GIBSON PEACOCK. Editor. VOLUME XXL-NO. THE EVENING BULLETIN ruaLisinte EVERY EVENING (Sundays excepted). AT THE NEW BULLETIN BEEILM NO, GOT ' Chestnut Street, I'hltadelphi4, 11T T/111 EVENING BULLETIN ASSOCIATION.' rzonnlETol4l. GnISON PEACOCK. ERNEST C. WALLACE,. ■FETHERSfON,,_ TllOB. J, WILLIAMSOLV. GASPER SOURER. JR.. FRANCIS WELLS. This= i ts p bargd t( t ) o u s i tp c scribe r r e s f o r: . t el li B e p g . l at 88 MARRIED. ---•- - - COLTON . —BRIGIIT.--On tli let of October, In Balti. More, by the Rev. Richard Norrie, Theodore Colton to Puma 3., second daughter co Nathaniel and „Bright. both of Baltimore. FIRTH—LLOYD.--In Wlllialimport, Pa., on the let ult., Frank J. Firth and Annie:daughter of Samuel If. Lloyd, Em. • MILL—MOXT.—On Wednesday, October 2, at the l) Chery fif the Incarnation, N. Y. by the Rev. Mr. Twing Charles K Mille to Mrs. Emily D. Mott. WEST—SKID/MORE.—In Brooklyn, K on Tuesday, October I. by the Rev. Mr. Merndn, Mr. Ibibiel S. Weil, to Mary J., daughter of F. W. Skidmore... COOKMAN.-4),ctober":lirt, (icergo:Okuist aged S7f year s. The relatives and friends of the family are Invited to attend the funeral, from his late residence, No. 161.3 Arch street, on Saturday afternoon, at 2 o'clock. • EAKlN.—Suddenly, on the ad hot., Mrs. Elizabeth C., wife of C. N. Eakin. The relatives and friends of the laugh' are invited to attend the funeral, from the residence of tier husband. S. E. comer Thlrtyminth and Chestnut streets, on Saturday afternoon. Gth tag., at 3 o'clock: Interment at Wood. land C emetery. ko6l',—At Bremen, f; , rmany. on Friday, Sent. 20, atter a rhort Koop, the beloved wife. of Iler. mann hoop of Brooklyn, L. 1., and daughter of Charle., 11. White, .61., of Philadelphia. PRICE—At Minneapolle, Mimi., on the 74th ult., Anna M., wife of filch:lrd Price and daughter of Elou Dunbar. The friend!, of the family are reipectfully invited to attend her funeral, from the relideuce of her father.o. Pe::: 'll rt nut rtreet, thirl Friday the 4th furt.,at o'cl k, P. M. tit 1:1'. k LA N I 'ELL HA VI: THE FIRST QUALITY LA Lyon elv.t i4a. Cloako, Lyon 4 VeF..ote,•2/3-iucli for Hsck, ELIZA ) V. S NI IT 1 . 1, lfl 1 own: Prrnell, German. I:T3-P6pruco ptreet. ezmg NDELL, FOI ANI) ARCII, KEIT A .0 tit, ....KoL tublit of Ca.einif•re, fur Bove' C10t1..-r, ...inl( rt.. 1,1 litiein,o 8,114. PATENTED.--PANTS Htill("ltED AND BTitETcIIED .1 from Ito 5 incite?, at MOTTLDS French St , :•ani 1))e• Ing and bc W.. South Ninth etre , t. and 7:14 I:fte4. Pt tec.t, SPECIAL NOTICES. jJUDGE ALLISON'S OPINION JUDGE LUDLOW. A letter ha_ been reeeived from EurA, from 11-m. J.reph In which he ray , "I ha , r,en the addrt.ri to eludg , l.LAllow. , o mdnerourly and rCe6lCtirib' Figucd, and eunuotpennit uryrelf to doubt the re.t:lt. You are at Libtrt to p lvateiy and pub licly THAT I Ald FOI: 111 • • 1112) TWENTY—FOURTH AND TWENTY—SEVENTH WARDS! DALT 4 - 1" UNION REPUBLICAN MASS MEETING Friday Evening, October 4th, 1867 • • AaT COMMISSIONERS' HALL, (;or, Thirt -Seventh and Market. Streets. tonic who 1:f oppo,d to placing the Na. joit! ho%e:nweut in the halide of rtbelg and troitoni: who is in la vc,:* of On: gallant and war-tried poldiefy, t ;runt, :Mall awl Sickle, and who d, , f.irm to see the Union r, vontiwted on a ba:dt .4 lasting r'ite'• The follov. iug eminent ep,,11: , .'n will addr, , the meet in,: (lon. JOHN lAT, GEAIN. Hon. WM. 1). KELLEI. . • MORTON Mc )11illAEL. JAME, POLLOCK. (ten. LOCIS WAGNER. aosnuA T. OWENS. BENJAMIN u. BIIEW,TER, WILLIAM B. MANN, Ev. • JAMES JOHN (J. 11l 'FLEE, Chairmen of Coin. on Town Meetinge. seer SPECIAL MEETING tit' THE BOARD of Managers of the Young :Nleu'ff Christian AraO i the following wee unanimously adopted: life is "as the morning cloud and as the. early dew, that pa , —etif away." These w orde of the Prophet are for cibly brovght to our minds by the sudden demise of our beloved brother, friend, fellow member and former Presi dent, GLORI COOKMAN, Esq. In the meridian of a {metal life„-urrounded by all its endearments, he has sud denly been called away by an inscrutable Providence, whose way,: are past finding out, but Who doeth all things well; there pre be it. fie,miced, That while We'bow with submis4on to the in evitable decree,.we_do most, deeply deplore the svwerance of Ilielftedff of CliristianTOViwship between us and "our de meted brother. Rem - fired, That in the death of our Brother Cookman the Association has lost it faithful friend. find our Master's caw° a fcarle.s laborer, One whose bright record wilPever be enshrined in our memories. I:t , olred, That we do wird heartily sympathize with the bereaved wife and children, and earnestly commend theta to Hint who has ever been the father of the fatherless, and the widow's friend. /Pt./deed. That we attend his funeral as an Association, and that tlic.c resolutions be published in the daily and weekly papers. lir.soccerl. That the proceedings of this meeting be made a special record upon our minutes, and that a suitable copy be transmitted to the family. 711E0DORE EARP, M. G. CROWELL, JO I N WANAMAKER, • A.. M. BURTON. ' PETER li, SIMONS, Committee. Womf.sm It, Ct 1.1.e,f, Corresponding Secretary. irrr MEMBERS OF TILE YOUNG MEN'S CHRIS. tian Awmciation are requested to meet at the Ilan, on Saturday afternoon, at 2 o'clock, to attend the funeral of our former PreAdrat, GEORGE COOKMAN, FM. Itb W. H. CULLISS, Correeponding Seeretars. stir JOHN IL GOUGII, AT lIORTICULYERAL HALL— under the auspices of the "kOL - NG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION," WEDNESD_AY EVENLNG, October 9. t?Abtect—"Ei.ogrus,yr: A NO ORATORS." I 'IttiDAY EVENING_, October IV. Subject —"Eno] , .NT) FICAION." Adnillsion 50 cents. No extra charge for reserved seat+. The sale of tickets will commence Monday morning, VII, at AshinertOt Bookstore, 754 Chestnut street. oe:t4trl, m a r . NORTH. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD AND ir'n' GREEN LANE STATION. We are delivering from Mk place the celebrated • HARLEIGII SPRING 'MOUNTAIN LEHIGH. COAL, the hardest and purest mined, at $7 per ton. BINIES SIIEATT. (MET, No. 15 South Seventh oireet. seiLlairp: T O TI N AND AFTER OCTOBER 7, 1 867 , S er' Pleladelphia Postoilice will open 7 . 13 (A-1111.u i n E d CiOPCI at 6.10 P. 31. A Night Clerk will be in attendance ter the dehrery of letters from 8.30 P. M. until 7.60 A. 31. Entrance on Chestnut street. oca ttlT3 HENRY .F1:14INGII AM, Postmaster. ler A MEETING• OP TOP MphiIIERSIIIP of the Arch Street M. E. Church with refereuce to the decease of our late Brother George Cookaaan, will be held at the Chapel thje (Friday) Eveuing, 4th lint, it t 7)(i o'clock. Or HOWARD HOSPITAL, NOS. 15t8 AND 1520 Lombard atreet Diapenaary Department.—Modi. cal treatment and medicine furnished gratuttotuilv to the poor. f.IiATTE-NTION, It !.--A Al FETING OF 11 COMPANY NATIONAL GARDS will be held at the Armory at 8 P. al. 'ADS EVEN IWO. 1 It• C. 1,. WI:ST. Secretary. .....!;.....:' : ..4it . ,...:• - •••iL . ....•....- . -'t7.'t.( . 'it',.:..... - .'..• . 7 f,8.1..i.t....4. [Corr,4nivicrie , . of the Plaindelphia I:coning littllefin., "But whatever you miss. don't miss Capri " That had beeh the chorus. away last winter, under the far-off arches of the Hue de Ilivoli, of the little circle that was dismissing me with /you voyage towards the Mediterranean. "In Capri there's a town that is nothing but staircases," said one: "never been a horse in it." "It was at Capri I met the original of Hebert's Rosa Nero," said a Frenchman, smacking his lips. It was the Chablis, of course, he smacked hisslips over. "It's at Capri," said a landscape-painter with the finest malice, "that Haseltine gets those ap petizing. gingerbread rocks for his coast-scenes." And as vie all - .touched glasses I promised to drink to their memory someday or other in wine of Capri. 11. W about Wenoted,,Frhlene artist had talked to me about the girl at Capri: .• " They are my whole mythology," he had said, "their round arms and low foreheads are ac countable for all my poupeex and marionettes." "Do they pose willingly as models;" - " Wholly to the contrary," he hastened to "they are shy as the quails: I had to in trigue for their acquaintance. with introductions and curb... 4 de eigite, and I know not what.. The salons of Mme. de Girardin are-not half so diffi cult. But they believe in nit now." At Naples, every morning, I would watch the sweeping curves of Capri. and think of these low brewed maids. I believe I have uever seen an - island with such an alluring outline. Blue as a block of Italian air, blue as a Mediterranean wave, it gradually draws its being from out the cerulean gulf; half way along the slow line breaks, to let a little white town hang in the curl like a wreath of foam; then collecting again. it mounts more boldly, and at last, when almost ready to sweep upward to the clouds, it suddenly, dizzily falls— ! and the pale, fearful Leap of Tiberius, with a mass of shattered rock crumbling surf-like at its base. closes the Impulse.: 1 1 ,:ith this blue profile mount ing alon , the horizon before you. you think of Capri as a daughter of the ,sea rather than of the 'earth. In color and in movement it is one with its undulating bed. It rolls, a breaker. It is the last expression, the.aehievin..leifort_of the divine Bay. Here the peacock's thr4w4 : llich nestles to the silver shore of Naples, seems to ruffle and awaken. and shoot throbbing to Juno's side. I had two good views of Capri. Its under sur face first. its upper surface afterwards. Lying on my back in the sea and paddling slowly around the Blue Grotto, I had the island hanging canopy-like over my face, It was a roof of changing, prismatic blue. A sheet of glancing reflections played against the vaults like chains of tempered steel, or a nimble net of lam .bent flame. It was a bath, not so much of water as of color. I was saturated with blue. Under me, in depths'On' depths of Indigo, plunged the massy stain: overhead. the profound azure painted the dome in the likenesses of some buried heaven. I seemed to have cloven the heart of a monstrous sapphire. and to swim there glori ously, as the amber-fly Iles in his world of gum. "Your honor's leg," said the boatman. "has a metallic hue." "I don't believe it," I cried. much disgusted:" gi for you, you were brown when you came in, but now I see bine under your chin and wider your eyes, like Illstori playing aft l' u." '7There's a fish," said the boatman. It was the shape of a perch, and a foot long, and It lied rapidly past me. I don't believe it was a real fish. It was bluish. almost transparent, and had all the air and motion of au immaterial essence. Turning in the water, its armor flashed blue. like some living Metal. -If a fish could have legs," said I, injuriously, "I suppose You would say they were metallic.",; "Doubtless I should, - said the boatman, who had a disagreeable way of taking you up some times. "When a fish ha , legs. does your honor know what it is called?" 'Of course I don't. simpleton." "They call them frogs here." To change the subject. which had become ob jectionable to me. I asked what was the cause of the darkening of the cave. He told me that if I would come into the boat and begin to dress I should know directly. "It is a party of j; , re.qieri, and there's a lady among them. The sea has risen, and Saint Peter's keys themselVes wouldn't let them in here With out a wetting." The scene of the entrance, viewed from my se curity inside, was ludicrous enough. A very small boat, as was my own, but loaded down with passengers, was beating and grating against the cavern's mouth. In the bows stood a dark and hoary figure, a verY'Cliaron, who at every approach laid his lean talons against the sides of the tunnel and tried to draw her through. The opening is so contracted that nice management is necessary, even with the calmest sea. "EdWia;" said a lady's reproachful voice, "you haVe got your fooCagainst my, cheek,:: "Then thank your stars,"- said Edwin, who was evidently wet and cross, "that he made us draw our boots. He insisted on changing my hat for his cap, and my skin is creeping all over me. AL, lam pinched! Oh, it is this gentleman's watch chain that has gone round my ear." , They were lying in a mass in the bottom of the tub, and the higher waves liberally washed them. Directly, with a sharp cry from Charon, they shot the aperture, and lay instantly in glassy water, with the merry sea tossing outside. They moved towards me, and I observed, while tying my cravat, the lady emptying her bonnet like a dish. For their benefit the Blue Grotto produced its last and finest effect, a spectacle which my plunge had renderedinutile in my own case. A sturdy Italian swam round and round under water. -He first developed himself slowly, like a photo graphic negative under the bath, by striking a light in the passage which is supposed to lead upward through the mountain to one of the Palaces of Tiberius. Where he had been abiding previously no mortal could tell.. As the light in creased he was seen mysteriously standing, large and pale, anon the ruined stairs, with a napkin • wrapped around his body like a cerement. Then as the taper went suddenly out, he fell into the Sea. It wad ghostlike and solemn. - "Edwin," said the lady, "it was the living linage of your uncle 'George! , Do you think anything—l'd never forgive myself!" Our misgivings were quickly dissipated by the figure rising between the two boats, and asking, in the negro-like patois of Naples, for coin, to be thrust into its mouth. The experiment was simply made to exhibit the odd complexion con ferred on the human flesh by this rich elenient. The warm look of- nature was gone. He ap peared like some weird Frankenstein. He swam away like a man of silt*. —Soon afterwards, refreshed by my bath, I was standing; just seven hundred feet higher, on the brow of the precipice. But the contrast was so great, the air so fine turd light, that I caught HASH STEPS. t.% iir. PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1867. toy breath when the guide told me to look over. It WfAfp a transition in an Arabian talc. I had been, in the cave.of Amethysts. Now, I twisted 'myself on my donkey, as on the flying horse, and he laid the world like a sheet beneath my eyes. 'Mils is the foundation of the Pharos of Tibe rius,- said the guide, profoundly careless, as he stroked the donkey's ears. And who was Tiberitusl." said I. "Tiberius. Signore, was a wicked King. of Naples. The most wicked of all. He tortured the best Catholics. and brought them here, and they were glad to leap into the;aea, as you would i). he, Signore, if your ribs ere alt brcken. It Is @even hundred feet, straigh down." I looked. "The wri ed sea beneath me crawled." Everything wtis dazzling. The travel ing waves were as if the crinkles In'a bit of blue crape could move. A flood of blue and silYer light bathed the universe. "This island in those daykhad, Signore, llke, a,, Aplendid crown,.a range of twelve palaees-which Tiberius set up to the twelve sup for saints': Saint Jove, Saint Venus, Saint Mithras, and many others whom it would be wrong to worship rum. Just here, where you can see that sloping mosaic pavement, was the ri//a Saint Joris." Before me lay the promontory of Sorrento, its chalky cornices crowned with orange-orchards and veiled with gay olives. Lying under the Protection of its flank I saw three barren rocks, transformed by distance into little gems, in a set ting of Lipid blue. "The Chickens, Signore." I knew that was the modern name of the Sy ren's Isles. I knew that long, long ago, in the childhood of the earth, a floating hero had divi ded this heavenly gulf which swam beneath my eyes. The blue dlu was calm then as now. And as be passed the shining rocks, the trattle-music of Troy that rang within his ears was exchanged for the terrible seductions of sloth and peace. Put up thy sword Into its sheath, and rest in joy: , Al,. if the white Syrens sail sang from tho which of us Would not eagarly drop the tradi tions of our Troys,.and lay our wo7ld 7 wealy fates at their dark pleasures! " Signore :" It was not the voice of the guide! It poured like ringing gold from a round, columnar throat. A statuesque and beautiful girl of Capri was standing at my shoulder. She bore her head like a caryatid, and her brow was roofed with downy black, having blue reflections in the lights. Her bare feet firmly grasped the' soil, like the feet of a Creek Diana. "We will go to the Cave of Mithras, if you please, Signore. And there 1.4 a famoUs great arch in the rock, if you please, Signore. No, you must not get on your donkey (her voice changed from gold to silver as she laughed), because we are going down the rocks. He would throw you all the way down the Salle; di Ti6 , ro. You could walk straight if you were barefoot like mee,,,,ln the evening I can dance for you at your alberi;o: I dance the Tarantella with my sisters. It is a pretty dance. And my mother has Capri wine." FAST PI :It Ill". M CSICA.L. Cs , l SI" , I a rtr:.6411 to be proud of the encr. er of hie tir,t orebestral matinee. given yeAerday. in !horticultural Hail, is Well wee filled in 'every part Hia orche , tra t= th , bent et in Philadelphia, the instruments num bering over forty.. and all in eNclient Runde. Thou fin , t part of the performance consif , ted of a symphony eat t', (No. 5. in D ma ior , in four movementd, all .marked ludis idi.ality. and each one CX(ittj,jt,fy b,•autiful . : .6 10Zart . ' mplffinik,! are shorter and k, aevere Deena., u. and therefore they are better adept,l t ta-t - r2l a mis.;-ellaneou:, , public. Each _movement w , tm.torebly en:oyed, hurt pl..rhap9 the bright. ,park• minuetto was the mo=t pl4aeitta". Too much 'cannot t„. ,:dd in Trai4e of the manner in which the whole work ii , med. The etrong holy of ~ LtrinOod instrument,. te • z.ty-ti; e nonll,r, gave f . -p,cially fine effect to ~, o nto of the pa— , ago,. After the tophony, Mr. W. Hartmann was to have CIU; rillt 11 , was unable to appear owing to indi. , • po,ition. In hi? glare, Mr. I:. Biehop -an;: a very beauti ful ,'IIV 1 , .," Blumenthal. The overture to Rienzi, by Ilich:od Wagner, us as then played by the orche,tra, ac. ord to the original ecore. It la a fine, bold. manly er.mpo:ition:not larkin in melody, tie are many of Wag ner', IN 01:F. and a, presented by this noble orcheutra. it fH! of beautiful erred , . 'The rest of tini progriimme az a lighter order. A lovely waltz (Flight of Fancy u by S:rao•-, a brilliant quadrille (Behind the Scene?) by th , . T use Tic•itaro4er, and a gallop by Hertel; ~dirred up the enthmiami c . ,pee hilly of the 3 ounger portion of the large aereml,larc. The , e ThurFday matinee at Horticultural Hall ha\ r thus bad a wort I rilliant inauguration. A symphony of :Mozart or I laydn a ill be I erformed at each; and it may b.• fairly preellined that the fine orcheAra, tinder Mr. Smt,e's admirAhle direction, will improve as the season is entitled to the most liberal support in MB eaterpri,e g such an orchestra, and °tiering so attracti% t. and interesting a series of perfrmances. A or probable that but fen of our readers are aware of the illitittitiOn 18 Ilieh has keen so quietly-announced, yet to thoroughly organized and firmly established in the pu blie favor during the pa,t HiX weeks, under the title of the "Ahlericki Con servatory of Music." • nimilai institution-. have existed for many year-. in the p r incipal cities of Europe; but, in almost every case they are supported by government patronage, and could not continue the it operations without the subsidies which they receive from the State, and it is therefore not 'only a matter of congratulation fonits Philadelphiana digit itre sic to haVe a tiniversity.of Music in Dui:city, but a matter of pride to us, as Americans, that in our country there is sufficient talent, energy and progressive spirit to carry to a successful issue CO difficult an undertaking, and to make it self-supporting- The Conservatory is, us its llama implies, an institution in which are conserved or brought together, for the rise of its students, every available means for the pursuit of a thorough education in the Science and Art of Music. Therefore, the Modern Languages and Elocution are taught, in order to nablo the pupil to study works of in struction and reference which have not been translated into English, end to sing in foreign languages with a cor rect accent, and with Cxpreasion and appreciation of the design of the composer. Each Department is provided with ono or more in; true tors, and the total Lumber of professors is now twenty two, forming a faculty unequalled in any music school in the country, and comprising much df the best must cal talent in our city. The Course of Instruction extends from the first rudiments of musical notation and execu tion t o the highest grade of study, the principal branches, beside the orthearal department, being, vocal music, piano and violin, each of these three courses ending with solo performance, a ith orchestral accompaniment. The requirements for entering the conservatory as stu dents of harmony and church orgav,are necessarily placed rather high, each applicant being expected to have com pleted at least a two-years' course of study of the piano forte or its equivalent, before beginning either of the two branches mentioned, which belong to the third year or finishing course; but in all other studies, new beginners are admitted without any further qualifications than re spectubility and tire desire to study. . . . . The system includes a three-years' course in each branch of instruction, each course being divided into four quar ters of ten weeks each, and the studies graded to corre spond, thus enabling pupils to being at the exact point for which they arc qualified. The queation to bo determined at the examinations is, first, whether the applicant is competent to enter the Preparatory, the Academic, or the • Finishing Course, and second. if it shall bo in the first, second, third or fourth grade of the course. The clans hours are so arranged as to accommodate all classes of ladies, gentlemen and children, and special arrngeruents are made for children between the ages of five and ten years. A fine opportunity will be afforded for the cultivation of. the taste and the amusement , of the students, at a series of four Grand Concerts and twenty Matinees during the ensuing season, beginning in November. The Pireeters inform us that their intention is to make these Concerts and Matinees the . best ever given in Phila- IF f delPhie, thus enabling the ' ii to hoar tine music in all its various formalfrom the (nuance of a solo to that of an overture or aymphon y a Grand Orchestra. Thew otertaiutuenti. ue welloi the Lecturer ou th OUR WHOLE COUNTRY. Ihe natural tendency of each oyetem le to Hour on each pupil to emu ate the other' , and to endeavor to excel,whtle the eelf•eonfidence and habit of playing in the preiento of other:, whiulibt time acquired, invaluable. .. . . The body of .I.*Witkee.liooth, the principal of the Con epiratorn, ti ho was killed in the attempt to rapture him at Gairett`e farm, near Port Royal. on the Rappahannock river. on the teith of. April, —, wen buried in whet was w known a" the aren - en. the Penitentiary building— * that portion between the pa ' used :to a dwelling by the wnrden mid the prison proper—mid, in this canner thin. it seems to be the proper time .now to- give . the following particulars, heretofore unpublished, con ceming the secret interment of the remains.. The body of Booth, with Harold and the captors, Lieut enant Colonel Conger, 'Lieutenant L. 11. Baker. Lieutenant E. P. Dough. erty and a detachiment of the • Sixteenth New York eat , ally arrived ut the Navy Yard at half-past two o'clock on the morning of the 27th of April, when the body of J. IVilkes Booth was placed on the monitor Montauk, on whi c h others charged with being concerned in the conspiracy wile confined, and Harold was as signed to quarters on board No. visitors were allowed on hoard the monitor, brit during the day large numbers of persons visited the yard and maw the body from the wharf, it being laid on a carpenter's bench, near the tenet of the vessel. SurgeomGeneral Barnes, with Surgeon Todd, of the monitor, and one or two army ersgeons, made a post mortem examination of the body, and removed two ef the vertebrae between which the ball, which canned hie death, had. peened. We can positively aseert that this was' the only portion of the body reinoved, and that the various reports put in circulation, at the time that his head was taken off, his heart taken' out, dc., were entirely' unfounded. A pine box had been made previonely, in which is bury the reteLdll2; but this was not teed, and about two o'clock on the day of its arrival up river the body teas wrapped • in a gray twiny blanket and placedin a boat. in whic h . was an officer of the Monitor , s‘ nit door eiumni, General Baker wad two d.eteemes. The boat proceeded (login .teeam, and finally stopped et the lower arsenal wharf, on which the body woe placed, :titer which the boat re turned to the monitor, leaving General Baker and his. assisetants in the arsenal grounds. Some feW petions employed at the omen! saw the body lying there during the evening, but a report being put out that it was the hoop of a soldier who had been drowned, but 11W.- atten tion was paid to it. Two men, who had occasion to re move the body, haying got some blood on their hands, cainiftear spreading the report that it was Booth's body, but bi ing admonished to quietly wash the blood off and keep their mouths shut, ' they did so, and but few persons became aware that the body was other then that of 'a . drowned eolaier, as had Lien 'reported: The body 1 einained 'on the whir until after nightfall, when preparation- , were made for the interment. Secretary Stanton., ileneral Liver, Chief et oronance. and Colonel Benton. commandant of the T.-oil, were 011 the ground, as well as General Baker and hie detectives. Three men of the laborers' gang were -eat for. and they were tired directed to dig a grave in one of the 'Penitentiary cells. bat alter taking up the brick ti ring they came to theegranite forendation, laid in cement. Med th6lsll,houneed this work impractivalele. A ere( Was then selected in the ware:room Fe or ii feet sonde of tie' iron door opening into the prison Iron the warden's department, and they were directed to dig 'the grave to the depth of Mena tea feet. The grave being ready, the body, inclosed in an ammunition boy, or arms case, was breeght in - by four of the ordnance 1.110151. In that ge of a sergeant, lowered into the grave, and it was tilled, the brick tiooring being mostly replaced and the surplus earth removed to another portion of the room. The burial having been accomplished, the windows were boarded up and the door made secure, Secretary Stanton taking the key with him. Thin key was kept at the War. Depart ment until a few weeks ago, when It wags returned to, the arsenal officers. . . • On 1 tweed sy, in accordance with orders received at the W A ashington rsenal by General Ramsey, Commandaut of the Pest, from General tirant,• Secretary of War, the bodies of the assassination conspirators, and also the body ed Henry Wirz. the .Indersonvllle ,Miler, were removed trout their graves and re-interred in another portion of , the grounds. Thi,, removal won rendered necessary in coneomence of the projected improvement of the. Arsenal ' grounds , . the contractor' for the removal .of the old Penitent iary Minding being eland to commence work. On the receipt of the order, on Tuesday, laborers were at once set about the work, which was 001)11 accent. plished,taking theta from the groves above neintioned, ft ed carrying them to number one warehouse, where a trench was dupa few feet Irmo the north wall. In thin trench the bodies were placed, and :to secreey had been enjoined, hut few Persons were aware that the removal had been tirade. Notw ithetanding the length of time that the bodice have been buried, the boxes containing them were no heavy and the odor from than eo otleadve as to indicate that decempenition had taken place very slowly, a fact due probably to the nature .of the soil. It would aiiem from thie action that the government does not intend to give up the bodies to the relatives. The bodice of Booth, Payne, Harold, Atzeroelt, Wirz and lilrs.,Surratt now rent in a common grave where their Indies will bet mingled. [Washington Correspondence of the yen York Timm" The linpeachineitt Question. • The A dminh. tration organs, elsewhere, udwhere, arc on the rampage over the proposition broached In these des patches for the passage of a bill providing for the eitspen ”lon of all Federal officers during trials tinder impeach ment chargee, which they claim will result in the pun ishment of the President before his conviction. In con nection with this matter •it interesting, to know that several prOminent livpltbileatt man ben, of Congress have advanced the opinion that Mime. diately following the presentation to the Senate of arti cles of impeachment by the House, the President would be placed in the Mille condition as a man Indicted by a grand jury for any crime or misdemeanor, and as a natural - eonsequenre would. be virtually under arrest or in the custody of the officers of the House, They claim that the passage of a bill Of the nature above mentioned is not necessary, meths logical result of impeachment would he the suspen sion of the officer impeached pending his trial by the Senate. They also argue that the President in suspending Secretary Stanton, although he acted ostensibly under the provisions of the tenure of Office Bill, has establisin , d precedent which the House can consistently follow, as they ineist that If the Senate refuses to duatain the renewal of StanWi. he will be restored to the War Office, and if , frt Cfrimate refuse to find Mr..lohn son guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors under the artielee of impeachment presented by the House, if they are presented, he would he restored to hie office. Then: is no'doubt butt what views ou this subject will be Fluinnita ted early during the coming ReS9lOl3. 'and may exert consi derable influence on the passage of the bill providing for ouch suspensions. Beciiregard Serenaded in Richmond. [From the New York Herald of to-day] I learn from Richmond to-day that General Beauregard was serenaded last night, at the Spotswood Hotel. Ile came out on the balcony and thanked the gentlemen viio gave the serenade, as follows: "I thank you, my friends, for thin kind and flattering reception, HO unexpected to inv. I regret. my inability to express to you my acknowledgment iu appropriate teems. I hope yen will bring to hear in your civil pursuits the name energy, zeal andintelligence which you displayed in the late content, and you will then surely meet with ample emcees. I again tender you my niucerent thanks for this friendly demonstration." Election Ritst lm Jeltioroott City, La.— Policemen and begroes Wounded— The Cltielf Rioter Killed—The Die. turbstuce Quelled by the New Orleans papers oft September 49 give accounts of rt. serious riot which, oconned between 0 and 4 o'clock on the afternoon of the previous day, in front of the Coda. house in Jefferson City, La., in which a young man, named Henry Rolaude, a member of Homo Rook and Ladder Company, was mortally wounded. The account given by the 177)108 is as follows: "It appears from the statement of our informant that many negroes in Jefferson have for along time had a grudge against a white man named Reece, and that they took the opportunity yesterday to satisfy it. Accordingly. one of them got up an altercation with Ramie, which soon attraceed a crowd of negroes, and also; serno five or six polivimen, who;in order to quell the disturbance, arrest •d TheYelll.o% crowd of some3oOnegroes set u thmmendeavoring to get hold of the prisoner. -The pal 0- wen then drew their revolvers to , defend themselves nnd general tight in which Ilan.' Rolando wasshot Htetorp of !Altaic., etc., are open free to the students, and they are, berides, entitled to extra tickets, at half the regular priCe".l. A in until( ent donation has been made to the city in the form of eiy:ty free eeholareldpr, no prizes, to the public schools, and we have to thank the IYrectors of the Con servatory not only for the encouragement of diligence and good behavior in the Grammar School., but for the Pros peel of an orchestra which, though now in embryo. Pro mLc, to become rowelling better than we have ever known. Two hundred and seventy applicants, ten from each Grammar School, wed twenty selected by the Prin cipal for good behavior wail musical talent. wit) present themeeli es at the Conservatory during tLe prosent week, and from each of the Sti grammar sections , two pupils will be selected for a three yearn' course in the study of Orchestral Music, and the sailance of the required number from the High School. The above-mentioned actofi generosity reemmendo tho Conservatory to our kiudestfocllng and bestwilhes for its permanent sucee4s, while the extremely moderato rates for tuition will enable its blessings as a music Pchoot to ho enjoyed by many who would, not otherwise be able to gratify their deotre for a thorough musical education. The original limit of the number of pupils has been in creared.to live hundred, in order to accommodate the un expectedly large number of applicants. Tile, eubsc '4ption Houk 8, it till: kept open untilailvacaneies lie-fillett Con The acceinpanying letter frOiattie President of the Con servatory wilLexplain Itself: ' On 1(1: OF 101. AMERMAN CONST.IIVATOIII" Urrsini 1214 Chestnut street, Pu11.A1•11,1.111.4. Sept. NJ, 1867.—Dear In reply to the question which in co often asked. "How in it poomilde to teach the pianoforte In claattem?" will give, in a few wordn, a sketch of the system pursued at the Colleen story, truatiug that you may have apace to invert it inyour editorial department for the Information of the public. Two pianos are used in each clun.room, and the number of pupils in each darn in limited to nix. Thu flour tur reci tation in divided into three parts t and two pupils recite at one time; one at cacti piano, playing ill concert, and thus acquiring perfect time. The four pupils who arc net play ing arc required to be 'waled in ouch a ponition an to enable them trt.enjuv the benefit of the instruction and correctien of mistaken of the pupils who arc reciting, and in their turn take their places at the inntniment, thus having the advantage of the instruction and correction of the errors of the live other pupils, besides the individual instruction to tliennitlvex. Iburr re , pectfolly, .IErFEt.SON E. WILLIAMS, Pr, ,, idout (;.,AI r nad wield Dirvetor. WANIIINGTON GOSSIP. [WaFhington Correspondence of the N. Y. Herald.] ' The Marini of John Wilkes 800th... Itemoval of the Bottles A)f the Ahsat./.. nation. Conspirators and AVirz, tan Andersonville Jailer. The folio:rink account of tho burial of John Witkea Booth fr.1:11 afar: through the bead. and Reece and another white man named Parry were badly wounded. and two or three of the police and four maraca were lino wounded. Holunde was conveyed to Home's honk, and, at last accounts, was dying. It further appears that as soon as the altercation with Reece commenced the no. gross in the vicinity rushed to their houses and quickly reappeared cm the ground armed ivith muskets and revolvers, and then commenced the riot. Mayor Woodruff. it is paid, was present but did nothing to allay the turnolt. Two companies of soldiers lone white and one Mack) were fin duty last night to prevent further dis turbance. It in said that on learning the soldiers were coming the negroes hastened to deposit their anon in some .secret receptacle. The most intense excitement and alarm, we miderstand„prevailed in Jefferson last night." The lieisoblican, a Radical newspaper, given a report differing materially from the above. It says: ' , Seven hundred and sixty•five registerd men had voted, only thirty of whom where white, when the disturbance commenced, tamed by a white ruffian named Henry Rol land-known as "Harry Rolland"--a firemen and former soldier in the Confederate army. Rolland, after present ing himself, at the polls and showing that be was registered, insultingly scratched a ticket bearing Republican names, re-wrote and de. posited It Then, drawing a revolver, be commenced threatening the Inspector of Elections, Mr. Frederick Frye. The latter stepped to the door and ordered Policeman Joseph Fleury to arrest Rolland. Ile. fore this could be done Rolland shot Officer Fleury, the ball panning through his hand, tired two other shots pro miscuously et the crowd, and Mandated his revolver with the remaining three shots ;in it. By this time. Rolland was RITMed by another • policoman illichard Beth. t•rton); ,, tionsetett , by tifrigena; , ;.nod6":taken'M %,wgrd prison. A policeman , henry- HAM - who 'had him in charge at the prison door, neglectful of Me duty, said Rolland was his friend, and he would not im prison him. To the credit of Major Vrye be it said be at once deprived Davis of his star and baton. In the mean time n rush of Rolland's friends was made for his rescue; a man named Henryo. Reese, with a: Derringer in cacti hand, being conspicuous in this clime. • The friends com menced an indiscriminate firing upon the innocent citi gene, three of whom were immediately badly wounded. One of them William Alexander (colored), nn ex-Union soldier, the doctor reports wounded in the fleshy part of the upper right thigh, the ball enterin. obliquely from upward. Another, Gabriel Lawson (ato, colon*, the doctor reports shot in the back, the ball striking the verte bral column, following the lateral track of the same; and another, Joseph Bisnim colored, was reported by the sur geon as shot through the left forearm. the ball entering and imbedding itself In the muscle of the upper arm of the same side; wound painful but not dangerous. Wounded also by ball entering and imbedding itself near the joint of the right shoulder. The colored citizens returned the fire, and Rolland was shot through the brain and soon died. His principal co-rioter, Henry C. Reese, was also shot in several places during the melee -once through the abdomen.. He was living at 9 o'clock last night Major Frye sent a messenger with a note to the military poet at Greenville for aid in saving blood shed, Be wan seconded in this by Mr. D. C. Wood, uti, Mayor of Jefferson, who also did his whole duty through out the trying and disgraceful affair. Captain B. 8..' Reeler, of the Thirty.nluth Infant-y, brought out every available man at oncothree com• panics, thinned by the epidemic and guard duty. Though they had to march a mile to the cars, and then ride two miles they were on the ground and pieces loaded in twenty minute; after receiving the word. How unlike the singular conduct of the military under Sheridan and Baird in the riot of Jule 1996. Previous to the arrival or • the troops the tire and - other bells had been ruing. and the populace, by hundreds, bud collected, armed with guns, revolvers and bludgeons, under the terrible ex citement of the IGOII. But at sight of the military, a general- skedaddling to their homes was observed, with muskets rapidly hidden away. Captain Keeler being informed that squads of thae armed men. had taken refuge at different points. sent otlieers in charge of men to each point, and dispersed teem. The Captain also visited the headquarters of Gen. Mower immediately after this, and received orders relative to further proceed. ings. be and Lieut. fluckland, with a portion of the men, remained on the ground all night to insure order, while the residue returned to the post, IN'ell,lo a statement of the CMG' in writingby Mayor Woodruff:which accords all bored to thetrooos in quelling the disturbance, and thus probably preventing another.lnly riot of great dimensions, CRIME. BLOODY AFFRAY. AT WILLIAAIS- BURG, N. V. One Man Fatally and Another Se. verely Stabbed—Escape of the Monti. A bloody affray took place shortly after eight o'clock last night at the corner of Division avenue and First street, Brooklyn, E. D., between a party of workmen employed in the sugar refinery of NN intjela, Pick k, Co., .which resulted in the death of one of the parties con . cerned and the wounding of another. It appears that Hammond Cross,.Lawrence Aerhnrdt. and another MAO named Weber, had a trifling difficulty in the sugar-houte 'during the afternoon, and when they left work last even - lug Way renewed. the..uccoi avenue and Yirs street. after an angry 'thermal= crico ••Mtirder! I am stabbed'' were heard to issue from the party. Hammond Cress WllB seen to fall en the street, Weber staggered up the street. and Aerhardt fled. • • Onicer Adamson), of the Forty fifth precinct, being in the neighborhood at the time, hurried to the scene of the bloody conflict and removed G ross, who wets then speech, less from loss of blood, to a lager beer saloon in the neigh borhood. A physician Mid immediately sent for, bur the wonnded man was beyond surgical aid, and expired within an hour. A stab wound was found in the region of the heart. Deceased was a married man, and resided at If McKibben street. Weber's wound is very severe, but not necessarily fatal, lie was taken to ht.. residence, which is alio MeHiblwn street. The, alleged perpetrator of ibis bloody deed is- a single man of more titan ordinary physical powers. Re resides in !sew York. It is probable that he will be arrested promptly, as mt Retires were immediately taken to that end by Captain Waglom. The utmost excitement pre vailed in the neighborhood of the tragedy up to a late hour loot night Coroner Smith has directed Dr. Creamer to hold a joust /itfirtern examination in the case of Gross 'MS' morning, and an imp. et will be held immediately the rea'ter. ,All the men engaged in the sanguinary' affray are natives of Germany—A. I . Attempted Highway Robbery—A Man ager of a Theatre Knocked Down in Broadway. (From to•day'g New York inws,) Yesterday morning about 2 o'clock Thomas Maguire, Wi'll-known as one of the manager. , of the Maguire Riley Japanese Troupe, was knocked down, and an at tempt. was made to rob him, at the corner of Broadway and Eighth street. It seems that Mr.Magaire,who had the largo sum of Cm 000 and a very t^ liable watch upon his person,was on his wile to re deuce, 211 floury atrect, but to accommodate a friend. 'as making a detour, and was going up Broadway. .1 i the Intention of going through Astor place to Third t -nue and there taking a car boom. At the corner of E th street and liroadway Maguire' and hte friend were accosted by two men who spoke to Mr. Maguire, calling him by some common name not his own. The next moment the man who had spoken professed to have. discovered that ho had made a mistake and begged pardon for it. ilethen,asanadditional reparatiomasked Mr.maguire and friend to take a drink, which proposh ion being accented, the party tUrneilto go into the Sinclair Hoene, a. few steps distant. The stran ger then recollected that the place was closed, and re quested tie party to accompany him to a gambling biome thevicinity, wlMre he knee, their wants would he slip. plied. This invitation Maguire declined, and was in the act of resealing hie walk when as knocked down, and at the same instant felt a hand attempting to reach his money in his vest breast-pocket. Mr. Ma guire put his hand over hbq breast and called "'Watch!" at the top of his voice, and his friend grappled with one of the stwo Merl who had accosted them. The tries of Magnine were heard by officer Sid gate, of the Fifteenth l'recinct, who started on a run to the scene, and on arriving found Maguire surrounded by citizens, and officer Tompkins, of the Fifteenth Prechter, was in pursuit of oue of the men, all trace of whom, how. ,ever, was lost lit Ninth stmt. ()dicer. Sidgate arrested the other mall and on arriVing at the Station-house the ..-prienoer gave the IMMO of Francis A. Sullivan,and said he Wttfl a native of Albany, and a 'carpenter by occupation. He denied all knowledge of the attempt to rob Mr. Maguire, and said the man in whose comp a ny h e was when they met Maguire was unknown to him, and he had never seen him until he net him a few minutes before!, in a Broadway saloon. Mr. Maguire had loot nothing by hie adventure, Lin money nut having been reached at all, and his watch although Jerked from his pocket. was safe, :Yee terdayla fternoon Sullivan wan taken before J ustice Dodge, at t Jefferson Market Police Court. but Mr. Ma guire not being able to make oath that he had any agency m the attempted robbery. was not willing to make a COlll - against him; and tho prisoner teas discharged. MEXICO. rs About Europeon Machina.- ikons...ltems o/ the Presidential Can vass... New Journals Appearing..•ol.- terbourrs Departure Faxed—Ruinors of Marquez... Santa Ana's Trial Going on...He Refuses the Meals Given im...Mexican Military Colony for Lower California.. [From to.dfiy's New York 11. k V.1\.1, $CIlt. 28.- --The Spanish mail sten ruer grace lona;' trom Nera Cruz on the 2.oth, via Sisal on the ti:irl. arrived at this port on the 20.11 inst. The dates from the Mexican capital are to /he 15th. You will, however, have r•ceived a special telegram on the morning of the 26th, with news front MONiCO eitY to till! Itith,lllllemo the wirers between runts. Rosa and New York are again t nutty. A letter of Uraga appeared in the CoiNt it a tiona/. In ivhich he declared to Ins friends in the capital that a serious conflict might be expected. in .Mosieo, owing to certain utatebinattons which have hiCiOl going on in Europe, and were even at that moment meeting with 110 obstacle. La Jaeara votes fur General Porfirio Dian so President publish of the Republic and for Den Ignacio Randrez as Presi dent otthe Supreme Court et Justice. The Orqueda, of whip!' General Vicente ltiva Palacio is the chief editor. " a Well writtena n da b ro io e g la ra im Ph i:a . c of its P :t li a:d i° a l rd ia b z ;re n t: contains the following, eignittean a t iac re:r2 o : ol : y 'A of u t e h iv , generation, personified in Porfirio Diaz, ariees in its power and maketY the Leaders in the struggles for our independence, Such a d'xinyu.smovfirldntpeandal.llB All three and are I :fnited. Understanding perfectly their misaion, they enteptain for each other a profound and unacverable affection. May they live long to establish among, no a new era of peace and prosperity. and the -bleedings of our people wilt be their fairest laurel,. w hile t h e praisee of all nations will constitute their most precious reward." itv way of contrast, another journal f the capital pro. duces an article caring that Benito ,Itia z and' his ?Mois tens combined to limit themselves, duri g the campaign which the nation sustained, and on thi confines of the territory, to "the good things of this life," without caring a Jot about what was going on, or even recognizing the nunwho took an active part in the struggle. General Eamon Carona has renounced the candidature for the Presidency, which a few eirejsp and Journals had offered him. Porfirio Diaz, though elfent, doe; not reli=ct Elie candidature. Don Simon dela Gartay Moto has re nounced the Presidency of the Supreme Ulbunal of Jus tice of the State of Nuevo Ler. 'ills Minister e t e rrnallrel has retired from the glioistry 'for a few days." 'l :Sibik t. It hew papet panelled ip Wino, veto for auarea Re L'ro. F. L FETHERSTOPT. Pakdur. PRICE THREE CENT'S sident. The Epoca and Convene/on, both nets- Journsda i : art,' against the constitutional reforms suggested by'the "'Lon t vocatoria," and their opinions are the strafe arrthoset& pressed by the twenty-two periodicals of the espidaL riumo Rojo had just appeared ; the Padre CoNix, Perm Corral and El Vapor were to appear shortly, rho fait two to be edited by Rivera Rio, one of the republican, miles. The "I !onvocatorin" was brought to light in • Gummi- Junto on the 251 h tilt. The Deknoorocia of Gramm -lamp reprobates the reizurt by - the police of at: bee of . the Tio C'aniyitas, of Leon. as an arbitrarS act of the functionary. Mr. Marcus Otterhourg,• tiro Lnited States Minister, has taken his passports and •e e to sail for New York on the 31st inst. His familtrandillte• E. D. Blake will accompreny hint. The eonflorufrui pro.. perty of Don Francisco Bement, appraised at dieldllosuat to have been sold at public auction on the litit lest. Theis forces which compase the Army of the Norttl, under* Colonel Miguel PallICiON. arrived in Monterey Ta ., thstr 31th. I leneral Marquez, it was said, had marebettfor the. , State of Tamaulipas (a passenger just arrived frorwSlisC says that certainly he was not in Yucatan). He weiraeens alone on a mule loaded, and it was supposed the lonefonl• slated of money fialvez is said to have taken to ther niountains of Las Crucee. whore he pretends to rem us band. The ease against General Santa Ana wasPragrest ring, while he remained a prisoner in San Juan de Glitter - lie refused the meals with which the Governor of their earths provided him, and was continually 'stamping kind"' swearing at the attendants, Don Miguel_ Negrete moat: have again escaped. Ile was last seen in the vicfnit.ro'br' . Iluanchboango. Colonel,Fragoso continued At prisoner in the bonnetier the Supreme Poderce for shiPping tho feel of an . a ;de>rtr= The (Mb°, in ref, rring to the Lower California toierti% ration scheme of an American company, states that it has • revived the spirit of filibusterism in the neighboring re tuglc.Te Globe adds that we colony t for the approaolt-^ establishment of a military on the borders the Rio Colorado, it would have to look upon the contract as a virtualnale of Lower California for the insignificant" ' sum of itleu,ooo. However, General Corona, aided by General Marques (not the one-eyed hero of Queretaro-- Ed. 11.1. are shortly to take aparty of about one thousand colonists from file capital to that border. The whole en terprise is intrust - 4:d to the sagacity of General Marquez. General Corona Endorses Juarez—Te.. itetholl Still Waitinti. Mimeo,Sept 10 , ---134 P. M.—The extraordinary leaves is half an boor: The only item of twil - s to-day is that the Couvocatoria has been published at Jalisco and to there fore endorsed by General Corona: The government desires that Admiral Tegethoff should obtain Natiefactory authority from the family of Maxi 1111ii inn. He will have to send to !layman and telegraph to Europe. The Medal Muddle. Had the Emperor supposed that his pet idea, the Exposition, would have been the cause of so many disputes and so much wrangling among the contestants, there is a probability that he would have abandoned it altogether. Our two great piano -houses, long before the final awards were made, quarreled as to who was mentioned first or second on the list, and then began the argument, Which was the greater honor,. to get the "first" gold medal or the decoration: until the Boston Transcript exclaimed, with Shakespeare, "a plague on both your houses." Two manufacturers of sewing machines were next in the field, both claiming a gold. medal, but • both, at the same time, disputing the right of the other to such a prize—one saying that the award was only made for a certain special improve ment: the accused in ,reply declaring that the honor was bestowed on the other party as an in ventor or promoter, and not as a manufacturer of the machine which bears his name. But while all this was going on, it seems that a third house silently watched all the proceedings. remained very quiet, and, conscious of its own strength, allowed the two competitors to call each other hard names: and now, that their fight is nearly over, and the combatantshave spent considerable powder, It comes forth like a lion, places its paw on the bone of contention, and walks off with it victoriously. In other and plainer words, wehave seen a copy of the official list of premiums, and find that the refire:Tentative of the Croce, 4- Baker Machine at the Paris Exposition was decorated by the Emperor with the Cross of the Legion of, Honor. This will, doubtless, surprise many who have read the statements already publisherin our papers, and it throws a bombshell, as it were, in the camps of the other claimants : hut it ;, a f.-**, vtr,ellcleSS, sea we are gratified to see the merits, and excellent features of the Grover& Bakernw chine acknowledged abroad, as they havelQw been at home; for it is a superior machine. We find the following paragraph in the Liverpool .1/binn: “There seems to be considerable contradiction among the successful exhibitors as to the awards. made In this department. The recipients of the two gold medals severally advertise that theirs is the only medel,thus contradicting each other, while all the other prize-holders concur that no gold medal was awarded to any sewing -machine Whatever. Happily, it is not our duty to decide this knotty question; but, be it 'as it nuty. the . G & BAK En sewing -machines have received the very highest prize—above all medals—their representative in Paris.having been decorated by the Emperor with the. Cross of the Legion of Honor."---Home dourn,ll. PORT OF PHILADELPHIA-o(n%. 4 lIWSee Marine Bulletin on Sixth Page. ARRIVED THIS DAY. Steamer 11 L Gaw, Iler, 13 hours from Baltimore, more, with mdse to A Groves, Jr. ' Steamer Utility, Nickerson, from Norwich, in bal last to D S Stetson & Co. • Brig Reporter, Coombs, New York. Schr Siak, Johnson, New York. Schr Viola, Treworgy. New York. Schr S Shindler, Lee, Boston. Schr E Amsden,-Smith, Boston. Schr II N Barrett, Boston. Schr Geo Fates, Thacher, Providence. Schr Cherub, Layman, Newport, Del. • AT QUARANTINE. steamer Stars and Stripes, Holmes, limn Havana. CLEARED THIS DAY. Steamer Vineland.Borden, Baltimore, J D Ruoff. Brig Reporter, Coombe, Portsmouth, Dovey, Bulkley Co. Schr 11 31111er, Barrett, Boston, Su fthlk Coal Co. ' Sehr Viols, Treworgy, Boston, W H Johns & Bro.. Sehr Chem), Layman. Washington, Caldwell, Gordon , . Co. Schr Sink, Johnson, SSlisbury, van Dusan, Locbms,tt & Co. Schr John T Long, Tunnel', Frankfort, Del, Bacon. Collins S Co. Schr Geo Gales, Thatcher; Providence, Sinniclooniforo Correspondence of the Pliiindelphia Ex liange. LEWES, Tsel Oct. 2 The ship Kate Davenport, from Philadelphia, in tow of tug America, for New York, went to sea at won to-day. The steam= America left the Roadekeitt this afternoon for Nassau, NP. to tow a steamer from that place to New Orietwl. Wind W. Yours, &e. JOSEPH • LASIETAW. MEMORANDA. ' Ship sate Davenport, Otis, hence at N York yester day. Will load for Acapulco. Ship Winged Hunter, Haynes, 131, daps from Cal cutta, was below New York yesterday., Ship Andrew Jackson, Chatfield, from New York 20th April, at San Francisco. Ship ilumberstone (Br), cleared at San Branciseo yesterday fur Liverpool. Ship San Lorenzo, for Liverpool, sailed from San Francisco yesterday. Ship Grey Eagle, Chesebrsagla, frem.Shis Jam/relit was below Baltimore yesterday.. Steamer Wilmington, Cole,.at Key Wcat yesterday from Galveston, and left immediately for New York_ Bark Sam Sheppard, Evans, hence fox Cien.0103941 was spoken 2401 ult. lat 29 Of, lon 70 24. Bark Ann Elizabeth, Norgravc, caned them. St.,‘ Thomas 14th cllt. for Turks Island. Brig Trenton, Norwood, sailed (rein ProvidaveCt24. Met. tor this port. Brig Potomac, Knowlc4 front Eager for tAi9l)Ortsji at Holmes Hole' nth ult. Brig Herald, Wood, hmce at Matanzas 22d alt. Brig John Aviles, Phnbrook, him" for Poollanktit Holmes' Hole 2d inst. Bng Edwin, Allen, sailed frpm., Riyez. 2d ;keg for this port. Schr L S Levering...Coreon, hence at. BOO= y.toter.. day. Oehr Henry Croukt.r, Poster, hence at Peovidatee td A • letant. Behr Albert Pharo, Shcards, , hence at trovitherme 2d inst. Lost foreeall in th 4 heavy blow,o/Morattw, Wt. Sehr John Atwood, Dallesbaw, . from Provititetown for this rant raffled from Newport Istiast. sir Northern Light, Ireland, an u d.Joe Porter, Rm."- roughs, sailed from Fall River 2d inst. for this, port. sax Aiming Wooley. Slag, henwat Brietrol 2d last: • Seta's R. Graham, Smith, AO* Glarcilitter foetid's. port, and Jas Allderdice, &a way, from Roston for do (with lose of foresail and jib in 'the late gale). ma Holmes' Hole Ist hist.. The J A sailed actin trit • Sehr Rita Matthews, McElwee, from Ibmiimfor this port. at Holmes' Hole Sid inst. Sld, all weals before reported, except schrs J H Witinwri&ht , W Oarrlaon. fl D Hut, VankirJr, HammW , . J S Welling. and brig Charlotte. 'ISAAC NATHAN% AtTOTIONEN:R, N. E. CORNER .1. TWA and Bpruco streets, only, .ue square Num the Exchange. $250,000 to loon In pine., or aulall al i natn i ae diamonds, sliver plate. wutelareOlowetrr and all ea %lithe. Officio hours from 8 A. M. to 71 1 . 112. fished for the last forty loom. AdvoACCO Made in bunt antoaute at Oat lowot ularko'i rata, lOW.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers