(SITErIDAYSEXOEPTELD'i MI W. VOILIVEY. SOUTH TOWITH 1.&111..Y Ie THis DOLLARS PIIIL OzoTi PER WEIR. to Elatnalben oat of theirltY, orsow I took DOLLAIIII AIM PLITT in; Two DoLuiso Twm)rvr• Moms. laTidatily t &Ammo buried at be mut rates. .WEEKIat PRESS, es. hts kblimui Piz Assent. b DRY GOODS. xx.nts RECEIVED ; TWO OF ED CORDED, AHD THREE OF IN SLACK, ider the old duty previous to last Juin min bond ever since, and that have Just out at tne reduced rate of gold, •sold below the present cost Of Importation. IN HALL & CO., 20 SOUTH isisoorro STRRIT ODE 3 DEPARTMENT. N HALL & CO., VI SECOND STREET, open. a tall Mock of all kind 4 at WRITE GOODS, finished this department with all of the various Muds in us. '8 AND OADIBRIOS, FISH OA.BIRRIOS, )KS AND MULLS, 'ARLTONS AND SWISSES, - DIUSLINS AND JAOONETS, NISH PLAID MUSLINS, JORD CHECKS, ,ORD AND PLAIDS, STRIPES AND PLAIDS, BRILLIANTS, FIGURES, AND DES, SWISS MUSLIMS, TARLTONS for Drones anigiodler, LADES, EDGINGS, &0., ao., will be Bold et the very lowest Won. I:4 7 ) ' 4:d4 a to his large assortment of CIO GOODS, cOLLARB, HT% HAIMERO/ 1 / 1 38. br the present gammon. ' 07 WID3 CH MUSLIN% In, and for gala low. • :IDSTANS, ILLUSIONS. and eau Mods. AND PARTY DUNN& Iva assortment of HANDKSBOHIN7B. JIDBRIES, Be. , all of so hloh are caned below the present gold rates. E. M. NEEDLES. a Tarp stook. .apers, by the taeoe or yard. Jf line qualityy, orrery width. andry kind.;from 60 cents to Shoe Linens, 711 seats to $1.20. tirti n g and flee Fronting Li 3111714. d Towelinga,st flee stook. tints and Mow Oasinan, ins for best fandlruas. brine, Jitaonsts, and Swiss minims for ladies' wear. te, rique„Bird•eve Linens, Aga. rain. Redwine. Ike ll Widths andjLnalitles t from $l. al to OM e Rhinos and Taffetas, to W. am, for evening drawee. variety at low prices: -Wins at the lowest price*. ge Tri:llkinstrviiie. 44 emai% taTi. my Plain Silks. Corded Mtn. lone stylan flows. IT' i o e rill 'Velvets for Gloat. foal or tuilltzirAtzdar t er a ws. WTI WWI JOHN 'KELLY. 'X'AIUEGOICS, EBSTNUT exe new eelllnff from their NTEII STOOR C 381210 PRICES. GrEN LINDID MISOZTILIXT OT 118, TRAVELLING SHIRTS, SUSPENDERS, IRUFFLIERf3, EDEF£4.I Aid tom doortitfox of 'S FURNISHING GOODS, ILI vat P&ISUTI. "FORD LURENS, ,vib - litrea "NAM: a sposiale7ba their business. Also, los etwriam - Bars wzAz. SCOTT & CO.. &MEWS 115JRNISIIING STOW AND PLATED WARE, AILOE AED TIME STEMMA • to Nunn% Armlets. Irmoles. Rai Buts. Tea Rats. Ise !Helms. wallas. Goblets. larks. Osao u. as. r•Palrod and Warranted. 014 Solt> 'qv', bought. HAlizirsos tAZDU. MR, HAVING BIICIONBriBD P. DUBOBQ & SON, AT Chestnut Street, interim hia Meade and enstoniere that be three lad varied stook OS JEWELRY, SILVER, AND PLATED WARE. baud, a large and well-aasortad. JEWELRY. N. RITtioN, We Firm of LIMB L&DOMUS & vo 'WILEY cusutrwr 3EPAiIiED INNS. and DIAMONDS BOUONT. TRADE.—F. P. MIR is the wholeasle MAK all branches it ioasq! VOL. 8.-NO. 173. TO VIE PEOPLE. lOW READY A WORE BE DE, VON MOSCHEISSER. of Mo. .10D7 WALNUT Stint. A BOOR FOB TRIABIip7LE. On the follutains Weeding: EVE AND BAR D 4 B EB. THROAT DIRIABIR UR 0 0 5 .4 1 CLERGYMEN'S AND THROAT. PUBLIC SP S' SORE DISEASES ry 0 7 7 THE AIR PASSAGES. (LalUo Bronchitis . ASTHMA AND CATARR re. book te to be had of W. S. & A. NrAttrlEK No. 4006 CHESTNUT Street, and at all Booksellers'. Prlos, The ollar. author. Dr. VON MOSCHZISICED. can be con sulted on all roaladles,and ail NEWTON AFFEC TIONS, which he treats with the surest mows. " Offlee. 10911 WA I.NDT Stroet. lag!-Itm MIMS AND entmicALs. ROBERT BHOEMAEER & CO.; Corner of FOURTH , and NAME Strode, PRILADILPHIA, WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS. IMPORTNRB AND DMUS IN YONZIox AND DONABTIO WINDOW AND PLATE GLASS. NAXlSFAerunnlla OP WHITS LEAD AND ZINO FAINTS. PUTTY. &a. AGENTS POIS TRD OHLBRILT/ID FRENCH ZINC PAINTS. Dealers and sone users sapplied at felO•lim URN LOW PRIORS YON OM. STATIONERY & BLANK BOOKS. (11L, MINING, 00.6. L, AND grant Insw COWPAI{I{g . • • . We are prepared to tandsh wow Oorporetions with au the Books they require. at short monde and low /reek of list quality. All styles of Sinew. STEEL PLATE 0.112T/2144T11191 STOOL LITHOORAPHID tit TIA/114111, BOO& • • • ORDERS 07 mumiu. STOOK MGM aaa, STOCK LED(11111 BAILLAIMIL 113111131111 01 CAPITAL STOOL PETIT LIDOS& AOOOIIJIT op SALES, DIVIDEND 200.1 C. - ' F 0 , 11.1.4 I. 1 ,) 4 JN/it 4 ,4 ..4N P I r✓l vP).I I '4ll NOTIO3. OUR ATTENTION HAVING MINN Cat•LEO TO AS eartions and statements lately made In the public prints with the design of detracting from the high repute en• loved by our Thread, we beg to state that ma atalahlia has never been changed daring the past Thins Tear.; and that now, as heretofore, no pains and expense are, Or will be spared to maintain for Ude Spool Cotten fti present charades. The attention of !layer, and Consumers Li drawn to the fact that moat of the new Threads offered to the , pub lic, from No. 33 upwards, are marked up, and that the airmen.. in the coarsen= of numbers, supposed to ea respond with our number., often varies from ten (10) to twenty (90) per sent itse•sot* GOLD'S PATENT IMPROVED STBABI WATER-MATING APPAR&TIIS Lamm lle had and Bleached 'at , at POE WANNINO AND VENTILATING TIMM DEUDINGE AND PNIVATN DIELDENOBL UMACRIMID. WEB UNION `IND WATh&►~e OMPANT OF PriRISYLITARIA. JAS P. WOOD So CO., *1 SOUTH MIME STRUT. B. M. FEL T riVELL. Su" Id-est-tr Jr . ROLM= GROUR. ULIMEIMI ULM WA1031001116 TABLE TOPS. dbo.; Act.) Igo. 823 Ob.ostlaut Street, FACTORY, 1111111118 AMP 111141116011. AMERICA N STEEL. Spring, Toe Oathin, The b e eteigh 111104 Stool. of ill dna and 'dada, made of the material. at the NORWAY IRON WO-EMS. And for We by Um yroyrietoro. /Luso, 09 and 101 JOHN Street, New York. 80 STATE Street, Boston. rid tin VIGOR FOR THE WEAL BIOKRENE; on, • • LIFE RES lITENAT 0.8. The. uses of this powerful larillorunt inaY be snA►med ay in a few word.. It relieves, with absolute certainty, Ili physical attawbalitnr; cures nervous debility of every type. restores the exhausted animal powers after long sontinned sickness; prevents and•arreete•prematnre do ray; b g vltallsing, strength-renewing cordial to the aged; may be relied upon by woman in all her physical ilEcilities sit a handgun and sure restorative; is an an tidote to the eonswinenses of early indiscretion in both sexes; can be relied upon as a special; for pentlysis,par. Hsi or entire ; has no equal as a stomachic, in cases of Amerada: sustain' not only the physical strength, but the constitution Itself, and Is in all respect. the beat tonis donrative and mall-bilious cordial in existance. Sold by JoHNSTON. HOLLOWAY, & 00WDIN. No. SS North SIXTH Street, Philadelphia. One Dollar per Bottle, or six Bottles fOr INS. Sold by Druggists generally. Sent by Express anywhere, by addressing NOTORIMIS & HILLYSIR. Prowletora, iieS•tritheaspis No. St SWAB Street. New York. GREATFAMILY ECONOMIZER! TER UIITBBSAL ( 1 3 0 0-WHIEL) WEINGU. The BUT end ONLY Sellable Clothes Wringer. ntiBEN3SPEILBI Without this Wringer With it The Olothee are Destroyed, The Clothe* are erred. Labor Is Lost, Labor to loonoraired. lime Is wasted. It will soon pay Its lost of Clothing alone. B. L. Boma e 7 laths lm pilT ILIC ANDBO OBBISTMAS GTFTB.•••• 11 - 2 . USTI° ADORNIUMTV POE HMS OF TASTE • WARDILA OASIS, HAJNOISiii VASES INT BASES. with Ears and °hobo Plante. 1101110BITT1 PoTS, . MUNOZ POTS, /SIAM! WI:11 POTS, PLOW'S, PoTs. Of linalorowi Styles and PA Bo rb L a R f LORLIBILIT Vs n T d OBl. VifilZi llOllDOLE. 'lsparta' and forulo by AS S. A. HRIBOII. Fo. 1010 CRASTNIIT Strain tol2-trilthatf HERMETICALLY SEALED MEATS AXD' SOUPS.' 1.000 doz Snoty oat. KO " Bone t t Beef. MO " do Veal. 000 " do Mutton. " , • 1.000 " do Turk. y. : • 1.000 " • do Chicken. '1 8.000 " assorted !lour. 3. 21 lb. onus. fee. Foj We by it ODES & 1071500/1 WATlM,.Bstst. ic, ... ,.,4, „. - :...--; ~ ..::, : t. i . i t p .. - ---*-';‘212511 '''''''- .. , , . .... _ . • - ', '. ' . . . . • ... —. . .. .. s . ~ ' '. • '' ' • ' '' . A ''''‘Z.A r illir . iiir .z : .•,-., ~I —.. • , .., i . -...., ~-",-, .. • .:. , 11 \A 11/4/ 1 ' .. .. , . . , • . .. - e •"• • - P e'" - __„...7...„;450 , :;•-,,,- _ ..-;,..!-. ; ~ - '.1 . -, . - :..-- - • ~ \;,,. • ......:-/ Il i .\ 3 , _.., . M eof . . • . - .7 . 7 • • • ------:-- -- -- : . ~ , ~,. 'L.... . ,..,.....(1.%:,.f,- .,., 1.7: ? .+:,..,;.-.! . ...7- ' ,.. 7 , ~ . . 11 . 4 I . ‘ , ....410 -7 :: : -*.: 'lrk • '. -', OPP"lntli •••••:•'••• • •.” ---• '-.....77 , , ,, r. , '„„i: . ~- ,- , - -- ' :';',9,!' ,•:. - '. f '' 4 .Y -- .r0 n:74110 1 11.. r. „ . ,- ;N ,-,. : .-;=. .- 4 -... ; ... ~..--, ` ""'r " .7;....„........4„....,..: . ,7_,____. ~. ,t;4° .: ' -'•:-:;,..'; - - , 7 .-... , .. - ' laggi -''' 1„1.: .. ' . ~--""" - ---"'"!:' -• ' - ' 4 - Pir - .. . . . , . .. . t • . .. • . LI ,- . pp i i.,:„ ~ ..., ... _ _ • ._ ..... ... ... • ......... . • . . ._ • . . . . . . • .. ~. ..... ..,..,__, _ . , • ___. *Loss & co., 43 0111811 FUT Street .1. drs P. COATS. rsuinzurmi. BOSTON. NAYLOR & 00. *XI 0031=11.4111 Street, rafts Time le Saved. . tra asp faintl to y y the savant m*B . 45 HAM, Mauer, Agent, South SIXTH Street, n Market and Chestnut, C4t SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1885. VIRGINIA AND NORTH CAROLINA. TERRIBLE CATASTROPHE ON CHESA PEAKE BAY. THREE BARGES BUNK AND TEN LIVES TJOST. LATE NEWS FROM THE SOUTH. A Remarkable Peace Editorial from the Raleigh Whig. STARTLING REPORTS FROM RICHMOND THE OITY ABOUT TO BE EVAOUATED -11.. L. Stehut— (Special Correspondence of The 'Peeve.] Noesoix VA., Feb. 15, 1885 WAIRIRE DISASTER. . . . E. sad and hearett ' asidg c r,a tit trophe, in which ten lives were lost,- bakened oil llikehesapealre Bay, about thirty-dye miles above F6rtress Monroe, on Saturday' night last. On Saturday morning a very severe storni . of Wind and rain Malted the bay into a masa of fury Land all.who travel upon the steamers between the cities of Baltimore and Norfolk must -have experienced what a heavy blow signifies, when the person is.ia Self roiled - fro% . eitlfer - shore. The windwas • very heavy from the northeast; and blew a httrtiosne frofh . tosiiiing unfit lo'bg alter midnight of Satuidayi - Tliettestritai Lori lane, of the regular Baltimore line plying between Norfolk and Balti more,-left the litter city on the lifted:tat:in bf, Satur day, at half:past four o'clock.. She had proceeded only as far na the moutkof ihe•Fetomito river when she encountered the stoic W; Putting- herself upon halfsteam oho proceeded, holever;wititont any soot dent either to herself or anyid her passengers. The night was bitter oold. The wind howled through the rigging of the steamer. •'Rlnto' all the burdened air A /dmig sighs'mane were heard, 4011 sounds and distant . That, uttered by the demon of the night, Warned the devoted wretch of woe and death Early on -the morning of Sunday, while it wail yet dark, the black waters of the larger bay were reached, and here the storm had gained its height. The lookout on the bow of the steamer heard a faint groan and saw a dark object Ori the port side, The steamer was stopped, thinktog it might be a hu man. being in distress, for U had bOome clear that %was a wreck of some description: The mate of the Louisiana cried out to. the shattered hull that was tut floating to the stern of the steamer. The - man on board answered that he was in distress and periaiiing with gold. - A boat was immediately lowered 'from the steamer, but the moment it touched the water It : was swamped ; the wayes dashing over. the men - turned into lee in a moment. The; air was ail ketni as a kniferblade, and cut with almost tlittlai severity. After a little time the steamer worked around no as to get within a few feet of the wretched man,-when rope with a noosed end was thrown hinia which he quickly placed about. his person ' jampetEln , the water, and was dragged through it to the steamer. When ho reached the Louisiana he was so stiff with cold and so perfeody exhausted that he eoultesearce ly utter a word. He 'Managed, however, tcrinform the captain that there were two other men en. the boat, one of whom was flotilla to death, and the!other was about dying through cold and exhauetion. Ef forts were made to rescue the other man, and a ft er a vast amount of labor it was accomplished. The. man fwho was dead could be seen lying upon the' edge of the wreck, the sea washing over him at every billow. The ice had formed in sheets all about his' person, and he lay literally encased in lee. It could not have been less than six inches in thickness over him. It was as clear as crystal, and the body of the unfortunate man could be seen with distinct ness. Both of the rescued men are attended by a number of army surgeons, who chanced .to. be upon the steamer, and after they had become tho roughly witrinedand made comfortable they said that there were ten men on two barges and two in .a smallphallop. They were being towed from Wash. ington to City Point by a Government transport, and were overtaken by the storm. The transport shipped a sea, which stove in her wheel-ho Use, and to save herself was compelled to cut the barges honk Shelost them in the night, and then left for Fortress. Monroe. All the barges sunk except the one from whieh these two men were taken. Imme diately. upon the arrival of the Louisiana at For tress Monroe the relief boat T. C. Wlnants was de. spatehed to search for the missing men, and see if anything could be found whereby the bodies of the men might be discovered. The Chesapeake Bay is one of the most dangerous of all inland waters, The Baltimore steamers are mtnatenttut of the time meeting with accidents, by which var luable lives are lost. The steamers are staunch and sea-vforthy, but accidents of the severest no, tore sets at defiance the skill of man to make strength always equal to the occasion. THE HA-LEIGH WHIG ON MULCH. I have just received a copy of the Releigh Whig, with one of the most remarkable editorials that has ever emanated from the rebel press. I send itew tire: "A national enterprise partakes of the same disposition that a private or individual enteprise does. Norman with sound 0017/111011 -sense risks or jeopardizes his property or his life, his liberty or his reputation, when he knows that nothing but failure and perhaps irretrievable ruin lies before him. For four long years the Confederacy has been in the con dition of a merchant who has risked everything and ginned nothing ; who has witnessed the foundering of the bark containing all Dis precious venture in2a distant sea. How long can we stand thisl How long are we to suffer and endure, without the faintest hope of bettering our condition 1 If we we una ble to maintain Inviolate oar territory from Java don when our whole arms-bearing population bris tled with begat - its ; when our ranks were over orowded with eager and wilting volunteers,lwhat are we to do now when those armies, with but one single illustrious exception, have been defeated, de cimated, or annihilated, andwe cannot recruit their ranks except through the unpopular conscription? In view of these momentous questions; In view of the threatening aspect of the future, it becomes us as men to consider how best to ward off the impend ing calamities. And in thepurest spirit of patriot ism, in the highest love for the South and all her cherished institutions—her brave 'courageous, self saorlliolug people-ztoe. affirm that it is morn than madness for us to continue the on-sided conflict. The spirit of our people is broken under a sacoession of disastrous defeats ; the Yankees are gushed with brilliant and dashing victories; we have lost the seacoast; Sherman and Thomas menace the into. rior, and Grant holds in his vioe-like grasp the only effective army in the Confederacy. Anything— peace, honorable or dishonorable, with or without slavery—the old 'Union—anything under Heaven is preferable to the utter irretrievable ruin now await lug us. " We do not utter this appeal in the expectation that it will be heard in Richmond, or if heard list ened to. What cares the present head or the Con federacy for the complaints or sufferings of our peo pie? Nothing. Nothing, so long as his owninsatiable love of power is satisfied. North Carolina is no more to him than Mexico or Massachusetts. He is the evil genius of the South. He tempted her to the brink of disunion, and now to save himself would ruin his whole country. He has done more than alt the Yankee generals combined to difeat our armies and crush out the military ardor of our people. And if our enterprise feats it will be attributable not to Yankee prowess, not to Southern lack of plink, but to the imbecility, the critical carelessness of Jefferson Davis." IMPORTS AT WILITITIGTOW The Wilmington (ti. 0.) Dispatch, in a late num ber, says that from October 20, 1864, to the end of the year, the following articles were imported into that city : Eight millions six hundred and thirty three thousand pounds of meat; one million five hundred and seven thousand pounds of lead; one million nine hundred and thirty•three thousand pounds of saltpetre • sixty•ntne thousand stand of rifles, and five hundr ed and forty-sir thousand pairs of shoes. A SMALL Rilllßi COBET. The Charleston Mercury of the 9th instant com plains that one rebel corps in the Department of South Carolina has - two thousand seven hundred names on its rolls, but does not turn out seven him. Bred effective men; it sake the pertinent question, " Why Is It that men are not in the ranks, and at the front l" GIN. "OFT= 4T NORFOLK. Major General Foster arrived in Norfolk poster day morning, from Hilton Head, and left for Balti more in the afternoon. He expressed his poaltive opinion that Charleston will be in our hands before the first of Much.. It is expected that a monster mass meeting for the restoration of civil law will be held here during this or the coming week. BTAILTLING IMPORTS ➢ROM RICIIMOND I have just seen a Certain Goss, a deserter from the rebel forces. He left Richmond on Saturday, and said that the authorities had ordered all work to cease on the monitors at the Richmond yards. A double-ender was blown up by them on Thursday last. He rays that they are about to evacuate Richmond. Shipwreck on the Atlantic Coast. [Special Despatch to The Press Tuotrairrov, N. J., Feb. ler= The aoltooner Raebstel C. Enzaell, Capt. Laird; of and from Great Egg Barber, N. J., with pine wood for Now York, came ashore on Long Beach, nearly opposite this place, about 10 o'clock on Sunday last, during the severe snow•storm. The crew succeeded In landing just before night, some of them being frostbitten a little. The vessel Is a total loss. The wreck has been sold by the captain as It Ilea on the beach. The body of an unknown man, apparently about forty years of age, was plaited up on Tuesday last on the south end or Long Beach. From appearances A had pot been long ha the, water. The body was well dressed, but no marks or papers of identity oonld be found. There were also a lot of red velvet oushlore,sundry articles of clothing. picked -up_ along the beach, which would load to the suPposiliOn that a steamer or some large vessel had gone to pieces on our 00103 t. - ft. T. T.. lIMII PHILADELPHIA, SA SECOND COLLECTION DISTRICT. NINTH Agnew. Samutl.... 8590. Agnew, Susau . s(o' Agnew, 1) hi ay,as.... 8u Aurocker, Thos EL. 289' Akers, Thorne's 1,00; Auspach, ' Jno Jr... 19,695 Ashton. Samuel F.. . 1,800, Allen, George 6,000' ustie, Henry 571 Baker, Abraham... 2,593 Baker, 151 V 6,6821 Baker, Mrs E 11 5.... 2,826 1 Baker. Miss Mary.. 820 Baker, Chaff H..... 28,512 Baker, Bliss B W. . 783 Bek , 4_,r 0-11, truafte for Elia Baker..".. 2,291 Baker, -'0 att'y fur Ann DE 8aker.14,491 Baker, 0 Ba ker, er Jr for C r 806 Baker, U H, trustee for Mary Baker-10,102 Baker, OH, trustee for Ella E Sohott. 697 Baker, (.3 El, trustee for .Loulsana B. 697 Baker, O H, trustee for G J Shaman.. 697 Baker, U 11, trustee for Loulseßethell 801 Baker;' C El, att'y for nn Byerly.. 1;188 fßorgenskl, Jos A.. 864 Brown, Jno R.. .... 440; Bradley, David W.. 2,800, Bradfield, James F 611 Bancroft, Esther-, 1,580, 'Bancroft, Margq... 1,580' .131)e. E executor of H. 81ye...-., 8,049 Brooke, Sane 1 8.-. 1,209 'lngham, Jno 0... 2,105 Bingham, Jn0......' 7,700 Bringhurst,Wllllam Waite 100 Byerly, 144190 Bailey, Eat L. 290 Beesley; TheoPhi lus E 2,548 -Ruck, titbanneey..". 2,680 Buck, Jno V 685' Bennet. A Marie.: 1;4851 Brown, Thos G.... 450 Bare, Elias! 500 Brown, G H .14,888 Brown, Jno K 1,200 Cope, al (1 6,763 Cope, Sarah W.... 2,517 Collins, William R. 1,647 Collins, Wfillam trustee for Henry A Collins-. ... . . 258 Campbell, Ckas.... 294 Campbell, Sophia., 2,425 Campbell, 7,998 Coates, Sidney ' 8,062 lioatea, Sarah 2,548 Chandler, James 13. 500 Cuthbert, Allen. .. 1,761 Cadmus,Jeremiall, '8,012 'Ortissimgainea H.. 3;050 Cohen. Be rnard :... 274 ()roll, N" • 589 ,Chambem,_Yames.. 710 Carlisle Henry.. 1,550 046111di, Cornell6ol . 1,000 Manus Win 1,234 Cogan, ' Edwd ' 605 Demokla, And 8 , 000 Latakia, klary.... 200 De.ooursey, Gerald, 3,639 Lowing . , J 5,281 Darraoh, Wm 2,729 Dickey, Sand J.... 1,622 Donaghue,Bernard. 400 Erwin, M L be E 0, . trustees for Susan Erwin 3,00 U Everett, B 3,141 Elliott, Geo 59 Fraley, F 4,400 Fraser, F .374 Fox, Henry J 2,700 Pereira; Jno 2,868 Maher Leonard... 409 Thos L.. 3,400 0111, Etnaoa T 8,026 Gray, N C 180 Graham, R 3,144 Garland, Jas 2,240 Griscom, Jno 6,550 Grill, Chas 225 Gliskitiger, Hen 0, 234 Gutekunst, F 20,950 Hall, A p 717 Mills, Jno S 1,110 Hartshorne, Anna. 375 Hodgson, Wm 137 Harbach,Anna E.. WO Henry, ,Geo W 216 Henry, Geo W, ex ecutor of William Henry 810 Henry, Jno W 14,7, Bannibal, Hugh... 198 B Horner, enj C 4,833 Romer, Rebecca... 1,336 Hahn, Nary 831 Rent c l ay, Jas H.. 600 liogaman, Moses S. 318 ofman, W 1,000 ooper, Eliza 3,746 Horne, Cyrus 189, Ileiskill, Hannah A 9531 Ileiskill, U 1,4801 litialzall, 0, Mabee for 11 D Helskell. $O l. Heiskill,_o, trustee for DI H. Helitkill. 528 Heiskill, I), trustee for F Helskill.... 923 Helekill, 0, trustee for E H Halsk111„ 439 Haskins, A Pd. H. 178 .Tamer,Geo 0 900 James S E 50 Jones, Wm F 61 Jones, Samuel W.. 7,719 Jenks, Mary A.... 232 Johnson, J B 613 Ring, Francis 20,000 Keene, Henry E. . . 900 RneaSS, N . 14 629 Knorr, g Fred 381 Halley, Wm $660 Beck, LeVl 1,198 Baas/each, J N.... 017 Clemson, Jae 1,000 Fliley, Harvey 3,0181 Franklin, E 900'' Bogner, Jno F 206 Has ner, Jefferson S 210 1 Hano, Lours 475 Holden, Ell 2,981 Harvey, B. . 256 1 Hagey, Jno 7861 Kempton, J 778 SIXTH . )IVISIOM Anderson, S D.... $770 Hitchoock, Win B. 8372; Baker, Geo 'OOO Hawkley, J H 200 Bayld, Frank 11;850 Howoley, M A Mrs 809. Beale, Jos B. 800 Hoskin, John 528 Bennett, A B 105 Jones, Geo F 981 Bomgardner, Jel.. 1,450.J0ne5, lel Mrs 863. Bornall t H hire.... I.loo'Kune, Sarah L Mrs 2,168 13rady,Thas T . 20.055 King, Henry T.... 600 Branson, 0 4,800 Kahnweller, Jacob. 2 900 Brown, David Paul 1,400 Ladd, 11 0 Mrs.... 4,282 Bockitta, ()heist.... 726 Latham. S T 4,278 Bryan, Mahlon.... 100 Lewis, Lawrence.. 9,018 Burrows, Wm...-. 416 Lewis,lers Anna M 15,671 Bawly, R D 400 Lewis, Miss ill R.. 860 lagdory, A 11 460. Lewis, Jos W 4,160 Cabal Louis 900 'Magee, Robt M.... 169 Caldwell, Stephen. 29,697 114o0aulley, Bin 91 8,136 Cary, Chas 400 MeCutehen, H M.. 176 Chambers, Jno Rev 1,957 MODowell, PI E.... 8,360 Cbamellon, Win... 900, McElroy, Albert... 859 (Mailman, 0 Mrs... ail' McLeod, James.... 800 Cooper, Conrad J.. 285 McManus, Thos.... 800 Oorbit, Jas 3,261 Morgan. W C 7,813 - Crawford, Geo L.. 825 litinerheid, 0 H.... 2,795 Oristy, Jas 0 945 Mnerkeld,Henry P 11,704 Cad Walader, Geo Mohllirtrie, hire R Gen 25,000 M 2,278 Christian, SJ 4,596 Ninninger, J R .... 329 J Caffee, W' l5O Oakford, Isaac 8... 1,983 Dixon, H 666 Peale, Franklin.... 1,454 Dawson, T B. 3,661 Peale, Mrs F 692 Delayer, Chas..... 723 Pesos, David 600 Derveee, Beni F.... 7,o22lPhillipB, Henry M. 9,100 Dickson, S H Dr... 1,500 Powell, 8G 192 Docaohet, H W Rev 8,945 Powell, 3 W 100 Du nglison, R .1' Dr.. 181 Price, Ell K 8,300 Dunglison, R Dr... 9,478 Reichard, Chas A.. 710 Dunn, Jno P Rey- 100 Read, J9l Judge_ 17,266 Diehl, John H 3,684 Read, Mrs Amelia. 3,202 Harp, 11l A Dirs. - . 405 Rlohardson, John.. 400 Ellie, DW 0 800 Robertson, Wm.... 200 English, Gustavus. 6,826 Rudder, W Rev Dr 1,900 English, Gusty, ex. 4,846 Rogers,. R E 1,164 Evans, G W ...... .. 289 Rudd; John W 2,870 Fell, Morris L 280 SllO6E:Sam! . 2,867 Ferris, Daral 580 Smith, Edw 8...... 560 Floyd, W E 3,809 St John, H H 3,755 Folsom, B F 3,883 Stephens, Mrs EB. 1,173 Foster, 0 E 54 Stevens, David 400 Fowler, Jos G 4 200 Stokes. Jno 11 728 Freeman. Henry G. 6,104 Swift, Edwin 14,545 Fassitt, F T 482 Stevenson, 1) 273 Fotterall, Sarah B. 763 Swan, D9l 450 Garrett, A 1,181 Taylor, John 2,160 Garrlgues,H A.Mrs 1,079 Thompson, James Gould, S M Rev... 195 Judge 2,042 Gray, Orlando.-- 1,894 Thiess', HIT 600 GroBjean, Edw..... 400 Tingley, Clem...". 1,100 Getty, Archibald...l4,4oo Tilghman, Mrs AM 8,032 Griffith, Thomas... 8,880 Van Poets, Rev P. 2,107 Griffin, George W. 809 Von Essen, H 8.... 183 Halstead, Geo W.. 347 Vail, Hugh D 4,107 Hamilton, W....,, 60 Walker S 0 400 Harrison, John 700 Wells, &Las 1,167 Hansard. P J 3,700 Williamson, .7 V.... 56,943 Hayes, Ford E .... 226 Waterman, A G.... 800 Haellman, Wm.... 496 Winship, E K 700 Heilman, Horace.. 878 Woodhouse, S M Heron, Jr, A 9,200 hl I) 858 Hildeburn, Jae W. 3,900 Woodhouse, T R.., 260 Healy, Patrick.... 758 Zimmerman, D 131.. 406 Abbott, W L 849,1841 Atlee, Wash L......13,870' Abbott, Jas . 1,626 Allen, Sarah T.... 1,764 Allen, .1010 B A.... 1,065 Anton, John 812 Allison W 0 10,862 Allen, iv G- 11.1 Allison, Walter.... 968 Atkinson, John.... 606 Biddle, Robt 7,800 Bossier, Dant P.... 660 Bullock, Geo 13,125 Bullock, L W 4,837 Bailey, Joel J....,,415,650 Brolaaky,Jeff}l.... eoo Bruen, E 8.. = en, Black, Jae T 400' Black, Thompson.. 2,400 Bcnney, Mary L... 600 Black, Rent 800 Beason, Chas A.-80,182 Baugh, Semi .22,861, Bull, Wm M 782' Betts, Rlohd R.—. 151 Bottler, David...... 684 Blopham, Wm..... 650 Bishop, Thos 51 Burden, Clarence, executor of Jos B Smith, deceased.. 764 Beatty. Saml 480, Balt, Darius 406; Battler, Danl 8.... 1,2951 Bisbing, Mary L... 600' Blair, Thoe 200 Brown, Wm 1 508 Brinkman, .111.. 888 Busby, Geo L 2,206 Busby, E 11 1,028 Busby, Sarah 681 Blackburn, F 1,000 Blackburn, Anna Elba 782 Brown, Nathan ... 6,881 Bishop, Uriah 0... 605 Bingham, F M..... 3,200 Brooks, David 2,939 Brown, John D.... 520 Barker, Ohaa 100 Brown, Margaret.. 2,401 Curtue, Sarah Z... 1,962 Claghorn. Jae L... 7,427 Carver, Wm 8.... 8.718 Crates, Geo M 8,169 Coates, lOW. 19 912 Conover, Jos 8.... 1,879 Conover, Wm P.... 1100 Conovor i A Mi.,. 4 W 9 lIVAC 070110 S. .1111640 . bT. Xtrleuam, Geo H.. 25.23 T •Thoi 98,117 ICueber,Antkorly 11 9,782 , Kaigen. Jae E.... 320 ; Lewis, Edmund....i6,931 i Lemsteter, John... 600 ;Les; Chas E i 7,890 Lea, Ohm E exe cutor of Jacob Lea - 2,400 Loyd, Sarah . 330 Loyd, Karp Ann.. 270 Longstreth, Mary A 2.845 Leidy, Joe 1,028 Litton, S 4 417 Lyle,T hos W 3 ; 097 Lang, Gvo S 5,409 Lang, Jane 6,657 -Lliinard, Mary J.. 79 LafOre, A.......... 460 Lafore, Lnalnda 61 200 Loh; Samuel 821 ' Morrie, Lintel 24,082 Morris, Stephen P. 6,408 iMorrie Mary 01. 1 - 3,993 Morrie, F V. 18,008 blyera, John D.... 90,361 Ellen, Job "B 23,730 Myers,Nathan..., 17,047 Myers, 151 A . 60 Massey, Okla, Sr.. 698 - Illusey, It 'V, EVr. 8,294 Milliken, Samuel.. 3,408 Murphy, Wm P....:1,050 ;Mickley, j j 126 , , Milligan, B T 193 Musgrave, a W.... 1.242 ;Martin, Simi 1,096 'Meyer; 00nrad 1,069 I blartln, Thoe . 684 Morgan,' ... . . 284 _Jas EL _,. 1,079 Arile, Elllston P.. .797 lward, Wm 8.785 51oCuteheon. Ja5..10,801 3lognlllan. Sae H. 810 Mc-F4,lll.wpPatir: 4;slr.- MhOOwen, T...., 261 oOintli, Robb H.. 300 Newlin, Pranols.... 760 Noidhard, 0 . . ... 3 , 245 'Newlin, Jul D 1,095 Oath' 1)... 1,224, Ilfahols, 0 0 382 NiffhOlas, Elias L.. 1,000 Ogdeh, Edved EL...1 4,016 Perot, Ed vrd 10,209 Perot, °has ...o. . . . '18,214 Perot, Edw06446,, trustee) for /Sleep P Lardner 1,708 Perot, Frain:46.... 0,170 Prestln, Charlotte. 1,731- , Paulus John 800 POtte, Jam - 368 Pflllog, Geo P 390 Roberts Martin... 3•18., Roberts, O l 7 2,800 Rea, Jobb . 8,550 - RQberte, Chas J.... 600 Rain!,.......230 Stanobridge, .. . .859. chaefer, (Arid... 345 Sparhawk; Sarni- 200 Simmone; Mry.- 1,300 Shuellorman, F.... 685 Sharp, Mall 31.2 , ` Sharp, John 5,035 Stroud, Wm]) 1,331 ..- Shoemaker, Nstl3... 1,500 ihowervg A 2 025 Sager, Adeline ... 1,779 Margaratts. 1,779 Smith, Lawn, atty . for.Raohel Smith. 1,182' Smith, Albert, atty for 11 . 809 Shaffner, Jr, Jno J 9l Shaffner, John... _15,912 Soule, Roraoe M- .16,786 Sulger, Ann Margt. 651 Sulaer, Ahab:Carat,. trustee for -Abu,. ham 501ger...... 470 Shifter, Ann Dlargt, trustee for Lucy Bulger 433 Bulger, Ann Iffargt, exam:dor for Ann S Sulger ' '1,585 Sharpleee, bath H. .000 Tilge, .1 1,725 Mg°, Henry 16,7715 Thomas, Jno- - 10,639 Thomas j .Tno, true- >. too for Ann Af. Boulden 3.889 Trucks Wm 2,474 Truck Ono • 2,351 Taggart, E Ft. 9,310 Vona, Thos W 1,473 Van", Xarge.ret... 3,157 Volans, NE S. 200 Volans, E 200 Van Osten, Jae 8.. 9,270 WORM!, j 151 26,150 Wllll4lll, Wm 308 Whitall, Sae 15 , 816 290 Weston, Edward... 2,922 Williameon, Walter 3,209 Walter, Win r 936 Wallace, Wm 196 Williams, Sande ... 700 Webb, Thos 2,700 Wright, A E 956 Wright, Thos C.... 290 WII damson, E H.. 89k, Williamson, Thos. 7,71 Williamson, T ho s, - trustee for Fannie W Johnson 897 W llliamson, T h o s, ' trustee int James Wlslar 2,344, Williamson, Thos,, attorney for ET T 450 Williamson, T h 0 e, trustee' for Eliza beth.W W, , 'star... 3,476 Brown, attbrney for Sarah Weldor.— 3,000 Whitman, S F 860 Yarnell, BFI 972 Yeager, Jno E ' 83 DIVISION. EEZZEU , Morris, H M $514 'Pennypaoker, J T.. 200 Park, A M 623 Plat, „Too . 500 Riley Tao 178 Ray, V 7 m 326 Stewart, M E 2;000 Smith, i M. .. 1,080 Stewart David 810 Toner, Terrance—. 83 Taylor, Root 1,143 Young, .1* P 1,200 EIGHTH DIVISION. Martian, Deb0rah..91,517 McDevitt, Daniel.. 18 926 MoGlensey, John-17,245 Massey, Wm L.... 8,446 Morris, P Pemton. 5,726 Maddock, Wm L.,, 6,806 Maddock, W L.W. 1.200 McHenry, Alex 11.. 7,950 Mcfdichael,Morton 8, 500 Murphy,Samuel... 252 Massey, Wm 20,000 McKnight, John... 2,050 Mahood, Jas 792 Miller,Jail 200 Morri, Wm 244 MOLangbiln, Matt 125 .Minloh, H R 250 'Myers, Lawrence.. 1,844 Markley, Ed 0.... 2,445 Mudge, Simon 494 Mershon, Daniel_ 272 Mclntyre Wm.... 284 ,Main, Wi l liam. 709 'Moon, Samuel 5... 2,400 McAllister, John... U,348 Merrick, S V 27,750 McCune, Clement. 500 Newlin, Thu 5....14,082 Nathan', Moses.— 2,860 Nioholl, Robert.... 1,088 Ogilvie, Sarah E... 457 :Oliver,Oliver, Geo L 14,280 O Jos IYI. 1 ,519 !Osborn, Edwin 400 'O'Brien, Peter 868 Ob O'Neill, M Robert.... 2,250 400 y, Par r rish, D W 1,400 Parrish, D W, ex of W DParrish, deo 4,60 Q Perkins Semi H... 2,840 Patterson, Wm 0.. 8,079 Peterson, Alex 18,941 Pritchett, John.... 8,276 Pritchett, Vdia... 2,000 Palmer, B 9,400 Pave, Wm W 4,407 Pave, Saml W 944 Pool, John 126 Pagel, Julius 150 Patterson, ]Pm.... 810 Penrose, Wm 845 Panobast, Joshua.. 100 Pancoast, Samuel.. 1,080 Parker. Morrie 5.... 260 Page, Franklin E.. 100 Peterson, Thos.;... 800 gninn Patriek.... 818. quoluron, W V., 61701 bAY,, * " . ElEißUAltii 18, • Chambers.a 7.278 cock, . 7,036 Chambers, tintirll,s'Zl Conant*, Geo :. 780 Cl Diane, Ged .v. 2,450 Ormond, Ifeeffi. 2,1C0 11 ,Oramond, t , We . ,ite avarillan of & E nonfat() .. 9,275 1,800 1 Colket, 'Wrn 900 h. 20,120 Oonine k laafto«,4.. 2,225 Clatileon,34o: .. 200 Clark, Mary 201 Celina, 220 Clayton, Onralp.t.. • 250 1 Crowell,'Jae X.-- 1,081 Ooobra z 1 .7 - I:l4kney. 8,284 0/1111, , ,1(. 8,182 Colton, .q 4 1,800 Conpland, ~,Tl e htte. 500, Cox, John.;.i 225 Caney, A 13: 4,1081 Carver, A rex , of W A Ski t.... 231 Doban, M .... 48,800 Donek - .... 430 0 1323,39 60 0 • 248 • 200 300 ~... 1,002 1,400 .... .302 ~.. 820 ~.. 1,500 810 , 1,476 ff . p.. 800 .13,857 (.2... 96 • 6,077 .. 1 18 x ton, . 6 , 000 0 te d ,828 'ln 1,880 /38 ... 426 . 1.400 . . 1.242 779 . 4 35 7 .10,150 8,880 4,057 . .1,000 .. 900 G.. 8;406 8,766 ... 179 .. 455 . . 5,186 tp 3_380 eo ~ 394 Renj MI. 578 , H 8,464 E.. 52,921 EWE& (3... 158 Booj 2,051' , L . .. 27,844 mp,,Tno 189 $lOOl2, Jae E... 875 man t .lap E.... 850 am,R3.l 120 Lain, Walter... 2,392 _ _ . . ....., on spie Win 2115 V. 11,107 Hsefeell, Samuel B. -2,548 Haaiey, Henry 9;375 kiofetmann W 50,555 Hoistmen, W J r trustee 5,886 HOpprn,dienry.... 2.24 Hughes, Wm F...,16,000 Hammerely, Jas W 2,475 Hirt, Samuel 15.081 Haneel,l B 10,448 Barn,George L.. . 200 Hopper, Thomas U 3041 Holmes, Geo W.... 1.015 Harris, Washingt, , _n 1,050 Hunter, George W. 516 Hunt, 0 J 594 Harris, George 13.. 000 Holt, mae 96 Harley, Edward... 1,192 Hansel), Amoe 200 Henry, Isaac 150 Reasoner, JaCob... 450 Bunn. 600 Hall, Ed w in 9,400 Born. J0hn....,... 778 'Briefings, SP 892 Hen W. 150 Heyl, Julia S 890 liambright,_M N.... 8,669 Harrhson, W H 200 Marshall. ..... 12062 Hertsug, Ann 9,716 Justice, Pbebe'Anzi 697 Justice, Elizabeth. 1,8371 Jacobs, S L 1,650 Jenks, William P.. 14,485 Jerks, W P, guard of KIM A Aid... 1,058 Jerhe, John L 11,276 Jones, William D.: 4,778 Johnson, Oharlee.. 120 Jewell, Leonard... 2,015 ,Jarden, Samuel.... 1,507 ones, snob P....22,48a • e, ries G.. 1,220 Jao , James:— 265 Joyce, John J 1,997 Johann, A 400 Kates,.. 1,852 Kates, Catharine 13 467 Knoppel, D 978 Kern, B F 321 Earshaw, John.... 277 Kerr, N orman imr.. 3,184 Lehman, Dlbe A E. 1,264 Lippincott, Wm... 686 Lippincott, Mary.. 1,159 Lippincott, Selena, 1,544 , Lacey, William.... 1,00 Levis, James 650 1 tarred, Wm Henry 20 728 Longstreth, Wm... 16,819 Liggett, Robert.... 5,872 Little, James H... 851 Lawson, Kelvins.. 380 Lewis, S A 2,106 Lawsdh, Mary L.. 102 Little, Arthur W.. ' 4,9311 Lomax John 160 • Lyone,AL 400, Leads, ki R.... .... • 8571 Loewe, Francis.... 800 Ludlow. S S 787; Lewis, H R 745 -M 1 agee Michael... 0,278 Magee, Michael I 7,095, Mania, Jae W 4,673' Moore, Wm H 3,6631 Megargee, Samuel 2,592 The Conbtitatio SPENCE' OP HON. We reprint with pleasure, this morning, the speech of Hon. A. R. McOiure, In our State House of Re presentatlves, on the motion to adopt the amend ment to the Constitution. We have rarely read a more thorough, statesmanlike, and unanswerable argument on this great question : I do not err on this vital Issue. However die guised by professions or loyalty, the teacnings of the gentleman from Northumberland (Mr. Purdy) and his political associates are aimed to paralyze the power of the Government, and to strengthen the hands of its deadly enemies. We were told the war was fruitless ; that it could not be successful; and faithful men were staggered by the earnest, tireless, innihty current of poison that flowed from the De mocratic leaders to make the people their own and their country's foes. I except, as I have always done, the masses of all parties from the terrible im putation of disloyalty to the Government. They Neve shown it in every stage of this conflict. They have defied their political leaders In the darkest hour of the nation's cause, and rushed to Its rescue ; but they left behind them the quibbling, craven alters who were too base to defend their nationali ty, and too cowardly to se sail it mannally. Need I inquire to whom we are indebted for the turbulence that has blotted our history in the va rlonS stages Of this struggle for national existence l Whence came disorder, contempt of law, and riots In our own free North I Who taught the deluded victims of Democratic leaders to inaugurate anarchy In the chief city of the Union! Who taught them that conscription was but remorseless tyranny and prepared them by persistent, malignant hostility to the Government for the appalling scenes which were witnessed there In 18881 And when they had but obeyed the inevitable conviction of Democratic teachings, and ran riot in arson, murder, and anarchy for days, who greeted them as "friends" and begged for peace, not to vindicate the violated laws, or to save an imperilled Government, bat to save themselves from the swift retribution they saw in the bitter cup they had prepared for others. The leaders had not the manhood to declare in favor of slavery and treason, but, like the gentleman from Northumberland (Der. Purdy), they paured a steady current of treason, the more deadly because it went forth in the thin guise of devotion to the Union. Well did they obey the behests of ala7ery, and they gam rich itnitS wherewith to gladden despairing e.' And who in our own Slate have t ought lawless ness to defeat the strengthening of our armies and protract the war for fresh Sacrifices of blood and treasure Z Whence has come disorder hero I Not fromallegheny, or Chester, or Lanoaiter, or Phila delphia, but from the sections where DemoOraoy could boast of its greatest supremacy. Whence cage this treason I It was not Inherent with the people. They are as loyal now 88 they wore in 1881. Who, then, by tireless arts and persuasion, made them stringers to their own beat Inked:. tanoe and foes to government and lowl I saw brave men, clad In their country's blue, march from the border when the cannon of Early thundered ou the Pototnao—not to make the victory of Sheridan more decisive, bat to enforce the laws and preserve order a our own then threat ened Commonwealth. While treason flaunted its bloody banner on the very border of our State, De mocracy, its faithful ' ally, was attempting revolu tion In the strongholds of Its leaders, to cheer the hearts and strengthen the arms of those who came to thrust the torah of the barbarian, and ply the trade of the freebooter In our...happy homes, and make our golden fields desolate by their brutal tread. These are but the currents which flow fro m the deadly fountain of treason, and where rises its Pestiferous head to course its way to every hamlet In the land, and leave Its fatal impress upon man kind! Who gave this fountain of treason life and power to threaten a nation's noblest strug gle with disaster 1- Behold the men who, at every stage of the war, have resisted every mea sure essential to success. They Ceclared trea son too mighty for the Government to sup press: They appealed to the sordid to arrest staggering taxes and debt by demanding peace, when well they knew that peace involved dis memberment and death. They plead their unholy cause to the fears of the cowardly, and Implored them to avoid the perils of the field y resisting con scription, and Impair the power of the Government by lawlessness. They aroused the prejudices of the bumble by pointing to the degradation of negro equallty, and even men plumed as popular leaders seemed to fear that they were so poorly endowed that the benighted African might outstrip them in the race of ambition. They appealed to every preju dice or the feeble, the venal, the faithless, to array them against the free institutions whose beneficence gave them every social,. civil , and religions right. But the people, although at times faltering as the dark shadows of disaster enveloped thenation, were still faithful to their Government. Like the dis turbed and oscillating needle that ever settles to the pole, they would rise from the cloud of perfidy that beset them and give their hearts and attorilloes to preserve the Republic of our fathers. One hope remained for Democracy and slavery. They turned to the court of last resort of Pennsyl vania, and, in the name of Democracy, demanded that the only means by whioh our armies could bo filled and enabled to triumph should be set aside as an Infraction of the sovereignty of the State, and therefore void. They hoped that the people would be glad to grasp this pretext to turn upon them selves, their country, their children, and their God. It was the task of despair, but it was performed, and the right of this Government to defend its life when treason was fastened upon It with deadly stfitte, as with hooka of triple steel, was gravely deniediby the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. Then did trea son, the twin-born of slavery, triumph In our midst, .and oompassed the judiolary--the.last reture'of the Its slimy , slit it arojtotd. the • Randolph; Evan— 20,402 1-1 dOi 8 132 ; Heed, afo ;Reed, Henry H 7,620 Itlobs,rds,Roht 7,543 iltiohards; Mary a 1,115 Rlobards Ells 1,115 Roberts; Perolval 9,428 Iltasmonct, AI. 661 Rafanyder Edwd , 1,000 Reed, AIL ' 380 !Rotherinel, Datil,. 1,700 ; Rogers " Henry A 333 ;Ryan, James 108 ilthiggold, Wm S 738 Starr, lima° 15,401 Sm Lindley 10.137 Smyth; Lindley, trustee.... Sterling, 5,055 South, °heater L , 1,660 Suaith, Qhas A. Rev, 114 Sansom, Hannah 8 950 Sterling, Heury 0 5,854 Semites, Rudolph. 400 Sault*, Ohristliti z 400 Schott; Jas 1;529 Sharp, Win L 2:R60 Sherrerd, Win D 9,205 Smith. Wm DT 700 Smith,Robt S 212 Soott, peo A 101 Stinson. - Patriok 3OO Stone, red, admin (strati:ix' o( Daniel Stone, deseased— 4,L79 Smith, 0 Stradley, Jno 200 ShaW, Jane .394 Steinmeta, Daniel, 6,040 StiOwden, Jae Ross ; 3,000 SParb suit; Tao 2,056 Struthers, Wm...: 3,450 Smith, Pemberton, 1,200 Seutiert, Ernst 2T6 SbarpleoB3 2,076 Scott, 3W T 942 Smith, S Grant l5O Sitar, PAW.. .. SOllOOl, Jn0... .. ._ 36 Freir 2,310 Smyth, James P... 7,316 Shinn, Wm 400 Townsend, R • 1:1; trustee of E A. Va 725 Townsend, R 3,685 Tingley, B W 12,271 Tingley, Ben] ' 4,720 Thomas, A R 650 Tunta, E 151 P 3,900 Tillinghast, J0a.... 204 Taylor, Emma L.. 8,721 Taylor. Time N.. . 4,117 Tredlok, Diontio. mery L 221 Thompson, A. H... 4,745 robey,*aml, agent, 1,244 Tobey, Mary 8..... 219 TenhrookWm E.. 1,437 ThompWinthrop. 404 son, Josiah B ' ... 2,485 Th 00585, Lydia b.., 2,254 Thomas, Lydia..... 6,692 Thomas, Jane 2,710 Tnomae, Jane. true. tee of Sarah R Ban 1,896 Torr, Wm S 524 Thompson, Jn0.... 14,257 Torrey, M A 16.0 T.4ylor. Wm 11 1,047 Tranlionsin And S. 125 TWaddell, Edward. 1,651 Twaddeli, Edward, trtialtoo' Of A Bunke...., 737 Twaddell, Edward, trustee.of o.Twad dell . . 737 Twaddell, Edward.; trustee of S T Orabb 737 Twaddell, Edward, trustee of S Twad dell ... 137 , 'Twaddell, Edward, trustee of Mary MeV - eV 137 Twaddell, Edward_, trustee of S Twaddell. ...... 137 Town, Robe rt 360 Thoms.s..6. Chithb , t. 635 Thompaon,Renry U. 2,187 Vaughn. John A... 1,730 I Vaur, Wm S . 5,499 Vial; Win S, trim tee of E P Long. 336 Vega, Win S; trait. tee under the will of E Fonlke, de ceased 5,163 Vault, Win S, true tee of F V 'Clufitt. 262 Vl3lll, Win 5, tree: tee of Eliza Tra• ntt 10,947 Wetherlll,oharlotte W..' 343 Wetherlll, Rohn P. 215 Wetherlll, C W and S, trustees of B J Douglas 1.778 Wetherlll, 0 W and S.trustees of C W Wether/11. .. 1,299 Wetherlll4o "a; an d S, trustees of Egli - Foster 1,899 Wetted% 0 W and S, trustees of. W R P etherlll..„, 1,299 Whiter, B Wyatt... 2,842 Whiter, B Wyat t; executor of Whiter, deceased. 1,965 Wolf, ED 1,195 Wilson, John A....33,277_ White, Samuel 5...42,409 Wray, Tames 0.... 8,472 Wray, Mary 0..... 2,532 Wray, Sam'! 0 and Mary o,adaers of Alexander Wray, deceased 5,178 Wright, Samuel ....28,289 Wright, John 18,882 Wright, Ohm 8.... 1,825 iWood, Nathan M.. 654 WUson, A. 0 1.932 Waterman, J 7,730 Williams, Thos 4,750 Walker, Wm 64 Watson, Benj 1,380 Wheeler, Jno H.... 884 Walker, Abraham.. 1,788 Whitehead, Mrs M. 933 Willis, Mary Ann.. 268 Westoott, Chomp I 8 0t1 1,438 Wetberlll, John P. 5,019 Woodward, Edw A. 1,053 Yarrow, Oaroline.. 1,102 Yarnell, A H 2,039 , Young, Jim S 749 .Zehender, John G. 230 IlicKniaht, Robert.. 400 Reed, R S 3,024 al Amendment. A. K. 211'01.11R8. 1866. people to a mighty struggle. Impelled 'by the despotism of treason—whtek mocked theta lii their perilf—to the moral heroism whichever strengthens right In its midnight of gloom, they reyereed their mart by the deotsion of the ballot•box, from which. there Jr no appeal, and I thong a just and merciful - Godr•that the court, the Saito, Budlike nation, lived; • and •lived loyally. [Applausel Tbfs record of unizabgled wrong anti treachery le the history.. of the ,party whose representatives to day will .oast their votes egainst the ratilloagon of the proposed amendment to the thinstltutlan. It Is their work—they were so bidden by slavery, and they obeyed. Am I not right, sir, in Saying that they are consistent 1 So far from being stirprbied that they sovote, I should think it strange' Indeed did they , not maintain the shade of virtue that Con sistency. and fidelity may give them. Slavery, concaved In crime, and faithful to Its creation 'for more than three• ['Rafters of a century, to about to finish its teak, and •when it turns • for the last time to beheld its friends la the exercise of power, it would 'he cruel, moat cruel, indeed, for them to spurn it, and leave it to die un mounted and•dishonored. They owe it to the power :which they worabipped when It was mighty.. They followed its bleak plume of desolation nottl dt made bcndage national and freedom sectional; untll it enbverted the genius of. the Government and its fundamental law; until It plunged us into causeless war and brought bereavement to every clrole ; and now. when He who inlet over all,. In the fatness of Hie time, has , declared that .• venueance is mine, I will repay,” and when lilt last relentless stroke is about to fall open it, it le fitting In this hour, In this death-etruggle, that they 'should be faithful to the institution that in other days made them great. [Great applause.] BBLIGIOUS IIiTLLUGENCE. REPORT of the Religions Condition of Callers, prepared by the Society of Inquiry, Andover Theo- Logical Seminary': COLLSOSO Am-herot Col'o, Nam . *Bowdoin Me. *Brown Unlv.,_ N. ' , College of N. Jena /. Dar tanonth Col. If. n Dickinson Clollece.Pi4 sAe 187 102 216 XB3l .Genesee CoN., N. Hamilton, Harvard 17n1y. *Jefferson Coll.Ps *Mad b3on 17niv.;111. Y. Midaltburs , Vt. Pain's College, Pa Nl:tigers College.N.j. Union College; NAY. Univ. Lewisburg. Pa. 'Univ. of New York.. University of Penna. Univ of Bosh'r, N.Y. Washinnton °oil. Pa. Wesleyan Univ.Conu Winterise Coil. algae. Yale College, Conn Total ,1864.23 Collegee 8671 1609 581 649 T081,1E63,26 College' 3926 1764 668 102 • ETATIBTIOS POR 1853 —These Colleges failed to all awer.tbe circular of inquiry as to their religious condi tion for the year, In season for publication.. NEISSIONAB6EO Ilt OHINA..—The following table shows the number of Protestant misslonarleil M China : Dames of Converts Towne. Missionaries. Missions. - Estimated. Canton 19 6 150 Swatow 6 _ 2 100 Amoy .12 . 8 , 700 rubel= 11 3 150 Shan g g p Ninhai' o 6 2 1 13 4 ' 590 • NO Rank= 2 3 30 Tintshi T 3 30 Chefoe 3 2 t Tangohan 8 2S 90 Pekin.— 10 6 10 Hongkong 10 4 440 Bums Cpantos.—The aerrnon on tide subject by T. H. Stockton, the pastor of the Churoh of the New Testament, which wee announced in them columns for delivery last Sabbath afternoon, had to be postponed on account of the weather. It will he in place, Providence permitting, to morrow afternoon at 3% o'clock; in the chapel at Eleventh and Wood etreete. AU who are interested in Scriptural truth. and Christian Union are invited to attend. Tim New .Tersey_ Conference of Churches, at IM late meeting In ,Newark, New Jersey, took mea sures to have.its thirteen churches adequately re presented Ist the General Connell, to be held In Bos ton next June. The delegates selected are Rev. W. B. Brown of Newark. Lowell Mason : . Jr., of Grange, Rev. -Jonathan Crane, of Middletown, New York, and Rev. Edward Hawes, of this city. A 00101ESPONDB1.7T 01 the Church Journal writes from New Orleans that all the church clergy within our lines in Louisiana have united in inviting Bishop Hopkins to make an Episcopal visitation to that diocese: Tun Clay Mission Chapel' Is a building in Pearl street, above Twelfth, to be needl e s a colored Epis copal chant, whioh a nuts lier of the Episcopal clergy have kindly volunteered to officiate. TAB Rev. Charles E. liftaray has taken charge of Zion Church. New Publications. The second and concluding volume of the "Auto. biography, Correspondence, &0., of Lyman Beecher, D. D., edited iby Oharles Beecher," just published by Harper & Brothers, is decidedly better than the first. It includes the events, from Dr. Beecher'S establishment of the Connecticut Observer, in 1824 to hie death, at Brooklyn, January, 1863, in his 80th year. His leaving Litchfield on a call to Hanover Church, Boston—an unaccepted call to Pblladel• phis—his emigration to the West as President of and Professor of Theology in the Lane Seminary, Ofacinnati—ids trial and trials there—his visit to England and Scotland in 1848, (we well remember what a sensation he created there, especially his lectures on temperance)—his return to Boston, and hie closing labors and departure, are related here in a plain, clear, and attractive manner. He was a man of great ability, sanguine temperament, exten sive learning, expansive intellect, remarkable per sistency, and true piety. His children have inhe rited much of his own character, and are, taken "for all in all," the most remarkable family in America. Received from Lippincott & 00. Messrs. Harper have also pub lisped a neat volime, by Warren Burton, entitled "The Culture of the Observing FaoultieS in the Fanilly and the School or, Things About Home, and How to Make them Instructive to the Young." Common sense—that rarest of all qualities—is the pervading character istic of this volume. Numerous subjects are noticed or glanced at, but none beyond the ready compre. heulon of young people. The aim is to engage and employ their observing faculties, and it is at tained. We notice, with surprise, Mr. Burton's crude ideas about newspapers. He thinks (p. 121) that the journal which invents Its own sensational news Is more popular than that which records facts. "That goes off," he says, "which contains the keen. est stimulative for the moment." ,We have not found it so. The reliable journal, kndi'n to contain nothing but accurate information, must inevitably go ahead of the sheet which makes itself so noto- Bons by publishing falsehood that, at last, (like the boy in the fable, who cried out "Wolf!") it is dis credited even when It tells the truth. Received from T. 11. Peterson & Brothers. L. & J. &miller & Co., New York, have sent us an Svo. volume, pp. 421, containing "Sermons on our Lord JOllllB Christ; and on his Blessed Mother," by Cardinal Wiseman. Most of these were preached at Rome, during the period between Advent and Lent—the subjects, suggested by the Gosp els v of this time, were the Infancy and Passion of the Saviour, kenos "His glorious Ramrreation, His admiral (sic) Ascension, Whitsuntide, Corpus Christi, never could enter 'our cycle." The die anuses were addressed to educated, learned hearers, many of them Protestants, which may aecount for a certain recondite air that pervades them. No one can deny that they are eloquent—but It Is not the eloquence which would naturally be awakened were the preacher addressing only an ordinary pa rochial congregation. Received Crom H. MoGrath, Market street. "Lord Oakburn's Daughters," a new novel, by Mrs. Henry Wood, bee just been publlshedby T. B. Peterson bE, Brothers, who have purchased the au thor's advanoed proof sheets. JO usual, it is a etc. ry of English society. The Earl himself is only a poor half-pay sea-captain when he diet appears, and though he suooeeds to a title, a very small in- come goes with It. The main Interest turns upon the runaway marriage of one - Of the Earl's daugh ters with a dashing country surgeon, and the de. velopment of mysterious circumstances connected with the previous death of her sister. The myste ry is unravelled, knot by knot, with surprising In genuity, and we must say that the novel Is one of the best of the season. Storage of Coal 011. To the Editor of The Press: SIR : Your correspondent, M. T., misunderstands the plan I proposed for the storage of coal on, and his objections thereto are consequently erroneous. The plan is simple, and the details require little en gineering ability to make it thoroughly effective. It has been favorably commented upon by many, and lest others may have fallen into the same error as N. T. it appears advisable to reproduce it while the subject is yet so painfully fresh In the minds Of our citizens. "I propose that whenever and wher ever coal oil Is stored in any quantity, the place of storage shall be an excavation of sufficient capacity to hold the liquid, and prevent it flowing over adja. cent ground in case of fire." I will endeavor to send the incidents of the coal oil fire referred to in my communication as being so suddenly and unexpect edly extinguished. I am, sir, your obedient servant, G. D. Gartmehrrowx, Pa., Feb. 16,1886. FATAL EXPLOSION OP A BRITISH WAR...SHIP.— Accounts from Montevideo state that the British flag-ship Bombay left that port for practice at Mal donado, at eight in the morningi and when about twenty miles off the port, at about 8 P. M., a fire broke out with such fury that in twenty•live minutes the crew was forced to abandon her. All the boats but one got away successfully, which was caught by tho the on being laundhed, and the greater part of the men In her perished. Assistance was ren dered by the English brig Water Lily, English packet Rio de la Plata, and a Brazilian steamer. In five hours after the fire broke out her magasine blew up. On muster, ninety-eight men were miss ing, among whom was the chief surgeon (killed by the fall of the mainmast). one of the lieutenants, and a midshipman. The Commander was the last to leave the ship. The admiral wsa on store at the time. The tire was Caused by the Ig - taloa of some !Tan which was being transferred from a hogshead to casks ha the hold through the ehref wawa o f the man who held Lite lkt.• •• • ' - • p . 1 ; :t !.'Nt #4.1 mamma ools-‘ Dll/011. Good deans of prosperity. Interest early in the year. Steady. earnest feeling among Ohristians. `•HoperaLif Dot encouraging." Some hopeful tokens. None than rime interest after O tt e Coll. Fast • Great want of Spiritnalits. " No epeeist! in terest. No national feel let. Considerable in. tereet. Interesting and fan of promise, Encouraging. ao 31 Beviyal in pro areal. "Abroad, and, as wo trim!, gamin work of trace." "Groat need of awakeniAt." POUR CENTS. T Ellfrrziraa Ow Idler& Pitirowilettatii /kw , ruovan.—The following is a oopy of the order op. proving of the sentence In the case of Lieutecarrt Commander Pendergrass, of the United States steamer Water Witco, captured by the Rebels In Ossebaw Sound on the ad of June. 1884—who was recently tried by court-martial at our navy yard : Navy DEPA.II3IIIII4T, Jan. 27.—At a riv.val gene• rat court martial. in session at the Nevi , Yard, Phi ladelphia, December 15, 1884, Lieut. Olionxiinder Austin Pendersusst was brought to Mar, by order of the 'Secretary of the Navy, upon the charge of Inipable - Inefficiency in the Ms.:Marge of duty," the specification setting forth that, on or about the 8 , 1 of June. 1866. the said Lieut. Commander Austin Pendergrast, being then In command of the United States steamer Water Wilted, lying at anchor in Ossabaw Sound, on the coast of (leorght, and peon. culiarly exposed to attack by the enemy, did not take proper precautions to stcrure.his vessel asohnit eurprlse and attack by night, neither by stationing picket boats, nor by leaving the charge of the deep In the bands of a vigilant and competent ofd stir. To which charge the accused pleaded "not utility." So much of the sfeclncationa as refers to the leer. log of the deck in charge of an officer who was not vigilant nor competent, is considered by the court vir4 proven;" all the remainder is found to have beW " proven," and the accused Is found "of the charge guilty," and sentenced "to be suspended from duty for two Years irotnthe date of this gen. ttmce, (January 16, 1866), on half pay, with loos of rank during the period of his suspension." Sentence approved. GIDEON Weradals. " Secretary of the Navy. ENGI2IIBBB Criorrirais Dniarrsenn.—On the ap• proack of Sherman Upon Sin. WWl, the rebels de. stroyed the Water Witch. Samuel Geuther, the acting first assistant engineer of the Water Witch at the Ume of her capture, upon being exchanged, was arrested for alleged cowardice on the occasion. 'The Department learns that he went below, ory. lug Vie surrender," Instead of joining In the tight to repel the rebel boarditg party. lie has been dismissed the service. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. There was a good deal doing in the stook market yes terday, tlie sales and the spirit manifested being such as to warrant the belief that the market has reached its lowest point of depreesion end is now on the rebound. The oil stooks were particularly active, especially at the open Board, the establishment of which has given a new impetus to transactions in this kind of securities. The tone of the general news in reference to military operations In different parts of the country is viewed as escsedloglY encouraging. and calculated to revive con - fidence. the absence of which has characterised the stock market for many months. Gold =led quite aU3ady through Out the day sad the ut. most efforts of the speculators in either the bull or bear interest failed to have any effect whatever. On all aides there is a confident feeling that Charleston is about to fall, and with that may well fall the hopes of the " Confederacy." It is In consent:mace of this cheerful feeling In reference to national affairs that we have from day to day to record inch large enbeeriptions to the seven-thirty loan, now being taken up with avidity in all parts of the country Yeaterday Mr. Cooke received subscriptions amounting to $3,971.850 The largest Eastern subscription was 11600,0:0 from New York, and the Urgent Western $30.000 from Peoria, The amount of individual subscriptions by-working man and women was $1,817. The IBM loan sold freely at the board at 111; the 5-205 were not so strong, the sales being of old and new - at a decline of M on Fri day's sales. The 10.40 e, however, are in good de mand at a shade higher. The new T 303 sold at 8831. State Si were somewhat better, having sold at 91St. City 6s continue dun, and declined M. selling at 96, The Railroad share list was depressed, tnongh there were some large sates, particularly of Reading. The latter opened at 68%, which was a decline of % as compared with the closing price of the previous day- There were large sales afterwards,elosing weak at 68M. Pennsylvania Railroad alto was lower, having sold at (2%. Camden and Amboy sold early in the nay at 143, but afterwards fell off to 142, which is a decline of 1. Philadelphia and Erie declined %; Morristown, North ern Central, Borth Pennsylvania, Minehili, and Little Schuylkill - *sold at about previous pities There was a fair business ;doing ;in Company 'bonds. The sales include Lehigh es at 98 ; Camden and Amboy mortgage 6s at Philadelphia and Erie tis at 99, and Fairmount Park and Delaware Railroad bonds at 90. The only sale of passenger rail.' road stock was Rice and Vine at 10; 06 was bid '.for Se cond and Third; 42 for Fifth aid Sixth; 45 for Tenth and Eleventh; 46 for Chestnut and Walnut; and lb% for Arch street There was a steady demand for the Bank stocks with sales of Philadelphia at 143; Commer cial at Cl, and Bank of Borth America at 196. The coal and navigation stocks were inactive; Conenmers' teal Coal sold at 11, and Big Mountain Coal at S 5 The following were the quotations for gold at thalgours named: 10 A. Y..........» ................ ...... ...... 9043 i n A. X . •••••»•••• ...................2013,. 11 X . ..: - ;....... • .." ......... .40 IN - 1 P. ii • 7)4,4 3 P. ••. fr.... 44 203 4 P. M........«:....' 203.: The annual report of the West Cheater and Philadel phia Railroad-, which baa just been published, oho we net increase of earnings of $50,091.21. Locomotives and cars alone have cost the large sum of $61.501 M. The lease of the old West Chester Railroad to the Pommy]. vania Railroad Company expired in April last, since which time both roads have been under one manage• meat. The number of passengers carried daring the year was 143,141, being an increase t 1 75,251 over the PfeViOUS year. The increase in freight was 6.212 tons. The company has in use seven engines, thirteen pas senior oars, three baggage ears, fifteen freight cars, and twenty platform ears. During the year there WAS not single accident to life or limb on tho road. The following Is the amount of coal transported on the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad during the week ending Thursday. Feb. 10. MO: Toas.o Tbis week 21.917 00 Same week hat 3 ear.... ......... 00 Degrease 20.869 CO The deciease this week wb enneed by the recent Leavy fall of snow. Drexel it Go. quote: New U. B. Bonds, 1881 110% 6 1113.3i New Gel We. of indebtedness ..., 903‘ 983 Quartermasters' Vouchers.... ---•.--•. 94 96 Gold . 9p9 0201 Sterling Exchange... 6-20 1 3 ln n t e l . • SMI 30 40 Bonds —...102%@102,31 BALER AT THE STOCK EXCHANGE. Pan. 17. Reported by Hetoes, dfilisr, & Co., No. ISO C. Thircrat BEFORE BOARD. 1170 McClintock eh FIRST I &CO 1786-20 Bds od It 0111 9RO do..new lin ep 110 q 2193)118 1.-40Bde it en. 101 200 17e 7-30's new ludas 9/4., 6to City 8s new 90% 3000 Fair 2°23001 Bd 90 H) biortbern Cent: al. 63 1121 Beading B 66% 200 a0....10t5. • ,.. bli 67 10 Camden & Amb 8.143 10 do 6..............142 17 d0......•.10ts 14131 1(03 Tonna 31.4 30 d0.........ea5h afig 16 Little Sobay 883 2 Vorristown 68 100 /forth "ant R •-• 29 3 Lehigh Nay Stock. 68'/' 60 RV yoming_Val. • •• . 66 leo Crescent City OIL • 1% BET WEEK 60 Big Mountain..... 634 & Buie 65..... 99 200 Oil C'k B C'y Ham. 634 700 do lots b3O 634 90 ........ 6% 2 PIM& St lots 143 60 Maple Shade 21 460 Oaldwell o.lte b6O 6 100 Nana B. b3O 635 160 d 0.... b 6 6311: 300 do ..-.. Ate 63" . ROO do 6311 8 Bk r 4. Arnerica.oeh 195 1000 Cam & Amb mor 6s Neg. 1090 II 810 40a —lO .9/ SEC 0111) 60 17 re 1881... coup. BOX MOO 6 , 20 lid new . coup. 110% 2090 do.. old coup. 1111.4 12100 Readdo Trans instil.-- 610. . 6631 t 6 2 Ped dna 633 o 100 Northern Cen.lota 53 100 Phtleatirte R..- 26 63 Minsbll) 57.4 AFT= 1300 Walnuolilotab3l sugaz at sek....bus 6 600 Hyde Farm... b3O 41.16 100 Heading 8.. eBown 0631 600 Mingo.. b 30.. low. 8 1-16 20 Con Hut Coal Co.. 11 600 Royal 011 131 3) Wyoming VaL lots 65 10 Commercial llama. 62 900 Darla 011‘.....1015 100 Noble & Del. 200 Ighart Olt 600 &Ingo • —• —iota 3 500 MoeliotoekOltlota 53) Oaldwall 100 Tarr Farm ..... .... 2% 600 Hyde Farm...:lota ..&131:18. 1000 City 6 Municipal. 953 COO Sherman 13 - 4, 600 do 1 a/. 600 State Ss —.lots 9/X 1000 Sxcelelor 1.4 6 Ciun R...... 142 BALES AT • CLOS& 200 Sahnyl Nan pref.. 33) 200 do 234 500 Mingo OM 38 500 do 3 1-16 100 Big Tank.......... 2 800 Dalze/1 011 .2 dye. 8831( 50 Che do 1.11; 511 rry Hun.-- MP: SOO ..•• lot.. 1% 700 do 13i 1809 do ..... IN ZlO Germania --...• .91.100 200 Hyde Farm 4 600 d0........10t5.. 4 • 50 Noble sod De 1..... 6 Oataw lees pref.... 31 200 Story Farm........ 2.55 8630 Qty fle 96. Ho P; oCllatPlanter b 30.. 5% 500 111 I 100 do 00t ...... 63.6" MO do 634 100 Atlas OH . • • 1,31 600 1:1 B 68 'Bl-- • —All =Upper Wand 36 • 2 60 Penni H ed. 63 600 do-•6s W Loan 100 160 do b 5. 63 60 do 62% 60 do-- • ass. 2600 Union Cal int bds 26 1(A Reading R•.—.b6. 6634 Es 0 0 do do • •—•••••• 06% . lots. 66X 10 100 do . ..... 66% 100 do e3Own.. 05% edwn. 6674 200 do lots b 6, 06% 3IX) do lts. 56 ICO do . •••• ••• . MO. 00 WO do • WO. 66 100 do. •—••• ..... b 6.66 04 200 do.. ..... s9Own. 00X 250 d . . ..... s 5. 063: 1(0 do 000 1;30 55:i 100 do. • •.... elOwn. 56 OPEN BO MOBWIN D SUDS. ICO Allis 1.31 200 Hibbard . 1 600 Philo & 011 Oro& 1 44 200 Walnut Island.... 2.t 2 ( 200 do do WO do 2SI 400 100 WiLlont Bottom 185 WO Sherman 3.4.4 200 Walnut laland • • 2t5 100 Wetzell— 4 160 Corn Plantar.— 6% 300 Dahall 34 00 MoClintook....— as aX 00 do 1000 Atlas 1.)-4 do 111 600 Hibbard ..... ...b3O LBl ' 100 Brauer ba 1.61 8300 Walnabieland b3O 2 /1010 1:r 8 10-40e%••.... ...108 _ 100 Walnut island b3D 2% a) West Pa blO AFTB/UtoOle CALL. - 400 0/1 Olt 63‘i 100 TIM Homest'd b3O 63.4 too do 63i 300 West's Penne oPg 334. 200 Cherry 8un.......100 Bathbons d Cam— 13. SO 80a5....1.66 203 Cow Creek-- —. 2 100 McClintock...... .. 6 • - 6to atlas ..... 900 Catawissa Cobo 123 1000 Davin 7 14-lleo 103 Com Planter 6 100 Hibbard LBl 100 Egbert. ...... . 3 630 Cow Crisek.....b3o 2 5)3 Story iarm.-- • 2 leo Mineral 100 Hoes 13‘ 100 St The New York Post of yesterday says : Cold opened et 203%. and atter falling to 2033 i, gradu ally rose to 204%, closing 20t The loan Mating is less inactive The supply of capital meaning invest meet far exceeds the amount required, for tae contract ed volume of business now doing The subscriptions to the Seven- thirties are produato g but slight effscs as yet. The sto c k market opened do U and closed steady. Go vernments are lees active. and rallroad bonds firm; money shares fiat, and petroleum stook excited: State stocks dull, aid rialtos d .shares. Irregular Before the first eeselon gold wee quoted at 1.0.3. X. Mew Itork Cleland at 114.34, Erie at 76 „ Hudson Hirer 108, Beading 114. The following onotatioss were made at the hoard. compared With those of Thursday afternoon: Thur. Limited Stateside. 1881. ooup....llJ erli. 111 •-. Adv Dec • United States 6-20 50up0n5......111X 1111 • • • • United States 6-20 coup new— 410),i 110, • • • • United States 10-40 soupoita— 3004 101 • • • • United States certificates 98% • • Tennessee 6e. •.. .... 66 66 1 Missouri 663-1 66.: • • • • All sails ........... 162 Pa01D0.306 .• •• New York Oentral " Rallread... 114 114 X Erie Railway 753, 76 Erie Railway preferred 92 923 k Hudson River Railroad.— ..... 108 MX M • • Reading Railroad. —• • IL% 114.34 1 After the board the market wee weak. Erie closed at 7IXONIX. New I ork Cent at 118 - Weekly Review of the Philadelphia Iffarheta. P.RNIUTAXY 17—Even/AL Tho stormY weather and the Ilastu 'dons in gold beam operated unfavorably on the markets, and business has been very dull dining the past week. Bark is dull it former rates. Bread/tufo are rather firmer and more active at the close Cott °alas advanead. Coal 11 dull. Coffee continues very utast Fish and Frcill era without ekegoe The Imo mathet continues dull. Naval Stores are lonotirs. Petfsgerugs ovally/es dell. eald VIM Are la Rue & Vine l 0 OARD. 260 Caldwell. lots b6O 6 260 do 100 Elbert M 1....». 3.1 100 Maple Shade...» 26 60 Cherry Ran 29 200 Dalzall Oil .. cash 8X KO do ..... blO Ant 83i 100 do 82- 6 100 Rose ` Ott 126 500 Mino.— b3O 2.90 20J do 2.98 400 do • lots 3 600 d 0.... • • .... D 5 3 60 Noble & DeLma. 6% MO do —...... lota 6 100 600 0110'k &Oh R. b 5 do 300 Bock 011 lots 3 200 Story Clentre.lots 1000 Walnut Island 11s t 4 liVAtiaa....ansh lots 1% BOARDS. 50 Hock 011 b3O 3 56 600 City tis 96 WO Roes 0i1... 12( 200 Mingo D3O 3 102 St Dflii bolas .b 3 4.1-16 WO do k01a5... . 66 4.1.16 do b 4X 1 200 00 Rending R.....caah 30 67 160 Sugar . .. 5 • AUna • . . b 5 1.31 1000 ;7c; 98 100 KaOttntock OR—. 6% Royal 011..... cash 11.6 200 Logan 011.... cash 24 Tula WAR FlEtE 4 13. (PUBLISHED WEEKLY ) Yea Put Rum yl.l be sett to inibsortbara by man (per aannm In &dyadic*) () Th tea eves.— 500 tyo copies 13 00 TPII edptas.....-.. ...1:.....1:5 00 Leirar Out)* then Ten will b* charged at the UAW rat*. H. 50 por copy. The Thinini MLA/ always accrmmanY the order. and i n no iniconce can these term, he deviated Awn , hay afford very tittle more than the coat of reaper. 44- Poetmahtere am revisited to act as Manic fx THE WAIL Pane. To the get ter.up of the Club of ten or twenty. as extra cop) of the paper Will be aiven- Meth, • . • unsettled.. The Provision market L without 111111a18. Wool Ls qtabt. Whisky CON lia ass dull The rebelpft and stocks of Flour continueli ht , sot the market is dull; eases competes oboist lb, teelarsets, pert ter expoit anti cart to la* Er 8 §:mum aaaaa Da p:ulster t. at $10.26010 76 for extra. the latter for Coy e,ilte. sad F. nosy/vent& end Wasters extra family at bbl. The retailers and bakers are bay way se $4/10 for suptrfine ; fq) 21010 vs tot extra: 1 9 1 0 7:412 ter oommon to .:holds extra faintly. and $12.6[013 hi bbl for fancy brand', as to smutty, bye yierir lb telling in a mall way at *9 * bsi. t urn 1:4 coetiou... that, and there itt eery lolls doing in tl a way of sales. (MAI pl. —Wheat continent; inactive. bat tnlcns are Hein. with tales of about le. OM bath atva6DM. 55 ter good and choice Pei/turf/Vaal* Western ra P ds, bet White it (boots* at si goat Si* on—the lattertate for lleotoaeY• EIS is railing In a wawal way at al 'lt @1 72 Wee. Corn le doll at about former rates. with sales or ism° boa new yello* to notice at 1 11 1 -641 b 1.66 V be. eats are unchanged; about 15,080 bus soot at 112 c P tol• The tollowink are tbe receipts of Flour and Grain as ibis port curing the put week: ie 700 bun. Cara.... b....b. 000 bas. Oats 17.400 baa. • PhOVlBlOlllB —Pete market continueeratheydale and tbt sales are In a small way oaly. Pees Fork is stelliag In a Milli say at 1K7g38 par bbf Btel Rains sell at PP• bbl. Mete Beef ranges at from IliTtgo26llbbi. Dressed Sore are telling at ;rem 1116016 the MOIL. Biala is rather scarce; mall sales of Darns are making at 2141134 a for plain and fancy canvassed; Sides at 24M3Yae. and abeDlo4lla at MC, lb. cash. -Ore.n Ideate are recast dull; WO tierree Haze sold at 2/YAZIc; Shoulders is salt at 16, 1 / 4 ;01936e, Ltd in pickle at liXe It lb. Lat 4 is quiet as abort former fairs,. With Walla or eon ziercea at ytithekas*lb. Butter coatis ass rather dull; email sales are making at 31015 e It 115 tor solid packed. sod 61C1 2 65r. V ID for. thehen. Crises le timer, with balm. at. 224200 It lb for New York. Bags have' ad vs need, with sales at 461g47c IF dozen. mrrai.a.—Pig Iron continues very quiet; small sales of antbraeite are making at *l6@o3lt toe for the three bombers, kannfactnzal Iron Is I, ss active, &Da prises are rather lower. Lead con hues dull, and we hearer no aisles. . . Saki{ continues Quiet, and ire hear of no tales ?tree no. 1 Querettron to olfered at $4O ift tort for the throe natelbtr. ;Alt mantine Felling in a small WAY at ®Hide lb. and Taliom at Sec IR lb krona are quoted' at 4.304e1i ClATOki.—The market is rather firmer, but the salsa n« limited; about 900 bales of middling* sold at from - 79@8k lb, OW b. and KO bales and CS begs, by auction* at Prom to up to 773F;0 . 44 lb, as to eondltion. and Quality. COFFEE. —The ma .ket continues eery quiet. and the sale* are small lots only, at from 4350455ic it 0 toe CUAL.—There IE a good 'demand to go OW on GoTent rnent seeotins, bat tie want of vessels cheeks basinew: small sales are making to the home trade et about for. m•r rate. DUOS A 3 1 .1) DYES continue dull, and prices are un settles'. owing to the amine in gold. Indigo is rather .FRA . THIES. are rather dell; email gales of Wettera., arc making et 7.e.713e$ F11141.--Matikerel are in ~reedy demand at shoat former rates. An &circles of bay Fieh Bold at $1.7 Hi CO t bbl Small sales from Aare are making at $/6 @26, bbl for shore le, IMiy do at $18420. shore as a& 111S42)19. aid large and small No Se as $11.45,13 SOIR bbl. rick led Herrington at erVil4ibbL Codffeh are selling 111 ftJtc lb. Phila.-1n foreign there to very Ittt/* doing ant pricer are eneettled Green Apples are scarce. and sell at 16.60@8 it bbl. according to onality. Dried Fratt La rath er gores Apples are wOll/. 13fiffrlic. and Peaches lit Phalle llTo.—West India 'Freights are Arm at former rates. The rates to Liverpool are without chess.. and there is very tithe doing. A British bark was taken for Rio with lumber at CO, in gold. Coal vassals are Mill* and in demand. BOPS are rather scarce, with small sales of new East ern and Western at se@)soe lb BAY —Baled is selling at $3!@)31111 tom 111DitS, —Sales have been almost excinslvely etilifi tied • to dealers, and even here have been rather meagre. We notice a few small lots of dry hides going to the yard..but tanners. even when in want , Sr. rarely die posedto pay preftent prices ra Imo +Med hides. Ettsnoa Ayres hides ate held at 40(4e4e'D lb from dealers' ha mta. In green and ratted stock there has been hardly the usu al activity- The market le abundantly ompplied with the latter, and are offered at 12013.9;,c vi lb. Heavy bides are mainly sought, and the Assoeuation are aellleg their solectione at 16c LEW/SUL—Business continues very insetivet con sumers are buying only to email quantities for immedi ate use. and holders are not alsposed to crowd aales. Prices are somswhat fluctuating, as they at ways are under a 101 l stock and slight demand, but the receipts; ms now small, and no large atwommiation can be ex pected. Sx.atrournit dons.—Sales are moderate. and metal/ conaned to heavy weights. The trade are, however, purchasing other descriptions. Prices area little un steady. and tales have been made at a light decline We quote prime rough conavy leather at 6.XWic, aad. all tight weights at trafgatc i lb. SPANISH beim—Tuese is no surp'us heavy- Buenos Ayres leather in the market. We quote strictly prima at 80082 c, with lower Entree for light sides and in.erior descriptions. LIINBEN.—Tbe market continues inactive. sad there is very little doing in the. way of sales. MOLASSES. —The stock is very light and there is very little doing. Small sales of Potty Rico are making at 71.478 c. and Lew orop New Orleans at $1 26 VI gallon. /NAVAL STORES continue rather quiet. Small sales of go o t o are 'oakum at IMMO. bbl. ephits of Tur pentine la in fair demand at $2 Gi@ei 10 @i gallon RIC& is in limited demand, with sales of 160 bags of 'Rangoon at 1230/1 IA El. OILS.- , Lard sill sc sells slowly at $t 1902.25 El gallon for No. 1 Winter. Flell Oita ate in steady demand at former rates. Linseed Oil sells at $1 65(4L re t gallon_ Petroleum continues scarce Ana (tall, and prices are un settled we quote crude at 4762* az milted bo td 6761 E 85c, and free at from ffligPfle ta gallon, as to quality. Ths following are the receipts of Crude and Refined at this port during the peat week: Crude....... 1 200 Ma. Reape* 2 200 bb/s. PLASTER is scarce, and worth EWE 60* ton. SEEDS.—Closes seed is lo fair d.mand. with sales of fik, hue in lots at $l4 7t@ls 25 VS 64 Ma Tian otny is dull, and buyers only offer 05 int 1,030 bus Flaxseed. sold on private terms, and small lots at $3 7003.75* bn. SPIRITS —ln foreign there Is very little doing. Blew England BIM is firmly held at $2.50 per gallon. Wide ky is dull at d rather lower. 225 bbhi. Fenn. and West ern sold at 23(0234e per SUGAR —Continues dull and unsettled. About 3130 hbd.s. Cuba sold at 1730121 X. oaths venal terms. 1.083 bble. retired sold on private terms. TALLOW —The market is dulL Smallsales aroma - big at from 16'3 170 per lb. OBAooo.—The market is firm but there is very lit tle doing. Leaf Is quoted at from 8031 c per lb. far Penns and manufactured at from. 65 to 76a per lb. for lew grads black. WOOL. —The market continua very quiet and buy ers are bidding off for lower prices. Sales or fiasco are making at 96alOte. and tub at 11144115 e fb. cash VINEGAR. -Cora `Vinegar la selling at Beoil gallon in bble. • • •. BOOTS AID 5H0134 —Trade continute unusually dull for the Eeiaon. Only a few buyers of any deecrip lion. araVhoee few are from the most remote districts. that bey directly In this market. Kentucky, Tennes see. Siler.mui. lowa, and other Western States have hardly a representative in the hhoe trade to town. !ger. ehanta are comparing the present inactivity with the beetle that existed one year surci, and not I:infrequently are at a loss to account for the difference. flare are no proapects for any decline In prices by delays In pur chasing; but, while this is apparent, there is no induce ment to speculations. and dealers will neither bay nor ore er goods man they need them. There ate doubtless. other illanenCes, such as military movements, the im pending draft, etc , that tend to delay active sales, bat accounts from all quarters agree in representing the stocks of saleable bhoes in dealers' hands as unusually email. New York Brarkets, February 17. FLOUR, Etc —The market for Western and State nowt is more active and, under light arrivals and a very email stock, prices have advanced 2C(4)260 on the low and lf@2oc on other grades. The demand is entirely for the home and coastwise trade. The sales are 11.000 bbLeF at $10.11ig10.60 for superfine State, $lO 706ti0 136 for ex tra State, *lO ®ll for fancy Suite. $lO 70@>11 for the low grades of Western extra, $ll 4126,1 66 fur shipping Ohio. $1.1.6f012 26 for trade and family brands, and $ll M®14.76 for St Louis extras. Canathan Flour in very quiet, but micas are 21@20c VI bbl better; sales of 160 bble at 810.65@10.90 for the new extrasgrades of extra, acd $10.96@16 for trade and family- dont • ern Floor is more salve. and 16e better; sales of 41 1,0 bb]e at $10 . 96412 for inbred to good angora de soma try brands Baltimore, &e. , and $l2. 00414. 50 for trade find family Bye Flour is dull; sales of 50 bble at sx®B.6o. Corn Mea' is dull and heavy. Ohmic —The Wheat market is inactive and prices are nominally the tame. Ordinary Wheat is very tittle:: the demand is oonitned to the millers. We only heat of 7;030 bus ordinary red Wes ern at Ai 2134 to mere. Barley is better Hales of 4,000 bus prime State at Al.loln store, and part of cargo Canada West at `ll5. Barley Male is inactive but Arm at 1112.9002.12. Oats opened Arm but elected doll We quote Wester's. erkill.lo, AL C 4 for Jersey. and mixed at `L. W. Z 76 is Inactive and entirely nominal. earn le nerds. 'Old le very Quiet, and new le in de mand and Armer. The sales as 7,0(0 bus New Jersey yellow at Al_ 7481.76 on. pier ; Ind Western mixed is seld.at $1.90 in store. Pnotriarons. —The Pork market has been rather more active, but prices are Irregular. flew mess is lower, closing at about the outside Agana, and old Is without exren.ll.l change. For future ildlivery we hear of 500 bble new mess, buyer balance of this mouth, at WO; teti bide do. buyer March, at 1137.25.• 1,500 bide do. buyer April, at ARM, and WO do. seller May. at rel. The wales, cash and regular, are 6,930 bbls at $t 756y114 for old mess- $35 71@16 for new do; $3l 60®30 for prlmei $34034 26 for Western prime mere. Beef Is firm. but no large sales are reported • sales of COO bbls at $lB 6(§9tfor yilain mess. and BEL 60@11.63 for extra do. Tierce beef is mill very 'firmly held, and In fair demand far shipment, bat no extensive sales are made public. We have only to note 60 us Hardy.o ard her. & Co.'s India mesa at /49 Beef hams are mode- L a r t lie a sWrY. a n en: t :r a e d aTiir a e l t -3 roo,lo bile a nd Ll S*g° bat ter; sales of 4EO packages at 173arec for shoulders, and. liglAtic fur hams. Boston Boot and Shoe Market, Feb. 1.6.- The 611oe aid Leather Reporter lays: The market is quiet, and staple goods sell very slowly. trade s-em ing to be confined to new and fancy steles and light yolk. Many of the buyers from large Western althea have returned borne atter purchasing only a compara tively limited quantity of goods. and the reboil of spring trade thus far has a Isappoiated moot of our deal ers. as gold shows a declining tendoacy. - manatee toren hope tor a fall In stook—consequently. are not Drying, and have stopped making no except on orders. We think there will hardly be an overstock of goads. as our trade have the experience of last summer before them, and will proceed with caution dining the present st aeon. Prices cannot be said to have changed mush. but buyers are holding off confessedly for lower rates. although we suspect they would take hold with avidity if the gold market took an upward turn The proposals for army goods threw orders for over six hundred thou sand dollars worth of boots and ahoes into this market last week. These awards will verve to make business in Ibis line .ltriik for the present. " . LETTER BAGS AT THE JILIZONANTIV Exoluuros. rguarmr.rgrzA. Brig Henning, Janeiro, sop. Brig Herald. Davis. soon. PHILADELPHIA BOARD OF TEAM J. B. CAMPBELL, BAAL. W. DlRCouseur. }Conan= oz nta Norm. Lung C. Ilium i s s s s lo Di A A ( - 4 0;0) POUT OF PRILLADELPHELL,,.PIIIB. Bus Run— 41 411 Boa 137174. •. 5 144 Emu WAX'S- • 7 411 CL BBD. Brig Ida A CommerY. NC . .lien, Cienfuegos. Brig Matilda (Swede), Anderson, Nevis and a market. ligkr Georgie Deering. Willard, Portismouth. A H., (CorrisPendence of the Philadelphia Enchants.) mm. Del.. A. There ars now at the Bre L a a kwater fiftee Fe n square rigged vessels and twenty schooners. The scar P Boise, before reported, will be got off after discherking; the schooner alongside of her was the Thee Jefferson. from Pal Wel phi& for Jamaica atm wag.got off this monstrag with leas of whe el, and other damage; she will retina to Philadelphia for repairs. The oyster sloop wW pro bable be got off to-night. Two other vaggels.were hauled off by hog America. The wind during 'l day has be.. from 'west to southeast, with rain. The tug America. to-day brought in fronts's& one bark, a schooner. and a disnasted brig. The ice has nearlyall gar eto sea from. the bay. AAHON.MAHnHALL. MEMORANDA. Steamship Virginia (Br). Lewis. from New York fac, Liverpool, was sicken IStb fist let dB. long 4g. Steamships Condos, Leigesernisr. for New York, and Liberty, Wlt6ap, for do. remained at Havana litk '' Brig A G Cattail, Watson, sailed,from Cienfuegos 7th. lust for this port. Brig y /derrick (below), Norden, mailed from Car- BrigdenSd met for this port E ag l e (Br ). parker, sailed from Cleaftsegoe rut. list for this po Brig Anna Wellington OW, Jackson, galled from. Cardenas . t ,, heat for a port itorthef Hatteras. Brig) A Dillingitri, Mudgett, sailed from Matanum 911, Lost for this port B r i g plots'. (Br), Be yooLls, at Sagas Sd East from Baum& . Brig Webster Halley, Brown, at Havana llth. inslaat for this port. Brig Altavela, Reed 84. days from Cardenas.. Via Delaware Breakwater 48 hone, at New York Yester day. Yarparienoed heavy weather the entire DUMP; lost end bp' it rails. te. Behr Ida B Wheelso, Dyer. benne at Sarni Ath all Behr bow Squall. Shepherd, sailed from Matanzas 9th inst, retorted for New Orleans. Sohn Neptune's Bride, Crowell, and wa, wrbolets4 Dinsmore, from Savannah. with notion, were bstow New York yesterdayester Fehr Ida from i P n h tA e e l r p n S r h ew ß wassaiers y probably come off at high water. Sehr PEctaseil, Niskerson,l3 date from New Or leans, at Asir York yesterday. Bed been 12 days north of Hatteras, with hussy if and AB gales; lost fore mift and boom; lost and split Mc. Brig Moonlight, from Olan d larkor Boston. pat into Hol nee' Hole Ugh inst. having md very heavy northerly gales during the passage; lost royal topmast. aisle stayeall, spilt ettlis t dad tatreivall oast daage.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers