. trA: • rit" -.-F1i11).&Y;JDEOEMB110. 23,180. " Irtt E k*7.oi: " ' lt • it IS S S ..814904 thaNtittlenoy aut. Ina contents of this nanibei are 'alitTailed Warsoter. Bead's Its must at traetiOne,"ltnontaine thaIatENT"FORBION NEWS: inifffiale OlYthit'popnlier Onion ;Atha daft onoine Lite rary rending, original and , sowed; Donut° and Fo , ligr.tWkil.lB.49!.:4P°4.#l° Int of , CONTEIITB; • Olflt - Istot LiciEND—PLocipui VTOL,/ Vioni—Ntiaißap—amum, 11001TAVICII OF, NOTKISO — OLD ENOLIIIM AZCIOIRT —flow., TA HUI AT Catrar-Illp/MIIIIIrS7-I.IZOLLPIA - . • ORIGINAL EiItETOIL . -:Tin(Lzii or' 'Art ow) Plitei -% llitlfabl. ItIMO 1 SICIT(3I or Till Lun Axa ADViI.N IIiRES OF CAPTAIN SAINIIIRS. BRADT. ..V03,/PE4P,OkiIIE.NOE.74IIO)4 NHOSi TTE - 11710) 1 W,UIII7ICMOVI. el 12.11'914,14kP6,-,43orru, PO?dTtei—Jvpox notrViß—Tmc RipirivitraTiiii. or 1711 W YOTX 11l TIM COMILIetToN pONVXOTION-4 TIItM7I ROTA AND .10711.11vAT-4LIOTLis 'eV AZT Ain SCIES Ci Tint TiIIEtTI=III:ETTI BA“ TO /RX . LAITP-,-PITTIOITIRO 'AIPODUTION—MIit. 'JOHN A. WATTIINGTON -- ANOTHIR APPLICANT 70R Anymore Ih 7 VO Tab 1514011—STESICnISO Or /3.XOTAZ .1.113 It—ELOZOTTAX ASPATIST. l iVi fiCELLANVitra. l --Pial . iosia, AND POLITICAL—THE MINTNNT"—TEE By rum. or JOHN BROWN—REAL) UNDID, Ammar— ..., ;A:Week:limn REPOSTB-:DDITINIONI he ;Ferrell .-,,0N ;TON 809111.-ANNIX TANNOTON .TuoThiztre: No. I—TER .1 4 DNNAAL , Da SoHN B. Co oN—Tric BENrers ";";:: CkirixarrEses , -Onntriony Joiiitvg /01 1 1r16. or Moira. NNW. NT , 1 / 1 11,,INIZADR IRON pAzitoitivise Ataxic*, Viiorxis; AND WANNINGToN SY,TELNGRAPN. ETC. 1 " RELIGIMiti—TtIiPiD POIitAITA, N0.,',1711 Rey. J. SMITH; PACTON or 'TIN ELivits44 BAPT,1111: ftuaca: - AGHICUL,THRE.--Hcax sox Strcx-romrnere Hoaxes ' "811fIRT-lIIMPIa FOR rare bear-A GOOD BVGOX.TiOS ECCIPE FOR Calomel ItAms-eurma Sicovrar IT BE CDC SHORT Ae FOOD?...CHANCOAL FOR PAT . FENING(MHEIALE--PAIYM ECONOMY • , TLLE CITY:-Waximy REVIEW or rux ParrtauxtrniA MARIEETS-THE MONEY , ELatXxv - Nxvi Wax MAR , METE, TOIEDAVr-THILADELPHIL CATTLICMAREST DIATITE-TEI MEDICAL STUDENTS • 401:W tharta--Xtrou HENRY AND TIDCMINTING NATIONAL HALL-4EOEIIER MARLED 110171 E-A - ,CAVIDOV A BORTioN. , , THE WEEKLY PRESS is furnished to eubionbers at Ha pet raar.,in advance, for the rune* *our, and to .. HID ea of Twenty, when teat to ows address, SW; in ad vane. Single °Niles for sale - at ths counter of THE Pius Office:in wrappers, ready for, mailing. , Pinar PAS, u.—Orte Holiday Direetory; .Personal and Political. FOURRO PAWL—Fugitive Negroes In 0 anada ; Nova Items; Marine Intelliienee. - Atin PROM THE EDITOR. • ' '3;VASIIISOTON, Dec: 22,1869. , requires no , great sagacity-to foresee that • some great changes are fermenting in Amer!, can - parties,,and that the Presidential contest next year will, in all probability, be !Melded, • if not upon new issues, at least by considera tions that 'six. months ago would have been -scouted by most of the politicians. I think :I may claim for gli& Faxes the credit 'et • having .predicted that no organization could succeed in Imo that did not recognise "In 'Rif creed . a large 'element of . nation elltY; Events, have been rapidly 'tending ' —. At; 'this contingency, and it, needed only the John Brown raid tb unveil , the fact to the :public gaze. The triumph of Popular Sovereignty in Kansas has made leo pro . found an impression' on the public con science that all other theories for the ad. justrnent' of -,the Territorial' question have been discarded, or made contemptible by the contrast. Imrsasmtrioit, whether for 'the protection or prohibition of slavery, is an obsolete idea, however leaders may .advo cate its application. President Buchanan's Tolicylasi it is true, done much' to sectional :. Ace our parties. Ills • early surrender to tile „ fire.eatera on the Kansas question organized • against the Democratic party, or ratho against his' Administration, a solid Northern ants. gonismi • amP his snlisequent 'course has ' "'greatly inflamed and strengthened this oppo ' r- ,In the meanwhile the Republicans were rather preparing for what seemed to be the approach of an ,essy victory than for the assertion of certain clear and" acceptable , principles. John Brown has come (aid gone) ' remind them, as well as' all others, that it • 'is ' impossible, for any party to ,succeed that done_ not not "meet living issues in :a' flatiflooted den'aible'inanner. They ought, for this zeason, to take the accusations of • the Ad ' .ministration with- the greatest philosophy. It is. so , easy and so .cheap a business to - day to a great party that a great national Gala . mity may be charged to their doctrinal, that It ie not to be - wondered that Ifr.Ruchanan and _ nriani-Edioguiavo- ifs TY itiori -- the - Itar: per's Eerry tragedy as a geed weaPoir 'to Republicatis t - That was not only :According to theiy, tastes, but in-harmony, with ,the expectations of the extreme South; and both will make it their especial shibboleth for ' the coming year. - 'The other side of the argu inerithaiyet to be made: The Republicans are ',silent enough under the irolictrnent - preferred , against them. "They, sit like statues before ''the assaults of their enemies In the 'House. ...It would be advisable for those who ate mis• itgders - tending this eller:me to wait for the re- Joinder. -It may eery° To clear up and com• ... - plete the troubled- history of thesA most troublous times. - These are the days of unt• tattoos and repentance!, in politics. To ' forgite - offences is the prevailing virtpe 'or ' :vice, of our reigning politicians. Those , who are now so eager and so fierce in their ' eliminations of the Republicans have' in tarn ",' 'taken to their bosoms far more offensive foes , of the South than most of the leaders of that 'party. What men ever did more to sow the seeds of hostility between the two Sections than John Van Buren, - or his father, or John ' ' Cobluane, or John A. Dix, or Samuel Tilden, oftxew terk, when with the Wilmot Proviso An - their hands, they helped to defeat General • - • Case, and to fill the' Northern mind with -painionate hatted of the South? There never ;was any great organised- party in the free ' 'states against slavery, till AO_ day. The Re. party Is the natural offspring of the Van Buren revenge. And yet, all these mat. contents have been forgiven and taken to the ~,embrace of Mr. Buchanan and his 81.6 7 -eating . Mende. New,let us auppoee'the Republicans to makes short cot to the Proslderioy. SUppose • ' , they, like the Van Berens, make "a virtue of " necessity;"and - become first-class conserve ' Dyes of the existing • school. They have not • , nearly as much to recant as the Van Burma, and if they can et the votes to back them in , ',the work, they will- be consecrated in the af . lectiOns of those who now delight to assail •- them. , Mark it t ' • „ lam not of those who believe that there is any immediate :danger of o' dissolution of • r thls Union' Mr'. Buchanan and• his friends • • are of course anxious to create the imprint , 1 : eion that 'the dissolution is 'at, hand. His party Is in fact the party. of disunion. ,-Every step, be has taken has been directly in the „. _path to the overthrow of the Union. There , Is not an enemy of the bond that unites, these States together, in the Southern States, that is not in a great degree. his organ or his sup , ' porter 7 his confidant or hip champion. There „ ' Is not, a Northern interest that he has' not , for them deserted or sacrificed In cold blood. • z ' There is not a Northern man that he lies not • ;Pursued; if that man- failed to come up to all - the' , requirepients of the' South. And if ever we are sectliinalized ' the present Admirdstm. • t -,tion will have done the deed. Harper's Ferry ;, has' been a 'providence to James Buchanan, and if he can induce the - people of the Sbnth : • to -trust him for' another - four years, and 1. , ISM again cheat„the, People of 'the North declaration of devotion to Northern : principles, his ambition will be gratified. In ” ' his hlindinfatuatioa he thinksthe greet Union meetings in Philadelphia, New T o rk, and Boa. - ton's° many trihutes" to' Alin and 'when a 'Bozitherit :Representative threatens dliaolu . „,,i,,, , tfort in a, _torrent: of f invective against 4,he Harpers !rienigerits,; Mr: Bachman canilea'himself to be set forward ' as the very Man to stay' the 'storm, which he, more than any other in this; country, assisted to raise. .;; ;I:ittleas, -I , greatly misapprehend -the .Union < spirit 'now. prevailing :JD our happy country, 'At - einttaina -no ono AnkrealciO i or ordloary re :, aPeOffor his Administration, unless, Indeed, . thotto map be Included witoilike 'Mr. William Riled; thiatlienisetrenintt, these MOOtir,igSs , 9 1 9 Y f°r.,'"*: 'Purpose, of, perverting, theta' to the , base , :intet et-ti trachoma and heartless ;any', inch ';'"A'"feelliigoin any "of:these assemblages.'. But this seem to bo 7tiiewn 'At! headquarters ,sotfenr,et., the kennaylvaida and - Connecticut, or t: - ').!s'lhttotradyS. - :arid :Bettnines TO*, of - Z1L,044 43 .4..04+ trOitbi! Is in- aPPropriz atetbi A t ° helresident L and .hia i satAini ur if ' ,, g a M,Y :Ioo4ot 4rndK '4 44ol49 ZgA9Yrn , :to ;be openly apposed to the , • ircf DpfltdminietritlWo,4l the , beidtddrit Of Jig 134' rear. And when it la recollected that in Orr thing that Charleston may do, from present appearances, the Disuniontsts and the Ad ministration must controybt that they will bolt its action, the idea of a Northern Untoh sentiment being' made to bear the appeartenee of sympathy with Mr. Ilitchanan and his po licy is as wicked( as it is absurd. The response to these Union demonstration% on the part of the SMithern setesalohists, in Congress and elsewhere ) has not been nor dial. They have failed to (Waken 8, reel procal feeling in that. quarter. Otherwise, ,they;have .produced the happiest effects. lheY hive not been managed by the leaders I only, and, apart from all other motives, they reflect the real feeling of the people In favor of the union of the States, however the pee .p!o May think of slavery in the abstract. They speak not only for Democrats of 1 all shades of opinion, but for the mass of the ' Bepublicani ilia the Americans. That such Manifestation should hot be agreeable to the Southern ftre.oaterd is to be expected. hose agitators want ditiunion for the sake of dis union. They choose to misunderstand any expression of, conservatism in our quartet of the Union. They declare all Northern Democrats as unsound of rotten," as Mr. Senator Iversen said a few days ago. They say all the Itepubliesne are re sponsible for the John Brown raid, and they are ready to unite with any party, however odious, that goes the length of theft. eXaetions. These are the author% of the expulsion of Northern Merellanta and mechanics from the slave States; of the embargo against Northern manufactures in those States ; of the dismissal of snph school-teachers from Southern families as happen to have been born on our side of Mason and Dixon. And these are the men who will go to Charleston, if they cannot break np the Union before then, and demand to control the National Con vention by insisting upon the adoption of resolutions putting slavery in the Territories above the law ) and who urge the sacrifice of. Judge Douglas—failingln either of which, they will go out of the Convention, and rum on a Disunion issue against the Democracy. No thing could give strch men more satisfaction than the iota exodus of students from our two ancient medical institutions—hardly ex celled in the world, and presided over by national men and profound scholars and practitioners. They will greet the hot-headed young gentlemen who left these noble schools with rapture, and will hail their secession as a happy answer to the late great heartfelt out burst of popular reprehension of the John Brown raid, bedded by our most eminent citi zens. But though these influences seem to control the South just at this time, they will not muzzle and master it always—unless, in deed, the South should have resolved to go out ofthe Union under their counsel. Now, it Is precisely such madmen as use a Northern Presi dent against Northern interests, Northern feel ings, Northern men, and that upright, loyal, and ' conservative sentiment which put him where he is. Nothing compensated them for their Mute to defeat him at Cincinnati, after he was elected, hut an abject surrender to them; and nothing will gist* or satisfy them now, unless the men of the free States elevate slavery into an infallible good—sanctioned by history and sanctified by Christianity. Are we quite ready for this new appeal to our generosity ? There Is little Immediate prospect of an or ganization of the Muse. The South Ameri cans will not go for no .A.dminlstratlon man for Speaker, while the Administration leaders are denouncing them—and particularly in view of the pledge of the former to assist in exposing the corruptions of the President and his agents. Nor will the Administration men or Republicans go for a South American. Sher man comes within a few votes of being elected every day, but from present appearances he cannot be elected; unless Messrs. Adrain, Riggs, Clarke, J. O. Davis, Reynolds, (all of them elected. by Republicans,) vote for him, as I think they should do, against any Administration man, and as they could do without parting with a single one of their Democratic principles. Hr. Sherman is a Republican, but I believe that if ho is chosen Speaker ho will be so fair to the South that he will take much of the Wind out of the sails of the fire-eaters. And this is really what many of the disunlonists I fear. Such, at all events, Ss tho result o' my t en days' experience in Weigh:4WD. - irome to morrow. J. w:l' The Expulsion of Free Negroes from Tennessees A bill is now before the teginlature of Ten nessee to expel all the free negroes from that State, on penalty , of, being sold into slavery. It provides that all free negroes found ft Ten nessee after the first day of *ay next shall be seized and sold if they hreadults, and that the children shah be bound out. If the adults agree to emigrate to Africa some slight assist ance is to be afforded to them to reach that country; or they may seek a master and go intoalavery: The Nashville Union or the Bth contains an editorial advocating the removal of the free negroes, on the ground that they aye an ic objectionable class" and of" serious detriment to slave property." The same paper, however, contains a communication from Hon. Joust Wet* strongly opposing the project, tie presents the following argu ments against it: "My objection to the bill is that It propeteS to commit' an outrage, to perpetrate aK oppression end cruelty. This Is the plain ttutb, and it Is idle to reface words to lean the fact. Let us look the proposition boldly in the face. This depressed and helpless portion of our population is designed to be driven out, or to be enslaved for life, and their eroperty forfeited, as no slave can hold property. Ile mothers are to be sold, or driven away from their children, many of them Infants. 'the chil dren are to be bound out until they are twenty one years •A age, and then to leave the State Or be sold) which means that they are to be made slaves for life, in foot. Now, of these women and children, there is hardly one in ten that Is of unmixed negro blood. Some are half white; many have half white mothers and white fathers, making a teat of 371-100t4 of white blood; many have a third crop, in whom the negro blood is almost extinct. Snob is the unfortunate truth. "This description of people who was born free. and lived as free persons, are to be Introduced as slaves into our families, or into our negro-quarters, there to be under an overseer, or they are to be sold to 'the negro-trader anti sent South, there to be whipped by overseers, and to preamh re bellion in the negro-quarters, as they will preach rebellion everywhere that they may be driven to by this unjust law, whether it be amongst us here in Tennessee, or South of us, on the cotton and sugar plantations, _or in the Abolition meetings in the free States. Nor will the women be the least effective in preaching a erusade when begging money in the North to relieve their children, left behind in this State, in bondage. "We are told that this free negrol bill' is a politic', popular measure. Where Is it popular? In what nook or oonor of the State are the princi ples:of humanity so deplorably defloient, that a majority of the white inhabitants would commit an outrage, not committed in a Christian country of which history gives any account. In what coun try is it this side of Africa that the majority have enslaved the minority—sold the weak to the strong, and applied the proceeds of the sale to educate the children of the stronger side, as this bill pro poses? It is an open assertion that ' might makes right.' It is re-opening the African slave trade in feat. In that trade the strong capture the weak and sell them, am i no it will be here if this policy is carried one. All over the State, those who are responsible for passing the bill Will have to contend with fear ful pubic opinion, made up of all the women who hay° metal eitaractersand religious feelings; hack ed by the clergy, and assuredly by a very large majority of the members of all the churches ; for we must carry along with us the important fact that numbers of the people sought to be enslaved, or driven out, belong tot and are members of our various churches and in full communion. That these 'groat bodies of Christian • men and women will quietly stand by and see their humble co-work ers cold on the block to the negro-trader, is not to be expected ; nor will any set of men be supported, morally or politically, who are the adhere o f such a law. The Nan Juan Affair. A highly-respectable paper, published at Edinburgh, and called the Scotsman, declares that Lord Joan Roseau had strongly Intl niattid to the. United States Government that under no oircuinstances could England agree to give, up the Island of San Juan. It adds 'qieme years ago ' It seems, the American Go vernment lent officially to the Geographical So ciety a chart of the boundaries under the Oregon treaty, with Ban Juan deDned as belonging to Great:Britan ; and this is but ono of many proofs of the entire groundlessness and wantonness of the American clam." This is ti bold charge, but the fact is that no chart officially issued in this country contains a boundary line giving Ban Juan to Great Bri tain. We have ascertained this by strict in quiry, and therefore set down the Scotsman's assertion es et a bold Invention of the enemy." It is more than bold ; it is reckless and un wise. MR. lIANICELB' BALE or ELnonivr FORNlnglie, at' hid warotoomd, No. 524 Walnut street, takes plum this morning. ijeo Thomas dc Bow' adver tisements, - - jzir Purser Smith, of the etoamship reystone 'Staleorlatob arrived yesterday, in forty-six hours from Charleston, will aodept our thanks for Mos of papers la &deems of the walla THE LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. TWO DAYS LATER FROM EUROPE► THE ASIA AT NEW YORK. tUNIORED TROUBLE BETWEEN RUSSIA. AND CHINA'. THE PEACV, bONGRESS DZOOVERY OA` GOLD FROM, THE WRECK OF TRIO ROYAL CHARTER. srimn kND TERSIBII AFFAIRIes Yong. December 22 ibyai stemsbiv_Asia. Captain Lott. which sailed from Liverpool at 0.30 on the morning of the 10th inst., arrived here this morning.. The 'steamer New York arrived at 'Southampton on the Bth jest, In future the North German L'oyde steamers are to 'sad from Southampton for New York, on Wednesdays instead of Tuesdays, as hitherto. The Print. Albert. from Galway for Rt. John's,Walk appointed to sail the same day settle ,psis. Th. news hr ttle Age la not fl u me two days later. as the North Amer gait , and City of Washington took nut telegraphie &Mimes via Queenstown, to the afternoon of the Bth inst. THE CONGRESS. Additional luiliesions to the Congress had been re• oeived at Faris. Le Nord says the exiled sovereigns and the present eldefs of the Governments of Central Italy wilt plead t sir cause before the Congress by 6nis Mid memo- ran. Adviees trim NM; 'Way diet the official invitations to the,PePtil GovernMent were to he presented el multene- Curly by the French and Austrian ambasnadors. The Vienna invitation was not expected to reach Rome be fore the 10th instant. Baron Sohleinitz, it le assertpd, will sit at the Con gress es representative of Protons. M. Mon will be the mooed plenipotentiary of Spain. werestated that together lish and French tim'ernitenth °enmities upon tui ermsurendot of the Hahne question. will will not probably antler Aus tria. but which eneounter na senous objections at Berlin and St. Petersburg. Notwithetanding the obleo dons urged against Count Cavour as the representative of Sardinia at the Congress. the report was persisted in at Paris that Cavour would be the plenipotentiary of the Kiln of Sardinia. titm. The direotors of the greats EAT chip company. In view of their erobarressihent relative to the Great Ettetern, called &besting of the shareholders for the 111th of De cember, but they 'subsequently issued a notion of their intention to postpone the esplanations they intended to make for m Month. Great thisatiefeetion exieted nmon the shareholders at thin proceeding, and it was expected that, notwithstanding the action of the direetorn t fidi meeting would be held on the day first named._. Otto said the directors had resolved to borrow Money' o il the ettii purity of the ship. The Londein Ttynet , ite hrliele draws attention to the injustice or Government to the Liverpool, New York. And Philadelphia Steamship Company , which is the mil,' British line of time - atl antic stutmen; without a subsidy, and which suffer, great hardships in the O men. of those profits and facilities which a mail grant confer". Great success' had attended the efforts of the divers at the wreak of the steamer " Royal Charter." About £lBO Westerlies. or nearly half the Amount of gold ship ' ped in her. hell been reeriveted. and great T h e were entertained of obtatteng the remainder. The expenbes , in the renovory had not eximeiled £2 000. The ship "Senfteure" hail reached London with 1:294.000 of Auetralien cold on hoard. The first battery of Armstrong's gums had been proved at Woolunoh with perfect scow*. They resisted the ehack from the largest amount of powder it was possible to cram into them, and were afterwards packed in enacts for transport. At the Newcastle aseixce, John Watson Moody, Of Portland. Maine, mate of the 4morirnn Rhin Mary, we, tried for the wilful murder of DenielWithein. an Ameri fan sailor, in the Northumberland docks in August Inst. t was proved that the Weiner pulled Witham nut of his berth. end lamoked him down with a "knuckle Mis ter," iniliettne injurlee from which Witham died n live days afterwards, The jury returned a vordint of man slaughter, end Moody was contented to penal servitude for 'i • The four Liverpool merchants who wrote to the Ent perot Napoleon. continued to be objects of reproach and censure , and there had even been soma talk of a proseoution being commenced evilest thorn. At a meeting of the Liverpool Lnw Society, it Wall resolved to tender the Attorney General the &madame of the society, should it be determined to take any proceeding' "t'll i r t .h h all o y fre e d ie rg g nh eloquent ppeal by Victor Hugo, dated December xt, in behalf 01 John Brown, the leader of the FRA'EarNCEner's Ferry rebellion. . The official monthly returns of the Bank of France exhibit, as competed with the previous statement, an ineresee in the each on hand of about 6 200 000 francs. end a demean In the bills discounted and not due of about 15.600.000 francs. The pacific policy towards England appears to he reeking goodprogress. At a grand municipal banquet in Pans. the Prefect of the Some smoke inn very eulo gistic manner of the now pacific era on which he laid France bad'entered. The Paris oorreepondent of the London Doily Neter denim' the. either the twiny or any other constituted body in France has either the or or the power, in the "lightest degree. to forge the hand of the Executive. end urge on war with England against the real wish of the Emperor. An imam! decree had been Mauled allocating, the budget of France for 1860 among the different nom tries. The total amount ill a fraction under seventy three million pounds marling. The sum of 113 574 is is set aside for the War Department £4,000 000 for the Marine. and needy £50.000.000 for the Finance Depart ment, including interest. It is etated thet the Freed] Government is aboutto expend upwards of „g 500,000 in fortifying the portent' Algeria : _ The Paris Bonrse was buoyant. and very animated, and Re:lo66l°nd on the thLY. 9at 70f. 48e. ITA The electoral agitation throughout Piedmont and Lombardy was unprecedented. At Milan all assoeia- Vona and trade clubs bad been transformed into elec toral committee!, The Tusran Monitore says that the country will find Daly resolved to maintain her rights. The Central Italians are better armed than they were at the end of the.war, and will persevere in defending p strong Ita lian Kingdom and a national anieri. which will efface old m diviens. The Provisional Government at Florence had de "fititelTitlit functionaries eerlVrn all by diplomatic rnil 'ga Doke. e gd P l i r . i lb i l g at pretreat ao s ruao. to return to luseany wittrin a iron night, under penalty Of toeing heir neoun ary allot 'Dents or pensions. The Paris trnietri Mulertakes to prove that the re forms which are tatted for in the Papal States by ru- Liberal party, cannot, by any possibility, be acic, gie d^b; the Sovereign Pontiff. Letters front !..%.;itiill B il P- tiriti ; ihat the Spaniel] ; revile, so far Dina saaw . es 4 ,t,h,,i s t asiri , y,., a s . ;I. r ~ MIL% ‘,.. Welt 6117ititing or fie"pr rtme r oaten_ the " ' '' A hitneK. wee errant t g tnet O'Donnell intended re. tllrnitOSlPLO tO Mndrin. and that the Spanish army won rettleln encamped in Africa for the winter. A iulnd despatch of tho Bth nays that orders had been given for a levy of 60,400 men in January next. , Reports were current in Madrid that seeterv, and even cholera, had broken en 'mow waive:al ..;..-at would ni= - 'wanillis Otfrilisig7 all t err force s coneentrated.. , Offim I,d'etalre of the Spanish losses on the 19th of Novel; er, and subsequent days. show the following mutter Officers, 9 killed and 45 wounded; soldiers, TO killed and 717 wounded. AUSTRIA., ar , . The Prebslons of the gloomiee represented to be on th en r; the memo. -Ati ilmpresaion prevailed Wring Nadir. treen, , thet the restoration of the Conetitution woo bet suffice, unless its maintenances was soarer'. tied by l ire Powers. The ultra-Montane berrieds of the Tyrol assert that any attemete of the Government of Aldan& to place all the Christian professions on an enuility would cause reneral indignation among the Roman Catholick of of the TtrOl. GPM MA NY% . The DTP jestreni %IMMO a. sehdfieial ankle on the rub act Of the C.Atilitrenais of the e mall Gerillari Mato. IA , iibticc. The article sari that as there is no unity between the men German Powers. the Con- lerences tout to satiety the general wish fora mare Nil iggo l un a nd ° l l t i r e e7t e gi u ' ll t e 1 t glel have ZVI% gi e e t ii at these Conferences, wile soon bovine perceptible. The Conferences hod nothing to do with any pretreat for a change in the Confederation., Advice. from Camel Mate that the proposal to solicit the Elector's mingent to the re.establishment of the Constitution of 1850, in conformity with the joint re flaredd tiOn of both chambers. in Jul 1867. has been e feeby the first chamber to a epecial commisaion. The differences between Prussia and Reese Eleetoral were in a fair way of being settled by the friendly in tervention of the Federal Diet. ~. RUSISLI AND RNA. The followiug.ii an extract from a St. Petersburg let ter ritcsavoll in London: " A courier arrived today in forty-two days from Amoor, with great news. The Emperor el China a n t iven the Runiane nodes to el Mt. as he had never a thorized the cession of territory, and bud only Just heard of the settlement. Meanwhile the Ruin= am nion at Pekin is sealed up in its palace." The above statement had not in any way been con firmed 'when the Asia &Ott TUR Y. A ministenal mists had been brought oboe; by the dissensions between Fund Pasha and Rise. Pasha. Fund had tendered hlis reeignation. but the Sultan re fused to accept it, although a bertrulneilt agreement be tween the two ministers appeared imponsible. Fuel Pasha was the only minister who emanated to oppose the Sues canal. The Preneh and Austrian dorm had made joint ropreeentatione in favor of M. De Lemma, and the adhesion of the other Continental Power. to his scheme was anticipated. The Grand Vizier was endeavoring to work out re forms, but the combination to winos the paper currency was prevented by the inedfficieney of the means in the treasury. The retention of from 20 to 80 per cent of the salaries Of the employees of the !openerpublic, enabliehments and a tax on licenses. had been ordered. 'The Turkish Government had eeizevet rge q ;entity of gunpowder on board an English el bound to 'brill. The Envoy of Prince Daniel, of Montenegro, lied been anassinitted at Constantinople. l's DIA AND AUSTRALIA. The Celcutta mails of Nov. 2d. Bombay. Nov. and Mel bourne. cAustralia./Oct. /7th. had reached Ent- lend. but the main features of the news bane been anti cvitgirde by telogr ph. le no e c' nfirmation of the reported death of Nana fielob 0 Melbourne advices mention the suopensien of Measre. Mollenbank, litilhorn, dc. Co.. and of Meagre. Smaller. A Clark. The liabilities in the former case are stated at £23.000, and in the latter at £25.000. The .American ship Idesseneer Bird, from New Zea land, put Into the Feejees, as the meter reported, for water, and Bailed again on the 7th in July, on a secretcruise. Her lower hold was full of coffee. boom of which she sold to another mind. These mom etances led to a auspieton that she lied been run away with. THE LATEST, (By Telegraph to Liverpool.l LoNnON. Saturday Mornins.—The directors of the Great Eastern steamer Mate their liabilities imme diately due, Will reach £45.000. against which they here only £1 100 in the hands of the bankers. The Daily News says the comvany have made ar rangements to borrow .£lO,OOO on a mortgage of the steamer. It is announced that the Rothechilde have contracted to ourehaae the Moscow and IR. Peterehu re Railroad. Advice! , from Marseilles announce the failure of Messrs. Zungromire, sugar dealers, with li a b i l i ti es ameuntinx to nearly hangmillion Marling. The Times' city article says fends opened with great ate/Omen at full the advertise of yesterday, but olosed with a tandem to flatness. Commercial intelligence. LONDON MONEY MARKET.—The buoyancy and animation in the English fund* reported by !be loot steamer still continued, and a further rice in promo had taken place. The tramcar books for Console were closed on the Bth, nreparatory to the payment of the divi dend,. The last price, for money, on that day wee 974, with the dividend on. On the 9th the eaten were for ac count ex-dividend, and the closing quotation was 99'A090. The demand for money continued moderate. and rates were about the same. The supply was abundant. The weekly return of the Bank of England show n de cranes of the bullion of Lei 097, Meek'. Baring Brat. & Co. quote liar 'silver at es IYid, Mexican dollars nomi nal at es 1 4 'd. angles 761. 3 4 4 d. LIVERPOOL alnliKErii, December 10.—Cotton-- The Brokers' Circular earn t "The market hiui seam been dull throughout the week, end as the import of new American, especially of &weds, is lauded, it is most freely offered at irregular priori,. The quotatione are reduced in most instances alkut Yd jr lb." Bra sile and Burke are also lower. The soles of the week have teen 42,010 bales. including 1,440 to apeculators, and 0,040 for export. The market yesterday (Friday) showed a change, but the new crop was obit premed for ante. The day's business wen about 0,510. including 1,000 for export and speculation. The quotations ore; Fair. Middling, Orients. 7 4 ; 7 3-16 Mobile ...... 741 Uplands,, 940 elf Stook on hand is estimated at 42640 bales, including '111.720 American. At firmly main Manchest e er trade continue, quiet, but prices are tai nd. BRIADSTMile.—ATessrs. Richardson. tipenno & Co. any the Corn market was better attended yesterday than for some time past. Wheat was in rather better re , q dee, chiefly induced by now American red, which no'd to a moderate extent at previous prices. Quotations for red are Pe edefoa; white 9, &lOUs M. Flour—No sates lemtedand value nominal at 22 tt 4Tit, Indian Cola quiet; yellow6oa dd 4r3r.c. PnoPtatoys.—Beef in large aurnr,itnd only retail sales at retioue rates. Pork—Na ea o. about 200 bids repeekea American at Ns. Bacon quint, A small ar rival ctnew Cumberland Is offering at 48e, without buyer,. Lard without inquiry, and quotation' are quite nominal at Us fnrfine. Tallow is depressed, and no Women reported. FROMM—The Bro kers' Cir cular reports Ashes— Balm; of Sad hbla at 77110270 fhl for Pots, and Ole thle27e Oil for Pearls. Rugare advanced dd for liroat India, with na improved tone. ease quiet, and business smaq. Rice inactive, lint firm. antes of Baltimore Bark nt Os fLn7s ltd. Linseed Cakes—Bales of American at £9 2s tidar£9 es. Ode—Nothing of moment doing either in Beal or Cud; Crude Sperm,. x9l 108 ; winter ragged, £96; Linked Oil in good demand at £2B 10e. Rosin less firm under arrivals • sales at as for common , mid to 2d for better. Spirits of TurPantMe—Betad mice et ete Tea dull, with seller, of Congou at le 20. LONDON MARKETS.—Messrs. Baring Brothers re- Americanßdknife quiet and prior.' unch4peed. Red Wheat ittt46S I White 460483. Flour 2111t2as. iron—Welsh dull at kb Ms !or hots bare and rails. Scotch Pig tee. Sugar—Refining qualities soy. and fully Is dearer. Grocery sorts quiet nt a toing ad vance. Tea quiet; sales of common Conger n Is aid ale Xcl. Coffee very steads and firm. Linseed Cake in good demand; New York bids £10; Boston bag" £olos. Fish Oils quiet; operm £04093. Linseed Oil rather lower; take nt 27e ed on the spot, Rice in very limited rattiest. Tallow dull all the week, but nieces firmly at THE PRESS.-KTRADqiPtiIA, DEMO.l3f,g, 2,t 1550: 85056 a on the spot and for all the year. Spirits of Tur pentine quiet at Ms 9tl. HAVRE. MARKETB.-There is nothing Wet t?la \A that received per Vanderbilt, .• . lir NAN 1 50 1 t311.1 run. 8,T...0. D,..p. t , quote aft follows: The market I for American °entities continues steady and prices Erni I but the trenseotlone dotter the peat week have not been of a character or to an extent to claim particu- I pl ar in n o o i t v i n ce l 6 . ea T u h r g o o e ll : owing are their quotation. For the United States ea, bonds,lBsB-- • rk* elot do 61 to 1 80 4.-..... . 1....‘..... WS Or Da Maryland 68 tro:-.........1.1.: •. t --- •.. . 94 e iki re_ aastuthusette6l .-.•..-.... ...... .. -- - .191 0402 fennhyl yenta 68. Mack . . ... ........- ..... 83 0 se . do es. bonds.. --- 85 0 g Illinois Central shares .. ~. ... . ........ 40 3edis do do 1/18.(Freelandst...... 13 Se 00 ' Miohiran Central Shares 19 or 42 Now York Control Shares. .. ... .„..... . 73 0 76 dri o d d o o 'I OW cool Bonds, 'B3 .... 84 oas s 93 et 1 Erles Shares ....... . 95 do ad mortgage........ ....... 04 en en Pennsylvania Central let Sonde-. ~, • ...... 82 0 Id Panama Vtfr nents, ..... 91 44100 do SIO Int trio. tgago 97 et 99 XXXVITII CONGRONi-FIRST SESSION'► U. B.CAPIToL,WMILLIXOTOtt, Diso.9l. SENATE. The Chair presented a communication from he - Atte in charge of the CaPitot extension, respecting'the heat ing and ventilating apparatus ld the horth wing of the 1 34 1 111Pcoiti. of ' Florida. Introduced s bill amending the a . ct to promote the votress of the useful Mr. Lope, of Oregon. introdoced a bill making an up- Pronriation for the payment ef expenses incurred by rho people of Oregon and Washington to suppress the Indian hostilities therein. Also, a bill to extend the !Mee and judicial bythmh . f the United States to Oregon. . ..• ow;;I. n California. introduced the Pacific Rail road IV, and gave notice that ho should call it up at an early toisnuitY, of Delaware, intreueed a hill making an appropriation for tho creation of pima in the Delaware hay. Mr. a te tti.•?l, Or roWit.latrOd • Cad hill to reimburse the Stte of lowa for menial expended in the suppres sion of Indian hostilitiee. Mr. CLAY. of Alabyna. introduced a bill for the OA pent of all law granting fishing boupties Mr. Drone of Mialeasieml, gave notice of his i ohm tinte,introihice a bill fur the Territorial organization of Arlaone. hfffr. SLIDELL. of Louisiana, Introduced a resolution that when the Senate adjourns to-morrow it be till 'Nestle) , next; that when it adjourntfon_Tuestat It be till Fnday ; and when it adjourns tin Friday it tie till Tuesday, t ho 3d of Jitt.dai y. Ho mid this mall at tho requeat,of others, who wished to go home to spend the ' holidayt. Mr. CoLLAaten, of Vermont, thought it an ingenious evasion of the Constitution. ;;; did not so understand it. The only object was to have a conimon under tending that no Namara shell he done till after the holidaye. Mr. CoLLAMeR felt it to he hie dot y to protest mainid rt. lie was willing to come here and attend to the Pun• lie btlainess. Mr. Dam suggested that the Senate lied better not Wm this couhn, an the Homo was not organized, nail the meekage not received. The House might organize at any day. Mr. &MALL read from the Senate Journal, showing that similar resolutions bed hash adopted before on the occasion of the Cincinnati Convention and the Philndel- Plict Convention. The Temolatron enla rge then agreed to. Mr. Samar introduced bill g the publio grounds surrounding the Capitol. Mr. FIYMPIIILL introduced bills making appropria tions for the paymeht Of certain Texas volunteete. Adjourned. HOUSE OF REPREMENTATIVES. Mr. FAeIIsWORTIt. of Illinois•orm entitled to the floor. but,he gave way to enable Mr. Curtis of lowa to move that the Home proceed to vote for Speaker. Mr CL'elle bole it appeared to him that this A'dte the last tiny before the holidays that they could effeet an organization. He should like to bear his friend, Mr. Farnsworth, were it not that gentlemen should devote the whole day in the effort to organize whole country is looking to an orgenliation thie very day. Ile was told in a private ednvereation. this morning. that four millions di dollars are clue to contractors, and most of Meal are now hare Imploring the mamma to make an appropriation for their pay. A s a preliminary to voting there woe a call of the Donne. AN it was ascertained that about sixteen mem bers were absent, it was thought best not to proceed at tangent to a vote. Mr. Aximencor, of Kentuelm.,wanted firet an organi zation. and then gentlemen might 'limes the slavery question to their hearts', content. lie was opposed to ite lunation, He favored the enfOreement ef all laws, and there wanted the question to rest. lie wmild not have risen now, had not his colleague fildr.Burnettl eesterdaLasked him why he aid nut take a . particular ourso. ice ant voted fors Detenentllo nominee sines he oatne to the House. and 'Would not. except an inane is made between the Republicans and Democrat& He hoed such an Imo would never arrive. He did not desire a united South nor in united North. Ho belonged to a party in opposition to the Adminis tration, and thee were not for a united South nor united North If wo en for the united South what would he the result? We would be overwhelmed by the North. which, the next census would show, hay. the preponderance. If you make it a amnion of dol lars and cents, whore would be the Sodthern interests? lie stood here as a Whig, and always expected to ad vocate Whig Mineiples. In reply to Mr. Burnett's question, why he did not vote for Mr. Milleon. it was, lie said. Nouse Mr. Milleon had voted against the Kaneas-Nebraska bill. The Campmate themselves have been incontrititent in voting for Mr. Milleon, who voted ambled the Kansas-Nebraska bill. which, in lam, was made the feet of Deocracy. As far ns he person ally Nrmi concerned, w hen he was on the Fillmore clo turel ticket, he did ear he would vote for the repent of the M 'mount line. It woe true. Mr. Etheridge voted with Mr. Milleon against that bill, hut on every other question ho agreed with Mr. Etheridge. Ile was it irlaveholder, but did not think he Iran the worse for that. He was in favor of a tariff for the protection of Ameri can labor. He undo retood that Mr. atlllson was in favor of free trade. Mr. Etheridge Is for the Union of these States. Mr. 111.71INETT said Mr. Anderson has a payer in his district. celled the ihinrill•Tranont, in which appears a letter from his colleague attempting to fix the cocoon I admit) , of the organization on the Democrats Mr. Annumom said that he did say so, and said so yet. ifaughter.l He repeated that the Democrat., could not eet votes enough to elect their nominee, even with the I aid of the Southern fipprothien. He and his friend. were elected in opposition both to the Blaeklinpubilerma and the Buohnnan Administratioh. T hey could, theta gore, have gained nothine by the e action of a Cam era tie Speaker, who would so term the committees on to ' aline the investigatione into the corruptions which they wore expected to expose. Ile spoke. amid much laugh ter, of a man who made a fortune by attending to his own butterut. and of another who made a fortune by lotting other people's business alone. He asked his col league whether he would support Dom ani. if nominated by the Charleston Conventioa. Mr. Bearrep, of Kentucky, teblied thlit he was not looking fortra to soon a contingency ,• but in a contest between the leek Republican and a National rone• waive man, he would net an example •;:`„,,,, h i t M league w "" I d o n t TO follow. wingt rally ,S,S,q'' ,4 " l / a f"4 . ant than treeing a Bleak Repu collitaalm had been In the het Congreati,,wente he lucre meted for the admission of Rename tinder the Erbil' bill? Ir. AtaixaSoN. I /Met al' emphatically "No" • fr.Beli net inquired whether his enflame's orindi date for the Governorship of Kentucky (Mr. Bell) did not endorse the English bill Mr. As nensoja replies that he did not. Me theft pro needed to explain ff, De poddlon en that sul mt. The Demon ate eattld sleet a F:Chore...Thy it they would, and that mein wits Mr. G l uier. lie did not be• here thg Mere bier:trona epoblican ProAtdent or ;Wel wee a . cause for going oat of the Union. ;rho, w A il h -,-;gypi in /omitted some oven. iset i Awl "woo d be the Creole irn7n ought net to enter any man's mind, He WM for the Union-7—last—elwaya. In the language of Web ster, "Li rte land Ilnien—noW and forever, one and 'mewl 0. pe.l Mr. trunitagr replied that he wee a Union nom, bet for a Constitutionaf Union ; a Union without & Consti tution wee not worth a cent. Ho desired a united South as more efficiently to cheek the Republiolins. As to bum not votins for Mr. Gilmer. that zenttame l e i . o it ISM known, void not unite his non party frnds. ith fe gard to the charges of corruption by his bol orume, he said there were itgresitgatimie lest isessinn, hut no correptioe proved eget* the Auministretioti. Geejle, men mini Aga Matte Investientione, bet ,th ey would treat With a similar Admit defeat as heret ofore._ lie tepeated . that he wee satisfied that this House could not ltd Maryland, remarked that as it could votedshown that if ell tho Southern Opposition Ind for Mr. Million that gentleman could have been placed in the Speaker's chair, it was Idle and unfair to charge the responsibility of his nomeleotion error! thom._ _ • Mr., Beenstrr replied that if these twenty-three Op. position votes had been given to Mr. Million it would have resulted in an organization, It would have placed him in a position to command a malority of the votes, and made it necessary for the anti-Lecomptori Democrats to decide the contest. As to Its being In the power of the Democrats last week to elect Mr. Gilmer, he believed thnt If the Democrats had gene ever to him certain gentlemen whet had voted for hint would have immediately ehanged their course. Mr. CaarreeLl. ree/ied that he as a renneriraman voted on the cateateon referred to for Mr. Oilmen lie voted for him on his record as a conservative man, standing on resolutions of 1310, and would not hare ehanged his vote under any circumstance'. Mr. Beaman. Do yon speak for all who voted with you ? Mr goirBELL. I speak for mysell_alone, Mr. Monate. of Pennsylvania. W hen the DeMoartits 'mite on Mr. 011iner I am willing to Unite and Place him in the chair. fioplausel Mr. Hans is, of Maryland, said. wben some of the Northern vote Was the other day salt for Air. Gilmer be land previously learnalt that it was done in geed faith, and he intended, whatever be the result, to adhere t o thnt position. Mr. Nixon. of New Jersey, said that he voted for Mr. (hinter in good faith, and was ready to de it again. Mr. Han. la. of Maryland. said that he woe author• iced to env that Mr. Gilmer could get as many votes one as he did than. M. Oalinerr said he tied voted for Mr. Boteler, Ant would do On again Against a sectional candidate, tail would not tie guided b. Black Republicans voting fat Mr. 0 liner, led by Thaddella steeons, Mr. Ilsesty, of New York. remarked that he bed oust Ills vote for Mr. Gilmer. who was consistent in Ns opposition to the Lecompton polity of the Arlmmistn. lion, and es an anti.Lecompton Democrat, if Mr. W riter is /Wenn preserited as a candidate by the conserve live portion of the Houma he would vote for him. (Ap plause 1 Mr. MIANETT said if there wan no other reason why he did not vote for Mr. Oilmen that gentleman wee sus tained be some of the most prominent leaders of the B S l lira n n p re a . ri 4f Maryland, remarked that Mr. Bur nett could exercise _lila own Judsmient. Hewn, willing to leave to the people outside of this House to prenonnee upon the reasons for voting for Mr. Crilmor assigned by My. Garnett nod Mr. Burnett. It being now an nicer , rained fact that with the Dementia vote Mr. Oilmen ran pet/Lone.) be elected, lie put that gentleman in on nation. Pi Mr. Mit:Leon . . of Virginia. mud that. without any agency of tile own. his name had been used in the ran ' vase. Ito did not think, under the eireunteinn.lea. (hot he could be regnided in any proper sense an erndidato. It was not, therefore. either his duty or invitee° to withdraw his name, or even to oiler any ingestion to t h e g entlemen who bed given is rote en tlatering to himself. While lie expressed his warm enc grateful acknowledgments for the honey, he (roster that he I might be allowed to express the hope that in he future votes for Speaker his friends would be influenced alone by their sense of sublio duty, uninfluenced n any dn greo by any supposed obligation resulting from his nomination, The House then mpeeeded to vote for Speiser SKIIITEENTIt BALLOT. Whole number of — Neoessnry to *choice.— .. .. Ito Ole. ...... .. on Mr. ........ . ..... op Mr. Davis. of Indiana ....... ....... ..... O 4 n Mr. KnITT, of Routh Carolina, proceeded b show an oreanigatton could rantrkly he effected by t uni on o f all opposed to the Republicans. He made thi proposi tion in good faith. and was willing to tendert - he olive branch. Let the thirty members, Including se Routh ern Opposition on the other aide, select a andmate from the Democrats. or let the DomperMa sleet ono Amin their side Let all unite against the common enemy. and success le certain. [Applause, and impatient mien of " Call th, roll " t' Vote "—and '• Another Whit.") The House proceeded to another ballot. NIIIRTELNTII BALLOT Whole number of votes.... ...... . Necessary toe Dhows . • Mr. Sherman Ain Silirlinii .. —...... ......... . ~,,, to employ those Ins, .. . ha able to work, in malting. garments winch are afterwards Mr. Gilmer—. ... 21 distributed among the sick rind mfirri . Sean oring ••- • • .......... .......... .. , ...„ 21 Et cry succeeding winter hes proved the advantage of Mr. Winersisv, of North Carolina, offered Resolution thin lucid() of operation and the asermontion lies only to that on and after fo•daY no vote shall he Ikon for turret that its resources are so limited. While it grate- Speaker until the second Monday el January He soul luny acknowledges ninny generous contributions, it thnt it was evident that the !louse could do aching Diet would urge upon its friends the nncessity of continued now to effect an organization. They were spponehins and ...tensed interest in its behalf. the holidant. which oven the slaves of Gm but)! on- During the pant winter, the receipts of this society toyed. He thought the House had better adjoin nt oso amounted to own ; .1.,3%.62 of thin sum were • x pen deil that gentlemen might no bonus, and catch sem of the in the enrolment goods. nerd e2tl 72 were paid lor sow patriotic feelitiga of their constituents. mg' 1,291 garments were distributed; 1,241 of there were Mr. Waellennvit. of Maine, and others or tie Re- Made by the poor who were ertiplomett sy the asimeia publican nide, objected to the reception of the esolu- hero. The following donations or goods were received— tine. viz: 25 blankets. 7&O yards muslin. 4.'84 yards It roe him, My. Gamy, of Pennsylvania. contended that ors two 45 yarn minion flannel. Ri yards entice. 108 pounds soap, motion. wore in order. either to proceed to vottor 1... 23 pounds candles, 250 bread tickets, and a lot of trim adjourn. The discussion of the slavery questio lied Slings. been thrust nn the noose by those who pry nun No flannel' 'Miller. President, MS N. Eleventh street. agitation." The Republicans have sot here with Ivied Elizabeth Jenkins. Tritium ror, 931 Prim kiln street. lips, while the grossest perversions of their &lobes Helen G. Longstreth. tieoretsry, 219. Sixteenth St. have been made by men who Maim to he fair-trilled. To either of whom donations luny be sent. , Now, while venire five millions to those who }tanner- Collo3nlt t S Cssz" —A boy. named Hoyle, aged formed service tinder written contracts, and been 'nt • nine years, whilclplaving on a pole about five o'clock Nes ting ma months for their pay, it was proposed to go lino terday afternoon tell into a pond, near Richmond:Red and leave the Government one drowned. Has body wan recovered and taken to the thee tee Government's 'divided faith ahould be 0• residence of his parent" in Eilgeinont stree t, where the . linnkrept. fie naked ale-ale- woman, te. named Queen, about nerved, above all, to the contractors who have rends.tl • h • e o A r o ;t o e . r p I, , it notifiedtsoe colored t i l ii t impoilatit services. Tim have been sitting wi. listening to Remiche. the substance of which append .pine . anon, near Eighth. It appears she [ resided la In the New York Ifitahf for the last six weeks. Tit ars tango, died euddenly ng a in paper furnished the brains( ' while the dinoussion on Lombard street, near Seventh. and was subject to a disease of the heart; Whpo out walking she felt an nt lacks the spire and terseness of its style. All read the, e 4 itorinils with interest. Gentlemen hero hove bet advertiehts Helper's book, Which they say Is dean , r at :.: 4o 2 ol r ‘ wo cli hte kl i i , ,,u er stoc t a rd r u ' i r s h h t e ed w a as io , , , i e y ry to si r o l k o a t i h , l , o i whit to. The servants went to tiVe to the pence and tranquility of the Union, an `'' giving • it a wide circulation. which the RepUhliell W dyi r Thee sealed her on a chair. Oneof th em aske4 for ossafret da sating that she felt as though she committee had fakled to do. If the book is hisendutrY as charged, and dinturbed the peace of the country m stn i rtild fora ph I inn while the other . much, those who have boon dtecussins the slavery Often to prepare 's ' ' mustard planter, and went retu t r o ning i n intention are responsible for it. The Republicans hat not spread brondetud thin book. few minute', found that she was dead. Hor bole was Mr. DaVingem and several mho.% mounded Mr. Grow mmos'aCia investiga ti on, where it was identified by her to the Pennsylvania 11ospital to Owed. the that lie had endorsed the circulation el the Helper Com- W i r."2: 2 . pendium. Mr. GROW yepl (pit that the Republicans asked to be STATINTICAI,.—Erotn the books of the Control- Judged by their platform and record. not by the porver- er's office we ascertain the following facts In reference mons of newspapers Wl 3 on any man charged him with nthe amount paid to the City Treasurer, since the new being the accomplice o murder. treason, and Other board of Guardian" hare been In office.", compared cringes , crimes, he had no other answer than to treat It with this rith the sum received during the same period In /8.5 . 8 ; ' fOrnJLIMI /401 to the last or December, 1859. there was contempt it deserved. He was willing , to proolnim hoe political sentiment" atoll times. This Union was not as aid tip the Treasurer of rho Oninfillane the stun of R 3- strong as fie supposed if a pamphlets f 11l eases con 0.24, and by the present Treasurer from Jul , to be disturb its tranquility. He and his friends ached that amber 2 0th 1 859,t he sore of 88.533 72 The total amount the business forelimb they came bore s hould be trans- pd ever thie irony is al i2OO, end during ISIS the sum Rated. He had heard it intimated that wheq the first of Or reached +30,898.74. January comes, if Ills Government Is not in credit to comply with its contracts, and pay these contractor , Maur Erns,—The :antra of Pre, about ten five millions, they would abandon the twill service. The o'ock last evening, was roused by the burning of a Republicans take no part to the discuSisonawhieh delay Er clumnov at a house in Redford street near Fifth. the organization. They will consent to to adjournment Dimply trifling. • for sports, foul hnil t h white those meritorious claim. note art) tli,progiand for. Mr. t4Mlrit, of Virginia, and others, sought to (Ada n the floor, but the dienute wee terminated by an adjourn ment. From Washington. WANZINCO roe, Deo. 3. X 36 ells t > ciders, Sweeny, Rittenhouse, Fite , & On. addressed a letter to the Pre aideq. containing e formal Meal from a decision of the Secretary of the Treneuri againet them on two , pints t First, hie refusal to permit them to deposit at MU Francium any portion of the Bovernment loan taken by them, under the proposals of the Reoretary of the Irth of December, lee; and second, hie refusal to refer the question to the Attorney Demerol. It in under stood that these hankers take the position that the place of deposit was clearly made a part of the contract, and the bidder, if successful. waa explicitly autherited, tin der the proposals, to select any i•overnment depository nearest to hie Tandem., or indicated at the moat ton• vement by hini, Immediately afte,r the airata, this trill offered to de tect lab alnlinitt ilt the depository at San Francis., The SeetetarY declined to receive it there, on th e tround that he did not require funds at that Murton hat his proposals did not authorise them to depoeit Sao Francisco. A balance o. their loch therefore re mains unpaid. The cOrrespohdence sheen that they have alwaYe been ready to pay at San Francisco. 'the President has answered their letter by informing them that an appeal does not lie to the President from the heads of the different miecutive Deoartinente. Their nets and decisions aro those of the Pregident,for which he is 111)1,11mq...elide, end they ere ivs, in lad, m all 011.00 off diMCIIItY hHo.I iMpottrinee. ThethVth. he nays, is that each an appellate Jurisdic tion would render it impossible for h.ut to discharge his high duties to the country. and would resolve Ms officio into a tribunal, to hear and determine private elation in the last resort. Ile refere these bankers to the Coort of Chime, or Congress, and they have selected the latter. The President has, tedoguide9 b. Sebastian. % corg i, consol alba Two Similes, at New York • Antonio Brandt , th Sturm. vice consul of Spain at 'New Or and Oliver 0. Donnell], wee consul o r portugai, at Baltimore. The Balloting Yesterday for Speaker Mrssurnorox. Dee. 72,—Mr. Oihner's thirtv•sut votes, on the first trial to-dar, were composed of his .4wn pott tte party. and of Moms. CsouPhelt Coved., aide, Makin, Jpnlcin, Manight, Millward, Alarm Of Sahli. srivania, Nixon, Seluungtun, Schwan., Scranton, and 'Sherman on named all returned to the support of Mr. 'Sherman on tho last vote. Messrs. licence F.. Clark, Davis of Indtana,und Re, - nohla voted for Mr, Adrnin, and Mesare. Adrn.h , Mont gomery, Morns of Illinois, ea 'l iligge for Mr. Davis of indituut, There were five seat crier Democratic. votes. Messrs. Maynard and Vence did not vote. Mr Gilmer, on the saohnd trial. and Me. Sickles, with four °thorn, intpported Mr. Davis of Indiana. Reception of the Southern Medical Students nt Riehntond* Vtt. Rtiit MON I), Vit.. PBC. 22.—The seteding hiediest ktu dents froin Philadalphis arrived hors in-dnv. and were teemed br the fatality and students of the medical col lege, the Governor's guard, and an immense throng of citizens. The procession marched to the Governor's inengion, where the students were addresied by Gover nor Wise, and afterwards by Professor Gibson, at the orgies°. A dinner was then partalcen of at the Colum bia Hotel. The students were received with great enthusiasm by our ei tisane. And as the procession passed through the streets the shouts of the Men were deafening. while the ladies manifested their delight by the waving of their handkerchiefs. An Invitation from the New Orleans Medical Stlidents to Seceders from Northern Colleges. - - - Niew Oat sans, Deo. 72.—The Modical College facultv of this eity have replied to the applientions of Southern medical students at New York that they will ha wino t ted to study here on nominal terlOS. The students of this city_ hare reached to Invite tho Southern students at the North to attend free lectures here, although they may have paid for them at their Present location. The South Carolina Legislature. ADOPTION OF TON "STATE DEFENCE:" AND UNION" ItEeOLUTIONS. WeeTTINoTeN. Dec. 32 —The Charleston Courier's enamel Columbia deepatch of the 19th says that both Houses of the legislature had adopted the resolution thal South enfpinut civet it to her own citizens to pro tect them and their property from every enemy, and that. for the purpose of military preortration in any emergency the awn di' $lOO,OO to appropriated fur military pupae. The Senate had also adopted, a resolution, which 'rends, " Still deferring to her beuthern ristere, South Carolina respectfully announces to thorn that in liAr Judgment the safety and toner of the alaveholding States imperatively demand a speedy separation from the frecosoil States of the Confederacy. and earnestly invites and urges her meter Statesof the tooth to orb. ginate the movement of Southern se parat)on, to which she pledges herself promptly to unite." W. H. Gibson, the Delnulting Ex-Trea surer of Ohio, Found Guilty. Cotivatars, Ohio, Dee. trial of thr enee of W. H. , t Owen, the defrot tine ex•treeeerer of thug state hee resulted inn verdict of Qudh being rendered. , - --- ItoWdylsin at New York. ish*;',,ft K. De. 22.—officer MoArthur woo neentilted in Grand street to night, by a party of rowdies, ono of whom, Janine Fletcher, L.e policeman idiot, woundin; him dangerously. -----*---- Markets by Telegraph. BALTIMOIIIi, December 22.—Flour let; ea% for Howard street. Wheat firm; white 6 , 1.2)11'1.40; red 81.1641.26. Corn steady ; whim" lrafte. )ellowtrieuErtc. Provisions quiet ;new - Western Mese Pork tkle eO: Prime 811. WhulicOg quiet, at 27c. Exchange on New York unohanged. Liverpool Cotton Circulars tny the "Artie."] New Yhttis, Dee. te.—ltowitt Co.'e circular TODMitt that the large arrivals of Cotton have increased the esgerneee to NCO, and holders had con3eded decline of 1i d. without temptine htirere to ga beyond their messing renuiremente. The cold demand was for the better qualm.- a, but the common and sandy grades( free from lent) were taken to a considernble extent for the Continent. The imports of the week aro estimated at 07.000 baton, but the actual arrivals were coneitleratily larger. At sert.2lX,res) betas, egainst 101.0e00 hales last year. The market cloning very dull at Th i ld for middling Orleans: 7.tid for middling Mobiles, and &la foi mid dling Uplands. Claret Eimer' circular reports a decline of I.l6traltid, Orleans 'Od, Monde dmarketands Wakefield it Nash report the at n decline of qd Orleans middling 7 3-/dekid. Mobile do? NJ. Upland ...entrdena Itnenee revert a mitt irregMant,. Cottot MI daily nirdr s d .ial4.l6is , 'o airs the lot is all km ed. en d forded Ow ien Vitt highest bidder. The docl nal 141 )Id, arid Much emitter in some cues. The market emcee with a declining tendency. New Orleans mid dling NA, Mobile do Td, Oplend do Ad. Irish Feeling for the Pope. A decided, but scarcely tineXpected mani festation in i'avo l i of supporting the POPE'S temporal authority, is in progress in Ireland, where tho great majority of the people are Roman Catholics. Not only in Huhlin, but in various oilier palls of Ireland, have meetings been held to express the attachment of Ireland to the Head of its Church, and of sympathy with tho PorE under his present and threatening difficulties. Offers or actual phy sical aid are liberally made, and there would lid no ditilmiq, it is said, in faising a new army of Irish Volunteers, 80,000 in number, to augMent this Papal army. The feeling Against NAPOLEON, for hit presumed coalition with the enemies of Rome, ti decidedly strong in Ireland. Academy of Music Verdi's opera of "II Troratoro " wee performed last evening to a fair house. Don Giovanni" will be given to-night, (in accordance with the wishes of many,) Madame Colson in hergreat role of Zerlina. This le positively the last opera night, and it may be a long time before en oppor• tufty will offer to enjoy so rich a treat as will be presented this evening. To-morrow afternoon, the last tnatintoe, and positively the last appear awe of the opera company. The "Sicilian Ves pers," with its great cast and magniticont mice era scene, will be presented. PORTRAIT or THE LATE Ilex. P. F. Mayor, D. D.—We have received front the Lutheran Publica tion Dooms, No. 42 North Ninth street, a very su perior and life-like portrait of this distinguished divine, who was the late pastor of St. John's Lutheran Church, of this city. It wee engraved on ',tool, by Samuel Sartain, after the original picture byJohnTangle, painted for the truatees of the church, and it is executed in the highest style of art. The proceeds of the eater of the en gravings are to be devoted exclusively to the benefit of St John's Church. rfr Rx• Senator Jerry Clemens, writing from Washington to his paper, the Memphis Enquirer, says : " There is less eacttonal excitement than I anticipated, and the members generally seem to be in bettor temper; a little blotter about breaking up the Union, if a Republionn is elected President, without waiting for any overt act of his in deroga lion of our rights, was to be oxpeoted, and as it does no harm to any but those who utter It, it may he permitted to pan without comment." ELEOANT FTIVSITVRE, PIANO FORTE, it o.—A largo stock of elegant eabinot furniture, superior piano fortes, Chinese tea poys, silver-plated ware, glass and China fancy goods, he., will be sold.tbis morning, et 10 o'clock, at Birch & Son's auction store, No. 911 Chestnut street. LARGE SALE OP FURS.-B. Soots, Jr., auctioneer, 431 Chestnut street, will sell, this morning, at 10 O'olock, a laYge assortment of fashionable furs, for ladles' and LUilooB' wear, fanny robes, furs for gents' wear, ko., A BENEVOLENT AssociAnog.—There is a 0001e13' in this oity composed of femalee, known a. the Peinalo Aescanation for the relief of the tick. Its operations are of an humble but effective kind. and we endoree them with touch pleasure. Th., following annual re port of the remote will be rend with much bitterest: In presenting the annual report of this associntiOn, it nine be well to refer briefly to the plan of operation For Noveral years after its commencement, the cloth ing distributed was made by the members of the society et its stated monthly meetings. So great, however, was the demand of the poor for omplo ment, and so deeira- We is it to encourage in them a teeling of independonee and Reif-reliance,. that it was thought best to enlarge the annual subscriptions of the member., and by this and other 'neon.. rnise it fund to oulloT those that nr,o THE CITY. AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING AMERICAN AtIkIWNIT or MUSIC. 131054 rind lionuet f3treeta.—`. Don Oiovanni." WALNUT-PTHERT THPITRX, enrrwr Wainuf Mid Nonh.--o The Irish Pu.t"—" Mephietophilee"— " O'Planigan end the Pal r tee"—" In and Out of Place." Wits/mgi & CLANK V. A arli-flilltrf Arch etred, nbove Sixth.—" The it iOtda"—" Toodie.." . . .. . . . hie - ritOPAITAN HALl..lllne'sCommenweal.h Build ing, Chestnut street, above diath.—Ttuodou's Museum nc Art. NA TI (MAL TREAT A K. Witlflllt street, hetwAno Eighth and. Ninth. Tho Dream i.f Chitrnlfy"—" The Mach of Unbolt." Pertbruvinceb this afternoon and eventos. TI MM! Or Wolntwt, nnrtneast corner Tenth and Chtetnut stredta.—Bignor MoDnaouotz's OILIVrIi,, Race street, below Thud.— Entertainments nighty. of Councils. tiothtranolies of Commits held stated meetings yes erdny afternoon. DRANCIT The fhllowing communichtions were hceived rind ttnPtoortetely refitted¢ "no from the pitmans of the ~p yrnbly-fgrat want, askine for the erection of gas wilfl; a petition fri,m It. M. Mclntyre in reference to a certain claim; Alpo, a communication from John C. Fletcher; nstatement wan received from the City Con troller, giving the cost of eautpments and general ex penses of the tiray's ferry l'ateenity Itatirnett for 185 P; a pgitition from the ma ofMaya tat‘ aeltint fhtell .PProorlntldh h tc pay the expenses In- Jggle `4lg 4 ,,wilirie.ine,itoVnV7it.tinnw:„ o .neenirri reference to the purchaee of Schuylkill wharf Le the city. for the purpose of improvin Fairmount Park. The yam", states thou the owner horn liaqu•ntly re fused °Rout for the property, and would prefer to re tain it. Mr. Neal submitted n series:lrresolution., relative to the conduct of the Mato,' at the National Ilan meeting. on the 18th inst., as fnllews : nesolvel, the Select end Conimnti Conned of the city of Philadelphia, that the prompt action of thq Mayor, Ott the evening of the 15th inst., tit National in protecting the troodem of speech. and prevent nig the destruction of property by 4 lawless mob, has met with the Onqualifled approbation of Councils, and tho thenke Thatil ond eitirene. Srgyteuf, the fieedory of speech would be a more farce if a crowd of roflinns can dictate to anY class of our eitigens what subject* they may discus!: Iwhat lectures they inßy listen to: whet !angrier° mat re tuled• and what the , may tint dare to ose, tinder the penalty of broken bemißand other brutal treatment. Resolved, That the high moral tone of our citizens wilt. at all times. support tho chief mar (strata of our city ha maintaining thy late, and its proteetins all climes of our people In the on 1” merit of their rishte freely to assemble, and freely to sneak on ant euh;nct.ieing re sponnib le to the laws for the Malec of that liberty. whether they lo "strong-minded women or weak inindell men. or those who have so often broken up the Union for partisan mimeses." Revolved, lithe Marro. had •ielded to the Advice of timid gentlemen. end closed National Hall um the even ing of the 15th instant throush fear of it mob he WOO , have disgraced tie city, and been no Snorer fit for its chief magistrate ; but by protecting a meeting of re• Rpm:table citizens in the enjoyment of their turloulitril rights. he rebuked rho mob, conferred honor na his of fice., and inspire:llos Tellow.citilens with renewed con fidence in his ileterininatron to maintain the awn. Res.:4l , W, That the Present Councils DI Philadelphia will co-operate with their Alwyn. with all the means at their command, to capture arid punish any number of villains. whether In brnadoloth or in nr.s. whn would, etthor diteotlY or be incline of any infuriated mob un der any pretence whatever. frighten, insult. and abuse fespentalile females ire any pleon they my choose to Resemble, for any purpose the, 1011' desire. A l fter griml r.to. tke resolutions were Laid on the uibe by a lO tn . Paver/II bills rr eking a transfer of certain items of appropriation to different departments were Passed. A report from the I Y:onus, Committee. making an extra appropriation nf S2OO for the laying of e water main, wee not arreed to. A resolution to refund a certain amount (or overpaid writer rents Wag arced to. Mr. Walken!l offered a resolution with a 'flaw to em bodying. it ne one of the roles or Councils. that the pat tern of all resolutiona nuthoriting or directing any Mt - (Minn of pay to any or the different departtnents shall require a majority of ttro-ithirds of the members pre sent. In reply to the interrogatory what tus object erne for offertne ouch n rotolution. and that it would tie up 1021.1. ielOn Mr. Wetherill rani that there in hardlr a meet ing Of t.ounnite hot what raltoluttoni askinr for extra rat were prom ented, and he thournt it no more then right that thin additional rhnek nhould be placed upon that kind of legislation. When winces accept eentr eta they know that all their one will bo repoired for the amount aereed upon,andnotwithrtanding thix. Councils ore conatanilv caked to make additional Itrnrnprottinno. The resolution, after a brief debate, was defeated by a tie vote. A resolution nuthorizing the Cits Comptroller tn make transfer of certain items of appropriation 112 his de partment was erreed to. Also. It resolution from Common Couttott, tiireetinf the Commissioner of Markets to eilveitiso for proposals for the building of a whuf at Lombard-street wharf, ou the Schuylkill. was concurred in. An ordinance inskiug en appropriation to Par the in toreat on the funded dab: 01 the city of Philadelphia. fulling due on January - Ist, IASo, passed finally. A bill fixing the salariesnf certa n clerks of markets. accompanied by in report of the Committee on Markets. wee submitted. Tho hill provides for tho inorease of the clerks of markets In localitiee wherh their duties have been rendered greater by the erection of market housen. The lull passed. • n ordinance authorizing the rommissioners or the sheinkin fu nde d d T old of to pay t the city he sum ofmatu 8700,C00. n t Jan e amount of tring ouary let, IMO, was agreed tn. Adiourned. COMMON C O UNCIL.ON The cheirmah sublnitted n htimmuturetion from Henry T. Kmg, KIN.. Kleine a statement of the cost of the Grey's Ferry Passenger Railroad, which ham Already been peblished. Also. one from George Hefty, Esq.. City Controller. taming that he bee deelined to tan warrants for three 'reboot tear here. Whose salaries had been ratted from , 3, 3a0 eiert. does not rem - amain the right of the Department to raise the Wanes of the employees of the cit), after the annual appropriations have been made, oreeee by consent of Councils. Mr, Fenton. apetlitott netting that CAPreehill street, ens k of Tteeritietn. be made a stand for market wegone. Referred. Mr. pro' ks, a petition from the manneere of the Episcopal Hoapl Ml, tilling for an appropriation to Pay for the water pipe and eurbing amend their grounds. It clef red. Mr. Fetter, of the Committee en Faience, submitted en ordinance etithertting a triblierarl loop of if . 2 a'ffl" to meet the, inherent den on the tot of leeway, or any other clairea epee no city treasury. Agreed to. Also. nn ordinance maple an Approvietion of voosooo to per the interest on the funded debt of the cay due January I. Agreed to Also. nil ordinance appropriating Eerie OW to pay ouch portions of the funded debt as mature in 1860. Agreed tn. Mr. 31111er, of the Ceintrottee On h IgllwanS, submitted an ordinance making an appropriation to that dolma , meat for toldßeferred. Alen. no ordinance authorizing the aradine of Tulitfr front Wood to Vienna streets, In the Nineteenth ward, agreed to. Mr. Craig, of the Committee on Trusts and Fire Com panion. submitted a resolution suspending the I,Vestern Hose Crenpeny one month, from the Let of November. which erne Agreed fa Also, en ordinance for the government of the steam fire engines. • aid over. Mr. Creuwoll, on the Committee on Poor, imbmi Veit a resolution authorizing the transfer of certain items of the appropriation to that department. Mr. Cattail. of the Committee on /larva. submitted en ordinance making the annual epprppriatien to that department for MO. The total cum is .113,600. being sl.boo less thanlnet year. Referred. meeting eriquestlne the Mayor to attend the annual meeting of the l'ennsylva nin Railrnad Company. on the 6th of Fenruars , and vote the city gtotY acronst rho boating of the Delaware terminus of the road eolith of talk greet, 31r. A. ender moved to Attend that the location shall sot be below the navyyard. Mr. warnet opposed the amendment. He said the city now held one-third of All the Moak of the corneae , . and it wed a metter of edged importance that Cour:etts ehmild Miller their views roil the etenoo.. Mr. A. Miller said this melba had attracted muoh of the pohlio attention. It hail been proposed hr come tar ties that Callowhili etreet should he tunnelled. so ghat the trains could to into a bole at one end 01 this Street. and come out at a hole at the other arid. without making any arrangement for the theeharge of their lead.. This Iran a visonary scheme and no eerie that would enter tain it for moment.lle them Olt the eremite of the Neap Yard the proper place for thin terminus. lie could see tie propriety to bringing produce from the interior, • rid the West, nnd deposited it in rho mud. three miles below the city. to be brourht back again to this ear. Mr. D. C. 't homes moved to postpone. A lengthy debate followed. in which Mews O'Neill. Thomas. Justice, Miller, Quinn. Howard, Eldridge, Creswell. Dennis. end elites partrcipated. The motion to postpone was finally lost by a vote of 32 to 242. 31r. Quinn moved to amend the Amendment to read that the terminus 511.11 not he north 01 Oregon avenue. Mr. Potter was in favor of referring the subject to some intelligent committee. as the debate had not coward that Information which would enable him to rote upon the subject. AVierar was riot prepared to rote upon this sub- Jeri. He hod confidence in the Boatd of Directors of the road and thought it would be best to permit the matter to rest with thorn. 31r. Potterwithdrew his amendment. nod offered a reeolution that tke subject be referred to a epectal com mittee of five fd l report at an early day. Dr. Sites said this was only a "dodge" to kill the matter—it will postpone the zuhlect until it is too late, when the stockholders will settle it. Mr. Potter said he never dod.ed ; he was not a dettger —he did not belong to the dodging party! The resolution wan agreed to Ity a vials 0(04 to 23, and Mews. Potter, Baird, Harper, Houseman end Warner were appointed on the coo mitten. Mr. Craig, of the Committee en Tenant, autry wed en ordinance appropratting 81.791 08. the proceeds of cer tain trait fund. to the Guardian* of the Poor, for the purchase of bread end furl. The ordinance pained by Peleet Council. authorizing the tranefer ore certain item of the appropriation to the Rehm) Controllers. was concurred in. 31r. Harper called up the ordinance pealed by Select Council, making tin appropriation to refund certain over-paid wet a rents. Agreed to. Mr. Randolph fwerne very wiener, end armee.] Me Miller of speaking too much and too long; when the body adjourned. .POLITICAL—MEETIVI Ole THE NATIONAL AMERI CAN CRSTR AL Co 4:yirrTez.— The National Central Committee of the American party met at the American House to this oay. on IVedneedny. to consider the next Presidential fial o Palign and the telltale (tithe American PertY to its issue. end candidates. Hon Jacob Broom. the chnienian of the (mum tan. presided Hon. Erasmus Brooke moved that the veers , or in the committee oconmoned by the death of V. Ellis be filled by the appointment of Menton Minoan, of Kentucky, and that he art an eeerotary. Adopted. Mr. Brooks then presented the resoluta., e ad o pt e d b e a meatier of National Union men In Weehiretoe city. IA C.. and offered the following resolutions, which were adopted: graced, That the chairman and secretary of the National ventral American Committee be authorized and requested to prepare an addrees to tine Amerman people, upon the duty and necessity of entabliehine some political orgentratton in 1850. noon the hems of the Union, the Constitution, and the enforcement of the laws. [(mica. Tanta eernmatee, consisting of lion. A. 11. If. Stuart. of Virginia: Hon. Anthony Kennett!, of elaolend ; Item James Bethel, of Now Jersey ; Hon. 11 Duncan. of Kentucky, ith the Clormen. be en ceinte(' to confer with the Washington Union Coale It tee, Friday. December 23d, at le; o'clock P. M., to inaugurate come movement favornb theo the forms bon of a party upon the basis set forth in foregottig reso lution. Upon motion, Hon. Braaten Brooks was added to the oommatee. Lettere were received Raynor , e. Borth ly, ot,Maega chusetts; Flora Kenneth of L'erolltia, and Hon. F. K. Zollieolfer. of Tennessee. After transacting Some other bunineine of an unimpor tant character. the committee adjourned to meet et the cell of the chairman. A MELANCHOLY CASE.—Some two months since, or between the middle and latter part of tiepteroher. a young men mimed Winans was taken to the almshouse. Ile hat been enisaged in Long'. concert saloon esa comedian. and while thus employed he became insene. Hie insanity was of a peculiar type. In hie remise he 'imagined that some persons hid an intention on its life, rad that he wee pursued M. foes truer to shoot hint. While in the almehnuee and under this frenzy. he one day escaped from hie ward. into the grounds eurround leg the buildings. ills keepers were unable to find tom, and under the eupposition that he had rammed from their custody the occurrence passed from their recollec tion. On Wednesday one of the inmates of the lunatic department mimed into the yard. Ile was noticed by one of the kospere to enter through a cellar-door into lone of the voters under the Thin keeper fol owed with the intention of cepturrea the fug alto. On entering the cellar. lie groped around Human the dark, and hearty seized nn the Knee tit a 1111 H -1311 beam. who was lying in the sorter. On draceing the body to the luta. to loin daittay he discovered rt t o b e them of the malting Winane. Booth had taken place. end de com position linden for nits anent that the features were with difficulty veto:tuned. It 800111 R that starvation had been the fare of rho miserable and unhappy man. and, but for the erculent which led to the diecoverv, hits re• 11131113 might have lain there fore century. The second fugitive au., removed to lue cell, end the coroner sent for to hold an inquest on the body of Winane. We have been requested to ear that the circumstances of this nine tranetured before the present board went into office. Weenake this Onto:Hunt nt the same Niue Rfir- Eng thePthe Note of the roan exhibit en 'Mermen of the most inhuman nee lore We ham e this narretare from undisputed authority. If a a true, then we rah that the whole Mina undergo a roost rigid exemmetion on the Part of the nuthorairs. The ease le 100 terrible to be Passed over in edam... TEHTlfloattL.—We were A ce l erday shown a beautiful chine cup and saucer which bad been 1;1111- Nutitroit in 0119 Clt), and deeigned Oa a present to AV. Davis. Preto formerly Governor of New Alexi o non at present the secomphithed editor of the Dot les . town Demurral. The cop is al ' a !Ate chins, he irs the name of the recipient in gilt letters, and is otherwise handsomely ornamented. Pita.—A fine occurred about six o'clock loot evening in the second glory of the Globe villa, occu pied by Mr. Coulstorie, end !mated 00 John atreet, aboVo German tow'. road The tire was educed by some cotton accidentally en tAing tiro w tole Got boya were lighting the ens in the carding room. 'lllO 1111tne1 were extingualied before the) earned Ittlieti headway. LECTURE AT 11 titerierieyn —The third of the course of the "People's enemas," nt Ilandonfield. N. Jo will ho deli ered on ' , mho evening next, fly Or. Shelton Slackens 0. e bean lectures mire under the all' been of Mr. Wm. C. and So eir Iranbeen quite a sweets. A DI alloy!: ay Sf freest —Charley eolored 11111 n emplos ril as N Natter et Jones' Home b e d a !remota i enterdo bolero Aldermen Beale rim the charge o f mesh., nn amount tit clothing slur other articles teen the hotel. The aldermati held hue to default lit e,er eve bail, to waver the char, et et court. Mona' ey ltennente—l'wo men had n beefing 3 patentee rummer, belare Aldermen Hurehatenn, on the charge of knocking down and tobi.ieg a 2e, se , t ee n of Poetics'- two dollars en the day preceding. The) were collitilitted. DESERTION or A CHILD —On Wednesday after. noon a unPe chits]. abogt twoyeere arm e.wee left at the Reading Reamed office, at Fifteenth 'greet and Penn el !yenta avenue, by an unknown women. The child 1$ le the care of eh employee of the railroad Company, Tne RZHOLOTIONS or THE MEDICAL ST= CET!. —We !rays been tarnished with a copy of the folleviat resolutions, which we print, oat, becaule we wish to present to our readers a compete record of the medical students' session. We tnay say, however. that if these violent and pat natio your': men loot only e xretr'ed the ward courtesy to reporters. nu application at this late day for the publication of their proceedings would have been unnocess try: ;norm t. We have left air homes and congregated in this city. with n vieWtO prosecute ong medical studies and having become fully convinced slot we hav erred in tilling this step; that our means should have been °Spender!, and our protection alfordod to the mainte nance and advancement of institutions existing in our own section' , and fostered by our own people: lieseirri, That in a body. or es many as approve of tl: act. secede front the institutions in which we hate severally matriculated. return to the booth. and herein pledge ourselves to devote our future lives and best ef forts td the protection of our common rights, and the promotion of on • common Interests. Resolved. That to taking this step, we disclaim any personal animosities, and deprecate any political agita- liesolood That we tender our crateful acknowledg ments and heartfelt thanks to the lion. Henry A. Wise, uoternor of Virrinia. 'Dr. L. B. donee Desof the Medical edieal Cohere at Richmond Henry. R. Frost, Penn of tut, Mprllcol Department nt t versa', of riouth caroitt.a. ; to 'resident Robinson, or the Philadelphia. Wilmington. and Baltimore Rail road and all others who have extended to us the Jab cannot enertirazarnent and aid on essential to the fur therance and successful accomplishment of our enter. prae. Reaotred, That wo extend a eordinj invitation. and will clieerfully welcome in the Beath. foly Northern student who will euter.iritre to the previous resold- ReAtartd. That a copy of thenaproeeedingt De eent to ell rio thorn Modica! Collor., for the bonafit of South ern etntenta who may have Inatrmitatert in them. Regolcrtf. That the Southern payers aencialty be requeeted to nutthah the proceedings or this conean- A Tiughv St i:ICE:MON.—Now that the holidays ye upon us, we have cat around ire for some important theme upon which to expatiate. for the special benefit 01 present perchasers. Ted theme we have hit upon is starAnsrnues. Discrinunating readers. do you not already bee the force of our suggestion 1 Presents hat ?sot to be ought, and Printented with "'the cdrupliments of the season." and want cciald be Metre apprdProtta• more g, and sensible. in every aspect. than shandy/wile Wereosro pe, with a fine selection of etereminopic views? We have been led to these reflection, he whet we re cently saw at the popular establishnont of fircesrs..T W. Queen & Co.. No, 924 Chestnut street, below Tenth, This hones has long Leen rem:timed es holding a trout rank position among stereoscope dealers and genet .1 opticians. and never more than at the present time were trier justly entitled to this distinct on. That the reader may barter understand the ,great va riety of these highly entertaminir and Instructive instru • meats which Messrs. Queen & Co, keep. we may state that they range in price, in short grille lions, from the ma int ont of 75 eents.(potket size.) to the IlligOlfie•Dt Ciutnornma hterev.cope. witt, rose wood ease. cud std./eating fauns, capable of holding /4I glass, and 144 paper views, or. if preferred. rhd of the letter alone Amid such s nriety, not to be suited is "I 'rei l ; L p i l e e'litl Cr for the stereoscope are infinite in their Variety, embraCing landscapes. chive —European, Assoc, and Amerman; water falls. rivers, woodland. and mountain scenery. In their French department alone. the examiner mar ho saved the time and expett•e of !six months travel. Egypt. Nub'a, and Palestine are r carrel , less ininntely rd presented • whilst their groups and st. tune, departments are equally eifierlsne• in ad dition to these. for yrhatesdr the reader may desire in the way nf optical instruments, then' stock presents a decree of excellence unaurpaswirl. REPORTED PEAT)3 OP A MAN BY A yISTAKIS Meorciite.—Pone excitement wns cah•eifin the lower part Of the eity (NEI Wednesday eveam by the Tynlea of the death of n man named Throne Dalteon, who died. it is *Hese& from the effects of an sec.., of edmirvetered either through the mistake of s . . . p t cumin in writing it prescription. or of tae ep theeary who put it up. ft cosine that the deceased. who was a count man, resided in the vicinitv of eecond and Christian etreeta. He was married in November last. and tin wait at that time in the enjoyment Of apparent g o ad health. He left borne on monde,. and was taken suddenly ill with a sort of bilious dysentery. He pro ceeded to the house of a relative, somewhere irt spruce errant. and became wane. Finally, a Musician was called in, Who preeerthect opium mils one to be given eves, fear hours. it is said the direetiofi on the boxeres to take a pill entry thiity minutes. This gras fol!otred. and th• patient died. it is not known whether the physician or the druggist made the mistake. The coroner commenced an Rives flmation of the case yesterday. tan owing to some con icting evidence, a3youined the Cage over till to-mor row atterhoon. IRE COPIITS YrstEßb.vi. , --In the Court of Quitter Primes, Judge Allison presiding. the toe of William Krell', for arson, was Trimmed. - The defetice was opened by Gustavus Amara, Eng.. who called nu merous witnesses to prove the good character of his client. To-de the case will be nestled to the Jury, and. probably. finally disposed of. During the entire day the court-room ma., crowded with spectators. who man ifested the utmost interest in the pro-tedium. Ti lady who men engaged to be married to the prisoner has been in ettendance since the commenoement of the trial, apparently intennly solicitous an to the nature of its termination NISI Pnitt—JUitlce Wocdotard.—Saeob 0. taring vs. I. Dickerson Sergeant, Br., and 'William G. Blight, cur living exerut ke. A noire facies issue upon ajudg !Tient against the exeoutorn of 3. lizabeth B Sergeant, end to brine in heirs to the Mate. On trial. la the Court of Common Pleas and Orphans' Court, Judges Ludlow and Thompson, arguments on the motion list wore heard. THE STRIKE. ON TILE FRANSI , OIO AND L'OtTR WARR PAASENGER ,hike on the Frankford and Southwark Passenger Bailin! con tinues. lhe company. hdrrever. still continues tp rim their cur; in n regular manner. It is stated. in defence of the course the directors have ndosted, that the earnings of the road fell'altl ED' considerably' since last y ear. In ennenendmio of the construction el com p tine hoes, and the exclinn4e-ticlet system, which was eatablished 'or the convenience of the public. and !inn - s the company o_ply three cents epee each passenger in stead of flee The hoard of directora. at meeting a day or two since. Maud that it Wonid be peceasary to reduce their expense., or do away with tne extliscge tickets, and adopted the termer course. so that the pa irons would not be inconvenienced. The reduction we. innsieupon all the crop ees , and all were satisfied ex cept the Slivers. Tim hatter an now earn 51 13 per d iy, and the conductors 11.78. by conning full time. Riven TOIEVES.—On Wednesday Mr W Leibert, proprietor of the rolling mill at Mail borourh-street wharf. Kensington. made a complaint before Alderman Remick, In which he stated that a considerable amount of property, consiatins of anchors, fhaina ropes, harm of iron and ruts or the machinerr rom his vessel!. had Lieen-atoled. A search warrant was placed in tne hands of Constab l e enmuel ,Nlc- Kinney. of the Eleventh ward, who, accompanied by Officer John Watts, tit the Eighteenth ward visited several Junk arms. and .ucceeded In reel:Warm, a largo amount of the stolen articles. They also arrested two cif the allesed thieves, named Thomas Boyle alias Corson, and William Davis, bosk notorious river pirates, who. after a bearing, en seed to not gnly minima Mr. Ltitert, but others. The defendants were held in *Meech to answer at court. The Junk wee were n'so held in the same amount. PAYING, SALARIS9 --The werranta for the &th rice of teachers of the public schools and others will be issued by the secretary of the Board of. Controllers, commencing with the File section, on 'I aside,. Janu ary 2. I* 2 ). From the Eighth to the eixteenth section on Wednesday, end the remaining &Timm' on Thum 'l he eu.rrerly and annual reports of the schools must be forwarded to the eacretaries of the various see' Done, that they ,nay be transmitted to the office of the secretary of the Controllers preymus to that time. No warrant will be issued to the priLcipat teacher of any school whose reports are not in on or before the first of January. TRAW attention to the announcement of the second anniversary end festival of the Livingston Lite rary ! now ate. to he held at Washinston Hall. this evenins. et 7 o'clock. The Livlnselon is an unobt.tu sive but very excellent association. and deserves from its friends a handsome recognition of its literary useful ness. Aeonsar.—William Harrison had two of his finsera *insetted. and waisenausiy topytedinternan., by being tun over by one of the cars on the Thirteenth and Fifteenth-streets Railroad, on Wednesday arch ing. in the vicinity of Thirteenth end tkolth streets. ACCIPIV<TAI, DEATR.—A colored man, named Tabs WOluoton, residing in the Twenty-third ward, tall dead very soddenly, yesterday moraine. Coroner Fanner held an inquest, and found that death resorted from natural causes. Canna:rem, Coscs Aker, Weapons —Alderman Clark held a man mimed Thomas Cleary to tail tn An. 'war the eherre of commonly an asaault and battery, and earring concealed deadly weapons. Is publishing the names of the Directors of the Pittisdelphia flohoot of Design for Women, we omitted the name of Wm. J. Horstmen. who was elected. SLlOlir FIRE —Yesterday morning. about tea o'c!ook. the locksmith shop Iv Mr. Joseph Vallee, :Jo. AO Buttonwood street, was slightly dsmaged by fire, FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL The Money market. rffiLADzirßu. floe mber Mk Catawiaso bonds, first mortgage, sold to-day et St Williamsport first mortgage 33, second mortgage It Penney Ivania Railroad shares seem tohave settled down at W. and Reeding was steady at 207 i. In the other items of the list there is little or no cheers to report The money market is very quiet. The brokers find come little business in supplying the wants occasioned by the usual New Year settlements,but the relaxation by the banks lest week seams to have Afforded seeommo dation sufficient to take everything like pressure off the street. and the rates are unchanged. It is stated by a Buffalo paper that negotiations are row in progress which will prolfithly result In the New York and "grie Railroad making . Buffalo its main west ern terminus for its roll and water business, retainin; Dunkirk an its terminal for all rat' business. The \Ya•lui glen ll's.) Boarnierr says that roiled States Marshal Dour betty visited that place on Wed• tiesclay, and seined urea the county treerury, to Po/ an execution for judgment and costs for the amount of interest coupons on bonds issued by the county to the Ilempfield Railroad Company. The legal effect of Ora proceeding is to hulk up the treasury examst all other claimants until this judsment is paid, which is about $2 CO), to the liquidation of which the oommissioaere are bOnllli to apply all moneys as they coma into the treasury, under a penalty of attachment is case cf diso bedience. Lawrence county is about in the ■sine Spe cial writs Imo issued on Thursday, by the United States courts, conirnandine the county conicateeionen4 to pay the /mount or the judgmeate recently obtained by various pa ties for interest on railroad bonds. The following are the ourrent quotations for specie, dramatic, eschance, de , as furn.shed b 7 Crews.) & Co., bankers, No. 40 South Third strain Old Amer. li doll/ ...1 4 Ohl .american gold .• I 0 lal , sweralga... _ 414 , 3 6 4 1,7 Mexican dollars .106 ,1% apoleons n —x.r. franca .64 Spanish " ._...103 ITsn shales 786 S. Amer. " ... -1 IX " " I Prussissi) 800 Five francs . .. 98 " guilder. US German crowns 108 Spanish doubloons. Ad 40 French " 110 'Patriot " -.15.66 kir Look. Sow York Exchange, par. Pittsburg• • • Boston. 3i, die CI, moral -I.l.lP'n.re.• •••• - -- s".rs'lle• Rs '' St. Ul;is to 1 chnrlenton... Nto }y " ,Ctocazo 9 t otK Savanyvtli " ICliwaknd h o Mobile .44 t., INesbville 3iC to 1 New Orlerinii. to , blemphos—.... X to 1 PHILAIIELPRIA STOOK EXCHANU MIX? December 22. 1329. g;==M . 200 Car 6.0 11 Ck P a 88U1100 Reading R.... .• . 8"34 lio) City as now(lota) .101 1100 do . 201 10410 Calms Ist mil ... 34 lIVI dn 20 , 4 5000 Maki, 2J m"7......14 liM) do 201 s `OtiO do .-.. 14 iliV 0 ° • . 3.1;1 Soild do ... ..td 14 ;149 do ... 5.3.. t in f il l d'i, 1000 N Penn% 11 IN 01'i103 do.. . 48.4. int 20., 3 :lamely!! Sam.. ..22 100 1 d 0..... ....b8 Ai's 8 Minehill R 1.7141w0 do. ..... .. ai l ). 10 Nornstown It _.43 ! 10 taloa Ilk ' Team •. • 1 87 '‘ 11 do .... .... 40 , 3 do - ••• • • lerko 15 MechnEdes 1ik...... 21 111 Fcnno R (lots) ....36 4 do -. ... 20T1no Orb No, prl saint 15'4' 100 Ileautn,r, E. V. , -. 20 Hozloton Coal 45 IiFTW I.: EN HOA f!.4 154 F.lmtra Ist ISA Ts .. 1i Del Do . .. 42 31X10 Elmira 14. b.% It I 4 Pen n 2 R... ...... 35 NKCOII7 170 A /777 300) citY ~ now CUP lu3 121 Farm & Mach Bk. .554 IV/ Fr), lt , m - 7/. IN Long !al R. hOwn 11 1100' 13 0 rerd Bk , 45 15 Penn R. ' 6 1-inhich Val R •, 3, 10 Lehigh Noe 4S‘i 14 Farm S. Mach Bic L 541 OLUSINti YAP:IPS—STEADY. Asted. cird.sk.l I% States 34'21 . 10/ 41 , 0hl Nal stock-- 14, Phil4t .•••-•--- • •• Belt) IN gasp t& El ;om. ..'er- 1 I lt a " hew..• • au/ 10J1 Ta let mart 524 Enrols So • •-•-• • VV - / 94 " 23 mort 13 , i' 11 Reading R— .21A 20‘i Long !glandK . II lAN '70.... 00 :Lehigh .;oal&Nav 45 , ‘ Jar,' " mint Be '4%53 121 Penn% $i " d 0041.71 71 1 {1 71 1 0 Ea.-- . 6.14 Penns it..._.., 117.; 5a I " 101 So 01 "24 m Cat/imam R..._. 1 14 narjle Jana) Con. :0 let m lela 33 34 pref.119%,1 Frank outh R• School N te V. a 1 67 .124& etc 14-, 37 M Bch Na v Imp 63 71 77 R actek,Vl aerate 33 Philadelphia Markets. DECEMBER n—Ereclnr. There is very hula demand for ' , blur. hot haldera are firm in their a base, and the sales are unt - to so pelt Cie borne trade, nt prices ranetti4 train .5.5.374 to is "VII for common to chow° euperhno and extras, 8546.2 d for mama., and 16.7547 to 151 A for fancy tots, as in auallta . Hr a Flour is 'toady at 14.375 i. and lut lode selling Corn Meal a firm, and Penney ania Meal searce• ar ~t. 3 IN; the demand, ho corer, to small. Wheat— There la not 'trah nuivein•nr fur the want of stook• and ribialt 2 6 , 0 bllBhol4 sold ar I:arm:so for l'ennsclonat e atlt Fouthern rade, the better for prime Delaware adult and 143,1 Me for white.cluilin: a small lot of Choice Western at tlin hie hest figures. Rye to wanted, a..d Peoria, mama commands sae. Corn conttnues In fair requei.t, nod Emile 7,tt, liurthela new a end's' , bound buy e ra at 730 lie fir damp, and fur dry lota, as to nditinn the hulk of tit° sentpla Weis at damp C orn, a loch is not touch wanted; old Corn is scarce Oars aro not niuolt inquired after, but about 1 060 bus Southern sold at 430. r etinsylvanut are *ethnic le lota, VI cm anted, nt W Bark—Soma malt sales of I,t :No, quere , tron were Made nt 121 to toe, Co' ton—The ni trket is unsettled ands few small lots anhi at previous rates. tirOcan. and Provisions—There is not much dame, and nn change to nots today in the tuallteda. toads—There 13 a steady demandfir Clore rseed. gnu some 61a) illll here been soh! an 5 125‘415.23 for fair to sc.!a d prime, and 8g5313082756 for vary choice lota, mostly at 3328 tY I.Us. Whisker me unchanged, and bi casks of drudge sold at 24%0,200 Penneylvanta bins at Wic. WO bble prison at 'Re, Ohio hide, and hhde at 2.6K0 its gallon. New York Stock . . 1 200 6o Tenn*AD- ..... M{ ISO Minh Central R- • Ml' 400111issonri 8t 443 ..• 24% SO %eh Bk. ..N 1 R. - .. 84 6400 Eno R cow, •cz ... 19 100 Melo FE *le I G... • 361.4 90DRTie R bds'7B ....29 .10 Mil & 'Miss R ... • 4 19 NO k Had Gloat 91 ID Panama R.—. 4 . 144.33/31 toe N Y Oentr )1 R 4107471 .19 do .. ..... —.nix WO 40 iv, 7sga, 1 Ito do ... _.. 8.60 131 13) do 7 841:00 do . . .-.- • ..131 43 do TS 1.98 Illtentotl R.. ~. De' noo do .... .... - - 71.3 10 Siolana, k Ciro .K. . 641 IMO Erie R.. 1.34 2 lOU ChiesTo &. E. 1R.6111 et v o d o . .... . „la 9 ,1 2 0 do . .. ..• - .._ 50 Hod R t ." . It, .....460 40 , 2 80 do ..- --am to 100 do MO el 200 do .. . . eel eCI.4 I 0) do ~- .. add 410 , ;; 50 do ... • —AO) 63 ITO Rem, o; R..... ... 405.140 do .---. Au ON CITY ITEMS. °RICE oet ar wean rata Eczataa.—This cele brated female authorese will deliver a teeters. under the auspices of the deferral Literary idnioa, at 3ltuneal Fmk! (Ind. this ( Friday) ern : arm, en the "Herm* is o.tumnri Life." From the 31,171,4101:00 audience this lec ture hat attracted to ether cities, a crowded hence tray be anticipated. Ton law ORLisAXS (Irani iforez. —This now estabh.hment,theingh Milli in meitatien of oar great 7fOrthem atadernies of ?Engle, coati/ant lame restores quite unique. It coati:he more private boxes, sad the proscenium, on either aide of the ease. to adorned bY a splendid mirror. in a gift frame. Ttas front of the house extends over the etreet sidewalk. in the style of many of the hoaxes in the French quarter of Ner Or- leans, arid thins affords a capital shelter for persona entering or leering it in inclement weather. going to or from cerriagea. The opera Comcarrly with 'which it has opened is French. We perceive, by the stinted de scriptions, that the elegant gas fixtures of the hostile were mode by the fun of Cornelia kr Baker, of Phi ladalrhva. Scranton CO3FECTIORERT rob For several days past the celebrated Conferhosery eeteliehment of bloats. E. U. Wkitinan k Second street, below Chesnut, has been literally throated with purchasers of their beautiful and deli_ coma Holiday Garin. In addition to their splencid stock of luscious preparations for the palate, they have rows magnificent assortment of fancy articles euitot,o for ;au. A hse :some boa. filled 'silk s variety of their superfine candles, MA create and chocolate prepara tions, will make - a sauce seeeptabte Car.statle 'meat. theism:my other tibia of ten t. rosette eics . t. (herr ReOCCTIOR rot Tits ifor.to/Ti.—Steteo - Instruments and Vies., Opera Oiasses, he., sold 1 at greatly reduced prices, by TeL 1. F iraaklia. Optician, 113 South Fourth :Vein, below Chestnut. CHRISTMAS GIFT 3.--Make } our friends A Christ mas Present of the Stereoscope sad Pictures t it ell! be most gramously recetred. &ceche= booth Eiihth street. Jas. Cromer k. Co. G. 0. Er.on' HMI Boos Brows, ala Okmataut { treat Bay your Holiday Hooka it trait Buy your Botolly Books at . - E,:alue' Buy your Holiday Books at Evans' Buy your Holiday Book. at Ersra? Olft Book Store, Gift Rook Beery, Gift Book Sumo, GILL Book ti tors. 'Tu. the heat else* In the elty. 'Tit the heat &aloe is the cu y 'Tu. the beet Saes la the city. 'Tut the bat tlsoe in the att. All Books are sold se eheap ea at any other Rio.. All Books are sold u sheen slat say other Mora. AU Books are KAI as cheap:a st anr other &tort. And you hare the tulrsntage. And you here the araatage, Amd you he, e the selrantage, Of getting a Oift ante sash Book. Of setting 10. ft with esalt Boek. Of getting a Gift Inch each Boot. CALL IS, AND OICE 2111 AL WILL CONTINCV TO= TIM It is the best plaii• in Ova eitr to purchase Books Dams; O. Eases•. Ors:incite, of I;ie Gift Book Barsi.utz. NO. 69 Ckesuant stidef. How To Mane • WITS HAPPT.—Present bar with Ladd, Waster. tr Co.'s /mProred &war Ma chine—the most iistlta and teasibJel article to be found. They hays taken Dtlnitnitien First Premiums this yeat *rev all other,. Coll elm see them, sit.= Chesnut s treet. Tee Uctoe.—The Union is now the greet theme of conversation and of newspaper discussion. Pomo believe that it is in danger, while others assert that it is in no peril whatever. There is one wares of oomfort in all these troubles. and that lain tha tut thst while pohtrtaas in the daTerent aettiolui of the country are 'nailing and showing their teeth, the people of all pot noel of the Union llama the meet maple adrantate of heart' able to preemie their garments at the Brava Stone Clotlithg hien of Roekhdl & WiLson. Nos. OMI std 61:15 Chestnut street, /11 , 0111 lath, Philadelphia. QVIZTA NON MOVETA ta the motto adepted by a la•re portion of our " Cad Hoes" population at the pre sent bus—" F.PelpIR and utterly repodiste efferything in the shape of ll:Movements- and ensah. it possible. the faculties of the human mied." Happily for to it oar day end generation. we lire in noses of improvement ; and 00-a9tAD !is the motto of all these who purchase their flocks for Christmas rifts at G. G. Evans' Gift Bonk Empornitn. No. 439 Chastain street. where beau - ti Ilartruet Albums, bibles Evangelical works and entertaining Novels, Stories, ite..„ for the y =la. WO ash/ at the lowest publishing prices, and S costly present awarded *ash purchaser. “NOT SE Or IHSALTH DIVE:UM POSIESELD, Tasteless, who Piles his massy gold, dower the number of the Uses Should hare his giorkfaideMe girdled ; He better claims the glorious name who knows With tritdout to enroy what frearett bestows.” And trot. wisdom will alear■ induce him to WY hi clothes at the •• Coa'bnantal Clottust House" of E. H Eldridge ,t Co., northeast comer et Cheemost and Eighth streets. Euar.sraaar. oc Dazaa.-571:Impeara, mtaa, ma "oho; t o aweatora editor. waa a writer tr ao little ability and of coooidsrataa origitudllf .W 7 vory cloud that .. the apparel aft a rocbtima the taus." This fact so undeniable, and bad the great poet fieurished two hundred gad steentl-Eiro years later, be would, doubtless, bare made old rokenns go a step farther, and advise his son to purchase all bit apparel only at the palatial slur* of Oniurille Stotts, 2fo. fat Chestnut street. SPECIAL NOTICES- Tint NEW YORK TRIBL;NE• PREPARE FOR TOR GREAT POLITICAL 013IPAIGN OF 1560! TTTB SEUT-WSKELT TRIECNE THE NEW 'YORK DEMI-WEEKS TRIBUNE IS pcbllahed issery TUESDAY and FRIDAY CONTEXTS OF No. - ...... I LEADING ARTICLES; This Disorganiza tion; teioc Meetinzi and Tsztid.Unit Jour nals Union or Dumnion: Cross round the Careens Pimple Questions; The Pm dominant Question ;Stop the 'ocean:striae; Manufactures and Tariffs; The roloct Meetme; Ho. Tammany was Floored: After One E. D. Morass: Editortal Para graphs. ABairatoViennatAmeneansis /II ,FROM HAVANA. , IV GOV. MAGOFFIN'S MESSAGE. I'..STATE A ORICTLTrRAL COLLEGE. YI .THE OEIRCIAL CANVASS. VII .EANSAB ELECTION. PFCIAL DESPATCHES TO TEE N Y. TRIBUNE t From Washington; Demo math; Caucus—A The Siete on the Treasury Mr. Reynolds' Vote : The Elect of the Deal Corrections; '..%lr.Vallsodis hent's Speech; The Senate Committees: The Messer.; The Fan Jaen QUe•Don I The Charleston Nomination ; The Organi zation Mr. loirraltee'n Speech. IX .THIRTY-SIXTH CONOR_ESS—Fniv Sas s lea : Proceedings falba Senate and House of It earesentatiree. X...LATEST NEWS RECEIVED BY TELE GRAPH: From California; The Case of MATtIIDr, AC. ; Execution of a MDT. darer; Failure at Davenport. lows; Dealt of the Rev. Dr. Hope; Arrival of the A ine rite. XI.:-THE PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE. XII THE TRIBUNE IN INDIANA. XIII THE JOHN BROWN FUND. XI V.,NEW YORK CITY TRACT SOCIETY. XV THE CHARLESTOWN 'EXECUTIONS Letter of Exculpation. XVI .LATER PROM BROWNSVILLE AND • MEXICO. ORAND1.7:110:1-8AV.ING MEETING: Tb. Academy of Mello Crowded i Speeciee by Mayor Tlemcen, Jima. Nrooks, Chcrle • O'Connor, Eca., Es-Govemor Washineton Hunt, James B. Tim) er, Sohn A. Dm. Pool. 0. 31. Mitehal, and the Rev Dr. Bethune CCIARLESTOWN EXECUTION I Citest Infium of Strangers; A Grand Mat- Lary Parade ; The Prisoners Preparing for Death ; Attemitel Earn. of Ci-ok and Copp e; Their I/moors:7 by a SeauceL XIX 'AIR. FLOYD 30YES AT ROUE. XX A CORRECTION FROM AIR. J. VAN BUREN. XXI NET PUBLICATIONS; A Gallery of tql• rugdiehed English and Amenean Female Porte; The Marvellosui Adventures and .Rlll3 Carotids of Master Tull Owl:lass; emencnn Bistorieal and Literary email- to ticlis 4 i to L." 4 . to '4 csa. 3143 i Walnut t t-ea 0.5.!a• voete Modern Ballads.. XXII WDSCONSIN ye. TDE UNITED STATE4i The United Statea Up—Wieoonsin Dorn. XXIII LITER•RI. XXIV..POLITICAL. XXv PE,'EOX•L. XXVI .CITT NEWS. XIII' .FOUR DAYS LATER PRONE EVROPR Arrival a the Yandarb It; ZS s r e.en's 13. tendons toward En:Lind; Mghly Inter-m -inx Declaration.; Buoncornotxn; 1:2- I , llthed In Central Italy; Japanese Em bus7 conarnq to iVnahtruton Entlsnd; Frtn , re ; Ennui alhi.:tiot00 00 ; 1.0,y; Eolith Amenes; Australia ; Arrival of the North Amerioen. X XIV .THE POLICE ARRANGEMENTS AT NA TIONAL. HALL—THE • RREr7.TS. XXV. MERRHANIWCI.ERKSNOrsENT BACK FROM THHROFTH. XXVI HOW T NAVE THE UNION: Lecture by Beery Ward Beecher. XXVII NEW BriLDINGS IN BROOKLYN: The Plymouth Church and the Academy of Mn- XXVIII .OFFICIAL VOTE FOR CHARTER OFFI eggs. XXIX THE N. Y. TRIBUNE XX'C AGIIIerLTURAL XXXI.NUSCHLLANEO XXXII MARRILOES . A . 7iD . DEATUS. - - • -.- XXXII( TRIBUNE' ALMANAC FOR 1.!4. XXIV COMMERCIAL MATTERS: full Fepor't of the Stook. Aloney, Grata. Cotton. C3Ole: and other Market'. 51.1e:sill Reported for The N. Y. Tranne. TEAMI.—One Copy for one rear. SI Two Copte , . ore 3 enr. 13 Fire Civic's, ore yen, $11.35. Ten Co. pier, to cot adisett r , .52). For a Club of Twenty, we *end all Fairs COPY. Fora Club of F..)rty, we geed The Dally Tribune :me,* THE N. Y. DAILY TRIBUNE /9 published every Morning and Erni:lll2l,er.! sent THE N. Y. W'REItLY Is pub/abed ewer, SA tanks. Talus-5: per annum. Three Conic: for $3. Ten f0r,717. Twenty Copies. to owe address. OD, and an extra Copy to the person rho forms tie Club. Fora Club of One Hundred, we send The Dan; 21,- buns gratis. Address HORACE CIRPF.I.F.V t eV 0411-/taW Tribune BaaldLase. New Vert. cianse--•Pee. 22; INDCGEMENTS TO CLUBS NOW, IS THE TIME TO SUBSCRIBE ties; Reyoerd•The Fox; A Rook of mail at .115 per serum
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers