mistiest toted that the Alabama was
in the port oi Chertiourgthat she had made the
run froin'the Etat. In the:Medaritably short time, for
a vessel in-her condithitg'oralititidred days. So Im
' posslhlo 'did . it seem, thakwhenehe entered the port
of Cherbenr,e, last Irkety week, both the American
vice consul at that piece rind 'the maritime prefect
telegraphs:4lo PariS that it was the Florida. • -
InireaditVoly the American Minister at Paris tele
graphed to, Copt.. Winslow;;el the Kearsarge, then
lying in one of the perts . of•litgland,•and to the old
sailiag frigate litt:LOule,'SUYipesed to be at (radix, to
repair im m ediately to Chttelionrg to catch the pirate
If possible.... The' Iteersaego arrived at once, but the
St. Loulstad not yetliff&thne to arrive at the me-
AGM- of: the. fight.' , TIIC-"Amerlean Minister also
protested atvenee to - She Freneh Government
evil:Let lho.admission of the Alabama, and re
mtnde'h • the - Foreign Secretary of his previous
- PiraniElLin.repard to this vessel. The American
Minister :Could with more justice protest ener
getleally In view of_ the fact that the Alabama did
not come Into a French port under stress of Wel.
ther •'
she seemed to have- struck a straight line
frosntlke Cape to Cherbourg; she did not turn either
to the right' , or to the lett; • sho WS not attempt
logo into either of the ports of -.England, or .of Hol
land) or.of,leelgium, or of Spain, or;of Portugal, as
sho •might have done with - the sane ,'acuity. , Mr.
Daytotethereforeinaile a most apt anti most forcible
point in (twisting to the-Foreign /Minh-ter Chat, by
cis hadullenee, - the rebels wrs-usfpg polls ex
dctly ari they were qi t"..:i. , 44tliar,:;they,pahl no re
gard to fie stress of tvti. , lt , clause, and:telt such
had boon the hospitality sho . "4kbem•ie France that
they were Met learningte re* 'oqt their only eta
deevons. '
•.The result of this pr:74..e..ft , :vias th at Semmes, after
the thing - had gone ,tlirezgli th e , reitilinteention
office,” received a nt the Maritime Prefect
to leave as corn -provisioned and coaled,
and not to null. for [fjt.ury as he had expected to
do. As soon as this iwaaelitii sent to Scmmcs Mr.
Dayton sent his son, Mr. V/III;em Dayton, Jr., with
instructions to Capt. 'Wins:COW - to make preparations
for a fight, for that Sgtuntie had been ordered out,
and would be obliged to gu.
CcPt. Seines, tindleg,thet he had no alternative,
determined to put thd:tesL.,litoo °litho matter, and
to make as , much entiltal fax Itimseir:es possible.
Ile therefOre wtotelai lottel-lo the Merit line Pre
fect, requesting hiers,to 'proem Capt. 'Winslow that
ho considered the Titter's emiduct in pretending to
lie off and blocktidethiminarnentrel port as an in-
Fiat (!).and that he
,intended to came out and drive
' to - otter Winslow Tied, 'Let tabu come out and
Ir
"v " Both parti made. their preparations ac-
I•Tertlingly. Semmes„ whose businers it was to run
and not to fight, was, se badgered and worried by
the taunts of our side; by the puts on the back of ids
friends and sympathizers, :and by the restrictions of
the Frinckautherities,jthat a less brave man than
he would„kase been driven by desperation to tight;
and .Capff;•Winslew, •wise,property estimated all
these circumstance's?, feit.'perfeetly sure that Semmes
. was golug-to_ light. Semmes lett all his valuables
in the hands of the Brazilian cousular agent on
shore, and-after Inviting his friends to come ouletind
see the fight, went, to sea.
You will see sanartyeecounts of the fight that I
need not dwell afirlekgthish that part of the affair..
•Mr. William Daytaii,. Jr.. - and - Antoine, the well
known messenger: ' be the American Lega tion ,how
ever, caw the tight: Mertgere on board the Rear
:nage before.ene titer the gegen, and their account
diners from mosi•ef those &bibbed, and very much
from the one-sided accourfts 'of the :ifoniteur and
the other Seceesien.prints, - • to whom 'the affair has
been a very bitter-pi?. According to Mr. Dayton,
Ir.'s, account , the ea on lasted about an hour and a
half. 7:110 - Kenrssize i althodgh bit In several places,
receiveitne vital shot. The hearsarge had but threq
men touched, Intl thblfe not mortally. It Is not true
that at any pertcit the fight the Alabama had the ad
vantage; the mance.tevring and firing of the Ketirsarge
*ere bothsuperlor td.thostrof ire Alabama. There
is ne evidence that Capt. - Semmes tried to board the
Keareargeons the Sete:islet( prints say. Toward
the end;.of:the'llght - Captecin -Winslow succeeded
in plantinestEhot in the inahhinery et the. Alaba ma,
_which disabled her he then. had things all Ida own*
way, and running close (0 Fier likpOnred into - her a: -
destructive - honeergieg,_,•ro
through a whotelectioneof ; Alklutmals ,str
the water-line and_ let the •er -through. • •
cedes. Both slaps tliciestop the Ala
bama, without striking je sterted . ....towhiff..
Cherbourg ; but CaptOlu Sating lei flag
of. victory, started to head 1 . *.• " e saw, how- .
ever, that the Alabama Was •ie • . and at once low
ered two beide to to hernia, and, in effect, the
vessel Sauk betbre she had proceeded a dozen lens
toward the harbor. The ocarsargees boats picked
up sixty-eight persons, of whom fourteen were
woutdett, and of whom three died. The others were
picked up by the Englisli.yacht, Captain Lancaster,
and landed at Southampton. The Kearsarge
steamed at once into the.portef Cherbourg with her
prisoners...•
And now. here arise two Important questions.
One relates to the prisoners brought hatoCherbourg,
and the-other to-those carried into Soutiaarupton.
The prisoners brought into. Cherbourg, many of
whom are Frenchmen, demanded to be paroled, and
Captain Winslow, who, was crowded' for room, also
desired to know of the ArneOfran Minister if ho
could not parole them,- Mr. Payton„telegraphed to
his son and to eaptain.NVins‘ow tr , .W. , the prisoners
could not be paroled, and that the must be held
till the St. Louis arrived, and-then conveyed to the
United States. ,
In regard to Captain ,Semmes and the other
prisoners carried into Setithalpton, Captain Wins
low claims them as his prisoners, and Mt. Dayton
haaadelsed Mr. Adams to demand their rendition.
Captain Winslow had-ample -time ••and- moans to
pick Tip all the officersand men of the Alabama, but
the boats of tho English yacht ran in and actually
stole them away, as if acting upon a prearranged
plan, thus constituting it a cleat ease interren
tion. Captain Semmes and party did not therefore
escape. 'I hey wore stolen away by a party who; was
Indirectly Interfering in the tight. %There waB no
wish ou the part of Captain Winslow to see Captain
Semmes drowned. • On tho'contraey;he would hero
SOOT' taken up Simples' boat-load himself.
Bete let me place a reflection. Is It not strange
that at her birth and her death, and all through the
course of her short existence, whenever the Alabama
needed help there was always an Englishman there
to renderitt She was constricted by Englishmen
In an English port;.she was taken to Sea, armed,
equipped, and started on her career of pillage and•
devastation by Englishmen • she was fed,•harnored,
petted, and protected iri Eng lish ports y and finally,
when she arrireral the la sttragic scene in her de
structive esistenee, there stops in um Englishman to
steal away her Captain and officers! • . • •
The.lttonf/cor and other secession sheets •say that
the contest was unequal.one, aud this in the face
.ot• the boast or Laird and other born Natio English
ship-builders, thatthe Alabama could either whip
or outrun the Kear sarge , . and that Captain' Semmes •
demanded nothing better_thon'a trial of thu qua
lities of 'the two boate. The facts . 6.re, that the
Reemerge could both entree- her and whip her.
An officer of the • Rearsarge •said, here the other
day, that if they could get.sighe opthe Alabama
in the morning, no .matter at`y - w,,hat dittaaco,
he-was sure that they could chielther and sink
her befere night. Both are wtiotlea,vessels, the
Alabama being of 1,060 tons,,anCthe _Reemerge
3,030. Both carried-abbut I.l4‘asme number of
guns, but the . ono. CAtried Yanree'vms and the
other English, end MIS gave the* • ekreargo if groat
advantage. A inasiwhe will t :tiffoiself to JElng
lish guns at'-tills affianced agie;, have his
ship sunk. Time itch large ea, re ,a , ooniplement
of oneliundred and ofghty me Lyikt.heAdatarna,
150. The dill - create wite not ; •• • ?regards nant-
Der, for ships of that size can =S' swell 'handled
in an open sea fight with 11,0 AMU , 4030 'mon. But
the lienrearge had a great aogitilitt thekind of
men; She 1111t1 Yankee sailors+ astll Ine of the old
gunners of the United States,,na - - trio first sailors
'and the first gunnery in the wee t` The officers of
the A labarlia,-I =told, are - tiWuperiermen lu their
profestdon, hut.their crew volunteered for privateer-
Ingo prirposcs, and were probatt not trio kind of men
to light such a foe as they . Mu .la, the Kearsarge.
For it is net the most adventure 011ie most blaster
leg man who makesthe best lightytatateof life or
death. .. •
Dr. Galt, of Norfolk, Va.',._the eargeolt of, the
' Alabama, and a gentleman who Moms to MAYA beet ,
much beloved and, respected tort board the vessel,
was drowned. So ut4east it. lereported.
- The Yeddo, new Confederate:ship at Bordeaux;
was yesterday prep-1111g to imiltoday. 'file owners
say - she is sold to irnoutral party, and the Govern
. mcnt appears to - coffin:a in the statement. Wo will.
aeon see.
It is to lie hoped thet'onr Government will ,hurry
over here some additional men-of-emr. They would
be very useful in. arioas ways. • - Matenose. •
OFFICIAL AEPO24" OF CATTAIL( BLAMES.
Mr. Mason, the representative' of the IC Con
federate', Government has Sent &copy of thisreport
to the Times. Ong el Semmes, says that, in an
hour and ten mina Stile Arita:ma was found to
bo in a sinking state—the enemy's shells having'
exploded on her 'tildes and bet Ween deeks.e For a
few minutes lie had..hopes of -reaching the Frew%
constf but the ship„fflion rapidly and ,the furnace
fires were extbsgaOhed. Onyltela,Semnies says, u I
now hauled Own colors to .- pro Vent the further'
destruotion iand.despathahed a boat ta.:
inform tbo enemy. of our condition, although we
were now bat lour hundred-e-yit t rile -from .each'
other. The enemy tired :Akan Ilvetimes after colbrs
had been struck. , is ebaritaleate„. eulposia- that a-
Alp of war of a Christian ,nation,cou d not have
done this intentionally. Some - enty, after
my
aer
my furna tw
furnace 'fine were exthigillheiloand the ship
being on the point - of sinking...every...man, in .obedi- -
Cameo to a provione order which-had been given to the
crow, - jumped oterboarit amPendeayered to save
hhuself. hero ..wa.e,mo appearance.ef any boats
coming teeth the ;enemy after thel74lp Went down.
It was fort.unatii - myself thus' escaped, to the shelter
of the noutrollieg on been' Mr.•Lanettster's yacht
Deerhound, together with about forty,othors.
GREAT MUTATE DISOWNS' Tittp•YRIVA.TBER.
(From the LondowPott (government oresie), June 21.]
• • • Now that the greet Confederate , cruiser
Is among the things of the paSt,'we aro aware Orel
very different judgments will.leipronounced upon
the character of her career. By:-some site. will be
denounced AS t lawless plratoe - whwe sole'Object
was to destroy ell prepertymhiltheihe Mid any rea
son to think belonged to the eithene:ofthe N'etthern.
Republic; by others she will - be .regardett• as an
effective cralt;manned by a resolitt,o crew, sailing
under a recognized flag, and tieing as mut* damogo
as possible - to an opponent 14 wilt= she was vastly
overmatchd.. Built in an, Engitsb,dook, and
equipped in neutral, though not „Ihmlish waters,
put ln commission 'white still on the high seas, and
never moored. In a Cenfederate Pert, there aro
these who will maintain that she never aoquired
that national ohmmeter which qualified her to war,
in the name of the Southern Confetlerapy, on. the .
Republic of theUnlted States, and that she Wag in
- truth a privateer teillmitt a legiffnicte commission.
These ore the questions which have. already boon
warmly canvassed, and which will, now that the
Alabama's race is run, again be eagerly ventilated.
Either as regards the Alabama's origin or her sub
sequent career, there • IS, however, but • one opinion
Molt unipped luvartial Inquires can, oyor
on• t crt4 ht. T •
hal this country is not responsible for her
departurefront our ports is evidenced by the fact that
in the similar Case of the Alexandra the Government'
failed to establish their right to detain the vessel, and,
therefore; *Seizure of the Altthama,liad it takenpiace,
would have been an illegal act.
A NUM' rna?•Pittat rlvrruo OUT FOu TILE UEBEL
OWAIN 'Mr. THANE-143.
fLossion Correspondence of tho Herald.)'
The sinking of the Alabama has been the theme
of every tongue and the gossip of every coterie.
Captain Semmes Is the hero 01 tho hour. As one of
'the tlatly-paphrs expressed it, "he is the guest of
England." ~ A nd before ho hod been on shore forty
eight hours arrangements were =dolor furnishing
• him another Ship, more strift end poWerful than the
ill-feted. craft that has just met such a righteous
retribution in 'Cherbourg bay. A gentleman told me
yesterdhy he hod sent: the steamer that teas now fitting
out for Captain Semmes here in the Thames;.and he
added that she would be put under his command in suck
a wily that.the'COVerntnent could n ot possibly interfere.
I believe overyword of this Is true.
-
-There ire malignant spite In thli English ma
itropells, coupled with a; hire of gain, thnt would rig
.out and arm a lmndrod Alabamas, utterly regard-_
less of Public morality, 'national right, or public
popsy. . "
TILE ENGLISH A ItANOESIENT TO RESCUE 6EHMIES•.
_ . ...
A gentleman acquitintaaco. had a long con
venation with UM Second OAlcerof the Alabama, and
ho gaft him these •particulars;The arrangement
was' made at Cherbourg' with the 'captain of the
vela-Deerhound to go out and , witness thellikht,
and reseas,Bortuuos It he,wore defeated. The 'officer
'ape, said they had only.four or five days , provisions
on board, and thelYenehGovernment bad forbidden
them a supply; so they had to go out and aneet.the
Kearsarge or have the ship sold and the crew dis
banded. Trusting In that luck which had ever at,
tended" his craft, the bold'hnecaneer salted cat—to
meet more than his match.
. . . .
. If Captain Wilkes exceeded his duty In. taking
Mason and. Slidell, from the Trent; then Oaptatn
Winslow is ioniewhat to blame in allowing Semmes
to escape. , But one of hii apologists May reply that
ho inquired after Captain Semmes of the first boat
load ol wounded and prisoners that came on board,
and was told he was drowned. •
*ln afew days a new Alabama, and part of a new
anti part of the old crew, will be cutting the salt sea
foam at a speed.of .sixteen knots an hour, sinking
and burning what few merchant reseels " vetremain
under the stripes and Eters," and fitted - out as be
fore with British gold - , mounted with British guns,
and supplied with. British and accompanied
by the malignant joy of ninety-nino hundredths of
Englishmen. .
Four American sailors who were captured by the
Alabama on one of the last ships that sho hurtle&
have lately arrived in England. They describe the
Alabama as a "perfect boll on earth.", They say
there was not a particle of discipline on board; that
they considered their lives in jeopardy every hour,
and that.they did not believe Setumes himself felt
any personal. Security against his lawless myrmi
dons. •
CAPTAIN WINS1:0108 Immo:visas watoz.En.corr-
TEARY TO . INETRUCTIONE Or TILE AMERICAN
; iwisven. . .
Captain Winslow, giving as a reason that he had
no room to•kepp. them in,efinmedlately paroled the
ptiEmierF.--live,officers and sixty-two men—and they
went onshore*:
The officerTganiS paroled were StliebnlGalt, for:
merly of thalnited States navy, Th iel Lieutenant
Wilson,. I,74l.d_hingineer...Pundt,. Chief Engineer.
Freeman, an allie r boatiwain. Several other officers;;
whose nameil base not yet becuablo to ascertain,
were picked up. by-Frenohhortt
It is.doubtful whether,tho.aelteniof Cr.ptr,
low the prihMerS will meet with the ap
probatiorfa. the GovernMent. 'lt is equivalent. so
far es NIS net can make% to a recognition of the
"I , ollE:event right3' , ;'cif" (Ifs Britt& pirate, wholes
never4et entered a renal pert:, It •mity have Die ,
enact to seriously Complicate .the question ()realms
which our Government will' make. upon Great
.Britain for property destroyed by-this vessel, built,
ranted, equipped, aml manned In an English port.
It was certainly in opposition to the instructions of
"Mr. Dayton, to whom Capt. Winslow applied as •to
whether or not he should parole the prisoners. Mr.
Dayton's answer, by telegraph, however, did not ar
rive until alter Diemen were paroled. It Is certainly
in opposition to the feelings aid wishes of his otil
cers. As to tho.mntter of room, Mr. Dayton In
formed tae before I loft Paris that he had tele
graphed to Capt. Winslow that the St. Louis would
arch - c at, Cherbourg In a few days, from the Medi
terranean, and could take most of the prisoners on
board. That Capt. Winslow believed ho was acting
for.the best, of course, I firmly belies-a.. Still I think
he acted very unwisely and injudiciously.
A DESCRIPTION' OF THE ALABAMA
A short description of the Alabama may not ho
amiss, therelbre 1 will give it : The Alabama, or
"250," was launched from the building yard of
the Messrs. Laird; of Birkenhead. She was a bark
rigged wooden propeller, 1,050 tons register, 210 feet
length of keel, 220 feet length over all, 32 feet beam,
and 11 feet depth. Her engines were built by Laird
Co., and were two horizontal ones, three hundred
horse power each, with stowage for nearly four hun
dred tons of coal. Her sails and standing rigging
at all times available were as follows : 3, ore, fore
top-mast, stay-sail-jib. two large try-sails, the useal
square sails on fore and main, with the exception of
mainsail, which, was n flying one, spanker and gaff
top-sails; all the standing rigging was wire. She
also had a double"wheel, and the motto Aide toi, et
Dieu Faidera. She carried five boat.s, viz: cut,
tor and launch amidships, gig - and whale-boat
between the main and wizen masts,, nud
dingy _ astern. The main deck was pierced
for twelve guns ;'elliptic stern, billet head, high
bulwarks. At the time she left Cherbourg her, crew
numbered one hundred and fifty persons. She
?ailed from Liverpool on the 29th of July, 1562, arid,
after preying for nearly two ,years upon unarmed
merchantmen• and having performed nothing more
worthy of her 'boasted prowess than the destruction
of the Hatteras, 1 urea - by the display of false colors
within range of her lire s ,shels'is tbutlit her first and
last battle. One may truly say,- !. she has boon seen'
in tlie light of the dames - Ire , • •
mice . 1 314, - nsiter;la. the i')(lT,rafetdf baktle,S.
s is amusing so see 4haiyfrfpfutthat . .y . o . ly r sak,
es - bYlktqlestrubtion, Pt‘Lailla•
rfeleto :11 ) 41 0 (fun' le We - 4 11 4
flavy.• Tnts ideils—dh! so bird tb swallow—that
• .lanlictignnblnit; white 'crew of :one. hundred" men
arid eight 'guns, !Mould have not only utterly de
stroyed, but actually sunk, in one short hour, a man
-of-war built, armed, entipped, and manned by Eng
lishmen (who sing "Britannia rules the wave”)—fn
fact, nothing but a regularly-appointed British Men
of-war, only sailing under different colors. .
HAVANA AND MEXICO.
Reception. of Maximilian in the City of
Mexico—Progress. of the War of Von
quest —Exodus from Ratan.
IL:v.1;o, July 2.—By the steamer Hayti we have
papers from the citY.ofiktoilco to the 16th, anti from
Vera Crll7. tothe 2r.d of Stine.
Thti Dnperor Maximilian and suite arrived In the
city of Mexico, and is sail to have had alerand and
enthusiabtio reception, but the same thing Was said• .
on his arrival at Vera, Cruz, and It Is known what U
cold one that was. Of course, one hundred, and .
one gene were fired, a Te Deum performed at.-
the Cathedral, and the 4/amine Sainte: fee lenpc
ralorem chanted by the Archbishop Saliastida,
and a grand 011 given to wind up the cc - xenon.
The getters-up of the ball, remembering the lack of
ladies at the reception at 'Vera Ortiz, determined
there should a full attendance-of the' fair sex
on the present occasion, and consequently threat
ened and coaxed, and used every ertifice to get
thud to go, and in this Wet - only vcre, they onubled.
HoWeVoi the Only 'ldle' tO get up a dance. , men
tioned as being preient-are Mrs. Alinonte,
Almonte, Mrs.-General-litEansison, Mrs. Adel!, hiri.•
Herrera, and Miss Sloane. - • •
Colonel Gander - is ref)ortedle haie defeated Bur::
con Gnllardo at the Corr Ode Salt Gregoria;and th,:e ;
latter is said to have fled to therredra Gorda . , a"
to have forty men hilted while Gamier had Onli 4 "
five vrouodecl. " ' : ' ' - •
General •Donui, - on the 25th of Nay, repoils • thee :
he has captured 530 stores belonging to the advance .
of Uraga at Santa 'Ans. Acatian. •
, From St.. Domingo • sliV'eral vessels have arrived'.
Nvith sick on board, but bringing no news.
The steamer Maria has arrived, eight days from
Monte Christi, with 120 sick soldiers, and one ofilcei.
The *teenier Mahal& loft Monte Christi on the
96tb, and arrived here on
. Ihe 30th. She reports
that there was no news:
There has 'hien an'tinniense exodus lately of. the
lia‘ , anese to the 'United States and Europe, all
the steamers leaving being crowded with passen-
EMIL AMERICA.
liVariike preparations in Chili, Spain,
and /Peru.
Niii , You, July o.—Tho steamer Ocean Queen,
from A;pinwall on , the 27th ult., has arrived with
61:0,C00 in treasure. • .
Panama Wires of the .27th of „Tune state that
Chili is taking, steps-to fortify. Valparaiso, to pur
chase war steamers, etc. ..
A Spanish gunboat, visited Callao under a. line of
truce on the 2dult., to treat with l'oru, in order tha
In the event of a scarcity of provisions on board the
Spanish squadron hostilities might be )suspended
long enough to obtain them without resort to coin.
pulsion. l oru has refused to hold furthoreommu
nicatlon with the .§paniards.
The pnited States frigatoS -Lancaster. and :Ste
Ilidrys'ivefe'dt Callao.
A revolution had broken. out. in ,Santa Martini
and the Governor of Magdalena lssarrested..•
There Is nothing now from Lilo .const... The seta'
General Barney, whjoh l .ran away from Sail Fran
else . ° two years agd.with a cargo of quicksilver, Sep.
has been Captured at afloat the Galapagos Islands
liar captain hail boon niorciorect by his Crew..
Leilterl)ront Boni. A. S. inckllnson.
. ~. ..131Nan.A.wrott, July .1,.1564. •
Silt: Tour favor Of the 30th ult., advlslogyie.that
the President; by and with the hilvice and consent
of the Senate, had appointed me Commissioner, on
theigett of , ,the Government of the United States,
under the. treaty between said Statet. and. her
Britannic 'Majesty, for. the.settlement of the claims
of the 'llndson , s Bay and Pugol's Sound Age-lout
;torah CoMpanies, reached me .on Saturday, the
inst.; - accompanied by the commission and other
specified documents. The acceptance. of this.plaoo,
anllthediseleariteef its 'duties, would so seriously
coniliet with established present and future par
poses" that-I ani constrained to decline. it. My no.
knowledgements - are due to the President and
Senate for the comidenee Implied by the solootion
and confirmation, and .10 yourself for the courteous
terms of your communication. I have the honor to
be your obedienteservant, D. S. Diertrat••ott.
To Hon. WILLI/al H. Simmer?, Secretary of State.
GE.N..IIIILUM AT THE .BATTLE OF TELE AVILDMI-
ZzßeS.—A story has been widely prevalent that after
the battle of the Wilderness Gen. Meade advised
falling back across the Rapidan. It was for inti
mating something of this kind that Gen. Meade or
dered thelcorrespondent of a Philadelphia paper to
be sent out of the army. A zentletnan of Boston,
who had heard the report inareotly from. an army
officer, wrote a totter of inquiry to Gen. Grant; and
haajitst received a reply from Lieut. 001: Theodore
Lyman, Vol.A. D. 0:,! who states that the. totter
"asking about the truth or falsity of the calumnious
.report" was duly received, and has been forwarded
to Major General Mends, with an endorsement of
which the following is a copy :
"Gen. Meade on no occasion advised or coun
selled falling back toward, muoh loss across, the
Rapidan. There has been no word or act of his trout
the beginning of this campaign whiehindica Led oven
belief ort his part that such a step would over be
como necessary. Such rumors as you speak of are
entirely idle and without the shadow of fountlation.
U. S. GRANT, Lieul. Gon.
"CITY POINT, Va., Juno 22, MA),
This effectually puts at rest a calumnious roport
wbieh umeentratlioted, might have booomo histo
rical. .
• Tint InAlio Gotn Altime.—Lettors from the3o
mines represent tho bar-diggings to bo, In-the ver
nacular of the correspondents, about " played out."
They advise no ono too thorn In search of fortune,
nothing of tlult litra . g to borottaa.
THREE CENTS.
FINANCIAL AND CONUMILLI.
S SALES, MK 6.
STOCK EXCEIANG
BEFORE
•
100 Reading B 69 Sl.lO
If,o do • .olOwn 41931
BOARD.
1 ICO nate & Erie 11...145 M
1100 do b 135
. I 11 & 3d St R 79%
000 U S coupon Se; 'Bl.lOl
Iwo . do 104
I 00 U S VI? bosidif 101 ff
12000 do - ..... • • .104!..
1000 d 0.... ...... .. :.16114
!MO do 104%
1200 do IGO -
13500 Gltyoe, new —lts 1.5100.
11001 d 0.... ' 1116%
2LOO do ' 00%
1000 do 10 1 6 A
1000 d 0.. . .
_ inopi
MO All & Erie bonde./12
BOARDS. • •
1(0 Olt Creek b 5 5%
00 Pen R 7344
100J,ocusost .
t Gap Impt. 12
IMO U S5-53bouttli.e.shINX
.1000 d 0.... ..... mehloUt
itraitd: ' "
.11 Or &enne
Goatee-et It. 3) %
31 do ..... ... a!).
800 City .a R low
MOO d0.".N0w..115.100.44
•
i 4003 U S 0-ar Bds—lote.lo4%
1%00 , do 'n1008.103
• EOM do 104%
2000 d 0.... 101%
PIItB2
31 513 n & Mee& Bk.— 23
103 Nor h ern Central—Toni,
100 Maple dbßde
1 Mortis CI cell prof 133
00 do s 5 coneol 00
1. - COSur . q 20.3 i
30 Cam & Mob Ei....183
10 Penne, R. ..... • 73'4
00 do . 13&:
2.5 do
14 do • '
rbi la & Erie ll •• 34n
•11X1 do
do 85
UV oo
do
100 do
BETWEEN
ICO Phil & Erie,
If) Lit !Soh R C&P 473 j
"15 d 0.... • C&P 473.1
ICO Ca tawlsen R.-prat 41M
100 H Y & Middle-1,5 1934
SP-001.2D
I 0 Southwark Bank.llll
'ES ?anthill 55
2fo Reeding It
Feeder - Dam.. •• • • 1
PA d0....1
ICOLlttle Seb R C&P. 4e3
100 Gala IL Prof • • 41).i .
100 • .. ... . 4134
100. do.. • . 100. Pref. AM
100 Wyoming Val'
AFTER.
MN/ TJ S 6-20 Bds..Reg.lolX
2t.tl New Crook 1
NO City 64 New.. . '. ... 106 N
100 - d 0. .:. R • mn
15c0u s 6a sia 1‘1414
201. Cala R..b80. Pref. 41%
• 200 • do Pref..4l%
100 Snag oelitinna C 1..: 21'
'l5 Wyoming yogey. 80,
ICO Deleon 6 i
SCO Denim - ore. 4
80013 S 0- 2 0 e . 104%
111 1 0 do. ;.. ....2dys.lo.
.100 d 0.... • 104
60 Colon- Canal • - ' 24
. CL09171
•
Bid. Ask. I • .Bid.. Ask
Er S Se. 'Bl. 11/I II 1043i1N Pa R Ss . .. . .
US T 7 3-10 Notes/CO' 707-ICatatries6R pom. m 21
Pbila Br, int 0ff..154 CalWiBP.I. Pref... 41 41.1 i
PhllaSe. new....1c634 /COlPeila 19 trle R.• .• 243( 35
Peoria 5s 0 .1 19 1011 Creek Co 51( 0'
Reading II 0I 09% Big Mountain .. . .
Read Mt B, '7O intlOS .. .2d and 2d-ctreeti. 723( 7.5
Penne R. ex dtr: 7334 sth and 6th-etrt • • 64'033(
Pa It 2d hf 0a Jeff 137. • flOtlx and llth. at R. 50 61
L &hut R ' • 494 47 Ilith and 1521... et R... 33
Morrie CI, Cone.. 90 9014 1 17th and 1911.-mt R.
Morrie CI, Pref..l29 140 Spruce and Pine.. 41'. 45
SehnvN . Stock... 2241 225.1 Cheid. and Walnut es el
Sehuy Pref... 3931 40 West Plata 72 723;
Rh 14 Si. 'B2,tuoif 95 95 Arch.streot. 24. y,
Elmira R. 51 36 Race and Vine.... 10 13
Elmira It Pref.... 62 54 Green and Coates. 29/1
Long island R... 47 49 Girard College.... 10hc 52X
Lehigh Cl St Nair'62 85 . Lombard and Sth.
Pa R M,1,1 32X Ridge Avenue.—
"The - following statement shows the avirage eon•
dition:of the , leading items of the banks of thL4 city
fey 0 past and the previous week:
Capital'
Last week: This week.
812,2e6.400 e74,27P,313 1nc.87.010.413
Loans . 42.(.57.758 40,013,009 4 'D ec. 1,139,749
Specie ....•.... .... 3,966.640 3,955,313 Liet.' 7,801.
Legal tender 12,870,735 11,4N,E73 . Dec. 1,441,3C3
from hanks.. 3,1:.3,132 4,32%4.19 I. - 1,15 6 .827
Due to - banks 6.544.663. .6,21150152 Dec. 313.710
Der.oNitc..; ...... 30,122,368 37,94.5,34 Dec. 1,177,46 a
2,002,470 2,1E1,2.53 Inc. 61,753
' . j. : ! 2 ?.n = g 2 FIF.I.S.EI-1,71,1rr;2,1 1 rg
bq cFrag..,754-cosßTF4'..tigs;..=
- F`'. 5 g "LSE,FO I f S -5 . 5g
E~~®
4 Lk:
.. 14ff .6E g Er. 6.E.
- ; -ri•i: 4 4ltl
.
-
:
• • ••41 , 1`,": • , 4 41 ,a
"K t nlgeESPP.e._.Agf
tgg4§,§§§g
Kgg§gS§§§ 6r M g
K—p-2.9.-oq§4vcsgas
2.1... P.
§tkictgn-.§3i4iratit§§§§§
p.Ap_atig',syo.sgiipj
•
P-P-M12.1041VR..4.0
•;: • R-:.*.t4
gOittvA.AA!g?.T.W.IP:.., ,
14§. l%*t ' 5 Ig&al§§igii
12 ar ik's3Pg4;374.ffsr4s
'§e§-§gEgiumaßg§§§lll§
i~~
". ~: 7 '.: - . ~ . .
....., . S . I x eleltrillgie' r • • Balanceic
dnAte er . 1 . '66,:1e,55h17-' -- 045,971 m
v . 4..,....... . . ........ . 5, SO 75641-.-7- 7 --40.n0 64
' • ''' 6:23. e,025 331 Cl.ock, 73
'
2,014096 •IS ' . 14.1,70 is
d.17i 4 .02.3 90 70:.757 56
5,757,831 IA ' . .613,81: 3 0
949, P59..4W 18-.V2,5i0,r;5
The following detergent ahows : the condition of the .
baillat of Philadelphia yariois Pixies during 150 3
and 1954:
January 6 ' 87,679.675.4,510.75014,604,115 23;4•31,187 ,
February '2 • 37.268,894:4,562.680:4,181.589 2),231.753
/dumb. 2 I
37.901,08).4,2Q,W1,666,477 30.175,319
. April 6.• • ••• .137,516.523 4,3.4.552!8.874.413:D • 531,559
Nay 4.. ..... 5a,44744.3.5.1.=42,014).425i50,5.R91
June . 1....... 87,143.937,4.:07.tel ;2,706,051.310.4,ns
i July 6 ' 36,M,411 4.3A74612.564,555tt."01,612
I August 8 1 8-141 1 0,179'4,187,074 2.417,7:5 1 '31/.7:V,4-15
i "Se'riember6 - 1%5 777,596 4,118.1621,25.4,306;30.65-1,6i2
1 October 5 • I g.5.788.84014M7,26612,198,00182.3%8,554
1 NO Y ember 2.. ..... i 89094 42 i 4,164,80t12,185, 281:31, EX1,966
i • December' 7 ' 1 86. 414.701:4,165.21612,105,174 1•51,874,165
-- XimizirY2. 1.464:'. 35.0:15.,5&4.15.4,585 2.0r4,810.2 - 4.178.958
Yebrusiry '1 .81,81,15'4,108,1410 2.036.53182,027,147
March 7 95 913,951:4,1020573 2,254422 81,712,647
April 4 ' 87,262.1504,013.495 2:850,022,34;404,658
May. 2 1960.770.486 8.472.319 2441.885,87,76.3.578
June 6•• .; 1 , 0,724,48318.044,06012,103;926g521P,F0t
13 40,2..c.6.483 1 8.26.1.76.4;2,077,75.3 .
_367,171
' 20..'....'.. 40.766.488 1 3:864.62142;074,M87:586.207
'• 27 ' - -42,667,749 . 3.268,610 r 4a1iaq.122.866
- 4 ' -. ' 40,913,0t0 3.9'.:6,334 .1.11.275 37,945,305
The stock market generally 11141n11, andoperatori
Move with extreme caution. Monetary affslia have
not coniplitely, recovered from thci shoek..ihlch:
events connected with the resignation of Mr. Chase
_ have &educed, and there is on eVery . skde a general
unwilliagnees to assume new riik.sdrmidortaiing's
Barrelling- definite - LS knoiie-alf `to the hiture
Feesenden:: „Xt rfinrs,probably many
oveekahafore that peliCyjakes.tarptie shape, and
"net& thrli;V:ie ; donrit 100k 4 14 tint crettled state of
llnlifies. air liidlsperisable'Aci• bossiness.
I , Thregendra itenor. of the stock market. benticlres
Avitlvit . Change. Government loans are steady at
liaitint*OVlpria.Vates ; 105 for the 5..n.0a ; 105 , 2100 for
eihir 4- -303: and 101,If for the 81 loan. There was
nathing doing in State stocks. New City Os sold at
100% ; —no 'change. • The 'share list showed some int.
„provement. Petmaylvania Blinehill
"Toed, `and Philadelphia nig:i:Brie Were higher;
• Reading closed at 99, 1 4 ; (hoiden and Amboy *as
firm at... 143 ; Northern. Central, sold at 591,• and
. Little. Schuylkill Railroad at 4.6;‘,. .The onlylato
.of bonds was of Philadelphia, and Erie at. IL^. In
Canals there were no material changes excint in
:Wyoming :Valley, which advanced to Bk.; ; Morris
Canal prefeirtd was steady atl39. Sloal stocks were
quiet at S. for Fulton; • 10% for Now York - rind
Middle; Et for Big Mountain, and 5m for Green
Mountain. Of Banks We notice sales of Southwark
at 101, and Manufacturers' and Mechanics , at 93.
Race and Yine.streete passenger Railwayisold at
11.; Green and s Coatei 039, and Second and Third
street at 75%. 011 stocks were without , materla
change; McClintock at - 4,g; Maplo Shade at 1t;
Densmore at 4,X; Oil Oreek at bK.
Drexel ,& quote: • '.'
New United States bonds, 1881 104 .10105
. • Do. . New Certif. of Indebtedness... 96 (a• 96 •'
Do. 7 3-10 Notes • 106 109
Quartermasters' Winners • • 91.: 99
Orders for C•ertilleates of Indebtedness • 4 4k,
Gold • • ;
Five.twents Bonds 104 i.; 105
The RoCk Oil Company, esterday . declared a die,
vidend of S Per cent . ..MOW capitel 'stool" payable
payable
s.uly2otb. Tho.repOrt . tO•the company shows Oita'
a flourishing, condition. The . Egbart Oil ComPany
has declared a dividend of 24,: per cent,.onilte capi
tal stock, palablo July 9.
Thefollowing Is the statementof coal s tmnsported
over thlr'Lohigh Canal, for the week andlor the
season. ending July 2, 1364 : • .•
Week. Sensor.
From Ranch Chunk. Tons. Cwt. Tots. Cwt.
Summit /dines', 9.203 17 104,137 07
Room Run Mines 019 03 53,210 .??!
Jefferles. ' ' S 9 13
From East Mauch Chunk.
Coleraine Mines ' 704 13 9,916 16
Spring Mountain 261.10 . 1,766 OS
Smith's Spring Mountain 760 18 0,74510
N. Spying Mountain Mines 1,033 32 12,147 01
S. Spring Mountain, 1,213 CH _ 34,169 18
Ilazleton Mines ' 3,4,313 90,957 . 05
Mount Pleasant '
.. ' 440 14 . 2,183 11
Buck Mountain 1,155 00 6,165 16
Council Ridge .1,161 t
752 OS
• • •
Jeddo Mines •
13,073 16
Minos
Fulton - I:.i 09 q , .'lQl 12
Milneaviffe•—.
Other shippers
Tart",
Same ttrue Wad
The following table shows tho amount of coal
transported over the Lehigh, Valley Railroad for
the week ending July 2,15x1, as compared with the
same Ulna last year : •
Week. Previone. Total. •
Tons. Cwt. Tons. Cwt.. Tous. Cwt.
llareliogjiiues 9 297 17 111,497 19 114,795 16
Past Snail" Loa' 2,910 17 90,3k1 15 83.233 51
Council ltidge .....•
2,487 19 67,716 09 60,266.03
Mount Pleat•ant 661 03 21,519 19. 9: 1 ,031 04
Spring Mountain 2,660 [G. 66,461 14 59,012 00
COletaiue .. . . ... 605 06 115,051 IS 16,537 01.
Beaver Meadow 77 13 1,046 12 1,124 03
Now "York 3: Lehigh.. 67.3 13 23,403 11 23.977 07
N. Spring Mountain:. 8,213 10 73.173 07 26,356 17
Jedaen 64 3 , 1 1. Ha. It. %rad 16 1,165 00 3,731 19
do 2,407 17 68,661 09 71,0 E 06
Ilarlefgl," 1.085 11 • 27.831 10 23.817 01
Gerraau Penn . . Coal Co 1,803 02 30,903 09 32.001 11
libervale Coal Co 74)5 OS 23.075 r 4 23,760 12
2111nescillo 1,133 13 25,298 10 M 1,344 03
Buck 3lountain.• •• •• • Kai IN . 31,405 01 35,260 03
•4,616 AG 63,079 13. 67,038 (0
L. Con.• Co • • • 25.12,3 1:3 23,123 13
Other kilipperB • 6.
13 0,4 x. 10 9,533 03
" Total k 30,257 07 73.163 02 772,440 10
Correspondlna week
lent ..... ... 10,700 03 Irmo 11. 637,006 14
.16,9 ES 04
The withdrawal of the invitation for proposals fur
the i 133,000,000 loan Is generally vlcwed.as a prudent
act on the pert of the Treasury, and has% relieving
effect upon the oventrained finances of the country . .
In the present unsettled condition of the' public
finances, and' after a heavy fallin Government SG;
eurities, It would be found impossible to assure
6ubscrlpttow, t 0 tlic gspount nti NT:l4ml for, and the
zionstm.
200 Densmore
nO/1111,
100
Man
Marde Shad. • 11
300 McClintock. 4%;
100 Big Moon t. ••••143. S
300 d 0.... .... .1,33. 6
103 Green. • ... .b 5.
200 McGlintoclL.3dys.
60 Pt 6r. Erie Sat.. 35 .
65 Race - 4k Vino. •• 11
. 03 Feeder Dam • - 1
- 100"fulton
160 Reading: • 6931
100_ do .• • • 060. esw
260 do .....
Plidlndelphlta Karlfeta.
• • .31rrx Or-Eveisirig:
'folders of Flour are Earner' In - their vieivs, and
prices are rather better ;'salts.consprisa• abaft 1,247
tibia at $9.50 for extra, and 31A.2 @i0.50 taibbl for
extra family; the retailers and bakers are buying at
from $5.5040§11 for anperfine;s9.soglo for e. - Ifra , , 610.2$
.@ll for extra family, and $ll-50@12•11 IbTfor fancg
brands, as to finality. • Rye Flour is scarce at $5 it?
bbl. There Is nothing doing in Corn
GRAIN.There is not much deinand for *twit,
but. prices are rather better; ahout 8,000 bus !add at
2.•3ogMbe for reds, and white at 21ef$250c 9.1/as, as
to quality. Rye' hi rather scarce; small•sales are
making at 150@1.6;,0.7a bus: Corn is bettor; 4,0001
bee prime ,yellow sold'ln lots at Net/dela—now held
higher. Oats 'have •adranced; sales of Perina are
maklng_atees392c I 9 bus.
BAlthe—Firstis, o. 1 Quercitron is scarce and b.
demand ;•a small sale was made at •tct ton. ,
COTTON.—The market Is very firm, but the salon
are ; Final! -lots of middlings have•been
posed of at 1540 ? it, cash:
• GROCIERTES.:-:,Sugars - are 'very firm at. full
prices ; - 100 hhds Cuba /bid vit•2le, and small lots of'
Porto Rico at 23c 11 lb: Coffee Is firmly held;,bat
• there is very little doing.'
PETROLEUM.--The- market continues: Brun,
with dales of 1,800 bbls relined at 806365 e, in - bond,
and .906:05e la gallon, free, as to quality.
,Cztide Ls
scarce, and quoted at See giallon.• • • .
SErDS.—ftmothy has advanced, with _salsa of
100 bash at 45.3.40 1 bush. Flax...eed sells on arrival
at, $3.401-. bush. Clover is scarce and in demand at
ta.t..049 V &hits. -..-
11i0N.-There is a firmer feelingin the - siatitg;
and prices are well maintainial....Small,sales.ot An
thracite are maticing•at.:ss3s3Bs $5 - toil for Zito 'three.
numbers. • • • •
NAVAL STORF.Sine"inarket,continuas very
firm at theadvanew, &gall sialivof Thithr ate ma
- king. at NtiCkli:f lid, and S,pirits.ef•'ftupetitine a,G
-from fec3.7 . 0@1.7517 _ .
AAallilt at; , e 2.429 iftbin;;
.R1101 , 7.610N b.-Ihe dilligrence in -the ivipira
huyersliitil.solilrd iveratitrati, l 'and there La
sc.ry../italedlippip,thts,,,vra of :fades. IlLess7Fbrk is
qubtecl..***,sls ..Lard is firmly held;
• salefronpritcoltheree Alpe foaklmg at•ll(A'•l9c
5!111SK Y,-The arketis uusettled ; shun sated
'Are' Making at•ISOCAS3 %Walton fur bbls.
•• • • Tbo following arelke:recelpts-of Flour and arala
at this port to 7 day • - -
.• •
"•• Flour - • re...4n.a* • •••' 'LILL
Wheat ' • " • 4 60) buS.
Corn 2,400 btu.
'Cats • • • :se - 2 . 000 bus.
Ti F
New York Ili:whet", gaily
ASZE'S are quiet and - slinky at $l3 for Pot'-, and •
$l6 for Pearls. :
BaminsrurrS.—Thezaarket for State and West.-
irn Flour is 15625 e betteT. SdrefrlB - ,ooobbis at,..510&
10.50 - for superfind Shite.f..sl.o.Boell:2s for : extra.
State ; $11.30(1.1.40 for choice do; $10'4 , 10.50 for su
perfine western ; $3.0.75i911.75 for common to medi
um extra "Western ,• $11.25411.65 for . common to
good
shipping brands extra round-hoop Ohio ; and
g01L70%12.25 for trade brands. Southern Flour IS
firmer ; sales 1 , 800 bbli at $11.2.5@11.89 for
common, and $11.65@13 for fancy and extra..
Canadian - Flour is 15Z256 - better; .sales 'BO6 -
bbls at slo.9o@llM for common, - and" 611.2.5@t2
for good to choice extra. Rye - Flour ;:tsulet
and steady. Corn Meal is scarce and Bien.. Whedt
is active, and 3@tio higher... Sales 12E0.0(12 iritiit;s2lo.,
82.35 for Chicago spring, $2.30W-3511n9Illarklas
: Club, e 2.3662.46 for.amber $2.1.4512.-501
. (pi winter red Western;Q2,or€2.o
' Or; and $2.75 fcir , prime v. tale, pine Aye
Barley and Barley!Milt ire dui . 'tits are
a.littlillrmer at 97656 for,t3Kula t atestwirs.t4til s
• and' 299 for Western: -
"klie . t.torn marAtit
gt; $ V 5.16 1. GO for new mixed-Western.. • -.1
egayo.d✓ r 4*ratedemand at 12-30&..80 for
,„-t ) " 2.80,far marrow/48:1 eanadq.-
•'.Perilen and Vely;firxii. SI.BO@LG3.
. -- PrioVrarciwZ.Bork truitket.fis firmer, withit fair
eales.2,Boo bbls at:B4/.50.10r nan5a,:548.750
- 4/5.12N VOr-nwer-dor4a-tes.r....yar old-a.nazi*Ff..iikinitoy•
• and S-19..3-13.(mprime _ • . .• .-
. "The BEET quiet and firm ; sales COO bblz
at about previous prices. Prime mess Beef is'quiet
and unchanged. Beef hams are dull and nominal:
Cut meals ate firmer ; salesl7o acgages at 1534 z
. for,ehouldeis; anfi27lAZlgullb • •
-Dalin is dull-anti nomipally
The:Lard market Is firmer and more active ;
-.2,500- .3.830519.qc ; also, I,loolibis for Stars
buscils option,nt 5))6c. -
• Ifiirs aro quiet anti steady, rltll.smsll Sale 3 at •
loam for middling .tio prime.
- laart.=-ScotetiFfg is'quiet and tteady at 81 1 0.
NAY is in fair request, arid firm. at $1.10@1.20 ibr
Shipping, and.sl.M@l.4o for rattail lots.
• -nos are easielth sales at 27e for fresh .State
and Weetern:
74 8 s
12,76 13 143:311 It
676 18 1h991 17
Oo 6,974 00
16. 2,337 00
25,752 10 261,731 00
19,G13 CS, 243.96660
675 12
TIM WAIL PRESS,
(PUBLISHED WEEKLY,)
. .
Tea WAR PRIM will be cent to subserlberi by
mall (per annum la advance), at $2lOO
Three soviet 5 OD
Five ••••••••••• eeeee .•• 8 00
'
Ten coples
.15 OO
. Larger Clubs than TOR Will be charged et the sato
rate, St, 50 per copy.
The money.must atom/8 accompany the order, and
to no' fnetance can !liege terms be devfatedfrom. at thew
uront very /MU more than the coat of paper.
11%- Postmasters are requested to set as agents fee
TRI Won FREW,
*P To the setter-up of the Club of ten or trienty.
extra copy of the Paper *W. be given. •
public credit 'would bo damaged by the failure or am
effort to put out a moderato amount of bonds. _
The New York Post of yesterday says :
Gold opened at•l9, and gradually rose to 2.4)Ka1
249 g. . •
Eachange Is In limited deinand, and sells below'
the gold rake. A. law transactions have taken place
at 27M272;
Tho,loap market tx more active, and the prevail
ing enspense la inducing the banks and lendlna
sUtntions to tall in their loans and to take other
measures to strengthen their position. The current
rate IS 7 per coat., but thero' is somewhat more dilll
eulty In obtaining money than for mine days past,
- while an extra eamtnission has In same cases beers
obtained. Towards ..the close of business - we ob
served some Indications of an improvement.
• The news of General , Ilunter's. operations at
harper's Ferry on the' rear, of the rebel invading
forces tended to give Increased confidence.
The stock market is heavy. Governments are
dull, State stocks Rule; coal stocks lower, bank
shares Steady,' railroad bonds arm . and railroad
shares drooping. •• • - , •
Before the Brat. Session- the market sea quiet,
without tench changeln mites.
The appended table exhibits thiehlef inev:ementa
this morning eoinpared with th e latest price of yes
terday: .
Wed. Tu. Acitr.Ded
United Stelae 6s, lon, reg . /TM ' I
United States 6e, Ml. coupon 103 101 ; ..li -.
United States 7-30 e 10G )01_ 4 1'" " Ili !:
United States 5•20 e. cipari 104f.i. 104 K" • •• re
United States 1 year cert. dor' SOX G 5 1,5f . •:.
Tennessee 6s ' ar
litteeon ri etr . 2 tat - nit v• ...
NCR , York Central Ri11ina11.1..,..1126 /U .
lf' • 13e . -
Brie • - • IW3i. 1161. ,5i
Erie preferred ' • • ' • USK 113 r V .
Radon River . 1363E1A5 Z
•
'Reading ' ' - 130 131)X- ' . *
• After the Board New York Central closed at 130,
Erie at 1353 k Rending at', 1:9; Illinois 'Central at
131%, Pittabt:trg at 112 m, Rock Island at 113.1Norta.
western at 4;4, Cumberland at 06);.667;liudsOrt
River was heavy at laik. •
. . •
OIL Q.a.141 Is hardly so lirm, with sales atNS
.
. OILS are arm, with a. moderate demand. til3llBBl.
..?170@1.71;;:LAkd 015441 5:2; Crude. Whale *1.330
1.36 uOrade Sperm r..1D0',2..9 . Mite ter for quarts
and r oB for pints . -. • , -
i‘udr,Xatl
of Oeau. initiators.
•
' ^ A 20.AIRIVA. . •
surge gaou
Di n tg
Jne 12
C c ity of LlFertok-Liversxmi ....New.York . June 25
Ania , ..'A 4 .. .. $6 -Li TOTPODI BostonNem 25
Germania ..::::.Sontbampton•New York Jane 23
' Liverpool New York JOllO 251 -
4 . 116t111111842/..• —Liverpool New Y0rk......'.:a51y E.'
. • TO DEPART.
Il?ifannia . . •--New York. Meadow 9tily
City of London. Now York • Liverpool..:. 9
Bavaria `Vow York Hamburguly 9
New . York New or,k London ''" uly
Dime* New Yoik :...Eavana . .. lit
Arabia New York .•••Livarpooi 'Jelly 19
Dielbounie ..:...New York London .... ...
PHILADELPHIA BOARD OP TRADE. r
SAKES 'MILLIKEN. .
ANDREW WHEELER, " COXWITRE OP THE Noirir:
EDW'D T. TOIVIISEND. . • . •
•
• ' LETTER BAGS
- TUE MEECTIIAIiTe EXCILINGE, PitirADELPRIAL
Bark Jolla Balton,Cotkstiy T saes:
Bark-WWI Belle, Tellable • Barbados. 100111.
MAINS INTELLIGENCE:
PORT Or. ipm:uuD' swim', July 7,1961.
SuN Runts...-4 33 F.Strx 5yr5....7 Jima Vitnisat.4.43
kaarvrax.
Bark .Pembroke (Br), .Staley,. it days from Windsor;..
with mdze to B A Bonder & Co.
-
Bsie Porto Plata Mae, De liana. 61 days from . Bra..
ffetf, with mdze to Barged Bras
• • Brig 'Vincennes. Bodgeon, 15 :days from Newbury
port. In bellazt to Baugh & Sons.
Brig Reporter, Gilkey, d days from Fort MonriSa, iM•
ballast to captain.
Britt Mary 0 Mariner. Mariner,.6 days from Bemifort
in ballast to captain.
' Fehr Sea 'Nymph. Connelly, 5 days from Providence:.
to ballast to captain.
Bohr Ida P Wheeler, Dyer, 4 days from Providence.in
ballast to Chas C Van Horn.
Srhr Broadfield, Fisk, 5 d aye front Boston, with mdse..
to Crowell &
Schr J B Matber, WillarJ,•sdayafrom Portland,wlth.
mdse to Crowell & Collins. •
Echr Nellie D, Simians, from. Fort Monroe, in ballast
to captain..
Few Mary . Elizabeth, Pharo, from .Newbern, bal•
&hp Claric. Clark, frozoYort Monroe. in ballaM&
to tliPtign.r.`... •
. .
Scbr H „ eatless: Natant, from.PoAltoyal, in ballast to
Blaltitton..Oratr, .4 Co.
'Rehr A Id Dines; Blaekxnan, from Harbor, in- ba
.last to I:Al:Meta re - d & Co.
..Seim Henrietta.. Englisb. 5 llaylkipora Alexandria, in.
41t o ThgelVelipter. ' •
Ecbr .?T from Neer York.;
',ln ballmt to captain. . tv• - •.*
• :Edit - Ceitlreefle, ,, Diiiiimife,:lXitafa from Lubec.. with
.plaster to 8 . ,4, 0 4 - inder I. Co.
• •Pc rr Raven,: Ithae, 2"d a.3•s ,troXlfy York. la ballast,
.to E A Souder Sr Co.. -. • •
Schr Rescne,-Eally.. •daya yttk.
mdse to Crow•ll At Collins. • ; •
s c h r Carrie Waite, 'Brown, 4 days mom new lIIMIOCiIa
'ln ballast to captain, • - !..e•
Scbr J C Roker.'Jones; l 0 flays froth
lugs to . Maibirs'a cabana. C .
bichr A 3 dwards,, nbaSOLI. IS clays from nunner,a. Dn.
ballast to Contain. ' • •
Ear Bonemia, ronng, -- 1 dais from Wasasnaton..tst
ballast to captain: •
Scbr S Dean, Dean, 3 1. days from Taunton,. in•ballank
to captain.
Schr Samaritan, LaHla, from BaitigKice, In.ballaat to
captain. • • • ' • • - '
Echr Elwood Doran. Jarvis, frons.Poston in ballast to
captain.
.•
kcl r 1,11 Ccrbitt, SLmpkina, from Alemmdta, ta ballast
, to captain.
Fehr B L Tay, Freeman, from Boston.. Ls ballast to
captain.
Sca Lancet, Bayard.' day - from Christilina, .
Del,wittc
grain tollbrlstian .4 Co. . •
• St r Liberty. Pierce, 24 boars , from licetlfork,
mac to W P Clyde. - •
_1 - - • •
St` r ovolty,lahavv,Zlhonrs from NewFork,
to Wm id Bait d. es Co,
. • • CLBABELD.. -
Bark Mintietiota. Smi th ; Now.°Aeon.
Brig Newbury, Moores. Bootim. .
RtigC C Colton, Stimpeoo, Boston. "
Far C Iderrick,.ll - outgoluery, Wlnthrop, Mess.
Schr Lizzie Maul,Willets, Boaton.
'Behr s
C Smith; oudersou, Providence.
Rohr Sea Gull. Moody. Olondester.
Bohr A II Mines, Stockman, Norwich.
Schr 011 Pettit, Clark, Provldence.
Bohr I) Jones. Totem, DlghtOli.
Bohr W Saulsbury. hickersOn, Boston.
Schr Wits( Wind, Rltchene, Ilimpton Roado.
Schr R Derain, .Hendrickson, Port BoyaL
Bohr Sarah A Flammon4, Paine, Boston.
Bohr Restless, Vara:ant. Boston.
Schr C 'Young, Mitchinson, Bangor.
MEMORANDA.
Ship Tonawanda, .I:ollap,.henee 4tk tilt, at Lira Pool.
26th. .
Shit Invincible,. Leman, from Boston 15th MAT foe
San Francisco. was spoken Ist nit, lat 32 lON, Jon 9515.
Ship Grace Darling,. Hotchkiss , from Boston 31st Mai
for San Francisco, _ was spoken 7th ult, tat 9510 N, lora
9710. •
Ship WaisbinnE)n; White. from C41.1_80 for Antwerp;
Was spoken 12th May. tat 21 22 S. lon 39 36. ..
• Ship Win Wilcox. 51antor, from Boston - for San Fran
cisco, was spoken Stb April. off Later Island.
Ship Mareppa. Weeke, from Callao for Antwerp, was
spoken let May. lat 24 S. lou 2.'135.
Steamship °emu° Washington, Gager. from Nett
York, at New Orleans 25th ult.
stooewhips Yazoo, Couch. and Mistiest Eennedil:
at New Orleans 'Nth ult. •
Steamship London (Br), Conch, from New York, - at
London 21th ult.
Steamship Locust Point, B,ftnean, from New York
for New Orleans before reported sunk early oa the
morning of 9d Uni t when off Demount. was 462 tons re
gister, built at P iladelpbla in 1553, rated A 2, and:
Barkin New York.
Bark J B Brett, Damon, at New York sth lust trout
Segue., reports 3d inst, 23 miles E of Absecon Light.
boarded the stern part of the wreck of the steamship
. Locust Point saw the bcdy, of a man dressed in night.
clothes, the head severed from the body: saw anothee
vessel dose by picking up drift stuff.
Bark UnieSi 4earil, hence 13117. API% at PenaMbnr 4 :l ,
Alas. . .
. .