The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, November 15, 1858, Image 2

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, ._•s'ety,igt • -t, numb.lfs,', • Nov. 14 says :.,, --, : :
-' v• iii 4611 , -- .A . -18' ''oU
',4inn ht.. r - - , ,;',,„' dignbill paper. 1 L•ft oni
Chicago, „,,,c;nw,ppli----..4--,;-_ had-ab...“ , ••
- -,kititil
_tilitVel-tL: zg I. Y) rd !on 06_14°49,
'6.l;iir4"4°stall'ildirs' 46dif1;-5- %ri., - -: : It il,i6-11r
-Liio3l9f4P6tr-AitiiiiiYoik ` l4P ' -''' 41:-:•; ' !' .ll '
Itaiti 1116YATtudn': 4•014#4- 1 1 : d itio,PuBli Tun - , ii.otillt*,..;‘,. "gifiiiii?gegriP''t otiTulAti63'!
''',.:*iiii44l4.-'iltAiiciir iii94l,l4lfliriliiin it
- ' ;"ritifl..4,2;/t,tar -i34,T,lnte,r „
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large
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7.f12 , ix0l ontlnishuitio Meeting of the Douglas
DA46olool**'lo3o9'Nti'llncelcl7oliii.;',on,
il.stilif,'ziyiiini-,,,Jnage trossielCpresided, is,
Odd briWilvet viee4restilenKi and ;two is4ro7:,
liiifisii.t.;:'X•SA4'o,l4;o4.27.9,i'igla a 44 6 4 iii 6l 4•Port'
'-' oCtiwili . , • wltiiiiiiit ;Judge, ?bogies? eongratidating
,'' • 40eill*Iii - oXlit).PlAWniti7_lo9 l l hit A!tuOlih•
Ai - A;(144 ISittnevetelyinrn;ilke:oonduot, of
iiiiyalkhintAdmieistration.'.. llosolnliiini; Mi.
4iiidifigthesdie - re - sientlidente,'-.4eie -, unnalmilimi ,
ados,itiZieili"!ditot xisitifirusilititiii;i - deteAka'
SiiAifilniiiiiiiti;ebiniiiiikli 4 4: - thilite:* freak In
snOpotrot the resolutionar- - :',•--- -,.. • -,. 7 --...,.. • „-•r
'TIT 444 , f(iiu= colit,totoi, :i t *.iiiki - oii Ja g ..
Doughin sap :,r - KTII's news of his women will••be
welcomed In ell, pary,,,of lhe, State" by ; true Wiwi
• - ' ignts.,'.r.J''".4_:,.. , . ' -7- -
~- ' • ' ''
''.
-Alinpspies or 4sergia an d; lifiseimippi bAng n;
• ' the annual massage* • - of 'the 'reape,Mtlye'Slfivornois
1 ‘ ,11.61411 f it4i;11 T 4 A l 4 ll ‘ l lo, l4 :stalviii l ol 3 rOwn ,
iiiiilitlApßitalit'iV , Xsifair,44l;s l 444 lairs of
G0e54714 7 420110; 4 *.tift et -l e gislatio n , 0
alit 1 - 4,47 , tii,Aiofoiatiegiiiiiti - oj • heft PiPer'
money:-• and awl return to the ourrenoy ; of the Con
stitallen:34lf•furtherjaire_
,or, , tbra.'`Olijoili' be
iimiesily*ninkeildillie propriety of establishinc
bylaw nsystaiii for Ile ' State 14010 to IheiSab:
treasnmayet* Et ho untiOsiatitagiWiedpii of
!till:10411e sioiji4Y4ilibii'der6o44ted'bY•tio.
-, .hunatfeinlYiiiiltsiii: rte practicaloperation.- ilovar•
114:14,:s7,11ilo t; treats chiefly OsSqbf internal Ins;
ikpijim, 41Sn;;;;e*I l wdeidip ne - oOnnielled wi t h-her ,
I,l4lmiettsptetu s ildiiiiroads,,, The importanoe of ' I
Jkii - firoliotKorgistiiilingthf and Under Ibis head
fl O gAinfili - ifigniiiiiihniiliiith entire liOnrity
glion to tiiliottielikiai Of the Mississippi river,
mar.‘l3Mtv WoiddiAibrion ad largest inClieliast
• -._ _:,lkigic,,rqiiiia In'ihe7,Whiltofqiebiallaiiohereoi - ei:
r ; lialf,kiinsifisi4laili:iillifed2so. - Slio,growiti a
our itiatscioie,osotton: --Ihe ailment of reclaim
s ..ehletlend;-;bo;llSaidatpo is- estireitect atnotless
thiiinshree MillicitieWlnorei, ;MAI4 on Iti.Tedit - Mpl,
tiosilisMiskliiipft ispe.hinkdrsd dollitelier aiiMr,
• On th - I, , ,Miji,COVd 7- 11,ilAndeto '''sey,,s , s they; qhilie
tkinjfi/i/ iib 6 C4 o ifieniiiilid,Ast ls4 l9,/
itegouninlittitikeiiiietheir henellte twee/people
Of 14:atierlion'1;iho; State ' l l,3tt, While
,Or Wise -
AOC. tel - :iirooiao.:,xlyeilfi.. , :voiAtiiii
, - oolgitiooootri*ko.,thiiiiliiikrilit Piexib.`
: lid*lfllitl i f3f ifilob:thili''`ooiliWo'lleh wa s on,
, .•••• glo ~ust e ln-, nor 1411, ay-.yo s so- ar ad.
• Taz44:4l !tp:lFirordliiiiioneritlifedivideide,to
Shook - 11a brie hinberked; woe ON)Atatini,shomili,
- T44'..straii.fipi".**A42:o* ,, ,ingi ihnisilieli!
completion lifelfsetikbp .the aid;of the hitate.v• - • , ..-1
, 14, ,;, 1 0;feittOiteibiTY1 has I**lilet accepted Pei
iliAllk4.o644tiljbV, - 140i_ottlialtikeff.Eniman , ....ki ,
4 ini 4Aisliiiifille•P*linirei!irithini s' week ''':''".
• N The ; elaimship tennelSei, froM'Nern ‘Orrits;lini'
kiittfia il'il:kreti:ilitilliirtilitieditirit,v - i:titi‘,*:
1 0. ,- 94 - litr'#sW iiiiikAkii.44ili:4e#,'4wii. ik,
geOtOtrieFiig:9• 4 thStiiide: 4- Zol*itJt *as
#4. - Aili,..**lloo - ,*t , *,i , iictie - iter4l3l. 4 *
• faissiOraiieVis a mi llion if-)iollars• Salley -*to
~theNneliiii*Slisiyan,WiiiiireasisiorcOf She', T4lie.,"
-- ' ; Y,#• 3 i;'Pii--P., 118 *liksite ' al/ t:rn 10l 7,,lhei'PaialAo'
_ .; ocorlie held ; begiohrnog4isis,*'7l;ir steimar,
iiii'it,iiiiacivas oiiiiiiid:_in'Tobasoii".4ipr by theta
laheials; r.; 67 , ; ; •' ','- . l _ ,' Vi• ~...... - ... - 4 .--,• ,:"L ‘ 4 ..:
. ; 1 0 1 ; ' ife l lig li i i t. ~IJiiiiiliti;Viiikiliiiii.3oi dia gg i
to:the testaAls now due at,,Nem:York.' 6,‘ -L',...';
Ifissliiii`on i h lnst ionelpled; Orin:lidOf ,at - lf*Wnikr
IteiVYoiaiy, ii 1,411 lkikeA o'ondiiiitnisilmisle
threnglio4thebtifelottils:s`yoltisig i 4lee*iind
- *ith - Ixiiiiiikg! ,l ditdifferiMOikindhuttlitg tileihith"
i' l #' fft6rMit6X,Kthir,•'-ciiiiiii tiOl.iiiirfri-),
i
'Ala ' *opralt. plead, pifoitie `sinie.ifi danger Mc.:
hyosilffa'rem - osio ' , foe,- his;nhenten ,Mloinfis lie
• ' - jOXid.;:eilllififiel,oilliera' - abink,pi.,prebal?illiy of I
the reimit,:iiith as Mich' iiidifferanoa as it it ware
siStere, gatie4 iiiitlioer.mbiciw, vie th - • decide the
quoettoiMStevitiiii Of the ufltoots who toekhlie;'
. 1 544f-if.: l4 ,o*.r . i s *;;ir#oil : l 6l Phij9kaiho
r i
applar - iwf -0641-less emotion than the oMeere who
• bila Ortrkf ) s ,(Ard!r.#,Ad, irl i i4;t4f:Pi 3 t4d 6 W - : att.'.
tiribilrep3,l4l`*as !endiied ,t he witfir:coilOuoied a
gtkiAtcrpom e mboy6 hp•nuinsed hiaiselt by whht•
ling And singingtand ;declared =that a'man , could
uot,filf,oo,Xilitilia lokiltlrew.*lfYl - Pia: Add
if 14 - 144 been tried in"2•T,lnill'ork'he woulii, have
' beenineqWlAtedv„ , ...14 ...,1
__. The extraordinary iaill';of walking qti ..; •tiente`
- ` withCit rif! Pr ' s/102 141 A+. *lined; f)Y - ',#,4, wig
I; IfOlniusinowitY thosobriipefofYThefailidind
Maid,!' at - Toughypepetepkqest , _ - She own
. ii(9)44, 16 0 - 6#4 6 #9 2 .11 1 4.04 03 ffiii1RPP")
and - eo4ludal op '••Thnraday night' at:that honrse
OhChitelefWel*lS?-itetehed" thk Whole of ;We
_ tlsiePiAt Ailti - • , 0 , 014k' on? itiaVeiietileg ' •she
, - Ych4 W itigiiiilii'l.ttlikib*Lett:f4Xdiiia;that
dio!ltatoifioc , .oontilli[eymnohl:ionger.,lier 'eyes
-' SieisAdatlfeliet,744.4lMisiOlesed ..'aii , i' :IC wail
~
widatelikisteetAritlonlOhiiViibk, o dd,Pieste
0rte1 . 54.1405? - 1513, 1 414 1 10rt - rAC.OISItt *Week As
ralliba; 2 alledP ll o l oi" li* l t heTt e l4 9 ls ad'
drem4to ittitt!Oia"„**l'A4`,.be,;,Otbltleg
etwiegtleitihli tbai - Wpontbkilink
grew shoiter.
Ottelt , !Aibiblttotik,arktvz slight - improyernent on
PristoitOliti .. •''..‘... ,'
.. ,
_ r tfilril itiisAtit" , nlgitt ki.rsoolii:pi;,, pi' i'aiana,
Seitiilliiiiinintylgaw,Vibik: wad irobbed At they
}gig Rikitroid 044 at Illtalrii i whilo eittittwehe
ailligg ti(krttiai'frOjp - ,Ditilittrk. 4 KO hjel been
• at . thiEttiitioritiithii , seierel , ligitis,7;4aitini the
nightAip - wWitildik ,, Abonthalbpaetnik'iloek lie
- _pied Intiyitt itibbitildtrieirlten he was sudden?
.1y asiuwalviiiAkiiii Thsi Pligdni 4- )i - Ja arms
s u griiiig:lllM,pai - -,Ai be Attempted' talo{ an ,
- - istariii - eiti•et - thirnfielieditkeravat and Written'
41 0 1 410,PROhjigTh 9 0 ° T- th". l ,,f ine4, 11 ,4 Plelfebj,
takitit* - 00 301 0 04 6 04 1 ! d_0nti11*,414 14 4....
- heidiedcdelliWiimieenii other valttablw -May.
--,, -- fe l3 l4444o#o l telierP t io;49l4A7?, - 'l o „lifd,bk,
Siiit."-",- - t- -- ,r { f' '`. .'!". , /t'ai.,;,'" , ",
,'-` ~ ' -.-- ,-, s ,'
Ty,lcii4selSsl srelktso,lStair ..etliberfellirelng
hardAttf.4 ,,, fillitbe,liet , ilnternallenel regattisime
whiffalitOkilit ituf"jeate - ki le"thfr 140 1 441
e°o°o l 3oooll l3 l:o44r l o47.wiilifed Isei,Vw,
thelestreil::tuad' pl ittie s i laiktailMM race lietWeen
awitMertotittirebrreAeut ittl'iltelfreeeh eliamplea,
wi s t , bat.iii=x;i:**4ol6.,-**4. l ll4'eletilent,'
- , slbiiielliehielefpOlikateat tilef, , _, Iliii bad better
-, ,te4CISI3oi - 44tarMiiiiiYitlitioilfri In 40 *aril that
::iitkoin Atifild,t, betret ilimaebe eati.l! .,- ,', '
- - f- -- rllikreliiii4ifdilAirsiti-1i,44141:the Vocruma
1 4 1 fili4 4 :9,iltlits* , i 7 y.K.oo4:lol,llesifziio s iinse • of
' ,tionli:lbur:overlthwl"4 l r :li,k , ` -FdYrag ,
, Vijiiik)Oearatideceli:i 4- ' 0 ,' • : ',' 0 0- --r0u.'5 ,, ..: ,
,„
'''---;:tObicittiilOitxtr.*2ltniip.oo*incy
- - SklittiAcorieek 7 ,..., pfrikorwidah*eri,
, br.6o44kiluidifig..o.) . 4-. -1 . .p . A -- i'.: o-, ::,K , ri , ~r -,
4 - 41114 , tIeliviiwiarotiosfikoko 4 •016 i;
f - - davirillesawit4foriali , "*** , 46 ;4.
A9:44V41' 10040 ).**VoritimOotil
2 ' I'wetheiAtt : ' petair ‘ efeWhlott lethe 35Dulelt`
' -1- -,' ine,.)9fetifil 44th r eleith'iollieielei:E: ,( F ' i'-
',-, i -'- '" 2 )l*ibSOtte ,
, - . 40-„tVisti a tivA?slti t i l - iiii
4
,
6141iitigt4:44*.*:' *4'4; iii - i'Agie 4lthe
;: A ,1 ;4; 4 1104 1 1 0:*** I i '-_
Aritttiraiso ist4qii - - ,
- 1 2,A.W44, 4..„,, ATOK4lfixgtak
~ ...“'ViiWiitig, .4 ,1 91 , tisAii; ,- *biltima•run ,
~- 4 ,!..iii . 1t4i01: o:l***4l4o l 4o l kopnif
";- I ,';.f - X4 1. .4 1 ihilfileV .-.41 511 ,44,14A,01etiftee
- I„-fp:t4' ' -
~ Ore ' ` liStit`idies irilittr i bielf 4 A-0 ,
P, L e,'Milt r ilasi jriiiiiil ' AlltiThlStrietibit: .It '. : r
gr -10 ' .- -""- ' taiitieSafo 4 l4:dietgroiiiiiiet
a s 1 ', .IVertptit:
F.A.K- - iLlt-FsTist=4 7,- .. pr- , , Ti . .. 5 11,. I _:'
r.•„ „ t O. kittllt4h,lllthlie tiallni f - -". Solo, leo
`pYlattlYl o .4AptriliettailkylpiOltei . iiilol •
.9.1: -1, 1 ,-(fixtr i %-ev:, v--5 1 4:V•7'2• , .. - ` - .•, - ' - `r., - ;--•-- • "-!•ry r.: - 4
:_••‘‘ .l •-, -, V44.•. - f ,, , , :t ,,, 1, ..g* , w,,,,- f,,,- • ..2.- ,-,-, - ~ - -
kf.-%-t-k. , , 63•14-r-1t:. , 2 0 ;:,, , !_'3w`.1.s ~,,, - • ,, t„ ; - - • _
ihe'eare slater.", ; oilliessi is new
befigeentvielve and:thi.fteen : irMsre of, age.....A. few
days ag o, the - officer
who'stated lier:house and
Wished Oltipley . .to re - eati*: T 674 f1i°9,4 and
aunt found flit littliW, , ,glif:ASQS‘igoligifisbla
Mid :lie former ...leek onstOdy,'' but
off . .igaring" the 'Statement of the 'child, re.
fused . to. restore her to Mir proteotrege. The'
`child the 'officer 'Bst her aunt had placed
hoiseihrdolibtfarkiptif , atioicWhoie
itelingitlfOirviny. day ; that gho ian
pisoalitlhe:reqUest of some of the,
ierWigh'lO''gfo'bOok to her
amstqHes. uggigui stAry, heggi of the
oflioar,; ;; Med thcgikl'ao his own house
Ailsgivie,rpsxgiiinsitiek rionviocsid Mm that a,
plau,had_bearaaid 7.l4;the to..debadolx , this
..tender,Oldld4Ttlui daughter .of `sister I—and,
erioVer, thektlia mother had left some property,
:Which! wag then' , iti - posseEgiOn , of the aunt.
gems: superstition
.Dories fi,ua r fhrongli:4 - X,eii. York paper About
;ihejime: of„tim excontioss,ef young Bodging, on
Friday, MisoMati" , hail** si% little girl With her,
apiplied"forlifertotgeicak - to' enter the Prigen,. "Oleg.
leg-as reason thOf her - child was subject to' fits,
lanilehmhaid-beelf told that If it could put ita band
lipen the3hodY of is person, who had been hung,
leifere‘thelsodf waa Oold,:giistire would be fasten
anisotiallP
,effeoted.,
Iu "Onlihiraday lasE, David Davis, an
"OM:ReVolgitionerisoidler;f died, a t the advanced
agerifeitillincidredinid four yearaand ten months!,
- .
The arer, fifteen tonne - in Nassaohusetta in
Whitilethe aandidate for Geyer* re.
cetped one vote ; deien towns whloh gave him has
andievnitY-lour awns in Which there
werilisathanlan - Anterlean votes Must Mat week.
Yark, r ficni Saturday,. Willianta Somers,
'whiS.WailoniVittted An September' of stabbing John
`B. - Altai,' the 'ratan' of - the ship tiandCrin, was
seamed to seven years *confinement in
,the State
fritian.'.;lanasagureprati„,nYoui.h,loinal guilty of
lcurglaiyii_the rat degree, was eentenced to Sing
Sing Prison for ten "years'and six months... - •
-y-•: ; - _The;steainship Quaker Oity left '4'llW Orleans on
Maining,en: kir 'second hip, to ltinatitlan•
tooh l 'otit;tfty 2 ,tsru, passengers, henna for the
the newly.iopen.Tehuantepeo, route. - •
• , : , - . -Tiie,Trearnont . Bouse, Boston, was cold at motion
ou `Satiirday;'siabjeot'tsi four Years ' lease, Sof
We had the :first`rent ledientiond of winter Yes•
for': thosti whomCiod
-haik icteased-,4lth:„aii_ibundanoe of,. this world's
goods to assist‘the,poof.-- They Can - be - found in
your` neighborhood; reader."' '•' ' '
• .„ Mr. Ipichatian , „ll - Ignde,ira. ,
ChM einellenkiireildent, Buousitan, has
'taken - it into his head that the Sovereign §tate:
"c;toble4horilid,be'c'alledlhe et:island Of Ma
defre.'Orthatt' :favor
elated,'ii.snanT3 that MBDART
'atiould',lle)lPPOinted to all the (Pees, and that,
:Tioo4.i , ;; , lintlifei4i, ' sliould: get any Place,
wbeitever:• We , altrays knew: that Mr. ißtf
'4isit4ii fond'" -or , * -kbpit glasi
natty Old Madeire.:=the Wager Madeira—the
Begat - .4Madeira; the regular , Madeira - of
the, - OId. , :sehool: 'But; then,' there mutt S bo an
alterative a .we''eannot. live; on fish all the
time;: we'eanitotdrink kadelre all the time.
A'noW . ;`,and ' , then. its
_good for the
StrongeSt,`;:ienstittigeis'i '6Ven the .Turk
mast. rest from his. Indulgences. Not. so,
how"eibi.j-Olitti';',Mr;'l'President Boomtire.
He littay ,'dead
_loVe with , E ri s
or, is -.they . - ,syllable it in Ohio,
Simmedary:' Our worthy Biecutive het no
'eyes' f6r anybody else. 116' sees San only ;
he, drinks in,MEnsar alone.. , 'Yaltk.to-remlnd
him thitthere is such a statesman as Wirsitst
ALLEN at Chillicothe;- that DAvn TODD liven
near Cleveland and 'that , 'old Pennsylvania
is full of repreeentativei In the Buck
eye - ,Btate-4he. Preildent sees AA*. and
longs for Madeira only. : . The fact Is,
this:, lilting for ';,,Stimmodsry Is a charms.
toilette of our ~new-lialeaty Janie; for
.491,_has hop the, opponent of the aforesaid
;slue alLbie '1:M114134 te has batoii him
with a double.headed.and double-barrelled in.
tensity. He •htui hatedhini" in the, general and
in the' delaill'clier, his written him down for
years. 'Me hen cu r sed hinfeditorially, delege
torially, and : corporeally„, He has .anathe
inathied ...at. , . the ohnich-dOor, at the
tavern - door,- at the pest -office door, and
. ti'evirl deer.' :Me - damn.ed him e t Baltimore,
41844, 1848, and . hi' . lB62'. Ho damned
it Cincinnati in:lBso,beceming tempo
rary;:ehidrman- of .the Convention, of which
lie was 'a delegate, 'and laboring to sponge
- Onf. triniins* minority by. applying the
Majority: - rule - t
-and :finally, he wet,blan
ketedhirn.before the election,' giving :Ohio to
kinmairrhy' r e retteing vote: Hence thiePro.
sidentialrivigard - ,Ek Salexpedary, . :Fiches been
giiinneileoneistit4 opponent that Buonixax
"intt` ;• Aiiat h lif-,'JS his - title
te',,oonsideration. , !.. ' -
- •_;,,Tliti;morient Mr;itieriaten,
et ItiOnti6' Bast the 'Governor of Minnesota.
The , ,duties :otAhat. office ~being dlectutried
after
, - ,4"'- , ,t ~ la l i)sidn,--' and the r ;;,TeiTitery'' . bey
tint,ana ,ttaitatited :into
the poet " o>Bde' ,at . - Oolumbite;fsii';' - atMggerY,
weith ionr. or five the:inland per annum;
4tolao:ol,hol4o.:l;'niii,dOveoo6 chair of
ltaiii4hecomineitteatt,there was no other
S 4, and inpord=,
.ingly tendered.to him! And this
The virtue Of enmiti;
1' and ; • the'WOrthlestming., Of:friendship, are . not
'often sowellatistrated..JMEDißt is. neither
14POlemorrinWisdore, a',Cleoro, in, oratory, a
'Bayard livertaitility,nor a NiTitherforee in mo..
i *hiving done his best to Proyeliis
:hostility to the President, lie has thereby won
'aillteldn'affeCtiOn and his regard ' ' „,
Telegraph. - •
lir,4timionss;,_ the reeohtly.disnalased
reetriCimilotithe; AtiantlO
~ , Telograph' (loth.
jpanylidere to iiceuniiie - *here the fault' lies in
'a: (Mile,' (*Mohr he thinks is readily re=
coverahie,)„and,-' , if im find' that -be ,oan
remedy it, makes . offer 0 1 will under
take, at my 'own mist, and at 'my own risk, to
reopen communication with If ewfotindiand;
atoifaither; maintain it for a' given number
Of Isere, at, - a mciderate,peraiztagempon, the
trees - receipts; of the company, 'this being
payahietmlonionlyas the llue.shill be kept,
byme, in geed working order." - As: yet the
Director's have not 'noticed "kr. Wnimmousn's'
letter s which concludes with a request for per.
"nilision • to make such examination of the
poli - as ',Oen he:tee Misery to enable him to
make the above offer. • ".. •
4 011;;IP,otober — ;P; u already,stated in
..Tnit
ra!soi:it inesoogo from Nowtoundlond,'by
dab* ivini rodeit:editkirolontla;, We take tbo
toliowink interesting 'paitiotlare from the
• ; , , -
OnthefiOilolin r qtteithiu,
.abeat- three
nrotoiliiiiihis afternoon considerable appearances
of eignalemaulfested:theniselvesupon the galvan
imititer;'Witlinifillations of the needle equal to 50,
divisions of ;Viefessor Thomson'i Male, which, as
they etionrred - sti -very regular intervals, were
rightlY slippOleiti , be - the usual reversals , every
15'seconis. These, appearanees continued until
betWeeri five - and six o!olabk in , the evening, whey
the- words- it Two ', hundred,'t and some 15 or 18
letter's, of whiCh no sense could be mride, werere-
Oeived. ; Subrequentlyithe 'signale " Can - you r"
(no doubt "'mead'') were received very clearly,
Messages, were -of 'course, immediately sent; back
tothe effect that, the Newfoundland signals and
wordrroonie Very distinctly,- and, if they could
read front Talent's; to'send no di
rMit response war received to this, OVUM of course
concluded that It was not received at Nowfound4
land: Aboittilghtedleinit on' the 'came evening,
tbd Words S , " Daniels now in_circult." were ,dis.
thiotly'recorded,,together with areat many sig
nals whiiilimere not intelligible. These unreada
ble motions of the needle continued until between
nine and ten';P-M., when the words, "-Two hun
dreetind forty " .whieh,no - doubt, alluded to the
:number of la the Daniels battery,
*hid( wee, speimn. °fin the, Message Previously re
delved,nd u, gricifmany.lettare and signals, of
which nothing connected could i hemade were re
'calved. " D aring the next hour= to? receiving, say
'frouteleven to 12 P. kt, the needle of the gawp
Inoineter was watched moat olosoly , yet strangely,
thOughlhe Insulathin Of - the wire appeared to be
.in prealinity.thefiutio; condition, not the least in
nivereal""-was observed ; the
Iwite appeared to have sunk into its usual lethargic
Condition. During -Thursday and Friday, though
the mest'arigilent watch was day end night kept
upon - the= galvanometer no appearmsoo ' or return
ing currents - Middlik observed, though the' earth
eurrenC'dusing' the",whole" of this period seethed
afeadY.,; 'cin' f ,the morning of
,flattirdeflatt? the 28d inst, between nine and ten
Odra, souie siight indications of signals and re
versals were noticed,- but they ; were neither very
nottendurinVFrom thence up to the
-present-Aline' nothing ; mOrti htol;'beenreeeived.
tid'Yet tiuk - teStings - do hot show that the cable,
in Vegas& Mliistfiation,la Ina worse condition than
it - Watt , 'Sj.truiiii-W haelc:;:ltis certainly a most
traordienry. end. nriaoCimidnice_ fact that, appa,
„ritzily with all. olteuinstanom the-MOM, the cable
-should at time/ bi forbid -capable-4f, triinsmitting
signals, 'while at othenknot the fitititestirade of a:
sigpal 'ontObis'i Made ' to 'pass from shore to Ogre.
eyeajlitliltbi rttpAtyeet,amountofeleotrioalporter.
It litudded, thatilly.:lixtinix, whose power.
.11illitageetii.elilettle 'mutating/1 liave for come
tfree been used; at Valentin t hai undertaken to
operations at Talon
jigfor perlOd. If the next accounts
* l / 2 4 Neirfaiiidlend 'shottid, show that the ro
iersals Trofn , .fifil" itaiiiitykitistruprobtic have
leer,
„
lait in dispatching a similar piece of apparatus
4411 '. :14tiibition at Trinity Bay.
County Repudiation.
The, decision agabiattlie - attempt to repu
thel county of Alle
ghtiriY, in payMenti - of her_railroad subscrip
tions, hap given generalsatiefaCtion. But
there'nre'itarne . remarkiiinAhe opinion of Mr.
JUstice Weenwsnn, on a question hot in
volved in the case, which hare - created unne
cessary anxiety, and tend to depress the market
,value_of all municipal: and _railroad bonds.
The Judge intimates that, if the rallroad'cor.
poration hai sold the bends received
,frOm did
'county for'less thin the par value, contrary to
the express' provisidn of the act authorizing
the subscription, the county, although liable
at law for theinterbet on the, par value, is not
bohnd to pay any More of the principal than
the sum' which the' purchaser actually paid id
the railroad company, for the bonds: - As the
bonds en their face purport:to be issued (On
purituance,of the act of 24th 1858," the
Judge,• thinks that "brokers and . their cus
tomers were bound to talownotice, as well as
other people." Notice of what? Notice of
the existence of the law, and the provision for
bidding a sale of the bondeurider par—not notice
that the railroad dompany had violated the prUte.
dons of the act, in some former
,transaction to
which the purchaser wturnot a party,, and of
which violation he had no actual, knowledge
and no reasonable ground of suspicion. , On
the contrary, a purchaser from a broker, or, in
other words, at brokers and ' their customers;''
'who purchase these bonds third Persons
in the market, have a righttcr,presnme that
the railroad ' company to whom they were eil
ghially given has parted with them honestly
and legally. There is no presumption that
any one has been guilty of violating, the law.
The, case would be very different . while the
bonds are in the hands of the original purchaso,
who was a party to the -guilty riotation of the
law which prohibited the'sale titular par by the
railroad company. But whenever the bonds
get IntQthe hands Of atibiegitent, purchasers in
good_faith; without notice, of, the previous
violation, of law, by the original parties, this
objection is no longer available. It is- for
that, very reason that the court willsrant an
injunction to restrain the Original parties froth
negotiating them.' This : Was the very point
deeided in the case of Delafield vs. - The State
of:Illinois, 2 Gill's Me*, York Report., 177.
- In 'Darr , vs. Leftivre, S . :CR.6y, 418, Chief
Juitice Lawn, in delivering the , opinion of
the Supreme court of Pennsylvania, said
that t"-such bonds are net strictly negotiable
under. _the_ -law merchant as= are promissory
notes and bills of exchange: They are, hew.
ever, instrument. of a - peetdiar character; and
being'
,expressly designed f 6 'be passed from
hind to hand, and by common usage actually so
transferred, are capable of passing by delivery
so as to enable the , holder to maintain an ac
tion on them In his own name. Possession is
prima fade evidence of ownership." Now, it
is very easy to settle the 'question of equity
between-an innocent purchaser without notice,
and the party 'who' created an instrument in
such aferm that it could be used as a means
of fraud, and placed it in the hands of one
who was thereby, enabled to commit the fraud.
As the ,benda were i!expressly designed to
pass from hand to band," and for that pur
pose were made payable to bearer, the county
creating such instruments must look to
the railroad company,' or or tti purchasers
from the company who participated in the
violation of law, and not to , innocent sub
sequent dealers who purchased without
notice. On this point, Mr.. Justice BRIM-.
sea, in 'delivering the opinion of the Su
preme Court of New York, stated the true
doctrine of law when he declared that "the
bonds are negotiable instruments, the title to
which will pass by mere delivery; and al
though void in the hands of the appellant,, (a
man who contracted to purchase 'trom the
agents of the State for less thin the par value,
in direct violation of the statuthautherizing
the issue of the bonds,) they will be valid -se
curities in the hands of a bona fide holder." For
that' very reason DELAPIELD was restrained
from negotiating the bonds remaining in his
hands, and ordered todeliver them np,'to pre
voni him from making the State' liable for
them by passing, them off , to an innocent par
chaser. 2 Allies New York Report., 177.
The same sound doctrine was laid down
by Chancellor WALWOrent, in delivering the
opinion of - the -Court of Chancery of - New
York, in a case between the same parties,
reported in 2d Piiigv's Chancery Reports, 588.
The Chancellor . expressly declares that if
-those securities, palm intl . ? the Inutile "-bon-a
fele holdert,ith have no notice of any irre
gularity, or Want of authority on the part of
the officers or agents of the State who put
them in circulation, - the complainant (the
State of Illinois, the obligor) is both legally
and equitably lound t,ty pay them to such
fielder: - •
In the recent cases - of Garrard vs. The
Pittsburgh and Cbmielsville Railroad Compa
nY, 6 pasey, 164, and the same,RailreadCom
pany us: Barker et.al., 6 Casey, 160, the bonds
of the county of Allegheny, giv,en for rail.
read-snlisiiriPtions; were recovered, from the
persons robe- obtained them improperly; ' and
without any valuable consideration, from the
President of the Company.. But in both these
cases it was conceded by the counsel, and
held by the Supreme Court, that if the bonds
had passed into the hands ,of a bona fide pur
chaserfer a valnablebenaideration, they would
not have been recovered. wee Very pro,
perly decided in 'those cases that a U put..
-chaser with notice' that the' sale is a breach
Of trust, or a frauttipon'd!ie rights of the real
owner, is particeps criminis with - the tramp'.
lent Vendor, and his Marche's°, cannot protect
him against th e owner, because, such a pur
chase is not bona fide." Notice that the law
,prohibits a breach of trust, or a fraud, is of no
Importance where the question' arises against
party to such violation of right. ' Every ono
Is= bound to lunivi the Law. But subsequent
- dealers who have paid a valuable - maiden.'
tion, (whether the par value' oiless . is Mims;
terial) are not affected by notice of the rules
Of law alone. , The notice; to affect each Per.
'sine, must be notice. of the fact that those
rules bad been violated in acquiring the title
to the instruments. And even'thie would not
affect the holder if he derived title through
one who had bought without notice of the in
fraction of the law. In such a case he ac
quires the rights of such former bona fide
holder. 'The bond having once become a
binding security in the hands Of the first bona
;fide purchaser never loses its character as
such, unless it falls into ,the hands of one of
the:, parties guilty ,Of the original fraud in
putting it into circulation contrary to law. •
'lt is regretted, by all'intelligent men that
municipal itubseilitions to outside railroads
Were ever sustained as constitutional. Al;
though the decision in their favor was made
by the single casting vote of the then Chief
Justice, (Bz.ton,) who had published a con
trary opinion but a , few months before, and
although the Legislature and the people have
since prohibited them by an express constitu
tional provision, it is the duty of all law
abiding citizens to fulfil the obligations cre
ated before the constitutional prohibition, and
sanctioned by the highest court in the State.
The recent decision of the Supreme Court,
commanding the Commissioners of Allegheny
county to lay a tax for the purpose of meeting
these obligations, : receives the approbation of
all good citizens. In the remarks we have
made upon the dictum of the Judge on another
question not involved in the case, It has been
our purpose to explain what we suppose to
.have been his meaning, and to guard the com
munity against a misconSetruction,whith would
depress the value of all railroad securities,
and thus interfere, to an alarming extent, with•
the improvement and' prosperity of the coun
try.
ce Occasional 3 ' payable respects to the po
sition' that Mr. litionenex has occupied on
the Tariff question. There is an interesting
page to be written upon that part of the his
tory,
of the President, which may, or may not,
see the light of day before the close of the
short session of Congress.
. ,
. •
- rir HON. WII.LIAN , H. Halman, of Indiana.
the author of the muoh.abused "English Leoomp
ton Bille? bee- boon ,re;elooted to Congress by
nearly-two thousand majority ! Wonder who was
.r baked by this result 7 7 —Reading (Pa.) Gaseete.
It must , bo tho English Bill, inasmuch as
liruireit Eamon protested It In odder to got
'through
RRONND RENEE, STOONS, AND REAL RSTA'fA.—.O
Thamis & Bone' Seventeenth Fall Sala, to-morrow ,
eve;iing; will coniiirioe haildetime' reildeneie on
'Walnut, Oheatnut,locust, and otheistro,!;ts, vain
ableloti Ctormentown and Riohmond, number
of nall•seonrod groand-rente, to., altogether'
twenty-nine propartlea. Peremptory sales by or
der of Orphans Court, ezeoutore, and °Moro : /arm
advertltipmente and papphle t eatalogueS,
TEE PRESS.-PMLAIALPHIAO MONDAY S NOVP,Mlifilt 15, 185 S.
Pabiic *litertainrineut B.
, ,
At the Aoadeniy:of,filusia, Saturday even. :
lug, Sienora Parodi ipPeared as Norma, sinking
Well, eating finelY,;:amilleolsing es
-if music tree
hei voice, and thet;each syllable she breathed was
at once a harmony and,:a,thenilit. -- Shiites eared.'
=ably supported byAtidaine Strakoiohi as Adel ,
Rua. The duets of
-these hie find vocalists were
dellghtfulro perfect, so melodious, so filled with
Here, we regret to say, praise must
and:- Without a good tenor, Abe opera of "Nor
ma" lalittle worth:. , %'lte new tenor, s ignor Bobla,
who made his first (and 'vie preiuile,hls ldit)
'mik° before a Philadelphia audience, as Pol . :
lions, failed—utterly; hopelessly, irretrievably.
What should have been passionate and whelk,
he made ridionlous and absurd, Laboootta was
1 bad enough, the,other evening,* ho is pee°.
tlon when compared i with, Poole. The - orchestra;
'we must repeat, Went unity of Porfoinience: They
are'not al*tiya in time: and generally too noisy.
• Thia evening,lnototee opera'of Martha" will
be produced horean Italian version for Italian
singers. Last season, it was admirably performed
hero. The plot is, that of the last century, in the
early part, during the reign of Queen Anne. The
scene, is, English, and the ineldente, really make
Soinething of A little Story. Twci young ladies of
Anatity'go,marcinerading to an English etatute-fair,
jokingly engage an 'deriaestia servants at a farm•
house,"wherolhelr two aMployers fall Wave with,
them. list, , a double wedding takes place, - and,
literally,. " all goes merry - as a marriage bell.".
The east includes Madame Colson, Madame titre•
Itoaoh, Signor Brignell; and :Olguor Earili. This
last in the part that Junoa would have taken but
for.a severe attack of bronchitis, 11 4 14 in whiob
Carl Formeamide each a hit'. The ilea dancers;
Mademobielles lira:ache and - Daele *Ele - p.
pear, on this ocoasion, and will he additionally att
'tractive. ' •
The second opera matinie takes place t,o-raor- ,
row, when "IlTrovatore":,will be played.' There
will be an operatic performanee on Thanksgiving
Day (Thursday), and ,a concert at Musical Fund
Hall on Saturday, . , „
WiIAUT•STEHTIT TnuAran;—At the Walnut-
Street Theatre on Efatutffity evening, a new draMa,.
entitled "Elva Nightechithe'Velaware," was pre
timed for the first time. It Is an adaptaticiirfroia
a French piece; -" Les Nuitea de la Beane," willen
by Mere Pourier; and originally brought out!at
the Theatre "Porte tit. Martin," Paris, in _ifiaff.
The present Haglish arrangement of the play is a
decided Improvement:, upon ; the Prenoh,, both An,
the morality of the plot and the originality of qie
seenio ofeats. The terminations of the different'
note, In the original, are tame and oonuuort-place,
while, 'ln the adaptation, they are 'rendered
strikingly picturesque. The piece depend' for
success very little • upon any literary pretensions;
lt t , belongs purely to _the sensational eohoot,Of
dramas, and is fairly overrunning ,with startling
scenes and dramatic) situations. There is no end.
ofplot and oeunterplot, and in every aot.the lover
Of the wield and wondeiful can find a bantitiet to
his •
taste.'
We intended to have given a sketch of the pia ,
bidets% but to do this would °Onetime a oblumn,
and wo cannot conselentietUdy.put our readers to
the task of reading such alumina. edition of ~Pla -
torah. Each °Minister in the piece bas enoughlo
do to form a small diicideeline biography, and we
therefore modeitly 'rlitralh. Whore the plot is rub
oidinated to the Production of effeative tableaux,
the incidental which serve as the - promoting causes
'Scarcely need talking=about.' There li a 'vast
amount of machinery invoked, and the correspond
ing results come out as a necessity from the labors
of the machinist and the customer. Pistols, draw
bridges, decayed mills, tottering houses, gunpow-,
der plots, red Are, and thunder and lightning ) !
'mire, delight, and terrify, by turns, through the
piece. Heroines seek for watery graves, oven In ,
the first act, and rise from the waves only to be
raved to serve two or three acts as confirmed mg,'
Diane, and then to recover their reason in time to
inflict the deepest blood-red vengeance In the;
fifth. Heroes begin life as rowdies, culminate'
into sloop captains, Spanish Jain, and Ita
lien
counts, and elide off the plane of existence
as repentant moralists. -
Worthy eons rob their worthy fathers, and to
conceal the shame, perpetrate forgery on their
father's name ; other sons, net quite as worthy,
though pretty near it, curse their very unworthy
parent, and indulge liberally •in the use of re
volvers to put a quietus upon paternal tbrobbings.
Forged papers aro stowed away in mysterious
drawers, convenient wax-candies take the impres
sions of key-holes, and skeleton keys most amia
bly come in to bring the missing doenthenis to
light. Country villas are broken in upon at the
dead of night, and gentlemanly robber., as well
as regular graduate " oraelunnori," run a rase of
cm:dation to see who first shall seise the treasured
papers. The quiet ruralitieg of Point Breese,
now crowded On every fine day with fast horses,
and feat, yet peaceful, young men, are invested,
about the year 1794, with the awfullest ens:round
tugs of mystery and horror; the place, which
marks thi3 happy union of the Delaware and the
Schuylkill Is marked in the eventful epoch of the
play with an old mill, owned by a sae:idled Spanish
Jew, who - smuggles goods to the far-oft port of Hew
York.)
gel/ airdist-rate gunpowder ; his brother banditti
seek, bandit like, to betray their chief and to pena
-1 irate the subterranean mysteries they ..go below
in search of filthy !wire ; their - ohlif fastens thein
down with look end key; the imprisoned bandits,
obliged to stay by the gold for the best of reasons,
touch off the piewdei, blow themselves and2the mill
to " eternal smithereens," while the rushing' and
rising tide of the Delaware mimes sweilliig on to
overwhelm the leading hero in the plot, the base,
bad; Jewish banditwho had fastened his folio - wore
down.
We think our readers may well believe there 'is
enough of Interest aid incident In snob 4 piece to
attraot °crowded house. On Saturday, the Walnut
street was Med in every part, and early in the
evening it . was impossible to find standing room
anywhere. This indicates that , the pieoe is likely
to have a good run.
The play was fairly done for a first representa
tion. Mr. Conway did the chief hero and hire.
Conway the chief heroine with groat eclat.
Messrs. Biebinge, MoDouough, Keaoh, Perry,
Frank Drew, and Young had a vast amount of
Work to:perform and acquitted themselves credit
ably. Tho only characters that overdid their work
were the waves In the - denouerient scene, .and
these were anything but well-behaved We con
fees to having seen , the Delaware and Sobuyl•
kill both under heavy storms at different times,
but we can positively aver that we have never
seen them as turbulent and wrathful as in the lest
of the "Five Nights en the Delaware." Although
the Kremlin-like explosion of the mill might give
some colorable waranty for unusual aqueous in
dignation, we oannot credit that the Delaware
could beoome so "obstreperous!'
They
these stage .
waves would make believe. They jumpelup .and
doten with the most amnsing ,rapidity of per,
&inane° - until the 'certain went down with the
house In &perfect titter of laughter. We trust oar,
friend Mr. Riohlrigi 'will see to teaching those
troubled "spirits of the vasty deer. to modify
their'preternaturril eathustasm. It II a pity to
hive a fine denouement or a deliolous catastrophe
spoiled completely by the unmannerly behavior
of a supernumerary wave !
The "Five Nights on the Delaware" is an.
nouneed for repetition this evening.
At Aroh-street Theatre, Bouroioault's adaptation .
of Ptinvrotte," which hie filled the house for
fortnight, le announced for this week. This has
been decidedly the fineness of the season: '
The National Oirous has drawn very well during
its first weak. Its second commencer, this evening,
with "Games of the Crusader', or The Knights of
Malta." The getting-upof the performances here
is very superior to what we have lately bad. The
dresses of the biped and the housings of the eques
trian performers are splendid.
The Old Folks give their last consort, at Conceit
Hall, this evening.
Signor Bliti continues to receive and agreeably
entertain a pest number of his friends and the
rape at Assembly Building, Tenth and Chestnut
streets.
Thomeuf's Varieties deserve their name. He
really has a great deal of variety In the respective
lines of singing, dancing, and eating.
Illluoie—The Popular Vote.
That eterling paper, the Springfield, 111,,
Register, of the 9th, sums up as follows :
We omit our table to•dsy, giving the Republl•
oan majority se shown therein, with nob aorrae•
tione as we have learned, ea follows :
Dem. Rep.
In eighty-nine eountiee. 9,072
Hardin 253
Hamilton 1122
Pulaski 438
Randolph 192
ne remaining maven counties gave, in 1356, for
Moore, 4,457 majority. If they vote ea before,
the Republican majority will now be 3,530.
And the Register adds:
The vote thus far shows that but for the In
trigues of the Washington cabal, whose.eole aim
wan the defeat of Douglas, the Democracy of
Illl
nois would have succeeded throughout. The in
triguers failed in their chief objeot, and only duo
coeded in doing that which lays bare their villainy
before the Dsmooraoy—the' people of the whole
Union. They boat the Domocratio people of
nose upon their regularly nominated State ticket,
but they have failed to reabh the object, of their
hate—Dotiglas. Their treason has been 'spent In
their own exposure, while the man they would
have crushed goes back to his place to " lash the
reseals through the land."
Itoputelioaniem, though Over twenty thousand in
n majority two years ago, amebae& 'ln electing
state °Moen by a minority vote. • Itdoed to by the
intrigue and treaeherrof the Washington Cabal,
which fails in its great' desire—the defeat of
Douglas, -
The returns show that Mittel, Is yet Demooratio.
They show that although 21,000 behind two years
ego, they are within 11,600 of a *llene majority over
Government officials and , Reimblioanitan com
bined. • .
13.tr,z,0t. IT,Litrnra, Drasarrnin, & 00. 1 ,8 STOOK
or, FyiittlTunn.The sale of this elegant stook of
furnttureottAo, 1014 Ohestnutitreot, oominonees
to-morrow (Tuesday) morning. Catalogues are
now ready, and tho arttalos arranged for exami
nation. 800 Thomas 4130115' ClYertipeanent.
BY MIDNIGHT MAIL.
Letter from, iiooeasional."
•
plorrespendeace - ot The Pram.]
lY,sBillNovits; Nov. 18, 1858,
- While, the' rraildent - was at thO Soldier's
Home!! last enamor, and' later, at Bedford and
at Lancaster, be spoke unreservedly In favor of
opeoitio duties, upon certain articles of foreign
product that come into competition with our own
mannfaisturo and - growth. You know how steadily
Mi BnOltanan has, maintained ' tho; opinion that;
on- these, articles, ad valorem. duties neither,
helped the revenue nor those dependent upon
their own industry' and the returns of
their Investmente: While ho was in the Senate
his leading theory was speolflo duties, and while
in the Cabinet of Mr. Polk he contended steadily,
against Robert J. Walker in favor of this theory,
going, as everybody , here knows, to the extent of
threatening - to resign his place in'thet Cabinet be- ,
I
cause speolflo duties were not recognised in the
tariff of 18411. Ms letter resigning his seat, on
this ground, was really, in type,and he was ready
to publish it, but waslissuaded from doing it by
some of his intimate friends. Mr. Buohanan
had a keen reaolleotion of, the charge made
against him in the previous isamPaigis' of 1844,
when Mr. Polk was the Demooratio candidate
for President, and when he (Mr. B.) was accused if
having offered a certain amount of protootion to
our people in Pennsylvania, in the event of-Mr.
Polk's election. lie was, therefore, ready to go
out of the Cabinet on this question in 1818. 'Why
he, remained I cannot tell. Probably you . can.
Well, years have rolled on, and the dieseating Se- -
°rotary, finds himself President, and Pennsylvania;
own native State, bleeding at every pore for
aidlor her material intermits Ife , to now In a Posi
tion to help ltd. lie has the power to give her whet
be has pronileed her for many years. ' He has said
that be would help her, slime he has been chosen
to the Presidency. lio has said so to hundreds of
gentlemen in tho last year. But Mr Cobb objeots,
objeots, Mr. Thompson objeots, and Mr.
Black says nothing. Will the President stand up
to his State on the tariff issue-Ads own issue—his
own teat in 1848 1 'lto' fought his best friends to
help a fan fire-eaters' of thO South on the Iciness
question. Will he now take oat° of his own State
in defiance of thego fire.eaters? '
• I hope' Mr. Buohanan will help. mi. I con.:
fees Ido not think ,he will• He lost a great card
when he deserted Walker ; and his own honor in
1857„ Had he adhered to these, a few hot-brained
fellows in the South would have got angry, and
would have threatened some. But ho would have
had a united people,with these exceptione,and could
have done almost anything. Upon the• sentiment
thus created, hi would have got the North to agree
to the purchase of Cuba, and the Bo u th to agree to a
fair tariff. Now, however,hisbais losttheNorth, and,
with sillhie bide for the South, has lost that; and
so he Jcomes to Congress bankrupted and powerless
for any good end. So Ido not think he will re
eciiiinierid his own oonsolontieus tarp{
,ideas topoi
grese in his,meesage.
' But tbat • Mr. Buchanan has given assurances on
this subjisct to 'many prominent oithiens, I etand
ready to prove. What he will do now, however,
Is matter of great and grievous doubt. The Wash
ington Union says, in almost so-many words, that
be will not; and so nay the most prominent mem
bers of his Cabinet. There is not one of them who
agrees on this enbject with him. • Judge Black was
always a thio'redioal free trader:
The coming ehort session of Congress will be a
most exciting one. A good many ideas are to be
thrown out, and - a good many axes are to be
' ground. Men will meet with many old doubts
solved, and many new ones started. The future
ie fall of uncertainties. The defeated Looompton
itasWlll present a lorry show, vrhlle' the Democra
tic, viatore will hold up their heads high.' Intrigue
is getting ready. Ambition is waking up. The
politician is hioking out for the strong side, and
the office-holder`, yesterday so noisily for Buohanan,
begins to whisper hie fealty to Douglas. It will be
a lively three months. ,
Collector Baker and the offioo•bolders in Phila
delphia assuage Mr. Buebanan'e chagrin at the
result of the late election by telling him that
your next Fourth of Marsh Convention will unani-
piously endorse his fatal policy. They are in
great glee at having 'sleeted a sot oComoe•holders
from Philadelphia to this Convention. Rest assured
that these people Intend to make this policy a test,
If every man on the Democratic ticket is defeated.
Letters received here from Judge Dangles sEato
that he will not leave Chiango till the that of De
cember. Ills correspondence is enormous, and his
rooms crowded with friends. Mrs. Douglas e'en-
Unites to be in poor health.
R. M. Stanton la daily expected from Califor
nia. He will bring with him an important lidget.
Mr. Stanton is a Pennsylvanian, and is a very no.
oomplished lawyer.
It is now stated that neither Mr. Meson, our
Minister at Paris, nor Mr. Dallas, our Minister - at
London, will be recalled. The President is greatly
disturbed lest the latter's, return may make hips a
candidate for a piortalp high eine°.
Mr. Heine's, etOommlssioner,to I ,renezuola Is
no* in the titti.
Thalweg& of Mr. Senator Trictrononer36a - noi
ploase the powers. •';itUrtdolitielnif by half.
• A galifortlan now in Washington -has no doubt
that Hon. Jo. Mollibbin will get his Beat in the now
(longues. Ho says he' is able to present a very
Strong case, aid that he will be powerfully sus.
tamed.
I learn that Hon. William Montgomery, of your
State, Is in Kansas Territory, and that ho will
come (Meat to this city on his return.
Popular Sovereignty in 1837.
CLAY,' URITTENDEN, SENTON, DOUGLAS, CALITOUN
AND 81,LAB WRICIIIT UPON 7118 SAgli rwerronx
In 1837, more than twenty years ago, Henry
Olay introduced into the United States f3enate
following resolution, which wee warmly supported.
and voted for by such Deimorate as Benton, Cal•
honn, and Wright. Read it, and then say, it you
can, that Stephen A. Douglas does not stand upon
a National Union platform :
"Resolved, That any attempt of Congress to
abolish slavery in a Territory of the United
States in which it exists, would oroato serious
alarm and just apprehension in the States sus
taining that domestic institution—would bo
violation of. good faith towards the inhabitants
of any such Territory who have been permitted to
enter with and hold slaves therein; and because
when any such Territory shall be admitted into
the Union as a State, the PEOPLE THEREOF
SHALL BEI ENTITLED TO DEOIDE ' THAT
QUESTION EX.OLUSIVELY FOR THEM
SELVES."
The Freeman's Journal, of New York city,
one of the warmest advocates of Mr. Buoisix-
AN'S election to the Presidency, says in its
issue of last week :
'• The rebuke of' the late election is severs, hut
salutary. , are pleased that it has been mea
sured out with n moderate hand. Our only desire
has been that the true principles of the
,Demo
°ratio party should be vindicated, and relieved
froni the contamination of the spurious and anti- , :
republican Vagaries of the present Executive.
We have, for some time, ceased to regard' James
ilushanan as a Democrat. lie is a Federalist to
his heart's core. He has betrayed his highest
trust, or proved unequal to it, and has warred
with an insane bitterness against the party that
elevated him to omas. Not only -boa ho endea
vored to rob the party of its dearest principles,
but he has violated the fundamental theories of
the Government in striking madly at the Repro.
sentatives of the people; and with his bribes in
Kansas proffered to the conatituenoy, and his re
wards of (Aloe bestowed on recreant favorites, ho
has made an epoch which will not soon be forgot.
ten, and ought not over to be."
Wa rejoice to observe that Francis Patterson, a
son of our distinguished fellow•oitisen Major
General Patterson, has been unanimously elected
lieutenant colonel of the First Battalion of Ar
tillery, First Brigade,
First Division, P. M.
Lieutenant Colonel Patterson recently resigned
!I captaincy In the United States army, after hay-.
hag seen years of hard service, upon the western
frontier.
No officer of his years stood hlghor In the esti•
motion of the army, and wo are ovally certain
that no ono could more eflialontly"dlsoharge ate
dutios of the post to which he has been °looted.
(Prom the Gesgraridest eseettear.) '
.Ft.ortamoaviLms, an Administration settlement
on the river Delaware, below the city of Philadel
phia proper, entwine a resident population of
about two hundred, and a floating population,
about the time of election, of twenty-five hundred.
Has a Governor appointed by the Exeontive—T.
B. Florence, prosent incumbent, who has held the
office for the last five years, and from whom it
takes Its name. Chief ocoupition of its inhabit.
ants, making ships and votes for the AdMinistra
tion. Situation considered generally healthy, with
the exception of an epidemic. anomie condition of
the lower extremities, or weakness of the knees,
requiring twenty men to lift a plank easily moved
by two able men of, similar ocoupations, north ad
joining mid pity proper: Irriporte mostly from
other States; Pennsylvania prodnots not admitted,
move under heavy duty. Polities, ultra-Leoomp..
ton. ***
Tbsy aro exhibiting a min In Now York—that
grand headquarters of the wonderful ? as well as
horrible—who eats nothing, tint paving -stones!
Here Is the placard that starts the paisers-bY of
the show-room
1 , The wonder of the nineteenth century! Mons.
Gluiest, the great, stone-eater. This wonderful
man eats nothing but paving .stones; pebbles,
rooksoto ; for his breakfast, dinner, and supper.
Ile will swallow a'number of largestones in pre
sence of the audience. Relives and subsists en
tirely on the above ,food, drinks nothing but
water, and has purest health. Physicians cannot
aromant for this unparalleled Hying wonder."
Cr OtaItESSION'AL OMIRTiItY.—At the Con
gressional Cemetery, in Washington, which has
been greatly improved during the past year k napes
tarts have lately been created in remembranpo of
the following distinguished mon': Hon: Jarises
Bell, Sumter from rievmHoropshiro ; BAD. Josiah
Evans, 13enator from south enrollee; Hon. Thomas
J. Halt, Senator from Texas ;Mon. J. Pinknek
llontlorpon, Senator cram South Carolina; Hon.
Moses Norris, Senator from New Hampshire; and
Bon. A , P. Butler, Senator from South Carolina.
THE LATEsT' NEWS
BY TELEGRAPH. •
- Later from Mexico.
yievoar or THE LIBERALS-OUADALAJARA NEOAP
TUMID - ZULOACIA ANXIOUS TO RETIRET-TIIII
pr.ortia nisoicoa
New Onczans, Nov. 12 —The steamship Tennessee,
from Vera Oruz on the 9th instant, has arrived at this
port
The &deices furnished from Mexico demote the victory
of the Liberal party. "
Guadalajara was recaptured by the Liberals on the
28th ultimo, instead of on the 18th, as before reported.
it was desperately defended, but the Liberals were re
inforced by a thousand men.
The people wore rejoicing over the result, and Gene
ral Znloaga was anxious to retire.
The Clergy bad offered Zuloaga another million dol
lars aid.
allettian - was in possession of the 'Liberals. ' Sin
Blas stao-the only town on the Pao'flo coast held by
General Znlooga.
The steamer .Guerzero - was recaptured in TOUIBOO
river by the Liberals.
The VpArdsh steamer Colonel was at Facriticio.
°pada had been captured t):7 General ilvaies
From ;Ffavana.
Clitannasvort, Nov. 18.-=The steamer Tube!, from
Havana, has arrived.
Prim had declined, molasses me neglected. '
. ,
The Pacific at St. Johni, N. P.
Si dorm, Nov. 13.—The steatnehip,-)Pecffic, from New York , bound for Liverpool, was ßigOlaiexl below at
9 o'clock A. Al. As the wilraot mail hence till ,to-mor- ,
row rooming, devatches for 'Europe left at the Ameri
can Telegraph office wal be forwarded by her.
Non-Arrival of the Vanderbilt.
. _ .
8/Nor Rom, Nov. 14; 11Jf P. M.—The steamehip
Vanderbilt front Routbaropton, with Liverpool dstee to
the Sd Instant, is now due, but bee not - yet been eig.-
,nalled. The weather le olear—wind from the west. .
From Washington.
' • ' TOO CIVIL/WAS. ../et , tItTATKAS.
VirAelliSOtes, ' Nov. 14, —A private letter ,received
here from Clubman, October 10th, in giving an account
of the revolution conftrmatery of the recently pub-.
Balled statements, rays that Oapt. Stone, with his sui-:
min • party, conalating of *brut , 80 Americans. ma
uled three houses In the centre of the town, directly
between the opposing puttee If an attack had been
made on him ha would have hoisted the American flog
and fought under -it, baing'well , armed', add having
plenty of ammunition, and a brig in the harbor mount
ing two Wm.-pound gun to retreat to, if necessary.
Lient Meter/ was ready to lend assistance-with his
The Mill war wan ended bytbe surrender ..orthe Am
thorities to Use rebel party., After, getting all they de
manded and obtaining a guarantee of Immunity
, frorn
prosecution, the rebels reinstated the authorities. The
Americans were not attacked, owing to their firm rel.
Von Ind declining to surrender their housed to the rebel
leader. - •
Ex•Goirernoi Diedarjr.
WallinXerox, Nov:111 —Ex-Governor Medal*/ will
leave Washington ti-morrow fer Be will answer,
in the 133111110 hr a we6k, whether he will wept the
tender of the Governorship 0 KanUi.
For California via Tehuantepee—Depar.
- lure' of the Quaker City.
New OnLVATIO. Nov. 12.—The steamer Quaker City
sall•d this morning for California, eta Tehuantepec',
with the mails and passengers-6 cabin and 276
steerage.
Railroad Convenlimi;
CLXVILIND, NCIV.I3.—The Railroad Convention, du
ring the sessions of yesterday, were occupied in the die.
mission of the plan adopted by,the Conveation held at
Niagara. A resolationwss adopted to submit the action
of the present Convention to the Board of Directors of
the roads represented, and the action of the Convention
not to be final unless approved by the,direetors of roads
representing two-thirds of the number of miles embraced
to the territory represented. When so' approved,
general Convention is to be called for the appointment
of commissioners.
The Convention resumed the conalderatton of the Nl
agarkplein of organisation to-day, and adopted it after
settle slight modification. The most important altera
tion/ preclude express and ffeight companies from any
?gentles in the nee‘of care or the despatch of freight sot
given to other shipper'. The plants to be submitted to
the stoetholders of the roads for approval, and ratifying
the proceedings of the Cleveland Convention, when the
plan has been acre; ted by the boards of directors of the
several reeds. W. Dennison, Jr., John Van Nortwlck,
and John Ingle. Jr. were appointed to serve as com
missioners until the regular board of oommisidorieni
shall be elected. • '
• The Convention then finally adjourned.
Debut of Madame Laborde at New York.
New Yost, Nov. 15.—Madame Laborde , s debut at
the Academy of Mode, this morning, was witnessed by
nearly eve thousand persons. Notwithstanding the
storm which WM prevailing, hundreds were unable to
obtain admission.
Western Navigation;
Monona, Wcee., Nov.lo.—Six Inches of snow toll
hat night lin this vicinity, and ,Lake Pepin la frozen
over. The boats will. probably, be alga to make bat •
few more tripe before the elm of navigation.
Sale of the Tremont House.
BOSTON, November 18 —The Tremont Home In thie
city Ivan paid at emotion to day, ant pet to a leans of four
years, at $192 000. The name of the pnrchaeor has not
been made known.
MI 2iil I;EN Ml=3;
•
Despatches from White River ;unction state that 1
le snowing bard there.
Death 'from 'an Accidental Wound.
Woeozerse, Plus , Nov. 13.—Frederick Warren,
city marchnl, has died of the wound received a. few
dive Once from the acoldentel Mooting° of A pletol t in
the hands of EL 11W. llendrieir.fs, a pollee offloei from
Oherhaton, 8.0.
Markets Vy7,lc-f,legiaph.
New eitt.XAN6, - Nor. 18 '-The Cotton market Is
stiffer, but quotations are unchanged. Wes today
8,500 bales, and yesterday 14,600 bales, at 11011,V for
middlings.
Wee for the week. 65 000 bales.
Receipts - 60.000 •
Reoripte ahead of last year 174 000
Receipts at all Southern ports ahead of
last year 459,000
Stock in port 212,650
egia r eip r UftraOra . ' "-"
' -
Hagar closed Orm and steady at 6 ;If 00. Corn declining;
vales at 68.. Lard 10 • Shoulders 734 '; sides sot - Coffee
oiceed firm; 'sales of the week 8,000 Sage ; I aerate 8,000
bags Lstock in port 17 000 bogs, against 114,000 'lnge dt
the same tiros lastyear. , Cotton freights to Liverpool
have advanced 1-16, and are now quot.d. at 646.
Freightsi ,to Havre have advanced V • and the rate la
now 134. Exchange on London 101010734 • exchange
on New York, 60 dap, 111021(; sight bill ' s 1401 die.
count
Orammiri, Nov. 13 —Hoge are steady; MOO cold at
00.70; 06 26r0.80 are the prevailing rates for those
averaging 2001hs. Iteoeipts. today, 10,000. Provisions
olosed firm ; for mess pork therein a epeculailve demand
at $lO ror delivery la December; green meatier° steady
at A, 1, and Se. , Whiskey active at leo; other articles
Unchanged,
Oritosoo, Nov 18 —Flour quiet. Wheat firm at go
advance. Oo•n quiet at Ole. 0 ata firm Raiment° to
BulThlo-1300bb's Flour, 13,000 bushels Wheat. Ship
ments to Orgego,—No Flour, 17,000 bushels Wheat.
Receipts-600 bbls Flour, 16,000 bushels Wheat, 0,000
bushels Corn. -
OCCASIONAL
Loss of French Ship Empress of Brazil
RESCUE OF sour. OF man PASSENGERS AND CREW
THEIR ARRIVAL AT NEW TORE,AO
(From the New York Herald or yesterday.]
Tho ship Planter, Captain Carlisle, from Callao,
arrived at this port yesterday, having en board
,part of the orew and passengers of the French
ship Empress of Brasil - The following brief ac
count of the lose of the ship and rococo of tho
. people on board is given by Captain Carlisle :
October 18, lat. 4.05, long. 36 W., pinked up the
mew and passengers of the Preach ship Empress
:of Brasil, Captain Alexander Charadana, twenty
.eight in number. She was from Rio for Havre,
which port she loft October 5. On the 17th she
struck on Roma shoal, at 8 30 A. M. she came off
'and sunk, taking down with her eightof the orew,
as follows : J. 11. B. Hutinot, the carpenter; T.
Evono, cook ; Louis Dreaampe, steward; Franolne
'M. Omnex, Pranols Prince, S. Tlune, Theodore
Manahia, and Jacques Mehl, seamen.
Thom of the crow saved are Captain Alexander
Charadana, Alfred Conran, mate; George Smith,
:boatswain ; Joseph Bandon, J. Latina, Jean Jell-
Oot, Louis Robert, Jean Conmain, S. Bamour,
Pierre Ilingant, Jean Comen, Jammu J. Same,
Lbuis Sorinenoul, Eugene Dubrua, Theodore Du
rum°, George Soune, Edward Dennaul.
The passengers saved are Louis J. Etionon,
Mrs. Etionon and son, Madame Aum, Josephine
Giunin and son, Madame Rosalie Godohaim,Tour
daughters and one son; Pohle Miguel, Joseph O.
Goarnient.
SAD 000IIRRENOE AT A BEAKER SETTLEMENT.
—A few days since an occurrence transpired at the
Shaker settlement in this county, which caste a
gloom over the second family. Catharine Damp,
aged about torty yearn, belonged to this family.
he retired at her usual hour in good health, and
lodged in the attic of the large building. About
four o'clock in the morning she got up . in a tranoe,
raised the sash of the window, and jumped out.
falling on the ground, a distance of forty feet
from the bed-room. She was not disoovered until
two hours afterward, when it was ascertaiced that
her limbs and ankle were broken, and that she
bad received fatal internal Wades. She sur
vived not more than an hour after being con
veyed into the house ; but she told her friends
that before she committed. the act, she dreamt that
a parson woe in pursuit of her, and that to maim
she must leap over a precipice that yawned be
neath her. Dr. Dean held an inquest this morn
lug, and the jury rendered e. verdict in accordance
with the above.—Albany Tournot.
TIM UPS AND DOWNS ON LlPN.—There can
be seen daily on one of the New York city care,
as conductor, the son of a gentleman who formerly
resided in or near Boston, and who was brought
up in all the luzur,v,that wealth could command.
Ills home was elegant. Horses and carriages
waited his pleasure—servants attended his call.
But one of those reverses came that come so fre
quently. We was changed. And the indulged
son and tenderly-oared for child hod to go out
and moot the rude wind and cool looks of the
World; and ,he earns his bread as conductor on
ono of the city oars, at tho daily pay of ono dol
lar and fifty oonta.—Correspondence of the Bos
ton Journal.
ANNUAL BALL OP THE GOOD WILL ENOIN7I
Co.—This evening the Cord Will Engine Company Co.,
one of the most efficient completes In the Fire Depart
ment. give their annual ball, the proceeds of which
Will be applied to liquidate the expenses they have M
ourned in procuring a steam fire engine and altering
their house for its reception. Their engine will soon be
completed, and it will be housed on Christmas morning,
The location of the comptny has' been approved by
Councils, end se the object of the boll is a deserving
one, it le to be hoped that all persons favorable to it will
second their efforts to place themselves as an important
auxiliary of our Eire Department In effective, trim.
A Lose COlLD.—Early in the month of 00.
tober'ore of the city pollee discovered a little girl 'ram.'
daring the streets. near Oxford and Washington streets,
In Kensington The ember took it to hie own borne,
and kept it for several days. but flouting no claimant, it
was then assigned by the Mayor to the Northern Nome
for Friendless Ohlliren, where It has since remained.
The child is about two and a half years old. If not
soon claimed by parent or guardian, the managers of
the Rome will feel themselves warranted to make the
belt provision for its future welfare, aecording to the
regulations of the Institution. ..
BRASS FOUNDRY CONSUMED.—A: fire origi
nated at twenty minutes past one &clock yesterday
morning. in a frame building, occupied so a brass foun
dry, situated In Seventh street. above Little Poplar.
The building was totally destroyed, together with much
of the nontents. We are unadvised as to the damage
anstained, or whither There wall'any insurance.
Bremen. Ceuarrr.—About half-past one
o , olook, yesterday morning, Officer Samuel Boyd, 'of
the Ninth ward, arrested a burglar in the store of I.
Newland, cornet of Tenth and Vine streets. He snug
ly ensconced him in the lookup to answer for his en.
bidden familiarity with the premises.
PHILADELPHIA, GERMANTOWN AND NORRIS
,TOWN %HAGAR CONPANT.—Ort and after to-day, the
10th instant, the time of the starting of the trains on
thti road «ill be cbengel. For partlaulara tee Over
;thement in another column.
BROKE urs4.—On Saturday a - waning . , a
mao, named William Pllder, waelettemptlng to elem •
ber over the gate at Dock-street wharf, fell and broke
he leg. Ho was taken to the Hospital.
FINAIYCIAI; - : AND:COMMERCIAL.
-Phe Money Market.
IgiLaDtLPIITA, November 13, 1858.
The,general tone of the deck market fa weak, with
here and thin; exceptions in favor of a limited number
of securities, which are held in strong hands, and com
,mand corfidence frOnitheir own merits. Per the fanny
stocks there is a marked tendency to lower prices.
liondeaud mortgages, and real east° in improving neigh
borhoods or good. buainess locations, are rapidly rising
in public favor, and we hear daily of operations in real
estate and real estate seemitles,undertaken‘witliiiview.
to investment at a wire "remuneration for thi4, and In
the certainty of.hereafter realising the full Output'
with a margin of profit, in any cue of need
These are the-views and tendencies of that olive of•
people, who, under, the name of ,"oritelders,”_ tumidly'
furnish the substantial means upon which the specula..
None in stocks have mainly rested.. They are not dis
posed to trust in railroads or railroad management, nor'
in the estimated profits and the figures of antmacie
ports. They want faith, bad they flod nothing, either
: in the historiortlse poet or in the aspect of the pres
ent, to 'lnspire It, and with' plenty of means In hand;
and no lucrative employment for it aside !vim specula-'
Con, they determine to put their money out on real es
tate security, which will be neitaln to 'yield them in
terest, and be forthcoming when they shall want it
hereafter for other porpiiieit. Their deelsion is a wise
one, but it is very damaging to the apeculatiOns alba
.stock exo muse - „
The October earnings of the North Pennsyliania
Railroad were sBl,o4s—an increase 'of 113,200 over.
those of oOtober,ipsr. Prom January let to Nov. lst, ,
1868, the earning' were $210,C81, an increase of. $.16,-
, CB4. -
~_ ,
The following Is the Treatinry,stitereent to 2holoth,
. .
lost: _
.. ,
Balance , . - $6,986,022
Receipts 570 221
Drafts paid - " " - 925 487
Drafts leaned - . - 1,126,786
Reduction - ".... .
.050,815
The, Pottsville - 11 - ftners , Journal of this morning ,
semi up the anthrtiolte coal trade for the season,,es
ooropsrtnl with, la't, as follows :
1857 1818. Looa. Cain.
Bohnylkill—Rallreed.l:6ls.99B 1,442,435 178,588
0ana1....1.180,070 1,145,621 15,545
Lehigh 'Valley B 891;171 426 938 " 85;767
Canal 825,970 804 981 20 089
Del. and Hudson Co.: '441,480 , 819.017 122,418 i
Penna. Coal Co ' 521,229' 585.786 ' 64.557
Scranton, Routh .".-.... 278,450 448,848 173,898
' e '- 1201 th ..... 184,2 0 1 127,678- 46 528- , -
8 172.825 5,299409 882468189,282
6,299,299 - - 289,281' '. ' -
Decrease In 1868.. 73.828 --- , .
18,328 .. . -
Wllkeaberra and, Ehamoldn--ab0nt....125,000 -
114M112
The following is a sisteinent of , the earnings of. the
New York Central-Railroad for the month of Septets.
ber,lB6B, compared with Its earnings for the correspond
ing month of the Smeilotte seer:
1867 8709,788 81
1868 802,487 11
Decreaso...
In the aggregate earnings - the month of B.Pb:iso
bar, being the last monthathofiseal year, areinaludeft
the arrearages of miscelliiiiteus items for
,thi year ,not
previously reported, beciiuie'net definitel y asairtalotid.
The miscellaneous earnings raferred torte:
For Sep:ember, 1857 V 32,733 10
For September, 1858 47,925 84
ThaFew VOA papers are already diditussing the pro
bability of the pt-opaning of the canal toll question In
the Legislature at Albany thin winter; and Ito effect
upon the Central llailroad stook. The people of the
interior have to some extent identified the company
with the Democratio party, from the fact that the same
men are prominent leaders in both , and a victory over
the Deweeratle party theiefote bales no good to the
railroad company. ,The Republicans, who hay() carried
the Siete ; have always been pledged to the policy of
making the canald pay; add whether that policy be
sound or unsound, it is natural to sopporpthat, now
theithey have the power ll:Clink Own hatch, - they Will
at all oienta try tiled favorite reborn., and tax the rail_
road for the benefit of the canals.
The eontroveray between the . pearenger ratlwajs and
the omnibus proprietors, has had a settlement rather in
favor of the latter, ea wilt be seen on reference to our
oourt reports.
PHILADELPHIA wroor,BXCTIANGIE -HAUB,
Novem!)er, IS, 1868.
AMPOILTED NT MANLIN, BROWN, „.
OD NARK-NOTE, STOOL,
AND INCIIUNON BROICERN, NOZTELV/182 COANNA TRIAD
AND ozawmar antiona. -
HEST BOARD.
400 Penns is 9O 7 Deliver Meadow .. 159
800 do 96 8 Girard B k 12
800 . 'do - 98 .60 do ' 12 .
200 do '9B 25 de ' 12
400 01ty154.... ...... 101% 1 1 :404towlessR 6%
400 do 101% 18 do 6%
600 .do 102 21 Letughlterip. .:..' SO:
300 do 102 100 Rea. , ing R...sbwn 25X
300 do 101 X 100 do Own 261(
400 Pah Nay es , 82..': 49 SOO do eswn 26%
2000 Tenn be C0up..85 801(1; 1 Ilarrisbneg R ~...58%
1000 Lehigh Valli 65.. 8014 29Dani lc , Amb0j...117
1000 'do 861( 7 151 neb.lll la...oaah 83
1000 PAR 2d m Datum 90X 10 . do .... .. ..culi 83
1000 do let m Os 2dya 102 ' 1 'do '' cash 153
SG Washington Gas. 28 12 do 83
50 Plant Bk,TentahloB
BETWEEN
1000 Delw RB in 08.: 87 '
20 Reliance 25
BROOND
BOARDS.
2411214t0n Coal 47
1000 04V, A R 64 , 83 24 85%
7000 Oo fle K 80
oforn
9 Plantennk,Ten 101
, 2 rows R 427
4' do ., "
' 42%
' c& ' do - • • 42%
69 041271104 — 6)(
60' do .- • 6%
150 Union Out Pref.. - 8%
100 Wash Olty Gas 2d 28
10Philoak 115
OROTBAISY. _ •
1000 Pa nos C 0...
1000 do
COO City Be Newlos%
400 do ......New 108 N
200 do 101%
1(.0 do ...101%
200 - dolol%
200 do", 101%
800 , do lOl%
200 do
4000 Reading 1186'88 7834
1000 do 13N
CLOSING PBX
Bid. Asked.
II States Se 14..104%
Philo Cs 102 102%
do }L....102 102%
do New..188%100
Penns 6e . • ... ....96 - 9834
Betiding it - 281( 25%
do Bde 10-8234 83
' do Rig 0044.92 N
do do 2 88.73%18%
Poona - 42% 48 -
do 1etm8e...10130.02 , '
do 2dm 85....003E 00%
Morrie Can C0n..48% 80
do Prof .....106 1003 E
Bohnyl Nair 6612.09 6934
- Mei:Asked.
Soh 114eImi 6a..70 ?I
Soh Nor Steak... 9
do Prof 17 17%
WougOt &Blot RAO ' 10,}g
do 7a lit mtg.72)4 73)(
do 26 ' 6 1.1 f
Long Wand 11%1.2
Girard Bank 13 12%
Leh Coal& Na0...611/ x
N.Ponno Sy;
do as 00
New Creek
Ustairineaß 61(
Lehigh Zino. A I
PHILADELPHIA MARISITS„Nov. 132n-Xmastxa
-The None market, 10 timer, but ,the , demand In
limited ; 400 bbls ;lied aupertlne only have been geld
at $5.12K, which is now the general , asking price for
straight brands. - The trade ere buying Moderately at
$905 25 for mixed and good superfine; $5 873E®5.75 for
extras, and $6.26 6, for fancy lots. ,Dye PloarMrd born
Meal aro dull; we quota the former at (4, and the lat
ter at 13 02)03 75 4, Wheatz.There la very
little good offering, and. prim have in upward
ka
deney ; sales Include 1,000 bun lair red at 128elffo l
1,900 boo prjme Southern d0i1390 ; 1,200 bus ordinary
mixed Tennessee,
.at 130 0 ; and $OO line fair to ;Mod
white at 35` el4oo. be is wanted, sad 900 boo yea&
sylvanis ;sold at 766780. . Corn conliones 'scarce and In
;demand; COO. boa Pennsylvania yellow sold: et , 4B2a,
afloat, and 1,000 bus Southern do on terms kept pi-trite,
No new Oorn offering. Oats are better, and about 3,000
bus, mostly Pa., sold at 45.2960, chiefly at thelatter rate.
Harley and Halt are dull; sales of the former are re
ported at 85c000, and the latter , ,at9s6ll. dP_haabel.
Dark- Queraltron is in steady demand, and 25 bade No.
• 1 sold at BOV ton. Ootton-The market continues
dull, with a small buniness only to notice at 12e123f43
V' lb, for middling to raiddlleg f .1r quality cash.
Groaerren and Provisions-The market for both are
unchanged, but very quiet to-day, tleods--The demand
for Oloverseed has fallen off, but about 500 bushels
have been disposed of at $5 75005.81k:4P' bun. Wble
key is scarce and firm "vainall ealei Ofbbla are_re-
Ported at 220 for Penn, 23023)90 for Ohio, 2131022 i
for lards, and Ma for drudge 49' gallon - . - -
New York Markets on Saturday.
Aeries —The market is quiet for pot , at $5 98d(, and
pearls at $B. &iterates steady at Oe cash.
Roots &,e.—The demand for Western canal flour is
moderate, owing to the storm ; but with light arrivals
In prospest. holders are lirm and on common entree
and reporting some Improvement has been obtained.
Good brands are dull and heavy.
The mice are 8,200 bbl's at It 4004 60 for rewrites
State ; $4 8606 00 for extra do ant low grades of extra
Western; $5 960550 for chipping brands round hoot!.
extra Ohio ; $5 600$ 75 for trace brands do; $6 5007 75
for extra Genoese. and $5 5008 60 for St Louis brands.
, Canadian Flour is buoyant. the arrivals tight—gala.
of 700 bble at $506 10. Southern Flour is moderately
active, the demand confined to the home trade—sales
of 1,100 bbls at $505 90 for superfine Baltimore, doe;
$5 5007 40 for fancy and extra brands. _ -
Onaut.—The demand for Wheat to quitelight, and in
the absence of setae prides ere nominally the same. A
small lot of Interior Chicago 'spring cold at 75*, which
Is below the market Byo le Wet, and is nominal at
70076 e Oats are a .bade better et the close—eaten of
State at 470493 and Western and Canada at 6105 , N.
' Oorn is held with more flrecinese, the demand is fair,
mainly speonlatlve—sales of 16 400 bus at 78e for New
Orleans mixed; 74075 X for Western mixed, the latter
rate for choice ; 85088 e for Southernyellow ; and 81086
for Jersey do. Barley is quiet — sales of 3,600 bee Canada
at 790.
Corn Meal is heavy and prices of Jersey are nominal
at $4 7503.00, and Brandywine at $4 25
5101.4831 n continues moderate request at steady
rates—email gales of Potto Rise at 81.3 and by auction
Meure.P. & J. Parker Cold 184 bbls Cuba, slightly
damaged. at 20X 0220, cash.
Paovistoss-1 he demand for pork le limited and the
mendret is heavy end dull at our loaide figures at tbe
elves. The Bales are 800 bbls at $l7 3501448); for mete;
$ l 3 50014 for prime, and $l9 for clear and $l6 75018 for
prime meta. , ,
Mem In good demand, and Is steady—sales of 950
bbls at $8 5007 OD for country prime;` $BO9 60 for do.
mere ; .‘9,60011 for repacked mere, and $l.l 60012 for
extra do.
. • ,
Prime meal is in fa'r demand—sales of fell - tea. good
Chicago at $lO. Beef hams a•e heavy and more plenty
—sales of 250 bbls at $l4 60m15 for Western. Bacon and
cut meats are dull and hear►.
Hoge of heavy weight are wanted at 70, and are
scarce. Lard 111 quiet—the arrivals are more liberal—
sales of 240 bbls and tca.at 103(010Xo. Butter is in
fair demand at 14a240 for State. andr2clB , 3 for Ohio.
Cheese is bet.ler and in demand at 7X ago,
Rion continues in fair mama at stead , rater—sales
of 80 tins thin morning, and 280 yesterday at 303,1,0
fer common to good.
WEISISZY.—The market
sales of 400 bble at 22g0
a firm with a [air demand—
OttANGl—November 18
80/ND.
NEW YORK STOOK 21.1 E
BISOOND
8000 0 BUIPIOIIti St 08 80X
10000 Tenn St 6090 000 94
1000 Virginia St Ele
4500 do 90,‘
9500 11l Oen Dds 92g
600 do —92 g
5000 N J Oen 2d int 90
2000 Radom Elia nit 87%
4000 7AO kMLQ 27
15 Am R 1 Bk 1061(
70 Puffin Mail Co 1043(
800 llud Meer 8 630 88
200 do ' 83
26 Harlem It . 12 #
476, do . 12g
50 do 630 12%
100 Harlem 11 prof 29x
100 do 80
500 Residing IL ' 63 50g
76 Michigan Con
It. 523(
16 Mich Bit IV la • '22X
14005i10h 81t guar 51x
100 do • 130 51
10 do 51X
800 do 61061%.'
100 do MO 513€
185 Illinois Oen It 79X
160 Gal & Ohio 15 600 74
100 - do . ..• TBN
60 Ohio & Book I R . Mx
200 do 510 83g
50' "do' " dig
160 ~do B4
100 New York Oen 82
200 -- do ' blO 82X
..
150 do 83 pag
400 d
do o tad
882%2%
126 do 82%
50 Brie Railroad 'UN
,10 do 20%
80 ktllw k Miss P. 1B
, WEST PHILADELPHIA HOSE.—The West
Philadelphia Hose Company ars now haying their house
altered to aeoommodate their n.* steam engine, aLlett
IS to be' brought home about Christmas timo. -
ENGINE TO HE ALTERED.—ThtI "AlSlStanee
Engine Company are about making preporattoos for
baying their engine alterol, so se to be 'worked b 7 steam
or bond power, so 000tioloa may require,
~ 3sro~.~x ^srx.--~,,x-,~G~..5.a~~.~u ~..n'atn+.:.iur A~
A. duet &Ma off at
DUEL AT siAIffEET9ITA. ,
JainestOsin - , - says the Tiolumisit
on the 7th; _-abont - eleyan o'oloek, between tWo
men named Leonard, and Anderson. It' appear t
the parties had tPlarrelled and' agreed talitht'
out with sia-shooters. _0; 40,1 40 were selected; and
the parties put in shooting,wider. At - the lint
round Leonard's - pistol' - They were
again - placed, and on the
aid's pistol bung - fire 'as tiefore"." ,, L'then!thrtiv the
pistol at his opponenti bit missed hicituid'atrtiok
his almond tat the - leg - ."- it:then *ow
their knives and. rushed-JaZhnt.Warawrevented
from doing aka °Wei' datnageWthe inleiferenee
o f 'the speoiatori.. It'apla#:,the - Pfeil:4o , ore
loaded with 100
_cartridges, by, the sec on ds al
though the prineipale were Mit awarsKof 'the fact
until - all was over. -Whiat 'di - towered; the
triok, they became mno - hiinraged, - and ininifeeted
a more killing disposition, if posalbje,lbati before.
The affair; - however, was afterwards arranged to
the sitisflotion of all parties.
A OATITOLICI' PRIEST," St , tP , !it tlaild;'
_,Aile ! .. ^ - 4
feW days since, met one of _thattsbaners bring
log home's load of whiskey: ' rayetexaMmits
armed with a hatohetliith which elne)ris in thn
heads of the barrels, bating the_ liquor, run - in)o ,
the gutters. . ,: . ; -: ,- ,•,, _ ;..-_-.. i , .
Mr. Samuel _Lawrence,' the Meted ex-agent
of the Bay Butte Mills, returned from Bur Ope in.
the steamer - Indian' Queen - ,leariskeithiurid has
taken up his residence 44 , Baltimorp:
- A RSOMENT is about lcirminiitt New York
.wbioh is 'to wear thellfghlenennirorin 'eeMplete.
Meetings have been held,- and over 350 - Men
signified their readiness - to join thisMetiyegit'nent,
whit* calls itself the Highland'enaid.-.'
Xfra , Excellency the 'GoireirnOr General of
Canada la shooting mtge . in the neighborhood of
Bradford. ~•
.
Cure for Cough" stud' Cold - .-4tissou 'as there
Is the sllghteist uneiololis otltio - ChOsti ,, olth difficulty
of breathing, or indication of Cough take daring the
day, a few " Brown's Bron:skipi : l).9slles Containing
demulcent iogredienti,_ theY shay PtfniOtlery
Sold whOlosile and ietail it'PAhlturd'i, 4 cornar
of Chestnut and ltifth strestor. , , no/6-eod-12t.
Nothing Is of more' — lintiortanes to the Com
fort of a farOffilltitris good COOK BTOYS
(41.1./eOBE,B,'B MORNING STAR • •
has been tn . esoeosetttl bpet,at;en some flee jfenrs, end
there his niter beitantrotineed to the publlers'COOK
STOVit that has given sttlefs - eti:zi
lOU DRAW, RABA Oti Bl. trPtnit . P ll, 4 l t.
the most perfect manner. • •
I will return the price paicifor it if It fsilito db as
shoes. ~ , , _ A Jr. - EIALIAGIIER,
ooll,taitel26l_ .„
iit•vabote;*lneor'
eallnahatta4antlae Gai Genunner.-".4;Flat
10P COOK STOVE, LAIMA toVEN„ -1 7111tY,HBaT,r
PLATES, AND IDIOM OUPEDIOR KAFFIR
I W ABRAM , it to
- - ;
;191,846 34
I have been engaged lathe manufacture ef 'Level for
many yews, and I con' barely WMemmettatlis BUMMED;
to my friends. if_it,falts,to pettonsile i tiboye' lauded,
twill littefflei TUB t
OAN YOU ASK MORBt
-,'ocli.usest2o4
New..ran4=ll4l - And 'ZelPhYr,l4,•iis and Feed
TORY.-7. MAXW E LL •BONi fiontfr f eilt
youth and Ohistnut. • 041.4tia
$14,607 76
One7Prtee Clstaing - ot the Latest Styles, and
made fn the beitnienneteinipOsilk for •zre:sti:4Ariait.
We niirkenrowast selling priiet,.in=, nista itnotse
eselinstiele:!ill via:UnladeAn efernadnd
sallitsetoryi and oar- 0111-reins iirssisi is Ade* ad
hered to: - We belleie this to be the oily tidr way of
44114, :ea thud; all axe
;CCO:i
80 4 , IIIARICBT Street.'
Burnett...Cowlslnc.— ,
• A Hngi9,applicatton iendire tbe - betri4o Wetter bow
o'ltt and dry—soft glee ay tOreeeetel ,tk is
TEI BIB? ..A.Vir CHIANTI' KUM 11 . 111111111/11' TUN
114ssexui&,96.) Cliei4 Sit
Sole Agenie:Yor dealersitiestiillWai 10 ibt yew
bottle.' ;;;;4‘•-•2;.- - • aolO•tIr
Professor elwanderit , iblinliden* :Institute,' at"
the WEST PHILADELPELLCnisTrrutz, teener, of
lIABIERT Street end WILLIAM , be reopened on
the Grit BlONDAW'OrtlepieinbireVitpibi, to the IMO
ber of fifty, will be received WITNOOT EXINNBNON - TANN
ON THU PABBILNOIR SAILWATOoy 786 OITY.
Thee, without expens , e,hre pleasant and safe min
veyarice; vitals oil tat carried:got° the treat - aft 'of the
country in heaths° half an hoar from the centre of the
city. Berets' sores of open 'ground border onthe beau
tiful groves of this Seminary, which is patronisedby
many, of the distingeirlacil 'gentlemen 9f theolli t *ing
Which ire titer-Miters Of 'The l'iaise,tha'lc'ettge6 sa6
The North American and 'United Pates Gazette. .Pte:
Os are smelted by the - dey; of into the family of,:thie
Principal,. ,
I, Wo, the undersigned, hare had on or wards in
Professor 13aanders.zleatIttMeriand 'tacitly during The
Saluilon,whiah has juskelese,d. In respect to parental
klndnes4 4 bail& infinediei, - attention to beat* and
progress In thorough education, our - opectitbinslurie
been fully reaped: ,To-oar friends . , who are looking
for a decidedly good Ahbal 'for their man; we cordially
recommend:Professor fisundere, Institute,
• ,
nn MATI'IIZW. NEvitf.ak, 14o; 1808 Ai* street. ,
~, 8146.W. FORNIY, drape alTheyreeta..
TROMPS* Thompood ltdc d, Xi;
418 Olgtobint..stra4t„ ; , , .
"I. EL BILVBII, 1400 Girard amnia:
' l, W.' L. Afirket street.: -
t e: • tip /42 . 6 . 18,a1ant atrost.7
JOHN c.m.rrogsu.,2l:sl)oosuiluirsiii:
lei Beath in s * etratl ;
B:•I3ROWNM, 118 Pontitlifttettoot.
a*kruEL Atbows,kman Square., .
P. WATSON, / ! 0,613 Naar,.,
WM. SWAIN, office of Lifter. -
MORTON ataleOilAßL, Mace of North Ainerleinr.
ELLIS LMW.I.B, Penn Square. - ;
1,0• No antlitlrf MOAB @ALIO!.
To All who Want . Money. Jones 1
00., Brokers, North - nest coiner 'or THIRD anU
GAEMELI. . SMUTS, below. LOUBABD, , advance ,
Coati - liberally, la 'largo and , small saloon*: apinn
dapotibt of . )Vateher,` Diamonds,
Clothing, Ste , on itioderito terms.. °too hone from .
66.11. to7P.M. oe.M.lin
- 860, 860, - 8 60 ;86 0 , sso, gso, eau, 800.—
SINGER'S SEWING hfAOII2NII3.—PRIORS
RS
DUOED.—A new and elegant ?orally Sewing Ma
chine f0i . 660, and the general ecale of prices greatly
reduced. All who want a substantial ; atiple. and re
liable Sewing Machine, which baa an eritabllaloWi
Cation for dobigkthe very beet work on overyllod - of
material, areinrited to - call at our 'Office arc' Latin:du&
the new MACalpelf: lit the reduced nifcie. They can
not fail tope eatlalled. X. M. SINGER to CO.,
no2-t.122 No. Oa CifIESTNIFT Strait— _
I Thomas W. Ea No. Edn -Market Street,
-Importer and Dialer in Floe }Patches, lewelry, Barer
and Plated Ware..Plret-olais goodianuitantly on hand.
'The subiatiber,pailng cash for every article, la enabled
to sea at • small adraince. Those about purchasing
'would do well to call. gdods warranted 'm repro.
Grover lc Bakeei Celebrated Family Searing
- d NSW
780 OITSISTATIT STAZZi; Pgiunctraii
These Maohbeas seer Irom biro - spear, and form
'twain of unequalled strength, beauty, and eleatlolty,
which will nor rip, even It every fourth stitch be cut
They are unquestbanabli the be in the market for
family use. - •
oele.tt [MusD sox A otactrtan...en
Seanten 9 a Saving Mid—Northwest Corner
of Second and Walnut streets. Rao.lves deposits
in Emma of One Dollar and upwards, from all
Mamas of the community, and allows interest at the
rate of Ore per oent. per annum.
, -
Moe open daily, from 9 until to o'clock; gird on M 0 ,31-,
day and Saturday until 9 in the mains. Preaident,
Franklin Pell; Treteurer and Beeretaa7, I:lhirles W.
Venda.
Saving Fond , -
Per Conti " Latereet,—,
kiraneNku atilfliTlf TRUST 06111 , AtlY, WALNUT
Eltreet, 8, W. oolnier of THIRD, Philadelphia. Money
rewind In imrec lam or endalli. and ist;ereatrA4
from the day of depoeit to the day of withdrawal.
Money id melted and payment! made. daily, without _
noilee. The Investments Are made in Reel Radio,
Mortgagee, Ground Rents, and etch - first-elms
tea as th charter requires. Mee hours, fr.:TO/o'clock
in the uk.isidag until o'clock in the afternoon, video
ktonday and Thursday !Telling! oral]. 8 o'clock _ fed _ _
W. Henry Patten, alannfacturerof Wind**
SIIADES r and Importer of CURTAIN and lIPROL
STERN MATERIALS, LACE ,and MUSLIN
,01713.:
TAINS. BROOATELLES, SATIN DE- WKS and
WORSTED DAMASK, RAPS, MOURNS. PLUSIIES,
GIMPS and TASSELS; GILT CORNICES and dlili-
TAIN ORNAMENTS - . GiiE Window Shades, with all
th trimmings, u low as 76 cents each:: last reosiied
from Auction a large Invoke of Curtains, which are
offered at the following unprecedentid low prices:
Mustiu Curtains, $L 00, worth $3 00 a pair.
Tambora Laos " $3 00, " 03
Quite heavy " Nr 00, $lO 00 "
Elegant rich Embroidered, $lO 00, " $2O 00 "
Daum*Certain/
from $lO 00 to $l5 00 per window,
complete. Curtains made and pat up at the shorteet
notice, by competoniworkmen.
W. HENRY PATTEN; 800 CHEETNIIT St.,
oolti-thnos ' ' Opposite Jayne's New Hall
Silver's Gas Consuming Staves:--Unless these
fto►ee are undo In a: proper manner they are'ne better
than the common old fathione I heating Btores
I mr ploy none bat ;the but workmen, and use the
choicest imported Russia iron. - -
warrant every,Oes • Commmer I tell to be
EQUAL to there I hare on eihibition in the Franklin
In'titute, and which i re attracting the attention and
admiration of rielters generally The Committee have
concedtd that C - ALLAGIIEWS make of SILVER , SGAS,
oonumma STOVES aro the bits in the Exhibition.
I call attention to the following letter: -
I have examined 'the (Elver Gee Oonsamers I ma
nufactured by Mr. A J. GALLAGHER, end pronounce
tbeakfully equal to any' I have evei seen. ' The Russia
Iron is the irllrr, near, the workmanship unsurpuSect.
The 'Whole etoie fatly embraces my Invention. I ie.
commend with pleasure to my friends and the public
Mr. thillitemithi make of:StOves. 7. 8. fitt.trai r rr
A. J. (*ALAI:IER, Stove Manuisotaber, ,
nob-emw No. 885 N. SECOND, above Tine. •
St. Vitus'* Dance.—Thle distressing - and
mortifying nervona affection le left generally either to
t a k e it, na t t oiroarse, er labeated on general' print-,::
plea with very llttleaneereia. - 7 The . 1-eivOsui symplirrol
are not the dleitee itself, and premed from flumtional
or organic derangement Vs the - narrow *entree. -No
medicine his been, fonictonnal the VERIII7LiN ,
itt:nienktni the involmitmi nervous trean."--;
blings knovrti tutBt: Vitus's Dance. -
For sale in this city by Y. Brown, corner 'fifth and,
Chestnut s and Hansard & Co., corner Twelfth and
04 01 . 01247'0MM
Special -Wanes.
M3=MI
111JELNETr8 0000A1,1iX
PRI
q. 4 oo tt it
$2 00, "