gljt Vress, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1860. FORNEY'S CALIFORNIA PRESS TO-MORROW. at 4 P. M. .Trios Rs: aVets "sr oom in strong 'rangers, nil - stsmssil, ready for msiiing. Tim filtet 0111 M -id ociressly for . OALIIPORNIA CIRCULATION. ' oot:twas oomphno summary of what ham tide is 00 - cats; Stat.. Mid the Alliatie States, since the haaartaro of tho tart steamer for Califonna. Pinar Nem—Literature; Arrival of the North ' - .:Oro Light; The Revolution In Italy; Meeting of 4ssrd of Contra! ; A Perilous Ride. FOURTH zPeea.—The HOUTIOaII Journey of a British Prince; General News ; Marine Intelligence. The NeWs. • The details of the nerve by the Northern Light ~-sire famished to day. We notice that there are •%. tem revelations now progressing In New Granada. The last revolution broke oat a few days before the sailing of the Northern bight, at Panama. For • the, preceding few weeks the Intendente of the State had bean forcibly recruiting for - the service against the Revolatitudes under Ijosguera and Nietc4, and the blaok population found reason to - , complain that great injustice emotions them in the ,inipreennent. Finally, hundreds of them fled 'fro& the city and took refuge in the bush, when a large party of them organised, and, procuring •' - , nreas and ammunition, waited an opportunity to Week the city. On the 27th of September they ,•„f ,commenced an attack, and would probably have . .f.gatned possession of the city, had not a force of • British Marines boon landed. Thill coming to the ' - '?!knoirledge of the blanks, they desisted and withdrew, but with the determination to renew Operations on the first opportunity. The re " ports relative to the progress of the revolution in tho Interior of the State of New Granada are - ,"romenhat gonfueed, though appearances RIM to _ Indleata the ultimate defeat of the revolutionists, Latest accaunts from Mosguera represent him to bo surrounded by the Government foroes, while at Santa Marta the revolutionary forces bad been re pulsed, for President took place on the 16th, and though the general result was not known, the return. re. delved indicated the elution of Gen. Herren, in Which case it is difficult to see how the revolution can continue. President Mora had returned to Outs Rios. No doubt teemed to be entertained that Mora would again gain possession of the whole e:aintry in a short time. Be had issued a proola '., motion to the Costa JUNIOR, in which be mune rated, their wrongs and nailed upon them to re - , drees them. There to nothing specially important from the other South American States. Oa Sunday afternoon, in New York pity, Hester Finley, an Irish • woman, was. murdered by her hnsTmndi Dade, Finley, while she wee visiting an : , aegmintance. The difficulty resulted from the neglect of the woman to stay at home and prepare her hesaond's dinner, and both the parties were somewhat intoxicated when the occurrence trans pired. The murder was perpetrated by means of a pocket•koife, the blade of which penetrated the woman's heart, and produced her death almost atantly. Finley attempted to escape no soon no he bad committed the crime, but he was permed and arrested by • woman. The death of General Walker has not given the :quietus to filibustering. General Benningten, a late associate of the deceased chief, has written a • long letter eulogising Walker, magnifying the .rniv•ion " on which he went to Honduras, and de. storming in vigorous English the " infamous con duct of Captain Salmon " General Bennington also expresses the conviction that the " good cause " in which Walker died "still lives " So far from filibusteriem being dead, be says it may be safely predicted that from every drop of blood shed, amidst the ohms of the natives, will epring ti; *Mother ardent: filibuster. The present political preferences of Hon. Jame. - Guthrie having been freely diecuased in the Ken ' tacky iewspaporkthat gentleman hae published a letter in'whiott ho Mateo that. soon after the coml. , . - nations of Mr. Douglas and Mr. Breekinridge, by the divided Deurooracy, he declined to pledge him self to the support of either, as he did not consi der either of - thins the regular nominee of the party. The annual Convention of the legdel Arocia- Hon of America is now in Ruston In New York, ' Mr. SesVer, of Boston, presiding. The principal .epeakere were Orson S. Murray, of Ohio Mr. ; Curtis, of Philadelphia , Joseph Treat, of Ohio; . Mr. Mandl= of Breton, and Mrs. Rose, of New York. - A steady' opprialthin to christienity and a - general disbelief in Divine revelation ate the lead fag features of the prineiples inculcated by the good/Mon. In the large room of the building - ' there Were assembled about one hundred and fifty • - We hear, by way of Savannah, strange reports . of disturbance, in Florida. It is said that the citizens of Gadsden, 'Liberty, Calhoun, Jackson, and Washington counties are organising a force to ' operate against the desperadoes infesting Calhoun county. Many murders have been oommitted. The militia of Jackson county have been palled out fir the preaeriration of the peace of the oom , madly. The pony express briers us' later dates from Oregon, China, and Japan. From Oregon we learn that the State Senate is still un organised, the Breokinridge men refusing to par , tiolpete in its swim. There was a compromise proposed to give the BreekinridgeDemoerats one man and the Republieans the other, but no tidings of its aceeptance bad been received. There wee ;,' some tronnie between Japan and France relative -to treaty etipuletionc, and the French repreeenta tive had tett Japan. The war in China was about ~ to commence, circumstances indicating that it ...would be contested with fearful fury. Philadeip!tia Races. 'This thy the Fall Meeting will commence 'at Point Breese Park. The handicap race of one mile, entrance $lOO, half forfeit, $2O de claration, with $5OO added by the Association owning the Park, has closed with six entries. The Association purse, two mile - heats, $5OO, wild bo contended Jos (!it the same day, and there will be a .third rase.—There will be a 'great tad of speed on the Second day, Friday next. There are four entries for the sweep stake, fur all ages, four-mile heats, $2OO sub scription, half forfeit, and $1,500 added by , the Association, and there will be a race, on the s=lo day, for the Association purse of , $550, mile heats. All these races will be run according to the rides of the Fashion Course, N. Y. Nearly all the horses entered are stabled on the promises at Point Breeze Park. Should this meeting be properly apprecia ted, and win an encouraging portion of public - favor, the Assoolation will at once get up a 'programme for the spring of the most extend- Cd and liberal character, adopting some of the best features of the English system of racing, ",it b . eing considered that the present American if rather it old fogyish" in some of Its de tails. Point Breeze Park, we may add, is the only raoe.cofirse in this country which ladies can and do attend. The regulations and arrange ments exclude or expel any improper persons who may be so bold as to attempt or obtain admittance. Elections in Other States. Elections will bo held today for members of Congress and of the State Legislatures not only in Pennsylvania, but also in Ohio, Inds. son, lowa, and Minnesota. In several of lbw's States Governors will also bo chosen, stud their probable decision on the Presidential question will be clearly foreshadowed. Iglowienee of Jo Lane. The following is an extract from a speech pro . 'stemmed ')y General Jo LANE, the Secession cm:did:its for Vico President, at 'Vincennes, Indiana, en Wednesday, the 25th September, which is doubly interesting, because of its - eloquence, and as a comment upon the efforts of Senator Biozsa, General STEverts, Chair man of the Brecittnridge National Committee, and Mr. H. WsLen, of the Executive Com mittee in this Slate, to secure a union between the 801 l and Breckinridge parties: ' Tati speaker said he thought Mr. Ball a very clever old gentlemen, who had never done either mush good or karat. Bat his party was now seek - log eMiiatione with Mr- Donis,' Mends. Last • aight;st Tarte Haute, ~Illneton Duncan, of Ken tealty, brought a eentraot, signed, seale d, and cle ' - livere, by whiob the Dongles and Nell pa rties bad -base marled in tali Stem. 'ln this agreement , the Enow , Notbloga Sire to go up to the poll. and" Douglas etagere also the Measles State .tioket, and;if - ancomesfot, the Moss are to be di- Vidad. ' My friend there, the 'Hon. John Law, know, that be and rode at thereto of *bead twenty-five miles an boor in 1555.. to pat down Know-Nothinglam. Many . have made their minds to vote for Dongles, I fear, '..for he Is a - fumy fellow; but I wish my foreign boriffrlends to understand bow be is trying to - Marry theta to the Enow-Nothlnge. My foreign • turn fallow•oitltens, bow do you Ilk* the hug of • Remer•Nothingism ? How do you like Its embrace? tiitrp to Louisville and view the bloody side : :Welke as the blood of your fellOw-ronntrymen oty Heaven' for retribution, and then tell me how •- yen like to yoke with the Know. Nothings. It this does not satisfy you, go to New Orleans, and there view - the trees* of gore that the Know-No ' thinks buy* viddeneti the streets with, with the '1,1 06 a •of murdered foreigner., and then Um we - bow you like - the' bug.' -i don't see bow yon eon =-% ' timid the Marriagel' Its embrace will prevo the ' - big of death, aid I ibjire yen to forsake so an. - ' holy' before, it is too late , and you reel' the bitter fruitier to unholy a Onion. • -.4lan.ft:Lane - e - eit- poised a eulogy 'upon Mr. • : ,...stgottnilelge, saying that be is one of the purest statesmen alive As to himself, be would , only 4.,24.0,..tb0t hi - oconnye been a Dezerionit—hed At; timed fee4eeheen gulf" , Be thenest hie' Dell3o. eireswiwefibk.net,be queetimial, tr Mimed b.: asyloctluit Breokinridge wonid - oirry all tie Southerst States and mionh, of the Nertberlk OWN id *hot lihm. “ Distingalshed Persons.” On Friday 1644; the New Pork Herald, de scribing the arrangements fur the Operatic performances at our Academy of Music, in compliment to the Prince of Wiles, made a statement as follows : "Among the dielingulebed persons invited to this entertainment are Mr. James Gordon Bennett and lady, and it le understood the invitation has been accepted. They will oeoupy proscenium box No 1" There are four points in as many lines here : First, that Mr. JAMES GORDON BENNETT and lady aro ci distinguished persons ;" next, that they were invited, by the Directors of tho Academy, or the respectable gentlemen who hare taken the trouble of acting as a Com mittee of Superintendence; thirdly, that• sc the Invitation has been accepted;" lastly, that (itho distinguished' , and cc invited" pair « will occupy proscenium box No. 1." Some surprise, if not somo indignation, arose in this community, at the statement in the Herald, and we aro not surprised that, to remove the imputation of having invited" the eminently if distinguished" persons named in the Herald, tho following official statement has been published : The written asreament with Mr. Strakosoh (Mr. Ullman not having then returned from Europe) was to this drat : . . First. That fifty soats should be pissed at the disposal of the committee, for the accommodation of invited guosts. Second. That a committee of ono hundred gen. tioaten should havo the right to, rosorve six hun dred seats, at three dollars each rest, tho object of this being to insure the commencement of a bril. Haut house Third. That Mr. Strakosoh blight reservo two hundrod seats at hie diearetion. (bp .1 Grow, bie agent, atatee that, by 'lnstruction. of Mr. U , lnutn, lie appropriated a proscentun box to the rditor of the New York Herald. Fourth. Thut all the remaining seats in the house should, with proper nubile notice, be sold at tho box.eiftoe of the Academy, at not more than three dollars per seat. and that to no applicant should'more than six seats bo granted. Filth. That not over one hundred promenade or standee tickets should be sold at throe dollars eaoh: The general committee appointed a sub-com mittee, and, for the purpose of carrying out the details of the house arrangements, platted a portion of the directors of the Academy on that committee. This is about the only agency they have bad in the whole matter. Publication of Hata of committees, and a variety of statements made in the New York Herald and other prongs, derive no authe• rosy from any action of the. committee or dr rectors of the Academy. Hereby it appears that it was riot the Com mittee or Directors of the Academy of Music who "invited" Mr. and Mrs. JAMES GORDON BENNETT, but the agent to Mr. Illamen, (one of the pro fem. lessees of the, Academy,) to who states that, by instruction of Mr. TILL MAN, be appropriated a proscenium box to the editor of the Now York Herald." We have no doubt that Mr. BENNETT, whose paper has attacked, slandered, ridiculed, and belied Philadelphia and its inhabitants as constantly and invariably as it has covered the Opera troupe with unceasing and enormous praise, will be touched at the gratitude thus tenderly exhibited by Mr. Mamas, and will recollect that some one has deflueti gratitude to be «a lively sense of future lavers;" but we have a suspicion that Mr. Human's Philadelphian patrons will not so approvingly appreciate Mr. Um.max's specially reserving the beat box in the house—right opposite that occupied by the Royal visitor—even to such ri distin guished persons" as' Mr. and Mis. JAMES Goanon BENNETT. We mention both mimes, because the Herald does. So far from sane. Coning this, the respectable and responsible gentlemen who superintend the reception of the Prince and the other arrangements deny any agency in this matter, and positively add that the cs lists of committees and a variety of statements [including the invitation to pro scenium box No. 1] made in the Now Yoik Herald, and other a prints, derive no authority from any action ethe committee or directors of the Academy." Eio wo thought, from the first. The Great Eastern. The Great Britain, immediately after her arrival at 1:Iilford Raven, in South Wales, was placed upon a "gridiron," which had been expressly erected, at vast expense, for the purpose of having her foul bottom cleaned. The London Tenses thus reports tho result: "In consequence of the ship's bottom having been what an nautical parlance is termed bogged,' when lying at Southampton, It was by no means so foul as most people antic!. pated. About the water line and at the bow a quantity of green slimy matter was found ; be low that, and by no means very thickly studded, patches of a fringelike seaweed only were seen, varying from one to three inches in length, and adhering very loosely. This at onco up sets.the idea that so many entertain as to the cleansing of her bottom causing an Increase of two or three knots per hour in her speed. In fact, a most mistaken notion is but too preva lent about the Great Eastern's rate of sailing. She has already considerably exceeded what was expected of her by Mr. BRUNZL—viz., an average of 14 statute miles per hour, with which scale as a basis all her coal accommo dations were framed. During the week a large number of men have been engaged cleaning her bottom w,d painting it, after which a coat. frig of Wharves patent metallic composition was laid on. This is a preparation presenting a smooth and slippery surface to the water, and by lessening the friction it increases the speed. Ot this it would take about two tons anda half.. It was expected that these opera tions would all be co:nisi:led by to-day, (Sep tember 22.) The ship appears to have lost none of her-attractions, and the receipts per week may beset down at X5OO clear. She will in all probability be removed from the gridiron on the Ist of October." This is a story very ditlinent from that which was told when the Great Eastern ar rived at Now- York. It was then positively desertedby her officers, that only for the bar nacles and sea-weed attached to her bottom, the Leviathan of steamships could have ac complished 16 to 17 statute miles an hour, instead of somewhat about 13. It now ap pears that lltr. Bunn, her engineer, never ex pected her to run more than 14 statute miles an hour, and had her coal accommodations formed on that estimate. It is said that the Great Eastern was to commence her return-voyage to this country on the 17th of • the present month. As yet, however, there was no offer of freight, and, as before, passengers wore shy of entrusting themselves to a vessel which from first to last has been more or less unfortunate. In the London papers we find the following advertisement: "This day is published,, price ls. The Great Eastern's Log, containing her first Transatlantic Voyage, and all particulars of her American Visit. By an Executive Of ficer. Bnannroay & EVANS, 11 lieuverie 7 street, Fleet-street; E. C." No very much wonder whether 'Mr. Cox, the notorious Pur ser of the great steamer, can be the Executive Officer who takes up his pen to act as herßis torten ? If so, or whether or not, we have some curiosity to ascertain with what degree of candor and contrition fc all particulars of her American visit" will be related : whether the historian will record the insolence of se veral of her officers, the mercenary exactions of her crew, the origlnaNxaction of $1 ahead for permission to visit her, the tremendous state of filth in which she was found, the note lions swindle of the starvation-visit to Cape May, the impudent declaration to the Baltimo reans that Philadelphia had offered $BO,OOO to entice her Into the Delawaro, and the concluding trick by which the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company was so far taken in as to coal her, for the return voyage to England, without cost 1 If Mr. Cox, the purser, be not the historian of the Great Eastern, be can at least throw much light upon the manner in which the voyagers in her to Cape May were mai. treated. This log of the Great Eastern, whether it relate or suppress the truth, promises to be be one of the beet jokes of the the season. When we receive a copy, we certainly shall give it the notice it merits. Lord Renfrew. Notwithstanding a certain inexplicablo non communicativeness en the part of tbose who have conduct of the reception of Lord REN anal', to-morrow, a flail account of tbo prepa rations made will bo found in another column. His Lordship arrives this afternoon, and will visit Independence Hall, Girard College, Fair mount, and a few other ti institutions," on Wednesday forenoon. It is said that he will attend Point Breeze Park Races in the after noon, and it is certain that ho will (t assist " at the performances at the Academy of MUBIC that evening. He leaVos - for Now York on Thursday. Lady Franklin. This excellent lady, widow of that martyr of Science, Sir Joust VaartEnia, the Arctic 'Voy ager, arrived in this city yesterday, and is mopping at the elrard The Election To-day. Fortunately, for the peace of the country, and for the relief of the over-worked, highly excited, and almost exhausted politicians, the election to-day will settle all the questions at issue in the State canvass, and do much to in dlcate the result of the Presidential contest in November. The first great climax of the arduous labors, with the din of which the ears of the people of our whole Commonwealth have -been filled, will be reached when the ballot-bores close to-night, and the official Statement of the votes cast to.day will make Many a heart beat quick with joyful emotions, and fill many minds with gloom and sorrow, be the result what it may. , The October election in Pennsylvania has nearly alWays exercised a very great influence upon the Presidential election which succeeded it, not only in our own State, but throughout the whole country. In 1844, the struggle be tween Surxx and lldaaran, for Governor, was decided in favor of the former by a ma jority of a few thousand, after a warm contest, and the election of Pour over CLAY was thus almost certainly' indicated to every sagacious politician. In 1848, the Gubernatorial contest between Jonsson and LONOSTRETR terminated in the success of the former by a majority of but a few hundred ; yet, it rendered the move ment in favor of Gen. 'Lumen irresistible, and the election of Gen. CASs impossible. In 1852, the triumph of, the Democratic State ticket in October foreshadowed the overwhelming vic tory of Gen. PIERCE in November. In 1856 rho struggle upon the October State ticket was a very close and well-contested ono. Tho Opposition had placed in nomination for the three State offices of Canal Com missioner, Auditor General, and Surveyor General, three men who were supposed to represent, respectively, the Republi can, old-line Whig, and American parties, and a lantana effort was made, in spite of con flicting Presidential preferences, to rally to its support the entire strength of all adverse to the Democratic party. It proved, however, unsuccessful, although for several days after the election both parties claimed to have been victorious, and it required very full returns to determine, with certainty, who had been sue cossful. The chances of BUCHANAN, which had before been considered solnewnat doubt ful, became at once brilliant, and his election in November, 1856, was rendered almost rn absolute certainty. The Gubernatorial contest, which will be decided to.day, is regarded all over the coun try with "nearly if not quite as much interest as any of the decisive October struggles to which we have alluded were at the time they occurred. The friends of FOSTER and of Unarm each claim to be sanguine of success, and the position of parties is so peculiar, and the changes of the proclivities of voters so numerous, that it is almost impossible for any one to predict with certainty who will be elected. It is not improbable that the vote will be so close that, notwithstanding the great telegraphic facilities we now possess, several days will elapse before the result can he accurately known ; although it is possible that some portions of our State may give such inexpectediy heavy majorities for or against one of the candidates as to enable us to an nounce, in our issue to-morrow, who will have been successful. Mission et the Prince [For Tho Press.] The oorrospondent of one of our papers tolls us that the'Przx co upon viewing tho city of Chicago iixproPeed groat astonishment at the rapidity of its growth, and was delighted with the healthful and inrosperons condition of Northern Now York. But as he is a Prince, and is the guest of our coon. try on a special mission, the names of our cities or their geographical position, are not especially fixed io his mind, and, therefore, in the impression that i4e is viewing a part of New York is but a figure of the reporter, and a republication of the belief that everything outride of Manhattan Island ia the ,)E,,pring of our liMpiro City. But saying so does not establish tho fact, nor the waking a swan of every goose done not increase the brood, nor will a appear that the dulcet notes of the bird aro any thing more than tho cackling vagaries of the gander. Tho Prince, in pointing opt to hie amia ble mother the route of his journey, will discover that Chicago is in Illinois, and perhaps he will realise that the beautiful country around it is mite os tributary to the dominion over which he will hereafter preside, as to the pity of New York. Now York, ho will find, is only New York ; and if nor autobiographers will confine their eulogiuma to hor acknowledged virtues, the Prince, it Is likely, will have ocular evidence of the extent of hor Imperial posseasions," without the annexation of Illinois or any of the States through which Ito passes., After a survey of the Western antes, and upon loathing their position in reference to the trade of the lakes, with, perhaps, the overatretobed exer tions of Now York to reach and monopolise the trade of the Ohio and Mississippi, he may, find, upon reaching Pennsylvania, another and a better outlet for the trade of the West, and, instead of the " one•horse team," the " sleepy hollow," the eimerian cave, whore the owls can see at mid• day," he may discover a reason for believing her "the Keystone of the !troll " In his investiga tions, he may learn that she has 2,086 miles of railway within her territory, which has...cost 8140,668 074 ; has carried over them during 1350, 18,617.002 tons freight, 6 667 141 passengers, and, together, has earned $23,173 Mt. Ito may, also, learn that she raises about 9,000,000 of tons coal annually; that she furnishes to conmumr4 about 90,000 tons of pig iron more than all the other Rites of the Union; that, last year, eho furnished 90 813 tons railroad iron out of 141,555 tons made in the country; that the manufaotory of cotton goods in the district of Philadelphia last year ranched 840,375,000, and that the loading branches of industry in and around Philadelphia cost over $158,809,090. And further, If his Royal Highness to not parti cularly struck with the beauty of tho Penneylva. ala scenery—with the flourishing condition of her improvements—with the moral, the mental, and charitable characteristics of the inhabitants, he may be pleased elite pieces with the arrangements of the city—with Re numerous benevolent and oharitable institutions, including her penitentiary— and last, not least, with the extraordinary in crease in its commercial business during the last ton'years. He may discover, not from the nowspa pore, or the records of the stook-market, but from the statistics of business, that, in the movement of the industrial traffic of the State, more vessels were required than is registered in any two of tre cities of the Union; that, ten years since, coven thousand vessels did all the business; that, last year, thirty-two thousand vessels, exelusive of those em ployed in the transportation of two millions of tons through the Delaware and Raritan Canal, were required ; and that the traffic of the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, and the business of the Cam den and Amboy Railroad, is not included in the estimate. Be may also learn that the outlet through Philadelphia is but one of her numerous ports; that the Cheatipeake gives vent to a very largo portion of her trplie ; that the Northern Pennsylvania Central, terminating in Baltimore, Is sustained from her produee ; that the Now Jer sey Central, the Delaware, Lackawanna, and Weet ern, the Delaware and Hudson, and the Now York ard. Brie Railroad, costing aboufelghty millions of dollars, aro alike maintained by the trade of Penn eylvania ; and if he stops at Pittsburg he will dis sever that "that great city" must became the dis tributing point between the Bast and the West. In all those matters, although a myth in the minds of our citizens, ice may discover the elements of great neas—a rival to fenny of his schemes—an eutrepot for the " notiona" of his subjects, or en avenue for his trade south the IYcst. Hie vaito, I under stand, are liberally provided with ewes and ears, and as experience has taught them how to use them to advantage, we must not regard the visit among us aa a killing-time operation, or a scheme t) gat clear of the dog-days. Therefore, while your reporting oorrespondenta aro filling your heads with nonsense, the Prince is drinking of " do. liolous poison" from the eyes of our ladles. Wo must not suppose the mite are idle; they aro col looting the aliment that hereafter may eery() to fire a nati on. 80, look out, gentlemen. The visit to tho country is full of meaning, and if trade is not the base and building of the soheme, your humble servant is not the son of a prophet. The improvements in ()a node have coat her Majesty over ono hundred mil lions of dollars, and since the bill hes boon gone rously footed, is it not reasonable that the location, the condition, the ability to secure awl monopolise the trade of the lakes, and tho facilities for reach log the shores or the Pacillo, should occupy the minds of the party? The Prince, therefore, trill shoot the go oust and wink at the ladies, the suite will bag the game, and your humble servant will continue to look upon the object as exceedingly Important to tho country. J. ht. B. LAE OH SALE OF Housznorm FortarronE.— Birch k Sou, No. 014 Chestnut street, will roll this morning, by auction, over 300 lots of superior household furniture, Including parlor and chamber suites, tapestry and Brussels carpets, Frenoh-plate Omar, piano fortes, Milo° tables and duke, stores, .to. POLITICAL PXOITEMPIN.T.—TiIe excitement In rill quarters of the city yesterday morning and afternoon was almost unparalleled. The Fitate- House pavement was besieged; all politioal vratd.- houses and headquarters were largely attended; betting ran high. The energ;y of Colonel Carlin in thin campaign has remitted In his physical pros tration. Notwithstanding this, he was present last evening at Manaynnir, at the Wigwam, at South. wank Ilan, at Spring garden 11011, and at Palmer and fiellgrade streets, In the Eighteenth ward. At ell those place* Mt ortteelestil wee very great THE PRESS.-PMLADELITJA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1860. LATEST NEWS By Telegraph to The Prem. EarEOIAZ TELsOBAPO TO it VIE PREss."l The lion. John Hickman in Reply to Ilan. Richard Vaur. WEST CIIESTER, October 3,1860 A large meeting of the Republicans 17119 held this evening, at Horticultural Hall, at which Dr. DAUM:IOI'ON presidd. Hon. JO/IN HICKMAN ad dressed the meeting in reply to a speech made here recently by lion, RICHARD VAIL; of your city. Mr. HICKUAN commenced by congratulating bis audience, that for the last four months they bad been able to express their political convictions freely, without invasion from threatened Southern legions, and that the Union was still unbroken. That Lincoln MO moving on steadily to the seat of Federal authority without heading promised trea son. That hireling brawlers at home had because somewhat taciturn, and the occupants of afflao were boxing up their email elleets, preparatory to remo val. • The die is east," said he ; "by this hour to morrow night we will have passed the liMbloon ; from thence we shall have easy marshes to too Ca pitol to proclaim the-liberation of Republioanism from the thraldom of Oligarchy, and the rule of arid and exact justice to all interests and all sec tons." " Wo will interpret the Constitution Recur fathers understood It," said M e. 11., " and not as eolfish ambition and slavery domination have boon al lowed, too long, to road it. Wo will admit the right of all the cantons of all the States to oaoupy the common territories, but we will neither enact new laws nor repeal old ones to make slavery na tional and liberty sectional." Ile then proceeded, by a clear and powerfullyadireoted argument, to show that at the very moment Mr. Bseskinridge and Mr. Douglas were insisting upon the constitu tional right of all people, North and South, to sel tia upon and occupy the common territory of the country, the policy of both alike must end in giving them up exclusively to slavery. That the mechanic and laborer of the free States required outlet to prevent an overadonally of pot citation, and a supply of labor beyond the demand for la bor, but that they could not settle down by the side of slaves, and hope to maintain a fully com pensated labor; that the °beeper artiole must al ways reduce the pylon of tho dearer; that the slave would constantly underbid the free man, and thus forgo him from the labor market, or reduce him to poverty ; that the poor white population of the t outhern States was a living proof of this truth In concluding this branch of Lis speech, he said : " We are fighting the battle of free labor against servile labor, end of constitutional equality against inequality. Ilro will neither rob nor be robbed ; and we will never allow our industry to be walled in within tho eighteen Northern States, nor to be palsied or pauporited in the Territories. The full status of free labor must bo uphold there by the policy of our Government, whatever may be the effect produced upon the ghetto! slave." Mr. Hickman then turned his attention to Mr Vaux and Mr. Foster, saying, that as some ono of his friends had apparently forgotten the old adage that those who lived in glass houses should not eat stones, he would mildly remind him of it. Ile said : "Mr. Richard Vaux, every clover and well dreeeed gentleman, of very limited notoriety end curious peculiarities, and who, four years ego, was loud and frequent in 'hie denunciation of Mr Dou glas, as a dirty demagogue, had, as he understood, reometly been bore to lecture on proprieties, and to teeellhumble people, like myself, their dutiea Well, this eity friend of ours, who has but recently found both his principles and his tongue, is very anxious to have Mr Foster elated ; and to (Kea, it, would have all of us maks ourselves as ridiculous as him golf." Hero the dissection commenced in earnest, and wee accomplished to the satisfaction of the most skilful surgeon. lie begged to remind the audience that General Foster anti Mr. Veux could not but be bound together by the strong• est sympathy. Never wore two politicises more alike. Pinioning to be Democrats, the unit article of their creed was men, not principles. That in 1858, after the issue was fairly and fully wade be tween Lecomptonism and anti-Leoomptonism, Mr. V became is candidate for the Mayoralty of Phila delphia, but could not be prevailed upon to tako sides with either—was distrusted by all, and defeated, as wee proper. He wanted to cheat ono party or the other, but they did not give him the chance Mr. Foster is now following in the footsteps of his ifiristrlette predecessor, Mr V., and will meet with, as he richly merits, a similar fate. "To what debasement , " said Mr, H., "must old fashioned, out-spoken Democracy have fallen when it clamors and schemes for the elevation of men who cloak their opinions and who only pledge themselvee to deceive their follower?! The Douglas men do not regard the Breokiaridge men as Po mmels. and tha„Brakinrldgo men persist in do. nounelng the Douglas mon as traitors; so that if ' Mr. P. should be elected, ono brooch or the other would have succeeded In raising a candidate to power whom they could not but regard as false to tho faith they professed." Mr H. then went on to remark upon what Mr. V. had said about the anti•Leampton Conven tion at Harrisburg, in April, Ifin. Ile said : "Yea, I was there, and participated in the pro ceedings, yet all my Demooratio friends at that time knew I was dissetisfied with the reeolntion complimentipg Mr. Douglas. I believe I went ao far as to say I would not have attended if I could have foresees, it was to be made an ovation to Mr. Douglas. " But that matters little," said Mr. H ; "wheel desiro to say is, that I did not sec either Mr. Foster or Mr. Vans there on that occasion The former itis not with us because he seal op posing us, and tho tailor had not then passed from the drowsy obrysalla into tho aotivo-wingod Douglas butterfly. But lot that pato ; his tool DON may, perchance, nicks up for the time lost in his long sleep sinoe '56 " Continuing, Mr. Hickman said, "Many might bo misled by the elegant aristocratic hearing, of Mr. Veux. into the belief that he is not oven yet a full-pledged Democrat; but I em willing to ace knowledgo him as ouch, as I know It will tickle his vanity. But I would recommend this wandering minstrel, this politioal Jim Bags, not to stray too far from home, or injustice Might be done him in this respect I wouad_ropest to this juvenile Dou gnash°, If ho were prosent , a witty remark of an acquaintance of mine If I did not fear ha might Consider it personal. It Made : that new conveeta are like young humbleabees, biggest when they are first born. But he has said - that the friends of Mr. Douglas in the House of Roprosentatives did right when they voted against Colonel Forney as clerk; that he, himself, would have done it,. beoanee Col F. was not a Democrat. I will not gay he is, as Mr. V. agoras he is not ; but this I will say: that after Col F. wee elected to the clerkship by Opposition votes, Mr. Douglas eon sidered him good enough to conduct the campaign for him in Pennsylvania, and urged Col P. to not as his fact Maw, passing over such eminent_ qualifications as those of Mr. V. " In concluding," cold Mr. H . " It would hems pardonable in ins to speed malt Limo on so unim portant a subject, but you most allow me to suggest to the anti-Leampton Democrats present, that edr. Vaux never discovered that Douglail was not the ' dirty demagogue' ho supposed hint in 1836, until he Met ascertained that the supporters of Mr. Dou glas were more numerous in Philadelphia than the supporters of Mr. Breekforldge, and that he (Mr. V ) onebt to be selected for a State Seat or, which latter foot, I regret to say, the voters failed to discover ; and that Mr. Foster, now en loyal to nominations, was the cause of Cot. Forney's de. feat to the 1J B. Senate, in 1657. It may be to their taste to pat Om one and to support the other ; my inclinations lead to do what I kuow to be right in the matter—to repudiate the timid and slow-emitting, the trimmer and, the quack. end to sustain those who toll us frankly what they are, end to pledge themselves to nif and justice. Such are Lincoln and Curtin." Mr. Dickman wan frequontly applauded. Ile was followed by llon. Prank R. Blair, who spoke for nearly an hour on the Imes of the day, and was loudly cheered. Dr. Frank Taylor made a brief addrocs, and the meeting adjourned at a late hour, amid a great deal of onthusloom. From Washington. WAtILINOTON, October 9 —The followintr named offs me hare leen ordered to the isloot-of-war Vandatio, of the Saar laths bevartion Cononandor S. t• Lee; re utonstr , s Culture, Webb, NI ilson, Flomming;lials, hiedegat, Dolton, and lion say. he Postmaster General to-day issued an - order of which the blowing to a cepy : Whereas by the act of Congress. passed on the such of the po.tase upon lottery assent such as era entitled hi piss fr ee , lit tween places in the United bte.teir, dto bo pre p :.and whereas the De partment *youth courtesy. tiaa hitherto • at considera ble labor and espense, notili , il the partials addre/aca in all instances in %hash the. writers failed to prepay; and whereas, macula al dim:malting, the number of such letters continues to ir c roasts, thus showing the omission to prepay is invotional,it t bore fore ordered that from and alter the let day of November. 1609, dd such unpaid totters he suit to the Do^ d Letter 0111.ie, to be disposed of in like manner so other dead letiers. WARII:IGGTON't Oct. B.—rhe revenue cotter Eforrist Lane returned hero last night, and tort this morning for New York. Neu emus and arrest tut inelfectual appliont , ons, have been made for a further witroneineni 01 ina ap pronchmg Minnesota In rid sales on the sound that the settlers are unable to ionise pa)inentit for me emotion claims within the presented time. tic:widow to the official atatanient of the Secretary of the Interior. the pro emlrors will inevitably logo their lands, 'retold and paid for by oilier parties ; but If not sold, they would. under the declaratory notices of aott ors, have the benefit of a year's credit allowed by lily for pat Inc tor lauds, and thus Pomona subject to Private entry. The Funeral of Guy. Willard. INDIANAPOLIS Oat —A committee of eitizenc vith the remains-of Oar Vv illird arrived here yesterday In apeo,d train front Cloutier,. a commie.: by Ow, HalllSer of Mini eeota ox. United Staters Senator Mee. Mann Cullen, Mr. Colirao, nod Hon. Wiliam A. Barite. They were mot at the depot by the unit. Lary 00 a lattn mother of wit tend. Who re ceived the temainH rind conve)ed them 10 the Eltf active Marmon. They ternary: d 'hero ruining Yeatotar y, arid will ha taken to the Senate Cnain ber One afternoon, end he in BOW ut the thane a nalttaly guNrtl, until Wettnerday ,morning, when the final funeral oerenionio9 in title airy wt I tare place. Tee tamales vti'l titan ho taken to Now A lbany• under esool t of the inrhtNiy and citizens. for interment. Minute tune wore fired on the arrival of tire earn )."8• timidity rnotme and during the march of the Drove:won to the Ixectuivr. Mansion. From Havana and AlexiCD. NEW ORLEAM. Vet. 8 —The ateamsbto f;moire City arrived bore to-nay, from Havana on 11102 d mot. buxom were quiet foals; stook in tort lib 000 hoses. kliohnn...e on London 13,1104 per cent. prem. LIP Now York Sari% per cent. prem. 'the soh°. ner Itedf Ord arrived from Tampico on the 25th. V. Hi a dykes flora the capital to the 17ta, told 180 in specie. sranion lons in the capital with Iliad men. Tit , Liberal headquarters wore WOW. Queretaro. WANIIIAGTON. Cat. 0. —nit. Picgyunz my, a o verbal report that Captain Jame, of the U 0. Golf equaaron, had rased a note to the fantail commodore, in which he not only conneinned Ina throat to barribard Vera Cruz in cone the Maim Concopoun wil l , not Hewed, and dainaeon naid; but declared that haw , old consider the li at shot fired upon 4,,ra. Cruz inf a' shot up u the Amerman sql.atiron in eonsequenee of thus nom, far ther 0011011111 tile matter was suspended. Three Spanish versals of war lu.d returned to no vena. Allegheny County Politic,. l'irrphnnc,Oot 8 —.A n nttompt to Dna Curtin rogo lutions a; the Ball and ±Nerett meeting, to-night, IN all aefoatetl, Lo fo lowing de.Patoh ,s l , o ,, been tent from tnio city 1)3." tue i'leen!"111 the 11:: fl Holler: Toe ltett- N.torttt patty wilt vole nnanimouoly her Footer. tV. AI. W no. tt c.'' Disturbances in Florida. 'MIT/A CALLIID OUT. fIAvANNAIt. ()darer 8.-1110 Quincy (Florida) fie nye that the people of °admen, Liberty. Calhoun. Jaolmen, and Witglungton counties are organizing a foroo to operate against the desperation inleenng Cal honn Many multlefe have been committed. The militia of Tanknon county him been called out. The Prince at Baltimore. BALTIMORE. Oct. B.—The Prince nrrived at 8 o'clnek to-night. He was Teemed with a fine tothtory csoott, who, as a guard of honor, con dented the Prince and Me elute to the Othroare House. The %nate were thronged with epentators, ---,- The Baltimore Park. Oot. 8 —The opening oerslnontaa of the Druid Hill lark hnve twen pontv ned entil the 19th Instant. The Keyptone' State. CIIAELSSITOIV. Oet. 7.—The nteamabip Royston e State Cantata 0, V. Altualltattrt, IWlTiVect heTo I%t noon tO-0117 FROM CALIFORNIA. CONTINUED ACTIVITY IN TRADE Accident to the Dry Dock at Mare Woad. MINING NEWS The Oregon Legislature Still Unorganized FROM JAPAN. The Japanese Unmindful of Treaty Stipulations. LATER FROM CHINA. Active Preparations for the Oponing of the Context. Sr. JOSEP/I, Oot. 3 —The pony express from COI] for nia arrived here last night, with the following memory °thews : BAN FRANCISCO, Sept 213 —Mallllo—arnVeil 24.8t031ii- Ship Sam Flash, front Plnladolphm, steamer Sonora, from Panftml. Spoken. July 11, ship Sunshine. from flew York for Ban Francisco. in lac 2t deg. North, lona. 3t doe. west. Bailed, WI. bag Shoot Anchor, for Valparaiso; Oak Hill, for Sydney. COMMERCIAL INTELLIGENCE. The activity in trade confining. with a healthy and steady country drm.tud• No arrivals of iniportaaoe having occurred,. a sensible Inroad is being made up,in steaks. Six or et:Au vessels are due fro 'i New York and Boston. Their arrival will inerelse the buy ors' op p ,rtunity, but the general market bide lair to be well sustained. Candles aro rat per quiet at 23,11,213. apifiye firmer. for Rio, with a few sales to the trade at lbetilslo. .1 lie finer description 3 are tinehasged. In Coal more firmness is manifested. The mail company lately brought 2 COO tons here. th terms not transpiring. .920 is a fair quotation. 'dome kinds of fruit tire active. Cartons have ntivanzeil to 260, and Rai/oust° *3.73a1 Other fruits ore unehav Hops are hold higher. but meet with no buyers; OM is called for small receipts. Nails bring te.4.7.3. Oils quiet; Coal Oil selling at 81 8001 62)3% rltorlsto ft —Butter hoary and drooping; sales of Isthmus at 302t3.3.1.ia; 1,100 firkins arrived yesterday. A tonal decline is looked for • Come sty to 951.1 Pork improving ; Nees :320 ' 7222. blame Meetly° awl unchanged, hive doll. tugs'; bow ant. Domestics improved. Crushed has been taken frettly by rho trade at 10315 e, the market cloning firm, with sales at the !liner ligurs. Domestic epirits advanotng. Brandy hieb3c ; Whisky 500 ; Pure Spirits bilatt2o ; raw 47319 e. with considerable to arrive. Foreign brandy and Luminary° quiet and unAtinged Tom without active ty. Wines—French cloned dull, with large arrmtla ex- Wpected.. The Drcedstulls market quite Oct. heat is bolus taken freely for export to Nnglaud and Piety York. '1 ho quotations may. be ado cocoa from de4l so to DI 05 31' 100 lbs. Tonnage 13 still great In maud. .- • • RNERAL NEWS. On the M. while t , e Brawn etotnn Otglito Teritilizurt was hemp placed on the tieveroinont dry deck at Marc Island, one of the sections gape way which wan quirktv followed by the °theta, and in a few minutes the who'o dock was a complete wreck. 7he ship was w.th ddlr oulty extricated - without much damago. it will trio several menthe and cost saw oat to repair the door, which ts one of Dakin and Secer's sectional &atm, and is not believed to be suitabh for much of the heavy shipping that oecasionally needs repawin; on tho conch. The pony exotics. with St. Louie dates. arrived at Carson Valley title morning. William C. MaTIOY. au agent of the express bail tut returned to Pan e tame en having resiocSed lour hundred miles 0, tae route eastwardly frosi Carson Valhi., which will fixable the express to make bettor Dri e whrn desirable. A fire occurred at the town 01 Pacheco Centro. in Conant county. on the 14111. deatroying nearly A) 000 worth of moon', . about one liaif of ‘711 , 011 is insured. The last downward steamer brought fifty tone of cop per tire from the new mines of Del la orto County near Crescent city, on the northwestern coast of Cahforn•a. The ore gives °Mensal that the mines are or immen.o wealth. Tnere is no nevi teeth., in the poltioal cant/ann. The ;Ante as rumitural Fair et Pneumonia has proven a groat success Over 1100 head of blooded stook were eland in competition for premium.. The tlllllltsg Recounts front Ca,sen Valley, as will ne from the now Co zo silver mines. 01 , nr tiwon'e I end, are encouraging, anti the pectic confidence to them IS un eosing. Tho olan Francisco MAIM express astonishment at the richness of the specimen. ot ore received fr. in the latter mines. OREGON". The Orozon dates by steamer and overland mail aro to the 24 h from Portland, and. the 211th from calom, whom the Legislature sits. The Socato continued to 191UOUrn front day to day, without a quorum . . . A report was circulated of a oonternplatod coiner.) mine between the Douglas and Breckinridco Demo crate, giving earh party ono Fenstor. on condition that the seceding I..reckmridee • cantors would return, and give the 8:- nate a I.—gal organizrtion. The lower House Passed a resolution on the 2'th. inviting the • enato. in As disorganized condition, to meet Olga! in Jodat con vent on on the nest day and proceed at °nem k, the election of United 4 Lites Ron mtw a. banal then no ac counts have b•ou received Ira. Balem. The Denial and Breolonr dgo parties have both held Oonvenions Ind nominrocid eleotor,il tickets. The Dreelonridge ticket is as f slows Ar LARG , —Dol , ann Smith. James O'Meara. DISTECICT—.L. WM. DOl4llltt, And the Douglas deka an follows : As Linea—William F mow, Bonk min Harding. DisTalcy—W, ham linitnon. The minim: new, tram Oregon and British Co'utnbia is very glowing* run new bode t•reek gold mines. the rilver foiling noir Fort Napo. and all the Ire which mains n cumin ta aro received. trend out inch resorts al ate h.ndlJ credibl e The seitoonor Woodpeckr r had arrived at Victoria from London. . . ',lssue returns give Washorgton Territory 9 OW POrulation. S VAN. • The hrsz Orbit arrived at Victoria on The 11th. thirti-one &rya from . 4 aka', M. loran. 6t e rent fora cargo of notions, but f mad the Jape , co so ouwilloig to observe the treaty that she tbd not obtain tho captain athtes that litome.au Unit rs Ware at W per cont. ovens:Eat, and Amerman and other cold at the a Imo tato. - Frenal, nanieter at Jaddo has resigned, 0.8 Liu representation,' in reNpoot to the treaty had reoeiVea , o el ten lion from he am eon Japaaesr hadoonaluded a now t eaty with l'or tug al. CAIN A. The Wan from China autos that a le:ao Prigli.,ll end French foreo hail asso•Lblad. It We rilulorOil tont the Chineao would "make a gto:t recto:ince, and deuperate fir w•oi extooted. This RuEui,,n war steMeme have hr en very active Moving fiemito with largo brodiee of troops on board. New York Bank Statement. itzw. loam, f',l. Imnic Etn.toinant for tho week ending on E'aturdny anowa : A decon.se of loans $1,612,000 of 'vole ......—.....—. 22.0 0 of &posits 1,a6 om There IMO of ..... Death of Capt. 3. Itogera, 01 Arkansas FOUT HMI tit, MU., Oet. 3,—Caehtin John Rogers, nt old and esteemed eitizen. and one of the original pro Pi lethra of this 014, died Inn night of paralysis, Florida Election. Heves:au, October B.—TIIO TEitartlS of the Ilerttl.l &cotton aro still very meagre. and rho remit to uncertain. Mathets by Tel BAT, Ti Monx, Ootobar 8. Flour quiet ; Howard• street and Ohio f/5 at 5.75 Whekt steady ; red 41.34.1.21 ; White till 44. Nat to. corn firm. P. oVIsIODS iste dy OM , foe active, tint uncluttered, Whisky cull et g2r2 etsalc. vot. 8 —Flour mill. at Saix6.lo. Wheat steßily Bacon firm; Shoulders ye; Mess Pork firm at $17,76:719, Ex3harigc ou Plow York unchanged. LEGAL INTELLIGENCE. UNITED STATES CIRCUIT COURT—Judges (trier and Cadwaleder.—The Equity Motion List was taken up and a number of cases not being ready, they were postponed until Wednesday. Among others was that of the United tqates vs. Kocher*eerier, et al., involving the right of the Postmaster General of tho United States to establish post rinds within onion and towns of tho Union. The authority in claimed under the Ifith section of the am of Congress of 9d alaroh, 10.11, and the demurrer filed by tho do , endanis avers that the complainants have not presented such a case that entPlos them to any such relief as is prayed for, because the remedy, if any, is at law, and not in oduitT. It does not appear that any outbolitY Was vested In Joseph Bolt, the Postmaster General of the United Slates, under or hr virtue of whieh Ito was entitled to make and proniulY nto the order whine it is nvorreo in the hill of compla)natit. as znede and promulgated, whereby the pant JomPh Bolt constituted and established as post roads all the avenues. etreete, lanes. alleys toads, and highways in tho eonsolidated oily of Phi Isdtope la. because the trail order was not made by the said flolt Sereeably to any authority conferred upon him by too IlPh section of the said ant of Consress, as there m no power conferred be tho Constitution or the United States upon Congress whereby it can delegate to this Postmaster General the sutbority to establish post roads within the streets end towns of the Muted dt , toe, and the said section or the act, so tar it confers said power, is unconstitutional and void. The admiralty list was talon up, and one edge argued, DlS'lll.l4ll' nitre.-71113 Im proVement Building ANHoolation of Phi.dolpnia and Delaware uountaem vaalannan Wrlpht. defendant, end eb. Agra o. torte tend nt. An action on a mortgage. Terdidt for platentifor e3lB !mom at. daze by bar next friend L. 111.11irnt ca. Becket .13106.. k Co, feigned tante to teat the owner ship of oertam perzonal property. Verdict for pill rota. Dts-uturr Oouiu -- Judge Sharswood. Charles Sing, t uatoo for Salim T. Lewin. Vs. Jonathan K. Bonook. This coot. wan given to tho Jury on i hurs day !net, with Instruction to seals varCtot. Yealerdal they raturnad a vet rbrt for plaintiff for Vow Julius Moro. to tho use of Id alike Stern, vs. Charles A. Casio defendant, and J. 0. Nonni' x Co , gar nishees. An action on &promissory nolo. verdict for plaintiff for 196.19 - Benjamin h. Mills va Peter Uovltw Pitt action on a promissory nu . e. Vero nit for plaintiff for 3:1396. ROM vs. John Stoat.. Au Raton to reoovar tha premium cite certain polio' of nuatranco. A non. suit we. enter, d. t tte Tssessmen's SmtnF, ]rand of Pluladolpitia ta. lli tam F Harrison sn notion on a mortgage. Verdict for plaimliff f0r(...,1,42.3.(4). Coatarox PLaus—Judge Allison.—The F;eptenitisr term of thin court commenced yosto,il,y, and the at tenonnoe of jurors with patbru applying for watchers for the election p emote, crowded the court room during the g reater part of the intnii.nit. Alter the, regular buionere had concluded. the an - Pcicitineer at watchers woe °mandated, and a num. er were named. QUARTER Stlgt3loll:3—Judge 'lllpinpon The Court took bp the prison oat,' tPfiterday, and a number of trilling character were thepotud Cl duri n g toe (tat • Thu following portent pltaddd guilty and wort ten tenoed: „ Lewis Al rttn , biropetly, two bil'o, six. months; Bto Oen Lionel% smolt and blurry. ono month ; John Alot.nughlin,larootiy. two months; Clt,.ttea Jorooni, ;nreo months; 'ahotrats Mot.tarty, num months. • monvietions and r °lgor con were re corded :Js larceny , throe mon the; Al u no oore, larc; ny. ui month.; lfintrior Pomo, noun,- 0, assault and battery ten dare John McCoy. qcsaulc and hatters. of a Month; s ;melon asssult and battery, tea days; Christian Muton. larceny, tour months; Margaret Can shell, larceny. Iwo months; John Magee, larceny. them months; John iNusent, IseceliJ• nine inurolia ; John A. Brown. I lemony, them; months; Jane llamilton, colored, ;moony, six months; Sarah Hall. colorod larceny six ITII Webs; Joint Brown, colored. larronyt citron months; James AloCullongh; riot, ton days. All the ouurtu adjourned until Woduoaday ito-rnor row). Important Opinion from 'Ur. Lincoln before Ilia Nomination. WO Copy the ibllowing het - Muse at this time it must have an impertant bearing upon the Presidentiat election. ft 19 taken Irma a speech made by Mr. Lmaeuwt, at Leavenworth, Kansas, while the contest was going on for Speaker of the present U. S. Ltouse of Repre sentatives: "You Demoorats greatly foar that the success of tho Republioans will destroy the Union. Why ? Do the Republicans 'looter° against the Union? Nothing like it. Tour own statement ot it is, that if the Bleck Republioann elect a Presidont, you won't stand it ! You will break up the Union. That will be your act, not ours. Tojustify it, you must show that our policy gives you Just 05000 for such deeperate notion. Oen you do that? When you attempt it you will find our policy is o:Knotty the pclioy of the men who made tho Union, nothing More, nor nothing less. Do you think you are jus titled to break up the Government rathor tthan to have it administered by Washington, and other good and great men who made it, and who firat adminis tered it? If you do, you aro very unreasonable, and more reasonable men cannot, and will nnt, submit to you. While we eleot a President, it will be our duty tom that you submit. Old John Drown has been hung for treason against a State. We cannot object, even though slavery is wrong. That cannot °num vloloneo, bloodshed, and trea son. It could avail him nothing that he might think himself. right, So, if constitudonally wo elect a President, and therefore you undertake to destroy the Union, It will be our duty to dont with you an old John Brown ban boon dealt with. We ono only do our duty Wo hope nod believe that in no section will a majority as act es to render such extremo measures neees.lary " Itirnutornon bas been received at the Navy Department of the arrival of the Unitel Mates 6 t a lxi 4 0 0 1 1 'a - war Pawnee at Naganola THE CITY. ANUS EMEND; TlllB EVENING. WALNUT-ATHEIST rlinvots. Walnut and Ninth ata— ..+ll-I,lallnw " rattenoe and Perseverance"— he Irish ricer." VVIIHATLZY & CLARKS'S ARCH-STRIIET TIIRATIIE. ATOh street, above Nxtb.—" The Royalist"—" Dumb Man co' Mano'.eater." - • • MCDnNorcill'S CILYMPI" i late Gaieties), Roes street. above Second —" Untie Toni's Cabin " en.tcrtamgral. TINATRE. Walnut tt., above Eighth.— Oarnerose and Shateley 'e alinetrele. CONCNIIT PALL. Chestnut Street, above Twelfth.— " Tho vtrizArd of the N SANFWID . 4 OyultA Hopei, Eleventh erect, above Cheetnut.—Co nee r t nightly. BARON RENFREW IN PHILADELPHIA ARRANGEMENTS FOR MS RECEPTION. Baron Renfrew, otherwise Albert Edward, heir Apparent to the throne of England, will arrive in this city at five o'clock this evening. We visited the suite of apartments, at the Con tinental Elotel, yesterday afternoon, sot apart for the Prince and retinue. They arc essentially the same as those provided for the Japanese Embassy. Partitions have been thrown across the hall at the top of the first-story stairs, and the attendant gen tlemen will find entrance and exit by a private stairway opening upon Chestnut street. The army of rooms lies upon the second floor, comprising twenty in all. The Prince will sleep in the cham ber and bed formerly occupied by the Sim= 11u goo No Kant. It is situated on the south Bide of the hall, running parallel with Chestnut street, and at the extxmoss east of the hotel. It is a com modious, but not a capacious chamber, opening by n window upon the south. on en area or skylight. There is, unfortunately. .1.0 view in this area of flowers, and shrubs, and fountalne. A Try, co, cant skylight alone will look up at the oir apps. rent, and great walls will frown dismally down. A hit of blue sky—if the day should be clear— will peer in over the roof and six stories to tell hie Baronial eye that he is not entirely burled. The furniture of the chamber is rich. but chaste ; lino re-owood chairs, seated with velvet, cluster upon a rich pattern of oushion-like velvet tapes try. e hero aro no paintings or engravings in the chamber. A rich pattern of gilt paper surrounds the room. The bod is of somi.lereneh character, without curtains. It is of rosewood, haudsomely carved, owl of ands just behind the door, and adj cent, to it Thoro is no sofa iu the room. Its tout en Tembla is indicative of luxury, but not us tentation. Everywhere there is richness, but no thing Is gorgeous The apartments are In every respect worthy of their occupant. A door on the west of the bed chamber opens upon a commodious bath-room. The floor is covered with green vel vet ; the bath-tub fa of solid marble, burnished, and beautifully grained with delicate ehadows and lines of gray. Brushes, etc ' stand upon a neat bureau. Thb beth-roote is to be lighted by a waxen tepee. Why the royal party so obstinately adhere to the taper in preference to the gas is not very plain. At any rate, the tapers have been or dered. The Prince's private parlor stands upon the oppceito tide of thothall. It is approached both from the hell and the bed•ohamber. Prom the latter a narrow private passage way leads be llied the full-length mirror, which seems to close up the hall at the remote eastern and The private parlor la provided with magnificent rosewood Wan and conches Some chaste paintings will adorn it from the gallery of one of our wealthy oltizens. A table in the centre alit bo adorned with &cleat American volumes. Everything of his toric character will be excluded, it is presumed, as the royal party ere decidedly averse to being re minded of the. halcyon days of '7'J Wo were shown a beautiful Bible, with a massive golden owe, which is to ornament the room. . „ We believe that no clergyman fa connected with the retinue Albert Edward is said to to cemrpe tent to travelwitheut a spiritual adviser. Whether prayer wilt be (dared at morning and at night in the presence of the titled household, remains to be told. Wo wore assured, however, at the hotel, that Mr Utiehineyor, the courier, had given no or ders for such contingencies. 'rho time of the Baron and suite will be busily engaged while In town. There mey be, however. some quiet indoor amusement—an ocoaninual game of chess or a half hoar at euchre; if suoh things be, the ohessbotrd and the cards are components of the royal baggage and not portions of tho prepara tion. We were somewhat curious to know, yester day, bow the soito would entertain Itself We bo iler') that there are barbell', oto., in the lint of at tendants. Tho remainder of the magnificent al lotment of aportmonts will bo occupied by the Paten's household The courier has signified the room in which snob member of the retinue will be quartered. The rcome aro labelled upon the outto Le of the door, so that any strolling gentle man of the euite eon Lad bin friend with ease. The Duke of Nevroastie sleeps neat door to the Prince, and the Earl St. Germain's apartment ad joins the Dukes. Yesterday, these rooms were being thoroughly renovated. Every hotel expense ig to be settled by the Prince himself. There will be no unlawful 1-pecu lation in reception funds, and when Albert Edward lends New York and Philadelphia, Booloy and Co. will not be richer and the community tim poorer. We believe that no eider (aftaa etde ',ogle) has been ordered for the Prince We made ovary cif ,rt yeeterday afternoon to discover any teams of Gomm Eacbmoyer in tbu spacious wine houses of Walnut and Front stream. It is m aimed that the princely uonvivialltiee will be mo• derale. Oho dining.room Ilea at some distance from tho Peoria's quarters, and aoross the area of sky light manttonod above It constitutes the most re mote of a roiled of three parlors or reception mama, and at the centre of the Continent.l. The Prince, It Is understood, will breakfast in his chamber. The courier. 3 Ileohinayer, arrived in the city on Sunday, engaged rooms of the Continental Ho tot fm two use of the royal party, and proceeded to hew York the seam evening Mr Bactuneyer made all the neeetwary arrangements for the enter tainment of the Prince, and ordered everything that might add to his comfort and convenience during his sojourn in Philadelphia. The Prince will reach the depot at Broad and Prime streets. in a special train from Baltimore, at four o'clock in the afternoon The carriages engaged to , con. vey the royal party to their quarters at the hotel aro ton in number. There are three covered car riages, throe open baronehea, one coach, and three baggego.wagens We have heard of no committee of reception from this city. It is presumed the gentlemen upon the "committee of one hundred " will have nothing to do with the Baron's entertain ment prior to the grand opera at the Academy of Music, on Wednesday evening. The royal party desire to travel in the strictect privacy. The Prince was particularly solicitous, when the royal courier left him, to. secure the absence of all toadyism and unwarrantable weleemors We learn that the depot will, be closed on the ar rival of the Prince. and the thror; of idlers who congregated there on the OCOWSIOIIOi the reception of the Japanese Embassy will have no, opportu nity to pay their respects to the heir apparent The royal party will enter their carriages within tho depot onelosure, and will bo drivlna hastily to the Continental, where a pollee force will be in waiting to prevent any jostling or paring, Mid the chances are that few parties ether thaw mesa immediately connected with the Prince's suite, will bo permitted to enter his apartments. It is rumored thy t a select reception will be hold by thron Renfrew on Wednesday afternoon, for which tickets will ha ioeucd We aro 000ured, however, that prior to the arrival of the Prince nu arrangements will ho made by which the public may have eat opportunity to gratify their mai osity. The royal suite will breakfast at eight in rho taming, dins at seven, and sup at nine o'clook in the evening. We wore shown the bill of fare. It exhibited nothing of more than ordinary cha racter. Three varieties of meats wore named, and a deleatiou of ices, puddings, and jelly. Our private Mans sit daily down tocqually fastidious mealy, and literally bare, living ilt for a prince." We found, in tho dining and central reouption rooms, yesterday, a genius of the Jenkins order, attached to the New Yetis prom. Ile was sketch ing the spittoons and obaadoliern with the greatest gravity, If the royal household succeed in avoid ing this sketching gentleman they will do well. The rush for ppora tiokots yesterday morning. aftersoon, and evening surpassed au,ythiug cl the kind over known in this city. A few amphitheatre tickets were disposed of at throe dollars each These wore cheerfully purohancd by speculators. We barn hoard of several cases iehoro single tick ots sold at prices varying from five to ton dollars. Tickets to soleot seats In the Academy wore ped dled, in fashionable quarters, at !rem ten to twenty and thirty dollars each. The ens: of characters in the opera fur tomorrow night will be found in our advertising columns, and presents a rare s om• blnation of talent The royal party will bu \vol umed to the finest opera house this side of the Atlantic, and tho entertainment provided for them will, doubtless, assure Clam of the unequalled character of the Philadelphia public. mad its mu sical taste. The few re/sighing tickets frill be die posed of to•doy, The probabilities are that the royal party will occupy seats in a position where they will not be encountered through the whole performance by the gaze of the curious crowd, as was tbo ease with the Japanese Embassy Tho ratite of Boron Renfrew oonsiets of the fol. Ravin! , persona : Elio Grace the Duke of Newons. tie inn St. (tonneau, Major General honorable It:Bruce, Lord Lyons. Itiqur Teesdale, Dr. Ack land, Mr. Eoglehart, Mr Wnrro, and Mr Jenners nitro ore oleo eleven attandnute. Three of these are footmen, one an saber, and another gentloman of the bed chamber. They are generally poisons of ristir, and most of llama are connected with the army. Lord hinchonbrooke end Mr. Elliott, pd. vote English gentlemen 03 wealth soil rank, will accompany tho retinue, having jointd the royal party at Chicago. OUTRAGEOUS CONDUOTt—Tho residents of the Thlrteoutu ward were a good deal frightened, l on Sat day afternoon, by the freaks of a mon mined Connor. It appears ho was very much in toxicated, and went to his rt &donee, in Hamilton street, below Eleventh, and, after ottockin r his wife with a shovel, and cutting her head, he rush. ed into the etroot, armed with an oyster knife. Ile plunged the weapon Into the stomach of a little girl, tour or gvoyests of age, and when the mother of the child stooped to pick bar up. the rothan stabbed too woman in the back. A young man who witnessed the conduct of Conner, hurled a brisk at him, knocking him down and outtieg badly about the head - The injuries of the woman era not damned dangerous, but the wound sustain- I ed by the child is very perilous and fears aro en- ' Oriented for bar rotovery. The affair canoed an intense excitement. The pollee were promptly on the ground, and the madman, covered with blood, and raving furiously, was secured and looked up BOEGLARY. — At an early hour yesterday morning it was ascertained that the furnialuog goods store of Mrs. Jan° Kenai!, No. 105 South Eilth utinot, had beau entered during Cu., night, and robbed of good] to the amount of two hundred and fifty dollars Entrance was effected from the roar, the robbers boring their , way through a back abutter. They ranattatiod the goods In the store, end carried Of the most value ble, consisting of silk shirts, neckties, and other line artO'es. Thin robbery In and of the boldest we have been called upon to chronicle for some t time past, nets the etore alluded to in directly oppm j site the mayor's elSie. Fittr.--A tire broke out about halt' paSt eight o'olook yesterday morning in the photic oil manufactory of Reline Si Co , on Bridgewater street, opposite Powollon. The fire commenced around the Mill, and extended to n shed in nhith a quantity of oil and empty barrels wore etored. About 700 gallora of nil ware burned in the dill, and twenty barrels of oil and twe.lve harrela of tar were destroyed in the ohed. 'Atte main betiding escaped with small damage. The moot° was intonac, anti the fit01:11C 1 had much trouble to prevent the lamas from spreci log. Tha lona is al,nut $1,500. No inanrance, imsrauarrtm THL &SCUM 0PP1011111.8.-- Yesterday sitter...ion, the District Attorney, Ilan B. Mann, addressed a meeting of the election officers, judges and inspeches of the People's party, at the Continental Club Rooms, Chestnut street, above Sixth, explaining to them the duties they are to perform teeday. About one hundred cffieere were present, and the closest attention was paid to the remarks of the District Attorney. Those who desired, asked questions, which were freely answore by Mr. Mann, who spoke for an hour and a half. He explained minutely the du ties of judges, inspectors, and clerks, commencing with the opening of the polls, in the morning, till their - closing, at night ; how the tickets should be counted, the election pepera made out, which papers should be placed in the box, which papers returned to the prothonotary'a of f ice, and all other duties which the law requires. In regard to challenging, Mr. Mann said that when a voter was challenged, or when there was doubt as to his right to vote, his ticket should be kept on the top of the ballot-box until the question had been decided, and one inepector should cot I permit the opposite inspector to shove the vote into the box, as le often done, before the proper investi gations are made. Sometimes an inspector, who is disposed to cheat, will cry out "All right," and put the vote in the ballot-box, before even ascertaining whether the voter bas his name on the assessor's list. This should not be permitted by the other inspector. Mr Mann said that inspectors who acted thus were, in his opinion, strongly inclined to cheat. Proof should be required of every man's right to vote, whenever there was doubt; end, if ho has not been assessed, the impostors must re. quire him to produce a qualified voter to vouch for him. It is not necessary ter the voucher to bo a voter in the precinct or ward, and the proof of the voucher being a qualified voter must he his own oath. The judger have no right to interfere, unless the inspectors difOr. If a voter is challenged, the inspectors must require him to produce p , oof of hie right to vote before taking the ballot. If the challenge is on residence, the voter roust produce a neighbor or friend to prove his residence. if this is not done, and the vote is taken, it is Illegally received. If an inspector knows that to veto is being sworn in illegally, he is not bound by the evidence offered, and may reject the vote If a man swears he has paid a tea within two years, and he can't tell to whom he paid it, and when. he ought to produce a receipt. Some men, Mr. Mann said, go to an alderman's office, threw down a quarter, and then walk away, and after this, come to the polls and swear they have paid e tax within the time required by law. The vigilance of the inspector should be exercised to detect such mon. ETo nest wont into a long explanation of the ques , ion of residence, end oited many instances, where a man goes out of the Stato to reside par manetttly, anti where persons come from other States to resido here, all of which aro fully set forth in the election law, copies of which are fur nishod to the election oacers; but many of them, not wishing to devote the time required to study it thoroughly, prefer to have it explained to them orally. A question was put to Mr. Mann as to the right of medical students, temporarily residing in the city, to vote. He said, emphatically, they were not entitled to vote ; but as they were all educated and honorable men, ho did not believe that any of them would attempt to vote. Ho was very careful in directing the inspectors to watch their colleagues when opening the votes to count them after the polls are closed. Some in spectors, who are disposed to cheat, will open a veto in snob a manner with their thumb-nail that they intentionally knock off "stickers"that may have been put on by the voter. This was a matter of Minh importance, as the "stickers" were the honestly expressed will of the voter, and it.sbould be the duty of the inSpeotor to carry out the wish es of the voter. The inspeotors only should open the tickets after the polls are closed, and the judges and clerks (and where there aro watchers) should only look on, and see that the tickets are fairly canted—not some bundles twisted with only inn,: in them when there should be ten or eleven, which 19 sometimes dose by dishonest inspectors of both parties, with the view of making the vote ap pear large or small, aoaording to their own views Ile next answered numerous inquiries which were urged in regard to the right of naturalized citi zens and their sons to vote. He urged upon those present not to perform their duties in a partisan spirit, but to net consoientiously, and declared that be was decidedly opposed to any man cheat ing in elections, and that any one who should be detooted in cheating would receive no quarter from bins. INDIGNATION M1:11 T !NU AT NATIONAL EiALL.—A LiveLY Min.—Lest evening, a meet ing of Bell-Everett men, opposed to the action of the City Executive Committee in endorsing Berry D. Foster, was held at National Ilan, Market street, above Twelfth. At the hour fixed, there was a very small number in attendance, but be• fore it closed, the meeting assumed bnge propor tions, the wt ole of the large room beteg filled. The meeting was organized by 11 G Worrell being celled to the chair. The following gentlemen were Darned as vise presidents and secretaries: Vine Presidents—j. B. Lippincott, Barton 11. Jenks. Chas. Megargee, Richard Taylor, Win, C. Claghorn, John Fox, James Curtis. Ches. Miller, G. J Harlan, Wzn. s Carpenter, Win Ler-eaten, Chas Cavil], dames D Pratt, A. G Waterman, D. Roeine, King, Hood Simpson, Henry Bureau, James P. Kerne Rowland Hill, James B. Wile name, Wm Clark, Alfred Haines Secretariee —A. Ripka, Joseph at Pierce, Ed• mund Taylor. Hebert Bruce, Lewis Carson, Geo. W. Worrell, Henry Kinney, Nathan Boileau. Jas M. Dell, Team Sutphen, Mahlon Winer, S. Elena , gam. Jr , William T Borill. Theodore D Fletcher. William Y. Leader oaths forward, and made long epeooh, pitching into the Executive Commit tee for their course, and aseertiog that up to last Friday night he intended to vote for Henry D. Foster. but was opposed to the oomtuittee dictating to him how ho should vote. lie atteuded the meeting on Saturday night in Independence &mere, but ho ft mad there nothing but a pack of blackguards. Their conduct had altered his course, and be should now vote for Andrew G. Curtin. lie said the members of the Bell end Everett party had called a meeting yesterdeat morning, at the Orleans Douse, but the ruffians had come there, and they were obliged to aajourn, hut they had'eecured Na tional Hall, and, thanks to Mayor Henry, who had detailed a police force for their protection, they would now hold their meeting. The allusien to the police force caused a great commotion, when some one coded out " three cheers for Foster," which were given vociferously. This was followed by the cry of " three ,cheers for Curtin," whieh were also strongly responded to. Mr. Leader, highly excited, then celled on the polioo to arrest all who cheered A 'rush was made to the west side of the room, and the police seized Charles Mann, son of the District Attorney, who was recomized as cheering for Curtin He was taken out.ido, bat ma Soon liberated, and came into the ball again. Mr Leader proceeded in a ramb• ling and incoherent manner, charging upon his opponents, the Executive Committee, arid the chairman of the meeting . in Independence Square, that they were " miserable slaves," " paid hirelings of Locofecoiam," and sundry other expressions which wore decidedly more pointed than polite. He assailed Dr. Kirk, Robert C. Smith, Select Councilman Bradford. Al derman McMullen, and others, in savage style, the two former for being concerned in breaking up the mooting on Saturday eight, and the latter for assisting 'lle road en amount of the meeting at the Orleans House, published in the Ertl, vg, Joe, nal yesterday, and said it was false from be ginning to end. Daring his remarks ho was frequently interrupted by cheers for Foster and for Curtin, and groans and hisses. At each little interruption the entire meeting would rise, end much excitement was created by efforts to turn two or three persons out. The polioo wore present in force, and effectually overawed every attempt at disturbance. From the cheers and groans the mass of the mooting appeared to be about equally divided between the friends of Foster and Curtin. Alter Mr. Leader bad concluded, there were loud cries of "Brown," or "Broom," and. for a time, It appeared as if the meeting would break up in a row, there being no other speakers. The long list of vice preatilente and secretaries, who loomed up on paper, were not there, and no per sous occupied the plettorin except the president, Mr. Leader, and the reporters. The president, Mr. Worrell, came forward end made a short ad those, declaring bit intention to vote for Cur tin, which tie considered the beat thing to preserve the integrity of the Bell-Everett party. He was in favor of the Bell-Eve rett men being allowed to veto for Foster or Curtin, us they pleased. He was frequently In terrupted, and after speaking about fifteen minutes, the noise beettuao so great be woe obliged to stop lie urged the meeting to separatequietly. Mr. Leader then came forward, end observed that they had better go soon, as the janitor woold put out the lights. This wee received with cheers, and blues, and the assemblage quickly dispersed. On pining the street, mme 500 Bell• Everett men took position on the ninth aide of Market street, and, after choorinu loudly for Foster, marched in procession down Market aireet to Tenth, to their hendquartera, Tenth and Chestnut streets, where Dr Kirk was called upon to speak. lie charged Colonel William Y. Loader with being a lying scoundrel, who bad 'teen kicked out of the Seil-leverott party, and nose he bad sold himself to the Black Republ inns. The Doctor went on in this strain for some time, tied made mime rather extravagant remarks in relation to the pro prietors of the newspaper preps of the city being bought by the Republicans lie woo laboring un- der great excitement, and was very bitter end per sonal in his remarks The party continued here for costa time, when a number Of them proceeded to the front of the Continenial Bletel, where Own, Barrow, of Tennessee, made a speech to them from the balcony of the hotel. liebtEltiNG or VD! GUARDIANS OP T. 13133 Peon —Yesterday afternoon. ti"letweting of this body was held at their °Moo, North.Beventh street: Mr. Maris in the chair Present : Messrs, Cresson, Dickinson, Erety, Esher, 'Annelid, Marks, Sinn, Stevenson, Wil- Boma. and Maris The total number on the lot instant woe— .... 312 Lsat 7tef...-• • •—• :JU DOClonee flat year...... ..... 73 Tote] /if V. k ite women's ward tic Du hitsd do. do, . it Do. inee's do.. ---...._ I t te Do. 010-ed 4.1. en - • t The ouf-of door clatters submitted a detailed account of :het* over/Mona for the month of ten/einem . , as follown : ...... •• • • gu e wroth adorte -•-• •• • • 7132 Pol•eved. chile ran . 7 / 2 Ti,,' nati V/ ty of those inflated wee as ibllowsi (lemony leotlen,/.. • .... •--- 2 ss.'t . Other fotelf pLece PhiladeiVide • • • Vent's:3l , lmm „ ...... set otherearte of United 147 Mr. (7,oree WlPans declined to turnise coal to tho poor ef eviin4 on tonne at which the contract called for Referred to the men, er from the eistriot. 'rho our 'our agent repdrted that he had ;oilseed :•3•,30 of the emigrant tax, ar d iiiil,o3lof bond and sup port cm,es. The troaatirer reported that ho had renewed.99o2.27, and paid the same over to the eaty. The amount appropriated to each poor district, and the amount tine upended is as follows: Appropriation. Adanes. la l t 4 . 100 4 000 4/ Ogg il fai .hl 11 666 " 611 erh 3 701 1.25 a Lich 12a ; ' ;tica on :Ci tlne. reported that ha 1,R,1 ruled upon the trustees of the gas worlia, but they would Dot teouse the int ca. Eroty rooted that the olert. and steward fu: Dish list of the einnioyees of the board, their seisms and duties Agreed to. r.. ll,olanson qabraitterl a reseln4pn That the caair man et each (‘pmtnittee, and the melcout of the board, be a Acuunittee to report an estimate neelielixpenses for IMI. Agreed to = - Mr. Wlnem., of the isOmmittee appointed to inquire into , he propriety of °Ozanne the mod.- of adnutti star lob out-door Mitt. statol th.tt he could riportat the next meatier - . waham N.Tolard. was elected a visitor of the First Poor °lariat. Adjourned. A HANDSOME BANNER.--.A banner, eigh teen feet wide by twenty-two feet long, bearing the likenesses of Douglas and Johnson, has been sus pended at Fifteenth and Market streets. Tho artist is a young man named Daniel °Trion. The banner luta been gotten up by the young Demo crats of the Ninth, ward, and will be presented to the Democratic Association of the ward, and flung to the brehre some afternoon this week. A PRINTSE DEAD. — GorrieliuS Edgar, well known to the newspaper printers, died yesterday morning. .Tfe worked in one of the emcee on Sun day nigat. In all that constitutes a genial tem perament, Mr. Edgar was happily gifted. Intent poranoe, howovor, materially effected his prospeota in life. ilwtsa STOLEa.—A sLable on Almond street wharf was broken open on Sunday night, and a horse In the bnibling was stolen. FINAANCiAL AND COSI.IIIEIWIA L. PIMADELPIIIA, October 8,1860. The stock market was dull yeste , day morning The market closed easy, and witn an evident desire among berate to oparate. Pennsylvania NMhead. notwith standing the decision of tne &Laraine Court on !the ton nage-tag question, was in demand, and advanced 15. There were free bidners for e.ty loans at 101;4 for the old and 10514 for the new .sues Pennsylvania sites clad at 101 bid and lea asked, and the Roes at WU Cr 1 and 03 naked. Academy of Memo deolined I Reading ailroad opened at a deeline of It, but rallied after wards. ElDra and Catawisea Railroad shares and bonds are leas active. bit witlicut any very essential °Lange in panes. Bank shares aid passenger rai lw a y securities are verr quiet. Int the mci , ..ey mean there is no chance. It conti nues in the same tinier condition which we bare record ed for some time mul, and from the present nepeot of the bnanctal and political horizon, it /8 not likely to be disturbed for many weeks to come. Trade is reciter dull, but this is always the case at election times. The banks wal eistribute the'r aeliti-annual earnings ne , :t month, winch will increase the ainuunt of capital on the street The weekly a OFFIC AvE: Philadelphia North America Vann h. Itlsoh.. Commercial... N. Liberties.— Southwark-- . Kenaineton... Penn Tommahly Western.. ..... MrG.& . l%lech.. Commons-- t Coneo!Matson. City Commonwealth, Corn Exehanp Unior North America Farm & Mech. Commercial-- Mechanics'-- N. Liberties.. eouthwark...... Kensington..... Penn'rown4hig Western Mao. h Aleck . Commerce ...... Guard Tredesmen'n.... consolidation City.-- ..... nommonwenlth Corn Exchange The folleulua statement shown the canaill en o f th e banks of Fiuladelphis, at various tomes since Novem ber, lag: - - Loans. Spume. Ciroulation. Dposits. Nov. 4, 1887.21.199,461 2,071.464 2.161,113 3 5,633,328 Jan. 11, 18,58.21,399,374 3,710,701 1,011,033 11,465,268 July 5 - 6,635,817 2.4.34,131 16.566,80 Jan. 2,1863.,26,451.067 6.063.354 2,741,754 175 1 493606 .4417 5.... -23,446.440 4,897,063 2,833,233 15,481,064 .11.7.3. 1860-23 3.38.967 4,450 261 2.856. 6 171 14.962919 July 2. --.26 801.366 4 374 519 2,696.733 15 994 915 24 936,227 4 6410 443 2 817.207 10.341525 11 .... 26 Er 0 307 4 753,403 2 849.849 73 671.260 " 20 .....251515 637 4.711 772 2 854.653 . 15183.118 " 27.. -.26 991.791 4 795.319 2,8% 083 7.5 742583 8091. 3. 27 093 028 4 757 9.7 2 835 524 75 923 769 10..._.27 221.180 4 753 709 2.831 576 35 103 815 " 17 27 492,859 4 741 624 2 999 857 16 313 976 " 24....- 27 7.9 486 4 6.2 870 2 8.37 ow 16 463.442 0ct.1..._.27,931763 4 676 099 2 033.2 0 16 831 916 8.. -. 23113,950 4.364,99' 3,603 658 10,879 458 The following la a atatetnent of the transeetionso the Philadelphia Clearing Howe ftir the week andurg October 6,1860, as forniehed by ti o manager, Georges E. _Arnold lir telegrat lr, wo learn that the Lehigh Valley Rad road Cowan, brought doze, for the ereolc audios Sa turday. the 6.1 i inst., It 2.;3 t .as of os.O. against - lOlt tone for the corresponding week Jen, mab ing for the seas.os, commerming .December let. ell al tease erninst 163,41 i tons to corresPondinr period lalt year-- heing an !wrens:, of 117 Om tons of coal to date.' 2,4011 tons of pig iron were also rent down the rout for the same week. Tire exports of specie from New York to foreign ports. bat week, amounted t0...._,.,..._....a et) 4'o Prey/moll , reported.. ..............Y..._30...t3 : 314 Total sines January Same time In 4 , 7 ... ISST. iS66 Ina... 1S ]S32. The Times of yesterday says The Artisans' Bank matter wee again before Janice Leonard at onambara of the Supreme court on Saturday, hot no receiver was appointed. Mr. 'Byrne, attorney in the first proceeding, withdrew his application for a receiver, and obtained en adjournment of the injunotion order until Saturday next. Ji.die Cowles consonted to an adjournment of hie application for injunction and receiver until Wednesday next. In the nupreme Court, at special term. Justice Hoffman ditoblett, In the case of Dunham re, She , man, that in the execution of a commission, SR. pici to rt.' fees were tot taxable in the hill of testa; and, further, that in all eases in the courts of this State. where wituesase sante examined IR a foreign State their fee 4 must be taxed by the statutes of New York, unless explicit proofs are ei"en that 'they had been paid by the lows of the state where the examinattou was had." The Secretary of the Treasury 'writes that all trea sury notes due before November 22 will be taken in payment of the new loan Afar the loan is taken, the Secretary will give sixty days' notion to stop interest on notes due before December 1. Thee effect of thin will be to convert outstanding notes into the new loan wore rapidly. The Chicago Boa- dof Trade tom established a bow grade for the wheat received Loin Wiseohtin Minnesota, mil Northern lowa. under the title of Northwestern Club. The bulk of this wheat comes by the Northwestern and Galena roads. and in a clear, bright grain, bringing 2as3o. per bushel more than No.l spring wheat. We notice sales of this new brand of wheat, in Chicago, on the kth inst., at PdirPlo. per bus . white No.lsoring gold at iiiitS2a. Phzlndelphan httics: Exchange Sale!, REPORTED DT Et. E. S1.1:1 MAKER. Merolla:Ors' Exchange FIRST BOARD. 100 City 6s. -- -_./017.it 25 Reading 11....... 233-16 lo °Moms Canat 65... 23 :53 Lehigh Zino..-- 17 1000 do .--_.. ... .... 03 10 Morris Canal—. 644 no) N Pontos R tin-- 75'1 100 , 1 Penne It._— .15105 e S Aland of Music Prf 10 1 - Intim l'refd ....1A 134 ra , n 50 29 Del Pie Canal-- 41 5 Academy of Alunto 51 10 linti & 11th-ste 1t... 41 1 Wrnsport & E nom 1'; Ili l'or nn It• •• -- ..- ••• 41' 100 Reading 14- •... • So lu' do .11,4. 50 d i .....e5 on 233-16 45 Plantar& Bk of Ten 100 do —...1 5..23 3-16 lots 10612 100 do uann..23 1-16 BETWEBAI 33OARD8. 19()Wranyoit k Ehnira 1',"4 Ito Aroli-st, fi IthCUN U MO City 6s 101? a 6..t0 Penna. Coop 0i..8.1 06' 2600 Elintra C:lnt 40 Morns I.; 64A d 3 6ai 5 d 0... 61,!-A . I CLOSING Pal /:it. Asked. fhiladeletgags._loll.i Fhila lOirq 142 Plata Fet...,.n0w.1053.r 10311 Penns iSs —int Off Reed..r. =4' gentling tide zi-04 Rend 'rites 01i.91)4 22„,1 . - • • - Read vit :0 4 lajj Pe.999. • 41% 42 Penr.n , rat tss ~ Mut CI eon dv 01l tii3; Mor pi dwv9.116 1161 i Soh N d'4'92 tit01f.75.5i; 7d Metarrl Nam Int tO: ic , l9.ol.,NaviStk. 9 93-4 garyuyi Navvy(' 24 2414 Elmira 9.4 The !lolly market IS inacitiva and prices abut the same, with a small business only to note to supply the trade. at from 5575 to SO. for superfine and extra, SS 123;46 $1) for familf. SG 767r7 for fancy branda, an cordin' to Quality. there •t; little or po demand for shit in..nt. and id. nitarti Hopei fine is uttered at mir est figures. 51 ru Flour is sailing in a small way at .24 25. fern's Corn Meat is etecalii , and 300 bbla so d at 43 00 4,a• isrteadt but not murk in quired for, and about 4 too bus wad at 12.9 Ij2e for lair to mood Parte&and W•stern red. 1., 1 / 3 .135e for common lair White. and It, I.3lictltn• for rood to prime do the utter fo - Kentucky. e—ascot seo bun sold at 77c for Deawaro and fOo for pewit& corn is in limited &mat d and stoat', and about I all bus prime yellow .o'd at 7 , 0 part in store. ruts unchsneed ; 3a - 4 000 but sold at 350 for fair, arid 3ec for prime Southern Saris w.tnted, at 527 ton for first No.l Quer citro so ToN.—The market continues firm t 100a200 bales have been taken at full prices Smocanisi.—Sugar and Coffee are ate , dy, with fur ther small es at quotations. PROVISIONS —There is very little. doing in battened Meals or Lard. and no ehangea to note Butili,.—There is Very" lltilo Clover offermit', and it is wautr.d at ed tEe lm for puma. 0 tmothy it worth iS 3 75 iil3,Avi'h but It tV offerolz wwsrcy to moving If in lots, at 22,14..a29k0 for Penn al es lvemit an fo d Mids. bb'a ; 2047, - ,220 for drudge. and 22ria 4, 4 ' gallon r Philadelphia Cattle Market. The receipts of cattle continue large. reaching shout 22;0 heal this week, the market dull and prices about the same as hot quoted : 73 P. Hathatral, e-ler enemy, $829, 60 J. Abrahams, Ohio, , EA 50. r P. 45 J. bende-s,m, Chest 'r county'. _,SCO,yO, 12 A. Kennedy, Cl ester cminty, r.tB. Aq B. C. Raldwin Cne.tter eonnty..Se2d. .10 S. Kurtz. Cheater county, Sp:: szo 75 t A Kimble, Chewer count•, SSA.% 54 57equaid 5 - Cu., Virginia, .7.s:(taa be 75 if ahlve Chelder halms h.l P. Alonlich €,, Chester county, cc, P. 70 James Me Filler:. Ir., (Mester county ~50 , 38 d 120'Conluan & McCall. Chester county, 717 ad 75 AS J. Todd. Ohio, MSztA 75. MI !Portnoy l South, (thin, ;19:18 75. tb , hamberg. Onto. giTire 136 11 SnlCl.lllTidgeo. Otto, 63a9 23. 87 l'llman & Frank, Ohio, 87ard. 10 11. Chair, ' Pennslvaui, ,57‘rp. 80 Auld VOISTS. hto. 17 A. Sanderson . Ohio, , 93 a t. 2.1 M. Courson, Chester county, 98 gs. 121 Steel 'trillium, :570850. 25 H. Nealy, Cheater county, i5./5 • 55 D. Itradley, Virgmin. iSrt9. 56 T. Strokland,P mgloitt 5 7 .4 7 " 41 . 35 W. Yttlirr, Penney 'vents , ty7m3. AT Chandler A Alexander. C hester retuar, 67,10. -- 0.3 Hutton tt, Seymour. Obis 7 g 2 ./ 91 . fit J. linne,hettx. Pennsylvania, .9304. n,aco Sheen sold at the Avanue Prove yaut at from 8 to no per lb as to oontlition 144 Cows also sold at the AVFiltle at from in 'o 555 Per head aecordine quality. The al - rivets of flogs at It. R. Irnhod's Union Drove :aid reached about 1,817 head, et from :37.50da25 for suit fed, and e9ce0,75 pima> Ibs for corn hole; market brisk. Sat I cad of Dees sold at tho Arentie Dr'o7e Yard, by Same, H. tteynolde, at ftorn .5811.5 per 100 Ms net, acropiteg to wady. i f6i _, - - 449 1 701 419- I AM unlalown. 1 ,SVJ ... 453 The Motley Market. atenient the Philadelphia hanks is es lAL BAN K EMENT. HE PHILADELPIITA BAIULF. 43,680.000 3,029 7!0 4,371 371 1.663.00 u 1.6-5 6 , 1 1 000 1 003 1.19 851 9 02 1 403 1 6 9 0.15 1 213 979 6367.91 2.4 1 770 618 019 11109 9 9 MO 6.5.9 471 232 661 067 4 'g, 6.J 000 3,0'17,14;0 356.1.3 1.625.0416 1,8'12 6% 1.4 3,003 1,035 6:03 8.54 637 8".9 194 1,616 257 1,210 621 664 624 2,406 435 623.20 btki 656 8 6 9,133 530 643 ggi .Jyr [81.793.600 1,84•.36i 2.9&3344 843 090 919 4n3 '1.9 ..10 732 511%5 1.79.)31 963643 t , 3 I 901. ..19037 1.245 1,0 433 L 18 270 C 53 517 278 305 325 324 130 200.246 17.791400 1.061.471 2.756681 Ul 4 OOO S 447 7 008 OM 71460 &A CO 031 271 261 148 701 25 479'2.9 1.".12.524 444 6,6 " . 8 819 ; 9:10 361.620 327 244 382,614 Clcannea &lancet! ! ......- ..._14,222.1:41 GI e 242,3319 rs ........ 3 GIB 231 34 239 093 37 _.... 3,728 379 21 219 31 98 .......... 3 430 459 13 291 540 63 . 4 113 13 , 09 211.34 76 —. . 3 9501332 13 13.3 121 43 325.071 315 60 e 5.203 140 10 ... 640 00 793 F.B BR 64 „ 33 Old 07'3 ........ 28 751 070 24.701.670 1 453.206 ....... 531./§74. October 3, INl' 110.±,ttD 3 Beaver Meadow ' blmita ......r3 9 Norrixiown ...... Readtwe 2.3 0 bar:teen:lz 11 61 .G.r..11.--,f1t.,1. 0 I% 43.1 !Elmira R.. ~.pref.lSX Al I.Elinira. Ts 73 .. 7.3 r. Lon; IFlaud R_ 13 13‘,.1. / Len h 67 53 .Loli CI k, /NT Z. 4 erip 4‘,:i 47, N .remnaPanna 14 N Pew a R 10a ...99 Cit , a`ipti RC - , n . 9li 6 Cate-meas. card I'rnkt & `Sant „ Seem d & Third. 49 .. [taco & Vtue-ta --St 96 West Ytula x.... 613 69 Spruce tr /I , } i GrAeu & Coates 19s,i IN)-4; & Walnut--31 93 Philadelphia Marlietti. OCTOBER S—Flentne Ucromt 8, 1&3)
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