The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, June 28, 1859, Image 2

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At the advanced sf,e y.feighteis;the eldest
statesman of Europe bas a l o,tholat of the
able and astute politicians WliO,,toele , part:
the establishment of thigiesileti of 1815, Who
not only framed bit - gigot:l them, who vainly.
hoped that thereby had been secured the so
inuch-deaderated "balance of power in Eu
rope." Prince Mnr.ennum, who was actual
inter ofArtebria, front 1809, when he succeed
ed tylentit ,IMinAter for Foreign
Affairs, unti11,84.13, when the third prench Re
velation drove him from office, was born at
Hahlonfa, hi Nay 15th, 1773,anddle-4 on Juno
110, 1869. , •
gis fspilly Was ancient and Wahl°. In early
iiii"44,"416143'0.:14ti0h-intelligence, but
weira preMature libertine. - This precocity
caused ienalderable annoyance_ to Ids - father;
but his mother is said to have "remarked that
in a little time, When be was fairly embarked
lithe actiorrof public life, he would relinquish
life firities. He woe educated • chiefly at the
University at - Strashourg, where he devoted
bblifierf to "pldiesophical studies, under the
tielabiled Professor He Room, whore he had
Ibunawns .001STAIT' for his classmate. He
teelehli degise'at the Hnifersity at Mayence.
While yet;in hie teens, he travelled over a
Ifte portion: of Enrope,-Amd, was several
irtintlis" In England- ,Oh his return: be
rativiedi , ,at the •age of ; twenty-one..Three
*ti before thitl,lo Officiated as master of
404,*kra,lik (4 . the Emperor LEOPOLD IL In
1794, immediately, after his marriage, he; was
Atilt - 4' 8.'40621 - au> mission
' -
Hie next, public employment was at the
o f .pipreisi Of Radetadt, where he represented
the college of the :Westphalian nobility, and
wan elyinen to act as
• Secretary to the Con
grew ilior this, having been nitride to the
Embassy 'of ()punt firs.nrou to ~St. Peters{
bftrg, young Iturrinprioa was cent as Ante
titan Ambassador to:Dresden, and there, in
1803.4; prepared that coalition between Auti
fria,Prrisaii, and /Insole, Which: Nar,euten •
dissolved by the.3rictory of Austerlitz. In
1,84 - .10./ he Was Ambassador to Nsvonson at
iParis, where he made what might be called a
;decided bit. At this' time Marranwron was
;Se, years old, handsome, well•made, of high
,birth manner, courteous,
OA dignified, and 'speedily, won the favor of
NapoL mid the regard ;lAN totirf;
P , ilin,bleside, - he greatipidmired, Marti:axon
'ntrareart; and folly tipprociated his worlderftil
kentrs et, ta soldier-Sing ! , In 1807, Partly
owing the Ihr °rattle , impression he had I
mane. upon Ivaronson, nu obtained _ , the Treaty
of Youtainebleart, 'which gave. Austria much
better tonna than she wart - entitled to. When,
theWif 'between Austria and 'Franco broke
ertOnlBo9;llaronsoi, conceiving that he bad
been tricked, sent ltsrrnamon over,the froo.
I tier,'ender the imoort of a - coriple of gendarmes.
tbe , .battki of Wagram, ire which Naronsoi
defeated the Archduke Shrsitrars, placed
`Atudrie at, the 'foot Of . Fiance. Conference/41
I for , adjustment; folloWed, tinting• which Mar.
iszteicurragainettlfis influencevithl,4ponson.
pie - remit Was tbat,Heintßranion,who had
made the allianee Mitieen Austria and Eng
land,
.nip" sacrificed; Afsxrsenres sueneedlng
itim as Prime Minister of Austria,' and, It is
befieve4suggesting to NaPontox the Idea of
Marry - legin Austrian; ,Princess. This union,
which,, actually` took place in April, 1810,
alienated the'Czar from Naronnow, and led to
the ley/anion of /insole. From 1809 to 1813
Marrinarey ^kept Austria in a state of , neu
trality aa "egarded Heron - sox, and his, foes
Ent;altliiiii retreat, from Moscow; he seems
phave conceived the idea'of restoring Arts-
Ilerlertner 'ascendancy and indopen-1
deuce InHermitny. For neutrality be substl- I
tilted what he'ealled Mined Mediation, and; l
in a reibarkable interVietti;'in'tibleti Haronnort
'fnettrited hint by asking him bow much money
England had paid him,le detach AuStria from
frarke, lie - signed; in bentember, 1813, at
fiiplifist the treatyfry, tabich Austria coalesced
Wittt Russia and Prussia against Prante.
• In air, months from that time NareLsort
was , ' defeated: , MErraanren (who had been
created a ?dine ..ofthe Herman Empire, soon
after , the- signing of the Treaty eV:Tina)
took a decided - part in the' arrangement of af:
fatticiinfie' 'Hie -Allies brought the Bourbone
;rim 716 V.rr•••••••••..
aris,, , atiAtietrian Minister:- Viten the Allied •
o(riethigni 'vialtedEngittiad;theY.Were accent.;
'Peeled .14.1irineit MorreetszOn,,whose reeep.
lit4i - ,vree'efitreinilli , 'flattering:: . ' t
-1-.lrile.e7iiii:Congiose
_Of:Vienna asseMbleds
itiNovember; 18146 MXTTIERNIOI was oompli..
mented - by, being imptinted to, preside; arid
41ithicted_ittetisi consideration for Austria than;
Lierhapsi=shiwas'atrictiy entitled to. Ile re-
Atone/ to, gernitiny..,thaLtendtd idea under
ivhitili Austria . th e different
dtatee`ef tboi Confederation for material sup
•
~Port e" , present war., Be Was, Austrian
- Ambassador to - ,Paris in' 1815'; to Carlsbad
in 1810 ; .Trepitu arid Laybacb in J,
and icia.h. Place stoutly prOolalvied-hisad
besiret `th,the(ableinte - Principle of Legit!.
.lititcY4the right'iliiine'd kings. indeed; the
.cemuesstof Tropp= and Laybach bad been
SPeCialiy:"OnVened himself, to consult on
theOneaps:of,euppreising 'tie - revolutionary
Ora Tist= 3 EHrone. -elevated to the
Chencelleriihip of Stale; be again represented
ituatrisAt Abe ,Obligresii CC Verona, and again
'4 - 1822;ind=1826,' •
It Mai be., said . that, from 1815, until 1.822,
Itintroonion ctitally: stied = Europe.
`4ll the' Continental I'o*erd soled upon bis
'opinion.% operili:deolifiti ,or' private)) , Cote-
Municated: , ••England, under the weak Go
vetnetent of Lord Liveipoon, a man so feeble-
Mintled'ihat .ho'dreaded to' open his letters, _
'TiorY mornhig,:for, Mar that they should tell
'Wm of the breakingont'ef `AU Insurrection in
the'lielfoteried miumfacitiring ,distilets—ae
,ol.ed each. proPesition made ',by =Monne
ittle*, for - th 4 eupPression of liberal thought
Iiiii:0104:; But, in the autumn of
,1822; Mr, Canitart became Foreign Minister
Of immediately and decidedly
repudiated tb(Clegttlatistrprinciplei of which
liforminteti waif :at once the exponent, WOO
orist, cluttapidti. fiem action,
litngland soon.detached herself froMthat con
thderady, or rather conspiracy ofSovereigns,
andieletteliselialled . if The Moly Alliance."
In 1824 the - Cause of Creek' Independence
found opponent in Mementori. ' He
+=kilned the: expedleiterof diudnishing the
ovrer, ; of Turkey , and increasing that of
inside. *tier years liter, accused of
.lekewitut ;or careless that • by: the
Ifitr,ti.e,titheiltinisia_atelTurkey; be permitted
the)Casi= ,iscendaney, in MOldevia
jandlralltiebiaduld;by the treaty of Adrian
-4,lo;(sifitenthnt'.l4;').B29.) ,eon-
4ip44,90.14 tbOtatitigi, pe4reat
,Opolent -*yet of Austrian -commerce . and
nornteuitiCatien.=.ll. 11-WOW/TV, Oisrmon,
Wiesii-biOgraphy. of)Worroettreu was pub
iletnetohly twelears'ago, contends that the
Mos*, of the, menthe of the "Danube was
villingly=antrindered.to Russia, by Marrs',
sma,;,ttk attach ,the Gear yet more etrongit
tha, before Atudris,'Ond that this conoes
ton was not diminished bf the , fact that the
sai;ibititt that thee, had literally showered
alioap of iniendi,en the head ' of the- Coun
t:o9S Etbui-Vcoes - am, third wife of:Mormut-
~ ..
~:‘. The„ Revelation of ino astonished,. Prince
tFritertioi. It overthrew, at once, the eye.
m Whialihittreatici of, 181 G bad inaugura
yid.- He was sorry to part with the Bourbons,
tint, accepted;" the' Ottlien - -Sing "` as a better
islicueastaiee' than a' Republio, and,, indeed,
?adhered. td, bis vieWs when he found Loam
Orriiree,liivini the ,I'ellab awl Italian na-,
ilonaJitiei Aid, other sooner but soli words.
Airery.Where`,`- Mier 'the Revolutionary prin..
410 s li!iioe waY 1 4 Pu9PP -- in '/Willti Pa
&Oita Germany, in the Netberlande--Mar
iglu:trait, eagerly exerted the'- resources and
influence Of_ Anitria :to Cheek the' aspirations
_lO Ploy/dem: • r: • •:,,,.- - , . . - .: , • ..
t Itie death, of the Emperor lonattors I, in
)0, 5 : ' diii.;ttet:tresien ;the ,Roarer of :Rxr.:
eitaMok..';',lie obtained the lull eon:ll4one° of
WO BraPereileiturtfarte;and drew yet closer
the ..bonde of; alliance batiteilt Anatrie;Sue.
ate; 4dTritselit. ' ite , :wiii , ifi absolute In his
ito4iiiii' lie . . were IllmsOt'elkiintoerat.
,t4The - French. Revolation Of 1844 found MXT.
re#o: l o_4 'qi e- - ,,age, of 'seventy-flue, still hold
,li-Arldtrary , away In 4tetriai.,, lie could I
Write, mark truly than Wdzatir Wrote, o Ego
44 ' ;, - Reri.liiiitte,:"4l.oins'Prtiairt had to fly.
' Vie, Ity66-pUtrince'.wiisieetbroivn. Italy
Aridlteeleary areie in arias. A street ennuis
ii ; ;Yienne ;Offiti_:of::Rerch, 1,84E9 'struck 1
iii*O Into, the: alkie,- of the Emperor andidost
tilf k.,his, finally. 4 Minindlign= never enter
iii -
taiNtitieldeitilitit liii 'epitin ivadvirong; or
that his services could be dispensed with. Bat
the Imperial faintly sacrificed him, without,
even therdecency of sorrow at Nadir an ad
viser, who had . growalliito in -'their service. I
Ho , - .howed - to ; the, storna,,,and ' fied from
I Vienna. Foriorne daYS,.be,vainly sought an
asylntn; in variOns parts of Austria. He final-
ly *mato Dresden, whence-:pe passed on to
England, where he was received with the con- I
sideration duo to his age, his farmer position,
I and his miefortunos. Aftor a iesidenco of a
- few months in- Lendon, : le wont to Holland)
whore his family rejoined him. Horo, for a
time he was almost in pecuniary distress, for
his priticiPal astatos had been confiscated. - At
fhb eload - ot ho ostablished lihriself
tfinseels, where ho renewed his communica
tiOne with his reledives and friends. '
The Itluninli of the counter-revolution I
permitted MarrallNlCA to, return to Vienna,
in - 1.861, His property was restored to him.
The .Eraporor Paasers-Jossru paid him a
visit joitanniaborg, where he had previ
ously - received the - /Pug of Prussia. Since
his return, • ArETTERNIOIL took 130 public part
in politics; -but it hat been said that raider-,
tune bad softened his opinions; that he lat
terly did not believe In •his fbriner iyatom of
absolutism and •cooroion ; that he lamented
the Vontimaanee of that harsh syateni by
°punt Byer., his -successor ; and that he con.
damned the , Anstrian policy during the late
war with Russia. More especially, it has
been declared; that he strongly advised the
present Emperor of Austria to endeavor ,to
govern in Italy, rather *by love than fear—an
advice which, if given, was not accepted.
• There is no question of the ability of Prince
litxxsartsrau. His experience ,in public life
Was great: He maintained his, power and po.
action, amid 'ail vicissitudes, for nearly forty
years. His principles of administration were
austere atelier behind the age. He believed
in .
4, The- rlght divine of li!ngt to govern wrOng.'
Re ruled such a hetaogoneoUs 'empire - as'
Austria by various means' He governed
Hungary by tho rivalry of races). Italy, by
fear'of the prison-fortress of Spielberg.
Marraawron was a Prince of the Gerinan
Empire, Dun de Podolia, Lord of johatinia.
berg, Grandee of Spain of the first elan, and
had pensions and Orders of ,Knighthood from
every Kingdom of Europe—save England
alone, which did not give him the Garter. The
Emperor FRAIMIS granted him special permis.
sion to quarter upon'hiS iviih his own
annelid hearings, thoie of the house of Ler
,rivirtt93apsbourg.' The estate of Johann's.
berg, so famous for a small quantity of excel-.
lent wine, which. it has now ceased to pro
duce, was a fief of the Austrian Empire,
which reverts tolhe 'Sovereign, on the failure
of male heirs of the NITTERDIOff line.
Prince was thrice married.
His first wife, whom he, espoused in 1794,
was niece of KANITZ, the - diplomatist,,-who
brought him forward: SIM had three dough-,
tars, and died in 1819. He tnarried . the Baro
ness Dx LIMAIVESILSTSIN in 1827. She sur
vived only two, years; leaving him a son, Baca.
ARA DR IlitD ; ST,Ettir*, now thirty 7 one yearn old,
who is Am b assador to Dresden, - Lastly, In
1931, he married the Oonnteis MELANIE DE
Zronr-Fianaars, who died in . 1854, -leaving
himino sous, P.yon and Lorisauta mi METTER
moiI.' Rio' first son, born In 1828, succeeds
Prince Marreastrow in his titles and estates.
The Personal Organ of the President.
The_New York Herald baying helm adopt
ed by Mr. BiTOHANAS as his organ, and being
rewarded constantly for Its adherence to all his
blunders, personal and Political. in the shape
of repeated recognitions 01 the abandoned
men_ who Surround tbatmost abandonedjournal,
has a right to feel—now it involved the
President in its toils—that it may proceed to
extend itself in the moat violent assaulte upon
the Democratic party, and in the most extra
vagant: assumptions of authority in regard to
the tration itself; The Herald in
dulges a natural hatred against the Democratic
party.. Its infamcius editor was driven
out of a DeMocratic journal in Pennsyl
vania nearly thirty years ago, for his treachery
to ANIMEW JAVICBOO/: . , and ever since he has
borne the bread upon his brow. That Mr.
Buonanam should have •selected him as his
,confidante and bosom friend, after being tra
duced in the Herald in the most. shameless
spirit of - TAORSON does not pervade the White
House at the present day.. Who, in review
ing the character of, Annaaw .Lkoscson, ex
pects to find that he would take to hie bosom
the man or the- men• who had invaded his
household and tradueed him in his nearest and
dearest domestic relations? Ard yet, jest such a
Slanderer is to-day the confidential organ, it not
the controlling counsellor, of jAltHe BUCHANAN.
As an evidence of the cool audacity of Ent
usrr, and of course of the President; we need
only print the .allegation in the Herald of-Yes
terday, that ex-Piesident Maims VAN Bram
suggested the ides of , tpo last great letter of
Senator Thimanas in regaid to the nominee of
the Charleston Convention ! •It only requires
that we should state that both the Vas Be
am, -father and son, eagerly supported Mr.
BUCHANAN'S Lecompton policy, and bitterly
opposed ,Tadgo Donorm's opposition to' that
policy, to show the infamy of this new fabrica
tion. The truth is, no one has courted the
VAN BuasNe more than Mr. 73tron4sas, and
none less than - ATISPENN A. ,Douaruts ; and
while we object thatldr. DOUGLAS should be
Made to bear the burden of the Van Btrauss
today, we do insist that Mr. BUCHANAN should
shoreline:lM regard to his allies of yesterday,
by Protecting them against the category in
which they are placed by his immediate or
gan, the New York Herald; for we think he
has no more desire to- parry the VAN Hunan!)
upon Ids back than the President hindself.
The Baltimore and Philadelphia Rail.
road.
The details of the sad railway accident
which took place about fifteen miles from
Baltimore, on Sunday evening last, will be
found in the columns of TUE rums of this
Morning. While we deplore the loos of
human life, candor compels us to say, that the
catastrophe itself must, In a great degree, be
attributed to carelessness on the part of
those who had charge of the train. At
the time the disaster ' took place the cars
were running fit the , rate of home thirty
miles an lour, and the engineer, and doubt
less all others immediately responsible, had
the horse on the track in view for some
minutes, inasmuch as the road lay stretched
in a straight line before them for more than a
mile. This, too, was in broad daylight, at
least two hours before sunset, the engine car
rying after it a living human Night Which
filled from five to seven cars. -We forbear
comments upon these circumstances,_ but we
cannot refrain the emphatic adraonitipn to
the! officers of the Baltimore and Philadel
phia Railroad, suggested' by • this catastro
phe. " Mr. FEWON, the President of this
road, • no doubt' does all in his power
to promote the comfort of the travelling
public, and we have confidence in hini, but
we know of no officer at the bead of any
railroad in this country who should enjoin
More care and fidelity on the part of his sub
ordinates than Mr. FM,OM. The low bridges
auras the Gunpowder and other Creeks south
of Revre:de-Grace are never traversed, save
with a shudder, by the bravest men. That
they are unsafe we are not willing to assert;
that they seem tobe most insecure must occur
to all who examine them in passing, or who
have • looked at them carefully afterwards.
imagine the result of a break-down on one
of these bridges. Carelessness in officials on
railroads is a high crime, that ought to be
punishable by the severest penalties of the tam ;
and while wo would not - add MO word that
would - wound the feelings of the family of Mr.
Otooon—the engineer whose life was lost on
Sunday; evening, in the accident which took
place on the railroad, near Baltimore—yet we
do presume to suggest to Mr. FELTON to profit
by the lesson Which this catastrophe so forci
bly teaches. ,
The Callowhill.street Tie:mei-41n
ProJect.,
We publish this morning a communication
from Hr. El, K. Heim, in which his project
for tunnelling Callowhill street is ably adve
cated,,and the, , financial question, involved in
the . .choice ,Delaware terminus by, the
Pennsylvania -Railroad elaborately-discussed.
It is evident that Mr. H. has fully considered
this whole, subject, and that he is abundantly
qualified to defend his great scheme fiohi all'
the attack that havo been made upon it. His
c'ommunisatien will donbtleas be carefully
read by all interested in the important qua;
tion it disci:Wes.
Paparta.—Wi are indebted to the
kind attention of oni — ndighboie, Meagre. Wolfe,
Fargo, k Co., for files of California papers to the
6th Jane, inolutive.
THE PRESS.-PHILADELFMA, TUESDAY, JUNE 2@, NM
Thei'Mut fit Italy.
The details of. the news hY the Bremen are,
full of Confirmation of the brilliancy and, com
pleteness of -the auccess - of the Allied arralee,,
and of the huMbled attitude whielfAlistria has ,
been forced to assume. The battle of
Na
gents has, proved a decisive,;One. It has
driven the Austrians hack upon their hiatori;;
cal square, and loft nearly all Lombardy in the
possession of the Allies.
Louis NAPOLEON and Vtoroa EMMANUEL, ht - •
entering lifilan, wore. apparently anxious ,toi
avoid all display and to escape any boisterous:
manifestation of popular feeling, but the . y are•
said to have received a spontaneous welcom4l
which has rarely or never been equalled in the,
intensity of its enthusiasm: The correspond ,
ont of the London Times, in describing it, says
the cc scone while the two Sovereigns actually
passed, it is impossible to describe. - Imagine
the madness of enthusiasm, the whole heart
of a people poured out before these, who had:
delivera from long-thraldom. Such may
havo been the reception of those demigods of
old, after killing some wild monster which
bad desolated the world. Not an eye re•
maned, tearless, and • proud must have been
the moment for both.' • brie: Stich -mOinerithi
almost sufficient to repay for all the cares,
sacrifices, and, risks,- without which a great
work like theirs cannot be accomplished p and
necessary, too, are such moments, for they
give strength for • new efforts. For the first
time I saw emotion pierce through that myste
rious and impenetrable countenance of the
Emperor—he would have been more than a
man had it been otherMee."
But,' although the = Austrians have- been
driven back into their fortresses, and haVe
even withdrawn their, troops from the States
of the ohnrOh, the present political 'position
of the Allies is, if possible, still more imposing
and more dangerous to Austria than their mili
tary position. On entering Milan, in the hour
of his proudest Victory, NAz.oratori hienutst
proclamation to the people of Italy, in whi*.
he disclaimed, with so mash apparent Esiu
cerity, all ambitious designs and ail 'schemes
for the aggrandizement of French territory,
that it can scarcely fail to set at rest the see
picions and fears of those who have appre.:
headed a second Napoleonic career of extend.
od conquest,
Russia stands firm in her determination ; to
keep Germany in check; the recent change of
ministry in England has again placed the firm
friend of Louis NAPOLEON, Lord PAutznarosa
in power ; and .Prnssia poreists in liar neutral
policy. Austria is, therefore, perfectly iso
latnd in the war, with no reliance for the reten
tion of her Italian provinces but her fortresses
and her beaten army, and with nearly all the
civilized World looking• on at the struggle,
ardently hoping that she may be driven from
the beautiful land that has .too long bee
,oursed by her tyranny.
BY MIDNIGHT MAIL.
Letter troittA4oeettetenitti"
(Oorreepondonos of I'b Press]
Ws9nrrdrox, Jnn 27 '1252
.
There is muoh disoussion herein relation tO -4 ,4iiit
celebrated Paraguay naval expedition. The state
menternade by the re ternad officers are really
lies. It would appear front thelifrink and sailor
like 'representations that there vetheli—known as
the" Cromwell " steamers—were entirely unfitted
foe the service. They were purchased atinormons
prices; they were repaired at' the various navel
atations, at the expense of the Government, absorb--
tog a large amount of the navy `aispropriatlon ;
and they were the butt and laughing 'stork, not
only of our own officers, but of the Brit3Sh and
'French Otters, who Swig their arrival at,- station
with' wonderment and surprise. "Are- DMA
American war-ships 2" said they--"lf' so t ' , your
Government is stupidotred year men breve tp cots:
sent to serve in snob caricatures of naval , areb*-
Mature. It is cruel and Inhuman to send gallat*
and true mon on such a SerSioe,in .81104
eels." There is a mystery, not only • about
the inception of the expedition to Paraguay, but
in its fitting out. The mystery Is greater when It
is understood that the vessels ware purchased, a,A,
intended, as they were for this service, from per- -
eons who are alleged to have, or have hid; intlineta.
business,,finanelal and' family assoolitloes - witlf
persons connected with the naval administration
of the GOvernment. To hide the inefileieneref
this shallop fieet, the names of which have heek
changed—for instance, the IL, , • '
won:Kr - 241moms, nun r
the list d these swiss are to 'be ImPoied 'ripen the
pest Navy Register ai so much of the strength Of
our navy ! The best officers and neon of the err.
Vice are subject to orders M 'them, and. to fever a
fraud, or the stupidity of those who imposed sucit
shallops upon the service, the noblest sailors. we
have may meet interim graves., _llls regarded:
as Whitten. En passant, these elx worthless
shallops are now, we are Informed, under survey
of navel lieutenants, each, of whom is an 'app.*,
cant for command of one Of them; one of whom,
I understand, is already` ordered, and each one;
they say, expects the Barris favor. The,neit Con;',
grass Will give this whole matter a thor4ixaklb•
vestigation.
It will turn out, I think, that Stephen A. Dosv
giro taltes'exaetly the same ground against the
letter of Geneial Osee, In regard to the proteetlon,
of naturalised ;Athens; that has been asentned„loy,
the liberal press throughout the country. .
The most serious *wris have been , preferred
against Mr. Isaac" took, the postmaster, at Ohl ,
cage, some of them Involving his personal integrity,
nod that of his clerks; but the President had re.,
solved not to investigate - or regard them, Inas
much as the removal of - Mr. Cook would give a
.sort of triumph to Stophatt A. Donglas:
The Demoorats of Now Jersey are ehortiy to-be
called upon, in State Convention; to approve
the Administration of the Federal Govern: -
it:tent. In' this - work, 'Mr. Buchanan mit
poets to have the aid of (tereModore Stock
ton. Ido not think be will be grati fi ed in -
this. ttommedvre Btoekten was no doubt greatly'
pleased to see his sou appointed minister to,Bomo r .
and a most delightful petition it Is—hut Diet be,
ihouid agree to the indoreetrient if an Admit:dem
Oen which he opposed co bitterly, I never-wilt fori.
a moment oredlt. Mark Commodore Stockton
will not, of course, attempt to, take, part "in , the
Bemooratlo organisation at New Jersey ; but whit
the Admlnlstiation expeeta is, that he should agree
to divide the Opposition, provided the Dernoorate
agree to support the policy of the President in
their State Convention, But, as strange things'
have conned in politics, this rosy - ho of them..
Coosa to,v.in.
better from New York.
NEW YORE'S FIRST QUIET STINDAY—PRINTERS ON
TIDE FOIIRTH, AND TRH FIFTIETH ANNIVHRS CRY
OF THE TYPOGRAPHICAL SOClETY—rtrscip Arygo.
- ' , Buller FOR A REGATTA—ENOEMOUS IMPORTS
' MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEARANOBB.
(Correspondence of 'no Press.] ~. . .
. NEW YouS, Joni 27, 3869.
-
At no ttate,nince ,the enactment ot:what le here
Alumnae the Sunday lace, hag the elty'beenho go /et ilk.
!twos yesterday. Throughout the city, and, espeeially
in localities where the more turbulent prirtiOn of the
people have been in the habit of gathering for *epic.-
pose of talking, drinking, and fighting,the grogieries
Were, with s c aroely VaCeption, Thiennu
null speared& ii attributable to the course which the
recently-appointed 'superintendent, Captain Pillsbuiy,
has announced it to be hie determination to pursue, on'
hie assureption of tho duties of general Superintend
eat of the Pollee on Friday, and of en Intimation to
'the different napalm' and margarines that a - decided de
neonstratioa in that dlreetion should be made, prelltd
eerily, yesterday. Captain Pillsbury, alto° his roosp ,
untie of the superintendency, hie been Visiting the re.
Vera station-hoard, and making himself acqoaiated
with their condition, and with the rpm? and men.
The popular Impression eseineko da fiat he will prove
the Most efficient and popular head the department hue
had.
The • printers, with s the yairinttem -that alweye
characterizes them, have resolved to celebrate the
Fourth in a manner not Only demanded Ly the amoola-
Mos of the day, but - with additiozial cevernonles, as
being the fiftieth anntveraary or the New-Toth Typo
graphical acciely, It le the oldest benevolent'hrgartiza.
tine of the craft in the country, and snit:steam, among
lie honorary members, many of the most ilistingnilitted
literary and ecientifie men of the 'country: A canine.
tent committee wee appointed to mature and report a
programme for the oolebration .
The Common Council have made en lune - ration upon
the usual public displays for which they have appro.
prlated money that meets with universal favor, and Is
destined to call into active play's, sonyee of diversion
'that Americans have too much' neglected. They have
'resolved tit', appropriate two Aundred dollars as a prise
for a grand regatta, to tele plsum off the Battery, un
der the Mrs/attar' of committee, The - Monett have
also determines/ to hone Bye thousand lichete of ads,
:minima to the tlity Halt, to see the flre.woi ke, sod to
have blade of Tousle lo the prominent Make and {subtle
grenade of the city: On the whole, the ally parentele
may be said to have done their ahem quite liberally for
a proper observance of !. the day wficelebrate " '
'The tomortsricMs tits far airing the month hare
bOOO large, almost *Mont precedent, and moat arca te
acme opprOleDatha to thi allude of the mote clinger.-
vote portion of the nommuultY, 'Vor the four week&
In Jana, 3.5871 the Importations amountell to $3,884,02;
3 11 , 11 , tub yeat, they amounted to $1,291,416 iothlle
'already In June, this year, the Importations foot up the
huge thus of $8,845,211, being nearly twice u mneh art
.1211831, and nearly three noon as much an in 1868
The query la, la the country so destitute of goods as to,
demand these enormous purchases front abroad? -
The Mysterious 4, taking off" ar pereone who h4e;
in one way and another, occupied Mime degree of onto.
rlety with the people, Is one of the noteworthy 'pesn:
Isaritles of Gime; boasted !I law•and.order" timers.
.cpi i s,
audden, tragic's' end of Mrs. Benny Deane Halsey ha s
again bean before the authorltles—this time before the
Grand Jury.. Store The serdlot of, the coroner's Jury
the /patriot Attorney has employed theca "officeris to sift
thq mystery that baa shrouded this istratiAs death, but
they ]use been unable to get any 'eine ithstirsr, and
the cue is consequently abandoned. - allude 'to it
simply from the somewhat prominent position the lady
occupied on the stage and to 1 . ? o oontott room.
I..*einitsylywa,ift Railroad 16.3mlinqs;
14'Or The Preas4 .
Mai. EOM ' S Recently, many communications
1;44* appeared in the newspapers directing the
, attentiorr of the Itttlaltt,te:tutrlotts localities, as
tieing bast adapted far thq terminus of the Penn-
Syllattia 'Railreed PA tide-water—the highway of
,
Acwoid. -
Moat of these communications have, doubtless,
emanated from parties interested in the eats of
certain properties.
- The beet article on the subjeet came from the
board .of directors to the stockholders ' and can be
'found in their,last annual report. This document
ought to be read by every one interested in the
prasperity'Of Philadelphia. It - sets forth:the de
sign and object of the terminus, whieh is, in sub
stance, to reclaim the cost of twenty-flue cents per
ten on the transportation and delivery of produce
to tide-water, and to • biomass and aloominedate
"the coal, lumber, and llve•stook buoineso upon the
'road, and ales to give two outlets to tide without
oestrlte Philadelphia,'giving the Option to use the
outlet hest adapted to, the wants of, our business
'men•
Should Market.street bridge burn down the
trade and travel of Philadelphia would be out off.
, --Wherever the terminus is finally boated, now
'is the time to secure ample space for traok, Ware
' horse and water-Teem to aooommodate It for the
next fifty years. -
The New , York and Erie Railroad have purchas
ed two hundred and twelve (212) acres at Jersey
city, besides their landings at Plermont;
The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad own sixty-feur
acres for their terminus in Baltimore ; and in my
estimation the Pennsylvania Railroad should now
secure notliss'than-fifty agree.
We learn. from the. last annual report Of the
Pennsylvania Railroad, that the tonnage for 1858
wee 1,137,189 tons. With proper accommodations
to mare the opal, lumber and-live-stock business,
the tonnage of the road would swell in a few years
to 2 000,000. A saving of 25 cents per ton in the
transportation and delivery of the same would
yield a handsome profit of a half a million of dol.
hire, less the interest of the coat of road and the
Improvements
This tonnage, uniformly distributed, would be
6,666 tons for 300 days; but as uniformity is out of
the question, provision must be made for at leest
' 10,000 tone per day, which would require 1,230
oars, musk thirty feet long, making together seven
miles of track for standing room alone.
, My object here is to show thatthe spans needed
to aoaom modate this immense business cannot pos
sibly be obtained In the public streets of Philadel
phia/ 'Nor can it be twoommodated In riNverto
under the streets, -
Every dollar unnecessarily expended operates
against the 'business of Philadelphia. Unless we
con cheapen transportation by this terminus, it
will be of little use, and a loss to the atookholders.
would suggest that as soon as the market houses
aro removed, the road be extended through Mar
ket street to the Delaware, with branches extend.
ed along the streets north and south, which could
,be done et a trifling coat. The second outlet to the
!Delaware shOuld he on the outskirts of the lower
tpart of the ally. , •
Mr. Ream estimates the omit of snob an outlet
t at two hundred and seventy thousand dollen,
'where .fifty acres of land' could be purohased for
one thousand dollars per acre. Books and ware-'
'houses could be constructed from time to time on
4; Boole to meet the wants of the road for the next
fifty years, and freights mould be distributed along
the whole oily front, by means of steam-tugs, giv
log despatoh, at a small cost, thereby dispensing
, witlEdreying the same through the streets.
New, let us examine Mr. Naria'a plan to culvert
:Oallo*hill street, and we will at once discover
that there, le , not room ,to sooommodate this
menial tattiness, to say nothing of the enormous
expense involved In the plan.
• Mr. Knertas 'sails the "bridge and culvert under
dallowhill street would cost $900,000 ; and fifty
cores of land on the .Delaware t at that point,
would coat at least 0100,000 per eon. (instead of
$l.OOO pe . r.ame, below the city ( ) making together
neatly sax millions of dollars; or, $.360;000 an-
Dually,. instead of $30,000. That this differer Oa of
8330,000 mad make a Serious discrimination
against 'the bnaittess of Philadelphia will be seen
at a glance. Indeed, the• difference of cost cod
ttapaolties to aooommodate the tattiness of the Pent -
sylvania Itailroad e between the , Oallowhilletreet
plan and the proposed - southern terminus, it ap
pears to me Is too apparent loamy candid Mind
to requirecomment, Putnaormonts,
Cape May.
Notwithstanding the marked snooess of Atlantis
City during the season of 1858, the long•established
faviMteverislde resort of our olthrens, Cape May,
wan as mush thronged as brilliant, and as highly
appreciated by its 'visitors during that year as
aver before; Prom present indioations, a similar
state of things will exist this season. Cape May,
to its giest natural advantages, adds theta of happy
associations, and WCi probably always (=anise te
be the favorite resort * of those to whose minds its
delightful haunts resell agreeable memories, and
who have suffselent leisure to safely enetah a week
,or two from the greedy Jaws of their olty eyries.'
lions. The hotels of Cape May, too, possess an
established reputation not without its charms, and
Oongren4 Hall, under the • experiermed and judi
cious oars of Mama. Wept St Thompson, is one of
the most agreeable establishments in the Union.
REAL EST ATE, UROUND HUTS, ItO THIII EV E.
,T 41,04.-1110111118 & Bons' este comprises upwards of
tblrtipropertiee, Including country seats, elegant
And plain oily residences, valuable business stands,
tßound rents, stooks, du. See advertisements and
.itanhlatuatal.•'4 as. .
OOTTA.OII TO LET TOR TUE BOWIE.
—Any of our readers wishing to retire to the
'country - for the next three months, without trou
ble, and every eonventenee, we would refer them
-tol.Gummey da Bone' advertisement, under
,
rho proper EOM
GROAT DECLINE IN THZ PRIOX OP BRIO CATTLE.
--Tho offerings at the several drove•yards pester
day Were very large, and a decline of one dollar
Per lundred pounds took place. The market
closed with a tendency to a further decline In
juices We Congratulate the pelillo on the very
fiattering prospect of an abundant supply of this
.highlydadiopeasable article of food at a lower
price than heretofore,
There are four million scholars and one bun•
_Arad and fifty thousand tomboys In the public
1st:tools of this country. Thera Is one scholar for
'every live free parsons. In Great Britain there is
one scholar to every eight persons ; in Prawn, one
to every ten persons.
The Galveston (Texas) News of Juno 14 con
tains a jubilant letter from a planter in Alkali
announolng his recent visit to a plantation
In Canton, In that State, 'whore ho found sixteen
rseently-Imported'Afrioans at work.
The ddest son of Dr. Baileyorho accompanied
hts father in his voyage to snrope, attributes the
death of his father to his having taken a severe
cold after embarking on the Arago.
It has become almost dangerous for ladies to
swear crinoline In the Streets of Munich, the mode
Nang considered a Freuch one, and the populace
being determined to extinguish, if not the French,
at least their fashions.
Importing slags seems to be a ruinous business
in more ways than ono. The Oxford (Miss.) Mer
cury says that three out of four imported Atlh
pans bought by planters in that vicinity have
died. •
theprospente,ot: an abundant wheat own In
the lireatern States ere most flattering, hut earn
has suffered a little from the pretreated drought.
THE PRIMROSE 'ls/ Pittsow.- 7 The eolitary
flower that raised its tinynotate prison. yard,
whore its loveliness met the delighted gaze of a
oondenined convict, has lent: inspiration to one of
the most magnllleentlights of eloquence that hu:
man tongue .tier uttered. And there is a flowery
namesake stow wasting' her sweetness in the Bast
ern Penitentiary—Lizzie Primrose—wheee name
and deeds have nerved to guide the leadlenolls of
numerous Indefatigables on more than ono 0 004.
sion, in dercriptions of the extensive depredations
of probably the greatest female thief that has
figured in our police annals for many years beak.
Lute Was sent last week to taste the sweets of
solitude for throe years; and so great hag been
Those •' charms." of which the poets slag, that she
tßeOlarra herself -to be chntpletely overpowered by
their iutimence In Abort, she is (4 insane," so she,
Imp, and wanto the f' good, ,hind Governor" to
'know it. Lisnie in an old band et the business,
and her ' , error of the moon" wilt be of little avail.
She eon Suet an soon oonalnoe Borne that the
is made of green cheese as that her airs
have deserted her.
1 AN TTNLQUAL CONTE/M.—An arm/Sing Mei
'dent ()courted while Van Amburgh's Menagerie
was eroasing the Appomattox, a short ditaanee
above the Poeabontes bridge, strikingly illustra
tive of the Stutz that the bull dog is the most coura
geous of ail, animals, and will attack any °nature,
; regardless of gigs. As the elephant entered the
>water with his usual slow and maims step, some
;individual in the crowd, prompted by a spirit of
lunging into the water, seised hold of one of the
Ind legs of , the elephaist,od which the latter only
Witched him wittt his tail, as htswould brush MT a
y, but not ridding himself of his assailant by such
antis means, and . fooling sharp teeth at work
yen hie leg, he suddenly threw his snout around,
nd seizing the dog, held him under the water
mill he was nearly drowned ; then, raising hint
ighla thenir, Area!' him at least a hundred feet
us into the stream. Fully atittsffed with the pun•
ahment he had received, the dog made his way to
Axe, and beat a hasty retreat.
. _
$ , ,
! A PAR ILLET..—Tho Paris correspondent of
Ike London Globe writes: At the last struggle
iibetween Austria and ' ranee , half a °eatery ego,
he names of the (17 alma's perNonfe, who perform
a on the Earapean ,hearde, telly, eg nrendertally
th the rorptilroinugiquidisplayed to public, view t
hen the ratriain Jona again on the revival of the
' roe play Ws hionth, - 1859, that the bill of the
4tertainteent needs no alteration :
Drain. p,rs, 1810, Dram. pers 0869.
lex wider I, Mar, Alex Linder 11.
,d, war. I. 1114 of Meals, Fred. Wm. 11.
a I Kaiser, Franz Jon. 11.
l
'ug VI, Pope, Pius IX,
*parent, I, Rrotagoalats, • Napoleon 111. '
V..•• Emmanuel I, ilawcwand, Viet Emmanuel.
hrriinand I lasseronet' : Ilerdlueod II
Mge IV, that gentleman In (}l7l O, 6Y, eating at
? a " Pe . • rivatyietoria
' hiPIIESSED,—Mr. AlltOtlio 09.11810, a Via -
Mown fruiterer of Charleston, who recently sent
3bales of cotton to Genoa, by the hark Holland'
0 1 bait been impressed into, the B m
ardinien a)",
t 2
w Ile In Genoa on business connected with his
el !potent. A rumor to the above effect has been.
ptovolent in this city for several weeks
v, _ , Charies
t.* (S. C ) liferair
~, .
iViriivr is AL radar, Tonna 'P—The following
ails the provhdons of the United States Vey pre
soithing a "legal tender": Gold coins and silver
&Main for all earns; half dollars and smallerallver
Goths for saute notever fire dollars and three-rent
pilicts for some not over thirty seats. No provl;
den Is made for omits, vitioh may therefore be re
futed.
•
TH. E LATEST NEW Further ,Newuirom Mexico,
BY TELEGRAPH. 1
13y the Steamship Tennessee at New
Orleans..
ONE DAY LAVER FROM EUROPE.
THE NOVA SCOTIAN AT FARTHER POINT
FURTHER FROM THE SEAT OF WAR
THE AUSTRIANS IN FULL RETREAT.
AIODENA EVACUATED.
The Emperor of Austria to• Assume
Command-in.Chier,
A New- Position ier ins Army Ordered.
REINFORCEMENTS LEAVING FRANCE
Garlbaidi's Deeds of Valor Recognised by the
King of sardinli. -
Napoleon's Headquarters at Gorgozof•
THE NEW BRITISH CABINET:
CONSOLS 931a93i
below 9CleinO, Sono 27.► The
steamship Nova &titian pasied this point; bound
for geebes, at halt past four p'elook thisifternoon.
She left Liverpool on 'tho 15th Inst., and fur
nieheti one day's later advises than the steamer
Bremen.
The steamer North American arrived at Mier
pool on the 34th inst.- The steamer Oily of •Beiti
more arrived at Queenstown, also on the 14th.
GREAT BRITAIN.,
Lord Palmerston was making good progress in
the formation of his Critinet. An authentic list
of its members was expeoted to be made public on
the day of the waling of the Nova Sootian. ,
Rumor gives Lord Elgin the Colonial Secreta
ryship; Richard Cobden the Board Of Trade,
and Mr. Gladstone the Indian Secretaryship...
; THE SEAT OF WAR.
A despatah from• Turin eays-that, after Mille
treat of the Austrians.frora Bologna, the Cardinal
Legate departed; and the municipality proclaimed
King Viotor Emmanuel dietator.
The King of Sardinia had lamed an order ,of
the day extolling Garibaldi's' deeds of valor, and
awarding him a gold medal of military order.
On the 12th instant Napoleon Moved his head.
quarters to Bergeson.
The Austrians were evacuating Modena:, and
were in full retreat towards the river Ogito.
An official announcement appears in the Weiner
Zeitung, that the Emperor of Austria will forth
with 81313111114 the immediate command.in•ohlef of
his army. and turd ordered a new position for the
army, which will , be taken up in the best man.
ner.
An order had,been issued for the mobilisation of
the Prussian army.
Large reinforcements to the Allied army Were
about to leave•-Prance.
The Latest.
tny telegraph from London to Liverpool.) -
Loin" June 15 —The Daily 2Verias says' that
no authorized statement of the competition of the
new Government can possibly appear before Fri.
day.
The Herald of this morning, in publishinga
telegram front Berlin, stating that , alx Pruesian
corps d'armie have been mobilised, says: "Of
source this means war. The advent of , Lord
Palmerston's Ministry has evidently , induced her
to take this decisive step, and join Austria. The
.Boglish people will now pereelve the truth of wbat
we before asserted, that the Earl - of Derby'e Go.
verement alone preserved Europe from being in
volved in a general war.!'
The 'Advertsser says that after Lord John Arm.
sell accepted the Foreign °Magian) , °Moae might
prefer was offered to ihr James Graham, who de
clined from infirm health, but at the same time
assuring Lord Palmerston that he cordially sup.
orted the Ministry.
Pants, Tuesday night, Jane 14.—0 n the 12th
the Emperor removed his headquarters to Ger.
goroli. In the afternoon he auperintended the
throwing of bridges across the, river Adds. As
soon as this :was completed, the army began the
movement which was completed yesterday. After
some heavy rains, the weather Is again fine,'lnd
the troops are in Hue spirits.
Lofton, June 16 - 4 .--The London 'Arms' City Arti
r ale says that the funds received a fresh' Impulse,
owing to the progress made in the construction of
the Ministry, and the increased hope that the war
in Italy will not be of long duration. -
The Tames' City Artiste says that the program
towards tile formation of the Ministry had a good
effect on Console, which opened buoyant, • This
led to realisations by speculators and the publio
and a reaction• took- plane, but the closing-prices
were above those of yesterday.
Vorelgn
,Cotinckercial Intelligence.
LITIHIPOOI, COTTON MARRET, Jine 14.—Cotton
lo Moor of sato, but the prices are unaltered. and the
market dosed quiet. Toe - sales of three days toot op
19 000 bales, Needing 8,0130 bales to exporters, and
1,000 bales to soeMtlators:
NTATB OP THIN TR&D.E.—The Manchester deices
continue tkaorable. A batter demand for all kinds I f
goods bu sprung up, but It has had ne enact on the
prteee.
LiVzsPoor, BARADSTUTP3 MARKET.—Mesne.
Ptchardeoudt. Speuee's circular reports Pious very dull,
and deelited Seed. American Is quoted at 10e Adolat
ed, but !lode no buyers. Witeat le dull, and Las oleo de.
ell ' U tli s tfial; ficilfErnit"firt
orn cloud very dull, with a slight decline on all qatali.
ties.. Mitred is quoted at Scale 4d ; yellow at 81 admits
'Oa, and white at Sags 4d.
LIVERPOOL PROVISION MARKET —The Wan
-lore report the Provisions generally dull; but with
steady ;ideas. Beef dull, but steady. Pork do. Lied
dull. Tallow qolet Flacon quiet:
LIVERPOOL PRODUCE Id ARKET.—Rcnn dull, at
45 for common. Sugar firm. Turpentine Spirite ateady s
at 42e Atha—Potts dull, at tide ; Pearls also dull, at
40add sale. Oils—Sales unimportant
LONDON MARREPB -7Tallow is quoted at $45.
Linseed Ott, %MI. •
LONDON; Junto 14 ...Consols eluded today at 93Xis
93% for arttounts,
AMERICAN B'POORI4—The latest sale% at Illinois
Central 8e11ve1d,48,4 retit diecbunt ; Minot, Central
Is (Freeland's), SON Saild ; New York Central Railroad,
68867; Erie Railroad stock, bbl; Penneylvania Oen.
trai Railroad, that mortgage, Damn.
Accident on 'the liaitintore Railroad
Engineer Killed.
BALTInOaI6, Tuna 27 —The train that. left this olty
on &today afternoon for philadelphlo was thrown
from the track at Obare'a Station, about fifteen roller
distant. R. R. M. °lough, the engineer, was killed,
and a man, whose name is not known, leaned from the
train and had his arm crushed, rendering amputation
'necessary. The eagloe, mall and baggage oar, were
thrown from the track and much damned The train
wee delayed about nix hours. Fortunately, none or the
pesseogers were inlayed.
PURTEM PARTTOGI4.BB
Sayan-nu Gluon June' 21 —.The passenger train
from Baltimore, due here at twenty minutes of seven
weeds, last evening; eras detained by running over a
hams at Obsab's Station, thirteen Mlles from Baltimore
The ergioe was thrown down an 'embankment, killing
the engineer Mr. Olongh, and seriously injuring Mr
Whiteford, who was Olin on the engine at the time.
The passengers all escaped unhurt, /4 did the fireman,
who jumped MT. The tender wee thrown on top the
engine, and both are otasiderably damaged. ' •
ii7:ll W.
CEIMEEZEM3
-•• • .
In addition to the abore, we have learned further
particulars et the office of the company, le this
The name of tin! engineer who was killed Is It It.
Oloaph. was unmarried and resided in lialtimore.
tie was originally from New England.. Ildr. Whiteford
bad an arm broken, Ha had fottpegkr been im the em•
ploy of tbs eorupany, end be wee allowed the privilege
of riding upon the engine. The many to the train wag
Caused kr Its being necessary to send beak to Baltimore
to procure another engine
The Contemplated Filibuster Descent
on -Nicaragua.
wAsatetreox, dune V.—lnformation bast been re=
oohed nom a lemma regarded ►a thoroughly reliable,
diving the pattioutars of the contemplated alibi:utter
desostit on Nitwit/us. The cameo of pertain partial who
sustain °austral Walker with arms ardt mealy are gicca
—the enjoyment of the beneilta of the Trianon route to
noropeneate, lu part, for the expeneee tbut'inettrred.
It fa stated that the expedition will atilt about the
middle of August; that a party of ellbnaters wilt ran - .
deavona In Florida, and be conveyed to Centred Awe.
yea in the geottlah
Wbe•ber or not this information la strictly true, Ms
certain that MU' Government will endeavor to - arreit ell
mob illegal ent4rprfeee, the order to our vent ♦smote
ler this purpose • Ikeretotors issued, befog gni In tall
MOD.
General 'Tares, before he left for NM:ingot, wak tally
informed of the allbnatering movement.
From Washington.
W01131N02014, *Tema 27.—The board contemplated by
the former w dere of the War Department, to be con
vened for the examination ot non•oommlaeloned officers
recommended for promotion, will be composed er the
toHector of teetice, the protoadoe of mathemetios, and;
the professor ot ethics et . the Mllttsryy ASadelx*, abd
Will meet he West Point on' the Brat Monday In dep.
timber isausity.
• Inflated men Telling with the Iroons will not here.
rater be allowed a commutation of rations.
Captain Maoism Bas been ordered to the command of
the sloop °Verity CenstellatlOn, the flag ship or the
African squadron, in plane of Captain Wilson, who has
been condemned so sick. '
General Lamar intended to return to the United
Rates in the steamship Moses Taylor, but he was do •
talned In Central America by the unexpected reeeption
cf despatehea Irma the Mate Department.
Another Revolution in Sonora.
ST. Louis, June 21.—The California overland mall
which lett Ban franolsoo on the 81 inst., hal e d
here
The Arkcal torrespocdent or the Republican Faye
that soother revolution boo broken out In booora The
Arleta Indl►ne have t►ten the geld in fever or Oend►•
re or the Church party
The revolut,ohlats tied captured several large tewns,
add were daily recet►ing additloos to their unmbera•
'Yen/ York Bank Statement. '
NEW Yore, June 27.—The bank etateinent for the
week ending on Hattailay chows:
A decrease In loans
4 decrease In elrenlntion
A decrease In 'polo
A denim° in net depaelts
Later from Havana.
Bay inNen, June 21 —Tbe steamship Isabel ban at
rived from Hamma with later Wow
HAVANA COAfMAAOIAI INYALLIOAAOH --sugarM AM
quiet, and uochelled in prowl. Moliumes le dull end
ncint 1 . Brolgbie are inective. katiminge On Nei,
York 17,m5 par cent premium ; on New Orleans eh tv
6„t 1 ; per eta premium.
Exhibition of Eirietvoithfi on thinket
Hill—Fatal Result,
Boston, Juno V.—At so exhibit:ea of firework, on
Banker 11111, at Charlestown on Ballade} , evening, one
of the rpeotatare, litre. Oliver Fret, wee struck by e
rooket•suok, and fatally irjured.
The Havre Cotton and other hinritets.
new Yoae, June 27 —pet steam:46lp jarernen.)—
Uwe, June 13 —The Cotton market bas an advanothg
teadeory. The /glee of the week amount to la 000 bales
at 101 f for Weeds bee. Wee la dell. Brae:Made are
deolin,n.
The Second Congressional District of
Louisiana.
- • • • • •
Saw Chamois, ,Ituse —All lea Taylor was on Saint ,
day ; nominated for Oongreee in the Boma dietriot, by
the anti-8114th Democrats
Non. Arrival ut•the Arabia.
SiOaVILLE, N. 8., Tuve from Hall.
!as,. up to 8 O'clook this aveutug, states that thy ex.
intoted ateamehtp Arabia wee not to sight.
Markets by Telegraph.
BdLTIMOaa ,Ittue 27 —Flour Id Oodl/dal, Id $6.75 for
Hazard street Wheal is dull at $1 11001.20. Corn le
Inlyroying p yellow, 80d; "bite 40bTBd. , Ptoeteloult
ere quiet; dldee, 93( 0 Lord, 11X®120. Whiskey 1$
Mal aid uwahingo4.
Befiure of thi:Oonducb% by Robles
thielahtnent etEttglhh inbjects front the
Cepttel.
New daisies, June 27 —The steamer Tennessee has
arrived up. Her mails and papera tarnish the following
additional path:afro's :
The oondtzota of five-millions, which was seised by
Robles, arrived at Jalapa on the 10th, where it was de
tained for a week trluener4 Boltdea for exensmattau.
It started math On the Idth noder Robles' permit ;-bat
when near the National , Bridge.Sobles,evertpon,the.
condneia and, ordered its return to Jalapa by the order
of Aliritmon Those in ,charge of tbereondtiotit Termed
to comply witlithis demasa,whete noble's ordered it to
be shipped aboard a British - war vessel, Which was then
off &inflator a The British commander' retested to re
ceive it, notWitbatanding the orders of the Itrenoh arid
British min,laters,
ENMG=
Blirctoon hid collected half a million dollexc In dutlec
on the co'adnols. : ' • - •
• • .
General Degollado irde pt Vela Oruz,
AU Brltiala 80004 had been Notalted from tie °apt
tal, their minister; Ili Otero, aohafasolog to the eider
EWA Tames, a servant girl, about eighteen
yearPnld, in' the service_ of, Mies „Warren,, of le
Roy, ft Y., _having been convioted of theft and
pardoned on iondition that ate eftertiden no more,
rewardetther'eruployert'who bad thrurendeivered
Weave her from the sonsequenctee of her crime,.
•by poisoning. the ten which she susPesell.tie-r.494 ,-
tress would drink Pie breakfait: The pawn wee
fortunately,dhtovered in time to prevent fate
consequences.
- .
Twa Ihttrth• reviler commencement -- of-
HavertadVoltege, Pa,, will take place on the I3ch
of July next, the exercises beginning . at 9 o'clock
A. M. The Alumni Association wilt hold ire re:
saint busineee meeting at 4 P. M , Of the previous
day, and the annual aadrees.willbe delivered before
it, at P. M., by Oherleellaber, of New Bedford,
Mete.
Ammo the fire-,Works to be ,let , oir In Buf
falo, New York, on the Fourth, is one which will
represent a broad expanse of crinoline/When
first illuminated-it will be spangled with dia
monds, and glorious in flounces; a little later the
decorations will disappear, and the skeleton will
1 9 1 , Pbar. in its gigarg PrePtlttOrd.
FINA.NCLA.L AND COMMERCIAL
Then itioney;Markei. •
iyipt.AD!ApETA, .I . t .. t.ns 21, 1869
Neither the era market nor the money tzarist Wee
aileoted by tha arrival or fresh *bloom from liorope and
California, unless St might be that time wee a trifle I
more mote in the money ITliiketonidir itteinluis of
so %Onion of two milhone or gold to the stook on baud.
Refintylweollitalltold elfarea flnoluatod; 'between au%
and 39%i Heading paltroul dea l atorel, at the Bret
board, at 21k; and Lehigh Nailiationi at 48k,, tut both
afterwards fell off M and Girard Beak stook was' not
`very buoyant-at 46 -Between boards, 100 Amos of
'union Canal stook sold'af2. The Market was doll with
out say dleptinitfon to make Well by goatee - melons 4
pile°.
BANK ATATIMANT.
wesictr ANIIILONSOjiIfi iiffEff
501019, -
- Bangs„
Jane 20 Jane 21. Jane 20 June 27.
$8,452,000 82,890.000 son WO 8809,503
North America. 2.848,746 2 877.461 669,889 644 2 2 9
Harm & 3 845 899 3 821.811 948 17s 824,284
CounnerolaL... 1,607, 1,682:400 1814,004 499,0 5 0
kleoltauics'..... 1.195,652 1,789 088 211,688 239.54
N. Liberties.-„ 1,428.900
,1,848 000 511,000 . 240,000
Bouthwark..... 929:810 198,180 246.976 '226,880
Kensington.... 810,877 810,733 170;955 162 /02
penn Townshp. 884, 888 876 177,013 ' 162 257 ,
Western 1,819,989 1,350,148, 381,462 278,717
Mao. & Idech 1,200.975 ;1,137,915 114,66, 102,896
Commerce 829,680 .037.914 1743,08 208-662
Girard......... 2,0+4,768 2 972,007 • 205,138,9 310.257
sradesmen l a 640,253 642 442 199,208 196,997
Consolsdation_ 614 6116 603 184 78 764 74 478
City ....... . 859,188 • 854-Ase .4 . 11 297 , 109 761
Uommonwialth 861 87 855401 '50.151 86,586
Corn Niebange 870,81 , 880 022 61,185 88,14 n
Uni0n..........867,176 862,148 74,764 66,924
Total,- --
1 6 716 216 25 , 408,842'6,801.181 6,086,847
, - ' Dirro6l7B , ' olsotn,knoti7 ,
' - ' Jane 20 - June 27. .Itine 20' June 27."
-.-
41,586,41 , 3951,480, 8288,004 $ 285 000
North Amerlsa. 1,586,6021 1,610 3 7 8 289 286 247,4 3
germ & 21eo11. 2,767.920, 8 407186 386 266 376,936
Commercial ... 860,0001 609,03 180,005 160 000
Mechanics , 999,1381 . ' 973 368 182 080 - 167,210
N. Liberties ... 1,865,0001 1,010, 107.000 98 060
Southwark 680 90,3{ 617,48 00.886 PO 500
Kensington.... • 503 911 1 .: 548,839: 129,440 128,860
Penn Township 648,8001 019,822 119.266 101,830
Western... 1,012.423 i 948.6 1 , 116.705 120990
Man & ANA/ 606 0.511; 661.82 1 183,488 142 ,
010
Commerce „,482,9974 520,128 79,560 78,990
Girard 847 8281 908,259 190.971 178,090
Tradeemsora - 608,8741 ~ 6 69,791 • 704,082 - 101. 4- so
'Consolidation.. 287,611 t SoLaso 80 1/73
Ott, ,411.946 t 421,768 -109,100 198 669,
Codurnonwealth 222 . 467 V 209.237 106,778 .104 325-
'0994 Ni6bet:lp 242.971 241,7041 101,100 104 660-
Union ..... 227,781 218:1601' 72 050 = 71,883
- ----- --
Total 16i706,980,16,114.26914,836 648 (2 729 953
,!she bartY statement for ill's, week shows a tsodso7 e
luereaSs Of deposits,' 'iod a tarsi' -, deereass loiris,
The speeM falls oil nearly a qutrterof a.million of dol
lars, coming down rattler deltoid 11141114ea15. , ,
. .
c 4.ll4.ly,sp3qlc,a_i_iie compare with printout oaccias,fit .
..- ---'‘ ' --- lone 20. f• Jares 21. - 1 r..r.','';.
Capital Stock— —511.595,101. $ll 13(17,058.-Itio:$11-151
Loara , 25,715,2f6 : 25,400,842.1)a. 809361
Specie - ' - . ',5,t01,10T. ' te,066, 1 347.31.:2118241
Dim fm other bka. 1 ale 3911',, •1 644 09T—De. 42 l'ol
stte to other M., - 3,399,068 , 2549516 .De: 150 111
Deposita' 15.156.980 15,111,259..1a. 402/39
,Oiroelatlon 2,635,648 - 2 729 953 ,De. - 105,505
_The followieg iitatemeht thowirthii condition of the
taupe of t Philadelphia, at cations kiddie - Ando goieia '
pat; 186 T:
1857.
Loans— Spade,- tsis;Depostta.
Nov 4 ..•.91,/09,482, 2,071,4_64 9,141,118 15,635,783
1854.
Jul. U.... 21,302374. 3,170;701 1,511 038 11.465 253
7nly 5 ...24 851 923 ' 636 877- 2 434 151 16,8156.843
1869
Tau 3.-28,451 057 6 068;858'<2,141,11T 010 005
VEAL 7.-28,472909, 6,079 433 2486 453. 17,001.161
Mitch 7—.26,719 883 , 8.926,714 , 2,001 337 '18,374,888
28—.16,987,420 8;298,298 3 059,265 17,076 080.
1.9,11 ..*.91,531.64,1-._ 6.888 068 '3;420,196 '11,154;119
11...27,884 888 0,144,208 8,580.447 11,002998
78...28,108,100 6,404378 804,531. 17,829,491
25 21,811 918 8 889,591 - , 8,179,236" 17,804,512
May, 2 ... 29,747,839 6,880,813 3,0,1 102..11;181,219
9 .. .27,693 498 '8949 890 - 8,159,745 1.1.444.128
....27.435 288 8.288,620, 3,090,007 37,608.264
23.-16,837,976 5 922,147 '8,014 659 17,182 349
30....28,408458 6,621,7E9 2,975 930, 15454 66/
Juno 6 —.25.177,875 5,40,687 .2,192,198 10 580 995
18—.25,920 993 6,521;188' - 2,918 426 16,003 149
10....25,715.116 6.101,107 8,535,048, 15 706 030
25,400,843 9,006,847 2,729)953 26, 7 14 2E9
The following Is a statement of the business at the
Philadelphia pleating Rouse for the week ending
Batiffany. :linen, 1859:
Total $111,628,061 16 $1 261,663 01
, Imlayloktiellis Bank-kotio kepotter for Yitly
lit is leaned, wlth the usual variety of oontloto.
Peterson's Co brnieifeit Drierfor for - July let Is Issued
today, and bears out the boast a the publisher that It
is the largest, fullest, and mist complete detector In
the world. Within a month seeenty.three new coos,
terfalte have been put In circulation, and are described
in thtnnumbnr. The butinciapf contiterfelting resists
to taint a fascination over all who once become en
gaged In lie wrong pursuit, far tint 'of proportion to
the possible Freels to lie meowed, from it Al l who en
ter upon it eetsolo ad here to It till death,'and their
Sturobera and their !raw:m.lly are very much underrated
391thrut the aid of the 'Counterfeit Deteetir the
whole trading ceinninalty, would be almost entirely at
their mercy, arida° one Is , Insfefrowtheir d•aigne who
does not keep himself posted up as to their operatlone,
by seeming the
. send•rnonibly repent furnished by T.
B Peterson Brothers, under the superrislon of the
tvail•kiown backlog houserit Dekel d Co'
We publish in soother part of to-day's paper a letter
from Air. Roane, relative to his magnificent plan for
extending the Penney!venni Railroad to the Delaware
river, through a tanned under Callowhill street. We In
vite our readdra to give Phis communioation a asvicul and
thoughtful perusal. Mr. Houle takes the right ground
when he assumes tbstelt penis.concede his plan to be
the znost feasible .2,4 proper °cooed that : the men ohleo.
tion to its adoption in argument of its opponents I.
Its coat. The meaner In which he Meioses of this ein
gle
objection Is In keeplovlejth.the ability be has Oa
played in the conception and Ilaietratioa of hie great
plea.
The 'president of tie igen FraneMod Board of Trade
In lain annual report, says:
" It le gratifying to Observe an inerassing dlsreltion
to submit commeroial dispute,' to the arbitration of the
Obamber. Various important cases have been tuns
decided, and - although In -Come instances the arroyos
have not been characterised by the same legal acumen
as Migb have been displayed by a coact of law, after
thorough ventilation of ihnosuse by learned counsel,
yet substantial jostle* has bean tailored in a manner
more speedy an& economical, oe well as more sallefae
tory, (in moetosses,) than could have been attained by
b teems. ta'fitottanted littgatioo ."
The Bin Trarielmao liglittin or Jane 6, says :
'tt.The deroareil for funds to *title and the hmounker
feting to quite limited. There is more than the Meet
reenirement, owing to the fact that a good teeny engage
ments, bated on the ttansactlons of several weeks past,
have fully matured, end mush be met this eteenter.
Meanwhile Interior colleetlona have scarcely been tip'ict
expeotation: Freight liebilitlee for the fortnight have
aleo,been large, There to also a dispoaltion on the tart
or those teho control foreign espital to withhold the
equal amount of accommodation, and to call In as much
as possible of funds airea'ty out, the ostensible part me
being the Investment of such funds in foreign ercuritlee,
owing to the great decline which hae recently marred
abroad. It Is thought that Icr one or tau lawmen sue
reeding the present, the amount withdrawn win be Co
large that very little floating foreign capital will be
left to the country, All the eircurnstancee hare con
spired to produce en exteedingly strlogent money mar
ket, sod render it difficult to procure accommooatiora
on the' most undoobted securities, not excepting Mint
'certificates of depoeit. Very little money will he ob.
tamed for this steamer under sg per c.nt, even trader
the guaranty of the moat anoneationaWeamnaters4
though the range may be taken at 2m2) per cent. on
sod 14 eth on real vitae !oedema rit es tt
freight on tressu,e, and low exchange, inlishowever,
Waco parties to WI, to the extent' of - their ability, 'en
event, it we are eighty . Informed, which will prove
high y gratifying to certain parties at the Sant engaged
in the Ualtfornia trade:.
$55,000
.... 05,000
.... 1,452 GOO
1,998,000
The operations in the totted States Brandt Mint, at
Ball FlO4lOlBOO, Owing May, are as follows :
Gold bunion, groaa weiDgltZ.7o7o.
dotakag.
....$1,020 000 00
20 OLO 00
Gold—Doable Rpgles
Quarter /Gaeta
Sneer—Dollars
nail' Dollars
Quarter Dollars...
11 Nine DUI,
Total cathage and bard
A watement Laving gained currency that the omit.
Vona of,the Mint would probably be suspended on the
/6thlnst for *out of the necessary adds, it my be
proper toetate that that contingency le not to he 4-
prehotOted, sines the present supply is equal to twenty
days , operation, end a large consignment of nitrate of
soda, 100 tons, the mate/141 needed, 011Z134 to band
yesterday by the Nelson, from Valparaiso., There la
81 1 0 mother cargo, that of tAe Atthistat, aboit
. PIILLALIMPULA. -NTINNI-EZ011.6.19871 141.9 K, •
, , , - ,... ,... „ _ .
SEPOITED sr umirt.aso#3.& 00.,iiirk-ii*ViCeio,6i,
AND .incoaattoS Dioxin, sokelzwear Voluen 40/00
AND 01913 . 711117! alliesre. ~ =
• - - Atlltift'BOLKll: '- • ' s ' :
"—'-
1000 Olty 64 - 08% - 9 511ne , 1 doelp,2 dye 1071
500 do KHO 0&P.,96)4 ,28 - dot 24p 1a..%
aoo do ....0 & I.; 06% 25 - Aeirefirg It 2f%
WO '44•7413,-,' ' - 1 36.14 : . 30 do ...:.c.r. - 4.,:"... 213(
1450 =. do New 2 oar_100)* .60 •do - - --- -• 21,K
140 /4m &Am -se 'IA $0 ~ 60 - eo ~.....2dye__2ll‘,._,
1020 OeVilet:,,,reti 7i.. 699', ',
60 ',-' do - 2 4. 21 .6 C
106'0 4 N paanit a: vs.,: 64% 100 ' ' do' " • 2474 25% -
000 rdo ... 883 4 100 , - 'do • ' - 2dye 21.3 c =
~:600 Iladrs 04.'110.8 65% 30 Norrlstowo.B. ... 50%
112 J enns,B .8091 .1 . ..do _, en
66 60 .:111 lots"B9X
.24 %AU et 11. nor a 21
,10 IKlnehill &rip.. 1713 ff ."641tokontes , 'Bk... II '
:100 .do • " , 13)81, - Y-,4 , -;..... , :- - = -
• - .7/0W2 666 4 = St6&113)111 - -. .- •• '. --
4000 Oa/v.4.10 2070 40 . 1 201 kUolca' 01 ' - . 2
/0 °treed .131c..oasb. - 46 120 - Lehigh. Nay ' 45V
--. ,
• 8/1100N6'BOASD. -•'' -..= -,"-. "• - •..
I
2700 Penvosl -- 94 "' 10 Poon4.ll. ! ,fritOti9x.
16 aa'cl!ty 6s stw cecr 1009( I du
,-.. ;.-------
---- - -g4 , .
500 .dO ' iol. e 101% 29 etioile'Cl P,1t.115',10
~ 800 ' do - ..; ..,.. ok.t. - 26% -40 OlmadVA. - ,........ - 46 -
1060 'CAN let mt 7e - .'50 30 Lehigh Nov " , 48' -
1000 do - 60 - 7 do ... ~.• :.',,.., 48 '....,
; 200 Loidpit Nsy 6e.. 94% 10 Deo Me* *..i.l&P 68%
4100 Lehigh Mfg 64 :. 98 '5 do IMP 88ji
1000 F.'s /st m 74.45w4 70 21 "do ' ' "C& P aog
2000 Fah Nov Imp 64-,76 ri m status B' 6
. ,- „ 05.982146 PKIONS-1514T/911, - -.. ' • -
Bed. Asked,. 'llO4. 131.4. .
Plats 041 n off ... 88% 9734" SatilNev Moak. 8„ 9
--•“
-" it _96X 91K - ft Prof 17.11 18 '
."
66 „ ew/a . 09100X10t., Watson &Sao 11 - •., - 4'
Reale 6,1 ' =-95% 943 e - ' 0 fi let Wt.: 70 , • '
,Italians B 28 - -013,4 0 2d. - ---,- ii
• a b1e , 70; - ' 80% 81 . Loogleteeel.B..i 1 0X1 0 %
''. 41- • sus es ' .4 . 4 92 ".. ' telt Coil & Nay: - 48 "4134 - -
? 1 4, do 'B6 78 I Pena& It 'a% 8,86
Penns It . . Box ii% -"-8 -•,....: 60,ig eig
. "8d ra 68:. - .'..""87' ' ' 88' 1 -,, 10.1 '' " "82 90
•Idor 0611.41 cm. asg 56 iattawhen 8...
. a 4j( a
- 0 prey 16834109 J ; F6 - .l4rtmt Mo. 60 _
Bahl Nay tie 'B2 69 00 ,
69311 vrantece.oBBth St, 60 .
.. Imp de 76 77., ill& 8d fits K.,.. , 40K 43
- . , ,.-
Joan OT—Zreulng,
Theie ie vorylitkleinquirl_ for,Ylour, and the Mar
ket cootinuta dull and unsettled—holders gerlaraui
being very anxlorre ae/lera. - The only sales we hear of
me about 2,009 Istole Western extra at. a pion kept pro ;
Tate ; strindard 'superfine lioffered 56.62,ga1l 75; flit;
latter for good utralght.brands,-,withotit fintildtbuyers,
sand the safeassreon . filti• tire' A17'1381..141 front these
prices up to $7 10 ktr . bbl for superfine extras and fancy
braids, ea ID quality. Rya Slone a nd Corn Meal are
not fr oirodfor, sad rro ttoto,:noto6slig ad 5410 for
the former; and rya eix et rito tad. 0:4 7
Wheat—There is not math utructus; salsa tuolude abo ut
1,200 bus in Ida anBoelBsci for pritiierrirdi; sad Iffim
:1770 for while: Bye fa Ault, and Oiling Tn a smell way
`only at 005...%C10rn te , heavy ; =l;2oo'brie light Southern
-yellow Bold on Saturday evening at'S„lo,'„ - ind ;ben
boo Penn'ant Elc,' - and'i;6llo bufnaiisAf "sit
Cate are also dall i 'with 'sales ea.ooo bus prime _Penn
at 470 in store. IlankWheii—Ferther salai are.report
ad at efin - at width rate it to trimly offered. 'Sark--
There Is nothing doing in qoaroltrmi ; let tin. fir sun.'
dy at $27 tO per ton. Cotton—Bolden are Arm in tittle
yiews but the demand coat:nue* limited and rites are
about the Same, with a moil thisineoi only -to dote.
tirooeries—There is not much doing and wa have only
to notice some further sates of RIO Cafes' al steady'
rates. Provisions—The market is firm but quiet at
previous quotations. Whiskey la moving off as want.
ad at about 27c fat Fesin,sAial2do tor prison add Ohio
28r0283 , j0 for hbda, and =mane per gallon for
drudge,
- - • •
The ordeals of Beereettle at the dlfseent 7 4484 wet*
very large this week, which, with this wind - weather,
redness the prisea about It the , ll/0 2.; there Wore morose
left over at both yarli, ..The fellowing are the p tr
tionlatekot the salsa at efistlnie and tile Ifollse_gesd
67 ramie Ahrehatele Va., S AO teen th e 2 0 _
McQaate i obi°, file 11% -
ISO Mooney & Sznit11;11o10,49611,
100 D. W. Brediey, 19611
91 ISLIFIllier, Weellogtoo, 0611„ 2k 4 at.
97 eeo Balaban & On . o'rdiessy,„l364.
68 J. _Eatur,lCent:6anaty,
1 46 s Ault, Ohio, lerer.or, ;Sok / -
s R 4 R tale, Weetroorfend eonety,l96l - 010.
33 Jai: Btabsr4lll 81Yn eodetv. sBe9
34 J Berry, M4l a opacity, pelt
kfuschey &,,t/0.', - 0/310„ endik 4", •
t 34, do do., do. $lO4lO 60.
56 Ifsmakei, ',animater e - nnir,.llB6lo. •
• 10 B. Grey, Ohio, $9 ,60410. ,
, 30 kliskie Medea, Ohio;
37 A,, llidebasish,,Ohester eovaty, so4lll y
2. Shambney. listener, eesse,t so, .
P 8 B 0. Baldwin It Do , Ohio, 1410 Is3l
sd 9andereon et Ca , by khrOlsesej 964 19610• iO. ' '
J.,Melfee, OblOiSS*9-
, 39 bindetilon, Virinnts,somtlt. . .
28J Ilaoshelan,Westmorioslkd'aeinly,lo." '
SS W. Quail; Weehingtoo;lB69
40 J. Donald, 01110,-14 P ;
;
3611. $10S111:'
, 40 8 Clark, Wubinston wooly, 19610. • •
30 J M.:Cannel, 0 Ede, $9610 60
' 60 CoelOan McCall, idarylandi stoadq EO. ,
88 W. hfel3lol;Maryland, Path 60' •
10 Dr Booklet, Maryland, peels!, 60.
• 68 Beat Kimble, 0beetay,6062367. $lOOll. ,
40 :Wellman, Chester connty,l9 606,10.
69 G. Lefore, Ohio, $10e11„
••." 26 B. Hood; Cluster county stoeett,
34 R. - Neely; Obeiter - evens:, $86 , 10 80, •
30 W. Weir, Washington e, only, $9610.
' 66 41. W. Adonos, Ohio, SS 604110.' - ' ,
' 44 P. Malillen, $10411.'
100 14..Seldomvidge, vfintoia, $lO4lll,
• 30 Bitable dr.'Firlr.Oheaser. eonnt,r, .110611.
10 J. Blair, Ohio, 19 60610: -
19 John Powell, Delaware nonoty,ll3o6ll.
Pomo 5a6,066 ktieop - wiro offered sYkigrtin ; s find 5c.74
4a4,40 ifr It, gross, for gool. 1!boop.
sold at from Is3B to ED' for imlins, 'got 523 tifdiNiSob
for common quality.. _ - .
There rime only &Heat SOO.Tfoga al rolhtfra Torii ;'
tHte itesh; which • moia at from 48 60 to $O 21 04 10 0
Ibe x neL. _
1 .
: 4090 Virgil:lla 81 . , 96X 100.1teediny1t - 58042 X
14000 Missend Bt Gs , SSA 2•24, ..-, _. 'do ,_ toP 4).) - i .
'TOO Gal &CM Isten PI 59 Del & Ditto 3 53X.
~ 14 Corern^nieth ek 190 Bho-'
'do -
,__- 815 05.1(
'.
0011 k Orate - of KS , - 99 ) " 100 ...lab BR. tutriso,2rX -
= 50-Del & Dad Do 100 t 825 .1111nolli DenOlt - `•6O. -
14 Penn Coal Do ' . 52A i 50 Ole* /k• P II TWIr -•< ' 'ON
200 5$ Y Peat It; bard 78 100 Ohl* &71 IR: 510 59x j
105 nerlemll prat ito 35 • 0014,0 Sc MID, -`X
.4.sl'astattelS, 115 •
: " = -'-• ofll/1 515.11141% - . - , :•• ,• ' ".• - 4, 1* - :, • ,
Assn —Poll are steady Ind in 't:ike &Mind 1454, '
5114' Piiila - ireqUietit 5311 xi:.- - o'.. - - -
• l'snon -=Tbe Sierket for Srato'end Western Pfour Di -
Yery Owl and heavy, at a fartber'deelloe'Of 10iene.--
Irlto moderateyeeetpla; and riles of 3.800 Mite' 4415.40
SO 99, and td for P 1461110 State $400119' for extrit do:
35 80®B for tarattlad Western; 3610eie 00 toffy-Ditto,
$8'2506 10 tor' stitnolyte, brands , ot extin round-boOp -2
Ohio. Southern Moor le vary dtillorith Pales of 250 ,
hbla et 44 25q6 15' for COMM 3.2 to Oak and Tog for '
• Ctaant to very drill and tower, with, axles of
spoo htiebele red Pon , hem at St 60; white do at $1.7 0 ;•••
new amber Georgie atil 75. - Corn inbeais; wiihnelea '
of 10 000 bashele at 8l 84a Jog Woetern ndzed, and - %
881 t n 'tor yelher .rentey Bye sates
were make at - 891103. - Harley ii Atilt dr:144110A: • ()gig
,lttenry":at 40e042,3 for Biuthetniterirrylveni,s,
Rey, end 44,140 for State, Cluieda. and Weetern.. -
Cleatinge. BeLlatl666 gold
23,691 321 513 1932 934 66
. 8.121 0 178 02 111,418 59
3.095,635 66 341 119 c 6 1
2,936 595 18 246,61 . 3 98
2 751.718 55 2614215 92
2,895,0653 ItE4 196,100 60
pgoi,gioNg =Pork ie doll and *Tricot' with -
pales of 100 bble at $/6 26 for law; 2)32.6 !sr Primo. -
Beef le splint, with atlas of 'l6O Mae at $6 60efT for
oonutry Prime; $849.25 for - country Mara sloml3
for repacked 011,010 and $14045 60 - for !kVA:Masa.
Bacon and Out
- Meats remain
„quiet. Lard , in steady_
and quiet, with valet of )00 bble atlo.lvigilie:.• pater-
and ;Arose are - _
Waisess is quiet, with aides of 20-bble at . .
MEr.rtNCI Or TER YOUNG MIN'S Cdaffintir
APe 1011TTON,Th9 - resider . .. Monthly" meeting if the
Young hien , e,Chtitifien, ,esseciation viaiiiad at the
Elarwout.street Barka Gitureb,-. lait averleg, Ott : 11..
lituset in the chair.' The - princip al feature of the ems•
ing's proceeding...4;w, the roadingnf a doctiniant, pre. ,
plaid by Mr. George log, to be rraiented it the
Troy Genrantiart whisk he to be hold on 13th prnsinen.
The prevailing impresalon—lo -which we nay say-the
advertimethent of the meeting tended to give eurrerey—,.
wed, that the paper to be read had, been fteiltrad,
der the sanction of the Aascciation, le an uiprrealon
their sentiment§ upon the palate dteenieedAtt, sa a.?
body.-' This was not the fact, but In stele' - mill . - "
apprehenalon tnuoh unneeteasaryamtment wee
which was, however; et once arrested when the author
of it rote and captained that what` he hat done was
merely Mien his right ea an individual, at the two loot
of the Association. The mistake evident y was
,In'
making a private matter so very pubro. In this, how:.
ever, we are aseured that Mr. Paz acted in ceinplisheii
with the wishes of his triende, rather than upon hie
own'grod Judgment. The neet.nrwas largely attend.
ed, and oonsiderable business of minor Importance was
, traneseted: The ierolts of the varbitri oommittees dot
;not strike no as being up to their used measure of in
terest -
or'drult Rie'T. J. A 11113 —We tinder;
stand from a noire4poudent that the Riii24 zA' Hisd,
oI nagliud, 18 stout tq visit litltiatt America, In'com
peep with the Rev - W. R, Guthrie, IY D , Lt. D ,
*ad the Rev, J. D. Ward, D. D., of Manchester. It ta
egfectedalso that the Rev. Mt. Rind whl visit Phtladel.
phis on hie way. The ltiortkEritia AdreitLer
of Mr. Mod in the highest teimaas, a pulpit orator
and a sound livatoseltest preacher, and denoininates bin,
ill being iti,ul t nj icept r ots a secor.d. Whille'd. Rut
comparatively few lease ago he waits wetting man lo
oadon, font :welch - Numtlo position has, ,by man.
rat ability and pereevetaere , attained Om - honorable
poet of theological tutor in one of the largest colleges
In Ragland. On Die recent arrioil,at Boe'on he mat
received Ly the Rev. W. If. Aitbonee, of that city, V6V,
Di A. Kingston, Of New Jersay, and Ills brother, W. R.
Rind, of Carlisle, Pa.
PREPARING FOR ERE POIIRTR.—Py the jilVenne
portion of the con-monity—inclothog not a few •t sti
dreu of a larger growth >r—the present week will be
spent in delightful anticipation of the alotiotte
Fourth,o.and in making "preparationa fir it. A good
supply of FIRRROIIIES will, of Connie, CoDatifUte one of
the indlspensables, and we therefore advise our readers
to Uvulae ire e roagailleent atosk of pyrotszhntaa now
displayed by Mr Stephen F. Whitman, at his popular
oenfehtilssery establishment; ho 121E1 Market street.
ills tieeortment of fireworks la very ',ripener, odd em
braces everything in that line.
Tee amortment of fire -works at If elutea, S. W.
eviler Arch at Muth, ineludee all the novelber pro.
duced, either here or in Narope, for the ensuing j.lyral
4th of July.
Mos. Jnazine's CHARLEY.—" Y was showing
dear little Charley the plot - sae of the' martyrs thrown
to the lions,” said Mrs. Jenkins, 1 k sod was taiklog very
solemnly to bno, trying to make -him feel what a terri
ble fate it was. this
,said be, all at ones; ma!
jest look at that poor little lion away behind there—be
won't get any!''Charley could barely here been
more conned if they had been diatrihntiog wooed sla
g at mite trete the Brown Mae Clothing Hall of Rook.
h It h Wilson, Nes. 863 and 805 Chestnut street, aborts
Kalb.
224,027 70
- - $1,040,000 00
../ 1 5 000 00
„ 17 000 00
70,000 00
„ 11,547 42
63,627 42
A CURDSITY.—We have_in our possefoion an
old " oblnplaster," paused In 1772, presented to no by
Mr. Jacob etoolmsto. It reads as folloorg
• .41 893 621 42
idosoiding to an aot of General Aieetably of Pi
Tatle, paned to the. Twelfth Year of the Helga of ate
hiejaety George the 7 bird. -
%tad the ad dey of Apf3l, - Lono Doi:Q.I7U: .
ITALY A CSOWI9.
On till bick of the - iota Is 'prints':: "any ,on
oloOtoo of tirtnAllo asap, No, 647 elksitinit itio4,l)
Philadelphia Naikets.
Phlladelphla. cattie
• _Joss 21.1868
Noy York Stock 1E
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CITY ITEMS.
TWO SHILLINGS AND SITTINGS