rrn KVMN JMJPT VOL. VillNo. 111. PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, KOYEMBER 7, 1867. DOUBLE SHEET THREE CENTS fAFIo nnihNTT in JJ U j 11 U FIRST EDITION THE FRIENDS OF FREEDOM. Great Meeting In West Ches ter Last Evening. Epcccli of Mendel 1 riilllip on the "Political Situation." Tho Effect of tho Late Elections. The Principles of Political Salvation. "Grant a. Puppet for Partisans." Beview of the "Imbecile Ignoramus of the "Vnito House." Emancipation Accompllslud Manhood S triage the Goal. 'All Created Equa1 Bt., ICtc, Kto., :Ute., Is lNflAT., FHONOGRAP1HC BEPOHT FOB EVENING) J TKLKURAFH.l JbVest Chestbb, Nov. C, 1807. This evening horticultural Hall was filled to overflowing by the elite of this city, the occasion being an ora tion oy wenaeu runups, eniiucu me i-ontieai Situation." The meeting was characterized by the greatest enthusium. Wayne McVeigh pre sided, la introducing Mr. Phillips to the audi ence he said: Speech of Viyn McVeigh. LadieB and Gentlemen: I have been aked to say a single word of iu roiluclioc I don't pur pose standing long between you and tbe scholar and orator whom you ate all so eager to hear. I only purpose congratulating you upon our opportunity to listen to him; for while we are liberal, as well as delighted in honest, fearless, and cultured speech, it seems to me that a small provincial community like ours stands in special need of such speech to counteract its tendencies to narrowness and selt-f atitfaction with its own creed and its own conduct. We don't, of course, expect to agree with all we hear, but all our lives, I am very sure, will be made richer and fuller and better by listening to such a speech as we are likely to hear to-night, even while we must strongly distent from the views we will hear; for we know that, however other men ppeak, this man speaks only what with his whole heart he believes, and because with his whole heart he believes it. And I therefore have great pleasure iD Introducing to you the ChevaUtr liayard ot American politics without fear and without reproach Mr. Wendell Phil lips, of Boston. (Applause.) Mr. PhillipB then came forward and said: Speech of Wendell Phillips. ladles and Gentlemen: Tlie kindness of the friend who introduced me to you Is. uh you may very well conceive, lu one sense, an eniburrusbmcnt, because I only come to ycu es one Amerlcnn in 2o,(i0u,0uo Willi a great work to do an Uod throws It upon all of us a great work to wliicli tills generation are called and tied. Our duly never perloimed. our dunser never averted, our task never ended, until it U done. There is no doubt, as my Irleud sitld.lhst, um independent thinkers, we shall diner irom eacn other, diner at to the method, aiiler an to the principles. There Is tut one thing upon whlsb 1 suull lake for granted tutu we all agree, and that is the purpose. It would Le utterly Idle for me to attempt, by commit to see you a wet k. to plant In our minds or natures a thoroughly new system, or purpose, or principle. No man approaches his fcllow-inau for a short time, and can undertake to revolutionize Ins moral or his Intel lectual 8 stem. He U.UHI live with liltu for that. He must summer him and winter him. He must approach him In all moods, he must see him through all atmospheres; he must come to him Irom all side, and then after a great while, with ample opportuni ties of mellowing him as he proceeds.he mayriuen lilin Into a new crealure. I might even persuade hiin to look out blnisell lor a new stand point. Hut no seuBlhle speaker to w hom an audience lends an hoar, no visitor to whom a community accords a day or two, has ever any hope tor. It 4ie has any good sense, any such plun as that. He must begin somewhere. He must Mart for the point where he and his audience are In accord. He cannot expect to make thtm over. He can only hope lo mate them coiiblstent consistent Willi I heir on u ideas, consistent Willi their own germ and principle, ot action or thought. Now, then. In approaching an audience on win m 1 have not hud the pleasure of looking for two yet-rr, and niay not again tor two years to come, the only way in which we can spend the hour you lend me to any profit is to take for gi Anied some tilings. For Instance, are you not all agreed as American? No mutter whether you are Demo crats or Republicans or radicals, or what you are, are we not all agreed that, as American cltl tens, we have one great duty, and that Is to save the republic on principles which will make It perma nently quiet and sale '! We are not merely to hold oil a danger at arm's length, temporarily, just lor this time, and let It grow and avcumuiitte and comedown like an avalanche on cur children. Is It nut a tact? Don't you agree with me? Is It nn common sense that, arii r thirty years of agitation, having our men tal and moral atmosphere permeated by the electri city and the thunder, after having the mind of the nation employed and exhausted on this problem o( races lor the guidance ol I Ins generation, capping all that labor with a war which has taken a third of a million of lives the beat, some ot them, among um and mortgaged our right bunds every one ol us for thirty years to come with thousand of millions of debt now, Isn't 11 an admitted principle, common ' neuse, and duly a duty we owe to each other, a duty we owe to the dead, a duty we owe to our civilisation that we should now thoroughly, permanently, elllrleutly, and utterly settle this quts tloiil And every mail Is preuipued. therefore. In Ills own mind, to luleud that. Not losend It back into the vortei of politics, to be kicked and bandied about from seltikhnets to sellishnei-B, and umbliion to am bition, fur unotlier thirty years. Hues not there a time come iu the Intellectual lile of every nation, in the moral department ol every nution. when one ques tion has been righted and is ready to be settled and rnss out ot the aieua t Js not that the history ot men? asn'l there a time, for Instance, when men debated whether real estate desceuded from lather to son, and after, peihaps, a century, they Betted it T Then the time when men debated whether u dying man should be allowed to make a will. 1 hut they settled. Then whether in hereditary element a house of nobles was necessary In a Male, and our lathers settled that. W e have put It away on the shelf. A question about which an American never trutlbles himself, takes It for granted, whether priests should dictate our creed. That Is one of the cit-aud-dried and dismissed issues. The Issue ol this generation has been whether Ame rican law should be able, to distinguish co'or whether any of the distinctions i.l civil life should rest on racewhether the declaration of Indepen dence could he ever thoroughly curried out while law dlBtlnguixbcd between tho black man and the Wliltemuu. 1 hut, succinctly, brlelly, and ouiicIhuIv staled, is the whole effort of this generation, while it Is the hardest thing In the world lor buxou blood lo admit. We are the proudest and the angriest or all raoeB; we are tho most exclusive and the most exact ing; we are the most Isolated and the most contemp tuous; no race treads over the earth with (Inner pur pose to tread every rival out of Its path than Hie baxon; aud it ia the hardest lesson In the world lor the (-axon race, within the girth of the Constitution, to learn that its principles are crippled and Injured, whiie It limits them to adlstiuo Ion In blood, and denies them lo the black man because he Is nut a Baxon. liul that I what Uod Is leaching I bis genera tion. That Is what slavery means. ynu never could have held slavery a day tlnce Thomas Jefferson If lbs men bud been while, llleaeh out 4,0ori,0U0 of negroes id a nirht, and the next morning yon ciald not have held the Demo 'ratio party to its boiithern alliances. (Applause.) You conld not have ,i , position nn this question, and that ia the simple lenient, lo which the nation Is tied nn. lo settle. Now. 1 am snlnv m i.k. n r... i that however much you may differ with me, that we have no right either to reimh humun Imhmreucs to party, or l5 be fatigued at the performance of a duty frcni warning to get rid ol trouble. We have no right to oisuiisa ui y,i,p,i, uaiiu it over, postpone It, and auortibue another generation with it. 1 . u t Coins to say to yon io-ul.ht 1 take It lor granted that yu agree with me. that this living ana act lug tnw mAliin la Sound so to dlvklt. Its part lea. an in .1.,.. lis policy, so to elevate Its leaders, and so toolaim for lis Wding men and magistrates, that the re. nit shall k. 1 1, ni Bhn wa leave the stage and our ehtldrao i.k. U, lbs great questions of the future wtuats, labor JMka sftUl, llil ummvi s aw mw at r Krat questions that we hve 'round tin desirous of settlement, to clean rena of the negro question fotcver 1 think I am not claiming too inunti ai a conceded point Irom which we are to start. Whether my bearei is a ! moorut or Kepu'iilcan; wholher he Ih a ra 'ical or a rouserva lve; whether he Is one or the other, I will grant blm that I. la parly au I his retro- entail ve, Isolated, and his net I President, shall s 1 1 come up to litis rcqtilnl: iu (hat they will do ell cieully and promptly what is neoesnary to girt rid of this question ol nice, and reap to tho uttermost larihli g all that the war has ruhifully earuo.l. 11' we are agreed uu that let me make another remark. To day sliows us lhai the eople are not converted that ti e public mind Is not Irretrievably and reliably made over In Its vhw upon this question. The elei tlor. In New York, preceded by yours, the election In Uuio aud Kansas, the fulling otV In Massachusetts, and other questions, may be explalneu You may explain them In the el'y. M ly here was an unfortunate nomination: there the bun day liquor law; an angry local division in the third tlace; but alter all the great fuel retimitu that, either y conversions from Republicans to Democrats, or by tne llstlessness of the Republican parly, or by Its In diflereuce lo the Issues now presented, the Republi cans are witling that foreign thought should be conlnsed,and the domestic courage chilled, by tlin apparent triumph at least, if not a real ono, lor their i pf onents In this year's elections. That Is the geneal lad. You can't construe it awav. or wipe It out, nor explain It except on the hypothesis that the tierce energy, the fierce dlrecltieiss ol the wur, is somewhat over, and wn have come down Into a lower level We h, vegot Into the level of politics where disturbing eti nit ms get in and contuse us. When Oram faced fv niliern cannon il.ecaunoii balls wentsiraittbt home to their mark. 'I hi y never went .ig. ig. H it when j tiu con e to the purpose of the Ohio R" unilcans or I be I'eniisy I van! a itepub; leans or the K nn-as leaders, llgies r.nv'yag. They make a circle around thiitlo iii. rtic d Uicuity to avoid woman s rights, and aruuml ilielugcr beer question, and come in at the goal mightily coulee, and a good deal fatigued, (ap plause.) 1 ho fiiTereuco between politics and war. hon e men are (leoourned, some men are run priseil. No thougntftil man otigut 1) oe either suror sed or dl ouitiged. lu the lirot place he cuonot be dls.tou rugt d he has no right to be discouraged, no mat ter how BMigufciO he was lu !Hj7, when 1 caiuti Into yonder city of Philadelphia, 1 remember making a Bpvecii on "A bolltton and Us Relation to the Perpe tuity of the Union." and one ot the editors the next morning had an editorial devoted to mo, in which he (alii, "It was very evident that I had no real faith In the probability of my ideas ever coming to anvtliing within this century,'' Well.no man had, when lit looked tin at the dreadful battlements of Church and tstale, when he loosed down on the people poisoned by slavery In every llbre, commercially, religiously, In literature, In politics, all through slavery pieachod In the ptiiplt, slavery offering the bread at the sacra ment table, slavery editing the A'oWi Amcrlctui lit;- iiw, shivery presiding lu Wall street, slavery expur gating the literature ol the world, slavery perverting Its conscience, putting the iilole underneath tho s.ave system, aud lis advocates calling us Inliilols if we doubted that was the right place lor it. They tired the first gun at 1-muter, It dissolved like the morning wreaths. It vanished like the morning dew, and we stand to-day with statute-book clean; wob'uimI to-dav with ti e Church lurgely on our side; we stand to-day with halt a million of men returned Irom the camp, aud they brought home a new gospel which they learned is much nearer to Christ than that which CHme from the pulpit: we stand to-day with mo thers and fathers looking down into the fresh dun graves of their hope aud their children, and the derive Irom it a lesson better than any lips could leach, of fidelity to justice; ibat they must save tho other child lu tne cradle Irom another such martyr dom. Who con d have prophesied It? If auy man haa told It, If he had said It, if the most sanguine funutic had vcntnr'd to hope lor it, he would have bten consWIerrd irretrievably insane. Had any wan Pi luted In ls57 the picture ef how we stand to-day, we should have been crazy with delight. Take off a quarter of It. take oil' a half of it, let m go back fifty percent. What of it? Kveii then we have made a greater advance than any other race nave made lu the same lime. Even then we have made aucb pro gress In the btate that nothing but a seeuiicg miracle can explain. Discouraging? Why. Ohio bus added from thirty thousand lo titty thousand votes lu raver of negro sutliage. We know that Is the State that Margaret cian er had to llv from thestreesof Its cupi' al, and lound no shelter I nut Its laws but In the waters of the Uhio. Hucn a State Gloryt hallelujah! amen I Thanks to Qod in it thousand tongue, unci from a hundred thousand hearts, that we have gained so much, not that we have lost it little of it. Aud again, why should a man be surprised? Hid unv thoughtful man ever see an Influence go lorward and never have a pull back? Hid you never hear of reac tion? Hues not the eulbuslasm of the moment carry a man further ahead than he can hold on to? Duos not all history prove U? Was not ouo always expect ing li? 1 am not surprised. I am surprised It did not come earlier. The surprise would have been greater If, pel Imps, the Union had deserted Lincoln In lhi;4. It It had given up the wur Willi the first 111 suc cess, I sl ottltl not have been surprised that the nation weary, confused, and litiigucd, should go back aud throw the loins on I he nsck aud rest a Utile, and draw breath t o surprise at all; not the least. No man has the right lo be surprised. W hy, hall a Uov.en battles do not make men over li to abolitionist". It was not possible. 1 might ai well convert you by a speech as the battle ol Antle tarn, or of liull Kuu, or of Gettysburg, or ol Atlanta. A man thai could be made over by six years of war is not worth making over. He does not begin to bo worth anything. '1 he North' is not made over Into nhniiiloiilsiH. '1 he Homli is not made over into loyal ists, vt e shall never get rid ol this antagonism while this generation lives. 1 do not want to exaggerate the oillictiliy, but I want you to look at it. I want you to understand It. Uod doei not remove the anger, prejudice, and mistakes. ot a generation of thinking adult men by two years of success or ill success. You cannot convert men here and thereby a ri-iruculous Intellectual proof. As an occasional case, you may see a man, intellectually, make a somirt-ault complete. He goes to bed a Tory and wakes up a Whig. He goes to bed a tool and wakes Dp a knave. Hut iu the musses that is never the case. W ade Hampton Is Just the mau to-day that he was.ln it-W), taking him as a representlve ol the south ern 'u.en. How many Bull Runs do youlhink It would take, hen td up one alter auo.her continuously , to make a l'enusjlvanlan believe that all men were Lot created equal? I cannot judge your (state, hut I know ll you were to pile them on lo Musnachu,etts as high as Allium Washington If you would give her continual Hull Runs until the end of time, when Gabriel's trumpet sounded you would find her hold lhK lip her htafl, blulngf n her feet, crying out,"in spite ol nil that man was created equal!" t Applause.; You cot' Id uol beat It or poison It out of her. Justus true ol r-outh Carolina. Kxaciiythe same principle, on the other Bide. We put Ueliysmirg and Atlanta and Ahilelkin on the Hug waving at New Orlouns, an i over JUiiler controlling the Mississippi, and we say lot k. tooth Carolina dare not believe any more. Miy you can't pull tsouth Carolina any more than y u can pull yourselves. Wade Hampton was not a sham. Jefcrson Davis was not a pretense. They didn't rrofess to bel'eve. They did believe. '1 he f ieat mistake of some Northern men was In suppoa ng iheHooih was as much a hypocrite as they were. Hut the tsouth was a reality. Thei-outh was an euruest, bloody reality, hhe showed It. bhe has given every proot possible ol her manhoed and sincerity, bhe has given property, social position, kindred, all that life has or hope, or of comfort, or of ambition, for her Ideas. What right have we to believe such new shams? 'lbere Is a woman whose delicate hands never did a stroke ot work until she was forty years old, who counted her revenue at seventy lo ninety thousand dullers. bhe is now every hour of the week a i ervant ol lifteen boarders, that her children-all that survive may eat bread. The only pride It'll her Is that busbar J, and father, aud brother, and tw o eldest born sleep in Con'ederate emves tn the et II II ey tried lo defend. Ho ou suppose she was not sincere? Don't you think she believed ? Now. Wsde Hampton believes to-day, as he always did be lieve, that a negre 1b not fit to be put at Hie side of a white msn; that It would be a wreck to civilization to attempt it; thai is the most uiiphllusophlcul aud un safe theory to venture it. Ol course, he submits to the clrcuinstances. or course, he bows his bead lo evens, and. sits down aud waits his time. Hut you will never get over tne uuuger oi ins inea, sun seeking to assert Use, flu fact, until Wade Hampton Is laid lu bis crave. (Ainlause.) You may Invite Individual instances. I am using bloi as the representative ot the munv leading men lu the (South. God onlv In that w ay removes great mistakes. The beautiful aud the most beuulltul of all anglers deal h God s mes- sei ger ol love to progress, takes the fossil heart, the brain mat cannot aomit a new luea, ins iiiiie-nouii'i nature. toUL'b and Impenetrable, and geutly moves It out of the way. that the new, young Idea may have the spate to spread sn niiiuence. i ne greutes' curse God could have given the lace would have beeu lo et it uvu to be a Aieinuseian, to in young thought ue crushed by the overwhelming influence ot the man tukvcouiu say, "l nave liven a tiiousuuu years, anu it was not so." Rut the suco sslve waves of humanity, n me waves ot the ocean, keen it iresli be cause ttev ara short.. Wa ulmll n l a anl'n Irom the booth until tnin miauii,,., iu i, iiu i.,aun u,,,i the next generation has grown up under the Inlhieoce ?i .'Sr'.'f. cly,"r"1en. But. lellow-cillzens. In the llglil of that nrluvlule. wit,.h r.,.i r..u..,. Wi'.'4.",!'l'"ry. ,V,Bn. there would be no Imps ' " i-,0.'. If ,lllD '. ry ground for the public J.I 7 ... .1 . qaeaiioii, uititi at least the outflow v; ' :"'.T."'f r.' "i"tng mat the Mouth ha vue greai eirmem Ol tne Ulacg race lu It. If tl,u BoutU tt tu nn. rai,a Ana nam. u I . . - .. .. ... . - .. iii nut wnite men were down there we should rrnui iu ..." ...""L'l Great Britain exactly. You know what that exainiila was: thai tbe chlel order." as ll Is said, ol tha liou 01 bluart, bad to be whipped three times before they IVUiu l. r.m ..,-. on v rn wuippru. '1 Here lS UOl a record In history where a large minority, having at tempted to bieak up a Government and an Idea, were content to sit down quietly for one whipping. Idely a man to produce it. They have always tried again, ana generally againi tnree limes, tie. cause, oa tne principle i was endeavoring to mggest to yon, tbe brains that .began It, I Iks (11 brains capable of snch au exertion, continued It BUBtll age bad chilled them or death had removed them. That Wi the law or progress. You k now titers were three rebellious under the Honss of Hanover before r-cotlaod submitted, l bere were four or rive In Vranrsi before her democratic principle went down, aud tuea the second instance before her oyl priu eiple wept down I 'ore Democracy, sines rm. It woala b jot so with as except lor the oegra. If you support a poltrr that aess aot bring furward tbs jMiUwa tot yrsmlnslh. Jva plant tbM4 snre to rermlnate In another rebellion. If vnn give to that wnlte race a place Inside of tlie negroes, and don't cut ckn ale them before Miey come there, out balance them, ncutra'ir.e this element adverse tu nniop. you ere only laying the founilat lou for another r belllon. It is as crialnas the nature of things. When the news of the Pennsy lvanl election goes down lo Georgia, what is the flint thing a Georgia slaveholder does ? According to the correspondents of the Iloston and Washington press, the Georgia slaveholders made out nn exact list of their slave", their ages, and their values, and appended afllduvils of per-ons si ill living, saying 'thai tout was a true va'uation." For what? To lay by the evidence that they have that claim against the Government tor compensation, and they lake ihelr encou agement from the fact that, as they aulTered from your elec tion, tlie reaction has lieiin. We are going to have an effort. The chances are for one, and w will pre pare for It. 1 be most natursl thing In the world. Now, therefore. If anv man wishes that this country shall repeat the history or all other countries, anil that, liavirg spent a third of a million of young men's lives, and f l,ln.0,nor,000, It. shall go through that same experiment again, and defend Die Union a il st ano ther eftort.ailu ast to bring It on, let me admit ten Slates containing the unconverted, alienated, derided, and embittered elementol the white race agaliiht us to-day. Men go around and gather up isolated facts: they All i olnt the same way, but t hey are not necessary. A friend ot mine was In Georgia. Il happened that lie was aide to be there, being lu tne Government employ, and hi Id high military rank, quite high, almost in tlie hi best grade. Ho rendered great sorvice lo a rer-lilent plainer, who still hd property left, llehtd a house some six miles from tlie headquarters where my friend refilled. Ou one occasion, meeting his frienrl, IhP (southerner. In the chy, tho night coming i n anlaslorm threatening, and he must have his horses In readiness, my friend volunteered to carry It I in out ill the direction of tils home, as he was him-m-li going partly in lhat direction, 'I hey arrived at the tioor. jle had been a benefactor of the gonllemau who was about getting out of his carriage, lie had stars on both epaulets us he sat there. The obliged and humble southerner descended from the steps aud said: "I wish, General, I could invite you Into my house, hut you know I cannot." Inside of that house dwelt a Southern wife whom no henclit. and no kindness, and no protection could reconcile even so far to respect the flag, and to admit one lhat wore its uniform under her ro f. Tlnv husl and didn't Hare to extend the common civilities of social llietn the man to whose word heowe ihis protection, for fearof his wire; for fearof that element which goes so much to make up public opinion; which goes so tar lo control the action of tlie community. You may say, alter I heap up tact alter fuct of that kind, that It was the evident condition of the mind. We don't need one of them. To thoughtful men no i (tat'silcB are necessary. I don't want anybody to go down South, and come back. I don't want the stall' of a General Thomas to tell me that on the archives of that district there are records ol four hundred mur ders of Union men, and that u Mujor-Generai of the United Slates army was not able to put his linger upon a single one of thoe murderers. Sucli was the stateof public opinion In Tennessee that It was in vain that the houeHtest General in llieserviceendeavored tint retell his military power to the point of taking hold of one these acknowledged assassins. He could not do it. Influences at Washington and Influences in Tennes see 'blocked him. 1 don't need fa'Jl. the principles would be sutliclent If It was the other way. The mira cle would he if public opinion did not force Just such a course. Now what remedy does G -id give us against such an evil? How does He enable us to fettle all these questions belore this generation is removed? What weapon is there right by us which we can use to beat down and secure, guarantee and to rivet . be yond all possibility of a change, the peace and solely Ot the rej.ublic? Why, it Is the black man. Itlsalact a God-given opportunity that lour millions out of this twelve millions, are constitutionally and Inevi tably unchangeable, are aosoiuteiy trustworthy ailhs and servants ol loyalty, and nothing else. Now it seems lo me thut the dictate of duty is not to exhaust other methods and try to do this worg some how other Abut seize the opportunity, and do ll Just In that wav and no other. Look back at the .war. You know how we started with the si.i.pie idea of preserving tne Union. We all rushed up Banctilied al) party distinctions. There were no Demo crats, no W bigs, no Republicans; we weut wholly as pairiots. Everybody rushed to the front. The great desire was to deleud that Dug. We stayed until Bull Hun; we went ou until McClellun had taken down a quarter of a million of men and burled them In Vir ginia. Then all at once we woke up to the fact, after nil, why should we spend the btsl blood; why should we Biieua inuusanus ot minions 01 aonurs: whv should we not advance with tbe weauuii that will surely end the suite, and end It for over lhat Is, emancipation r i lien tne American mina aiviaeu. Then the purpose of thecommunlty began 10 divenre. One side said "No! upend every dollar; Bend down every young mau uiiut-r twenty-one, ana put iiim in hla crave: leave no gold In tbe country, noihlotr but greenbacks: spend all the reserve Hinds ut the capital ot the cotintiy. v uen you are or ven to tiirt wall; whin you cannot procure another dollar nor find an other man, then, ut ihe last lerrlole gasp, seize hold of slavery aud abolish It," That was conservatism, 1 lint was itepuuucanism, luecnuaoi w ntggery, mat was timidity groovaa wttn tu couiprontiawe ut tue Constitution. That was a mau who gave up the soul bis n other I ut iu mm wnen ne was norn. on tlie other side there was another set ol men teaohing, representing what we cull the lunatics John Phelps, Hen. Duller, Juhn (J. Fremont, and a Bet of impracti cable men, rash ai d dangerous counsellors. TUey said (here are livepowers fur the Government to u ;e one is blood, another is the army, anoi her Is the ntvy, suotler is puny discipline, anu ine other is ilavery. Don't touch either ot them, don't spend a dollar; don't let any man sft' rilice a drop of blood: se'za slavery at first and thank God He has given veu the opportunity, have everything e:se. 1 ue spirit or the country dictates that w hen our fathers erected a com promise screen between us anu the. sin of slavery, and said. "Go w here you will ana no wtiut you please, but don't put your hand through the creen; don't you touch slavery," the Declaration of Indepeudeuce bids you to hate It, 'Ihe Coustiluliou of the l u ted States, In Us spirit, pledges you against it, but don't put your hand through that screen, 'lhat screen lanleu until lsut. then they opened their batteries on r-uuiier. anu tue screon Vanished, and i r 11. e lirsi time the hated system or human bondage was brought lace to luce with the Chief Magistrate of the nation, uud he bad a ri,'ht 1 1 see It his eyes were not upon It before. (Applaus.) But when the south had dragged that screen asunder he hut', constitutionally, a right to seize slavery; ha hsdalegul right to look Into It and say: 'it lean serve Gud uud the Union at the same tiuio, I w ill seize It." Tho president sitia: "o: 11 i cau pos sibly gel along without It, ll I can save ills country Without It, 1 W ill. reize uiu uiiporiuiuiy iu savw too iintrv bv It. Iii order that, uy acsiroying it. you may Insure the peace of the luture, since you have the coi -btliulional right lo do so. '1 here Is w here we dlfl'ured Fremont, in August, iei', comes iu wivu tuis prin ciple, He 8epi slavery out of Missouri. The conn try said "Amen!" i.Very newspaper said "Jlurr ill ! that is the Idea that Is stutetmunship, thut Is loyaltv, that Is n Hilary skin, that is Justice, unlit tuor re sident thought It his duty to say '! forbid it." When he said ll he put us ouca a yenr. ue put us to an ex- euse of a couple or uiotisaiius ui miuuius oi uotiar.s. le said in effect. I will sacrifice a quarter of a mitlir ll ot men more. You see then Just t- Is: Our fathers kuew that they were building a Government that contained within Itself the principles of Its own d slruc.ioii. They knew that they w. re building a Government thai, use a cnemicai n ixture, i-uunnicu ui a on tee urd fxploblon. In 1SU2 Mr. Seward (belnre he lost his bruins), ut Rochester made a great speech, lu which h' coined, or rather adopted, Irom those who had coined It l-elore, the useful phrase, the "Irrepres sible conflict." aud IU it he said, "Our lathers knew the danger they were running. They cuutemplaled the impossibility of the success ol the plau Ihey adopted. They knew that lavery and iree loin could not eilst together peace! ully.and they thought it possi ble Inevitable al mi si, that thereBhou Id be war, but thov conclud.d it was a t hauce that freedom might worry . .i.v.rv-erariuullv absorb It. and develop Itself bo strongly tbel finally It should entirely eradicate ,t; but ti ey di uhted. He (Se ard) said they doubted strong'y whether that would ever come. Ihe great and terrible Isuie to which the virtue o the people it to he submitted Is in tlie choice of the uext mind that U lo be the Inspiration ot .he future or lis obstacle. It li the chickmate. It Is a great question. It is probably the most momentous tl at Una generallou will ever have lo answer. 1 do not mean there is iibailliimd l lor I don't believe Itl that we shall mil a Rebel lu that place. We have had loo serious a r..-0..n i ne it at vear o make It possible thut we should put, according to tbe New York JJiruUl, Graut lor Vr..niflent ana 1 ee rur v e-ri i di cu-,uu mo un-i "i "reconcl thare, put a nation." We shall not put an actual R -bel but tbe aucsiicn Is whether we shal man i hem with a face for ward, with his heart braced, lnwardlrgravltatlii',' towards the greai mimt, ..r ....n, Imrkwarus. fearful of change, conservative by the ......... . i hi. ..imi'Hmanshiu. Ill the one case. If we put a man like your own Stevens there we shall aave r"..J; ,,-r eent. ot wnat t' e war earned. We should get out of thla epocli what no nation ever yet 7ii,l uet out of a war. No nation ever g it out of a war i .,i ?n iblrtv ner cent, of what he war might i"':.. Z..7.r. to vleld. 11 you put such a man n. Ti'voliled McCVUaii, then , we should not get .Trt half nor cent. (Laughter.) And in my . :.,.... I iiir.UA I d down by pledge una so committed to radical that he shall io tn merely as a s rvant of fie 'aleiement o 'the Kepubllcar iparty (Applause.) ism toite&Vi lhM tot Wlk8 you make we f. .7. i..iii rand's laws are never In vain. coln'a iuca i..iua i nn,t fur d'rectlou, acter of the great Piesident andilis beaulf was thai. Ignorant and prejudiced, every day wis better than ifi-sur lie was learning rri. ...r terday He IsTrned This man "hat sits In the Wits House haa rorgotueu everything aud learned nothing. It Is to be hoped that ws will select as h s lucuwor a man ef whom mm know whether biliM ltMBtlsoy UUif. aa4 wblcu way bU fa look. iuv irr roriv n.r ?ePit 'i'e sl all get something, bui we shaU get as SSSu w ith 'auy decent t' J ol . Mils ueuerai uiuui . ,. n.riy; It aches for him. it h nossiblJ ' we do'our duly, either lhat a better mai IV li ? ziKtum lie ad of the t ivernmenl, or that this shall beat the hfa t ue t. , , hlJ,, b890 mi .in C-.-r OUII HTsmlirlnd.Tcw7b,.t It '0"" lK JSiMi',; Lou't iJl us put ourselvts uoder," b"Vn leu n2 ol God's rlghtliaud by a mistake ot to-oay, In letting Inoonipetency, Indltlerence, or alienation , from the riaht ilri... i..U ..i, n,a helm of government. Liii- SECOND EDITION THE SUNDAY GAR QUESTION. Opinion of the Supreme Court. DccIsIod f Judge Strong Kcvcrsc l KTECUI. DESPATCH TO TI1B EVSN'.NO TELE3Htrrf. Pittbduro, Nov. 7. In the Supremo Court this morning, the decree of the Court below In the case of Sparliawk cl al. vs. The Union Pas senger Railway Company, of Philadelphia, was reversed, and the bill dismissed, by a mijoilty opinion, Justices Strong aud Ajrnew dissenting. The reversal is made upon radical grounds en tirely, mid the opinion is full and ably written. Judge John M. Head, lu a lengthy opinion, takes the broad grom:d that the running of the cars on Sunday is "a work of necessity aud charity." Judges Wood ward and Tltompsou say that if the running on Sunday is illegal, the remedy is at law and not in equity.' FROM EUROPE BY CABLE. Noon Report of Markets. London, Nov. 7 Noon. Consols for money opened at94J; United States Five-twenties, 70iJ; Illinois Central Railroad, 82; Erie Railroad, 4G. Liverpool, Nov. 7 Noan. The cotton mar ket opens firm, with an advaucc of 1-lfllh, and there Is more doing. Tbe sales for to day are estimated at 15,000 bales. Middling Uplands are quoted at 8d. ; middling Orleans, PJ,!. Breadstuff's Corn, 49s. Cd.; California Wheat, 15s. Cd.j No. 1 Milwaukee red, 13s. 9d.; Barley, 6s. 4d.; Oats, 3s. lid.; Peas, 51s. Provisions Pork, 72s.; Beef.llSs. ; Bacon, 52s.; Lard, 52s. 6d. ; Cheese, 62s. Produce Common Rosin, 8s. 3d.; tine pale, 12s.; Tallow, 44s. 6d. ; Turpentine, 27s.; Spirits Petroleum, 2s.; refined, Is. 6Ad. Two o'clock Market Report. Londok, Nov. 72 P. M. Consols are quoted at 84 7-1C; Illinois Central, 81J; United States Five-twenties, 70 11-16. Liveju'ool, Nov. 72 P. M. Breadstuffs are without change. Sperm Oil, 114. THE DREW THEOLCGICIIL INSTITUTE. The Opening Yesterday The Exerciser Yesterday Afternoon and Evening. The readers of Tub Evening Telegraph were favored with a telegraphic report ot tho pro ceedings up to noon yesterday. After dinner the guests bpcut some time in meandering ovi-r tbe majrniQocnt grounds connected with tbe Institute. No spot in the State could have been selected combining all the advantages desire 1 more completely than this. The visitors were more than pleased, they were rapturous iu their praieo of every arranirc- mctit by which the comiort of the students will be secured. The afternoon exercises were held in the Mansion. " Never befoie did that noble Imitd- ing witness such a gathering. Here Mere dwellers iu Nesv Jersey and New York. Here were distinguished men froai Cin cinnati, Buffalo, Baltimore, (Philadelphia, and Wilmington, all joining in the enthusiastic exer cises ot the occasion. The halls and parlois were crowded, and the kinging, under ine leadership et r. I'uillips, echoed in tbe most rich and powerful tones. lie v. U'suoi) Atnes opened wiin an appro priate prajer. Ktv. Dr. McClintock, President of the Insti tute, gave a history ot the purchase of the pro perty by ir. Drew at acostoi niou.uuu, wmen, with the improvement being made ami con templated, will muke the cost at least $250,000, and an endowment by Mr. Drew of a like amount will constitute the munificent gift to the Church of at lo tst a halt million of dollar j. Mr. Drew has, in addition to this, purchased and endowed a jouug ladies' semin try atCttrm d, N. which he has likewise given to the M. B. Church. He in still contemplating other noble. woiks. The Doctor then alluded to the cnmolelene ts of ti e buildings for the purpose to which thev are devoted. He expressed the wish and hope that these halls, consecrated to learning and science, ruiht be the home of devout piety, from which mifilit go forth holy men, thoroughly trained for the gieat work of the Christian ministry. Tne regular course ot study will require tnree years for its completion. It is arranged with reference to tbe attainments and studies of col lege craduatcs. Students whose want of airo or of preparatory education will not allow theut to pursue tbe regular course, may pursue a fiartial course of study requiring two years for Is completion. Applicants for admission, who are members of the Methodist FpWcopal Church, must bring a ccititicaie of Local Preachers as license, or a iccommendation from either a quarterly con- fererce or leader's meeting certiiyiurj tnatttj't aopltcant is a proper person, as to moral aud Christian character to enjoy ihe advantages of the Institute. Members of other churches must bring satis factory recommendations from minUters of the church to which they belong. Studeuts may be admitted into either one of the classes, provided they be tound qualified by the Faculty ou a clerical examination. From other theological seminaries, when dlsm'ssed in good standing, tbev may be received ad eundem. The expenses of the students will be brought as low as possible. No charge is made for tui tion, room rent, or use ot the librarv. whleh already amounts to about five thousand vol umes ot the choicest, works on Theolocry, etc., which can be found together anywhere, and which will constantly receive very valuable ad tlit ions. Tbe spacious club house on tho grounds is allotted tor the use of students who desire to form a club to hoard themselves. The expense in that ras-e will be as low as they desire. Kadi student's room is provided with stove, bedstead, mattress, pillows, blankets, coverlet, table, washstand, and chairs. The address of Dr. McClintock was listened to With profound attention, and his remarks met with much applause. Rev. John 8. Power, D. D., of New Jersey, then addressed the audience. Rev. Dr. Cummiaei, President of the Wes lejan University, aud Bishop Jones and Bishop Antes also made brief but eloquent addresses. Tbe exercises closed with the singing ol the Doxoloey, and the Bene.liotion. ine mends ol Rev. B. II. Nadal, D.D., who is now Professor In this Institute, will be glad to bear that he ts so appropiiatel; and usefully employed, and that the Drew Instituta Is I cesiiied to have bright aud happy future r nAna run ilrinkt THE ELECTIONS: New York. The Democratic majority in New York will be over 40.000. There will be a Republican ninjorlty of 3 in the Stale Senate, and a Democratic majority of 14 in tbe House. A United Henator In place of Mr. Morgan will be electe.l by the present Senate, but by a new House of Representatives to bo elected next year. New Jersey. The Democratic majority iu the State Is nearly 10.000. The Senate lll stand 10 Republicans to 11 Democrats. The House will he composed of 15 Republicans and 45 Democrnts. This secures the election of a Democrat to the United .States r-eriate, In place of the Hon. Frederick T. Frc linghuysen. The Klectlon In Massaohutettt. From the Boston Journal, iVov. 7. The result of yesterday's vole In 219 towns la as lollows: Bullock, s;i,G2fi; Adams, 02,556; Bullock's plurulity, 21,070. The same to ns list year Rave Bullock 79,142; Sweelser, 23.H2G: total, 65,216. Bullock's vote has increased 4481; Adams' vote over Sweytser, 38,63'i. The fctHte Senate will stand: Republicans. 24; DemocraiB, 12; to be heard Irom, 4; License, 29; Prohibition, 7. The House will contain: Ropubliean, 120; Democrats, 54; License law, 118; Prohibition ists, 39. To the Council are elected: Republicans, 2; Democrats, 2; not heurd from, 4. There are about 85 towns to bo heard from, which will increase Bullock's ninjorlty to 25,000, and will increase the License Law majority in the Legislature. Colonel John Quincy Adams, Democratic nominee for Goveruor, was elected a member of the popular branch of tlie legislature from Quincy. He received tho votes of the liberal members of botb parties. Edwatd Avery, who is chosen Senator, is also elected to the Houfe. The friends of a license law swept this city, and, in fact, Suffolk county pres -nts almost a solid phalanx of thirly-six representatives aud six Senators, all but two or three of whom are well-known advocates of a law to regulate the sale of ardent spirits. Though the city nave Mr. Adams a majority on this final issue.it by no means indicates that the Republicans huve abated one jot of their loyalty. Our citizens object to the prohibitory law, and have a strong dislike to the free use of revolver! use I by the force specially organized to cuforceit. Tbe total vote shows an increase of some three thousand votes. FATAL CASE OF BURNING. A Clergyman's Wife Burned to Death. Vow the IttUburg Chronicle, Aov. 4. A terrible case of fatal burning occurred on Friday evening at Turtle Creek, on the Pennsyl vania Railroad. It appears that Mrs. Pollock, wife ot the Rev. David H. Pollock, of Turtle Creek, feeling chilly, stood near the grate. W tile standing with her back to the fire the skirt of her dress ignited, and In an instant sue was enveloped in flames. Her screums attracted the servant girl, who Immediately threw a bucket of water over the burning woman, and ran out after another bucketful. Mrs. I'olVock followed her, aud this fanned the flames Into renewed life. More water was thrown over her, but made little Impression. Some neighbors ran to her and pulled off what little clotnina-ilill remained on her person, but belore this was accomplished she was terribly burned about the limb and back. Physicians were summoned immediately, and eveiythinp posible done for tho relief of the suffcringr womm. She suffered but littlo pain, but her Injuries were at once pronounced lata), yesterday it was 'seen ahe could not live until evening, aud at 2 o'clock in the ul'iernoon she expired. Her husband was absent at the time of tho accident. Mrs. Bullock wa the daughter of Rev. Mr. Kilpatrlck, of Westmore land county, and sister of Mr. John M. Kiiput rick, of this city. She was only about twenty six years of age. FINANCE AND COMMERCE. OrriCK or thm Evknind Tklbb aco, 1 Thursday, Nov. 7, U67. The Stock Market was inactive this morning, but prices were without auy material change, (ioveroment loans were firmly beld. July '65 5-2Us sold al 107J, no change; lOOj was bid lor 10-40s; 111 lor 6s 011881; 1051 for 730s; 108; for '02 6-2CV; 105i for '64 5-20s; aud 106J for '65 fi 20s. City loans were in fair demand; the new tasue sold at 1013(3102, an advance of 4. Railroad shares, as we have noticed for some time past, continue the most active on tne list. Readu.K sold at 47j48, no change; Pennsyl vania Railroad at 60$, no change; Jorritown at 64, no charee; Lehitth Valley at 61J5U. no change; Philadelphia and Erie at 24 j. a decline of i; and Northern Central at 434, an advance of J. 124 was bid for Camden aud Aniboy; 67 tor MiDehill; 31 for Norih Pennsylvania; aad 22J for Catawlfsa preferred. In City Passenger Railroad shares there was veiy little movement. West Philadelphia sold at 60; 64 was bid for Tenth and Eleventh; 18 for Thirteenth and Fifteenth: 25 for Spruce and Pine; 44 for Chesnut aud walnut; 8; for Ues tonville; 20$ for Uirard College; aud 30 lor Union. Bank shares were in good demand for Invest ment at full prices, but we hear of no sale. 100 was bid for Northern Liberties; 30 for Me chanics'; 105 for Bouthwark; 110 lor Trades men's; 70 for City, and 61 for Union. Canal shares continue dull. Schuylkill Navi gation common sold at 10, no change; aud Le high Navigation at 34345, a decline of . 22 was bid for Schuylkill Navigation preferred; aud 10 for Susquehanna Canal. Quotations of (Jold 10$ A. M., 138j; 11 A. M., 138.J: 12 M., 130; 1 P. M., 1SNJ, a decline- of 4 on the closing price last evening. The New York 'Jribune this morning says: "Money is abundant to stock houses at 7 percent. Commercial paper sells at 79 for best, and 1012 for quite strong names. The reduction iu the price ot speculative stocks as compared with last year at this date, euables parties dealing in them to carry them with com parative ease. "Koreimi exchange is dull. London, 60 days, 109i1094; sight, 110J(g 1104; Purls, loug, 5'15; short, 6-124 ; Antwerp, 6174 5-164; Swiss, 5'17J fj?,6-164; Hamburg, 36J; Amsterdam, 41J; Frank lort, 40441; Bremen, 78.79; Borlin, 7272J. The Boston 3raue"eyof yesterday remarks: "Loans of tbe first-class were effected iu a few instances this forenoon ou call at 5. but the common rate was 6 percent. Discounts of prime commercial paper were maJe at 7, but lower grades ranaed Irom 8 to 12 per ceut. Cousldeia Die business was done both in lounB and dis counts at intermediate fractions, and the supply of currency was larger than the demand lor lis use, at tbe bunks and in tho street." The Chicago Tribune of Mouday says: "Ibe week closes on a stringent money mar ket. Tbe banks nee the absurdity of attempting to carry gruin to be held here for the benedt of local speculators, aud many loans are being; called in. Borrowers on speculation tiud little favor, but there is every disposition shown to arcommodate shippers, by aoceptitig short-time bills against cargoes. Weveral of the parkers are at work, and more will commence as soon an the weather becomes more favorable. In the meantime they are making arrangements for money to carry them tarouirh tbe seaion. "There Is a good inquiry from the lumbermen for discounts. The stock of plumber now tn the .sods of dealers is estimated by competent Udee to be tn the neighborhood of 326,000,000, not to speak of lath and shingles. The mercan tile demand is fairly active. Paper is subjected to a close scrutiny at tho discount houses, and. . favors arc granted only to those whose acoounts entitle them to accommodation. In the open market there is no difficulty In placing loan, able funds. Tbe rates are irregular ranging from lj(jt3 per cent., according to the nature of the security. "New York funds were quite scarce In the forenoon, and sales were made between bank at 25((010 cents -premium, but later in the day there was a belter supply, and round lots sold at par. Tho counter rates are irregular at i dls foiintJ?par buying, and par($l-10 premium fcclling." PlllLAHEI,rnU STOCK JEXCITANGE SALF.S T0-B1T Reported by Dehaven A Bro., No. 40 8, Third street nitMT BOARD. two 5-209 Jy.ep n7'i f'-'Mm do't7.Jycp.clti7S, '-WCIty Ss.Kew lot -. 2'00 do. New I0i :mo do. New 11,2 I to do. New....lua IsoO do. New in? lltxO do. New lui t-M) do. New loi f ioitlPilSS. W L..CP 1111 r'Ooo do pil loo sh Head R. 4' 100 do... sfiifcilll, 47 do bae. vi 100 300 20 leO 15 2-". 10 100 OO...S6.tlUt 1i do 47-H4 do ....baa. 47. do....trf. 48 do...trf. 4S dosfcAlnU. 47',' do c. 47-94 ilo...f(VAInt. 48 1UI) t.ntu icemen es B4lS. M 1 inm do si',' liioO Pa R 1 m s m j it Km Read S '70 Is W (piiHm 11 Frie s. c. MX arsli Wech Bk i-Swn. l 1 lcdsh Sen N slk 10 1 tosh Norrlst'n R..b 20 sh N Central 4:i'' sh W l'hila R 60 I M sh Leh N stsb5. 34V 8 do... at "4 20 do 81 H do. .... 8I 4 2 8h Leh V K.M I)S ll do -..Is 6'J. 09 Bb Fenna It Is. Ml 4 do.. Is. 60V 1(0 sh Phil A E bOO. 24)2 Messrs. Jay CooKe Co. quote Govern ment secuiities, etc., as follows: U. 8. 6s of lssi, llli(57;112; old 6-2s, 108(761084; new 6-20s, 1H64. 105J5cl()5j; do.,1801;, 10GM1064; do., Jnlv. K)74(ai07i; do., 1867, 107C'dl07i; 10-40s, lOOJcft 1014; 7-30s, June, I05.J105i; do., July, 106ifVJ 1054. Gold, 139ai394. Messrs. William Painter & Co., bankers, No. 86 S. Third street, report the follow ing rates of exchange to-day at 12 o'clock :-m 0. 8. 6s, 1861, 1114112; U. 8. 6-208, 1862, 108(31084; do... 1864, 105 A fr 105 J ; do., 1865, 100:41064; do. July, 1865, 1074107; do. July, 1867, 1074107; "6s, 10-40s, lOOJSlOlJ: U. 8. 7-JOs, 2d series, 105.(31054; 3d series, lOM'Tfi 1064; Compound Interest Notes, December, 1864, 119; May, 165, 1174; August, 1865, 1164; Sep tember, 1805, 115i; October, 1865, 1154- Gold, 138j138. Messrs. De Haven & Brother, No. 40 South Third street, report the following rates of ex change to-day at 1 P. M. : L'. 8. 6s of 1881, 1114 112; do. 1862, 108'(tl08J; do.. 1864, 105I(J 1058; do.,lft65, 100(ttl06i: do.. 1865, new, 1070 1074; 1867, new, 1071 1074; do. 6s, 10-406, 100tS10ll; do. 7-30 Juue, 105105; do., July, 105J(fil05J: Compound Interest Notes, June, 1864, 119-40; do., July, 1864, 119-40; do. August, 1864, 119-40; do., October, 1864, 119-40(820; do. December, 1864, 119J1PM; do., May, 1866, 117J117i; do., August 1866, 1164 116A; do., September, 1865, 1154116: do. October, 1866. 115j116. Gold, 138j139. Silver, 133135. Philadelphia Trade Hepoit. Thursday, Nov. 7. Bark I here Is very little coining forward, and the demand is good at 154 fl ton for No. 1 Quercitron. Seeds The stock of Oloverseed la light, and the inquiry limited at S7 258 64 lbs. Timothy ranges from 32-40 to J2 05. Flaxseed Belli at 2'45 2'60. The Flonr Market continues in the same lethargic condition noted for a week pitst, and prices are weak al yesterday's quotations. Bales for shipment of 400 barrels Northwestern and winter Wheat extra family on secret terms; a few hundred barrels new, taken by the home consumers, at S7'50(i)8 fj0 for superflue, $8 609'60 for extras. (9 75&11 lor Northwestern extra family, 8ll1275 for Pennsylvania and Uhio extra family, and futicy brands at $13(14, ao cording to quality. Kye Flour Is selling at 18 50 9 V barrel. Nothlnu doing In Corn Meal. The Wheal Market la dull, and prices rale in favor of buyers. Sales ol red at $i'302 47. and a lot of strictly choice at S2 50. Rye 1b steady at fl5o for Pennsylvania, and Jl-39 lor Boathern. (Join The market is quiet at former rates, fcales of yellow al SI 381 39, and Western mixed at 81-87. Oats are unchanged. Hales of Boath ern and Pennsylvania at 6073c. Nothing doing In either Barley or Malt. Whisky is oilered at 2627o. gallon for com mon, in bond. Markets by Telegraph. New Yoek, Nov. 7-eJtocks active: Chicago and Rock Island, wij,; ReadlnB.90', Canton, 4i: Krie. 71',: Cleveland and Toledo, n2: Cleveland and Pittsburg, Pltlaburg and i'ort Wayne, 9S; Micblssn Wouthern, 7s.'; New York Central, llli; Illinois Central, 125'-,; Cumberland preferred, lite. Missouri s, 93J; Hudson River, rr: United Statue Flve-lwen-tles, IMS, Mtfi.U; do. UB4, It.,; da UMiS, hm,l: Ten-forties, Jul; Beven-lhlrtiee, lust. Money, 6(&7 per cent. 6ter ling Kchange. 110. Wold, I887. LATEST SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. War additional Marina News tee Third Foot, pout or ruiLADKLeinx NovisarnjEil STATU Of THBBMOMETltB AT TBI IVENINa vvri. oaAca ovrica. 1 A. M...... 4411 A. M..............f,o2 p, tt, 64 . SIlKARB? THIa MORNING. Steamship Noruinn, Crowell, Boston, II. Wlnsor A (v, Barque WVan Name, Craig, Marseilles. L. Wester Brig Kllen P.' Stevens, Holland, Trinidad, Workman Bclir J. J. Bponcer, Fleming, Galveston, D. B. Stetson BchrA. J.Russell, Hedges, Hartford, Borda. Kellar dtNuttimr. Bcur Kliuira Wooley, King, Norwich, Day, Huddell Echr W. G. Andenrled, Baker, Boston, RothermelA srun iir-i Bchr busan McDevltt. McDevltt, Alexandria. Cald well. Gordon fc Co. Bcbr P. Bolce. Adams, Boston, Rommel k Hunter, bl'r Diamond Btate, Robinson, Baltimore, J. v. Huoff, ARRIVED THIS MORNING. Bchr J. A. Parsons, tsetover. 6 days from Wilming ton, with lumber to K. Bolton A Co. Bchr J. Maxheld, My,4dy from Providence, wan Old Iron to captain, Bchr W.G. Audenrled, Baker, from Boston. Bchr P. Bolce, Adnms, from Boston. Schr E. Wooiey. King, from Norwich. Bchr Reading UK. No. 60, Corson, from Norwich. BcbrB. McDevltt, McDevltt, from Washington. Bieanier Monitor. Jones. 21 hours from New York with indue, to W. M. Baird fc Co. MEMORANDA. Steamship Chase, Harding, hence, at Providence 5ih Instant. BieaniBblp Roman, Baker, for Philadelphia, cleared at Bunion 5lh luat. Brig Kolus, Beabrook, for Philadelphia, c eared at Boston filb lust. Bcbr Virginia, Price, benca for Portsmouth, at New York yesterday. Bcbr Northern Light, Ireland, hence, at Providence 6th Inst. Bchr Boston. Smith, hence, at Pawtucket 6th Inst. bcbr B. M. Builih. Turner, for Philadelphia, sailed from Porisuisulh 2d lust. Bchrs Thus. Borden, hence f Jr Fall River, at New York yesterday. Bcbr Henrietta, hence for Norwich, at New London (lb lust. . ,. ... Bchr L. B. Ives, Bowdltclt. hence, at Fall River 4th ,UBchrl6llver Ames, Westgate, hence, at Dlghton Sth '"Bclir'nenry. Walker, lor Philadelphia, cleared at BSch'rr Kxpedl'ie. Backett: J. Field. Pettll: and J. P?lce, Nick eisou. beuce lor New Haven, at New York 7 Hell W'. B. Thomas. Wlnsmore: K. Davis. Johnson; Adn lrKrHteolniHiii K. and . ?"-tf"! MiiMrks-J if. Al eu, Heainan trade Winu, cor-s"?Heve"l-'.U. l eett J. k Marshall. Haakon, a a, Wood.Dorau; aud Mary Riley, hence, at Boston Sth '"rt'eanilnc America. Mondsy, from New Orleans for Phliaduipbia. ut Norfolk sth lust., short of ooal. far TELKOBAPH.l Nkw Yobx, Nov. 7. Arrived, sieainsiiln Cumnsr. laud, from bl. Thomas. v vumuer- DOM KSlToPORT8. Nkw Toik Nov. a-Arrived, steamship Helvetia. Cutting, from Liverpool. w -""'vetia, leauishlp Western Metropolis, from Bremen Bteamshlp (Columbia, Barton, from Havana riamu u. r . ivers, rust, Irom Antwerp. Barque Alblna. Waeflasr, Irom Havre. lt.,11,1. l..nla T .... . m. - - "-'i mv, uvtu k (leave.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers