The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, November 30, 1858, Image 2

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~.a m ,: y o ,„,.. - ,, i ! ,, , ,,, - 4 , t i a ,4j3DAY, NOTEMPER 30 2 1858.
. . ...•
P,Jlost.ituttographs — i-No: 4; Linos on the
• Harris, of Illinois; Literary
~ gfiti#l 3. *t•Aftkr.l lA 4,l ‘ g for of
bit°i_atu!e;,-00411it.',11', Mnfey—lihiliest
*-• • -
'"
The;NOW,s. I •
• s The steamship hurepa arrived at Halifax yester.•
s:- daY,`.witluthreedais lateintries from Europe. The
"celebrated. soeltdist, titobert Owen, la dead.
hisie yet- been' received of the' , steamship
Indian Empire', exalt is feared that te-lost. The .
•-•! , - - " , frepti-bes,refittiedlo deliver up the Mortara child :
44: Cottort•hke advanced /d. , Breadshiffe ifere'dali
..B:4-4..2iii:0-1,7,:',;.,-Csl,l'ito•detaind. for American se:citifies bps titereased.,
;frt , : , `L . 4`otar, OVerland. mait ratites io the Paeifio
•••?e-"? 7.3c.1"3••• ,-, :-:i..€;•ehai•e".-.noir -been settled -upon.l The southern One,
• - ? , :''-';'•' - .• 7 • 0 " Wilfibtiopen 'ell. the year,, and: the other thiee for"
1 t - L ,f,u n tacr t ri i ve l:g . vosaroutes belt the:eolith:tent in ,
Thrallets, , and aro so:Sistributed that each division'
E into stage and railroad den.
• ~ . necticitortth all the, others. -, _
whcitvere.en&board 'the Quaker .0 ity, on
her idietht first tripnVer.the Tebnanterio route to
a;;, 4tldlifosn ( d~ speak* the highest terms of praise of
Abe .Coatlaceeloos4 A correspondent
i'7" lA2 3 :2,A.c:=lll;trtilli) New- Orleanaßutistits says :
~.,1•- . 't-Theritave in Paris what they call the Jardin
;;‘, Pignut; a collictiony made at great trouble
, ....:.and,"eiperizei• - „of, the .raiest :animals, birds and
'• „ " 2.. i plalthlr7the yonder. of Abe • world. If Paris Were
situated en the banks of the COatsacoaleCs.es it is
• on the' banks-of the • Seine, snob a colleotiOn would
'-"•"‘;'• qui _uncalled for, Nature hereelt has
furisithisd at hand one far more .curious.
• P4ollkoi3, 'alligators, - eagles, ivulturee,• parrots,
• '3" , inticavie;lini - banyerrtree; eilba, cocoa, palni, and
'iWitateVerldieleiare *the animal and vegetable
kirigdornalikif,ereeur familieraoqualottumesand
' - • hourly.companiens. , e The' first named, Sri partiou.:
• - • have welcomed us ht numbers innumerable ; •
tn • - and what itinotete• iiii - Point,every'orlif who had
••
I = i- '" "oroonldloan the use °florin, has had:lda'
. "pop " , at them', fibis, is the, veritable paradise Of
••••• ~,f , ' , . itineratth•Esettsf•Nolitioner had we - reached the
Of"the - rifeetban - were greeted by a
riutither otgullifand beobies,'Cie former
' "• - , fiying, - theuethds iri ti Hook; light and airy as the
;-•••••• : -. .'srevallow; and fairly lighting up the lower horizon
• ' by' the quick' notion of their white wings ; a little
, 'farther 'tip by Om' flamingo, Curlew and white
',wane—white eit the driven snore, and graceful as
R •••• •= the airana splendid: mark hi the thick, 'dark
• - ••"-"WOoti ftir ettr party' ettliCard. ',.As we advanced,
• • •"the Piteous belief the nionkeyi was beard from
the • neighboring ferest ;' innumerahle,
..decks of
— that'iltingiatitotaind macaws greeted - US is we
thet:isieS , alligator laYsitniiing
the - there: - This ugly monster fur
- • 'ebbed rate sport to our Marksien 7 -thougt, I be-,
- - " ' Itavetotentiwailit=7-there wee' snob agroteique
awkiiirdeMis *ids heidleeg plunge, to; be seen
• - itelotirei - se different 'from the I'ght, springy,
: NIP Oftbe white, 'mime, when a shot fell
near,, that gisivitYheiiilf must hai`e laughed out,
, right: And'hirelet - hte'stdvise the traveller, who,
' Would enjoy Ibis' faro - ,sport, to come out well
,'armed,Vrith - , plenty 'of ameonnitio,n. A double:
'-'"litirreled rifle, of long'yange, Is beat, suf the -aka
, tanee iiifreithentiy great *either 'Shore."
United - States Ciro + Court* San Pratt.,
eiseti,',Ort the fiolhfj rendered a . „slgßent
the'eatie 'of the United States ;us= Jelin Parrott
for theNewsAlma•
-- den `ousel silver mines, in Santa Plara,pottati, the
value of-widen itf+arientiliestlniated at fr0m41,.-,
• ", 006,000, to S10,000:000: They have lately produced;
. •
a net anridalrerenueof $00,0002 The judgment is
-"' faros' tif 'the title Of the United States; The
- '<mutt•issued' an , injentition , to pre - vent thi,a u fen,-
- ferilierWerking the micas , and
'bit* named eaaoriue and report
• . 167thfilipitrithi Ceridition'Of the same. A; receiver'
,--, - problabilit'vlei appointed to take, pea.:,
the property. meecase - ieuree,
Ver
~ups to the ',United I Sfates,,'Stinrame
It is' rumored ''irr'iYasitington that - a Medifica=,
_.tiara litotetiff, - wither vlow to an;thorease of the
es - it:me; Wilflie,ficartitatinded in the forthcoming
•' 'reports, biii,tb o at the means by with% it should, be
• 'effeeleeirill'net, be designated by the Secretary*,
2 ., - "the Treititiry• , ;
It ti said'that . e. number of NiCaraguart ad Van
liiiebeen landed about'fortY'milesfrom' San
"•
"". I JUitit del' Sur, : that' the '‘' oraigrants;," Who
• the2,Alhisi Painter.
Moblftl44llll,llnd theses to embark from ,some
' -
"'i%''*'3 Senator i)eughts Was 'serenaded, while' stopping
at the-Planters' Howie, In St. Lnikh r eri the night ot
.
• the -24th - lost.i - and responded to the eetriplitneat in
- Short and ableapeetth. , `
s : - ..•
•;.!•,--"s Aloeconetive'oritliiiDeiawarir arid Tiaokair'afinst
• - Railroad eardeded , near 'yesterday. -
instantly, the engineer was
terribly wounded, anddt m bend he' cannot
_1.67 -
:;" ..eciverilandstwo other Peitems 'were bedlY'lisjiired ,'
' Judge ' , ,Edmondek•delivered lecitire:en" " The
• ~ „ •,...01fsaven and Belt of "Spiritnalialp4 ll • in New lork,
, on Snaday, 'Slight/ irltiott*sioported the - Wee
••
= : r York=re,af,-Yee erd figr]
•'
ea44 ll o,ltemslo strong
as
Yesterday, was tbcday. - 11xed-for, the tritit'ef .. thk
-• ,AllibenOind,liewhall,easte, bat It wait postponed
• - on account of sickness indhe.Eataio flfistriet
*may Tioughead.
Thfilatiii; who
- - stabbed Pride y : night,lase , by a'yonug
.t4tvii,in affiaiwltieb
=••••' 'Sohn •Green, decoad
- etiefit, :above..Erisrio; died iii''the'Veltieylviniii'
OnefAv',X,iVis"p - reteste l thet the stab
the titanic Of 'an acoldent:
'mere thin five bun.
' MI iireeted in ihe "Second
entice' dletrioti which ; extends Christian
,South; :and from" Broad Street to the
"',- ; • • •
• statement 'or„ the Philadelphia
. banke, made up to yesterday afterecion', presents
s the-following . 'aggregates : Leans(' 526,192,600;
!arteefe - ,„,6,035;442 - ; thip08101 ) : 616,633,268';
ESEE
;.F
NEE
.41o,neral.fltutri'.Baoratary. of State; has 'written
- fbiaollowing lettie in regard to titeliartire case . ,
• :to & prominint",arr'ef this'olty :
DisifabistUXt , Or , Sr
' Wesniriaiorr. N0v.21, 1858.
Thire."Preautent of the Conh'reg6.
47o4 41 .11.riekve'rerael,.!'. Cherry street,
Phila
.- , -
B,rn hike submitted to the
'President:3'one 'fitter bt.theldth inet., respectfuv
the allegadforcibTealidtiOtieiliOnt Lie parents of
' r.Tawinh child, Web° nubile anttiOrlttes of Bologna,
in the Papal dMuluions, and asking come expros
Mona of'oondiMnatitat the: part of, this Govern.
mans: I
• " Thiedicnirdllcelo4 idiee'srlthin the territories
at'an independent - Power; and: without affecting
the rights 'of 'any, Atmeriaitti • .It is the
' settled poliOv.of, the I:lbited States :to abstain from
anterferenceirt,the internal concerns of other
countries.. ' „ i •
Voitainijr-there Is nothing' in the circumstances
if l-I, "LP 4111 - ease, Mt fthey aro_ reported, which - would
es' •." ~Iniment'this- ' roserve",.upon " the Government. But
net it belles - Mad ivoper"lo - adhere:to, the:established
I,7 •""'"''''',,princiPle,which has heretofore legolated its con
'‘i`• duotin - Its' intitio,oitrati with r other nations.
": „ t - iitii;,sl4 . yeraitibudieut:servant r - t, •.
Lams Cats. •
, „ . • -•
glEifilffl
•", , '"„"' ;,,'" 1,- , " , : I ‘ Ntee;'4,iko,fil
~pgitttte.'
-'''
" . ' 'IV "‘,i . tl — by, thi - CalikirMa tialiOra, that a
,
3 3 i,,iir: :1 : 1 13 -`7 •I , - ••e • ° .°. * : l • •- ,
--, •- • movement: in real estate bae been commenced
'.!Tlii . SairtitichlOo,,4hloh - la: even more active,
-;= -- -I haa::ati illiii,hail-OCcorreti in the Atlantic
5 , ... , " citles.' . . l llo'4a4 3 l,Yitaclach llerald of- No-
MUSE
Yoililtioi 6 itiyii:',ttiat it-Imo 'advanced twenty
' . per: :Value' within- a nadnth.' Last
:ortOg a property was soldfor,slB,ooo,' which
hrouglit,s2B,ooo,,eaah - . 11 piece of
"real '., , idistittai *hiellif sold ?with . .._(litllaalty ! tor
$14:,609"04,A04,4041, - x'..S9o9Fiber; readily
let of November for
other , lOstanCei:ate, given -by the
'ficriteequally'strlklug - ;,'dapitalists all , over
the, country: seep] more eager • nbvi to buy
f , r ~ 4"-3 'than to The': dttipiiiiittoti to
h 2 lirillinnt:hut
Atiolgerous , ebtorpriies riieeived 'a terrible
icifelillt:6( .. bii4onie -l .tho great di
of, moneyed men..
- ,
:-•Dloro of•Ticcoloiniott,;',
~iIJ #sic F~~: i
,"*lietlior.: ... ....-. .. ,'. 01%
' - ' '' ' ' 't
excitement evaiY
.-1. tivu.t , .,i t -
11 - n tee i p,,, j ea usos :gra&
'==,,.s " , .i . t_,:l . :::Pli - e ° r - t - 1 , ;! , , , - 4 : 1;21 - e . w ..yoryi , Bbii - ciiiised.qiu , ta
thea
41,':VeStaii, sliejs likely to play
:':::?1
''''fir9r.e.'
f'this,ioitT it. seems' uncerteib
l';
“.'4"...'51 ' M'61.6"'i
n' l
'rpi sr - Wall, Vilelysok, as
..3. ' „, f I:4SY '/
is,' .1.9009rs1:10- :Nvil' - e 43 , , . i.. ii.i, a ppi.ii - of
,';1-'1 '''''.' it • ' .. - atie.ainee4.,Z like Yew- , or -E, i . at
:i .` ; ,,' ,',.::;ge tils aterda ,. y Aeelare, -diet. she .was to -IPPper
~
11 'biI""FAI4Y: eltdASur.dtkYl
c 7: i'` - 110u - ileSl i 'rtoid , :.15,,,„
.. ,
.i:: a' 'fi , .: Ai'geejunellon with the
(-,-, : , 4 , ‘.. 5 ' , -•-- - - - - Artistes of Mr. ,3TRA-
iase,o troupe. : fdr: Peraairoseu assures us,
a nO!st ,131 4 et -14q4re•_1111,fthat
,en this Crues
daiy, alerting: they' iask, perfornunices: et his
-0 ;;• 1 1 1
Opera clotuP t li_r i u;l'*! 4 P'!rilaelt this 042
itt'their-dbfidrttire. for Baltimore and
hington- where ,they Will appear, wo.be.:
-. t*p4 ,-. .s.d•txtreve'liti the very,. ei-etiings for which they
announced; to sing with Bignota Piano
" - •
result ; be, we presume, that
;' l l k
".' not TIM Philadelphia
; th
lio-14,1g--ff-`, f;':
1;01 '
lart#nattxxaX *PAIN OXLEPHAIION.".,I 3 I, °Ye'
n i n e ok, titottylisstitet et of this pity bolds its
MP; tte Musical Fund
~-,' :. * . z. lo .? .., ? . : TibitAi l tii..,(ll o llol4,9444testre give the ton.
Ad!driaisi_bi,thOPipsideet (kr. E. A, Haw
aas -- and ..... , otiee . ;ientlenietille alternate, very
* 4-1 "lq -5 - 1 , ,,, 44.i.o_iihillpf, : 4 1 di,..*Ilittai,,',61dater-Auter, Ken
't.JlL-I,4.7t""AtbmltCr:ilasiyaipVig*itl,f!.oo,ll,.. #f„p'ellotit,
0#46-ot, ofnielotteon,
:kiss of J. E. Goild;tlecenth`e l a mi n t;
' I
nut stoats, sae , tarn n pesrestio n . s t oo k
earsan itd
i Selee.
r •
rt.:4' I F-1.~.
ho tiro# of Philadelphia.
From. the tine of;, the that settlement es
PhiladetplidattsSS h a e
.been, ard- 6 -itt•
RS MI 0 W
a Steady, progressive rate, equalled by; but
few'ether Cities. Therehave been some periods
wheditiginwtktiaennusualli raPidiand others
when for a time it was soniewhat rotate:l;lAl
as a general rule its progression has been re
markably uniform. In the first year after its
-foundation it contained eightyhonses and three
hundred, and fifty-seven mere were constructed
in Die succeeding year. In 1684 it had 2,600
inhabitants. In 1700 the population was be
tween 8,000 and 4,000. •In 1720 the number of
-the taxable inhabitants of the city and county
,(which then embraced a. much }arger region
of '.territory than the present limits of the
City) was-1,195. In -1731 the population of
the city and suburbs was estimated at 12,000.
In 1744 the population of the city was esti-
Mated at 13 , 000,and the number of houses at
1,600, by Secretary PETERS: -In 1749 the
houses were counted by a number of gentle
men, among whom were Dr. Ensmix and
.other distinguished citizens, in person, (an evi
dence of the interest in sueh subjects, by the
way, which might be not unprofitably imitated
at this day,) and the number was found. to be
2,076. In 1763 the number of houses. was
found to be 2,800. In - 1760 the number of
houses was 2,069, and the number or taxables
was 8,321; of whom 6,687 resided outside of
the old City limits. In 1770 the estimated
population was from 26,000 to 80,000. In
1777, when General flows occupied the city,
an exact census was ordered by General Cons
irea,ms. In consequence of the war, many of
the citizens had left the city, and 587 houses
were untenanted, but the population, exclusive
of soldiers and strangers, was found to be 21,-
767, and the
_' number 'of houses was set down
thus.: In the. city proper, 3 ; 508 ; in South
wark,. 781; . in Northern Liberties,• 1,170 ;
,total, 5,470. In 1790 the ,population of the.
city. and suburbs, exclusive of the rural dis
tricts of the county, was found to be 42,620,-
an& its regular progression has since been
shown' by the census. Its increase may be set
down thus: •
POPULATION OF PHILADELPIIIA
lul7oo 3,500
1731 12.000
1770, 27,000
1790 (including the vhole eounty)...• 51,391
, 1800 ' " ~ ~
.... 81,005
• 1810 " ' " " ... .111,210
1820 " .. til
—.137,097
- 1830 " g,
—.188,001
-1840 . " ' " —.288,037
1850 " • " • " ....409 045
The present population of the city is sup
posed to exceed 600,000. If the rate of
progress which our city has heretofore main
tained continues, it is destined to become ono
of Ihelargest cities of the world at a period
not very remote. In nearly all of the periods
of twenty years since its foundation, its popu
lation more than doubled. From 1810 to 1880
it did not quite do so. But from 1880 to 1850,
as from 1840 to this time, it has much more
than doubled. Assuming the population to be
600,000 now, at this rate of progress it would
bo 1,200,090 in 1878, and 2,400,000 in 1898.
We confess that a result of this kind is some
what startling, and it is difficult to realize the
probability of our city attaining such a popu
lation. Yet it is not much more unlikely
than it must have appeared forty years ago,
that our city should now contain 600,000
abuts. There is a solidity about the business
operations of Philadelphia, and about the re
sources uptin which its prosperity depends,
`that cannot be shaken hy arty ordinary event.
It is the groat natural point of distribution
for the morchandiso of the country. It has
complete and perfect system of railroad
communication with the interior. As a great
manufacturing city, it possesses advantages
far superior to any other city in the world.
With its ready access to raw materials, to coal
'and iron, to an abundance of agricultural pro•
ductions, and to lho markets for its manu
factures, why should it not thrive as rapid
ly hereafter as heretofore ? Certainly the
prospects of the 'city wgre never brighter
than at this moment, when it has emerged
from a great struggle for a superior line of
communication with the great West triumph
ant over all rivals, when its manufacturing.
pre-erninenco.is fully established, and' when
Its natural advantages, in a commercial point
of view, are becoming apparent to the whole
country. •
Emericiu ,Bennett on "The Beauties
, ,of poetry." „
According to previous announcement,
,Binerson
Ileoned, Beg., delivered xleeture at 'Conoeft Hall
'last evening on The- Beauties of Poetry. We
sa:ii 'happy to any, both for s the sake of the lecturer -
Whe hetird him,,,that his effort last even-.
ingiree wi innek ' maresupoessfal (hart - his lecture'
"on B,ridaY the, nature of ' his subject .• was more
';'elevating ; and no matter how mush Mr. Bennett
May expelinfiellneating the tragic adventures of
• ttii &reef, as an author, upon the leeture•board he
'certainly comes off with better colors in portraying
the Amoy of the muses. •
, Hti''remarked, in opening his lecture , that as
poetry Wei as inexhaustible ai tlie deep, he
thould„attempt HUM more in his present effort
han a herded glance at a few specimens, in
trOdueingfliese, however, with an introductory
lisqulsition upon the salad of poetry; first, in a
general sense, and then in its metrical, or more
popular acme. „
Poetry, in a general sense, was said to be a
throwing out of the interior life, the emotions of
Which were inspired by the outward. The first
great poet, said the speaker, was - Jehovah; the
tivst,great peem—the Universe Some mends ' ivied poetry, or, at least, said they did though
he.Wiainolinedio believe that snob men did not
know what they affected to despise.
ShakspeOre's celebrated linos—
The man that bath no music in bin foul,
T bat is not wowed by concord of sweet wands,
Z a fit 'for treason, stratagem, and spoils ~
Were here introduced, with the remark, that with
equal truth the word poetry might have been
substituted for wursie, inasmuch as 1111/13,0•WaS but
the poetry of sound.
.41Imen, it was said, were poets in a greater or
limier sense. Ifs did not blame men for disliking
metrical poetry,as he believed there were many
true poets in obscurity, who bad the spirit of poesy
dwelling _within them richly, yet who 'posressed
net the art of, giving it utterance. Byron had
well said that "many poets, and perohanee the
best, have never penned their inspirations," By
inspiration, we were to understand the magnetic
influence of the outward upon the inward, and of
which poetry was but the formal expression. The
general acceptation of the term "inspiration "
was; that it constituted an influx from the spirit
,world. This was true, but it
,was not the whole
truth. There were, be believed, none but who
at'some period of their lives were subject to !mores
skins- Imparted by outward circumstances, which
were truly inspirations. It was a great mistake
to suppose that none welt inspired but those who
prophesied, This did no more follow than that
dew which foil from heaven MU* necessarily pass
up a water-spout. .
Ile felt that too strong a figure could not be
given to illustrate tbo exalted character of poe
try, The Bible qua a book of poetry from first to
last
The second part of his lecture—Poetry Special ;
or, inspiration ennobled and adorned by art—was
neat taken up, in the course of which short poems
were read from numerous authors, dead and liv
ing; known and unknown, several of which—bar
ring the lecturer's occasional indistinctness of ar
tlonlation—were really admirably given, and the
fer(which were less artistically rendered it may
not become us hero to "damn with faint praise,"
and so shall pass them ; though, in truth, a full,
round success, where so much was attempted, mould
hardly be expected, the spirit of the readings hav
ing necessarily to be greatly varied with the intro
duotioa °revery new poem.
It was remarked by the lectur er that ono of the
great faults of modern poets was, , their leant of
art, (a, want which we opine is more or loss to be
deplored in some other fields as well.) Our poets
were 'doh in imagination ; but having once pro
dtpied the diamond in its rough atate, they, in
their ambition to explore the new, left their gems,
.already prodneed, in a comparatively 'snide, on
polished stator-satisfied that it was there, and
content, M leave the "world to find it. In this they
;resembled the lecturer who oitoe - appeared before
his audience, ,and said " I'm no scholar ' and
can't speak geed English ; but I'll give youfaots,
and you may put the grammar to them for your
selves." -.
The r etherlal, and, ho might almost say, myth°.
logical character of poetry, was also dwelt upon in
this connection.-, We admired the flower for lts
seen beauty, but loved it yet more for its unseen
fragrance:, so of, poetry;" we AdMiiii& it,for its
hisruniny, of sound, and artistic arrangement; yet,
heyond any quality that wo could eirplain, there
Watta spirit emitted by it which was as irresistible
and as unseen
,as the fragranoe. of the. floiver.
.11omer, to.den was little better than a myth ; yet
who could predict when the Illad.shall perish.
TEC, first poem read ,was ; " The Lake of the
Dismal Owanip," by Moore, which was introduced
with a brief ,referonee to the legend upon
witicfli.if wee 'founded.' ,It was road 'well, and,
ati , the initial, step of that part of the even
ing!s, performance, quite flatteringly received
: by the , anclienee, Ills reading of "The
pells,P.by Poe, cionsidering,lbe
..varied effect
im
piied;by,the dliferent ,hellsorldob, in metro, are
spiiirbilY.rui)gli i the author, Was a SUCCO9.9. 112
'thii"sUbietinent pieces introdueed, (two many, we
may be allowed respectfully to suggest, for a sin
gle evening's entertainment ) ) the humorous,
the;' athetio, the' , waggish, the sentiMentalf
the "witty, and The tragic, came up by turne L
and wore, for the most part, disposed of with
evident satisfaction "to the audience. The read
inga. were ionoluded with Tennyson's famous
"Dharge of UM tight Brigade," which was judt
clans in the :lictiror,, as his rendering of it was
his master stroke of the evening. ' Mr. .11ennett
on this occasion, reserved until the close of -his
lecture the annOuneemont of his leoture to be
given on Wednesday evening. his subject will
then be "The Life and - Gonius of Byron." ,
Public 'Entertainment&
The Academy of Music, last evening, was bril-
Hunt with as fashionable an audience as over
gathered within its walls."" Don Giovanni' ! could
not fail to attraot, as' the music, even If badly
done, Is full of exquisite melody, and cannot be'en
tirely lost" to the critical ear. It will not do to
compare last'night'S performance with the last re.
presentation of the same opera by the Ullman
troupe. The absenoo of Herr Bermes and of Gas•
ale: were not atoned for in any degree by
the Sarin brothers, whose " Leporello " and
"Don Giovanni " were submitted .to with be
coming resignation as a sot-off for the grati
fication of Gazzaniga's "Donna Anna" and
Colson'e " Zerlina." It will be a difficult task
to discriminate between the performances of
these two prime femme last evening, and still
more puzzling to decide which carried the great
est share of the popular favor. Both were en
cored again and again, and most deservedly.
Madame Colson's ' rendition of " nrlina " has
never been excelled. Her acting was the perfec
tion of grace and coquetry, and her singing was
sympathetic and artistic in the highest degree.
In the duo, "La cif damn la mono." and in the
two edos, "Batti, batti," and " Vedrai Deem),"
she carried the hearts of the audience by storm:
Gazzaniga created as deep a sensation by her
pathetic acting in the scene after her father's death,
and also in the 'fine oestett in the second scene
of the seeond act. She missed the finest solo in
her part, "Non mi (ljr,, del idol mio," which
000055 in the last act, but made up amply for it
by gratifying the oudienoe by the glorious song of
the " learanjera," the Spanish orange girl.
To-night a very fine programme is offered for the
benefit of Madame Gazzaniga She will undoubt
edly have a drowded and brilliant house to greet
her, and; to bid her farewell. A glance at the bill
offered ought to ho sufficient to satisfy the most
exacting lover of music. Parts of "La Favoilta,"
" I Prtritani," " Martha," and "Il Trovatere "
are offered, and the entire troupe will appear.
Those who wish to get seats for to-night had better
"call at the box office as early as possible."'
THE Rowan FESTIVAL —On Thursday evening
will be given a farewell concert to Mr. Gustavus
Runge, on:the, mission of his re-visiting &trope.
It will be given at the Aoademy of Maio, of widish
he was the working architect, in connexion with
Mr. Lebrun. The stockholders of the Academy,
with that liberality which, we are very happy to
acknowledge, has always distinguished them, give
the use of the !leadenly on this mmasion, free of
all charges. Two foster-ea will particularly dis
tinguish this concert—the Germania Orchestra,
under the ditection of Carl Sante, and augmented
to one hundred, will perform-- , and the Chorus
will muster at least one hundred and twenty
strong, consisting of the principal Gertnan singing
societies of this city, under the leadership of Mr.
F. riammer. There will also be adequate vocal
'assistance. With a view of making this well
merited compliment to Mr. Runge as general at
possible, the admisolon has been put as low as half
a dollar. A compliment snob ad this, to a modest
and well-deserving man of genius, ought to bo sub
stantial, and wo hope to sea a very 'crowded house
at the Aaademy,, on Thursday evening.
Signor Blitz's pointer enteetainesents continue
to attract full audiences. his ventriloquism and
other extraordinary magicalleais cannot fail to
please.
BY MIDNIGHT MAIL.
Letter from •{ Ocoaslonal.
[Correspondence or The Press.]
WABLIINGTON, Nov. 2?", IMO
Jefferson Davis has frightened some of the
Northern Looomptonites dreadfully by his Jackson
speech. Any number of protests aro sent up here
against the dootrine that Congress must intervene
to protect slavery in the TorritoriesL—deneral Case,
himself, being far from res.dY lb agree to the pro
posed fortheoming koceptation of thid theory in
the President's message. But the President stands
firm. Ile assuredly told Davis that he intended
to advance upon his present position, and he will
do it. It is 'odd, by the way, that the President
should have made two promises—both of the
extremest kind—to the two Senators from
Mississippi, Brown and Davis. Ho told the
first" that he weal , ' remove every Ohio-holder
in the North who did not come up to' the odious
requirements of 'rho gnglish bill, and he now
promiseiDavis that he Intends to advance upon
his delightful experiment of LeconSplon. Brown
- said that the President was ,< weak in the 'back"
after making the first promise ; but he was name
ly correetin this. The fact is, that everybody
holding place in the - North under this dy
nasty is woak'in the beak," or " weak iit 'the
knees," singe the frost that fall In Ootebor and
November;
,andnoti, 'when Davis brings forth a
new promise for the President, I fear that this
weakness may end in a consumption, and a rapid
decay.
A good many of the Southern men, some of them
already here, assert that they will follow Jef
ferson Mavis in hie now chase after fame.
,The statement that Senator Douglas has offered
terms to the Administration Is a weak and shame
less invention. He is expected to get hare about
the Christmas holidays, and will take his seat
immediately. Ho has made his mark, and will
stand on the eminence he has won, with no dimes'•
tion to court his enemies or to desert hie friends.
He stands today where he has always stood ; has
nothing to unsay, nothing to repent, and nobody's
pardon to ask.
The establishment of a Douglas paper at Nor
folk, Virginia, is one of the signs of the times.
The President Will write his own message.
While he held pines under Col. Polk he was
pubilo in his declarations that the President
never consulted his Cabinet; and sines he has
been elevated himself to that place, be has
done the same thing. Mum you will find that
his next message will,be all his own. I commend
to him his old tariff views, his preconceived opine
ions against heaurocraoy, nepotism, favoritism,
and espeoially extravagant expenditures.
This morning's National Intelligentrr con
tains the President's letter to Pittsburg! Oar
town is in a broad grin about it. What is the
worst of it is, that it looks like an attack on the
Cabinet, who have been spending oceans of money
to re•eleet Lecompton Congressmen, and the Pres
ident writes as if he didn't know it all the time !
Tho Democratic papers in the North and West
arebreaking out against the Davis dootrino in favor
'of slavery intervention like a freshet. A Wiscon
sin Demoorat now here told me yesterday, "if that
idea is Insisted upon you will be compelled to send
out a new Christopher Columbus to discover the
Democra.tio party."
The illustrious Francis J. Grund has been op.
pointed 'a sort of police over the American lega
tions in Europe at the rate paid to member!! of
Congress, which, for the year round, would amount
to abont eighteen dollars per diem!! His du
ties are to overlook Mr. Dallas, to spy into
Mr. Mason's hotnehold, to watch all the Amen.
can gentlemen in the Old World who happen,
for the time being, to bold places under the
present Administration. A gentleman now in
Washington, who met this man Grand in London
and afterwards in Paris, says that the Americans
abroad hang their heads in shame at the idea of
snob a representative of our country—Buck a
watch and ward over American ministers and.oon
suls. Nor does Grund make any secret of the
way in which be has fooled the present powers
that be ! He boosts of IL After ten years of vil
ification of Mr. Buchanan, and after be had de
serted Cass to attach himself to Douglas, he won
both Case and Buchanan by deserting and de
nouncing Douglas in the very last hour ! Grund
will, no doubt, make a first-rate policeman. Ho
is so ignorant of European Manners and customs, and
so honest and correct withal, that he will never sell
his adopted country, oven if a few thousands were
offered ail the price of hid treatton. Ile will never
court foreign influence. lie will never offer him
self for sale. No !he will lock all the secrets of
the State Department in his, bosom, and hold the
key in hie own firm band. The man who gets
that key must pay very well for it, you may bo
fully assured. The appointmen.tof Grand on this
confidential diplomatic service is the highest com
pliment that Mr. Buchanan hits yet paid to Item
self and to the friends who have stood by him
through fire and storm. Grund has coined and
circulated more slanders against Mr. Buchanan
than any other man living In the Union, except
Bennett, the pions editor of the present Adminis
tration organ in New York. lie has been on ail
sides of polities. He has cheated repeated Ad
ministrations; and ho aprons a solemn vow never
tostoii till he defeated Mr. Buchanan lie has
succeeded ; for if he has not succeeded in defeat
ing Mr. Buehauan, be has certainly conquered
him. The foreign Governments know Grund so
well, that they will, no doubt, entertain a warm
regard for the purity, and integrity, and Moor
ruptibility, and sagacity of our Government,
when emit a man as Grund is its secret reptesen
taNve at.slB per day Occesicoret.
WE RECORD THREE RA/LAOAD ACCIDENTS
this ,Morning—two of them 'fatal ones. The 5
o'olook eipress train, on the Thulium River road,
New York, at 5 o'clook on Thursday evening last,
ran over. and 'killed Mr. doorge Black and his
wife, a short distance from Tarrytown, New York.
They were walking on the track, and wore not
seen by the engineer. On Wednesday afternoon
last, Mr. Miller, mail agent on the Ohio Central
.Itailrad, Nina killed by fieing crushed between a
train of oars anti a woodletle beside - the road.
The third acoldent claCurred on Thursday evening,
on the road between Rousare Point and Codens.
burg. A breken rail thretr a train tram the track,
and three persons—Captain O. P. Geer, a Mr.
Powell, and B. Berry, the conductor—were in
jured.
THE PRESS.-PHILADEVMA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1858,
THE LATEST , NEWS
BY' TELEGRAI4-3.
THREE DAYS LATER =BOPP b
The Europa at ttalifai.
NO TIDINGS OF T.nINDIAN hDIPIRE
Loss or a Preach ri oto
ReMonstrance of the Catholic Powers
The Child's Release Refuied by Pepe
EXPLOSION OR AN ARSENAL
«V Million Poo's& of ditionithilion
Destroyed.
11;x-King of Della Sent to Caletitta
COMMERCIAL INTELLIGENCE
COTTON AD VA NOEL )id
Improved Demand for American Sec unities
Ilatirak, Nov. 28.—The royal mall steamship L'u•
rope, Gape. Leitch, from Liverpool, at 9 o'clock on the
morningof the 20th Snot ~arrived here at 2 o'clock this
afternoon. She reached Liverpool from Queenstown on
her outward voyage at D o'clock on the morning off the
18th loot.
The Europa reports that on the 20th, when of the
Bell Buoy, passed the American ship Tornado, of Phila
delphia, bound west; at 5 P. Id., 0 miles to the west
ward of Holyhead, putmd the steamship Persia, from
New York for L'verpool ; on the 21st, about 25 mild
westward of Cape Clear, passed the American ship
Hsecrt, bound east.
The Adel on her onward-bound trip encountered
such severe weather that the captain bad Ms knoo
pan broken by one of the seas that struck her '
The Screw steamer Baxonia reached Bouthrimpten on
the evening of the 19th.
The easterly gales, whiCli prevailed around the En
glish coast for several days, bad moderated. The sea
borne malle bad been greatly damaged.
The Government bed sent two steam sloops to the
chops of the channel to relieve vessels In 'Wren!.
Robert Owen, the celebrated religious and social
writer, had died, in Me 88th year.
GREAT BRITAIN.
Parliament had been further prprogued until the 12'h
of Janus. y, bat it was ex Acted that the torsion would
not commence until about the 24 of Pebruary.
Hon. Frederick Bruce, brother of Lotd Elgin, has
been appointed Brat British ambassador to Pekin Mr.
Bruce wan Secretary of Lord Elects embassy, and was
attached to Lord Ashburton's special minion to Wash
ington, in 1842
Another attempt at assassination is reported in Ire
land. A maglatrate, named Gem; was fired at near
Irenagh, by a diebhalred employee, but escaped without
material injury.
The London Gazette contains la rintioe of application
for a eharter for the Bank of British Coltimbla and Van
couver's Island. The three-hundredth anniversary of
Queen Elisabeth's accretion to the throne had been cele
brated with Protestant deinqnstrations in various parte
of England The Bishop of London delivered a lengthy
primary charge to about one thensaod elergymen nr
dioceses, at b.t. PauVe. He condemned the practice of
the confessional.
The Oreat Eastern Bhip Company has been duly
organized. The Great Eastern Is to nest the new nom.
puny one hundred and elite thousand pounds, and one
hundred and tort!' thousand - pounds mote ia the eat!.
mated amount required to dash her.
THE LATEST.
[hy telegraph from tendon to Liverpool.]
Lohnoll, lilstrirday;' NOT. tO, A. m.
The Da;ty News' city article, of Friday evening.,
says: it The fonds to-day were dull, and a decline of
.36* ?' cent. iras Many quoted, owing principally to the
languor of business. In the other departments or ibe
Munk Bxchange there was an equal absence of features
of Interest. More ease Is observable in the discount
market. The supply of money Is more abundant, nod
the general rate for good bills Is etll l / 2 X its' cent, but
instances In which transactions take niece below that
rate are leas rare There *Ore no bullion operations at
the bank to.day.if
The Times city article of last evening sere The
linglish (nude opened steadily this morning at the firm
prices of yesterday, and remained without much alter
ation. although there wee a disposition to dulloeee at
the close, in conaequence of the quotations from Paris
being slightly tele favorable. The abundance of mo
ney increases, and trannsotlons have talon place in the
die/mint market at 2.,i( 4fs' cent.
't In the foreign exchange,' thle afternoon, there
was a slight donne in the rates on Vienna. and,
Trieste; on other pinata they were the same as at
the last poet. About 140,003 in gold arrived to-day
from St. Petersburg. andji further similar amount Is
expected immediately. The whole has been cold for
eportation. The Colonial proNeo market, during
lab week, has been scantily supplied, partly on cc
count of the easterly wind retarding the arrival of
many vessels now overdue. ' A eteadfattainess has ta
ken place, chiefly for cooktimption, and some of the
leading etapleS babe closed it ellghtly enhanced rates.
There Is Mill, howeter, a genetil want of animation.
MADRID, Friday.—The Queen will open the Oortes In
Doreen.
The French Legate Theop been lost near Ca
diz ; eight persons were drown. . •
. Tab eimiacrek.Ae JgDDAII.
. .... .
Ttos Itoglksh aisd French aotomiselonere arrived oh
the 12th et deddeh, on board the Oyelops There were
thrPellOglish ehips•of-war In the roadstead.
The Gazette Announces the appointment of Dr. Rea-
TV Barth, the African travener, to he a compamon of
the Bath.
TAO amp at gidershalt is in admfirebie order just
iior. The effective strength of the troops is liteer
10000 min of AU. arms.
PIiANON.
• • - •
Reinfordeusente of the :Preach, troops „bare been or
dered to Cochin Milne. in oottiteq4este'of the Waist.
tee* being erwentio4 in the tutorial., Atilliery was to
be Sent es Pollee infantry, that sent , by Spain from Ma
nilla Beloit Insufficient. A Brigadier, General le alio to
'go out ,„ • .
A commission to consider the odestion of negio snit
ration ham bean nominated. oonsiets of seventeen
members. M. de Persian yls the president.
Prince Napoleon had lesusd,-n decree relimiing the
Preen In Algiers Irons, cartel's offensive additions to the
laws of the Prose in Branca, and placing them upon the
tame footing as French journals.
Mentalembertle case was celled up proforma In the
Corrections,' Tribune on the 17th, but, as already inti
mated, was postponed till the 24th.
A special decree in yesterday's !Anima eetablishes
a special bank charged with the ',melee of the treasury
to the great public works of the city and Which shell
beer the title of the Rank. of the Works of PATIO
Lords Palmerston and Clarendon were on a visit tb
the Emperor at Compiegne The lifoniteur contains a
decree obliging all bek.rs in certain towns to keep in
reserve a aufecient stock to supply their manufacturing
Wants In breed during at lout three months
The ftmde were slightly firmer to-day, the three per
cents closed at me. ty four to eighty-five.
ki Thouvenel reached lirsnee, from Constantinople,
to-day,
BEI3IBR.
The Belgian Chamber of bemires voted the address
in reply to the I{ lag's speech by lirly.three against
nine. Great excitement attended the vote, and some
of the opposition retired from the Ohambev.
It is reported that the United State" Government has
declared lie Consent to Spain °lain:dog satisfaction from
Relic° by an armed force
ITALY.
A telegram from Milan states that the new law on
military conscription you producing Considerable effer•
nascence. Lettere from Rome amers that all the great
Catholic Powera had addressed remonstrancee to the
Pope for the minim of the Jewish boy, Mort rit, The
Pope had replied that the boy's return to his parents
was Impsealble. . .
Prince Ilohenzollern, prepident of the Connell, to no
minated Miniater of Havlne.
AUSTRIA.
The monument erected at Prague to the memory of
Radeteky wee Uncovered on the 13th In the preaence of
the Empror and a great einccurse or spectators •
INDIA
. The Bombay mall of October 2alb had reached Eng•
land The details of the news are quite important.
The Bombay money market was easy.
The ex-Ring of Delhi had been sent to Oehnitta
under escort.
The proclamation in which the British Crown M.
sum, direct dominion over India was expected to be
promulgated on the 4th of November. (heat prepara
tions were making to celebrate the event on a gracd
Beale.
An explosion cocurred at the liturmhe arsenal, is
some fireworks ware being prepared, and four men ware
killed The whole of the rifle and musket ammunition,
amounting to a million of pounds, was destroyed, and
the greater part of the or anal blown up
Commercial Intelligence.
LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET —The broker
circular states the sites or Cotton for the week 58 200
bales, of whioh 4 600 were to speculators ant 7.030 for
export. All qualities were about 4 per pound higher
on the week, under a good demand from the trade.
folders of f ered freely at the close without showleg a
disposition to Dress sales. The bash:twit of Tilde, was
8.000 bales, of which 1 000 were on speculation and for
export, the market cloning steady at the advanced qua.
tattoos: Blr Orleans 7%d; middling Orleane 7 10d ;
fai t Mobiles 7M , l : middling Mobiles 7d; fete Uplands
7md ; middling Velar& 870 The stock In port was
estimated at 332,000 Wes, of which 247,000 bales wore
American.
SPATE OW TRADE IN AIANCIINSTER.—The ad
vices from Mancheater are 'encouraging, there having
been a slight advance in all kinds of goods.
LIVERPOOL RTLEADEPUFVS MARKET.—Mews.
Riehardeon, Spence, 4 00. quote Flour very dull. but
eteady; Western Canal. 20s: Phlladelnbia and Duni
mor. 20a Mona Od ; Ohio, 2'24,2415. Wbe.t uiet, but
steady; red Weldon', de 6106 e 3d; white ditto. Gem
13/ 3d; white Southern , 6i 9den'T.. 0 rn very dull. and
quotations nominal; mixed, 25a; yellow, 29e; white,
3Ve.
LIVERPOOL PROVISION BIARICBT —Meagre. Bic
land. /Oliva, & Co., Itichariann, Spence, & Ce . James
McHenry, and others, report Beef heavy, and all coati.
ties alightly lower, causing rather more buelnest at the
clone. Pork dull at 70a; Bacon heavy, with but little
inquiry, and prices weak. Lard doll, and prime freely
offered et 62s the market closing firmer however. Tal
low advanced Od ; Butchers , Ananolation quoted at bin fld
cone, but with none en the market.
LIVERPOOL , PRODUCIC BI SHICP,T.—The brokers'
and other circulars quote Ashes quiet—pota aemsoa , •
Peale 32a M 0328 Od. Sugar quiet, but buo7not. Cof
fee arm. Rice firm, and 61 higher; Carolina IBscr23l Rd
for middling to line Tea—An average buelneee, with.
out quotable ebeoge in rates Ruin steady; c•mmon
emcee at de 2des4l Sd ; modiuM be &has; Roe 12,n17a
Ilidee dull. Berk dull; Baltimore Re &I; Philad.lphia,
gales unimportant. Cod Oil £3O Beal Olt—Sales un.
important Linseed Oil in bett.r demand at 20502013 lid.
Olive Oil advanced 10020 a. Spirits Turpentine dull at
age 6d re .108.
• • • •
LONDON 11.h.B.RETS.—Messrs. Baring Bros. quote
brearistuffs quiet and uncb•nged White wheat 42.; red
Medi:in; Dour 200240. Iron firm ; relief £6 10serL6 15s ;
barn £6 50. Sugar opened quiet ; bnt olo•ed buoyant
and ;distal? higher. ()toffee quiet. Tea quiet; Comma
1034 d. Spirits Turpentine firm at 41n. Linseed ad•
vanord le. Linseed cakes—quotationa barely main
tained; New York £lO I.os ; Boston £lO Linseed oil
steady at 20e. Fish oils slow of sale. but prime un
changed. Mee steady. Saltpetre advanced Gamin.
Tallow quiet at Ste.
LONDOIs MONEY lilAßKET.—Consols were quoted
at the close on Friday at 09)4698„1( for money and sc.
Count,
The hellion hi the Beek of Englend had locreseed
.C 186,000.
Menem. Baring Brothers quota money sexy at 24'03
IR' cent Bar sliver ; Dollars nominal at Os 34'd;
Eagles 708 31.
HAVRE MARKET—For the week ending November
10 Inclusive —Cotton steady; sales of the week. &MO
bales; stook, 88,000 bales; New Orleaoe tree aritineire,
1081 The manufaoturing advisee are favorable. Bread.
stuff.; quiet. Ashes firm. 0; ftm dull, and slightly
lower. There was more doing in Oils at rather lower
prices for all 'kWh Rice cull; Carolina 27f Sugar
buoyant, and slightly higher. Whalebone inlet
AMBIuoAIS BECURITIE I —Messrs. Baring Brut.
s r . Co. quote an Improved demand for American Bean
rities. United States dime, 95; MassecbuSeita even ;
(bandit.) 10'm103; Maryland area, (bonds.), 90; Penn
sylvanite dyes, 82; ditto bonds of 1877, 88(081; Virginia
Been and ellea,Bs. Railway Settrtilielf note . . Panama
bonds 05.
Messrs. 13.11 & Co report State stocks to Improved
demand, and all qualities slightly advanced, Railroad
securities yolot.
United States sixes of 18t7 t. 1010105 ; hon Is of
1808, 1044an106)4 ; do fives of 1874, 0430+054c ; A o.
barns fives, bonds, n; - Kentucky sixes, 1868-71, 90,1117:
Massachusetts flvas, bonds, 101,.0103; ObiO sixes, 1870,
99340404 ; Pennsylvania fives, 82a81; Toulouse
six. a bonds, 84038; Vltgluln fives and sores 80¢x88;
Boston City fives, 901e02; Illinois Central o•vens,lEoo,
rteuland, 80083; do allonS said etTeue, of 1870, 81o88;
INDIAN- NEWS
Death or Robert Owen.
BREADEIVITATS DULL
Consols IlelAt'
PRUSSIA
do ebatee. 21622 dircounti Mahlon (antral eights,
1860, keen; Now York Coated sevens, 91047; do
Macs, 112.04 ; do sham, 76018; lb le sevens, 31 mart
gate, 69070 ; de stock, 15017; Panama horde of 280,
100; do of-1865, 08095; Peniteylvants Central pixels,
Ist mortgage, 90692
The Leaden Times of Frldsy quotes Sales of 111Incr0
Central sevens of 1860, Freelanda, at 82; New York Cen
tral abates at 77X.
WAIYEFINUD, NABI3, tc 00.43 OIRCULaIt—IFer
Au.go IsEnroor., 11th month 10 —I he apathor
hoe become exceedingly severe, with a atrong brease
from BPh „consequently our artisan; sre light. No
Improvement in either demand or price is yet observe.
Wain any branch of the Crain trade.
We had s very acanty attendefice at our rivulet tills
niorkihg, end again Mit it very limited trade tcok place
In Wbeat, without au* quotable alteration in price
frtor; the rates of Friday.
Flour sold slowly, end only the superior classes sup
ported late rates,
Indian Coin met only a demand for feedino purposes,
but the quantity aold,thowever, was very moderate.
Oats and‘Meal nearly supported late rates with only
a limited Inanity.
PASBENGMAB Left EURoPA.—Mies Gox, Mee Greene
and attendant, Mr. 00 , 111 and lady, Mrs. Johnstone,
Ker.li'm Davenport. MC Croker, Caroline Lesser and
infant. Meer Joi•natone. Gilieeaa , Dotter. l'ibbetts,
Met, Tagot. 800, Barth. 'Mel, Corme:an, Creswell,
Mollatiand,Turnhall, Willingham, Hermann, Mount
fort, bearb , rn, Kelly. Daring, Morro and eon, Morris,
810Vatia, Adams, Smith, Dud, and tire. &metal".
Further From California.
lily Overland kfail.l
Br Loma, Nov. 21.—The overland matt, with dates
to the let toot., arrived last night.
It woe repotted that a Natio hod odoarred between
the volunteers 'neer Oen kibhe. and a band or Indiana
In Mullah county. Four Indlace were killed and
eight prlsonere Captitred One volunteer woe killed
Tao Circuit Court of California hod annotated a Corn-
MiSSIOnOr to proceed to the Almaden quicksilver mine
to examine Into the oondition of the property, and re
port upon the expediency of appointing a receiver.
Tinniness was dull. The non.orrival of veißela froth
Eastern ports winced conetderible embarrasament, both
to Importers and Jobbers.
towel liavana—Arrival of the 'lsabel at
Charleston.
OFTARLESTON, Nov. 29.—The steamer bullet, 'from
Havana, bee arrived,
Sugars wore firm at 95; reale for No. 12 'the dock
at Havana and Matanzas' amounted to 65 000 boxes.
Molasses wee unchanged
=Change on London ha? declined to 13 J? coat ere
mium. Exchange on New York was quoted at 103 X,
On New Orleane 104 g e 10536
From AValolington.
IV/SII}NOTOST, Nov. 29.—it ts of Id by gentlemen who
are particularly Interested. that white a recommenda
tion will be made to i3ongrers for a modlnostlon of the
tariff, with the view tt an increase of the revenue, the
maim by which this should be effected will not be
designated by the Secretary of the Treasure
The subject is alrradv agitated In ',Attica' circler; as
to whether there shall bo a speella Instead of an ad
roaforem duty on iron
A. letter brOught by the steamer Qualter City says
that &number of Nicaraguan adventarere have landed
atodt forty miles from San Juan del Sur, end recent
private adVioet from the South state, that tholle who
were prevented from doing oat In the Airue Painter,
have made arrangements to reach Nicaragua by some
other conveyance.
Congress will he officially latomied that the late die
turbances in Washington and Oregon have resulted
from neglect to ratify the various treaties concluded
with the Indiana of these Territories.
The Ship Confidence.
IVAOTIINOTON, Nov. 29 —The ship which esptlin
Leavitt 'reported &week ego at; having been repo by
him on the Moselle abode, wet the Alp Contldence,
from New York. With the assistance of the wreckers
eke was got off after a portion of her l , srgo was taken
out. She was leaking badly, but Captain Lerma eepeot
ed to be able to reach Neer Orleans. The revengers
had been brought t+ Now Orleans by a passing vessel.
The Captured Negroes at Havana.
WASIIINOToN, Nov 29.—Three hundred ernancibadoe,
of the negroea who Were captured by the Sparkish war
steimer Tenadito, hid been placed at the disposition of
the Silty Councils of Havana, and were employed in the
constrinition of an squeduct from Vento, and seedling
buildings for those engaged on the work.
Locomotive Explosion.
Etssimsnano, Nov. Tif. - --The engine California, on
the Delaver°. Lackawanna, *lnd Western railroad, at
tached to a train of empty coal cars, exploded abogt
1:10C11 to-day, when near Opragneville Thomas Loner
gan fireman, was Instantly killed, And Edward Hawley,
engineer, is suppos:d to be totally Minted. Two other
persona were badly injured, but w,ll probably recover.
The accident ie supposed to have incurred iceman Over
pressure of steam.
Anothei tiro at Mulch Chunk.
Mallon Onnstx, Nov. 20.--ttatoll.6 & Johnson's *oat
breaker, No. 2, at the Beaver Meadow eoal mines, took
tire from the engine on Sunday morning, at about 4
o'clock, and won entirely consumed. The damage la
estimated at IslB.ooo.
Horrible Affair at Mattoon, Illinoir.
hidtroow, Illinois, November 29.—Last night a. man
namel /high liarknese. while laboring under a fit of
delirium tremens Set tire to hie house, and, togethei
with hie wife and child, wee eonedmed in the dunes,
The South Pass iVauon fond.
Si , Louis, Nov 20 —Ur. F. W. Lender. auperinten
dent of the South pane Wagon Road. arrived here yea
terday, at route for Washington, whore he will report
and write an emigrant guide of the new rot&
Acquittal of an Alleged Wife Poisoner.
OLISMAIIn. Nov 2g —Meant Oola, charged with the
poisoning of his wife at Chagrin Falls, Ohib, was ao
quitted on Saturday morning
Now York bank Statement.
NE* Yosk, Nov. 29.—The bank statement shows
the following results
Decrease of bolos $87,000
' .
Inman, of specie 307,0e0
Morose of circulation 208.00
Demme of not dopoaits
Passengers te drage.
Nor Yohg, Nov. 29 —The Arago arrived this after
noon from Havre and Boutbampton, and brought over
two hundred passengers. Among them are Paulding
Tetuan, bearer of despatches and the new Japan treaty ;
the nor. Dr. ratton, bearer of despatehes front llama
G. Germain, French vino -cbdiul at:New Orleans, and
bearer of despatcher! front Paris ; Mrs. Senator Owin,
Mon. Wm. Aiken, and Bishop Davis, of Booth Carolina.
Letter from New York.
PETE TO LION. D. EL BICKLER AT NIIILO'S—DEDiPT
OP CAROLINE 'twain's AND PETER RICIIINOB—
— OP DR. GAILLARbET : CM` slo,ooo—
RETURN OF BOSIO-MORRIS'S SONGS IN ENO..
LAND-REVOLUTION AMONG THE BRITISH QUA
KERS : FASHIONABLE FRIENDS IN NEW YORK.--
PROFESSOR MORSE RECEIVES 100,00 D FRANCE
ON ACCOUNT-810,000 BILLIARD MATCH BETWEEN
rttnume AND SBERITER -SANDS, NATHAN, A
CO '8 CIRCUS AT THE BROADWAY THEATRE.
[Correspondence of The Paw J
NRw YORK, Noy. 49,1998
On Thursday evening next the friends of the Mon.
Daniel It Stades propose to gibe him a etimplimentary
fete at table's Saloon. It trill consist of a supper,
speeches, and ball, and of course will be participated
in by a goodly number of the gentlemen and lady-
Mende of Mr. Blekles and his amiable and fascinating
wife. I learn from one of the principal ,‘ sachem;
engaged in getting it up that it le designed to be a very
extensive and brilliant affair.
Aa intelligent and tolerably full house assisted, on
Saturday evening last, at the debut of Caroline Rich.
loge and the rearj u in:ance of the venerable and craftily
Teter, at Burton's. The play was "Extremes,"
which Was and Mr. It. have acquired considerable re
putation in the "provinces " It was well cast, went
off with smoothness and Writ, and with all desirable
applause. The comments of the press are flattering,
and stem, on the whole, to be written in a diserind.
mating Ppirit.
The escape of Dr. Gaillardet from the custody of en
officer, Just as he was about to be sentenced, cont;nues
to be a topic of canverratioo. The following carious
statement In reference to It apppeared in the Sunday
Mercury, of yesterday i '• The mane of the Doctor
was attended by an outlay of ten thousand dollars
which wee readily and willingly liquidate,' by his
friends without the i'.tervention of his private puree.
Ito will never appear again in New York unless he °b
lean; pardon, as he pee ably may, at the hands of G"v.
Morgan, if that gentleman should be perfectly Initialed
that he is entitled to clemency." After perusing a
paragraph like this, where the pecuniary dean aro
siren with the most eatisfaotory and perfectly under
standeble minuteness, the Inquiry suggests Itself
Why is not the writer of it requested to make himself
app trent to the Judge, and tell all he knows about the
obequatulating Dectorta whereabouts ?
Among the on dies in the lobblea at the opera haute
I hear that Boatel intends returning to this country at
an early date.
ElaMe has set to 11113 RIC and pablisted, in London,
General Morris's songs of "Scenes of Nome," I• Ile
Never Loved Me," Your Mend I take in Mine," i• The
Belle of the Ball," &c.
What do the Friends of your goodly Quak+r City thick
of the recent conference, in London, o' three hundred
members of that Society, at which It was agreed to
sanction marriage between individuals of that commu
nity, although not in membership, by allowing them to
take place within its religious meetings, and that all
restrictions to regard to what Is oiled plalnness of
speech, behavior, and apparel, may also be discon
tanned ! Some of our old, historical (looker families are
rapidly assimilating themselves to the manners and
custom!' of the world's people. They a'e now to
be found among the dwellers In these open lid brown
alcom front temples that adorn Fifth avenue, and give
'parties and soirees of the moat recherche character.
1 Professor Morse has received, in Paris, the Bret In.
stalmeat (100,000 franca) of the testimonial of the ten
Farapean Powers. Bo says a letter to the New Yoik
nbsereer, published by his brother.
It may, perhaps, Interest your men or the mace and
Cie to know that a match at blillauls, ter ten thowand
deilars, between Phelan, of this city, and BORiter, of
Detroit, is nearly Nettled, and that no dlfliculy !a an
ticipated in reference to the Heal arran,teme .ts. Phe
lan has hitho Is been considered Invincible, but the
young Dutchman of Detroit in said to stir up the balls
" with a lon polo " In a way, and with an accuracy
wonderful to behold.
To-nig`t Bands, Nether's, 4. Company, the Napo
leons of the hone opera, open the Broadway Theatre
fora aerien of h'gh art performancen with pedal and
quadrupedal '• jumpers." The grand cortege, ,,
beaded by the gem calliope, drawn by six elephants,
followed by a long line of mounted men clad in gar
nlenta enrionaly variegated, procesaed through the prin•
olpal streele, to the groat delight of Individuals un
der sixteen years of axe, saying nothing about the older
peoples
The following to a comparative statement of the con
dit'on of the New York hooka for tho weeks ending No
vember 29 and November 27:
Nor 20 Nov. 27.
Loans .41 . '5,598,032 $120682 018 Bee .. $87,068
Specie ..... . 20.700,815 27,157.781 360 016
Ourcula.ion... 7,860,670 7032,167 Dec.. 203.121
Not deposits 87,046128 80,733,705 Dec.. 1,211,723
The hank statement allows an Increase of coin and a
decrease In circulation. The net deposits are reduced
$1,200,000, without any reduction in the loans.
PICTORIAL NEWSPAPERS.—The Illustrated Lou
don NM; Std the illustrated Aruu•s of Ma
World have reached us from Callender, South
Third and Walnut streets. As usual, they aro
erowded,with engravings, and mirror the news and
notabilities of the world.
LARGE SALE 01' REAI, ESTATE, STOCKS, PEWS,
to This evening, at the Exchange, including
valuable brown steno building, 327 Walnut street,
elegant duct plain dwellings, business stands,
building lets, t o ; altogether twenty-six proper
ties, besides stocks, pews, &..0. Soo Thomas
Sons' pamphlet cataloguea and advertiretnenta.
TRUSTELV Prince SALE-^•" 30310 110TRIi."—
Messra Thomas At Sons atleortiso for 116 2lst Do
ember, tho above first claps property—ono of tho
best bnettlesli latta.ttons in tho oily, and formerly
ono of the lot popular and profitable hotels.
THE CITY.
.6.631:7810MENTS Tl3lB i O TAN/Ne.
ACADEMY ON Mrsio —ThO Strakuch Opera Troupe:
Moe. D. P. BOWCRS' WALlOrr•er/lIIET TIIANII.
"COuletly of JElrrore"— , . Randy Andy."
Wfitanay h 01.AR6VB AlOll-OTIEOT TIIIIATAX.—
" Our American Cousin ~—" Charlee II."
NATIONAL CIRCOI —ct Lent , . mama Company."—
Polish March and Cavalcade—Equastrian and Gymnastia
fea..ta.
ASSEMBLY BUM.DIEBS.-13iEnor Mitt.
.
Samoan's OPIC ILA 11.00011.—EttliOplaM bntertain
monta
8111K8CISA&E COLIOSEIT SALOON, SIKAU AND CillitiTSUT
—Miscellaneous Entertainment.
Dedication of the New Arinory of the
Philadelphia Grays.
PAlttibE OF THE GRAY BATTALION,
BANOTET, sesAluaia, &o , &
The Gray tlathlion was out yesterday, and had quite
a time of it The c ceasion•was the dedication of the
now ermo-y of the P biladelphia Grate in Market street,
above Eithth. The day was not such . no might have
been desired The ground WAR m^ddy. the air was damp,
and the skies were dark and threatening. but mrierthe•
lees the weather did not materially interfere with their
.y. The battalion fornied on the teat side
of Waehingtou Fqu•re, end paraded over the route we
published yesterday, under the command of Colonel P.
It Patterson the newly-eletted Colonel. They made
quite a brilliant display, their military bearing and their
samirtlite drill ensiling universal and merited elm-
Initiate from the crowds of spectators which thronged
their whole runts
The twined ato occasion of the tarn-out wee, as we
babe bait, the dedication or the armory of the Phila
delphia Grays. This company is. we may hero retn•rk,
the favorite company of the battalion. Its ninny years
of active service, and the uniformly good character and
gallon heart rg of Its members having given it the po
attion it occupies among our m litaev organliation
A numter or our meat worthy aflame, anxious to
testify hew deeply they felt the Importance and useful
nese of the Grays, as a volunteer orgentration, gave
them a banquet last evening at their new armory. We
gave a description or the betiding in yesterday morn.
Inge Pres., /rid me we need not delay further on that
Point.
Toe tables extended soros+ their long and spaelatis
iMerd, and Jere mirretinded by about three hundred
gentlemen, consisting of the mend) srs of 'he company
and a largo number of invited guests. both soldiers and
eivillane. To use a local-item simile, "the tables
groaned under the delicselea of the e.sa , on." Theta wee
eeerythlez that could be desired, froth talkies and
Ward down to rabbi and Monongahela
J BroWn. Heq., the well-know, and gentlemanly
propeetor o• the Aroade lintel, presided. supported on
the richt by fieneralPatterson. and the left by I:femoral
Oaderalader sod the venerable Judge Findlay, late a
captain of the company . after the cloth was supposed
to be removed, Mr Drown rains+ and offend the four
regular toasts of the evenipg. via:
1 The President of the United States
2. The governor of the State of Pennsylvania.
3. The Array of the United States.
4 The Navy of the United States
These sentiments were drunk with be graduated degree
of applause , the 'army cornice in for the Houle share,
and the President for the President's. The band played
sundry pieces of music between the drinking of each
sentiment
Mr Brown then rose and made a few remarks, allud
ing to the sondem the volunteer organization rendered
in the war of the Revolution. They were the maid, be
might nay the only support our great Bather received
in that trying struggle. In Washington's rate the en.
listing of a volunteer soldier was a Matter of necessity.
He would gladly have preferred a regular army. The
aoldiery of the Revelation, in comparison with the sot
dierY of the present day. a'e the rig iron e'mpardd
with the barnlebed. They had the material
courage, but they needed the soldierly drill. Otis only
defence wan the citizen soldiery, and he felt proud in
the feeling that we bad such a noble organization to
depend on. After alluding In eloquent terms to the
Philadelphia Grays and their glorions h'story, he con
cluded by orreries se a sentiment—
, The Phtlaarlphia Grays."—This sentiment was
received pith,." three cheers and a tiger." and after
the band played another piece of multi, Captain 'Bradley
reilpooded jn a very beautiful and eloquent Friedel. He
spoke of the time, when be took command, paying at
the name time a neat compliment to H m
a edal:wawa
He Praised the company, too. for the obedience it had
shown to hint when its commander. After smeakini of
the services rendered by the volun•eers In Mexico. of
their indomitable courage hp., he concluded by
touching allusion to two of the deceased members of the
Grave, and gate ace sentiment—
The a itizeni of Phelarlelphio.
Colonel John W Torrey responded. and Seas melted
with loud and enthusiastic, cheerio.. As an node
nerving member of the committee oertreangements. as
one who had given nothing NM hill bead's best *lilies,
he bed no right to be assigned tbrl flattering and com
plimentary position he then occupied. He came
simply to show by hie presence bow heertily he co.
operated in thie ovation. There were many associations
conneeted with thin Company , not the least of width was
that his friend Judge y indl ly was Ste late beloved com
menter. The Brat time he had the honor of seeing the
(learn wag whim he was a boy, some twenty yea-s ago.
The company was then on its way to Harrisburg to as
eist in the celebrated Buckshot war—and in view of their,
amoc'ationa. though he was unworthy to respond,
yet he wee glad to be here. For when we ceased to honor
Owes who defend our bonne and our Breaths, we were
unworthy of their services. When we look at the con
dition of our country—lts past, its present and its fu.
tore—when we compare ourselves with other nations
of the earth, we should thank God that we were per
mitted to rest tiodisturhed on this beautiful portion or
his footstool. When We look at our owit continent and
,de the very eiligtes of republics to the Routh of us,
skeletone under the name of liberty, and writhing under
the bloody hoot of despotism may we not feel proud
that we ate permitted to live at all!
Here we hate no standing army—here we have no fet
tered preen,—all are happy and independent. How with
those to whom he had alluded? They had no protec
tion. They had no volunteer organitation, to shield
them from the despotic arrogance of ambitious tyrants.
They had no citizen soldiery. like us on whom they
could depend to mippreas domestid strife at home.
or repel invasion from abroad. In view of these
things, he thought the chairman was right
when be said Rome tribute should be paid to
those young men in our midst who have contributed of
their time, of their energy, and of their meting, to ens.
talc the military system or their' country It was
Well, then be said, in conclaing. that we should come
forth. as oitiasne and as men, to honorthese young
men for their eelf.deotal and nab
Colonel Forney then promised, In eloquent terms,
the health 'of 'General Patterson • On rising to re
spond, the General was received with three times three.
He responded in a very felicitous and telling speech,
and called out General Oadwaladrr, who acknowledged
the e-mpliment In felfeltrais terms.
Parent Campbell Irra few neat remarks, presented
the company with two shells which had been need by
the Allies at Bebastapol, and which he had brought
with hint from that town.,
&natal other gentlemen addressed the meeting,
among idiom were Colonels Lewis a, d Lela, and Cap
tains Becker and Lowry. Their remarks were well re
ceived Mr. Dunn wan called on rar a rpeech by the
company, and In reapondlrg be stated that be wag the
yonnaest representative of the press present, after
which he eat down
The company adjourned about 12 o'c'ock.
A MERRY SET.—A precocious youth, who
sports the appellation of William Higgins, was up be
fore Alderman lrernington yesterday morning on the
charge at keeping a disorderly domicile On Baker street
William is hardly 19,years old, but bag a very extended
notoriety, far beyond his rears. William, in the hospi
tality of his heart, lien been harboring a number of
persons, Of different sexes, different colors and morals,
in the last stage of decomposition. 'they Were a jovial
crew, William and his guests, and they whiled away
their nocturnal hours in hilarity no boisterous, that
their quieter neighbors made grievous complaints to
our authorities, specifying many things in relstion to
William and his metiers which charity compel* UR to
suppress, but which aroused the Ire of our munici
pality to ouch a degree that a descent was made upon
them on Saturday evening. and the frolickers were
transferred to hloysmensing. The juvenile William
wee committal in default of $l,OOO ball, to answer the
charge of keeping a disorderly house.
11013BERS COMBITTED--Yesterday morning
two young men, named John Dressier and Dental Collins,
bad a hearing before Alderman Moro*, on the charge
of robbery. It appears, according to the tvidenos, that
they entered the house of Mr Clvdener. in iprch
ereet, Fourteenth ward. on the morniog of Wednesday
t. and carried off jewelry veined at about forty dol
len. The property was alt reeoyere I, except 0%0 breast
pin, which was thrown down a sink by Dresser. Both
Parties acknowleiged the perpetration of the robbery.
They abstraoted the artic'es from a lureau drawer
irh they broke open The/ were committed to an
swer in default of $BOO bail.
A BURGLAR TRAPPED.—The farmers in the
vicinity of Frankford have been annoyed by the depre
dations of several unknown thieves Tho fel owe took
grain, Agricultural insWomenta, and everything they
could lay their hands on. Growing tired of these noc
turnal visits, Air. Thorp, a heavy sufferer, net a watch,
and on Saturday right a man, who gave the name or
3Ohn-Kyhough, was aeon leaving the place of Mr.
Thorp with a quantity of corn fodder in hie posses
sion. Ile was arrested and b and over by stda•mao
Elliott, yesterday morning, in the SUM of $l,OOO bail, to
answer the charges preferred against t im
RODDERY.—An office No. 127 South Third
street, used by Charles F. Noble as an engraving and
printing office, was robbed at a late hour on Sunday
night. The entrance was effected be smashing In the
glees panel or the door. About $lB worth of goods,
Including a valuable violin, and some clothing, were
Won. The furniture was much mutilated. and the
desks and drawers wore pried open. It le suppesed the
burglars were secreted on the stairway when the bui d ng
was closed, and that they effected their exit by drawing
the inside bolts.
THE UNIVERSITY'S Armmx.—We give the
names of the newly elected oMce's of the Alamo!
of the Department of Are of the Pennsylennia Ma
yor/My. They will earns for the ensuing year:
Preshient—Charles
Vine Treeidente—lesae Hayn. Id 1) , Han. George
Shermauft, LL. D , Rev. Kiegston Goddard, Mr.
Henry Gregory.
Correepecding fiecretary—Z. P. Dobson..lPg
Recording Peeretary—Join M. Collins, Erg.
Tro to srer—G. H. Roblnett, M . D.
SERIOUS AND SINGULAR.—A young lady
named 11l a•garet 'Mum mat with a very notions al.
cident on Sunday evening, which may result fatally.
Mel' account of it Ic very Megular. She says that she
went to the haute of Mr. Dup•eo, on eili.hatine s'rent,
near Fourth, for the rurpone, sa she states. of collect.
ing her tieterhu wager, and that she was pushed front the
step lir a woman The (•:oily of Mr. Dupree nesert
tllat she slipped met fell. Mica a Morn aas conveyed
to the residence of her parents at E'evaoth and Whar
ton Amite.
hooters —Tn the ease of Harrison Wil
liams, the colored man who woe stabbed on Friday
the coroner's jury reedored a verdict of death
from a wound inflict:d with a Loire in the inn It or
Isaac Lane. Lorre was gently committed by the
oorerler.
In the CVO of the baby wl ich wee found at Dickinson
and Pourth streets, the inquee.t was concluded yeaterd,y
afternoon. The rificers. sifter diligent mearcb, were
unable tr procure any evidence to lead to any clue, and
a verdict of death from causes ntkoown was rendered.
Pints.—A. small grocery store, owned by
Riedt, BE9 North Tenth street. was burned last
evening about 10 coolcclt. Domage not ascertained
Also, another lieu at Turtle and Catharine streets, in
which a negro child was badly burned. Caused by up
setting a lamp.
At an early hour yeaterday mauling a frame amble
was burned. It was tt e property of pith Wilkins, and
was on Second street, above healing Railroad. Damage
$5OO.
GOOD SPORT.—Two of our young sportsmen
returned on Fstarchy, atter a revr days' blot in Ded'ord
county, in this State. They brought with them, es the
result of their skill, 21 pheasants, 46 pVtridwis,l6 rab
bits, and one buck doer, when, net weight was nearly
160 pounds. This may be tenni d truly LIO Fport, and
we question very much whothor It has been excelled
by any party from fur city this yoar. They report
plenty of snow on the mountains, and exceedingly co d
weather.
A DARK RECORD,-7110 Second police dis
trict. extruding from Christian street to South. and
from the Delaware to Broad st , eet, has a very bad rr
cord, morally spenkiou Thus far, during tlm presont
Month, more than five hundred persons have boos ar
rested in the Second police district This Is about as
many arrests as have been made in all the other dis
tricts together during the same ye: tnl
.P.IIeINIX HOSE COMPANY.—We were higltly
gratified at the rplaratlid :once male by this rery
eflialentoempang. on the oce %pion of the vet:o°llot the
"Hibernia " They turned out 41mat for y mon, and all
over the route were spoken elm the hiALevt terms They
merciful like verernoF, and terre led by a rplendid hen',
whose sou'-atirrlng RIURIO gave addltiooal interest to
the proe.elon
REWARD OITEnIID.—WO alluded, a feel
days ay:v. IN the ee i A on-Oardly attQmp.s that tiviro
been mint t 1 rely up , o *h. I fe of II F. West. Esq.,
superiot,odtut of V.e inr..t.n Mat ufm.urti goo,l
-pnuy at tiloe,s'er. 1 0 . J Wa a Oe.stand that the
company lice oft, 1 n r,rer.:4ll.f .13 000 f, r the arreat
awl I cry eton of the To. phi of these outrages.
It is to he ilonve inn v 1.14 ins may be timcovered.
Plerreers:r Commyrruu.—A, young negro
neen u vird AT n 4tttlar rrre arrested on Sunday
o ight ci 0.., th and St MITy rtrertl, on the charge of
picking the rtrket. cf llcc li VCIII`s of tine dollars.
Ohs nna ecnurit tol in the worulng by Alderman
Fatohel.
THE COURTS.
iEATERDAY'4 PBOO7IDIN4II
[Reported for The Preshi
DISTRIeT COURT—judge Stroud.—thonies
A. Zones vs. The Continental Insurance Co. An action
on a marine policy of insurance. This was, an action
on lt,Policr of Ineuranre on the schorner t• Pletout , for
MS 003 Verdict for the plaintiff $1 605 62 McSfurtrie
for the plaintiff ; W. S. Price for the defendant.
Fox vs Scattergood. An rintion to recover the ratio
of a horse killed by the negligence of the defendant.
Defence not opened. On trial. Northrop for the plain
tiff; A. Phillips for the der:l:Want:
- thsTRICT Count-311dg° Hare.—ltionara
M. Jones rs. Squires, 'Zimmerman, & Allen. An notices
to recover salary as a saleeman in the dry goods store
n
of the detendante at the rate or WO a year Defence,"
that the plaintiff was not engaged at any flied sum,
but wee to be paid according to the value of his nervi-
Jiry out. Jenks for the plaintiff ; M. Latta
for the defendants.
COMMON PLEAS--Judge Ludlotir.—tiuzbY
and wife vs The West Philadelphia Passenger Railway
Co This was an aplication for a special injunction to
restrain the defendants from proceeding with their
road along the line of Thirty-third street. between
Lancaster avenue and liatket street The complain
ante allege that they are the owners of a lot of ground
at the intersection of Lancaster avenue, Cramond and
Union streets, in West Philadelphia, and on the line of
Thirtythird street, no the Berne has been laid down
upon the last plan of the day of Philadelphia ; that
the said portion of Thirty-third etreet has not been
opened co a pdblic greet, and that the defendants have
not pistil any damages to the complainants for the injury
done to their premised by the laying of the rails ; and.
therefore, they pray an Wl:Malan, kit. Held under
advisement. Argued by Miteheson for the ctimplain
ante, and by Sheppard for the defendants.
The court then took up the inablvent It t.
QUARTER SESSIONS—Judge Thompson.—
lehn Sp nic was acquitted of, assault and battery, but
ordered to Pay the costs. - ^
William Allen was charged with forcible. entry: and
detainer, kfr Allen was an agent, and rented to Wear -
ristts Freeman a room Id a henna in Price', eotirt ; the
prose utor failed to pay the rent. was dispossessed by the ,
agent, and the goods wore seined to pay the rant. It
was alleged the door of the room was broken during
the absence of th• prosecutor. The defenhe allege
that there was no force used to enter, and everything
wre legally done, a landlord'S warrant being used.
Verdict guilty Sentence deferred,
Philip Rinsed was chervil with obtaining goods wader
false pretenees. Mr. Mann stated to the jury that the
parties had been engaged in businerel together; and the
critter had been amicably settled, and the partee had
consented to pay the coats and save the county from
expellee. 'Verdict not guilty.
Joseph Luttensger was charged with oammittin g an
emelt and battery upon Term, hie wife. ,Sentenced
to pay a fine of M. and costs.
• John Marshall was indicted for maintaining a nuisance
in the shape of a - bonahoiling eatabliahment on' the
Second attest road, at the intersection of the Reading
Railroad. A great number of witneesee testified to the
unpleasant character of the smell which emanated from
the defendant's entablialtment, rendering it almost un
bearable in certain positions of the wind, sad that wee
felt a distance rf a quarter of a mile, and rendered the
whole nethhorhnod almost uninhabitable. For the de,
fence several witnessed - Were called, who tertifird that
theynever were annoyed by the emelt front the defen
dant's establishment. and thought it rather an agrees,
ble feettrre id the neighborhood than otherwise. When
crose•examined as to their occupation, they admitted
they were mostly nettle poudrette business. Tory out.
Peter , for the prosecution; Ocorge Earle
But , for the defendant.
Havana—Arrival of the
Litter from
kmpii:e . City.
The -Empire City, Captain B. Y. Griffin, left
New Orleans at eight A. M on . the 20th' inst., ar
rived at ltavana at sunrise on the 234, and left, at
430 P. 31. the same day, for New York. Her pas
sage has been prolonged by constant heavy wea
ther and head winds. She brings twenty-five pas-
Bangers and a large freight of produoo from both
mentioned ports.
The opera, Just inaugurated by Max Maretzek at
the Villa Nueva theatre, was occupying the atten•
tion of the Nabaneros, and, under the new law of
prices—" Double or nnits"—promised a success to
the enterprising manager.
The spacious floating dock, constructed lately,
at New Orleans, had safely arrived at Havana on
the 20th, in tow of Spanish steamere !tiexico and
relay°, having been six days on the passage.
The Cuban Progress (such is her name) will air
rest a great deal of floating capital in the harbor,
formerly directed to the United States ! but being
alone of her kind, it is inferred that her tariff of
prices will render her " ways.' other than " ways
of pleasantness."
Exchange en tendon 14 to 141 s. New York anti
Boston 3 to 31s. Freights excessively dull--41ot
i a vessel of the United States taken during the
past week. One cargo of negroes. 493, had been
I I landed on the coast to the eastward since last ad
vices.
Affairs in Illexieci-..The Age of Tyranny.
[from the Washington States
The taloaga Government must cave in. Their
arbitrary treatment of capitalists and foreigner!,
in the enforcement of their eicaotions, is oxempli•
fled In their treatment of Air. Warrall, , who has
just arrived in this city—he having, by supreme
order, to leave the city of Mexico in twelve hours
for refitting to pay an assessment upon him, and
he not being a citizen of Mexico.
Gem Robles has been too long absent to expect
to be raised to power. Me was at Jalapa, and
Zuloaa talked of arresting bins. General Mira
mon, it is stated, will probably succeed Zaloaga
as head of the conservative party.
Three Spanish men•of•war had arrived at Vera
Cruz, and the number expected was seven. France
had officially notified Mexico of her intention to
redress by force the wrongs of her citizens. The
British flag was represented in force ; and the
only flag of the fear nations having most Interest
ing relations with Mexico, not represented on her
coast, was the United States. • "
Juarez and the Liberal party will oppose foreign
aggression, bet the central powers and population
are apathetic, or rather 'approving, under the
impression that the coastwill catch the worst of it.
Mr. Warrall, to whom we aro indebted for this
information, is at the National Hotel. .
The Thirtieth-street Tragedy.
AM. GOULDS' INFORM or THE SUICIDE UP, HIS SON,
Contrary to expectation, Mr. &allay, the
father, is likely to recover from the dangerous
wounds received at the hands of his eon. Since
consciousness returned, it has been deemed pru
dent to conceal from him the suicide of his son, as
it was - feared the announcement might have 'a
disastrous effect. Yesterday,, however, he was
left alone for a few minutes, and soon. called fof
assistance, and was found in a state of excitement
and ,torror. He begged -not to be left alone.
" Every noise I hoar about the door," said he,
"makes me afraid that Frank is coming in to
finish his work." The physicians concluded to
inform him of his son's feta, which was acoording
ly done. His condition is still critical, and any
unfavorable turn would moat likely prove fatal;
but he has held out so well, and his situation is £0
much mere faVorablo than at first, it is believed
he will recover. 'the other members of the family
are doing well —N. Y. Evening Post.
Nett/ York !Markets Yesterday.
Agora —A drill and Leary market—sales of pots at
$5 623 g. and pearls $5.St.
Coevals. —The magcet la very kaiak this rnorninr, but
a Slur bogeys's was done Saturday afternoon at 'steady
prices; 90S base St. Domingo Bold at 989.310, 650 ditto
Man:alba, part at 11 )(DUN o, and a few cape at no.
Cotrots.—The market is less active, but mien are
sustained. We Quote !
21E1V YORK CLA9SIFIOI.TION
Uplands. Plorida. Mobile. bl.o.&Tex.
Ordinary ION IfIN, JO% 10%
Middling. - 12 12 12X 12%
Middling/air...12% 12% 13 12
nabs, &c —The demand for Western Canal Stout is
quite limited, end the market is heavy for the low
grading, but the better grades are In moderate request et
former rates. The demand is mainly for the home
trade
The soden are 8 000 bbls at $1.2054 40 for superrins
State; $1.7004 90 for extra do; $4 for low grades of
Western extra; $5 8505 50 for eh pptng brands of
rrund hoop extra Obi.; $5.60e7 for trade brands 00;
$5 5007 75 for extra Genesee, and $S 5058.50 for Bt.
Linda brands
. .
Canadian Flour is quiet but ilem, the demand is light
and the receipts very small ; the sales are 260 bbls at
One 20 for extm brands. Southern Flour is dull anti
heavy, the arrivals aro fair, in oxce, of the trade ;
the sates are 600 bbla at $ i fs
a 5.45 for superfine Balti
more, &o.; $5.60z.7 25 for fancy and extra brands
Rye Flour is without change; males of /50 bbls at
$3 35n4 20. Cora Meal is more plenty anti is lower;
sales of 400 bhis Jersey at $3.40a3 60.
FrtUlTS—Raisins are in fair requ'et ; ;Wee of 1,000
boxes bunch have bean made at $2.60, and 600 do layers
at $2 05.
finell4—The inquiry for Wheat is fair, but the mar
ket is lower for moat kinds but prime and Western—
this is offered spuingly ; the sales are 7.0 000 bus at
$1.1201 20 for inferior white Southern. St 20 for com
mon white Western, $1 25:01.2735 for fair to good white
Dliehigan, $1 15 for fair mixed Intrude, $l. 34 for prime
white Canadian, and $1 50 fo- white Kentucky.
Rye is quiet at TerniSe Otte are better end In fair
demand at 41051 for State, and 52053 for Western and
Canadian. Ittrtey is firm mire of 100 bus Canadian
and State at lbs.
Corn Is rather lower, and is freely offered—the de
mand Is moiseate ; sales of 22 000 bus at 740 fot d.m•
aged, and 7434enT6% for 'pod to prime mixed. Other
kioda are nominal.
111oLAA ss 14 quiet, bat price* are firmly maintained.
We quote New Orleans prime new at 42a, and syrup at
45c
PROTISIONB.—The market iv irregular for pork. the
demtnd moderate—vales of 850 bbla at $17.35m17.40 for
mesa; $lB 75m10 for clean; $15.50m15 75 for prime
mese, and $13m13 60 for old thin and prime. Included
in the Niles are 200 bbls meal—boyar's option all De.
cemter—at $l7 75.
'lleef is in good supply. the demend le fair for the
tredo and for shipment; the market le steady, vales of
600 bble nt $0 25e7 for country prime : s.Beo 50 for do
mesa; 19011 ler repacked mesa; and $1126n12 for ea•
tra do.
Beef barna are eteady; sales of 400 bide at sls eel 5 00
for Western Bacon Is heavy ; sales at t 94690 Cut
meats are &early ; sales of 150 Made and tea at 9a , 01.ie
for llama and OM for shoulders.
Laid is firmer and In baiter demand seen of 400 bbls
on the spot at 1144 islON ; 50 bbls for December at ne,
and 2 OtObbla for June at
Butter and Cheese are gaudy all ealeshlo. Dressed
ly - cl are scarce at 70 S
Bloc—Ts in InVerate request, with sales of ICO tea
at 3¢3Na for comown to good
be idni —The market is sm.' , qntet, but there is no
(lisp.' lion to areas salon unless at full previous prices;
small eaten of Cuba nt SOX erl Xe, mad Ravana at
7,6 eta
TRos—At private a• moderate bush:len is doing In
both greens and blades at steady rates.
Witisgair —Tho niatket Is hardly go firm ; the sales
ere 4 000 bble at Va.
NEW YORK STOOK E.
CEUNGE—November 29
DJ/RD.
SECOND
2000 Missouri St Oa 8070
200 Readlog R r 33 50,,
100 do 51
200 do I6D 50.14
5 Illinois Con R 76'N
290 do 1116 M
50 do slO 70 , 1
50 do 76X
100 Mich Oen R s3O 025
ico &riot, 6& N Tod 215,
b :Mich 8& N 1 G£l 515
100 do b 3 31,1 i
30 Mar & Pitts P. Q 5
25' Onions & Chi R 72
200 do £3O 711
100 do £.lO 72
100 do 560 71,1(
400 Chicago 5£ R I R 61,.1(
350 en 61 NI
300 do 030 60,ri
200 5111 & Miss R. b 3 12
001 UAW 19 , 1 r Ln 102
13500'11 Oen bds 01
200 Cant in Co 20%
140 Pacific Mall Co 10,7;
10 do 104)
50 Del & Had Co rBO 0810
200 N Cen bOO
130 do org 02%
80) ao seo 82%
250 Panama 11 121
100 do 500 121
100 Erie Railroad 17%
200 do 173(
300 do 1714
100 do 510 17%
340 da IS
100 do 560 18
50 Hod lily 10 500 331(
900 Harlem It 12%
Markets by Telegraph.
II a Lmstuta, Nov. 29.—Itiour eteady in price; sales
tritlicg. 3l heat steady; rod $l. 18®1.23; white $1.36
vat 45. Corn unchanged ; the retelptet are large. Irm
vin'ttos firm Whukey firm at 25025)4 cents
CINCINNATI, November 29.—Whiskey in firm; salon
at 23c Hogs aro dull; Pales of 5 000 at $6 25e 50
for light and $8 7007 for heavy weights The re eipts
for two days amount to 7 000. In Mese Pork there in a
large business doing at $l7 for January and February
dohrery. Lard eel n at lie (future delivery.) The
weather is unfavorable. The other markets continue
unchanged.
CrtanLver - n November 29—noon —The Cotton mar
ket is q•r et, and closes with a declining tendency;
l-s unimportant
few OaI.RANO, Nov. 29 —Sales of Cotton to-day.
7,060 bales, withcut change in quotations.
Runnum.--Tho Second and Th!rd-street
Passenger Iteilroall C.Kripeny 010 made nrcesesty tr.
latterneat4 with the omnibus owners atrith of the Ex
cheege. The care memo:ma running yesterday
morning.
FINANCIAL AND COMMERCI/
The Money Market.
- Lputi, Noy. 29.18
do &drones of two per cent, upon the ten-Poi
heads of the North Pennsylvania Hailrold Cow,
was the redeeming feature of -the stook market to
which otherwise was dell and liettess. Readivg .
road declined ji ; Pennsylianis Railroad gained
do oh through the The Macias are neglected
e►ee some orthe ieUnble eeci cittee you clop of a
present 4notatiotta; ,
In
In the mdney Market there .Is no change. The
sal of neafly trio More millions Mon MOWN:
bring up the epeole reserves of the banks to ar
ligaree as ever sobs, while the shipments south
run up; the line of the •ifew Orleans banks to
fifteen :millions or dollare-+Anal to nearly
tent of their added circulation - and depceita.
nsw o nA7MTFK2Vg;
"g4oE;gogooo,gs3..,
g.afg - gi'mP-"soft
t 4 4 0 3frg
Eg sg: g gil.aakst
' g • IiZF
Et- 4E,- ; .....
OlEW§H§g§lnlii
iMVO&MMelitigtri%
T. . .....
,°. w..... , IL — at
v 4.o.mc.Votitt,WWW
, c0...0p....,t..p......wj.0.
5@ W....mi. - I:A. coluiA , •
w h.,..2.4.4,0x..amp''
.. c.....0.-W 0..4.... .g 8
4
.12544.°'.V4gt4443.522a.8
-
ca .
.
1. . ... o
. .. ..-4..c.pc0.... w0 ..
.
9.........4............
1ci.1c.....1.144..1,..U00 - c. - .
im ..................000
. 000..,++...........0
4g32;l=3;33G.Wg,ge„ra
y0....00
..owqwo...dbow.4
1 W.A..W..k....=.0...1,
,31 10 4 %5tg14 , 11
00.0.....0.....m.0....
Thebmk staiMOCnt this week compares with Lb
last Mondays. follows;
Nov. 22 Nor. 29
Loans 126,236 924 2.28,152 600—Deo. 8
specie
otter . .
1.7 (1 9 t .. 6.600:132 6 633.332—Dec 16
Due fm 263 1,629.828.. Dee. 7
Dile to other bks. 4,116,040 2.c91.605..Dec.12
- 16,760073 16,6 0.268..Dee.12
Circulation , 2,138:490 2,632,063—Dec 10
temonfs Clounterfiat littector for December
which-Was -issued at the cloaircf the week, coma
Upon the error of assuming the weekly gatemen
the banks as a test of their, 'strength. in the folio
judiolone remarks: art Thai weekly statements of
ba'nka are generally taken by casisl readers as a ti
their strength, but this Is only trim In a partial a.
The loans and disconas and specie are set down ag
the circulation and deposits, in the weekly etatem
but no account is rendered of other assets of the k
such as stocks, bonds end mortgagee, real estate.
claims of, other kinds. A ontniarisort of the lest q
derby at stement of the blew 'York bean, in which t
assets are included, with the weekly statement mite
the same day, shows a difference of $l9 924,586 In
of the hulks; the investments, as shown by the q
terly report, being $144,043,490, of which the am
of loans and discounts was $124 118,904.1,
In the hasty abstracts of bank statements made
the newspaper, a umelderable degree of injustice fa
ten done to individual banks without the offender
tending any--often without his knowledge: Thus
give an example, In an abstract of the bank ataten
of another city, we have, almost every week. rei
rented the specie kept by one of the best banks in
&ate as small ls_ proportion to that of others, w
the fall statement ohoWs it to have on hand some $1
OGO of Government and other funds convertible
operate at any moment, of which we have taken no
tics Errors, such as these, will creep Into our cola
despite every ordinary care, and we will feel oblige
any who are aggrieved, if they will call our silent
to them. •
George 11 Arnold, Esq , the mugger of the Clea
}butte; gives us the following summery of the teen
tione at that Malta:Mon during As mist week
Clearlnge. Balance' pi
...83,381 877 06 8160.826
.. 3 353,852 39 7,3' 4.693
... 3.413,091 6L 319,210 1
... 2,959 900 70 253 238
3.004,795 41 240 938 4
2,648,274 75 154 183
Nov. 22
14_ 23
Cs 24
te 2$
t< 26
" 27.....
.$18,647,794 92 $1,390087 I
Ilveritlme a new 'hatch of counterfeits la ready
projectors wait till after the
next haus of the coon
felt detectors is made, sod then launch - their Impost ,
upon the community. Thus, on Petniday afternoon
evening a large number of _ spurious bills were put
which Imlay dc Bicknell describe as follows :
" Bank or Wilmington and Brandywine,WilMingt
Bateau.; 10s, imitation; vignette, teacher and eh
with mill, etc. I on right end, man with wet a 2
meted head on each aide of centre vignette, with'
Ton " /cross each; above the one on light, In
counterfeit. Malawi' hair an inch above it;
the genuine it touches the circle around the head. 1
genuine reads, I Proonises to pay--,or bearer,
Demand,' 10 Iwo lines; the spurious, as fol.ows :
mites Ao pay the bearer on , demand,' in one line. 1
graving very light, paper putt."
Itll, reported by telegrath that the Lehigh Vat
Railroad brought down fer the week to Saturday eve
log testi 13,267 tone of coal, an increase on correapo,
ing weelt'a tonnage of Let year of 6,272 tons—mski
the tonnage thus far thus season, 030,681 tone, being
gain on list season's bulb:tees ti:tear of 60 . 246 tone.
- PRILADBLPHIA STOOL 2IXOTIARGE SALES
.-Ntivennhar 2D, 1863.
REPORTED BY /41141.21T,ER0WE, it CO., lIREZ•NOTE, ISTOC
ABS VICEASOR ERWLERS, NORTHWEST CORNS& TBS.
AND OIfiSTEITT STREETS.
FIRST
BOARD.
1000 N Penns R 100 o Si
1503 Cataw Chattel lOe 66
600 do do O.
1000 do 7o 48
12 Peons R (in Iota) 42
5 Cattwiosa R..... et
10 Philo Exchange. EVI
Farm it. Mach Bk 60
10 K Penns R
20 Union Bank. Tenn OS
6 Norristown ...
]O Union Think.ason 20
300Readiog R
100 do 26
22 do 25
1 do . utak 26
1 do ..cult 26
BOARDS.
500 OityOi , R ' 102
100 do 101%
100 do 102
200 do 102
1000 .do new 'B9lOO
600 Beading 11 68,
438, cash 74
2VO do 74 .
1000 do , 74
1000 do -10 ch 83
1000 do —cash 63
1000 do _dud, 63
600 What' Ns 83 7 ,32 711(
1000 Cam & Am 8a,83 80N
5001 Q Peons R oa.. 63
100) do 10t, ch. 87
1000 do ..csah 87
•
6001 Penn• se, coup.. 97
1070 Elmira R.let in In 72%
1030 Allege.) Be, Staub 55
5000 Oataw R. 7c.. 48
1000 Lehigh Val Rea 87
50 Wilmington R...
BOARD.
SECOND
1003 City 600, New.....05A, 1
900 do .103 X
200 do 'Bl. 106
2000 Reading It 6e, 'se 14
1003 do '7O 03
1000 N Pavan R, 10s.. 07
6 0 do
500 - do G 0... 63
500 •do 63 t
100) do 63 1
0000 Soboy N6e, , 82 b 5 113(1
600 do 713 f, i
OLOBIIiftPILL t
261. .4sktd.
II 8 Ee; 10435106
ehua dle. 109. 1510234
do It .....102X102X
do New-105%100
Penns Se ..... ....9tx 653;
Reading Et 2535
do ads '70..83 8335
do Ittt,g 6e44.93 95
do do , 58.73 E 74
Penns Et •27; 43
do letoo 60...102 C 3
do 2dm 0a....00 X 91
Monte Con C0u..43 60
5000 eam&A 6s , 89,b5.00
1050 do X70...86
3liseouri Oe oP ,
09 Penns It (In lots) 42
75 d 0.....
14 Lehigh Nay 59;
20 Planters B la 8,
Tenn. 2 dys.los
80 Blloebig R 60f
S Cana9ambop,bs 117
10 R Penns R. 8
10 Beaver Meadow...o9
S>E—STEADY.
.394d..A.skec
Soh Nay Imp 65..72% 74
SohNot Stack.— 8% 9;
do Pre 16X 16)
Wrop't & Elm R 10 103
do 7a Ist mtg 12 73
do .2d 01 02
'Long laland 113 111
Girard Bank 1174 12
Lehilnal& Nay... 60 00;
do Scrip . 0 20 X 30
07 Penns r - 6.1(
do 63 62% s 3
New (kart 3i 3
Ustswilss 6 if 67
Lehigh Zino .... 1 13
0 Prof 107 109
£cbuyl Nsr Be'o2 71 71X
PHILADELPHIA NORMS, Nor. 29—Evsxixa.-
There lone change. in Breadstuff's, and the none made
IS doll. About TOO bbls sold at 65a5.25 for mixed an
good straight superfine i F 5 60e5 76 for extra, sad s6 t
650 for fancy brands. recording to quality. There L
vary little inquiry lee shipment. and a limited business,
doing to supply the trade at the above rates. Rye Piou
is held at $l, and Corn Neal at $3 87)f if , bbl, but w:
hear of no sales of either.
,Wheat is dull, but price
era hardly sustained. About 2,500 bin red have beet
sold at $1.23m1 25, the latter lir g rod Pero r , and sow.
small iota of what) at $1.'3001 40 Rye ie iu demand a
7'43 forSontbern, and 78a8Co for Nona , and not mud
h re. Corn—About 2 500 bus new yellow sold at 700
Ms. mostly at the former rote for damp. Old Corn
•sorde, and p Imo 3 e'low commardallSoUllo tfr bu. Oat
au unchanged, sod about 2,000 bag gold at 45e a,
Delaware.; 46047 c for Pennsylvania flask — No sate,
14 quality quercitron Is firm at Yea 0 ton. Cotter
held firmly, and a few small males have been made a
bully former quotation.. Groceries —Not much doing
Comte is Inlirett and firm at n ant for lUD, awl
12. for Legogyrg. on time. Sugars are selling in I
amrll way at Mee fcr Cuba. Provlalonv are in lig!:
stock, but the demand is bmited. Feeds—About 200 bu
Cloverseed have been sold at 65.6005 75, chiefly at th,
farmer rate Nothing doing is other Mode Whiskei
is firmer: 400 blds Pennsylvania eold at 24c, and 201
Ohio at 250, tome holder. now sok more. Elhds art
scarce at 210, and dredge at 23c vlid . gallon.
PHILADELPHIA CATTLE MARKET, Nor. 29
The offerings of beef cattle at the different yards, err
less than last week, amounting to clay about 1,701
head. Prices were without eny material chlege ,ex
cept for common stock, but the market eras rather dot
at the c`ose.a.The following are the principal as
made today
CO Maryland, J Powers, $ 70842 " 101 lbs.
114 Ohio, McQuaid, Mooney, & Co.. $8 5000.
23 Chester co , Contra & Creamer, $7 5009.
12 Cheater co., A II Oheen, $7 50e8.
40 Ohio, blum & Co , S3OS 50
21 Chester eo , J Strickland. 67.6008 00.
15 Ohio, T Blair, ET 604113 50.
54 Ohio Ullman, $7.60m8.
ST Virginia, Murphy & Cassidy, $7.6008 50
97 Virginia, Hutton & Seymour
23 Chester co , Scarlet & Baldwin.
42 Delaware el., D W Gemmill, VC&
24 Ohio, J Lighten/, 874`8.
10 Penneyleada, G hiyerti,S7.6 o lt B
44 Virginia, Clinistv & Bro., $7 aorta 50.
16 Chester co., A Kennedy, $BOB 5O.
SO Chester co , Underword & Baldwin, Slag 20 .
74 Delaware co., D Ferman, $8 2609.
45 Ohio, J Abramr,sSerS 25
15 •IcrreY, O. 11. Rosenboch, $7OB.
:0 Ohio, J Snyder, s6al.
26 Ohio. B Cook $7OB.
150 Virginia, Glendie, $7 2508 60.
CS Marysni. Hopkins & Cook, $8 60er9.
60 twit &Kimble, $7,50043.25.
56 Chester co., Hathaway & MeFillen. $8 5009.
29 Chester co , John Todd, $7 60a8.60.
29 Cheater co , Wm. Forrest, $7.5008.25.
40 Cheater co., Chandler & Aleltander,”
83 Ches'er ao R. Neely, $8e8.50
33 Maryland, Wellington, $7 5003 60.
25 Ohms er Hood. $7 bOOO
30 Chester co.; J. Hartley, $7.50e8.50
About 0,004 steep were offered at ticardelPs. The
market was dull, price% ranging at $2 50.53.50 each,
equal to 7 jietiiy,e IP' lb, dressed Some SOO Cows and
Calves were at market, selling at from $3O to $lO for
good, ste to $3O far middllog quality, and $l6 to 121
for dry Costa. Of liege the receiplalwre torte. amonot•
log to 7 037 At Phillips , yard, and prices ere firmer
eirenvm to geed quality brought $ 67, std ETAT.. no
7 .25, the net 100 ths.