WUM PILEsI4, PVILDIRILD DAILY (SUNDAYS KXOEPTEDI: alr SOHN W. FORNEY, OFFIOI. Na 111 800TH FOURTH STRUT. TUE DAILY PRESS, TOVERI (113iE PER WERE, payable to the ifirlieri Walled to Sulmoribere out of the city at SEVEN DOLLARS APEITE; Taus DOLLARS AND PIETY OBITS /OR Br* foirrinit 01tl DOLLLII. ARO BISTRICTI-PIER (NETS NZ TI MM lours. Invariably In advance for the time or. tiered Sir:Adverktsementa Inserted at the usual rates. Es Lisa eonstitat• a square. TILE: TRI-WEEHLY PRESS, lod to Subseribere out of the city at Foux DoLLAse Amnriii, is advance. FINANCIAL. FIRST NATIONAL BAN'S PHILADELPHIA. GESIGNATED DEPOSITORY FINANCIAL AGENT 0/ TEI UNITED STATES. 10-40 LOAN. Nth lank has been satholisra 114 la aoW Preparad 10 - reaelya aubsorlptlons to the NEW GOVERNMENT LOAN, This Domr, toned under authority of au sat of Cox , twee' approved March 3, 1834, provides for the tuna of Two Hundred Minions of Dollars ($200.000,000) Mated States Bonds, redeemable after ter, years„and Doable fortY years from (bite. XI COIL dated. lfaxib, 1.1804. , hearths lateral at the rate of .! RIVE PER VEX?. WIT Mills 00I,A, payable seral.sehnsily all Woads over fliffl.'sful on Bonds of 0100 sat Wu, vas. Stiteeribars wltl melt% *leer Solistsred or Cloneoa !lends as they Xtil piefex llenietered-Bonds will be lulled of the denonlituttione if DIV dollars (OM, one hundred dollars (8100), ITO hundred dollars (16OO), one thonsand dollars ($1.030), Ilya thoneand dollen (46.0 W), and ten thonsand dollars (11D,000), and Coupon' Sonde of the denomination; of CMS dollare OM), one hu.ndred dollars ($100), five hun dred dollars ({6OO}, and one thounand dollars (51.0001. INTEREST eommente from date of subseription, or the aimed interest from the let of March san be paid in win, or, CUM farther notion, in U. B. natal or notes of National Buda. *dal= teed per Madi to the amonnt for pre- NEW LOAN. B. 1040 s. 00051 k 00. 0711 X 70X BALI RHi NEW GOVERNMENT LOAN. Nub:4 TIT, Tor Cont. Int•r•of 00111 Medestoable any time alter TIN TILES, at the Plea• cure of the Ooyemment, and payable SOBTT TBAIIII Eller date. Both COUPONS and ESOISTBRIID BONDS ore tanned for this Lean, of tame denominations as the FlYe•TWenties. The littered on PO and ONO payable pearly, but all other denominations half yearly. - The TBN-TOBTY BONDS are dated March 1, 1584, the half- S'ltarly interest falling due September 1 and March 1 of wi th, Tea r, Until let September. the seemed intend from Lt March is required to be paid by pnrchasem is win, or in legal sarrensy. Mainz aD per imet, for premium. until farther nobles. i• &II other Gaverninsat eacutioi bonght and sold. JAY COOKE At CO. ap84.1 n* SOUTH TIM M STREW. L IPEGIAL NOTICE TO THE HOLD - us OF SMALL 1.30 U. S. TREASURY NOM BMW-THIRTY NOM, of the denomination of ~. and 1130 e, can now be converted in BONDS OP THR LOAN OP ISSI. if the same denomination. For information apply at the office of JA.Y COOKE & Co., Bankers, THIRD Street, Phila. I& BLANK. BO ANY DIRECTORY-- ..let of Comm:des, their Otliaes, Preside. a, and Beceetarlea. We are also Prepared Compinies with CERTIFICATES OF STOUR.. TRANSFER BOOR, . ORDER ovra.kisviit, - - -STOOK URGER, ITOCX,ZEDGER c BALANC)IB;, REGISTRA OF CAPITA', wropil, DitIDENE BOOR, . ,z•::: : .BROE&E'I3 PETTY L'EtetEE": ~' AMOUNT OE §z A r .,.. . J . 4 'good mOoltrilal And At •Pricett. . • • - ,-, '"ligoSS ST; Co.,` cf. , STATIONERS, 13STNITT Street, ZEIT 13110BMAKER & CO., Clam 0! YOUNI'II end RACE Streets, ,PHILADELPHIA, LESALE DRUGGISTS. IXPOPMENS AND DIALERS IN FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC WINDOW AND PLATE GLASS. NASPNAttrITRBBS Op .. AM) AID PTO PAINTS, rtrrTT. args. mans 101, THEt pILItBRATAD MO TAINTS. HOTISNIAINT Sr, CO No. 257 BROADWAY, NEW YORK., IMPORTERS OF S & LADIES' GLO 'fi AND ENGLISH HOSIERY, S FURNISHING-GO & DRESS TRIMMTZ to which they VIPS THE WHOLESALE TRADE. WI. - SBA RRE, NORTH PENTIBMINIA RAIL AND DISTANCE SAVED 1 L. IL EXPRESS TRAIN. PROM THE THIRD STREET, ABOVE THOMPSON. G IN WILIMSBARRE 2,45 P. RETURNING, VILECBSBA_BIIB at IP. M., making close •t Bethlehem with North Pennsylvania , and arrive in Philadelphia at 8.20 P. AL ARE :c4;.25. IMONED THROUGH LES S. EARLE it SON G WIESTNIIT STREIT, PHILA.. NN to store IL MT fine assortment of OSINC CLASSES, of OT$l7 character, of the MAIWIAOTLIU AND LATEST dis PAINTINGS, wraRAITINGS, rams AND PHOTOGRAPH !RAMIS. And General 161 Nvrth DELAWARE ATIII I . 3E. "GV.A.IAtA.V,V,N, MOSQUITO NETTINGS HAZARD. ivorinisopT, No. MI CHESTNUT STREET,' COMMISSION MERCHANTS, POB ,48a OP Ityl4-eml PHILADELPHIA-MADE GOODS. Fon THE ARMY AND NAVY. C. R. CLARK, President. Banners. Regimental and Company Flags, Swords, Sashes. Belts, Passants, Epaulets, Hats, Caps, Can teens, Haversacks, Camp Hite, 'EMU Diaries, SIMS, and everything pertaining to the complete outfit of Army and Navy Officers. A liberal discount allowed to the trade. io3o-lm EDWARD P. ;UCLIC, Zan AMOR luutil A somplets assortment of SPRING A ND SIINXIER GOODS. ave-if GENTS ) FIIRNISHIENG GOODS. THE IMPROVED PATTERN SHIRT. WARILUMID TO IIT AND OM SATISFACTIOL SOS. '1 IND 8 NORTH SIXTH STREET, MANUFACTUNER AND DEALER IN _ eIIerLIMEWO BIKE FITRESIIING fieops. CONSTANTLY ON NAND,' 111J8LIN,Ans FLANNEL MINTS and Mamma, CoLLABs; STOONS, Ta4s.VELLINo OHMS, TIES, WEAPPERs, &a., Sus., 'HOSIZEY' f eLotts, BOARM :-131313FREIDER8 BANAKEACHIESI4, SEDIFLDEU Z 34033, do., 411+4 Bold at roasoniblo pri ces 826 AZOR STREET. 825 • 3EL V. .14 0V A. id. G. A. ROFFMAN 5 MDT PREMIUM SHIRT AND WRAPPER MANITFAOTORT. GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING EMPORIUM, sZNO* F73o* 806 vt.ppirpoarr, TO TRS NEW 8T0,133., E 325 • AIWA 825' jelOtramwem ' TOES FOE CASH. SPRIZIO AND 8171131. ER. • asTIRE NSW STOOK p E 1 CLO TJ THE LATEST NOVELTIES IN. GENTLE:mon FURNISHING GOODS, fficINTIBE & BROTHER, (STJOO3IB6OII TO HILL & MN%) 1085 CHESTNUT STREET. The "Model Shouldr.Seam Shirt.” - say4-weata VINE BIIIRT MAITITYAGTORY. Al- The subscribers would invite attention to their ' IMPROVED CUT OF SHIRTS, . - which they make a specialty in their Dasinees. 31/0, constantly receiving NOVELTIES FOR GENTLEMEN'S MAE. W.-SCOTT & CO.,' GENTLEMEN'S FURNISIIIND STORE. No. 814 CHESTNUT STREET, jal74f Your doors below the Continental. ES, TO FAMILIES RESIDING IN THE COUNTRY. We are prepared, se heretofore, to esPidy fandliel at their Country liesidenceiwith every description. of FINE GROCERIES, TEAS, cto., ALBERT C. ROBERTS, mrsi-tt come:ELEVENTH and VINE Sta. ARCHER & REEVES, WHOLESALE GROOBRS, No. 45 North WATER Street, and No. 46 Berth DELAWARE Avenue, Offer for sale, at, the Lowest Market Prices, Aleuts dock of . SUGAR, MOLASSES, COFFEE, 'FBAS, SPICES, TOBACCO, And Groceries generally, carefully selected for the country trade, Sole Agents tor the products of YITHIA.N a pourres Intensive Fruit Canning Factory at Bridgeton, N. J. ap2ls.srn MACKEREL,- HERRING, SHAD,. &O. —2,900 bbls. Mass. Mos. 1,2, and 9 Mackerel,lato• Wight fat fisk, in assorted packages. tarring 2,900 bbls. New Nastyort, Fortune Hay, and Halifax %MO boxes Lnbes, Pealed, and No. 1 Herring. ICObbis new Mass Sbad. HO boxes Herkimer County Cheese. In store and for Ws by.2IIIRPHY ICOONB lal9-tf No. 146 NORTH WHARVES. PICKLES. -100 BBLS. PICKLES 1:14 VINEGAR. 150 bait bbls. Miklos In Vinegar. Also, three-gallon and. ITS : xellott Ems do. Tar sale by • RHODRB .t WILLIAM% rah2B 107 South 'WATER Btrost TIRAIN PIPE DRAIN PIPB. VITRIFIED TERRA COTTA DRAIN RIPE--all sizes, from 2 to 16-inch diameter, with all kinds of branches. bends, and traps, for Sae in any quantity. 2 link bore Der yard We. IS Clan TERRA COTTA CHIMNEY TOPS, Tor Cottages, Villas, or City Homes, Patent Wind. guard Tops, for curing smoky chimneys. from 2 to 8 fast high. ORNAMENTAL GARDEN VASES. Fountains. Pedestals and and Statuary 'Marble Busts. Brackets and Mantel Vases. PHILADELPHIA TERRA COTTA WORKS. 1010 CHESTNUT Street. fel2-ttirfftt 8. A. HARRISON. PLUMBING AND GAB FITTING.- McCOLLIN & RHOADS, YAWL MARKET Street, Philadlphia. Water Mille, Wind Mills, Hydraulic Rams Pam* 01 various patterns, Bathing Tabs, Wash Basini,and other articles necessary to furnish Dwellings in city and gauntry with every modern convenienee of Water and Tirra Ciotti Walar and Drain PiDdL 121.19-rniVill R-=OUBED PIGS FEET 100 KEGS Pa PRIME. • Soused Lambs Tonnes 100 kegs price. For Tripe, 100 kegs rime. For sale by RHODES & WILLIAMS, 191341 107 South WATER Street. CHARLES MIDDLETON ") SECOND AND WILLIN'iTNEDSP IIT. Sam Iran rtuolial, i tu n d l er g ß i ate. jy6Bm* EHREITOLOGICA• EXAMENI, TIONB.' with tall dascripttorus of &tracts_ Kipp DAY and EVENING, by J. L.- CAREN. tab£l-wfrmem No. WS South TENTH Wink 'BOHAN . • - , • , • • tritivk.' . . „ isit okr. , ..7.• .• /-- . fr. , ,A. r • ~_ 76,1;.• itr r .., ~...,„. \ ~' Vt i f/i„,"`,,.. , II .. - c.•-•,,, ,, f,?, - .""'"!' ,,, - tet t ti .• . • :.. . .. ~ •, _ ..,,_,,,....--` t .N= A f i t a . r i , , -,.; :,• 4 ?: . ,;., i0,, , ...... e - 7 ,lir t ,s . . , 0 1 : .....e, " 0"/„.• ,, ,,, ,: . ;: ;". : ,, , , , ',.. , „: : tivr-lir ),,, , _fill\ •.''. - - ' , ~,.. , L - ~, ~. '- ~ 6.-7. -- -„e..._, ~. • .t":"; 17. - :. : r. ,': . - , ri-...„191„ A1k .. , • , :;•... , :.,.-.N . x...„, ~,--,,,fr7": iiii ii ,„;;.., - 1 *--'"--------''..- r. '"‘ ;: • : ; : ' . ..''''' : ' : '''' - ''' .f 17-- . ' ft f ''''' - ' ' . .. , .. . '.. ..... v,, , ,... , ,,,-,v,•'w•z*, , ,..- , ....3-NN , ... , :/' - _-- -,-, '''.- - . 4- • - r , --,0. , '''-. el , •.'..., „,,,,.--.:-;,- ::-._ ,- `"-••••••-.4' e. - • ?? , Il 11._:.:..-. ~, , ~,,,.log. PO . '.f 1.6- Ls_ ... : -Li . , :; , .. _ T t-- 11 7 .6 . --:... „ .1..-...,, ~,...`,,,%`-, r. -. , i - . ..1,-7-- , ..Z ..1 .., „,,.Jml , , . 1 -. : : , ...3 ,6 A' ) P -^ -i- ,.- - , '-,.." : „. -. ,::',', ~:1.;; • . _ ' 211111 71' . , ' , ......• : ' , 7'.. - -)il l ° ',;.-''.?.' ,i - -• : . ''" - 41 : A,• - '' '‘ ' S ., e el• .• i f ftc , ,5k.....,,, _---.. -- -- ,1 ...--..,.,,,.---------- • Oil . - _ -....04 ... . , . .. - . . . „ • _-_,_ , , . -----,... , _ --,„ n' • . • VOL. 7.-NO. 302. CURTAIN GOODS. tyJeCESSOR TO W. H. CARRYL,) 11ASONIC HALL 719 CHESTNUT ' STREET. NVMJDOW SII..AMES, CURTAINS; COMMISSION HOUSES. ARDIT '6OODS. V.VANS 8z lIASSAXAL, MILITARY FURNISHERS, 418 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA CLOTHING. /TORN • KELLY: TI~IIORS, No. 612 CHESTNUT STREET; LTONES' EOM., /ATI 142 SOUTH THIRD STUB?, JUDE BY aroxiN C. Axmagoiv, OY HIS OW 111.1MYLOTORIL GROCERIES. ( Ci,,e Q 91155. FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1864 New PUN' eatienti. The Bradford Club of New York (named after William Bradford, the first printer of Philadelphia and New York, who Bled in 1782, aged ninety-two years), have just brought out a new volume, su perbly printed on sized vellum paper, imperial octavo, of which only 150 copies are produced. This volume is entitled "The. Operations of the French Fleet under Count de Grasso, in 1781-2, as described In two contemporaneous journals." --It is edited by John Gilmary Shea, %Intact( an author of repute. One of the journal! In question purports to have been written by the Chevalier do Goussencourt, which is probably a none de plume, Inasmuch as a search In the Navy office at Paris failed to discover that any officer so named was on the expedition of. De Grasse in 1752, nor, Indeed, In the navy-lists from 1781 to 1787. The Chevalier, whoever he was, was hostile to Count de Grasse, and freely can-. Tosses his operations, the last of which was an encounter with Rodney, the English Admi. ral, which ended In the capture of himself anti the Ville de Paris, his flag-ship. The Chevalier constantly disparages De Grasse,but his narrative Is plain and detailed, one amusing episode (pp. 30- - 88) is an account of the cereinonials, one might call' them the saturnalia, observed on entering the torrid zone. The journalist speaks' of flying-fish as "really the most delicate of all moats 'f—an opinion 'not bold now. lie describes the events which led to the surrendernf Lord ,Cornwallis at Yorktown, the French assisting, and after relating the subsequent career of the French fleet winds up with an amount, _illustrated by diagrams, of the encounters with Rod ney, which ended in the surrender of. De Grasse, on the 12th Of, April, 1782 and tells how the fleet re turned to France. -The whole narrative Is the re: verse of friendly to De Grasse, ft gallant but unfor tunate officer. Justice is done to him, however, in a second document, also given here, the " journal of an Officer of the Naval Army in America, in 1781 and 1782, 1 ' printed at Amsterdam, In 1785. This journalist is more explicit than the other, and says that the Ville de Paris did not surrender until after A twelve hours' contest. Do Grasse and his officers were taken to London, where they were treat ed With the utmost respect, well reeelved by the Royal family, visited by the Ministry and other leading men, and conveyed to France in vessels expressly chartered by the British- Admiralty. An appendix contains a correspondence' between Count de Grasse and Washington, 1111 ac-, count of De Grasse's conquest of Tobago fromthe . Ca:celle de France; a journal, from Almon's- Bement brancer, of the whole of his operations at sea, in cluding the encounter with Rodney and ROdners Own despatches announcing the victory. The volume Is well edited; with necessary Introductions, blograPhical and other notices,' and'an excellent in dex. A portrait of Cotmt de Grasse, beautifully engraved by Geoffrey, is a suitable frontispiece; and there is, also, a view of the Ville de. Paris. Con nected with our own successes, which ended with , the defeat of Lord Cornwallis, as the aid of the French fleet was, at the very moment when it was most needed, we think that the Bradford Club • have done well in producing this volume as a con tribution to national history. , . Three years ago, Brown & Taggard, Boston, com. menced the publication of a new and complete edition of the works of Francis Bacon;_ the great English philosopher, who, for a time, was' Lord Chancellor to James 1., but will lire throtigh his writings. This is a reprint of Bacon, edited by three eminent English scholars (all belonging to the Uni versity of Cambrldge,) namely, James Spedding, Robert Leslie Ellis, and Douglas Demon Heath. The publishers made a promise that the work should be completed in fifteen volumes small Bvo., that In typographical'execution and appearance it should at least equal the English edition, and that the price should be much smaller. They further ar ranged to sell the work only by subscription until completediTheir successors,raggard & Thompson, also Boston publishers, have fully carried out their pledges. The work has been printed by H. Q. Houghton, at the Riverside Press ; the paper Is of the finest, and the binding of the firmest quality; the price has not been raised, though the cost of production has greatly increased.. The work is now complete, in fifteen handsome volumes, and is now offered for sale, for the first time, to all purchasers. The public at large have now the opportunity of purchasing a choice subscription series, containing all that wise Bacon ever wrote, at a price far beloW what it sells for in England. No ono who makes the slightest claim to possessing a library can dispense, with the ]Yorks of Treads Bacon. - . _ .lames Parton, one of .the raost , indastrihns broitr: writers, hne produced, in two volumes crown- 80,4 What May emphatically be entit.led the Life of 'Benjkilain•Franidin. Hitherto.we had-no full and reliable account of the great practical man of our greitlievolution. The good sense and firmness bf Franklin, the! sagacity and,courage, of Jefferson, and".the 'endurance and courage of Washington raised us, with the blessing of Divine Providence, to the condition of a Nation. it is impossible tow find any work, or number of works, conveying, together with the fullest personal details, about Franklin himself, such an accurate idea of the social and political mechanism, literally "wheel within, wheel," of thitransition state of this country from the tea-riot at Boston to the surrender us Oorn wants at Yorktown. It is the history. Of the time as well as of, the man, and Is written with energy, patriot ism, and ability. Mr. Parton, wo are happy - to say, has not what critics call " a style," but writes with ease and force, with his meaning always obvious. We have found few errors in these volumes. He, certainly is wrong in' attilbuting to Franklin the saying of Dr. Warburton, " Orthodoxy is:-„my.doxy, - and heterodoy, is your dm," Mint°, (vol: if;; p 7) apeaks of each gamester haVing " a small nesentaisd by bird to hold the . .,ir- tea." -,Dut;as a -whole, :this "perhaps, greatest .man, , all things considered,',,thi.V: - Amerlea has yet .produced, is readable and rgliable. The • English critics, fa,obsorve, highly wheeze it. The book has a good hmilitfe 'index, and' Is 'embellished with portraits, engraved on steel, of Franklin at the age of twenty and also aged seventy-one ; of Mis. Sarah Bache, his daughter*; and of Francis Folger :Franklin, his son, who died in youth.' The type graphy, by Mr. Alvord;Neti York, is beautiful. Mr. Parton, we regret-to notice, favors the incorrect or thography,of Webster. - . Air. Parton first became generally known to: the public..by his Life 'and Times of Aaron Burr, pub lished in 1857, in which he was bold and generous enough to clear from the characterof Burr great quantity of traditionary slander. It had been the fashion, for half a century, to accent Hamilton as a martyr and saint and Burr as a deep-dyed sinner. Dir. Parton showed , how little foundation there was for, the double Mistake. He has Sust published a new and enlarged , editiori--of f ids Life of Burr, in which much neWMatter Is introduced, in the'appen dices., Among the additions `are further portions of Burrls correspinidenee With his wife and daughter, Who idolized hinr;Which show him in a very bright light - ' Supplementary , to this biography of Burr is an octavo volume called " The Blennerhassott Papers," published by Moore, Wilstach, & Baldwin, of Cin cinnati, which Is an extension of a work-written by William IL:Safford, entitled "The Life of Biennerhassett," and published in 1860. Since then Mr. Safford obtained the journals, private memo randa, and correspondence of Blennerhassett. He has used these in the extension of his work, and has executed it with judgment, ability, and fairness. The volume is of historical interest, on account of the light It throws upon Burr's mexican schemes. Blennerhassett himself deserves the very smallest sympathy. Mr.' Safford directly °harps General Wilkinson with being the author of tho Burr expe dition, which he finally betrayed. Burr's great fault was, ho was a filibuster thirty years too soon. Mr. Parton's works and this Blennerhassett volume are sold by J. B. Lippincott. 3. E. Tliton & Co., Boston, have just published a charming volume, which we recommend our female readers to obtain and study, for it Is one of a series expressly got up for them. It le entitled " Wax Flowers, how to make them.? Indeed, It more than carries out the promise of Its title. It shows how to mould fruit in wax; how to cast them; how to finish them (by color, powdering, and varnishing); how to make small clustered Irani; how to obtain and prepare wax; how to make wax flowers, leaves, stems, and buds; , and how to model double flowers, All that Is difficult Is made easy, by illustrative en gravings. This delightful art of making flowers and frult in wax, to imitate nature, is a companion to that of making skeleton leaves and phantom flowers, explained in another volume by the same publisher. One of the most successful novels of the season, "Neighbor Jac.kwood," by 3. T. Trowbridge, author of " Oudjo , s Cave," has just' been published by Messrs. Tiltbn. It is highly sensational, dra matic, and semi-political—in its exposition of the horrors of Slavery. "Haunted Hearts," a novel by Miss Cumming, Is much superior to "The Lamp lighter," her first work, and will probably have a larger sale. The language is vigorous, and the characters, who , flll, but do not crowd the volume, aro drawn with skill, judgment, and effect. Above all, they talk naturally—which people In novels rarely do. Memories of Illorris A correspondent of the Boston Pool relates the following of Morris : • "For his song, 'Origin of Yankee Doodle,' he originally received twenty-live dollars, but such had been Its success in reaching the national heart, that, when Its author, wished to incorporate it into his book of collected poems, the publisher of the song demanded fifteen hundred dollars for the per-, mission. -Attrill, of old, one of our shrewdest music publishers, offered one thousand. dollars for My Mother's Bible,' after It had been two years before the public under the imprint of a, rival house. Fifty, one hundred, and even five hundred. dollars, have been paid to. Morris for single compositions, and for years almost any of his song . s have boon con sidered cheap at any price. Of ' Woodman, Spare that Tree,' millions of copies have been sold, and this song, in its time, has been prominent in the pro gramxne or bidden as a tit it In the repertoire of every vocallet of note. Mallbran, Russell, Braham, Phillips, Horn, Pearman, Dempster, and Anna Bishop, have made Morris' songs fee, tures in their musical entertainments, both here end In Europa. 'My Mother's Bible,' We Were Boys Together,' Boatman Haste,' Near the Lake,' Ceti ogees Welcome,' Songs of Homo,' and a cata logue of two hundred others, all popular, are uni versal.r Ballo set some twenty-five of these songs to appropriate symphonies. Sir John Stephenson, Sir. Henry Bishop; and many others, have also arranged sweet melodies, which, with the words, have become almost to universal as the language of love, And, s ' i 9 JULY 22. 1864. . apropos of this last thought, how many fond but bashful lovers havo, by the old of Morris' sonm, given bob] and blissful utterances to their heart's tit robbi ngs 1 "Norris, too, was the first song-writer who trans ferred negro melodies from the plantation to the parlor, and thus popularized this now fatnous strelsy. 'Long Time Age,* and Through the Streets of Now York City,' were the earliest and most successful fruits of these attempts at musical transformation. lie was, moreover, something be sides song-writer.. As ir dramatisChe was success ful enough to get thirty-flue hundred dollars, jn 1827, for his liner 01111 - , , and, for - the libreltb of opera, 'The Al aid of Saxony, , he was paid twenty five hundred dollars, in '180:. ills collectedprose tales circulated to the extent of twenty-five thou, send copies, and Lis collected poems have also had large and profitable currency: He once told me that he received ton thousand dollars from the sales of the poems, which Is abundant_orldence of their popularity." lATERIRL —Dr. NCWIMELD, the eminent Pathelic . clergymtut, a proselyte from Protestantism, - has published' a pamphlet about himself, called -" Aporogirc pro vete Sae." In this work he uses many arguments/ in favor of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception, and the liquefaction of St. Januarlus , blend. As-a specimen of his strong style of writing, we citruot the following sentence : "The Catholic Church holds it better forthe sun rind moon to drop from heaven, for the earth to-fell, and for all the ninny millions on it-to die of starves , t lon in extrem est ngony, ns far as temporal afflic tion goes, than that one soul, not say shout& be lost,. but should commit one Single ventalein, should tell one wilful untruth, or should steal one' poor farthing without excuse." , The poetical • works of Winthrop Illackwortip Prned'will by published In London in two volumos in July, and will Include a number of youthful peems never before printed, and now furnished hy the poet's sister. The revision of the text is by Sir: George Torrog, aneplieW of Prited's, while the me moir of the poet will be from the pen of Rev. Der went Coleridge; Alcxnnder Dumas is said to have recently writ ten In a letter to his publisher : "To forget what I have written the moment -It is printed is one of the greatest faCulties Which heaven has given me. Were I so unfortunate as to remember I should re peat what I MAMA. Imagine what 'damnable: iteration' I slietild have been guilty of had I re: peated what I had said, for you know I have some thing like twelve hundred volumes." The removal of AT. Ilenan from his professor's chair in the College of France will not affect him personally, as he has already gained a large fortune by the sale of his " Life of Jesus." He will also soon publish a`" Life of the 'Virgin Mary." He will ye succeeded as professor by M. Drunk, ad Jew, Feinted that Renan's removal may not be attributed to the Influence of the priests. -- Semmes, the pirate, is to become an author again, a London firm announcing " The Cruise of the Alabama and the Stuppter, from the private journals, Ste., of Captain Semmes, C. S. N., and other officers.” The surrender and sinking of the Alabama will make a tine closing chapter. The Appletons will republish the book In this country. Edward W. Price, a boy in London who had been to hear Miss Bateman in "Leah," was so im pressed with the performance that he rewrote the story of the'play in verse, and it has been published with others of the young - author's poems. Henry Richard& " Life of Joseph Sturge," lately publiShed in London, is a large volume of over six hundred pages, and.eloses with Whittier's memorial lines of Sturge, beginning " Briene Edgberton's nide —. " It elicits much criticism, both as a literary work and from the eccentricities of- the subject—the really amusing mistakes sometimes made by Mr. Stage, notwithstanding his really eminent philanthropy. The proprietors of the• London National Review , announce a new series of that periodical, to be be gun in No ember next. . A greWtlecline In book publishing is anticipated for the coming fall. A • largo number of books re main in MSS. - and in the• publishers' portfolios awaiting events. The French , translation. of "Paradise Lost," by Chateaubriand, with a biographical memoir by M. de Lamartlne, has last been published in Paris in quarto, illustrated with twenty-live llne engravings. —The words of an opera hare been prepared by Mr. Jahn Oxenford, for a leading musical publisher, on the subject of "The Lady of Lyons," and it now only waits for a musical composer. Twenty new Froncheporas will be given this Season at Baden—four of them having been express ly written for that place. ' Mosenthal , s fathous drama, "Der Senn eriwend hof," has produced a prolonged ibitsallun in Ham burg. SOJENGE AND ART. is an admitted fact, well demonstrated by the . spree:rake of. We rebel prisoner* In camp and hos :POO; thlithesaniiary condition of the rebel army If fiat superior to that of our own, and the attention of pinctical and soientifie men is directed 'earnestly to inquire • Into the cause of this extraor dinary end unexpected fact. In 1662 the rebels • were farinferior, to our men in.recuperative powers, especiallywhon sillij(jite4 to severe or capital sur gical operations:; piit„it:.ii-now observed that their condition has , greatly:traPpeved, while our soldiers have lost ratb.erthangehiod.in power of endurance. Strangens it mitrailem, thereare eminent medical men who attribute ails 'lmprovement of the rebel army to-.the sinyileity, and diminished quantity of •rations ; being at - piesemtlimited to sixteen ounces of corn meal and Jeer 'ounces - .of Bacon per day. Tbis•diet is veryyutritions;and,when mon are en gaged in . active •Mit,74ear:puisulte, it must be very healthy.. ThisaluireaSicie Miry:save the lives of a thou mind men., The ',falai Corbbir James is a malarlous region...Korth cif he tropics the three months in which malarie iiictiiitracted arc August, Septem ber, and October. ; Of ail the feets in the science of medicine the onebeit established is that Peruvian bark is a preventive of malarlous disease. Three years ago . the surgeons of some of tho regiments in • the Army ofthe Potomac . administered Peruvian bark or its extract, quinine, to all of the soldiers in their regiments daily duringtho threeLaickly months, and the published Statistics- show a remarkable exemp tion from diseasoln thase%regiments. Let every Person who has a friendly. the army send him a dol lar's worth ofluininei lath instructions to put as muck as will:lipmethe point of a pen-knife •In his coffee,eyery merningi.and the probability is that he will eau:Pe : An:onto tUarrhtectilaver and ague, and bilious fever. : • The repairing:A title silvering' on the backs of ' looking:glasses has Ilitgfeiftibe l ee t eonsidered a very difficult operathiMF View and Very shifitferaethod, 'however, has-beenffeseriblid•beforb the Polytechnic Society. of Leipsk7 It is as Olean thit bare portiomOf the glass by rubbing it gently with fine cot . ton, takirig.cere to remove any trace of dust and grease: If this cleaning be not done very carefully defectiwill'appear around the place repaired. With the point of your knife cut upon the back of another lookingglass around a portion of the silvering, of the required form, but a little larger. Upon It place a small drop of mercury—a drop the size of a pin's head will be sufficient for a surface equal to the size of the nail. The mercury spreads immediately, penetrates the amalgam to where it was cut off with the knife, and the required piece may now be lifted and removed to the place to be repaired. This it the most difficult part of the operation. Then press lightly the renewed portion with cotton. It hardens almost Immediately, and the glass presents the same appearance as a new one. The superior strength of cast steel cannot be better illustrated than In the 'fact that castings of steel without hammering,rolllng, or other means of meohanlcal compression, show a very high degree of strength and tenacity far above that of castings of any other kind in practical use. Advantage Is taken of this property of cast steel to .snake bolls of that material one-third lighter than bronze bells of the same diameter; and this lightereteol boll will, still bear double the breaking strain. of the brobze one. Another superiority of steel castings is that they are not as liable as other meter to break when subjected to concussions during intense frost, as proved by the Diet that cast steel bells are rung in Russia and Canada, where the thermometer ranges twenty degrees under zero, Fahrenheit, without the least injury, while the heavier and thicker bronze bells cannot be rung in the same temperature without cracking: 'The same prOperties have led to the manufacture of oast stool railway car and en gine disc wheels with tires, in one solid body. -- Last Sunday, says a London paper, there was so great a crowd at the Exhibition of Living Artists that the heat became perfectly suffocating, and it was necessary, at intervals, to stop the admissitin of visitors till a supply of fresh air was produced by the vacuum created by the retiromitnt - of some of the amateurs. Imperial, • • Paris papers say the Prince having been permitted' by the Emperor to make a choice among the works at the Exhibition of Living Art ists, has made his first purchase. It lathe "Wounded Drummer," by M. Armand Dumaresoe, that has been fixed on by the young Prince. A French paper says that by an accident char coal has been discovered to be a sure cure for burns. By laying a piece of cold charcoal upon a burn the pain subaides immediately. The remedy Is cheap and simple, and deserves a trial. Wounded at Frederick. List of Pennsylvania. and New Jersey soldiers who wero wounded In the battle of Monocracy June ton, and aro now in tho United States army geno ral hospital at Frederick, Maryland: 87TII PENNSYLVANIA. Nath. Thompson, Henry Nool, E. Bankard, Eli Beim, Henry Bonner, John 0. Snyder, H. F. Wel temper, John F. Strangler (first lieutenant), H.onry wiloolro, A. Wolff, Once. Shultz, Chas. Daley, D. Dien, D. Wittinger. /4TIL NSW JZ,RBEY Captain Joseph Hawk, George Conovan, Smith Bates, John Compton; F.,dward illmitko,. R. D. Blackwell, Win. Drown. J. U. Lupton, J. Ma gee, Wm. Able, Th. Stout,, Louis Young, S. Stchel, Charles H. Haviland, G. W. Camp, J. P. Disbarue, Lacy l'aincett, H. A. Clark l Joseph Lewis, Thos Ryan (first lieutenant 4, S. I. liohnes, S. Browor, W. H. Craig, W. A. 'W. Shores, J. H. latuhlso, E. 11. Gibson, John W. While, A. Flatt, W. Williams, C. S. Barklow,.J. Czadrow, 3. Downes. 196T11. PIMIESTLVAII A. Holtronn, Badenburg, John IfloGammon, G. W. Gum, S. Hallman, J. O. Blackburn, Y. L. Flunk. )49T11 PENNSYLVANIA. John Brounlow, J. W. West, Oyrus Ilenry, Allen Evens, Theskes L. Davis, Eeslr Lewis. /44TH PENNEIYLVANIA. Ell Vailorn• ' 12TIr nrs.NBTT.VAVIA OAVAIIIIY nal:nos Fla mon, Edward Statlo,..T. Conn, worg&n. M. Donald, captain. 49TH rEwrisyrNANtA., 1.11 Lyn°b. Pence ConfereEetv-- Borneo Greeley In Comsminlont,loix with Glen, N. Ntander.f4 to Co. (From the Nessotork These, I The following Important despatch from/ Niagara Falls to the Rochester Democrat was talegrsiphed to a: private party in tills City last evening. We do Vot.vouch for Its accuracy. Nut:sax& FALL'S, Wednesday, .Tuiy weeks ago, George - N. Sanders, O. 0. oinyor Ma baCYlt, .Tacols TholtPson, of Mississippi, and J.- P. Hodoonsh, of VirgMla4 arrival at the Clifton ROMA, just across the river Irony this place. Their - arrival was,eittly annoancei in the pwislia press, and the Oh. Aeet'of their mission' was understood to be to consult with the - Democratic loadersof the North in re ference Halle Chicago Convention. Besulte.. proved, however, that they had a double ur ppose iVvlow, which was lirstdereloped to Horace Greeley iJy George N. Sanders, Who wrote to Mr. Greeley, Stating that. essrs,;tilrey, Thompson, and nelcomb: vete duly .recognized commissioners of ,the.Confitterate Government, and desired to know what terms could he made' for terminating the war between'the two sett ions.. HO added, however, that thefe commiseioners were not- specially, authorized. te.neaottite for a•cessationothostilltles era. reStOru• Lion of the but that they Vottld like to have an informal.eooference with such. persOns as the United,States Government might indicate to moot .them• These facts having been presented to Mx. Lin coln, lie requested Mr. Greeley to act In the matter as bethought advisable under thWpecullar circum stances., and statedlhitt he (Mr. L.) .should at any finte be.Pleased.to receive propositions - from those who had been In arras against thii"GoVernment, for a return te their allegiance and (lutv'e.s - citizens of the-Union., He also stated that heetcould . he pleased to see thelinion restored upon any terms:consistent with - Lbw:present and future safety, welfare, and honor Tit Government. Mr. Greeley having settled all p,reliminarles with Mr. Linteln,. proceed.- ed to thiWpritee, reachlisg-here last Monday morn .log, - and, took up quarters at the international Rote!. A•porrespondence was at once 'opened with the commtVginers, and, as a final result they made the, folloWnig proposition, and viva t as their opinion that the atichmond Government' l would; ap prove and ratify the souse. The restoration of the ion in 'state tpto upon' this bn'sl s' : -First, Alj negroesvhlch have been actually freed by the War;to he secured In such freedom. Second, All negroes at present held as slaves. to. 7 1 hird:::The war dobt of both partlog to be pMd , by tho. l o.!ltedV.,,tates... : . Toarth. The old doctrine of State rights to bere combed iwreconstructing the Union. Ttritrpropesition was laid before Mr. Lincoln by Mr: Greeley. The Preildent at once telegraphed to Idr.,GAeley the terms' upon which he would pro poseWSettlement and reconstruction, to wit: The-frill4nd complete' restoration of the Union , in all 4f13 territorial integrity ; the abandonment:of slavery.. by the seceded States, under conditions skald, while respecting •the property rights o llloyatrnen; afford ample security against an othei.lwar le the interest of slavery. .'.....After, considerable correspondence between the was . concluded to refer the whole matter baq_-to the . o Governments for reconsideration. Artilegotiations having been terminated, Mr.Gree ley,ln 'company with Mr. Ray, private secretary of Mr. Lincoln, called upon the commissioners at the' faliftenalouss, on the Canada side, where a pro tractetVand . pleasant in rervielr was held,, and the verfilinf , Onestions under Consideration were - cuiSed , at itingth. 'Mr. Greeley left the Falls for' Newa r ork 9n this afternoon's train. It fa,..nnderstood that the commissioners with San, deraand aemett, who are both, are to remain and" carry on negotiations with the Democrats. A letter is to be prepared for the Chicago Convention, in which the commissioners will hold out e trong assurances - of a restoration cif the Union 'under Democratic aespices.. The whole movement is regarded by, many as a mere scheme to entrap the Administra^ Itt. Mlse position' before the country and the worldi.flesqlse benefit of the disunion Democrats. Address tlof Gen. lio.seeraus to the Chi; ....4rift Of Northwest Missouri. TheTollOwlngis the address referred to in a, recent despatch: • lIPADQUARTERB I)BPARTMP:NT OP THE IMEISOURT, T. LOUIS, July 10, 180. To the Citizens of Northwest Nitwourt whom it may Your best men have assured me by word and letter that you meant tohehave as law-abiding and peace ful chitens. They have assured me of your pledges and pledged themselves for you. I have entrusted the peace to yap r keeping. I have supplied you with ammunition andlett arms in your hands. You have given me fair promises while you allowed rebels and guerillas tallveand recruit among you. You have concealed from our authorities these men and their projects. You have seen iobberi and murderers joined by the very men who swore to defend us egaineathem. The arms and ammunition delivered to you for the defence of law and government have been used to destroy them. You are guilty of all the blood that will be shed by the use of these arms, and the hands which have basely.betrayed both you and the coun try. You havo• nothing left before you now biit wholly to reoeuhce and help to pursue and extermi nate these common enemies of mankind, or your country will become a - desolation. I could not save it, and r mustlelf You, as a friend, I do not think it would deserve. it. Citizens, situated as you have been, who will.thlorato a species of—l will not call it warfare,lnut.-outrage, which finds no parallel to the annals of Our Indian wars, must expect the vengeance due to, such moral dereliction among free and professedly Christian people. I implore you, for your own sake, now at once lay the axe at the root of the tree., Needful assistance will be given if you do your ditty.. All loyal aridiv-abiding citizens'must promptly' combinegvith the!.military - . authorities, giving ail possible aid, assistance, and. information. Mark those wbo do not, and regardithem as your enemies, whose contlnct may ruin yourselves and your fami lies. Bet bile • you denounce bushwhacking and private war, remember that the accessories to these crimes ar)ikewlse guilty. Any Oita •vriko knowingly and willingly advises, counseLl; givralobrisent, food,- direction, .informa tion or assist/in& to bushwhackers, is partaker of their crimes, and ought to be of their punishment. Let not [albite to take my advice bring upon the beautiful and now prosperous counties of North Missouri desolation Such an reigns along your west em borders. IW. S. Rose.onaNs i , Major General Commanding. J.• g,-D,A.CnrittiA 7 RD, Captain and A. 11.0. Orders the Proseentlon of a Newark Paper. Major General Diito-day directod United States District Attorney A: Q. Keasbey, of Newark, N. J., to arrest and prosecute the editor and propriotons of the Newark.grenine,Journal. The offence for whioh the prosecution is made was the publication of an article on the draft in its issue of last evening. . The following is the offensive por tion of 4he editorial:: "Lebthe people unite in agrand defensive league to protolit against the demands of the despots at Washington. Let the tax-payers come thr.irard and demand' that the . igyatem of exorbitant municipal bountlies'shail erase ;And these objects accomplished Lincoln'wlll be obliged to depend upon the loyalty of his tiCliCeoholdorS and contraOtora , for re. crut ts to carrion the war.' , The arresr-lvill be Made under tho section of the set of March .4d, 1883, entitled*An' act tar enrolling and calling out the national forties, and for other porposcs.7 the section reads as fol lows : And be itfurther medal, That if any parsed shalt resist any &Oft of men enrolled under this'act into the service, of ihraliffted States, or shall counsel or ald'ony perSekt..to• resist any such draft,'-or shall as sault or obsitxact!' any oDicer in making. such draft or in pertermancm of any service fu relation. thereto, or 'stall command any person to. assault or obstruct :any..truch officer, or shall command any. drafted man not to appear at the s placo of ton-. "dezvous, or • wilfully dissuade them .f rom the per forinance of military duty, as require Is.w, snob Ferson'sball •be subject to summary arrest by the provost marshal, and shall be foithwith delivered to the civil.authorlties, and, upon conviction thereof, be punished' by a fine not exceediug .five hundred dollars, or by imprisOnment not exceeding two years,. or by both of said pUnishmente. The editor of the Journal Is. Mr. E. N. Fuller.. The paper has been one of the., most violent of tho Opposition papers. The well-known secession sym,- paatizee James W. Wall- has beau one of the prin-. visa! contributors •to its columns. The paper..is: owned' by a stock company.. We understand the warrant:was to be placed in: the bands of Provost Marithal ;IL J.llllllB, of the: Fifth District.;—N.' Y. Evening Poit of yesterday.. Darla Bond. arum the Vicksburg Herald. ] This is one of the most ex - traortlinitry bends of this wontierftil Mississippi River, and has reoeivod, its name from the fact df. Ihtt.settlement on the-penin sula formed tho bend, of two members, of the Davis faintly,, knewn., as 'Jeff' and Joe.' This peninsula is some.twelve. miles in length; and at this point where It is attached to the main land of the State,of :Mississippi, it Is so, 'norm iv. that the enterprising. planters have dug. .canal across, not unlike - the celebrated Butler canal. of Vicks burg fame'', althea& not 'near so long. This canal is called. the thit:off," and , in. MO water the, peninsula bermines . „lo fact, an Island.. This tract of land. Ist of . great ferti li ty, being entirely a deposit of the rich soli washed from the prairies of the great-West. On this tract aresetna sloe planta tions, of from 900 to ? Imo, acres. each. Two of the lirgest abd beat of these. were owned by Jeff and Joe. Davis, and, , aru knovrn as the Jeff and Joe places." Thelorm of this.peritusula is' such that a few companies of,soldfers withrinaor two stockades can keep'outari army.ofrebels, and:the inhabitants, although frequegstly : surrounded by the hordes of Southern murddrece and thieveS on the opposite banks of the rlvbr- and canal, dwell In peace and comparative malty% In filet, this site, from being the home of: .traitors and .oppressors of the poor, has become; „a sort of earthly paradise for , colored, . refugees. There they flock in large numbers,t 'and( like Lazarus of old; are permitted; ea it tvere.,..,".to. "repose in Father Abraham's bosom:" -The rich mon of the "South ern Confederacy," now homeless wanderers, incl.; Bionally.cu across for thELitsarus whom they have Oppressed and dtispitled, but he is not sent unto them, because between the two parties " there Is a great gulrfliced;'so that they whomould pass from hence. cannot." On this.freednien's paradise parties for cultivating the sonata organized under the super , :ntendence of missionaries, moll party cultivating from ten to tine hundredaores, with fair prospect of realizing handsomely... These efforts aro aided by the Government; rations, teams, Ste., being sup. plied and charged to each party, to be deducted tromtlie proCeeds of their crops. Cotton is chiefly eultivated,and some very handsome "stands" ap pear: • The " Joe place" is nearest the landing. The fine brick house, however, is nearly demolished, bat' the cottage, used as a sort of law library and office, Is remaining uninjured.. The negro ,quartars also remain. • - The "Jeff place" is 'also a very fine plantation.' Tho residencehas not been Injured, except. the door locks and one or two marble mantels broken up, ap parently for trophies. The Jeff furniture has been removed, but the rooms are still furnished with fur niture brought here.' The house is, in Its ground plan, in the form of a oross—but one floor with large , regime and ample verandas. .The portico In front is supported with pillars, and these torn the only or namental features of the house, except such as ware, added for this occasion by the artistic touches of onr • N ort horn sisters.. . • 'Rho Successor of Rev. T. Starr King. • .The Mahan Advertiser of WOdsesday says: "The. question as to the choice of a successor for the.late Fey. T. Starr King In his pastoral charge in. San. Francisco is decided by the following nearer spondeneo. None will mor4 heartily eangiotulata the California society on , their judieleus. selection than that large circle in New England. who vlll regret the loss of lilt% Stebbins trim, his. station here : _ _ - . " LSAa FRAINTSCO, Tuly 13. Rev. Iforallo Stebbin3, New Yorl' " ' By a free, spoetaneous,-and, unanimous vote, you were last evenbig inritod by our sooloty to be come their pastor. Thorn was but ono voice and that for you. The call is earliest, and your welcome will be warm and generous. Please answer as soon as possible If you win accopt. If you do, it Is im portant that you leave August lath. Your salary mill be the swam as that given to Mr. King. • 4, Ruaitam B. SWAIN, President of Trustees., " Naw Yortw, July 18. " ' Robert B. Swain, Esq., San Francisco: • " '1 ncoopt your call heartily, and shall sail 13t lx August, God willing. HORATIO PURCIEBT.7-A Newport school ma'am has been complained of to the authorities for making her ro fraotory pupils hold aloes in their mouths for seve ral hours. Some of the ohildron hays been soveroly Ala tll omopence, PERSONAL. Brigadier General Daniel McCook died at the residence of Ills Arother,lenel Gererge W., Mc- Cook,. In StcubetrpUlo, Ohio, at 2 Wank P. M., Saturday' last. He was shot Through; yust below the right shoulder, In the ana'sit upon Konesaw Mountain', on the 2 - .1.31m1 June. General 31ce1006 was, In Co summer of 'ln; made Oolbnel of the 52d 0. V. 1., aid was, for Vero years; commander of a . brigade 'fa The' Army orthe • Cumbeland; (HAW , gulshing himself in all onesrgencies as a cool, cap, a. , blo, and dasEdng officer, whose tendency ,So rashness was tempored'by'good judgmernt. Two dibyrbefore' his death he was promoted to be a brigadier general' "for gallant and' illatinguishod'servicea at Itenesaw - Mountain." lioloarcs a wife and Infant daaglitor. Ile is tlio fourth'ef his family itliled 'eurirg the war. His remains; secompanied B by hid brothers; Colonel George W: and Major General Alexassler McDowell McCook., reached this city yestertlay morning, and wore bUried at Spring; Grove.--05n ' cinnali Commercial s 2014. —;l42r. James Bryan). a clerk in the ffnance . of the Post Office Department," deserves Mention , for his seal In behalf of `his country during Alla re cent presence of_the enemy in front or Waelaington. He Is In his a - Sty -ninth year, yet, eager to aid in the defence of the capital, -he obtained fivm - the Postmaster. General, through Hon. A. N. Zevely, Third Assistant, a note relieving him from official duties for this express purpoee: Nate in hand, he called on Quartermaster General Malys; and begged to be admitted Into any company going to the - front. General Meigs rave him a letter to Captain Camp, under whose command, on Monday afternoon, the 11th Instant, under a burning sun, he marched to Fort Slocum, four miles distant, where he paned the night on the ground, without food.. Tuesday, Wednesday, and part ; ;of Thursday, he spent in a ride-pit. He returned to the city on Thursday night, bemoaning his misfortune In having "- been placed In the vicinity of a fort on which no di rect assault was made, instead of being nearenough to participate in the charg e made by the veterans of the Pith CorpS, which put the assailants to flight before Fort Massachusetts.— Washington Chronicle. Colonel James F. Jaques, of the 73d Regiment IllinolsVolunteers, was before the war a well-known "Methodist preacher in the State, one of whose regi ments be has since commanded. He 1.9 'a straight forward, honorable, and patriotic citizen. The Go vernor of Illinois suggested to him, at a time when volunteers were not coming in very fast; to use his influence to raise a regiment of troops for the war. The preacher went home, as he said, to "try what he could do," having three months to work in Resat down in his study and wrote a letterte*every preacher in his conference, urging each one to help him. In the project of obtaining men enough for a regiment, and Informing them that he would com- ' mend it. The result was that in two months he had raised, not one, but nearly three full regiments, and In the one which he commanded every captain, ft Is said, was also a Methodist. preacher. Colonel Jaques was sentwith his men to the Army of the Cumberland, where he fought under the eye of General Rosecrans,Who, as we have reason to know, thought highly of him as an officer, and found him useful in the management of certain reli gions questions which came up in Tennessee, and in the arrangement of which, we believe, Colonel Jaques has been for some time engageti.—N. Y. Evening Post. —John C. Heenan, the American pugilist, was, RS lately announced, seriously injured by jumping from a railroad car at the moment of the recent collision on the Southwestern Railway, near Egham, England. Ills spine being Injured. a par tial paralysis of the lower limbs ensued. The phy sicians think, however, that by attention to regimen and the observance of rest, he may so far recover as taenjoy a tolerably comfortable existence, but that all Idea of his resuming the 'career of an athlete must btabaxidoned. The medical examination re vealed•the fast that Heonan 7 s frame was generally a prey to disease. This circumstance induced him to settle his claim for damages with the railroad comnany, and that body has awarded him _me. Heenan proposes to take a benefit tour in England, and than return to America. —Florentine, the lately deceased art critic, received 86,20 D a year for contributing a weekly art jeuilieton to the Constitutionnel. He also received the same salary for writing for the Mimi/cur. His estate, real and parsonal, amounted to $150,000. He left, says the Paris eorrespondent of the Publishers' Circular, his Cross of the Legion of Honor to DI. Alexandre, the organ builder. His disease was gout, which set tled on his heart. —The hippodrome, in Paris, has got an aristo cratic acrobatic attraction in the person of a Per elan prince, who performs on the trapeze.. The con descension of this great man in descending to saw dust oven awes the French, who are not always in °lined to do homage. —Letters froth Sweden continue to mention the great success of Signor Severini, the new tenor, at the'Stoekholin Opera Rouse. So great, we are told, has been the attraction of "IlTrovatore, ,, that tho opera•has been played almost without intermission since-March. way in which the baptism of the son of the Princess Olothllde and Prince Napoleon Is being put offindednitely is causing remark amongst those who usually concern themselves about such matters. A Utile Silly is making her mark as an actress on Landon boards. Wile Lovely is the name of a new opera singer. It is said that their names tit thein•well. Ira Aldridge, the renowned African tragedian, has been playing Shakeperian characters all throughout Russia, receiving ovations in the places he visited. Miss Bateman is officially declared to have re tired from the Adelphl Theatre until January next, after having played Leah uninterruptedly for over two hundred nights. —Miss Kellogg has poStpdned her departure for Europe, and is singing at concerts occasionally in New England. A grandson of Daniel Webster has enlisted as a private. The Davenport brothers have gone to England, under engagement to }Larry Palmer. The oft-spoken-or journey of the Empress Eu. genie to Rome has been again alluded to. 'The War Press in the Army—The Sani tary Commission. We extract the following from a private letter from an army officer to a friend in this city : I get the paper you send me, and take great plea sure In reading it, because it Is an evidence of your regard, and Is a very excellent paper. I think that a. Judiciously conducted weekly paper, stating the current events of the past week, which have actually, according to reliable authority, transpired, more profitable to read than those daily papers which have the bad habit of getting things so Jumbled In a mare of contradictory rumors and reports that after you have road them you are ne wiser than you were before. The description of your Great Fair, in The Press, was very graphio and.interesting. The United States Sanitary Commission is doing very much this summer for the troops in the field, by the distribution of such anti-lcorbuties as saner. kraut, canned fruits, lemons, Sze.... One good effect elate efforts of that beneficent institution is seen In the fact that the commissaries are stimulated to put in requisitions for dried and fresh fruits and Vega. tables so that between the Commission and the commissaries the army is bettor. supplied than over before with these good things.. There is one thing, however, which I think the Sanitary Commission should not send to the field, namely : stimulants; except, perhaps, for use in the general hospitals. The fact is that Government can easily supply wines and liquors, and as long as the surgeons have only the stimulants furnished by Government they are liberally. dispensed to the sick, and cannot be used for the entertainment of friends or the making of presents,.becanse all have to be strictly aceounted•lor. But the stimulants received from the Sanita ry Commission they are accountable for only to their own consciences, and .much of the liquor sent down by the Sanitary Commission, I have good rea son to believe, is misappropriated, and instead of being a source of good is a. fruitful source of evil. Now thesame thing is true r no doubt, of supplies seat down by the Christian Commission ; and these de fects will and do exist in allbeneficent Institutions of this kind—will, at least, until all men become honest and unselfish. The weakness of dishonesty and sel fishness may affect the agents of these institutions, and cause tho fund for relief to be misapplied; but the generosity that glvos . by the million and labors incessantly for the application of the fund to Its proper uses, is one nt. those manifestations of the great goodness that existain the hearts of those for whom the army suffers.,and the reflection thatsuoh goodness does exist in thogreat mass of the people, makes fi ghting to their defence almost a pleasure. The Coal Mines of the South. The American Coal. Trac t - after mentioning the large supply of coal, necessary to keep up the nu merous southern foundaries, Government machine shops and arsenals, states that as the source of these supplies in Virginia and Tennessee are in the hands of our forces, that they should be held by all means, as the boat results would necessarily follow from this coursani: action. We quote : - therolore, that the greater part of. the Coal used by tha 'Confederates' for manufacturing and other purposes, must coma from the mines near 'Richmond. , And as almost every person has an idea as to how. Richmond could be taken, and the rebellion crushed, we would suggest as our plan (if unhappily General Grant should not lumina before cold weather sets in) that the coal mines above Richmond should be seized, and the supply of coat be abut olf,and thus freeze the rebels into Bobtail- E 1013.", We aro, sorry to spoil so fair &theory, but as ,It Is best to know the truth in this as well as In , other batters relating to the conflict now raging, NVO will make the following statement of (cots, derived from a reliable source.: First. Nearly an the Southern States possess coal mines, and the pooplo of those States were not so ignorant of their locality as not to avail themselves of this very necessary supply so. near their own doors, when the war rendored all further triode with the 'North impossible. Ever since tho war began the coal minoonf North, and South Carolina, Tennessee, and Alabama have been worked with groat success. Whin the occupation of the Termoss.m. Railroad rendered - it impossible td receive any more coal from thaiStateefor the use of the Immenseffumbor cif Goverument works and foundries in Georgia. and Alabama, thelaborlng forces wore greatly increased on the mines of Oarettaa, and Alabama, and these last, in altledegha county, near Selma; have come of 'testi importance. A Wallah railroad has been btillt to ((militate ttanspOttatiOn to the river, and a neWlihe of beats established to carry the (tool Iron Selma to .3tlontgomory, from thoLoo to be ' , hippo!), by rail, to the various depots In Alabaiha and Geofkla. I• From thlastakement of facts, it will be Soon how foolish it . Is to predicate su,ccesses on the simple ignorance of thitrao State of affairs In the Southern country. The existence of a certain state of things tofirre the War 'does not necessarily establish tha lam condition of things now.—N. 1. E.rpress. TAR SON OF Gisrtaitat. Pnics.:—ln Chariton county, Missouri, there Is a German sottlenont, which was threatened with extermination by gue rillas. The people solicited Colonel Edwin Pace, son of General Jerk*, who had served In tho rebel army under his father, but who had abandoned the rebel cause two years ago, to lead them is their de fence. He consented, organized them, encamped them, and the guerillas concluded to let the Ger mans alone. Colonel Price continues .the organi zation, and the men are detailed in Squads to culti vate and harvest the crops In the bottom, and he styles his little army the "Army of the Bottom," and seems to sport all the dignity of a great com mander. Tluit is the waytto clear the eematuele out of MIL Zliesourl and Itoakoiy, THREE GENTS. THE STATE. THE BOAT .13/iolb AT Pirrantille—HAlarth VIC 7nalous.—The dliampion scull-race between' lames Enroll! of Pittobtirg and Joshua Ward, ofNewburg, Rew York, for a melte of WOO, took place oalTues day afternoon, In the' Monongahela river. The event attracted a veVy large amber of peoploftrour the city and adjoining: Owns ' and long betorer thy hour or starting the beaks of the river were Iltmal• ly lined with crowds as far as the eye could reach: The distance to be rowthlwas five mites. At a Roe minutes before four o'clock, a pistol was tired as the' signal for the start, and ball men struck oars almul toneonsly; A better start „Ibuld not have been de sired. In the first forty yenta llamlll gained fully a length, and seemed to gain etandity thereafter. As the med in their tiny boats passed around the bend in the river, the cheers of the multitude In the vici nity of the starting point weroloud and hearty. Hamill reached the buoy, rnadeltietaru ahead of Ward, and upon the return gradually widened the gap lietWeerl them, Looking through a glass, at the Moult co of about a. mile and a ball, it was difficult Wilt:ten:Mae ithki was ahead, but' ttO they came Osier, and ebtilif be seen with the naked - eye, Ham ill was diocesan& le. be considerably In the advance. ()lithe last ottarver pia mile It wan plainly(' operant that Hardin Was" , taktog it quite easy, ,, while Ward seemed to ba: "Milling for his life." The story is soon told. Hamillicontfnued to row quite leisurely and reached tit's/ place of starting a length , or two ahead of Ward, tints win.ning the race quife• Tillie: forty minute:rand forty-slx seconds.. When they landed both' avopearee flushed and fatiguedianti after a few antleatdo• vro.vils exchanged with' one another, they repairedtto ate contrary aldescf the rarer. STIOOTINff OP A'StaTOSED •RXBILL.—roi sevira days past, says thisHarrisbar g Telegraph orthelOth, a suspicious looking' Emu rty and ttavel-wort, ~ has been lurking- around' emantown, Cumber land county. His conduct' exa 'tett the suspicion of the whole neighborhood; and , wl ten it is remembered; that the panic createrby ande ,ated rebel Invasion is scarcely yet allayed, th is fa ct is not aurpriilng. On Friday meriting . _ several. ce the citlzens• de termined to know whitthlrskalk er was after, bat when they attemptedle'rench his a, ho commenced to skedaddle ingood' order. He • was pursued and finally shot, the hall taking effect 'Et his leg above the knee, when' he was captured and brought to this city, and an examination. !wove d that he was only a common vagrant; art outcast, homeless _pl l - grim, who gave biti name'as - Andeew Miller. Had the poor lellowatopped whenchaticag 'ed by his pur suers be would not have 'been , Injured, but Ito was too badly frightened, and considered ti tat his safety deper.ded on his flight. Prervest Mart Mal Opdrho kindly ordered the dressing•of the- pt 'or fellow's wound; which, though painful; Is - natter, gerous,and bas further provided for his eareruntit Iv e recovers. VALIUM.]: GIFT TO A : ClOtfinne,—Dr.. William Prescott, of Concord New Iftimpshire;.ha s recently given to Allegheny College, at PelsosYl cants, ono of the finest geological, Woo. ralogical and conchological cabinets lii the 'country- It em braces six thousand specitnens from , all parts of the habitable globe, which the donor - has-bet .n over forty years in collecting. There are- reps% seated one hundred and ninety•siX genera' autl' two thou sand six 'hundred dltferent• species - of conch Ology, and over three thousand varieties , ft t ml neralogy and geology. To those' there- are yet to be added upwards of two hundred' varlet!' iS of birds. Some idea of the completeness of the cabinet May be obtained from fact that of 'thirty° hun dred and ten genera of shell-fish known• toacience, one bimdred and ninety-six are •hore , repretsauteel nod that many, and in fact' malt 'of the specks of those genera are complete.' •F,Ol - ** eXiMptei or 'the helix, or snail, there are two hundred and three , Species repres ented ; oroliva , onehundred neileLMty- Ore ; of corcea, ono hundred,' and 'thirty-three.- of buceinum. seventy-two ; of purpura. sixty ,—of cl4l- thivan, forty ; and so on' through t he entire- cata logue. It contains Only the choicest-specimens, LANDLORD BaGTALITY.—The Pottsville Miners* Journal of the 20th gives the 'following instance-or the hospitality some of our people;greedy for gain, extend towards the wives anti children of (wpm]. d tars : On Tuesday last a man named Clemens Acker man, who - owns a house on Sanderson street; In: which the wife of Mr. William' Hoffman, a soldier of the 7th Pennsylvania Cavalry, resides, throw-her furniture out., because she was in arrears to him for rent, a trifling amount. Mrs. - Hoffman, who •Is respectable, 'industrious woman, with, unfortunate— ly, two children• sick at the present, said that she would pay him at the end of the month • but he per— sisting for immediate payment; she offered to pay the amount at once. This, in a passion, he refused, sod threw the furniture out as stated, and oven the• medicine 01 the tick children. The affair so incensed: the loyal women who live in 'the street, that they resolved in mass meeting to thrash - Ackerman, and replace the furniture. The resolution was carried out so effectively that the unreasonable. hard-heart ed landlord fled for his life, anti Mrs. Huffman was again placed in possession of the premL?..3.• Acker man was afterwards arrested, charged with assault and battery on Mrs. Hoffman, and was held in. 1500 ball to 4nswer. Asc OLD Oorw.—A relic in the shape of a rusty copper coin was presented at the post office in this place the other day. On one side is a bust, with the inscription "Georgteas Del Gracia Rea l " and: on the other the figure of a female reclining on a harp, with her right arm elevated, as though in the acte of gesture. and circumscribed by the inscription ; burn la, 172.3." It Is, therefore, one hundred and forty one years old, and looks as though It had recently been exhumed from mother earth, in whose bosom it has probably been deposited for ages .past.— Waynesburg Republican. A IINNARKAIII.I-1 MAN.—The Mercershurg J 01.4771 al says that they have in that place a remarkableman in the persm of Mr. J amen Bennett. He is now in the 91st year of his age, and a cooper by trade. Ha M has been a resident 01 ercersburg for the paatsixty years, and is hale and hearty. since twelve years of age he has never, with but one exception, missed a harvest, arid that some years ago. For thsr.last thirty-two successive years he has harvested on the Caine place, and this year made ten days AS a full band. AROUGHT.—With the exception of a fine shower last Thursday a week, our town and immediate vi •cinity has had no rain for about six weeks. As a re-• suit we are here suffering from drought. The.,cora will not ear unless we have refreshing. rains very soon. Other grains are made. The cloverseedmay suffer also, as the pasture is doing. The wheat crop hereabouts is shooking , up beyond. the expectation of everybody. It Is an average crop. The nate, now nearly ripe, will be perhaps more than an average of the last three years.—Somerset Berate!, .20th. EnocaTioser,.—The Legislature, at its last ses sion, conferred upon Governor Curtin authority to expend the sum of *50,000, donated by the Pennsyl vania Railroad Company, for the education and maintenance of destitute children of deceased sol diers and sailors. The Governor has. chosen Hon. Thomas H. Burrowes, of Lancaster, to superintend the expenditure of the same. His salary will be six dollars per day and the necessary travelling ex penses. He Is also allowed a clerk at a salary not exceeding 8100 per mon th. Criarvonn/Heams.—The Patriot. and Union, the organ of the• Democracy at Harrisburg, has changed hands, and is now conducted by Messrs. Campbell & Hite.. Mr. Campbell has lately given evidence of his ability in managing a newspaper in the publi cation of the Johnstown Democrat, whiob was one Of the best country newspapers in the State. A CIENTLE . YAN who was In Scranton, in this State, on Saturday last, informs the editor of the Newark (N. 3.) Journal that the retail price of coal there was only 0.50, delivered. CITY ExPEESES, ETC.—During. the fiscal year ending in March last the expcnsesof the city of Har risburg were nearly $46,000. The raft iptS were about ;t63,000... This appears from an exhibit just made. GENERAL NEWS. A Cool. DiteliA.—Deseribingamsensattonaldtems. —" Tho .Sea of Ice"—a New York critic earl: "First you have a mutiny on, shipboard, with e. mortal combat a few pistol shots, and an oath of vengeance I.wbieh are very warimbproceedings. Then. a tossing about on the wild billows with frantic struggles for safety—which are,c2Bo very warm pro-. caedings. And finally a. deal off love making—any, thing but cold work—and the, punishment of vii-, lainy and reward of virtue, all/ of which are not4o be effected without amazing exertion and a der-L,of warm ,discussion.. The .wholo•of the fine cast pen spired freely, and ono felt muoh Ince jumpingon - the stage and fanning their savored brows. But,the performers went through it .bohlly, and have been doubtless packed away, in leo-reedy for this evening. again.! , Six Hi7NDEZD POrr*DB TO. LOVE.—The Atlanta Rebel says: "One Henry Tracey, a citizen of Elan cock county, East Tennessee, died on the 131,1 z of April. Ile was about fortyskx years of age, six feet six inches high, and. woh,r,hod _over six hundred pounds. For many years previous to his death lie had not left his home. His health was generally good ; be was very talkative and fond of company. A great many persons v i sited him from curiosity. In his young days he . excaedeil all his schoolmates in ruening, jUpplrig, etc.. He leaves a wife and two children." A SENSIBLE. FELLow,—A. workman, writing, to ' the editor of the /bin k: Workman, states ::" Since I gave . up smoking,. I, have put into a box the amount that I formerly„spent every week in tobacco. At the end of the.yearon opening the boa, I have counted out a sum off money sufficient .to provide myself with periodicalsand newspapers for the year, which sum .1 called 'solid smoke. A friend one day called and askod me Have you found the philoso pher,a stone 1 , 1' 0, 1 ,1 replied ; I dolt turn the smoke into gold,: bat nrovent the gold from turning into smoke. " LADIFS "PUTTING ON IAIRS.—A P—, in Paris, advertises. a salve for the production of a slight down on.the lips of ladies, a little moustache, so great is finale:yes the hair on the upper lip of wo man is received with in France. We remember a picture by Van. Ensiling, of Adam and Eve, In which Eve is painted with a pretty little heartland mous tache. The ; ladles of the present day have perhaps become, more effeminate than their ancestors, and . Van Ennling might have been warranted by tradi tion in tds,portralt of Ere. A NEW Istori-CLAD GUNBOAT..—EXOCIIMOIIb ate making at London with a new ,kind of Iron-clad gunboat, .which can move as rapidly and easily on land as.well as in the water She can be taken to pieces in a few hours, and divided Into eighteen blocks, including the engine, and it required, can engagn In a naval combat off the coasts of Frovence with a speed Of eight knots, then be taken to pieces. and having been carried awr.y by railway, be ready to tight again off the coasts el the Atlantic In thirty six hours, alter crossing the:whole of Prance. ORIGIN OF BOOTS AND SHOES.—Boots - Are said to have been invented by thaCarrans. They were at first made of leather—afterwards of brass and iron, and were - proof against both cut and thrust. It.was. from this that Homer called the Gzeoks .brazen-. footed. Formerly, in France, a great feet was much, esteemed, and the lengAh of the sh,oe,. in tho • fain teenth century, was r, mark of distinction. The shoes of a prince were two feet and a half long; those of a baron two feet; those of a knight eighteen Inches long. SBRIMD HIM RIONT.—A gentlerena of the. old sehool in ono of the horse cars She. other day, gave. his seat up to a lady who fatledito make the proper. acknowledgment. Standing awhile after the car had moved on, ha stooped rutlf to listen, and said to her, "what did you say. modam.l". "Nothing, sir," was - the reply of the. startled lady. "Oh, said he, " excuse me ; 1 zoally. thought you said "Thank'ee." Sine Sancrrivron.—There have bean between two and three hundred illeggh marriages,./n.cortain.coutt ties in Wtiot Virginia, since the war broke out, owing to tae filet that the officers authorized to grant licenses bad abandoned their positions. A bill Is about to be Introduced into the. Legislature to le gatir.e Gdl these marriages. NOT A 001)Plali ARISTOORAT. , -0130 of' the weal thiest, men of 'Mooted, Gonn.,,laid the. foindation of his fortune upon a shad wagon. From the first load he peddled he realised a profit of $ll, anti, though he can now count $lO,OOO upon each finger and .820,000 upon his thumbs, ho says he never felt so rich as on the evening when he counted up Um, proceeds of the load of shad. I WELL ILLUSTRATE:IL—The present attitude of England towards Germany on the Danish queslon, et akin to that of .the high spirited gentleman who replied to his Insulting enemy : " Sir, you havespit In thy face, you have trod upon my toes, you, have called zoo a liar; now, beware, air, how you go any further, lest you rouse the sleeping lion." A DBTBRAiiriBD JAIL Ilititexan.---111neston, the criminal who performed extensive exploits in the lefty of jail breaking at St. Johnsbury, Vermont, a while. ago, IB repeating them at the now jail in Irasburg, and they think it about impossible to keep him without a constant guard. ELINLINIIT.—A Yankee traveller, describing a doughnut Of unusually large proportions which he purchased in Buttelo, says:'lt was ono of those stupendous achievements of art which aro only at tempted In the vicinity of a groat work: of nature Alio tato Niagara Falb," ' THE WAR PREENS* 11UBLISAED WEEKLY.) Tat WAR Pales will be seat to orabeoribers by man (per annum In advance) at SJt 01 Three copies . b 0. Five copies 100 Ten copies lb 01 Larger Clubs than Ten will be charged at the ease rate, $1.50 per COPY. TM money must always nocomlxiny the order. and in no instance can these termite deviatectreont, Mew ceirord very tittle more than the eve of Paper- MP' Postmasters are requested to sot as agents fog Tait WAR PRES& Sir To the getter-up of the (gab of ten or twenty. en extra copy of the Paper will be given* DDIANCLIL AND COMKKECUL STOCK EZCHAZIOE • BZPORIL 1( '0 Densmore 011..... 6 . 14 io t t Atwell Petroleum 6) 100 McClintock 0i1... . 6 MAT : 10 1:001/m111e Bank ..116 Ico F r i (ton Coal 100 mi. oral 011 2 dit 2 SOO do. —•• • • ........ 2 100 do.. 2 100 Resdlue R s 5 653 i NO d 0.... ......cash 664 RV d 0.... 613 i ICO do --cosh 61) 100 d 0.... cash f 3631 100 d 0....... • -.cash 63,41 InTlV.llr.br 25i:eh igh ?fay 85 ILO U 3 5.20 b0nd5...,..101,4 MO d d o 004 FA/ do 104 (5011.16ebial R .... 02 1(00N Penns ..... —104%1 ILCOND 64) Maple Shade 12 ICO Northern Central: 58.! 100 Cala 660 prof 41 100 d0“.,..•660 pref 41 100 do LSO Prof 41. 100NPennsli 32 ' l O O SON Canal ... . . .630 20 ; 5 Mechanics' Bank.. %Mt' (.0 Sob Nay.........prer 354 mo Maple Shade.-....: 12 200 do pref 34% 100 Venango ........... 100 U S lei% 100 Phila. & Oil Creek.. ,T 4 100 do 104% 110 Reading-B. 6514 100 do . 104% 6EO Olmstead " 2 ICO do 104% 700 Densmore lots -531 100 do ...... 104% '4l/Irving Oil 3 300 do - 1043. 150 Noble & Del am - .06 12 100 do 104% fe NY & Middle.2dys 013 do ..J0434 100 Reading eix" to do .........:.....104%500 do 2 dys 6.5% 30Penna It 73% 100 do 851 ca 65V 10 do 73% 100 d 0..... . .. -610 65 s 4 Bank N America....lss ,103 de TO it Int 6531 Drexel & Co. quohe flew United States bonds, 1931 102, 1 44103 Do. New Certif. of Indebtedness-. 03Vadopay Do. 7 3-10 Notes la3Y,lgica gnartermaiters' Vonc.hers 110 04111 Orders for Certificates of Indebtednese- ...... 106 aln %i 26 0 s Sterling Exchange 230 28.3 Five-twenty Bonds ' 103.14., Hog Quotations of gold at 'the - Philadelphia Gold Ex. change: A% A. M 11 A. hl 12 3f -1 P. M S P. 31 4 P. M Market steady. The stock market centimes inactive for al! classen of securities. Government loans are steady; the 520 s sold largely during. the day, closing at 104%; State Gs, war. loan, sold at 105%; City 6s were quiet; Susquehanna Canal 65 sold at 6371—a slight decline ; North Pennsylvania. 63 were steady at 104%. In-the share list the only improvement we notice is In Pennsylvania Railroad, which sold at the close ari.3%; Reading closed as on the day pre vious, 65%;'• Camden and ..mboy was steady at 357 ; Northern-I;ra] declined- to 58%, and lifine hill Ballroad , t . canal stocks the principal feature is a &sniffle of 2% in Schuylkill Navigation preferred; Lehigh Navigation. was steady at 85. Fulton Coal declined 34, and Nev York and Middle was steady at 20: In the oil stocks there was more doing, at somo-improvement in price ; Maple Shade advanced.to 12. CP honk stocks, there were sales Or Mechanics , at 93X,;- &ink of North America at 155, and Louisville Bank at 116; The passenger rail roads were quiet' We quote • /SEW .499. 2d & 3d. sheet 5..•. M. 75 10th & •. Spruce SE Pine • eta • - 42 Cheat & Wal ses• -55' 80 The following arnthe cb of the princip.ll spent:ll°th But A6k. I R Ask. gmdin. et;e4;.BB%lPalton Coal 8 9 Pennell •....• 73% ,73X Sig Mt C0a1...... 71{ 8 Catatriesa B. •19 21 NY & Mid C MA 20 cataxibea pref.. 37% 89 Penn • Mining.... 9.% 10 N Penns 31 32 Oil Creek a r Pbtla & Erie it—. S3ll al% Maple Shade 011. 117 f 1 2t Schuylkill Nay.. 25 28 McClintock 011..• 5 5% Schuylkill pref.. 55% 38 Densmore Oil-- 5% isr. Slum Canal 'lB 20 Dairen Oil 6 6,14" Reports from fiesta:l"state that a large amount of paper from the illterfor, , made in aid of the specula tion in merchandise, k.as been offered In that - city at liberal rates, whieni have not been accepted. while prime notes, in connection with the regular trade, are scarce and Is. pea. (Ewer at silt to nine 0 46 sent. 134'. West Ph i lad a ..... Bid, 7%. Race & Vine. ete..ll 13 Green & Cose.es 33 osing quotatfons of 301128 o.9toClis : The following is thentesent - State debt Of Con neetieut : Bonded Floating Total $8400,000- -And the Finance Committee estimate that 000 more must be raised for the ensoing year, which will make the total debt ell . ,150,009:. • ' The following is the last. monthly report of the First National Bank of Neahville, Tenn:: . Due from Ilea - York banks Er.i90.885 United statts bondsdeposited for airen.lation•••• 50.0.73 United States deposits 103.030 United States bonds on band ' • 47,800 Legal tender notes 210. .. MS. . . . - ' Specie - . . 7,310 ' - Gorernmen vouchers 136,011 Due nailed States Treasa.m . - vs.ono , . . Circulation 45,000 The following table shows the• securities and eir— oulation of the free State Banks of Indiana, accord ing to their reports, made onathe-ist Instant : Securities. Circu/ation. Ten banks doing ba5ine55....51,273,071 $997,36T bight reUrtsa circulation.... 441,615 TX, Wia hlrteext 'without securities.. 44.7 X Total $1019,366 $1,339,6321 Besides the above there ars twenty suspended banks, all but seven of whioh. are redeeming their notes at par. The following figures show- tate aggregate gross monthly earnings of the Galena and Chicago and Chicago and Northwestern Railroads, which have been consolidated into one csmpany_ under the name of the latter since the Ist of January: Jsmiery. February March ... April /2{2,029; Jan Jens 264, 024Juns Ste,lf2l -- 371,459 Total. 6 samithes4,ls3.93T The New York Post of yesterday says : • Gold opened at 259, and, after selling down to 25ek it rose to 259, closinsAtt 297,;. Exchange le quoted at 275@280, the disparity between the views - of sellers and buyers preventing much business. Few options have been sold this morning. The Loan market is working easier. There is s. less urgent demand, but rates are fully T V cent. Commercial paper is wanted, and firm at 7@12 % cent. This morning some of the. leading brokers have had large amounts offered to theseat 7 R cent. Governments are irregular.. • Xentforttes are of fired at 97, and coupon sixadsof 19iitat 102 X. Five twenty coupons have advanced, Slo . 104, and certifi cates to 93X. State stocks are quiet, bank. share§ - steady, coal stocks heavy, mining share* nominal,' and railroad. bonds strong. Railroad shares opened doll -and- closed with aa.. Improving tendency. IiSUISOD. River advanced at the second call to 126. The appended table exhlbllithe chief movementil at the Board compared. with- the late*, prices et yesterday : ; United States 6s, ISM, rezelt Wed . Adv. Dee. - 10231 United States e4l, JAL IO3 United States %Yell: thlitudt.nkt e 403)1 10331 United States live-tweritar,ciiiii.'.lol United States Iyr ceri w cnareacy. MX 93)1 • • American Gold • . - Tenneseee bLaes leacoarl sizes Atlantic Mail Pacific Mai/ New 'York Central Railroads— Erie Erie fiefe fled lo B;( Hudson River " 126 "124 2 Reading • M' 130 X K After the Board Wm-market was irregular. New York Central closed. at 131 X, Erie at 106 X, Erie preferred at 108, Autism at 125 X, Beading at . 131, Illinois Central at .1ZIX„ Pittsburg at 10T, Bock Island at 1073.1„ 07raberland at 58. Phikatelphia Slarkets. 31:m1'21—Evening. The demand fariElonr is Undted both for export and home uSe,.and the market Is dull. About 400 bbls Western ,extra. family sold at $ll bbl.. The retailers and balers are buying at from $9@0.50 for superfine; SI;SSIO.SO for extra; $1.3g11.50 for ex tra family, and $12@1.2.50 bbl for fancy brands, as to quality. Rya Flour and Corn :aram. are scarce, and held abosathe views of buyers. GRAIN.—Tbaro is not much demand for Wheat and the market is dull, with sales of about 4,000 bushels prmsa obl red at 260e2d2c 500. bushels choice new. Southern do. at 268 c, and. 4,C00 bushels Kentucky ut,hite at 275 e g 1 bushel: Rye is scarce, with small sales to notice at 17941115 c la bushel'. Corn Is tither better, with sales of 5',C00 bushels prime yellow at 170g173c bushel, in store and afloat. (iats are dull ; sales of old are making at 90 dine; and,a small lot of new etsSo qa bushel. 13inS.,7,41,uereitron is in demand at full prices; a boa was was made at $5014 ton for let No. 1. Corrox—The market comdinues dull, and there is little, or nothing doing.. We quote middlings at, 162 c It 4. cash. Gaddsnies.—Sugar and Coffee are firmly held, but tb= is very little doing- in either. PXT.3,OLIIt.II is quiet; :wall sales are making at from 5052 e for crude; Yk@Ssc for refined in bond, anti 94i . 9.54: gallon tor free, as to quality. SEKU.:.--I.llover Is sw.r.eo and in dqmand with. sales at $9610 at 64 Ls. Timothy is rdther lower; 500,11.15 EOlO at $4.25 ig Flaxseed is selling, in ; - el wap, , at $3.75 N.AVA.I. STORES.--S"W.1101.)08 of R05111.5.1"0 making at 4,15@00 la barrel. Spirits of Turpentine is un changed, with small 204e$ to notice at. $3.5033.10 it gallon. • ew.—Maekiet at former rates ; sets from storeerel are are malting rather at s qu lS for No. 1; $14.50 Q 1.5. for No. 2; and $l.l .%).3 syl bbl for medium and large Is. New Codfish are selling at Tx° • laos.—Thero is,. very little Wag in Pig Metal— Mall sales of Ar.r..tracite arnmaking at 0651070 1 4 ton, for the three, numbers . Manufactured Iron La. firmly held at thi,atliance. rnovisioris.—_There is vary little doing in any deseription and. the. masker osntinues very doll.. Bless Pork is 414oted at 4;10644 Ift bbl . Lard Is held, at 20621 c %1 but %ca hear of no sales. Solid' Packed Button s selling_ in a small way at 25@3.5m g 4 It. as to quality. WEISKY !lag adranood;. small sales of reeled am! Easton blWaire ranking :it ils©lBoo 11 gallon ; most' holders ast„more. The following arathe receipts of flour and grans at this putto.day : Flour Wheat.„ MEE New York Markets, Su' 2 Asnas era quiet and steady atiti3• 50 for pots and, $16.2t615.40 for pearls. linunosnuirse,—The markot for State and West-. mu Flour is dull and heavy,,and 250 lower. Sales, of 13,000.bb1s at ;19.50@i0 for superfine State ; $10.25. 6 1 10.50 for extra State; $10.55@10.50 for choice do ; *9.151410. for superfine Western ' • W.90@11. for com mon to medium extra Western ; 4;10.50@n. for core, won to good shipping brands extra. round-hoop Ohio, curl 411.05@12 for trade brands. Southern Flour Is 101 l and drooping; sales 900 bbls at *10.60011.50 for common, and 4a1.60@13.24 for fanoy and extra. Canadian Flour is 250 lower; sales 500 bbls at tlO 80610.50 for Coin won, and $10.604P2 for good to choice extra. Rye Flour is quiet. Corn Meal is quiet and unchanged. Wheat Is dull and Co lower; sales 6,600 bus at '52.320,2.48 for Chicago spring; $2.35@2.48 for Mil waukee club ; 12. 46@2.55 for Amber Milwaukee ; 42.61@2.66 for winter red Western, and $2.6702 'TO for amber Michigan. Bye is quiet at 61.90. Barley and Barley Malt are quiet. Oats stainer° native at 91111090 for Canada ;MOM for State, And SI for Western. The Corn market le quiet ; saliva 24,000 bus at ./.0 0 6/101 for now mixed, SALES. JULY ILL BOA ROB. 105 domo• Oil cat 5 2CO do ..... bje 53‘ Reading 5534 ICO Sebny Nav b 5 pref 36 11)0 do prof 312 25 Lehigh Nay 25 I Penna ...... 733,( 25 do ..... 7522 17 Little Schur' R.. • 46Xi is L Island R...•citeh 4tf Academy of Mimic 45- Cam Sr Amboy R-157 sDlNioeblll It 62 425 forth Penn& Saip 95 ROA EDS. 85 N Pinna recto 25 150 Stage' Os. war 1066.10.534 10 Pecan' R 73,V 50 31orriz-01 con C& P 96 ICO Se h n yt I:iair.llspret 36 LO Cato R.- -cash/old WV BOARD. 11000 &BM Can 0.4.. ,21X0 do ^AV • do 'SAO do 2AU Cr El 20 bonds.. .260 2563( 2156 2573 , 2.58;4 . X.,6 • • •36,000,000 •• • ;4450,0V • 673 i 67 .. 66 17663 X - 2 177 . Est 2SO Imo_ t low ITN .. 1,500 bbls. 9,400 bug, 3,030 bus.; 2,600 bus..