The New York Herald Newspaper, November 24, 1863, Page 4

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PREATENT AL ‘MOVEMENTS. Wendell Phillips Moving in Favor of President Liavoln. Tho Boston Liberator Not Satistied With Secretary Clase. The New York Syecial Organ of Mr. Chase Down Upon “Old Abe” and Secretary Seward, Old Amos Keudall Moving for a Candidate on the Kentucky Platform, &., &e. ke, Wendell Phillips, Exq., on the Crisis, {ltrom the Boston’ Liberator, Nov. 20.) The fourth leovure of this cuurse waa given this week, in Bostou, nut, according vo the programme, by Houry Ward Beecher, but by Weadell Phillips, who bad kindly con- gouted, at short notico, to tako Mr. Boooker's place. Previous to the lecture ® fetter was road from Hon, Charles Sumner, requesting that bis name might be with- drawn from the , in consequence of the pressure of important business. The eomniittee hoped that his place moxt woek might be supplied by Bir. Beecher, Vhilii; 8, 62 coming forward, received three hearty rouues of applause. ‘The brict time he bad bad for pre Paration must be bis ayology. he said, for recurring to the wld sub,cce It would be waked, why speak of slavery now, when emancipation ix sure? But he thought we might tuke | & useful Josson from the vii Corn Law ue oF and. When Sir made first Lord of suid the repeat of they held a this League the \cauralty thy Gyn ews was orecn mocling aud reso'ved, © Where raise fifty thousand pounds for ag ; and in 1844 a ben red thousind pounds ior ag snow that the First Lord c€ ihe Admuralty is pieged to cur objec League two hundred and fifty thousa:d Pues ake the matter eur ument is partially pledged to the abolition o instead of (avoring silence and quictide ou our part, should be our inetioment to vew Vigilaneo. more Karchig criticism, more eu i¢ ace tion, Vo must demand te immediate, total, wocondi tional aboliti nif slavery wherever the ‘Stars and stri wave, The lessening prospect of foreign inteference aid the increase of our succeases ut home give us certainty of toe final result, Two-thirds of the Union are with us, and halt of the rem fing third is on our side. No one can doubt ol our wit mute victory. ‘the e, ho®ever, 1s vot where onr danger Ites. When air Line in wa. ashe to provide for the safety of the officers of colored regimnts, he sard, * Lon't asl: me to speak a word until afier the Chio elect.” {t ts not tn Southera: bullets, but ia Northern opinion, that the rea! danger of the crisis lies. When Seward in bis last public address sid, slivery is no busines: of mixe--ho showed the great danger agaist which we must provide—a spirit of Compromise in the Loarts of the Northern people. Seward every year assures the world that thore is no barrier to the return of the rebel States whenever they please. Members of the Cabipet aro now organizing a scheme to restore Ficrida is aslave State t+ the Union. In thig Stato of things it ia the duty of tho masses to interpose and save the couvtry by somo more thorough and speedy method Task nothing further of Lincoln in the way of policy, only of action, He has taken the first great stop by issuing the prociamation, and if he be iev'd in January last, as he told me, thattwasa gra mistake, he has changed his mind since thn. Them n who had the heart to originate that proclama ion, and to sand by tt, ought o remain in 700 -Y at lees! Six yeary loner. . Sbranam Lineois was uot my first choice. If we could Awe had Fremont—(aypiause)—a marie and nota vovay’, ® man alread, intelligent ia the point most ne df ij and not cne whoo education was to be con- ducted at an exnonse of $26,000 a year in the resis douliqs cl , we should e mad? better progress. secrot ry of the Treasury hit been spoken o: in thts relation, but his gfe has no’ given th: assurance of such soun prinerple as to warrant the peonle in trusting him at tasorsis The Governor who sacrificed Margaret Garnt has ne heart “he Secretary who, wht fou teen States op- posed Seward, flung himself firws dia hisd fence, has no peeinie ‘The great trouble with teward ts that he chores the revolution taat is now shaking the nation, We must demand of the goveroment civil action*as well as military, and action suiticiently ‘energetic for the orisis. We are nv tonger to demand action of Lincoln or the govorals merely, but of Congress; and the thing to be de- tmanded ‘s that el very be Reucetorth utterly prohibited, and rendored imporsibie withia the limits of our nation, Various tas are current respecting the relation of tho rovol States to tho nation, and the manner of their roinstatemont iu it. | care nothing for these theories ‘The one cert rin tact ts, slavery is the thing which has git all tbisRevil upon us di it must die. Does Mis- Binaivpi wish (0 co00 back? i will gladty weleome ber Daok if Ahe comes withuut slavery. that it Gail be impossibie for Ler to come 1 wid have Congre: the amendment of ‘he constitutiin fo this efiec’>—S h neefirth har no place in any State within ths Union When ibis ts done, jet the States come back as soon as they plearo. The geveroment should bave but one ob Joct, the ostublishinent of permanent peace in the Union, To this cnd Lingoin b emancipated three millions of finves. For the more eftective accommlishment of the gam cud, Congress should abolish all slavery. Indiv duals have the right of self-dotovce when their liv < aro assailed. Individual nations algo have the same Fi. Lt when their existeuce is aseatied. Cur first point is w save the li@ of the nation, ‘hero is no security, ottuer for the present distress or against future contin- moies, but ia radical, thorough moasurce. Give us the = granite of justice on which to found the future of the. 100, ‘We must create a public opinion which witl be felt at Washington. Neither the House vor the Senate has any- thing to propose except a vigorous prosecution of the war, Much more ts necesaary. Let the government funounce that wo are in revolution, and put every able bediod black may into the army of the Union. After the negro bas had the musket ta nis hands you can’t make bim a slave again. / ur two hundred thou. sand Uuck men in arms, ant I'u risk Seward. But sti, thoro t» more than this to be done. While the gove oment ams & few of te uble bodied, it leaves tho oid and infirm, the women and children, to starve, ant this not by hundreds nor by thousands only, but Dy five Uiousumd avd ton thousand. Idemaud of the Over: ment tont thoy confiscite the land of rebele over the whwvic Sonth, and give it cr sell it In small tote to the a@laves, tho blicks and (be poor whites. This will help ths sarvmg ones to provide for themse ves, and at she 6a 10 Cine will bo tho best assurance for our future. Wobwe oo pln, ~~ ie sircerity, no heartinoss, in onr treatmont of tho biacks. Lince!'n Rates cbarery, but has no Reart fo bfriend ihe negro. Vhe noges, North ‘and South, #b wild fd the Union ready to welcome him as a soldier and give him citizousbip. is no probability Of decisive and thorough action from government be ore noxt summer, unless the People Goin wd it. ‘ihe people should demand it, The great +b Garb: tthe Secretary of State. The a should swatch ham, toless ‘hey.can remove him, The chse of every civil war thus far has been a bar- € compromise. Ovra is to come, and we must be On our guard against ft, One thing we can accomplish if wo aro taithful—nover to let a siaveholder return to the Occupancy of one of the vacant Senatorial chairs, Now, before tho I'res dential contest commences, let chusetta consult with the West, @titu‘ional extinction of glavery shi struction. Ne loading man or organ of the republicans lights us one stop beyond the proclamation. ‘et the door ts stilt ‘t that a con. open for thé slave States to return and poison tee fature | and who of the Union, m Wo must provid . We . toch the pation oot mer ave, but ept the negro matter how rebels arrange themecivors otherwise 4 they come back to tho Unio they must come back’ Yankees working with their own hands, paying a proper gainst this d to arm the « foapect to labor, securing by law the ‘morals and man- = hhera of civilization, fy " government owes the desti- tuto clanaee (arco things: Liberty —property—education, Tho South must guarantec those ax (reely as we do. ‘We must support the government in what it hae done, and stimulate it tn what remains to do. Seward has been og ag ye policy, the wn el eving Judas, the rock Of the abip of state, the nucleus around which on the disloyalty, timidity, selichnors, baseness of | 'n determin! nation, Let us complote the civil revolution, Let aby the faxthiess Beeretary and hold “P ut oe was (roquently interrupted by hearty appiause.—C, Information W KW meted. [From the Boston Liberator, Nov. 20} In Inst week's Liberator “Orion,” for some purpose not yet cutirely eppare roasury & very bi char tor , claims for the Secretary of the -alavery life- 100 Lo freedom and to equal righ! Kind. that bo bas been faithful to. the priney onl anti siavery, without variableness or eh of radi- NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1s j3.—TRIPLE SHEET. announcement Sof Tikewise ¢ ear, | boon deliberately chosen and “ was fo Ina dotermination w the cou ri the adininisGatiow thet bo ti teste lemptto pres® compels g elaine as eriminal to th r of high t ‘Yhere isn» micnnderatanding Ub of the ukuse. Ihore ip na doubling » cward tb im eon Unc I're » | tive authority bet dd. the latter while ma proclaiming head of the ecuaia senre tt cro , mere } te of t29 nominal tration. The man wa» pledged tho vebels at the outset of the war, that ales shouid not be rediced to obecience arias," who inflicted Licratiy Seymour on i who, bis own hand, wrote the re the Vresideut to the uieut prayer of @ud to do it ty av 2y ae to Cireaten coudyyn war wpen all, whe' her of righ of lw degree, who should venture to in torfere with ius pretensions. ‘Tuo ‘doctrine be assumod to convey these points was, that the uoxt Presidency was the property of Mr. Lincoln by virtue of hia nomivation al Chicago and pubsequent clection iv 1860, ‘ihat that nomination and election was a virtual contract ou the part of the people to put him in possession of the Presi dency ot the whole of the United Btales, but (hat, in con- sequence of the rebellion, the contract Lind not been ful filled, and to use hig own words, ‘Abraham lincoln must bo President of South Carolina’ and Georgia, by virtue 0/ his election ‘of 1860, or the Union is forever lost.” Tt is hardly ible to misunderstand this language, and the only point about which we are at all left in doubt is, whether Mr. Soward means that tho next Presidency should lapse into Mr. fincoin’s hands without tbe forms of an election, or whether he should be named aud * through’? nemine contradicente, with the usual formalitics of a Convention. Whatever Mr. Seward means, however, wi the liberty of doubting whether he cam carry Gne pro- ject through; and we also doub! whether Mr. Lincoln haa exhibited his usual sagacity in co himself be twought forward in this offensive an It te quite a new thing for the American to be told that they are but an incident to a reparsonal Wis and that the suspeusion of such tive is graver to the incumbent than is the talerrape jon of its sovereignty to the nation. According to su ‘ine the President is everything and the nation nothing, and popular rights at once become merged into movarch' pretension. ‘Tolerate this for an instant and you aude to it forever; for no time can come when a beiter reason than this cauuot be given for the perpetuation of arbitra- ry power. But porbaps we are treating this pronuncia miento of Mr. Seward far too gravely, and, instead of cro diting him with the meditated destruction of the country, he is only to be suspected of an iutended sacrifice of Mr. Lincoln. Every one knows how deeply be resented his notnination at Chicago, and how constantly (oxcept in, the finances) he has bafiied the success of his administration, The war has Leen purposely pro- lunged, with vast intervals after each — victory (uy Ste. Savard's military pets); and, in the case of Marytand and Missouri, he has s guided Mr. Lincom gs ty place him in hostility (6 all the influences teat lifted itm to ‘power. He has, in short, 60 manipulate! and con ducted that simple-minded man as to make bim the patron aud guard not only of conservative” ° terests, bt the apparcnt noninee of the ‘conservative’ press, This lattor fact has, for the past tweive months, been amoug the mos' riking evidences of the time; and it is @ matter of concern that there should be so many reasons for it. it is not strange tha: @ vitiated journalism should appreciate the Reckyille manifost» that was in- tended to stop the access of liberty to Maryland, or re- ward with hocannas the Executive’ discouragement of tho raficais of the traus-Mississippi region; but it is strange that Mr. Lincoln should have chosen such a@ course to command the ideas of the period, or expect to retain the support of those who set out upon the journey with him. flo is de- ceived, doubtless, by the forbearance with which tho truly loyal press regard these signs of his defection, and foolishly receives the simulated approbation of the ‘ory journals, and the sorrowing silence of the Union papers, the faihful pA. will In apite of the unfavorable weather, the Te coed of the Rochester mi 3 early Olied with an immense ‘audience,’ and oo bauer cernestly solicited 1 man- Btocks firm. ym agg og fives, 100; jow of tara. | Pennsylvania 7, Al Gold, 1644. Sight’ ex: ‘as evidences of a general popularity. There is one man, however, who ts not deceived by this ovation, and that man is Mr, Seward. He shares the false incense with his candidate, and is equally defended and applauded in his policy by the whole raft of conservative ecribblers; but be takes the subject at its true value, and probably fo- tends to betray Mr. Lincola to ks illvsions at atime — it may be impossible for him to recover lis po- sition. ‘The very tact that Seward bag brought him out prema turely, and paraded him on the text of clatming tue gov- ernment as a personal possesston, would seem to indicate 4 deliberate purpose to destroy him. The moat substan ta! popularity could not eadure a double strain like that, and ‘t certainly will prove too much for a character which fs only attractive from a pencend simplicity, and which receives the upplauses of the opposition merely because it is considered harmless. Should tt turo vont that the scoming simpleness is only craft, aud the halting policy attributed to tim dity and consojeace but a portion of a Bchome for personal advao , the rejection of his candidacy might be almost universal. Favorable as they seem to-day, irom the surface expres- sion the press, we are quite gure that the prospects of Mr. Livdolu not been bey Poy the manner in which he has been put forward ir. Seward; and are very certain, also, tbat he is doomed to find, when be reaches the vital portion of tue race, that his present trainers will decide he ‘made tue rupning”’ too soon, and that bis chinoes are exhausted. Then, the military candidate whom Seward has always Id in'close reserve, and who would have been McCielian, but for his Pennsylvania fiasco, will be brought duly for- ward, the true campaign begin. This candidate may possibly be Grant, from the mys'erious manner in which he supy Rosecrans; but, that it will not be and remain Mr. ee: Se Se hans ae ne versions of Mr. ar. Seward’s character ion prot tat fact of his nominating him so carly, he does not expect to be required to staud by him. the operation is attended with the doce dggarags to to coln as the first man named, If, therefore, the unhappy Mr. Lincoln, with his negative populurity, an live through we shali be red to accept his candidacy as tho Recessity of an unex. yected feebleness of nature, too deplorable for present comprehension. In disposing temporarily of this tty tet us deduce one feston. ‘The shameful rds of exe. catve ambition, which have omlly devoted incomes of the government to the perpetua tion Of personal advantage, teach us that the chief magistrate should not be eligible toareelection. The rs of the war and the conspiracies of generals in- struct us, moreover, that ® ic must ‘aways be in- ferior to @ monarchy ia arms, if its military chieitains are eligible to the Presidency in the term next suocoed- ing their exploits, While a is their interest to dize themselves lory for the coun! it is at the same time the terrible temptation every aspirant connected with the civil government, and every rival general co-operating in the fleld, to limit thelr success against the enemy within reasouable bounds, We hava seen this work again t Fremont, Butler, Hooker, Rosecrans and Banks; and we had better improve the warning before grappling with a foreign foe. We have seen it sacrifice the second battle of ull run and neu- tralive the advantages of Chancallorville and ; and we must take measures (hat it do not win some future invasion of the Atlantic coast .Six years the President and non eligibility for a soldier in the term next succeeding his campaizn, will vastly redace tho evilwe complain of, and save usfrom such wretched seenes as that performed recenyy at Auburn, in the ap. Parent interest of Mr. Lincoln. Amos Hendal ‘es Ciren New York, Nov. 0, 1863. Rs Sim—You are respectfully invited to attend a cou. vention to be held at Cincinnati, Ohio,on the 34 day of De cm er next at twelve M., for the purpose: f con ul s+ thon, and taking sucll action as may be deemed moet ere: | tive'to secure the nomination and election of conser: a. | tive men in the approaching Presiaential campaign. lie | meeting will be composed of old live whigs, war demo. crats, conservative men, fhe rd to former party preailections—friettis of Jackson, Webster, Clay and Crit- Macaa- | tenden, who desire to preserve the Union and the const!- tution unimpaired! who are willing to take theit stand upon the Kentucky plattorm, oppored alike to secession | and abolition fanaticism; who believe that the war | should be carried on till those in armed revolt are com- pelied to obey the constitution and the lawa of Congre-«, that the State governments suspended the revolt showd be restored under their State constity tions respectively; all such persons are invited to be proseot. A meeting will be held under the auspices of Toe “National Conservative Caton Committes,”’ appointed At the recent Rochester Convention, of which’ the venera ble patriot, Amos Kendall, is Chairman —t committee ‘been called to meet rs the sme time and piace, letter to the Secretary Mr. Kendall writes:— ‘The by Fe platform for patriotic men who love the Union constitution as iets ” «With the gentlemen whose Bare Po mention ‘mens bers of the committcs) | am to os jo the attempt to unite the conservate elements of the country in the pext Presiden. Sint eet pom to ad time shonid be lost ped ming Lh an pn Me pur. ving to attend the meet cetrtn Reena Dames to the National ‘Com: at the Burpett House Enclosed please mare meeting. HENCE that we have the bonefit of your oan the committee, R. F. STEVENS, Secretary, 106 Faet Forty ninth street, New York. ‘ a“ .~Please inform us if wo may expect your attoad aued sel. By order of PHILADELPAIA STOCK BOARD. Purapecema, Nov. 28, 1863. road, 63; Morris Canal, 7 tox nod hit this high charactor bas stood the teet of | Sbange on twenty youre of potitteal life. Barnivons, Nov. $8, 1868. mieitepa these things are s0, Frit, that abolitionists | , Flour steady: Uto extra, $7 1: mining 4 owned may er nesured io Go important a mattor, will | street, $7 BRAS 12%, Wheat quiet sh Wo the Kindoges to answer these two questions, Ton $2.06, Corn ercited at $1 uate, 14. wha wan Mr canes § connection with the mournfil Neila mh did at Mr. Onase take ta retasion of 4 aumber of Tejrublican Fenmtors, ‘apect’ een ten large Pear do) that Mr Llocoin would choose for bis Secro- slavery than wil OK. Ww. tary of Fake Ame man los tolerant of Vara HL. seward? The tormal opening of 1864 by Mi. coward 4 big AL DUPE eperch, Un Rua! Wettering Among (he, NtiekaBe, Without any mm Gaze ite true Tt waa clon hat Mr. ty authority Te wae olene ~yy Vhat the time of the | sellers thao buy ere, Whisleoy oy ors with ao upward tendamey: Paranwurmia, Nov Loman vie , x3 Wheat Orm, advanced Bo.; sales 5 000 bosbelr. e nad Western red, $1 60 0 $1 OT. white, $1 50 a $2.05. Com Le F ellow O0$1 22), a $1 28. Whiskey unsettled and bo, b The. Brrrato, Nov Floor atondy. Whent steady at §1 22 for No. for white Canada, Corn fr Cate Qe. haiyher iter demand: rales at $1 12. Fionr firm: superfine, 1863. ago sales At faies at A 1640 a stmal! way. Pariey rm. Kyoin (he bre idential campaign or a key tw beiter demaud: sales at68e. Canabfireights— | Me on whertto New York. * ‘ she's wheat, 17 000 2679 bushels be porwcd hoe Ubi. flour, 33. bushela ehoahe wy ie CON, 17,000 bushels ¢ , 8,000 bu tits tu vorrvatr, Now. 2!, oo % ‘tour bu ‘ee mpertns, ‘heas tative. ANY ID RO ame At He y Lard 120 bt Tehwge ow S243: par eenipy. Hoipadicals, is potty be questioned of his war runt whoa be specks for Abraham Lincoln The divect purrose, therefore, of Mr, Sewara's Autum | Southe speech was to nominate MF. Laneain for (he term of 1860, and Chicago 1, low aa 188%. FINANCIAL AND com MERCIAL. Monpar, Nov, 23-6 P. M The stock market this morning cpened quite brisk, and prices were nearly all up. Evie ad- vanced 2 percent on the sales of Saturday, New York Centra) 2%, Hudson Kiver2, Harlem 2, Erie preferred 1, Pittsburg and Fort Wayne 1%, Chica- go and Kock Island 1%, and nearly all the others from % tol per cent, At the second board the mar was a fraction dewn, and at the half-past three ‘clock board, aa comparcd with the prices in the eect Harlem dectined 114, Erie %, New York Central 18%, Jilinois Central sorip 1, Michigan yo 1, Pittsburg and Fort Wayne 134, Galena and Reading 1, After the board the market became quite heavy, and at five o'clock Erie covld be bought for 108%, New York Central at 13714, Harlem 98%, Hudson River 129, Chicago and Northweatern 49%, Pittsburg and Fort Wayne 66%%, Reading 126, Galena 110, and Michigan Southern 64, Gold opened 4 Little down from the closing prices ou Saturday, but soon reached 164%, after whioh it again receded, and by one o'clock sold down os The following wore the quotations during the day:— 9:00 A. = Ege he . 163% z Lise 4 + 168% - 12:00 M.. 1635 12:30 P. a. 158 Wado BL Mois. 188% ‘The budiness of tho Sub-Treasury to-day was aa followa:— Receipts... $6,107,618 Payments 8,180,086 jance., 16,646,615 —Receipts for custome, $215,000. The banks, as will be scon by their weekly statementa in another column, continue to reduce their loans; but, as their deposits are lessened in about the same proportion, the money market does not seem to be disturbed by the contraction, We give below a table of the aggregates of the bank statements for each week since the calling in of their loans cps aE Week End'g. Leas Specte Crroula'n, Oct, ne o nats 685 sia 28,582,475 6,618,764 178,050, 00 ‘304 OLG 6 1799,097 172 “487, 596 co's 22,418 28,124 021 6, (071,735 171,116: 254 198, "486,841 28,’ 783, ‘281 6 NA0O ae 159,499,193 184,044,030 29; {117,049 6,095,952 151,770, 408 » 176,702,428 23 054,514 6, 122,378 145; ‘243, R46 Nov. @1.. As compar ed with the statement of the previ- ous week, there isa decrease of Loans of $5,342,102, a decrease in deposits of $6,521,652, a decrease in 535 specie of $1,122,535, and an increase in circulation of $26,447, Comparing the last statement with that made on the 17th of October, we find a de- crease in loans of $29,956,221, a decrease in de- posits of $32,601,671, a decrease in the amount of specie of $827,959, and an increase in circulation of $503,615. The Second Nationa: Bank of St. Louis was or- ganized last week, with a capital of $200)000 and power to increase to $1,000,000. The Firat National Bank of Pomeroy, Ohio, has been established, witha capital of $160,000. The Valley Bank of Chillicothe, Ohio, has been organized under the new law. A national bank has been established at Green- castle, Indiana, with a capital of $100,000, and it is to go into operation on the Ist of January. The First National Bank of Cardigas, Ohio, has just been put in operation. Money continues in active demand Ya most of the Western cities, and legal tender notes are so acarce that they command a preinium, while the rate of interest ia far above that upon which loans are easily obtained in this quarter. The specula- tors in breadstuffs, and pork packers and pur- chasers, who are in the markets as borrowers, cou- tribute largely in producing the atringenoy of which they eomplain, ent until their demands are satisfied there will be no leniency exhibited on the part of the bankers. Reports from Chicago state that the money market in that city is de- cidedly close, and that the wants of operators ~~ ere much larger than bankers are able to meet. Regular banks continue to loan at ten per cent; but the real price of money is Gfteen to twenty per cent. counts was somewhat easier than it had been, and government contractors had ceased their appli- At Cincinnati the market at 1 ac- cations for loaus. Money, however, could not be obtained at a lesa rate than7a8 percent. The Pittsburg Commercial of the 2lat inst. says :— ‘The money market here is somewhat stringent, and haz been so for several days. Vory little paper is discounted at the regular places, and wbat ts done Is at a pretty high figure. ‘There is great complaint of @ scarcity of par funds and currency among our brokers. Greenbacks have wonderfully dicappeared, and aa (his is the season for the hoavy purchases in pork, where vast amounts of them are beeded, considerable inconvenience will be experi- enced if ibere does not come 4 epeedy relief in this re. spect. The London Herald of the Ith insts apeaks of American stocks in that market ‘There was vory little alteration in Amori ment stocks and railway shares; but the dei steady and to a fair average oxtent, Maryland fn at 74, the closing quotation boing calied 73.876. At- antic ‘and Groat Westorn, Pennsylvania soctte hands at Tégy, and fually closed at shares, were operated in. at 675, , e:ootually closing at 6 a 69. Sitinois Central, M00 shares, were purchased at 1844 dtscount, the flual quotation Welng 19 17 discount, The rebel foctton loan was steady in Lon- don on the 10th inst. at 6 a 66, and Mexican bonds were heavy at Ua Although it bas been understood that much of the drain of specie from France had been for Italy, that country seems to be suffering like all others from an absorption of gold, and the Na- tional Bank at Turin had advanced its rate of dis- count to 7 per cent. The 5-20 loan sold last week was scattered over | the several States as follows. Subscribed through sub-agents: Ta New York and vicinit; Beton and vicinity . Roode Irland . t thus Uhio. Ind Wisconsi Michigan . Kentucky. Missour! Total...... This is an average of $018, oan per ‘uy for the week. New York, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and Ohio continue large takers. The following statement shows the business of the Reading Railroad during the month of Octo- ber, 1868, compared with the same mouth of 1862; — 1943. u bas -¥-7) o ose 08 2, 13,086 le oer ™ $916,902 08 488 72 04 988,199 99 81 008 OF 092 84 Net for the month, Piped «+4 byah-—ding ttl Sains 1 8 8 Total net profit 11 months . $2,878, 78,043 70 ‘Tae 13 (912,249 13 —Here is an increase of $1,066,703 in the net prof. its of this company for eleven months of the cur- rent fiscal year over the corresponding time last year, ind inst year's profits over all expenses and interest were equal to about eleven per cent on all the company's stock. tens Frio RR. b20- % 4 Brie RE pret... 108% 104 Jivrw” GF&A 106 in re y 00 Hludeoe River RR 2 Vannes M4 2000 MG's is toTkSis 85 1000 | rte éth m bde 108 2000 Hariem lat m.. Loa 2000 Nich & cag rb Le 1100 Hino's “Ou 5000 CLIRNW 6000 Mh & NM B00 Dich me &N 400 Os 100 TH Cow KK ful 11000 American go’ 89:00 BO. cee oe 10-shs Pk ¢ ov 6 Imp & Ti 800 Canton Com any 31K 0... DLS 110 450d. 84% 40. Gal & Chicago RR IL 200 dO..s..-5.. HMM 400 do, 100 do. *..).b30 100 DelkTiud Canal Co 179% 250 Cumb Coal prof 4044 $00 , eee ft ey Quiokse sig. vio ue 400 do... $50 Cont Am Trans Co 3 100 American Coal Co 96 250 Wyomg Val Coallo 90 10 mais Min a Z: on Bt Ohio, ‘tae & — kk ee — Pitts, FUW. 4256 a racine ‘tail $8 Co 216 700 N ¥ Cont RR... 18836 do, 930 BECOND BOARD, $5000 Us 6's, "81, 08s, "300 ah ErGRR pt a0 10d 8, reg ahs Eriol e000 Us 6's, ly cert. 102 50 do. 103% 0... Bow Bs; 60 do. ato0 Tenn 6's, eas 100 do. 1000 Haricm a 200 ah 3 lc oSNi bs 800 1il Central RR.. 600 oe 100 do 300 do. 3 124 400 itn Pitts RR. ery 0. P.M. 841; 124, 1244 24 0 110 400 Ga’ oi i Chie im is 700 do Mt 800 Cie & Toiedo RR lt 200 2b 118 Boo Chic & Mk ial RR 1004 do 10935 tea Krie if ‘prof:.ba 104s, co eee BB LOE in op i f) 200 Hud Riv op ons 1100 do. goo west dh Re 89 209 Harlem KK, 999% 200 obS 8575 200 do 200 8955 4950 Chie * “Alton pret 96 200 do 96 American 3544 60 CantonCo,,..b10 345) 200 do 34 _ Cumb at 300 do. 41 600 do vagy Turek 0 Cook Y, 200 sha I! Cen RR. 2 600 86% ‘oadiny ar iments ‘sii me 36 wx ou 10 = do, hale $35,584 2,288,778 Butch. & Drov.. 2 952 Chatham.,....:. T8016 86,162 14,042 ‘TELS Chemical....... 3/ 4,077,147 . i U0 BAR -~ ce. IT Commonwealth. Continental, . 438,882 RX: Bech. 561,115 merica.. 2,897 Rerun River". fieree Republic Seventh Ward... 1.739, Shoe & Leather, 2,978 330 + 6,576,490 Mowpay, Nov. 23—6 P.M. Asuns —Receipis 50 bole, Market very firm. Small sales pote at $8 75. Poarls were nominally $9 41 Buearervrra.—Recoipts 40,921 bbe, flour, 16 rack buckwheat do., 205 bbis. and 64 sacks corn meal, 75,083 bushels wheat, 7,000 do. coru, 13,800 do. rye, 100,475 do, oats and 8,477 do, barley, The market for State and Western flour was a trifle firmer, and a slight tmprove- ment in prices of the low and medium grades was ob- tained. Trade brands were without material and the demand fair, Sales 16,000 bbis, at quotations below. Canada flour advanced 60., with a fair demand and alee of 1,000 bbls. Southern four was without matertal change, but And in good request, Sales 1,600 bbis, Corn Acairce and prices tonded to a higher range in sympathy with the movement in corn. Sales 1,000 bis. at $6 for Jersey, $6 19086 15 for city oa $6 GO for Brandy wive and calorie, Pancheons qnoted 50 bie at a flour is firmer. Sales gee a a four may be quoted $3 12}, 0 nares heampe ttn om 2 620 a 8th . choi 6 a 816 Extra St na 6 all @ Common to Southern Oo a8 Good to choice extra do. 2 916 60 Commer Canadian... 66 8 668 Good to choice extra do © 2800 Ryo flour. . . % a 700 Corn meal, bb! wo 660 oe, pone, 00 50 Buckwheat Moor, por 10 1 ary The markot for whoat open b and ia favor sem By Too d cane nly specutation, rived 125,000 bust on a bane $1 4: rt 25 for off do. 52 8 BI 60 for 43 for amber Milwaukeo, $1 00 8 #81 46 (oF new Spring ( as Lie and 60 for prime white 4 yy tu orn Continued, and ® furthor WARCe crop 43 it, both im Ano epoculativs with extremely tight rece! or So. 8 be. was cat b ished. quantity aud quali: ju the intorior are bold- ing 1 back An anticipa higher prices. It is just Powwible these parties may “alip up’ on tt. sales Of the day foot up 100,000 bushels at §1 25 a $1 24 for Western mixed, in e'ore: $1 25 Ree and $1 23 for Wesiern yellow. Qita were alao Zc. & 30 ‘higher under an acid apecuhtive market; sales 160,000 bushels 93c. a Pic, for (wnadun, and 98Y%C. & 950. for State and cargo of 30,000 bushels 100 kd land, to arrive, at STKe. Rye was firmer avd ip good neat, with sales of 7,000 buahols jaw al $1.36. Varloy ruled steady, put ar ‘a bale of 600 bush- ols ood Stato woe wnado at $1 60, Malt was inactive, Corron,-—Marketeduil at 634%c. a B40. for middling up lands, At the prizo salo to day 70 bales brougut 8lo Ib, ‘Corvrr.—Murket active, Sales two cargoos (about 8,000 bags) per barks Trieste and Adelaide, from Kio Janeiro, on private terms, Freicirs were dul, and rates favoret tho shipper, To Liverpool were engaged, per neutral, 1,700 bbis. four at 1s. ads 2¢,-—the inside rate to Oil up; 260 tons logwood pnd $0 do. fystic, 12. 6d, Grain racea were nominally Bid ‘lo Tendon 2.500 bbls. flour, 18. 414d. a 18. 6d; xnd ree poutral, 700 packages buttor, 208, ; 60 ticrces "28. Of ; 60 tons oil cake, 1 Od, and 16 dons tuliow, 16s. 84, To Antworp 1,060 bbls. petroieon, 64. 6d., and 60 ticrces lard, 223. 6d. To Maracillos $00 tioroes Iara, GOF, ASbip was taken up for New Orleans at $6 for coal, $25 for bay and 1c6 per foot measurement A small neutral ey 120 tona, to north sido of Cuba, $1,206, a schooner, (600 bbls. capacity, to Port Royal, &c., in.govornment ba de $800 per month;,one from Philadelphia to Boston, cay 2" ee ton, ard one from Etizabethport to Boston. Wforuia froighta were firm, with a far \t poing forwara, ‘Thero are oight clippers on tho pee going 20 for coat, 400, measuroment and lo, por Hor toaty, ae doe. nate for now. Gales 100 bates Morasaus.—Market With sales of 169 bbls. Now bar ree ‘at 60c., and Sonn hhds. Porto Rico (common) at 680. Nava Srones wero steady, with small rales rosin at $37 60.0818 50 for beens Btrained to No. 2 Prov's oxs.—Recolpts 785 bbls, pork, 2,426 packagos Deel, 654 du cut pe oop ae ‘There prevailed a one, [Sats padiee inquiry for the hog produots at the Produce Keb day, and tho market for noarly all articios ‘tho accounts from tho West ruled yan and firm. rei corn crop, &c., combined with tho fact that @ much smaller aumbor of hogs are being fattod this year than last, tended to stimulate the movement, especially lard, aud to onbance the value of both " According to tho off'clal returns there ix a faling off to tho box crop of ono-fith. The frosted corn is mot nearly ao good for tls: aa ood sound corn, 60 that Aa only is the nam nga AM ler, but there is likely to be a large de tho yield of tard, ‘fhe specniation under which p toes of pork and lard was largoly advanced was based epov these iacts, aud prices wre susicived by the bome fufluence. ‘The receipts of both pork and lard are light, and do not begin to cqual the sales from day to day. ‘Tho sates of pork wore 2,700 bb's, at $16 60 a $16 6234 for old mes: $18 124 a $18 25 tor new do., $12 a$12 371 fr ve - prime, $16 a $16 8744 for thin mosa and $14sfor sour and ee ee ee pe games Septie (0 Btransport), Havens, Washington, to Bieamor Btcamer Btoamer M Ragnnae tsoe-fe Jaomel, oss of antine. . Hen vers; briga Ann Lovett, ‘Wind at ant NE. Mi Bre Awariy Axarta, from Liverpoo! ith, Philadel Diamona Heros ith y 4, yf, Bmith, Philadelphia, nie Br), Par Pere Denes 20h 20yh in inst for & Quer ee an, Diamond, Fropire; barke Mer; maa Hilds, Attieda, Ronse de Awe br Pe ee, fay ward, Anita Duaion, W Nichols 23d—U Speunboat Dacotab, Bosiou via LI Sound, scellnnmeous. for Bosion, in en toring Galway harbor struck ® rook, but was ot of aphurcn injured. ‘Bhe remained at Gulway'on (ho Tue 4m Bury Bown Huxtrx—The ateamebip Athenian, at Liver pol Sth inst from the crow of © rebel steamer Georgia. Sure Kancoon, Boyd, Coast of Africa, hed ou board ty fold "Manter. betore Lew ted coi fed by the The slp was destroyed. frou Oaloodia for,Mamt ost aw wa apd chain olf Dungeaess, and was supplied from up NARRAGANSETT, from Shields for New York, Benford ay inst Bhe losban anchor with 45 fathoms chain a8, in the Downs Suv Jeuia Lawrence, 8} before reported put 1 Her top ~ plaried, deck aurisiun eps 24, requleods were very open, kn up and top in bad je ar, from Basselo for Falmouth, — ihcugh she aha BOT" made but lituis water Sia her bottow, ‘Tho captain threw over about 300 bi of rice af (he Capo, aud al ut LOVe otf were (ound to be destroyed, Sune Y betare eerie on) ite that at tea rid “in were ‘thro Smy Westran mouth, whieh repo: ted put into Ma caulked and copoered, 10) b ve would pi Bann Teevanal Bans Banan A Nic: from + Hravethport 1 lost on Great Rip on th the mate and two men ber) ona ra(t, Allo’ mss, and Went Lo Breaver Ituapy, of evening iaat. 2 point near the mouth fachoms of water. musty do, Of beet, sales comprised 600 bb's, at $12 25 a $18 7 for plain mess, $l4 a $16 for oxtrn mess and $10 a $14 for ropackod do. ‘Tierce thousand 80) ars, deel was in demand for export, with gales | Hai other harnas Ne of 600 tlerces at $25 for Western x "i # while inferior, of which the stock mainty consists, was dull Woatern at 20c a tle for common to prime. Perrorgum.—Receipts 600 bbe, Thore waa a geeat deal more firmness in the market for roflned to da; aan with a go <l domand for shipmont, prices advancedfabout 2c. The sales wore not heavy, owing to the firmuers f holdera, most of whom refused to sell under 45c. a 4344¢, ite, and sme sales wero reported ‘ride was dull, witbout chango tn but higher, in sympathy with sales, Tho small vin their views. ond, on the spot, We quote common palo to choice yellow 5 >. Cheese ranges from 120. a 16c. for light atraw to w! at dic, for export. prices, Free waa dull, nded. Benzing was dull, with sin lt recoipts tended to render holders firi The sales were 6,000 bbls, refined, at dzc. 0 d4e., including about 100 " bbls., ‘chiefly primo white, at the outside price: 600 do., tree, Slo. a 5340.5 960 do. crude, 26c., aud 250 do. benzine at of 200, for crude and 24c. (or refined. The market closed with muck firmness at the outside prices Rice, Market activo; anles 1,600 bags Rangoon at 7470 200 bags Apadon at Tic. New Orleava at 1%1yc 400 a Tice ‘ane Svear firm; sales $6 hhds. aud 50 boxes {Havana at 1Sss0. a Lec. at auction, boxes Huvana (damaged) sold at 18tyc. a1St%;c. east TaLtow was in good request ath %, of 450, 009 Ibs. at 12c. a12\6. for fair to prime astern, Western and city, ¥ i ‘of ‘2c. 2 36.; sales 1,£00 bbis. at 720, a The., and Westera. sac rox ee YORE—THis DAT, «mhora, +4 MOON sus BUN RISK - 488! Higa Warr BUN SKTS. -mora 72) Portor New Yorn, N eee 23, 1803. € been ee: ‘i an +g en all—D wy ey Merrimsc, Sarson, New Oricans—U 5 Qa Keily. Shanghae—J ( Jewott & Co. farahatl, Liverpool—snow & Bur = W P Wore! ron D ae ry. Kelfast—Mu sl & Bany the, voaby. Grava . BlcLe'ian, Br), Land, Kingsioa, Ja nentoaguerA C Havens wrtress Moaroe—Mt T kumyoa Spark Coral Queen (Br), Alten, Monte » a—Wayide eons cummond & Hore yom Andersen Say as Bark Musiaag, Wella, New’ it Kos James, su John North hr MA Lyens, Walton aes Eldridge, Lal Behe Wm Hone, Seaman, Fortress Konsoe=Vau irewt ache Henry Brown, Latham, Foriroxs Mor Benth Smith & Co. Sone Sruitheoaten, Darts, Alexandria—Jor be RW Brown, Uishop, Alecaudria—. Rett Isabel Albert Slagit. re P Hupbard, Wit Schr Somerset, Stirling, Hal Sebr M lemto Shaw, Wil Schr Minate _Siovn Deep River, Br Tooker, Wasuingvvu—Yao Bria tama, Washington —Beul/ey, Smith more—Merrii| & Abbott IW Moke: wkor & Lay oH Son bicamer Octoraga, McLaughlin, Baltimore. ARRIVED. camshin America (Bren), Wessels, Bremen. via So ait 12, gt Lis PM, win mile aod SY pasoong: €4 Miscissippi (U 8 via Key West Fulton (Us )S Quarterm fav & sieamabin 8p tow. The Fulton cap blockade runner Bacshee. oe oO ba, hein towed to he ort the Br er, Naswau, NP. The by Heamslip Falton, built at Lis eiglit timer, eof the capiure another blockade ranner soon, sterring SS. Steamehip City of Ricumond (US transport), Koily Washington, to U 8 Quart ster. fae 8S transport), Snyder, Wo *hington, Sherwood, . Portiand, Ui Crome & Cunningham, Liver with mdse ane rpg, Oot 20, with passer 1M Ship Criveriom. (ot Boston), * Seton Bi 86 a lage, with goei, to Nesmith & Sous, Oct 16, while st anchor tn Grima; Roads, Angust Charison. of Norway, seam tor i Wes lost; 19th inst, Mark Doner, of aman, overboard from the fore Ther iinpiverd nad was lost, al though every affor Site ee MeLanel Cardiff, 37 days, with coal, to. "Thos mes, Park Bidwell (Br), Charehill, Bris, atlro Boyd & Iinck ¥, 90 days, with *, Gieraes 9 Oct 16, Mat a S leincke & Ww ke By schr Service, for Li neal Heh tui, lat B80. "You'e? saw Fe brig Lizaies bound a Carl Cre 9), Miedrodt, Marsetiles,| Cth with ante, to Wm Salem & Co. 14th inst, lai $4 39, lon 67 14, saw eehe Fleet Wing, boan | K. aan ton (of Boston), Trecartin, 8 rett, Kon & Co, Was detained 1y days ta the port a by head winds a Young atfield, Providence, to Boyd & Olden), Jgnceon, Avgostara, 27 days, with N maa Bt »; Hruniqne, Oct 30, and 8 Martine ici Winn “Cae (Be), i Dorle, Relive Cove, CB, with cos, te 5 Hunter Br is, 1b anya, with ua, Nov 13, with este! tras, Sas Pore om, prvthaante pan Snow, Grant, en rope vob Getchel rere a aoe Schr Armenla ie |. Pew fohr Monte: ci, Falta Perea Port anew Rehr J omen Mai “ag (4 a ache Fialen provid 5 Behr cata Se ten og for Rewtout hr Kewne, Gh Ca at Hed-ou Wonton, | & ents be oa. Se primo mesa, aod $28 a $28 60 for Indin mess, plowing a shebt falling off in previous gales, eof hams were steady: | f ‘ 150 bbls, so!d_ at $18 for Wostern. Cf cut ments, 26 ou pounds of bellies and aides, in bulk, sold at luo a 108%. nlso 60 casks smoked shoulders at 710. Hncen sides wore quiet. Pressed hogs advanced to 8c. a 820, witb light supply and active demand. Lard 3 4 to {hie extent of 6,000 bbis. and ticroes at J1%c. a , on the spot, | ar for common to prime, including 2,500 pa: The ary ani Fobruary delivery, at 180, a 1k\c., T deliverable in Philadelphia in all noxt month, at 1L2%c, f Choice butter was ecarce, firm and active for oxrort ship Lmve pas-ed the warks and t ard 10 vepair +28 Reed Ware Suppo " put into Copeutagen loch ed Up or Saturday by 6 snack and ¢ ‘The boat hus not Soni N& D Scupnen (ol Karasta vidence for Pas tuxeat River, Md. Tost with loss of bows: r't aud al Whian unknown sone. thewmave Torning off Point Tuaithe Dainage to the other achr alight, 20 inet, while vo Hehtbouss imwar Noison, from Padang for New and wys #o XA ba ‘e ‘a s oe X¢ Ato Masarili rai re Rar a pug ht i uplabt por serie in eae from Rangoon for Fal- aril ‘al Tow bails and spars, to be rine in al) October, from Cronsiadt for New tusi, teaky, (of, spuvaport), Capt 1 Xt tian, With a'eRrzo Of eo ne 2th ts! ‘The wife ot the c left in a boat, and the rest (Gin nd pieces at # AM on Saturday; eR, Wordi ppt into d fiealuus: “Bevt 5, was ready for sem, \d Would ail in @ day or two, Sir OH Lonp, Smith, from Calcutta for London, before ~ Bept 8. needed to be stripy - = by sea water, Bbe York, rie tata, ja ter bat one, w ih Oa. Were into telgae: wm heard fio. he bark wae @ Puitaceiphia, eprang a lenk on Friday tin enke Ba. ate Of the Pow pidly was ‘asi ington, he latter with mainmast b oken. he Dabomey, Preybo, and an Am Is te former with urn, Nov 7~—The Amanda, Thomson, which arrived esterday from New York with damage from collision, boon survered, aud will bave to Wim or lichten elite tea Nov &—The Mount Royal, from Eastport, has h' part of e. Hae ae 0 vage, of heving » . when they 6 were the capta’ elfast, trom No} bie ts keep her afloat aro washed over bo: ‘and crew Compeltod to ar u“ “for Philade!phia, has put back any m Ki aE. Cittaghan, arrived to day, with loss of . Nov 7—The Echo, Hopkirk, from Now Yort has put in leaky, and with cargo thrown ome. of bark Phen pon cong ‘ork for Queenstown, avk th rung aleak Octd. witch imercakcd “until the boats, being ad ‘rom which Pere taken on the aame day alongside of thelr owe ¥ ip dat 40 04, Th 114 ef 2 mall from Ser di” for Portiand, US, has pas dder gear broker Misstso Vis rts The Tiavia Cipo‘oswich, cleared at this port J a heard «f. ly 27 for Queenstown or Faimouth, aad Las not einee ‘The Mildur, Begren, cleared 3 this port July 28 fur Mayle, and has not since been heard of, Bi George Weymouth, aud New Visser ew versels Ls yeesent year. Tle) Will be éplosed in O55 tons, to be C0: abel, 215 LaMeutor, 243 1585 Owen Bearee, 7. and substantial crafts, the Livxynepe-At mals Brother, & sides hee Wore BAA Susquehanna Bream Tow Her dimensions are as Mefeot, breadth of beam 82 fset, depth of we Ger as ieee Cavt Geo P tons, € {9 have then built om the v pe, StLawrenee, thu are mesa the ce manded by ting irade:—sche Allee apt Luke 6 Ciaae, licarse, Panel © Sturgis. Frou ast uy feet OF the south vise of itmere, Slat inst, cf Jobn 8, Fe sicamer, constructed for the ‘Company, ‘ollow & Le! ach ¢ 201 rT) Feet, and &0 tons measurement. Tix fo" von ble harbors sratnd, “Lett aA Hintuawage Nis with ew Yor! w halemen wr ives A gum of the rcaseim the Ochotsk on Oho, owned in Barustable, LeCocq, cleared at this port July 28 for has ‘uot wuce bea . ext of, f Tt is petting to be @ fuvorte meth dof wand fu the orton, Fiiiadelnhie, Balth and New Srna, at tho tntout accounts from ex ‘of thoes ports: eles ne i ton, of NB. pee cg at Honolulu from the Ochotel, bone (his season. Las been re have arrived at fan Francisco, Hetaers: Rayuor, NB, waa the Aretic, with 1086 wh 2,000 Ibs: ny ere Oct {t 10 cruise on Ca ifornrn. a 4 hence (from Py Arctic July 24, Buphrates, 9) bbls eee eee tik Sierea Nevade far New Oriensis, Now 14, tay 33 0, ion 78, Axwwear, Nor kor, ANE Artionny ae OT Nye Fore: Ports. (Arr ut Flushing, Anna, Vorbrodt, New yna, Oct 26—im port American bark —, for New (Pill), Nov &—Arr Amelia, Cosulich, NYorm; 9h, Pollard, St Joha, NB, for ordera, Rornvaux, Nov 5—Std Numero 5, Albrecht. NYork. ae Maewennay ex, Nov 6—Arr Kime & Mathilde, Nurdewhoit, NYork, mS ENO: . Livers Gowr gat ‘Nore. Axurs, Gept WO—Arr shin Betsey Willisns, Cae. &—Sid Rangoon. Boyd, Mambar ‘ov 7—Sid Mary Durkee, Crosbie, , Nov —Arr ia the ruada, 2 G B.anchard, York, trom ‘Catino, Ovk- WAGE, Nov WO—Put in, bark Telegraph, Giles, from for NYork, leaky. tar shin Hudson, Potter, Museat, Colombe, St4 Dats anchored), Oct & Sov 10—Arr Catsibulanus, NYork for Londoa (aad Faison ag Nov 9—Arr Ttannah Secor, Kirby, SYork. Ora: Gtare A Nov i, Ocean Spray, M ob Lavine, Nov ¢—sid Leven, Cadiz Outs nn: Bee, Sn ee ecarr farm. Ei Kong: Empire, Coombs, NYork; 9th i, City of Limerick, (8) Livexroot, Sun ane Cw Nov a ag a Beh, ‘Bt and 40. Minott, € Mace Jones, Prowse. E Nov G—Are pogcete, Db seal NYork; Juliane, eee liu, ton Al h. roca, ae; Bib, Gases Maree; Boss, Fo Ch ‘th, British Queen, Aylward, and Universe, Hutton, ork. out 7th, Arabia 11) be v1 Bt M foun, Low on, Cid reer! We (and st tr irom Ul meduivans ty 9th); rc ieit ws 3 do; Moset, Cob) Ent out %h, LONDONDERRY, or 100) irene, Sov 1—Arr Mary Gill Eee belbelt: ‘athaa, Oot vesserowny ior “ahd tin, Bravo, Eor3 aes a ALBANY Noy 2t- t i ete x “Nev 9-00 the einer are ‘about ahps Br beg Princess Sig ie aries a Stone, Boston and flalit aon Muir; Columbia nase, Kubo Eberuian rh Grange, Clinton, re. Brelson, Bren Nata i 1 aid tor eaup sae. Moore, sohr Flesh, for NYork. Buteber, ‘Atee, foo "Batdmore (a eater, ps Gg Boardman lever, are ea Hooper, F : AE sera nist ary ; See, Jetfery, Hie Ler er d'Hartings, 1 Law, Boston ose from from 6 Terbatt, h, laney, bes SALT CONE, Mov Me Deker vee Aime CBr), Bark

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