C Jjrf) ms. WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1865. Air- We can take no notice of anonymous commu nications. We do not retnm rejected manusorlpts. AW- Voluntary correspondence is solicited from all puts of the world, and especially from our different military and naval departments. When used, it will he paid for. ' Does Ideality Mate tlie Crime! Tbe normal condition of New Zealand, a British colony in the South Pacific Ocean, is Rebellion. The rule is revolt, with peace as the exception. The island group re ceived its title, over two hundred years ago, from Tasman, its Dutch discoverer. Nearly a century ago Captain Cook, the circum-navigator, took possession of the country for the Crown of England. There* was no treaty, no purchase, no submission of rights by the natives, but simply the British flag hoisted in the -name of King George, and at once the country, most productive and salubrious, was supposed to have passed into possession of England. About thirty years ago, what is called a President was sent out by England to go vern in the name of King William, and one of the first acts of Queen Victobia’s government was to- commission a naval officer .as Lieutenant Governor. Aboutthe same time, a-commercial organization, called the New Zealand Company, was established in England to'colonize the islands, and a few towns were erected. A Protestant Bishop was sent out, and the see richly endowed—out of the natives’ property. It has happened that, with brief intervals Of peace, the relations of the Bri tish and the Maori (the aboriginal race, extremely warlike) have usually been.hos tile. The New Zealanders, strange to say, do not appreciate the a and-honor of having their country governed by red tapists residing 15,000 miles distant,, and seem determined to drive the invaders away. A new war, on the old question of disputed land claims, has lately sprung up, and, as yet, the British have come off se cond best. It will he necessary, if New Zealand is to continue under British rule, that large military reinforcements shall immediately he sent out. Every soldier who could be spared from Australia and Tasmania has been despatched to New Zealand, hut the natives, determined and disciplined, feeling that they are fighting for their own soil, against usurpers and; strangers, appear not'likely to surrender the vantage they have gained. Already,, the annual cost of holding New Zealand by force of arms is about ten times more than the whole value of her exports and im ports- Sensible legislators, among whom Mr, Bright takes the lead, have expressed a doubt whether it would not be as well for England to abandon a colony in which the natives seem resolved never to submit to British rule. The Morning Pont, said to be Lord Palmerston ’s property, and. also the exponent and champion of his policy, strongly demands that the British Government shall be not only justified, but authorized to maintain forcible posses sion of New Zealand, contrary to the will of its true owners, the natives. It says, “ There is of'course no choice open tour but to crush the revolt. No Government can admit a justification for rebellion." Now, during the last four years, this identical Morning Post has been one of the warmest adherents of “the so-called South- Confederation, ’' and, in that capacity, has not only defended rebellion; but has bitterly complained of the obstinacy 1 of the North in not yielding, at once, to the treason and revolt. No doubt, in its edi torial mind, that, in the case of New Zealand, for example, where the British, mere squatters at first, have seized the whole -country,. or in that of Ireland, taken by fraud, and held by force for seven centuries, Great Britain caniot admit a justification for rebellion; but, whereas the admitted wrongs of New Zealand and Ireland are so great as really to justify revolt from usurped and harsh authority, our Southern States went out of the Union—committing per-j jury, robbery, and treason—without the slightest justification. The South had no grounds for complaint, yet Lord Palmer ston’s mouthpiece justifies their rebellion. New Zealand and Ireland have been greatly wronged by British miagovernment, but the same authority declares that there can be no justification for their rebelling against it. Thus a great inconsistency is evident, showing that what is worthy of praise and patronage in our Southern States becomes a dreadful offence if committed in New Zealand or Ireland or India. In short, that whether an action is to be exalted as virtue or punished as Crime entirely de pends on the latitude and longitude of the plaee where it is committed ! Mr. Cobden’s Successor. • The seat in the House of Commons, 'iccupied 1 |>y Richard Cobden from 1859 iitil his (death, -will be occupied during tie short'remainder of the present Par liament h? a man who inherits his politi cal opinions, if not his ability. Mr. Pot ter, whosi father and brother had suc cessively Then Mayors of Manchester— • sometimes tilled Cottonopolis—has been elected M. I. , for the borough of Roch dale. He wis opposed by Mr. Brett, a lawyer and t Tory. The population of Rochdale is 10,190, and the number of regi|J;ered voters is 1,840. At the elec tion, 1,148 Totes were recorded: 648 for Mr. Potteb, aid 496 for Mr. Brett, leav ing a clear majority of 150. What Mr. Potter’s political opinions are may be gathered from what he Baid, on the decla ration of the final state of the poll. It was as follows: 0-ekm.bmbh : I congratulate tlie men or Booh •dale, the people of England, and the Mends of human progress all over toe world, on Ike glorious news from the other side of the Atlantic. I congratu late the friends of popular government on the suc cess of the Federal cause. I congratulate the working men and working women of Koohdale and this great distriot on,tbe prospeot ere long or hav ing plenty of ootton, unstained by the blood of the slave. The proudeM aristocracy in the world have ■had ro bots down, before the offended majesty of a great people. Let this warning not be lost to the proudest aristocracy in Europe, and let them remember that "the maintenance of wrong to a great people is asj&k -stt/s es it ns vnjTtgi.' [one ore. i jjiun*br jtodkdale,! thank you for the honor you have done merin elect ing me your representative. But far more I thank yen that you hove set your seal on the opinions of that great man who was recently taken away from among ust Our English Cousins. An article appearing in the London Times, of Thursday, April 20th, which is just received, states that “judging from the loss of officers and the numbers of guns captured, the army of General Leb can no Idngerbe in a condition to carry on the -Campaign. ” It is gratifying to find that a journal which has so, long persistently undervalued our successes, and underrated our actual power, begins to see that the po sition of General Lee was hopeless. Never theless, it is sufficiently amusing to read the after-manner in whxh it endeavors to undervalue the positive success it so posi tively admits. While acknowledging that Lee’s army must he nearly totally disabled and incom petent for further resistance, it heroically —-for we admit its moral resistance to the logic of fact to be stubbornly iheroical— persists in believing that “ thei of purpose of Mr." Jefferson Davis and the majority of the men whom jt he South chose as its representatives,” will he still “ willing to persevere.” Forgetful of their own,, expression of opinion with regard to their own past troubles; it says that “even now the South has the means of inflicting such losses on the; North by maintaining its resistance, that the Wash-. ington Government may-'not he unwitting to grant an honorable peace to. those who hare fought and failed with honor." We can* scarcely help smiling as we ’Tead this semi-appeal in behalf of the South from’ the leading organ of a nation which trampled out a pleasantly mild rebellion in Ireland by deporting the principal leaders to its penal colonies; while it crushed out the atrocities of the Indian re volt by as atrocious and vindictive a suppression. And we can scarcely help wondering h6w great or how little will be their gradual change of feeling as they read of that startling succession of suc cess and horror—the surrender of Lee, the murder of our mlFtyred President, the flight of Davis, the rapid end of the assassin of Mr. Lincoln, and the surrender of Johnston, crowded to gether in some twenty days, which, with the previous fall of Petersburg apd Rich mond, have epitomized in the last month more of the passion, the suffering, and the glory of history than nations generallylive through in long years of terrible trial and stubborn carnage. LETTER FROM “OCCASIONAL.” Washington, May 2, 1865, The last foreign news is rare reading for an American. The interest to him is, how ever, not more than it must have been to the Europeans themselves. They had tried to treat the United States and their troubles with the indifference resulting a complacent sense of superiority, or with the hatred natural wherever the ri valry is of a sort too serious and costly to be despised. And now they must read what surprises and confounds as well as it dismays and disappoint® them. I speak of the leaders, only. There have been no" people in the Old World for many hundreds of. years. There haye been men and. women, but they had nb rights save to think without acting, to work, to eat, to obey, to fight, bleed, and die. ' When, however, the two antagonists 'Of Freedom and Slavery entered the arena ) with God as the Judge and Arbiter, a world for their spectators, and monarchs to be hold the swelling scene, the conflict was one in the issue of which all the tribes of' men -had a personal stake; and the victory being with Freedom, even to the death of Slavery, there is now a brotherhood of peo ple all over the earth who feel that our gam is their gain, and our destiny their; destiny. It is not as if our effort was that of au inconsiderable section, or a small; body of brave men;- like our fathers, who fought on -a-narrow field, though for the broadest truths, tind even then set fire to all the rot ten monarchies on the' stage of Europe.' Whether by the wand of commerce, or the community of misfortune, or the religion of a common sympathy for the same holy object, our struggle reached, and touched, and thrilled the most distant and different interests, f passions, and principles. And as it -progressed we had the unswerving de votion of those mighty elements. The ver dict of the Awful Judge has been pronoun ced. How it has been received by those it has helped, and by those it has hurt, let the cotemporary utterance of Europe de cide. In this utterance two things are made sure—that tyrants are no longer even necessary evils, and' that the best known Government is that of a people trained to the education of the mind and the body—or, briefly, taught to think and to fight, not for others, but for themselves. The most-successful conservatism is at last discovered. Our vindication opens before mankind a volume in Which can be read, that an intelligent' Republic cannot die—that its Government iB like the planetary .system, simple in its me ; chahism, and impossible to disturb, be cause (tod is architect and the guardian, that property is as sacred as labor, order as lasting as the law is just, and no one man essential to the existence of a re public whose safety is in the equality and the nature of all. Europe is now reading thw volume, and was studying it before, she knew What she has lately learned. But if what we now see in her printed papers, what Bhe believed of the United States When the:Government captured Richmond and struck the last rebel capital, what will she say when in the midst of the rejoicings over Lee's surrender the chief of the nation falls, struck by the traitor-assassin, even in the midst of his usefulness, and while mil lions. praised his noble name ? There will be found a . yet stronger test of the system of Government purified and crystalized in the fire and blood of the rebellion. ■ A Democracy, denounced as an unlicensed mob, with an extended frontier, reaching to the shores of two oceans, conducted on the principle of frequent elections, com posed of millions of people of different nationalities, climes, and avocations, white, black, and Indians', is suddenly at tacked by a gang of traitors more for midable than the gladiators of. early Rome, because more numerous and equally blood-thirsty, and, after four years of battle, in the midst of the enemy’s de feat, finds itself deprived of itß chosen chief by amuglerer’s hand,andsumveshis sacri fice as it had already survived the rebellion, and the consequent expenditure of precious lives, treasure, and the piled up burdens of an almost .countless national debt! Such is the prospect#for European contempla tion. Such the triumphs wrought by a people diserted and despised by European monarchs. Such’the trophies of our ca pacity to govern ourselves, and* to mould, and wield the-mighty mass of material of war left in our hands at the close of the insurrection. The next thing for -Europe to study and to |dmit, will be the sub mission of the proud people of the South. Nothing Ifess than this will complete the conquest of the foreign observer. When he sees these millions coming under the’ laws of the United States, not only willing, but obedient, and not only obedient, bat grateful—subdued, it is true, but all the more ready to yield because they fought and are forgiven by their own household—when all this he sees, he will exclaim: “These bar barians have found the Philosopher’s Btone. They wage war like Titans—they govern like the inspired Statesmen under Christ— they have conquered' peace in more than half of their territory, and bloody rebellion in the remainder—they conquer by in ventions and modes that enlist all the genius of man—they survive everything, even to the sudden murder of their Chief— and as they mourn his/death, their machine of laws selects his successor without a murmur of dissent; and in the midst of their rage, grief, and hate of their enemies, they forgive like the gods themselves." The Death of Two Stthttvobs »no* the Waxs of'Napolsoh,—General Baron de Ohamoin, one of the few survivors of the grand army, has just died In the 88th year of his age.' He entered the army as a volunteer, marched from theeamp of Bou logne In 1804, and was present at the various battles in Germany, Russia, and France, from Austerlitz to the conclusion of the oampalgn In MU. The Courier du Hard announces the death of Joseph Dehay In his 87th year. He served In the armies of the Republic and the Empire, and was the oldest soldier wearing the medal of St. Helena- q.bhbbax. MoOx.bm.ah ih Romb,—The Roman correspondent of the Morning Post, writing on April Ist, says: “The dlnner glven by the Baron de Meyer dorf to General IVloOlellan was merely a nominal return for the civilities received by Rus* elan officers at New York, General de Montebello and the General Commandant de la Place were present, as well as three or fonr Russian generals, the United States Minister, General Rufus Ring, and the Secretary of negation, Mr. Hooker. The entertainment appeared to have no political mean ing, nor ware any after-dinner speeches mads. Fhohoqbaphbb’s Saeabibs.— These gentlemen receive In the New York oohrts a very fair compen sation for the exercise of their very nseful and mysterious science. We see that by special statute they now reoelve 82,600 a year. This salary may not appear very large, hat It mast be remembered that as the courts take a reoess of three months In the year, none of the phonographers are employed more than nine months. This makes their com pensation *277.77 per month. But Fare 11. or the supreme Court sits only four or five months; the phonographer In this court, therefore, Wots from *6BO to *626 per month, and In Part- 111. of the Superior Court, which never sits, and so also in one or two parts in other oonrts, he has nothing to do but to draw his salary. The number of trial days In a month Is nominally from fifteen to twenty, bat really averages less than fifteen, so that the most fhlly employed phonographer will receive not less than *lB a day (of five hours or lees) for taking notes j and in Fart 111. of the Supreme Court he will make not leas than *33 a day,. In the special Term of the Superior Court there Is so little done that he will get at least *B6 a day. -Add to-all this will he the fees for writing out, at ten cents per hundred words, and frequently tMee copies are ordered. Thus he really has a fine return for his peculiar talent. nothlng moro howew, than the difficulty of mastering the science and its grtat value deserve. j_ FKssnasT ti»bbi.»’'S Tomb Cohmbuoud.— The workof ereotlng.a tomb to receive theremalns of our late Prealdont, was commenced at spring field on Wean*sday».AprU 28th. T^ ground se lected to reoelve the honored bodyfgutyled the “ Mather lot.” A magnificent monument wlu be erected. i A MONUMENT TO PRESIDENT LINCOLN. An assoolatldtt has been formed here lor the par pose of erecting in tblß oltf a'suitable monument to. the memory or tie laita President Lincoln. The following are the officers: Riobabd- Wallace, Major of Washington, presldont; Skobbt S. Notes, secretary; Gao boh W. Btoos, treasurer. It Is proposed to raise tor the purpose the sum of at least #lOO,OOO by subscriptions, to be limited In amount from one to ten per contributor. Sueh Is the general soUcltude to oontrlbuto for suoh a purpose that It Is not doubted that the amount requisite can be promptly raised and the monument erected immediately. Persons throughout the coun try desiring to contribute are Invited to send their contributions to the treasurer of the association. HAT ALLOWED TO BE EXPORTED—CIRCU- BAR TO COLLECTORS OF CUSTOMS. WAB Depabtmbnt, Washington, April 29,1885. The executive order of January 20th, 1565, pro hibiting the exportation of hay, Is reselnded from and after the Ist day of May, 1865. By order of the President. E. M. Stanton, Secretary of War. Tbbasitbv Dbpabtmbnt, May 1,1865.—1 n pur suance of the terms of the above order, all restric tions heretofore placed by this Department on the exportation of hay, are hereby removed. The court marital of witloh Major General Fos ter Is president, now In session here for the trial of B. G. Hakkis, member of Congress from South ern Maryland, oharged with persuading paroled rebel soldiers not to tabe the oath, and urging them to return South and fight again as soon as ex changed, will not, it la understood, be dissolved upon the conclusion of this oase, but wIU. be con tinued for the trial of Booth’s accomplices) The eight-inch breech-loading rifle gun of H. W. Mann was tested at Fortress Monroe, on the 28th .and 28th ult., by dlreotlon of the Ordnance Depart ment, resulting In its perfect snooess. With a shell weighing 118 &s, and It &9 of powder, an average velocity of 1,800 feet whs obtained, and a range of about three miles at fifteen degrees elevation. * THE BEWABDS. 'W'ab'hibgtoh, May 2—9 A. It Bon. E. M. Stanton, Secretary of War: Sib : I have the honor to report that the Sooro tary of State Is feeling Tory well this morning.. Mr. F. W. Sbwabo’s condition Is more enoouraglng. Very respeetfuUyi J. K. Babnbb, Surgeon CHneral. {BBCO3ID DESPATCH.] Washihotok, May 2—9 P. M. Hon E M. Stanton, Secretary of War; Sib : X have the honor to report that the Secre tary of State has had an apparatus applied to the lower jaw to-day, which promises to answer the re (lotted purpose. Mr. F, W. Sbwabd Is qalto as wo a as at the last report. - Very respeotfallyi The Postmaster General baa ordered the follow ing appointments: At Kent, Indiana oounty, Miss Mary A. Hsnder son Is appointed postmaster vloe William Bruoa, deceased. ' 7 At Inrks, Columbia county, Pa„ Daniel Fealer Is appointed postmaster In place of Emanders Unanqst, dialled. * At Hunter’s Cave, Greene county, Pa., Isaac Johnson Is appointed postmaster vice Morgan Hedge, moved airay. At Winfield, Union oounty, Samuel A. Waite'3 Ip appointed postmaster, vloe Levi Rook, de lla 9 1 At Annin Creek, McKean oounty, Pa., liv/la Jackson Is appointed postmaster, vise NJttr'gin ney, declined. . . At Eulalle,. Potter oounty. Pa., Hall If, Kelson Is appointed postmaster, yicb Austin White, re* signed. At Germany,JVarren county, Goo. W. Roper Is , appointed - postmaster, vice William J. Reeves, re signed. At Greble, Lebanon oounty, Pa,, vice Jeremiah W. White, resigned. At Waytoalt, Wayne countyi Penna., MUo O Stanton appointed postmaster, vloe Francis V. Carr, resigned. At Lazaretto Station, Delaware county, Howls Kugler is appointed postmaster, in plaoc or Marga ret B. Wright, resigned. At North Washington, Westmoreland oonnty, James M. Rafferty Is appointed postmaster, vice William H. Guthrie, resigned. At Suteisvllle, Westmoreland oonnty, Adam M. Garllne la appointed postmaster, *los J. E. Hay don, resigned. THE ACCESSORIES TO THE MURDER, A C 1.053 BBAKCB 808 TUB fit IN TES LOWTiIJ OOUfit- TIISS or MABYBASTD—THB CHARAOTHB OW A.TZ,%- BOTH ASH THB PHOPLU OB THAT BBOTIOH. Since the capture of Booth in Virginia, and the acknowledgment of the faot that he found help and ln the lower oo&ntgps of Maryland,. . the Government has concluded to subject the In habitants to. some punißbmgpt for their oomplL city.' Military posts, -‘garrisoned by detachments of Infantry and cavalry, have been organised In Prince George’s, Charles, and StT'JSlary’S coun ties, for tie purpose of breaking up alleged treason able practices, and protecting such of the people as are loyal. In order to Inflict some retribution, the garrisons are lnstrueted to forage'on tho country. The Inhabitants seem to take this arrangement with a good deal of ill-grace, and have, suddenly discovered that It is 4belr duty to “ look the door alter the horse Is stolen,” la Frino’e George's county a reward of *2,000 has been offered for the arrest, If token in that connty, of any persons sus pected' to be concerned in the late-oonsptraoy to murder. In St. Mary’s, the local journals maintain that the people haveTiot yet beoome murderers and' assassins. It is probable, they say, that Booth passed through that section of our State, In seek ing to elude the vigilance of his pursuers. Ills possible, likewise, that he reoelved shelter aitd con cealment. But that the people of' the oounties named In Mr. Stanton's order concerted together for his safety and escape, no one will believe who has a propet knowledge of their oharacter. The Fort TObacco Times defends Charles connty also from any complicity, and endeavors to show that the mere act of Atzerotk, one of the arrested conspirators, being once a resident or Fort To baocp, should not militate against that town. Speaking of Atzeroth the Journal says: “We see it Btated In some of our exchanges that G. A. Atieroth, lately arrested as one of Booth’s accomplices In the mnrder of the late President, had resided In this village for twenty yeat;a. Such Is not the ease. He first came to this place In 1867, since which time he resldedhere until a fewmbnths back; about Christmas he left and went to Wash ington, where, It seems, he fell In with Booth and became an accomplice in Ms infamous sohemes: While here Atzeroth was looked upon as a harm less, Inoffensive fellow, and as especially wanting In that species of pluck and daring which we con ceive to be absolutely necessary to constitute the ooDsplrator and assassin.” The Assassination Oohbvibact.— The court martial which is to try those who have been arrested on sueplolon of being accomplices of Booth Is to meet 1% Washington next week. Ids said that a large amount of evidence has been accumulated, which will surprise the people when It Is laid before them-through the newspapers for perusal. In Washington much has been gathered. A journal of that city says:. These developments, resulting from a partial -search, only show what would be brought to light by uprooting and unearthing. If necessary, every house in the District of Columbia. Seek for double partitions, false walls, secret apartments, udder cellars, where the great State, prisoners were to be kept secreted in chains after being kidnapped. That it is In evidence that President Lincoln, Vloa Presi dent Hamlin, the members of the Cabinet, General Grant, Chief Justice Chase, and Speaker Colfax were marked as the victims of certain rebel conspirators and assassins there Is little doubt. That the plot originated with the ohlef politi cal rebels In Richmond, was planned In detail In Canada, and was to be executed In this olty, there Is also no doubt. That secret, meetings were held at the residences of Secessionists In this olty to further the execution of this fiendish plot Is well known. The arrests already made of persons ksdwn to beparties to the murder of President Lincoln, and the facts .thus far ascertained of the hellish purpose of the rebel assassins to strike from exist ence all the leading men of the National Govern ment, thus leaving it without £legal head, and the reins of Government to be seized by any erratic, ambitious general who might at the rime be In the field at. the hard of an army, will, when all is made one people and astound the world. Occasional. THB SCENE IN. DAHVIME WHEN JEFF DAVIS Alt- SIVBDTBEnB— THE SUSPENSE BEFORE THS ,SUB- KBEDBK—X-AWZ.BB BHBSS OF THE PBOPiB. Danville, on the Dan river, one hundred and forty miles from Richmond by rail, was, before the war, a flourishing little place of about three thousand in habitants, beautifully situated on a hill overlooking the river, wbloh rolled gracefully between the hills beyond until It was lost to the vision, turning abruptly from Its course, by a small valley of great loveliness. Its ohlef commercial feature consisted In the tobacco trade. The counties adjacent to Pittsylvania (tn which Danville Is situated) —Henry, Patrick, and Franklin—are all In the richest part of Virginia, and the yield of the soothing weed was enormous. Like all Southern towns, Danville has suffered greatly from the war by the utter stagna tion of business and the premature decay so common to the Southern climate. Danville, on the morning of April S, presented an unusually lively aspect. The news of the evacua tion of Richmond had reaohed the place. Crowds of men, women, and children, black and white, nattered around the depot at the telegraph ojlleß to hear the news. A thousand and one rumors were rife. Soon the overloaded trains began to arrive, and the confirmation of the sad news, with many additional particulars, was eagerly listened to by the Impatient crowd of bystanders. Soon the train containing Mr. Davis wasannonnoed. As the people crowded around: the car which contained him, not a demonstration, hot evena faint cheer was given, but a look of the blackest description settled upon the features of every one present. But, alas, for the blind devotees of the cause of the rebellion, the worst had not yet come, Mr. Davis wss Immediately invited to the palatial*residence of Major W, B, Sntherlin. Mr. Trenholm and several other'dignitaries accompanied him. Here he re mained until he was obliged to leave the .plane a lew days after. Mr. Benjamln- the fat little Score tary of State, with the air of a French dancing master, had-asmile—l should-have said a grin—for every one. -By the vast Inliuxof strangers Danville was thronged; every place was filled to Its utmost, and the departmental clerks who soaompanled the effects' of the. different) offices remained In the oars, converting . them Into offloes, ware houses,- kitchens, and bedchambers. The, Greens boro Extension Railroad was used to its utmost capacityiu transporting people who were ea route South—some to their homes, others to visit some friends, under whose roofs they might tarry -until they could shift elsewhere for themselves. The greatest state of uncertainty prevailed, and the Swere beginning to feel really alarmed at not g from Gen. Lee’s army. .Six days passed of this terrible suspense. Brig. Gen. Hi H. Walker, who commanded the line of defence on the Bieh mond and Danville Railroad, was in command of the place. He was in dally communication with Mr„Davl(yetm no.accurate Information could be heard from Gen. Lee. It was confidently expected that he would make his way to the Danville Rail road, and make the Staunton river the line or his THE —PHILAPELPHTA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1865. iVASHXNOTOM. WASantoToir, May 3. Hdoh MoOum.och, Secretary of the Treasury. HARRIS COURT MABTIAt, TRIAL OF A RIFLED CANNON. J. K. Babhbs, Surgeon General. PENNSYLVANIA POST OFFICES. THE FALL OF KICHJfOND. aSSSSaT' Sufficient time had elapse# for hi* pl»n« (If snot they were, and snch ™Mthegeneral Im preetioD) to be developed, »nd not on* word was heard from Win. . , General Walker sent oat sooats, to be oarrtod down the railroad fo Stannton river, then to »»*• the best way they oonld to General Loe sarmy. They went within sight of the armies, and returned with the Information of the surrender, which at first was generally disbelieved. ItmV but by the time General Walker bad ridden to Mr Davis’ house: the news began to spraad, and two hours afterwards every one knew it* eight was spent by many In the discussion ofthe situation* Morning davraed, wid, life® pie’s heart, was anil aid heavy-looklng. Thon began the exodus. Stoneman’s ralderswerero ported between Danville and .Greensboro, causing painful apprehension to those who contemplated flight, southward.' It was over one week from the evaeuatlon of Eiehmond before the news of the sur. render of Dee was known in Danville. By this time the wagon trains and, those who had left Rich mond on foot began to arrive, and theplaoo was more thronged than ever. As all,the oars were packed when they arrived an Danville, and the wagons also, many valuable stores of great variety were destroyed. l Mr. Davis and Cabinet left on a train, and were fired into by Stoneman’s men Just before they burned the trestle-work over Roedy Ford creek. evaeuatlon of DanvlUe began on Tussday morning, and by Wednesday morning every one who oonld get away had gone.,. Then began one of those scenes so 'common In the South In places evacuated. The poor of the plica began to plun der Indiscriminately commissary stores, quarter maator stores, medical stores—those that had aeou mulftted by the blockade—of such quality that the poor of Danville had not seen, save In their dreams, during the war and in ante bellum time. Not only did plunder fall exclusively lato the hands of the poor of the city, hut they Oame from the oouutry by droves. In the midst of the excitement a magazine exploded, and the explosion of tho shells added greatly to the excitement. j THE SOUTHWEST. ALL THE. REBEL POWER BREAKING OP i AND VANISHING. Dally Expectation of the Surrender of Kirby Smith’s Forces—Theiast Organized Bohetlrmy, AS ABMI STICK ALREADY DECLARED. By the Guiding Star, which arrived at New York last evening, have Important advloes from Lou isiana and Texas. .The New Orleans Times of the 26th reports that the steamer'Gah. Hodges oame out of Bed river on the 23d, under a flag of truce, fop the purpose of negotiating with Col- Spragaei ehtefof staff of Gen, Pope, for the surrender of Kirby Smith and hie force. Col. Sprague left Cairo on the gun boat Lexington, for the purpose of meeting the General on the Hodges, at the mouth of RedrMr, and there can be but little doubt that Kirby Smith' has surrendered bis entire force. The tonus 'of sur render are those proffered by General Grant to Lee. The steamers Lexington and Hodges are anchored at Hoff Point, a few miles below the month of Bed river. The same Journal confirms the nows of tho surrender of the rebel Secretary at Pensacola. Eight mllllons of greenbacks have arrived at New Orleans to pay our troops, and as mush 'more is on the way. Claiborne, Alabama, has been occupied by our cavalry, under General Lucas, after a victory over a. regiment of rebels ngrth of Mount Pleasant, the rebels IpsinglO killed, 15 wounded, and 22 prisoners. Qnr lobs was 3 killed and $ wounded. Fire hundnd bales of cotton were secured. - Captain Pickens, who has forsaken the rebel cause, has issued an addfcss to the people; of Louisiana. The rebel General Chalmers 1b reported surren dered In Texas. An Inundation ht San Antonio, Texas, has ~de> stroyed 26 buildings and 10 or 12 lives. -ADDITIONAIt DETAILS OX TUB DESTRUCTION. New Yobk, May 2.—The steamer Guiding Star haß arrived from New Orleans, with dates of the 26th, and from Havana on the 28th. Thodoetrao tlon of the rebel ram Webb Is confirmed, with ad ditional details. She pasted New Orleans undefa heavy fire from onr wal yesgels, the Lackawanna sending* 260-pound Bhot . through her bows. Only one vessel, the Hollyhock, Lieut. Commander Gherardi,was ready to .follow, and kept %lose on the track of the Webb nntll 28 miles bolowsthe olty, when the rebels saw tile United States’ Sloop-of war Richmond ready fori,action, and turnedfor.the shore. The Hollyhoek going straight at her, the Webb’s offieSts and erew fired her In several places, and fled up Into the swamps. The boats from the Hollyhoek boarded'her, and saved one man. aban doned, asleep.. They were unable to putout the flames, from the Inflammable nature of the cargo, and the fear of an exploslon-of the magazine. The W ebb was armed with three gone, one a 32 pounder. She was commanded by Lieut. O. W. Seed, former ly of the United States navy, and commander of the' pirate bark Taoony, .which' Inflicted much da mage on our opmmeipe a year-or two since. There were 217 balesof cotton on board the Webb, besides roßln and turpentine. The pilot of the Rtohmond knew the Webb. Two of tha orew gave them selves up. .. AN ASKKTtOB.ynTa'xATLOm Mnwrare, April SO, via CAiHO, KCay 2.—The But. lefin hasi; spectardespstoh.wliloh saysitls re ported" tkpt -Ah® rehel Generai iilpk TSj[ior sent Geheral Hodge to notify General Dana of, the sur render of Johnston to Sherman, and to Inform him of the terms of the Bnrrapder. General Dana Im mediately- gave fair qredence to - Blok Taylor’s statement, and arranged an-arm|Btloewithj[odge, the terms Of whionweresatd to be the' entire obssa tlon olhOßtfUtles, each side retainlng. the right to • punlsh gnerliias. This armistice contemplates arrangements on the same plan as that proposed by- Sherman, unless repudiated by General Daria’s superior officer. The armistice commenced on the 22th of Aprll, and it can only be terminated by a nottoe of ibrty-elght hours. :: THE BBBKI. WAVY. : .>, HBBTEDOTIOHOF AEEBEI, FtOATIKO BATTBBY. '*» Wabhisotok, May 2,— The Navy Department, has communication from Commander W- H. MeCoptb, tinder date of April 12th, at Plymouth, N. 0., in which, he aays 11 1 got news yesterday to tile effect that the rebels, had sent a floating battery down the Koanoke, and thatlt was then just above this plane. I Immediate ly started from. Winton. in the. Wilderness, and ar rived here last night. I then found that Commander - Feblger had sent a party np tinder dent. Franklin,> of the Isaoo,which party had fonnd the battery sank, near JameavDle by onecftfietr'own torpedoes. Cleat,, Franklin set fire to all of her that was above water, about two feet, and Jt.ls supposed that she Is pretty; thoroughly destroyed;” - *■ " :■>. PABTICULABB 0» THE DESTBUOTIOBOV THB BEBWr vavuniM. BAKWBBS. : s Nsw Obleahs,'April 21; via Caibo, May 1.-r Off the 20th; Mr. Mallory r Soetetary of the rebel Department, surrendered himself to, Captain Grti son, United States Navy, at Pensaoola. ' : The rebel ram Webb, commanded by ,Gaptaj|f, Seed, of the pirate Taeony notoriety; passed here this afternoon. When: midway she lowered the stars and stripes-and foisted the rebel flag.' Bpe was fired upon, and ;OHCi '125-poun4Jt>all j>aSjj«m through her bow. Onr gunboats started in and when twenty-four miles below the olty the ram. was fired by her' orewrand at 4.30 F. M. blew dpi Her crew, oonslstlng of sixty-four men,, Including eight offloeisi'took ; to the woods on the left sldp of the river, the greaterportion afterwards surrendor log. Her deok and boilers were protested by cotton bales, and 217 bales warn destroyed by the banting of the ram. Captain -keed, In coming Mississippi, had the telegraph attached to his ves sel, In this way tearing down many miles. - The steamship Western Metropolis arrived to day. Np sales of cotton to-day. Superfine flour sellsattB.7s. : MUroBSU AND ARIZONA. Sab Fbaboiboo, May I.—The Oregon papers mention Hie hanging of fifteen horse thieved and highwaymen In Walla-Walla and Brls oounU«s, by lynch law, within a short time. The Vigilance Committees had lists of 160 rogues, who wereto’b.e driven out of the country or punlßhed. Arizona April 12th mention another fight with the Apaohes, in which twelve Indians were killed, and one soldier killed and one wounded. The Indians fled. 'i ; W. Hopplns, a member of the Arizona Legislature, Carlos Smith, one of the offloersof that body, and several other whites, have lately been murdered.bythe Indians. ' Mining and business generally is prosperous; The crops of California ail Xook welL *osj" -f; - J The deposits in the mint daring the last montii amounted to *2,226,000. ' . , ; ~. ; , Arrived last evening, steamer Slen**-Nevada, from Portland and Victoria, wlth *ll4,Pooin golf. Major Frank Jj. Pope, of the Busalan ,0 refund Telegraph Company, arrived from New-Ym* on the 27th, and will start neat week for Fort Yedkron,' accompanied by Elnnloatt, the explorer.! :‘V. , MEXICO. W OOSTIHAB—BBCCBBSBS W toraoonw jm ttef; • FBKIAIdSTS, , 1 Advices fromßnaoa etatethat Cortlnas had&ijeln abandoned the Imperial oause and oooajiliid Sal tillo and Monteroy, and a party of bis mop are said to hays dashed Into Matamoras, and skens sent to Vera Orui for relnforoements. Bagdad lsaiso said to be occupied by 8,000 unarmed men under Oortl nas, and lt .was thought that Matamqjasrrotdd toon be taken by them. i •: } i Havana advices of the 25th, and Qnudates or the isth have been received. Heklokn. newt Is not lmportant. Thelmporlallsts are e«td to baye bloodily repotted an Hnaltlllo, and,to have again defeated the same foe,after,a pursuit of four leagues. Tba Bdtdlutlonttts bad defeated a squadron of Imperialists at Obiape, la tbe State of Morelia, and the town of Parbandlsb, In tbe State of Mlohoaoana, baa surrenderedto toe Juaieits. 1 . I I . Ihero Is no news from Cuba. ; W ’ j The Sultans liiaaster. ‘ ' . Sf. Louie, May l.—The Hon. Johi| povode,'oi the’ War Committee, furnishes the fpUowinginforj matton relative to the Sultana disaster : No troops belonging to the States «Bt of Ohio were lo«t,ell Eastern troops being sent to Annapolis. He says the, boat was overloaded, her registered eapa-j city being only 876 passengers. Other good boita were at VWtsbnrg at,the time, hat tne authoiiHesj would not por mltthem tobotakep. Tie prisoners, tblsk there is criminality k Of matter. fAhea‘j 2,000 paroledpiisoners were at Vlpkßbarg wßeaftfifr' Snltana leltyand 8,000 were sttll at AndersonviUe,' in consequence of the railroad being destroyed, be tween Andorßonvllle and J action. Ti“ Astern j troops go to-Annapolis bji way of the. sem The Sultana's agent writes that near 1,700 prttOhers were lost by^the disaster. :;$» »po:ri : Btatert*jIMS. to be leas than l,«o 0r1,500, Thomas Thor p, the gnerlUa, was hang to-day. IKntli of the Rebel General Ctmlnier* . St. 3-.guis, May 2. ; Cairo despatch says that OeneralChalmera hadhee’n murdered by personsunlrnown, bhi more reliable information tayß it waa done by tbe rebel soldiers. Belugees from TomltlnsvlUe' bring."reports that the rebel General Maury, who commandedat Mo bile, bid been superseded byGlbson, who earn ' mended a brigade at Spanish Fort. They also tay that ~tte demoralization among the rebels in that Ylolnltylf tery great. '! * Tie rebel gnnboata Morgan and kashvUle art theta almost desertedby offloeis and men, XiUBOFBi Burners or a Defensive and Offonsl-vo Al liance Between France ana England. THE CAUBX—FEAB FOB THB SAFBTY OF CASADA AND MEXICO. THX HEWS Of LIE’S SURRENDER NOT TIT RECEIVE 9, 111 At ETent Looked for, and the Confe deracy Considered Dead. Correct Statement of the Portuguese At- tack on the Niagara. The steamship Scoff a, from Liverpool, Apffl22d, via Queenstown, April 23d, arrived at New‘York at noon yesterday. The steamer Asia arrived out on tfce 22d, The Demoscm* reached Liverpool on the evening of the 20th, and tho Virginia and City of Manchester on the afternoon of the 21st April. BDHOBBD ANOtO-XBBNOII AhLIAWOB, Wp copy the full statement of the London Morn ing Advertiser, concerning the reported alliance be tween France and England for tho “ protection of Mexico”—already referred to. It appears in the Paris correspondenee: 11 On receipt of the newß of tho fall of Richmond Louis Napoleon proposed to Lord Cowley, that England and Franee should, by a treaty, offensive and defensive, make common oanse against the United States of America ; that ‘ln the event of OBnada being attacked by them, France should as sist England with all her land and sea forces ;> and that in the event of the United States ‘openly or eovertly attacking the Emperor Maximilian, or In any wise endangering his throne,’ 'England should, In conjunction with France, ‘defend aud support Maximilian In the same manner and on the same conditions as they sustained the Sultan of Turkey - against the aggression of Russia. I do not know .how'this very cool overture has been received by our Government, but we know what Us emphatle answer ought to be. On the reassembling of Parliament next week this Import ant eubjest is sure fo receive Immediate attention, and the idea will be denounced In the strongest language whloh ParUamentary notions of pro priety will allow. Still more deep will be the ta dlgnatlos of the country at the proposal; for the whole nation still smarts at the remembrance or the manner in which Louis Napoleon treated-us In xmr unfortunate alliance with him m the ease of the Crimean war. Were ministers to entertain the Idea of the proposed alllanoe even for a day, It would kindle a flame in the national bosom which Sonld be productive or more serious effects than te overthrow of a cabinet.” \- THB HIASAKA TBODBLB. The London papers of April 21st publish a letter frSin Mr. Harvey, United States minister to Lis bon, dated April 14th, correotlhg some false Impres sions as to the firing into the Niagara at that port. He' shows that the Federal commander was In no way to blame, and says: w “ While the firing was golngon, an officer of the guard-ship Sag res presented himself on board the Niagara to express regret for this violence, stating at the same time that it must have originated in some strange mistake, as his ship had received or ders to permit the Niagara and Saeramento to pro ceed to sea at 2 P. M. that day, an hour and a quar ter before they began to move at all, If such was the desire of the Commodore. By a providential lutor poelllon no life was lost, and no Injury was lu - lilcted. Commodore Uraven did not return the’ -. fire of the Castle, and to his discretion alone may be attributed the happy exemption' from causes or mourning, whloh every friend of humanity will ap preciate and rejoice at. He considered and treated these repeated acts of - hostility as proceeding Horn an excesaof zeal on the part of a command ant, who eltheT lgnored or misunderstood his duty, ana. ho testified his friendship for and hiscond dense In the justice of his Majesty’s Government by refusing to take the redreis in his own hands. « This is not the proper place to speak of the di plomatic action which folio wed, bat it may be said, as an answer to much-misstatement, that the repre sentation was confined ,to the -facts, and that ex planations and reparation have been accepted. The manner i f proceeding wlll'be left to tho judg ment of candid and enlightened men, when the ' correspondence should be. allowed to speak for Itself.’’ - 1 TBB BSBBL OATJBE HOBBLES 8. Up to the ttme'of the departure-of the Scotia no Information of the surrender of Lee had been re ceived in England, but It was evidently expected. The Times of April 20 says : '- “It is not matter for surmise that the surrender or General Lee and the total destruction of the ohlef Sotftbern army should be hourly-expected. It is, Indeed, quite possible that this may take place, for Northern armies, which probably outnumber his re maining forces ten to one, are pressing on him and Closing round him. It remains to be seen what course the chiefs of,the, Confederacy sued the Con gress will take In this extremity. The obstinacy of pnrpose of Mr. Jefferson Davlß, aud the majority of the men whom the South chose ai its representatives, - is well known, and doubtlese there are hot wanting many who even In this hear of desperate fortune are willing stiU to persevere. B,ut it may be that some of them, desirous to stop the shedding of blood and tbe miseries whloh a savage partisan warfare would bring on the Southern population, may prefer to give the power of negotiation to the General who, in a series of glgantle battles, has commanded the ad miration of the world,and whom even his adversaries regard with a feeling far removed from animosity. 5 “ The -Confederates certainly ban now expect to make but poor terms eompared with what they might have'exacted a year ago; bht, evon now - they havo tlio means oi lnfltoting saoli losseroo the Worth, by -maintaining' their resistance, that the Washlafeton Government may not-b'e unwilling to graptkhetibxablp peaoe to thpse who have fought and ■ failed lAth honor. Even a hopeless contest kept up by gnefllla'bands, without unity of purpose or any object but revenge, may force the North to maintain great armies -throughout the expanse of the Southern States for many years to some. Saph.a warfare mhst be deplored by every humane man, “ Everyone must hope that If the South shall be no longer able to contend with Its adversary .by, rnesnS el-regular armtoe In tho field, ltwlll accept the arbitrament of war, and return even to a hated political connection rather than shed blood to ho purpose. But it lsJmpoislole tosiy what desperate resolve maj. be taken by men under the lnflueUce of suehithreats ps the North has continually uttered, and of snob laws as Congress has enacted. For this reason wo hope that the leaders of the Confe derates may Consent to bring the struggle to a close if they really believe their military power at an end, and that the North may meet them as,conquerors should meet an honorable foe.” ; ‘ In another artiolb the Times expresses the opinion 'that a oordlal reunion Is possible: , ." It Appears as If the North, which, though &o < tuaHy victorious, has as mnoh to forget as. the South, lsnot unwilling to perform its own part In the. reconciliation. Its triumph has made it jubilant, and brought out the good nature or the "people.' They are proudevenof the achievements of.'their Southern brethren. They forget their mountain ofdebtand all the terrible suffering of ■ tie fpur ye&Ts ri yfat. _They are urging their Go .vernment tp offer! the most liberal terms to their r late enemies' on-.|he Blngleoonditlon of submission and agreement, and In. this they are guided proba - blymore byfeellhg thanby any deep political oal oulatlou, What the tJovernmect, however, may ultimately do, ormow the Sonth may accept- suoh overtures as are, made, remains to be be seen. - "Slavery need. no longer be considered a stumbling block In theway oh union. This .fdtnl institution Is alrSady.halfeitlaot, and is verging bn Its final doom,' But there are-the passions of desperate men, lnflamed’ by the recolleotlons of the war; , there Is the confllot of Interests out of which the war arose, snAthere’-are questions of the deepest significance winch the war has created. For the Issue we Can onlywqit,aswe waited for the'event of the struggle, wlth jho steady forbearance of neu trals, but with an earnest wish for speedy andlaßt lnxpefice. TheJfldcr (Confederate organ) still professes to letsk hopefully upon,(he second act of the war, when “the Confederates .for the first, time will have the full benefit sot their vast territory.!’ - It suggests that this second act should;have-been the first, and that President Davis and hle.Oablnet Should have had for their seat of government General Ism’s headquarters, As to operations in thefield the Indei remaffcs that “if Dee. can suc ceed In reaching Dynohburg he will not have much Ihrthnr difficult yin eluding, the tolls prepared for him, and It awaits without, despondency the South-, era account of Dee’S retreat.’.’ / ... The Morning Pott and the Homing Herald adopt a ■sOmewbatsimllar tone. , \The'Army and Navy Gazelle thinks It impossible that the. organized resistance, can be prolonged,' GBHBaAIiHKWS.'-' The marhets for Amorloan securities and even ■cotton, was very buoyant and active, In anticipation of an early, pease. , ■ - Tho extradltlon ease of .-Windsor, the defaulting cashier of the Mercantile Bank, of New York’, has been before the Court of Queen’r Bench, and post* posed for a week, - k . The Bank of Prance lost 1,T60,000 franca la specie • during the week.' : * i The Mexican loan is hlghly sncoessful, - Paris bourse was heavy atffirr. S7c. f Ctarowltoh continues daOgmrously 111 at Nice. The Czar passed through Paris on the way to -Nice, and had a conference with Napoleon. , The Spanish Senate' continued the debate on /the conduct of the Ministry, ldthelate disturbances ■' at Madrid*. • V . ■ , Oaboutta, April 15.—Imports quiet; market la regular, but without any panlor, Exchange 2s. Ojfd. Bombay, April is,—Cotton declining/ ShabghAn. Maioh 9.—Tea unchanged. Exchange BS.4«d. ' Cabtok, March IS.—Cotton, goods unchanged. Exchange 4s, 6)£d, 'jj# DrvzsFOOhj April 22—EvonUfgei-The Bales ©foot ton to-day were 26,000 bales, lnohnUhg 10,000 bales to exporters and speculators. The market is buoy. aut, wlth an advance of xd, and ln some cases for Ametioan.N Breadstuffs are quiet and steady. Pro visions also quiet and steady. Dobbok Mohby Mabret.— Consols on the 21st were rathe? less firm,’but Closed with a better tone af9oX@tiax.fof money, and Sf>X@tiOX for aeeount. There was a full average demand for discount at the;Bank at 4 per oent. The supply in the open market continued abundant. ; ; The weekly statement of the Bank of England shows an Increase in the bullion of £36,631 ster lln. ' i . A heavy failure had taken place at Glasgow: that of Messrs. Buchanan, Hamilton'ft c©., In the China trade, and one of the oldest firihs-ln the city. The liabilities are, estimated at fromMyso.ooo to £1,000,000 sterling. The sot pension is ‘cause by heavy losses on tea. rlee, &o. - Ambmcab SSdtTßiTine.—Messrs. PHing, Bro thers,'& Co’s olroular says: “Alarge business has been done this week In Butted States flyO-twentles, ‘ In Erie and In Illinois Ballroad shares, attadvaeoing prices. We quote 6-20 s at 60%@80ji, *»‘o.; Erie, ’ 46X@47; Illinois, 69 jf©7o)f. Virginia bondß are alßO'firm—6b, 44@35; (sterling 6s, 79@81. Trankfort 'aovices report great.nativity there In United States bondil, which had advanced to 60. ' (V Suioibe of ab Ambkioaw Dadt at Dab visa. —On the 17th of last month- a lady madether ap pearance at the York Hotel, Darvlsb, and re quested lodgings for the-might. She stated that she Was an American, from New York, . travel ling for -her health,- and that her objeocjnvistt- Ing Dervish was for the purpose of soa bathing. She professed to be mnoh fatigued, and retired early. Her baggage, she stated, had been left at the depot.’ The following morning the- in mates of the hotel became alarmed, at-'their repeated failures to receive any response to the Inquiries at her room. It was at ’last ‘ deter, mined to know theworat. A man entered the bed room window by a ladder, and discovered the lady dead on her bed. On a-table near the bed were fonnd some- empty paper packages, marked “ver min poison.’’ On examining the clothes or the ae. oeased the Only money that could be found was twb penoe halfpenny. She had also. lu her possession, two- watches, ABo,May2.—Until a late hour last night, and during to-day, an Increasing stream of persons passed through the court house, whloh was finally closed at 8 P. M., and the remains eßaorted to the depot, iwe cortege will arrive at Springfield to morrow morning, and the funeral will take place there ch Thursday afternoon. A despatch has been received from Hobart Lin coln stating that his mother’s request Is that Oak Ridge Cemetery, at Springfield, shall he the per manent burial place of her husband, and this re quest will be complied with., The Pirate Sbeuadoab. The Shenandoah was last seen off Oape Schanok, and. was believed to be waiting off theooastto Inter cept American ships, several of whloh, from Now York and Boston, were then dne. The following account of tbe captures irfade by the Shenandoah from the time of her departure from Madeira Is given in the English papers: . Her plan, was, when she crossed a vessel, to whow English or French colors and Brea gun,after which, If the other proved to be Yankee, ehe was taken and destroyed, and her oaptaln and crew made priso ners. The following Is the list of vessels destroyed by the Shenandoah: Alina, barque, Staples master, from Akyab to Buenos Ayres, eargo of railway iron. Scuttled. 29th October, lat.T6.4rN , lon. 16 43 W. Charter Oak, schooner, Gllluian master, from Bos ton for San Franeltoo, assorted cargo. Burnt 6th November, lat. 7,38 N., lon. 27.49,W. D.i Godfrey, barque, Hallet master, from Bos ton to Valparaiso, assorted cargo. Burnt 7th No vember, lat. 6 28 N., lon. 27.6 W. Susan, brig, Hansen, master, from New York to Elver Plate. Scuttled loth November, lat. 42» N., lOn. 26.39 W. Kate Prince, for Bahia, neutral cargo (coals). Ship bonded 12th November. Adelaide, bark, of Baltimore, to River Plate, neutral cargo. Ship bonded fur $23,000. Lizzie M. Stacey, schooner New York, to Sand wich Islands, assorted Oirgo. Burnt 13th Novem ber, lat. 1,40 N.. lon. 28.24 W. Edward, whaling vessel. Burnt 4th Dsoember, lat 37.47 lon. 12 so W. ’ Belphfne, bark, from London for Akyab. ’Burnt 29th December, lat, 29.10 S., long. 60 £- The larger portion of the sailors taken prisoners volunteered to join the Shenandoah, and- were ac cepted 5 the remainder, all but "a few, were tran shipped to other vessels met with on the Ugh seas. The remnant were eight men, besides Captain Niehells, of tho Dolphin, and Us wife and-stew ardess, who were brought hither. Unassisted, but unimpeded, they made ihelr way out of the Shenan doah very shortly after the vessel’s arrival In Hob son’s Bay, and before the permission to land them, for which application was made to the Government, oonld be afforded. NBW YOBK CITY. 1 Nbw Yosk, May 2. OODHT JOANBBS FIXED. , Tbe sufferings of the Count Joannes, Palatine and Knight of the Golden Spur, found an echo In the bo som o(Hhe jurymen, who fully appreciated what It ’was to be slandered, and they gave him arerdlotof $lOO. ABBTVAL OF "WOTNDBD SOLDIBBS. The steamship S. It. Spanning, from Beaufort, N.[o., brings 130 sick and wounded soldiers. ' UONBX and stocks. > : . Gold Is quiet bat steady. The business of the - morning has been inconsiderable, in' consequence of the prevailing incertitude as to the future course of prices. The opening quotations was 141)4, and after, touching 140)4, thajffioeing price was 142. The lean market 13 fairly active at 5@S 39 cent., but tbe supply of capital seeking temporary invest ment is ample, and the aocnmulatlon of ourrenoy Is increasing, and some oonslderable transactions are reported at easier rates. • The stock market Is Irregular. Governments are .strong, and the demand for foreign account Is ex tremely active for the old five-twenties. The tsu iOrtfes are ln good request at Improving quotations -from investors and from the new National banks. Railroad shares are drooping, and there is a da, clded dUposltlon to sell. Before the first session New York Central was quoted atloo, Erie eat 80)14, Beading at 103, Michi gan Southern at 7OX- The following were the quotations at the Board, as compared with those of yesterday: To. Mon Adv. See Cf. 8. 611, coupon,*Bl-.110% ut»4 H. - If. 8. 629 coupons ......-106K 106 H TT. b. 6-20 coupons, new 10G< 10.1)4 X B 8. 10 40 coupons.——" 97 97 U. B.,Ceitifleates. 99)4 99)4 TennesseeOs—B2H 63 .. * HUtoorl 6,.- «S 67 - S Atlantic Mail-... —.--145 160 .. 6 Faeifie Mail— 800 SO NewYorh Central..—— 9SJ4 101* - 3)4 Erie ——— ——— 78)4 82 - 3)4 brie preferred.— ;. 89 90 . .. 1 Hudson River—— 111)4 113 - Vi Reading— .101)4 1004 „ 3)4 Michigan Central 11>X 113 - 7* Michigan Southern— 68* 71* - 2g Illinois Central lia)4 117 - 1)4 THB STOOK EXOHANOB, SECOND BOAKD. ire.OCOUS6s5-2CC— ..106 ; 509 a Y Cen 8.... 97)4 60,(00 do 10f* SO do 98 6,(00 do—n iss.tOS)!' 200 do-- —.97* 10.000 d 0.... n lss.lo6*; 600 Erie Railway 77 16,006 Mis* fit 65....... 67 6 0 do «SO. 75 20,0(0 OA M Cer— 30* 40J do.—- 73* 10 000 do—804:1600 do 76* 30.000 do.. 80*! 609 do ——. 76 400CantomOo——41*1 200 do——blO. 76 300 do 41 409 Hndsott-rlver Jt—l6s 900 Cum Cl pref. 48*| MB do— —lo9* SOOOuick Min C 0...... 61 ilOlO Headtni R........K0 4CoMar«ihCo—lB I*o do.———loo* 200 H y Cen R—.— 97*1 600 do .639.100 600 do— 97* i THE SVBNXNS STOOK BOABD. HP. M.—Stocks active'and Irregular, but lap proved a little after the oall. Gold not active, closing at I4TX ; Old e-209 106: new do. 101*; N. Y- Cen tral 96*; Erie 74*; Illinois Central US* ;-PittB r burg 72)4; Rook-Island 98*; Northwestern 30; do. preferred el*; Ohio and Mississippi certificates so: Canton Company 40 ; Cumberland Coal 46* • Quicksilver 62 j Mariposa 18*. i OATTLB MABKBT. . r At the cattle market, to-day, the price of Bsef was K@ie lower. The receipts amounted- to 4,243 head ; sales at 12@220. - Teal was lower, and quoted at 6@l2c. The market for Sheep andLambß was unchanged ; receipts 8,129, and sales at56.60@14. Swine lower; receipts, 6,147 hogs; and sales at 10@ll*c. . Public Entertainments* Tot )Nbw Ohestktjt Stbbet.—At this house the deilghtlhl actress who is Us present “star,’’ has this week appeared as Lady Andley in the tell ing drama, or, more properly, melodrama, called “ Dady Audley’S Secret.” This play la of the same olass as “ East Dynne.” It Is simply a rehash of a popular novel, with strong and powerful effect In it, which enables a loading actress to make it vividly telling with the exoltable audiences of the present day. Mrs. D. P. Bowers played the golden-haired and oold-blooded'woman who Is the heroine of the plot, and made' her exceedingly telling.. In soms portions her Impersonation was a thoroughly true portraiture of the criminal woman, and -produced an efieot upon the audience whloh was most legi timately created in the IHegltlmate'drama whose powerful character she embodied. Mr. Mordauut’s Hebert Aridity was good, but the Sir Michael of Mr. Plsher was singularly false In Its interpretation. Sir Michael Is decidedly an uxorious old gentleman o f sound common sense, and would 111 no wise have given-an observer the Impression of mental weak ness. This, we regret to say, Mr. Fisher’s Sir Michael most .decidedly did at the commencement. Nor oan we say that it | Intellectually Improved afterwards. Wo may, however, glveV considerable credit to the Alicia ol Miss Annie Ward, and special ly to the Phebe Marks of Miss E. Cooper, whloh only needed greater vitality to have been a very clever impersonation. We presume that, drawing as large houses as it does, “Dady Audley’s Secret” will oontinue on the bill, and Us golden-haired heroine be performed by Mrs. I). P. Bowers for the next three evenings. Tbb Hahbbl abb Haydn'Sooikty.—it may be seen in our advertising columns that the third and last concert fof the present season will be given on Friday evening next, at the Musical Fund Sail, on whloh oeoaslon Neukomm’s grand Oratorio of “ David ” win, for the first time, bs given lu this city. The soprano Is a very able one, perhaps the ablest In Oratorio now In this country, Mrs. Mozart. She will be supported by Mr. George Simpson and Mr. W. Fisher, as tenors, Mr. James Marks as baritone, and Mr. A. B. Taylor as bass, with the Getioanla orchestra and the chorus of the soolety, both under the direction of Mr. Carl Sent*. This oratorio ought, ftom its excellence and novelty, to ensure the largest attendance of the season which has been gathered together bvthe evening perform ances of tbe Handel and Haydn Society.' TOT Bbbevit os Mas. Thateb,—This excellent artist will this evening take a benefit at the New Arch-street Theatre, on whloh occasion Mr. and Mrs. Dcwls Baker have volunteered to. assist the at tractions of the performance, as Gertrude and Peter Spyke, in the “ Doan of a Dover.” The piece de re sistance of the evening Is, as we have previously stated, “The Streets of Now York.” Mrs. Thayer ought to have a crowded audience, as one of the long known; and most talonttd ftheatrioal ao ' qualntanoes of our present publio. - Otto Dbbbbl’s first piano-forte concert In Phila delphia will take plaoe to-morrow afternoon, at the Foyer of the Aoademy. The programme Is select ed from the works of some of the best composers. Mr. -PreseTs reputation as a find' performer of'' classical music leads ns to anticipate greet plea sure from his concerts. . Mb. D. D. Hums, the celebrated spiritual medium, who created such a sensation while In Europe, and who is also a fine elocutionist, win give a reading at the spring exhibition of the Children’s Progressive Lyceum, at Concert Hall, this evening. THE CITY- (808 ABBITXOBAI. cfirT OTWS SBB VOOTTH PAUX,] DEATH OF A DI&TIN GUiSHED NATAL OFFICES. Edwin J. De Haven, a lieutenant in the United States navy, died at his residence, No. 336 North Front street, on Monday last. The deceased was a native of this State. -He entered the naval service on the 2d day of October, 1829, as a oadet, at the early age of ten years, and has been in the. navy ever slnoe that time. From the year 1838-to 1842 he took part In the Antartio expedition, whloh was under oommand of Ideutenast (now Commodore) Wilkes. Dlentenant De Haven was at that time midship man on board the Peacock, whloh waalost In a storm: He was favorably noticed for gallantry and skill displayed on that occasion. He was afterwards en gaged In the survey of the country, in the neighbor hood of the Columbia river, and on the-Bth of Sep tember, 1841, was commissloned*Ueutenaut,. Dun log the Mexican war he had oommand of the - flag ship under Oommodore Conner, In the Gnlf sqiuL dron. In the year 1862- a bill was before Congress providing for promotions in ihe navy aooordlmr to ablUty, and Irrespective ol In that blll ljen. tenant De Haven was seoosu on the list of nromn. lions. There were but five recommended, money,'De Haven, Davis, Dahlgren, Ingram, He was afterwards put In command of the TMukon :i?SiSS.S¥SS?r t " “»«* which Maury, who was their oiflefi la the Observa received most of the credit. The abllltv In his Washington*^Ja* at Observatory at Washington, led to his being o&lled to take eom ! Th?t Expedition lu the year®, ™»riS 1 ?? S? 0 ?/ 6t S CM dlu the fall of 1861, having : resohed a point further north than had been touched up tdft.M’UO- The full details of Hov.-P^AV 011 , W6ro duly set out in a work pah , ÜBheu,. curtly after its return. He afterwards had /Sr 8 * the 4™S?o, and was engaged in surveying tue-ooast south of Florida, up the Gulf of aSexlao to Texas, and along the Bio Grande. • , In 1867 hlB eyesight beoame much tmpateed, from Wbat Is known as snow-bUndueas. He wns therebv rendered unfit for Active service and has since then, up to the time of his death, been living at home having been placed upon the retired list. His total sea service was about eighteen years. He was a ' a lj*e»>t, and was admired and loved by all who knew aim. His funeral will take plaoe to-morrow meaning ute real- CHRISTIAN UNITY 1 An adjonrned mooting «T the from the various for the purpose of forming a Otulathyi union of the several cknrohes, was held lastevenlnglnthe First Baptist Church, corner Broad and Arch jtroeU, Hey. Danes Boardman; D. T>., -puter. , - The exerolsns were opened With the singing of a hymn. . . • Her. Dr. Boardman, pastor of the ehureh la which the meeting was held, then read the 13»I Psalm—“ Behold haw good a thing ft B for brethren to dwell together in unity.” Prayer was then offered by tfte* same el*T£7m%a. Bov. Franklin Moore, of the iff. E- Oburoh, was called upon to jpresldh. On taking the ohslr, he said he eonld not accept the position to whleh he was called, without mabiag & few remarks'oil the subject which called the audience together. - It seems that the doctrine of the unity of the Church is a sentiment that cannot he repressed! Thh Holy Catholic Church which we mnramr In oar prayers, is the Chnreh which we are all seeking to attach Qorselyes to. The troth will triumph In the subject of Christian noltv The manner of that unity is not for us to discus. God will take care or that. The work Is oursT We have been told that we all shall be all even as Christ hr the Father Almighty Is one. We may as well' attempt to pinion the arms of the Omnipotent as to attempt to prevent the comlugto passof that tlmewhen Christ shall look upon His holy Church universal. After the singing of a hymn, Bov. Mr. Kimball, of Brooklyn, was introduced. - He said that the- conversion of the world is the busteess of the Christian here, and as an antecedent thereto, there should he harmony amongst all the Christian leaders all over the earth. We rest upon the principle that we are undertaking to study the S raver of Christ, and to follow all that we do un* erstand of it. Preach the gospel, the command Is, andtbatls all wo have to do. While we remain Brm to that command, we may have unity; bnt as soon as we depart from it, there will he difficulties arise In the way of' nnlty. We do not set ont any plan, we set out for one ob- Boston, was next introduaed. He said: Tbe example of Christ throughout, Is an example of Christian unity. He prays that pU' his disciples may be one : aud, as there is a unity be tween the Father and the Son, so should there be a unity in the ohureh. He had been iu the East .Boom of the White House on the oecaslon of the ob sequies of our late beloved President, and he saw there Christian ministers of all denomlnatlous unlting together la one voice of, prayer; He could not help thinking how beautiful to see these representatives of different denominations standing together and addressing the King immor tal, Invisible and head of the Ohureh, and In viting all presen tto join with them in their peti tions to the Great Ruler of the universe. He thought it was beautiful and tangible and would bear fruit. Bev. Dr. Newton also addressed the meeting, which was afterwards dismissed with the benedic tion by the Bev. Dr. Bomberger. SWORD PBESENTATION. Major B. .T. Tayman, U. S-A, was the recipient, last evening, at the St. James, of a very excellent and handeomely-finlshedsword,made to the order of a lew of hts patriotic friends. The Major has been op dnty In Philadelphia, recruiting for Major Gene ral Hancock's .Veteran Army Corps. The sword was presented by Major O. at. Berry, In a neat and appropriate manner. Major Tayman, Is response, paid a handsonfo compliment to Chief Franklin, at tributing the great auocess in recruiting to hts efforts, the energetic and judicious manner In using the press as the mighty engine to produce such sur prising results. In a little over a month upwards of 1,500 veteran recrulta Had been sworn Into the service, and bad tko war continued there would Have been probably three times that number recruited at the presenttime. The Major expects toatart,this ovonln g, lor tbe front. As might be expected,"on an occasion of this kind, a festive board was spread, and song and sentiment prevailed. The occasion was a happy one, and the party Anally separated, after singing the song of “Auld Bang Syne.” GENERAL GRANT. Lieutenant General Grant, passed through this city yesterday on his wayto Burlington, whore his family are living. It is Bald he with his family will retnrn to the city to day and take possession of their new home on west Chestnut street. LECTURE ON'LIGHT. Last evening, Professor Henry Morton, Sesre tar? of the Franklin Institute, delivered a lestnre on Light at the Academy or Music. The Academy was well filled by an appreciative audience. The subject was philosophically treated, and Illustrated by a number of ’ brilliant experiments with lime lights and galvanlo batteries, producing the electric light. THE NATATORIUM. The Natatoilnm on South Broad street Is now In full operation. Since last season a number of Im provements have been added, and lt ta now one of the most complete establishments of the kind in this country. Dr. J ansen has muoh cause for con gratulating h’mselC on the success which has at tended his efforts In promoting the physical health of the young. A beautiful little rowboat has been put la tbe pond, a sliding-board has been put up, and many gold fish In the pool add to oths other Interesting features of the establishment. FATAL BAII.ROAD ACCIDENT. Yesterday, between 12 and 1 o’clock, John Galla gher, three years of ago, was ran over by oar 39 of the Second and- Third streets railway, at German* town road and Jefferson streets, and was shockingly mangled. Hts parents resided opposite. The child died soon after. BALE OP BEAL ESTATE, STOCKS, ETC. Messrs. Thomas & Sons sold at the .Exchange, yesterday noon, the folio win g-stooksand real estate, viz •• ' 60 shares Slate Bank of Camden,#ll6 each, SS,S3I GO 67 do do do 109 each, 6.113 00 IS S° 3° I® 1W each, I.IW 00 SI do do do 109.60 sash. 4,769 60 3.0C0 tends Philadelphia and Beading Bali* road Company, 92percont-'-k. . 3,76090 £ Shares Consumers’ Mutual Coal Compa , . UT, *8 60 each.......—.. 31 60 1 share mercantile Library Company.... e 59 jd2 shales Northern Liberties,lias Company, „ MOekch.- Z 3.833 00 . ©shares Philadelphia, Germantown, and , Norristown Railroad, #64.60 escb 2,180 00 1,666 Delaware Mutual Insurance Company Scrip, SOWOent.— 1,262 00 Three- etory brick store and dwelling, south west corner Second and pine streets- 12,000 00 Three.story brick store, JTo. 44 South Second. north of Chestnut street, .. 7.100 00 Two-etory brick dwelling. No. 35 Strawberry street.— - a. 2.300 00 Three story brick residence, *O. MO North Nineteenth street.. - 13,800 00 Four-story brick store and dwelling, north west renter Eleventh and Nalnnt streets—. 11,150 00 Three story brick dwelling, No. 1017 Girard ... HT6HHB *«< 3*600 00 Tvo story frame dwelling, jigs Base street, ■» with twodwellinss is the rear.--.. LOOO'OO Two-story bride store and dwelli&r, souih wett eorner ol Washington and Orammond stnati- —2,000 00 Three-story brisk dwelling, Ho. 319 Booth, street... 3,975 00 CUTTY ITJEiMSS. The Bbatjtipiii. Sbwimg Maobihb Spbotmbit i“ra, prepared by Greyer & BakerTand tobe seen at tbeir warerooms In thlflatty, No. 780 Chest nut street, is attracting general attention, ladies are so much pleased with the elegance and variety of the work it exhibit*, that they declare that the only Sewing- Machine that meets their fetstela the “ Grover & Baker.” The exhibition of these speci mens in thlß' convenient form has algo largely in creased the orders in their Work Rooms, where, by the way, all hinds of plain and ornamental sewing for family purposes Is done at the shortest notice. Among the samples above referred to are tuoking on the finest material, every stitch clear, perfect, and uniform, lace—a mere g&uxe—not drawn a particle; cording, hemmlgg, foiling, and quitting ruffing gathered and stitched down with absolute accuracy 5 fancy work in variety; letters in Gor man text wrought with embroidery, for marking table linen or the finest handkerchiefs; and cushion patterns in the most elaborate designs. The most exquisite thing in the oolleotlon, however, Is a beau tiful wreath of flowers, in all the various natural shades and tints; This we regard as the most ar tistic and difficult feat ever attained on the sewing machine. Corsets—Aedine in Prices. Ladles requiring any grade of corset, either of the commoner quality of domestic gpods or or the higher grades of European manufacture, including the finest embroidered article, will, prioV to their pur chases, find It Interesting and profitableto examine the large assortment tobe round at Mr. John M. Eton’s stand, at southeast oorner Arch and Seventh streets. These goods, which comprise seven different grades, have been selected with care, and are of superior make, and;undoubtedly cheap. An grades above 11.50 are warranted whalebone. American corset... fl;30 per pair. French cane c0r5et...A...i... 1.50 « Cann Statt corset, good article 1.76 “ Cann Statt corset, finer grade. 2:00 « Embroidered-top comet 8.00 “ Embroidered-top corset, finer grade.. 4.fio •* Embroidered-top and firont corset..... 6,50 « Besides these goods, Mr. Finn has In fun Una the following articles, at very loir prises: - Parasols for ladles, as low as (*.25 apiece. * Parasols for children, as low as *1.75 apiece. Coates’ spool cotton, 200 yards, 10 cents per spool. Wllllmantle spool-cotton, 200 yards, 8 cents per BpOoL All grades ladles* stockings, fiom is oentstoso cents per pair. Embroidered edgings oibcautiful designs, some forty different kinds. Worked bodies for infants. Linen handkerchiefs, from 12 cents up. ... Hemmed.stitnhcd wnaU ties. ■ - -■ Jaconets and cambrics, from 22-ccntsnp. Nainsooks and undressed cambrics, til grade! Swiss muslins, good article, as low as-80 cents per yard; Plaid muslins, a full line. Lace veils, a l&rge variety. - Brilliants, very aheap. Crinoline, 80 cents per yard—very cheap. Irish linens, all grades, Grom 50 cents per yard up. Remember the stand, „ Johw M. Brww’s, Southeast corner Arch and Seventh streets. Lose Looked Fob—CoM3.AT.nmT- Th» TJnlon Button-Hole Sewing Machine, of Boston, Mass., has arrived, and may be seen In operation at the Florence Sewing-Machine Rooms, «so Chestnut street. The publio are respectfully invited to cal and examines The only machine setring a button-hole with the same stitoh as hand-work, and’ introducing the “bar” or.cord- so essential tio-make firm and sub stantial work In precisely the same i»»mr as always found necessary In buttonholes made-bv hand. The stitoh is formed with two. threads Instead of one, there'by imparting double stsength and dura bility over band-work. - .This wonderful sewing machine performs all the work, and does not depend in. the least upon the eye or guidance of the operator, completing the work with more accuracy thaa eon be done by hand, and with great rapidity. Caß tond see It ateSO Chestnut street. - apCS-St The G-bbatest Sbwibu M achiwb on t«b Asb fob, MiBTrFAOTDBiHQ. Pußpoßßa.—Oar readers, we presume, with few exceptions, are ftdly aware that the Grover A Bake* Sewing Machines, for all kinds of family purposes, arc the best in the world. The Grover A Baker Company have, however, late-' ly added totheirilstof popular machines a new large sine which operateswith the greatest ease, and makes but little nosle (a most decided im provement upon the manufacturing ; n this respeot.) This machine has already become a great favorite. It uses with equal faeffity spool cotten, linen thread or silk, and is altogether the most perfeot manufacturing machine ever offered to the publio, and is so pronounced by practical ma chinists. The machine can be seen in operational their office, No. 780-Chestnut street. Thb “ pkizb-Mhdai.” Smwra Invented by Mr, John F. Taggart, and for sale at the popular Gen tlemen’s Furnishing EstaWiahmant of MrTaeoree Grant, No. eia Cheßtnut street,are the be&bdnade and the bcßt-fitting Shirts In the.worid. The very choloest-goodsm thls departmmtt are alwavs ffir **>« m. amt’s w»v«a, W * J * 1 V FBrarcß COHTECTIOSrB a» b ~ Tk' ** ®* d to «« In P,rw mW.Nistti and C&ejtc, V 1 ’ boobOC*® l roasted almonds, delta tnnnes# “O™ l ** F™”* and A J • elegant «MW 4 mod oik# things of tost® * M *< quailed. IbpoktjSJPT , to Gb»tlkws;, a at hand for gf*V® m ' n ** »p! tt) ; la Furnishing ©, w « »caij ' George Grant, «Wv^ heBfena t Btre „ i:, j to Ills superb stoot V 1 thls Fepa.rj L assortment of ante A, 'ogs, l6ci u^' : ‘. Shirting Prints, bearffh ol Sonj,,?^:. ble TTaderoJotatlng, *s. H( 3 v i Medal” Shift, inventcFlj»i' Mr. unequalled by any otherfti tt« ' A. PlaASAJrrTisit to-* pr S4 . We made an excursion toKy Sio * at Manayunk, where w 8 a,# a,, 1 •• ••Fcuntasn Urn,” a*. r inl[ ' •• Snows as a moat courteous Sts* « Wed Mm many a time and been found wanting. Headm sant exourslon, take the *■ Tmt London- flares and - jiond.— The London nme SBdw " ’'j Klotmond Is a decided sta.~„ : ' federaoy.” It la willing to -h. yielding or the rebel capita! i 3 ** ’*■ general smashup of Coniedera,, h •-1 eame token, the great pro? Wr ,,.„. Clothing Hall of Kockhtii s tf,.. Ue B '" 605 Chestnut street, above stst c > 1 ! an evidence Of permanence 0 t ’ teaches the young Ides how to Euti'~*.. S ’ : ' apparel, and It furnishes adoit ' month worthy of American woolddo wisely to drop Its abuwo'v. and take to Inditing come worthy a the popular Clothing Establutm,^ Spurns Bonnets add Misses’ Ham—The latest styles, ami the city, ah Wood & Cary’s, TK Thb Bbst Fitoso Sbibt os Tli , Improved Pattern Shirt,” mace 5 - son, at the old stand, Nos. i a-./ street. Work- done by hand, ic and warranted to give satisfaction Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods case,,. Prices moderate. ‘ SKETOH-Cttjß FiCTtrak Sai»_t. Sketches and Palntlags by rlir Club is postponed from Tioreday, a ‘;J day evening, May sth, at tb e tr R wm , ; street. Tbe Exhibition will reman ot of sale. Admission free. r ' Wibdow-Shadm, Laco and 95,.,,. Ont CornlWß, Curtain Loops, ptus I' f to great Tat lety, at Pattnn-a, HOS 1 EyH, FiARi JtSD UATARsh, SUoo«sj:- by J, Isaacs, M. 8., Oculist and Artificial eyes Ineertod. No charge fo?^ AftfiITAJLS AT THE Tlte €odi Geo B Tripp, TJ S N J McKenna, Boston Red Kellogg A wf. Conn G E Dneenbury, N York O H W Mohan, Wash Jas A Wise, Washington Oba® H Cornell, USA w O Chapman, Mass T Y Jones, Mass Tfaos J Moore, Penna J C Brown, Pittsburg It B Brown, Pittsburg Mrs Davis, New York SB Sanffer,Penna J J Painter, Penna John Mitchell, lowa J Meyer, New York Geo D Sherman, Chicago D W Clark & wf, Maine A P Cox, Boston - M E Miles, Cincinnati Mrs ATE Kirkland, NJ Rev A Mrs J S Bush, N J E R Griswold, Cleveland A W Edwards, Jr, U S A Oapt M Man roll, U S-A. L P Hawes. Richmond Mrs Hunt at son Miss Hunt QW Corner Ala, Balt IBlsb M T Williams,Mass J G Walters JNBrown R H Bailey, Wash Oapt EG Barney, Ohio J MWoodworth, M D Pa W H Patten &wf, Boston M Campbell, Baltimore Dr A B Blair A la, Pa A T Fahnestock A la, Pa H K Lest Awf, Va Mrs W Lloyd, Altoona Miss K Lloyd, Altoona Miss A Lloyd, Phila Master W Lloyd, Altoona A B Watford A wf. Fa G E Hersh A wf, Fa E H Wei Per A wf, Pa w Hay. York. Pa Miss C Hay, York, Pa J M Fulton, Pittsburg H Thomas, Harrisburg H C David, Boston W E Wench A son H Hathoway.N Jotsoy H Polkinhorn, Wash’ton S Polkinhorn, Washing’s S F Dewey, New York E N Lawrence, N York w c Hopklrut, Montana J W Pntnam, Washlng’n The g J Bnmple & la, Columbia Jos P Wilson, W Chester Jas D Murray A wf, Md E H Nevin, Jr, Watt’s Eobt Scott, Pittsburg Lt Jos B Thomas, Pa LtGeoSeager G Bally, Baltimore m a Brennan, WHm,NC A D Eckel. Sohlk 00, Pa I H Ashley, New York j Richard Nash. US N W H Hanae, BSK G J Shoemaker, Harris’g SL Christie S B Dodge, New York Beni.R Mean WC Buffington, Md WSFort, VS A Geo. W Ssekett, N Y F M Knapp, Washington WE Potter. NJ , Jos Stine, Baltimore W W Arthur, Baltimore ■Toshna-Lynch,Baltimore H Thomas, Now York J R Hunter, Pittsburg G LElite A la; Columbia Miss K Oldwlier. Penna Mrs S Hubley,; Columbia S S Dttwller A la, Penna IA Althoueo, Reading . Wm Earns, Reading John Hocb, Fine Grove Mr A Mrs Wheeler, Pa Dr J A Harlan, Colorado J L Nutting, Penna AT Supplee, Maryland- O G Keeary, Maryland Thos Rlsdon L H ElehoHz, Penna H M Demerton, TJ S N J W Havfll A wf, N Y J S Little A wf, Penna S B Conover A wf, Md J E Silcock, New York H Clawson, Oil City ■ J G Beaver, Pittsburg H M North, Columbia F Gossler, Columbia H K Enos; Baltimore A J Herr A wf, Harrisb’g D W Woods A wf j A E T O Cal'S L C'lleE*' Mrs V r.: Mrs S.IE C W 0«t O T Ztur ic Bowls 1 IGOrmr"' ■ SR I) C-irj. E Port?. to H JIi"; ■R CarM, i K l'atri;r>. |W H Jcif ! J W ivsos. [Maj NFS Miss A E Woods Mrs Denniston A ch Mrs Myers A 2 oh T S Lyon, Penna i Mlbb F Lyon, Clarion eo Miss A Lyon, Clarion co JHKrng, Lancaster I O H Anderson,i'- nS J Livingstone, Pa W U -j S Prayer, Virginia ; . M F JTrorell, Fenna G Li, a l G W Btronle, Pa iHenri 41 W Bank, PMlipsbnrg ,J " |'M EGGearhart, Pa I) Gearhart, Pa i R|, V "'*|| „D Ajen, Pfcllipsbnrg ( 1 j 3 B Gearhart, Pa I 1 Jacob BGearhart, Pa 1 JPKratzer,Clearfield iBF « ■"s v Mm Spratt, Penna % MlpsTßeggs, Fenna |£ . W SpeeiyXahe City ? V M RMIbW, jEuttsbarg W D Bunn, Huntingdon « " 1 R D Wolfe, Howes, m „ , John Gray, Wllkesfea rre.Jx/.'< ; ‘ fj ww Paxton, Fean* yi, ;,•* -,i3 Jos Pomeroy. Vannj, H ■*HUeshew,York%'prlrgs •> ~« Jf| Jacob Albert, Dili etmrg if ,_i~ IS J G Carrotbers, Cdtio Geo M Swart*, Jenna , ir? J M Binder, PWana j 1 ’ :i; ■: ~■ D J Richards. Ohio ;', - , John Clam, Penna 't,- v: t- • v, Uriah JliF *7Hf j‘ l Jaa UtirifU , .Toon J Kfv MitFevt*.. J V J W Hen •***• 5 W O RUc;V- Jas B B'2 u JoB H-7’65 ii Jollq H i •>*TB E H Fi : H M Patkjs J K o*#m, r * Tnoa J A Uoni ini v MrsS'.itfrii Miss Stag,-.- • D W Jag Stq'srg-.:, Mrs P«»tter. fr P-Jjrg. pi B Buunfeii M TnarwiLJ W Glider J E S-io*e? v 3 W j AS Aheli.Bdl B KHamlH-isS J F 0 W Divß yJ J ti- W Jewell V: J Al)'an, S*» •Vtfs L’ E Dtr I *.; Z P Boyer, fr“ HSTtomps e. : K A Pelted O Bartlett, JE« J F Pafj, Fs-tti, J T SneppH.i' O E East. SV F S Vatjdii=i€E 3f Lsdft,Otl:i; O H Newt ra. C OI E C C*wf 'I Haaiinu. Vi F A. WUcoi,.V: J Decrort M. Leffe-ts.>'* Miss Woo*iiai, O C Hatrm;!. E H Van Bra- Dr McFarfsK