TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1858. - last Piall.-- 3 30116t D'Oreay ; She Is Not Lir ten Log -Now ; From New Hampshire; From MI se* garagation of Halloo; General News. THE NEWS. By the steamship Europa we hive three days later sae from Home. The telegraph fleet bad eotapleted the preparations for another attempt to ley the wires designed to oonneot the two soon tries,, and was to have allied on the 17th Inst. The Indian hill passed by the House of Commons had also pawed a second reading In the House of Lords. Cotton, breadstuff', and previsions were boating in price: From Utah we learn that the Mormons hive re turned to their homes. Brigham Young professes to be not only willing but anxious to be tried on the charge preferred against him, but Insists that all the jurymen shall be Mormoit. If this modest demand Is complied with there will be little doubt of the charioteer of the verdict. The fieoretary of the Navy has de:lined to allow the Collins line of steamers to make Portland its. western terminus. The 0/11 - 1111111n Illinois is progressing with great spirit and energy. The popular feeling is deci dedly in favor of Judge Douglas, and unless the power of the Government officials, now conspiring to defeat him, is greatly underrated, hie triumph le cedilla. Parson Brownlow, of Tenuous., Is to bold a publie discussion on the shivery question in Phila. delphls, oommencing on the 7th of September next. Ills antagonist is Rev. A. Pryne, editor of the Ohio Reformer. The Tnee Southron pnbibhes a letter from an I ttimate friend of the late General Quitman, who deoiares that the National Rotel disease, which .00st thirty-one persons their Wes, and de. aimed the health of slaty or seventy more, was uedoubtedly the cause of his death, and that the phytiolans who attended him perceived the un mistakable effects of ample. The New York Supreme Court has refaced to 'Deanery the British official Elliott, charged with embattlement, from custody. A comber of parties are being formed inlifferent qtarters of the country for emigration to the Fra• ter's river gold mines. - The details of a fatal, sanguinary conflict be tween two colored men, furnished by our local reporter, we publish in extenso. The victim wee horribly butchered, having been oat in levers] places. When discovered, he wee literally bathed in blood. The alleged murderer Is still at large. but au memory, so deolared by the verdict of the coroner's jury, has been committed to prison The account is a sad record of human depravity. The first pauenger ear on the Eleventh-streel line was run ovei the Meek yesterday afternoon t ; Its appearance, of course novel on that thorough'. fare, 'directed very general attention, and eliet 7 led no email amount of admiration from the nu merous friends of the liae." This car, we under stand, was run merely for the sake of experiment, Oa next Monday, it is understood, the line will be Ir. full and, we hope, sueemsful operation. . - The defence in the Kirkpatrick cue was Conti nued in the Court of Qiiiirtiir Pensions Yelbladtth end sundry witnesses called to prove the good ohs. Tuner of the eolored defendant Jones, and of Mrs. Richards. It is supposed the oece will occupy the greater part of the present week. , THE ELECTION IN KANSAS The eleation in Kansas is to take place on the Stat Monday In August. It will be of a very peculiar character. While its result dill decide whether the Lecompton Constitution is to be the fundamental law of her people, it is in reality not held to ascertain whether such Is their wish and desire. It is well under stood by all that a large majority of her citi zens are uncompromisingly opposed to it. Theyhave declared so time and again, by the action of their Legislature, by the protests of their presses, and by their votes at the polls. Not a single intelligent individual In the nation believes that they Would accept Lecompton as a free choice. This fact is quite as well known before, as It can be after, the ballots are counted. Why, then, is the election ordered at all? Nominally to ascertain whether her people are i willing to receive a certain quantity of land, (a matter about which there is very little room' to doubt their sentiments, if they could freely ...apron them,) but in reality to learn whether the bribes and threats devised by the English bill are sufficient to mako a people say that they want a Constitution which everybody knows they do not want I We are curious to, note the success of the experiment. It is one of the, first of the kind in the history of our Government. If it succeeds, it may be the precursor of many others; if it fails, we treat and hope it will bo the last. - It has been common enough to attempt to bribe and threaten national and State Representatives, but it has been ,rare, Indeed, to extend the effort to the great fountain of political power, the people. If they prove as corrupt as some of those who have represented them, Leconip ton will triumph. The inducements, we con fess;are tempting. A great anxiety to escape from territorial vassalage, and to enter into the great family of American States, naturally pervades the people of Kansas, and probably forms ono of the strongest political sentiments that animtte them. To act upon this power ful feeling, the English bill declares to. them, " Vote fik the ordinance, and thereby Indi rectly endorse Lecoinpton, and at once you enter the circle of hue and in dependent American sovereignties; dare to refuse, and you are remanded back, perhaps for years, to territorial bondage. If you vote for a Constitution you 'do not want, you can become a State at once; if you wait to form one that is really satisfac tory to you, Aare must elapse before you can have it adopted by Congress." Nor is this all. The Land Ordinance is the thing Which the ballots aro to ho cast for or against. It Is uaturat for the people of a Territory to desire to pommel in their own right a large quantity of land. By such possessions their taxes may be greatly lightened; railroads may be constructed, free schools established and kept in operation, public buildings erected, and the interests of the aottiera be greatly promoted in many ways. The poor but hardy pioneer naturally feels eager to enjoy the sub stantial assistance which large donations of land wonid give the government under which be lives, and which, if not partially sustained by such aid, must depend for support entirely npon his hard earnings: And here, again, the tempter comes to him. It tells him that while; It la well known that in hie Inmost heart he bates and loathes Lecompton, yet that his pe-• cutlery interest should urge him to endorse it. With Lecotnpton ho gains not only ad mission into the Union, but many million dol. late' worth of land boalde—moans by which his property will be enhanced greatly in value, avenues to good markets bo opened for his produce, and his StateGrofertimOnt be el Otiii placed upon a self-sustaining bails; whereas, If Ise refuses thus to Impose upon himself a con stitution he abhors, poverty stares him is the face; hia State may never got an acre of land, but pine away in neglect and desolation, while her sisters thrive sad liouriah on bounties such as he rejects. . but, at the last moment, fearing that both these considerations, powerful as they are, were having but little weight with the people of KAMM, Jona Milieux has minus to the rescue of the bantling which has covered his name with immortal infamy. Ho , is ready with another boon. Ho actually , proforma his willingness to allow the men who wore honestly elected to the Legislature under the Lecompton Conititution to take thelileats, and a free-State Legislatmo is thus secured in advance if Lecompton Is endorsed it the coming election. • it would be unreasonable 'to expect th a t a ll these considerations will not exercise cos- eiderable influeneo over the people of Kansas; yet we do not , believe that, powers las they are, they can galvanize Lecompton, Into an active existence, although they mai femme Its advocates in the Territory .from * mere handful into a party of respectable ,numbers, Tho bribes and itidticemeets held out to oti tails their endorsement (it what they aro known to hate are too great to bo wholly in effectual, yet we believe the people of Kansas have political virtue enough left to resist them. When this day' comes that either pecuniary, land, admission-into-the-Unien, or other bribes, can induce a striereign people to ignore their own Office of a fundamental framework of government and adopt one odious to them, the era of repribilian virtue will have passed away, and the decline of all that is pure, just, good, and really liberal in Amerloan poll- Hee will be hat approaching. . Yet we are exultingly told that all who will not join in endorsing as a finality, and in sing lag Ore praisei or, this scheme of corruption, this ale plan to buy up a people, are not, and cannot be, Democrats I TIM FRAZER RIVER GOLD MINES The recent discovery of extensive gold de posits on Frazer River promises to be an event of great importance: "As, in Australia, these discoveries wore anticipated by geologists, from the formation of the country, and Governer" &MWS claimed, in his last message to the. Legislature of Washington Territory, that the district south of the international boundary line was as auriferous as British Oregon itself. It is certain that the reports of the richness of hese mines have been sufficiently well-authen- Heated to tempt thousands of California vete ran gold-hunters to a trial of their merits, and a very large emigration thither may be con sidered,a fixed fact. The enthusiastic eulo gists of the new mines already claim for them an extent and richness equal to those of Aus tralia or of California, and the characteristic readiness of the age to scan and mould the future Is already displayed not only in the calculations Cr the immense wealth to be re alized from them, but in the discussion of the questions likely to arise in the apprehended difficulties between the enterprising miners and the Hudson Bay Company, from the methods in which the jurisdiction of the lat ter may be enforced—in anticipations that the project of a British Pacific Railroad will re. ceive an Impulse certain to secure its con struction from these discoveries—in investiga tions of the best methods of reaching the new El Dorado, and in attempts to render 'it attainable by an overland route from our west ern frontier. Several meetings have recently been held at St. Paul, Minnesota, to accom plish the latter' purpose, and to bring promi nently before the public various important facts hearing upon The subject. The proceed ings have been published at length in the St. Paul Daily Times. It is claimed thatthe vast district of country lying between that city and the gold district affords great natural 'lnducements to emigrants in search of perms.. neathomes, as well as safe and convenient routes to the auriferous region. This region has hitherto been withheld from colonization, but is 44 soon to be surrendered by the Hud son Bay Company for civilized settlements.," The conclusions reached from the report of the committees appointedby the meetings re ferred to, are as follows : That the journey from St. Paul to ThomP , son River, the eastern border of the gold mines, can be accomplished in seventy days, and the distance is set down as follows: St. Paul to Pembina 450 miles. Pembina to Carlton Howe 800 t. Carlton to Edmonton 400 It Edmonton to Boat Benampment .150 Bost Enoampment to Thompson river... 50 " Making aiotal distanee et 1 850 miles from St. Paul. That the expense necessary to equip and lit out a party of ten from St. Paul, including in the estimate sufficient food for six months, will be as follows: 10 bbls. Saw, east $4 per bbl $ 40 00 5 I, por k, ~ $lB ~ . 90 00 450 lbe sugar, " ' •54 00 40 lb' tea, . 00 ate. per 1b... 24 00 Sundries 100 00 Powder and lead 100 00 10 pairs blankets • 100 00 Goals and implements 100 00 Teams and vehicles 1 200 00 Total cost $1:808 00 That the overland emigration to British Oregon, attracted by the gold discovery on Frazer and [lampoon rivers, will And Minnesota the most lesirable point of departure and supply for the iollowing restos!' . First. The emigrant bas a choice of three route; far more easy 11114 direct than any south of St, Paul, to wit: (l.)—By Pembina, Carlton. Edmon- EOD, Athabasca Portage, and the Boat bincamp-: men' of the Columbia. (2.)—By the Soutb Sas katchewan and the Kootonsis Pass to Fort Col ville and (3.)—By Governor Stevens' well.known railroad route on the American side of the Inter national boundary. Second. Either of these routes has more water, timber, and game, and is less difficult, than thoee /blob start from the Missouri river. Third, Supplies of all kinds are very cheap In Minnesota. Fourth. Faithful guides and attendants aro easily obtained on our frontiers and in the terri tory of the Hudson Bay Company. Fifth. There Is no danger of molestation from Indigo on thee. northern routes. That the citizens of Minnesota will join heartily with the people of Canada in the poiloy of cola sizing the waiter° diet/lois of British America which is about to be established; and that rela tions of reciprocal trade with the United States, if not now existing, should be extended over that region of North America . IoTTINOS PROM TD Turrrry•rinlST WARD. BY ottAVIIMATID lad the pioneer of the last century been told that in the year 1858 the city of Philadelphia would embrace within her borders one of the, most picturesque streams in the world, he would have regarded it as a mysterious propheoy, to say the least. Yet, the fact that the romantic Wissablo. con, with its hundred Indian legends, is to.day meandering through an Important section of our consolidated one-hundred-and Or en if-square-miles city, would be ample fulfilment of such a pro-' pheoy Anxious profitably to Improve my welcome leisure of Saturday afternoon, I sought the banks of the Wissahlecon, accompanied by .a friend, Ind whiled away some three boors luxuriating beneath the umbrageous canopy that to wildly enshrines that crystal stream. Any attempt to expatiate upon the singular grandeur of this miniature Hudson would be superfluous to those who have ever wan dered through its vast contiguity of everything that can charm man's sense of the beautiful in nature. Nor has art dealt meanly in tendering her best offerings towards rendering this favorite resort of our denizens all that could be desired. Au excellent turnpike road extends along one er the other of its banks nearly its entire course. Near its mouth the splendid truseel-work bridge If the Norristown Railroad spans it at an altitude so fearful that; from a point we occupied—so situated at to be able to see the train only, and no patter the lofty strieture over which it was pass lng—the losomOtive and oars had ail the appear ance of an aerial train descending from the up per regions. For blessing at least a score of mills with excel lent and unfailing water-power, the Wissablecon damlood from one end to the other. Some of the most extensive paper mills in this eountry are located here, while gristmills and printworks are Also numerous. de a fishing stream it is not par ticularly celebrated, as I infer from the amount of patience I was required to exercise on Saturday in angling for the spree of an hour and a half with out having the monotony relieved by a single nib ble. Not to enlarge, however, I will only add that of all the spots in our magnificent rural metropolis, in hot weather, commend me to the ,‘ Vast embowering shades, The twilight groves and visionary vales," of the Winuthiccon. _ By one of the MUM opposition slap lines, we were, after a lapse of five harms from the time we left the city, comfortably landed at our place of destination on the Ridge-road, just ten miles out, where the writer has since then, among other ex traordinary adventures, regaled' his palate with deflated' berries, plucked with his own hands while standing with one pedal extremity in the city of Philadelphia, and the other somewhere in the lower end of Montgomery county! This entire section of country is rich in minerals The annual yield of Iron alone from the neighboring mines is immense. Copper la atso found, though less abun- Vent... Marble quarries abound, endive rip?. is this region in Milestone that even the moat careless observer cannot fail to notice this fact in the al most snowy whiteness of the macadamised roads. The town of Boxberough, a short distance be low this point, and extending along the pike some 'two miles, is certainly one of the 'most attractive settlements in the State. The value of property there received a marked impetus in the sot which made it a part of the incorporated city. A large number of residenoes have sprung up . in it within the past year, many of which are owned and occu pied by our merchants, who find it at ono health ful and convenient tp come to the city every morn ing and return In the evening. About two mites front our stopping point, within the limits of Mont gomery, are the furnonS Spring Mill grounds, on a creek of that name, which is certainly entitled to bo classed among the most remarkable natural curiosities in this Donlon of country. The waters of this singular stream, which are awoot, and clear as ether, are constantly being supplied by limpid fountains, bubbling up from the bed with such force as to cause a continual boiling appearance on the surface. These' subterranean tributaries are not. few in number, bat seem constantly to be well lug up from a thousand fissures in the bed, vary ing in capacity from the sine of a pin's point to an aperture from which hogsheads flow every hour, each announcing its locality, in the agitated sand, caused by its upward force. The grounds here re ferred to are adinirably adapted for public gather lags, being at once picturesque, shady, and. em bellished with I capacious platform, a large area of seats to aocommodate listeners, and other clever arrangements for the comfort and conve nience of man and beast. And now, with the reader's permission, I will devote the balance of tide article to point out briefly - the nature of what It is sometimes the privilege of these grounds to witness. In the papers of Saturday, as I learned on Sun dey morning, appeared the following announce ment "SUNDAY INSTlTUTS.—OatopAitealos to. morrow, at Spring Milt. Can leave Ninth and Green at 9 A. M. precisely. Men of thought, be up and stirring" Being in that immediate vicinity on Sabbath af ternoon, the writer reholved to attend this Oimp- Meeting, in which resolution he found, on arriving there, be had been joined by some three hundred others, besides the delegation which came up from On pity—the 1, map qf thought 1"i Presume. PI9 first scent of hoguawe had on reaching the ground, was the ominous indication that we were about to have the "play of Hamlet, with Hamlet left out." We had boon allured by the. advertisement to at tend* camp-meeting,but found, on our arrival, that it was only a meeting, with the camp omitted. At 3 o'olook, an individual occupying the chair on the platform, morbidly addieted to the use of the term " individual," rose, and with an air of stunning pomposity announced, in a very peoullar foreign accent, to the individuals present that the Mat individual to address them would be the preacher of the Independent Congregation of Ger mans of Philadelphia. This congregation was said to number two hundred German families—. 1 " men of thought," who took the liberty of think ing for- themselves upon matters and things in general, and religion in partioular. The preach er,s name, I believe, was Sehenoman Potts, who it was Said would now make his appearance and deliver an address is the German language. Mr. Potts proved to be a young gentleman of vary polished address, line oratorical powers, and evidently more than ordinary erudition. I have, indeed, rarely heard the German spoken in pubile with equal grace and purity. To a mind not hope lessly enveloped in the darkness of infidelity, however, his doctrines were, of course, revolting. Without deeming any more extensive synopsis worth the space it would occupy, I will only say, in a word, that, by all the poisonous sophistry he could glean from the mythology of, the past, he sought to delude the credulity of his hearts with the ideas that man is a purely material being; that religion degrades and makes him brutal, be cause it teaches humility; that heaven is a fabu lous myth, existing only in the fevered imakinit a . . s„ tion of zealots; that God is not, wily as we ' -.. in surrounding nature, and that man musk mine, by his own unaided actions, his wliefe:des- tiny and condition in life. •At the close of this speech in German the con sequential individual on the platform gave due notice that the neat individual to speak would be (the name was too indistinctly pronounced for me to hear it); immediately after which we SW a re markably alender-limbed, keen•eyed, hirsute ape-, cimen of humanity making his way to the stand, labelled from head to foot with that spurious ec centricity which misguided vanity mistakes for Indications of real genius. This cheap edition of Voltaire, or some one else of the same Infidel die, Introduced his crusade against Christians and everything they hold dear and sacred, be a tirade of blasphemous:salient against the Being by while mercy alone his tongue was not paralysed, that called forth from many who beard him expressioni of pity and commiseration. Amore unreasonable and self contradicting strain was probably never indulged in. First, he set out with the pedantic pretence of having Condescended to leave Englandnot long since, we suspect—to come to America to teach us the true import of the word " Liberty"— about which we made such profoundly ignorant demonstrations same time in July—(having evi dently forgotten the exact date.) ' • Us pitched into phristiane at a furious rate for being so feolish as to pray at all, and in the next breath, oondezoned them for not obeying the command of Christ to pray in : buret, and to woke the contradiction trio awed the next moment that Nab a being es Phrist, had never lived !—that the Bible was an imposition throughout,, and that the pretended God of the Bible was at most a being of no more account than himself (the speaks r), seeing that the Thbla reprented Rim as having " walked in the garden In the poyl Rf t& day," which proved that he suffered from the 1;94 the gahrie or we 1 This unfortunate man, whose vanity Is Intlamed by the deluded devotees who are pinning their faith to his coakaleorep v yrithout reflecting for themselves, is sioubtlose 111/Ing 4 1 1 8 02 11 in the providence of Ond, (for we are told that oven thp wrath of man is made to praise him,") 4ust as foul birds have their uses In the World around us. 3coutiog the idea 0f future pupislneilt, be paid he would muob prefer risking bip o b angos of going to hell than subscribe to any snob absurdity as tbp Christian's faith. In fact, his language through- out was that of deflana to Almighty power, and all this upon God's own Sabbath ; upon soil made sacred by the blood of Dod-foaring pen, abed in the glorious cause of human libortv; and t1:44 ki stripling of foreign birth Wbo boa not yat 100P3P4 the alpha of the institutions whose benititp ho gratefully sharos. When will the world beam that the liberty which merely confers upon man the prerogative of making a fool of himself is not worthy the name BY MIDNIGHT 0414. LETTER FROM di OCCASIONAL.” faor:Opondence of The Press.] WASHINGTON, July 28, 1858 It is curious to reflect how common it la for the •1181111sialioartacti to votr eu Intl/Toper egitaiLto gram territorial acquisitions. There aro little corners o' the earth for whisk streams of blood have been shed and millions of treasure expanded, and, after all, they were of no real importance to thoo who acquired them. And on the other hand, largo districts of land, which have eventually proved of priceless value, have almost gone begging for owners. When Mr. Polk annexed California, the acquisition was ridiculed as an entirely worthless one, and the whole country was pronounced " not worth a dollar." When, too, we determined to yield up the lino of 54 deg. 40 min. rather than light England on the Oregon question, no one dreamed of the real importance, as shown by the recent gold dismyeries, of the territory we !surren dered. It is by no means Improbable that this very country may yet beflome the object of serious dipionsatio difficulties between the fro countries., With fifteen or twenty thousand Californians tit ready passing Into the gold region, and thonsand's hurrying after them, It is easy to imagine that English Governors will have a great many not very loyal or submissive subjects to deal with, and It will be impossible to draw the reins of power very tightly upon them. A disposition, however, it must bo eonfetsed, is shown by the British Government to meet the new exigencies of their distant do minions. T'be charter of the Hudson Bay Com pany will expire in May next, and the Territory, which is to be called New Caledonia, Is thereafter to be under the control of a new Colonial govern ment. For the present, the British Secretary of the Colonies, Sir E. Lytton Dulwer; the novelist, while Intending to send the Governor, Douglas, a force to preserve law and order, announces that it • "is no part of their polio+ to exclude Amerione and other foreigners from the gold fields," provided they "submit themselves, in common with the subjects of her Majesty, to the recognition of her authority," and conform to Bah rules of 'police as have been established. The Governor is commend ed for hie discretion in declining to despatch an armed force to compel the taking out of licenses, and admonished to be cautious and, careful in dealing with the Americans. The indications from Kansas aro, that notwith !desisting the Lecompton hill le snared alt over, it will not go down. I see the Fort Scott Democrat, one of the few papers which advocates an affirma tive vote at the August emotion, frankly confesses that " the proposition" will, doubtless, be rejected by a large vote—the majority against it will ho thousands." And after all this ; the advocates of the English bill will no doubt continue to tell us that they are opposed to Congronsional interven tion in territorial affaira, and deny that they have attempted to thwart" the will of the majority" in Kansas! The gallant canvass Douglas is making in Illi nois excites the sympathy of every true National Democrat. Yet, while leading conservative DOM oorattojournals In the South have boldly express ed their sympathy for him, the ultra fire-eater presses denounoe him bitterly. They thus prac tically array themselves 'under the banner of Lincoln, for whatever. of Influence they may have over the contest will' inure to his benefit. it Is truly delightful to see the Charleston ltfereury ) the Richmond South, and the Washington Union, laboring thus lovingly for the election of an Abolt ifon Senator Tho t3eoretary of the Navy is about starting in. the steamer Water Vitali for an inspection of the navy yards of the whole seaboard. It is hoped that you will be prepared to receive hint with duo honors when ha arrives among you. 'Should there be any anti•Looompton Demoorats among the eni ployees of your navy yard, I hope they will bury the awful seoret of their attachment to genuine Democratic prinoiples deep in the Inmost recesses of their souls, or there is no telling what punish ment may be meted out for so terrible a orime. OCCASIONAL. The illihuster Walker has written a letter to the Mobile Register, reiterating his 'assertion, notwithstanding the denial or the Union, that the Administration had endeavored to, persuade him to forego his designs upon Nicaragua, and to direct his warlike energies against Mexico. He avers that General Honningsen had soverallinterviews on the &Moot with the Secretary of War, in which he allegea the latter said : "That if we would turn our attention to Mexico and enter Into the service of Comonfort, we should have the support of the United States Govern ment; that while in the Polexiean service we might, by some stet, such as tearing down the flag of Spain, bring about a war between Mexico and Spain, and Cuba might then be seised by the former Power. The &oratory, according to the report I received, informed Oen. Ifenningsen that means would not be looking for snob au enterprise, and when pressed by the General to state how the means could be raised, he replied have gone the length of my tether : before I can say more it will be necessary for me to see a person above me.' In the next in- terview the Secretary informed the General that he was not authorised to go further, but that ho might rely implicitly on the means being provided if the enterprise wore undertaken," NATIONAL THNATRIE —This plane of amusement has drawn full houses since the opening night, and the plays have been performed with great spirit- We wish to notice especially Messrs. Chas. Foster, B. Meginley, and Barry Langdon, who repre sented their parts well. and received much ap plause during the performance. Mrs. Julia Cooke and Mrs., Poster also deserve particular notice. We earne stly wish the managemeat all the emcee they Owl% THE PRESS.--PMLADELPHIA, TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1858. THE LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. FOUR DAYS LATER FROM EUROPE, THE EIJHOFA OFF CAPE RACK • THE INDIA BILL PASSED ON SECOND BEADING. THE TELEGRAPH FLEET THE MASSACRE AT JEDDAH. LATER FROM INDIA DRFEJT OF THE • SCIAIDR TROOPS Decline In Cotton and Breadstuff,. CONSOLS 95x895%. Sr. lone 26,—The Cunard steam ship Europ 'ASape Race yesterday, on her voyage to tt 7Halifax, and was intercepted by the nest , the Associated Press. Her dates froni' . l,ol aro to Saturday, the 17th inst., three day Ater than previously received by the steamer Indian at Quebec. The following summary of her news was obtained : The steamer Nova Scotian, from Quebec, arrived at Liverpool on the 16th, and the Persia on the 17th. ' The steamers Niagara and Agamemnon, of the telegraph fleet, bad completed their preparations for a renewal of tho attempt to lay the cable, and were to sail on the 17th inst. . The new India bill, previously passed by the House of Commons, had been passed by the House of Lords d pn second reading. The brutal massacre of Christians at Jeddah by Mahommedans had attraotod much attention throughout Europe. The Turkish 'Government had promised to avenge tho massacre by punish ing the authors of the outrage It was expected that Franco and England would occupy the place at once. Advices from Bombay to Juno 10th bad been received. The despatches state that the 'Solna° troops had been defeated, by the Caipee rebels at Gwalior. A large number of the former bad gone over to the enemy. A strong British foroe was preparing to march for the recapture of Gwalior. Commercial Intel trireme. COTTON . MARNET—LivoItVOOb, 7gly 10:—The sales for tho week have been 37,000 bales, including 1,800 bales to speculators, and 3,100 bales to exporters. There has been a decline in all qualities, ranging from 1-16 to )0. The market cloned quiet, hold°re offering freely, but showing no dieponltlou to press salon. The sales to-day (Friday) have been 8,000 bales, dosing at the following quotations ; New (Mosul Mobile 61a.u. 13P TtactoCk of Cotton In port ls estimated M. 638,000 bale*, of - which 670,000 bales are American. An auction sale of a small lot of Sea Island Cotton has been made at a decline of Id. ' . The Manchester advice" continue favorable. LIVERPOOL BREADSTUFF'S MARKET, July 16 The market exhibits a' cleclinlog tendency for all de scription' of. Breadstuff'. The weather continues to be favorable for the crops Flour Is doll at a decline of 6d. Ohio le quoted M 22024"; Western Cahal, 21®:2e1 Philadelphia and Baltimore, 22022 e Cl. Wheat is also dull at a decline of .Id. Sales of red . Southern fis 2does 3d ; white, Co lideTs 3d ; red West ern, to Made 6d ;• white 6s Weds Od. Corn le very ; wh ite sells at Us, and yellow a The Brokers , circular onotsa the decline of Fleur at (Male; Wheat at n declining tendency, and prices 6d ele lower; Corn also as declining, and a falling elf in price. of 6d. . . LIVRRPOOL PROVISION MARKET, July 16.—The market sided wlth a declining tendency. Beef heavy, holdere pressing "on the market. Pork steady; Won hem, w l th holders pressing their stocks on the market , at Et decline oils. Lard steady at 65se Od • LTVIMPOOT. Rgopuos July 18 —The circular' report epgare stea4y. Ice firm. aleadr at 12e for prime, ilpirita o Turpentine, Of 041" LONDON. MARKET, July 10.—Mes , rs Baring & Brother's circular repor ts Dreads tuffs as firm. LONDON MONEY MARKET, July 16.—The money market is slightly easier. The bullion in tho hank at .Ingland has decreased £llO,OOO American securities 9:utrel etteree are quoted et 27 dr con Console are quoted at 06)(0057{ LIigRPOOL, Saturday noon, July 17 —The Cotton market la dull under the egeot of the Perehen advices. steidx. ' • ' • 7)ilY o. Tres prdlualre 106 f. 4rrlval of the Northern MOIL ilp ! ,? y0111( ' .Thly 26-11 ololook P. ?.I.—Tho m eteaehVorthern I . ,tght from Women, Havre, and Bout ampton, helinst arrlved. Her dates are to the 10 Inst., and have beep" antlifeated. On the plunge she had straps waster!) , gtdee te Oape Race. Sr. Lours, July 26.—Our despatches from Len. ,von, orth to the 23d inst., received by the steamer D. A. ,Tannay, eat phut Jr. Livingston, an old trader on tho Wine,rtoq'the previoue niht from Salt Lake ; City, with dates or ;one 30th. 'fhe kinoe her} marched from the capital for Cedar Valley. about forty sato isplow. • Brigham Young and the beads of Ulf) l'llormon ohuroh bad returned to the city, and the people were following them en =ISM All was quiet in the valley when Mr. Livingston lett, U9mereturned teamsters are eimulating a report of rtoblold. depopitejn the 'vicinity of Belot Ve. rain's Fart. These stateitikriliAo rpe9lye full oredlt In the absence of inforwation fr . * aithen• tie sourees. se. Further from Salt Lake—The Illormsaa_Re.. S. Louts, July 26.--Desptttobes from St. Jo. sepba to the VI inst.. resolved' by the steamer D. A Janney. statelhat atlyjcee from Salt Lake City to July 3d had been received. The Mormons bad all returned to their homes in diebrent parts of the Territory. Gen Johnston pupil through the city with his horses and encamped thirty miles distant on the other side. No troops remained in the pity. The Government officershed been duly installed In their various oillcos, and are preparing for the proper discharge of their duties. . . Brigham Young professes to be anxious to be tried on-the charge of treason, but insists that the jury shall consist of. Mormons only. The Disposition of the Utah Forces. LEAVENWORTH, July 23, via Booneville, July 22, per United States express.--An express from General Barney's headquarters at Cottonwood &paw, on the 14th inst., brings a copy of the general order, issued by Harney on July 12th, on' the reaiipt. of the instructions of General Scott, Poi. the disposition o' the Utah forces. • Colonel Monroo with the tpurth artillery and two companies 'Of drigoons, will rowan in the distriet of Platto. - Canal I,.jav is ordered to take the post at Port Kearney, with three companies of artillery and one of dragoons Two companion of the first cavalry, under Major Sedgwiok, will repair at once to Fort Riley. Six companies of the same command. under Col Sumner, will coneentrato at Fort Kearney for set elan on the plains. Two companies of the Same regiment, now in Utah, aro ordered to go to Fort Riley. Lieutenant-Colonel Johnson is relieved from 4uty as Inspeotor.General of the Utah forties, and "dfrecii:xl totakp command at Fort Riley. SurgeonAirrighirptuens to St. Louis. Major Brown; of the Pay }apartment, is eta. Honed at Kearney. Assistant Surgeon Smith is assigned dpty with the first cavalry. Assistant Surgeon Swift, with two companies of the fourth artillery, will be atatloned in the vicini ty of Cottonwood Springe. Captain Simpson. of the Topographical Engi neers, proceeds to Utah under the movements di. rented In "general order No. 17." A detachment of recruits, about 300 strong, under Major Backus, left Fort Leavenworth on the 21st inst. for New Mexico. Wasupgran, July 26.—The President today re.appointed James G. Pickle postmaster at Buf falo, and appointed James A. Fopda as postmaster atTrof, Now York. The German festival at Arlington tg.day was attended by thousands. It vas the greatest affair of the kind ever held in this vicinity. A large amount of money was realised toward the erection of the Stauben monument in Now York. Nan - Yonx, May N.—The weekly bank state meat exhibits -a decrease of loans, $225,000; an increase of specie, $185,000 ; an increase of de posits, $ 1,040,000; an increase of indrawn de posits, $51,000. Meaux, Jnly 28.—A tiro occurred last night, at midnight, which destroyed the Masonlo Hall and Kellop's stable; St. Joseph's street, and Thomp son's saloon ' Royal street, adjoining the new cus tom house. The loss was mostly insured. {ho Th ustome Intense beat damaged the granite front of c • New . Cotton from Texas. NEW ORLEANS, July 26 —The steamer Texas, from Galveston, has on board two bales of new cot. ton. Markets by Telegraph Onto too, July 26.—Flour quiet; wheat d eellning ; salrs at 70 cents; corn active at lot advance. Oats dull. Shipments to Buffalo—no Dour; 62,000 bushels wheat; 32,000 bushels corn. Shipments to Oswego—no Dour; 40,000 bushels wheat, 11,000 bushels corn, Re ceipts-1000 Ws. flour, 16,000 bushels wheat, 42,000 bushele corn. Ray 26.—Flour firm Sad unchanged; I,sookhis. sold for October delivery at $4.20. Whiskey unchanged ; 000 bbls. whiskey sold at $22. Mem Pork $l7. Now Oat.mixe,July 28.—Sales of 1,600 bales of Cotton today ; the market to easier but, quotations are un changed ; a 'lngle bale of new cotton, received from Texas, was sold today at 15 coati. The sugar market is buoyant Salsa of shoulders at 7c. English 'versus American Iron. To the Editor of The Press : I notice in the letter of your Now York corres pondent, in this morning's paper, the following strange sentence, to wit : " Is it a fact, us stated, that the contract tor the iron pipes for the now wirier works in Washington city is given to a EH tish company ?" and your correspondent very per- tinently asks, "Is there no iron in Pennsylvania ?" Nave you the ability and inclination to inform the sovereigns who read 'The Press who the parties were who made the contract? It is surprising that we have so many who call themselves Ameri cans, ever eager to buy and wear whatever article may be introduced as French or English, but it is really humiliating to know that men, who perhaps hold high stations in our Government, are willing to forget the Interests of our manufacturers so far as to give a contrast of the desoription named to a foreign company. Can you give some light upon this matter? N. PHI6ADRLFIII.I, July 24, 1858. BALE OF STOCKS AND REAL ESTATE TIM EVE NING, AT TEE FoKELIANGE.—SOO Thomas a Bons' 7 advottisoinenta, auction hood. The public will bo glad to know that the „ Riviera Scandal" is quieted, for the present at least. Mr. and Mrs. Blount, and their interesting daughter, sailed. on Saturday in the steamer for Now Orleans; Riviere hes modestly retired from the too pressing attentions able creditors ; Hunoke is found and fined; Jersey and justice are satisfied; the puppets have left the stage, the play is over, Pull ea end tho Jataat Nino Pap W9ader, Bair. t 1 7 X 7si From Salt Lake. WaitangiOn Attnirs New York Banks. Fire nt Mobile LETTER FRO3I NEW YORK. (Correspondence or The Bresei.]' NitW Tenn, Silly _26,1858. Except the juviniloptinie °condoned by the re ported presence of a solioduf sharks In the har bor, and the prostration of the Barmy!'" bopos of a matah'! yesterday,' the good public have little to: talk , about just-now. The" tumid number of stabbing affrays, robbariel, and gene ral swindles, afford but a breakfast-table - talk— the ltiviere soandal has been lulled into triteness, and the ocean telegraph anxiety has settled down to a patient waiting for another trial. To be sure Mr. Stephen N. Branch, in spite of sundry libel suits and heavy bail-bonds, continues to refresh the community with salacious etatemeats coneerning high officials; but his last canard, (wherein our worthy Chief Magistrate, Buchanan, in company with Dan Siokels and others, is held up as a very naughty old bachelor indeed,) is not yet making a stir in the courts. Whether "Buck" will bring a. libel snit, like Mayor Tiemann and good. ..Eater Cooper, is rather doubtful.. Sommbserving traveller has been inditing the follOWIng; which be salts "An outline picture of Philadelphia," and which our pity papers are just no 4 copying : Ist--Houses flush to the sidewalk, email, red-brioked, and white shuttered, with three white marble steps, without railings, protruding into the pavement for no earthly purpose than to trip up the pedestrian. I'd—lmmense silver door bell-pulls 3d—A druggist's shop at every corner. And, 4th—An ice-cream * saloon in every block. By these four indioations a stranger may instantly recognise Philadelphia. If New York were to be pictured, I fear that the description would read, instead of a druggists' a dram-shop at " every corner," and a something worse in every" blook." Tha Board of Health held its usual moeting this morning, end permitted the ship Grotto to proceed to son. - Our pollee are either not popular, or else very Jrreseible, for every day we boar of some fracas in Obit some shielded individual js engaged. An odloor was this afternoon violently assaulted, and nose-broken, by a tavern-keeper, who wee !mho quently arrested. An Umbrella vender was fined on' Saturday by the Mayor 'for peddling.witheut a license: -This morning ho appeared, with his counsel, the re doebtable Colonel Doheny, before the Marine Court, to bring suit against the Mayor for injuries done to his (the umbrella man's) public oharaoter. Bat, alas for liberty ! the judge would grant no warrant against his Donor, and Colonel Doheny and his client left in high dudgeon. Mr. Peel, the British fugitive, is still in prison. The market for stooks this morning manifested increased animation; and the largest business transacted was in Reading, of which twenty-five hundred shares were sold, opening at 451, seller sixty, and 401, regular, and closing at 47, regular, and 481, seller sixty. Delaware and Hudson re mained steady at 991. Pennsylvania Coal declined -1. New York Central opened at 85, went up 1, and closed at 851. Harlem brought 11, seller sixty, against 111, regular, on Saturday. Erie ad vanced 1. Pacific Mail Steamship opened at 903, closed at 901. There were subsequent outside sales of this stook at 90.- In Western roads, high rates were the geneial rule. Michigan Southern old stook opened at 231, and closed at 21; the guaranteed likewise ad- yawed 1. Illinois Central opened at 773, and rose to 78. 'Mlohigan Central began at 61 and closed at 623-41 advance Mao Saturday: Chi cago and Rdok't slaild'opOtal of 0, and rose 1; sales large. Galena and Chicago brought 91 aid 913, a rise of Ito 13. La Crosse and Milwaukee remained at .Saturday's price. Milwaukee and Mississippi brought 171 regular against 17, seller 60 on Saturday. Panama went up to 108, owing to favorable speculations concerning the establish ment of a now mail steam lino, for the Frazer river gold Fltdoefrein pn g land tbg PR4Fig• Of bank stocks about two hundred shares wilre sold, ivithout much change In the prick Shot and Leather oloSed at 109; Metropolitan at 107; American Exchange at 416 ;' Park at 101; Bank 'of Commerce at 1003; and Continental at 921. The exchanges - at the Bank Clearing 31onse this morning were $17,385,180 7Q, and the Valances were $0;989 4§. 'Ph,o MetropOitan oertificates remain at $B,O 00. At the Second Board Michigan Central B's rose 1. Pulite Mall fell ; Pennsylvania Coal rose 3; New York Central 3; Reading ; Illinois Central fell 3; Galena and Chicago rose 3; Michigan Southard ; do. preferred ; gamma 2 , Balling at 110 ; Clinton and Toledo 1 ;. Island 3. In foreigi exehange therell but a lght bus!. nese, though nauci iltnes:e nisr,tike t ifea draw. ore. The dominant rates for 'bank 4n4 4e4;kers' are 1091a110, the latter merely nominal, se there is no demand at over 1091; prime commerolal signatures 109301093. On Paris sf. 15a5f. 1.1.1 Hamburg pi. 4inneFdam 413a411; Bremen 791a791. • The 'ger* Canal and Beeldew Coinnanv. hoe - declared a eemt,annoal diyid9nd of five por 000 on Ito preferred stook, payable on the third of Anna, at the Moe of the company, Jersey Oily. The subsoription books for 11500,000eapital stook Bank of p. 'booms are now open at the Bank of America. This increased capital will make tbe investment 81,000.900, half the anpiort9ed 991. tal. The Dank of St. Louie commenced business eleVen monlbp 49, apl up to last May realivid a profit of 146 per cent : . ' • NNW YORK STOCK OXOHANGX—Jar se. . ogoolD pop. 26000 Mies State We 861( 3000 Tenn Ste O's 'OO NIX 2000 Vir State tVe 98% 1000 Lake Erie k W let mtge bads 86 4000 Mich Cent 8 p let Int Bkg Fd Con bd 07 10000 La° & L a 81 200 Pacific Mall S 0 00 15 Penn Coat Co 70X 26 do 80 100MIcb8kNlaR 24 IEO do 24X 50 Mich S&N Prof 010 47 100 do 47X 15 Panama R 110 Igo oio, k Tol 11. 660 381( 60 do 11811 260 Ohl & R ld R 78X 60 do WI 781,1 126 Leo & M il It 4 . 118 Del & Bud Po 993 SOON YOenß 88)i. 100 do 630 85% tlO llud River R . 28%, 100 Reading R .10 47 100 do 630 47X 100 do. 180473( 1100 do 47% 36 do 1304734 50 Mich Oen R 623( 76 111 Oen It . :1,7.3( 10 Stonlogton It a6O 3:0 60 Os & Ohl R ex dr 88 THE 1141RISETil FLope.,.No ohange of pote,. tbo supply repaaltdng small. Silea 1) 400 bblp, ' • ' °atm.—The Wheat market to Wet for the pant of stock. Prices rule firm ; sales several small parcels et 41.95 for new white Pennsylvania; 1.16 for good white Canadian ,• 'sl.ol for inferior winter red, mid $1- for prime Milwaukee club. Rye in scarce and held firmly at 80c for strictly prime, with 780 refused Barley quiet. The price of Corn is• nominal. not enough stook offering to make a market. Oate dull at . 620380 for Virginia, 400450 for Dela- ware. Jersey, and Pennsylvania, and 450160 for State and Western. past 1111368,—F0r the past there has been a good demand, end the mar ' ' t.ady, but prices role ratherin favor of toe b "The receipts have been somewhat in axon hf i Biles, scathe total stock of Ox and Cow Mee .—Tis 103,420 • PROVISICIFShere , is' less doing in Pork, but the Market remains steady and Unchanged. Vitae 100 bbia at $17.12 for mesa ;with fobbing l'ote as high ea $l7 20,) $lO 12e10.25 for clear. and $l9 for prime; mine mess Is quiet and nominal at $l6. Beef to in moderate request, and firm ; males 200 bbia at $lO 75011.80 for country mess ; $12013.50 for re packed Western mess and 814014 50 for extra do Prime mess Beef indult ' , and nominally the same.. Beef Hama steady at slomlB. Bacon firm with small ellen at previous prices. Out Meats continue firm, with sales 140 hhrls at 6,yc for shoulders and B,is'a7Xo for hams Lard buoyant at 11,91a1.17; for prime; sales 400 bbl,. Butter la steady and unchanged. Cheese to dull,i)t oaBo for medium to prime. - Strom—There is less eaticlty to be observed in the market, but prim, nevertheless, remain firm, with an upward .tehtleney. birk.sparn . .—We notice a rather better inquiry, and the marhet in buoyant. COFFEE—Rio Is llfm, hit Wet . ; miles 400 bags at 11 ellyic and 0, 1 ,; mite for St. Tiomtngo Rios is firm, with a good demand for prime for dap' meat; sales 275 ibis at sh• fa% a . • Liar—Demand moderate and parse eteady at 40045 a for good shipping qualities. Lams.—Common Rockland in more active and better; sales 4,000 Ibis at 60e; Lump dull at Sec. Asuss.—The market is unchaoged, and the demand moderate; guiles small parcels at $6 for Pots, and $6.12 for Pearl& - Oorrow —Market dull, and prices nominally the same, with no transactions of magnitude reported. WHISKEY IS in moderate demand, with sales 260 bble 10,240244 c. THE COURTS. The Kirkvatrjok Poisoning Case. YESTERDAY'S PROCEEDINGS [Reported for The Prees.] QUARTEU SESSIONS—Judge Aillson.--The Kirk, patriok poisoning Cage was resumed yesterday morning, when witnesses were examined as to the good character of Josiah G. Jones, the alleged de liverer of the poisoned pie.. Quite a number of his colored friends ware called, some of them members of ohuroh, who gave him an excellent charaeter. Witnesses were also examined ea to the character of Ma Riobards, also to her usual style of dress. The object of the lest was to show that she wee never known to dress es the witness testified she did when she was seen by Edwin Kirkpatrick, Mr. Culls, and others, after the receipt of the anony mous letters by Edwin and other members of the family. Mr. Michael Dunn;of the Merchants' Exchange, was tailed to testify as to thoetato of the weather on the 10th and 11th of January, 1857, ono of the days on which the poisoned pie was reedVed: Mr. Dunn was enabled to give the state of the weather from a register kept at.the Exchange. The trial will doubtless occupy the greater part of the week. ' Nono of the other courts were in seesion White Envoy from St. Domingo parresponflenee of the N.Y. Timm.] WMIIIINGTON, July 26 —ltem from a very re liable Source that as soon as Baez was defeated and Santana restored to power in Bt. Domingo, as reported by Captain Mclntosh, of the United States navy, our Government took the initiatory step towards securing a foothold there which may lead to the establishment of a permanent Govern ment by the whites. Santana, himself a white man, is altogether favorable to the whites; and, in the opinion of the Administration, the golden moment has arrived for securing an influence on the island which may lead to its regeneration. It may be remembered that Baez proposed send ing a dipiomatio agent to the United States, but, a mulatto himself, he wished to accredit a negro as his representative near this Government, To this, objection was urged by Mr. Mason and others in the United States Senate, even before the de livery of the Dred Soon opinion. Santana, as our Government has been informed, is anxious to send a white Minister here, provided the United States will recognise his Government, and give him their influence and encouragement. The subject has occupied much of the attention of the Eteoutive, and as I believe Mr. Buchanan will want to make a clean sweep, should he deter mine to enlarge the area of freedom in the Gulf, I dmibt not arrangements are being perfected for baoking up Santana, and sustaining him in hie °Forte to Oyu a reap9tabla Government, THE CITY. Tragedy in the Seventh Ward—hthuman Butchery—Pull Details.—We have oftentimes noticed that a dearth of news in'this locality is almost invariably succeeded by some startling event, terrible and tragic in its nature, and cabin lated to produce a sensation in the community. 'We have seen many instances of this strange suc cession of, local events, the last of which is fur- niched by the deed of butchery which we are now called upon to record. Between two and three o'clock yesterday morn. I ing a fight occurred between a number of colored individuals, in the yard attached to a building known as the " Philadelphia Institute," in Lem. bard street; between Seventh and Eighth. • Da ring the fracas, a man named Peter Miller was stabbed in three different places. He went into the house, and evidently died in a very few minutes. The news of the fatal affair was corn munioated at once to the ethos of the looal tele graph, and in a little while the entire neighbor. hood was aroused. . • ' We repaired at an early hour to the scene of the tragedy. Lombard street, between Seventh and Eighth, was thronged with an intensely excited multitude, arid we experienced considerable diffi culty in our endeavors to reach the Institute building. The place was guarded by a number of the policemen of the Fifth and Seventh wards, who were kept busy in restraining the curiosity of those desirous Of entering. The reporters, how ever, were admitted, although several of their number had to pass through the ordeal of a search ing inquiry, and any quantity of suspicious looks from the knights of the star. It atoms that the deceased had 'been with seve ral other young colored men in the restaurant un der the Institute, kept by a man named Murray. Between two and t'areeo'olook a difficulty immured between Miller and a young man named Jerry Dickson, who is better known as "Dixey." There MB an old grudge' between the two young mon and a law.suit between them is now pending. They got to quarrelling, as we have already said, and the party, some five or six in nnnaber t went into the yard book of the Institute to fight it out. Miller and Diekson stripped themselves to fight, and Miller gave Didion the first blow. The lat. ter then ran into the house, saying that he wanted to blndriP his eye *here he had been struck. He went into a barber's shop on the first floor of the building, where he was employed as is journey man, and he shortly after' returned and' he pro posed •to renew' the fight.' Miller. seemed sue. platens and protested that no knives should bo need. Dickson:assented to this arrangement, but moment after ha attaolced Miller with 'a farm, 'fished procured in the shop.' The first eat a shocking gash on the right arm. just below the shoulder. Miller turned to run, when he re; oeivod a out in the back, just above the hip, which made one of the most horrible wounds we have ever seen. The wounded man ran screaming into the entry of lhe Institute, whither he was followed by his enraged assailant. Miller succeeded in working his way to the front deer, which was fastened, and be broke out the glass in the each at the side of the door just as the murderer brought the razor with tremendous force tigress the left sidd of the neck of Miller, severing the jugular vein and °finding a perfect torrent of blood to pour mit over the walls, floor and other objects, and of course musing the death of the man in a very few seconds. The eptry, from the back door' to the front, is oompletely smeared with blood, and the walls neat where the final blow was given in the jugular are sprinkled nearly to the ceiling. The body was stretched out opposite the door of the office ofJacob O. White, Jr. The police were too late to scours the mur derer, who escaped over an adjoining fence, and through a house in the neighborhood. He , has not yet been captured. One of the young men who wore present at the time of the murder was secured, and ho narrated all the particulars subsequently. The "Philadelphia Institute" is a large two. story brink structure with high ceilings. It is situated on Lembiad street, between Seventh and Eighth, and is morn familiarly known as the "Co lored People's Hall." The .baseinent is used as a restaurant and ice.oream salpop. The 4rst lioor is tilVidedtinto several tomtit, the front'be biung occupied-as'i'barber ihop. The ethers, we believe, are not in nee The second story is need for the meetings of different colored moieties. In the rear is a gate opening on a court which leads into Little Pine street. Miller was rather short and slender in person. He was apparently about thirty years of age, and wore whiskers. The body was in close proximity.to the front door, the feet being towards the street. It pre sented q herrible ppeotaele. The eyes were open. A deep cut was' in the arm, rand. Inn the admit Of 'the book 'was. a frightful gash, some eight inches in length, while the left side of. the neck ootanlotelY laid open. ''The deceased was a barber by profession, and at ono time had a shop t'tterpinutowp. 'so) ab:l had'la ShoP • near the Polled Stales Hotel-, qity. Thou gh as A destiera e fellow, yet he was i 'an exeellent harbor: u 'used to icScon3pany many hreursion partids to the'Sea-shore, M. pay personal ):itteption to the:ezentsion'sts. Cdrotior rennar, after empaprielling a Jury, and viewing the kiddy, iireeeededto the Rifth•war4 station house, where the Inquest Wag mimmeneed. The following evidence was elicited : Charles G. Parmenter, sworn.—l am an officer ; I think it wns about fifteen minutes past two Melooh I wra watkinit along' Seventh near Little gins street; I heard a'louq tutiso of sereapaing; I think "murder" was bried ; I ran into Little .gine istredt; X met two coloted'men there at"thd head of alley ; .T.aoed' what is the matter; they said there is a little full, go_ tn.atirl me 'to it ; went in and sprung my rattle; one of the ward men came; .1 asked him to stand till I go around to look ; one of the motif saw was colored, dressed in white pants and shirt ; no :mat nor hat; he walicgd leisurely away ; I found a coat and hat ...'aiert'on the feces of the' yrt wheretheor WHn mecOmmicceq p -Rasj Of hall; they refused at grit to let dhybody into the house I' ont in and" we arrested the man' who slept in the house ; the basement of this house was all open into the street;_we marched this house; we broke open the restaurant under the hall and found aeolored man and woman there; ' they were arrested; when I entered the hall the de deified was lying m the entry near the front door; ire hroke'open the barbers hop an'the first goer of the halt and•lbund `seine blothing there' Tlbe pilpess here de:Wiped the appearanee df the then whom he say leaving the *ens Of the murder.] Italia bright moon light at the time, kat r doubt . Whether I could identify theni poi/Offaly. Frauois 4n n (eolored),,sworn.—l don't know what hour it woe, bpi it seemed as if the men were spatting all the evening I was 1,714 ip bed and I beard a rumpus book of the ball; my husband looked out of the window; I looked out also, and we concluded that they were going to fight; we watched them and they spatted. a right smart while; the deeeased• was sitting on the fence be• tween the Institute and my boom; there appeared to be five of thorn; one of the men wont away and , came back aga in , and he said to the dead man, "Now, come; " "Will you fight me fate" inquired the deceased; the man said, 'Yes;" the deceased then came down from the fence and took off his coat and hat and threw them on the fence; the other man etrack at biases tin:igh he was cutting ttip; the deceased cried "murder" three times; he roan who did the cutting ran down into the basimetit; the women whio Were looking out of the window hollered ;'murder;" two of t=ie mon in the yard jumped over the fonpp and. ran opt 'of the al ley back; the man who ran into the basement af terwards ran up into the entry; the deceased stag. gored as though he was wounded; he got into the entry, and I heard the breaking of glass soon af terwards. William IL Bell, sworn.—l am a lineman;po I was going down Sixth street, near Lombard, and heard a rattle , spring ; at Sixth and Little Pine streets my attention was called to a man with a white coat on that was all bloody I took him In custody; his pantaloons also were bloody; ho was standing at thelinae at an alloy, near the hall ; he said he wait up stairs, and afraid to come down. Idarlin Raines, sworp.-4 am a policeman ; I saw William Drown (the man arreste4 by 41r. Boni coma out of the hall ; be passed a key opt ißrough the broken glass to.a man on the step; the latter unlocked the door, and the man inside came out; I saw that the man's coat woe bloody; I followed and assisted in arresting him; I searched Brown; ho had no knife; I also arrested the man who nil. looked the door Vona the outside ; E. Peyton was the man who unlocked the door. Oborlos Fair, sworn.—l live in Lombard street near Eighth; about two o'clock this morning, as I woo about, going to bed, I heard the cry of man der;" I ran out . and beard the crash of glass; I saw a man's head out of the window beside the door; there was a good deal of confusion at Bret about where the cries came from; I saw a man with a white coat Covered with blood come ont.of the house; I took hold of him mad insisted that he should be arrested; several oolorod parsons came up and said the man had not kopu in the hall but I knew better; I asked bow he got the blood on him, and ho said he went into the halt after the murder and got blood on his coat from the well Mary Murray (colored), savorn. live in Grace street, between 16th and 17th; we keep the restau rant under the hail ; my husband was at West Ohester last evening; my . brother and I opened the place; wo heard the noise up stairs this morn ing, but it woe after wo had abut up; no person came down there after we closed ; we heard no noise in the yard; there was no quarrelieg ha oar apartment; Iheard the cry of "murder!' and I thought it was in the entry; I cannot tell the names of the persons who were in the saloon in 'the evening; soon after the ory of murder was heard some one tried to get in the back door of the base ment. [Drown was here introduood. His coat was spottpd with blood, as though it had spirted over it, and not as though ho bad wiped the blood off' the wall.] ' Witness resumed—That man was in the saloon near two o'clock. Elijah Peyton, colored sworn.—l live at Plea sant avenue and Little Pine street; I was at home and in bed; I hoard the cry of " Murder !" and ran out into the street ; at the corner a gentleman said the ball was whore It occurred ; I went to the door and pounded at the window and called for Jerry Dixsoy ,• ho made no answer ; Brown an swered from the inside, and I told him to open the door; he fumbled at the keyhole and couldn't get the key in; I told him to hand me the key; he did so and I unlocked the door ; as he went out he said there was a man in the entry who was almost dead; Brown was soon after arrested; Jerry Dixsay worked for'. me at barberine • In the. hall; I do not know whore Dixsey lives ; Brown Is a barber also ; Massy has been sleeping' in the shop; tho key was put In the windows° that Gerry could get it when he came home at night; a year ago there was a quarrel between Dixsey and Miller; I have beard it referred to lately ; I saw deceased about nine o'clock in the evening; I saw Dixsoy last night; he and Miller wore not to gether. • • • Joseph B. Smith (colored.)—l know Dixsey; I last saw hipron Tuesday ; I am bail for the de ceased in a suit brought by Diasey on a charge of assault and battery with intent to kill. [A coat and hat found' in the yard were exhibited and Identified as Ilizsey's.l' • Arthur Tide (colored) sworn.—l live In Lom bard streetT , llte third house above the In stitute ; I heard a noise in the street; I opened the back door, and a light mulatto rushed in and said the MoYateensing Hose fellows were after him; I was soared and put the light out, and let the man go through; the man had a coat on ; Brown told me in the eel! this morning that the loan who ran through was amen named Hoofs; I wasseared when the °Meer came in the night, and I opened the basement through, 80 that the police might think the man had run through without ray open ing the door for him. , John W. Hall. (colored.) sworn.—l am the hus band of. Fanny Hall. This witness desoilbid thn wrangle In the yard already desoribed by his wife: He saw the commencement of the fight ; saw one of the =flout at Miller as if with a razor,; ran into the entry followed by the man who out him; the man then came back into the yard and jumped over the fence ; Brown followed into the 'entry; the other men eseaped through the back way ; witness saw the knife or razor in the WO of it toll, allot man, who used it i thew were five men in the yard besidee Miller; the man who' did the cutting went into the Institute a moment before William'Breani, 'o4:mod, one of the prisoners,/ sworn —I live in Barclay Street, above Sixth; 'I was lithe caller when the quarrel commenced be tween Jerry. Dickson. and Miller; M lit n piede of paper and put it under a lady's dress ; Dickson charged Miller with it; Miller said he was "a G—dd—d Hat—that he did nothing ot the kind ;" Dickson said he was another, and then they went into the front cellar ; Dickson told Miller that he had something against him, and that he must fight Lim; Dickson said he would fight Miller In the .1 yard; James Keefe, myself, Dickson, harm Rich- ardson, Samuel Keyser,. and Miller formed the party; they (the combatant/3) took off their coats and Theta and laid them aside; Miller then atruok Dioison over the eye, and Dickson hollowed " murder !" - Diokson told. Miller-to wait till he went into the shop to bind up hie eye; be came out with a razor in his hand ; Miller was sitting on the fence ; Dickson asked where be was; some of them. said be was on the fence; he told him to come down, and 'Miller came down ; they commenced to fight ; Miller made'a"pase to strike him ; Dickson dodged, and then Biokson out him across the arm, then across the back ; Miller then ran into the entry, and broke oat s pans of glass and hollered " murder !" Dickson then out bim in the neck; I went into the barber shop and staid there until the boss came and knocked at the window and asked for the key; [hat and coat shown.] they are Dickson's; , I was. within a few feet of Miller when he was out ; I got , the blood while trying to get into the. shop. ' Mrs. Murray was re-called, and explained that she was not in the part of the saloon where the wrangle ocourred ; ahe heard of the lighting:of the paper early in the evening.- Brown reiterated that it was a short time before the fight that the oireumstance took place. Brown resumed: , I saw the razor, it was a Nook handled one; be used it with his right hand ; I do not know what he did with the, razor.after the:cutting.. , • William N Brown, (colored,) sworn,--Thie wit ness was the brother of Mrs. Murray, who was in the restaurant at the time of the occurrence. Ile knew of no wrangle between the parties who were in the restaurant; be beard Diokson gay . that "he had it in for Mini" he heard 'of the,eiroumetanoe Of the lighted paper, but rims nruier the impres sion that it was two hours before, the murder. - barah Battle (colored) was sworn,--She lives in the rear of the Institute, and saw the -'fight; she beard Mahon declare that he was not armed with a knife; and ehe , saw .two"of the eelte in: fisted by,hirri; she knew it was .Dielcson. beelines the' persons in the.yard called him by that Mime: , At this stage of the pr.:wading)), the inquest was continued until seven o'olook in the evening, when it was resumed at the Eighth-ward statkin house. The vicinity of the Eighth-ward station house laet evening also presented a seem of wild. excite ment. The first witness: called was Dr. J. R. Coed, of the Fifth ward. Dr Coed testified as follows: I made a poet-mor, tern examination upon the body of the decensed the first wound I examined waS upon the left side of the nook ; it, was ktransveree tradition, extend. ing from q 'paiist behind the remits of the Inferior maxillary bone to a point below the middle of the chin, about six bides in length I ,It was a deep in cision, dividing theisterno oloido mastoidena inue. ole, and partially dividing the carotid artery 'and jugular vein; there was also an Walston el inches In length on the arm of the right side, below the shoulder, dividing the long head of the biceps mus! de, and savoring the 'military . artery and vein 'there was elm a transverse irmsion in the gluteal region. on the right side, which partitply divided the gluteus maxims muscle, but not dividing any important vessels; he died from loss of blood. James Keefe, colored, was sworn.—He testified that he resided in Keim's court, running from Bond street; he was in company . with the deceased in the restaurant in the morn ing; aaw.theprepare, tions for the tight, but bed nothing whatever to'do with It. His evidence was corroborative of BroWn's. The vulgar language employed by the participants was detailed by the wham, who Rave a atrelgbV forward amount of the afrair. As also testified filet Ise was In comflany"with Birdman, Brown, Mille,r and •Iliehardson at the time of the affray. Samuel Keyser, colored, residing at Sixteenth and Fayette streets, testified that be was in com pany with the deceased and Dickson in the restau rant in the morning; ust prior to the tragedy. He did not see the fight, as he was afraid of the consequences; he jumped over the fence to be out of the way, before any blows were struck ; he did not know Diokson. This witness is in the employ of Mr. McClees. A colored 4aR ntmio4 ittgul was examined, but bleevidlinde did not amount to 'anything. Mr Patton; the barber, who irsus examined in themorning; stated that be missed ,from his' shop one of 'hirrasois, with a white bandle: 'This in strument no doubt, the one 'used by Dickson. 'There being ne snore' witnesses .the'mry, after :a ghorlielibetioq. rendes:l4a verdict that the dp dossed earner to his death" from 'lnjurieslntkieted ' wlth a 'knits or ratter, in the binds of Jeremiah Diokson or Dixey, in the yard and entry.of. tbe Philadelphia Institute, in Lombard street, above fieventh,'On - the morning of July 28tb, 1858, be lireen the hours of two and three eoloolt refill being ileoe9setty ittbro the aqt, A variety of opinionti were enressed b 7 the crowd outside of the station 'house upon the ren- dition of this verdict. Many stated that they thought it unfair towards one who was no more implicated than the othpre who were' in company Vint piurdepir Ip tbelestaprant, :• . • Drown Was committed lir tie &roller to answer atnonrt. bad not beedarrested up to a late Isar laid night, althmigh tbe'most stotive Ortiontf* irere made by several of the *detec tives to secure him; I t la thought: that be bee not left the oity, and that era long he will be taken into oustody. This sanguinary conflict and Pe result were , the topics of qinventation in all girdles yesterday afternoon and last evening; and Itte. tleraumantitrAtti ioa.• piTistbd by the Vdiderer i pow at lgrgo, imparted to it an extraordinary, degree of interest. Bever before have we seen the victim of a tragedy a' horribly mutilated pa in this ease, and' never such an instanob of' hnman depravity. We can now only hope for the speedy arrest and punishment of the guilty. .• - • • • 4not4er Homicide.—ln tittle/0g of the young man nathed Vynch, a Rinej beatman, who died at Elle bospital on @anday front the elreote of injuries 'received at Pheenirville on the 17th inst., it seems that tie deemed was enticed away from his' boat by a party of ruipans, Selo beat and Stabbed him. ' ' Hie pookete sc ore ,n turned ineide out by the oun drala in searohof plunder. Coroner Fenner cam. ;lanced nn inquest In tho oaee yosterdny morning, but he was pompelled to adjourn It over for want of evidence, .Fires,-4 bedstead, bed and window cur tains in the second-story front room of Mr. J. Ramsbottom's dwelling, Thompson - street, above Fifteenth, were destroyed by fire, about ten o'clock on Sunday evening. Damage $2.5. - - Yesterday morning, about bait past one o'clock. a fire occurred in a small frame bake .house, No. 132 North, Bleventh street, above Cherry. Loss about $lOO The flames wore caused by a tin pan, containing hot coals, being placed adjoining some boards. al Little Responsibtlity.—About U o'clock yestecday morning; a woman having a baby In her arms, and walking along the viomity of Elev enth andl4libet streets, asked a colored boy to bold it fora taw minutes. lie did so, since whioh time she hoe not been heard of. The little re aponsibility was finally taken in obarge by. Officer Cooley, who had it taken to the Tenth-ward Mo tion house. , By an adverlisonent In another column, it will be soon that on and aner.Monday next all the passenger trens on the Philadelphia, Germantown, and Norristown Railroad. °neat the 3.10 and 6 P. M. trains from Philadelphia, will stop at Columbia avenue for the aocommoda• tion of personsiesiding in the northern part of the city. .Rddiiion to Church Membership.—On Sun day forty:five now members were, admitted to the M. E Ohuroh inljanoook street, Seventeenth ward of which the Rev. John Thompson is pastor. This congregation is oomparatively new, and is under the acetone and enorgotio lead of one of the most native ministers in theoity. The services are very well attended. Death of a Child from Drinking Whirkea.-- Coroner Penner yeaterday held an inquest on the body of a child named John McLaughlin. only Ave Tears of age, who died in McCluskey's eoutt, Primo street, above Eighth, from the effeots'of drinking some whiskey which bad been carelessly loft upon the table. Congestion of the brain 'was the immediate cense of death. Run Over.—A man named Thomas Turnor was run over, on the West Chester turnpike, about U 1444412 o'olook yesterday afternoon. He was driying a wagon, and failing from his seat was badly injured about the head and shoulders. The wheels also passed over his body; and his injuries are so serious as likely to cause hie death. The Coroner was well- enough, yesterday to attend to his onerous duties. We are gratified to see him again at his pest. Be conducted the in vestigation into the murder ease yeaterday with marked ability, the proceedings being promptly and systematically conducted.. Fire.—The alarm of lire between two and three o'olook yesterday afternoon was oaused by the slight burning of William King's-fluid and alcohol establishmentrin Marlborough street, above Duko, in the Eighteenth ward. The Weatherlosterday was truly delightful. At 4 P. M. thoThermotnetor at this Moo indicated a tomporaturs of 80 dearest. PITILADELFIII/1 Camp Marian!, Monday, July 25.—The Cattle market this week has been quite brisk, and the drovers have succeeded in realizing an advance of 250 per 100 pounds. The offerings amounted to about I,Boolmadohowing an increase of about 100 over the receipts of the week previous. The demand has been good, but the supply large for this soma of the year. AU the Cattle ex hibited were disposed of at prices ranging from $7 50 to 89.50a9.75 per 100 pounds, the latter rate for extra quality. The quality of the Cattle was not so good, as usual. At Wardell's A.venue Drove Yard there wore ogered'and sold duffing the week 077 head. The following are the quotations at which they sold Choice quality per cwt $0 50a9.75 Prime " " 9 25a9.50 Fair " " " 8.75a9121 Ordinary " .1 8 25a8 50 Common 1 . " 8.00n8.25 Inferior " 1. 7.50a8.00 Among the Bales we notice the following Iota: 41, leans Abrams, Ohio, 89 to 99; 45, B. Mooney, Ohio, 9 to 95; 39, W. Fuller, Fayette; county, 81. to 91; 21, B. Baldwin, Chester county, 9 to 95; 54, D. E kerman, 7 to 8; 79, ThoineaStrieldand,Ohio, 8 to 9; 54, T. Franks, Ohio, 8 to 9; 48, Murphy .4 Cassidy, Virginia, Bto 9; 66, Alexander Co., Ohio, Bto 9; 26, Strickland,' Virginia, 'ft to 81; 19, 0. Igarshall, Chador connty, 8! to 9; 03, Jos: Smith, Virginia, 81 to 90; 83, E. quald, Phi°, 8 to 9., We understand that tho following distin guished gentloinbn were to leave England by one of the July 'steamers for Quebec : The Rightllon. Edward Ellie% M. P., Sir David Dundat, and N. W. Senior, Esq. Mr. Ellice ig well known in Canada as the proprietor of thelleauharnois es— tate, near Montreal, and one of tho principal pro prietors in liudsen'e Bay Pompnny. , Sir David Dundna occupied the post.' of Senator among during the Russel MinistrY,lB4B,lBso. Mr. Sent* is known here as well as in England by hie popular !Wares on political economy, published in the Encyclopedia Metropolitan. These gentlem^n will pass a few days at Montreal, and then join a party at Saratoga Springr. From the latter point they will start en a liurney of mend mom through the Otates and Canada. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL; THE MONEVIIi Pumensunre,lnly 26,1858. The stnek market exhibited a slight improvement .to•day.. In money matters however there. is, no progress to note. The failure, or debermination to wind up their agairs, of two large firms onillarket street, last week, has damaged returning confi dence somewhat by Inducing fears that other houses which are .thought to have withstood the panic'successfully, may also go to pieces in the ground.swell that follows the storm. i2,9.2,p9..2154vv„5'yg,g,y. i egg E,2 BaSsv t ., ?r a . 0 .A. 7... B.B' v4v.pil, 0 7.. w pal: 4 B 'B <111,4 e l it._ t g r 4 .1 °A; I; X g 6- ktFzil'S• .., 8. 4 LI . ::• : : ^F , : ::: : : • : 4 , ei .. gEE l 2 , lEttEti;-.lfi - ' 4 !TtEtt l itittgtt2§§ . 2 . g ..1 ni ~, ~., ~.,..t ..iv I '4 zd''',,,vslgLitgggffiEED, IE a 4 O ..-. 1. 1: t" l 2 i . FC . : 4 4V it aWrilt l i F BlV§ 1 Ft 171 44 t 3 2, 41 SaSeggUgEVP.ltilirAttl El " .O. W ErgEE-7,..-;Ril§ §Vg gi • Fil 1 at t. 44 t ;41 -: 2 P, ,T, 4 Elr/lIE ff'iil i' - §l.,' .72 § I t i ° g.... 4 ,t , 1 t . ~, e 'l -s- FO tl`: n' 'l , I , E wt,...,, i iiilil Ei ; iliiia;FiEViiEY§gY§, tc -r i -. go,ca ol ... o. aro a vig-i -IWO <DU - as:4 1 i S ... .4 5' ?. ." 3 23iV1r."49.1.147,31 ~_ CI io' St g Pitt gectrit g F 0 4 Z . /••• Co A. ofp AP. 91. , f• ta .ID 111 w s4 ....w g I -,,..41.42;0412..aF.26?a!2-1 The following are the change:lln the aggregates, aseompared with the etatement of last week.: ; Loans • Increase, .... •.• $l4 905 Specie Due by other hanks ....•..' 49.801 Due to other banks' Decrease. 169,255 De sits increase 259,263 Circulation • - '34,803 The Clearing House report for the week !mail g Saturday, July 24th, shows • the amount of ex changes and balances to have been as follows: Olesrlo63. Balance!). 22 616,069 97 - $ 12 3.866 37 2.463,969 87 - 208,581 52 .... 2.483,537 00 - .151.956.17 .. 2,273,864 16 ' 228,785 80 1.927,916 79 " 89.885 46 .. 2 093 808 15 . _BB,OlB 51 Mo•day._ Tuesday... Wednesday Thursday.. Friday Saturday.. $l3 828 156 93 • (891.094 83 The last report from the United States Treasury gives the following items: Treagarybalasce (19111 inly. Amount of recelpta Drafts paid Drafts isnot • $4 600,003 1;00,834 30 • 2818,851 41 .... 1,848,741 88 ua au • $759,905 64 On the 14th the Minnesota Assetahly passed a bill fixing the rate of interest at 16 per cont. per annum. Anything over this will be a violation of law. All contracts : must cameunder this 16 per cent, rale, The leial interest, or interest where no stipulation Is made as to the rate to be charod t will be only 7 per : oent. It is thought the senate will propose - a higherii .ta.,aay 18 few cent. The oironlation :of the 'five New Jersey free beat!, igain'st which prebeedings of foreclosure have been instituted; has been reduced to the fol lowing mama. Bank of . Trade, $48,600 ; Artisan s', so,o9o; hferehants', 'of RattertiOn, $7,06Q; Stati 1406111ith $3OOO, and Open, $9,03Q. - • Intihe %lilted Stgtss 11iatrint cane, bold at qiiviattud, Qhio, the following deolaion has,. beon ' made -in the 'case of. Mortgagees and trustees of the 6tenhenville and ./ndiana Railrood the Treasarer -of Tusoarawas county, who solaccl the rolling stook fa : Waxes, The mortmees fished ibr a periltual hephation %gating the , ta4 gatkerer op the ground thq , - • • The oompany was unable to pay the interest or prinoipai said :bonds, onto roplace cad locomo tive and oars in case the tame should be sold ; that the use and possession of the same woro ab solutely DefieliPitty th the nperatien of the, read by the company; amid the i fe, sale of the ptropetty , ky tho treeautev.wohld be of irrepathblo injury to the holders of said bonds. Jane McLean held= 1. That the over of tar,ation is a sovereign poT litioal, powektind a branch of the power of emi nent &pain. That if the manner of assessing and colleoting taxes pretoribed by;the Legislature be not in conflict with the Constitution, a;id tbe 41 7 core oha ed with thet .duty conform their fore with those ogoeni. 4iso}targY ' Ot nullr dutio4 2. That the lien of the State for taxes is.para mount to all private rights vested under the Co vernment. Individual Sena cannot come in OM petition with the lien of the State for taxes. 3. That the lien of the - State fur tares attaelles to personal property-pen the eeiaure of the setae, ea in oases of. levy by marshalo or shrift, - end when suoh • property . Is piled .for taxes due Abe State, it is in the ogstody or the law 'under to Ma mount lien, which cannot be displaced by the Beni of individuals upon'the same property. ' 4. That tho relation - of the complainants to the Steubenville . and Indiana Railroad. Company ii defined by the terms of the mortgage conveyances to them. - That default in the payment of the interest or principal of the bonds secured •by. the Mortgages did not vost Ruined and its equipment in the complainants as mortgagees, but authorized them to take poteession of the rood and run it as the agents of the oompany t or to sell the road at pub lic sale. That the ownership of the property could only bo changed by a sole of it, and that no Gale having taken-place, the company, and not the complainants, were the owners of the property. Temporary injunctions dissolved and bill dia. missed at the cost of the complainants. The Bank of France, on its July, report, holds in bullion, 2105,501,003. The Bank of England, $37,040,000. The banks in the seaboard cities of the United States, 567,067,000. Toe aggregate is two himidred and fifty millions, the heaviest sum total yieee'the year 1853, befoie the Russian.war, _ and about ono hundred and sixtikeillions more than to November lea, when lhe Rioneh and English banks were brought down to about $35,000,000 each, and the New York banks, (Octo ber 13,) to $5,500,000. The heaviest awn over held in one establishmorit was by the Bank of France in 1852, - $123,000;000. On the last:Fteneh and English reports the ceremonial discounts wore on the increase, showing some improvetnent in trade in both countries. " PIrILADELPIaI.A. STOCK EXellatti OE BILES, _ July 2c, ' ' IMPORTED NY MANLEY, DROWN, & 00 BIOME, AND . RMORANOR 480E890 , NOIT/r6IT COINER THIRD AND OHIOTNOT 6705056. , FIRST BOARD. 4000 Palm Valort CAP 80,if 5 Peso 11 41 400 pity °'e,...,,....07;4 0 do 41 MOO do 97X 4 do 41 300 do 97x 80 do 41 1000 Olty It 6's 97X 12 do ' 41 3000 do 07X 10 Reading R 23X 400 ' do 97X 100 do 2.1,X 4000 Soln Nov 6's '82..61X 60'`do eash.t 3h; 3000 Rimy Nov im 13`3.64 100 do .. cash.23X 1000 do 64 100 do ay; 200001 &Am R6's '83.81 50 do ' 23. x 1000 do 13.81 100 .do 21X 4000 Mor Oa 6 , 8..b5am.83 • l'Beav Read It ..... .534 50 Peon ..... 100 51 American 1n5..:13 4 do 41 6 Mechanics Dk 20X 15 do 41 7 do. ... 6 do - 41 9 Ph il o Da nk . 108!i 2 de 41,E 8 do 1 0SX 1 do - 6 Union-11k Ten n.. 100 . . BETWERR /3DARDEI. 07%18500 Read R 6's 97X . 1 0d Read R 23X 100 pity Ci's 97X 25 Solvay Nav .. • . 8X 800 City R 07X 60 Scbuy Nav pre 16 4000 Read R 6's 'B6 2d 67 50 Reading 1t.... ca5h.9.3,1( 2030 - d 0... 24.87 20' d 0.... 23x 4030 ERm It Vs 21 rnt..45 1 Morrie Can pH' 97 840 0/ID&A-it 6's '64.84 - 5 Mechames 8k......26X 644 do '64 24.84 t ' CLOSING -Bid. Asked.' Phil. (Vs tax 97g do ' B 97x 97X Pannsylv 89X Reading It 2.210 08% de bd 101n0f176 77 I do mt es do Pesos nmt tis '80.,6634 4 6734 - 41 1X do lstm 681n01198X 09X doOdmislnod 67 87X idotrisOant C0n..43 46 do pre? div MINX 97 Sokol N 6182.....01X 6IX LAT' loop city R o's 2000 d 0.... lOSB.-FIItU Bid. Asked. Solt Mr Imp 6e do - smolt 6X 9 do prof 19 16X Wmapn & Elm P. 10% 10% do 7Nlet mt.'B% do 2d rot ... 451 47 I tong bland ....U7 12 Girard . 11,1( Leh noel & 14ay..48 46x ff Penns 11 I3X do We 98x 90 New Creek X X Cotowtooo g 6 6% Lehigh 7,1n0.. X 11( IST. ' 1000 Reading It ?88....87 1000 Wine& Elm 7,E.88X Reading c105e5....2:3% 2a% PitILADZLVIIIA ALUIKETS, July - 28,—The foreign news, although rather unfavorable for Breadstuffg, has bad no . effect on our market. The receipts and saleauf Flour continua ; 209 bbli Bran= dywine at $5 #O, and 1,000 bbls suparflue for Sep tember delivery at $4 50; 1,000 bbls hob ground from new Wheat at ; 7 . 00 bbls Western extra at $4.75, and 200 bbls condemned at $3.040.75 in lots to the home trade; $4 25 for old stook super fine ; $4 50a4.75 for fresh ground from new Wheat; $4.75a5.50 for extra and extra family; and $5 625 a# for fancy lots. There is but little inquiry for Rye Flour, with mall sales at $3.311. Corn Meal is nitrite at $3.50 per bbl. Wheat-LSuppllea come forward slowly, and prima lola are in demand for milling. Pales of fair and goad new l'ennsylvania and Southern red at $1.05a1.10 per bus ;1.,g00 bus white at $1.20; t!oq hue fair old kentuoky white sold at $l.lB, and . 590 ;bus inferior at $l.lO some pdar old red sold at 660a51. 600 bus Rye brought TOe. porn is source and wanted ; 1,000 bus yeller,. sold on Saturday at 900 afloat, at which figure it is in demand today. bats are in fair request; about 3,000 Lunde old Penna. sold at 4202i0; 1,080 bus new Delaware at 40e. Bark continues scarce Lind in depend, with farthei sales of 12 hhds No. 1 Qinireitron . nt $32 per. ton. Tanner's Bark is dull. Provisions of ail kinds are held very firmly. Moss Pork is held at $17.75a518 per bbl. Lard is hold at 12c per lb. for bbls and tierces, and 130 for kegs. 50 casks of Hann, in salt and pickle; sold at Bic, each and 00 days. Whiskey is held firmly ; Sales of bbla at 25a200, the latter for . Ohio . ; hbdt pt 2410513, and drudge at 240. . _
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers