The New York Herald Newspaper, June 30, 1865, Page 2

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2 NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1865. on the eager waicb. to entrap our brave votorans, and tngnm qouaty and city of Zapegpiiio, Obin wil be paid OTR MINERAL WEALTH. (2 Serres | aS eS See ees Sa ) the Bii asmy travela and ex} ‘that have neither’ of the govern- ‘Terre Haute and the <a af tho Big Horn but yields fair prospect termite ihe eccurdles ef he peltc inv; oabtin tame: |, 72 - peers etnalie egrsogee apr ly or atmost entirely confines to of the priious metal. For agricultural purposer, | ing of known and accou ‘men, nor any in- | declared a semi-annual dividend per cent, now known as Montana, I shall, of course, be telling you | they promounce the Yellowstone and Big Horn valleys as centive or promise of that which inspired | tax. than fllibusterism for Cuba and Nicaragua—and that business, | “rhe Norwich and Worcester Railroad Compyuy has ‘all know, proved as troublesome and barren ei ot vs aus cea declared a semi-annual dividend of four per cent, free of tax. nat. dividuals who. went yoip blindly, a cing repugiay erry Coupons of the first mortgage bonds of the Col for, on it. Gentlemen, we should havo no more of this questionable business.” No one thrives by it but the | and Indianapolis, and Columbus.and Indianapolis: scheming brokers, who pooket a per centage on their | railways, duc 1st proximo, will be paid at the St, e a ay ft | ins National Bank. vagabondage, to meet the fate of outlaws. It seems to ‘The Howard Insurance Company will pay, July 10, eee ror ateacen than eb aap other that oat Pape diipand ofan see bees some cen m™m can \ any occur—overy patriotic citizen should see that the | _ The Evening Stock Exchange has been organized “~ 80, Sur cca aon oat bl in tes | vided ake ahares o $28 cach The true ares | Sk . The — inhoud hare safe ana olghtoned danas and the | Tova" Gainer, Wiliam M. Parka, Worren,Kisball heartiost encouragement in taking to wholesome pur- iu suits and to achievements on a level and in character | B, Frank Gallaher, Charles P. Currie, John F. Pickroll, with the confirmed liberty and greatnoas of the nation— | 4. g. Laing and Robert Sewell. R. H. Gallaher is Presi- its and achievoments that cannot fail to add other roe, wealthy, licalthful and powerful communities to | deat, William M, Parks Trossurer and J. 7, Winchestor ‘those already enrolled and exulting in their strength and | Secretary and Assistant Treasurer. triumph under the one broad banner of the Stars and | The resumption of the diy goods trade botween Cin- publ cinnaté and the South is thus refered to by the Gaselte of 6 s 4 that city:— FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. It was dev to-day that the crodit syatom is at, sold to eloped Corrms. ti a foothold in the goods trade in, an thi is cmteuding tothe Bouts, Goods bare been shows Aeon nage Bio, Bes a5;289..: Pa terms, ‘Tuurapay, June 29—6 P. M. Southern merchants within the last few days on four Frxigata—The market was quiet, but rates we months’ time. Bankors woro folt as to their disposition | arm” the only engagements wo heard of wore | The stock market was dult at the first board but in regard to the paper. The response was unfavorable. | cow” per Inadener two boat loads corn, 8x4. nt lowover pent a TOMES VISITED from this on more about Montana than of Idaho. Early | wmevrpesed. The climate was delightful, and they were MONTANA THREE . | in Sune, 1863, T received stunilar orders. from. the War | Certaim of the navigability of the main river as high up Department to those of the previous year, and had my | a8 the Big Horn. Granville Stewart, in bis work on second expedition ready for the march from Fort Aber- | ‘Montana As It Is,"’ lately published, states “corn, . crombie by the 15th of July, and my experience on the jovr- | beans, pumpking, &c., grow finely in it” (meaning ney to the mountains, although I materially shortonod | the valley of the Yellowstone), and further adds:—“The REMARKABLE GOLD DISCOVERIES. | th: rox by deviating in places from the old trail, was | Yellowstone river will be navigable for light draught about the same, and, of course, quite gratifying, aa that | steamers nearly to the centre of Montana, and it is by —S Was a season ‘of relentless hostility of the ‘Indians | this river that she will ore long roceive all of her sup- through whose country I Lad to pass with a very small | plies that come from the States, and will in time carry party. down our gold'ani silver." But from all the explorors EXTENT AND YIELD OF THE MINES. coat. and voyegers visiting that country for the past thirty On this trip, as well as on tho first, remarkably.} years we have had the confirmation of thes» statements. fine beds of bituminous coal were found at different such a region, and to this identical one just alluded to, eed P along our route, between’ Lake Joasio and tho | 8 the destination of my fourth expedition, being organ- “ thacdeabesition thik if ile seneptige, as On sey oon npoet pre se cae mye . expedition from Minnesota—that of last year—on a | ever, y told you enough, I presume, about that, 80 Just as Good a Thing as Old | eee ince from Big Stone lake to the mouth of | Twill again revert to. my oxporlences and observations N Wanted.” Big Horn, on the Yellowstone, extensive and numerous | while at Virginia City in 1863. While on the subject of iners Wanted.’ verns of good coal were found in the bluffs weet of the | soll, crops or agriculture, however, should have men- Missouri and along the way hence to the Yellowmong, tioned that the valley at Gallatin City or at the forks of Indications of irou and coai were also abundant cast the Missouri are entirely productive, and yielded fine tnpodition of the grent micoowe ef the weir Thad telees | bien ken wnile manny other walleye’ wore ciko” cult . Great success of the Thad toft on | bles, &c., while many other were aliko cutti- Discovery of Deposits of Bitue | (12 casera siope, ana wax of course, anzious to, mect | vated—tor inslanoe, the Prickloy Pear, Sun river, Dror them, and to spend more time inthe mountains, which I | Lodgo'and Bitte Root—with like results. The seasons aro minous Coal. determined to do; and in passing through those wild | mild in the valloys, and bear all through Montana some- regions I never allowed an opportunity to pass in | thing of the character of the Pacific climate. RUE Si meeting an old mountaineer, a Jesuit father or other ‘THE MINES. {ction him paricayattothalimate sa, mlosely | A ranth of the. sunkingwater "a" trbotary tothe ‘ularly as 1 climate, soil, mineral A th of the Stinkin; a tribul to ' Tne Great Horseshoe Basin of the | xc., in the vicinity with which thoy might be most | Beaverhead or Jefferson Fork of the Missour, and gave } familiar. On the 6th of September, 1863, the same | employment at that time to six thousand or seven thou- i uF 3 | i : Rocky Mountains. month and tho same day of the month as the year be- | sand men, Other gulches were algo being wrought in the | steady, with the exception of Michigan Southern, which merchants may be disposed to take risks, now | J iv? joo! ‘ev6ei : fore, we reached Fort Penton, on the U; issouri— | vicinity by In ties, The mines were all from the closing prico at yostorday's second | that the trade is dull, capitalists are very decidedly op- pry party jaa BR distance from Fort. Abercrombie. eight hundred and | largely, and times wore most brisk In every Fine declined 296 trom the cl is posed to tho re-establishment of the old credit system. | fH at BXd. add. London, 11600 pkes. board. Erio was higher, Reading %, Clevetand and goods, 168. 34., and 60 tons oil cake, 17a, 6d. T Plusbarg 34, tlinois Central %, Northwestern 4¢, Rook |, The recelpts of four and grain, at the placos indicated, | ters wero: 7. es twenty-five miles. At the government farm, on the Sun ifters for the gulch mines were in dematid at twelve —Two vessels to Pe : river, some thirty miles northwest of Benton, I saw | dollars por day when I reached the place. The average i" Road: Co Richness of the Valloy of the | mm crops growing, ot, rather, boing barvosicd, and | pay throughout io Virginia City mines wan carefiily 6 | Island 4. Government securities wore Inactive. ive- for the week onding Juno 24, wore:— i Fi Ss. Ge ne fe, Reaent ees ae ee aes it is proverbial throughout all the region that stock not | timated at twenty dollars per day to the man, whilosome Wheat, Corn, Oats, | Cardiff or Now] ’ < only winter Dut fatter on the graves clone catthout shoty | claims yielded an high as fifty dollars to two hundred and | tWenties were unchanged and ton-fortios advanced %- dash,” buch, —_ bush | SArtlMT ot Nowport, 3s Yellowstone. isc omit eat nea | Sea ys aera, gi | fon penene some kth mat we ait wie | Seto tanta pal a “ yy the Ameri ur men— | reason 8 yield per mines was no mato | 7 © 5 one ‘ is ag mild a8 could be desired. — that small bas'n arsounted to not less than throe-fourtha | om4at the i ie 208/000 14,371 11,379 | iver to Bordoaux, prizate; ong bance & 19 6304 19°114 ee ae tobacco, private, and one to Genon, 1 6,025 18,317 | “"Hors.—The market was exceedingly quiet, sai we ——a | heard of salos of only 80 bales at from 1c, to 300., «conn change, Rock Island, Northwestern and Cleveland and Pittsburg wero without variation, New York Contral was % highor, Erie 4, Reading <, Michigan Southern FOS of a million of dollars, we can realize that sich is wealth One of the luxuries of lifo in the mountains or vicinity | indeed, when no more than ten thousand persons are en- Prestacat Lincoln and the Gold | is the abundant supply of clioico fish in all the streams | gnged in all tho pursuits pertaining. Hore, as at Ban- on eithor slope. Speckled brook trout, weiching from an | nack and throuzhout this mountain region over which I 917,445 758,849 1,000,464 610,914 654,969 Miners ounce to three pounds, may be had on sight for the sup-'| havo travelled from year to year, was abundance of good | % Government securities sold at the morning prices. 9 383036 | Wg to quality. sa ply of a large camp. i water and grazing, and plenty of the best of pine on tho | At the second opén board there was a general advance of cet Ruan’acihigesistidih Khe, porta of: | Werte mieten Pesgon he telinrnteat pr ee Ante tt CEP PARTY owe, TO RICITER DIaGiNas, mountain sides, Several good saw milla were under way, | 3/0 sper cont. New York Centrat sold at 93%, Frio | Ghicago, Milwaukoo and Tolodo for tho wook onding June | tr at 9c., currency; 4.000 Montevideo at 16%Ke <0!) r nine days march from Benton we came to a halt | both here and at Bannack. I frequently heard It ro- 7%, Rock Island (8. 3) 100%, Reading 96%, Michigan " 2,100 Orinoco cow, 250 Central American, 15,0 7 PLEASANT REMINISCENCE on my old trail near the base of the main chain of tho | marked by old California or perhaps Australia minors, | 77%, Roel ( ? i Dab ome slaughtor, on private terms; 4,000 Buenos Ayres»! 1" y * | mointains and opposite the Prickley Pear valley, where I | that the main gulch at Virginia City was the richest they | Southern 61, Clovoland and Pittsburg 68%, Ohio and Mis Wheat, gold, and'2,000 Rio Grande, on private terms. 4 pes) A Ley Party ine fall before. I visited the Bison buh ped Syeria.or sve new, Whi P gome ay nd Leen sissippi cortificates 24)4. oanta Paruoueca—The markot was steady, with a ‘ ——~ ro ply a few remained, as in prospecting further ¢ campe and gulches { frequently roceived presents o| q h 2 i wert South along “the castern slope they had klesovered small (2 unique nuggets of , with generally aap marke; bes hype yeae ret abe peter ae hoy oe Mahe a pad rodney Bee Teoee ty éc. a FOURTH EXPEDITION TO MONTANA, caer digg gs"? ant bad moved up late in io falt some Injunction, such as to “hurry up the mails hammering of the bears an: 1e weakness of foreign ¢} 5 ‘So. for forward delivery ; 700 do. refined, in bond ne} See TS De aT ee ee aaaet Bower et eer ake ae Of travel to tho States;'" “get | change. The lattor has been artificially depressed by partics Be at 53c. a 54c. Free waa quiet and unchanged. en beginning to reap their harvest for patient nele Sam send us @ mint and assay office on ; s. —Rece' k doe &e., &e. &e, perseverance, and to-day Pr ckly Pear is one of the most | ‘Get our Territory (then called Idaho) divided. "copay | “short” of gold drawing “kiteflying’’ bills on London, —_ on machen cut tea so: ae ned rhe park ark: extonaive and best ying mining districts inthe tere | our friends at home that wo'll be thero too ons o' these | and selling them to the bankers here for whatovor they 3.000 in repidly ‘recovering frrm the panic inte whirl it wa acai ory. continuing my journey in search of tho main | days,” &c.; while one miner gave mo a very fine nugeot . th 4 proved Captain Fisk’s Address to the Tra rcuce’s | party Lwas obliged’ with my tealn, to cross the main | for “Old Abo.” ag heaald, and wished. te to presomk iti], Coule 6% Fecolving in rovurn bei ay gl apr pe 20,000 Ca tees Te aad Seat need ea eer, a Club ‘of Wow Work: ; Tange to tho west side, and in dropping down toward the | to him myself, and to toll him that “he hoped he (Mr. | @dbivalent, which they immediately sold on the Burs ro tho movemont is confined almost exclusivel Mx: Pemmsusr’ sub GeenicnGt els Nes naveiitionh: famous ‘Deer Lodge’? valley, wo found fine prospects | Lincoln) was enlisted for the war.” This nugget was | gold and then threw it on the market. That the present 81,615 mess. The sales to-day wore about 6,500 bbls. sand 7 3 sort " of gold on a number of lively streams, but in the banks | worth in weight about $200, and was duly presented a8 | gnomalous condition of the foreign exchang> market is 15,000 — | regular, at $24 75 9 $25 37% for new mess, cio in" 2 my custom to appear before select or public assemblages | and bars of the “ Little Blackfoot,” where we halted a | the mincr desired. During that pleasant interview, in 18,560 500 | $95 a $28 75 a $24 for old do.; $18 a $18 50 ‘for priv for the purpose of making a speech or delivering an ad- | 44Y, and all hands tried our skill, we found that we | company with Senator Ramsey, of Minnesota, upon my | Bt the result of tho operation of logitimate com- 10,510 19,504 | 3nd $19 a $20 for prime mees’and city, Bef e: . ‘ ' could get from one to five cents to the pan of gravel and | applying to be transferred to a com i J sdroas of any kind, I have found it necessary, in under- | earth washed. And to-day Iam told there ay in that Bouth (they were dark days hen) Mr Lincoln replied taking to enlighten you upon the subject you have named | val me forty miles of very rich mines being worked | that I was porforming important service whero I was, in your kind invitation to me, to put what I may have | 3 ah to chango it, Said he:— From merce, is obvious, when we reflect that our imports, —_—_— dull and heavy, though prices were without no! for a considerable number ot months, have largely PBI eae Rae ieaaege patches change. Tho sales wer>. 200 at $0 roponderated foature of ele Q " p or plain moss and $12 8 for oxtr preponde' iy oer sigh srpesth an sorta, Roe The receiptsand shipments of flour and grain at Chi- | Beef hams continued dull, and were without furt our trade is becoming m spi H from January 1 to Juno 17, for four yt were:— | t note. Bacon was dull, and tho rates were jv is) + fot the wook onding June 26 being valued at only | 6? ll gy 46 cant. ‘Prices meanwhile continued entirely 1 $2,023,471 in currency and the imports at $5,118,639 in 1863. 1964. 1865. Sa Rp ll tel oct Pilons fag iy ' gold. For the moment, howover, these foreign bills, re- Mp ATER, CeRTET STL seh 8 388,008 | 9 Ide. for aboukler.tihes #:iie.: torbawh and.” prerenting nothing more substantial than credits, havo C 10/142) 473 145271220 7,160,322 6.129.678 baggod do. Lard was in fair demand. and priv ¥ their offect, although leading bankers aro now 651 2/300'172 47136,736 acts en ans AP eH ane om by ov ral thousand People, For sconery, I never and ho would. not wi held a more enchanting landse: tha this Heel’ no pretentions to literary excellence or scientific r- | mountains across that vailey. In this stream we-caught | the development of the mineral resources of the West, search, I can speak only in my own plain manner of S00 SAlEhing fomnoe to coenbanie BATE GOniN, On + vitally necessary to the carrying on the war. The aching the Deer Lodge we for - matters which I have seen or learaed from the most au- | q flourishing village called Cottonwood. City an which | veut. money: pasion ad i eee en tar natvioal thontic sources, Throughout all the regions of our great | were a number of stores well stocked, shops, meat mar. | finances,” On reaching Washington that winter, via ‘Foot wo'niay read fa! Reyraipitertalierd Gia kets, hotels, &c. Johnny Grant, thé old ranchero of | Salt Lake and the overland stage, my second report was 10 wor! “ 7 f the valley, with his countless herda of cattle and horses, | soon furnished and published by Congress, anc sing to draw at current rates. Again, | 340,768 6 205,807 * a ‘ Sgt ect ig spieeti oy Hi sroewwr orice prooses, aull flourished. Here, a& | of securing division ofthat immense Territory com- as pees ‘shipment of cotton ls _ proving 148,018 148,510 266,255 | Tonitercd at 19>. a 190. Epa lber aertirg ses os proven» ? . 4 . . “ys of Montana on either slope of | menced, as I have aire: x) sometime in 1, . . Treg sping, pass cities follow in: inels wake, the mountains, stock winters without shelt-t or ott hay, | May. 1864, tho bil was parsed eeeating Montana acTere. | an oxaggoration and a bugbear, No cotton worth men- sor,165 "g0e'505 648,971 303,833 | “Suaae =the market remains steady undor t. fir ¢ _And Territories to potent States aspire. and are seal fat the year round. The beeves that I saw | tory, which, in view of the wonderful strides of Previous to the creation of Idaho asa Territory, that | in great numbers in this valley, and of which Isupplied | the ‘past year, tho late discovery of over two hun- dmmonse region of country embraced within her bounda- | 24 larder, were, many of them, 0 fat as to appear | drod miles of additional placer diggings, besides now tis as whon organized, was almost wholly unknown | S0:U4Hy deformed, or more like Berkshire pigs fatted for | gold quartz and extonsive silver lodes, is, in my + 4,216,796 304 4,208,971 2,156,025 | mand, and prices were without decided change he « 7,965,527 13,147,095 4,579,146 6,103,005 | was rather less buoyancy than there wasyester’\y. bi 466 2,480,767 4,077,062 3,511,344 | the fall in gold had no other offect ‘The sales wor 1,5¢ 817,547 267,540 133,036 146,558 | hhds. Cuba at 10%. a 14c., and 2,000 boxes yeil an tioning is being shipped at this port, and at present prices here and in Liverpool its shipment would not pay. ‘Tho boars have borrowed all the available gold in and Ths man Grant has already realized an | judgment to-day th ining ' terri i - K i ; 4 iid regardbd’'as comparatively worthless or uuitted'rér'|!{taménes *fértund troca’ beled of Ria tattle Tee eeerumaaed ais reais) monetnelt WO things Curetallt prepered, bashes eiporoon praia ones bai seston 144,614 a hid : Kho 99,648 | white, private terms; also 200 bbls. yellow ot \ox¢ tho purposes of civilization, Contemplating the high al- | 18 horses for the saddlo sinco his solitude was broken in | from the best and most reliable sources of information | *@ated on good authority y hoiaeognrerrnintencsnetieSiorai net tpebte ie Steanine was steady witha fair demand. We no a, upon by the indefatigable and venturesome miner. | open to me, a condensed statement of tho area and ave- titude, the many,craggy, towering ranges of mountains, | ‘Those whom T had seo ertaian along this valley in ’62 | rage yield of the various mines worked in Montana up dense forests, &c., We Were wont to regard it asa wasto | had ali stampeded to the rich discoveries at Beaver | to the latest dates. But I would here bog to stato that I place to be forever surrendered to the red wan—a sacred ii ne en monte Appt = little party, | do not raped aod bond havo cape ae cayprtbe ao i , wavel up the valle; ‘Tossed rt} ‘Rai ry will ne jen: home where nature should be left to revel in a solitude | through what is called the De Hole in The Mountains, Pope to have some any at hnivoreat in that dircotion. to be seldom, if ever, disturbed py the footsteps of our | on to tho eastern slope out into the great Horseshoo VIRLD OF THK MINES OF MONTANA. intrusive race. Fora considerable time, even after the poppe Rocky: Maantatn aire, where thoso brave | | The mined of the Deer Lodge and its tributaries aro in . ecrs, Lewis ani rk—types of a claas now exte! one in mi al ‘rom 2 sottioment of Washington Territory, the region to: whlch | tyecominz extinet, ait down and: festod a few days after | dollars per day tothe mau,” Guleh diggings, in the vict- J refer attracted little if any attention, and failed to lure | their long and wearisome marches. up the Missouri and | nity of Bannack City, have a total length of thirty miles, emigrants from a distance to prospect its Texources, or to | its sources in 1805. The Beaver Head river, the north | and pay eight to forty dofiars per day. Gulch dizgings, entice any of the thocsands amnrally passing its’ gate- | fork of th» three forks of the Missouri, drains this im. | in the vicinity of Virginia City, are in length eighty-s x ways to pause for a while to 8-6 what might be wrappod | morse basin, in which lie the placer aud quartz mines of | miles, and pay ten to two hundred dollars per day to Une in her mountain vaults, or hidden in her bold cafions and | Bannack and Virginia cities, Rattlesnake creck, Ram's | hand.’ Prickley Pear and its tributaries pay from eight to Deautitul valleys, Gradually, however, a‘ter having | Horn creek, Brandon and Boulder creeks, Silver creek, | one hundred dollars per day, and are in extent one hun- reached the western limits of the continent, the restiess | aud many otber places of minor importane There are .| dred and forty-seven miles. Yellow Stone, lately opened gold hunter began to penetrate this region from the | !2 this great Horseshoe of the range, scattered about | noar its source, in extent thirty-nine miles, pays ten to ‘Weat, in search of new flelds and better prospects, and | many isolated spurs and clusters of mountains con forty dollars per day. Here is a total of four hundred they constantly opened to him in return for his energy | ing gold, silver, copper, lead, assinnabar, and coal; all | and two miles of placer or gulch diggings being wrought own and thoir depositors’ gold, which the borrowers, if | Money is in considorably larger supply than is re- ; called upon, could not return without seriously advancing | quired by the business community. The banks and indi- culate pounds at 17c. a 1834c. for prime Weste ‘ Viduals are lending freely on call at five per cent, and do 4 a ee. the promiiim; for there is not a suMcient supply | Xor‘tna borrowers cnough to take all Rettate on good BE sr Fadel 1,400 packages changed owner 00 p floating in Wall streot to enable them todo it. The pre- | security. Lateran cs hiabyl lth Sane UOONDI a. wt HDNN carious condition of the banks of this city is illustrated Pee ma pes, erie: posi belgeciapecte #4 2 fod allo. want capllalists at seven ani a by the fact that an institution which professes, in its dre pasbon tt tho street at eight. per ‘cent, while lower | ,,TORAco? was quict, with sales at from 120, to 280, Th weekly statemont, to have about nine hundrod thous:r4. | grades rango from that figure up to double interest, The nae ees ee, POCO, ae ey. dollars of specie, was yesterday morning unabto to pry | stock market is rather dull and the transactions are | “AVY Romina | 1 i eowey feeling in th] the gold check of a private special depositor | Small, withthe exeeption of those in goverument bonds. | wiatey market, and, though the sales were srnal for $94,500, The anawer was “Wo will certify, | The Commissioner of Internal Rovenno has written | higher prices wera realized. ‘The salox wore 250 0! this obeck for you, but we have not that | *hefollowing relating to taxable articles transported or | Western at $2 04 o $2 06. much gold in our vaults. We shall havo to oon bs on boyond the limits of the States’) ok, One Hundred and Twenty-tr send out and get it for you."’ The bank accordingly sent ae . i bd ares sn oss tac beroa* Ltn Sha Dollars a Pair. out and bought the gold for greenbacks, and not till | 1 THO Ubon to be “transported, beyond the limita of SUPREME COURT—CIRCUIC. 4 late in the afternoon was the draft honored. Yet the | the States lately in Insurrection’’ will be held to be sub- Before Judge Clerke. > and faith. of which is stau.d upon the data of actual discovery. at this time with wonderful results, It is estimated that | depositor of this gold had previously supposed it to be ees — ra bo ote ore, Se hereto Seleaee Jone 29.—Gustavus A. Burckhardt vs. The Bri SALMON RIVER. BANNACK CITY. at least thirty million dollars will be taken from the uy in th It and payable to his order : Com; us bron; ‘The mines on Salmon river were the first to turn pub. | _ Bannack City is nestled between. two towering moun- | gutch mines alone during the year from July 1, 1865, to | yiné quiely. in the se sano That from one. of a | were manafactured and removed from the place of man- vege Conan” This War, #3, Souoear cee (7° ic attention to this region as rivailing California in their | tain spurs, but i¢ a live place when you get to it. On | July 2, ae ee ne mainotnss, peter itt See: Aie Uae ot Sepepeticrs, 2Oes, Csr. | Sen FeruRbe tn renoweT $1,100 tveiTOMRee beREAge, drt richness, 1 presume you are all familiar with the history | ™y approach I ired a salute from the howitzer across Qvants Lope. ; eet: number of events which might happen that the bon portly Srondcal ed fuqaorne (shed Be ie its transit between Dunkirk and.Now York. 0) bs. of those mines, There were soon afterwards opened on | the valley, and as the echos went thundoring down Many very thick and oxtonsive quartz lodes of both | banks, on calling in their gold, found their | Ming oll, distilled spirits, cotton’ or woollen fabrics, | 8®g¢ consisted of three hoxes fi%4 with weariny Clearwater river, north of the Salmon (both those streams | along the valley into the caijon, hundreds threw down | gold and silver have also beon lately opened by being on the western slope, and tributaries to the Colum. | their pick aud spades, and it was a general turn out to | the increnge of prospectors, These odes crop customers unable to respond, and that conse- | where brewed, manufactured or distilled prior to the 1st | household linen, bedding, &c., which the plai k ~ k “ velcome oI vay: “ day of September, whether the same were removed for ba, or#nake river), well pay.ng mines, known as “Elk | Welcome the old ilag which L always carry unfurled from | out in all the mining distriots, and many of | quently they were unable to return tho gold to their Tr pert eee are brought with him from Atlanta, Ga, Among th« City’ and “Oro Fito” digg-ngs, At the junction of the | the head wagon. Cheer after cheer went up, and there | them have alrealy proved highly productive, | special depositors, would the banks concerned not be | Soviet ienisned to the assessor of the tistactory PrOot | o6t wore two pairs of boots which cost tho plalt Clearwater with the Snike river, is situated the town of | Was aright hearty welcome. ‘This was the first flag they | such ns the “Dakota,” “Wadhams,” and others of the Lewistown, until recently the expital of Idaho, There | had seen since they had left home, and at a meoting of | gold, with the “Rothsohild,” “Nonpariel,”’ “Henry wore mines struck near Fort Colviile, on the other fork | the first Union League of Montana a few nights after I | Clay’ and a number of other silver lodes, which have Of the Columbia, simultaneously with those of the Clar- | Spread it on their altar amidst the wildest delight and | given reat results by assays made at the United States ‘water, and since then we may record the most extensive | Chthusiasm. Of thos» who were present at that meoting | office here and at other points, ranging from three hup- ‘Of all the discoveries in Idaho West, at what is known | in the mountains, and who delivered themselves of | dred dollars to two thousand five hundred dollars per ‘as West Bannock, and Boice City, at which points [think | speeches becoming’ the occasion, I may menticn Hon, | ton. California—with her inexhaustible mines, her there are now near forty. ‘thousand inhabitants. | Sdney Edgerton, present Governor; Un'ted States Mar- | navigable rivers and coast, her fertile valleys, good Gold and si! » some extent have also been | shal Payne and others. Here 1 met about one-half of | cimate and fine forests, her majestic cities and her live discovered of 1: Jare now being worked snecess- | my original party, and during the ten days I remained | and generous people—is an empire in commercial, agri- folly. In the Deer Lodge valley, the western base | ‘2 this locality [devoted myself exclusively to personal | cuitural and mineral greatness, and is yet but a creature » ‘of the Rocky Mountains, there had also been some small | examinations of the various gulch and quartz mines | of twenty-five years growth. Oregon and Nevada aro ‘discov made inthe tall and winter of 1861, Tho | that had been opened and worked. There were then | two other mighty States, pioneered and blocked out by averayo yield of all the mines above mentioned I bave | about eight hundred people in Bannack—to-day about | young men who are but now just in the prime of their carefully estimat's at cighte n dollars per day to the | ¢isht thousand; and here let me suggest that this town | manhood. One teoms with a busy population pursuing tnan.. Lut up to that tine no discoveries had been made | and the Bannack on the west side, in Idaho, ate distinct | commerce, agriculture and manufactures; while the Un tho cast side of the moantains (excepting Pike's Peak, | and ditferent places entire, but ate unfortunately very | other, with her hosts intently plying the pick, drill, considered guilty of a breach of trust towards the latter? | game wero actually manufactured prior to that date. but which could probably have beon purchasa Moreover thore is a constant deception being practised by rss yres sammracanteds ou veeaes and ae oF Fe pally fay tid hill Led SE re oe ipo moved for consumption or for delivery to others than 4 a the banks upon the public with regard to their specto | Herts of the peck pty fain proiteak: y cabers than. | Teadanta, by tiie teres of whic tHe aetendants were average, They stated in their last weckly return that | 3ist day of August, A. D., 1862, and the 3d day of March, to be held Itable for the destruction by fire of at y 0 f specio was $15,906,314. Of this | 1863, will be subject to ‘the tax imposed by the act of | Or baggage while in transit; that the haczay Lag 5p pala ga Me | duly’, 1862, on such articles; aud the tax 10 bo lovied | Plaintiff was destroyed by fire, at a place called gum some four millions or more is currently | O1 ‘gi’ articles so transported or intended to be trans- | and that therefore he was not entitled to recove reported to be twice counted in the form of certifi- | ported as aforesaid will be that which was imposed by | The counsel for the plaintiff stated that the cates issued by the Bank of Now York, the | the law as it existed whon they first became tiublo to tax, pire ee cee fon ae receipt for gold represented being counted by it and tho certificates ant ees will be mado at the rates which ob- complaint ight money, which was attache! also by the other banks holding them, which reduces the When any article 's cianed to be exempt or sbiect to Beige Lg defence Neat ban oo w aggrogate of specie to twelve millions, moro or loss. Now | A less rate of tax than is imposed by the law as it now | O ing in the possession of the plaintiff wh) exists, proof satisfactory to the assessor of the district | tained tho proviso in reference to fire, and that \t the important question is, of the gold oMcially stated | Tsr'Lh piven of the rate of tax to which. It. is subject, | tat account it was held back. . and generally supposed to be in the bank vaults, how | otherwise it will be properly assessed under the law now Counsel for the plaintiff replied that it waa course), and it Was ny vood fortune, after serving | much confounded and confused by many not posted. | spade and pan, and a hundred mills driven by steam and 4 J Bane months in the Fouth against traitors, to rec in The guich mines were very busy, and were taking out an water, yields "bounteously her bricks of gold and silver | much 4s really there, and of tho deficit, how much is —— A a fy br sete cokiseete aes cinpa Railroad Con a ‘orders from the Secretary of War to organize and cquip | $Verage of from eight dollars to forty dollars oo day to | bullion. Colorado and Tooora hold also their distin- | really loaned and how much virtually sold. PY nee we noo oe ty oa, in hind It could not screen themsely fn escort of able-bodied young men to proceed to pioueer | the hand. By the permission of a friend having an | guished places on the scroll of fame for their rich yields which they were manufactured, whether under bond or In order to show at what rate we have been losing our | otherwise, before vy rate of tax A wees they are ne ' Judge Clerke ous ee hag ay te defer gold since the suspension at tho close of 1861 we has been determined, the assessor ¢ district in which | !n consequence o| @ absence of the lacing the tax is to be paid will determine thy t and cer- juestion; but allowed the plaintiff the privile, wi have obtained from tho Custom House authorities, | {He Ut tame tothe collector a ammount a Aen. Tera k forte so teat na uoneo en Oppartua't statements of the imports and exports of coimand bul- -———— amend his complaint. lion from the beginning of 1862 to the end of last month, Stock Excha' the latter of which we published a few days ago; and the comparison shows that our exports of the precious metals during that period from this port alone were $164, 764,174 greater than the imports, or twenty-five mil- | “5999 400 lions more than al! the gold and silver coin in circulation | 24000 US 6's 1yrcer 99% 15 Stonington ‘a routo from the western border of Minnesota across the | @Verage claim near the city I pulled off my coat and | of the precious metals, But when Washington and plains and mountains along the forty-seventh and forty- | Picked the carth in the shait or tunnel, wheeled out and | Dakota gave up that area out of which fair Montana is Zighth parallels north latitade, to the Pacific slope; and | Washed it under direction of a miner, who did not want | carved, embracing tho sources of tho two great rivers to announce publicly that I would protect such’ emi. | t sell his claim, making just a clean but hard day’s | of the continent, it would almost seem as if here we had grants as might collect in time at the rendezvous, and | Work of it, and summed up as the result what weighed | got the very core or fountain head of all the other mine- Bnform to the regulations of my command. Our ren- | twenty-seven dollars and fifty-five cents. Most of this | ral ficlds distributed far and near along the slopes, and Gezvous for this trip was at Fort Abercrombie, on the | Was in fine shot or scale pieces, although one piece | as with Idaho, with her fifty thousand inhabitants Red river of the North, and on the 7th of July, 1862, | Weighed $2 25, another $1 50 and several 50 cent pieces. | rapidly increasing, we shall see two new States of these when the order for a march was given, my party con: | My friend very kindly presented me with the fruits of | before or by the close of 1865. Yot let me say that it nistod of about fifty armed and mounted cuards with a | my hard day's work. The miners generally did not heai- | will reqnire many thousend active colonists and settlers, ‘twelve ponnd mountain howitzer and drilled squad, and | tate to show me their buckskin sacks containing amounts | full half a century of years to determine the full extent one hundred and thirty emigrants, including twelve or | they had taken out during the season; and 1 must say | of the greatness of the resources of our mountain terri- fifteen women and some children. The wagon train, | that, in very many instances, while I congratulated them | tories. The cammerce of our great chain of Inkes and All About Some Coal Scuttles SUPREME COURT—CIRCUIT, Bofore Judge Clerkus <, ToxE 29.—George Griffiths vs. Gerris Prince.— ‘hit. an action to recover cight hundred and so dollars, a balance on a lot of coal scuttles de! scarcel . 14000 Usé'n 1 is 983; 200 Reading RR.... 953, fn single file. was about one mile in length. A trackless | I could scarcely Help envying them their purses. To say | your own broad canal now terminates abruptly at the | in the loyal and border States, excepting California, after | 34 e ae country was becore the, and from the very starting I had that all who went thero or were there had made fortunes, head of Lake Superior, for tho want of that Northern Pa- | the outbreak of the rebellion. From these statistics alone | 2000 Missouri 6's... TA 400 do..2d call wae pe yaa 2 ae peeing’ im writing, which 1 ‘to take my compass bearings. Our route lay through the | OF had any show for the same, wou! ‘an insult to the | cific railroad leading to the mountains. I cannot con- the danger of that specie bankruptcy which threatens us 60 ‘Od call 104 by petnsliny Pamlor Meher 4 omy ba q great hunting grounds of the Sioux, and in looking | intellig.nce of enlightencd men; for it ts the same in | ceive ie cause of kdelay in building that much needed ‘Sut from Abercrombie westward there was nothing but | mining camps as at home in tho States—there is a certain | thoroughfare, and I now venture to assert thet if that ‘space and waving grasses to obstruct the eye; over one vast | ¢lasé of men who have noither the faculty nor di i.on | company will survey and constract their road, via. the ‘ocean of prairie-way on into the misty, smoky distance | 0 secure a ape meas A where it requires manual labor, | Yellowstone valley, to the very centre of the population against the horizon. But we soon reached the Wild | diligence or energy of character. And 1 wish just here to | jn the mountains, the saving to the People, for two years, Rice and the Sheymee, both of which rivers we readily | S¥xest that tho man who, from having been born tired, | jn freighting merchandise and supplies and dridgea and crossed. Here we found hy of elk. A | OF otherwise so indisposed to physical exertion as to have | would nearly if not quite construct the road. really fow miles farther on we came to buflal an honest living, need | know of no public enterprise or work the completion of days march one continuous herd lined the prairies, Then w territory, be it rich in | whieh is more demanded than this at the present time, at some future day, is apparent; and hence banks which hold specie on special deposits, should resist the Induce- | 5099 Ohio&Miss cert 24%, 500 ments of speculators to lend at ruinously high rates of | 6000 Krie 34 mtg. oe oes 1000 6000 Mich Cen 8’s,nl 111 200 interest, and 20 protect themselves and their customers, Clev & To {'be,100 Pcentayt es IndRR ~ trade. The defence set up was that anit 200 +i) agreed to deliver soventy-five dozen scuttlea thie weo? 6 succeeding the contract, and that after that he was t furnish one hundred dozen per week until the ,onirse gop. 3a cath ome | Mas.lled, Tt was claimed that the plain ciiy Exports of Speie from New Imports of Specie into New | 3000 ChickAls Tbds 953 100 Ill ContraiR #30 127" | hot assorted according to aercetseit, sad that tine far se York. ‘ork, 5000 Marip Ist mtg. 40 100 do,....-... 128 | to deliver the goods in accordance with the terms of tl Year. Amon, Year. Amoun'. 1000 Mich S2d mtg. 87 400 Clev & Pitts RR. 67% | agreement was a source of severe pecuniary lox t th ‘and for forty | always failed at home. to obta or think of succeeding ina certs antelope and de-r, grizzly and cinnamon beara, | minerals or otherwise, Again, Ido not believe it meces- | and increas ng with time. c R with piety of wild fowl and hy in the streams and | Sary for any man, except for health, or some other mo- In conclusion, gentlemen, permit me to say that at i : bak 18H nee Pacer om a ie rm oon os oy a defendant, which ought to serve as an offset ayalnst t? lakes, The roadbed was all that could be abun. | tive than gain, to leave comfort, plenty and weli-doing | this moment, for such an emigration and onterprise as T peand mese* So.s2seat | 1864. a'zau'ste | “68 we cH ‘ Canal ae OOChICa NW pret 66 balance alleged to be due the plaintiff. dance of good water and grass, and sufficient wood and | to go in search of bet [ego Teagons of special welght and character exist. es te 1865; from Jan 1 190 ia ‘i aM, ‘Co 13% 100 os "’0 al ba The trial of this cause lasted two days owing to \b bots de ba he for our wants, In every THE QUARTZ LODES AT BANNACK CITY. he triumphant termination of the war which the na- Mas ‘a1. 12,710,287 |" toMay 31..... 3,820,116 | 200 rig ig Co. 18% 100 onte & hie t Ue ee conflicting nature of the testimony. The jury rout was a del ghtfal one, and unattended by The quartz discoveri's in tho immediate vicinity of | tional government was compelled to wage against the emesices, Sata a Sh on4 9, SypEry 100 preg pas es) 200 le Se: » ed in a sealed verdict for the plaintiff for the fo!| «nouo ture, We bore round the Missouri to the Nortli, | Bannack City were the first discoveries in that jon, most wanton and criminal rebellion of which history Total $173,532,995 Total $8,708,821 300 Atl ie it rey . ne 50 Pitts, Ft wee. 96 claimed. ed the eastern base of the Rocky Mountains at the time Twas there were merely being prospected | makes mention, has thrown back pon civil life thou ro ‘meta. 708, oe cert I ic y EE Ty Wh tor oF during the month ot September. Upon approaching the ‘pital and machinery, But | sands and thousands of brave and high-spirited men, uct imports 6,708, 4 foun eens la H pre! New York Dry Goods Exchanyo. spurs of tho main chain I sent ont prospecting parties ch. To the depth of | whose future is precarious, to say the least, unless their |p f 9164, 104 704,174 imi 60l . This now establishment, which is located a! “ox with ten days rations in different directions, to report to was of a honeycomb | energies and impulses be properly directed. "The exeiting | Pxcess of exp! sig BECOND BOARD. aad 61 Park plhod, Win somite 4 ood tall me belore ths train would cross the great divide. Both tis called burnt quartz, showing cores apd | duties and scenes of a protracted war, such as ours has Cash gold has been a little more abundant to-day, Haw-past Two o'Croox P.M. place, was formally inaugurated at !)1" jos) parties to the right andl left discover dl gold. ‘There wore ere solid gold through tie xt taken 9 hog in naturally rod re ta thone whe have mared bn owing partly to the issue of checks for the interest on peers koe Hee 7 rites neg prac The mecting was oll & practical miners in each, Whose judgment could be relied ut a half bushel or more myself there was | a spirit of adventure and of bold and novi ion, whiel . 3, 5-20, cor or Cc 2a Ww Willian Upon, arid on reaching the ana) renervrers compared, | hot a piece of it the sizo of an egg which 4 cannot be subdued. This, for certam reasons which it is | Tesistered bonds payable on Saturday at the Sub-Trea- 10-40,cou 974 bait pager Esq. ve" arog when it was decided to make a halt, and enter upon a | did he gold in promising relief. | the habit of the general run of moralists and philoso- | sory. The difference between cash and regular in the RRis 73% Esq., a8 chairman, and A. Budd, Es more general search. The main valley of tho Prickly | They had cot a rude three-stamp watermill with | phers to dwell upon with more or iess misery in their | Gold Room was gencrally 3¢, but the common borrowing 9855 tary. At the request of the Chairman the objo Pear river, a small tributary to the Misaouri, was about | which they were working out about $3,000 per week from | tone, may be deplored. That it unfits men for the quiet | * mente cant pee Gay meeting were stated ina brief but eloquent seventeen’ miles south of our trail, and in which | the Dakota lode. Others, prospecting their discoverie resutmption of the pursnits from which they were called | Fate on the street was X per cent per day. Hon. James Brooks, Mr. Brooks was fol’ soon hinds «meh discoveries of surface | were pounding the rock, Which was very easily crush je cry, cannot be den‘ed; and this, with: | The opening quotation for gold was 138%, after which ‘Thomas Bisgood and Mathew Hale Smith, who fully and explicitly the object of ostablishiny (ye) «as warranted a removal of the | aud which contained very little if any of obstinate met. ‘a lamentable consequence were It ni past 200 Bircrs se IN y mp $0 that pn * Alter spending avery few | als, in tubs, and then panning up the pulp, By this ract or turn it to pond bosoms: But it deolined to 188%, and sb 3 ae bony wile hd 100 Canton Company 37% change, The Exchange ts not to be exclusively » ‘ Gave here, of sufficient to nseure myself that there was | process as high as $65 had been worked out in a day by there is in every evil acompen- | 13934; then receded @ fraction, and at -past five | 200 Mariposa My Co.. 19% to the dry goods interest; it is to be a genere tas place for importers, manufacturers, jobbers ape )-oK + an, During my sojourn at Bannack several new lodes | gating principle. The very violences of nature stood at 138}4. 100 do..2d call 13% 200 de no 0c for those whe ut In searchofgold | on is. ds 5, ze “ led to es ere discovered by acquaintances . n 4 , d en aes; 2g in all kinds of dry goods shoes, steam to go furtver 140 adc thera, and they cided to 68. | Were ye ore a eee avr be to rents the’ iaroads of the, aoe, | _ Forean exchange has been depressed, and bankers) | 7 TT ee ee Fee 100 dees sald 100 Imai Kinds of dF) soote wmook emake ates. tagnilicent valley, some thirty miles in length andfrom | out, Mr, Murphy, the owner of the Dakota lode and the | to crush the mountain, to seize and utilize sterling, at sixty days, has been sold at 109 a 34, and BS AP nl who'can meet daily to buy and i, tho variou one to ten in Width in a mild elimate, plenty of wood, alcovery oh im, who had t en nearly threo, years from | the Hightoing, to defy the anaverse, iG, 1ot | mercantile biis about one per cent below this rate. CITY COMMERCIAL REPORT. iri prot Ray “rogue pS an a water anit grass, and for miles along the banks of the | bis family, which was in this State, iff recollect rightly, | in any way give man the maste t, at 3% a 6 t > M. b mg ¢. Sirens and on the prairie for some ‘distance back trom { nie Ins claim for the sutn ot $12,600 in gold ot | planoty wo find the mechanical arts multiplied, and | | i ean ering ," eve ein 1a ‘ nccaushia-aile hc yhoo % mt templated to, embrace int ‘members ° could pull up tofte of gras# and wash clean v York ¢ ange. But from want of the means alone | science every day extending its domain and power. £0, jo Ors ; a Pe sige. —Receipte, packages. etwas | change tho ja ng on oom fact. I from the ‘earth, clinging. to the foots, | Ideclined the otter; and after wating till the following | too, with the restlessness, the passion for adventure, the | instances upon miscellaneous collaterals, The discount } quict and we hear of sales of only 25 casks at $7 60 a dealers of all the | rented forties ¢ cities in t Tichor, however, as we tested nearer | spring, when there’ was a rush of capitalists and ma- | wild contempt for the tamer scenes and demands of life, iste is dull, at former rates. $7 75 for pots, and $8 for pearls. States. Mngt geet foe the operations sin the bare of the stream a | chinery in that direction, Iam told that he made sale of | the arnbition to face new dangers and be the heroes $8). Von Dyelt hes accepted the position of Seb. aaa , 10,608 bile, ena chang ne for the neeen tae ieee” nd. Thi gold was evidently | the satne property for $176,000 in band paid, and the | new exploits, which a military career excites, These Mr. H. H. Van Dyck has pm i of Sub- Breapervrrs.—Receipta, 16, bI jour, OF Cee een of the ped wee 4 members, rt, the old miners who | claim could not now be had of the company for half a | are the agencics, if wisely understood and wisely used, | Treasurer, and will assume the duties of his office on the | and 1,016 bags corn ,meal, 93,037 bushels wheat, ous oul bb 1 ™ pt py ge ae just as good a thing as | million, I exhibited spec'mens from this and other | by which new conquests are added to the civilized estate Ast proximo, 86,123 do, corn, 76,041 do. oats, 760 do, malt, The flour ar aon te-tar. open transaction of sidn't wear Out another shoe | claims thereabout in this city on my return in the winter | of man, and that it becomes more and more enriched The business at the SubvTroneuty to-day was fot ” i né on aes the fi 1 of gold, and, with eal oon iy pT Tg ih le a ti inc 2d EE othe td fete tak een whieh ea PTEERHUFY to-day WS aS CO | te demand, prices declined Oca 15%. per DOL | | Rastnoan Accromer.—The Montreal express Hor atanend here, so discharging the ould PIRGENIA CITY MINES, tion to heir 0 nite and sci ows:— 5 . ‘ F Fiat, stil Liklne bent Brleeu ofthe most trusty with | On leaving Bannack F travelled over awell benten road | vaile among the legions of gallant fellows whom We aTe | Receipts for 6 «$250,000 | There was no shipping demand, and d the moderate fans | the North, on the Rutland and Bastiagton ( Vi) is aoe, saad my mareh with the expedition property | Jan ensteriy direction the ditance of 7 ave euetd | Tas propigental forthe Ture of ue ‘wakon. inthe | TO% Tecep Jia egy | fetione reported wore confined almott exclusively, Ship: | above: Dumaersiows, Ve, and the slewing oe wmerons (he ww Walla, Washington Terri | when I rose on to a beautiful roll of ground and behel as providen: for the future of the 5 9,253,545 v 7 “Y tory, wher: | ae dtected and | Virginia City, Montana, not Virginia City, Nevada, (these | heart. of this vast continent, are regions, such as have | pelinen's Somctape | ety Rewevery ane Ee wreak Pee hase were Jassonger car rolled down fanny Elite che "172,000 ; d; x tates, via the Colum. | places being also often confounded). Here’ before | this evening attempted to describe, which, but for the the market closing heavy at the ine noted, | tally injuring another, and more or less injuri a river, to 1 cre T took an ocean | me Was @ panorama fit for a king, A real full | spirit I refer to, untamable as itis, might, perhaps, for er for San iat ~ California | fledged mising city of about four thousand in- many ‘a year to'come, remain in agemisavage condition, | The Internal Revenue Dopartment has decided as fol- | to which we conform ‘our quotation he dees —- pe Meieay 8 Ad inv three weeks 1 id reached Now | habitants at that momevt, and only three anda half | or at best furnish an insecure and profitless foothold for | tows with regard to the liability of brokers to pay the | flour was dull and heavy, and ah tale Wi Sn 18 oT the EI oh Vermont —— York, va the Is hmw ¢ Jénuory, 1868, | months had elapsed since the first white man invested it, | individual and desultory enterprizes. The war suddenly tax on sales of gold and stocks made on thoir own a0: buyer to the extent of 5c. a 100, Be market for Soe Ae ine loge, med iss Holon M. Wi regiment. hay ing accomplish 600 Miles in gowen | Like a myraid of Gophers at work on the plains throw- | terminates, however, and the energles daring it ae 850 bbls, at our quotation, kinds iB aor de od a ju ree) ee Mee ae 4 ot x Tt wae a al ih Washington that | ing dirt in every direction appeared the busy mining | called f and which survive it, are om, here and | counti—- flour was in sympathy with ot es of 600 bois. yd oe Mon Po Phoips of the firm of Phely tur that the Ber anlzed by Con- | thousands, stretching away up the valley or gulch as far | everywhere, to accomplish speedily, and jolesale as TREASURY DEPARTMENT, be written fully 10¢. lower, wit eo inal Yat | Sour 4 salore’of Springtold, “adr. 08 4 rosa, <imult f my official re. | as the eye could reach, while in the city there was such | it were, the necessary, profitable and jous work, Orrron oF Inrerxat, Revenue, flour was dull, and pricés oie thvorea the eae th Fork, jealers r 0, Piorso, port of the Lisho, at then | &éommotion of moving populace, horsemen and teams | which ’ it may soon’ appear the wat ‘suspended WastunuTox, April 24, 1805, was in fair demand, but pri yer, The | Yor quotations, We Sin—tn reply to youre of the Lah inst: That all broke | Sales wore 400 bbls at one 645 | Wns ov tne Lars Rowan WH ' i organiz'd, embraced Mm area ot y 8,110 square miles, | all about the same height of the buildings, that it ap- | only for time, that it might be resumed Aud here, if you please, 1 will state, for the ake OF con- sated like one grand moving panoramic view of “the | with vastly augmented force, on a far more | ors, and bankers doing the business of brokers, are hold Superfine State and fern flour, fo | that by the will of the lato gq rete tats v nione? bs L progress, that the great mountan ta iypetes Dreaking camp.” A cavalcade of horsemen, | golid’ baal, and ‘in a more compretiensive spirit. | to be liable to tax on sales of their own stocks, bonds, | Extra State. Bre s i 695 | New Xork, $10,000 1@ gion ae oe Cobras din the liumits of Idaho beowne such barriers to | proving to be some of my old party of pioneers, rode | Here, indeed, in the peopling and development of these | &o., &c., as well as upon those belonging to others, 6750 600 | Kingston, R. L., where thevestator nt hip 6 : post and legislative commoant¢ation and | niree—the | ont to meet me, and I was not only welcomed to hospita- | great new regions are onterprises worthy, fully worthy, Very respectfully, 6400 655 | $ 10,000 to Mt. Barling, hirconfidenti clerk; east With the wost—that a dly ah the Territory blo boards but done for generally as only the Western of poamere fave — worries Lod Lo gt ig E. A.’ ROLLINS, Deputy Commissioner. see 780 ‘ 1 3 asked was granted a jittie morethan year frontiersmen do, I was s00n made acquainted with | of the jon, and have brought the nation ow! , Wil ‘ ing that portion on the West under, the title anc all the leading citizens and the people generally, and | flying colors, from the storm. Here, are enterprises | The Bank of the Commonwealth and the Becond Ne. aie lished government to Idaho, and ereating the now Terri among whom I found the leader of the party and a num- | which, while 1 thoroughly accord with that love of | tional Bank have declared semi-annual dividends of five 1450 1186 ly chi 1, 000; and the be of Montana out of mplgene ibe, tee crest | ber of members who bad lately returned from as0ar 9 ¢ ay oom yn spa peg nee Lenin Siuy on per cent. 5 80a 600 | dor of his property is in the hands of bid of the Bitter Root range to longitnde 104, b« the Yellowstone region, where they went in search o m his last battle fleld to his grave, 0 - b, ands the North by the British poseessions and on gold. ‘The teusimnony UF these meh confirmed all and+| couraged inthe first place, and then conducted to tho | The interest coupons due Ist proximo on the Sacra- bb ig Nore eS Wil bro een roe. a by the forty fifth paratie! north latitude, She | more than was ever anticipated for that magnificent | end with good faith, practical good sense, discipline and | mento Valley Railroad bonds and Freeport Railroad 4250 475 | and Mr. Barling and Abnow, Davia, of ‘New York. The her complement of Territorial officers, her 1 country, They crossed to the heads of the Big Horn and | systematic steadiness, will secure him an honorable and | bonds, of California, will be paid in gold by Georgo T. M. ret 620 | amount left by the deceaal is variously estimated from and g/l the moans of good government in working orier | proapected to tte mouth, finding gold in almost ali its | happy and, it may be, a very bright and abundant tor. | |, tle Date tn UOTE aes bee | Seven a hall mittions tole walijons 26 tues arent ‘This Lertitory embraces the heads of the north fork of | trivutares, and even at its very confluence with the Yel. | tune. As we have already , there are scores of un- d att ; enek nae A ne, Le tl a by the tall in } Bedford Mercury, June 8. rn the Columbia, sources of the Fow river (Iam informed), | lowstone they washed from ten to one hundred particles | scrupulous aud wischieyous speculators here alive, and The July conpou bonds of Belmont county, Musk- 1 —Tho grain market was greatly prosaed by ‘ a

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