gtt VrtsS4 TRIM,SpAY, 00;0613Pt 20, 1859. Frits? , Peas.—The Late Senator Broderick; To Terns and Back", No 2" Dr. &Udder's Lecture on India, on Tuesday Evening, at Musical Fund Belli Additional Particulars of the Harper's Ferry Plot ; Sketch of Captain John Brown, the Leader of the. Narper's 'Sorry; Insurrection. 7011E1'11 Penn.—The Southampton Tragedy : Negro Out break in 1831 ; The Courts ; Marine Intelligence. , Servile Insurrections. Fortunately for ,our country, notwithstand ing the large number of negroes hold in bond age in'the Southern States; the number of servile insurrections Which have occerred" 'IL. been very small; their ramifications limited iu • extents and their suppression remarkably prompt: TILAOKERAT; in that portion of his "' novel -of the (c Virginians," published in the October of Ha7er'S Magazine, de salt:4' some of 'the marauding expeditions of the slaves Who had been enticed away from their masters, by the British, during the Hero lotion; but the masses of the negroes remain ed firmly attached to their masters, and, in some instances,•bravely fought in the. Ameri can armies. In 1821 , an insurrection broke out in the county 'of Southampton, on the southern bor ders of' Virginia, of which an account will be found' In another portion of this paper. It oc , essitiollireeter loss of life among the whites, and greater consternation than any other in 'aurreet,ionary movement among the negroes ever Made in thhicounfry. About 1835 another extensive plot was dis cOvere4, with which the noterious desperado and misereaut,Mcnitatt, was closely associa ted, and' the supposed letvier, A.few men- in '•• nearly•all the Sotitheti States were believed to be connected with this conspiracy; but as they were 'nearly all villains of the deepest' eye, their principal object was probably pillage, in the midst; of the cenftesion and consternation they expected to create. In 1856 great alarm was occasioned in vari ous portions of the South by rumors of another servile insurrection. Many negroes were ar rested and severely punished, and several white men were shot for, their alleged pellet potion in the movement, Mt no very serious harm was done to the whites. Whether the mysterious and destructive National Hetet disease, which broke out in Washington city -a short time previous to the inangeration of Mr. Beenanktv, was in any way connected with a negro conspiracy, has ne ver yet been fully ascertained, but many per , sons suppose that, in Ane way or other, no groes were connected with the creation of that terrible disease. The late movement at Harper's Ferry ap pears to have been entirely under the control of OsSawattomie BROWN, of Kansas notoriety; and 'it , seems he was to some extent sup.. plied with fends, and perhaps arms, by lending Abolitionists oftbe northern States. But his lit , tle band ofwhite followers were recruited almost entirely trims his own Kansas - companions ; and it is evident from all the accounts of the recent 41tBeulty, that he regarded it as a renewal, on a new theatre, 'of his old'Kansas fight against the• Missourians. All his white followers, with but two or three exceptions, paid the forfeit of their lives for their connection with his Insane and wicked enterprise. It is not at all proba ble that Coon can long escape arrest and pun ishment. Bumf; himself Can expect no other • 1118116 on his trial for his connection with the late oeturrenees, • than imprisonment for the remainder of his life, or execution upon,the gallows. There are many rumors that a wide-spread conspiracy existed, but we are inclined to think that its importance was greatly magnified by the exit): fancies , of linown's mind. It may be that FRED DD R OLABS and GERM SIIITD, whose letters were found in' his' bawd quartera, actively sympathize with him; but it is utterly impossible: that a , sufficient number, of white persons' were connected with the movement to render it, under any circumstan ces, really formidable against the strong array of force which was brought to bear against rt at a few hours', notice, and which, if any seri ous danger• had really existed, 'would have trwelled 'tip into an' army of a hundred thou sand men at a Week' a notice. TIM volunteers who would have been placed under the control of the President as anon as the intelligence of the outbreak was extensively P: circulated, and a necessity, for their assistance established, would not on. have been suffi ciently 'powerful to subdue any plotethat could have possibly existed under Bab nrstiti direction, but any movement of a dentist character with which every: white 'man in this I7nlon, that could possibly be found to sympathize with it, was actively and immediately Connected; for so thoroughly is' the' national if eetinient' of America Impre.' sae& with the itorrurs,of n Ser vile insurrection,"and with the duties of Ame rican citizens in every quarter of the Republic of preserving the lives and property of the citizens of, the whole Ifepiiblic; that it,suceess tal insurrection on an extensive Beale is an ut; tar impossibility. .The Chestnut. Street Bridge. Our readers will remeniber that pianoßs; instead of referring the subject Of bUilding bridge across the Schuylkill at Chest:Mit street to the Highway Committee, to'whicif, being ti highway, it naturally belonged, handed it over to the Committee on SurVeys.: It seems that the clialr7n9m of the Conanitice on Surveys is Mr, Csaver.r,, the Treasurer (and apparen tly the representative In Connissy of the West Phila delphia: Railroad Couipliny;end one of the most influential members of the same commit tee fallir..TlLEOPlpaiE PI:SLRII; the solicitor of the seine, Market-street, Railroad. ,Company. It. Is well known tireverybody that it is for the Interest of the -West Philadelphia Railroad Company to defer the building of the Chestnut etreet bridge, that it may continue to enjoya ' monopoly of the triveiacross the river Schuyl kill. It thus appears that this most important project bee been put into theimnds of its natu ral foes; and as it seems, from the long ellenco, and inaction of the committee, that it will be smothereil by it if possible, it becomes the dutyluf some member of Councils, to move to takelt out of their hands, and bring about `wore decided adieu' on the subject; otherwise driverito Aim. conclusion thit the WestPbilidelphia"Ritliroad OompanY: 'not only owns Weal Phßadelphia,:iis the pee.; pie are forced to think, bat the whole city and Councils too. Eclectic Magazine. The BeleatieMagasine of Foreign Literature, of which IV. It. Bidwell, of New York, is proprietor and editor, la a periodical which we make a habit of reading every month. It con tains, for its literature, the very best articles in the leading periodicals of Crest Britain--more particularly from those which' are not republished An tide country. Those aro given without mutila ,Kilion or abridgement,' and a tine scholarly taste is exhibited In the- selection. The work is well establielie.ii, as the forty-sixth volume will liaeom- MienCedin January. There is safe reading in its pages—not a line that the moat fastidiona parent need dread to meet his family's eyes., Its Mee trattints, which are principally portraite, though not exoluelvely so, are of the first class. In the Beleatte for. 'lB5B forty steel portraits of eminent persOrut were- glean. In the present year there will be 4 444 phriralte, including one of Rufus Choate, immediately forthcoming in the November 'number. Pen and graver unite in making this periodical unusually Attractive and interesting. Three volumes, each of sit hundred pages, octavo, are published every year, the" sabseription to which is Only five dollars: Terms and other par : tioulariwill be found in the advertisement, on our third page, to which we take leave to refer; are" indebted to Mr. Daniel- B. Paris, the Waiters ngent, of The - Beleetie; for a sight of two -- .'very _beautiful ,Prendlinl Engravings, of else and - exemition width ' make them worthy of being 'NOW, and • hung in parlors or libraries, one of rrldeltMr, Bidwell intends presenting to each new ettbsetilier, Whoever obtains two eubecribere to the Ma,gaillie Will receive both: The plates hive been expontiti.biOur - eminent engraver, john Sartain, Raw.; who intended to sell them at the,pair, and has _disposed of them to Ihlr. Bidwell for $1,200,, which he estimates as only moderately paying him for the time and l4 l, 6 r.bestowed upon thein. They Tweiat , llo3 ", are ° ' Filial Alfeeßen—Britiday Morn end t‘ Rome geone-, -Retitrued item Merkel." Beautiful domeatio coinpositienathey are, and won , ;thy , of piemotion to tho parlor walla of enbierlbers. now at the Ashland Rome; Aroh *tot, Wilt- show , these ongraringi, and-specimens of the ",ordinary, illustrations of The .Eclectic, to any per: 'Sent !, p it et enr. OfOrt,ie llovember lanrober ' Bo 4 l ins twa ,.. firet.olaes 'ingravlngi en. steel;,-The Old Valentine amine Trial of Eno Doane, with. 1104 engraving of Peril fashions, a variety of other 4hi„,:llloo:4tfone, Tirose, verae, et cetera. Really, (folk outstrips lams& as the year alosoe. -Li 2tii'L Cligirk of 64 The Count of ;Monte In the years 1841-45, were published twelve ?renames containing c( Lo Comto de Monte Christo," by ALEXANDRIA bumes. This story originally appeared in a Parisian daily journal, the Constitutionnel, whore it attracted general attention. With the exception of SCOTT'S beat romances and DICKENS' home•uovels, no work of fiction has been more popular in our time. Through the medium of translation, it has been extensively circulated wherever the English language is road. It is generally known, now, that DIMAS really did no/ write this won derful romance of life. This was charged against him, in 1845, in Arantoust: brochure, Sur le Afercantilisme Litteraire," and, in the same year, by g? Frabrique de Ro mans, liaison A. Dumas et Cie.," by EUGENE MIRECOLTIIT, the sarcastic author of that re markable series of biographies entitled ?? Les 'Coutemporaines." These publications affiliate , c The Count do Monte Christ*" upon a cer- tain Monsieur Anousri MAQUET. At another time, perhaps, wo may return to the disputed authorship. Just now, wo desire to show upon what actual circumstances the characters in " Monte Obviate" were drawn, and the thrill ing incidents framed- The 'original of Emand Dantes, who subse quently figures In the romance as the Count of Monte Obristo, was one FBA:News PICADD, who; In 1807, lived In Paris, and made a re spectable income as a chamber shoemaker. Young, lively, and well-looking, he was on the eve ot marriage with a handsome damsel, who possessed a respectable dowry. PV.4.111) . had a neighbor who kept a cafe near the Place Sainte Opportune ; a widower, with two children, who bad one great fault— though himself very well off, he had a re markable jealousy of any neighbor who was thriving, or seemed likely to thrive. This mans name was lii.Titinu LOTIPLIN, and he was a native of Nimes, the capital of the de- parfment of Gard, whence' PICAIM orl ginally came, also, and his three most in -Unitas friends all came from the same neigh borhood Visiting LOUDIAS'D cafe, and attired in his holiday costume, rnAlmors PSCAUD attracted the attention of his townsman, Loui'ua, and confessed that, in three days, he was about taking tho important step called marriage. Tho damsel, ho said, was AfARGUERITE DE Vi 0011011X, with a dowry of one hundred thou sand francs, equal to about twenty thousand dollars of our money. Ho invited MATHIEU LourrAs and the other three Nismesites, his friends, to attend the wedding, at Saint Lou, and to join a little bat champetre, with which the evening would close. They accepted, and PICAUD retired. Naturally jealous and grudging, LOUPLAN became indignant at the Idea of PICAVDN hap piness and good fortune, and declared that be would arrest his steps into prosperity. Ills plan was to notify the Commissioner of the district, who frequently visited the café, that Proem> was an agent of the English, with whom NAPOLEON was then at war. Then, said the envious man, our friend PICAUD will be summoned and examined ; he will be frightened to death; and instead of being married in three days, as ho expects, his mar riage cannot take place for ten (lays or a fort night." Lenexa:es three confidants agreed that it would be a good practical joke on Pl - who looked so provokingly happy; but, as they were quitting the cafe, one of them, named Auer, who had been thinking the matter over, warned LOUPIAN to abandon the scheme, saying that riCAVn was capable of taking a fearful revenge;if he ever discovered the trick, and declaring that, for his own part, he washed his hands of it, quitted the company. The other three laughed at his fears, and resolved to proceed. • The'Commissary visited the cafe that same day, and the result of LOUPIAN'S conversation with him was he immediately made a report, which found its way into the hands ofSavanr, Due de 4 R.ovigo, who had succeeded FOUCLIE in the 'office of Minister of Police at Paris. Un fortunately for Fromm, there -had reached the Duke, at the, saute time, some revelations especting movements in la Vendee, always he stronghold of the Bourbon party, and the conclusion was rapidly jumped at that Ptoa.un was an agent for the west and south, that his trade was 'only a pretence, and that le , realty ' was 'a gentleman of Languedoc. ,The mutt was that Ptdati,n;wrasaetretly arrested mid re moved with se' Much mystery that, except by Lourraat and hisit4en4 his fate was unknown. This, it will be remembered, was in 1807. Years'rolled on;and, in 1814, the star of NA 'POLEON ceased to be in the ascendant. The Imperial government fell, and there was a general clearance .of State4irisoners. From the .Castle of Fcnestrelle there tottered forth a man yet young—as Time counts—but bowed by. care, grief, captivity, awl despair. Ile seemed, to have lived half a century in seven Years, and when he looked into a mirror, in a petty inn In the 'village of Ennestrelle, could not recognise hitriself: In prison this man bad merely answered to a number -- for names were lost in that hard thmldroui: - IN had latterly been assigned as a iliameatie to another prisoner, a Milanese ec clesiastic, "(the abbe Faria, of the novel,) who, indignant at his relatives not having taken any steps to obtain his liberation, literally died, of a bkoken heart, on the 4th of January, 1814, leav,ing a will)laY which he bequeathed his vast fortune to his attendant—the FRANCOIS FRAUD, ! of the former'part of thIS story, though he was mentioned, as legatee,' by the name of JOSEPII teernat. Tho bequest, which was securely invested in ilarnhiirg,Alansterdam, and Lon don, amounted to seven million francs, and there were also three millions more in coined money .of various nations, as well as a con cealed treasure of immense value, in diamonds. Luitrza's release front prison took place three months after the death of the Italian testator. It was - not:MUM' ten months later that lie re turned to Paris, eight years atter be was re. moved from it to prison, and;thougli ho looked :considerably older, was now only thirty-four years of ago. Taking up his residence, es a stranger, and 'with a changed name and aspect, in the Quar tier Sainte 01)POEtAtIO, LIMITER speedilylearned .what had occurred in his absence. It amount ed to i tbin: that, in February, 1807, there had disappeared one FRANCOIS PICAVD, a young tradesman, who was about marrying a won dowered girl; that no ono was able to dis cover whither he had gone; that his in ,tendc4d,,,MAaotrantri: ,friu`'in?OtrX (tfio ~"e:tleslof', E uxis', romance) r mourned for her lost foyer for two "years, and then married, the cotTee-houso keeper, Lot:roles, and lift this man, enriched by her wealth, now possessed ono ef the best-appointed and most-frequented cafes ,in Faris. The names of LOUPIAN'S two friends had been forgotten in eight years, but some one remarked that a certain ANTOINE Amur, who bad been intimate with Lotimix, at the time of PICAVD'S disappearance, was ac quainted with them. ALtter bad retired to Mimes, his birthplace. Next day a post chaise, preceded by a courier who paid like a prince, flew rather than rolled along the road to Lyons. Thence, alongside the Rhone, by the Marseilles road, which it quitted at the bridge of St... Esprit. There an Italian abbe alighted for the first time from the commence ment of tike journey. Reaching Nismea, the Abbe BALDINI, as he was called. (the Abbe Boson' of the romance), aeon placed himself in personal communica tion with ALLur, and told hint' that in, prison at Naples, In 1611, he bad become acquainted with one FRANCOIN PICARD, who died pardon ing those who had caused his misfortunes, and had left a diamond worth 50,000 francs, the bequest of a rich Englishman, which ho (the Abbe) was to present to whoever could relate the circumstances of his being denounced in 1807, especially believing that ANTOINE ALLET could give that information. What followed is precisely what DUMAS has related of DADEROESE and LA GARC'ONTE—DIO dia mond was accepted, and &LITT gave the Abbe the names of his denouncers, GERVAIS CHAU BARD, GVILIIER SOLARI', and MATHIEU LOU- P/AN. ALLur sold the ring to a jeweller in Niames for 08,000 francs, and the gem was immediately resold to a Turkish merchant for 102,000 francs, at which ALLUT was so vexed, that he stabbed the jeweller• in a rage, made good his flight, and was believed to have es cap'ed to, Greece. LOUPIA's, at the solicitation of an unknown elderly tamale, receives as a wafter at his care, a man aged about fifty. Lotrms's wife thinks, for a time; that she has' seen the face before, but mid other cares, she ceases to conjecture. -Cu/vitamin and SOLATII, the Nistnois, visit the ca re; ( Thti day; dnikuriAnn fails to appear as usual. The next day, also, be is absent. So- rani goes in quest of him, and returns with the news that ? at five o'clock on the morning of Christo." THE PRESS.-PIBLADELPHIA; THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1859. the preceding day, the unfortunate GuinnAun had been found poiguardcd on the Pont des Arts—the weapon left in the wound, and on the handle inscribed NUMBER ONE. By his first wife, LOUPUN had a son and daughter. Of the latter, aged sixteen, lovely and accomplished, a gay and dashing gentle man became enamored. lie presented him self as a Marquis and a millionaire. The young girl falls a victim to his seduction. Ito agrees to marry her, showing his pedigree and the title-deeds of vast estates. Loomis is rejoiced. The marriage takes place. The Marquis orders a repast of one hundred and flity covers, at the Cadran Bleu. The com pany assemble—all but the host, who sends a note to say that by order of the King, ho has to go to the Tuileries, on business of import ance, but will join his guests at ten. The re past proceeds. Two courses aro served, and, with the dessert, a note is laid on the plate of each guest ] stating that. LOUPIAN'S daughter was the bride of an escaped convict, and that ho had fled the kingdom. To avoid the scandal, LOCPI.4II takes his family into the country. During his absence, the café is burned down, and his property is wholly plundered or destroyed by thieves. LOHMAN is ruined and friendless. His at tendant, named PROSPER, clings to him alone. LOUPIAX opens a café, on an humble scale, in the Rue St. Antoine. The other man of Nismes, GUILHEH Sow.nt, regularly visits it. One day, be is seized with intense pains, and dies in agony. The physicians say lie has been poisoned. The bier, according to usage, is exposed at the entry of his residence, and a paper is found pinned to the pall, bearing the sinister WOWS NUMBER Two. I,ol;ptAN's son, caught in an act of theft, is seized on secret information, and, barely es caping the galleys, is sentenced to twenty years' imprisonment. His wife—onto the be trothed of PlEVER—dies broken-hearted and childless. His daughter, reduced to poverty, sinks so low as to become the mistress of Paoseea, their faithful attendant. The catastrophe approaches. Walking in the garden of the Tuileries, a masked man ad dresses LOUPIAN, and reproaches hint with his conduct towards Proatm in 1807, sums up the various revenges which had been taken, and disclosing himself as his servant Paosrxn and his victim PICARD, plunges a dagger into his breast with the assurance that this was NUM BER THREE. At that moment, a well-planted blow pros trates Proxy to the earth. When he awakens, it is in a cave--one of the abandoned quarries with which Paris is undermined. There stands before him a man who declares himself to be ANTOINE ALLOT, to whom, as the Abbe Bal dint, ho had given the diamond at Nismes. After much suffering and punishment, he had been prompted to trace out this Ba!dint, and had penetrated every alias of his. Pie Are vainly offers to purchase his release. Then occurs the scene of which Dumas makes DAIMLERS, the Danko . , the hero, in the vi cinity of Rome. ALLOT knows that Pie Ave has 111,000,000 francs, and proceeds to bleed hint at the rate of 25,000 francs for each meal. A day and a night pass, during which PICAUD'S health fails., and, at last, In a lit of rage, AL. LOT poignards hint. Plying to England, AL- Err dies there, in 1828, confessing his crimes, and leaving no clue to the depository ot' PI oAOD'S VOA wt4 ilth. Such are the main facts upon which the story of Monte Christ° was founded, The escapb of EDMOND DANTES front the Chateau d'lf had its parallel, we have heard, in an actual escape. The wholesale poisoning, in the story, by Ma dame DE VILLEVORT, waalint a reproduction of scenes of which Madame nE irrn,LE was Dig guilty principal in 1780. Wo may yet state the circumstances of her crimes and their de tection. Letter from "Occasional." tCorrompondoooo of The Press.) WASHINGTON, Oat. 19, 1859 The politicians are beginning to epeoulete upon the effect the Harper's Ferry insurrection will have upon the Presidential election next year. The Republican leaders do not liceitato to admit, in conversation, that it ono do their CUUtIO no good. There ia not a large city In the North which is not axially or commercially connected with the &mitt, and the fact that a number of Southern citizens were taortficett in the raid of Brown and his eon. federates has created a profound impression In all these eirelos. No political organization that at tempts to ignore the !Southern people can last in this country. 'Fifteen Mateo, united by a commies bond, and by the apprehension that, enlewe they are United, their population may be made the vie , time of a servile insurrection , full of all the boners of Sim Domingo, moat /derails wield an immense influence In politics. The Southern States, par. tioularly those growing cotton, sugar, and rice, are rich. Their public men are generally among 'the ablest in our national councils. With a combina tion of money and of intellect, they must he pow erful in the etruggles for the Presidency., The liarper'e Ferry tragedy is a bad comment upon 'Mr. Seward's " irropreasible conflict" idea, and will be used lay his opponents, in his own party, to bls groat disadvantage. Can it be pos sible, in view of these circumstances, that the Re publicans are willing to throw themselves in 18110 upon the theory of a deliberate Bassett upon the institutions of the South? or, in other words, (to follow out Mr. Greeley's idea.) that all the powers of the floverntnent should be devoted to the re. striation of elevery in the United States l Anti yet, while I ask the question, the answer is patent and present. The Republican leaders intend, from all Appearances, to commit the Republican party to this dangerous dogma. They forget, and they constantly forget, that, while the Fouthern States contain many anti-slavery mon, In the free States are to be found hundred's and thom mod who are prefonielly attached to the inter cots and to the institutions of tho South. In my opinion, no mob game as this can eueeend. The Republican party la WM lied all the advantages of the excitements in iiensee, tied with these they rallied around their candidate au Immense popular vote. Bet in 1860 they will not have this Ovate , Cage. The extreme men of the South plant them selves upon the same principle, although they In sist upon u different application of it. They dealer° that all the powers of the Government shoal I be exercised for the protection of slavery, because that institution has been recognised, in certain senses, in the Constitution of the United States. Between these two extremes there to to be found a common-sense, practical, and wholesome doctrine, viz: That Congress shall have nothing whatsoever to do with slavery, but that the whole thing shall be referred to , the people of thq, Territories, to be by them disposed of. Mr. Greeley, In his late article in the Tribune, fakes the ground that the Government of the Uni ted States can be committed to no other doctrine than to the limitation of Mammy—and in support of this quotes all the fashionable and favorite ar guments of his school—and, unfortunately for the Bdutb, and for the Demooratio party, Mr. Beebe. nan's policy hes contributed to give to Mr. Gm ley( and to his Rawl, undue influence, Now, would It be rational for the Southern States, in view of this demonstration, to allow themeelves to be Committed to the doctrine that the Government of the United States should Interpose for the pro tection of slavery? Why not accept tho ground occupied by Douglas, which is the moot acceptable offered to the country, and commit the whole ques tion, as Clay, and Webster, and Cass, desired in 1950, to the people of the Territories? If the South acts wisely it will take the Douglas platform, and thereity protect Its own interests, and pay a proper tribute to the feelings of its real Northern friends. r regret to hear that lion. John B. Floyd, Secretary of War, continues in poor health. He and Hon. Jacob Thompson, Secretary of the In- Wier, are the only members of• Mr. Buchanan's Cabinet who have treated the Democracy of the free States that have resisted the policy of the Ad. ministration with decency; and a wldc,spreed feel ing of eympathy le entertained for the Secretory of War. The deportment of the United States marines, under Colonel Harris, during the late insurrection, is the subject of universal praise. Bellows the ad vantage of disoipline over disorderly and undisci plined troops. The marine corps is that branch of the public service more unjustly assallarban others. It is always useful in eases of popular tumults. The action of this corps during the riots in Washington, shortly after Mr.. Buchanan came into the Presidency, produced instantaneounwhele some consequences. It 14 so constituted that it is always snore or leas a source of jealousy to the regular navy, and I am glad, whenever an occa sion offers, to pay a pi opar tribute to its efficiency la every nose of public necessity. The Administration men are beginning to cast about for a candidate for Spenker of the new Uouse, and are disposed to make the Democratic caucus a sort of star chamber, In which the most offensive programme shall bo laid down for the purpose of preventing the Democratic perty from .sueceeding in 1860. I understand that the Presi dent is extremely anxious that his policy Anti be endorsed in the caucus of the Demooratio members of the House. .1 predict he will most ingloriously fail in this. In 1855, at a meeting of the Demo grotto members, held, I think, at the home of lion. Charles Jaines Faulkner, late Representative in Congress from the Martinsburg (Vs.) district, a series of resolutions wore adopted, in which, In substance, popular sovereignty was strongly en dorsed.as the loading issue of the campaign of 1856 ; and good results flowed from this meeting. Now, if the neat caucus of the Democratic members of Congress, to assemble in Washington early in Do. oentheref /859,wi1l follow the example of that which met horn four year& ago, and will lay down a dia• Snot and broad recognition of the doctrine of popu lar sovereignty, as this doctrine was explained by Mr. Buchanan In 1851, and by Mr. Stephens, of Georgia, by Mr. Cobb, by Mr. Toombs, and by Mr. Breekinridge, they will contribute immensely o tho union of the Deutoernoy in tho next Pres( dential campaign. You will recollect when the Lot Congressional census met, four years ago, it was after the Ameri can party had triumphed in a number of the Northern and Southern States, and when tho Do mocraey had lost their majority in the National House of Ropresentatives. There hail been n o desertion of principle on the part of the Demo cracy; they lost ground, simply and alone, because they stood true to the truth in the midst of the popular clamor. Now, however, when tho Ad ministration of Mr.. Buchanan has attemptod to commit the Democratic party to a desertion of principle, would it not be well for the Ilemooratio caucus—composed of the Dernooratio mooiers of the House, and, if you please, of the Democratic members of the Senate—to meet prior to the or ganization of Congress, and in a plain, frank way, anticipate the Chadestan Coneenfinn , and to gi ve to the (wary the platfor ni upon which tee are to fight the battle in 1(110l I know that that caucus will be composed, in the main, of Southern Democrats. I linow that among the members of that body will bo found such men as John S. Phelps and Thomas Craig, of Missouri ; Thomas S. Bocock, Henry A. Edmondson, and Sherrard Clemens, of Virginia; Warren Winslow, of North Carolina; Henry C. Burnett, of Kentucky ; John V. Wright, of Ten nesse° ; George S. Houston, of Alabama; Otho R. Singleton, or Mississippi, and others; and yet I am SUM that not ono of these gentlemen is wil ling to rush the true mon of the North upon the ruinous theory that the Democratic party of this great country is henceforward to be committed to the odious doctrine of the protection of slavery in the Territories Until Mr. Buchanan was elected President of the Unitea*States, there was scarcely a Southern statesman who had not 001116 to the conclusion that to the people of the Territories might be entrusted this whole question of slavery. Tryst those people, and no wrong will spine to the South. Lot the people of our eminent domain fool that tboy hove entire control of their own domestic affairs, "slavery in clusive," and they would he glut to loleesto the fa vorite institution of the South ; but distrust them, and you make them your suspicious enemies. I be- ieve that whou the Demoortaio mums shall moo In 'Washington, prior to the session of Congress, the gentlemen I have named will be among the readiest to do their duty in the premise!. am not in favor of the interference of members of Congress in party matters, any more than I am in favor of the interposition of Congress In the affairs of the people of the States and Territories; but I Wier° if there is, to day, one fair, frank, upright man in the Southern Mates, who will go into the caucus of the Democratic mem bers of Congress, to be held prior to the first Mon- day in December, and will reject the poisonous counsels of the Administration on tile one hand, and the more personal hostilities to that Adminis- tration on the other, and present himself upon the Democratic idea of entire submission to the will of the people, he will be able to do a service to the country which will embalm hie name in the grate ful recollection of the people, I read over the attacks of the Administration or gene upon David C. Broderick—the very organs which aro constantly flattering the working men-- led too by Mr. Buahanan, who professes to be de voted to the interests of the laborer. I ant often reminded of the intimacy between John J. Critten den, of Kentucky, and Broderick. Crittenden — cs glorious old man, and when Broderick Caine into the Senate, no doubt the venerable Kentucky Se• eater felt indisposed towards the man who had been denounced as rough and vulgar. But they soon became friends, end although constantly dif fering in polities, they were closely connected. I should like to beer Crittendou's Judgment of Bro derick, by way of contrast to those Administration editors who profess to be Democratic, and who regale themselves in abuse of the lamented Citlifor. Ma Senator. You have resurrected Bennett against Mr. Iht ohanan with a vengeance in your article of 'tees, day. Not even the editorial of the 10th of October has mated snore talk. Our people hereaway are In the habil of reeding the &raid, and of forget ting it. While it has a large eireeletion, and eon. tains a daily:recapitulation of the news, its political opinions rately make any Impression Therefore, you may imagine the surprise excited by the pic ture which you held up before the country, expo. sing Bennett's intense contempt, dislike, blind. ridicule, Invective, morn, and den o nehilie l , of James Du:bonen in 1.850. Stippo:o any gentleman were publicly to print hi, opinion of nnwher olt-• denten, as Bennett ties printed nit opinion of Bu chanan—what would you think of the aforesaid two oonsimpogether in a public embrace without an equally Nadia explanation ! Would you not regard both with pity and contempt 1 Men, after denennehig each oilier in private, may settle their differences; but whore gentlemen priblioly assail each other In the learepitpore, to reeoncilia-, Bon must have a bank as patio as the insult which has boon offered. That Bennett is utterly Infa mous; that ho has heen kicked and enroll tin ough out all this capital (in snore senses thin one). notorious. That Meier Doles, of the Weebingtoo States, has knocked hint down, editorially, tram pled hint under foot, and spat open him in despite of the Presidentiel recognition or him, is true ; that ho and his have been excluded from the do cant house! in W.Mbington is haeknicn's talk ; end that they have only been, like a hideoui forced upon the tnenthere of the Cabinet through the alternate begging and blaspring of the Presi dent, Is equally clear. The apology, thee, emcee from the man who has beep insulted; the Presi dent, so far from resenting the Wows given to him by this base adventurer, not only offers his other cheek for another blow, but invites the Insulter to his house, there to snake public expia tion to the num who has insulted him ! Have you never thought that i/aPriett may prithitt you have sold In favor of Mr. Buohipi l sa kkeet, in reply to that wide!' you have Apra the Herat/ against Buchanan? I 4he does this, answer let your be, that you stool . by James At (liana), as long as he stood by the„yrineiyle which he himself had laid dottyferitsaNat all your eulogies of him were die l ,4invele belief that hr si'es /AVirtti to Fut! tg. i Bennett opposed Buehentin ate r , Chan" WO true to his friends and his - • and when Bennett became lluebanan's frie , latter de e•wted nil those who lied stood by bum through life, and became the slave of him, who was mot only lamella before the country—morally and lAMB. cully—but whose whole life had been character ized by bitter personal warfare upon James Bu dmnaiit now Prebldent pr the United States. Public Aniusementv. IV A 1.,N T-HTII ZS! Till rAT15E,..31i213 Davenport played Prg Woffingeon in the comedy of I Masks and Faces" to a very full house, last night. Thu play wait well cast, well dressed, and well played. 4'collo additional from the novel, which (revers. lug the usual order,) was founded en the play, by Charles Ronde, ono of the drateatitte, allowed Miss Davenport , also to personate am actress, Mrs. Eracegirdle, s with a minuet. This gave additional interest to the performance. Indeed, we nerPr were more thoroughly pleased with this lady, in any part of English comedy. She was applauded very mush all through, and culled out, with great enthusiasm, at the full of the curtain. Tho remaining parts wore well played—the tOr resimellvely suetalocd by Mrs. Duffield, Mr, Thayer, Mr. gonoli, Air. Pulools,,ruld Mr. Showell dieing especially good. We 21/1113t aIS4 notice throe children—prosnmeiD, progeny of Triplet (Mr, Thayer)—who entered fully into the spirit of t econo. Little Mine Lewis, who played the part of Liptimachies Trip/et, deserves till the applause, she won. Messrs. Showell, Bosnia., and Itulxdt: will permit as le say that in Peg London men of feeldon gkinot wear 111011901.608. - -except in the rare iIIALLIIIOO3 whip they also were officers in cavalry regiments. This evening, Miss Davenport will appear In the now play of "meden," 3111. Cowell as Orphme, Mies Miller u and Mr. Shur':ll as .717 For her haunt, to-morrow evening, she will play the part of Dot in "The tlricket on the Hearth." She would gratify many admirers, we ere requests.' to soy, by also playing In "Charlotte 001 - day." Mrs. Batsman's new play of "Geraldine, or Love's Victory," which has boon wonderfully popular at Now York end Boston, will be produced at Walnut-street Theatre on Monday evening; Mrs. Waller, Dime dramatic power we have heretofore bean happy to acknowledge, will auetain the cha racter of the heroine. MADAME GAZZANIOA'R FAIMW/11.f, This everting, at Musical Fund Hall, ()stmt. niga's Farewell Conoortwill come off. It prornixes to ho a bumper, for nearly ovary seat WAS taken yesterday, The performers are the Mr. Purring, t'izner Ardnvnni, tie batiione, atd Harry 6.tialereon, the ploute. 'The programoic is very attractive. Bradford County. ToWAtittk, Medford Co., P,., pet. 17, 'O. 'herewith fiend you the rote of Bradford county on the State ticket, which te am follows: 8 unveyon uusEn,94 William H. Kohn • . John Rowe Kohn's majority Avatrott 01:Nlt Tt h iclin mi rda E on L C° . l V'l'rarniglit Cochran's majority Squabble Iu a nemocrithe Coove.» l init. 00.19.—The Pomoosstin Convention of the Filth Coo srosstonol (111)11kt was hold to-dot. A doohl , . sot of delonoter, rupresentini; the rostroo !loose nll.l Doonlas ,ntorests. Were present, Mon) of Vol Wo' forced their way through the utinitou y into 1140 1114.113 ettotnpt hector been vitiate to exclude them. F. .uey Webster, Esq.. was ehotten rman. fter oil c tth.4 'cone, the modem bonne bolted, and organized runty. The Dooglne men, Maiming to be the re 'on tar coiteen tine,nominated B. V. lhillett and Cornehun DoltertY. both Don ans men, to the Charleston Convention. The other eon vention elected John T. Board and J. C. Love joy, friends o jtho Adminietration, THE LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. THE HARPER'S PERRY INSURRECTION! TUG 1'itt 4 Ov1:111 Vott NI ITT ED—TIIII VF.SII , Ii 01' joirtnicritr;--CAPTAiN nnolvv'S F 111 Lair OF III:4 ' , Mtn', It ITU THLIII. (IMES. trA SPEWS V, Oct. 19—'The prisoners ha., hies committed CO Charlentown jail to await the sotto:, ot the gg road MU. woos they sill he itelleted and tri:d in low dais. The arranrensint about the jiiiisdietien has liven wq tied in this iv I The local nothoriti ell aro tr) the prinoneis for murder, and in the toenntiote the I mrol ntateA :nohow ms e ill proceed on the charge oftreason. °overrun . Wine s 7r. Mr. NO. the I. ruled Wale. Ns triet Att.:run) , that lie hail no obiadisn to the General orovewlots anonet the ertsoners, that is. what st bo left of them lo the tune the Virginia au thorities hate done With ante. Brave is better tc -dot end lots matte a fuller state ment of his oper'io c' lie n aye that he rented the farm front Pr. Kemp :I) six months sinee, and the rent is paid until next Mardi. He never lied over twenty-two men at the finest lit nn) ono time that belonged to the ore:manure' , but that lie had rued tones to expect re infori..enientn from Mar)land. Kentucky, North and silt Carolina. rind the Caniulnn Ile had provided rats sufficient for fifteen hundred men, including two hundred remise. two hundred line rtia rifles, and thoossiiii spears, till of 'which were left at the farm. Ile Al , 0 brut an abundance of powder and fixed ammuni tion. All the 6111111 WOreeiColll tunic to time 11/ought level Ponneotioutand other eastern points to Chambers bur.:. Pa., and were ilireeted to J. Smith Sr Sons. Ken nedy Form. Me assumed name. They wore packed in double boxes be as to deceive the parties who handled Horn en their way to the Win. Ile nays that he made one mistake in either not detninin the train nn night or else perry itting ice on uninelested. 'Phis inn:take lie seemed to infer exposed line doings too soon, and Wel eared his reinforcements coming. The names of all his party at the Ferry, on Sunday night. except three white Men, whom he admits that he soo t irway on an 0 rrn mt. ere as follows. with their pro per titles under the Provisional Onvernment: but O John Brown, commander-in-chief—wound ed, will recover. Capt. Oliver Brown—do:a Capt. Watson Brown—dead. Capt. John Rec.', of Ohio. raised ti Copt Aaron C. Stephens, of Connectiout—wounded ' badly ; hits three balls in ine body, and cannot possibly recover._l lent. F.din Comma, of lowa—unhurt. Lieut. Albert Hazlett. of Ponnsalvanist—dead. Lieur..tereminh Anderson. of Indiana—dead. Lieut. Writ. Leman, of Maine—deed. Capt. John E. Cook. of Connecticut—escaped. Env:stem Stewart Tnylnr. of Canada—dead; Charles P. Todd, of Maine—deed; Win. Thompson, of New York—don'; Dolph Thompson. of New lork—dniiil. Thoyilinve, with the three whites previously sent off, make in nevoiceen Whttee, Negroes—llangerfield Newt), of Ohio. raised in Vir ginia—dead. Emperor of NOW York, raised in South Carolina—rot wounded—a prisoner. The tatter was elected a member of Congress of the Provisional Go vern. ent some time since. Lewis Leary, of Ohio, raised in Virgin—deed. Copeland. of Ohio. raised in Virginia — tint Wounded—a prisoner at Charlestown, (lepers! Brown lots nine wound., but none fatal. A bushel of letters were discovered frnin all part!, o r the country. Ono from Gerrit Smith informs Homo of money Leine decocted in a hank in New York to the credit of J. Smith A. Bnns. and appears to be one of many informing hum from time to time as money was re ceived. TIER CorrettvrTlON OF THE PROVISIONAL fIOVERN- The following is the Constitution found among the Pillion' at Brown's farm i Provisional Constitution and Ordinances for the people of the United Skates.— Proanible.—Whereae. slavery ! throughout its entire existence in the United States, A none other than the most barbarous. unpro voked, and uniuntifinble war of one portion of its citi zens upon another portion, the only conditions of which are perpetual imprisonment and hopeless servitude or abaribite externittintion. is otter disregard and vio lation of then eternal and self-e% ident truths act forth In our Declaretion of Independence i therefore. see, eitizens nf the United "Retell null the oppressed people, who, by the recent decision of the Supreme Court. are declared to have noughts widish the white man is bound to respect. together a ith nil of her people degraded by the lawn thereof, do, for the time being, ordain and es. teblisla for midwives the following Pot t ilonal Constitu tion sand Ordinances, the bettor to ant our people, their property, lives, liberties, on to govern our nc - lions : Article 1. Qualification for tnembentlii p.—All pennons of imam ass, whether proscribed, oppressed, and en slaved mil zoos. or of the orogen hod and oppressed races of the United States. who OAS agree to sustain and en three the Provisional Constitution and ordinances of this organization. together with all minor children of swill persons, shell tie held to be fully entitled to protec tion under the same. Article If. Branches of Government.—Tiro Provisional Government of this orgnnizetion shall consist of three brancliee Nos • Leiriglntive. Executive, and Judicial. Articlelll. legislntive.—The Legislative branch shall be a Congress. or House of Re erase mat iVeil. cOMPOWeI of not leas than five. nor more then ten, members, who shall he elected by nil citizens of mature ago nail of sound mind connected with this organization. and who shall remain in office for three yearn. unless sooner re moved for misconduct. inibilita .or by death. A majo rity of snide membere shall constitute a quorum. Article IV. Executivp.—The executive branch of thin organization shall commit of a President and Vice Prost dont, who shall be chosen by citizens or members of this organization. and earls of whom netl hold his office litres years, unless sooner removed by denth,or for ina bility. or misenndizet. Article V. Judicial.—lio judicial branch shall consist of one chief justice of the supremo court. and four room elate judges or ..o1 relict, each constituting a circuit court, 'rimy shall enoli lie chosen in the same manner as the 'fronton t. and shall continue in office until their places shall have been filled in the same manner,lo elec tion of the (Osman. 'Articles XIII to XXV provide for the trial of the I , e- Indent and other officers Anil members of Congren. the inmenehment of judges, the doles of th e Presides, Vice President, the punishment nt RllOlO3, snov np pointinents, ninnies, Ike, &c o and not lining o f gi ,,,,,,i interest. are omitted. I Article XXVI. 'Treaties of peeve—Berme ant treaty 4f Nome shall take full effect, it shall IA signed h) the '1 °lndent. Vice President, commander in.clittf. a ma jority of the )tours of Representatives. a majority of the supreme court, and a majority of all rho get - iron! officers of the antic. Article XXVII. Duty of the fililitnry.—lt shall be the duty of the eundoltatety•fit-chief. and All officers And soldiers o the army, to afford noeciel protection when needed to Congress. or any Itieliilwtr thereof. to the supienie pAutt. or any tneotther thereof, to the Pre /liant, Vico President, 'frintsurer. and Secretary of War. anal to afford canal tit protection to till eis II officers o r ether yer.moi loving the right to the :...)11C. Ariacle XXVIII. Itrott,t).—All eni toted o r con ta g . eet.il pi °ports . . Anil all ligorerty the eriolitet of the 1,- 64 of thone itelevtttz to this ttronetratton. and ol Lair tanelien. ,hall h- in lit as 1110 lo t m et ts t ol ti n e µt. 0 1,„ equallt , wattout that,twt ton. turf nit) ha tried for the pennuon I cern, or disposed of for the •arn , o'leet; and any lit. Tel, officer iir otnorwine. .who ph,ll introvert r retain or his secret tete. In 1100511033241/ 01 stony suet propel ty, or property limn& captured. or conffieJat. , ii, belong:nu to the enemy, or !shell willii , li i.e.leri to render ii tittl ned Stir ateterntint 'if twill . vomit ) ty hit, so taken or nel . nail lid it.- Mend t not/ . I A 1n.3- 1101,03110 r, and. on conviction. shall be punished no (Trilled , . )(Mole ):7:. IN. The Flifeta , or Intelligenee Pion; —All wooer plate watettesi or jeW Cll y raptured he honor al,',.v.atfare. found. tat on or i norm—tint elir t r , 0 1,11 sae red r..,.....,ttt.tjA gltlieittl.:trt ty or 111513:1130TIte 111.141. .t n ok ‘ li 'S •rirsl l o9l ' f b or ' t. ' ;l . 44l ' l l s " .o P , V7 r1 0,541 ' 0 4 r in 0;11077451 1. unme.. thrill lA/teemed mita of thett. nod, on eginvic. lion t o , reel s hist; 1, r.....0ted liceordinfla. The tree god , — shell (nroieli OA e, finned alt tune,. with A Mil tdntyrneut of the condition of such filed na4 Ita nature. • A 11.14•10 ..f: XK. The' Cotninanderdn•olliel and the Treinurr, —"The commander in chief shall have power to thaw f rom the 31•011m.irr the money selloilier Pre- I en, nit the fend provided for 111 article XXI X. but his moors shall be signed also by the Secretary of Wen, a ho •i. it LOPp a Attie: account of the same. subinct to RIR- I nation lir any member of Congress or general officer. Artiele XXXI. Suiplus of t lblii ftifety or Intelligenee Fund.—lt shell be the fluty 0 tle cninnintiden in-chief hi advise the President of any surplus of the safely sat so, AlreoBo fund. who shall here power In draw such surplus, his order being 5150 signed by the Secretary o Sale. to enable Wm to early out the provisions 01 arti cle XXVII. Article XXXII. Prisoners.—Nn person, after hay nn! surrendered himself or herself As such, to on) Mit re, or print° connected with this orgenizition, shall nrVrWargi tie put to tenth. or be sulneeted to env entrio peel punishment, without first having had the benefit of it fair end impfdpal Intil• nor shill nay prisoner be treated with spy Mod of cruelty. digreeneet, insult. or needle s e severity; hot it shell he the fluty oftill per sone.male and feinnte. connected therewith, at All tones. and under all circumstances. to treat all such prisoners N. itn every degree of respect mill )rtinitiolthrit the moire of the elllleunistancen will clout, and insist on a Ike course of conduct from all others as in the fear of Almighty Rod, to whose care and keeping we Commit our cense Article X XXIII. Volentitrin.—All persons who MT crime forward and shall voluntarily deliver up their paces and limo their names registered on tho taroksa this orgenisation alien, nit long on they continue at peace, be entilleil to the fullest protection nil their per soil and props rte though not coo iected a !tit, the orimni g a t ion. and shall ke treated as t wd Sirt merely as v.,45,,50111."14 ,Artiolo S XXIV. Netneßls. The a finedm property 'of nll non slaveholdera who shall roinsin filessiluteiv summit ellen bejespected so far ne eireunistnocescan allow of it, Ind !hall not Inc entitled to any activeipro teetion. Article X XXV. No Needles. Waste.—Thu needless senate or dostniction of any useful procerty or article ler fire. tirAwina open of tenons field,. building, or need ..., billion ,d . enitilele. or injury of either, shall not lei tolerated nit one time ny place, but shall be promptly and properla punieheil. Article XXX VI. Property Confivented.—The entire personel nod real properhu of all persona known to be eerie t eitherdirectly or indirectly with or to the mistily. rimed or found in arias with them, Dr wilfully holding AIMII I OII, shill ho eiintiscatell Anil taken whenever Or wherever it luny be found, fu either the Inc or alma Blab , . Article X XXVII. Deserhim.—Persons cenvirted (man implartird trod of desertion tothe ellaild , 311 0 r1501501111113 1115•51.110ro, netsll3 its spies. or of the trent:heroin our. render nt property. anion, ammunition. provisionniir supplies it on Y kind. tomtit. brut:tee. pernons. or fort 111 cations. Flinn IA put to death, and their entire Property Contisciited. Article X XXVII". Violetion of Pante of 'Boner.— Petnous proven to tee guilt. of taking im arms, after harms WOO act at blew,' on their parole of honor, or eller the nolo to Bata taken any solace pall with in fur (he neer i ii . direct or indirent, shah lie put to death, and dour minds or:witty confineeted. Article. XX XIX, XL, end Xl.l. require all !labor to be for the general good, and prohibit minimal notions. Article NUL The Marriage Relation. Schools, and the thilffintli.—The marriage relation shall beet all !linen tea eaten. families to fin heat together as ferns possible, and broken families eneoureged to re-unite. nod intent. gene. Olives to be ostllihrthett for that purpose. Schools and elm:Then to be established as noon rue they her. for time pm poso of roligioun And other I nelrunt.o.43, and the fl rat day at the ueek re: rilejl na a day of neat, and 4P proorinled to moral and relortous itodructinn and sin pros militia. the liiiief of midterms, the instrontion of time 'nine atilt Ignorant nail the encouragement et per 6011a1 el M 11111333 I nor shall ally person on that day he 111,11/I , PII 145 perform ordinary manual Intarr, Unless in extyninelt intent canes. ' Artiste XL' V. No JIOIIIOII 1.1 entry enneenled Wll- • 14.11 3 .—Nil person within the limits Of the conquered j tendon., foment regularly Appointed polieemen. en - ; hrensinen. officers of the army mill carried', or other ill neereditell 11151•301111 1 / 3 of Camp..., Py..ideta. Vier P•ePi1141111 II limber' of the Supreme Count. or salm i missioned edition of the amp, and theme ender peen liar eireomnhowes, shall be filtered et any time M carry ennionileit weapons: Anil nnr portion not specially nu than tetl rim is Jo. who shall he found so doing, shell be deemed 0 3111.14151153 0013011. and 11141 fa once be arrested Ins fray officio, instiller, or ottizen, without the fortilabb , -.. .f. eolopinint or warrant, end met st ... J et tin sobieeted to a ilioroorh instill. mid shall hove hi. Or her cnoe thoroughly in-esti:Alen. end he denit with as circum stances on, nroof shall require. /diode XI V. Persons to IA Feized.—Persons within the limits of the territory held by this prelim entice pot connected a ith thin organisation, hiving Arms at All eoneenled. or otherwise, shall he melted tit once, Or be taken ii, rho roe Its some %gallant of cer. and their case thoroolitiv investlystell ; and it shill he the dots of ell eittreril 1110150.1.1101' 5 . 33 troll As offiriern, to arrest .such 11.11111,1 an ere unmet' in thin and the preeethur notion or article. %111,1nolil Out foimalit• Gl' a complaint or war- rant. nntl they ehnll h. placed 111 the Charge of some proper nifieer for et.minotion or for enter keernite. A dude X 'XL—These articles are not for the over throw of the (Jovertiment.—The loregolna artiolee shell not to rend rued 1.0 nit, in tiny was, rii encnunate the in erthrow id env Stale Government. or of the General Got eminent of din United States cord look to no Mew,- lotion on the Onion. hat tempi: to de amendment mid reine d o f red s , n i i voting Inwei. Anit our flag shill be the same dint air lathers laugh Under in the r(0 , 0- Intioß. Artode XLVI I. Nii Identity of Mitres —No two of the °Meer filled provided for lie this instrument shall lie filled I,s the nine personal the rime time Article X ',VIII. o,oll.—Every officer, civil ormilitarl s enitheeted with 11553 or.noilntion. shrill• before entering thrum 1110 110155'3.51 oilivo, make n solemn ()Atli or sibrion don to 3.1.5(10 lii ntill impend the Proviniona I Govern moot. end th e ..i mildoineng. Also mienettizeti nail soh Bong liefore ing lolly recognised 113 Buren, Mien do the ,itni, Selo tet,,--.liet I. t• gir nt of this Convention 'bail enn , "ie. ion., i ns g e l, on flue roloption of dos nide, 114.51.1. 0 ( . 50.V.5/111.40 or nil Fuel, 151.114411), 1" a shell It,'' ei t en tl,lr `ho •a, e , I " , ' 'j ai l ille l'omMicito a in n P . ,e,s I , :," I , el.•, , tnna all the ',Tens a r c, idly min,' '1 in tiro annul Congtlliitlon ; the Pre rd ut tit Gum Con, mu," 1 re-ett no and lesion: 0,30004 wino to enrol,oil ( orn cl.ii: nll welt i IT., el, Imo, ''ern hoc e!. 1.1,1 in the 1.1511111(51. 1,151 tiled 111 Ono hotly of ilia in ci remold. 114110.c' , l', nr. 0 ' . 1. ii—Erenin.; —The psis, em - led e • li mint, 1 ,11.011 1 , 1 I II,• ritsti , tlona tl tall .n (e ~,,s t ell9lol l l , 01 Eat et., n 1: nod United Sim., iner,h,l. tire .tarn 11,11111 .• 454, 1•1113r01.1 out of dame,. jl, Ina died I '•1 0,111 1/ 5 555 of the l iming , f i ns Elko died Io nu the ..ti......f 1...........1.. it., roar \Yu.e hu t gone to Chtirlohlow n v;111 tee prhroner, ennt Dam .7.0.,', :a a. '1 ns I',lpollatallll, TllOl,Ollll Wee 1111,0 , ens , 031 rel , 4 11 1041 m{ trucked him 11'0111 1110 1101160 1 0%11,0 1145 ale I,..,kfast. 1.1 L'ell ALARM ! ROI or ISSI 1111hel111., t',1 1 01111:11 Ai' 1, CSlnl' 1100K—Illt• Plllll} 0 1 , 1,11 ein ..iir inn tiliT• •• rs To ILIA !Tien 1 v.. , . A \i‘ , i • ;1.. cHAvi:FI. I. t ni.t.v.y is I . NIIIII- I I , 5I re ! I It t n,g 1 ,• l'. nit t. `. in, Oct. 19. 6 8 o'cloc)L—Thin town ' L., iieen ilitoWit 11110 great commotion by RIIIRIl•vh0 ' , o p, , 4 4;, 55 4. 55n.04104.111.151114 that "the !hack Ileplibli- Winn., 4 . .lfft 1113 On, in,.{ tine houses end Murdering the poo. nip it I'mlt Hoot" Th , in „'le hole ere erining, nini the excitement 111- etelEltlS 10 ion or teat The 31M1.1 Is (1011141055 a false 0114' QCCASIONAL 3,7• 63 ff It rl rcnnv. Ver., Oct. 19-10 n'elnekt — Nor idle vat tits. limns the g repteat consternation has prevailed It has born reported that an tha man• women. and h 'Wren at $ uiy Hook were &Wiling towards this town c that the limn,. sere being blown up—that Conk and -- s band were Inurtlertn the whlfes—that the inhabit. lunts had been first disturbed In the tirttta of suns• rdEvery both' hero had plot tired ar is. pod prepared for struggle. 11 lit been 11 , .•..11/1111 , ,1 hard been ft rots, rdnron, and We fVfl , 1110.111 VIS (Vitt 1110 11111flighllt8 of that plertannt input aro sionoti: .111,101, .60v. Virtse lots ;olio with some nrtned ;nen to search a Ave, where it to seal the potty(' eleven are euncaalqq, STILL LATER. Some Credit Given to the Rumored Insurrection at Sandy Hook. ONEL LEE GONE TO EXAMINE ITS TRUTH. Arrival of Three Hundred of the Inhabitants at Harper's Perry. arse's Pen rt, Oct. o'clock P. M.—( From the Reporter of the Baltimore American.) alt o c , el !toe, olio has nooLluiled to remain with the or.ot e, lice now crow not into the vailoy with thirty mamas, to es mien into the truth of the rumored:leg/0 insurrection et 0011 Mei, It is rumored that n tarty, eonsonins of thirty armed oils ro o m of this ph.co, lin, 0 also started thither. Mr. Mown I the first informant of the reported out break )Insi eta that he heard ea rort ma of murder and cries for help lesion: from Mr. Garrett's lonise in the valley, accompanied with reports of fire-amts. • Not lona than three hundred meu, women, and chil dren hare arrived here from that vicinity, affrighted with tho rumor of an outbreak. THE VERY LATEST. RETURN OF COL. LEE-ALL QUIET IN THE VALLEY. HARPERN FERRY, Oct: 2D- o'clock A.M.—Colonel Lee has returned from Bandy Hook. having found every Gang Quiet in the valley. Mr. Garrett's family were all safe and sound. liAlirrleg Pruitt'. Oct.l9.—The following ie the num her of the lolled end wounded during the recent insur recline Evangelical Convention. elliCatio, October 19.—A Convention of 'Western Evens°heal Christians, opposed to the policy of tho American Tract Societyon the subject of slavery, mot in this city yesterday. The aPendance wan law, em' bracing delegates from Ohio, Indiana, Illinois. Wiscon sin. lowa. and Alinnesota, The Convention was permanently organized by the election of the Rev. Peary D. Kitchell, of atichisan, as President. .A emninittee appointed to report business lon the action of the Convention reported a series of resonitmns tnnt the tract agency was the most vital means for the promotion of the ranee of Christ ;Dint the efforts to rein o the African slave trail. demand renew ed testimony from the church against its abominations; that Brengel' es I Clirlatianit kr condemns slaveholitins as one of the hishestermirs asninst God and man, and that. n view of the refusal of the American Tract Society of ow York to apply the Gospel to the Moor sinveholding, the time has come for the reorsanizntinn of the system of tract operations, with the view to meet this present exigencies of our common Christianity. Addresses were made by the members or the Poston and Cincinnati societies, and a, Strong feeling of oppo sition to slavery and the action of the Amei wan So al etj on that subject pervades the assembly. The Convention will probably remain in sesston seve ral days. From Washington. lIROITICEI PM's/TR—LITTER PRO/1 (MI ••• • • WASIIINu Tn.:, Oct. 19.—The 1,3119•13 fnund on the per son or in the valise of Brown, 'scalped by the Govern ment. confirm the reports that his scheme liedsdpoeates In various States, who were well informed of his plans and movements for a servile insurrection. It appears that he kept a journal, in which he detailed his trans actions. showing his purchase of arms in large quanti ties, and ammunition of nll kinds, with other warlike nppliances. In ptldition to the above, it is geld that there is nothing in the papers to implicate nerroes or others resident at liiiper'e Ferry. of its vicinity, as "iportireps Cr i 1111163" before the fact in Brown's con spiracy. A private letter from General Desollado, just received here, states that be has appointed a Governor of New Leon. in place of General Viclaurn. and that he is satis fied with the condition of things in Northern Alexia°. It is not true, as reported, that Ban Luis is in posses sion of the Church party. Commander V i iilliamaon. recently in command of the Ti. B. steamer Fulton. died at Pensacola on the 16th inn From Brownsville, Texas. ==11:1:I1E1 New Onus gaa. Oct. 19.—Advices from Brownsville state that the fever has drgappeared in that vicinlty. The citizens of Brownsville had formed battalion. to stand guard nightly. ORLEA e, Oct. 19 —The steamer Indianola. front Browns% Ale on the 11th instant, has erns ed at this Wrt, The Mexican outlaw Cortina', with several hundred mon. wag still enoampril above Brownsville, and another attack wee hourly expected. Cortina. had issued a proclamation ea mg that orderly citizens had nothinx to fear. his object being to chastise hie enemies—the sheriff and the lawyers. From Northern Mexico. Nyw ORI.EVCR, Oct. I9.—Monterey /Winced to the 29th ult. have been received. • Durango, in the State of Durango, had been taken and sacked on the lOth, by a band of two hundred robbers. On the Arrival of the troops they were dispersed, mid many of them were killed. The arno at Monterey had pronounced enamel Oen. Vutaurri. who. with Zolzeit, hail left for Texas. Oen. Marquez hail been defeated twice, near Coble- InJnrn. hr ben. Nunn, commencing the forces of the Liberals. Marquez had asked for reinforcementafrom Gen. A Telegrapher Shot nt by Cook. B LTI MOUE. Oat. 19 —The de_epatch yeeterde7 Mem` ;nett). gave credit to hlesers. Westervelt end Teo ott for maims the telegraph line to Heier'. Fero. fee credit should have been given to C. Westbmati, super. intendant of the Baltimore and Ohio telegraph bite, and B. Welly, operator at Frederick. C. Ways. en oi orator et Martinsburg, was one of the pang echo helped to drive tioe insurgents from the bral.e. stln, during yeeterde• ineroilry: Oltr,;;T-lino r.Va ,,, ..r, whilst repairing the line Noreen Harper's Ferry end t.rtinehurß. vas shot at by (Antrim Cook eriloin be recognised. Death of Cetteral Peter Str)ker,of New Jersey. 150‘ , :aolu.r. N. 04.11—General Peter J. Stryker d.ed ltria miontni, at the ra:e of mnetv-fnur years. He hold the other( of Major General of the . Third division of rho Nev Jersey and find served in the State Le. tralatirre durint several terms. General Stryker was lio oldest military officer in commutator' in thy SIAM lie was a wagon-ho, in rho Revolution under General Warne. If ot funeral will take place on Friday morning. The Yacht Wanderei Stolen—Pursuit by bt l)wner. ill,!ricer salted tact 11101 t with a rub crew and supplied totli prollitione uniton. etolen front her owitnr. Caotnin ilsrtlit who hid been ne.iiiint.ot for a^r purr:Salo for 6.110 tOtie. The col lier, oh tlio port Lea ion , a stew. Jr. with Mr. Lanier and others. ru penult at Wl', hot so far without success. General Conv«ntion of the Protestant flpiscopul Church. RICI(M6SD. Vu., Oct. 19.—T0-tlity's session of the Bottle of Deputies was dimity occupied in the discus- Win of theproosition te(ipestirt: the House of litsliops to rooontoilOr thotr resolution Cl last session. In minion to the use of hooks of prayer. No notion WOO taken. Fire at Colunitous,Ohio. COLUMBVS. Ohio, Oet. D.—The pattern shop and peep of the ghedy of the Columbus Mmhine Mannino bulge Corbi:MY were deatrmed by bite last maht. in cluding s ITe gßaPtitY Of P.tterP.• The ....lit or the loss is no non. A Railroad Depot in Virginia Burned. PAIIIEERSBUSIG, Va., Oct. 19.—The fine railroad depot of the Northwest Virginia railroad company at Ellen taro', Ritchie county, won destroyed by fire at 3 o'clock this morning. The building. it is suntiosedi waa set on fire, and the loss is uninsured. Loss of the Propeller Troxy. Goons: meth C. W., Oot. t'--The propeller Troxs. join Moist) ler Itnifttle. thundered last night ten inilea nil taint Utibequo, A beat with three it the grew game ashore, but the life-bi , at with eighteen nt' the crew and three ladies has not loan heard of. Death of a Valuable Citizen. l'orssvihhg, Oct. 19.—Sainuel Billynutn, Esq., or this Place, decd here at nine o'clock last night. Mr. S. was (MO of the molt prominent and public-spirited thou in the coal region. ytstt of the United hose to Easton. Ensros, Pa.. Oct.l9.—The fuembers of the United Bose Compnny were entertafued to-day in serious ways. A grand trill one etven in their honor to-night, by the Humane Iloge. They return home to-morrow allornoon, by the North Ponneylvente !Inwood. Departure of rho Europa for Boston. SAI xv n.r x, N. 8., Oat. 19.—The ',termer Europa nail ed from Halifax. et 030 this morning, for Buxton, where she rill! he due to•renrrow evening. PrOlebllDr 21010;13. Dr. Bethune. nail Chevalier Hulse. Inane, Fie aping the passengers w the Europa. The New Orleans rilibusters. NEW OP.I.AA NA, Oct. 7l9.—Juilge McCabe. of the Fede ral ooisTr..detwbrehl a limy charge go the Jury agairiet the Illihumers recently arrested, while attempting to mart on an expedition destincirfer Nicaragua. Letter from New York. PROPOSED Pt SKRAI. HONOR'S TO SENATOR DRODE• DICK . JUDO► DOCGLAX—POLITICAL ANARCHY NNESTiIIESTIR COPSTY—FOREION DEMAND }OR BREADSTII. PS—MANCPACTURE OP CITIZENS AT THE RATE lIP TnpKp lICSIIIIED PER DAY-3111. DODD'S PICTURE SATA — T"E 1111011 CLERGYMEN— MUSICAI, AND DRAMATIC ITEMS. [Correepondenee at The l'reee.l From present indications, it is probable that the de monstration which the firemen propose to ',yoke in honor of the memory of the late Si•nater Broderick Will be soneraily participated in by the companies ill ilrookl) n, Willetinstairg. Jersey Clit , and 'betoken. At the firemen's meeting held last of ening a resolution acne adopted 'prolog Judge Penske to deliver an Ora tion ml the Per:anion of the proposed funeral pageant. I understand the feeling to be quite general Among the firemen in bas or of one of those imposing tl monstra lions which can scarcely he got up in any city of the Union other then New York. The friends of the late Senator ore enthusiastic about It, and are determined it shell be bnltirintlY earned out. Westchester county seems to be Ina state of political anarchy. l'atty tree and part) drib are treated with an indifference that betoken, a general break•up in No vember. The probability is that Robert R. Coles, the present surromite 1 Elie_comity • it Democrat, who wernity espoused the cote el lion. John U. Harkin at the Congresamnol election, w.II be thrown by the INDlO crnpu minventiim, and adopted by the Republican. A county ;libeling el Penincrats will also ho held at White Plains to-morrow. rho object of which is to initiate sonie such relorniato.3 nuwernent, insuln the puts', na is contr inplnted by the FULIi Avenue Hotel " Demo erotic Vigilant Conirnitte'l'fbe mill for this meeting is herded IA Cauldwell, thipervisor of :lb, rlartnis.lhndetous Davide, SUPetIIIIOT of New Roche Is. and other gentlezuon of the patty. The 'freebiethe rf the tat district of tVeatenester liarm ammo uteri tor the ASSOIII 1,13 W. T. It. Milliken, Dm, one in the moat no : servedly popular gentlemen id ttie county. Notwitil stemling the distant a decided!) Democratic, the PolLti eal nursing now going on in the Mania may possibly result in carrying Mtn , The business of miter:dime veter• nnine.en swim - minsly tee court.. Dartag Ito list tour days some In el, hundred Aldesinn and Teutons,' Hob ;Idit's hay been intinufactured into constitutional members of " the laud of the free " ke.. The number naturalized thus tar In the present year,is much smatter than :.i,l of last year, owing to the feet that Tammany" nod Mozart" have done little or nothing tow moll pay the n am/disarm - In expenses of their Immo, pllllll, rl (newts The Regiiilybpan seminal comm.:tee, u lie het c geneoilly been liberal In this way to the hlYe no m. 0., to spare for them title year. rho i,, it C enitut Deinoerats. Who have hitherto sopplie ~ ; , 0111 r It the sinewe of war. basin, effected" a littie finiZation of their own, Cm. )esaish deepen this ueonl boa nu..d manipulations until the mum turmoils "de 019110, nit asks, those nnnunatione ore eggilltable to the lily. Un- tickets of their nether garidtbts will 110 it)'. Op. 11111,10%s 111011 are ei atnlatin c them,elvos upon i , . roiel-lioctiinad for brendstith, 'flos 1,13 1,0,11 IV IMP aril to NS prOlstblo for 00010 ill), plat. Vesta/MY tim irely ht en - a:timpani riot tar Weal Brant 0 were sreoter Ginn In rm tonal eaporlt 11,1 O,IIOIIIMM 11110 port Ginn the Ist la January, Itird, spin to besinniM, ol the present week, au um bushels-were bike. for uoirmow, ono Liveriarm, and 101 W barrels of dour Lee bale Of the morales of Mr. Robb. of Nen' Orleans, 'hod. took ;dare lost et 011/1111. 099 111401; alleaLletl. The 1,..•',(1.01,•; 0 pinclifkainaft• lt, Itarri- Coil, 01 y 0 z ior " C l a vi, nod ee. Jima wall ' p .01,1 1,3 n0t• r ”.11115,,,, , ,r8 ; mr. filo - 1,470 for lleiroi, 0 leoun. u‘rd The rubor minty/II pi•toro• 911,1, .1,1•1 , 1 "111,1) 1111,1 1 11 ' I" ,andrea dt to. , Jbs; " o) 'l'l = foal • r.,114 'feud." by V^rnet, V r is ' en/1%1111111100,1 11,0 El,lntsX 10 Le Brum ;filter Aimintior 1,10 WO. ot (11/11.11. I W , lter COlO 1, 0 1/Id., till/. The beet of the pietures wain loruietly ui thesollery of Joseph lion The depot Mon 10 Irish merry men ulio enure hither to raiso nioney to ens blo them to evangeliSe the drat!. " I . by Ger tutu portions of Ireland, Imo collected about SA We sn t on'fgdo n lp " l i i i r l ' l o . olo9 n"W to appeal to the good 1,00100 Willialn A. Moore, of fijibln's Gorden, and Jein c s Nixon, vireos mall, haws gond In Englanit tonneau, dra- Matte and equestrian novelties for the holidays. Loia Montez la also ',gain amongst us, having become tnir tygo , oust. rho parlor operas of Mr and Mrs. Pray ton are deci dedly pannier. Mr. Barnum, their manager, condyiete metiers with a degree or liberality, Mato, end tact. mum raoteriatic of the man, I have an abiding Colifitlenco thee his address. enterprise,. end nerve, will stain rvid speedily, bring him before tlia public in connection with Nome splendid intimeal, operatic, or dramptio Altair. There I( a ruin.(r prevalent that ten. I'. Rioo (.1' Kentucky. a prominent liomuormi, peli• 11 101 boon murdered nod ed of n Inigo burn of money, between hiF residenon and tho Ten imam line. THREE .08' LATER'FROM EUROPE TUE EUROPA. AT HALIFAX TEE ZIIRICE CONFERENCE CONTINTED. ITALIAN AFFAIRS UNMAN° Departure of tho Great Eastern for Holyhead GIS LT AGITATION ASO NENEsot I AlliEsTS AT NAPLES • LATER Ilion INDIA-THE DISCHARGED TROOPS GOING TO (IIINA• PIOILICA'fION OF ?HE OFFICIAL COAXES The English Minister Approves of Minister Ward's Coarse. r=MMMR7'377IMIT4MWTIMM4 FUNERAL OF MINISTER MASON 61AZZINIT LETTER TO THE KING OF SARDINIA Tim I'opo ril,iltS/P. to (41-v.. up lue, tem Lural Pow-ur. French Cout Puttlloadons Rapidly Progreuing SHIP A?dERICALN CONGRESS ASHORE Irtaurgents. Citizen's 15 4 U 5 0 From South America—Minister Yancey abon to !Upturn Home, Unsuccessful. IMPROVE:WI V=N T IN COTTON BACKVILLR. N. f!... Oct. 19.--The royal mail mean).- shi 'Europa from Liverpool on °Minder, the 9th inst, arrtved at Halifax this morning. nod her news reached here by floral-express this evening. Her atlcioes are three days later. The steamship 'Kangaroo, from New York. arrived a. Queenstown nn the 6th inst. The steamship Ocean Queen also arrived out on heath. The royal mail steamship Persia arrived at Livorno on the Bth ins . The Zurich Conferences were still continued, and further progress iu the settlement or the Italian ques tion , s reported. The stoamahip (heat Eastern Imo expected to leave Portland for Ifolyheed on the rime day on *limb the steamship Yampa sailed from Llverpool—the filth inst. Italian political affairs aiere unchan.ed. Great opt itation prevailed at Naples. and numerous ar rest. had been made. Later advices from inure had been received, which stole that the Furogonn troops who teem recently dis charged from further service, had consented to go to Chinn. The ship ft,mericen Congress had gone ashore an the Flni ligh Channel. The vessel was effected to be saved • • The U S. frigate Constellation grid steamer Sumpter were et St. Vincent on September 2kl. The ship American Corium, wound neer it Cove. w, gotten Of. end tint been towed to SPitheach Ike ohm Cairo. from New York for Botta rde m. was ashore on South Pa m one no the th inst. No aerticu'ars. The ship Lancaster. from San Frenciseo for Austra lia, foundered at ar n l g ki on J u l y tn ,h . THE ZURICH CONFERENCE. Nothing further wise known as to the proottedints of the Zurich Conference beyond the general ion that prolate. continued to he made toward the maniac of the treaty of Mitre. It in said the terms of the treaty are to he complicated. end will leave Austria a door open to aaerret with Piedmont. The Perm ceeffituf contains an article written hr its chief editor. statism that "the ni elimmentio de termined on at the inieetint of the Emperors at Villa France had rescued Italy from every forenn interven tion. under whatever name, and from whatever Power. France confines herself to givin r Italians power and adrice, which, if followed. would here insured prs . • . . parity I to Central Italy. But haring in rain offered ad - ice. she cannot dictate orders to Italy." The latest teports say the treaty between France and Austria would probably be Signed on the 19th or 12th inst. Austria had consented to sign on all eueetions belong ing to Lombardy. rat RAT BRITAIN. The Ilatieh OEOI4I rorrespondence on the Peiho anair line been published. Lord John Russell fully approves of the course taken. He .11,4 preparations arc home made. in condonation with France, to enable the forces support the pienipo tentsries in their . instructions. Mmaieter Bruce elem. expressos the opinion that the Chinese will not mak° difficulties, nbout exchansinv ratificstions with him.ns the conditions under which the American min.sterslone was entitled to nn t Pekin. contain notion. , offensive to Chinese nrde. Mr. Bruce ackoowledses his indebted.. to Minister Ward and estitnin Tritnall. and concludes es follows; "Minister Ward!■ position is one of eonsideri ble rbffictilly. nor do • • • • I MM. after an unsuccessful attempt nt Path°, that any comae WO5 open, save the one he adopted " The cotton broken, of Liverpool and the minute°. tare.' of Manehewer were exam mining loud err against the practice of ireizinie sand. dun, pie— /nib nmenenn roam.. The brokers' ananciation et Liver pool had provided n memorial to the Anteriman Cham ber of Commerce. reauratini its iefloenee to be exerted to atop the p merino. The memvial any, for the east •• Pot the amid rt widest hen. probably, been equivalent t o m occ hero, , no I enticed a still greater depreciation in the vane of cotton. Th, v...,5• city article of Friday evading says the derdrodt for ryinnlly by increased. • . The f.ondon Times' city article of the reme date says the funds ere quiet. with a alight tendency towards an increese in the &mewl. The ship RM Jacket. on a voritte front Lirorpool to Australis. rem down the shin Elisabeth Walker. The Rew of thn later had teinstr time to get aboard the ed meeker before the Teasel sunk. The detail' of the kiss of she steamer Admattee. trad - int between • delaHle and Malb+urne. Of that She struck rock. and broke no. Forty of her museensers Plums to the beleerke, one of whom wee wished stray. The re , tummies were fire data s withnut food. Fifty of the pas sengers of the Adineltee died from cold and hunger. FRANCE. . . Minister "MOO'S thneral took else+ on the 6th kat. at the United States chapel The forsian embassies were all represevnted. and the attendance was numerous. The Ws will be sent immediately to America. The Patel , cans a special corps of 1,300 Melt will go to Chino 'is Bisset. The Bmemor Napoleon hes declined to attend the banquet et Bordeaux. Tbs fartificatines on tha coast. from ITA,TO2 to 01100. hare been earned on with extreme moirlitv. The London IPmll's Paris correspooderit nes.' it is strictly true that Napoleon hes a neer. , tool•aitendrs; with Austria and Pardinitt, whieh onabira hint to earl ment th 4 *Sole Itali a " senbeed se fitr vs Penis Vec chio': and another stepip tbefutthertirre of the scheme ltl the ennelon Os Morose.. rot the Itieti.'ertsnean squAdmn.‘ Joh sailed from Toulon tr:th Willa men for Morocco, would command tho African coast (tom Al gions to Cont,." The London Times is moored that nix steel Oath] foliates b eve been ordered And twenty krie transoortA, capable of carrying fifteen hundred men each. ore build ing or ordered to be c.ornmeneed. At the Pans Bonne, on Friday, lentos closed et &If. The Bishop of Orleans. in Joining an IltrAmontene demonSratine elven be the French bishops.on account of Italian nifitirs. hinted at the probable invasion of Ireland by Gen. McMahon. ALY. A [Macre rfl front Mndelll% stoles that Mr. Anviti• Dee - sident of the late military communion of the ex-Duke of Modena. was discovered. on the ath inst.. to hone arrived in the city of Parma. in disguise. haring rnne thither for the purpose of getting my a ormapirney. The door of the puked house where he tank refnae area forced by the ranted popular*, and Anritt wag killed. Perfect tranquillity was oubsequent Iv restored. Another account rays thn[M. Anriti agnomen+, rim ier thrnnrh the city. when.on toying reeognienl.le was buffeted by the mob, and finally his head cut olf and carried off in triumph. A vacua rumor preyed', that Prince Carignan° had accepted the Regency of Central Italy for the King of Sa It n confirmed that the Sardinia minister at Rome ion rendre,' hie peoloports.._ The Government of Bologna ban adopted the Siardi nlnn tariff and customs. hl. Matsui, has addressed a letter to the King of Sar dinia frankly renouncing kispenonal opinions and Pro mining hint the ouppart nt the Democratic party, if the king can and will make Ran free, NAPDES. • Lettere speak of great agitation Prevailing at ?larder. Fourteen persons belonging to the highest families hod been /melted on. the charge of holding meetings for the dtseuesion of polities. The Government was taking active preceutionarg measures against an, entbreen. It is rumored that fiarshelili has entered the marshes. end the rumor esused much sensation In Naples. The latest letters rev that the oldies wrested in Na ples were released wittimit tong prosecuted. ROMP.. • . It is an;,l that the Pope has tofortnesi the irent Pow ers thst he would tor Ore us, hts tarerstral sowers, and dl. if necessary, call upon the Cathohe Powers to pro tect him. • TURKSti. Oiler Paett. doer of tho envoi of net sib. hes been depnved of hie command, because of Alm; it committed under rothonts. The repotted a ppentenee of the plague et Beyrout, is denied. MIMIIMMEMI • teenier I:uroon gaited. but not in nom for the Amen in low!, The force, to be sent lo India sroald number ten thou - .. . send, Iheiurliances were imminent on the emattor Ratty war. It wns reported that the people of.Jo3Poto hail not complied with the disarnun x order. Nene, With wise in NOTNIIi. _ CHINA. Chine dates to August had reached Boni an but the sews to unimportant SQUIB AMERICA. Later unit men froth South America had been received. The ne rowan - ins initiated be the American inmate r had ended without result. and Mr. Yancey was about to emitark for the United States. The preparations for the war between Buenos Ay rep and the Arcanum , . Confederation ware active. The London T. u r•s mars Minister Yancey failed tie enuon h.n domande were Ptotntoount to rt,ltirinC the UncOnditionol surrender of Buenos Ayres to Urge: sa. Nmw Yong. Oct. U. 1539. Commercial Intelligence. By the steamship Europa.) 1,1VF.121 . 001., COTTON MARKET. o,:toß;HT—The Brokers' circular report. an improvement in the ('Jr nod mulattne qualotcs of Cojton. the quotation. for Which 4ln elightlY SaValleed. The inferior qualities cork. vim* depressed end unsaleable. and are sl ix ht ly lower Holders offered freely, but showed no disposition. and spd en improved trade detmel had armee up. 68.000 bete. had been We during the week, Inelodio; 3 OM to 'revel:Bora. end 1100 hales for export. The soles to-day (Friday) are esti mated at 10 COO beles, of which 3011) were to speculatot• and exporters. INo quotatin in have been recetved.—Bec•l There ismtock of UV OM hales an rott. including ;W -OOD bales erAMATlelDenonn. STATE OF TRADE.—The *drums from Manchester continued until. arable. There was little inquiry tor vegan and the primes were weekend partially Water. LIVER POO., 13REAUSTI'FFS NI A BEET—Dec. 7.— Th. ttrend.tofr. tuatket_cerierally furrn. Messrs Ricbiithatit A Spence report dour firm at 3.3 t 6 e 77, per bbl. Wheat has been firm, the rebates a let ter turn in the market Omen Mona's - , bet et the Cl.lO the market WAD quiet. Red western...lo.l..9old. Whim l all ileieriphond 9s fhl a Ile per rental of Meths. Cm,' to bil,ntlrlth a slight say:ince on all qua'itt•s. count the inthianco of imemilettve purchase.. Vet low it. Wile for yelkisr. and7.4l. Gil per rental of 100 lb.. C Malaita. AM.'', It Co. IA floor heft loran sax acre of Gaels lief sack, and Corn for en advance ta &bits per nill llPo aer. VEOf. PROYf3fENIIARKET.-3fessre. land, Athys. A Co. James Meirenrs &To.. Rtcha r; axe s Nuence..ic Co.. and other catmints. report the Prot t- Slone market steativ, hut quiet. Beef stead). r ith a. alight decline ...partially on the inferior qualities. Pork heavy and uneatable. Rayon quiet and quotations nniinnl. Lard firm. with more doom !Zs ralerzet 'Fellow In letter di tuft nit at ntaMsta IFFtitltOtit, I`RODITJE MA llKET.—Buter native, wit t i - tat title:lino on all qualities. Coffee quiet. Rice ;Cltho tit 1. oi. Roam dull at I. 31. r to Sit for copartion °plots; ot Turpentine steady at .13. Wolf% 9d, • nolk--the 6 ,,ltr,r,niti ter Old common quartile. were narelyinnin t, Ithie the market for the other qualities was firmer. .As es-13as quiet xt ffserite; Pearls ditto at Vs MO Bark—lfaltunore bark is quoted at 7sets3d. pod Philadelphia at 8e &108 s 90 In Fish Oils there was t o worsen Isonneeti doing without quotable ehahiet le.n711)814 fella at lifAß e l i fliT, Oct. i.—The money market cOntlnuel, without chance. Console closed this evoeing 9.1149 C, The bullion in the Bank of Eng lnd hes Item - eased A ° 37 MO define the week, AMERICA:I BTOCKP —Banes Brothers report the business limited, int.previons rates. . VoNprtoili Stock. Exchange--Oct. 10. • lIIICOND HOARD. MIX) 8 Sall 1661 I ,INI Stich R&NIR S line/Missouri 60 ...015 85 I 3 1 Jo • • •• • • 101 J do . ISD Sikh SiNia ,o‘. ILsp NY tits to ys. 757.5 1).1 ins) .lo 110 110 Candi Cord gd....13 1100 do NIO do 1111. —WO 13Li , 115 l'enenis R . 1.9.; 50 Erie It. T}. 3 Cen H.-- • • Gt r , 100 do • .860 7.1 100 • .. 100 5D do . . 60 ..... lou ...... 7 4 ; Zal Ctite 60 th. 100 e 0..... ..... 4 N Central H to dn.., •- • I ' 2 °.. M . 1!0 ... StP, , Clev k Teo 1) ri 00 do , • .b1:0%;10) Choi 7r. It 11t .1 , 60 60,, 501 do., 00).101. .110 Jo. 10D Harlem. 01.100 do hoStich Cen I Ilkhgtvon Ort. 19 —Flour active — sales or 11 Ont) barrels at 115 i for Onto and floward•atreet, and Wu barrels of City Mills et n, rib Wheat bun.) ant - 9103 bushels hold at la; 14,50 for white Corn firm at 92 ergYe for white and yellow. Prot talons lull, tot unchanged In quotations. Wionher tlull at 2di 0.12 1 / 4 . for Ohio. Mo ihr. Oct 19.—Thu Cotton market 11p, nil at and closed at tit for middlings; sales 3WO b ties. 1:x- Of, Nel, York 1 , 1,111111. At "nit t, Oe t. 19.—Cotton firm: a:Vestal° hale.. ell n ail ate OCT. ig ..CCOtt(111 has an advanemt ten- Jant sales to day 2 tsl) bales. Aoti'ANN Of. Oct 1 0 —ln Cott., there he, t een an race bovines', wahout quotable c Lang' 11[169 t; ws:na NU bales. NAMIOW ESCAPE, — On Tucebtay evening, while 1110 slaMlllo.li State Rights Was ems., no the river to the nannen.e. front New York. nn aid Indy named Walkot, neenl,ntnllv walked ovelbonrd..no was fee cued by one of the aeck handy, CONSOLS 94ne9pi Markebg by Telegraph THE CITY. LMITSEMENTS TRIS EVECCIXO Witcartii k Cr.mites kica-kirkszr Taw - 1m Mel Mesa. &km Sink —.Dot ^—" lire Wives." Wgiottl-Brim Tit . !grat. es Walist sal Ntuth strvent.—•• Modes - - Time Maid." Alizigicg Argptier Or Msac.l.oll4l aid Matto Pillg"—" Tight Rope,"—"The Fags Laget72" Mrsicgt. Fru. bxrgy st...gsovs Grand Concert. tj ,McDo23 do - 301 3d,) Nay 20, V 1 Penns ft a 1" 3954 . 411.1 do 1.413 1 3 do ..... _194 1900 Pitts. Ft W. A. pea 110 do R Eat 7a - 47 il7 d0.._...NS SOD N Pe. ns R 19 , 3 .112 1 7 Girard BC Age 2 Nor Cut ptd 2 43.113244 , 10 do do .2 ds 145 N, 3 Consol Bk 1 do , 105 N 'l4 7,1 R . 3 Cam & Amb R ..113} 4 i 10 do --... ..... .0) BETWEEN BOARDS. 10 Penns R. CAP 41 die-5 3 ). 13 ReoTillbuti R• • • - - • 5434 . 34 Rarnetesr‘ R - SECOND BOARD. BO City AL R 104" tollinobill R. lota . 100 130 n 1134.1000101 3tV N Penn% R. lot. 2.1,0 Warn R 03, 33 1 2t Far J. Bk Oro .58‘i 30,41 tto taSsm lo da 304. Atto ray. Ft W. A. Cbto t 1 da. R. Est Ti_.. .... .47 LI Girard Bit .to 2001 N Pc ono ft Go 70 ..... . 11 110 Elant3 R . .. . . ' CLOSING .PRICES—STEAD Bt. Atha.? Bit f.lsd. U States 6. —lO4 Irish! Nav stock—. e 44 num es.. ee s 100 &W. 59'. Jul Map't de Ebel R. ..Sd larij "75 Ist mart 4 4 4 .4. Filen% 5....... ..5344 93%. 1 " 2d Men. Realms 13%.L056 Island IL .... kr , ‘ JO% 941379 76 7d ehiEb CtmliclfsE.43 " most 6s 'SS. 90 IN PrrHus A; C 6:4( r") 14 L SIETai . a ft " r. 11% Morris Caealt,ou.S.4 49 " Ist to Ms n Pref. niS &IA; F & &esth R....—. re E 2 Retail Vas Ss 931.83% .1419. id Sts ..._ 3s‘i Scisvl las 71 to I &,.....*vms SU; R Philadelphia Markel,. OcToon I.lt—Ersams. There is rather more lei:nation in th. }lour market. end %hour low this hare hems diavosmi of at es-trii for etraiiht superfine:Aar!, for Breast -street mitts 2m. end 1 ,1 2 , far fund.? Flour. including - Ms do lea mono units at a prism.: Samar; the stales for imam ronsumptiom are moderate. ran< ins from 43 are to s6a •nit Or common to choice superfine extras tad r m e , lot...remain.: to anante. Rre.Floor and Corn 'Meal are Viet at Si 25 for the - former and 4.3.% or the Latzer. Wheat to unrharred, with sales of 740 to at Lt.:Jilts, or fair to prime red and 133 s lit t i:.mal white. Rte as steady at SOo for Penna. or , tk mat sal,. Corn a rather iiniet, %Molly about 3 LOU Iva el'oa- found burro+ at 90.930. in store. and 93e afloat. this are to good defuses, mat about 3 C 9) bag SictiPTS .41 at 4k. Barley and Malt are Smile tirhi. Bark— . tuereitron Is ranted , and lit hints Nn sold et iti'lltkrs too. Cottoo--The market a doll, Lad Mlle a ft..' an..all ias have been sold. at shoot possintis prices. etroror , a— Very nitre Pdolaes.o sod Sotoldck se e ealir are a m b m heir teaN of. holder* limit operations. Seeds—Thule is a. moderate business done in Cloverseed, at in ; from rt) o f3.7 bu. the latter lone: no chance in Timothy or Flaastvd. and but Ittt , , se '.n r. Whllkilt to held firmly. Ohio and Prison sePotz et 2e: Easton VS. and drudge at 27c: lihda sre scan-mass: worth Wu le nnlion. - - - - Tag MCLNKET Tnoros.---Sincor Dounettfs clever troupe of educated animals, pie their first of a ,Sort aeries of entertainments this erectns. at National Hall. They were here some three yearn since, and gave uni versal satisfaction. and we are assured-that they haws lost none of their luterrstair features, hilt ha, e tmpro:- ed ttth in numbers and merits. It lean entertaintr.ett well calculated to ides se both old and loons. aid there is not anything introduced, hoe - ever diverting. that th e most fastidious can tate MIT tlfeptellltts. Tuts Laren NATIOVAL, STErIEOSOOP£ CO ' t[T het - BJ(1U opened a fresh lot of Pictures lately trarnrted, and are now otferins them In the pablie, at the lowest possible pr:te. la South ElgLth Street THE Jaa • tau% Bela a.—The members co' the branch or the Jennoue family who claim to M ts,o heirs to the fi'4l tltr RV nosr an - aitiror a elananot in Fa;- 'and. assprn Weil et Charlottesville, Va.. on Wedriesdn7, is She number of fifteen. No deur ice action gran taken. them ,li the sentbar of en agent to Europe Is belief ed to he resolved 00. shon'd they rtueeeed in setting the $4O NO nnO. we o - dna the e will he matte is stampede nfte• the new and ele-stht sO les of R. P M. Estrada. FaablenaLle Teller. Na a booth eleventh street, and " Hobson's will be In demslal Putr.anzt.t•nu Iltraorrirsnr —.A correspondent of the John troten Echo writes thus from this city :"Pht indeirlita by undertone wonderful chanses since my first visit here, ts - enn Tents ago. Wood hss siren place to pressed brick, and betel has yielded to marb'e, iron, grnntte, and brown stone Chebtnut street bat teen re volutonised architscturally, its nest notable chance being the dissprearrince of ' Old Drury.' ard the crc'e tioll Upon its site of the msznifieent :frown Stone Cloth int Mill of flocl,bill .k Wilson, Their elerant esdab- Itsbutert is numberod W. 3 and Ma. Tin clothing made there lint a amid-wide refutation. ns most of your renders nes aware " '• goon u - tyr needs nn hush,•' acd the eleglut Clotho:: sok: at the Continental." N. E. corner of Chettnitt and Eighth streets • by E c o ,, needs IN 0011iltIPLIdAt.013 (MCP at,