:;,,:'.. ..,.., , 6 6 , , - .: : •;;;,, 1 1 6 -' . 4 . ‘.-y Trol , f.s eg i :,, , ,,, 2 ,cf-.; .i 5,1- 1 - 4, 4 (A.l " . .f".: : 7 :'-' _ • qBErTEMBEIY4 I ,-.1 1 3 58 .. - Pepe-IHen' arid Hooke ;Ark. Perleootion Datigieurr..l4llD*ool9oPki.4r; P,foinieote in jilinokinod.VicAgrAw,k s ,ki... - 41 1 , , g1 1 .9 1 7. , 9 °W " ,PoStioe ,PM:t 1 )! ) 4 9 1 .1g7t' N n grWP" t ; 1100rifig:tqcfersol, Morn tn. preode - ; ,Denere):Herre. kotnevrif Weekly Reeler of -Rie,lkiledelpkiaMarketa.-"Sirrinraledfr::-Ttielm ".iwevernenc Done -in Bitting French ; Inventiocs , Nrinkirtgtictioe; _ Sealing ,i;oterialifee 4hi.,.0150e --- gride ;-' The r:Lit los' b Ooityetitien Hew Voir in - New York. Poetry—The Prairie Vire"; ; 4 Piirioeas,' rke Hero of :Lake Eric. 84,Swedieklenr - Sentenced to Dently, sa ! iV'Para?nect -04 the' , „ • • ,:,. Voi NOWIr. „,•, , , ". We irk informed- that the.New.Xork Bite Pe'' .paitming have ,beiorne- heartily ashamed of tike, iti,,WhichlhuY;treated the-P,#lla siaani,englea obuiparty, that ,oity f or ea s7s 4bree.• - ;fkime of the hreer':,forhAie un ;-• are in thiseitii for thiqUiposeoi 3win:Olf abent a more and 'friendly feeling'bettreem : t hemsolves Thii",:,,ii„Ue' it should , ' Thereisnooooaelonfor aal,hitter, feeling between the, firemen of the, oriieigns. White we cannot' ti bat' Help' adrift/Oho:Spirit-et the :Philadelphia -tioystmder ttietOireismatanees,, yet it is nobler to d-t extenhe hand of friendship, thin, to bear ma; :1100.-•• The f ew Yorkers,..wo are, told, bay e itliri eontemplatton - to invite the Philadelphia, aritll . 'altdir!eteartiniabhiee; trtvhdt New York; when the departintint of tbat:city,will turn out to re• st solve them,: -If snob:4 the osad,weltopethe int!: 1,, -tition wilt be aosepted, as we feel confident that the ' betterludiMent of our - neighbors has pre, „Wailed; end' they Lot' no aggrieved • for what bas ponied., - Lot' na foolish quarrel!' ev'et ;Taal. fhe - good feeling which should always.,eziat hi; Breen brother Aremeri,,• . - • _ _ . • ” The eleotifoisii; De &sixty, his- sent another re, ,and ,mysterious -despatch - from Tri,nity• : in regard -,to , the 'ocean - cable, - I(e`givee Amrance to - the Agent -of the Assoeiated .Proar.that there are bnly temporary difficulties of an aar.o. •mticar. akrorta in, the, way of 'the working of, the , 'cable. Beyond this, he , says, he eiselatiel to make • .auy statement. :Thiele all right, if the -agent of the new. York Asoorriated Freon to to control the electrical movements, of the cable bat it 'lli a di - sect Ineutt - to the common sense of the commercial men of the country, if they are expected to ootni 'ter:tepee and support' nob - a , gi'ganti'c - monopoly. ironld be well:enough foillirietrlcian De flinty , his next deefoitolt:frefiaTrinity Bay to infoim • newhitlter,lhe ( Oosan..ealile. haa'been laid for the benefit of -asleMindiv,iduais or the whole public. ; A titv : rap/ilemitoh'from New York informs uithat about $5,000 hap" been Subscribed for pro curing testimonials to Cyrue W. Plaid, Captain • Hudscntbiessrs. Bverett,Woodhouse; and others; 'enirge - d it:flaying the Atlantic Cable, This is all '.' Proper ie (9inil 'others" inaludes'the'hardy Arne ' :lean and British; bra. . We have some: later:aims ; from, the Mormah -,• - country. It is of a crude and Unsatisfactory 'ohs ; the city of Balt Lake' the Govepment the =Mtlialons appear:JOl3O getting along very harnienionely together. ,The Indians -; and the Mormons - outside of-the pity have had se , - veralreenfilets, l in whioh - an entire Mormon fateily had alarsitCred.; Dr.. Forney ,' the lodine agont, was out among the tribes' making treaties, 'in which he is reported-to have been ancoesaful. wpm. advioes 'iota Arizona show s 'owlets state of things - in that Territory. lediatt,depredatione were daily hemming more frequent. Col. 'Sayler speaks favorably of the resources of the Territory, but deems the annexation of Sonora as of the at- - in - oat Apportatioe , to:their development. The igentipt thiCalifondaOyerlind, -Company warei,West, of_ the Rio . Grande In ,theaarly 'part -the lest-month, establishing mail etatiotui.- ` Mr. Edward A4toker; tl se - engineer who, home years ago, rein 'a train of Oars throirgli the draw, bridge ever Norwalk river, leer Norwalk, Venn which_ resulted in snots terrible loss of, life,com mitted suloide,•at a boarding-house. in:New York, yesterday. Ho lehres a wife and two children. living nOar Troy. New York:' : - -The American Board of Foreign Missions, which '-has baen in session during the past few. days at Detroit, Michigan,, adjourned yesterday until neat year. - • - '---Lampten_ D. Duman free-soil Democrat, has , "been'electedidayor - of*eavenw, R um, by two hundred majority. lie was oppase y RepUblioan and American candidates. . • ;The steamship Canada, outward bound, touched at Halifax yesterday. • - •' • . "The "Douglas Democrats of the Third oangraa eionil district of - Illinois have nominated George W. Armstrong far Oongress„ ' ' - A Arm'extonsively engaged in New York in the sugar and coffee trade are reported to have failed for k 390,000, .The deaths by yellow fever in New Orleans are daily decreasing., .. The number ,of deaths on Thursday wee 64. ' .. , ;MOW. , galley & Company,• of this city have tendered ssoolowards the fund. for, the relief-el Match in New Orleans. . . Important Railroad Meeting. A meeting of the . presidents of _tha--fo2r leading railroad linen= 12:-.--the _ennsylvattia • Oentral,_Balti and Ohio, New York Oen - trial; and New York and Erie, has been in ses-, sign at tho,Girard House for tb.e last•two, days. The object" of . the meeting was to • effect an fiireement,`uPoi sonie, uniform and fair system applicable ,to passen gers and freight, and te 'eni to those unworthy differencer 'Tibial' have been so fruitful of complaint and of disaster. Atalate hour, last night, or rather early hour this morning, the respective presidents were still in session, having effected no posi tive niideratanding beyond the restoration of the kindest feeling, and the certainty of future co;cperation, on. points..of, practical irePort= tinge to all parties. The New :York and Erie road, which has Otis far been the obstacle to a fayoriit4d*ifF of rates, inabifented the best ditMOsition.,_NOthint 'Was - done to eqntilize , the fares of raliroad travelling. At psst 12 o'clock the presidents were still in session. - Who Projected" the Ocean Telegraph? There have already, been somewhere about a, Score of claimant, or the ; honor ;of having :iniented--tbat 18_, suggested—the Ocean Tele - graph.: Xt• 'strikes - ns that 'tho real inventor was lie who 4rat transmitted the electric cur rent-under water. -This was done, in 1749, across, the Schuylkill, •by Dr. FRANKLIN. The -Xonden Times claims the hOnor for a young Englishman, named kat:names Nsw vosr Gallop:ix,' now employed as engineer, by the , Government of Newfoundland. , In 1852, ho laid before that' government plans for connecting the two Continents, and 'was commissioned to make a survey ,of the Now fopndland cottst-for : t h at purpose. The qimes lays, 11, No Was furnished with means for, his survey, and in the autumn of that ye", _undeterred by the approaching win. commenced' his explCration of, the outrliiindred miles of wilderness,west of St.. Johikos th'en untrodby the , "foot of a white Illank: 3 ltiatarted, a ccompanied by six strong reSolOtOzion; - ; ECch of the party carried on his hick `seventy., pounds weight, including chithitigi; surveying instruments,' axes, and twat/ peniutti :of;hiscuit; for the remainder of their-100 theY:ivero dependent on their otie; Worn 'ant with fatigue, hunger; _"and :expend% ) four of these hardy adventurers returned. Only two re mained with Mr. gissonsx till the close of 'mg survey ;of whom - one, survived a few days, and the other has never been able to follow any'oOcupatlon, from. the prtyatione and ex , posuro ho underwent. Mr. Gum ORBS "alone ,:xetUrned.,unicathed. , The country explored lit_ a °Quill:mons series-of swamps, lakes, and 411,intersPersed with woods, barren rocks, andAdlis, over yrhieh the telegraph passes, inCtlew forms the connecting link between the'Atlantlecable and Canada; and the United - • ' -43// '" 404 w 15 4112..0n1y say that, Rio siege lar that_Mr. Gisheeisk , e , pretetistoea. have Hover beforehetiaiibieitk,l t f r notice. . 1137' ; A: . reply to the erne* eitineriting neon the nomination of 0. - 'A, WArain-tit; is th e Tenth Legislative dtetrict,.whiali apßeiu.,l,4 in Tarfri elle a few &le iteceileis been croWdea„ out of this morning's paper. - • • E 127 Notwithstanding . the _publication or a supplement this morning, we still tine our selvifobliged to postpone mucli matter Pre pared terible paper, our columns being nearly nneh,erimded, as ever by adyertioseinente. Iriri,Ve.arolpleased to notice that WIEN Foitilax; t eq., bacbecome one of the editors of:iiilndependent , papet indijished atilelle fonte;ll,a, called .:the,:qintrat,Preii,, the iirat of,Ssiiidoh - ,eiliihlii(giqat talent and indnidti; .4 - - • -";,• Fail:B'3o4Vll2PirssawrSatva DisTatsr.—We '',ool4lelstitia that the? 'Dian* Itt this Aistriot has hiskiiiiiitittillitili'alkingeq;Qtxt. W, llamerslyi 13.44;',4 - hOrtar,iiesivad 'OOO4O of all the' - etas batpsiss at,the rasettag, held .114 t 'NIA' 04 . .,C4iiiiiittown: Bit.: H. IN now .the rity:emuAlge • 0011.4 10 0, 1 )1, 1 0 Harty ip the, dlingot, Our Eons Congressional Districts. Tim New York Courier 4. Enquirer, edited by General Jamas:',Wiersost W,isen, who is op posed to the re-elebtknof thOislottnent cham pion of Democratic - pritic‘ipiteOfel._,Toaii 13, - Thismin, and thO'Weat.Chester, Pa., Varso, Record, edited bi-11041,04i S:kvans, wher: is equally hoitlielethe:, l44 leAloh ,9f 110 P -7.; Joni( Hroinair, no less true in support - of the. that this b jo e ur . established principles of the Constitution, are exceedingly desirous of proving :rbe!„l naliTitz.Paase,ta willing that-wh ile Pry en 41,4•Encam. aral%HiCiesiek elected;tinff too, by the voters et all par- Ires; ;Wei& deli* all brans' pester to defeat the_ present 'Hon. IMT'Bltituttsoitifl Representa tive from the Second Congresaional district of this State; iitid-Otti•yand to elect Col. Groisoz• H. MARTIN, the, Democratic candidate in the same distriet:.'#' IS stated that Cal. MARTIN -is the sc Lecompton candidate" in thiS diatriet; rims is roundly rated, as inconeist eaend T t,wi i; its Nell'-known hostility to the Kansas pciley•of the ,Administration, for, supporting .tht4. gentlema n in preference to Mr. Moan's. Complaint is'alse made, that while we are de sirous tif. rallying foimer political opponents in favor of HAIDIIN and HICKMAN, who stand with us, We. are 'talthe same time anxious to elect, gentlemen who • is alleged to feel in harinedy with the peculiar Kansas policy of Mr. Boonanatt, WO meet all those allegations on the thresh- Old, and state; once for all, that the Demo-, °ratio candidate In the Second Congressional district, COI. MARTIN, Is not "the Lecompton candidate," but that'he Will vote for the ad mission of Kansas, irrespective of Ler Opulatlon, should she come before Con gress, in the event of his election—that ho will adhere to the ,pledges and principles of the Demoeriatic party 'of 1856—and - that he was nomidated bye Convention which unanimous ly reasserted' its devotion to the Cincinnati Plafforin. = Bealde, Col. MARTIN lEi the repre sentative._ of ,the business men of Philadel , phia.• He Is a - merchant; one of those who are so rarely elepted to representative posi tions, and we believe that he will be support ed by'a large 'number of citizens, who have heretofore differed from him in politics, for this very reason. -While we have nothing to do with tho'ser members of the party of Mr. Minims who object to hiin because, after receiving the votes of the - friends of Fizz- MORE and FREMONT in Weber of 1856, in November of the same year he took ground in favor of Mr. FILLMORE, this much is certain, that should Colonel MARTIN be elected the Representative of the district, he will be found no' less true to Pennsylvania, and no less true to Philadelphia, than Mr. Aromas. For years Colonel MARTIN has visited the na tional capital for the purpose of assisting the peculiar. interests ;of our State, and this too at a time when lie:never expected to become a candidate before the people. His , pracfi cal business talent ; his devotion .to Pennsyl vania; his general' acquaintance with mer chants from all% parts of the country, North :and 'South'; his knowledge of public men; eminently entitle LIM to the support of our mercantile classes: Boston never acted more nobly than when she elected her ABBOTT Lawnincs to the NaConal Coun cils; and New York never shone more con spicuous in Congress than while she was repre sented by 0.0. CAmmtlmma. Let not Phila delphia overlook this important interest, now that a good man and an irreproachable mer chant is presented for her 'suffrages. With these views, we unhesitatingly prefer Col. MARTIN RI the present Representative. We trust this explanationwill satisfy the critics of the New York Courier .5- Enquirer, and the West Ches. ter Village .Record, both of whom are so anxious to go to Congress themselves, that .they would rather see the Administration triumph hi its Lecompton policy by the de ' feat of Hamm and Eheiciaeu,,than that these intrepid champions Should be re-elected. In the Third and Fourth Congressional dis tricts' the Federal Administration has suc ceeded-in nominating for re-election two gen. tlemenwho have deliberately violated funda -mentaLDemooratie principles. Tbo Washing ton the issue to be decided in the Northern electTcffirtsewnus tm .,.. the 'AdministratioU shall be sustained, not whether the principles • ; of the Demo cratic party . shall prevail; and in 'fhr therance of this theory, the didminsatration has undertaken the business of nominating can ' lidates . for Congress to be supported 6y the masses of the Democratic party. Now, while wo are quite fling that the President should appoint postmasters and custom-house officers, and diplomatic agents, we 'submit whether it is quite 'ihir that he should appoint, or, what is the same thing, nominate our candi dates for Congress; and yeti-that the -Administration has_boon - doing this thing since it naado -- the policy of Lecompton the test, is quite as clear as that it has been turn ing men out of office for not • supporting its gross betrayal of principle r and pursuing Judge Douses, the- head of the Democratic ergs niz ition in' Illinois, as a traitor to principle because ho will not bow to its mandates. Hence; we are free to declare that when in the Third and Fourth Congressional dis tricts this Adminiatraton comes forward to select candidates for - Congress to be voted for by the Democratic party, such selections or nominations, call them what you please, are not binding upon that party. And we have no hesitation to add, that as,between Mr. LANDT, Lecomptonite, and Mr: In-mum, anti-Lecomptonite, in, the Third Congressional district, and Mr. Pum ups, ..ecomptoriite, and Mr. MILLWARD, anti tecomptonite, our sympathies are unmistaka bly in favor of VERREE and MILLWARD iu this struggle. Mr. PII/LLIPS and Mr. Lawny both add to the enormity of the interference of the Administration in' our primary elec tions and our nominating Conventions, by invoking the aid of political opponents, each as the well-known Native Ameridan leaders, while, at the same time, they are eager to show themselves the especial friends of the adopted citizens!! This is a new rea. son why any nominations made under such auspices cannot be binding upon any true Democrat. We discard them. Thus, then, while we are anxious to see the men who have been true to their pledges re. elected to Congress by the votes of citizens of all parties, we are no lest; anxious to see those who have been false to their pledges retained at home,by the votes of citizens of all parties. Returning now to the First Dongressional district; what is the clear duty of the people of that district/ We answer, that unquestion abliit is to support Dr. GEORGE W. NEBIN GER, the regular Democratic Popular Sove reignty candidate, and we have been surprised that the manifest propriety of this course has not been acted upon. He stands fair with the people. He Is a gentleman of rare intel lect and courage. Ho accepts the living issues of the day like -a man. He shirks no questions and dodges no responsibility, but stands out before the people upon a plain, well-defined, and popular platform. lie is oppesed by Colonel THOMAS B. FLO RENCE, backed by the Navy Yard, the Custom House, the Post Office, the Mint, the Cabinet at Washington, and the President of this Uni ted States; and yet, as if to assist this same Col. Fr.onzacz, we see a Republican candidate in the field, a very excellent gentleman, Mr. RYAN, and an American candidate, Mr. &nom,. The honest course in the First district for the friends of Rvax and Sraoissr,, is manifestly to support NXISIZIOZIt. COI. FLO RENCE relies upon the opposition of anti-Le comptonites to Newness, because Nzensazn, a native-born citizen, as he is, is a member Of the Catholie persuasion, and yet by the flivisions amongst the anti-Lecomptonites in that district they are willing to re elect the preferred favorite of the Ad ministration -at Washington. Let there ,be a generous support of NERINGER. Let Ole "squabbles..hetweon rival aspirants cease, and once for all let us present an exam tile of deyotion to principle which will show that our professions are not mere professions, but realities. , - : Sueb is our plettorm as to the four Con gressional districts in the city of Philadel phia,' and we trust that it is entirely in:- telligible to those who think Tun Puns is waging a battle for individuals and not prin ciples. Man. Picor's • Bonom..—The many - ladies of this oily, as well as of other parts of the country ' will thank us for directing their attention to the advertisement of Mrs. Charles ?loot, apprising them of her willingness to resumisinstrnotion in the Franoh language. The school of Mr. and Mrs. Pioot attolned a celebrity not surpassed by any in this oonntry;and it is but rarely that!itah an op- Portagliy,for the study of /Mob It pointed, THE PRESS.--PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 18511; The Central Railroad—its President, and its Future. - To the Editor of ,The Press :, Eint. I have Just'perused , an elaborate article in your oolumns on the' advantage' to be expected r ronv 's ocptinnousroute ef railroad from this city 'to ChlifsgtVankiritit advantage WePhiladelphians may expect to dative - front this extension •, and 'map, lauding the energies of Mr; S Edgar Thom ;eon— This aide of the story may be all very well, but we Phibkdeltihiart#l*, nothing to expeot from either Mr. J. Edger Thomso- or the continuous route of road of which you speak. Are you aware, Mr. Editor,• that the fare from Chicago to Philadelphia is - Alventv two dollars. whtle the fare from Chicago to New York, through Philadelphia, is only twenty - dollars. thus compel ling our merchants to book to Now York who are always in the habit of stopping at Philadelphia? Don't you think- that _if, Mr., J. Edgar Thomson had the interest of PtillUdelphia it heart, he would atlehat Vat the'fare as low tO, Philadelphia as to Now York, and not coax our trade oft' to the latter oily. Thilaoi - islit is all self with= Mr. Thinrison and - the - railroad company, and not the interest *of Philadelphia they look at, unless they want tome abistanee, either political or poouniary, from our ,merohants. .This statement of foots will, I think, somewhat alter your opinions of the management of this mammoth railroad route. Yours truly, A MABICIST•STIIZET MERCHANT. A single word in reply might suffice, and that word is, that our mot thy correspondent is mistaken in his facts. The fare from Chicago to New York is $2O, and the tare to Philadel- phia is but $l9, instead of $22, as stated in the above letter. These prices were estab lished on the 21st July, 1858, and have not been varied from since that time. Previous to , that time the fare from Chicago to New York had always been $2 more than the price to Philadelphia. The change was made at the time of reduction by the New York lines, which was expected to last only a short time ; but, should it continue, the price will be permanently s2' less to Philadelphia than to Now York. But we are not content to .drop the subject, as treated by "A Merchant," without more than a bare correction of his facts. He says that as we Philadelphians have nothing to expect from either Mr. J. EDGAR THOMSON or- the continuous route of which you speak." So ' far from agreeing with him in that as sumption we take direct issue, both as to Mr. THOMSON and the continuous road to Chica go. First, as to Mr. THOMSON. Our corres pondent says that he and his road are "all self." If he means by that, that while nearly all railroads in the country are so embarrass ed as seriously to affect their credit, and to almost wholly prostrate their energies for the public good, the Pennsylvania road has been so ably managed that her resources aro am ple and her credit equal to - gold, in both Eu rope and America; if that is what ho means, then we have no issue with his position. If he moans that, by Mr. Tuomsox's skill as a financier, he has maintained an untarnished name for the city and State, in which we all take just pride, then we have no issue with him. If he moans that, by Mr. Thomson's skill as an .engineer, ho has so ably and so energetically— yes,.so• "selfishly,' if you will—applied his time and talents as to give us Philadelphians a road across the Alleghanies which is at once a monument, as eternal as the hills, to the power and genius of the man, and a means by which Philadelphia can enter into successful competition with New York ; if that is what he means by " selfishness," theb we have no issue With him. While a "Merchant" has been wisely and "selfishly"—for every wise mer chant is somewhat selfish—pursuing his own business, and is thus enabled to maintain his own credit, and meet his own obligations, Mr THOMSON has bean winning his way to the proud position he occupies by grappling with the rude mountains of Pennsylvania. By the aid of his able corps of engineers, and the well bestowed money of our merchants and men of wealth, he has levelled every barrier, tunnelled our highest summits, bridged our widest rivers, and reduced the Alleghanies to a mole hill, so far as our commerce is concerned. He has pursued this gigantic idea until the merchants of Philadelphia are able to reach, in the short est possible time, and by the shortest possible route, the vast and lucrative trade of which, as we said yesterday, " Chicago holds the key." He has pursued the true interests of Philadelphia until a theatre of commerce is opened to them which has hitherto been 131 " 1 7- , auter_ the control of Now York, and which, in is better to us than a mine of gold. For and steadiness of purpose, the men who had controlled the various sections which go to make up the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne, and Chi cago Railroad, wore wholly unable—even after they wore all combined—to finish the road from 'Plymouth to Chicago, a distance of less than one hundred miles. , . . . Failing in evers_rooomrce, to complete the work . , ,with.tit - bredit and without money, they tart to Mr. Thomson . in the hour of need, and he, by his own personal credit, starts the furnace and the forge, in our own State, em ploys the labor of our people, when no ono else could do it, and the last link in this grand chain of eight hundred miles will soon place Philadelphia in the front rank of cities, in re lation to Western commerce: That vast and fertile country, which has made cities of over one hundred thousand people in less than a quarter of a century, is now opened up to the manufactures of our city and State. Is that of no consequence to Philadelphia Are our merchants less shrewd than those of Now York and Boston? Can we not take hold of the advantages which long and well-directed energies have brought with in our reach? Is it nothing to us that by this railroad we can reach the chief city of the Northwest, as well as the larger cities of St. Louis and Cincinnati, on the more southwestern lines, and thus command the trade of ten States and Territories, which, in less than another decade, will. have more people than now compose our Union? Is it nothing to us that we who, as a city and a county, transcend any other in this nation-- in the extent and variety of our manufactures —aro now able to trade directly with the West, instead of sending our wares to New York, there to be resold to the West at a profit to that city over and above what her merchants pay us? The fact is, Mr. Themes has stood fore most in building our road, and now is finish ing the other end of the consolidated route. If our , merchants will imitate Now Yorkers, they may command the Western trade. Mr. TuomsoN's duty is done. Lot our merchants do theirs. We believe that true selfishness is the high est form of righteousness ; that the man whose selfishness leads him through a life of energy, to bless the world with railroads and tele graphs, merits the love and esteem of his fel low-man. No man can well servo his own in terests without serving others. We believe that railroads are the groat pioneers of Ame rican civilization, and from the bottom of our hearts we thank Mr. Thomson for what he has so nobly done. THE SLAVERY DEBATE.—This discussion was continued last night. It will terminate this evening. No question will be put to the audience, but the discussion will be published to the world in book form, the affirmative and negative views being side by aide. On last evening tho tide of feeling Seemed to veer toward the negative view of the question, the audience being no larger than at first, and, eio far as we can judge, comprising the same persons who have listened to the ar guments from the beginning. Mr. Brown low, in in the affirmative, commenced, through his reader, Gen. Small, hie bronchitis still disqua lifying him from speaking. Ile reiterated Ms se- Benton that, from the earliest Agee, the Bible sanc tioned human servitude ; that down to the reign of Elisabeth, the commna law of England legal iced the institution. It is endorsed here by Judge Story, and protected by the Constitution of the United States. The speaker expressed himself as aware of the fact that facts cannot bo driven into the heads of anti-slavery clergymen. They "Stuck it out With stomachs stout," and perverted the sacred Scriptures to their own purposes. The slave provision wss - put into the Constitution by Washington and Franklin. dots admitting slave States into the Union, were signed by Wash ington and John Adams Waehington and Frank lin refused to abolish the slave trade. Washing. ton, Adams andiFranklin put into the Constitution the principle of three-fifth representation of slave property. by which the South gains thirty repre sentatives. Washington, Madison, Jefferson and Monroe. all slaveholding Presidents, were sleeted by Northern votes. Slavery is &indent. Hundreds of millions of slaves were sold in the marts of Phenicla, Greece, Rome, Britain, and other countries. Slaves by millions were owned in Greece and other coun tries in ancient times. These facts show that slavery found its basis in primitive !meaty— slavery identical with that of American slavery. The voice from the awful summit of Sinai, and voices• from every nation, kindred, and country proclaim Its existence. To the descend ants of Japbet the north was a heritage. Shem was seat above the equator, but the torrid south was given to Ham; who obtained Ida right to it from the race of Cain: "His eons were • all born after the flood and the name " Cali," " Canaan," &o„ cart be traced for hundreds of years. The fate of tag• mas t onielact (10d 1 wall to be brought and sjld., Jlam's wife was 'a negro, and her descendants have been negroes ever ohne. The speaker,oonttnned, by endetkvering to prove the good , reaulteWhigh gloater around the inatitn• tion of perpetual bandage; =lie compared Ameri oan alavery to that endured- by thalows during their captivity, and bettfatihe were predicted and senettonedly the, Seriptures, and , read eatreda from a revortof the Afrioin Aasoolation ofLin= don Of 1880, showing that,'sipoe-fhe abrogation of the trade in 'fileecacAfalea - had, relapsed I to barbarism and cannibalism., - . Mr. Brotinloer - tutu:rued to , the.l3ible, and tramid up those passagee In the Neiv Testament 'Which be considered ae touching upon slavery. ,The isßiti mete ancestors of the abolitionista were the Ones ties, who wereiprohibitory law-men, ,00mpuisatory ohnrob.goers and hypocrite in general, snob' ae- Yankee aboNtlon eta now :are. ‘; AO% enietle to Timothy, Paul 'coideMlle certain new and Villain- , one ,fremsoil and •abolittotr dietrines,as- perni, oious,, and denotwes the two freedom-shriakers, 'llyinisnime 'arid Aleiander, • and deliverit them over to the d—l, ae he would deliver over Mr. Pryne if he were here. • , , 'Mr. Brownlow next endeavored to show that the colored man wee an inferior me, ; after which be 'bestowed a bard rub upon the reporters of the newspapers, wbo, be fetid, were all prepossessed in favor of Mr. Pryne ' and also out out from their re ports all hie points, and all theltatistimi by whieh those points were sustained. Besides this, he eaid there were plenty of free negro,es and fugitive slaves to applaud him, and to hiss Mr; Brownlow. Mr r.ryne, followed, s burst of- applause - greet. ing him as heroes, whioh hated some minutes, fol lowing up his predecessor, and demolishing Ids arguments one by one. There were, he said, two kinds of infidelity, one that singe psalms and robs cradles, and another kind that was fuller theology, and yet steals negroee. - There was no danger of a dissoldtion of the Union.' The present Judges of the Supreme Court would not always retain their present positione, and the day would yet coma when slavery would be legally abolished. As to the wrongs of the slave, the black catalogue of which the sheaker recapitulated. he could not believe that God sanc tioned it without becoming an infidel: It was of no nee in such a carve to bandy to doripture. The entire ethics of the snore Volume were op posed to it. There was no danger of a dittiolation of the Union. The South might menace as much as they pleased, but that she would ever secede we' an idea too absurd for a moment's conside ration. BY MIDNIGHT, MAIL. Letter flremOcettiionaL:, [Correspondence of The Press 1 , WABEIINGTON, September 10, 1858 It is apparent from the inklings of foreign di plomatic gossip, which comes tops-by the last steamer, that the relations existing between Rus sia and the United States are of the most frater nal character. In China, in Jlim upon the Amoor, and to the north of the British possessions upon this continent, evidences seem daily growing more conclusive to the end that the Cm is wil ling, one might say almost anxious, that a com mon volley in regard to great international affairs, should bewailed by us with him 'lt is more than probable that on the Chinese question we have to the full answered expectations in thstoespeot. The truth is that Russia, like America, feels itself in a peculiar position. In Euippe the Powers range themselves in opposition to Russia, and here the came Powers, above board and under the board, intermeddle and delay the' settlement of disputes with our neighboring sister Republics. Gore Ouseley has gone, or is, going, to Central America; and there is no doubt that he, with other British agents, have engendered the diffi culties we have had in New Granada, and with Nicaragua and Costa Rica, and with _reference to the Mosquito coast, and that they also have pre vented their adjustment. It makes our people unite uncomfortable, to say the least of it,, when they perceive that, in defiance of our vaunt ed Monroe doctrine, England assumes a maternal care of all the weaker States upon this continent, moulding them to her designs, and instilling into them a dislike of the United States. If vre played the same game against her, with some of the inde pendent States of India, we would have very soon an outburst of indignation from England for our pains. See, for example, bow bitter-and insulting the allusions are to an attempted building up cf French trade and influence in the East, and near the British possessions. It is hoped that the Ad ministration will sustain a firm and really Ameri can policy on all American questions—that is, matters wherein our interests and rights upon this continent are undeniable. There is snob a thing as being before and be hind the scenes in politics as well as in the thea tres, and it is amusing to hear, as one does every day, of men who somehow or other feel obliged, from the peculiarity of their position, to sustain all the vagaries of the Administration, in public, yet who are free to confess, in private, the unmitigated scorn and contempt they feel for its Kansas policy, its permeation of' Douglas, and its efforts, now being made daily in many sections of the country, to control the political action of the people by Fede ral officials and Federal patronage. Like Matthew Baguet,, in Bleak House, these men ate eternally haunted by the idea that " discipline must be *dne - preserved," and under this delusion their tongues know rtir are fettered, and they Support what they D 6 todit outrae.—.—wwengs. Some of these fine days they " will grow tiered ofate mental tyranny which now enehattadth m, au k do the ranks of the denuders of Proscriptive La compt.wtsm will be awfully thinned out. The American people are, in the main, honest and pa triotic, and they will not long suffer themselves to he dragooned into the support of deeds of injustioe and of tyranny. The extent to whioh the Federal power hat gone in dictating to the people how they shall act in their primary assemblages, partioularly their Congressional Conventions, has aroused a deep feeling of indignation. Oar system of government contemplates that its exeoutive and legislative branobes shall oath be responsible directly to the people, and each be perfectly independent of the other. If the President is to choose our Congress. men, we may as well abolish the House of Rept* seutatives, for if his will is to bo supreme in that chamber, there is no use in subjecting the country to the present expensive process of having over two hundred men to record it. I bear that letter after letter has been writ ten, announcing Mr. Buchanan's desire for the re-nomination and re•eleotion of his Le comptonite favorites. The protracted difficulty of the Congressional conference in the Sixteenth die. trlot in your State has been caused by a letter from Mr. Buchanan, declaring that be desires the re-nomination of - Dr. Ahl, the present member, while the people want somebody else. If the mat ter ended here, it would not be so bad ; but the fact is beginning to bo clearly understood that the whole patronage of the Government, *the $OO,OOO 000 of the people's money embraced in the annual expenditures, is to be used, to a greater or less extent, it; rewarding those who assist in securing a compliance with the wishes of the Administration. Hard workingmen vbo have earned a mere pittance of this sem by their daily labor have been ruthlessly dis charged the moment it was ascertained they would not sustain the Presidential favorites, and others of more pliant wills have been put in their places. If this thing is to go on forever un. checked by the people, one set of men might perpetuate their power. If Congressmen are to hold their seats by virtue of Presidential favor, the people can neither expect independence or regard for their wishes from them. They will become, not the representatives of the people, but the representatives of the President, and the popular control over the doings of the Governi went will be entirely destroyed. - When the Washington Union, instructed by la few Presidential aspirants, started out to crush Judge Douglas in Illinois, it did so believing that It spoke for a united South, and for the organiza tion of the Democratic party in the North. So thought the backers of the Union. Their experl 7 ment has now been tried, and it has failed fear fully. The leading Southern papers are nearly all against the course of the traio2l in its abuse of Douglas. In Georgia, most of the controlling journals are bold in their denunolations of this policy. The Augusta Constitutionalist and Ma con Telegraph, the two leading Demooratio papers of that State, and a majority of the papers of the same polities, take strong ground. And how has it been elsewhere? The whole Northwest, organ ization and all, is with Douglas and against his persecutors, and the man they have attempted to break down is now the cynosure of all eyes ! It is not often that so early and so heavy a har vest greets the labors of the ambitious poli tician. Senator Bigler, who vibrates between Washing ton and Philadelphia, and attends alternately to the poem:Alice blanks and the Lecompton devotees, is not very much enamored of his trip to help our old friend Gillis out of the scrape in the wild cat district. A gentleman from Pittsburgh, who has Just reached here, tells me that there is not the shadow of a chance for the old friend of Morgan. There is a very decided movement against him in Clarion, Venango, Jefferson, and Warren, and in the latter county the Ledger, the organ of the party, is out against him. There is an eager anxiety in Clarion county to give Col. Bigler a good turn, especially since his letter to Stanton in favor of Walker. OCCASIONAL. OR/1180N COTTOIC-liir. Thomas Smith, who re sides in the immediate vicinity of Richmond, Vir ginia, hues small field of cotton whioh is considered a curiosity by all who have seen it. It differs but little in appearance from the ordinary kind, ex cept in color, whiob is as delicately crimson ae a maiden's blush. Not only is the stook of this of a gorgeous hue, but the leaves also, the vividness of color fading, however, as it approaches the margin of the leaf, into a purplish green. This is not the effect of disease, or of any extraneous cir cumstance connected with its culture, but a pecu— liarity in the plant itself, every stook possessing the same rich and healthad glow, and as thrifty as any cotton in the country. STOCKS AND REAL ESTATE, OD Tuesday next, in eluding residences, Chestnut street, Green it., and „Poplar street ; business stand, small dwellings, building lots, to., by order of Orphans' Court, truotees, and exeoutors. See Thomas. Bone' pamphlet °stale:in° and adwertmemente under auc tion howl, THE LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. pr9nt. Trinity Bity:..:Tie Telegraph • • • CablA. TRINITY BAY, Sept. 10.-:—kt.,De Sauty, the eleo tertian of the Atlantic Telegraph station at this place; donnas to make any statement relative to tie Atlantis' Cable for publication, beyond the po sitive' asSuranee to the agent of the - Astoolated Press that there are only temporary dillioultieS of an eleetrioal nature, and no reason whatever for any tumor that the cable had parted, Advice from Arizona and New Merl co—lndian Depredations—The Cali fornia Overland Mail. • • 'Sr. LOUIS, gepteinber 10. - :"Colonel Bayles, the agent Of the . Post Mao Department, arrived here yesterdayfrem Arizona, reports the existence of a very lawless state of things in that country, the pistol and bowie knife being the only law re oonimed. I • - ndian depredations are also very frequent. • • Colonel Saying speaks favorably of the mineral resources of the Territory, but deems the annexa- tion of Sonora of the utmost_ iutportanoe to their successful development: ' - The RI Paso and Fort GUIS, waron-road expedi tion will complete their work in November. The agents of the California Overland Mail Company met early in August, west of the Rio Grande. and were busily engaged in establishing stations and making arrangements to .enter upon service this month. Anew military poet will be established on the San Pedro, in Arizona, to keep the Indians Tin obeok. Fort Buohanan will probably be removed to Banta Cruz valley. Colonel Saytea also furnishes later advfoos from New Mexico. No reports the difficulties with the Navajos Indians es still unsettled. General' Garland had assured them that the murderers of Major Rrooke' servant mud be given up, anti in view of the pending troubles, he bed ordored Colonel Miles from Fort - Ftllmore to Fort Detranoe. Mnjor Backus' command of recruits crossed the Welnut creek, en route for I:ortillnion, on the 27th ultimo. Judge Bonne. of Philadelphia, recently appoint ed judge for New Mexico, left Independence for Banta Fe on the sth inst. Army Movements—Later from Salt Br.. Louts, September 10 —Despatches from Leavenworth. dated the 7th instant, received per •United States Express to Booneville, states that orders bad been received for two coin paniee of the First Cavalry from'Colonel Sum• per's command. • The Salt Lake mail had arrived, having been twenty-one days on the Tonto. The Mormons were orderly, and the Government officials attenelinglo theirAuties.- As soon as the Associate Judges arrive, the trials for treason will be commenoed. No arrests have yet been made. The Indians are very troublesome about the city, and have already killed several Mormons. One family was massacred while moving to the south. Dr. Forney, the Indian agent, was out among the tribe'', making treaties, and has thus far been SucoesEful. The engineers are out locating the four posts on the western division of the mall route. From Washington. Wesnismrrost, September 10.—Captain Harwood has been ordered to duty as Inspector of ordnance. vice Captain Adams, ordered to the Sibine. A board of officers has been ordered to convene at an early day at Washington Arsenal, to ascertain, by trial, the best patent primer for small arms. The board consists of Captain Goma, and Brevet Major Laidley. of the Ordnance Corps; Captain Pickett, and Lieutenant Mite, of the Infantry, and Lieutenant Maury, of the Mounted Rifles. The Paraguay Expedition. WASHINGTON, Sept. 10 —With a view to render the Paraguay expedition equal to any emergency, a proposition to send out a strong force from the army launder advisement. Every possible precau tion will be tatten'to guard against a failure of the objeote sought to be acoompliehed• The American Board of Foreign Mis DETROIT, Sept. 10.—Stirring addresses were de. livered lad evening at the two churches In which the Lord's Supper was administered. The busifiess of the meeting having been com pleted, a farewell meeting was held at 8 o'oiook this morning• when several prayers were offered The Rev. W W Thompson, D. D soon to re• turn to Syria, and Rev. Mr Grout, from South Africa, made effecting addressee. Dr. Anderson. in behalf of the Board of Commis. ',loners. thanked the citizens of Detroit for their hospitalities. . - Dr. DOBeld, in responding, thanked the Board for mooting bore. The hymn "Blest be the tie that binds" was sang by the audience. Dr. Bacon pronounced an affecting benediotion, and theßoard than adjourned till next year. Municipal Election at Leavenworth, Kansas LEAVENWOIRTIT, K. T., Sept. 7.—A municipal emotion was held bore yesterday. Great excite ment prevailed, but no serious disturbances Ge mara& Latapton B. Duman, Free 801 l Democrat, woe elected May,pr by two hundredmaprity. Ly man Scott, Republican and Know Nothing, and Mama Fisher, Republican bolter, were opposing candidates. Illinois Politics. BLoomottoros, 111., Sep. 10.—The two wings of the Demooratio party in the Third Congrewionei diWriot held separate conventions. The Domeier win. nominated ari urn W__Awitairortg for Con noni nifticW to the voters of the dirtriot. Aid from Philadelphia Tendered to New Orleans in its Misfortunes. NEW Onmiettts, Sept. 10.—The Howard Aureola. Von of this oity have received Iron Messrs. Bailey tk CO , of Philadelphia, an offer of live hundred dollars towards the fund for the relief of the sick, during the present contagion. They have tendered their thanks to these gentlemen for their kind offer, but the fund not yet being depleted, they will reserve the sum until it is needed. The Telegraph Testimonials. NEW Yonx, September 10 —About five thou sand dollars have been subscribed by sixty firma to the fund for proanring testimonials to Cyrus W. Field. Captain Hudson. Meagre. Everett, Wood house, and others engaged In laying the cable. The committee expect to receive further largo con tributions. Suspension in New York. Nam , YORK, Sept. 10 —A firm extensively en gaged k the wear and aline trade failed today. The liabilities are $300,000, but the assets will be large. The Of .of the Galway Steamer Propeller. BOSTON, Sept IO.—A complimentary supper wad given last evening, at the Parker Douse. to the officers of the Galway steamer Propeller. Mr. Patrick Donahue presided, and epeeches were made by that gentleman, Captain Thatcher. Mr. John O. Orowley, Mr Thomas O'Neil, Mr. 13. S. Treanor, and others. It was a very pleasant Man sion. The Steamer Canada Ontward Bound . . HALIFAX, Sopt. 10.—The R M. steamship Oa nadq, from Boston fer Liverpool, arrived here at 10.30 o'olook last night, and sailed again at one o'olook this morning. Yellow Fever at New Orleans. NEW ORLEANS, Sept.lo —The deaths from yel• low fever, during yesterday, numbered eixty-four Markets by Telegraph. Di Lantos!, kept. 70.—Blour dull; Howard street $6 60: City $6.60g6 62. Wheat dull and unchanged Oo•n lower ; white 79080 o-ntg ; yellow 90092 cents. Whiskey firm at 260.7 cents. Provisions dull atm un changed. Prtoilful, Sept 10.—Pales of 700 bales Cotton to-day, at 120 1 214 for middlings. The sales of the week have been 8 100 bales and the recelpte 8,160 bales. The stock in port in It,. 00 bales Sterling exchange and freights are unchanged. 01110100. Sept. le.—Flour Is very doll. Wheat Is also dull, at %decline of 20. C..rn steadr, at 66X. Oats dull. Shipments to Buffalo-4 000 bb gone. 2,u60 bus of wheat. and 100100 bus of corn Shipmente to Oswe go—No flour or wheat, 19,010 bus corn. Receipts -1,400 b`le tour, 87.000 bus wheat 40.000 bee corn. 1.4 Oftmelbel. Sept. 10 —Cotton—Sales to day 1.000 bales at an advance of Xe; middling quoting at 12m 12xv. Salon of the week, 9,160 bales. Receipts, 14,000 bales, against 8 840 last year. Stock In po, t, 41,000 bales, against 11 000 last year. It our quiet atilt for nuperfine. White cora is quoted at 65e., and yellow at kfOc. Coffee closed firm; sales of the week 6.000 bags; stock In port 80,800 bags, against 120,000 begs last year. Sterling Exchange to quoted at 8X per cent. pre mium. Matters and Things in New York. Prom the New York papers of last evenlogl Last night, between A and 10 o'olook, the sound of the drum and fife in Stapleton, Staten Inland, lrought together a considerable number of persons tt ascertain the cause. Some supposed the troops, under General, Sandford, had arrived from the &Ay, while others thought there was more trouble al (ho Northern village of Tompkinsville. The wise was caused by some unruly persons who had three effigies, which, after parading through the eticets, they brought to the park at Stapleton, and there burned on a pile of wood. The names latolled on the effigies wore Dr. Thompson, the health offioer, and Mr. Raymond, late member of the Assembly, and tho editor of the Staten Island Chronicle. Tie Daily News says " Some of our country contemporaries have been sadly and wickedly hermit by a telegraph operator. who has bad the bad taste to send a massage that Mr. Smith, for merly proprietor of the Sea View House, had con foaled. on his death bed, thatbe murdered Moses, the lar-keeper, for whose death Donnelly was exe cuted. We deem it our duty to say that the whole story is a base fabrication, as stupid as malicious Mr. Etnith is alive and well, and at his place of business in this city." &HIGH OF THE &WINNER WHO HUN Ills TRAIN OF CARS THROUGH TIM New Haves .RAILROAD DRAlvonwo E.—Edward Tucker, the engineer who, some years ago, as will be remembered, run a train of oats belonging to the New Haven Railroad Cout patio through the drawbridge over Norwalk river, at Norwalk, Connecticut, which resulted so die. astrously to human life, committed suicide on Thursday afternoon, or evening, at the house of Mrs. Bodine, 329 Tenth avenue, by opening the veins done of his arms with a razor. Tucker bay* ing boarded with Mrs. Bodine, some two years ago, returned to her house about.l o'clock Thursday af ternoon, and seeking an interview with his former landlady, said belted lust retorned from Beaton, had been up all night, and was tired and sleepy. He asked for a room in which he could go to sleep, ;which was granted. At 8 o'clock in the eveqing, a servant girl went to call him to tea, but after rapping severnl times at his door, and receiving no answer, she returned below and reported that Mr. Tucker was asleep. Two hours later, Henry Wel ters,'a boarder, who occupied the room Tucker was in, went up stairs to retire, and then found Mr. Tucker dead on the bed, with a deep out inside the elbow, he having severed the veins with"a razor which lay beside him. The blood had run through the bed and formed a large pool on the floor. The clause of the suicide was cot stated. Mr. Tucker has loft a wife and two children living 191111' Toy, New THE CITY. AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING MRS. D. P. Bow Ens, WALSos•STRRST TERATBII.-- 1 1,Loniss db Asmodius WRILITLIT & CLARKS'S A ROR-RTREET "Two Loves and $ Life ,, —"Sketchea in India." waymeil NATIONAL TlDlATal.—,•rdazepps.',—,gliook: woi/d.T atatoapPe" OiIAA ,Hortsc—ldthloplan lintertain menta,Ao. bONosar flara..—Banderson , e Panoraina of the 'Wa lden War. NATIONAL HALL.—Panorama of the Bible. . THONIRUIT'S VA RIETTEI. Mieeellaneous Concerti Nightly. , CONVENTION OE RAILROAD MEN.—A Cow. vention of railroad officers, to make some arrange merits to reconcile the troubles between the New York Central Railroad 'en - d 'the MAW York' and Erie Railroad, met at.the Girard House on Thurs day afternoon, and continued in session Friday morning. ,The representatives present wore: Ereetus Corning, Esq., President of the - NewTork Central; Mr. Moran, New York and E•le ; Mr. Brooks, Baltimore and Ohio; Messrs Thomson and Soott,Ponnaylvaoia ; Mr. Barlow. Ohio and Miasiseittpi ;Wenn'. Newton, Vibbum, limn, end Bruner& of the New York Central; Mr. Houston, of the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne. and Chiang° ; and Mr. Sloan. of the Hudson River Railroad. The Hon. Eratt s Corning presided. A number of gentlemen, not connected with the Convention, were also 'present. Incidentally; . among them Wm. H. Clement. Esq., trice Preet dent and Superintendent of the Ohio and Minis- sippi Railroad ; P. W. Strader, General Tieltat Agent ; Thomas Lough. an executive 'Hoer of the Same road, anti D. S. Gray, Esq., an officer of the Central Ohio Railroad. The Convention continued in session until' late boor the first night, but most of the time was spent in the discussion of preliminaries. • It will be remembered that the Railroad Con ventkin which met at the St Nicholas Hotel, New York, in July last, determined on a male of prices for the transportation of freight, and on a uniform rate of larrie,,..whielt .received the sonotton of, all -the commenter intereated except the New York and Erie. - . Since then the New York Central and the New York end Erie Railroad Comnaniel have been at War, and to reoonaile these differences Was the object if the Corti/onto - in. • Yesterday morning the meeting went, article by article, over the arrangement of last July, and all wore agreed upon, with mine exoeptions, the preventatives of the Now York and Erie joining in the arrangement. , The points which could not be readily adjusted were the rules Which fixed the rates for all rail, and rail and water carriage. It was finally agreed at the session yesterday to have two distinct rates, and the freight agents of the various roads were consulted as to the proper , rates to he fixed upon. ' - At elate hour last evening the Presidents were still in session, and, though a definite conclusion had Pot been' arrived at, matters were progressing smoothly. and there was a fair prospect for a sails featory adjustment and a return to, fair prices, thus putting on end to the present disastrous rail road competition. The thanks of' the financial community are due to the Western Railroads, for their fixed determi nation to have the matter settled, as well as to the Pennsylvania Road for its kind interferenpe for this final and benefioial adjustment. A. MYSTERIOUS OCCIIRRENOE.—A some what singular affair, or rather transaction, has come to our notice—an affair which may, If tho roughly sifted, bring to light a startling detail of Grime. In November, 1855, a married woman, who liad come hither from one of the Southern States, died suddenly at a house in Green street near Twelfth, the house then being occupied by a member of the legal profession and a woman of doubtful reputation. All the preparations inci dent to such an ocourrence were gone through with, but with such extraordinary haste and pre cipitancy es to cause a vague auspiolon in the mind of the undertaker that death might have been brought about by violence. The occupant of the house insisted that the interment should take place Immediately, and aeonnlingly.the on dertaker having been shown the alleged physician's certificate as to the apparmit cane of death, be complied with their demands—more, particularly as they stated that " in Tides interment invariably took plink' immediately after death, without the delay which the Northern people have estab lished." And yet, when the burial did take Mace at a cemetery in the upper part of the city, but four persons beside the undertaker were pre sent. The suspicions entertained by the under taker soon became known to, and were freely dis cussed by, others; and, assuming a definite cha racter, the body was exhumed, and a post-mortem examination held. The stomach• was taken by diameter's, for the purpose of analysing its con• tents, to detect, if possible, the presence of ar senic. or - snob poisons as may have been adminis tered to the unfortunate victim. The result. how ever, of the enalysatlon of the stomach if any were made, bee never yet been made known. The deceased was worth, in her own right, a large amount of property. A little while after her demise certain parties proceeded to her former residence and presented a will, which they stated had been made by her, and in whisk nearly all, if not the whole, of her property had been left to them. The will was placed in the hand, of the proper legal authorities• who proceeded at once to teat its authenticity. The will was proved in open court to be a forgery throughout, and it was also established that no physician's certitloate was shown to the undertaker. but a paper, written and signed by the occupant of the house, was substi tuted in its plane. Three years have now elapsed, and yet the mystery is unsolved, and perhaps but for this para graph would have sunk Into oblivion without com ment. Will not some exertion be made to bring out the truth, and if there has been a crime committed, to arrest the guilty parties, and thus satisfy the outraged law ? We hope so. Hstorooto Ire TROUBLE.---_-The backmen have been getting themselves into trouble for their con tempt of law and ordinance in ne(oe,pptrave, their numberexleeolsr-ITTkre placed prominently upon the inside. The cabbies have the !sloes hid away under the cushions, or in some other place where they cannot be men, in contempt of the or dinance which requires that they shall be promi nently placed The numbers are also treated about as cavalierly, for tliey are bidden away under secret slides, or etuok away in out-of-the way spots where it would require a sharp search and a pair of good specs to hod them The law concerning numbers is very explicit. It is as fol lows: "Every such hackney carriage shall have the registered number thereof marked upon the out side, and on the centre of the panel of each door of such vehicle, with white, gilded, or plated figures, (in the Arabic character,) of not lees than one and a hslf inch in size, on a dark ground, or with a dark figure of the same kind and size upon a lista ground " "And if any owner or driver of any hackney carriage shall nee or drive any such carriage, or permit the same to housed or driven, without complying with the provisions set forth in this section, he or they stall forfeit and pay the sum of five dollars for each end every such offence." About a dozen were arrested up to yesterday. They were all held to bail to keep the peace, and a summons was issued for the recovery of the pen alty. One of the defendants, named John Duffy, had two cabs with the same number, thus avoiding the payment of the license money for one. The carriages belong on the stands in Fifth street, be low Chestnut, Broad and Market, and Ninth and Walnut. AN ATTEMPTED tr SELL."—A singularly di lapidated ouatomer, evidently of the worst of the wharf-rat species, by some oversight, yesterday wandered out of his usual bent, and being rather overburdened with the load of villainous whiskey he had all day been tugging along, was benighted before he could reach his retreat. In this dilem ma, and scorning to throw himself upon the hos pitality of his fellows, so grudgingly, if ever, be stowed, he pitched his bed for the night on one of the market.house stalls, where sleep soon sealed in forgetfulness his temporary sorrows. He was soon aroused, however, from his rereshing snooze by the rough hand of an officer, and marched to the calaboose, the alleged reason for this cruel sot being that the man had placed himself upon a butcher's stall, with the intention of passing him self off for "fresh," whereas he was decidedly "stale" and unmarketable. We heard some whisper that the article would be "confiscated," or its owner fined for an attempted violation of the market laws. Thirty days' curative influence of the work-hone might restore it to something like wholesome condition, but we think it rather doubtful. A Roma CUSTOMER.-- - -We saw rather an ugly customer yesterday, whose care called for the o..goisanee of the police. He bad secreted just enough of the "red-eye" to make him feel bola. tennis, and like indulging the largest freedom which Me decidedly rich feeling seemed to prompt The police did not feel exactly like tolerating hbu in his wild freaks, and undertook a remonstrance, which seemed only to add to his excitement. Gen tle means failing, he was taken in charge, but he did not teem disposed to yield obedience to the municipal authority without a struggle, and there fore pitched Into the officer most furiously. Some minutes elapsed, during wbioh time, M the lan• gaage of the street, " things flew" before the belli gerent customer was taken down. It was, how ever, finally accomplished, after which he was tumbled on a dray and carried to the station helve, while the victorious " star," gracefully spared upon his batik, calmly and modestly bore the blushing honors heaped upon him by a juvenile and somewhat ragged Constituency. CITY WATER RENTS.—There are some five thousand houses in the oity from which no water rent has yet been received for the current year, and unless payment is speedily made the Commis sioner will be compelled to out off their supplies. There are also a large number of houses where the water is used without paying anything to the city. The re4son of this is that, through some overnight they have not been messed. One case was mentioned to ue yesterday of a running foun- tain In Chestnut street which had paid nothing for some time, and which is now assessed at tn. The plumber who put up the fountain was fined $25 for doing en without a permit from the Water De partment—the ordinance attaching a penalty to any change of pipe, hydrants, ,kc., or the con etruotion of new ones, without such permiation. The receipts of water rents for the last two weeks have averaged about $2 000 rer tray, and of the assessment there are yet some $30.000 due. DARING BURGLART.—At a late hour on Thursday night, the dwelling of Mr. Matthew L. Miller, Igo. 103 t Spruce Street, was entered by tearing a bar nut of the grating in the rear. The burglars got into the basement and carried up gala a lot of provisions, which they coolly devoured in the dining room, while the family were asleep up stairs. The rascals finally decamped, carrying off a few artioles, among which was the key of Mr. Miller's office in Third street. PENNSYLVANIA HOSPITAL.—Peter O'Neil, aged twenty-three years, Wag taken is the hospi tal, yesterday afternoon, suffering from a etab in the right side, ihflicted with a knife, by a man named Thomas Gladden. There was some slight difficulty between them, which led to a quarrel in which the wound was inflicted. It occurred on Thursday night, at No. 23 South street. The in juries aro not of a very serious ohatueter. ()mums WAGNER, aged fifteen years, was admitted on the evening of the 9th into St Joseph's Hospital with severe injuries, produced by one of the passenger one ' on the Tenth and Eleven streets line, passing over his foot and arm. The acoident was caused by an attempt to get on the driver's platform when the oars were moving at full speed. Rom Ino.—A train on the North Pennsyl vania Railroad ran into a bone and cart, yesterday Morning, at Chatham street, smashing the latter to plates. The animal was not injured. The dri ver was not at the horse's head et the time. ON'BRBOARD.—Yesterday afternoon a horse and wagon were knocked overboard by another horse and vehiele, at Walnut-street wharf. They were toned by the bystanders, FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. The Money Market. -PaiLADELIIIII, September 10,1868 _ . , There 111111111rooderale , arnount of business yostereey In the eta ek market, n a nd prices were well eupp , rted. Investment seitnities are lino, and the fancies generally ahoy "a slight luteroyemenk The sucessor of Mr. Qeo Newbold, as President of the Batik of America, will ibe Mt. James Punnet, the present eaahler. The La Grosse aod 'Milwaukee Itailroad Company glie notice that ere:ommittee has been appointed by the. Board of. Directors, duly authorized to compromise and settle the floating debt of the company, by exchanging there - or third mortgage bends, covering the entire.line of road, d.pots, ke ,sulpect - to prior Ilene. The - ere-, ditors are reworded to present their olefin:4oh° office of the company, No. 21 William street, Newterk, In the denting debt Sill be ineduded the coupon on the, land g ante due in August,end the'one falling due next February. The earnings of the road have been pledged to Mr. Chamberlidn,the contractor, for the MO neces sary to build water 'nations, turn tables, and engine houses ; and it ie not probable that any money from earning' will remain for the land grant., before August, 18E9.,-The rolling stock of the roadie suffi cient to work the whole line, which will be formally opened October 1 t., Earnings or North Pensylvania Railroad : To Atigtot,-1858.... In August, 107.... 745 77 From December 1;1857, to august 81, 1858, .$llO 547 80 165.804 69 Same time hat year Increase ' '41,742 61 The following is the amount of Coal transported on the Philadelphia and Reading Itailtoaddaring the week ending Thursday, Sept. 9, 1854 : Tons. Owt 8 850 13 • • - 2 672 16 16.168 11' 1.191 19 8.743 09 Prom Port Carbon..... g , Pottsville " Scbuyikill Haven. Auburn Port Clinton Total for week. Previously able year • 85.210 CO • 1 072.60 02 Total To same time last year.. . . , The following is the amount of Coal t ransported on the Schuylkill Navigation for the week ending Thurs day, Sept. 9, 11353 : . Prom Port Carbon..:: . 1 ' Potty"(lle 11 kobaylkill Haven 1, Port Clinton.... Total for week " Preciously this year To same time feat year. The JhOuirer• of yesterday rya "We notice that the second ins alment of thi stock - of the Union Bent is being paid in with great promptneee. and from pre sent illd , Clitiolll that institution will soon be put into opention nn'er very favorable auspices. We learn that the property on the northeast corner of Third and Arch etreete has been secured for the site. - This is a most excellent selection. and each we think, will prove highly advanto gem's to the business of the bank kinglet. sound 'Vote of policy, we understand. has been determined upon—the selection of James Dunlap. 20t1:, as its president. Mr. DI, for' many years past, has . odiciated as director In one of the best of one - city banks (the Mechanical, and during that time familiar ised himself with the entire workings of banks. He it a gentleman of integrity,"of /rest moral - worth, and eminently quailed for the position designated." • The poet of president was, b r common consent of the stockholders. awarded to John M. Pomeroy, Bag wbo represents, Through ,bie Mende. a large portion of the capital stock; but as his mercantile bnainesa requires all hie time and attention, he has declined an election. He will still be connected prominently with the insti tution. PHILADELPHIA STOCK EXolliNell SALES, Sept. 10,-186S. - - INTORTID BY NAILIT, MOWN, & 00., IAII-10IR • STOOX, AND IXOBANON BEORIAB, NORTHWEST 001111 TICIRD AltD OILESTRUT 0111118. lIItST BOARD 5 Mine Hill B 601( 1 do ' BOX 10 Norristown 1t....65X 200 Catswises B o,lg Readiog 8 -243 i 1 - do 24X do . b 6 ' 243 i - 25 do 24h Beaver Meadow b 5 65 1 di.' to 55, 14 do do' - 65 20 do' do 55 10 do - ' do 55 10 do' 'do b5.:.66k 24 Norristown R.... 5 5% 10 do ' 2 Germantown Gas 44n 5 Penn ' 483 E 10 do • 43% 10 do 41% 0 Plana Bank 314,4 10 LOttloville Bk b 5.104 20 llotrleburg B 05% 3 do ' ....55% 40 Girasd Bk 12 2 Cam & Am 102 16 Penn% WS 89 12 53 'do 89 27 do 89 13 07 do 89 300 City al 98 900 do 9.9‘ 100 do 98 300 do 98 100 do 98 1( 0 do • - 98 100 do 98 me do P R R....931i 2000 N Penn it Ca oak 60 1000 Del It tog Co ....82)( 2000 Bch Nay Imp 6e..69X t1:160 do do 55.601( 1000 do do 85.89 x 1000 do do —891( 3000 do do 011.70 2000 do do 05.70 600 do do ...691( 2100 Lehigh Nay 84'85.98X 000 do do . .98% 100 Penn It 2d nit Ie 9144 2001 Cam & Am oe, 99 'O% 3000 do do '83.80% 10 Mine Rill 11 130% BOARDS. 600 Reading .11 66'88..71 BETWER 2000 Clam & Am Gs 'B9 RON 2500 Reading it 64 '86.71 13ZOOND 1000 City 034 new Gas. 98N 4000 Alin Val It 7e...60 600 Sok Nay Im Os.. .70 8300 do do Gs 82 21 85 2000 do do d 0.... 06 400 do do do b 6.85 , 000 Wit & lil 2m 10..60 50 Beading B 25wa...24X 50 do 243 50 do 2434 50 5 Prank & South 11.. M. 10 Bouvet Meautoir b5:55X tr mine nur R. - BINA% ONB—P/1151. CLOSING P Did. 440 If 8 de '74 1034105 X elute 6'. . : ...... BOX 98x do a 18X 98X do New .702 X 108 X Peaneyl Its 89 89x Itedtne. 80 R 0 83 24x 24X de 7 83x do mt(1044.92 .. . Bid. Asked Bah Nov Imp 61-693 i 70 do nook—. 9 9X do pref. .14 —lag X Wousp't d.Bilat .10X 11 16 do Velet rat.7l3 76 do 2dmt.....50 5t Wog laud ....12 12X Girard 14 Leh Oosl & Nay.493i 50 N PennsE EIN 9 do We 00 '11)f New Creek Af. Ost~vi~r+ it ex 7 Lehigh Zino-- 1 do mtlis , 86.1 0 X 71 Penns 11 48.4 i 44 do letm 6a loam 101 do 2dm 6a 913 1:2 Norris Caul C0n.49 do pre .... 100 X .01 Bohol N Go fn.—.65 853 i 19.11 W YORK STOOK EXOKANGII Sept. 10. BEOOND B . 411 D. 11090 Brooklyn W L 97 1(0 511 , -h 8 R prof 40 10900a1& Ob Ist mt 90 5 Gal & Oh R $3 ROO Harlem Blatant 84% 200 Ls° & Mil B - 3 2000 Erie R 2 dm 56 110 . 1 Reading It 49 50 Pacific 91 Beo yi 700 do 03048 X 90 do 9 3 , 4 25 Oleve & Tol R 34X 100 N Y Central R 79X 60 Mil & Et 16x 1126 do 79X 176- do 16X 5 Erie Railroad 18 23 do 08016 THE MARRSTB. • . . UNDLLB —We entice a sale of 800 bus Adamantine Ptaten Island at' OXs Cones Is steady, Out the m•rirat has relapsed Into a quiet state. Pales 200 bags RIO at9X estlKe. COTTON =Market unchanged; Sales 1,200 bake at /81( for modeling Upland.. Drswoons.-- rho Storks Cr. light, and prices gene rally firm. but the rrarket Is dull Balsa 80 tens Sava sills t natio at s`9 60, and 160 tons St. Domirgo Lea wood at $lB, both cash. , HIDSI remain quiet, but priers are nonunslly the came. The tranesatimns are 4,000 California. and 1.000 Bueuoa Ayres, on pileat• terms—the latter said to be at 2ty4e ; 464 Caracas at 20e, 8 mot. and 65 dry Porto Ince, 20 be at 22e, lees 314 per cent for cash. Elora are quiet. with tires of 10 bales, new, at Mo. Yearlings are quiet at Tot Bo. LICATIIIIR —Hemlock role is dull at 21,4026 e for Mid dle Weights of Buenos Ayres. and 23,16824 Xe fur Ori noco Oat Pole Is unerianged. Litts.—Coinmon Rockland steady; valet 800 bble at Tete. Rtes.—The market is dull; sales 100 tes at 3m3Xe cash. for common to prime. Bose —We notice sales of 900 hotel; Castile ou th. emit and to arrive, at 11011 V, usual term. 817GLR.—The market for Haw bas become more set tled. and prices rule steadier. Sales 350 bhds Cubs a 7etBMe; 100 !aids New Orleans at 7%0; 778 bxs Havana on private terms; 100 bxs Havana at 81(e, and 2,500 bags Pecnambnco at 7go. deans are steady. with small sales at $6 for Pots. 71ous —The market for State ar.d Western Flour is very heavy. and abort 5e lower. The receipts are mode rate ; salsa 9,000 bbls at $4 9585 for superfine State; fn 40m5 50 for extra State; $3 5084 for rejected State; $1a5.10 for superfine Wentar”; $5 2085 05 for commo. to fair extra Western; $6 6085 05 for chipping brands of extra round hoop Ohio. Southern Flour dull sod heavy; sal. a 700 bb s at $4.3004.60 for mixed to good brands, sod $5 6087 76 for fancy and extra brands Oariadian Flour le lower; melee 800 tibia at $5.8.80.40 for the re age of extras. Gnat,,—The Wheat market ie dull and] m2O lower; Bala of MOOD bus at $1 20m1 25 for Western white; .1701 22 for Southern red; $1.20®146 for Sluthert. white. Corn to e shade better; sales 25,000 it aat 66e 730 for mixed Western; 804,830 for Southern white, and 90et920 for Southern yellow, Cata'are wary dull. with sales at 361143 c for Southelorkrod Jersey. and 46e60e for State sad Western. Rye is steady at 76076 a. Yaortatose —The Pork market is doll, cad rather in favor of the buyer; sal.a 200 Mile at $17.60 for Mess. sod $16.60 for Prime. There is more doing in Beef. but without chance in prima Sales 200 tads et $14¢14 75 f, z re-pacied Chicago Mesa, and $15016.60 for extra Mesa Cnt Ideate quiet, at 0,4 e6%.3 for Shoulders; 8,14613 X,. for Hams. In Beet Hams we notice sales of 26 bbl. eery alt at U 7, and a large invoice of new on terror not yet transpired. Simon Is quiet. Lard is steady; sales 400 bid. at 113( 011%0. trotter quiet, at , 120) eft for Ohm. end 16e210 for state Cheese dull at 6m7,ris Watuar dull; ales 160 bbl® at 21,410. CITY ITEMS. RELIGIOUS Senvices TO.IfORROW —A sermon to Seeman will be preached to•morrow evening in th' Methodist Episcopal Church, Fourth street, below Arch by the Rot. Joseph Castle. The sermon will be w,th special reference to the sudden death of John A. Enver nod James Cooper, members of the Hype Hose Company All the firemen In the city are invited, At the Church of the Covenant (Concert Hall) there will be preaching to-morrow morning and eventri, by the Bev. Dr. May, of 'Virginia The subject of " Bible Telegrams " Is to be continual by the Use. T. IL Stockton, at National Hall, Market street, above Twelfth, to-morrow morning at o'clock. A union prayer meeting, from 6 to 6 P. M., is also announced to take place to the same ball. A LARGE CLOTHING EtOtrag.—Among the many creditable jobbing eatablishmanta of which our city can boast, we hove hitherto omitted to mention a well known clothing-how., which, to the trade of this State, is probably ae widely and as favorably known as any other we could name We allude to the house of Messrs. Strauss & Goldman, No. 306 Narket street. above Thicd Tbastock of this firm is very extol:mire; and the fact of their having kept their hoods emp oyed steadily through the late panto le no mean irdimati n of the enterprise and liberality which characterize their mode of doing business. -To rr erchants now visiting the city to make their fall purchases, the inducements which Etrause dr Goldman hold out are certainly de serving of notice—a conclusion at which we arrived in recently p casing through the extensive establishment, and examining the metal , of gacments they display, and their extensive arrangements for increating their stook to supply an unlimited demand. A GREAT POINT OF ATTRACTION.--At this par ticular season, when the latest style of bonnet is the paramount topic of conversation among the ladies, we can probably give to the fairer portion of our readers no more accepteble item of intelligence than_ by informing them exactly where to go to find every- - thing in that line that taste the most exontaite could produce, or the moat fastidious desire. The great de pot for such an exhibition will be found at our old friends, Lincoln, Wood, & Nichol', No. 45 South Second street, who have the five stories of their maw. PlOth ostablisignent Itteralir crowded, with arirrittult new and, deniable to the millinery line that the beat markets in ttie country: or En ope afford. flteleolOtteVeWolett extent, whioh. the WM ilf — tion r eati - zipifbK4egpireti - has x derel its quality matter or mien' ithisorisrecii to'ot's eit'sene. It has become is *Whittled thetoooldtionery , may ; trot :only bs eaten yetis icappity r hat wish„deolded benefit, pro vided the final - 4 cot' it to ' - we have tried that -manntscittreslnkti4l.petar eatalNOtAstr:tl.3.f,lll.""- B G. Whitnian dc 'company. gecOna street; below Cheat not, and so hive hintioill - Orothere, out the t tnani tnons decision' fa :tts... Wei; lonfectionery Vaned. „- E. WAL110111! 4.1:10., inopriarore of a very popular Gentlemen , ' Furniehing Itetablishmentln this city, are now tally prapired for pie fall Irade.r Al ready the 'orders 'am pouring to np n them moat en ootiraiingfk::?hirts. callers. cravat - a. and wrappers are using tlian . ecessilaa of llfe; and Walborn has fairly _ taken advanta ge of Okla' circumstance by sat 'iinglthsinuti In the Ogststyle, and at rooderate'pri eels OXLY 75.oents for a gill-bordered window shade, with - the trimmings complete; other goods fu Hon. Ouain ~godda, and trimmings, lace' and musin cattalos, Olt - oornires. bands, pima, kc., wholesale or retail. by W. Henry Patten,.oBo Choshatit street. ' PartADNI.PIHA. AND ITS ,11faSUFACTIIItES " This interesting volume we hive read, and fled it to abound in uttetal information to all classes of the bug ness community, especially in regard to the best, moot ,faeltionsiie, and cheapest olotbiog found in the city. It eniphaticalliadlifsee . all - men, whether - call - Mut or otherwise, to:procure their - chithing only at the " Old Franklin Hall Clothing Emporium" of E. H. ildridge, No 821 Chestnut street: By:the way, We destris testate that, to our certain knowledge, Eldridge hse the largest and best assortfrientotrealpmade clothing in the ray. A Cusletyry.7 7. We saw yesterday a one dollar bill on a city bank, payable to 0. Loran or hearer, dated May 18,1038.,4 k t s been in circulation for upwards of twentY;Tiertt.andlas kat found its way to Philadelphia fob lhe pitipose'ef being redeemed: It was taktin away by a gentleman who left the city in search of , a fortune. and who,-after-an absence of twenty yea-s, has re turned for the purposent.ivisiting hie old Edina, and. buying his winter garments et the drown StonerOloth. log Hall of Rdektill,k Unison, Nos. 603 and 606 Chestnut street, above Sixth _ WE invite attention to the advertisement of Robt. H. Adams, in another column. His Act& of oiothing is good, and hie primes reasonable. IMPORTANT TO MOTHRRll.—Dr..Bernes' Breast Salve is warranted to prevent gathered breasts. Sold at 333 Chestnut street„, , _ TREBLE 811V- 1 8-PLATED TEA BETA. . Tr.bie ted - Castors = Treble Silver-plated Rake mad Spoons. Treble - SI e'er Staled Cakeilintkate. Treble-Plated Ware or • • ManafacturA by E.-W - Omni, 714 thestnit street. A COMPLETE ODTPIT for persons commencing housekeeping, including engem plated ware, Cooking utensils, tin ware, tat tram wooden ware, Zapanuery. he., may be bad at B. W Carrylts Home Punishing Sto 0.714 Che.t,ut street. Alittinsit CoMief.;-Moni.e..Tohannison, of the Scientific Institute, _Dublin, recently, by the aid of a doublerettio fog; beihZectlint telescope , d scorned 111 the constellation Zebra, a new comet Mating straight towards the earth. ShDuld it• erica; It is surmised by the saran, of Europe that it will thereafter suffer "rout a concassior4pf the- brain Meanie ii., ear citizens soould avail themielves of the int.real to procure ap• propriate emits of elegant fall clothing at the palatial store of Griurille Stokes, No. 607 Chestnut street. - who indulge in 'the luxuries :of:the table, and experience -an unpleasant cessation of !alines', should use Dr. Barnes' remedy,; its effect is inatinta newts. Advertisement. in Supplement. 919,047 37 20 '9l 14 ! ..1 107;782 08 ..-.1,80 1 ,972 OS Tone. Owt 11 312 00 2 639 19 19 628 .30 2,960 00 88510 00 731,462 06 797.933 11 84%,153 05 I'B D into (Reported for The Prdeal Q,CIARTIM Essarorts—Judge Ludlow.—Tho . jury inshe case of Lewis Muff. charged with rece i ving stolen goods,' before reported, br ought in a ver dict of guilty. Sentenced to nine months'. im ptivoikment.- A Free 17 ght.—Thothas Erwin, Robert Dougher ty, James Thompson, John .11fellraw, Alexander MeQuaintain, and Williitinlifilligan - were charged with having mutually and simultaneously assault ed and•battered each ethei on .the sth of July last, and having, in divers other ways, done honor to the 'day' we celelirate.". , There was a delight ful mystifloadon -amongrthe witnesses as to who commenced the fight, where it began, and gene rally as to any clear knowledge on the 'subject at all. Thera were cross and each witness, called on either aide, felt it hie duty to play the partisan, and support his leader's standard in law as in war. The ease occupied all day. Jury ant., Messrs. Armstrong and Ludlow for Erwin, Dough erty. &c. • Daniel Dougherty, Esti , for William Milligan, 'kn. Hartshorne's Cure-All Depot Is removed to No. 25 lFghtli - stryet, betwka - I.lbiatinti and, Midst, where will be 'foetid all genuine patent medi cines, at wholesale or retail -The increased and un precedented demand for liartshorne's Medicines has company' the proprietor to obtain a central location for their sale. noll4t* Liberal advancements in cash made monde. positalor.Cedisterals, Watches, Jesstry, Gans, Cloth irg, ice. ',MIS /a CO , Broken, THIRD sad GAB BRIX, below Lombantatraae—tL-- _ • _ -501.65 Alterative. —She subtle chemical vital affini ties •re ever at work for the wane or renovation of the wile' PERUVIAN - SYRUP with Tie a•'es.l fi l , - eresints , o the laboratory of life in agent ever act ye, and can never be absent without derange ment of the vi al fuotions. In this slow and alterative process, i t is trolyn renovating sod life-giving me Borne. For sale at F.. Brown's,, fifth and. Chestnut, and Rossini & Co., Twelfth and. Chestnut. se% d&st tf Try Again —Most Persons, once imposed an, are suspicious. Caution ieneided in these times to es- cape hombur, and the certainty . or being sioUtolsed. Jules Hauel's Eau Lustrele Hair -Restorative is an infallible - remedy for baldness. All those who hate either lost their Bair, or are becoming bald, should try this delectable Preparatiou, whose effects are minion loos. Bold by all Druggists, and at the Laboratory of Jinn ileum. - Ss Co., Perfumers and Importers, No. 104 Chestnut street, Philadelphia. . • • - ee643t Professor Saunders , Classical „Institute, at the WEST POMADE PRIA. INSTITUTE, corner of MAMMY Street and WILLIAM, will be reopened on the first MONDAY of September. Pupils, to the num ber of fifty, will be received wrrecoirr isaroNso or rex" off TES PASOUSOIat ItAILMLYS Or Tylit 0 TY. Thus, without expense, by a pleasant and safe con reyinea, - popils can be carried into thn fresh air of the country in lees than bait en hoer from the Centre of the. city. Several soma of open ground border on the beau tiful groves of this Seminary. which is patronised by many of the dtetiagui•hed gentlemen or the city, among whom are the Editors of The Prise; Ike Ledger, and The lforth American And 17,nited: . tetes Gazette, Pa. pile are received by the day, or into the family of the Principal. We, the undersigned, hove had actui,nr wards In Professor Saunders , Institute and family daring the deasion which hag joist closed. In respect to parental kindness, happy loilmeomis, attention to health. and progress in thorough education. our experirtious have been filly realised "ifo*onefrienda, who are looking for a decidedly Rood school for their sons, we cordially recommend Professor Saunders , /militate.; "MATTHEW NEWKIRK, Ne. 1300 Arch street. "JNO. W.*POENEY. office of The Press. CHARLES N. THOMPSON, Thompson ,t Rood, No 413 Ohestrnt street. "J. B. SILVER. 1400 Girard avenue. - I , W. L. SPRINGS, BSI Market street. GEORGE H. MARTIN, 626 Walnut street!' , Other Pitman of this Institution: ELI 8 BURNETT, 409 Market street. - JOHN 0- MITCHELL. 203 South Sixth theft. T. B. COLOHAN., 152 South Eighth street. N. B. BROWNE. 118 South Fifth street.- SAMUEL MOORE. Logan Square. If WATSON, Logan Square. . WM. t-WKIN. office of Led,rer.. MORTON MoMICHAEL, °Moe of North American. ELLIS LEWIS, Peon &mire. 1:10r"No SEXIALLIT NOME BBLEIi. BeiltainVe MMus Pund—Ofllce 203 Walnut Areet,. one door west of Beeond street. Reeelvse de veldts In mime of One Dollar and npwr tide, from all slimes of ° the oenzunnalty, and allows Interest at the rate of Bre per cent. per annum. Office Open daily, from 9 antic 5 &cloak., aid on Mon ts,' and Saturday until 9 In the evening. Provident, Franklin Pell; Treaanror and Secretary, Charles M. Words— • Saving ffund.—Fivo Per Cents Interest.— NATIONAL SAPNTY TRUST COMPANY, WALNUT street, 8. W. corner of TMERD,Philadslphia; :Money 00eired in any corn, large or small, and interest paid roi l the day of deposit to the, day of withdrawal. *Miley to received and payments made daily, without -iotice. The inveatments are made in Real iterate, Mortgagee, Ground Rents, and such drat-class securi ties as th charter requires. Office hours, from Y o'clock in the %ruins until 5 °kapok ih the afternoon, nd on Wanda, sod Thuralay erenhcre mall 8 °Week. fee 0 & Buu.ay. OXLIII3II.7fID It AMILY SEWING MAIIIIINES VA GELBSTNIIT MUM. These machines are now justly admitted to be the 4iet' in ass for family sewing, =bang a new, strong, nil elastic 'stitch, which will Nov 4,, even if every ',meth stitch be cat. Circulars sent on application by atter. 9 0'7 Jackson, JOB PUNTER, PIPTH AND CHESTNUT. Cheeks, Notes, Drafts, Bine Lading, Elll Heads, Cir. =Um, Cools, end all other kinds of Job Printing, at prices to snit the times. roll-ly General Debility.— This convenient term noludes numerous ill-defined and enponed incurable forms of disease, accompanied by general laasltude and exhauetion, without any ascertainable external or In ternal cause. The PERUVIAN SYRUP sands its re novating influence to the inmost recesses of the system, Ind bail - relieved in oar community minimises of sup. posed incurable disease. For sale In this eityby F. Brown, Fifth andOhestant, and liassard 8c Co., Twelfth and Chestnut. an3l-demtf One-Price Clothing of the Latest Styles, and made in the beet manner, expressly forBUIL SALES. We mark our lowest selling prbes in PLAIN 11011188 on each article. All goods made to o-der are warranted satisfactory, and our 0101-PRIOZ SYSTEM it strictly ad hered to. We believe this to be the only fair way of dealing, an thereby all are treated a'lke. JONES & 604 MARKET Street. Thomas W. Bally, Pio. 622 Market Street, Importer and Dealer in Fine Watches, Jewelry, Biker and Plated Ware. Pirst.clam goods constantly on hand. The enbreriber, paying cash for every article, le enabled to cell at a small advance. Thom about parchaala would do well to all. All goods warranted S 4 repro. moutod. - .04m THE' COURTS, special . 4 PIIILADZI.PRIIl t July 1,1868