The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, November 02, 1857, Image 2

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. f .. • , :10 , 7'4: ...... , r 1 ITy.t 1' $ :: 10 7 ,
, I ?,,i 1,1 I l i- :::A - - 4 '''fA id' ' 4 " '''-''-":' C : '
_ „ „
tritosimmi , NOVlMEß 4. 10-7.
of Kansas!
AeliihrWrierl4loliilitottlincr, ofiliditated
Thfiiieft*Otillilitiebtel roublcaf f
Ilenetal tfpwe.,.
aeiiriVlTlTArgagt llBl o. li tig lqr*:!'
dl3l4lk9blithillied.):4;q, ;:,, ,„,!, r „
c 11 , ' :1 , +'‘'
4 . ) 1 •1)
mOnitsPg• / 1 9a" 0104tt
boitiii'ltbitanrAct kha pOlby, tbo
tration ;44410; gliOe 7 :o
' artir,b , ***Mott; the - action or ta - overnor
•YrA.4k:**o4o ) ,t4:o l 4o ll, otO ili f st ;
sond..County,an; ,fn44914-0 4, ;
• thiaPoinOrelaball; bare, asinatitbing.to aar to
. : naorrOir: 4ffesnwf,flewit bare Only tii'reneit our
entire shrove of this action, expreased , b Tun
*late %our opinion
th a tl a *klmrs4oo. sg , itiiriftofAitild
b Cledthbai and Crory:lrian& of 4,ba
f•VA it*•l7l ',AV"
i•-•-,•0 fr, • • %
•-•-•,•• •-:'••••••, •••• 'L.-% • . • I
Thel*.b4Olv *with reason.p for believing that'
tlLeflottheosilife set:o,o:4'6m lavSlitigation
ialO:iliS'Tiditinsi of •v 4 la
_vrif,4hilmeez :tuilteo•4rtirjiooin
maitqgemeide.4 l 44,-.44oo4l:iilitch:; will
vividly , re 9411 - Vie days or the biokee;ihelc
0ffi10g4414404,:','66*001141)e but
006 pp:kb:4ll.6i the aubf xfo.pei,.are',ei*r`-`
taiga 'iliat'tioi'Mp4Oldsrs clepositers wit
ba4loi;Witelt44lo l 44CW l :o oo 2"
orphans, and otters who `hasio,Woadod .
ihrtnnes to the batikViiitiitot be so fortunate.
k#l;4eCtlenSililtwAsabYthillzPoff•
And Ailts 4-0;# 1 0.i 614 -4 1 0( A0° 2 0 , "
hashontrivpd to"socapein anticipst4,4
the plibliesitibii Ofthilieitsvitesdfitlo*lomi
aid doePrAti Attero- 4 410 12 0, LklieM
atutle - egiakoses to thowteadioll-,
the`iiiikiiiithiliiiethies 'et Oar:,
tialitialskfilltslitlaossOklh 4 2 -40,41 4 . 1 fi
distigetahed.hil yak,: Btltiohydiot these de.
040t t ?
Auricle, never Isexhit fir. :noivo „
r0 14 4 , 1,:9r
c!il*OoMeliAltirM But said to haVe
hiwhoharltshleyakik44.;tfn
. !joiaO4 lo ,,
of
the Intoxicating circle' in" , whisos ha moved,
He was lit7idgb:pressuroAllswlder; lived
fast, liqttandepdi, money Mi l li `•' scat
tered "4erlonnacilistieni"+"*-- 1 010allavish
ba*,..l94,thellgtit tluittlMinvesttacnt of to
day-40dd :be 0iv1 3 !,44,4 ,1 0;
till'YtnSlved‘ cold;
0r.1.440,4*:,',1112'5vm,".1:1#1,3b0 teat of
iplondittAinte *0'049" of
tfOt .tlff,:.*`loalYaticorkt' = Is,: it
'f(osde; thatbsr,SlithtletliMir:hirosety almost
isfalUble pthstlis Jilto4l:
loslrer i'lfaseq he. Should' ltavo, , been
4,enio Aewii it is said
ti/SkAt-i;•, ' 44.*** l l,l•ltii . :4#4Pi 4 '0 41
-, hopenot -If *44; suit iflie :is
5t#3,4040010 nWitt hitAlhadsu,Claint him,
te;itade-let- . ..444, ihoo
Olie3fire`beittee!ti: id lir hbi
011 he 41114:1, ortetWrir
forfeit all claim to the title 4.att, , lnineet;
WWI lenkif &religious nianCs.: '
, BST.PER ' ,6• P* 141 1 11101 . ' 1 V 1111 :
It, 'thuittot, he , dented' that' a better state of
Ilidiiot ~, i s iiiiii#4# In ill *miters', 'The pressure'
has; we• trwei v exile edte;e4e' pang iti;(o.:
•Ndthtei but , taef meet , calemttotii,t ereileti' 11
Apo, pe•cap '6o4,ldWilifilre '4 ito iligu2 it
,seimedte f ,ikk x :s. ,iotAais,seiiii,• *even 111 4
event may not be without Its compiesitiops
lfifth if:iiiat'tlest:Azild Britain alert do withi
eiikonr:cottort le 'Ali,•illidA of Iler own 61
atiters,'and that therefore Miswriting' to a eV
4'4 6 100 8 . 0 , to, 4 11 0 k I .4 4 *Tit l a 014
indebtedness - to her, ail', adicle in AbgitO3i4
donfrignes, of October /12; glows, couchethelt
Lthe4sliri'deptilidente 'of • the ainufatitrans in
I‘ Giaktiltsius 44; 1 4 01 14 0 kollr o es Alta 4 0t
- i
Ipandoweeiif thOutanufacturers or Prenoeinixin
~ 4 iir,904° 11 4 14 ilia real ' ITte"ille" , ill sli t
,• flan of-effort, Of opining• new , Eel& for. 0'
gronlll 'of that f important , ; Staple, • Prat this
article lire xaidm the follow* astral t ' ' '
i, , groin tbele9 ol o lllllo 4 00 t. ) 1 4 ~ , ,
' Ten Cohen (4trativtor.6-It hrextreciely,inW
' eittiontesiiirsie•dos tiros porsedveror oselp
tiespireseetlea elionlot beestpkived..toreinark the
r views and prostate's of the inanatsetitiog world
at this mentint with regard to the oaken , tappbt.
TAU 'kiwi. mow tostsiderediqisiwt4with prism
reason, as one of the chief ehmsonte it" the methllt
t ciliation*: Ihe nattilieskla fad* setae Preneji
PlarnAli Ilmaigallak4h 6 i gliPrdP7 °, 6 . it__troete
prodoeiblela thesaWat 'Witt Vltat.. ig.qml
don area/Oat/00 ltiltabat—fa: l l o Wtogolars
- 0,4 44 mnllhounguef Asixor owtays , h Pv ,
, oecoiesee,iffeami,iof Sumo. astir our elenawnwi
. ‘ofccforsr/ &so inroad 4440424griS mid asestfrn
/mind correrponcroxiifor iimpurPon iirstelinfr
', aut.iiii IffeCzolif 4 turfirmissl4 l lo l Parts If the
tiorici s :Acre as ha 4Sisossets or , it 4103 about,
alcrlign. Whor,trami is to lifitcotiolo rd te caw
,sostscr,for • raiment, conger ruse in' ttemlitifil $4l .
f 0 04.., wool, few ogee tiat *Au eit*e of ey e
"unt'l 6 but 001 t 4 " 7 40 , "*.P1a# 0 4 04, 1" 4 4 0,
P. 414 491 0911 4 , 4 nh •Q tt PlitiPn4Vt,- . 11 1, 3 P1,*
eruenufactures ana upon otOr swassrViserwris we'
.• PPi d 61 T .M . T1, 4 1 41 4 6 , 4 2 riitrureaf, alit 'Ol4 sus. ,
,"tibtilitpotee.' 4 '.' ' ' ' I
_.,' ,lltriPllo4ltilt Of fast it awl be •pau •
sed • that
' thfs lidiaOstirtitti si,Sertadn'perial had Warily'
' 7 ;taherilit4i indents), 'it is tasejaststerwsthat a4 l
ummi About
: rilta a ittil= l ;:te ss a d tlfactur;rramok
`•midi miol , olous abides, tTniffii—blattitt of
America entered specially ape* Mee work of auje•
4t4 ;OP .Thisi by their prom detetiou,stspitel, and
~, Ofaiiike3 4 VOIIMOUOPOI/0 4 4ltorpiwtpigethtr
4.s eohsoWlloo4 Ws thit side,of , the Atlantic, and lokP•
-',..400000. 00 010 otlisr poweeded la* rate of noel
. , orstionitele li Wrenn , Wen mew A pod erkt
sada good 'avast at the sesithere stew$ tew 4,00
.. 4110104X011 Wow* the Lancashire mills with
x
-,..,44ll,42lolloa.'proTagasemi tit i, ...dr". , t
:1 r. f!re....,41 , 11.107 ,10.4,, , ".4 to ,
. ,5,,.. p er stint us Pmil 011 Ilwrithfe-
If'
*
;LS_ es,nowir &sly esjeowe thilliropirtfon
ni tfirstoreiled. ne'hairleanitheadved are
wailing/ op a portion of *delays in* ipitterisi,
IP 4 dillbe niselfeettgreis of the theitintat so* oleo
'gr e to,ttio Wittotonuirket—gritig acts eauditersigle
thuds tbairpsist. law weights Urea
- . 1 , lartlienisielnlidi of conessiewthelartlitor de
. .., , t , sm'oCtiog balanee, , Mt the Maselotster•pas
pie ask whit is tokstdeae, If rAsaithsawask hinny
~ ,faaW", h er- p ressatheatesaillh and is likid,r swot&
,10 havoutorst i Tlie_appreliansion, hi (*IA Ake
f, , Sian „MOJA where, t Imltoffai •
et iggirrilwi "I
3.biletatir k the fiettthentjonotel• glitte, ow thesix
, rupify 9t 1; 11 1 , 11 1 m, the geld of; aupply, and
&lane countries turps lid of the Anted-
Lotir PIA% Or woric o f, Pftlit lo alllt the itorld. , Ao.
~,t ccitiii4 ,v,' init.' eamiteuYearsii ice` me organesed
, ,
~, I ,looPrifatiemi for 'o4_ jr,larliese) and- have out
t s / skit:TAW arieslitesi tots tliollllolo3ll of width%
•
ca F 4
the i f‘t kit - 141" 1 I t iti ffi legari4, , A , 4
Siaittthi3eo4lhlerea arteieistitetiikkiiptcy
:,4-,.. toey now es eeteerear naafi been apprehended.
il' ' Ar t l q 141 g re 4 / 01 1 , g l i g t o ° • Of 0 r 6011041
7 T , lN ,stutilined 4 4eitigWA riti**lng arranged oh all
handeby the people tcrelleve the anticipated
• ' distiesseivof the poor; and to give work to the
,' 4 ti 3l4 a the'W nd " a secure who are exacted
-; -1.3 attm tiromi out 4 - *PI6YOutIY Pr,04 0 5. 0 *
desired beneflti Mind being fully carried ont,
``''' liissinuch en it Is apparent thitt lank of the
",.,',,! Mitred, Welt halt - been spelie ti of does not
: : exist s ,. and tualt94 of ihotte 1 Trlto WM :,bti'
Sieved to be without work are still engiginl
'''' at lt3 Windt:tioildrii tail' coitribute to , -la
._f Mire lioih , Illelo :/. 10011 +3 11011 / 111 10 MA' as .
the Recent , , of the movennuitt,• r e gards the
"'.-.relief of Both clasbet--tliose whe :are in heed
, Of, Yr ol o.; r atitt tit* whO are homed of labor.
lifbeti&n parts` or the community tie united
> , t, Ito relieve fetich other, there °PAO lee mach
~ 1 1 40 3 111.1. rifering, and we shall not be atupriad
if tliOiviiitei pasties off with all MHO suffering
4 ,. ' 1 1..A0 4 .4 ' 9 i4
' 0 6,14° " hag biOned In 1 14
one - year for 'the ba twenty. i 'ft is• 110
•. i Jaw Pclear, that Pieitor State iir.thillile exists
'
' i arnottgi our i merehlente, who begin to look
tearlessly towards their reining liirrnenbi, and
' lt Ottait i atu i lt the bankithetnielveo feel that
1 ~ lit#Pr,lili!lro h as bewailed* , upon them, and
' that they are prepatiog for the acceptance ofthe
provisions of the so-called relief law with little
'of the' tropidatido whir& ttkey felt three weeks
,
' ago. ' Meanwhile there le a large amount of sit
,
b 3 f circular
basun 0
ti, goKAP t h9l-1131 " I ' ler .i " glll notoN ;
~, ,y or,:lin.-'4 P
tri,;,,,ireitlyclyAgrY ,er-i
the
, tlOl4 APR ?° F bright.o4 ' the ' 'picture,
weg
I. '' s ' '''
di iii , if: .t o i - gtheidet tiumthe
~---,, an , k B" tiro- ire!) .ii iier 133.011-
.. •-e•-eiliitkr bin ,
... , tOidgq C r, 7, - i a
, • ;. 1- '' t o „
,litatAo r ta , • .., to vibe: provh on
• I '''' *a ' t t la i '•
3331 a,": ite"raing,C faith. hated at li#
l.9Y11:,?-ii/36a,-;ii43:!YdAP..
,;,094,:tie3 pc;
• .I,kille
_m_. ,ia:,:i4,. el-40A t. O .
mar miasma
,I,' 1 -,,,-Ani T6P" Viatidn, ! Melt ~t;" :44440.
-I '-''''liiill4r4ti>. -z4{:oo*, ' be pad
r idi ot : -4 ..r........ ; , ~, i.' . -,. w ig
rr .7 ':': ''
,1440457,43"1 - ~
0 . t .: :mega
semf.anbittal 84" own) siOTo
, a ‘,- iepn, ~, , 44, iir jAiii4il4-7...t. ieierlis
..yka•-• -'i106411,01-A7l.3't, fctiokAterL , th e
-co p**''''",t,nt,conotow- AP" P, - ....„,ig. among
1 ,, 4 ;r 4 ,44 41 r— 7- 7 biti 0440 le ' no' r"c :,is . ii, hang
_,.. -.-..1 tilipia4n, I,...,f•iinkliiiiikriii?„thq:-:-r,,' i.:43i
-1, -3 --a... Fp , '' '', VrtitijA){4ll.ool .' '
'fr! '.;,r/, iro,.. •
ei'doitigNt+, of tiff
-,.t.Z - •zoiriclisititffar• . , ~6 6 : *I 40,41i6atil* ~,..0.,
;* -- , -.7.. -et.,.., - 441idi go
~1 = ~ ~..,l im.
~9
"ittl..!.l,fllPP,,mij ihif, Pi - 2700m4h"iolia;Pita
.-.; ti:-L.:3a.33.34PA1 in be, :v."''' .',• d' flit
`;''''l',."iti,t;;Y:4.c.„.4#ll4l:t., 40 , 03 f 1110 itl!f 4lo A I? ..,,, ,
- • : . a,isi l - i k tetwr,ff:: f4±- IL, , lilt-
4,,viiinv4tpiktt , • ,
''''..t.'''''
'' - f arii.4l4l / 0 " ' viliigy: ITbm);
-'.'6."'' ' Pk;"l-11 ' ' -- tablenotlritY 4l4
ne foe
in.
-with lu er e a/ - • atrong reall°
, • ,__. a le Ile,. aro
it se,'
&Aging "lit too, that thor n „ it ; really better
4
- glue ."ming'
THE NEW YORK ELECTION.r •i "
An important State *floodlit:o4es ptsec,,
New York to-morrow, widiel;:irci*Jilla, igdta
cations, will be close, and Milt enian a";.defeafi,
:ape Republicans. Seine linitago,
dieted that, in proportion as the 'lCarisareit'
,citement died out, and the triumph of a fair
election in that Territory became assured, so
W4uld 'the ranks .of the- Democratic _ party,.
everywhere,]be r awelled the, return of the
'members a that iiiigagieatiatiNVo went over
to!the.eause
delusion that the Democratic party Was com
io'thol witetuddif - ii't abittery:'
Ended that it`wasi instiesalbie' for Mien who; dur=
lug icing liveii; had exhibited their devotion to'
sena constitutional Principlei cintho subject of
the curtency, tariff;•and internal improtre;'
. .
*tents,' tci rennin' With an organization which
was solely eeincmitted to Aboiitionieni t Andes
peoially to . Wigiere to it 'after' the latter 'Me: -
teeitt had Every" day goes toshow
that'the Sequel Will verifY this prophesy: Audi
ftitlinnet it iillopirti too mu& that New' Yotk
Hill rleclde against Mr. Sewitin and his'arty,
.
:yet "there 'ean be' `no' question that 'a , radical'
;chin& lei - certain' to be 'Made, `either atlthe ,
cif at the 'next. 'The folkiw-
Jo
• • g
;
.fretri the' New' York' /aurora of
• CoVninkie, tipaper'whiolt 'cannot be balled a
ixtere.ptitir (wipe; shaws ivhat may - expect'
atibeelectiOn Whiehl is to 'take piece
row „
Pint* t here'll:l,oi has been it time When' the
opponents of theiDemooracy , -tho State.ef New
'Tory were c sci compietsly deltHata ig%Fiespons with
which contest an election as the/ are at this'
ititineent:' Tine far they Seem to have been utterly
Onnuseessful in their attempts to drum up . an issue.,
finnan as ati issue, is evidently need up. This'
i‘harplirti thousand curl*" tuns playeatipoil
long that it can no loner titter' better MUSICI, than
hurdy,gurdy; and t his Itopnylisens are,oven
ropOty re
s kibrerfoge and ridirisprotiOntntisin in Order
condetsi thenridenee of the election frauds late-,
per_petrated in that Territory, by
Aafor,tbe Died Scott, decision, the owner of that
Wine Sold hid' *diens ugo'as tw it spring; and!the
Ptileldirmils New Mayen - latex suit only„deolmated ,
thls:.;4 o etorit ,M 1 ,30 liZaed.„the original missive , to'
tiiploiled the' magaitno 'whorled' their
p e rt; thinughadt 'the tiountrylirew their ammuni-
Is this dilemma, the Republican journal,.
srhlehhiv,e a character to sustain, simply preserve
invitee,' *bile' fife lessor organs indulge In the
hisektieyedidirams Gatemen in every election..
iTharaturn to the Dentooratie yanks of the Bd.,
Mato Rept/i/ic'-'-apaper which tientnver to Ritipotil
.liciinitnisittiach:Nye &tattle Bienin,ir Peat-,
ilgoildont indication that, the ,- revulsion in
has unspoiled pirty'le "enspend."
The ifemialis' would 'never' hive Abseil' to coffer
the bimiliation of ,retracing its tracks. so long as it
mid have been assured thaks dollar of rtuets—in
!the shape of issues were left lathe Vaults of the'
piiify. But id this ease; Issues were in
!the nature of'speoie, and overt: the supply, of the
New York Tribune was exhausted when the Re.
public went back to the National Dedioareey:' •
-The oiiidenced are thickening that Black Repub.
Heard= is, to beaten in New York, as it bas
been inrP,ennsylrania, lowa:Minnesota, and sub
stantially In' Ohio . The desertion oroneof their
Most influential journals is' seconded by the apathy ;
of others, and, we should judge, by the disgust of
a large part of the rank and file : Sectionalism'
is in had 'oder. • The 'national administration of
President t Buchanan tar restored the health of,
the body politic, and tines& ° doctors are henceforth"
to be discarded., Let all 'national and patriotic.
men fejobie:' , ' , •
r.RAC.T/C 4 L BFrilgr".!x.! N c E•
„1:49
..%)Ng o!,.?i t tz;i.4., on Saturdaylast,
as :we
4tr? iiigoi r meit, 4 4cinatO 'sum of five tiuddred
and flit,dollars'lo "charitable purposes,and
tio wisely; given' to: societies
th,at ! are PI the hands of 'onr ptiblic-iplitted
and, distiiternsteti.inen; Whii'are' willing to 'de
an4 aitontlon It:obiring pie
noceisitleS of the:raiffering poor of 'our: city.
We ,shall;,t,o-nierrow,; gise a list'of the dif
ferent, tiodies to this Cortipiratlielk
Jare aunt ,Of money, has tieen' entrusted, and
our readers will be able to 'perceiVe, not only
,ttipigenet:os4 „
y ttie doiors,'but their 'Madera
and foresight In conunltiliii, thin trtifto thoge
"Alpe, pagt . nsefulness and high
,cliaracter
.ananza.e4o4l:4 discharge ' of so agreeable a
'duty in a siaionlition wide spread 'dlstreger
I ted ' • '
API lank ,Flr ft'?
fop NiEty 1E iiitriPlCAlit 1114.1. 7 •
The Indian s mail' it:earner . trent 'Li've`tpool,
tiLl "a fie` " ' ' 6 t"d
our av a r news, to our y exp e e
'pt, Qneliite, 'and it' is - supposed that libit Will
.bring tome aenoune`of the inipreaskon made
pp , ..the lends= money =Market 6y the' intellt 7
,genee tlie . sreit' ! Terk 'panlia"fialiing 'sus*
.poryileit j Oinpairdento:: ‘i
She irini "trileaci
eerAOOf o'd the' 2'fat ' Is not
probable flaw sietilntelligenee'likeild . matt4
moneyed iVeiegr - in -zurepe;
iiinfild gin* the'neSes:
aity.ef preparing to:pay in' specie for such
Fotton and'h,i,kidetnift Englitnt may require,
from , country' The ' tritto` 'theY multi
and, the
.breitdatnkt they qni y 't're:' Under
any OreirMnetinceig, a further iMpOrt of gOld
from Europe' nny*liieked •
F ioM WASHIIJOTON
lfieleptefi Retains, 4t Oitert Precnet;
Ifieisiity;fiCsiseifiTerritery—fiovernor Walker+.
iitional. Fields .* :Oregon
Safes oi:t'ubJlb
tionsdellndimirrnat penfia r .De . e is tesi' of 'the
fayterniT#crieritirAlleith of an Aria'', Officer.
' WAt - ilborroir, N0v.4,4857'. ,
(Ckinesposid se of Tito :• - •
ileihddn'of :Governer Walker and amatory,
fitantedin paiking the polls of „the late election in
,
Kansas by- throwing out the returns from Oxford
precinct, Johnson ,eoenty, oceasione greet Occre
ge;has heretofore confined his aetion tai Soh'
questions as dearly cense within biii"jrithidietion.
In thh l ltetanee;liMviier; he hesallamed his seats
of sire fraud eoiitituto
do exeeptidn to this
action. tliat of .the &lore
haa Wth anti is, to Wive a fair election,
'to heir; the-people's mill, as fairly expressed, fairly
&riled' ont.. r
•
Brom the mounts tho.popete, Otero seems to
be' DO doubt,,that o fraud, vo! ootemlttedlit this .
cioettee, audit.,vee tbls, feet .I . iiiett'haoindtiothi•
43 107PIFIri, eib end ' l 'ileoretsts thiottin to 'take
•
tomtit nave resehrd'Washington frideotiteers
istireihad:tti 'the' Interior Department of the die
°dim* In' Washington iand,Oregon .Territories
btrndreds of allier In extent, and vest'
forests Of timber admirably suited for naval pUr.
Wes, <, This disoovery is doemed,of importance to
the. Interests , Alto .coast, furnishing'
iookod,afthr, the paeans for rapid oote
mtplestion with , th e Sooner or later, has
leen tiM - prediction 'of entintslaitio eAliforniarst
the rich trade of the "East Would pass array (rpm
its enelear„oluinnel , lad flow through San Fran.
aleit,tatrard Ittetv, Xork" and hi it
way to the Old,World. ' 'route is' many days
nearer to Ragland and Frans than the ono now
travelled; and the dieeoveri,of these coal beds anti
ROl:sheaf tiniber,suitablo for naval purPosoa 'adds
another inducement rfor the piedie Led uh a nge,
newspapers. is'ave everywhere Stated, with
.great pesitivoriess, that the present financial crisis
wrould,prever# the sales pul'ilo lands for some
pants butt.; is not the, opinion- of the Land 011iee
ttbat tbiewl'l he the result. 'Far a ytiiiior two,
tllo,Vainablis treetsmf public" hind have bees with
drain; front • sale under4he Con. ,
gross for' trillroadeend tither arable, ireprovemontin
`Thole lards 'will 'he thrown into market, in , all,
lb, IfOligi and as latest' ink
,pitelttionildenee Mot Plloitie i n lai ° it ' D°°6 of
at 40101,. it• is fair to , presume come , or the money
Auirdee during theorists will be, for, greet(' !,a-,
eurity,4itst in'tbitt real 'estate„to which' undentded
'title can use giv e n.•
Chariplokint, hasheenlnadetitat the tmeneisSiptier
of Italie it ,, Affaire ineested the treed fends be.
'l .9Ditiettlq,lndlar"._tribeelb"State stooks. The
Anestiont .wjm relerred to the' Attorney General'
'who' grate' AB his opinion, that ; n,doieg eo the
Oolonlindoner acted in, full :ooroplisoste',with the
law.: In 1841':Critirosif passed law agatnit the
invinitipient of' these ftiodpin any stook but United
Stated stook, . Since .then provisions bare been
liatridneed -into various treaties with 'digiretit-
Intiliiti tribes, to' tho, 'effeet - that
,the, Aeorotary of
the Interior should dlsorotieejirrest; these
funds In/any glade and`praditable stook." The At ,
lorasty Genera, /Oda that thellnited Stalin stook
may be safe; but just now rather unprofitable; as it
deinakels'the payment of -'a, haste' premien': In.'
I.eitthitabairl State steaks ate 'just haute, and pro.
*table' beside.''
Lieutenant. T. It/rigid, 2nd„lntantrY,' died at
keit Randall, Nebraska Territory, ,on the 12th
O t t.
, •
. :t •X, Y.
n has been banking strenu
ous exertions to be redestaned in his fernier charge.
lait Week tba'Allegheny.Presbyteri of the CUM-
Presbyterian ()herein mot, When three peti
tions were
,presented, asking , that 110 might be
s o u *Omitted to, the;fttnotions or, the ministry:
Orli:twee/rem the mistionary Goole ty, and the second
froin` the lodise. soWing!reiety attached to hi s
forme,r' Congregation!' • The 'third was signed by
about thirty cf, tlio,,MendmisAf 'ttto, Zilureh. The
Presbytery unanimously declined
,to, oblige the
~ nlissionarY and Bosh* societies": by reinstating
, ft ''. $ • •
,f.;o4` F,444
brahesman on one or the owdtraipa at''.ibe Read
fittkailrOadVfell,:thiongn. the bottomAoors of a
18i14 4 1" 4 4 r ' , ',8n' *gab:. he - Was ratiddlng--4hp doimi
to k ikei ta neneePidlYlroko while ,tbo' tralp was,
ilvatotion,4ndliidibojt; Ns loge Ho wo4
fatint fOliettAlintotr, tilers the mutilated limbs
44,tecr bele* the knees, by Dr. Bnitizi)
oniAgtraiWodfibf bivfoAla)-oaier„fihe:acciddat
iisppoeCop pear 1-N4l(ninton,
(Vu',)•firdnten bail , it parade
on Wainesday, and at night there was a disturb
ance, daring which A. Duke. and 0. Bryant were
diarnoustr &WA,
PROM NEW,MIRIit, t .4' .
o „rrtipanderletT butFra
9 .7. 7 ds
`4l dux, Oct;
This first ditYof sunshine we kayo ,had in
- .en; an . ; l roadwOwarniit,with the feiritnines,
Auttertetinsall thOn'es of a deWar
differenrpeople, as 'well as pictures, looltpaer„,a
goodAight ; and how these golden; rays from
heaven dissipate the blues" as Welprus the
donde.- - Yesterday, everybody looke'd cress, and
felt Suicidal ; life itself was at a &want. To-day,
the world is smiling and exuberant; and every
body feels younger, richer, happier,
and better.
'Wlicriferfderd h the" rekelan for - worshippinglhe
r
anal, , tiro Trofeasing and presuming
,Christians
call it idolatry. Better worship thitt than Poilling:'
'bettor bow before the glorious god of day than be
fore the gelden calves ef Wail street,' ' .
' 1 I vientjast night; to see Miss Guthman play the
'role Tiibe, iu Chorley's translation of the
Aotiess 'of Padua.?' It was truly,great per
formanoe—en exhibition of high drama* art such
Ai we seldom see ,on • the stage.,When she !Oils
Philadelphia, (which I learn will befit a few cleyre,),
year, manager should endeavor to get up an en
gagement with Foi4est at the Bettie - time. It would
prove's is.i'd'ind re'slailess ettradtion mien in these
impinging ' Miss Cushman wee very fairly'
supported het evening by 'Fisher, who is always
'carrot and respectable, and Miss Susan Dwain, a
remarkably, pretty woman: , had not Seca her
,sine she wa,s a mere, obild,,at,the "Bowery,", and.
amliot a little, surprised that her fine physiqe has
not made more noise in the world. Although, If I
am not mietakon, there has been soma quarrelling,
and fighting atiout'hor.' Wonder if she is , e in the
market" now !
Wheat little Or the !Rata eleation to tome ;o£l'
On Tuesday , next.. 'The' tightness of the money,
market is a severe cheek upon the "Patriotism," of
all par Des: „The Democrats have 4, good ticket Itt,
the field. • ilsePe it , rrtll be pleetod. Lint lam not
,sanguineenongit to bet on it. Indeekthere is not
riceiMment enough on the subject in the whole city
't'o got up a bet for ts',s,s, Leary:" 'After the State
oonteat is in4tl.:4, ..;ve Shia! have a pretty hard fight
hero' in 'the city between the Wood and the
tinti4Thoil parties (for , snob will ,be the real
lameiriddecembei.)— There is ts Alston , movement
initiated between the "Iteptiblicall.' and the f,`Aer7
and to order AM their greet. antagonist
to the wall, they propose, to pit against him some,
wolf. known substantial Democrat. Atuang others,
Wilma 9. Hunt hi talked Of. There are Beforel
important nierticipal Mikes to be filled at !he setae
ilmeL-judges, recorder, district attorney, Ac.; de.;
anti of 'ail thdse the Demtiortitir aid quite sure. Let'
Me (ft) the Party the Jingles torch; that they have
nominated exeellentmen for the resp,eolive Mikes
! But enough; for; today, of ..the affairs of them„
lion. ~Let mutual:lb tmen matters, if, not of more
general...important:e l certainly el, greater interest,
to a porilon, of:yonr, readers . We are just' . now
treated to the" moist, sumptuous entOrtainitifint 'in
the way of thO Find Arts. Within a few days we
have had opened to us a British Gallery and a
French GiallerY Of Paintings itn,L.Drawings,'etteh
Oollietion containing many gents of the richest and
rarest desoription, Let your readers make So note
'of this,'end look after these beautiful exhihitimas
'when they visit Potham.: In , the French tiallery
•there is an
,admirable portrait of Rosa Bonbeur,
, whoSe merv'elletis painting—" . Tile Rom Fair "
still on - exhibition here, is world-famOns. The
likineis' Is by Dubufe ; and 'Rosa has
Painted a bull in the foregratind, upon which she
Teets her arts. Sh 4 wears her dark hair 'short,
and is represented as a thin, sharp, keen, strong
minded genius. Ifer talent for painting animals
is truly wonderful. , What a versatility of nature
she must have, so to enter into the spirit, action,
foaling, and passion of the horse, in all his varie
ties and "conditiOne, 'And Iti4 she must smell of
the stable
' The Diisieldorf Gallery," retently purchasod
of Mr. Doke!' for , $lBO,OOO by the "Cosmopolitan
Art Association,}' is exceedingly attractive in its
new and elegant rooms , in front of Dr, Chopin's
Dhurch,ilik Broadway.
,People aro aeon flocking
there to subscribe previous to the approaching
"distribution" of premiums; and everybody is
hoping to win the, " Groek- which foil to
the _lot of one of your , Pennsylvania ladies last
year, who sold it back (by public auotiOn in this
city) to the," Association" for sil,ooo. 'An addl.
tionid thousand hnilieen bid for ;" but it is " up"
sigain as a priie ; and somebody will Make a hand
sonielhing by the small investment of three dot ,
lots, and for whioh auto they ire aunt to receive,
either any of the three-dollar magazines, or the
" Art, Jeumal," l a splendid quarterly, and,, a five-,
doUsr,ongrayieg, entitled "Manifest Destloy"—a'
porfootgom of, art. With all these indooemente, , ,
it is net suririeing, that zuhscriberi%namee are'
multiplying "like the dropa of the morning.";
The vary tightiese of the money market leads'
people to" try their fortunes." Your readers
think me for calling their attention to the number
of the "Cosmopolitan ArtoJournal" just, issued,
as it contains an excellent likeness and biographt:
oal_notica of the lamented Crawford, whose sun hai
sot at noon-day. One HOPOLITAN.
TM "LATEST, NEWS
BY TELEGRAPH.
lyou-Arrival of the Indian.
QcrEnEe, Nov. I—livening.—Tbe steamship In:.
'diem; now due*lth Liverpool dates to Wednesday,
the 2 1st ale., has not yet' been algnalled teloir,
frdm the telottaphitation at Rive's' LtiLimpe.
The /4 1 1141114 Policy of the ModSaltation
WitaypiclTON, Oat. 31.—Xt is now ascertained on
inqUiry, that the report which was last
night prevalent in unusually reliable and well in
fornied circles, of the intention on the part of the,
AdMinistration to iettiove'GoV. - Walker and Secre
tary Stanton, it without the'least foundation; nor
is there any reason to believe that either intend to
'resign. - The last dates from either have only COMO
dott,to the leth of Ootoher.
'4th'oveinc.!. Llgosts PraclBmJUOn Withdrawn.
DATMORE, NOVOlUb ' er 1 —Qovornor "higou bas
finally consented to
, withdraw his proclamation
calling out the military and placing the city tinder
.martial law. Negotiations have been going on all
day betweou the committees of °Bisons represent
ing „the Governor and Illayor,mhich terminated
this evening In the annonnocnilent made by them
jointly, that they Were antherited to State that the
Governor, tieing satisfied - that' arringentente had
alreadibeinimade by the Mayor for preserving
the , Peace; and assuring an 'uninteirupted exercise
of the right of suffrage, the military forte will
therefore .not he .made ,use of. The day passed
without disturbance, though the streets in the ri
cluity of the Mayor's office and Barnum's Hotel
have been crowded all the afternoon by thousands
awaiting the result of the negotiations.
It is due toGbvernor Ligon to say that the ap
plication for the contingent use of 'the Federal
forises 'at the Baltimore election was made by a
committee front that oitY. His name was not men
tioned'in the despatch to the Associated Prem.
The „railnio : It!uskets Ofwernor
BALvtioni, Nov. L—A 4espatch from Itich-
Maria oonfirme tho'relmrt 'that Oovornor Wise, of
Virginia, bad agroed to loan 3,000 muskets for the
11130
. of the military called into service by aovernor
'Ligon. Six boxes, containing forty each, passed
through • Richmond yesterday, and about thirty
additional boxes 'arrived there this rooming, and
It Is helleved were 'forwarded by the passenger
train this afternoon.
W amnia:ma, Nov. I.—The thirty boxes of
rouske4, reoeive(fhero to-day from Richmond, re
main at the Wishington dopot.
OUtragc in Buithuerc—.l CaihollF Church
*ltach44.
BALTIIIOIIE, Nov. I.—Before daylight, this
neetning, slang of rowdies threw some Make at
the Catholic ,Church of the Immaculate Concep
tion, in the, erecitern'eitielpify of the city, breaking
ri"windoW, arid; it is slid, 'causing other damage to
'the Interior ' The 'sexton 'Oleo the alarm by tap
ping the bail. • Thi`pnliee partnied the gang, who
'fled, after firing upon the pollen. f,
More , Trouble in Kansas.
New Youn, 00t.,31.—A private despatch from
.I,awroace, K. T., sayi that Governor Walker and
Seoretarp Stan ton wore Obliged to leave Lecompton
'On 'account of the throats - of the ultras, and are
now 'at "IletiMitt.' 'Sheriff Walker, with a posse of
his men; is with the floVernor. A special meseen
germs sent for Colonel. thunner's command. A'
document was circulated In LWOW:Po inviting
Walker to that place, and pledging the protection
of Its citizens,
The Assasiatod Press correspondent at St. Louts,
!n reference to the, ahoy° despatch, telegraphs as
follews:
"We have no melt intelligence here, and noth
ing like it has passed through the telegraph office
in this city. to•dny. The deepateb hasinternal nvi;
denoo of being a hoax. Governor Walker has
troops at Lotompton for the protection of the Om,
atitntionel Convention; and if he had not, he
would soareely,dinnand it of an oineor who bee not
been In command in Kansas for ,several months,
and who for IMMO t,i m e past has been under arrest.
'I saw a letter front Secretary Stanton to-night,
dated LeMimpton, October 28, and' it makei no
mention Of any difflotilty." '
The Expected Callturri!!l,SfealMr
Nan , YQIIK, Nov. I.—The stemnshlp Star of the
West, from Aspinwall, with the California mails rki .
the f.tit,ult., is not considered due herd before
Crucidriy • • •
• _
Arrtv,al at Nu. Plitlaitelphla at Now °Wane—
, 16450,000 lm Specle. . •
; NEW ORLEANS, Oat. 31 , —The 'United Stfi.es mall
nteatnehip Philadelphia, fromilavana, co. the 28th
!natant, has arrlyqd atthis port.
'he steamer Stir of the Wein,'Which was ad
iorrlised 'ASTII4tIII on the 20th instant,.
'witli'iwo weeks' later yens "ftein California, had
not arrived at Havana when the Philadelphia left
theft Ors. -Bhe may have been 'detained ty the
connecting steamer, which conveys the malls from
San rnmcisoo to Aspinwall. no Philadelphia
brings $450,000 in Psool9.
THE IiItESS.-4111LAItt1411A, AIiAbAY, NOVEMBER I, 1857.
BOSTON, Nov. frail foreign ports
for the quarterjust ended hike hien $3,400,000 over
• -
the imports for the same petiod of lag. year.
aionma, Oct: M.—Cotton—Sales of the week
5,000 bales at Meta Receipts 4000 bales,
against 7,000 the game week last year.
stock in port is estimated at 30,000 bales, against
21,000 at this period last year.
Autumn, Oat. 30.—The Cotton market closes
active; sales to-day 700 bales at llttal2e. The
mosey market is pasiet-i
• BiYANTIAiI, Oat. 33..--Cottovi-loales ,tb-daY 90
hales at 10142 e.
Omint,astoN, 04:20.- , -411•qiialities Of Cotton
have slightly. advanced; middling talr quotes at
120.
• bRLEANB, Oot. 31.—Oottou—Salos , to-day
0,400 ; :reoolpto 10,000. , Markets unpbanged.
Sugar is quoted at 5a 6 4 ; Molaasoo at 25Io;
Ilium Pork $2O.
Sterling Exchange quotes at 93.. Exehange ou
Now York 6 per gent. discount.
•
(From the Now Drleine Delta of the 2.lth) .
The, steamship Opelousas arrived here this morn
ing with Galveston dates to the 22d.
The GalveSioh '.lViiMs 'of the '2oth InSt. says.;—'
The alarm that was manifested in' this city, among
some of our citisens, in oonsequenee of the news
of bank suspensions in Now Orleans' received bi
Friday's steamer, seeing to have as suddeily subsi
ded by the favorable news brought by yesterday's
Our banks continues to redcoat its note's whoti
ptetented,though the small holders are now relleVed
from their fears, and it, is pretty well understood
this circulation is, quite limited.. Checks were
paid yesterday promptly ; and the Civilian learns
that the failure to pay them on Saturday was solely
fer, the purpose of devoting that day to the do-,
Maids of the numerous class of small notnholders
doh as women, laborers,' and oaten', who had be=
come alarmed, and greatly needed their etrall
amounts,. The fact that this bank bad, greatly
ohrtailod,its circulation, and fkat the "
paper of
it is"almost entirely withdrawn from'
,eiroulation ' has left us more than usually depend
ent on the New Orleans bank ,payer sae our only
medium of exchange. It was owing maintrld
this fact that some alarm was felt on the ronorpil
suspension of the New Orleans banks.
The Houston Tdegrapii publishes" an 'argurtilini
'from " ono of the best lawyers hi Texas;" a member
of the Legislature, to show , that that body. Atia no,
, power to eked ono of, its own members to the office
of United Statei 'Senator."
i The Nioaraguti fever prevalitiin Port Bend, and.
it is said that a colony, of Rixty,rvill go , from gat i
and adjoining, *Wes, with implements of Wl
ijandry as well as of warfare, intending to'bicome
permanent settlers and cultivator; of ' the sail in
that beautiful country. , ,
The „Bon. John Henry 'rown' Maier bf
ton, has resigned.' An eleetionfor 'Mayer, for the
unexpired tern of Mayor :Brown, to to belied on
the 314 lust.
Major Modnilooh, 'United State* marshal , has
returned to Galvottou, , from hie:Northern and
Western tour. The Civilian Rays ,be denies the
soft impeachment of being afflicted with the Met
regue fever.
the Charleston Courier of the 29th.]
The stsaumbip Isabel, with Havana dates to the
25th, arrived hare yesterday morning.
' i rhe island is quiet.
The prospects of the coming crop tieing a large
one are favorable.
That eventually there Must be a reduction Itt
rates in the Havana marker, no doubt exists..
Meanwhile, all business is in a state of complete
stagnation. .
Lard'amtprime butter Is verY genie' at Havana.'
The former arable is becoming quite scarce, And
retails at fifty cents per pound, whilst of thp,latter,
there is not any to be purchased. '
The Norwegian barque Marie arrived on the 13th;
from Amoy and St Helena, adth one hundred and
seventy-nine Coolies.
There is a rumor that the Clara 11. Williams;
late of New York, has been:Seised by a Spanish
vessel of war, off the coast of this island.
. British subjects in this Island had nearly boon
left without a Conant-General. J. T. Crawford,
H. 'B. Majesty's Oonsel•Generat in Dubs,
is now on a visit to the North, and the Marquis
DeLosodos, acting Consul-General, woo attacked'
with yellow fever last week. However, halos
got well over it and mail at hie office yestorday.
Another American barque, with slave', on beard,
has been seised by a Spanish Gruber off Segue La'
Grande. " ' • •
There have been one hundred and seventy more
rearetts ariived recently from Calis ,
The folloWlng a trairlation of an Import ant order. issued , flint., by wlhlsh.lt will be seen
that after,january let neat, vessels brinalngear.
goes to this 'Blind and taking away molasses, will
bercOmpelled'to pay the duties on totfnage : • •
or.mour, Anumturnknoil or mentrutu mors,
let. From the let January next will, °ease the
drawback of tonnage, which, virtue of the
royal decree of 27th May, 1846, was granted to the
rooneignoes of vessels which entered into the .port
of this island lOW a cargo, and left entirely
loaded with molasses. ' •
2d. The vessels which enter la ballast and Clear
entlrelyloaded with molasses, will continue exempt
from tonnage due's.
By ordor of the Senor Intondento General ibis
is published, for general information:
BONIPAOio CORTES:
Atli . ; OA. Mb, 185 r. • '•• • •
• The 10th inst. Was the birth•day of the Queen
or 4pain:, Salutes wereAred qt sunrise , noon andl
sunset, a grand' levee at the Pelee° in the Morn-
tug, andit party in the evening, • •
On the night of the 14th, or early, on Oar
tog of the lath nit., the barque ,Zylnit, or Z hYr i i
reported to have formerly,hailed from Halt ore,
was brought into. Havana, a prish• to a Spanish;
cruiser. She had been taken a short time pro.:
%dourly off Marie, having then on board between
file and six hundred Africans. -Report says 'she
has been between oape 'Antonia, and Havana for,
nearly, a month, seeking, but without finding, an
opportunity to land her *urge. She Is a One Op
per-built vessel, almost new.. Her captain,. with.
his crew, (all Spaniards,) were permitted to make .
their espape, taking with them the vessel's papers.
Three hundred of the slaves on board of her' are,
it is understolid, to be sent to Port Prinill9ni to WO*
as apprentices, until they obtain some knowledge
of the Spanish language, whilst a like number are
to be brought from that locality to Work'on'tbd
public works near Rama.
Money no doubt is " tight," yet our planter('
cannot generally be needy, or they would sell
their sugars at the rates offered, but , whieh they
indigna4tly refine tp do. ,The exports of, sugar
from nev4sl4, Metannas, and (lardenas, during the
past month'oniY,' altunint to
.21,000 boxes, whilst
during the same month last year 4f,000 bops were
exported, and 35,000 boges In the IMMO month in
the year 1895. The stock atllavana and Motorises
is about 240;000 boxes, whilst at this period last
year it was gym boxes leas, and at this period iii
1845 was only 90,000.
From Mexico.
(Prow the New Orleans Picayune of the 26th ult.)
The steamehip Tenneueo arrived hero yester
day. She brine dataa from yora pin to the 210,
and from the capital to the 1 th, and 644P,P0P in
gold.
The principal news by this arrival concerns the
appointment of a new cabinet, which Is as follows :
Minister of Foreign Affairs, Jose Puente; 'Minister
of the interior, Benito Juarez; 'Minister of Justice,
Manuel Rule; Minister of, 'War, Jose M, Garcia
Conde; Minister of, the Treasury, Mannol Payee;
Minister of Foment°, Sabina Flora. • • '
The appointments, if we 'are to believe the pa
pers, would seem to be more a matter of form than
any thing else, a sort of concession to the actual
state of things. '
The old rumors of the probable retirement of
the President„ and and his succession by Times, were,
in consequence, rife again.
The list news from the Indian war of • the South
was that Alvaren bad routed the rebels, Ji.t.
pa, with
,a terrible slaughter.
The political war Birk mania has made bet little
progress shice• our last; that of races, however,
had broken out with increased violence. The
village of Tekak bad been the scene of a dreadful
conflict, in which two hundred of. the inhabitants
perished.
Oaragesehy, Laguna, and the whole coast in the
possession of the revolutionists, were quiet.
Sendr Gorsudb, the recently appointed chief. en
ginger of the Vera Oro; and Mealee railroad, the
°barter privileges of which were receetly granted
to Senor Feeandon, is about to visit the Gaited
States, for the purpose of erganising a corps to
proceed at °moo with the survey and location of
,this road. Senor G. was the engineer of the Gua
dalupe relit:end. ' '
Among the passengers out to Vera Crux by the
Tennessee, on her last trip from this oily, says the
Progreso, was the exiled Sentinnist, lieu. Cortez,
under an assumed name.' lie wee, however, recog
nised, though disguised. in an uuuma) dross, and
taken Into custody.
nieVidi Homicide In RicbMond, Va
[From the filclinkogil Whit, Oct. 30
An appalling, orisne was oommitteft yesterday'
afternoon, about 4 o'elOak, at' the Pair Grounds,
and following close upon an accident by which o
negto man was hastened into eternity, diffused a
profound gloom throughout the multitude, sadly
marring the pleasures of all present. Tho per
tinker* of the dreadful event, as ocmmunleated to
us, were briefly them: Nimrod B. Dickinson,
commission =reliant of this oily, formerly a
t..'lmeeonist, went into the tont or refreshment
eatoon;" whore John C. Haley woe employed as a
enterer and anparintendent of the snack depart
ment. It appe4sthap aley was indebted to Dick
in eon for some ar Halos which lip htld PllrPhofod fran
him. and the two entered into A Span) 9ellyollintlep
relative to this debt. They were standing at the
time near the head of the dining-table. 'The al
ternation wan very brief, and terminated,tt is said,
by•Diekineon applying a harsh epithet to Haley,
which he resented with a blow. Dickinson imme
diately seised a carving-knife from the table and
pinned it into Haley's breast. He proclaimed
that he had committed the awful deed, and was
reedy to surrender himself, but all present wore
overwhelmed with ebnaternation, and D. retired
unmolested, with some of $a freentjp, to the out
side of the enclosure, where be got into aback mai
rode off, avowing isle willingness, wo understand',
to surrender himeelf to the authorities.
Haley, after receiving the fatal stab, walked to
the hewer end of the "saloon," where one of. the
barkeepers pane to his 'aid, and gestated him to a
recumbent poettlen country physician present
egarniced thee wound, and 'diseoverei Immediately
that tbe unfOrttthate panties peysnel the pate of
Inman 'kill, He gasped' but te few hipetts and
then expired„ no blade of the knife entered the
aorta, and mud have penetrated e• depth ef,
oral inches, judging from the marks of bleed Open
the sides of the blade.
The clepeaaell was well known to the community
as a restauratfUr, and foi several years was a
member of the night watch. IN leaves a wife
and live or six email children to mourn his sad
fete.
,utter the above was in typo, ive learned that
Mr. Bickinsion surrendered hit:itself to °Meer
Johnson, and wee Spainlitla to jail by, Alderman
Burton.
The Apathy of the Dry GocatstMarket.—The
same general apathy to which welave before re
ferred, and which has characterised the dry goods
trade At our city for a month past, was prominent
on all our business streets during the last week.
Ithere is but very !Winfred° doing, except tbrough
orders, and there is no dlspooltion to do anything
else thin collect in from the country. Thor° is a
vast amount of money duo our mordants by
Southern, and Western dealers. Prices continuo
firm for most kinds of domestic rods. American
fancy oassfuterea are much in demand at good
prices A largo quantity could be sold if they
wore in the market,
importrq
Markets, °."
LATER EROAi
Later from AlaTii!9%.
T I CI PIT
,AMUSEMRNTS TIM EVFNING
,
AO.plar or Mum, LW. ORDER 0? BROAD AND Lo.
oast STROWIII --" Curious Case"--" Little Toddle
kind'-44 To Oblige B e p ao n. , ,
WiTEATIAT's ARELO TONATRO, ADOR OTHewr,
ARDOR 81 /". —" Wool of Spades"—.' Black•Eyod
-Bussn.ll
WALNUT EITRINT TIMOR'', N. H. MINIM OT NINTH
BD WALNUT eetteaTe.—. , Stage-Struck Barber"—
, Linda, the Cigar Glr1"—" Meemeelem."
NARLE'S GALLERIES, No. 816 0112STNOTTilliftr.—
ATctio 86,1 p *esolute
?)118Aati , ii OPINA Ilevastil4ll9sl44B iT./11110; ADOYN
OBBOINOT —llthloplau Life Illuetrited, concluding with
langhehieaftorpisoc ._
TRoxsur , s V./MIMES ; Plrrif AND ONNSTNOT STN.—
Dgonape,j; . •
Twenty-fourth Ward Relief alssociation.
A large meeting of the public spirited'oititeris of
this ward was held on Saturday evening last at
the . West Philadelphia Institute. On motion Of
O. O. Westoott. Esq., Aldermen James Allen"was
called to the chair, and Henry bt. Dechert was
elected secretary.
lion. N. ,E. Browne '
E. W. Shippen, A. J.
Drexel, J. P. levy, and 0. 0. Pierson were ap.
pointed ' committee to report resolutions to the
meeting. ,
. The following preamble and resolutions wore
reportdd through the chairman, Hon. N. B.
Browne, end were unanimously adopted :
i/Vhereas, The financial disasters which have
overtaken the country, have to &great extent ens•
pended the operations of trade and industry,
thereby.throwing out of employ in our city many
thousands who will be without the means of support
during the approaching winter; and whereas, the
!relief of our neighbors and fellow-citizens who may
be thus unfortunate is not only an imperative duty,
but should be the pleasure of all, not only of those
who may contribute out of their abundance, but of
Atm who may be able to spare a portion of their
snore moderate resources : therefore,
I Resolvid, That the citizens of the Ttventy-fourth
Ward hero represented will make an effort, corree
pot:idles to the occasion, to provide against the
eateries and want that are likely to mat among
OM poor and unomploy'ed in our midst during the
coming winter; and for that purpose will organize
awardrelief association,lo ,be aided by committees
in ettoh,preoinct;onl to eontinnis in existence until
the fret day of April next. •
Resolved That to make acid. association Wee
dtvp, the eld ef all will be required who may be
able to give la' money, fuer, clothing, or pro
*talons ; and that, in addition to immediate con
ttlinitions, it ig recommended that every family in
tho ward, that is able to do so, should;during each
tosek,'between the first days' of November and
'April next, sot apart an amount, however small,
to v w ri a i r e d d e a om g e a n k e e ra t l h relief asoc i f a u t n io d n ,
t a h n o d t a h s a t
n t
m t hey be
e e ntof
'their liberality. •
Resolved, That the employment of those who
need .it, no Joss than the relief of those in
suffering or in want, should be the object of this
association ; and that, therefore, the means at its
command shall be dispensed, as. far as possible,
among those' who may be willing to give In return
their labor and industry. ' •
Resoluedi That this association should not con
flict with the designs, nor interfere with the action
Of perthanently organized benevolent 'associations
now existing among us; but that it will, so far as
practicable or ludialeue, avail itself of their ex
perience and cooperation in the 'distribution of
'
Resolved, Thatfor the purpose of carrying into
effect the objects of this meeting, a committee of
twenty-five be appointed by the chair, who shall
arrange and carry Into operation the details of
this effort, and report from time to , time, at such
Meetings as may bo called, by them for the pm ,
pose
Resolved, That in the opinion of this mooting it
is the duty of our public authorities to exorcise
such a wise liberality in expenditures upon our
streets, docks, station houses, and other municipal
improvements, as shall give occupation to the un
employed poor of our city , believing that it is
better to maintain the independence 'and self
respect of the laboring man by ouch timely aid,
than'to degrade him into pauperism, and perhaps
crime, and thus not only add to the expense of
supporting our poor houses, asylums, and prisons,
but also inflict Incalculable injury upon the morale
and good order of the community.
llsThe objects of the meeting wore further discussed
by Rev. Messrs. Levy and Saunders, and N. B.
'Browne, P. Lowry, G. (11,Westoott, W. W. Keen,
V. W. Van Houton, It. M. Dechort, and others.
In the Course of a few minutes the handiome
amount of $2,000 was subscribed' upon the spot,
.and it was determined to , thice, energetic stops to
raise the large amount needed by the association.
It then adjourned to meet on Tuesday evening,
November 10, at the same place.
Police Items,—During the month of 0nt0ber,..1731
ber,..1731 persons were arrested throughout the
consolidated city, with the exception of the Thir
teenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth districts, which
constitute the rural districts. The arrests were
divided among the different districts as follows
Districts. Priionere. Districts. Prisoners.
...IS]. 9
—lBl 10 194
...101 11 155
~.102 12 132
.148 10 121
94 Reserved Corps 101
87
. .......
08 17x1
The greater portion of these arrests wore for
drunkenness and disorderly , conduct.
At a very early hour on Saturday morning, two
mon went to the Broad street House, on Broad
street, near Vino, and engaged lodgings Shortly
after they bad retired to their room, a cry was
raised that two persons, lodging in another room,
bad been robbed. Their apartment bad boon
entered, and three gold watches, a silver watch,
twelve dollars in money, and a set of gold studs
and sleeve buttons, were carried off. Suspicion
'fell upon the two strangers who .had taken lodg
lags, pad their room was visiltd. The two men
.eapressed a perfect willingneasto be Bearded, and'
• a strict scritinywas made 'in their room. without
-avail. The twain then. went down stairs with the
barkeeper, end while the attention of the latter
was called away, the 'strangers took their de
parture, carrying with them, as it was afterwards
ascertained, a portion of the plunder which they
bad thrown out of a window. One of the watches
was subseplantly found, with the fragments of
nnotherf lying in - Broad street, where they had
been thrown by the thieves.
Befpre Alderman Eneu, on Saturday, Theodore
Voirtinthis was ithargod with lobbing the dwelling
of Charles Collins, at the southwest, corner of Fif
teenth and Cherry streets, on the day of the recent.
firol.lloll'i parade. The articles stolen consisted of
sundry pieces of gold coin, one gold watch-key, a
silk dress, ,to, Pagundus wee arrested by . Officer
,Trafts ; ard committed to await a further nearing
on Wednesday.
'Abont 12 o'clock, on Saturday night, Officer
Burgett .was attacked at Fourth and Master
streets, by three !pen, and most shamefully beaten.
Tem of the assailants, named John Kelly and John
Agnew, were arrested, mid held in $1,500 bail
by Alderman Ihylin, to answer at court.
At 121 o'clock, on Saturday night, a fight oc•
currod near Phillip and Jefferson streets, between
the adherents of the Taylor Bose and Protection
Ilea and Ladder Companies, during which stones
and bricks were thrown in 'great profusion. Thos.
Armstrong, the director of the Taylor Mose, and
Wm Russell; were arrested:and hold to bail by Ald.
Devlin. There wore nineteen arrests made in the
'Soienteonth ward during Saturday night, and nine.
teen persons accommodated with lodgings at the
station-hi:Mee. In the Ninth ward no arrest of
penance were made. In fact, the 'Sixth polies
district, comprising the Ninth and Tenth wards,' is
One or the most orderly in the city. •
At a late hour on Satnrday night Wm. Buck
and Win. Chester 'entered a lager beer saloon in
Fourth street, eboye Franklin avenue, and after
refusing to pay for what they drank, amused them.
Polies by breaking ip the windows of the establish
ment. They were arrested by Officers Conway and
Ackley, and taken before Alderman Devlin, who
held them to answer at court. ,
Mailers of the Nary Yard.—No are inform
ed that Mr. Campbell, master-laborer at our navy
yard; will give employment to-day to fifty laborers.
This la a preparatory movement to the commence
ment of the building of one of our new national
sloops.of•war.
The United States osastinfateamer "Walker" is
now on the dry dock, and will be completely over
hauled in her wood-work. Her boilers were
thoroughly repaired at Messrs. lteaney, Keane d
Co.'s, Kensington.
The United states sloop-of-war "Jpmestown"
will be Wien off the dock during the present week,
having undergone material and important repairs.
Her wren are nearly all on board, and site can be
placed ill readness for sea at the earliest moment.
To-morroi the United States steamer Rini:trick,
bailt at the Philadelphia navy yard, will mite a
trial trip. and leave in a few days for California.
for machinery was built In Now Yurk. Com
mander John De Camp has been ordered to her, '
. Mr. Henry Hoover, the master carpenter of the
yard, is entitled to mudh credit for the manner in
'which the wood Work of this vessel has been an.
plated. Wo learn that she will proceed to New
York, and there probably 110 fitted out. Mr. Win
ed», the:chief engineer, goes to California on
beard the Shubriek.' ' .
Ace-idol/J.—A boy, 'named Ambrose, was
run over in the Ridge avenue, below Parrish
street, on Saturday afternoon, by Jacob' Peters'
reed wagon. The wagon was loods4 with oorn,
arta the goy was badly NOW. Us was qouyeyed
to his boons iu Ninoteprith street, beipw qirard
avenue,
On Saturday afternoon Andrew Fleming, while
gaining at Rod Bank, had throe fingers of his left
hand blown off, by the bursting of his gun. lie
was brought to this city and taken to the iNinnityl
mitt Hospital. The injured man has a family re
siding in Christian street, near Thirteenth.
Frank Brower, a boy, had a thumb taken off by
a circular saw, at a turning establishMent,No. 311
Race street, on Saturday afternoon. He was taken
to the hospital.
About eight p'elook'Op Saturday everting a fluid
*eiplOded thp dwelling of Taylor,
Wharton strbet, , ahove Fourth: 4 child, eleven
years otat berned•
Woman's industrial Asseoialion• — Another
meeting In favor of this Assoolation to rafts money
to send laboring women, out of employment, to
the West, was held on Saturday evening, at Cen
tral Hall, Kensington. The room was well filled
with both sexes. Dr. Henry Wadsworth presided,
and Mr. A. Flanders noted as secretary. Speeches
wore made by Messrs. D. B. Canfield, J. M.
plpirO, John Samuel, the piesident, and others
An association was Oro toned, and 091i l littFes
appointed to further the object of this noble enter
prise. Whereupon .the meeting adjourned until
Wednesday evening when the °dicers of the 88N:r
-elation will bo appointed On Tuesday evening a
meeting for the same purpose will be held in Me
chanics Hall, Northern Liberties.
Xorthern Horne for Friendless
,Childeen.—
ks reigitutotl of tbo Fleeting to be held
ja ml the above ev f mtp g , at
alt-past seven o'clock, iu , Connertllall, Chestnut
street, above Twelfth. Ilev. (*tries Wadsworth,
Rev. John Chambers, Rev. /liugston Goddard, and
RAIL Alfred ()pokiness, will dellVer addressee.
Fire in Chestiut Slreet.—Considerable ex
citement was caused at II o'clock on Saturday
night by the breaking out of a are in the Arcade,
Chestnut street, above Sixth. The fire communi
cated from a floe to a girder in the cast avenue,
and gave the firemen much trouble before it could
be reached.
4 Gallant 4cl.—On Saturday afternoon a
bqy abopt el yep mu y t ago ro.ll °Y°o°" 4 at
Arcli'stroot arr. tray going down 'the
third thee, b fortailatei ' y
ho eau& held of a
rope. A gentletpan, nanted Minato Einider,lampad
overboard apd rescued 'him from a watery grace.
Ctpneert, Hall was crowded op Tuesday even
ing to listen 'to the poem of " Hard Tildes," by
Park Betklarilin:4 lie hat consented to repast the
looter's on Tuesday opening Pef.t.
Vessels in Por/.---There were in port yester
day three atcamshtps, eighteen ships, nineteen
barium!, nineteen hr%s, and tvientrtieesphonera
Succeisful dpplication of a New Railroad 1 BY THE- P
ILOT LINE.
Signal—An Interesting Occasion.-04 Saturday
Afternoon a number of solentific gentlemen, resi
dents of this eity, assembled at the Market-street
crossing on the Camden and Atlantic Railroad, for
the purpose of witnessing the first experiments
made with the Railroad Signal, invented by Mr.
Jacob Bugger, for the prevention of accidents at
drawbridges, crossings of highways, switches and'
curves - . A number of gentlemen, largely interest
ed in the different railroad enterprises of our
country, were present, and none of them hesitated
to express their unqualified approbation of this
most meritorious invention. This signal is entire
ly self-acting, not dependent upon human agency,
or the irregularity of time-pieces. It signalizes
only when "all's right." When there is danger
ahead no signal can be given, and the engineer
has to come to a full stop to ascertain the cause.
This signal, as we saw when the train of cars
passed over the road, on Saturday afternoon, ope
rates as follows: At any desirable distance from
the'bridge, switch, or crossing, two cams are slightly
projecting above the rails; every wheel passing
over the cams presses them down on a rock-shaft,
with an arm to which a rod is attached, reaching
to the place of danger; the pressure of the cams
on the shaft moves the rod which causes the ring
ing of a bell, or gong, at the place of danger, giv
ing notice of the approaching train; at the same
time, .and by the same operation, another bell or
gong
is rung b e sid e the passing train, insuring the
engineer and passengers that notice has beengi von
at the place of danger, and that" all's right." Tho
apparatus is so arranged that one boll cannot ring
without the other. In moving from the bridge,
switch, or crossing, neither bell can ring.
This signal at once by a simple process does
away with the liability to accident by reason of
neglect By its construction it is impossible that a
drawbridge can be opened or a switch turned
without notice being given. There can be no
neglect, as it is not by human agency. If mali
cious persons should injure the machine, then the
signal will not strike, and the train will at once
stop. Tho cost of its construction Is very slight.
At the suggestion of Mr. Charles IC. Landis, a
gentleman who has for a number of years been
foremost in various scientific enterprises, and
whose numerous contributions to the cause of gene
ral railroad improvements have associated his
name with many most deserving inventions, the
directors of the Camden k Atlantic Railroad were
induced to place this 'Signal at various stations
upon their road. Mr. Marshall, the superintendent
of the road, speaks of the invention as one of the
most practical and important in its bearing and
results that he has ever heard of. We doubt not
that ere long:tbe signal will be introduced on
most or the 'principal railroads of the United
States.
Probably, in the course of a week or two, another
public exhibition of the groat utility of this inven
tion will be given. In the moan time, the resi
dents of Camden and of this city can embrace the
opportunity of witnessing its operation at any
time a train Is passing on the road. When we re
ileot upon the numerous beneficial results which
must directly come from an invention of this
character, upon the thousands and tensor thousands
of dollars that may thereby be saved, and, moro
than all, upon the additional guarantee for the
safety of human life, which it undoubtedly bestows,
we are free to state, that we regard the introduc
tion of this railroad signal as one of the most im
'portant of modern humanitarian acts.
' 7'el,egraph Statistics .—The following are the
statistics of the local telegraph for the past month:
South Section.—Messages sent, 328 ; messages
received, 383 ; total, 691.
Lost ohildren.—Boys, 72 ; girls, 39 ; total, 111.
Strayed horses and wagons.—Strayed horses and
wagons, 37 ; strayed horses, 29 ; total, 66.
, Cows, 12.
Coroner notified, 17.
Miscellaneous messages, 181.
North-east.—Messages sent, 276; messages re
ceived, 315; total, Md.
Lost Children.—Boys, 63; girls, 41 ; total, 104.
Strayed Horses and Wagons.—Horses and wa
gons, 28 ; Horses, 11 ; total 39.
Cows, 17.
Coroner notified 11.
Miscellaneous niessages, 155.
.NOrth-lvest.—Messages sent, 142 ; messages re
ceived, 192 •, total, 334.
Lost obildren.—Boys; 36 ; girls, 18 ; total, 54.
' Strayed horses and wagons.—liorses and wagons,
13 ; horses, 5 ; total, 18.
Cows, 7.
Coroner notified, S.
Miscellaneous messages, 188.
Coroner's Inguests.—Coroner Dolavaa was
summoned yesterday to bold au inquest on the
body of a colored woman who died suddenly at We.
16 IVaehington &treat; on the body of a ohild
named Franey, adz weeks of ago, who was found
dead in bed, having been overlaid, at the corner
of Frankihrd Road and Norris streets, and also on
the body of a ohild in the t3eventeenth ward, who
died while in convulsions. Verdicts in accordance
with the facts were rendered'in each of these oases.
New Panoramas.—On Saturday we were
favored, at 110 South Third street, with a private
and particular view of Mr. Garrlngton's beautiful
and characteristic panoramas, which will soon be
exhibited to the public. One of these represents
the life and death of Dr. Burden. The other
shows a consecutive series of scenes illustrative of
the private life of Napoleon I. Mr. Harrington's
descriptions, biographical and historical, are at
once graphic and eloquent.
Robbery.—During Saturday night the tailor
store. of George Busby, ,Spring Garden street,
above Tenth, was entered and robbed of 3500
worth of clothes.
The Rittenhouse Library, we aro gratified
to learn, is in a flourishing condition. This is a
very respectable literary organisation, composed
of a large number of /young men.
The value of the Exports from Philadelphia
to foreign ports, during the past two weeks, was
UAW..
The Boller Explosion at Providence,
The Providence papors contain full am/aunts of
the boiler explosion In the India Rubber works of
Nath. Hayward, on Thursday morning. The Jour
nal says :
Such was the force of the explosion that the
boller,'weighing some four tons, was thrown out,
carrying with It the wall of the building, bitting
and cutting off an elm tree nine inches in diameter,
and breaking away the aide of a house apposite,
and not expending Its full three against these obsta•
clew, it continued some three hundred feet along
the street, and there fell, a part of it red hot when
it struck the ground.
The engine had been started about twenty min
utes before the explosion. The ashes, and coal,
and scalding steam, were thrown into all parts of
the building, and the whole was almost instantly
enveloped in Raines. The destruction of the works
is complete, and a pile of ruins is all that remains.
The counting room, which is separate, was little in
jured, except by water.
The works oonisted of five buildings beside the
counting-meow. Tboy were all connected the
older portions were built of wood and throe stories
high, and the additions were of brick and stone
four or Ave stories high, covering In all eighteen
or twenty thousand feet of land.
There were over two hundred persons employed
in the works, more than half of them females. At
Gist it was supposed that the stairs had been sepa
rated from the portions of the buildings in which
the greater part of the people wore at work. A
terrible panto ensued, and It was with difficulty
that the girls could be restrained from throwing
themselves out of the windows. Some of them
jumped down upon a abed, and were removed from
that by ladders i others went down by the ohaini
Used in heisting goods. In this way some of them
sustained trifling Injuries, and a few of them were
hurt more seriously, but none of them, it is hoped,
dangerously,
Mr. F. E. Ewes, the superintendent of the shoe
department, was badly scalded and wounded. At
the time of the explosion he was In his room over
the boiler room. Ills first knowledge sf the disas•
for was his finding himself sinking. Presently his
downward motion was partially arrested He was
blinded and covered with lime bricks and mortar.
Here ho supposed that he received his burns and
wounds on his face and arms. On his first real
consciousness, he found himself on the lower story
among the ruins. His escape was almost miracti•
lons.
Elijah Ormsbee, the engineer, was blown out
with the boiler. Ile was covered with brink and
rubbish to the depth, ef eighteen inches. His log
was broken, his wrist and face were cut, his back
badly scalded; and it is not certain if ho will
survive all these injuries, but Dr. Miller hopes he
will.
Dr. Ifartsborn sold the establishment two years
ago for $Bl,OOO The land was veined at $17,000.
The buildings and machinery were probably worth
about 450,000. There was a large quantity of
manufactured and unmanuthotured stook on hand,
of which it is not possible to get an estimate, as
Mr. Bayward is at his residence in Colchester.
It was insured in New York, and perhaps part
ly in Connecticut. The insurance Is stated at
$BO,OOO. But the exact amount could not be as
certained.. ,
The Hop Iron Foundry, situated next to the
works, on Eddy street, was at one time on fire,
and only eared by the greatest efforts of the fire
men.
The house which the boiler struck was °coupled
by Michael Drury and Michael U. Melaw!nu in
the ppperstery, and by 40111e1 Faillkuor and Mrs.
Catherine lie , troy "in the hascrueut. Mrs Faulk
ner wds sitting in si rocking chair near the window
with her child in her arms when the explosion took
place, The boiler passed through the side of the
house, and took the rockers from the chair in which
Mrs. Faulkner was sitting, who, beside being as
roughly unseated, received a few bruises from the
splinters and pieces of wood. Mr. Meawinn's
mother and sister, who wore in the room overhead,
had just finished breakfast, and were preparing for
washing, when the boiler carried away the whole
front side of tho room, demolishing the closet, its
contents, sink, clock, looklog-glass, wash-boiler,
teakettle, and choirs, leaving the stove the only
whole aitiole in the room. Large crooks were
made in the floor, and the building was slightly
thrived froni its foundation. The plasterlog was
Shaker down with web force in the lower story as
to create quite a, bruise en Nllen ljafferlu'a face.
no strictures onvored with the bricks and splin
ters, all the way from the works to the place where
the boiler fell. One little girl was knocked down
in the street by the flying bricks. Several person,
saw the boiler as it flew up the street, and there
wore some narrow escapes of persons passing.
There seems to be no doubt among experts that
the explosion was caused by the water getting out
of floe boiler, and admission puld upon the
hooted iron. The appearanae of the boiler inside,
and of the fracture, gives undoubted evidence of
this. There wore five boilers, three of them only
in use, and it is possible that the water connection
with the exploded boiler was impeded by sad Iment.
MATTERS AND THINGS IN NEW TORE.
[From the New York Herald of yeaterdayl
The trial et De Cpeyd fpr the murder of Os
citr grew entltienoc y Wortley before the
ihnon cottpty) W. 4.) Courtof Oyer and Terminer.
Dr. Voriok, who was on the et and the precious
evening, woe cross-examined at considerable
length by the prosecution. Mr Andrew Terry tes
tified to the facts of De Cueva's daring De Granval
out to fight on the evening of the affray, and to
the latter haying applied several insulting remarks
to him. Mr. Mclntyre Henderson, John D. Cox,
and John Vroom were examined to show that
pistols had exploded in a number of instances,
when not cocked, by being dropped,
Several testified to the goodlcharamor of deceased
for painfulness. The District Attorney, Mr. J.
rl Litton. sumnined up the easo for the prosecution
in the afternoon, occupying three hours and a half,
When thb ease was adjourned to Monday, when the
summing up of the remaining counsel will continue.
It is ear:toted, thut there liritt be a large attendance
to hear the Hon. Dayton, the Atter.
nay Gliineral of the State oP New Jersey, who con
cludes the sumpiing up for the proseuttun.
Thomas Canners, the man who tqas so aeverety
beaten - at the CIO Hall, o G Friday afternom tie
now abevalescent.' 11r. Ray, or the New 'rock
hospital, thinss his patieut will be cetirely re
covereil ip less hikaA a week. yesterday Veneers
Wits ante with big Wend*,
LETTER FROM NEW:YORK
(Correspondence of The Press ;
Naw YORK, OA. 31 ,1857-5.20, FM.
Saletrday Is generally a dull business day, and
this tlrty is no exception to the rule. A few con
fidingindividuale, of sanguine temperaments, say
that the 'Money market is " easier and gradually
recovering," but the matter-of-feet persons whom
I meet all concur in stating that things ere
quite as tight as ever. Prime "abort paper"
wont a trifle easier r at the banks yesterday,And a
very limited amount .of,,relief_ was eatepdad to
,a
few importers, but I hardly look for anything but
a further contraction In leans inhienday's bank
statement. At the discount brokers little is do.
ing. Those who wanted 'money most urgently
to make their bank settlements, and 'save their
names from protest, have, in very many instance&
got extensions, which serve for the moment, and
they need not, suffer the terrible shaves exacted by
all money dealers; and those who are really
solvent. bat need a little accommodation " to get
along," will not submit to the extortion of these,
cormorants. Rates nominally are the same; froM
two to ten per cent. a month. Domestic exchange
is still very much depressed, particularly South
and West, and the rates vary from fifteen to five
per cent. Gold ranges from par to 1 per cent.
prroium. Foreign exchange Is better, and those
who have money to remitpay 105 a 1071 for sixty
days sterling, and 108 4108: for the drafts accepted
by the Bank of England, brought here by the
Persia.
The most cheering fact to be noticed here is the
increased activity, within a few days, in the grain
and flour marks, and the large linsinbas done for
export. Here is the only source of real relief to
which we can confidently look, as hence only
can we get the means to pay our debts and shake
off the initinitous despotism of the bank man
agers. It is impossible to recur too often to the
ruin that these men have wrought. Bard as is the
lesson, it should be understood and remembered
by the entire community, in order that means may
be taken to prevent the recurrence of similar
disasters. On their. Bth of August last the city
banks bed expanded their loans to 8122,077,252.
They commenced contracting on the 15th, and the
Mowing table shows how they have continue&
that policy. It must by seen to lie believed: i.
Contraction for the week ending 'Aug. 15, ' , $235,720
Do do • " 22,: ' 1,101,890
Do do 41 29, ' - 3,550,663
Do do Sept. 5, 4,987,554
Do do t , 12, 2,235,793
Do ,lo ~ 19, 1,204,151
Do do it w„, 985,988
Do do Oet. 3, 1,855,934
Do . do ~ 10, 4,017,430
Do do o 17, 4,671,743
$24;83 . 1,42a
I believe history does not record anything_like•
this financial coup of our bank managers. They
had just sense enough to see that their extension
at the time they ought to, Imre kept sate was ex
orbitant folly, because the legitimate interests of
trade and commerce did not require -44 and in ,
stead of courageously meeting the danger, and
quelling the panic by bold, generous, and united
action, they preolpitated the panic by theirfrantie
efforts to save their own assets. They'. beld'quito
enough of specie to redeem their eiroulation...!"tiff
run could have affected them so long as they re
tained the confidence of their depositors; but they
made these—their best frientheir bitterest
enemies. Deposits were withdrawn, and aspen:
eion ensued. Suspension for what? "To enable
us," said the bank directors, "to extend accom
modation' to those who need it, without injuring
ourselves." The first week after this act, and the
promise of "accommodation." shows a contraction
-THREE YILLIOXI3 ASD A HALF The United Matra
Economist of this week aitys The hanks- have
destroyed mercantile credit, made the assets of
merchants unavailable, and destroyed ability to
meet obligations. They have stopped the circula
tion of capital, and the availability of credit, and
then seem surprised that their debtors cannot pay,
and that their depositors lose confidence." The firm
of Winslow, Lanier, es Co. who failed fortnight
ago, have resumed payment, having settled every
thing in fall. The exports of specie during the
week, from this port, are as follows:
The Troy City Bank, which suspended business
on the 23d, resumed yesterday. The Metropolitan
Bank, which threwout the notes of the Troy City
Bank, has announced that they will now be re
ceived on deposit as before. Much indignation is
felt, and not unreasonably, at the declaration of
dividecds by oiir suspended, otherwise insolyent
banks. The American Exchange-Bank takes
credit for its self-denial, in only deoliring
a dividend of three per cent. The old maxim,
" be just before you are generous," i 9 very truly
applied to this declaration. It is very,reasonably
asked what right institutions that cannot, or
will not, pay their debts, have to share the .profits
of their fraud amongst their stockholders. If a
private individual wore to fail, or " suspend," and
appropriate a portion of his assets to his own pri=
vote use, ho wopld probably become acquainted
with the inside of the Btate'l 'prison. But tlka
banks of New York are not bound, by such vulgar
obligations. Law and common decency are only
to bind the ignobile vulgus, not the aristocrats
of the bank parlors.
The business of the clearing house to-day was
as follows: clearings, $9,287,264 57; balanees
paid in coin, $880,416 64. The east transactions-,
of the Sub-Treasury were: receipts, $64,126 47;
payments, $154,508 58; balance, $5,41)3.396 54.
The custom heal) receipts for duties were $3l,
234 11.
The export of United
port for the week was as
'Co Liverpool .....8670.725
London. 155,026
Cowes 25,829
Glasgow 34,953
Havre . 3,960
Cette 15,475
Cadiz 14,272
Lisbon 2 10,535
Gibraltar , 20,145
Hamburg /77 2C3 I
Bremen 48,772
Antwerp
244,317
Total
.totes produce frOm this
follows • ' -
I To Mexico ...... :.1133,924
Brull 12,443
ArgeLtlne Bap. 5,707
Chill 11,174
I Br. Guiana .... 24,276
Br. Australia., 198,231
B. N o: Oolo's 29,723
Br. W. Indies.. 14,026
Danish W. In ( 27,00 i
Porto Ri - 40,4611
, Cuba 17,347-
The following table will 'thew the exports - ef
the five principal staple artlolea for thelreek and
year
1858. 1657.
Week ending Oet. 29. Anent. Value. Am'nt, Valie:
Cotton, bales 1,352 971,119 5,639 -$257,293
Flour, bble .48,019 316,745' 31,432 .1(61,45
Corn Meal , bb1e..... 1,063 3,409 310 1,
Wheat, buah 361,864 641,917 153,393 179,6 1
Corn, bush 39,626 29,625 27,331 ,19,541
Beef, bble. and toe_ 590 6,619 726 12,681
Pork, bbis. and tee.. 1,000 20,950 321 2,545
.... 909,717 .... 662,490
Decrease of the week eseompared with that of
1856 $331,227
After the adjournment of the hoard the followlni ease
were made at auction by 8. Draper: .
$3,000 Miesouri 0 per cent. bonds. Int. added 68
$4,000 Milwaukee and Horleou B'a
50 shares People's Dank 00
10 do Artisaus' Bank
MI do New York Life Ins and Trust Co
20 do United States Vire Inn. Co
40 do New World Me Inc C 0...
Also, the following by Adrian 11. Muller:
$3,000 Syracuse, Binghaniton, and N Y Rit. Flat 27
40 shares Staten Inland and New York Ferry Co.— 10
Also, the following by Albert li. Nicolay
01,000 Tennessee 6s Int. added 717(
$14,000 Milwaukee and Beloit Is do al
$l,OOO Missouri Cs do 70
$l,OOO Milwaukee and Iloricon Ss • do 37
!1,000 Vir g inia ttor do 780
10 shares Importers' sod Traders+ Bank
10 do l'henlx Fira los
20 do Excelsior Tao. Co
20 do Commerclol Inn. Co
20 do Altos Ins. Co
20 do II roma,' Steam Sugar Refllling CO
The Stock Market was much more irregular to
day. At first board Now York Central closed at
Erie 121, Reading at 291, Illinois Central at
81, Chicago and Rook Island at 66, and Galena
and Chicago at 64. New York State 6's of 1873
sold at 1011, do do 65 at 1001, Missouri 6'e at 69,
and Ohio 6's at 94.
At the second board prloes Improved. Erie closed
at 131, Reading at 36, Chicago and Rock Island at
67, Panama at 72, Galena and Chicago at 644, and
Michigan Southern at 12. The tone of the market
at the close was buoyant. Missouri B's fell o 6;.
Report of specie exported from the Port of New
York, froir, tho 2Gth to the Slat Oetobor, 1857, in
clusive : •
Oct. 27, st'r Black Warrior, Marano, Doubloons 13;600
" u Asta, Liverpool, Eng. 0& 8 98.276
Kangaroo, Am. Geld.. 9,630
Total for the week.
Preelouily reported
833,333,232
30,864,364
25,606 278
33,663:140
t),066,733
Total since January Id..
Same time in 1856
II I, 1856
If lc 1854
1853
if 1862
NEW YORK STOCK WWII
HIRST
1000 N Y Vs es '76 ung
4000 do 102
7600 N Y We es '65 1001(
LYAMOdiIo 0t 'BO 94
MA Virginia e's 79
15000 Missouri 89
1000 Oal 8 Is 'TS 67
1000 N Y Can Rea 80
600 N Y Can It 7a 90
1000 Erie It con to '7128
1000 111 Can bda 69
3500 do 09
6000 do 83 617 i
3000 do 67.0
8000 do 67%
4000 Lite&Mil L U 14 26
70 Pacific 3188 Pu 75
6 do 741(
1000 LaO & 6l Ist m b 65
96 Dal Or 110100 64%
5 do 94
60 Cumbd Coal
100 do 6%
5 Mch So &N I R 11
12 do //X
00 WA 8 & la p s 21%
119 do 25
EMI Panama R 71%
200 do 500 73 } (
10 B er, Quincy R 66
40 LaCrosse k Mit R 6
23.030,802
ANGZ BALM, Oetober
HOARD.
210 II Cen 6IX
100 do 4G sag
200 do -64 x
80 do -
200 do 63 64
60 do 41 MY.
WO do bOO
25 do 61X
WO Erie R R 12
100 do 40 125;
1030 do 4 13x
-100 Beading R o SOll
100 do e 30
350 do asg
100 do rank 23
100 do c 29 •
100 do x 3 29
600 do AO 28),
131 do c 29X
50 111 Cen It c 81
Oal & Ohio R 8,0
35001 e,& T 96
20200/A4ll4ll ed
aa
66 do 4 661 X
100 do s6O 65
100 do 40 65X
100 do s6O 65
50 do 45 66
18 MU & Mix It 19X
50 do 20
a N Jersey R 103
BOARD.
500 Rrio R 230 13
200 do 1334
100 do '2lO 13S
100 do b 7 13k
200 do 121 i
150 Harlem ER 7
5 Ode R R 67
50 Reading II 110 32
60 do 2I 341
200 4c, sog
10Q ,112 90,4
100 do 23 30
200 do 20
21 Mialt Bonthena R 12
6000 Ithsourl Os GIN
10000 N Y SVe 5s '53 fq
2000 Cal St'a 3 ;il LT
200 ' 9 'pun to 40 74
'IWO een R b b 430 70
2000 do 683
16000 do 68%
2000 Harlem 10 letm 61
2000 T 2, AI tld on 40
25 Imp& Trad's Bk 65
100 Comb Coal 6X
100 do stt , y n
'2O Gal & 911‘,1 C 041(
ipo °t1•& ryON 27,1 i
70b1 Panama lit 71
MARKETS —Agars are firmer for Pots, with
sales of 25 bbls at $7.25 and 20 bbls Pearls at
$0.50.
BRSADSTUFI , 9.—State and Western Flour is
firmer, with a good trade demand ; we quote the
advance on shipping brands at 10a15e per isbd with
the remark that shippers do not Recede to the de
mands of holders, and the market closed quietly ;
the calm are 17,000 Ws (including 6,000 bbls sold
yesterday after. 'Change, and not before reported),
at $4,85a55 for common to good State, $5.1045.25
for extra State, $4.8545 for common to good Michi—
gen, Indiana, Ohio, lowa, Ao., and $5.05a4 for
extra do; Ohio round-hoop extra brands arequoted
at $5 5046.
Southern Flour is more nothre at unchanged
prices,
w ith ~,,des of 2,000 bbls at $5.25c55.410 for
mixed M rod brands of Baltimore, Alexandria,
*)r fav
tieorge o re rit wn e:
fri:nny and
extrarederieksburg, brands
a SS.SOaST
c., and
devsma
$8 15 for super and fanny Blehmosd ( m a i m and
90.5,540.0 5 for extra brands do.
C a nadian tour In flrnier for extra, witiCaalea of
),.1,00 barrels et 95.9540.75 lb, the range of extra
brands, meetly at 54
Rya flour is selling in Entail lots at 55.254 , 150
for she range of Sue and superfine.
Corn meal is nominal. We quote Jersey at $ 3 . 15
4 3 23; Brandywine, $3.75.
Wheat is Anne; for common grader of Western.
The sales inehide i,eott red:S*4l4li at
125a130o; 700 white Southern, 140a145e; 3.200
lianingi3cl Southern, 90a05e ; 3.200 Chicago ' , tin.
1014104 e; 3,009 whit et SUcli ans. 1241; 4-000 - white
Kentucky. 1506 ;' add 3'.060 white Canadian;
Rye i e wyro „quiet-14.74 8 0e km: 4"V and
Northern.
Oats are lower. We finot.q:33a37 for Southern,
15e40 fur 3er5ey,'46114.9' for State: and 43445 for
Western. '
Corn le firmer, will) . sales t4lls.ooolmshets mixed =
Western at 7311745, ~osing - ,
COT rox.—The market is quiet, with little offering:
Pno vt ewe s—The pork market_ iswithont mate
rial shave ; thidemand iiquite light;et tile trade
are baying only to supply- their most
_preadult --
wants ; the sales are 475 bble at $201.120.25 for
mess, and $16416`5 for prime, the otataide prices
generally asked at the close. Dressed hogs an
Erin at 7143 e. -Beef is• unsettled. with sales of
225 bbl. (including 15 bbls new Ohio at $l5) at
,9aslo 50 for country mess, $6 501e5T 50 1.0 r 00101 h7
prime, 510 50a512.0 for repacked Western, and
$l2 50a513.50 for extra mem Beef hams are
steady, with sales of 70 bbls at $14418: Bacon is
dull ; 17 blids Western were sold st 124a13e. Cat
meats are entirely nominal Lard is steady, with
melee of 200 tee and bble at leasl3e ; we understand
that 1.400 pkgs lard, which were recently returned -
frourßtrroptk arernow being rstbipped bask again, • -
tasking their IWO trip across the Atlantic. Butter.
and Aneselin,bnibanged. , I 1
lYtrisKny-74'sles,oc 7,0 bids Jape) , at 21 cents,
and 200 bbfa Stabs St 211 cents : cash. •
,M9NEY MARKET.
PHILADELPHIA. October M. 185 T
The impression appears to grow and find favor
with business men that we hero passed the culmi
pating point of the revulsion, aid that we are al
ready entered upon a season, perhaps of slow, but
certainly of progressive improvement. Ire this,
stage of commercial affairs we ebsil find :tha,ll*l-• -
fit of the happy condition of our country, at peace- -
and with plenty of food, healthy, and producing
every necessary within its herders, its people
ifiduetrions, free, and enlightened. Our citizens
possess an inherent power of recuperation greater
th an that of any other people in the world, ani
witl.ropidly resume their actual operations, upon.
move just, and safe and etrefulptinciples, and nen.
seriuently bring the welfare and prosperity_of the
whole country to a higher - pitch than ever. We
have 'the advantage over England that we ma,
not. dependent upon any one great brands of
nsitional industry for prosperity, neither- are we -
shoring under heavy national indebtedness,
or' the crushing burden of -expensive ware.—
Nor have we any considerable portion of our pea.
ple. engaged in parsuits,under which industry
produceSchleflY articles _ :of luxury, for which, in
times of distress r there is ; no , market,
„se is the,
ease in Prance, nor does -a ibiaanial here •
mein - resolution: - al - Irdoes"tittref - - We'll:7W' -
, not governed by a rapacious and macro
, pitons despot, - whose need: of money. and
of' occupation' for the eat-throati in
:Vice, may le:ld,hlui to plunge rte into a cola
! leas war ; nor yet are we so' near neighbors to
such a ?Mar is to have cause to dread that we
may be the victim of 'hie repseity., The, people of
Europe, where the tiresome no lambent than they.
haverheiiiTtirre;`lll7ol4iitiorrht dfoidlithattlind - -
evils which we dream yak of-J r evils the fear of
which sits like s nightmare_ open their spirits,
weighing; theni down 'to an-grief •eitimt slat
yiesrs after we shall bare - forgotten our distress
„except as a matter ofidstoiy, they will bo but just
- beginning to
,emerge ,fient under blighting
shadow.,. - •• -
We lettrn that the Philadelphia Bank heads-.
cided to accept the 'provisions 'of the Relief Law;
and the"other banks; withill a week, will nearly.
all follow the example. Our buoinest men Rita*
hopefully of the heavy Notromber payments being,
made without any further serious Albin* Thin
Is the dam on which, so much stress. hnt bean.,
laid by those who
,wsdiiinete aril aslilte obit** -
which could - not pandhly be ;'surmonnted, 'anti
which hat yriv.ented
,Many; Wlttr:odherwise
safe and able, from venturing to employ the, Means
in their bands for the hohneht 'Ormbn - in `business:
The' fourth' of November 'B&W passed, we. shall
breathe freely and"diteply,iartd. trade wil mew
again comneuceV.to'nitire: , -
The Norristown Register says thatidr..llonir'en!ii
iollipg-mill went into operation again last - Mani
day, and that Gen. Schall is waling nt-r angemeAti
to re-ooraznenee work also. -
The interest dne November ',on the headier die.,
Ilississippi Central Itaitroait Ootipaay; wO.l .ker
paid on presentation, after that dade,,,atike 3 allee
of Andrew. IL. GTOOD, No.- street, Now
York.
The interest on the hoods of the 'Evansville and
Crawfordsville Railroad, due lit of November will
be paid by the Farmers' Troia Company, New
York:
I'be Interval on the
-third mortgage and :eon
vertible bonds of, the: Hudson, River Railroad
Company, due November 1, will be 'paid otitis!
Office of the company, No. Cd, Warren street, 'New
York, today. - -
Messrs. Winslow, Lanier, & Co., "New 'York, will
pay to-day the balfieaily coupons on thefellow-
ing-nemed securities: City of Cleveland saran per
cent. bonds, issued- to tha Painesville and Ashts
bola 'Railroad; ge,n4...al:ltaaitidarriiinq
per cent. bonds. • ' -• ' •
Wa learn from the Village Record that eta
new " Bank of Chester Valley," at Coatesville,
will open for banking husiness on the .4tb. of No
vember. It ds not proposed to accept the Relief
Law, but to do badman as a specie-paying bank—
redeeming all its notes and deposits in [min. Spe
depmits
,Mf irredeemable. paper: wilt be else.
'received and paid out
For the week' ending Saturday last the -G ecigeri
, Creek Coal and Iroo,Companymhlppod from thei
mince 2,238 tons oestonaking for the Seat to tlisiV
time 68,706 tons; the •Hampeldre Coal mnd Iron "
Companryshipped for the same tinier 347 tans, and
for the year 47.319 tons; and the Franklin mines
shipped fir the week 167 tons.
il" 141
• [Prom the Warren Ledger, Oct. Nth.] 2 - '
' A His Feast= is Mossy r:am —a - projeci
recently been set en foot by - several of the Wadi*
bankers banters In Philadelphia, which, if fairly andL
properly carried out. must be of great advantage to
the business interests of this Commonwealth. It is
proposed to adopt a plan whereby the bills of all the
country banks will be made bankable in Philadelphia,
and consequently current funds 'all over the State, which
has net been the case here totem. Before the present •
financial Pressure, money which was permit Pittsburgh
and west of the moturtaina,was at &discount of from me
ta two per cent. in Philadelphia, and what was known,
as ti•antorting. was sontinuallylept up. The'eflbct or
thin system of warring was to- threw back tipm the
eountry banks whatever of their circulatleat its4htreachl
Philadelphia. Thus *merchant inight get a note dis
counted at some country bank., and intlitbe proceeds go
to the city to buy goods ! • he pays the city mechaat
with the country bank bills , and We city merchant
posits them with his bank the MUM day. The melt
day they are " assorted" and sent back to the
country bank, or at least carried to the agent
and redeemed. In this way the bills of our country
banks were deprives of a legitimate circulation '
anan ds each bank vas forted, to pay the gold on its bills long
before the discounted note of the mints; marebant,
would become due. livery one can readily Me that
while this system is continent, the etenttry,bnoks are
virtually placed under an endwise as soon as " halt
times t'L appraisal ; for they Mumot help their cutter:era
without leoparling their omit - existence. '
We hare not teen informal.. 'as to The derails of tie
Plan now under advisement bytbe Philadelphia banks
to conjunction with the country banks, but we
very safely Wert that one important feature in it
L the abandonment, on the part of the city bankers,
of the assorting business. Proper security will one
doubtedly be required, and country bank bills will has
received co deposit by the city haute, and again, 0 44
out on cheeks, thereby giving currency to coca
money, which must ho beneficial to the interior while.
It affords a safe circulating medium to the biases&
man in the city. Tar two months put the coun
try debtor could not remit told' creditor in the city
cams 'exchange could not be procured and Ile own bank
bills were not current except in his Immediate vicinity_
Business, consequently, beams almost completely
blocked, and the numerous suipenainas of city mer
chants attest that they were therreatest niferers by •
course of events which proceeded, in a great meassre,
from the system of assorting by city bankers.
When this new commercial era is fairly inaugurated,
country merchants In all parts of Pennsylvania will do
better to mete their purchases exclusively in ?bile-.
delphis. Money which they may receive from they,
customers wfil pay for their merchandise without mk t .
through the usual " shaving poem " that city brokers
are pleased to apply. In this section of the st a r,
merchants generally bay in New York, bat we, hope to
sea them go to Philadelphia hereafter. GiSoe,s, can b e
transports!, by railroad, from Philadelphia ;p Bnikirk,
for eighty-eight cents per one hundred 1.0.1.4 for trot
class i sisty.lre cute for second class, and fifty-three
cents for third dais.
181e126%
10
..101%
00'o100
81
$116¢;5
33,216,771
•
STAIXIIIIT or DRPOSIT3 .I.IID COIXI4I. AT TVs Wm or
, Tot VNITID Beans, dming **Youth
• of Oetobar t 1551,
Gold Naha. Deposited —limn Califoktde, 13,155:-
N 6 • other emcee, to gait deposits,
ss.ik,ots. •
- Si/ter Brllisn DwNratited —Trialndttig Myer pareha
ses, fOBO ISO; flpazdslt and Mexican fractionsof der
' tar, .refettod the enthuse for new teats, $0,200.
Total Oil Tar, 10380,510. Copper tents (0. S) received
for exchange for new cents, 045. Total deposits,
0,644,401.. ..
Gold—Coixage Extra:a—Double eagles, 110.652
pieces; value, 52.992,640. quarter eagles, MX* pieces;
'value; $164 500. Total number of pieces 157,0524 total
value, 52,762 140,
Salver—Coinage Eterutett—lLef dollars, 51 1 0,004
Talus,/$160,00d. quarter dollars, 2,400,000; Tales, sups
oou. IhU dimes. 70:1,000; value, 04,000. Three eeet
Piece-L:345,560, value, $7,350. Total nuoilocT of plecs_e,
5,135,000; value, 005,350.
Copper—Coinage Ezecuted-4,363 opo cen t s.
Rerapirmiarion.--Gold culnage,l2'l,o62 pieces; 'calve,
62.562.140. Silver Coinage, 1,7'4000 pieces; value,
fau5.250. Copper oolnage, 1,560,000 pieces • value,
515.000 Total numbez of pieces, 5,472,0&2; Sold val..,
15,703,090.
PHILAEELPHIA STOOK EXCHANGE rALES,
October 31, 1157.
Reported bq R. Man ly, * Jr., Sto, Brae', No Bo4 W alnut 3treo.
MST BOXED.
' 650 :kb Nay es 12..51 5 NEILS Is 313
1,000 City Coup 64...8.5,N, 10 do 36.4 i
503 City 6a....N0w.8.13 1 do 553‘
1, 0 00 City B. Ps. elm. TO}( ^5 Harrisburg R ..... 46
1,000 Corn & Sas a as 50 Reading R, 13 4-
, . 13 ...Al 10 do iaZ
NM NPs It ta.cash.4ss 10 do 153, - .;
1,000 do .... <3 45, 100 do .... s. - awn-15
.4.000 Penns .5s Edg 50 do e 5.15
4,000 do 803‘ 100 do bS.LS
2,000 do 50 E 10) Jo 135.11
1,000 do 803( 100 do ....aswa.l6lC
500 do PX a BMA' Mead 11 .....416.
250 do , a 50 Lehigh Zine 3r;
55 Norrist'n R 101.1.52 15 Girard Book I,',
IN 1.00 0 Nov lots 45.' ' 10 /arm 3t 31ro Sk ..'.62
0,,' Proud It - .38
BETWEED
•••- 80 1( 1
SECOND
Ifix4 Nana 5s
WO City R
1,000 N Pa R Ga..
600 P01103.5A.--
..= do
1,000 do
216.29 do ...
706.10 do ...
•
1,440 City 6n ..:§levr.SSX
603 do ..New.B3,‘
IFlarrieb'g A lots .td
100 Reading R.. 56.16 X
100 do .... 56.15 x
A.VTER
40 Lehigh Nay. 15.43 1 107,41 Pto3ll. 541.,......1.11
OLOBlliti P1116.3—D111.1. :. Y
Bid. Asked. 1 Bid. Asked
Pkiledel rt....70X 80 sa Nea 'Bit ) ...t 13X 14
RR....79X SO Woneellalm R 7 . U
~ New. •• . 6 SX 69 dt btuarll , 4sll • SI
Peoasylv f5'5....80 -80 x '6 „ d . 24 1, a _. 10
R. 76 ,6 C MX 1 I,orte Wand ...: 9 0
I do lsa Monde 10 62X r Irani Thenk.....418; ` .
do X 4%44 7Q , Lehigh Zinc..... -, 4
POOO/6 Ra.•,et API 35 U nion Canal ..... 3,, 4
Morrie eel,' poo 92 40 I New Creek
9eko;„ $O4 fid.... 00 ii 01X catawina It R...6 X'
7 34
” 004 7X 8 iii
s:lPextaa II
.19. s
y
.SOX
q 0
SO
Sch Nav pre11......13:7 - ,
SO do 1.5.13 x
10 do ..........13`
Poona 11 ...... ....,34,
3 do 35
5?. Guard Baalr.b.Swa. - 7
M do 7
20 do 7
I Bank of PtsLa....lo
3 do 10
1 do U