?Sw.i#a•F!' . - - 114_11,1*' ;11" : 116. 7 1.-. . as 4 71 0140. 1 : - - - 111.001 _ , - ~ 1t,.. ;-Lc.,—,4:4•,:-; 2 =‘,. , "--, ',, Sat i lt i rair pow7tionsTl4 • ,„1i.,, 41014 V. 74;itUttiOna'' ~ , „ , •Y-i • Aimatio _ l , AO _,, , igotran amen& ms?airm me e n Auvrli., _ - ~ 16 V 111300 Ai K01R01.5.., VaiWilliptailstaaltiall,lgo. a *Arra, .4...;a• iledisimernein .ro ..,.:A-,;:v . . , 1 , -,. , i ......, ..‘, pc: - . • f , r , . ,111011XXVIPTORZ, f • • ~. • ROVAVS ,liamik. ' L ' „ ' s e ikfc)sVr ' - WOOD 41410E10a „Ttli . f. , —atiessrlizArtna: rink ! 1+ '';'`,/ ~.T. : Vp, 041/11C11211Thirr &MIL " *Ai 110110.1715CA,P30 *I, Nf 4 4 031 4 1 .* ' , ..L:.lloYrofoiraiDnatiUlialv • r " "`417.14111' OWNtIT piper. , : 'loittlilainitilt - 1 a ? &net,' 3- J 1 L ., .t a i mm oral: l 6e 11, 4 IstorianimatorLag' ; - . .664 , 204; *m_oAt.onpu* mpg th. •iftWi _ atn ime • , littazazipaty - GooDaL C • , ,,,-1,7;7 •s" • •" ' - • XlNiailesibitlillogivropasioirfrksaiiieeketlatr", umureporm,a,xistiptiag• high/WE"- • - .,:•PJ.:• , :2:v X tringliiiel ' ' STRAW' BtOrbit e rei - • ibuKoNtbibMilookool i Ittivlati44" ll 4 NPilial!**:*** l . l o,4 6 4o o i ll 4 o : 0 4filit 0 494 bidnielftria 4 W.o.l ' ,f 4 nit ii,ANIIVI:I4I4III,- 1110CX;10161:k* .• Onitkitnutu - Err. X 99141414.4 rt . ,,rowrimikuk , - , , tuallOwitont...iiwL'imrsaur, mu& nut i r k Atir r ic44 l l, 7 ,4ol l l]*. 11 ;4 4 .- • "We. _ :4 4 010=64 4, 11 424 s ,:4 : 011111‘ , - A • ; 1!.!W4T!,,t19.7 -, '''.',„.:: - zEssa.l 1 `" • ". ==ti1404;1111 , 01P Aras w(94,a,; insiatt iorlisainta. • -eta: LONDOVORMAIIMPOWAirIiNtri; Xt r MID 2111171t001418PORDirli F. 61 7*IIIIO3.IIIICANDI3IIPORTZEI , • :wan dairy Pio ; t • " • 4664 11 %.1 "1. - - Jer ncriinuues-rium •.' - - 107 hti IMgiSt4 1 : 44 W 10,4 "" windage, 48UT.1.E.11-Ba44.iiOA.ETYi lftLi'srsistrit eEOOND mums WATCHES. • '4t • 401tIVAND WIEVAR OAS" — T TH& thiiii4raimonn4 ralcisa. • ' . ' ;": s ;; . .!! } 4. I TAit,EO II-. • - 1 - 10 4 / 4 / 1 1°- " •-•- • UMW .IliM- L 'iloll43o , 4oßiatlON ';OP PROSMIT4I "cif of of : ''.i.livii;lllllacil: Ist Thappltite of ;Aso li*:ll4Z.3i(*KfiOrt` OR :cAkasi:.`4o To " *dittnlfrittle. -- '"" 'i HAVING-4 00 U 11,TR T I :o ti Pti• l oin, ~e—,-MINGIOP bam'illsti*Soont , • * • Ilettenas r or si, ow* AY ot, it :, ,i , 1....,. . ~,s t y Haan SlM Tit. Indelli.'` -. ii. lir ont i teOTRIIVIIIIVeI L tror t s woes IrallArling,,, 1 .: ...... ::, i ii w .. ,4 1. 1 ~ ~11 :•, , , !um_ AwnottrWO . o , , , fi r )-7411JURS.-i ilussitity . or ta 4111471LIZSILfgAit *IUKOZAW'jIII4. MrcPARE rt 111ARDINittit4The I 'Sb igothy!• !ail /IC it y: - 4 . • • Win is arm , .._4lgoet l i g i • 011 1 6 " 1=2ireat%"*Wrik 640/3104 16' • prCX: t " 4 ori-utv PHOTOGRAPH m 0.3" som Mori% ' , A P n *,,Cli,Filiik • ' develiml ,jamikaividy to - MOWOOPAP***4III3B. pawl " itOVAL PiAjlimhAiikad u sa *al fa spy ass = la. OA vim ads, ides, kfunr. • • • AMP Stilts tear CAM 1110 ii born INN Illftbillt410111WWW4:1 . _ -ZINAMIUNO±ON NUM% -TI Or Prag iiMONa ;111 i , r)14 . 014! , . . MEE ,514;f Aii-Vir94llog, . - ... ~ ,-, 1 . ,,,,,,r ; ;. 1, 1 e,.: cri a ~-.,1 - ,,x 1 -11, , jr, " 4,- , - - - '--- - : 3 , 0 $ r . "., „riw . i"" ° - ; Li - ': ~,y ., , ,.; r. T , ; - -,*,, - - , 10 , k.. ,w. .e." --- - - •111 , 4 ,-, ..: , -, F., 7 , -.„1.:- 7 4 '.' r=. t r ; > Y , l e‘v 1.! : . - --, ' i. - ; , Z.. 4 ' 1 " :.! 'i i it t •; -, f 4 , ',,i" ,A! ..- ,7 , : - 41 _. . I _i.,. i . ,i,P,A, • i:VIA ul arf/S,"/ I„,, , ~.,--,,A, , ~,; ,I ; :,t,f,li t . '' l I ' 4 : ”::'' ' ' " - --!";,,,, Vil, , „„,„....--,.:-. :"• ski , i -,.. j1 =- -- ot., '...„_-----. 4 . . 1 " 141 .. 1ii *4:'''- ', `. :, - P; :-.. "le i ' ''' • i .rla% . 's. ~.„. I -.0 3. ? . .a,,,,. k) r,.. 7 ~,,,,,,- ,_.. _ ~,,,, . ~; 1:7 WIJ .. ~:,' "1- " I r I i, ', -.. ~',r; \ ,' : ' '''' •'. - ' ‘ 14111 41,,, '. -' :,1D......, , -- z )..,401ith,„ ..-,:.-- . ..., ..,.._,,, .111 4lial ' ••••• . - • 0 ... _,..., ~ .., , ..,.. ..„ .F.„.--,' N .‘- .• !"- .. ..!" V ).? fi', LC!" 4 " r., -,, Li - ' ' * l-e. --, ;, '''' . •••-•.. . ~- i /' VP *:. -• t - i gh• ~ , - -,. I esit ,-.1„. ~,,, i E 1 ',. ~ I PAI ! 5 ~,..., 2. ,„,,,,.„....-,....}.--,-;; .' ' ! L. 1 .. il ism ', , ,' j • P. - • - -:-*-,,, : ~e * ',!'., --. .' i • . : - . „ - 1, F. ,, 1'... .. ..,u„ , , ~ ' ift. 77 7 " ---=-.. .fit, ....'5....... - r .. 1 A - ..- - ' ,4 ••• '''' -- ---*. '. ', ' - i' . : irl . 1 ' , -7--- ` • ' ---. ''' ' , . , „'_;.: .1;,t , !,-,,'”) ~:,',-,.., ,:,-:', L -.:,. !,,• •:,_ -:, 1 '.. , :'-,, , ' ~, -^„ , . ' " -, -„ . . , ' . . , " -'' " 1 .. , , „ . , „ , ~. 7. . •.t 1 ,'„ •• 7. :: EOM VOL, POLITICAL.i tikopiats ' •TiOltkT. . *A 9R, I ,ALEI ANH ER HENRY. CITT SOLICITOR , a. Gin osiiiaoLLEß, GEORGE guFTY. *EapyER,; OF TAxEs, • HA -,MM. - VOMMISSIONER, JOll - N,4'. HOUSE MAN. ,ILSO/1031 20; TAI6I .114:011 TiTEE6At. ; MAY I$T. ITZII tocioTs•On'ilionii. BOICER ORPTOERS. itaii*OntithisAir), Trimteas :00/4 6 idiTtommAPB 'EPWIT 3I, `449?, §#PPIA. a...4ussadisa miurm erraliew • riquaatuqui6 - tptiot WW2 .441 D 11110111' , WABIROIIIIII 1141 X try ........ iio. - 4trwaticiiraiiilr;iarkapwri[A. Laws sew as Mad ia iiztaaaivi stook of DOOTII Otil MK" ot *TAO tooniotion. of 'OMR ,OWN -AND, NJATMILII PLAN UPACTIPLY4 6'141464i, &tit6es 111141 • ' " -,611411 .:DELNA AND -41DEDNIWAlta• ot% INEPOISZID 'AND - • • liffit '9 D'AID' D DACL BD saris U4J iotrrsFfiurra whim. 011stwora Market sae 'Mortara stmts.), 4 1110? 'twisty's , * - Mailie; , Aeasett..Mteae; ppm of a met Hamlet as MANUFAOTURSEMERMA WRIGHT. MUTH. & CO., '• alinto,Aftimi liariativaixerwmis. InTTISHIMG' A.G-ENOT. ii4.ol4,4l4s*dik*WrFa U&i fr"urr • 'aux ul!Acrrinticur Mall. • itei-jiNattß,riris aims, 41040. x 10,14.. : itlitmety4osll4oo). : bine** Stook of • ' -I ] 4413,FLENSWARE. LAMIT4O3 II : IIsca , sad • 0 t o l: if i th i g p arft: Mk id St.. eLua 1171:16 h , Y hl r AOX* " 4 Pm: ll .g ./ 1 .• ,Uku!•• f ' ll / 01 Y/F IPHMKGS. VOL 40 11 /10", SOM ANPORTISI. ARP DEALERIII2II _ .7004811Q1C, gra GAITEEMATEAVALS, MentieS,•GAlll*ln. AIRESTiNOII. PATENT LEATHER. moos ximutcurre, eulipzx UPkEILX. . E. HORNER iounzu an ;mita armor* limas NOMZ= SteEMMR:& FENNER. WBOLIMAIX - UMBRELLA AND PARASOL MANUFACTIRABB, kUtll3l' im=r, *4 4 s,i 7 i*TiliarainUNG 60439.• SMIIIOR:01 1 14 GEBATOIiB,; ; ,. 111ceitItoprOted .43.11.104NEr 0108 AND OAARIAI3ES. • In Greet Variety. • - , FVIOIII/00.1.0 , TE88. banes sad WILLIAM, YAENALL'S STORE. xtri BTREST. . Of Fine Arta.) '", ' ' 11106L6;- - kiROTIIEEt, tram, • s kam STATIONIDItS, AND . 9LAIiK•IOOIt ALAN D, ACTURXILEI, Wall.imilmoteil stook. IMPORTZD, DOWERTICI. and oT their own mamuirecioalit, Viiiiiiioraisaitilia thi +lll7 IgWillils6ollS. • tlX;l4l4li, 1300105 Alla" 8 AI Wiet r allatitir Of 111 4 46 .6, Ord.?, ' of 'izsT vim tiiiiiimasinal tad wink:. •' •11rs:imeallialiiiiiiiiikaird tUNGttn to otter ' fao-ira B .0141; EL • • "OAtIT-14,rfirliA . , *CAMBIUM, „ • . .1,111.41,1,AZ118, •• - • • rAcTezim, .IwiA,***otinizb AND NOLD *y' :NAIrLPR 410. comiumciat PILMADELPHIL rgte.,_V fr ieriaz . A . . z i wr .d to 14..viry roc Z ei 4 1 ralMlJoad 4rnatafas„lri . , lmam. la a Tau/laws 64 , 641" ofeeb belle: •: VatiTrr'a.. ,nagOgrl. . a haw ta aim? irikkiliks :1;J INtilqo 0 - 44 / Ett , Astr-ri UR it* 91. an DER ' - ; iTr • 1f444.8ict "bmtpiNTl; '4pg, Oil. twriiit. 1860 . „ Fpuwrit. CIARPOr WAREHOUSE. - ABOVE onEBTNUT BTRXET, 'No. 47. • - SPRINO4MYORTAT4O;I Ot Valid. 'Broolola, Loponal jai - 13441b &mu In and •Vointion - - - CARPETING S, .. UI Fresh Canton IIMITIII4. Fresh Canton arta Matting.. .I,lote and 6010T611, of aaaoriot Aokolity4 Also; a large -aidiortmeat of Oil tlidtd, Rap;Druggiti, Crumb'Clotha, find Bziglish ileloolinciaa'Doorldati,, &O. Also, an. invoice °Mal eatta COCOA MATTINGS, of various widths. "4614 isr 'LEMON. SUCOUSOR*TO • , • - aurrr, a i da-bn ManntaotureT, Importer, and puler, TO NY & Co., NEW , CARPET STORE, ; '.. No. SS NORTE, NINTH STREET, (lSoond . 0470 r shove Filbert. Went side.) • Went& redpebtfully Inform their friends. end the pub lie geieirilly, that they have opened an entire near kook of - ' • . • CARPETS. , OIL CLOTHS, ' MATtINOS, &c., • Of this sessonie importation, ; Purohesers me) , rely upon having en entire new Hook to select from; and ed infraction of the same is re freetailly solicited. ' apt-wfm-,lm* O L D EST 4,II,thiSIAD STORE, 38'. SOUTH BBOOND STREET, „ ABOVE OBEBTBUT. WW.1413 - ksNtO ,& CO., UOI36B}IIORi,OF SAMUEL" TOWNEMi/D & 80N. Importers and Dealers in yELTET, , BRUSSELS, THREE-PLY, and /NORAIN RPETS.. of the Elio& fad A3.4[1,411.11 wakes kiiTINOII; CLOTHS, 4a., ie., Ac, To witch attention is solleitod. aulas:mfmtni CARPETING. • OW:MOE MANUPACTURn AND_DEAER IN CARPET - - 1/41" - MATTINONI. &a. ' WAREHOOSE, 144 NORTH, THIRD STREET. - • p A NGLISII CARPETINGS. a-=a TsPettl7. anumels, Ingrain, gad Vanillin car- SP:4W a lerratts tium rkloii- C 1 0ee1, 1 7 . in great egi mportcr 'ler, 141 bmtk SEW Stroet, pak.ll-1m meet nide. pRILADEI.PIIIA - • GAS-FIXTURE WORKS. WARNER. MISHEY; & 111EANITIACTIIIINZIN. STORE No. TSB ORESTNITT STREET PNIIADELPItIA, WARNER. PECK, & Co; 2fo: 670 • NROADWAYi NEW YORE. %wild s yeaneetrallyinfana the pubbo that they econtutim to niatilfactnni all kolocor . ; ." - ciaO rixOsaco. - Luttirth, ..19/ 11 &190/Z8r BRONZES, &0., &o. . • Anit that their. large and varied Meek •oomprisee the erupted ea well as the moat elaborate patterns, designed by their French artiste. Thar-Mao keeP et their atom. P 10.679 BRO4DWAY. a larg. and full assortment of all theft manufactured goods. 'Dilators and'othom are in vited to call and examine. - • hpU lm LOOKING -OIL ASSES, ronnurr AND PICTURE moms, ENGRAVINGS, oYb PAINTINGS, tco., IMPORTERS. MINUFACTURERS, WHOLE SALE APO : RETAIL ,DEALERS. TRurr, BIRO.; & IMEOMEITS AND WHOLESALE MAIM -}14444,13W4RE. CUTLERY, GUNS, PISTOLS, &0., 11$11 . 1111JULET STREET, 529 BELOW SIXTH, NORTH CBE. tia-Lawara 11111LADELPHIA, 'PHU.ADISMII - :16. ABBEY`Be. NEFF, NO, 308 NORTH THIRD STRI ET. Have now In atide a limit complete 'took of HARDWARE. of late Importation. and Anteriosn, nutaufaature, which they, ,clie! to . the NEAR TRADE on the very boot term • ere4m OORE.TIENNIZEY,& CO. RAID:WAR& MARINIcsad $ll4l COltudEitoEitieets PAPNR. HANGINGS, &ea 1860. .BPRING EITTIM/ 1860, • 01 , WALL PAPERS. - a 0 Ir'R'Lr o'l7 R , iliaufactorani and Importers ' oe PAPER , REANGFINGS. irmifecoilit4ol.lo# pTREBT, b elow *Atka. 011orwas thoilltma to &Fathom' and Western buy re, a imlaadiditook Of goods to @Moot from, and all of Maoweat and best &Islas. WINDOW OURTAINTA- Wier variatt. • • fetl-em TO CLOSE 'BUSINESS. iiONTGOIERY, & 00., • • NO.' a OILIENNUT KRIM, Will soll eats Bough Nis winter and INN NNW. Bier • • • . stoek of , • • • *.A.PER'irtArrctii•ids. 'Wads ! pr,sys7 mitt* 14usteoti4orith Galt#ll7 =DEO= PRIORS. norropien PAPERS N PER CENT. EN "'• ' 00t1T. Imo Roues ,paora, esa rot 144116.A.1N5. to tt '• „, „ • pRINCE - IMPERIAL . .C . HAMP A.GN E. gig_ , . % RE. 'MOOR lb CQ., RYBRNAY, FRANCS, AM twill Rooptiatobio Denim throughout the country, MM. tali brand-of CRAMFAONR, stilton with tbo mot ow Imo oontivoil [w elt' bathe Nal tablea oi ti t of Nolimpoe 01111.10111/ obtained the rpost la zi g rivir JEC= o rant ga tl i t i=Tiffi.llo = mit7,42211. r t wii"E r . 7F i gkr4li T: —asstow ti a I tog di ' one ' r IrgraiW d a is= nut Z i latis) Ay , Ina eattetl• wom ita z e t, et tc4 ... := g rh i rizi or d a itltazgara 0 1—r i f4479., at Akstalo. ow in hid a U ADWAIri Kew this laid this sits by • -- • - ; ' • - ~ , , ; arms. & DEAL, aii-lha t; . •, . 11041KAIKM Stmt.- PAS 'FIXTURES. LOOKING GLASSES. JANES 13. Eitt , LN & SON, FABLES' IcIALLERIES, els CIUNITHUT erREET, PhiladVphis. HARDWARE, CUT,USRY, sad GUN weniuoung, PHILADELPHIA: PHILAWPWA , `, ;MO FAY , APRIL 18 . 6 Q! commOsiot Hoviio; • WHOLtEIA.L4 CARPRTING, 011. 03 6 9 7 /Velpl?!CfriNek WAREIFLOUSE, N 0.112 010i$T24117**EA 1117 - CANTON MATTlNoB.:Jolim4iv t ajnojoco. of 4-4, 84, and 674 VPllibe and Ale 4 COIN oriliumr , on ootungnment, ...• aintal* HPLEY, NATAISD, k • 11140,11INSIM KO. dayirtrin COMMISSION - MERCHANTS • FOR THE ' PHI7LADEL.P.I-11A-MADt GPODS. .• • . 51.1.40*.. ,WOOLLE • • . MOILWAINE 8a BACON, • . No. 180 OHNSTNUT STN.KeT, Dave, Dec the latest arrivals, teraivAt.A large 'stook of SILKS and WOOLLEND, adapted to the Clothing and Jobbing Tiede, =foie whiek are the_ fellow* Reveler' 'maker of clothe: . - • C. PiELLEIND3N (Son of J. hi.) Whole and flititinder. F. BIOLLEY & BOWS " - NAMIEST, OR AUSTRIAN SAXONY CLOTHS, of all grades, • V Also, g• 4 and 5-4 DCKSKTNI, OASffifdffitffhiffeAN CY do., BIOLLEVS BILK MIXTURES and'TRI COTS, SATIN DN Off-iIikA,:BtACK COTTON BACK' do.' BLACK' SILK VKLYZ4'B; 'BLACK end DAl4off yEt*Orgiff, All of,whieh are offered for kale on favorable tams,' Fol-wfkanam • WELLING. OOFFIN,, & 111 011ESTNItT STREET, .Offer by the radiate the followlns dowlptionsot • .7011," AMERICAN GOON S o dandat4 makes tad is grii{ varlet, PAINTS QI? irkAPLD,AND:DANDYDrYitIii. HIMiOHED AND DRONyN'.O2IIiBTD4 NNINTINDS, AND DRILIA.,' OEINABUROB ,BNIMN, AN.3 TRIPM, CORSET JEANS. SILESIAIL AIM NANA 8A1,1114 °ANTON FLANNELS AND Fiipiiss LINIS9II.! LIMY% KENTUOXY /EOM, i4P CiVir-: - I . „ TONADBAc ALL-WOOL AND UNION CLOTHS. ' :•• ; BLACK AND FANO% II, • pwir AND MIXED DONSICINIL OATDIBTA ANb UNIONDMIINDINADIL TWIINDIL emcatea am, &•. mtaltanr3l FAINY'DRY GtlfTe. B'U,RNETT; SEXTON. & , SW,EARINGEN: InpiorMrs of, • • FANCY Goriso. ENoLas*Azio GERMAN DIENIG,FUANISRING aooDar Dit,Xsll TRIIRMII.IOB. ISKIRTI3-41hatlosdArc41,4410%._altV/Xii.Tll4. tick. 41 tintram . , DijkinaNre 4 44 AAA Nab 96 AS NOtrit PODIUM ATREBT: from Elf ivps,'thstr - • D'PRIN.O . :IMPOICTATIONir r - • Exelaan AND ONDAAN HOSIERY 4, ourrEa, Arm amm.fr.yr.AßEt• blachme_Btwin‘ Bilk aid Thread-on_ Wiwi' is /whoa Of WIT 0011440f0 WOO ITAIHNIIIIIOt4 r ISPIDGIALLY ADAPT= TO 8011TOIMPI AND DatEDYI TEADT.' ' fe34m, DAY:GOOD! JOBBERS. Je W. GIBBS & Soria, • . Ho. 031 MARKET WPARE'S, Are now opeiltig their SPRING STOCK OF GOODS Adaptad to MEN'SWEAR. ' In which wiU be found a Pall wortnoriat of 01.431 , 1111, DOESKINS, VESTIIS63, TRIMMINGS, a 6. ra-$m MeOLINTOOK, GRANT, 00.,' IMPORTERS AND WHOLBSAI.E DEALERS IN 01.0TR3 CONSUMES VESTING% TAILORS' TRIMMING S; No. 333 MARKET STREET, (Up Stotra,) Are ow opening their Spring Stook, to which they in 'de the attention of the trade: ValA WM.'S. STEWART & 004 IMFORTERB AND JOBBERS OF SILK Min FAZIOY DRESS GOODS. 3O MARKET Street. Rive now in atom end sge constantly tooteving s hll aeseortdnolit of Bey and Dee. SPAIN° GOODS Pargaaarinalb.to which titei invite the attelt tiont ex ose an yrocptelpAloatee layer& • , • • Fall linen of Iv end Fano,' 800, and an tile new strict et Printed toe oOnitainly on hand. leS-ent JNO. B. ELLISON &SONS .. .. . $1) MARKET STREET, (Igeoond door below Fondli,) IMPORTS'S 41.!/D JOlllBllllll Or mom, SIAMMVPM,i m VyBTI24OIS, AN : WAMOrtfl• -41 NOB, Ferlidllite t re i roll ,tt WWII , to Mall :lams of rAN LP noNditILV YAM Gri,_and do. vac, nuke* oFO Orl OLOTIIII and AO I:141N% I Jo! .and ciolpril. and oder the exoldsiVe atoo{ln Canis of DIMINO:4 oeleblnted Mika of (Moth! Doeskins ; • oleo* La ravoll4lln'Trilf.aff.tlfed Id on. to the pound ' ) and rdikeurorb Wok in N t a g ell SPRING. 1860. • rwitr4.laftvlVl:. P11.11, 1 1F 9 g w'r) Y. °wassail, A LP It. e 011.121. R. WOOD] MARSH, I HAYWARD, liimoiters and Wholesale Dealers DI: - Et 0 0 D f 4 CLOTHING, tel-lha No. 509 MARKET Street, PhileAelehis. - WURTI3. AUSTIE. MoVEIGH.; IMPORTERS - AND JOBBERY! ' IA DRY GOODS. No. DU MARKET BTREEI, Above ThiO, - etr Ti rArelt da t : Mao,' T. e moVelgh. „ thithAusa.nwt. 0 hu t i gme . r. • fe3.3ln FITHIAN, JONES, & (30.. WHOLESALE DEALERS to • FOREIGN AND DONESTIO DRYGOODS. No. IGO MARKET STREET. NEW 000DS rooming every day for CITY AND NEAR TRADE. fektha SHAPLEIGH. RUE. a co.. Importers of DIME. WRITE GOODS, LAOEd, and , EMBROIDERIES, NO. 899 MARKET STREET. or Our present - gook, 'foliated la the beet {kronen. Market. by ourselvel, Is the -malt Complete, we key* ver adored. ►SOMAS & MARTIN, 117 OHESTNUT STREET, 11AVII FOR BALI APIAQUAG SEAMLESS BAGS, f$ ATT. MEN. aROUND 'MOWN ZINC:-Poi' nip by WETRERILIi & IMOTO:11., 47 44 4 . 0 ,iort4 11XCIOND errant. -Ado LAMPBLAOli—Ground_, pure 4..f1 „i o n,„. t O il RO , wATHeßoeksqop : gtts 41-41. MONDAY, APRIL .l HrEItOTY Of " Ckur inierienn Consist ! " As yet, Judge Cadivelador's 'famotitlejterge ier ; YUCl4,9lept in,Te /Aura Icneno Vf., Wheat, flay -and, Pis,r49, Thal not beett, ptiblishodt ifnyrnmrfoiy, ,front, Ha.; extraordinary length, no one is likely .to.go. to, :the, ckpenhe of printing It. We 'are informed 'that it :glovers two' hurt- , ; deed qbarto pages, in :close marimteript, which would - twenty-taro 'such Colunine" as this, 'and OC:curded 11'6' hours in being reed; Morentier, titter it was read, inopen, court, to an exhausted audience, the learned and lengthy, Judge spent nearly an hour in, endeavoring to !make it intelligible .to the lawyer,s, on both isidee-an attempt which wee Wholly maauccotte.7 'ol.lethey, knew, after six, hours listening 04 6 Itiidtie/501str-wlitat , • h, emlght. havl, told them ; in 41t eentances—that Miss dictum divine! had not a copyright in "Our Antioiletatt - Oeu.; sin," and thatahereforc; Wheatley and Clarice were to paYllor,sGOO,for the representation.cf .a piece to-whieh ahe.had no legal title. More tdeirinng,w,.- alluding :teßtlide , -teltiox 3 4 ivel ht,yeiredatcht auchtlicumstahaeklespeatintitil .origistAlstory,' - atiet ihnsitithi els 'We bad become acquainted - with - froth the pbblic'iournalk. ate glad'to Hild;'hi. the 'lNetb'Oileaiii Bee, a clear; candid, sindsweli-written -Watery of "'Our American Oentsini"k 4 The writer - evidently hat famSiiatl neitlitnterims; With the facie, and here tbeide, atl he'ielitcts thern'i ' ' "During the .years 1850 and ,'5l, when the . World's Fair,' in, the Crystal Palace,' on, (he baniii of the vlaorponline;! Itt 11.);fe'Pez:lc,Lerid'on, Was the great attraction to the:wonder-roving; the United States ivore r betbir r and mot, numerously 'tnpreiented by people than any other country.' In the Current twelie Monad, it is estimated' 80,000 Americans visited the great metropolis of England. And we all remember the- furor some of our Yen keit* 'created. Hebb's looks were placed on the door§ of the Lord - - Chamberlain's office—Colt's-re volveriwerein the halters of every British davat. oilletle=eineeotiout babyltinipers were 11 the loyal 'Margery, and - Mmeaohneette patent ,baok aekltig, eilf-adjusfing, rotary open.and eta dietteekraie were • the terror of 'even ' arlato• .arena 'Lord Jelin linssall 'guessed! end 'Cal' nidrited''On the litpai Aggression Bill;' Palmer ifettfand Hitt/ski' whittled,' ono on the other 'a .. A*ld the ' Wooleaok;' end through the columns of worded dodri . OtrOular,' we learned *it at particular ' fraction of 'an hour on ti "Order 'day of the freek, - her Moat graoicineldejesry ,QUeenVieteria, aided by the Royal Consort His Highneis Prince' Albert, together With the whole Royal Vain*, indulged in thtWe half pints of .1 1.51ftxititi' and 'font and the two-elateenthe of our geStnino'tpunkln•piea,' Cardinal 'Wiseman and Hie Bishop of Leiden. warn seen playing pciker O'er tit> stiff Bourbon Whiskey slings '— la a word, everything was Yankee with the Beek. :toys, who pronoinced their Cousin the only indi vidual :elevated to an equal capacity with the titillating,' pulverised particles of the tohacie plant-An other *orde r 'up to- endli.' This state of stkinge naturally naught 'the 'attention- of the dioniatio: world. ind a ecitiedlin; 'orthe Yankee wheel, named Josiah. Bilsbie, 41'011,1 witese,und when Too laylttr, the facitlelstkrouned author," Immediately brought Ida adaptation' pen to work, and produced 'Our AmeriohnCeisio,' iiiithlehMr. Silsbee was to , play it'theAdelphi Theatre the then leading cha'reiiter ',Asa Treif , Ben Webster, the lemets of the Adelphl, this pia yes sold by Tots Toler for Clamant of 1 Se, or (AOC Mr. Webster held it In .his Study, 'and on reconsideration; as the year 1851 wee morning to a close, and the Yankee mania dying 'nereY,' detained" petting the piece' on the step, 'and by way Of b, oompensitten arid ooneideration to Reba° for breaking up the unexpired engage. silent between them,,and a desire to have Madame 'abate ae"the 'at the Adolph!, he (Mr. tl'.) made Silsbee a preeint of the manuecript of the play of '4)or American Cousin.' On reading It, Silithea defile to the ebbeitudotr-that It was an hitt feetive piece, and plieed it 'on the shelf' until his, return to America, when be rehearsed it in California. Again it was d,ootned to, the shelf with.. onOhstptibile getting a 1,8er..„.0t ",Rears passed, and in the Meantime Tom Tay; lor,•thinking, because Mr. Silsbee died, that Our American Cousin' was a manuscript in the basket Of oblivion 'and Mooted addiesses,' and having n copy of it, Placed the same in his New York agent's hands, who, In due course, a year ago, sold it' to Laura Keene for 6LOOO. On the produotlon'of the piece [di t) first time, Mrs. Silsbee; the widow of the 'comedian, (no* Mit' dlnipthan, performing at the Varieties in this city,) remembering the natio and the various characters, hiving been present at the rehearsal in California, Searched over the Old pa pers of her late husband, and: then found.the manuscript with the followtag eupersoription in Mr. Josiah Silsbee's own handwriting : 'Our Ame rican Omuta, by Tons Taylor. Fropc B. Watt& to T. Stls6o.' The siddeot earning to the ears of Messrs. Wheatley and Clarke; the managers of the Arch-street Theatre, Philadelphia, they bought the original manuierintirom Mrs. •Silsbee, and com menced rendering the play, when a lawsuit was in stituted between themselves and Dfiae Laura Keene,- in which some interesting evidence was elloitbd, bit notie that stlatalned the Philadelphia managers in their ease against the ahrowd and wily Laura. The pleoe from Regret night at Laura Keene's to' the time onto Withdrawal, was wonderfully et tractive I and tho Ugh played in Wier) , city in the Union since, has not' been successful as a !run' save in such cities as New York where a short dis tance made it convenient for the Imitators to visit, watch, and study the original performers. Poi In stance, from Boston, B. - L. Davenport and Chan• frau, J. A. Smith, .and Mr. Warrori, and from Philadelphia, Wheatley and Clarke visited. Laura Keeno's in New York, and repeatedly studiously witnessed every movement, every gag' iti or stage tact, and the entire affair was secretly taken down in shed-Nand hylired stenographers for those gen:" tiemen'.' 'fence in only these cities has the piece been well 'rendered, and -though the public' haie 'seen It already here, many have yet to see it more complete with the three original characters, and its chief one Lord Duud✓cary. So much for the history of Our American Cousin.'" The writer goes on to give hie opinion Of the play, which much agrees with our own: It is simply that, having read it and Been it acted ? a we arelamiliar with its bearing, lite rary and dramatically, and now simply aro forced to say it is beneath criticism as a whole, while some of its features possess a goodly degree' of stage effect."' Further, ho says, "the secret of its success is in 'the adaptation of Mi. Sothern'si Lord Dundreary, which ho entirely altered from Tom Taylor's plan and idea in every shape and letter; and which, by the bye, ho frequent ly changes 'every night. In fact, as the' NeW "York press 'said, ho has gone entirely his own and 'created out 'of the' merest skeleton of a fantastic fop a whole tnelangf of Maze. lordly fops never seen before in any one portion." We never saw Mr. g othern'a Lord Dundreary, but it could not have been greatly hotter than Mr. Wheatley's performance at the Arch. , PE,OrLE'S &MTH CCITRAL Pollock has announced the following as the People's Btate Central Ocumuittbi: Atax. K. MeCrams, Franklin county, Chairman. Itenry L. Benner, Joseph Harrison, Charles McNeal, IL B. Coggshall, Wm. 13. Mann, Charles ThoMpsPoulson, on Jones, Lruatus J. M. Pomeroy, Peter Faso!, Philadelphia; Jessie 0: Dickey, Ches ter county; Charles Ilitner, Montgomery county; Geo. Lear, Bucks county; Y. D. Maxwell, North ampton county; Dr. Ed. Wallace, Berke county; Robert 111. Palmer, Schuylkill county; E. T. Foster, Carbon county; W. 11. Jessup,B avid anna county • James S. Slocum,Lucerne county; G. W. Soollold, Warren county L. Ullmer Lycoming county ; 0. A. Warden, Union county ; Dr. Paleman John, Columbia county; Charles McCoy, MIMIn oonnty ; • Levi Cline, Lebanon county; Samuel Stoonm,,john J. Cochran, John A. Hiestand, Lancaster county; J. S. Haldeman, York county' n: 'A. Buehler, Adams , notinty; Edward Scull, 'fikrmerset • county ; J. B. MeEnally, Clearfield county; Joseph Smith. Indiana county; Gee. 0, Markle, Westmoreland county,; John Hall, Washington county; Jne. H. 'lllimptoit, 'Robert Finney; jatnes Park, Jr., Goo. Finley,. Allegheny county; Jno: M. tulllvan, But. ler county; 0. P, Roundel!, Venango county; D. A. Finney, Crawford county; J, P. Lyon, Clarion county. Ray. Dit. PONEROY VORGIViN.—Out roadore will remember the case of 'Dr. romerey, , the do fanner, upon whom was practised the confidence or czcnat94 2 , , game, in' gouton, some time since. Wo note loarn.that tho First Ohuroh in Bangor, Ainine, of 174:51iDr.Pomerny had long beennmorn bar, after a careful and anxious invostigntion of his nase;ilirougli. a Foetid of nearly, four, mouths, hive tecentEl:cominunioatml. to' him ~tho .nsartrapda 'of their cordial, and entire forgiveness, dnol Ming him 'entitled to all the rights and priyileges of a member .in goodtind regular standing, and affectionately commendibi him to the sympathy, and. conthienee, anyi fellowehip of the ohurohos of Christ thronshout the ,world. The goal aotioo . was . with „entire 4 ll r.Pli!#tY • r. , A D IT T IA B n L :A O II N LL , IN v D s LAN It A i - , A T D R:A z Yj r o u.s ill: 8 0 . $ 0 1, 0 1 : nr. C : N R : 1001[0.11POU4000 ?IT4frivia • - ' worYtnor, Apr11'20,4840( During a recentirtp,to - WesternNew,York I was made acquainted' ith the ftietabf 'Oilebt the most interesting oeourrenaes that ever took place in that pertkin Staitt,[naintdi, the' treat'Y'infwie by the Gevernmencof, thictinited Statis with the To , nawancla band ef . ffinkeeta I.lnikieni; on 'the 'sth' of November, 185.7—the tint land only treaty ever madoissith theindiana.wharn.their 01 1141 8 4.r.i&lAti to the soil have- been proteeted;.• and where the surroundinglikiteLtepulationAhd.,tha ,offetters of the State Government, have united-in asking the Federal authorities to'permit theist to :remain on the lands of their - fathers, Xpropese to give you the principal idoldOnti 'connected nil the disking pt this treaty, .ttellerrated fo,b*npof cite g,e,n tlenien who was a "patty In the celebrated 'inUse"Of Blacksmith (an In- OOP aleinet;ffelloW4 l , the ;Unitedleititoll€4/ 1 : promo Court decide d that-the treaties of 1836-42 gave.to4o-liblii.gitanteer lAtight 1014101,1MA1111 non ; that possession of-Indianian& could only be aurrenderethapdotthe. *Armament ,itself ; hence tilf , k l cs l l4lfesefits3?,lM t4 B JP?" employed, and the pistol drawn.,agsliztet the old. Chief, Who' eicatily reatilek`wleassliinallt;' aiid therefore-At 'ilifirMid itikel'llinitoiliGrAthe -State isourtsiewhietitleinin sBoO'daindges : to Bt ekag73tis 7 The court aktheastanekintatiffaf Tonawandaswerote : tra. removed ,istair,lhO94?- vornmen, ; should, interfeee ,to ,do,se,„ The O g den WhO'' F eld tge ,proVeMitim, tiPplitid;'aildrttkle'tife iiiiiilent,'aishireenilid a .perertipterykirdekToiltholtineral 'band Kandtuf; the them tuixtautirati, , '-aoon as their trope .were,gathered. , The Etat intimation the Tonawanda! ked of Ode bard fate wee given them in July, 1657, by Gem Denver; (then Cerainie, rimier of Indian Affairs,) iii - perioid, '*b& SUM: Monad 'them' to 'meet him' the absence' of the distingtilehed 'chief, Ely • S. Par ker, -Miss Caroline Parker,' his slater, - acted aq jnterpreter, and did , she, petferm that duty. Gen. Denver promised them each' 620 acres of land in Kenna, the payment of their ex penses thithei, aid stippert for 'a tar thereafter. The answer of the band was: " We have never day treisty,tut have unanimously protest. ed against the setts oilafoot of Tenarranda ; our an nuities have been stopped, and, we have been ha reseed and inirtided nioti a nd white' trespassers, bud we Babe *ever' aseepted a delta's' undir the treaties of 1838.42; and we never tinllehtitegh' starve. ' The alders on the' other - •linservations had no power to WI our home at Tonawanda with put our consent. We ,will never,yield up this spot. , Tell our Great Father. e are now weak, and be is' 'very etreng, but we think he it too geed to send his Warrior's to drive our Women; children, and old men: from this place. Our band have lived here since' Coil made the world, or at least since he made this' ,part ofit. We shill he abused by ruffians in Kan-, ens who do tot weld us to go there, but here our; white "neighbors are 'vety We must be. dragged to ICansat ; the Setteiae Will not walk there." I General Deaver implored them not toaerid this answer to the President, who would be angered at; them; but Caroline Parker, with the utmost cool.' noes, replied; You have our answer, rind this Council is adjourned." The Indian" then appointed 'their chief; Ely 3., Parker, and their friends, John' 11. Martindale Frederick Follett, andWra.,G. Bryan, a delegation,l With full power to arrange or compromise all their' affairs. These proceeded -to Washington, armed !1 with letters from the Governor, Nicholls gill, Daniel S. Diokinson; George W. Clinton,' and other eminent oitizens, appealing to the President to reconsider his steps, and, if possible, to , afford tome relief to,the Tonawanda, General Den ver yielded eo far as to eignify to the Presil dent, in writing, that be had consented that the delegation ask an 'interview with the Ex eoutive, at widish he would be present - if - desired! Mr. Bryan then waited 'upon Mr. Buchanan witti Gen. Denver's, and the other !ottani, and the pr sident granted a private Interview with the dele4 gotten on the next "day, On 'that interview tl destinlea of the seven hundied'indiane ' very moo depended. It resalted twist -favorably. - Proceed; lags were susPended'agaisattheia; and the' Omni missioner was directed to-enter into an; agteismenl With the delegation, preliminary , to anew or retie treaty with thOband. agfeement was enter} e'a" rntaTiCrid - Illial - firth r ii - shererr-arctitr as Or she Government, and its contai', although known 'ty the whole band,' never leaked ...out' beyond the* Until the treaty therein.eontstmlated was actual:: ly negotiated. This new treaty, one of the most liberai, wieei and humane ever made With an Indian pro vides that the Tonawandas surrender to the United iltates'all claim to the lands and privileges in Kan, aas reserved to them • under the treaties of '3B and '42, which, treaties remain nnexemstediso they were concocted! and in,ooneideration thereof, the OnitedStates agreed to pay and invest the suds of $258,000 for thOTonewanda hand. With thii money they were to purchase back the Whole, 04 • such portions of the Itakervation as • this Ogden Company .would sell, and the,band werik willing to purchase; but at a price . not to exceed twenty ,dollars per sere, unless spocially authorized by the President-the land' ad purs - to be' taken by deed Of 'conveyance io th Secretary of the Interior, iii fee; to beheld by hilt for the exclusive pee of the Tonawanda band. The Indians wore to surrender that portion of the Ittl emotion whieli . they could or should not so pui ohne° ; and the - balanee• of such $250,000' 'to b'e safely Inveitedi , for, the heaedt of the Indians; in .United States; stooks, the intereet to be paid them in the same manner in which they now receive their annuities from the United States. Tho.ln dlnne also receive the " Improvement Money $15,018 38-100, which Ogden & Follows were bound to pay under the old treaties, and which money, by the way, was actually paid them in , specie at the Bank of Genesee, Batavia, N, Y., on the, 3d day of the prosentmonth. The band have secured about seven thousan'd acres of their ailment reseiviiion; tit' /re and un iezeumbered, for a permanent home—land not sur pitseed in fertility by any In the United States; they will be able to invest and receive interest on poi , haps seventy-live thousand dollers;, they will he paid regularly their annuities,, and WILL, fttTiZAt, ITN, DE ONE OF TEE MOST COMFOitTABLT SITUATIID AND most: ENDOWED LITTLh COLONIES IN THE WORLD ! Rod Jacket formerly lived at Tonawanda, whin is now the family headquarters of his faithful and gifted nephew, Ely S. Parker, of whom, by the way, Brady last week made a superb imperial photograph. There; too, lived and died the old and honest sachems, John Blacksmith and Jemlny Johnson. Aarunnors, this band are not surpasind by any tribe, of ,red men, Steeprook and Albert Smith having made the fastest time on record. Thus terminated, happily and most adva:ntige ously for this band of Senecas, that long; arduous,, and hopeless-looking 'struggle to inure for thein,i in defiance of , fraudulent- treaties and ineessint at tempts et•bribery, intimidation and foroiblo inttu dons, tho remnant-of that old reservation, fair And fertile in itself, but, especially prized hy those opPrissed — and Oriented son 'of the ' forest. To the credit of the press and public) of-Genesee county,. it can be said that tliey have steadily sustained the cause and rights of this band of rednieni and now look forward to such an ficprovement in their condition' as will testify, that the efforts of their faithful friends have not bon in vain. The following article, in the Orangeburg (S. C.) Soot/von t is a aigoifloant index of the de gree of fraternal ; feeling towards, his Northern brethren ,whieh exista in the breast of the editor : " A rich specimen of a dream is, related by an enterprising member of the Orangeburg Vigilant Committee, whose thoughts, it would seem, dwell, as well during the hours be enjoys in sleep as when awake, upon the importance of smarding . against the pernicious influenced Abolition emissaries, " lie dreamt, he Says, that, being fully impressed with the belief that before a great while longer'the whole South will again be overrun by itinerant Yankees, as it was, previous to the Ilarper's Ferry outbreak, the importance of ridding the country of them naturally suggested itself, as well as .the questionsas to the way in which it could best be done. After a few moments' reflection it occurred to hire that the most effectual mode of aceomplish lug so desirable an object would be to hunt Omni with dogs. but that it would be important to have 'the doge previously trained for the vulvae.' The question as to the manner of training them; then , came up for decision, when, ono -whist, the gb quite novel, but by no means 'void . of suggested itself. It was to take Neal propg .d.„ of Now England rum, molaases„ wooden nutmegs, onions, and codfish ; "mak‘e a deemed:bin of the tabus ; take the liquid, rub the feet of ti` sprightly young negro fellow well with it, and then learn the dogs to trail him up, after giving him soveril hours start. Tim smell would doubtless bo very similar to that of a fullbred Yanked. - plan plafor ditedting Abolition entisserlei bag also suggested Wolf to uttrAbough not while asieeP• Wo think it by no means .a bad ono. It le to om pley spies for' tberpnrpoiejoir a mdneyod consideration.- -As it requires ono Yankee to cheat another, it also, requires one to doteot another when' engaged in . faecal: I,ll'4olloh' Mr 0166 would be In.doing, - In'oonsideration of being paid for 'their eervides.l' , ••• • 0011NyllintFFIT fEIOy.,D Dar.Larts.- I Qulto a iinaihes of opunterfelt gold dollars are in oirentatien In riestcbi:: they ean readily be detected' by the ab- Seib* of the word "Liberty," Which la On the go ti tine in enzall.letiais on tho'lndiaiN'tiiisilidrou, ME= NMI Two LENTS. •.T • By eligrapl thelresi. HOE. DAYS MAI EUROPE, TAE latillied r ' , IIEENAN ARNE'BT•ED4 potpuLny OP Alf litunrimisii4ClST ' TYLE3 - Great to' Aoc6/ - ripiu* the Primal df Waleartinthe • - 1 1 .1 4 1.1 i tb-CanadAL The Samoyatdist,o.V4toon,the-Question of Aninizas lion; CONSOLS ';9:43i050N:3 „,. 4 ” 4.1 .s 1 „ 4 4 4°l, from li4 It p A.d ? of V, 41!*Ad°wn -I•wi Vok' ,pt/03145.:'- .0. ArintrtiOdy 7 e ALL' ,t,tith'' for Bootoinwit*pwrillikiiiilfirit labor, ISA whirs Stusiisy dvelAng. • • • . A gip . wail seed on fine, Aptill.. l ., off the Sellley Ishwids, ; spßirently an-gomencan cottonship. (ter meats were all good . , Siihiiener'Weig alongside of h8£; 34 1: •.1 .ti tr: ;' . Hcanttti nnM. arrestedl ID4aD DerbY,ol443lA 9 1Dr F i ng o k 0,49 ,1 gild,le and was 40. in 9us Until dayittie theAmerlds salltd;When'fici woul brotight before the magistrate. - • . was supposed that the tight would be.ludetl nitely postponed. It was r'ePortedlhat the Great EaStein• would be ready In sail witb_theriquadrou which accompanies thethe Prince of Maculae Ca eirlY iniPuto, It was stated limit Mffibilaner of avtoY and Nice Wouldijote in slew daya'hy whitetail suffrage on thaquestion of. iwatexation: • • The it.. atearaship, Asia, from, New Yor k, Liverpool'on - the Bth. • 'ie atearnehlP Hanka:teat was to leave. South. amptowen the.9thfor flew York, in Mace ef:,the Boru•ssia, _which bad broken her main_theift:, 'Pears; Friday , 3:30 P.14.-aThelferatie lids been i Arm; the rental , closed at: 69f. dbet shout: th e% earataa yesterday. The_ reported negotiations for an offensive auc defedslire trea . between Fronoti' twid Denmark are contradmted. - I The - Moniteur,notioes .that .tbe .ireaty; of com merce with England' hie already began to euertise a favorable inddeneti on thia eXportirade in the! southern 'departmentai and. eostaideraide ;ordeal for. wince and,spirita had been resale - ed.. . Negatiationi are' `geing" cin — tiatireisilionie Naples; relatbie to the emilrof.Sespblitarttroopa into the States pl ' ;tne.Chureh t The result wee noti known. The Turin - Opiesoria gates' that; to ;eight or ten! days, the inhabitants.of Savoy and'llioe *Rivets' by universal suffrage on theluestion . of annexation; to l`rasmo. Three divisions of Gederal 0131dini's ttoopa have; taken position in: the; Romagna, Palma; apt bio-1 delta. Ferrate, Bologna, and Bayonne, are eel •Profeasor De!attire tea® been appointed Al extraordinary at • London fur 910 MOZI, Confederal ti° 4lelioderid'Cointaii hue addiewied a 'elm/tier toi the Powete who sigeed the -convocation, for wOon4 MADAM, Tl2oll(jay , svenin g l.—Thn lintels a deoree'degrading exi; Ortega. Elio hall been oaptured.: Traitquillity prevent/everywhere: Australian advisee are to the 18th of February Business continued dull.' The paiteiil 'dletriotift suffered 'from' drought. , Eher - mining-intelligenc was eatiefeetory. - Copper remained-Arm, - and demand at £lOO per ton. Melbourne mimes announce the suspension o N. & R. (intheridge, who wirer intereetetd In th Geelong and Ballarat Railway cordrante. V.BRY LATIUM - • [By Telegnapfl Le. Queenstown.] LONDON, April B.—A despatch from Rome 3d received asps GinierilLeinoreeie was received at therVatiesn. - ! Sardinialtenelabor the- political prianters of the -lectkll,_ oretary of the Dane Basins had en,e/tinal: A din/patch frOta ,Floretatec4th, - saya the sixth enders .of England and France Mite ,taken dew their eienteheons. . despatch from Nisplea. 7th, says ,the oftioild Gsornalil , NoPfdia atudlimetil thatthe raharr at Palermo attacked the Royal trdopi On the 4th[. The idols' ware dispersed. - Rout GtOvzole , de Roane has the ao poiritment of General Latanrioiere as ConimandO- In.ehief of the:Royal-OMB.' r '• -The ofloial tslsertitie of the two cotital da news up tote sth, Mar, the effeetthalthiethf - Stant lion hail 'been litiPpresiaid; 'aniibisthiate eon:shit in the and teases:, The Instated -tisisse-hisiatheileuturiLpet beep - - • - Commercial Intelligence: - vastpoot i April 7, 31160.-41:e Brahma' and oche Livorpoc4'ireulars were poblished on'the afternoon df the their contents:telegraphed t4 gildsman's , seen.ln seon or the North Amerman—The Markets liser all closed 'on Good Friday: and alga to-dat.' 'There consequently' nothing later. The following Owlent ditional information we can gather as to the lave 1 and London markets terminus tb Felder - - • • la VLF keel, rit.QV-IMON Maki E;T,-.ltietusrd Spence, & co. re nort Pork Meetly with a terse busihe io old @Meng 6a. Beef steady.. :Bacon steadY6 Las dull and nominal. Tallow deohned Mole. Butch* 56*6d®gls. - LON bON IifARKETS.-..Baringe. Circular. published on the evening of the 6th , reports i ts money Market slightly easier. Consols for money eigetti,i, and far ac ril i tiff:32rbut steady. Iron steady at lOseia lie for bot h rails and bars. Buhr dull and easier. bet anon/mum onohanged. Aloe irm. and ,All qualitoie slightly higher. Tea" quiet at la ll ddels dd. • Choi* Turpentine firm and , alightir advanced gales at ass. Coffee km titLe, gales unimportant.. Tallow quiet at ode on thol spot. • , , Bar .16179 t, 'a Mid; Dolma nominal ; Vag* . 'the bullion In the Bask of England had deer • H AVNE MANN Navra Cotton market was doll; saws, of the week INS) bales t stodk i' Port NO' bales.. New Oylekvi man,onhapire 10116.- dttio bar iiii73 . Bt tiro; atiii,iiridrglilni L ariet. 'Tifieriru ' R. Co 1 fee firm. 011 s in tittle mmitry. and wipes weak. mi: Ri :-:: steady. Lard Caddy. wh*ebone, quiet, bat tenches ' i uP 2l4l. i tioAN SECURITIES.—Baring Brothers tehort H. fl Payee declined to 92; ftlassachwietts five bones Iroelo2 ex-dividend; Maryland five, tends Mead; 'Vir ginia sixea 1881, Slefd ;.do fives 1888d:oft ; Pennsylva nia fives 83; do bonds of 1917 Ed eta ; Pennsylvania CPII - RR. sbareittaU; .New York Central es • ens 89E191; do sixes Meg; Illinois Central abates etchseount. Boil s r. Bon report an average business, without quota ble chnge. ' United' states sixes, bonds 1868, Merl; ditto fives, 91%e92t0i ; Alabama fives, bonds, Dian.; blarylavd fives, bonds, ' Meet; Pennsylvania five} . bonds. 102gelet Ohio sixes, DM. &7418,3. Petneylvan a fiveB.Bl4B6 ; Virginia fives, MS, 82.x8 , ' Al l ontreal size 666 , 80082 i, litinrca Central 'sevens:lB9o (freeand,l 89e ; ditto sixes,7le79,' ditto tevene,,airogo ; Michigan Cs - 91 tral eights. 1969, ttleB3 ; New York Central sixes, 86 8,1; , ditto sevens, 92e98; Erie • Railroad sevens, fi t mortgage. 90091 ; ditto, second mortgage, 81082; dittt ; third mortgage, men; Brie ockiverilbles,29oso; 'tit ditto, 1865. '102.0103 ; Pennsylvania Central sixesibrat m(02080.89290. LATEST'SIIIPPINGIN tELLIGENCE. . t Arrived trouuNew York, Holland, in the Take!. ' Arrived from New Crienos, Amanda Spear, ,at Dart mouth; Lantashire, at 'Trieste; Cerro Gordo, at Havre ' • Jormit Olark, at . Pimple!. i Arrived from obile, Martha, at Queenstown. Arrived from Savannah, Juntas, at Liverpool. Arrayed from Apalachice a„lonian. at Liverpool.' Memoranda—The Robert, from Liverpool for Graven ton. &there on the Welch roast, has been got oil and into Heir head. ;owedi L IST OF ratiskriomits. Baroness de Kagnleira, Mrs, de Zee Bermudez and maid servant. Mrs. Hall and child, Mrs. Saminds, nurse and two children ; Mrs , Miller, Alm. Mason, Mr... De xter, Mrs. J. de Count, Mrs. J. B. 'Rimer, Mise S. Spar rat. Miss Rohulta, Miss Chews t Mies Hatcher. and Miss 14perrett, Bev. R. Scott. pr. titling, Dr. Pinknev, Dr. Liviageton, Bev. D. B. Niche ,' Messrs. P. de Zee Bermudez' and male servant, thiminds, Hy kerstita,R;B. Forties, Holders, basher, Casa, Lola. Carothers • - .Lo - ery . Kell. Ballastro. l'acheime,Thas: IllekettiPick p, iv J , - 11 f °Donald, D.C. Balker, G. P... 11 owse.o.l. l i d: Lot is, J. 91. Laing. N. C. Gernsev. R. Cried, Jno. ,Mors n, ' Dirsado, Hatcher, Then. ReithboUrneßutton, Gee ge Tappan, SeWard, .Mitimil, Wilson, Peter, CarbUgal, Parker. . . I . . , . • Important .I.!ett or from Gov. Walker, , The Covode investigation hue brought to light a private letter tuldressed by Governor Walker to the President, shortly after the former arrived in Ken sas. • A considerable part of it is taken up with notices of - the physical features of that Territory, its temperature, and the like. Mr. Walker,beglus with some rettutiks on the different pointed orge)g cation in 'Kansas, alistifying: them into (1). hes- State DeMoorata, who number 0;0004 (2)- Republi• saw, 8,000; (3) pro•elaVery Democrats, 6,500 ; 1(4) pro-slavery Know-Nothings, s,ooo—malting an ag gregate poulation of 24,000. All of tho ' drat party and' most - of the third, ho 'Says, . are with him : the other's are mostly in opposition- Had he not taken ground, in lis t onugural, to favor of Beth mitting the Constitution to Aim people, the L4is lature, be says: 'Would oertainly nave' oatmead a sOmplete code r f laws, and could hive put them ut preattoat operation by the popular will a large majority of the counties of the Teritory, and they will do the tame thins next fa if 'the Constitution is not submitted to the poetise. Th is is of course, all wrong. but it would have been done,nd would hate united nearly all the - free. Btata Democtats with the tiepublieene, and rendered a Waif aOiliineiff l ir sae a tedious and stingutossr elan war inevitable re quiring the active services of trades in a large OM rity of our counties certain. When yourecolleot how, any hundreds have fallen on both sides In the late Melt ar; hew many houses were beret; how poach nrePerty w as . plunderird, and how many were the insults antrivu4e: you may find the (muse in part; 'Bet Winfield ese is Wirier that a prop-slavery Constitut:on will be or y a minority upon the majority. The number of *biotin in Kansas is probably about' two- hitildred. it, biting e.ti- , mated the two hundred have been taken away *nos the test se v ere winter." • •—1 ..- •,-, - • ' I The governor-then, proceeds Ito elaborate, his " Isothermal " theory, and state its affects on the extremists' of 'the South. -' ifweensivars theta a miserable faction, whose attaeks , would, onO the - whole; benefit himself and the,Generel Adminis tration.. After declaring a. asiond time that; but for his inaugural,ralvil war *Mad have been raging throughout Ktinsaei overwhelming the Demented° Harty, amid 'overthrowing the 'Government' irlf, he coademns the appointment of Judge Wi ll a mp se a great, injury to Kansas--done " uninten ion ally,'' of ,course. , Prom this point be tarns to the vote east for delegateito the forthcoming Conven tion at -Litompten. The aggregate, he sayS, is ?2;1.00 out of. 9;2slvegiatered -voters. Be -dotes not believe the former to be . the whole pro-slavery' strength in that Territory, , Though ", the 'Mink Republicans would not vote, - and the free-State' Democrats were kept froth votingby the fearlthat the Constitution would not .be • tubinitted," he be lieves thatgod coneerVative Constitution la ,made and submttt o cd to the people ) ",they wilt vote next fall, and wo will neared ,with a great deal, of, hard work.".N. r, Ecbting Post. • • LWourieen judges are to be sleeted iu the ptate of Vtrenta on •the ,fouithattxadsy of Mei next. The whole number otetrenita and circuit jut i l , tes in the State is twenty-one.; .So th at eleptiona 11 be held this xear in all. but seven. • The oitc44t•jOgest are eleeted for elght years, Sad are required tope at least thirty yesrs,of age, Bqeittek thtle. there aro, five judges of th e Pond, of'APPl*Arho are ,eleoted far twelve years, and who , must.he:4 least thirty-dye years old. ERE= 'I7IIE-Airk...e;m„talt-1313aWk— ,_ efts 111rAzipq PH's: a t m :ma to ; maiteper !lima, in "LH " '46 ' , Yin " U " *AO Van U« - - Tweets e. (iisaigiblio soot Tvestr Cowie". or aver"i -- • Oa: Mims , ' . • -1 q/A4palogibter4pipl4rTrAq-'l7. * nil is Fsrs I-PllllaPiriteArrXol. VqrktP°PArt°- 41erill*"" Ca Tai joitt --- ' i ng' EU: lamed HeinTaii Cililbtaii; Steappra,. Ciaaxle,ton ugat 10 „ 1 _. D DieBCUIPTI,9W „ Op Zllfir7l7 OC!,TiOY 41 11 , , zniaiii'ax=rnif • vnitii-;aist iinottei stisrustm--fms ammo's_ wisri sum) :walnut ssisaggps AssAsz•AsitFN Asps, posissisyssmat CONViNTION.-•rape CALM Paitatkrin TB* Illeget: 14: Tait . .t. .Clasathilero.ll,B: 11;1860. As Cllsrlistosi is soon. As rbe thermos* of,iter httPs, the, greatest. ,and, most .irisafient,pothileal caucus eves Winn Mil &unify, a leeeription of the olty and itipilopleflita~phialaiy open your a e °l3 Yelltba ber.resPowdellee. `titian Viet Petweoa the AWAY sod Coapf . Melt to - forinThlatieston hasher, how in one litketta ihraighlo Theßnisrono•W to the cows , '_)ThekregelAlet eleeett , 11,demAlevel, he the sewerage,ot the oilis by • meani Oculist - Tuts Vstehr ot veryoomehrte` aryetlialtAnshed...l IL is , sntg dentttir thatlllotthAPittion.ofihilmo deig*ld *water ne tw o rk 'Minna' visite tionstaftiitiottlioretirla chisel:. As lost; ha. ,Mrer • as Gm Riot hatch jokes "Ge roitytellesseetsdaed oentkanes so ,prolitlp,.of miasmata. and mites 114 the loWlsirids hordinfig *Ashley, 'and' *wow [tient et:Aflame to br tryGeer, re key,- iteetrtletio, will OttaZiselcuelleireritrea the Seasergs sip log r o gl oeyspatharrottio. The presence of iftoalever Itefe - fi 'GO Gn i eittionorhen - the wit meshy Waite& mese laytir Gioia Ginter, `Mocks, perhaps, forever seem as an i whitsole to thejobbieg ir4of Cheyt.ff hone tau ' •as mayfienOk6bldilalestomme' dead. wee TOP 4 Ai d t Bl° M o offlistweq l Oftglittaall anewof ver • Itidireb dohneeted : Will the niojobeid elstera of tidal drain/tars two artesian wsUit, Water *OM finished iilrtady,,and , tae pt,ting In lodes pleggeter The ',feline* dompleteil Setnetwelie ' hundred feet deep, end' ths' wittit• emit thirtz ini de mi ll above the'rearksocit .1 1 .8 f 0 1 141% w i teM t lia t iV l S t4,411"11,.. 4 eel S eil l drink izg l" .. Z,lts: taste track hiVand, far, Mitts first quite disagreeable. Soda and iron-Jure principal. ingredients. It is held - in Very hi t g eaffinicdoil by the'bitizens•iii scrofulous affrotiona, for rhiramatiate mad. woe canna:lotion. , It la of tradicat ;rique,for the 0911 - -03.11011, .bur . toidlea . hire fotuAont, to Giffin : tense eatishottOnl • ' , • • • 2 , billca tkbei glefet filvf Ithieltil;Pßeffdire.okolPi and which many of your readers rearasprin, a earns poithin of the ottY has been Sebulket Witt with* was before of; Woody ? Though of made sminateent strionion, the Influmme of climate has given i k n rite l newer' houses an ' old , look. - unusual re Ifs cities. The son sir very hot Get the brief '6 receive isT iletr -, lbaking every, simanteri and their bright red sooseliumges toden. brown, The sun also has way of blistelneethe faint on'the holies and hooka, and unlese , frequandy-tenewittf an old seared Intik :soon fall* ..oniol tbe eleteuladie lott . face. !lanting roofs otoluld With ti lt ' V slate ' resided perhaps' introduced bj theold rehab Li rallies ISo were the irah wattlers,jmeabine, with the etreamsi ngesabove ißosttii9ms4 tit make our town look antivated. _ ' The amount •of biger g' traumata -L od daily hi aharlestoe'deting Ate intaltrehis ousonneest fhe,nember of letters pass * tiuhujja. the pod office is' evidence - or this fan . The rush' at. the opening of the . principal mail ' hi' fillY:eftnal te ui inessed New Pak. r Bohm" *alma end energy, can hardly Tail of a - rapid, andlarge for nine acre, if utited ulthlibiltaly Ind PillatTetal6ll. - The maseiard of !eaglets andmoriatry lefehasies tonitverylilgh...• A strangerfentlet fat Who Pro" foetidly impressed with the superior wood anier and gillet *hick Pre'vail'on , flundaye. Ever ybody dogma •tO 'church. and to. hear 1. favorite preacher; fur whom tie is willLg to figh t - ter_ Pflib according to oireumatanoei. You ,trati - ftd here .he bluest of•all Piesbjfertins; the ittinikehest•cif all ohnrolimen,. and the . most entlindastie 'Of all WO/ 64 4 , 41 1 1 4 0 1 4 1 E 1 , 1 0-kW Ptioular deno, ll4- tin, and a pert - sadly well pos ted op thersikfect of the nioraf and•religions proprietiel of +slavery: ' A parmn,withottl bit wines le an anomaly. Steak logpf regroes l It is but fair_to say , that the shaves here'are,.. tide general thing, fed and 'treated; Bo far via - idraliagerfoin tell,: -bettor than the eon. r0V1. 0 4 1 06 ehee at 4" h 4 10 - 914 /I"dir. 4 1 '4 , tat, guad•natured and lazy, ali appearance, happy. 'Perhaps they do' fame` Am the sweets Of i fretakim they have liiTer. eat thaset the gad , * teased of the Chartedon Year fats in the month! of Jinnary Mid lehreary.. The plait ten bring their yrivteend daughter/IM. then flar • short, inter campaign et,thothotals, and th e hand soMeat and richest tidies' of the Btilta - are itenally wend in Veen - darter-I:fief vieltywhicla it the mooed ot third in litabroary.t This le - the AMID to complete the matches Inipui at theeßSlmPs the pre vious summer: • - ' '-But Chirlestondisnon braes- anothef sight. No to filly ladies not! swee2. l ooll4ns4 °nett& ler ndore`of the " Mills", or thi • " Cuarlestos' with thw fib slag fuldearof their graonfal robin; no hand collie bawlz howbuipgiwbout. the Onion ,wasititig for their belles to Jon them in their. strolls or the carpets are now ieinoied; - the parlors ere filled With beds ;- Abe- bedl.rianni i. tann ed Wig egreatdoemitsty ; Ithe toDilikar• poem is sontutittees,sne the:req. !tipper 'Awes is wirtioadeCitlth , e. pay here , " whign," staring yoti larpfedbiUy :Weise IseArnitievbe=psspostr littricd WWI FOP can TOP 194- . The... Wood delegation hate' taken a tart' till Owned by tiro tft:Andreir's Socfety,lbr ;Wide they pay 41X - bandied deltas's:at during the sitting of the ,Conyention. Seventy-one .bedsteads, m l h chases' . and piIIOWN _hare to aii,y landed from the doh ooner - oit which thy' Podia, the_ hem catererhave,-ti free . segrs.-islo amply the food for - these gestlaws, ~perhaps, havi the beat and the , oheapest satommodatioas to bo' had is the city. •The otbeallew York delegates nave talon rooms at the Mills ktoties,-at Ave del tars pet day. The Kentucky delegation as alp-to int found there. Mr: DOuglas Is to he entertained at a private house. His intended heat has not been much in political life of late years, and has not such a • number ;of political :friends as to render a friendship with the Little Giant undesira ble. General :Lane • has taken a house in St: Mi chael's alley, which is. to-day bring set in order by his friends. It is understood here to-day that Lane will not be present-thet he confidently expiate the nomination; and though Charlestonians know no more about the matter than you do, there it very • decided- impression abroad that Lase will dually suconid. 5o; that be must beat any ftepiiblican candidate nominated atChiesgo. , - The to-day runumally quiet—ft Is the palm which precedes the, storm. • : • Yours, - P. Seventh Anntial Y. - M. C.A. Convention. We have received fiern 34111'1gal:4eMaker, Beg., corresponding secretary of the Yhilidelphia Young Men's Christian deaociation,' who is the delegate from this city to 'the Seventh annual Y. M. C. A. Convention at New Orleans, which commenced its sessions in theCarondelet street Methodist Church, on Wednesday, the 11th init., a brief account of the opening proceedings of that'body, from which welearn that associations from - nearly every State in' the Union are represintauf in the Aorrvebtien, and' that the 'delegates have met a,meet - denital wolcomo from the New Orleans brethren-- . Wansaisker was unanimously "chosen to act as secretary of the Conventlea., The following is the New.oiiiaes Delta's report of the opening addrese , to the delegates by the Rev. . J. B. Wapvir, of that city '" It bad been made. he said, his pleasant though unexpected duty to tender them limed hearty and cordial ,weloome. They had ettane,, come of them from the,plains of the Rio Grande, some from the banks of the St. LawrOnee, - some from the far East, some from the: mighty West, inddionte even from the shadow - if the dome of the national Capitol. lie congratulated them on their safe arrival, and he wds glad, Mit they - were here.- They tame, it is true, from various lag:diens,: but, as taChriglan or ganisation, they knew no North, sto South, no But, no - Witat, but loved their, - common country from ocean wave to.ootialiwave; and for the preservation - of the institutions of that country theyiwould labor with men and intercede with God. They came, too, from various evangelical denominations, but they looked upon them all as laborers • in the same good canoe; as coming -out of the same spiritual Egypt. Forty-flve years ago' there bad - been - a great gathering of young. mania this tame city. They cant" sunoss the. oods and the, prairies, &crate „the rivers and the awiinps, with their ' true - rides 'and their 'booming ettinirott, with theft- stout arms and valiant hearts, to protect the booty and, the beauty' of New Orleans. And nobly did they perform their work," hurling the n,ithless invaders from our - shores. The weapons of his bearers, though not carnal, were yet no, less mighty. They oune with the sword of the spirit, to , angst in the great - enterprise of pushing on the triumphs of Chrigittnity. They Came not' , wrath; -but in love, and their watchword On-earth, peace, and good will to men!' ' "Ile was glad - that they had &Mae. , 'They were needed ,inst where they:wire. This great city was like a grant jut wisking.up _from his lethargy. It Wee still in its infenCy., But 'already the - annual :Valiant' a single - article 'Sint from its levee was more than a hundred:millions of dollars. Lines of ocean steamertwould ere, longeonneot us with all the leading ports of 'the world. Millions of people troleld 11+e eloing these-shores. ' ThOusenda of young "twin would lock hithir to push their • lecteldly for tulles.. Under mob eiremagal7eil t retie= like thitse'were needed to eo-operate greak .work Of convergent. They were the - teernittree'offteeta and the fadvanee pitchable( the , theureh.. - gait tez th e hotels, the boardinvhotutes, , and the hos pitals, they might,',whilet they' relieted the" wants of the body,' whisper fo the sett that itwie not all of life to,live, nor all of death tq 411. •-• "The great'rlike-thatinlieliy eui gathered its waters loom,the fresen mountains and the vast pralrms; abet:hit& the eindribittions Cris thousand tributaries, and drained -hall' ,Ittentinent„ Thus would their confederated association, deriving strength. Ind influent:is lreidtbe - Ainited e power of individual societies, - praised in study grandeur on its great mission of Christian charity. " lie bade them ,vreldome, 'and' hoped; in con cluding; that their fmpresgenaof eurpOople might be good; that thelriendship , now formed might be lasting, and 'that, when they went forth from our midst,. it might be with it'Uoral flambeau in their hands, tq shed a lustre over this world." tar A remarkable instance of the rising appro.- Siation I'affOrded by the recent agile, iq r to i ndon; r a:; ! solleeillie of the works of comprised about one hundred of his Scarcest pioem, on magic, travels, adventure, political pamphlets, and temporary 1 . 04 4 of which mareewoOlberlsvy sordid bh fbund. It was bound up In 1-2-Tommes, of various sizes, and brought Ala extraoidinaryprice of 'IASI; or more than $2,000. • '• •• • - N Ism!Meese MOIMER.—A correspondent of the BostonTrareltrr wirltea_tya r ton Ilhursday evening a man In Woburn, ItEMI , rim? Lid 00101:away and ruined a poor y 014441, was met .0n ShWatreet by the mother, win floared,blW With a Oeirlide till he ran, then po:suediliik;:atikeolUrined.tha castiga 119nii11,q4F9041fM YOiMat 11 r. .