The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, November 03, 1857, Image 2

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TITMSD.EI6.IO9VEMOKR,I?-1-847.,
• 4 ,,
Irieb'Refanlker,l by t he
potti FAGS.' mi ce will
o'c li Au
I,lg iditorial)
-*forma
Goticarion watt *Ilk" kt - *We 'd4rolui
-...-.-t 4, _kintisofittwenni77 - wuzi !Ayr:TUE 0:1110*-
r,i.,411888 atatioilit,' ti ttlii:4;t4 to ovirtgo... "
tg the will of the-majority" " in replol7,- 1 7‘ 0 11°,
d ,: til which began with the' itfiebiration';tif, Pe' 413 ?:
", 4 ;vernbi-,and Secretary W;tlei,ftiipiiieptreeltit,
''
1'
ih'e 'ic * ' I ' 4l a ,should be wilted 'silt' if
1 4 ., , e ti e j' 0 , 11; tr i
, -, 1 :had never been - hel#.". 4 Tiie , n l 4 l i 11 1 3 Pili, 4 fk P.
'‘ie,.4341111'6," wiana,loo,;4if,ltii Stale Logien
',-;,, ~,, ' tr io a number.: of perseni,'w h o had , beets• d e ,
• : Ntied lie - the polio, but` Whb c id holding their
seats,.ln . '„tlinC4 4 4 44l i44:* 4 •lidttee, vd to
, , ~' .governor )111N11111 , and his , pary a omWilio
' '' Pri,LY IP 'e'4°,!l,r,.. then bi i dief: , VO 3, il/ Peeli .
i t
'•
,' Oil': bPo ,, FPl9P,Otullifl4o4o l9 kit an the
„,4y9o4.4tentleni Of ~the minority; talirirretit`
the', luenseratietc of- , GttiVeinok •.ornlti \ ' i tti
PPIAPYX4l,f;O6.Ol.l4ilr‘Aik4O,.3l4O., had ..409p,
OlMsei , Gaverner,at tlmpratitoui October eke
:. - tinti ! W 4 1 4 1 0 -1 1* , 'cvf, 5 sorad •OlOt thousand .
'•
'vOitif.: ; 11 i 3 O. POOttio,t4e ' "kAntikailis am pro,'
verbially , e , pitient sod Ibrbeiring yoothOi but
'- ' st i atobt°4 1 0 011."4 1 044:f.r:#4,•`!" ,, i th i p 4=' ,, .
•,;
,' ‘,: tiii:WeivkaAr* . of iiatk<to:ihol overl.
throw of the vital principle' Of, flee'
, b a 4 -. velment ,-1-;Eatnely;•)'iltrets , ' , 4nif ', totrotittr•
iirsiitp ,,,, Tri 4-- Ivipod ., ol pliwpit li4Ati
':: - : " ,bitaiii.i,it:ii tikeo:iAatf...! 4l KCillio r 4 0 44
•,, • i,c by-theiteanole to tliciStittei , espitel-t6eindleete ,
'their Itiperillt4 l rlibte: , l i i(ii: . `p§vrinor !retail. ,
' ''' ',iited 1 , ., Odd* ' out ttiotio4tto maintillitVs
~1 , niTuitrota , Minion: - The people mom iA bi,
ti i „
...' .- orkaniiing Ominittitilt'ot laiety, [44 yr were
~ . 11. / °P ,t # 6 VP. Ai', t lOW cIA iorww l lo reo ;or •
' ,iour,indeoeidentignitlemen ,4 ?t , tho'lill lte
' ' .I'i ri i -l ' llbw4 . 'o i ii ii #A .4.l4ll4lf li - 04 1 * . 'es4i )
~2 4 1
• l IpigOii;: r , .I,4:!ißitlipiii4ii,d , 4, Laub , , Mr ? , :, Lbforoctursiof Oiatrir, tint Hon+ Joni - 8 p*s o
'I.
, '';' 'o l' i i i '.!f 6l l , :t 4 o o :!'t i i.9 l o ._ l 4 ' 'oo l6o _ la' int
,-,„A'gananns - LiTiVrtliV , ,,Tebo ~ led , the 4 Uppoid-'
:-tiOnOillia 40 , gavoltWittsdriti to - the echo';
orata-pojoritir.B Isi • ,licitCbronOheipf tile yr
''
'l6llll6g' 'if
• iiiiiiiliiii'Vic4ll4.li but rodOlote
f.: x'aiontion whiotvislone•gore , the' 1 100 .10tikr , ito
' ' " ' ri g bis ' 'it° rescued 44‘ ' P Lo #P *ii Ai rolO of
' ''"ii Imeates iniliority ::, 1 , ~ , '' ' '' t
i. , .- • , There .411;4).= singular; and; With one , slip,
I .
•fl '" iteopo;# 4 ttikl* l 49q l arith !Cti*ein the
1,,v t r# o , l ** l l,4l#o.4;#olloY. W • AN) stf4e, in
„., , ,1888,,and the proceedings "oltha ascertained,
` ,- .l'v,nolnerWiti the 'Territory ,de Kilttoos 4 , 1 411Ak
: t 0 101 r4. : 004,10 11 iff ,1,-1t00r44,40: lit
• ,Y; that. ,Territoiy.. IS 'ailmittedhbr every 0930,.
- 0- i- obtortir: 'l' f bf r )y have4netiliatedthoir:44egate
Ir a , '''d'oniMilii liy. ilorso„k4miti;,t4thide,l
~, ... 1: Alt we'4I I ,OYOJ aliairrilltilOrtirill B mbhron 0,01 . ,
~,,.,„ the new Legiiiiiithritythessn • elythi, fifth day et
:L'!tb,Of;MOliqi.,;.l3K4ko=l444eitir....64 cue,
,
•
•, , ,4, 0/14 1 4 *lSPier,ikhr KV' atila , Pro 4 , ll tverY .
• • Ina ,or misealled mittens] I)Matoerats) ) My not
':' ifio i Miif° ll4 :*trii::t* AtiVibioi44.l.tliel
` 'rat:urns. They, resolve to rushee . undo 6 , ,,l'it'i
„+r .- that Legislature ty disregatithlg thei:pfinolple,
that:Vits 'ai:,toritri 'Sirel,n Eitl4, 3 and, by re
cognising a UM 'and naorlious • 6,011 tilioit
, . -, , that principle in its stead. Let us comp to the
,4 7 - fe4:te'Of the ease: :, ' i
00rdt4iiship )1 ,
S ' ireeinct lu the cotiai
-. I of JohAls ol 4' TerritPri or Kansas: , ',lt belongs
.., ;:f to; se Giblet , whieh elects three'lleniteri tot.
AT
"4440:660 '49,44quY itta*tibk'Qiiesiiitii=
, -1 lives to the Legislatare.' This distriefiskein,
-, posed of•tAetiic:;dottnitiri oNtlipt,iiiiiitiolut
, ~.1104. lift aori coppONT, ir,4Fll*, tali' •
„; , iri?idafrifilifini ' d.t. October 19;141, , ,,filtiiIllage
o f,i x noose% tricludinitstmS,ll,9"atili*
: ::; 00 iMiiited:Iii*StV0Pt # 6 .,0 t ##;/4 1 4# 0 ., 4"; 4 ,, r,
~; •-,
vela village 4i„§iiitwlyi itt, itieneturi Pr. iAt
the election on the fifth, as we 10#10frina
' other - liuthicoit ',otitiiKitri . 'titit ommtlei,
' ' a o::.yliiiooli`. '44 P*l4,)94dlig the 0,1
a,, :niliot,4. , ,O,ifOSit !into*, IldpuMen I' majorit y '
I' - ''.. '''`O ' r' Po, 100 ; *h t eli'1 0 0 ,1 - : •11 S i fr , 4 4 4X: f 'l°ll
- le fr beVelik*Wre,v iigfertikaye.eighty
!--PiShA )7 4 100 1 1 4 :7 0 k - . 1040 :Pt. 441 . 3 * -tiel .OV hi '
• -Iteelf.ll •tetylatge inter hitt tit ,'m *
elk
;,." ', 7 11 ,*( 1 4ti0,-iii 6 it4l l lo , thit '". tiblv ,
in
, : J?it,4 had ibairied the , district, an eirora 0.10;1
Is, . covered'- , in ;the 4 .oitfotit
.„..
ng
:f . CGI V CIed4 P 4 MS V silqenins4ri and 104de
.)• etilo t ' o r' e: et lot . ol,o4aed Prqsla ,
wy,ilekit ?
,::a x lOfcta, three Meirbar oftheGotnhi
,04,
.9
,oight inienthPfs'`f lb° th**;.#oll th e
' ' "Isttdr •'piity , 'clittm a majOitty or.Ais id ',each
'.v: ,PagtOti•of PHI PeBlolll]nfo.,-74t: hotteGovr i z i
0 0.,;, War k sint covthe lote.of itkfii,rd.i , :lre i ' ,
,:':, -- ;:4l , 7ftuuricki#ol. 6 lo , ',:' ":„:.'' ' 1 I 5.
', i
. 1..,, 1 : 4 ..lesinepeid I.,n4iltip e'emiderationa , *444'1 1
oo;e.;&4: 3 114 4 , 1 4:1 11 44 seoPensibilt resting urn
in' kese to4eefeineette Oahe „ that 44, ste
,:.i .„ l cau l
o fr i l4urecohavicid d e n tasio /i i i 1v...
9 'trotari 10.010111 - Di ? liTinieltY aliiiiia whirl
' 'liitrdth stidlnettefthieVie idntid"eleertatin rely ,
,'. f a aw e tdo e ,,rid itliiid, oi l VoilitinAoili m )
i derived freed the fah of *Peri, 13 , ,
we went to the iiipbisof Cbtroi4,ool ire ytt,
• f A 4 AP-with nisclievensi hieladitia etorwei'ind wi twat
, ,e , tavern') sal emertained from tbanitisese ef that
' , vietaityea espwdlinv time ef,,thelsenerm+fear
,,,,,loos ofiliapptliew asmoiro,ldisiriri o (separated
f ~,,.. Isely,,bl,llo liteltitt.,,asuir oentaileing 'about , twenty
-Mouses,) that, altogether Itat,,entre'tbsti onateutto
~.the, nrebra 4.r p9r.mistcPx.4oo4, t O,lO tY O *O l 4 l
, . were Prtiasnt pa the two.,tlSys, ettlee,elmilon ,
•' ' ? rauekthe smaller number. not orseimihig:thirtY ia ) ,
•.' ''' MO, being Preisint, , off. the laid 4,0 *140 1 46re
'time, fifteen lituiditd `• votes are represeattid as
- tuning biteng veil. - The people 0f:93144i sti well
os thereat the neighboring
,village,.of 'lents Pe,
'', 't *EA ars tabiltua it qtie • niquitate` 'Of the return;
-,, ~, atid*wit , pireeas 'et 'SW nettitik ki'botti'p t ieelte,
~ treated . therwliolis alUtilieltiVderhdee,.6f la Jails,-
..tiorr i . not having beard ' OW alleged maidt, until
• , - - weird days after It had 'oeheired.„''' , -'. ; '''.,'••
1, In the course of our journe y id ii6.4f,4,* Or:
~ -,,. ~ Y ordowapetsied °vet itelet3llo lirgOr part of the
,1,-, county. ,ot ~/ohnson#, • asd; ** , ,bootane , thoiroilghly
•-, t , satigied 4,katitOrecio , no , ptintlition • in the week
1• • opontyclemi„wineh more Mao one-third the vote of
.i ; ;,,
i ti o iptig t l h e r :let • ziii i i n . r hgre -iken b ity p on. 4 42:
~, „ 1 ,92-1119j4,41•5414.171 . 0411140,0annty, and claiming It
• reeidenon thereln,. though gtierally slisegil had' •
' ~*tite4 '4l. ioMeietho tir . niip 11. /I_, Olt county.
ThS*Wil,kligibo 6 l"4,9 10 4 .0". 0 . 11 0"#0 0341 ud
'; l .olitio ,- -
A „ acco rdingl y , , Governor Temunti re. ,
,: `,"jietedlhe'Vote Of Oxford - pincloct, giving the
. .
. .
, 14.. - ..;ioartificates•to4tlid.llePublicanigontialll,9rtraild
. •-•lfejklesentatliee.n Illerqs . .aorphtliiitigh alrdiiily
;4 , 1, , ,P..4 1 0 1 . / .914 0.,;,..0! , rm..., il , ro .repeated, .
,:,,,,„folowitt „„.., ~,,..„, ~ ,;. 0. 'r ii• ' r i 1
•9 ..' A ~ • ~
''''''''. Ile: wdoef iitittifiiegfirok th,i,' 4 '6, 4 i:of the 4,„
f , j; 41,ibnettliovitomilaiiiiirkla ,pi io, :,e. , in
1 4
, any, other manner, that 'As ' 114 ivi of eleollon
t. 4 I.= *itootti•tho kath7.lmpfolitlvily , emmilled by the
f 4;1 -statute, , tel'eeenrit the If Impirtlal= - 4110hatio ,ef
f '. ,rftheir dulleakebordlngdo,law. ,, i4. , "- 4 -, , -.-.-,
r,•-_,. :;•-„ , 0 2, ndone not appear that ther i pitsr pte
resend'.
•to um was one of-the w nal 4 Aeol
° bifglis ; kept
..?;-..',, nt thlolleetlonl aalliqqtrest ;7,1 fr .;; btit, on 'the
• '"
'' 44 lr7lier it
ol)91,PP( °t r ' . PIP' i 1eM 14 1 .0 800010 ' it,
~,,:'..:tiv4PV‘?Pri#l,,,two„4lo l oP o ooll vilanr,ipopyof
, O so Ooki d 4 36 no
0o
gene n als h a e t
•'
~ the olootion. Tka. IviasTollts ,aaftatlke P 0 1 1••
r. ,. 1, ,,. , 6 , oo . incte be } l oggia - 3o the ' reterp•Ohe other
,-,, ~-,1 •40 = b- p Ideicoattif="AiltllltiCiflefir -- Of 'l,3m, book ' of
4 = 2 eibikilifaldoniip of tliolOoPer, 60413fY; '•• ' '.'"', :- '
• fulldplis•the*ok ofzimilh"obietor Oati ti & - Ti , ,
"-,l74sorded formielfiktokf .tiretity-foripiab ate and
. , ...,;. in ntevitkomottouidrodetaltelOwtottatplhee set, ,
0• 4,,,,,,,that byollieststediStalreall PIMA!) loi oat Atta
1
' . that the number of votes prmette = kite bil
, ill, rilvla (A,thar. 2 , l o'. 4 TV-4 4 1Vdavt•JAIlla 444,11,
; . nikfed,..fig •:ifiq ppm. ofllif tarliritten; iuld•
, ; 1=.0; 41 l VOlfeal , f'Ptaaall4Pkatag „POT slesigtistioll
souk' obo boon liken 5att,,.! .. , rdad•„!;thlit ;he
, ..., time preserlhell )).7 law .. 3,...4.1 - 4 , - IS i' ”'
• ' 'l4 o'!4tfr,'="liiiir au eittregyNnaty lea ,i'' tending s to:
- i' lthroivdbitrust ifn'tka white pi4preedilig,,thet, o;
". • Ifieefoken. handredtiikttirent„Valikt TOO 'lltili
one le' given to the delegate sleet to.lkia'gror
t ' mtid.obiltorkhuildrof Mut twentrfoir 14 reeptl i ti
,; „se_bfoing beep 41. 9 4 ler the Wel eataliditee Of '
i . " VlavaaviPil".-... ' , l W.,, , [.,:' I ny<l; , 0 ~, ,I, , 4 ,„ , , i , t
'.
4 ,1.1n0qr thin elronmetenem,, • we& hob feel •e*
_i , , - ,ilalffaalV4ry• 4 0 -teaktglr i !dktillit la 4,onr.
•••• • I 41 1 0 g. fps; ll t ill, l i t c.l r 0, 1 7
g
iiressllleinte vhe Jo 1 1 v .. OWlXld,in.
' 1 tinbitaned'aild llibiril reined ,a l U . ' go'
• behind them and ) nitre - int o into I icy .) onlfrfor
- 1 the- puiroto lot l'idermibibti ir - ny ;these ,
. -== t valta4 dotioneto 60 Meicrria ,§4ifi dation
arelm i
-, ;I. Aof theta sellthavisi tbi"effeqg efAtlffoyht i ;Mill 1
of the people, eought to be fairly at the
-'-'; t'• Wil•••' - - 10,41 0 avanf rsgli mu* ,tioneelekneer, wq
•.,,, ref ghtlesltate tO,reoplre.; veto upon any dared;
0; ', forn4 3460744. i epontlal,,lt. kw. ,Ilgt -‘ln• the -
, .. premEre i me, feet oiatilelfea Wind, ki , l adfirite to
• - ' l ' lake* letter leftlie' lit*,lit'order ;4f defeat'a•
~: '"aides. it patiablii riita.": '' -'‘ '''' ,' -'• ' '
" Boostivii thiriforii• the Pipit 'moniker et.
, 44 , )1V.ireliiitkoi'its"not ono of the Original pidl•booke l kr
i ., 1 ., ~t h itn, ,pired to,be returned" , mid frton4tikeib ingos .
' of the oath preimilbea-4-the leriltortalietitutei,
' . for. the judge' , Of Oreatiallbtilt volltranlSOlng the'
- ' A '', altiiity" inVedifis aiii Ovi w,R.; IO 4 I OTt thillltou end
- ' ' L alliiriliiied; la Imiltiiittlit'AliplyetOnalmoes, t o pg.,
ureatise.but to repot, the idiots Warta from .the
`' %; o,Sfoiirlifitainot; aid 7 14i,glre - tkrieesit;g o gt os , ta
.•--=' = -- . .thoserilloi‘ppear Id IMO beetikeefidlitilditlus of
, . . the other regular roma.", , , - 1 .,' ' -,,;:- .
. 11 ::Fr n' An e PA ° Y1 r11;g i . 46 . 2 ,,, u tO L: n $A 0401111
n' prominent ' sciiiiroi' wit luegmlii,rotrili cr.-
1e.',.-o,tartritfreottted4o4o.loll ( tlibrOldt be, le,,
y .-"A , liiiitstioll-ritituiekttilialt4ll , 4"4l poi,
~,,i,i-Ovirsti,,,g9eol-m,mr„tillifirliteenseated, a
'' f gar,00:401 4 • 0 0 .0 ;:g44:; . Oga4l,Pili' .l
-r.4---4 - •AVetrit, , ill , 41 1 1 1 L:ierecem-110-Yie OA retere:rt.
.vr , i'ilki*dieosinfessing t , tolithe,Avcrad,ltia4,
, e „, lAfii t awkisinvhed - jlitiliqiiii944
, liioc , fild#l-
jiticktes*Attl,ll4litia4 441) . ;
T '8 ,64- tOSKO-AitttP 4 1 1 41 itgt°olll
- " 'if fiiiii 'tr. -,el • , tili4s 704'
0- 1,4! ~ - , - iiii#4l, 2i , 6 , 0 , 0144 ~
* . , 44, 0-. onitia‘adifiTo *I siiiiiArai
tote by the fourth section of the ICansatblie
brinks act, as tb„llews. 13yylis section he is'
bound to tmatrue t tin' to me k. WY qf the votes :
"The persons the d nta ; art2fir
legal votes law" ,1 4 4, iod tired
members of. the ctj
Governor to be,. 0,
eta° personsiviVw 'tat tier of le
votes for a r Slaa shalt
daolared 4 1 G ov einiflO ,
.8 u intim me
hers of said Hoese."
There is a precedent which the Democratic
party Will , not seen forget, We allude to the
celebrated Broad Seat controversy in 1889-40,
-4/1101 , P0. 13 /04li gild great struggle, which
"Calnienear revolutionizing Congress, the De.
rilaildriabifaiagr
-nem shoisid4mkt behind rtheareturnia- ; There
was te' coftUdt 4 'l ' MtWee , to bbia-,l,GtairdrUOr and
;Sit4reSiti"of An
, 4 4Rf ) ,10if i Oper.'had tinteawn out the
yetd, , or,, l te,tkwusicip oox; district ? (which, ' elk
• elected ilia *tole 'opposition ticketthe repie;:
SaintatiVes eleeted on a'. general ;
tjekiat,),:',4l' o,4Yeria4 took the return,,
t?t lll 4l4g, ;'this ' , township
Secretsyy,,flcii,Unting ur the .*oto, including
-ite.a;aThea result was a grave differenCe; 'the
Demdcrats Oehtetading 'that' the'act of t
'foil& 'Officer WO and slaitaid -.)43 re
; Tiaao7 - , - Ptaclir ' li' , ;Pe, airierted! ,by;
,GiterMr:WALlMpriald Pee opposition te,l.litg;
the either ground. a Oar roaders'wlll raniejtfi l l
OettintrOVersye ,
PISA therefore—upon. the.
ins,n4Utes )4,00,114; and ,upon Aisan'ttllednness
0 4, 0 penuesa of the. ftaust—and..maisty . s.PW
;she foomir - s-4overiorMnicatists will sten/ f ling
tified-befoie his; Conntryiliegl ; 'We te f tintit.that..
iCayi t dod,' 0 1 ,14,'4 , 1 0#C-', 4; 4 4 an
1 . 144044 4. o 'iarloalc . 4o 4PW2 ;to; So t
' -hind the ,teturtui ; ibut:We.hold,that rltpon the
tgrimnd of tion•complianch With the las) it,o4;
the fahnilyotioflOxfoid 'Vas Mjeek,
aorlo;42, 4 ;ailo l *s °lets
' bafftiul4 36 7irl4t4,ol 6 ff 4 TU7s . adllalited;'
proted, ankconfessed, layaverrmalarlar,alit
Ambiaterial evidence-4-heid -, gtvire, (the
tiep. a 4s to men- lelfeLtiere iibt"eleeted, aAd
'tlq Legislature,
-w:404 11 / 1 14..b. iCTe`:,',been ; the retain jun region
IllloderithMlned.reert, and excited,by
matiify.elements illoodshed couldinot!haip
:CM , Thellte4of
- ,!l:treq'fl4) Iwould.
444;:lticf(giireA.fiic.IftL4Y a„At'Ar sftallulsat:
ism as would haVatleft, tis,conservntivo'hieif
;of.thelforthititterlY at the Mercy , of th6Al5.
In '-stieh art evdht, lion; woUldtbe,
isOoif thut`tlra i 'te bhll ailities o of o'B'l4 tom
4galeet
;the inajority, hate ,him: and t.te
De
,mooracy, before the a country? .Toesper e ityr.,
teat' pr f ofess e d to lieve..law on his Hn
went behind .the 'retprini',te"justifY , !frond;
0i0,* 4 / 1 4,01e 'la!, at,hii back.
artaalflaY UolulsP Men IAIeYOO Uinta ;.thlt'thai,
equity, athe , jtislice -the•oase, ‘, the :dnaxlniity
of the Ifraudc-Iti •-iicaught - - to 'sanctify,' Wino:
apparent to the pooplk,' ; `,#o • im,y had not
'91M411,,:t40 f r i g hts „ty, 7°4 1 , I Ye laketi it
into, o wn ;: Mcotift ..ltranda. ar,Goidritor
Mamma -. rejected a' the , false and' fabricated
tiOtaitit Oxfobal bpOnlegaliraitinds t lint ho did
',ntted' .00c,tri ron*, heite.:sunit. him
4)70;4 44141494 of ; every !jest man, of Writ
manly, asi -dernagogue,whee labored only for
isis part or , a 'ioward' who- feared tee do
Oght, ' li e Ads' be l eit'irint9 the trii(h; and ,we
44 . 9;4p toy , • ,
,ActSeuthern people do not teak that ,artsina
should harmed° et slave , State hi' 'such twang
tbs. thist Oxford: fraud. f They' are Itlterierees
oc,*n. • 'Atiir, w . 9144 scorn : a trro'ng, as
wonl4 Omani a blow; eyerY ; Seutherti
.stokthereare linsisetcitlsons ;who aiimlt that
Kansas willbest , tree State, , and -such citizens
ariltkot te lon:4one ;the ' 89tithern rUh3,
ib the I eiriterY; 101'4116st' ruhl it 6 longer
t 4 Ol 015.1 ) 0S1:10r;
iii4ch• - 449;forx4A
et , :thiroremusetdatioli lot; the ,popluat will; 'of .
Kona's; Int this hat been , yielded - to, ; beemise
ltk rdenaliaterwerii:cheian , aCCOrdihg`,ic: car,.
torniS: Lek ,
ilifaturO,(aiiocbeetut under vet7,Auestienabbi
suspisos,),anii.bees.mo,tho ,people wilt
4-4oltes'upoirtho'Wokdf-thusais,Meniberia: _The
Democrats 'Or the' :Snith'haVe sPoocr;bi.,ps.
of
:(1411!, 1 4.40.Pi 1 7001. 0 Man.APA:., 413 ,1 have
*borne to Speak of the:partlal character of
lomel-elections; 'and with: rapidly thinning.
hirve'takeit tiering flit or the'Aboli.
)I;q:ooiied, ,elections
only won they
,victdry, by, pledging 'themselves to .the Mitten;
that under James Blichcotau's oldatinutration
the teltl,,V the majority sloOrstsißtivirit, tp,i,seiher
'tar inajnitisi One 'the' ip
aMaijailt 0 7'; fta was
eur.,aawksh;:, that ? ~when , this; majority, was
'ascertained, would be- a :Denuieratie ;nia,
16*d for this eof'dy`c:rienbstentisi
' 0116) ., " s 9'ik r i Ile:4l'oo;44We, believe,: that it
*0 likrcgtts Of Iptnactia that
Its deotinier should - :be Iln the hands.,of the
Tienibotitic:.l3
puty.ut of-it is to be other-.
, siteii-d-lf-theiliej?itbliCans hive won U—in
them, Let us 'net dick
joquoimusalves by areiort to trick midi* fraud;
or by-countenancing trick or Maid, to deprive
them of it. , What If the-Republicans should
gettiroVriited States Setaforo .I.;egis,
'biinraSetter that they Shona
,haiO n twenty
iit'an that Wo.aliplai,haVe one ? iftbat ono is to
means,- , :
t-, , -Vor long years the writer of this article bait
stood the ' luat'ilemands -of 'the! South.
pry? has been, nebittlOleld ernes General,
40u iiteraitai ~
mqt, .49139- ttie .heat ,in his. poor. :power'' - fe
, strengthen 'the hands 'and te;protect the rigitA
of the' , Seuth:- For this, While he has received
M 0 4 11 0 1 48 I rePOiches from thri extreme men
rif,the . free 'Sfates,'-be, Was
~rcuraided : by the
approving .consciousness that he was doing
his plain duty. And In ; the present exigency,
'it is ',Our; 's o l e mn- conviction, based' 'upon a
-ediadwitat intlinate 'inewledge f On . r whole
,peopy, - .that ripping could ~ 49„our common
eatesojnortx Isstirig
. horiu, mooing could work
'more-Irreparable ; evil, tb the 'South—rioth'lng,,
would bead sure teiugaliiinito tik dying or-
gtjtaliitidn;', laid yea r defeated,-lii*: Pio at;
teapp(td:iegailice
; and, 'clairicOfy; a Proceeding
which no; man has dared to ;justify :upon
,fljel'
ground df right, and ',width sets -Cant with
deDberato repudiation 'of the great principle
"tbat grtic Waereirror stain
ti
_ rg. - 284 ,
; ‘A Avg
(0
c,4prolims,m#l4 l
4th.PA 6 0 16 206,
arrivelt.st Now, York hot, night, with $170;00,
- in specie. Sho allio brolight SeJiator
note'whoihnikteabliO4 On,,
yiwiiilijr*e'o'fike 4#;:r,ioqiA§Opivall,l
Z4.#7 1 :6 5 T1C ' 9,F, ' 44#, ha.
Zho , Ronkw: Ply ilsil 4rqugat, Anti
lila paper, dated October 5, on which , day the
Gorden Gaitieft; Slut Fratiohico , and;: tot#nefi
thither pR t the j ,.loth, `tinichinctybeing Out.
100 47, 0 ,4 4 1 . i. °,414 1 4 :44 ' l .fte
..wilikgrAmPsno9.l l A li en §f,ead,,an4 NA:died Pin:s-,
taa on: the .2411.. i I'l -
o. , The'• Stair bf the West has $1,600,.
I MO Neil YPrk4ioA $500,000: for
~; 'nefte tVe. lie*, In; -the
avitein;:stAd );(itldte Stateii had not , caused
mitteh,ttatprlsehrbalifonits. • .
; 1 ,4'61 ienOral noire fiohlCAUfornia does not
;plitiSSO'hittelf,intei(ist: "Governor ','"Wanti
, nt
ThO,
inra wai. highly Democratic alao,:the, Senate,
'consisting of Atientrtive Democrats and flye
DepabliCati6 • this' Aisetitbitottii*fonr,
hi,tiooti#ooo,*s. ; :v4! tote
On the glate debt stioica a nkajority of BVIOO
in favor of payment.
'been iseveral encounters with
thollndians, , The "Mormons in Carson Valley'
Histero,finder Beiauai Tonso's Orders,' to
f4'. 2 . 4 4: 1 4 October, and 1.8419
_la
tirtah? lie Is said •to - have directed them to'
oritf , itiliptiir;t i milithization,',' The isripreSsfOiv
Rt 0fhift:91 1 4 18 074414: 4 44;• , wh0n , driven to ex.,
tremityi thelfonnons would' (jolt Utah; and
, in
,iiitiMiin-American'
Territory. ~,„;
:The Stai' of the::-Wiet Vol,ll".pr9tialq ; . :arriv.9
#4: * ' l-0 4."11fiti$ .‘•
-
ItABI-44404'0*4.**491.%trj:;51A1L1
Tel despatches front - QuebeOt so'
lite'"lin ' 6, eltioliliiiilitett, , tattniiitte the,
non-arrival of , the-mail-eteamer halais t from
ILitetpool:, on fibc 2ast ult., with.faur
from „Europe: get. intalligende
jiiieteli,loi . Anlleltinteree‘ai,, voll.pr 9 ba„
11111411 : , the quipenalon, of the, New
Terisliardnr bite Wen ienelved
•
"„# 4 4,64' iiitorpiA r a r/a A3/40.:14420
Aiioiktiopi,hol4,oppoloptstOalts, , ,
real estate, ese„, at the Raphael* mild. , advirtlie:
mats rad pamphlet eatalogne.
SHIPPING PHOTHILIE TO TUE EAST.
Op
The folloWin ' rtiel4, fru the Cincinnati
Times, Par' " nierved ~,,, rite to Philadel
'W% te wity4Sure. Niro learn
thiriatt ' bat.4f the toirl'ork merchants
.. ,
have patthltestagenta. to ,ino West to pur
chaase , :odnco* . d Ahip it rerlard, to avoid the
11.1111di4intos of iikcliiiitigo:N.llloy . take the lo
cal notes which area letiao6der; say in Illi
nois, Indiana, Ohio, anci rqintucky, and with
this buy produce. Whysfinttid not our Phila
delphia merchants follow this good example ?
Every good result would flow from it: ::‘ ,4
As the yield of this year's harvest Is "now itOoti.
-misting iand'bidafairtoacommulate lf
tommumulate
trade is not revived, we tate the occasion to mike
,r*,L rtgls„,..„"Aiii.tAlitlflolollllll4tol It 6061101 itli-
OM. Maur preseht circumstances, fur the fuer , ,
cautile community to raise the means to meet their
EaitobiiObligittitdase 'o6ll'4l:albite seem to Wail:doh'
impossible, and much of the money newlfloat can
be, used, coly at a sacritleck in the shape of discount.
Under these elrsinuistanoos, isby, riot:make the pro
duct! now Analog its way to OCT markets °errancy,
'for the time being, to isTiot Eastern Obligations.
MAP it, 'gist, aS fast es it - arrives, "diSpoile Of it in
the-re . ady niarket'there, epi:ad:the Most 'ilreesiug
debts, And save that hoer enemata to x,.irrohiegit.
It seems to tic that exertions In that direction
might save many. houses from , a dilemma, which,
the extreme tightuom of the money market and
the bore tim es pow threaten.
these win) choose to adept, this, Tian, to it
grouter:Or, leas extent, a kedittedgo of the but
Oita for shipment, ht thie time, is quite essential.
.That point ; tdost atratedlY, is Philadelphia. •
"sdiatithera another ailment' atlif ti favor of.'
,Philudelphist, 1.1" t is mutt nearer , , and the freight
0./large!, eepseguontly mood less. A batter 'and
mpro reliable class of railroads dope not Origin
l i e:Linton than these which complete the direct
'" tbid city to Philadelphia: 'lt embraoos
three einspanliss "iglinnh. the ,
'Columbus and Steub'envilli'rtinnieg . to Pittsburgh,
and,the PetautylvatiaTentrol..l.The Littleibliann
1 41.tix , ..lrott rlffolts.,,to opt shippers to need tioni
-145t4pn.,,, he Columbus ,and Steubenville road
is excellent portal lion, well stocked, sod prompt
'in 'thethrdbliiiitloils as , common
carrier.'7ll6 Is'entitylvenia Central etandent the'
Wait tifAinerielti faith:rode, for excellent manage•
mord.' t:Thie is espeolally So in regard to its facili
ties for traosportiug freight,' and shippers from the
gast,to,thelYost, or (rem the West to Abe Haat,
1;4)14,4y : the ,;Central ; Pennsylvania,. die, sure
tondo it gendral promptitude .lid],
Which' 016 onthiAtitdenorl. ali,cluses of, freight;
'and , tlid'eateeYetelsett'iti ita 'transpdtifitibor.,lm
otnaile - 1111 roritehtlie , ronte. ylitr • extillencs. To
'bilailelphik;.thereforeowill sbippent of 'produce
be led, of they coastal. their. ..awn Interests. ' , lt is
nee the host rairket; : it, is • the easiest of atoms
fr,p,114 pp tit, and pong theehortest, is, con
spire!), 7, the tdiettpest
,for eaststard-bOnact
proddeafrom Cincinnati;
).TRItI3IEII 1 , 0V,1k PHILADELPHIA
Me. have: been permitted to make the follow;
.leg laritiacts frotii a letter, written by an
the
cot beartt:illo" steam-frigate Wabash, the flag
ifqb tlte 0 0 iiie Squadron, eiumodoro PAUL.
lit,was evidently not,interuled ter pub
lication, but Is tbe.ftank, sallor-like communi.
cation of an officer to a brother officer. The
'testimony Is, all the More valuable on this
liceoriuti; acid we kpiT, the writer hp be well
filltiPeOr Pk.e4PeilCilgo skPliAo Judge of
the'merlts and excellence of the ship pd. her
, niachinery: , Itwill bw remembered that the
Wskskih hi one of•the ebv stearaLpropeller
gates,, of Very largei'dinaerisforis, built by order
Vongress, ank,tligt,;eN was ci4l6tr,udtd at
the tNtsvy Tard•ln alit city, wholly by rbila
delpbta mechaniest , °The other five frigates are
utuiied 'the , Minnesota,"Mertirant,' Colorado,
naanoka;ao4,,Nfogiira: l 4'ho IVabatili is nom-
Luanda!). byPtippi,n'yOnnarox_Eiriin
. U, S.! great isatond Weals ?,
-00tobor b, /867*-- 4 spinsauld
Doan sfra s have not time to write you a
letter,•butdrill a - ropy - 4u I short note. The Korth:.
ern Light' is firing up, end the' signal flying that
the, 'passengers are coming, • • ' '
. 1
dircinid' like you; I Wou l d like all the navy to,
ken thid ship. ' She is perfect in style, in 'figure, in
engltiee, in small arma,', In anything and in ivory
,thiug iippartaining,to a "fluit.rate map.of.war. Mer,
ofloar ` 'Au4 • her won are perfect.,
Therejs ,po,tt.iuble,po quarrelling, ne grumbling,
no courts•martial; wid could whip all ototti, with
her ) and give them odds. She ls efileient, under
steam or under/fail, and will be equallys6 under:fire;
there is notbiog we can't do with, her. One Are
departtoent is perfect; ;we beat "Are quarters"
this morning, and; in two minutes,, the bole was
laid 'and the water -flying. The hose is kept on
reels, 'always in order, , and always ready. Why
den't :the -GOvennusht send this perfect ship to
'inane fetter! station? ' What *0 4,.., to kuep euob
'4114 hire. , Our priklienferiant Lc a, ottoital
bee ono',gripiti, 'virtue which fen . brat
tho eflioani up' to the
.atet,4% , ia.i.aeS 0140 4 "Pm. 4l to tiCIP:a steady
.9 1 i:4 1 P4i• ithttru.l.a .uu.,"let up,'" aaa alt
Pell as ' 40 9 0011 ,T all any old maid could
desire. ,When bands are nailed for any
dtity whateveri the trot oliantenant , bikes'
'the trumpet,, end every' le the ship must he
able station. The pacer -of the deck can't furl
Or loose Bails:here., This 'goes a little tough at
first, but tough or net tough, it has to work until it
gets laude''! '
lifesarti. Meirlek &Sons have distinguished them.
selves; as usual; by , the engines of this ship. You
know IWO in 'the Mediterranean, in the Prince
ton; for two years, and her engines; built by the
same *erica, did not cost the Government twenty
dollars in that time.
TUE SONS OF MALTA
We trot& eeepaion yeater4iy to notice the
liberality of this n'apfill body of men, in making
donations of, money to the different charitable
assoblations of this city. We•have been fur
nished with file following list of the societies
to. each of, which Alm sum'ef fifty dollars has
beilivOted; making in all Um sum of five hun
dred and:ilfty dollars a
'Union Benevolent Association—Edmund
Wilcox, Treasurer: Homo Missionary—T. T.
Mason, Treasurer. Foster Homo Association—
Mrs. E. S. Simmons, Treasurer. - Penn Asy
lum for Indigent Widows and Singh) Women—
Mrs. Phobe , Daro, Treasurer. Female S oci
eq. of Philadelphia for the Belief and Employ
ment of the Poor, Seventh street, above Arch—
Mary Ann Baconi Jr.,Treasttter. Rosin° As
sociationlira Townsend, Treasurer: West
ern ,Provident Society and Children's Rome,
Nest Philadelphia'-.litre. Samuel Field, Trea
surer. ti Temporary Home Association, Zane
street—Mary IV. Brooks, Treasurer. Southern
Home -for Children, 12th and Fitzwater streets,
Mrs. T. R. MarvlB, , Treaeurer, Homo of Indus
try, Catherine Street, above 7th, Southwark—
Wistar Mortis, Treasurer.. Young Mon's Cen
tral • Home . Mission—William O. Stevenson,
'Treasurer.
AN impOrtant meeting of the holders of the
mortgage bonds of the Union Canal Company,
not interested its the common or preferred
stock of tho company, will be hem at the
Girard Miner; on, Priday evening nest at 8
o'clock, „. ,
;' "
,"The Queen of, Spade," a drama whit% was
acted at the ArelPetreet Theatre last night, was
sfat Played, at Drury Pine, Theatre, London, on
March 29,, 185 i, , /t was ,"adapted," by Mr.
,Bouroicault, from a French piece, by Boribe,ealled
Dame de.,Pigae." , Mrs. ?Whitt was , to have
played the leading part titratinkat Nelaorf, the
Queeei al afo'resaid:o•She was taken suddenly
" itt"—iri the sated way' as George Frederick
Cooke . nfteit Was; after dlenerL•and, 45e' the mo
lnontf anothei l plaY Was' about being sUbStituted,
nut the audience watild not he've it. The "Queen
OfSpades" Wei announced,' and her majesty must
appear.' ,The titage-manegor announced Mrs. 11 . 1 a,
totti's''',!'birtes,C-but the audience laughed. Then
110 7 6 `°4 ( ;,q1 0 ? 3, ' AhO lessee , made his bow, and
announeed that Miss, Penny, Vining (now Mrs.
S. t,. ,Da T onport),w 9 pl4 read the part. This
:satisfied tiotaudienee, With whom Miss Vining
wee a decided end.doserved favorite. 80, without
Abandoning her native Tele: of Queen of Dearth,
the ohartning inbatitute'. appeared as " Queen of
'Spades," aid' retid'theisit tai:Well;ani played it
'so brilliently (with" the' manuscript in her hand,)
that' the ,absenee` of Mrs., Nistitt Was,forgotteu.
'This .Was the, identioat character' which Mrs.
Davenport performed last ,night, in a Manner
'whieli Would' have made then reputation of any
rietritk i , She, teok)t out ,of the, limits, of mole.,
:drama, , arid, in het ,hant4, it .was wonderfully
Offrution.
The main points. of Oda drante,,whioh, more from
Its seenery stud situationa, than its dialogue, will be
, a leading trump in, Mr. Wheatley's hand for come
time, may be submed up thus : The first relates to,
.the liberation of a Russian officer under sentenoo of
death, effeoted , by.the sharp wits of a clever prin.
eras who levee , hint, and who has herself escaped
from the 0,t?l, anger at, St. Petersburg in the dip
guise of a linining and humpbacked aunt. The
pritener,la sent down to a salt mine. Tho princess
by Preifilsing,a' c young miner—the cardinal feature
of whoge einiraeter'is an insane love for gambling—
'!k4neei,.,inigle.fliintly ring, the property of which,
when inr'ekeil cards ; is to make the wearer
aliveystrik .on the Queen of Spades, obtains his
assistance, 'The, commander of the Imperial
Sioftral , a family enemy of , the condemned, and a
/miter of the: princess, is outwitted, end the youth
—after, a good,' deal, of 'well planned " bust
nose," and a eueoesslon of small but effective incl.
dents—is conveyed'in safety to upper air.' In the
latter piirt, of thb play we meet till the char/tote:a
assembled, tri gaixtbling•honse: ' The escaped
prisoner' is"pittying with the ',lei of amassing
`nioney,itilliCieneto pay Off the fanilly debt, which
Prev,elltS ithnftota r.ectsing eettsfactien Or his on.
,tege4ifst;,the ;latter:ls playing the ,view of
IFlstiOgihe,powers of the ring which inns fallen into
:l h i crefes s on ;, and the salt-miner, convinced of its
virtues. is eagerly booking Whom, w h en , enc id en .
ly, .upon a,Scena,of great animation , and excite
,ment, ialiPofirs.the princess, fantastically dress e d
fdr a nuesittorade as the Quest , of Spades, and hay
leg abjured het pretended limp and huneh. This
apparition , swag to , set everybody.to rights, and
furnishett aptoper eatestrophe to the ingenious
of the drama: .• • - ,
THE PRESS.l4illiatiaritiA, NOVOltitili 3, 1857.
tenter of
. 1i? atilt mine, (" one thousand foot ',belcoy
the Furthest tii...{be tea,' '..with "the stair-ease of
salt,") risa*Ser offtiotive, and a gambling puyi
hen iat darlidied 4 .whieli, the „hills ' infortn,,,uo,
is Situated ifi'llehemia?—was brilliant. Atillte.
last moment, 'when Mrs. Davenport - appeared
dressed up as the Queen of Spades, and,'by a rapid
change, in a splendid court Mistime, the effect was
no good that the audience greeted it with very
hearty plaudits.
Except that Mr. Tannehill, who appeared as
Eric Klamberg, (and played it more than respire
tably,) would speak of Biresina as Bereeinar, as
Cooknoys,do ;: i thistidfr. Welly4 Russian ! , nelet
were' the *'Austrian' intif'orin; ^eihieh is ‘heir, In
stead, of theitumlanewidoh , farms, and,that Air.
Dolman, in aot iii., played hark as if it, were slow
'etimed/phrt-::the'dmierat noting was geed. On
the whole, , MrS..Daierapoit 'was well supported. ',
. Deo „ of, .the , great 'elements ..01. genius is I la'
,adaptability. apd YerriatilitY• . Demi tißer t laying
tho part of s, prineess- 7 which, "be 410=1,0 to bo,
"eye, every Mob “ 7 -ehe„appaared in . onglati
,Terrold's ' 4 11144:Eyed Susan," in the "les4 algid;
fled part of Susan. And very' delightf ly she
played' it, without hay stageynass whatever, but
with natural fordo and simplioity. Mr, Daitinnort
hen' laken violent , pisseision of irillioni. i. The
play was xevived at the Haymarket Hu 14culdon) .
for the express purpose of letting Mr, Darepport
play in it. At. that, time Mr., T. , P,, Ocadie, the
'9Fininal..T. ll iarat nfo , uP ,l 9"lo9A WI ';17 . 0 :retired
from time stage, (he. bat, roe witty . returnedi i tci'it',)'
and it clearly and confessedly, was ''o mi 'to
Mi. Davenport' to meet 'the "manager's *lee, by
`biking•the PM:t. deriold; tiirourd,. Dibliona, Ox.
nnford of the Titnes;attdEbrster of the BaWnlitisr,
wiinessed his ' , art% ' pinfornsandi of 'it, And their
united °platen:. was Abet IrMr. Davenport WAN a
little, foss nautleal thanAlfr4oolie, he,was more
nottral„ pathetia, and,„efrpotlVe. ,/lo „itlt?rnately
awakens the unite and draws down t,9 t, aria of his
audttOis' i foi his sons° 'of, humor is as deep as his
feeling of deep' tragedy. 'lie 'sings very well, too,
and the hornpipe with Siiiali—T, P. 1:104e . weed
always call her Shoo:lab—wog a great adobes for
both. The play is well put on the stageld the
prinolpal .performers very were well: suppi ed by
the other motors., ,
,7.110 two, other theatres (In Brawl street and
,Wuluut otreet) were well attended last,nlght. At
ihe 4rg - fi st,rept . was almost a
r jaya, every goat
boing soeuiiied. - understand that 00645 e
iteedePs 'local melo-drama, Linda," :went off
VerMell:, at Walnut Street. ToMorrow, per
baps, we may be able, Prom personal observation,
to may-what It lo
Tidlie Prez:ollra, the celebrated Italian.
iat, who has beep performing for tlOlllO weeks at
Now, York, takes n brief..reqess„frore. her ,rinaipal
labors there, and will appear at the Wince) Vona
Hall, In this city, on Monday evening. There is
no announeetaent, as yet, of the artists who wilt as•
list at this, her first concert hero. 'Mille F. is
under the'direetten of Maurice Strakoseh.
The New York Tinted' tiatisounood, on the 29th
ult., that 'Sit WILT:JAIL CILTEIELIi Y was to be
sent, by the . t . ritistitloyernment, as" Speolaliginit
terto negotiate q lettilltilartt or the remaining dif
ferenaos between 1 uglaner,a4l Mis' rainy/v . in
regonl,te Central Ameritien affairs." If,,gds wore
true, whioh we deubted, at the time, Sir WILLIAM'
would virtually supersede Lord NePpca., ft 'name,
as the New York 2'inses afterwards ad mitted, that
Sir WILLIAM was, to go, to Central Amerlea, end
not " to negotiate. a settlement of the rentaining
differences between. Etsgland and thss country."
Our ileighbor was misinformed originally, and that
is the long and the short ef it.
A Nnw CotirrEnrmr.--4hreegdollar bills on
the Farmers' !Unit of If eer Jersey, at Monnt lolly,
made their appearaneel yesterday. • fAsvertil wore
P oll 4' The left oni4 1141 a fedi figure of an Indian
drawing Vo*--41m right 'end ilifstleo in s pedal•.
lion,' holding the sales." The ,Sentre v ignette, two
figurna holdreg pivot gisidot, With e • ligtfie three
to ihe P,righf, 7 I.llentty; geehies, 4nd J. glank,
?readout, apparently. In.t4id, nante innut 4 wViting,
Dated i.A.toant Holly, January 1, 185(I.,. Ms of these
notes ware, raped at Parker's saloon, in Ants street,
during the parade yesterday. Three pollens have
been arrested charged with " , Shaving thersinotes.
Those who have been victimised sfloul( make an
early visit tq the kfttior's riffles this morning.
BY MIDNIG.HT MAIL.
nom wAgnmovoN.
a 4,901 of Roperfriten'dopat of; fioncyft Affairs—
, ?JIM 14fIfiFfIffikd Apache Indianar4•Witon.
nevi He's ,peacripthwi of the GILa ponittry—
' aveit,Bitela'of Oregon and Washington Ter
ritorleit kc.
(06mospondenes of Oe Proff.l
Vilsit:fs:l7g4, Noy. 24,11357.
The Cemmieslotter of Indian Affairs rebeived
this morning, the report, of Superin
tendent ot,lndlan Moire in Nqp Mealeo,,dated
Septembor 80th, 1867. It fe 'oopotoppfled by a
letter otAgent Steoli , who reperhi that'ike Corr.
ter; Apaches had.aentAheir. Ohliff men to the
agency to nth Air peace, uhloh be rtoonttneaded
should be-granted them, as tow of their, people
have been engaged in depredations, on the whites;
and alai by a letter from, Col. Bonneville., Col.
Collins says :
,
"'From the information dontained In Col. peat
ueville's letter, it will be seen, that the c ountry rl
the Gila Is pasullarly suited for the permanent la
otttleat a the several tribes of the Apaebee, ,a faot
whinal . am desirous Amid be understood by the
honorable Commissioners."
Col. Donnoville's letter is as follows:
"%tau Fs, NEW Alamo,
"'September 22, 1857.
-Dear Colonel ; Returning a few dais since from
the depot on the Gila, I mot your friend and
agent Dr. Stook. ,Ife made much inquiry respect
ing the Glla country—whether your views in re
gard to locating the Aparditi Indlani in Pueblos
should he effected on the waters of Cm Gila. Ife
appeared desirous that I should converse with you
on the subject. lie boliovod that any information
in relation to this hitherto unknown rogion, would
be deeply interesting, and perhaps some day might
be useful, in assisting the operations of your su
perintendency with those people...
nWo were operating in what has been known as
the tills country, for morn than four crienths; had
detaoliments of troops scattered in every dirim
don, and information and,sketohea 01 the country
brought from every quarter. I eatoblishod my
depot on the east branch of the Gila iiirer—a
beautiful spot about fifteen miles from: the, ;tfogol
lon mountains. This valley , is about twenty-five
Dallas by forty, brained by the •Mogolion to the,
north, San Vicento to the east, the Burro and Al
moque to the south, and to the west ty the. Patos
and Son Francisco. These mountains enclose ong
of the most fertile and healthy apots on earth—
beautiful to perfection. Such was the admiratiOn
of all who saw it that our. .enaployoes, every ono,'
would have remained to have made it their homes,
had it been safe to hays dons so.
"Lieut. Whipple was sent into .the Mogollon
mountains. He remained in them some twenty
dap, angvisited the head-Waters of :he Olin, and
he &Berthed it as a most elevated ant tumbled-up
region, perfectly worthless, exceptitg a limited
space on the northwestern slops of tie mountain.
His mope, made film frequent readings of the
compass, I look upon as very correct, Every de
tachment fumbled me with a map a the country
traversed• These •I have transmittd, with 111 9
report, to the department headquarters, to which,
I have no doubt, the General will readily give you
SOUL
"After passing the depot Valley, tie river con
firmed to the south; and enters the onions of a low
range of lava mountains, connoOtinz the /Burio
and Almoquo mountains. About twenty railed fn
the carious it falls into a large open eountly
ox
tendtng from the Burro mountain or the net, to
the Almoquo on the west. It centimes westerly
until it meets the Sierrliajorriodo, Along tango or
cailone from the south faces the riser among the
Issues and preolpioes of its northers extremity ;
when seeking again its western direction, It dews
from sixty to ono hundred miles through a
valley about forty miles wide, We valley wos
remarked by all as most fertile, with extensive
bottom lands a rolling country in either side,
'offering the, finest pasture, to the very foot of the
mountains. This valley, like everiother capable
of cultivation, gives evidence of a former people
who were agriculturists, and who wire; no doubt /
far more civilized than the presort race who
desolate it. We find, to the' !lath, the Al
moque and Pates mulleins; with ti basal
tic range of low mountains, oontteeting these
with the Penal range. To the west, the sooth span
of the Penal Mountalna fined as a barrier to all
ogress. To the south we have the ntsuutala ranges
of Turnbull and. Graham, 'and to the east the hi
errita Jornado, Within these boundariee we have
a spot—large, fertile, healthy, and will watered by
the Gila—bedded in the moontaim, distant from
all roads and pass-ways; and without die probability
of any over being made through t it—a country as it'
were isolated. This appears to mo nost admirably
adapted for the home of the Indian. Hero, establish
ed in his pueblo, his fertile planting ground at his
'door, good water, and healthy climate, with his
nooks, herds, and stock fattening on the mountain
slope, he would he well situated. The =goes, the
favorite food of the Indian, is hero found In abun
dance.
I em ewers that objections may be urged to assign
ing, such fertile countries to tho Indians; but this
valley, with alt its health, its delicious water, and
rich lands, is not such CO I fancy would bo desirable
for the settlement of our people, who seek the great
thoroughfares and reject what so completely Iso
lates them from the busy world Here, indeed, a
man may lite end grow fat, and have nothing to
disturb the quiet of a whole year ; but this is no
lo sympathy with buoy, active, and enterprising
American citizens; so that the foot of Its great
isolation is an additional recommendation for its
Indian adaptability, where, ander the pa
rental oaro of an agent, the Indian may easily
satisfy all his wants with the certainty that
his improvement, though slow, will bo constant.
To the'nortb the Gila country is broken, rising se
you go north into high mountains of lava, ko.
Small streams have their Downes in these moon.
tales, and, running through the otaione at times,
open out Into small yalleys of the greatest far•
Sim Williams Glare Omelet.
'Silty, On the south, the fliqhtrutilelling to
the mountains. It lo peculiarity ,to this, as
to ail, the Gila region,: fiat' springs commence
in all , the mountains, so as to afford anod
ise/1e of water for - all stock piteposes, and
sometimes oven for irrigation; but these springy
lose themselves in the loose soils of the valley, and
And the river under ground,
"I have made a rough sketott of the subject;
desiring simply to drati_your attention to it, and
if it should have the merit of any usefulness,
shall be satisfied. Tho Sierrita Jornado, whioh
omitted to mention, is aboutone hundred miles due
westfroo, Fort Thorn- j T;ant;
"It. C. BONN'EVILLE, Col. If. S. A.
"Col. JIVES COLLINS; Sup't Indian Affairs, New
Mexico."
,The great basin between the wisoade and Rooky
mountains, and lying in the TerMerles oY t;lregon
and Wishington, will, in all piobability, be sur
veyed and thrown into market during the next
/Jammer,
The Secretary of the Treasury has appointed
Thos. White and Edward Gibbon to be assistant
keepers at the Caryaford Reef light-house, on the
owlet Of Florida, Di the place of D. Clarke and D.
Lewin, resignidoniponsation $3OO per annum
and'onp del& ration. Also, John Christian, to be
airslitant keeper of the light-house at Northwest
Passage, vioe' Henry Ogden, resigned—com
pensation $3OO pet annum and. one daily ratio,
,The tenders fop, the site of the Knoxville oustom
loise,,court house, and post Oleo buildings were
opened, this morning at thp Treasury Department.
ThOro ace said to have loon thirty-six distinct lots
or sites offered In nil, ranging in price from S2OU
40 . 835,000 !
Brevet Major Jefferson Van Herne, captain in
thathird litiantry, United States army, died at
Albuquerque, New Mexico, on the 28th Septum.
ber last, awarding to advioos received at the War
Department.
The res!snation of Capt. Daniel Leadbetter, U.
El..eorps
r of engineers, to take effeet on the 31at
beeeinhor next, Les boon Recopied by the Presi
dent. " X. Y.
THE LATEST. NEWS
BY TELEGRAPH.
FROM HAVANA
ainwArvaz OF 71111 qUaillit CtT I•
• AT NEW YORK.
THE STEMMA STAR OF TIIE WEST.
81,000,000 in Gold Coming
?Taw Yong, Nov. United States mall
steamship Quaker City,. from Hexane on the 29th
ult., arrived here this evening.
The steamer Star of the West, from Aspinwall,
had arrived,at Ravens, and would leave on the
30th ult., for New York.
She has $1,1100,000 in gold on board,, bottles a
halfpillion dollars for England. Thir ty-ilve of her
passengers,' Including Senator Broderick and Col.
Fremont, arrived hero by the Quaker City.
Tho connecting steamer, golden Gate, left San
Francisco on the sth. Hor machinery became dis
abled, and elle returned to that port on the 10th.
The steamer Golden Ago left in her stead on the
11th ult., and arrived at Panama on the 24th.
The eloop•of-war St. Louie of Havana for Aspin
well on the 29th ult.
The Steamer Herald, of Sau Francisco, of the
ult.. la tbo only California paper brought by
the Quaker City. The news therein is of an unim
portant character,
wagon-road party had beon attaolted by
tho Indians, bat tho latter had been repulsed with
out loss.
It is sai4 to he the intention of the Mormons to
go into tho Russian Possessions, should matters
prove serious,
The editoes from *vane, nre 'unimportant
• The health of Havana had become good.
, It le, reported that the appointment of idirasol
to relieve Coiseba as Governor•denoral ins not
aeoeptable to the people.
bachange on New Tork and sugars were Demi•
unity lower, ,holders of sugars preferred to ship
to the, United States. Gold commands three per
omit. premium. ,
.The shipments of email eargoes to Europe were
salve, but there are no freights for heavy eargoos
Thu Quaker City brings $173,000 in speola
CALIFORNIA INTELLIGENCE.
The official 'returns of the resent:election in
nearly all the' nonntiee give Weller, the Democratic}
candidate for Governor, ,a majority of 11,600 over
all the other candidates.
The Majority in favOr of the payment of the
&etc - debt Is $O,OOO. The Senato cantata of twen
ty-fire Deinoorate and tiro Republicans, and tho
Assembly of fifty-four Democrats and sixteen op
position.
The orop of cereals is largely ahead of tbo de
mand for home consumption.
The news of the panto In New York had created
but little serpent..
.The trial of Treasurer Bates has resulted in a
verdict in favor of the State, to the full amount of
his bend, $lOO,OOO.
Th'e Mormons in Carson Valley were to leave
there for Utah on the 25th . of Ootober. Brigham
,Younghui ordered them to form a secret cavalry
company, equipped with a year's provisions and
clothing.
The expedition from Fort Buohanan against the
Apsoho Indians killed fifty and took one hundred
and fifty prisoners.
Cheat ezeitement prevails between the Sonorlans
and the inhabitants of Arizona, and no Americans
aro allowed a passport into Sonora.
The Plnoo•lndlens have killed one hundred and
fifty Tomes and Apaohes for outrages committed
on them.
Xo papers have been received from the Isthmus
or South America.
Non•Arrlanl of lbe Indian.
QUEBEe, November 2-9 o'clock I'. M.—The'
steamer Indian, over duo from Liverpool, hos not
yet been signalled
,at River du Loup. As there is
little prospect of obtaining her news to•night, the
telegraph lino to that place has boon closed.
The Southern Mall
Wssnisarox, Nov. 2.---The Southern mail
furnishes papers from all points as Into as due.
The rimeilds of ootton at Houston, Texas, since
the }lrk of September, amounted to 13,000 bales.
The stook on handon the 21st ult. was 0,300 bales.
A letter from Brownsville says that Judge
Watrous's sliver mine is no longer doubtful, The
yield was large, and sixty hands were employed.
Many disastersare reported to have occurred on
the coast of Texas during a gale which prevailed
on the 28th ult. The losses wore not sorinual.
New York Bank Statement
Nair Yonx, Nov. 2 —The following is the con.
ditioii,of the banks of this city, as shown by their
weekly atxtement : •
increaso of specie $2,472.000
lucrooso or deposits 3,4121000
Decrease of loans 275,000
Docreaso of el roulittlou 050,000
Commercial Espionage—Fatal 41fra y
AvausrA, Ga., Nov. 2.—Mr. Bell, an agent of
Douglass a Co.'s New York Commercial Agonoy,
.killed a citizen of Yorkville, S. C., named James
Allen, on Saturday last. Tbo oommunioation of
information injurious to Mr. Allan is stated to have
been the cause of tho diffoulty. Mr. Bell has
boon placed under arrest.
Faint Accident
PLYMOUTH, LUZOIIIO CO., Pa., Nov. 2.—Andrew
islndsloy WAS instantly killed by falling from tho
buOlcot whoa owning out of Monislana's shrift to
day.
Markets
SANANNAII, Novembor 2.—Cotton—Sales of 100
,bales to-day at 111 a 121 e. lliarkot closed firm.
AUGUSTA, Novombor Y.—Cotton—Salim of 800
bales to-day, ivith buoyant market. Prices mostly
12e.
LATER FROM UTAH TERRITORY.
(From the New York Times.]
03IAILI CITY, N. T., Thursday, October 22, 1851
—News has just reached here from our frontier
Mormon settlement upon the Loupe Fork of the
Platte Iliveri tear the mouth of Beaver, and
known as the Beaver settlement of Mormons
(about one hundred miles Inland from here), that
some ,ronegado Mormons, or seceders from the
Mormon Church, fleeing from the Bonitos of Solt
Lake had reached that settlement a few days
since ? , bringing the news that a largo force of the
Mormon militia, under Brigham Young and Heber
C. Kimball, were reparsng to have Salt Lai,.
City, toith provistons and ammunition for a six
weeks' campaign in the mountains to the east
ward. and thus, to stop, if possible, the passa.ze of
the United States troops. Although the positive
destination wash secret known only to the leaders of
the church, yet it was generally supposed that at
the, pass in the mountains near Bear river ant-oIL
or at Steeple Rooks, the stand would be suede by
the'Salt Lake forces, with an almost certainty of
" wiping out" the entire force sent against them.
In Salt Lake City, and through tho Territory, for
some months prior to this movement. the militia or
volunteer force hays undergone more than ordina
ry drill, and a nuinher of rogimenta would compare
favorably, in point of &Ili, tsith the independent
corps of the States. The Mormons feel confident
of destroying the force Gant against them this fall,
and, with their nextspring's ulliesfrom th 4 States,
expect to stand a regular tight against the whole
United States available force, and not only con
quer, but establish themselves as an independent
Geverntriont.
Between Fort Kearney and the Valley thoso three
or for.r men travelled almost entirely at night, and
under the guidance of one of the party—a
thorough mountain man—evaded tho regular
travelled route, seeing no 'troops or Indians, and
making the travel in about nineteen days. They,
and all the mountain mon with whom I have con
versed, state that fn the event of a stand being
taken in some of the mountain gorges this side of
Salt Lake, ten men can easily and successfully
cope with one hundred and fifty United States
soldiers. And who knows those mountain ranges
and gorges; with all their advantages and disad
vantages, better than the Mormon t This report
also brings thesotnewhat expected news that many
of the Indian tribes from Southern Oreon and
Utah were secretly preparing to join the Mormon
force.
Fire jn Wood Street.—Tbo alarm of fire,
about eight o'olook last evening, wel caused by
till) burning of a stable In 'Wood street, west of
Blood. Seven horses wero burned to death. Tho
ebede 'Of the coal yard of Mr. A. J. Baker adjoin
ing were partially destroyed by the tire.
Decisions by the Secretary el the Treasury.
TIINABURY DICPARTNENT, Oct. 22, 1857.
The following decisions of this Department on
questions as to the proper classification, under the
tariff act of March 3, 1857, of certain artioles of
foreign manufactures entered at the port of Phila
delphia, the importers having, under the pro
visions of the fifth section of that act, appealed
from the decision of the collector of the customs
as to suoh classification, are published for theln
formation of the of of the customs, and Ohm
concerned. Downs. Cons,
Secretary of the Treasury.
Follies of Cotton—Cotton Velvets.
TREASURY DEPAP.TURNT, Oct. 21, 1857.
Bus: The Department has had under considera
tion an appeal from Messrs. Worrell, Coates, &
Co., of Philadelphia, from the decislon of the col
lector at that port, in regard to the rate of duty to
be assessed so an importation of cotton velvets, per
the ship " Wyoming," from Liverpool, and en
tered on the 9th ultimo, and also an appeal from
the same collector as tOtherate of duty chargeable
on the same description of merobandum imported
by Mr. George D. Parrish in the ship " Stalwart,"
from Liverpool, and entered at the port of Phila
delphia on the 7th ultimo.
The article in these eases Is a fabric composed
entirely of cotton, dyed, and known as "cotton
velvet' in the trade, and described in schedule
of the tariff of 1646, as "velvet in the piece, com
posed wholly of cotton," and subjeot to duty, under
that act, at the rate of 15 per cent.
The collector assessed upon the fabric, In ques
tion a duty of 24 per cent., it being, in his opinion,
placed in schedule C, and made subject to that
duty by force of the 2d section of' the tariff ant of
the 3,1 of March, 1857, which transfers to that
schedule "all manufactures composed wholly of
cotton, which ate bleached, printed, painted or
dyed."
It is true, as aliened by the appellants, that " vel
vet In the piece, omposorl wholly of cotton," was
provided for in schedule Fin the tariff of 1846; that
the tariff of 1857 has reduced the rate of duty on
articles embraced in that schedule to 15 per cent.,
end that the fabric in question is "velvet in the
piece." , Whether it still remains in that schedule
is the question at Issue between the importers and
tho collector.
The let section of the act of 3d March, 1857,
reduces the duties upon the articles enumerated in
the several schedules in the tariff of 1846, with
certain "exception," and the first of these excep-
tions is contained in the 2..1 section of that act,
which provides that all manuftwtores composed
wholly df cotton, which are bleached, - printed,
painted, or dyed," shall be transferred to schedule
0.
The language of this provision is very compre
hensive and unambiguous. There is no reserva
tion or limitation imposed in the law itself, and
the Department can impose none. In view of the
directionppooeitivo o f the statute, ihe only points to be rmineintimc.unaeraoeratia
are, is the fabric in question a "manufacture
composed wholly of cotton ?" and is it "bleached,
printed, painted, or dyed?" It being &manufac
ture wholly of cotton, and dyed, it must be held
to be transferred, by the second section of the eat
of 1857, to schedule C, and subjeet to duty at the
rate of twenty-four par cent.
The dealeion'of the collector is affirmed.
I am, very respectfully,
lietsam, COBB, Secretary of tho Treasury.'
J. B. BAKER. Esq., Collector of the Customs,
Philadelphia, Pa.
1%0,th%. of Cation—Cotton Hotiery.
TREASURY DEPARTMENT, October 21,1857.
Sue : Appeals have been taken to this Depart-
ment by Messrs. Charles Vezin :k CO., Witcht
Lankenau, and Soblossinger & Co., all of Phila
delphia, from the decision of the collector at that
port as to the rate of duty to be assessed on
bleached and colored cotton hosiery.
The articles in question are compeaed wholly of
cotton, and bleached or dyed.
The collector assessed upon them a duty of
twenty-four per cont., as embraced within the
designation of " all manufactures composed wholly
of cotton, which are bleached, printed, painted,
or dyed," as transferred by force of the second
section of the tariff act of :341 March, 1857, to
schedule 0.
It is contended by the appellants that manufac
tured articles of this description have not been re
moved by the act of 1857 from schedule E, in which
they were placed in the tariff of 1848, under the
classification of saps, gloves, leggins, wits, socks,
etookings, wove shirts and drawers, made on
frames, composed wholly of cotton, worn by men,
women, and children," and that they become liable,
under the reduction of duties by that act, to duty
at the rate of 15 per cent.
The articles in question, under the tariff act of
18441, foil within that classification in schedule E of
the tariff of 1840, and they still remain in that
schedule, subject to the reduced rate of duty of 15
per cent., unless they have been transferred to some
other schedule by the tariff act of 3d Morelli 1857.
The 2d section of that act provides, " that all
manufactures composed wholly of cotton. which are
bleached, printed, painted, or dyed," shall be
transferred to schedule C."
The Department can givelno other construction
to the very oomprobenstve language of this previ
sion than as intended to transfer the articles above
enumerated, and known as hosiery manufactured
wholly of cotton, and "bleached, printed, painted,
or dyed," to schedule C, subject to duty at the rate
of 21 per cent., leaving in shade's E, dutiable at
the rate of 15 per cent., articles of hosiery, if any,
composed wholly of cotton, upon which none of
those processes have been performed.
The decision of the collector is affirmed.
Very respeotfully, your obedient servant,
HOWELL Coen, Secretary of the Treasury.
T, B. BAKER, Esq., Collector of the Customs,
Philadelphia, Pa.
The Secretary has also decided that an article
known as "snow drop damask," composed of
linen and cotton, is entitled to entry at a duty of
nineteen per cent. under schedule D of the tariff
of 1857.
trader this decision, all article' composed of
linen and cotton will hereafter be admitted at a
ditty of nineteen per cent.
MATTERS AND THINGS IN NEW YORK.
[From the New York papers of last evening.]
TOE Clll3B CONORESB.—The contest between
Mr. Lichtenheim and Dr. Raphael for the third
and fourth prizes in the grand tournament was
concluded on Saturday, Mr. Lichtenheim winning
the first three engagements. Messrs. Murphy and
Paulsen have played three games, each gaining
one, and one being drawn.
Dnowamo or Dannicts MR/L—On Saturday
afternoon a party of five men, named Hiram
Myers, Benjamin Enroll, Thomas Godwin, Jamas
Murray, and Win. 11. S. Smith, went from New
York in a boat tea raft of timber lying near the
Elysian Fields, for the purpose of fishing, and
while there became so intoxicated that they were
unconscious, and three of them laid down upon the
raft. Ono side of the raft rested upon the beach in
such a manner that it would not goat; and while
they were lying there, so overcome by their fre
quent libations that they were insensible of any
thing. the tide rose. end their persons became
nearly submerged in water. In this condition
they worn found about 6 o'clock on Saturday even
ing, and removed to the Hoboken station house.
Physicians were at once called to their aid, and
after the application of restoratives two of them
revived ; but Smith was found to be beyond the
possibility of recovery, and ho died during the
evening,
UTILITY OF A COFFEE-POT.—The captain of
the barque Virginia, which arrived willow York
yesterday morning, from Turks Island, reports:
"On the 27th ult., while hove to tinder a close
reefed maintopmil, we shipped a sealhrward, which
carried avrayi the gallery with its entente, (cook
excepted,) since which time we have been com
pelled to cook the beef and pork in a collho.pot."
The firemen of Trenton (N. J.) had quite a
time on Saturday afternoon in testing the merits
of their relative "machines." The following Is
the result: Through 241 feet of hose, the Hand4n-
Hand throw water 142 feet, 9 inches. The Dela
ware threw water 164 feet, 9 inches. The Hanna
ny. playing through 23 feet loss of hose, and be
ing entitled to an addition of 25 feet in muss
quence, threw water 141 feet, a inches. The Good
Will, playing through the same length of hose as
the Harmony, and being entitled to the same addi
tion, threw water 151 feet, 9 inches. The Eagle,
entitled to the same addition, threw water 151 feet,
9 inches. And the Union, also entitled to the same
additions, threw water 154 feet, 2 inches. Through
50 feet of hose, the lland-In.lland throw water 133
feet, I Inches. Delawere, no measurement taken.
Harmony threw water 125 feet. Good Will threw
water 1117 feet, 1 inch. Eagle threw water 139 feet,
6 inches. Union threw water 180 feet, 3 Inches.
THE COURTS.
YESTERDAY'S PROCEEDINGS
(Reported for The Ptees.]
COMMON PL.:As—Judge Thompson.—.An
appyli
eataon for an Morris or.
The Philadelphia Insurance Company, the Phila
delphia Bank, and Redmond Cooper. An applies.
time for RA injunction to restrain defendants from
disposing of, protesting, or negotiating a certain
promissory note given by defendants in favor of
the Philadelphia Insuranoe Company for $3,000,
dated February, 1857. The complainant alleged
that he loaned his note to Redmond Cooper as a
personal favor, with the assurance that at the ma.
Witty plaintiff could have said note without pay
ing an amount of money on or for the same, and
that in the meanwhile the note should not be used
in any manner. The defendant, Cooper, denied
the allegations contained in the complainant's
bill. Thu injunction was refused. Frederick C.
Brewster for the complainant; henry M. Philips
and George Junkens for defendants.
James Ewing vs. Sarah Jane Ewing. A feigned
issue in divorce. Verdict for the defendant.
DISTRICT COURT—Judge Sharswood.—Dusen.
bury and Austin vs. Samuel Caibraith et. al., late
trading as Caibraith and Wilson. An action for
money had and received. George W. Wollaston
for plaintiff, and ,Roon for defendant. On trial.
George and William ifullorson vs. the Awe,
can Porcelain Company. n action for goods sold
and delivered, N'ordiot for the platntiff far
81,373,10, M. J Mitcheson for plaintiff, and
James W Paul for defendant,
Michael F. Menehon and Isabella Monehon vs.
Alexander Morton. An notion of replevin for
household furniture, Joshua Owens for plaintiff,
and A. Thompson for defendant.
COURT Or QUARTER SESSIONS—Judge Conrad.—
Willlam was charged with seduction. Ver.
diet not guilty. The defendant was represented
by Lewis C. Cassidy and William B. Itanken,
Esqrs,
Min Miller was charged with the larceny of
plates, lie plead guilty, and was sentenced to
eight months in the county prison,
Jeremiah Callahan wcs charged with larceny,
plead guilty, and was sentenced to one year in the
county prison.
Ire are authorized to state that, on the (lot
of ground, in Chestnut street, near the corner of
Eighth, between the premises (part of Fetridge's
Butler purchase) now nearly completed, for occu
pation by Messrs. Stone, and Levy, respectively,
the erection of a new and hand some store,with white
marble front, will be commenced this week. Em
ployment will thus ho given, during the winter, to
a great nomber of mechanics, artisans, and In.
boron.
Industrial Women's sissociation.—Thero will
be a meeting of the Industrial Women's ASBoCill
tion, at Mechanics' Hall, N. L., Third street, below
Green, at,7l o'clock this evening. All persons Inte
rested in the subject are invited to attend Tho
office of the association is 118 South Seventh, be.
tween Chestnut and Market street.
Young Men's Christian association.— The
third anniversary of this organisation, which takes
place to-night at the Muted Fund Hall, wilt no
doubt be well attended. We commend it to the
young men of our city. The association was or
ganized for their good, and should certainly Twelve
their support.
Fire.—Yesterday morning, about four o'clock,
a fire broke out in the lumber yard of Mean. R.
L. k. C. L. Nichols, in Carpenter street. It was
extinguished before melt damage was done,
TBE CITY.
ASIGSEMINTB THIS EVENING.
ilea Di,Mt Or MOW!, B. W, ootrsms or BROAD AND La
-01787 Silt/I/T4 '• Game of Speculation" Little
Talleklne"—' , Box and Box."
WBeettet're ARCM 8 71161,1 T TRZITRE, AHOII &TRW.
£lOOl - 811010.--" Queen of Sped... ,—• Bleek-Eyed
fitteen."
WALNUT 8781117 TUZATAI, N R. CORSLII OF 111171
AND WAI-NOT 81111211 —" Stage-Struck Barber"—
"Linda, the Cigar Girl"—" Mesmerism."
..Eaactt's Cir.u..zetaa, ISO Sta CalatiTSCT
The Arctic Ship Beaoluto "
Saarroau'a Ortal. nolJalt, Et.araaru $ ,
CUESTZIOT.-+-Etb101)111bLIN Illairtrited,,cooeludlticiritk
a laughable altarpiece.
Titomacria llaatirisa, Ylrlir AND 01 1 10STIIII 4 SYS
i,Concert.,,
Parade' of tAI Undid Americas Mechanics--
Dedication of (heir nog grAnd parade
on the occasion of the detlioatioa of the )Iplendid
Hall of the United American Mechanics, on Foarth
street, above George, (Northern Liberties), came
off yesterday morning, according to the programme
laid down. The line was formed on - Arch street,
under the tnarshalship of Major PoterPrita. The
weather was magnificent. and the regalia of the
order, the numerous flags and banners, the insignia
o the trades, de., de. showed to the best possible
advantage in the bri g ht morning sumlight. . 1 1114
marshals were arraye d in showy regalia, mat wore I
blue sashes. The men inh
t e ranks were alb
dressed in black suits with white gloves. and their
wore We regalia of their respective ootmeilsma
collar anal apron. '
Several of the trades were represented in the
line of the proeession by groups of workmen who
were engaged in various mechanical employments
while mounted upoulatforms on wheels. In this
respect the display afforded inexperienced lookers
on an insight Into the improvements made in diffe
rent trades within the last ten or fifteen years.
In the great centennial parade of 1832, the me
chanics worked in the line with old-fashioned
tools, wli e l i ph have since been driven out of use by
improve ante In machinery. The parade yester
day hw,. dome of this improved machinery illus
trated, and it added not a little to the interest of
the ditplay.
The lino was formed in the usual order, the
chief marshal and his aide leading the line, and
the various bodies forming in their regular order.
First came the
,
Fuser I/mimes—E. C s obb, marshat-LWash
ington Council, No. 5, headed this disfaier. The I
members turned out in great strength, and they
made a profuse display of flags and wreaths. The
banner borne by this council Was ¢lllglaifiCent. It
represented Greenough's statue of Washington,
with the head surrounded by stars. Upon either
stile of the statue were figures designed to illustrate
Honesty and Sobriety, the motto of the, council.
This body bad with them a small printing press,
drawn by horses. Person were employed printing
cards upon it.
Pennsylvania Council, No. 6, made a magnificent
display of flags and floral devioes.
Kensington Connell, No. 0, hid a beaallsl ban
ner, wkloh represented 'Yuloan at the forge. The
reverse was a picture of a. ship
.sipen the stadia
This council had In the line sevorsl small models
of ships, and two trades 'were st work upon
wagons. .Boilermakers and machinists worked at
the lathe or piled the bellows on one of the plat
forms, and upon the otber hattert*ere engaged in
blocking and finirhingbeavere, Kensington Coun
cil made a very spirited dlOility.
Independent,Council, 10, had a splendi d banner, wbiohrepresented the drafting of the
Declaration of Independence.. On a stage, drawn
by six horses, a party of oak coopers were at work.
This council also bad a party of shoemakers at
work upon another Platform. Independent Conn
, oil turned eat strong.
' Bactorn Diviami.—Charles .Neman, marshal - ,
Liberty Council, No. 11, headed this division.
They had a beautiful banner representing the
Goddess of Liberty, with Washington and other
figures.
Fame Cennoll, No.ll. This council bad 4 spice
did banner, carried by a tatty et 5e.11621., ThS
banner represented Panic soaring aloft; trumpet in
hand and bearing a medallion ofireshington. The
members of the Fame had upon a car suicide' of
the National Monument to Washington, with car
penters at work with the plane and circular saw.
Tam) DIVISIOX.—C. M , Jones, marshal. The
most prominent feature of this division was the dis
play made by Elm Tree Council, No. 26, . The
members were out in strength; and they had with
them a oar with stone cutters at work on a marble
monument.
Fouurn Drvislox.—Thin portion of theparade,
under the direction of Marshal Robert Williamson,
was headed by the Decatur Conned!, No. 34. Tbla
council exhibited a bauner of unusually rich
materials. The device on the front was a black.
smith at work at his forge . on the reverse was a
representation of the burnhle of the frigate Phila
delphia in the harbor of Tripoli.
This council also had a representation of one of
Decatur's sea tights—the oapture of the English
frigate Macedonian. The model was on wheels,
and drawn by a regular " ship's company," so far
as costume is concerned,
A printing prow was at work in this portion of
the parade; also a party of gunsmiths plying their
trade. Flags, eagles, and banners were very
plenty.
Diligent Council, No. 42. was well represented,
as was Mt. Vernon Council, No. 44.
FIFTH DIY'S/DN.—IL M. Warren, marshal. This
division wan preceded by a full hand ;. then eame
Radiant Star Council, N0.,45 ; a full repreisenta.
lion. A. chop of huit.makex were hard at work
hero. Relief Council, No. 47, came next. They
turned out very. strong, and ,bole. a number of
large flags. - The following bodies made up the
rest of this division: Amerman Snit Comma, No.
53; Schuylkill Council, No. 50 ; Springville Coun
cil, No. 75.
iziltxra H. C. Pratt widths mar
shal of this division. It was composed of the fol
lowing ocranoils, preceded by a full baud ; Heart.
in-Hand Council, No. 79 ; Promise Condon, No.
101; Union Council, .NO. 102; - Dusralagtevra
Connell, No. 135; .Delaware Division—Councils
Non 3 and 4.. There was a grand fluttering of
flags and banners, but no very remarkable dames
in this portion o f proemial'. •
Tun Savanru stir LAST DIV/SION was mar.
shelled by Mr. Morris Rodgers, and accompanied
by a full band. Seven four-horse and two MO
bon+ carriages then followed, santaining-- -
Officers and Trustees of the Hall Association.
Chaplain and Orator of the day.
Otheers and Members of the National Connell.
°Moors and Members of State .Connoll.
Trustees of the Widows' and Orphans' Pond.
Trustees of the Mechanics' Retreat for Disabled
Members.
At the conclusion of the parade, the new hall of
the American Mechanics was formally dedicated.
This structure is situated at Fourth and George
streets, and is truly an admirable building for the
purposes for which it is designed. After the
singing of two odes and an eloquent and lengthy
address by Col. U. U. E.. Elliott, the exercises of
the day wore concluded.
The Nut/tern Horns for Fritudlesa Children.
—ln accordance with previous notice, a large
number of ladise and gentlemen met In the Con
cert Hall, in Chestnut street, lest evening, for the
purpose of listening to the vindication of the claim
of the Northern Home for Friendless Children.
(merge H. Stuart, Esq., was called to the chair.
M. J. Miteheson, Esq., read the @ail for the
meeting, setting forth the object of the meeting,
and the present condition of the House. • The Rev.
Mr Chambers being called upon, opened the mute
ing with an energetic prayer.
The' Hay. Kingston Goddard, D. D., said that
to be a benevolent man In eueh timed was certainly
en honor of no ordinary ebnrenter. He compli
mented the President (Mr. Stuart) for the Chris:
tiara courage he manifested by the position he now
occupied, 110 alluded to the hardness of the
times, and to the dittleulties whititi were presented
in the fact of a universally afflicted c ommunity. m
Ho feared not, however, but the people whe bellev
eel with him, that Qod would care for all who cartel
for the poor gptl helpless, and for that and other
suet; ruson a It e same forward to advocate the claims
of the Northern Home for Friendless Children.
Ile said that a new age would soon be inaugurated,
and these destitute children would be culled upon
to «mph many of them, important positions as
responsible social beings, or atipehts to the com
munity, and memorials of a negleetfal past.. He
continued to set forth the objects of the institution,
relating several cases of haplahip of the most
heart-rending nature. - He painted scenes of
wretchedness In the garret and • the cellar, and
contrasted the condition of gush with that which
many of them now occupied in the house. Ile
said that the Institution was calculated to take
helpless children away from homes of poverty and
starvation, and homes of vice.
The Rev. Alfred Coalman WIN proud that he
was a Philadelphian, nett only because of its adapt
ation as a city beanie, but because of its monuments
of brotherly lore and sisterly charity. lie referred
to the several charitable Institutions of the city,
and characterized them to the jewels of Philadel
phia. He said that the managers of that institu
tion had come before the community In the name
of the claims of humanity , . Me Mad that it was a
inlay for him and Ids hrethern,bandreetste the
claims of such a little band as ocoupitata place in
the audience to the right of the platform. He
knew no higher glory than to be' counted among
the vindicators of homeless, helpless children.
Re related en anecdote, and presented the in
stitution to the audience no a grand movement
wedded to Dloty himself. He named some of the
triumphs over poverty and wreteltedmess, Which
this Northern House bad accomplished—spoke of
little ohildren being led to Jesus, and asked if this
was nothing? Whether amid theetorm of financial
business, they would allow this institution to be-
come a wreck ? He believed the fame of this city,
his ono of brotherly love, to be glory enough to,
stand forth as an incentive to the people to ant, and
to preserve the Interests of the city by protecting
the children and ,, raising pp a barrier to protect
the future greatness of our oltY•
The ohildren then sung their I Pcorite
";'want tote on
The R J
ev. ohn Chambers next addressed the
meeting, Ile said that he would ho ashamed of the
wildest hathatiart if he eauld leave the roam with-
Out giving something after hearing each a song as
that whioh had Jut been exeouted. Ile said that
whilst the House of Refuge professed to mere crime,
the Northern Home professed to prevent
and =ounce of prevention was worth a thousand
pounds of cure. He desertb ed a visit which h e h a d
recently made to the institution, the merits of
which they hod come to consider. lie denied that,
in asking old for the house be could be accused of
beteg a beggar. It was one of the pivoting pri..
'illegal of humanity to protect its own Interests,
and as fur woman, it was Permission, and it would
boa monstrosity to suspect her of Infidelity to her
right!' and duties,
Such institutions reduced taxation, anti tended
to make pauperism a stranger. Pauperism had en
business In a country like this. lay sustaining
moll institutions there would be no use for such
I tea-drinking and sugar-eating establishments an
that on the banks of the Schuylkill. (Great ap
plause ) He concluded by appealing to the people
in the name of their Christianity and their Ameri
can hearts, to come up and chow their appreciation
of duty and privilege.
Mr. Stuart made a closing appeal, and the child
ren sung another of their favorite ditties, named
" Sparkling Water," and thus the exercises were
brought to a close.
After the singing of the Doxology and the pro
nouncing of the benediction, the audience dis
persed.
Persons desirous of aiding the Home may send
their contributions to John W. Claghorn, 1009
Arch street.
Police (ferns.—Yesterday morning, John
Sweeney was before Alderman Elmo, °Urged with
carrying concealed deadly weapons, and threaten •
ing to kill a man named Robert Dougherty.., Mr.
Dougherty testified that as he was antismog the
coach at Fairmount he was stopped by Sweeney
and asked with what _crowd. ha-was en Sunday
night; and Mr. Dougherty linscswiag hlmthat he
was with no crowd, Mr.;SWlelley drew e large
dagger frtaa a inure which he bad, and said he
would Cal him (Dougherty) in two, and weld
skin him alive. Mr. Dougherty immediately
stepped into the coach, and accosting the tint
=MEE
hedideieil &Ye* to be arrested.
Mi. - Sweeney Stated that be was s drover, and
that on Sunday night he met two men at Jones's
Hotel. He alleged they tools five or six dollars
frovalslin, sad on meeting the. 4 Yesterday morning
they assaulted him. The alderman committed
Sweeney to *newer the . obatte,
Yesterday afternoon, Charles &blither had a
hearing before Ald. on the charge of receiv
ing stolen goods. From the evidence, it appeared
that the houses of Messrs. Morrie, Nicholson, and
Major, of Pottsville, had each been robbed of vazi
oat articles, about one year age.
High Constable Nutt hearing that the parties were
is the city, arreated:Mr.rfaidoistvr and wife, and
had them bound peer by Ald...Ease on the charge
of reaching stolen goods. On their premises were
found some of the goods of Mr. Morris. They were
taken to - Pottsville and theie acquitted of the
charge of larceny. They then came to this city.
Mr. Nutt bearing that a watch tostonglm to Mr.
Major bad been sold to a man named Prederiek
,Wolf, Proceeded there yesterday and arrested
Sabiniser.
Mr. Wolf, on being. sworn, testified that Mr
Sehinizer had sold the watch to him. Mr. Shini
er!' steted that he received this property from an
other man.
The sideman emu:ratted him for another bear
Mijor lestifiid to being the owner of the
t lhatlrr. Wollikitd to hie co!wiesion.
• k-,.
..'iii i l`lTE,'Pti3Ot LINE.
LETT,93I FROM NEW YORK.
_ ...
(Corroirin.lAos' es of Me proo T l , _ i
NEW TOLE, diet. 2,1857--5.20 PM.
To-day it is currently reported that the hank
managers are generally disposed to defer the re
sumption of specie payments until they think that
the financial condition of the Union sinirrants such
a course. These gentlemen, whose eolleitude for
the interests of the commereial community, and
the public at large, has been so abuudsntlyproved,
think that we need repose, and that they blessed
uncertainty of oar present position will to more
conducive to that end than any each disturbing
event m the discharge of their obligations by the
banks, which is slightingly termed "arbitrary
• coin payments," Indeed those who do-not de
sire, Ibis sort of repine, and who Prefer even
painful vitality to " the repose" of penetration,
are said to be promoting en unktatifishie agitation.
If we agree -to submit 'very quietly to this in
definite arrangement, by which we are -to be so
emelt lbeeefited, we are premised, by the oldest
and most eonserretive backs, to extend their
discounts gradually on "the right sort of pa
per." I have already told you what the right
sort of paper means. As the tight awl does
not Include a very large "nuinlatir,
.serf
those
who do not belong to this little category are very
numerous, it is somewhat natural that the premise
Is not very Itatikfisetory, and that several people
call it "another humbug." The past conduct of
the banks does not, perhaps' inspire perfect confi
denies in their good faith ; ' but as the New York
city banks are not submitted to vulgar centre-
Lionel rats, and are above the law, it ought not to
be expected that, they are bound to attend their
diecounts bemuse they, have promised .to do to,
when their, whole *lnatome, at present. is one
broken promise, and when every note they Jame 13
a falsehood.
It- to' i feet, 'however, that money is staler for
the most 'unexceptionable names at short dates,
that money,tm ealliapel
in
on ttYloshlo,
and thil the Sinks are in search of prime paper,
backed by prints co/laterals. They are not, how
, ever, very successferin their _search, because the
cless of men, who' Would nialrn._thil papfir do not
want' money, trade being perfectly stagnant. Rates
in the, littera area male eamer,but those who need
money, if they cannorget extensions, mast either
go 'to the watt, or psy,terrible interest. „Foreign
unhinge Is' firmer. Thi sugmly of firiklelass bilis
is by no means abundant. - Bills on Ishiden are
veiling at' $1034108. - Benzenesignatscres from
410741071. Domestic "einhange, is still very
difficult, and causes great emberreatemit to thole
dependent on collections from the eoentry: Rates
continue very mush the Santo as on Saturday.
The Clearing Henze , settlement
-was 'unusually
tares' to•day. Clearing' 512,398,768.5 N and the
balances paid in coin $321,20.74. .The cash tran
sactions at the liiib-Trearrni van' as follows:
Receipts, $555,609.77. (tnciladiet $500,000 from St. Lotus), Payments, 597,510.77. _Balsam $5,90 5 ,-
49154 • The receipts at the Crottsan House for
duties were $48,060. ' .... • •
The statement of ‘ the New York city banks of
their average condition for the week ending Octo
ber 31st,shows a deereaeo of 2277,759 irk towns; of
55.49,9911 n circulation, and an increase 4 . 92,471,-
798 in Specie, and of $3 " , 2 30 in deposita. The
following is a comparative statement of the last
two weeks:
Loans_ • Spools. Cireelatknalieposits.
Get.• 24, $05,695 , 518 810,411,043 8 3,884,739 857,550,334
Oct. 31, 95,394754 22,833,44,1 - 6.334.1411 "61,44,565
The stock market wee lees animated to-day.
At the "first board. New Tort Central Visaed at
65, and closed at 6417' Reading
. declined 2 per
cent; Erie I ; Galeria and Chicago i'; Chicago and
Book Island advanced 1; ioxl Weltigsais Southern.
old snick, fell 1.. IllinOis:Centrel bonds 'advanced
1 per cent.; New York Central iPs else advanced
I; Erie convertibles of 21 went up' 3 per cent ;
and -Cumberland Coal wimp-any declined I.
At the - Woad board, Reading elated at 29, New
York Central at 54k, Paleat 12, hile'higen Central
`at 40, Panama at 72, Illinois Central at 81; and Ga
lena and , Chicago- at; 64#. The malice, was less
animated than in the morning, and the feeling teas
confident. There is to be another meeting of the
Eriustookholdere this evening. and the a meeting
of the Meade of the road in` - Muer City:
NNW FORK STOOK R1C114.991 SALES, Noeember 2.
PIM , BOARD. - : .:1 0
206010 N ilit's 6s '73103 150 Nellie MSS Co 74
8390 NY State fr's !SS IN i .25 Canton Ca -• l 143
600001183 Es , 85 92 24 NY Oen R. : e 65
1000 Unto ea 'la 02 - 60 - do - - --e MX
2000 Sont'y Bt's to 93 Zie . do ..'. 610 fIX
4000 Virginia Ole . 79 60 - , do . bl.O 65
1000 MLA St'e as 81 100 - - 40 -.- bco 65
2000 Georgian', tia 81 124.5 do -,-, 4 64X
11000 Mbrouri 64 68X$ 50 -do •-• JO5 64%
9009. do . -MX 1 4001rie Railmaitia3 13
NOG do -, 68% 100 .- - - - do -- 4 12%
. 2050 Cal tit, IS'. 67 1 106---' dos • to 3 12
5410 14 I Can 3ls 90 - ..nit do .: I'-s 3 121(
1600 N Untie ta-in 11,11 260 de - 53 12%
1000 11l Can bds 69% 100 do - au 12
3000 Brio tals 13 58 10 Ruined 35 11, 15
4000 do .be 40 - do - 14
3090 do 60 60 do ;WO 14%
0000 Erie It coats 'TIWN' 5011arlom - 71 — 7
2000 do 20 , 15 N B&llartford B. 105
1000 . do 436; - S ' do 104%
4000 do 30 100 Reading IL _ all esh
.1000 do , 62 20 100 do ,- 'MO 28
1000 L bland II Is 60 300 do .4 all 26 x
50 Bank of N Amor 75 50 do c 'Ali
10 Bank of Cum 79 MO do c 29
8 Del &IfCI Co 94 700 do ' 'sack ..%
5 - do 93% 100 - do' • e 28
40 Penn Coal Co 61 LW Melt So tr.Nllt 11x
10 Combd Coal 630 ZMb IS& N Iprf sk 2434
€OO Clay & 2012. e 43 6 . do . . 25
100 do e 27X 10 Panama B -72 x
9501tle&RIS . 66% 1 50 ' do e 72
50 do • 86% 160 111 Cat Et e 81
10 do 156 - 10 %eyed ik Chill SO
110 La Cr 6.. Slit ex' 100 Gal A. Chic B 63
le do 6% 50 do 40 64
10 3fleh Cen It to
BROOM)
3000 Missouri o's esh
MO do - 6SX
6000 Tenn ds '9O 18
10 Union Beak 86
10 Metrop's Bank 75
10 lkd & Hod Co 921( j
%) LaCrosse & 5111 H. ex I
• 400.1165 Baliroad , .12%
320 do 4 12 14
100 do 44 12 •
150 Ilarlem R • 7
/90 -do OX
TEL MARKETS
Asps are heavy, - with an increased supply ; we
notice small sales at $1.25 for pots, and $6 SO for
pearls. ,
Bemknatirers.—The market for Stan and West
ern flour opened buoyantly, and lone bales were
made at reduced ratee,latt with loge 'receipts,
prices dropped' back again, 'elating 'warily at a
concession of 5 cents per bbl: on eOlOlllOll shipping
graded; the sales are 9,690 bbls. $l.BO e 54.95 for
common to, . good State, 25.55 a $5.20 tar extra
State, KW a $4.95 for =tarn= to good Ifebigan,
Indiana, Ohio, lowa, de., and TS a 5910 for
extra do.
Souther* lour is heavy for the eornmoacuali
ties, and steady for extra breeds, with sales i? ;50
this at $5.25a55.40 ifor mixed to good braids of
Baltimore, Alexandria, Georgetown, predereks
burgoto., and 25.5047 for favorite, fancy m a
extra brands do, including extra Petersburg at h e
latter rate.
Canadian flour is easy for extra brands, (no at.
perfine oftbring,) with sales of 600 bbls at 25.20 ;
$8.75 fur the range of extra brands. -
Rye floor is dull, with small sales at $3.25154 for
for the range of fine and superane.
Corn meat is firmer for Jersey, but there is se
thing of moment doing; we • quote Jersey' at 91,.-
401 Braddywine $3.75. '
- Wheat is easier, with large arrivals ; the sales
' include' 1,300 bushels mixed Southern at $1.35;
2,000 handsome red Southern, $1.31; 2,7.50 white
at 21.50.41.55; 3,000 white Canadian, tel.:.; 47,-
000 Chicago spring 21.0141.02 k ; 1,800 damaged
Milwaukee club, 921; and 24,700 sound Mil waa
kee club, 51.0641.08.
Barley is steady, with sales of 4,000 bushels four
; rowed State at 75 Mats. ' ' •
' Rye is doll and nominal at 75480 cents for Jersey
,- and prime Northern.
' Osta are unchanged; we quote, 33137 e forSontb -
era, Xei4oe ferlersey, 40a430 for State, and 43at'ao
fat Western,
Corn firmer, with a limited supply arriving; the
sales are 13,000 bushels mixed Vi astern at 7.5a77c„
closing at the latter rate.
Corrox.—There is very little Offering; milli its.
upland is quoted at 12 cents.
PeovisioNs.—Pork is heavy and dull : 5015 Mali
new mesa were offered for sate, deliverable this
month et the option of the getter, at $lO, but we
did not learn of a sate being consummated - the
nominal %notations on the spot are s2t'ss24 25 for
old meat: 11611$16:34 for prime, and 223 for new
mew, Dressed hogs are muter. with sales at 6 :a; i
Ibr soft and hard. Beef is dull and unsettled,
with sales of 70 bbls at 394'10.60 for country
men; 5 4 347.25 for country prime, and 510 •50 aSI2. SO
for re.pitoked Western. Prime mess beef is now
Inquired ter, but quotations are as yet nominal at
539
It $2l, Beef hams are dull, with sales of 40
bia s a t ,gll a 316. Bacon is beau ; small sales of
city smoked were made at 13c. Cut meats are en
tirely nominal. Lard is firmer, 'with Eale3 of 200
tierces and bbls at 101 a 12,5, the latter rate for
choice. Butter and cheese are unchanged.
STOCK OF PORK AND SILT re riCEING YARDS, NEW
TORE AND noora.rs, soy, }oar, 1357
vest
'5O Ifll & Ilia 8 13
50 N Y Can It - 64!‘,
106 GUT k, 'rola. 271(
100 Beading R 1.10 23X
100 do 2.1 21
100 do ao VX
300 ' .to 03 V
' 43 MI& Cm IL 40
- 5 Nanazan 11. 72
54 111 Ceih it - St
4aGal&Chiß
Total Last 11;4 .ist.
614 564 new. mmt.h. last yell..
... .. 9.041 4,St.S
4SI 3'A
.. ..
.. • • 1.21: 31
... • 21 S
2.'40 :34
•• - •
14:. 1 349
-•- -
162 7%4
• - •
• • • • 12s 7:6
491 336
Thin ineu..
Pcllo. ram
Flank
Rump.
Refuse meu.
Rolm prime
Other refuse.
ralaspected.
City Mei! .. .. . 8
City prime 44 Lb '...
Repacked maid. ........ ....1.1211 2.843: 3 xy;
Do CS).Re mesa ....... .... NO 1.55.1 1 :`•
Railroad boot' 103 10d 7c7
Refuse men 121 bd2 431
Byrum prime 14 14 2.1
Other reins. 56 34 ad:
Perna mesa, tel 1 310 114 IBS
Country mess 412 99 6es
Country prime ICO
Uninspectesl Ic2 1,3436
Uniospectad bbta. 2,407
WHISIST .—e•sats are MOW, at ti.oltlta,de
.ingsing buoyantly at the latttr tato, wkialt la an improve.
aunt.
16,?25 S,ACci
St 4 11,054