■ ■ t . ’■ ,■ ovs •••'; •;. * • ■ ' ■ • ’ • . . -i ' , : : , ■ .f-.? - ; : r \:V L‘ i ■ \ : -Y. '[ -^‘'T M ' I '’' 1 - : , '.. : | . ry, ' "'! ■■ ■ ' EHIS DAILT PKKSg, i “®* TH *iTwo Doi.LiKa akd Twmrrr- CTrECwnc*to*THAEKlloaxHa. lnywlably In tor Sh» Um* ordmod. * - ' **" AdwHMmettta In»srt#4 »i the iim> rtttt. SM* IKI-WKEkI-T WtKSS, : - IMW to Rnlntiibgrt, y ITS domam Pur Amro*. U 9AWU9,> "IFiTII——MIIMII !■■«■——lMl I W JgArARITTAYLOR’S NeW'NOYEI' JOHff GODFREY’S FORTUNES, BELATED BY HIMBBLF. A STORY OP AMERICAN LIFE. BY BAYABD TAYLOR. Author of '• Hannah Thurston, >' "Views-A- fool Lands of the Saracen, 1 ’ Ac., Ac. ras yob. lidmo.-.t,..; prior, $*,35, NINTH THOUSAND HEADY, Read what the critics say of it • The language Is universally nervonr and idiomatic. In some portions of tha VofS uf 1 scarcely too much t< say that its natnrai simplicityis a genuine teho of Swift or Daftl S* 1 ! 1 ® this, his latest work. ”-2YoTFfm«s; 1 “ “ ty forM *> , This ts, in all respects, the.best novel Mr Tavirtt. Ims produced. It contains no flings againßt Ohrmtisn?r2 r and seems to have been written with a serteH to condemn vioe and extol virtue. ’ HANNAH THURSTON, BY BAYARD TAYLOR. OHE YOB,-lamo .....PRIDE, $3, From the Albany Evening Jonrnal. • r It i» worthy of the genius of He author. The atorv isfpU of character. Its depiction of life i 9 graphicaid truthful. Hannah Thutßton will he eagerly read ’ 1 From the Philadelphia Daily Press, mod?s 6 t dtspla?£ 0 e 4 r n ®whi!k n oo ** his modest aisciatE er, which has awe 11’80> tat ask nint bflitv 1 Md'iott 11 of c A r , ol « n! ordinary proba miity, aad us whole tone is healthy. It is a htnrv arn phattcally •racy of the soil, ’ which will greatly iT crease its writer's fame." wm * raauy la ‘ HURD & HOUGHTON, PUBLISHERS, (FOB G. P. PUTNAM,) •: HO. 401. BROAD WAY, HSW YORK. } £L“d , “ tb,mll prBpaid *« UP- SNAKES, AND” CRAWL. Heady; Friday, Jam. a. 3, i§6s. SNA K E AT THE STOLEN BRIBE. of4atettBa taterast, tytie author of The Wild Scant of the Mountains, ”“ Theßollicbta* Esager, Ligtitfoot, tha Scout; ’ > &o. Snakey'a war cry, “Wake to anakaa. and crawl,” becamTa terr” to his dueky foes. The -whole book la superior to auy tiling that has beau iasuad for a long time. " Tha following is a list of ■ 1 MUNRO’S TEN-CENT HOTELS, ” which are-now aa familiar as household words; • .. - s T4 O TT?^ Ilt9ra - 2- ThuTiaTw’s Retreat. ; 3. The Trackf«' « Man-Eaters 7. Charlotte m, 8 - ™? 8 , Death-Face 9. The Indian-Slaver to Ooean l, Trlninph.' I—.*he ©cean.Rovers. 13 The Tory Outwitted; 14 2ake Sternum, the Lion-hearted Scout, 15. The Scourge of the Seas. 16. The Captive Maiden. 17. Loag-heirged oods .' T lB i Tt >e Wild Seoulof tne Mountains. -19. Ttie-Forast Lodge. 20, The Rol lickinglangers, ' 21. Battleanake Dick, or tha Flower’ of the Wigwam, ; 22. Rickety Tom, the Hover. 23. The imps Of the Prairie, or the Slasher of tha Cave. 24 Tha Bobber's Terror. 25. Joe. the Sarpint. 26 Lightfoot? ihe Scout. 27. The Giant Spy Of Banker Hill. 28. Scar- Cheek, the Wild Half-breed. 29 Squint-Eyed Bob. SO. Snakey Snodgrass, or the Stolen Bride. These books are for sale by all nows agents and book sellers, and sent' (post-paid) on receipt of price, TEN CENTS EACH. ‘ r ’ liberal terms to agents. - GEORGE HUNEO & CO., )ai3-2t No. 13T WILLIAM Street, New York. JyjEW BOOKS I NEW BOOKS ! J last received by . ASHMEAD & ETANS, (Hazard’s old stand), Ho. 734 CHESTNUT Street, CHATEAU FRISSAC; 08, HOME SCENES IN FKANCE. By Olive Logan, authoress of “Photo graphs of Paris Life. ” Ac. • ELIM;. OK, .HYMNS OF HOLY REFRESHMENT. Edited hr the Rev. F. -D. Huntingdon. D. D. WET DAYS,AT EDGEWOOD. J. K. Marvel’s last kook. HOUSE AND HOME PAPERS By M's Stowe • COUBIN ALICE. A Memoir of Alice B. Haven. AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A NEW ENGLAND FARM HOUSE. A Book t>yN, H. Chamherlaih. STUDIES FOR S TORTES. Jean IngaLow’s new book. KITTY TBEVILYAN'S-DIARY. By the author of “Sehonberg-Cotta Family.” ja9-tf IOCK LINDS A-Y & BLAKISTON’S i-OUcf. PHYSICIAN’S-VISITING LIST f0r1865 now ttffdy in every variety and style of binding, including tie INTERLEAVED edition, with pages lor special Memoranda, Ac, DIARIES FOR-1566, s-i various styles of binding and sizes ALSO, HOLIDAY BOOKS of all kinds at LOW PRICES. ■ LINDSAY A BLAKIBTON, , Publishers and Booksellers, deW No. 35 South SIXTH Street, above Chestnut. M I sOE L LA XT'S OIJS AND LAW BOOKS—The best and rarest collection in Phila delphia.—Hallowell’s Sliakspeare, fifteen hundred dol lars, and other Books, equally scarce, for sale at 'iiy CHESTNUT Street, ja2-3m JOHN CAMPBELL. SJUE AMERICAN GAR*COMPANY, Thirty-first -and Xoenst streets, WEST PHILADELPHIA, (DAB BUIIiDEBS, IRON POUNDERS, AND MACHINISTS, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that this Company 1* now prepayed to receive orders for building ALE, KINDS OF GARS: The shops of the Company being supplied with the latest and most approved labor-saving machinery, will enable it to execute all orders with great despatch, and in the very best manner. . THE COSIP ANY haß also purchased the right to use BOTTBRES A MIRIMONDES’ Patent Anti-Friction Self-Lubricating CAR JOURNAL BOXES, 3and Mr. THOMAS H. JENKINS’ Patented Process for HARD ENING CAST IRON. \ ' -■ ALL THESE PA TENTS the Company intend using for and on aIT the Cars built in their Works—thereby greatly adding to the utility and durability of the work performed. In addition to the above, the Company is prepared to execute orders for STATIONARY AND PORTABLE ENGINES, NININO AND PUMPING ENGINES, 3T,OW I H G ENGINES FOR FUHNACES AND FORGES, ROLLING MILL WORK, iw., SILL AND FACTORY GEARING, and Including ALL KINDS OF WORK connected with a GENERAL MACHINERY BUSINESS. Also, all hinds of Iron and Brass Castings and Smiths' Work executed in the yerybest manner, hoth as regards design', material, and workmanship. . Drawings and estimates made at the Works free of chsrge. . WS: ■ . ■ JAMES W. BARRETT, Secretary. IX J-r. DOI’TEBBR, dalO-thstulm ' SUPERINTENDENT. (Q OLD’S PATENT IMPROVED STEAM ■WATER-HEATING apparatus I'OK WASHING AND.' VENTILATING PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND PRIVATE RESIDENCES, XAifUFAOXCrBBP BT TBH CMOS STEAM AST WATEB-HEATISG or FENNBYLY AS lA. -James jp. wood «& co., 41 SOUTH FOURTH STRBKT. B. M. FELTWELL, ’Sup’t. 'SOME CHRISTMAS GIFTS.— '.'IC ADOEHMBHTS FOR HOMES OF TASTE : lAH GASES, HAKQING VASES, IBS, XVI VASES, Ilea wirn Bare and Choice Plants. ITTE POTS. OBaKGE POTS. IF BTH POtS, FLOWER POTS, : Jt Numerous Styles and Patterns, tperb Ankles for the CONSKKVATOBY, miiULE, PAKLOB, LIBKABY, and , ROODOIB. Imported and for sale by S. A. HAEBISOW, Ko. 1010 GEEST A' 0 f Street .BE THE NORTHEASTER!— METILMC WB&THER d WIHI>OWBANDd lutally exclude OoLD, U&, and DUST from doors and window* the rattl’ng: of sashes, eaye one hall the fuel! muted for five years. ; ’ »r applied by 111 A, LOSST, 38 South FIFTH Street, v • Sole Agent foi .Peensylyania, mta Wanted throughout the State. ja!2-lay* ifiT F URNIT tJREi ~ MOORK 4 CAMf’IOSf, *Ol heath PBOOND Street, - u 52 the decline in the market In the itlh- re * Purchasers will please call and *ses 6m . VrRQINWAXOF ANTILLES. « Wwttfyt»#»i'4pri ***6 &sce «Su®s:, If is the men wonderful com- InVU.l n VU. nor I 'tli« la i? e i. I>er o,lalk . Puwder, mair- Sjdittl y " r n _ l * i 'i 7 . lts , composition.- It bßia* ',tV‘? £l Wps frfr L Vlr * l F Was ! teace this ex >nni f .'S ir - fcail^™l esorvin “ ll) , oB^iD * m*»initlt ■ •'■wSftftir 1 * SN O D GR A S S; COMfJM YOL. 8.-NO. 143. CURT AIM GOODS. I. E. WALRAYEN, " “phonic hall, tl» CUES TNIIT ST RE ET, OFFERS A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF WINDOW SHADES, PIANO AND'TABLE COVERS, . PICTURE TASSELS AND CORDS, _ LACE CDRTAINS, GOLD AND WALNUT CORNICES, ■ -\ - ... '■ • ’ brocatelle cfrtaihs, Furnished in latest Parisian design,, isstf W A T .RA YEN, Tl 3 (ITTESTNITT streat sewmgmachimi SEWING MACHINES, trio chestnut st. SCALES. fAIRJBANKS 1 gCALBs’ ■ ‘ ■ -f WAREHOUSE, 715 CHESTNUT STREET. ■ ' • '.‘x; ’■ ■ ■; . : de7-tf WATCHES ANO JEWELRY. FINE WATCHES, JEWELRY, SILVER AND PLATED WARE, CORNER ARCH AND TENTH STREETS.' •rooehes. Sleeve Buttons, Armlets, Bracelets, B«ri Pifjs and Rings,-Tea Sets, Ice Pitchers, Waiters, Goblets, Forks, Spoons, &«. *** Watehes repaired and Warranted. Old Gold; Diamonds, and Silver bought. no2o-3m HARRISON JABBER. QENTS-* FVRNISHINO <BOO.OB, QHRISTMAS PRESENTS YOB GENTLEMEN. ’ A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF • SO&RFS, GLOVES, ' TRAVELLING SHIRTS, • SUSPENDERS, MUFFLERS, HDKFS., And every description of GENTLEMEN’S FURNISHING GOODS, SUITABLE FOB PBESBNTS. LINFORD LUKENS, del4-t{ H. W. eor.'SlXTHland CHESTNUT. TONE SHIRT MANUFACTORY. A The enbserihers would invite attention to their IMPROVED COT OF SHKiTS, which they make a specialty in their business. Also, eonetantly receiving NOVELTIES FOR GENTLEMEN’S WEAR. J. W. SOOTT & 00.. GENTLEMEN’S BURNISHING STOKE, No. 814 CHESTNUT STHEET, Four doors below the Continental yiGOR FOR THE WEAK. B I O K R ES N ES; ob, EI F E KEJO V- E NAT OE. The uses ol this powerful invigorantmay he summed upin a few words. It relieves, with absolute certainty, all physical disabilities ; enres nervoiif- debility of every type, restores the exhausted animal powers after long continued sickness; prevents and arrests premature de cay; is a vitalizing, strength-renewing cordial to the aged; may be relied upon by woman in ail her physical difficulties as a harmless and sure restorative; Is an an tidote to the consequences of early indiscretion in both sexes; can be relied upon as a specific for paralysis,par tial or entire ; has no equal as a stomachic, in cases of dyspepsia; sustaiaenot only the physical strength, but the constitution Itself, and is.in all respects the best tonic depuratlve asd anti-bilions cordial in existence. Sold by JOHNSTON, HOLLOWAY, & COWDEN, No. S 3 North SIXTH Street, Philadelphia., One Dollar per Bottle, or six Bottles for $5. Sold by Druggists generally. . ■ Sent by Express anywhere, by addressing HUTCHINGS & HILLYEB, Proprietors, de6-tuths3m-fp No. 81 CEDAR Street, New York. nOFFEE ! COFFEE ! ! COFFEES!! V--' Are you a lover of good Coffee 7 If so, to families wo would Bay, brown your own, in tha PATENT ARO MA-SAVING FAMILY COFFEE ROASTER, which will •ave more than its cost in six months, and always in sure the coffee in its parity and fragrance. As they are simple in construction, andeasily and quickly operated, Without liability to burn either fingere or coffee, no family should he without one. PRICES.—Ho. I, roasting from Xto l)f pounds, $2.60; No. 2. from x to 4 pounds, *3.60; No. 3, from 1 to 8 pounds, $5. • Families at a distance, by clubbing and sending their orders for not less than three, to be forwarded to one address, shall be entitled to a discount of 20 percent. For sale by all leading Hardware, House Furnishing, and Stove Storeß, and by the undersigned. ' To Hotel Proprietors, Grocers, Hospital Managers, Coffee Manufacturers, &c., we beg to say much of the strensth and flavor of coffee is wasted by imperfect roasting, and more by the addition of water to bring up Its weight, and of grease (often rancid) to give ita gloss. HYDE'S PATENT COMBINED STOVE AND COFFEE ROASTER is the only machine by which it is possible to roast coffee In quantities, as it should be,and retain all the aroma. . ~ - - . 3 From 26 to 40 per cent, is saved by the use of these ma chines, as we can well substantiate by testimonials from the leading hotels, and from many hospitals and *Bend for a circular and see testimonials from Continent al, St. Nicholas, and Fifth Avenue Hotels. ’ ; PRICES. . Ho, I’, capacity from 20 to 35 pounds.... 40 «« 2, hand or power, capacity from 40 to 70 pounds. 60 ** S, power, capacity from 80 to 140 p0und5..,.325 JX, 3. —These machines can in a moment be converted into a Franklin or close store for heating or other pnr goses, and are well worthy the attention of crocers M eing well adapted for heating their stores. - Agtntß wanted everywhere. For S al 9, whotoaleand gtaiI fi by Bijapßßj Solo Manufacturers, FIFTEENTH and WILLOW Streets, deW-KtothSw Ip Philadelphia. • TO THE PUBLIC.—THANKFUL TO L cor friends and the public for the liberal patronise bestowed upon us, we would inform them that, having made extensive alterations inottr estahiiehment, we are now prepared to execute Pictures to, the satisfaction of »U who may favor ns with a call. Having now at onr •ommand increased facilities, we take pleasure in so liciting a discerning public to compare the execution of onr work with that produced at any other establish ment in the United States. We would also state that aur ■. OALI.BRI IS FREE TO ALL for the examination of specimens. : Notwithstanding the advance or material used and wages of hands am ployed, we are yet furnishing Pictures , . AT THE OLD PRIORS. Photo Miniatures, « Ivorytypea. Idfe-eize Hoads in Crayon, Oil, and Pastel. . . Cabinet-size heads in Crayon, Oil, and Pastel. Imperial, Plain and Colored, 13- U, 8-10, d-4, and 1-3 "'carte de Vlslte Vlfiettes, fnllsize, 8-4, *«., $3.50 pdr Oarte<i® . * Attbrotypes. from 76 centsinpwsrds. Copies of Bare fa frevlnst, Photographs of «!l the prominent OeneraU tid distinguished men.&c. .&«•., . ; Outside Tie,. & CavPhotomphere, • “ 813 Street. A SAFE STEAM BOIIiEB. —THE XJL en ]j. criljer is prepared to receive orders for the • • HAEBMOH STb£m BOILER, ” in sizes to suit pnr chaeers. The attention of Manufacturers and others is called to the new Steam Generator, sential advantages in absolute safety fromdestructive explosion, first cost and durability, economr eE ioei, facility of cleaninriand transportation, &»•.. *p » “»' Pos sessed by any hotfer now in use, .These boiiers_ can be seen in oally operation, driving the extensive works.of Messrs. Wm. Sellers & Co., Sixteenth and Hamilton at S W. Cattail's factory, Hprnco street,Sclnirl klll, and at Ganed’sTremont MUI, FranhfOrd. , • JOS. HAHEIsON, Jit., ’ Washington BaUdlng, iZ74r South THIRB Street, RhlUdft. p'REDERICK BOLAND, A M» on fact tin rof every variety of ROOKIKQ GLASSand PICTURE FRAMES, and dealer in EUROPEAN AND AMEKIGAW ESaKiVIKOS, PHOTOGRAPH OTali FRAMBS. dn srreat variety." do3S Ito * No. -am North NINTH at:. above Raw pOTTON AND FLAX DOCK V and CANVAS. of all numbers and brands 1 Tent. Awning, Trunk, and Waron-cover Dnck. Also, Paptr Manufacturers’ DCer Pelts, Irom 1 to 5 reel wide i Pauline, Belting, Sail Twine, he. JOHN VV. EVERJtAWJr CO., 80. 103 JOSES’ Allay. •GUSH AM) CANNED MEATS. ■*- 600 bWa Meas and No. 1 Maotceret. 8, 000 cares canned Meats, Loestan, *O. . ; Foretfie by P. 0. BDIUIOCOH. SeK-Sin US North FRONT Stcoot, BfiTEEKA9INOT-W= w 5 ! ANO VOX.. of those whoare drafted cllo attftt H°3- and liable to military dntV aid\ionfK?? ¥* »“I i>Ue4 fnS s SL d m^*^f tO K*. I V t^ tll ? ftt ? basiaesa; we are rmSSSbiStSS “0* liable to the draft as substitutes Bad ’othS Ss!w l f M* at lower prioee. than any nut* nnlMi f.XI , P b> I “del phi a, The law allows na to KLlm a . ateB la the Navy or Marine Corps, to be “edited to °nj/ district in the Btata where the prinolpal „, J? persons living in or out of the 0 ; t I fh°3. re e»rolled..wul mralsh ns with a certtii aSSrt ea t i°' ment tjom-the Provott Marshal of yV/ r I, rc *’ they can haye enhstitutes sworn into them from E toaft. aiS BerTlCe ‘ Whicil will tally exempt „ ; ? o X r J 3B „ c ?, caa 1,9 * lTen !,<> ladies and gentlemen in thle *}*£ if - J l ™,?® have done business in thte line, and the following counties: Chester, Delaware, aSpt?n r ’ Betkii ’ jSnc!t3 >, Schuylkill, anil Horthi „^,B'“ Clnfchl!s . a ” 4 Gl nhs fnroisheil at the loaett Call or address MoHALLtr, PAXSOtT, StCO , „ Ml CHESTNUT Street, or Box 21)77 Pttiladelphla Post Office. fob the pbofxe of, , oAYAKNAH. —The undersigned,-a Committee K?*m» B<l by Meetiug of,the citizens .ot PUla aeipnia, convened for the purpose of takiac’ stem to Sf T 6 i tlle l s a ? tfl fellow-citizens of Savannah, £fI eafi v d * from V** c , rne l yoke of rebeUiou. and h*i®Bt upder the flag of the United States, »\ appea i & tbo ffooerous and patriotic people of Philadelphia and Pennsylvania. .The citizens of Savannah have embraced the drstop ?i? r tr a u y j°/i p f their^loyalty aud submission to the united States Government. The capture of the city closed the avenues of trade and supply, and Savannah, isolated from the eurroucding country, saffara for food. heid a * the rooms of the Board of Trade, on the 10th instant, Bishop Potter presiding/a' letter! addressed by one of the aldermen of Savannah to Messrs. J. P. Steiner & Co., wbb read, of which the fol lowing is an extract: - . * wx JThe principal object in my addressing yon, is to* atic ? on whether yen cannot *©t up a subscription for the poor and needy «f Savannah, as they are de-Uftitte of f-v&rything* and such a movement as this would en shrine the Philadelphians in ihe heart of every citizen of Savannah. In case you do something, do it at once: twenty thousand people are destitute of all you can imagine what are particularly necessary are bacon, flour, and potatoes.” * BVM.^^Li 316 ,. 0 111 ! 1158^ 1 ' , 51 iB proposed'that Philadelphia shall send to bavannah a cargo of provi sions: acd the Committee earnestly appeal to the libe ral acdpatriotic citizens of our State, and invoke their aid in thjs Christian effort to feed the hungry, to com fort the distressed, and to show our brethren who have been in aims against the constituted authorities of iha land, but are so no longer, that they may again enjoy the benefits arising out of returning harmony in 014 (JEBBS* Person; wlo deiire to contribute to the Pnml, are aI*MAEKBT n stre'S e ” i!>ttolia t 0 JAS - L ’ f;l AOHv)J{jr. Alonzo Potter, : ’ Wjb. Banter, Jr., A. G. CaUelJ, S. yanjhn Alerrick, C. B. JDarborow* B W, Cisrr, Samuel J. Christian, J. Gillinghfim ¥6ll, A. J. Drexel, Cadwalader Biddle, William C. Kent, Horace Biacby, Jr., Frederick Coll in s, Boarcs TO TREISSIIRBD.-THB GIRARD LIFE INSURANCE, ANNUITY. AND : oa» »0. * i-L '. ' DECEMBER 31, l£oi -Aa the period of five years has elapsed since the last JBonns was made, tn® Company has declared Roans ■«£. 6 , t0 fbe insured for whole l ife on all policies in force wnjcn were issced prior 4o January 1, 1862. Tims a ■SJS'&IS?®/'? 1 has ® lO5 addod to th * J Bl k for B ? ct 088 isBa.ad in 18-58 have W added; th°BB lsened in 1859, as well as all policies ■wMoh Participated in Bonus, No, 4, declared In Be cember, 1859, hare $75 .added for each. $l,OOO insured, «o, s SfC, “ .■ * * Larger and smaller sums participate in Hire proper ttons, without requiring any increase in the annual pre miurnto/bepaidiotte Company. , In addition to which on ail the above-named policies °£_^l c k fotdre premiums shall be paid, and on all other life policies after; they shall have stood thres years, and shall become claims within th 6 nest live years, there shall be paid a farther Bonus in the sams ratio as that now declared. As soon as the Bonds shall be credited to the policies on the Registers, a notice will be sent to each policy holder who participates, stating the amount. By order of the Board. Jrro. F. James, Secretary. . !TMja ,wa*» At the Annual Election f< the following gentlemen we Bank for the enduing year—' Augustus Boyd, J. B. Hodgson, • '/'• B. JSf. i&thban, 0. H. Beach, C. H. Uommings, B; G. Smiih, . J. W. Bullock, * ; I _ And at a meeting of the 1 BOTH* Esq., was unanimfl ja!3-2t OFFICiE OS' THE EMTERFRISE INfsTOANCE COMPANY, 400 WALNOT St Philadelphia, Jan.ll, lsesi: At tiie annual meeting oi die scocaholders of this Company, keM on the 9th day of January, ISSS, the following gentlemen were elected Directors for the ensuing year: . ; F. EATCHFOBD STARE, ~ ... . • WILLIAM MOSES, . ' NAhBEO FRaIZIEE, J. M. ATWOOD, . B T. TEEDICK, •; MORDEOAI L. DAWSON, ' GEOKGE H. STOABT, JOHN H. BROWN,- ■T. b. EEEINSER, . GEORGE W. FAHNESTOCK, ... JAMES L CRABHOBN. ~ WILLIAM G. BOULTON. Board ofDirector held this day. THo^montoo^P^ "tONTGOMERT re elected Vice President. jali»6t ■ ;• > .-- B. I»OCK STOOD, Secretary. - IKSURASTCK STATE OF PEEKS' The followinggenllemen 1 Directors jot the year 1865 * Henry D. Sherrerd, Charles Macalester, .Williams. Smith,. "Williain E. Wnite, George H. Stuart, Samnel Grant* <?r.» Tobias Wagner, a meeting of ihe Direct D. SHEEBEfiD, Esq., wf President of the Company jal2-6t WILLI THK I*IIUA»IJI.PniA SAIIOX* : ALBABK. JPbh.Adei.phia. January 11, 1865 „At the annual election fur Directors, held yesterday, the following gentlemen were elected Directors of this Bank for the ensmna y ear: ! Thomas Kohine, Edward S. Clarke, LewisE. Ashhurst, • Sami. W. DaCourser. John Welsh, Henry Preatil, Marshall Hill, George Whitney," J. £, Integer, r Benj. D. Godfrey, f'lagtorn> Augustus Heaton. J. Gillingham I ell, end at the meetin t of THOMAS BOBIES, Bid., President. ja!2-6t OF “THE HARRISON OIL COMPANY, Ho. 4-34 WALHUT Street. S * of the ..*• HAKRIj kgJI OICCOMPaNY, ” held January 9, ISGS thafollow wr*Damtd gentlemen were duly elected Directors thereof, to serve for the ensuing year * George Williams, I Coffin Colket. " : James W. Packer, • | Charles B. Collactay, William! Groves. ' At a Board of Directors, held on the same day. GBOEGB WILLIAMS was elected Presideat and M. SPIEGLii Secretary and Treasurer. ja!3 3t* -: M. SFIEGLE, Secretary, *>*■*• ICE OF TJXK INSURANCE »=£? COMPAHI OP NOBTH AMERICA. . Philadelphia, Jan. 11,1555. . .At a meeting of the Stockholders of this Company, held 10th lMt., lo elect Directors to serve fur One year, thefollowingeentlemen were duly choien: Arthur G. Coffin, Wm. Welsh, Francisß. Cope, Samuel W. Jones, Wm E. Bowen, Idw. H. Trotter. John A. Brown, Jas. N. Dickson, Bdwtrd S. Clark, C.hae. Taylor. S. Morris Wain,- Wm. Cummings, Ambrose White, John Mason, T. Charlton Henry Bich’d D. Wood. Geo. L. Harrison, At a meeting of the Directors, held t G. COFFIN, Esa., was unanimously re. ;jal2-3!. . , ' .chaklb.s KCSSf" - ASSESSORS : OFFICE, UNITE!) STATES INTBKNAL REYENUE, FIRST DIB JmiSSn PEANSILVANIA, NO. 4r3lN WALNUT bTlijiET. - • PHroADnipniA,- Jan 7. 1885. Notice is hereby givon that tho.offlcial lists of assess ments for *he FIRST'COLLECTION DISTRICT of Peam- Brivania. of the SPECIAL INCOME TAX, required to he made by provisions of. the Joint Resolution of Con gress of the Fourth day of Jaly, 1864, are now ready for examination, and will remain open for the inspection “ a ? apply for .that purpose, during -the ttn days next ensuing, exclusive of Sundays. wriffAh, specii >ing the particular cause, Barter, or thing respecting which a decision is request ed, and stating the ground or principles of errorcom piained of, W.iii. be entertained by me at any time be fore IhegOth mßt. . t-. WASHINGTON KEITH, . Assessor* SS'OCKBCOUBBKS* NOTICE THE N^nn^ra® 1 StockJioldsrgofthe COST.- COMPA& Y .will be held on MOHD IT, the Bth daj of Jan nary , 1865, at 3 o’clock: P. M. , at the office of the Company, Ko. a3O Sonth THIBD Street, Phila aeiphia. - An Election for President and Directors will be held on the same day and place. > E: D. BARCLAY, Saoretarypro tem. ; de23-tj&29 §s®““ ' ™ E AKSUAIj MEKTIKSOt'THE S 5 n ck M d ls* of the MECHANICS' OIL COM- E£l ,^, wIU J? e h „ eWat office, BOLLETIH BtFIIjD •M sacond flow ’ January j&ii-et* ■B3§P° J'kaft.-at a jhketisg «(““ ew«Misof theELBVKNTfi WARD, held Jaiinary lutla, it was . •-•- Ktsohed, That each of the d ifferent wards of the city be requested to send three delegates to the halt, N. E. ™?.wiw^ eC T ondand ,S^ at f IS Mreete * on WEDNESDAY EVENING. January 18th, to meet alike number from *he above w ard, to take some action ia relation to the nnV I nrm-!&i S Prov l e* 1 lr »rshai Genera! Try TODCHtNQ Quit QUOTAS on the coming DRaFT. ~ , r „ , PitEß. GLaDING, Chairman. Attest:. Thomas A. Fah?, Secretary, , .-.jais-si* 231“.PfE ASXI7AI, SIEETIXG OETSIE Stockholders of the TWELffrH-STitEETMAR KET COMPAN Y_wtil be hold at theOfflceofthe Oom- SaTr!»fr r i ! 4 r r°fn T f :E t LF ¥ I „ an l MAKE ET Streets. on SAfDELAY. 11th Inst., at 11 o’clock A M,, at which time an Electron for nine Managers, to serve the ease inz yen. wUI be held JOSEPH PAXSON, Secretary. Philadelphia, January 7, 1865, . jilO Bt MKK€AK'S-103 HBEiEt COS Philadelphia, January 2,1865 A?dJBA , Vf u £i JKS et JSS oftheStockholders of the MBE LIBBaET COMPANY will he' held on TBBSDaY, Wth instant,', at Hi o’clock P. M., in the Libraiy Boom. At this meeting nominations of’officer* Wil ba inade. JOHN A. McAbLISTEB ■l” s^' 7 ' Recording Secrets storage com. OF PH ILADEI/PB la.—The hDb.crtpUeL SStfw T .r 1 * r rSl a 5 J op f 11 a'- theoffice of the Compear Street, and at the Booms of the Piilla* tUlphia Board of .Trade, 505 CHESTHUT Street, nutii the-atock Is alt subscribed for. , 1 u „ £S' i 5 fdl ?* Ascriptions or instalments win &nm?FTr Je i?V? lr S, ieeis payable to the order of F. B. Esq., Treasnrer. n026-BthH Kwf"’' COAli-. COJUMST. a 2uual mestlas of the Stock holders will be held at the office of tho Compact- (No 3 Pork Bit FoaCB). 193 K South FOUKTIi Street, ou TUOrV BAY, January loth, ISOS, at 12 ..’clock M /far“ the purpose of eJectinsr.nve Directors to serve the:ecknine year, and trant actinit such other business.as may com- 1 cefoie the meetiug. _ ,• _ mg nislhSt . SAMUEL W. WRAY, Secretary. *<S=>' ISOTIOfe-MIBSUtHiEKs TO THE I3E? .Stt.tk'f:tho ■ •wfSTEKK TBSVSmrtVIJ-. <«*• COMPACT are hereby'notified thatthehr snbscrtptloos aro note due end payayieb”.or ms-...at the r’irst ha KESDAI. Jaanaty IS. Ji.. ". s^eiviary.. ar ——■=-=• xJOJB P> 2 i-A !>KU‘ H-X.A ISIF-rs *tKin. DISPBSBAfc*. H, B-WtawRUJTB •.r-f* OiKDEJi SLrestii. i» opan ddiiv irom Ut*i ?&l SklCT.kgW *M»! «"** « ®, lt «©;CUO£flOf -k»i "Y'** ‘ • * James L. Claghorn, Joseph F. Pk;’o, Edward 8. Clark, A. T. I,.uie, 6 ibson Peacock, ■ George T. Lewis, James G; Head, Au*. Heaton, S. T. Eooder, George W. Griffin, » Lloyd P. Smith, Samael Dorbirow, Edwin Kirkpatrick, ja!2-3t THOMAS KIDGWAY, President. , - jaS-thßin 61* [OMI EXCHAWG2 January 10* ISSS. for Directors, held this day* ere elected Directors for this -viz: . George A. Kohler* Alexander L. Crawford, John W Everman, - Wm. Bamm, Charles Hillman, John Williams. Board, this day, AUGUSTUS Jusly re-elected President. • fiOKGB J. HAMrLTONi Cashier. COSPANY of the YL VANIA, , ■ ■ Jaxtlury 11, 1885. ‘ nave been .duly elected as Thomas B. Wafctson, Henry G. Freeman* Charles 8. Lewis, George C.Caraon, Edmund C. Knight* John B. Austin. ors, held this day, HENRY r as unanimously re-elected [AM HAKPER, Secretary. he Board, held this day, ras unamnionsly re elected B. B. COMSGYS, , Cashier# his days ARTHCTR ■elected President. I PLATT,Sec : y, C. T, EE Elf, Sscretar: §|t f .tits* SATURDAY, JANUARY J. 4, 1805. NEW YORK COT. [Special Correspondence of The Press. 3 ' New Yobtt, January 13,1865. “THE INNOCENT PEOThB* have been endeavoring to commit one of their oha raoterletloally brutal murders, hoping that a dilaeeration oommltted by fifty or more would bring no one to the gallows. Brave fellows are these ; ls friends” of ours!—a sooreof them cannot bo fright ened off by any one. Moreover, they have a way of taking the law.into their own hands, and seemingly think no more of beating a man to a jelly than of beating their wives with sad-irons and sections of stove pipe. Mr. dn'o. Hecker havingondeavorod to prevent the excessive squandering or the public moans through the Instrumentality of an Injunction, uSrortunately prevented-the payment of accrued wages to the street sweepers.- The Citizens’ Association, out; of sheer pity for the men, offered to procure a modifi cation of the injunction so far as to admit of thok satisfaction. Some of :our best lawyers acted upon : this matter In committee. The sweepers having held a meeting, declared that they would not accept of payment save through the Comptroller or City Inspector, seemingly a political dodge. To cap the climax of the absurdity by criminality, a crowd of them attacked Mr. Hecker in the pity Hall Park; and attempted his life. He took refuge, however, in the Court House, and the doors were barricaded against the Inoiplent mob until the police should be notified. A lovely olass, this “la nocent people,” with a short memory ! else the re* collection of the grapeshot and bayonets of July, 1863, might have lent them a shadow of reason. This lawless, barbaric, brutal spirit will have to be crushed one of these days, or wo might as welllapse at once Into Yahoo-ry, and prepare to pass Into “jelly ” whenevertho “working-man” sees fit In stu pid passion to exercise his brogans npon us, CBIMIHALITV DOMIKAHT. - To adduce this as another instance of the lawless , ness and desperation of the specific times In which we of the metropolis live, will be supererogatory. Crime no longer jscent In conooalment, butjsaUent and insolent, projects his shadow over this tumult, racked city. Blood, fever, kleptomania, hideous or gasm, are satiating in our midst, and; seemingly we have no power-to crush those devilish Incubi, Oar magistrates are meeting and solemnly affirming that they will infllot the heaviest penalties upon those who carry concealed weapons. The press is calling for some means vthereby this mad amuckof desperation may bo impeded, If not absolutely checked. ... . . In New Orleans and San Francisco vigilance com mittees have been found to be singularly efficacious The number of divorces Is said to have Increased 22Kper cent, during Hie past year. The literary and artistic oircles have just been shocked by the most scandalous moral obliquity of a well-known, and talented Individual in connection with that of a Washington authoress of certain glittering inde-' ■ cencies, which have boemfreely copied by the press » and have given to her a questionable poetic fame! Altogether wo emulate-Babylon finely, and pos- 1 siblv hold a candle to Sodom and Gomorrah, : A,5500,000 ERROR, One of our great sugar refineries has just recom menced work, after haying been Idle since May last, . The proprietor at that time conceiving that sugar would undergo a very marked decline, refused to purchase any stock, aha, discharging all the hands! closed his doors, A week or two since he went into a calculation which developed the very indelectabie' fact that he had lost nearly half a million of dollars by his mistaken policy of inaction. He is now going to press matters in his refinery, “hit or miss,” to om- • ploy a cant phrase. - or YDYKE YERSUS WEED. The unsatisfactory termination of this - suit, through the failure of the jury to agree upon a ver dict, does not seem to have produced any marked : impression' upon the public mind. Judging from the conversation which one hears, the public is pro foundly careless asto which way the case mayultl mately terminate, iynong politicians the exact converse of the proposition holds true. Our mer chants and mechanics refuse to'admit it as one of the causes ce7ebres l oaring nothing for either of the gentlemen, desiring to see libel punished If com mitied, but having no personal preference what ‘ ever. . . Moreover, they are heartily sick of the in terminable thing, and very justly, too. How fortu nate ifjlihe Jarnoyce v.'Jarndyce, It might be buried in a fog, and never reach the world at large! ~ sAvksNAH « - - - is to bo aided. Such is the decision arrived at by' the Produce Exchange. - The hfow York and Wash ington Steamship Company Have tendered the use ol the steamer EebecaOlyde, and a patriotic and charitable firm has offered to do the lading. So it seems after aU the absurdity and burlesquerte which have unfortunately attached to the matter hereto fore, that we are to deposit our mite in the bread treasury of the recovered city. Curious this ne cessity for so much debate, for so many wild specu lations, for such stern suspicion of Col. Alien—ln short the necessity forso much corporate stupidity as a section of the Chamber of Commerce evinced, «*E STEAMER AUSTRALASIAN, : outward bound for Liverpool, ran aground on Wed nesday afternoon, and. remained there until mid night. So strong was the gale that the spray made clean breaches over her, much to the discomfort of the passengers. A portion of her cargo (some 1,200 packages) was unloaded during the evening with the hope of “lightening her off,” tjut without suc cess. It 1b said that some of the cargo was damaged by water during the transference. • Loi-d WbawncMlEe and Mr. Seward, The English papers publish the correspondence in regard to Lord -Wharneliffe’s proposition: to send aid to the “ suffering” rebel prisoners in the Worth. Mr. Adams, closing note Is as follows: 4 “Legation of the United Stat#s, “London. December 20. _ -KLT liOEp i I hav© the honor to inform you that I have submitted to the consideration of myCovern ment a copy of your lordship’s note to me of the 12th of November, and of my reply of the 18th of that month, and I havo now to apprise you of the conclu sion which has been reached. lam instructed to say that permission for an agent of the committee de scribedEy your lordship to visit the Insurgents detained m the military prisons or tho.TJnited States, and to distribute among them- £17,000 of. British gold, cannot be granted. lam sorry to be further constrained to signify to your lordship that with this note my correspondence, on this subject mast be bionght to a close. -I have the honor to be.mv lord. your lordship’s most obedient servant, ’ urn "v ; a Francis Adams. “ To the Lord Wharneliilc.”- 1 ta'Vi?I d iv ?!lar ? ol,ffe ’ ln scncHug the correspondence to the Times, says: ... > .“As I feel precluded from writing to Mr. Adams 13 leplyto the contents of Mr; Seward’s despatch, I ™i^ Us ™ I>p £ rtunlty ° r aDEweri ag some of its state ments. ,Mr. Seward asserts that the Confederate prisoners are not suffering unusual privations. This leads me to quote the following extracts from a let- bearing date. the 14th of. October, and written by a Unionist of I* it island, whose name in full Is at the foot S Prison In the North, from -Rook Island to Tort Warren, goes out this wall of suffer ing humanity. */. * Tnose 1,500 pale faces are be £h 6 «S 8 1 i*6 m pass me at the depot. Those Rbastiy pleading faces, I saw them here again, saw Pi l ® ® f tod-dead from want of nourishing lood. * * ,Hot.tears of shame for my Countrymen JxfShl 4 . 1 * 1 ® 3 ® ont rages upon humanity, tears of Pity ! or tbeso poor sufferers blind my eyes.’ . iW *iot B ,« m 0 ? y of IJ¥£ lnd tes arrived continuously in this country. It believed to be true, it naturally creates a desire to alleviatesuch misery. If untrue the best means to disprove It would bathe visit of a accompanied by witnesses, would Mr. Seward declines,' ® l f;>’. e ' v , a ss l ™ ld make it appear that the sum.ob lamed atthe bazaar wasmamiycontrlbutedbv those who had been ongaged in trade with the South. So far from this being the case, contributions > were re* Mivedfrom all parts of the United Kingdom, from the Continent, Canada, even from the Northern states. SL e ,5 0 7 elD i ®5 tor ¥ 1 S. at6 l' witll ’ and was all but em ip 1 1 T, at „ by ’ , th , e Southern ladies now j?..England. It cannot be supposed .that these ladies are engaged' in foreign trade, or that out of more than, ten thousand pereona who attended snd contributed to the result- there could be any f I S 1 r „ e M a u 1 fS rOl -S rtio r 11 any concern In the 1 &ou '?' 1 eannot pretend to understand what Mr. Seward means by the assertion that the war was; promoted by Britishnubjecl! “if they «? ' ?^f®"r£ av ® P r °tractedlt, are not these the Irishmen and Germans who have been induced by Northern agents totakeapart in it! Is it not probable that without their aid, so eagerly sought.' the war would have been over before this time 1 if either side has wandered from loyalty and patriot 3m,iiH,not , raEher tbe North, Whose loyalty tofts Constitution Is now exchanged for obedience to a despotic GrOTfirnmont, and whose patriotism is now exhibited/in the destruction of fellow-countrymen because they assert thatlight to self-government which has ever been declared inherent In all the people oi America, l To Mr. Seward’s epithets ‘urn STS??’ a ?. a M led t 0 tk ® act!oa ° r to® S OU S’ \ “‘Silt be replied that when the people of .i£a iv,L W ,fL 6 . r > e ’ J “ !s “gaiist those to whom they owed existence there was really something ‘unna waL 1 , 1 ? St b ® added that, at the end of a similar period their prospects were hopeless indeed If contrasted with the position of the Southern armies this day. Kir. Seward, how ler, appears still to oling to the fallacy so often exploded aiready-that the affair will be over in 90 days. As to the attempt to represent the efforts of ladles , on , behalf of their suffering brothers as a ‘grave insult’ to their own people, It employment of your columns to reply to matters so unworthy, I have only further tbattbo refusal of the Fede ral Gnveninient will not practically affect the die trlbution oi the fund, for which, unhappUv, we oan imd but too many recipients.” • ’ Tariff Decision—lron, The Boston papers publish the following decision of the Secretary of the Treasury : “Tskastuy JIapaETMENT, .Tan. 4, 15G5. : Thoappciilsol Messrs. Wm. E Rice & Co. : ( '2563 aBd 1 2364) are received, dated September 2. 18M from your decision assessing a duty of , one anil •thali cents per pound on certain 1 iron wire rods In ctiils,? : imported ex Herald ot the Morning and Golden Hind. , - fhe article in question Is rolled-down bar Iron™ n shape, round—] Attaches in diameter, bent into a .COli. . ... , : “ The appellants allego that the article Is specially provicod lor at l.fof cents per pound as ‘rolled or Bommerea iroD, not otherwise provided i'<Sr 1 ; “Utder previous tariffs It was decided that ‘steel ■n colls 5 was. not * steel In bars. 5 and hence there would appear to be some ground for the claim of the spi-ellauiß. A oareful examination, however, of the letter of the law shows that the phraseology in reference to steel differs from that relating to Iron— the law speaks o! steel In bars and of bar iron. “There It more than a : verbal distinction between bar iron and. iron in. bars, and It follows, conse quently, That the present .question is whether •rtucds less than throe.fourths of an Inch in di ameter- cease being rounds, less than three-fourths - of anmoh, &o. V by being, bent Into aeoll. „ : i! t e of the, 1 Bteei clause’ in the act ap wSniv 1864l 864 - wiil b °i found- to; Include voile,, docbtlets becauset;the plirase'blogy as to ■irt^ ! f,nt'ttio“w copied from former tril W 0 d colls 18 not included In the 't hlft ?r 0C ’ V' ,q tt( : sti! > r ' a bly beaauso It tbat iron In coifs was caroraoscl in tilts somewhat general term oi' bar iron.’ “ I am, very respeotfully; , ■„ W. P. Fessenden, , “ Secretary of the Treasury, ' ■‘•■To J ?■ Goouticn, Kfq , Collector, Boston ” r, ‘ ’AMJABiY; 14, XXXVlirtii COJIGRESS—-Second Session. Washington, .Tan. W. SENATE.. -L-. xT > PRKB»HTATIOKOff'PBTI^IOIf9, ? presented the peti .noß of citizens of Illinois, in behalf of soldiers captured m Ccl Sfcreight’s-raidintoGeorgU, setting forth that tJif fffw’ts to eectti e Ihslr release ;had been unavailing; tfcat they were suffering in r Southern and could not get frcsh air becauseihey were unable to bear ine ball and chaist \ and praying that sometbingbe done torelieve them from the slow.but certain death which 'fiwa-its them, deferred to tIU Military CommUtee. , Mr. CLARK, of New Hampshire, presented the peti tion of citizens of Virginia, asking for a Territorial Go Ttrninent instead of their present .State Government. to the Committee on IVrritorias, * ♦v Sf. Wifcconein, presented the petition of the Wisconsin Historical Society,asking for a redaction of tbe duty on imported hoo> s. Referred to the Coa mitiee of Finance. * . ~T J ?.r- Indiana, presented a petition of the ißaiana. Publishers 7 Association, asking for a reduction Oi the duty on imported pap»r. air. .SUMNER, of Massachusetts, presented thepeti- UOB of a citizen of Massaohnsett., who had lost a Go- VMnnioat bond, askingthat it be restored WUin. <■ ■. ■. t_Mr. SHEKMaS, of oluo, said tbs Secretary of the' Treason- bad lndicsted Ms intention to make good the loss of boros after the- lapse of a rear or so, bat if Trea sury notes were loht, thoy could: not be returned with ??i/ u . 1 t her .. l,! s;?lattoD, and such petitions as thatpra .seated Sumner should go to the GommUtee on. lt was so referred. ; 1 THk NUMBER OP MSN FURNISHED THE ARMY UNDER V „ OAtt off jiAST joi-r. .. ‘ f Delaware! offered a resolution in ..btiucting. the Secretary of. War to report to the Senate the^f? b l r tt f s*■“ Jifniebed hr tee loyal SUtee aider ■r. S W Fresidenffia. July last for 800,000 men. M ll * information .called for is very anxiously loosed for.by thousands of citizens in all the loyal i'i'> r eji>rtlcniarJy in those State* whirlr ~” p ,°. n *o States In rebellion, and which have l *° Gv f r T 4iaffe made upon their people by the 1 reclamations of the President. . .v,,?/sHI5 19 'i/ 0, t ® e .i 6mber i aB J» it- appearh I hat bat two “iuniiredand forty thousand of the flye hundred thou sand calkd for. were oluamed, .leaving:*,deficiently or two hundred and. encty, thousand In consequence of tuts, a draft of three hundred thousand has been order ea by the President, By the census of ISBO, the States my-MWlfittoif contained ia round num .twenty*tireo millions of people, including the ; oJ Columbia/ This number is. doubtless, greater 1 wi ¥ assume it to be theaame, The State W* represent here had a population of one hundred and twelve thousand two hundred and six ,teen Out of ihispopulfttioa Delaware famished itro Sj\ C o^“he f 16thTj"ly j“t* I fo “ y mOT nador ' tte ,„?L Kn ., id § a i’. a * son® abroad that the smalt State*, wnctii . dra ? ts HS; ecf»«ed with ease and rapidity’- np £l i e deSciency created by the *?'*“« l^ a , d / sfl . ia *?* Slates. I think the benale wiU gladly give ihe Secretary of War the oppor tunity to give the information, for it is oiiied foria the 'hiadest spirit to that ofilcer, and I think he will cheer- respond to it, ‘ W % of Missouri, thought the resolution ought : to ihe referred to the Committee on-Military Affairs, and it was so referred. . TBH OOKSt-LAE APPEOPniATIOSSi On motion of Mr.^HEEMASr;«'oiiio“,Yhe'coaBnlar appropiiation bill was taken op. r ;® r ; ■■HAIB.'-of JSew- Hampshire, moved to amend the bill by'increasing, the ..compensation of the consul at Halifax from two thousand doilari to three thousand '.dollars.' . . Mr. PEEK MAH was opposed to the increase nnlessit oonld be ehuwn that it was actually necessary Mr. CHiBDXiIR presented a letter front the Secreta ry of Mate recommending the increase Mr. BD aniER said be was opposed to any increaie of FRlaiy any where, much less to a general increase. Stilt he wan willing to look at individual cases as they arise, and decide npon them. Be thought the consul at Hali fax ought to to better paid than he: is, and he should yote.forlheproposition to increase hiaealary. Mr. SBbKMiK e&id if the consul at Hallfax was dis fatufied be would agree to Hud fifty men lnhls own State to telio his place. Mr. SB HHEIt.s Would they discharge the duties of thepokinon ? Air. tsßllififAN. They •would. • Mr. SDMflEll. I donocU. £ •Mr. ; CE4.KDLEK advocated tlie increase, after which, the yeas and nays weie called on the amendment, and resulted in a vote of yeas 12, nays 37, • So the amend mentwas not adopted. TZLB; tBMPXBB OS' *OSXIOO NOT BECOGNIZSD BY THB „ L_. __ UNITES STATES, ; ’ Mr. WADI moved to amend by in»Brtin* before the word Mexico •‘tbefitpnblio of.” He said tberew»ra . two Governmouts in Mexico, and we could recognize none but the hepnblio./JWo had nothing to do With the .Empire. Tne .aniendihentwaa adopted. ; ■ . The consular appropriation biil was then passed. THE SAViOSET TOWARDS INDIANS IN-COLORADO. Mr. HAKbAiS, of Jowa, bailed np the resolution in relation to the officers and soldiers of Col. Chevingtoh's command, suspending their pay and emoluments until anlnveetigation of their conduct towards certain Indian tribes m Colorado takes place- Mr. POMEEOYvof Eaneas, hoped the Committee on Indian Affaus had investigated this subject. He did «npt like to give a decision untUho heard both rides, and he did not like to hold tubordiaetes responsible for oteying orders He was opposed to hasty action. If Colonel Cbevington liad done wrong: he onghc to be pumped, but private soldlerß ought aot to be held re spousible for the orders of their superiors, . Mr. HARLAN said'the.isaolutiou only proposed a sufipeefeion of pay muil .the-facts were investigated The took part in this transaction were hundred days s ’men. He believed they were organized with a distinct understanding that they were to engage an this raid. They returned to camp loaded with plus der, consisting of ponies, buffalo robes, and Mexican collars. "Mr. NESMira, of Oregon, was opposed to imme diate aciion, ; The men were simply obeying orders was great deal or misplaced sympathy ex tended to the Indians. He had seen none of the gene roas and elevated sentiments in these people of which fcehad read so much, but had iound them treacherous thieving, and murderous,-and he believed it would be weU for the country, if they were all exterminated. y/q had tried to. civilize the Indians by translating Christ's Sermon on the Mount for them, but we never could impress Christian doctrines upon them, although wehad civilized them to some extent with powder and ofOregon.quoted several instances of Indianbarbamy, and argued that every attempt to treat them with kindness^had been unaucceasfal. Mr. COfiKESi, of California, was in favor of there solution, and spoke at lecsth upon its merits; Mr, EICHAKDSOK, of liiinois, believed the whole fault was with the Governor of Colorado, who acted no doubt upon the bid of the Administration. He was op posed to the rteolution because ii held private soldiers ‘for the fault of their commanding officers. He be lieved the Indians to be the most treacherous and perfi dious of people, but he did not think Government bad a nght topurßUBßuchamodeof warfare as Col. Che* yington did. Mr. DOOLITTLE* of Wisconsin, denied that a private soldier was bound to hill women and'chtldren if com manded to do so by the superior officers. Ho court mar tialwould convict a soldier for refusing to obey each orders. Be was in favor of the resolution. Mr DOMEEOT moved io strike outto much of the re solution as relates to the suspension of pay, and make it an order for Investigation. 1 Mr. WILSON moved that the resolution be so amend ed as to apply, to officers only, as it would be unfair to make it apply to because the laws of the army w®re very strict; and compelledprivatee to obey orders. Mr. POMEBOT accepted Mr, Wilson’s amendment la place or the one proposed by him, ■"■Mr. POWELL, of Kentucky, opposed the resolution ' becaufe he did not believe in punishing men without aiair trial.-/If the facta alleged against Colonel Ciiev ington were true, he ought to be tried by a court-mar tial and shot to death. Mr. SUMNER thoaght exceptional crimes deserved exceptional putishment, and this was an exceptional .crime./It was an a rocious crime, which tho Senate on ght to be e wilt to pn Dish. . . , . The amendment of Mr.'Powell was not adopted, and the original resolution was then passed. _On motion of Mr. HENDRICK*, of Indiana* the- Senate proceeded to the consideration of executive busi ness, and soon after adjourned till Monday, -HOUSE OF- BEPRESENTATIVBS. SaBSON, of lowa, presented the followiuf me mona.l fromSamuelVV ilkeuson,na‘mely: reprBsen|sto the Congress of the United States tout he is the Washington editor of 'the New York Tribune; that as . such he sent in on three different days witbm the current week to the offices of the American Telegraph Company, in thiß city, for tiausEDission to the Trthvne'm tilew York, telegrams announcing ;the removal of General Butler from the command of the Army of the James; that the telegrams were not sent, but were suppressed; that your peti tioner has been informed that th*y were suppressed by an order issued from the War Department; that your petitioner has reaeon to be ieve that a censorship of newspaper telegrams has been established in the city of Washington without Jaw, and that the same is exer ciaed therein without re*possibility, la violation of thefreedom of the press, to the injury of lawful bull*- ness, in violation of the rights of property, acd in nul lification of law. Tour petitioner further represents that this suppression of the newsof the removal of Gen. ."Duties extended to-dnd'included vhe telegrams announ cing the same, and to all the newspapers in the North ern and /Western States, by their representatives rest art in Washington; and that wMie- this C9U3orship and suppression wero in force in Washington the agent of om ot the NewTork newspapers at the headquarters of the-Army of the Potomac haa free let and license ac corded to him to send to his paper full accounts of the said removal of Gen; Butler aad extended comments' thereon,-which license ha improved, aad thereby se cured fur and gave to his paper a monopoly of said news over all the'papara in the United to the uuj uat interference with b usiness aad the violation of equity . Sour petitioner, therefore, prays for the passage of a law that shall place the right id Use the telegraph- oa the same ground with the right to uss the mails, and that shall punish interfereaca with,'and interruptions or suppression ofthis right, as tre lawnow punishes suppression, or interruption, or interference with the right to nee the mails of the United States • . ‘*6A«£JBX, WILKESOK.” The; petition was referred to the Committed oaths Judicial. . ; ■ * THB DEBATE OS THE AMSKDjaETfT. : tor. ASHLER of Ohio. moved, aud it wa3 .agreed that, alter to-day, the further eozuideratloa of the anti slavery coustitutiohai amendmenVbe postponed for two weeks from Tuesday next. Mr. HOLLIES, ot Missouri, said that at the dasfc ses sion he yoted aiatnet the proposed amendment, and wish the question abail.again be taken he intended co record his name in the affirmative. He had changed his ‘Views with reference -to fcho. expsdiencyof the ineaguie, and was satisfied ’ with the reasons which had induced him to reach such a conclusion. He eater taiced the same opinion of the rebellion now which ..he.alway# had, and that there, was not a. shadow of pretext for the infamous and disastrous contact on . the part, of the South,, fievertheleav he believed ihat there had not been exhibited a sufficient wiUincuess to extend she Constitution to the masses who haye beau misled and betrayed by their leaders. If he could pre serve the Constkntiou and Union by-preserving: the present status of slavery, he would do it. He would go.forther, and woula save them even if it were nec&a saryVo extend slavery, fle would, iu the langaage of the President, either partially or altogether destroy slavery .to accomplish this purpose, audit was simply because he btlieved ihe amendment. if adopted, woula serve tiat-patriotic end, that he would vote for it. He argued that Congress had power to propose the amend ment to the Constitution, and yielded to the public sea tiaent and action of Missouri ia abolishing slavery. We never can have-peace until wo in soma way du jose of that institution. He expressed the' opinion that n less than two yearsKentocky too wilhbe a free State, and will abolish slavery, without compensation. ' Mr. Rollins was applauded as the conclusion of his remark?, which extented tor over two hoar*. Mr. GaRFIELD, of. Ohio, alluded to the progress of the emancipation of-slavery. It was first driven from the territories, and then its ; kingdom in the S?a!ea was stricken to its louudaiion, - aud now, one by one. its comer- stones were being removed. His colleague (Mr. - rendleton) had, however,: found anew resting-place for slavery-namely*.whete the great statue of liberty .16 enshrined., But ro spot-was sosacred that slavery, could not be puisued to the altar and there slain. The argument of hi» collesgao was good if it were true fctut were sovereign and iadepeuieat; This he controverted If everythingwere sovereinj and Inde pendent, they were not so now. -Coming into the the obligation once taken rendered-them an in divisible nation.; .... : , Mr, STEVJSKS, of Pennsylvania, said the gentleman from Ohio (Mr,. Pendleton) siad.exoaaratea those-la arms in the, rebel States from respottstomty of, this bloody war, and placed It upon-himself (Mr.-Stsveas), and those who acted-with-him. This was a grave charge, and, if tree, should hot only make them fset great regret, hut remorse for their conduct. He thanked ood that his long-entertained hatred Of slavery, had not teen weakened with enteebling;age. The party with which hehad acted eonld not hesitate to do \yhat duty required, namelyi to exclude slaees-from the Territo ries.-TOnfinin* it to the spot which.lt already 'polluted' m theStetes He had hoped thegreatevil would work out its own destruction, but none with whom he acted had proposed a. violation of the Constitution for e/adl -eatingUr- He said tbs epitaph of the gentleman'from Ohio wohld foe, “ Here rests the ablest and most perti nacious defender of slavery and the Opponent of liberty «f -Ms. party;” while his (Hr. Stevens) would be, ‘ Here rjes one .who never, rose to any eminence, and onlycourted lhe low ■ ambition to have It said that he sought to ameliorate the condition of thepoor and dowa tronden of every laegnage. race, and color. ” . Mr. bniDWilf, of Massachusetts, entered' into an argument as to the character of ottr form of government, denying that this Is a Confederacy of sovereign States. It is a- nation;. He briefly advocated the pending, reso lution, regarding slavery as an outlaw of civilisation, and as: the progenitor, of treason, which could be at oiieeaholishtd • - ; Bo other speeches were made on the resolution. Riur.s ArtD rkTXTioKe.' ?' Mr. .COI,E, of California, -introduced a bill in amend ment cf the Pacific Railroad act, ratifying the assign ment ujada by the Central Pacific Railroad Company o! CaltiorniaYo the Wtorriu Pavittc Railroad Company, a) d lequmßgrhe said road to complete the twenty-five miles jltarljvand the whole from San Jose to Baora in-nto in four years. Mr RCbBARO, of lowa, introduced a bill authoriz ing. the Secretary of the Interior,to'lnßtitnte geological tntveyp of the Black Hills in Dacotah, and approcrl tttlngtweniyitbonrand dollars for that purpose. ! ... The House then edjournfjt sill Monday. THE IrEG ISX-.A/I'TLT R-13. . - i Hartuseuho, January 18,1880, I house. - " , . The portae met at 11A. M,, the Beuate not being in sc-snon] - Mr. HALBBACH called up an aot allowing the Hunt- Inidonjaad BrosdJTcp M.unialn Railroad Company to T? thons of the proceedings of the Senate agd House onihodeath of a member (Eobert Seed), of WashlDgton •ouat?, were ordered .to be printed. «- ; " 4 *®E£*' anihoming sheriffs, piothonoteries of Common Plea*, clerks of Oj phans s Courts/Oyer and Terminer and General* Jail Delivery, and Quarter See- SiOus, registers, recorders, and district attorneys to coarse fifty per cent, increase on each, item of fee; and rtleasm* them from the payment of,fifty per cent of tQ An S^ mEloawealtii:i UnleBB tbeir cross re ceipt exceed $2,000 per annnm. * *k• WEISBK, joint resolutionsiaßtructingPenneyl vJW»a j"fP reseß teirvea in Congress to rote for a repeal oitne duty on paper, -i « Mr. WEISEK moved to consider these resolutions..by suspending the rules; but the House refused 1 , by a viva Yfee vote,.to grant permission.' ' : Mr. lEOKaS, an act authorizing the Kortli Amarican , iranf-it insurance Company to effect insurances against accidents, no matter how occurring. _Mr, COCHBAN, authorizing the Phosnix Insurance company to return to its original form, as a stock corpo- _-Mr.; FBEEBOReauthorizing the Court of Common Pleas to increase the number of special, jurors (so as not to exteed 60) whenever deemed expedient . Also, exempting the property of the Locust-street Mis sion Association (Locust street, between \Einth and Tenth), from taxation. - ■- ■ Mr. JOSEPHS, incorporating the Watermen’s Benefi cial Association {corporators Wm. McAUer, Henry McLean, P. £ Catroll, Daniel J. KeO&rthy, Wm. J. Patrick Martin, and Daniel A. McKenna). , Mr. RUDDIMAN, legalizing sales made by persons ' acting,in a fiduciary capacity, whether such sales be conducted by public outcry or in the ordinary way. . Mr COCHRAH, increasing, the State appropriation to is mates of the Pennsylvania Institution for Deaf and Dumb to*2go for each person,instead of $lBO par annum. .Mr. FRLSSORif, extending the time'ror payment of the enrolment tax of the Pairmount Insurance Com • paiiy, v . Mr. SMITH, of Philadelphia, as follows r , —Section 1/jfee it enacted.-etc. That the compensation *he membersof the Legislature be SI,2QP. Mr., JOSEPHS, as follows; - Be it enacted, etc. That the provisions of the fourth section of the act of April IS,lM?,enacting that “ where two verdicts shall, in anv »c ion of ejectment betwesa parties, bo given for plaintiff or defendant, and judg ment be rendered thereon, no new ejectment shall be brought; but where th*re may be a verdict against ver* oict, mtw een t&e same parties, and judgiaeut 'be ran ched thereon, a third ejectment *n such, cases, and ver dict and judgment tfcereoß. shall be final and conclusive, and fear the right,” shall be construed to extend to all actions of tjectmeni, whether the same ba founded on a legal or equitable title, or such an action be brought as a substitute for a bill In equity: and all laws incon sistent herewith are hereby repealed. • • ' The House proceeded to select a committee to try the contested election case of Mr. Orwig, of Union county. The following were chosen, viz Messrs. Adlumv Miller, McClure. Markley, Guernsey,'Eeybert, Slack, : Donneilv, and Hill. a Mr. OB WIG, an act authorizing soldiers in actual mi m*rv service to vote by proxy, at township and bo rough ejections. • i - v s '. Mr. SMITH, of Philadelphia, a resolution providing additional rooms for the use of committees of the Legis lature {such rooms being absolutely necessary). Ajneedto, . . ;t ; - The House agreed to adjourn until Tuesday afternoon next, *i 3 o’clock P. AT. Adjourned, The following is % copy of ihe original resolutions re lative to paper duty, introduced by Mr. :WBI 3EH'; Whereas, It is alleged and believed to be true that a ' large majority of !he pianufactaTe/s of paper have en- , tsred into a combination to raise and' demand aa exor- -' bitaut price for paper, higher than a fair and legitimate profit on its manufacture will warrant;- therefore, ■. Resolved, That our Senators in Congress are hereby instructed, and our Representatives requested' to vote for the repeal of the law imposing a duty on paper. . Resolved, That the Governor be requested to furnish a copyof lhis resolution to each of our Senators and Representatives. 7 RILIBIOVS mmUSMCI. An Error Corrected.—The .chapel at the cor ner of Eleventh and Wood streets has been merely * sub let for the partial use of the Second Con'grega tlcnal Ohuroh. The original lease is held for the Church of the Hew Testament (T. H. Stoakton, pas tor), which has occupied the house for more than two years past, and will do so hereafter, except at the times assigned to the other Church. According to contract, the main audience room is now undergo ing Improvement, and will soon bo reopened. Mean- Mr. Stockton; preaches: In the lecture-room, Sabbath afternoon, at 3 o’clock. . Tee Locust-street Univers amst Church.— This church is now open for public worship. The .repairs which it has.undergone during the past few weeks have added much to its appearance and com roxt. The Church 1b In a prosperous condition. V A Prosperous and Generous Chukoh.— The Spring Garden Presbyterian Church has liquidated entirely its debt, and added four hundred dollars to the salary of Us pastor, the ltev. M. C. Sutphen. Its annual contribution to the cause of foreign, missions, made on the Ist Inst, . amounted to over six hundred and twenty dollars, an Increase of two hundred over that of last year. ■ New Pastor,— Tha Rev. J. B. Toombes, who has been supplying the pulpit of the Worth Baptist Church, Philadelphia, for some time: past, has how been electeu pastor of the church. r 'ln a Prosperous Condition,— The Kith Bap list Church, comer of Eighteenth and Spring Gar den streets, Eev. J. B. Simmons, pastor, recently entered, as Is known, a new and beautiful house of -worship,-which cost about $BO,OOO. -In connection with the dedication services, the pastor stated that the house, with its furniture and fixtures, was paid for, and that the salaries of pastor, organist, and sexton were also paid, for a period, in advance. : • • A * Year’s Work. —Bishop Stevens, . assistant Bishop of the Diocese of Pennsylvania, reports that , during the last year, he held 83 confirmations at. which 807 persons were confirmed, preached iss"” sermons, and delivered 77 addresses, consecrated 1 church, reopened 2, and laid the corner-stone of 2, held 11 ordinations, attended 18 communion ser vices, and travelled 6,805 miles. Bishop Potter, the chief Bishop of the Diocese, although lh frail health) has nevertheless performed considerable Episcopal service. ■V Membership.— According , to the statistics of the annual Minutes for. 1864, the total membership of the Methodist Episcopal Church for 1864 is 927,31®, , against 923,894 for 1808—an increase of 3,992, -The Advocate and Journal says this Increase is only appa rent, as the two Colored Conferences, Delaware and Washington, which report 13,168 members, are mainly composed of societies embraced in the re turns of the Baltimore and Philadelphia Con ferences, which met in the spring, before the organi zation oi the Colored Conferences.. >. ' Statistics of the Unitarian Denomination —The Monthly Jourrtal, published by the American Unitarian denomination, gives; the following i afor mation of the number of ministers and societies be longing to the body: The whole numberof societies is 268, an increase of three over last year. In 1830 there were 193 societies; the increase foMhlrty-five years has therefore been about thirty percent. Of these 269 societies 67 have no pastors.- The whole number of ministers is 326. This includes professors in' colleges, chaplains,. &e.; 130 of these are unset tled, 190 settled. East year there were 343 ministers: loss 17. .There are two theological schools In the de nomination ; in Cambridge, and in Meadville, Pa, The Illness of Bishop Brownell.— The Hart loi d papers announce that Bishop ’ Brownoll still lingers, though his death-may be expected at airy H moment, . Per days he has been'uaabie to partake of .lood. Once in about twelve hours he experiences an unremittent attack of spasmodic heart affection from which he rallies, though each time evidently weaker than before. His ease is a singular one fo uls physicians have repeatedly thought ha could not survive. . - - - " i -Maximilian and the Chuboh Peopebtv in Mexico.— The Emperor Maximilian announced on the 27th nit. his intention to 11 revise the opera, tions of-the mortmain and natiorializatlen or eccle siastical property, shaping It on the basis that legi timate transitions executed without fraud, and ac , cording to the law 3 which decreed, such amortisa tion, shall be ratified, according to the principle of free, and ample toleration, keeping in vie w that the religion of the, State Is the Koman Catholic and Apostolic,” AHEmcAir Bible Socibty.—At tie monthly meeting of the managers, Dr. Do 'Witt offered prayer.. Encouraging statements were mads from agents in Buenos Ayres, Ijima, Milan, Persia, Uhtaa, and Turkey. 'Among tie books presented to tbe library were fifteen volumes in the languages of Northern Europe,.brought from St. Petersborir by Kev. Walter H. Xiluwell. The books granted At this meeting were 89,000, mostly for;.tlw military hospitals, for prisoners of war at Fort.Deiawareand Elmira, and for freedmen. Of these, 56 000 were for the United States Christian Commission; several grants to ieeble auxiliaries ; 268 to captains of ves sels sailing for foreign ports, and four volumes, in raised letters, for the blind. Daring eight months the society has received *407,891, issued ten millions of volumes, 412,00,0. in grants, of which 227,000 were to the U. S. Christian Commission. “Books are now being printed in behalf of this society m.various pans of the world, as-in Turkey,: India, China, Italy,-Germany, and Eussia. J 1 “We have now in preparation.eieoirotype plates for a Hawaiian Family Bible, and for the Dakota Testament; while the plates of the Arable Bible alone are estimated to cost about *35,000; and to these are to be added plates for the old Slavic Tes tament, and tbe Slavic and Bulgarian Testament. The expense of these works will necessarily be very great, while the works themselves are of immense importance to the religious interests of mankind. ♦‘The agencies of the society io Mexico, South America, and the Levant,. are still successful, as well as the work of colportage abroad, but thev are now carried on only by heavy expenditure.” CojKOREGATioNADtSM: in OaBGON.~-The Congre gational Association-of Oregon met at Salem, Sept Ist; present, eight ministers and six delegates. Professor E. A. Tanner was “licensed ;J to preach. Seven churches are reported, with one hundred and seventy-seven members. Twenty-five, have been admitted the last year and twenty-two removed; three hundred and sixty-eight scholars In Sunday school. Average attendance on the churches is four hundred and ninety three, *27,802 58 have been ex pended on houses of worship from the beginning," and $B4O is all the debt remaining. ■ Plymouth Ohuboh Pbw- besting. —The annual pew-renting of Plymouth Church took place, last week, with even more than the usual success. Mr. Beecher explained that, by the practice here adopt, ed, one-third of the seats paid two thirds of the in-' come: The first choice was gained by Mr. ClaUln, at $4OO premium, with *l2O for rent-. The first 150 pews sold yield, inrent and premiums, $32,000. The whole Income is upward of #48,000. The congrega tion voted to raise the pastor’s salary to. $12,509. The sexton has $2,609. . An Entbki-bisb Abandoned —Wc learn from England that, in consequence of the sudden death of Copt. Speke, the proposed Ethiopian mission is abandoned for the present, and it Is said that the aid which would have been” rendered It from Swe den will be tendered either to. Bishop Gobat, at Jerusalem, or to Bishop Tozer, of the Zambesi mis sion. , . A Fjresbnt bob the Poi-E.—The Paris Slide says that “ahandsome piece of furniture, Intended to contain .splendidly-bound translations In all lan guages of the papal bull ‘lneffabills,’ promulgating the dogma of the Immaculate .Conception, is atthe present moment "being constructed in Paris forpre sentation to Ms Holiness. The bindings are .to be executed by Paris houses, and the whole will proba bly be exhibited before being sent off to Rome. The Morale has expressed a hope that the work would be terminated this year; but, whatever activity may be displayed, there are doubts as to whether the ex hibition can so take place; .the bull has still to bo translated Into Arable, Turkish, Turcoman, Coptic, and Abyssinian; there arc also wanting transla tions in the languages ofMexicb, California, the Republics of Central and Southern America, the Empire of Brasil, the Quyanas, the Antilles, Haytl, and the Philippine and Sunda Islands; as to the Iroquois. Algonquin, and Osage tongues, several liLgulßta have undertaken them. But the Tyrolean, the Buthenlan, Magyar, Circassian, and Finnish are not yct represented, nor the different dialects of, Italy and Spain. The bull ‘lneffabllis’ is also awaiting translations In the CHtana, the Norman, and the Savoyslan.” A Shadowy , Host.—A correspondent of the Staunton Spectator (rebel.newspaper), wrltlngfrom Bewlsburgb,. Greenbrier county, Va., gives ,a‘ de scription of.a remarkable atmospheric phenomenon witnessed In that town. Alt was an apparent proces sion of shadowy forms like those of human beings— thousands ■ upon thousands in number—moving through a deep valley, in clear view of the specta tors, and finally ascending'a steep mountain and disappearing. They were moving North as fast as their aerial legs oould carry them, and were pro bably the North Carolina Quakers, who are said to be quitting that commonwealth for more peaceful abodes In the free States, fmsCUl AND OOMMKBCM&, " jv T^ 3 »*ook market was moderately aetirkyastiirday, u>« transactionsbeing mostiyconfined to Government &na ratiway bonds. The former w ere somewhat de; pretsefi ae to price, excepting only the 10 40.*, Which sre : ? The 1881 loan sold Bblll*, ‘ ' at » decline oP'M.: w moderately dealt m, the coupon Bs Belling at f>s%, and the State -war loan 6s at 101 : the-’ht ter being a slight advance. New City 6s were v- wfi' but the oldiasne wars a shade lower! 94M. There were no material, alterations in the' list, and the transactions were limited. Thedemand 1 tor company bonds continued active, and there wer® sales reported, of Beading mortgage 6s at 100: Camden' and Amboy 6s of ’JS9-af99; Bnlon Canal bonds at 23, and Cheater Valley bonds at 12. There Was comparatively little said m oil stocks r and prices continue drooping. Of the ctfal stocks we noticed sales of SwatSra at 6: Fulton at7K, andßig Monntain at 6J4- The mining, bank, end passenger railroad stocks were Tory dnll. We append the closing quotations for the aayigat'on, mining, and oil stocks: ’■ , _ Bid, Ask. ' ■ ■ Bid Ask gchuyl Nay.pref.. 32K 33 Franklin 0i1........ ;|na<tad.ir.i....l4 14* Globe Oil ...... g? BigMonntCoal... «. 6 Howe’s Bddy Oil. 1 jg iRW6 r Coal. ,11 ~ Hogs 151 and...... 14-16 .. Clinton. C0a1...... 1 IK Irwin 0i1.......... g gw Connection! Mm.. % y, Keystone 0H...... w W Diamond C0a1,... 18 Er0teer.......... IS< Isi Fulton C0a1....... 7H 7K Maple Shade Oil;. 29 31 Greon’iifer? 1 < ? cal ‘ McOlintock. 0i1... 4K 45£ '»»¥ 4H Mineral 0H...,.,. jg Iff Keystone Zm0.... IK 2 Mingo...,. 38 ag Monocacy,... 8. McffihenyOU & 5 |Carbondale.... 2M62K McUrea U ChyEan .. New Creek Coal.: .. 1116 Noble & De 1!..... M fo§ Penn Mining.....: 11*11* Oil Creek.... 7K (T Atlas... .. —l# Organic 0i1....... .. °% - pli g fS y *®eout- •• 1)4 OltJistoadOii..«.** 2K 2 K Big f Tanjc., ; 4e.e,,i 2-21-16 Perryi-Oii ... „ 4§ f&Bgat&'iitf B&fit-i:?. ¥ -m ¥ $ Contmenfal 0i1... 2 : 2.44 fia venue Crescent City..... i& 2 Roberts On!!."I! .7* I Cartm...v.,, 32 14 Rock 0i1..,,..*. 41> Cora Planter... .. 6 5herman......... r 14s 1 st IK 1* Story Farm 0H... 2K23-16 ,&«BTXwii.,IT St Nich01a5....... "" 4 OnnkardOil...... K Suntturv* Dnnkard Creek Oil .Ur- 1 TarrFann.,,. .... 2>£3* SS? 6 ?, 0^, 011 *”" & Turtle 8un....,, .. ” \ Mzeiroa.w*.**.. &H. 8?6 Colon Petroleum. .. 1 v Sfe::::::;.; f* .«&.«■ The gold market continued active- yesterday, hut, ag the quotations show, prices steadily declined. The (peculator* are looking with great anxiety to theresult of the Blair mMon,. and the fact that gold declines no w iB coiclneiTopf the universality of the opinion that some icod is expected to come of it. The following were the rates at the hours named:: 10K A. M. " 31 A ■ 22Q>£ I! m. .1 P« M«>» » > ■> eei ... nil I | tmt.i.Hi.i... ..2] Q T THe seventeenth; annual report of the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company,.of this city,, shows a yerv «a usfactory condition, of its affaire. It appears that the receipts forithepast year amounted to $338,093 71 Tbe losses and expenses amounted, to $106,91713-, dis’buree ment^SS, 970.52 Tteaccumnlated capita!, December 31, 1664, amounted to $1,876,435.32. Mr. James T™. «ualr has been elected president, and tbe board have declared a return premium dividend in scrip of fittvmr <»nt. upon the premiums paid In : 18« on ali policies in force December 3!, 1664, and decided to receive the cer tifi cates of the extra scrip dividend of September, 1859 m settlement of premiums on and alter the 20th test, ’ and to credit those indebted for premium notes or loan^ o°r loans o:7hMia.r molmtOf6aid B ° rip ™‘“ r notes The Girard Fire and Marine Insurance Company have a bo farmtheil an exhibit of their financial condition Si ?£ e ° fole ? i f rdfrom andinte to msm S 9; on ac count ofloßseßSsS,l3o 75; and on account of dividends expense, &c.„mS33 97. Mr. Thomas Crayon S heen re-elected preßldent of the company. - neen ,v' r^f? 11 , owill£ isthe a-monnt of coal transported on the Philadelphia and Beading: Eailroad dnrin* the week ending Jan. 12, 1665; ■. i ■ * B W9ei£ Thisweek..... Seme tlme last year Decrease -y— -, Commissioner of It ternal Eev„nue has’made the followin t important decisions: jnsied sohsequent to Jnae 30, 1864 - ™ werB *4- . sales of townlands at auotion, except when judicial or executive officer, by deer™ of cn™= „, r exempt from taxation. Deeds a!ven bv e rnS;„;‘S atamp daty.°^^ afi<^S sold foltalei are o alfo nxemfK, 1 ' ;toS^^S^l^M Bretlir v dasln »- 8 The annual message of the Governor of New Jersav WedfeTdlf {£* ie,!slatarB »f that State on Wednesday, states that the receipts into the State trea sury from all sonrceß dniin* the year ending Nov go amounted to *431,028, which, added to the cash on hand made a total of *585,683, The dlsbnuements during the same time footed np $386,410, leaving a balance of he Ist of December of $139,273: The : Governor: estimates the receipts during the present year far above the ex. pentes, and he, therefore, feels authorized-in saying ! a * Wil L e le TiedihlB6sfor State purpose.. Ho thinks , before the close of the. preieat dsc! year the' .State debt will he reduced to $2,000,000. Siw Jersey ina financial Point, of view, may, therefore, be con' sidered as one of the soundest States in the Union The. test advice, from Great Britain report that the bullion in . the Bank of England had decreased during the previous week £307,C00, and- that three important commercial failures had occurred. Cotton had a’so de .clined half.permy to one penny per pound, and with the intelligence of the. capture of Savannah a further considerable fall cannot but occur,, whiebesyill involve the risk of a semi-pan.c. Government stocks will be linely to advance in the same ratio that the rebel loin declines. . . PHILADELPHIA STOCK EXCHANGE, JAJT 13 1566 BEFOBE BOARDS. O% 1100 Heading E , FIKBT BOARD. U S?' 20 coup lots.)o9k 100 Coin-Planter b-30 'mi 400 ..d0..... ~s6wn 109j4 500 : do .....lots bs* CU' K(Bsltno-4Qconplts.io2J4 400 Caldwell .lots 7 6COUS7 SOTSMinall »£' 200Jlensmi™"l l 100 State WL’nSscp 104 100 - do...™Mi - L ICi Q Union Cnl. tods c 23 200EI Dorado loti' iv 1000C&Ajn6s’S92dys.lC6M 900 Hibbardis«' Y‘ 2000 Chest Vaiiey 75.. 42 500Mingo . 1 \v .40 Reading Ii Trans. 50Jf 1000 do . !'iote' M ■ o Ssst>njb.. ? .,lots, Oijc 200 McClintockiOU lta ; 43s SO Big Mountain.... 6% 100 fficElheny „Y, IS oO Fulton Coal cash m 130 Noble & Dels Tots iml 300 Swatara Coal lots 6 100 Oil Cr & CkerrVß 200 Cres City Coalba. 2 600PhiIa& onc/ftf Y HO Corn Planter 05.. 6% 500 Sto'#|aim.rf. 1 l& g£ ICO- . d 0............. tpi 500‘St JSiciiolas Oil Its 4 J3OAKBS.' 200Bnnlcard 0i1...... y, ,100 6 State Coop 0s 96 ; J3OO Bew-.iots. 97#- 10CQIIS o 20 Bonds ...109*5 - 600 U 810-40 SOO Noble & Bain. csh. io>4 IOCO Cam 6 Amfa 6s ’B9, oOOOUB 0s ’Bl SCO.Cera Planter.« A BETWEEN ..ffOHinto. »b3O- S 31 600 do*«.. .♦v,.b3o. 34* 160 do 3}£ 600Headings,..lots. 5B& ICO Walaut. Island..r>:''2££ 200 «...bSO, SCOTarr Pam. -Zh 1000 Story Farm... lots. 2% SCO d0*.,,23*16 feECOJJD 4000 Bead Sf 8e....«v,1C0 100 IT S 6 20 Bda. How. ICSS£ 100 Cata B b3O . Prof, 30 OOCO Chester Tal Bds . 12 700 Sherman ....lots. Ilf , tO Cherry Bun 27 ] ’ ’ : - dFTEB BOAEDS. ,10 Man JiMech’oßk. 33 100 Balzall.. s% lrn D ™™ 10Ie "” , Yi- Story Farm .......2 3 if .rS? n«, 500 oenijaßia*niii..i i ir 1100 City 6s over ’70... Mli 100 Hinro.. bs* 93? 200 Walnut f,1d...05. lit -® 2CO Caldwell 0111)30,, 7 209 T Miiiffo t\, 5 100 YMaago.'".7J“,': 3 M It® gt Aichola«....bs. 4 200 Beading 130 Story Farm........ 2A 200 Pone Farm' °?5 200 Oil Creek..„..bSo S 5 * 300 Unaei E=nnnmr‘" I SI 'Kg Noble &Dela lots. 10* $0 ik *®9®. S, S I? 0 2® C °OPS-.109>1 8300 Penna B Istmtßs.lPß ™ • mi 10.0 US6sS-20 cmp°. 103« •M®-® SCsa.2pceup....lo9* 100-KeacUiik bs2 wo Sclmyijfav Pref . g* gew Creek Coal., 1 70 McCiiatock..,. b-5, aV. fm cu?da. ar “:::.:::: 1 fsl* E iffl®- S M 1®. Ca1dweU..........: ;6S Vi Peterson’a Detector for Janaary Isih, jast issued,con tains descriptions of thirty* two . new counterfeits that bave been put In circulation since the let ofthe month. In these: days of unlimited paper money, no' business man can safely do without a Counterfeit Detector like Peterson’s. . ; ..... . Drexel & Co. Quote: United States bonds. 3331.... ..... !11 vsnn-e' 'United States CerW. of IndebteSnesa... Hew. sjS®- 97K Quartermasters* Touchers t/i 01 Orders for Ce:tifleates of Indebtednesa ...... 2 @3dte Uold.*.. „......... 1,„...„,215)5@219« i gterlmi Exchange ....A. 23S @’4o rivo-turenty 80nd5...................„„: Ten-forty 80nd5....... .1021,®102K - j The Chicago papers notice an active demand for mo- | ney, andjery bigb interest bjTspecnlaiore/ Tbs Tri- bune says “Pork has fceensold at a difference of $2 per barrel between cash and thirty days, .which is paying about nyeper cent, for money, The treat scarcity of money, of course, depresses ail kinds of trade, and prices cf all giaplea have a downward tendency. “ Exchange is very close. •' The rates are very gene rally par buying; premium selling. There is occa sionally a concession ofjfon the buying price, to obtain currency. There is very little exchange making, and will not be oatilthe railroads begin to understand the situation, and lower, their freights sufficiently to enable shippers,of pro visions to forward their stocks. 11 The N. T. Evening Poet of yesierd ay says'; „ Gold opened at 223, and gradually sold down ta the closing price. Me loan market is'sluggish, and lenders have diffl. cnlw m placing their accumulating fends at 7 per clft Commercial paper i« scarce and passes at 7@9c In fesn’ sequence of the adoption of ft cash baslroTer an iS creasing area of transactions: the amonnt of bills offer wg f*U* very much.below the former average J f£ a 7 ents sre i aider pressed for sale, bat the de ““ftr e f ?eid?rSlorteT 6 aUthebl,adB oSat ' l d eiare l ST 8 but there is more dispo and the hodera of sound dividend' securities are less influenced by apprehensiona aatofchf future course of the market. co^ i^?h q osT; a f t ZtU^ e a^^oS t . tta * o «< M- ' ! &r- A4 t- B3c MX JUS ... %£ ■ 109>. imi .. „ ■1 m Will x : .. ■m% mx f ., , •llk.'l USX .. mil 93 y, ... Baited States 65,1881,«0ap.... united Slates 5*20 c<mp*w... * United States 5 20 coup (new). United States 10*40 coup~... United States certificates*.« Heading Railroad.*,, Pittsburg Railroad Weekly Renew of the PMladelphit markets. January 18—Evening. Th.e Produce . iaarkfitS; have "beea dall and unsettled during the past week, owing to the /various peace rumors, and the decline in gold and foreign exchange, Bark continues very dull. Flour and Wheat continue duil, but prices are without any material change, Cot ton is rather lotrer. Coal isdulh and the sale* areli , mited. Coffee is firmly held In Fish am Fruit there is no change To notice. Naval Stores are rather aaiet. Petroleum is dulL end prices are unsettled- The Pro -Vision market, as we have noticed for. some time past, continues firm, but the difference in the views of buyers and sellers limits operations. Plaster has advanced. Rice is rather dulL Sugar is in depaand, and prices very* firm. Seeds are in demand at full prices. Whißky is rather firmer. There is very little demand for Wool. There is very little demand for Flour either for ship* mentor home ns«», and the ie rery dull; sales comprife about 7,CGO bblsat $10.75@U. 25 for extra, $ll 6C@lS.Mfor eKtra family. iucludlQg fancy brands at from slo@l6 bbl. The retailers and bakers are buying in » small way afcfronv $9.50@10 25 for super* line, $lO 60@11- 26 for extra, and $l2 up to $l3 ft tfxtra family and fancy brands; Bye Flour is sailing in a sma 1 way at $?@9,25.ft bbl. Corn Meal is quiet at former rates, . G.KAlli.—There is.very little demand for Wheat, but prices are wiiloat any-material change; about 20,000 fans sold at i66©27fc%i JbQs foi fair to prime reds, and white-at;from29C®£t)estni,- as to quality. Ityahas advanced; email sales are making: at 175@175c bu Com ip r&tber scarce and in demand, with, gales of 21.000 bos at 175 c for sew yellow, and am ill lots of old at 183 c Oats are flrjnly sales of IS.CXW bus at &@94c; &ojne holders ask raore; . . . ■ *i\he following-are th«* reoeipta of Floor and Grain at ihia port during the past woek! Flour**** *v* «***•'«.« •••*'»*« -*-*■ W heat*** * *♦♦* * +*+•*• • *♦*-.*-**♦*«»•*»* *+-» Corn«y-^r.v , 15, BSD bbls, be s. 350 bos, --~.SJ.3W bsn . 37,114 39,162 JBOABB, 200 Ming0.......... gv 100Eldorado 94 lOOStoryFarm........ 2% ,300 Up Economy.. .Its. X 1000At1a5..........10t*. C Brigs G T Ward, Brigg, aid Jas Saker. Jiickeraon. h«nce s t Kew Orleans 27cl nit _ _ , ■ Brit Yincenfc* Morrison, hence at Kew Orleans - stlL D Brlg*Clara P.Olbhs, Tan’ey. W " for this port, remaioed at Hewojrt d P St 10‘h t=at. Brits Glendale. Guthrie^andTß Delano, Baxter, hen ■ a M?Cy r gnet S Ln*|hence at St .At inst info^aThtm^^^^ Tracy, tfom Beeton •*- K«W Louden iptbiiutt, ' _ , rft f , r pjjjiaioni with. £chr Kew Haven, P" or f n Fall ciror* / !op« of iibhoom. was et snohor in we *sr>»ai. nth lust. \ r (THE WAB (PUBLISHED WEEKLY. I R *^ W '*“"*• “** *0 MtiHtam by *i«srSiS£“ * “—**• —*» m Jive copies. —~ *«* Tbb *odlm„ „ g ()• ' • • '_ ' lIUMHUM JU> raSXiS £ Tea WUI * "“«** : money must alieay/? accompany tb* ord*r % ™ jn*tance can these terms be Om afford vcrv UttUmon than the e^rt^' ~m* g Zr FoBt Z ,M * U,rt “• MWMtWI to Mt-M Msnte tot #g~ To the eetter-np of the Clab of ten or twenty m extra eopy of the paper will be ilTeh.., W “ F ‘ m [ PBOYI6rONB.-—Tjhefinnnegs QFhoiderslSmUH onw, vieJ^ 0 bWs - He ", B Pork sold at *l4 bbl Oressad S?*“S r ?/ olmc S : io end selling freely; at m the in,) 4ypS® 22 ® 3B 9 bblf « want?? aad 2&2 : a 8 ‘ a d l|,|® a , 5 ilerceelamsin«S»?fold Klott.^ :in salt tti l6«@lB*e 3 lb, cash iaflu *5 f*tr ftt tnll prises, with sales of 150 Heroes *W bnu a/eJSji 24Xc, and kegs at2S>¥lb Batter Is in a«m\^ 21 i 4 P sales of at 38@4Sc f roll at <!@Sl““adT],. : Bbea & ■?• «>• »«* Irak CheeeeH Wiu* «? 2* s® Kb are orarce and selling at liaise BBTALS.—Sanafacturad Inn- is in- fair demand at shout former rates, rn Fig Metal there is “err Hat. doing; small sales of Anthracite are roakiniratVinatn the thrSß nambera. Scotch ftg te fitd/afft! fenS 4 ®?- 1 " Lead is doll and-, quoted at 514.75@18 the J' 0 -E p i r T 81 ?. an ," ! ‘- l o®. “- Yellow Metal are m- lb for sheets and bolts; - ■ iSAKK.—Qnerciir&n contißn** dbJl.asd wa heat l*S »«U ifrheld at *4»W • ■nttnr&oSi Cajidles are rathe? qa!e£: Ada airscscaßd, at &B<mt forma* rates, llitle' dolse* <2™?^•ontUrmw call, ftcd Share is very wemak&ir from F6rt Rich- COFFEk f«HiiSiiS hoard; a^Oß r 500 salea‘ar« limited-: lb for common to prime 76 efea ao M- tete at 40(5H7c ke°t islulh In'd rrl« s T l^ 7^ ll^{r ai | d ‘ aadthB to bat;tte main ahont the same as last qaoted‘“' d p ™as re i In Mackerel there ia very littiftVrMnrr. hav ftSfflSrt s *'.* B8 ® forshorels;’ *,f fo r P‘2 - f l - *@lB for shore 2s, andsl6@i3 m»bi ? i“Sf, a | 1 d i, E S allS s- o P i cl ‘ leiiH I ' , ®r?u?T -if, a s?„s 0da r B^!* t - frO1 ? ®s@s.so the lmm? and hiih , d 4P r , * el . gD frEut continue scarce, sa bbi 1 ® T»rf«a C A a ®w u ffl<w demand at is tiotikt IL~ b i* a v 5 Apples are aelling: at from iSHGaiRr. 35@4te|hft &0,!r26 ® $Sclor “wredl.S,f?S ? 0 al lndia freights continne Hnii fwSJj™B/ as taken to fionth side of frt ponch&rges paid.; Smalt shipments are m^kiacr FEATHERS.—SmaII sales of choice Westarn .«- making- at BC@B3c?Slb,-'cMli western w rt 1 nutT® « -1 ; 30@33 ton. 7 oJa *ik°* i -“Orforeiin the demand continues limit*/*- fnifwl sa i? B mada taT , B - bBBn “ fbe small wa?fmm. f there continues Sfir?^' q i fi T «?il li sa l < r a at fro,n l2®Wc«lfli.- - a lilr la ' ..1 „ B ? 1- ~ lilere 15 Tel y little doing in the watne z. nr *r b - 0 s l oclt Hlight, and thereisverv litui doing in thenar,of sales; about 100 hoeshsads tSI 68 ® 60 ®gallon nossneads tart Sp?itSof , 'rnrSSfA are M w 6r qalf>i '’ ™»n sales of hosin is sSS?i I ? e = are ,f lakinE^i?-5 ® ? a| lon, cash fill R^i.SS*A ? , asniil . 1 waTats2s@2B bbh rvtV- - ? 18al contmne firm and a nipt r.in«<unsi oil is: m demand at .fil.cs 1 rate {ffoii g“|l 5 small sales of Cride we makiig a msmc e*m£ s?on”Xt£a!s? d thKSj Kei-nerj".'.' -1,040 bbls. the past week, the demand being confined almort« clnsively to the city and near by-trnde. -who ?,in ti to purchase only for their immediate wants C ' )attao * Sole.—There.continnes a fair inonirv- fee heavy stock, which is scarce, and sells'at 65(35? cer,tn f SW&nS^r 158 * for SS&TS& .Sfas-ish SOM?.—Prime Jots of Buenos Av/ps firtfo. nia, or .Orinoco continue to seU freely on arrival ins" are The stock of good and- daVaged cSS . /Cckkied Leather. —There is a moderate ieoni—c. skintin^t,!“5 ki n tin^t,! “ S l ® m aa ‘hte ®’poand. fISSf * ccntinnes dnllwuhafair supply; For 'eufTEß d " m whMt T Salvia eoCC " 8 Rl,o “ ed at »• * too. _BICB. —We hear of no sales, and the eMni siei B |pf,?g 18 &“ ot!Ed i3dtUi: mn^olr ol^6 " CODE!ores scarce, and in d«. Hgsmisssssssi BPIKtTS. —There is very little doing in foraiee prices remsin about the same as last ouoted - fi a 4 d e? ? „*LH? ,lo^drt ® 2 40 ® z ’ WhTsSf* fiom r ’lftas* “ore -doing; about 800 bbls sold a? We“ern. ® * E ‘ g,,Uon ft >- Bennsylvanu o^ st!ck®t™7Tmuc^^^ 4| ! | t l|: 5(l !“ ltlB ' aßd2 - 6 ' ob<,^s(ioi > a coldit H-omlll _ SALT.—There is. no change to notice A caTsrr , A r c* Martins has arriTed to a dealer - *«. cargo or Sc. TALLOW.—The demand Is fair with sale* o.r nit dI TOBACCO® vS,p Mco >u»ry unmni'c ¥ ft/ ' .ffISV * — ? l Plces costume ver-* firm, but the sola* TOn«f° af S d Manufactured are limited 8 salB * . y OOL.-There is very little doing in the way ofsala. hut holders are firm in their views SmalTSt*.™ fuiC@ r ii a ecl| 95cIOrP,llle<i ’ 98 @I““tefl?e«, S aad ffb market has been very quiet s» : far., as sales are concerned. Some fera- hnwkt!r# 89 other markets have been in town, but more forihe'm? pose of. ascertaining the character aud orn«n*/fo#?.P+£' S D g, ir2de P** am and Eastern markets, bat h™ coVfMt of -SS ■^ssag&ssk. •Boston Boot ana Shoe Market, Jan. li. The Shoe and Leather Reporter save ■ The total ah>„ meet of boots and shoes by rail and sea for the bJJ* il SM c .?' es ’ .Of this number 5,000 cases hayn been sent by rail, as follow!: 2,393 to ftay vvfrfr.nl Pennsylvania; 273 to the Southern States no.£, »“ d postesdoii, and 2,235 to the Western Statef ffiJaiS Total shipments by sea, 374 easel ’ Cleans,. ™- J?€w York Markets, Jan, 13. Ashes continue dull and nomiaai. *.r ■pfKf l2 — STJ iFFS.r-The market for State and We«tern ft fiQ r fl%?<Pe& aßd 6c hatter Kales of 4»SK> bbls *Sr?^i?o- 5 / or **P«rfine; slp.os@lo lOfor extra State• " l?eftef n ” wift°ir C /lm C K d ?* and 60@9.6.5 for super fine Western-' lil'ttffil?'® fS “ mm ' oa 5° Medina extra t”'® for common to good Bkmmn?- toMdsextetrorma-hoop Ohio, and SU.i®l2forS .. nA o S«,lJ tt . Fld!lr is inlet and Arm; sales fISO bhlsat extra.® 12 for commoa ®«@k for ficy anl Canadian Flour is§obsttsr. bnfc yatv rrntaf. .ni.. SCO bbls at $10.15@10.25 for common, 3o@r> S for good tc choice extra. Bye Floor is quiet. CorSe'alk dull,. -Wheat is very quiet, and-prices are eSirel? . nominal .Bye is qniet. Barley nominal.. Barley Malt Jf dull. Oats_are qniet Et $i OS@-I.CBJi for Weaern ls firm > sales 3,630 bn? Western mS at i,¥Jr f?sAfm^ 0 v e 't 81 d f d ’ Ied i Jersey at $lB9 yionsprice™ 1 8t 156ta£dy; 6a!es4sobbl »- at aboutprel hams are quiet, with sales of 150 bbls at $26.69 ryfc D is-% als , ai ' e ,stead y> but quietsates 275 pk-s at 17Sf ©lajfc for sheaideri-, and i9@2!c for hams. * ataiSMpc marbetis Qn!6i and: steady rsales 1,230bb1s JinlUmoi-o Markets, Jaw.is. e.ll? 1® Hj2?l ’ ffoward-street superfine sails at $ll 26 @11.072£. Whsat firm; Southern whits &l(a¥> qs V n --. anil Whisky dull and nominalati ! s K”>7oyis££ advancing, Pork buoyant at $44@45 ? £bi foimms. New Orleans Markets, Bee. si. The market exhibited much less movement to-day than yesterday, there being, in fact, yery littla figures below the views of holdSs! l?v.?Tn vS^t?* 188 .reported-were 3 bales picking at i?vf° A™. fcl K at 75c, and 16 goal samples at SLCS. Qnotations are, to some extent, nominal, but onr prejions flgnres as followe: Ordinary . si@l 05; .good ordinary, st.lf@i in. by *1.1£@1.16; middling, sl.l§@l.2£ ’ OtV STETEMEST OP COTTOX FOR TUB WEEK EXJH.ve THKRsn.r ~ evexiso, j)eo. 23, 166-1. . Stock onhand Sept. I,TW! f... ®5*SEt Beceiyed during the week......,.,,,....,. ‘ om y»o7o Beceiyedpreviously '"i^ Exported during the week.... Exported ptevi0h51y......... Stock onhand not cleared....;., s>oSi StiGAS and Modasses —The supplies are very light and the receipts are only in yery smaU quantittS* riderablv'less 8 inn’nb-y “‘p®- m ’ alt . ko, Jst there is coni siaeraniy less inquiry. Prime and choice Slolassas very scarce,, and the stick, both of Sugar and Mollsses on the landing, is mostly in second hands. Yesterday' no*, previously reported, 150 bbls Molasses sbld at tilt - Sawl 0 w 1 P rim f-- Tjie salTs to ' -5 bbls 3fola?ses at $1 for common and ELIS'S 1.25 for prime, and 50 hhds Sugar at Ids ft ib jnr i nfel nor, and 21Bc for folly fair, n .'o te- • . BETTER Baes, ' o, MEECHAKTS’ EXCHANGE, PHILADELPHIA. Ship Coburg, Gibson....; Liverpool/Sw*. Schooner Zsmpa. Johnson Ponce, P B . soon. Schooner Prince of Wales,McJfab......Barbados soon. . PHILA BBI.PEU' BOAKD OF TEADB. Saml. E. Stokes, > Geo. K. Tatham, > Committee of the Month. Bknj. Maesball. J MAKEVJB LYTBILIGEiYCE, 'BT OF PBIMBELPHIA,JaD 13i IMS, iCN Bibbs..-.7 171 Sun Sets—4 43 1 High WATBB...4;ttb AKKIVED. WUl6t8 ’ 8 day . 6 kom Stono Inlet, la larttb ffl’iSuffl;* sda7S^omßean ‘ or *»lab*l- S.°„ a, \ ScUellerjer, from Ledge Light, hay. '“Ornto bark i’.oanokfi, for Lacuayrar echo, ar, ® a l> S’, and Lawk Chaster, all for Bsanfort. Below Bombay Hook took in tow brig Ocean v^sT e ’ i rOlQ Hatterae Inlet.sioce arrived up, leaking brdly: the water gamed so rapidly that we were com pelled to run her on the mud at Delaware City: Towed up schrs Mary Ann Magee and George Bales, ice heayy from Kew Castle up. - ; CLEARED, Ship Wm Cummings, Miller. Pensacola. Brig ELlen P Stewart, Cain, Pori Koyal. £chr Zampa, Johnson, Poncß, PB. Schr L & M Bead, Bead, Poi t Royal. hchrJ H French, Grofby, Jamaica. Schr Ida F Wheeler, Dyer, Sagtia. Schr JC Baxter, Price, Beaufort. SAILED. /- The ship Corqneror, Bontelle. for Pensacola. left bhippen-stree? wharf at half past 2 o’clock yesterday, in tow of gte&miug America. - BELOW. r > ■ Ship Lancaster, Decan. from Liverpool, came la the Capes of the Delaware at 0%-jL. M. 12th inet. Boportad by Mr. gaiauel Price, pilot, . ■ „ • • .. . ‘Correspondence of the Philadelphia Exchange.P ' ' . Lewss. Del., Jaa. lt-PSf. The: harks Graville. from Philadelphia for JSew Or leans: Princess Alexandra, from Sombrero,; Walter, from Kew Orleans; brigs Cycloce. from MAtamas, and Matilda, from Barbados; schr M C wlfcft Go vernment stoiee, with guard-ship Yoon* Borer, are at the Breakwater. Schr Hiram Smith, with Government store?, went on the bar opposite the Breakwater daring the gale on the night of the 10th last. About- twenty schooners and one brigwtnt to £«& Wind north. Tours, .*6 i AaßO* MAR3HA&L. (Correspondence of the PHladelphinExchange } . >-Chester, Pa,, Jan. 13. Brig Isaac C Carver ia ent through, and discharging. Schr? S H Sharp,B F Shannon, L Grey. and Polly Price* for Fortress Monroe .Alien H Downiog, Mary JRusssli. fqr Ktwbern, KC; HB Tyler,from KswOrleans; JL Leach, from Port Royal, and -Jews Williamson* Jr* bound up, are at the Piers. ‘ Elver fall of tioitiusj ice. Tour?, Ac., A. L, McKEETER. ./ MEMORANDA.^ Ship We&tmorelsnd.i'Decan, hence via Pensacola, was ' ;b6low Hew Orleans 31st ult. •_ Steamship Til lie (IT. S. transport!, Bourne, from Ifew -York, at K*w Orleans 29th nit, and cleared 30th to re turn. , ‘: •’ - Bark Uhion»Ullmer, hence atßew Orleans 27th ult. Bark Dresden, Emerson, hence at Kew' Orleans 25th nit • B&rk O E Maltby* Bray, cleared at Kew Orlean* 39th ult; for this port, with. 500 empty barrels and S p'zz* mdse.- , , , , Bark. Iddo Kimball, Clark, hence, remained below Kew Orleans 31st nit. ; .. Bark Andaman. Otts. hence at hew Orleans 29th u». Bark Pawnee. Williams, hence at Hew Orleans 27tk 17,68"? . 22,553 •• 2,603 ..14.591 ; 17,199
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