142. .;•.( . , liviLas6l44o,flnOTTATh*:)=4,l l , l r 0 0491 11 .;A: , *Mit: : rqrai*CtWfili , e*V r af/ 4 . 10411416 : 6 9 *OF** ibilliktgkal OM Clier Ist Urtisite - POWADataass ima-,lll•Ess lionotal fasitliks.tiow yea*: llitointartairatilairlsath yamiii• Sid shoo enierol. • • ' • • • sokkofrakiaiiit'ai• boa .1 1.1 W4l-47ERLE.Y-44 , 0 Of 1z 14 :04. '',-,116.1654111LW UMW' • - - Starieirrobwrox, vissiiirir ever uiporend. w.orongti. innoioduain* eiee is kplerologitaivort baiadoreim • LE 5711109 WARitiklith dam ~ ttt i a M o n y wissimai O.4II,IVILIAI.9•I**AIign. Noir-Tork. - . 8 401;int i ' UA W °, 11311/180° P 11 Sp ns catiormrr az. (*MAMMON NEROUNIS 7011 Z ULM OF -- PHILAD PIAPHIA - MADE GrC)ODEL . 4 ` WELLING. . OPEFIN. ler -oxisTstrr Iowa; OW! 00 Marin feetirtioan AIVUERICIAS ‘ci1.001)13 Of ellesdial asekse aid ut gross twisty s roprrs or arArtwoor PANdY mum. si:ooasuOk Ara : isuiwit' oirgrucei (16A104611 *Nap: CIDIMM.TIANS:IIWBIIIII,ium Npuisins i Utsi ',hi 4 F.t% t -•P r. s. ramnrcar .ntamr. • usual. ' < , auArooi,inxtrition, puoicam,) miry ousniassa . AND /CUD iOIIAZINa. ' *n14111.06 UNION'unIMUL Trig% , GLVE.= , SPALKaNtrt$ PREPARED. , G,L4JE,I i•N ITITON TN TJ*N IA WiNNLNE." - DISPATCH 14011 nix imam!, . As maims *Au heragh-alim-,* filaustskiset 04141iititt II Via l iedl s W NW , 49.1.A11, eirromfastvair Sermiipaidie://voistavia,ww. OinArap _ BPALDINWif GLIII assliiidl sok traiross4s4 sass basiolodit lila affbrd Is bs witbost la It is Mims mai 44 sr ttolltS,stisk- Sss stint. Thais Is so Amor a asassaitf los litssiss_ ilbstersd mists. botillas dolls, and brass ft aims to studs for gam. *W. sad odor sessisastal trorkkisi , sstadsr with ladies of raisaissat ~laradaltallsslNrat.!;1.:•7•••7-7- •• : - 1 ' . :93' - - ':..._-.-; [ _- - ,..jAiii. - • 1 . MRS Vir L -pi , i pr. • .._ ..• ~) „ ~. . .., . __-_...„•,,,_-,\,.. . „ ::,.. 41. ~ I °M N - it't,dll ..'- •. , 44 _....... A ..,,-.www„ . . .:. • --- -_-_-_______ - • _.,...._. .......,. ~ - • •• • ~ .. -..--.• - ,--• ::-.,. .1.,,-.. _,,,--..„,.-. - , , . .-7-„--.--........ -_,- .--. . . ~., •...... • -;,....... , . --.....,...„. :____,...... .„.„_.--.- , . _ . , ...._ ..,... - .... 1 . _ - _ - . .7, . • •, _,...... I . . .. , . , . . . . . .. , . • . , . • . . , - • , _ MANTILLAS GAS FIXTbRES. pIIIIADELPIIIA CHAS-FIXTURE WORKS. WARNER:. MISKEY, & MERRILX,„ lILILMUNACTIMM. STORE No. 718 CHESTNUT STREET, DEULADBL,PHLA, WARNER, PEOXLK„, T& 00., 'No. est:BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Would resPootfullr inform the public that air, confines to manufaoture all lands of , . GAB MUM, LAMPS, outoiDaus, • 'BRONZES, to., &a And that their litrge and varied stook comprises the eimplestat well ae.the most elaborate patterns, designed. by their Frenoh artiste, They also keep at, their Mono, fio.6T9 BROADWAY. a large and full assortment of all their manufaotnred goods, Dealers and others are In vited to call and examine. , • apid Im LOOKINO GLASSES. LOOIII LASSE PODTRAIT AND PIOTURE REAMS, ENGRAVrisTGS. OIL rtuinxet, to.. to. JAMES S. EARLE & SON, imrolinuts, MILNUFACTURERS, WHOLE SALE AND 11.11 TAIL HEALERS. SMILES' GALLERIES, 816 07aE8TICUT STRIINS. BARDWA~tE: pf3EY de k?EFF, • NO; SON NORTE THIRD STREET, Rate now In stores most oomstete stook of HARDWARE. of tate tumottetton. sod Anteriesa menufsetere, whiob they - of le the NEAR TRADE on the very best wrists. • •,- - - sve-fm WATCHES, JEWELRY, Re. BUTLER & 111cOARTY. N 0.131 HUTH 8130010 9TREE7, AMERICAN WATCHES. GOLD AND SlLVira OABIIO, AT TIE LOWEST JOBEING PEWEE. abb-tenvill . DIAMOND STUDS, PINS, RINGS, &0.. Carbuncle. Lava, and Etrvsosgr, r,, fa im various am - Ity 4F.1,14. Isla 22 aril/ 81. x Street. a ICE PITCHERS.—A GOOD AS SORTMENT of foe hellion, of varioaa patterna au aad Plated ware, of all desoriottoee 0 ifIldaETA, meet - 2 2 North SIXTH Street. F INE JEWELRY, • 11*P MANUFACTURER'S PRICES. "Jr: P. DOBOSQ & MATIVPACTIIR2IIO AND 1MP.3211.7111111. Have now ors Pend • fell assortment or met Pearl s Pearl and Jet, "%trace's, and Isnemelied Joyous., or the beet ene -N l Y. itf. • Ida ORESTEUT STREET, aszepetraza. Alen, a lhil assostment of Plated Were. ... • S. W: PEP R. Edliirtaseee thartnPEtendent. PAPKIL'HANGINGO. Ira ---CLOBETTatitiplEttikl. BAEZ /10/041911:Ingt, & TIO. 822 ORESTEVS SKIT. Will melt feet. ththash this winter and nest ming. their large stook of • • ' PAPER HANGINGS. rerlatths of every variety oceneetedwith the iminewa AT GUAM =WOW PEWS& • IRE MINOR PAPERS AT SO PER CERT. BE LOW 00nT. fumy wanting their Houses Papered, aka set great • BARGAINS, 13-tt fiEWING.RACIIIt4EB. WHEELER it WILSON SEWING MACHINES. HENRY COT, /wet, Oa CHESTNUT STRUT, SECOND FLOOR, Rubino, with Open Mora. on 'nue to Private PealUlm. JILPCH 011111M2 I Wept STATE Street, Trenton. N. J. CENTRAL SQUARE, Beaten. Pe. ift3-/n WI LOOX & GIBBS' SEWING MA CHT.—Tbio groat and i4oroaaing demand for Wiloox do ' Bertrit&Aaohino to 4 guarantee of ill Tarr me Imo. Fnoe sao. For sate at FADE- D 11' Softie Waialeale, 711 CHEBTIi UT street. matt DIEDICINA.L. WilOriCi AN EXPERtENOtaI t NUDE AND FEMALE ihrtimaa OO eree• THINOSqt. to the etteatioYßOT n bono her TOR ONTLDREN TEETHING, whiakt i greatly facilitates the groom of %nothing, by !awn theln:t radon/mall inflagnaron i WM elf. 11 , v i tnet So Rig a tEAT P lr l at %ALS. Deems *eon ltonothsto, it will give rest to yonreeleaa „ i ItELINF AND REAL= TO YOUR INFANTS, ' le hAverat4 op ak4 iota : tato article for oPer ten tivraufr4 4-4-611 A. 7- Anddruall or ". all Vr t E OS Di , 4AD m itt, Em. ism lAA t. 4 ow an customs of Jam by any tine *hp need if. On the coo an are 4alithan trt tb ita uperations and speak terms og highs. ...- ndationofits niagi , oale eoltanAmedioalvi %. 7 tielirie Meek in thli wafter what we it A know , "after ten years up or maps.and pledgeonr.... reputation pir the fulfil- Mout of what we here de lam in most every ftiMsoe where the is to lelnierilltFr om pain on -Antinartton. relief will lw , took in niteen or twenty annum, Ter the syrup to !..7 nunistermi. i Tar i m L i. Ore l ! , C 4 tTelh7foidia ea fl w *ad co end uwe mod with ". ./ e rtrelN i lgli _OF ooze, ' It rmk_i_ul7 . Dv Lrn! hind front WO. te,t ,In h " tows*,, corrects acidity, l A7 r:uwild rei r itro t lirelVirTHß iltitraff A D IND 0 OIL en ' dko enigma eon fir 44hI re It la A tteittl reiniLie e d 4 Rd i i n teething b i L ' h a tt a E r, G w ° , , 71 - leti ri n,ria b ird or from anypther ~... awes. We would say to *very MINIUM who eye. hits suffering trom any of tie foreman' complaints, lig do not tet your prejudices, eI T i t , Abe ies. die ßli JilkO d ell try lf ca. o o the i ra tiv er to n d o bei v :v m ee tr n e 4gr i medipine, if -...; timely used. Fuedirso- Vas r at t i l l oOcin .i Pact each bo_ttie. Noma MN- $ll MOO Of PORTOI & I"E.R- V i gel4. l / 6! ?f_p 0, ,I. 1311 the outsi de wropner. - sajd by onierhronghoat the world. Frinoi gal Off*, No 1.3 AR Street, new York. iriao NI foam a tie irSA-4 , . , . • - PRINCE 'IMPERIAL OIIA.MP4eNE.• FROM DE VENDOR. & 00., EPEANAY. DRAVOIg. Bold by all Deageotable Dealers throughout the country. This hne brand or CILAMPAONE, whit% until tel vast year wee confined exolusleely to the best tables of the Continent of Bemire, has now &Awned the most unbounded sueoess and mummy ttuecountri. It is ribmnimprlded by some or the brit phytoolans of be nit) or Hew Vorg, over ettother wine., on account o tra e; tram gorily ILO those'', and toss who once try it rarely use mey' o Or 000. Although only one year nns elapsed sines i introduction Into this country, the demand in enormous and constantly increasing. Our Wange manta are suoh as to insure the quality of the ine batag maiatalaed at as present high standard. Pomps Impenni is imported iolely by lA, we being rze t e *gni* of Fp f e . ni t i All o V i Nkstlit ; k Oo ( ka tht, gpi• Oa. r 0 2 WW W. 4) Bold Due y REEVES & DELL, sehlt-em f uO4 MARKET Etmet. RUPTURE TRUSS, WHITE'S PATENT LEVER. Adjusted et NEEDLE'S, TWELFTH and RACE Streets, Philadelphia. W Sand fora Panishlet "1911 enhat-Sna MARTIN & QIJAYLET iisTAmoNEFL, ioy uk kin Fein SOODB g / tr WM MAL/4 STIR T, IA h 61.1? IMILoW ILlVillit i, m 0t. ..0 T 0„ blind rwrfillllo7l , Rflr+AL A rtffm. "1311 , 110 VISIONS. —Hama, Aides, and Shoal deo. of vitriol's Ingo& I also; Alm Pork, 1462,, Peg, Asitsislsl peel for sale by O. O. SADLER & 00.. A ,m ?ittf.t. RON 11111; ,I;MW Or" Front. *TM We — by wrnsmual *, lIROTTIVA. r.. 10 17 slut 4. North SIP ei MD PO. •XTENbION TABUS ARE tiCiW Stddt vorc r lAW VIC•II. at EL PREEzvoi Old em. 1.0 TM. Ritrowt. 1101rACIE-MAKING MAOLTINEfi Ma tem. . r .rttir Oisyeilfgaiads Brici lkil 6l 4tl4lviv Th. 4114 1 f01 *OA • • • te4ll PHILADELPHIA, 'WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1860. 186 0. . POURTH SITSET 1860. CARPET WAREHOUSE. ABOVE CHESTNUT STBar.ST; No. 47 SPRING IMPORTATION VELVET, BRUSSELS, IMPERIAL, THREE-PLY, SUPER INGRAIN, MID VENETIAN • OARPETINGS, OIL-CLOTHS AND MATTINGrS. JOHN LEMON. RICHARD M. BUNT, somm Ilanufaetnrer, Importer, and Dealer. OLD ESTABLISHED STORE, NO. 39 SOUTH SECOND STREET, ' ABOVE CHESTNUT. TOWNSEN.II3 & CO.. SOOOESSORS OF SAMUEL TOWNSEND & SON, Importers and Dealers In VELVET, BRUSSELS, TIIREE•YLY, and /NOBAJN • CARPETS,. Of the beat EnelLehnnff American make. MATTINOS, OIL CLOTHS, &0., &e., An, Toward:l attention is soliorted. relltamfralm CARPETING. GEORGE W. HILL. - ANUFACTIIM AIT T R o k s I : III..IN oANPUT WAREHOUSE, 144 NORTH THIRD STREET. SDIO-1m• PhiLdll/Wa. MATTLNGS!MATTINGS!MATTINGS 1-4 white and °hooked 64 4 . •. 4 i Mattlno, 6-4 '. .. . For sale et lowest °ash priees,bT REbVE L. KNIONT; 982 South BECQIID Street." above EIPIt ti OZ. Weft WO. GOODS. BONNETS! BONNETS ! BINE 0111 P BONNETS, , BLACK NEAFOLITAN STRAW EMIR, BLACK Ropqn AND READY SONNETS.•• THE VICTORIA BONNET; NEW. LINCOLN, WOOD, a NICHOLS, m7l-tf • TBS CHESTNUT Street. . FlliENOki BONNETS , Of meld importstiott. • •LIN FRESH SIONTUEREI AND FLOWERS, Jot rsoeive2 by LINCOLN, WOOD, it NICHOLS. 746 CHEMOT Stroet. CHIL.uREN'S Goolis 1 Every Style of MAW (tom. TRIMMED AND UNTRIMMED. BOYS' STRAW RATS AND OAPS, LINCOLN, WOOD, & NICHOLS, 725 CHESTNUT Street. 186 0 . SPICING t fOOK 1860. One of the largest and Most complete stadia of goods in oar line in this country. Th. beet tame - and the cheapestprim% a, H. G-ARPEN &I Manufacturers of, sod Wholesale Dwain in, FIATS, GAPS,-FURS", SILIE and MAW BONNETCantankl i letr e 4- •""'"" " 4 .WelirritErr, whir +••••• Sixth. fey-tae MERCHANT TAILORS. E . O. THONIPSON. TAILOR. N. E. COR. REVENTR AND WALNUT STREETS. Clothing made TO ORDER only. A Fine Stook of Materials &me oo hand. N.H. 'elating the City are, solicited to leave their ine4eeres, apri-tat GENTS;FURNISHING IxOODS. PROCLAMATION 1 1 1 R. a WALBORN & CO. Nos. 6 and 7 Nort BIRTH great. tilloonttnuetheG 44Taircnit,i,'"atF,har Okas rArthond intend to continue there forever. or at least until due notice to given to tne contrary. This an nouncement 'swede m order that our numerous pa trona in this city and elsewhere may know that their or ders, adddrossed as above, will always reach its / wheth er they happen to use our gdverefrement is ow news pers f r the time being, or not t Please out this out and paste it in your mem roy random n. . l-If lr W. SOOTY---late of the firm of Win e.• cheater & goott• T OORTITLEMESt'S FIITHIBEt- LNG "ME and Max MANVF4OTOKY, hit p . Street,(nently °spout*** etude Rau%) 3, W.B.W world rosoootfoll call the &Untie of his forum -patrons end friende n t our ral otor, ore owed to sin mato _Tot_frt itTtl at loft. no oe. , A mitred fitonarantted. Who mils o awry .1 IS too Shiita and Collars. TO FARMERS. rffospiwrio G . 13 A 13 0 PROM SOMBREROIRLAND, WEST INDIES.' THE RICREST FORMATION OP PHOSPHATE OF LIME KNOWN IN THE WORLD. It oontalna over le ply oont. of Done Pbonohato of Lime, beini 50'per °ant. richer in Flioeplate of Lime then Done Duet. FOR SALE BY THE TON OR CARGO, AND TO FARMSBA AT $lO TQO 2,000 JOS. B. HANSON & CO. Bole Mentz In Philadelphia. mh94mw-9ni No. 30 NORTH WATERlitreeL PlllO FARMERS AND GARDENERS,—The n utbsoriber has now on hand a iftrile lot of GEN V INE POUDRETTS. of II superior gurality, whlati rll be sold at the lowest nub snow. warrantod to me womilsolion. I will In ell isms warrant Itsquality. Wlll.' l Bernd etreet. one square above the first Toll Gate. °Moe, o. 12131YOrth tieoond street. above Franklin avenue. hiladelphis. apll-Im. BLINDS AND SHADES. B. J. WILLIAMS. No, IS NORTH SIXTH STREET. Is the moot extensive mannflotmer of VENETIAN BLINDS £NI WINDOW SHADES. The largest and &nest assortment in the city, at the lowest prices. UMW SHAORS made and lettered. Reesirina eromptlk attended to. aP43al pIITLADELPHIA WARMINPAiIp VENTILATING WAREHGVEiE. NEW GAS-CONSUMING CONE FURNACE. Thu Warm-Air Furnace hos now been in me in this City and all-parts orlhe Lining' states, and, after four years f trial, th ey' have wovbd IA be the srentest Remo mixers o F fuel, and most POWERFUL HEATERS . aver 1110 d. ea huntlrede of' refereneee will D im,. co arid see them, et ARNOLD & WILSON'S, 1010 CHESTNUT STREET. E. M. PIELTWIILL, HUD% mlat-eBculai ENAMELLED SLATE MANTELS, Manufactured from Pennsylvania 13104 %tene t and enamelledand marbleised In inttatron of the nee est and moat rare iSfyptian• 'banish. Verd Antique.flientlit, and other desirable Marbles. Thar are lushly panehed, e .,11 not Stain or disocdor )017 " 1 40. fi r , Eimp..., Nß .1. tones as strong' as 'Marble, an aye m sheave+. They have been axed In this Country for the last fifteen and in Europe for the We forty yesnr, lest eatisfaction. Architects. Buildern. and_ all In vr4nt Of mantels, ehnuld not NI to eXIIIMILIe them. Manu factured and forego br ARNOLP do WILSON.. 1040 affEMPT BTfl4E'r, P. M. Fatamtzta o Enlladelptna. Talfir-14W3171 B U AGMS TROUT.` ~ VI A 4.I4D , fiIAL. nn r r ir,.__ 4 7 t 'Woe Drawl kt o rk , ararialloast ' p kg 13 surly' On and Sk e i ntil s ' CAIWETINGS. BIJOOESSOR TO rEittiLizr.us. WFMNESDAY, bfAY'9, 1860 LITERATURE. Tug POETICAL Njatt i fthlr p t7,,.....E T 1L Q : Si l m C ieli T ilig: Boom t Lic.le, ° Brown, as' Co. ..vnilactelphfa: 8. Renard, Jr, Robert Southey would have been considered more highly as a poet now, if he bad never written any prose. Many years ago, wher. we made his eaquaintance, he admitted this, consoling himself with the thought that Scott was In the same predi cement with himself. "Undoubtedly "The Lay of the Last Minstrel," followed by " lidarmion," and " he Lady of the 'Lake," placed Scott among the inetii pepitia'r of British putd-r'but the Waverley Novae Made a wider reputation Bir 'the Arkisto of the North, and his prose was eclipsed by Ids poetry: Smithey wrote prose most admirably--so well that It kir.lanbtilil whether Witt= POglidi was printOd. ' . • the %amid Jeremy Taylor, ' Oddly enough, ria s noi we ventured to remaik this to him. Southey lesletmi Dust -Rebhan wrof ~ the hest English writer eg,dati.tizast+—brosiosei ifie Monti .Sa0 11 .• :lit Ohba; Solitiwt, per Cobbett, nor indeed any other Hog linft isOfer with ordinary edueation and brain", *wad ; anhatitute the manufaetured . word donate tra lb!) pure Saxon verb 'give. 'it' hal Amen , °Madder:id' eniedient to include Southey, in the eemplatosolteetlon of British Poets, from Chewier to Worihworth, 1 3 0 1 , In 0 9 , 4" of PliblieSilen by Little, Brown, .Ir, Company, of Bon. ten t aiready exeemling one hundred volumes, eat * *Professor Child, of Harvard Distversity, tritis taste and judgment. These Poems of Southey, o" ea ten volumee, are embellished with a poirtrilt of the author, and enriched with a hio talkiest profane by Henry T. Tociterman, One of the' Woet competent 'and Judicious eritios In Arne vita. -This edition contains the autobiographical introduetions to the collective mica of Southey's Puma, published in 1837, and not only every line In that editkip, but also pertain of §opthey'e Poems which , were not published in his life time, Mentily , --" Oliver Newman," a New Ragland tele, and inlet° infeoelhineotts poetical Romaine. Here, then, Ip en attractive form, at 'a low, prise, and with , a completeness which Ws not yet been ao oomplistied in England, are the whole of Southey'e Puree:: No collection oaa -be complete without Ibis setiie, which will be followed by the Poems of / 3 9rigi-kra- ?bailor. NSW Are *RICAN CYCLOP,IRDIA s A repular Die ' itclet r e l r:rti Ill e = i s s_ K rly'll.l 6 o : : i N. d B'4. G t }l l 4l.l to Joao UN i . Pp. 784 Neto Void; IL Appleton fa Co. -Plirlisdeivhsa : John No Vadat'. The steeds- progress of this great and truly mai- Hanel, work hoe realised all the expeotations formed of the tioVand talent of the editors, the industry Of the ntfinerque oontributors, and the pecuniary means or- the pithitehere. Thin last kr a main item in the autitint, for a vast amount of money bas how invested' in tide work--enough, indeed, to set tip in inuaness hall'a dozen Moderate booksellers. Shortly after its eornmeneement the Paulo same on, paralyzing the means of many publishers, but the Appletens held on to the enterprise, and have produced .weeeseive portions of the (beloved's with great regularity. The ninth volume, com pleting three-fifthe of the whole publication, has jut been kneed, and a careful examination of It show,' us that it even surpasses its predecessors. The contributors to this volume are numerous, and fitet-olsag Welter's are Meng them. Two Philadel phians are un the list; Charles G. Leland eon. trlheites the articles lopon Heinrich Heine, Huns pets, Red Dirioh yon Hutton, and Henry Garay Baird the blographipal notices of lured, Charles Jared, and Joseph Reed Ingersoll. Dr. Francis, of New York, 'writes the memoir of Dr. David Hauck; W. Gilmore Simms, poet' and novelist, thit notices of Arthur P,, Limo, and Robert Yeneg Hayne—the lest being the South Caro. liaise with whom Daniel Webster had the Mernoraide tournament of eloquence in the United Stsitu Senate in 1832. profeeeor C. 0. Felten, the eminent Greek scholar, has supplied- the article on 4ierfieF , at *WO olessktal, aritieal, and eloquent' 0121niett O. Hasewell, of Boston, ocuittlhates largely from Illittletorbalandhlographioalatoree. Pintas. usstrirr - s. - areeliw...--a,-,4, sreeinnttarseverat -or the mere bhportent legal articles. John Estem Cooke of Virginia, appearsbere as biographer of Washing' ton Irving. But we might Mt a column In par% tienlerleing the crack articles In this volume and their authors. We would direst especial attention, for their npmplateness, to the artloies upon Hayti, Hebrews, Hievoglyphioe, ilintiosten, Etistoryi Horse, Horsemanship, Hudson Bay's Terri- Wry: DeTid Pater, Hungary, IlYaregraPbY, Ice, Ichthyology, Illinois, Indian languages, American Indians, Infantry, 11RO:hien, Ire. hod, Italy, Italian Literature, .Tanseniats, Apse, and Java. The lives of eminent living men are numerous in this volume,—the publlo more often desire information Mont the living than tie dead. The highest character wo need give till Dyclopenlia le that its editors are ant ; mated with an honest purpose to make it, really and trtly, a Diotionery of General Knowledge, , entirely free from sectarian, partisan, or personal favoritiim or enmity. With this purpose they started, and they have faithfully adhered to it up to the treeent time. It makes the work reliable wad Our. THE LIFE OF STEFREN A. DOUGLAS. Rs SAanta W. PRIM:IAN. 1 VOI, 33 MO. Nero York : Harper le. Ett l tbas. Written by a competent Ana sec/04104M Bon* tleman. will acquainted with his subjeet, this hi. ography ofthe groat Democratic Statesman supplies a great dad of accurate information, personally ind politlouly, respecting the antecedents and pre sent position of Mr. Douglas. The early chapters, treeing tie commencement of a career which Is un sullied b: a single error; are full of interest, and "point amoral "to the youth of this country. Ilia course thing the last six years is described WV and spirledly. Altogether, it is an able and an honest bok, Mr. Sheehan, its author, is the die thognishe Editor of the Chicago Times, a De• mooratiojournal of deservedly high character and large Initenoe. ARCTIC ,DVENTUR R RY SSA AND LAND. from the a trhst date to the last expeditious in /learnt! of Sir Join Franklin. Edited by 'Kees Batman?. With maps' si 1111190st:ono. tool. It mo. Easton : Brown ik, Tagerd. This rume, in which are condensed numerous voluminss works upon Arctic Discovery, comes before Copulate at a time when our townsman, Dr. Bar, is about starting upon a new voyage, to "unwind writers end unreaolled shores." It is a rell , ritten and eatisfaotory summary of all that has 3011 done, from the earliest period, in the way of *tie Discovery. The book would be all the bettefor an Index. Prefixed to the narrative are two !gee of technical terms peculiar to this navigatli op the toe, with explanations of the same. I good map Of the countries round the North Pe, and numerous wood-engravings, well execute:land especially well worked into the letter pre, add conelderably to the value of Hole book. FRESH EARTS THAT PA ILVD THREE THOU SAND EARS AGO: with other 11 hinge. Dr the author (.. The New Priest In Conception Bay. I v 01.5125. .Barton : Ticknor* Nelda It is i secret that the author of this book of poems the Rev. Mr. Lowell, brother of James Russell ivrell, one of the beat pants and mast ea ; compiled scholars In this qoontry,. Coming from Boston, hero carelessness in rhymes :memo part of the petem of Versification, this volume has been oefully examined, and we find In it only two impfeet rhymes—shcire and are, on and done —whiehassures us that the Bev. Mr. Lowell thinks well of the art of Bong, as to believe that, when do, It should be done properly. The poe tiy whiche hag here placed before the public la earnest d thoughtful, with a strong under-oar ent of redone feeling, The opening poem, from which Cheek takes - Its title, is fanciful and olassi eat. Throble lyric, " The Brave old Ship, th'e Drient, , which eorsoludea this eolleotion, thrills one Ilk the sound of a trumpet. The poems here we been written, we perceive, at intervalduring the lest eighteen years. Yet, for the set part, one feeling of devotional thought eau be led in most of them. Our especial favo rites 'tithe followieg : A Communing with God before ierizsg into Holy Orders ; Dirge to a Soul , Departi; Burger's Lenore (a very close and epirltedersion); A Rhyme read by Two Lovers, and %noble Ode, already mentioned, on the wreck dhe brave old ship, The Orient. This last, fried, is a magnificent composition, which any pp'might he proud of. pIogruRIGAL AND v ol. , ilr Ep4riiin I , w,tkis FirktlMAN. 1 Vol., lim o. Note lork: dharineribner. Mr. Adman was almost unknown, as a verse maker,itil there appeared two pieces of his in th e Nework Trtenne.—"Tlto Diamond Wedding" an d a adted ballad called " How Old Brown took Harper Ferry." The firet of thee° excited a, much enition as any occasional production within our resection, and showed the author to have a keen see of the ridierdoes and me small power of maple asressipn. fie lass been compered to W. 4.- Dor, whose l ' " Nothing to Wear" has man y »d points, but rather reminds qs of the write the, Ingolleby Legends ; for Mr. Butler. p ar ptittea more take rhymes than any writer wo 6 J. RI-, Whittier mceepted, while Mr. Red atr in this hook of nearly 200 pages, bee only iie bad rhymes, vie : tea and hese, farfher and ;her, which is Cookneyiali, and d'itat and star, slob Is a trifle worse. In "Nothing to Wear," t a (pogrom, thosi era ever thirty had thylneei e the Ingot:10y Legends there are spaniels any. 'Bohemia: a Pllgriaiage" is almost a good poem. - lit measure is a pliamat ono with a ring of nets sto in its refrain, but the ,subjeet i 5 1 .44 tie, for the "Bohemia" of New York, which we presuine it sings. is commonplace, low, and vicious .compared with that of Paris, of which the other is a poor copy, Much finer ie the ,Lori poe f in;irt . blink verso, On Penelope, which reminds us, not tm piea4titly, of Tennyion. Finer still, is " The Freshet: aNew England Idyl "—natural, touch- Ing;and truthful. The odes, "To Pastoral no mancerand " Glimpses of Haitian," are also very good. But almost the best poem here Is" The Ballad et Leger Bier "—hearty, genial, and lively as it is ; Worthy of having been inspired by gener ous Burgundy, imperial Tokay, princely Johan nesbeiger; brave fleekliiiiner, Sound Port, golden shorry,•old Madeira, or ripe Canary. The ,man whom Lager Bier could exoite into thus becoming its Laureate, must indeed be a poet. • We learn that 3., 8.. Tilton & Co., of Boston, have ;in She press a book for boys, showing hew by in dastryt, perseverance, and applieation, a bity has }Rived himself from a low .station to one of the highest in the gift of the- people., The subject of the work is Gov. Benke. It is written by Rev. 41.1Thayer,:kuthorotsoketah of AmosLow totk entitled 0 lipor 20,14106,4404110 Prince.": , G. G. Evans, of Philadelphia, hap • paid s§,ooo, 'leis said, to Mr. Ingraham, for " Tbe .P,,rinoe of the : noose of Daviry , and already his - 7:000 , more 'eopios ordered then lie easupply ' From Peterson 1c Brothers we have No. I (l2mo, pp. 96) 'of a now work, to, be issued in monthly parts, by Samuel French, dritioatio publisher, New Vorit, ontitreaTh Arty' TesYn 15f. 'a. Ploy Goer's Journal; or, 'Aisnals of the Newyork Stage, (ruin 1706 to 1948 i with biographical sketches of all the principal "porromiers.p; This Stet portion comae down to the summer of 1803, !Ls written in a very sewing* rnenulrt iiiTes a great ! deal of information, and holder out the promise of a satisfaotory, useful, and fair record. Samuel Hazard, Jr., sends Wows of the City of Philadelphia, printed in cobra, vie : Phila delphia from Camden, State House, Girard College, Chestnut street, Rxehange,% Caldera iletune, Mint, Penitentiary, FainnonntWater-works, and Laurel !fill Cemetery. small deecriptdro pamphlet no- companies the aeries, SHARP WORK 114'rmi Itoox Triaba.-7-Tbe enter prising house of Rudd & Carleton have in press, and will publish next week. the famous lettere and corms piindence of Humboldt. They will confirm the worst fears in regard to the infidel Character of Humboldt'. belief. There has been quite a strife among the book. sellers in relation to this publication. But the ecd has proved honorable to 'the alai:Minded' character of the 'lrittle in this oily. :Ateeare. Rudd & t•arletou obtained an early copy of, the German edition. A German .oholar of the name of Rapp 'agreed to translate the' work and makait ready for the printer in ten days , . In the' meantime. the, Appletorieliad purchased the ad vanced sheets 'mid were about toisfue the work.. .IAO they agreed to ,yield. it up to #l gdd d Carleton on the payment of :44b the sum paid by the Appleton. This was done. It was then found that the Harpers were all reedy to go to press and they had to be stopped. And as soon as that house knees that Rudd & Carleton had InsdeAnputitty -of fiefid and bought ofi' the Appleton., they gave up the field to, their- young rivals. ,The coast hems clear. the work was put to press and will won be Milt: 7 4 . o3feet ..Teinnett. A Strong, Loud Voice from Delaware. (eorteroondenoo of The Prem.) • Naas WllAcoarox, Delaware, . 7th May, 1860. You will doubtless be surprised at receiving a communication of political oh erector from one who differs with you so essentially, both as to men and measures; but the truth le, sod in this respect I may be peculiar, Bite to die:pectinate my ideas tbrongh ehannele of doubtful, if not adverse, pro clivities, in order that they may receive the con sideration of the thinking mon of all parties—hence select The Pre**, in preference to our own papers In Wilmington, The subject upon which I propose to write is : the Charleston Convention, its action and oonsequences. Your special correspondent gave us a general and very correct idea of what was going on in Charles ton, during the past two weeks; but the 1114rcury brings ns, in detail, all the proceedings. The Democirate of Delaware, and by this expression I mean the vsei, of the party - the thinking, Intellect. teal, and bimet and sinew of lt--as much as they in dividtially admire their delegates to Obarleston z , do not approve or - um - conreeFor Woes - who seceded. :They think there was no cause for such action, 'and that Delswees should be the last of the Southern States to 1183121te a portion Which would ^virtually pledge her Democracy to sus tain a sectional candidate. In 1818, our pub. speakers, without eVeption, , opposed Mr. Fremont because he was not the nominee of more than half the States of the Confederacy. lie was, emphatically, a sectional candidate, and our Mende, here and everywhere, invoked the spirit of the Father of our Country to protect us against geographical divisions and sectional parties. The response same from the hearts of the people, di rected, doubtless, by the spirits of their forefathers, and Mr. Buchanan was elected more upon the ground that he was a national man, and nominated by a National Convention, than that he had any particular and peculiar elabcce Upon theDemooraey of the Union. The South, which mainly elected him, first opposed his nomination ; and the North and Northwest only yielded to his claims when they were convinced that the nationality of the party could thereby be preserved.' How do these facts contrast with the notion of the seceders at Charles. ton? I agreed with many of thorn so far as men Were concerned. Men are but instrumenta how ever, to, (tarry put fundamental principles, and the people ef our country only ask for and want honest, conservative, and rational eandidatea. They want men who will reflect " the Union sentiment," and neither bound to the heresies of the North, or the vagaries of the South. Delaware, of all States in the Union, wants sueb.men. She was the first-born of tho Constitution, the oldest yet smallest child, and will be the last, when her people speak, to secede from nationality or Confederacy. Did the States which remained in wish to deprive Delaware of her-just rights? No: Did the Convention commit any overt act—did they do anything anti-Demooratio, or which Our people could not and would not endorse? 17o t Why than, I repeat, did they secede ? Not because the Convention violated their faith. Not because it did anything objectionable to them, but because it refused to do exactly what they wanted. Is this a justifiable cause for tioceeston ? You have de nomiriated one of our delegates as " the great se ceder." Re doubtless is entitled to this honor to day, having needed from the National Convention, and, afterwards, finding himself to doubtful com pany, seoeded from the seceders; but ho may pos sibly have a reason for all this and with great anxiety his constituents aro awaiting that lesson. The seceders of old were a numeroge holy of Pres byterians in Scotland, who seceded from the Cow menion of the Established Church about the year 1733. The rules of the Church were not changed, nor the rites of Communion altered, but the sece ders had ideas of their own, end would not eur 'render them, or remain in the Church unless the Church would eneournb to them. Thus yon,see that our two delegates from- New Castle county have a good:precedent for their course. In your paper of the sth inst. there le a mistake. which I hope yen will correct. Yoe ask, " Will the DemOorats of Delaware In:Wale the course of &miter payard at Charleston, in leading his State out of the Conventicle, and In heading the move• meet against the old arced of Democracy ?" Mr. Bayard did not lead hip State out of the Conven tion, nor did his State leave the Convention. A majority of our delegates remained in their Heats, and two-thirds of the votes of the State were given by Mr, Saulsbury, until the Convention adjourned to Baltimore. They thus aided, not only in keep. tug a majority of the Southern States in the Con. ration, which was essential to the nationality of our party, but saved the counties of Kent and Sus. sex the trouble of falling Conyentione to send delegates to Baltimore. Who Now Castle county will send In place of Messrs. Bayard and Whitely, I oannot say, having very little to do'lrith those who " pull the wires." but I hope good National Democrats will be 10- looted, and men who will go with a epirit of com promise, to do the best they can for the unity and eueoess of the party. It has been suggested, (Mr. Bayard haring cold that the delegates who took seats in the Beooders' Convention could not re turn to, or 'meet the National Convention at Baltimore, if his remark in reply to Mr. Barry, of Mississippi, is correctly reported) tha§ the alternates appointed by the Vehr,-,ary Con vention, at New pestle. yenta become the de legates. 'ate, to say the least, is very doubtful. The alternates are good Democrats, and clever men, bat when Mr. Bayard destroyed his own right to a seat, did he not exhaust the power of the Convention which created Ms right? At any rate, such ft question might be raised at Baltimore, for unusual scrutiny should be there tumbled to keep. the Convention pure, and hotioo I hope a new County Convention - Will - be called at once, by the ehairman of the last county meeting, to be hold at early in June, if thOitgh It ba to send the alternates chosen Ity thelaskionventin. This consul would probably give eatisfaotion to all, and harmony is Wb at we want. Barmen) , in the De. mooratio party of Delaware, is neoessary for too titles. Harmony, in the Demoorittio putty of the Union, can aloes drive no the adyanoing cohorts Of Mack Republicanism, and Bemire to us the thlrteenthl'retridential viotory in the nineteenth oentpry. If the Southern delegates wlio seceded at Charleston bad remained in their seats, that harmony might now prevail, the Democracy be a unit, and her solid columns advancing under the , command of a good netlonei, oonservative man, lad one 41 Who ItaOs to build—not boast a generous moo." Dinawanit. TWO CENTS. Letter iironi ie.Lzek Blehstrds.” . Worreseondeace of The i'reeft./ • WaesinturOa; May 7, 1860. ,Ite I write, dererion Ii• vie tido trii g bis long expected epeech on tie'canotie relsolutiOns touch ing:We-protection of slava In the Tefritories. The chamber is full, and the gallerial contain, 'on the one side; an attentive, and on the other a beautiful and brilliant audience. ,The °optimal Allah - 4.nd fluttering of fans on the part of the latter and " better, half of the auditory Clrßil considerable impediment, at times, to a complete bearing of ihe dietinguiah ed potato!. This misfortune is likewise facilitated by the manner of the ItissisaliplaW. Ills voice, generally senora& in Intonation; is mistimes jerked into an alternate series of high and low tones —like the teeth, so to speak, of a vocal hand.saw, which continually tears' the 'auricular sensibili ties. If the vocal accompaniment. of his manner is irregular at times, its .personal. or elocutionary aspect is deoidedly effective. He is esieodingly, earnost, even I fallacions, and tolerably refieshing, Asteu ,theitigh intolerably stabheirrt." . .lle . 14ks, in 4 , 140116mM than ulna]; and sada efp,Saki iebirli as though he felt druself the leading Man of He. tion, and in theglorions, but temporary spasm of - , bitteiffhtreara;Hust the day's .prOceeskiag, hoe which he. tikes ao'esaptiatie and °Weedy; madam a lead, may be fraught with, (Hamel disasters to the very motion to which he litOyftp kds,bigiseet and &west devotion. You will not ospeot,mebe give a roiliest , ;this remarks. As the chosen: Menthipiece of the Gulf; State conspirapY agehist theilit:ef •the bone and sinew of, the National I:4oseevairy, I can find little in his speech to particularly 'note. It was the old, "ever-spoken pageant of phrakel,atedirted, of course, with the .brillittrit and etfootive . paraphernalia so obareoteristio of the ex-i3ecretary's mental, ward robe. The connection of Senator Davis' name with the seceders from the Charleston Convention, the re port, that he is not averse to the doubtful honor they would confer on him by an empty nonildatlon, and the ednsiderabli sitillatitibetweettlie banana reioluti6ria and the rejected plattbrm of Charleston, created considerable Interest anions the politicians congregating en -passant, :jot now_in_the city. Therumor, likewise, that Denator-Douglas might Ina it necessary to say something in the shape of e. reply to senator Davis, added much to the oars. sion by attracting many of our losicidectual citi zens and a litre crowd of ladies to the Capitol. • Outside of the hero-sweing and hero-worshipping faculty which Alled• the galleries, the interest of the subject of Itself was suniciently attractive to the members of the-Hones of Representatives, Proioinont on the door of the charcher wee the Speaker, and groups lined the sofas on all sides. The aspect of t4o men present, is very,tmggestive. Toombs looks as though he thought •the whole scene unnecessary, and, while politely ratnalniug In his seat, evidently yenta, it he were Waled (or curet) with the deafness of Sir Joshua Rey nolds, shift his trumpet, and only take snuff, • Senator Fitch has struck a very Imposing atti tude of enllghtened'and philossophia attention, and retains' it attenslderible pain. Attorney Gene ral Black, who has taken a seat nest to Senator Chesnut, uneasily bites his nails: " By the pnoking of hie thuiribs, Bootee:arm Wicked his way •oiimee." Brown, of Mteeissippi, and Cling an, of North Carolina, having coved together, bars a sort of devil-may-oture conNr, evidently not thinking that the _eminent colleague of the 'former will vet the Potomaeon fire this time. Senator Thomson, of New Jersey, who, for a long period, has, like Tom Moore's beauty, " seemed to sleep," baldest arisen in the middle of one of Davis' most forcible een tences, and commenced strolling abent,"a waking procile. Gen. Joe Lane has been in an elaborate enthusiasm. Breokinridge has been calm—very calm, reeling his head, to la Boater Pension, on an ivory -handled cane., ' The RepreeentativelTroM the Northwest wear a oheerfUl guise, and Senator Douglas, calmly re clining le his, chair, looks bask the threatened storm, "as the rook does ocean's spray." Among the crowd on the floor sae many members of the diplorriatto corps, among whin:lll(i Russian min- Isles le Partioularti noticeable for the interest be :Lakinthb.debate. Brown, of Mississippi, said a few emphatic words in reply to as allusion of hie colleague, sud Clint man hes now arisen to address Chet chamber; but I must take Clarenoe hiangen'a advice,, "watch the clock," and close up. FHOH CHINA IN Yuri - T.Bam Osva.—A clipper ship arrived at San VraDOIFOO on the 20th ult., In forty-six days from China, thus showing that it is practicable for merchants In the States to receive advises from China by means of the telegraph and pony express In less than sixty days. We copy a few items from the China Chronicle of March 3 : "The Government of Memo has lamed a notifies+ tion that after the end of March next no passport will be given to the ships sailing with "coolies for Havana. MI the vessels lying at that port are en deavoring to getaway before therinnounaement is brought into force. "The accounts which have reached us from Amoy detail atrocitiea that bid fair to rival' the worst days of the Inquisition. The brokers and agents engaged in the coolie traffic, are subjected to the most terrible retribution at the hands of the CM nose authorities. Crucifixions, beheadings, and mutilations form n category of punishments in itiated on these Untutored individuals, which would put to the blush the most refined Atanipulator in the Inquisiturial ages. "The accounts received frem Japan are very unfa vorable. Our relations with that promising coun try are carried on by a system at once dishearten ing and pernicious. There has been a murder committed at Yeddo, and suspicion points its finger at the Japanese officials, but evidence cannot be brought forward to prove it." lITPLUDOIIELN TRRltlieliT.—ln the comprehensive scheme of new Territories just got up in tho'Committee on Territories, of the lower house of Congress, there la ono project of peculiar interest. Is is that which proposes divede Dc ootah into two Territories instead of ono, and to in clude in these two all that part of Nebraska lying Borth of the Niobarrah river, which is a tributary of the Miasouri, above the forty-third parallel of latitude. This would leer* liebinelte with about the setae area as Kansas, while the two northern Territories would contain each about one hundred and thirty•ftve thonaand square miles. Of these the tat therninost, which the committee proposes to christen Chippewa, liar between the forry-sixth and the forty-ninth parallels of latitude, which are, respectively, the northern and southern bounds-, ries, while it extends from Minnesota in the east to Washington in the west. It is in the issue range with Washington, northern Mieeesots, the upper peninsula of Michigan, stud the northern section of Sfsine. Remote and wintry at it is, it has advantages that may make it, in the oourse of a few' years, a very' 'attractive resort for end gratin. Includ,ing within it the whole of the great bud a the Missouri river, it nt fords to settlera a naturalchannel of tra-' vol and trade through Its Interior region in comparably tine, while it has also one of the very best of the routes for a Pacific) Railroad, being that surveyed by Governor Stevens. _This mete, fol lowing ,wost the course of the Missouri, has the. advantage of wood and water all the way, and is, besides, the Morten of them all. Snob is the that extent of this interior region that even this new intbdivision will need, in the future, much greater cutting up to bring the Territories within the ave• rage site of the Atlantic Stake. The hyperborean Territory of Chippewa would probably have to be come day split up Into two States, the one eastern and the other western. Washington will be under the some tmidity, just as Oregon was. So that we seem to be in a fair way to have, before the lapse of ten years, a whole range of esteem* Northern States above the forty-sixth parallel: It will probably surprise many tolearn that Chippewa has already from .8,000 to 10,000 inhabitants ;, yet such is the statement of the Committee on Territo ries. It includes the Selkirk settlements on the Red river of the North, which are populous and flourishing, and alto a number of trading posts, government forts, de., scattered through the valley of the Missouri, THE " DIgNITY or Buy' Ntdoens."—A slave's speech on the relative standing of the races; and the superiority of slavery to freedom, Is reported by the Vatersburg (Ye.) Express, of a late date, in this wise In front of the Central Warehouse, a philosophi cal darkey, leaning lazily against oneof the wheels of a dray, thus delivered himself to a brother John, who was disposing of himself aitallarly "All nig. gem onght to feel de dignity of bean' niggers, 'oept free niggers what danno• what dignity em. Die minute Pm 'waif about fifteen hundred dollars," and he gave a demonstrative gestnro with his left forefinger, "and a heap white folks can't say dat for deyseivos. Now der," and be pointed to a " gentlemanly vagrant," " is a white man; ho non/anti turn hisself into money to cave his life. hiere'n dot, be ain't wuff nein, he &ulna nuffin, and he won't do nuffin. I feels de dignity ob de lack, anklet's what makes me say what I do tay.,., Ate USPROPITAOLK PINT or Wataxar.--A ease hoe been decided in the Court of Commonlleas, in Champlain county, Ohio, which is a loud amnion to liquor sellers. Peter Lawson sold to one. Peed Drub a ,tnt of whiskey; Brush get 0, intoxicated and drunks" as the law atates it; Brasi l did furi ously seise an axe, and with fame and violence - did cut and ehepeff the loft foot of hie wife, Afro. Brush. There is a wpm Rod salutary law in Ohio, giving to wife, child, parent, guardian, employer, or other person who shall be injured in person, property, or mewls of support; by an inteotioated rweon, a tight of action ageing, the person who sold the liquor to tho lob:Winded 'person. Under this law Mrs: Brush toted f.arrson, the grocer, for MHO damaaoe for the loss of her foot, by moans of this pint of whisheY. The defence alleged that the maiming was the re" stilt of a domestic quarrel, brought about by the unchaste conduct of the wife: But thajudgmvery properly-ruled-that immoral conduct on the wo man's part could not forfeit her claim to legal pro. teat* and that the law considered ber drunken husband as merely the instrument' of Lamina - in cutting off her foot, and held the latter*, truly re sponsible for it as if be had done the ,act with his own bands. The jury, therefore, found 'a verdict of *5.000 damages against Lawson, and in favor of the abused wife. 7 '+4 14 14 • 4 ,aritiblk irel Ds isu igss mes t" , (parownis, ThrileCofhi. " " *- #.OO Ph'. *** • ..a cob Ten: " 12.00 Ito es• wadrissa)2o,so fto 111111rma of S. Twenty " Ttn;ntY Cowles; it Dior" oach Ihdotoibord 1.2* Fors Club of Ty:pity-MO or over. iv trill mood ika WI% 0 0” bib* gottovuo of t3etant4 Sit^ Too Vr NtnizzYotozsisuPlugo soo Totosologt to oat loydsonto to: vezirolllllllA PALM booed Beau-Monthly in time koi the Califoudo Bteginere. Response of tbe Referee to Geo, [From Sell's Life in London.) - - - We hoe* taken some panto treed out the actual state of the ease as to the strnute at the ropes, ' when we were forced out of our place by • the creed, and also as to the fact of ilasnan's is - aving strack' the eeenzda of Sayers alter the bottle wits virtually over, and we am Informed, by gentlemen of position, who were present, and who bed o n er , portanity of seeing, that once, if not twice, white Heenan bad Tom on tlwropes the .letter got his , kneea- on the ground; and was lifted np again b- ; the ' , 80y," and main held .In his vicious arm. /f, Oita were the ease-yned - we g ee not the e g g h t „ est raison to doubtita trotho-dt is a fortunate thing •. for Reenamtbst the referee was prevented from teeing; for, had "he witnessed this act, be must bore decided against Reasan. •By the ram of this ' ring a lin & on both knees is doom, and if inter- feral „with „after ,that event before " time? is called be is entitled 'to the money. On the - lathed point WO boasted,: the statement of Manton: • -1 mild to contr./41ot- the testimony of 30011, twenty or thirty gentlemen, besides our own reporter, as ,to Rednan's having stinck down and Iticked'Jemniy Welsh, and knocked - Elvers elf ails second's knee, I AS !Dl* kkking Accustom, thorrhipace it not con. - Cinsive, hut in the oast of Welsbrand the Champion - ~wirhavinis doubts 'ettp4bitil Lewd ire doilis , boristed theabocutt Ip,Sealieelllatorretetf.Paper, dad to below, Whilst wriittem. by Mr. Wilkes, of rrairs'Sentle of Times: Thafaceount any s : -- ",/feetiettAlleblie 4 sca ts thangto - obssitf not. - Or would not rile from his seat corner, and his seconds refused to award him the victory that ,bel'onged - to'him; by throwlirg up the ailvanced upon fibrin the midst of.bis seconds, and. etrack-bits where he ash% 41:bis-admiesiostiapa--r‘ tamount to an acinaidedgateut, of defeat by arow bloii; and yet lir:Wilkie eallstrefivel-Iltoparlial a Bogjiahmen, to swath, the belt de-Heenan.; "-Oro - . own opinion or the matter is Ellie,: that as themom were fighting in a crowd without any order or regularity, and as Heenan WM ahabst Iliad, and 4- his noddle was -doubtless in a taste- ot, coons: shin confusion, he did not rialto know what ha Was, about, end ant'ma- therefore, rie' cused for the "' =Justifiable Naveratakes,' ha t the referee been, present, he would have .hadto-do his,duty, and no one would More have regretted' this than himself. * ' * I r."*' net the Ting. Wes broken Why! the / , ftietulaof Sayers 'alone ire ; deny..„ We are nth/tied the pollee, •who had been - gradually Inareasing in numbers, coriirohneed pre -mare from without,' and, being - aided by mobilo gentrynwho were Dissent Are other purposas- than : sport, and whose o cot was to atock, their, Jeweiry _ shops from the pea ets'of the spectators, the pre*- - sure gradually reached its cohabiting point titor • about the named,- alien the ring "red tool** in, spectators and all being gradually/arced either. into the ring itself Or - else el getter away from its precincts. Asti: who vet the topea—if they were 'r out—we cannot say; bet this Wd db gay, if it ho true that the life of Savers gra In danger, and if he - had tenched 'the ground with his knees. • it was a perfeallyjustifiable act, - Bogging is not fighting. and though, there_ no written rule Pee the 'abject, a man: 'should be released Wfitik it coiner to such a neer thing as It is stated - to have been etifTursidaY: * • * • * 'We deny atrenuoasly that Reenan i ., in any „way, gained a 'right it. the belt. The'detsrmination . on the part of the refel*e'dot bate* es/eta:Sad meeting during ' the week is etrietiy. in sectordanos with the goners! • / custom of the country, *here men Are so Injured at ware both those gallant felletra on Tuesday. The last instarai s on record of Opostponernene was • the match between. Aaron Jones and thyme. in which the former was alloWed a month, pro ducing a medical certificate that he would' require -L . that time to get overan 'injury to' hit - band: some what similar to that %coned by Henan. Mr. Wilkes apparently would impute that the referee haa depart/Afros:l_ the, usual practice on this occa sion, and lays that Keenan doett 'not require any consideration on the inland of humanity: fo re. - ply, all we-have, to say Is, the referee is gin thi mer ed her hhea d p roper . si p e son tyjmAre experiecein , s n ol h matters c han Mc. Wilkes himself,' Had •he ordered: a seeonti meeting this week, he would have ordered it. the same day, supposing a fitting, ground - could hare boon got, and-as, bythat time, lieensa would have' been quite blind, we leave the nubile erdecide who: would-have had the advantage.,. Bad he postponed. it till the following or any succeeding day in tbo week, his conduct would have ta.seivol rintrergir execration in all countries where humanity "at all enters into public, consideration. . - • Maurizio OF VIE PRIEM - Di Or Joan ErcRFAN tx .11U'at Yong.-2n aecordanoe with a call faseakt a day or two since), a large , number of the friends of the American pugilist, J. C. llcenan, suet at the Malta," coiner of Broadlay and Thireeer.th street, last evening. The room in which the Meet ing was: held was filled ebiefly by enercbaLts, brokers. and 'steamboat =Ol4 - there being present tint a few " roughs," attic. to say regird ing the objects for whiehtbe assemblage had met At eight cedook• the• itseeting was organised by tha appointment of Capt. J. M. Turner aiehalz man. Re made a few remarks enlagistieOrthe "Boy", end trusted 'that 'the Amerman people would not be, eparlitg MlClAStinguport him the honors which he had so fairly awl nobly woo. On motion, Freak Elotaling was appointed se cretary. • Air Ward moved that a committee of three he appointed by the Chair to select a - committee of moo, whose duty it should be to reaelve contribst , Gene for thefund about to be raised. Curried; and Messrs Ward, McCarthy, and Burrell were ap pointed such committee. Resolutions wore then introduced, to the etfect that John C. _Heenan had fairly won the Cham pion's belt, and ought to receive,tt ; and that a fit ting testimonial should be presented to him for en nobly upholding his country abroad. Dr. Max Langenrchwartz they addressed the meeting, saying that the late fight was a national oonteet, and he hoped that the blows Nielsen gave Sayers would not be the teat ones England would receive from America. [Laughter.] Ile proposed that a national nag be presented to the American Champion, Which, in ease of war, should be carried in the vanguard of our armies. [Great laughter end applause I The preamble awl resolutions were unanimously adePted. The'rommittee then reported the following gen. Cowen as proper persons to receive submrietions, having increased the number to eiiteen t George Wilkes, Edward Phelon. Neil Bryant, Francis Queen, James Irving, N. W. Genet. Ed ward Jon eg , George Bill, Samuel Webster, Thomas Burns, ram Woodruff C.W.Cembelt,ChatlesMltes, Al4s. Mason, John Lipper, and George Mountjoy. The report was adopted. Resolutions congratulatory of Heenan, Mellon. ald, end Cusick were unanimously passed. One eensuringJohn Morrissey was tabled, when an adjournment to Monday evening nest eras ear .atay S. Ezi RicanDs The Methodist Episcopal General Con> Terence. DAT. Brirrato, Nay 7, 1280. The call of the Conference, which was interrupted en Satotday by the adjournment, was resumed. A sueeemfal efort was made 10 Tetentidet the cation of the Conference on Saturday in the matter of ar.petating a Committee on Appeals, end the Chair was ordered to appoint a committee of seven to prepare a code, regulating the disposal of all ap peal 000091 and report to-morrow. Bishop Morris presented the answer of the British Wesleyan Conference to the Methodist Episcopal Conference of Amerloa, The address, among other congratulations. ex preseee warns satisfaction at the existingaentiment in the American Church on the subject of slavery also, a .communication from the same Conference to the bishops of the Methodist Episcopal Church, regretting their inability to send a deputation to the present Conference,and exprershm,the hone that such a deputation will be sent in 1881 The letter oleo acknowledges the teteipt of a corn- MUniCatiOn from the Rock Meer Conference cn the subject of slavery, but declining to take any Ration thereon from deference to its American brethren. The letter also eipressee the liopo that the American Church will take such action as shall finally separate itself from all connection with that inetthition. Bishop Morris *too presented an address from the peotora of the Annual Conference of Prance and Switzerland, held at Paris, Juno 22,1359. The ad dress gives a favorable report of the progress of Methodism on the European Continent, nottrith• standing the constituted authorities bare trotted the ignorant population against them, in many in otaoces amounting to serious peroecutione. The Church is making rapid progress towards Italy, and hopes that the work in France may still have a claim upon the sympathies of the American Church, On motion of Mr. Slicer, the Committee on Cur respendenee was footnoted to inquire and report In regard to the statement that the British Confer ence bad been memorialised by the. Rock River Annual Conference. . . Bishop Morris presented a memorial from Dr, S. Luckey, , whioh was read, in favor of establishing an emotive conference for the government of the Church;, is consist of the Dishopa and one delegate from each annual Conference, to be appointed every four years, which shall hold annual sessions, and ,shall have general jurisdiction ,over the temporal matters of the Church, including the power to in vestigate all charges against the Bishops, std to try the same, as well as the preachers, Subject to an appeal to and a revisal by the General Con ference, es well as a general Pllnerinlendelley of the Book Concern and the Missionary Committee. The memorial proposes to to elect the 'Executive Conference that three fourths of each body shall be perpetuated in the succeeding sue. The memorial was referred to a select committee of seven, to onsidet and report at an early day. The. Chair announced as the special committee to prepare a plan for the disposal of appeals, Messrs Moody, Clark, Nelson, ilitchooek, Porter, Griffith and Reddy, Adjourned. Seventy-three petitions for a change of the sla very rule and two against were presented to.day. Call for the Douglas Meeting n& Neu OBAwn RALLY FOR TOE CT:TIM—AII citizens opposed to the secession movements of the Louie !arra and other State delegations at the Charleston Convention, and who approve tho course pursued. by Stephen A. Douglas, are invited to meet in Lafayette Square, Tuesday Evening nest, at seven o'olock, to take counsel together, and to protect against any action of any citizens of this State which, at Charleston or elsewhere, would. commit the people of Louisiana to any measure of scheme destructive of the Union. R.W.liantiogton, M. Gordon. Jr., G. W. Bever too. W. G. Mullen, p, W Colieea . 4erye Ilevergee. Patrick irwm. Sohn Pinder, W. Coshing. Doing Donovan, E. Duerene; Br.. l'oTentr. I'. 0. Lanalnin, L. C. Pewee, Th.... Wane% H. Kerieee . e. J. Doooien. D. V. Fans, G. W. McCarron. B Holscher. J. V. Gourdein, Edward A tone, M. gander, Wm: &Crane. J. he Magingna. A. Count's, A. r. Toner. John Arrnaroag. l ia rle'D/Din, Dr. B. Ballard, Wm. Monaghan. 1. Marto, P. P. oner.. Oso ir B. Po) not. Pr.. w e. D. Fenner. Dr. E' W. Johnson. a-d w i n Levey, Dr. D W.Briokell; Ant. Gi rand. ft. P. /tarter, J. A. Bgivegter, C 1.. Perrault, Rodriguez. Fdr Cu soon, 'liner D. lntrper...P. A. Bertrand. J. G. Vienne. G.;Lardrs - , A. B. Shelby. J, tainelia Viavant.Gen....Foadmit, Cornibe. Brewer. Laic tlobnbert, T. J. Marlot. Orleans.