THE PRESS, pIJAISIDID DAILY, (SUNDAYS SBoliPTID;) By JOHN •W. .101;1kRN o yiWS, NO. 111 SOUTH, FOURTH STREM - - THE DAILY PRESS, To city Sabocribei e,T .8 TE N DOLLARS PER Artnett, is n3 ,,,, 000; or TWENTY' CENTS Pim %Vann, payable to l y e (larder, Mailed-to Subscribers out of , the city, 01 ,4 DOLLARS PER ANNUM; FOUR DOLLARS AND Full- YOZ BIN MONTHS • Two' DOILARR AND TWENTY.. my CENTS TOR THREE MONTHS. , invariably in advanoe for the time ordered. 93- Advertisements Inserted at the ninal rates. THE TRI•WEERLY PRESS, galled to Elubeeribere, FIVE DOLLARS PER ANIVTX. itt 4/41104% EDVOATIONALL. BROOKS AND MRS; J. E. zu_ HALL will Reopen their BOARRINGI"MD DAT gii9EADYATElLeVrOfatEgtgjolZtLfftglat324 WEST CHESTER FEMALE SEMI KARIG WEST CHESTER, CHESTER, 00. PA. This Institution, under the care of Miss P. C. EVkliS, assisted by competent teeahere, will be opened for the . rec eption of pupils on.THITESDAY, the Ibth of Septem• suer next. Circulars containing terms and other information des sired, can be had on application to the Principal. an3l-18t MRS. BADGER HAS REMOVED TO .M- 1 - N 0.1633 SPRUCE Street, where she will resume the duties of her Institute September if). A large room has been fitted' up for healthful. exercise during recess.. Circular, obtained at her residence BELLEVUE FEMALE INSTITUTIC A BOARDING-SCHOOL. FOR GIRLS. ' This Institution, healthfully and beantif ally located on the; nor th ern limits of Attleboro, Backs county, Pennsylvania, will open its Winter Session, TENTS Norm 1964. For d.etaile, obtain Circular, by ad • dressing the Principals, Attleboro P. 0., Bucks co., Pa. ' . ISRAEL J. GRAHAME, • . JANE P. GRA Fl &ME, Principals. attSl4m CLASSICAL - AND MATHEMATICAL SCHOOL. 1008 CHESTNUT Street. Namber 'of k ePupile limited. The Sixteenth Semmion will commence F: on NORDAY, Sept. 6, WM. FEWSMITH, Fria°ipal. anS7-Im* MISS E. T. BROWN'S ACADEMY FOR YOUNG LADIES, 1003 SPRINCi Street, Will open on MONDAY,SEPTEMBBE sth. an27-Im* Air ADAME MASSE AND M' LLE. . 40 . 41 - MORIN'S ENGLISH and FRENCH SCHOOL for Young Ladies. at No. 1342 SPRUCE Street. Philadel phia, will reopen on WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBE RI4th. anM-Ims . • PHILADELPHIA • MILITARY SCHOOL. (Court) and Saunders' Institute. THIRTY NIBTH and MARKET Streets,) reopene.September 6th. Address Professor IL D. SAUNDERS. D. D. außa-lm THE ENGLISH A ND CLASSICAL Sehool for Boph No. S WEST PENN SQUARE. Da dee resumed Sept. 6. J. DAVISON. Principal. au9S-Ims EDEN 'HALL FEMALE SEMINARY- Located at PARADISE, Lancaeter county, Pa. The next Session of this Institution will open on the third 31onday (19th) of Soptember. A full corps of able Veachers will be 'employed. For further particulars vend for a circular or address the Principal, • O. S. WALKER, Paradise, Lanaastar.ao. p Pa.. au29.18t • TEE. .CLASSICAL AND ENGLISH SCHOOL of the subscriber, S.. B. corner of THIR TEENTH and LOCUST Streets, will reopen on 'NON DAY, September 6th. Applications can now be made from 9 A. M. to 2 P. M. B. KENDALL, A. U. an27.lm* , . MARY P. . ROBESON WILL. OPEN her School for TOnne Ladles at 1613 FILBERT Street, pn the 12th of Ninth Month (September). an26-tool • • , • • • •SPRING :GARDEN : INSTITUTE FOR • • • • YOITN G LADIES. , BOADDING. AND DAY scnnits. vo be reopened on the sth of September. GILBERT COMBS, A. id, Principal, an2s-18t* BOS and 611 MARSHALL Street, Phila. MISS V. P. BROWN, No. 1007 PINE Street, will; on MONDAY Sept. 5, resume the duties of her School for Children 'between the ages of 4 and 16. aa2s-ISt* A OADEMY FOR BOYS, 142 NORTH TENTH Street, Duties reeamed Mondr:y, Sept 6th. an24-lin T. BBANTLY ,LANGTON, Principal. VOIJN4 LADIES' INSTITUTE, S. E -A- corner of MARSHALL and SPRING GARDEN S Datles reamed September L2th. ENuCH H. SUPPLER 0. M., Principal. • • anl4-tf • • VOUNG LADIES' SCHOOL ANIYAD. VANCED CLASSES PCB HOME STUDY, 903 CLINTON St. Formerly Prof. O.•D. Cleveland's. Fall Term begins Sept.lsth. PLINTII CHASE, Principal; B. Jones, A. T. Buffnm, Aseociates. anSI-Im* THE CLASSICAL AND ENGLISH -a- SCHOOL of H. D. GREGORY, A. A. AI, Ho 1108 MARKET Street. will reopen ott M O NDAY . 6th. anti Vr i IBS ELIZA W. SMITH'S SCHOOL 01 FOR YOUNG LADIES, 1210 SPRUCE Street, WM be reopened on •WEDNESDAY • Sept. -7th, The course embraces a thorough English education, with Latin, French, German. Music, Drawl.ng, Painting,dge, au2o-2m 5 •• ABA CHM ANN, PROFESSOR OF L. 111IISIO, and Organist of the Fifth BalAist Charoh. frill retinae his lessons September let. BeeiS anise, 024 'WRING (MEDEA Street, . aa33-Im* THE HANNAH MORE ACADEMY, A- WILMINGTON, Delaware.' The Fall Session will commence MONDAY, RIOTER . - 3ER Stb.ISM. For particulars. apply to the Principals, CHARLOTTE and ISABELLA GIUDISHAW, an 22 Im .BIGHTH and' WEST Streets. PRIVATE 'SCHOOL FOR BOYS, N. E. A. corner of CHESTNUT and EIGHTEENTH Streets. afll leopan on MONDAY September. ottL: L. BAR ROWS JNO. G. R. MoHLROY. Principals anls-lm' 11 IS S HOOPES WILL REOPEN HER • MA. BOARDING and DAY SCHOOL for Young Ladies, at 1400 I 11ST.Street, on WEDNESDAY, the 14th Septetu r au22-lrn 4.NT OWN' FEMALE SEMI.- , GREEN Street, south of Walio.t lane, will EDNESDAY, Sept, 7th. .cla , Unlit forth the Course of Instruction, &c.. be obtained at the Seminary. . WALTER S. FORT/NOCE, A. M. Ml • Priuclatli • 31117137101041ra--crwiSSIOIL ` w• INSTITUTE, 127 N. TENTH Street, will ieoPen MONDAY, Sept. 6. All English branches,Latin,Greek, 2erman, and French taught , Call for a Circular. sn2o.lm* • : • ' • yam, xax eget WEd MitaAlb tee. CHESTNUT-STREET FEMALE SEMI 7 la FAX:Y.—Kim Bonney and Mies Dillaye will re ion their Boarding and Day School a: No. 1613 ORESTPUT Street, WEDINBeDAY., September 14th.- Igirtlanlars from circulars. anlB-tocl CHEGARAW --- NSTITUTB.ENGLISR AND FRENCH BOARIHNO AND DAY SCHOOL FOE YOUNG LADIES (1527 and 1529 SPRUCE St., Philadelphia). will reopen on TUESDAY, September 90th. Letters to the above address will receive prompt attention. Peteonal application can be made after An. cast xi, 1864. to MADAME D'HERVILLY, Anl7-1m Principal. SCHOOL AND KINDERGARTEN AT Ninth and Bpsing. Garden will be REOPENED fentetaber 12th, it 191* MOUNT VERNON Street. ;GERTRUDE W. FULTON. HARRIET B. DARLINGTON. MARY E. SPEAKMAN. WOODLAND % SEMINARY, 9 WOOD LAND TERRACE, WEST PHILADELPHIA. Nev. HENRY BEEVES, A.Principal, (late of the Chamberebnrg Seminary .) Sasion opens September 14th. A Day and Boarding School for Young Ladies, forperienced Teachers; in st ruction solid, choice, and Awash. Circulars sent on application. aula-tf PROFESSOR J. CLANE, 209 SOUTH SIXTH Street, opposite Washington Square, has reeving his LESSONS in French Language and Li terature Herman, Latin, and Mathematics , in schools and families. • I • sel2-6t* • HOLME BEV 114 SEMINARY FOR YOUNO LADIES will be reopened on TUESDAY, Sept. O. For OIROITLARS, containing areln i c m 43B B . B : n ii addreee the Misses 011APKAN, mica P. 0., Philadelphia City. anl6.lm THE MISSES CASEY & MRS. BEEBE'S ENGLISH and FRENCH BOARDING and DAY siCSOOL,No. 1701 WALNUT Street, will RS. OPEN WIDLIEr3DAY, the 14th of September. an4-2m THE ENGLISH AND CLASSICAL SCHOOL, N. W. corner CHESTNUT and WELFTH Streets, Will reopen on MONDAY, SWAM. Seer 6th. • Somber of pupils limited to forty. Price of tuition same as last year. For refereaces and particulars see Circulars, which may be had at Mr. Hansard's Drug Store or at the School Rooms, where the Principal, (succeseor to Charles Short, i. M. , ) may be seen every morning between 10 and 11 o'clock. A. B. MEARES, aa2o-1m No. 1301 ARCH Street. VILLAGE GREEN SEMINARY.-MI LITARY BOARDING SCHOOL,' 4 miles beyond Ma. dia, and miles from Glen Riddle, on the West Ches. ter Railroad. Thorough course in Mathematics. Natu ral Sciences, Languages, and English. Practical Isa mu' in Surveying end Civil Engineering. Fine library and apparatne. Number of pupils limited. Begins Sept. fth, ?agile have benefits of a home. Refers to John 0. Capp 42 Son, 23 Borah Third street,' Thos. J. Clayton. Bit., Fifth and Prone; John H: Diehl, 900 Walnut. Address Ray. J. HENRY BARTON, A. M., 7722.9 m VILLAGE GREEN, Penns.. pETLADELPHIA. VOLLE9ILTE . ARCH FOR IrOIING LADIES, No. 1530 ARCH 6treet. Rev. CE.A.S."..A.'SMIT3 I , D: D., B. CLAMENCE. GMITIL, A. M., Prim:bills.' ' • ' Ninth Year. Three Departments: Primary, Acade mie, and Collegiate. .Full college course in Classics, .blatharuatics. higherMnglish, and Natural Solarise, for :him who graduate. • Modern Languages, Music, Paint and'Elocatton by the beet masters. For circulars, ./iPPIy at so.' 1530 ARCH Street, or address Box 2411 V. 0., Philadelphia. The next session will commence on Monday, Septem ber 19th. • • ebp2o-sm* • FEMALE COLLEGE; BORDENTOWN, N. J. --This Institution is pleasantly located on the Delaware Itiver,_abont thirty miles , by railroad from Philadelphia. IThorongb. Instruction is given In tint common and higher branches of Huglish. and a a d s rnish ci t and s Mupoerironr tt v n an age o , D e aw a ing, P d in n in he i An al en its branches, Vocal and Instntmental Mnslo. For Catalogues, ad. tress MIT. JOHN H. BRAKELBY A A. hi., • an 4.61, , • • • President. NORTH BROAD-STREET AOADEMY FOR YOUNG GENTLEMEN, No. 009 North BROAD Street, Philadelphia, Professor j'inClav4. Principal. This institution opens 'September sth for application, and September 12th tor tuition. There will be a Preparatory and an Academical De- Dartment, in which the number. of pupils shall be li mited to la, and the instruction thoroughly Classical, including Ancient and Modern Languages. For rote rencee, circulars, and other. partictilare, apply at the /Nati tu Non .se2-12t* . . miss C. A. BURGINI3-130HOOL FOR YOI7NO •10.97.. WALNUT Street, will REOPEN on THIINAWAYeeept. 16th:• se7-Im* MR. THUNDER, 280 BOUTHIPOURTH Street, lute resumed hie.Picdeiatinal Practice. At home from 2 tit 4 o'clock dai ly: I SWIM gcmOoli - TOlC:l3oyE*:l62o.'afOugr l•-. ) STREET. L-40BREIT .14.13 . 1311RTOirsiid 'Eget. NALD H. CHASE have aesociated'themsalwaifor the 'Purpose of conducting atchooL in which Bets will be prepared either fcir college or business. . The Autumn'Ssesion of the School will coutraesse on lioNDAY,September.l2; Until that We -the Principals cambe seen at -their school-housa.daily be tween the bows of 10and 12 A. Al. , se34ot COLLEGIATE AND COMMERCIAL ACADEMY for BOYS,. 355 North TENTH. Final. reopeno MONDAY, September L. . Call for a circular. se2-12t* J. HARRIS, Principal. VRIENDS , ACADEMY FOR BOYS, rear of 41 North ELEVENTH Street. reoPene fro the 6tb tut OS per term of 22 Feeke. All denomina tion admitted. Cee2 Im3 ' N. WHITALL. M McMULLIN:.RESP.ECTFVELY IN • FORMS her friends and patrons that she will open her School on MONDAY,I2th hist 014 'ffo• Eolith EIGHTEENTH Street. • • ''lol-111t* • • - W M. B. COOLEY, A. M., 'WILL :RE OPEN hie Classical and English SCOOL, ai 4112 MARKET Street, on 6th September. -an3Ckluts Elssinr,R. VALLEY ACADEMY FOR Young Ladles and•Oentlemen will Reopoi Ninth month (Bentember) tith, 1864. J. K. TAYLOR, Prised , " 1 , COATREIVILLN. Cheater county, Ps. an)-lm" TIIOmAS BALDWIN'S ENGLISH Mat hematicel and Clamfoal School for Boys, N. E. corner of BROAD and ARCH Streets, will reopen BEP i• wE/1111IR &h. . an 27-110 GLENWOOD ACADEMY, DELA WARE WATER " GAP, tiIONROE, CO., PA The fall session of the a rose' institution will coin -61109 on the 12th of the Stti. month (September). For I)l,rtlenia re apply to BARWEL ALSOP. Principal, 'YM* 2 th Delaware Watereap, None co., ra. CENTRAL lIT B T T B TENTTI 8 , said SPRING GARDEN , Street, t•wUl •• re ' 44 .0 , '' • ... - 1 . . ..•. • . . - .. . . . , • • .. . g. i - • ••••••• - VOL. 8.--NO. 39. EDUCATIONAL * MARY' WILKINSON'S 'SCHOOL FOR LITTLE GIRLS, 118 NorthILEVENTII Thorough instruction in French, MUM°. eaifDrawiig. Six pupils can be received as boarders. selit•tr • DA NCIN4; ETIQUETTE ELEGA.NOE OF DEPORTMENT, • CALISTHENICS. Bze.—Mre. BEECH will Reopen her Academy on SATURDAY. Sep. tember 17th, at 21i P. M., at the ologant 8411 ROM , S. B. center of BROAD and SPRING GARDEN. where all the most fashionable European and American Dance. will be taught. Residence, 1431 14. TWE TH St. Evening Class now forming. Yel3-.3t* IJ POLYTEHONIO.. COLLEGE, PENN SQUARE. —The Twelfth Anneal Series of Lectures and Practical Demonstrations on Mining, Metallurgy, Civil and Mechanical Sokiuseriug. Chemistry, and Architecture. in the TECHNICAL SCHOOLS of the Col lege, will begin on MONDAY, Sept. 19th. The Labora tories, Draughting, and Modelling Rooms. have been enlarged and refitted. Applicants will present them selves for examination at the Faculty's Office on w ar . day, 17th, or Monday, 19th inst.,_at 9 o'clock A..M, ALFRED L. KENNEDY; K: D.. Presiderit 'ache Faculty. A-A- A GRADUATE; AN EXPERIENCED TEACHER of the Musics and higher English branches. wishes employment as a Private Tutor for the afternoon or ay/ ning. Address • ' Student, " Oheettmt Bill P. 0. set !Erma* . ACADEMY OF THE PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH, LOCUST. and . JUNIPER Streets. The Autumnal Session will open on MONDAY, Sep tember 6. Applications for admission may be made at the Academy building on and after Monday, August 28, between 10 and 12 o'clock A. M. • JAMES W. ROBINS, A K Read blaster. anl6-inwflSt 110319EOPATI310 E D'l CA L COL LEGE OF PENNSYLVANI A PHIL ADRLPHIA. Session of 1864.6 begin OCTOBER IS. PACDLI —C. Hering, M. D.. practice; Ad. Lippe, M.D., mat.med. ; N: Guernsey, M. D., obct. ; C. G. Raise. hi. D diagnostics; G. Starkey, Burg. ; P. Wilson, , anat. ; C. Heermann, M. D. ,PhYstol. ; Prof. Stephens, chemistry. • /Urea*, . C. HERRMAN, M.D., Dean, . 1105 FILBERT Street. • - • • VARKSBURG SEMINARY • FOR P YOUNG 'LADIES, PARKSBURO, CHESTER CO., PA.—Thie institution will be open for the reception of Day and Boarding Pupils on Sept. 19. Tense, MOO per session of five months, including Boarding and Tuition. Por Circulars addresss the undersisned. ANNIE M. JOHNSTONE, ANNIE KELLY, Principals, PARKSBURCI; PA. eel-w.sBk* MISS SALLIE KIMBLE, TEACHER or the PIANO, No. 91 B North SIXTH Street s above Poplar.' Terms reasonable. sel2-111* P ENNSYLVANIA MILITARY ..AOA.; DEWY AT WEST'CRESTER.Tbe . duties of this Institution will be resumed on 'THURSDAY. September Ist, at 4.o'clocit P. It. For circulars apply to JAMBS H. OBNE, Esq., No. 626 CHESTNUT Street, or to Colonel THBO. HYATT_ , President P.. 11. A. Bel2-lm • pracericAL: SURVEYING AND CI VIL ENGINEERING-In C. 8. HALLO WELL'S SELECT' HIGH SCHOOL.Ho.IIO North TENTH Street, special attention is given to the study of Practical Sur veying and Civil Engineering. The experience of the Principal for many years, as Surveyor and Engineer, enables him to offer something more than ordinary faci lities In this Dopartmert of the School. Students are carcully prepared for the Polytechnic College, of this city, and the scientific schools of Combridgo and Yale. The institution is supplied with all the necessary Field Instruments. Study will be resumed on the 13th in stant N. B. Prot. RODGERSON, C. E., will exercise the Class in Field Operations, and give lessons in Topo graphical Drawing, Mapping, dtc. sel2-6t* FAIRMOUNT SEMINARY, NOS. 2211 and 2213 GREEN Street, Philadelphia. —The Fall term of this beautiful BOARDING and DAY SCHOOL for Young Ladies opens SEPTEMBER sth. with every possible facility for instruction, including Maps,Charts.' Apparatus and Laboratory for illustration and experi ment. Modern languages taught by native teachers. Music, Painting, &c., by the• best instructors, Pupils received during the tom. A preparatory department is provided, and is conducted by a very superior teacher. Rev. J. W. BARNHART, A. 31 . sell-6t 5 Prof. P. D. BARNHART. AR. TAYLOR, 1226.. MELON ST., . Teacher of Singing- and Piano. has resumed hie duties. N. B.—Concerts will not be allowed to conflict with lessons. - se9-6t* GB°.w* ''PETTIT RE -OPEIi his Studio for the reception of Pons in the arts of DRAWING and PAINTING, at No:100 North TENTH Street; on the 15th of September. anW-lm' . CLASSICAL INSTITUTE, DEAN Street, below LOCUST. Dlitlos .resiimed ESP. TEMBER - J. W. FALRILSP rin,D.. D., • an.215-2m* • . . cipal. ,k A NNA KAIGHN , B . SCHOOL YOUNG LADIES will he reopened Ninth month, filth. nt No. 2044 MOUNT VERNON Street an264)3t* RDUCATION. SCHOOL -FOR 'PRI. -R-d•vats instruction. N. W. corner TENTH and kROH Streets. *opens Sept. 12. R. SZE WART.- • seB•l2l* • . Principal. • PREPARATION.. FOR OOLLE6E.— J- ; . • - . . _ Tmartiment. of . Ancient Languages in C. EL HALLOWELL'S Select High School, No. 110 North TENTH Street is under the constant supervision of a thorough Classical Scholar, graduate of the Crniveraity of Cambridge, ,who has spent the past fourteen years since his graduation, in the enlargement of his mind by foreign travel, and as Principal of some of the first High Schools of New England. The lessons in this De partment are given daily, and copious written exercises are required. To the Senior Classes, Lectures, illuetra: Ling the history literature, and antiquities of the Latin 'and creek Languages are occasionally deli. vered. Exercises will be resumed on the 131 h inst. se9-fitc 111 0 , I \ e • • • Mathematrce, and liaglien Dram:nes. 136 13:Ju.s v Street; bet, een Walnut and Chestnut; eel.o:6l* A C - OLVEGE.ORADUATE WANTS A SITUATION -.IO3.TEACIIER in a ecbool 'or private family. Abundant recommendations can be furnished. Address Poet Office, Box 410, Danville, Pa. selo-4t~ 7EDUCATIONAL pally for the y FOR st E ud IGN LANGUAGES. A new 'Willa published, and sent retie on applies don by P. LEYPOLDT, Bookseller, Pbl CHESTN U Torter, 1323 Street. 1 'EMALE.COLLEGE,I3ORDENTOWN, -I- N. I—This Institution is pleasantly located on the Delaware River, about thirty miles by rai . road from 'Philadelphia. Thorough instruction is given in the common and higher branches orEnglish, and superior advantages are furnished in the Ancient and Modern Languages,Drawing,' Painting in all its branches, Vocal and Instrumental Music. For Catalogues ad dress Ray. JOHN H. BRARDLEY,A. M., awl. 8w President. PHILADELPHIA _COLLEGIATE IN STITUTE FOR. YOUNG. LADIES, No. 1630 ARCH Street. Rev. CHAS. A. BMITH,I). D.. E. CLARENCE SMITH, 'A. IL, Principals. • Ninth. Year. —Three Departments: Primary, Acade mic, and Collegiate. Full college course in Classics, Mathematics, higher English, and Natural Science, for those who graduate.,Modern Languages, Music, Paint ing, and Elocution bthe best masters. . For circulars, apply at No. 1.530 ARCH Street, or address Box 2611 P. 0., Philadelphia. The next session will commence on MONDAY, Sep tember 19th. ap2o- ra* rrHE WEST CHESTER ACADEMY -A- AND MILITARY INSTITUTE. The scholastic year of ten months commences on the fact TUESDAY, the Bch of September nest, and closes on the lst of July following. Boys and young men prepared for College or Business in its various requirements. The modern languages are taught by native resident Teachers, who have. no connection with any other school. Tor catalogues and full information apply to WM. E. WEEKS, A. M.; Principal. or, J. HUNTER WORRALL, A. M , Ph. Associate PrinCinal. WEST CHESTER, Perms. 37204 m STATIONERY & BLANK' BOOKS. OIL, MINING , COAL, AND OTHER NEW COMPANdS. We are prepared to furnish New Corporations with all the Books they require, at short notice and low prices, of first quality. All styles of Binding. • • STEEL PLATE CERTIFICATES OF STOCK,— LIT ROG RAPEIED TRANSFER BOOK, ORDERS OF TRANSFER, STOCK LEDGER, STOCK LEDGER BALANCES. REGISTER OF CAPITAL STOCK, BROKER'S PETTY LEDGER, ACCOUNT OF SALES. DIVIDEND BOOK. • MOSS &CO., • BLANK BOOK MA NUFApTURF.RSAND BTATIONERS. K 1 :1 1 0 )Vl/ CAVTABETTUUTUITI?:I4TD BIIi MOORE & CAMPION, . . N0:'261 SOUTH SECOND STREET. In connection with their extensive Cabinet business are now manufacturing a superior article of • " BILLIARD TABLES,. Ad' have novron band a.fa IMPROVED nished with the • MOORE CAMPION'S CUS HIONS, Which are.. pronounced by all who have. used them to be auperlor,to others. For the quality and finish of theseTablesethe manufacturers refer to their numerous patrons throughout the Union, who are familiar with the eb erecter of their work. anl9-6m NORTH 'CLEAR CREEK GOLD AND SILVER MINING COMPANY, GILPIN COUNTY, COLORADO TERRITORY. Hox. JOHN DIX. Hoy. EDWARDS PIERREPONT. JOSEPH FRANCIS. Eso.. T. B. Burin'No, ESQ.. A. O. BODFISH,Dso., Colorado. How. JOHN A. DIX TREASURER JOSEPH FRANCIS, EBQ. CHARLES F. BLAKE. Bact. The property of this Company consists of 2,232 g fee on the " GROURD•HOO , " "GREGORY, No. 2," " SIMMONS, " and other celebrated developed Ciold•bearln'g Lodes In the best mining district of Colorado. Also, the Hendarson Mill, now running, and In ex cellent order. CAPITA'. STOCIK.SI,OOO,OOO WHOLE HUMBER SHARES 100,000. PAR, $lO • A large portion of the stock has already been taken by Private subscription. Books, are now open at the odice of the Company, at ' No. 69 BEAVER BTREET;,NE_W.YOBIL„ where tt limited number of shares' can.be,anbiarped for at pit. - • .- • •••••••••••• • - Copies of the Prospectus may be obtained at th• ones 91 Cke QQ/EtPan.Y. • 6431-laa WORKS, PRINCI- 43% . CHESTNUT Street. TRIJESTREd PREBIDENT COUNBBL: " CONCORD, I SEWING MACHINES. THE FLORENCE . THE FLORENCE • THE FLORENCE THE FLORENCE THE FLORENCE THE FLORENOR THE FLORENCE THE FLORENCE SEWING MACHINES. SEWING' MACHINES. SEWING MACHINES. SEWING MACHINES. • SEWING MACHINES, SEWING MACHINES, SEWING MACHINES. SEWING MACHINES. 630 CHESTNUT STREET. 630 CHESTNUT STREET. 630 CHESTNUT STREET. 63:1CHESTNUT STREET. 4 630 CHESTNUT STREET. 630 CHESTNUT . STREET. 630 CHESTNUT STREET. 630 CHESTNUT STREET. CURTAIN GOODS. I . IC. WALJELA,VICI46 18IRX11118802 TO W. K. CLEITIO MOW BALL, Thi? CHESTNUT STREET. WINDOW SHADES, CUBTAIN6 wooscivrio SILK & DRY GO9DS - JODBERS. FALL; : . :FALL, 11364. NOW IN STORE: (1864: EDMUND YARD a CO., Nos. 617 Chestnut and 614 Jayne Streets, IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF SILKS AND FANCY DRY. GOODS, SHAWLS, LINENS. AND WIIfTi9•I:IODS. A LARGE AND HANDSOME STOCK OF, DRESS GOODS. FULL LINE OF FOREIGN AND; DOMESTIO 13A3L310RAIAS, . * INCLUDING BRUNER'S AND OTHER MAXIM au2o-3m WALL PAPERS. PHILADELPHIA WALL PAPERS. HOWELL di -BOURKE, Manufacturers of PAPER HANGINGS, • WINDOW•CURTAIN . PAPERS, mix SHADES AND HOLLANDS, • SOLID GREEN AND BUFF, CHOCOLATE GROUNDS, FIGURED, AND PLAIN SHADES, • To which we invite the attention of STOREKEEPERS. 5e,19.-mnrst 2al COMMISSION HOUSES. HAZARD & ROTOR INSON, N0..112 CHEBTNIIT STREAT;, COMMISSION MtilkjilAl4l'S, POR TES SALE Oa 071-Gm) PHILADELPHIA•MADE GOODS MILITARY GOODS. FOR. THE ARMY AND NAVY. EVANS tk, ]M/IyA.SSAIAA, MILITAAY FURNISHERS; - z : 418. ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA Banners, Regimental and COmParty Flags, Swords, Sashes, Belts, ?assents, Epaulets, Hats Cape • Can teens, ' Haversacks, Camp' Kits, Field Glasses, sses, Spurs, and army pertaiiing to the complete outfit of Army and Navy Officers. A liberal discount allowed to the trade. se77lm CI,OTHIN. I 6I. EDWARD P. KELLY, • JOHN KELLY, • TAILORS, 612 CHESTNUT STREET, Have received their PILL STYLES; and a large stock of FALL and WINTER GOODS, including choice AMERICAN GOODS, all bought before the rise in prices, which they will make np in the best styles at moderate prices. TERMS—NET CASH. . „ _ -se7tf BOYS' CLOTHING. ••!`..' A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF FINE BRADY-MBE BOYS' CLOTHING • ON NAND AT ' V. A:. TIOYT - 'BR° 43, S. W. corner TENTH and OILEIMMT Shuts, , ASSBNELY,BDILDINGS. GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS. THE IMPROVED PATTERN: SHIRT; VABRANTED.,TO FIT AND GIVE SATISFACTION MADE BY C. ARJECISO.N, Nos. 1 AND 8 NORTH SIXTH STREET, MANUFACTURER AND DEALER GENTLEEEN'S FINE FININISMNG GOODS. CONSTANTLY ON HAND, LINEN. MUSLIN, and FLANNEL SHIRTS, and DRAWERS COLLARS, STOCKS, TRAVELLING SHIRTS, TIES, WRAPPERS, &0., dm, OF HIS OWN MANUFACTURE. ALSO. HOSIERY. aLoVEB. SCARFS, hIIBrENDERS, • HANDKERCHIEFS, baoULDER BRACES, &c., Ste Bold at reasonable prices. apls 6m 826 ARCH STRIpIT. REMO'V AL . 6.4. HOFFMAN, MT, mow' SHIRT AND WRAPPER ` wartracrromr, AND ozwnahnort FURN*WING FAsapc*o4. ILINOTBD,FROM 608 ARCH STREIT TO TB NSW BTOItI, • WI. ARCH STREET_ isto•tepos .PHILADEIYHIA,. WEDN• SEPTEMBER 14, 1861 • atise.thrieraisito law for it ; because the Examiner . ' . ' el . : 'Willer° chance of suppressing me than lof sup keesing the. Examiner. No ; but gracefully as ?onaing that he has only to stretch out his hand to 4 t . +flash that "evil" 'any. morning, he says with a lentle rehignatien worthy of the Saviour himself, - t • :Oka ha.ndacif his enemies—better to bear - with it' r a time ; this contradiction of sinners is but tem! . 1 WEDNESDAY WEDNE SEPTEMBER:4., 18,84.vratyr. I might ," arrest" it, but why.should I take , - !say my people's liberty 7 Let the press of the * lontedersite StateS,' then,• understand by what . The Colored Troops. . ;Pure they hold their title to print and publish—it (Special Correspondence of The Press.) - ;the forbearance of-Mr. : Davis. 'Journalists who do UNEASINESS OP THE ENEMY—LIP ' EIN THE lATUff him every morning are evils, but tempo- TRENCHES—CASUALTIES ;ry evils; he 'night arrest them all, and clap them ja.: . Disar.Boravar, Va., Sept.-11,1864. : ola il k , e b o u r t bears “libert w y it , h , them yet a; little while, for s There is nothing of any special interest to (Kim- irirr., CANDIDATE OF THE •PEAOE PAuvr-HIS manic : ate at this date. The two armies—Union and Ilir•ibEe.—. - George 8.. McClellan, with his .well rebel—are confronting each other-with--fretful im ttilltdinmstiinndciefsiagth.bred• mann:bra p 1 'teal geatlet patience. The enemy is mystified by the opera-, leoln. But itacOle e ll:n er •l2 :Ly e, this - negative ren tions of Gen. Grant; and, :ficim`liiir 'movements, is ' ' r, of representing all that IS discontented, dis unable to conjeetura_where or when he proposes to used, and disgusted with Lincoln. -He has no rybrful hold of his own over the mind of the na crush them. lie would be considerably relieved if • nt alis name ianot - associated with anyeat 'tri be could only Suppose at what point the Lieutenant ' iiii:of their arms , nor with. any brillian g isuccess General intends to hurl his hosts • but what in'. - a 'statesman. ' Grant's conquest of Vicksburg creases the anxiety ofthe rebels is the fear that Our i j overshadowed ' the .'prestige of the Young Commander in-Chief *ill 'attack them at different ' ,poltion,:and: he has wisely • abstained, so far, points, and prevent them, as hasbeen - their Custom,. ~ _ entering; the political " arena . . There was gay when_ ,he might, have • made , himself from concentrating their forces.' If the davotees of ar, when a great and 'spirited army would haie the imperilled Confederacy are ignorant of the in. ' ldwed him enthusiastically, whether- he led them 1 Mat a' nationinarms onto the - White 'House in tentlons of our master mind, we here are no less se, but with little better opportunities of judging what', 14 , itting unfortunate.to li e la ek , p e e d o the o e f ire a r n g y . : p u s d t a r t h t e t daring is most probable. • • • to begirt anew era in his country's history, by Everything is - prokresaing as rapidly as the cir.; l§ring-peace to two' sister republics, 'who might cumstances will admit, to the completion of. our a 1 radial-IV:3"e'. side by -side, that would have grand plans for the destruction of Lee's army, and. at, litit - notlitVw r e le a s kln f Revering, s.' aVs u o n i rl it . f °r pat the capture of the enemy's strongholds. ' Never has iiinalty for having insulted theoddiss,..whose there been so much uneasiness manifested in the )ffered hand he would. not seise ; the low cunning of zealoualnaster foiled his , plants,deprived him of' rebels' department, and 1u the sentiments of their • , cane of success, and then,.•accusing. , him of a journals, as there has been since Gen. Grant, with” e — , Whit% Was due. to the ; valor,,of its', enemy, his unbending will, grasped the very core of the. rite_ the fauna' dr hie plairsi,,lre ideptiVed : On of rebellion, which he holds with - a tenaolti that fully . ,maialld-lied'soile'hircrilitereialW 'Socill-Ova exhibits the taroxYsni of fear and.grief of the Davis wind dreams of - future revenge, artfully fanned conceit'. ''. • ~ • ' • . r , ew his pliant-nature and- wanted 'hini-aS•their• o open, ambition by skilful partisan leaders, who )1, P , ''''s nainful fall., RN There is nothing new or interesting from the ex citing point in front of Petersburg, which I visited yeiterday, but' the continual artillery and picket firing: Shot and shell are daily thrown into Peters burg With a view of impressing the Johnniee of what they may reasonably, expect. One ,of the most dreaded features about here is the cerysin shooting of any of our men who exhibits the least part of his head where the enemy may see ft. With a slew of trying the expertness of ,his sharpshooters:Ceps are frequently raised on a retired just above the breast works, when immediately a ball passes throUgh, to the amusement of the troops. Many of those pot ions iho are shot in the trenches by muskets may attribute their mLsfortunes to carelessness or a fool ish display of courage. But there is no dodging ] Whenever the pieces of shell explode 'in one's imme. diate vicinity. This kind of life rather hardens our troops for the service, and, by its frequency, ren ders them insensible 'to any emotions of fear. It was hardly to be expected that men, having no pre vious experience in martial affairs, would present such an undaunted and unwavering front as has been exhibited by the - colored troops in front of Petersburg. CASUALTIES AMONG THE OOLOHED TROOPS. The following casualties have occurred during the last week in front of Petersburg in the ith "United States Colored Troops : • • • Captain A. B. Walker , Company I, killed. Perry Richardson, Company B, wounded with a shell in the right wrist, and Stephen W. White, Company F, ;wounded in the forehead, slight. • BTE 11. T. Si 0. T.-Calvin Vorthisid, Company B, kllled.! • • •• gni U. S. 0. 1 r.:--Alrat Ooston,ocompank C, gun shot wound in the throat , ; GeOrge Joivls, Company •H, shell wound In the right leg and 'right fore fin ger, slight; -John Wesley, Company K, gunshot wound third finger of left hand ;-Jesse Elsey, Com pany H, shell wound in left foot, slight. . 22D U. 5...0. T.—Thomas Ringold, dompany B, and DanierWilson,. Company K,•killed. 29xu:U. S.O. T;Theodorti Anderson; Company . H, - gunshot wound, -thigh, 'slight ; George Carl,, Company 0, centusion of the - thigh; Joseph Demo ny, Company E, - gunshot wound in the hand: • • - ' ' Ror.raw. TEE 'SOUTHERN STATES. The Rebel Press on the Draft C hances . of 112cCliellani— News from the Rebel Arnsies 'Bright - Hopes. and Consolations—Another Foreign . Agent —A Proclamation by the "Gover nor" ~ of Louisiana Advising Wholesale Per jury. • • . • We have received rebel newspapers of last Satur day, 10th,lnetant. Tho editorial columns aro chiefly devoted to saiirical comments on the "'Northern draft' , and the candidate of the Chicago Convention. We subjoin specimens of each : - Is THE. SOUTH CONQUERED 7—HORS MAN RE QUIRED Fri.—The half-million draft is likely some how to 'go wrOng; it is postponed, not in New York only, but, everywherivelse, and that for an Indefinite time.:. „F.,,yritly.rhey are about,totrx..wliettamp —stranta - ropprrir wrm - trie - reimorcera calls for, and accordingly Secretary Stanton ap .peals' to the , peop le in- suoli coaxing and caressing tones, as might wile the bird from the tree," let' alone beguile. two or three hundred thousand re cruits into the army: Ho* can they resist the syren.. Secretary,. when he tells them that Grant only, asks" ler the capture of Richmend and-to give a • finishing blow"—how many new soldiers 1 Why, a bagatelle ; a matter of one hundred thousand— " promptly furnished!" The thing cannot well be put at a lower figure than this; and if the invest ment is immediately seized upon, he promises them a splendid return. The soothing Secretary tries to abate the alarm:of t lactiuntrymen at the draft of half a million ; it will not amount to half a million, after all; , there are " credits," it seems ; and by a lucky accident the 'great andtarbalent Population of Now York city, where 'serious ratistanco to the draft was, threatened, is discovered to be exempt altogether. The credits of New York are so large that she has oven a surplus fund of. soldiers in the service. Ono hundred thousand men being handed over to Grant, and that' promptly, there will !Inertia two hundred thousand of thanew force for garrison duty —"to guard lines of communication and supplies; free the country from guerillas, give security to trade, protect commerce and travel, and establish peace, order, and tranquillity in every State.", These are the duties which' always devolve upon a conquering army after. having destroyed the orga nized forces of a "rebellfouti—a thing which has been already almost done, or, at least, is just going 'to begin.to be done ;'or or else Stanton - is mista ken t h ere are always in such !cease guerillas," which may, perhaps, as a New York paper says, continue' ter make travelling in the mountain regions of Vir ginia unpleasant for years to come. or example, there are the guerillas under Early, at this moment, who greatly in fest the lower past of Shenandoah.Val ' ley, and are too apt to stop travellers coming south ward, as Sheridan can tell, Both In Tennessee and in Kentucky, too, travelling is still ' unsafe and in terrupted by lawless persons like Forrest, Leo, and Wheeler—SO that, of course, Mr. Stanton foresees the necessity of having some troops to breakup such bands and bring them to justice. After all civil oommotions, *also, Mr.:Stanton knows that: . measures must be taken " to give security to trade, and,protect commerce '.' True, this is very much; needed, On the Mississippi .river for ex ample, a • great •highway . of trade and traffic, passengers and steamboat captains can ven ture :now . only after. making their wills, as travellers used to do before setting out to journey from one town to another in Naples. "To establish peace order, and tranquillity through every State,”" bot h North and South, is also, it will be admitted, an exceedingly desirable business; so that in the North factious personsmay not go about voting the opposition ticket, and that in the South every Yankee man may sit under another' mans. vine and fig tree, with none to make him afraid. For all. these services Grant wants three hundred thousand new troops; he appeals to his countrymen ' for no more ; and they could not reasonably ask him to say less.. • It is truly a remarkable people with which we have to deal. Everything that they do and say amazes us ;• it is an astonishment whichis new every morning. For example, consider the cool assume- . tions of this despatch, and espeoially the gentle and paternal solicitude therein expressed for guarding the security of the roads, (throughthese Confederate States,) promoting trade therein, and restoring. tranquillity to society after the unhappy disturb ances which have lately occurred. One la , almost inclined to ask himself, on reading this, ' whether he is awake or dreaming.- Is-it 'true • or not that we, the Confederates, at this mo =ment hold large, regions even of the State of Vir ginia, which, in September of last year, were occu pied by invading armies 1 Is it true that Washing ton is more threatened by our forces than Richmond bythose of the enemy I • Is it true that Kentucky, • which last year gave no sign of Confederate life, is now partially in open armed resistance, .wholly, frcm one end to -the other in suppressed rage and . shame at her unworthy position, everywhere plotting and devising how best to get rid of the foul tyranny - that maddens her 1 Is it a fact that the '-whole of Texas, and almost all Arkansas and West Louisiana, which but a few months ago were overrun , by . Invading armies, have now driven them from 'their soil with . slaugh ter and disgrace'? Is it true—or do we dream—that General Grant, after a sanguinary campaign of four months against the city of Richmond, is now, With the sorry remnant of his enormous host, bog glingand blundering in front of Petersburg, within easy reach of his ships, unable to take Richmond or Petersburg—able only to conquer City Point—and that he la bawling out for a hundred thousand more men, promptly? Can it be that the advance of Sherman's army • but few miles further from its base in. Georgia, and its occupation' of 'an empty ofa little town, while the country behind him la not'a,whit more subjugated than the country be fore him,•and the' rule of the invading power ex tendaprecisely the length bi their bayonets, can it be Mal this event has indeed "reduced the Confede rate States to three,". finished the rebellion,' and left'nothing for the conquerors to attend to but some trifling details ofjubilee, providing for the securit y . of trade and travel, and the • full fruition of a bliss ful peacel Either the Secretary is a little mistaken or we are. It is poasible, also, thatthe North ooun try, which has heard of the rebellion being crushed, or on the very point of being crushed, from time to time any time these three years; may pause and consider before it furnishes those 300.000 new sol diers.—Richmond Examiner. Almost since the rebellion commenced the Rich mond Examiner has been the persistent opponent of Davis' administration of Confederate "affairs." Its remarks have at times been so virulent as to ex cite the indignation of the Davisites. The well; known Mrs. Rose Greenhow, in an interview laet April with Davis, referred to this enmity, and asked him whylie did not suppress the journal. She gives his answer in her recently-published "Reminiscences of Rebeldom." "Better," said he, "suffer from that evil, which is temporary, than arrest It by a still greater one. 'lt is a dangerous thing to inter fere with the liberty of the press ; for what would it avail us if we gain our independence and lose our liberty 1" The editor of the Examiner finds this waif in his exchanges; and thus spiritedly replies: &MITTMAN FREEDOM Or THE PREI3B.—IVIre. Rose Greenhow, we are aware, had been one of the most trusted counsellors of Mr. Davis, and her report of. the conversation may be taken as accurate. The reason, then, may Mr. Davis has not suppressed "that evil," the Richmond Examiner, Is that ho has reflected that the evil is temporary. The reason , why he bars not interfered with the freedom of the' presais that he would.not, while giving the country independence, take away its liberty. It does not seem'once to have, occurred either to Mr. Davis, or . .to that :most'fitting counsellor or his, that there Would be any difficulty about suppressing the Rich= 'mood Examiner; nor,. indeed. that there are .any laws br, rights in this land which he may not suspend or take away: -When she asks him plaintively why he deers hot suppress that sad " evil, ' he does not reply, because I can't do it, and dare not attempt it be 825 ie i.pol, consoled him for the painful .1.. He nice more borne on high by thasurging waves. of „Arthern polities, and - again, we inirlict, he Will be lend unable to conquer the raging elements and Peer the storm-tossed vessel safely - into the desired yen. • P • , Without influence and without power as. he is, oCiellan must, however, in order,to have been den by the still 'mighty party. or Northern De ociacy as their standard bearer, represent 'some pat idea, some leading principle, which they °pa may find an echo in the hearts 'of'the multi ude. This is not peace. It is evident from his se ction that, upon counting 'their - strength At-Cid riago, the peace party found themselves in an un expected minority. They discovered, no doubt, that individual men of weight and character were anxiously desirous of a speedy termination of hos tilities. But they discovered also 'that the masses were by no means ready yet for an open avowal of defeat. They wanted a brighter light by which to read . their coming fate than that of Chambersburg, and I the roar of cannon had not yet thundered into the ears of: the merchant princes of their great cities. iSo this proud Democracy, once in its union with Southern men the pride of the Republic and the 'a:lope of the world, forgot a second time Its noble vo ,cation, and stooped to a pitiful compromise: Se lecting a. man who had solemnly pledged himself in faior of war. and who was yet weak enough to pro raise to be-whatever the party might desire him to tie, they coupled this;puppet 'of theirs 'with an avowed peace man, hoping thus to offend none, and conciliate all. Like all half measures, : this policy ..is sure to fall, andvill only play into the hands of `Lincoln. • . - r For us there lies in these considerations a solemn wa Bing not to indulge in hopes of peace from any qu ter but our own invincible armies. It will he r• Rely more glorious for us to conquer peace by trength of our arms, to owe nobody thanks, and to. laim a place among the great nations of the Je 1., not by favor Or by persuasion, but simply by Ji: t and might combined:Richmond Enquirer. , T' WAIL NEWS--TITE SITUATION AT PE ' SBURG,..TONESBORO, AND MOBILE. . e unwonted inactivity of the enemy during the p:' iCIV days is interpreted by some into an evi de a that preparation is being made for some new an sudden,move • perhaps , another mine, with an a - It right and left, everywhere but in the breach it. f. It is hardly to be presumed, however, that G nt has men enough to risk in such another wild au impracticable soheme. He is resting and re or tang, and until the next draft fills up somewhat hi hattered columns, he will content himself, no d .- .t, with putting on a bold front, shelling the of , or making some Teint or other to divert - atten ti . . 7 —Richmond Sentinel, 10th. • , . . - . RANT?S• OPERATIONS—ASPAIRB IN'.PETERS. 11, • o.—While digging, and mining, and fightig in fr .t of Petersburg, Grant'has not been idle in' other re//poets.: Re has been grading the country in rear off his works, and building's. branch railroad to con flict his extreme left with the road to City Point, tliiereby having a rapid and unbroken line of eom unication'between all points of his army and Alis mn base of supplies.' From those portions of our ei r rks nearest this new road the noise of the falling In,. as It is thrown upon the ground, can be plain l heard. This new road is in rapid progress. There seems to be but little doubt, that Giant is i elving reinforcements, and that he is conveying 'them to his left. He may probably contemplate an ati Bel on our right, or may. be, a further extension of his lines around the city. In either case, though ho ha,d,the addition of the" hundred thousand men he calls-for, we predict •his failure. The 'enemy's batterles•were again .opened on the city yesterday morning., and for , an hour or two night - before last. (hie n egrii - *is injured, and one or two Irou9bil struck. ' .25 . 01eyteglositions arkplut , . . - e. • 4,trains ._..,-, 5.....:-., • 1-__ -s gine iteard.*fitersburg Express, 9th. • - Moving=Ts' OP FAREAGUT--MILITARY PREPA RATIONS-IN•MontLE.--Who Mobile • Register of the bih gives theTollowing resume of the state of attain • The enemy MOM to be busy at something down the bay. On Friday they commenced changing their camp by the evacuation of Cedar Point, and 'throwing their • forces - on the mainland at or near Navy. Cove, which -is in the rear of Fort Morgan. One of the monitors has the appearance of 'being aground in the upper bay. • The attention of the public-is -still- devoted to military matters, and clumsy companies andiblitL tenons are beginning to allow a - proticieney In their' drill in the school of the Company and of the bat— talion that would do credit to any body, of'tioldiers. Let the good work go on without' any abatement In • zeal or,the diminution of numbers. -• • THE SITUATION z N GRONGIA.—The Maisie • ter sees nothing - deaPerate, nothing gla . nny to the rebel cause-in, the present aspect of•sthe'War l ilf• Georgia. Everything is, on ihe contrary, "orienring and hopeful." Wo should judge, howevergrofit the time, space, and ability wasted by the' rebel' lonr nstis in showing their readers that the loss of Atha; to amounts to nothing, that in their hearts thefand their readers, know it does. But "drowning men catch at straws," and when real military advantages do not accrue to the rebel arms shallow Sophisms are resorted to, that a gloss may be thrown over de feat. The Register follows the example of the Rich 'mond journals in this wise : , The fall. of Atlanta has not occasioned much de spondency. The news of this misfortune has not pens). trated the national heart with - such gloom and fore boding as did the fall of Vicksburg. It is true there are some temperaments prone to magnify 'every evil, and to see In the -least reverse to our arms the sure ruin of the Confederate cause; and these are utterly disconsolate and hopeless. But this cam. paign in the West has not failed. It is true that the enemy has gained an important position—the objee- • Live point of six months' operations, but at a cost of life and treasure, that leaves him, .we- • may reasonably believe, too much 'crippled to - make any Immediate use of • his advantages. In the meantime. he is confronted with an undis °enraged and determined army of veterans, with reserves within, hail; raiders and guerillas are swarming in his fear, rendering his supplies preca rious ; in the East the flower.of Confederate troops may soon be relieved from other duties to turn their attention hithenward ;and, In the far West, mar shalling hosts are slowly but steadily approaching to crush the desperate - adventurer, who,. In unholy strife, has • staked his all upon a doubtful success. We do not despair that •this campaign may yet' and in the destruction of-Sherman's army, and. the ex hausted North be forced to give over the struggle. pEiut should it not tie so&should the fears of the despondent be realized, what • is the worst 7. The enemy, routed in every other field, in Florida, in North Carolina, in Virginia---thoroughly so In the Trans-Mississippi Department, in the State of Mis sissippi, and in East Louisiana—has gained' one im portant position in Georgia, and that has. been pur chased so dearly that their despotic- masters may well exclaim—" A few more such-victories will ruin us 1" He must pause to recuperate; and if we are not criminally idle, by the time he is ready to re new the contest, we shall oppose him with renewed numbers and redoubled ard.or; • A PROCLAMATION PROM THR RIIREL - "GOi7BR. NOR" OP LOTTIBIAIIA:—IIR COOLLY ADVISES WHOLE. ' BALE. PERJURY.—The Richmond Eiaminer says that Governor Henry Allen, of Louisiana, has issued the following address, " containing advice which-, is 'equally applicable to citizens of some of the other States as to Louisianians :" To all Persons residing =thin the Confederate Lines in the State of Louisiana who have taken _the Oath of . Allegiatiee,to,the Untied Statei,Dovernment: Having received many letters asking advice on this stbject, I take this' method of replying. By the •laws of Louisiana, whoever takes the oath of allegiance to the United ' States is diatranchised, and cannot enjoy any civil right. If you are true to such oaths you must be false to us, our country, and its cause. You' should take your choice, either keep your oath and 'go with the enemy, or repu diate it and remain with us. As you did snot depart with the .enemy, I believe that , most of you (and I • hope all) did not design to forswear your fealty to your State and country. I will not discuss the right' or wrong of what yon did under stress of danger to yourselves, or whether that danger was small or great; real or imaginary, but I ,will simply advise you as your Governor, all the premises considered and the hereafter we are to have, what you ought to do. As an oath; imposed under any duress what ever, is not binding finally, morally, or religiously, my counsel is—to join the army at. once, and wash out - the stain on your names in the blood of your ene- - nales. Let no occupation, nor age, nor infirmity, keep Seurat home another hour. If you can carry a mus ket, or march only a mile in a day, join the army, get face to face with the base foe who has robbed, and intuited, and tried by every means to dishonor. you. It, your case revenge is sweet, and right, and holy in the sight of the and ever just God. 'All who arc physically able should 'go immediately into' active service. Those who are unable, by reason of age or infirmity, should join the reserve corps, and, be ready to do their duty whenever called upon. I give you this advice in fall view of all the air cumstances. I would give - it to my brother or my ' son. •It is, the course I would myself adopt. All persons pursuing the course laid down shall be re commended to the next General Assembly as good and patriotic citizens, worthy of being restorea to all their former rights and privileges. AsoTuart, REBEL ''FOREIGN AGENT . '—AN AMA TEUR PEACE COMMISSIONER. — The Georgia Consti tutionalist publishes a letter from a "Southern"' man in Bermuda, Jerome Dushane, complaining of a rebel "foreign agent," C. G. Baylor, who had arrived there a few days before. He. says: "It was with surprise and mortification that I heard a man calling himself C. G. Baylor give üblie expression to sentiments that no true South ern man would make- use of. He proclaimed publicly that the Southern .. Confederacy was nothing short of a military despotism ' and that two.thirds of the people of the • South were .in .favor of a reconstruction of the Union. - This man claimed to be a commissioner from the State of Georgia to France, and so he registered his name here. But it is currently reported here that he holdall commission from certain parties in eeotgla and several other States, to the Lincoln Government, to negotiate a peace on the basis of reconstruction; and ,there la some plausibility in this, for he does not associate with Southern men, but, on the contrary, he avoids •them as much 'as possible. His most intimate acquaintances are several New York Yankees. ; :- He has also been - closeted several times with the Yankee consul here. In fact, his whale den eerier goes tolihow that he is not a friend to the SoUthern cause." • The Constitutionefisf, commenting on this letter, says the psputhenz C9aroiloraey is pecaliarly 1111- fortunate in itErselection.Of foreign agents. rn fact,. it hazy rendered Itself ridiculous by the jackarrupen sent abroad as agents of one kind or other. ,, The Georgia Countrymat denounces him , as a humblig• and an idiot. PERSONAL —M. Auguste Laugel, who arrived in thiircottntry since the beginning of this month, has been- doing good service for our cause in•FranCe, M. Laugel IS prominent. among that accomplished clam. of writers who have made the Revue des Deur Monde:: leadinjorgan of opinion on the Continent, and his serlefrof elaborate and brilliant essays' in that ma:. gazine, - upon the Americanquestion, will henceforth entitle it to a new share of regard; with an enlarged irans-atlantic circle. Since the volume of De roc queville, no French writer has excelled .M., Laugel in the wide extent and" singular correctness of his knowledge of the issues that -ha** divided Ameri can parties, or In the philosophic acuteness : with which he has traced the working of the causes that led to the rebellion, and developed the character, progress, and probable results of the grand contest; Laugel has an American wife,. the daughter:of the late Henry G.-Chapman,, •of .Boston. To 'this. fact may,. doubtless, be attributed' his 'famtlierity co uncommon among Europeans—with American affairs. He is the son of it Erin& officer,- and 'has himself attained distinetion.in Paris as professor in the Ecole des Mines but being an ardent Orleanist • in hisSympathles and principles, he has recently re sided In England, where the Connt'de Paris and the Due.d , Aumale, have now their home; —The Richmond Extfißinkr Of, Sept.loth says that the body of Gen. korgah•waS,Vitnight to Abing do n, where it was interred, iiiraitothetime Tygen the soil 'of his loved iCeninsifey can receive ineo ifs bo som the remains of f her gallant and heroin son.; • Moses 0. Peirsdns, otikanohester, N., lic, .one of the', representataes• in the State .Legislatttre T ; has enlisted In aleaVy artillery regiment fcirining in that city.r. • • The oldest.person in the State of Vermept io t a . blackman, In` Pomizet, named keter Nalmon;Ao was born about 1734. -•• -I • ° Ea-Governor -Augustus C. French, of „Mine's; died:at his home, in Lebanon, on Sunday last,-of typhoid fever. ' " • Elizabeth H : .'Whittier, only sister of Sohn G; -Whittier, died at Amesbury, Massachusetts, on, Saturday last. • • , 'POLITIC/11h - DE.ZIEBBR ON TEE CEWAGO PLATZORM.--ne . Neti York Times publipelehe folowing philosophi cal and logioal extractlivm a'priviti letter, recent:. ly.written by_the eminent Dr. Lieber : • • ; The Chicago platform appears to my mind the well-framed creed of Northern servility, to the criminal arrogance of' the r• SOuth=a sariction of highest-handed lawlessness. The election' of Gen. McClellan means armistice; armistice means sepa ration.; separation means disintegration-;the in- • stant separation of California, the dropping off , of Utah, an empire in 'the Mississippi valley, the ex °talon of New England, and an inorganic clustering and reclustering of the,Ea stern alithlle,States with• out any inherent character. Disintegration means defiance to the wonderfully-great and self-opmpleting geography of our country, and a lapse into.that state which befell Europe at:the beginning of the Middle Ages, when principalities rose and• fell, enduring only long enough to perpetuate the sanguinary tur moil; it means a repetition of the chronic revolution which has of South America this half century, possibly with a neighbor 'growing in monarchto power, which soon would claim the right of exten sion and recuperation. Disintegration means the reckless rising against that: , polity which the Dis poser of Events has ordained as the normal. type of modern civilization, against the Nationalized Go vernment, which is the. opposite to the darning League, the vast, yet incoherent monarchy, the pro vincial kingdom the petty city, State, and the frag mentary feudalism. It means quarreling, shed; and ruin, without an idea, for a century. to come, and 'disgrace forever. it means the heartless destruction of a nation appointed to perform great and sacred tasks. It means all this, and slavery.to. boot,that "divine institution "' whose' altar is .the auction table, on whichthe um-divine ties of parents and children are torn asunder by the auctioneer, who thus becomes a holy: missionary of the win ., . shipped institution. ..LETTBRIPRnaI EX-PREgiDENT PIERCE. -The fol lowing letter was written to Mr. Spofford by Frank lin Pierce, dated at Concord, N. H., August l7‘: I,received youi note on Saturday , evening, do not see how, consistently ir . lth your convenience or my ()vim,' we can meet ' again before yonleave for Chicago. Nor indeed ' is 'there any special oc casion fern: You know my.views, and I rely upon your friendship.. What I wish to have done - will be no task.: It will be :easy to check any word that, may by possibility be said about me in connection • with the nomination: The New' Hampstdre dale gation mill take no steps from first to last which fa• vor,or give sanction to my' being a candidate. I • wish vett, as early as you can, to see them together. At all events, you must' understand from what I have mere than once said' to you, 'how painful it would be to me to 'have my wishes in. this 'relation disregarded by my frlends,in any part of the. coun try. • ' 'Whoever 'may be nbnlinated ' will, I have no 'doubt, in obedience to what will be the vote of the • Convention, declare in the name of the Democracy , Akiet Vattgai •' , o4lPoct 4410 , ithe.apmw 5 obedience to the laws of the land=with no military. presence ,to overawe the unarmed citizen. And that if; any sovereign State recognizing the authority ,of the Federal Government, 'military usurpation' shill come to spppress the - people in the eieroiso of their rights - under the Constitution and enacted laws, we will meet that f military usurpa tion with all the power we can command: But if your Convention will aot cordially and in harmony, there need be no. apprehension that the bayonets will attempt to control the judgment of the voters. • • , , • • •• - No audacity in defiance of the ConStitution will dare to confront with arms the - united Democracy or the Southwestern, Middle, Northwestern, and Eastern States. ) No mani'defying the Constitution which he has sworn' to .uphold-and obey, can bring the army to support , open rebellion against a fair and free vote. They will' hold that we • are a free people yet—let us be thankful for.that—a free pen. ple. living under a written Constitution, which ; b inds: the highest official not less firmly, than the 'humbleSt citizen of the republic. Of this, I think, yeti may •be sure. The critical—the -vital thing, 'will be united" action on .your part ; and that such may be the result is My most earnest wish. . . 'ANOTHER LETTER FROM TRAIN to MCCIALLAIC George Francis Train has written Gon. IloClel lan'the following bitterly.sarea,stic letter : ROCKAWAY•ONWHIPSEA, Sept. 11,1864, To Maj. Gen. G. R. McClellan,'Orange, N. J. : DzAit SIR : It Is a mean'thing to listen at the keyhole. It is meaner to open a private letter. It is the meanest of all to accept hospitality and abuse the host. But these mean things are Christian vir tues compared to , the ,act of accepting ,the nomina tion of a party in' order to destroy it. A platform is the party's soul. A candidate is the party's body. Separate the body from the soul, and death ensues. It is as 'difficult to sit between two stools as to sleep with one eye open.: You cannot worship God and Mammon. Honesty is not only the best policy, but the only one for an honest man. To cheat in poll. tics is as wicked as to cheat in money— You know the Peace men controlled the Convention.' They gave you a platform that was neither fish, flesh, fowl, or-mackerel. . _ Yet you insist upon the mackerel. Hence the D aily. hews, the. Metropolitan' , Record, .Freeman's Journal, and Ohio Crisis fly off from you. like hoops from an efferveseing,barrol. Singleton will follow Wood'; Vallandigham will fall 'in, and in two weeks Pendleton will decline to be ship-. wrecked with the rest. " Come out from under the bed;" said the indignant:.wife to -her undecided husband. "Not," said he, "so long as I have the ,spifit of 'a man within•me." . - Mark my words, General—you will not carry a single State except New Jersey, and you will sacri fice seven Democratic members of Congress out of ten. Look at Vermont., • Maine will be .the same. Indiana will only lead the other States by a mit. Yon will find it as hard as the rebels , have to ht such Democratic nemeses Foote, Farragut, Par r , and Dupont, on the sea, or Grant, Meade, Burnside, Sickles, Hancock, Thomas and Sherman. on the land—all of whom are against you: The' late* let-- ters of Sherman and.Grattrattle through. the:De mocratic ranks like lightning through a gooseberry bush. It only costs two thousand dollars to gel up a McClellan meeting. Eaung - Ketcliutit said so. If the explosion of a limited quantity of gas in Union Square killed two women and wounded several the other night, what will •be -the disaster when your whole party bursts up in November 1 James Buchanan said that he was' no longer'J. 8., but- the Cincinnati platform. You reverse it, and saythat you are not, the Chicago platform, but G. B. Mac. Said Lord Byron in " Don Juan " _ " The.trelllknOwn Hetirew word, f am; ' •, We English.use to govern d—,. " • . • But to your letter.. Dulwer said 'the "Pen' was mightier than the sword.', Then "he had not made your acquaintance, General. NOMINATED ON•It0132 .c.REOORD. 'Fesr The Draft.- The:Proclamation. The Suspension of. Habeas; CotPos.-% The; Arrest of. Le gislatures. Military at the Polls, and. disobedience of-orders. Is not that your reocirdl :Boson mean, by alluding to your record, that yen will do the same again 1 ' . "„GENTLEM,EI4 I have the honor to acknowledge' the receipt of your letter, informing me of my nomi nation[of course who else did you suppose iVwas ?] by the Democratic National Convention [certainly, it was not the Republican National Committee],, recently assembled at Chicago, [That's so ;, it did not assemble at Cleveland or New , York,] as their candidate at the next - election for 'President of the United States, [Exactly; it was not for the last election.] . • • " Itle unnecessary for melt° say to you that this nomination comes to me unsought." [Why Say it,. then 1] Take the whole letter, paragraph by paragraph, transpose it as I have this sentence,.and you will fin( It as weak as disla.water—undecided, 'inconsistent, ungrammatical, and egotistical. The six allusions to the'Union remind one of the stereotyped cry in the Fortunes of Nigel—watehes, clocks, barnacles. The bright boy who cried barnacles, watches, clocks, in troduced a new-idea into Scotland. • "If &flank, earnest; and persistent effort to obtain those Objects should fail, the responsibility for ulte rior consequendes will fall upon those who remain in arms against the. Union." ' .. Why not say war right. out, not-dodge _round a, 'Corner this way 1 • Don'tforget that old •Cass killed "himself-with the Nicholson letter. ;, ; • . . "Believing that the views here expresied are those of. the Convention. and the people yeti represent, I accept the nomination."• ; • • , You don't believe outthink 'of the kind., You know ,better. The Northwest'wets •all peace., "So reads the platform. Five hundred delegates unani mously agree upon a platform. - Here - lt le: - Resolved, To please you, they have war. . • Resolved, To please Pendleton, they have peace.. ResOlved To please all the outs, the war go on till the peace i s signed. • Remember that' the Royal George in Bristol Channel went down with all 'on board, the result of trimming. Walter Savage Lander wrote the Georges : ', Geor ge. „ • . the. First was reckoned yile, • Viler George the Second ! And what mortal ever heard' • Any good of George the Thifil 'I • • ••) -A • 'When fromearth the Fourth ascended, . t God be praised, the Georges ,ended." . _ I condense your letterin two lines - , • " G:,IINTLEMEN I I accept the , nomination, but as knowledge myself totally tilifit for the position." I mean nothing unkind in this, General; but you, know) that now you are a fair mark, not a large one,: for all to shoot at. -,,GE0.-FaarroisTaarn. Tab Courrier `des Etats Unisifolloiving the 'Daily' News; repudiates McClellan: It reviews , his letter,: and comes to the conclusion,Mhat hahas ,allenated with onelell stroke'alFthos'e Democrats Whopelleve: that the'continuation the war will' tiring greater disasters on the' Unitiired%States• then &ny'heretofore expenienced."..,Theeditonthervoontinues:•4a.:a , a The Peace_ partyAere willing, to .make comes :ms'iliiorral 2 r r a d n e k r •i l f'b rn ii llin eth al ey n 'in th u e st lW- n in iit .2"n til tn iis 'tli ke i6 d' D • tit saorifice their belief:- General bloOlelliri liaslgtorid I with ;bag. and •baggage:.into the' camp at/Lem/14.c Democrats, that Dastard party which promises to this land all the evils of the Republican Adminiii trationi witlput haying its FOUR CENTg. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. The stook market was somewhat irregular yester day, but there were no Important guetuations. Go vernment loans were in steady deinand. The 'Ble Sold at 108, and thes•2os at 110 X, and•leSx with the coupons off. State es were somewhat lower.. City es were unchanged. In the share list rir notice an advance of X in Residing ; penniylvania Railroad Was better Oatawirsa common 801 d tit 20, and preferred at 40%. • Our statement yesterday that the Catawissa Company wasdisoharging its floating debt was - an error, ' inasmuch as the company has now no floating debt at all. North Perinsylvania Railroad sold at 34X; Minehill at 62 Norristown at 66 ; Elmira preferred at 515 Northern Central , at 55; Camden and Amboy at 158, and Harrisburg Rail road at •72X. There -was very little doing in pee. senger railway stocks. • Ridge avenue sold at 16 70 was,bid for Second and Third ; 02.f0r 6th and 6th; 60 for 10th and 11th, andl39X for Spruce and Pine. Canal shares were rather lower, with sales of Schuylkill Navigation' preferred to notice at 39X2 39:; common db. at =4 and Susquehanna Canal at 19%;g40.'. Bank shares are, firmly bold, but there is little or nothing doing., 162-was bid for North Ame rica; 62- for Farmers' and Michanies', , 56 for Coin racrelb,l;2Blor Mechanics', 40 for Kensington . , 70 for Tradesmen's, and• 46 - for. Corn Exchange. . There was less doing in the oil stocks, and prices general ly were for a lower range; baize'', MeElhenyi Ma ple Shade, Story Farm, were all lower.. The,fol lowing were the closing bids yesterday, as compared - with the day before, for the mining and oil stooks : Mon. Tu.. . Mon. Tn. Fulton Coal 8% 8X Keystone Oil .... 'l' • 1 • Big Mount. Coal•• 6 7 Venangp Oil % . .11. Y. Sr lit:C.F'd 22-' . :•• • Union Petroleum 3 1 , Green Morin. Coal 6% 6% .Seneca Oil Carbond'e C'l 2%`' 2% Organic Oil ' 4% 7 • New Creek Coal . • 1% , 1 Franklin Oil' ' '• "..• Feeder Dam Coal 194 • .Howe's Eddy Oil ix _14 . ( • Clinton- Coal. • ;.• 1%. 134 I rving_oll 034." . Amer. Kaolin.... 23i.. ,Pope Farin•oll..: .. • • Penn '6 '4. ' ' Butler- cow •15 Etna Mining , 18 13 . IKeystone Zinc.. • . 2.% • 2% Conn. 'Mining.... X' .%-Densmore 14% '14% 'Aimee .. 1* 1 IDakell Oil.' ..... 1/34; 1134. Oil Creek-• 634 '6iMoßlheny Oil• •• • 8 836 - Maple Shade Oil. . 17, 11 'Roberts ..... 2X" 234 _ McClintock Oil .. Olinetead • 23j 2 Penne. Pet C 0..... . • .. [Noble &Doi 153.4 is% Perry Oil 4% 33 Hibbard 2/f,2% Mineral Oil 2 . Ki 234 f ROM Farm • afa • 3%' The money market is ;somewhat unsettled, in con sequence 'o . f the violent fluctuations in gold. No stringency is apprehended from the payments of the new loan.• The NeW York banks, we see, have no• - Wed the U .S. Treasurer • for twelve millions of de-' posits; which they can offset for the loan if it shout(' be, expedient» `)' • GOld fluctuated during the day between 220%and 226,:closing at 225. • The New York banlestatement for the week shows a decrease in loans of, more than two millions, and in deposits of upwards of three millions. The former indicates the • temporary' contraction the banks are practising, and the latter the cause which ;renders it advisable. The • following table shows the amount, of coal transported over the Lehigh Valley Railroad for the week ending September 10,1884 : Week. Year. Torus. Cwt. Toae:Cwt. 3,094 10 1390521. 06 2,144 11. 1(8,080 00 1,025 16 . 76,613 OS 986 00 . 29,750 08 1,2.49 07 : 79.846 , 02 794 OS 21954 05 50 12 1,730 13 584 14 . .30,601 15 778 15 101;355 14 . ..... . 2,702 12 • 65,574 07 -1,386 09 90:053 12 949 04 • 38,358. 07 646 12 49,481 19 168 02 30,149 02 ... 903.01 36,946 06 ..... .. • 779 10 142,516 00 2,6"..V 1798,433 04 p 25,123 13 11,766 05 Where shipped from. Hazleton Mines • East Sugar Loaf Council Ridge Mount Pleaeant Spring Mountain Coleraine Beaver Meadow liewlYork & Lehigh North Spring_Mountain.. P. H. & I W. H, R. 11.••• • Jeddo • Rayleigh German Penn. Coal Co.;. Sbervalo Coal Co Miinesville Buck Mountain ' Mahanoy L. C. &N. Co ' Other shippers 221 08 . _ Total Corresponding week last year. - • IncresEe The following shows the amount of coal transport... ed over the Delaware, Lackawanna, and West ern Eaproad Oompsay s for week ending Saturday, September 10,1864 : Tons.. Cwt. Tons • wt. Shiged North ' 9,601 1 ' 239;640 7 South * OM ; 620,149 6 Total ' 30,170 1 For corresponding time last year : Shipped North 7301 16 ' South 20,760 13 Total. Increase..;:. , . " Drexel -&- Co.. quote: • New United States Bonds, 1891 ' " ' 107% 109):', New Certificates of Indebtedness New United states 73-10 Notts 173': 114 Quartermasters' Vouchers 90 91 Orders for Certificates of Indebtedness ' 4 ' .134 Gold 2'15 227 Sterling Exchange•, 2-1 . 5 X 217 Five-twenty Bonds - 109% 1/0% STOCK EXCHANGE SALES, SEPTEUBER 13. 8E1t08.3 BOARDS 100 Perry 0i1... ..,.. :6 .100. do—..c• '.11. 1 9 . - 4° W Mall Cieek• •• • 100 McClintock 011 •1 100 do • • 143( .130 • do ~ ..... .. 100 Daliell Petroleum' 11% -100 . 11% 60' do 11' 100" Perry 0i1........:.5 100'Graen Mountain.. 6 3 Harrisburg $.. 72% 200 011 Creek ' lots 5% 110 N Penns 100 Organic 300 Dalzell b3O 11% - 100 do. ._. ! ,.b80 11% 100 McOlintOck Oil.. '6% 100 do ' 63: 500 d0.:.....:....6% 100 do " b 5 100 Perry Oil ' 4 000 DicElhenny .. lo b 5 ts 8 100 do 8 100 Bea diurß.... cash R3Bl 100 d 0.... ..... casit.63:4" 'CO do.. . ..... .c Beh et% 100 Schuylkill N. Pref 383, 100 . d 0.... b 30.. Pref 39 100 d 0.... b 30.. Fret 39 100 do Prof 39 100 do Fret 39 100 . ' ' b 532 4 Sneq~ehanns Cnl. , 19/ Cam.& Amb07..R..158 2 do 58 1000 13 S 6-20 B -coup off.l l ord'i 20 Northern Central. 56 16 do • ...... '66 100 600 City do 6s new.-106 - 1(6 6CO do 106 • SECOND 26 Man 14 bisch )31c - ... 27% 100MeOlintock 011 6 200 Dal zell Oil b3O. • 11% 100 do b3O. • 11% 3 Morris Caual • prsf•=3 100 Mo3lbeur Oil 8 200 da 8 100 d o ' 8 100 do 50 Dela Div.... 2 dya. '3B I 3 North Parma 8.... • 34% 2000 11 S 65, 1881.... reg• 108 2000 do reg.loB 400 City 65 ' new.lo6 9 3finehill B. 62 7Ptnna B ' 73% 300 lifalbeny b 5. 500 Diamond Co'l.b2o. 2134 1600 'Union Canal Ma. .2034 400 Densmore—. lots. 1434 600 lota. 8 200 Catawlssa C0m.... 20 200 'Perry 011 lots. 3.96 600 MeElheny b3O. 83f 300 Bch & Oil Ck.2.ilys. 234 300 Bruner Lif 100 Tarr :Farm sx 100 Dalzell ' " 1134 200 MeElheny.••• .1030• 834 100 HibbardOil...-.... 234 100 Noble & Del 1534 460 Maple Shade.. 1735 650.11 S 5-20 s 11054 Receipts of the Deism's Week ending September 10, Previous in 1864 Week ending September 12, 1563 Previous in 1863 Increase in IEB4 $33,7155 67 The Railroad and Mining Register says of the oil stook companies : Speculators interested In the original allotment of shares, and brokers whose commissions aro im posed on the number of shares boureht and sold, are the parties specially benefltted by the existing plan of - oil company organization, because it, is impos sible to keep the credit or even a produoing oil com pany on a .stable basis, where. there are 200,000. or 100,000 or 50,000 shares on the market.. Shares sub scribed for on speculation float about in the market like corks on the water, bobbing•up and down with every ripple on the surface.. And not till after the companies that own producing wells shall have consolidated their shares to .a minimum number, say from 200,000 to 20,000, will they be held more generally for investment and less for speculation. The State is full of examples where companies that originally issued 200,000. shares afterward cut the number down to 20,000. shares. • The oil region, of Pennsylvania Is a producing re gion dotted with wells that yield copiously in gal lons, and earn largely in dollars. The interest of the•oll region, moreover, is in the well product of oil and in the market price of oil,' more than in shad-roes of capital shares and fitful changes in stock speculations. The oil region and its invest ing friends, too, are Interested in having bogus companies that were organized only to sell shares weeded out of the market. Hence the sooner the oil companies begin to, reorganize on a basis or say twenty thousand shares, the sooner will permanent investors buy and hold oil shares to - enjoy dividends paid out of the product and profit of. the °livens. At the low' prices that ruled two years ago - this product, which fluctuates less in quantity than in price, netted a considerable sum. At , the prices of 1864 the product of the region will realize an enormous income. But parties who buy oil shares these days must bear in mind that now there are an hundred millions of dollars of oil shares •Lesued in the stock markets, to represent the same: property which, two years ago was held, by individuals and, partnerships whose modest asperations did tot rise to. the• contemplation of millions, neither of shares no dollars. . • Our faith is in the oil region and in the product of its wells, but the present stock basis of the oil companies we believe is deceptive and wrong, and in need of readjustment. The bank comptroller of the. State of Wisconsin, in his report on the condition of the State•banks for the month of August, states that the cirula,. Lion has beon decreased during the last month $lO, 938. The whole amount of circulation outstanding is : For banks $2,457,305 ; banks winding up, s9s'- 158. , Total, $2,5 64 1 093 . . The s New York Evennig Post of yesterday says : - Gold is more 'firth The oPenisi - pita was , sum.' From tfilepoint thero was a gradati 'advance to 22434. • The closing 'price is , 225 3‘. . Exchange is dull at 109 Or specie. ' ' •' • • • -•• The loin, market; though active, is not sd• strin gent as was anticipated , by the, boars. The rate is 7 per , cent; for loans oh approved _securities, with ample margins. Commercial paper goes ' B / O TOY a t . .8/3 , 12 per cent,. . . • - The stock market. Opened strong and closed steady. Governments are_ irregular. Five -twenty. coupons are dull at ilop„ teri.forty:cbupona at'96X@97, and . small denominationa at 100@l02, -coupon sixes of 'lBBl are quiet , at 10;%@21.07K., and seven-thirties at :d10%@1.10%.' Oirtificatea are more liotive at 94@ 1943 i. i State stooks ,are.dullibankshares neglecteil d, pining shares quiet, railroad bonds firm, and ra „read shares active, witlCan upward teridonoyi „read first! aotelon.,gold.waa ,aellincat lareiv :York Central at 125, Eribar 109Villeadirtg at *127%; lifilohigtua Southern at , 713 X, Toledo' at In,. ; ,;Itoek, Wand ..at, Cumberland 7st,,6l2(Ciya, Quicksilver at 79%: • • The appended table exhibits She 911.10 f piremeAte 21,703 08 1,030,131'01 914,414 13 121;716 08 ....'2,876 18 919,789 13 224,823 3 616,411 6 811,231 9 78.555 4 ..28,0V 8 . • -1)5 4% '! • :.•=...7.•-•-..4% . 0 4 100 Oil ()reek." .., 600 Keystone Zinc.* 2.44 100 00 o d Beading R blO 64b5 64 1 20 SAM Canal 193 r 100 do.. z.... 20 100 do • b3O 2034 - 12 Cam Of Amb R. • ..ISSX 2 do US 100 Penn. R .73Y 20 do. 734 100 Catawiesa ... E. 20 100 do • .....Prof 4031 100 do Fret 40X 100 do ... b3o..Pref 40,1 60 Ridge. avenue R.. 16 100 Ir inn Oil 731 i 100 5000 II SO- 2013 d s. Cp off. 103 X 300 do ....Coup off mot 100 do Coup off:lo3X 100 - d 0:... Coup 0ff.103% sax) State Os • lots MX MO City Os New Zdtin.lo6 1000 13 S Cp 6s 'Bl.. cab: 107.4 300 do cash 107 X 200 d 0.... .. • . cash. 107 X BOARDS 100 &Esq. Cana1......... 20 - 100 do 1311.. 20% 4000 Pittsburg 53 78 - 100 'Elmira R....pref , 51 23 Norristown R, 66 500 N Pen/18.10s . 90 Penua R. 733 HOARD. 100 NcElheny 0:1;1330. 835 100 US 6.20 B•conp 0ff.103% 600 US Con6s'Bl.caah.lo7X 600 do 660 do 108 caah.lo7# 200 do 107% • 4000Statoo6s 0983(i 1000 d • BOABDS. 50 Catawisei pref..... 40% 100 • • do., . • —.• • • 40%, 4 North Penna 3134 200 Phila & Boston .2 • 100 McClintock • b3O. 7 100,..d0 7 , 600 - do.' b 5... 900 Union Pet...dote., 334 100 Mcßlheny.... ••••• • 00 BM 100 Story Farm —...... '354 1 do 331 300 Ball. Creek— . 1300 Big Tank Ib3o. 2% 200 McClintock. ... bl 5. 7 1100 U e S e ' aO w ~ l oll Di 60 Pet Centre b 5. 43 350 Perry oil 3% RD Reading 6134 200 McClintock—. bl 5. 7 9 f.,0 Cartin' 2 -- 2 91 200 Reading '''' 65 100 Corn Planter . 4% re Division Canal Co. flit IEB4 86.7E5 27 . • .•...139,620 70 • --4146,408 . 87. .. $6,029 40 •.• • . —.108,621 00 • 112,650 40 THE WA.R PRESS, (PUBLISHED WSPALT. ) Ts* WAIVNLESS will be sent to subeeribors by mail (per annum in advance) Gip Three copies 5 00 Five copies •.•. •.••'v.•»•••••. . 8 Oa TOR copse 8 •• • • .1 , 44 ;•• •• • **** .••• ** • *** • ....... 15 00 Larger Clubs than Ton Will - he charged at the same rate, $1.50 per copy The money must always accompany the order. and fn no instance can these terms be deviated from, cur they afford very /fine more than the cog Of Mew. Air Postmaaters Are requested to act an ciente fee The was Paws, • Agir• To the getter-up of the Clab often or twanty. extra copy of the Paper will be given. at.the Board compared Vith the latest prices or Monday: • , . • Trice. Mon. Adv. Dec. United StateB 58, 1581, rag...../07X MS .. g United States 6e, 1881, oorrp... .107,X 107 X .. .. United States 7.3)e - ......11014 • IIOX . United States 5-228,- coup . 110 X 110): • • ;‘,. United States cart, car. .... .... 94 of .. : .. American Gold • - 221 210 2 .. Tea nessee 68 ' 40 5 -• .. Missouri 68 85 65 • ' • • Atlantic Mail 185 196 ••• • • Pada° Mail l 7s Dew York Central Railroad-1 2 / 5 M 125 X ~• • Ens ~. • - lfilli 1 04 '. • • " 5 - Erie Fleferred 108% 108 X.. ••• - . .. Endson•ltiver • • 1/43( 1103( 2 Readin 127% 12S '—• g After g theßoard netnarket was - Broady and rather more firm. New York Central closet:l at 1253 Erie at 103 X, Iratison at 114; Reading at 1273 x, 011011.1 g.. an Southern at 76X k' L, Illinois Central at 126, Rook at 104 Xi Fort 'Wayne at 1063.8 Northwestrrn at 50. Northwestern Preferred at 89:012mberland4rt 603Cfloicksilver at 793‘. - Sesni•Weekll . Bevies, sir the PheatielphLlV" Markets. SEPTSOMBER I.3.—Bvening, the "produce markets arc dull and' prices are drooping, owing to• the' rapid decline In geld and i'or2 exchange. The demand for Flour is limited and the market is dull. Wheat is lower. Corn and Oats -ars:quiet; - Fisb are rather dull. Fruit is less plentr: Naval Stores , are'unchinged. Coal Cli is dull and lower. S.eels 'are him. Sugar has' de- Whisky is very dull. ' Wool' is also dt11,,. and thersis very little doing. There is . very - little 'demand for Flour, and this" market hr dull. Sales' comprise* about 1,000 ;bblis Blue Rldgcrextra family on terms kept secret._ Theo retailers and bakers are tnying at from slo.soeill for superfine, $10.50@11.75 for extra, and $12@13 ••bbl for fancy brands, according to quality. Rya , OlOUr 111 , ,eelling• in a small' way at' $10.2,5@10.50 ' , bbliiioorn'Aloal is scares, and we hear of no sales. aitiare-=`Thore is very little doing in Wheat, and. hOlding offeror lower prices"; about 4,000' 'bus sold St 245@nbec for eblamon to prime -reds, the latter for-new :Pennsylvania, and. 275@285c ."fr bus :for white, as to -onallty. Rye.; selling in a small 'way at 180t0185c WI bus. " Coin is less active.; ,about bus - sold at 1:"2e for Western mixed and OM, - yellow, the latter in , the cars. Oats are without :change ; small sales are making at %PIM for new, ;and 93@e5c 'll ; bus for old. . _ papvisior „ m.--,There is very little 'doing .in the wayof Sitles,and.holdere are less firm In their vievril. Mess-Pork is selling at $41043 bbl: Mess - Beal - is , selling'in a small way at $20030 per bbl'for country and city-packed. Bacon is selling in a small way at 20@25c for plain and faney-bagaed Hams. Shouldere and Sides are firmly held at 19@206, but there is very' littlb doing. Green Meats are scarce; a Bale of balk: Shoulders wasmade at 180? 114 which is an advance. Lard is scarce and firmly held, with small sated oC barrels and tierces at 24@250 lb. Butter is in de-- - mand; with sales of solid-packed at 420500 '4l lb for fair to prime. Cheese is firm, and selling at 22@254 114 Eggs are scarce at 25@25c per dozen.. . MaTALs.—There is very little doing In'pig•Metal `and prices aro unchanged.. Small sea of, Anthra cite are making at $67@73 tip ton for the three num- - bars. .Scotch• Pig fs selling in a small way at rear' 77 fi'ton.. Manufactured Iron is in , gond demand, and selling at full prices. Lead—We hear of no sales iyortyr of notice ;,Gslena lequoted at leyo ' dull lb.' Copper is at72o-for - sheathing, and 500 • for yellow rnefaVoit . • BA.RK.—lit No. 1 Quercitronis dull, and We hear of no sales. It is held at $5l cla'toni• COAL.—The market is very dull,'and therels. very little doing.. Sales are makineat $10.50@1l 50 ft , ton free on board. ' • - • • CANDLES: are "inactive; amalb saleecdAdanisul tine are making at 35fg400 . , and Tallow Candles at from 25@260 'fit); Corsica is dull, and the sales are limited ; sales of Illeare making at from 40/3.50c 13 lb, task and four months. 0077011.—The market is dull, and there Is very little doing at the decline ; small sales of Middlings are reported atslBo@l93e cash. • ' • Fissi 'are, rather dull; 800 bbls sold onprivate. terms. :.Sales froni store are making at $30@31.- for' No. 1; $20@21 for No. 2, and $19@20 bbl for No. 3s; Pickled Herring are scarce. Coofish are.in de-' nand at 9c 1;1 lb. Fuurr.—There is little, or nothing doing in fe• reign; domestic fruit is coming inless freely. Apples are selling at 50@100c '4O basket, and Peaches at fse= 20001 basket, according to quality.* • FEATIFERI3.—SmaII sales of prime Western are. making at 05a V It. Hors are firm and• selling at' 35@40e3fl lb for old crop. . • Flay is In steady demand, -with _sales of baled at s3o VI ton. 11 - rms.—There is very little doing ; the assocla . lion are getting - 10@l70 for green, and butchers' 'weight at.ll@l2c.ll lb. - ' • Luzinwals firm but inactive, with sales_ of white • Pine at,'s3o@3s,and yellow do at $27@281 DI feet. Elotasszs is firm, but there is very little doing; small sales of Cuba are making'at 85@1000 NAVAL STonas.—There is verylittle doing, and prices are lower ; small sales-of Spirits of Turpen " tine are making at $3.50@3.60 gallon.. Rosin is in a small way at $42@45 bbl. - Oins.—Lard Oil - is scarce, and - prices 'are firm ;. *salea of No.l are making at $2@2.05 gal. , Fish Oils are firm, and prices are looking up.. "Linseed Oil' is selling at $1.65@1.68 'fl gal. , Petroleum Is dull, and lower; about 1,000 bbls sold at 49@6e6 for crude ; 714760 for refined in bond, and free at from • , 80@8503 VI gal, as to quality. • FLA STNR is selling . at $5.50 31 ton. Runs.—Small sales of Rangoon are making at 163-i. ,@I6X-31 lb. • • - • ; ' SISKDS.--Cloverseed is coming In more freely; mall sales of new ate making at $l3 50@14. 61 lbS. Timothy is firm, with sales 400 bus at $6@6.50 31 ba. Flaxseed sells on arrival at $3.70 VI bu, which is an 'advance. • • Srinrrs.—There is very little doing in foreign, , but holoara are firm in their VIORS. N. E. Rum is t-^a,nr: 2 ll;Ehietry-in-very dull,' and prices - lit er - le - wer small sales 'of Pennsylvania bbls are making at 1840, and Western at 1866 3l gallon. • SUGAR has declined. The sales are. limited about 400 hbds . Cuba at from 21@223i0 /8 lb. Refuted sugars are quiet. TALLOW is quiet ; small sales of city rendered are making at 19%018 lb. Tomacco.—There is no change to notice in leaf or manufactured, and the market is quiet. Viaisosat.—Corn . Vinegar is selling at 26c 3l gal in bbls.- ' WOOL.—There is very little doing, and the mar ket is dull; small sales of medium and coarse are • making at 111@l160 • The following are the receipts of Flour ant Grain at this port to-day : . Flour 1,900 bids, Wheat 8,700 bag, Corn 2,200 bus. 4,400 bull. Oita New York Morketo, Sept. 13. • BitEILDSTIIPIPS.—The market for State and West& ern:Flour is firmer with more doing ; sales of 3,003 .bbis at $9.50@9.75 for superfine State; $9 80@9.95 for extra' State ; $10@10.15 for choice do ; $9.50@9.TS for superfine Western; $9.80@10 50 for common to medium` extra Western ; $10.65@11 for common to good shipping brands extra round hoop Ohio,. and 511.05@13 for trade brands. Oath are quiet at 89g 000 for Western. The flora niarket Is more active and rather more steady ; sales -80,000 bushels at $1.60€11.61 for mixed Western; $1.63 for high mixed, and $1.63 for good mixed West ern in store. • hleago Breadstuff's Market, Sept. 19. The Flour market was very dull, and there,was• but little done. Advices from New York were un favorable, and prices iltere were nominally 10@15e lower. With the limited supply offering, and the small' businesa doing; It is almost impossible to give any fair quotations. We quote winter extrar. nomi nal at the range of 111012.25 for white winter f. and spring extras at KOMl—the Upper price the ex treme rate. • • • The Wheat market was dull; and prices declined fully 3@4c VI bushel on , gill grades. At the decline there was a fair demand for No. 2 spring. The • : Ofierings of 'the higher grades were light, and but ilittle was done: The sales were at' $2.05 for No. 1 :red; $2@2.02 for .No. 2 red, $1.92@1.93_ Air rejected ''red; $2 for No: 1 spring, and $1.9501.01-for- No. n spring—light sales being made early at 4198. The market at the close was quiet at $2.05 for No. 1 re"'" $2:02 for No. 2 red;s2 for 'No.I spring, andel" $1.96 X, 61.003‘ for No. 2 spring—all in store. - - LETTER-8A.618 AT THE MEROMAZITIP 7tXtIZANCiBLPHEEJIMSL:PII7I6 Ship Lady Emily Peel (Bi)i.Pen,llY 3 Av,12.40,1.1.d=71 Brig Primus (old). Sehw . arling:lPOit. Or mA:t. • PHILADELPHIA BOARD OTTRADF!. JADEBB Nixr.srazar, - '• • • . . . ANDREW WHEELER, . Committettof the Month. EDWARD Y. TOWNSEND, • MAINE : INTELLIGENCE. POET OF PHILADELP:III..A;IikekiIL.I3,IB64. Sun Rises..s 48 I Sun SetB..B 12.1 High. Water—HlSS Brig WappoO, Dolan, 9,days froDLSagna, in bal last to .1' F. Batley & Co. Reports that the brig Agile sailed 26th'ult; from Sagua for Philadelphia. Left bark Oolcord, Oolcord, for Boston, to sail in t days ;!bilgs Nebraska, Hooker, for Philadelphia, in 7„days ; John Crystal, Barnes, from Philadelphia, ti arrived 29th, disoharging. Brig Tempest, Wilson, it: from Glace Bay, with ice to H Bndd. - • Schr F Keating, Rich, 4. days from New York * -with redo to captain. Schr Rachel Jane, Itoath, 3.days from New York, with mdse to captain. Sehr Ida r. Howard, Anderson, 8 days froin.Port loud, with mdse to captain ' Schr Reddington, Clark, 10 days from Calais,-with lumber to Gas kill • . • Schr Lizzie Raymond,. Lord, 3 days from New' York, with,salt to Wm Bumm & Son. • Sphr W Phillips; Smith, 4 days from Provi dence;• in ballast to captain. Schr .T B Creamer, Mains, 4 dSys from Salis bury, Md. with lumber to J W Bacon. Schr Yecomico, Morris, B:days from Concord, Doi, with grain to J W Bacon. Schr Florence, Bealby, 4 days from Laurel, Del, with lumber to J W Bacon. Steamer. New ork, Davis. 21 hours • from New York, With mdse :Y to W.P Clyde. • • • Steamer James Hand, Shropshire, 21 hours from New York, with , mdse to W P Clyde. CLEARED. Schi V Sharp, McElWee, Fortress Monroe. Soh': Wm Kanahan, Fenton. Washington. Schr: F Keating, Rich, Boston. Sala' Eva Belle, Lee,Marblehead: ' Schr H W Godfrey, Weeki, Boston. , Schr Sll Gibson Bartlett, Boston. •'' Steamer J S Slariver, Dennis, •Baltlmore.• [Correspondence of the Philadelphia - Lewes; Sept. The British steamer Joao, Captain Thompson, from New York, ostensibly bound to Barbadoes, came to Delaware Breakwater last evening - and coaled. One of her crew-deserted and reported she wasa blockadarunner. I boarded her this (Sunday) morning, and on examination of her papers fotuad she had been captured as a prize and sold ; her name as above, and registers 237 tone. Immediately after my departure she hoisted the British colors and pro ceeded:to sea, The following vessels are at anchor in the road 'stead : Steamer Express, for Fortress Monroe; brig Agnes; for Barbadoes ; schooners Spray, for Fort ress Monroe; II G Bartlett, for Beaufortl - Acklam, for Providence ,• Ossuna, for Boston ; •E -A Cunt.. Inings, l for. Washington, together with five square. riggen vessels and about forty schooners. wind quite fresh fryoomurstheaneo.,rth. Allow WA= AIIEMORANDA. Ship Vancouver (Br), Carlisle, hence 11th nit, tot Liverpool, was seen on the 28th, lat 42.56, ion 59g. Ship Philadelphia, Poole, from Liverpool 23d ult. for this port, Was spoken on the 25th, 56 miles S W of Tuekar. • ; Ship Clara Ann, Carter, from Bath. for this port, Was spoken Uth list, Cape Cod N W by W. 60 miles. f Ship Emily Augusta, Strickland, from St John i NB for Liverpool, was spoken 29th ult, anchored ' off Saltees , Island, by the steamer Malakoff, and deported she, had been on shore on Connivey Rock, and, carried away her rudder. The steamer tendered her services, which were refused. Ship Northampton, Morse, cleared at Liverpool 27th ult for Bath, Me. ' • - Ship Nountaineer, Lodge, cleared at Boston 10th inst. or New Orleans., Ship Lookout, Nugent,' 99 days from.lionoiniu, at !New Bedford 10th inst., with 2,447 bbls sperm, and. 617 bbls whale oil, ke.,_on freight. Steamship Pennsylv ania, Smoking, for New Yorks, ologed itt .1411117091 VI