The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, September 02, 1864, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    , . .. _ , • . • . ~ , , . „. '
+.................. b .
• •
-* a IeiLIPOII4 ' ...
- • .. . .
•••.- • . ..
•
...
no - DAILY CMUNDAYS. JLEOUTED). __ . .•
- - , • ... ; . • : Lt. •'.- -- • - --• ----- • ••Z' ' 'lo l'4 '- ' ....' ''''
. ' '•
'. ' ' ; • „ . ,
. . . .
. ' - ~ . .....
'4
.10TIN 111N-DIDDIEY, :
.. dm,. ...
,;,- yr t f •,.;
.. ~„,,, ....,
~.
.. . ,‘...., 4, , r fi'rj., 1 ' ..:•, -...., ~,.....,,,..--., - .t ..*
.- ; , , . , -.A,
0 *O. • ill - SOOTSii3tta . TE stun. '..----- . • ~---- -.0.% tie, -,- 1.--
.„). • - . --•••
. ... : ..-- • .. . t ..e - " r i i i. • - re - )
' ,6 -';` ' ‘',,. h-.
- "'..1 ,,, a , ,Nyi itii „ , .....‘ - ' ,'• .. - -,' '-'- '%:-',:.' !
.
Yr. - '
• . , ~, ~ .
' ' '
.. . ,
.iif ,.,
- '• • -
• TILE DAILY - PILI1911;
- -.. .
- '
• . , - . :.
~ ,
. .
~.... ..... ~._:_..... , , 1 . _ , 7 . ieit :,...., ..... ........ ti, ..1 ~,".......‹,•,... , i ...Aft -- ' ."0 • • •
''' . XV<7, - , - ,1" . " '.
'.,
--
- . 1':
_=-- - ~. •-• . 4 .i.H g:.7' .... 71111Fr‘: 4 1 i i, ilk' , ..- ~ - . -- - -,,, , , : 2- :Jiiiii _ _, ,, 1.;: - Ai-- -- - --- - - : - : .- .. '- • • rT:- -- ? . ' -
--.. •• , ,-- . --, ..." ,- -,,,,,i .. , .:. --,,;1,...-.......---;" ..! 'OO4O. RUM -.. •
. , , ~ . ,
. , +
.. , . y- , ... . 1
:, • ~ ..1
. ,
r e , . eabselbers; i la Tax Datums Pim Aminne, la • FAA
. ;,4.' . 1 - c .- -- - ~..\ , r Firp " .•,-,,,1'
~Zi -- :
, • - ••• l, / VI, 1114 ... . 1....... .;_; :aH -,, I
T . ,ON TWP.WPY Cerra Pee Weer , payable. to ' - ' -' ' ''''-- •. ' r . I
1 . w "
. . . .
' -4 b - - . --- -.•-,.- o ''''. •• ' -,- - ' - , , r, ' .. -- Ai , Trr - --- ---- _,-........ ,
• ,- Mailed to Subscribers out of the eity, . ,---__-. ---...-.•- - - ; , •• 7 --1 ,, -- • : ••, • ' ..: -s •. ,- ...i...,- r--• - ... - . . m ic •,. - -- --_,. .0 .A. • •.• •• •- ', •• •„ ie;l : / s: •• '• ••••-- . - ' ' .- t -,
. . . - 4 , ~,.--:,_,,. .-..,,•,,,,,•
. ..
, ,
...:„.„....., It ore Dora AIM rim _
.1 -‘ > ,-- -.k :,. : -- . ,,.,--,_.. . -....„ ..• . •..,
~, SIR MogEast. Two DOLLARS AND TWitaTl, _:,, .....,-.......--___.,,,..- . .....i... - --_,,,A- , -
_+ , .._,14 . .:-.1..4 . , _
....._,_ •
_. ,
..
1. ,.... . - .,,, ai , ii ,.. i ...„....„_.,....,..„...._
___; ,5• ,.,. .....____,...„,....,.'"
r • arts • "Wham Iliortge, simui.**l . Y lit folvAttat / 1. ' - - ...--1.. ' '
Mate 'ordered. - . - • •
Aavertisemen.ta inserted at the street rate*. • ' , ' •
1.• .... . . . .
-'...- WWI TRLWAREMY rims, ~.
' • , - to Itsliseriberi. Tres Domino PEa Amor* ix -•
c'. ae,
. :
. anmsaminwarralok
EDVCATIONAL. SEWING -MAC
SS BROOKS AND MRS. J. E.
, . HALL will Reopen their BOARDING AND DAT FLORENCE
, .. OL, for Young Ladies, at 12111. WALNUT Street, in FLORENCE
IA :DNESDAY, the lsth of September, ittiBthn* r'llE FLORENCE
ST CHESTER FEMALE SEMI- THE FLORENCE
THE•FLORENCF
, NARY, WEST CHESTER, CHESTER CO. PA. THE FLORBrir
1 . a Institution. under the carsrof Miss P. •0. EVANS,
..ted by competent teechets, will be o p ened for the THE FLOES'
,tion of pupils on THURSDAY, the 16th of Septem. THE FLOW
; next.
~ • attars containing terms and other information de.
V
.
can be had on application to the Principal.
I • •
, . 41- • .
I V, ALBERT HENRY BARNES POIL
..NG,,
I •
, ..•
.- will open a 0 L &Bele AL and ENGLISH SC HOOL 10t* •
:., •ye at No 922 CHESTED r Street, on MONDAY.
~ .. bar 5, Mr. BARNES may be seen at No. 923 i77.5[7."'.
.OE Street. - anSl-12t* . she will
...., . No: 41.1
) , LLEVUE FEMALE INSTITUTE, • sel.-120
-.. A BOARDING-SCHOOL FOR GIRLS, AST KEIT
, 5 Instil ution. healthfully and beautifully located .ad jUNIPEP
lit northern limits of Attleboro, Backs county,
, , vivania, _ will open its Winter Session, Terre MONDAY, p
•,H let, itl64. For details, Obtr Circular; by ad. may be ma'
-• . g the Principals, Attleboro .O. Bucks co„ Pa. Monday,
ItiltkE J. karatast, . . 1
JANE P. GRAHAMS, Rosms,_.,§
-am Principals. - Head
ITIMOUNT SII,MTNARY, 2211 AND ...- M., w
~. 213 GREEN Street, Philadelphia - Phis beanti- Ad Engllid
,A,Riding_and_ Day School for I ming Ladies will a 6eptemb'
. - EPTEmBER sth, with every poutible facility for
.:- lion, including Maps, Charts, Apparatus, and .Y AC'
• . .iy for illustration and experiment Modern
.••ipla taught- by native teachers. To be able to settlemen
.•- .the only condition of admission to the Prepare.. ABA T.--
• nester sr
•.partment. Rev. J. W. BARNHART, A.M.,
Prof. P. D. BARNHART,
1-Its. Principals. SALT'
sli Clay
. SBICAL AND MATHEMATICAL 4llii d
ARr
SCHOOL, 1008 CHESTNUT Street. commence
. • limited._ The Sixteenth Session will
.NDAY, Sept. 6. I,VM, FEWSMITIL Principal. -EY '
v -he mr EN'
steer
,•• SS B. T. BROWN'S ACADEMY ..steer
FOR YOUNG, DADIES 1003 SPRING Street. . - er CII•'
,
ope , on.MONDAT,SEPTEMBER 6th. Art27•lna* triV
:E - SPRING • GARDEN ACADEMY 1. -
.fA,B"
- .A Classical, Mathematical, and English SCHOOL,
fel'
• ming Men and Boys, corner of EIGHTH and. BUT- Ay
••00D Streets, re-opens MONDAY, September 6. Abe
-• -121 • . S. P. BIRCH, A. M., Principal.
OD
ARY E. WILKINSON'S . SCHOOL (
1
FOR LITTLE-GIRLS, 118 NorthELEVENTEI St. ,
+ugh instruotion in French, Music, and Drawing.'
•., pus can-be received as boarders. ati'll•tit •-;
DAME MASSE - A.N D. M'LLE.
.•HORLIT'S ENGLISH and FRENCH - scEtoor, fox
g Ladies. at ' No 134 E SPRUCE Street. Philadet.
lOU reopen on WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14th.:
.!...hris ..,
i IL - ADELPHIA *MILIT.A.RY
-4Hoot,„(Conrtland Saunders' Institute.THlßTY.
.. : and MARKET Streets) re ens September 6th.
-.. A Professor' B. D. SAUNDRRS, D. D. •• au.29-4m.
RGARET _ROBINSON., WILL RE
-6 FEN HER SCHOOL FOR GIRLS, RACE Street,
Franklin, on the sth of Ninth Month. Apply to
,:• 'NOON, Cottage Row, Germantown. ant). UP
ENGLISH. AND - CLASSICAL
pled r S ep t .
No. it WEST PENN SQUARE. De
,-, Sept. 5. J. DAVISON, Principal. an2o.lm*
1 ROE R 13/BEER'S ENGLISH
• CLASSICAL SCHOOL PRICE St ,Germantown,
•.. OPEN on MONDAY, Sept. 6, 1864. an`D-121*
N HALL FEMALE SEMINARY
-; • sled at PARADISE, Lancaster county, Pa. The
:Won of this institution will open on the third
...
09th) of September. A full corps of able
rs will be employed. For further partiottlara
. r a circular or address the Principal,
.WALKER
•:
.19t Paradise, Lancaster co., Pa.
ILA.DELPRIA. SCHOOL - OF -DE.
SIGN FOR WOMEN reopens SEPTEMBER sth,
4e building recently purchased, S. W. corner FIL.
Street and Penn Square.
- ECTURS. -Joseph Harrison, Redwood F. Warner,
' am J. Horstmann, Charles Gibbons, Eli K, Price,
. Cla_ghorn, Jas. IL Orne, Wm. Buorneil, Wm,
:, P. P. Morris. David 6. Brown. Geo. Whitney.
T. W. BRAIDWOOD. Principal.
egraphing Te,tight. -. an27-st.
E CLASSICAL. AND .ENGLISH
SCHOOL of the subscriber, S.. &,. corner of TOR.
•TH and LOCUST Streete, will reopen on MON
. 9 S A epitriii:e 2 r l ,6tk i. Atra. l. o .la c its - Er. ,l 2.. x v. de
• Ini*
vRY P. ROBESON., WILL OPEN
her School for Young Ladies at 1338 CHESTNUT
• , on the I.2th of Ninth Month (September).
tilera tear be obtained ' t 110E' ARCH Street.
-. tseld • • -' - •
i' ING GARDEN INSTITUTE, FOR
YOUNG - LADIES •
BOARDING AND DAY SCHOLARS.
To .he %Rent p i l l -hitt. oi . S4s,renit.t r ytz ;ll4l.
-ISt." 608 - andoll. - ilitiliSHALL Street, Phila.
BB V. P. BROWN,_ No, .1007 PINE
street, win, on 'MONDAY, Sept. 5, resume the
of her School for Children between the ages of 4
• au.25-I.Bt*
NA. KAIGHN' 8 SCHOOL FOR
*.'
OUNO LADIES will he reoOened Ninth month,
'at No . 2044. MOUNT VERNON-Street au2.s-151.
s' , NDF
• • . LL,
on th
' ish (
- - rt bs
B.
a ti
lot
F' tit
.. •
eel
-- , Evi
. ...
er,
...
. • DEN, . _ ,
4.- ' TH. Street. Duties resumed Monday. Sept stl
hn T. BRANTLY LANGTON,. Principal.
' . 'UN G LADIES' INSTITUTB,f S.. E.
rner of MARSHALL and SPRING GARDEN SM.
` resumed September 12th. ENuChl H. SUPPLE'S,
1 Principal. an24.lf
NG LADIES' SCHOOL 'AND AD.
ANCED CLASSES FOR HOME STUDY, 900
ON St. Formerly Pro , . 0. D. Cleveland's. Fan
egine Sept. 15th PLINY 1- CHASE, Principal:
•^ ones, A. V. Butram. Associates. . an2l-Im s
' KB BRL A ND VALLEY INSTL
TS FOR YOUNG GENTLEMEN. MEOILLNICS
' a., eight miles west of Harrishu zez rvon
* sow the O. - V.
ev, O. s.
a resume SEPTEMBER lat.
'a moderate. Send for a Circular. -•.--• an24.12t
: CLASSICAL AND ENGLISH
HOOL of H D. GREGORY, A. 3I„ No lox
t- T Street, will re. open on MONDAY S ept. fins.
td lm*
.S ELIZA W. SMITH'S • SCHOOL
OR YOUNG LADIES,. 1210 SPRUCE Street,
reopened on WEDESDAY, ept. 7th. Ths
... braces a thorough English education, with
ranch. German. Music; DraWing, Patnting,lce;
A C H M ANN, PROFESSOR
s , z . c. i tto. - mist the Fifth Rapti - '
h
OARDL
- STEPP . .
- - . ACADEM. -------
. 1 North SIX_ per sessim
. .. . nu.-. I Term. an23-121*
~ • - LIAM & .T. HENRY WOLSIEF.
~ ... ,li, Proter - " Niglio, will re- - - ^,t,,m , dutie
Prof..?.Ab
HA
o rg r
11 f
)• IF
43 - H.
Du
. • ,
l• 0111`.-
;-, suit attar...,... , - -..........-
' Strafe. Thr duties of this . ...ton Will ....
d ociRONDAY, September 5. - au22 120'
V.A. 7 ` .-
.3
..;
It
~, 'the
her. • minim
R3l A N T 0 W N FEMALE SEMI
' • KY. GREEN Street, ' -ith of Wainuttele, w
r ,
WSD ."--
sr, a,
• -1 1 1,
? AR.
mil
li.k,.
it C'.
ING
'• -. lasi
; ' • . Eli:
1 ,.
• " • •V
~. -;
.Y T
'.•"' • . ''' - --• in.
'.. . '
:TN .
: Y. -Mt.
'ir Boordi_-
W _=...._
UT Street,aal
f: . - 4,1 circulars. .
„..
• -
's AII A ViTMClTTrifirfnivnt ~....... -..„.
- T.I
.1
.• - t
-.
-.
r: ..ir
tb
~ . •
~ .
-, =
[:',-... :i . ' IDLA.
• . '', - 11q -
F
rx 1- ' ..- ' - rebdr
.' . Da'
'''.,.••.. '-, Ad
"I ' '•
) 31
tati 1".)
F.
bs I
1 , in,
, -
Tilt.
-No p
, LSD a
.. '
~ T
N,
.: hart
8 hil
e but
. • , ' r 6tl.
..... k :', A. 21 ,
• . ,
•,.. 1 4 % '.. BYLVANIA
. . .
. . - , AT WEST qugt
s of No
, Sep'
.. .
.
9 r l
..1 - • , Of '
t.' ,, ,
. '... Es .
. fur
~ti
• , AY.
It
.yet.
.. 3 - r,
1. , - e i
Intl
.. ;,.
'4
' , •,.. •
... I.
-, ,•
. . . .
- :•1•!.• •
_ _
)S' SCHOOL FOR Glgrif3 AND
BOYS, on &hoot lan e Germantown, will
the sth of 9th month. 'lhe tonal branches of
h education will he taught, and we feel war.
believing that make mpetec of the teacher,
‘l. Smith, Will it decirable parents to
the echOol. For further information apply to
me:treth, Bast Walnut lane, Germantown;
ttenl.. , ase, Township
_Line reek,' above Bitten.
Oerecantown Mary A Wright, Booed.
We 4 Township Line road, Germantown;
ra o , l , Boman street, Germantown Conklin
Tulpetioaltenelanet, eartielitoWn.
iY 1011 BOYS,_ 144 NO9I
1 Organist of the Ottorah4
lessons September let. Reels ence, 9212
ES Street. an2S•lne
I FER BROTHERS' MI MI.
lEMY will reopen on SEPTEMBER Sd.
'TICTH Street. Terme per
armors of music, will resume ._ - stea
Sept. 1, No. 480 north SIXTH. St.
-NIiAR MORE ACADEMY,
INOTON, Delaware.
Sed.lon will commence MONDAY, SEPTEM.
864. For particulars, apply to the Principals,
lARLOTTE and ISABELLA. GHISISHAM,
WORTH and WEST Streets.
E. HALL'S INSTITUTE FOR
NO LADIES (with Primary t i fill t lko i nl i d l in
IttacAedld2l, E. + s Ineiitntil - be
- - - -
of GEIESTNIIT and EIGMTBENTH Streets,
on bIOWDAYA September Oth. L. BAR
0. G. R. goBLAOT, a n
0.
HOOPES WILL REOPEN HER
RDING and DAY SCHOOL for YOUTIq Wise,
LOCUST Street, on WEDNESDAY, "
..41$ 80 win
n 13,1 h.
4, Ratting forth tne Course of Tatikructi4lit
may be obtained at the Se/einem'sT
Prof. WALTER S. IFORTESCUEL A. M.
LUBIA INSTITUTE—A HOME
301Ni:1-SCHOOL FOB HAYS, at Andean".
es :rom Philadelphia.
H. T WEILL% A. Rector.
r^ ,F= Be!. Afonso Potter, TED., LL.D.,
Oral. B. Stevens. D. D. • aullzlm
;T SCHOOL FOR GIRLS, 1080
r; LIMBS Street, reopened Sept.
-2 , 1-12t9 B. Y. SCIRIKMAN - , Principal.
8147 STI CREW ,CLASSICIAL
TUTS, 127 N. TENTH Street, will reopen
.All English branches. Latin. Prank,
1.1 ?reach taught. Call lot a Circular.
UT•STREET FEMALE SEMl
miss Bonney and Mtn \Min
will re
-rdinB ..L l VoiaDn i . " Ba:tembier
FRENCH BOARD N(# AND DAY SCHOOL
0 LADIES (1587 and 1539 SPRUCE St.,
.iq). will reopen on TUESDAY. September
.or. , to tho above addrem wilt receive prompt
application can be made after An
-47. :a MADAME WHERVILLY,
- Principal.
A.ND KINDERGARTEN AT
a roi 9p Su* Garden will REOPENED
1, at in-a- MOUNT VERNON Week.
GERTRUDE W;.FULTON.
HARRIET E. DARLINGTON.
MARY E. SPEAKMAN.
.s.ND SEMINARY, 9 WOOD
TF.REACE, WEST PHILADELPHIA.--
1 REEVES, A, M., Principal, (listed the
3atulnary.) Hesston opens September
y r s.442 3 3 i ozrd i i i t i t a g ,l 4 3. l t oo2. 11 ; 1 1 :o o nnLadles ti.
reniars sent OIL apidoatTon, °XlE.tf
E S BUR G SEMINARY FOR
LADIES win be reopened on TURSDAT,
CIRCULARS, containing references, Am,
Missal] CHAPMAN, Principals, Holmesbnrt
,lelphie, City. aniS.lm
518
CASEY & MRS.
GB EanE4 BE' S
1703WA N N H T O tr R ee D , I will RE, D P T N -
I, the 14th of September. •n4-Sm
AR Y COLLEGE, ALLEN-
Psana.wlthin three hours ' ride oirrld•
dared lid the state, provided with spa
%lA hti ding% and opened in gay last
teed ted pupus. Commune its 111111 He.
Gth. For martian, address Rev. . L.
.M , President. attlftlia
MILITARY
this institution 111 be resumed OR
aptember let t M 4 o ' clock P. M.
mtaluins Ism information, may be ob.
LER M. OENB. Esq., No. 6U) f313119T.
of OOL TRIODORA FITATT.
President Perna. Military Academy.
31 . CHESTER A.CA.DEII7
tTAET IMITITIITN,
do year of ten months sommesoes on the
V, the 6th of September next, and dew
lilyllo
fowinp.
;not men plowed for Gollsge or Bullion
r.onnirementn.
Dinning' us taught try maim rosidowl
to hporo no oonnooilon with 11.17 O&M
1
3i Lai full Information a 1 to
- wit. r. vn 4111..
Weals
aurr 62 wozauz. A. Kt SS.
Assofista shii,
MET OHNIT rsuiti
VOL. 8.-NO. 29.
EDUCATIONAL.
INSTRUCTION.- A GENTIJEMAN, A
member of the 'University of France, having had an
experience of ten years es Principal of a Classical
grew and English School in the city of New York, de
sire, to form an engagement in a dchool, and also te
give private instruction in families.
First-class reference given.
Address "S. T. D., care of Blanchard & Lea,
an29-mwf-St!" No. 105 B. FGJETH Street.
OLIZTECHNIC COLLE
p
,ENTIFIC SCHOOL for the general Student of Ma
thematics. Rave Imentat Science, and Natural History.
will re-open, with enlarged =lmmo!' miens, on MON
DAY. September nth, TECHNICAL SOHOoLS re open
Septoth Nth. Apply at COLLEGE BUILDING,
MARKET Street and Went Penn Square. set -10t*
M McMULLIN RESPECTFULLY'IN .1
6; FORMS her friends arid patrons that she will
open her School on MONDAY. 12th inst., at No. 41.1.
South MIGHTEENTH Street. eel-1W
ACADEMY OF T 1 PROTESTANT
EPISCOPAL CHIIIICH, I,ODOST and JIMMIE
Streets.
The Antamnel Session will open On, MONDAY, Sep
tember Si. Applications for admission may be made at
the Academy Appl ications
on and after Monday, August
28, between 10 and 12 o'clock A. M.
JAMES W. ROBINS, A ,
anls-mwHin Head Master.
WM. S. COOLEY, A. M. WILL RE
OPEN his Classical and Eng l ish ish SCHOOL, at
1112 MARKET Street, on 6th September. auSO-110
C HESTER' VALLEY ACADEMY FOR
Young Ladies and Gentlemen will Reopen Ninth
month (September) Oth, 186 4 . S. TAYLOR, Pried ,
pal, COATESVILLE, Chester county, Pa: an2o-/m*
THODZAS 'BALDWIN'S ENGLISH
-a- Mathematical and Classical School for Boys, N. 11.
corner of BROAD and ARCH Streets, will reopen SEP.
TEMBRB oth. au27-Im*
MISS MARY R THROPP- WILL RR
OPEN her ENGLISH and FRENCH BOARDING
end DAY SCHOOL for YOUNG` LADIES, at No. 1841
CHESTNUT Street Phlladelphta, 011 the 12th Of Sep
tember'. For otroniere, apply at the School. ot3-6w*
aLENWOOD - ACADEMY., DELL
WA E 43 .WATER GAP, MOMEOE 00., PA. '
The fall !setae. of the above bletitation wll eon.
Mena" on the 12th of the 9th month (September). /Pot
partibulare apply to SAMUEL Ajax-, PrinelpaL
jr.90.2m Delaware Water Gap. Monroe eo.. Pa.
irENTRAL TNSTITUTE, TENTH
and SPRING GARDEN- Streets, will &wen
Sept. 6th. Boys prepared for any Division of - Ulu
Public Grammar Schools, for College, or for Business.
Special attention given to email bops.
att26 Im s H. G. ItIaGIIIRB, A. M., Principal.
THE ENGLISH AND CLASSICAL
SCHOOL, N. W. corner OEtESTNUT
TWELFTH Streets, will reopen on MONDAY, Septem.
boy fith: -
Nnteberof pupils limited to forty.
Price of tuition same as last year.
For references and particulars see Circular's, 'wlsich
May be bad at Mr. Hassard's Drag Store or at the School
Rooms, where the Principal, (successor to Charles Short,
A. M. may be seen every morning between 10 and U
o'clock. A. B. SEf SAKES..
au2B-lm No. 1301 ARCH Street.
aEO. W. PETTIT WILL RE-OPEN
hie Studio for the reception of Papile In the arts of
DRAWING and PAINTING, at No. 100 North TENTH
Street. on the 15th of September. an2B.lm*
(IL /081 OA L INSTITUTE, DEAN
N- 1 Street, below LOCUST Duties resumed SSP.
'MOSS S. J. W. FAIRSS,D, D.
au2s-2m* Principal.
VILLAGE GREEN BEKINARY.-MI
LITANY BOARDING SCHOOL, 4 miles beyond Me
dia, and 134 mike from Glen Riddle, on the Went Chea
ter Railroad. Thorough course in Mathematics. Natu
ral Sciences, , Lariguages, and English. Practical lea•
cone in Surveying and Civil Engineering. Wine library
and apparatus. Number of pupils limited. Begins Sept.
6th. Perils have benegte of a home. Refers to John
Capp & non. 23 South Third Went; Thos. .1. Claiton.
Seq. ,- Fifth and Prune; John H. Diehl, 302 Walnut.
Address Rev. J. HENRY BARTN, A. M.,
1 723-3 m - VILLAGE GREEN, Penna.
PHILADELPHIA COLLEGIATE
IN-
IiPITIITBtPOR YOUNG LADIES, No. 1630 ARCH
'Street. Rev, CHAS. A, SMITH, D. D., E. CLARENCE
3MITH, A. M., Frinotosle.
Ninth Year. Three Hepartments: PrimaryrAcade.
ado, and Collegiate. Full college course in Clasics,
Mathematic% higher English, and Natural Science, for
those who graduate • Modem Languages, Music, Paint.
trig, and illocution by the beet masters. For circulars,
"poly at 1E26 CM - 118na uT Street, or address Box tell
F. O. ~ "Philadelphia.
The next session will commence on Monday, Septem
ber 19th4 ap2o-Bne
I'EMA.LE COLLEGE, BORDENTOWN,
N. J. —This Institution is pleaeantlylocated on the
Delaware Hirer,_ . ahott thirty miles by railroad from
Philadelphia. ‘Thorgugh instruction is [bran hi the
SOMIXIOA and higher brandies of English. and IlTerilO
advantages are tarnished in the Anolent and Modern
Languages,. Drawing, Painting a all its •branohes,
Vocal. and. Instrumental Music. For •Datalognes, ad
irees - Env. JOHN H. BRAKTeDiIY,
arsi-ew . President.
NEW PITBLICATIONS.
A LIFE OF GENERAL GEORGE B.
Mann LAN.
The subscriber has had in preparation for a , everal
- .
inontts.
- -
A MEMOIR OF GEN. MCOLELLA.N,
tracing with great fullness and care the career of the
General through West Point, the Mexican War, the
Red River Expedition, the Journey to the Crimea, , and
those important Gamptigns of the present War in
which he filed so conspicuous a part.
This volume Is now in the Press, and will soon be le.
sued, with Illustrations, in an attractive style.
/gents to sell this work are wanted, to whom liberal
termio:4l , lle - gtven.
JAS. G. GREGORY, Publisher,
•• 118 a , " ' . Aih. , 34O.EROADWAY , Mew -Yhtk,
GHOSTS EVERYWHERE
GHOSTS IN THE PARLOR!
GHOSTS ON THE WALL I
GHOSTS ON THE CEILING !
GHOSTS AT COMMAND!
BLUE GHOSTS!
GREEN GHOSTS!
ORANGE GHOSTS!
WHITE GH.OSTSI,
BLACK GHOSTS!
Ohoets of all sizes. all styles, all colors. at BIZ ty Sa.
conds notice!!!
Just Published;
SPECTROPIA ;.
OR, SURPRISING SPECTRAL ILLUSIONS.
' Showing Ghosts everywhere; and of any color.
Thia new Nhest illusion requires no apparatus, the
book itself containing every requisite to exhibit
life
sized ghosts, which are produced by the aid of the book
on the well. or any white surface, by the mere applies.
Non of a well• known principle in optics, affording
EXHAUITLESS PARLOR AMUSEMENT.
One v 01.., Do, with sixteen illustrations. Price One
Dollar. Nailed poet free on receipt of price.
JAMES G. GREGORY,
Publisher,
No. MO BROADWAY, New York.
NEW BOORS 1 NEW BOOKS 11
Jll/3 received by
, ASHMEAD & EVANS,
Successors to W. P. Hazard,
No. 724 CHESTNUT Street.
NOT DEAD YET. A Novel. By J. C. Jeaffreeon.
SPECTROFIA t.or, Surprising Spectral Illusions.
slaowins Ghosts everywhere. Sixteen illustrations.
PIQUE. A Novel. Ninth edition. jolt received.
THE EARLY DAWN. By the anther of the " Sawa
burg-Cott& Family." and said to be equally as well
written.
ENOCH ARDEN. Tennyson's new Poem.
DOWN IN TENNESSEE. By Edmund Kirke.
QUEST. Another new novel,
JOHN GUILDERSTRIti (I'S SIN. By C. French
Richards.
RITA. An Autobiography,
ASHCROFT'S LOW-WATER DE
TECTORS.
Ashcroft's Steam Gauges.
Justice & Sbaw's Mercurial Steam and Blast Clauses.
Clark's Damper Regulator.
Water Gauges, Scotch Tube'', &c.
AIIOB. S. BATTLES, Agent.
24 North SIXTH Street, Phila.
NEW BOOKS t NEW BOOKS!
DOWN IN TENNESSEE, and Back by way of
Richmond. By Edmund Kirke.
JOHN GUILDERSTRINCPS SIII. A. Novel-by G.
Freud, Richards.
QUEST. A Charming New Novel.
DRIFTED SNOW FLAKES; or Poetical Gatherings
from many authors.
ENOCH ARDEN. A Poem by Alfred Tennyson,
D. C. L.
RATH HALL. A Domestic Weer the Present Time.
By Fenny Fern.
THE EARLY DAWN; or Sketches of Christian Life
in England in the olden time. By the author of tne
Schonberg-Cotta Family.
For male by WILLIAM S. ALFR B M A EN,
anfer-if , 806 CHESNUT Street.
LOOKING GLASSES.
JAMES S. EARLE & SON.
1316 CHESTNUT STREET. PHILA.,
MVO now in store • Terl LILO assortment of
. 1 4 9 . 4 a, ©'LASSES,
differs character, °fee
~- BrontsfAsulavrtatE AND LATZST STYLI&
OIL PAINTINGS, ENGRAVINGS,
low PIOTURR AND PHOTOGRAPH MAHAL
DENSERVO.
A most effechlye and delightful preparation
FOR THE. TEETH AHD GUMS.
Highly recommended by the most eminent Doctor'
and Dentists.
It le the reedit of a thorough comes of seleintlLlW eggs
extending through a period of nearly thirty
tem.
To a great extent In OTOI7 MAC and entirely In Many.
LT WILL PRISVENT DECAY OF TSVFEL It wiliAleo
STRENGTHEN WEAR GITMS, KEEP THE TMTE
BEAUTIFULLY GLEAN AND THE BREATH SWEET.
Bee °lrgul4 ". Price B e i. Prepared coley by
S. T. BALE, M. D. DENTIST
ma cazwrtitpr Bt. , Philadelphia, Pa '
For sale by Drageotc Is lJa
QUEEN OF BEAUTY. •
WHITE VIRGIN WAX GP ANTILLES,
A new PRENCELCOSMZTIO lor beautifying, whiten.
preservingthe complexion. It is the most won.
derful compound of the age. There is neither chalk,
now d er , magnesia, bismuth. nor talc in its composition,
yb e ing composed entirely of pure 'Virgin Wax ; h ew "
its extraordinary qualities for preserving the skin, rash.
lag it soft, smooth; fair, and transparent. It makes the
old appear ypting, the noway handsome, the handsel:ea
mor beautful, and the mostbeauttfol divine. Price VI
and I S cents. Premired only by BUNT & 00, , pe r s on ,
am 41 South EIGHTH Street, two doors abase Obeid.
nut. and
133 South 133VENTli Street. above Walnut.
IMPORTANT TO RAY DEALERE
AAP& CONTRACTORS. Farmers. Shippers, 4 , 4
Say a n d
in the prowling and transportatiozi l o
Hay and Straw will do well before making their as.
``casements for ' the season to examine the , Beatty
Press," now izA_opers.tion on the corner of EISCODIA
Street and COLUMBIA Avenue.
This bay is compressed dine,' and ten tons van b•
readllyput in au ordinary box car, amino hazard what
ever is incurred by the road in transporting It.
The bales average 400 potinditi_and are only 22 Lucke.
by 93 Welles, by 4 feet In else. We are prepared to least
out counties, and the facilities we secure give superior
value to the product by this Press.
For farther particulars address COOK TALGOTI.
Superintendent 'Pennsylvania Beater Press Compeer
Girard Rotel. Philadelphia.
ati&bn•
PURE PALM .oth SOAP.-THIS SOAP
Is made of pure, fresh Palm Oil. and is entirely a
vegetable Soap; more suitable for Toilet use than thoett
made from animal fats. In boxes of one dozen mares.
for $2 per box. Manufactured by
GEO. M. ELIUNTON & SON.
No. 116 MABOLRETTA Street, between Frest and
Second, above Callowhill. • Jett-Om
READI ICELDII RE4DIII--
HPHTGOHERY'S Minn is a neverfalling
omody for Neuralgia, Nertonmem, Headaohe.
to. 101 a lea new &Mal% and la accomplishing WWI•
lets start do,y. Yon that are sugaring with any of
bees complaints, mum hays spent manY cams Ltd
lnd no relief. thereon I auk o n to 'pond one dollar [cg
/no of. Nontgomory's NerrtnO it will gl a of
oglce and see
(WSW Btrsok Volladelp
_KILL Wholsealcand air
ail ,hy SITRADLIT. liIITII.II. and jUH.M BM.
Ng MEIN&
•
SEWING -MACHINES.
THE FLORENCE
l THE FLORENCE
THE FLORENCE
THE FLORENCE _
THE•FLORENCE • .
THE FLORENCE
'
THE FLORENCE
THE FLORENCE • - • •
SEWING MACHINES.
SEWING. MACHINES.
SEWING MACHINES„
SEYMIG ilkoEuriߧ,
SEWING MACHINES,
- SEWING - MACHINES,
-. --SEWING MACHINES;
'SEWING MACHINES,
dm CHESTNUT STREET. ' -
N3O_.CHESTRUT. STREET, . - • -
HO CHESTNUT STREET.
620 CHESTNUT STREET.
p) CHESTNUT STREET. -
62).. CHESTNUT, STREET. .
SOO- CHESTNUT-STREET, '
630 CHESTNUT'STREET.'.'
CURTAIN GOODS.
I . E. WALJECA.ViaNs
0100C;Basoz TO W. 5.V1.T.111.1
1111180M0 HATA,
219 CIEMSTNUT STREET.
VMM)ONV INUAIMPAito
OTJ-RTAIN B 3
~~y~q~lTrD
SILK & DRY GOODS , JOBBERS.
FALL, t STOC K { 'FALL,
NOW %STORE. (15404.
EDMUND YARD CO„
Nos. 611 Chestnut and Sit Jayne Streets,
PHILADELPHIA,
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS Or -
.
SILK& AND FANCY DRY GOODS,
SHAWLS, LINENS;
AND WHITE GOODS. -
VILL LINE OF FOREIGN AND DOMISTIO
33.A.X2VICORALSr,
INCLUDING BREMER'S AND OTJIM ALINNAi.
Eva2o-3m . •
COMMISSION HOUSES.
HAZARD & AUTOEUNBOA ,
to. lila cabman sTRENr.
COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
701 roe grim or
171-603 , .171 ' LLApILPIfIi-MADS GOODAL
CLOTHING.
EDWARD P. KELLY,
JOHN ILEiftiY's
• TIVLIZWICS,
612 01213t3TNITT STREET,
Will, from this dale. Bill
SPRING AAP BUNN= CLOTHO
IoW Prim
On hand 5t0:415, or Fall and :Nl:lnbar Goods.
sought lielone the rise, which they will sell at. mod*
ste prides. Telma ad cash.
01:11$ ; 4VIIII ll.%Tirr7ilTl
OIL COMPANY DIRECTORY—CON.
talging a Mat of Companies, their WU" Presidents,
Treasurers, and Seeretazies. •We are also preparedio
furnish New Compankis with
CERTIFICATES OF STOCK. -
TRANSFER BOOK, . •
ORDER OF TRANSFER. '1
•
STOCK LEDGER.
• STOCK LEDGER BALANCES.
REGISTER OF CAPITAL STOCK,
DIVIDEND.BOOK,
. BROKER'S PETTY LEDGER,-
ACCOUNT OF SALES.
Of Good Materials and at Low Prices.
MOSS co 00, '
STATIONERS.
my44f . 42A .CHESTNUT Street
LUIJUiiALM.4.WUU.UWZW4
8 - q5 ARCH STREET. 826
EM0VA..1...
G. A. HOFFMAN,
nusT.nuranum SHIRT AIM W4APPEIi
NANITIACTORT, AND GENTLEMEN'S
FURNISHING Emromum,
WOWS) PEON 606 AROSE STREET
TO THE HEW STORE,
6245 ARCH STREET. 825
ieS34B,nw6m
THE IMPROVED PATTERN SHIRT.
WASIWIT ' BD TO FIT AND GIVE BATISFACTiON.
JUDI EY
JOHN C. AUJECISO2I9.
ROL 1 AND 8 NORTH SIXTH STREET,
St.,!;Ittrr.&MDIKEL A D D3 4 k!atit IN
USTIZIEPS Itußmaw4towls.
CONSTANTLY ON ItAND.-
LINEN, 101ELIN, saIAFLARN.Sh 81118T8, and
ORAWSRS, COLLARS, STOOK& TRAITELLINO
MIMI, TEE& WRAPPERS, ao., atc,
OF HIS OWN NANIPIA.CTORN.
AldiOs
NOSINET
01,0ArBS,
SCARFB_,_ •
susraNDEßs
HANDIOLNONIK.
ONOVIDIBBAANNS, No., *O.
Sold at resooniblo arise■
VETE SHIRT MANUFACTORY.
IL The unbearihere would invite attention to theta
IMPROVED CUT OF SMUTS,
which they znehe a epeeialty in their badness. Also,
militantly jeoelving
NOVELTIES FOR GENTLEMEN'S WEAR.
J. W. SCOTT & C 0.,.
GENTLEMEN'S ruittrisinNe STORB,
No. 814 CHESTNUT STREE.
lal7-tf . Pour doors below the Continental.
Q 1101LT8NEAN .91r. C 4.,
*57 SZOLDWAY. SIM YORK..
.11fPORTIRS OP
%TEN'S ct LADIES' GLOVES,
GERMAN AND ENGLISH HOSIERY,
MIEN'S FURNISHING GOODS.
[,ACES t DRESS TRIMMINGS
to whist' they
IMPPZI TEX WHOI4BOALi TRADZ
1,10-41
DRiaisT PIPE, DRAIN PIPE. -
VITRIFIED TERRA. COTTA. DRAINPIPE—aII
sizes, from 2 to la inch diameter, with all kinds of
branches, bends, and trans, for sale In any Quantity.
Sbillt bore per yard 85c.
43 „
4 CI 66 „
6 64 7 6 %
6 44 46 .
TERRA COTTA CHIMIWAY . TOPS,
For Coltays• Villas, or Oily Houses, Patent win&
guard Tops , for curing smoky chimneys, held ato 8 feet
htsh s' °EKA4n:BIe",46LE4"VABEra
FclutrB'doetateandStuaryMablo Busts .
I ruci LL D M jagl aße SiTßßA
COTTA WORKS
1010 CHESTNUT Street.
zin. fowl " & HARRISON.
RTEAK 11/L&TERS FOR FACTORIES,
la ws. a g e. 'heated with exhaust or direct steam;
also. Coos los Neatens Condensers, Evaporators. &o.
ee! gilt . N. TO ie Nit EOM ablreNii
PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY,= SEPTEMBER
VrtsS.
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1864
Touching Autographs and So Forth.
We are frequently in receipt from Messrs.
Peniogton, foreign booksellers, South
Seventh street, of catalogues from French
and English dealers in old books, auto
graphs, and literary curiosities. •At the
present price of gold, and rate of foreign
exchange, our purchases of such things are
nowz . " few and far between;" but It is
-pleasant enough in an idle hour—not many
of which-are-enjoyed by hard-working edi
tors—to look over the catalogues, and see
what may be stirring in the respective lines
with which they may be connected. They
are . of use, too, as enabling collectors to
know :the current prices. Waller's cata
logue of autographs, indeed, is :a thing to
be not only yead, but studied and put safe
ly aside fot reference, for it usually abounds
in curious specimens, and it is our friend
Waller's fancy not merely to name these
articles, but partiahlarly to describe the
more interesting, not unfrequently with
attraCtive . extrapta characteristic of each
writer: The intending purchaser thus
'tains a pretty accurate idea of the document
or article he desiderates ; and others,. who
may not purchase, obtain. Information which
gratifies each.
Surely, of all the hobbies that culti
vated minds can put through the ma
'lege, autograph-collecting is the, .simplest
and • most informing. In the article
on Autography in Appleton's New Ame
rican Cycloptsdia, to the authorship of
which the writer of these lines pleads
guilty, this idea is more fully expressed :
"It may be stated that those who ride the
bobby of collecting autograph,a generally
do it with a higher purpose than mere curi
osity. Whatever the original inducement,
whenever the pursuit ripens into a passion,
augmented knowledge, historical as well as
biographical, is the result. A genuine
collector is not satisfied with- an autograph
until he obtains as much- information as
possible concerning the writer. Very fre
quently the letter or document itself con
tains something whic4 illustrates a doubtful
point of history, or throws light upon+ an
obscure -passage in biograPhy." An in
stance 'of this bas very recently occurred,
which may cautiousl3r be designated " Cu
rious, if True." One Mrs-. Berns; Who
made some little stir, thirty or forty years
ago, by assuming the title of Princess Olive
of Cumberland, and claiming to be legiti
mate daughter of Henry Frederick, Duke
of Cumberland (third brother of George
III.) by the sister of the. Rev. Joseph Wil
mot, and whose pretensions-were disallowed
by Parliament, left a daughter, named Mrs.
Ryves, -who is said to be making some
efforts to have these pretensions examined
in a court of law. Mr. H: Coleby r who -is
engaged for her, and is probably a lawyer,
has written to the Daily Telegraph; in Lon
.don, that while arranging some papers-for
Mrs. Ryves, preparatory to her• cause
coming on. next Noveniberin the Ftobate
Court, lie found the following, among other
manuscripts :
. LONDON, January 3,4172:
Lord Chatham ,hereby agrees. to indemnify Dr.
James Wilmot for all the risks and dangers that
the said Dr. J. Wilmot may be subject to in the
continuation of the "Letters- of Junius,. autho
rizing the payment .of £llO to. J. W., on account of
printing and, publishing the work. , 01i.A.T86.31.%
Another document, said •to have been
discovered; Mr. Coleby states; was " a paper,
note ; or memorandum, written one: leaf in
a PPoket - beo„, or what
Werra Pocket-book. leaf :: 'ls consent that
Di. Wilmot may *• * • * my letters
of . Philo-Junius. J. Dunning. Mt'
The foregoing seems to authenticate the
article on the subject' of Junius' •in • the
Panoram a .for Novemberc.lBl3; which was
read by some gentleihen •at 'the British.
Museum a few months since. It is asserted
in this magazine that Mr. Woodfail, the
printer, recognized the initials J. as
the author of Junius,' and that he also
received a gratuity from Lord Warwick in
order to meet the expense for printing."
On this the London Publisher's Circulaa , ,
which Mr. G: W. Childs has kindly handed
us, remarks "The olaims.of Dr. Wilmot
to be considered the author of Junius•were
fully set forth by. Mrs. Serres many years
ago in a volume containinginany startling
facsimiles of autographs, and to this-voluzae
we would refer Mr. Coleby. 'We have a
strong suspicion that' the doeumeht in7ques
tion will be found infacsimile in•that pub
lication. Of. course, if it were genubze, it
would settle this-long-vexed question ; but
if the &Rica have so. long. passed , over a
piece of evidence of such importance, it
has doubtless-been. owing to. a strong sus
picion that the. extraordinary zeal of the
late Serres to. establish the elaiins 'Of
Dr.vWilmot give a somewhat apocryphal
air to her extensive repertoire of original
documents."
This Dr. Wilmot .was, represented as
uncle of the pseudo 'Princess Olive," whom
we-had the honor to present with a bot
tle of Burnett's Old Tom Gin, (a liquor
much affected by " Her Royal Highness,")
during a visit of curiosity which we paid'
her, when, a prisoner for debt, she resided
Within " the 'liberties" of a debtor's prison
in London. If this indemnification were
authentic, it would put the anthorship
of " Junius" upon a person capable
enough, and not unsuspected—for, in
1.851, a volume was published by • Mil
ler 4; Orton, New York, entitled " Ju
nius, Lord Chatham : ' a Biography, set
ting forth the condition of English poli.
tics preceding and contemporary with the
Revattionary Junian Period, and showing,
that the greatest Orator and Statesman was'
also the - , greatest 'Epistolary Writer of his
Age." This volume was not without a.
certain cleverness and plausibility, but
certainly fell short of identifying the Earl
of Chatham, the first William Pitt; with
the great anonymous "Junius.".(Our
own opinion, and we have been examining
the evidence for thirty years, is that Lord.
George &duille was the author, assisted
by Philip Francis, as amanuensis, fact
collector, and occasional writer ; and cer-
tainly no public man of the time had such
strong motive, at the time, to assail George
the Third, his Cabinet, and his myrmi
dons.) .The fact, however, of Mr.. Coleby
having found the Chatham indemnification
among the .papers of the "Princeis . Clive,"
is &ancient to awaken doubts of its authen
ticity, for many of the documents which she
produced, as signed by him, are ascer
tained by internal evidence, as well as by
collateral facts, to -be burthened with an
utter impossibility of being true. Suppose,
however, that this newly-found document
be true, what testimony does it not give in
favor of Autograph-keeping and Auto
graph-collecting ?
All this time we have been chatting
about , Autographea subject which we de
termined•not to mention when- we. put.pen
to paper. : Yet, ere -we quit it,,let, us men:
tion that our. next notice of Autograph-'
Will contain a - discription at an antOgitili.
of that famous and excellent. divine, the ve-:
nerable . John Wesley, (how astonished'he
would be, could he revisit this country .now,
to find Bishops in the Methodist Church,
which, with God's aid, he founded !) and a
true confession of the manner in. which it
came into our possession.' It will not re
main there, after we• make a clean breast,
for we shall present it to the most honest
man whom we have the-pleasttre of know
ing, who is himself a Methodist. Not ex
actly; " an:' Israelite"—save that he is de
-scended, like other white people, .fioni that
great! family,-we .know. man'MOre en
tirely "Without guile," and, whenever he
departs to the alAtown. shore against 10.iich.
the Waters of Eternity will dash for ever,
the;:triest inscription on his grave-stone
mad 14e, in Byron's words,
He.kept
The whiteness of his Soul, and so men o'er him we pt.'
This tribute is earnest and froni the
hearl; - and we are not disposed, after pen
ning it, to add any alloy of meaner ma
teri4. - We shall finish this article to-mor
row; Meanwhile, we tell our readers, (in
the Strictest confidence,) that the conclu
sion; Shall treat of Postage , Stamps, the
mart for them in England, and the varie
ties . which have extended through the
world. This subject has been suggested
by receiving a two-penny pamphlet; front
our ,friend Penington, entitled "Priced
Catalogue of Foreign, Colonial, and Eng
lish-Postage Stamps," offered for sale by a
dealer-in New' Oxford street, London.—By
the Way, how much trouble it would save
us, if we only could get intelligent persons
to s4ggest-subjects for articles. * To a full
mind and a ready pen the usual difficulty
is not so much the writing upon , as the
sele4ion of a'subject. Whoever makes- a
hapy suggestion in that• line-. - ccifera- a
favo' upon <the newspaper writer. It is
verytrue that not more than one out of, a
C
doze Suggested subjects may be editorial
ly s ectecl, but what a gratification to: the
man - m ' has hinted, at the accepted
One; fiilm t Writer treats it eol. -amore, to be
able to, say "That's my thunder!: I sug-;
3.
gest. - the subject--all that he-did was to .
worll it up." Yee - Wei:who have been
constantly writing in this journal ever since
it, wtis bEgurt, (the vulgar patois is "ever
sincO it 'was inaugurated" ), -have never re
ceived half a dozen hints of the kind we
ineniioni during more than seven years .of
labor, which, if almost unremitting ; yet , is
not a liberal share of gratification:•
For it is pleasant to know that one writes
for an appreciative public, grateful for
good intention, and kind in miticism.•
POLITICAL
A SOLDrElth3 OPINION or THE COMING ELEOTION.
An Offiiter in Sherman's army, botn and educated
in Philadelphia, writes us from before Atlanta an
interesting letter discussing the draft, the coming
election, and other subjects - just now of general in.
tercet. We give helow his remarks on the coming
election, as a reflex of the opinions of the soldiers of
the grand Army of Georgia, who feel an especial and
deep, concern in the restoration and perpetuity of
the Vnion : •
"I wish the election were over; its results will de
cide the fate of thie nation. Mr. Limon re-elected,
and the policy of carrying on the war until rebellion
is utterly crushed sustained, and I fully believe the
present war will terminate triumphantly for the
right within six months. Mr. Lincoln defeated, and
a tow, conoillatorrpoliey avowedithe war will also
terMinate, perhaps more speedily, in the recognition
of the South as an Independent nation.
"To defeat Mr. Lincoln Is the main hope of the
Southern leaders. They know, perhaps even better
than we, what important results depend upon'the
November election ; they know his re-election Is the
death-blow to their hopes, his defeat their promise
of speedy victory. '
(. They, may lose Ilichniond, Atlanta, and Mobile,
and the confederacy Is still secure, if the war-policy
of the loyal Stites is disavowed. We may tail to
gain either of the rebel strongholds, and yet give
armed treason its deans-blow on the election of Mr.
Lincoln; and the consequent avowal that, despite
three long years of.hardship and suffering, despite
the sacrifice of Money by millions, despite the
shedding of blood like water; despite defeat and the
death of thousands of our bravest and noblest, we
stand where we stood on the 15th day of A.pril, 1861
—for the prosecution of war until treason was
crushed, and rebellion ceased to exist save in name.
Oh t as an American, as a lover of my country,
I pray God will give our people courage to
meet the issues before them;,oh-, that they
may proVe worthy descendants of the men of the
Revolution, and do their whole duty in the hours
'of the great crisis of the ware God grant that
our people , may show loyalty, their patriotism,
is more than empty name. The blood of the pa
triots of the 'Revolution, of the heroes of 1812;
the blood of their sons, their brothers, their friends,
shed upon the sacred Bolds from Bull Run to Pe
tersburg, from Shiloh- to Atlanta ; the gaping
wounds, the shattered limbs, the maimed forms of
others of their brethren, sons, and friends,; the tears,
of the widows and the orphans, made such by the
war; the old tattered flag insulted, the memories oC
our the hopes of our future, call upon themen
of the North to be true to themselves, to be true to
thnation. By their acts will the fate of the
V he , dedided—and by. .their acts .will they he
jfe
f rrr
rthell children and their God . - , -Linocilic
an Johnson in themselves are but men, with all the
faults of their fellows ; individually they may be
ignorant; they may be much less competent than
others, as true men as they"; but a loyal convention
of representatives.of loyal men has selected. them
as the candidatesfor the chief offices of the land;
they are thnavowed friends of the great, only true
policy of the nation ; one, at least, has been tried
and not been found wanting ; and both are identified
as patriots devoted to ~ t he maintenance of. the
- Union afall costs, at all hazards ; as such they are
the repreSentatives of the great principle for which
we have given so much. - Their election is its hi
umph; theirs is its defeat." Representing, then,
the cause for which we fight, there can be no doubt
on the part of the true loyalist in the proper dispo
sition of his vote, no dOubt respecting his duties in
the coming election.n . ,
A Tisaissasoiricm—Tlie first anti-slavery paper
ever published in a Southern State, and almost the
first in the United States, came from the hands of a
Berjamin Lundy, printer, in, Greenville, East
Tennessee, about the year 1815. Greenville then
contained about two hundred inhabitants, and the
country was very thinly 'settled, so we suppose the
circulation of Mr. laindy's "'Emancipationist" was
not very large. - Flies of the paper Still exist in
Greenville.
SOMETHING NEw.—Under this head the Portland
Prim comments on a resolution passed at a recent
Dellloo7lltiC Convention in Indiana, which declared
that its members held Jeff Davis and his govern.
ment in utter abhorrence and says:
"We hair(' never seen the like of that in any De.
mocratic Conventioni at least, not fur a long time.
It is, like the shadow of a great rook in a weary
land—an oasis in a vast desert. But you don't catch
the Democrats of Maine embodying such a sent!.
meat' in their resolutions, nor anything approxi
mating towards it. A friend at our elbow asks 'lf
Tudgc Howard would have so readily accepted-the
doings of the late Bangor Convention, If this senti
menthad found a place in them?'"
ti PastrmY" of theDoston Journal, writing from
Chicago, says : " Vallandigham enjoys the honors
of Martyrdom and denounces McClellan at Chtca•
go. When Introduced to the New York delegation
saturday; he began to talk of his years of devotion
to the Democracy, as his record would show. D—n
your_rebord exclaimed Dean Richmond; no. man
here needs a record over a week.' Old Vallandlg.
ham dried up."
Ws' notice that Gen. Leslie CoombS has. been
making a-display of kdinself or of something she at
Chicago. .He promises fifty. thousand majority for
McClellan, or for the nominee of the Chicago Con•
vention. That protons? smells of the horn..
PERSONAL.
The Richmond Dispatch, of August...lL,. asserts
that a diary was found on the person-of General
Nulligan'whert his dead body fell into the hands of
the rebel soldiery at ffitrnatown. It hopes-that.it
will be kept as a precious memento of-the war, and.
continues despondency about, the -war and ,
conquering the South Is most pithily expressed , in,
the last entry made by him on the day of -battle-t.
Well,' said hei out cause is gloomy ;we Nvilluon.
quer the South about the time the -Jews-all return
to Jerusalem P General Mulligan.left in blaokand
white his opinion of General Hunter.. He calls him
ftmd.': He. blushers for hies courstry.for keeping
ruche, tend in service.).'! our readers...kw.
no..bow
muclicff I,lilito believe, especially.if.they remember
well -*e eiande . ra with which. thet,samo-paor and its
sisters in Richmond attempted to . blacken the me
mory of Colonel Dahlgren.
Tom Taylor, in one of his London lettess to the
Manchester Guardian, writes• that he has- heard
from a medical officer of volunteers of, the. patent
fact that very few crack shots-(especially With small
, bores) keep Up their "form". for many , years, or
even months, together. It Is that 'one effect of
shooting with very delicate sights, at long ranges,
is to produce a partial congestion of the retina,
which, if it were allowed to-go on, might end in the
loss of the sight altogether.
A Mrs.", Douglas of Yorkshire, England, fifty
years old; And the mother. of seven children, is per
forming the feat of walking a thousand miles la a
thouliand consecutive hours, at the Alhambra Cir
cus, London, for $5.00. She has alreadY accom
plished'a similar task In Australia.
Brig: Gen. Alfred H. Terry, of Connecticut,
has been recommended to be a major general for
valorous conduct in the field.
-- The Chattanooga Gazelle speaks Of a young
Philadelphia soldier in these terms: Major Wm.
moMlchael is the subject of the Gazettes remarks:
Major IffOklichael graduated at the University of
Pennsylvania just before the war broke out. He
bad entered upon the Study of law in the offiCe of St.
George Tucker Campbell, Esq., when he 'responded
to the summons to arms, and took a position in the
Army of the Cumberland. According ti the Chat
tanooga azetts, "he has been relieved from 'furtheit
duty in the West, and urdered to daty on the staff
of Major General Cadwalader, at Philadelphia,:
"Heretofore,” says the. Gazelle, "we have :sever
Menttned the many excellent qualities of IVlajor
' - Molt heel, for the reason that when he oceupled- the
posit n from whlch he ),Rq just retired, many shot
- tow-iided person s , might have inferred common
c from our pen were inspired by a desire to,
ten .t
4 he official favoritism of the Major—en infer
ence equally unjust to the Gazelle and to Major
nicaluotiata. ,
"But motives of -delicacy no longer constrain al-
Irnee, and we feel perfectly free to give expression
to the , ,opinion -
of almost every officer In the Army
of the Cumberland, in saying that Major. William,
McMiehael is ore of the. most industrious, encl..
petic, intelllgent N able, and consoientious ofdeers Iq
:he service in this army. Re was ever at his. post,
and no consideration of personal friendship, as
selfish; ambition could for one moment induce him
. ,
to do n ' hair's breadth from the strict line of his
I Met duties, or to infringe an, iota the orders of
Li 2 /11 'erlorta.
"1 lilt reepeet Major MeHrliolatel is an exeeption
to elm rt
f
,every officer we have • ever met with. A.
11.1) 01 the patriotic Morton McMichael, the veteran
edl , 4 r pf_the Philadelphia North. Americau, no less
could .he expected of him. He is just the man for the
At TN lieriermance of duty in the State of Pettes l .!
'VEir Di In'a orlds liire the present. •
"we have not learned who succeeds Major Igo-
Michael, but 'whoever hemayy
.his
he shall serve as
lotg sill SF ,acceptably as .his predeoessor,„he will;„
ime; iiitire with the wet m appreeintien of hie
elope.' 4 .0 , . 1 vA.c. gmt litentlol4l l of hill Pg 00).".
. ,
1
. .
tHE. 'CHICAGO NOMINATIONS.
01 3 1141'014S OF THE NEW YORK PRESS
'WHAT 111(/ES TAX MEAN?
OH WAR.?
A T'T EXPT S TO' IN T•ERPA ET ITo
Yor the benefit of inquirAis seeders who have
carefully read the Chicagaplatform, and who desire
to be informed of itli real signification, we have col
lated the varlons-opfaionc of the leading New York
journals touching .thkrromarkablerinstrument: The
extracts will daubtless•prove oi assistaxee in
the effort to arrive at a saitsfactor, Interpretation
of It. It is worthy of nate that all ,the influential
organs of popular'sentiment qubteil below-411a
Tribune, Times, World, and Daily News--- - regard it
as a guarantee of unconditional peace. The Herald'
alone avoids .such a conch:elms, and Prefers to re.
main silent upon the subject' -
[From the New York Tribune, Berk I.]
The Democratic platform demands, wholly and
_unqualifiedly, that the war shall, on the part of the
Union, be stopped. Suppose this were 'done to-'
morrow.,President Lingoln sende an envoy to Jeff.
Davis, saying: "Let' us haie a cessation of hos
tilities." a Certainly," responds Jeff. "Nithdraw
yetur forces from the confederacy,- raise your block-
ode; and I agree to an armistice." (The rebels havie
already indicated that they, will have no other.)
Suppose this were conceded.; must not evertf'Eiro - -
peen , Government at ' once, recognize the , •
Cen
federacy W. On what ground could any refuse?
We• should have give's' ufi the contest, arid' re
tired ballied,,sind defeated:- ' .Piropeis--famish
lug. for- 'cotton' and naval Stores, Which' the
rebels ;have „to. ewe ; . they. are, in . desperate
wait of a thousand Whings.yOmpni , Ettropo . leas a
surplus They "=would,: of clews - traderonly with
their friends. Who deef, of a , at,this le punier', •
complete and, final ely , anzrendered
NeW ®cleans , Newbern, Ifelrai,• Vicksbnig,'
ov i lma
IllemPhis i _Nashville, _Knoxville, Little ;Rocki and
'Fortress relonrneall the fruits of bue.lotiglind ar
duous etruggle—who imagines, what Confederate.
would= fear, that vin7.ahouldeyer plunge ifreshinto.
War, and try to takei - thetil over again I Wilke fraud,
then—an Impudent, wicked fraud—for thisplatform
to talk after thiffef peace "on the bash' of thirede-',
nal Union." :We have war only because',nertain
Stites have repudiated and, now defy . that :Winton.
That Union leCtle.bone ofloontention—therels•none
other. How,-hen, having decreed a!" cessation ,of
hostilities)" arifyou 'afterward to have the Union?
But " a , Gens'ention of the States—nay, ""an
ultimate Convention of oil the • States"-1B -.in
your programme. But- the rebel States' had .thetr
Convention at Montgomery nearly four yearn
ego, and framed, there a Constitution wherewith'
they profess- to .be perfectly contented: That
constitution , ignores ours supersedes it, and ma
ders'yOur Convention a simple nullity. Stop the
war. new and . they will laugh ' your " ultimate"
,Convention to acorn. They will tell you that
They ; have "It first-rate Constitation, formed at
Montgomery, and that If you want union with
them, you must adopt that, and , apply to be a d :
milted inta their tionfederaoy. Three anda 'a half
Years ago, before a• drop of blood had been shed, toe Re
publicans proposed a Convention, (Si' rather adopted' the
proposition of Kentucky that one be 'called. Hadiou
Democrats then favored a Convention, we should
bug since have held one. But you resisted it, fought
it, voted it down, inducing even Kentucky to join
you in defeatinglt) And-now, after three years of
carnage and devastation, you come round to our wa
sition, and vaguely recommend a Convention. We
. standby it, and will helP carry it*,' but that will not
put down the rebellion. We must first have peace,
Men hold a Convention.
ThELTribune's Interpretation of the platform as,
an nnronditional peace document would seem to be
justified !rem:the. renewing - language of the New
York Daily News, thenrgan, of the Woods :
.
At the Chicago Conyention, contrary to the usual
custom, the platforni wae adopted and the candi
date was then nominated:and placed , upon it. Its
acceptance ay Gen. McClellan _pledges him to peace
measures, and this secufecklaie nomination: Mr. Pe
ndleton stands upon the same platform, and upon it
he has stood since first the war commenced for a
more single-handed and able advocate -of peace
measures Is.no where to be found. This we have
from Ms - speeches -in Congress, and from his own
Ups, and from his every political speech, for he hut
never failed to avow his posse sentiments whenever
a proper'occasion gave him the right to - do so. The
Peace men, then, may wellrepice at this victory.
They have peace upon' pledged•tapeace measures, and
it behooves them to be no laggards in the great con
test that is to elect the candidates and give peace to
the nation.
(From the New York Times.. Sent.
The Democratic nomination is made.. lie who
did more than any other Northern man to save the
rebellion from its enemlegin its growth is ,fitly put
forward to shield it from the finishing blow in its
decline. "The platform which demands that " itn- •
mediate efforts be made for a cessation of ho4tlll
- finds its apprOprlateembOdiment in the gene
' fel whof Of all . others, did most to thWart the
progress of those hostilities. It being, deemed
politic, by the - majority, to seleet a military man as
the candidate; in order to abate; with the people, the
odious associations of a peace policy, the least,war
like of the generals was the very "jack-atra-pinch"
to servethis.end.• Though thebtraight.eut Peace Men:
did not take kindly at first to any such manage
meat, they were easily enough reconciled Vitt by the
plea that, without some such shift, success was
Impossible ; and by the concession of the second,
place on 'the ticket to one .of their own number, Val
landighairt .appropriately, and ;without, hesitation,
moved to.inake the nomination.. unantaious. • What
two-thirdg of the Convention .recogidied in giving,
their brat vote to Mealellttn, : ls unquestionably true.
, thezliktforrit.OthwAwitsitutinklat-netii.Lit-
Self calculated to gain the-favor of .the people. The
reasons are two--ime negative, the other positive.
The negative reason is thii.t the platform does not ,
contain a syllable condemnatory of the, rebellion.
Plenty of space is found for denunciation of the.
Administration' at Washington, but not a hair's
breadth Is allowed to eves- the , slightest censure of
the rebell:lovernment at Richmond.
The positive feature .of the platform which will
condemn' it with" the pgpple is this very commit- .
ment to the polley of compounding with armed re
bellion. The people have carried this war too near
ly tells c'onsurc mutton to abandon it for'any such
object. They know nesuch thing as "a caseation
of hostilities? short of submission to the rightful
authority of the National Government. It was pre
cleely to enforce that.subruission that,these hostilil
tics vreree first commenced.
_The progress of these
hoetilities has proved, their ability- to enforce -it.
Most assuredly. they.de-not -mean to give up the en,
forcing of it, when soh earthe end, and to let their
immense.sacrifiews of treasure and blood fail of their
great recompense.
The platform beingthusi in itself an Unpopular one,
the practical question - now is, to what -extent this.
adverse feeling wilibe propitiated by a nomination
of this particular type.. Will a platform _which
would surely be rejiteted with such a representative
civilian upon it as Tallandigham or Thomas H..
Seymour, be acceptable, because that standing.
place is occupied, by George B. McClellan in a..
major general's uniform 1 To this we answer em
phatically no, antifor two conclusive reasons : First,
Gen.-McClellan notoriously is not a man of any
positive independence whatever. His nature lacks .
the element of resoluteness necessary to self-asser- .
tion. He has uniformly displayed a disposition ,
to yield to outside pressure. We do, not
say that Gellelail McClellan may not have, .
for a time at least, views of his own. We do not say
that his language at West Point, in favor of is übdu- .
lug; the rebellion, was not then sincere. Bat the
trouble with him is that he lacks steadfastness of ,
conviction. His Opinions are shaped mainly by air
cunistanees. The fact that he held war language in
July Is no more an indication, hat he will not go in
for a peace policy in September, than the fact ttiat.
he one day arrested the MarylanitLegislature by.,
military authority prevented his exclaiming, not - .
many clays alter, against all summary arrests. it
has been said that this latter change came from his.
having been manipulated by politicians. Whatever
the cause, the fact of the change nobody disputee ;
and it is this very changeableness, that, want Of
consistency, that will make it impossible' for.the
people to give him any support that would be with,
held from the platform itself.
Personal considerations, though ever so favorable
or unfavorable, are In themselves nothing, over
againab the mighty determination of the loyal men
of this land to fight this war through until the re
bellion is subdued. There is a , principle ,here at
stake Infinitely beyond the power of politicians to
' set aside or modify.r-thaprinelple of the supremacy
of Government, over rebellious. resistance. There
is a spirit,too, quite as much beyond political con
trol,a spirit that forbids the outraged ,flag,--Cad
Glory, as It is styled—to huy the sufferance of its
enemies at a price. A tide will speedily'sweep. in
that will make 11. wreak of this platform,,and engulf
every min on it or near it, -
groin the N. T. Daily News,-Sept. I.J
We accept the platfeina adopted by the Conven
tion as a great triumph ,Cor the. Peace party.. The
propositions for an armistice and a conveutlon of all
the States, arsuggested.several months ago. by the
Nine, has received, the. sanction of.. thelliem:ocraey
"through their-delegates, and - the Peace--,M.8i1. may
rest assured that that propritiltion, carried Into effect,
will bring about an. - endurinrperma_between the
sections.. We congratulate; the, arty in; whoaelre
- half we have SO earn/logy labored tint their earnest.
nees and devotion have'not been lirvain.: 'Tat there
be no repining, if peehamithe full. measure' of their
anticipations lias not ",been reached ; , for assuredly
the influence of the.principle , they, have advocated
asserts itself nein the platform ttuit'llias been
.adopted, and the nominees of the.Chisago Conven
tion stand committed to a, course_ that is undis
guiseply and unequivocally, traced. in accordance
with the popular sentiment.of opposition to the
war. . .
The nominee ; of the Chicago .Coniention for the
Presidency is not the candidate of our preference ;
but, standing upon the platform upon which he has
been nominated, and being th&reecgtrized standard
bearer of the Democracy, ho_ is untitled to, and he
will receive, our earnest support.' George B. Mc-
Clellan him done and said much.that we cannot and
will not attempt to excuse, but Oct between George
B. McClellan and Abraham Lincoln no Democrat
can hesitate, and we are. convinced that the same
concord of. action displayed by the Convention will
be demonstrated by the -Democracy at the polls on
the Bth of next November. Being assured that with
the election of General McCidian the war will end, we I
will support the nominations Made at Chicago from ,
this hour until the close of the polls in November.
fProm the Jo,. trial of Commerce, Sept. 1.1
= The name of George B. McClellan is presented to
the American.peoplees a candidate to occupy the
Presidential chair, an the platform of the UNION
and: the ..Ccertyrerrmon - . tine more worthy to he
trusted, more able to sustain the responsibilities de
volved on hite;could not be found - ln the country.'
The irreproachable ream as he was styled a, feW
days since by a radical paper, the young and so?
eomplislied soldier and defender of the Union, the
" American Oitizen,,of strangely ,mature _ statesman
ship, the Scholar, the Christian, THE Man, IS de
mended for the highest service - in this cOuntry. ,-. He:
Is a man, every inch of, him.. Nor, in , a moment
like this, is it unfitting so say that this nomination
has been forced ripen. him againstliamostearnest
wishes; and that, if he accepts it, it will be at a
sacrifice of feeling which few can appreciate. But
he must accept- it, and he:must then have the !Alice
itself foreed'on him by the voice of a people in such
overwhelming majority that ho,wilkhavestrengtit
for the:vast responsibilities which are involved in
such an eleetion.
- ['grout p e New York Tribune, Sept. 1.3; ,
.
Tout years ago, and up to the nathroak of the,Wart
N.cOlelitirt, as well as .rendieton, was,a resident of
Cincinnati, and that city is 131111 Me legal 'resinerice,
according to . the axiom of our State Constitution
that - 1m one gains:or loses a - residence by reason of
serving the country_ In her, armies. ; We do not
know whether McClellan is now billeted on New
York, New Jersey, or soma other State; ; nor is it at
ail material, The - president and Vice President
1 ifitodde;
theta
Soviet not - be residents of the'scime:State ; but there
it no ride-which forbids a dozen defeated candidates
being in Massimo house if they choose.
mom t,
he New. York World. Sept. 1 ' . - -
'Phe Natibrial Dipaceratie .Convention has. done ,
its worit, ienid one it' - welL It "Ices nominated 'the'
ablest nfilailkt 'step ule r ticket ever presented for the'
auffre es afi - the American people: Both - candidates
a"' m r a e r b ir. 11 5
Ito4lreillak'flPtheeritydlleiireie°Porf.e'vWoje7l-}troehdus!.-ttot4msoear In a public
' capitol rtsliothrare; by iniititete afid - edudation; gen
tlinie tlefeltherise , Id suidligke to hesinentstedl with;
~ prejnd opszabiehxualt hlurfor playieg& useful part . /
t
.je me etreurestafices, onte.haxe.'stirraialid, him:
-- - eiiii,w 11.,siStef party hackit who will - preireatleis
diseernink-ineilit or ability detheiiiossa elect& - -
tt Thou'dld,st begin the quarrel," SIM OA ancient
VATII,
-
sage, r reConcillation.n The electibfl'im
Abraham Lincoln -was a. trumpet of sedition arid
civil war ,• that of S- or R. NicVlellan will be lse
herald of reunion aid peace. The people unitif•t
stand this without argument; and the nominati on made yeaterday will be hailed throughout the loyal'
States with a spontariemis Jorvor.of hopeful euth m .
slum suet. as never before greeted the announce-.
meat of a Presidential candidate.
[From the New York Herald, Sept. Y.
The Main feature of the Chicago Conventiort
was the utter end final denaat'of the Woods, Vattee.
digbam, and the other Copperhead liliaceprien.
landiillaM was a delegate' to the Coriventem ; bat
tile Woods warn there an lobbyists: l Their only
authority was_ a resolution Which had bees voted
down :by the Peace Convention at SyraCtlttp, but
which.. they had fraudulently revived. These
sham delegates were not retognized officially y
but they were hoots& at fp the streets; insetted
at the hotels, outwitted In the caucuses; and
ftnaly
_.mothered by the action of th e oonvii.
tion. .Vallandighana, Ain* and the rest of tho
Copperhead delegates have not a plank in' the%
platforminnd the Woodh, who wored . like bearers.
for Seymour, of New Your are laid Mit cold by - the
ofilicelellan: We have always told the
politicians that the CrOppeillead Peace party wae • a
humbug, and that the - Copperhead . Peace faction of
the Democratic party had no Strength; and'_the vote'
Of the Convention proves the truth. of our assertions;
qv the first 'ballot, after bitterly apposing McClel
lan, the Copperhead Peace: trim oonclmtrated upon'.
'Tom Seymour; of Connecticut, .and; beheld they
weld only muster twenty-three and a hall' votes—
the half a vote' .representingtTaliandigham -pro
batAy. Then, instead of .carry,trg out-their bluster
ing threats of boltitar,theee Copperheads all ate the'
bitter leek, and Vailandliiham himself .mortal that'
nomination bo madMitnemblllouil•
NOTIS.
•
• • •
.
Titiralt is •an excitement in Parfe beeaitse i 3 15
maintained-that the Blendin who haerbeen perform.'
log at the Illpipodromorthere Is an impostor, and LAO ,
the 'original American l'clegaiw:Falla BlendiM 'TV.e
inipollition Is said je ammo ealoted siklrthe sonar.:.
canoe of the Manager. Villareal name of the gemany
Blondin' is :Mid Wee' lawarelet—ht. 'Gravele't;"- of
Bonen, and the laiiv4a-re really a *amipar Le.
bran.
W,iitin it Madrid they.are preparing a'serieS of
bull fights, under the patronage of two distinguished
and- wealthy citizens, the Bleakest! of Medina-Coen
and the Marchioness of Villa, Seca, at Barcelona
the:y'llatie destroyed the a..ena and built a hospital
on the site.
Liaviiica, the well•known. French member and
chocolate manufacturer, is
.eald to be nominated
successor of Baron Haussmarw, who has been ap
pointed Minister of Public • Worka and Trade.
NV hen Devinek• contested the 'election with Thters,
some Paris wit said : «Thiers lies written his name
upon the tablets of history, and. Devinok his on the
tablets of chocolate."
Tare Sultan, in .a case in wtheh the dilator a
Christian 'village; near • Yanina, had been unjustly
condemnidlo death for takings part Ina murder
ous affray with another 'village, Sae' granted a,oon
cersion unprecedented in the 'Turkish criminal
law—that of a newtrfal. The mew was acquitted
on thesecond trial.
As excitement 'has been created In the Isle of
Wight because the owner of land In the vicinity of
Oarisbrooke Castle—the noblest rain on the Island
—prOposed building.dwelling•housee thereon. The
Town Council made a protest en the ground that
the new buildings would destroy the beauty of the
rural scenery.
FININCLiIi AND COMMKECIAL
STOOK MORAN e
BEFORE
6(O .Globe Oil 230'
10- do b 5 2%
0 Reading b 5 66%1
200 do WO 66)5 I
103 do b3O 66.56 ,
MO Ball Creek . . ... 4%
11.0 Excelsior 011 ' 1%
Denunore Oil. 13
100 • de b3O 13%
903 Detail Oil 1031
_ 3,1103 T /
600 II 5,20 Bonds., ..10934
2000 d 0.... coup 0n.102Y1
- de 169 g
NO city 6s• .... • •Nem.105%
SCO
d 0.. . . -105%
7000 do 106••
400 ' do_. 106
6 Kentucky Bank-110
do 110
100 39 Green Mtn b 6 6%
NO do b 6 6%
EX' Mineral 011 2%1
100 Dalzell Oil 10%
•sco do.. . 307'
2CU Philadi oli . 134
CO Densmore• • ... •• • • 12%
ICO do 123{
100 dub 3013
200 • do' 12%.
BETWEEN
66 Sm. 5g Pine-St 11..b4
200 Densmore 0i1.13
100 McClint'k 011.'00 6%
50 Mclibenny. EX I
1500 Cam a Am 6s '33.108
50 Schuyl N... .... . . 34 j
' 8300 m)
100 Phila & Oil Creek. 1Y
100 do 14
Morris C 1 cash-J.OO
100 McElbenny 8%
350 Sehttyl N... ... 34
35 do Pref 40%i
, - AFTER 1
ICIOO U S 5.20 B. Cp 0ff.1023/I
_ do. ... 0ff.10214 I
150 oil Creeg 4%
100 Dalzell 10X
100 Story Farm 4
:350 Dedzell.•. ...... ..• 103
Bru 2
t MI OO Bal Creek 4%
5000 1.1 6 . • ... "408
20 Mir st & Walnut.. 60
3.0 Venteme 1%,
_:44o.:Oenemere:.;„„,.. m
MO Story' 1. arm
700 U S 6.203 110
600 Story Farm...b3o.
6CCO 8 5-20 s coup 0ff.102%
PEI Reading WA 66%
20 N Penna 35
103-5( Carbondale., 3
110 Densmore b 5 13%
800 rtfcElbeny 844
s(]O.McClintock....blo 6%
100 Ball ,Creek....b2o
300,bicClintock
100. Dalzell 11%
KV McClintock- bswn 7 I
Drexel & Co. quote :
New United Eastes Bonds, MEI. -- 03% 107%
New Certificates of indebtedne55.............. 93 94,
I` l / I F, United States 73-10 Notes .........„»..109•: 111
Cluarferzonsters' Vouchers 90 9t.
Orders for. Certificates of Indebtedness 94 -
Gold .. " '
c.• ..... . ........... 249
Sterling Enoanna « unsettled._
Five-twenty Bonds 109 NllO , ,
The Secretary of the Treasury has issued pro
posals for the sale of the balance of the loan.of 1891-
about 851,500,000-the bids to be opened September
9th. The advertisement contains the usual right to
decline all unsatisfactory' bids, but are auther-ed.
in saying that the bonds tall. be sold. There is-an
active demand for long Government six per oento
which the security haul determined to supply to-the
extent of She balance of the loan of 1881. • The 7;303
, in currency do not yield money fast enough,. and
he has wisely determined to supply his immediate
meeurities, from this
to
loan. Now is- the
time for the people to come promptly to the aid•of
Mr. Fessenden in this his first appeal.. The bends
are the 'gest desirable issued by. the Government,
and the last absolute long eix per-cents. to be issued;
They are to be sold in amounts within the
parties of maaerate capital, and from .inch,there
should be nuirterous tenders:. Banks, eapitelists,
and brokers, who propose for millions to resellet an
instant profit of two or three 'per cent-, should , in
this matter be outbid bythe peopleetlering, inemall
Stims,lhe price they would be charged after 'the
negotiation by jobbers.. The whole -amount- ought
•to sell at 108* at least, and will do so if people do
their duty indifferently well. The Secretary- comes
frankly to the people, and should not enlybe warmly
supported, but receive bids in such amounts• and at
-such liberal pre - axioms, as will .00noince the• most
skeptical that the money of the North is at the free
control of the Government in its effort to-suppress
rebellion.
The announcement ,that .wealthy,Germen bank
ers had formally proposed to the. Government to
take one thousand milllOnS of Our national debt at
a very low rate of Interest,•is _creating considerable
excitement in financial, The. proposition
made by Mr. Reiff:Mat, of Hamburg, la:behalf of a
number of wealthy German capitallsts,,is receiving
the earnest attention. of the "Treasury. Department.
The responsibility- of the parties-making the offer
Is endorsed by Mr. Marsh, our consul aft Hamburg.
The general tone.of the stock market/ la decidedly
weak. Government loans still. continue a favorite
Investment. The. 5408 sidd atllo, and with coupon
off at 102%. The. 1881 loan sells at 10Et. State and
city leans are. steady. Bank shares are dull at
about former, rates; 10335 was-bid for North Ame
rica;
28% ler Mechanics', 2,3,f0r 115(agmfacturers , and
.Michanics', 84%, for. Consolidation,. and tux for
Farmers' and Mechanics!. In city passenger rail
roads thereis very little doing,, and the market cony
tinues dull. Second and Third sold at 72 ;50 bid
for Tenth and. glaventh ;:31.fer Spruce and Plne ;
593 i for Chestnut and. Walnut,. and 34 for Green and
COatef.
Oil Steal; aretendipg.dozeiggrard, there being less
demand, and, More anxiety to realize. Mostof those
purchased:during. the late excitement, was on ac
count of speculation, and therefore are eagerly dis
posed of now in the fear- of a still greater crash in
prices. The high quotations of some of the oil
stocks are justified by the dividends they declare,
and the prospective value of the oil lands. Others,
however, haveno value at all, and it would be well
to exercise a carefu.l.serutiny before touching them.
Companlea. doing a<good and profitable business are
not anxious to see their stock quoted at the stook
board at all. The fallowing w ere some of Qs:closing
prices ::
Bid. - Asked. Bid. Asked.
'II. BMs 103 108% Conn. Milling-. mr,
U. S. 5.20 s 109% 109% Alsace Iron.— 1% 4
Reeding_ .... .. 66% 66X Oil Creek 6 5%
Penna. . 74 7434 MapleShadeoll.. 16 1630
Catonrissa - 21 22 McClintock Oil .• 6,44
Do. Pref.. ox 41 , Penns Pet C 0....-
North Penna. B. 34.% 3456 Perry 011 . • 6 0%
Phila. NErie R.. 3436 86 Mineral Oil 2% 2%
L. Island Igt 98 ' Keystone Oil 1 2
Scbutyl. Nov..- E 4 "8430 Vag:tango Oil 110 138
Do. Pref.. 90 40% Olmstead •• • . 2%
Union Canal:.. :. 2% 2% Seneca 0i1........1.44 1S
Do. Pref.. 33;, 4 Ore MAO 011 • • 1 . 4 6
611/4. • Cana1.....19%'' 20% Noble & Dal... .is Dix
Fulton Coal.-- 10, 103 i 110WO's Eddy Oil 1,,W, 2
Big Mount. - Cosl. 7X 6 TrvingOil e!‘
N. &B. C. E'n. 22 2:3 Pope Farm Oil. /. 4 5
Green Monn.Coal 63/ 634 Butler Coal 17- 19
N. Carbond'e C'l 2 4 Keystone Zinc... 2 2%
New Creek - Coal. 1% 134 Dens e w ore 01.1 . ••• • 134 13%
Feeder Dam Coal 1 1% Daft 11 0 11 - ••••• Di% 11
Clinlon 1,30 IN Mal hoof ~•• 8)/ 8% .
Amer. Kaolin .... 2. 5 - 2% Union Pee Oil-. 3 .8%
Penn Mining..••• S 10 Pet Centre. •..• .. 310 3%
Girard Mining. •• , 5 , Bebert •• • ... 3,;‘,
Etna mining 13 19 Hoge _ 2
Mandan Micing. • • . 5 Hibbard..., 2% 2%
Marquette, Min S 4 Ball
_Creek:- 496
. 4%
There is a more native . demand, for money, and
the rate fe r firm at seven per Cent. for cell loans.
Firstpolass 'mercantile paper passim at eight to ten
per Cent.; and - theme IS some difficulty in negotiating
any excepting Mirictly A 1 notes.
The following is a statement of the kusinosi at the
United gtittis Asiai Office at New Yea for the
month ending Angust 31, 18p1 •
Depoifta Cio‘d.
Foreign, coins • Meter
ForeignlPedllon max)
'tutted Mate 5........ ...25tf050-$31.1,U10 00
Deposita of Silver. Mandl:lg pur- •
chlistor
ForeigniCeins,••••••••••• . ...
Foreign Dalt:a '
1:101,ted ;Slates BRUton. (contained in 4
cm
Statesitullion (old coins) 100
Unite States Bullion (Lake Superior) 14 . g . 50000
Total dtooosits, Payablein - am .. an _ 393,00
co
TJrtkldereelte..eayable,i'!•""A s-- . 323,030 te
Hold Bargl, stemmafor
Tianereitted to" U: 11. Mint, Philadelphia as.m. 48.
It i 9 reported that ate Onto 04ad litlopriulan:
BOARD:
100 Gir & Coates-at .2).35.
10 Wyoming Val••••• 8834
200 Fulton Coal .104
MOO 17 8 5-29 Bonds:4.loex.
34 Man di Mach'. a Bkt. 28. '
1
I' 16 -Penns R ....... .... 741 i .
BOARDS. •
1 6CO II S 5:20 B op o0'.•1021¢
10 .24 Penni 11 . : ... ..• 86 ,
00 Conn Mining.
100 McClintock e
5.0 Senecca ..
_.,' , ~. —l l
IGO •Densmore .... .k
int• 1i
100 do 18
Daize
100 do ll 1 1.14
6
100 Olmstead
.200 Allegheny Riser: .1," 4 .
. nolg.gbeft ••••. I Nriv••• 71
' bp Da1ze11..i..... ""11. •
100• do . • ii
; -303 Swahili, Falb 15NC
100.4flobe .. ..........2.66.
..100 Pet Ce ntre........ ...... .• 33(
101 Datzell 114
100 do 1.1.44
• 1.12) McClintock ock T
• Ile Densmore 2dya 13X-.
100 - do -• .. ...... ~ . 1134
• 100 Pet Centre' 4.
300 ;Excelsior. Monday. 134
' 900 Union Pet 83-4
,Wilkeabarre ' have given notice that an advance oC
L yteem,pfie -cant on Wages will be demanded this.
w;,sek% Laborers in the mines are now receiving
s9l' per day Add fifteen per cent. and it will hi.
orea e, it te4wer St per day. Miners are making 81
per' day, and, In some •lnstaamedr, we have
and $ .
• heardo 312 and $l4 per day In favorable locations'
\
\
' The l'l,llV York Evening Poet of yesterday says :
Gold evened at 243 and gradually Mee to 24V X.
_Exchange * inactive and unsettled, and is selling
set max ler \ !gold. • The loan market isl more active
2a conearseace of several large Mats •having been
varied in. The rate is 7 per cent., and the aercitmu
h6ebn or cepflal seeking kavestment on call con
tinues.
Ulm new Gove.monent loan is attracting cormide•
table - attention, uvad although it' hi . offered tett to
fitteeM days later than was deemed prudent by the
linsasahl anthoritie:v, who urged its Issue, Still the
hope id - Indulged that no very serious or protfacted
tooonvmytenee will tomtit either to the Interests of
the Government or to \ the engagementi4 of our coin/
mercial abases.. A lar'te amount of currency Is noel
going Welt, the deman,l for the moving of the crop
. E m ,i pg win three week's earlier than usual. The
new,bends, it - Will be obseTved, will be sizes of 1881.
FlVe-tWEintfiilt has been . supposed would, in the
present conditioner the fok' demand, have sold
' better, and a Molted amanita may perhaps be here
,alter offered tothe public.
The stock nualtet Is lowvr Mid feverish ID cense
,r_tionee of the prevailing inceltftrule as to Me (14,-
: - reogement,in•thrs money infitieet, which may be
~e.‘ Ised by the palments on aCOCeMt Of the 12017' Go
. VOY.DIMMt loan. governments Era lower. Cowen
.9120 of 1881 have' receded to dlesc, coupon Iva.
- meg' ties to 109%, se - mzethirtles t 0 ,1.0 4 1, and certati
'jcettest to OSIO)) 98 .14". •
1 , i mil ,te stockswere dull but firm, ciarateeks strotg.,
•tetoe - fshares quiet, taThing shares
.hoary, and raA.
•legid ihpnds inactive:
, piegkued shares opened strong bun:dosed heavYheavy.)..,Elfe mid Hudson Rlverbelng the meetheerve. •
jkyikoro the first sessibei Gold was ciroted at Sid.
1 rarat'...toti.3‘, Preferred at 108 X, Reactinr, at 1324,
..pjut s b u ns at 110%.
pie app ended table erMbits the chief rM)vemenes
4irtgu •Finsrd 'compared with the latest'rices of
1 • - - . 1 - Thor. Wed. Mk,. Des
VterldStllliadai 6ea Bah reg.-. 010744 168 - 34
d Matta' Os 1881,.cear , ••In 10734 -.- 1
',... tett,44testZt o zw• 111% .. 18‘
i i fr
b fed:die - tee A-• coup ..... -WV ...... Ito
.-__ .... , ic
'ipaltedlkater 43ert., currency.. 23X ad -- •':". - 'lc •
amerima'Rviltl•-- tr , • nit ' 243? , 1 .-
TeoeVse as. Tbc 68g ••
Al flisodri 132 i.,.....•.... 67 • O 7 .. ..
AtlardSellfair.„: 186 lb.'S
Padilld•.3lMlJ.* v7B' 278 - ' ..-
.New TOZICOMMI Railroad - -12f1C ' 1211 E
Brie .—. .. •••••? • . . 109 USX • ..
Brie Prefereed4'» 109
.2634 • •
liessl.-......... .:' .: . .. -, ...:„..L.33 MX - ..
Pittdburs 31141..... 29,g • A
biterthtboartillhe market war'dbreiewirat• lowititi
closing steady. Phew York Oenteil' at 123.1 if, WO
at 7)8X, - .lRbedingsit 122%, Pittsbazwests /10.4.-
E SALES, Sept. I
1311=1:1
OM MoMdo B awr? Oil' 8
11Xl ,"
100 dol 1
83.
00 doB3i
' 103 DfcClintock , ..... cap 6%
100 do . .... —6%
1 900 dooo Union Pet ' 0
r 600 Corn Plantetc • • 431
1200Denomore 2412%
100 do WO 13
ICO Idellhenny Ogt•:-
_. IN'
200 do awl 13
10
FhTaN y pre 4
50 74 .
3(10 Re ading 11 blO 66
100 N do nor R .SW
100 do • 341(
• .34 - g
100 do
110 2d & 3d-st R '72
50 do 72
124.113 Alla Co BA, alp 7S
10 Locust Mountain... 62
8 Man & Necks Baal& 2.3.
•
9 • do 29
5091deeltntoelt 0.6%
ISCCO State 5s SOX
BOARDS.
MET& Mid
60 0 . do 13S 5-53 Bds 1 10 0
2.44/M
•
. 137erina E . . 7.es
2000 &Me Coup Es 101.
.... ,00
TWO WALL PELEISIS,
el:thiamin) y - -
Tim 4irlvritimiriiiil 1,4 • .
(per aim= Ix &dye,.
Timm c0pti0—«..,....••••••••• • • I Olt
rive S OK
Tan 50nii11441.12.... W
L a r g , kr ObibLeksA-‘4153M1115-005•5 '5l 5641 mitt
444 e. 5140.M40 4A
17t. eaniy 40,06 . sll.s.weematio4444/ flo brim. crag
tw "1"4210514.0514104551/451 be clesitagolitoroetit
airont eft Mae more thew the ease al Nem.
. ler
WAR Pogstri are recreorted to 54$ We looddlillt
Irarlt Plum, •
ar To th• setter-up of the Olub of tan or WWI&
extra eopy of the Paper will be rivini. •
IPtmeemaelibla Ilitarftee ea.
Sarrenteafrl 4 —Xvelitter.
Thcdomanil for Flour Is 111(111ed,t0111 for vapor['`
and holm" use; but tile renal= contintewilitin. The
sales STS mostly Ma small. way, to tha retailers and
bakers; tit' trent 8101.5dt Idr. for superifue'and extra
gl2@i2.lo'l . ol* 'extra. family,. and 818013itiell bbl for
fancy brands,' ate- to. quality. Rye Mir Is 6rm
with small- sales at. $10.40/11-,bbl. Cdiir fifesl is
scarce'and high.
Gnizw.—The offerings of Wheat =tilledand
the market* is firmer r • with sees of abaft' 4, , 000 ' bus,
at 2,so@fesc for old rede-and 26010265 c for new Penn
sylvania ditto; white Le selling at from 2aftrgilic
bu, as to quality. Bye le selling In a small way, at
from 185@l9skrAftbir: Corn is rather qui:IPA former '.
rates i.7,000 - bus sold' at liac for prime rellow; and .
lilc bu for Western mixed. Oats are Midl'at NO •
for new, and 33_Video laP be for old:
BA arr.z-lst No. Queroltron continret•ficarcos
and in demand at Issl ton.
Correa.—The market is rather firmer, but the
sales axe limited ; smalllein of middlings l'irfebeen •
dlsposed'of at IBBol4lb, each.
Gaootarics.—Th'e market Is firmer, but there ' '
verylittle doing in Sugar or Coffee.
l'omoistrx is rather firmer ,• small sales :A' crude
are making at 4041150 e ; • refined in bond at EsAgtatie,
•
and free at from 870600 V gallon, as to quality.
Samos. -1 - ;000 bushels Rimmed sold at $3 C 5 be, •
• whit% is an advance. In Clever there is verylittle '
doing small 'sales are making at $14®15g7 64 lbs. '
Timothy. is selling in a small' way at ii8®6.25 bu.
1n0w.,-There is no mai trial change to notice fa
pig metal: Small sales ofrantbraeite are making at
from $684@7.3 per ton fdrthe-three numbers.
Metered Iron is.ln good• demand and selling at full
prices..
Faurr.—Fore 18 Onrcei and there 18 little or
nothing doing: Domestic is coming in and selling
freely at from 26690 c per basket for apples, andff,
@ , 200c per basket for poaohes.
I+l AVAL Srouns.—Small sales of Rosin are •
making at from 16354@5epfsr bbi. Spirits of Tarpon.
tine is selling in a smalFwey at- $3.6543.3:70 per gal.
lon.
HAY.—Salee of baled are- making at $2.00,81 per
too.
Pnoriszows.—Holdors , continue firm
views, but there is ye:711111e doing in• the Tray of
sales. Mess - Pork is selliegta a small Way at WO
42 V bbl • -Bacon Hams arer selling -at 20026 c, and
pickled do at 20c it lb. plater 1s selling at 406450
vt lb for solid packet:•- •
WHISKS is dull and masttled, with-small sales of
refilled bbls at 486Q18* -prime Western are held
higher. -
The fbllowinst are - the receipts of Flour -and
Grain at this port-to-day
"Flour
Wheat
COM
Oats
1,900 bbiS.
. 8,600 bus.
9,200 bus.
, 4,200 bus.
New York Markets; Sept. 1.
/Corms are quiet and steady Jet $18.60 for Pots, and
• $18.50,f0r Pearls. .
BRICADBTIMS.—The numdre9 for State and West-
Apra fiourja,lo§2o ciente batter. -Sales 113,000.661 a at
49,70410 for superfine 5tata5.119:20a10:23
State; $10.30(410.40 for choice do; $9.18@10 for super
fine Western; $10.25Q10 99 for common to medic=
extra Western ; $11.1021142. for common to good
shipping brands extra round hoop Ohio, and $11.441
@i3.29 tor trade brands.
Southern Flour is firmer vaales 800 bbls at $11.20
61.1:80 for common, and $41.994314 for fancy and
extra. Canadian Flour is 100200 better; sales 600
bbls at $lO 2001.0.50 for . (*moon, and 810.51@12 for
good to choice extra. Rye Flour is quiet. Corn Moot
is Wet.
. _
oat IS 2@4c better, and more active ; Ales
84,000 bush at 82.2062.32 for Chicago Spring; 82.21
62 33 for Milwaukee c1uipi_90133“2.36 for amber
Milwaukee; 192 35@2.40 for winter red• Western, and
$2.41@2.43 for amber Michigan.
Bye is quiet and nominal. , Barley is quiet. Bar
ley malt is dull and nominal. Oats are 1 cent bet
ter at 91041%c for Canada, -91;@92 for State, arid
92 for Western. The Corn•ma.rket is I@2c better
and decidedly more active sales 134,000 bus at
$1.50@1.82 for Mixed VeStorn, closing at the latter
price.
FROVISIONS.—The pork market opened decidedly
firmer, but closed heavy. Sales 6300 bbls at 988 50
tg39.65 for mess, $40.506 , 4149- for new do, ,closing
heavy at $40.75,923@38 50 for new prime, and $399.
39.50 for prime mess ; also 11090 bbls new mess for
all September at $42/943: The beef market is
quiet and steady. Sales 400 bbls at a,bout previous
prices.
New Bedford.oo Market, August 29.
Sperm—The market has, been quite brisk since
our last, the demand being largely for export, for
which the sales have been. Y,960 bbls in parcels, at
62.25 VI gallon. To 'thetrade we notice sales of 259
bbls good at 62 30 VI gallcri v and 230 bbls Inferior on
private terms. Whale romaine quiet but firm. The
transactions of the week. include Eales of 443 bbls
South Sea at $1.50 13 gallon, anA, 248 do. inferior at
prices not transpired. Whalebone has been in great .;
demand, and sales large, amounting to 39,900 Se.
We quote: 18,000 lbs Ared0,32.25 ;1,000 Its Oct:Wak e ,
182.30; 800 do. do., $2 W-1-800, do. North West at
62.10.• 15,300 do. South Sea, in parcels, at 1111.1451. :
4,000 do. at 82; all for ezport..Thelthports of Sperm....
and Whale 011, and Whalebone, into the 'United
States during the week...hare been 1044 bbls Sperm.
Oil, 3.904 bbls Whale d 01.14.200 its Whalebone. -That...
total imports from January Ist to date have been
44,554 bb's of Sperm,.s6lBBo do Whale, and 51514611 -
114 Whalebone. .
Boston 13101tets, August 31.
The receipts since yesterday have been 3,101 Able
Flour, 878 bushels Rye, 1,300 bush Oats, 7,950: Inn*
Corn, 200 bush Corn Meal- Flour is firm; with Weir
of- Western superfine-41 $10,50@11 ; common extras
$11.50a11.75; medium axtra at'SL2fdl2:so ; good and
choice, including Diverge brands St. Lordly at $12.50
bbl. Soufhern. Flour is qUlet gra,ralywine
Is scarce, and nominal. Market for Corn is, firm ;
we quote Western raised at $1.70, and Southern yel
low at 11.80 'ft bushel. Oats quiet, with sales of
Northern and Canada at $1@1.05 bushel, .
selling at $2.254/s/151 , Shorts are dull at $10042;
Fine Feed $45@48. Middlings scarce, and nominal.
Facrvisroas.—Fork is firm; sales of prime. Pork
.at 8361237,; Mess at ; Clear at $434345 $1 barrel,
cash. Bef is ; with sales of Eastern and
Western Meer , and extra Mess at $201229 barrel,
cash. as to quality. Lard Is steady ; sales in barrels
. and tierces at lac. lb. Smoked Hams. are,/.00210.
Butter sells at. 6150520 $t a, ibr good and choice.
Cheese continuos steady at 10g23c L for common_
to g 0942, es to quality.
LErrEst, BAGS
T raa 1101/Mnil NICIELtarEiB, Taaa.DBLPHIA.
Lady . B.*By Peel (Br), Penny, .A.onclonderry,
'Bar •BOOzoke (Br), Cookny...:44Lnoyra, soon„.
Brig Bertha Koehn, Shultz....Mo. Janelzo, son.
PHILADELPHIA BOARD OF TRADE.
JAL. 26.suaxis,
ANDRZW Wks, Commlttse of the Eon*.
ED. Toertrezazr,
;10 L') :',7P Fr% . 4 A J :1 2 /1.:fklIFIla f,:f;11
Sun Xises..6 88 I Sun 5et4..6
Pluiltkutml
- - • -
Shlp J S DeWolfe, Bradshaw, from Liverpool,
Jtiriek, with mdze to John R. Penrose.
Brig Annie E Gray,:rnito, 8 day! from ..fgatiin"
sas in ballast to X.& sander
Hampden, Snow,lB uIaYS from Orainlii ,
guano to Baker & Folsom, vessel to „TAl.;,.fliksior.
&00.
W Sch t r n A b u all s a st E to e D T S
o w S n e nd n,.
&120 o da . y3 from
. Sep,
Sohr Oats, Spence, 1, day from Bra4dywixte,Xlel,
with flour to R Lea.
Seim I.aneet c Bayard,. 1 play fromgarietiana,, Bed,
with grain to (Jhristian,rt.oo.
Solar Packet, Palmer, 1 day front Leigate,Ded,
with rani to Jas L & .00.
Steamer C Comstoek, Drake 2 4 . hours, Trion New
York, with mdse to Wm DI Baird es. Co. ,
Steamer Novelty, Shaw,24 hommfron NOW YorYa
with mks to Wm DE Baird & 00.
- - - - -
Steamer Ann Eliza, Itichardr.,94,hours tow PR , .
York, with mdee to W P Olydo.
Steamer 8.. Tempe. Philbrigik, 2 1 1 , h9 7 :As - f r °n !
New York, with mckiete W P.Clyde.
BELOW.
Ship Tone-Jam* Livervol, passeal,
In the OapesOf theDelawto, iresterdal*,3l!trni#S•
. CLEARED
bainaz, Rio dojkal,dro.
Barn W E Anderson seed, Pensapoia.
Btfg
Brig Baths Koehn,
H'S EmnrY, rats, Clenfttegoo,
Brig annah, Sherman, Seaga& •
Brig Gen Banks, Band, Beaufort. • •
Brig SG: Aden%Bolland, S Ram. • •
Sebr Marietta. Steelman, Hampton,
R 0114113.
Sohr Beading R R, Jones, Afkmpton Roads,
Sohr Jos Passfield, May, Boaniat, - -
Salm Maiestto, Payne, staram,
Sear C. I. Ebner, Mason it
Sohr Lydia A May, Batt; Boston.
Sehr Mary•and EJlzatgl9 , Oordery, Digh,tok,
Sehr S W Ponder,.PWips, Taunton.
Sohr Heroine, Chamy New Bedford.
Soh; Sift Eihaddlok, Arnold, Norwiph. ,
Soh' L Phleger;Drehy, Washington.
Sohr Ida L, Admen, Washington.
Sobr Pseinc, Webb, Fortress Monroe. •
Steater 11 Willing, Ciindlff,
_thatimore.
Steadier Samson, Dunn Lug, New York.
Steanierßilstol,'Charler,Nevr York.
N*wrolicr; correspondent Of . the Journal, de
scribing tile, ball, there , says one fair damsel of five
years was quite staitling in her-toilet--s pink. silk
dress, elaborately trimmed, silk stockings and white
satin shoisa„ fancy, fan :and ,ernb,roldered bandker
oblef—ietting off her -Matlfra • oborso to great.
advantage. •
in their
Watec..2 21Ti,