• - • , r „.. o , ..:,,,•---„..„-,:,,„,--„,_,. : „.,:,,._,-,,zi,,,,,„,,,-,:, „ ,„,... 11l - ,s, , , --'4'el.',..i.tittißElPA,T .',11 L 2114 .1.4 1868, '1 i - 7'.: -, -_ ~ -r.. CI., :-..,- "- - Y 3 ." ' ` '' 1 • , • =ACTBEKLY -- PILESEL" . ro - i - tertn4. - irealit..rmsow thimatsiodwit of fittoilittilimateif origicukaud I,lo44,4roltsined ' l4 tlii ; 6ug*Floctat.imgor443toolcodll lo,fouakthil inOftutiiiiiiux-'4l,siiiiax#4ll; id:l Afigitopt df •!O .YrWoll,ie,,Wl,o'; z' r " 1 0N1419a441,s •;710,0PitivAiris,14206—oervai - • ,:•-*:yaosltummqk .?fil`4l-74Pt*Yepiot Assiiiimnim,*,P,4xol l l , 4l44T 4alffia --,-^,inii,PAcriowAktooolko."-gsatwOomoo DimoooL4 liii,44lkritm•rmktl. Poialtd 4, l* Ihroimm-411 1 -f 'mixt ' 0 1"zi:14.q;6,-*944 45'11111f T,VP, ,3 'it k:`3 L 10,1, THR,I4/4,1110 . 01n0, 'oo , l , iltitakiiDigNOS;4' l o l2Bl,llo3 t OdOASIONAL» *tale i.‘,Voo,6lolo, ll talit; likiittllle4lo,6l:ifig.Plillfirtfilkikaclilllollo lll r hoc: Pisli 0 2- M-10.94 1 ;VM:Tha T NI4 1111 ; m9 *. zr PtiT lLP Cik_: 0 i Alz.z4 . `/TrasticiTs-Di.troi , 1480IfirafiX017,11 1 1to in 111073-,-Tas tWAsaura 7caii iar 'llll.*- t iri aiktieitii****Wiliii 10 flit* Saif4rAri,Vtarr*i,tii;:iiimj 4 #4 4 4ol2o, -1 4100. 1 00.0ori00;141A", _,P)1444!:2,4' 6 44,:c.f1 -posi; la women, ziacly for iesillat. - ' 4 ~5. 3 i4,'••••••••••••••immow s v !) 'z....110.4i"!0Fra;10:-Stlite elilliV3101016;' : = ? Wre pnbiirh IMinother column.ae full a re - "P'ojie'ot. the',Preeddieri r if Democratic SIMA !!onve,sktl[o.„4, Wit A. llPArtat , PrS Yeeterr • day, f orwarded 'V to the #4O - gt*4 l * thiotigh4 erifite-A,Meheis,, r *Minit;thei ) :4elo . 6oll Were m 01 144'.,*(074 and ' 4 1 '04 iiPplrests' ofvtherillemocratio party. , in , this State;‘, .!fikei met as treeMetsrnk'refitlittn the ' r .7oo , 4siorkines Deu4o,i,o4.lsot 'as,a gang ,of , u(armsuitcsi,;.l4)-41rei . _lncense ' , Upon. the Coming tita - pit*ik tikcitinamaflit . esitiiii4ey. ,, ,fsithittUr renected _ the,j 4 eitiMeto,,Aovallitig*TithetYl " :.otir.Pl,444_loPiati'edidiOilek AO, coriliPt Administration which has betrayed its pledges atstdisirieett the 'dointry, iairetetatiudinit a P*l7.o;;_ , PPok , w,t!tokitbt., 420*,14 Democracy 01, .4itmoisutleuityksaity..4.-The - time -of of. the .Dimogratic PSTii;:--14214' animated; •byjittfty,c,a*ii.- - Situd,'=fielt -purposes, it=-'coma mindid 'Support Sylvania th'etrelee.:„:7ffe expedite he ' • euables s t;lepiesed s to'. our fail report The Railroad War=-6tibe" of the bid: solution - `of iiie Nicholas We hiier,oceived a pamphlet of sixteen ,_:pageN:;oo)iiiiele _ Pen; n ikiiyivankcilmiiima cinipaDy e and written tifitit),bniiikkengeniiit it atitike lite Buffalo t A4 4 4444ofiti • - Ipare-fes6 made ht-tiaard to•the causes which eonipetied•:"Pe*Ylioticeti appeared of 'the' Istisatiint;dver . the “Rew-Iterb." 2. The writer eon ., :,-44Miljobat 7:111. thdiaiplatioa the old compact - e ir liiiiiy the d; objections made Or Ad Ne* ZS* ',43oiir4l.ltaliron&by #4.sti c e, 4*:!'a;,l7 ll ° accused 14C,filinter , cniponti,frOn of 44411 in ' l4 - 41P: iati iNiAlprfions , reckless of lobooiler assume„thet. d:Luodef , ,A ` 11 :” **fribles,lo l oe: 3 li,kuk ~at4,,2 41 04.011# - ;New4erie44Tl4 - , only: bot; 4 ooeet: WOO Ofol4fisis mee6, - weie ;: - . - reiAit;:i4l4*;EleoirOPideak - pOigoltcppon expressly that' 4 . : I !:4tiboliVhe 'Wt.;• talLor:Jet , , , .*. condo = ilad" is most convenient 0 1 4 61 i ft andti th at. freigbti';sfrom f New ork 'to ;` , Zile` Week' Those= from' by it:, auui`tiediereikbr eti, is to - `i*ei, i tlie Ira ff r kt ot,:ktfreattit'abOikte''Tbie,‘. di ff er"' eneelfbi4.#4: -0 00044 1 ilei:0 1 .ieSbeW; :* * * 3 4 46116 4 "inks as `''ll.4l6inrf ` itti rail =1 45 ,9,41 1 ,,i1tbe,*er444 10 e 1 4 , torV mud ,- Coldinteuri "._ - ftat r k - Joel t , k. 4 l4 l o 44 ll o iAtAftifig*i r et.d.4k4, 4 s4 l4 . twe iifteAn, 44 cents thad , ;7%44 ti the - rataie , ftetaLKetiv 3 -- .Ydrktb ,, Philadelkkio o -tild tkictithi*hi**A: l ilittig ll 4:eir 4 AuK.aFe' `tio'likir•tv*,' 'tient/4 1 w' lo4d: Mote* 0 014 41 , mg, tberefore t 14 so on; • - that' tiit'illtibienield,4tYoi thE penfal' Rhllieiel,eiCkeigl44Futifietietjreitini4 was . '• iO**Astroot t o Ain • -ofl, 4 0 ' 1 0'#e0der11 arrangement, mad , uy , etiroad competing for the trelelstftAteXeot. t .,V4eb likoPree the natural' `mitiek'• 4relir I fOrki' . -The- P3 oll ol l r ,Of the ppniiiittants V . on - tent datk.U:Siikift -18 ,1tifaletteistogidiPiiitleof tp the iteMeholse compact, truly saitil,.w,Theee w*WitirteiA W4 1 4. 1 **A 4 0 4 3 1 44 01 a•' -1 4 04 In'ih t s hope that -z,--,4l4:fesstk'ot e en r #'oll*:evinisir#/si' eee!reloi: • : ..,;bee *enuiePraiie 4 o - L;Plik ibior unit Asir, ex*, gi atioltr toiWirot 4 6l,kidtized.w .1 The pare : . eloPkiiroilfigibfeeVibit:the lower rates of ftelOt ttomildiadelphla id the West eigtia V, did '404 . ts'e'ionitiet w'ati -444 a ezi!~fetl for ` X0!k i1 , 1 .04 =4. 4 0 "A in ft She•eo+iipCct Ogisiil to operate, and will ea - ennui to t*t gooled.k lltheigh;tempbrary mite's replant to eicooli: by the AzoitherwreadeNe.'!PeOrnikb)e superiority of the, niftititV,pitelticni Philadelphia t4inuit; - ireiolL',l l KhOggrit Poiquth, t fi of the - "Werst;i 644lo iiimi,signiCtiiViiiiisas Wong( 'this SOX, aid* always , continue e x er cise bone 1171T14441itesC and liPolk ins business ,of ' -'''": ---- 1: : ::. --: ' ; '; '. 2 • Y ' Arf., ,, '..14,,,, - **Ifilir. ' Ig,Ta .- ;* 7 4 - iiii*C,........ -, , -..,,::),'. 4) , ,i l fii , likai , filinaa 14404ivekdain.-:', It i'DAVID MiLtioto! . . - - -- . - -vot•il;:4 10630: ; - • - 11 1 - 658, - . , JIM*: ~a*TOlll4l- 4,- ;, = - -1 , ; 1 ,,-. ., ,, , 5 , i,-....,...„'; ,--:(,,,,, - 4 , - ,,i• - : Oil* it l'ilidtitleie- jvillliiii yon.'4l3te,ibeiii , ,111spilhaiiiitliP:oir - fll4#elaticiiiarrAtitan'll,- --: - 7/11111INICIFICilltri Pp; 745; , , , 1'1gew'r00 - -7 , ' Dat , tikOrr - 2 " tirtilailit:',:k . ?-7 - ;:, ~-!,-, :. ~ ..+- , 7`f0;,:, „ , ( .4, ,, -, , , , t,.; ,,, - -' ..±/41•1* - Xillif 4Viihe'llolitiiiii. '''',ifif-• J. ifitiri - ' *odoS ( 4 o )*llli,tlitliA%4lifil',iSiiiwltgir) l 7 - F. 0: - • o.lD;AptiVii:',' A ',41 - ;, T i :X iiy';N:tivk ,t,:Tirr , --,!.. -, Tii!)(1)414:1 - a: t 1/131 ,;',. '-:,. -;: :,';;;:' ' ;:-:', . -;'- '"'-., - ' ';(i). R4A401314 - juilisiuLlif_ry - i:g . iiiii: it, giiiii Qfttfitt#,Al4.!:ei.foth94.. New : Raltif. .iiiniA.4r , :; , :T: _, 'h. , , ,--,, -- ~-,c,L.,-,:z:i :i 1 . b ;;, ' - ,- • (11:,B1 - s74l.otetilienakingtkirosi-, Luigi; _Him.' ~ -,. yesti.i, 3 o4',iftbiligrapllY,t -. 11 7'-. 10 , 11 !.. , : - :_ 141101 !x= Pif4l9A;::i*vfX9*.i:.pf.4"!,Agy 1- , i';!1 , ,-' , - , " • (637.441440011;u1. -..:8 - i - ji I ea inflit - ./Afli of, Piiiiiio;lllo/4 ':"/ - 40,1 1 6 "- 'diutiio. "Life of Witillientt: - ,, , , ' ',l4tc,.lf,icAuk.ii: l -4 0 1.436, 277 f #7,: - ,_ . ;llfit 'pit ypi,ielfidia4l l #9'iioE'_, 0 - 104: 1 0 1 01 1 ,' ihiii'S;:iiif.,, an • 4(64iii. t o ---,-- IFV.: - .. 1 - * I I4 IOP. . i - E . 1C,A 171 7140, Al: qe....... , ' ::- ‘; - ,_ _ _ __; - Is4464iiiiiillatoty4Cibiklitisoillovirt under ;1 1 4010 1 WW_IitarOP. --, , ,, Trasilibtralt. tto - toe,Viczoks , '!:' , -' , CPltiniii_„ './f , ijiefre,-,:i11*, , ,.. 3:14.10. ,, X1it,,i'_ DimasessiL,4, Lth - ',...101e0111112.fi.Pga: , & ,- 1 , 3.q. ~ , ,L.p;, -, . ~ ,p iv; - -,,, , --;-,-,) li, - ,, i - 1, , t : -1-;'l9tillitatiftiliit6iViiilrillgjii-liii - D ' iriOW.,:By. 1- a.:tiliii-ORiitt - iiirii - Air Sit , 'Pidlidgetlifie• dmiitik --x=44 Chatlea Dlekeiii Knowing bow muchlitSjoirtis 'attached, in this country, to*Ortanixel)lortatis, hie mi.` 'tinge, and bis personal!, we".havo fernithidly communicated tKeuriiiaders,(in'Abe strictest' confldence) varleis particulars whith reached ns from public and private sources. We were the first to state that DICKENS purposed giving 0p,../Toussho/d' Words, and substituting a new - fief lid;lls,be { Caged Pound the Year, and we' evonfwent sit tai' 'to say that the motto •Wonid-be-an , :aslisptation • from a well-known 11 Othellol's celebrated, address to the ;Venetian Senate.. • • , - • 2- ' - 'The Coarse of",litetOtare; like that of love, never:dims run tits tyvo leading 1 filhistritted London Journais •of March 20th, advertisements, ieeoli-lieistedWititia•quail-Sliaispearlui Itue ` 4 / I ",e,"!it . „!'iY kr. our Alba, arei. iulnounCed 'ilttirBai, the 80t,11 4 Aprly•would be' pill:dished, price' two: i 44?; the [firet!ntiinher: 2 or Au. 4ouUd ,a weekly-journal, designed for the and - entertainment of alt etudes of re%dera; and assist in the .diecruision of the titielat'queetions of the' day; - conducted' by Oickiiiiiijiyzeciiiii:"; To this was added the iiinitteant notice „ •. , , • - 7, " On; Saturdey, ,, 28th may, 1859, Mr. Charles Dickens will Owe to conduct Botisshold Words ; that periodical will be diseontioned ; and its part ettshipefprairietore dissolved,"• • - • , The '.tecorld' advertieement simplyl stated. thiii -44 1he iirtiiiiumhir, price twopence, of the new -weekly journal-'All the Year Round,' Hill coAtainthe„firtst part of a new story, ,by Manias ihousits." „ • 1 , Bl'amnisr• & who print Household ifrorifOldch - _,been' a paying - 'property, objeCtod, tO!. hiving. their , interest therein muffed out by: Mr. Diottuital advertiseruente.' lie/their art; 'paitnitti the, concern to the extent of one:fenrth. incontinently, there foie, 'therrasheiVhefore R matts-, ' and 'moved through —as r ' of e ßolls, , icounseVfor an' injunction to restrain 'the ' , ,publication of DifiXess's 'first' advertisement, ,annonnied:-•the purposed discontinuance of 1 iHouisho/d , Words, and the Intended Publics= Other periodical take it 4 place.; - .The facts,•ael stated iii.e.otirt, were. that in Matob;' 2 •lB4Bi (it 1853• in- the 'report, ivileti4e'kedw belneorreefo CustinEs illsownes, Wismast Hussy intro, and Sous ioU , iti 'United to establish Household' Words.' At this fime,,we may say, Dmirstui was very popular Wins, a mere compiler, bad been a Sort; of:suh.edltig. of Chqmbers' Edinbuigh YoStoir/ ; Ond.lownEosiEn, an abli man`; but the'pnffer-gepetal, W. O; Maoataror, was•edi 'tei,S.Of44-•,.Eodeilao4; succession the sale 4isted Arnie* • FOrinelltllni one of thi ablest ietlinilliter the English Omni had ever , -.• Thetertne of partneirship were that DICKENS was tie. gaiter- with salary of £5OO Per ati .rilin!, additional pay fin; any articles he should tontribite; iiiid"one-half part in the property' of the Pnblieation. i3ziranniT & P',4;10, who • are capitalists as Well as printers, took a quar tet' aluireithe other quarter being dividedle tiveen 39 . 1 444 * sub -editor; Wl:us was -to ••• have 4400-a 'year, ',Fonts • receiving no,payment ,for,hli contributions., Of course, Y,oerwidlailat and soon retired, buy lag his eighth in'the concern to Mr. Drowse. "Ifo'dS, begaine a•Profitable pro.: 'party, and [( al l' went 'merry' as a marriage bell;'* until bui,`Ncipember,• when, DziftwEes--:- aild 'to be anitir titiOattee" BsLnnizftr, & 'kvixe - tefielied.to,publiq, iii ~ Punch, (which , they ! that' Oienierable• .:isar4" of his;' relating to hie doinesitin ditHoalties, which did aPpeariii-lionsehokt Words,- 7 gailvnotice that the; isl?ipio . titiji?' : eilikt . tie: 411 ifitifed; - and the' puhllcatiOn:diacontlimed ou completletkoLthe 19th- yeltiks',On' ,the last Saturday:in May. sentiosr., tic; },yeas had, previously ref used . .£4,006. Nitta' :Drexel's offered them for their in the concern: The ,1104 . 01iiii,i.Willitti; they-sought Was to. pre --ventirthirannotineetnent that, m the com ,,Plifterc dieSontinned, for lhey hoped s tkatilfetWitlndatidin# Dniscsiirs' secession, they oeisldeontttine,tbr;}rors'witqreasonable'proe. -Phut siceess.;--3n.fitoti though this was not stated before tlie.,'Matfte the . - Hells; they •14.1 iteltod ,TiAniteakit, saultde Abe se). Lonilon . ffettsip. states, adding that Offer,made, hit doubt, en:tbOsriPp r oaltieti tbat Tnaincsitay, 2 1irhol6 Angry, With',DlOrnitif for 'what he `calls his lostiltty_ii tto:ye;to3iiOrpeio, would be Mn„iti,oppoiltion te, his quondam ,fileisA.y•Alffat'THA'oxiins.X,";-"who is a - shrewd ,11444, likettiSCit *kart jip le; and'ileellued 'he offer. ••.,1 •,- •,•. • , ' • • !The Militei;lif the Rolle delliAred th 1 0,1 11 4 jagmeOt - • • piiipeity in a literary` Work is, , I believe, coutried *the mere :uric, and the, title to this ,WOrkit - MoneeholdWords;and that Is settled in a Inirtnerldilti; "antactesidingly that le part of the lartairitdo assets; and , that - easy be sold, snob as Diii4tovideditlisfanY existtnoe. Now. I think ;441.'etet441,t0 Ife.'Salssyn'and , Mr. Hoehouse, iltatlON theCwordli by me,' or* by the rte 'theltithere.' which is another ex. kwUla that ay , tie used Sifter the word discon- Media ", In fourth line of the Address, and •by theeditor 1 : after the word 1 dlsoon tinned' ,in listlitie of the Address. would *he the - Metter fide from all cavil. Mr. Palmer, 'presses on me yet.) , strongly that Mr. Dickens bee no Tower to put' an end '"to" the work ; • but I - ans-not, dear , that he has, Sat.' , 'I sm • mot clear Iket , hit, mere retirement' will • not• ipso' fide' annihilate' 'add , that- , le•not "eon.' Adored entirely and eolely, areoeisted with his thitinfibbittiffset, the name 'Household' :Words', -would be literally_ worth nothing's - 3 soon' 'ASK kdoini-itit fishes nothing ..nolbre to do withtt. That,_ one cannot th e it"shilthappeilf , bat l eta' satisfied thS state; taltnt 'that be .has nothing more, to do with it is ,prcparlyltifiregitited , by , saying it le disci :1120- .240 d li me; '?and that does not impart the foot -thatltliedboontlnued absolidely ; and positively; beeeteelreleridjilleerttliha lie himself,' so fat as 'be Us anything' to , do with , %has discontinued. UnlTthink thatis all , that the is entitled iotessfulte. Atioordingly, upon , Mr. Dickens nn. 'dertakingl-„, ;tbe 'future. - advertisements to 'be' piddlehed; to : put= those words in, Sr equivalent *Order.; I wilt , make no' order -at all upon this mo 114o,lint reieivetitenosts of-it till I see' what the retain • to •wheas , thapartnerstiip property acmes to • di#4 5 6,1 i,tss - ;r }This judgment„ which OoMpletely knocks the irionndifrom midei:the 'feet of Easton:um ,&Everts,:wai! ,delivered on 'Saturday, March the'titiftS,',Otithe' following Monday, & iTANgt .published this announce- Meat t • - . - • Th i e'refinit Of an ,sMplioetlett , made this day to the= Mester •of, the. Belle, , on- behalf of- Messrs. BeadburyekS. Evan' having • been an, underta- MPS , the Portof Oharloe Malone to,elter thiestatement pet forth by himself In reference to ,} 1 Wambold r Norde,r Meters. • Bradbury and Erase havelo ennonno• that It is only Mr. DICK. •ENS7f.t -CONNECTION -with that wtrk 41114 Is about to, opase,--Aterch 26. ilfeit'dity;,also in the• Times, this notice was llOW4in - 12 ti repea . o ,by goon f- oce dated, the':lfear.Round= Mee, 11 Wellington st,reet,'N,Orth simply giving pdetgt to Ittii4tOOS'Ainiitinpon Wirich7tion, ImMelearly relies, as. authorising him. to eoni ldatieiv,periedieal, - • ' t.r.the' upshot, of Aliii`-whOle • le, that Dieu meet 'wilfatimmeniodill. the Yea's; Round on the 30th otC 4prit i with . Vie, new story , .of his own, and Oa, hi wtlf',.,colittiOte to conduct ' HeiS e ehor e l `Words 40.-artothei; month thereafter, viz • tnttl the 28th pf - 2tay. BRADVIAY & EVANS may strive ;to continue Household Tordi after ,that,hut ihilliaiter, of the is probably perfect; in' his:ltlea that,-,floaarhold 'Words; noeitiel;44 iitherrperiori but Diormits, ion be literally worth , nothing as soon as it is rkietly,,Well'iknovin' that', Dzon'trut'has hing - mtpre to'doliith f§d;cat:; thartateat adviqs; rents this curhius beeQ.'rt Should . 0111,1,11a4U0Otiy, .prthierip 'any pew phaneer features, we ahall take care that uheieadara are , fully wielded " reapeet histhew. iIl Ognoenatznr..AND young isiart.istosetiMagdiderts; "flats & etas arrested yes-, tl*Yi'ehergedirriat• robbing her mother of some foarteewhoOdrod tranall'ander;the following, air ,mrneeAugoel ,„.!,it; appears that- the elder lire. Xldta and her .dabgb ter arrived! br: the olty, a few days IWO frcon.QartnenY, and pat,up!at.•RerWitt'a lartirin- in .tine , Fifth ward._, Oa -.the pasettge over - IdialiEbitawas..woorat and won by,bno,,,of the ,Reinnidt family geared Jesepls, and • as the lady'. inotherweikrathsr are* to their inion,haelope, ,pterit Was prtipbis*f and leelded on by, the parties. MatraWal altather. - Matter., to be, Nettled, r howswert„ltefore the 'AloalmoVe b'ettld'be toad e. fier,szioner,' some 2,000' frames,' jfofy 4 ill i mcl orsi - 1n her, petticoat, - Soit, ; the • young tones eotild riot been the world 'with "eniply ,pboaffts,4lo/40iolvettto_pousse thetaseives 'of the, .11.190lialna t a,rid.; At ft*l ‘ inearts or other,' Meg.' d eta got poetaulow of the, coveted pile, nod the . nbia wooe d; b u t Nirk: L Xlol, d 6 discovering her 1 1 111 k." otAl4O,An Terkinstin and had theta: !te . 7 Aitar ' :Witting': the old, an relented,' and ;consented 'l6 the dlibbarge of Ote,prtionets, en,rtipiPtirigi 'beak etisue - Alltsen • haidiOffiteiscof! ibi atolanlactief. 'The bilaboti tdabitiOrber b*n iightt "and wad teaspSy 9 YiWtstatiiiple lb peen 'the -Ivbrid i *qt.- ;('9):,.gbeasttg PAro, nays,. 1• 1 ' , • • .! • liafe• tei - 9100titifed iiiird'aisistanfenertetirs is the nay,: Henry O. Victor, V. A. R. George, Sidney Albert, Wm. W. Hopper, and Frederick . Democratic state Convention. Delegates frovi Every Part of the State. GREAT UNANIMITY OF ENTHUSIASM. SPEECH OF HON. JOHN HIOKISIAN [Correspondence of The Press ] Hanctisnuna, April 13 The Democratic State Convention assembled this morning in the hall of the House of Repre sentatives, at ten minutes past ten o'clock. From au - early hour it was evident that there would be fall delegations from • all portions of, the State. The respectability,' influence, and Democracy of those who were ',present were undoubted, and called even for an approving remark from the re presentatiyes of 'those they wore met to condemn. It was by far the finest representation of the De- Wormy gathered in the State Capitol for many Mr. T. P. Campbell or Hustingdon, palled the • Convention ; to, order, and moved that Dr. George McCook, of Allegheny, act as chairman; which motion was agreed to. -' Mr. McCook, on taking the chair, dald • Gentlemen, I return my thanks fir the exalted honor which. you have conferred upon mo by se looting me as your temporary chairman. I see herere me the, intelligence and respectability of the State. Here are the independent men of our Commonwealth.,'lt is not, therefore, any unrea sonable presumption that your, deliberations will be marked with prudence and wisdom. We have a usefurlesson in" the vile and bitter conduct of the pretended Democratic Convention of the 16th of March last. I hope that you will' manifest none of their vindictiveness, , [Applause.] Remember, gentlemen, that you are within a temple where our laws are made, and let us be guided by libe rality aid an evenhanded justice. I hope that the.solemnity'whieh is wont to surround this hall will hive' its due influence upon this occasion. [Applause.] , Gentlemen, Maim the proud honor of being ono of the•fathers of the Democracy of this country. [Applause ] I was deeply and permanently ass). mated with 'General Jackson' in the days of his' glory : I was upon his electoral ticket in 1824,-• [long and continued applause]—and from that day to this time, whatever of energy and vigilance oould command, and whatever of pecuniary means I could afford, have cheerfully been devoted to the beet interests of the Democratic party. This it is, gentlemen, that will explain why to day I stand here witheilvered looks ; one who has passed the grand climacteric of human life—who sees three score andten jest before him—lbis will ex plainwhy I have left my family and my home to oomehere and assoolate with you to promote the best interestsofthls Union. [Applause ] The voice of alarm has sounded from the east and the west that our institutions have been ruthlessly assailed by the vilest and most reckless Administration that God has ever inflicted upon a suffiring people. [Loud and Continued en planes. I"' The faith of the Democratic party has been violated by one who came into our party not until 1828. And here let me say, that the only ounce which ever attended General Jackson's Ad ministration was the appointment of James Bu ohanan United States minister to Russia. [Ap plause.] ' I remember when he was clothed in the habiliments of aristboracv. That was the occasion,, and ever has been, of his elevation to political power. And I want you to mark a solemn fact. In 1824, Henry Olay,• John Adams, and Andrew Jackson were candidates for the Presidency. The electoral college failing to elect, that, duty de- Volved upon the House of Representatives By a onion of the friends of Mr Clay and Mr. Adams, and itidefianatief the popular will, Mr. Attains was elevated to the Presidency. In mentioning this, I do not arraign the noble and great' men' whose names I have indicated. Their velem; are hushed in death—their bodies sleep in the tomb ; yet their patriotism shines out gloriously upon the pages' of our history. [Ap plause.] -What, however, was the result of the oombination of the friends of Mr: Adams and Mr. Clay? Thepopular sovereignty of the Union Was violated, and, in 1828, an outraged and an indignantleople rose in its might and majesty to pat into the chief Executive chair of the country General Andrew Jackson. [Applause ] At that early day, the principle 4fpopnlat sovereignty was potent and jealous 'of infringement , [Ap plause ] ' ' Gentlemen, methinks our whole country is as 'sembled hero. • Here are the goad men and true, from the valleys and hills, the mountains and plains of this Commonwealth, to denounce an in famous outrage perpetrated upon the National - Democratic party. [Applause ] • I did not intend to detain you at this length. One 'more remark and lam done - I have seven teen • obildren. [Great applause ] When I re member the blessings of free government which I haveeiljoyed, it is my ardent desire to :mann the . obutinuanoe of that enjoyment for my children end my children'sichildren. [Applause.] L thank you for the honor you have conferred upon Me. Mr. Forney Moved that Mr. Geo. Northrop, of Philadelphia, and Mr. B. It, Peale, of Clinton; act an secretaries. • • The motion was agreed to, and the gentlemen Mentioned took their seats at the desk. , Sailed°, ofjEleriss i moved that a committee be . raised or one from each Senatorial Malik:it to nominate permanent officers for the Convention. The motion wee - adopte - d;lettd woo attrectt - tbetz the ocmmitteo should be appointed by the Chair /1 short recess WAS taken, and after the Convention reassembled, the following committee was an: nimneed by Mr. Northrop: Dr. ,fileorgo' W. Nebinger, George Northrop, James Sheridan, Wm. Hopkine, Joseph DoWdell, Charles Kugler, Dr. .1Z E Griesemer, pr. G. J. Higgins, 'David Heller, A. N. Maylert, J. W. Ryan, James Gillilland, Captain Harvey Walter' J R, Dunbar, Dr. E. Orth, John S. Dongberti, Henry Reisinger, Dr Orlady, Thoma M ' Farlend, Henry F. Phelps, Henry 'J. M. Laird, Pr. George R. flays, Samuel, Harper, John Martin, Henry Gungrioh, and James Sweeney. :During the absence of the committee Mr. Mak man spoke`as follows : 'Mr.'Pansmwer : I am glad, to meet yed—to pin you upon an, mmeelon so interesting and lea. portent as the present one. I heartily endorse the propriety,of this Convention. The base' outrage recently attempted here by the minions of clas ped., Federal authority merits a stern rebnke, but not more than the weakness and heartlessness which Ooneeived and commanded it. I love and admire the honesty and courage with which Gov. Paoker has appreciated, and discharged' all his public duties. TO him and his able and acoone. plished Attorney General, and Sweaty Of the Commonwealth, aro our thanks eminently due for a manifestation of that devoted patriotism which impelled them to consider their oonntry find, and consequences afterwards. It ig not serprieing that politioal prostitution'should condemn it. The popular affeetioll, however, will be to them a Shield more Protective then fortresses of granite and of iron' But I desire to speak of other matters. 'At this day, resolutions complimentary to the present National ' Administration may be per *ed. *ben proceeding from official sycophants, brie ,they can ' do neither, good nor harm. The history of - Mr. 'Buchanan's executive life has already 'been written, , and too plainly to be ob literated ' by, bribed eulogy, or to be mime. derstood by the people of - this, State nation. Neitherpoliticaloonjuration tier party Mae° can make them forget the wicked violation of pledges, the arrogance of bloated power. the prostitution of Congress, 'the profligacy of • departments, or the rapid and. _marked tmeroachments upon popular conetßutional 'rights.' Judgment, final judgment, has, been, calmly and 'deliberately, passed upon this treason to' the Democracy, this assassination of common honesty. and it is asirreiersible as the deoreee of God. It is nee, therefore, in this Con vention, to speak the truth plainly, and to avoid the folly awn attempt to 'sever up an audacious criminality we must ell condemn. By the ,aotion of the 84th Congress,_ the com plaints made by , the residents of Kansas were as certained to be true; • Although the South', by the legislation of 1854, was pledged to maintain the domeetio sovereignty of the Territories, a portion of their people from Missouri entered ripen the soil of Xammil,and, force and fraud, seized the lastr4eaking p ower; stilled the' voloe of the' ma-' ind °nattier* litatutett disgraceful to the'ige and nation. This fact,', revealed, made a deep impression upon the public' mind, and Mr. Buchanan found it necessary, in order to carry the eleation in his own State, to pledge him.' self distinctly to the maintenance of the doctrine of popular sovereignty, and to defend the rights of those who bad 'been Gins ruthlessly despoiled. I will not pretend,to indicate the partionlar weak. ness in his nature that induced him to turn the band of the suicide 'against hie own fame, as it 'matters little whether it arose from timidity, a 'fear of hie enemies outweighing a love of his friends, a 'careless disregard of fair dest iny or-a. weak '.and puerile . . vanity. It is enough to know that he dedeived all our hopes. turned with blackest 'ingratitude upon' that self. eaoritioing friendelitii . by which' 'ho reached the goal of his feverish ambition; and vought,'by all the meitruf within the reach of drunken and stagger ing authority; to disgrace every man' whom he maid not debauch. Suddenly, and as by the touch the wand of the magician, he became transformed from the sympathiser with down-trodden freedom, 'to the open and shameless defender of aggressive and law.defying elaVery. The halls of the na tional legislature Were turned Intl marts for con totem°. He published his interpretations of party principles and platforms with the arrogance of a dictator, and commanded his subordinates in of fice, and his coward slaves, to, reiterate and prooiaim his bulls of 'party excommunication 'against all who were rash enough to follow an ha l dependent judgment. Those acts, of themselves are enough to e sever allegiance. It would be an ill-ehapen manhood which could tolerate them' in silence. But bemuse we denounce thent,`ive are anathetiadsed as' rebellious. • Sir, we will 'see where the rebellion will end. It will I end in the supromaoy of the ! awe; in the integrity of the Constitution ; in the purification of parties; ' in the sworn loyalty of executives; and the vigo rotas' growth, material greatness, and eternal dominance of the North. That le where it will end.' Popular ievoreigntyf invoked by the South; will be defended by us, and it shall unfold the veiled, yet dimly discovered, destiny of this great Republic.' We are battling for the tight, for the spirit of the institutions our fathers established. ,Let us'fctt that we are' doing this; and we will no. complish the, victory of our century' ; not a mere naked 'triumph at the polls, but the great 88.80038 afterwards—the untrammelled eel[ government of man;' the, dedidatten of a continent to a consistent liberty. • 'Those wbo atop to talk of conciliation and nom promiees between tut and the Nell- oonstituted oraelesrof - the 'Democratic party, can' 'have but a feeble appreciation of the Tell condition of things. When you can harmonise light and darkness, in tegrity and corruption, the patriotio devotion of the Wrist* °Wean to the principles of our Govern inent, 'with a tyranny worse than that of the middle age s, _it will be time enough to cry ,i‘ peace.", Let this truth be made prominent— that there is an eternal antagonism between free. dolt and slavery.' The constitution of the human ' wind and the human heart makes it inevitable; and the' one or the other must eventually gain the '`asoendaney. The struggle between them, hut just: ' begun, is 'now going on in Our nada; and, he le but a' superficial' observer , who does not discover it. We have noted bons rablyi—benevoleitly. For long, long pats, we have 'defended' the' shattered rights Of our Satithetn,brothren ; ire have even monocled their ,eietitiOns; we have given them all the advan tagesaptingingfroninneuttal legislation; We have Atapod' policy to stilt their notion's Of interest ; haiting pewit fat; they demand as a prerog. iti4ll*brat we granted 148 a fever, and having found a President withent affections, a sworn °Meer not afraid of perjury, willing to book their pretenelone, they would now treat as as a common enemy, and THE PRESS.--PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, APRIL 14. 1859. brand our names with indelible infamy. They have decal more—they have gone farther : they have come amongst us, and bribed cupiditywlth gold, ambition with promotion, and vanityivith temporary consrqucnee, to do violence to jutioe. Larger forbearance not only ceases to be virttons ; but it becromes cowardly and base. The *nth has rights,: long in abeyanee truly, yet not Idt ; we will save them ; by wails and fire and tilted, if needs be, we will save them. In what I have just said, I would not be Miran derstood ; I know I cannot escape misrepresnta tion. I wculd resist aggression on the part o' the south, not her constitutional .guarantees; aid I Would force a plain, distinct, unequivocal "reegni-: title of the rightful claims of the Isldrth ; netting more, nothing less. Who can safely oomplah of this? I wish I could stop here If this were all at he accusation, we might forget the past in the exer cise of a profuse charity, but unfortunately ve'are not allowed to do so. A usurpation Jeas beet*ao-' oomplished whioh saps the very foundation 'tour. political structure. Mr. Buchanan has demsOded an absorption, of the powers of. ongress in thou of the Executive To carry out his treachery ti us,: be has assailed the Representatives of the peple.' lie has bribed the renal, ,rewarded the asspllng., alarmed thetimid, and deceived the honest., By such means was the Liseounton Obettitntloneer vied into a provisional law, in contemptuous dere gard of the known Will of the people upon whoa it was imposed, and is direst contravention of thriet ter and spirit of the organic act itself. The ration' which prompted the 00=118E10nel the outrages too manifest to be doubted.- It was to purchase flat tery of the South;'to force slavery, .upon theta ' of the North ; and to strengtheri and aggrerilise one section of the Union at the expense and he pird of the other. Then, compliance with exentive behests was the teat of Demooraoy, and to ate gard them was apestaoy.. More recently, howeler, when the recommendations of the President vera thought to favor , he Manufaeturinie and aeoui • tural - States-'-when the propriety of a new tuff law wasenggeated—and when the so-called Nom eratio members of the Sentite'end House of Rime sentetives, and even Cabinet °Moore,' rateedthe voice of denunciatory opposition, it was ail HAM, and rebellion became loyalty. , And yet 'Peen• sylvanians see nothing wrong in this; nay, they commend it. Chains never clanked upon thelMbs of beings more servile and debased. We mleht, perhaps, be able to open their eyes to the , trotha and loosen their tongues to utter its-by cons tinning them in office under a new Admfaia. tration, governed by a ' more benign piny. If parties with such plastic notions shall be able to grasp the control of our Governtient, then must the strong empire of the Neal' be dwarfed to barrenness, and eighteen millioSs 'of white slaves here, be added to the four minims of black slaves yonder. That is indeed a strangt ft lustration of the advantages of free govermant which prociaimra necessity for ornalung out the inherent power of a people by fashioning their in• stitutions for them, requiring it to be sanotioted; and yet allows and encourages 'a denial of lad by which. alone a bankrupt treasury can be replen ished, and honest debts paid Bat, sir, we charge further upon the Addible.' tration of Mr. Buchanan one of the main taunts by which we have reached the point cf tional insolvency; a reckless prodie alit: in the expenditures of the public money, and a prevailing vice in the departments of the Government. It is a gross mistake to aupiose that our increased expenses are owing to - en expansion of territory end the removal of' stir frontier. The Administration of Mr' Van !b -ran, with an annual outlay of thirty.sevisn 'sil ting of dollars, was pronounced extravagant; row our expenses are close upon one hundred mi I liens a year. But we have got used to talking of - mill lione without stopniug to consider the' magnituis - of the figures. Why, sir, all the horses and miiitti in this county, numbering over els thousand, would scarcely draw, in silver, the meney required to foot our Government bills for a single year, Do you inquire why this is so? I will tell poi We have abandoned our former and better OW.. noes. When Mr. Jefferson was President, he re- Vivid honesty and capability is his appointees; now, subordinates ate selected for their known leek of independent's); °insolence, and wilt. There "was a time; which our fathers remember, when-40. be the heed of a department, a Secretaty of the Treasury, or of War, or - of the Navy, ,required greatness and inspired confidence; now a man of very moderate dimensions will Suffice far either place. An ex• Governor or effete Senator will -always answer for the position, -provided lie has the marks of gyves upon his legs, and don't know too mush. I think we will be able -to furnish one hereafter, viho may claim by a double title. I haiard little in saying there is now more money equandereCana stolen yearly than it required during the Asitoldstratiena of Madison, Monroe, and the voinger -Adams, to support the Government. • There is not only , no careful supervision et oar finances, but funds-ate drawn, constantly, directly from your Tremor, to reward favorites, and to give approved soaps: to publlo opinion atthe polle; in other words, to car ry elections. The Secretary of the Navy, among others, may know a imothing of this. If be should not, the Patterson Litter, with the President's on.' doreement, may affsrd bias information. Pub , lie. property of ' great value is sold, private ly and covertly, at a tithe of • its worth; other is bought at almost fabulous priors. Navy yards, post offices, custom houses, and minty; have been stocked, orowded; crammed, for weeks and Morlihs with superannuates and idlers, and paid the wages only dpe to well-Wight graft and deserving industry, for the lime purr pose of overriding the legal voters, returribg- Carasites, tumbler and 41.ot:ether S Weeds, cto ongress, and publishing an attestedlies to ihies -worm, -Thoso-ssots—thoso , no Pass,, violitiOnitsot preservative Aim and decent behavier-l-beverair beeedidorwid - here, in this Attlee; in thli, Capitol, and uttered and publielied as tine and genuine Demooreey. God Save the Republic, ! And know-- leg them all, aria in the face of them all, the Pre , Markt himself, .to whom tint three short years ago we gave the fullness , of our ..nenfidonoo,s new bleached by age, and blanohing before the frowns of an outraged and insulted conatttuenoy,.Mtnts and whines, in hypocritical numbers, over the de.. generaoy of the •times, and in the expression of a fear lest *Options - shouldsbe carried by s ..golds• Catching, the sounds of lamentation as they fame. from the open easements and portals of the White licufo, , oiir Wren, Jonewes,4 St id gain /onus, move with the embed andeolema tread of mourn ere, and Lind gouty tears of blood., • The indefensible ;Mid destruative management of the Post Offioe Department requires especially to be notined. • 'Within a,vory short period, for the more purpose of enriching inntractors, Made.' log largeases upon sterile and uninhabited districts of the Sonth; and aequiring power, tin expendi tures have boon almost doubled—ran •np to the enormous sum of twenty millions of dollars—and the midi system made a by-word and a reproach. With new, extended, and expensive routes, with out corresponding returns, sunk in fathomless debt, aye, paralysed by burdens, its chief lustily cries for help 'and piteously begs the sinews of pro longed malfeasance. But upon whom does he call? Upon those to whom the appeal is always made when money, votes, soldiers, or other effective help is required—upon the laboring thrifty-athe "mud sills" of the Beldam, Northern, Middle, anti Western States. , It is consoling to know we are good enough to pay, if not to receive. We are at least able, it not respectable. If we have not chivalry, we have fields and farms, and faotories. Let us then, without whimpering," Split the differ ence."- The ." F. F. V.'e" or the " F F. T.'s'l shall take all the posts of patronage, and we will pay their debts - The plan proposed, by which we shall do this, is a very simple one. We have only to pay five cents, instead of three, on sect letter we write, abolish the present '5 franking peal and, otoneepently, out off the distribution of all seeds and agricultural and mechanical and political information from .our people, and the thing is, in great measure, acesmplishod. And why not this ? To be sure, due more than pay nom for all our postal , eerviee, and these don ments are highly prized by us, but do we not know that "as domestic inetitution " is too poor to pay, and too ignorant to read. We seem to be prone eternally to forget that wo were made for hewers of wood and drawers of water. If wo would remember this feet, I think we could cordially unite with those who met here on the 16th ult., and join them in pm ins and praise to the now American Monarchy. • . - It has become humiliating to pride to speak the truth, for it has become unfashionable; and almost incredible. Largely in debt, pressed On all sides by voracious oreditors, with no present ability to pay, and, with constantly accumulating liabilities, the President of the United States has shown himself incompetent...to .carry any woe. sure of relief. Yes, this, man and his Cabinet are appalled, terror-stricken, and motionless in view of the natural zonate of their own polloy.. If it were permissible, I would recommend them to Infuse .a little of their Lecompton fire into the tariff recommendation— "lnstead of etttodlog,, staring altogether. Ilk° garden itodsmand not so deems, edlter.V , To blind our eight to its`short-oemings, to cover up its disgraceful defeats, and to reoonstruet its sinking fortunes, the Administration new pro pose., by virtue of a transfer of ttio war-malting power to itself, to visit ehastisemunt upon feeble States for imaginary wrongs, and by t the acquisition of Cuba to extend the area f freedom gin:White+ On slavery. A man self-made mad, and then self destroyed—a Lear in rags, and not in rebes'---' having lost the sceptre by - the weakness of folly, ()latches the firing air, 'and seeks toModnt again to power and influence. Vanity-of vanillei there is no restitution for fallen greatness. IMA few material inquiries may possibly present themselves,' when we nno to Molder the pro priety of the purehaso of the vain and mush praised "Queen of the AntillOcii and of bringing her into our loving and lecherous embrace. In whet way, by what mysterious means, with what magic . key will you draw the thirty golden millions, de mended bythe President as earnest money, and the hundreds of millions afterwards, from a strong box, empty as the heart of its keeper, and whioh is more ensure in looking treasure out than looking it in? Bow far will a well-regulated prudence determine ne to go in entrusting such vast amounts in the hands of one who has already deceived us—in whom we have noponfidenee ? By what legal secret will wo be able to contumtnate a purchase of Spain, who has determined not to sell ? . And heir eon wo better more ourselves against those who, in league with the President, have - sought to humiliate us, by adding to their power and extension. end by giving them the control of the Gulf of Mex ico- as they may have it over. the M 15313- 240? I think I can school myself to love my enemies-; but not better than myself. I can willingly admit my brother to an equal enjoyment of a common inheritance ; but I cannot, when he does me violet= and injustice, strengthen his arm so as to enable him forcibly to take it all. So, I can and will love my Southern neighbor. I will freely allow him an equal participation of all the fruits of our generous system. I wit divide with him the temple of Liberty. I will shield him from the evil-doer. But when he denies to me what I am trilling to grant to him, and that which my title covers, I will not stultify myself, and place weapons in his hand for my destruction ; and I will never pay tribute for either his kindness or forbearance. Ouba may be Important to the Union; I will admit that it will be so when we have just and equal laws, and honest officers; but before we acquire it, I desire to be -informed whe ther any- legislation son possibly be had as beneficial to Pennsylvania as the purchase would be to Tennessee or Georgia' ' and, above all, shall I seek to know how, thenceforward, we are' to be treated. For if I - am, a traitor— an unoonsclou.o and unrewarded one—tq either thirty-three -or fifteen States, I Will not add to the enormity of my offence by extend ing the number et States against which my guilt must operate. have elated, as' oonoisely as I cogid, my judg-, maul of the, management of the Government for the lost two years. I trust I have made it plain and .distinot I have not descended to minute par- Malan ; the proof of my declaratione having ho, Came matter of enduring record has rendered it unneseseary to do se, I leave it before you and the gauntry, as to, full' jnetifieation ,for' our present, course, and as the reason for our settled determi- nation to refuse to be identified with movements we both deplore and despite. Desiring to be fair, we cannot tolerate deception., Sustaining right, we; must denounce usurpation. Asking justice, we Gannet inflict a wrong. Economy is not presented to ns as a choice ; it is forced upon us as a neeeasi ty ; and having been trained in a system of poli ties that we love, and taught to Jegard purity as essential to power, it is too late in our lives to turn demagogues to maintain majorities, or to barter for smiles from rotten rule. It is true that renewed and continued denunciation and proscription are likely to be our reward for the choice that we make ; hut I cannot avoid hinting to those who suppose they have throttled the wolf, that they may have only caught him by the ears. WO' told that when the Belvidere Ap filo was in, the Louvre, a* lady of gushing . and fascinating beauty came with rack returning son to look upon and love it, wreathing it with soleoted fl swam and clasping it In all the ardor of. her youthful heart. Days and weeks and months rolled on, until at lest the Gold and stony figure turned her warm blood bite, and she was found dead; with her face buried in her bands, and leaning against it. Sir, we may be too ideal, and look for a per feetion which nature does not furnish. Like the daughter of the Baron we may bestow the jewels of the heart where their value can never be ap preciated, and our lasrpulse may beat as we kneel in absorbing and silent adoration before the sym bol of a god. If such must be, we may well 'claim, at least. a generous sympathy, for that form once bad brain, and heart, and life, and power. In the days of Jefferson it was wise and creative, in the days of Madison brave and benevolent, and in the days of Jackson commendit4 and resistless. Thin it was the awe inspiring guardian of Liberty— American Demooracy—inviting companionship, and holding in its hands'the olive branch of peace and the thunderbolt of war. Bat, sir, we will not die, but live. We have Aristotle's hope,- tho' dreams of waking. Men, and their appalling interpretations shall be written out In letters of fire upon walls of adamant. It shall , be read of all men, from the Aroostook to the - Golden Gate, You have it—Allah in' a wills per shall confound thellie from a trumpet ; and a naked child shall tread upon the armored giant leading the hosts marshalled against the advancing civilization and rightectis government of man. , . Look not bark—we have learned the past; but onward. onward, with steady eye and unwavering step. Tthigoll is Wore you ! You will remem ber that when Orpheus lost Eurydice, ho followed , her evewinto the abode of Hades, where, by the .wer of his lyre, he won her bark ; bat it was enjoined upon him, that he should not look upon her until he had. arrived in the upper air. At the Nary moment they Were passing the fatal bounds, it is said his love overcame him, - and looking around to know that she was following him, she was caught back into the infernal regions. The story embodies a pregnant moral. If you would regain the loved and the lost, then forward! forward ! ! lam done. If I have been dull, you will par don',me. If I have inspired a single patriotic _thought or feeling, I have my reward. - , ' Mr. 11lokman, was frequently interrupted by de monstrations of applause during the delleary, of hie able,and eloquent, 4leeee. At the oonolueion of Mr. 11loaman's sPeeols, the Committee on Or-, ganization announeed the following gentlemen as permanent officers of the meeting: • PRESIDENT ALEXANDER M'KINNEY, of Westmoreland oo M. A. Harrington, Wm. B. Lehman, Dr. Wm Squires, Adam Warthmau, J. T. Worthington, David Webster, John S,bwartz, John Holloway, Edward Karnes, E. N.- Meylert, Henry Sherwood, Dr. J. C. Canfield, Col. Wm. F. Reynolds, Potter Withington, James Burns, , Dr. I,evi Hull, Col. R. F. Hazlett, Thomas Bingham, Thos. M'Oonnell, Dr. John Ca George F Gilmore, John H.' Nagley, Edward Grant, J. W. Douglass, Joseph Morris, ' Mr. Gibson,. Nioholoon, , Dr. Robert Brown, Adam, Bohoener. ozonsrortios. S. R. Peale, ' J J. l!doBlhone, James IL Sheridan, John O'Brien, Archibald Moßride, Albert G. Greene, Wm. P. Wilson, Geo..W. Shearer, Geo W. Peon°, John Harlan, , Dr. H. Wadsworth John C. West, Joseph Hunter, . J. T. MaGonegal, L. Et...Cantwell; Dr. R. B. McCoy,' Wm. R. Piper, James M. Leddy, A. Bolinger, - Wm., Bargeont. Qa taking timchair Mr. McKinney said : , Velloir-Demoorats I 'am a , matt of very few Words I prefer aotipu ; but,l cod* to you that if I wag a moat admirable epeoohmalter the sense of the obligation which you have ptit me under &Mid hardly be 'expressed in words. Besides, I , would not like to make a speeoh after auoh a one ae you haVe jug listened to. (Cheers I We have a plain work to do here to•day.- I feel flattered, ,indeed, in being, the ohairman of a meeting of rush rebels reheerel, and I do not know that -1 (mulct ocoupy a better Abair than this. (Cheers.] [The chair coupled 1y the President is the' old chair Used by John - llanoook in _presiding over the 4ovention whh adopted the Ileola tion Of ep p andenoe, on ic the 4th of July, 1770.] All I de.4 - re is that we shall organise the Demooratio party t emp the Olnitinnati or some sooh, platform, and 'then - give sir. Buchanan lodide friends an oppor litany to repent and mentor tho Ilemearatio 'll3heeral -Thanking yeti again for-the honor you 'hive ponferred upon, me, I now deplete this Von tention duly organized - and ready to proceed with Aridness ' • - - 4tr W....llirnikv—iturnmittee of twenty•five was appointed by the ph - airman, upon the suggestion of the various 'delegations, to prepare an address and resolutions for theoonslde ration of the Convention. The following is the committee; Got .john W. Berney, Philadelphia; Ii N. Wit lard, Desert:a ; 'Col. Samuel L. 'Young, Barks Hon. .fahn C. Knoi, Philadelphia : ,Thomas p .Qampbell, Duntingden ; J. 'W. G. ?herniae, Deli phin; C. Wingard. Allegheny ; John H Neg leY. Ritter ;- Samuel 13 Keller. Lanoaster ; Gee :P. - Higgins, debylkill ; A. U. Noyes, Clinton; J W. Douglass, Brio;.11. Dritenbaugh, Mont gemery ; Daniel 'Pellet. Jr.. Westmoreland; 11. J. Nioholean, Jefferson ; W. Whitton Redick Payette ; Semi. Ring wait, Chester; J. W. Brown Dauphin; James Gillitland, Centre; Bally Tho Dps, Philadelphia ; John liannegan , Cambria; r. Geo. W. Nebinger, Philadelphia; Wm. P 'Turlock, Docks ; Charles Darnell, Allegheny ; L S. Cantwell', Armstrong. :Mr. Campbell, of Huntingdon; offered the fol lowing resolution, which was referred to the Com millet) on Resolutions : ' • '.gesolved, That a general State Central Corn, rpittee be appointed, and instruoted to call a ge neral StateConyention, to neminate a State tioket fur our support at the ensiling October election, cud to perform such other functions as pertnin to the duties of the Democratic State Central Com mittee. : I Mr. SAllade, of liarko, moved tdmt the Conven ,lion adjourn until 2 o'oieok P. Ili., whloh motion was agreed to; and at a quarter aft4r Awelve o'olook the Oonvention adjourned. The Convention assembled at'two o'oiook P. M. T. W. Forney, chairman of the oommittee, read the address and resolutions,,which were received with unbounded applause. , Among the resolutions was one repudiating the platform and candidates of the Conventlop of the Nch of March, which was received with terrific oheeri. The Convention wee then addressed by S W Forney, of Philadelphia, Attorney' General Kan; T. P. Campbell, of Huntingdon, W. W. Reading, of Fayette, L R. Cantwell, of Armstrong, g. t. Wingfield, of Alle gheny, and Mesits2 Northrop, Nebinger, and Lah• man, of Philadelphia. Tae Convention adjourned sane die at 6 o'clock P. M. Full wont n! Ithie proceedings In Fridays .Prest. R,. Important From Jamaica. INSURRECTION OP THE BLACKS-TROOPS DRS PATCHED AGAINST THEM-AN APpRAV IN THE ;STREETS ,OP JAMAICA-BOULOUQUIS OPINION OP • , 1118 FELLOW NEOIIOIO. ?The Courier des Etats Unis has a private oar respondence from Kingston, Jamaica, dated March 23, from which we translate the following .Enceuraged by the note of their neighbors, the Ilaytiens, our 'bleats appear aloe' disposed to at tempt a revolution. In the parish of Wedmore. land has rooently been imposed a new tax' to which the negro population are not willing to sub mit. Some of the disaffected raised the standard of revolt and entered the little village of Savan nah, where they destroyed some property, The p lice havins arrested'four or five of the ringlead cis, their pants/no. far from being discouraged, cautioned their work of destruction, menacing with fire the Oity Hall, if the prisoners were not released. Informed' of these facts, Governor Dar ling has despacted against the revolters a body of five hundred men under the oommand.of eel. Whi tefleld. "As these troops weree marching towards the place of embarkment, they met a• long file of carts,. Open which were perched a number of blocks, attracted thither by the sound of the drums Old trumpets. These people blocked up the pee. sttge from the soldiers, and the colonel ordered them to retire. Ede order producing no erect, it was neoessary to unsheathe the.weapons, and the sword or Colonel Whitefleld; which probably had .not seen the light since the battle of Waterloo, fell upon the shoulders of more than one of the poor wretches. " &minutiae. who lived near by, beheld these exploits from his window. Far from grieving over the strok,s under which the negroes suffered, he contemplated the some with evident delight. •Ah !' cried he, 'the whites at het begin to understand bow negroes must hi treated; sweet words are not for them ; they need blows and ithooke.' Sou. leuquo evidently adheres ,te, hie own system, and hie misfortunes have not yet cured him of • his :dete lusiona," Shootticta ACCIIMINT.—At the Oriskany Valley woollen mills, half a mile above fOriskany, about half-poet six o'olook ,this morning, a girl about sixteen years of ago, named Margaret Brien, mat with a strange and shocking acoident, She was In the carding room, and approached the main (upright) shaft to exchange a full Spool for an empty ono. Stopping stiddenly, her - dress flirted against the shaft so as to " lap" directly around it. The shaft was making about sixty-five revolutions per minute. The poor girl was In stantly thrown dtwn and whirled about at the rote just stated—sixty•five revolutions every minute—and at each revolution her bead hitting the brisk wall, only eighteen or twenty inches from the shaft Efforts were immediately made to relieve the unfortunate girl, but it was four minutes before the machinery could bo slopped. Sue was unconscious and shockingly machined when taken up, but not lifeless.—Utica (N. Y.) Observrr, April B. ,LAIMIG COMPANY OP CllllflortaN POE THE Wiser.—A party' of more than fifty children, most ly, boys, last Tuesday, left the office of the Mil dren's Aid Society, at Now York for the West, un der the charge of Air IL. Priedgen ; of those more than twenty were orphan boys of about thirteen years, and nearly an of a size. - An affeoting in oident 000urred among this group in the office pre vious to their departure. One of these lade burst into tears, and on being asked the Cause of hie weeping, he said it was with ,joy on the immediate prospeot of his leailag the city, as he had been a long time without home or friends. Another, with tears also on his 'cheeks, said that he would have boon driven, through the extreme of necessity, ti do something wrong, and what neither he not any of his had ever done, but for his , ieseae,by the twisty. „ I. „ . , - MR. A. 'BAltn. , of Springfieldi - Erie county, pi.. in attetupting ' to halter a obit last week, had Ms hand entangled In the strap and was dragged nearly a mile, sustaining snob _injuries that he died soon after. BY MIDNIGHT MAIL. Letter from 4, Touchstone., Correspondence of. The Press..l WASHINGTON, April 13, 1850 - Mr. Carlisle occupied a large portion ,of the forenoon -in explanation of his objection to the admissibility of Mrs. Stales' written confession yesterday, after my letter was posted. Mr. Brady made a very effective speech pressing the en tranoe of this confession, and it was in reply Mr. Carlisle spoke, He is a fluent speaker, with a ready vocabulary of very appropriate words. His language, like his person, is neat, and hie manner that of an accomplished gentleman, as he is. He met the legal - interruptions of Mr. Graham with ease. and - olearness, and succeeded in winning the court. Mr. C. has a knaok'of 'attracting the at.. Nation of the judge, for which, however, some do-not wholly credit his ability, undclubied as that is. The judge ruled out the emsfessien, but its powerful effitot will not be lost; for-'the'press has admitted it, and it was the town talk last evening, the Star having stiooneded In getting it . iisto a second edition, great numbers of which were dis posed of. The revelling oharaoter of , the confes sion leads to a variety of opinions as to the mo tives whioh impelled the writer to make it. Some of the details are so disgusting, without. there being any necessity to do more than aoknoWledge the crime, that people are at a lose to account for the total abandonment of even a slight reepeotior the feelings of her husband, already so irrepara bly outraged, - . , Miss Ridgely, an intimate friend and companion of Mrs. , Sickles, was in the witness-box to-day. She is a fresh-looking and' handsome young lady; a blonde with sparkling eyes, rather below the medium height, ,and probably between eighteen and twenty years' old. During the recital of what occurred in the house on Saturday and Sunday she was quite overcome and eroded to tears.. Several gentlemen promptly tendered , their attention to her, it being feared she might faint; but after be ing refreshed 'with a ilium of Water, the interesting young lady so far recovered her feelings as to give her sorrowful evidence in a clear and, impressive manner. She most eloquently described the die traction of Mr. Sickles by not describing it, saying that she could not hod words' to express his agita tion, and the unearthly character of moans. The simply forcible' style of her testimony 'evidently brought the feelings of yesterday up. Mr. Sickles became quite subdued, and leaned his head and faco upon his hen& All that touches his home :visibly and almost immediately affects him, and :the allusions to hie little daughter bow his head. Bridget Duffy was on the stand again to-day, and_ gave a very clear statement of - the trouble In the house. She underwent a lengthened °roes :examination at the hands of Mr. Carlisle, who suoceeded,, however,, in, making her rather strengthen her Uosition'and in drawing from bet a few tart and indignant replies, which, as dra matte critics say, "'drew down the house." Miss Bridget is a smart, modest, ; and direot-spoken girl, with very little brogue, if any; on her tongue, and none at all on her toes. TOUCHSTONE. Letter from ,New York. RATIONAL ACADEMY OF DESIGN-CROD.CE'S SIX. TIIODSAND•DOLLAR LANDSCAPE -IVALSHINGTON IRVING'S 76in . DiRTEDAY =GENRE CLAY S DIETLIDAY-TII/I GREAT LOP•TOWN MARBLE HOTEL • —TRE, LEGISLATURE-71TE POOR (Correspondence of The Prees.J A7vw Yonrc, April 13, 1859 The exhibition at the National Academy of De sign attracts large numbers of people who are fond of pictures,•4l r • desiring_ of-being considered able to " talk pain Churoh has some fine landscapes that form, he us el, a eentral point of obiervation. 1.... Church's great south American landscape—his six thousand-dollar picture; of , whit% mention I made Some weeke since in one of my lettere—is receiving its finishing, touches]; and will , soon be ready for exhibition to the, publio, 2 Mr. , Church has made arrangements with Brodsham di ' Co. for its exhi hitien here and 4n, Europe. • .. The venerable Washington Irving was made the recipient Or a beautiful tribute of regard from his neighbors, en the fid instant—the anniverearY- of his severity-sixth . birthday. Prom Anost'of ' them he received offerings of, Powers, visits, and greet ings. Although be has suffered from the effects of advancing age be is now in tolerable health. He Las been omit:lad to .put the ;finishing touch to his Life of Washington, and now settles himself comfortably in his easy chair, to " enjbV -the pleasures afforded by an unusually long and un interruptedly brilliant and successful life, devoted to literature. A beautiful character is Mr. Wash ing_triti Irving. • ' ' „ , _ The national emblems were living throughout yesterday from the 'City Hall, Tammany Hall, and most of the hotels, in bonoiof the birthday of Henry' Clay.' ' The 'City Councils directed, by resolution, that this. tribute should be paid from the City Hall ' Id the evening there was an old line Whig 'dinner, at which &natty, Brooks deli veradonbuthis tarring, elfeefiVe`ipeaohes, after which there was/i good deal of, what iagenerally well understood bythe • oomprehensiVe . abbrevia tion, " Ao. - "' ',‘ '. The great 'tharhln.front', hotel, situated at-the junction of DrOadway and Anti avenue, is sp. proaohing completion. It is to be opened on the Ist of August,' by that' 'Napoleonic lintelerinn, Parma' Sceveneonf Boston,:eith Hiteheook. of -the St. Charles Hotel, New Orleans, as principal ma nager. The house. Is calculated to aedommodate eight hundred guests, and it is the design of the' owner of the building that, in its public and pri vate apartments, its appointments and conve niences shall surpass thosa of any other establish. ment in the *odd. It is below, and quite near, the present terminus of the New Haven and Boston railroad, and 'the depot of the Hudson River rail: road, apd it will probably not belong before 'the lludeon-river boats; and those of- the Bound, will have their decks in that neighborhood. The Legislature completes Its session of one hun= - - dred days this day. After to-day, members must Work without pay. It is probable that they will continue in session two days longer. The import ant bills relating to the charter and railroads of this city are not yet consummated, and it is more than likely that some of. them will fell. Since the adoption of the present Constitution, in 1846, there has been no instance where the session has continued more than two or three days over the hundred. The number et persons in the institution under dame of the Ten Governors on • the 9th Instant, Woe TAO, showiog a deorease of 121 from that of the previous week. The applications for relief to tho Superintendent of Out-door Poor ceased al. most entirely on, the lot Instant, and money and. coal are now 'dietributed`only" in oases of extreme Want. New York Stock Exchange, Aprill2. SECOND DOASD. 2000 118 Se 'O5 - 1021 5 Olee OoiScOla B 95 16609 Miami St 6e 88%1200 Harlem Railroad 121( 50000 do 610 68% 700 Harlem It prr tilo'4o% 2000 Mich B 8 P'd - 72 100 do •. , 40% 15 Park Bank 108 1 09 Galena &Obi B 67% 125 Penn Coal Oo 81% 200 Reading R 5034 60 Pacific M 8 8 s6O 84 100 do 00 9034 150 do 8634 200 Blich Central B 63 100 timberland pref 921( 1150 • 'do 52% 100 do 22% 25 do 03.11 100 N Y Cent P. alb 70$ 500 Mick 8 Gear .P 5 40 60 do , ' , . 7e% 10) •do - ' 660 48 100 do e2O 76% 20 do es 39)( 100 do ,- .660 78% 60 . dci I. i 89% 60 do bCO 76% 60 do e2O 39,9 2QO do 1,3 75% 160 Cleve Jo Tolelo 255; 100 do blO 78%1300 Olden° &BI 030 567 40 do , , 76%1100 de , . 5 0 31 250 Pawnees B .860 119X1., z • . TEM BIARKEITS. /teen —The ieqatri for Pe' rhels fair at $5.87} Pots are quiet at $5 75 OCIFInI6.—ThO market le very firm, but less animated; pales of 3(0 hips Rio at 11,4 m 1230, and 4 OXI do yes terday, eq. Roarpke. at 111; o ; 4 000 do Lagupyra, part for export, on prliate term', and 800 do St Domingo at 10ga mei. Oorrox —The markeipiteady, with a moderate in. quiry from epinnere ; ea Pe of 1,500 bales to-day and 4,000 yesterday, of .which 1 600 were in transltu. We gnats NEW YORK CLASSIFICATION Uplands. Florida. Mobile. 14.0.&Tex. Ordinary.. . ... 10X 1 103,, , 10X ' IO X Middilog 12% 12% 12% I2X Middling Fair...l3X 13X 20% 14 Fiona. &o —The demand'ts gond for the low grades of Western Oanal Flour, but not quite as active as yes. terday. Prices of the low Oradea of extra and State are rather better. This in gnad demand for the Provinces. Ohio extras are freely offered. •The pales are 12 006 bb le at $61005 46 for euperflue State, $6 9508 40 frir extra do,' $6.4000 30 forlow grades Western, $8 35e8 60 for shipping brands of round b op extra - Ohio, $88007.70 for trade brands do, $8.90a8 25 for extra Genesee, and $8.00e9 for ex tra St. Louis Osnedian Flour le dull. Small salts at $8.6007 40. Southern Flour Is more sabre, the medium grades are irregular. rates of 000 bb's at $5.9008.50 for super fine Baltimore, Ste., $8 13'08 26 for the better grades Rye Flour Is in fair demand. and le plenty ; setae of 180 bble at $3.70e4 40. Corn Meal le In stoady demand at 03 95 for Jersey, and $4 30 for Brandywine, and $l9 76 for puneheons. . CRAM —Tile Wheat rrarket is more active, but prices favor the buyer ; macs of 12,000 bus at 1400 , 142 c for red Onto - and Indiana. and 1450 for small lots do ; 180 e for 'choice white Kentucky, and 85e for ordinary Ohl eago spring. Rye to quiet mid nominal. Oats are in fair demand at 54m65x0 for State, and 670600 for Western and Ca nadian. Barley to in fair demand; sable of 9,000 bus at 00e761 for Inferior to good State. Corn In rather more Retire, but IC nominal for mixed and white; Wee of 19,000 bee at 850870 for Southern and Jersey yellow; small lota of oholee do at 88e, and 8508504 nominally for Western mixed• White beans are in fair demand at $l.lOOl 20 per boehel. • ' ' X °Linen is fairly active ; sales of 800 bbl(' New Or. lease at 394,401 p 80 hhde 80 tiercesound 25 bbls Tani , dad at 23o31)0; a few ' Muscovado at 240; and Cuba elated at 230 Oita —The demand for mostly all hinds continues quite Wanted, and the mark. t lack, buoyancy as well as activity ; salon of 10 000 galls Linseed at 64e650, 700 Idols prime erode Whale at 555 cash, part delivered In New Bedford, and 200 do crud(' Sperm at $1.40 per gall, oath; other itinda aellfilowly at prices thowitor no va. :lab a change, bat there to not enough doing to eata• blink a atapla cuereney for whole parcels. , . - Paqvistoss —The Pork market to rather firmer and more halve • the arrlvala are not large; there Is a fair demand for the Wore The males were 3,000, bbl, at $l7 55e17.110 for bow mesa, $17.81,4 for old do, 111680 for prime' melts, 113 25 for good ramps, and $l2 62)5 for pima. 'minded to the sales are 750 bbl, meta, buyers' option 'n May or June, $57 50; 500 bhis, sellers' option May, at $17.10, and 1 00) bb s do ; buyers' option for May and sellers' for June, at sl7.t2,af. • It et It stead)) audio fair demand for.the trade ; male, of 350 Ma at $6 6007,f0r onnotry prime ; sBcoo for do meet; $9 26011 26 for repacked • mere •end $l2 no" for extra do. _Prima mesa le quiet at $17e21. Beef hams are heavy'; sales of 58 bbla at $14e17. Bacon Is inactive, at 8010X0 Out Meats -re a shade firmer; sales of 840 bpd, and ice at 541x8,5 for ahoulders, sod Bm9 Air hams, Lard is in fair demand and 1s vary firm '• the sales are 600 bbl ,, at .11 /bilge and small lots at ]l%c. Butter of kw price ' to to fair demand and Ia firmer; sales of Ohio at 10m150, ant State at 1234 er23o. Chem is In fair requ.et at fleslOo Blot is inaottyo; eaten of 100 toe !,8.3004/40) as to natality. WlllBBBY.—The market le firmer and the demand more Wive; sales of 600 bbl(' at 26c. • 'DOWN.—Tho first span of the old St. CIOr street bridge, from the Allegheny ehoro,'at Alio 'ahoy, Pa. fell to the. water early yesterday morning l'ho bolts had been nearly all removed and the arches were thus left without adequate Support. ERABTIOB HOOO, who killed S. G. Parrish, at Raleigh, N. has beon oonvloted of murder is the firet degree, THE 'LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. FURTHER FROM. CALIFORNIA. MEE STAR ON TEE WEST AT NEW YORK $1,400,000 in Treasure. ME OASS-YRISSARI TREATY, RATIFIED NEW YORK, 'April 18 —The iteamshipßtar o' the West from Ban Freemen; with dates to - the'i/tit ult., ar rived-at this pert this evening. She berige 111,400 000 in treasure. The follorring are the principal consignees; , • . , . , Welis is FArgo, &Co - - ' ' $269,000 Amerman Exchange Bank 360,000 Boholle h Brothere • '' ' :97 000 W. T. Coleman 81,000 Metropolitan Bank 70 000 Duncan, Sherman; &Co ' ' ' ' - 62 000 Freeman & Co 01,610 The California and , South 'American . advices have been mostly anticipated by telegraph from New Orleans, but the paper's contain come intereating particulars. The United btatee-elopp,ollwar Decatur had gone to San YrancleCo. NICARAGUA -••-- • . It was reported at BeaTejo that the Cass-Yriseari treaty bed been ratified. with slight' modifications, to which United States Minister Lamer had accented. The latter was said to be coming home. From Was.hington.-, - WiSUINOTON, April 13 =The Poet office Depart:omit is having piloted. blank forms to be sarersiljy filled up with the amounts of Indebtedness tsimall contractors They mein the nature of certificates, and are intended to serve ail a bailie for loam nnOt Congreao shall relieve s the Department of • Its present pecoolary erobarnies, meat.- . _ As Mr. Doynnao's resignation of the lonics:of Super intendent of Nadia Printing will not tate place till the Ant of May various gentlemen are pressing their claims for the plate ' Among them is , OolOsel Joseph Severna, of Philadelphia. The Weehington Republican iseodation to=night celebrated, at the Odd PeHowe' Hall, Jefferson's birth day. A full band of xons.c enlivened the occasion. Hon. Francis P. Blair, of Monet:o v presided , hisjor French read the Declaration of ledependetin, and Danl. H. floodloe, late of North Carolina, delivered the ora tion. the contract for tarnishing the illostritions of ma— chinery, etc reqoirel for the latent Office Report bee been awarded to A. R. lewetteruffdo, N. Y. Pennsylvania Legislature. HARRISBURG, Apr 11113,1869. BENATII. .1 The following billewere pissed : A suppmment to the Spring Cardin Paviogs Vaud. - A supplement to the North Philadelphia Plank hoed Company.. ' An act to incorporate the Lehigh Iron .ooropaoy. An act to outthink a the vice 'presidents of honks to re ceive esiaries. . A bill relative to the Westchester It dlioad Company. An act to lnoorp•rate the Rome and Foreign Bible Society of Philadelphia' An lot to incorporate the 21m Tree Improvement Company A supplement to the Richmond and .Bahuylklll- PAH aenger Hallway Company: An act to incorporate the DOvets , dagoeletion o Philadelphia. ' • : An sot to incorporate the Hay and Straw Company of Philadelphia., , • ; All ant to Incorporate the /ring Garden Ere Then. vane. Company. - • An act to Incorporate the Cameron House Hotel at Huriaburg. I Adjourned. .V 7111321009 813881021. The Senate met at 8 P,,74; ' • •, ' •:; ,• II: The following blue were passed : An act teineorporatethe donthweatern Market Oom peal. An act relative to theduties of port wardens in . . philadelphie.•A supplement to the West Philadelphia Metall Bev. lug' Band and,Trust Oompany. Adjourned till evening Several unimportant Berate •mendmenta were amour, ied' in, after which the Hones adjourned. , Cuba Revidutionary SCherne: Weennlemon, A prlll3 ,--Thers le =eh information In thus city u leaves no dott3t of the existence of s dot p•leld !whom fora revolution in Onba., It in not known that Ole Government coh been In• formed of the feet. , „ - Frtmi Havana: 71IE RECENT Firessooneirilreioß;y ARTIFICE FROM MEXICO. Nmw TOll%;'Apill 18 6 . , -The steamship Philadelphia arrived here this moraine.. She brings limas dates to the Bth list. - All was quiet Ou the Island The fires previously. reported ,occurred between Ma tansag and Cardeom, where came - on tWehty estate', en ugh to make 10,000 boxes of sugar,.we . e destroyed Accounts had reached Havana troin Mexico confirm log - the intelligence of 111:amen's restreat and the siege of the capital, • Sailing of the Steamers Persia and Editi; • burgh. `. New YORK, April 13 —The eteann hip tPersiawlich exiled file afternoon, for Liverpool, took oat upwardeof a million and a quarter dollars in speole,, and nearly 100 passengers, ' " . The eteamehlp Xdinburgh for Glasgow, tool out 250 Desttaptivp Fite at Wilmiagtoa, 11.1111i6 . 0N. N. CII„ April 13 —A destruot ire fire broke out this aft•enoon. In an old shed on Jenkins' wharf A stiff southwest brass preysiled at the time. The flames spread to the adjoining 'beds, and from theme to dwelling, homes . The Pint Presbyterian Ohureh, on Front sweet, was among the properties de. droved. -The the le at bat tusderoontrol..:::: The Cuban Ex pedition, -' !New Yosir.)'Aprillit.44be'Sitilfot tittle 'city. baits the Onban,fleg to-day. The paper says- that by thie ,Itotto_titoro to no doubt tbot -the :whole telana to to • state of revolt, ti strong expedition baring lett Leta et the latter and of *mon: Death of Don. David Maim. - ;BYDIPORD. Apell 18.—The lan'ld *atm, one of oar oldest nit mans, and formerly' Andifoitieneral,"died here to day after reprotraet.d illness.: A Philadelphia Schooner ilarnaged. , Newton. R. I, April 13 —TEO nchooner'Malabar Nom Calais, bound to PhVidelphia, has' put into tbi port in a damaged condition. - The Billiard Balch--PhelanNictorions. DETHOIT 3 April 10 —The btlllerd, game terminated au slate Dow, Phelan winning by,9B point#. „ :„ Markets. BALTIMoitaI, April 13..--Ylonr dull; sales of Howard street at $0.25; r and (Mid at 11812 g: Wheat' firm: at 81 60a1t.60 for white, and $I 40a$1 60 for red. Corn dull at 75 cents fa-White, and 78ert0 estate for yellow Provision. doll; I:tenon, Sides 91( cents ; Mesa Pork $13.25. ,Whisker dell at 25Xcenti. Ilionit.t, April 13 =—Oottoo—Baled of 1 600 bales to. day at 12%0 for mkidliogre. The sales of three dive , amount to 18,250 bales, and the receipts to 5,320 bales On summon, April 13.—Cotton—sales of 1 700 bales ; the market is depressed and prom Itended:Med MOX. BAv.II.NAIS, April 13. Steamer's news had no street on the market. • . . . , Abousre,'April .13.—The market has not been ar• footed by the eteerner 2 s news. ,_;OntonouTt, April 18.L.:-Finur dull but • anolsauged. ,Whiskey steady at 280. Provisions heavy and depressed Bulk meats; sales of 100 . 000 tom of shoulders at 5%e. Lard sells at 10%c. Philadelphia Markets . . ' Aram 13.=Erpeng: The Flour market in very qtill , again tc..day. There is no demand for Iditpinent, and the retailers and bakers ere the only buyers, in mall Jots, akso.26 to $0.02 for euperfise and at's!, wed front 0.75 to $T 60 for extra family and fancy brands, according to qoaNty Shipping Flour is offered at our lowisf. Boris, but we hear of no sales to day. Bye Flour and Corn Meal are qd.iet but steady, at $4.25 for the former and $3.87% for the latter. Wheat Is rather more inquired for, and holders are firmer, with rails of, 1,203 bus red, mostly prime Ohio, at 1511 c ; 1,100 bus good to prime Western white at 160 to 1050, and9oo bus baudsonae Southern do. at 1700. Bye Is dull and lower; about 1,200 bar Penna mold at 1350. Corn In unohanged ; and 405,000 bits have been sold at 80089; for damaged, and 880 for prime lots, meetlyy Nona., at the latter rate, afloat. Oats confirms ; about 4,000 bush Senna. sold at 61Mo, and 1,600 bosh very prime de at 539 afloat. Bart Is steady, and a small sale of first No. 1 was made at - $33 per ton. Cotter is firm, and about 110 bales sold at full rates. Etrooeries—The market for Sugar and Coffee is fi m, and a modera , e business doing in the former at 7 to 7.Me per lb for Cabs and New :Orleans. Pfovlsions—Holders are not so anxious to sell, and there in rather more inquiry from the trade, but there Is not much doing Seeds are quiet, but prime Glover: load is wanted at $5.25n6 50 per_bueh by the dealers' and there Is very little offering Whiskey is dull; prices range at 25M m2BMc for bble—the latter for Western, 25M0 for hhda, 24.124M0 for drudge. :PRISONER ESO4YRD.—Philip Dusenheimer, a German, from Milford, or Springfield. undergo ing an imprisonment for beating his wife, took a hasty departure from the Doylestown jail, Pa , on Sunday last. He was assisting James Rogers, the jailor, to grease a 'card tige,:when,-watohing an opportunity, be gave aim a couple of raps over the head with an iron wrench, suffieient to stun him, and then started off at lightning speed in a westerly. threaten. Pursuit was made, but the prisoner having the advantage of fifteen or twenty minutes start succeeded in making good his es cape. The last seen of him he was streaking it in the direction of sunset, showing no symptoms - of flagging, He is.a desperate fellow. Mei Rogers TM not seriously injured. t- - • Fa;rar. ACOIDENT.-:-OR , Thursday last an ac cident oeourred on the Tidewater Canal, opposite Safe Harbor, which resulted in the death of a man named Isaac Pearson. Pearson was employed as a hand on a canal boat, and as the boat was enter ing the river ho was endeavoring to stay its head way with a Lego. The pole was naught by the tow-path bridge over the outlet, and as the unfor tunate man stooped to avoid the obstraotion, his head was caught between one of the brace@ of the bridge and the cabin of the boat and ground to a horrible mass. The deceased was a resident of York county, Pa., aged about twenty-two years, and unmarried DAMAGES AWARDFD.—A verdict for $7,000 has been obtained at Burlington ; Vermont, against the Vermont and Canada Railroad Company, in a suit brought by the administrators of Mr. Ebden N. French, who was killed by the oxplotion of a loqomotive on the road, in July, 1855. The jury gave the verdict on the ground that the company was guilty of culpable negligunee in permitting the loootuotive to be run when in an unsafe condition. ... • AFFRAYS Lounivrttrar,—There were two affrays in Louisville on Monday night Mat, in' one of which one man was killed_ end four wounded ; in the other one man was mokally wounded. Two arrests were made. ' • RHOOVEILING.—OaptaiR B. F. Bently, of Mo mongol:Iola! city; Pa., who , CIS shot by his do-' intoned wife several days dame, we are happy to kern, to still and hopes aro entertained of his recovery. Six hundred and fifty gallons of liquor, belug the entire stook of D.l) Warren, manufac turer and wholesale dealer. were aelzed at Spring field, on Friday. The liriuoir proved to be of the very,wors,tgrade. el witv WiwvEr. 'has been discovered at . north Fairfield, Ohio, in the shape of a living dolt or centaur having the body of a borne, but a bead resembling thattof a human' being • SINGULAR. OCOURRENGE.—Tho Columbus (Ohio) papers stiate,that - a man butted Miller was strhok dumb in that oily a few . taus ago, after . eating a hearty breakfast: tin patent office Mei last iedek exceeded WOO. The'inventive geialus•of , the counirr takingfresh'snirr , . Tun Ifeading, Pa., jaas'ordirW; the police of that oily to arrest all minors hanging about bar-rooms in the evening. T-HE'L Y ITK: • ABCI7BIISOMPS Ititisl4lsllAG - - WALSof-13ozaws Tessin:— Minot - back"—" A Devilfsti Good yoke?! & _CLAJIYII'I3 Talli4Tlll. " Our Areeriefn COUsitl"—" WPIOW Elope," IM oDrorOmiifis iiiaresirm.—Seleotione trim - ham Gems from Operas, Pantomime', Doering, inallinging. Tamer's Vaarerrse.— Gems. from Operas, bey* Booentronties, 11•49811, . Instructions have been 'lssued - to the' high constables to entoriethe folleviiiiseatton of the ordi nance Providing 'for the reenoiat of the" market shade : rection 2 - 'That fiem 'end after the - firsiliyAf March nest,lB69, It shall not be lawful fee, atiy ingot or other vehicle tostand in tolarket street Broad street, cr any other street adjacent to Market, atreet,lor the - purpose of vending M 4 sts, vegetables, orclerM predicts of any description whateCever ; nor Asti it. belevifitl to crimpy the - rdswallf turd in esid.,strrsita with stands, or arratgementii; ordevleas hied", foilbe purpose of dealing in or vending such oommodi tree ; for any violation of the previstonS of thine - 44*i there email be Imposed a penalty of ithydelleris ; recoverable ID like mender as - penialtins-are:namdly recovered for violation of city orditammes, the ores-kalf, of„which penalty shalt be paid to the informer and 'Presemitir, and - the other half into the pity treasury,. , Inclearing out Stirietiiieet,iitij leave the work half done? An ordinance win pessedanlhorising the remo val of . the market ehede on botheld.a of groat street. Tieder fOr tb i'e;iantfon it- this orananii her owed, and yet the abide re - Mein; F Metween the ' fariLe ! s_ curb -atone, and the hisclit‘ni In the shed!, we 'not think.there opa be • choke, .Tll.lll Ides wee 0111011013411 'is a zeforni,'ani we tat hriped, When the fainiees Were compelled to, !go, the sheds,^would; he seat along with them. Justice to a,ll, many think , would dietatieneh OODITO. Tag Bengal tlger, - 'whieli , so' delighted-the° ciremplearkwith his savage prank's, andln.inted ayonng lady so severely, died on Tamale'', afters Bever. illness. He was the finest apeeimitis aver seen in thin His owner, him. LangWorthy,' hal kindly presented the body to the Academy of Rabin! Winds's, anf atter'ai: post swim examination bat been made by some of tie' sane us of that institution,' the aki6 Waite stithod - ind added to Its large and interesting collection lit onrioil=' ties. loss to Mr: Langweithly - willlii a haavy'rine, as the animal was valued at ten thousand dollar& it' will be, fchaud much more difiault;ailio c lo Snit - Cot the female, as she wilt, become much welter and ni fro, nu manageable when left &yule': 'llnioldlion,,when with out a coMpanion; wig npicirioui, bat s; small black t gar having been put in bin atm he is now deal dedly amlanle may net be: generally huOWW, tone . that an elephant is only rendered contented and quiet - 'by giving him oompeny, and accordingly knish., dog is generally tied near him and the pair Live together in a 'most friendly manner. It lei Poasibla that the surviving 'tigress may be oeneoledintke same wny. - • Aitoui faiur jestirdaynrrnirig, all old unoccupied housii at the iontliwest noire rof Mar shall sad Willow ghetto, le-the Thlitecrith ward, was set on ace. .The place bsa long been considered - iv Esaee to the moghboroood The fire was extinguished before it had nude much headway, , Txa telegiaphic instruments for - 036 h .- oases of the .Bibernle _ . and noieelesin"ffee-eogine houses . resealed' the' city yesterday, abd„pley - wpt be ;ta. ,forthwith -- :,. "- = •'- - - ! JusrxcE 13:FDD,- of ,pupden, sOn Tuesday if t tarnoon Neat two youeg - dee to kit to answer ,the , charge of breaking, Into - is leottee,te Beverly; and robbing of ieveril artolei of ,ralae. Two Lena, -named SohnAlinea and John Butelst, get into ► fight on Tuesday afternonn at the Sohool hones at the corner of Belgrade and OVA etreeta, in the 'Nineteenth ward. Daring the'sfyray Johp Bute let was stabbed In the ehoulder. The wound Is not, Considered dangerous. , WILLIAM who charged with _ com mitting • burglary in lb. town of Pot'walla,- wig ivantr back to that place yeaterdarto gnawer the huge.: A CUBAN SLAG was displayed yesi T erday'ln‘ the vicinity of &coal sad Walnut 'fiesta, i;u: conse quence of a deepatch arriving here announcing that unba was on the are of !relic= - Tbe flag creattd quite an vicitethent among tbelatriotil citizens of oar Fat Y- - - ! • A oprr,mator-caak, an 4 two of. thiee,scav-:: angern E with new broorns, wade, thekappearatme fait evening t on fliestnnt street.* the.. early part of the evening. , The strait eraaalianeifind4aterdd id a de. hghtlnl manner,. nctre4, fo,:thejoyof the thousands thronging th - e thoroughfare. Asorilwoom yeateidiy two Vila were play, , ing.with come powder, and one of them, named Buck, got hie fade ant 'hinds badly barged by tee plosion of the inflammatory subetatee T - ersib wed iw eaovrd his home, . at - the comer orirteaaa'autWeet streete, aufferlug severely. i Two mutt, named Chiwles - seph Johnson, were held sl,64 - billAtrlideWfaiii ?gra; yesterday ktclansWerillie clone 6/dendrite in lotte ry polieles, and gambling; with an intent , Ada!aleitat and Oland. i • REPORTS are coining - fropieVery di rettlon of the greatatonn wt- . . lore of. our city were Hoed,'en& one or two retid*nnes struck with lightning. Raring tha storm, • telegraph pole tear the railroad Wedge, dier Cooper's erotic in few Jersey, weep:Fork, by Alibtaing,-.bridge wig in Injured by the eonanition that Ifirea" denied danker. onefor halos to arose it. The oom, pnoy troorfiegely, mot ihoitt Oty:iforioniecCup; anltthebridge - Way m in put in a tete eonchtion - ogain: • 3 THE folfoivilig`teiberiieH brie IHieHl.iitlected'S , c - dileers of the itiaashaha Lddia, Peas Of, „Issaning terrier , ifilv 17: 0 41:41 , 11,.W9 iAlkir.GiuToras;:itkla ; ' Morass' vizitokr•67.qz , zi - Gime: Sy--wecd;,l43 ;- ,r...E4ier9e, 0. Bikes , ;(1; Goddard, M . . • Ohailda oak,or 1, G. R. 5 . - T1'14'1,42,0 body, of the man ilio , imaArinad7 the other morning out in therroi t ia fitiireit Phil:misl— aid& has been Identified-el that of Patrick finites, aged about gay years, anii.who . iiithied ilerrnantoirn road and Teffinion street : t OINANCIAL AND 'COMMERCIAL; The Money Market: , =:-, , . • :, ' P311.4811.91/th, April 13,1359. The stook market was waste' lively to-day and a fair bueinesswas transacted. A good deal of 'peculation is going on in the stocrand bondi of thellatawill43.Lorig Wand, Elmira, and North Pennsylvania Railroad bona. panies, which are all impieviiag in price in manse quenee. Reeding Railroad stock is quiet., The money Market:iiinnebanged.' - f , ' , s , -; - , One goodreffect bids fair to moult from the break ing up of the railroad ceramist "of the four great lines, atul,that lea return of the ell united Pennsylvania feel ing, udder which oar Central - Railroad Was horinnenced end whieh was so carefully fostered and atilt - tented by the early management of the enternifee. ` ' :,- --- --.' , The Pittsburg Journal beets 'right Out on the anb• jest ha an old-faldoned style that it does a Pennsylva, assn Eyed to hear. Opeeking of the railroad war, 4 says: •' Since New York hoscommenced It, lather have War t.) the knife rd - the knife to the hilt ; We have our own family quarrels with - hfr. Thomson and his roads; but when it comes to a regular tight with the, _other lines. we cry . lanon, Micduff.l....We believe the Pennsylvania Railroad, In the inaide of eve years . ; eau break dovirCevety one of these* competing limit. The advantages in her favor, aces overwhelming. All , the energy, talent, and capital of New York cannot do any better than bring out her roads second best. Hurra for one 'reads it''. ' .' ,' • . , ,' '' - . : ' - ; if ' 'The case betneen, the rival rondo is stated by the Journal as - ' ' "New Yorkers have two Virtues, bolduensand frank ness.- Thar ef Mace iron. the Southern linierare heat ing themiliey are losing their tingle, ' They demand that their roads carry freights three or'fOur hundred miles farther than* Southern roadi do, at the earns actual coat to the shippers. 'lf this re II riot pay direct ly, New York must make it up some other - Wily. — The trade she molt and she Mil/have. Here lathe me morial of the New tork.rnerohante to 'her - railroad Icings: " The undersigned beg leave to represent to pin that the present discrimination in rates of transportation per railroad to points West, la favor of Baltimore and Philadelphia, and against New York, febpainNiirto the great injury of the trade in this city, and, in the judge meat of the undersigned, against the in , erests of your roads The present arrangement throws the business into the hands of Philadelphia - and Baltiindie mer chant". , We lose the business, and, of cqurseorm. lose :the transportation. -- - ' "il In the opinion of the u n d ersign ed,ned geode should be carried front Ibis city to Cincinnati; Loniiville - it. Louis, &o , as cheaply u they are front Philadelphia and Baltimore " - , - ' -,- ,• : for is her demand—can they , dolt? We answer not, for three teatime,: ' 1. John Lugar Thomson hal a road decidedly impart or—at least folly equal to any one o - theirs, red: he has admtnlstrat ve ability superior to any one tof their railroad managers 2. From the points named the Pennsylvan's road and its cot sections have nearly one-third the adroit.. Cage its distance 3. The Peormylvsnia road has only cost about ono half of any of ,its compiling lines. ~The New:York Central has coat tearlY fifty millions; - The New York and Brie over forty millions. -The Baltimore and Ohio nearly forty millions. The Penneylvaniaßa 'toad about twenty minions. PRYLAD.ILPIII.II, EITOOIt REOHAIOG.II SALIP, April 13, 1869. IMPOUND NT HAWAII, =OWN, &1:10., NANN-NOTa, noes, AID INCIHANOI HlOl/le, IoNTNWIST 00INZ1 NIVID AND CINIATHEIT ISINEWAS. FIRST BOARD. 1000 Penns Is 93% 10 Catawless. R...b1 8% 10 0 0 3d & 34 St B. 75..91% 103 do .26 8% 2000 d 0.... 91% 10 do cash. 8% 1010 Oat seises It 73...52% 100 d 0.... big 1000 do 634 60 do 15 • 8% 1000 do csh 63% la 2 p erataß in 10t5...48% 1010 do 64 5 do wish' ag k 20110 do in 10....b•kt n do ~,,, 43% 1000 Union Col tls "4,9 4 'West Phila IL:. 52% 1000 hoh Nes Os '72.. 88„ I .do - ' ifit 600 d ' 88 3 Minehitl R 59)4 500 'ao 58' 1 Par & Mech BS ...60% 3000 Catawle 2d ra .86 36% 4 Oerint l n Rite.— .60 3000 do - bb as _ -2 1 1 arrisborg It .5714 0000 N Penns N. 6s. t 6 06% 10 Uuion Cat 3 600 do 08% 5 Clam &Am 11....191 60 Rimini. It —.lit. 11% 6 . do 12t 10 do be „9% 60 Reading B 25% ,/ 6 -". do • 0% 100.' do • sash . .6 % 392 ' dolt It eswn 9% 60 •--do - cash 25,% 50 do 9% 10 2d &3dB z R 48 260 , , do in It Mown 0% 2 Philo & Tren R.. 118 100 Catania& R...b5. 81(1 , DITIABIN BOARDS.. , .....oggiscoo Catarrh, 2d in 56.85 99%1 7CO Lehigh Nov 05...97 91%! SECOND BOARD 1000 City Os It 99% 10 Morrie Cal ptf....1131 „ 2000 Read It OA Ot6 Bde 75% 10 do 187 301.0 Catawisla IL Is.. 634 16 do 2dv5.107 2003 do 64)4 10 do odys.lo7 1010 do 5415 45 Lit lichyl R .0 2000 do 64% 80 do 2.0 1000 Stuart Chat 111.5..79% i2O _do • 0 10 (Bateman R.. bd. 6%161 do 20 60 d 0.... . —l5, 6%112 Mechanics Bk :. ,b 5 28% 60 - do .b 6. 6%lls',Norrintown It 61% 11.0 Echyl Nay prf.b6 19% '0 ' . 'air ; 61% . 80 d 0.... ...b6.19%1 10 - . - do' ' ' 51% 60 d 0.... .:.1)5" 19% 25 Lehigh Ectip......b5 2834 _ 90 Penne, H. In lots.-43)4 ft do 5528)4'_ 10 Moab Col prf..107 1180 Elmira It 9,'4 10 do "107' - . CLOSING If ' ' Bid. Asked: II 9 ISe '74 104 105 , Phila Oa 69)4100 .r It 99%100 ' " New ...103 103% Pence Is 93 93% Beading It 26% 26% s' bde , 7olnoff 01 88j4 " tut Os '44 92 96' ti dO ' 1 86 76.11 76 Penna. it 483 4 48% -" 24 mOn Mug 90% 91 . Mon Canal - Con. 61 - 63 g ,- prat divoff 107 ling; Betel how 6e 'B2 74% 96 ' Ii Imp tie ... 62% 88 400 City 84.:. 900 do:.. 1000 Lit Ws li 78 ans—rlati Bid. :diked: ,20:11 . , T i s e l_Eltoek. ? i t 14:4 1‘ Waurpst&AumE, 934 0 % " 7ti let mtg.. 12 .72,4 aux - 61- 'Leh #l% 11% 'Leh OCal 61 52 It Penns IL 9% 9X 6g tTX 66 40/1.1.“..t .94 96 „ . 9% 6% 155'54514e 1.1%.'54X Sauk & South R 21&8d St R.... 47 50 , BIM & Vine St 65X 44 '