gi j e prtzs. ;WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1865 ifif - We can take no notice of anonymous COMMU- Slications. We do not return rejected manuscripts. Aar- Voluntary correspondence is solicited from all 'parts of the world, and especially from our different 4nilltary and naval departments. When used, it nald for. will TEMPORA rIITAN'FITR! 1f as was said, eeinturies ago, by a re• speetable old classic, " the times are changed, and we suffer change with them," assuredly that great trans-Atlantic organ, the Times itself, has also passed through remarkable mutation. We freely confess that it did not enter into our expectation or belief that this famous journal, whose -talent, wealth, and audacity have made it a power, lime given it a world-wide influ ence, ha - ve ffen egablighed it as an alltllo - particularly whore the English language is spoken and read,would or couldhave taken a fair view and made a just estimate of the trial at Washington, which ended in the conviction of the parties charged -with being accessories with WILKES BOOTH, in the base attempt to murder President larteout and other eminent members of the Execu tive Administration of the United States. The Times, on July 17th, having announced the COnviCtion of these criminals, com mented on their sentence with unusual good sense. `"Justice has before this been executed on the chief accomplices of BOOTH, the assassin of President LINCOLN." Thus the Times opens, and goes on to say : They have been convicted at last by a Court-martial, after a trial so protracted as to exhaust the patience of the American public. "Whatever may be alleged against the Jurisdic tion of this military commission, its proceed ings were certainly not too summary, for they lasted over many weeks, and are said to be ernbodied in four - thOueand three hundred l'aigeS of tedious manuscript. No less than three hundred and sixty-one witnesses were examined, and it is to the credit of the Gorern meta that the expenses of those called for the de fence hare been defrayed out of the public funds. Of course, until the evidence ispublished, we can form no opinion upon the fairness of the 'Verdict, but nothing that has yet transpired a!- fords any reason for impugning it. It was hard ly doubted, we believe, by any competent per .son in America, that the charge of conspiracy had bet% brought home to all the pl . - isomers ; the question was rather as to the various degrees of their guilt, and the proper apportionment of ptudshment." The same authority proceeds to say that, with President JOHNSON'S approval, the convicted criminals had been divided into three classes: the first including PAYNE, HAROLD, ATZEROTT, and Mrs. &MATT, to be executed. Three others (MUDD, AR NOLD, and O'LACGIELIN,) to be impri soned for life, with hard Tabor; and SrAriior.En to have penal servitude in the Albany Penitentiary for six years. "Against the severity of these aellieHeM not a word can be said," is the grave de -claration of the Times, which adds : " The Zives of BOOTH and his fellow-conspirators sces.e moat justly forfeited. Human judges can recognize no excuse for assassination. tyrannicide can ever be justified (IS an ap peal to a higher law, it must be justified be fore a higher tribunal than. any earthly judgment seat." Thus no excuse is offered for the female criminal. No plea for her pardon is put in on the ground that she was a woman. The broad fact that she had unsexed herself by becoming a conspirator to murder the President and several of the members of his Government alone is taken into consideration; and the opi nion of the great newspaper of England, congratulation that " j ustice has been executed on the chief accomplices of BOOTH, the assassin of President LIN COLN," may be accepted as the opinion of England upon the crime and the criminals, the trial and the punishment. There is not any expression of sickly sentimentality, but an honest, bold out-speaking, which has its promptings in a plain sense of justice. In connection with this subject, or, more Properly, with the great crime itself, we have published numerous expressions of opinion from various foreign countries. The latest we have seen has reached us froin Calcutta, which is so distant' that its earlier arrival could scarcely have been expected. It appeared in a letter from Calcutta, published in The Times of July 18th, and informs us that the Bengal Chamber of Commerce, the justices of the peace who form the municipality of Cal cutta, and the American residents, had all separately passed resolutions expressing, in the words of the Chamber, "The horror - with which they, in common with all ranks and classes of Her Majesty's subjects, view the assassination of the late Mr. Lincoln; President of the United States of America; the deep sympathy) which they feel for the people of that country under the great national calamity which this event has brought upon them; and their earnest hope that the war from which they have suffered so severely niey soon be brought to a close, and be followed by peace, lasting and prosperous?, In these sentiments, so kindly and cor dially- expressed, there surely is that "touch of Nature," which the great poet tells us 4 ' makes the whole world kin." OUR MERCANTILE MARINE. The assistance rendered by the ship builders and ship-ow - ners of Great Britain to the parties engaged in fitting out pirati cal cruisers against our commerce, served a double purpose ; it gave aid and comfort to the rebellion, and it helped to cripple and destroy our noble mercantile marine. While the Sumpter, Alabama, Rappahan nock, Shenandoah, &c., were nominally employed solely to advance the interests of the Confederacy, they were really engaged in serving the interests of British ship -owners by making the vessels of their great American rivals too unsafe to be entrusted with the carrying trade of the world. It was no mere sentiment or sympathy for the South that prompted the shameless violation of the British neutrality, laws, but a desire to advance British ship : . ping interests in the most infamous, disgraceful, and dishonorable manner, Every pirate fitted out in an English port, to war upon American commerce, contri buted directly to swell the premiums for -war risks on American vessels, and thus to give foreign ships an immense advantage in securing freights. If our losses had been confined to the comparatively few ships that were captured or destroyed by the pi- Tates, they would have been comparatively slight ; but, as the risk of capture had to be encountered by all our vessels, immense sums were spent for insurance, and many of our best ships found safety only under the flags of other nations. It is sup Posed that by the sales and transfers thus ren dered necessary we have lost one thousand vessels and nearly half a million of ton . nage. The New York Dilpune gives a list of 608 vessels, with a tonnage of 328,605, sold to sail under the British flag alone, in n period Of about eighteen months, and it estimates that several hundred more were sold or transferred during the same period to citizens of Brazil, Spain, Italy, and other minor powers. The numerous blockade-runners captured by our navy form only a partial offset to - this fearful list, in a national point of vieW, and as an aid in swelling American ton-% nage ; but they were valuable enough to . make their owners severe sufferers in this illicit modern war upon American coin- Merce. Indirectly, their desperate scheme • has, in one of its ramifications, recoiled. Though the damage they disponorably and interests secured inflicted upon our shipping secured temporary profits and advantages, those who invested such ill-gotten gains in blockade-breaking enterprises, eventual ly lost a large share of their prOfits by. the vigilance of our cruisers. How the, ac count of all the transactions connected with British shipping interests, as affected by the rebellion, if footed up in dollars and cents, -or pounds, shillings, and pence, would stand, Will probably never be known. But the profits have been" materially lessened by the numerous captures made by our gallant navy, in a strictly honorable and legitimate manner, of ships caught in the act of vio fisting our laws and in yielding direct aid to the Confederacy. And it will not be easy ior America to forget or to forgive the men who, in the hour of our National peril, formed what was virtually an alliance, de . fensive and offensive, with our dOniestic - foes, and who supplied them withguns, can non, munitions of war; elothing,and piratical ahii4,!*ith.the UndersttMOlng that:they, in turn, should zealously endeavor to destroy our mercantile marine, so that " Brittania " might once mere "rule *6: waves." WEST;-POINT.' . . The Board of : Visitors, - appointed to at tend the recent annual exffinination of the United States Military Academy, at West Point, have recommended several important changes, among which are the following: That the Corps of Cadets should gradually be increased to four hundred ; and that the age of admission should be extended to twenty-four years, in the ease of applicants who have spent two _years in our armies during the late war; that the standard of admission should be raised by adding pro ficiency in grammar, geography, and Ameri can history, to the present requirements; that no student under seventeen, or more than twenty-two years of age (with the exception given above,) should be re ceived ; that legislative provision should be made for competitive examinations of applicants for cadetship in the States or districts in which they reside ; that the practice of "hazing," which is the West Point type of the " fagging " that pre vails in English schools, be broken up, and that a first assistant professor of the Spanish language be provided for. Whatever may be the faults or failures of our great military academy, some of its graduates have re cently rendered such vitally important ser vice that the nation will gladly assist in ex tending the sphere of its usefulness, and in educating within its portals new generations of young heroes who are to lead the future armies of the Republic. ' I 0 DAV SN i 1 The friends Of JEFFERSOIsT DAVIS, in the city of New York, taking broad issue with Mr. Justice JAMES Tnomreox, of this State, who decides that the rebellion is at an end, have held quite a respectable rebel meeting in support of their imprisOned leader, and are evidently preparing to make a neW demonstration in favor of "the indepen dence of the South." See the account from the New 'York Evening Post of yesterday. THE BRITISH Snip -owls - Ens having done their best, during the rebellion, to destroy our shipping interests, and to prevent us front doing even the bulk of our own car rying trade, now, since the war is over, a systematic attempt is being made by British manufacturers to destroy our -manufactur ing establishments, by inducing usto adopt a free-trade policy. If we would relapse into a purely agricultural and mining na. tion, and supply England with gold and silver, grain, provisions, and cotton, taking in exchange for our vast treasures of wealth, manufactures of all kinds brought here in foreian ships, and allowing foreign merchants to fix the prices alike of our imports and ex ports, we would please our English cousins exactly. Year by year they would grow richer and richer, on the profits of such a traffic, and we would degenerate into a state of hopeless and helpless dependency upon them. We could devise no better system than this to fasten a new British yoke upon our necks, which, in the end, would become as galling and oppressive as the one our an cestors threw off by the Revolution of 1776. The late war for the Union showed hOW invaluable the manufactming genius of the North was in a military as well as in an in dustrial and financial aspect ; and this les son, added to the numerous proofs of the covert hostility of European nations, will make the American people more anxious now than ever to secure an independent position by enabling our own citizens to supply, as far as possible, all our own wants. Death of Richard ilildreth, the Ma torian. The following letter from Mr. Hunter, de& ing Secretary of State, conveys the sorrowful intelligence of the death of Richard Hildreth, the well-known author and historian of the United States: "DEPARTMENT or STATE, WASIUNGTON, 2S, 1865. "Hon. Chas. Sumner, Z.T.S. Senator, Boston,Mass. : " SIR: It is my painful duty to inform you that this Department has received intelligence froln Mr. T. Bigelow Lawrence, United States Consul General at Florence, of the death, on the morning of the 11th instant, in that city, of Richard Hildreth, Esq., late United States Con- - sul at Trieste. _ 14 I will thank you to eonnuunicate this sad intelligence to the friends of the deceased. No further information regarding theynelancholy event has been received at the Department. " I have the honor to be, sir, "Your obedient servant, "W. HUNTER, "Acting Secretary." The event was not uneXpeeted, as Mr. HR• dreth had long been in enfeebled health but the blow will lie felt none the less severely. - Richard Ilildreth was born at Deerfield, on the 28th of June,lBo7, and was graduated at Durward College, in 1829. He began the study of the law at Newhuryport, and was admitted to the Suffolk county bar in 1830. He began practice immediately at Newburyport, remov ing subsequently to Boston. His literary tastes began to manifest them selves at an early period. While pursuing his studies he was a contributor to various maga zines throughout the country - . His legal .ca reer was brief. He had transferred his resi dence to Boston, when it was determined to establish the Boston Atlas, and Mr. Hildreth was secured as an editor of that journal, which was started in July,lsll. 111 health compelled Lim to resign that position in October 1834, and he passed a year and a half on a planta• tion in Florida, where he wrote his anti-sla, very novel, "Archy Moore," which was exten sively sold, and afterward republished in this country, and again in England. He resumed his connection with the Atias in May, 1835, and until .ICovember, 1539, was its Washington cor respondent. At this time he took an active interest in polities, and sustained the leading measures of the Whig party. About the time of President Harrison's ad ministration-appeared Mr. Hildreth's work on "Despotism in America." The enbrmities of the slaveholding power, the outrages perpe trated under its auspices, such as to systema. tize robbery Of the United States mail with the approval 01 the General Government, the atrocities perpetrated upon individuals, and the riots ii, Northern cities at the instigation of Southern leaders, were all rebuked. His health again giving way, he left this country and resided for three years in the province of Demarara, British Guiana. The great work of his life, the "History of the United States," was next undertaken; and the first three volumes appeared in 1849, covering the period extendingfrom the dis • covery of the continent of America to the organization of the Government under the Federal Constitution ; the next three volumes, extending from that period till the end of the sixteenth Congress, in 1821. The whole work was then revised by him and published in a new edition in 1855. He published a volume, carefully collated from .Lord Campbell's Lives of the Chief jus tices of England. It has the title Of "Atro cious Judges ; Lives of Judges Infamous as Tools of Tyrants and Instruments of Oppres sion?, In this volume the circumstances of the Williamson case were set forth with for cible comments. . - At the accession of President Lincoln he was appointed Consul to Trieste, in the Austri an dominions,and held this post at the time of his death. Mr. Hildretli was fifty-eight 'years of age. The Celebration of the Fourth of July in Geneva, Switzerland. A LETTER FROM GENERAL AVCLELLAN. The Americana at Geneva, Switzerland, celebrated the Fourth of duly by a dinner, and an excursion on the lake. General McClellan haVing been invited, sent the following letter to the committee : HOTEL BYRON, LAICE GENEVA, Tuesday, July 4,1865. Mr DEAR Sin: I have received your very polite invitation, on behalf of the citizens of the United States of America, who are in Ge neva, to Mrs. McClellan and myself, to join them at dinner to-day. I regret that it will, not be in our power to do ourselves the pleasure of meeting with you in the celebration of this most interesting anni versary of the most sacred day in the Ameri can calendar. Although I cannot meet you in person, I hope that you will permit me to ex press the intense joy and pride with which, in common with all Americana , I look upon the recent glorious successcsof ourgallant armies under Grant and Sherman. As these victories have 'finally crushed the armed opposition to the General Government, and have brought back the whole of the na tional domain under the folds of our flag, I - *rust that this anniversary of our nation's birth-day will be the opening of a new era in our history—When brotherly love will again prevail between,the people of the once con tending sections—when all the causes- of the I ate war shall have disappeared—when the idea of secession shall be regarded as a thing en tirely of the past, never again to be revived, and during which we shall become a stronger, snore united, and more prosperous nation than 7e..i. before. • -. I roost Sincerely unite with you in the feel ings of sorrow and indignation which have been so universally expressed for the Coward ly murder which deprived the country of its Chief Magistrate, and in the desire to afford the most loyal ;support to his successor. I trust, too, that you will unite with nte in the hope that, since we have completelyvindicated our national strength and military honor by tile entire defeat and ruin of our late enemies Our. people will pursue a magnanimous and ' merciful course towards a fallen foe—one that will tend to soften the bitter feelings inevita bly caused by a long and earnest war—and to . restore the confidence and kind feeling . that should exist between those who owe allegiance to . the same Government and belong to the same people, ,B eg ging that. you win Convey to the com mittee and to the gentlemen they represent, My sincere thanks for their very courteous in vitation, I am, -my dear sir, very truly and re spectfully yours, Gkollek B. MCCLIMLAN. pHs JOY or THE PICOPLB AT Tint entenRATION. The New York Times , correspondent, after describing the dinner given, says When the dinner was finished the guests em barked on the steamer . William Tell, which was waiting for them at the quay, in front of die hotel, and steamed away down Lake Le man. We Americans abroad do not know whether the moon shone that night on Monadnock, ltoStOn harbor, and Lake Michigan; lint we do know that the blu&lights on the .bows. ,the iimillaunie Tell :burned Pale in the eilver eine= of Lake Leman, and that 'Mont Diane bare hip diadem of anew in a silver light, as , brigbt'att - fancy words could paint it ; and the sail 491111 the lake drew people together with a rapidity and closeness nearly allied to spiritual affini ty. Indeed, aro' have reeclited several confi dential disclosures that the:ot.eyage would be the cause of seYeralotbera Valle future. As the vessel came around to return to Ge am; she commenced burning_ blue and rod lights and throwing uri rockets. Presently the guests caught sight of-answering rockets from the town. Then they saw one villa after-an other illuminated. As the 'boat reached the harbor it was found that most of the largo_ hotels fronting the lake had been ; illuminated in sympathy with the occasion, and that the quays. the bridges, and the houses were crowd ed with thousands of peOplei:' Then it was we felt that we were in a re public, and, in the words of one of the Swiss speakers at the table, that the hearts of re publics beat with one pulse. As the boat reached the quay, the last rocket from shore answered the last one from the boat. The crowd divided so as to form a narrow passage to the hotel, and, amid cheers from the people and the music of the band, the celebration ended. TEXAS PAPERS—No. 2 NATLIDAL DIVISIONS The State is naturally diVided into six great sections, not marked oir by distinct dividing lines, but gradually running into each other, and imperepptihlyaliding from the one to the other. Still, each one, after passing its neu tral" or rather, mutual grounds—its mixed bOrderS, spreading out into 'a great seetion clearly distinctive urnd individual They arc the sugar and cotton lands ; the cotton and corn lands; the corn and grain lands; the grain and grazing lands; the _. grazing and waste lands, and the sterile wastes. PRODUCTS And upon each of these divisions are, or May be grown, all the trees, shrubs, flowers, grasses, grains, fruits, and vegetables distinc tively peculiar to their corresponding . lands iu other parts of the world. For instance, upon the sugar and cotton lands grow the wild cane brakes, the large magnolia, the pomegranate orange, and fig. Upon the cotton and corn lands the sweet potato, peach, and persim mon. Upon the grain lends the peach, apple, and potato. Upon the stock lands the mesquit, cattus, and great prickly pear. And upon the unwatered plains, or waste lands the stunted shrubs and scattered reedy grasses peculiar to such lands everywhere, while over the Whole, excepting the barren plains, grape vines are common, and neatly all garden vegetables are grown. OTHER DIVISIONS The State is also naturally divided into the flat or coast level ; the rolling, the mountain- MIS Or hilly, and the high plateau country. Again, into the bottoms and the uplands, and the prairie and timbered lands. The coast level lies along its entire gulf coast, from the Sabine to the Rio Grande, a dis tance of some four hundred miles ; being al most upon the gulf level, and scarcely broken for the whole distance; and extending back inland for different distances, a good deal de pending upon the curvature Of the Coastline, in some places but few miles, in others sixty or seventy and perhaps still more. Then the rolling lands are reached and continue in in terspersed prairie and timber, crossed also by a wide belt of sandy post oaks (in some places any miles wide, as upon the road between Washington and Austin,) till the abrupt, mountainous., or billy, country is reached, be hind which and far away are the elevated pia, teen lands of the Llano Estacado, or staked plains, bordering New Alexia°. GOINO WEST The traveller going west from Galveston would first strike the hilly country, with its crags and gorges, and cedar-brakes, fitted mostly for sheep walks and goat ranges, just in the rear of the city of Austin, and in reach ing them he will have passed over almost two hundred miles of level and rolling country, of which the rolling is two-third. One hundred and thirty of the counties of Texas lie entirely east of the 23d degree of west longitude, with only three west; and yet more than a third of her territory lies west of that line. These counties, however, embrace by far the greater portion of the State that is really inhabitable; and within their limits are comprised the several natural divisions I have named, even to a portion of its sterile plains. DOWN THE WBSTEEN COUNTIES A traveller, well mounted, starting front the Red river, and riding down the western line of the western counties in a direct line south to the Rio Grande, will find fifteen hard days ride in making the trip; and will only seldom touch civilization upon the journey; a lucky hit, in fact, if he- sleeps under roof a single night, or finds either bread or meat by the way. On his journey he will ford or swim the head waters of the Brazos, the Colorado, and the nieces, while all the other great rivers of the State (excepting one, the Pecos,) the Sabine, the Trinity, the Oruadalo . upe, the San Antonio, and the Arkansas, with their hundreds of tri butaries, some of which are theMselVeS long and important rivers, he will entirely head travelling far west of all their head waters; and yet, still west of his line of travel lies a third of the territory of the State; and east six hundred miles of the Brazos lie between it and the Gulf; and be will have crossed the. great Mexican road about midway between Fulton, near which it enters the State, and EL Paso, where it leaves it. Along the northern end of his ride he will find land that by and by "Will add its annual treasures of corn and grain to the agricultural wealth of the State; but through all the Southern half, he will only look upon a country forever destined to the restless tramp of cattle, and from whose wild plains shall yet he gathered the beeves with which to supply the stalls of the butchers of NeW York and Boston. Nature has been bountiful with her soil and sun, but withholds her showers; as if dieted - Mined that neither the adventure nor the cupidity of man should ever tempt him to mar with fields and fences the natural beauty of the great pastures she herself has prepared for the ceattle. THE SUGAR COUNTRY; Entering the State from Louisiana, near the mouth of the Sabine, and travellin—along, the coast southwest towards the mouth of the Rio Grande, one finds rivers, creeks, bayous, and lagoons everywhere crossing his road—some times to be ferried, sometimes to be forded, sometimes to be swam and sometimes to be turned (gone around,) for bridges are neither natives nor Settlers in Texas—but every where nearly the same level through it all. From the Sabine to the Neuces he travels either through cowbrakes, sugar lands, river bottoms, and hogwallow, cotton lands, or flat prairie stock lands ; and from the litieces to the Rio Grande he crosses a magnifi cent sweep of low-coast cattle range Spot ted with the salt springs and lagoons from which nearly all the State was supplied with its salt during the whole rebel lion; while all along the coast are nume rous little oblong islands, upon which sea island cotton has profitably been grown for Many years, Upon, this coast trip one sees very little of beauty or variety, and its dull, flat sameness soon become tiresome beyond expression; and, though actually crossing the sugar district of the State, with all its capabi lities for tropical wealth and beauty, fruits and flowers—though every river bottom is crowded with rich treasures of cane and cot ton, and alive with negroes and mules ; and though its occasional stretches of deep, black hogwallow give promise of liberal crops as long as man will but plough and plant, still the great fiats of seemingly worthless lands, covered with hedge, and looking wild and drear, give a cheerless, comfortless aspect to the whole that impresses one who has never seen the uplands of the State with an unplear 'sant and erroneous idea of it all. But were he to enter the State A HUNDRED MILES TIAOK or north of the route just travelled over, and follow about the same direction, he wouldfind himself riding over a country so entirely dif ferent from the coast route, that he would hardly be able to imagine himself in the same country. It is a picturesque, rich, rolling country of interspersed timber, prairie, and bottom lands, covered with cotton, corn, and cattle. This road traverses the highly culti vated and wealthy counties of Trinity, Walker, Grimes, Washington, and Fayette, the garden of the State, mostly inhabited by large plant ers, whose negro cabins are everywhere seen, and whose cotton crops are a bale to the acre• Along this road the traveller finds the eastern Portion less desirable than the centre; but, continuing on over the Colorado, he is soon struck with the decrease of plantations ; and, after crossingthe Guadaloupc,though the coun try continues rich and beautiful—more beau tiful even than ;before—cultivation almost ceases. He is again in the domain of the cat- . tle. Nature in her anxiety, lest man shall for get his necessity for meat in his worship of cotton, and sacrifice his stomach to his pocket, has here locked up her showers again, and so forever divided =the fields of man from the pastures of her own. The traveller upon this road going south. west, when -be reaches the Colorado, has seen a long belt of the great cotton and corn sec tion, and most probably noticed that, if ho wants a small farm, andintends to labor in his own Yields, be had better still go a little higher up, where fewer negro cabins and smaller patches are found. Along this road he will miss the bayous and lagoons of the coast, but will still find bridgeless creeks and rivers, aCTOES which he must ferry, wade, or swim. They are, however, clear rapid streams run ning between bold banks, over which the fer ryman's rope is usually stretched, and his boat working its own way from shore to shore, UPON ANOTHER ROAD, lying parallel with this, but yet far enough be hind it to leave the great belt of post oaks be tween it and the gulf—say entering the State anywhere between ShreVesport and Fulton, and running southerbieo as to hit Austin and San Antonio—a traveller will find 'himself riding over a country { still more rolling than the , last; like it, interspersed with wood, prairie, and bottoms, but covered with grain, as well as corn and cotton—cut into smaller farnlS, grazing more `cattle, horses, and sheep, and having a cooler and more bracing atmos phere. This is a portion of the great grain section, and is the home of Northern men and Euro peans, who need go no farther to find their 'farms and build their cabins. —A note from Jackson, Miss., contain the following expression recently used by Gov. Sharkey, of Mississippi, who, being asked if he had any objection to its publicity, said he had not, its it truly stated his sentiments : " I have lost all the negroes I had, some' seventy or eighty in number, but, so help Me God, I would not oast emote to restore the institution Of Slavery." ' • =NOM , I ' AUGUST 2, 1865: 4 4. • PASSENGER RAILWAY TRIPS-NO. X GIRARD-COLLEGE ROAD. THE CRAVE OF FRANKLIN. APT'JMON7_'ICDS 2 I,ll3ll,Ait'Sr. CAMP CADWALADER, OR CAMP DISCHARGE The Girard College Passenger Railway is a double track arrangement, on Arch street and Ridge avenue, the intervening sections be tween these two thoroughfares being Ninth and Tenth streets. Arch street possesses a few features worthy of public remark. The firs tof these may be introduced as Franklin, the statesman patriot, philoso pher, was the first man to introduce the elec tric telegraph. It is true that his method was by means of a kite raised among the thunder clouds, but, since that period, other improve ments have been made, other machinery has been brought into use, and amore perfect sys tem established. Franklin, it may be said, grasped the bolts at the forge of Jupiter, and brought them harmless to the earth, It was a bold undertaking. While thousands of peo ple turn their heads away from the reflection of electricity, as it dashes front cloud to cloud, often taking the earth in its momentary circuit, Franklin stood in the open field of Nature almost like an. Ajax. True, he did not defy the lightning, but court ed it. In doing this 'he entered the undevel oped regions of ethereal science, if it may be called such, .and taught: the world that so Subtle an agent as electricity could be made subservient to the uses of mankind in various ways, because, at least to some extent, It was not beyond human control. This great man— the wonder of the age in which he lived—ar rived in Philadelphia a wandering youth. His ration at one time was a single loaf of bread. He attracted the attention of a "ladye faire II standing on a door-step, on Fourth street,near Market, and in due time she became Mrs. Debo rah Franklin. Franklin was a genius. Re was the student of nature, and an apt scholar. He roamed on the banks of the Schuylkill; drank inspiration fresh from the natural fountain of the Wissahickon; established a printing press, and through this medium illuminated the world. He was the contemporary of Washington, and finally arose to the lofty po sition of an Ambassador abroad—for, by the light of history, we see the same man unos tentatiously standing before the Court of France, in• all the primeval dignity of an American citizen and representative. The mouldering:remains of this great man repose in the corner of a secluded cemetery, at Fifth and Arch streets, within three hundred yards of the first scene of his courtship. A. broken flat gray marble slab is all that speaks of the illustrious dead. On this stone is the follow ing simple inscription: There is plenty of room on the slab to in scribe the epitaph that Franklin, no doubt, desired to be placed upon his tomb-stone. In the year 172,9, he had a severe attack of pleurisy, and during Wornness, it was thought that he wrote the following epitah. Its style and sentiment were adopted by other writersi in England, who borrowed the idea, and ap plied it to different subjects. The following is a true copy of the Franklin Epitaph ; The Body of BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, Printer, _ (Like the cover of an Old book Its contents torn out, And stript of its lettering and gilding,) Lies here food for worms ; Yet the work itself shall not be lost, For it will, as he believed, appear once more In a new And more beautiful edition, Corrected and Amended by The Author. At the head of the broken slab, is a half falling stone, containing the following FRANCIS T. Aged 4 years—son of Benjamin and Deborah Frankl— died November— This stone is so much defaced, neglected and broken, that the entire inscription cannot be decyphered very readily. It seems a great pity that one, who, in life occupied so much public attention, whose example s was so illus trious and worthy of emulation as Franklin, should be left to moulder in neglect and ob scurity. But for the energy of a few gentle men in this City, the people, of Philadelphia would have known nothing of the spot where • Franklin was buried. A small portion of the long blank wall, on Arch street, was removed a few years since, and an iron railing erected to prevent invasion. Though these rails the passer by may look upon the neglected gritve of one of the great men of_ilzwyrica Or days long ago. APPRENTICES' LIBRARY. A Quaker-looking brick building, so far as its drab color is viewed, located at the south west corner of Fifth and Arch streets, that many citizens, doubtless, have supposed to be a meeting-house of the Society of Friends, is the Apprentices , Library Company. This in stitution was Minded, we think, in the year 1821, and the managers fora long period occu pied apartments in Carpenters' Hall. The li brary contains at least fifteen thousand vol umes, and is open on alternate days of the week, Sundays excepted, for apprentice boys and girbs. In former years, a large number of apprentices, instead of loitering around street corners, or running with the fire companies, used to avail themselves of the great benefits of this institution. Some of the best citizens of Philadelphia, men of affluence and influ ence, fOrmed a taste for reading in the days of their apprenticeship. - TLC' institution is, per. haps, seldom thought of among the great body of apprentices of the present day. Our insti tutions of popular education are more nume rous now than ever, and, therefore, the rush of apprentices to the building at Arch and Fifth streets ought to exhibit a ten-fold increase as compared with thirty or forty years ago. This beautiful temple of amusement, since its recent enlargement, has become one of the most popular theatrical establishments in Philadelphia. It is very well managed by Mrs. John Drew. It has a marble front, and may be Considered an architecturai ornament to the vicinity in which it is located. At the time the proposition was first made, it met with universal resistance on the part of the Quakers or Friends who resided on that an thoroughfare. They conSidded it an invasion of their rights of conscience, but their efforts to stay the. hand of "desecra tion,?" as they regarded the project, were una vailing. The almighty dollar and progress were too powerful; the theatre was built, and since that time other improvements in busi ness have been introduced, and Arch street is no more considered the Quaker thoroughfare of Philadelphia. There are a number 'of temples of art on Arch street. Each year new stores are added, so that those who were familiar with the street only thirty years since would be a stranger there now. The car turns up Ninth street, into Ridge avenue, and then pursues a northwest direction until reaching the depot, at Columbia avenue. This is one of the oldest thoroughfares in Philadelphia, and on its en tire route there are many magnificent scenes of nature and art; but these are beyond the depot, and access to them by rail is under the control of another company. Therefore, a change of ears is necessary. The large four-story brick building of this company Is located on the east side of Ridge avenue, above Vine street. It is surmounted by a pretty large steeple, from which an ex cellent view can be had of the city of Phila delphia. Those who are acquainted with the prominent locations can approximate very Closely to a fire by the light in the night or smoke in the day time. Steeples On angina houses now-a-days are more ornamental than useful, because of the local telegraph, which extends to almost every part of the city, and by which lire alarms are communicated as quickly as meditation on the wings of thought' From this point there seems to be an almost endless array of steam mills, fire-brick facto ries, stove works, wood-turning establish meats, extensive iron-railing works steam marble works, and a great variety of all kinds of places of industry. It is doubted whether there can be found any one street in Phila delphia that presents so much enterprise, such large places of prosperity, as this ave nue. Some of the prettiest iron-railing and sculpture-marble monuments to be found in the country may be seen on this ancient ave nue. A very pretty pressed brick building, known as the Green xill Market, commands atten tion. Tido edifice is a short distance above Washington Drove Yard. It is three stories elevation, and a great convenience to the neighborhood. This famous institution is loCated to the west of the rail track, but the interior of the entrance cannot be seen because of the long, ugly, blank stone wall that Intervenes. How much better would it be to reduce the wail, and erect an iron railing thereon. As it stands, the many strangers, who pass and re pass that place every hour in the day, may suppose encloses a prison. The main build big, which looms up on the horizon, from almost every distant point surrounding the city, is one of the most magnificent strue tures hi the city. It is a great ornament, and' its beauty should be displayed, s mach as poi slide. Its founder, Stephen Girard, a very singular man in many respects, had an eye to beauty as well as strength. His bank build ing, on Third stieet, is some evidence, from its architectural ksign, that he was far ahead 'of the times in the beauty of improvementi, between sixty and seventy years since. We may say that, on this part of, the route, the country is more open, but there are no scenes or natural grandeur. The depot te heated . -r , I sT. JAMBS Mswiai GIRARD COLLEGE BY "OHMS." THE ORAVE OF. FRAIYKLIN. BENJAMIN Ara FICAIifi:LIIT. DEBORAH FAIRMOUNT ENGINE COMPANY. GIRARD COLLEGE Columbia avesme. A skut, diaroce north of this place is focatetr* • CAMP OADW,ALAIIMM, . hn.M. • at the preseM.tithe as'cathatiOrseharge. fiejr(•the soldieri , Wro' fully discharged from service, and, spoll'iilaching'the Outside of tip), Camp, are ,immediately" beset , by ' gangs sharpers,..Xendy:3o ,rob. them whenever an opportunity -offeas. The soldiers generally have bad soraffimperience, and sonackspf them have profiled by it. We stood afihortlistance. from the Camp, and observed a few : lsharpers around as many soldiers. The latter were New Hampshire cavalry men, and, being strangers, did.not know the direct route to go. They found they were 'being misled, and one of them gave a flourish on his bugle, and the straggling members of his company came from all directions and congregated about him. The sharpers received some attention in the shape of pugilism incident to the ele vated regions of the " Old Granite State.” They "went to. grass!! in less time than it takes to write about it. The route which extends out the Ridge from the depot will make the subject of an interest ing sketch in a few days. COUNTRY RAMBLES—No. 9. BY CITY COUSIN, JB A NIGHT ON THE RAIL—A CONTRABAND CONCERT, AND A ROW WITH A SOLDIER—Emmy:3s, moßnas lANA, AND FORDHAM—THE COTTAGE op EDGAR A. POE—AT HOME WITH Tan BABY—THE HAR LEM BRIDGE—THE BRONX—A NEW YORE BULLY —A STROLL ON FIFTH AVENUE—FAIRMOUNT PARE--VISIT TO CENTRAL PARE, ETC., ETC. FOEDHAM, WESTCHESTER CO., N. Y., July PO, 1.96.1.. How swiftly the chariot-wheels of old father Time carry us towards eternity. We are merely babes of an hour and children of a day. Such were the thoughts that presented themselves to me on receipt of a pithy despatch from the companion of my boy-hood, announcing to me that a near -relationship had been sprung upon him by the advent of another little stranger on life' s pilgumage. A NIGHT. ON THE RAIL It is nearly midnight. All around, the sta tion is bustle and confusion. "Show you're tickets I" "This way In "Cars for New York Pt and such expressions greet the ear as the liv ing stream of beings poured in at the small gates. How they Jostle one another, andmake rapid strides towards every vacant position! With what evident satisfaction they take pos session of two seats, having a good nap in prospect from an improvised bed made of two Millions placed lengthwise How nicely the baggage is disposed to dceeive the unwary into the idea that they are already occupied But it won't work. Some of Uncle Sammy's boys come iu, and soon every available space is occupied. It is now but a few minutes of the time of departure. The gong has already sounded, and stragglers are running for dear life to get onboard. Slowly the long train winds itself out or the depot, and passes the rear Of the old grave-yard on Frankford road. The bell rings out its notes of warning, while the steam-whistle and safety-valve lend their aid to the general confusion. But the Reading Junction is soon pasted, and we are fast leaving the built-up portion of the city be' hind us. What a democratic institution is a steam railway car. Here we find the millionaire, with his careworn countenance, in close prox imity to the celebrated razor•strop man; while an Meer, With guady trappings, is hemmed in by a motley crew of bounty-jumpers and pick-pockets. The soldiers and sailors sit Sociably side by side ; clerks and business men, waiters and washerwomen, Congressmen and bootblacks—all reduced to a common level. CONTRABAND CONCERT Everybody is getting into position for a nap—we follow the example, and are soon ob livious of all things around and about us, but are suddenly aroused by a horrible din about our ears. Imagine my astonishment to find the two seats immediately in front of me filled with drunken negro wenches, singing with very cracked voices, and at the highest pitch, verses of all the songs in the catalogue amid the plaudits of a half-dozen tipsy soldiers and sailors in different parts of the car. Of course sleeping amid such a racket was entire ly Out Of the question. We near the beautiful city of Trenton, cross over the Delaware, and feel greatly relieved at the exit of the dusty, cracked female voices, who wind up in hor. rible style with "My True Love is a Soldier," and "We won't go Rome 'till Morning." On we go, at the screech of the whistleomtil New Brunswiek is reached. Sere we are obliged to wait for nearly an hour. A ROW WITH A SOLDIER. We are again startled from our equanimity by angry words at the rear end of the car. A soldier has entered, and used opprobious epi thets to a civilian, who is occupying a whole seat. Ile also endeavors to pull him oil. Civil ian naturally becomes enraged, jumps up and seizes the soldier by the throat " Let that boy alone P , shouts the soldier's friends; and "Break his jaw shouts the, civilian's friends. A grand rush is made towards that end of the car. The two combat ants are speedily separated, and soldier boy takes the coveted seat, regaling the passen gers with very indelicate language, not at all complimentary to our sleepingyassenger, who was disturbed in his dream Of feigetfulness by the cowardly poltroon who would skulk to there= in the hour of battle. The night is wearing away, and the day is beginning to break in the east; " Night's eanales are burnt out, Anti jocund. day stands tiptoe On the misty mountain-top." Newark, with its numerous factories, plea sant walks, and drives is soon left behind us. Jersey City looms up before us, and we are at the ferry. . ARRIVAL IN NEW . YOlia. A short ride across the river, and we arrive in New York, tired and hungry;in time to take a promenade with the newsboys and paper, carriers in their daily morning walks. The street cars have already run one or two trips—we take a short walk along Broadway past the ruins of the old Museum Build" ing, and jump on board of, a Third Avenue car, and are soon traversing the route at a line pace. On we go, block after block, till One Hundred and Sixteenth street has been passed, and we finally reach the Harlem Bridge. mum HARLEM RIVER BRIDGE This is an immense structure, built entirely of iron. It spans the Harlem River, and con nects the county of Westchester with New York. It is not yet completed, and a tempo rary wooden structure is the only outlet of the immense travel on the road. We here change cars, and enter those of another company, marked Morrisiana, Tre mont, and Fordham—they go slowly over the bridge, and a flue view of the river is ob tained—Mott Haven, Morrisiana, and Tre. mont, with their beautiful wooden cottages and - flower gardens, are soon left behind us, and - the cars stop at Fordham. FORDHAM, This a beautiful village, in Westchester county, twelve miles northeast of New York. It is situated on the line of the New York and Harlem Railroad. A large Catholic College with its stone cupola, at first attracts our at! tention. I believe they occupy or own about one hundred and forty acres of land in this vicinity. The grounds are handsomely laid out with trees and shrubbery. Chapel and school buildings are erected, and the institu tion is said to be in a very flourishing condi tion. The Dutch Reformed, Episcopal, Me thodist, and Presbyterian denominations are well represented, and worship in neat and handsome buildings. We take a stroll through the numerous streets and lanes of the village. EDGAR A. POE'S COTTAGE Now we turn up the road that leads to the High "Bridge, and there, up on the rising ground, we see, peeping through the surround ing foliage, the small white cottage of the late Edgar A. roe, where that beautifully mourn ful poem of "The Raven' , was composed Open here I flung the shutter, when, with many a flirt and flutter, In there stept a stately raven of the saintly days of yore; Not the least obeisance made he; not an instant stopp"ti or stay'd be; But, with mien of lord or lady, pereh'd abohe my chamber door-- - Pereh'd upon a bust of Pallas, just above my chamber door-- Pereli'd and sat, and nothing more. And the raven, never hitting, still is sitting, SUMS sitting, On the pallid bust of Pallas, just above my cham ber door And his eyes have all the seeming of a demon's that is dreaming, And thur lamplight o h m streaming throws his shaerow on the floor; And my snail, front onethat shadOW that lice float big on the lioor, Shall be lifted—nevermore: • The building is made of wood, is a story-and a-half high, and seems *to be trying to hide itself with the green mantle which Nature has so kindly bestowed upon it. We pass the cottage of John Savage, and instantly his lines on "The Bronx" rushes to our memory... little further on, and we reach the beautiful and pleasant home of Hon. John B. Raskin, one of blew York's gifted• sons, who, it is reported, will be the ne•Dernocratie candidate for Go yernor of the State. We pass along, through shady lanes and pleasant grovesi until the waters of the Bronx are reached. This is a small stream, about fifty feet wide, which flows quietly along through green fields and flinty rocks, and finally emp ties itself into the East River. The pleasant walks and shady , groves along the banks make it a •favorite resort for pleasure parties to while away a summer afterllool3, Stone fences are the prevailinrstyle all over this section of the country, and some of them present a very neat appearance. We have now reached our desired haven, and rind the object of our search enjoying the fia -vor of his cigar, under the cool shade of the trees on the lawn'; of course, he is surprised to see us, and 'We are invited at once to go and see the little stranger. We are taken to a small ante-room on the second floor, and requested to wait a few minutes, when the young represen tative of genius Will be introduced into our august presence. 'We hear a little cry from a little throat, a little coaxing, and a little talk ing ; and, finally, the' door opens and there stands before us the young father with his. young offspring, his face all aglow with plea sure. He assures us, time and. again, that' it is but three days old and weighs but ter) pounds; Ire is • evidently proud of the ' little cabinet of love that has been en- trusted 'to his keeping, and ~ we smile a r t his sorry attempts to appear unconcerned. - And such a baby 1 He is full of life and looks 'up Into your face with that peculiar smile. which seems to invite you to love him and I take him to your heart. We feel very, very much tempted to raise the little morsel in our arms and "kiss him for his mother,l , but the argus eye of the nurse is upon us,and we must forego the pleasure. Little baby'bOy has' is rnairitd oirf long enough, and Awn Ue stowed aWay,rigairf:pre..a stray breath ShOuld disar range'his_rather delicate structure. We leave the shrine . of innocence and parity ; and walk iinwn iiie - lanettrthe short patch Of woods on the brow of the hill. The different chilleh bells are sending forth their horitationfar and tide and request oar attendance. A DUSTY RIDS After whiling away a pleasant afternoon amid a circle of friends, we take the cars again for a dusty ride to Harlem Bridge. What a crowd of people take possession of them as they hurry on their way ! As we near the bridge, we see the bosom of the river filled with pleasant parties sailing around the Stone House on the desolate isle, or rowing up and down upon the river's bosom. The ears are full to overflowing, and we secure a standing posi tion on the front platform. We pass through Harlem and Yorkville until One-hundred-and sixteenth street is reached. Oh, how tired we are I and over a hundred blocks to ride yet bó fore we can find rest. The ear stops—a Man and boy gets on the platform beside me. lie is somewhat inebriated, and takes a seat on the front dasher, with his feet hanging over. The conductor warns him of his peril, but re ceives curses from the bully for his pains. How the sidewalks are lined with people in holiday attire! Tile policemen, with their blue military uniform, Panama hats, and white gloves, are seen at intervals amid the throng, preserving order. At last we reach Seven teenth street, and are soon kindly taken care of. A STROLL ON TES AVENUE After being refreshed, we take a stroll along Fifth avenue, with its palatial residences and the old Worth Monument. Vast nnmbers of carriages of all descriptions, public and private, are going to and from the Park. We think of our own beautiful Fairmount Park, with its pleasant drives and leafy shades, its fountains and delvers, and the beautiful mur. "Alluring Schuylkill winding its way around it and tbrongh it—the pretty boat-houses, and their pretty crafts, together with the grand concerts given daily, which draw thousands of visitors to its pleasure-giving embraces—what Fairmounrrara is to our city, Central Park is to New York, And now fch, How majestically Nature and Art hare com bined to form an earthly elysium ! The drive over the macadamized roads is one of the finest in the country. The grass, trees, and Shrubbery are taken care of in the best man ner. We reach the marble arch, and stroll underneath to the fountain; we ascend a flight of steps, and come to the music-stand. It is a pretty piece of workmanship, and seems to have been erected and decorated regardless of expense. little farther on, and we reach the Alhambra—a pretty, unique building, whore refreshments of all kinds are served up, at a nominal rate.. We retrace our steps to the lake.. The white swans sail proudly and queenly on its bosom. The miniature boats, with their tiny flags, are anchored in the centre and the whole forms a very pleasing picture. The Ramble is reached at last; the path is laid through thick woods and over 864 d pieCes of rock, and far up in its laby rinths a rustic arbor and rustic furniture in vite the passer-by to rest nnder their friendly shelter. But higher, still higher, says our guide; and we are soon on the point of a rock, where a beautiful . view of the surrounding Country is obtained; we make another steep descent, and reach the Cave. It is some what dark, but we feel our way through; we reach the opening, but the path seems to be broken. It is not, however; jagged rocks stick out from its side, and we tug manfully until we reach the summit. We cross over this natural bridge until we reach the highest point next to the basin ; here we obtain a magnificent view of the city by gas. light. The sky is beautifully grant in its va riegated evening robe; the hum of the busy multitude reaches us in our lofty position, and we instinctively murmur, Godyeigns over all. We retrace our steps, and are at a loss where to make our exit, when a friendly policeman comes to our assistance, and kindly escorts us to the ontside. By the aid of an Eighth-avenue car we are soon at home, well-tired and well. pleased with our short trip to Fordham and the Park. • Election Mobs CFrOin the Londort Times.] We have noticed on former occasions the exchange of acerbities between two of the candidates for North Wiltshire. Mr. Roebuck and Mr. Foster have signalized the election for Sheffield by an amount of personality and invective which reminds us how dark are the shades which are necessary to bring out the brighter and more attractive coloring of the picture. As a specimen of the violence of a mob we may instance the Circumstances at tending Mr. Brand's [Appearance at Lewes. The scene mightmost properly be described as a series of single combats between the two parties, for which the business of the orator seemed to be to furnish a succession of pre texts. Every politlealproposition that he laid down was immediately submitted to the ordeal of battle,. and it was only after judgment thus invoked had been given that he.ivW. emaA. l *.d,_ 6 0; - x,rckaawl_tc , a furtinv; statement, the validity of Which was immediately decided in a similar manner. At Grantham, so formidable a riot arose that the poll was adjourned to the fol lowing day. At Nottingham the riot act was read, and troops marched into the town to prevent more serious consequences. But the Paint of barbarism and brutality seems to have been, reserved for the little agricultural and railway borough. of Ghippenhain. The Liberal candidate having been defeated, a mob of five hundred persons assembled, and amused themselves for three hours, with little interruption, in destroying the windows and furniture of the Conservatives. The house Of the rector was assailed with tomb /tones torn out of his Own churchyard; and a sick person, who COMA net be removed. from a front room, was protected by his ser vants,- who stood round. his bed holding up boards to kee off the stones. A butcher's 'shop was plundered as well as wrecked., in the beat of the moment, by patriots who did not forget their own domestic interests in their fury.; and to quell this riot, which had been foreseen long before it occurred, there Were only twelve constables present! According to the usual practice; after all the mischief was done, a detachment of the Guards was tele- graphed for from Windsor, two hundred spe cial constables were sworn in, and fifty fresh policemen obtained. At Cricklade a desperate fight took place, and many persons were in jured. At Rins Lynn Mr. Walpole was wounded in the lace, and an unoffending par tisan of Colonel Berkeley was shot dead at Cheltenham. It would seem as if riot and confusion had migrated- front their old seats in the larger towns, in order to take up.their abode in secluded agricultural districts. Public Entertainments. On Thursday next, the Conference of St. Vincent de Paul, attached to St. Joseph's Ca tholic Church, will Make an excursion to At lantic City; the proceeds of the entire excur sion to be devoted to the wants of the poor. ABCII-STRRET TngAmim.—Oar readers should not forget that Hooley's Minstrels close their engagement at the Arch on Saturday night. On Friday evening N. J. H. Budworth takes a benefit. Mr. Budworth is a fine performer; but his imitations of several of our great stars are truly great. .AUCTION NOTICIL—We would] call the early attention of bv.yers to the large and attractive sale of 1,500 cases boots and shoes, to be sold on ThursdnY morning, August 80., by Philip Ford & Co., auctioneers, at their store, Noe. 525 Market Street and 622 Commerce street, commencing at 10 o'clock precisely. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL, From present - indications there is no good reason to doubt that the Oil business will speedily recover itswonted prosperity. Every one interested in the oil trade will readily re call the vicissitudes through which the trade has passed since its inception in 1859. In 1850 there were great flowing wells in Venang,o county—such as the Sherman and the Noble Wells—whieh yielded from two to three thou sand barrels` per day. ..The oil became a drug in the market, and sold as low as twenty-live cents per barrel at the welle. As the uses of petroleum were rapidly discovered the article increased in demand and value, and specula tion in lands became extensive, until in 1883 and 1864, it became almost a mania. Early in the spring of this year, disastrous freshets overflowed a greater part of the most valuable oil territory along the /Ulegile. ny river, Which caused a great reduc tion in the yield by the filling of wells with water. This - put an end for the time to speculat iokMial but the owners of oil lands have not beene. New wells have been struck almost daily on the various tributaries of the Allegheny, in Venting° county, and the yield is now almost equal to that of the most pros perous era. Old wells that were overflowed, and others that were thought to be exhausted, - have been resuscitated, until now the supply equal to the demand. Boring for oil and the transportation of the Same has been a great expense to operators, from the scarcity of labor and high prices of everything. This will in some degree, be remedied in a brief time, from the increase of labor now beingfurnished from the army. The cost of sinking wells will not be so great, and small capitalists will soon be enabled to:enter the field. In fact, the MM• cations are strong that we will have this sum mer apd fall such an activity in the oil traffic as we have never had before. The stock market was less active yesterday, and prices were unsettled and rathor lower ; Reading was in fair demand at the decline; about 3,sooshares sold at from 5114' 2 @52 1 A, closing at 52; Camden. and: Amboy sold at 123%, and. Pennsylvania Railroad at 57Y,; 29 was bid for Little Schuylkill; 55 for Mine Kill; 59 for Lehigh Valley; 12 for Catawissa common; and 25 for preferred ditto. In City Passenger Railroad shares there was very little doing. Ilestonville sold at 15. ' 20 1 4 was bid for Spruce and Pine; 9 for Race and Vine; 13 for Ridge Avenue ; and 23 for Union; 72 was asked for Second and Third; 55 for Fifth and 'Sixth ; and 48 1 1 fOr Tenth and Ric youth. Government bonds are very quiet, and tbere is little or nothing doing; 105% was bid for 5-205,107 for Gs of 1881, 99 1 / for 7.305, and 904 for 1040 s. City 104119 aro without change;. sales of the new 1139110 are making at 87, Bank shares are firmly held, but we hear of no sales; 150 was bid for North America; 182 for Phila delphia ; no% for rarmers' and Mechanics';. 29 1 /1 for Mechanics' ; 45 for Penn TOwnship ;51% for Girard ; 2934 for Manufacturers' and Mc:- chunks' ; 573 a for City ; and 38 for Consolida , tion. Canal shares aro in fair demand at the late advance. Delaware Division Sold at 31i4, and Schuylkill Navigation Preferred at 3W :1 ',4331%; 22 was bid for Schuylkill Naviga, tion common, and 8% for Susquehanna Canal. QOM 040114'es' as life have noticed for several - days past, are the most active on the list, and prices are firm, with the exception of Maple Shade, whichlistrigain declined. It is reported that thir;CotOttiikwell has stopped flowing. About .2,400 shares/ sold at from 7@i6/ 2 '; Big , Tank at 114; Cald Weill at 2.1004 ; Dal z ell at -1 1 ,1• 3 644 . -0 m -latter rite an advance of g ; Corn Planter at 2 1 4' ; McClintock at 2.44@2.6 9 ; Perry at 1; and Densmore at 1316. The following were the quotations of gold yesterday, at thri hours named : 10 A. M 11 A. NI At a meeting of the stockholders of the At lantic and Ohio Telegraph Company,held July 20th, the following named persons were elected directors to serve the ensuing year: John Derbyshire, J. H. Wade, Anson- Stager, John IL Briggs, A. C. Wilson, L. de la Cuesta, E. N. Wright, David 4grOoks, H. H. Shiningford. Recent letters from Virginia state that, since the opening . of the James river and Kanawha canal, a considerable quantity of tobacco in hogsheads has been shipped from Lynchburg to Richmond. The farmers are bringing it in from the country to the various boat landings in small lots for shipment. Very little is offering in the warehouses at Lynchburg. Some few hogsheads common leaf sold recently at from $7.50@10. One lot loose lugs brought *3.30. Considerable tobacco is still held by the far. Men, away from the lines of transportation, which will not he got to market for some time yet. The latest reports from North Carolina represent that there is a good deal of tObaceo in that State, awaiting the means of transpor tation. Agents have been sent North to de" vise means of getting it to market, anti if pos sible to effect a sale of it. The Raleigh Standard, July 22d, says; The crop of wheat was generally very light. It was much affected by rust and smut. Very limited crops of cotton and tobacco have been planted in the State. But from every section we hear the most gratifying reports of the prospects of the corn crop. There is not a portion of the State in which the coral is not most promising. The crop 'will be more abundant than it has been in several years. It is not easy to estimate the blessings to :North Carolina that will be consequent upon an abundant crop of cheap corn. Cheap and abundant corn makes cheap and abundant bacon, and when abundant, each is of the best quality. No man ever saw an inferior quality of corn of a good crop year. Bence it secures to all our citizens who will work,. plenty of good corn and a plenty of good bacon. dioth articles of food will be plen tiful, and will be within the reach of . who are willing to do a moderate amount of labor. If the corn crop fulfils the present expectation of farmers, no poison in the State need suffer for a sufficient supply of healthy' food. The crop of fruit is very excellent and very abundant. We know no country that surpasses D]iddie and Western North Carolina in the pro duction of an extra quality and quantity of apples and peaches. Every year the orchards produce abundant crops, and their fine flavor is not surpassed by the fruit of anzoountry. The following letter of the Comptroller of the Currency is published in - the St. Paul journals " TELMASITP. - r DP.4.A.I2TMENT, OFFICE OF COMPTROLLER OP CURRENCY, WASHINGTON, July 1945. " IMAir Sin : Tour letter of the 19th ultimo, enclosing resolution of the Bankers , Associa tion of the State of Minnesota, is received. 6, I and here represented one or more banks in place of which National banks have been organized, others to whom promises have been given for the organization of National banks in their stead. It somehow seems lobe the object of these gentlemen to convey . the Idea that Min nesota has not received, and was not obtain ing, her just and fair proportion of the na tional circulation. Such is not the case. Site already has more than her quota under an equitable apportionment. It is true that her banks, being mostly small ones, have not been able to avail themselves of the privileges given to the State banks by the law of the last ses sion, to absorb circulation largely in excess of the amount due to. the State; but she has as much as in my judgment her bankers will wish to have when the system of redemption now beinginaugurated shall have gone into opera tion. " If I mistake not, there will be in the future an opportunity for the organization of more banks, if they are required. "When all the banks are called upon to re deem their circulation, as rapidly . and often as it shall return to the commercial centres, the matter of circulation Will adjust itself, and many banks will find (perhaps some of those in your State) that they have more than they require, thus giving an opportunity for the organization of banks in places where they- may. be needed. "Banks have already been organized in the northern States sufficient to absorb more than all the circulation to which the North is en titled. What little there is left must go to the South. Very respectfully, • , P. ()LA:EMU, Comptroller. "Hon. Ignatius Donnelly, St. Paul, Minne sota:, The Boston imports for June were $2,812,431, and the exports $2,293,151. Theamonnt of mer chandise withdrawn from warehouse for con sumption is $1,102.65, and imports entered for consumption, *688,292, showing the value of merchandise thrown on the market to be $1,790,357. The following were the quotations of Ameri can securities in LOndOn on the 18th of July: United States 5-209, 6 %9 Cent 71%@72 1 4 Vi Do rginia; 5c en wi cent 45 1 A @50.50 ~ 6 t 38 Atlantic lß and Great Western, New V 3934 York Section, Ist m0rt.,1880,7 Vi cent 73 @75 Do. 2d mort., 1881, 7 7fl cent 73 @75 Do. Pennsylvania, Ist mort., 1877.... 76 @7B sd-alort., 1.099.... 71 7 S _ Erie Shares, $lOO (all paid) 54 UV, Illinois Central, 6 cent, 1875 75 81 Do. $lOO shares Sall paid') 883.‘ 894" Marietta and Cincinnati Railroad Bonds 7is cent 68 @7O Panama' Railroad, 2d mort., 1872, 7 qt7t cent .103 @)105 Pennsylvania Railroad Bonds, id mort., el 9 cent., convertible 82 On Do. 880 shares 30 ORO A further sum of £16,000 was drawn from the Bank of England on the 18th ult for Egypt. The Boston Evening Journal, July 31, says : " The loan market during the week has been quite steady. There is certainly a diminished supply, espe,cially with the National bank de positaries, aStroVernMent belanees are drawn down quite close; but the demand is moderate, and speculation in Government and other stocks are not to any great extent. In dis counts the market is well supplied with first class and good business paper, which. sells at seven per cent. and upward." The following are the comparative earnings of the Michigan Central Railroad for the third week in July Increase Annexed are the earnings of the Detroit and Milwaukee Railroad for the fourth week in July : 1865 1864, Increase The following is the amount of coal trans- ported over the Lehigh Valley Railroad for the week ending July 29,1005: Where shipped shipped wmitc. LY. TOTAL. from. Ts. Cwt. Ts. Cwt. Ts. Cwt. ijazXt°ll 5 491 91 9 9 , 79 07 ., 93,9 5 1 " - _ East Sagar Loaf 2 330 12 50,626 18 61, 957 10 Mount Pleasant 651 09 11,446 15 12 ,098 04 Jeddo 2 67309.53,415`12 56,059 01 Earleigh 1 309 10 28,967 16 30,277 06 Ehervale Coal Co 1,272 08 13,599 02 14,87140 Stout Coal CO e 4570 19 zit 935 OR 22,009 05 Council Ridge '1'622309 51,60 3 1 17 53,285.06 Buck Mountain 7 118 07 31,242 07 32,360 14 New York and Lehigh... 1,270 10 24,731 18 26,002,08 Honey 8r00k.... 2,566 13 52,272 17 54,839 10 German Penna.COal Co. 739 00 21,604 15 22,343 15 Spring Mountain 1 BV.. 18 40,032 10 42,765 08 Coleraine 813 05 19,882 12 .20,67917 Beaver Meadow D. W... 21.5 03 1,031 32 1,246 15 Lublgh Zinc Co 385 05 6,614 06 6,999 11 John Connery 126 10 1,99717 2,07413 mananoy„„ ~„ ~,,, , OS 04,040 18 83,873 09 Baltimore C0a1.... ....... 1.,238 14 17,436 16 18,075 10 Franklin • .... 25 06 14,052 03 14,077 09 Consolidated 19,808 16 19,808'16 Audenreld 213 16 11,559 08 . 11,772 19 ,___ _ , Lehigh and Susq'hanna. 788 12 15,471 14 16460 06 Landruesseris 277 19 6,148 15 6,374 14 Wllkesb'e C , l& Iron C 0.1,043 13 6,359 00 8,302 13 Lehigh Coal & Nay. Co.. 164 07 164 07 Other Shippers 214 00 224 00 - Warren Run 10 10 22 11 33 01 Total 36,021 04 700,380 10 741;108 04 Correspend'is week last year 31,195 17 841,176 CG 875,372 03 Increase 3,82517 =MEM Drexel a Co. quote: New United States Bonds, 1881 106 3 r107 U. S. Certifs. of Indebtedness, new.. 97 4 4 9TX U. S. Certifs. of IndebtedrieSS, 01d... 99401100 Quartermasters , Vouchers SS§ 57 Orders for Certifs. of Indebtedness.. 98 1 A 99 Gold 144 145 Sterling Exchange.. 5-20 Bonds, old 5-20 Bonds, new 1040 Bonds ks. Angast 1. Sales of Stoe SALES AT THE FIRST 100 Dalze 30411 8 100 do 436 100 Swatara Falls 2 100 do blO 2 100 West Penna. 200 Dunkard 011 961 1(0 do ÜBLIC BOARD. CALL. 100 Atlas 011 100 St Nicholas I ,100 do b 30.1 44-100 100 Win Penn ....cash 1 36 100 do cash 13 , 6 ',300 do cash V 100 Story Farm 56-100 OARD OF BROKERS. & Co., 60 B. rhird OtOttt. WARD. AT THE REGULAR Reported by Hewes, Miller FIRST 2700 City 6s new.. .lots 52 30 Sus() Canal Scrip. 44 20 Cam & AMUOy R.12.1K 23 Penns R....10t5.. 5734 100 Del Division 311¢ 100 It R.....5a0 0 51%, 2 s2O 51.1i1 100 00 do 1110 141 200 do s3O 51% 100 do a3O 21% 0 1)10 51N 100 do cash 51:4 200 do x3051%1 t do 51% 200 do lots bio svi.k 200 do cash 215 100 do 8319 Mk 100 (10........05W11 51;4i 200 d0......10ts b3O 52 100 do ~blO 52 100 do 010 52 100 do b3O 5234 160 Readlng..casb. 52 3-16 500 Ilig Tank b6O 200 Map Shade Its 810 7 100 do 510 734 Mg 100 do 1310 do lots 735 103 do 610 74 mob 500 fio Caldwell 011...b5 2. 7 44 200 do 44 400 do lots 2. 2‘i 600 Dalzell b 5 414' 500 do 1/5 434 200 Excelsior . . . 50 Corn Planer.... 2 2 00 'McClintock 011. b3 . 3,4 2.,% dO 4 200 do 2.44 200 do b 5 2.44' 100 Oil Ck & Cher R. 1,4 500Donsmore 13.16 11ETWEE 1000 Dalzell 011...1)3.4 3-16 6000 Pittsb , g ep 65.... 71Y1 100 New Creek..—. 94 . me 41 Sun 55... 05 youHostonville R.... 15 do /mg, 1200 City 6s new 02 2000 oo 100 Dawson , s Min.. 52 2 % 100 Royal Oil BOARDS 100 Read1ngt11....b5.52 1-16 100 do 52% 100 do 521-18 4 00 0 do 00 do 1,30. 5 522 100 Maple Shade-1310. n M 4 200 4 7 100 BleC11 do 0.1( 011.1)50. Z 66 100 Story Farm gi BOARD SECOND 300 Read R..1t5..830. 100 do .410. 52 & Amb ..123X ("1100 City Oa neW..1t510 2 100 McClintock 011.. 2 441 -100. - Mizell 011....1.>5. 41 , 6 100 Curtin AFTER 200 Sold Nay pre f-b6O 31X BALES Ar I 100 Reading R.... 530. 52' 100 do tdo- 52 , 10 00 0 ft raer . , 52 50 100 !daDle Shade 8.,.4 100 do 100 do st moo titate. 5200 . 300 Locust. Mtn _IMO: 44 200 Schy 11 pfbs,.%int 31N 100 1/011karcl. 011 99& 100 Maple Shade 0 100 Perry 011 1, , . : OARDS. 200 Datzdil 011 b 5 4% 'HE CLOSE. 100 Sugar Creek .b3O. 0 100 Tie: Whig H..2(13 . 5.5 2 100 40 55 100minkard 011 50 Curtin 011 3 100 Haze Lt. Vine 10 The New York Post of last evening says : • Gold is firm but inactive at 144 1 4@14% The transactions are inconsiderable. At the close" 114 0 4 - 4 was bid. Before the first session Erie sold at, 89 1 ,4@ sw,.; Hudson River at 1104, 1 Reading at ies!kil Michigan Southern at ; Cleveland and Pittsburg at 68 ; Northwestern Preferred at 60 1 4; Cumberland Coal at 464, ; Quicksilver at 55 M. Atver the board the market was heavy mid Rat, quotatione being 14. M. ;o we , at 8730 and tilehigan Sotiihern at UN'.4,. York Central at DW I ; Reading at 103';`',4. burg at 68; Northwestern at 26 , 4; ern prefered at 159!",; Rock Island at lev e :'•, , Wayne at WA; Ohio and hitssissipp''' Later, Erie sold at,Erly.. Semi-Weekly Review of the Phil WA Market& 44p', AUGUST I...E wn , Ereadatuffs are less active, and p ile ,°; drooping. Flour is without any. , 4 , 4. 4 ! change. Wheat, Corn, and Oats have (t„, t Park is in demand. In Cotton there , doing. Coal is in good demand. Fruit are without change. Pig Iron is h, ter demand and prices are looking Oil has advanced. Petroleum is rethoi. The Provision market continues lira advance. Seeds are scarce. WhibitykAt,tr'. held. Wool is in fair demand at about t„;;'. rates. The Flour market is rather (mkt former rates ; sales comprise about 441'.';' in lots, mostly to the retailers and from ifaia7.2s for StiPallide) f o ' r *8.02 1 ,4@5.75 for Old stock extra fatally a'l for fresh ground do, and s l o@ii fancy brands according to quality. II v ) i s swung at $5.50 Uhl. Cornmeal csiti.l)* quiet, and we hear of no sales. ,• GRAln.—There is more Wheat calsi , prices have declined, with sales of bushels at 200@215e for_prinle old rob, at the former rate, and .200 c per do. In white there is nothing doin g selling in a small way at 105@lise, for new and old. Corn is lovver ; b yellow sold 100@105c, closing i t ; tho figure. Oats are rather quiet; 3,0, 4 ' 1 ,': ;... sold at 55c for new, and 700 per bushel i PROVISIONS,—AII kinds continue searrp''L prices are firm at the advanee. Mess Pork are making at 44525;;; 3ft 1, 14 : Beef is selling at sl2©lB 9rt bbl. liaN s are scarce, with sales plain and f lu , vased at 24Q300 5, skies at shoulders at 18 1 1/fßie 311 it. Grecs also scarce ; sales of pickled hams an; is•Wr at 2952.5 e, shoulders at 17Q17 1 ,4c, and MC I ih, Lard is firmly held, with saleN,;(i,3 and tierces at 22@24c qi It. Rutter t. ,% dull ; sales are making at from solid-packed. New York Cheese is seIC.; small.way at 15@latr:c lt. Eggs areh, and sell at 24@26crf'dozen. METALS.—Pig Iron is in domain], tent itr, are better, with sales of Anthracite at 1 , ;;. for No. 1 ; No. 2 at X 33, and Forge at $2;. t ', 1 1 ton; most holders ask more. Scotch firmly: - held at ucen 1 ton. faanufabti; Iron is more active at full prices. Berar.—lst No. 1 Quereitron is scarce eq ;t good demand at 3x12.50 V ton. CANDLES.—Adamantine are selling in a L:O 4 way at 22@22 ,, (c lor Os, and 25e 12 ih low Candles are unchanged. COAL.—The receipts are inereasine, there is more doing-, both for shipment home use. CargO Mica are making from Illelitnolid at from iitoogri f ton COTTON.—The market is firm, and thq,,,, more doing in the way of sales. 000 bales of middlings sold in lots at free, 4s 40c IS it, cash. COFFEE continues very scarce, and the are limited; small lots of Rio are from 2.2@22 1 4., In gold, and 32(0,Ti0 ?,4 1, i n or. reney. Film—Mackerel continue sales fto store are making at $22@24 for Shore :co. 1: *l4 for Bay do l4 for Shore No. ; *23 yr Bay do, and *ll@lo bbl for large autism,' No. 55. Codfish sells at Sc riturr.-Dried Apples sell at s@eell Fruit is coming In freely 1 Apples sell at iirM qp bid, as to quality. In foreign there is or nothing doing. MOLAl36Es.—Priceb are firm, bat the gale= limited at about former rates. ' NAVAL STORM—There is very little ki; Small sales of Spirits of Turpentine ai; making at from *1.50@1.55.Ail gallon, 'l'm quoted at SV7 qft bill, and Pitch at 51175 lq Rosin is selling in a small way at $.3611 Oits.—Lard Oil continues scarce • small of No. 1 are making at $2.0.V22.10, which kip advance. Fish Oils are without clump.. b.,. seed Oil is selling at 6+1.18@1 •q 0 gql 1%, troleum is unsettled; sales reach about t0., 1 bbls in lots at 32@38c for crude, ,11.65.4;!,,f,,, relined in bond, and free at from 70f6:v gal, as to color. Rice is firmly held, with sales of Rum at 9],4@5%c 91 it, and Carolina at 10@l014e, SZ,EDE3.—AII kinds are scarce. Clover 1 , 1: demand at *15618 WI bus. Timothy is inn it,.; at *50.25 '4l/ bus. Small sales of Flaxm,,l 4 i. making at 62.46 V bushel, SPIRITS.—In foreign there is no tauttrix change to notice. New England Ruin suit,! 7 a small way at $2.30@2.32 Wiihky in better demand, and prices hare atlvanc:: with small sales of Pennsylvania and {Vesta bbls to notice at prices ranging from $2,25 Si:MAR.—The market continues very unit full prices, with sales of about 1,200 hints t at from 8 1 /49 1 ,4c sib in gold,and Porto Rio/ al 150 0 It, in currency. TALLOW is firmly .hold. with sales of offs'dared to notice at 11VAI2e, and country lie 'ill .14. WooL.—There is a fair demand at about in mer rates, with sales at 700,75 c for :nail i tun ;a: fine fleece, and 67@75e ib for tub, as to qualit- The following are the receipts of Fleur an Grain at this port to-day: Flour Wheat aloha Corn s,otk , ha Oats s i t ro tat BREADSTUPPS.—The market for State .n Western flour is dull and 51510 c lower onr•ii: mon grades; sales 6,800 bbls at Se(f - P1.50 for perfine State; M 3.7003,80 for eXtIM. Stale 66•90 for choice do ; s(i@6.so for superthin ern; $0.75@7.30 for common to medium ett tt Western ; and $8.15@8.30 for common to guy! shipping brands extra round hoop Ohio. Canadian flour is b@lec lower ; sales :;(in at 1116.76@7.10 for common, and $7.15Q9 for gwl to choice extra. Southern flour is dull al; drooping; sales 500 bbls at $7.0.5Et5.50 forcer. mon, and 48.68@12.25 for fancy and extra, hp; flour is quiet. Corn meal is dull. Wheat is dull heavy, and nominally , 11 , 3 lower . ; sales limo bus at $1.45 for Amber 3E. wankle, and $1.90 for amber Michigan. Rye a dull. Barley is quiet. Barley Malt is dull. Oats are dull at GM: Western. The Corn market is very firm, WU only a limited supply ,• sales 36,000 has at for unsound, and Weal for Sound mixed ern. WHISKY is firmer; sales 150 1)111ft Wegtern $2.10(§2.20. TALLOW is steady; sales 130,000 Its at 11 1 ,(AT. PaovisioNs.—The Pork market is Lowe sales 7,000 bbls at $34Q34.87 for new mess; 30 for '63-4 do.; $2.5(445:25 for prime, and 27.70 for prime mess. The beef 'market is quiet; sales 400 nbli. about previous prices. Ilea hams are quiet. Cut meats are ilen sales 550 pkgs at 15Q17e for shoulders, mid 23 1 Ae for hams. The Lard market is aim :al , 1,400 its at 10@,24:yi. Pittsburg. Petroleum Market, July 31 The crude market has been minutia quiet for some few days past, and, whib• general feeling and tone of the trade is trot' ness and depression, there has been no matt change in prices. We continue to quote at bbls returned, and 25@26 bids include and these may be regarded as the extreme , the market. The only sale reported to t was 400 bids at 25, on the spot. The balk oft sales above noted were at 44@45 for Iminellia delivery on the cars here, and 53.3.4@52, delhe ed in Philadelphia. The only sale report to-day was 200 bbls for immediate delivers,; 45. Free Oil is quiet and unchanged. Notht doing in Naptha or Residuum—no dent whatever for either. 873,359 58,022 BALorniont, August I,—Flour quir,t•, li grade Southern declined 00C. Wheat, lotsc Corn dull, and 2c lower. Provisions sick , ' Coffee dull and inactive ; 1ti0,.50(422e, in goV, Whisky firm at 225 c, and very little offering. CLICCINNATkAIigust I.—The Flour market unsettled, offering at $7.50. Whisky item $2.20. Nothing was done today in the Pro Bien market. - . tircisoo, August I.—Flour is dull, and II declined 10.225 c. Wheat quiet; sales at CA' 1.21 1 / 4 ' for No. 1, and $1.011@1,08 for No. 2. Corr: active at 88@e8 / 4 e, for No. 1, and 87@87%c No, 2. Oats dull; sales at 42c for No. 1. l'i visions are quiet. Ilighwines quiet. Receipts. Shipmen Flour, barrels 8,800 Wheat, bushels 37,000 27,0 Corn, bushels 110,000 . 100.0 1 Oats, bushels 20 000 531 Freights have advanced 14(i/Ic. Ok) ,ar.tmefa tki atm wrei*l47l PORT OF PHILADELPHIA, August SUN RISES 5 6 SUN SETS HIGH WATER Bark Victoria (Br,) Christian, 12 slats fa, St, Marc, with soiree, logwood, &c., to ha. Wattson 4.4, Sons. Bark 0 E Maltby, Bray, 6 days from Italie ton, in ballast to captain. Brig Evergreen (Br,) Nelson, 11 days It! st Croix with sugar and molasses to ra. Bros (% do. Brig Nellie Move, Bailey, 15 days from John, N B, with laths, &c., to AL Trump, Ns. co. _ . Schr Sarah N Smith, Disney, 25 days fro Glace Bay, with 316 tons coal to .N Works. Schr Sophia Wilson, Nowell, from New 1 . 01 in ballast to Castner, Stickney, ht `l""clliugt" Schr J Rienzi°, Lake, from Salem, in ball , to Van Dusan, Lochman, & CO. Schr A Falkenburg Sipple, from Provident , in ballast to Caldwell, Sawyer, it Schr S J Vaughn, Vaughn, 'rola Trey - mon! with mdse to captain. Schr A Tirrell, Higgins, from Welltlcct, nit 'incise to Crowell & Schr W Gillum, Dickinson, from Counactic River, with stone to captain. Schr N B T Thompson, Endicott, from Si' Raven, in ballast to captain. Schr W B Thomsa,WinsMOre, from o , r v* dance, In ballast to J B ToullinSOn, , „„ Schr John Dorrance, Rice, from l'royitw , - in ballast to Westmoreland Coal Co. - Behr Thos Borden, Wrightington, from tr River, in ballast to Castuor,Sticknen "' lington. ,„ Seim C A Stetson, Stevens,. from Peoria town, with mdse to Gieo B Kerfoot , Schr Garnet, Kalinin, 2 days from LAO , " with mdse and passengers to captain. , Schr Coreda, Thornton, 4 days front Cliint. teaguo, Va., with grain to J W Bacon. Schr 'l. Crocker, Prosbrey, 4 days from Taw ton, with mdse to captain. Schr A G Pease, Harne,2 days front Portiss Cohn, with stone to W Gray. Schr N GoUld, Crowell, 9. days froan Bo° with mdse to captain. r N , Behr Jesse Williamson, Winsmorc, from Bostominballast to Sinnickson A ba,: Schr M Reinhart, Hand, 6 days front Bo4L" in ballast to JGAGS Repplier. &Iv C W May May, 4 days from Boston, hemp to Fitter, 'Weaver,& 137,789 113 133,983 19 150114157 10P105% 104 104 1 / 96% 960, Cleared. Blip Castilian, Chryfstal, Quebec. Brig E P Swett. Chadbourne, Idarscil Brig Mecosta, Dunbar, Boston. 0 Schr Planet, (Br,) Walker, St John, N Schr IVI Reinhart, Hand, Salem. Seim Jesse 'Williamson, Schrift L Vaukirk, Vankirk, Now loco *am I.'dw Ewing, Bennett, Hartford. Schr Soßhfa IVIIBOII, Newell. Boston. Sehr J Marvell Hastings, Geovgeical l ,' Schr Amos Falkenburg, ProrliliSt • Schr Gilbert Green, Weaver, Newbetu Schr Coreda, Thornton, Accomac. Behr W B Thomas„:lVinsmore, _Boston. t Schr Win Gillum, Dickerson, MithlictOW i Bahr S Rienzel, Lake, Salisbury. Winsmor ei Schr ,john Dorranco Hewitt, Prorititn• Sehr Prankorden, Wrightlagteni,F4/1 .Schr Pierce, Taylor, .Wastioree n. Steamer R. Willing, Cundiff, BaltimoN' Memoranda. Steamship Governor Chase, Tuttle, or lizew Orleans 24th ult; at New York 3•0 6 t e '' - with cotton. Ship COntinental %Liman, Sal Liverp Hesperus, for Calcutta. , 019 Bark Waycott, from Neu April, at Buenos Ayres—no date. Brig Johanne, Diedrickson, from 7th May, at Pernambuco—no date. • , e oil • Sehr War Steed, Cash, clearhd at Bosi ult for this port. . Bohr George Edward, Weeks, hence at deuce 29th ult. A Sohn B F Reeves , Doughty; Shourdsi Wm P Cox, Houck, aud frd ,; Minnie Parsons, for this port, sailed Ptovidvice 29th uit. Few York Markets, August 1 Birarkets by Telegraph Arrived.