The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, March 15, 1865, Image 1

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    THE PEB9B,
UiifißJU) DAILY (SUNDAYS EXUEPTJED)
BY JOHN W. FOKNIIT.
OfflO*. *»■ IUSOOTPHjrOBSTH STREET.
(H£ DAILY DRESS,
, T gflbMrib.rs, Is Tbk Dollars Fa* AnTCK.t*
’ « YWMTT Gift* Ps* Wrkk, payable to
1 (jtrrHi. M*He4 to Sot»«rtb«r» <mt of tho .ft*.
' ponaM Fi* imniKs Poo» Douuutti imb Vrm
„to* *a Morrss: Two Dousse airo Twhwtt
„ Qavta »* ***** Mo«thi, i*T*rt*blT In sAtum*
it, tin* «*«•*•*• , •
lniortoi at tba anal rate*.
F IDS Sn-WtBKLT PRESS,
HU*s t« laDarlbtn, ItnltattUß m um. I*
iii*
MILLINERY.
c NEW BPRING IMPORTATIONS.
i SOW OPBH, A POLL LINE OF
SPRING BONNETS,
HITS, AHD MUIDERT fiOOOS
.([ally. Merchants Btranfon, and Resident, pat
wins BOH«STS will And atarr rarletr t» select
gu.attha •
WHOLESALE AND DETAIL
IL.LINBRY SHOW ROOMS,
T»0 ARCH STREET. ’
iliH-Wfp*
RETAIL PHY GOO l>B.
HEAP BILKS.
IHOBCAJS W. BYANS * CO.
HAVE NOW OPEN
L ARG E ASSORTMENT OF
PLAIN SXXiKB*
OHOIOB SHADES,
V EH- it C£E EAP.
iO». BXB and 830 Choatnut St.
BihUSt _____
'LEACHED MUSLINS
AT REDUCED PRICES.
he aabeoribenhave nselred from the
LATE AUCTION BALES
jveral packages or the moat desirable makes of ■
lIKKTJIG, SHIETISB. AfD PILLOW CASE
MVsLDB,
> whloh they raapattluUr inrlts tbs attsntloa of
trsie.
HEPPARD, YAN HAELINOEN, A ARRISON,
mhiS-St 1008 OHESTSUT STRggt.
T REDUCED PRICES.
HOUSEKEEPING DBf GOODS,
SHIRTING LINENS,
• LINEN SHEETINGS, and
PILLOW CASE LINENS.
TABLE LINENS, NAPKINS, DOYLIES.
TOWELS and TOWELINGS of story deiorlp.
lon.
UUILTS, BLANKETS, FLANNELS.
A larra assortment of LACE CURTAINS, CUE
IAW MATERIALS, CURTAIN FIXTURES, SOLE*
jOBDERBD SHADES, «to , Jto.
iHEPPABD, YAN HARLINGEN, k ARRISON,
Bhiset , v 1008 OHRSTNUT STREET.,
OTBL PROPRIETORS
HOUS XCK EE I* EH- S
Oan always And a foU atook of
BLANKETS,
QUILTS, _
LINEN GOODS,
SHEETINGS,
At lbs lawsot wtolesAl* prloes, at
J. c. STBAWBBIDGE & OO.’S,
lais-awfam N. W. oor. EIOHTH and MARKET Sta.
TYEPOT FOR
SJ WINDOW SHADES, ~
n« B ubasrib fF |rsaow S .g»^dm.utnp
at the etylo. of
OK '*
FANCY WINDOW SHADES.
And to furnish and tint up to order in the beat manner*
HEW DESIGNS OR EXTRA SIZES
FOB
DWBLia»aS^TORE Sfe CayRCKE 8 . OR OTHER
B laW|®B«
which they will cell to thetr*de at thgiowest market
"sHEFFAHD, YAK HARLINGIf. & ARRISON.
Window Cmttin and Shade 8t >n>,
mhlO-fmwißt iNO, 1008 CHESTNUT Street.
TfJLAOK SILKS WITHOUT LUSTRE,
A* Blk Grot Grain.
Mk TaffaUaPariiilasno,
Coidad Widths audrroalltlw. froia $l. SO to W.
BIMkGKM do lUi&Mand.Tiffetis, tow.
mSShsWSSS^&r;--
AU thoW mwaia* »ut« fowMd
MvHint tUgoo* as
»»ia.
tax* obbsthpt btbblt:
loMMiarsn? stbbbt.
ADIES* SPRING .CLOAKS. .
.J OpenixirtlaUy. fie tr Cloaks.
Freneb’GJoth Cloaks. *•
American Cloth Cloaks.
Water -proof Cloaks. ,
I la addition to a food stock of ready-maaefaraent*,
ge make to order Oloak* of newest «?'• *B* “ftt?,*?
Ihsxa to fit iM please. XiUta stock; of CLpAKIRw
CLOTHS, at wholesale or retalL Xadies sksjbr
■ood a ana older of us* eertain toh* wellsnttsd aeawlui
3a»ostoh. GOOPBft & COWARD,
mhS tr S. B. corner BIKTH andtUßK ST sU
WAHD-WIDE BLEACHED MUSLINS,
'X Besti* the city.
Beat lit Ike city. ,
For SIX eente.
For 3iM osnta.
A gnat Bargain.
A great Bargain.
iFRINGDRESS GOODS, OP NEW
' BTYLBS, OPBBIHO DAILY.
■MpssWdw,..
SprJM «tTlo« of Poplin*,
fitumnor Poplins. "
Bpl«ndldOrf»nilla«._
Pmc»lm. inir«atT»ristr.
Wow styles of Hanes- _
SprlnfColsors d» _L*inf a,
■ = ae soath SSOONP Street,
BHIBT FOR 186 S.
thb aioJtfss* urvßiraioir at thi aqe ur
HOOP SKIRTS.
j IT. BBADLKT’B Jfow Patent DOTLBX ELLIP
TIC (or doable) SPBIKQ BKIST.
WBBTB’ BBADLEY & OiBT flat* J. I. & J. O.
W«at}< BOLE PBOPHIBTOBB and MANUFACTOBER?,
97 CHAMBBBB and 70 and 81 BEADS Sbteia, Saw
"*llllB ISVENTIOiT oonsiits of fimnasr (or two) Si,.
gjPTio Steel SPiraoß, tnaenlomly brarosD Tioartr and
J9IMKT.TT fcogatkar. rRDOB te KBPS. masin* TOnOIIEST.
Bolt FLEXIBLE* BLASTIO. 4ftd BUBABLB SPRItfC CTOT
Bud Ttoey seldom bbnb or break* like tbe oiafle
Bpriogft. and 'flouManintly preaerTe their pbbpbct and
■rautifcl Shape twice *» lqbo as asp other Skirt.
THB WONDERFUL FLEXIBILITY and gr«Rt COMFORT Attd
B .U S
AbkrmßT.lEB. Opbbab. CAKiuAims, Kaii.road oaks,
»™Xnir/?OVHa Ladibb they aia aopamoa to aU
® *fhky are the best <ju alityln everypittpjandnaqties-
Sonably *the ll«htbm. moat pesirablb, comfoetablr
And bconomicalSkist ever-made. ,
a #ii h 9 pgF^
. HOPKINS’ _ g2S;
HOOF-SKIBT MAWtTFACTOSY, Vo t "
Eel*y, Si*\> JtLPfcbilltyi Hndihe«a*»* haT®
tff ifflßt Bnrliilr MBortia«Pt no* r»d T . *«** m*
CARPETS AJTJP OILiCLOTHi
atAHUPAOTOKIHO AH> COMHISSIOff MIKCHAKTS.
CABPETIN&S.
OIL OLOTHS, BtATTOfO-S, RUGS, &o.i
KO. 819 CHESTHUT STEHST,
PHIIABSIPHrA.
BAKER’ S
ornamental hair
MAW UP A.CT OR Y
The lu««rt and beetMeorlmentof
[WIOS, TOUPBKB,
1,010 °»T» BBAIDS AJfD CtTKLS,
WATBBFAIIIIB, YIOTOBIKEB,
FBIZKTTBB. ILLtJSIVH SJAHS 808 LAD IKS,
Brice* leva then elsewhere, at
at* oop nmagrargl Strati.
.SHATTERED
K S'tojttDfrr gSTBi,OT«uOB9<
YOL. B.—NO. 194.
, 1 _. r „., CURTAIV _ GOODS.
J t 1. WALK A YEN,
B P. DILL k CO.
PIANO AND TABLE COVERS,
U. 8. Bunting Flags and Curtain Goods
te LESS THAN PRESENT GOLD RATES.
mhU-fptf
1026 CHEBTNU ’ ILBrFRBE ' r -' 1026.
O. M. STOtJT & CO,
DEALERS IN
HRIMATIHiLK MOB ABU NOTTINGHAM
CURTAINS,
PIANO,' TABLE, AND PURIrtTURE
, •OO 3 . ,r..-*,.,
WINDOW SHADES, &o.
~ I«M CHESTSOT STREET. :
felO'fmwiiß
SILK & ORY GOOIhS JOBS6R9,
gFKING—4BBS.' •
t EDMUND YARD & CO.,
017 CHESTNUT AND «14 JAYNE STREET,
SILKS AND FANOY DRESS GQ.ODS,
Wblob we offer to the trade’at the lowest market
ericas. -v*r. ; ~ -■mhlo-9mfp
gPRING. 1865. BPRINGf
! - *- '• 0 ’ ■ *"T-' / -
JAS. R. CAMPBELL & CO.,
\
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OP DRY GOODS.
797 CHESTNUT STREET,
OFFER TO "
CASH BUYERS AT WHOLESALE
An exleneite aaaortcientofchoicafahrioa in . I
fOBII6H ABB AMEBICAH BBT GOODS,
At and under market ratea.
As their etoek iadaily replenished with the moat, da
drable offerlnii of this and other markets, it will
dwaye prote worthy of inapeetlon.
mhd-Zm WHOLESALE BOOMS UP STAIRS,
gPRING, 1865.
MELLOR, BAINS, & MELLOR,
Noe. 40 bsd’4J? STREET,
nmnwauroF
lIOeiEXIY,
SMALL-.WARES/; ' '
' AS» , _ . ‘ ' •
WHITE GOODS.
■AXSyAOTDBBBB OF »
mhStm SHIRT
JOHN H. BTOKBS,,
TOSS ASP a Btceal
MAHONIC HALL,
719 CHESIM! STREET,
OFFERS
JLACiXEI CURTAINS,
W^OWSH^ 1
OF NEWEST DESIGNS AND COLORS.
C..' ••'I f M > v>
I. E. WALRAVEN,
NO, 710 CHESTNUT STREET.
HAVE HOW IN. STORE A FULL STOCK .
AMERIOAN DELAINES,
BALMORALS,
SHAWLS AND GLOVESj
WHITE GOODS AND LINENS,
JAMES, KENT, SANTEE, & 00.,
mPOBTERS AND JOBBEBS
db y go o ds,
foa. 9189 tnd 341 North Third Btr«et,
PHILADELPHIA.
Jloths, Prints,
O&sslmeres, Delaines, , ~
lattlnets, Alpacas,
leant. Fanoy Drew Goods,
•Jottonades, Brown and Bleached Sheetings,
Denims, Brown and Bleached Shirtings,
Stripes, - ®mlsh Oh&mbras,
Ohechs, Bmlsh Tweeds,
atnghains, ;■ flannels,
Diapers, * Idnena,“ ' ™
FURNIBHING GOODS.
WHITS GOODS, SOTIONB. Ac.. he. teß-Sm
STATION*:®* * BLANK BOOKS.
nil., MUTING, OPAL, AND, OTHBB
'-'jtiwcompahis. *
w* *ro *ro*M*d to ftumlih low Cor»or*U<ra« Witk all
A* look* 0»l nanlro,*t'*hort notion luid low iii***.
nixotamtUty. All «W«a of Undine.
KKRIi TOATB OEBTOTCATIS 01 STOCK. ~
LITHOOBATHID »! *1
nuismiooK.
OKOBBBOV.TUimVn. r
' KOOK UKDOXX.
KOOK MUCH* BALAICM,
KSOIBTBK OI CAPITAL STOCK.
BEOKBX’S riTTT LBDOI*.
ACOOUIT OB SAXES,
IIVIDm BOOK. , (
MOSS A; 00.,
SLAKE BOOK HABOTACTURIBS AID STATIOEKKB,
H2o.it #*» OHBBTKOT Bind.
Q.OLD’BFATENTIMPROVED BTEAM
WATER-HEATEVG APPARATUS
FOB WARMING ABB VENTILATING PUBLIC
BUILBINGB ABB PRIVATE RBSIBBHOIS,
KABUrAOTOEBD IT THE
UNION SOU AND WATER-HEATING
COMPANY
OF PEHKSYLYAHIA.
JAMES I». WOOD &’ CO.,
41 South FOBBTH STREET.
B. M. FEIiTWELIi Snp’t.
. j»8-flin-fp •
|J<HE AMERICAN CAR COMPANY, |
TEIRTI-FIBST ASD IOCUST STREETS,
WEST PHILADELPHIA,
OAK BUILDERS, IKON FOUNDERS, AND~
MACHINISTS.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN th.t thl. Company la
now prepared to recelye orders lor building
all kinds of oars.
The shops Of the Company Being anpplled with the
latest and most Improved labor-naymg machinery, will
en .hie It to execute all orders with great despatch, and
Is the very bast manner.
The Company has also vsrchased the right to use
“ ” and ‘‘MIKIMOHDES’ -■ Patent
Antifriction Self- Lubricates CAR JOURR At BOXES,
and MR. THOMAS H.JEN Kißß’Pato ured Process for
HARDENING CAST IKON. All there Patents the C.im
bM»lfcT."ho Company 1. prepared to ■
STATIOBABT^tB^POBTgra^IHOIHES.
B^S G g^to4^«kc°o™^ B trttha KaE3 ’
GENERAL MACHINERY BUSINESS.
Also, all hind, of Iron and Brass CaaOngs and Snrithsi
work executed In the very best manner, both as retards
de»Jan, material an* workmanship. s *
Drawing* and estimates made at the Work# free of
eb * l **' D. H. DOTTEBEE,
- SUPBBINTBNDBNT.
THE AMERICAN CAR GO.
CAPITAL, *600,000, EN BHABBS OF $lOO BACH.
a Hmtfeui-number of Shares la this Ebclensiva M*nu
farinrinsßOompany —wMeh womisss to bs larwly r«-
mnneratUrA-for Bale at the office of the Company.
' rawita W. BABBITT. Sowotary.
mhl-wfrmlm ■ :
WILLIAM EVANS, JR.,
W 253 SOUTH FROST STBBBT*
Wholesale and Retail Ajm rotORS.
- -WHITS ZI!fC« -_j, at inn
AMBBICAH AND lOBBIGN WINDOW GLASS,
OP ALL DESCRIPTIONS* _
AT LOWBST WARgBr RATRB. .
Agentfor PATBBT GLASS LE CTBBB .jnhgjmfp
ENFEEBLED AND DELICATE CON
li BTtTUTIONR, of both sexes, nse HBLaBOLD t
EXTRACT BCCRu. It will glvebrlsk and energetti
(sotings and enable yon t« aloep well.
FINANCIAL.
u. s.
SEYEN-THIRTY LOAN.
Nyasthority of the Seoretary of the Treainry, the
nndeniansd hae aeenmed the General Bnbserivtlott
A£eney for the .ale of UnlM' States Treaanry Notes
beartni ■even' end three-tenth* per sent. Interest *er
annum, known ai the
. BEVEN-THIRTY LOAN.
Tk,*e Note* are leaned under date of AncditlS, ISM,
aik an payable three year, from that Umo, In enr>
rekey, or are eonrertlhie at the optton of the hidder'lnto
V. S. 6-SO SIX PER CENT.
GOLD-BEARING BONDS.
. These Bond* ire how worth apreminm of nine per
sent., lneindtnc (old Interest from NoYemher. which
makes the actual profit on the T-80 Loan, at ,*nrr*nt
rates, lneindtnc Interest, abont per sent, per an
nnin. besides its exumvtionfrom State and muntofrxil
addufromone to thru per. emt. more,
stAordinc to the rate loyiod on other property. The
Interest is payable saml- anmuJlyby conpon* attashsi
to eacb note, whlah maybe entoiTasd sold to ahV bank
or 'oanktr. i .
TfcyMmpat ***-vf:;,;
*^THpentperiiSalna 9K note. ■: '
,'ijpSonte p* day on a WOO note.
Tm sent* per day on a *6OO note.
; Twanty cents per day on a *l.OOO note.
One Dollar per dar on a *6,000 noto-
Motes of*aU the denominmtlou named WiH be promaA
lylfornlsKOd apon receipt of sabeerlptlone, Thie Is
: THE ONLY LOAN IN MAHKET '
nowofTered by the Goyernmont, and M Is sonfidently
expected that Ite anperior adranfocee wUI make it tbs
akEAT POPULAR LOAN OF THE PEOPLE.
Lees than *R&oo(Soooremaln nnsold, whlsh wUlpro
bahly he disposed' ’ofwlthlir the nut sixty or ‘ninety
days, when'the nofoe will dndonbtedly eommand a
or-eminm. as has uniformly been the mas on eloslnc tbs
■nbscriptlons of other Leana|' ' •. *..*.' :*
In order that sttlseas of ovary town and section of the
country may oe afforded facilities tor taklm the Loin,
the National Banks/State Banka; mid Private Bahker*
thronehonl the sonntry have ceaerallyained to re
mive snbserlptlona at par. Subscribers will select their
own scents, in whom they have confident*, and who
only ar*,t?b* lespensible -for thedeUTew.df
for which they reselvc orders.
/ r JAY ddOEBi
BUDSORIFTION AGENT,
Ho. 114 SOUTH THIRD BTKEBT,
PHILADELPHIA.
5-20; 10-40.
11 AL]LGWJEI ‘ L ’
yTOOK BROKER. .
SOUTH THIRD^REET.
\f (Boom No. if' ' r -
' ■ -018 ■:*■**. ■■■
government, state, and other loans and
[STOCKS BOUGHT AND SOLD ON :
' COMMISSI ON. .
t. 8.1-30 HOTSB IURBISHKD AT PAR,
frfftlAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO. -(
‘ . OIL STOCKS.
mhll-lm*fp -.* I !.».• - . .
5r20.
7.30/;
I ’=■
‘AiJ>-B/W'S &. laEYIS,
' . .. i:
NO. 80S OHESTTrUTiSTRIEET,
- AND. feROKER^ -
-- All kinds of
GOVERNMENT SKCURITIBB AND STOCKS BOUGHT, *
,i ' BOLDr-AND NEGOTIATED.
)LD and SILVRR bought and sold.
dthNn-firaL to OIL STACKS. mhdrSm
tmiWAKD BOBlhs, p?B^i**..P^|l*,,
' T »o3fflDPifi| "s* CO.,
STOCK AND EXCHANGE
BROKERS,
HO. 47 BOUTH IHIBD SIBEET,
PHILADELPHIA.
Att KINDS OP
BANK NOTTS. GOLD, SILVER, BTOOKB, BONBS,
ANB GOVERNMENT SBCUBITIBSr
BOUGHT ANB SOLO.
ColleoHoni madeon all parte 01-tbe oonntry. .
Deposits reeelTOd, sab)set to sight draft, and Interest
allowed. • fa2B-8m
gECOND'
OF PITTSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA,
(LATE IBO* CITY TBUST COMPANY.)
CAPITAL. ©BOO,OOO.
BANKERS’ ANB MERCHANTS’ COLLECTIONS
promptly attended toonthemost favorable term*.
G. E. WARNER, President.
JOHN E. PATTBKBoN,'Cashier. felt-3m
CHARLES EHOBT. ALEX. BEX3O2f» JR.
EMORY & CO.,
stock And exchange brokers,
. No. IS South Third street,
: # PHILADELPHIA.
All fejnds of uncunrent funds and Gold, and Silver
bought and sold, and Collections made* •
Particular attention given to the pnrehace and sale of
Government* State, and other Stocks and Loans oh com*'
wiiwptioiL . . ■♦.. - i . . ; noM 6m
g B. LEECH & COMPANY, <
, BANKERS AND STOCK BROKERS,
MO. 1< FABQUHAB BUILDINGS,
(WALNUT ST.. BBLOW THIBB).
PSttADILPHIA.
Gold, Government Brads, OH and Mlsedlaneons
Itosks, bought and told on Commission at ths Board of
Brokers. Dealer. In Foreign Bxshanis. Letters of .re
lit lssnad on London, Paris, Antwerp,, Be. lal9-8m ,
gFECIAL ATTENTION PAI D TO
the pnrdhase and sate s*
OIL STOCKS.
SMITH,
10 Strath THIRD Street, .feff-Im
WILLIAM H. WAYNE,
v T Let* Discount Clerk Bank of Worth America* ~
STOCK and BILL fiBOKBB* Ho. 16 BANK Street.
Doans* Stocks, Ac. * purchased and sold at the Fhlla
delphla Stock Board. • Money procured on collaterals.
Promissory notes negotiated, Ac.»Ac. mhfrlm
TREASURY department, office
a OF THI OOMFTBOLLBB OF THB OUB&BffOT,
. WAfisnvoTOir, January 36. 1860 -
WhertaSi By satisfactory evidence presented to'the
Anderalghed* It has been made to appear that THB
NATIONAL BXCHANGS BANK OF P HfLApBLPHI A,
in the city of Philadelphia, in the county of Philadel
phia. and State of Pennsylvania, has Been duly orga
nized under and according to the reaulrements of.uu
Act o! Congress entitled ** An act to provide a National
Currency, secured by a pledge of United States bonds,
and to provide fer the -circulation and redemption
thereof* ” approved June 3,1864* and has complied with
all the provisions .of said act required to be complied
with before commencing the business of banking under
said Act— ' ~
How. therefor*. I, HUGH JKcCULLOGH, Corny
roller of the Correney, do hereby certify that THI
tfATIOHAL BXCHASGS&AHK Of PHILADELPHIA,
la the city of Philadelphia* Sm the eouaty of Philadel
phia. and- State of PenasyWaaia, is authorized tocom
mence the buslaes* of bankio* under the act aforesaid.
1 aflh day VIfoTMtOCH,
Comptroller o! the Gnßeaey.
EDUCATIONAL.
QAKDALE SEMIHART,
AN ENGLISH, CLASSICAL, ASD NOBHAL SCHOOL
■TOMS BOYB.
PUGHTOWN, OaBeTEB CO., PENN A,
Pile next term of this Institution will begin bn MOP.
Oil, Ap*U 3,' law. Por Oironla™, oontamln* partlcu
ars, address * . ISAAC W. GULMJf.A M.,
mbSlm - * ■- Principal.
VILLAGE green seminary.—
V MILITARY BOARDING SCHOOL, four miles
Tom MEDIA, Pa. Thorough coarse In Mathematics,
3Usiie»e natural Science Sr-and Boclish; practical lea *'
401 bin Civil %figin«erlDf Pupils received at anytime,
iud of all ayes, and enjoy the benefits of a home. ’ Be
•'ere to JohnC CapoAc Son, 23 Sonch Third street; Thos £
J. Clayton,Bsq.,/Fifth end. Prone streets; ex Sheriff,
gem, and others. Addr»>*' Bey. J. HKEVBf BAB*
roa. A, M . VILLAGE PRESS, Penna. aofrfim
nrOODLAND SEMINARY FOE
IV YOUNG LADIES, Nos. 9 end 10 WOODLAND
TSBBACE, West Fhilada. Ber. HENRY BEEVES.
A M.. Principal. ■ fcM-tir*
TAKE NO MORE UNPLEASANT
JL and nninfe remedies for nopleuant and duiie
roPe dl»iieß. Use HSLMBOLD’S EXTRACT BUOHU
■SdIMPBOVED BOSE WASH.
CBOVELB AND SPADES.
■SobK*aalOTt?«aSKatyss?:*SSH^SS-
PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, MAECH 15, 1865.
f£o THB FBOFLK.
• HOW RRjkDY* 1
A w °r E gcfUf w^N^tei 8^
A BOOK PEOPLE,
- On the followlnx Diseases'
EYE AND BAB DISEASES,
THROAT niBBASBS rSt OMSEJJ,. _
CLERGYMEN’S AND- PUBLIC SPEAKERS’ BORE
, HHROaT ,
' DISEASES OF THE AIR PASSAGES.
(Larrusitts Bronohitls.)
ASTHMA AND CATARRH _
The book Is to be had of W. ,S. k A. MARTIRN, No.
I >OO CHESTNUT Btrset, and at all BookseUera’. Prise.
°Th?*nSor. Dr. YON MOSCHZISKER- san be eon
suited on all Etusa maladies, and all NERVOUS AFFEC
TIONS, which he treats with the sorest checess. '
“oace. 1087 WALNUT Street laM-ilm
JJDWARD P. KELLY,
618 CHESTNUT STREET,
A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF
SPRING GOODS.
, .. m ..::*.-,vv--
gOYB* CLOTHING,
!jAOX E T S , PAN T & , S o:.',
COOPER & CONARD,
iplMm K « CORNER NINTH A * MARKET STK
WATCHES AJiD JEWELRY.
|THB SUBSCRIBER,' ;/ ;r . :n -
HAVING BHOOEBDBD
:* ' F. P. DUBOSQ SON.
j . ‘ ' - •.: ■
■*• ' *
Ift'oss Ckfiltnut -.B*ree*,
impeetfrOlylnfonna hie friends and customers that he
uuforsalealaricsndTsricditockof
ViTCBES, JEWELBY, SIL¥EB, AND
' PLATED WABE.
Alao, constantly on hand, a lane an# well-assorted
tockof -*
FBAHL JMWELBY. !
Late of the Firm of LEWIB LADOMUS * CO.
FATGHia An 4 JEWELRY OAREXPLBYiBIPAIRID.
GOLD. SILVER, and DIAMONDS BOUGHT. feS-im
QtOUD AND SILYER
- AJUEIiXcJtN WATCIiISS,
;* ..-*■* -
THE BEST AND HOST RELIABLE TIMEPIECE MADE.
AMETHYST, SPANISH TOPAZ, AND ELEGANT',
pearl; JEWELRY,
- At 1 ■ "V''*;"*//' : ; '
N. RULON’S, ■
•' mhia-dt 1088 CHESTNUT bTREET.
1040,
r> THE TRADE.—F. P. DUBOSQ
& BOg SrlH' continue the wholesale M ANTI FAC
fUBB oMBWELRYHtAII brancheaat IOaS CHEBT
fUT StreSt,tecond story, fe!B Ira
7IEGLER & SMITH,
.-.--ai.- ,'_**4«;,,tm^.
■WHOLESALE *
Brng, Paint, and Glass Bealers,
Proprietors of th#PeiulMrlT«Bl»Priiit sa4 Color Worta.
best white jlkai>, best zinc,
U»wm>a«Ma tot WMtoneßi, Fine Gloss, Durability,
■ Firmness,. and BvenoSßa of Surface.
TUBE LI BESTT LEAD -Wirrantad to coyer more
surface for seme weight than any otter.
PURE UIBEBTY 'ZINC,
delected Zinc, (round in Beftned Linseed Oll.nneqnaled
to qnaUty,; •dw&ratke »m«;
■Warranted to do moreinibetter work at a dVen "cool
. y Any otkff,i
- GET THE BBSTI
Store and OfflM-Bori3ir HorUt THIRD -Street,
mbS-3m*
ROBERT SHOEMAKER & CO.,
K. E. Corner of FOURTH and ba.ce streets,
PHILADELPHIA,
WHOLESALE ORUOQISTB.
nfPOBTKBS ABB DEALERS IN FOBSIGH AND
DOMESTIC
WINDOW AND PLATE GLASS.
. ICAarrnrAOTtTBBBB Ov r
CHITS LIAlt A2TD ZUTO PAISTSe PUTT*. *O.
AGBHTfI V 0& *H* OBLBBBATKD
FRENCH ZINC PAINTS.
Dealers and eoamunen anjpplled at
few Sm VIET LOW FRICK JOB CASH,.
GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS.
CTOK^Iim^M^rDFACTORYi
a Tho .üb*«riber. would invite attention to tiicir. . v
IMPROVED CUT OF SHBXTB,
rkl.h they makes syeeialty ln tbelr bnilneu. Alto,
°* rt NOviMHßsfoß GENTLEMENS WEAR.
TbokaeJ. o&ax. : BobbbtJ. Hnicran*.„
rtBAM & HEMPHILL,
V dbaubsxn '
- LEHIGH AND SCHUYLKILL COAL.
. , ' Of aU»iiMandofbe»t ( qnalitle». . '
Carefully ridtd and HtMaidi tnd iaTi™Uyrt «•
W^dTard.
wtiafoctorily Ailed. _, _ % JwJm
E BCE REINER, OT!W:CQAL DEPOT,
• NOBLE Street, aboyeNlnthstreet.. ..
Constantly on band superior qualities of LehUh ai
Schuylkill Coal, selected sxpreaslyfor family norposes,
at the lowest market prices. . wharf Twenty-ttdid
street, below. Arcb street. OSse 110 Sodth POUBTH
Street - . - - ■ -ociD-da:'
UPH «fe 00..
Q E N-TJIN E EAGLE VEIN COAL.
V* EQUAL, IT NOT BUPBRIOKTO LEHIGH 1
trial will secure your eoetom. E«t and Store slues,
ELLIBBRANBON.
GO A L;— B TJ'G A H LOAF, BEAVER
MEADOW, andßprtnf MonntsinLehidi OoaL and
beat Locust Mountain, from Schmylkill, prejwred_«r ; ,
crossly for family use. Depot N. W. comer BIGtNTB
and WILLOW Streets. OMseNo. IW B<mth SECOND
Street tapS-tO •_ J. WALTON * CO.
g H. SLEEPER & C 0.,.
BUS MINOB STREET,
-ffADTUFACTURERS, AGENTS, AND WHOLE
SALE DEALERS IN
FLINT AND GREEN GLASSWARE,
Sire now In store a foil assortment of the above roods,
which we offirfat the lowest market.rates .
Beina sole' aaents for the SALEM GREEN GLASS
WORKS, we are prepared to make and work private
monlds to order.
PORTER, MINERAL, and WINE 'BOTTLES, of a
•nperior color and kulak. V;
Also, LAMP CHIMNEYS, APOTHECARIES’ SHOP
FURNITURE, SHOW BOTTLES, SYRINGES, HOSKB
ipaTHIOVTALS, totd'Drmttdsts’ Glassware aenerally.
T. A. EVANS A CO. 'S PITTSBURG GLASS VIALS
iohstantly on hand at factory prices. fel3-3m
ADVERTISEMENT. , ;t ,' *’,
SURGEON GENERAL'S OPTICS, ;
• ' . Washington, ©. C., Marchl, 1885. ...
A Board.of .Medical Officers will convene in-flew
folic City onthel6thinsti.to~examine;sttch. modelsof
urttficialllmb* (ieisand arms). and app&raiu&f or treat i
m*su of eases or ezsectios, as maj be. presented by tfl
respective investors or proprietors •
Those manufacturer* only who shall be Feeemmended
oyfthe Board will be authorised to furnish .limbs- or
apparatus.. +
jts the object of this Board is to secure the oest artifi
cial limbs* &c., to the mutilated soldier, all manu
facturers most submit thoir models to thlsJßoard- in
order to received** approval and r* commencation. ia
eludlD* those wflb now enjoy that privilege* as wail as
those who desire to do so. , • ••• , •
For further infoTmatton applyto Stirgeon Wfi[. J,
SLOAS. tJ. B A . Hndieal Director, .Department of the
East; No. 198 BLEKCKBR Street. Netr Pork City.
; B Army.
OELMBOLD’S FLUID EXTRACT
XX BUGHU is pleasant In taste and odor, free from
ill iujuiions cnnterttM. and immediate in Its asttoa..^
L» RICKS ! BRICKS !! BRICKS It!;
L> of all kinds, on haod lminlro of
S, AT OILLRSWR,, 80 V B THIRtBENTB St.Oraj.
(wlck-ywd.SWEIW't-EtITH Wd, RSSD Sto. [ahSUT
MERCHAiVI’ TAILORS.
JOHN KELLY, ,
TAILORS,
HAVK Now nr B*o**
dors’ CLOTHim.
SPRING SACHS,
NOW BEADY.
Zl|r. RULON,
DRUGS AMD CHEMICALS.
Manufacturers of
PURE LIBERTY LEAD,
ibv it. Ann von wiu. havb no othek!
CTBE LIBERTY ZINC.
FHILijDBLFHIA.
J. W. SOOTT <» 00.,
GINTLBIIEN’S PUBNISHING STORE,
No. 814 CHESTNUT STBBKT,
. Ponr doors below the Continental.
~ eo Ax.. -
Eft Joss.
-WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1865.
REPORT OF SECRETARY STAHTON.
THE OPERATIONS -OF THE WAR DEFABtMSST
’ ’ IiBKISG THE PAST YEAR.
}': - / War Ugpautmbkt.
• 1 WASKHfQTOw City* ffiarcal, 1855,
Mb. PEBSAssrn SaySlbo honor iiarawifh to sjhmlt
tbe anonal feports of (bp levsiral imrs&as of this Dspari*
ment. Tkey desijhed to ftccompanr m.r annuli
xepoit, wMdfcn by jour iiermlSßiqa, 2ias bMii dalayed
natll the Ge&eral sbouid/uriiisli his suinzaa*
ryof opaVatfoasof thepast yaa t._ .Hiaro*
pdit haandt.yBt : besii receivedl as the activity of the
canipaigk lii'prdgieAs dfmauds'hiruncsasliig aiteutlon.
Bat the accompanying documents are now submUfced,
ihordelfthat».:i(> far as ean be dbne withnut injury to
the service, .they-may boprinted; ths public docn«
mentßOfiliepieeenteefislOHof.Coiigreßa.: ,
BTOXA&T 0»;THB Y2AB T S WORK.
.The militarF eYeeta of «he past year hare beett offici
ally putlJ&bea by this Department from time to time as
: hey transpiied, and &te fully known every branch
of thlfr Government, and thronahout the civliiaed world..
They eohetltcne ft'scries of sncoessfallmarehes. sieves,
and battles,'attectlng the endurance and courage of the
soldiers orffiid United B»tes,’and the gallantry and'
military ekiU .of their commanders, unrivailed.in the -
history of motion*. .' '' ''„ *, ,
The the Army of,the Potpmac. aud the
operatxmPirithe James tee APPometiox» and
uound dimmed as a Petersburg; the masterlybpsra
tmns-ofout,a£iiiy in GeOfsia, retailing ,in the caoture
of and dthef important military
Poet« In f’at State; the reduction of she forts inthe
hhrior of tfohue; tne hard-iought battles at Franklin
and aiotma^hrashyille« ,> (FeBUlUn( id * the rout of the'
rebel Tennessee, the »,u«cessiou>of brilliant
yictoried wbh hy.ihe *imv of the Shenandoah; the rac
: ceesful 4 etormipg of Fort Fisheir? the capture of WU
. mingt«it,;Qdttjnbia. and Charleston,and othe r aehUre' -
of alii contributing to the triumph of *
tie Unioh ceu« and the euppieasipn of the rebellion,
wOTba mot;e‘*pproprlftt«ly detailed ttpon the ecming in
General
fThat -the administrative * operations of the several
bureane of thifi 'Depßktmefct have sot failed to con
tribute to tiMLAucoesapt our ..armies is shown by the
officialreporteof their reepective chiefs,
■\ ■nvfjLaxiiwvi. -
' IThe AdjuianiGenerai reportath«ilffietatieß>prin*iag
- up -from a mfilden and vast increase orbuaia«ss mea* <
enrsbly overeftoe ia-hls oureau. clerks inetrnctei and
work Credit Is justly due to both the
officers and clerks for their fidelity-.
i ’c ’DgikTlßii AB» : RBORUITprO,
' Ueepite advantages for recroitia g .volunteers, -
greater eucceSi'lias been reached ia the reiular sarvice
• than was artfctpflted. These dre twbdepots for coilec
‘tibnof r*ciuit« i fbr;theariovat- large—one for infantry
at Fort Columfina, Hew York, and .one for
service arOaTHfiei-Fa -i Thbre are also <fourteen depots
-far ld different sections
: of me wkand wounded officers hayegenerah
v ly been^iupleyejEt 1 on -recruiting service, and when re
coveredtley haye:b«en settt to rQPiace others in the
fitld who retiSro relief a _ . _ , • ,
one depoti are established in the principal
Et&tesfor eoileCtisgrand forwarding- to regimante
ldnteere andUeubsiitutefi. and alto drafted, mea,*. The
■: Tehran Beaerre - G6rpe has boen of much eervloe in
guarding theie depots, and escorting
their i There are also. &ix for
recruit® enliated in rebel States by agents horn loyal
gtatt e* - **'' * cjf-" *-**'.>■' -'Y.i ,’.j.* -
Boards have been,hast up to inquire
Into caaeeb of absence from duty and alleged o£*nces
by cfficeiC Tbueffect has been to diminish the num
ber of cases published and referred'to the boards to'
thiee hundred mad ,Bixty. four, for. eleven months:
' whereas, beforetheir organization, from, one hundred
to two hundred .Wfere reported monthly for absence
leave afehe, ■ ,
;The status otihap aiBS seems to be mißunder&iood.
~ Fu m the wordmg of the.ac6_of April 9* 1884, section U
lfe ts thought bx aome chaplains that a new rack be
tweettlhe lYadei of major add captain is intended for
< thelm r to be an error growing out of=
tnehse *'eurgeohV in the .act, instead of.
**m%dtetf'-’offiroy The former assimilated rank of
chaplains, in to Allowance of quarters and
pay proper, Vcsptain,” and such should now he
their rank. - % •• -' ■ "
Over two huiared dags. c&ptured from* the rebcls.
have heen recetted, properly and deposited
forsafek*etfng*.**V ‘ , ...
Medals or hemor have besn-awarded in numcrous iu
etßUcesto privatts ano non.-.commUeioned officers for
gallant aervieeS The plan of awarding gold and silver
ffitdalß to cfficershntead of brevet#, to a certain extent,
iscommended to.noticQ. Xt ehould not supersede the!
conferring, of bretet, especially, in. cases, where<such
rank might be fcafcclsed itfhigh commands;
The work of prtparLD g official reports of hattlee, «e,,
for printing, in efißcpliancewith the resolution of Con*
greeeof M*yl9; I*4, is progreSsixg as rapidly as pos*
eible. and all offlemrs from whom such reports ate due
have been ealle<£|ipon for them; r :
The reports that the entire army
is paid to Anguefßl, 1884, or inprocees of pay as rapidly
as the TreaßUry caneuppiy fends. . f
He c&Us attenliOKto the of his
bureau, and stromily urges that the paymaster general
. have the rank of atbrigadier general; that there be »wo
asUstant paymaster; generals witKthe rank of colonel;
and ten dspnty paymaeter generals in addition to the
two now providei'by law, with the rank of lieutenant
colonel. He alßoieeamniend.s the adoption of a provi
sicn of law. to tlmeffect that any; j«y master or. addi
tional by the Secretary or war to
take charge of a gtographical pav dUtrict, shall have
the temporary i# of < cornel during such
charge. .He", rtmlthe.cterlcal force of his
bureau is efficlGbff-Bhd that no increase is believed to
be at present ysqcdred. *.
OBDlfAliqß BBFABTXBBT* . .
The CHiief' of wdnance reports that' the flseal
effatis of .that bWeau show a balance, July 1. JMi,
$3,122 979 11
AppMprtattoiiB».^i;r;;v..>,v. w ..; v 42.0i5;cg3 03
. 141,023 01
"Total means.... ..'1
FxpendUUrea durißg the year*...^»......• 88,603,5J2 99
In treasury and public depositories, Jane _
SC, 8,770,179 13
,~-™..545,279,00212
Thees’imiatesfor the,next fiscal year.are based on
expenditures for a similai period last year, iakisg into
cosstderattonremalniughajanses and supplies onhand.
The supplies produced during the past fiscal year in
clude 1,760 pieces of ordnance,'2,36l artillery carriages
and caissons*' 602,615 small arms, 784*066 sets of accent? e
meats and harness, 1,674.344 projectiles for caonon.
12,740,146 pounds of bullets and lead, 8,489,400 pounds
of gunpowder,- camidges for amaU arms. '
. These are complete articles, in addition to large gn&nti
■ ies of the same hind of supplies partially made up at
the arsenals. •■■■■■’'•.■'■•■/•■'-
The ordnance supplies furnished to the military ser
vice during the fiscal year,include 1-141 pieces of ord
,naxce, artillery carnages and caissons, 455,*910
small arms* 602,044 sets of accoutrements and harness*
91S. 70S projectllea for cannon, 7,624.685 ponndß of bul-
Uts and lead* rounds of artiuery ammunition,
162*C67Eeto of horse equipments* 112,087,653 cartridges
for Bmall arms, and 7,5*4,044 pounds of gunpowder.
These supplies were in addition to -large quantities of
partsprovldedloT repairs in’the field- i ■* - g* 1 '
The capacity,.of the arsenals :2or the manufacture of;
munitions of ,war ha» been increases during the ypar*..
and that increase Is sti.il goingos> so far rnsans
appropriated will admit, supplies manufactured as
ihuarsenala are of better quality and.iess.ooat than si
mtiax articles obtained by cohtiuet or purchase.
The national armory at, Spriagfield* Massachusetts,-
can tern out thiea hundred thousand of the best quality
bf rifle muskets annually. , ,
i Potsession has been taken of Sock Island* IlUnoi*, in
pursuance of an act of Congress, and the requisite
holdings for an arsenal there are in progress.
- There iso® hand a stook.of three-quarters ( of a million
of first clafßjifie small arms, exclusive oitce arms in
the hands of the tioops , slnce increasedto a million and
a quarter.' l'i -i- -t..
The intrcduetlon of, breech-loadinxaxms for themili-
Eaiy'servlce recommended, ’
The selection of.a sitefor ageneral depository of gun- -
powder, and the erection of, suitable magazines there
on, is recommended. In that connection the construc
tion cf a'Government. powder mill, of aufllelent capa
city to make standard,and -proof powder and gun cot
ton, ie also recommended. . . •' . _
The procurement of a suitable ground for the proof and
experimental firing of ordnance and small arms is
urgently advised as a most essential -want of the mtii j
ttory service. •" • ' ' ;
A beavy;2o-ineh gun has been successfully .east and
finished, and is ready for trial. The object of the trial
is?to demonstrate whether the, destructive effects of
eueh r a gun, warranted by theory, will be practically
real ized, and to settle the question of the largest effe e-,
tive calibre for sea-coast cannon.. ,
The armies in the field have been ;amply supplied
with good and effective arms* equipment, and ammu
nition, .and the arpiament of our fortifications has been
kept in good order* and strengthened during the year.
TBS BSOISBSti SBP-AttTKßSfc
The chief engineer reports that the operations of his
"bureau for the lest year embrace, special efforts to pre*
pare the coast defences to receive the heavier and moat:
suitable artillery for combatting iron-clad vessels; the
construction of field works and lines with the armies in
the field; the preparation and service.of pontoon bridge
bauipage, and the- reduction of' the enemy's. works on
Mollis Island, fort Morgan, and PoH Qainea by siege
OJ Snch information,-in campaign maps and otherforms,
hae been prepared and disseminated, the survey of the
lakes has been satisfactorily continued, and progress
made in the repairs and preservation*of harbor works,
for which appropriations were made at the last session
o, Tfie fxpenaitaiee forth. jaar, indiidto# ths matata.
uric. of the Military Academy, amtranttoJß.SlS. 191.71
A baud of engineers, ordered b» the War Depart
ment ioJadnary, 1864, to examloe tbe system of oar
seacoast defence a, haa performed ita, duties, recom
mend in the modlficatione made necessary in tbela tty
tbe introdnetion of increased calibres And-rills efttne,
and to enable them to combat affeetiTSly iron-cl ad hos
tile fleets. Barth as *-material fornarapets and ramr
• parts is now.Cas.ltias -bten from the, earUest,employ
ment of battering axtllltry) found to bathe bestae well
as the most eeonuittieal-reststinK mass to* oppose an one
my'e'flre both on the, land and sea front,. This mate
, rial ie uniformly adhered to whererer the locality per
mltS- '■ < : - U V .t* *•
Sine offleers of engtnem, ont of a total nnmbor of
eighty-elz, have been lost dnrlna-the year bydeath;
all of ihem;haTe.giTen. their liyoa to the terrioe of the
arid -wei* conunicsioned in the army. The,,«mallness
of;thic number grows oritof the_resi*naUoas which oc
curred in- thii clan in the beglnnlng of the rebellion.
The classes at this time have thc- nsnal strength cor
responding toConireialonal representations.
(■ran .COMHIBBAIIT SKKBBAi’fI UUP ABT2CBHT,
The Commissary General'of SnbsUterice reports that
the I applies of .snbsiSterice storesbiTe been mostly pnr
chased in Bo,ton, Hew Torlr, Philadelphia, Baltimore,
Watbiniton, Cincinnati, Louisville, Uhl car o, and St.
f ' Louis. »eef cattle u ere furnished by contracts of snort
duration-at’most'convenient from
tbe plaoe*of purchase to ibe field. Most of the stores
were purchased by. advertising, accepting the lowest
rids offered for suitable articles at cash piiees ; > At
tempts have in some eases been made byindivlauaii
and wsoclstions. to monopolize and control the prices
■ofiarticlts riquirsd by the Subsistence Bureau, thereby
creating much difficulty. , ...
The armies have been supplied with good and whole
some food and large numbers of prisoners and suffer
ing Union families have been furnished with subsist
ence. .‘Generally the contractors and others have filth
iuliy Complied with their obligations Officers em
ployed In this branch of the service, with-feut few*ex
efbtiona, have performed their duties with promptness
inSbe field affdat depots During theysar ending June
So, 1864- ftfty-.iwo thous&nd.four hundred and .eighty?
two Quarterly ormonthly accounts have been examined
and referred to.the Treasury Department.
tbs QUAKTBRBASTSB OBKHBAI. > © DBBPABTMBZIT.
, The report of the Quartermaster. General eoataincft
statement of the operations and expenditures, of the. bu
reau under hircontrol curing the fiscal Fear.
The clerical force authorizedby law i«»in hie opinion,
still insufficient to maho that prompt
accounts and reports of disbud sin* officers desirable,
and indeed necessary to secure rigid acaptmtebility for
the expenditure of the public money and property.
. An * Mention of the increase or compensation granted,
by ifce lsßt Gobgrees to clerks of thellower grades, so as
todndude those of higher grades, is. recommended by
the Quartermaster Generali ik view Of the iacroasea
eost of living in Washington, v. *. \ .■ •
The Quarrermaster General gives an aecouut of the
measures adopted under the Orders oi the Secretory of
War for equipping, supplying, and moving the large
army which, concentrating last November on the bansB
offebe'Tonncssee* fought under Gen. Grant thehaitle of
Gnaitonooga* and opened the way for the victorious
campaign of the army under Gen. Sherman, resulting
inhhe capture of Atlanta, and the operations which, are
■ ndw in progress in the Btate of Georgia. The vast ef
forts madev the wonderful resources in men aod'inate- *
. v jigj deveiopid, the manner in which the steamboat and'
railroad interests, the agricultural and mechanical pro
v ductß of tihe valley of the Mississippi, were laid under
contribution in feeding, supplying, and moving a vast
army in auadvance of over three hundred muss from
Its secondary, and four hundred and flfiy.mlies from its
pi3mitiveba»e, are 'described: The record Is one ore
citable to the .people who have developed such vast ra
soiurce*, and placed them s> patriotically at the disposal
olthe Government, and also to the officers, their agents
in this great work- ' . ? / • r ~,
The report gives fables of the quantities of the princi
pal military supplies, fuel, forage, clothing, and rntie
rtfclcpurchased, transported, and used durtogthe year.
It'also contains statements of the steamboats employed
upon the Western rivers, and of the steamers aaa other
vteseta upon the ocean engaged ia the transportation of
troops and supplies . - „ . .
Jd this service.it is believed many abuses have been
reformed,and greateoonomies have been effected during
the pati year. The indications derived from CongTes
gioj ai examination 'and reports have been followed up
with advantage to the service,
.The army bas been well supplied with all the esssn
tlaU of miiitsry equipment, and. withmail foragsi, and
losses 6 by capture-and deetrucHon of fcralnsi by\:
[ tie 9$ eipplQyea py \
the rebels, h&ve been gre&% but the movements of tho
aimies have seldom been delayed ny them.
. The most revere losses of material during the year
Iw e been the destruction of a portion of thetraia of the
stay atUhettanopgaintbe fau of 1854. and thococs*-
onent deslrUe:los of animals there, and in East Tennes
see ; tbedestructlonof fcteamers on the UUateaippi and
Ohio by ineendlariee; the loss of the trains dmlnc tte
Bed river expedition; and to these mar be added the
destruction of a train of two hundred wagons, near Fort
Bmlth, in Arkansas, since the close of the dscal year. '
MILITARY RAILROADS.
tAe the rebel armies are beaten back they barn all iai-
Sonant: railroad bridges, tear up the railroad tracks,
eetioy the water stations, carry off the. machinery and
rolling stock, and do all that is in theirpower to render
the railroads uselets to our armies. .
-The armies are oblited to follow generally the natural
lines of transport and communication and the lines by
which the enemy retires All the railroads nurth of the ;
Potomac, and or the Tennessee and Cumberland, and
within tbetetritoTieewhlehonr armies have penetrated,
have been a tersately in ihe hands of'-the rebate sod of
onr own troops, When abandoned by the enemy, their
immediate reconstruction and operation becomes a mili
tary necessity.
,Colonel (now Brevet Brigadier General) D. C. MeOol
)um hasbeeDplaoedaa mliitMT,. director In charge of:
this work. Be has organized, an efficient conttrncsion
corps, provided rolling stock, for which it was necessa
ry to make onerous demands upon the manufacturers of
the loyal States. The report of Colonel MeOoUumlsa
if cord of the expenditure of over eleven millions of the
approrriationsof the quartermaster's department. It
gives information upbn the means and the cost of sup
pi? tag an araiy by railroad, and the manner, of repa>r
ioghnd reeon’tmcting raiteoads in a hostile country,
which ii of treat Interest to soldiers and engineer.' Tne
results are remarkable triumphs of military and en
;glneeiisg skill, creditable to-the system under which
they bavebten accomplished, to tne officers and, men
engaged in the work, and to the country which has dis
played such energy and suchrteourceslndafendiug aui
eeserting ite; integrity. Already a thousand miles of
railroad have been operated by-this Department, In
connection wiih the movements of the armies.
The mobility of the armies hag increased. The
opinion held by somVdffioers of rank in the earlier
;Msioiy of the tebeilion that an army oould.net be
maintained except within reach of a navigable river or
railroad; has been dispersed by such marches as those
of General bberman, from . east of Meridian
and. back to: Memphis- to Knoxsville
:asdback to Becatnr. at atlxiie|when;the railroads were
not in cpeiatlon; that of Geherarßurnside from Qinaln
'nAti Louisville Sou- heast Kentucky to
BjaoxvUle;- that of Lieutenant- General Grant from
Wa&bington to Petersburg; and the marsh of General
Sherman, from Atlanta toward the coast. r
The organization of this bureau has been much im
proved by the law of the'4th of July last 'The grades
"of, rank and authority being now-in proportion to'the
duties and responsibilities, the officers' work- with
grester succees. Thepresect organization is fully de
tailed in the report of the Quartermaster General, and
no further cfaangegaxe thought necessary. a , t .
The agreement made by the War Department with a
convention of railroad comnsnles, held in this city
euly in ibe w&r; h&s remained In The rail
at; the prices then establis aed, except as modiSea by
the Internal Bevenue laws,.thoagh below ihose then
charged to private citizens, which hate since been con*
bidexably increased:
To a/few .railroads- suVjeot to dtpredations by the
enemy, ITbin theinbeiog ix districts wnere the Depart
ment has not be<n able to give them entire protection.
. and safely, some advance in rates has bien granted.
j - military Tblbgbajphs* _
The telegraph hse edniinhed to be a most efficient,
and valuabloaid to’military operations. Six thousand
five hundred miles of militarytelegraph-have been in i
operation, of which three tlumsana m-Ues have bseu
conrtructed duiihi the year. one tbousaud par-.
&o£B have been eicployed In this work.* The emsleney
and fidelity of the officers and operadves of the mUUary
telegraph deserve special recognition.
Full reports are givon.of ;the>quantities of clothing,
cskop and garrbontqutpagefuraidhed to the armissdd
ring the year. Xfo difficulty ha* been'found in procurlag
ample enupUes of good quality from domestic mauurao-.
taxers, with the exception of tents and blnnkecs. Ina
portion ofthese,imported materials have beca.used, as
the domestic manufactories have not yet been able to
supply all that were heeded. Some frauds have be*n
committed, the authors of which, it is will be
brought to justice by meaeurt* now in progress. Soma
bsveateeady been convicted and senteffirad to the pe-
The vaft snpplies of forage needed for our armies have
been furnished generally with regularity. Tim diffi
culty of transporting , so"’bulky && article as hay has
caused some irregularity in its supply to armies in hot .
tile'di&tricts, ana it is remarked in this connection that
the armies'ill actual movement draw less heavily upon
the means of the Department than those which rest long
inactive in district* exhausted of supplies, and there
fore drtwlng everynecestafy from the distant loyal
territory.
Thetralnaotthfiarmy-are reported to be in gool con
dition, thoroughly organised, moveable, perfect in. mi
terial and equipment, and well supplied with animals
and themeansof repair. . < . • _
The purchase of horses for the cavalry was, , during
the fiscal year, under the direction of a br&nch of the
Qua rterma&ter Gen«ral ’ s office, organized especially for
that purpose, in connection with she cavalry bureau
Since the reorganization of this office, under the law of
July 4.1864, the purchase of all horses and mules for
cavalry, artillery, and the trains has been placed under
the charge of a single division of the .Quartermaster
General’s office. Itte believed that this has reeulted ia
advantage to the service by securing. more direct and
speedy ies pontibility, end a better end mere uniform
inspection. The enpply of-animals has been at the rate
os about fire hundred per/day. whichisalflo the average
rate of their destruction. The cavalry of the Army of the
Potomac was twice remounted dorinc the drat eight
months cf .the present year.: • notion of the
country seems, to he able to bear the Immense drain
upon its home and muleß, and the stock, judging from
the cnmnt piice's.’givefc no sigas of exhaustion. or di
minution , ... tj : ... /
The quartermasters’ trains of our armies average one
wagon to every tWenty-four men in the fieldvata sn
•&Uny in the field, .well snipped, with arttlsry,
cavalry, aid trains, requires one home or mule, on. the
ayerftge« to every two men; The number of horses and
mules 1b nearly equal. ■ .
The : ground appropriated fox a cemetery near the
“Soldiers’ Home,” in the District, having been filled,
& national military cemetery has-been ektablished at
'An ins ton, on the south bank of the Potomac, in which
s&ve el thousand interments have, alieady be?nmade
The names of the soldiers Jt ere buried are registered.
Those who fell repelling therebel attack on the caoisaL
last July have been buried on the battle-field'north of
Port Stevens. It is recommended that Congress provide
for tlie erection of a monument to them; ■ •
For the better protection of the depots of the Quarter*
master's Bare&ttfromxebelraids, theQnartera&storQe
neralwas directed to cause tba persons erap’oyed in this
department, at the principal and enppeed depots, to be
organized toto military companies and regUoents for in
ternal guard s duty>andforlooal defence.- : This, oigul
~ zaticu at
a force of several thoueandmeni, in
this District and In Tennessee, been called upon several
times during the lasbyear to take the place ;Of regular
troops os guard and in. the breaches, and have done
good service at Washington, BashyiUe, and Johnson-
Tills, all of which depots have been threatened or at*
tacked by the rebel armies*
. THE'XJOLOBHD MAJT.
The Quartermaster General .stales that the flews ex
pressed in his report of 1862, la regard to the aid to he
expected and derived from the colored population, have
been confirmed by two-years* experience.' These per*
eoas have been extensively employed in the labors of
the Quartermaster General’s boTean; where each one
so'employed released a white soldier from labor, and
restores him to Ms place in line of battle. Their exten
sive enlistment hat created a demand, however, beyond
the supply; application bein* made to the.Quarter
ns aeUr General for such labor with the armies before
Richmond, which he was nn&ble to provide, he-en
deavored to procure colored men from the departments
of the Atlantic and Gulf coast, where it was publicly
reported that they were suffering for want of employ
ment. Hone could, he obtained fi om those departments,
however. The commander of one of them reported that
they were all wanted for labor necessary to the success
military operations or for other public sennas, and
that not a man, woman, or child could he spared.
. The Qnartefmtfster General makes honorable mratton.
of some of tbe officers of Ms
bureau, "'who have been engaged io the most important
operations have most Contributed to the general
succcSfrofourarmies. •
- • THB BAIIfBOAD.
Beferencais made to the;damer of.interruptionnf our:
milit&Ty'eommtixid&tibns with the States on the P&eifls
coast,by war, and the difficulty of supplying armies and
defending these portions of the Bepabiic. when the
only military communication not exposed to a hostile
fleet, ts a wagon road across thei continent is mm
tioned. The early Completion of the Pacific Eailra&d is
called for as. a military precaution deserving atten
tion'and the fostering care of the Government.
! THB BUKGIBON GBNBBAI» , 8 I>BPABTKEirT.
It appears from the report of the Surgeon General
thatthe funds derived from all sources, and,,available
for the expenses of the medical department,for the nsa*l
yearending June SO, 1864, were. $12,203,988
Disbursements-«.-*—«,***, $11,026,791
Batanceremaining in the treasury. .. ~ .
June 30,1884.— 914,135
Balance in the hands of dlabur&lng . ■ ■ . : •
—-_^ liam9BB
One hundred and eighty-two honitals,with a capacity
of eighty-four thousand four hundred and seventy-two
bed*, were in operation at the. date of the last annual
report. During the summer campaign it was found ne •
cessary to establish additional, ones, ; and ineieise the
capacity of those nearest the teenes or active operations, <
giving one hundred and ninety hospitals, with A capa
city of .one. hundred and twenty thousand five hundred
and twenty one beds on June 30.. 1864 During the year
the health Of (he entire army was better than is usual
with ttedps engaged ite constantly on active duty and in
arduous . campaigns.. -Ho -, destructive - epidemics pre
vailed' iiT any section, and the number of sick. and
although 'large; has been .comparatively
small In the proporttOuit bore to tha whole army . At
the dote of the’year the number of sick and wouaded,
both'with their commands and in general hospitals,
was l6Bs.than sixteen per cent, of,the strength of the
army: tfhe number sick with their respective oom
m and 8-was four per cent, .and, in general hospitals five
and three tenths per cent, of the strength. Of the six
and forty-six hundredths per cent wouade?* nearly
one per cent, were with their respective commands;
the restingeneral hospitals. -* - v -■* .
The Establishment of, medical depots within reach .of
armies In the field, and .their .prompt supply upon the
field of battle; the transportation of sich aad wounded
by ambulance,' railroad,' and hospital transports; the
sufficiency and successful administration. of the best
system of general hospitals; the sanliary^ precautions,
• as well as all minor details of’this department, tending
'to the ireater comfort of thesichfand wounded, wweli
as to the health and efficiency of the troops, have; du
ring the fear undergone the severest possible teat.and
inn© instance have the .movements or guceessful gene
4rale been impeded or dett/ed from any tfhuse within
ihecontrolol themMfcrf department : ; ‘ . r _
Houee bill Ho. 543: Thirty-eighth Congress, having
passed the House of Bepresentatives was-not reached
in the Senate, and awaits final action. The proposed
and well deserved promotion*of-meritorious medical
officers cannot fail to increase their efficiency, by plac
ing them upon an rquatfoottnrwith those of other staff
corps in regard to loealxank, and H is respectfully Bub
mitted Jhat theJaithfuljperrormance of. arduo us duties
by officers of the medical staffshoold be TacognUed and
rewarded by brevets equally with the other branches of
the service*< .' - - 2 '
The Army Medics! MtUenm continuestoinereasaiu
value, and Is already one of the most inatnutlve patho
logical collections In,the world: A desoriptlTa oaia
loffue is in course of preparation, < an examination of
which will, it is thought, 'fully ei iabliah the i <apo nance
of tMs institution In connection with, the surgical and
medlcalhietory .of the war.
PBOVOST MABBHAL GBKBBAI.’B DBPABTICBKT.
Prom the report of the Provost Marshal General will
* J*M? _ The effortsmlide during the year to perfect the
enrolment of the national forces, the lists on ih. first of
flovembei laet containing the namea men.
Second: The resnlta of -the drafts made on 1883 and
1664. given in tabular form, ftom'trhlehU awpeara that
on the 61et day of July last, there wae no material de
adend, lhdheUnited States on-the quotas of troops re.
attired. ifueh localities as were behind having been
drafted for theamonntt due Korn them. The draft made
under the call of July 18.. 1864, was Inprogress at the
.date:of the Provost Marshal General’s report. This
draft came on during the heat of the late Presidential
camial|i,*and resistance to it was threatened in many
: places, and In some aotnallv organized. The Provost
Marshal General justly claims special credit for the
officers acting- under him for the firmness and fairness
■with which they executed the. Jaw of Congress and the
orders of the Government In msklngthis draft, andfor
the success which attended their efforts™
Third The-result* of; the volunteer reerattlag.eer.
vice, nnderthe different calls for troops, dated rebrns
- March 14, and July 18,1864, are given Inrefs
fence to' tho re-enlistment of veteran volunteers during
the fall of 1853, the Provost Marshal General says:
‘•Over a hundred and thirty- six thousand tried sol
diers. who would- otherwise ere this have been dis
charged, were secured for three years longer. Orgini
tations which would have been lost to the service ware
preserved ano recruited, and capable and experienced
officers -were retained In command. The force time or
ssnlzed and retained has performed an essential part In
the great campaign of 1864, and' Its Importance to the.
country cannot he overestimated." _ . - .
jl oonour in the fotegoln* remarks, and know or no
operation connected with the recruitment of the army
which has resulted in range advantage to the service
than the one referred to " •- .. . ._• .
The results of the recruitment under the act of July
4,1864, for recruiting la rebel Statas, are reported as
Fourth Commutation money received up to Bovsm
ber 111864, from drafted men, while permitted by law to
•eeure exemption by payment ol SSOO each. Is appropri
ated by act of Congress, ‘‘for the expenses of draft, and
for the procuration of substitute!, ” A large.part of It
has been used, and the n ualnder is required for other
The Provost Marshal Gensral reportsaotlvity
on tie part of his offlceie In the arrest of deserters and
strsgalers. 88,692 having been arrested between October
1,1 SsL and October 1,1864, the, total number arrested
. from tbe e»tabliebment of tliebareauto Ocrobar 1, 1861,
ProvofctMarßbalGeneral Taport# tbe ye-
Beterve Corps as consHfclpg, October 1.1884, or
?6s officers ami 18.738 men; tii diaclplins and iastnie
clos sood ; and tb&tthß antirs corps H doing datywhlok
would otborwlßO have to be performed by an eqoal
number of able-bodied troops aeteened from tbe ar tales
In the fi^ld; sad that U lay et iaa: equate in numbers to
fill the .demands made on it. , iV
Seventh. The medical statistics of the drafts, pra
lestedtc astrltaoftablei, are referred to bv she Fro*-'
vo*t Marshal General as worthy of special attention-
Eighth. Tbe tot&Uilsburseioenif on aoaonnt of enrol
tuent and draft, inclcdlnt all the expenses of the hnraan
for the year ending October 31,1864 aie given at $4,019 -
728,56 - The amount: shA x Tear ending
September 80,3&84.Jrnia the appxoprlatloo for cou*ctini,
vnrr 6nlslbg, and drixltag volunteere. is given as $4,199*-
on sxpe&ded &9J& **m tend daring pro*
FO tfJft CENTS.
ceding year, $7»78C.237 40. Amount expended &anng
tie yea? ending September 80, iflw, for pay of advance
bounty 94 658,203-
bo appropriation of mens* It asked for any brancifoi
ttis btreaa during the onßuiog year.
JOPGB A3>VOCATIS eaJTBBAI.’S DBPASWMBNIf#
Ab will appf ar from the ace impanying report of the
Judge: Advocate General, the business of this bureau
baa eoßiiiUfd steadily to Increase. Its laaporteat duties
sre believed to be falth/nliv performed, wnis-< as was
anticipated, the new orgaoirationtireu to thwofllceby
the set of last eesstomls ffrond to haye addedTmuchto
the efficiency of its operations. A digest of the opinions
of the Judge Advocate General upon current questions
of military law, which has been published and distri
buted throughout the army, will, while affording valua
ble instruction to inexperienced officers, e mtribute to
produce that uniformity of and sotiouso much
to be desired in the administration of military justice.
SXOHAXQB Ofe PftIBOZrBBB.
The general sxehhnic of prisoner* effected under tt«r
instructions of this Department by Lieut. Geo. Grant,
in in course of diligent execution, and It Is hoped that
all of our prisoners who are in the hands of the rebels
will Boon be returned. A furlough'of-thirty days is
extended to them as they are returned to. we camp at
•Annapolis.
To the chiefs of bureaus, and their subordinates, the
thanks of this Department are due for tbtir unwearied
industry, Vigil anoe.and general-fidelity, In the dia-
FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL.
The stock market was much depressed yesterday, in
eon sequence of tlmetiU further deoliae in gold ■ Go
vernment loans, however, maintained quotationirand
Were rather firmer at the close—the ISSts selling at
HQ#, and the3-30* at IKK- Stats and City loans, how
ever, were very dull, and we notice a farther decline of
2in the State War Loan 6s, with sales at 98; City 6s,
municipal, sold, at 93, and the new were droop?
Ing at' 94K- Cmpany bonds were exceedingly
dull, .and the sales light; 2d mortgage Pennsylvania
Bailroad bonds sold at 100* and Lehigh Valley bonds at
bS. Excepting Catawiiia Bail road and Beading, the
share list was very-weak. Camden,and Amboy de
clined #, selling at ISSH; Beading closed at about 55M
advance of H ; Catawisea preferred sold at 28X; El.
mint preferred at 47#» and Little Schuylkill-st SS3£.
Delaware Division Canal was weak a; 35; Wyoming,Val
le, Cabal soli at 60, and Sehojlkill HaTigatlon pre
ferred at S 3 The Coal stock, were Inactive i Green
Mountain being thsonlr one that- found binrere, and
fains were unde in this oulriaa small way'at BX.
qnotatlons for the other coal stcoks will be found
iiiour list of dosing prices There was loss excite
aunt la the oil etocra, the speculative feeling being
decided 1, da the warm' Big Tank, Which was Mselr
repotted by the books of the Pnblio Board oo Hoads*
at 4 dosed peeterda* at 454.withsalest Sugar Creek
sold srls, a furiher decline of 2.and Cherr* Kiwata?s6*
a decline of X; Slippery Kook, which sold ok Honda/
at S, destined to 4, and P.teolenm Centre ftom'Sli to
t-k. The People's Equitable was heavyaj K■. and
. Bali Cr* ektirin at the olose at Es4City rail
road.shareaebntiniie very qoitU the oaiy sals was.
Arch-street at, IIJSt fSwatbil for Second and Thirds
7J for Wtet Philadelphia, and 25 for Girard College
Bank shares are firmly held, but there was nothing
doing; 301 mns bid for Horth America; 140 toy Parmer,
ard'Bfcchattier ;.8J for Commercial; 80 for Mechanics’;
46 for Penn Township; 30>4 for hUnafidtarere’ and Me
ehanics!: 60 for City, tnd 6» for,Corn Bxohania..
The following wore the aaotationa of gold at the horns
nimad: -
ilO A.
11 A. M...... —M.mn.JSHK
18 Bf t t irT*-*-t- —... IBS
1 P. H —MIX
\ 3 Pa If a a.I a 111 nTt t ---' IT! ass. MS * C-.. 4 M 4 s 181
4'; F. HM*.«<eeM444,e«eiseseea»e*e'»M««s<tei4etl7lr
The Bttbeeriptlona to tie 7-SO loan recaiTed hr Jar
Cooke yesterday amount to ,9.127.250, including one of
SfiOO,OO from K ew Tork. and one of gmooo from Cin
cinnati.- . There wars 3.SEI individual anbacrlptipns of
@lOO sack.
Tfce foiiowißX were tto cloalnc aabtattoab for
principal n&tigfcUon* mining, a&d oil stocks
Bid. As ft.
SehlJTaT—w.* . j
Scui NaTpref—. 82# -am,
Snaq Canal.—llk 13£ !
BisJtfoont’nCoal .. 6#
Clinton Coal.—. .ft
Conn Mining-—. .. K
Feeder Dam Cl.. .. 1
H 1 & Middle..** 8# 9
New Gretfc* Coal. M 1.
Bwet&ra Falla Gl *. ?K
Atlas *—. \K \4A
Allege Tideottte lg 1%
Big T*Dk—. m 6
Brandealsland.. 1 \%
Bud Creek...... 3 8#
Briggs Oil.—►*•• •• BH
Boni’gSp Petro- .. 3 .
Contfnfc&tal OU.. .. -%H
Crescent Olty«.. .. 2
Corn Planter*.... 8 ■ •
Caldwell-.. i—6# 6%
Cow Creek...... JK VH
Cherry Bun**— 87# 38
Dnxkard Oil—. 1# 134
Dußkard Creek.. 1# «•
' DalzallOil«——. sg 8#
Fxcel&ior OH—. 1# l#
Egbert.—s 4 3k
Eldorado.—*• 1&
FarrelOil.—**.. **• 334
Flask Bn Oil* -... .. 8
Great Western... •• §k;
Gej mania—. •••* *• 1
The following is the am<
the Lehigh YaUeyßailroad
11, 1865:
WEEK. "-PKBVIOTJSI.T TOT At,.
Where slipped from. Tone Uwi ToaeOwt lone Cwt
-Har.letoe .... fT., ....77.... 4,70} 08 46.450 16 61,270 01
East Sugar L0af........... 2,077 13 2J.7V. 66 24,T0J »
Mount Pieaeaat«»..».}« 676 M 6 ;»t 01 7,819 10.
3 edd0......... ............ 2,178 0B 7.:, 160 18 E 28,347 .0
Harlelgh. 1,266 U 12,876 09 14,133 0)
Eberyale-Goal C-e • ■ .... ' 7i112 64 ,7.H2 04
StoutCoalCo..., 3£f6 *.m«*
leblsW 816 08“~i 11,656 19 12.677 07
Honey Brook ■ 2,51815 ' 86,613 09 28,136 04^
Geririanfenn*. C0a1G.,.. 1.08114 11.161 06 ' 14.281 fflf
Erring Mountain -... 1»88S;17 18.0*6 18 1K474 II
Coleraine. 760 04 10.764 09 11,631 01
Bearer Meadow.. y, ,03 14 68 12 144 05
JOeMghZineCo 658 C 8 1,36810. Mgg
Mahanoy... 4,417 16 86,127 05 89,646 0 „
Baltimore C0a1..917 00 6.601 03 7.4-0 v
FrantHe 866 18 .6,87718 . 6,7® 11
GoseoilOated .1,26-11 G 10,987 14 13,1911
Ao.ienreld.—-•••. ®OIJ 4,465 14 6 056 04
Cghilh and StuKinehanna 267 03 6,260 12 6,607 1|
Mbitad; ~~ s *f | W
olhlf n:: :: • *BB ,^B.
Totri.. —.-31,307 CO 314,755 00 3M.053 09
os mm* mm «
licrease 53.537 16 33,744 00
The foUovlsg ia aetatemeiit of coal transiwrtad on the
Delaware, Lackawanna, aad Western Bailroad, for the
week ending Saturday, March 11,1835 ; _
TOTn*Cwt. Ton«. B Cwt
Total.-.—..... rf.'S&U
For correbondta* time last year:
Shipped 4,886 5 8
<" South 19,913 U 175743 6
Total—.*—l« 5».»23 14
Jtoere&M ****♦♦..—.
Since It Is practically demonstrated that the Severn
iocnt can, by taxation, take all that la necessary of
anybody’s propertj, money and income,to pay the
Government's debts, and even before a title can be
perfected on a fore closure of a first mortgage, the taxes
must be paid—thus proving that the tax la the prior
mortgage of all mortgages—we are quite sure that mo ■
InTSStmeot is so certain as a claim against the QoTerm-.
memt. We, therefore, give a list of such claims s 4
One-year certificates, having .four to eight years to
run.
7 g 10 notes, having two and a half years to run-
S-SO bonds, having five years to run, and may ran
longer.
10-40 bonds, having ten years to ran, and may ran
longer,-
United Statea sixes of 1881, having seventeen years to
ran. v - *
’ The?S ltfnotee have two and a half years to ran,
which is about the time probably that it will be wise to
have money fall due; at any rate. If there is hot a re
vulsion about those days, long Government stocks' will'
then be 1 at a premium, and the holders of ' each notes
osn convert them or sell them at thepremium for con-
Torsion. . -V :
is ft general activity in Oil City at the present
time In the erection of new houses nearly every
avallahlo epece within the haelhees part of the town
hae been boaght or'leased, workmen are buetty en
gaged, §nd, when spring opens, a vast number of
honees will dot apots that have hitherto been nnoecn
pied Many of those will be erected for business par
•POßes, while not a few 4 will be fitted up for families who
intend making this place their fntnr e home.
Of .the many institutions intended to mitigate the
soils of indigence, there are probably few that are more
commendable than the system ojf life insurance, from
the early part of 1843, the date when She practice of life
Insurance maybe said to have commenced rathe United
States,Mo the end of the year ISB3, a poilod of about
twenty years, there were leaned by American life com
panies mote than 500.000 ybUclei, covering Insurance for
about *550,00),€00, Daring, the year IBM alone there
were l.rued about 35,0(0 policies, insuring gtoi.ooo.ooo,
while In the year 1561 there were probably'inned 50.000
policies for *150.000,000., The total number Issued to
December, 1864, was therefore not lees then 250,m0,[m-
the inauredg ia ease of death, the enoriaoa*
sum of seven hundred millions of dollars. If there he
one cl ess of the community more than any other who
shonid most readily perceive and acknowledge the be
nefit of life insurance, and who stand in moat naed of
them, it is -certainly composed of those persons whose.
Impaired health admonishes them of the preesiag ns-.
ceißity of making that prevision for their Children or
dependents which most ever be a consummation to be
desired.. It Is much cheaper and better to effect insu
rance while in health than to delay it until the rates are
advanced.
The Comptroller of the Currency has issued a circular,
calling public attention'to a recent most Important
amendment of the national banking law. This amend
ment piovldes that the three hundred millions con
templated by the bank act be apportioned to the dif
ferent States and Territories In view of this enact
meat, no new-national banks can be organized until an
examination of the data oa which the apportionment is
io be based shall prove that tbs State or Territory asking
for them is x entitled to more Institutions of this cha
racter. The'apportionment will probably be grounded
upon the Congressional representation. The banking
bnr.au will aoon publish the bank ‘’Quotas." and
“credit*” of the different Statea, . .
The .mall notes (ones and twos) for the national
banks are now In the hands of the engravers. Some
time must elapse before they are issued to the banks;
and at the notes Will probably be furnished to tbs banks
in'the order of their oiganlzatlon. recently formed In
stitutions will not be provided with them for many
months yet. ,
The lowaStateßank has deolded.to retire as fast aa
possible the circulation of Its branches, and *380,000 of
thelr issnee have already been committed to the flames
Tbs receipts of Gold from California this year compare
with the amount arrived dozing the same timainlSdlas
follows: .
1855. -
Jan. s~*. .....$241,728 Jan. 4-** *1,143,850
Jan. 1!..-• MB, 603 Jan 11,*.. 383,519
Jan 524;853 .Tan.27 l ' 511,188
Feb SB5 J3B Fab. 6 SS'fl?
Feb.ls..- 452 975 Feb 2g,88
Feb.2B*March. 5. . 919.415 March 7 1.237.8 U
$2,770,327 Total* •« ♦•♦•*** *54, 196.002
ThetbipmenUofqoldfrom SamßwacUco compare »
follows:
Exported! o February XI, I«SJ
Exported to same data la 1664m—*—
Decrease this HHh*» „ .~~.,5,0M.06l
The total valae of export i from Boston forth*weak
ending March S, Including upecle. was mi.lB}. agatnrt
E3Bl.tSarorthe corresponding we*k in 1861.
The foreign export* from the port of Baltimore I net
we«k amounted to *».9SB.
Prezel & Co. auote:
H«wo,B. ,^^:oKirf'«witee‘ei:U; 1 Wi 1 89 S
Quartermasters* 1.7." 7.7.r.a79§ IBt
&tarUn* 8x’0bang0~............. • * ” ~M l>f <§ JMK
•? K 2SKunrnr;;"“.:“
- Bid. JJJc.
OlotoOll,M X
Howe’s BddyO. 1% ..
Hibberd 0i1.....* .. IK
Hate Island. • 2%- 2%
Hide Farm..—— 4
IrwloOilB . 10K
Keystone Oil.**.. 2K 2W
Kr0tzer.......... IX? \%
Staple Shade Oil* 25>& 27
autiiintoek Oil.. e% &X
McfiSheuy 6H.... fi%
80bl8&DBl>*«m •• 7
Oil Creek—™ 7X 7X
Organic .... ~ %
Petty Oil 8# m.
Pope Farm Oil*.* % X ■
Pet Centre-*...*. S 8%
PklU& OUGk... . IX
Rock Oil. 3 8&
IX
Seneca OU . 4X
StoryParmOil.. 2.31 2%
ScbliOCk....- 134 2
Stßldibifts ..m« 4X 4%
Story Cant»e~~. .. - 7X
Banbury'...... %
Tprr Farm....*... 2X %JA
TarrHomestead. 4% BX
natou Petr 01..... IX IX
:: L
Watson 2% 3
>imt of coal transported over
for die week ending M-reh
137,984 1
..93.444 13
THE WAR FXUBSS*
GPOBLISHXD WftBKM.)
*» Wab Fbbsb will be wnttoeabeorlbeM br
BtUlmtmuihi» tdruice) »t W
~~10»
TeneDßiee™,
f tr S r ® ah ‘ th * n T «‘ l win »* thwart at tht mmt
r»te, ta.oe p«r COPT.
ThemonevmHHalvaytaeamvantffutordar.mM
<ii no inttanot «**» these terms be ifuufqfwf jTtrwi, -«f
(telfjtfbnt «rv UUt, mart Hum ihe cost o/patror.
rMtiiiMtMi kit MksMM to i«t u wartt flat
imiruruu. ” •
JW* To the letter-os of the Olob ot u» or tweabr. «a
trtrotowofthopapor wfllbeiiTea.
Utlw orttoeht*
THEOKSI
ioco —in
IHSSESi
100 dOMttttlHtrttt 6»
'ICO dO»»M>» iimiii
i P
«0 do™ 6
3S i£~z"::+* fg
100 m
100 UI.M> C? 4
300 Com Cr«ek~~«**~» 1%
600 Crescent |
100 S
$ fc~:=n:lS
100 EcrekA***« 86 1&
B®&eUD
100 AtT«u~. MQ ljfc
ICO Petroleum Cast, bft 6J£
300 Bnynlug Spriiigs.. A
6*OD 86?55te.~.;3~.1103f
2DC Biff iK
400 d 0.......... .... 4&
300 4kr
£O3 d0~~~..~~t>6 4k
200 Surefeff. 169
2UO tf&rion 0U........ 1 44
ITO l£ftGliatock*OTo~.. 6k
ICCO BiffTaok..... lot* 4£
BALES AT TBS B&GULAj
Reported by Hew*. 8, Miller,
BEE OKS
10D HibberdOil~*.hSO SX
HOHorseiteek&Bg.. *»
-400'; ;do.■•*•««• ••*••*> 8#
fiOO-Logau***. •ss.sw. . k
100 Great Eastern-*** 2k
100 Petro Centro-*****
10D ; dOs»v**4.m,Ss ft
100 do.**..*** ****** 4ff
100 'do'i*** ***'•***♦•*
103 . do****.*••*•*••«* $
1(A) Bathbone &Cam. IX
2WT Rock 0i1,... Sfi
m I Jw
JM BUrein-'Kiwlt".-"
280 do-** ■«•*.•**•* fi
mo St BTicholaa-....-- 4^
TO wijhnt'rsidV.'bW
lOff Big That 4JT
SOD JBoyai****. —** •***
100 do..**** **•***•» is
fico do-T.V.V.V.™ Is%
HO St Nicholas 0.. blo 4N
200 Big Tank.*•«•*.««• 4m
VO Walnut M*td. *BO mg
ICO Winfield 0U...b13 ISL
miss s goes -•****.*..iio)i
100 Bull Creek.....v.. SJ£
B BOARD OF BftOKW
, A Co., ifo. Hr*. Third,tt.
I BOAED. '
COO Corn Planter..**** 0
2Cti Hibbard **..*••«** IX
ISO Big lank. *•*.cash 6k
(SCO
200IncHaaSpring..... tk
2CooCity9s-new MX
2CO Eldorado— m
100 Jeirey Well 4K
SCO Caldwell lolSe-bS 6%
4CO do «—.lots 6f£
70U do.—lots..b9o t£
SCO d 0...- B 6 eg,
4SQ Fetroleom Centre. 3 j
FIRST 1
2CCO ÜB6b 18». ..oonp-liO^
220G5'&is.B6W.lots cp.UO
160 do n* w -lot*.ep. 10fi&
2oorrB io4oslot*.cp. s»*
soo cures ie?o... lots 92
100 do-*- -®%w9l£
2rooPennaß3d mort-.100
ICOQ Lehigh Yel bonds. 98
J O Beading •.c&sh.loTs 64
ICO d0..M.....«..bS 64
1(0 Arch-st £>*+—- hfi 11 ,
SOO do m«* **« 1. lots Kyi
HO b 5 Kg!
2(0 do.— 10t5..15 li^ :
COO v d0....10ts cash 11^'
20 Gam & Am. K.. lots 13 I Ji
600 Cata proflots
Pch BaT.prf.lts.b6 38
, 26 Wyoming Valley. 60
7(0 BigT&nk.lcts* s 90 r ts£
360 do.. *...* bSO m
BO do~*-£fiwn&fni
lfiOf d 0... . 69i
200T6troUnm Centre. BH
lLfOt d0*—.....10tS 4
SCO do^—... lots 4&
BBTWEE2T BOARDS,
I®o Starr 0i1....‘.10t5. 3# 300 Pet Centre——. 4 K
i£oo do. .-lots bSO- 1 31 WO State War Loan 6a 98
ltOWinso cash. 43 *6 7COCiU6» new.— 9S
40t Bis Tank..... sSO. f>K 20n do 94*
608 df .... ~. 2dye. 6}*i 2 Q Jaissy Well-W). ft
1600 do— lots. 6 5000 US 6i lB3t ~.re*llo?f
..b3e. 1M *K) Story Parto—— M
9;oPt=t Centre Its bSQ. 4% KHReadirg R...casb. 64
ftO do— .lot* 1)30. 4M HO Packard *v—>... U£
3710 do lots b 5. 4j£ 100 Sob Nay prsfSiys. IS
10U) d 0........ lots. 4* IfOStsCUatick..cash. «
700 do—fclyslots. 4* lOOG CaidwelHois b 39. 6 K
SECOKD BOARD.
ICOO U Sf- 20s.new coop DO i fOJ Fetro Cenire.Rs bfi 4K
ICO Beading B— W 6*H 1030 do*.— —lots 4ffc
JOO do.*— bft6S£ 1600 do.—lots 4 8
3(0 d0.~..-.lotebs 6H* 500 do,*....—bJG 4J£
6ft Lit Schoy B—bs 2*s 600 d<T——..bfi .12
ao US 10 408 ....coop 86>4 lUJPeaiLOCreek 7m
SiOSiory Farm.-.—bfi 2J£ 600 How-s’s Eddy..bSo f
1(0 d 0..-.. Ig 100Da*elIQil....2dys BK
6«i Royal P*tro...b3Q 2K .200 dLo —lotsb3o 8X
oOOAUi«&Tideoate..lg
AFTER 1
«oFeti6 Centra...MO 4 81,
SOBlmirlTß-.-. praf 47 %\
: 200 n.i«w»« bit -mo ss I
. 2roOil'Cr«k..lot«bs> 75 1
100 do bS IK
r 2COJnnctlon loti tx
7CO Corn Hits ter. lota 0
BALES AT THB CLOSB.
1008ea4tnr8~.,...S S 3 ICO 801 l Creek—bill I
ICO Sugar Creek.... »6 W I 210 Mingo 0i1....—. 4
600 Retro Centre~..bs 3% 100 do———* .*** 4
. 200 do—-...lts.hft ah 100 0UCreek.......... STJ£
ICO do.*a*—*s Sg 100 do-- Bfc
ICO Big Tank. 4% 1C0 bSO 7*
100 do b’o 6 390 Sugar Kale....b*o fig
500 Pefcro Centre....bft 396 200 _do —*b3o at
ICO do. 3%' 460 Ball Creek.—, til
SCO do.....'*.**— <> Bht' 300 do—.»*•—— g|
ICO Cow Creek....™ iX 500 d 0..........™ SS<
H 0 Dalzell Oil.. sx 100 Cow Creek.. I*
100 Cherry Hon 87l< SOO Sherman Oil;1J6
4>£ 400 do ~..1ta 1M
600 d0...150 45i 200 Btory Firm—.bao 2 «
4CO; do. 441 2CO St HiclioLaa....... 4 Sf
100 Bi«Tanki~—.M 454 100 Indian Bgrin(.<~. IX
SCO ' do.. •........VO 4341 200 Btarr Oil-*r***.... Ik
I MO IxceUiorOU. t>i» lS MO „do 15?
1(0 Bn>lCreek......W 3 400 Ma*alraOtt....«. IX
100 do-~.-...-b6 8 I
100 Petr oleum Centre . , &£
m dO-.*.-*....*.bS 4%
BCO do.*. -lots 4X
4CO db......*.**10ts 0h
1500 Caldwell loJb
?00 .do .bff.-lote 1%
800 do -..cash.-lots $k
100Dunaard..***.cash TJtf
350 ' do ~..•****-Jets Ik
503 Egbert (HI lots 8&
100 People's Equitable jf
303 Phils & Pittsburg,
ICO Maple Shade...-bS 2T
i 100 do ™bK W
•1600 Starr Oil. .*... .lots »M
200 Mc'iJintocfe Oil •** 6X
2X Slippery Bock.lots 4
EX) Orescent City • ***** XX
V 0 Com Planter,*.... $
430RojsiPeito-..10ts VX
100 d j ..b m *K
300 Sugar Creek,.;lot« 10
2» QmhhtaahUlu.. 3X
Seml-Weetel# Review of tlte Philadel
phis markets.
The Produce inert eta contlnne very dnlland drooping,
owing to the rapid decline in gold, and the transaction,
are in a Email war only. Bark has declined.: Cotton
certiimts. very quiet. The Flour market ia doll and
lover. Wheat, Com, and Oats are also lover. Petro
leum hae declined. Seeds are lower. Provisions con
tinue very dull, at about former rates. Whlakr haa
fallen off- Wool continue* very qniet, and prices ai*
drooping.
Ti ers is very little demand for Flonr and prices are
rather lover; antes comprise about 900 ob:>s at gligg
11. ft' for fair to choice extra family, and fancy braaall
at ftom *ll 7£®l2 k IbL The rSfeaera and bakers at,
buying in a email way at from *9@B SO tor anperdaef
*tC@K>.so for entra;,/*ll<ail.6o for extra fami.yf and
ats7.76lM>tol . ' /
GRAIN. —There is very little demand for Wheat, and
pricM are rather lower: about 4»<*o bushelsrod sold at
from ? bushel for fair to prim*. White Is
held ats2 5G@3; 70 buehel.&s to qutiltj, Bye is sett
ing in a smaLi. wat $1 7t®i 75 w bu*i.el. Cura has
declined vT.'tlOO bushels yellow sold at SLS3®LSO sfc‘
bushel, closing the latter rate. Oats are very dull,
aid offered dTfc£®96o bushel. 1,000 bndieln prime
‘ Barney sold at bushel. .
PROVI BIOS 8 —The- m arket continues very dull*
and prices are dreopiu*. Small sales of mes* park are
mahircat *37@3S Beef hams are seUlrg
at $26&28.60 $ bbl. Hess Betf ranges at SK@2S I
bbJ." lor country and city packed. Bacon, is with'
out change. Small sales of Hams • are. making at
2: ©2sc $ fb. for plain and fancy canvassed, wies
at &©25Hc., and Shoulders at 21c. $ ffMi Green
m#ats are in fair demand, with Mies of Hams jtt
2t@2lc.« and Shoulders in salt at IftJtfc. & • fi>.
i ard is scarce; sties of bbl* and tea are making at 33&
@24c, an& kegsat 20@27e FHb. Batter continues dolls
e*les of eolidrpacked are making at 20®25c, and roll at
2£®42c¥ib. as to qu titty.-New York Cheese i* firm.
With sales dt 24@2Sc 3* lb, Eggs are stilih* akae®tr«st
dozen.
METALS.—Manufactured Iron continues quiet
Met&l ip.duU; small a&lesof 5T0.,1 Anthracite are making
at $ C@6l $ ton. ' Scotch Fig is quoted atss3@3o 9 ion.
BaßK.—Gnercitron is scarce, and lower; Zdhhdi Ist
No. Isold avs3n&ton. , _ “
CANDLES.—SmaII sales of Adamantine are making
st3l@33c Sperm Candles are steady at 4£@4sc W
COAL,—There is a feir demand from the'Esst, hut fit*
shipments axe rather light, owing to the scarcity of ves-
COFFER—The market is quiet, and there is very lit
tle doing In the way of sties. Small sales of-Bio ax*
making at lSM@3leim gold; 3.000 bags sold on private
terms
• COTTON:—There ia very little demand, and the mar
ietta very dhHandlower. About 100 bales of middlings
fco)dut72®74csfl>,cash. . - ’•
FlSH.—Mackerel are without change; small sale*
from store are making at s2o 60@2$ for shore Is; SIS@2B
for Bay do; $19@20 for Snore as; $l6 for Bay do sad
$l4 6f®i7sM>bl for small and large No B*. Pickled
Herring are selling at $& 11, and Codfish at 9^.
FRO IT. —Orange* and Lemons a-e sellinc at s7@t
10 50 per box. Green Apples are selling at sB@9 $1 tfi.
Drltd Apples range at if@2S&c, and Fared Feaenes at
coni inue quiet Botin sells in a small
way at #2&@Bojfc bbL Spirits of Turpentine is seUln*
at $2 05@ 210 gallon.
OiLS.—Lard Oil U scarce; small sties are making at
$2 20 ¥ gallon. FishOil* are in steady demand at for
mer rates. Linsted Oil is celling at $l6O gallon.
Petroleum continues veiy dull, and prices are unset
tled ;we quote cruda at 40c, refined, in bond, at6s©6Be*
and free at from Bt@B6c $ gallon, as to quality.
BICE' —Small talee am making at_l2>£@l3.&c?l B, Out
latter rste.for Charleston. • _
SEEDS.— is dull and lower; small tales
are making at *SF@I7 ® M Bie- _ Wmotto la rather doit;
tmall ni« are making at fi K@6 ¥ bn*. Flaxseed la.
eeD)nzat*S.3S@S4o*bns. , -
SPIRITS-There 1b very little doing In foreign, end
prices are without change Wilskj Is dull* and rather
lower; Bmall sales of Pennsylvania and Western bids
ftreroaking&t #2.27@2 2S?* gallon. _ *
SUGAR. —Prices ar» ra-Eer lower; small sales of
Cuba are making at BX@loc in gold.
TaLLOW continues anil, with. sales of country and
cSty-rendered atl4Ja@l6K,
WOOL —The market continues vert duU. and prieaw
are drooping; we quote fleece at 92@100c %lb as to
Quality.
The following axe the receipts of flour and grain at
this port to-day: ,’.****..
Flour>M<iitt*m«irtHooH»H«rtT««<i»*mttoM*ii2w< duzSb
*-»*—*—» *4,000 bush.
brush.
Oata..M..e*e**»*»«**«»»***« ——
EKTTER BAGS
AY ran UX2CBAHT3’ SXCHAXGE, PHttAUBLPHXA.
Ship Recovery. 5t0ddart............... .Liverpool, soom
Bark Roanoke, Cooksey .Lasu&yra, sook
BrlgS V Merrick. Borden .dh.Havmta, boo*
Brjgßobettlna. Mardenborongh Port Spain. «oo»
PaitABELPHIA BOABD OF TRADE.
Job. C. Gkbzb, ) .......
Eonczn A. Sotrnßß, > Cohhittee op the Mokth.
Gno. le Bpzbv, .) '
MARISE imTEI,r,IGEWCE.
POST OF PHILADWJ-HIA, HABCH H;
Era 81888...6 07 I Spar &STB..-5 S 3 j HIQH Watss. ..1 It
ARRIVED.
. steamship Norman, Baker. 48 hours from: Boßtox*
With mdse and paaiengers to H Winsor & 00. ■ .
Brig H C Kennedy, Clark. 10 days from
with molasses to Bams & Stotesbury—vassal to Bi
Bonder * Co.
Brig Hunt«r (Br), Faulkner. 14 days from Sombrero,
with guano to Moro Phillips—vessel to C 0 Yah Bom.
Brig* mian,.‘4 day* from Washington* in ballast to
United States quanermattsr.
SchrC n Grore.HcKce, 3days from Hew fork, with
mdse \oDS Stetson & Co-
Schr SaiUe B* Bateman, from‘Fort Boyal, in ballast
to Com H A Adams. .
fcehr Boston, Brower, 4days from Dennlarttle, El,
in ballast to Tyler d-Go' ~ „
Sebr Man Patterson, Godfrey, 1 day firom Cape Hay*
in ballast to Tyl* r & Os.
Sehr-Willow Harp, Davis, 8 days from Fort Jefferson*
in ballast to captain.
Sehr J Warden, Wills, 6 days from Fortress Monrose
in ballast to captain.
Bcbr Xxpresi, Elliot, 6 days from Fortress Monroe*
inballast to JS Bhzley dtCo.
Sehr HR Boynton, Herrick, 4 days from Washington*
DC. In ballw to captain * • ■ .
Scir J B Wilder, Darrel. 6 dut torn Fortress Moil
roe, IzJballMjtp Warrendt Sregg ,
Bchr Mary Augusta, Bolen, 2 days from Vienna, WiQt
lumber to Joseph T Justus _ . _ _
Sehr Lewi* Chester, Bartlett, % days from Great BBC
E arbor, in ballast to carta in. ~
SchrJ C Patternon, Whitaker. 6 any* from Fortrere
Monroe, in ballast to captain.
" Sc hr b Clark, Griffin, 3 dare from Few York, in bal
!a gchr ffVßenedict, Case, 8 days from Gresnport, la
: b \nhr t C?a* B t™*towl>er. Jicksom IdayafromSmyrna,
,n slh?B«*blSSbitb. KeUy.Sdara.ftom S«M
-1 Wb7el“rS?Gl.nghllh. S day. fromKew
T lS'r i |H U H^°Uey! t Nt«korß«,n, 8 dky, from Bare
,tiSs*AD^iS’ t ”o§||U s agrt tram, Georgetotnu
in ballaat to Blaklaton. Grrf. S Co
' , ! OLBIBBD.
ateamrilpßC ITnlght, Gallagher, Hew York.
siSkß«S&e (Br). Cookear, Lagnayra.
Silrk Palo Alto. Wiley, Boston.
Bile Gold Bunter (Br). Da Wotf, Cinfaegoe.
BrlJ itJanta, Low. Bew Orleana. j ■
Brt* Urana. Coomb* TSntfoii . _
t clir Mary Kelly (Br). B*ed. Bagna la Grande.
Ectir JHennUUt avenue, Bogere. Boston,
tebr Jnlia Bewell, John non. Breton
Sebr OKJBawley. Clark, flew Haven.
Sehr J WWall, Cain, Salem.
Sebr Fidelia. Haley, Few Haven
Bcbr Cl, Barlea.Troman. Providence.
Bckr Brandy wins, Ooreon. Proridense.
Sehr Gilbert Green. Weaver. Proridenoe.
EobrEarek Caark, Grtan. Breton. ' _
Srbr Bailie BT Bateman. Fortraac Monroe.
*Sr idd'L* e*Taylor- Hampton Bond.?
Sehr Kate,Kalahari, Hegcr, BamPKia««f.
gchr T. ariderrtic. Campwn. Boads.
Bchr pangairett, Wap:es.^Hanrtonßt>*ia.
Bhlp PiredetphltJ 1 aallai ftom KverpooUWt
fßr l.'CnrG*. aaited from Sl*iH'
•Harehlt, isn.
BOAKD.
lOIHDS. .
200 USIO-40s 9t
700 City da, W
200 Walnut 1
100 do—V—*~* *
20 KoyjU OU. 25-W
200 do -. 030 SC
KdxorU—Xvnlag.