Ett Vatiot att anion. MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 30,1868 0 BABBITT & CO., PROPRIETORS. Oneumudeations will nos be patilaned in the Pawn! Am Unto' unions accompanied with the name of the addhor. W. Zink., of Towanda, is a duly au thorised agent to coiled secounte:and receive teibscrip Sloss and advertisements for tida l paper. liovszasa T 2.1984. S. M. PETTEMSII.I. ac CO.. Me. Mr Parini**, 11. Y., Red 6 State St.' Deno ll , Are oar Agent' for the Pomo , ex tretos in thee/ sides, and are authorized to take Advertisements and eabraziptions for as at oar Lowest Rates. FOR SALE. JUl•eoad-hand ADAMS Psses,platen Mingles in good order; can be worked either by hand or .team power Perms moderstb Inquire at this Mice. TO THE PUBLIC. TIM PATRIOT AND Usual and all its business operations will hereafter be conducted exclu sively by 0.-Basnwrz and T. G. fOMEDOT, un der tie firm of 0. BAnnwry St Co., the sonnets lion of B. F. M'Reynolds with said establish ment having ceased on the 20th November, inst. Novsmsza. 21. 1862. To Members of the Legislature; The DAILY PATRIOT AND DRIOS will be furnished to Mambas of the Legislature during the session et Two DOLLII3I Members wishing extra copies of the DAILY PATRIOT LID iillolll, eau procure them by leaving their orders at the pub , leation office : Third street, or with our re• Porters in slitter Souse, the evening previonat Democratic County Convention. -By direction of the County Committee, the Democratic County Convention of Dauphin county will meet at Harrisburg on Tuesday, the 21st day of April, at 10 o'clock, a. m. Meetings for the selection of delegates to said Convention will be held in the several town ships on Saturday, the 19th April, between the hours of 5 and 7, p. m., and in the several towns and wards between the hours of 7 and 9, p. m., on said day, at the usual places of holding delegate meetings. Oso. F. Waavau, • Secretary ; pro tem. Harrisburg, March 118, 1863. - The Abolition oligarchy at Washington is organising twin movements in the army and among the people which are crammed full of anarchy. Among the soldiers the movement • eonsista in exciting suspicion and distrust, and the introduction of politics and political meet ings, the forced passage of resolutions against the "copperhead traitors" in the loyal States ; at home it takes the shape of Union Leagues, 'which assume the solitary virtue of "loyalty" to the- Government and proscribe everybody •who does not and cannot swallow negro eman cipation, a war of extermination, the usurpa tions of the Executive, and the despotic and -unconstitutional enactments of Congress. It is not hard to foresee the tendency of such a policy. It is,part and parcel of•the iniquitous legislation of the mad fanatics who now govern the country—the attempt to substitute force for the free will of the people. Such a policy carried out develops mar ehy at once—the only refuge and safety the infamous bigots who are instituting it can hope for in the future. Such things go on from bad to worse. The effort to proscribe and stifle public opinion and the free expres • pion of it among the sovereign people of this nation, is one which proceeded with will inevi tably recoil upon the tyrannous agitators who are making it. The people are not so ignorant -as not to know who owns the country—and the surrender of their inalienable right of free speech, the direction and government of the country to snit themselves, is not a sacrifice which they are likely to make willingly and without resistance. Let them then take warn ing in time. If riot and disorder and intestine •violenbe begin, retribution will fall upon the fool hardy attempts they are making surely - -and speedily; and if come it does, and come it must, their blood be upon their own heads I Recruiting Negroes in Massachusetts. Prom the accounts reeeiyed, the recruiting .of blacks in Massachusetts doer; not- progress -with the rapidity anticipated by Gov. Andrew and the Abolitionists generally; in fact the en .periment aeons now to be mourned by these fanatics as a melancholy failure. Notwith .standing their partisan papers continue to pub lish urgent appeals to the colored recruits in :language like the folloWing_t •" Colored men, attention! Four country -calls 1 One hundred colored men wanted, to be attached to Gov. Andrew's new regiment, the Massachusetts Fifty-fourth," ;Yet they are like Glendower "calling spirits from the vasty deep," they "will not come when they do tall them." The Legislature of Massachusetts has passed a bill to promote en listments and regulate recruiting, which puts $1,500,000 into the hands of Gov. Andrew for the purpose of raising volunteers, and gives to him alone the authority to offer bounties for enlistments. Under this authority he is now offering $5O boast/ for seri) remits, while he only offers $25 to such of the soldiers of Mos sachussetts now in the service as may hereafter re-enlist. This is in perfect keeping with the one-idea mad fanaticism of the Abolitionists. Not con tent in their impiousness with trying to reverse the decrees of God, and place on an equality, those which He has stamped with inferiority, they actually place the ignorant,nntried negro above the veteran white man-443race of a hun dred well fought fields! Great God; can such folly long go unavenged ? Negro Statistics. The preliminary report of the Superinten dent of the Eighth Census has just been printed at the Government printing office. It abounds 'with valuable information and the following statistics, relating to free negroea and people of color, cannot fail to be of interest at this time. Pennsylvania has a free negro population of 56,849, more than can be found in any other of the Free States_ The six New Engl9nd States have the follow;ng:—Maire, 1,827; New Hamp shire, 494; Vermont, 709 ; Massaclntetts, 9,602; Rhode Island, 3,952 - ' Connecticut, 8,627; —or altogether, 24.711. Being far less than one-half of the notrkber in our State. During the last ten years Pennsylranut has added to her colored population 3,228, while No York State has 64 less than she had in 1850. The Ruperintendent says "The greater mikicess of the climate and a milder type of the prejudices Connected with this class of population, the result of benevolent influences, and its proxi caity to the Slaveholding States, msy account for the fart that Ibis race holds its own in Pennsylvania, while undergoing a diminution in the State next adjoining it on the north." This increase is owing entirely to ()Migra tion, for it is a remarkable face that the race does not increase from natural °arms, for the report says "In Philadelphia, during the last six months of the census year, the new city registration gives 148 births against 306 deaths among the free colored." By the above statistics, it will be seen that Pennsylvania contains nearly 57,000 negroes —enough in all conscience—and we are glad to see that resolutions have been offered in the Legislature preventing any further immigration into this State of Mr. Lincoln's "loyal Ameri can citizens of African descent," and hope they will be passed into a law. If the New England Abolitionists will steal niggers from the South where their labor is useful, and bring Nord' to fill jails and alms houses let them take coffee home with them and have the full benefit of his odorous company, and hug him to their hearts content. We certainly have a surfeit of them. Anarchy. and Disunion—Au Appeal to all Conservative Men. If there remains a doubt in the mind of any conservative man that even Abolition madness has its method, it is high time the delusion were dismissed. Abolition means something more than negro freedom; it is more than an impalpable theory of higher law—more than a dangerous political heresy.; it has fostered from the beginning the furtive spirit of Anar chy in all the sweep and breadth of the terrible meaning of the term. It has begotten at length that incipient•-moaster in our midst. Conspiring against the government, it aims to overthrow the public liberties. It is now the dominant power in the land ; and it has made the issue with the people, and the people must overcome it or submit.. Rejecting the true theory of slow and im perative reform, Abolitionism has leaped headlong into revolution. It heeds no longer fixed laws and statutes made for the stability of a government founded in faith out of the long agonies of early wars. It has for gotten the traditions which have prospered in the nation's heart—the cherished household gods deep in the silent worship of the nation's love. The clustering and illustrious memories of our golden years of progress, the majestic march of onward greatness and renown, the pride and glory of the past, the hopes and visions of the future—all have not served to chasten the vengeful spirit of its wrath, the rancor which has brooded its soul. In the guise of professed philanthropy, it has awaited the auspicious hour of national convulsion, warily, but with the same intent, the same inexorable purpose. Gradually it has crept from the refuge of the laws, the Union and the Constitution, until, stripped of its mask in the heat of its own madness, it comes to revel in the nation's woes and make wild havoc of its liberties. • . The time has some when Abolitionism must be met and trampled out of life ; or it will stride the nation with its fury. It is active and alert, while a calm and nerveless apathy is covering the people; and it will work the destruction of our liberties if it is not met and promptly overcome. Let the conservative men of the country arouse and bend their energies to the work. Let our action be earnest and united, and let no differences dis tract our efforts to resist and overthrow its power. Once drank with revolution, it will be hard to bring back calmness and wis dom to our counsels. The inured servility of idle and ignorant submission will destroy the life and freedom of the people. Let security sleep in our hearts and vigilance, the price of liberty, be debauched among us, and the waves of anarchy will sweep away the glory of our empire. N Mark, freemen of the North, the mighty impetus of events, the slow coiling of the despotic power. Destrained from your own freeholds, it is gathering appliances of a limit less . and exterminating war. A dotard Presi dent, per* ed to his oath, is become the in strumene of projected crime, so Vast and so _unchristian, that its very purpose will dis honor the annals of the age. The emancipa tion proclamation and the confiscation acts are made the unholy objects of unnatural war fare, the eternal barrier le a restoration of peace and union. The Union is a compact dependent upon the will and suffrage of a free people; it was meant to be eternal; it must. be preserved ; but it is dead for all time when mutual confidence, respect and affection are no longer possible—stat *Minis umbra—only the bare and lifeless skeleton remains, when the spirit of amity and concord has departed. Did not these anarchists know this when they passed the act of confiscation and urged and instigated the emancipation proclamation ? Is there a man idiot enough to think the destruc tion of the Union was not deliberately planned in these enactments ? The same intent which animates these acts has reacted upon the innocent and loyal people of the North. It is raging the full length of all our borders. It has not been enough that hundreds of thousands of our brave sons have been sent to the carnage of an endless war, to butchery, to rapine, to their own moral ruin and dishonor—not enough to direct against women and children and de. fenseless non combatants a crusade of life and death, and, with vengeance, rage and hate, to lay waste and reduce to the bald condition of a conquered province the sove reign. Southern States—not enough • to drive before the dread approach of marching armies shelterless innocents, to strip them of their houses and property—not enough to uproot the entire social and political systems so deeply imbued in the life of eight millions of our fellow creatures, to upheave their government, obliterate State lines and institutions—it is not enough' to prepare such schemes of deso lation, that in the full tide of anarchy some new system, a stranger to the soil, might be implanted, agrarian settlement of the lands be iniroduce3, a protectorate and distribu tion of the subjugated territory —net enough to perfect in purpose such vast iniqui ties ; but over the laws and institutes of the loyal North, where no pretense exists for it, the same madness runs its wild career. The sacred rights of person, the inviolable privi leges of sovereign freemen, equal before heaven to kings, has been infringed without war • rant and without stint. The same inexorable despotism predominates legislation which touches the concerns of Northern men, that abides m the hateful projects of Southern sub jugation. The . purse and the sword are to be surrendered with the liberty of person, cowl ounce among the people restricted, the right and power of self-defense, guaranteed by the Covenant of our liberties, to be wrested from the helpless and deflowered sisters of the Nor thern Federation. The insidious wiles of ty ranny are at Work among the armies in the field ) exciting hate and suspicion toward their own loved and loyal friends at home. In our very midst associations are formed whose covert aim is to subvert all freedom of speech, to proscribe all unfriendly expression of opinion, to bring the reign of riot and confusion and intestine violence to our doors. The record of such crimes, and the folly and Madness of their au thors, will stain forever the fair pages of our history ; it has turned to amazement the yearn ing love of freedom in other nations, which looked to the bright example of the Western World. To all the conservative freemen of the North let the warning voice appeal which speaks so plainly in this day's national afflictions. The demon of violence must be met now or ne+er by this generation. Courage will meet it— temperance, wisdom, patience must and can subdue it. Let all conservative men as semble, organize and be ready; they will be needed. The hour. approaches when,for their rights, for the honor and safety of the nation, they must act. By the peaceful but powerful right of their own suffrages they may save the country. Submission now is wise and vital to success ; vigilance and organization will do the work awl redeem us in the end. Against the usurpations of their creature, the President and his minions, against thaviolence of faction, the madness of armed anarchy North and South, let the conservative freemen of Pennsylvania array themselves—against a dissolution of these States under the Consti tution, against dishonorable peace, against empire within empire, against all unlawful in fractions of the sovereign rights of the whole country, against the twin heresies of Secession and Abolition, against all traitors North or South. Let them stand for the war for the true pur pose of the war, and none other ; hr peace, when peace can restore to us again the common heritage of a united country ; for the imper ishable glory of the old Union and the Consti tution unimpaired—with sympathy for our soldiers' trials, with pride in the mute suffer ings he has endured, with hearty, ready, 0611100 will t 9 aid him and protect him, to cherish his fame and to honor the cause in which he fights, making it just before men and in the sight of God The Barbarism of Abolition. "When Anthony Burns, the fugitive slave, was confined in the Court House in Boston, a meeting was held at Faneuil Hall to consider the subject. TI coder° Parker, the man who presented the gun, which was so affectionately received by his excellency, and the Reverend Thomas IV. Higginson were there. Mr. Par ker, in concluding an eloquent speech, alluded to the fact that a slave was confined in the Court House, and exclaimed, in substance, .Way stand we here idle ? To ' the rescue !' A rush was immediately taade for the Court House, and at the door stood a poor laboring man, a Mr. Bat chelder, a night watch. His wire and two children were probably sleeping at home, possibly dreaming for him as he was toiling for their bread. The crowd demanded admittance, he refused, as in duty he was bound to do, and was immediately assassinated on the spot. Who killed hint the world never knew. These men, Mr. President, were the confidental friends and supporters of Mr. Sum ner, and for this reason I have alluded to the subject." The above is one of the reasons given by Mr. Swan, a member of the Senate of Massachu setts, although a Republican, against voting for Mr. Sumner for the United States Senate. Mr. Swan was evidently shocked at the fiendish barbarity which would sacrifice the liv.es of any number of intelligent white men to redeem from slavery one ignorant negro ; and yet Mr. Swan and his co-laborers, continue to support the present administration, and the emancipa tion proclamation of the President, which is conceived in the same spirit, and which could not possibly produce any of the results they anticipated, except to inaugurate a servile in surrection in the Southern States—re-enact the horrors of St,. Domingo—and deluge the fair fields of the South with the blood of non combatants—dearepid old men, defenceless women, and innocent children—and all this for tor what ? TO attempt to better the works of the Almighty, and raise to an equality, beings, which He in the wise economy and order of his creation has made inferior. Mr. Sumner may preach in the United States Senate of the barbarism of slavery, but in all its dark annals no parallel can be found to these hellish schemes. They are alike leveled against civ ilization, against christianity, against God, and cannot but overwhelm their authors with the curse of all Christendom. General News The lateit news from the Vicksburg and Ya zoo expeditious reached us from Wm on Saturday. It appears that another barge, con taining one thousand bushels of coal, floated past the batteries at Vicksburg safely, for the use of Admiral Farragut's fleet. We have it on the authority of the Memphis Bulletin of Wednesday, that three of Admiral Porter's gunboats have reached the Yazoo river by the Sue newer route and reached Greenwood. The same journal says that our farces above Greenwood had abandoned the undertaking to force a passage, end were Palarniag t hen they met General Quimby's division en route to reinforce them. A conference was had, the result of which is unknown, but h is thought that in consequence of the success of the new route the whole force would return. The rebel accounts of affairs in the South west conflict somewhat with owe, Richmo n d papers of the 26th say that the Hartford and Monengahela were allowed to approach within four hundred yards of the rebel batteries at Grand Gulf, when they opened ire upon them, the vessels replying with broadsides several times. A dozen shots struck the vessels.— Parties were seen carrying the wounded below. The Natchez Courier says the Hartford, with . Admiral Fermat on board, anchored in front of that city on Thursday afternoon, the .160, and sent a small boat with a flag of trues ashore, with a note addressed to the Mayor, stating that if the United States gunboats were fired upon by the people of Natchez or by guerillas he would bombard the city. The Hartford remained all night and left with the Monongahela in the morning. The Richmond Sentinel of the 24th, in giving their account of the situation in the Southwest, says :—"The last papers from the United States are jubilant over false reports of the Success of the Yazoo expedition. Our An reports are several days later than theirs, and represent the expedition as thoroughly whip ped, and in full retreat by the way they came. Thus far the enemy has utterly failed in every one of his last moves. Farragut was whipped at Port Hudson ; Banks broke down before he got there, and fell back without a fight ; the Yazoo expedition ends in chastisement and flight; at Vicksburg they are drowned out." The Legislature of Missouri has adjourned sine dic. The session has been more remarkable for what it has not done than for anything it has accomplished. It failed to fill the two va cant seats in the Senate of the United States; and in the event of an extra session of Congress the State would be unrepresented. No conclu sion was arrived at, and no law was passed in reference to emancipation. The banks and rail roads of the State claimed the attention of the Legislature, but only temporary relief was granted them. The whole session was frittered away with long buncombe speeches and stale jokes. William Thomson, master of the rebel schooner David Crockett, which was captured while running the blockade at Galveston, Texas, has been released from Fort Layfay ette, by order of the Secretary of the Navy. A deserter from the Seventy-first Indiana volunteers who returned from the enemy's lines as a spy, was shot at Indianopolis on Friday by sentence of court martial. Two gentlemen—one a legislator of Indiana and the other the deputy auditor—were arrested there for cheering for Jeff. Davis. Subscriptions are circulating at Washington to pay for pamphlets calumniating General M'Clellan. They are to be gratuitously circu lated. "Little Mao" is so deeply enshrined in the hearts of the people that all the calumnies the Abolitionists can circulate will not affect him injuriously. A specific offer of a loan of one hundred 'mil lions in gold was made to the Secretary of the Treasury on Saturday by a leading house at Amsterdam, the gold to be exchanged for Uni ted States six per cent. bonds at the current premium at the time of the draft of any portion of the Amount. We have later intelligence of some interest from Europe by the arrival of the Asia at New York on Saturday. The diplomatic corres pondence with the American Minister relative to the American war is published. Mr. Adams' letters refer principally to the affair of the Alabama. He complains of the course pur sued by England in this matter. Mr. Mason's letters appeal for the recognition of the South ern Confederacy, and urge that the blockade •f the Southern ports shall be declared a nni. lity. He is greatly dissatisfied at the refusal of his application. The London Times, com menting on this correspondence, says, " the irritation so clearly displayed on both sides is proof that England is not inclined to either side of the controversy, but has maintained her neutrality." The accounts of the Polish insurrection continue to be vague. The insur gents are now computed at 60,000. Col lisions between them and the government for ces are reported with varying results. There was much activity in diplomatic circles in Paris on the subject of the insurrection. A demonstration took place at Marseilles in favor of Poland, during which the residence of the Russian Consul was threatened. Deputations had an interview with Lord Palmerston urging the interference of England in favor of Poland, even at the expense of war, which would be popular in such a cause. Lord Palmerston re fused to commit himself. The Poles defeated the Russians in a battle near Mysezoma. One hundred Russians were killed. The Paris Moniteur has positive information that the Archbishop of Warsaw is among the members of the Polish Council who tendered their re signations. The Spanish Government had refused to permit the holding of a meeting at Madrid in favor of the Poles. The revenue steamer• Reliance arrived at Baltimore on Saturday with two prizes cap tured while attempting to go to Virginia.— They had a large mail and file of late papers from Richmond, also a large amount of Con federate bonds and Virginia bank notes, medi cines, &c., intended for Richmond. OUR NEXT GOVERNOR. It is pretty generally conceded that the De mocratic party of Pennsylvania, with the as sistance of the conservative thousands who cannot support the radicals, will surely carry the State at our next fall's election. Aboli tionism, whether decorated in the thin veil of Union Leagues or anything else, is utterly disgusting to a large majority of our voters. All we require is a conservative platforin,which pledges our party to eternal hostility to a se paration of the Union under My eireumetati ces, and a candidate whose sentiments are known to be in accordance therewith,and whose personal character is not vulnerable to criti cism or detraction. Give ue such a candidate, upon such a platform, and the genius of the people will adopt and support them. The wisest of us just now are utterly incompetent to even clevtrly guess at what may be our condition six months hence. In the last six we have seen our form of government en tirely changed, until the President to-day possesses absolute power, unequalled by any other man upon the glebe. Whether he will abuse this power is a question to be settled ; and, if he does, to what extent, is another query suggesting serious apprehensions. In any end every event, no matter what may bo developed bereft er—whether a restored Union or a dismembered one, or an absolute separa tion of the States, in which event each one would have to see to herself—it is our duty to have at the head of the Commonwealth one who will be able to meet successfully any contin gency which may arise from our present troubles. In our fellow-citizen, Hon. George W. Cass, we believe we have the man for the occasion. Calm and wise in counsel, and firm in his convictions, aided by a prudence which no rashness can affect, he mould be able, suc cessfully, to encounter and control the worst contentions of the times. We trust that our I contemporaries thoughout the State will pay some attention to the subject of our next can didate for Governor. Let the people's mind be directed to the subject, and the Convention of June next will be better enabled to make a wise and judicious selection. We are anxious to have our candidate's abilities and character thoroughly investigated, because we have no fears of the result of such investigation. Al. ready we perceive the good effects of inquiry in regard to our candidate, by his growing strength throughout the neighboring counties. —Pittsburg Post. p,OCKET KNIVES.—A very fine aa- I SCHIFFER'S BOOKSTORE. LATEST BY TELEGRAPH. IMPORTANT FROM VICKSBURG. The Sunday Mercury has a special Cairo dis patch to the effect that the rise in the Missis sippi has overflowed the, Peninsula, and that there are 15 feet of water in the Vicksburg cut-off. A fleet of six iron clads and twenty transports are said to have passed through, carrying 15,000 men. They are to join Ad miral Farragut, and, though the object is kept secret, it is thought that they will attack Port Hudson. Another despatch.says a report has been received announcing the complete MONS of the expedition under Generals Ross and Quimby, and Admiral Porter. , It is said that the rebel Fort Greenwood As been cap tured, with all the troops. No particulars are given. INTERESTING FROM THE SOUTH. FORTRESS MONROE, March 28 Last Sabbath several clergymen in Norfolk gave notice that the churches would be open on Friday, the 27th, for services, in conformity with Jeff. Davis' proclamation. The churches accordingly opened, but as • the worshippers berm to congregate, they found a guard of Union soldiers at the church doors. Conse quently no services were allowed. Richmond papers state that Judge Meridith, of the circuit court, decided every citizen of Maryland and every foreigner who ever enlis ted in their army, no matter for how short a time, acquired a domicil, and were, therefore, liable to conscription, if between 18 and 45. The hull and machinery of the steamer Pennsylvania, burned 3 years ago on the James river, has been raised, and passed here last evening for Baltimore, The steamship Spaulding arrived this morn ing, bringing mails from the fleet at Hilton Head, where she left last Thursday. She re ports the steamboat Expounder, formerly Dan iel Webster, aground near Stone Inlet. No movement at Hilton Head to report of the fleet. Colonel Ludlow, commissioner for exchange of prisoners, has concluded arrangements with the rebel commissioner Odd, for the exchange of all United States officers held by the rebel government. The steamboat State of Maine left Fortress Monroe at noon for City Point with a flag of truce. She took for exchange 2,800 prisoners of war, including 16 rebel officers ; also, 225 citizen prisoners. An officer, deserted from the rebel ranks, ar rived in Norfolk yesterday, and reports that the rebels are evacuating Riohmond as fast as it is possible for them to do so quietly. The report is not fully credited. MONETARY AFFAIRS. D L QOVERNMENT SECURITIES. New York Prices. U. S. 6s, due 1881, Coupon 305ji P 6 Do —.duo 1881, Registered Int. off. 1043 E 105 U. S. 7 3-10 Treasury Notes .. 100% 107% tine year 6 per cent. certificates 00% 102,4 U. S. Demand Notes, old issue. 40 41Mpr Market firm. STEM'S QUOTATIONS. BANNABLI (7888601' BTANDAND. 401. D. . SILVER. American, prior to 1852 ' SI3B a.... Do Quart's... 1 38 a.... Do Dimes and Half Dimas_ 180 a Do Halves and QrVe(new) 1 30 a 132 Dollars, Am and Mexican.... 1 38 a.... Do Sp.,perfect 138 a.... Do earalna .. 1 33 a.... Do S. Amer— 138 a.... Do Norwegian ... a .. Five Francs 1 26 Francs . 25 (ittilders, 3t Prussian Thalers...... 80 German Crowns, 1 17 a French....do... 1 14 ! Eng. Silver p. £, 6 20 a 630 Spanish and Mex. am. silver, per oz. 1 62 8ar5,11.13. assay, p. os. 181 rile 5 dwts. 2X grains. American 41 a 42pr Du idated prior to 1834) 45 a pr Bov.,Victorian. 6 79 a 6 80 014 61 s 6 Cr Napoleon,2ofre. 6 50 a 6 65 10 francs....... t 75 a 2 85 Prue. Donb. Pr. D'ora.. a Doubloons, Bp .23 00 a 24 00 Do. ilexlean...22 001144 00 Ooata Rica.2o 005 22 00 Bars 000 fine. prm California, $5O and $2O pieces. 38 prim California, $lO and $5 pieces_ 28 a 10 Guilder Pie- eee 870a575 Ten Thalere... 9 00 20 Mille Bela, Brazil 11215A1129 *A heavy Sovereign wel UNOUBRENT MO Die Count. New England X New York City.. par New York State X Jersey—large X Jersey--small N Pennsylvania Currency. ) Delaware par Delaware—small . .36- Baltimore X Maryland . ..... .... X a 3 Dis. of Columbia X Virginia .95' a 40 BATES OP DOME Discount. par a 1-10prm New York... • 1-10prm Albany X a Baltimore... X a X Washingt l n,D.o % a g Pittsburg % a X Detroit, Mich.. ii a X Lexington. Hy— 2 a .. Slilwankie,Wlß. X a X PENNSYLVANIA COUNTRY BANK NOTES AT PAA dA riILADSLPIIIA NAME OP HANKS. WHERE REDEEMED. Allentown Bank, Allentown . Manuf & Mech. B'k. Bank of Catasauqua Farm. & Mech. Bank Bank of Chester County Farm. & Mach. Bank- Bank of Danville Bank N. Liberties. Beak of Delaware County. Bank of North Amer. Bank of Germantown. 'Farm. & Mech. Bank. Bank of Montgomery C0unty....... Western Bank. Ba: k of Phoenixville.. Manuf. & Mech. B'k. Bank of Northumberland Bank N. Liberties. Doylestown Bank, Doylestown.. ...Philadelphia Bank. Easton Bank, Easton . Bonk of North Amer. Farm. B'k of Bucks Co., Bristol.. Farm. & Mech. Bank. Farm. & Mech. Bank, Easton Girard Bank. Farmers' Bank, Lancaster Mechanics' Bank. Lancaster County Bank ....... ....Western Bank. Manch °bunk Bank. Girard Bank. Miners' Bank. Pottsville Bank of North Amer. Northumberl'd Co. B'k, Shamokin, Corn _Exchange B'k. 'Union Bank, Reading. Bank of North Amer PENNSYLVANIA COUNTRY RANH NOTES AT DISCOUNT IN PHILADELPHIA, Allegheny Bank Antbraciteß'k.Tamaqua Bank of Beaveroo.prem 60 Bank of Chambersburg. Bank of Cheater Valley, Coatesville Bank of Crawford Coun ty, Meadville Bank of FayetteCo prenz.6 Bank of Outtyabarg x Bank of Lawrence C0...1 Bank of Middletown.... X Bank of NPW Castle....l Bank of Pittsbn'g,prent. 60 Bank of Pottstown X Citizens P'k, Pittsburg ; Clearfield County Bank., M Columbia B'k, Columbia X Downingtown Bank Exchange B'k, Pittsb'g. Farmers' B'k, Pottsville x Farmers' B'k, Reading- X Farmers' it Drovers' B'k, Waynesburg Franklin B'k.Washing.. Harrisburg Bank Honesdale Bank Iron City !Pk Pittsburg, X Ntw Mutrtistmtitts. NOTICE.—The Carters and Wagoners of the City .of Harrishnrg are recinest&d to meat at Peters' Hotel, in Market street, on Tuesday, th.3lst inst. The object o 9 the meeting fs to effect an orpn ization, as a strike for higher wages is deemed neces sary.' mr3o-2t A. PROBLEM FOR THE BENT FREE OF CHARGE.' • Address "PROBLEM " Box •13 P. 0., inr3o.3t Philadelphia, Pa. C A. DAVIS, . B!LL ' POSTER. &enters, &e., carefully and prombliv distributed. ID— Residence, South above Second street. , .sPLENDID. A OSORTNENT o Formerly retailed at from SS to $O, ere .tiorr (-flared at 150 and 75 , 43ente,and $1 and . sl 50—yablighed by the Art Union, and formerly retailed by thew. Pplendid Photo:m[llde Album Fieturea of all diatin gnished men and Generale of the army, at only 10 cta. For eide,at 801114FFER'S itookstore, 18 Market street, Harrisburg. NAw YOaK, March 29. EY QUOTATIONS. Discount, Wheeling Ohio par Indiana ...... par Indiana—Free 1% Kentucky par Tennessee 10 Missouri 2 to 20 Illinois ....... .• • . 2to 60 Wisconsin 2 to 60 Michigan.. !lowa .... 1% !Canada pm 50 TIO EXORLDTGR Discount St. Louis. X a X Louisville lta•. Cincinnati ..... X a X Cleveland X a X Chicago. x a par Dubuque, lowa, 1a .. Davenport, do.. 1* .. St. Paul, Min.. 1a .. Montreal, Can.. a.. Jersey Shore Bank Kittanning Bank X Lewisburg Bank Lebanon B'k. Lebanon.. x Lebanon Val. B'k, Leb.. X Lock Haven Bank Moab 's B'k, Pittsburg.. Mocbaniesburg B'k, Me chanicsburg . .... Merchants' & Manufact. Dank, Pittsburg Mifflin County B'k, Lew. istown .. Milton Bank, Milton.... X Monongahela Bank, Brownsville 31 Menus Joy X Octoraro Bank, Oxford.. Petroh B'k,Titusville Pittston Bank, Pittston, x ,Stroudsburg Bank Tioga County Venango B'k, Franklin, x West Branch Sank, Wil liamsport Wyoming B'k,WilkesWe York Bank, York York County Wk. York. g NOTICE --To all whom it may con . oorn.—Peroors arc. hereby mintifined not to any credit to the OM of Fatly & V alma, as I uo nc hold myself NW° or responsible for any goods, t a „ or merchandise contracted by said firm from th is ii a . t :„ ,7 SAMUEL WITHESs . Norfolk, Va., March 28, 1863-3t* t RA NT'S HALL! FOR FIVE DAYS ONLII commENcnia Ar Tuesday Evening, March 31, AND EVERY EVENING DURING THE WEER THE 9REAT HISTORIC MIRROR OF THE WAR, PAINTED BY MESSRS ROBERT nil WIL, LIAM PEARSON, of New York City. The outs complete artistic work of the kind In exist ence, twins' a complete hiatory of the Great Contest, illustrating all the principal Battles, Battles, Battles, Naval Engagements, Naval Engagements, Naval Engagements, Marches, Parades, Sieges, Reviews, hiarehos, Parades, Sieges, Reviege, Marches, Parades, Sieges, Reviews, Camp Life, Camp Life, Camp Life. Not only showing all the principal Fortifiestions Towns and titter, but also following our brave t roop ; through their various positionti and evolutions, the nhole forming a series of ARTISTIC AND BEAUTIFUL SCENES. Ticket' 25 eenfs—Packagee of BFX one d Ilar. Doors oven at 7 'clock, to commence quarter before 8. Persons desirous of engaging rickets will &ass apply at W ARD , B Blusiiiiitore, Third skeet. mi WANTED—SOMETHING NEW ! Est; foment! Elnigornent! Male sad Female Agents wanted in every town and city In the United States. $2O to $4O per month can be made. and no humbug. Bustneus easy and respectable. It requires a very small capital, and will not interfere with other employment. This is na book agency or humbug of an, kind. No person will regret having sent for this information. let his employ. ment be what it mny. Full particulars given to all who inclose TEN OMITS, and address 11•11.1tliT BROWN & Amoskesg, N. H. mr26-d6tw4t* RE MOVAL. The subscriber has removed his Coal Office from 4th and Market to We Coal Yard on Canal, between 3d and 42h, where he will be happy to receive his old custom• ere and their orders for otial. Ile will keep an assort ment of all kinds and sizes on hand. both hard and soli. Any orders left at his old office, on slate, ordropped io Poet Office, will receive prompt attention. Pell weight guaranteed, and prices as low as any one else, Thank ful for the liberal patronage heretofore extended to him, he would still ask for a continuance of the same. DAVID M'OORMICIi. Mar , Ishtar& March 26,1863-310 ROBBERY OP ADAMS' EXPRESS. FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS REWARD. BiLtatots, Match 10,1888. The safe of the Adams 'Express Company was robbed on Wednesday night between Baltimore and Hers is burg. It contained yariona aums'of money in currency and gold, a large number of United Stave. certificate* of indebtedness, Unit d States 11y...twenty bonds, and cheeks of the 'United states Treasurer on the Assistant Treasur .r of New York, payai le to the order of the Adams Express Company. A reward of Five Thou•aod Dollen' is offer. dby the Company. Tile public are re. tarred to th.- list of the numbers of the I onda and ear tificates published by the Company, and are cautioned not to negotiate any of them : licone United States Certificates cf Todebtedneol, 000 eqch. numbers 21,449, 2i,450, 21,41. 21.455. 48 United States Certificates, of $l,OOO each: Nra. 59.342, 59.343, 59,844. . Nos. 69 232, 1.9,213. f, No. 69.199. Nos. 59.203. 59.204 59.9 , 1, 52,208. • Woe 69,200 59.201.59,202! Nos 59 148, 59 149. Nog. 69.148, 69.147. NOS. 59 13 , . 59.130, 59,129. Nos 69.247 69.248 Nos. 59.' 1 90, 59.191. 59.191, 59,193. Nos. 59 338 59.838, 59,884, 69 335. Noe 59,330, 59 318, 69 819. Nos 59,320, 59 3tl, 69,322, 59,323, 59,2111. Nos. 69 317.59.325 Nos. 19 302, 59 303, 59 304, 59,305. Nos. F 8.879, 59,068. 59.0 9, 59,070 Ten 5-20 United States Bonds, Nos 18,179 to 18,133 Indy sive. The following checks of F E. Bpiensr, Treasurer of U. 8 , on Assistant Treasurer, New York, tayable to th• order of the Adams Fxpre as Company : check No. 856, for $lOBO. for no. G. M. Felix, Cincinnati. " 859 4, 2018 13 . 1 J. Be T. Gibson, 11 11 865 11 1080 11 Conrad & Wooer, " I' 866 " 4%0 a Wilson & Hayden, 11 865 " 7220 11 A. Bohlen, 11 864 11 5016 15 " J. 8h llita & Co., " " 887 " 404 " Geo Jog)", r. " 8.3 " 483 87 J W Wagner &Co . 11 8 1 8 1 / 284 s 11 11. Morton, St. Laois. 11 161 " 3507 40 14 R. IP: Barry, " The 'public are corutioned not to negotiate any of the above bends or certificates. HENRY SANFORD, Superintendent Adams' Express Company. mar24,4lm 1863. 1863. DEILADELPHIA & ERIE RAIL ." ROAD.—This great line traverses the Northern and Northwest counties of Pennsylvania to the city of Erie, on Lake Erie. It has been leased by the Penitsy/vanio Rail Road Company, and under their auspices is being rapidly opined throughout its entire length. It is now in use for Passenger and Freight byte DM from Harrisburg to Driftwood, (Becond Fork,) (17.7 miles) on the Eastern Diviwon, and from .Shallekt to Erie, (78 miles) on the Western Division TIME OF PASSENGER TRAINS AT HARRIS- BURG. Leave Northward Mail Train 2.30 a. in. I Express Train.. 3.20 p. m. Care run through ebithout change both ways on these trains between Philadelphia and Lock Raven, and be• tween Baltimore and Lock Haven. Elegant Sleeping Cars on Express Trains both wspi , between Williamsport and Baltimore, and Williamspunt and Philadelphia. For information respecting Passenger business IRV at the 8. E. nor. llth and Market sire-te. And for Freight business of the Company's Agents. S. B. Kingston, Jr, cor. 13th and Market Went Philadelphia, J. W. Reynolds, Erie. J. M. Drill, Agent N. C. B. 8., Baltimore. H. H. HOUSTON, Gen'! Freight Agt., LEWIS L. HOUPT, Glenn Ticket Agt., JOS. D POTTS. Gen'l Manager. Williamsport._ tal6Ts.dy 1)IANOS carefully packed or removed I by 14 . WARD, mr93-2+ 12 North Third a reet. LOOKING GLASSES, of all sorts and sizPa. at WARD'S, 1.2 North Thi•d street. M INCE PIES --Raisins, Currants,--Raisins, Citron spices, Lemons, (Eder, Wine, Brandy ana Bum, for sale by WM. DOCK, jr., & Co. FOR SALE —A House and Lot on Sixth street, near State. Enquire at the Exchange Office of B. i.. 61'013%1.00H, 26 Market greet, Where the highest price is &heap" paid for GOLD anti SILVER. febl2-dif JA PA NE , . E TEA.—A choice lot of this celebrated Tea joss received. It is of the 8:14 cargo lacer imported, and is much superior to the Chi nese Tess in quality, strength and 'fligraMP and also entirely free of adulteration, coloring or mixture of oar kind. It is the natural leaf of the Jspenese Tea Plant. Fir /IMP by WM. DI)Cli. & Co. V L Ali MATCHES! NO SUL.PHURI NO SMELL! ITIPTY GROW! of Oho above Superior Matelot! AO cawed. and for We by WIC DOCK. Jan do 449. WHITE BRANDY !!!—Foit PREsasv - Ise Pußrosas.—A very superior article, (Apical pan) post received and for sale by WU. 3X)43.1{, Jr., & CO- 1111ROODIS, BRIJSHES, TUBS AND }IAWLW of ill dircriptions, qualities and view, for solo by • ' WM. DOCK, Ts ~ 1E 00. G.COlt N.—WINBLuW 8 fresh kA Green Corn jant received by WM. DOCK, JL, & CC. oinbar4m , Dts, Bombardments, Bombardments.,