'Ely ',Puss. TUESDAY, JULY 4, 1865 REDUCTION OF TERMS. The price of THE Pima, from and after July 1, 1865, will be as follows: City svbseribers, $8 per annum, xn ad roanc e ; or, 15 cents per week, payable to the carriers Hailed to subscribers out of the city, $7 per annum; $3.50 for SiX 9)1014/L8j $1.75 for three months, invariabl•,y in advance. The TRI-WEENLY PxtEss, mailed to sub *Webers, $4 per a12.1111Y12, in advance. The above notice is sufficiently explana tory; but we may add, that while the re duction in the price of subscription will introduce THE PRESS to a larger circle of readers, it will not be less attractive in its various departments. We have made ar rangements to greatly improve it. To orvE the gentlemen .connected with TEE PRESS an opportunity to unite in the celebration of this memorable Fourth of July, no paper will be issued from this of fice to-morrow. THE CELEBRATIONS TO-DAY Our columns contain numerous notices of arrangements for the celebration of this memorable anniversary of national inde pendence. The Union League has dis played its characteristid energy by _engaging the Academy of Music as the scene kir ap propriate exercises. Independence Hall, and various other public buildings; business establishments, and private residences; will be brilliantly illuminated. Throughout this and other StateS a vast number of mag nificent demonStrations will be made. None is, perhaps, more prominent and ap propriate than the great gathering which is to take place at Gettysburg, the memorable turning-point of the war for the Union. It is to be graced by the presence of the victorious hero of - that bloody field, General ItIEADE, Governor Currn, thousands of our brave soldiers, and many distinguished men. At Chadd's Ford, the scene of the Revolutionary battle of Brandywine, the Veterans of Chester and Delaware counties arc to be entertained at a gigantic pic-nic festival. Many of the celebrated speakers of the country are announced to deliver ora tions ; the task that has usually devolved upon aspiring j young orators being now al lotted to prominent generals, -experienced editors, eminent divines, and able states men. "BOSTON NOTION OF A FOURTH OF JELLY CELEBRATION. The civic authorities of Boston have ar ranged a programme for their celebration to-day so comprehensive and varied that it deserves special mention as a model of mu nicipal liberality. They have resolved to make their commemoration of our national triumphs one in which every Bostonian and most of the inhabitants of the surrounding country will participate. Their official ad vertisement fills more than two columns of small type in the Boston Journat, and an nounces the following entertainments, pro cessions, exercises, exhibitions, and privi leges, as the free gift of the bountiful City Fathers, viz : The church bells aro to be rung at sunrise, noon, and sunset, and a na tional salute to be fired at the same times ; the public buildings are to be decorated ; the ferry boats are to run free during the day and evening ; musical, legerdemain, Punch and Judy, and other entertainments are to be provided for the children of the public schools at three theatres and musical halls, there being three performances at two of these places, and five at the other. A procession is to be formed at eight o'clock A. M., in which the soldiers, bands, municipal, State, and na tional officials, foreign consuls, distinguish ed men of the city and State, and various public societies will participate. The formal exercises will include music from their great organ; singing of the Star-Spangled Banner; a chorus from I Lombardi; the Liberty Duet, and one original hymn; the reading of the Declaration of Independence, and an oration. Two balloon ascensions will take place from Boston Common. Three boat races, the winners of which are to receive in the aggregate $l,lOO in prizes are an nounced, six members of the City Commit tee directing this branch of the programme, and eight experts being selected as judges. To crown all, a splendid series of fireworks are to conclude the festivities. Exclusive of a profusion of rockets, aerial shells, hen gola, crimson and emerald lights, there are to be ten elaborate pieces displayed at South Boston, ten more at East Boston, and se venteen superior productions of the pyro teelmic art are to illuminate the famous Commons. The "grand finale" is thns described ; An illumination of crimson,silver and green fires dblilays to view this tribute to the day. upon four ornamental columns, in silver lance, adorned with beautiful pediments, rests an arch in agate jets, supporting an entabla ttue, from which re-es n.nmAsive dome, in dia mond lanes work, the,entahiature being beau tifully ornamented with devices in gold tires; surnMunting the dome is the Americas eagle, clutching in his talOnS the olive branch in emerald ,jets; at the base of the donic in let ters of gold, is the motto, "IN GOD WE TD.TIST;" directly underneath, the name of .‘613. S. ti'llAxt." while upon the arch, upon either side of the keystone, which is a shield, may he seen in letters of emerald, the names of SnynmAls:" and "SHERIDAN ;" the face of each pediment is ornamented with laurel leaves, and a large shield in the appropriate colors, while from the top of each, at the foot Of the doine, on either hand there waves the, American flag. In the - niche of the arch, hi appropriate colors, Minerva, clothed in the habiliments of war, extends a sword to the Goddess of Liberty, who supports a shield of the tuion ; and the Muse of History waits with the partly written scroll. Beneath the whole is the motto in letters of crimson, gold, eme rald, and silver. "HEROIC LIVING—IMMORTAL DEAD." A salvo of arti]]erc is heard, and there are tire -nnboats, one laposl either hand, one bear ing "the name of "Patrivit, s, the other "Porter," and as they move rout left to right, the batteries fire a national salute ; the vessels bearing at the peak the American ensign; a salvo of artillery is again heard, the nir is filled with showers of gold rain and colored lights • marooned batteries open, and a na tional' salute of illuminated bombs is area, which, rising to an immense height, burst with heavy reports and discharge eltiSterS of Crim son, silver, gold, emerald, and amethyst stars Ivith gold and amber ,streamers. nights of rockets fill the air with golden rays and clusters cf colored bouquets, and with another salute the festivities of the day arc brought to a close. During the display constant discharges of Sockets of all the various calibre, and beauti ful garnitureS will be given. Flights of colored torbillions In groups, re volving spiral courantines of great beauty ; aerial bombs, bursting with heavy reports and discharging clusters of crimson, gold, silver, emerald and agate stars, gold and silver rain, gold and amber streamers, fiowervases, filling the air with colored lights ; mosaic and ma rooned batteries, bengola, crimson, and eme rald lights. To prevent the usual hideous accompani ments by 'which the day is more apt to be desecrated than celebrated, the Chief of Police has issued an order setting forth that— “ Police arrangements will be made to pre vent mock precessions, the blowing of horns, the discharge of firearms, squibs, and crackers, and other annoyances, and all persons violating these regulations will be summarily arrested And held for trial.” We have presented to our readers this "Boston notion" of a Fourth of July cele bration, partly on account of its marked contrast with the present and usual policy of the Councils of this city. It is worth considering whether it would not be w i se and creditable hereafter for our municipal ttUthorities to make our celebrations official and effective, instead of individual, dis jointed, and unimpressive ; and whether it would not be advisable to seriously repress the petty nuisances which nearly always Cause conflagrations, and compensate all who delight in such outbreaks of patriotic enthusiasm 4 some such creditable and artistic display of real pyrotechnical beauty at Fairmount Park as Boston will give this evening on her classic Common. 'WONDERFUL REVOLUTIONS. It is at last ascertained that the new Con stitution of Missouri has been adopted by a decided majority. We have already printed the several clauses disfranchising the ex-rebels and those who sympathized 'with them. The enforcement of these pro hibitions will completely purge the State. The example of Missouri will healthfully affect other States, especially Kentucky and Arkansas. There is, in fact, no Southern tate in which any hope of readmission-is entertairA, where the mass of former ac tiverebels are not prohibited from voting, or convinced that their own interest is in a quick and real repentance. The fact that Congress will not admit any State that does not show this repentance in im proved and purified Constitutions, if not in the enlargement of the basis of suffrage, will add-to the honest action of the politicians of the "seceded States." In fact, we are in the midst of a whirlpool of Change. The great - revolution of war is to be succeeded by the revolution of peace. Governor HOLDEN, of North Carolina, calls for Northern emigrants. Governor PAR SONS, of Alabama, who freed his own slaves and held them to his family by affectionate treatment, is about to begin a system of schools for the freedmen ; and Gavernoi PERRY, of South Carolina, cannot rehabili tate the exhausted frame of that former home of the patricians, without Yankee blood and brains. The whites that once led the South are either dead, disfranchised, or- out of the country. Their places must be filled by new material, native or import ed, white or : black. Thus is it that the great work of change goes on. All things feel its - influence ; the oldest instil Miens ; the strongest Parties ; the most Southern prejudices: and bigotries. In the midst of the chaoS and crash the only things human. that are stout and stable are the American Union and the American Constitution. THE GREAT CRIMINALS VATTEL is an authority oftener quoted than read, more spoken of than known; In that part of his " prolt de Gens" - (the "Law of Nations, or Principles of the Law of Nature applied to the Affitirs of Nations and Sovereigns," first published in 1758,) in Which he treats "Of Civil War," he distinctly states how such great, public cri minals as JEFFERSON DAVIS and his col leagues may be justly treated. He says: "When the Sovereign has subdued the oppo site party, and reduced them to submit and sue for peace, he ma:;,•except from the amnesty the authors of the disturbance, the heads of the party ; he map bring them toe legal triai, and punish them if they be found °witty. He may act in this manner partieularly on occasion of those disturbances in which the interests of the people are not so much the object in view as the private aim. of some powerful anti which rather deserve the name of re volt than of chit war." LETTER FROM 66 OCCASIONAL." WASHINGTON, July 3, 1865 To-morrow we shall celebrate the only anniversary of the Declaration of American Independence which has not dawned upon - a hunian being in slavery. There is a world of truth and thought, of reminiscence and retribution, of hope and change, in this single sentence. I dwell upon it as the commanding event of the age, the crowning result of the war. The fact that demands recognition is that which proves that Eman cipation has been followed by few or none of the horrors that were anticipated and predicted as its certain consequences: A whole nation, the third of the population of one of the most flourishing and fertile portions of the world, numbering nearly four millions of soulsi set free by the rebellion of those who claimed to be their masterS, against the Government that pro tected the dominant and the subjeet races, are at once incorporated inttrthe body of the people, and clothed with the knowledge of reciprocal benefit§ and duties. The secret of the ease of this stupendous transition is as siMple as it is sublime. The races are essential to each other, and both are neces ' sary to the : Government here, and to the well-being of other nations. The blacks must work to perfect their freedom, and to prove they are fit for it. Thewhites must help the nearly freed population if they would live themselves, and secure the trade of the world, and the renewed and vigilant protection of the Government. Thus to the mighty moral influence which de manded, and to the quick and wicked insurrection which precipitated the :aboli tion of slavery, we have now added the superior and practical ageneies of com mon life—domestic labor, internal trade, foreign :commerce, and business competi tion. It is no longer a poetic fiction that slavery blasts enterprise, repels emigra tion, and diseourages emulation. No prose could be more severe—no common sense harder, than the comparison between the States where freedom is, and thoSe where it is not. If we would prophecy what Vir ginia will become - without a slave; let us read the marvellous experience of sotiri, which, when only partly cut loose from the corpse - of human servitude, be gan to assume the proportions of colossal prosperity ; or, if this is insufficient, let us study the contrast between slave-bound Kentucky and free -limbed ,Ohio; between the poverty-stricken acres of Maryland and the gorgeous farms of Pennsylvania, and try to decide why the same same soil, the same products, and almost the same peo ple, arc sterile or fruitful, light or heavy, poor or rich, precisely, as the curse of slavery afflictS or the blessing of freedom assists them. And as these lights dispel the mists of ignerance or prejudice, may we not expect to see such commonwealths as Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Texas, Louisiana, Mutt bons of the wealth and power. of their Northern sisters, now that they have no dead weights to carry, no wealthy classes to support, no interest in sup pressing industry, and no fear of the pro gress of intelligence among the multitude? With the end of slavery we have the be ginning of a new life in the South. The States whose population has Fallen off; who have year after year gone down in the scale of national representation; who have seen the young Territories of the North west growing into empires in a few years, and pushing them from their stools in Con gress ; will from the Fourth of July, 1865, take a fresh start in the contest. It is not—says the good and wise man at Wash ington, Andrew Johnson—it is not only the Colored men that are emancipated ; as many, if not more whites have been made free by the close of the rebellion. But the emancipation has taken even a wider circle than that described by the President. The bold and ambitious young men of the South—long kept and held down by the cotton-lords, sugar-barons, rice-kings, and tobacco-dukes—are liberated, to do as they will. The mechanics and inventors of the North, who had to fly for safety at the beginning of the rebellion, may now return and find all forms of tyranny gone. The Christian Church is emancipated ; no longer is the Bible to be tortured into double meaning—one to extol and excuse, and the other to execrate and make hideous human slavery. Travel is emancipated. No-tourist must change his opinions to suit the latitude, :or - hide MS faith in falsehood to screen his person. Trade is emancipated. No captain of a vessel need fear the police man seeking for contrabands flying from the lash and the bloodhound. The press is emancipated. No daring editor need hide himself from the wrath of the mob in hot search for Abolition incendiaries. On this, the eighty-ninth anniversary of the Fourth of July, 1776, we may feel that emancipa tion is not a partial or a narrow blessing; it does not liberate one only, but many. It includes all races, interests, parties, and sects. Those alone are slaves who prefer degradation, ignorance, and chains. 111, • 70 111 , ; DREW'S Alien STREET TITHAT A new burlesque, attributed to Mr. R. IL Craig, and entitled " East Lynne, the Great Western,'' was proditeed here last night, and is extremely comic. Lady hatort Ctain/e. was represented by e‘Jrnellaby Mrs. Thayer, and Frank Drew, Sir Francis LCUCNIM Stuart Robson. "Vie People's Lawyer" mot "(;oat as a v uoma t,g r o were also performed, and the three pieces will be repeated this evening. The adornments of this theatre, within end without, and the at tendant illumination in honor of the day, will be something remarkably brilliant. The house last night was literallycrammed. THE SQUIDOtt PArans.--This is the character_ istile title of a new humorous book which Mr. Carleton, of New York, will soon publish from the pen of the late John Plifenix (Lieutenant Derby,) author of " Fluent:dun Thu-thou sands who laughed over the brilliant humor of the author's first book, will gladly welcome the present volume, which contain some thirty or forty comic illustrations, exhibiting that rare humorist in the light of artist as well as author. " TUE TWO ?RESIDENTS." MR. JOHN W. FORNEY, Before the Literary Societies of Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pennsylvania, June 28, 1865, Ciin: In behalf of the literary societies of PiCiiiioaal College, we have the honor to ex press the high approbation elicited by your oration delivered before them this morning, and respectfully request a copy of the sante for publication. Very respectfully, your obedient servants, Joni.; liars, t Committee. A. .SHARP, To Hon. JOHN W. FORHEY. Nr. Forney places the notes of his hurried address, pronounced this morning, by invi tation of the literary societies of Dickinson College, at the disposition of the committee. GENTLEMEN of , THE LITERARY SOCIETIES OP DICKINSON COLLEGE: Plutarch, the Greek, wrote history by paral lel and comparative biographies of the phi losophers, statesmen, conquerors, and em perors of his own country and of Rome. Those delightful memoirs, equally admired in his own and in succeeding ages, read in every lan g,nage, and translated into ours by some of the noblest English scholars—one edition being edited by John Dryden himself—owed their popularity not simply to the style in which they were written, nor to the great characters they described, nor to the wonderful events they embalmed in eternal remembrance,but be cause the author extracted from the materials so industriously collected and digested, a moral and a lesson for the guidance and emu lation of the youth of his own and of succeed ing generations. Not content with his por traits of the men, and his incidental sketches of the women of two great republics, he delineated. with marvellous grace the manners and ellstOMS of the people themselves and, although several of his books have been lost, those which remain to us are cherished among the classics of ancient literature. The subj eet I have selected is entitled to a solemn and a peculiar consideration. It is a comparison between the character of the illustrious victim of ono of the most terrible tragedies in human recollection, and the character of his immediate con stitntional successor :—Both of them repre sentative men—the one the most conspi cuous personage in the four years which saw rebellion of unexampled dimensions culmi nate and fall, and the other destined, in the providence of God, to complete the stupen dous mission left in his keeping by a Calamity as dreadful in its incidents as it must be interesting and controlling in its COnSe quences. While what I may have to say must ne cessarily he compressed within the decent limits usually set apart for such a dis course, the main subject would tax the ener gies and the intellects of a college of Plu tarebs. They would not only be called upon to compare and to contrast the two great citi zens; to understand the political and personal antecedents of the fathers of the American Government and Constitution ; to trace with exact and conscientious rectitude the marvel lous adaptability of the various provisions and clauses of that great instrument, in times of profound peace and extended war; but also to take up the new issues evolved in the growing greatness of the people and the increasing dimensions of their territory. Such a, Student Called upon to examine these events, and to study these Cha racters, would realize that before the Ame rican people had advanced far beyond the one-half of the first century of their ex istence as an organized government, they had passed through a series of civil revolutions, and emerged from a State of semi-barbarism intoalmostimperial civilization ; and that just when the whole world looked upon their ex periment with amazement, a sudden and bloody rebellion, which for nearly three years threatened to destroy what had been so splendidly and so rapidly erected, broke upon the land, and called forth an amount of military genius, affluence, energy, and originality, never equalled in any age, and not less marvellous than the magical de velopment of the Republic itself. The fall of the rtbellion, consummated after the grandest battles of modern times, was terminated by a deed of such unutterable horror, and produc tive of such inconceivable results, that it will require years for the statesman fully to un derstand and for the historian faithfully to de scribe them. It is interesting to note how Providence pre pared us for the events which rescued the casket of liberty from the strong grasp of shivery, just as slavery was the strongest. You . have read a thousand times how the South broke, iirst the Whig, then the Democratic party; and compelled the formation of a Northern organization, as if to fabricate an excuse for rebellion against the section- . alism created by itself alone. How easy to trace the hand of Providence in these frenzied follies ! A few Weeks after Mr. Lin coln's election the last session of the Thirty sixth Congresa assembled at Washington. The conspirators came, hot with hate and fierce with a fixed resolution. They plotted daily and nightly. Wrought up to the pitch of a desperate resolve, and not for a moment awed by the fact that they were about to force a war without pretence of right or reason, and that they must start With the whole burden of provocation on their souls, they opened the conflict with violent 'insults of the friends of Mr. Lincoln. Take up the Congres aimed Globe, and you will find that not a mo 'silent was lost before the conspirators showed their predetermined purpose. Congress met on Monday, the 3d of December, 1860. On the next day, in both House and Senate, the work began. NOtorlouslypreconcerted,there was no effort to bide the object, or to heal the breach. They were so eager to precipitate the actual conflict, and to terrify the majority into sub mission to the minority, that they no longer made a show of loyalty. Clingumn begun the debate. He bad been the most moderate of his school ; and yet he transcended truth and history in every word he uttered. He echoed the most ultra opinions, and demanded the most decided resistance. In the House, on the same day, Hawkins, of Florida, declared that "the day of compromise has passed. n Miles, of South Carolina, asserted that his State "was already withdrawn from the confederacy.) , Wednesday, the next day, Lane of Oregon, fol lowed in the same strain of abuse and ridicule of the friends of Lincoln. Then came Iverson of Georgia, Brown of Mississippi—Jefferson Davis, whose very first words included the threat that "before a declaration of war is made against the State of which I am a citizen, I expect to be out of the chamber;" Wigan, foul and malig nant—and so in regular succession including nearly all the conspirators, to the lath of De cember. In this long and acrimonious dis cussion, with the exception of some short speeches by Senators Hale, Wade, and Sumner, nothing had yet been boldly said In favor Of the Union by a single Senator. Mr. Seward, the great leader of his party, sat silent in his seat. Already chosen Secretary of State by the President elect—a fact known to but one or two others—he saw through the schemes of the traitors, and implored his friends to let the tem pest rave. The object of Davis was "to fire the Southern heart;" to arouse the people of the slave States to War; to give him and his associates, when they left their seats, an army to lead against the Government of their fath ers. If the friends of Mr. Lincoln could be goaded into bitter retorts, the first work of the traitors would be more than half done. It was not for Mr. Lincoln's friends, however, to en gage in HOS pleasing pastime. And as the fiends of treason—how Well they proved their claim to this title in after years I—scoffed, and domineered, and shrieked in very agony of rage, they got no ribaldry and anger in return. At last, however, the champion appeared. Not the unknown knight who entered the lists to do battle for Rebecca, the Jewess, as de scribed in the dazzling pages of Ivanhoe—not the faithful Denton, after being eagerly waited for by the true friend whose life had been Placed in pledge for his return—was more rapturously welcomed. lie had made no noisy demonstrations between the contend ing parties. The champion was born in the South, and held a Southern Senator's seat. He had no - ties binding him to a Northern party or a Northern man. And yet Andrew John son offered himself as the irresistible foe Of the scheming Southern Catelines. Seated in Mr. SeWard's parlor, sonic evenings ago, and listening to the wise and patriotic sentiments of that wonderful man—in my judgment now unapproached by any statesman on earth, and recalling a! I that we know of the most eminent publicists of other nations—l ref/11100111Am of the appearance and the speech of Andrew Johnson on the ISM and lath of DeeeMber,lB6o. "Tea ! " Said Air. Seward, "lie Came in happy season. It required a Southern man to say what he said. It needed a Southern Democrat. to ex pose the efforts of the lad men who were lead ing our country to ruin. A Republican; and a friend of Abraham Lincoln would have only added fuel to the flame, had he given expres sion to such thoughts; and an Old-line Whig, even born and reared in the South, like John J. Crittenden, created the slightest favo rable bionession. When Andrew Johnson_ spoke, however, the traitors themselves felt that a voice had gone forth which would reach the innermost hearts of the peo- pie they were hurrying into rebellion, and IA mild there keep alive a religious devotion to the union, and that a power more potent than armies had been given to the duly-elected Chief Magistrate and the Administration soon OCCASIONAL P PRESS.-PITTLADV,PM'A TITESDA_Y„TITLY 4, 1565. ORATION OF CORRESPONDENCE. CAntisi.u, 2Sth June, 18M CAI tiste, Suite 28, 180 ORATION (0 enter mien the responsibilities and dangers of the Government. "Ile who believes," said Mr. Seward, "that there is a special Provi dence even in the fall of a sparrow, cannot doubt that the hand of God Was Visible in this opportune championship." When it became necessary to nominate a candidate for the Vice Presidency in 1861, not- withstanding the general belief that Mr. Ham lin had proved himself to be wise and faith ful, the fidelity and constancy of hundreds and thousands who had opposed Mr. Lincoln in 1960, in supporting his administration of the Go venni-lent in the, prosecution of the war, im pressed many with the idea that the com mon cause would be greatly strengthened by giving the Vice Presidency to a repre sentative Democrat; and when the Baltimore Convention assembled in June of that year, Andrew Johnson was nominated as the candidate; and it stands to the credit of Mr. liandin that no one endorsed the nomina tion more heartily than himself. Here again we must trace the presence of a superin tending Providence; for while the desti nies and the interests of the people would have been safe in the hands of any loyal citi zen, does it not seem to have been ordained that a Southern man like Andrew Johnson should take up the lines when they had fallen from the hands of another Southern man like Abraham Lincoln, and that the work having been begun by the Old-Line Whig, it should be completed by the Old-Line Democrat I No living man is better adapted to meet and mas ter the questions of the hour than Andrew Johnson. Having suffered more than human -tongue Can tell, or human pen describe, at the hands of the rebel leaders, he is Probably better qualified to determine the ex - tent of their punishment, and to forgive those they forced into the rebellion. Now, not only can Andrew Jolmson deal with the crime of treason with a bolder hand than if he had been born and reared amidst the party prejudices of, the North, but he can bring to the solution of the questions arising out of the military and constitutional nboli boll of slavery, a practical knowledge acquired in the experience of a lifetime in the midst of slavery. 'Understanding, far better the rela tions between master and slave than if lie had been reared in the free States, and, by Coll Be. quence, better qualified to organize a system of compensated labor, I am disposed. to entrust to him all the resulting problems. The men who did not fear in the face of a tempest of calumny and prejudice, which bore down thou sands and tens of thousands of the bravest spirits in the South, to grapple with treason ; to hazard his . own life and property and all his Personal and political hopes, and to act with those with whom he had never co-operated, will not fear to grapple with the difiieulties of the new situation. I knowthat apprehensions are entertained in some quarters that lie may be too lenient, or that he may not be willing to g 0 to the uttermost extreme on the subject of universal suffrage. To those who enter tain such fears, I would say, he cannot be disqualified for the imposition of a se vere sentence who has himself suffered the severest; nor is lie apt to startle at the bes towal of the right of suffrage upon his fellow man, WhOst) - Whole life has been a battle for the largest individual and political freedom. An drew Johnson is a practical, not e. theoreti cal statesman. In his frequent allusions to the power of tile people lie must be under stood as indicating not simply his confidence in them, but his knowledge that a nation which is periodically disturbed, or rather ex ercised and purged by popular elections, must be governed with strict deference and refer (MCC to the judgment and the interests of - the masses. A despot, whose actions were not sub jected to revision, would strike off the head of every one of his enemies, and take front or give to multitudes of men the most precious of franchises; but here, where the intelligence of the masses is as pervading as it is vigilant and jealous, that rule is the most lasting which is the most judicious. Could there be any ca lamity se vast as that the final adjustment of the great questions growing out of the war should be left to men who did not believe in the necessity for crushing out the rebellion'? Hence the superior obligation of so disposing of these intricate subjects as that they will defy intelligent scrutiny, satisfy the require ments of the immediate present, and prepare the way for the higher contingencies of the teeming future. The individual man-nutty in sist upon his peculiar opinion& They are his own, manic may proclaim thorn freely. How (Efferent with the Same individul when so lected as the custodian of the rights and in terests of others! It may shock the sensibili ties of those who contend that a political plat form should guide a great ruler; and that the rapid utterances from party hustings should bind a public servant when the diaposition of the highest interests is placed in his hands. But the chief of a people spread over do main of different Climates, divided into different populations, swayed by different opinions—political, social, and religious-such a chief, however wedded to certain fixed opinions, Ceases to be his own master when he becomes the guardian and the trustee of the rights, interests, and wel fare Of Millions of human beings. It has been said, and trulyi that power is conser vatism-not that conservatism which (rem idles before wholesome innoVation, and rejects reform because it may unsettle old abuses ; but that which does nothing in haste, which de'- liberates before it strikes, and which, once de eided, is fixed and unalterable. I know of no living statesman whose life is a better illustra tion of this quality of COINCrViItiSUI than drew Johnson. With his strong, impulgive, and daring nature, had he lived in Pennsyl vania or New York he would have led the extremest radicals ; but born the South, warring from boyhOod against intolerance and bigotry, and contending with poverty . and with ignorance, and the bitter hates and en: Tics of caste and class, lie was constrained to pause and take his reckoning, before he acted. Had he allowed:his own resentments or his own desires to control him, he would have been in a perpetual and pitiable minority. . Ile :compromised where he could not control ; and so, by degrees, but marvellously rapid and sure, because previously well deliberated, lie rose, step by step, to the proud height he now occupies. It is in this school that the present Chief Magistrate has been educated. Now we might have had what is called a better anti- Slavery man—taken, if you please, from Ban gor, Maine, or Boston., Massachusetts—ono who would have carried a strong, inexorable purpose to Washington, and enforced it with out looking to the right hand or the left in the Southern States; and in doing so might have Pleased his consistency and exhibited to pos terity the character of a statesman who dis charged his duty as he understood it, without - reference to consequences 5 but I fear such a leader would soon have been the leader of a forlorn hope ; and before the termination of a year the fortresses of civil liberty would have been reconquered, and the enemies of constitu tional freedom practically restored to the po sitions from which they have been dievenetal well on the battle-field as at the ballot-box. Note the extraordinary similarity in the character and the career of the two men, Abraham Li neoln Mid Andrew Johnson, They were nearly the same age. Johnson was born on the 29th of December, 1808 ; Lincoln, on the 12th of February, 1809. Southern men both, they were the children of hard-working and needy parents. Lincoln's biographer says : " What Robert Burns has proverbially been to the people of his native land, and to all lands, as a bard, Abraham Lincoln has become to us as a statesman and a patriot, by his intimate relations with the humbler and higher walks of life. The experiences of the toiling mil lions, whether of gladness or of sorrow, have been his experiences." Johnson's bio grapher says : "Andrew Johnson's posi tion in the community was of that char acter which naturally made him inimical to whatever would' give power and wealth to the few, at the expense of the many; and, thanks to the tuition of his wife, and to his own natural powers, he soon became known as one of the most able exponents of the views of the working men in Greenville. He talked with them, and to them, and by their influence and power succeeded in crushing a powerful aristocratic- sentiment, which had until that time ruled in the town, and had prohibited honest citizens, who labored for their daily bread, from ocovipying even the most trivial political offices." It was natural that two menwhose beginning was so similar should agree in their hatred to every form of tyranny over the mind of man. It is true they belonged to adverse political Parties, but their opinions *ere singularly alike on vital questions. Andrew Johnson, when he removed front North Carolina to Ten nessee, became the great exponent and cham pion of the liberties of the poor whites—a race nearly as much impoverished as the slaves themselves, and in many instances equally ignorant and despised. Abraham Lincoln, after he had removed from Kentucky to Indiana, and then to Illinois, soon became the leading opponent of the enslavement of the blacks. And it is noticeable that while Johnson was tight Mg the great battle of his own class in the Southwest, Lincoln was unconsciously helping him in the NorthweSta Now, in all the bitter con t ests in the slave States against what are called the Abolitionists, Andrew Johnson never sought or was assigned a proscriptive promi nence. lint when his State Constitution was to be reformed; when the basis of suffrage wits to be broadened and deepened 5 when the people were to be educated or the press to be made more free—he was sought out as the leader and the organ of the masses. Johnson and Lin coln sat together in the same Congress, from 1847 to 1849, and though they did not agree on the Mexican war and Texas, yet did they co operate on the homestead bill—a measure never abandoned by Andrew Johnson. Even when it was erowned with success, lie con tinned to watch over it. This - Incas - two showed - where 'Johnson stood on the question of emi gration. if slavery has hated any one thing more than freedom, it is the annual addition of thousands of hardy men, women, and chil dren from other lands to the bulk of our population, so essential to the redemption of those mighty expanses which, as they are covered witbdindustry and thrift, protect and push forward the hag of the Republic to the shores of distant setts, and obliterate hereto fore savage, inhospitable, and illimitable wastes. But below this question, having, if Possible, a cloier relation to yet more sacred destinies, was undoubtedly the consideration in the mind equally of Johnsen and Lincoln, that if we invited emigration to our new ter ritorics, and offered homesteads to the brave men who have fought for the liberties of the country, the day was not far off when that aristocratic system, copied and inherited from the feudal times, by which vast bodies of land were held in fee simple by a single - individual, would be broken up, and that false and ille gitimate nobility, which has subsisted upon slavery and upon the land monopoly' in the South, be succeeded by a host of farmers, own ing convenient homesteads, Willett each might till comfortably and profitably for himself and his faintly. It would seem as if it was intended that these two men should be brought closely to gether, in the last few weeks which made the One a glorious martyr and the other the chief of a great people. When the day of the second inauguration of Mr. Lincoln approached, Go vernor Johnson was at Nashville, engaged ill his efforts to reorganize Tennessee and bring her back into the Union. He telegraphed me, asking if his presence was absolutely neces sary, adding that his heart was in his work, and that he would rather aid in sending his fitiOPled COmmonwealth back to the hearth stone of the Oki - Union than to be 'Vice Presi dent of the United States. On consulting with mutual friends, and especially with Mr. Lin - coln, it WaS decided to insist upon his pre sence. How warmly the depa rted sage re garded "Andy Johnson" a hundred instances might be cited to illustrate. His knowledge of the citizen, the Senator, and the military governor was sufficient to inspire confidence; and the terrible sufferings of the hunted and Outlawed refugee made Andrew Johnson the object of his keenest sympathy. They were at RiaMOnd almost on the- same occasion, and reached Washington a few hours apart from each other—in time to hear the great gence that closed the rebellion. I am not of those who think that when two men, whom God seemed to have made almost copies or counterparts—whose lives were so alike, and whose patriotism so equal and so genial—are suddenly severed by the bolt of death, it is a dispensation to be received if not with something like satisfaction, at least with a very ready resignidion. I accept the de cree. It would be most impious to quarrel - with the inscrutable fate that permitted it, and I thank Ikaven that we have, in Andrew Johnson, a patriot so tried and so true, and so ready for the fierce emergencies of the future. DM the loss of Abraham Lincoln cannot be re placed. It was as if some great orb hail fallen from eternal space into everlasting chaos, jar ring the Whole earth, and tanking the very . `pillars of the skies to tremble. Our country is not destroyed, but he who saved it died in the effort of saving it, and can no snore be re- Placed than the mother who gives her own life for that of her offspring. And how beyond all price is the example of Abraham Lincoln It has almost revolutionized parties. Not one strong word that Mr. Lincoln said when he entered office, and maintained when lie was most violently assailed, has ever been molli fied and explained, but rather iterated and strengthened ; yet is it true that long before the assassin stole away his life, he had almost conquered antagonism and dumbfounded en vious faction itself. I may be answered that, "Success wins sometimes more than virtue ;" and this is true of vulgar minds, But Lin coln's victory was in this: he never let go the helm. Dark, thick, and tempestuous were many of the heavy hours of the past four years; but the star of hope shone steadily on the altar of his heart. The darkest month of the year 1861 was the month of April; the darkest part of the year 1865 was the middle of the month of April. The rebellion broke upon us in the first and ended in the last. The earliest martyrs to the cause of liberty gave up their lives in April, four years ago; and the most illustrious martyr of the century. gave up his life in April of 1865. We were un prepared for war in April of 1861; we were - prepared for peace in April of 1865; and when the faithful recorder shall: come to compile the materials for the illustration - of the close of this mighty . struggle, he will be overawed to note that month which commenced with such fair prospects should have so' gloomily ended. Early in the month, the first fruits of Grant's masterly strategy were gathered. On the 2d of April he announced the triumphant success of our armies, after three days' hard - fighting. On the Sit of April, he sent word to the President that be had taken Petersburg and Richmond, and was in full pursuit of Lee's retreating army. On the 6th of April Sheridan, and . 1111111pliress and Meade mid Wright reported . the continuous triumph of their conquering columns. On the oth of April General Grant telegraphed the Secretary of War that Leo had surrendered the army of Northern Vir ginia upon the terms proposed by himself, - On the 11th of April, full of gratitude to tied, forgiveness to his foes, and - loVe for all, Mr. Lincoln spoke from the windows of the Presidential mansion those words which, pre eious as his last ow earth, sound like the syl lables of inspiration as we read them now. The rejoicing thousands had called upon him the evening before, but that he - might weigh and condense his opinions he asked for time to deliberate. On the 12th we had another day of jubilee, and on the lath the night was set apart for special illumination. Never did the political capital of the nation shine more resplendently in the robes of light. It was as if Peace and Reconciliation had joined hands over the graves of the illustrious dead—as if war and woe had fled to the extremest shades. The next was Friday, the 14th of April—an other morning of happiness. Ilut what a night! As Igo back to that dreadful recollec tion, t go back to the frightful agony that made millions mourn I was in niclunond when it was announced that Mr. Lincoln had been murdered. It seemed to me as if Nature had taken a pause—as if, bet Ween the fading night of war and the dawning blushes of peace stood our farewell sacriflcc—as if having just learned to love, to revere, to depend upon him, to place our cares and - hopes in his keeping, as in a sacred repository—he should he called: away. As Elijah was swept from earth to Heaven, so a- as our deliverer taken from us. If there is a solace for such a calam ity, it is that he died without shame, in the midst of his glory, and at the very threshold of the temple of a rescued and purited public. Nothing is more wonderful than to see how the President gone, and the Presi dent hero, agree on the questions of the day—: the very issues, in fact which lin Lincoln may be said to have died in the very act of solving. Long years ago Andrew Johnson de flied the right of any State to secede front the Union. He insisted that rebellion could not destroy a State government. This doctrine, universally accepted by loyal men from the first day of the war, is now cheapened by some who would hold it in abeyance to secure an imaginary party advantage. As it is the very kernel of the nut—the very gold of the mine—in fact, the vital spirit of the Govern ment—for which our soldiers fought and our statesmen deliberated—it is worth some thing to know exactly where these two repre sentative characters stood in regard to it. Mr. Lincoln, on Tuesday evening, the 11th of April, 1865, in the last speech he ever made, thus met the question, in terms substantially identical with the words of Johnson in the benate, in 1860 and 1801, and in. the Presidential canvass of 1864: " We all agree that the seceded States, so called, are out of their proper practical rela tion with the Union ; and that the sole object of the Government, civil and military, luxe gard to those States, is to again get thorn into that proper practical relation. I believe it is not only possible, but in fact easier to do this, without deciding or Oven Considering whether these States have ever been out of the Union, than with it. "Finding themselves safely at home it would be utterly immaterial whether they had ever been abroad. Let us all join in doing the acts ne cessary to restoring the proper practical rela tions between these States and the Union ; and each forever after innocently indulge his own opinion whether, in doing the acts, he brought the States from without into the Union, or on ly gave them proper assistance, they never having been out of it. The amount of consti tuency, so to speak, on which the new Louisl and Government rests, would be more satis factory to nil, if it contained fifty, thirty, or even twenty thousand, instead of only about twelve thousand as it really does. " It is also unsatisfactory to some, that the elective franchise is not given to the colored man. I would myself prefer that it were now con /erred on the very intelligent and on those who serve our cause as soldiers. Still the question is not whether the Louisiana government, as it stands, is quite all that is desirable. The question is 'Will it be wiser to take it as it Is, and help to improve it; or to reject and dis perse it?' Can Louisiana be brought into Proper practical relation with the Union sooner by sustaining or by discarding her new State government? ), Referring to his former views the new Pre sident who succeeded Mr. Lincoln, said, in his speech to the Indiana delegation, on the 22d. of Aprli, 19a5: "Upon this idea of destroying States, any po sition has been heretofore well known, and I See no cause to change it now, and I am glad to hear its reiteration on the present occasion. Some are satisfied with the idea that States are to be lost in territorial and other divi sions; are to lose their character as States. But their life-breath has been only suspended, and it is a high constitutional Obligation tee hen., to se cure each of these States in the possession and en j(SrMent of a republican form of Government. A State may be in the Government with a pe culiar institution, and by the operation of the rebellion lose that feature; but it was a State when it went into rebellion, mid when it conies out without the institution, it is still a Stale." The question of colored suffrage, which Mr. Lincoln would give to "the very intelligent," `and "to those who serve our cause ns sol diers," is thus suet by President Johnson, in his address to the South , Carolina delegation, on Saturday last: "I will aga in say to you that slavery is gone. Its status is changed. There is no hope you can entertain of being adinitted to representation, either in the Senate or House of Representatives, till you give evi dence that yon, too, have accepted and recog nized that that institution is gone. That done, the policy adopted is not to restore the su premacy of the Government at the point of the bayonet, last by the action of the people. While this rebellion has emancipated a great many negroes, it has emancipated still more . white men. The negro in South Carolina that belonged to It man who owned front one to five hundred slaves, thought himself better than the Ivldte man who owned none. He felt the white MAWS superior. I know the position of the poor white man of the South, compelled to till the barren, sandy, and poor soil for a sub sistence. You cannot deny how he was, in your eyes, of less value than the negro. Some here in the North think they can control and exercise a greater influence over the negro than you can, though hits future must materi ally depend on you. Let us speak plainly on this subject. I, too, am a Southern man; have owned slaves, bought slaves, but never sold one. You and I understand this better; we know our friends are mistaken, and I tell you that I don't want you to have control of these negro votes against the vote of this poor white Man. I repeat, our friends here arc mistaken, as you and I know, as to where the control of that negro vote would fall. When they 001110 to talk about the elective fratielase, I say let each State judge for itself. I am for free Go vernment; for emancipation; and I am for emancipating the white man as well as the black man." It will 1)0 Seen, therefore ; that President Lin coln, while recommending that "the very in telligent" negroes, and those who haw fought for the flag, should vote. does not once propose that Congress shall take charge of the subject. All is left to the States. President Johnson takes the same ground in stronger language. He believes if Congress could confer the right of suffrage upon the South Carolina negroes, their former masters would control them ; and he emphatically declares that he does not de sire this to bcSO, used as these votes would be against the poor whites of tile State, and for the benefit of the aristocracy of the soil. I might add many other sustaining thoughts. The danger of giving to Congress the right to regulate suffrage now is that it nifty be 'used hereafter to enable a mere party ma jority to oppress a State or section. In all the so-culled seceding States, save two, the white Population exceeds the colored; and in most of them largely so. The white people of those States, with almost entire unanimity, Inc -In tensely hostile to the Principle of negro aid frage. however unreasonable or unjust this hostility may be, it is a fact which stares us in ,the face, and with which the Government is Compelled to deal. If, in reorganizing these States preparatory to their full reinstatement in the Union, the right of the negrocs to vote should boguaranteed to them by the interpo sition of the General Government, would it not have the effect of so uniting the white vo ters, in all elections; upon candidates of their own exclusive selection that the colored voters, being in the minority, would be rendered ut terly powerless? Even in the States of South Carolina and Mississippi, where the blacks are in the majority, it is by no means probable that at a first election they would he able to rally to the polls in sufficient numbers to out vote the more intelligent though less flume rolls race. It would take time for them to learn that thoy had the right to vote and even if aware of the right, they would scarcely have the intelligence necessary to its exercise in any effective manner. If the effect would. be BO to unite all white voters on the same candi dates as utterly to nullify the political power of the negroes, would the men elected under such circumstances, probably be of tile. class most favorable to the amelioration of the con dition of the colored population? These are practical considerations which it will not do to wholly ignore in our eagerness to estab lish abstract principles of right and justice. But lot us leave the question to time—to the care of a loyal Congress—to the vigi lant fidelity Of a devoted Union Presi dent, who proclaimed himself the friend of the masses of the colored race of Ten 'lessee, and will never allow them to he oppressed by their recent masters. It will not be many days _before these latter re - alize, by the best evidences, that the only way to secure the admission of their Senators and members to Congress is to adopt the amend ment of the Constitution abolishing slavery, to provide for the education of the colored population, end for the payment of colored labor by a wise and generous plan, and to re peal the odious penal codes made necessary by the accursed system of slavery. Till these things are secured, they will lie kept out of the halls of the nation's legislature. When they are secured, the American citizen of African descent will have a chance to fit him self for that sacred citizenship which ought - never to have been bestowed upon ignorant: or lazy men, white or black. Both Lincoln and Johnson agree, therefore, that there can lie no destruction of State sovereignty by se- Cession—that the question of suffrage belongs to the States, and not • to Congressand that slavery is dead by military success, by Exe cutive proclamation, by Congressional sta tute, and by the acts soon to be completed -by three-fourths of the States, ratifying the amendment of the :National Constitution for ever abolishing it. When the impulsive Romeo, eager to propi tiate his love, would have hurried the philo sophical mid tranquil Friar Laurence, who promised to aid him in his suit, the patient priest exclaims: "Wisely and slow; they stumble that run fast. Let US take the axiom and the moral to our own hearts. The Swift and dazzling panorama of war, which flashed its meteor changes be fore our astounded eyes, and achieved reforms that could not have been wrought by centuries of peace, should not tempt us into a spirit of 'fatal Imitation. The fabric of free Govern ment saved in the shock of battle will soon re settle into the regular grooves of law and Order. Institutions necessarily set aside, that treason 'might be punished, and Government be able to put forth all its energies in the struggle for its existence, will soon resume their wholesome influence. Time, reflection, system, are the essential auxiliaries. Nor, in -deed, need we be in baste. Least of all should we apprehend failure, because of present doubts and contingent amenities. Behold the catalogue of wonders on the page of the last' four years' history—wrought in the progress of HAS triumphant war for human freedom. In an age that, continued with the last genera tiOnS, scents like an age of miracles, the over throw of the rebellion was the grandest and most sublime of miracles. The malignant pro phecies of our enemies everywhere, which they are now so anxious to forget, glare upon them from the page of history, like so many reproaclfeS of their ignorance and their hatred. in war, on land and sea, in finance, in statesmanship, in diplomacy, in the inexhaustibility - of our resources, in our in, ventions, in the wondrous prosperity and comfort of the loyal people, in the deliverance of four millions of human beings from slave ry, in the disbanding of a multitudinous army, and the dismantling of a navy larger than that of any of the nations of the earth, we may find not only the material for felicitation but fora superior and a solid consolati On. There -is no lion in the path of our future so fierce as those which have been subdued and slain in the paths of the past. Let us, therefore, con fide our destiny to the constituted and con stitutional agencies of the Government, and to that benign Providence which has watched over us from the perilous beginning to the victorious close. New Fields for Enterprise. The termination of the great rebellion, and the complete restoration of peace, have given an impetus to Northern energy and capital to- ward the vast mineral fields of the Border States. Eastern capitalists have already em barked heavily in the coal and iron lands of Virginia, and other States on the Atlantic slope, as well as in Kentucky and Tennessee ; and PennsylvanianS are now turning their at tention in the same directions, This is not to be wondered at when the vast extent and cer tain' value of these mineral regions are considered. Previous to the war large investments had been made in many of the Southern States ; but owing to the dif ficulty of engaging skilled labor hi. re gions where industry was degraded by the presence of slavery, these enterprises rarely proved profitable, and either had been abandoned or were lingering out an almost hopeless existence. Now that this great evil has been obliterated, the only obstacle to the profitable working of the hidden treasures of a vast region is removed ; and the progress of many of the Southern States in mineral and manufacturing wealth will undoubtedly be most marked in the next decade of years. "The Cumberland Coal and Improvipnent Company n is now in process of organization in Philadelphia for the purpose of working va luable coal mines on the Cumberland river, in the sutheastern corner of Kentucky. This coal field is well developed, and is known to be of great value. The quality of the coal IS the very hest gbituminOnS; the quantity is almost inexhaustible, and the natural facilities for reaching the markets of the Mississippi Valley are unsurpassed. The lands in this region are heavily timbered, and all the lumber that canoe manufactured there will find a ready cash market, because of the `great demand that must exist for years, to re- P/aCe the destruction attending, the war, and meet the natural wants of a vast and rapidly improving agricultural region. Some of our most energetic business men are engaged in this enterprise, and in their hands it will not be permitted to lay quiet. The Breaking Itip of the 2d Corps The regiments of the 2d Corps, abont to leave for their homes, called on their cOnunander, Major General Humphreys, on Thursday evert• leg, et Bailey's Cross-roads, Va., to bid him good-bye. The leave-taking between the General and the brave men, whom he had so often led tO victory, was truly affecting. The General, in response to the wishes of the men, stt : 3fy FRIENDS : I •cannot express to you how grateful I. feel towards you all for this proof of your regard. 1 ant 1;a 4 '3 0 - e s i O a t t Ly n t ,4 o it with ;in 17111, 11 ,1 1 11 1 7s Y i t ; i iile n a ' sa.U; and having found yen always ready to do your duty 111 the field, I now lee! eqUany confident that, as peaceful citizens, vou will obey the laws of your coun try, and be ever ready to defend her rights. We are all glad that peace is restored, and that the North and South are again united. We did not like to light our brothers of the South, but would have the old flag restored Mill respected, that's all; and 'bravely you hay(' performed the task allotted to you. Von may now return to your homes with the proud consciousness of having done your duty ; and now I must Say that word always. sad to those who remain, and not always pleasant, as in your ease; to thoSe about to depart—Farewell: This corps ceased yesterday, (Monday) to ex. ! Lst as a separate org,anization. THE WILDERNESS BATTLE-FIELD. INTERMENT OF - THE UNBURIED DEAD THERE LIST OF PENNSYLVANIA AND OTHER SOLDIERS. The work of interring the soldiers who fell in the battles of the WildemesS and SpOttsyl- Vania Was commenced on the 12th ult. by a working party under command of Capt. J. M. broom, of the Quartermaster's Department. Two cemeteries were established-one on the Orange Courthouse road,. and the other on the Orange Courthouseilank-road 1 -and each properly enclosed. The graves and remains of about seven hundred soldiers were identified, and neat, white headboards, with the names, regiments, &c., were put up at all the graves but those of rebel soldiers. The latter were all Properly buried. It is stated that an expedi tion will be sent to Coal Harborand North Ann battle-fields to perform the saute duties there. The following is a list of those buried who belonged to Pennsylvania and New Jersey regular and colored regiments: Adams, W I, 61 liefeVer, 1) IY, G, 62 Anthony, Stephen, K, tqLyle, Chas, Res Corps Langer, Sgt J 13,,15 N .J Aelters, IN nr C, A, Si Lantermail, J 11, 11 Andrews, Saint, C, 155 N J Brady, SA,C, 61 Lynch Lt T C, 51 Berk, J S, 11, cl Little, II C, D, 149 Brady, Peter ,K, 45 Lowry, .Jas, B, 56 Buck, Corp.ll, E, 45 Lave, 11 E, 05 Blackman Jas Gr., 53 McDermitt, .Jas, A, 91 Bowman Ii 93 Moore, Ist Limit J, A, 51 Brazer, Ser,_nt P , 119 Idelgem, Corp CJ, E, Bovee, Jas, 1, 83 J Brown DavidC, 48 Morriscy, F, 48 Baldwin, Lt C, 11 NJ Moyer, SC, B, 48 Blake, P, N Martin, S S, 11, 10 N Belles, Silas, I, 143 Mayer, Moses, 143 Bodkins, hoist, A, 62 MeAtley, Sand, L, Barr, T, E, 62 .John, 0, 155 Brosan, Thos,B, U S liMott, Martin, A., 61 F Brown, Henry, ,11USI McGee Hugh, 81 Black, A, I, 14 N J Mitchell, Jas If, 110 Burke, E, 48 Miller, Sergi F, E, 95 Baler ; A, 15, 2, Pa V It C Morris, 11, 84 Brown, John, 2US S S Muvl, W 106 Barr, C W, G, Pa R V C McGuire, Lieut J A, I, (Ist rifles) 118 Brown, 11, F; 11 U S Stiller, John, G,15 Becker,..l, 11, 88 MeThompson, K, Beard, Sergt W II 9 15 N Bickerstalt, .1, 11, 150 Mathew, WA, 93 Brickhouse, 11, 2 S Mattocks, F,IUS SS Buxton, Sergt . T, 10 Pa Malone, Wm, (1, 183 VR C. Myers,. Adit E, 02 Bowen, Win,ll, 56 Alonteith,..lno, C, 01 Brockway, .Lt, .r.; 140 McConnell, .1" A, 112 Clark, OA, o'2 Martin,Geo,ll,l2P VC Clark, 8 F 62 Myer, 11, 1,0 Coxen, Win IL 62 .Racy, John; E, 50 Cochran, J E, 139 Natbans, Sand, 11.1 100 Crumb, G A, B, 139 Nettie, Chas, I, 88 Coylay, C J, 8,139 Nevegeld, Jno, A, 8 P Cortnv, Wm, 91) It I C Campbell, Sergt J, F, 5 Obile, Win, B, 93 Pa lies Otto, Isaac, A, 4S Cooper, Albert, C, 4 NJ Prouitit,y M, G, 10 Coleman, C, D, 62 Perkins, Ser:4C T J, 11,01 Cronkin, Sergt Charles; Page, Sergt . G,I, I 0 R 11, 2. IT S S Carl, C, A, 50 Pepper, Morris; K., 2 U S Chaplain, G, IV, B, OstPepoon, B, E, N rifles) P V It C Patterson, CMJ W, 102 Campbell, Sergt, F, P Mee, John, C, 45 V It C Ityerson,Col it 0,10 NJ Cotter, W A, F, 61 Roach, Jas H, 45 Cherry A l I`, 2 l' II V C Robinhold, L DI, A, 48 Cook, 11, 1., 143 Roach, Corp Ti A t F, 49 Coweas, A, 132 Reaussau,Lieut C 11, A, Clay, Lt JuoH, 14U S I 143 Dileam W 50 Bodgway, Jno C,121 Defile, Lieut 31.; J Reynolds, W, 11, al; Dully, Geo J, d,148 Rielmrdson,Corp Paid, Debruc, John J; 4N J 15 N J Door, Capt WW, li, 121 Roger, EC, N Thicket, John, .1142 Rogers, Corp W, 141 Dalton, F, A, 1411 nodes, E, 95 Davis, John C 96 Ritstan J tr 84 Delkey, Geo, C, 96 Beide, b It, A, 50 Dartlis, Edward, 15 N J Rubedean ' Color Sergt 710 n ant, Ci A, 95 Sand,. 15 N J Deacon, Cr F, C, 12 N J Ruth, Sand, 62 Davis, Eph B, C, 81 Roland, Sergt BF, A, 01 Devcrarx, Capt, 115 Smith, F, 11, al Downs, Sergt jasM, 11, Stewart, Corp A, 01 17 U S Infantry Sweney, J, 11 US - Dave. I', G, 84 Sanders, S, It 45 Ebert. Chas, E, 116 Shenan,Corp'J Li, K, 45 lige, 8., I, 48 Swarte, IL B, 45 Ensiguer, Ily H, A, 87 Snyder, 11, 0,11 Plt V C Ebert, Sergt K, K, 143 Stroud, J, G, 59 Edgerton; C, 11T SSS St Clair, AT,A, 48 Eakman, Geo G, 10 J Stoneback,Sertll,ll ,50 Estel, 11, D'o4 N Sloan, Sergt WC, 148 Ewers, Sergt E, I, 145 Sloan, Sergt W 143 Fin)ow J, A,ll U 6 I Snyder, 11 it, sr, 102 neck, as, A, 148 Southerland, FON, E, E, 50 G, 150 Foster,Capt 148, Service, Sergt Thos, F, Foster, P ,I, 431 121 Ferree, Jas DI, G . , 96 'Spangler, C, 141 Fritz, Corp Jim hll5 NJ:Smith., Albert, A, 96 Foster, Sergt, k, 53 Seiffert, 11,13, 155 Ferguson, -, 140 Shiner, Capt C, C,15 NJ Finton,.Jno G, 17U S I Stood, John, A, 96 Fulton W, PVC Session, GO, F, 139 Foram, W, F, 12PR V CI Sparks, SergtJ A, F, 119 Foster, Sergt, AG, 'Spencer, G, 1.15, (Ist rifles) "P C Sharp, John,C, 61 Gordon, COrp , l Geo W, Snyder, SO 50 14, 1 J It, 11, 45 Gains., Jos, 61 Soaper Sand, C,111502 Glenn, S, A, 45 P C Guyer Cant John AI, E, Schodder,ll 0;15 N J OY'l2l' Stab! Auer,C,2USI Gehr, C, F, OPKVC Scadden, \Y, D, 143 Gridley, L B, C, 50 Sister, J, G, 81' It V C Gross, H. M, Cr, 148 Schwartz, Lieut, Chas, Gunsatius. 11, 148 A,103 (jogger, IIE K, 53 Settling, P 3 14 S I Gunsain, Sand, C, 148 Smith, Hy, 11, IIT S Gray, Jerry, A, 51 Straw tan, Sergt C,1.55 Gray, Marshal, D, 61 Schofield, .J 1, (4, 1' V. Grant, AJ,G, 58 C • Gorman, Jas, A 76 N J Spencer, Lewis, G, 9' P Garnett, Wm, 1!,- . 1.50 RV C Graham, Robt, It, 99 Starkweathcr, J, E, 1 Hesser, Lt Col ThoS, H Rifles PRI C Ilagers'on Ist Serg,l% Schneckenberger, JM, IS, 62 A, 10 1' It V Cr John, L, 02 Staley, J . , 11, 10 PKVC Hopkins A . 3', 45 8 1111111, Dan, 13, P C Hunter, 'Win,' 1., 45 Teater, tra , s, 3: 1 129 Ilattoy,ll, F, Ali Tyler, 8 B, 2USS9 Heim, SergG, G, PRVC Toyer, ', 109 Hicks Ist Sergt N O,F, Truelitt, Ma) H P no 6 r v c Troh,II,F,IIUSI Heen, J IV, li, 48 Temple, F . 11, 1 Bat 17 Hoffman, T E, 50 U I Hock, Corp C l 0, 2 N J Tipton, BF, E,12 PR C Holmes, Sgt S 0, H; 143 Thermin, Sergt Fran- Hawley, W B, 143 els, H., 111 Harris, Cor IV 15 N J Vorheis, B S . ,1 N J /lays, 1 0 ,11, 139 Vandyke, W S, 140 Hornbergcr, Corp C, B, Chas C, C, 63 139 Weaver, J, I, 61 11-, J, 81 Wilson, Henry, F, 139 Ituutzinger, T, A, 48 Wakes, L Capt, D I 99 Hoffman. K, 45 Winters L W 18C0rp,1.,50 Hoop, AT, (lstrifles) Wieks,ll W,Sergt,ll,lB3 1' V R C Walker, Joseph, 03 Hunter, W 2 S I Walker; (1112.13 , , , Heifenback, P 7 N J Wood, Sand Lieut,F, Herron, Win D. , , 140 10 N J Horton JS C, U S l i Wallace, Henry 0, 149 , Hyde, gat B, C, 2 Bat IWalker, Capt Jos, 15 NJ 17 U S Infantry Welkinan G, 96 thump C, SPII V C [Woodung; WM, E, 9G Bineline, J H, 5P It VC Wooman, Frank, E, 94 Haldeman, R, 45 Woods, T, 11, 155 Johnson, A 11, 1. 45 Wells, Corp LT, 11,2 Johnson, T, K, Bat 17 IT I Jebb,SgtJW,l', 10N J Wiebecke, Limit Col Juddy, Geo 11, C, 4 N i Chas,2J Justice, Lt (1 N Warner,Capt C P,K, 119 Jackson, Lt b, G, 48 Westbrook, J, 1), 50 Johnson, Lt C A, 155 Woods, Lewis; 48 Jacobs, --, 1.117 S Inf Warren, Jos,ll Jarvis, C, Fll . hemp, I', Walking Chas G 11 U Kiorstead, Jos, 118 S I Sergt IV, F, .50 Woodman, Geo C, B, 2 Knuttle, Fred i 3, 48 U S S S SF,K, 7 N J Weisser, John, H, 88 Reefer,Jacob, 11, 96 Whiney, Jolla, K, 10 P livers, Geo L, M, 62 V R C Kress, Sergt G, G, 6'2 Zelsert, Lieut II 99 Karns, Jno, G, SPR V C Zeigler, Sergt i,96 Kulm,J M, 0,1 P 1t V C' NoVal Movements. f NY Y~IH:I+'LJY:i~7IIUUYWIIILY~I:LIO ~if.YYH[e;~itilil~ NAVAL OPNICEILS PRIIBUNT. Another of those scientific and interesting tests have been given this week, under the auspices of Rear Admiral Gregory, showing the terrible destructive power of nn imple= went of war which American genius has evolved during the rebellion. The various specimens of percussion and submarine shells n*Cil extensively during, the war in blowing up vessels, removing harbor and river ob struetiong, applied to torpedo steamers, etc., and designed and invented by (Adel' Engineer Wood, United States Navy, were placed on board of the United States torpedo steamer Naubue, which sailed from the navy yard on Tuesday . , and anchored below Governor's island, 'where the tests were made. The fol lowing distinguished gentlemen were on board - : Rear Admiral Gregory, president of the Chamber of Commerce.; Captain Bythcsea; of her Britannic Majesty's navy ;Captain Kich kin, engineer in Russian imperial fleet; Cap tain Diordier, of the French navy" Commo dore Ringgold, Captain 'Norden, Uhler En gineer Wood, the inventor, and ether , Shells were exploded. at the depth of fifteen feet, and one from the bow in the the usual shape of a buoyant percussion-shell of sixty pounds, raising a large column of water. Submarine shells of sixty pounds of powder were ex ploded about one quarter of a mile from the vessel, near Governor's Island, with terrible effect, stones and other substance front the bottom being thrown. up to an immense height , . The tests were most gratifying and successful, there being no failure in any case, the time eupied being but a very few minutes, clearly demonstrating the efficiency and destructive Power of these torpedoes. One of the most accomplisheil men in the British: navy, tails Bythesea, said there could be no doubt of their efficiency. Moldier - a Familles--The Contrast. 7b the Editor of The Press: Sin: One of our citizens has just called at my house and handed me $1.5 for the relief of our suffering poor. Half an hour before I had been to see a family of ten in a condition which would make the stoutest heart weep. The father, laid aside from work for eight months; the mother making button-holes in soldiers , clothes, at fire cents a COOL, to support that family, is now also laid aside by sickness, plainly brought on by the avant of proper nou rishment ; and two of the children are in bed with the same disease. This is, moreover, a real nice Christian family; and though not the children or wife of a soldier, never were funds given for the relief of the poor and needy that would meet with• a higher approval from God. I have scores of soldier's families in equal de stitution on my list, -How muchY good some Or all of the hundred thousand dollars about to be appealed for, to purchase Ford's theatre, at Washington, would do one thousand such starving families. God keeps Christian be nevolence from towing in such a channel while the cries of the starving poor are ringing in our ears. God, open the eyes of our citizens to see the wants Of poor soldiers' families, and incline their hearts to heavenly wisdom in the distribution of those Means God has given them. To 'give such an amount to Perpetuate the place, or the name of the place, the very remembrance of which sends :a two-- edged sword haggling an,l cutting through the tenderest sensibilities of a true American heart, is not, surely, the wisdom of men, much less Christian men. The name of Ford's Thea tre, change it and purge it as you nuly, will de scend to posterity as the Most evecrable.Spot in the "Laud of the noble free." - Incase acknowledge the following additional contributions: From J. A. Philadelphia. " S. A. G., Philadelphia " C. K., West Philadelphia... 500 " E. IL 8., Philadelphia, (special).— 15 00 J. E., rort Kennedy, Pa 10 00 CITY' PASTOR, 1811 Lombartl street. A snbseription is being raised at Constktn tine, to erect a monument to Napoleon at the most distant point reached by bun in the des ert, in his late journey. The spot line already been marled by a heap of stones, CITY ITJU)IS THE BEET FITTINO billar OF Tut ,thpi, mproved Pattern Shirt,” mad c . Arrison, at the old stand, N 0,,, Fun , " Sixth street. Work done by hand manner, and 'warranted to give His stock of Gentlemen's cannot be surpassed. Prices moderat: T- m: c m - NI:$.1; SuN Ilnm , liniule UarY,%sChestnut to every lady leaving the city for : t 't or sca-shore. Prices moderate. of straw goods selling off below eo4C" VISITORS TO Tat SEA-SHORE Sholll,l themselves with BATHING Dans,„ JOHN C• A r No'. 1 and 3 North 6i xth FounTrt ou JULY.—Thp Fourth” will be celebrated w ; th t ; , ! spirit the present year. There %%A pendence, Victory, and trnion sort of a triune festival. We our readers to enjoy theniseivo",:' , / : heart's content, have a good thits and purchase their wearing appar,•! Brown Stone Clothing Nan of Willson, No. 602 and 805 °What Sixth, if they would be at once and Comfortable. T nE ,sw.AN pours out her. weetest son dying. In like manner, the fragrance loins "Night-Blooming litmus , ' grow., ; exquisite us it beeealleS fainter. Thi: the ease with the ordinary, extrae:, handkerchief, Their original scent 5q,”,,, t into a decidedly repulsive odor. where, HUNTER'S lODINE SARSAPARILLA, IA a for disases of the blood tool shin. HUNTER'S lODINE SARSAPARILLA, p(, cures Scrofula, Tetter and ErySlllOlll.S. HUNTER'S. lODINE SARSAPARILLA, CIID! ning Sore, of every kind. HVNTER'S lODINE SARSAPARILLA 1: th, remedy for the comp/WM:I of eliVflnn-.: lowing improper nouriolunent and fever. BrIcTER'S lonrt.e SARSAPATZILTA cures after all other means had faUed, :NN. printed. testimony. HVICTEIVS lODINE SA RSA P A RTL LA, the be. , ; reedy for the Complaints of Fmnaleic firieriin , s lODINE SAI AP kitILLA.-111111q1 in this city attest its value. MINTER'S TODIN/1 SA.II;S4PA ta. trial is sufficient to convince may' ou t or, truthfulness of - these assertions. Solt hy M. Wilson, No. WS Market street, PLiln. J. E. BEHIND THOSE ROSEATE - GATES—the i, girlhood—there should be a fragrant elegantly furnished with ivory and drop metaphor. Young ladies, you shoui.lk,„ your teeth and gums in perfect oraer, hope in after-life to enjoy the sound set of denials and a sweet Inel, What will enable you to do this 1 yep Nothing but Fragrant Sozodont, we reply, jy4-tilths3t A RAID.—Now comes the season of Mem,' nuisance intolerable. Let everylin,l 3 - then, that Dateher's Lightning Fly-liiho r utterly annihilate them. Use it, and r, sweetly and. seeurely through the Sllllll4. bent. Sold by druggists mid dealers ( 2 ,11. 7 .1 1020-th wiltl Four: STECK & Co.'s PIANO'S (HMO 11 , ;( 91;: k sale at bargains. These pianos have helm 114.! during the past winter and sprin g enuee:!, at public halls, and in private house;, show no marks of use. Price 4;200 less 11 4 new ones of same style, though all new have been reduced $7.5. J. E. Cion.n, jc'l.3Gt Seventh and Chestnut stryek CRAMPS, COLIC, CROLEI3A, Summer COI aplai:. Dysentery, Diarrhoea, and all affections of ,:, bowels arc cured promptly and offeetually , 4 Dr. D. Jayne's Carminative Balsam, Being Dl , l. sant to the taste, it is readily taken by chi!. pi , and, having maintained its popularity fur ,t -thirty years, the proprietors confidently Commend it as a stun (lard household nun.* Prepared only at No, 242 Chestnut street. WE INVITE the public to examine Moo , graphs of President Lincoln, in Crayon, 4i4 ink, rind Oil, before purchasing elsewhere. 3e`2. tit* HEINFIZEY. at, Co., 82.2 Arch Area ARRIVALS AT THE HOTELS. The Con A II Newton, liteliniOnti J Bruce, New York T Radford, Richmond Hunt, Richmond E Hraf & wife J H Dowell & wf, Va A Knox, Washington A W Lock ev, Ithihmond S 71L Whitc,V S A W LMan, 'Nhitke W Shenk, Lane:L-40r N Col J L :kidder, IleulE7 Bev A G Einuniblaill,l{ E 8 Grubb, Burlin,Tha, T V Tracy, New York Miss A Tiaey. New Yei Miss 0 Tracy. New lea Mast 'Tracy. New Y•ak UOl. A I larasul I v. I 'al D Alio Diarati,l, BrioNya J E Beale, liruelilyu A Simi:ton, tlrwtland 3liss F Mae Ilia nalq, Si' .1111:5,>C Mae Dlarnthl, NI: 311ss Darns, Del Lt Cot H itotloy, U S A J Worth E da, G W bins, Trenton B Trenton T E Beatty, Trenton I"rownsend,New York J I) Cook, New York 1Y Dings, t Louis F Chase C WI. Maine Miss Chase. Maine Miss Libby, 'Alain° II King, NeNV York H Ham, Mt J ov DB Short, Na...hvinv T 11 Larkin, Jr, St lad Jr A Sto wart Miss Clmeelitil, 3lalno Mrs DI A McGrath. Ky Miss B McGrath, Ky Miss .7 ra McGt K h, y 7,; G T Cottrell. WISIIIngtOa E Me Manus, Baltimore A 0 Cummins, Bawling It Potts. U W Shew, California A /3rlnkler, Monplo4 Mrs W C Dziwpult,'lvmt E Guy, Memphis J H Mount, 2.f rTr York 1{ Sprague, few Vo; Tut;l6. :Nassau _ . A l) Westrall & la. N J W Ii lI Pullen,N P ulcnitugXs & F S Worth, Brooklyn F P Norton, Brooklyn C J I/tinning, Brooklyn 11 J llohnes, - Brooklyn Miss A Holmes. Ilroiiklyn C H Lonnalntry,Dlaward S T Scott. Lotilst ills 11)r It C Stiles, W Chester C li Parson s,Washlngton Jas Gordan, Washington Mrs iiheppard, Knoxville W W •Waahn J B Eastman, Baltimore W Cochran. 011 City TB Morey. Washington W J Bond & In. X York Coyle, Washington 1% Merigles, New yortc. C Chambers The G DR Williams, PClllla. II F Lougaker,Balthnore' Frank Brooker, Bolt John L Martha, Penna. W L Jones, Harrisburg U 0 Broomall & wf, 1111*.IM Brogman, Pennit J It Robinson. Franklin Chas H Patton, Franklin W Elliott, Harrisburg Chas L Morrow, Conti Lt J L Morris & to, N Y Chas Rogge, Baltimore W F Hutchinson, U S ti Thos H Foreman M G Smith. New. Jersey Chas It Steinmetz, Pa. G T Blair, New York B Grant & son, Erie Pa .) Bamhiton , Carlisle, Pa B Collins, Fort Monroe It De Vetoer, N 13 Alfred Melberg, U S A T L (Mien, New Jersey W MeClamont J M Sellers. New York J E Black. Washington Capt T A Snyder, 1 Capt W A Pilekett • C N Dobbs & wf, Y ]tJ Pritchard, Boston S M Mount, New York Mr & Mrs Simpson, Pa W 0 Kershaw. Newport It J Stroud. Albany trawl. 1W G Geary, Richmond John 0 Leary - . Wash A Ciark, Wa - shington Chas W Hunt, lialtimora J K Wolcott, Norfolk,Va W Harrison. Boston 1) IS Campbell, Boston R F Young, New York T L Bowman, Baltimore Thus If Green. WM'snorl James IluMngtOlh Y tr-L ICouttleky O It Franklin, Kentucky Jos Dorris, .r.iorristowil S Shively, Harrisburg. Jas 1' Newell, Franklin it (+ Thrift Maryland W 1) Robbins Lt ln. rittst Mrs Harcourt & Ch. W Vs John King. New York W C David, lialtiniure It B Deane Troy G Markle. Indhinapolk numrord. New Jersey M M. Cook, NIH Jersey A Swartz. McYVyto" , . F Bennett, U A. - 11 - II Hastings, Ps G SIIIIIIIOIIS. Delaware. G Weidman. Lebanon HAllny. Delaware J Alleti & son, Delaware Mr Mrs Brown, :t.").' Or Freenian,_N-I,IY York B Watson. Delaware. 11 Stark, Lancaster CO BC Brook, ra C liciatun, P C Orant, P Johnston, Wash R Shlllingsford, Wash J dt liarcomrt, West Va The American. A M Halberstadt, 117 S Tilos U S S Jas Evans, Dover, Del Chas Sudier, Now York. J Stephens, New York E J eek, New York Mrs Paine Mrs U emit* C ot EC Sl.4tegettbery. Del %1)A n Melt & lal. N Y J F & tsii Y H Holbroek & la, N Y N H Holbrocit & Y W K Barker &Bath John A Leslie, U S A itobt C Stover, Ps Capt G P Mason. U S Limit H Potte, U S Al 1 Iteville, New York S Lamb, New York II Kaufman, Schuylkill eel 1)l) Devlin, New York : E Thomas & la, N.J T Hammersley, Del Lleut Webber, Pa A S Richmond, Wash W 11 Hopkins, Minersv Miss Ida Shut, N delta S Woolson. LT S C Osterloh & wt, 1J S N B F Cutter, Boston Dant E N York Jos 11 Outerbrbige, N Y A i 4 Brown, Wilm, .1 M Barnes. N J M Sumner, Mass ;No Anderson, Baltimore Ethyl` Peck, Baltimore E IC Banks, Mass B Armstrong, Chicago K Behuyler, Burlington John M Hale. Philipsburg W W Hale, Phllipslmrg Jos F Essex Jr, Tenn tt A Kingly), Harrisburg Col A W Bachman, Pa S Dears. Washington S H l ckeY & da,Oxford,Pa SIMP4s- E 13 13011, Bell's Mills Jos Stewart. Mills L Ebangit, Bell's Mills It Clark, M D. Pa T Leidy, Memphis R 11 Westbrook. N' Mrs Chester, Wasblogtota H Aamos, Ohio John A ihmt, Altoona, A Crooh, WlA.rre A I) Jones. Wilk, 41ArrU. Miss M M Long. Pa J .S Borer, Mechanicsburg B Gfsh, Elizabethtown J Keener, Elizabethtown Beeseman. N Jet..l 'l' Ch Whitaker as M Riley, N.l a rseT la Mrs M A Bellls, ,„ B F (lonia St The Myr David Lawson, Pa ECE2=I Ili S 1' Triplett, Virginia W 6 ray, Virginia Win U. Bailey, Virginia 1) Poole, Alabama J G Butler, U S A IV Braal & WI, Baltimore C EaStoll . . A Brandt, Parkersburg J Greentree, Baltimore K I. Mood, Brookville G N Smith, Baltimore J J Turper, Union City Mrs Milliken .Mss , Lewistown ss Emily 3111 liken, Pn p Long & da. ra W IL Divot, Landlsburg Dr !V Livingston, N Y It W Reynolds, Del MMI=M The H Finch, Brooklyn N S N (' DI tt , nter, 'Maryland D Batellit_; Maryland A F Bates, Nashville J C BeLatighlln, Penna .11V Ryan, .0 S A J °MI Thomas, Indiana T .1 first, St Paul J li first, Bath, Pa James Garter,Tantagus E M Denham, Mass A S rerklus, Mass W 11 Roberts St rd. I'a Miss Roberts., M Chunk F Collllta, Mattel) Cheek 1) Terry, U S A Mrs Terry, W 34014101) M Allen, W ;wee a eo. 1) 1) 1111 dine, N Jersey es Union. The Stout fl 'Mader, Nazareth, Pit W Kaufman, Pittsburg J MeCay, U S A Dr S.O bultzbach, N B Hennyius, 11 S Nl li Roehe New York T J Seott', Maryland 0 A Maxwell • J L Pugh 0 A lthllig, Jr, N J T Smith J L Lllls & la, Reading U Hill, Maryland F. J Power, Norristown A Townsend, Penna MEM II Suit:dwell, Penna E P Cainll. retina J Cooper it. la. Penns !J Percival & we, N Y J Canimans. Perna JGltuteiv. New York It Custer, Perrysville hf SJeferiem, Penna It L McClellan. l'enna L St room, Penmt F StoeY Pi II n inCioon, t,ewiul , urg P 73 (*rutin', all (ttlV. Wu The COI Frank Eltonhead, N E F Stone, New Jcrsey J I.ltottnee mere's'. Geo Fisher, Chester ea D Missitner.Clwslereo W II Richardson, (hes ea issate Hanson, Chester cu H hD John oug . oylestowa Durum' Wnit" , 3 Connor, A ilnt, Del David Dunn, I [um inVo'' M calm llougwA ti lassylna Cant C Twining, Penns. Saint Wright V Chester \V Levfs. 'V Chester Arthur Quinn, Bucks ea J E Corcoran, Buck' " C W Stewart, Laness'rea A Beckett, New Jersev L P nononerlee, Plitsb'g V Wilson, Jr,Rada J ta.roltoit,MAryland J A ltrattoli, Chester ee. Vrodk W LCNViS, tr S A W C Oxford Pa K A Akin, Lexington, r 1' Borper, Slransburg lecktely, ' Pottstown Jas . hole, Chester en S Ferree & la, Chester A it Sham Richmond, Vs 1) Cady, Rome, RA' The Bal (1 W MK:lads, Bath, Pa W Prter, TroTalertunit (Inrauss Bath, Pa F Shock, U S A W Ii Buiean, 11 S A S Engelman, U S A Peter II Yoder, USA Josiah Falstitelt, U S A %v Rohs, S A J A Berehnn. U S A U F Dletlenderfer. U S A Chas A Shuman, U S A - w Dern, ii A d Eagle. John J k. QuAkuPtown A R. Pa 1' W Ilektinger. U S iiihn Knobler, M C Murk Bugh McGee, M Chunk I Siegfried, Eit.ii4sll P Ii Wenyer,Wilkeshar ro iliram .1 Wilt. I 4 'W J Slenpy,WlMed , F Weidner, Lehigh eo B F PeniOntrg J Martiu, & la, Del Co. The N IT W 3lort,ll,litootul A Aleugrantey, Newport II Hamlin & wt, Del Kenyon, Prov, It 1 I) F Crew, New York Deo CI Witter New York • Chu Strat,ford, Brown. St 1.011(1 , 4mi% Wnt Neete, Seralthm Wm Male. Jr, Sermittoll John N icholas, Scrantoll.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers