qc't iluuu. TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1865 MEET/1 14 OF THE lINION STATE CEN TRAL COMMITTEE. PBDPORD, Pa., Aug. 19, 1865 "The members ef the Union State Central ?Committee, appointed by the recent Con -Vent-lon at - Harrisburg, are requested to meet at Ho. 1105 Chestnut street, Philadel. !phis, on THURSDAY, the 81st day of Au. gust, 1885, at ten o'clock A. M., for the Purpose of Organization and the trauma. , tion of such other business as may claim their attention. A fall attendance Is earnestly rgq,nested. JOHN CESSNA, Chairman Union State Central Committee THE BURDEN OF PUBLIC DEBT. Among a hundred authorities who wrote and spoke and legislated for England while her debt was growing from one hundred and twenty-nine to, eight hundred and eighty-four millions of pounds sterling, which it did between the years 1776 and 1816, there were but two men whose appre hension of its effect upon the national pros perity in any measure corresponded with the truth. These were Sir Joan - Sue claret and - Emmen Brinni. They be lieved that England could bear her debt, pay it, and grow in wealth and power under it. DAVID HOME, in 1776, when the debt stood at the lowest amount here mentioned, said that the revenues of more than two-thirds of the kingdom were al ready mortgaged Or anticipated forever. ADAM Slant said, at the same time, that Great Britain could not, without great dis tress, support a burden a little greater than that which has been already laid upon her. And Dr. Pawn, in 1777, said that the ad dition of a foreign war to the civil war of the American Revolution would raise the national debt to two hundred millions, in nominal value, and sink it- to nothing in real. worth. And so tie cry went on increasing in forebodines of evil until nearly everybody came to believe that the English debt must either be repudiated or sink the nation to utter bankruptcy. Aftei the battle of Waterloo, when the total debt was four thousand three hundred millions of dollars, with an annual interest of one hundred slid sixty-one and a quarter mil lions, and was a charge of forty-vile dollars on the hundred of the private property of the 'United Kingdom, scarcely a man of authority was bold enough to entertain or ROMP a hope of DUCcesafally struggling under the intolerable hurden. But what has happened in'the half century that has since elapsed ? Rfrat. The principal of the debt has been reduced three hpdred and eighty millions of dollars, and the annual interest thirty three and a half millions. This, indeed, is not much in imount, but in burden the reduction , is immense ; for in the meantime the wealth of great Britain has grown from ten thousand five hundred millions to thirty two thousand, millions of dollars, or over thrice the value of 1816, and the charge hes fallen from forty-one to a fraction over twelve per cent. of the value of the national wealth. Second. The annual interest in the year 1865, is a little less than one hundred and twenty-eight millions of dollars, which is a tax of but four-tenths of one percent. upon the property of the nation ; in 1816 the in terest of the debt was one and fifty-four hundredths of one per cent., or nearly four times greater. But the most recent history of British finances is still more striking. The official report of the exchequer shows that in the five years ending on Slat March, 1665, filly-two millions three hundred and thirty-one thousand dollars of the prinei pal of the debt has been paid off, and in the same time one hundred and thirty-nine millions of taxes were remited or abolished, by which is meant that the rates have been so far reduced that upon the like value of the previous subjects of taxation the total revenue would have been reduced to this amount. Here we have reduced rates -of taxation, reduced debt, and increasing re venue running together! The people con suming more, buying cheaper, and paying snore into the treasury than ever before,- and all this has been accomplished precise ly during the time when the staple industry of the usually most prosperous portion of the kingdom was struck down by a failure in the supply of cotton, and half a million of opemtives, whose aggregate wages had pre viously reached the sum of one hundred and forty thousand eight hundred dollars per diem, or above forty-two millions per, year, - were for about half the period changed front producers of wealth into burdens upon public benevolence; Add to all this the fact that for nearly this whole period of five years, the market of the United States for British goods was greatly reduced, and we have the fullest proof that in the new era of wealth-pro ducing agencies the nation's industry and enterprise, though clogged by an accidental failure in one of the greatest branches of its trade, and a vast. reduction in its, best mar- - ket, have proved more than a match for the heaviest burden of debt borne by any people under the sun. History, it is said, is--phi losophy teaching by examples. Here is a piece of history very full of instruction, if men will but read it aright. Unfortunately, however, men are much more disposed to use history as a memory than as a philo sophy; and under a vague notion that his tory is ever repeating itself, they take half the data of a past judgment, and apply the same conclusions when they recur. Thus, England was a debt-crushed nation when she was worth but a third of her present valuation, and when Wealth grew at less than a third of the present rate ; and, there fore, if we have 4, debt equal to three-fourths ahem when her wealth was but two-thirds of ours now, somehow or other, we are as hopelessly involved in debt, burden, and taxation as she used to be 1 It is as well known. as anything of this kind can be known that the wealth of the United States increased in the ten years from 1840 tolBso but sixty-four per cent., and in the ten years from 1850 to 1860 one hundred and twenty-eight per cent. ; and it is by no means unlikely that the in crease of the ten years from 1865 to 1875 will double again. The experience of Eng land in this respect exactly corresponds with' our own in the last twenty years. That is, her growth of wealth has doubled in the last decade, under the operation of like eauses—supporting and corroborating ours: But here and henceforward we part company with her. She must live under the economic laws of the Old World ; we have discovered and entered upon a new one, to which the adage that history - is philosophy teaching by example has so slight application, or fitness that it falls im mensely short of prophecy for our future. People ask, when will our National debt be paid t If they mean, when will the ex penses of the rebellion be paid, w e answer, they are paid already. The bondholders of the Government have the receipts in their hands for the sum total. The ques tion really means only this : :When will" these expenses be equallyclistributed among the entire population for the wealth to pay the debt is not to be created ; it exists in the nation already rthe people own all the land they ever did, and all the property. they ever did, tuid some of them their threa thousand millions besides and no man, woman or child in the loyal States is poorer by a farthing than before the war began. This is all there is in this" bugbear of Na tional debt—this mortgage upon every man's property and industry. The annual pro duct of the loyal States is alone four thou sand millions; in the last four years the. products have been worth sixteen thousand millions; at least three thousand millions of this amnia is surplus over consumption, profits in hand; and so the expenditure of ti l ewar has been paid to the people alreadY, - find all that they have to do with: this amountof money is to divide it in due pro- portion and. in due, time, upon the whole people of the' present and'sneeeeding gene ration, and them Will be " nobody hurt."' It will be understood that we arc item strictly speaking of the burden of the national debt upon the national wealth, and in this light will be allowed to say that it is in fact paid already, and only reqiires to be distributed pro rata upon the popula tion or property of the country, and is-not ill ally sense in diminution of the total national resources. The nation's right hand has gainedit, and its left hand must help to support it. Or, it is to be shifted from one pocket to another to be. carried-evenly; for it has been produced as property already, and is not to be created in future, nor will it in any way hinder the productiveness of the future. WEILM JOHN BUIGHT snorm SEEK. As its name implies, the House of Com mons was originally established to repre sent the commonalty or People of England: The Parliament itself, though its designs.- tion be derived from the - French—not earlier, than the twelfth century—certainly originated in the Saxon great councils of the nation, called " Wittena-gemote," or meeting of wise men. Under the Norman Kings this assemblage was co n tinued, form ing a judicial and ministerial as well as a legislative body. Gradually, its judicial functions were transferred to courts ofjus tice, and its ministerial to the privy coun cil—a remnant of the judicial power be kg still preserved in the appellate juris diction of the House of Lords. When the Parliament was divided into two bodies, Lords and Commons, the latter assumed the exclusive right to assign the, supplies to their proper uses, and as they became more powerful, would insist. upon public grievances being redressed by the sove reign, before they would vote the annual supplies out of the public. purse. During the reigns of the Tunons, the influence and power of the Parliament gradually advanced. During the four reigns of the STUARTS, 1.603- 1688, there was a continual struggle between the Crown and the Parliament, each striving to obtain control of the military force of the country. On the accession of WILLIAM of Orange, the Parliament, which had de posed JAMES 11. and called him to the throne, necessarily became a greater power than ever, and at the time (1714,) when the House of Hanover was established in England, this legislative body had become the governing power of the realm. The two first GEORGES to divide this power, pitted the Commons against the Lords, but, at this moment, the Commons possess the active while the Lords have only the passive power. It was hoped that the Reform Bill, passed in 1832, would destroy a great evil—the facility with which persons entered the House of Commons, through the fitvor of persons who were owners of what were called " pocket-boroughs," or by actually buying these seats from men. The ave rage price, at a general election, for a bo rough-seat in a new Parliament, which might lasbi for six years, was $20,000, but as the average duration of each Parliament is only three years, this made the cost about $6,700 per annum, a seat for a sin-. gle year, when the Parliament had nearly ran out its time, rising to $lO,OOO. The borough-owners, for the most part, were members of the nobility, or untitled posses sors of great landed estates. When a man, with or without a title, was absolute owner of, nearly all the houses in a borough which, however decayed, (such as Gatton with a few houses and two hundred and fifty in habitants, which yet returned two mem bers,) his agent or steward could say, and usually did say, "You must vote for so and-so, or turn out of your residence, at Michaelmas." This one man, and not the in habitants, actually returned the member% In the case of Old Sarum, it was worse. From the time of EDWARD lIL to that of WILLIAM . IV., it returned two members to Parliament and, for the last one hundred and fifty years had neither house nor in habitant., The owner of the land which, once a fine city, it had formerly occupied, sent whom he pleased into the House of Commons, as its nominal representatives. As a general rule, the purchaser of one of these parliamentary seats was expected, usually even pledged, to vote with the party which its proprietor favored. So absolute was the properfy in these boroughs that the Duke of Newcastle, who was the principal proprietor of the borough of Newark, claimed a right to control the votes of the electors, and, to justify this usurpation, once exclaimed, in Scripture language, "Cannot I do as I please with mine own ?" If a noble wanted to obtain higher rank in the peerage, if a great landlord desired to become a noble, if a retired millionaire citizen wished to be made a Baronet, which is the first step in the ladder of titular dig nity, his machinery was set to work in the House of Commons. If he owned one or more boroughs, he would barter the 'Votes of their members for the " dignity" he coveted, and if he did not possess such ownership, he bought borough-seats for himself and his adherents, and surely won his way—by prudently voting for the Minister—to the desired result. In most cases, when a noble was or is, (for the Reform Bill which abolished the Tory, carefully preserved moat of the Whig pocket boroughs,) anxious to have ins own politi cal views represented - in the House of Com mons, he made it safe by returning his own sons, or, at least, near relatives, or close connexions of his family. In the last Par liament there were over two hundred and fifty members who did not belong to the Commons, but were scions of the No. bility. In the Parliament which dis missed Sir ROBERT PEEL from office, in 1846, there were two hundred and sixty-six of these aristocratic gentlemen, consisting of Peer's eldest sons, heirs-pre sumptive, younger sons, grandsons, bro thers, nephews, cousins, sons-in-law, bro thers-in-law and fathers-in-law, besides four Irish peers. Here were three-sevenths o the Commons' House drawn from a class at perpetual antagonism to the interests of the Commons or people. The " Third Es tate of the realm is not what it should be. The Commons' House of Parliament should consist wholly of Commoners, but really includes a great-many of the nobility. In the new House, the Duke of Devonshire has one brother and three song ; the Mar quis oD Westminster has two sons and a nephew; the Duke of Buccleugh, the Mar quis of Salisbury, and the Earl of , Derby, have two sons each. Thus _ five, nobles of the highest rank and greatest wealth ac tually send thirteen of their own nominees into the new House of Commons. Mr. BRIGHT, and the small but compact phalanx who act with him, "Few and faint, but fearless still," are endeavoring to extend the right of Voting to all men of adequate age, that is, to all who pay taxes. He would ex clude all who cannot read and -write; but the 'want of elementary education in England is so great that this would deprive too many of the franchise, The number of voters in the British Isles is about one million whereas it should be seven. A long time will elapse before the franchise will be thus extended. If Mr. BRIGHT wants to make the House of Com mons represent the people, he has to sup plement his Reform Bill, by inserting a clause that no son or heir-presumptive of a peer, no Irish peer, no member of the Gov ernment, no on:The-holder, plaeeman, sine curist, nor pensioner, shall be eligible to vole in the House of Commons. If desira ble, each Minister might attend and speak, but - without any right to vote. The pre sence of re,cognized representatives of the Government might be useful, for state ments have to be made, questions answer ed, explanations made; but it really is monstrous that the members of the Cabinet, with their paid adherents, shall vote on, and make majorities upon, their own measures. The Commons, once cleared of its noble element, and relieved from the presence of officials, would, at last, fairly represent the people of England. LARGE PEREMPTORY SALE OF BOOTS, SHOES, TRAVELLING BAGS, CLOTH HATS, &C., &0., THIS i 3 x.—We request (lepers in boots, shoes, &c., to examine the choice assortment of the best city and Eastern.makes,,comprising samples of I,2oo:packages of seasonable goods, to bp pa• remptorily, sold , by catalogue, on iOnr.MOnth9 l credit, this morning, commencing at 10 o'clock, by John It; .Myers.it CO., auctioneers, Nos. 232 _ and ra biavict street. THE NEW RIILING CLANS ,190117TH._ To the Editor of the Nation i" - -- I wail - in Nashville last fall. ; . The President at that time was MilitaTY Tennoll - In Nov embed' met Mi. &daft, the first Superintendent of the Rome feT the Refugees. . . , 'During the previous year his voluntary labors in aiding the white refugees, who 'then beget. to arrive from the South, attracted the attem Lion of Governor Johnson, who, in September (1803,) appointed him as an agent to attend to these people exclusively. lie held that office up to April, 1864, a p4riod of seven months, during which he received about ten thousand persons, the poor whites of Tennessee, Geor gia, and Alabama. I took notes of his testimony at the time, and submitted them to Mr. Oviatt for correc tion, and thus amended I now reproduce them. " It was pitiable," he said, "before the office that he filled was created,-to see the listless reas and extreme poVerty of the refugees, who, during his term, were of the lower class almost exclusively. 'The men who Recompil e niedthe parties would sit down on their mise rable and rude furniture with a stolid apathy, as if they had no interest in life and no mo tive for exertion. They paid no attention to anybody or anything, until their women came back and told them that they had found a place to go to until they could leave the city. The thought never seemed to suggest itself to them that it was the duty of the husband to go and search for a shelter for his wife and children." Mrs. Oviatt, who'• had lived in the South for fourteen years, and who had seen a great deal of the life of this class added to her husband's state ment that was precisely the was in which they acted at home. " They depend for everything on their wives," she said. I asked her " What did these men do, then 1" "Oh ! go fishing and hunting, and . drink whisky when they can get it," she responded. "The. women do pretty much all the hard labor." I asked if they could read, and what proportion of them 1 Kr. Oviatt replied that their nuance was "beyond anything we can con ceive of in the North." "It was . amazing. There is not one per cent. who can read." inquired concerning their morals, and was told that nearly all the boys of eight and nine and upwards were smokers; that "they all swore and lied without auy exceptions, and so do all the women'," he added. " They all swear and they all smoke br chew tobacco or dip snuff', and sometimes all four 1" I had heard enough along the military Tailroads to have formed an unfavorable opinion of their fidelity to the marriage vow but Dlr. Oviatt said that in his opinion they were worse in that , respect than the negro women them selves. After a long conversation, I returned to the habits of these people, and asked again, "Do they all smoke-, or chew, or clip?" Mr. Oviatt did not remember a single exception. Not one. The lower strata of these lower classes, he said, take the tobacco leaf, dry it, and chew it, without any other preparation. Dir. Oviatt could not recall a single instance of women or good-sized girls who did not use tobacco in some form. A young girl,- a refugee from Northern Alabama, who was present, was asked if she knew of any woman or girl among her acquaintances who did not smoke. "Only ono—granddaddy's folks," she replied ;-" the old man's opposed to tobacco. But his is the only family. Iltnow that don't smoke.) , These people have one peculiarity that is generally supposed to be characteristic of the negro. When they fall sick they rarely re cover. They seem to have no tenacity Of life, I made inquiries as to the relative self-reli anee of the poor 'whites and the negroes. Mr. Oviatt said that he had taken pains to gather the statistics touching on this point, and per mitted me to copy a paragraph from a private letter that he had written to a philanthropist thereon. It was dated February, leCrt. "A few words, now," ho writes, "about the refugees and the contrabands. I:find that for the five days ending the 15th instant, the number of rations issued was, for refugees, 36413 ; for city poor, 3,3; for contrabands, 971 The number issued during the five preceding days was, for refugees, 3,9/9 ; for city poor, 1,94.0; for contrabands, 474. rutting the two together, we have for ten days, 5,169 of city poor, and 1,445 of contrabands—being - about three and one-half for city poor for one Mick, supposing that their numbers were equal. But when we learn the relative proportion, it speaks still better for the black ; for we have 23,000 whites in Nashville, and onlyo,ooo blacks. We find, therefore, that we are feeding .03 1 4, per Cent. of the whites, while we are feeding but .016 per cent. of the whole negro population. In counting city poor, I only take into account those who were residents here previous to the rebellion all the rest being . under the head of refugees ; and, at the same time, in taking the total:number of blacks in'the eity, I have taken colored refugees and all. Take the white as I have the black, and the percentage is about .036—telling badly for the whites. " I promised you some statistics comparing the blacks and Irish. I am told the Irish. popu lation of the city is about 3,000. The popula tion, therefore, is as one to three of the blacks. Now, more than siityper cent. of the city-poor are Irish; and, taking the comparative num ber relieved, we have six Irish to one negro; or a disproportion as against the Irish of eigh teen to one—eighteen Irish paupers to one ne gro pauper. Truly it may be said, as one friend remarked to me a few days ago, 'Better let the blacks take care of themselves, and put some one to hiring out and providing for the whites.' " So far Mr. Oviatt, with his experience of 10,000 of these members of the new ruling class South ; • and his wife, with her fourteen years' life among them. After taking their testimony, I ballad at the liefugeh Henke, I fOnini it in charge of a colonel whose name I failed to note, and liaye since forgotten. He said that there had been an averae of 3,000 refugees a month pass through this house all summer long, and at the time of my visit they numbered at least 4,000 monthly.- Since the date of its establish ment no less than :35,000 persons hadifound a temporary shelter under its roof. I asked the colonel whether these people were intelligent or the reverse. "Lord !" he exclaimed, as if amazed that the thought of intelligence could be associated with them., "they don't know Ii from. a bull's foot. Half of them don't know anything at all. You have to kiek.everything into them." Be described the men in the same terms as Mr., Oviatt used—as good-for-nothing, listless, lazy, and stupid ;• and the women as dirty in their habits and in their morals worse. But it was the women, he quickly added, who did all the work. . A few months later, I met at Cincinnati the Secretary of the Refugee Commission, who thwidescribesthe refugees thatpassed through its Temporary Rome : "Of these refugees," he writes, " about two-thirds are worthy people, though they are ignorant and apparentlyhave always been- poor; they are industrious and anxious to improve, and seem honest andsim ple-hearted. About one-third are lazy and irty, and SO,apathetic as to leave little hope for improvement in this generation. Still they are not likely to swell the,police reports of the North. The absolutely vicious make a very small proportion of the whole. Three-fourths of the whole—the women—have been trained to till the soil, obtaining a scanty living among the hills of Tennessee and Georgia." This is _written of an experience of less than dye 111111- dred refugees, but is valuable as far as it goes to illustrate the character of the new ruling class South., . . Carlyle says that every human brain, no matter bow -brutalized, has got some dim theory of the universe which it would profit one to hear, if stated with a becoming , brevity - . So these degraded poor whites have their no tions of the "rebellion,lts cause, and cure," which I often heard delivered with many an oath, and flushing of the cheeks, and flashing of the a e, and amazing grammatical blun ders. When at Dalton, and at other points in Georgia, I saw hundreds of the home guards, all of whom were fully developed specimens of the poor white trash. They came chiefly from the hilly northern counties of Georgia, in which the loyalists—nearly the entire poor population—had been very cruelly persecuted by the rebel authorities. They frankly avowed that their solepurpose in seeking to be recog nized by the r ederal Government as regular, or rather legitimate, troops was to obtain -re venge. They wished to 'have the power to hang, shoot, and destroy in retaliation of the wrong, that they had endured. They desired, in other word_p_, to. be Federal bushwhackers, ' ported, armed, and equipped by the National_ Government. They were equally ignorant and vindictive; yet they understood clearly enough the Arne philosophy of the rebel lion. They never spoke of the rebels but of "these big nigger-holders," who, they said, with one accord, mutt be killed and their es tates divided up, or the Union would never be secure. a You can't get a principle out of a man unless you kill him," said one of them to me. "That's a fact," said the other; " you must kill a man to get the principle out of him." The first speaker went on to show that the "big nigger-holders " were thormighly aristocratic ; that while they held the land and owned the labor the poor man must neces sarily be driven to the sterile mountain dis trictS, and, as a consequence, that the same class who brought on the rebellion -would be ag! in in power, and constitute the State, and educe the present state of things within a few "ears. "For," he added, "this war has only , grOilhd the principle into them worse than ever." - I found this to be the almo.st uni versal sentiment of the loyal poor whites of Northern - -Georgia, Northern Alabama, and- Eastern Tennessee. After visiting nearly every town from Athens; Alabama, -to Atlanta, Georgia, and from Nashville to Chattanooga, If - thus wrote last autumn of the - habits and houses of the poor whites, and if my notes are rough and unpolished, they have at least the fidelity of a daguerreotype as:,to details, and may serve indeed as a pleasant change to the smooth and scholarly English of . your,:other contributors : " I have more than'oneemeidentally alluded. to the prevalence of dipping and snuffing as pyactised by the woraettßown here. In travel ing by railroad every one has chances enough to see women smoking. They do not seek to conceal this habit. Ttley can be seen sitting very often, with- their chairs tipped back, se renely smoking at the doors of their houses. The pipes that these daughters of the South delight to patronize are frequently, I think generally, made out of a corn-cob whittled down. 1. or stems they use vanes and goose euills. The custom is not merely common, it is universal among the lower classes. "I walked on foot from Decatur, Alabama, to Athens, twelve or fifteen miles, and during this trip first saw with my own eyes the practice and the apparatus of dipping , . As this is an indoor pasttime, the traveller has less chance to see it than its twin-sister vice— smoking. It was at bieDonaldfs Station. I went into a house, a large log-cabin, and asked if they would get me a dinner. There were two girls and a few children in,. the house. One of thegirls seemed to be about eighteen, the other about fifteen years of age. But I found that they, were each three years younger than my estimate. They called the woman of the house, the sister of the elder girl. She came in, said that I mowt dine there if I could wait, and lay down on a bed in that one of the two rooms that served for kitchen and dining apartment. I will not stop to deikeribe either room. It is enough to say that it—that everything in it—was cheerless, and rude, and dirty ; that it had no cellar, no closets, and only a thin floor ; and that through the walls and through the floor the wind might enter, and the rain might enter, even if the king of England couldn't enter. The woman was realiy 'sick. She spat blood—and snuffy saliva, When she wanted to spit—which she often did—she slightly raised her long lank form, and spat against the sides of the house. Sometimes she missed her mark and spat against the high head-board of the bed. " After my dinner of bacon, corn bread, and buttermilk was eaten, the girl who cooked it— quite a pretty young creature—before going out for sonic water, went to her sister's bed, and tried to slide a tin - box that I saw under the pillow, beneath her apron. I playfully protested, and asked her if she dipped snuff The sweet sisters seemed to take it as a mat ter of course, and were not at all hurt by the insinuation. They both defended the'habit. It saved the teeth, they said, awl 'all the women in their country either dipped, or stiokeil, or chewed—and sometimes all three. 'But do'the rich folks do sot' I asked. P said the younger girl, guess they do—and get drunk at home, too!' Notwithstanding this broadside, I still protested against yOUng , girls learning to dip. 'Did you notice that young girl that was in a little while sine?' asked the recumbent' matron. 'She can dip as well as any of theme Now, the girl re ferred to was not thirteen years of -age—a sickly, yellow4kinned girl, in the last stages of consumption—a disease of which her father lay dying, Inquiries sinew that time have eltowmtliat the - woman spoke the truth ; that yheßabits of dipping; chewing, and smoking aresli• but' univerSal here among. the females, rich and 2mor. The men admit with font beeitation that their women constantly use tobacco. Do you know hewn is dipping . is done? A little rag is tied on the en:c of IA 111,8 FRESS.--PEILADELPIIIA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 186 b: _ • stick, about the size and form of--a pen -holden The rag is' mcriatened, in the mouth of the fair devotee, dipped; in the snuff, and then the teeth or gums are rubbed with it!" After the battle of Nashville had an excel- - lent opportunity of seeing the poem white::: of Southern Tennessee and. Northern Alabama in their own homes. I accompanied General Stedman, now commanding in Georgia, in the movement which was designed to prevent Hood from recrossing the Tennessee. In -re turning we scoured the bottom lands between Huntsville and Stevenson, which are exclu sively occupied by the poor Whites. I find that I thus recorded my experience of the country and the people : "The section that General Cruft and I tra versed on this ride was a part of the bottom lands and the bluffs of the Tennessee. it is inhabited almost exclusively by poor whites. There are Very few slaves and no i rich people -anywhere. But poor as it is, and out of the way, it had not escaped the eagle-eyed con scription of the rebels, nor the visits of their guerillas, nor the retaliatory calls of the home guards, who style themselves loyal, and are so, but refuse to do other than local duty, which enables OM to plunder with the semblance of authority. It is everywhere the same Stone—low, wet wooded land; the trees leafless, tall, thick, with dwarfish, ungraceful branches; here a worm-eaten trunk, still standing ; there a stray bunch of green bushes, to make everything around it appear the more dreary h y contrast: a 'God-forsaken country,' if there ever was one, to look at on a cold, rainy clay, from horseback and a hungry The cliffs, on the other hand, are steep, rocky, covered with dull, ashen-colored trees—the haunts of the guerilla and the buzzard ; they are as cheerless as the bottoms that they overlook. " The people axe like the Country—as dull eyed and stupid as the lowlands ; as gaunt, angular, and vacant as the bluffs. Their dress is coarse; their food is coarse; their manners and their thoughts are coarse. I write not of the rebels only, but of the entire population. Rebel or loyal, it is all the same in, quality. They have no love of culture, of civilization, or of truth. The schoolmaster was abroad when this section was first settled, and has never returned, to stay, UP tO date. To and young women who can read and write is the rare exception—to find them as i °rant as the plantation negro is the co on rule. They are not to be blamed. They have had no chance and no encouragement. The wealthy slaveholders frowned on all attempts to edu cate the people, and the prejudices they created, or the vileness of their social systeffi, speedily drove away any warcdering Yankee whom accident or philanthropy or a desire to better his condition drifted into these be nighted regions. " The houses of these people are rude log buts, mostly without the interstices properly filled up, and therefore as cold as they are primitive and cheerless. It is singular to see bow little 'gumption' they have. One loses patience with them. Instead of going to work and filling up all the gaps in the walls, and thereby , keening out the cold, they pile cords of wood on ilreS on the hearth, beneath chim neys that are built outside of the cabin, and that thereby scoop up alt the warm air as fast as it is made. So they shiver. and roast, roast and shiver, freezing on one side and scorching on the other, turning themselves round like human spits, heating themselves by , detail and cooling themselves by sections, instead of se curing by a little labor a comfortable room, where they could make one job of it and be clone with it, and then go to some other work 'like Christians.' To make the matter worse, the wind takes the liberty to visit them through the floor. I did not wonder at seeing so many pale, wan consumptive women. Their style Of living is 'barbarous enough to kill a civilized horse. There is a heathendom. in America that we have got to redeem before we can lay a just and permanent aleipx to the character and reputation of a civilized land." Although my notes are still unexhausted, I cannot intrude any further on your space. I bad- intended to show by another series of facts that there mug be universal suffrage in the South ; that the disfranchiaement of aiiq class, instead of helping to promote an endu ring peace, will inevitably produce instead, not a war of sections as recently,but of classes and of races as in St. Domingo. JAMBS RRDPATIL Melanin, Mass. The 'Union Ticket of Delftware Comity. [From the Delaware County Republican.) The County Meeting of the Union men of Delaware county was held, pursuant to a call of the County Committee, on Thursday, the 24th Mat, at Cedar Grove, near tile Black Horse Tavern, in Middletown. The meeting was called to order lit one o'clock. Charles R. Williamson >was chosen President; H. Jones Brooke, Jacob Smell, and William A. Todd, Vice Presidents; Jas. Barton, Jr., and E. F. Baker, Secretaries. The President stated the Object of the meet lug, after which the names of the delegates were called, every borbugh and township in the county being-represented. After some pre liminary business, the delegates retired to ballot for a ticket to be supported at the next general election. The following-nathed gentlemen were ap pointed a committee to report resolution§: - - Thomas V. Cooper, Robert L. Martin, H. Jones Brooke, Jacob S. Serrill, and John Lar kin, Jr. During the absence of the committee, on mo- tion, Wayne Eic'Veagli, Esq., of Chester conn ty, Hon. John M. Broomall, and Robert L. Mar tin, Esq.; addressed tile meeting in eloquent and forcible speeches. At the close of Mr. Martin's remarks the chairman of the Delegate Convention reported the following ticket, which was adopted by the meeting Assembly—Ellwood Tyson. Register and Recorder—Frejeriekralrlamb. Prothonotary, F. Dullard. Treasurer—William H. Eves. Commissioner—WilliaM D. IL Serrill. Auditor—Joseph Walter. Director—F. J. Tlinksou. Coroner—George Rigby. County Surveyor—Joseph Taylor. The committee appointed for that purpose reported to the meeting a series of es:callow resolutions, which were adopted. The following resolutions were submitted to the meeting and adopted: Resolved, That section 4th, rule second, Of the rules tor thegovernment of the National. 'Chien party of Delaware county be suspended, and flog each township and ward delegation nominate a person to serve upon, the Breen -Live Committee for the ensuing year. Resolved, .That the rules be so far changed as to fix the place of meeting of the Convention permanently at the courthouse, Media. The meeting was well attended, and the pro ceedings *ere harmonious throughout. Since Lockhart's death there has not up- Peered a more readable article in the London Quarterly Review, than that . upon Grouse, in the new number, just republished in New York, and received from W. B. Zieber, 106 South Third street. It is full of pleasant de tail, and gives the history and mystery of grouse-shooting in Scotland as it never before was given. There is a paper on The Close of the American War, more moderate than usual. The other subjects are The Appian Way— Christian and Pagan Sepulchres; Browning's Poems, strongly eulogized ; North Polar Ex ploration ; Gleanings .from the Natural nista rY of the Tropics ; The Church and her rela tions to Political Parties; Carlylol9 Frederick the Great; Sanitary Reform in London; and The Elections. The September number of the Atlantic Month ly, received from T. B. Pugh, Sixth and Chest• nut, opens with the beginning of what pro mises to be a thoroughly good story, called "Coupon Bonds." There are continuations, respectively, of " Needle and Garden," lk Mar vel's "Doctor Johns," and Mrs. Howe's most sensible "Chimney Corner." An account of an American's visit tO-Ansa Edgeworth will be read with interest on both Sides Of the At lantic ; and we recommend " Our Future Mill. tia System" to all grades and classes of men. The poetry is not as good as it ought to be in a magazine of such high pretension as this, but most of its prose is very good. prom" Run ning at the Hands," evidently a relation of facts by an eye-witness, we take the following account of the petticoat capture of Air. Jeffer son-Davis: Andrew Bee, a private. of Company I, went to the entrance of Davis , tent, and was met by' Mrs. Davis, "bareheaded and barefoot," as he described kber, who, putting her hand on his arm, said " Please, don't go in there , till, my dayghter gets herself dressed !" Andrew thereupon drew back, and-in a few Minutes the young lady (Miss Howell) and an other person, bent-over as with age, wgaring a lady's "water-proof," gathered at the waist, with a shawl drawn over the head., and carry ing a tin pail, appear, and ask to go to " the run" for water. - Mrs. Davis also appears, and says : " For God's sake, let my old mother go to get some water !" . No objections being made, they passed out. But sharp eyes were Upon the singular-look. ing , 4 old mother." Suddenly, Corporal Hun ye; of Company` C, and °the* at the same in stant discovered that the" old mother" was wearing very heavy boots for an aged female, and the Corporal exclaimed: - " That is not a woman! Don't . you see the boots." and, spurring his horse forward and cocking his carbine compelled the withdrawal of the shawl, and disclosed Jeff Davis. As if - stung by this discovery of his unman liness, Jeff struck an attitude, and cried out: "Is there a man among you'? If there is, let. me see him !" "Yes," said the Corporal, "I am one ; and if 3'ou stir, I will blow your brains out P , • " I know my fate," said Davis, 6, and might as well die here.” - But his wife threw her arms around his neck, and kept herself between him and the threatening Corporal. - No harm however, was done him, and he was generally kindly spoken to; he was only stripped of lus female attire. - . . Ds a loan, he was dressed in a complete 'Suit of gray,a light felt hat, and high cavalry boots, with a gray beard of about six weeks' growth covering his face: t lie said lie thought thatour Government was WO magnanimous to hunt women and children that way. Wimp Colonel Pritchard told him that he would do the best he could for his comfort, he answered "I ask no favors of yomc Too which surly reply the Colonel courte ously responded by assuring him of kind treatment. * - * * * * Mrs, Davis Was very watchful lest some dis respect should be shown her husband. She assumed the responsibility of the disguise, saying she put the clothing on the "Presi dent.') She complained that the guard kept their guns cocked ; but When it was explained to her that the Spencer carbine was for safety_ carried at half-cock, she seemed content. In. personal appearance she is nearly the oppo site of her husband, who is a man wearing an ill expression of countenance, slim, spare,and under six feet, while she is quite fair, and of good size. On the road, both Mr. and Mrs. D& vie were at times seen in tears. She read the Bible to him, and be regularly asked a blessing over their meals. We" Vandals,” ache so often proclaimed us to 13e, did not disturb tutu. There were men among his captors who had been prisoners at Andersonville, but .they spoke of him without malice ; they only asked for justice, as they recalled tlicir fearful ex perience. Davis recognized and claimed the horse private Lynch had seized, and when he pleased, was permitted to ride him. The members of Davis ) staff submitted with better grace than he to the capture and march, and were generally q_uite communicative • but when speaking to Jeff, they removed their hats, and addressed him as " President Davis." The most interesting individual of the cap lured - party, was , famee H. Brooks, a little mu latto boy, about the size of Davis' son, who was his playmate. The little fellow readily affiliated with the Yankees, and became quite a pet. The news of Davis , capture spread like wild lire. The country people came in great crowds to see him; he did not show himself, however„ usually avoiding the sight of these wbo flocked to .see him. We did not under stand that the people had come to sympa thize with him, or to do him honor, but only that they were simply seeking to gratify their. curiosity. To us they expressed - exultation at his capture andthe , prospect of peace. Th e d a y w e, mulled Hawkinsville we met reinforcements. coming out from' Macon to join' us. 'The brigade band aeoompanied it, and was drewn .up beside the road :to play ” liankee Doodle" alive passed; but so eager were the perforniers to see Davis, that they, forgot their music, and the tune canto to a The Periodicals. laughable:t.ffeak-down. lininediatelt ditor they strnek..alp " Old !John ' Brown," the boys ;_putting In the - words : •Andwni liang Jeff Davis on a-sour'spple-tree." Witir - gusto--Which so affected him that he Thisdown the' curtain, of his ambrdigiOe. This force also brought, out President John son's proclamation of a reward forthe capture we bad already , made. Reagan was the first of the prisoners to read it, and - he then handed it to Davis. After this the party seemed to be more cast down. RAIL SHOOTING.—Mr. Walter, the editor of the Delaware County Republican, at Chester, himself a true sportsman, thus speaks of rail shooting in the vicinity of Chester, the head quarters of that kind of shooting " The season for rail-shooting does not com mence until the first of September next. There in a law in existence which. inilie,ts a fine of five dollars for every bird killed prior to that time; and ,yet scarcely a' day passes that we do not observe some vile poacher carrying these birds through our streets. They are mostiy of the lower class of men from the city, who manage to evade the fine. They are also killed by gentlemen who come here in yachts from Philadelphia. To the credit of our gun ners be it said, but few encroachments have been Made upon the law. No true sportsman will bag a rail before the first of September." WHAT THE SOUTH WHINES or vas Corrisit isrAnS. The Augusta Chnstifutionalise thus speaks of the Northern Copperheads: Before the war they were great on promises. During the war they were exceedingly great on doing nothing. The boasted assistance they were to give the South in case she resort ed to arms, to force the Republicans from place and power, was an empty boast-that's all. These designing politicians are now once snore at work to entangle this section into Schemes which will result in their own good, and our injury. We hope no leading Southern miggior the masses, will be deceived by them. If Mt permit ourselves to be cajoled, we will find out when too late that we have been made dupes of for the benefit of a set of men who tare nothing for us except OUr political influ ence. history proves this. Why should we al low a repetition of that of which we have al ready been the only ones to reap bitter fruitl Let us avoid all entangling political alliances with the dead Copperhead Democratic party of the North. We can gain nothing by so do ing? On the contrary, we will be the losers in. the future, its we have been in times past. Let us attend to our own affairs, and our future will be one of greatness and prosperity. Public Ainusements. CHESTNUT•STaIi&T Tinwrna—resterday even. lug this theatre was reopened for the sect: son. Deficient in capacity, as compared with its rivals, it has an excellent situation and is well ventilated. The stock company has been much strengthened and increased. Mr , and Mrs. W. E. Chapman, Walter Lennox' Mr. and Mrs. Mordaunt, and many more of the old company, are retained, with a not unac ceptable infusion of new performers from other cities. Chief among these is Miss Jose phine Orton (lately the "star" of the Warren Combination Troupe), a young lady of great ability, with good looks and a fifte figure. Mr. B. Young, long at the Walnut-street Theatre' where he was known and valued as a careful, reliable, and effective actor in a line which he may be said to ,have made his own, is also a member of this company, Mr. Robert Eberle, formerly of this city, and lately connected with the drama in Boston, is the new promp ter, and will be found intelligent and steady. Mr. Joseph C. Foster, who has had consider-. able_ theatrical experience, is the stage ma nager. Mr. Birgfeld presides in the orchestra, and Mr. W. E. Sinn, Joint lessee, is resident manager. The "bright, particular stars'l who shone last night were Miss Kate Reignolds and Mr. Sedley Smith. The comedy seleeted, to intro duce them was a The Wender; a Woman keeps a Secret," written by Susanahtent livre, one hundred and fifty years ago, and still a favorite with audience. and performers. The verytitle has a certain piquancy in it— libelling the fair sex, as -it does, by imput'a. tion. The charaeters, scene, and costume are Portuguese, and therefore picturesque. The play was successful in the leading points of its presentation. Mr. Mordaunt agreeably surprised us by his spirited and intelligent, if sometimes rather loud, rendition of Don Felix. Were he a little more subdued, he would have :been almost wholly successful. Mrs. Keach (widow of the clever and much-respected gen tleman who was stage manager of the Walnuts street Theatre some years ago) was put into the character of Isabella, which is too much for a novice. The lady is young and well looking, and may yet become an actress. Of the small Tart of Flora ' a great deal, but not too much, was made 'by Miss Annie Ward, a very lively young lady, who has admirable notions of acting. Her by-play is perfect. In this line of character she will probably be un surpassed, ere long. Miss Reignolds, who has wonderfully improved in all respects since we last saw her, some years ago, had a fine recep tion, and played Donna Piotante in a charming manner. Silo has matured into a very good actress, and her figure has bnproved into a becoming fulness which is far removed from what is called stout. Her action is natural and graceful ; her voice clear and sweet, but always audible ; her laugh has the silvery! ring Of Mrs. Zlishett, and her in tel lectual understanding of the author's language thorough and intelligent. She is handsome, tcoo. In, short, she is a splendid performer. This evening she will play in "The Youth of Richelieu?' WAtitev-sTrtewr TREATEn—The house was as much crowded as it had been on the opening on Saturday. Mr. Clarke's Major De Boots was a wonderful eihibition of "eccentric" comedy, which is near akin to broad .farce. He seems to have studied and stereotyped every accent, movement, attitude, and glance in this mu sing part. Mr. J. A. Herne is somewhat more animated, as Mr. Feltz Featherly, than before, but does not gibe the delicate by-play which renders the sparkling dialogue doubly effective. Mr. Fawcett, more assured than on Ills - first appearance, -played with greater ease, and' favorably. impressed. the audience. Beth gentlemen dressed in very good taste. Miss Annie Graham, ac commodating her voice to the size of the house, was acceptable, because audible—her elocution is excellent. Miss Effie Gertnon, as before, spoke so low as frequently to,be indis tinct. In fact she has a part for which she is not equal. In light ,farce, or as a soubrette, she plays very agreeably, but there is a long dis tance between the lowest step in comedy and the highest. Both ladies were charmingly at tired; and looked extremely well. Every Body's Friend" will be repeated this evening. Napoleon was a horrible grammarian, judging from the way in which he murdered the King's English at Waterloo. CITY THE BEST.FITTING SHIRT Cip THE AGE is " The improved Pattern Shirt," Made by John C. Arrison, at the old stand, Nos. 1 and 3 North Sixth street. Work done by hand in the best manner, and warranted to give satisfaction. His stock of Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods cannot be surpassed. Prices moderate. Oen FRIENDS, C. C. DITRIOH it Go., of the Continental Clothing Emporium, by a mas terly stroke of policy, have been so fortunate alto secure the services of that eminent ar t i.?t, a. Zaekey, Esq., the famous cutter of Parisian celebrity. Engaged for a series of years in the leading clothing - establishments of this and other cities, he has given such marked evidence of superloS skill and ability, as justly to entitle him to be called the "pre eminent head" of his profession. The large and extensive business of his employers—their splendid and well-selected stock of cloths and cassimeres l %c., together with the celerity and unexceptionable manner in which all or ders are executed, warrant us in assuring his large circle of friends that perfect satisfaction will ensue from their continned patronage. THOSE who — do not use the manures of the Agricultural Chemical Company are, we think, running counter to their own interests. The experience of those who have used these fer tilizers, is that for every dollar expended, ten have been returned to them in the way of in. c,reasea -production. -Journal. Mee, 413% Arch street. PRESIDENT JOHNSON'S COAT-OF-ABIIB.—PHRCh publishes a coat-of-arms, drawn for President Johnson. It consists in a pair of 'Copan scis sors; between — the lower part is a tailor's goose, and between the upper parts a thimble, surrounded by balls of thread. In the places of flags and flagstaffs, the scissors are sur rounded with yard-sticks, on which are bang ing coats and pantaloons. President J. having gone out of the business, Punch advises all his readers to procure their wearing apparel at the Brown Stone Clothing Hall of llockhill & Wilson, Nos. 603 and 605 Chestnut street, above Sixth. THE TSNTH OFTEN DIE - I.ollg before the system IMO its youthful vigor. This should not b 0 so. To pzevent this species of necrosis use fragrant Sozodont. It keeps the dental bone alive, the enamel spotless, the gums rosy and elastic, the breath -pure, and the mouth clean. autlo4nths3t CONSTITUTIONAL CONSUMPTION.—From trust worthy data it has been estimated that at least one-fourth of all who are born in the United States, have at With lungs in a tuberculous condition, and inconsequence are predisposed to Pulmonary Complaints, yet it is equally well established that this prediSposition need not end in Consumptiorq Asthma, or any other lung disease, if due care and watchfulness be observed; -and all exciting causes are promptly treated as they arise. It is in Just such cases Dr. Jayne's Expeetorarit exercises its mostbeneticial effects, and has produced the largest proportion of its cures, Besides promptly removing Coughs and Colds which, when left to themselves, are the most common causes of tuberculous development, this stand ard remedy allays any inflammation which may exist, and by promoting easy expectora tion, cleanses the lungs of the substances which clog them 41p, and which rapidly de stroy when suffered to remain. Prepared only At 292 Chestnut street, ausB-3t TRUSSES AND BRACES, specially adapted to ladies , use, correctly - rifted, by ladles, at C. IL Neeilles , Store, Twelfth street, first door be. lOW Itae street. au26.10t 31.4.C81NAW 917111 OWNS, *l. Mackinaw Sundowns, $l. Mackinaw Sundowns, 81. ' Closing Out the balance of our straw goods at 'ess than cost. CtIABLES OAKFORD & Sons, au24-7t Continental Hotel. NEW AwD SECOND-RAND ri,11,508 FON BENS', alld portion of rent applied to purchase. Also,. new and relegant pianos for sale on reeommodating terms. - GOULD, jyl4l-2m • Seventh and Chestnut. Min VBEDIOT o T9713(413 TASTE, Ince the poll tical vote of the country, settles many delicate questions, and the immense demand for. Pha loies " Nrghtanooming Ceram" shows that Ter diceto be oVeredtelmingiy in'. favor of the ar ticle, as the finest perfume on this continent. Sold everywhere. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. The follOhing is a statement of the condi tion of the Philadelphia banks yesterday, as compared with the previous week August 21. August 28. Capital stock 514,442,350 314,442,350 Loans 51,920,58) 50,577,243 speeie • 1,160,922 ' 1,155,197 U. 0. legal-tender 20,581,5013 19,640,788 Deposits. 41,348,173 38,861,910 Circulation 7,076,557 6,983,323 WEEKLY. BANK STATEMENT The following statement shows the average condition of the banks in Philadelphia for the week: peaeding Monday, August 28th, 1865: g - NlI mg4L'- Valo,baoWEv~iat xX-ww.EXE Itteze x '2. mop=22, , g.. E 1.52w02,p.r t ' Mv4IT-Weigs:a.°lElv tgaoso4lVlEg.44&im& z x. s l; gEr4ge.-Ems 4Eo%g-1-Ig;*ErE E r. xx gm prgn F 5 0 P Sr' H - 2 Po Er sq 2,!: OFROOMOYMYMM gggungugglng§§§§§§§§§§ pcol.meat ONPUJigi;gslbite 6 A - t - J §§§-6§g§dE-Ettiiitaitgsl§ '''' - 1 7 4.* PAAtm.O l l § §iiii§ E tiegEnAl - g.OI.2.I!NELT.:4IIqN3NIOUNAARO i§§§iiE§§§Edlu§§g§§§22l§g APPYPagApjia" - ggggOgg§n - 5a7 14"4P"g‘°114 §M§ElTEditti 171.1. POMMIAnAf 2 ?"P.,-PAAPP.O. garghgnlEME-13§E§§§4H r r PPlggPlPPßiTagilggs4l§; §§iii§i§§iimala-m§oßgi§m@ PfYROXIMpIpgIMVOYAO glgggnibbgEigtMEbing§§ Clearings. Balances. August 21 $5,516,413:94 $480,827 92 22 5,323,501 11 524,479 19 4.11. 23 4,766,107 68 570,716-16 4 ' 24,, .. , 1,258,574 22 438,769 91 29 4,05,04 16 270,574 24 ti 26 4,448,673 89 463,702 63 28,534,097 02 The stock market was moderately active yesterday, and prices generally flrm. Govern ment loans were is steady , demand ; the old 5-20 s advanced to 106% ; the new sold at 104%, and the 7-30 notes were steady at previous prices. There was considerable movement in City as, and the new issue rose %, with sales at 91%. There was an active movement also in State securities, the fives selling at 91%, which is a shade better. Companybonds were very dull, the only lot disposed of being Read ing mortgage 6s at 9334. .The share list was inactive, except for Reading, which, with free sales, advanced on • Saturday's figure. - The last sale was at .52%, ao. In other railroad stocks there was no movement. The oil stooks continue very dull. tionesta sold at 1% in the morning, and in the afternoon was freely offered at M. The < only sale of canal stook was of Sehliylkill. NtiVigation, which changed hands at 32 for the preferred ; Union Canal bonds sold at 21. The follow ing bide were offered for -railroad shares : 127 for Camden and Amboy, 57 for Pennsylva nia Railroad, 57 for Norristown, 55 for Mine hill, 25 for North Pennsyliania,l2yi for eau).- wissa common, 25 for preferred do., 93 for Philadelphia and Erie, and 42 for Northern Central. In City Passenger Railway shares there was nothing doing; 7234 was bid for Second and Third, 48 for Tenth and Eleventh, 1 21. for Spruce and Pine, 65 for West Philadel phia, 1.0 for Areli street, and Mt for Race and Vine 4934 was asked for Chestnut and Walnut, 33 for Green and COates, 26 for Girard College, and 24 for Union. The follolving were the quotations for gold yeStorday, at the hours named: 10 A. M 11 A. M 12 M 1 P. M 3 P. M 4 P. M 14334 /44 141 X 144 144 143 X The arrest of Edward 13, Netchum, on Fri day evening has not surprised many persons, because it was supposed that this rash specu lator had not left New York, and could pass his intimate friends without any apprehen sion of a detection. That this young man will not escape punishment for his conduct is not certain. The crimes against society in high places when not visited bytenalties are calcu lated to increase the class of offences which business men deplore, and the influence upon youthful minds in the great marts of trade and finance, as well as elsewhere, cannot be too highly estimated when gigantic offences are perpetrated with impunity. Thus far no new light has been let in on the lamentable transactions of this mfflguided young man, and it is not yet apparent that he has the power to explain away his apparent eulpability. Tile total amount of mutilated fractional currency redeemed and destroyed for the past week is 1420,200. Certificates of Indebtedness, amounting to K 821,100,. ilaVe-peen reduced Bince, the lath instant. The receipts from internal revenue, for Sa turday, amounted to over a million dollars. The following National Banks were autho rized during the two weeks eliding SaturdaY, August 28, 1865 ; ' Nantes. Location. Capital. I'3llostota National Bank..Canastota, N. Y. 5000,000 Farmers' and Mechanics' ..Westminster, Md. 75,000 Nat.Weliater Bk - ofßoston.Boston, b1a55....1,500,000 York Saco, Ma. 100,000 First N.B'klndepenclence.Jacksonir3to 50,000 Merck. Nat. B'k of W.Va—Clarksb"gW.Va. 100,000 llungerfora Adams, N. Y 125,000 Nat. B'k orlthode Island, Sewport, R, 1„ 100,000 People's Jackson, Mich.., 100,000 National Exchange Lansingb'g,N.Y. 200,001 Saco National Bank Saco, Me 100.000 National Bank of Newark. Newark, De 1.... 50,000 National Bank of Selma...:Selina, Ala 100,050 Merchants' Hastings,. Mutt 100,000 Capital of new banks , ~, $3.201),000 Previously authorizer.] .159,414,M Why,le number of National Banks Antho /Tied to date, 1,538, with an aggregate capital of 15,818,333 Amount of circulation issued to the Na tional Banks for the week Previously Isssueti Total No additional depositories of public money have been authorized by the Secretary.of the Treasury since August 20. It is proper, in order to prevent an erroneous impression, to state that the majority of the banks in the above list are conversions. from State banks, which were presented prior to July 1, and which have been delayed by some defect in their papers, or from which the final certificate has been 'withheld until their State Circulation should he redimed within the limits prescribed by the national banking law. The two or three new organizations reported were sanctioned prior to July 1, but have only j ust perfected their arrangements. Of the entire list but one hadbeen authorized since the date named, that one being at Selma, Ala. It may be stated 'generally that national banks now being reported organized may properly be classed as " delayed business" in the Treasury Department. The semi-annual coin interest on the ten forty loan, due on the Ist of September, amounts to $4,319,2.52. Drexel it Co. quote : New United States Bonds, 1881 106 N 107 new cur. of indbt's.. •. 9876 'L old eer. of indbt's 993.4 9971 7 3-10 notes 9034 993% Quartermasters vouchers 06 97 Orders for certificates of indebteduess......9B34 Gold 143 a. 144 Sterling Exchange 157 153 3-20 bonds, old mg 1003 10-40 s 97M 98 new 104lf 105 s, August 2S. Sales of Stoc IC BOARD TIE PLIBL SOO Croseent e1ty•b30.94 SOO Min go.. ..... ..lots Si 5 0 0 do blo 2yri 100 do 23-16 100 do 25$ 100 ....... ....sl5 2M 500 do 2.41 200Stl teholus..... 85 114 100 do 1361 500 ... slO .04 1000 do . $80..1 1000 do 1,4 1000 do - 1000 do .410 1 44 1000 do sit) If 100 Drinkard. .4.5 290 10 1 M Roya do I CALL. BECON I 100 - Maple Shade ..b2O. 7%; 110 Mingo sl5 23( 100 do 130:296 100 do .... 2,4' 2c4 Junction 234 100 do blo 2 MO tit Nicholas 31(0 Tionesta lots 14, 1600 do b6O .09 AT THE REGULAR .Reported by Hewes., ./Bi/er 1100 Wal Island-1160 .94 500 Tionesta b3O X 500 Mount Farm ...• • X 100 Junction blO 100 Tionesta b 3.511 100 Key5t0ne......... 1% 100 Mingo ..31 100 Keystone 1.31 lOARD OF BROKERS. & C0.,60 S. Third strait. BOARD. 1100 Maple Shade 75n BOARD, BEFORE 2(41 St N [cholas (Ml FIRST U S 66 '81...c0up.107 WO 135-205..n..c0u.101g, 150 U S 7.30 Tr Notes 99 31 200 do June 9 9 01 RAO d 0.... ...June 99% WO City Cs, new .. 91,4 200 do ..3+l 10110 do 91% 0e do.. municipal 9100 WO do ..municipal 91.34 32090 State 55 lots 9i 2000 do 10 Man & Meet Bk.. 291 e 10 Man & Meth Bk. 2;0,4 000 Reading R o:'a 100 Sel , t iolo 3. Novav prof T 2214 100 New Creek 1.'4 100 do .... liu 1000 Tionesta xi 100 Maple Shade 100 Mingo 011 ...... 23.4 000 do gm) do ..... 100 do .. 2, 1 4 100 Royal -Petro BOARDS. BET WEE. 100 neadlag u.. 1)10 52 01 100 do 010 2S . 100 do ... . .. —.610 52 56 200 do 52% 100 (10 .. . ... e 5 5235 100 do 2dys 52% 100 —do b 7 52% 100 dO . . .... 52-56 100 t 10....•. 2211 3200 City 65 new 91% 5000 State 56 55 9111 2600 do—. ..... 2dys 90 MO do 914 3CO Gibson Oil 7,i sO4) New Cret k.. . : ... 1:5 100 do—. 13,6 400 Da17.01.1 Oil. ...WM A; 100 do 3 4 s 300 du B 5 :P.4, 500 do 8% 3000 Iteadhigint 05.... 934 800 Ifoge Isld boo 15 100 Maple Shade—, 7.% 500 Mingo ..cash 2.Vi 100 do b2O 2 3 21 $OO do 2 1 500 do Imo 241 i 2000 Clinton WO 1 100 Caldwell 011-830 2 1001Seli War pref.... 22 600 TS S 5-20 Bile new.lolN 2000 MS 2.30 Tr Mytine 99M BOARD. . . , . /to u*n:l4l,ll,ls4lßel°)(:itUN64 IJ 7-80 Tr liotva I tots ..Aug 9936 WO do ........dune 9931 d0..,./ots July 99Y4 ;400 Cat' 44 ti.OW gim -100 S.cli Nay pref..... 32 100 Lel Na.vStool: 59 1000'New Cree7c..ll - is 1 3-10 300 Walnut /01d" 94 AFTER _ 100 Us)* Shade 9•/‘ 100 Organic 011., • 21 700 'Er S 7-80 Tr NEB— 99 1000,19'do" Ang 99 1000 City 6snew 91% 200 Caldwell Oil SALES LT 200 Sell ti av prer 32 200 100 do 32 500 do 035 12 14 100 Mingo Oil blO 2% 5000 Union 011 Eds.. 21 500 Sherman Olt 200 Reading R....01/7 52,e The New York foal of last evening says Gold is quiet at 1.44@144%. The loan market is easy at .5i(06 per cent. The accumulation of capital is large, but capital ists are cautious. The stock market is dull and drooping. Go.. vernments are steady, but without activity. The 7,308 are In fair demand at 99 , 36@9016. Before the first session New 'Cork Central was quoted at 92%, Erie at 87%, Hudson River at 109, Reading at 103%, Michigan Southern at 64:%, Pittsburg at 70%. following quotations were made at the board, as compared with Saturday: Men, Sat. Adr. Dec. 11. S. 65, coupon. 'Bl 10576 /0554 16 U. 8.5.20 coupons 10696 1006 U. 8. 5.20 coupons, nee-.104 46 104 U. S. 10.40 coupons 97 76 97 06 U. S. certificates 98;6 STA Tennessee 65.. ... .... .. 7836 7274 Missouri 6871% 71 58 New York C Mrs' 92,1 Erie gni Hudson River 10976 109% 3i Reading 10516 10534 M . After the board, Erie closed at 86%14)87, New York Central at 9.2%, Reading at 105%. Of Erie, 3,800 sold at 87%@87/, 600 Hudson at 109%f311% 1,200 Reacting at 105%@105. Later, Erie sold. at 86%. Philadelphia Markets. AIIOINST 2d—Bvening. The Flour market continues very firm at the late advance, but there is very little demand either for export or home use; about 1,000 bbls soldonostly Northwestern extra family, at *9@9.251 bbl, in cluding good and choice Pennsylvania and Ohio at Vegli Mil. The retailers and bakers are buying, at from 11787.75 for superfine; 1313,19 for extra; isa.t . s @10.50 for extra family, and $d1612 `ft bbl for fancy brands, as to quality. Rye Flour is selling in a small way at $608.25 "43 Uhl. 100 bids Corn Meal sold at $4.75 "fi bbl. GRAI.- ; The demand for Wheat is limitet N and the offerings are light, but holders continue very firm in their views. About 6,000 bus sold at it:LID-a 2.20 for fair, togood and prime new Reds, and $2.26 @2,30 for old Pennsylvania and amber Western. White is scarce, and we hear of no sales. Rye is selling at *i@l.oobus. There is more Corn offer ing. About 5,000 bus prime Yellow sold at $1 03 afloat, Cats are in fair demand, with sales of 5,000 bus new, at 5452„140; ilia latter rate in the ears, and 1,500 bus old Pennsylvania at 80e, which is a decline. BARK.—Quereltron continues scarce and in de- Mind ; 15 hL s Ist No. 1 sold at 1t32.00 . 13 ton. COTTON.—The market is rather firmer, but there is very little doing in the way of sales. Rinall lots of middlings are reported at s'@l7e ib. GROCERIES. In Sugar there is rather more do ing, at full pricer; 400 Mule Cuba sold at from 12M4 laMe 74 lb. Coffee is firmly held, but we hear of no sales worthy of notice. PROVISIONS.—The receipts and stocks are light, and the market is very dull at about former rates. Mess Pork is quoted at *34 MA. Bacon Hams are selling in a small way at 261@•31c lb, for plain and fancy eanvased. • WIIISKY.—SmaII. sales of Pennsylvania and Western bbls are flushing at 224(§)Pie it gallon. The following are the , receipts of flour and grain at this port to-day: Flour 1,700 bbls. I:) WO PC K. ~l 0 * El Philadelphia Cattle Market. The arrivals and sales of Beef Cattle at Phillips , Avenue Drove Yard are larger this week than they have been for several months past, reaching about 2,400 head. The market, in consequence, is very dun, and prices are without change. First quality cunsylVaidA and Western Steers are selling at from . 15,X@10%e; fair to good, at 141B15c; anti com mon at from 10@13c e el lb, according to quality. The market closed very dull, and sales of common Weat ern Cattle were reported it rather lower prices • than the above. SD - DEP.—Prices are xather better. 0,000 head sold at from Of.ec7ge ib, gross. Of good fat Sheep and. Lambs at from Pelf tgi head. HOGS are in fair deinankat former rates. • 2.000 head sold at the different yards at from $15017 the 100 lbs. net. $2,799,064 19 COWS are In demand. About 150 head sold at rum 4430 up to *9O "{'3 head. as to quality. The Cattle on sale tvilay are from the following ..tatea: - 810 bead from Pennsylvania. 976 head from Ohio. 620 head from Illinois. The following are the particulars of the sales: Mooney & Smith, 150 Penna. and Ohio, 15@,1616. Owen gmith, 100 Penna. and Western, 13®1634. Christy Bro., 68 Western, 150111. Diellllen, ha Penna. and Illinois, P. Hathoway, 141 Penna. and Ohio, 14016. J. S. Kirk, U 4 Chester county, 19M,G16 , 6. Martin. Fuller, & Co., 196 Western, 146163. H. Chain, 52 Pennsylvania, mom. J. & J. Chain,_ 90 Piansylvanut, 1.5@1.6. Hope & 82 Western, 12046. ' Dryfoos & Bro., 100 Western, 11 16. St-hamburg & Co., 225 Western, ricou. Ullman & Bachman. 100 Ohio, 15,4016%. E. S. MeFillen, 68 Western, laigpi. Kennedy & MeClese, 35 Pennsylvania, 1212/10. Corson, 21 Chester county, 7,4 r, gross. Jas. MeFillen, 126 Western, 1 1634. COWS:—The arrivals and sales of Cows at Phil lips' Avenue Drove Yard reach about 150 head this week. The demand is good at full prices. Spring ers are sellly at tbom *30660, and cow and calf at from J10(0 head, as to quality.. SHEEP.— he arrivals and sales of Sheep at Phil lips' Avenue Drove Yard are large this week.. reach ing about 8,000 bead. She demand is fair, and prices are rather better; good fat sheep sell at from 6k , 07;.:(e 1M lb gross: stork sheep at from s3.soal4.sotahead, and lambs at triigelii head, as to condition. H068.-1' e. arrivals and sales of Hogs at the tnitoilAvenne Drove Yards resell about 2,100 head this week; the demand Is good, and prices are well maintained, with sales at Trout- $15917 the 100 net, the latter rate for prime corn fed._ 1,628 head sold at Henry Glass' Union Drove Yard at from Nagai the 100 It's, net, as to quality. KO bead sold at Phillips' Avenue Drove Yard at from 40.5.50®17 the MO Ms, net, as to quality. New York Markets, August 2S. ASHES are dull at $7.50 for Pots, and $7.6214 for Pearls. - - BnuADSTuFP6.—The market for State and West ern Flour is irregular and unsettled; sales 12,000 bbls at 8;7.1 8 7.75 for superfine State; $BOB.lO for extra State: .1603.35 for choice do; $7.057.71 for 5 11 pertine Westeiiii 0.0.4(49.00 fors common to nie di diem extra Western: and. $9.100.30 for common to good shipping brands extra round-hoop Ohio. Ca nadian Flour is unsettled: sales 400 bbls at 818.10,g) , 8.40 for common: and d 8 50®71 for good to choice ex tra. Southern Flour is firmer; sales 600 Ws :149 60 a 10.50 for common, and $10.60@14 for fancy and ex tra. Bye Floor is quiet. Corn Meal is dull. Wheat is irregUlar and unsettled: sales 40400 bus at $1.6Cff1.62 for Amber Milwaukee, and i!‘.2..1.5@12.16 for Amber State and Western. Bye is quiet. Bar ley is dull. Barley Efalt.is quiet. Oats are Unsettled, arltk! for Western. The Corn market Is irregular and unsettled: sales COO bus at 96c for unsound, and M@SW: for sound mixed Westorn. PROVI siCss.—The Pork market opened heavy, but closed firm; sales of 6,700 bids at im@32.75 for new Iness:sso.o.oo.Bo for 7 62-4 do! #0.4 for prime, and $27,70 Gas for prime mem The Beef market is firm; sales ase bbls, at about previous prices. Beef Hams are quiet. Cut Meats are firm; sales 640 bbls at 14X®1610 for Shoulders, and 19@2:30 for Hams. The. Lard market is quiet and steady; sales 000 bbls at 19M4 .24 . 14 e. WIIISnY is Inn; sales 900 bids Western at 6.2.19210 .t.fat. , TALLOW is steady; sales 125,000 the at 143i@I5tie. BOARD OF TRADE. . TEIORNTON BROWN, EDWD. IeAFOIMOADIG, ) MONTHLY COMMITTRX nit:l , llAr Law's, MARINE INTELLIGENCE. PORT OF PHILADELPHIA, August 99. 017 N RISES..S 281 SUN SETS.. 6 611 HIGH WA2Rit..B 10 Steamer Norman, Baker, 48 hours from Boston, with Indse • and passengers to Henry Winsor & Co. Outside the ()apes, saw a large British bark, deeply laden, coming in; below the Buoy on the Brown, our deep bark and three brigs; on he Brandywine, brig C Nichols: two schooners from West Indies at Fonrteen-feet Bank, and brig Us, off the ship John Shoal. . . Steamer Claymont,_Robinson,Robinson 4t hours froto-Rieh ond, with mdse tolV P C4de,ik Co. Steamer Bristol, Charles,24 hours from Now. York, with mdse to W P Clyde iCo. Steamer Valley City, McCarthy, 24 hours from New York ~.with mdse to W P Clyde & Co. titealller I.4l).erty,_Pierce, 24 hours from New York, with muse - to P Clyde & CO. • Si eamer D Gazley, Stone 24 hours from New York, with noise to W P Clyde &:Co. Steamer Vulcan, Morrison, 24 hours from New York, with mdse to Wth M Baird ,t Co. Steamer S C Walker, Shelia, 24 hours front New York, with mdse to Wm M Baird* Co. Z 591,230 172,664,400 • . . Bark Queen of Scotia (Br), Lockhart, to days from LlrerhooL with bulge to Peter. Wright .1, Sells, Bark Ellen t•ternitgl, Wilithanl, 3 days from Now York, in ballast to - Warren Br, Gregg. Brig Coo E Prescott, Mills, a days from New Lon don,ln ballast to captain. Brig C N kinds, Philbrook, 5 days from Boston, In ballast to E A Seeder Co. $175,05,890 . _ . Brig a 11 Bixby, Outcrbriago, 8 cl:rr. from Bostou With let , . to order. ~ . . lirig Webster Klly. KAM:ell, 4 days from New York, in ballast to Warren it trrettg. Brig Foster, Unpin!, .days front Boston, with empty barrels to captain. Brig John - Aviles, Tracey, 4 days from Boston, with empty barrels to captain. Brig Win Creevy, Godfrey, a days from Boston, in ledlast to captain. - Brig Winona, York t days from Portland, In bal. last to B. A Soutler-& Co. Schr George Pales, Nickerson, 4 days front Prov idence, with mdse to Crowell & Schr Com Kenny, Roberts, 3 days from New York, in ballast to Carman, Merchant,. & Shaw. Schr S Wilson, Howell. a days from Boston, in bal la wt to W ammumeher 3c Maxtleld. - - . Seta' Izetta, Eaton, 3 day 3 frOM New York, In hal._ last to J E Batley & Co.. • &In* J Maxfield, May, 5 days from Boston, In bal last to captain. - Schr Atlantic. Brant, 8 days from Bangor, in bal last to Warren & Gregg. Schr. S A Stevens, Nickerson, 5 days from Stoning ton, Lt ballast to captain. Seim 'l' Borden, Borden, days from Fail River, in ballast to captain. Schr N J Brayton, Milliken, 4 days frOni Bristol, In ballast to captain. Schr J 11 Litchfield, Crockett, a days from New York. In ballast to captain. Schr Delaware, Bostic, I day from Smyrna,, Del, with grain to James Barratt. Sehr Banner, Furman, 2 days from Indian River, Del. with grain to James Bartatt. • Schr Freeniason. Formait 2 dO•s from Indian Ri ver, Del, with earn to Jaallarrntt. Mir Hand) WalTen, Pollos, 1 day from Camden, Del, with grain to Jas Barran'. Sehr At - Istria, 2 days from Baltimore, with grain to Jae Barran. Schr Sallie Veaule, day from New Castle, Del, Will, groin to Jas Barratt. Sclir Lancet Bayard, 2 days from Chrlstiamt, Del; with grain to Christian & Co. Behr Nile, Fowler, 1 clay from Smyrna, Del, with grain to Jus L Beltley & Co, Schr lUdle, l?ffillen, - 2 days from St Martin's, Md, with grail[ to dos L Bewley & Co. Schr Pearl, Richardson, 2 days froln St Martin's, with grain to Jos L Bewley. & Co. Schr Sewall. Cothran, 2 days from St Martin's, Md. - with groin to Jaa L Bewley & Co. Sehr Jos C Atkins Atkins, 1 - day ihntl Del, with grain to Jasl. Bewley & Nchr Ettie Hall, riming, 1 day from Frederica, Del, with grain to Jas L Bewley & co. Schr Frank Herbert, Crowell, from Fail River, in ballast to 41 G & G S Reppller. i , chr Cen Banks, Ryder, from New York, in bal- I a -t to captain. sow Caroline Hall, Doughty, from Fan Myer, to ballast to Captain. SChr el Elliott, blittw, from Thomaston, in ballast to Carman. Merchant. & Shaw. Schr C W May, May, front. Boston, In ballast to Wm Hunter, Jr, & Co. Schr Irene, Eaton, front New York, in ballast to Tyler &Co. • Stilt' Lizzie, Eaton, from New York, in ballast to L Audenreid & Co. .Schr ti A rarsons, Sharp, from Boston, in ballast to captain. Sehr joint Snort, Coffin, from New. York, in ballast to captain. - Cleared. Steamer Buffalo, donee, New York. Steamer B Aleinder, Bloomsburg, Sassafras. Steamer J S Shriver, Dennis, Baltimore. Brig J W Harris (Br), Davison Marseilles. Sehr Mignionette, Wheatley, Washington, 'D C. Seitz* Sneed, Smith, Baltimore. Srhr Dr Kane Ilvder, Danversport. SOH. ilathorn, Bath, Schr E A Stevens, Nickersonßiehmond, Schr R Borden, Borden, Fall' River. Sebr N J Brayton, Millikt n, Providence. Schr C Hell, _Doughty, Dighton. sehr Sophia Wilson, Nowell, Boston. seta' A Tirrell, Higgins, Boston. - Schr Frank Herbert Crowell , Providence. Sehr Johoßnow, Coffin, Portsmouth, N. H. sehr,e Eaton, Boston. • st - br C W-May, May, Fall River. Sehr Irene, Eaton, Boston. Sehr A Trutiell (new), Timmins, Newport. • beheßee, Owens, Riehmond.Va. Ship .1 S Harris, for :Sydney, N S; bark Thos Dal eft, for'Lagaitrral brig Cuba, for Matanzas, and evernl brig...mat schooners, anames unknownwent 0 *sea at 8 A M Su mlay.--Reported by Mr. J.W. Eu.- berforO, Memoranda. Steamer Saxon, Sigtthews, beam at Bogtou On 100 Beading - ft 5201 - 100 do Da 52.ig 100 Mingo 1)10 2% 500 Sob Nay pref—its 32 SOO do 1)30 323( HZ CLOSE. 100 Reading R.• ..1i45 5276 200 o d 52h 100 do 530 635 wn 3205 200 Tionesta Oil 01 500 New Creek..... 1 3-16 500 Mingo Oil.— ..... 2 31 500 St Nicholas.. .... . 6,100 llts .10,900 bu 4 . 6,200 bah ATARTST ?A—Everting Arrived. Went te`fles. ' ARRIVALS AT THE thy tt i ii .", ________ The Continental. i F mires, waslßOßton Mr Gazz„. , Chas H G Lewis,Wash Tl 3 itler; . &" `,,'1 ,1 ,,,, Chas ,T Canfleld,Wash C 0 Relh.,74'! St i' . ., Robt A Payne, wash Wilson , r,-, - ;1‘i!!. y,', , ,, J A Brown, Maryland T L Lewl,.-14 , It 0 A tiartman, York, Pa A Lorna i',,"i"i! 04 Chas It West, Pittsfield Thos li puly.n, c '! ft'', :Jag McGee, Brooklyn Wli Is in , lrili "'i• !- Miss E BW oodward, Moss John h 1i , ,,, -- ; ! Ci , ,,• , i, A C Davis, Lake Superior 0 B Riell,,;!:'-in, i, l' , . P Mors & son, New Yor - 0 Ileekri,riT! ' C Sclniltness. Louisville J H Rae:s ' is.' "i, a l'%' Miss Schultness & da, liy l' A jeukel."4,`i Jos Illatk,!Zanesvillo Geo lltnn,, , . rel,l: ,, ,q M Black, Zanesville k(1 111 lo la , 1 ;6,.." M Beamas & wf, St Louts Dzi Lereioi! . 4v,v, Geo A Kelley. Allegheny V Cooke,. 'pj ro , ,k , 'i Dr Purple, New York It 1,y,,,,,„, ) !!ha. •,*, E R Purple, New York Geo W Mniin; I . l '` , J 11) Peddle eh wife W It Jon r,1•,;!..' J W Dunklee,Rotterille (('en 1TA1id;,,j,,,,P,:11 21 It Swayne, Balt Jr, ii Char,,,,,,, .i.' 7 ' Al J Goodrich, Scranton 6. DunNp 10, •L 7 . 4 .1 w A wsnams, Scranton mt.. 5 win); 6 1''.' b, F, A Ferguson ,t wf, CM Ayartie e, i i ; ., !! • Miss B. Clearwater.. Cin II irl rnr:tiu l i,' ',Y . !. Miss Laura Clearwater,o J IV Newlin. I "! , :s, W Burke, Pittsburg Mrs It II tinilli; r''''', JameS Upton Mrs J Yori,o, i';•, r `Chas Whiting, N Orleans A W Leis, Iril, ','-,' HI) Bird, Pctershilrff VE Meredith 17,,1'n% A F Crane, Baltimore Miss tend,, 31, ".;',,, ,1 Cites J Prescott, Boston Mrs U lie 11 j t ,;' , :: John Ingalls S Carolina lleoL indon, ,f j' , t.,r,. W B Taber, Brooklyn T J Rohe, , s ,-,',, ~,i!.0;,, m rs w swehh & da,lnd'a Mrs ht Viol 8 1 ' ",.' 4 ,,..;': A E Pattisonlndianapia His. M Vns% 1. 1,•:' tr) p Searfe, PittsburgP Van Segg, I-, i' r rs, e ; John W Matthews, Pittsb It Oral' a svi', i" , ',,"'' , ;i. Jas Flitter, Philada 11 Elguera, 1,1,;,,ra1ii ! Saint MUSSOMILII. & wf,Pa Carlos Hulse), ; , T W Egan, New York AEd Ward 5, l';;;; I '' Ll. HIl Bates,Cincinnati J . C Clarke & ',,.,'',P ' 11 E Breneinau, Cinelnit E Albano!, & t i" .'„ 0 Albert J Clark, N York C L Brigham u t ' '',,'' R J BL Winn, Tenn fi 1' Nainutl,,'PY ",' Mrs Winn 8c 2 ch, Tenn. J,l Bunting 1,,,, , , ~, Miss Filgin, Tenn . E Evers, 1i4!.,..." 41 lsaae NeWton 11 11 Fonytil , F Adams A Jaok s n,,„,, ;', y, II E Temple D P Rhem.., ( ,,, , -!,,, S Sorelter, Paris C Holland, Cin, !. Chas M Elleard & wf, Mo John A I hmor, ):' ' . lo J A Boole, New York Dl' Southwi..t miss G Boole, New York Ales White, i 1,,„. 'l' F Ward, Pittsburg' Col & Mrs knni.,.,!; , Jas T Peterson & WI, * Ora A C Mack, In,:.' '" ' 1 F J Painter Alex liratil. !!!.1„ Jas I' Duffy, New York ii 6p„,,,,,., ~L :, , S 11 Aubtle, Boston 'rims Wittim,„ 1,.. E F Real & is Ohio E T I. Faxon, ( . I,:'':, A J Ford, Richmond, Yft J T . Brishe & ~t , : , !f CR Taylor,ltichniond,Va W A Benson. x,, / ,;' . ' 4 MrsHellmers, New York Frankotter, !!I!.!;,'i.'" Reimers & eh,NYork 1.,,..5ii, , j,.:(, W Nichol, Nashville II Burge, ' 1 Dugs ,T Nichol, Nashville J Cleag&lif, I), 1 t 4.! , Miss L 'Nichol Nashville C B incoo, 1)„, 0 ,.... ..., hirr M Ilaiii - y, Nashville Mrs C m i tklllif , ,' ! ;, . R Cunningham, N Castle Mai AW W nt, N„", r'l S W Treat, New York W Wills, .11', Nni r!';''''i Miss A E Merria in, NYork II C Morgan, ?,;,,, i;' 7 1 H Foster, New York C 0 Reynold, N . ,.,, ‘'.', Ml as 13 Merritt, Illinois J II Zegler Ilar; !',.'' Mrs BM Showell &2 ch JII Bombe ro, r,ll';:'i E R Oleott, Now York Chas fl Minh, p„ .:•- i 11.11Pettertii, wf,Melnplils'W A Mullin, iien',.-. Miss K Potter, Memphis / The G -T Fourthman, Penns J A'Boyer, M D, Pemui J J Moore & wf, Virginia Mrs Brown &eh. Poona W H Khtler, Newcastle J Rounsavelle &AIX S N. F S Turner, Baltimore i C Crookshank, Md I SC Magruder,Washlngth' Wilson Havenderi, Del Jas Carter, Tamaqua N D Taylor Jersey City I!„Yes R-Best,'Jersey Olt) JlllifeCutehembJer City! Mrs Brodhead, P ennit Miss Slebert,Chambersbg' Thos H Rickert, Pottsv J G Rowe, Greencastle R T Emory, Penult W Hedges, Ohio Miss Currey W Jones, Perms S A Sommerton, U S N H S BensomWashingtou L Laughton,Vlrginla F Catenux, New I ork J Patterson,Allegheny. A P Hoover, Washington B C Dean, Brooklyn iii Asai'' Waiter P Foster .1 C= Allstead, Pittsburg DL Welock, Allegheny W B Reed Felix Callin N N Valiant, Baltimore J S ['tuba, Maryland B J MeElbaney, Pittstrg Geo Toy, New York. S Randall & in, NY J 151 Reed, Hartford A W Wilson, Kentucky J It Vogel, Scranton Mr% Vogel& da,Seranton B H Blehards, Altoona S W Snooker, Altoo/1a W G Rodgers., New York Miss Carrie Rodgers, N Miss Ellie Rodgers, N Master Chas Rodgers,NY T L Anderson, Newark J N Dean & Is, Harrlsb , g John W Lanier, Balt Christian Ward, Balt W T Wattson,Sprlngaeld C Horner, Cincinnati J D Ramsey & Is. Conn Miss D Rumsey, Conn 'W L Hamilton & son,N D S Wright, Wilm, Del F T Romper, New York A Creel, New York J Dillon, New York D A Sutton, New 'York Mrs Foster & dau,Pittsbg J L Bewley, Delaware BF Dougherty & la, Pa Miss E Dougherty, Pa Master E Dougherty, Pa J Samson, Baltimore L lilmball A. la, Va Miss V Kludmil, Virginia S Hinkle & son, halt B F Carter, Woodbury C W Catlllollll IL 0 Ben&sler, park o4 Dl' P R NV:gases .Mr BMA ' IW/a Ilor.se. A ts , 1 S pimps: i 3 " IB S ' yrr's Rotit Ne 'Deo 1 1- Strong, Saml Jambs. Ron !John Tlionias. Trs IS T Richards. John Archibald.S JasT Lock ride,. ei...;j," ; M. Hamilten,Nr s Isaac New trm, J F Greene, N Carnlitn T Broderick, 4 0 0 Harper, llng:in,, Mel Eckert, Wasitinit....,' E H Rauch, Itea,na, I+ II Watts, 115.1 E Ambes&wf, F.llraks J Clarkson, W Stewart, Waddn,i,-; II Z Rboades,/,44ara r ' 0 J J T Mactaloniale.LaeS'r B J MeG W L Holbrook, StrOa I. J A Patterson, Ih!s.v ar , C V Button, Delaware J W Sommers, 0 W P Ard & wr, T H De Browning, BPBrown&/a,,N., 115 Hemphill ,t S Burdwell & 50n,11.- 0 S Bright & Ii B Craft & wf, Daniel. o reent, ii ii, L Bloomer & It B Thuma,, Baltimur: Jas Thompson, ball R Lewis, New Turk , La Rue l' MMUS, N J S Bo n dy, Whreline C Harbour Whreala W Harrison, T L Ogden, Woodbury W G Case, Colutuhia 0 It Denkle, Roston 'PMcEvoy, Liturailot MissM Dunn, lane:tile,* I I) Bruner & wf, Peat Mrs T Smith & ch, rons W P Bran ti wf. Food P Bast & ser. DC1111:I W Carr & %yr, PitisleurA C 11 Brock Hon .7 A Nteholsrm, J R N icholson. Basses E E Ewing & Is, I::ktsa. II Love, New York I'' Clapp, Harrisbuts Whitey The Mer W Schwabacher, Wheel'g Mr Pritchard chants , . C Schwalm, Pitt;lagg GI- Seymour, MilwAo,,,: J F Stewart, Penn, J Paul, Pittsburg J P Gregg, Pittsburg A H Polloek, P1114lur; Miss L Stoup, Alleumq D 0 Saylor, Al len I own B Deltmer & la. Cia, T MVP liams,Smyrns.W. Berk, Smyrna. Lirl C P Hess, Lentil/114 William Brown C S Palitter ' New Hain. Bernard, Illinois IR Fulmar. Pittsburg . Jo Ine,4 It Honey O W01111:01, New Jersey M Lansbarg.Wasbington Yomer batiey Holtzwortb, Lewisht TI Arnold, Ottawa, 11l IS Lehman. New 'York C Perkins, Plasficel M Haynes, 4 'Melon:of Ragsdale & la, N York Gen W Lilly SI U. i . ,11111. MrS H Mutt,. MCnunk H L Marr, 6chuyilill J Brush. M L I: z, A J Stewart .Cliambersittl J J Lewistown M Ciulld, Boston U C Pollork, Baltimore. Ales: Taylor. Phtsleir; Ii Simpson, New Y.,:k T N Colder iv, Now= I.J Wllon E K Whitaker H Stewart, Ponta It B Bomber, 31.14.11e4m J H Landis, Middletwl T Allen bi . Flo T Ronson. r Flianort,la s•pi ith bachnuin, N'ew 1.'61* A ,nenerumn :, Frankel. Oskaloosa M Israel, Chicago C Hope, Trenton - w Kohler, Virginia \V Ii Bid Jonah, lowa J G Johnson Capt .i.l34harborough Ca tMMcCanna&ta R Armstrong,Allegheny G Black, Valparaiso, Ind W K Tandergrift, Perinn J K Barbour, Pittsburg Bly, Pittsburg Ilißrockerboir,lioterowe L Cartnyneta 4 Newark E Brown, Newark 4 R Hutchinson R C Johnson, Blair co J H Keatlev . ,Hollidayshg J Craford, kittannlng ILA Bowser,Kittanning Galt, Sterling, 111 A Hi Conover . 7 . J „ Blanenard, U S N S Heineman, lowa I Ward, Pottsville Mrs Snerldan. New. York F ti Baxter, .Boston Blair, Allegheny. C P Whister, Allegheny Geo Gorman, Hazleton Miss A Gorman, Hazleton Dr J K Kalil), Lanegster T Plekeupangn 4 Virginia Miss Id A Mulliken, Ohio VI Patten & la, Columbia C L Bard, Chambersbnrg J B Leily,Newport, R I M Halfpenny, Penna W a Halfpenny - , Penna Deo Fritz Johnstown 3 II Aranstisel, Delaware J W Reynolds. Delaware] S Stewart, New Jersey W G Wardle, Pottsville WW Blakslee,Weatherly C I) Brodhead, Penna P H Allenach & la,Wash H Hoi'Vey, Plymouth L In Smith, litivestort S J Reed,Delaware co,Pa • g Liggins. New Tor, ,Mira* Miry 3 • 111 " D Rosenbaum ,• . . WEmnierson. Englan.l Mrs Sherrill vs T Newsman. Cumbolas I J Itosentlug, lowa .M ICalin, lltinois • J Hirsch, MRVglin IV Flendng. Vit1510,,r4 J Oberndorf, Milt WM' The A J P Murphy, New Jersey, F Conover New Jersey .14 A MooretTrentopi N J P Welch, New York A DI Somers, U S A Chas H Fletcher,Boston Jae Porter, Milwaukee N Appleby, Chicago T,Newell, Boston H Frankental, N York E Mcilhaney, N Y S Carolina A.l Cl,,rke. Baltimore Thou Clay, Baltimore Chas Connor Thos J Prow erican. 'F M Kintner. Iteminm. C J P0W111.6, New Turk 'Jos P Brostus A. Dickson. ludinlavoitt C L &MOS, VI ryi 11/3 E J Horner, l'l Mu, DO J M Cotton:Smyrna, PC, C in Ward, Troy, N r J MeGonignt, Dover, PM S Perry, High Point., N I H 31 Irwin • 1J 31 Climpp, Pa Bart, 8 - clutylkill filvd [J DI :Nina% Buttim ,, t , 1 B BrinkLey, Baltimore B ILI Pliiiique New John S Hat. ' Viroini:. F B Smith, New S'arli It L E Coombs, Ito.to NM. Ft Goma & l IA 11 Cappoultligtt• 31J (Alex troliiisvis, IS Silver, Delaware 13 M Flntbait. lioThm Miss Briggs. Virginia Q S Collihs, 1 - ttrylairt B F Willis, halt W P Sanders. New York I Padellord, Taum.. l, Chegt or 01 P Linton. Pew:, II f 3lltaniser & lIIJ Prettyman x wf, Del CaPt It C Jamemm. A A ii Bishop, New York Baring. Couneetioul C Dathey & Wire 'Miss Bobbst,l. VI Nis is! 'D B Krause, 01110 Mr A Hello's E V WlngartkPßila. T C Fisher. Huntingdon Jae It Moorhead, Ps R D Elwood, Pa W Hsiitillee, Nowlin:10 • Hann:tits: Chicago • W Price, New York A Gale,.Chicopee, Mass Robt B - Warden, York Geo G Read. New York Sle Conover{ New Jersey N .Jersey W W Griffin, 'Wash J Hem Columbia D Mann, Delaware ui Bauman, roma 6 F Watson, Alex,Va J Y J Henry, New York D Martin, Baltimore J t Ramberg, New York It Callan, New York W Brooks, New York f TlShaw. Chicago Dr J W Redden & wf,DM The Union. . . . . W Eskhart„, Wheeling ; Mrs Lathrop • 2 oh. Eapt ADI Layat, New York Mrs Vining & ch.lr.tyritrl Übns P Martin, New York 1,1 1 W A,atteksan, Mohr: , haute B Dangler, Chin F - ivituvr, Q W Reeves, IttuAnon,o , Alcx U ray, Wilkoheb . Chas Hicrholzer, Penne !Mrs 0 ray '& son, Jos Run', Birmingham !C Jaggarii. Altoona B Himes, Newport, Pa ICap.t J Newton, I . K J J romer W - Kreps, Bre:mewl k B J Sulger_ Allentown .J Palmestock, Lane 4•• , 13. W Ziegler. creetwasth, arls s 7Crtder, Lalle ru F Meorou, New Ji.,Voy lilies Salzman, Pun,... 11 Landing, New Jersey :W E Vines, Lewiscown. C E Christ, Allentown !MISS M Lowisf n R A Toting, Coatesville Miss M J o nes./.,elrlClr It J L Suydam, Coatesville J P Lukens, Clarion, Peter Buck, Ashland Mrs lekens eh.tnito W Carmany, Annville .N Wetzel. l'onsvM , W W Campbell, Piffle IW H Barlow, Mall'Y ,‘• It J Jackson, 'Maryland E reenewall. Eason' H H fleeting, Canton, 0 11-Inman meyee.c9ato)i;'4! it A RobinsonN Camerick 1 ' q C C Columb'us, 0 IN Minoan HIL John Smith, Columbus, Cb • ==%! The Con 'Joel 1; Posey', Cbester co C SecoMh, Sew York E S Marshall, Chester co 11 W Geunfl 11, Delaware T M Georgia Chas Cope, New York FlDaky IlLLPaley, Norristown nough, Chester co 1111ps, Chester co I C.Postlewalt, Altoona Jas !Whimsy, Pittsburg Wio RichaiMcon N H Lane co A RMW hittnan, Penns •: W W Wisler,Phtenixv'le .105 Reeler, 'l' Walter, Chester co T W Parker. Chester co A Bright,Mechanlcsh'g , Theo „) Maish, Lane en John L Gage, Obi.. Hagerty. J agerty. New Hill. iq 'Roney, N A F Oforft, 8 renoot . k, J tioNwn„ %tr GIIIIev;Bv,1°I.4,1t1,1:1;.;k5(1 .iut.?,i'ililN'll:l•ll3:l 111 W Wheeler, lte..ea Geo worth, II 0. 3.lleheaer, " W D Conic, I C S h e r r i .Heays, Al e C alhe,ia st!. i B Taylor. Prima 'A CJones. Beading IT .T Worrall, C Seem!), NI-"v1"' • a Union. 10 EaNtlatell Nov k C W Nolen,'Newart . ill' IJames B Thipmer , IW Wore:III, tHAtpro,, lIC K Schreiner, flarri- 1 : 11 , Pal rlaml, Chester t Nolen, Cltesler r n H Harrison, rk N Nen* Ito, if Sanders, Bus ro W Sawyer. lA/arra 'W G Satterfield The Stet Amos Townsend, Penua Col J P Croeger, Balt Mrs Orteger. Baltimore Miss Apple, Baltimore Wm alker, Monroe CO W Fortner, AWN,' Pa -A PreSeOtt, Masa II (Albert Thos Brooks. Ohio Burner, Milesbarg, Pa M hull. Penne A Henry. Downhill co W R Idizerne co E Connsellor,sciem,NJ The • D 0 Mid Mewl+, Pottsville W 0 Reimer .1 A Wendell, England amestown C 11 linerr,Co_pley, Pa W F Hecker, Lehigh co W St:miscall), Lehigh co' E Camp. Techtgli co.- lan Mattles,_Penna Miss Mottles, Penne Engle, L Mans, tetaith et' P .1, .1 m, Sort ho S A Rei littstoo A Fria [clot, Tamaqua E Schleicher, 'roneell"e 3 A Weitiner, Derry, 'J App, Allentown A (1 Michel:, ilethlem•'" QintkertiT il wt i AV Dengler, Itehlenbaeli, Lane co co liroliss. bane CU J Mat ties, Potful AV It Coleman, .10 MO C F.'. 3 . 411)11 E 1 1 b 1110. ii,,l:aokt•it llllllller, Allentown 11 C Huber, Allentown 'W Even & wt, Rocks co blies ilipot, linen* co Kutztown E L Cope, (potkertowo y Sheaf. .9 ; ~(..;l in iil lt ik i ie , ,,,t . t :4 • \, ;l l (4 , .r i : t il is nl io tt a l , : i l u k i s i t ' ' 'T Evans, 140/ 13 1 B Ely, N Jers er.e>. IJ AV Drink, N ey I miss Eider, Cite Act c" _The Berl 2i Uras reuna Hl:toner. Hazleton BrtullY, Delaware .1 Keelson, Nrtitia ItueAs Ktost e , Pa W N'anktrlt. Frankfurd Canard, Backs co The Black Bear. C flowers, Trenton, N J Saint W Miller, 1010 4 : ti it Stovel, Woodb'Y, Pa J K tirlseoni, ftriscom,! J liolsiger,W9psib7 Pig 3N. trp_degrave‘scloift L,,'. Peter WAtlnse, IfeViti Ottaa Flatter titir l3 " l l% A Weldenhaunner, ft IA W Kamidi, itcf.,,, , i,4 Saint Lonclis, Inkfreat !Frank Fort, itingf,'—