4.323:- :4: -- • 3 , - 33 --...,..' • • 33 •• - •: 7 3 ---- -• 1 ...••,-.- ';'; aw ' --- 3;• - . ''..*:', - "VV -3 ., 4 . 1: 1 a 's3, +% -' ' ' 'P' - ti•'• ; I I) •' - t , - :::„‘, - r;; - ` . 7 - ;-:•.:(•;". ; ~44. 4-;:1 - 4=- 4 . ~.4.- -,.., - :::.."- , .'-' 1 i •-•- -.:,tr,74 l'• ,* • ~- ~...- -, :i,Th ‘ l ,l 1 .0 --,--'''.---- •- •-. : : -•- '." , : . ' ---- , • ,:i , „., , ,32 - ..z3 ..] •.-.-. , J -,-, , , 4 3 .,,.. : - ..:3.". -, ..•:. .•..- 3 .--:: ...,-- 3 ' .__ • - ,•:,,.;...3-g•NcA:•.e.:At,f,....-,'„i•.-- 3- v' : , .-.-. •• - - -:•g- "186§. - -4il & ii i o TkibißP l ',„: „t „.‘, ,c'Zirii.,„W_ littildf',A.„P,!:- ~- , -4 ' A !,- "(` - '''' , ` ''.',..E7.-- , ifi44 , ,r - k i, * -, c ,,, A' - ,: -4-- :` _ ~,_ , ~,,,iiiiigi,al§iii4r4 ; ...- ~..--..2ai, L'...Dets,tipl!,?,K -..,: - .ti o ureet eri From .-'''''' E lif l rr ` '' . 161 V=Iititter.i f f )gn - .- t *of the -4=::f,,*iliategitdl7._°> iil,ofito;,contqlat'*"nnoo4iita; i3gi34,,,i4;4004-#OlFPHrt:i., sk4o44..rliklis , ; 74 -8 , , ,, . ftt1ie0"4447,. -, 17i-• , 1 , --, . - 4 1. '' '' - -, -Wir.oliniiii *flt!'-cP.: ,„ „,•31:..w..wsfike,,--:3•:::-..,•.,ike News. .-..,..• _3- ' , - :zs;-'' --' ' ''' ' ' " 3- - 3 ---- -•- '; -• • , ~i,tow York yes. 2 & -' ' - '';sl -- ,----'-''''' - ' ' piattalf arrived a.- ----7;•-•Tlikit#101011L..., i litittkow,thatb ro ught.ii - '''- -- - RIC' n4*. 11 e- a. 9.--, • - -1 he t hies furith. --_-,..t0r1t04:, i, - iieditibeo, bit , -•- is the pen !: 11iAtie •tut ',ctiiiii,...,-Ath:ong these , arses ,- e interesting details. i, ... Detaining- 4 h° --A t T' , .;_,-:. 1 -41 : 111 0 ,:ar ieeo - .e . f."ciliiil2oth - ,el ~ A, .., _ ono: oak ," , e nPoll'tha'Aawr! ltee t t, ' ../t." ":- .. ,- ; . .i -L ittabit'Or that paper . Of - /Ifitdatat--1-- iltliait a' •, '-lf••-tYq't,tsi,'; iAa-,'.. heeliii -Wd(it,k,Otli:alttatweinill -',.'..'''';:. -sikilii.o:4#!.F#Y,,,. ti, - .4.4"tiii - ..41. d m "' , ii-sktet ..•,•,?,--a.i.hetiftitSerti42,l9!-wa4: liigi'inekkOftlar-`'Mehottliit i:.•:.t,i4i.sien.c.-ta,•:....-,,taiiiiitrtayjn4 i ota 5 th e :‘":-.0P ,-I( r biti i i 'V- i fl 6l V - 'flit.'11111)11k.:111,1•1,!1,; -,,,-' -: • -4 ": - ' iikiii!it-ia lag -IN - t!"?iiitoi4o:-t, f . . , •"_ - • s i t ie n 1 *1..,46-..;.•'7.V01e• forty ; lo .li l f* (4 4 c r i g i o n A lt- dollars haver i '!!)os l2 iiew ! ok Y ur7 H, ii) ,,..,; :•••!-',-Ti'i--4k-tiveir ~i,iiiiiiilyn.V.tp: , 0 , ir o tip mry: -k=t4,iiiiAiri,,W,,2„,-tiiyi-te ificijkliPl,lo4 MCI -•;,..1.1**1yi55mi:1,..,,,...,,J,,"" =.;".",- 'E".. ~' ' ' " i t t • '''''4;' ' . 14 Itiwd teslit - was plebs& up 4--t.,-4141, ,---14;h,ietaiS1):7--•, . M o n d ay morning, xi i - 4 ' 41,1 W 114 - ;hid litett li a 4l3l ,.. , - ... .- .;-•- - ; ..--, - -,11. 011(04q-01111t, -" 4-V6K, -='-_,_,-•:',- Massachusetts, -•-... k .---i-fiird.LiAik.rAt'tiaii.ie's:iir4,7,:l-- 77 .1 ' ill ten. ti°:'''''.:Aloo2lll"'''''''' ''' - Altinolastko4 - * a .•'-'oi"-''' ,o*,";.lteirl4llreri.l- the th i s our pa per Rent . .-„,i",-,411'. -," wee ----- eitted up to_ - ~....- whoa '4g`i'Ailits.;,,tll4,lllll-iifOiiit oidaiths'ta.9'7•4- ' within ..-.;-f.-t;:;•-•'.:it'f Pei,,,,,,,,,, si,,,Atakidihiel?Weke ktivot.,a • -.•-'-'-=t;s4,Alligtittola.-4:, ' - -- d . siiii.iiiiiitiat dividen ds "il.gitfit oasl ' de*Te • - " b is iwi'average Of, TA*, AUl4leititew their capita . ~o f i cas s iso,, ;--77,:;•-?-flinr•-P74.5.' h-,i-,w,Geitt7,;•l*--13c4enl,r' mte:lten; I >i i4 ta'f 4 4 ol ,t-1 _ 1 ,, , .. 7 ' -;,.. '. a iiim it i this city , to 4,1 :;1 14 i-Plter°,7 - - ..i,„--41 imitsiti:,iiithit I :ltilt°;,. C s ':' -- ' - --- molt , ` - '"f eumbot an ,yea - p thwille, Clltz-- .'.: '''''?Aawe ° .t.ii.i.,„ - ,- iirtillis.ig ,a .-- ~,• . , .„.'V,e,,.....,:Thiiip---f----,, this lit tirdii• --; - • ' h i is - , -'• ' l 4.,' :;;Negle;;itlit'oa - "n. - 'ue - gambling 0 • - .i .• A' - descent Yo!'4a;- upon t -it a late houron Mon _`'--;•' ait'hiri:g;l C!li#liu, !!.1."--A•otor-eud:44' 4040! i'7r,i, 4„ , i - ;AL and the 'Pr9 .----, - after' ''-; I.l* - - • ••4 - -' ' it held for a. h e a ring,-. ~,.. ?'irfax!:arkr44! , ,---:,:.-."- '-" ' '- . '' ''''i, )f this Zit 'j :•:r..l 4l : 9 y P ti: : ;tithie'L ' , •=telittlt-istie'nielioreotheberirattycototrfau.o, of ' ,3, 'ltii,d7.ll6ndai nigh t, = . in ,tie. sober city ,:: . 4 e ~,- - • ' "ei:hriew' York than it s mothered ] to - •• :-:-. .. 11 ft At F i r m s • RiOillik' Dillon " - d with i LlAe rh al U ir ih.ra-o.hinitkon: 7vhi'th.he• has tere e f one vengeance,eh"og+eeefteary..: „- _ mist` " 4 "sqlsio'irlivii." L er" 0 •••••!-• - " - • ilitu, apotnor . , ', , ii6.4.. ti ,•• i• 3 - , - e...oi o i n , he is.leatooPt- • . - u nii* ee t_ - '''' '' .--1-‘-. tre;iiir li tio l lt ,l-10:1111 a • threatened o withthe?- with;' e ,1118 . kti. ;,,.,tress suicide by. drowning, , , ... , "It • - •f 4 .- c o mm its , -Aid c ; the DelairdrokY P. murder er. - Lon of a ;-P 4iiillatowit , -p-1- , - • ii•al iliii;,iiitl3-!..P!u.,. '• . ~.ig'.. lipiiiilb)Ot, f9,.r.-.!! P.a. ~... -„•,..--=-,,•••-.,,,, •• . ' : . ? i. • 3 `4oiiiiitti",,- - . 33 .-iiL-0-i,13,,,":40tiAr.13:44rcr°1-?1goi: 4' irA tk aj* "47 , - ... : * ° ,,,,, F .:•i n t er t i g ni i s i of . ,the, recovery . '. --,,; ittditoPea' '''''e.the,litio terrible swans of the - „...;4.415uf the"-victims 4), ~.,. ,3, .. idig'43,ollldYq . ' f . - , "'-e ' 4 , i ' ' i . ,ord Napier - ' - iil - iirni4Pg! ' ' • t '• = • „- - ?4, KOSSUTH visited thie totritrylke was : -tuifcb deed at man thin Xe;w4s 414-i 4, prise4ieNteiaie,peerini Its -.keyed roar, ot _tt9)45,0; tari'exteiding=ilto rbratfd .ut etmikterjs 1, ligha F-3/0!'0 The:- nashtigonader,toeses ebeking"the' akin; , 'The hell °Untie:vs r 'abaft - they howl -and Wu,- 1. And bait ; addle await - winnifonateSni situ, • • " thitithiptithen, tasli round thi;rooka of Jet! `. the/nit aroiniClaipittleas horror set, in spray the aktea i aztd thence email . Itilurnaln'an anaming ehoiier, width. ;nand, „...:4171tIkita nnaniptiadaland of gentle raid . tfer*.orki to f 4* one eiiioiald • tk.116! admireddlito mighty inonarelin of the • fo:restit;-Ontir day, t 6 rule the Nee;'l4,tleetti; great tat 'whale slim•• • lOet• in" uppte admired dor iiiiterOileitiglieeple 'Our fnientbee, ~a m ireohi4nlos, out., setae: moroheute, -tut; eanale,' our magnificent .• rivers, "our long. .ex bir :.. - anerefat &kis, our, : iiag!r-tiremen, :our well- L dlecijtitnedmilit a ry, • - tonAt!intee,"ttir HO`wondered atall these, and many more thirgF. - 7•Aut mostly Orbs *on-, .: i ; 6 'dei 7 ei.the•thetlityrof public natural 4iiitiuoi*htO k : - he found orefywhere. nisifet hitheiqtated inatee said lift, Je t*rettittp orator . - • - • = ,-' lii Lii ': uatlre Hungary he h eeon little of .: 1 ,;4;ti11e;,0, - itty: . %tin . ?.Idiglardti-, thilksh.vihiett even eduelted'eliumes capable of gettini st , ion, auddencaergenen,,and ... :making `,-;!:!47-4itiowpfia:,,,ferisit49;ItAft apace} to; : an croWd, hilt-WO or, shin!: If he •"bad=',vieitdd Parliament, li e would find the -greatest' publlo mad *err splakers, - humblest ADC hawing, after they have been fri "the 4 -1143,tthe'!=s, for twenty yeart (,„,- like , atibrentill.thithilkg - . titropette Ithaltb,ef , his thistles dingbter,.red,eheeked t9Atito;pl;tf Ott plAtuOddlne dinner 971 hick, ov h 7" a l'affnal gift" ,By groit E o d . • u -54, 61 ' 1,1101 r- ad 0 fortunate ars ~ , , ''' " the ? eiele -` 1 Leh Ambaanulor, Lorti ' ' irertigel ' ilentes alcif, , `Ofr-hand. ••• s , . ,is -4.- -callfral = !P a • aitd • -' ' * th and -' 'fiaa4):°_4,-._Edbo..4!,fah-s bad kiwiedthe Blarney-, ~ pinp),ll,,nlr4arx "7..."-.7-itsbei`aipitel aßer-ilin 'a 2,,i4.4„,;ra,.19,?0rbt1ef a l g i. l e i -iintiing:' toad 'of public , „,,.... 66 11T 6 -r i o B.7 4; e aA sii m * ;,- 124 0 iti ii:rein e ' l fr o li f al: ra l n e k eic i o n ep E t n io g r ._ . ;.• 7 540.• the,Seaeral ' rt " , ,- c? ta.. l - 4 1 4 l es t week 'l'llti4*Tle-'ll.iii-'4:4° titlohniond, - I. a it,, , f , - at lowing meeting, a ''".-- ll'gre e - hate W.I/azan °lranian alao held , - virginl-,1, , , 's z ro'rib ' inds 111 th 9 'op , . • ~, , ,. .• l int4 ,4rt e s t wo wl:t ung o i rat to o n r c . bed r nooihrs,plyn.oce_istßsouranltawi -' ~c.' _sa*eitti;ret n_nvbfklatfl° z". Pi' --.• • -,.o.l'iti - - - 'l e end isle . ; ; innicnnaellsa " ° ~...,,K100"1" r '' '' , hope' -1)f ' settling; i'll'ilz-ar " e ''' ' ' ';'-''' '' ' '-ill ' d 'ciil tiPeti tl -4 ;: l i l l ' O e rIlui ',loll; , at a I,att:, ," -. 4410* lAEA - _their- Yu de d ` i.3l v oilleily ilia Brier" ''''' 44ll9* I.lll ` - limentary notrae of Alanni rldf7i-tta,,a 97,1; el„isbiory, of kneiloa,” ' "11'- idr f te i r 3 Si7talelita fa 'ffsJard!'"n° l " and ''' ' - 1 . 611 n ' 'sea tioeotaele ;to whic h no; E -%•,•...ild'lncß ..,-- ",- r- -- iy ' t:' 'ithitory or• -t gificiisli *radial-1i ,irLl4 aren • „. `' '----. * - example`of.tide awlit,.realatlesa, •_- Bien? :: -f., s killed' labor over li) oilovoiatimeaf ° • b .- a e ,- " 2 ;4t, el l a ci 4 l ; l ' t'attl'; retitle '.4lOatalif of f e say g ''''' yz , lbt - 46, --, It Is thetirst•triumPhAf man-, 1 ` - '--' -. 'the aociannlated P ow ers' of : ,, e'lirat'lld with all; tf - ovei llatui'e in her ~ ~.,e0,4011,0-atut Inypit PP , —..,,,,.. and botin• .'• ',,ku.l6)Bl:llrnitiltral fl a r , r ,n 64 ff, _ •,. . - r s • tfruf asitlOtiOne."f - '','• ".....,:,-:-...,;.- emigration, aoid..' !:1: ,; -:.:4 :w 4. 1 : :.:..._ sf i l t... * _i;iii! ‘ : - f il ', 1 7 1- iiii ia,: ii th ri eLit -P por: 8 7 .= ::_ tos ...co t t dthe ih en e yiwi lit inf i ya d l : • ....., -ir igrrealttiFo- - IL:exit/1111EL° .. interest - ~T.;••,,siel. . ,v_11.411111 -_,..zi.40 'yea the _ - ._ in , 1-?'"lfatf' pleasure '- e" *P lelin " fel leattergr I, A -,,,,--oearth.".,,,,merirrirtuoigqlnqn,, ,f, Amerieen- hu1i...,. . '...• •_: , .ishitlii se ;a ilkte,Pr i yi.- r-.- e t: I l k indeed. ~:,i tak*A°r,reigiiikreti4o„, ritlageTata.-_,1,,,rn-thef - -, ,'„.4..-„;1iik14.741,/,-",:gAltaliiiX•eci7,l6rieiltivo- Tilierul), 4:1-11,01;t Tqh.artl'AnadaillX.V.l4,474,iniid hat ,tkkjaaa_4.4„„iike-;dijrt„fy:arbiaja,4lM thelyammed and 4,,nui#9l-11-•%wv#,l4o3l l:#l,Tr 'liogialoh ivOald be , --- fli*l"olAh'fifOke.,t ttchacibm„tead—ou . ; v.3",4-4',- egad anti &... ._,„6t-in,.mos , ..., fu rrow le not o:'.l6lirals...bilt°,-',,i,,,,ligiuttliat,:the, that the • •,5-',..)).ti,,,,wietut.Ltiefea-Aiiiit loi - oti en 91 award _bristles '-'?;Tihatikti4Y4C-AiiireefliAltiL.th6. laa general • • ' "'L iiiiiioP 44-!--11-° ituiliVe;-,4k0--thale„ dlabover a ----'-' ;, l4s. l .ol6titallitri ginll r9rnithue Terns 'WTI A.l6lty.Z;Tle eii .4 o % - a ve .- a' lilt s he ep. . '- •, long the v tls 4 fi l ' - liiifiest quiaerithe. ii,__. frequently. , . - "'"-1,', OW ,-aenr •:selmik,tili-beee' —7; ... loan.. .'•''',„-,:s.`:,te,rifemifer,..dibt-1t,%•-iiiera valuable .ittileirideearnia-taTIMPS 'l.'''"doefitt:Caltd,qieliijiialhiir* th il - refieetlee to show _ . - 4 . " - - t l l. l - 1, --- ' ' away . .1.4 t requires but llt_sr. natural andiranst ='. '''''''' -'=":- heisooreag'ire the ._,,,- h -oVtIllar). M111011161).m9 tenants' 'au the f ie Lgirlithi- / u ~{4 i s , 'itil 1_6., 7"'',.-Hty lag nbl qfpl,,llll --,_ many portions of. --- . ,',",':14- iiiiTii%iri.',, hand , l" ice eZ 'ell Orderell. In, a ny ,Bn.. eisp!elint thals)Vbge- „a_„,if.:,tuttlipe, ir lish.- tray. er =P4-1 ' ' 1.14(1/110°4 id wiirglsl".*lEDS ,lnalaa: corn , ~.iio-;ll!Yroilautinazi:_-sie. owe; 9,4' ib t r ao i th, .. b y 04 , ",/.I'tiritifitill, .14'..skYtile Aim; end 11-irttiti 'aanai- all mag ma : 1-"tobipiii,i**,., w e , r b zio ,fistit and_ initimiq to Btu - 4..1..a-''.i.icatto!WAin,ltti,rrstlire feeiteltk.,l4?•ii ireator=,.ehlle'-. - '''': -,'ilfiellne inP"' -' ' Theft! o re! — ‘f -,,T. 0f,...i norm' • ,41,' B uns jitiehaptiri, 4: 1 -i v •,„ tno• I ~ r- a 't''' -,,rardePt, ••.,,,,,, A - e fruit .=,. re. -P thei. , coon el , , • • . - " -- . •, :rdisiiii,' 0.- e.:.'ilie,..•,:xso heavy ~ ,diaftl, and the; ifittalt,piliP,k°,F'iiitimigaa oteid,v, iiiii!ortm. --"'•'! I,l„4l4o,.,4l4,7,s''isittleiLl._„teez,..4m.be'ipriPe, ,•-: e11e.1. 1 , 4, - „,•h..f. -- • 'l4Ol-ot:, egi..lll- fiwida....,., ..ttdne,,:,,ro4----aibio,,,:orift.li...l7 prove cii;vfitii *bare., --i--Li 4 041411 r 4 thwymvisigasolr,l6-x., aiovg; ,th*?,. ' q..hbki-V7l'jkfio'-j.zfC-'4r2t,tat,4Ate fitkproveigen!•• -- ''''- hies ikiiiiihn•litt,g-,---tai'at skidobilipalwllkell, ~e, ir-.l4wia--ak :thif.,l t cl 2 oiioh . o, yitiligr 11, :,;1•.: '4 itibiktitiftejl:,64o,vii 4f6', i,,!„Viitlir b2,,ifotaii,,,, ,:•0 ,f•Atiferidol:ol4, odeitis . I' iisCistlA aga,,,,‘,„,,,,1:, hoditi,l4,xelliiiiii- gentlentelqrlinviber results _ Csiatlorttle.-faak, will t urn , i titft : sfiinteillgeticei ~:i4;:itidilljtviv"tri'llhe::;disilolftriiiiiirsulti;•tho,in:,, •••:i'.i-s`ll=Toit,,iiri-utti0,!°4;44.41,411000,10.11ib!"1 manures, the :::;`A,;,lt:riitilad.4lll4l34l4l l : l lk l i t - ,r, slid' the, general ~,..4.g.4.byob;fst*Zt-0r.., the iMnitilicethibi tiOnta 111 ,' A k e j. 7. '-'ll%VitifiePCllo"P*lP;T:an I g liani4ir e re ative 'l ,-I 'ir:;t k ., t amvm thatilimtvia *4. 9 0 7 be P which will .-;.',-.F"....'7„i17'--14a140(1,Fta.l.P.Iiiiipitiv_0# : but, it e y to -- , a • • 0 .?!..i, VlMillsik; we t fi ° - Ctrs AI% Sly; - : 1 ' ' ' 441:.,giesRlitiftrellttiirainese:-.0 --' M4---(ilas-_tha,' - .. --,- T' - -iAiiik •ip, . Zi..,.:...1?-- --0- 1 ,- , - ,:i6jr - i-litit; .-4, , i a'. f. ~Tiiiii-A0T:040.4; 7 •'' - - '', • tord-ITAPIKI' .i-'1 ~,,iOl-=,, - _-,,,...4(4401504 - i:--- . _ ,-aiiO'b eti, ;,,,!_44,0:t5)#1-41i%iiii,'&:itue#1$4--I*-tias; •' - - ..., , ..-- FtlLougValtiotiiii.o4.4o-poi=lek,, jea -`ii-11-•:- gisor soip et_k,, 'it ,-,if:6,iitiyi,;:','l.4)- Y . 10 ;4 1 , , ~-,, liro if iireg5r443V.,,...,,,, , ...irtfukthisysi ;-ii(lill'lg "iittkliliketlel%'l4--'' admirable ''.7it iiitgit7„, -A-iit.at gii--14,-AfLA,,,,ihtaugh: N -f-fe.,:t..e.Pti,,CP ---'-' t:101401ii;1,7,-,,;;-tri..7-znitililio00 # -.- _ w his 44 I li . ~-7,- search" i„. 113;tit4:111M*4-'014;0000t`),011- ,- :- •:;4i... -*--piyiIaWISIPIK.4 ,stii?im4-0-03,1,,41:0en.a.K.-; ,:!:t2ze kik, . -,-.:44.14...4.4.y,.,....„64nthi11ie10,1*.' -. ~ , -„ E r l i. o k -` m an, ~..,_,• •eL - . , - ‘l-,._:,57&':,-.,?,-- 4 ~, - The latest accounts from Ireland state that, as a forlorn hope, the shore end..of the Athm tic,Cablo was-abortheing laid, which should have been done linMedlitely after - the Cable was brought into yidexttia, aid that the Asir of the Telegraph Company were under orders to quit on the,last " day November , unless , to use MIOAWBEIt'S pet phrase, , e something would turn up"' in the interim. The 43014- pany's £l,OOO shares, which rose to par from £2lO, When- theArst International messages flashed the ocean, beim fallen down to I800;Mid.£88 6 : 'ltlirliketty evident , that-the Directors of-the Atlantio-TelegraphOompany look despond-' MOO, lipki,the speculation - which; some two tionthi:igo;tinide Europe, arid ..4.1110408, al most =band- with wonder and For the:present, We, fear; .the enterprise has failed. Yet not Wholly failed, Or:several things have peen proved' in' its progress—that , the sub :o64We cable, can be , laid ; that it can convey intelligence front the'Old World to the New; andthat, whenever 'another cable be laid, not ;i:oo7*l4lilOir science be . breught to' its eon , 'strrestion,,but that : efficient electeiciarui will . belat . each terminus,' filly, prepared in all Peintath Mike th'eaffsir complete. From the time of the vessels starting from their mid ,ofietut:iendezesiii to the present hour, there neems to have; imien a series - of neglects, blun deri,nna misfortunes; :Neat time, we shall bitter knOW what to':doniffi how to do it. R „ embrandt, Peale on' 'Washington. Yesterday evening, at Musical Fund Ball, Mr. Rembrandt Peale delivered a most instruotive and interesting "lecture, oompletely aaai generic, upon the bestAliewn.Portralts of the Father of his poinkry,`Lbri. Peace, tamhoMWashingten eat in 1794, is the survivor of all the Miners who have headed his feature!' down to these later times; aid' orin , .reoolleptionStMd-!Mpresslons were v ivid, • • - , Thalia* Which - was thrie4ourihs filled wißi a Most aitentivenudienoe, was kept in comparatiVe &fitness in . Order -tolillow the exhibition of a beautiful'oopy of Italian's, 01. Cecilia, painted by Mr. Peale, Who is now in his 81st year, having been born on February 22, 1780. Tide deprivation of light in one place, to concentrate it on another, though necessary for pictures and speotators,,did not alloiVus, M. the darkness 'Tisible,',''to take notes of,the lecture. „ . - Mr. Peale exhibited copies of :Washington por= . trails by blifsther,'Ool;Trumbull;Glibert Stuart, goidori,Mid Ceriaold, - (if we haVe caught this last name ,He ales `slioved Washington painted bilibneelf—life.else and also heroic, Mr. Peale has actually made over somas; copies of hie pie-, 'tures:Of •Washiagion. • A• - fine portrait of 'Mrs. I illiitlMVashingtiM , 'by the elder Peale, was also shewn and, an original letter from that.lady was exhiblted,abd read.- It forms one of a select and valitable collection of autographs, connected with W,ashiaglokand portraits , possessed by Mr. Pealejniatoftherti lettOis to himself. - Mr. Peale criticised, very closely and fairly, the different piotures he exhibited or described ; and weatust:bandidly admit thif+'he was as °Moat upon-himself epon any other artist: Be; ; inttodnesd ; varioae . personal .anecdotes Of Washington, and partioularly ncitioed his greit pcinistimlity. l lininentioned how,When 'Washing. t Miat to himself, four , otticr lutists' also 'availed iheraseiVeS of the.hipeititnity,flindnither painted Ort ketched the hero. • • -. • IMAM -MrePeale, who . was .very audible throughout, Was repeatedly greeted with applause..., The leoknre.will"shortly be retested by.regtieit, Arid . duo notloe , .• „ Letter from 66 Oemisional. 99 feom,ommas of The prere.J - - - ..WA.amsraTmr, Nov. 2, 7-18 '!yiyanla t in thO' diploinatlo'apd consular . eirvice, X;luioirobtaincd frau, the piper' quarter, after k. m tient:di. It le a curious catalogue. GM. Dallas _ _ England 5.110600 P. N. Dallas, Seo. - Legation—Btrgland 2,025 Benj. Moran; Aset:Seo.,Lern'England 4800 J. R. Clay - Peru 10,000 W, B, Reed' ... e . Oltintt - 12.000 P. Beaten, See Legation Chi1i........ 11800 MINISTERS imiDEXT. $9,000 Jones Austria Ecuador 7" 500 . '0 R. &Aglow Naples 7,500 1: E. Chandlet, Mr. Davy - ' Leeds 2,000 H.` Keenan ' Cork 2,000 J. Keenan ' Hong song.. 8,000 Dr. , o. Iluffnagle; . pon. Gen..B. India, Cal. 15;000 Sinn" .- ' • Malaga, 1,500 &minter St Joirna,P.R. 2,000 Stileig ' Vienna 1;500 Porp97 -• Monrovia . . 1,000- Diffenderffer Paso ,DerNorte :500 Priest • San Juan dellinr - - 2,000 Aaiun - Guayaquil 750 Sarmiento ' - ' Venice • " 1;500 i Louis.. 2 500- Ociebran • ' St. Jago'lla Cuba 2,500 ::::.:.:.:.::..:.....PonesGallagber 1,500 Giants - ' Stettin • 1,000 2,000 • The Maims. Dallas, W. B. Reed, Jahn G: Jones, 'J."lV.''Obitidter; ,11.: Baekalew, .J. U. Clay, are Sr4;ll,M:town.' Of these only one has been a known friendof:die, President for ten years past Buffnagle, no'* absent on leave, has been in thee Some fourteenyears. Kele a highly ruxiom - dialled, gentlemen; end ; one 'Of the Lancaster family of that , .Mr. F. Beelen, John , Secretary of Legation at ,Obili, ie a Pitta. 'anrgh min, :arid" Very competent for his. place., , Seneral4imea 'Keenan, now absent on leave, at 13,-ritenabfirg; in your State, was Adjutant General under GOi.,Bigler The Conant at Oork is his re• ative—an• nude, I believe; Dr. J. Z Forney is the klarytatid family of that name. Mr. Endliob, is' Franklin county man. Cochran, Fairfield, Ctirmianto, Davy,Smith, Gallagher, are timed wielly.anknewe to oar people, here and at home. Besides-those contained in the above list, John Bigler, appointed from, ; Opelirer, appointed from , New York, , , after - having applied, (vita `Pennsylvania; apPuint• ed rRm - :Now .Flerk te . :/tavre ; - Morgan, 'ap p)inted front Ohio to Marseilles, now; inister at Portighl :I. R. Diller, appointed from Illinois to Brenien; Slillater, ,, appointed from 'Maryland to itahlre 7 were nearly all' born InTermaylyania, and several, of " theta - got' their backing from Pennsyl vania. 'Spencer is a distinittished instance of luck and-perseverance; He had lived in Pails many years befiire'his,appolntinent,' and came back Just before yotir .eleetion in 11136, having no right to vote, and really no polities. He Carried off the prise for which hosts of young Demorata were son tending. _ • There will be difiloulty about the etinfinnation of Jahn Cr.,Jones, and this makes him hesitate about resigning his seat. , He has been here for a few - days past, and looks litgubrions enough. Be thinks now that a bird in the hand is really worth two In the bush," even if the first is prittYwell plucked and very smell. ' General Plereeithe ex-President, wee at last ao oontits at Rome, in good health ; 'bat Dire Pierce was not in Improving health. The extraordinary accounts of the battles of our .troops With the savages' in Waihington Territory, -provemot only the great prowess or the American soldiers; but the, importance of the late discoveries iu'llre•arms.`•., Sharpers rifles with 'the Minnie ball, have been more potent iu terrifying the Indiana and in conquering them, than 'all the skill and drift of the West Point Academy. Proper' 1111 are the appointments of several Old line Whigs to high positions, for the gallant and patriotio stand whioli so many of that party took in the memorable struggle against fanatioal sec tionalism in 1850, bow many will contrast it with the fierce; cruel, and unnatural proscription of old and long-tried Democrats, who have fought the deadliest battles of the Demooraoy ? Why elevate ittal take to his embrace new friends who long had done honorable 7otifatal battle against the Demo oraoyinnd .proscribe and seek to dishonor the old est and^ most: honored names of the Democracy ? Why:elarnte'ruen whoSonoe would have abhorred one,drop ofDemooratio blood in their veins, whilst all the pationegb and pone; of his Administration are relentlessly aimed at the honor and fain! isn of, onf the noblest and most cherished sons of the Demoorsoy Why thus - seek to aid an inveterate ( Perwho has grown gray oppoiltiOn to all 'the' hest and: efforts of the Deinooratia ,party," ,te'place Lincoln in the linnet* States Senate? , . . Why in -Itie,ft new polloy" repudiate in Kan , gltil greatoardinel dootrine of popular sove reignty andzeylve and cling to the old Federal tenet of denying in the people the right to make and detemdae,theirown form of government' Prosldent, in a spirit the most , ilndiotive, will stop TA. Press and take. tohiti: e mbreoCth:O . p . m York Herald, so ulit4Pederatin - tite.ineient memorable struggle for popular sovereignty, who does not . believe that Mr. Buchanan hag parted ;yrith hie Domaine.) , • EvA.itoraiy General Cushing left here yester- Aarafterhoon for Boston. • His address beforo the Agricultural Boolety - at itiohmond,:tra., was ex peedingly able and eloquent. His partner in law, MOildney Webster, has taken a very active in ,terest In the elections in Massachusetts. Aoatiguy OF Muinc.—Madame de Wilhorst ap pears thbf avening,_foethe float than in Shillala: in - theopein,Of Lucia' di Lammermoor. As - we have not heard- her - slain her debut in New IfOrit,"Sokie•threa' years - ago, we Are unable to speak, Trton personal-knowledge, as to her present standing atia`printa donna Mr. Strakes*, how trier,lwhe he lin jezcellent judge r prodiets for her a remaxliablointaess this evening. Mati„ , Boirites t ieflatravir'.-We have to remind ills trieilder Of '.iitig: - Boirciia; and they are many, that'sba appeal n -them, and to the public gene rally, this .evening., : The pieces are it Pauline" ant! " Sitnikon 4 'Oo!. - ;!, f ,,tnthit itiolt of whit* the fair We 'llO, hope tb.find the pouiy.very much - orawded,;'tuld titla-tt substantial )iipliineiliwbfolatte"BoOte,o,ol.497 VA,.a.e•Ck ' 4 • • The Atlantic Cable. BY ~hfID~VI(ST :HAI:4; Tho - followinglist of appointments from i:'enn ECM= Public EutCrtainments. Fourth Anniversary of the Young ition's Christian Association. SPEECHES OF REM' GODDAN.D, MOORS, SCUDDF.B., D., JOHN CHAMBERS, AND MMES. - FRANKLIN W. tIBITB~'OF BOSTON, AND H. THINE HILLER, OF CINOINNATt. „ . . The anniversary tiervi,aes of the Young Men's Christian Association, at Jayne's Hall, last even ing, attracted an immense audience. Long before the hone 'of oommencing had ar rived, every seat in the immense hall wits occupied, and as the prooeedings progressed every foot of standing room was taken up with anxious listen ers, and It Is estimated that thousands 19ft without being able to gain admission at all. , • The services of the evening were com menced by singing 'an original hymn, prepared expressly for .the wooden, by the Hey. T. •H. Stockton, 4n:su mming : • , . Not unto us but unto Thee— () Lord onr God ! all glory be! With grateful hearts we now appear, To close with praise this blessed year Holy year ! Happy year The Lord be praised for each &year:, Following the singing of this hymn, the Scriptures were _read by the Rev. Theophilus Stork. D. D. The lesson selected was the Sixty.eeventh Psalm, commencing with the beautiful petition—" Clod be merciful unto ,us, and bless us, and cause his face to shine upon us." Prayer was then offered by the Rev. James M. Crowell, at the close of whioh an appropriate in troductory address was- made by the president - of the Association, George H. Stewart, Reg , in whioh he extended a hearty welcome-to those who sym pathised In their movement, - and who in looking around he found in attendance, from New York, Batton, Cincinnati, Baltimore, Chicago, Pitts burgh, Harrisburg, West Chester, Burlington, Bristol, Holmesbing, and other pines.' His cor dial welcome to tbo orator of the evening, Dr. Henry Pdartyn Scudder, of India,- was received, with evident emotioh on the part of the latter. ; Following this, the chairman introdiroed to the audience as the newly, and he' might say persna. newly, elected corresponding secretary, Mr. John Wanamaker, who oatnelorward and read the In the, opening of the report reference was made to the death of ,the lamented- Dudley A. Tyng, who was one of the pioneers of this assooi ation. At the close of the last year the roll of membership numbered as follows 840 active; 315 associate;. 27 honorary and 20 life members, making a total of 1202. The association .now 'numbers 1383 active ; 469 associate ; 54 honorary, and ea life, making 1922 members in all, er an in crease of 720 members within the last year. Much of this increase is attributed, in the report, to the revival which recently visited the ehurch. Within the last year also, the rooms of the Asso elation, on Arch street, have been supplanted by much more commodious and extensive quarters, on Chestnut street, above• Tenth. In these rooms a beautiful and capacious book.;•ease has lately been erected, .whieh new oontains two thousand seven 'hundred and . eighty- three volumes, for Which the Association expresses itself mainly in -debted to the generesity.of the book publishers of this city; New York, and Boston.- The greatest care has been taken in .the selection of the vol umes, •to exclude • everything of an objectionable character: In addition to the library there are pow on ,file, in the reading-room, some ninety °Utile most important newspapers and periodicals of the day, published in this oountry and /in Eu rope, alt of which have been kindly pleeed on file 'at the request of the secretary, free of charge. The inauguration of the "Union Tabernacle ,Tent" was referred to .in .the Report as having been the means of accomplishing much good in the work , of uniting the different branches of the church in the respective looalities—six in all— 'where it has been pitched. Wherever removed it ,has -been Attended by thousands. Since its dedication, on the drat of May, 415 services of a union character have been held in it, conducted by ministers of the Gospel of nineteen different branches of •the. church. The aggregate of the attendance at the Tent services from the•oom ,meneement is estimated at 170,000. Of this vast number some 300. settle aro known to have been awakened on the subject of religion through this agency, three of- whom are now preparing for the ministry. Reference was made also to the Tept now stationed, at Fifth .and Wharton streets, tweeted under the direction of a committee of the Association.. Of the work among the firemen, it was stated in the report, that meetings for prayer are held regu larly, under tiu• direction of the Association, in twenty-six of the oompaniee' houses, independent of- eight meetings held in various club rooms, school houses, do. In connection with Allis sub ject, several interesting incidents; which we have not room for, were introduced by the secretary. Reference was. also made to the interesting anni versary services held In .Tayne's Ball on the fifth of July, under the - auspices of the Amoolation. Brom the treasurer's Avert we learned that the receipts for the ourrentlear have been $4,460 08, and the disbunemente44,2o4.4B, leaving in the treasury a balance of $241.1p. Bmiltudve of this, the Association owesilbr , oath borrowed of the - library and building- fund;s9lo 94, leaving a le debt, at this - date, $249.84:. - Among other important statistics, it was stated that, through the. instrumentality of the commit. tee on employment, situations have been procured for fifty-nine young Men: Under the direction of the sorn2on committee, fifty sermons have been preached during thalear to young men. A tract, of foity.eight pages, detailing the history of 'the revival, has also been preparid and ;ea iy for pub- Bastion. The report closed with an earnest' . &Or peal to their members and the community, to press on the good work in which they had thus far been so auspiciously engaged. - - • The reading p!_-the repert watteeeerredirtrtrevi.: dent interest- and aYeUnged - at the Close, Two verses of the hymn already quoted from, were here sung ,• after which the Rev. Kingston GA. derdwas Introduced, and made a capital speech. If said lie in opening, any one still. doubted whether this association bad with it the tmpular 'heart of the fibriatian 'communityy, the mane - be fore hin; wee surety eneagit to d ilalpate all suoh doubts. Re knew there were thousands in our midst, and all over the land, who blessed God in their hearts for the good received at his hands through 'this important Christian agency. The speaker paid a handsome and well-deserved tribute to bins who has the honor pf being the president of so important an organieation. Mr. Stoddard, as the first speaker, felt himself called-upon to' refer briefly to ' the objects of the association, and which he did in eloquent terme. His remarks throughout were of a thorough Tinian character, and as snob did him a degree of credit which was' amply recognised in the burst of ap plause-with which he was frequently interrupted. He believed that at nndistant day ministers of all 'denominations would - stand shoulder to shoulder, in each other's pulpits. lle had himself but re cently occupied the pulpit of a Baptist brother, and had the warmest sympathies qtended to him, notwithstanding they did not regard hitalle 14av ing ever received the ordinance of Christian bap- Cam. [For some cause or other, this remark elicited tremendous applause.] At the close alibi address, the chairman said be had the pleasure of introducing to the audience the president of the first Young Mane Ohrlstian -Assoolittion ever founded in America, Franklin W. Smith, Esq., of Boston. This gentleman, on coming forward, paid the compliment to our citizens of saying that he had dome to Philadelphiaimpressed with the exten sive scale of our city. 'ln this he had not 'been disappointed; though, larg e as were oktr dowinions, and wide as wereOnr bor d ers , hp found this large ness altogether egoeeded by the large-heartednesa of our people. Mrl Smith then wont intq a de tailed statement of the incident which had lad to the establishment of their association. His ad dress, though short, abounded with the most cheering testimony of whey through their asso ciations, wee being accomplished in Boston. The close of hie remarks were followed with long-son tinned applause. The next speaker introduced was' the Rev. Franklin Moore. Speaking of the objects of this association, ho said that be had always ass3ribed it, as such, to the aggressiveness of the church. It was ari organization to save souls. And could there be a nobler task confided to man or angels, than that which had for its object the salvation of souls. He painted in . glowing rhetoric the gran d Jur of the destined 6_lll/W4=OW to be wrought by this - organisation. Ile could pet but believe that it was destined to fill an • important place in that problem which had engaged the prayer of the Son of God at his departure from earth. He made no pretention to depth of , thought, but he avowed that we were hare to-night to develops an Important historic fact; one to which future ages would turn guided by its radiance. Ee was pre pared to insist upon it stoutly, that the Young Men's Christian Associations were a new development of Christiany, and be thought history would bear him out in the assertion, that all such new develop ments were harbingers of great good in the fu ture. It was exactly nine o'clock when the Rev. Dr. Scudder wait introduced to the audience, who came forward greeted with rounds of applause. He commenced by saying that he ()Minted it a high privilege to address such an assembly. Ad dressing himself_ to the chairman persepally, he thanked - him for his cordial greeting, and to the Rev. Dr. Goddard he would, say, "I thank you, brother; for your kindly recognition " As to what had been said of his denomination, he was glad to - contest hie identity with the Reformed Deitch Church in their noble efforts to convert the heathen. There were, however, other 'denomina tions there represented; and ho was glad to so. knowledge that in the great work of evangeliza tion in India the Episcopalian Church bad- done a hundred times' more than any othor. Fresh from the fields of India, his remarks respeoting that country were listened to with more than ordi nary interest/ hie. recognised the wisdom and goodness of God in the recent rebellion in that emtntry... God was new paving the way for this missionary age, just as in times past he had pre pared the way for the Reformation. Hot only did we trace this in: .the doings among distant na tions, but here, in the very heart'of the ohuroh. His testimony of his own, experience In thus leaping, as it were, from a bind of ,darknesi into the bright Scenes of Christian brotherhood he had here experienced, within the last few days, was signally touohing, and proved him to be a man eminently fitted for the humane mission in whioh be has been so long engaged He believed it was the high commission from the court of Heaven, of the Angle-Saxon race, to carry the gospel into every laud, and this was the work which now more than ever, they were called upon to do. We were approaching the Saturday evening of man's existence upon earth. He believed the millenium was near at hand. Oat yonder on the bleak; howling summits of heathenism,a whole nations were perishing ; and if love was the great obaraiteristio of our blessed re ligion, how tmuld those who profess it rest satisfied until theta perishing ones are saved? There was a false and a spuriona zeal. That which flashed like a spark from the cold flint, impulsive for the in stantOras good for nothing. To he effielent in this work, it was necessary to continue and Morena our efforts continually. Bat they wanted help in India: He had been censured since his return for working too hard In his mission, and thus injuring his health ; he ought, they said, take His work more leisurely and nothe so assidione. The fallacy of thisposition he exposed as fel lows "Suppose ," said " I should find myself surrounded with a pack Of ' wolves ; one had hold of my foot, another was pitching right in my front, and another was climbing up my back. Under these circumstances I should, of course, use my ex ertions to extricate Myself from the diffloulty. I thouid 'Strike, and thrust, and defend myself, with a flashing . eye and desperate energy. And now 'what would be thought of a man who, looking on thicsciene, should address me from some secure lo cality with idyls* not to work - to hard, but to take it more leisurely ?" [Laughter.] " Why don't you come ' nd help me," would be the response in such a case, and so he would address his brethren 'in the church with regardto their need In Dais, ¶' 197 don't Yon come end help uewl OCCASIONAL. THE PRESS.---PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1858: T. give, in synops's, any adequate idea of this eloquent appeal, would be Impossible. lie ,speke for nearly an lour. and was frequently, greeted with protracted applause.., • - , • At the conclusion of this address the annual col imam wait taken' from, the audience, during the singing of a hymn after which the chairman in- . troduced K. Thane ' Miller, Esq., president of the " Young Men's Christian Assoolation of Cincinnati>, to the audienbe; who came' forward and made a short, but very practical address. ;•.ITif felt that . : being present' on, this occasion wOuldadd lesslo its interest by anything he mightßay, than from the fact of his being there as a testimony of the fraternal regards of their fellow-Christians in Cin ofinati. Owing to the lateness of the hour it is impossible for us to give the notice to this and the succeeding speeches, which their merits deserve, • < 'The last address made wise oharaoteristictene, - by the Rev: John Chambers, mite -submitted the following resolution: . Resolved, That the appeal made by the Yqung Men's Christian Association, for means ,to per chase ground and build a hall, should, meet with the most cordial response on the part of the eiti - ens of Philadelphia. „ After urging the , importance of such , Move ment in the speaker's usual sanguine style, the re-, solution was adopted by a unanimonsYes. Mr, Smith added a few, words respecting a simi lar effort now being made by their assoolation in Boston, in which they are reordvinethe wannest encouragement from the citizens in general. After, the doxology and benediction; the' im mense andienee; after having • remained dn; the ball patiently for some four honri, moved slowly from one of the most remarkable scenes it has been our lot aver to record. THE LATEST ,NEWS - BY TELEGRAPH. THE ELECTIONS YESTERDAY. . . , New Yong; Nov. 2.—A. row occurred in the First s word this afternoon Several policemen were kncicked down by the • Walbridge (anti-Tammany candidate for, Congress) men, while the former were protecting Nutted Butes poldtere to voting for Hon. DatliA.E: Bitable. • The following return! for Otiveliink_Nursolize of the oily winds have been received; AJ. Parker, E. D. Mervin; L. Burr Owl, Wards. (Dem.) (Rep.) - `,(Sue .) ' First 1 806 248 Second.... 268 181' - 97 Third 422 , 218 68 • Fourth 1 871 367 81 Fifth 1 638 , 724 238 Sixth 2 206. , 280 , 27 Seventh d,486 l,lOl 842 Eighth 2.32 1,028 491 Ninth 1 977 2 Ofilt 1,183 Tenth 1 403 900 288 Eleventh 2,956 950' • ~ 8 73 Twelfth 1195 632. 225 Thirteenth 1 092 770 224 Fourteenth 2,388 421 58 Fifteenth 1 169 1.722 896 Sixteenth 2 155 1,710 604 Seventeenth 3,417 1,804 610 Eighteenth 2 182 1,680 , 881 Nineteenth..., • • 7,477 740 • 113 Twentieth 3 007 1,887 482 , Twenty-first 1 989 1. 8 17 412 Twenty-second..l 877 1,314 , 124 , Totals 40,881 21 778 6,90 Oerritt Smith received OS votes in the city. , Hon.. Daniel X Sickles Admit' Dom) le reelected in the Third Vonresehimil Maria by 136 majority over Williamson ( 2nd Opp) sad 289 over Walbridge (Anti- Tammany Dem.) • Dine additional towns given ktorgap sra rotes, Parker 1709. and Burrows 660. • -•. . ®Broome county (complete) gives Morgan $OO plurally: Twenty lye tubilitional towns give Morganlßep) 120) plurality. B. FDALO, Nov. 2.—Buffalo oily gives the folloiring Gubernatorial vote . ... . . . . Morgan, (Opp) 4027 - Parker, (Dem) 4327 • Barrows, (Am) ............... ......... —2149 Beattering remens [tom six Venda, for Mevernor give-- , L 0re..;11 . . 1 549 votes. - 1,494 ~ Bureau 470 i g - . , In ten wards of New Yiirk iiikfthe returns, as Com pered with the Presidential vote, show a Democratic loss of 2,820 votes, sad an American loss of 6,914 votes, and a Republican gain of 1163 votes. _ • The returns thus far Indicate that , Gerrilt Smith aholltign) will not 000iy0 over 190 votes in New York gity. Batumi" from four towel, ToMpkies gaunt/ elmw • Republican gain of 90 votsa. Ithaca gives Morgan (Opp.) 60 nuilority. Sreaoose, Nov. 2.—The Democratic loss is upward of 200 _Totes in this atty. - At Champlain the Demoor►tlo kiss Is to votes. , TEN CONGRESSIONAL 'VOTE. .. In the Fourth Congressional-district Thome, I Bur (i/ardajtell auti-Tamumuy mutdidate) km been elected. In the' Fourteenth Oongreeeldnai district John H. Reynolds (anti-Lecoiimton Remnant) has' fifteen han dfed majority over 'Brutus Corning (Democrat), the present member. Grins, November 2 —Ronnie Conklin: (Republican) ia been elected to Coignes from the Twentieth dietriat. In the Mitch distract, Wm. B. Stadia ( semocret) probably to elected. ' In ' the NUS Slettlub Jul= Ooprine, p eutoorat) probably re-elected. in the Seventh district, George Higgs (Fusion) is prol)abiy sleeps over 'Witt ..Wardil (mornocrat,) pre. pup 'member. thp Thirtfookiond district, F. a.. Spaulding (Ftt 7 sloe) is elected to Congress la 2,241 'majority over Israel T. Natoli, (Demoorat,) precept mapper. , In the Osmond Congressional Mattis ,t James Ham phrey (Pinion) is elected over George - Taylor, (Demo stay meant member. In the Seventeenth district, Alfred Wells is undoubt edly sleeted. In the Thirteenth district, Reasselier county, gives 4: ii. 01to, (Repub ) for Cooper; 8000 majority, and oirhp Republican Omanty Ticket. In the Twelfth deader "gettillibbb AcalikiViluta the Union ticket, and gives O. L, Beale (Republican) for 000gress aboutl,6oo majority. , Michels county gives Beale a very large majority, ;and he is undoubtedly elected, The Republican majorlV in Cayuga - county t1;001) , vase, bpini a k i gath of 700. frronon *mats the i pblioan iiioolll7 Omitted at 2, being arr 1,800 votes. In the Twenty-dna - 44 at - 24, nutteabldißey) is sleeted: - the Twentpfoluth distriet , Or B. lied& wick b elected by 2000 m.jo,ity. In the Twenty-third district Ohm. B Hoard, (Rep.) is re-eleeted. In the ZleTenth district, Wm. El KIK7OII, (Rep.)•ls areer t i help • kalqi in place of Wm. Y. Bussip, (Do r • In e Eighteenth Qtetriet, ,„ Ohms. B. Cochrane, (Esp.) is relo'eoted. ' In the Twenity-rizth district, Z. B. Pottle, (Rep.) is re-sleeted: Thb Republican gain is large. Qrleans county' (complete) gives Morgan (Ileptall cah,)'for Goyerdor, 1,000 majority. - • McAroe cheuty (estitufted) glees Moffett 2,100 Ma jor I sy, • • • In the Twenty-ninth district, A. Bly, (Republican) for Coneress,i. sleeted. , ALBANY, NOV. 8-2 o'oloch A. M.-,The Atlas and Argus give ep the State, conceding the election of Morgan cc Rovernor by 20,000 majority. They claim only Ore Democratic members of Congress. S. Lem November 2.—10 Begamon county, five predinote etiov'ia VemOarstie gain of 199 over the vote or 1866, when the united Opposition untried the county by 811 major*. In Madison county, Alton city gives the Democratic State Congreeelonel ticket about 100 majority. WIL;FIKOTON, NOY. 2.—The following we the majori ties In the'olty wards People's Ticket. Democrat First ward .. ' 47 Beeond ward " ... 31 . Tbhd ward 0 .0 .. Fourth waid 339 .. yitth ward 23.. • 218 78 ablo rat - rpnp from the country ;alive been received. Wruftnoyon, Nov. 2.--The Fittp ward of this city giros .10" majority for the ti4et. In the FIFA ward, William 4_ptton, (Dem.) for Gover nor, hen 69 majority, and W. U. Whitney (Dem.) for Congress, 70 majority. In the Second ward the Democratic majority is about 88. '' Borrow, Nov 2-10 o'clock P. M.—The returns are fa vorable for the Republicans. In this city thp vote for Governos.standle as follows : Nathaniel P. Banks, (Opp.) ,”138 8 Erasmus D. Beach, /Dem.) ' Bag A. Lawrence, (Am.) 910 Returns frombeventylowns give a plurality of 9,000 votes for Bauke. The Democrats have elected B. B. Butler to the State Senate, and Hon. Caleb Cushing to the Assembly. 1.11 the Fourth Oongreselonal (naiad Hon. Alexander H. Rice, fßep ,) is elected by I,oopplurality . . In the `Mitch district the re-election pt Hon. Anion Burlingame le conceded.' In the Sixth district John B. Alley, (RV,) is elected. Boston, Nov. 2 —The Republicans have swept the State. Qae hundred and ten cities atuftnwns give 14,000 plurality for Banks The entire Republican- Congressional delegation is oleote4. Elpn. Anson bqxlinpinO hes VOO mniority intim Nitth district. In the Fourth dletrict, Ron. Alison Burlingame has 1,100 majority. The Legislators will be largely Republican. Nuvranr, Nov. 2.—Wm. Pennington (Fusion) has been elected in the' Second Dongressibnal district over Jacoo K. Wortendyke, (Democrat.) present member. The Opposition candidate for Metal" and six Opposition Ansembiy are also elected. TRINTON, Nov. 2,—lt la reported that the °ppmMon has triumphed In this Mote throughout. Probably the whole Republican delegation to Congress is elected. DITROIT, Nov. 2.—This city gives the Democratic State ticket from 000 to 400 majority. The Republicans claim the election of eight of the eleven alaermen, and a portion of the county ticket. The returns from the Mate are meagre, and indicate that a light vote has been polled in convimence of the severe storm which prevailed throughout the State to day. The Republicans have Undoubtedly elected all their candidate. for oongresii. WASIIINGTO9 NOT. 2 —Ths New (Mama mere of Friday omiu ta 'dates from Tabasco to the 14th ult. Governor garlat the Zuloaga commander at Tobasao, had proclaimed inertial law In We dep irtmant, owing to the immalon of the Omustitationalista from Chitin', to oppose whom he was eudearerlog tp rain saytteleut force. flaw Tose, Nov. 2.—The steamer Itulton , s advises contain the report of the Sarre market, on October 20th. Cotton was dull, and if lower. • The sales of the week amounted to 2,600 bales. Strict middling Or leans was quoted at 105folt:6f 500. The.uaarket was tending downwards. Now (Mimeos. Nov. I.—The deaths from fever on Saturday were only 20. New ORLEANS, November 2.—The deaths on Monday, from fever, numbered 27, . Non-Arrival of the America. HA tam, Nov. 2.—The steamehip America now doe with Liverpool dates to Bataiday the 2ihl We t has not yet been signallet below, • . Robbery of the Delaware Bank, at Delhi, N. Y. Naw Yost, Nov. 2.—The Delaware Bank, at Delhi, N. Y,, was robbed of 587,000 on Sunday night. Appearance of Frost at New Orleans. Naw Ontain, Nor 2.—There Were indications of root in the suburbs this morning'. The U. S. Steam Frigate San Jacinto. New Tone, Nor. 2.—The U. 8. steam frlga'e Bea Jacinto sprang cloak, yesterday, while lying at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. There Is now nut feet of water In her hold. Nam Yonx, Nov 2.—The steamer Balton, from Havre and Southampton, has arrived with dates from Liver. pool and London, to the 20th alt. Her newa has bean anticipated by the Indigo, at QUObBO. Resumption of Specie Payments. Louievaus, Nov. 2 —The Dank of Tennessee re qmed !rel. pemonte yeatordsy. New York. Illinois. Delaware Election. Itiatasachusetts. New Jersey Election. Michigan. From Mexico. The Havre cotton Markets. Health of Nov Orleans. Arrival of the Fulton. The AIIMJ/Citil Polltly lo 01/111t•-A /Au er from Printing House Square against Mr. Heed. - -., . ... [We publish the following article , from the - .. . London Times of the 20th ult., as a matter, of news ) on account of the general intermit felt hi the mission to China by our citizens,- but dp ' ~ "not doubt that Mr. REED la fully able to de fend 'himself from the assault therein made upon him.] . . Mom the London Times, Oct. 20 1 We have from time to time copied from the American newspapers their reflex of the public opinion of the United States upon the recent tree ties with China. It is not a favorite sublet with our cousins, for P.--' is one upon which they ean. ,not 'possibly persuade themselves that their Go vernment has played a manly part; but we are pleased to see that the 'nation, and especially the mercantile community; see cane for much quiet joy in the advantages . that have been ob tained. It is not our Custom hero in england to crow very long and very loudly over successes won, or, after the event is over, to indulge in Invidious comparisons between our own exploits and those of other nations . ' We can remember without vaunt ing, and trust to history to write our annals true In the observations we are about to • make, there. fore, ~ we have no intention of wounding the-na tional vanity of Afireilean citizens, or of doing more than 'to appeal to their own common sense and to their own-patriotism how far they them selves have been well served in the recent nego tiations. - ' ' • From the commencement of the rupture with,the Chinese authorities, the position of America has been one of complete security. Her interests did not rest, es they did proViously to the treaty of 1842, upon ti.. mere confidence, however well grounded, that England would continue to pursue a generous policy, and Would hold open for the world the door which she 'had forced open by her own power. The United States had a direct stipn t lation with the _Chinese Government that they should participate in auy privileges that might thereafter be granted to any other Power. It was quite open to them, therefore, to look on from a die tense, and to quietly take posaosnion of a common. interest in any otineariene that England might obtain. Perhaps it bad been a wiser course—it• certainly would have been a less expensive coarse—had she contented herself with this atti tude.' She, however, thought °eternise. Mr. Reed was despatohed to China as the Plenipotentiary of this first-rate Power. The pacific character of his mission was shown by his being sent out in a ship which was more powerless than a common opium clip; er for, any purpose of coercion. Be fore leaving the shores of his native- country Mr. Reed was feted by the commercial commu nity: Be boarded that he was not a professional.diplomotiat, hut a man of plain ,mother wit; be renounced all crooked proceedings and aeoret intrigues, and promised to ad. as in fact all are. rate diplomatists do act, with candor and reso lution; In due time Mr. Reed arrived in the Chi nese waters. We pass over the first circumstances of his ambassadorial career. His secret overtures to Yoh were not, perhaps, very demonstrative of his candor, and the resignation with which he submitted to the snubbing administered to him by Yoh was not very creditable to his resolution. Such as it was, however, it was a diplomatic failure It was the essay of a tyro in the lens walks and by-paths of diplomacy. It was like the rude attempt of a countryman to imitate the tricks, of a juggler. I:lad be stuck to his honest common sense he might have bold his own; but his clumsy attempt at sleight-of-hand only made the old pro feed jugglers smile at his imitations and his fall ? urea. Butt Canton fell. and the scene of action was moved to the Peiho. Thither Mr. Reed followed, and by the aid,and under the protection of the English and French guns he was enabled to prowled up the river. We do not attic whet might have been expected of him there, as the representative of a - close ally and kinsman Power; we ask only what he might be expected to .do as the agent of his own countrymen. We had aright to speculate that the Man'who was sent on by the American people' to watch this important business' should look elosely after American interests. We -knew that next' o ourselves the Americans are interest: ed in commerce with China. Looking a little ahead, and -havin regard to here increasing population, her grove of ,cotton, and her constimptlon of *tea and silk; tis scarcely, toe'much to say that the American people aremore vitally interested in ravening np this great region to the toduetfy and tq the wants of the Anglo stiv* rage ? that even WO 'hol4obitd Inglish' are. The interests of the two nations were neeparable. We both had the 0 fevered nation elapse," and therefore the utmost that either got must be erased' by the other. It might have• been imagined that a man of common sense and "mother wit" would have taken a plain business view of the question, and would have been Content' to give the moral weight of his' country's influence to the cause of olvilisation. To the astonishment even of the Russian, who had not hoped for so fond a dupe, the Amerioan - Minister was found to be Amen ea's . met intractable enemy. Whether he bad RIM private crotchets of .his own, or whether be thought—a common error with ieratterers— , that the ways of a diplemielet mint pedealatily he torturous, helve always on the side of the Okina wan, and always against his own countrymen. He once, we are told, in no cionfidentialer diphimatio conversation, was told by an English official that his sentiments were more Chinise than those ofthp Mandarins, find that he %maid he bettor at the Court of Belau than a itiniater for acivillaed at and his answer was an avowal that he thought very much as the Chinese thought upon many st. tv nder discussion . Meanwhile,whenie oiandiiw.4eundingaturalrights for ell mankind, Mr. Reed, begged a treaty for himself and his nation. That treaty is now before us: It consists of thirty article, and is the exact measure of what' America would have obtained if, oven with the advantage of the English and French guns, her interests had been left to the manage. mentpf her own Representative. ' ' mitetrat artioleef -this doottment providee that, F' if any otherstation,shail-aaestajastly or roppyrli steely, the United states will exert: their good offices, on being Informed of the case, to bey about an amicable arrangement of the quieten ; ' not a very substantial stipulation, and only re markable as a commentary upon Mr. Reed's de- Glared desire to avoid entangling alliance. The fifth article confers on the United States the right to send a minister to Pekin, but under condition that he Is net to stop there, or to have more than twenty persons with him, or to come into the Peiho in a ship-of-war, or to stay when his business is done, or to come without having business to do. Thifourteenth article opens to American commerce the new ports of gwatow and Tai-wan, both of which were, already in undisturbed exorable o foreign commerce. But this most unnecessary ar ticle, as we read the treaty, ie dogged with the provision that any subject of the United States en gaging in contraband trade shall be dealt with by -the Chinese lent authorities, without protection from the Government of the United States. ' - When it is remembered that Mr. Reed was most careful to use terms which should include the im portation of opium—in order, as it was suggested,. to spite the British' for their crusade against sla very—and as all the eminent American houses in Hong Kong deal in that drug, it may be imagined what the treaty rights of an . American ottlaen would have been in China under this treaty This is the whole of the document. so far as any new concessions axe concerned. Thera is no pro vision for free transit through the country, no net/ ports, no prevision for an 'amended tariff, nothing that could be of tho least leitte to qtly class of. merchants wishing fn export from the harbors of America, or to import from the inner waters or• the northern see-coast' of China. Having con. eluded this famous piece of diplomady, Mr. Reed was not content with his 'achievement. He was not satisfied to have made this wretched bargain for his country ; he eras nfbat desirous that Lord Elgin should tlOt make a bete (teen far her, and eivilisationiu general: The Chinese commissioners had agreed by letter to all the English and French demands, the treaty had been draughted, and the hour had been named for the signature. when suddenly Mr. Reed and Count Patiatine sought solemn audience of Baron Gros, and represented to him that it was the height of oppression to insist upon any resident embassy at Pekin ; that the free transit through the goon. try was a most useless end offensive demand f and that the additional ports never could be agreed to. We are told that these remonstrances were pressed so strongly upon Baron Gros that he, who ad no epeeist interest in the commercial stipula tions would have given up the points, had be not been influencedby a loyal regard for the unity of the counsels of England and prone. We are fur ther told that the two remonstrant Powers oven forged or Weed. the fable that the Emperor of China bad sent down an edict positively forbid-- ding the mandarins to concede these points. For some hours the whole of the substantial be nefits of this treaty were in pail,,--.we are stating nothing which was net well known throughout the whole expedition—and the Americans were insane: ly rejoicing at the apparent success of an intrigue that could be beneficial only to the Chinese and the Russians, would he indifferent to the French, but would be "vitally injurious to the English and to the Americans By great ability and by great firmness the threatened danger was avoided. Prompt counsel was taken, a countermine was sprung, and again the clumsy player was chocked by a fool's-mate. But, as we understand, some privileges were given up which would have been very useful to the merchants of both countries— not because they would not have been conceded, and justly conceded, nor because the reasonably booths influenees of Russia waa feared, but because it would not have been safe to daily longer with the opposition of ROMS while Russia could count upon the misenetto assistance of America. This is as much of the story of the treaty of Tien-sin as may be publicly known and publicly stated. The foots are freely talked of, and tee believe there is no doubt of their correctness. We think they ought also to be known in America. This is not a question between the two countries. We are quite sure that the American people are as anxious to carry their drills up the Yang-tae and to exchange them there for low-priced teas and silks as the merchants of London can be, and that they would have been quite as indig nant if the result of resent events had been no better than Mr. Reed's silly treaty, as we in England should have been. It is only fair to let them know how badly they have been served in this matter and how unreasonably , the moral influence of their country has been used against us and against themselves. Throughout the whole of this latter wane no diplomatist over made a weaker figure than that made by the Ante ' moan Representative; he has not only caused us both much peril, but he has done us both some harm i he has been in all things the tool of the Russian, whose opposition was sensible enough, and to be expected ; and he has succeeded only in ! fixing en the Chinese mind an indelible conviction 1 ~ that American roan only number two class Englishman." REM. ESTATE, STOOKS, &c.--The following are the sales of stooks, real estate, &e., by M. Thomas & Sons, at the Philadelphia Exchange, last evening: Three shares of the capital stock of the Associated Dutehere and Drovers, $7 each 1 share Philadelphia Athenamm. $lO 60 . 1 share In the Mercantile Library Company, $8 60 ,• 'shiver, Academy of Mode with ticket, s2BBfor the lot ; 1 share in the Philadelphia Library Com p any, $31.60; dwelling, Shipper, etreet, 17 feet front and 185 feet deep. $2,860 ; frame dwelling, Grlswold's alley, 28 feet 8 inches fret t and 60feet deep, $880•, two-story brick dwelling, Griewold'e alley, 19 Let front and 50 feet deep, $670; two.story brick dwell ing. Griewold's alley, 13 feet front end 50 feet deep, $5BO ,• brick buildings, extensive s tabling . /to., Noe, 113. 116, and 117 South etreet. $2.100 ; 6 modern three. story brick dwellings, Nos. 1222, 1224, 12 . 18,1228. and 1230, Oh , lotion street, $2,600 for the first, $2,950 for second $2,426 for third, $2,420 for fourth, and $2,400 for fi f t h; two.etory brick store and dwelling, No 811 South Second street $3,925 • , three-story heist dwe^llog, Lombard etreet,,lll,4oo ; valuable ground rent, $l5O a year, $2,025; four-story brick dwelling, No. 78 Penn street, $l,BOO ; 2 three-story brick dwellings. POWs,II street, $4,060 two-story brick dwelling. N 0.941 North Ihurth street; $8,000; neat modern dwelling, No. 840 Federal street, $1,900; three-story brick store end dwelling, No. 685 dela etreet, $2,090. Tll E CITY. AMUSEMENTS TUN BVENINGV. ACUIVIT Or Strakosoh Opera Troupe. Mae. D. P. BOWBRS' WALSOT•BTSSST THISATI7.-- Pauline ,) -5 ) Simpson & Co." Wrineitit & 01..taxx , s Slog-smorat t , Pauvretta ,) — , ...Who Speaks First?" ' NATEtax PLUx.,—Williams' Panorama of the Bible. ALeMitiretr Buii.insoerßignor Slits. Trrestair Veatariss. bliseellaneons Concerts EIANPORD'EI OPERA. Hol7ol3.—Ethioplllll Entertain manta. Oottosar Hem. —Great Indian Exhibition. THE FOURTH, AND- • SELPPEN STREET TEL- Oso7.—On Monday last a young man named Richard Dillon wan smothered to - death in the chimney of a house of bad character, known as “Mrs. Price's," in Shippen street, a few doors, below Fourth, north_ side. His death occurred in the following manner, as nearly as the Nate could be gleaned : Dillon, it appears, is a plasterer by trade.' His mother and sinter reside near Fifth and Carpenter streets. For quite a long time Dillon had been Using with, a woman as his. mistress. Dillon quarrelled with her. and she, left him not long sines, but he was aware that 'die resided at Mrs. Price's. On Monday afternoon he had been drinking, with a companion. and they went out and bought two"black-jacks." This was about 3 o'clock. Dillon was next seen, between 7 and 8 o'clock. at Mrs. Pricala, and he declared that his mistress 'was Upstairs, and he would see her. , Rushing up the narrow, steep stairs, fro n the front room on the lower story (where there is a bar,) Dillon forced the door of the thirdatory room, where he supposed she was: stayed around on the landing awhile, end then climbed the ladder lead ing to the roof, for the purpose of getting down Into the mom by the chimney. In the dark, he dropped into another chimney just beside the third story flue, but stuck feet when hie body was just 'opposite the third story landing. Here his cries were heard, as well as the noise of the detached brieke and mortar which fell on the fire-place In the, lower story. Efforts were at wee made to rescue him by the =lateens of the house and by neighbors, but although he once held on to a rope which wan let down to biro, he could not be drawn up, and was finally taken out by breaking into the brick work of the chimney. A. bole about three feet long was made, and he was drawn out alive, bathe died noon after being carried into a room. The coroner was quickly sent for, but did not arrive there until a. late hour. It seems that Dillon had another mistress, who lived Pine alley; and who went by the name of Anne Smith. Dillon had quarreled with this girl, and threat.' sued to kill her, and she had declared her Intention of drowning herself in consequence of his threate. She declared her Intention to commit suicide to several per anus during the evening, and had gone so far as to give away her few effects to different parties, when intelli gence of the death of Dillon was brought to her. She then said good-bye to her friends, and went away. Yes-_ terday morning, at daybreak, her body was found float ing in a dock, in the Delaware, betweqp Lombard and South streets. The coroner was sent for to hold an In quest. The body was dragged out of the river, and raid upon the wharf until the dead-cart should arrive, A jury was summoned, and proceeded to a house near 'by, where en inquest was held The first witness called was William Barclay, who was sworn, alai teillitied an fel, lows, • . "I knew the deceased, but not b y name; about half-past maven o'clock, on Monday evening, I caw her sitting upon a chair on the side-walk in Pine alley; where abe lived ; she called me over to her ;. I wept, and she toll,' me she was in trouble; I asked her what her trouble was, and eke said a man was going to lick or kill her; the said she was gbiog to drown herself; I told her I would not do that; she said it was the on y thing she could do; this woe before Dillon was killed; the deceased was net In liquor at the time that I could eel ; she did not tell me who the man wen who threat ened to kill ber.l , Maria Welih, sworn —I keep the house where the do— omed lived; the only name I knew for her le ,4 Anne;' , she was sometimes called Anne Smith, but that was out her proper tame ; she lived with me four weeks ; the would not tell her name ; the was an Irish: girl ; she was nineteen or twenty years o' age ; the man who threatened to kill her wee Dick. Dillon; he said he would cave her head in with a blackjack •; she said he should not have a phones; She give away her clothes ; the deceased was not the woman was after when be got cluck in the chimney; the woman he was after bad gone to the theatre; is soon as she heard about ]lick being smothered in the chimney she said good bye.'* and wept away; the deceased bad* outer who le well off who lives some where in Now Jersey.. - The jury rendered a verdict that the deceased had, committed suicideby drowning. Dillon had a black jack slug to his wrist at the time he was extricated from the chimney See. Matters ,have been somewhat complicated by the arrest of a man named William Berry, who was taken into custody, Mon day night, on the charge of having thrown the woman overboard. The hands on a vessel declare titer hoard le . er t tbrat m the woman halms tbey heard her tall LT° w' A GAITELING - HELL ROUTED.—A short time Niece a drover called at the Major's 'office and made complaintthat he bad been fleeced out of three hundred dollars at a gambling house, kept in the upper part of the building, No. 9t7Oheatnet street, three doors be low Tenth. The warrant honed for the arrest of the preprietor and Ills basbelaten, gu placitd in the hands ,of High Constables Eassell and Erankltn, and Lieutenant Donderson, Witt; a detichnient of the name corps. - At a late hour on blondayntglit the bonne was taken by sterna, and an animated -scene followed. There were about thirty clatters, most'' , strangers in the oily, ln the hones at the time of the descent. ant there was a ,general. scattering when theyfound the police were in permit of them. Some concealed themselves in the ash bin, and In other places, while several Jumped Out of the rear windows upon a skylight in the roof of a back extensiOnef the store below. There wee a great smashing of glum in the - skylight, and aeveral;peraons were hurt considerably William Robins, Anthony Meter', and Wllliani Rote, the proprietor of the hoise, and hit assistantaorerd smelted; but none of the Mere Walters to the home/ were molested.' All the tools used In Praying faro were captured and taken to the Central , 'The partlea were hold for a hearing this alter _ .mApt.AOII.oItIAET SAVE llNtrtik Ogra.—The private oolleatim of Untied Abates; cents belonging to Itir:Edw:iilogen, coin deader, of 48 North Tenth street, was dhlposen of on. Monday evening last, hitt private friends and the rein collegtors gene rally. The following are the prime of the finer and scarcer desoriptions ; A fine Washington cent, of 1791, large aegis,' $lO r ext , emely rare die of the' Washing ton cent of 179/. $28.60; extremely floe 1793 river or link cent, $12.60; 1793 wreath, very fine $5 18; .1193 liberty cap, very fine, $7.25 ,• 1794 remarkably fine . $4.06; 1796 thick file, very fine: $2.60 ; 1795 thin die, fine, $1.60; 1796 liberty cap,- very fine, $4; 1796 fillet head, very fine, $4; 1797 very fine , $1.60. 17X11 quite perfect:92 60; pp very flue 440, bqi pea quite perfect, 17 ; 180'2 fine, *IL 1 3 5 anal one, $1.26; 1804 Ivry 1ine46.60 11806 very netirgg ; 1609 extremely ti l e,. 91 11883399 very perfect, termed land; y other Bents realised vary 014 pri.Sie t Makliag &total of $190.69 for 77 cents. TEM Goon WILL ENGINE Coxpnirr'n grarzeit as =The Good Will Inginellimpany are making ac tive preparations for the receptlorrot their new stesm fire-engine, new coostrueting at the works of ?deems. Daum Morris & Co , Kensington. Workmen are en gaged In remodeling and enlarging the engine-house, which will be completed in time fqr the reception of the steamer,' on the 24th of December. The front will be Of ornamented Iron, Instead of marble, as at pre sent; and the house will occupy the fall 'extent of the lot. On the 20th of the pretend month, a committee of thirty will visit Baltimore, for the purpoee of present ing the Liberty Engine Company, of that city, with a magnificent roll.frame, manufactured by Cornelia' & Baker, and now on ex,hilrtion at the Brat/kph Institute. Inonnnunntn-.-AnnEwr.—Yesterday morn ing, wont six o'clock, a frame stable located on Perry street,' below'Diamond, in• the Nineteenth ward, and belonging to John ktoKane, Was set on ilnrand totally destroyed, as well as its contents, eonsist+ng of a quan tity of hay, straw, ion. Three horses, which were, in the building at the time, were rescued. The lose is es timated at $4OO. Two young noon, named Frederick Horenstein and Joseph P Ilaley, were subsequently ar rested by Lieutenant Whitcraft and Officer Pierce, .on the charge of tiring the plane. It le Alleged that they Were seen prowling about the building a few minutes before the tillllll3o 'were ,dIRCOTBIII4. Th e 410111113 d were WWI b fore ?Neiman Ofbipf yesterd y morning, and committed in derdult of $l,OOO each for a further hear ing. .f i gIVINOBTON GRA.YIL.—A now'military corps, under the name of the " Livingeton Grays,i; was re cently organised in West Philedelphls, audio under the command of Oaptaia Lowry. Oa Monday evening they ware dtildetby Lieutenant Eckendorf, formerly of the Washington grays, at the grays , Arm or y, Wear phos dqlphis After the drilYthe company wan inspected by Mejor Yeager. Brigade Inspeotor. Tale corps is com posed (Spain and fine soldierly-looking men, and, con sidering their recent organization, executed the nu meroue movements la which they were drilled with much credit. GENERA-T. P&Ez.—Yesterday morning Senor P. J. Refits, President of the Ccinvention, called upon klaYoy UN;ly an l i Wormed Min that the Commission had heels anecte4 by the Venezuelan Government to call upon the authorities of this city and thank them for the kindness extended toward General Paez on his arrival here ingBso. The Mayor has arranged to meet the diatinguished party in the Hell of Indepence at two' o'clock this afterupon. General Peer and his friends will leave this country for Venezuela in about q jat night 17.ASTAVAy EllraloE.—The Citizens' Tasman ger Railway Company has recently erected a hand some new edifice on Tenth street, below Columbia ave nue. The building Is nearly completed, and will-be occupied as an Wilco in about two weeks. On the swath aide of it a large frame struoture, two hundred and thirty-four feet in length, by thirty-sl4 feat in width, his been put up. - Title is Intended no a oar-house, and tq accommodate PM passengers by the Germantown Railroad. who may desire to take the passenger railway Into the heart of the city. BtrlM AND RIOT.—At a rather early hour, yesterday morning, a young man who gave the name of granola Morgan, was arrested by s.veral of the officers of the - iihrt pollee district, on a charge' of housebreaking tie made &very riototo demonstration, and when brought before Alderman Tittermary, The double charge of housebreaking and rioting was prefer red against him. He was held in $l,OOO bail to answer at the next term of the Monet of Quarter gamins. ABS.A.SLTING Ali OPPICES..—The Seventeenth ward policemen arrested, yeeterday morning, a man who gave the name of John Menem, at the corner of Second and Diamond atreete. The prisoner wan trou blesome, and while on his way to the citation house committed an mason and battery on one of the police men named Switzer. Nor this offence he was taken be fore A. derman Shoemaker, who directed that Meocase should find a requisite amount of bail to insure his ap pearance at the next term of the Criminal Court. PAY Yana TAXES.—The Receiver of-Taxes has given notice that it the State and City taxes, due for the yrar 1858, are not paid before the let day of January, 1889, interact will be charged the eon, and that the names of all delinquent tax payers will 'then be published, and 37 cents additional tali be charged for publication; also, after the 15th day of January, 1859, a penitly of 5 per cent will be added upon all taws remaining unpaid, and coots thereon for collec tion. AFFRAY BETWEEN FIREMEN.—On Monday evening the Washington Engine, of Germantown, and Hanayunk Hose Companies came in aollision on Ger mantown avenue, between Walnut lane and Rittenhouse street. It is said that a feud hen existed between them for some time past, and a fight was the OOnsequence. A. number of stones were thrown, but no person was injured. • The row was quelled by ;be police, who ar rested four of tee parties concerned They were all held to ball to &newer at court. A DESPERATE ASSAULT.—Before Alderman Petnington, yesterday morning, a man named William Kane wee charged with committing an assault and bat tery upon a man named Staokpole, with Intent to kill Mr. S. was attacked by a party, among whom was Ktne, at Seventh and Bedford Weals, on the 08th of lost month, and badlybruised about the head. The inju ries were minded with a “billy.” Kane wad commit ted, in default of $l,OOO WM, for a further hearing. STORE ROBBED.—Some time during,ltionday night, the dry,goods store of J H. Perkins, at No. 120 North Eighth' street, -was entered - and robbed of a quantity of goods. The value of the property stolen is estimated at $2OO. The thieves gained an entrance to the place by taking the padlock ott the front door, end then forcing open the latter. No arrests were made. EX-GOVERNOR GEARY SPLlOED.—Ronora hie John W. (leery, ex-Governor of Rams, was mar ried yesterday morning to Mrs Condemn, of Cumber land county, in this State. The wedding took place at the residence of Hon. J W. Clniggle, in Walnut street, th e ceremony being performed by the Rev. W. R. De witt, D, D., of Harrisburg. , Worm{ Aetern--Abonttive o'clock yester day morning, the sloop Daniel Price, picked up a colored woman who was floating in the river, clinging to a bush el basket, between lilllingaport and Tlnicum. She was almost exhausted when remixed. She was brought to the city and taken to the Pennsylvania Hoep itia. RENOVATION IN THE SHERIFF'S OFFICE.— Since the retirement of Mr. Magee the sheriff's office has undergone a complete revolution. While the work is In.progress the business of the eheriff's office is con ducted ih a room up stairs. The aherff like all the other city and county officers, is sadly crippled for room. ARRESTED roit BIIACILAItY--Frariciis Mor gan and James Hughee were arrested in the First po lice disinet on Monday night, on the charge of house breaking and riot. The milled were held in $l,OOO bail each to sneerer. . . ANOTHER NEW ENGINE.—WO learn that the Fairmont Sire o.mpsoy have determined to obtain a steamer of the first elan, an 4 have appointed a oln. mtttee.of twine of oar rood re.peotable and influential 9 11 tItIce V:, CPA them to their volleetiono for the object. COMMON Coustort--SPEolsa lifErrusa.—A special meetin g of this body wee held yesterday afte, neon, In acco rdance with a call issued. The tint Hon of the body wee a concurrence in the amendment's of Select M o unclllll,4l . tho, branch culverts and drapes ordinance. The next Matter'of - einsideration was that with ie- • ferenceto the raining otnaseenger railway Canton the Habbatk—the Bathe subject which was under coca - dere, Hon at a previous meeting: Mr. Matcher moved that the prussenger care be all O wed tarn after 12 o'clock M r ", on the Sabbath, which he supported In a few remarks, and which called forth a running dieauselonletWeen Moors. Gordon Herr ; and others. A motion was then made to amend by making the hone 8)4 o'clock, A. M., which WAD accepted by Mr: Moocher. A further amendment was made by Mr. Dennis: to make the hour 11%, P. M. in connection with which he made a most able and eloquent argument in favor of the propriety of supporting i he Sabbath; and in support: of Christian institutions's., centrazted with the doings of . .- - Mr. Denote, much doubting w hether these 'Was a quorum of the house present. moved a call of members to ascertain that fact; and there being only thirty.siZ; members who answered to their names, there was no, quorum. Upon the motion to adjourn, the yeas and neje were . celled, reetating yeas f, nays 27. ' A call of the house being moved, the preeiden't deem, edit eglismely doubtful whether the"Oonnell could en, tertian any queltion, and the only ,thin g left for the' Chamber to do, wait that to adjourn. - Upon the motion to adieus., the ,preeltiont declared the Connell adjourned until T h ursday. - • ' THE VISITING IfisTratti=—The Washington Artillerists, of , Pottsville. Capt., ?hies. arrived in the' city at noon yesterday: They were received and escort ed to their quarters by the MhmteMen.of?l6, Captain Berry. and the - Scott Legion, Captain Gray. They are a well-drilled body, and'aretinder the disci pline of Captain Nagle, who served with great distinc tion in Company Bi in the Mist Pennsylvania Regiment. during the Mexican war,- A band of music accompa nied the company, *he lifter marching thrOtilthl , bee of the principal etreeteiproceeded to the armory of the Spit 'legion, at glahtb,andt:lheetnat etreeteotere they parteok of a °ashen. - To-day they will be taken to Independence Hall, the Mint, Girard College; and - other attractive institutions of the city. They will be entertained by the Clidwala-• der Grays and the Minute Men of , 76 In the evening they will visit the ball of the Hibernia Greens. On Thursday they will leave for home under the escort of the OadwaladerGrays Tam FRANKLIN INsTITIJTE:,--lifottelthstarid hug the attractions which last evening presented, there was a pretty full attendance at the exhibition, = When it is considered that Jayne's Hall presented a perfect* jam i that Meecher , ii lecture _wait just a Well attended, and that the the theaties, and the various places of amusement came in for their share of patronage, the attendance here was of& most flattering character. -Oise half of the closing week . expires to-day; and, with the visiting societies and schools which are to some, wa have reason to anticipate a decidedly lively time at the Institute ' The reports of the metal committees. we pessame, will be made tomorrow or next day, and they will be looked forward to with considerable interest. Tun NxtuurAr. GtrAnns.—This superb mili tary corps bade company drill at their armory, in Bice street last evening, which was grimed by the promote of many ladies. The numerous bright eyes that beam ed upon the company, doubtless had the effect to put both °femme and men upon their mettlel as wee evinced by the accuracy with which every part of the manual, as also the miens' evolutions; many Of them intri cate, In. which •they were -exercised by their excellent commander, Captain Lyle. , ' A 'BirzrO L Uß:iref Inuakrn.—A man named Otiarte2 Thompson hada hearing before Alderinan Shea nicker; of the Seventeenth wird, yesterday morning, on the charge of ,committing an assault and, battery on a felloW inmate of one of the cells of the station.houssioft that district. Thompson .iris, arrested' last (night Second street, above Plural; ad while la 010 of. the cells, he essulted one • Samee_eimpeeni_whou cries tor' help could be heard fora poulderalde distance: MAN SauritTp.—Yeaterday. morning, abobt four, o'olocli,"odleer &chard. while, paroling 'his beat, discovered a man named Peter hislaonigle,- lOW on the sidewalk, at Eighth and South streets ; Be waa bleeding about tip" bead; which was cut very badly: Ue said that he had - been attacked b four or five men, who struck him with a billy." l ie was conveyed to his residence. - __• , - IBQUEST POSTPONED. , --A named B Sylvester, who was found dead:in.hed last Monday, In Crowd street, below ealloiehill', - said to have died from the , effeote of. poison; "Morin* relines eommeneed an inveetiiat on into the facto, bat in eon• sequence of the absolute - 0, ono of the jurors,' it abut postpones{, - „ - BEOEIVINO STOLEN -GOODS. Aldermin Shoemaker yesterduy held :s man, named John Am gen, who reeidee InlVaablngton emelt, above Oglord, to, anawet tlie_ohargt,or being3s=reeelver 'of stolen goods, knowing them to be stolen. , CONTRAIIANIt DEXLINO.I..L-Akildeilittl2l 00112'0.W yesterday wonting, held a man named Patriot Moline', to g5OO bail, to answer st tenet the °barge °teeing% liquor without a *me, at kiii..TeillilenOß 1R EgteelP atteeybelow Carlton: ' -• ” - . Letter from New York. 7 - • TLIN IRISH STRAYERS: GALWAY TO ST. JOHNS IN SIX DAYS I• LORD AND LADY RIMY : SIT ALAN Sic- NAD-•SIR W.H. WILLIANS7tWARD BREOHNHIS NEW HIGHLOW,OD,vm.rosr: VISIT iQ EUROPE JUL BRYART.-U4Vir soois'rkiti APPLE- TONS—THE GOTILDT ROSH ,TER ACADIMY - ..TRGI-00/Telpf/1N.,-`,AND BORN FS CENTENNIAL Murrc-9.tr•ratotuts-7,uomcrat Oorreepondeneept The Preas.J. • ' - Raw Yoa r , NOV. 2,1858{ The Galway and New York nue of Mesmer, are mak log a sensatteSt. TLitat evening_ abanoinet.itas stein 'to the officers of the Pacific, to celebrate the Lot of tkiir Immog run from Bt. John-to(lalway in six days and one hour. The American Ex press Company will wen make,theinselves infernentraelthebnalnees of thin line. By the way, Sir Alan Haab, one of the diree tort of the line, arrived here -, yeaterdai frii'm Canals, to meet his son-in-law and dangbter, Lord and Lady Bury, who came !tithe Pacific. t .Broadway has selddos seen a better specimen of a fine, well-preserved, gen.-, tlemaniy old cook thin Is Sir Alan. When that annul. fat 't Patriot War , ' broke ontil'eanada, In tkowliter"Of 1887. Mr Alan was a hersnuolonel, and _resolved that he would have either 64 feet of Canadian ground eri BaroUetcy before the war wee over. He got 'the , ter and no blood drawn. " ' One of the ma It diiiinguishol of, the netoble man cf Eng'arid is liminethe siiipiairpooilble time In Cons-- de, and, curiously enough, no mention of it teertte to have been made by the Yankee peas. 4 &undo to_ Sir W. - 71. Wilitame, Pe holoof }Aar. Tharaday tut publtp honore were accorded to him at Toronto—an addreas having been promoted by the Mayor and cor poration, after which, of conrse, I municipal feed. The congregation of Ward 'Beeohnil "chirah, lyn, have touched $ll,OOO towaro the 4120,000 neon; glary to build the new church: Three - gentlemen point ed $143,000. Mr. John Bigelow, the industrious, ormrtoorts,.and capable editor of the Evening Pose, evils for Xanipe next Saturday week, in the Fulton. Yew Otto% ha7re aehleved a higher position in dmerlean journalism than Mr. B. Accomplished, industrious, practirial, andstm-' Bible; having a just appreciation of the power and 101- pentane° of the press, and slimy' rising above the *- Wiens of party and partizans, he has aided materially to elevate the ryas to the .high place it occupies in the public respect Dieing hil absence Air. Bryant .esuroes active editorial sopervislorfor the 'paper.' One would scarcely imppoeei from! Mr. - -B's eminent rank as a poet and man of lettete, hie advanced age r ind,the ease with which he could reprise upon his laurels, that 1e could take' much interest in attending to the duties of • daily paper ; yet he Is'as indnetrions as ever, writes leaders,. .aragrsplus, and ignitor, with as rimah pirit and seet'aa ever, and is anything , but a merely ornamental member of 'qv) ostalOtehment. The Appletinis have several good hooks . in press Among them, Lewee'e Philosophy of Ooramon Life ; Summer and Winter in the Two Sicilian, by Julia JLa. vansgh ; Milken Literature of Greece; Heland's Shall and Will; Life of James Watts and Ohnokinate, a novel. Wpmlwo will flavor Probolality now Is that all the members of the darady family, together with the two momenta will survive the horrible wounds Inflicted upon them by the iraloide, Frank Graildy. Yee- terday the girls were able to converse, and an are doing well. The funeral of Frank was 9f an oatmeal chase. ter. A few people—el:494h to handle hie remalna—fol- lowed him to the graze, where he was deposited, with• oat any religious service . , orthe ntteranee ors syllable. The Academy of Maxie is on the topmost wave :at 1111CC(11$ Last evening the crowd to hear,Piacolomini In Trovetora, wee larger than on any of her_•preyiona nights ; indeed, It wee the - largest house I have seen there. it matters little what blase attics .may sal about her musical capabilities, the little lady has dra 'natio powers of .so trancendant - a character, that, in conjunction with her vocal powere,•conetitnte a very extraordinary artist. Throngs of intelligent people, familiar with the hut performers in both -hemis pheres, are eager to hear her, and clap their hands with the heartiest possible delight at her personation,. The fine voice and acting of D'Angri, and the superb eing lug and admirable acting of the new baritone, Yloressa, combined to make the porforolance, one of marked in terest. Bt-tbe•waj, I note that Strakosah's troupe haye made a hit at your Acatemy. How could It be otherwise with artiste so capital as Corson, De Wil horet, Brigaoll, and Amodio i How-admirably and how satisfactorily they do everything. The Eleotchwn are prepsring' for an "now gold', time on the occasion of celebrating the centennial an niversary of the birthday of Scotland's most honorid poet, Robert Borns. A dinner at the Astor, with tin. ,queffa ,of Glenliret, and the! occasion itself, can scarcely fail to elicit a grind gathering of the clans. Ah ! but what trencher men, and what powerful drink ers those Scotchmen are ! Between the Boards stooks were variable and west. At the Second Board, Miesonrl (Pa fell X ; Illinois Cen tral bonds N ' • Pacific Mall rose X ; New York Central rose X with a large halftone ; Brie rose X ; Nucleon River X; Michigan Central X ; Illinois Central fell lX ; Galena and Chicago rose X, and Bock Icland fell X. Money ham been abundant during the day, and lead ing homes have been paying off Inane at BOP cent. At thin pride on choice coliaterala money le plenty. NEW YORK STOOK EXCHANGE —November 2 OZOOAD BOARD 800 N Y Oen IL 1 60 do 200 do 85000 Miesouri o , e 881( 10000 do NO 8516 . 1000 111 Con Bde 06 100 do 818 84) 700 do b3O 84% 200 - do sso 81% 100 do - 84% 100 do b6O 81) 200 - do a 813 76 Milwk&Miaa R 16 1( 100 Erie Railroad 18,44 10000 do WO 91# 6000 do 450 04 4000 do 16000 La C&MIL G Bd 28 - 2000 L Erlo&W Ist, M 76 15 Bk of R411013110'120, 50 PeollellBook2o 105 X 50 do - blOlO5 .. . . . . 100 do 16N 20 Hudson River R 22 100 Mich Oen B 563( 160 hitch Bdc lls e 2 233( 60 Mich 13 Quar'd 810 52% 100 do sOO 52X 150 ,do . 52% 100 do - 53 50 .:. do e6O 52X 10 Panama It IL 1193 50 do 119 100 do 108 100 Pen 0081 Co 11110,78 100 Canton Co - 580 203( 100 do . 580 21 125 Illinois Oen It 85 100 CalensecOhl R. 783( 400 Clove & Tol It 831( 180 OMAR lel Ra 10: 100 do 50 do - 66% 200 do on 68 3( 200 La Oroese&Alllß 4% TILE MARISETS Antes quiet at $0 for Pote, and $012% for Pearls. Fume, &o —The Flour market Is heavy and drooping —sales 8500 bbl! at $3 2604 for unsound, $41004 80 for superfine State, .$4 45a4 65 for extra State, $L 40404 80 for common to 'good extra Western, and $5 8005 45 for shipping brands of extra round hoop Ohio. - Canada Flour is ahm heavy, with !ales of 400 Mile at $4 Neil for extras. Rye Flour le quiet at $3260410 • Cleats—The wheat market is steady, and without im portant change ; sales 20,000 bushels .at $1120115 for red Weetern, and $lO2 for mixed Illinois. Rye is better, with sales of prime at 78e16,3, Oorn In quiet and no. changed ; sale, 25, 4 '00 bushels at 670700 for mixed Western. Oats are ficmer, with seen at 40e53 for State' and Western. - . . . Paoriandis.—The Pork market la steady ; but quiet ; ealee of 200 bbla at $15.754516.55 (Amen, and $l2 50re ming for prime. Beet le attire and lower; sales SO 0 bele at $6.5087 for country prime; $6 50119 50 for do moan ; $10.50m11 6 ) for repacked Obloago do ; and $ll 00 812.50 for aura. Prime mesa In nominal at $lBlll9. Beef Hama I:intet; ealee or 60 We at $15.50. Ba.on un changed Out meats dull. and nominal. Lard firm, with an , upward tendency ,• sales of 200 bbl. at IQ% 10%0. 'Butter le ideally at 181116 a for Ohio, and 1611180 for State. Cheese firm at,7cSJl c Wutusur dull and qomlpal attrro, FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. _ - - :The Money Mar e, linti:Miii44ll, Nor. 2,1868-, Awalk along Third streqt,durtog the reams between , . , the first and rebind 1110etIngercif the Stock Board, would enable them - Oat inclifferentobtereer tobill at once the tendency of the stook s market. Short fame are a sure indication ;fa itiligmarketateelts leokbig iip-Lehtle elongated visages are -in inverse relatica to the proapeota of, the - females . ; Abe imager the face, the manlier the . prospect ot, in. active demand and advanced Woes. We ere often reminded of a story told by a brother editor, out' West, describing an indig• neat subscriber entering his ollloe while he ices scissor toff, with t 4,8 14lOt rePortef steamer's news?" °Yea" - "go'r'e whist?" - "I do not know, indeed.' I saw the quotation, but it iiipped my memo ry." “Guessymil remember if , you liadany Wheat in New,h'ork,"; And it is 'no more then fair to presume he would, if the Marfa! wee falling, and the denuind to ZurOpe the sole hope remaining. F , „ . We, who never tough :stooks to sPeCidate In theM, and who have enough little moats at home ti preveat our making iiinj„otttir - ,,,than „permseent iiiminuints in -bakers' and butchers' billii;ean hardly form to onnemei au adegtfate "conception of - thileirs and hopes which lie behind:the - eager HOwsi Weeding? What does tr - sell iiirSto:dai r t lit by the fervefish owners of alr•maties teMielr patronising friends, emerg ing fromthgbroiteri secret, ,radon. - ; .We never, with_ out sorrow, me the disappointed looks with which the outaider from - 71'4 - z informant to calcu late in the gloomy. vineartaint,•_ whether falling clocks have - jet reached .bettom,"ind whether, by re newed, purchases, ,he 'dial endeavor to reduce his ever_ageeost "Mike.* margin.,i 3 , - `Andettr_ borrow hiMontel grief whenWe,iiee,the margins one friende,lutya • niadiecome out upon the wrong side, while' stocks still 'leek Giahrisiading point; the batons. Ogr 'friend who speculated in wheat rued to say that his good old mother never prayed herileittirlifir bread to rise than' he did for his wrest. 'ollr „aspiretiOns are for.. stock market that 411114' afweyi riling aid making fortunes for all oar friends. ", .•• There was .no material changeln theetnek market; triumictions were'to a Heated eaten; and prices of all descriptions; with. one' or two: exceptions, were well The Germantown and Parkloccen Turnpike Company, And the Cheltenham awl Willow Grove Turnpike Com sany, heVeeach de fared a semiannual dividend of two per cent. - --The „managela of tbe -Philadelphia Xxehange Com pany have declared a Mvidemi of two and a half per cent., payable on and Misr the 18th instant. The semi-annual divideedii, &Mired yesterday and to-day, hy most of the:banks of Philadelphia, were as follows ' We` give tne • cipital stock of each bank, as well as the gross amount of the dividend declared Banks: Caplitook, Dividend. Grass Amt. Philadelphia $1,800,000 - 4 per sent. or $T2.000 Perm. and Mech... 2,000,000 4 •• •• • • 80,000 Commercial , 841,400 -8 r • • • • 25,242 Mechanics , .. ... 800,000'•6-•• • • 40,000 N. Ltbertlea ' 600,000 5 • • ••. • • .25,000 Wonthwark. " ' 260.000 5 ' •- 11,800 Western. . 418 600 6 • •- - • • 20,9311 Man.'and ............ 667,676 .4 - •• Mt,303- Commerce 260,000 5 -• 12,600 Girard....:. /5 260 ,0 0 0 ;I1X••. •• " 93,760 Tradesmen's.:.::::" - 160.000=4• •" • • • • 0 000 • Olt,- . 488,860"8 _• • - 12,015 001 0 1 71 0 0Wei1k . ....' 108.140' - 3 • • 4,894 .4sßsington . , 400,090, 8 , 20,000 "1121144,846 -- ' $398,134 The Bank: of Borth Ameriaa doesnt dielde at this time of _year. The - -Penn. Township has not yet an 'esoeuerstellitfildind.' Th - 4.ocinSelldatlon - Bank doe* not : divide Second Week 14,Noveriber. The Corn Exchange Back la only been In ope ration a short time. With these exoeptione, thei above 'includes all the banittOf the city. " We hare alien elsewhere the names of the gentlemen - choeen by the stookholderi of the Union Bank, to urea as directors. They are - 411Vrispanalble buidnis mn, and thelVotandingls an AMOS ipmisu — thiltheal7stra of that ntlintien, Tinder their Will be carefully and efficiently managed.- The Board, either that meet yesterday aces; non, elected Jame* Donispi krq., yi,cpreatdeinf, ,john M. Pomeroy, Su,l _iii rite-president, god dawn Lesley, as euhler: _These are strong natpea, and well calculated to; seciintfer_tre new, bank 4 8 n 44 * 01 .4 81 4 1MP1 1 .. .04 P is very prominently known in,fluanialstreles,"nd cannot failOf inaklein seispbehleC i lientdent. 4 •: - Ati. Pomeroy te the FincipaliCtlielergeArilioArjl,4log b oom of Ponieroy; - 14neigni.k. IS& Plideitelphisn by.birth and education: . iiittiirmeliLkobiriftlainigh out the State for illsitjets has served nearly *lit/ ysincpShltlievS,:iiii*ehisr of hi tarter banks, the last•thittemaZairthe enmities head of the Bank of Olnuisherebingi.whiehieettion he has just relilolSl4€s. ThSett4l.l,ol4en,So43 hen nude a Monk:4lolone aPpointmont, - The following hi antement At. the amount of 'foal trawrporaCover - the I,llllgrialliy, Hillroad, for the week ending (hil - stei 80. 1868 Wsen. PaayigoaLT . 10241. Mins.Tons. Cwt. Voris. Chet. -Tons. Owl. Spring Montitain. - ...2.804 18 - 88,416 08 86,219 00 East Sugar Leaf' 2650 29 70.134 16 . 72;787 1 4 N. York tc•lshigli. 8701 a l'f•zt,26l - or 88,122 03 Council 8 1 44114.4444 . 1, 3 66,14 , -. ;48,40617 49,762 18 ClerubM2 Re. Co 171 - 04 -' 2.745 16 2 919 19 Orderable & B Mead.l.Bo9 14 68,794 11 60,014 10 Hazleton 2,019 14 e _76,1132 10 71,1132 10 North Spring inn. .' 4 1598 - 112' — 2l 15)0'02 22,488 04 &nth. ." • 2,743 19 2,743 19 264. Pleasant' 'l7B 00 • 2,580 - 3,708 14 East Lehigh 97 16 Summit • 281 18 281 18 31,A89" Offt . 4(9;016 19 7:416;008 19 Cortespcollatit99lV -, • - •'-‘ last yeat.; ; ::$72,0911.1t 881,073 13 86.5 85 78 - " The contest et Cinstanatibatieseis the - oieditore sod "assigniati of the OhibliteTand ?reef ConiPargr - has as 4ameg-alote phase: It triU - he• remembered that ap pitettficarreteinadete the 'United Stitei Circuit Conti on one - Side; and tattle Superior Court on the other, lortkualnalutznentot - a- - receirer..7 Seth; scats :ren dined judgment on griday;tisietiair jorintiothie,; thus between the rival omits illynowfake. the piece (Ohs *oldest betweentle, creditors and assignees et this unfortunate concern...Mr:lames Bilbiesth has been appointed rt . l99lver by the United Stated Olt 'ea Cottit; 'Mit the 'shunt% tt It said,;esi iati-cdeliver hey of theAecitecintonityi to h:m net& he set tled his dispute with the rivri receiver appointed by the - Superior JudgeLeavitt, with the concur. rime nfludge hlet t ain;Aellyersi d the Judi/wet of the 7114,41140 g Circitit 0013.: ." - -The interest due November 1,186 8, on ..the following class of ton& of the Michigan Sontkerii anti Northern Indiana Railroad ikdopany,itill be, paid in New rock at the Morn Rxclainge Bank on presentation, Viz: Sink ing Sand bonds! - of 1866; klichigan - Southein bonds of /800, and second general mortgage bonds of 187 t. PHILADELPHIA Si'ooB BEOHLNG2I SALT® c - Noiember 2, /868. aoroeezo sr minor, asoirx, & ao. .1141M10711, MOE, 8R0L48.8, lilognitijur conm THIRD AZI) ClingBllll7l 07DZSIS • 161941 . Perini /1 . 1.1 seer 03AC 1000' to .6 Lehigh &nip - 90 16 Man itldaeli 8k..121 600 Oity 85, a0w....1053 600 do 4 .. - :ilO5X 1000 Morrie 08 8e - 88. 1600 N Pena 810,...8 0 1000 do ' -9 Penns le -43 X ' 100 Read 11. alma/111,25 1100 do 65.25 100- do de 1100 - do ..eswracin.2s 1100. do, •As6wakin .25 6 do 25 25X 100 do 65.20 X 100 do' - 4 b5.25X 100, do coah.26X 509,-Bsad Be' ne.. - ..13% 1000 L Island B e5.t.5.81X 1000 Blades Ist nit 1t5:784 1000 dodo ..Y33 12 Norristoira 66 2 do ' - .66 Par & Mach 8k..00 ,-BOARDS. 65 Little liehtql 163 Little 6ehtyrit..26% 23 1 3000 City di new gis.lol 1000 Penn It 24 mt 84.00 X 1000 Read It 81 , 88...../33( 2020.3iDions It 14.. ;80 1000 Elm It 24 tot Te.. 61% 2000 Phil to anntOy Is 10 1000 Bch Nay 68 3 82.85.89% 2000 Del 11 mt 13e...ab.87. 1010 Alleg Coils. n Val 6th 10 Germantown g0a.49% 4000 Clatawlt Tosco on 44X 1 - do 49% 2000 , - do ', ...b6A3 • 10 , - do ~, - -49% 1000 do - - cop en.44li _ 4 Lehigh Nay • 61% ' ''.. 'CILI33INe PItIOXB—PULL. Bah liar Imp fie —TON • d0.8t00k..... 9 9,,v .._ do Prof n 17% Wmsp't & Elm 8.10 10% do Ts lot nitg.73 • Bid. Asked 11. S. 6s 14 104 Phtia 62, - 101 102 do 8.....101 102 do New.. 1125 1051 Penn* Ss.. ;......943‘ 94 Beading ..... 2834 281( do Bds '7O-8216 83 - do Mtg es '44.22 do . '86.73% 74. Psalm B div off ..43% 433( do lstm 85...103 -d024 49 60 Long bland 11% 12% Girard Bank IIX 12 LallOoal & 51% K Penns R 8% 9 do Co 60 CO3 'New Creek Oatawisaall. 6% 6x* Lehigh Zino. 1 1% do 2dm 01....903i 60X Florris Om 09E6.46 60 - . . • do 109% fkanyl Ss 5 82:09% 69% 11111,&DP,LP DIA - MARKBTI3.—Nov. 2—Bvezong. Breadetoffe continue unchanged. The Flour market m very dull, but there is no change in quotations, sales be'rig confined to some 600 bbl, at 115m5.1234 for super fine, moistly at the former rate for Western ; and 85 26 for common extra ; the retailers and bakers are belying within the range of sses 25 for superfine ; *5.25a5.76 for extras, and $000.50 bbl for fancy lots as in quality. Rye h'louo and Corn Meal are 260 bbl lower ; the former selling at 81 123im4 26, and the lat ter at $4 41 1 ' bbl for Pennsylvania Meal. likeat—There is some little inquiry for prime, which is scarce; but other kinds are unsaleable, and a few small lota only bare found buyers at 118e120e for jade, and 125m130a for white, as in quality. Bye le dull, with sales of Pennsylvania at -76 e. Corn is about stationary, and 8,600 bus old Yellow sold at 80081 c, in store and afloat, incliding come prime new in the cars, at 68e. Oates are not so plenty and held at 41e, but the only sale wellear of is 2 600 bus Pennsylvania at that price, afloat. Bark—Bales of 20 blade Quercitron are reported at $3O for let No. 1 There is very little demand for Cotton, aid the sales are mostly in emelt lots at 121(6 12)4o for cub, for Uplands, Groceries end Provisions are firm, but the traneaCtione in both - have been of a limited character, Baeds—There is only a moderate amount of 010 eeeee ed offering. Buyers and sellers are apart in their time; sales of 800 bus are reported a t $5 7566 87% qy bus. Nothing doing in Timothy o r flaxseed. Whiskey moves off as wanted at,„21022e. for Pennsylvania bble ; 210 for hlids and 200 for Drudge. , . Markets by Telegkaph. aiw 0RL.16115. Nov.l.—Sales of Ootton to-day, 7,000 bales, at previous oaotatiorui., _Sager has declined 3(e. -Molaisee folk lower.. _ . . New Nurses, November 2.—Cotton—Bales today 8,000 bales at 11% for Middling. eales of three days, 20,500 bales ; receipts of Wee days, 88,500 bales. Su gar dull and declined gp on fair to fully fair qualities; sales at 5%e: ' *Ailing-44.1m0 is quoted at 36c. Freights on Cotton to Liverpool 150 32d; to Havre 15a ltd: — Sterling 'exchange 7% esl3% per cent; et ch ange on New York 1% -per gent. premium. BeciAttkors, Nov. 2 —Flour'ateady ; Oblo and How. ard-street, $5; City Mills, $5 2543531. Wheat steady. An improved demand for Corn; old white, 68e7.13 ; yellow, •79e810. Whiskey dull. Bacon Arm at UM 030; Bulk meat, obi asks. Monito 2.—Cotton—Bales of 3,000 bales to day.. Bike of three days '4,500 bales. Receipts 16,000 bales. Cslasso, November 2 —Flour steady; Wheat firm at 60a; Corn active and lo better ; Oate Steady. Ship ments to Buffalo - 800 bbls Flour, 15.500 Imehels Wheat. To Oswego.—No Flour nor Wheat, 15,000 bushels Corn. Receipts-2,00 0 bble Flour, 17,000 bushel's Wheat and 10.600 bushels Corn. OINCIINNATJ. Noyember lour dull but unchanged. whi.kyThera lila large supply ; sales at 180. Hugo are firm and In good demand at 15 75. A Ben PLAcE BROKEN Up.—A man, named Felix Oannely r wee arrested on Monday night on the charge of keeping a disorderly home, at Seventh and Bedford streets. The place Is alleged to be a notorious resort for thieving. The arrest was made upon a war rant hued by the Mayor. The accusal had hearth yesterday morning before Alderman Vemington, and via Mu la ROW S&U to manor at out, ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers