W*MW«D»Jin.t,’(BBI!I»AYBBXO*PTRD,) s»4s«iWiji | BTSBxx vf'i" ' ‘ Vw*lt* Oltn fn to tko Conlor. •Wtod to SibwUanf out (iftto City «(ft* Doluis i£** - roM Xiant Momm, tXan Souuuu #o* Six Moaiao—invonoblr la ad '••M»&£tko (Worthed. /. * NtU'r•' ' -i*M-W«ia«.V PKKItS. tto OitV «t Tain m, c«u nk4A«M.tmodnitu.' ’ J ft HTJTCHJNBOH, Ao.»»* «W£8T«r»B»„ 00*108810* HKROHAKTe : ntnxuuiiv . tPHIjLAOEL^iIIA-MAOk GOODS. fy ASH INO TON MILLS VOBMH&LY BAY STATS MILLS ' "af aUdltar. in groat variats. Rtabtmiaaifl Prawd TABLE COVEXB . , RNIONBB AVERS and HAOAD CLOTHS. skirts. r •OMKINe. Md Uonbto and T»itted COATLttSS. kMTT ZEPHYR CLOTHS. PtAii FLAHHKLS and OPERA FLAM WSLS.; Prated FELT CA.RFBTIH6Q. • 'FoiraaSiSf-/-'■ rBOTHINGHAM St WELLS, ■! - u*itorrßxnrr SILBTITIA Btr«t, ■)»m »,. i, HATS AXD CAPS. .' NfcW HATSToSif gr - JQHN; E. FOSTER, (tjtoiitm Soath TMid attest,) • -■, -Barat takea tlia etore at N0.,881 CHESTNUT ST., dSfS&MSm.■Owldr *tyto, innt«* iho attention • f TS!B34StT Allp EXTENSIVE STOCK BATS AND CAPS. jtrJUanvAUlftrlM.anaiaakadmind. . FURS. fpURS! FURS! heorge f. womrath, BOS. ,41* AND 41T ARCH STREET, . Haa now Oaea A FULL ASSORTMENT ' LADIES’ FURS, Totrhioh tiwjMtwfaofl of th» Pwblia ib invited. oe>-4n HIUINERV GOODS. <J»HOS. KENNEDY & BRO. , 79 ft OHBBTNUT STREET, BELOW EIGHTH, Btroe»*aad aSPOBNDID ASSORTMENT of r 'FRBNCR FLOWERS, HEAD DRESSES, . fXATHRRSi HUMORS, STRAW (Hgtb*. ‘ i. -i ■ - - ■ 'AH» BOJN NET MATERIALS, . . . . AT LOW PRICES.y aad-Im CLOTHING. So DOHERTY, TAIL OBS, •I tad U SOUTH PIPTHSTRISKT. atv* jc»» kwimi) TBEim ALL AHD WINTER. BTYLEB, ... Totathar with a laraa aaaortmaat of HEW AHB PASHIONABAE-GOODS. To MU tU fault ui> laritad to axamuie. a»H-ha ■ . ■ V CABINET FVKNITVBE. PHBNOHFDKN ITU BE. SEORaE J. HENKELB, *B4 WAUtUT BTREKT, • a jaw oa—o a hfta UTQlaa oi . > nut. ■ ’ ; QUADRILLE, KAKQUETBIE, and ORMOLU WORK, Wfcteh ha wiUaoU at wary REDUCED TRICE*. eidaTriUutSs'cAßlNKT WAttM. OKO. J. HENKE Lg, idAd-WALNUT STREET. . OSbnat V.B'AT &KDUOED PRICES hartwjtawui.iiamiiitliaUalon.au of How Dew ana fWiaa*i»aaißiaaWfeTa>viilii«int. ’ aanam and ml- MOOBE & CAMPION. Ifll OABiNXT WARKBOOMB IN OPEND tHM WKEK BY ' "■=' No.** BmthBKtX»FDStmt, FouSooreoboT. Gt-^rtrgt, , A i»re» srortrewtef rUKWITUItB 6mt.it dMcriV bw'«MN*nariN**a*,a*tkoiowMtoatt*no«o. . ... arnwna maohbwb. BOUjDOIR SEWING MACHINE. RS FOR HUILTING AMD hews: Work. ’ - ‘ 'withottt th* trouble of to- Wfc'Tl liLHfOMfc wliliMfif Md. - pollute nj>B* JB6tf MAHOTACTUBIftG AND I^%O s^OHINES gfOETIIIr, GOODS. QTJNS. PISTOLS. SKATES, &c. PHILIP WILSON & CO.. MRNBYAOTCXBRS 07 SUPERIOR SUMS, laportrn aad .Mm ia riKE 6CMB AMD BBOQIIMB TACKLE, CRICKET MATS, BALM, So., BASS-BALL IMPLEX KNTS, «KATES pr EVERY VARIETY, FINE FIBHIMO TACKLE, ATTRB LOWEST PKICB*. 48(2 OffISOTNOT STREET. BLIND* AND SHADES. jJLINDS AND SHADES. B. J. WILLIAMS, Mo, SB NORTH SIXTH STREET, l. tk» jaisA MtwudT. Munbotanr ol - yEN ETI AN BLINDS WINDQW SHADES. TH larsest end ft&eet Msortment in the c»tr* At the kwttttrfa**. audaud lettored. REPAIRING k, . 001-im ■ t«, GLASSES. ookino-g: * Alfa picture! frames, Of oreir itHtalr. 1 mnoratinos, oil-paintings, *«., 1 no.sss'Xroh Street, • oko; £ DErmEr*, MINOPiCTIJIS* AMD IMPOSTS*. pittruaE.coxMfoif xhd-Room houliuboA. .. WhoKOOIOMd Rotoil. : I kooKiHG-GLAssis, OIL PAIHTWaB, At., ks, ‘j&Nt W’Jwbw * son, - au]ttitj.imrsss3. whole. TT aii* AND RSTAIL DEALERS, EEfiUaB’OiJULEWSS, SIS CHESTNUT BTRBist, !• 375 bbls , 200 halfbbls., 370 VOL. 4.—NO. 81. OPEN. MONDAY, OCTOBER STD, A Superb Üb« FRENCH AND GERMAN DRESS GOODS MOM AUCTION. The attention of our otiitoiuore te invited. JOSHUA L. DAILY. IMPORTER AND JOBBER, No. ai3 MARKET ST.. «og-tt I AND ATTRACTIVE STOCK I »om FALL AND WINTER BALKS SHORTRIDOE. BROTHER. & 00.. IMPORTER* AND JOBBERS, No. *#o MARKET STREET, and N 0,41« MERCHANT STREET, PHILADELPHIA, I ff&k n FORE,QK “ dAMK - A FULL STOCK <xaontoS%ronvtlr, At LOWEST MARKET qLoaksi CLOAKS I TO WHOLESALE BUYERS. HVKftV NOVELTV OP TttU fliiA t&U. AT THB LOWEST GASH PRIOKB. •v’Merehaate’ ova material! aide up if dewed. HENRY IVENS, •M'Sn No. S 3 Booth NINTH Street. W. LITTLE & OO- SILK GOtiDS. No SIS MARKET STREET • auMm p*ALL, OHAFFEEH, * COUT.&Oo FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS: salg-Xn No. ITS MARKET STREET. [ARTIN * WOIifF, mtUIUI SULIM It FOREIGN AMD DOMESTIC DRV voops IH Niiui STREET OMk end rrearet Blc-aotttia’ Boien. ot *ll reoaona ire invited to Ml «xM»la*tlon ef our Stock. acß-tm* REMOVAL. 1b (oantuaM or the datreatio* by are ef then Vara Stun Stoer. YAW), OILLMORE, A GO. HAVE REMOVED TO NO. 610 CHESTNUT ST- SOOTH SIDE, JJBOrS SIXTH. They h»v» now open AN ENTIRE ; NEW STOCK OF SILKS AND FANCY DRRBB GOODS, SHAWLS, GLOVES, RIBBONS, DSSBS TRIMMINGS, Ac, To*ether with 'LARGE ASSORTMENT of , STAPLE AND FANCY WHITE GOODS, EMBROIDERIES, LAOIS, MANTILLAS, Ac •reviou to the 're, the. cM #e»Med to tUsslei A NEW STOOK. tcvMob th*r Invite theettmtum of their Coitorocn cad Jtocw imentllv. yjTCTKTS. ADSTIE, & McVEtGti, IMPORTERS AMO JOBBERS 3H DRY GOODS, Mo. 311 MARKET otreet» Above TbJrtf 1 ) John B.W«ua*r, ) •Jwilarrß. / A*i-a» WOOD, MARSH, * UAYWABD, IMPORTERS AMD WHOLESALE DEALERS IN DRY GOODS aid CLOTHING. NO, 3«S MRRKET STREET. , nill ud Winter Stook nowoorapleto and re.iljrfor frapeM. ,'x«J:fcn t»A*»BRHAM«MBS. pAPER-HANGING OALL TRADE.) HOWELL & BOUKKE. . Hneim to th.lrneV Sion, OORHER FbURTH AMD HaRKBT STREETS, Are now preparsd to Oder to ISO TrAfie A !.rr« ud ojdiut'aMwtiMSl of ™ Lt sfes, ; 600DS»Ac m AH of tb«'uvta .•& m? fe*#nvs; from the love»t prieed ertlele’ (0 tke tndet. ; GOLD AND VELVBT DBCOKATIONS. Southern and Western aherehuta trll do well to Ml the MUNishmenl of HOWELL A BOURXR, N, B. OORNEX rOtTETH AMB MARKET STREETS, ' enld-Sa '' FHILAMLraiA. - : ; GAS nA'TURES, LASI* , B, *c. OIL Or SDPffilfOß QUA- Ll^ t ' KEROSENE, of COAL-OIL LAMPS, CHANDELIERS, BRACKETS, k.,, MABafaofarod mmd for ■*!♦» »t LOWEST GASH PRIORS* . I WITTERS & CO., ■ Ho. 33 NORTH EIGHTH STREET. 1 °° r Mirket and Arch, - SHOKriWUINGS. |SAAO BARTON * O®.. j IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN SHOE STUFFS. MtEHCH AND ENGLISH LABTESOS, GAL ' LOONS, PATENT LEATHER, *o. Alto# GOODS rOR CARRIAOS HASERB, ! No, 3S SOUTH BBCOND STREET, PMtedelphle " nul-Sm . . -.. .■■■ ' i M OORB * lIFNSZEYa&CO. . ARB NOW OPENING ; ' TD-JBtR PA,LL 3ifO o S OP ■ _ HARDWARE. . , , «»V MARKET, Ud, 41* OMIMEKCK WREST. ■i ■ gssas FfeitadeMia, «mm« -™4^wrjj^ rtiLDßtpoU Mt-irtf 1860. PHILADILVHta. HARDWARE. JJUNN, RAIGUEIj, A GO. nIFoRTERS AND JOBBERS OF FANCY DRY GOODS. No. 137 NORTH THIRDtSTREET, NOW OFFER TO THE TRADE AN UNUSUALLY ATTRACTIVE BTOCK OF GOODS, COMPRISING BILKS, RIBBONS. DRESS GOODS, WHITE GOODS, EMBROIDERIES, LAOEB, CLOTHS. CAS SIMERES, VESTINGS, HO SIERY, GLOVES, AND TRIMMINGS, Toiether with & fail and varied stock of FALL AND WINTER (SHAWLS. To all of whioh they invito the attention of CASH AND PROMPT SIX-MONTHS BUYERS, ocf-lm rjMIE attention of Buyers is solicited. FRESH FALL GOODS RIEGEL. BAIRD, & GO., IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS ov DRY GOODS, No. 47 NORTH THIRD STREET. Would respectfully invito the attention of the trade to their LARGE AND WELL-SELECTED Stock of FRESH FALL GOODS, Whioh thej are now opening. We are dally ih receipt of all kinds of fresh and desirable goods. Call and examine our stock. se7*3m gOWER, BARNES, & GO., BOOKSELLERS AND PUBLISHERS; No 37 NORTH THIRD STREET, Lower aide, above Market Street, Philadelphia, Invite the attention of Booksellers and oouutry mer chant to rteir very large stook ofSohool Books, pub lished in this and other cities, together with Miscellane ous nad Blank Books. Paper, and Stationery generally. B„ B. « Co., arejmblishera of many popular works, among whioh are £ho following: THE CENTRAL GOLD REGION, BY COL. WILLIAM GILPIN, (Late of (be U. 6, Army,! ILLUSTRATED BY NUMEROUS MAPS. One vol., Bvo, bound in doth. Prioe 01,»; and a liberal discount to the trade, This book is pronounced the most wonderful, soionti no, and comprehensive treatirt on the geography of our oontment ever published. SCHOOL BOOKS: SANDERS’ SERIES OF READKRB. BROOKS’ NORMAL PRIMARY ARITHME TIC ......1, ota. BROOKS’ NORMAL MENTAL ARITHME TIC™— —_—, 23 ota, BROOKS’ KEY TO MENTAL ARITHME TIC— 8, OUt BY E. BROOKS, A. M., Professor of Mathematic* in Ponasrivamn stAt» Nor . ~ , mat SAiinol. Liberal term, for Introduction. WHITE’S COPY-BOOKS. BY T. KIRK WHITE, Pre.td.ntof renAsjlnnia Commercial Coilei* PELTON’S OUTLINE MAPS. This .etfei of SIX SUPERB MAPS is now adopted inalraCat/everysohoolofnotemthe Union where geo graphy Is taught, and has no equal. Prlcg $23 for full set of sik maps, or 9lofor set of hemisphere maps alone* auB-ftm v CARPETINGS. (WiNG to thelaegFlmpoStH ’ TION OF ipARFETINGS. and consequent forced sales THROUGH THE AUCTIONS IN NEW YORK, ire ate enabled to offer a larje assortment of VELVET, BRUSSELS, and TAPESTRY OARPETtii, OF THE NEWEST STYLES, AT MUCH BELOW REGULAR PRICES SUPERB THREE-PLY and INGRAINS, IN GREAT VARIETY. BAILY & BBOTHER, No. 920 CHESTNUT Street. WATCHES AND JEWELRY. JAMES E. CALDWELL & 00., 822 CHESTNUT ST, Import and manufacture FINE WATCHES. RICK DIAMOND AND ALL OTHER JEWELRY, MANTEL CLOCKS AND BRONZES, STERLINO SILVER-WARE, ENGLISH AND AMERICAN PLATED GOODS, PARIS ARfICLES, FANB, OPERA-GLASSES, &c„ * The principal part of our stock is entirely new at MODERATE FIXED PRICES. An Examination will entail no obligation to pur chase. noltJal-if ;<JjN'FINE WATCHES, of the most ap* isS&C RT2y® d^ tnakeia; Jewelry of every description. BiiTer-wate equal to coin; also, Plated-ware 0 the best quality, at G. RUSRBLL.’a, OQgg-Im „ , 22 North SIXTH Street. ■-'JStI SCARF-PINS, STUDS, and SLEEVE- Jtfji BUTTONS.—A law. awortment of Oarbunolo, Coral, Lava, and btrusesa Gold McArf-piEB, at oc»-lm 38 NotthSlXTt^3‘.r'o«t, UNBBELLAB. SLEEPER & FENNER, WHOLESALE MANUFACTURERS UMBRELLAS A°ftl> PARASOLS, NO. 3«0 MARKET STREET, PHILADELPHIA, are now making more than mS HUND&feifl)lYVXfeX*¥ VAIUETIKS 0* UMBUSIXAS ofevery to 4Q inohes. • %3jein who have sot had 9. & F.’s make of goods will fi&a pwir.time weU spent mioolrisg over this well-made ■took, whloh includei mAnt kovhltibs, noi tfui with ’eUrtehtrt* aa»-Bra gHOT WELL'S SWEET OIDEK, MADE EXPRESSLY FOR OUR SALES. The firft invoice of this - - CELEBRATED CIDER Just received. ALBERT O. ROBERTS. DEALER IN FINE GROCERIES. obsi-tr Comer ELEVENTH andVlNßStrae.#, -BPABKHNO AND STILL CATAWBA Twines, Xin.reoinßjn rt rT. H K LBV, Ginolcuati, Ohio, Alwan on hand, and in loti to mut nnrohMa t«. bi 'CHARLES F, TAGGART, Sola Aunt, . No, CSI MARKET Street. JP*AMILY FLOUR, MADE FROM CHOICE WHITE WHEAT. C- H. MATTSON. 8, W« aor/ARGH and TENTH. etreeU. EMRBT PREMIUM AWARDED, at the -l latf Agriculture) Sobiotr.t* ALLMAN fe 2EIIN DER. Eonrth end Vine, for Boat Family FLOUR.— Conttantl. on hand, Wetslpe Harper's Ferry.Fagan's Four-Acer and 'Stag Horn, 9t. Lome, and UambrllL’s retuiao Familr Flour. ooi-jm PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1860. '€ l} £ Ire s ?. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1860. Letter from Lancaster. (Correspondence ot Tho Press.] Lancaster, Oot. SO, 1860. Mr. Editor : The Press of the 23d lost. con tained a brief letter from me, in whioh I gave you tho faots, os far aa I knew them, of the burn ing in effigy of John W. Forney, editor of The Press. I said in that letter that Messrs. Muesor and Reigart, clerks under Messrs. Sanderson, editor of the Intelligencer, and Swnrr, postmaster of Lan oastor, were tho persons by whom that disgraceful affair was devised, and executed. I directed your attention to tho inference whioh might not unfairly be drawn from the olose connection between the l olerka and their employers. I alEo said, in effect that both Messrs. Sanderson and Swarr were ro oipieDtß of Mr. Buohanan’s bounty, and dare not rofueo tho old gentleman’s commands, if he doom ed you to graco an auto da fe. I did not have all tho faots at my oommand at tho time of writiDg my hurried letter to you, or I could not have failed to point out to you that Mr. Alfred Sanderson, as- sociate editor of tho Intelligencer , and son of George Sanderson, ohlef editor, was one of those who walked in tho procession bent upon your an nihilation. You will eoo from the following notioe taken of the performances of that ovening, that I was extremely gentle In my allusion to the per sonal qualities of those making np tho orowd: A Disgraceful Scene.—On Friday night last, a motley oiew of railroad loafers, drunken wife beaters, and two oent gamblers, beaded by a post office official, and his Honor the Mayor’s clerk, met near the railroad depot, and marched in pro- Gbssion to the musio of a consumptive drum and wind-broken fife, te Centre Square, where they amused themselves and a few dozen ragged boys and red-armed Biddies, by burning in effigy Col. John W. Forney, the editor of the Philadelphia Press. A more miserable or God-forsaken-look ing orowd, eye never saw or ear heard tell of. They were a disgrace to humanity, and, for hu manity’s sake, we never wish to chronicle another suoh a sceno. Disguised by fantastic dresses, the only resemblanoe they had to men was that some of them walked upright. After burning their bundle of rags, whioh, in more respects than one, bore a striking resemblance to many ongaged in the raree show, tho party proceeded to the hanks of the Conestoga, whore, in the indulgonoe of tan gle-foot whisky and sundry abominations, they rioted the night away. A few, wo are glad to say, who formed the original party, left before they reaohed Centre Square. They diCQqyCteil that what was at first meant for a harmless pleasantry, was, by the little meanness And dunce-llke ma lignity of the leaders above referred to, rendered a disgusting speotaole of partisan indeoenoy.— Examiner. • For asking you to draw vour own inference from tho unquestioned faots published in the letter in ihe Press of the 23d, and whioh I here take oc casion to repeat, with the additions in referenoo to the assistant editor contained in this, the senior editor in the Intelligencer of to-day oharges me with making a “ covert attaok ” upon him, and to give point to the oharge, intersperses his remarks by suoh pleasant epithets as “ scribbler,” “ Black Republican,” Ac. I shall not impeaob tho erudi tion and marked ability with whioh the intelli gencer is condnoted. That has become proverbial. I should be flying in tho face of s Tory de cided impression that the editor of that pap.er-has done much to disseminate intelligence), and to awakon learned and benefioial inquiry, slnoe Pro vidence has shown so evident a sign of.oonoorn in our behalf by removing him from Carlisle to Lan caster. But I should be derelict in my duty if I did not attest to at least a lew of tho benefits which our benighted peoplo have reoeivod from the Mr. Pot of the Intelligencer. There ifl not a ohlld of Democrat) parents in the city who Is not acquainted with the poetical quotatioh cobiuenolng toth— “* “ White spirits and biaok, Red spirits and gray,” >Snth the Intelligencer's-p&ttnt'prasQ phrase, “con ciliation and harmony,” togothcr with tho mngnl fioent idea pervading the whole paper, which, put into brief and expressive English, would read: “ Tee editor of the Intelligencer, desirous of hold ing on to the mayoralty, would thank the generous leader for a lift in that direction on tho first Taos* nay of February next.” With suoh choice poetry os quotation, su«h double refinement of the Add!- native to tho genius of the editor, and such grandeur Itftho Conception of the objects' for which borrowed and indigenous thought should bo employed, it will go hard with aa if wo do not soon throw tho students of tho academics and groves of Greece into tho deepest ebade! The Intelligencer waxes liberal. Ho wishes to “wagor a year’s subscription that Col. Forney’s Lancaster correspondent voted for Curtin at tho lato election, that ho Is now hoart and soul for Lin coln, and that he is a Black Republican in dis guise." There is ono very serious objection I b&vo. to taking this bot. It Is this: I never yet have put up two dollars against so worthless an artlolo in my life. Two dollars against fifty-two oopiesof the Intelligencer ! Coaid a man conceive groator odds against him ? Just io think of i‘! by suoh a bot bo compelled to read fifty-two articles, qom -*«K4*nalpg ; Red syEfT Dftfirirtfaw-*— fifty-two artieles hooded “ Conciliation and Har mony,” and a score tlmos moro of doleotable arti cles through whioh Tha.’yoralty in meaning wottld bo &A apparent as a blaok background through tho thinnest ofoobweba. Oh, no ! Captain, I oould not think of taking suoh a bet as that. Suppose you throw in tho press, the ohief and assistant oditors, and some old typo, and renew your proposition. I shall then think of it. X. The Assolulioh of the Union. To t&r Editor of Tub Press ; Apropos of the present talk about disunion, I send you an old number of the Newport Mercury, containing an article referring to that subject. You will bear in mind that the Mercury was published at the chief mart of tho African slave trade, Newport, Rhode island, and that it was what would now be oalled a conservative paper. I commend the article to your readers as pregnant \vithfaiatter for profitable Teflecllon. Respectfully yours, A Daily Reader. iFrom the Newport Mercury, March 14,1807.1 “ PSESBRVB THE UNION. “ A smart debate has taken place in Congress on tho slave-trade bill. Mr. J. Randolph, the day after the bill passed both houses, moved that leave be given to bring in & bill to explain tho law—a law whloh he denounced as tho most frightful and abominable ever passed, and against whloh ho ex pected protests would bo Boot from &U the States south of the Potomao, and ho hoped from Mary land. He deolared, if the law went into force as it was, he doubted wketherioe should ever see ano- ther Southern delegate on that Jloor. Ho, for one, would say, if the Constitution is thus to bo violated, let us secede and go home. “Mr. Bmilieeaid the gentleman (Mr. It) talked of the Southern Stateßseooding from tho Union. Jf they do not like the Union let them say so ; IN THE NAME OF QOD LET THEM 00, WO CUD do with outtnem. “Mr. Randolph explained, and said*. Mr. S. grossly misrepresented him. He looked, ho said, upon Union as the means of our liberty, happi ness, andsafoty—as tho meansj and not the end. But if Union and the manumission of slavery are to beputin the soolo,lot Union klok the beam 1 Mr. Randolph's motion was oarried, and & oom mittee of three appointed.” Deserved Compliment. [Correspondence of The Prees.] GhsENWooD, Sussex CO., Del., November 1, 1860. Bin: We had & political meeting at BrJdgeville, ’ on Monday afternoon last, and at Georgetown, our County town, on Tuesday evening, both of which were ably and eloquently addrossed by a gontlo man from your oity, John 0. Byrno, Esq. Mr. Byrne greatly delighted his hearers on thoso occa sions, and fully and satisfactorily explained the principles of popular sovereignty as advocated by Mr. Douglas, and proved himself to ba a champion for Douglas* rights, of unsurpassed ability. I have heard political addresses from many eminont gentlemen of tho country, among others, the'late honorable and justly celebrated John M. Clayton, but I have never heard one whom I consider tho superior, as a stump speaker, of John 0. Byrne. W. 0. it. Philadelphian Manufactures. Tho manufactures of this oity appear unaffected by the politics! strlio of tho time. Early in Sep tember, as -wo reported at the time, the ominent silver-smiths, William Wilson & Son, corner of Fifth and Cherry streets, executed an order to tho amount of $12,000 for the agricultural fair at Nash ville, Tennessee. This week, they have sent off $4,000 of plate, seraowhat above tlie ordinary Standard silver, to Port Gibson, Mississippi, for distribution, as premiums at the Clairborne oounty Agricultural Society, in that State. They inolude pitchers, cups, goblets, spoons, «60. No doubt these articles willgive as much satisfaction asthoao sont to Nashvillo did, two months ago. A daring and novel burglary was lately perpetrated at a grocery store in Cleveland. A hole one and a half feet square was out through the side of the storo, not twenty feet from the open door of* the room where Mr. and Mrs.’ Maok Boftey (tho proprietors) were sloeping.' The burglars took the key of tho money drawer from Mrs. Roney’s dross pooket, and abstracted about $100; all the drawers in the houso were aearohed with astonishing ooolness. Tho eocrot was chloro form profusely introduced into tho sleeping-room beforehand. THE PRESIHENTIALCANVASS, “TREASON’S LATEST PROGRAMME.” South Carolina to Bear the Secession ' SJtahdard. What are the Requisites for a South Carolina Governor? Oolonelß Orr and Ashmore on the Crisie, On- an “ Impracticable’’ Dltmlonist. A Voice from Virginia—Disunion. Dc nounccd. How Treason is to bo Accomplished, John J. Crittenden on Judge Douglas, PLEDGE OF THE MINUTE-MEN. Inflammatory- Itlioloric in Ala* b ama and. South. Oavolina. WIDE-A 1 The Republicans under a Municipal Escort. Scnnttr fcameron on the Cabinet of Lincoln, YANCEY AND DISONfoH IN KENTUCKY. Letter from of Florida. The Louisville Soumalii of Tuesday publishes the following artiole, to which allusion has been made in our tolegrophle*sespntches from Louis ville : Treason’s Latest Vroorammb.—-We have had a conversation with a gentleman, a remarkably shrewd and well-informed polltloiau, who -loft Wofihiogton city last Friday evenipg,. .Hg states that some of the principal Breckinridge leaders it among-whom h® mentions Senator Wigfall, of Texas, hbaf Judge Meok, of Alabama, “ft■“, ■ oonsnltatl.n on Thnrsday, at Brown’s Hoto l in ogre.d op«n a eonoral F l *?®* Mtwn In tho;eT*nt of Lincoln’s cleotion, .wbioh they proftMSd looted as a w ,Ulnty. On Friday, Mr. ivigfall .poke wllhout resorre in re- ■ gard to tto phn s4cpfod;3Sy them. Ho said thatl Sonth Carolina was to tetip the lead—that, within thirty days offer ifooott’s olcotton, South Caro lina, having vereignty, would’send an embassador or minißlcr plenjpotocitiary to tho'Dnited States GoVernmont at Washlngfcon r eskiDg yocognitlon os suoh. Tho bolior Was, that the ,pA«T'Utit would receivo the ?v U Mtt ob his organ. * ;' a ®h!Dgl°n ' has asaortoa a State s right of. scission to Hie uaquesdonable. If the GovMQinent receive the South Carolina tho other cotton States, in whatever order they might shouldp having severally declared their Independenoo.'Scucutmnisters to .’JflShingtoaior reoognlffori and reception in behalf 0 ™P®?tive And, when a 'cufficwnt number of Southern fioverelgntletf*shall have been eetabllshed'Ssd rfcognired, then they are tohqld a general Sontfieni Congress or Conven tion and adopt, if sgroo, the terms of a Southern Confederacy. This is probably the latest programmo, and its oxcoutioataay or may not be vigorously attempted. It is Bomewhat different from-the scheme of troason divulged by a lato high functionary of the Treasury Department, which was that the Governors of tho Southern States should convent their Legislatures by proclamation on the Bth of November, or as soon thereafter as the, eleotiou ef Mr. Linooln might'Le ascertained, and thot the Legislatures shomd.ptoooed to declare tho Union dissolved, and to pronpnnce in favor of Mr. Breckinridge as tho President of tho Southorn Union. Undoubtedly divers schemos of treason are extant in tho South, find-it is impr.aAbte to say now whioh will meet with most fat Jr from tho conspirators. Whether that infamoofiraitor, tho President of the United States, if a minister Rhail go from South Carolina to WflBhfogt4a t wall, venture, In CJftmo of tho V. Govoßtj&e&tViq 'receive hi'4, is perhaps a qnsation thsFpnly the'experiment nan deolde. The indications,!however, are very strong, if not con clusive, tha/.ge'ls datively playlny Irfio tho bands of the the exercb *scf his official ?oweti -jLeis tSftSLthreq weeks o'/’jio sont seven n»a tSoti3ond lf. 8. Cfisrleston, aus aftha sotoo t'.ras orrjored/It iUSSj'JI.'S-troops tt^-a l.frcm For# Moultrie, with the exception of two oompicioi oonslsting of porlispj ahundretl and twonty.flra men. If Iho South Oarolinians wish to saoode eftor next Tuesday, they ean in halt a day ssizo the seventeen thousand stand of arms, take the fort, and eject tho U. S. military power nttorly from their limits. Why suoh a quantity ol U. S. arms was sent to Charleston whilst tho U. S. soldiers who might use them were ordered away, oan not, wo apprehend, bo explained by anybody except upon the supposition that the President is aiding and abetting South Carolina in her project ed treason. Rfe believe that ho is doing this. TUB REQUISITES VOBA SOOTH CABOIIHA GOVERMOU. • The Charleston Mercury thus discusses the qualifications necessary for a Governor of tho mighty State of South Carolina: “Bat,independent of any hostile collision be tween South Carolina and the Genoral Government in the hands of the Abolitionists, the Governor of the State may have most important correspondence to carry on—the most Important jication of our coursgf)n him may test the justi nciions—to thev, or States—t Q forcion. won as muoh by the pen an ablo documents pnt forth by our statesmen atcr more to enlist the sympathy,.respect, end support of foreign nations in our behalf than, the armies of Washington. Mr. Calhoun’s colobrated letter, when Secretary of State, to Mr. King, has done more for tho cause of the South than the battles of Brandywine end Germantown did for our Revolu tion. We livo in an age of Ideas We are being crushed by false .ideas. Xbo Governor of South Carolina should he able to expose and vindicate the truth in the mighty contest waged against us by the angry fanaticism of the world, and to hold up to its false conceptions tho great principles of froo govornmentj'on whioh we rest tho defence of our liberties and institutions We are cot lighting alone for slavery. Wo are contending for groat principles of government, vital men now living, or to llvo to the day of doom. The Gover nor of South Carolina should, if possible, bo an able and experienced oWllinn— one of resources and addresb.' “Reasons may be multiplied; but, we trust, those we have assigned above will bo sufficient to call tho considcrato and pntrlotio attention of our Legislature to the next Governor’s election. Those who aro not prepared to act, or who wish all action by the State to bs defeated, of course will see so necessity for an able Executive. Tho weak er, tho bettor for them: But to tboso who are de termined that South Carolina shall never submit to tho rale of Abolitionists at Washington, wo trust our bumble suggestions will not bo in vain. Ihey mo!t go for whatever they are intrinsically worth.” C3LOXELS ORH’AND ASHMORB ON TUB CRISIS. Wo learn from tho Greenville (S. 0.) Patriot that, on Tuosday of last week, Colonels Orr. and Ashmore addressed the oltizens of the district in tho oourt'house. Col. Orr had no hope of the de feat of Linooln, bat would counsel no hasty action on the part of the State. South Carolina should not withdraw alono. He diffored from others in the opinion that our Legislature should call for a Convention of tho people as soon as it was ascer tained that Lincoln was eleoted. fie thought it would bo wiser and more prudont that commission ers should be appointed to go to, and consult with, tho other Southern Statos, and ascertain the course they intended to pursue under the cir cumstances. so that there might bo a concert of option. South Carolina has. tried the experiment, of sending a commissioner to a slater Southern State when her soil wav invaded,:and the result of that experiment docs not afibrd much enoouragemont to repeat it. At this crisis, howevor, although eaoh State must, in her sovereign capacity, de cide upon her own course of notion, yet it will be, doubtless, thought advisable, to securo, in some way, ss muoh conceit of action as pr&oiioablo. Col. Ashmore also thought Lincoln would bo elected, and counseled that the State should put herself into a position of resistance; and that when the time comes she should resist to the death. AN “ IMPRACTICABLE ” DISUNIOHIST, £sThj Charleston Mercury thus oritiolses the re; coumendatlon of Col. Orr: “Mr. Orr may be a oapitil Disunionlst upon impracticable , conditions Tho riTeot of bla recommendations is postponement, del&7, enervation, feebleness, halting, fainting, parwysiflj submission— tho downfall ofslavory, with the destruction of the South.” THE PLEDGE OF THE SOUTH CAROLINA MINUTE A letter from Columbia, Sa 0., gives tho fol lowing as tho plodga of the Minute Men organized thoio ; We, the undersigned, citizens of South Carolina, in Tiew of the impending orlsis necessarily inci dent upon the elootion of a Black Republican to the Presidency of these United States, ondinviow of our duties to our seotion, ourselves and our beet interests, whioh must fall in the event of the triumph of Northern form our solros into an nssooiation, under the narno and •Btrie of the Minute Men, and do farther solomnly SHdgo our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred oaor, to sustain Southern constitutional equality in, the Union,,or, failing in that, to establish our Independence out of it. ..Tho members.aro re quired to wear a blue ooofc&do on tho left, sido of fh< hat, and procure a Colt’s revolver, n Tide, or ' other approved fire-arms. A public demonstration is to bo made on Friday sight, 19th; and, if any one may judge from the blue cockadcs-seen on tho streets, tho demonstration [will' bo an important one, not only. In .numbers, but In the character of the men composing it in publio procession. Tho members are required to carry a lantern, flambeau, or other demonstrative implement appropriate to the occasion. FIERY RHETORIC—HOW THE EDITORS IN ALABAMA TALK—A VOICE PROM.THE HOME OP TANOBY. Wo extract the following paragraph from tho Montgomery (Ala.) Mail: The result of the'elootion, Tuesday, in Penn sylvania, was tho death-knell of tho youth—or of the Union—it is hard to dotermino whioh. If the South Fubmit, she must calculate on ceaseless sor vilo troubles, eternal Northern interference, laws aimed at her institutions by tho Federal Govern ment, and the gradual extinction of the supremacy of the white race. If the South submit, two years 1 will not pnas—perhaps not one—when the difficulty of holding and managing negroes will be so great that ownors will sell at anyprloe to Tho whole foroo of Lincoln’s free-negro Govern ment will be directed to bring tho white man of the South down to the level of the negro. Its uUtmat.e purpose .is the amalgamation of the two races. Hamlin, the future vice President, is, himself,, partly of negro blood. LetthoScuth Choose. But if the South resist—what then ? The result is obvious. Tho world, the civllizod world, cannot exist a day without cotton. The Governments of England and France cannot oxist-without a supply of cotton for thoir millions of white 'slaves If, then, the people of tho South aro not utterly enervated, de based, and ready for obains—if they hayo a spark of tho old mnnbood left —they can, by immediate re cession, plaoe thomselvcs in an impregnable po sition. * . # * * # - * Let the South arm ! If tho slay© States intond to protopt their rights of property In'slave*—if their oitizona intbnd to resist over? form of insur rection and-itioondiarism which Northern hfetrrfd onn inflict—let them prooeed at onoatoarm. There ls .no time to delay! “Every bree'z© that blows from tho North brings to oar ©are v intelligsncft'df the onward march of Wido-Awoheista .and free negroism! . Tho South must mover Sdbmfssionis death arid node know' it hotter than thoso "who oonnaa’ it ! V.&frjlio j for your altarsand yourfirooi' .Strike j tor (he Riaim ytiur sires!. ' God.a«d .. •.% r , JiCt'in? 00-f/s arm- SSvery one that canpoxnta ijiotguH dr revolver should have one\ Lctcvsfy community supply itself with munitions) and storo them safely. Abolitionism is at your floors. With- totc.fi and'knife in hand” Tho Klofcmcmd Whig- justly remarks: • “ The mr.n who con writ© suoh abominable stuff must be o'razy—stark niod—a fit subject for a lu* ; natio asylum. Wo pity him—from our inmost' soul, wo-pity him ” | , DISUNION DENOUNCED IS VIRGINIA. j J/TIMORE. A oorrospondont of tho Riohmoud Whig writes from Norfolk, Va., under'dateof the27th : “ I cotioo a despatoh in the Whig , of yesterday, in regard to ex-Govornor Wiso’a speech and reso lutions at tho Princess Anne mass meetlog. Thore wore about eight hundred persona present—many Bell and Everett wen, but they tool no -part in tts pro ceedxngf. The resolutions are published in the Argus of yesterday, and wo leavo you and your roadors to make tholr own and form their own opinions. The Governor’s speech .was, if possible, more ultra than his resolutions. Both have struok moderate mon, of all parties, with ostonlshmont. They are deoldediy revolu tionary in tope abd tendency.^ “Gop, Jjohn S.v MiUaon made amasteriy speeo here.last evoning ln behalf of Mr. Douglas. Hia -remarks woro received with great sensation and amid much enthusiasm. He referred to the revo lutionary project, end resolutions of ox-Governor wise, fiß published in the Argus of yesterday. He Sftid VJ& DilVo Indeed fallen upon .revolutionary t Ww,, Ho dopicicd in a graphic find poiverfal manner the workings of tho scheme now set on foot in subversion of law and order—he denounced It hs one of the boldest and most startling projeots over broached In a- free government, (fen. Mill, son referred to the approaching eleotlon, and said, 1 result it might, in sixty days after it was over, there would be no Bell , Douglas or Bred, inridge party in the country—there would he but two—a party for the Union and one against it. Ho had sided and would battle vrith the former.' His remarks made a deep powerful impression o.n allpresent, and all felt that we had reached a crisis'io publio affairs such as tho country has, per haps, never before witnessed. We have never witnessed moro intonse political exoitement than Is now raging in this city and the surrounding country, and never have we seen a mote resolute and determined spirit than is displayed by the op ponents of the Breckinridge patty—tho friends of Bell and DoogJas. The city of Norfolk*, Ports mouth, Norfolk county, and Princess Anne, will givo Bell a majority of 1,200 votes!” WnAT GOVERNOn I’RTTUS WILL DO—A NEW FOim.TJl TheßrcoklnridffeStfttea-right men of Mississippi bad a largo meeting at Columbus last week, and Governor Pottue made a speech. Tho tenor of his remarks lod somo one to ask him, if tho Union shonld bo dividod, what disposition he wouldraake of the interest ho had in tho Bunker Hill Monu moot? Ho said “ho would givo up his interest to the North. “ And what ” said his interrogator, “ will you do with the South’s interest in the Fourth of July?” “ We will make a new one,” was the reply. JOHN .T. CRITTRNDSN ON STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS. In a recent speech at St. Louis, J. J. Crittenden said: As for Mr. Douglas, gentlemen, I must speak what I feel, and say what I consider to be just In regard to him. Mr. Douglas has, during this can vacs, which, on his part, has been a very unusual ono—going among tho people and addressing his follow-citizens—Mr. Douglas has shown himself, in this canvass, a msn of frankness and fairness, and ho has also shown hithseli to be a pationßl’ man. .[•CUenfe' cheering, and “Hurrah for Dou glas.”] Mr. Douglas I have fought with side by sido in the Senate of the United States for twenty years, and, when wo havo been there together, our relations have been those of political opposl-, tion almost continually. Day after day have we stood beside each other—he in the ranks of the Demooraoy and I r»n old Whig. {Cheers.] But opposition in politlos does not necessarily control ray feelings towards gentlemen with whom I have been in the habit of associating. [Cheers.] I be. liovotbat I can entertainmy politioalopinions, and, at the sumo time, entort&in my friendship tor any one who may differ with me in politics. [Renewed oheeriog; J I have been an opponent to Mr. Dou glas during iny time, but, when certain questions . oaiao up,{four or five years ago, and when I saw Mr. Douglas, at tho sacrifice of all his political rela tions, at tho sacrifico of all his political hopes, at the sacrifice, X may say, of what then seemed cer tain advancement to the Prosidenoy—when I saw! Mr. Douglas sacrifice these relations, and stand up ! like a man in opposition to the infathous Leoomp ton Constitution, 1 [cheers, { endeavoring to be forced upon the people of Kansas-for whatever might “£ constitutional government—£ stood ready to ac cord to Mr. Dougins the credit which he deserved. [Groat cheering.] When that iofamousforgery was attempted to be palmed upon the people of Kansas .by the trickery of a few Federal office-holders,, fories of good, good, and bully for you,] X hesita ted not to donouDoo it as a fraud, and X Bteod up in tho Senate, and declarod that my band should co ver bo dishonored by affixiug my sanction to that thing as a Constitution. [Cheers.] I found Mr. Douglas then, by my side, battling in the same cause, (obeors,) and X muBC do him that justice which he desorves, for I would as soon do injustice to a fellow-soldier that had fought and bled at my 6ido on the battle-field as to do injustice to a man who faithfully battled for tho principles of right andjustico. I believe Mr. Douglas is a national man, (cheers,) still ho is a party man, surrounded by opposing parties, and If lie wore Presi dent ho could not bring peace to your country. His Administration would be subjected to tho per petual assaults of opposing parties. Yet ho would bo my second choice, after those whom 1 prefer first, Bell and Everett. [Cheers.] SENATOR TOOMBS VS. SENATOR DOUGLAS. The Atlanta (Go.) Confederacy writes of Sona- i tor Toombs and his rccont speech thero in Its usual flowing style. It says: Mr. like tho ghost of “ Hamlet,” haunted tho nuud of tho infuriated buWruly pa tiiotio senator. Goblins and hobgoblins flitted across his redolent imagination, until, with gleam ing dagger, he stood ready to eheatho it in tho ho3om of him, whom he onoe said, would not flatter Noptune for his trident, or Jove for his thunder! Mr. Toombs intilnated, and that very clearly, that Mr. Douglas should not bo permitted to speak In Atlanta on tho 30th inst. Mr. Douglas spoko in Memphis on yesterday, and wo learn by telegraph that ho epoko in Huntsville to-dny, and ho will cer tainly epoak in Atlanta on the 30th lust, acd all the powers that bo cannot prevent It. Mr. Douglas will also ropeat his answers to the Norfolk ques tions in his speech in this city, and we trust that Mr. Toombs will bo hero on that ocoaslon, and keep at that distance from tho Littlo Giant so that it “ioill be safe for him to answer.” SENATOR YULBE ON TnBORISIS. Senator Yuleo, of Florida, has written a letter on tho issues of tho canvass, whioh oloees thus : « My own judgment is vory fully decided. We cannot endure a Government which puts Itself in confliot with our sooial safoty and civil develop ment. We must bo assured against the unnatural condition of a society warred upon by its own Gq vernmont. I am now convinced, after careful obser vation, 6iEco 1850, when the South consented to pass Into a minority, that we require new guarantees in tho Union. Nothing short of the adaptation of tho Federal compaot, by appropriate alterations, to tbe changed circumstances of the oountry, coin meet the neocssitioß of the case, lhe ohonge whioh seventy years has made in the number Of States and extent of our territory, and especially the great changes that have ©oourred In the num bers and distribution of population, in the ele monts composing it, and in the Ideas which move them, oil make very proper a review of the terms of union, and an adjustment of the details of govern ment to those altered conditions. The existing, stato of disqaiot and violence proves the nooossity. There Is no peaoe in the land, nor anv general harmony hotween the States. We should arrange together, now and at onco, for living in peaoe or patting in peaco. Your obedient sorvant, D. L. Yulee. lion. R. A. Pryor publishes a letter denying that his remarks have been so personally offensive towards Judge Douglas, as charged in some of the newspapers. REPUBLICAN MASS MEETING IN BALTIMORE—WIDE AWAKE rARADE—DISTURBANCES AND ROWDYISM ALONG TIIE ROUTE. Tho Baltimore Sun of yestorday says: Notices appeared in the publio prints, yestorday, that a mass meeting of the friends of Linooln and liamlin would be held last evening, at the Front-street Theatre, to bo preceded by the unprecedented fea ture of a proocßsion of a “Wide-Awoke” associa tion thTongh the stTeots of Baltimore. Somoindig nation, accompanied with threats, wore expressed during yesterday, and tho committee of arrango monta thought it advisable to secure the protection of tho police authorities. Accordingly, one hun-, dred of tho day police, (twenty-flvo from eaoh dis triot, under their respective captains,) were de tailed for speoint duty at 7 o’otock last evening, in Holliday stroet, opposite the theatre, where' the “ Wide-Awakes,” to tho number of about two hundred and fifty, formed for their march to the Front-street Theatre. Theyworo tho unifonn’of tholr Northern prototypes—green capes,, lead coloxed hats with red bands, and carrying the common trldont torch, and some goblot-loolring lamps and n banner. A crowd of at least five times their numbers collected around the “Wide-Awakes,” who .wore subjected to the most degrading epithets, hisses, • and groans. Cheers for all the Opposition candi- OF JULY. N'OT SO BAD. TWO CENTS. datis were proposed and given In turn, and the attempt to raise a obeer for Lincoln was instant* J y drowned bj indignant bprstfr of'hisses and groans. The line.formed hastily, ani“headed S^Sa 1 ??!. 0 * music playing “OW Dog Tray,” street 104 tbroDgll Holliday street' to Baltimore aatotSlv «V l ” rncil J nto Baltimore attest It'was U?ead for»arrt t hl m « of S OO ” 8 and h ‘ BSe8 ’ bnt mB S3E!*2!?r ky P 1 * niarshals, protected by the w !°, *°, rm .“ d ‘ho files on either sidef and aoteias a body-guard.. The samo a/ccies of an noyance naa kept np thronghont tl,. 'Baltimore street to Entaw to Pratt : to,.Charles,-to lombard, ,to Hirt® to’?™tt to’ ne ? atro , < ' nUDl “' t ’ *°' - -Afe corner of Lombard and Charles street some bricks woro thrown,into the procession', *an fl : several of the' spectators were struok by ibem : One or.two lamps wire smashed,here, and aarntpy i arrests -ipade/ ,The-march, to ,the,theatre was .literally a forcod one, and ;na4o,*in *fhb 'face of mtfob insult and ashofttiott > *’At'the' theatre 'another rush.waa.xn&de ,L npott the prooession as the members were.entering thedoors, and.a Dumber of' arrests'werb mode of partied detected'in the act of ‘throwing brleka and other < mii&Ues~itito - the pro . The following named persons confined in the Middle. on and stone* into the i p/ghf, and ..with *ot wLfe d jf' y A®. ? tr ? et L Jwob H^miltpn, MertA-Bedian, Honxy Fisher, Hugh Kelley. Chas. bjSjeJJ,'Robert McGovern,Henry Holland. - Valen tine Luoas, a member of the procession, was taken from the line upon tho bharge of beipg drank and disorderly. They were all held for Warifag.; P<>* Jiceman MoO&ra was struck in. the* a briok pesfiago of the procession,, and badly injured Fm.E Beale, the chief marehal ot tbe occasion, in tho absence of Wm. B ' Coale aB A^ a °k in'tbe face on Holliday street, by a mit sue thrown, as well as several other who were 1 ’ The prooeiaion arrived at tho front-street thea tro, and entered about half past eight o’olook. In tho meantime the meeting had been organized by the. appointment of Wm. B. Coale as' president, an £® ® n ®wof vice president and secretaries. Xho Rev. Fronoh S. Evans was then introduced, and be congratulated himself that he was allowed to address a Baltimore audience; he had known them for forty years. His address was specially mixed up with Lincolnism, Black Repablioanism, Cr 0, . H P he stood on a Southern soil, the blood of tho Revolution triokled through his veins i —thp blood of Valley Forge, Brandywine, and the ; Oowpeps. His address was a lengthy one, Inter spersed with any amount of huzzas and hisses. He endeavored to prove that General Washington, Jjfanklro, and others were the founders of their P/ His address was stopped by the entrance of th ®‘‘Wido Awake ” clubs, after which he resumed and finished. He introduced the Hon. E. Joy Morris, of Philadelphia, who spoke amid much in terruption for some time. Ho was followed by Mr Owing, one of the eleotordv and he by Be. Wiss'. Judge Wm. L. Marshall, who was present, was ro pflfltodfy called for, but did not appear. The whole meeting was one of the greatest ot>nfu3lon, oheere and hisses being the order of the night About ten o’olook there was nn adjournment. There was a strong body of police on hand at tho theatre during the night Tho Sun thus editorially comments on the de monstration u Baring tho oveafng, the friends of Lincoln end Hamlin appearod in the streets with lights, and a transparency bearing the names of tho?e candi dates so extremely obnoxious to the citizens of Baltimore. As they passed through tho orowdß assembled on the pavements to witness tho Bel! and Everett display, they were hooted, jeered, and yelled at with great vehomenoe. The line moved along, however, amidst the disiurhance, and exhi bited a spirit of perseverance worthy of a better eaufiet We cottainly cannot find an eiouse for so imprudent a proceeding, evon with the right oon cedod; and beyond doubt, under the preva lence of that sonso of wrong experienced In a a Southern Male in view of tho possibility of Mr. Lincoln’B election, the parties to the demonstration owed their protection to the strong arm of the po lice, exerted ns a speciality in their behalf. The very term “irrepressible conflict” implies a war upon the South, and tho friends of Lincoln conse quently appear as the pioneers of the army by whom that war must bo conducted. They have no cause of surprise, therefore, that they are regarded as the enemies of the institutions under which we live. Wo regret that they were not suffered to make their unwise display without interruption, for the effect of suoh interference with them can hardly fail to be used against tko South by the porverted senllweut ot the North ! SENATOR CANBRON ANT) MNCOLN*3 CABINET. The Washington Star of Thursday says: A Ilarrißburg correspondent of the New York Tri* buvr says that it is the opinion of Senator Simon Cameronj that Mr. Seward will be offered tho post of Secretary of Stato by Lincoln* if elected. This is in direot contradiction of what Mr, Corwin writes in the Utter to Mr. Hodge, of this city, which will doubtless be published in the Washing ton Intelligencer, but not until the morning of the election day. In that letter Mr. Corwin not only says that fifr. Lincoln tells him, as we stated a day or two since, that, if elected, itis his purpose to execute , the fugitive-slave law at all hazards, everywhere - throughout the North, , until a better one to accomplish its purpoao shall be enacted; but also, that ho will maintain the right of any future State to bo admitted into the Union with slavory in its Constitution, if its people so deoido on coming to frame that instrument; and also that he will oppose all efforts to abolish sla very in tho District of Columbia against the con sent ot its legal voters and without full compensa- , tion to tho. owners of slaves in the District. He -farther states, in tho same lotter, that Lincoln avows his determination to offer the post of Secre tary of State to the Hon. William C. Rives, of Virginia, and to call into bis Cabinot Mr. Fessen den, of Maine, and Mr. Ewing, or Mr. Vinton, of Ohio. There can be no doubt whatever that Lin coln does not hositnte to nvow to his confidential friends that those who ©xpoot him to aid in the destruction of tho Government by essaying to in-‘ corporate the prinoiple of “ Irrepressible conflict* ism” in his Administration, rest under a profound mistake POSITION OF COY. WINSLOW, OF NORTH CAROLINA. Tho Wilmington (N. 0.) Journal reports a re- Jc the course idea of the compulsion or coercion of a Sfaß.~ -tot* the present he thought that, even in the event of’ Lincoln’s election, tho Republicans would bo powerless for harm, being restrained by an anU- Kepublioan majority in all tho other co-ordin&io branohes of tho General Government. But the time might come, and that full soon, when the caso would bo dlifer But—when North Carolina might deem it necessary to the preservation of-her rights, and the maintenance of her honor, to assume a separate and independent position, and call upon her sons to rally under hor banner. Should that day como, ho, for one, would be found by the side of North Carolina, to whom bis first allegiance was duo.” KENTUCKY AND THE UNION, Prentice, cf the Louisville Journal, says : Mr. Tanoey, at Springfield last week, said he wanted Kentucky to sympathize with tho seceding South ern States. Why should the noble State of Shelby, Cloy, Crittenden, Letcher, and Moxehead, sympa thize with treachery? What oan Kentuckians gain by leaving the Union ? , Can tho cotton States protect their slave property any bettor than the authority of tho thirty-three United States oan ? When wo have tho right kind of Presidents to oaforce tho laws, wo shall have no difficulty in eseouting tho fugitive-slave law. Millard Pill more acted firmly in tho Burns case at Boston, and showed his fidelity to tbo South, and as his reward ho was denounced throughout the South four years sinco as an Abolitionist, and re ceived tho vote of Maryland alone for the Presi dency. What oan Kentucky gain by disunion? Will it preserve the present price of its slave pro perty? Will it reduce its quota of taxation? Or will it not rather ruin all tno slave owners by the depreciation of their property, and will it not add meat materially to tho burden of taxes? Moat as suredly. If Kentucky could demoralize herself by listening to the pleadings of the Secessionists, her own interests would restrain hor from taking any steps toward tho contemplated treason. LEGAL INTELLIGENCE. United States Circuit Court—Judge- Cadwalodor.—Laura Keene ts. Wheatley & Clarke. In this oaso, whioh originated in the per formance of “ Out American Cousin,” the follow ing decree was. entered yesterday: It appearing that the complainant’s literary proprietorship of the comedy in question is derived from a non-re sident,' alien author, the court is of 6pinion that the complainant has no copyright therein, or sta tutory right of exclusive dramatic representation thereof But upon the points involved in. the question whother, independently of the statutes jin that behalf previded, the complainant is entitled to relief, the oourt is of opinion that as the said comedy has never been printed, and has never been‘published otherwise than, by theatrioal re presentation; and as the complainant’s own thea trical representations of it were not the means through which the defendants were fairly enabled to represent it, their unauthorized theatrioal re presentation of It was such’an infraction of rights of the complainant as entitles her to relief. The court is further of opinion that the proper pecuniary .compensation for her indemnity in the premises is the value of such a license her hand and’sool. accompanied with a fairly-writton copy of the said comedy, 83 would have authorized and enabled the defendants, after udeqnato prepa-. ration, to bring out tho said comedy at the theatre, on the 22d of Novomber, 185 S, and represent it thon and afterwards without restriction or limita tion, as it was then and afterwards here performed. It wAs ordered that either party have leave to apply within ton days boreafter for an issue to find the valuo of a license and copy suoh as aforesaid. The cause is referred to a master to inquire and ascertain the difference botwcon tho average profits at such a theatre, of performances of old. or. well knownplays and popular new plays, and to report the nightly profits of the actual performance of the comedy in question at tho said theatre, and the number and datos of its performances there; ‘ with authority to examin'd witnesses and parties, and order and compol the produotidn of books, accounts, and other papers, and return such material answers or depositions as either party may request him to return. • Themaater w»U report further tho pecuniary valuo of a license and copy suoh as aforesaid. In ascer taining this value, he will take into consideration, so far as it the defendant, the pfioe Which the. complainant asked for suoh a license .when she asserted that sho had a statute copy -1 \t is directed that if an issue shall be tried, off or any depositions hitherto taken in the cause may bo read on tho trial by either party, subject to the same objections as if Ino respective deponents had been offered for oral examination ns witnesses. And it is furthor directed that if such an issue shall have been ordered, tho master, so soon as he shall bo able to report in suoh manner and form as may facilitate the trial thereof, those mattorS of whioh tho discovery may in his opinion bo mate- the WEEKIiY PRESS. Vhb WiExtY Puu will bp ant to nbombon by mailfyer annum, m aditau*,) at. ...... »|t«H Three Copies,« ** f.M Five »* »• «» - _ Ten •« *» « 19,## Twenty “ “ “ (toeueaddreMm.** Twenty Copies, or over” (to address of each subscriber,)each. I.M Fora Club of Twenty-one or over, we will Modal extra copy to the getter-up of the Clab. ,„*®TFostniMters are requested to aot aeAgeatifbr XHEWEmutFaiss, ; aurcrnia press, - Issued three times r Month, in time for the Califersis Steamers, s rial to oitter party for the purpose of rash fatal. l ? e SElne accordingly; confining his wher ® both parties do iot reqaest theeon- B ? cl1 matters of aoeount, or Of d#tait, n« investigated at each a trial without in convenience or undue delay. . DistmctOdort— J udgo Stroud.—Quinlan ! e C ore reported. Verdict for defendant. Ballam, Baker, * Co. vs., ilerwlg It Sohoeulna. An action to recover a balance on a booh account Pefence deny the partnership. Jurydut. Weekly Renew of the Philadelphia ! Markets. m . _ , . . JfHiMBLPHU, Novembers, ISO. iiie Produce markets have been‘quiet this -weak* ‘owing:, in- some 'measure, to the coming election, and prices general]? are without any material variation, *»awc is scarce', and wanted. BreadstuflaJlsvff been dull, and the prices of Flour and-Wheat have slightly de. Hye ,? loar > Corn Meal, and Com are steady, ■ n coal there i 5 a K o od trade dolbar at ful , pHos> _ Cq g tt ' mov6lße ' lt - Cottonnfsftirn dnii n- h J tato ™ ,ro ™ nea t. **" •* "-Vr—-i r rirti* hari™** there; is a fair ln ' Bs ,mo or Hides, The ec ’ , ' b “t without aotivity. iMi— dST Ota ?“'V Nanl St " M "S'*" 6s«n aofot,aidthe stoSToflu ktad,S£?M*s?* .» doll and lower. Salt-Mo ohanre cI„7,S * rooddemaod at fall rate,. buttZtLy u i« firmer. Teas and Tobacco are quiet. Wool iaiaec *™-J n Goadß the bulk of the fall trade la oyer, and the market has been quiet, without any materia) ?b*tng* to note in-fabrics of any kind. family, inoludmr 4AJO bhla Western iamTl7 SKS kept, private.' thee market clowns imStiv. ft tbn oiwit-^ 10 .* a ? s t° the trade have also bees limited A>lfo? ftu^tea^tt j&fhj 8 ? *5 S ,a a small way at §4.26 4? bb! Corn [2 p|nJr,lvSuia loldTt «3 w M ‘ , sboat bbl “ tti w^tela’f^SEg o fttmrud Meal, ft, O f!rJ! L MI-- ”;i ~ aura 30. K 1 : 0 ”--——«? do. Com Weal—ll IS do. condemned, W 3 Total .. y, vsnia red at I2s«i3se.SrathiS, BPcnneyln>L’ 8 Pcnneyl n>L’ atV^lMoLTLi gtßsasjis MK?»r J °2”tinneH m request at IBifolWfopsr lb S&SSISts^d^SSSSS m fi( *‘ ta ™»« it Itsht.awa no eate. I faS^fftifcraiftr h »JtfA*'isfe)‘d”E" ! "eSand n ttes 0 uttle p? f,K Hl !'« l !°wat3,o#' lb. n “““ o“Sjffi43 £?*%&,£& liver up to the close of the ye™ Orders from thJISS fil:?/ 04 61 * ftre firm at advance and isSi- CpFPtE**“Tb6ro is a moderate ißnnirrand tK« «■» e:?fe”?a. *« 7iS;C 0 H- fo £; 8 ? rapl ? s up , *? middling aEdnSdohaeffif Uplands, ,9« for shuned do, iaGKo for Pmkinii 10 p addling fair Mobile, cash and imaotbtl dojs!° t amag ° a 80,(1 by auction at from 7H to .The following is the movement for the last wmW«.4 'ms'’,ea?“ raber _ 1 ' 1853 ' °™P««d with thjfivl*^? * -RSCBSPT3 FOR WlOOt-s irS. "%l‘‘ £’£,%„ z?°„ ce ....mm cu,m 'ii'm ffah • 81,000 JO,OOO ?!000 ...110.000 flldOO 73.000 20,010 SjOOD 58.C00 249,000 50R» emo IBS 92.000 448.000 2L(5» 8 000 4000 ..-81,000 • 431,000 38,090 9JM „ Britain, France., OtherF.P.Total J§W«. J2lOOO 35,m ii.o& mom' f&M o * -179,000 £0 000 20,000 249,0c0 fWjW ISSB-9~~..103,000 34,000 12 000 169.000 ■Stf.flM IqS'S l * 37,000 19,000 IS 080 123.000 160.000 1866 7■■>... .(0 OG9 41,000 1 6.000 IffiiSn %f7nn ?Tht?«l* » 38-090 34 000 2/9 000 2SJJQO x Thu». the vepeipta show a decrease of 111,000 bales over those of last rear, and a decrease of bales rolta? 858 ’ 9 ’ aUd Ih ° exportB ttblbJtffiefWfinSiSK Compared t 9 ( ‘ Brit, France . (UK. F.P . Total. Stock . Lastyr. dec. $B,OOO deo Ifi.OfO deo-l ooodeo 74,ccodefiioo 0 ! 1 8; ccw deo-19 000 m 0.7,000 ino. 6,000 ino. 65,000 DRUGS &. DY-HB.—Not oiuoh. doing t, Poda Ash is SSSiSS fieelr, and rails at SHotS’/Ts mos.'p»Jf ltdUo‘” h “i SmJ.^fir f Snm"S^ J,MsoUt ® IM for “ r ' «>»• FRUlT.—There baabeen rather more doinz in both w«i^nwa'hS niM^fl ii Duoch Raisins aro selling at ®?-M©235 v* box, amauer pactaaes in proportion. A sale of Oranges wm made at XSiteon mod SsHSi. ®£ Ben are selling at 9I.SS 3 Wforor>inniottJergey and rood-Eastern, Dtim a»- ples are dull and nominal at ak 040, Dried Peaohes are BSfflStJfcr lor dmSSenSSTaSJS from Qq.tQ:Si3._na Md tpe mpplv large. Western, in lots, at 430fi00. short time. e ~*'- FlBH.—Mackerel are held with more firmness in con sequenceof the accwuma from the East; tales from ■tore of.No.lat 619021: Measdoat §23; No 2,atBH for large, and §lO for medium, and bio. 3s at 9925, §7, and 96 for large, medium. and small size. Codfeh 'are steady, at S 3 60# bbl. Piokled Herring sell at §275© 825, BoxHemng are scarce and 'wanted. Mess Shad command Sll# bbl. Freights.—To Liverpool we quote flour at at 3s Sd ®ssCd»and grain at 30>iffll2d. lo London we notice engagements of 600 tons oil cake at 355; oloverseed at 4t)s; KiO tea beqi at 7s; flour 8s Od.and gram lid. To the South the rates continue as last quoted. To Boston we quote flour at 250; oats 6o; corn Go; wheat 7o; measurement goods setGo, and pi* iron at 92.30#' ton. Coal vessels are m sood demand, at 81.05 to New York* §1.75 to Providence, and §2®2.05 to Boston. GINSENG.—Prices are entirely nominal for both omde and olarified. GUANO.—The season is over, and there is little or nothing doing in any description. HEMP is very quiet; 100 bales Jute sold before ar rival on private terms. HIDES are neld .firmly, and 1,620 Caracas sold on terms kept private. HOPS come forward slowly and are firm, with sales of new Eastern and Western at 82©330 # ft.- LEATHER is moving off at lull prices, and good stock is source and high; . LUMBER.—There is a fair business for the season; amongihesaleewondtioeEastport Laths at 81.70 & M ; Susqnehannawbite Piss Hoards at 913&27; yellow Pine Sap at §13318; North Carolina flooring at 817© 20; rafted Hemlock at 87.60©8; a lot of shaved white oak hhd hoops sold at 8 33 # AI. MOLASSES.— I The market continues very dull. Sales of olaved Cuba at 240. and Mnsoovado at 32aS4c, 4 mts. NAVAL STORES are quiet; among the sales we no tioe about 1,400. bbls Rosin,' ranging from 8160 up to S 2 37>S for common and low grade No. 2 and good No.l. Tar/* selling at sl.G2>a®3. Pitch is steady. Spirits of Turpentine meets a limited inquiry; sales at 40©42c for Boa»hern,and 420, cash, for New York bb's. , OlLS.—Fish Otis are held with more firmness, but the sales are mostly confined to store lots. Linseed la lower; small sales at K®s7o. Thera is but little Red Oil here; sales of city at 62e530, four mouths. Lard Oil is very quiet; 40 übls No. ■2, and Western winter sold at 900, tour months. Imports into U. S.» -Bbl",ep. Bbls.'wh. Lbs. Bone. From Jan. 1 to date—6B 985 137-959 .1,352 500 Same time 1a5tycar.,..62.227 ]J6iS97 1.8J2.403 PLASTER is .very dull; the last sate of soft was at 8260# ton. RICE.—The demand continues limited and prioesna seUled, with sales, m lots, at 84.25ffi4.50, o&sh and four months. t . SALT is unchanged t,9 000 sacks Liverpool Ground and Fine have arrived, and a cargo of Turk’s Island, all to the d e &lera; & cargo of the latter also sold on terms kept private. SEEDB,—The-demand for Cloverseadis active, but prices remain without change; sales n< 3,000 bus, in lots, at Soffid.l2H for good, and 8® 25 bu for very prime. Timothy continues to arrive freely; sales of LOCO bus at 82.5003C2H; some reoieaned at 8287>5, Flaxseed iadullat §1.62# bu. . SUGAR.—There ie less firmness in tho market, and the demand is limited; prices, however, remain without olmnee; Bales of .*lOO hhda, including Cuba at7ffi7>fc y and PortoßiOQatW4®7?£o,bntime. SPlRlTS.—Brandies are firm.witn a small buairess to note. Gin is atesdy. and Rum is selling at 33a3ic for Boston, Whisky is dull and less, plenty ; Ohio bbls selling at 2t)sffiS3o. Pennsylvania do 22K0, hhds22o, and drudge gallon. , . , • TALLOW is more inquired for, and sale* of oity ren dered at lpjf«10Xo cash, and oountry at 9XoJ& ft. TEAS—rrioes oonnnue firm for botn Blacks and Greens, but therelsnqt much doing. TOBACCO.—There is a firm ieelmg for Leaf, and the tenuenoy is for higher figures, but in manuf&ofared there is no change. . - WOOL continues very quiet. Tho manufacturers are boldinroffin anticipation ol lover prices, and the sales are mostly in small lots at steady rates, JSCft 61 1889 60..-. JBB-9 1856-7. 1856-G..—.. A LUDICROUS ANECDOTE is told Of Hoi’tz, th© pianist, when in California, lie had announced a concert in one of, the new cities in the 11 digging,” and sent on to Fan Francisco for his piano, but, to hid great dismay, it did not conic. Tho audienoe had assembled, and the unlucky musician expect ed nothing else than to he bowie-knifed by the outraged miners. Observing his terror, they asked him what was the matter, whereupon he confessed all. “0, never, mind the pi-anner,” said two of them, encouragingly. “we don’t care for it. TVe came to see you ; make us a speeoh.” fieita did his best, and they had all noarly forgotten -the piano, whenjts arrival was announced. Aoompa ny of stout meu carried it into thfl hall ftnd plaoed it on the platform. It was a tbreenornered, or “grand” piano, and Hertz promised himself to astonish the natives, fie seated himself on sn empty whisky keg, and struck the keys. Blum ! hlam! splash l splash! Not a sound did the piano (riyo, save that of the keys striking in water. The Californians who had brought the “box” from Sau Francisco finding it heavy, had footed it to toten, and, on drugging it out upon the levee, ne glected to pour the water from tho inside. The Now York Times says that a distin guished olergyman of Brooklyn, .whose reputation forbenevoienoe'is as great asthatforoloquenee, reoeiVed, a few days since, a letter, from a respon sible Southern gentleman, stating that.he.had thirty-five slaves whose market value was $30,000, but which he would sell to this clergymen'for $20,000, pocketing the loss- oheeifully, Cirouml stances render an early sale .to some one or at pub} lie auotion, imperative; and;rather than have his servants parted and thehf. family ties destroyed, he would make thenooeeaaiy sacrifice by selling then cheap to any party desiring to make them free. Oil wells have been sunk in McLean county, Ky., which promise to bo as rich r.s those in Pennsylvania; *
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers