, „ •L' - '-'''''' . .f-4 . 6 -- ii - g 4;!iti, - g ` '4'. ''-' - ' . ,:.`if,",ii.`% , ...;10r4; - c.,...,:ti - -', ' - -.--ff• . t :-.:4,--i 4 , ,1 -' -4 '. 0 '1 ,7 " -*h , ~1 , 11,6 t -' .4, i-,- I , ; ;•zi:i.`' , .'' - :!.'-'‘' '---, 1 TVEBIATi'_I)..EOVIIIEL - 8,'1e67;.• ~ • Vitrz..4-Z"'ll)C, Board ". , • _CLlZlArekiiinfititil .i310`polle; 11,6 131 r r ifiitiertfitinsT_iir,!* • aaiiii6ol34.syl Solt- 1.104,40. Y . l at + "0 ,Wil#6l/6f2PPP7, itt-al- 11 4 :' :1 4 r , 4,744.7e4t 4 g0,0 2 1 9 . 11ne6, tide; that 'l l %, , Ctbivf tatieck' 4. ofltiviltOlittOolf //**S44l44l3OrintWP,*4 l ikr , 3 l/4 -?`", tf`"! ,, - ."•0 15 k.„TPilt..tra l o kl PAI)I 4 Es B ,,A 6 -E• ' --. Tiuk:ldriesager: Or Mreildent,i3goliaban will Le delivetesi to'lhOripreaentotives of th e elliL fninnrYikl4o''Gt ibininio J(, liati P , Tim, 7)4 li**C.:soak Aciliti ii**ol 4 4., announaea that;;lti44iiirlititrit"A s rtlyOrteiago has ooni mcn:o4:4l434.lfiik,_•;..; .--.,,,.....:. ~.;,:,--,,.," !4.1.,* - pifikwitt-,b9.: t oliVired_ to thi , repreJ • sentritlyAklf.ther'ilaifY,RaPnri* -*DPI; /4KIC.R, collegtarigab*kik(-41W.Offieff.:!:' ' ~,• *EYNON:T.Oi i f iletii 1 ' OV.,' V {RON Lii ~'l6 * Elliafiteif: o l443oo ;FAN iIA tt. ' . Tiikl4.oolclii , V.*C 6 i*ltution 'far',a hie , people ; th einaliglielt laiiffiritiost , ditty. , IVlihi j 'i -- 2.70ii-90,14tonstitittion ofTenn srl'iNirikia .Ntriqi:Crif]nif4, l hel'4.*l44ls ~ar , i 4 Democratsratliandth give it , . Or .the popular `. votg;, l 'phtth:creatilt "was a-: gr eat , popular uP -1.'51118.1 •Protpats• aid per one _werer am in against-it,attkiiiu,:lea`derefixrr th e . Indvennerd ImaldAtAA:COliPatiol,liiVaieiftn:Wire never forgiven_.,, - PI rlB,B74B;;Whei-Slea,,neW 0 meek, tioir l iio Sid;thioroodel th e old Constitution, *igbrukin f f t* : a.ilariligA talliktn ' Y-4 511 arif were tonannrted , , , 4l,4lo, lo.frePoth. a ritan-da '4#4l-I'4M-111Y:6-60'OPPY'l"--,:l'haf'main propnidtfonsAs% nnjilondidi jnattetary;,and thdradu4h - fdlpiAl4aidorial. p at r onage I an 'e 44eStiSO; )ielPw; l 4 4 7'-‘ l 4 l inipntiarica aftnnhad winiln:itinsaa Con: at#37El . okofarit Ovaifto pepiln; and ocna siondlia4,./iiia(eatnent. ' , Had- IMO' Cod , ventith refused- to submit their work' to the sovereign, cau1:1411914, all taking - part in the set of saceliale4 would have gone into private life fotever. Some ofthe members of that body) , trho'"'dlnappointed 'their ;constituents ." in - this . and ) othee reSimets, hit not recovered the eetifisleritO` Sof tim ." The 4 44 "4: Viriiiiii,,in',4776;' elteit by GriVornerl4l63, remarkable Th * Vviaslhe!' - `4 . 'Orinstituti' fOr a'State` over' franik mid it Is not strange that the mode should hiyolifeli defeetitak • The - great statest man of the: ant ofthe RevolutiOnaStrsnitoli; idwaYa aPekr - Agogoutoutuni as hail% an essential el ho ,- sanetion -- and authority; i h • pf_the i ,ct ,of 9 - .. major ty. Hero ore his:. @s to this firat Xonatitutions, vrritteglilB2,l. , • our Convention no -, ;apectal authority had beefi delegated WPM people to forma pump:tent Constitution, over -which their saustument legit , iatiell should• have no power, l' alteration. They had been elated for the ordinary purposed of lasts." !Rapp only, and atlt time when the establishment of a new Government,had not been ,proposed nor contemplated. ,Althoujib, therefore, they gave to this itot "thet title of "s Constitutions yet it could be no torethan aetisflegistation, subplot,' as their other .fitanCitere', , ter alteration by them suooesears, , .12-Wbfewaishi,l'srefeid, that ilia oOuleseence 6f thiflojdilailiipidiedthenichr of ot r teal pow er. to , my.to t em, en eVeryttfinictionatiesexerolat unlawful authority over yht:,:if Yawata net gointe - Actual resistance it will be deemed' acquiescence`and conformation' 1118 y et tiocided - whether the r °instance,. mast boj_nstantancous When the right to reidet ceases; or *bother It has yetneased. Of tlib fou r non, organized, •lwenty three have dfaapproved our dartrine and exam:: ple,::andihava: . deemed the- formal authority thetr irea'pte . pa sikcessory foundation for, their Ciiyiditution.'i • the" 'l3altimOre , A Souther*journal;,...retirik on, this latter eX ample : • _ • . filinenstichipahltie general "prfaiiple level,- cd; The taiit of• Kenna is '.."enntanded by peen ifit'oirenmstancel that, beyond the rataappiying. utAyetz,mmaimehder ICllllperalive 'that is Mitutienemintating fret. the -Imeetepten • tion :should be reciogaiest until it bas received the aprinaval;6l.ll4) , cpeopitrof - tho Territory): ' That. 'Convention'int the areatitei , of-za , tit tmintrrity of , the' people of the TerritarY, its kmembers , undar-Lthei rifstriatiVe aatien" - af :OP viva and nuaenetitationalyiate..4iifillept fret ' the polls a majority "et the amstitneney..-it pretended ta relresent: - ,Thane'-.laws` have since lost all . their power ,and 'become-obsolete, Ivith°llt,,''os4lvit* : repeal , • ender% the load of obloquy heaped upon them, but at the time the Condit:4,onel Convention was elected they were ietivir arid , alteotual, and* disfrandised ' large thijority of the real voters of the Territty: To claim-for bc , dy 'Jotted under" suoh eironm etltimes, end , wliom the riFelee of-the people of the TerritorY hae - sisiee,optai, seri:nil occasions; alearly repudiated, the newer jo 'form a Constitution-and tit Itinto satire vitality's the, supremo law of the stale,,vrithcrat allowing Jhe people any oppor tunitylo record their approval or disapproval of lit general provisions, is a stretch", or power alto*. gather anthreppblioan. It may be'remarked as a little :angular, ' in this connection, , that whilst the Leaompton (lOnvention refused , to the, people the right to vote against the OonstitatiOn) they force all,mholTOte Itt 103 ) to VOW rig it, In providing for the decision or the slavery question - the Con vection-has directed that the ballots ,shall :be en. doted Constitution with slavery ' or Cenetitn tion with:no - slavery) 'Ant, whether the ballot is cast for or_against slavery, Pis stilt for the Censti tutio-t-a, mod& of 'getting an affirmative vote that, is. tvottyy, the electioneering tactics of Xentia Xhe atantillia,l4 ; Aver of r iatielvitig the La.` as. the• set at the imople Icansas, and admitting the. TerritorY into the Union - of States upon ihat-inattrraintfere based mainly upon ell:edit:oy. - Such a result' is pressed , `-as: the musiset solution of the - difficultyi and the clutalted mode, of renioving the agitating stational • quiationi4of which... Ate history - of - that Territory has been en prolifie, fret , ' tha arena of national golitio argument' of; opspedimokyle always a, dangerons ) eue ,the peter number , of eases, it falls, sharkWethat.)theetotal. emergeney de loadart..•ant. a* , riiii)atOrad of a digerehoes t , iptWand `Antatoltion of .We._ ; ') prove soh this_easei and tbarthefi.- 40' oder'the to' Oregon "- "Nava the tatting' cause* itakint efleirtionsl." ilideellng Mid ea- °Mush , "whioh:iteexperiatee,',as l'irieltory; hatfaitshad no parallel.'' - OrntßalE at` Vt • Nirerrpereoivethat a-nruabor of Southern Re.o%Olatia: , paper,, always, t 6 a 'yiOlattliak'ar'ilindaineillat':prlfiqi)leil;• 'shit espeoially_.to a: disregard , ot:, the Sovereign rights of :the, aro taking that just and logical viearl •rtf the .)[arias question Which: ii,3bilOofoxii4oted from _;upright ' and Katisiii it will be ret;flectetl, which; leetcled•against the fqy vox* When,: other Territories ask' fOrr4mission into thel-linioni canistinee 'alone . 'should' make its extremely cautions how we:',conntenance , and managers ilia, ottemPt Of, the; intriguers and managers of The. Calhoun. Convention. It ,is estimated that at least seven new Territories are here= ast,er :febe'• - ndmitted into the Union, exclu sive of Kansas, Minnesota, and Oregon, and it would be a semewhat avenging sequel, ii- tha Men Who are' now demanding that a . 0 - oo;iinfion'Aitil be, sovereign and (he t peopla, inbordinate, ihonld dud ,th e Poisdned,cealice commended , to their own lips 'on a future occasion . . ,- J 1 30„ Reeiheru,, Tapers whiclillhaTet spoken" ionnd tuths'in'this aubiectare the Richmond Engtilrerand the Lexington;(Kentucky)States rhann—the ileffte published at Ilic:rettideitee of Our diAldgaished Vieo ,l4: esidt*.' 4 ,The -0;" iittirer,"of Tnesday, publishes a commutileatieli from ct A,State Riede DemOerat,"- which ali• pears in another pert - Of Tut! Punta: to.day, vindicatingßoi*noYOLKEß and the emu' lanolin' • Deineeracy or tho, Wirth in their hostilityio the Calhoun Convention, while, in kto,',..anolial:Oolut?la of the : genie date, after nianitiitiot a_ disposition., to; I.biodoi2 its ori ginal ground ln favor of making the submission of tbC o otitutifin Pc' guaetwto thepeople a liai 1 2 1 4& n ' OnpitoxirellteS The foßOWing views : , ,!..st Ootiten Ilene ini this oonetriere not sovereign. §.500 -, 00 . p1e , jealously - &lard -thair:rights,"and no thing but grave Considerations of the public good thiaorpehnliar oirannistenees 'can reconcile -them to alninsgression'of authority on liert of those who figeoleeto theop It" isi doubtless in : view of Ws laietig - sesattety4if taw Oopli Oat some of the Dement:Ad of tv.lferth PreniOnitrate egsinst the anti OULU " *idiot Conventßat in saiidt tins on! ,a ' le ferstureef Vat 'MOW@ , law of sai l Kau itiscratliket , or relieted as , the' popidar iTi. 1 1* '0 sleet/ - 43aV-while Ire wird WWI, towlitrelsoweithy motive, inc. still '. think' they Aro jedesrding -, those -things thet ,, arekiminitely ‘ ,4 eitereovalutklAs than the remit'bt:ek'strint enforee. - 1 ; :Meat ot.rthis iwinolpiedrilhisOingle Itistaneof end in the foamier in which orals prop:and to sawn taisut it, could to:risibly prove'. They should be nil .fingt 'to' inept , theites.tif,that:twe 'evils': Thoy sliould , soquiesoe in, or submit, tic vileparture front, -the iirladftlersf poyalarlefentigetyriir. ji g itot -itrfoseat ones; rather thee 044 imb ro m n y, ' b ou t villientritat of civil strife inKinnim'q r ayi e l luil l„., 'thillAttwidati Otto intatibli,3l.-offil,w, between the; Ifirtirand-ilietiontit;. - J1 tem ' 4,01 -rs: ';', .-,-,.• • , 4. 'ir:'l!Wfq*lritli iliong th lWaiilrtilioldieot , ifseiiwatitortlinisti,ontoisid Rut, for e , ` k / iS iU 3llo4 , l *Alitirti l4444 ;l l43 ace,skiktOnedr, =l 6 _ 3l =3l' l tiblir li r4h l VlXeltU l t i ,t; "teintelite,gitiktiMsio ' rabikluged itother'fit of thir,trlt. -- ii:,,64,..,..,;ridencer 4potiii` tile 1....5t5. of his enemies, we, shall atinonte.to 'Um-NI/kW the setae SOWN' *Ltd vs biditte ,to Influence these Northern Defailborats whe'aiffor from us in this matter. ' 1, -. -a- , 1 ' e ` - ' ,4 .'"Wes are afraid there will bo anirrellsovallsot .n 1 Denison on this question. Antlite May, be that it r has; yet to reach its most exilitinggend alarming stage. lint we have' wirldence , inlbe wisdom, kmnesse and strength ofyie Acithinistration.” ,-..- , ' - ''Other Southern journals have expressed iniein more liberal views; and we notice that an immense meeting has been held at Lecomp toti,,KensasJorritory, composed of pro.ala * Very:46'li, - Democrats, and Republicans, at ioler ' 011ienn- Cotevottion 'and Conatitu 'tail. t . lind ilenonneed. It is quite In vain, in the 14qe of such a record ai. this, to mako e the sue :010;nel appeal, that the Kansas question can ever bel"siittled" on the Calhoun Convention hieiti.. - '..-- ' ' , EtIito.P.E4NNEWs BY ' 4 THE BALTIC." As ilia expected, the steamer Baltic, which le4:-Liv!kneel on the - 25th ult., arrived at New:,.:l7ork 'ipsterday, bringing four days' later news. •- There was no•fluther intelligence - frotivlndia.. Goaded, no doubt, by the almost - general - .taunte :of the . press, ' the British Government r; had elevated Generals Have- POF And' Fuses; the heroes of Lucknotv -and Delhi, to the hereditary - rank of Baronet. Iti is= tree that' 11A:vetoes has, at present, no "inpre: - thee' 'his f 4 good-service pension" of fiVesibillings a-day to maintain the ccilignity" of this i rank:' But• though the British Istrythay abstain - from placing him in pecu niary independence,. the East India Company a7perislon of £5,000 a year to the . , Marquis • of lieittousti, for-showing con incapacity' as Viceroy of India) will piphably'riete' some liharal income te Sir HENRY IlaVettics; for having manfUlly and successfidly fought ,for ,the maintenance of •13rititit away in that vast region. Although further and even considerable LEMMnereittlfailuras are announced as having _taken - Place in Loudon, Liverpool; ' ljatnliurg, atid'Bremmi, money was so much easier, that the, anticipation Of a yet farther advance by the Bank of England, on the rates of discount; was rapidly, becoining removed. While, in Oomphance With the 'recent Government mis sive; the Bank still adhered to the rate of ten per cent., money was procurable in the Stock Eichange at from five tests per cent. • ; The relief given to the great banking-hodso 'et - Geoitoe Peanony. & Co., and to OVEREND s * (III.TRNET,A Co., the extensive discount-hope in Lombard street; amounting to £1,000,000 :to,cach: establishment," has carried them through, and prevented the Mitre of mmmer oits who did business with them. Gold was rapidly retuining to the banks of • . , England an d• of France, and its export had received such a check that the Baltic brought enly A0,000,-,whAe,the .ildantic, which loft Ifewirork- -- on Baturday,.toek away to Liver pool, abOut $1,800,000 in gold. ' The , ananclid ,difficulties of extended throughout the, great part of EuroPe. Oven Russia and Spain have felt 44 the Panic," though muCh - more lightly than more commer cial countries, The ifibrease of specie funds by the Bank of England was steadily progroseive, and•as the discounted__ -niatured, fresh funds would co* tn. _There was a belief that the Govern- Ment intended funding Exchequer Bills, of Which a large amount is now, afloat. Tho .hforliing Star (a London anti - Ministerial jour nal) says: w It is felt that the revenue pay ments at the, present moment are not likely to be of the usual satisfactory character, and that the .dividend period of January will proba bly not find the Government in tho highest condition 'of means. It is not impossible that a mixed operation of a loan and funding may be brouglit under consideration ; and such a course would specially suit the con venience of the East India Company, who Would" thee be placed in a situation to obtain a more readily convertible security than the large amount of Exchequer Bills which they are now known to possess." :Tho London Daily News personally compli , menteSir,W. GORE OWLET, now in Wash ington, but,contends that his special Nicara guan)ulasierrliworse map tiseless.,-: One as. nigtted raittotOitAis 10 to.be found in the ittOtinf: and tlnsPieloue, sen- AtelOsif.is tt tebili4Ontstektia4 the. real 'objeot iii tat 1410 t ho, states' it-to ; proem% excite-- Vont thol'assage betodiop the'Atlantio an'd Paeltin ; notlindeed, to keep out our oomt meroe -in limo of pintoo, 'hitt :,to - secure for the United &atm the great advantages which the power to exclude us to time of tear Oonlel give them. Thelesignisobviously preseoted by pre-, sent-delay.',, ,The summing-tsp runs thus (Us a manifesta , Lion of our elneere_dosi re to be on the host terms With the'llalted States, every one will approve Of this visit .of Sitlirmttim Goan OUSELEY . to Waebington. ; But it does not inspire, under all tio,clieinnotancos of the case, Many impel; of securing accord there ; and without to-op eratteit,. his going further wilt, we are per 'waded, 'do - much more harnt than good." The London Gazette of Tuesday, Novem ber 24, contains the official announcement jhaf'ra new naval commission had been las*" by the Crown—the name of Sir Entsgav PEEL being omitted from the list ,of the Lords of the Adiniralty. This is tan tamount to his quitting , Oise, which, we think, he .hitd. not 'formally done before. AM EtAktvErx LETEn We have.reeeived "the following letter from one of the most gifted and eloquent Democrats nWesternPennsylvania,a gentleman who from blayhood has been the firm and devoted friend 'of Me. Boonewasr, whohas served him in State and National Conventions, and whose position 'Whit region iesecolid to nom : Dunne= 1, 1857. A - take the liberty of thinking you for the manly `stand liana :Pima on the affaus of Kansas, and ;umet you to- stand firmly by it at alt hazards. , We have hid trouble enough with Kansas already. It is about time it should stop. , have no - mere sympathy with the Northern fanaticism - Of anti-"slavery than I ought to have, I believe. But I have not yet become so enamored of the institution ofalavery as to sanction the most barefaced -and impudent frauds on the popular will to extend it into Kansas or elsewhere. lithe principle • of popular sovereignty means that an insignificant minority is to govern the ma jority,-I have been laboring under a slight dein sten. 'lf this, great principle is to be used, by a mere fragment of the people of a Territory, to forte slavery, or anything else, on the masses et the people of that Territory, all I have to say is, that the Democracy of the great North will soon be reduced to a mere fragment of a party. The prinelple of popular sovereignty is sound, in every way.- But the practice of it must be honest. As faith without works is dead, principle, how ever sound, if not practised, is dead also - The prinoiple is the sovereignty of the majority. If the practise is to be the subjection of the ma jority, the is not only deed, but is alive again - en the other-side. The party that while professing thief principle , sanctions , and maintains ra• right, a practise' under the principle which wholly-reverses it - and vibjitgatet the majority, would not only bo despised by all honest men, but would riehlydeserva to be despised. Such a party, to be honest, should inscribe on its banners and embody in Its platforms the doctrine of popular subjection instead of sovereignty. In my humble judgment, the only fair way of settling the troubles in Hoofing, is for Congress to reject the Constitution, and order, by an act of Congress, a Convention' frame a Constitution. Then all parties could and would meet on common ground, and vote fOr"delegates, without any sacri fice; of-party pride. Thus the question could be fairly' and honorably settled, according to the ranee -of the country in almost all each oases. Why such a polio) , is not adopted by the Adminis tration is what I cannot comprehend. It would be a fair settlement, and no honest man, in Con gress or out of Congress, North or South,could raise his veto against it. • I say,,thon, maintain your. position at every hazard: The Democracy will be with you—all honest men will be with you ; and if they are not, or Were not Jobe, you would be right at any rate, which, - after - all, -is' better than to have all men - with vou.in the wrong. efo not quite understand the course of the Pittsburgh Union, if it can be said to have any Course' for it does not seem to be either for or against the Constitution, or its submission, rcpt.- - 1.1014 , er adoption. Bat no matter about the Union. Your course ikand will be, fully endorsed by the Demooraey here: Pardon me for troublingyou with such a long letter. -think the subject a grave one, and think you may be pleased- to know that your coarse on this - question- Is highly satisfactory to yeitt- friends, and - somewhat mortifying to your enemies; and- allow me to,observe, in oonetuetou, that your paper Is everything that, your friends could wish. r- „ THE'LEISMON SLAVE SASE, • 'iri'the NOW York Supremo Court yesterday, •(k full bench sitting,) was delivered the judg -liebt,,on this case, to the effect that a slave- Veldei :Cannot carry his slaves through the &ate of New York, on a journey to any other NO of tho 'Union. This affirms the decision pi Judge PAINS, that the slaves should he 'free. Judge Roosevsridissented. Tlto3tAs D'Artor.lifoGna has boon nominated tor the' Canadian Parliament by the Irish :nittioias , cof Montreal, vim elaiM one member nity,:On -the, strength of the fiat that they number one-third of the population. SToprqi, .3..toEssuos AND BEAL , 110:41* . 7 4hiff f . Bvaming, M. the Elehangi. Sea 1101/4 SOrriP adiettleemante, and pamphlet Bi(talagice: "' . • ""- - - The oatalogua comprises, also, a large Ilet teo aetste at private tale. PRtS.--I. 3 I.IiIADELPHiA, TUEOp4V, DECEMBER 8, 1857, THE DEMOCRATIC Dltilliff OM THE' MAYI9AS.9.U.IMITION:= ;. ; , - Prom the, IlleirMitteVe,) Record.] ,- Tee: /CORAS Cotintrrtriox;:-The bold, manly, and independent course of the Philadelples Press on the Kansas Conetitaitioni question, merits the .I.LPprobation of every Member of the Democratic party, in all sections of the Union, who entertains an honest respect for truth and fair dealing. The attempt of the late Convention to impose upon the people of that troubled Territory a Constitution, without submitting it as an entirety to a di rect popular vote, if successful, is in manifest viola tion of the letter and spirit of the Kansas-Nebraska bill; subversive of the true prinoiples of republi can institutions, and fatal to popular sovereignty. Any attempt from any quarter to justify by specious, plausible, and sophistic reasoning, the course of this Convention, will be met by the scorn and con tempt of every honest and honorable man. If the integrity of the Domooratie party is worth preserv ing, party leaders must understand that the masses have honest convictions of right and duty, and will not long submit to imposition. [From the Monroe (Pa.) Democrat.] ffsteSAs Coxerireriost.—The Kansas Constitu tional Convention has finished its labors and ad journed. We have purposely, thus far, refrained from noticing its proceedings, because we did not wish to raise our video for or against its action before we bad some' tangible assurance what it - was to result in. Now, however, it becomes us to speak, and We mean to 'meek * It bears upon its face the impress of trick and fraud, and should bring down upon the heads of its authors the scorn and contempt of every lover of honesty and straight-forward dealing through. out the land. Congress—and we hope too Pennsylvania dela 'gallon in that body will see to it—should at once, upon the presentation of this peeked instrument, reject it by a unanimous vote. That body should consider that if the new Constitution is not worthy of being submitted to the judgment of the free men of Kansas, it is clearly not a fit instrument for their government; and they should provide for the forming of such a Constitution as would suffer nothing from public ecrutiny, and public opinion as expressed through the ballot-box. We hops that enough honest men will be fonnd in the next Congress to redeem the pledge of the Demo cratic party, that Kansas shall come into the Union with such institutions as a majority of her .bona jilts citizens that' determine upon. This, as outsiders, tho people of the several States have a right to demand, and this Congress should yield to them: — (Proust (Prorate communication in the' St. Louis (Mo ) publican, (Pro.filavery.l There is one view of the Kansas Convention and its proceedinge, which, though often alluded to, has not been as distinctly stated and as seriously dwelt upon as its importance deserves. The Con stitution is not submitted to the people, to be adopted or rejected as they may choose. That, perhaps, is not necessary to its legal vailditl, but is contrary to the declared policy of Om 1 1 Riker and President Buohanan, and is very undemo. oratio. There are many precedents (and Min ion ri furnishes one of them) of State Conventions which, in their simplicity, thought they were ap pointed for the very purpose of making Constitu tions, and accordingly did make them and put them in force, without asking the sanction of a popular vote at home, and without suspecting that Congress claimed the power, which is now boldly claimed, to pass upon such Constitutions, in whole Or in part, and affirm or disaffirm them, according to its own notions of republicanism, for the time being. The Kansas Convention haschosen neither of the two courses heretofore pursued. It does not put the Constitution in force by its own authority, and it does not submit it to the people, toles ain eepted or rejected by them. Moreover, it does not leave the question of slavery open to be simply and fairly voted upon and decided by tho people, as was lately done in Oregon. But it devises a cun ning plan to compel every man to vote for the Constitution, denying him the opportunity to vote against it; and ail this under the pretence of sub mitting the question of slavery to the people. Bo the schedule of the Constitution, the people aro required, before voting, to swear to support the Constitution if adopted, and then every man of them is required to vote for it. The form of voting is prescribed, and this Is the form : "For the. Constitution with slavery," or "For the Con stitution without slavery." And thus, however the people may choose to vote upon the question of slavery, the schedule positively requires them to vote unanimously for the Conatitution. The bare statement of the ease is shocking to sense and decency. If the Convention had thought fit to enact a Constitution and put it in operation without appealing to the popular will at all, per haps it had power to do so, however undemocra tic the course might be; but under the pretence of submitting the questioner slavery to the people, to require every man to vote for Use Constitic- Hon, and to swear beforehand to support it, is a, disgusting compound of oppression and folly, the equal of which can hardly bo found outside of Kansas—oppression sit eompelling men to vote for what they may despise or abhor, or renounce their right of sulTracis ; and folly, ti, supposing that they could (wale the few to sidmigate and rule the matt y, by such is despicable trick. That is not the way to govern people in this country, and will no more be submitted to than would the presertption of a poison-doctor who required his patient to take his arsenic with bread and butter or without it. [From the Detroit Yree Press The real question now is, will Congress coon tenanae the cheat practised by the Convention ? Wilt Congress income receivers of stolen goods, or restore the abstracted treasure to the rightful owners ? - In all the Territories except Kansas and Ne braska Congress has, from the very first, exercised thapotier of disapprovingnny and all laws of the Territorial Legislatures. '-•IS was not a regular, but an irregular.proceed til,whme the Legislature - of Kansas authr)rised the 000mpton Convention, which Congress may ratify or reject as it shall see fit. Such was the view of the Administration, expressed through the Wash ington Union, in July last, as follows : "This movement of the Territorial authorities to form a Constitution is made not in the regular way, in pursuance of an enabling and authorizing act of Congress, but on the mere motion of tho Territorial Legislature itself. Nay, it has been begun and carried on in the teeth of a refusal by Congress to pass such an act. This Irregularity is not fatal. There are other MO in which it was overlooked. But it can be waived only in consi deration of the fact that the people have expressed their will tit unmistakable language. If we dis pense with the legal forms of proceedings we must have the substance." We are as anxious as any Democrat can be that this Kansas imbroglio should be speedily settled. It is a disturbing and harassing element. But it is far better that It should remain open for the next fiveyears, or ten years, than that it should be settled at the sacrifice of the great cardinal prin ciple of the Democratic party—roman sove linlGNTY—Tile MORT OF setr-uovenenerrr. This principle was not assorted in the Kansas-Nobraska bill Or Kansas alone. It was asserted for all fu ture Territories. If it is abandoned now, or brought into ridicule, where shall we be upon the slavery question? How shall the question be treated when it shall rise elsewhere? [Teem the Chicago Times, Deo, 5.) Kes:aa CONSTITOTION.—We have rooeived espies of this instrument. Independent of the slavery question, it Is, perhaps, a very good one, but of that the people of Kansas have the right to Judge. The slavery clause gives the Legislature power to provide for emancipating (by compensa tion teethe owner) all slaves; but denies the power to prevent the introduction of more slaves. A vote " for the Constitution with slavery" is a vote to establish and forever maintain the institution, with the power in the Legislature of emancipation. A vote "for the Constitution with no slavery" is a vote to recognise the existence of slavery now there, to keep those slaves who aro now in the Territory, and their natural increase, slaves during their lives, and is a vote to "strike out" the power of the Legislature to emancipate. The Constitution " without slavery" means that slavery in the Territory shall be confined to those slaves now there, and their increase from generation to generation, with no power on the part of the Le gielature to emancipate by compensation, or in any other way, The Constitution with slavery allows more slaves to be brought to Kansas, but gives the Legislature power to provide for their emanolpa tion. We confess our inability to decide which of these two alternatives is the more "pro-slavery," We incline to the opinion that the "Constitution with no slavery" is the more "pro-slavery." [From the Louisville Democrat.] In the present ease, the reason for not admitting Kansas has nothing to do with the sort of institu tions the State may adopt. It is the mangier of the application that is to be considered ; and it is per fectly extravagant to maintain thnt Congress has not full discretion upon such a point. It was never before held that Congress should admit a State when the people were opposed to such admission. This is a point upon which Congress has never ventured, and which the country will never sanc tion. That body hes disregarded all formalities in the admission of a State when the voice of the people of a Territory was for admission. That point settled, no form has been deemed essential. Now, when the voice of the people is, or may be, against admission, no formalities can cure such a defect in the substance of the application. But really it seems to us too plain it case for argument. Congress did, in the case of Wisconsin, exercise the discretion to refuse the admission in n much stronger case than this. Congress had itself pro vided fora Convention in that State. It hod been held, and a Constitution formed; but it hall not been submitted to the people. Congress tont the whole work back for popular ratification, and in so doing acted wisely and constitutionally. MATTERS AND THINGS IN NEW YORK. [From the New Yolk papers or last evening.] PORTER HOUSE FIUUT—MAN SHOT.—Last night, at midnight, some ten or twelve of the Atlantic Blues" entered the porter-house kept by Michael Barry, calling for something to drink After they bad been served, the discovery was made that the joint capital of the party amounted to one chil ling, which, being deemed by the Bonithee of the establishment insufficient, a fight ensued, when the keeper of the house seized a double-bar reled gun. and shot one of the party—a man named John S. Kelly—the whole charge entering his side about midway down. Ho lies now is the hospital at the point of death. Barry Vac arrested. Ton CINALEI CLOSED.—The canals are olocod for the season. At Amsterdam, on Friday, six horses could not start a boat on account of the toe, and along the valley of the Mohawk the canal is blooked by ice. The snow which fell the acme night has so clogged the gates that it in impossible to look a boat. There can be no doubt now of an entire ouspension of canal navigation in this State. Tun Emu RAILItOAD TROL'IILES.—Tbe pollee. mon sent up to Piermont, on Friday afternoon, to protect the Erie Railroad freight depot, returned to this city about nine o'clock on Sunday evening, their services being no longer required. The re volted men all returnedpeaceably to work on Saturday, and no further disturbances Is expected. The Evansville, Indiana, Journal of the 80th ult., learns from passengera by the steamer Done, that a terrible tragedy occurred at Oaseyville, Ky., on Friday night. A man by the name of Hall, who parted from hie wife not to since, and Who killed a man a few weeks ago In' counter, met Dr. Taylor In the street, and a him, and, as the doctor tied, pursued him into a store, and there stabbed him twice in the breast, and finished the diabolical deed by nutting his throat and sever ing the jugular vein. Hall then escaped to hie own house, barricaded the doors, armed himself, and 'defied the authorities to take him. At the last amounts, be was besieged in his hence by the °Meert, no one having courage to attempt to take the desperate villain. Both or the two terrible homicides committed by Hall were prompted by the fell pullet' of jealousy. MiIEIMIMM BY TELEGRAPH. TIIIRTY•FIFTII 'CONOREB4. OPENII§IIIOY THE sEssipri III& FITZPATRICK CHOSEN .PRESID.NNT PRO TEM. OF THE SENATE. Organization of the Ilona% JAMES L. ORE ELECTED erEAKEM U. S. CAPITOL, WASHINOTON, December 7,1857. —The weather to-day is charming, and the open ing of Congress has attracted dense crowds in the galleries of both Houses, and other parts of the Capitol. The greetings between the members and their friends servo to render the scene pleasantly ex citing. SENATE. On the roll being called fifty Senators answered to their names. The Senate was called to order by the Secretary, who read a letter from Mr. Break inridge, Vice President, stating that he would not bo able to reach Washington at the commence ment of the session. On motion of Mr. Benjamin, a resolution was adopted that the oath required by the Constitution ho administered by Mr. Bright, the oldest member present. Messrs. Andrew Johnson, of Tennessee, and Clark, of New Hampshire, now members, were sworn in and took their mate. The Senate proceeded to ballot for President pro Lem. of the Sonata, when Mr. Fitzpatrick was chosen, and being conducted to his seat, returned his acknowledgments for the honor conferred. Tha usual resolutions were adopted for the ap. pointment of committees to inform the House and the President of the United States that the Senate was organized and ready for the transaction of business. The Senate then went into executive session and confirmed the nomination, by the President, of George W. Bowman, editor of the Bedford Gazette, as Superintendent of Public Printing. After the executive session, the Senate ad• journed without trammeling any further business. Two hundred and twenty-one members answered to the call of the House. A quorum of members being thus ascertained to be present, the House proceeded to the election of the Speaker. Mr. Orr was nominated by Mr. Jones, of Ten. [lessee, and Mr. Omer, by Mr. Banks, of Massa. chusetts. On the ballot the vote stood as follows : Mr. Orr 128 Mr. Crow 84. Scattering 13 • Tho announcementof the result was greeted with applause. The clerk appointed Messrs. Stephens and Banks, as a committee to conduct Mr. Orr to the chair. The oath of office was administered by Mr. Old. dingo. On assuming the chair, Mr. Orr expressed his thanks for the honor conferred upon him. The delicate and responsible duties of the chair, be said, would be comparatively light, if he should be so fortunate as to secure the co-operation of the members in despatching business, and in uphold. ing the dignity of the House. He promised to ad minister the rules, which may be adopted, with firmness and impartiality. The grifat business con fided to them by the people admonished them to oul tivate a patriotism as expansive as the Confederacy itself. He cherished the hope that the public busi ness would bo transacted so as to promote the in terests and happiness of the entire people, antl. the Constitution would be maintained in its integrity, and that their legislation would quicken the great ness and glory of our common country. The members were then sworn in, advanoing in delegations for that purpose. On motion of Mr. Clingman, the rules of the last House were adopted, till otherwise ordered, with a proviso to the 23d rule, via : that whenever any committee shall have occupied the morning hour for two days, it shall not be in order for ouch committee to report further, until the other com mittees shell have been called in tura. Mr. C. alluded to the fact that the Committee on Public Lands had for several sessions monopolized the Morning hour, compelling the other committees to rely on the courtesy of the House to make re ports. Mr. Allen, of Illinois, was elected Clerk of the Howe, receiving the same number el votes as Mr. Orr received for Speaker. Mr. Olossbrenner was elected Sergeant at-Arms, and Mr. - Hackney Door-keeper. Mr. Cluakey was declared Postmaster by resolu tion. . Mr. Florence, of Pennsylvania, gave • notice of hie intention to introduce a bill for the entireisup. preadon of all bank notee as ourrenoy, or of bank notes of a loss denomination than * hundred dot )are ae a oironlatlng medium In the District. of Columbia.. The Renee then adjourned. Washington Affairs. WABIIINOTa, Dec. 7.—Colonel Richardsori, of Illinois, has been formally tendered the Governor. ship of Nebraska. The entire Globe and a supplement, issued to. day, were 000upied with an exposition of the alleged frauds in the purchase of books during the last Congress. The publication has produced much sensation, particularly about the Capitol. In the Court of Claims to-day, Judges 6carburg and Blackford delivered an opinion adverse to the claimants of the brig General Armstrong. Judge Gilchrist dissented. Immediately after the llouso adjourned, hum. dreds of men and boys crowded upon the now Doorkeeper, clamoring for situations. The Post master was assailed in a similar manner, and the Clerk is overwhelmed with applicants tor appoint ments. Tho Ropublioano, at a caucus hold this morning, nominated George M. Wooten, editor of " The. Republic," as their candidate for Printer. The Democratic Caucus WASAINGTON, Deo. 7.—At the Democratic Calms held this evening, one hundred and eight members of the Rouse wore in attendance. Mr. Faulkner made a statement to the effect that, wishing to become fully acquainted with the facts In connection with the remarks made In the former Caucus, by Mr. Clements, affecting Mr. Wendell's character, he wrote a letter to Mr. Clements, who replied that a corrupt proposition had been made to him in behalf of Mr. Wendell, Mr. Wendell, In his letter, (the subject having been referred to him,) emphatioally denied that any proposition of the nature stated bad been made with his knowledge or authority, and that it must have been by some one too lazy to work, too proud to steal, and ashamed to beg. The above correspondence was submitted by Mr. Faulkner. Mr. Clements said that when the proposition was made, he referred the individual to the not of Con. gress prescribing penalties against persons making approaches to members of Congress for corrupt purposes. The man was in hie power, but for the sake of his family he would not expose him. The correspondence having boon road, a vote on the nomination for printer ensued. Mr. Houston withdrew the name of Mr. Batiks, and proposed that of Mr. Steadman, who received 60 votes from Southern and Western members. Mr. Wendell received only i 1 votes. Messrs, Faulkner and Hopkins voted for Mr. Muria, Of the Union. Some of the members refused to vote, and trouble is apprehended at the vote in the House to morrow. The United States !Supreme Court. Wasnianron, Decomher 7.—The Supreme Court met to-day, with a full hooch, with the exoeplion of Judge Curtis, resigned. The oases nninhored 28, 20, 38, 101, 5, 80, and 43, in which the United States is plaintiff, vs auroral parties in California, appealing from the deelsions of the Distriot Court of that State, were dismissed. The docket will beeline(' to-morrow. The Southern Mull WASHINGTON, December 7.--The Southern mail furnishes papers from Charleston as late as due. The steamer Wolaka, of Savannah, was totally wrecked on St. John's bar, on the 3d Inst. The crew and passengers, and part of the cargo, were saved. The ;ship Diary C. Porter, before reported, had been brought to the wharf, and an effort will be made to get the water out of her. Gen. Walker's Steamer Fashion NM OnLnine, Dee. I.—Considerable anxiety is felt among Oen. Walker's friends at the non arrival hero of the steamer Paehion, which took out Walker's troops' and was to return immedi ately. A portion of the Texas regiment arrived hero yesterday, and Immediately proooodod to Mobile. The Lemma Slave Case. Nnw Yonu, Doo. 7.—The Lenin= slave ease was decided by the Supreme Court to-day, affirin lag the decision of Judge Paine, and declaring the doves free. Plarkets. Pirrs a 110011, Deck 7 —Flour is declining; sales to-day 130 bbls, from the wharf, at $1.50 for super• fine, and 250 bbla, from the store, at $4.50 for superfine, $4.75 for extra, and $5 for familj. Wheat closed inactive at 05oo$1 for red to prime. White oorn 450 on arrival. Whiskey, raw, quotes at 18e; rectified at 200. There is nothing doing in provisions. OINCINNATt, Doo. 7—Noon.--•Flour dull and nominal at $4. Hogs are rather bettor. Drovers are operating largely, Packers are doing little. Whiskey unchanged. Provisions do. New ORLEANS, Deo. o.—Cotton--fiabas to•aay 8500 bales; market unchanged. Sugar firm at 4tasle. Flour steady at $5.12. Red Wheat $l.lO. Lard dull at 14o; sales of 0,000 bags of Rio Coffee to-day at go. The other markets are unchanged. Navy ORLEANS, Deo. 7.—Cotton—Sales of 4,000 bales at Solo for middling, with a. turn in favor of buyers. Most of the sales were effected previous to the publication of the steamer's news. Sugar declined o, at 41a5.10. Molasses declined la2o ; sales at 19a22i0. Lard in kegs 12io. Other mar• kete unchanged. Tim Virginia Legislature ltiortuomni Dee, T.—The Legislature of this State' insulted. Most of the former offeers wore welealeyl, Tim flovernor sent in four messages, unpreWentedlyleng,and largely devoted to banks and thi)lonking question generally. Alassachissells Election. drniaartabo, Meas. December 7th. Anson Phelps was re-elooted dayor of this city to-day. Nan , Bantonn, Mass., December 7th.—G. A. Dunbar, Republican, was rmeleoted Mayor of this city by ten plurality, over Harland, the "citizens" candidate. The latter carried a majority in Douniibly• LAlTssuca, Deo. 7.—John R. Rollins has been chosen Mayor of this city. The Middlesex Mills. Dosrox, Deo, 7.—A committee has been ap• pointed to Investigate the affairs of the Middle. rex Mlle Company, and to dotermino whether work Is to be resumed. The committee is to re port within thirty days. WASHINGTON ITEMS. A letter has been received by the Secretary of War from E. F. Bealo,anperlntendent of the wagon road from Fort Defiance to the Mohave river, doled 27th of December, ono hundred miles east of the Colorado river, in which be says : "'limit the honor to report my arrival at this place, a crook flowing north into the Colorado The last, two days have been spent in constant ex plorations of the country in advance, towards the Great Colorado river, in ardor that might know on, what to depend when I bet this place, as the count* , -has boon represented as barren of grass and %voter. !` Up to this point the road has been, beyond all comparison, over the easiest unbroken country for the tame distance I have over seen; and should it prove of a more difficult charaeter from this point to the State line of California, it will even then he a thousand times better one than any I know of; offering, as it does, abundance of water and grass throughout, and passing through the finest forests or pine timber possible to conceive. "I sent Mr. Thorburn to-day on an exploring expedition in Wrenn, and shall myself start on another - line to-morrow. " I cannot iruflielently express my admiration of that noble brute, the camel; and I confidently look forward to the day when it will be found in general Xlfo in all parts of the country. The idea that their feet would break down in Unrolling our reeky grounds is an exploded absurdity. "In all the explorations over the roughest possible volaanie rooks, they have been with us, patiently earning water, of which they never drank a drop,' and'orn, of which they never tasted a grain. On the expedition from which I returned yesterday, they were four days without water, and apparently without feeling the want of it. "I sent back to-day part of my escort, having no further need of it. My animals are all in good condition, and the mon in excellent spirits. "The next despatch you will receive from me will announce my arrival in California, and also the fact of my starting back on my return. " I repeat, that up to this point, the road, con- Adoring its length, and the fact that it is un broken, Is the best is all points in the world, and that it will prove, in spite of all opposition to the contrary, the great emigrant route to California. It cannot fail in this, for it is nearly two hundred miles shorter than any other, and the region around ~bounds with grass, wood, and water, besides being very fertile in all parts " Mr. Holbrook, the special agent of the Post U (1,31, Department who arrested Tinikerinan, the mail robber, reports the r ec overy of over four hundred letters for foreign ports, which have not been violated, and which were forwarded by the steamer of Saturday, sth instant, from New York for Liverpool. These letters weremelled at New Orleans on the 7111 uitlam, and left Now York for Boston on the night of Sunday, the 15th. Among them are many letters from San Francisco and other places in Cali fornia. Dr. Jacob Forney, Superintendent of Indian Affairs for the Territory of Utah, has written a letter to the Indian Bureau, dated Fort Laramie, October 26, 1867, in which ho states that the troops would leave there on the evening of that day, . and that he and his party would follow on the morrow. Ire says that they mot no hostile Indians between Fort Laramie and Fort Kearney, A 'report had reached him that a portion of the Utah Indiana are Mormons, and that Brigham Young boasts that he has several Indian tribes in his service, and ready to take up arms against the United States. The Doctor says that, in the course of a tow weeks, ho will know the truth of this report. FOUR DAYS LATER FROM EUROPE ARRIVAL OF THE STEAMSHIP BALTIC CONSOLS Si l l a AO; The United States mall steamship Battle, Capt. Comstock, front Liverpool, at about two o'ciock on the afternoon of Wednesday, the 25th of Novem ber, arrived at New York yesterday. She brings seventy passengers, and 145,000 in specie. The Jason, from New York via Queenstown, arrived at Southampton on the morning of the 22d. The screw steamship Anglo-Saxon left Liverpool for Portland, nt noon, on the 25th of November. The steamship City of Baltimore, from New York, 'arrived at Liverpool on the 25th The steamship Persia arrived out on the 21st nit The political intelligence by the Baltic 1s ouhu• portant. The political news furnished by the Baltic is of an Unimportant character. ',Comte closed at 891a001. An easier foaling prevailed in eommeroiai circles. Perther failures worn announced, including the following houses : A erg k Creamer, Hamburg, liabilities 11,000,- Carr, Joslin, k Co., * London, liabilities 1300,- 000., Hermann, Sillem, & Co., London, liabilities ergo. Alexander Hints k Co , London, liabilities urge. Pennistere tS.,. Marshall, provisions, Liverpool. Also, several Hamburg and Bremen houses. The banks of England and France are both gain ing bullion rapidly. No later adviees are furnished front India Generals Havelock . and Wilson had both been ba ronetted. The pressure on the Bank of England was gta dually diminishing, and there wore signs of a re taxation in the discount market Fould, the French Minister of State, woo on a visit to London, it woo believed in reference to financial affairs and the question of the Principali ties. N meeting of Paris distillers was hold to memo rialise Government to raiseimport duty on foreign spirituous liquors, on the ground that they cannot compete with foreigners The Government informed a deputation, who had charge of the me morial, that inquiries had beeti instituted, and it would be guided by the result. It is said that the Spanish Mexican question still presents danger. Lord liowden had gone le Madrid to urge the reception of the Mexioan En voy. The deaths by yellow fever at Lisbon averaged Prince Gegarin, the Russian Governor General of Reitain and Mingrolia, has been assassinated by one of the Sovereign Prima of Mingrelia. The financial crisis was beginning sensibly to of feet Russia. The Bank of Lisbon was about to raise the rate of disoount. The yellow fever wits still violent at Lisbon. At Hamburg and Stockholm, large money ineti tattoos had been formed to assist commercial men and sustain publio credit. Afirices from Vienna nolo a continuance of the financial commercial crisis. Money was scarce and the prices of raw produce wore declining con tinually. The extra mail from China bad reached Suez. Hong Hong dates were to October 5. The news was unimportant. Teas were quiet. LIVERPOOL (MAIN MARKET. [From Richardson, Bros., & Co's Circular ) Ittvisttruor., Nov. 24th. Without actual prevenient in the quotations in any article of the lirain trade since our report of Friday, wo may mention that a more cheerful feeling has prevailed, and importers are less disposed to press sales; as the veports from most of the lending country did. trio mention short supplies by farmers, and as tho docks at the ontports are small, the future state of our market will in a groat measure depend on that course they will pursue; It must be borne in pleat that they, as a body, are less influenced by tan per cant. discount than any other class, anti It is only the fear of large foreign arrivals that will doter them, and wo have now arrived at a period of Vie year when snob usually fall off. 0 had a more numerous attendance at our mar ltei,this morning than for some time past, and a mono active demand experienced for wheat, both for investment and consumption, than for ninny works, and an Improvement of 2tla3d per 70 lbs, waSfreely paid on the low forced vales of our last, for the hotter and medium descriptions, while in. tenor and low classes did not participate to such ,an extent. your was wan- more Inquired for, at tbo same time holdora vcro generally dispow]d to moot the demand freely; in most instance.] ildais per bbl advance was obtaina ble, but sack Flour did not improve in price. Indian Corn dull, at (Idols per quarter decline on all sorbs. Oats and Meal tolerably steady, without any ha praVomont as regards demand. [Front A F. k R. Maxwell's Circular.] Ltvratroor. Coax E ell ANUL, Nov. 2i.—The ar rivals from Ireland and coastwise, (luring the past week, have boon light. From foreign ports wo have received 11,130 quarters Wheat, 3,101 guar( tors Boans, 3,333 quarters Indian Corn, 2,484 socks and 3,051 barrels Flour, besides 7,902 quarters Wheat, and 3,227 bbis. Flour from Canada. The exports in tho same time comprise 3,202 quarters Wheat, 440 quarters Oats, 2,T21) quarters Indian Corn,7Bo racks and 1,351 barrels Flour. There has been little doing in the trade daring the past week, and prices have been very irregular. Some parcels of Wheat and Flour have been forced off at very low rates. In other articles there has also been considerable depression. The weather has been stormy and wet. At thin day's market there was a gond attend ance of the town and oottntry trade, and several buyers from a distance and the interior. Wheat met With n brisk demand, and a large business was dose at the full prices of this day week, tho de mond of Friday being recovered. Flour was not mach inquired for, and in the sales made a decline may bo quoted of did to Is per bbl and sack on the Week. Oats and Oatmeal were in fair request at about late rates. Barley may be quoted. 2d per 00 lbs. and Beans is to 2s per quarter lower. Peas typing seam maintained their value. Indian Corn wan negleoted, and prime yellow and mixed etteld have boon bought at 31e, and inferior Ibralla at 31s to 325, being a decline of fully is per quarter on tho week. Prime white brought 3tis per quarter. LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET Calm—Sales of three days 13,000 bales, of which speculators took 2,000 and exporters 1,600 bees. The newspapers report the market generally unchanged. Messrs. Richardson, Spence, & Co. re pint a decline of Id and prices irregular. The advioes from Manchester nom unfavorable, and the sales of good unimportant. Preadstulia.—Market closed with an advancing lendenoy. Corn.—The market closed with a declining ten dency, and all qualities were slightly lower. Provlsions closed very dull. There was an Improved feeling in mercantile circles, but More failures had 000urred, chiefly on the Continent. The largest, Ulberg & Crener, Eemburg, whose liabilities are about £1,000,000 sterling and Carr, Testing, & Co., of London, whose liabilities are .f. 200,000 sterling. 'Consols closed at 80fa901 for money, and 00a901 far account. The money market was slightly easier. Meson. Ulohardson, Spence, 44 Co. quote Dour quiet but steady. Wheat buoyant, and all quail. ties slightly hatter. Corn very dull, and 6dals lower. Rod Wheat de n7s; white, On Hale 9d. Mixed and yellow Corn nominal, at 345; white, 671 4 #16s 6d. MUS M . quote Flour ad vanoed 6dals ; Wheat adva cod 2da3d on the bet ter qualities. Beef dull. Pork dull. Bacon dull. Lard dull, and nominal at 585a60.1. The additional failures aro Herman, Einem, A; Co., London, and Alexander Ilents it Co., London —liabilities of both are considerable. Pennistore A Marshall, provision dealers, Liverpool, and several Hamburg and Bremen houses. The Banks of England and France were each gaining bullion rapidly. Nothing later has boon received from India. lienerals Havelock and Wilson will be made baronets. LONDON PRODUCE MARKET, Nov. 21. Wheat firmer. Sugar in moderate demand, and is Isfid lower, except fur West India, which is am. changed. Coffee. firm. Tea in moderate demand at former rates. Saltpetre dull and Isa2l lower. Tallow advancing, 49sfidaals on the spot. Linseed oil, 29sa29stid. Scotch pig iron steady at blsfida- Os. At the London wool bales the demand has slackened, and Iho recent improvement in Sydney wools has been lost. Prices closed quite as low as at the commencement of the sales, and several parcels had been withdrawn for lack of satizlacto ry bids. ra , ,sr.vcsits, In stenntshi) Baltic, from Liverpool—P Parker, late U. S. Minister to China and lady, J. S. B. Bernard, W. Cathine, F. Clighton, C. C. Comstock, Miss Ellen Comstock, Mr. and Mrs. Jno. E. Devlin, two children and two servants, W. Donny, L. Dunbar, J. W. Easter, Dr. liversbeld, A. Froidna, Mr. and Mra. Wnt. Gibson, J. Gibton, 0. G. Gilroy, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Kennings, four children, governess, and servant, L. N. Ilitchoock, Miss homer, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Jenks, F. H. Jenks, George A. Jones, E. Lafourcade ' John B. Marie, Mrs W. May, R. Maury, Jr., Julius Meyer, Chas. W. McCune, Isaac, Newton, Jr., W. Mr. and Mrs. C. Plefaon, If. Rice, Jr., C. W. Rich. artis t P Rogers, Mra. Ann Rowley and child, C. J. Start and two daughters, John Stephenson, Mr. and Mrs. R. Showell, Misa. Al. Sweeney, C. W. SIM. It. B. Smith, W. If. Scott, David Stewart, G. W. Stewart, T. R. Taylor, L. F. Timmortuann, Mrs. L. Tiutchin, V. Versepoy, Mra J. Walden, J. P. Windle-711. Foreign NMI Additional to the Telegram. [from paper': received at ,• The Press•` othee.] A STEP IN TRY. RIGHT DIRNCTION.—Tho Queen hoe signified her pleasure to raise to the dignity of Baronet of the United Kingdom, Generals )Vll. eon and Havelock, by the titles of Sir Archdale Wilson of Delhi, and tilt Homy Havelook of Luck now.---Obso rev. The Timcs says the chairman of the East India Company will propose to the directors of the East India Company a grant of £5OO a year to General Neill's widow, in addition to the ordinary allow ance. Her Majesty has granted permission for the widow to assume the title of Lady Neill. The Landon Stattaitisays: " One tumor of the last few days has been that Lord Palmerston is very much disposed to promote groat changes in the future administration of India, nod would even go so far as at once to abrogate the double-govern ment system ; and it is intimated that, if such be not proposed by the ministerial bench when Par liament meets, tho fault will not be with the First Lord of the Treasury " The Moi a tag Star states : "We are informed that the First Lord, in opposition to the wish of not a few members of the Cabinet, wants to per petuate the old system in India, if for no other purpose than to teach foreign nations that oar eastern empire has not been mismanaged." On which divers opinions, the Liverpool Daily Pest remarks: 1 ; It cannot be doubted that the Minister will throw the East India Company over board, if he find that the country will be against him unless he do so. The Cabinet are undoubtedly divided in opinion on the India, as well as on the reform question, and this will very much hamper any measures on those subjects that may be intro duced. Although the report that the English Govern ment was forming a foreign legion for India has boon repeatedly and authoritatively denied, tho Cent, ier ern line Rhin now asserts that the head quarters of an English recruiting establishment will bo opened nt Strasburg on the let December next. It oven gives the name of the dicers cm played on this 4 , 3'1 , 61. They are: Colonel Hud son, commanding; Major Cafe; Captain Wilkin son, paymaster; Captain Wendt, quartermaster, and Captain Herring, nssistant paymaster. Major Cafe and Captain Wilkinson aro favorably known in Strasburg, having boon there when the Anglo- Swiss Legion was raised. Two small commercial failures are reported in addition to that of the house in the German trade, whose liabilities are believed to be considerable. • • •• The Detective Police-officer Thain, who was shot by a man named Settler, whom he was bringing prisoner to London, has been taken to the hospitaL His wound is said to be dangerous. Tho prisoner was to be broughtup at the Mansion Mouse to-day, on the double charges of robbery and attempted murder. A meeting was held in Spite'fields, last night, to consider the best means of relieving the distressed weavers in that locality. DS. LIVINGSTON'S DISPARTVIIE.-Dr. Living ston. the great African explorer, leaves London for Southampton on the 2n.ith inst. On the 27th he will embark on board the Peninsular mail packet Tagus for Lisbon. The object of his visit to that city is understood to bo for the purpose of consult• ing with the Portuguese Government, through whose territories on the eastern coast of Africa the adventurous traveller purposes passing to reach the heart of the great African continent, to pursue his magnificent discoveries there, and to open Central Africa to Europe through the great river Zambesi, which passes through the Portuguese possessions and empties Itself in the Mosambigue Channel. The Dublin nreninsr ryas authoritattrely an pomades that the Most Roy. DrAullan has moil ed 1,000 Cranes from the Pope, and 000 francs from the Cardinal Prefect of the Propaganda, for the relief of the suilerers in India from the stroeities committed by the Sopoys. MEM PAnis, Tuesday.—The Plenipotentiaries gill assemble on Thursday at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, to exchange the ratification of the treaty relative to tho boundaries of the new frontier of Bessarabia. Lord Brougham has arrived iu Paris. The French _papers continue to occupy them• selves with the English atrocities in India. M. Eould. Minister of state, was on a vita to London. His visit was supposed to have reference to the financial crisis and the situation of the bank ; and it was also reported that he was to confer with Lord Palmerston in reference to the diffloulties of the Danubian Principalities The Emperor and Empress had returned to Paris. The Conriiir die Ras Rhin asserts that the hoaclquurtErb for en Engli,h recruiting establish. mont will be opened at Strasburg en the Ist of De cember. The Nod says that the Conference hos been put off to the month of January. The Bank of France was gaining specie. The illoniteitc announces the appointment of M. Dupla as Procureur Imperial In the Court of Coo• sation. A dispatch from Paris, upon the subject, says : "M.,Dupin was formerly President of the National Assembly. lie was also'one of the most notable adherents of the Orleanist party, and his acceptance of office under the Empire has caused great sensation in Paris." The election returns from Piedmon t are still in• complete, butcontinue to favor the Government. Count Cavour had pronounced against the forced currency of bank notes. The Genoese journals enuouneo the death of the eminent naturalist, the Marquis Maximilian Spi. nob& lIAMBUM: Ilesinsw, Tuesdays—The now institution, in tended to relieve commercial distress, wen an nounced here to-day, called the Discount Outman toe Soeiety, with ten million marko bane° capital The whole amount was aubscribed in four hours. SWEDEN. STOCKHOLM, Nov. 22.—A society of credit bee boon formed for mutual support and to maintain the public credit. Tho London Gazate contains despatches, re ceived at the East India House at various times since October 13th, relating toevents in India, and now inserted in continuation of those published on that day. THE CAPTIIIIF AND EA.ECFTION OF TIM DELHI PRINCE:I.—We (4, y6hire Bap c,s) have been fa vored with the following extracts from tho letter of a young officer to his friend in England. It is dated Dugshire, a place about 40 miles from Delhi, 29th September last: " A few days coo, Captain Dodson (of oars) went out and captured the }Ling, and brought him in a prisoner. Ile is at present confined in his own palace. '•A few day later, he went out again, and came up with the King's eons and grandson lie had only 100 native horsemen of his own regiment with him, and the enemy about 10,000 ; .3,000 of whom were fully armed aOpoys. Hodson taw it was no use attacking them, 80110 sent an emissary to tell the princes that the game was up with them, and that they had better surrender, which they did. after some time, and came up to Dodson, who immo• diately surrounded the carriage with hismen. Ile sent for their arms, and, after hesitating some time, these also were given up, with seven elephants, and lots of stores. On reaching the gaol. Hodson ordered the princes out of the vehicle ; they. im agining all was net right for thmuselves, began (native like) to talk, and say they hoped there might be an Inquiry into their conduct. Hod- Bon said ' cheeproks' (be quiet), and ordered them to take off all their flue clothes. When this was done. he said, 'now, get in again,' and ordered the driver to proceed. Ile then beckoned to one of his men, and asked for a carbine, and with his own hand shot each and all of the three princes. lie then tools their bodies into the city, and laid them out for inspection in front of Kotasallie, where those wretches had laid out their victims during the massacre. There aro lacslupon Ines of treasure and prize property in the city, and if the city Itself were put up for ransom it would fete h upwards of :d) lass." COMMERCIAL [From the Times' city article or Tuesday evening ] The public, continue to support the stook-market by heavy purchases, end the closing quotations to day show an advance of a quarter per cent. Tho first transactions in Consuls for money were at 891 to 1, and at the conelo-ion the prices were 89: to 90 for money, and 90 to for the ith of De cember. A steady flow of bullion to the bank as sists the tendency to a restoration of confidence, and altogether a bettor feeling prevails, although some additional failures announced this afternoon haao occasioned deep regret, Beek stock left off at 212 to 214; reduced, 181 to 89 ; New Three per Conte, 881 to 89 ; India stock, 214 to 214 ; India bonds, 40s. to 355. discount; and Exchequer-bills, lls. to Os. discount. In the stook exchange to day, owing to the large investments of the public, the supply of money was abundant, and short loans on Government se curities could bo obtained readily at six to seven per cent. At the Bank of England the applica tions continue gradually , to diminish, and as the repayments now falling duo there are extremely largo, the weekly returns are henceforth likely to show a considerable improvement. In the dis count market also there were some signs of relaxa tion. A further au about about .t 150,000, in Australian, Russian, and enter gold, was sold to the bank. The total taken there since this day week is thus raised to £930,000, exclusive Of any sovereigns that may have been returned from Scotland or elsewhere. No particular alteration has taken place in foreign stooks, but they continue in fair demand, and the market closed steadily. In the foreign exchanges this afternoon the rates generally showed a decided improvement, the principal adyancc being upon Amsterdam and Hamburg. ilitelnek however, ta restricted by the Trent of eentldenee, emoted by %e late failures. The quotation of the exchange at Neff York on London for bille at 60 days' eight is about 108 per cent. for first-elasa paper, and from that price to 106 per cent. for other descriptions. At the pre sent rate of discount here there 11, consequently, no prat on tho transmission of gold from this country to the United States. The stoppage of Messrs. Herman &Item h Co , a house of more than fifty years' standing, and of very great respectability, was announced this morning. Their transactions wore in connection with Germany, Holland, and all parts of the con tinent. as well as with North and South America, and the West Indies, and the liabilities are there fore considerable, At the moment of suspension they had large funds in hand, and according to the opinion of numerous friends, who would have been ready with assistance, it was doubtful if the step.had become necessary. it 'Heim that an idea is still entertained of the possibility of resuscitating the Wolverhampton MA Staffordshire hwalt, which stopped on the 17th inst., with liabilities for about .4:1,000.000. For bearance is to be asked from the depositors, cod the share-holders are to subscribe new capital, to wards which the directors offer .0.00,000. In Paris on Tuesday funds closed at 86 95 money. and 61 account. The increase to the bank's bul lion is said to have been particularly rapid during the last few days, and to have taken . place without, any artificial purchases being made in England or elsewhere. The Daily -Vt.l , Y says the rumen of & probable funding of exchequer bills are causing, alteady ad vance an the price of these securities. At Vienna, on Monday, there was renewed dull ness. Exchange on London as high as 10.30. The "tenthd says, ut the close of businesa the bills of one or two small firms were returned ; but although this has mmumml, their actual suspension may not follow From Liverpool the failure of Peninston and Mor ahan, American provision merchants, is reported ; and at Bradford, Jonathan Bottomley, spinner, has suspended payment. TILE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF AMERICA [From the London Times, Nov. 23.] It is long close America has had to pass through such difficulties - as at present beset her. The un broken prosperity, tho uninterrupted progress of the New World, has long been a subject of pride for the Republicans and of reproach to the mo narchies of Europe. Indeed, America has been zo fortunate as hardly to have had a history, in the modern and somewhat sombre sense of the term. While France, and Germany, and Italy have been convulsed by revolutions ; while Spain bee lost ships, colonies, commerce, name, and dignity; while even England, though growing rapidly in material and moral power, has had to fight her way through wars, and Insurrections. and " strikes," through the obstinacy of party and the prejudice of classes, America bee seen the way clear before her, and' had bad only to build and occupy, to plant and reap the increase, to educate and receive the blessing of education. Indeed, so few have been the trials of the Re public, so easy and enured its onward march, that the people have become weary of their very happi ness. Much of their occasional irritability, par ticularly towards England, much of their desire to turn every conversation into a channel -which shalt draw forth some compliments to America and her institutions, much of their encouragement to Filli bustering and such like excesses, arises from a feel ing that the country's history is hardily great enough for her. Prosperity is not a sufficient sub- Istituto for glory. It is not enough to conquer the wilderness, to build vaet cities where the Indian and the panther wandered within the lifetime of men still young; the American people seem to tire of this monotonous and uneventful prosperity, of the ever unclouded sky above them, and the un broken smoothness of the path they tread. Suck an event as the enforced idleness of multi tudes who depend on their labor fee their daily bread, is something new on the American continent. We who have had in times poet to suffer from such calamities, and who bare even now groat numbers among us who in age and sickness have no resource but public charity, can well feel for the misery with which the population of the Atlantic cities is threatened. The Irish and Germans, who form the majority i . af the laboring class, ate hardly more provided against the storms of fortune than their brethren who remain et home. They earn more and spend more; they are incomparably bet ter off than in the villages of Connaught or Suable, but they have hanity in the first generation contracted habits of saving and hoard ed enough to carry them through a winter of bankruptcy and snspended works. The American papers announced a few weeks since that some 40,000 men would he without occupation in New York, and that a great outcry, and perhaps a general rush southward, would be the result. 1:y the last mails we have a description of the scenes which are now represented in the city. "Ranger meetings" have been held, In which banners, bearing in several languages the device "Work or Death," were carried in pro cession, and the multitude has been addressed by orators 'who proclaimed the duty of the community to provide work and food for its members. It may. indeed, be a mockery to preach political economy to a starving man, but still it is certainly true that the knowledge and capacity of the working classes very much influence the arguments which are used on such occasions. In this country the artisans, even in the very depth of their distress, seem to acknowledge the true C/111%0 of it. We bear little abuse of the rich, little talk about the tyranny of capital and the rights of labor, and never an incentive to violence or spoliation. But it cannot be forgotten that the American cities contain a population which has been educated in other principles, and is not accustomed to let its acts lag far behind its desires. Prom the Parisian workshops, from the Democratic districts of Western Germany, from Switzerland and Italy, have gone forth bands of emigrants who have notions of property very different from those whits!! native Americans learnt hom their English progenitors. The right to work, to food, to luxury, to happiness, has been preached by philosophers, and Attempted to be re alised by statesmen in the largest capital of conti nental Europe within the last ten years. The spirit and the doctrines which have been sup pressed in Paris have free play in New York and we cannot but fear that if extreme distress were to come upon the continental emigrants and their impulsive Irish brethren ocenoe of violence might follow which would require the serious interference of the State. That this interference would take place promptly and effectually cannot be doubted. We have no fear for the peace of New York and Philadelphia, nor for the speedy restoration of employment and i well being. The worst of the crisis s already past, confidence will soon be restored, the vast pr e duce of the West and the South will bring wealth into the country, the merchants who have fallen will kiting up again with true American elas ticity, or their place will ho taken by others; mills will reopen, work will be resumed on ships nn I house;, in docks or in brick kilns, and in another twelvemonth the panic and starvation of 1637 will be forgotten,. But still it is possible to look at things too much in the mace, and in our confidence in the community's strength to overlook the sufferings of individuals. We cannot but sympathise deeply with those who seem likely to undergo a term of great distreas. That the benevolence of the prosperous may be counted upon to relieve the want that will Surround them, it probable enough ; . that its powers may be equal to the task, our sincere hope From the event, however. it may be permitted to deduce a moral, or rather a principle. The destitution of the Atlantic cities will remind the Americans how much their social condition is tending to similarity with our own, Bence, when thoy hear of poorhouses, and begging and strikes' in oar country, they may learn to took with more indulgence on their neighbors, and with less presumption on themselves. The feet which all recent history is teaching iv, is the supremaoy of economical over political laws. dorms of (lot ernuoent hare, no doubt, their effect on mankind. Far bo it from us to say of tio vernments '• That which in best adminis tered is best." Liberty of speech and action can alone make nations permanently great; political slavery taunt produce is those subject to it many of the vices of cloves, and a rule which sustains itself by force and secrecy must have its hour of downfall. But if political Institutions influence all that makes life worth having, they hardly touch life itself. Still less can such dif ferences of government as distinguish England and America produce the groat dissimilarity of the workingman's condition on the two sides of the Atlantic. Wherever the popula tion is crowded and the occupations are de pendent on traffic, there must be periods of distress and disturbance, in which angry passions are nourished and the lessons of common sense and experience are forgotten. The northern seaboard States of America will probably have in their turn to struggle against many of the evils with which this country has so valiantly battled, and though they will enter into the field with greater advantages than ourselves, yet their watch must be unceasing and their resolution firm. There is, however, a power in the Americans of amalga mating the rem that come among them, which gives assurance that they will succeed even with the most stubborn materials which Ireland and Central Europe can produce. rntL tDELPIIIA MARKETS. itfovn.tr EvnNtso, Dec. 7.—The Baltic's ad vices have hail very little( effect in Breadstuffs, which have been dull and unsettled to.day. There Is very little doing in Flour, except to supply the retailers, and bakers, and shippers Flour is offered at $5 per bbl, without sales of any cense quenee-7.00 bbls sold only at that price, and 250 bbls extra at $5 25. The local trade aro buying at prices varying from $5 up to s.l3as7 per bbl for common brands to extra and fancy family Fleur. A small sale of Rye Flour was made at 51 25 per bbl. In Corn Meal there is nothing doing, and Pennsylvania Meal it held at 53 per bbl. Wheat is dull and drooping, and holders are free sellers at 51.1501 18 for good reds, and $1.20351.25 for white, without finding takers at these figures. Corn is not much inquired for, and only about 2,500 bus new yellow have been sold at aSs6oc, and 1,000 bus old at 700, the latter afloat. Oats are (lull and lower, and about 4.500 bus Southern have been taken at 33a.340. Rye is selling in a small way . at 753780, the latter f or p e ,,,,, N ivat t ia. Bark is held. at $22 for first quality, but no further sales have been made pub lic. Cotton is inactive, and the transaetions, as has been the case for some time past, have been exceedingly light, and prices exhibit no change. - Groceries are without mucliactivity to-day, except in Biizars, the prices of which are firmer; Coffees remain as last quoted. Provisions—Very little do ing, Mess Pork is held at $lB per barrel, and Lard at nail le for barrels and tierces; a sale of salted Shoulders was made at 7io, and Hams at Ole per lb. Seeds—Very little selling; a few small lots of Clovereeed have been disposed of at $5.25a s•i 50 per bushel. Whiskey id selling at 22a for hhds, and 22.1a230 for bids, for Easton and Ohio. PHILADELPHIA. CATTLE MARKET, PEEL* IIER 7.—There was a fine amount of Beef cattle offered at the various yards this week, amounting, in the aggregate, to about 1.000 bead, principally from our own State, including some Ohio and Western cattle, the latter of which were of good quality. The demand was moderate, and prices were wolf sustained, ranging at from $7 to $lO, chiefly at $8 5049.50 per 100 lbs., for good and prime qualities. Some 6,500 Hogs were at market, and mostly all eold at Phillips yard. this week, at s6asB•so per 100 lbs The supply was large, and prices fell off, some being left over. • Cows AND CALVES continue dull, and brought slsas2o for dry cows, $2.5a530 for springers, and 830a540 each for fresh cows. The offerings were 230 head. BrIBEP meet with a brisk demand, and about 4,500 wore offered, and pretty much all sold at to 54.50 each ) accord Log to oostetioo. THE 'MONEY MARKET: Petz.Losu.exue. Decero t bet 7,1857 The news by the Bahia Icing more favorable, or at least leas unfavorable, than was exyeeted, a alight improvement was produced „in pricer; hut the news did not seem to warran t say hurt or speculative trey/actions at the stook board. It will be next to Impossible to galvanise the stook Moir" kat into aetitity until after the close of the year. The absence of outside operators keeps the busi ness not only limited in amount, but nearly life less ; and all the efforts of the New York banks and their agents to force up prices and make their col laterals available will hardly emceed while the general depression of business continues. Bail- - roads are not expeeted.to do more than pay off floating debts for a time to come, and no expansion is likely to inflate fancy stocks to a great extent, until after the tide of business shalt have again brought prosperity to the commerciakelateco, who usually furnish the means of support for the stock market. The great accumulatimssof specie by the Nevi York banks, and the steady reduction of their &J -aunts, must come to an end sooner or later, and their attention be turned from operations In stocka, just now of paramount inter eat to them, to the em• ploymont of their capital in the legitimate chan nels of business. When money can be mid to be easy for other purposes than as loans on undoubted collateral, and when businees men can be readily accommodated to a reasonable extent for bn• einem needs, we may look for steady and per manent improvement in the prima of stocks, - ' The late heavy shipments of gold cannot fall to influence favorably the state of the English money market, and save oar cotton and bread• studs to some extent from more serious fall in price, and though the direct effect may be a post ponement of resumption on the part of the. banks, the country at large will be vastly the gainer. If prices can bd thereby kept high enough abroad to warrant the exportation of our products, we ea► well spare a few millions of lie imamate iceman- I lations of specie now held by the New York hanks. The 'Norwalk Savings Company, at Norwalk, Ohio, has suspended payment to depositors, sad made an assignment of Its effects. The last New dries= bunk-statement foots up as follows : N0v.21. Nor. 25. Specie 17,40,0111 13,067.03. Inc 5665.013 Circulation........ 4,320,089 4,125,7D6 - Dec. 177,116 Deposits 6,981,132 10,021,443 Inc. 934,311 Short Loans 15,934,362 15621,669 Dec. 7»6,612 Exchange 2,483,501 3.829,905 Inc. 647.107 Due distant Barag. 623,073 .665,019 Inc. 33,191 Long and Short Loma, November 21 513,464,165 Long and Short Loans, Kovenetbor 23 17,651,706 Aetul decreue of Long awl abort Lwow for the week , a,5 During the week ending November 28th the re ceipts of cotton amounted to 63,566 bales. Other prodooe was coming to market quite freely. ant DUSiDeSS had revived. The imports of merchandise for the week, at Now York, were as follows: 1635. . 8826,541 V. 519,365 1544,506 654,4 , 36 1,961 ,t.. 15 -1,011,710 Dry roods Gera merchsndise Total for the week 1,791.033 3 503,791 1,731,= Total for 11 m05..141,539,913 199,913,636 M 0,304.103 113,370,982 203,4 &617 =0,933,00,3 aminnti The following is a comparative statement of tie expo . rti (crelusire of specie) from New York It foreign feria, for the week, and dims January 1. 1435. 1.80. 161.8. Yntat for the we•k.. 41.765,07 $1,30^..,537 $1,1,816 Previously reported 0,234,874 72,484,987 67,441,1144 60,590,60 vi,g47,19‘ psajekin Since Jut lit John R. White, EN., bar been re.eleeted pen dent of the Mount Carbon Railroad Company.. The Ilelactate and Hudson Canal Company have deolared a half-yearly dividend of 4 per cent- to be paid on and after the 26th inst. The transfers close on list inst. PHILADELPHIA STOCK EXCHANGE SLUM, p s Deccan 7, 1867. Re ly R. Nardi, Jr., Stool Bray., No 801 Walnut *greet. RIBS! BOLSD. 1000 Union Coast 6...30 14 Bear Meadow R.. 51 500 do --....33 1 do 33 W ItOO Penn ........... NO New Creek C 0.... N 1000 do ....24mt.75 6O do' 3( 0330 do 73 L..) Scbl Nay pfd 113( MAO Penn Sa 10i534% 21 do 313( I Morris Canal :44..114 3 do -92 3 do PC/1B E SPX 10 do 30,1( 10 do 281 i 21 do 38% LI Bask of Pero-....16x do. . 80 do Girard - Bk. 9ti 6 do 1 / 1 ; 10 City Bank 10 80A.R131. 19 N Paw R. 1 Norris Canal 75.1...111 DOM. 40 Read L.... 2 dayi.26V 16 lloaTioiarg B 112% 25 talon 4 27 N Yeaa B 10 Yarta&Mocli Bank.fd Bk of Penn. ..ioto.ll ti 16 G irard Baat : 9ti 1100 City 113 lots CkP.loo{ 400 do n Ck P.e.3OX 5 Lebigh &rip:l2.33X 50 do 3S 10 do ...... —35 50 do 33 CO do 33 50 do ....53tt0.33 GO Vinirs R 13 100 Reading It &Sys 1033 do ....55yn.2.6X 10 (la ^6ji BETWXI3I 10 '...; pen 8.. 10 do ... SWORD 1.1300 City6s et Phaw.s.l% 1000 Velem Canal 6e..38 lax' CAA Trans 6.154:14 loso do ...Thds.74. Xi Leh Perip.....14.03 10 Pebl Nay pf..1.....17,1( I do I Reading R 0 !.1 AFTER BOARD. di '64 cash 5it5kr6....74 :X3O Caos&Aßd.ll. Ttaoa 0101111419Pi1l • Bid. Atka. U Staten d0'.614.141 Philo O's iot 0f11433; '" BRAID% Si New.9l4i 92 reroute 5'5....64K Reading P Z 5 h 27 de Bond. 'TO 7&' 75 do 41E464'44A1 Peons RR 313 Morris Cool Con 46 47 lithe N ea 0t0ek.....11 12 LATI 103 Reading It 1015...26 11 100 do b 5.. 27 I J. Asked. NCa 12 int 11N IIN Woe,'tßHbm An 13 do Woad 14 fa Ti do do 11416 66k 61 Long Island.... !' Fla/kers 6N 7N Chard Doak 9 11N Lehigh 156 e 1 Unkfu Civaal 4 44 New Creek X X Catawba* 8 E.. Ci I CITY ITEMS. RTC. TOTOTOOE L. CrYLLIeS LZCTOOL..-111,11 annquncetueot that this talented young dhrine will deliver a lecture in Musical land Hall, on Feisty evening of this week, on ••Lonion—its high Lite and low life—its Parliaments, palaces, pulpits, with sketches of 9 surgeon, &c will be received with plea• •, time many of our [WILES who he,. TOT DOOM time past regarded with a lively interest the rise ant prutrets of this popular pulpit orator. Mr. Cuyler Du recently returaed from a raropekt tour of some months, and from the acute obserratioa that he peeresses, and his ready genies for hurting up the moot interesting phase in everything ha teatime, we may judge that his eghts and experience white in England, and on the Continent. have secured to him • Mock of materials to work upon before an audience, such as we have rarely the privilege of enjoying. ire are thus confident in oui anticipation, from whet we actually know and hare seen of the num, Ws letters from Europe, published la the Christian Isulligcnstr, (tad other journals in this country duriag hiallseente, hod a clear ring of originality about them, that wee quite refreshing in this time of orerdone, sickly, bogus foreign correspondence. It I. true they evinced the mark. In some mules of hasty execution—width la a dying trip, as his emphatically was, to always to be ea pected—atill, upon the whole, if they may be taken ma shadowy foams% of what their author will gileus,aftet s breathing spell of due deliberation, his lecture will be a treat. What may serve to render the occasion doubly at tractive, and which it is proper that we should state, is, that the entire proceeds of the lecture, after paying the expense of the room, will be appropriated to the Sli , sion Sabbath School, in Federal street, and through it to the pm, of that district. For places where tickets may he had, ate aerertise meat. .lIE AL TIFUL TVllNtattlYo Goers.—Not only beau tiful but good, and in the extreme, are the gentle:net:Ca furl:nailing goods eold by Items. S. C. Walborn .t Co , Nos. G and 7 north Math street. They are, inamorer, alter the latest styles, portion:July in the mayor linen, collars, wrappers, and other specialities. the holm of Walborn & Co. is one of long standing and high refu tation. GIFTS! GIFTS!—The meet acceptable gill, to our taste, Is a good book Others think differently. At Erans's Original Gift Book Stine, Chestnut, below Fifth, Brown's iron bonding , yon get not only a good book, at the lowest price, but also, en likely an net, And j ourself possessed of a beautiful breastpin, or a bracelet, oc a bejewelled ring, or a ton of coal, or a barn!l of lone, or a gold vetch north, peshaps, ti OC' : Every purchase of a dollar and upwards eecuren a gilt of some kind lllcno Lifie A Pnlscr.—One may dine like a prince or a princess, or as princes and princesses are supposed to dine, at Carets' beautiful Ladled' and (len_ tlemen's Ordinary, Eighth street, below Chestnut. All the delicacies of the season are served up, and may be had at alasat any hour in the day or evening. Ladies will end a pleasant entrance to the elegant saloons /et apart for them through the confectionery. Carel', we think. is certain to succeed. No one ever batter de served to prosper. ll' OUR RiAORRR denim) to see acme splendid specimens of Philadelphia workmanship, let them call and examine the fine cast steel Skates at the manufac tory of Messrs A. Tillmer SCo . 617 Arch street. In beauty and symmetry of share and perfection of polsh, the skates manufactured by these gentlemen exceed any thing or the kind we Asse ever seen. It affords us touch pleasure to state that, notwithstanding the dull ness of the times, Messrs. T. A, Co. have not cnly been able to keep their entire force at work, hot have lately been compelled to employ additional husda, so great hes been the demand for their skates. Mo. GEORGE SUMNER, brother of the liot. Charles Snomer. is expected to deliver a lecture on " Ohl Europe and Young America." next Monday even. tag, December 14th, in Concert Ball, for the benefit of the Union Temporary Home, OCR FORRIGN RELATIoNS.—The Nattcnal la telligencer says that our governmental &than with the foreign world are in a state of unwonted, if not unpre cedented, tranquillity—a fact well worthy of rejoicing over, 'ffe have never yet seen any good argument ad duced to show cause why our " foreign relations ', should not itsolnaly enjoy ,the blessings we do, ea potion) in regard to clothing, If they have the good tarte to patronise the extensive establishment of Clif ton, Albright, & Cu., in Jayne's Hall, No 6"..11 Chest nut street. THE RECENT FIRES.—SOVeTai oloUilng stores were damaged by the hese which hare taken place with in the past two days. We are happy to state that the famed! Brown Stone Clothing Hall of Boothia it Wil son, Noe. 603 and 603 Chestnut street. above Sixth, is still right aide up, and ready to sell out its enotmota stock of gentlemen and youth's clothing at their usual reasonable rates. IT WILL be seen by our adtertidng oolutos th at the Waterman Gas Regulator Company sat now saran their superior Regulators ai prim to salt the times. Only dee dollar.% for e. wannantel to ears 20 to 30 per tent. of ilia gin bill. Omen 802 Cbentnnt stunt, abort Kith • Clore!. 26,V01..1