''''.o4''''' • l-:-.1 , ..' 4 , -,K"--,'"'Y%-`7 , -:- -' - --_ ' ' ' ,--, , T,: - , v,,,,,-, .. . i . . i.:*5.,... - . - .,,.tatmoz ' ~..,.,,- -, , ._ .. _ . . _ . ______._.... __,__,.._ .. f4-4' , z - .5_ t- 7 - - , -- - 777 ----- '7 - '741 '' ' ' • - . . `.- ';'f ,,- '' .- -.,"-WE .- .-:ati--•:-: . f.. : 4:?t,i;VA1: , •140 -- i ,-- ' " ''' --.''' -. • -' - .:,-A- - .--'. ._ . • 1P, ; •,4-`4: - PiZ4 2 .-P,e- 2 . . : • -•'. .••; , -, 41-f ` ' '' , ;: i, -9 -7 -74 -# -'-- 4 ' '.. -::- ' 7 : 1 -.l':- -' - . --.'''''' '' '-' - .. - ' '-' s . . 1 '' '''• . • . ' { - -- 1 2 3:-',N'..?,4A,5`. , :., - ;• . ..14;- • .-_. - :73 - -.. - . - -z.P.--- .-- -.- • . • • -, : - .. - 5.-.4: - .*:•-.2% - 44.:.!:- - rt, - ,-..,;',=,-=',•,..- :, ;'•• -..•-• - • .-_-,: . ' • , . • - • . . .. --11 '- ' '''''''''''"" .-;.-' '' --- ' 1 ''-''''''' ' ;',ii' L ` . .o;o•l.64o.4..iisKia""" l " ll " l " • ......,. . ~:,,..,,....,_„,,...___..... ~ ~ .., ~ ~, ~ ~,.., .4.,,, \ ,,.,,. : ,.,,,, ..,,,t.: '** .' .'' ' •• '. ' .•••.'-; '-•'-'''{' ii .'.l ' • ' ‘ *- 0- ' ,c't i'l 4 t '.. 1 i '`. • . - . . . . . ~ ~ ~ ..- . ~ .. , , . - ~... ..._ ~ , • .* 4 '...1 - kNiAI4.II" I / 1 " '. •• • ' "." . ''''''' ' - . l'f-IN% $6.4 . .. .....,.... „, ~„.,_.,•::._ ri- . At io k , . .........„\wv,,, , ,,,..._,,,, -,,,!..„.... , ..„:„ • ...•••• ~,,,, , /.. • - —..„, . ,• • C. .. •.•..., .. , • .. .4 - , ~ . . . ~... ,4• , ,,., . • / . ....0..4.4. 4 . 4 , -,. • 4 4 . - , - .7.'"-• .:: - .1•1,444,,,1-•,,,, ' ."„... , "%, - 0011111411 1 ' ;' - t --, ':, ....'•••• •.- i * A- . .., • suiLustus) DAIVIW(Fit/M t • ' . . . ... , . . ..--, -_,-- ."..:,'„;,-$ - f., - I.„,_llllPr'.'- - 1 1 - Ifi • ~- -.•...-... .. •.: ' ... :. . ..±,:-. f „--.;„„„;. . - -:•' ,-;-.-.- -- '..g:41F,1‘ , - _ -.. .: ...,..- - J .., .. ~i , ~ .,,,...,e-jr:- •.• ••• •:•• , .•: , , - 1 - ' ~, ‘ ,...i. . ;A•:- .. - . , f..f . ";k• .. rli •::. ...,,,_ •• • .."1.. • .0. 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"...-..............„tx,..:0 /141"14301116`911,46r4: Milted sookalottbissfoutOrtlit Oily ne. - 8 'Banana neeplicril proiln 'Vett*** Volk IliairillosTge.; TURN% DOLLMIS VOlatitlllol4THlri iule a t d6l l I npaysPace,,tot the 4 3. E . E, AO:14LO Taus* Doi.. Lass - riaAllwas, in advance., -" wilt Orkiortbers by (ind annum; in advittic9 • at- " - •'s2 00 -ThteePol4*,-. ' ' • 600 00 riviOnplai "‘t ' I Twwiaeatty 4 ol. o 9o -o . ll t. - " • -" ' l e 2 00 • „ to one address): - . 20' edr Tw.enty,Coptee,Or'eSsirr- Ttn - addreas of eneh'` subscriber), 'yob • -' • . 120 ror • club of Twenty-one or over, w” e will sand an nitin,popyAn - the , gattakup of the Olob: IsU'Postakasters arb tegneetad.to " as - y gentsfor :snia-Wasnact...raad .' .~imf~e~iiiits: 414ZRICAN 40 - 4.0? 01 - r, , or - A ' 0 . 0101..e4ne. :On ?PIMA' (Monday) V lENINCI., December Wlll hitierforthea the amitelun Commßette, entitled ' Joliks - _ ja r ' am Bello • ur - Goy ...... • .john ;TIMOR ' ' M. Le Moyne • To ennolude with - Mkt, grand Paire,Ballet;*entttled THE G OLDEN HOBBIe.. ...... ..... • Ikno,r Clolseppina Prated Birt' , .. .. ,M , lto Louise Lamoureux Boom open at; Performanoes wilt tom• menet Zl half-mutt 7-' - • ' • : Armxesiort : • , • B04,101,:i ritno et, and Piniiet 0ir616 60 nen tit. Pandly Olean and Amphlth,eatte - ' 25 Plivntelroxec ( for elgbt,,pereons) ' $8 . I"ne Sax Offi 14 es openfront ,k: M. to 4 P . M. for the securing orsenti and boxelholtbot'extra charge.' , .11PABBABB' • woe., McKEON. itIUSICAL MATINEE. • ,• • • - "4R NI)"DAY PERVORMANOE, In i Eß A T if it the DeFeTker224 ' . 4ltaCta " lifti. TEILL. • TICKSTB FIFTt OBNTS. On which oecellon • , MLLE. MARIN OARNAVER, ' the eminent pianist of the Conservaterio Paris; pupil or Charles D. Berrot, (Melanin), will make her debut. _GRAND' CORONET. and, VIRIIX: . whowill joihtly appear , with . WAIN ntLINI`T.S. °AWOL'. MISS ANNIE ...ERN)±ST - RZRRINO, ROCCO, RLITZE R . oindisstot... • • • ..• • .. . • •- I • • Big.' ',BELLA. Theiprogrisidno on this occasion will be easefully se. haw& cud will ,contain goons of the marterpleces by Mdzert,ldayerbeer, 'Rossini. Beethoven, Donizettl; se lecting from Oratorios by Handel and Haydn. Boors open at tialf. - past'one. Matinee commences at haltpast two. , d 1931 MRS, D. PI. BOWERS' - = WALNUT IrlitEET' THEATRE. (lola ~1.411986„ D1R5. D. E. BOWER& Actin* and Stage Manager .. RICHINGB. pn 21112 (Mo n day) JP/ENING . , Deo. 21st, 1857. - VIOLET J N Covens* Violet. Sirs Dl' Bowers. tdOltiflNO CALL, Sir Edward. Ardent v hfr Etchings; Mrs ‘Ohltllngstone, Miss Etchings. Prices of Admission..*..... . .. : .. 25 Cents. Secured Seats in Dress Circle - 37g Parquet 25 . ti Boa Ofilr.e"open from 10 o'otock A 11. to 3 P. 11. Doors ensued at a quarter to 7 o'clock; curtain still rise at aquarter 047 o'clock. , , , (113.3 t WHEATLEY's ARCH ST: THEATRE. v,v .-80 LE L'ESEE IV. 3VIIELTLEY TRlS"(Blonday) EVENING. Deo. 21st, 1867, • BEATRICE. : „ • Ramorp de, Tesolaisra, Mr Davenport; Lord Walter Court mai; !dr. Wheatley; Lord Landstnere, Mr Dot. man; Beatrice di Neva, hire. Davenport. SARAN% YOUNG MAN. . , Mr biogiridge, Mr Mar; Sarah, Miss Anna Cruise. SCALE or SALICES.—Boxeg, 25 cents; Secured Seats, 58 cents • Orchestra - Bums, 60 tents; Seats in Private Boxes, .7b cents Gallery,,LB cents; Gallery for Colored Persons, 2,5 cen ts; Privvate IMF ; in,olallery for Colored Persona. 08-ceritti, ' Boa Office nperi from 10 A. M. until 3 P.. 11. Doors will open at .. 64 o'clock ; , performance to commence at 7, precisely,, ATIONAL THEATRE AND CIRCUS, N •WALNUT STREET, NEAR RIMEL LERSRE WROLEY DARMORE. ARBIBUNT BIANAGER. .... ... . EQIIRRIRIAN,IIANAGER TOOL RING. TRIO (Monday) 4 EVENING; Deo. Met, 107, • - IRON HAM - Outon - Da. ELNZL Dr Kane; Mr Win Nie F s k tilll f Dlclitnore; Shanghu, Mr Drink; fatty, 3tr Cunnittkbani. " During the evep!nf.,tbii *bile c,ll - 1 - pi,laT appear am ** DEDOIIIK ARABS. . . . l'asess or Aininsinint , -25 Cents , parts or the Home: P elute Banta 50 elide. • 'Doors open at .03i o'clock. Performance to com• menee at 1M • ' RIANE I OIID's 'OPERA ROUSE— "', 'ELEVENTH Streit, above °beet:Wit.- - ETHIOPIAN DEEFORHANOES THIS 'EVENING. Ethiopian; Life: Illustrated by Banford's Town ot, Stare—New Dances by the Sanford - Obildreu. Doers open at I regal—to 'commence tarter before eight. To conclude with • A EALIGHABLE •AITERPLEOE. Admittance 25 tense, • ftloneg SCULL, GAMBLOS, CO, BANKERS, •. • ' No: 38 South Third Street. - B.W.cornerEltf u.. Bank of Pennsylvania Notes The highest premium paid for ' , ' , • ,AMERWAN - GOLD , ISTMAS A Nit - JIXOTIA - N0111.• Uneurrentifund s bought and sold. Stocks bought and stdd on conintiaslon only. .n6l0-21n* A MPIOCAN. GOLD AND' ,1193 , 19 . YORE EXCHANG E winnui AT RIMIEST OURBANT RATES, , ORONItiE & CO SPECIE RO X.k .11Si n024-dif , 40, SOUTH THIRD fir re W. TINGLEY & CO., BANKERS, Boutlt THIAD Street; Philackfplklit. • COLLNOTIONBnromp apneas an all nectosible points in .t4e,United emi 3 Oanguis , Stout-Cll'ond'; &o.,'Bought and Bold on Connkision. Uncurrept Bank Noble, check'', &c.; bought at the loWent rem " Devoelts received and interest allowed, as per agree.. ment.'• ' not-3m tOcktthee, Jetoettß, &:t. , • WILSON de SON Vase_ now on hand the largest stock of - RILVER WARE - IN TO! MI, 7 . Exclusively of their own , manufacture and , WARRANTED. iersdius nesiroos "tit purchaslog are respectfully In vited to call andexamine for themselves, at the OLD ESTABLIORD STAND, d019 , 2w . 13. W.,Cor. FLFTH and cIIBRAY Streeta ° MEADOWS & CO. Va_ Race the. honot - to inform their customers, and the puhlie generally, that they are now offering their exieusire assortment of ' , • t STERLING' - S , (Whic_b, for Etyle,fiterling quality and good taste can net be aurpaasid,) AT-FR.IOU ttbitrilliALLY LOW, FOR OASHI: UPWARDS OF 20,000 OUNCES STERLING SILVER ARTICLES SUI7ABL6 /OR HOLIDAY OIFTB, Tea and Coffee Services, Moberg, - °ups, Gobleta, Cae _; • tore, Knives, Forks, Spoons, And all articles of ornament and utility usually made ideeen. 0. DI. B,'Co?bettig theiosilveApi*CCal Silver satithe, 04 liereonalti superintending tha insnufactunt of -Avesx article kirea thOmt' fez' CAN WAR RANT EVERT AR:11.014 AS REPRESENTED . aei9-9i AN 011E8TNUT Street. BAILEY & CU. r ORESTNITT STREET, 'llawintazturoro of - BRITIBII. BTERLINII ULM. WAII3, Ureter the inspeetion,' on the involver eaolustrely, Olttaeasaad Strangers aro bolted to aloft cor mans factory. WATORES. - Constar* on hind n 50151%41d stook ot linperlas Watches, et all the celebrated makers. DIAMONDS. ifeeklsees, Bracelob, ffrpoehes, Ear•ltinge, linger 91age, sad ell other articles in the Diamond line. , Drawings of-NEW , DEBIGNIS will be made free of . charge for hoe wishing work made to order. - 11i011. COULD JEWELRY. A -ie datifekt aaaortment rof nii the caw styles of Sine . , asidosato, Mona and fawn Cameo ; , Pearl, Coral, 'Carbuncle, Efargaleite, , • , -'&11 - ., EGO. fern . EMPAIdfITOPS, :BA S KETS . , IVAITBIdej &a. Also; Bionio and 'Marble CtOCBII, of newest atplaa, and of. al/parlor qualtaf.. , aul-dfw/awly 11,.:E.:1:1ALDWEIAL'et, CO., ' • a/ - 482 CHESTNUT street, ~ ' ~Itiee weeelted, per 'steamers. new style's , , ' Jewelry, Chatelaine, Vest Chslan. - .., fiplernUd Pane, Hair Pins. it = Prult Standn, /agar -Bashete.' , Jet Goods and Plower Tanen. - • •Coral,Mtws and Massie Sets. Bons argente In. Philadelphia for the'eala of „Charles Frodslim'S LONDON TIUS-KNEIPERO.. del° PEQUIGNOT, mk.i. • :30114URAPTURER9 OP WATOEt OASBEI - AID tIIPORTIBEI Or W141011)8, • tiOilittbillit NUE?, BELOW 01001111:11 ,•, • ?8in ! ...p.:1:0,A1ia1114. • . Cosign" PstmOlitat.. • kiliugn piqugetoy till (IVO, WAR • t . "; „ wit:GUM NV lasoll 0, L PN,,; • :.hfAIyUFAGTUREAS Ui:Birialr (ESTABLISHED 1812,) 001111111 C smut AND , Onsispr. arallETO. . rA large'sesortmertat. of SILVER. W.ARE; of every de scription, constantly on band, or madtt t 4 order to match a pattern desired. ' , 3i;•, •; , • • Imposters of Sheffield and 'Birmingham imported vowel - • ; • ; .'st39-ddcerly V; JARDER &BRO. air • • NAJIMPII3IIIIIEAB MOD INlPOWelrie 01 - • WAltßi Re. fel Oltioitnut Street, above pip .stilts,) rrPhlisdelphls} Constantly on hand and for sale to the Trade, 71/1808,. , 00mmopuoms31111r1.011 Mrs,. um, ..-11T4Cupsis , -01)BIARTBeatIES,; WAITSB4, , DAS._ iP3SITIVO,ISTOItS, ANIVISt, SSW% SARKB,„ LADLII3,' • - Osth*otall.kbidit of nistal, r orily inCYPIVICL4-'loCSbiles Onlty9ettos,jo store NOt a CPTHO: l l, ,, ii i niff IMO - 4 , 34ftifiritWlttr•St• _ .•. VOL. -1:-.4‘19. 121. LOOKING GLASSES, OIL PAINTINGS,. oiIItI9TI4AB YRESEWTS - 'LAMM! 8., EARL - 8 Offers for sale the Largest Assortment or the shove, at the LOWEST PIIIO.BB to be found in the city.. DARLEY.II beautiful ILLUSTRATIONS of • ' "DIAIIGABLIT," VRRISTMAS PRESENTS.— WrittaiDeski, Portfolios, Portemonnates, Purses, Bags", Oard Cases, Pocket Knives, Backgammon Boards; Ohasignen, Eno Letter Paper and Stationery of every description, it greatly ' REbUOED 4. B. JOHNSON, dell.tde3l4 No. 3 North ..BIOUTH. Street. BIBLES.-ahe Depository of the Poonsyl- X. monis, Bible Society, corner of WALNUT and BEVENTII Streeter, (opposite Wrishlngton Square,) Philadelphia, it arrive supplied with a large assortment of BIBLES and, TABTA6IBNTS, comprising every variety of aloe, quality, And price. The Bible in Your veld., tit cowienlent size, bound in roan; calf, and morocco. Now Testaments in one, two, and four vela, very large. plain type, for, persona whose eyesight has been weak-, acted by age or disease. Peeling separately bound of verbena sites:, Zelpele and London_ editions the ilebiew Betio- - Mimi for OATe in trier thirty langusges. del7•iw* AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. A beautiful seleettiou of O.O.LID:A.Y GOODS, enitable,for Presents, to be found in GREAT VARIETY, at the corner of ' FOURTH AND CHEM= STREETS, such as PORTEMONNAIES, POCKET BOOKS, , PORTFOLIOS, DRESSING OASES. WRITING CARES, ' • BANKERS', CASES, • BANK BOOK HOLDERS, BILL BOOKS, MONEY BELTS, CIGAR CASES, RAZOR STROPS, WORK CASES, CARD OASES, NEEDLE CASES, - POCKET CUTLERY, , ROGERS' RAZORS, . CHESS BOARDS, ' • BACKGAMMON BOARDS, PAPIER, MADE , WORK BOXES, - DESKS, /to , GOLD PENS, and GOLD AND SILVER PENCIL OASES. 4817-2 w F. lf. SMITH, N. IV. corner FOURTH and CHESTNUT Ste. CHRISTMAS PRESENTS.— , IN ACCOXDANUX WITH %TX MANNER, OF THE TIMES, WC WILL, DURING THE PRESENT HOLIDAY SEASON t SELL AT RETAIL Our Hairaucent Stock of , FANCY ARTICLES, WHOLESALE PRICES. WE HAVE JUST BLOEITS,D A venial? . or NEW AND BEAUTIFUL ARTICLES, Mr It Johnston ExPRESsLE SELECTED AND ADAPTED FOR HOLIDAY PRESENTS NEW EMBROIDERIES FOR CHRIST- I£ N. DIAZ, FSESENTS.--Just opened, new and tholes styles of ' Swiss, French, andFcotch, Collars, from .250 to 50. , Cambric Collars, very cheep, from 250 to $t An Fame Collars,new styles, from 60e to st. Mclean!' Collars, beautiful goods, froM 750 to to 60. = !twitted rind bralteseCollars, very cheap, 76e to F 7.60. , Valentin, French,' Swiss,' Cambric, Linen, and Hord ton Sete, from 50c to $l6. ' Embroidered and hemstitch Ramilterehlefa, very cheap. Sleevee, Infante' Waiots, French and Chantilly Veils, Flounoings, Embroidered Scarfs, dco, Itibbons,l id Moves, and Gauntlets - CLOAKB AND SHAWLS Closing out at an enormous sacrifice . ; also, Delainea, Aterinoes, Cobonrga, &c., &a. Quilts and Gonnterpanes closing very cheap, at F. & T. If. BELCHER'S, S.W. corner EIGHTH and SPRING GARDEN attests. Bank of Pennsylvania Notes taken at par. dela JR .itISTMAS AND HOLIDAY GOODS. W: D. GUNN, No, 26 South ROIIitTI/ Street,' /31111 1 .1WPAta b lVtiP - ANOY 000D6 imitable for the Holiday amen. Being entirely of his ' OWN IMPORTATION. The msortment embraces all the_ NEWEST STYLES, AND Jl7 VERY BEDEORD ritieze. Among it will be round Paperititiole Work Boxes, Desks, Portfolio', &e. Ladies' Cable and Traveling Bags. Porte hionnalea, Parses and Pocket Books, in great variety. ' Pearl Card Cases, beautiful styles. Boheinlan alma Toilet Bottles, richly decorated. Odor BoXell and Glove Boxes'. Fancy Bronze Inkstands, Thermometers, d‘o. Backgammon end Chess Boards, Cheestnen. FintrEnglish Scissor", in sate.' Fancy Cigar Btands and Cigar Cason. Scotch Wood 'Snuff Boxes and Fancy Articles. Itedalltons ?Ladle ivory. Memorandum and Ball Tablets, in pearl and Ivory, Together with numerous other articles in the line. deg-Int-if GIFT BOOKS FOR THE HOLIDAYS. -- • THE ADINBIOAN SUNDAY SCHOOL UNION PUBLISHES ONE THOUSAND CHOICE - ILLUSTRATED HOOKS, • YOB CHILDREN AND YOUTH; Being The LARGEST COLLECTION IN TIIE COUNTRY Also, a Variety of BIBLE'S AND DEVOTIONAL DOORS 0:1 1 1 / 1 4D, FOE THE HOLIDAY SALES. ELEGANTLY ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUES MAX be bed without charge, by applying at THE AMERICAN SUNDAY SCHOOL UNION, No. 1122 Mansur Sr., Paths. del6-tde2s. WARBURTON's INIMITABLE COVERINGS FOR THE HEAD Embrace all the peinte necessary to • GENTEEL EFFECT, and all the details and nicer elegancles which Impart FINISH, COMFORT, AND DURABILITY. Gentlemen are Molted to call and examine. 0c25.6m . 430 CILESTNTIT Street F . OR REGISTER OF WILLS . WM. ,IlAtiooollB, TWELIMI WARD, d2-3m* . Subject to Democratic Mica. FOR. SHERIFF— ALUM 4N GEORGE mom, FOURTIT WARD Subject to Democratic Rules. F OR SHERIF Tr- JAMBS G. GIBBON, TWRNTY-RISCOND WARD. Subject to Democratic Rules. tioftant FURS! FURS!! FURS!!! FURS!!!! JOHN FAREIRA & 00 . Importers, Manufacturers, and Dealers In FANCY FURS, FOR LADIES AND CHILDREN. Raving manufeettieed an Immense Stock of FUSS, With the expectation of doing . our usual business, the present prosepre of the times, and comparative stagna tion of trade, have loft as with an unusual amount of Stock upon our shelves. it le to moot this difficulty that we have now DETERMINED To close out our ENTIRE STOCK At Prices actually less than TIME COST TO MANTIPACEURE ! We have also on band a le4 and complete assort meat of QiNTS! MRS, CLOVES, All of which will be sold at very LOW 1 , 111088. No. 818 MARKET 8t , bet. Eighth nod Ninth, "ti019..8w South side ORIGINAL EDITION OF CHARLES KNIGHT'S PICTORIAL SUARSPEARE—IneIud- Ieg the Doubtful plapt and Biography, and Illustrated with very numerous Engravings on Wood in the high eat style of art; forming Suds., imperial 8 co. The subscribere hate. been, enabled to secure three 'copies Pr Ohl magnificent editlonof Bbakepeare, which has long been exceedingly . scarce. Immediate applica tion will be necessary to prevent disappointment in W et/kink copies. i • 0. J. PRIOR &CO , , Importers of Mulish Books, (102-y- No. 83 890th SIXTH St., above CIIEBTNUT. ,OFFICE OF THE LOCUST MOUNTAIN COAL AND IRON CO.—Pnibioebrata, Dec 18, ;1867.—Yhe annual Meeting of, the Stochholders of title Doinpany will be held at their Office, No 88 South FOURTII Street, on MONDAY, the 18t1 January, at 11 Welock A, M., at which time there will be an 'Election Of threatens to aerielor the eneninglear, "184,148 WAL C. LUDWIR, Secretary. BUTTER.—Fresh Tale Butter received thtiday-26 cents per Potutll. Beit bunch RAISINS 10 note per pouild.by the box. CHARLES SMITH, Orooer, de/44 " colter of SIXTIi bud •4191. Aohbap ki/Siflo• SNORAVINGS, R6OSIVCD. EARLE'S GALLERIES, 876 CHESTNUT Street. 4 R. & G. A, WRIGHT, RS South FOURTH Street political. COLLARS, ho Cit Virus. MONDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1857. FRANCE, AS SEEN THROUGH FRENCH JOURNALS BY LAST STEAMER. The French papers of the last month are before us. Their appearance recalls to our memory our own newspapers of a dozen years ago—the unbleached paper, so full of imper fections, almost pepper and salt, with a mosaic of rubbish for ground-plan, contrasts very strikingly with the snowy whiteness of our own journals. We have seen something like it in this city, not many years ago, but the manu facturer apologised to the indignant editor, who had already apologised to his offended patrons, by explaining that the heavy rains had muddied his mill-stream. The freshet took the blame, and as soon as the weather got better the nuisance was abated. Yrequent complaints are made against the injuriously' small print of our dailies. This is a fault that cannot be urged against Le Con 'sfitationitel or La Prose. The leading arti cles are in very large type, and the grade flops in size throughout the paper make a very effective distinction in the different sec tions of the sheet; but, unfortunately, the hue of the paper nullifies, to a great extent, this 'excellent' arrangement, by making the whole dim and pale. Both the papers that we have already men tioned have a heavy dividing lino running across the first page, separating tho bulletin of the day, which stands above it, from the feitillefon which is below. The latter is, as the case may be, a tale, critique, or other article, taking rank in style rather with our magazine writing than that of our journals; and they are rendered still more effective by the real signature of their respective authors. ,When the length of the article requires it, the same arrangement is carried over to the second page, and, if need be, oven to the third. Horizontal lines traversing the whole breadth of the page are much in use in the advertising derailment, and they have the effect of distinguishing and exposing them better than our method, but at a great ex pense of space. Another thing that strikes lie instantly is the fact that all the leaders are signed, and in many cases the correspondence, and even the synopsis of current events and politics; thus making the authors personally responsible for their statements. This may have tho effect of restricting the number of writers; it certainly deprives the sheet of the popular look of our anonymous columns, and it may deter ninny from rushing into print, but it throes a charm ing air of credibility over the paper which is truly refreshing. An author in such circum stances must carefully look beyond the pro babilities to the possibilities ; lie must watch how his feelings affect his facts. Our sys tem is a capital exponent of our popular Go vernment; it takes away the restraints upon free speech, as the ballot insures free suffrage; but it has its difficulties, for the desire of startling surmises and astonishing 'statements sometimes gives our papers some trouble in their next issue to make a studied re-state ment, a dignified buck-out, or a dashing dis claimer. The leaders on this account generally as sume an essay-like style, and attain a smooth ness of diction unusual to us ; and other parts of the sheet are frequently devoted to articles that would find their way with us to the 'Monthlies, or what we call distinctively lite rary papers—criticisms on books and art, his torical sketches, scientific research, and de 4criptions of places of interest, especially the v)chaitY thetir_own_ndored _Paris. Among the news of tho day every move ment of the Emperor seems to be noted. He must be a god-send to the penny-a-liners. Our President and chief officers are bulletined ad nauseam; but the royal family cannot make a trip on the railroad without showers of com pliments to their especial adornments, la borious preparations, and momentous man nerisms; the officials are greeted by royalty, and graciously thanked for the ease and rapidity of the journey, while military guards flock around in crowds, tilling the air with national music. French nature is a queer sort of human nature—perhaps their Majesties like it; but we are so much better satisfied with our own manners, that we rather like VICTORIA for avoiding as much as possible the Mat of a royal progress. ' The leads of all true Frenchmen have been delighted by a grand spectacle at Valence, on the 15th of November. The occasion was the grand distribution of the medal of St. Helena. The Bishop of Valence addressed the con course, and 1n a burst of eloquence rendered homage to the Emperor for his solicitous care for the veterans of the army: Brave veterans of our grand armies," said the prelate, "the Emperor has only good and generous thoughts. Each day this is more evi dent in everything that ho proposes or executes for the well-being of his country. This is but the justice that men of all classes and opinions are compelled to reader to him. One of the happiest and best of his inspirations is his constant solicitude for the army, and he loves With equal affection the brave soldiers of the wars of the past and of the conflicts of the present. The highest officer of this depart ment, deputed by his Majesty, has this day be stowed upon you the medals that now gleam with honor upon your breasts. " • • • Religion, too, cannot withdraw herself from such a scene ; she delights in all that sheds glory upon the name of our , nation, and after blessing your valor upon the field of battle, she hastens to bless the laurels that your valor has won for you." These eloquent words were answered with shouts; the veterans wept for joy; the multitude cried aloud, " Vice VEnt perettr ! Vice l'lmperatrice ! Vice le Prince imprrtal P' while the whole city and country celebrated the day as a grand festival. La Prose contains a series of articles by A. PHYRAT, contrasting with ability the position of England and France, and frankly according all the approbation deserved. A mere glimpse of his happy style is all we can hope to give in our condensation and free translation : «England offers at this moment one of those grand spectacles which aro the glory of a free people. IV hatever opinion we may en tertain of the affairs in India, or of the man ner in which these affairs ara judged in London, it is Impossible not to admire the public spirit which gleams thrOughout Great Britain,making every heart beat with the same pulsation. This public spirit—a happy blending of national pride and patriotism with an invincible devotion to the interests and glory of their country— spreads with equal force throughout all parties. It bursts forth in public assemblies, in the jour nals, in the complaints that rise against the Government, and even in that project of re form so inopportunely launched as a menace against the ministry, sonic days before the opening of the session. The liberty of the press, < that torch without which all is dark ness ;' the liberty of assembly and public dis cussion, which are so essentially part of the life of the people of England, has long given them that perspicuity, and that rectitude of intellect, which has always in the most critical situations rectified, by the force of its own in terests and rights, the movements of Its Go vernment. t‘ With us public spirit is not wanting, b it has not the same character of consistency and solidity. Created by the writers of the eighteenth century, it burst throughout Franco in 1789, and maintained itself through - many years with a vivacity and ardor which insured the triumph of the Revolution. Arrested in Its march by the too frequent changes in the administrations, it has been perverted in the midst of intrigues ; it has become irregular, intermittent; it has been subjected to all man. nor of eclipses and aberrations. A people often deceived, fall easily into indifference— they fool a distaste, a disgust for public affairs, and concentrate their attention on 'their per. PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1857. sonal interests. But this concentration iti'fot z tunatoly a condition too unnatural to endure Tho proof of this consoling truth atikel at this moment overy observing man. Mb movement, which for some years bas seemed to draw our whole country into the follies-Of speculation, is certainly not stopped, but, It retarded. It is said that wealth has lost p4t of her attractions for the hearts of her fawn- Hes. Business falls and politics ride. Ti reaction is only commencing, butit Is striking. , “Political, economic, philosophic tiutlyt will spread through the masses, and a'poptila' sentiment will arise, expanding and strength ening as it mounts. It is to excite and tlitio this sentiment that the journals should applx themselies in their' Motion of briar]; Old guide of the wants,• the interests, and the ideas of the people. And for this purpose'ru have called attention to England, wliqe opinion, mingled and identified with the general sentiment of material interests aibd political rights, forms that public spirit, which' exists in the masses, in tho parties, in the Crtil vernment, as an essential element of the tional life." no Gazette de France takes exceptionlit PEYRAT for insinuating that public opinion` did not exist before the Revolution; but hO, defends himself by saying that it received i first impulse from the authors of the olOf! teenth century, and growing and expandink) through the Revolution and succeeding years," is but now worthy to bear the name. It ht., achieved a position, at length, which will ren der a return to the ancient monarchy an /Ql' possibility. Its results have not been 114 most brilliant, but they are the most sure. If was the want of a mutual understanding that kept the land so long enslaved; the populace' of Lyons knew not, the sentiment of that , o Paris. The same feeling was beating in their, hearts, but no community of thought made" them aware of it. When the moment of re velation (lid come, France rose,' from Lille to Bayonne, from Brest to Strasburg, and the, Revolution was achieved. ' `,, L'Univers, in a notice of these articles, de- , mends of the author the grounds on which he asserts that the Franco of 1857 is greater than the France previous to 1789. A. PEYRAT 11.4= swers by an admirable sketch of its advance in science and art, summing up his argument with these words, "It is not lightly, then, that .we say that the Revolution has given to Franco_ more happiness, more dignity, and moro moral grandeur. It has sustained her honor as gloriv ously as her rights and her independence." L'Univers also says that the greatness of Eng land dates from the French Revolution. This is disputed by M. P.synnr, who wields his pen right valiantly in defence of Cromwell, "who created the maritime and commercial system of his country, and who, by the navigation act, gave to the commercial and maritime industry of England the impulse, the direction, and the monopoly which has made the prosperity of Great Britain." La Prose of 21st November makes men: tion of a recent address of Sir ROBERT PHEL'S, in which ho took occasion to criticise a speech of Lord PALMERSTON'S, and to make a savage attack upon Lord CANNING. It goes on to say: " Following his custom, he essayed to make his auditors laugh by putting pleasantries in the place of reason. Sir ROBERT PEEL has long sought to take position as a man of wit, who considers questions on their humorous side; but to fill such a part it Is necessary to possess the talent, the eloquence, or the power of an O'CONNELL, a Many, a PALBERSTON, or a DISRAELI. This talent and this power arc entirely wanting in Sir ROBERT PEEN and he' furnishes another proof Or the difficulty of maintaining a great name." The same paper contains an announcement which we were glad to see—the Municipal Council of Montpelier has established a course' pf kipteres on.Politieal epeor ample, says La Prose, should be followed by other cities. The State has boon indifferent to the demand that this science should form part of 'the programme in all official training, and it is, therefore, the duty of cities to or ganize such classes for themselves. In our own country an Old Mortality " sort of taste is now reviving the yellow pages of the Elizabethan authors, and displacing the yellow-covered literature from the fresh springs of a well watered region. The French, too, regmdful of old names," have lately placed upon a house in Versailles a marble tablet with this inscription : Jean do ha Breyer°, frlond of the Princes of Conde, wrote his book of " chat arrow." We know not the pleoe of his birth but he lived long where ho gave his thoughts to mon and rendered his soul to God, May 11th, 1695. It seems to us that the United States gene rally, and Pennsylvania particularly, have been leaving the dust to settle something too deep upon the memories of their early laborers in classic and connmtnal literature, A people who fail to treasure their national traditions do not deserve a history. Fearless Champions of the Majority Rule. [From tho Waynemburg Democrat, organ of the Demo (Tata of Greene county, Fa ] With undiminished regard for the patriotism and wisdom of President Buchanan, however, we can not help thinking with Governor Walker, Judge Douglas, and othersof the ablest and wisest states men of the nation, that the people of each State possess an inherent right, and should have the op portunity, of passing upon all the provisions of the fundamental law by which they nro to be governed. This we believed to be the true intent and mean ing of the Kansas Nebraska bill, and it wart upon this view of that measure, in our opinion, that the Democracy of the North achieved the glorious vie tory of 1856. We feel bound, therefore, to stand by the construction given to the Kansas-Nebratika bill in the last Presidential campaign, and to in sist that the whole Constitution of every proposed now Stabs should be sanctified by the popular ap proval of those who aro to live tinder and be Af• footed by it, before it should receive the sanction of Congress. It is quite evident, too, from tho tono o the President's message on this point, that he is of the seine opinion as regards all future States, and that such was his understanding in re gard to Kansas, at the time when his instructions wore given to Governor Walker. It is a signifi cant foot, also, that the President dean not oven recommend the admission of Kansas as A State under the Lecomplon Constitution, bitt loaves that question to be decided as the wisdom of Congress may deem best, 'from the Bloomsburg Democrat, organ of Democrats of gallant "Little lorry.") The Kansas question has long boon agitating the publio mind. The friends of law and order, ponce end tranquillity, in every port of the country, are anxious to have it speedily settled by the admis sion of this Territory into the Union ns a State. hut thin consummation, so devoutly wished, must be brought about fairly, honorably, and in strict accordance with the principle that the voice of the majority of the people of Kansas must rule, if that expression of opinion does not conflict with any of the provisions of thO Constitution of the United States. It will not do to attempt to force that people to accept a Constitution they do not want, or the provisions of which they do not know. Whore the bona file voters of a Territory demand the submission of a Constitution—not a part, but the whole of it--for .their approval or rejection, in justice, the right to record their judgment cannot and should not be denied them. If they see fit to waive that right, and agree to abide by the decision of tho Convention to whom was intrustod the framing and adoption of the in strument which is to be the basis of their laws, it is their own affair, and calls for no interference on the part of others. Prom the conflicting reports current, we are un able to say whether the peoplo ol Kansas are sans• fled with the submission of the single clause de termining the question of slavery, or otheriviso. If they are not, then the Constitution nn framed should, in our humbleopinion, be submitted bodily for their adoption or rejection. The murder of Mrs. Garber and Mrs. beam, in Lancaster county, Pa., has given rise to intense excitement there. The Express of Thursday even• ing says : The funeral of Mrs. Garber and Mrs, Lenin took piece this morning at ten o'clock. The remains were interred in a graveyard near ]tinsel, on the Litiz turnpike, about four miles from the house. The train of carriages and horsetnen was probably the largest ever soon in the county : over four hundred carriages alone wore in the prooes• slon, and notwithstanding the solemnity of the occasion the excitement of the people, through fear that the guilty might escape the punishment ro justly due them Is said to have boon terrible in the extreme, and it is expected that not less than a thousand people from the surrounding country will bo in town on Saturday to attend at the hear lug of the prisoners. The feeling of indignation isintense, and threats aro foely made that the prisoners will not be allowed to return to the pris on alive. We trust, however, that no unlawful aot will ho attempted, and that the second sober thought " will prevailagainst any violence.. The two nogroes under arrest have been fully identi fied on two mon who were seen to enter the house of the unfortunate victim!. CORRESPONDENCE. LETTER FROM CHINA.; fOorreTondence of The Presz Snaxnnaf, October 80, 1857 The mail loaves to•morron, and I take the liberty to send you a line in reference to affairs in this part of the world. Since the sudden declaration of the blockade of the Canton river by the English Admiral, a blow, specially aimed at American interests, all warlike demonstrations against the Chinese are at a stand' still; all the troops intended fur operations here basing boon ordered to India, where, at the lest accounts, the rebellion was not only unchecked but spreading. This defection of the &Toys has pro duced a most profound sensation. It is regarded as the most serious blow ever aimed at British power in India, and unless speedily ar rested may terminate in the utter oubversion of the Anglo-Indian Empire. Lord Elgin, who had but recently arrived in China, left very hurriedly in the steam frigate Shannon for Calcutta, and, notwithstanding his own statements to the contrary, the impression is very general with the British officials that he will not reborn ; that he will relieve Lord Canning as Governer-General of India, in which case, it is said the post of Ambassador to China will devolve an Lord Elgin's brother, the lion. Mr. Bruce. Mr. Bruce was in China name years ego, and, at the time of joining the mission, was ConsubGene yel toEgypt. •Ife is not regarded as a loan of ex , iraerdinary elevornesa. ' I have given the popular rumor—my own opinion is ' 'that Lord Elgin, finding the condition of affairs in China somery different from what ha was led. to wee tylous been glad of en excuse to with. driyareven temporarily from the annoyances of an i.'iWseeilitiori with officials whose imbecility or die . ascot ybe tould'iot abut hts eyes to. The oaten ',Ode object of his visit to Calcutta is to prochre Troop', and, whether he MA:COILS or not, I have no I . .ioUbt ho Will-return in time fur the arrival of our ossininissioner. The events which are now transpiring in the 'East are worthy the profound attention of the peo• pleb(' the West, and especially the Government of the United States. With an adroitness ( worthy her polioy, England, by fostering ir ,ritations in the West, has managed to with. ~, b servation from the boldness of her designs, and the magnitude of her conquests in the East, until ;from the cape of Good Hope to the coast of China Ater virtual dominion over almost every inch of territory worth possessing is almost perfect; and she now seeks to establish the same control over :the trade and commerce of this old empire that she "has long exercised in Hindustan and Burmah. se , Hae not the time arrived when this aggressive ..aplrit should be rebuked, and the rights of power 'Caned? and if the weak and feeble can present no barrier to its exercise, is it not incumbent on Anse nations and peoples who recognise the obliga tions of truth and juetice, and who have a common , ' _lnterest, to interpose at least their moral Influence !,)n opposition to violence and wrong? The present war upon the Chinese I regard no Ore most iniquitous on record—selfish, mean, and shove and worse than .11, hypooritioal—ostensi- My to enlarge the field of commercial enter ;prise, to advance the cause of civilization and Christianity, really and practically to fender to the worst passions of humanity, and by orce, and fraud, and crime, and blood, to force :destruction upon a feeble people. They that sow t the wind shall reap the whirlwind. There is no 'doubt but what this war upon the Chinese has pro. elpitated the uprising in India ; and the English, ',Ter their cruelties and butcheries hero, are reaping St retribution ns fearful as unexpected elsewhere. • The arrival of Mr. Rood is looked for with groat Interest, and from the position of affairs I am San guine that ho Will be able to do good. Notwith• .atanding our unfortunate attack upon the Chinese, 9M:destruction of their lives'and property, and the lowerfut efforts made by interested parties to im• pros them with the idea that in this war wo stand Sshoulder to +Moulder with the English, the Chi nese have never fully believed it. • , They have a high opinion not only of our nom 'Mon sense, but our sense of national honor and justice. and regard the hostile nets of the Aineri• •eari officials as their own per so. The very prompt relnoval of Dr. Parker has given strong confirms then to tins belief, and bee tended to prepare the way for the new minister to make an impression, exercise an influence, and necomplish a work which I ant sure will reflect honor upon himself Mid the country. 'Coming, as Mr. Reed does, to replace a man 'whose strong Anglican sympathies and consequent 'arrogant bearing lied rendered him peculiarly ob annxleue. personally and officially, to the Chinese, they will ho disposed to receive him with courtesy and kindnese; and the English, I tint sure, in the present condition of their affairs, willpay respect 140 opinions if they do nut avail of his services tolettle pending dillieul ties. ~To toy mind, It is clear as a eunbeam that sound tic Oily, not less Ginn the dictates of justice and Isom requires that the United States should (Ito 'emelt:nonce the attempts of t ho English to conquer of anatuninber China. The idea of ouch %purpose 11, 4 , X" seem ,startling, but it is nevertheless true. Tll,o3ritialt minister may rise in Parliament and arrrinlyrltisavow ..all such designs—they have done t i s s : ils. s y r - 4 l,...sts hsmaesta yew.- —and whiz Is oelaratiou warm upon their lips, they have never, for a moment, relaxed in their efforts of aggrandizement, until by force and fraud they have acquired dominion over one.sixth of the popnlation of the globe, with even a larger pro portion of its wealth and influence. 'llse great pretext by which the English meek to 1 oxen the sympathies of the Western nations in favorer their aggrintlizing policy in the East, is the cry of Russian influenee and Russian onoroneh mente This is partially the truth, Russia by her innate mobility is eteadily flanking the Anglo-In dian empire, end England apprehends that she may be called upon to disgorge a portion of her ill.gotton plunder, but the whole truth embraces the apprehensions of the rapid growth of Ameri can Whom, the peaceful but steady extension of American power. To England, with all her pomp and pride and arrogance, the United States is "Mordecai sitting in the Hieg's gate." Though but a stripling in years, awl without those material elements, an overpowering naval i and military force, by which the strength of nations is too often estimated, the British states men are not deceived; they have a right appre ciation of our present resources and future destiny. They know that, with our vast and highly-favored territory, extending front ocean to ocean ; coursed by our great rivers from the frozen North to the sunny Smith; teeming with the products of every clime,—vre are a world within ourselves : and, be sides controlling that great staple, which, as an eta want of emuniereinl and political power, is oo potent, and alarming to England; in the bravo hearts and atrong armor our hardy, thrifty, intelligent popula tion,devolored and educated under our republican institutions ' they see us already entitled to stand in the front rank of nations ; and in a few years, if faithful to our high mission, true to our inherit ance and ourselves, it is our inevitable destiny to oocupy a position and possess a . power, material and moral, which will justify us in asserting the oapremaoy of right and the obligations of human- ity, whether in the Orient or Occident. Very great efforts are made to produce the im pression in the United States that in this war upon China no pilitleal question is involved. It is either apolitical war or It is a war of plunder. It cannot be to advance the Interests of civilizations and Christianity, for the representatives of these inte rests are ns free to roam throughout the flowery hind as in tho highways and byways of our own free country. It cannot be for the freedom of cony raeree, for where is commerce more free and entrain recited ? With the exception of opium, all articles of foreign growth and manufacture are admitted, and at a duty of live per cent.: and 1113 to the products of this empire, the fullest domande are always mot. With no part of the world has foreign trade in creased so rapidly. It le but a few years since the United States took twenty millions poende of tea, and England forty millions—the former now tykes forty, and the latter about seventy mil lions. But n very few years ago, there was exported 'from China to Europe and America nov silk to tho value of a million end a half tit dollars. The year just closed, in consequence of tho failure of the crop in Europe, has witnessed en capon tation of forty zillions and more, abiding a mill. The extension of the commute! area is senrcely a decent subterfuge. It is, in plain English, an unmitigated falsehood. Upon the products of China tho English Government levy a duty of from OM to two hundred per cent., and upon tea alone collect a revenue of twenty mil lions of dollars, and yet have the shamelessness to ask that even the present low rates of duties upon !heir exports shall be reduced. Upon the very opium which is forces! upon the Vhineso, the British authorities realize a profit of nearly If not quite two hundred per cont. before it loaves India. Tho production of this drug is a flovernment menepoly, and the poor ryots, the Indian laborers, by whose labor it is produced, ran only tinder the most frightful penalties dis pose of It to the Government. The Government gives to the ryot about ono hundred and roventy live dollars per finest, and, being the solo possessor, 101 l it for their own price, which averages about four hundred and fifty dollars peril chest, realizing Is net gain, on the total annual production, of Inbout twenty millions of dollars. A largo portion of this sum is wrung from the toil and sweat of the Indian, whose returns &largely suffice to keep soul and body together. The balance Is borne by the Chinese, among whom It is introduced under the active patronage of the British authorities, in opposition to the most positive and stringent laws. These laws, I am sorry to any, ere now but feebly enforced. For many years the Mandarins, the hepa rin! officers, struggled bard to perform their duty and roll hank the destroyer of their people; but the smuggler, covered by the British Slag, and protected by British force, sets all law at defiance The most notorious seizures have been made the occasion of heavy damages and some time requiring an oblation of blood. The Chinese, unable to withstand such force, and their efforts to perform their duty being visited with terrible ven g eance, can now only maim at nominal opposi tionto the open violation of their laws, +lnd thus we see this vile body anti soul-destroying poison, g a thered by the British Government from its un requited slaves in India, is by the might of British powder and hall foreedupon the hard-working un war•like people of Chinn. Ills Excellency Admiral Count Pontintrine, of the 'Butane navy, and Russian Minister to Chinn, ar rived here about a week ago from Nagasaki in Japan. He brings the important intelligence that the Japanese are about to change their policy with regard to foreign trade and intercourse and think of sendingsome of their high dignitaries to visit those natives with whom they have formed treaties. The Governor of Nagasaki was desirous that the Admiral shards! remain a fans days, as he was in hourly expectation of receiving frumJeddo the offieffildeolaration upon the subject; but the Ad miral was anxious to reach this port in time for the overland mail by which ho sends ono of hi s offi cers as a bearer of despatches to St. Petersburg. The Admiral sails for Nagasaki today. Ile will return in about a wook, and wo will then proba bly _ know the result. From Admiral Pontintrine I learn that the general impression which exists of the Rue- ' shins having an embassy at Pekin is not so. Tho Greek church under the patron age of Russia have there a college the same as Jesuits, the representatives of the Western church, have or had, but Russia has no diplomatic agents residing there. Admiral P. is empowered to negotiate peaceably In reference to this subject. Some weeks ago ha called off Pekin, and sent his communications on shore; he has not yet been able to return for an answer. . . I will write you again soon. Meanwhile, nun truly yours. J. 0. B. SPEECH OF HOPI S Si COX, OF 01110, In Congress, Dee. 17. EXTRACT.] Fifth. I hold, lastly, that that Constitution is not republican in form ; becauae, in the fourteenth section of the schedule, it prohibits—ay, that is the effect—an amendment, alteration, or change until after 1861. It is utterly idle to say it meant to provide for alteration, amendment, and change meanwhile, nd ltditttm When a Constitution provide:a 11 mode anti time to amend, all other ways and times are excluded. After implying nochange till 1861, then it proceeds to hamper the " perfect ly free" action of thp people of 1861, by requiring two-thirds of the Legislature to concur, before they will allow a majority of the people to call for an amendment. And, as if to clinch the whole of this absurdity with another more glaring, it provided that even then " no alteration shall be made to affect the rights of property in the ownership of slaves:" Now, I do not seek to intervene in domestic affairs, when I declare that, whatever may be the Precedents in this respect, I will never vote for a State to come in under,such impossible, absurd, and tyrannical conditions. Congress guaranties a republican form ; and this Constitution fetters every' limb of that form. " But," It is said," these conditions are void. The State may turn around to-morrow and ills 'curd them all." So it 'inay. Now York did; so did Louisiana But it was revolution. We have no right to force people into revolution against the established order. It may net be that revolution which, like a tempest, overturns the public au thority by "wild sword law", or popular frenzy, It is not that inimitable thunder which aroused America' in 1775, France in 17E37, or England in 1.1130. It is rather like a machine, which, having a principle of compensation, corrects irregulari ties without breaking the machine or retarding its motion. Still, it is revolution; whether it be a perilous ono or not, tt is the only way to get rid of the 'restrietione plimeil on the popular will by this Constitution. To those who say the State may, after admission, alter the Constitution at once, before 1864, I ask this question : IVere the delegates in earnest when they forbade amend ment till Mt ? If so, they will attempt to carry out their ideas; and, in doing so, they must resist innovation. If they resist, there can bo no assu rance of a peaceful, harmless revolution. Those who attempt to, amend provoke resistance; and they who vote for this Constitution must resist that resistance. 'Tho consequences must be revolution and civil war. If the delegates worn not in ear nest in prohibiting amendment till 1881. what a monkery in us to approve of such wind work, cope °tally when bloody work must or May follow. The tracks of blood over follow the wrong-doer, and fol low hint to the bitter, bitter end. This Constitution is triad°, in most respects, ir revocable until after 1801. Tho machinery for amendment begins to run then. Still it is an irre vocable IMY and it is not only absurd, impossible, tyrannical, but anti-Demouratio. Democracy, as taught in Ohio, believes in the repeatability of everything by the popular voice. 51y State has no power to-day to tax certain banks, because the Supreme Court of the United States, under the plea of "vented rights," has taken away our so vereignty in that respect. •' Governments," said Berko, " without the means of change, are with out the means of their own conservation." Who, that remembers the scorching logio of Jeremy Ben tham and Sydney Smith, on the ' , fallacy of an irrevocable law," can fail to feel the utter still- Imes of those who propose to bird down the free men of Kansas for ten years in most respects, and in one respect forever. I refer to Bentham, vol. 2. page 402 ; and to Sydney Smith, VOL 2, page lot. "A law," says Mr Bentham, (no matter to what effect,) "is proposed to a legislative assein bly, who are called upon to reject it, on the single ground that, by those who, in some former period, exercised the same power, e regulation was made having for its object to preclude forever, or to the end of the unexpired period, all succeeding legisla• tore from enacting a law to any such effect its that now proposed." Now, it appears quite evident that, at every pe riod of time, every Legislature most be endowed with all those powers which the exigence of the time.; may require; 01111 tiny attempt to infringe on -this power ja mndmissible /11111 absuid. The Bove reign power, at any one' period. can only form a blind guess at the measures which may be neces sary fur any future period. but by this principle of irrevocable laws, the Government is transferred from those who aro necessarily the best judges of what they want, to others who can know little or nothing about the matter. If it be right that the conduct of the nineteenth century should be determined, not by Its own judgment, Why that of the eighteenth, it will be equally right that the conduct of the twentieth 'bilirtirry - ehookt be deterininedt,met by its 0,111 - ads. ment, but by that of the nineteenth. And if the 8111110 principle wore still pursued, what, at length, would be the consequence ? That in process of time the practice of legislation would bo at an end. The conduct and fate of all men would be deter mined by thin-a who never know nor cared any thing about the matter ; and the aggregate body of the living would remain forever in subjeetion to an Inexorable tyranny, exercised as, it were by the aggregate body of the dead ! "The despotism," no Mr Bentham wall ob serves "of Nero or Caligula would be more toler able than an irierorable law. The despot, through fear or favor, or in a lucid interval, might relent; but how are the Parliament who made the Scotch union, for example, to bo awakened from that dust in which they repose—the jobber and the patriot, the Speaker and the doorkeeper, the silent totem and the men of rich allusions—Cannings and cultivators, Borings and beggars—making irrevocable laws for men who toss their remains about with spades, and use the relies et these le gislatois to give breadth to broccoli, and to aid the vernal eruption of asparagus?" Long after Calhoun and his confederates shall have mouldered and have been forgotten, the men of Kansas will look track with pity and contempt on this futile andfoolish attempt to hind them by the decrees of 18,17. The men of not the own of IBsS—will laugh to scorn this attempt. The border States of this country are not the places for such despotic experiments. "If the law be good," says Bentham, "it will support itself; if bad, it should not be eapported by the trreroealle theor y, which is never resorted to but /Is the veil of abuses. All living men must possess the supreme power over their own happi ness at every particular period. To suppose that there is anything which a whole nation cannot do, which they deem to be essential to their happi ness, and that they cannot do it, because another generation, long ago dead and gone, said it must be done, is mere nonsense. While you are captain of the vessel, do what you please, but you cannot leave use commands ; though, in foot, this is the only meaning which can be applied to what are called irrevocable laws. It appeared to the Le gislature for the time being to be of immense im portance to make such and such a law Great good was gained, or great evil avoided, by enact ing it. Pause before you alter an institution wide!' has been deemed to be of so much import ance. This is prudence and common ranee; the rest is the exaggeration of fools, or the artifice of knaves, who eat up fools. Mr.tertotis Murder near New Haven, coml. The New York papers of Friday evening con tain the following interesting despatch from New Haven, Conn.: It will be remembered that last winter, a boy, named Charles E. Sage, about nineteen years of age, was missing from his home in Cornwall, near .Middletown, in this State; and that an Irish man named Patrick Nugent was arrested on a charge of murdering the Ind, and putting his body under the ice in the Connecticut river. ' In a few months afterward a body wpe found in the river without a bead. This body was believed to bo that of the missing boy, front several marks upon It, as well as front a portion of the clothing Soon afterwards, the lining of an overcoat was found answering the description of that worn by the missing person. Sonic months elapsed, when a sailor named Ben son came to Cornwall. and directly charged Nu. gent, the Irishman, with the murder. He said he saw the deed done, and assisted Nugent in put ting the corpse under a haymow. lie described accurately the lad's appearance—his dress, the color of his hair, eta., and declared that ho had not had any peace of mind since the murder, and that he had come to Cornwall expressly to divulge all ho knew about it. He confronted Nugent aid charged the deed upon him. Tho accused denied it, but trembled from head to foot. A grand jury found a true bill against Nugent, whose time of trial was fixed for the present month. Thus mnftent have rooted until within a few weeks, when the cousin of the missing boy, living in Ithica, N. Y., received an anonymous letter front the interior of Pennsylvania, which ho show ed to his father, RMr Williams. The letter was answered, when another letter woe received from Pennsylvania, tsigned William Russell, which Mr. Williams himself answered. He at the same time addressed the postmaster, requesting him to watch for the person who called for the letter, and de• scribe him. The postmaster did 80, when Mr. Williams immediately left Mika for Pennsylva nia, Mond Russell, whom he discovered to be his nephew, Cherubs B. Sage, the (dotard Missing boy A special court is held at Haddam to-clay, when Nugent will bo liberated. The ease is involved in the deepest mystery. No ono can assign any rea son for the perjury of the sailer who swore that he cam the murder cosamitted, and there is no infor mation to Rad to the identity of the body that was found mid buried as t h at of the boy Rage The annals of crime do not afford a more extra ordinal), case than this. New HAVES, Mee IS --John A Benson, the sailor who testified that he saw the murder of Charles B Sage, of Cornwall, bast been arrested on a charge of perjury, with intent to take life, and has acknowledged his guilt. The °rime will send him to the State Prison for life. There aro mother developments. A letter front a soldier of the Gth Carbineers says: " For a description of the riches of Delhi my pen is inadequate. Cashmere shawls, inlaid with gold, bodices covered with gold, bars of gold, beds of silk wail down, such as no nobleman's house in England could produce—you would see Sikhs carrying out of Delhi the first day, as if they wero almost nothing ; a shawl which in England would fetch £lOO, they wore selling at four rupees, and you may depend our fellows wore not behind them. It is supposed the Rides will go to England with upwards of 11,000 each, though Gen. Wilson has issued an eider that the prizes shall be all put together and divided. Most of our men are worth upwards of 100 rupees." TWO CENI S. DEMOCRATIC MASS MEETING AT TILE CITY HALL, DETROIT. rFroul the Detroit Free Prig j PASS/wit OP RESOLUTIONS .11,x-lariniuxo THE GREAT DEMOCRATIC DOCTRINE OF POPULAR SOvER EIGNEY—RESPONPINO TO THE SPEECH SENATOR DOITOLAS—EXPREBSINO CONFIDENCE IN PRESIDENT RuciTANAN—AND RECOMMENDING A STATE CONVENTION. Pursuant to call a meeting of the Democracy convened at the City Hall last evening, for the purpose of re-affirming the groat doctrine of popu lar sovereignty, and taking steps towards a State Convention of the Democracy, to be held at an early day, foi the purpose of a thorough organiza tion of the party. The City Hall was filled at an early hbur, and the meeting was organized by the appointment of Alderman Dyson chairman, and P. S. Allison secretary. Mr. Charles W. Chapel moved that the chair appoint a committee of five to draft resolutions expressive of ho semet'of the meeting, and report accordingly. The chair appointed the Collecting gentlemen Nei committee : Messrs. Charles W. Chapel, Y. Logan Chipman, George V. N. Lothrop, S. Dow Elwood, and Th,!mas McEntee. The o'm:emit toe retired, cud after a short absence returned end reported, by their chairman, Mr. Chapel, the following resolutions, which were read by the clerk : Resolved, That the Democracy of the city of Detroit will in no wise depart from, but will reso lutely and Immovably adhere to, the doctrine of popular sovereignty enunciated by the Kansas- Nebraska act. Re301t.04, That the true intent and moaning of that bill was, to leave the potpie of Kansas and Nebraska perfectly free to form and regulate their domestic institutions in' their own War subject only to the Constitution of the United Stater.: Resolved, That the domestic institutions of a political community about to enter the Union as a State embrace not only the -question of slavery, but the executive, legislative, and judicial de partments of the Government, the finance, taxa tion, and education of the people, and all other things relating to their local government. Resolved, That the speech of Stepben'A. Doug las. delivered in the Senate of. the United Stites on the oth day of December instant, is a clear, conclusive, and unassailable exposition of the doctrine of popular sovereignty as enunciated by the Kansas-Nebraska act; and that the De mocracy of the city of Detroit tender to*Stephen A. Douglas, their thanks for the promptness with which he has pronounced this exposition. Rego/ved, That we have unabated confidence in the integrity of James Buchanan; that we ap prove and admire every act of his Administration thus far save his interpretation, in his late mes sage. of the popular sovereignty clause of the Kan sas-Nebraska act; and that we have no other ex pectation than that the future course of his Ad ministration will be such as all good Democrats can applaud and none condemn. Retailed, That In the opinion of this meeting it is desirable that a State convention of the Demo cracy of this State be held at an early day,, to take measures for the more thorough organization of the Democratic party; and that, to that end, the President of this meeting is requested to ap point a committee of ton persons, who shall hare authority to call such couvention at a suitable time and place Speeches followed by Messrs. G. V. N. Lotbrop, Cornelius O'Flynn, Charles W. Chapel, Elijah Hawley, 11. A. Morrow, A. Smith Bagg, and others. The meeting held until a late hour, which rendered it impossible for us to report the speeches in time for this morning's issue. The previous question being finally demanded. and the demand being sustained by a division of the house, the chair put the motion on the adop. lion of the resolutions. The resolutions were adopted by a decisive vote. The meeting then adjourned. More Lynch Law in lowa—Hanging of a Horse It appears that the "Regulators" have again been at work in Cedar county, lowa. among sus pected horse thieves The Davenport Gazette of the 12th instant says: Last week a young thief was arrested in Cedar county, and the Regulators became cons incest that he was connected with a band of horse thieves, and could give, if he would, some valuable informa tion. Ho was threatened with immediate e:e• cation if he did not make a confession, Ile refused to confess anything about his companlow, etc., and was swung up. Ile was let down gasping, but re• fusing to make any confession was again drawn up. On his feet again, the same demand was made of hint the third time, and, as he had every reason to believe, the last time. Again he sues pulled up into tho air, and hung dangling to a slender cord, null again ho was let down. Finally, recovering his breath. he told them coolly they " must bo d—d fools" to try to get him to tell anything by that kind of process. Ile was then tied up and thoroughly switched. After this operation had continued some time the young fel low concluded to confess. Ile told bia persecu tors, among other things, that Hiram Roberts was to meet another thief, named Quilbaug at a cer tain house, each with a stolen horse, to be taken from different parts of the country, and from par ticular stables. The committee at once took steps for the capture of Rebuts by Qom:mating several .mop in the eta- . ble ; but auspeettng a:mottling; he did not go in. Be was followed to the house of Big John Ran. lin," a friend of these rogues, where he wan after wards captured. He refused to make any confes sion, but acknowledged the justice of the regula tors' action. He was then taken into a barn and tightly bound. Two men with blacked faces 011110 into the room. and they were left alone with the thief, every other man of the committee withdraw ing. In a few minutes the doors of the barn were opened, and the thief and counterfeiter was dis covered banging by the neck from the rafters. The execution occurred on the road between Wal nut and Red Oak groves, on Friday night, Dec. 4th. The body was allowed to hang two days. Thus has Roberts at last paid the penalty of his prim ca. At York, Pa., on Wednesday evening, the dress of a girl named Henrietta Mate, aged fifteen or sixteen years, took fire from the explosion of a fluid lamp, in the house of Annie Budd. She managed to get out of the house, on the pavement, when the air increased the flames, which illumi nated the street, causing an alarm of fire. The Pen nx ylranian says: "Mr. George Ropp and other gentlemen ran to rescue the suffering girl, who was being consumed rapidly. They tore the remaining clothing from her body, when a horrible, heart-sickening sight was presented. From her knees to her head her flesh was completely black, and full of blisters. Much of her head has been burned bare of hair, while her face and eyes are so blistered or swollen that she cannot see, and her tongue protrudes from her mouth. In leaving the house she passed through four doors, brushing past a cradle in which slept a child, whose eyebrows, etc., were singed. In feeling for the front door, the girl's fingers came in contact with the wall, and the finger-marks were plainly discernible. On the pavement she sprung at a lady, the flame , reaching far above her head,exclaiming, "My God, help inc ," It is no exaggeration to say that some of the flesh on thepoor victim's body was roasted black. About half-past eleven o'clock Thursday evening, thirty hours after the accident, she died Capt. Townsend, of the schooner Cortez, which arrived at Now York on Friday. from Oa boon, Africa, makes the following report with re ference to the seizure of that vessel on suspicion of being engaged in the slave trade: Oct. 3, at 2 P. 31 was boarded (from three boats) by about 73 armed men froth a frigate, said to be the United States skip Cumberland. After getting en board they broke out all the cargo, and broke open the captain's writing-desk, and finding the papers, sent them to the frigate : the officer left in charge of the Cortez then commenced breaking open all the stores in the store room, and apparently doing all the harm he was able to do. The papers were returned in about 13 or 20 minutes, they having been shown to the commanding officer of the fri gate. During the search no discretion was used, for the stove, the water casks, provision barrel, A:O., wore thrown about, and they left the vessel in a most outrageous manner. Tho ship displayed the British 11 ig during all the proceeding, nor was any other flag seen until the boats were alongside, and some of the mon on board with drawn sabres. nc-sha-ro, (which, rendered into English, is man-chief,) cloven inferior chiefs, and four bravos of the Pawnees, reached St. Louis on Thursday, says the Democrat, on their way to Washington, to see to the ratification of the treaty lately submitted for the consideration of parties most concerned. Mr. Wm. H. Dennison, their agent, and Mr. Samuel Allis, interpreter, are with them, having accomp.inied them from the place where they wore located—forty miles west of Omaha, Nebraska Territory. They made the journey with wagons and four-horse teams to St. Joseph, and from thence to the Hannibal and St Jo.mph railroad, which took them to Hannibal, where they embarked on the steamer. The reads proved so bad in many places that they were obliged to alight frequently and assist the animals in dragAing the wagon through the mire The chiefs and braves are accoutered ns befitteth the Indian warrior, each having his tomahawk con stantly in hand. They evidently seem to think, also, that tho business they aro on calls for an extra consumption of ochre and other coloring mat ter. They aro a good-looking set of fellows. A New Hampshire jouinal gives the parti culars of the death of a young lady, named Helen AI Kittredge, of vigorous physiont powers, at Nel son, N. II , under somewhat singular circum stances On Tuesday, the Gth inst., she exhibited Nome symptoms of the typhoid fever, then preva lent in the family. Some one proposed as a retncdy what is familiarly termed a'• rum sweat." This her anxiotut and affectionate mother attempted to administer. After being for a moment surrounded by the ascending hot air, ohs gore signs at suffer ing ; bite called to her brother who stood near, for aid, upon whose area her head fell, inn manner indicating that her life scm departing She coca placed upon the bed, and an exclamation of ag ony, front the almost frantic mother followed Her idolized child—her beautiful Ilelen—was dead' Alcohol hod been used, and too much of it, the nervous system of the sufferer seethe to h ave b ee , completely overpowered, and her whole holy was dreadfully burned. The Easton (Pd.) Eapress, of Friday last, says that a fire broke out about threeo'olock in the morning, in tho coach manufactory of Mr J. Al. bright, on Fourth street, which ended only with the entire desttuotion of the whole establishment, together with all the material and all the work, with the exception of some carriages on the first floor of the front buildi❑g These, worth, we aro told by Mr. Albright, about a thousand dollars, were taken out uninjured, whilst all the unfinished work on the second floor, the tool+ or the hoods, Ito do., perished in the flames. The loss. of Mr. Albright is somewhere in the neighborhood of six thousand dollars, about two thousand of whioh are covered by insurance. NOTICE TO CORMILSPONDENTIL 491784 °P 4 entiror-Y;8 B.if "_Ri144110114 nand the following rofee : Every communication mot be actompaniod bye. name of the ernts4. Ia oriet•to insuit ) eafnetipmet . the typography, but ine tide of a theft shoold 'written upon. ' We shell be greatly obliged to gentlemen In Panneyl. Yenta and other States for contribations giving the cor rent news of the day in their patellar lootattlee, the resources of We surrounding country, the inoreaanot population, and any information that eat be inferential to the general reader. GENERAL _NEWS". A Crawford county paper, of a recent date; makes mention of a lady who had reached the, o agar ldest person one hundred years, and - claims her se the emen person DOW living in western Pennsylvania. We are not willing to admit this, for &friend informs us, says r ate Raft man Journal, that we hare now residing in Burnside -township, Clearfield.' county, the oldest man and woinan perhaps in the Statel-Mr: Ludwick Snyder and his wife. Mr. Snyder, in August - ast, attained _ the peat age of one ha:wired. and eleven years, and Mrs. Snyder one /unwired and seven. Both now enjoy rod health, and are quite as active as persons of stay to seventy years of age. Mr. Snyder is a gun-, smith, and has within ten years made & gun, and. has walked from home to Clearfield town and bark to Curwensville, a distance of thirty miles , in one day, since his one hundredth year. We beNere this cannot be beaten, and chum for our vomit, the oldest inhabitants in the State of Pennsylvania. till we learn to the-contrary: We learn from the St. Louis Republican that a skiff which left Kansas bay on the containing Father Dnrand of the Catholic D..r. F. Smith of Leavenworth City, Mr: Patterson of Nebraska, formerly of Indiana, Mr. Sears of Lincoln county, - Indiana, and geniis'; man, a resident of Manhattan,' Kansas, name cm known, from Belfast, Maine on hie - way Bast to bring his family to the Terktoryewhen about twenty miles from Kansas City, between Wayne City and Liberty, struck a man and was capsized, throwing the entire party into the river. Mr. Smith and Mr. Saari succeeded la retaining thee. .hold Upon the boat until she drifted Ma sand. bar. The balance of the party namsd,-'with all their•baggage, 'were lost. The. Wiles had fruit been reerivered, theugh search had been made, The Bev. 'Mr. -Durand was a prominent man at, ,the mission, and highly' respected. The Indiana (Pa.) , Messenger' learns that % quarrel took place one day lest week, ellincloax.ol.' suit-house, in Armstrong county, between one. Robert Watson #nd Thomas Caldwell,' in which` the former was considerably injured, and died isr. few days afterwards. The coroner of the county repaired to the grave of W,atson, with a party or men, for the purpose of ascertaining whether death had been caused by the .in received in the' quarrel ; but it is said that the neighbors of Wet= son refused to have the body disturbed, from ,thew fact that the deceased bad stated that he himself was partly chargeable with originating the quar— rel, and had requested that Caldwell should not be prosecuted or punished after his death. ' The coro ner, it IS said, was compelled to give up hie war— rant and leave the grmand vlithent exami= body. Even the brothers of the deceased to have the body disturbed. • " - We have received 'our files from the eitr ot Mexico to the &I instant, containing additions( details of the news already published. The vea l sets of war at Vera Cruz.wete to he armed again. &Fier Payne, Minister of Finhnee, had resigned, but bad again aceepted.olate.o Ku Smith; United. States consul at Mazatlan, had . resigned. The Indians in Durango and many other northern' States were commuting great 'ravages. °Durango, New Leon,. and Coahuila were about to unite their forces against the Indians An official report or the circumstances attending the Zerman expedi tion is published, the investigation suspended, and the parties accused freed from all imputation of entertaining filibusters intentions. The waste land survey and concessions consequent thereon. wore ordered and approved by Government. Iranistani the how' of : Barnum, rit Bridge port, Connecticut, as already stated by telegraph, was totally destroyed by fire on Thursday ought. This was probably one of the most unique sista-- blishments in the country. It was here that the great showman cultivated his fancies, notthe least_ of which, by any means, was the domestication of a herd of elephants. Daring the palmy drive of Iranistan its proprietor took good care to make titer public, through the medium ,of the newspape aware of its characteristics end surroundings, and it is unnecessary to again force the subject apace their attention. It. had been vacant since Idr. Berritues pecuniary difficulties, but he bad medal arrangements to occupy the premises. The build ing originally, it Is said, cost $lOO,OOO, and the for.: niture $20,000. There was an insurance of 541,01/0 upon the building. . The Newark ..Idrerliser announces thq decease of a venerable Jorseymandsjor tYm- Chetwood—who died at Elisabeth cityon Thurs day, at the age of eighty-eight years. BeH was the' oldest member of the New Jersey bar, except one, lion. John Moore White, who still sarliTlll blur. He a son of Judge Chetwood, of the New Jer-, sey Supreme Court, and was born at Mu,' beth, in 1769 Ile graduated at Princeton - in 1792, and was admitted to the bar in 1714. Ile 'was also aid-de-camp to Maj. Gen. henry Lee, of. Virginia, while commandant of the troops who 'were assigned to suppress the famous whiskey In surrection in Ina, and served throughout that ex pedition. The Charleston (S. C.) Mercury of Thursday appears in mourning for the death of John Milton ,Clapp, who has for upwards of twenty year been. 'connected with the management of that paw, and who died the precedinm evening, in the forty eighth year of his age. lir. C. was for a long time vole editor of the Mercury, and at another 'period edited the Southern Quarterly Realtor. He was in the brat rank of the newspaper writer* of this country. The Pittsburgh Chronicle, of Friday even irg, says: " The President of the Pittsburgh and Connellsville Railroad yesterday informed the Mayor, by letter, that the company would be en able to pay the semi-anneal interest due on the lit of January, proximo, upon the $500.060 of the bonds of the city of Pittsburgh. issued is the com pany in payment of the subscription of the city to its capital stock.' The woman killed on the Niagara Falls Road last Tuesday proves to have been a Mrs. Armstrong, who lived on the banks of the river near Tonawanda. Undoubtedly she committed suicide, as she has experienced great trouble re cently. Her husband was tried at Icekport last spring, for putting obstructions upon the Canan daigua and Niagara Palls railroad track. She was about 40 years of age. It appears from the Superior Chronicle, that there is but a scanty supply of provisions to carry Superior city through the winter The St. Croix and Lake Superior Railroad Company have left their provisions at Black River Palls, to be dis posed of for the benefit of the laborers, which will waist materially towards getting through the win ter The celebrated race mare Lucy Phillips died at the Ten Breech course, Savannah, on 'Thee day last She was the property of Col. James Talley, of Richmond, Va., and won a high reputa tion as a racer, having been the winner of eight four•mile rases, besides others of less distance. Iler disease was pneumonia, and the attack was very violent. A Ere occurred in Fayettville, N. C., on the Zith inst., destroying the warehouses belonging to Walter Draughton, Esq., and to Mrs. Whitehead, (the latter occupied by Cook & Johnson,) and the stables occupied by T. D. Haigh, Esq. Lim about 4'2,000. The barque Cornelia, Captain Hopkins, from the coast of Africa, with dye stuffs, &c., bound to New York, went ashore at Shark rirer, N. J., yesterday morning at five o'clock. She is leaking badly. Madison Butler, a slave, for killing Wm. Mason, free colored, has been convicted of man slaughter at Port Tobacco, Md., and 'aentenesd to the penitentiary for nine years and eight months- Mr. Henry Rubins, a merchant tailor in Buf falo, committed suicide on the 17th inst. by hang ing himself. The Buffalo Times has merged in the Buffa lo Repel , ' ir, the name 01 the latter being expand ed into Buffalo Republic and Times. Mr. James Winter, well known in Lancaster, Pa., died in Jacksonville. Florida, on the sth inst. Tames Clark, a Baltimore pilot, was drowned a few days since. PHILADELPHIA 111IRKETS SATURDAY, December 10.—There is very little alteration in the Breadstuffs market to-day, and. the Canada's advices appeared to have little or no effect upon prices; about 500 bbls Flour only have been sold at 35 for superfine, and $5.87a23 the pair for half barrels, the latter for better brands. Extras are offered at $5.25a55 50 per bbl, accord ing to brand and quality, but the demand for ex port and home consumption is quite light Fancy brands are selling in small lots at from $1 to $4 73 per bbl, with an ample stock for the moon, and holders free to sell at these rates. Corn Meal is held at $.3 for country ground, bat there is very little selling; a sale of Brandywine was made at $3.371 per bbl. Rye Flour is offered at $441.121 per bbl, without sales to any extent. Wheats are plenty, and bnyors nro bolding off for lower prices; about 1,200 bushels red sold at 112esillc ; 1 : 503 bushels White, at 1182124 c, and 1,000 bushels Choice Western do at 130 c, mostly in store. Corn is dull, and prices favor the buyers; sales_include 7103,000 bushels Now Southern Yellow at 52354 e, the latter for dry lots, which are rather scarce. Outs are loss inquired for, with sales of 2,000 bus prime Southern at 35e, and 1.2.00 bus geed do at 31e, afloat. Rye is selling at the distilleries at 75a Barley and Barley malt are dull; the sales of the former wens at SP,e, and the latter at 100 c per bus, abort time Bark rernsirainvtice. but a mail sale of Quereitmn bark it rcrorted at $2ll for first quality. Cotton is aithont alte r ati on i n pr i ce or demand, and a few tots are taken daily at from 12 to Me, mostly for each. groceries are much in favor, and Sugars are generally held above the views of buyers, with a small business, as yet, kiting at the nave nee Coffees ere also better, with moderate sales. Provisions drag heavily, and the transactions are unimportant, as buyers generally are waiting for lower prices before operating to any extent. Seeds are quiet, and a small business only to note in Cloverseed at $5.2505.37/ per bush. Whiskey is in steady demandlat 21a21i0 for drudge, 220 for hhds, and 221a231a for bbls. TOBACCO ATIBALTIMORB, Dec. 18.—The-re ceipts of Maryland have been light end the sales of stop small, shippers turning their attention mostly to Gummi Leaf. We quote as before. Ma ryland ground leaf, as in quality. $7.80a15.50: in ferior short seconds stiatti.so; brown leaf SBas9 And extra $10414. For Ground Leaf quotations range from $547 for ordinary to good ; while sin gle Ws sell at : 3n54 . 50 for inferior, and OW for choice quality. Some few bhds of new crop Ohio aro coming in, but wo hear of no sales. There have been some small sales of Kentucky Tobacco this week to the trade,but they have not been suffi cient to base quotations on, and we therefore omit them. The inspections of the week are 702 Ude Maryland, and 74 hhde Ohio—total 778 hbde.