Jiirr- W*l srJKtfl* n*T ,w*.i» *3^i-/«V r -'•I -5* •;t'-ni ®:lPi|tkii ;CTA./Jii l 1 -r.XSWh'Ti «U I K } ' : - - - : r CljAV' >.\ thbi&My; ,ssx @l^® ratv raftdin*. oH*inal andliMeSWdTDdtiXßStic'aud Fo- ’• <»£/. W^ f !'^;y-'!OWfTENT^:-‘-- !^c '*:H V< ‘** vr. v.' u .r * V,' OUR PQRfeFOLjG/^rV^ qs'j CoL.:Hay? Ettßax L .Q°s > s** Houap?aj>aT>iiFßKNCU.lUvqi i tJT|qx-7PDxw,lXT|ip —REVOLUtION-A^Y-.INWDKJWS-^AinnSaSy^S^.HE-; TotjsPABTAJU* SOMEtUI-^TO l*AtXT*BB GaoAVrrPHXBi9iQsic.Alj^.,.; : : ! ._• ,' •; , j , Ml HONpRA IIKB JjEAO-rT’UK BjX A*? Dbath—Gompbtitive' E.?AMVSAnoaj-7Tnß ; FpLix{“ CAL MojJXK —CoaTipp stKraij^iMxXT?n^ PAIUXQ FOB ,CqABtKST,ON-riiRT,BAORI3JNAa ; YiDOCT;- MEST-TffBWBVy^ASBABCpS^fOII9N T Tq£|£tJllO rf PE is OHAXORYr How fp\«R:3?BaPS?C^t£3 J fT6BLa .NUEL’SiNrW lilXiaXBX.-tIvAIpINO,-X^a'Wlsp—TitRBE DaY* QClElta,A?9.kp?,^fM*Sl# JX&B,' 1 Jvt fjn!tj',uv,| V> COR RBSPONDE?(CEr-XETißiiB ai. 1 Lbttbix i ay Euchar^ AKD TllB ChARLKSION CONVENTION-~LETTER FKO>^ PoTTfJTpWS, (Pa. y;r ;,j 7 ! > yj ,f v,'*<r.L yt. %o NEWS.t-TJIE : »Y <$XLZQXkt*£ FROM EraOPS,- , VrA?HIKOt« N *4»R.!J‘*S > N?^** B M 1 »PFf> THE RKVIKW OFTHErim.ADFLPjqA MABR*Tt^TU*.‘MokBY J 3IA»KB®“MAEE?AOE»,iART> Deaths. -, | . '■< <'d-.. % i* i-. >VH %'./•: u'sOJ-i* >* MISCELLANEOUS. ~ Kouta* of- ths ■Fi**m«;aro SixTir-STBJss'r' Passbrobb' 'RMLbPa©— Spßßcri-op’ Mr. J. AfcoiP'aWt ox tubNortit bbx FEjiAHt,FisAR««Ri Aflar A.% GO»»'ASb-m , HoUICIDBrf.LBtTBB*’ FROM Oaltfoasia—STßdLt THBOtfan I>AO - Hill. tR/AiixoNA^KpHANCBdV, A MJjtf NATIOR A k : Mo SV'- MBS* EbpensiYx faml'ftaa 82 i*r, s'Mir,iß-«S*iuw«..(o i t[»lt«jiiil!l« ,ooj>r. and; to Olui-.of T*i}iiy’,"*h«« *mt<oono addre«iß2o.iii ad i'okjiOatM/Snwra'tp.r*,'feadrfor'millini; •• ” ; U.r i-;\.: wop«-ii~7- i .>■ FZBST^Pjt&R*' HlatoricAl Society bt tFrom; lain line Inbaifgen.9eX”.>!:V- P LM : tVs i.iji’.alsT'li-iii • - Thfe TMaty of Vitra- Fttoiictt., *’-H Th» Jaurtal df 1 Naye>Ke,: l M | HE ht . | hy. t M steamer -Hammonia; , which'-.arrlvediat' New TorfcW’.TtiM^y} i liters) jfcithe.., treaty^ the Etiiperors.ofFraooe i.and, Austria^atiy.illa Frencht? 0 . v-A?' VV;; “ Batiroiiu- i'U M^j r J»'y 'th6 Emporor ofAua tria and BU of. theJFr«n<ih,ifc hu boen agreed as foUtfws; %i, 7,7 ■ V.' .- l '‘The'tjrcr Tatot sfe jpreftUoaO Bnlttliari'Gqnfed6raU<W/\VV' */ r '\J “ Shall “b o 'under the Kbno- t “too Emperor of Austria cedes to the ; Empoibr ofthePrenobhie right#* IhdlrOthb4rdy,‘#i*A : Me e& uptioi% r tf'th>i,fottressesof Man Uia>arid ‘Ptschitt-: ra, so tfcft£thO'.f#otitier of the Austrian possessions should' stkVtftoai'thO extreme of Pesahiera, and' should' extend.in*» dlrectllno along' thVMinciO as. far, as i Ginmw; ■ftfcm'thenoa. to goor*a.rolOi3hd.Lusano ; tpvthe.Pp # r from v wbptloo.the actual,frontiers shall continue fqrmyheJtnuts.of Attatriai^laeVEaiperor ; ofrthei. t Fii)hch r ,wiliihanj4' ovor (w/?M«ra) -the coded territory tpthe.King, of Sardinia* y—vA -f .* •- r ration, 'though remaining tinder th 6 - crown of the Emperor,otAustria* £f , . v “The.Grand’fDulce.Qf'Tii^any'iind'tho.Duke of return tq'their s(ate&7&j*Atitink;ft general hfnnosfy^VA' ’* ”7? \A\ ’!: " 7-A 1 ' -1 * “ Thti’tirpEmperorswilVa?k< the.Hbly Father to States."I’' 1 ’' 7 “ Afultond lagran tedbn I>9tV to persona ooniprbihised in tholate'e vents iti' the te^ritorieb r of-thß belHgor'oht p«rt^es^ , ;IS ’- * “ DonewfViMVA' PiUxoa^the:> 1 Ith dnly, 1859.’ 5| AalthfMreaty l&s t)P% rqpuljlisligd Jtt all tlip- Paris paparB, it is no doubt lit fully answers the descriptions which had*been fciv'cft of it jn ; of Jts lf cut the, Gordian.knot pi* Italian’ difficulties 1 , in air on tirelyuriQxpsctedahdporamptory.manncr, and,, notwithstanding' the Vitterhesa with which It, has bgen.£ttuil§d,jt la by it was not the best and wisest adjuetnient prae-, ticablq’i under the peculiar‘clrcfiinstances \n which th'Q belHgorGnts were placed; ’ 'The pro-; positions ( tyhiclr. are said. by..tl>o.' Vienna, correspondentjof the - jiondpn Times' to hWfen>titt<rjuaao.U,n Aautaa, nwflWneyfny —hy lKruia NapoleoxJ .- Thc .sarue wrlter saya tlmt'.thcr J ong(nal > proppBqls A pi[‘ l tho latter.(ro jectcd<,byvAua4rfa)jWoce as follows; i “K. That LombVrdy r snd Vonide should be sepa* placed as an independent kingdom under an Arobduke, • ‘ . “S/rThat-ModenaandParaift should bo given to - earJlnlft -7 “ d/TTbaiTusc.inyibonld bo coded to. the 2>noh -■ cssEegentefParas.”-;!; .; .• » 1; 1 The details of the treaty of Villa Franca are of course' ill still to' be"arran'gedj and tho ex act'ijo'Bj(!,on wbiih; J(aly Will , assume'.;under' the reorganization contemplated '.cannot yet bo determined: It is reported- that 800,000,000 livrts is thp sum to'take as her portion of thb nftfonai'dehhof. Austri%nhd that Milan .Turin,'.dnring, alter-, nate yoarsv'tho honor of being the' capitnl of the'now Kingdom of -Sardinlay Piedmont,'and Lombardy, t of whichVioion Ei£H4j;cEL..is'to, ethefutnroyuler. i The plan of. the- proposed Italian; Confede ration has not ,yet been authoritatively do? termlnbdj s b%iPis J 'Scrjobs attention, n.fjtho; Frencn,..and .Sardinian Cabi nets. Count Walzwski’s project 1 is said:to be thit the Pope Shall act is Honorary Pros!, dent, and that, in the Federal Couneil, Pariori and. . Jrnve >OllO '..vpte each, i- tho, Popo.itwbi Tuscany,'twoi Austria,: for tia, two; and Piedmont and Naples, throV cach—and tbat Gaeta', Mantua, and Piacenza, shall he gaftisoned partly by Fed?ril troops, and .partly; jby. tropp* of: tho. Stategrin which they are located. ■, > , u-; There‘are'still many elemcntS/Jof. discord ip it biay he'ixirdmely dlfficuft to harmonize. 'Thus, much ill doeiing exists' be tween thp Pope, and fpioioa' JBgtMAXPXt, and: the people.of Tuscany areverymnch opposed to tho return of their formersoVcreigp" or r iiisy of .'fiislahtify/ ,, ‘ i V/ifethhh i ' , Lom»^^Po£^oif will.assist, tlio, Grand-I)uko- of Tiiscany' to re gain hfs"dom.nloi)s,,does not seem do bo abso. lutely.’certain,- but: it-is probable ho. will do so. The following' curious anecdote- is told inti letter from -Milan, published in tho Intlepcn dtnle of Turin::;: ~/. ,' o.U " Whso-tbe Marquis Nori Cowlnl di Lnjitico,' who - revolution at £WUfMo, beard of the preliminaries ofpeaoe haying bean signed at- Villa Franca,, he .vraitod upen an ‘exalted’ nerspnage ?/to\risk’ what' had'been stipulatedwith-'regardfoTbacaby. ; * ■ thb Grand Duke isat liberty to Mo, him, a)ici'r(wT*!Ub!infi bit Government? ; ■ u . "ißx&tvß PensoXAijE-iNotTeMMceillTi* r .“AfAriaojar-.Biit than I foar-tlieipwple will to fU??4? • , j. “ EXAi/tr.D PsltsoXAUE—Tnn! mieux, («o inneh tribbritter’.)'.- 1 -.e . MAritjetS—Thofri TriU bo didturb3neo ; fie will bo dilyonpqttomatoforee.,-..,. W ALtKD.pP MOSAqS-r- Taut.miettx. . t , , : (Wlbo£no n plaa»o<l)-How ? Tant mutt£ ? 'Yoo wUr ndhnttmo to riienHon thU con- YjmtioA tddny . 1 - > V j "JBxAtTFD TxnsoSAGß.—TTith- all. my heart— JOUto**-)5 i. I.; , “This amatemont/ walkod 'bafcktwraSoptbf Ijie'rnbnJ' with'pi'6foun!d ' bowa,‘ and ’radttVring b&tWedtf his< teeth ‘ tne famous tarit inituxsifr n i _t' L; r .r ,=r , ftiid/kirid,/?»$!, gtaotly/contributcil tolcalm down: the feeling of tlur firat fidirigs of tha "fof a 'tifpobis ;that: Muri l return of /of 'J'nseShy rijajr/y«'t be prevonlwU ,7 “to cpnteiri platoo mdVfeirtoßtbfrOiit-IN'Otthern. to 'Central xtgfe atiiniiarii, the independence of !n,be lialf bf i-tho Dukes/bif Tuscany and Modena, cm:;Bcarcel}'';bpe xpect<sdw.-A-;n 'Oj.itiT .Of-:-! ---, -/V,'|‘, /Tfiidaf thpj Ibttst'fnydrable, circumstances, It to form a complete and cordial .confederacy, of nStlbns''wHicliteya::for r 'nlaiiyCcritiirieatjeeii independent, qf.’j each other;-but. there.arc, obstacles (o!ltaiian.rmi6n nd«!j iHanlj|ij l existed'to ti 'eanfctdehSi: turn of the ajUjyjl.tirne of, tljiTd^ol£®qri j {wlieh > the ! Cbnstifution of tbBiP^^%S|^ajw^y^fdu!d; ,! Alfijougli:,tW results of the war in ihr'Shprt oftlte eqticifptiotVy wiiieti Were ef. one tlfne eh td^!n?4%i#.w9P#liSf sbmevsubstantinl bfeneflts ISotn the aiib!fatibsd>'fDr 1 tWed6m^are;‘ not now-all path, the tare political and material welfare brightened. VTe pußi.isii to-day the proceedings of the late meeting of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. A press of mat for debarred their publication yes i»rt»y. '^TuSxh 6 Mysterious Wise teiter- : ■ yA y.iWhen this extraordinary effiijitlefffjh first’ .published in the New York Mx? the opinion that w d: And some of our coteraporilrles cfomcidewit^ !US QU this point. A Now England paper gives ps tji4 sole reason therefor: that tiie letter «is ibo short-for WisK»f- Others, urge the foolisfi character, of-.the epistle .qq evidence 4hat'Goveilioi’A\ r lsK it# The Kich ptudiid^n^ti/rcr—editQdbyO.-JENNiNos-WisEj Esq.,th&talented Sonof tlie Gov o m or-rop. the Bth iust: ; tokSl ait/additionhl; notice of* the let#: ter,to]4(at we^hsitmetjefi,'from'tho Saniß.papef* ’lon yesterday.': It is as follows,:, ; ■ ■? J . .'pßhpinrEi>'X%TTEn Gov.-Wisis.--Bolow will he foufid \Vhat purports to be‘ tho copy of.a let-, ter from Governor Wiso, efYlrgluia, addrewed to. {«omo unnamed person in'thl^eityor Stato. it was t pnimtd v .cireafatpdi nt-Aibuny during, thq/dttlng, of ttho State, CdmmlUco, t und used, authors think, quite,skilfully in damaging, not 6n!y Goi er : nor but-Mr* Woodnnd others. - ’' ' KWe-haV f n6' don6t it is n-forgery, and ftvor, Upon our own has jiqvgt writton suoh a letter. It- **.,<*. fi&HO , and Wo believe that somo of iho w* n who induitri •OUSly? but confidentially, exhibited it at AlbftUy, Witwit to he a forgery-\i yet are wrong, let them thfe 'proof;* *ffthoy do,not, they Wiih rust' Sndor the imputation wo now cost upon them (lu s tjrfpg Ihe balanep of'their lives. ****' * . lotted, .the' Enquiftr^TO ' 'A use ohtby person? * claiming, to bo ia, in onr , lWs criminal. , If tt . 'begehiniieA i is'cvldent that'some dressed Governor Wise (who is an honest, open* hoiked and frco-spokeninan) in, fii© .langnago of friohdship forUbp pu'rposeof procuring from him hle’ttcrjn reply for punlio use,, whioh vfoalu injure liitn, naweU as accomplish oertom qthor t doßpi6aole objdeta in; this State.,;} .1,, •’ ” “, : A frdyd,. has th,us beeii .upon the ; Governor as infamous iii its conception and exe-, ‘ttiUon .as Is.tbe,conduct of Iho, persons who hava thus becomo partios to it,in the nao they have vnctile pf the.letter’. But we repeat that, in our opinion, u is a it is ndt, produce tho proof hnd thenamopf tho gentleman.to wliom it ,waß writ ■ ~ ,1 t 4 . *1 ' . Oat confident hopn that tho letter,!* a fabri ftition is strengthened, by tho nbtlce of young iMy.dYlsEjabOvo qnbtod, ’ ■pa th's other hand, BOino of our icotempora rjcß ‘ Boern to regard’ iho 'lottor its authontic., iThoißlchmond ir/u'g publishes a letter, signed; <«Citakilli’' from. aNewYork correspondent, from which W'oextraot the following: ■ Mflf’i.ufss.aSiegotistical as Gov.jWiso, of your, , Site, I- might jnsUy claim great prodit as, an ora :ole ort>olincaUwisddm., -Among,tho first letters ,of ;■ Cetakili’; ho. pointedout.tko ooalitlou that ox -need hoSwoonJWipe and. Wood, and the fjamo of tho district system, in order: to, 1 get a few bogus dolq-.i 1 gat# to Charleston, from this State, who would be ;adinitt»4,Wiso c relying upon tho strength ,of his, frionds in lhe Cqnyentmn to reject thq regular dole-. ' gat* and.acoopt tho wiie-Wpod.doipgntoß. . ■ When,!, wrote:ithoso. IqttOfSj: I-little dreamed, /that all lassorted, woeks ago f 'would so,soon be ooo: . firmed by the hand-writing of Mr. Aviso.. , Yet,- Isuoti is the foot. Yesterday the State Oontral Ppm pjjttoo mot St Albany, for (ho purpose of,issuing n .sail for a'Pomocretio State. Convention, and, for ■ the i purpose ■of deciding how the Aologatos „to„ .Charleston .should ,bo,.appointed-.: Trood wosson Uand-to makfi Cflpitalfor his district ,Aw a* .oneo.'itwss wbispeiod arpumllhat tliero ffasa let 'tor InAlbahy from afr.-.Wise. Its oontouta wore, ‘iommuabatod from Ono leader dp another Wood, Mard of: ltr Ho proDOunoed . it. a fast: forgery. as!- he’ was soon,to bang bio hO“n with ,shame. Iho lotter was gemilne—oou'd not he disputed,. Cue member of. tfid OommUtoo.brtbo oat iu a rage aht Well; I .thought we bad some prooloW pooun. ,'dfrels- among- oar -Northern loaders, but they are. -not'fools as well-as political knaves, and this letter, thr Wise tak* tho shine-off any cheating arrange;. wo have over concocted. ' - >■ . < - / ■#*- “‘Ctoir. Wood slunk j?ifaT from.Albaiiy, andcamo down in thhnight>boat,biuisg himself fl.way in thd ’clerks etiito-roonir- -:” When that portion of - Mr. loiter Telating-toblmsclfwas rcfl4 ft (Wood) ho swbro liko a trooper*.called WLsecverv; {sort of Vilo namo/and l’ll bo d*-d if I do not' publish- all Wiso*.a letters to mo> and expoao ms dnpuoity.’ Ifhodoci—and ho Is very likely to do it-—thecplstolary correspondence of Henry A. Wise will bo a Heh political volume,if his political hon ; /esty-Is on a par- with tfrat of-tho letter to tho , /Albany Ooihtnittob*man, Yb«o on® fooling of r universal scorn "from, all- hlzivinSnded pomoorata. 'Tbb'FODorable-Diokiifaon'enbd when tho letter ojf - r Mr. WiaO‘WM OXpo3ed*tolii!n. Ilo'obaerved, i Sir, ■ 'it is that-wo unite and send bat ont set of {delegates to Charleston, when bo prominent a S)rin*a4>wi3o Haro send such an infamous letter, proposing to $ eb&rfc of deliberate political vil lainy,'in order to'fleou/’O his nomination. lam ashamed that a 1 own ‘ editing a Southern Democrat * should exhibit such a combination of ignorance, 1 behtism*-rascality, l and selfreoncoit, and expect.the.- v Now York-Hnrds to co-operato with, him. I, for one, disown all further connection with him^ 1 -• «: %. : *s , u Poor WfW had not ono friend in Albany after ; that letter was read yesterday l • • Oar Democratic fenders haro some remnants of .political virtue left, and Douglatf stock wont up * 50 { por oent.i yostorday, 'Such a bpltly . declaration from a rival oandldalo-r-and no *»o/ip, treacherous,* nn&' disAon'fst, in rcCeronoo to s(r. v -TWAinj-laa.- Vita ra«VLa him Ttinnr ffiondl OOlOng the Hiirds and SoftSs-/ •' * . I‘J / 1 ’T' ~ "■ “ Notwithstanding Mr. Wood’s bold declaration, tha£‘4fcdriot delegates should go from-No w York to. -Chari efitenj ft Trill not be bo. The game cannot bb -plttjed nefr. Mr. letter baa mado tho Wood mpvemeot,'ln tho State, contemptible, and any 'this <&lnd vwld bo ab?nrd and ridiculous.' lenoloso a'Pouglan paper in reference to Mr. Wise. « - > . .“ ‘'Virginia willbo a unit,’ says Mr. Wise, I will AxtHat/ New a unit now. so far as Mr* Wise is cohoernod, If shewas not’ before. The committee has received ;nnd' exposed tiro political Swindling proposition of the honorable Virginian. - “ ‘ Beware of Stationery, 5 should be the.motto of Mr.' wrjtjog, paper has killed him aedead tfs <s*d JRomon Porajfay, • • - “If tbe'honost ehiv&ironr, minded. Democracy of .Virgin u?,‘ 4 SID be a * unit, in 'guppbrt'df-tho'ch’efttinff lettor, all’l gay is this,' that I om.pretty oorisdont, the. first rcsolu. 5 thnt'will bo'o'ffered at’ thd Charleston Convention . will b'o Ab follows' i • JtesofccdKpk&t the Democratic (tolerates from Vir ginia pa expelled from thin Convention, for luivin/ on aoraod a-nwiD ns a candidate for tho• Presidency, TyJio nanoponljfs and in.aavnnoo. proposed, a scheme of ras calitj to iftaufe me own olovotidn; wilieu merits tho 'scorn of ovuty Demooratm the United States.' may rostnasurod .of one thing, if Virginia becomes a J unit, ’ ■ and sends ;Wiso delegates to Charlestoa.-aftcr his totter,' no ’honest Northern delegate will sit in tho samo building with thorn.” .« ;The "iVhig hdWevor, bitterly opposed to Governor fyf ise, and aotpe allowance should bo made on that-account.' - -- 1 ’- f Tbo 'lTasbihgtoh ‘ Constitution (organ of the' Cabinet); says ! ; . -' “The Opposition jnurnnls are making themselves merry oror a lottor wilich purports to havo been addressed, under'date of Kiohmond, July 13, by tho Governor pf Virginia; to somo political friends ,1a Now York. in' regard to tho arrangements which the Dcmocraey of that great State might deem It necessary and propof to adopt, with a Viow of oans ■ ing their opinions, sentiments, and wishes to’ have their due and'proper weight in determining tho de cision of tho National .NomOcratio Convention of' 'Charleston. ’ If tins letter is genuine, nothing oan .be sOld whioh' oa’n increase'themortifiOation'that mast necessarily he felt by the,'friends of Governor yfittOatftsinbpportutiepuMitatioh. Ifthoreisnny sentimont whiqn tho American people cherisbpand which (llcy ought to require from public men, it is pblitiqctlhjtoraliiy nmtm% those who aspire to their 'suffrages.. This letter is ealenlatOd, in tho strongost degree,'to' shake' the, confidence of the.poopio in this rospedtv Xf apolitical adventurer hereafter — aetiidled by-d profligate disregard of consistency and patriotism — shard<l wish to find a rhetorical defence of his aberrationshe'migkt tiiul itin this eztraordinary letter 'of Governor Wise.” " : lb is presumed that the'intelligent and right thinking people of. tho United States will give due heed to'tho very'sagttcious and exceedingly honest and'virtuous and candid suggestions of, tho organ, and its lessons on “ consistency, 1 ’ .'l'political morality,” arid “patriotism; 11 "If ..we'irilstake not, however, they will bo' apt to .say, witfr respect to the reproof administered i to Governor VfisE by it, “ that is very like Satan reprbving sin. 1 ’ Tho people know tlio •dlflVrcnco,between true coin, and .counterfeit; antl, thny, will di’ci(l e that the ffaulc "out-spoken, ;and"ftee-spokon. letters of <3overnor Wise,*. written 13c6- T “a true Virginia gentleman all ot 'thq .oide'n tiine',” concealing nothing and using unambiguous language, even if; his letter does ali'onl cause for, 'is not as. nnworthy . and dlsgraceftil a 3 if It had contained Pharisai cal and hypocritical professions and assurances of'Mr. Bociiakas in 1854-55;'and ■ ’CSj that he.liad no aspirations himself for the "Prestdericyf arid would cheorftilly support 'GeneraliPiEitCE for a re-election, apd that his. .’purpoSDiwas fliod to; return home and go into retirement; and close a career,,-,vliich had been .somewhat stormy, in-peace' ,arid,.quiet', and had *no idea' of., being; norany wish -to be, ‘a eiridldiite"for the- Presidency;' or like , hi.s recent;carefully framed declination in tho Bedford Gazelle and other papers, and in his MridandlesS telegraph epistle of tho 80th ult., “■nottobbcom.o iicandidatp for ro-election, 11 , &c. Tho people will recollect, too, his celo bratod Pacific. .Railroad letter sent to , Cali fornia justbeforo ihe election,of 1850, and kept Becrot on this side of tlio continent. They will call to mlnil; also, his Squatter. Sovereignty letters 0f1856, written to .promote his election,, ahd the iiumorons other electioneering docu ments from'his pen,' and his speefcheS'made .with .tHo'sapiri,! object; ’ and they will "not’ ibr gat. tjuit' iio, Kjv? t tWlaifledt all his pledges ,'tiud professions, so/, made.', Itememberirig these things,-they will,bo likely to .make a proper arid just'hpplication ofthe terms “ political morali ty “i nrid a' “ profligate disregard, of consis- 1 jterifcy'aiid patriotism,”- so imprudently em.-, ip'tpyqi'bythoorgan. If the correspondence o.f 'Mr; Buciianan anterior to and after tbo : Balti jnore. Conventions oflB4B andlBs2, and anterior, to'the Oincinnatl, Convention; in' 1856, was all exposed tb tho'public eye, wo do not believe ,Ke would have any ridVatiiago over Governor :Wisi-t. ; ' ’ , ' ' > ..Tlie New York Herald, in commenting on t tills bdit#ial qf tlio Constitution, uses the fol lowing language.!', o' .. . . - “Tho appearance of this mysterious letter was liko a bombsholl in Kiebinond. Tbo paporsnro all dumb. They seem to bo astounded into silence. Tho Washington papers also have nothing to Boy about it, with tho exception of tho Constitution , which iif edited by nn old woman in brooches, from Wall Btreot, wjio U ns fond of a good dinner &j Jabk Falataff. waaoriiwt wM,fcnows ppr?. •out pdf(tiesJ7iaii Jac&rfui'Gjgjftc qiuihties\p£'t%' cocktail.' /.The comments oftho gpustilupon arb ahoor nofidehso and baldcrdwh.* 1 1 % r>;,TJio Herald m referenpo/to/tko letter farther: ‘ * 1 '^Vrr*> “ Instead of tho publication of this lettey filling off Govornor Wise, assomo people anticippto,ahd as no doubt was intondod to bo the result, {t j$ jhst posslblo that- it may give him bigkor bitch at Charleston by and byofgreatly to the astonishment and confusion of his enemies.” In another editorial lha Herald Rftys i ‘ a Tho pious Aminadf'bs of tlnre'dltdriarSlook [family of polUioiaiis roll upthelr, eyes in holy hor ror attho.. advice, given,byGoycriioi' \Vi6O to.his New York friend to' whiptho oratio S6fts)>‘in their State Convention, or send' a contesting set of Hard delegates down to Charles ton.’ - t t! ‘j ■ ( ’ il These, Instructions -are pronounced unworthy an honest man, and a denth-blow to their author as a,Presidential ‘aspirant. 'Who could have thought It? s —* The man must bo crazy’— 1 Yot the letter is evidently l gonulno ? —‘Well,,it only shows to what basQ uses ambition will drive a man’—nnd ( saob like billyioxpressions groot ns on overy side, and from political organs and managers steeped to tho lips in' the 1 Vory dregs of party trickery and" rascality'.' There' is really' nothings Wonderful or startling, - or , now; in this dreadful letter of Governor Wise.. It no new trick,, 'or Slot, or doublo-dcalhig game , in politics.' * For io' last 1 twenty yours we have 'hardly had a party! convention. State op National, or a caucus move\nentt that has not been subjected more pr less to the samtf or vjorse. Indeed, Jho, great terror Wiso, Jn this,iato'lptter, baa been his ighonmeo of’ the' dirty sinks and sloughs 6f'pur-‘New 'York-- olootloheoring system,’’ ior. example, while our smooth-faced Now York,party, thimble-riggors aro • too, cunning to jutt their plans to paper, they will not hesitate 'at..any treachery by’which a confiding rival'may be in jured, or by which even a'friend may be when the end^,which is the wilt justify the.mea\us., Thoro arc men at this day in tho Sing Sing) State prison,-who,'on tlio saore of ‘honor among thiovoa,’ fife moro trustworthy than some of ourhighimd mighty Now York politicians. ‘‘Tho 1 material error of Governor Wise in this • matter,was in the trusting hia confidential views to any Now .York, managing politician writing. Talking,is' their rulo.,of action, bo that what thoy gay to-day th'oy'can deny to-morrow 1 if, neoessary. As for tbo moral offoct among our Presidential.po* where of the disclosure of. this lettor pf Govotpor Wise, it : will bp at. hast .but'a, nine daysyrondor. Indeed,’aftorUhVcxplahation which ivd' published. yCstefday of tho m/innor in which said letter was made' publid- through tho trdnohory of the Albany varioty shop, tho odium conneotod. frith this mattor must attach-to that .institution, ills rivals,for tho Charleston nomination will dis cover that ’Wise is not thus to be killed off. Ho will doubtless write auother letter, and that vory Mon, in vrhich he will makft the fur fly in ovory direction. Wo have had occasion horotoforo to speak out in. very plain torws of tbo vulgar and self-degrading porspnal,slaps in whioli Govornor \Viso spmetimos indulges in nil stump spocohcs.” , l ? It farther aays : ‘ As ftnan of honesty and Integrity; as a man of'hio Word, and as a man who would scorn amoan 'fcrick.exaopt on the stump or in tho dirty puddlo of Now Yorkpolities, Governor yfisc will compare favorably vith any Presidential candidate of the day * ... .... ‘ i •; Thoro is'ft groat deal of good stuff m mm, and ho is pluck* to the backbono. :110 will not give up the oontest for tho grand' prize of -the -Presidency on account Qf this little slip of writing such things as should only bo talked oror to a New York poli tician.’ Ho will know btittor |iow to do it next - timej 'and if’tho Albany Rogonoy have cheated - him out of tho voto of New York at Charleston, our New York , onginoers’ will doubtless find Wise an. impassabio obstacle iu tho South. Ho is .on tho - cofirse/ahd will Ijjost probably remain there, no • mination or nohomlmitlon from Charleston.” * ‘ Tho Washington ■ T corfosponilOncc of the SMne’jiftpcr, of this letter, fiUtea: ; “ The Q 1317 ‘papoV borewhioh has any comments on remarks you will perceive ayo somewhat and absurd, As Wise himself, ppiy ti)at the letter has b con made public, tp is not tfco less dis concerted. . Tho fact, however,. fcaB. enlightened him considotablT as to tho oh&r&otar of too men trhp comprise the Albany Regency. Ho has ro<> ceived fttattor from tho gentleman to whom tho fa moua communication, tft lB addressed, explaining tho olraumstanccs under wlitCk D was ootainod for pub- which acquit him 01 all blamo in we transaction, as };g >vas most treach erously ’ dealt with. Ify© party ■to .vrfwin tho letter waa written is said tp po. Mr. Jof.niird Donnelly, * who is in the BH/?tfoa anq CQmrpiMlon business in William street, New Vflrlf. ’ Ifo 10 represented to bo a trustworthy Democrat and’nip* cere friend of Governor Wise. I dan inform you with'confidence that Governor Wise is abonf to publish a Mttpr fop)0 twenty or thirty columnß long about this ln }ri)jcli ho will givo a history of tho Albany Ijofoifoy toft the last thirty years that ho has known thorp, day to tho present. Ho will oxposo alp their echen|es, treacheries, and and show, tip? South What kind of men they aro who are attempting to cbntrol.tho StatoofNow York and to adjust its delegation to the Charleston Convention to suit their own aims.- -It will beoaoof the moat scathing political ddduYiont? oyor given to tho public, ana will mako the Albany noutfcol wlnco lik o galled Jades under the iftsh. It will pe for . the press ina few days,** '* Tho Herald of tho 9th alco contains tho fol lowing article, which it will bo seen refers to pther letters written by,Mr. Wise : “ CfoRRESppNPBNCE OP GoYEBSOP. Wlpß.—lt f r ? af 3-? a ' a b? tfeqt.tbA4UiisfjiQinLCMafMAgifltcatoojf_ Virginia is prolife Inljj? ejnftqlary iuvum. Tho lotfor toMr.'ponneily, wb'icp Upturned tho Alftouy StateuemmUto# to ')ts fouridaU.ghs, and'oetnented an everlasting aUiauco betwgeq tho friends of Daniel S. Dickinson and the Barpbqjnflj'a, tjraa but one out' of a thousand from bis’facub pep, Tfr? last known-recipient of ono of his valuable com-- munioations is a gentleman in Brooklyn, whoso naipp is Mr. Oliver Cotter,” * * * * UTjio letter to SJr. Cotter from Governor Wiso was Ono of. thanjifcrran outpouring of gratitude for tho endorsement of hii claims to t£o which had been -ffivPß. ip Brooklyn <>t fi Qyor which Mr. Cottor taad;iWs lo'ng.beforo presided’, ft doomed any long opposition ot'poJiMdh'l foitp, after tho thirty-nine page credo in which the Governor had-recently indulged, quite superfluous; but, leaving naturalization laws, niggers, and schnapps 04t‘$f |he question, it solemnly cloclurod (bat no., llonry A-vise,.toiled forward with ‘unnffectci * KtticlPity* to tho ‘honor? With MjjjeU hp was about tJ hs ' l *«wbe!m«4i a «4 that h© <fonld fcot but ilo r owdv honJ**' v * with tlio'most dovodieenea liousdf gratitude, «£?•»»**•. JJ« and patriotic expressions of rega.”. he had neon greeted by.-tho city of Brooklyn ay ' rally, and by Mr. Olivor Cotter in particular. ■ “ Alas for Mr. Olivor Cotter’s powers of compre hension of Governor Wiso’a eloquence, ho had no rocollootion of evor having presided at a Wiso moot ing. It is doubtful, in foot,-whether Mr. Cottor Is' a Wiso man. Certainly, noithor ho nor his friends had over assembled to give vent to thatoxuboranco of Wise enthusiasm which had inspired tho Gover-’ oor with such ‘ unaffected humility. 1 Was it, thou, 'humility* on false pretenoes? Bach a supoosl tion was not to bo thought of. . Whatovor other smaller frailties tho Governor, of Virginia may have been aceusod of, hypocrisy and sham are nono of his vices. Imprudent, hair-brained and foolish he may be-—reckless to a fault—but ho is void of du e boyond a doubt. It flashoL then, upon Mr. Cotter’s mind, that Governor Wiso must have boon hoaxed—oruolly, wickedly, abominably imposed upon—and thateortain.wiokud ones, ‘sons of, Belial,’ in Brooklyn orelsowhoroj bad led him to believe that' tho thing was which was not; in a word, lind lied to his Excellency most atrociously. And^o.it.proves tohuvo been; and tho upright Cotter hoswritton to Governor Wiso to that effoot, and has assured him that," honored as ho foels by tho iecoipt of bis'letter, ho nevor presided at-a 1 Wiso mooting, and-, that •no such assemblage was evor eonvonou in tho City of Cliurobcs. “ Simultaneously with the lotter to Mr. Oliver, Cottor, Govornor wiso wrote another to a porson'in Williamsburg on tho same subject of tho ‘ Brook lyn Wise mooting,’with whioh ho had bobd so mysteriously gulled; but as this,is altogether a grayo and important matter, and as the original documents must soon bo forthcoming, wo postpone further comments for tho present!” Tho writer then alludes to tho recent "Wise Boston-bagging letter to John S. Foster,which we published oh Tuesday last. .. The New York News says thp Donnelly let ter is a forgery,, Tho Evening Post and Jour nal of Commerce seem undecided. The Times and Tribune both appear to regard tho letter as genuine, and of course condcinn Governor .IVlB® on account of it, and make' it an excuse td assail and consuro all sections of'the New Vork Democracy, as if they were responsible for it. . • We have tKus made h Fair exposition of fill that is to-day known of this extraordinary mis sive, and the .different views expressed in re lation to it, A few days will settle tho ques tion of its nuthenticity, : Since siting the foregoing we have received the Richmond .Enitjiurer of yesterday, which contains’tho following letter from Gov. Wish, which puts a somewhat different phase on tho transaction to what it was at flrst madc.to as sume, though tlio Governor* has admitted tho letter: * RrcuMoxo, Va.. Aug. Btb, 1859. Gbktlijmes : —ln your editorial or this morning, I ttoitoe what purports to bo a lettor written by me, to some unknown correspondent, published in tiid Now York papers, by whom, or how, does not uppear. You say that you havo “no authority to ppcuk” about tho matter. I now givo you authority ,to- speak all that 'I know about it. Tbo improsflion is attempted to bo mado that I lmvo oiTousivaly obtruded my advice nud intorfor once into Now York politics, in a vain and immoral attempt upon tbo members of tho St&to Gommittoo, to influonce tho appointment of dolegates from that State to tbo Charleston Convontion. Now, tho plain statement of the whole case ia:—that for somo considerable time past, I bad held private and confidential political correspond ence With-Mr. B, Donnelly, No. ft William stroot, Now York. lie wroto to me last spring, I replied, and tho correspondence ceased until Uie Bib ot July last, when ho, wrote to lao again the £oUo\rlng lettor: . , i • > Saratoga, July Bth, ISSO. . My Dear Goverxor j \mi will romcmlior my writing you test spring,tQwlucli I received nnnnßwor, and which 1 Wdutd linve neknowieuKod at nn earlier day. ImtntiP' posed your timo would beso much tnkon up with other important matters, that 1. concluded to witlinold writing >od until the present. You will learn from tho uowa papors and olsewhoro« that those who aro in expectation of receiving tho nomination at Charleston are marshal int thoirrorcosnsstrondynspossiblo. , This State, which I.Jiavo closely, with a yoU'Ot wlmt is-goliu on,will,as matters now sHud, send to Clurlcston a urptod dolo/a lion in favor of .Douglas. T heir second olunco would ho you; Ittivo you lhm information ns diet,so thatjou iiiny roly ui»on it. It is bnrely possihle tlmt \Vood nnd others in how York city may eucoeod in xottmg up two nets o/'dele/ffltes to the Convention, but if is my opinion yuilr friends in tho South need not expert nnich sup port from'tlio Northern States* -The South is the only placo to count on with any degree of cortninty. nnd, if tho,South 6liould kick up her heels, and rclnso to 'ndoptyouaHhor candidate,she wilUosoall. Xlusyou may rely upon. -With any othor mhn from the Southern Htntes than yourself, we would bo beaten .out ol With tho South then, to l»ck you, Uiero willlio a suffi cient number of candidates for Congress and Govcmiot (in nomination,Mvho will bo aula to control a sufficient from,tho .Western ami,Knatopi Statoa, to xive you tho nommntion—nnd they will do it, to huvo thoUiseU'es 5 well knowing that thore-is no one hut yourself that c-inpoll tho votes of tho adopted citi ziiih. Tho Federal oftico-holders hero are m Invor of Douulns, bo thatnttho Charleston Convontion, if Mr. Ducliamm should consent to Ik> a candidate, ho won’t bo able to got a single squad from this Htnto. If you wore onco nominated, my Cod, whatavote you would pet with Seward against you J yov* would carry ©very .Northern ptatfy exccptinf j the j PRESS.—PHILADELPHIA. THURSDAY. AUGUST IT, 1859. Massachusetts, Vermont, artcLffoasibly Rhode Island. All ortho Weatorn Sifttos, 'l.fttn, ttMurea/would roll ‘intolino attain. . ?•- •*-.iv-—. . . ‘ I am stopping at the Springe.h*je for a few daja. and having.nn.oppQrtnmtjr:or I cedKul|inj ydth .our friends irom different soctionß Olthe Union * ‘l:'thought it advisable to arnjt'jou tho enclosed,-hurriedly; Boratoliod together. ,If<reaiV«« ©f any oorvico to you let mo know ft. If yon .think it. advisable tomalco a push for the dolßgaioslffPip tlus State, write rne. and I will tell you how.it enh ho dono to the. boot of my knowletlffo and belief.'‘.Ludlow, Cassidy, and Peter Ca«zer aro tho controlling spirits, anu either of those, if tliey supposed you wore not completely in tho hands of Potnnndo Wood &.Co M would lie your, friend. This, I find, is their impression, thougn not publioiy ex nroMed., Mr. Wood Is a very -smart; nmn, and is much fonreu by tlio but his •miB{orluno;sooms,to‘ consist in having no. one to back -him. Had ho the' thatthosc otbors navo in the country districts, ho would ho the noxt Governor. Hut In the. country he 'fulls bbhind, and seems to bo very unpopular amongst •tho,fanners and othors. Your best way is to keep clear ot nil cliques and r factionH.-:Sido with nono of them; and when it isdotonniiiejlwho a rtf to be delegates,' and also wlnx boa control of tliehi. it will then‘be time emoUgh to become identified. * \ ours trill v. „ w B. DONNELLY. To his Excellency, Gov. Wise. ■} ,'Address ine at my store, P»o. 3 Williom street, N4Y. Mr. Donnelly is, Ibeliove, not a member of the Demooratio State iConnnittco of New York, and is a person in private life, so far as I know. Strict’y in responso to his letter I wroto the following reply (now correctly punctuated), and. intended, as it shows on itsface, to.be strictly prlvato and confi dential, and giving no advice or counsel not called for by my correspondent and not pertinent as a re ply ovouon points of personal vanity or pretension : : ; , ~ ,/, . Richmond,July 13.1855. . ; DiJApSm: I thank you for yours of the Sth inst. I have apprehendod all alone that the Tammany Regency ' would carry a united delegation from-Now Y«rk to •Charldston. For whom? Doudas,'l know, is confident; bat you may rely upon it that Mr. Buchanan is himself a-camlidate for ronoininatioxi. anil all,his patronage and povrof will lie nsed to'disappoint Dou/lna and nil other aspirants. Our only chance is to organize by dis tricts, and either whip the enemy or send' two delega tions.’ 0 , 1 ‘ ' \ . - If.thatis done or not dopo, we must still rely on a united South. A nnited South will roly on a united Vir- 1 ginia, arid I pledge you that sho, at least, shall he a unit. •Virginia a unit, and perslßtentand firm on a sound plat form of protection to air persons, of popular venn*' 'sduattor sovereignty;.sho must raUy to her support all ho South., Tho South cannot ndopt Mr. Douglas’ plat form.' U ill a short out to all the.onds of Black Republi canism. Ho then will kick up his lioels. If he doo? or don’t, he oan't be riominated, and tho mam ‘argument against his pnmination is that ho canlt hc elected; if nominated. If jionins, an independent candidato.aml Seward runs, am nominated at Charleston, I can beat them both. Or. if squatter soveroifnw is a plank of the platform at Charleston, and Douglas is nomi nated, (ho South will run an independent candidate' on protection principles, and run tue election into tho louse. Y r hofo, then, would'Mr. Douglas be? The lowost'candidate. on the list. . If I have tho popular strength you suppose, it will itself fix tho nomination. Uot.that, ami I am confident of success.' ’ 'Tho Hon. F. Wood is professedly and really, I bolievo. & friend, and of courso I would, in.good faith, bo glad of hisinfiuoneo. and would do .nothin; to impair it, and ieonld.not justly reject his kind aid; but you uny. roly upon it that I am noithor completely nor at all m tho lands of Mr. Wood, pr of apt other man who breathes. Ho>|ias alwavs hoop frtondlv to me, and I am to him. but ?lwa> son fair and independent torms. Thore is nothint in our relations which should keop aloof any friend of , cithor. He knows, as woll as any"ono can toll hun. that his main influoneo is in tho eify of Now; York, end I judge whatyquaay of his country influoneo is correct. But! am counting all tho time without Now x ork, and don't four tho result. lam depending solely upon an open position of principle, independent of all.cliques, and defying all comers.' We will overwhelm opposition in Virginia, And her voto Will bo conservative and national. ?At all events, I shall always bo glad to hoar from rou, and am, yours, truly, •> HENRY A. WISE. Tho first that I hoard of this lettor was tho fuss nnd farco npd fraud practised at Albany; on the 6th inat., Saturday last, I rocoivcd from Mr. Don* nolly tnofbUoyipg: • ‘ North Skor*; Staten Island, Auy.'4,’ ISW. His J?.fceUinc\f, (foterner Wise: Mt Dbar Sir j.Much to my aurprißO an<J royret I find published, in to-day’s Herald, your lottor to me of tho 13th of last monthr when l received tho same I showod it to threo or four distinguished and honor/iblo friends, each of whom’had tho lottor in thoir possession' only while reading it. consomiently they could have no ; chance of copying it. Alter which, on Saturday last, whitoip Albany, l showed-thdioUqr toMf.Cnßsidyilhe ablo editor of the Albany Argus and. Alius, who, after rosdinvit, wished mo to leave tho. lottor with him.so that he.miKjit show it’ to Mr* Doan Richmynd, tho ebAirman ! of our State Contra! Cornrmttoo. Tp this I consented, for the followinK rensonen-Initho- firat place, you will see ’inmy previous lottor that I stated,.that the selecting ol tho delegates to tho Charleston Convention would ha dono in aocordarieo with the-winhoa of Messrs. Rich* mond, Ludlow, Caggor. and, Cassidy, each of whom. 1 waa informed, was friendly to you, but objeetod to yon ron account of tho. reported mßuenco supposed to-bo oxorcisod over you by Hon.-Fernando wood. In orderto disnbußo their minds of this impression, and to sotmro llioir induonco nnd Iriendship. I consented to allow the lettor io go out or my hands, not knowing ol any'moro ofiectnal way of accomplishing that, object .than by showing tQ them the.denial of those falsehoods, then in your own haiiUwntitfif.’ Mr, Cftbsmy expressly pro mised mo, that your iottqr tjhonjrt not; bomndo. public; and, frojri his prominent position nhu exalted character, I Supposed was a suffleioqt guarantee that all would bo if wfujdesired., ... . This Hmqrwa* mads pubho. no doubt, with a view of • killing you rdf. Ot this wo bhall poe apt! hear pinre hore r aftor. The Democracy in this part of Uio cquntry be lieve that the TJiopt prfio was capablo bf destroying tho' inonstor Know-Noihinginm is the pioot competent nnd suitable person to aostroy that monstor of ail mon sters-Abolitionism—which, if not destroyed in 13», will lie mastor of tho field for all tuno to conic. The State Committee has done ns . was expected, and ‘ tho whole niattor lies with tho people, who, if aroused. 1 have no fear.. So lo'n* as tho pooplo aro right wo need notfoarthedishonorablo tricksters. • - • Yours, truly*,.; , B. Donnelly. Nqw, .this is afl I know about the inaltor. It is no 1 fa.uu or |rai>TUucrfbe ofxulno which makes the YfJjpto public, iin'd 1 'thUd esJjlHtnip/itablf I have-no comments to' wafeo/'nothing‘to excuse or iusiiiy. Who needs doiehooTor trenchor?, h»d for a gross outrage upon all tho confidence and good faith known among ,inon In civilized life, I leaye I tho publio to judge. I giro Mr. Donholly’s plea, I and boliovo. until tho contrary rippcars, that now inrtocepfc. now it will recoil, wo will see. His niUno fai nbt'gjven, to oroato tho impression, obviously, that l wrote th|d' JtiiJdrfinotyfancpujjly to soriio member of tho Jfow York Stylo £olpm3Uco. I owo it to myself to expose thi«, as you say, “worse tban forgery.*’ ' Respectfully, Hesby A. Wise* Oijcb Moj’flf-'php Empire is Pence. The (jenfl.oipan pcrgijtentjy saljejj Jfppjicur Bokat-we, by Vi.otpe (who jvas crea ted. Peor of Franco by, I,W'[S Piifpji'i'K, and therefore is aristocratical,) promises to be lvell- Dennvcain-tntnrcj-ond not to frighten England' pr any other great Power,' oy- maintaining .A, large' milituiy establishment. By tho wnsv how absurd (t is to faiit Of England aj <f a eat foyer,’!' ?ee|ng lpojy terribly Tifraid jhe is' of invasion and ibow badly wcparoVl she is fo yo pel it. Napoleon promises to mluco his military and naval forces. Moreover, he is expected fo payan early visit to England—anxious, no dQu.hJ, once again fo receive the sisterly kiss Khijcji ftueofl so pvc him, as ono of the great brofhejrhopd Sf and kingly rulers. What his rccoptjpp )?y jtho English nation may he, seems rather doubtful, for the general impression among Englishmen fs iha£ Jjo concluded poaco when he was within u §tcj) pj tyrp pi expolling tho luiyirfews front Italy, sn<} tpfthe fiwntod w'6?o far, very'far fropi tlipgd >^Ch he waa in a to Jmpofla, jn yipw of his pledge to make Italy <( (f°hi the Alpß to tho Adriatic.” Yet, WAro&Eow may have had ample cause, to the world yet unknown, for acting os ho'dld. A letter from St. Petersburg, dated July 15, coming from a good source, says; “ There are many versions in circulation touch ing tho mission of Count Paul Sehouveloff to tho Pronoh hoadquartors in Italy. Tho onp* most nc orodtted is that'this jioreonago was - ordered by tho Emperor Alexander-to toll tho Emporor of tho French that Prussia and England, being alarmed at his great successes, bad oorao toan agreement to check their continuance; and,that, in tho anticipa tion of a ooinmon action on tho part of thoao: Pow ers, Russia found herself bound in honor to-fore warn tho French Emncror that sbo wna not pre pared to support him In thp ease pf general war.” This would confirm tho generally rofiejvcd opinion that Napoleon was not buro of /t ill support from Russia. Exlcnsiou of American Territory. Among tho news-yesterday received from Europe, by the Nova Scotipn, is the following: “ The ]\Toniteur dr, la I'lottc, a Fronoh Govern* mont organ, says that tho ‘Danish Government has ceded tho West India Island of St; Thomai* to tho United States.” This may bo so, but it will bo nows in this country, wo Buapoct. Tho island in question, ns wcloarn fromLippincott’s Gazottcpr, is ono of the, Virgin IsluntU, 38 miles cast of Porto Ricoj greutost length from east to west,'l7 miles; greatest breadth, about4£.miles { area, 45 square miles. Sandy soil, of which only about 2,500 acres arc under cultivation, nearly half of which aro planted with sugar-cano. Is deficient in wood and water. Is a largo commercial depot, being a great place of call fbr ships from Europe, Conti nent, and tho other lYest lndia Popu lation, 12,800. Tho questions pre— Have- we got this Island; how, on what terms,> and by what authority ? ‘ ‘ ( . A correspondent complains of tho “ tipalaves” of tho Court of Quarter Sessions, saying tliat they want to bo pulled over tho coals, for rude conduct, by somo authority. He givea tho followiitg as his own'rooent experience: “A few days ago,l wos compelled to attond court on business, dud whilo looking around for a seat, was rudely siotod by a burly tipstaff, 'who ordered mo to find k soat or Mosvo.’ As tho Beats wore all Occupied,'l bad to retire, and risk tho penalties for non-attendance, •f submit that this ought to bo remedied. and ; lhai porsonß attending court on legitimate business, nnd In many cases to'favor others, should bo treated with common dcccney, nnd not like oriminnlß.” The following is a list of patents issued'from tho United States Patent Office, to Pennsylvanians, for tbo week ending August 9: 1 I Rudolph Dirks, of Philadelphia, for improve mont in neats for sleeping cars; Chester N. Farr, of Philadelphia, for improvement In Bowing mnohines; Samuel AV. Lowo, of Philadelphia,-for improve ment In machines for milking cows’; A\ A, Moss, of Philadelphia, for improvement in hydro-carbon vapor apparatus; Stephen Stewart, of Philadel phia, for burglar’s alarm; Johh j{. fright, of Philadelphia, for machino for printing in different colors; James F. Watorhuuso,'of Germantown, for improvement, in knitting machines; Ralph Groon wood? of Altoona, for improvement lit fire-boxes of locomotivo engines; Anthony Iske, of Ijancastor, and Jacob B. Krb, of Conestoga township, for im proved hpproneb-opening gates; Samuel Mowry, of Womolsdorf, for improvement in cultivators; AVm. F. Pratt, of Bristol, for improvement in sowing machines; John Shmfor,,of Lancaster, for improvement in grinding-cylinders for applo-uiillfl. Hon, Anthony A. Kennedy, tho ablo and ac complished United States Senator, from tho State of Maryland, is among tho visiters at tho La Fierro Houso in this city. , Pum.tc Sales of Real Estate and Stocks. — Messrs. Thomns <fc Rons’ solos at the Philadelphia Exchange will in future bo held at 12 o’ejock noon. First sale on Tuesday next, 10th instant. Sco ad vertisement. Court of Quarter Sessions. 1 ' tetter Occasional.”" CCorroßiiontloftceaf ThePresß.l - , -- - ; WAsiiiNOToy, AuguiHO, 1859.' James iDuchanfin' Hobry, Esq 1 ., tho' nephew and la to- private ficorctary of the President, is to be married to-morrow at Annapolis,' Maryland, to Miss Nicholson, a .daughter of Col. Nioholson, of that city, and ono of tho offioors of tho United States Sonato. Mr. Henry la a natlvo of Pennsylvania, and tho only aura-wing descendant, of a sister of Mrj Buchanon. This ia an affair of the heart. Tho lady Is beahtiful and' accQinplifihed, though hot re-, puted to, bo wealthy, which latter, faot, it is whis-, pored, lins orousod tho opposition of tho undo (J. 1);,) who, it is reported, will not therefore be pre sent at the nuptial ceremony. If tho whole truth w6rc fully disclosed, 1 It would show,that it was the' independence of character displayed by Mr. Hpory, in refereuoo to this and other matters, that prompt ed him to abandon tho post of privato secretary of the President, and commence tlie practice of his profession in New York. It is notorious that tho tyronny and hauteur of Mr. Buchanan to members of his household, and certain members of his Cabi net, bavo becomo well nigh insupportable. Late lottors received in this city announce that Lieut. Edward Beale is on his way from tho Paoiflo country to Washington! noross tho plains, and may ' soon bo exported in Philadelphia. His expedition to California and back has boon a very great sno 'Ocss. ' ‘ Tho denial of the President, through tho Cotuii tntion, that the wordy between Col. John aon nnd hisExoollonoy iu tho oar at the Baltimoro railroad station in this oi(y; is expectod'to elicit a oountor-statoment. from. Col. Johnson. In, this, as in othor raspeots, tho denial of tho official flrgan a notorious ovont that occurred in the prcs’choo of a- number of witnoasos, is ,MgMy charactorletic: Notobly was Col. Floronco present at the tuuo tho outbreak of Presidential wrath took plaoo, but, if I am rightly informed, Mr. Cobb and others, iqolu ding tho ladies of tho Presidential suite. Col. Flo rence took occasion, Immediately aftor tho affair, to speak of it to a number of porsons. Ho may himself bo called upon to giro his vorsion of tho scene. IVhat crodit is to bo attached to tho state ments of ajournal which boldly and impudently do-' 1 niea that wkioh was at onco known through all tho olrolos of this city, whioh was - tho theme of oom mont in tho hotolg, and wkioh was frequently spoken of by Colonol Johncon bimsolf?> Tho Con stitution attempts to intimiduto Colonel Johnson by stating that u ho has lived long onough'tobff awftre of - tho ridiouto whieh invariably attaches to officials who redress their griovanco9,' real op imaginary , by [flying into print , under the illu sion that the public concerns itself at all about .thetn-f' which moans, of oourso, that the President has a right to insult and dograde honorable men in tho presonco of other?, and that tho insulted citizens, must submit xn silence, ovGn whon misrepresenta tions rro mado calculated to injure tbeir character, . lost tho official organs assail them by “ridioule,” thus adding injury to insult. Wby, howeyer, did Colonel .Johnson resign tho consulship at Havre? That is tho question. ' ’< It is understood hero that ex-Mayor Wood, of New; York, will bo foroed into tho papors to do* fchd bimsolf against tho Donnelly lottor of Gor. Wise, whioh', notwithstanding what has beon said by his son in tho Riohmond Enquirer, has boon accepted by tho Governor as his own proper pro duction. It plaoos both parties in a most inextri- cable dilemma. They have boon vory olose friends. Mr. Wood, you vyill recollect, paid a visit to Itichr inond some two years agq, an 4 there pronounced an elaborate oration upon 41oxandcr Hamilton; was tho guest of Gov. Wise, and has, from that day to tho present, been regarded as his loading friend in tlio Empire State. Tboy wore, I believe, in Congress together. It must ho peculiarly mor tifying to Mr. Wood to find himself tfius criticised, .whilo, on tho other hanjj, it iseosy to imagine the bittor poignancy of tho feelings of tho Governor of Virginia in having his private opinions exposed to the vulgar gago, Biuco the declaration of Mr. Buohanon in tho, B;dford Gazette, that ho was not a candidate, and the MoCandloss letter published on the.3oth of July, the following editorial. article has appeared. In tho Buffalo Republic: u A denial has recently boon published in some obsaure Pennsylvania journal, at a timo whon Mr. Buchandj} was j’pstioatiug, denying that he was a, candidate' for penomipaqon. The'denial fa truo in onesenao. Mr. Buonknan is nol‘ a candidate, but oxpoota toget tho nomination, and within ten days he so said, adding : ‘ The Democratic Party akr LOST, UNLESS IT DOES NOMINATE MB AT CHARLES TON, BOR NO OTHER MAN CAN BK ELECTED BUT MB.’ If the nomination is gtvon him, he will cheerfully accept it. Thoso who deny that Mr. Buchanan DOES Nd'f'bßitfnu ARRNOMINATIOS ARB NOT POSTED. “ If Any office-holder under the Goyotawerit wishea to test tno fact,' lot hint tnKko lifmselC v4ty biisy for about three days, in favor of any 'other anikidate, . and if ho docs not got his walking papers, and havo hid supply of ‘Buohananbroad’ suddenly stopped, we aoknowlcdgo that Mr. Baohnnon is not in tho field. What putriotio custom-house official from Muino t<i'California (or any othor Fodoral official) Will try tho experiment?'' ■ “We say tjiis. notwithstanding a private note from Mr. Bucbunan' W Jlofi.'iyffaqp' Mcpandloas,' pub lishod, unofficially by telegraph at tho 30th.i»*fL»«t; Oocacioxal, _ THE LATEST NEWS BY TEfiEGEAPH. The Lnnding of Slaves in Florida* Y/AQUisqfos, AagustlQ.—lt is ascertained, from an authentic source, that Op 'the Hth of June tho United States Deputy Marshal for Northern Flori da informed the Government of tho prevalence of reports that a-vcssol or vcssols woro expected on tin.* coast of Florida with slaves from Africa, and made eomo suggestions as to the beat mode of in. Lorcopting and arresting them,’tho marshal him bwlf Being absout in another part of the State. The Bycretaiw of tno Wthe reception of this coromunioatiob, UumddiAttfly ’ totegrafpM deputy marshal, informing him tpaf i reypnuo cuttor had boon ordored from Oharloston to oruiso along the ooasb of Florida undor his direction. Tho donuty accordingly went ofi board fiiecuttoron tho 30th of June, ana roaohod Now Smyrnaivlct OP the 3d of July, J)T t q weeks theroaftor ho wroto that he hud boaTdcd vaHohs hohoopprs to which suspi pion miglit Attach, nnd had oHiefully inquired for tqany ptftes alopg the obast, and cbnclaaoUby' spy ing that tfiSF® IfQ B injbrmatipu to verity the reports of tho landing Qf African^.' it DPRoars that Marshal Blackburn hira.- solf was far bohinu t!*° as ho did not inform tho Interior Dopartmont of tacsd tuows until his deputy bad investigated thoir truth with the above montjonod'result. Tho above fno’ts aro glonpej °® cia l papers. New York Alfuirs, New-York, Aug. J0 ( -~Tho supply ofmonoy is In creasing, and money on call Is easier, and 5 p?r cent- f* the common rate, It iu ropoptod that Oommodoro Vanderbilt is to take the Mtoamor Adriatfo in oxchango for tho steamers Cortes end Unole Sana, and that he sells the Northern Light and North Star for 9500,000 to tho Pacific Mail Company. ' The opposition is to cense after October. Nathaniel March, the secretary of* the Now York and Erie Railroad, has been appointed roeoivor. At a pjeotjng <?f t)io directors, yesterday, a"com mitteo wo? appoipted 4oyfso a plan for the re organization of the popipAny. 7h6 euicido of a ’wealthy gouthornpr, at the St. Nicholas llotob roportod this morning, pro’vos te bo without foundation, Tho police, on Sunday night, arrested two men named Potter and Clarke, at tho houso on Forty fifth street, where rooentlyabout $5,000 in counter feit money was found. ’ j£\ t the tlmo of tho arrest the pojico seoured $13,000 ip counterfeit notes, and an apparatus for altering bills, with a Urge quantity of bank-note paper, and thirty-six coun terfeit platoe. Mormon Forgery of* Treasury Notps for the benefit of the Church* Sr. Loos, August 10.—Oao of-the counterfeit chocks on tho Sub-Treasury at St.fLouls, was re ceived hero yesterday. This imitation of tho ge nuine is admirably executed and is oolculnteoto decoivc. The tools and matoriala seized, by tho United States Marshal were found in the church tithing 00100 of Brigham Young, The parllos' arrested aro sab] to bo Mormons or high standing, aud it is understood tbrifc tho profits of the transac tion woro to aocruo to tho bonofit of tho Church. ' North Carolina Election/ ■Washington, August ID, —Returns from tho Eighth Congressional dtetriob of North' Carolina confirm the report of tho ro.olegtjonof Z. B. Vanco, Opposition. The Late Murder at Cleveland. Clkvki.and, Aug. JO.—The inquost on tho body Of Mr. Sterling, picked up in tbo street on Sunday morning, rendered a verdict to-day of probablo murder, Nothing material was olioitod by the evi dence.' Chester County Politics. West Chester, Pn., August. 10. —A primary meeting of tho' Republican party was hold at tho court houso to-day, ■ , , Tho Loooropton Democrat's mot yesterday at tho court house, and tho imti-Locompton Democrats met at Cabiuct Hall. ’ There avo no Uro political preparations being mado. Ohio Clirißtian Anti-Slavery Couvcu- veution* Coi.r-MHus, o'., August 10. —The State Christian Anti-Slavory Convontionmut thin morning, and all parts of tho State woro well represented. A committee was appointed to adopt measures for a permanent organization, and to prepare a series of resolutions-and an address. Adjournod till 2 P. M, Columbus, AugustlO.—The Convention organized permanently this nftornoon, by tho election'of A. A. Guthrie, of-Zancsvlllo, ns president, and ten vice-presidents., Tbo committee submitted a series of resolutions, and tho Convention ndjournod till 0 o'olock to-‘ morrow morning. Fatal Railroad Accident* Washington, Aug. 10.—This afternoon, on tho Alexandria, Hampshire, and Loudon Railroad, s cow, on tho track, threw off tho grovel train, while it was crossing over tho Four-milo run bridge. The.bridge was broken down. Two per sons on the train' were killed, - and twilve persons injured. It is feared that throo of tho latter num ber received fatal injuries. The New Steamer Yorktown. Norfolk, Aug. 10.—Tho' now steamer York towu, from Richmond, bound for Now York, nut back at two o’clock this nftornoon, for water. , cbo loft again at four o’clock. Her maohinory works well. Sailing of the Arabia. Sackvillk, Aug. 10.—Tho sioumor Arablasailed from Halifax for Boston, at s.oo P* M. yesterday. Rho will be duo thoro at midnight. » Cincinnati, Aug. 10.~Fiour vory dull at $4.75a 4.50. Wheat dull. Whiskey steady at 23c- Pro visions HMctogctj. Three Days Later from Europe. THE AHABIA A? HALIFAX. NEW MOVE .0 y,N 4 POLEON. Vrtuth Army ant Savy to be placed on a Peace Footing;* Apparent Binoority of Napoleon. THE ZURICH CONFERENCE NOT IN SESSION., Vote of Tuscany on Annexation to \ Piedmont, t ) Important Parliament, TBE GOODWOOD RACED* COTTON STEADY-CONBOLS 01%a95^, Sackyille, N. B ,'Aug, 10.‘~ Tho horeo ex press arrived this morning, with tho details of the news for tho Associated Press by the steamer r Arabia,/ ; ;. • , ,i » * * The steamships Vanderbilt, City of Baltimore, andTtavaria, from Now York, had arrived Out. The Emperor Napoleon has decided that tho army, and navy of Franco shall, bo placed‘on a peace footing with the least possible delay. This fact has been officially announced, in'-tho-Paris Monttcur, and, has had the effect, of causing tho Emperor,to be regarded ns sincere, and hiS ,ihton-' tions pacific. ' Thd Zorich Conference .had not yet assembled. Tho timo had not boon fixed, bulht was oxpeoted to meet In a few days. The nrrivnt’of the Sardinian to the Zhrioh Conference, at Paris, is announced. ■ Tho adviefes from Italy are peaceful. ■* Ml ' . The Moniteur's announcement of tho intended disarmament caused an advance of 1; -per cent.; on, tho Paris Bourse,, but subsequently r this waspat-' tially lost. Throe per cent. Rentes olosed at-GBf!4s. The Amorican Uo/Bo “ Starke,”, entered by Mr. Ten Brofeck,' for ths Goodwood Race, has won the" stakes, but tho cup was carried off by 11 Promised Jjand. ’ ’ Tho American maro> l Prioress } camo iu third, ‘ . -V • Tho OTorland • Mail with Qalcutta.dates,to June 17, Hong Kong to’May- ID, had reached MaVsoUlesi Tho advices aro not, important. The English Cabinet has 1 announc ed th ri t/h o in* vitation to.participato in the Congress of tho groat' Powers will not bo considered until after tho result pf the Zurich ascertained. •, >-> 1 Lord John Russell and Lord 'Palmerston have made important speeches imParliamenton Euro pean affairs, in .whiph they adwittod ‘that England iad aetod as the medium For conveying terms from Franco to Austria, but without enuorslng.them. • • Tho f aubjoct of the national'defene’es had been debated in Parliament, and the ministers exhibited the intention of the Government to cohtinuo a vi* gorous proscoution of the work on the national de encosi Count Coloredo, the Austrian Ambassador to represent' Austria at tho • Zurich Conferenoe,' reached Marseilles on the 27th ult., on his route direct to Zurich.! V- / i-j *f f ' Tho Indfptndance Beige says that the Austrian Frovinoial Couhcna will ail be convoked j sopnj and l will have complete liberty in iholr deliberations, arid may make known openly and sincerely to the Emperor tho wishes of their, populations. . , Tho first Austrian corps do armee for the present will bo maintained in Italy on n war footing, two hundred thousand strong. The other.'corps do armee aro to go to their' ibrmor cantonments in Gallicia arid Hungary.’/ •/' The official' Ptedmontese Gazette' says that tho now Ministry will not produoo any serious varia tion in the policy of Sardinia. Thore will ho. a grand illumination at Milan on .the arrival there or tho King. ' Tho Sardinian Governors of : Modonahave sboen withdrawn, and tho government turned over to' the, municipalities. , , . / Tho result of the ddllborations on the annexation' of Tuscany to-Piedmont had been mode known. At' 141 places, including ■Leghorn .and Florence, there were 800 affirmative, and only 15 negative votes. • . ■ . he Nord domes that any French troops are to remain in tho Driohles, i . ; ’ A Milan letter,Bays that the extreme party is commencing, agitation, ,and an Insurrection in Venetia is-possloler • - • : L'.,*' -*V ■ Tho Intodlide' Rusts 'jays that Austria- and Franco ,may make,.whatever troatios they please; but in fixing tho lot of Italy, they aro bountt to ask the conourronooiof tho rest of-Europe.- , , It is -said that a deputation, with tho.Princo Napoloon at its head, will soon roachVioima, to take tho remains of tho Duo dePeichst&dt to Franco. On.the 28th, In the Ifoaso of Commons,'Lord C,. Pngottjai4 t|iat'experiments wore progressing to test tho practicability of laying a submarine tele* graph to Gibraltar. '* *. - • ■ Lord John Russoll made hia statement relative to foreign affairs. He said he wo’nld.have postponed it if there, had been any prospect of being’aolo to announce'a definito settlement of tho affairs of the Continent before the approaching close ofJhoYcs sion. Ho was glad to see, in the Paris Mouiteur, ; that the JSraporor of France had determined lo place tho army and nary on a peace footing. After reviewing 'tho grounds of poace ns proclaimed by the two Emperors, ho said, that as England did not interforo in the war, ho did not think that it was for her to interfere in the peace.. Tho,sacrifice of a province by Austria did not' affeot-the state of af fairs qf Europe sufficiently to warrant tho interfe rence qf tho neutral Powers. The mo'stf-important part of the troaty, however, related to tho future of Italy, anfj t)ip inyitatfonpf tho Emperor Napo leon to England to.opter ,the Congress was to con ; *uUon tho aotual state of affairs ofltaly, duite irre spective of the'terms Villa Franca. GJtEAT ’BHITaFn. The parliamentary proceedings on tho 27ik ult. were not important. England hod nqt consented to join the’ Congress, pnd could not until tho'Minißtrjrsaw’wtiat should Result fftfiVtJie Conference at Zurich. The treaty of Villh Eraricn ‘dhl'n'ot lay <J6wn absolutely an Italian Confederation, but only'that'tho Emperors would white'to proniotoObo. :■ Jjo donated thofeaai-, billty (iV thehonoStof a cgnfederatiqr} at precept, pointed out the yarieua obstacles to the con summation of such a project. Again, England must know how it was proposed to carry out the treaty beforo joining the Congress,'especially with respect to the restoration of the Dukes of Tuscany and Mo dona, as England would never bo a party to r forcing tbtup pn their pooplo without their free consent. i|e rejoiced to say that the King of Naples was be ginning ip pat an end to thoaystom winch prevail-, ed under the' lato KipfJ, arid siubereiy desired ,to torminato it altogether, Thoro was a treaty about to bo made at'Vienna, whithora eouQdential.agsnt of.t!)° Erpßph.Gpyernmont had gono to arrange tho basis. * •' Ho bulioved that the Emperor of Austria desirod that tho Italians shqutd have solf-govornmont. Hp could not "now sdy-wfothp£ theft wcmjdj.be a- Congross, but ho thought it would nptboobniu~Eng<' land nqw tq say that'shq wdijl'd’ withdraw from such an assombty if thorp was qhanco of prq-, moting tho liberty' o£ Italy and, establishing tbo peneo of Europe. r ' ’ ‘ ■ > 1 h ’ Mr. Disraeli expressed the wish that/Lord -John Russell bad'been more explicit, particularly as to any terms that may have been offered Austria by tho aeglF4l Pqwors. Ho roiterated his objection to' Englandu/ivtns anything to with tho Couferonoe, as ttobM W or W !? 0 !>°und by tjjq treaty of- Villa Franca. , . - . ’ , Lord Palmorston denied that England pqd sub; mittod any terms to Austria which were loss fayor-, ablo than those ohtained.frqm franco. Tho Go vernment, at tho request of tbs french ambassa dor, had consented to bo the ehannei of qpJPIBlto 1 " oation, and had; .oertejn teiqpa tp Aus tria, but, qt the saino” tfmo, disGucuy stated that thoy wore t)n> vfefMof ifo French Goyornmont, and that England «ayo pq adylco or qpinion. ip the matter. It would-hoiPJtoUiMo far tho Goyorpjflon* to join in ,tho Congress until the Zurich Conferepco was known. J . Mr, Whiteside said thatj the Government had been made a v cat’s-paw of, and' : by transmitting terms to Austria virtually assented to them. - ' Mf. oulogizod tho conductor Sardinia; defended Lora Palmerston from too misrepresent ations brought against him,’ dmf' besought the House not to intorforo botweon the Egooptiro in Whatever measarosit might finditself able to adopt for the interest of Italy k and the permanent wel fare of Europe. After?poqohos J>y oUior mombon'i tho subjeot was dro’ppod.* -*• * * •-* "’■> 4. i '"i. . On tlio 29th, tho pyqooet}ings in the Houso of LordsVero unmtorcsting. , Inffco +iouso of Commons, Bundry questions wore put to tbo Goyormnenfc on the subjoot of naval nr mamrats and national defonoop, - ;*- Lord Pulmorstop said that ho did not think it poulblo for England to enter Into an agreement with tho othor Powers 1 for the arithmetical reduc tion of the military and naval establishments, her position being totally different, ~ ... Mr. Horaman movod a resolution that tho ex penses of completing tho works of dofonoo bo mot by a fund speoially provided for tho purpose, inde pendent of Parliamentary votes. Ho urgod tho gpoossity of continued armament, and Buggestod tho eatabljshmont of a loan to complete tuo de fences. . Mr. Sidney Horbort and’ Lord Palmorston ob jected to the proposition) hut both sajs tjoyqrn tnent was fully alive to tho importance qf comple ting the defoncea of the country,-and promised porous aotiou In tho matter. ... . , . Mr. Cobdon deprecated this unnatural alarm aq an actual iuocntivo to war, and ridiculed thp idea 1 of invasion by France, Ite hoped,that oxplana* tioiis would bo enterod Into between the two Go vernments. After such explanations had been tnnde and tried, ho would,' if necessary, be ready to vote two hundred millions of pounds to provide ft navyrsupofior to Franco, althopgb ho plowed tba£ : tlfo English navy was greatly superior now.' Mr. Horsmap’B motion was rejeoted by 97 ma jority. ’ •* ? . Tho London Herald says that tho formation of, a coast telegraph around England fans been suggested by ft circulur, more particularly addressoU to the shipping interests, ' W r i The coming loan for India wns not expected to uxeoed six or seven mlUloqt sterling., The bouutius to seamonh&d been slightly roduood, and tho system oxtondod to Sept. 30. 9 * * FRANCE/ J:•. V Tho,MoHitfitr of tho 2dth contains .tbo official announcement that tbo Emperor decided that tho anny and navy shall bo roatored to a poaco footing with tho least possiblo delay. It ib stated that ns soon ns tho troops have returned to Franco aud resumed thoir previous quariera, groat num hors of tomporary furloughs will bo grunted, which will nftorwnrds bo mododefinitivo for fill those mOn’ who have twelve or eighteen months to servo. Tho administration of rnarfno is said to havo' ro coivod tho necessary instructions for preparing the definitive discharge of all sailors who, having already served six years, have been called to join tho fioot within tbo last six months. - Tho London 2V'wrs> in ft Ipader on tho,proposed .French disarmament, suysr •* Wo reoogniso in this : disarmament tho sagacity' of tho Emperor, in .gauging tho tomnor ot his people, and for our own part wo rcjoico that wo may now rotnrn to security and poaco. Wo shall, of course, in duo time, follow tho example of our neighbors,” Tho Daily News thinks, tho execution of tho proposed ineusure would bo a tuost valuable pledge lor tho poaoo of tho world, and tho announcement' will ho accoptod with candor. Tho Post says general confidence musj bo excited throughout Europo, and a long and uninterrupted poaoo is to bo hoped for. Prior to tbo announcement of a disarmament, tho Paris corrospondenco was filled with conjectures as to tho warliko designs of Franco, particularly in regard to England, and many absurd, statements woro made. Ouo writer says, “ Orders have been sent from Paris to expedite tho departure of tho French troops from Italy. Of the 120,000 ‘ mon 'in tho north of Italy, 60,000 aro to be sent to Susa aud Gouoa by rail, at tho rato of 3,500 nor day. Tbcss are to be in Pnris en or before tbo utn of Augnsfc. andS&r thejEittgdrot;* fite the Rhine Js to be iigpSrder to, allow Germany -the,, gyronob Vtroops • can be mated from thOeeno of victories ipYlhe south, to Crwh onterP ri s i f neoessatyj in th^rTtorth. 5 ’ [ltwaibtill rfimfare2LtJjftfr;the Etfrperor oontem generally A BO,OOO mon wasfieing formed at St. Mnus, ncai**Paris. - AUSTRIA. ,1 cor . reB P°ndenco af the Indcvendancc Beige thu£ speaks of the projocta 'of reform entertained by the hmporor of Austria: ‘\All the .provincial councils of the Empir& Pare to be .convghod gldgilw iH -9. J§ -&P§we r a Berios of questions on Ike ameliorations whioK they sary to tho ofthq States, es pecially injthe provincial drganliation. jThe coun cils wiU - h aye com pie to li be r ty; in, their, dblibera-" lops, and : muy make known openlyafadJ. sincerely to' the Emperor the wapts and fishes of the popu lations. Important financial and military reforms afclikewis(?projected;”; - ,t - ; . I ITALY . i The official' Gazette publishes'a circular of tho .Ministry .of the Interior to,the governora and intendants general, w,hich says the change pf Cabinet jloes .not produce' any variation in the charnctor of the polioy of Sardinia? The new ministry will continue to favor/aa largely as possible), ; -the' development > of-tho great prinoi-V pie® : which are/-the basis, of publio fright. ’The minister 'goes on to' ask’ support in the tram guilization-of discouraged ‘minder in strengthen ing tho belief in the righta-to -libertyand in pre paring the annexed Provinces for liberal institn ions; Tho by promising reform; i In the oxtonsion of commercial and provincial .h'.UA'L'i.l(yi.H/7L Chevalier Parnni, Governor of Modena, has, by order- of tho-Ringrof. from< :Sardinian authority, arid published a,proclamation in which he remit# the Gpyorriineht to the munloi )al members. Tho populace.assembled. in crowds; ina proclaimed tho municipality, by acclamation, tho Dictators of the country. Chevalier FarHni acpopted'a provisional/regenoy to .maintain riublic order,and reunite .the representative assembly of Modena, which is to pronounce on the future Battle ment of tho country e f y* t ,y \ i ,; .. , '{The rosult of tho deliberations oh the' question* of-anpexing Tuscany witb Piedmonthas beon made known from one hundred arid forty-one places, including Loghorn and Florence? Tharosult shows eight hundred and nino affirm,atlvo against fifteen negative votes. .The abdication of tho-GrandJ)ttke of Tuscany *n, favor.oThis sdri is officially confirmed. * ' -i 1 ■ ,J 'Tho Nord denies thahariy French trbhpa are to occupy theDqohfrfl, Thoso who are at Romo will' remain for thopresent’whore are. Nowhoro else will thoro qe any intervention in Ita I y. ' from;tt&- ; dhalbri L hßariag of tho preliminaries to the pea<so, Garibaldi'ot fered) the resignation of Him?'Glf.£rid',riU hla ofiicers to She King of Sardinia, out the latter had refused them, .l;I.i ‘I T ’. Y'~r j • \') ii » j .Tho Government of Romagna had adopted tho code Napoleon, •/ ;; y i.-*■ "YY •- * SPAIN. “ • ‘-Tho recent conspiracy, at Seville was of a Repub liennoharaotor’ana had ramifications at Barceloha, Granaaa, and Santaridar. The conspirators were to have met on. .a.givon/day. 1 in tho Place del Dcgno, Sevillo, to oozrimenco' the insurrection,’but before that time twelve or fonrteOD of them wore arrested and the place’ occupied by troops. The Madrid l officially *announces that the Quoon of- Spain is' in the fifth 'month of preg nancy. y-iA _ INDIA AND.jOHINA., !'The India, China,, and Australian mails have readied Marseilles. Juno, 17, —Tho produce markots aro inactive. Imports dull. Exchange rs Old.' llo.vo Konq, Juried.—^Exoharige r 4s.loida4s ,lld, At Foochow Tea was inactivo and higher; Iriiports dull { Exohacgo 2dass 3dr 'Xt'Shanghao Toa wasduUy.Tmporta'duiQfc; Silk 1 rather dear of; change . Y i.>< From Singapore, under date of Jonri Uth, it is r . stated that the’ inhabitants'hfißo'ugcmlfipan had risen uud murdered nearly every r European/ ; , . At Molboume Produce: waft fair,.and ImporU ■aorivc; Exchango lia2o peroent. premium»o .> There was great excitement at Melbourne incon quonce of the Chinese refusing to pay.the resident’s tax, and numbers had been arrested. CAPE OF GOdD HOPE J. Tl^e.Cape of Good Hope dates anj'to Ju1y,21..’ Several, shipwrecks, attended 1 with loss.of life. had , occurred on the' south African coast, hut rid Ameri can tcssglh aro mentioned. t **'- • . • THE VERY,LATEST.,/ r ‘ r \ Saturday,‘July SO.-r-Tho Baity'Neic's' city ; airUcle says: The stbok exchange of Friday was quiet, the oxtremo variation being scarcely f« In the other departments little altera tion' in prices. No biilHori'was taken, from, tho Bank, tho gold by the City of Baltimore'supplying the immediate' wants of exporters'. Tho- Times 1 oity article pays,: The funds, open-, ed ontFriaay at> fractional but soon* showed renewed dullness. The oxtont of the busi- Jiess was unimportant., There was a £ood demand. Tor money, and in the generaVmarket 2J poricerit/ “was 1 tho lowest rate. At the Bank applications were limited, t . , The Morning Post Bays that according to re ports in Paris last night, Count de Peraigny has de ferred for a day or two his return from Florence to London, on his mission.to the Tuscan Government. ■ Tho Sardinian plenipotentiary to tho Zurioh -ConforotiCQ reached, Paris yesterday, and had an Interview with Count'Walo.wski. s ’ ■* 1 • ‘ f Commercial Intelligence. LIVERPOOL COTTONrMARKRT.-Tho sales of Cot ton in the liiverrool market for the week added up C3,- .400 pales, of winch 5,600 wore to spoculators and 8 000 to oXQortqra, tho,market.closing-with a-pood demand, which caused noulors to ask an auvance'of >«u, hnt th*B was! only partially pHained—^making the woeVs advance on the unor quahtiCsvery triflmk, while thhjQnotations for Mho inferior qualities were barely maintained. Holders offered freely, but showed no disposition to preqs sales. The sales of Friday amounted to 8 QQG samp, of which 1.600 were on speculation and for export/ The market closed quiet but steady at the following au thorized quotations: Fair OrWns. fYd; MuldUnrrdo.’t Srl^dFair Mo hilas-7?<d: Middling do. T^i. ; Fair Uplands, 7Md: Middlin.' do. 7d. Tho stock in port was 675 000 bales, of •VrmNi 607 500 wore American. » - STATE OF TRADE- fN MANCHESTER.—The ad vices from Manchester were favorable, and the prices of goods and yayns had advanced. Tho market closed buoyant and nctive. •- ~ * LIVERPOOL BREADSTVFFS MARKET.-The Liverpool Bteadstuffqmarketiqdufi. Messrs. Richard snnj Swsnce, k Uo. reporttho harvest prospects favora ble.' Flour very dull and nominally unchanged; Ameri fcan 10s©12a Bd, Wlieat dull nt.Tuesday'g improvement: v estMqte<t7i6d £9n 4d ? AVastcrn 6d : dqil; isqrppcAn onerea at a slight reduction*; mixed and yeJlpw Amer'caneslOdffCsad: white7s«T7s9d. ■ « ; , LIVERPOOL PRO v IP/ON MARKET.—Messrs. Big ling. Athya & Co.,‘ Richardson, Spence Sc Co., .Tames McHenry and others, roport: Boat heavy, and ail des criptions slichtlyjowec, l 'but with more doia/.r Porkdull and quotations 'nominal. Bacon 'heavy- and' elwhtly lower. Lard dull, but steady at {ttpfiis. for good refinin-.'.* Tallow slow Of sale,-but' pricos'linatterod< Batcher’s Association.s4WssS. .LIVERPOOL PROnUpE MARkF.T-l’lia hroVors' circular reports Ashes staad'y aV2u4t?fs'6d for Pots and ©tiM for Pearls.- Sugar quietimt firm. Coffoo quiet. Ridosteady. Tea firm 5 wanted at IsS&d. Fish 0)1? Slow of sale, btttpyicqsupalterpth Linseed,Oi(nt »sw2os Qd. Rosin dull: common 3s Sd«r2s 9d.‘ American -laf Itsaris M, Spirits Turpentine dull, ana considora my: lower; sales tyt So&33s, the market closing with bold ersaskme an advance. ‘ ' ,i ‘ * . LONDON MARKETS.—JTeMre.Baringßros’. circular reports that the innrkot for wheat opened early in‘the week Witl\ a shfrht advance, but closed with quotations Jiafoly maintained, iron firm at £0 ss«r£6los for rails, And £6tt.£6 5s foy, unFs. > I‘igiriejidji; at 53a quiet. Cofioe steady. Rfce quief. Spirits pootipe heavy aqd slightly lowor: sates .?37s on the* ,?P9t, and 3*>s' to arrive. Fish Oils quiet; Linseed Oil fliiiqt.Aud scarce qt §Ss 9iJ«r»s,‘.TqHQw steady. Tbo wool sales were amninted. nmlnnces were firm, LONDON MONEY MARKET.—Tne. London monoy market was slightly more stringent, with an moreased demnna. s i < Ckm«ols closed on Friday at 9iT4ftSSH for account. The bullion in the .Bank of England had decreased £235 000. ( l! Messrs. Baring Brothers quote bar silver at ss2Kd; dolliMfisldJT: eagles 70s Jd. . _ AMERICAN SF.CUKITIES.—Baring Brotbars report) A limited business, at providu* rates, m State stocks, apd tin improved ricpuwUpr railrnaii ponds. Fana r . pia RriilrOnd bonus being in Inrge qpeonVitive inquiry; while m other descriptions the transaction? were small. Tho London Times, of Friday repots sales of New York Central shares at a - considerable decline, vi*f6S; f and of Pennsylvania-Central ddcohd mortgage.bonds ab MARKET—[For (ho week ondini the 23th' ult.l—Cotton dun; sales of tl|eyoek 3(100 bates; stock 82 000 bales; Now Prleapa tres. JUf. and bar 1001.. beinqaalkntilfecUne. The wMthor m France had' been unfavorable for tho crops. Breadstuff's wore dulP hut stpncly.'Pot Ashos firm ot 4pf.' ColTooduU. Oils— □alps unjmpnftnqt. heavy.' Sugar dull* but firm. tftraUqif. ip firmer, . . New York Stock Ixchange—Ang. 10, SoCoMichigan 6s.7slllinois Cea R...... 63H 10000 Missouri Stds.... 62M 230 MicitS&Nl Guar.g3o 20: 2000F.rie lst mtg bds.rSO 300 ' ; dq;.V»'.'..-.«0 20 ‘ COO 111 Con Ms. . 85 100 < doL *. .. i 2DX & Pacific M 5C0..810 77« 100 .. d0.:....2)3 BO ucr sJO 78 250 Panama IUK SNYOouR. mki 6 H4JX 200 do 69V 300 Clov & Tol R. ;.b3O 17 ■ 100 do ~,,\b6069& 560- do.: 17 100 Cumberland Prof... i2H 100 Chicago ARI. .slO 6Ojf 200 Reading R l6O do 01 IQO- Ido .830 43 700 do'. b6O 61^ 300 .da >.43*lW do 60* 230 do 43 100 . do r£osO* 200 Mich Central R.».. 41Nor & Woroostor H 40 ; THE MARKETS, ,-Ashes aro steady at for Foteiand 55.62* for Pearls. , 1 . • ■ FLoun.—The mnTkot for State and Western Fleur is dm! and unsettled nt a dec mo of SirlOo, with fair csipts, and sales of bblp at for superfine State; 54.65v4.96 for extra; 465 for superfino western; 54.G0J»5,10 for extra do; 54.75v4 9Q toroid, and 6d5.20 for fresh''ground extra round-hd6p*Ohio. Southern Flour is dull and heavy, with sales of 800 bbls at 55*5.30 for mixed to bood, and £5.60&J loy extra bmnds, * ' “ (JnAix.—WJioat is scarce, and now is 2c hotter, with sale* of 10,000 bus. now rod Southern at 51.22*«v1.25; do whito Canada at 51-25; now Southern whito at 51.55; andndwred Kentucky at 51.25. Corn is dull and un changed, with no sales to note. Ryo is quiotat7sc. Oats aro steady at 30at35c for Southern; Pennsylvania, and Jorsoy, for State, Canada, and Western.- ' . Pnovis/o.vs.—J'ork is nomunl for mos»; 51050 for prime. Bcof is dull, with sales of lOO'bbls; al 5C)?6.25 for country prime $ S7ffB for country moss; $8 50 all for repaekod Chicago, find -513jrlJ fO far extra. 'Bacon 'and Cut Moats aro du 11. Lard i? quiet, with sales of 100 bbls, nt JOHotIIc. But ter and phooso nrd nnclimr od- Wutsxpv is du|b g ales fif lpO bbls nt 2?c. { Arrival of tiib Printer Visiters.—-Yes terday afternoon tho twonty-fivo repreaentatives of the typographical brotherhood of Philadelphia— alluded to by us a day or two sinoo as having started on a pleasure excursion to Washington—nrrived in this city at one o’clock, their yacht having keen towed from a considerable distance down tho river, Last Friduy they left Baltimore, where they'took occasion to J step for a white on their journey, aud Vrhcro thoy woro so hospitably ontertuined., At our wharves tlifey woro received by their fellow-* oraftemon, and at onco invited to partako of tho hospitality of their Washington brethren, always so gcuorouslj’ oxtendod on puoh occasions. Wo un derstand that to-night they witl bo invited to share in a collation, to bo sorvod up in a stylo worthy of the noblo«hcftrtcd'Offtft, * To-day, tho visiters, in btiargo of a Washington committee, aro vjsUlng the various objeots of in terests in and about the city. .This afternofon they will pay thoir respocta to Prosident Buchanan. To-night, as above stated, tho visiters will be en tertained by thoir Washington brothron, and to morrow morning at 3 o’clock they leave on their roturn trip. They will embark jOa .their fine schooner yao ht, the 'Father and-Sons, afad 6n thoir way down tho river they will j> ty a visit to hh unt .Vernon and tho tomb of Washingtonj—Washing ton last evening. ‘ Tho Yarmouth Register Fays that tho far-famed soa-serpont has lately visited that port, and was chased up a nqjrrow crook and caught. He turned out to be ft horse mackerol, measuring ovor eight feot in length and woighing throe hundred and aixteon pounds. Tho Register says; 4 “It ia tho opinion of .experienced fisliormon that ■ this is the fish which bus given rise to the belief in a sou-sorpent. - Wbqu it is running at iu-ordinary .speed in soarch of prey it moves along just under tno surface of tho water, producing a wavo uhich rises up in a serios of oorrngatidns for about ouo hundred feet in a straight lino, boforo it falls off iuto tho ordinary spreading wuke produced by a body moving through tha water. This nppeaiancp in moderate weather s 6 closely rcseutblcs that of a huge serpent moviug over’the surface of the wafof that it is difficult,' even for thoso accustomed apponrancc, to roalize that it is nothing hot a wavo, and it is not strange that, wheu soon for the first time, should strike the beholder with torro?.” 7 - C T | the Money-Market* > j PniLADELFHIAj AggoatlOplßfid. Thej money market gftfwr s&mewtnitf fighter as the a4tive , "«efcioir oTfcdslneis advance*/ and'the rates dfm o n ey, T during thopaatweek/have gradn*; ally advanced notiessthan one pcr.oent.;L - At dae Stock Board/ heyond .a sale 0f.,19,000 *jity:• loan at 102}, very little was done. v’Pittaburgj Port ; . Wayne and Chicago. gpld -,7s at |B}, ptjq, Commonwealth Bank aj •17, Beading Railroad 'at 2ft}, Behigh’ViUiey Rail- * rood dt otSasjdel.^^49^', at 118}*, Union Bank of G^|np®Sefl/it^iQ2 f onb " share j Philadelpbia*Bauk' r af Til. '‘Eiglify-three ofstock, and'nine thousand dollars ofbbhds fup up the whole day’s work, outside of the^sl9,-' ! * £ 000 city bonds above mentioned. The market is very bare r of oiders.froin outsiders, and odnld hardly - he bore dull than ft is at present. } .The news from abroad, detailed in the Hammo nia’s bails, and telegraphed from Halifax upon the arrival of tho Arabia,’ producod no effect upon either tho stock or the money market. The moat important event in the internal history of the country for last 1 week, tfasdHe sejaidri of ,tha .wool-growers’ fair at Cleveland. The Dental Con vention and. the Dlondin; united to attract a large crowd to Niagara and the t vicinity of Buffalo, hut the hone and sinew the r r ■intelligence of the Country were attracted to Clever land and tho great wool fair. The exhibition elicited the warmest commendation from those in i attendance*' who^wfef^ : the*gene/al* f appearance and improvement of the wools of Ohio, *'■ , wliich, in the opinion* 6f comjfctont ‘judges, eur passejl anything of the kind. ofer brought to the attention of the public.' Omo has 'become the loading Statu Qf'tkb'Uhion in the. produetlbn of wo6l,Jand'bid3jfbif,to‘reap'annually a rioh harvest of wealth and ’prosperity : f?om .this great etaple' alone. Thereseems.to.'be no reason why tho joy- - oos hiUs.jmd<^|ertUe a .--Yim§ys :: .pX I _our should not, equaltyjwith those of Ohio, eontribnte to tho supply'of* IhiS great and plbfitablestaple. * * '' * ” The roturbs show that m .the f whole country somb | oi 'wool ahj produood in nually»whUe tha&nnualconsuinptioa in tho United Statep is rather above than' below 100,000,000 pounds, and f is-steadily increasing.-' More than 50,000,000 wuo} *"aro imported every year |no this country, yrhhjh tho country"iV abundantly able to. prodrsca jtfl' own borders,.hud of which the very faet of - its importation from abroad : . is a burning djsgrhwrto'our native agriculturists. Mr. Cooledge, Of B&WnV&ddr&slhg'the Ohio s¥jooi-~< Growers! Society, said: > ~ , JVe have td'raise; wooVfnj and t trust tho day of common 1 sense is* drawings noar wlion snoi) ft tariffnaiwlili hold out liberal inducements ‘to the wodl-grbwora' of the country.* l •'Wo' of the' East'oome •to you : starring fofcfood for our <nuwhlnoxy. Wo oall for - more| wool—let it he of all grades—common, medium, or fino, and we promise -.yon wa will fur nish Machinery enough to use it up. You cannot glut 9ur markots. ' “ Mr. Eddy, of FoU xirerf urged the - growing of - fine wool. 'lc paid better than coarse'. * There was ‘ ' notaidreßs-coot worn by man or boy in the land but was mado of foreign wool and in a foreign oountry. "Erory yard of Broad-cloth ought: to be, made here- Jt Another (speaker spoke of the different breedsof: sheep raised. Crossing 'of breeds is s good plan, and by this method the' wobl-growbw will improve their; fleeces. • It.ooata non . more,'aud /nbt quite. a sheep that will. Bhoar from fire • ‘to seroh'lbs.’thwoue thatVitlsheartwoauif'ftbalf •’ lbs. i The reason thJktepymany by dogs] is that tho farmers keep * drove of. dogs and do not consequently they must get their food where they can. htm&ed his sheep, and from geptumberto-washing time did not let them bo out at all in hoary showers or cold leather.'"indeedfthoy shouldnot -be 1 washed,' but 1 that ( wziB a custom, hard to broah away from.. .. Mr. Adams.said that Saxon ehoep were tooten- dcr to be,out,in tho winter... not build a saolior iorhislTrench’ sheep, aid" considered them tHo most profitable.' ‘His i wooiaveriigod’-thitiyoar a. trifle short of fonr pounds. Haa two hundred sheep an rSundrod acre? 1 n hi a One speaker had commenced fShqop-raising in y &rmont in. 1825. _ lias ralaoiVSpanish,' Saxon, and _ Torino. Sheep were cold rains than, i. by snows, for this reason they will wintor out Yormont better, than in ■ f - , Mr. "W iliis purchased 2,200 sheep two years ago. ’ Ono: flock of I,QOO ;came;from Washington county. Pa. j These were put ( into, a. pasture of 1,500 nerejs and left ont all winter,'not boing look ed to or aaUod'more' than, throe' tirnos during the winior. They woro very poor in tho full, but in the spring wore fat enough for mutton. He had* ~ triel r bo,Ui«mfltho(ia i -jo,f,,leaYing. j thQin ..onf housing them. From his 2, 200 shoep he roaUxed'" $5,201) in eight months.: •; j ,: t i'.’At tho sale of wools there was a very large at*, tendance, and rory spirited bidding- * MCsfirs. Jlar baugh & Co., of Pittsburg, known all over the* 1 TJuibn as aloadihg house in tbW trade/bought up . wards of sixty thousand at prices r varying according to quality, from 34 to 67 cents per pound» and the Pitfsbiirg house bf Mr. Randall also bought largely. The sales altogether,amounted to not less than 300,000 pounds, at go6d prices! Mr. Cooledgo, of Boston, bobght soma 25,000 pounds f Mr. Wil lard. uf'Beston, about7O,ooo ponnds; and P. A H. Stearns, of'Pittsfield?. Masr. \ about poxmds r fleeces of extra, .fino, quality were • run up,as high bs $1.15 per pound." * Thero* is no'snbjcct‘mbro interesting, and scarcely any )deq appreciated, thc*ubjcot of wool-growing in the handsoFAme* rioan farmers; and we trust that'the record of the Ohio Wool-grawerameoting,&nd Bale at .Cleveland, ww be widely noticed by the. agricultural press of &e;wholb Oixj own Stat 6 is far behind ' thejposition she ought to occupy‘in this respect, and evoty newspaper iu tho State should; endeavor to arohflo our farwbrS fo'o sense of their loss by ne west of this.lmportant branch of agricultural in dustry, 3 The following 1 is acomparatrre statement cf the bh|ittCßS',of«the Norlh Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany, for tho month of July, 1858 am} 1859: EaJningß in Jnly, $25,337.31 '* j“ Jllty, IKS.. -25^53.11 Increase-;.-.;..: 2. » .Katnintrs in 8 months ending 31st nit ’came time last year • Incroaso.,. . 1 .... ’ It ia announood that the half-yoarly dividend of tho Xew York Central Railroad Company will bo three per._eeot> >;• / *• The following i§'a etatomont of oarmn g» for the month of July, 1859, as compared with tho cones* psnding month of the previous year ¥oa«. Increase. Statement showing the results of the businow off the road for-the six months ending with 1 the 31st of July, 1859: Burnings '..r, Less expense. [ Total.., ...$1,272,721 01 months’ interest and sinkiug fund. 538,047 SQ. 8a1an0e...... .1.. $734,673 31 Amount of a-three-por-Oent‘,dividend. 720,000 00 ‘ Leaving.....- ,$14,673 3J ‘ r {The following krV the J rdcelpts of‘ tho Morris ; <3 inal Company : ' ' Total to JuH 30.18591 §144 207 30 Week ending August 6,1830. 8,790 CO 5133,097 SO Tout to July 31, 1868. §llB 288 S 3 • ' Week ending August 7,1555... 8,7.13 07 127,03135 Incroaeo, 18^3...'533 075 96 ,Tho follpwing aro the roooipts of tho Delaware, Division Canal Company; Total to July 30, J&9. 252 Ou Woek ending August 6,1839. 6.M0 69 Tjitftj to July V. 1858- 590 904 OS^ 105 ’ 7& .Weekending August?, 1861-6 J 99 17 • 1 23 ; -Y-ll—■^inoreaw,ia»..l^.v..v v io ; Shipments of ooal by tho Barclay Railrojtri and Coal Co. for the week ending Aug. 6a 1;198 ton.*. Previoussliipmont., 12,575> u j Amount for tho' 5ea50n.......... i ’IS.'TTT ‘* c ’ \ PHILADELPHIA STOCK EXCHANGE SALES, j J.■ ; August 10,,1359. 1 y -.-• - RSrORTBD BY MA.NLEV, BROWN, & cd.,‘ SANK-NOTB; STOCK, AND KXpn ANOB BRQKBRS,,NORTH WBBT CORN SR THIRD AND CHKST.VOT STREETS. I ' " FIRST BOARD:' ltooo CitT M Naw..... 102« 1 1000 Elmira 2d m7a 25 ' iIK S ‘V, A ,W f 3• • •“» 27 Union Bk Tonn... .118 JOW J’, !■ 1 5V&ChC7s.50. j 1 riul.i Bank 11l irrK^Hn^ 68 | 15 Koadma it 21JJ I ° ".'.bexwlej JpOO N Foima . ..&})£{ BOARDS 10 Lehigh Val R_ }..b3.35K BOARD.. 10 Commrwwltb Bk.. 17 3 Lehigh ValjU 3dJs ‘RICES—DULL., SECOI 2000 W Chos 11 Sa.. <-,b5 , IWX> Elnurn lat m. 7*.... jwJv 512 C6sAm B bi-iiit* CLOSING R 1, .. £«/. Asked, - Bid* AiitcL Pluto* '..MX 100.. Schuyl Nav stock. 7X Vi ‘ s ;»!4 100 prof. 17 : , m TPmap’eiElmß. 3 3\f PennaSa' in 0ff...50 90X •• To Ist ruort 56 07X Roadmr H. 21)J SIX “ 7s2d mort. 23 33 , “ Mb TO.. . ..73 ® Lon? IslandK ..■.. 10 10V ** mort 6s ’*4.80 01 Leliixli CoalJtNav. « “ do’66 in oIT. 69 iNPonnaß 8 Si PonnaH. 38Ji 3SX *• 65.. 63J£ W ’ ", 2dm 65...85 67 “ 10s 80)6 87 Morriß Capa! Con CO 62 Cataviswiß i ,u ,prf tHvofT.lW 3« “ lßtmlxls. S5>S Scbnjl ;Nav6a’B?.. 69 F6-South R divoiT.CO 65 “ 7A'< gd A & Sta R- 4.1 Race&Vine Stall. 43 FJiilnilelplna Markets. August 10—Evening. The Breadstuff ranrkot remains dull,. and only soino 3n400 bbls. Flour found buyers at $5.£Q for euporfino, made from now Wheat, and $5 per bbl. for sound old stock; somo holders are indifferent at soiling at thoso rates, but the demand is mostly to supply the homo trado at prices ranging from $5 up to $7 per bbl. for superfine extras and fancy 'brands, according to quality and .freshness. Kye Flour nnd Oorn Meal are-but littlo* inquired for, and held at 53.75 for the former, and $3/621 for tbo latter. Whout—There is not much offering, but the demand is moderate at tho advance; sale* in cludo GOO bus. fair red at 130 c; 1,400 bus. prime Pennsylvania and Delaware aVl33e, and 800 bus. white at 140a1420, mostly at the latter rate for ' priwo Jfentiteky. Itye-is steady, with small sales of new Delaware at 70 cents, and old Pennsyl vania at 78 cqnta per bushel. Corn is in better demand, and nil effered, some 4,000 bushels Srime sold 'at 75 cents. 1 part in store. ats are also in good demand, witn sales of 5,000 bushels old Pennsylvania to noto at 37a38c in storo. and I|7oo bushels now Southern at.33c.. Bark—A stnnll salo of Ist No. 1 Quereitren wos mnde at $3O per ton. ,Cotton —Tho market continues stendywirt ?[uiet, and about 250 bale 9 have been disposed of in ota at from 12i to 13ie.forr,C viands. cpth rr>d short*time'.' Groceries and Provi&ionsj-J-Thc-re are ,tto, changes, and but lrltle doing in the wey ; of ‘sales. Whiskey moves off as wunted at 25c ; for Drudge; 26c for Pennsylvania, and 27c for Ohio bbls; (Ails ate held at 26c per gallon, and doll. ... 81.3ffi.3Q .$214,042.10 . 181,499.93 $32^43.17 £ arniDgs. >5511,569 48 . 458|65350 ..$52,005 68 .S2;TSS f SS7'7I . 1,463,130 70
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers