The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, May 13, 1859, Image 2

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    r:44 . 5.0 , ai1a g)., .. ,
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11 1
4; - - - un der . Icitit, and
~,--,. .• - •,k. a T - el IV : ~• .., -,, can >illir, had been trampled . ~,,
''''• -'-'-'
~,."' '-'' '- - *- : - . c. 4, I otherwise insulted in .Valkotaise;
, ':-,;:_.9474g 4- , - -' , .: , : - . ,,,,,,, -,- z , ..--;: ,,, ,; -- -•;• , , , - , L.:: c'4,-,part of; March, and that the; person
mkt HAY ' lli 1859 and dwel
,,_ irt j the.oarly
,; := ,- ;-:,•:-.,- - Aft, ~-,7 . "..„.„;, , , -, 4,,, -,--.: ~, „Ain (Willie American "Consul thoro had been
' -_,,' '•• ~,,.: •,
-_--- ~ - ' - tC ,•- - " -,,
,--•- -,. - ••• ,,, -4 bubtagnd more than once- - From a detailed
';'l4lo'''''"AG":4l'ett*:"Zr44„tlgt--,J`J,°,9:9-,,,,;',-,lALnaintitii•e.,.not_writtenfor the prose, which has
tay,:frmsi:To_isheitensst:. Italm.,-.%:•-rr-V'#67P';'-i.--reacliellitidialt-s:Tiericy,:alparlino,,,vie are en
)*Chial/Inglisk:,llastings; The 'Ladies, Poi snake ; ,
'''', 1(1,- 4 - - l'Kabled-to givii , an iixtict.hceoitiWot th e whole
- - Cletiiial - , ,, ,News, -, Fonstriq4c,4,ra.7hfarirtiOinyll;
.. _ • - .
sr ,
,_ ,
~,,,
~, i,,,,.
~ .
~
.4ft... --,..- '-'.- - 1- - ' , -,•-":-""-..-':-..•', T--:-.,•"-- ..,-- ,oircumntance •,• , .__ .„„ , _
11 " - '''' ' ' ' ' --" ---- i '' r,.‘; -. ' "- a' 4 - , .',-,.' - t.i: ~--' ~ , The communication ; is , dated March 10th,
Ti: . 'ic ' L'-' 4 `=-'•-''-' - :L -1 and , de thee the attempted Revolution'
- an ger , - 1
By the.arrirgof the",•,Tenpiwer, ,e,at,,Aia, w . _O .. rina,,eL! Ithichila ft er,some,' brisk-, lighting,mt- the part
, :- from 'Vert Orin; We fanikTilini,'Sar!ntlgno_bAttl.!o: l F , ;of. the tineurgiinte, , was ,pitt Aloin , „ by the Go-,
--. at Jelaidoittli.ontrtihOiraitidmen4 lo : b4,!1-10.1st 44-rrimdacfrob i ii; •, The American flag :was
' a - deoree forbiddiet.t,therfaisi, ge-, - dt e .,"- 4 ., me r . r . l t °l 7-.." v ' liiiiiita on; dm OciiimintO, and was:Rierced by
--, /iiitil'i • oil ' it - .•ecait'o 6 ' --4 : i il ts, , „ . h fiir n • a ±', -rmitetAWenty-flie belle; ' neddiessly tired while
whera" adieu hi°l*-4.13-.- vi ew
ii. '4. iiti• Aho - iiitilding in' ishiCh le is',locited -wassur;
I 4 et i d;' , Pd. 4o- sv# l4oB ! C '' , "'" lll " l '' -6 ' ' '. lc ded .b in
-`,
Or,' the ' Government:
• Miriniann•wes,lrYlnill4 rat": is t rdl-' ffvuk'Xr"r -- ' I° . 1 •' 41 -:-.. ' ' y •-•- - h ", -' 4' di 0 01 , s id a t a
„: 'penn napaillete -tiork-•;pledge"offther.olturili--pno.. Beyeral persona ni , n,rVerea, art
~,, e
..- pe r ly,:lkqpnlibishaftnineeniang MO haortgager 'during this: rencontre hetweekthe Insurgent s
' Tbir-Nir960.4--,.10.,,,0011100.74.'P1tr1f4NAfts - land, the- troop narrowly , escaped being
-','in Innailatnes,orkbntklides,e,tha*ater,',,l'n Bali t wounded:: Anrong :other - excesses, , after the
',ilitilliii° ,llll sidval,tim'falli.:Arq - ', aeuri4 a -, barrel • itifolt was put down, the troops broke into the
- +;s
-' ld -hik , ttiti ho t 644 .0 1 i'''"' . 17, - *!. '' - ' : !•' 1 ' 1- - - ' ' 2•• ' • -:1 ', :twine; of art -AmeriCan' Muted' , Jesse, a rest
-11°1'''4'vi,V,I..3j4-4°ll-;F":',0:40:14-11:41.4,1114"41-5 d,ent of *Alparais& robbed it of every emit
..- ' Afri6"-et4144°.41 is":" " i4g4tß ' ""39-"e ' - if.'" ntilied,stiot . his brother-In-law through'
-,--arelleise4l4/-*COnneerCßol,:.-lregiva a-full report,, , c ontained , :
' it an d finishail
. ' of it Moir °CY indianiii:. , Itin replete , with many "botharms, .<eince
_amputate ,) , b y
- interesting - statements itt relation - tc - Osioniaation; 1 -shooting ;Tonna ' hireself ". through the heart,
- -arandswillipleiisdilrof theitoointyy r tinienift main , - and therrbarbironely -mutilating his:body; with
-don, and*liiiiiiifeik"ifitl4l6o:lllt*--tai-libe ,lbeiebayonets, ; . • - , _
. -oolored'irtin'Ai4..jAfrien:'s , A resbhf,tl4,:bl.,lliank Many s ,-
persona Bed to , the American .consu
was introdueekby,Tedge,-Relly, an unanimously ;
.
ndopted. , , - - thennelM. l „Parkini,' , .Esk:. prostded. , ,,t, : .•
--- •At thentiiiing'orthiMaW,Y,Orkpoard'ofq Bro- revehitionistii or :, the' not biss dangerous bru.
ha ia,Ad n i:4o,ot - aa a n aoaue 4 d -•„44 , 4 - . 4 1gr,• y e i on t, relit MI
,ef' the trOOpe.' , ,Thei nought the • pro.
Little winidiultheiblelo renei t hineingagniMenist Mellon, of 'tc the, stars and stripes," and re .
a einteMenC:widehininseit: ao,,ilitie:exelteMenti, .Ceived it._. - . ~ ~ „ , ,
. ,
-.., noise! iMing tlif,clbalbt,wrstiti rialribids tron-- -- On Metch'gd, as the Amerienn , Consul was
bles great ielhitinielien`,l.lklit's*ong `ihi,iii .'retiiitihg , tti his house,•(n mile froin the city,
"•boarle4' il ivik'''b ai l i f mm l ia,- **i* lt c: , **,..ikol li on. the'. bills,) -he and his party were stopped
and imamate to a vary,:large - amount.; 'Mr, 1,,' pit.: hrionO of a line 'et sentinels occupying the
tie has fornorae time beari,a ionding;bnyer, MO
, a „ roadieading to - the dwelling. All the satinfac
:' - ' a'inima'afiy-ralnentin*lnil44o6lehag'ili,'',ll,ldPr'ertity,i-,,'rahlres'"FPi_ble'llitaudisg. 416.6- g i v en was that this -was done by orders!
Panama 0 4 . 1 , 1 0:0, k , , c„,:tiaLt.,,,Tki, magnitude - ,With ,• : ., torke" difficulti;and: after
, some'delay,
:' 'of blii'opifklliints4is :Stiftleien,t",*'!iop#tet* 1t41 . 0.0,05ul noo'alloWed to eater his own house!
'- Market; and giieeii:wera`yerit44l.lol: . .i I , .:,-;,.: .:;'; ,the,-nentin,ele"priasented arms . es be '
went by,
Thii:Tairriterial:lmail,Mater.batsieen Mambo, therity*iihi-140, words , ' 6 4 Pass the, American
iiiisionri;nadlAltakheitieTtnNeniAdea l o, t and be- ..',O.Otitilli'? - ;,which shows that his person was
'---
~ tw.
.eln , P.4,.140 1 00 4 . 4 j:# 1 . 8 , 1:° P 10 4 , k , :Pkg.,AY i'liiii known. Getting inside the large gate of
' - t'OrPla 'wh - towere let °fun_ . 014 .01 5 f Jeari.:haie . , the; premises, the Consul found a sentinel
- ,-been,;ll . poontinned-hy.lthi„ cievarnment,„,to, take there, inquired' of hint how he dared to tres
efeet from-.heAsi ef,Julynext.the,;fellare'o,f ,- . I
. congress to
theihotal appropriations for,iiie pasa„, • on the habitsilonpf, the American Con :
4 PaatiMden - l.teinlifunint;this'interrnilliabe - of ihe : suli , ret(eived a vague reply,' and 'narrowly es
. - Miails, - 4iniintltifitifin'thei,44 - eiiiinbi - ia,,f : - _hontile s litL. 'CiapeSl"- . being
_shot. At the - call of his wife,
.-. thane albei the line;.aid„ the 4 1 ;iiit4Toir iviill:l.ii ‘,;16 - .4rfidin the benne; the donsid Went itidis
'of mail matter LW' a..eaMparativel,y, hurignifanant
,ledge ale Officer, who Was in her room, dud, tic
. ,
' ... amount, ere given se,the reasons for, the discoisi. sthally net him on the top of the:stairs. He
. tinnanoe of tbisovirland 6)**l6:: . ',':' :' '' ' • '.. ' 'had; no authority ,to show for hit intrusion,
,-, . The New Oileinelt - ieziyunn'giarenthe foltewing :
and was instantly collared - and disarmed of his
partionliireof the - outrage, 4, the ,Britinh, Mai of. : ,
wor -
- 'war,if ,whiebf'ara had_ an ennenieament jester.' 'd' '•
-;
' '.'' ' - - ' : • '
air
" - day -: "The -bark ;flange gtriokeroCaPtain . Ma- ~ It appeared that, p lin -hour • • before, this
'Donaldi . -frods Rio Janeiro, thiribtkof March, lir: , "officer arhtlris pirty,had entered the premises
rived at thii port to 7 dei. ,, fcaPtabi , hioix , reports' through a breach -in; the ', wall. When Mrs.
thit, while , aff ..the - A-MARIO ;'4,34iriat,, some RixtY ,Triniiii, rvliowas, ilone, saw them advance,
. _ miles d.lstitilt : frill''. CaiOlailiutgat*lkke IN* 'Woe , ehe: tbOW:thit!.,Flng over the, staircase, but
Arad upon by 'an Bngliah I man-ef-war to him Ma- ,
~ Riimanzi - the officer; contemptuously trampled
Ureztyrk - - Ili* we". "Uil'Eilhots; ' a " ''''" r" ' ''""Y - 'upon ii lairrediractly,into'her private apart
, preSede4f-by'enr- warning :. -Thep', fell at the die- -. , 4 - •.- ,_ _. . •. . : _ •
' tonne-of. &Wont e iraitirof aintlefronn " the h a rk, ' meats, imd„ thougirvaraea that •he svas;ln the
•. from widah'ibey.wein':dinthiatfy Min I,,;himself Consuls house, persettered ,in ' occupancy of
-. ---and all op hoard-; There.Wastonly, one ether * 1 4. 1 Mrs, 'l'.'s room, and writing a bOte to tho In-
'-- eel th tight - at , the time, a nd be a long dietanoe or tendente., ~- ..,,•••:;- . - . ~ - , ' -. , ,
. in - another direction,. After delivering hersolk of - . The officer, once in-the Consuls bands, pi
• .Ithenerabots,- the:-ordser.-Mdred•ship and pursued,too- 44
819:begged for his life. - Meanithile, the
after , the- Wirt ;*,Captain MoD.- then *elided , hie entrance 'gate, which,, had been locked after
national inderethid'bilen• - up , but amoinent -
-.-- • -.: ,-- have the,. asu s entrAnce,- was forced open by.
beforn - rwldncalCaltared her eatirse,44, - lfe
only to a. - 4 - 0 4 4 - , "A l ok c li t oi t i ht , o; ig a .
, plidn , iota!! inf !ht . ! iibldiers'who remained outside.
frank man, :Along :4i:tinged in an•lionOtablistrido,4 Theyritshesito the door which hirs..Tazvrrz
and is Sanity indignant itt,thic parionpl *Jam*: ,was, holding: They were, warned, moat strong-,
tional insult,-“:". , '.. -{ - - ,,,i - • „....,, ,:-.-,
~ -,,, •,,;.: - ~,„ - ly, ibae„.ttils'llidy was the Conant 's wife, but
. ', -The New York Bzyireis - tolla igiatlow raMintie seized 'kohl of,her, tete ••h,er • dress, and en
..storY.'ill' 4 6 - likill,. l k;ytiinieta# l- ;i1, 1 4,,ni,i1d t air:, iiiti 'denioiMito
„drag her away .. A' gentleman, be
' -7 4 00 ret wr!ii,'l,• l64 *l'l' I %,"rueok. 1i .4 047 1 /.a l ". 0 4 .4 "lensing': tii: the ,, Consulate; who interfered in
. in. , that -iiiy, some, week:, ego, - tior killing am entheladlin behalf, Witittolired b bloW on the
-,..-, - named' VentWarl• ;-- 4, - Beellie thet Moen , 111.-411 , r
_ace from . the,hatt•end of a musqnet, and soli-,
native of Zfesr__York,nlad, very respectably con
r- - " no w . A v i i i w a i der i t ;6 3 , 3 I k e Nome a t i,-,,,,,, d misty, mat: .They paused to thrust their bayo
- a ria s - ,i,4, 3 4-,aly,;;-atr,a - , „ ga i du a z , - ,,a 1,:; 1 •,3 1 .,,,ad• neteotte , r 'thin gontlininats; brit" Mrs. Tnirvaz
:at a school during chlldhlied; and ti:: insTrisge en., . sioimed over end tbrew,her.dreas around him,
- gagenient r :Was ' th e -. '4iOnlititintinet'lk,4;:thil his; acttialiSt shaming ,, them . into . , treating a fallen
paronts'wl ll t,:fq.y , Finelfepriesq, ~d . 1 1P 1 , 01 0, Y e. man ; with some forbearance. - "" - -
ted in vain With Abets: son, wholitseniekdstor7 • Next', 04 coininendid . britiking in the door
iiiiied;' 3l 4 : alli l iti 10041*," - thi- Pmequopoo ,4o :wktte. theif,mrisketn:': The door ilightly.opened;
_marr_ tbe•rnald,-,of , ,hin Obolooii whoahol l ad
centred - sulic iz ettn e ;;In , rd i t4 ,b re i ktir
, aad: . .the iooi . liii and itimiain ,- Were , tibserved .
;the -engageMent; It's parents; si /deem ellegii!,. to"go no:stai T iyaftbti top of Which, 'Orhen the
pla4ied bird hifeniehdlboald'ii'iiiinjof-Wer&hieind! lady , went itp,Mitimaz,Wie'plteously bogging
- " one ar",',liol4!--,,t4,15e-,T-A4loi.eltittp-Oied,
.I'pr-the yetriya orlds sword, the Consul insist
to wpw , -,ll4,lr",ol:oie:„J44e 9 •Osathle:i4tiltint,:. log `that heili t litild'i.iptiiiive it ; unless he gaii.
and seeking,6-is.oll,,ilo.Nolttli,c-::11,0.,47-th ,earned tin irord 'of heibri.to - Withdraw , the- soldiers. ,
-,- . -ter: , They • liptA; aitOptii,tegeiner-1311:lit.P . ,we . at He Made'the.preinise; and' otbabk his wee-'
- • property the , a_mpokittr.r , t..o. 9 o 9 l.'7. o 4s,°°: `'soul -: molt; 41 mmediately pror cattle it note
bidieheied w ent ; -kan* l +4 B4 .t.xii44;*'llin 4 1 4 ,3 4 r - Ilt r i - "' - e' ''' ''" ' ':
- -'
gene: la to'lieia• 'main ' 4.6.vit nionny."l4tha -. `ro.r . ' - 1 01 R '44.ttcti , o4.!/11 0 % ,ilAxpizz ',had. ,
.ta - S,PPor - t of-11 Is - fimiri, - ,- - brirliiiiillitt -- -4 0 .09 —' 11 1 44, ' ,11 . 141. 11"IY ittairtilitert . - - —..?: ---,,,-,- • ..,, - - " ill '
...
1
• • , . .71 et C • 01111 - Irag ezu*sayik
to tab hts:trirti_•,lioms - ,qoici 4 grOMPF.n lrorth
en:cot; yitienTinlfati, Enqrfereale
pritieiti MM. - A . lnarrol,was the 'otkia . Otenite, , artd
before it vies nirer:VaieWiio4o,ted, a - fitrit
in abdontetii . olthengiilie was riot' aw
lajaties till some time afterwardS:;, - - •
• The following.is -is list ' of
the United tittiteil'atent
for the wiseirMidiai2lida3/' JO, 185 - 9 °l 4tialiZbearing',
that data: • ..!;;;• • , ,f
-,•
Robert'S. , Colvin; of Laureates r.-For improve.'
meat in ootivertitibroarrisgeshefte.,*;,:•.l
- .-Biketiblirry off.Eastoti'i...For•imprtired
method of compensating foir)eireinkola and- con._
traction of anetalifoteneen: '
' Lewis R.fiki of ; Readitig•'.-FOr imPrOvaittriat "in
railroad Car , bntkia.
•t 3 8: Ritter; Ofl!hiladelphitior IMPMrainent
in hernial 'triunes. .: ,
- Darid 'Or Urgers, :of l'itisbarg:„.46r, improve: ,
meat la gen ' • - '„•-,
Jacob ikatoittith-opphoad.,piam ! —*t
Meat in automatic far Arwatw",• - • -;
John 13elser t nfIfilliittasp6if..4dr i m provement
fa • -
Matthew Smith,'of littsbarg.—For-r iropiaire
',Meat in rotal4iteetatiinginetiii • :- -.-"-
,-MiltonlithitlelitiWard.Whitei'Heir T. 'White,
preeia - • •-,•• :•••• ,r
-: J.derilli*tia impair - Mount
inploaghe- '
J
• ohn B Cohen," - Of Philadelphia , assignor to
himself and Patrol of stiMe,plaoo.For
improyed'hotsialiernaohine: - - .
aritathe, - of Philadelphia; seelknor to him.
• self and _Joseph, 4.!.•Litiberti-, of sane, placer-For
imatevementla kaapssolow - !-- - •
Prederlok - Shiite? of, Philadelphia;- assignor of
hims e lf, and or earner place.—For
IMPrerotrOtary':aurters find • mode of Operating
-them forMoaldiaga.. , t • ,
Additional Litproweineht..-.R.11.-Tom and John
Fink, of fielding - .-For improsamant in • railroad
oar ••• • • r.
- ' Wednesday 'night, at,Oepe Til4nd, New Jer
sey, :tight:occurred. ,betieint'lliik . men, named
Maithewerirraitan&Morris Conner, ,during which
-Conner,wstaiistitlibed 'fetidly : by Curran, who was
oomutittiditO nntrini: for theratirdar2' „
The Tadion•girli:4:Potilla4i . - ' m4r-
Siege with a big black" follow has given her much
notoriety, nod 'who 'll;ii' 'dwells 'With the negro in
a shanty; at Windsor,'has Written' . a' letter
to. a, Muesiiper,„:.lo , whiiir says he r pareate,
never 6 , mittrusted 9 , bar ,40itittions of marriage,,
- ant denies that her taught antaiginelatiorf
aaright , - -,--ti; " 4
" Pie etifeed4Linii,liinelity's„44,Xary
BtAili'ol4 , ' ll 4le4;!-ficin L . Wiltliiiire:'l. 6 .4PirdsYs;f o i
with 153 emigrants,' .thoitly man u mitte d
, slaves. 'reties preseyteryt,M, ,, salitiorier,les; Rey.
.1 A. Miller, aink-Dges.; -. .jainia end T4innee'firtio,'
" also went,,vnt.
• Amerlemis reileteied , /Li the.-banking
(doe of Dantligeßeldwine - ' ts; 004-8 , Place dela
- ' Hoarse, gto April lißildetf:4-=-41
' ' C. Atilep: G. Leen", 3.,HrHoldina and
- W.• ' Tam Obi; Dr.--V.
)er and lady; P .Dseoppett-i and , fandte,'-'Misa A.
Bertasll,,D. MoDeussll,jefin-, SAilek aedlad y,:
H:Wenicley4=l; Ileoriemi; A. G.:Biedtord., Jr,. H.
-- "Masson aedlaiatty,-,1", , D ,
an d' 7 lB 3 ; bi, I‘;,..Jesaikead Mrs. J. Moß. , e,-
- "
-Miss B. 18.ashee„!3,:4, , atigio,, , A.,:ld A:kV ,
leo and 'family O.' la Draz e ezidisd+
• 2n°n )3 'A - W 'd 'Mr - d -t "
A G Renault , - , E 11.1131 . -Woo
di'
V.-M. Dente, Sohn R
• larger and femtly;:y and'
wife, O. A . Asidrews;R. , jonasy;tE'filliP,..ittHagk,
Jr., L. N:f,t3hearanfl.:Join ew ily,
7 ' A iteT'atlt:%4 7. f
Hag _ A
Y - • • D. Lines;lThoe. H'MOOntij :141oOsil
" and land", gi pr ii i :to r- van ,
Nostrand, - J. W;Gsrard, : 44 - 'OA: Ward; Mrs.
- . _W. B Bartted, - ,ldikriretil,',"JrieZ/DOolgiindi
- Diondsiond,,O44o;4olo4mpeoin,"DAH. - -; TiMeansoif,'
• ' , 'jot Renns4.Jdif,A=Golli'D. - Heleismi,,Wid,' , llo - Er.:'
= A'...(lerdeer;,W,
• ,Ifoltewria; • Brown. Dr
f"- • - =Ainsitreng,
l'fine"..'Oreff i - Ohek' 'aniftleme;
='7r- 11 W: .141 4 11 "
'H ,- argent,- Ices,
Angell, Miss Angell, T.
leak, D O. Eiliottilee'!:Dl-ReWnosid,"Hairl r oric ;
' . "IL-Lass:Us and , lady, K . Harts-1 ,
borne and
•-:`Sealy t.ll. ', Alien F. 'IL
g a dth i -Dr -wr 0, o',[l7iiiteni4 4 .%. 4 Psii ten; Mc;
B. Millard ' Ohio; D`
- Cuts;
664
.A 404,02 5*,-
•.):....,rr,..--;.,1;,-4,44,-,44141:00,440,tr0c.-.IKOOO for v il ie
tk i :A4 q - - " l, o,4.l4l44riti.sgAl t a ri. _l l,o _46:
•
4igit#olo; i t al Aril'
ig'Nz4 - M'i:4:. • 0:* 49#400er'crit
17k-173)0 , -, - **#o4Atiortiiiii - outvi,
$2l.
4,4
AZlV•!Wfttle?7,..",t;
..,--. : 7:_ ,- --'; 1, :' ,, :# 11 .: , - - - ,:s,ziiiilierican. Flag Iristated'in Chill. ,--,9 3:!1
f7S't - - --4,7- - ) ; ~ P i- f - v 't, c , ; , : li..:4l4:intereati with no little
_.lo,Atety,' hat
1 ,.....,.,,be0ti eWakened•by the rumors 414 tl l , 941nerl'
• n#VrprOßeVolitetni'
armed sisldierSand'titeir gallent,cisptafti cleated
one we
'Men anktWo,iiden,:n6fone of ...the. conquerors
laming itnything' like 'l:iv/aspen: , The Consul
irsB 'll , ll - qty jnii)jAritA: . s *r. RAND,. ;who] 80-
'Conded4him, suffered from the blow in the face
formor'eViab aveak. ;
The Seeret`nfotive of the-affair Is helieved to
thaf.serite'Vf the refugees who daring the
revolt cif-Yebruary.2Bth, had claimed the hos=
pitalltyiof the American Consul, and the pro-,
feCilent. r e:',Ainetifian it4g, were Pc`ditical
retugeea~; find . ; the gevernmesit, . believing,
.tiMnf 'concealed at the Consul's residence,
hadcirderekit-to'be sirpritied, in his absence,
when, If•lkirs Tinvlrr refused to give them
iMilbe'soldiera were to retire; saying it was
is ratatake,-Imtilf she showed fear, the refu-
Fees:weire'tct be removed, and apologies stib
scinently made,' throwing' the blame upon
itaxmicz,whcise - note -to the Intendant° was
part of,the arrangement. ' •
Hidf an hour after" the- whole affair was
over,- the intendente' sent a demand to the
Causal; claimingAhe ifurrandor of persons
whom he' said ,he ktiewlo be in the house.
Bat this -formal-application came too late—
cable after the Conisular dwelling had been in
vaded by military force—after the Consul and
his wife had been insulted and assaulted—
after one of his family had been wounded—
after the *dirmiican - flag had been trampled
under foot.,
• .The Consul's reply to the Intendants de
tailed a ll these circumstances, and postponed
Any further
_reply intilite 011ie Consul) had
communicated with the Minister Plenipote
ntiary of the Anierlean"Governinent in San
tiago.: This communication was- daly made,
result Unknown at the date of our despatches.
,Two'daya after the freed/4 a military force,
backed, by civil authority, entered the Consu
late by stratagem, and den:landed the surren
der of all asYltimed
,in the Consul's house.
The Order was to burn the house down rather
than not , get the men, who were to taken
dead , •
The consul manfully protested against the
";entrinee'of - an 'Fined force into his dwelling.
"Afpee four hours'_ delay, spent in trying to
mediate between the reffigees and the military,
*be - snirefinded the 'house, the Consul, udder
ihe 'strongest ;written : protest, quitted the pro
misee. ; The, Major ; commanding , happening
to be a'lgentleman, conducted the search with
delleacy,-but , discovered six of the refugees,
one of theta looked 'upon' as a leader in the
Most
,probably, death will be his
of the outrages committed on the
Aniericaff Gement and the American flag have
been :fillY4Operted,tO Washington, and the
nation of the . United States Government is
aex t ionelY, aWalted,,; The question.is
simpla—
,ie,` the 14mi:ten flag,, a flag, or only mere
striped; bunting to make .Buncombe, speeches
'MA siionil What use is the flag
to the Consul, if it does not give protection?
-The :Consul- •st. - Vulparalso bad no official
iietilleatititcrit the politics or' identity Of his
guests lintitafter,ble , house had been twice
invaded by aimed soldiers. 'His conduct is
eireriglY eakiorteilby 'tile foreign , population
by ,large,
,majority -of
Ofilleliou , also. It - is iv, singular coincidence
-,that, On the day of ',the - Revolution in Val;
parolee!, Jim ;Intendente - pf the, city, himself
took refuge in-the hbuse of, the Spanish Con.
out,- andSafeltrimmined there until the fight
WAS OVfri:s , * •
• - „ -
-We bavebere placed before the public as
full and acaarate si_blateri of cape as it
lutebacn in . The hction.
o,tpe '.Execntive apt* the double Walt to
our Flap tnnat ' launadiaterly take -place.
„A:pemr,ary_ or_httrom.-...-110ame Laborde'o bane',
h.V.to)re.„g.lo oo -” toots dt balmier.
inooe9 00441‘w four,th'iet of Le, Favorita,', ellt
biieffoooo[l,i,jfielleodlig peril by the 6eoofiriard,.
,tioigkrifiliCatifo44,and fitirenso", To:morrow,
,:fix,ll4isbiLidritiPr,,:firilL given of a Matinee.
Ishii 'Redid bidlt • hydn &misty have engaged the
lifild(h)fittiitairidiltd‘jrfoittioliiotoxio of ." Tho
performed (o:Morrow evening,
Ihe • Okktfo0000 tilp.'olooo • 7oyklifohday , ::
• '•
•••
• ••
G 3 3t
P1aP1t10.40 , 17,t40. 1, -1 a 4 1 . 18 -;44444 - FO O .
#)&tt' World, of .40140.0thAilli*uillOad IQ
`lli* 0 Oleridei d torWspoper" mono, Ttilid
iii • d.Wilnot street- Also, the illustrated Lou';.
4.4l l rewa 0t the lime date.
•
;:t
Austria
.'The prominent ppaition thin eonutpf
pica
hefore ihe i world, in coniequenen of, her
'belligerent attitude, natnrally•oreateqa' gene
ral desire inr•,information in _regard to her
resonrcea, history, and general Condition:
The following .atatialles, compiled' chiefly
from APPLVTON'EI New Encyclopaedia, will,
therefore, probably prove acceptable to some
of our readers. - -
The total area of the Austrian empire is
20,650 square miles. Its population, accord
ing to the census taken in 1864, amounted to
39,411,809. It is divided into 'twenty one
statealof rovinces; as follows
Population.
1' Arichdifohi of Upper Austria 775,250
2 Lower Austria , 1,714,608
3. Duoby,of Salzburg 154.879
4: Btvria . ; 1 00 5 , 078
5. s'" Gorinthia ' ' 346 150
6. " Carniola ' 505,886
7. The obuntles if (hertz and G rodlike,
fdargraviate of Istria, and the dia
. triot of Trieste 613.056
8. County of TYinl ' - 925 060
9: M#rgraviate of Moravia 1 972 165
10 'Kingdom of Sammie. 4 800,818
IL Duohy of Bileala 479 321
12, Kingdom of Galicia 5 056 647
13. Duohy of Bakovina. 430 664
14 - Kingdom of Dalmatia 432.387
15. Kingdom of Lombardy ' 3 009,505
10: " - -Venice 2 493 968
17. , ' Hungary .......... 8,744,481
18. " Croatia, and Slovenia.— 967,130
19. Grand Duchy of Transylvania 2 285,572
20: Principality of Berrla 1 574 428
21. TtieMilltary , Prontier ' • 1 054,794
Mote than twenty different dialects are
spoken by the people of Austria. German
is the official language. ACeording to a:clas
sification made in 1846,16,282,196; or 40i per
cent. of her inhabitants belonged to the Sla
vic race. The Germans numbered 7,917,195,
or 21 per cent. The Roman race , numbered
8,102,468, or 214 per cent.' The Magyars,
5,418,773, or not quite 15 per cent.; the re
maining two per cent. consisted of 600;000
Jews, 12,900 Armenians, 18 000 'Greeks, and'
100,090 Gilislea. Three-fourths - Orthe entire
population profess the Roman Catholic reli
gion. , The members of the Greek Catholic
Church are estimated at millions. The
Reformed-Protestant Church has 2,280,000.
The Lutheran Church, 1;270,000. The Uni
tarian, 46,000. •
Austria is the leading • Roman .Catholic na
tion Of the world. All the limitations upon
the Papal newer, established by Jessrit
were removed by the Concordat concluded in
September, 1855.• The decrees of the. Pope
are binding upon the Chtholics of Austria
without previous sanction from that Govern.;
mat. The Bishops are empowered to pro
'
hibit all books which they deem pernicious;
they have control over the public schools ;
they they punish clergymen and laymen for
violations of the rules of the Church, and
establish an unlimited number of new monas
teries. Promises have been made to the
Protestant Churches of a liberal organization,
but they have not been faithfully kept.
Austria abounds in the ,elements of mineral
And agricultural wealth. All the metals ex
ceptplatina are found in her dominions. She
possesses forty gold. mines, producing about
sixty thousand ounces annually, in Ifungary .
and Transylvania ; and also a number of silver,
copper, quicksilver, tin; lead, iron, zinc, co
balt, arsenic, • antimoni, chrome, bismuth,
manganese, .and other mines, besides many
1 -
beds of rock- salt, and an, immense number of
mineral springs. The total value of her mine
nil products, in 1851, was estimated at 119,-
664,781 florins, of forty-nine cents each. Her
production of iron and coal has greatly ite.
creased during the last quarter of a century:
In 1880, she produced 1,4F,838 'cwt. of raw
Or pig iron, and 150,637 cwt. of, cast iron ;
while, in 1854, she produced 4,151,505 cwt. of
pig iron and 682,446 cwt, of cast iron. In
1838, she produced 4,000,000 cwt. of coal,
and in 1855, 80,000,000 cwt. -
Her agricultural capacities are very great,
andmuch attention has recently been paid to
their development, by the introduction of im
proied American agricultural implements and
machinery.. Altogether, the' area, of the pro
ductive soil of the Empire is 143,682,000 acres,
of which 07,442,200 are woodland and pas
ture, and_74,919,800 -acres arable laud. ,The
total,Vaine 'of the annual produce of agricul
ture cattle -, breeding, is catenated at
$1,600,000,000. - '
- - lhei..annteal product of her manufacturing
is 'estimated at, $600,000,000,
Its',Prinelpal .eleinents are as 413.110-ra
Wapiti' 07; 1 5tM1
• • 27.; 00,1,1- 1 . • : - 1,000,000 ; manufactures
- eiri - Asied flax, - $66,000,000; woollen
fabrics,lso;ooo,ooo silk manufactures, s9o,i
000,000; 'Manufactures of cotton, $40,000,000.
-The fereign':citmenerce of Austria, con
ducted Principally' at Trieste, amounted, in
1867, to 281,932,1122 florins, of forty-nine
cents each, of imports, and ,231,018,109 do
rins of exports. , The Government has latterly
made great efforts to develop the material re
sottrces Of the empire., Many excellent corn
memial roads, and a number of important
railroads htive',been constructed . Telegra
lehic lines have been extended in every direc
tion;, snit in January, 1857, 6,185 miles of
electro;magnetic telegraph were in operation.
Austria contains thirty-five canals, whose ag
gregate length is about five hundred miles.
Steamboats, built on the Ameridan pattern,
have been introduced on her - rivers. Her
vessels increased from 5,574, in
_lB4l, to
10,006, in 1856, 'of which 657 wore ocean
vessels, 68 steamships, and 499 largo coast
vessels. :
The finances of Austria aro in a most de
plorable condition. Her expenditures, for a
aeries of years, have greatly exceeded her:cur
rent income. She has repeatedly been obliged
to resort to new loans and to expedients of a
very despotic and discreditable character, to
meet her expenditures. • A French paper of a
recent date estimates her national debt at
about*l,2oo,ooo,ooo, and she cannot negotiate
even a small loan from foreign capitalists,
without great difficulty, Her army, when on
a peace footing, comprises about 400,000 men;
and when on a war footing, as at present, from'
700,000 to 750,000 men. She has made great
efforts during the last ten years to, increase
her navy, but it is insignificant when compared
with the navies of France or England. It
consists of one line of-battle ship, three screw
frigates, five steamships, eight steam despatch.
boats, seven brigs, eleven schooners, and fifty
gnu-boats.
Austria has been under the dominion of the
house of Hapsburg since 1278. At the death
of ALDERT, in 1391, she bad an area of 26.584
square miles, since which period, by wars,
m arriages, tortuous diplomacy, and various
other ways, her territory has been extended
to 256,569 square miles. For many centuries
sbe has, with the exception of intervals of
peace sufficiently long to 'recuperate her ober ,
gies, been. in a state of 'almost constant war
with Other European Powers., Since the de
velopment of liberal 'done in Europe, she has
warred with relentless and unyielding ferocity
against their extension, encountering in her
chequered career many terrible defeats ; but
she has been singularly fortunate in nearly all
instances, in finally accomplishing the ends
at which she aimed, in stbdulng the revolt',
tionary movements which provoked her
antagonism, • and in preserving her terri
torial dominions. She has been a faithful ex
ponent of the maxim, that w they should take
who have the power, and they should keep who
can." She has struggled with dauntless
Perseverance to acquire 'new territory and to
- rob the people under her dominion of- all
participation in and control over their Govern
ment. Her career has been a long, a success
fill, a bloody, and a tyrannical one. Every
reit& of the Revolution'of 1848, except tho
abolition of soe,age, was destroyed soon after
the Austrian monarchy was securely rees
tablished upon its throne. The Constitution
of 1849 was annulled ; trial by fury was abo
lished 'Cur "public press was crushed down
with the utmost severity ; the influence of the
Jesuits was reestablished. Even so late as
1867, when the penny' press had grown, not
withstanding the 'strict censorship exercised
over it, to be extremely popular, it was sud
denly annihilated by an onerous stamp tax.
Within the last few years the'rigidness of mili
tary rule in the country has been somewhat re,
faxed, and many hundreds of political prisoners
have been pardoned ; but every vestige of real
liberty has been denied to the people. Pub
lic education is, nevertheless, well provided
for. The number of' primary schools, in 1867,
was 25,000', or one for' every 1,404 iambi-
tante ; and in 1049 1,660,000 children, •out of
,2,576,000, went to the common schools. At
the present time the proportion is undoubtedly
. „
mach greater; for, In August, 1865, a decree
wee promulgated compelling • parents to send
their; children 'to some school or other. ln
addltlon to the numerous common schools,
there were, in 1801, in Austria, 202 colleges,
THE PRESS. PHILADELPHIA; FRIDAY, MAY 13, 1859.
88 schools for teohniCal ^ snlerice,P agricul
loyal colleges, andttleo aluenlAr of Toothed'
schools, nnivereities; private academies, then
logical sentinalies, and boarding-schools.
•Br.MIDNI9HT MAIL.
Letter from " bccasional.”
itiorrespondonoe of The Press.]
- Weenretorori, May 12, 1850.
Sprott and humor,' who wad despled the ordi
nary wealrnees,of obeying the law of the , idnd,
who would disregard the Constitution and recom
mence vigorously the slave trade with Aftioa, have
everywhere in the South, inept
,only about
Charleston and Athens, the classic home of the fi
nancial Cobb, met with disoomfiture and stinging'
contempt. Ex-GovernorFoote, in Mississippi, de
nounces mesh men justly as traitors. Under the
law of nations they are pirates, and as well de
serve to donee upon nothing under the care of a
hempen cord as ever did Kidd or his nautical itni
tabu.- With James Duchanan's slave code, with
James Duchanan's winking" at the introduction
stud sale of slaves from Africa, with James Bu
chanan's studied infraction of the faith of tree
ties' entered into for the prevention of the slave
trade, the fire-eaters of the South, appealing to
the interests of their section, expected to carry the
State this side of Mason and Dixon's lino bound
behind the gilded wheels of their triumphal ear. ,
Bot alas for the vanity of human calenlations In
Virginia the solid= is siceted../ So it is generally
throughout the South. Alone in Savannah Julien
perjure themselves, and find not - guilty for men
they clearly know have violated the kW. Foote.
in Mississippi hi a strong man. -Upon the stump,
he is irresistible. Armed with newspaper outride
nentag the political life of Southern politicians,
he will clear the desk of his adversaries when he
portrays the, extravagance of their inconsistencies.
InlB6o, he retrieved his drooping fortanes bye bold
advocacy of the compromise measures, and when
ever he hold the ground of the Union conservatorS,
MOMS crowned his banners.• • He flew the track
a few Years ago, and has ever sines been flounder
ing in the mire: Again he is on the trash, and if
he continues as he ha's begun, he yvnl, sweep away
the hopes of Jefferson Davis. and Barksdale .frith
the besoni of destruction.
An outcry is made against the Secretary of the
Navy for his undisguised favoritism in the ap
pointment to ships under sailing orders. •As in
the charter of ships seaworthiness was not leaked
to, provided one of the Swiss guard could be ena
bled to put money in his purse, so it seems efli
clayey of appointees is a quality little looked
for by the chief clerk, Welsh, and his master, or
his machine, the Honorable Isaac Toncey, of the
State of Connecticut.
Brigadier General Gjtorge Washington Bowman's
resignation of the superintendency of public print
ing leaves that veteran hero in a wofol condition
of perplexity. Browne, of the Journal of Com.
Ineree, comes from New York, to mend the
login and straighten the grammar of the
Constitution, in whioh the intrepid Gene
ral remarks, with refreshing originality, that
"we was glad to see our friend in snob good
health;" and what Brigadier General George
Washington Bowman is then to do. beside keeping
an eye upon the printing jobs given to his paper,
*and making a division of the spoils, it is bard to
conjecture , The mojestio Mr. Rice may whisper in
the Brigadier's ear that though the fruit appears
entioing, yet it is like unto the Dead Sea fruit,
and turns to ashes upon the lips.
It It stated that Goo. M. Dallas will be with- quanta. May 12.—The telegraph builders reached
drawn from the Court of St. James, , to snake it Trots,. ei t toi l e iso lto
p rs t t a
. 7 on e
n h a ur t dr i e s d. x
ct 4 t uti below this i
room for Attorney General Black. Mr. Reed '
will' t: completed to t't ?farther Point." flay mile ' :
comes fresh from the Celestial Empire, and is ex- ' further eut, in sensor' to transmit the foreign news due
pooled with heavenly sqrenity to smooth into Intl- flit b ,l, r.ialeorn.'itel 1 2 an e or brat t ile 1 / 1 3 : 6 ;a t - t h Oar ar ;i . n t w eekly b by
ty the disoordant *and Jarring elements of the the agent of the Associated Press, to whom. and to the
party. , I Canadian press the publio reporte wdl be telegraphed
eteltshely by an arrangement similar to the one which
• Jeremiah B. Biaok, Attorney. ,Genoral, of the exists with the New Brunswick and Nova Bootie lines.
United States, betimes editor of the Ireton and I
the Union alias the Constitution, and whose us- I ''' Thl Sollthlverk Hose at Easton. '
gotiations in Pennsylvania, and espeolally in hie ilaro4, Ye., Slay /2 —The members . of the !oath.
wok Hole made a trial of the emotion engine of the
own county of Somerset, have been so redolent of pbosniX. : this morning; fn the pretense of a large con.
genius and marked with such ttnparalollod success,: commis ofeltiseent, in which they proved themselves as
would afford even Sir Charles Coldstream a new—
well at the brakes of an engine as hereto.
sensation-by an exhibition of the excelling grade I A crud plonk) tikes place this afternoon on Cheat
' not isu.whleh pram'ees to be a Mott pleasant fete.
of his Oheeterfteldian manners and the supernatu
ral perfeetion of his attire. If ho has not listens I Tonight
tit. , P a i i 'e the members f.,one it'll,trwrhluertl'h a
lobed the Supreme Court with the dulcet strains of members or On r anoils presidents of the ematentos. a
his fascinating eloquence, but generously has , jir n :te be ni. of li r anfa ' n t d d a tt ndge =el:alit:Zit will lot
yielded that duty to others et the expense of the t.ke part fq t. ,, e featieittee. ?hie wilt he the grandest
United States, yet has ho put in the • archives of entertainment that aver took pis** to this city.
his department solid opinions upon tbo inpresee qr . •.:
- Departure for falteria.
carters' wages, adorned , with the' gay ribbons,Of ~Psvrixoxe, use la -The bark biary Caroline Ste..
blue and red, and yellow and gold, of Sbakspea;l fens sailed to dal at noon for L'beria, hectare* board
rims quotation. These extracts seiyelo allay the•- c alf LT= saris: . m are!Via n t ti o n as t e o f P w re h a l h a y b
Oirsty dryness of hie legal lore,: , With Jahn ,G..:1. Winn mhaitinarfse. the Rev. A. st!lter sod the Tt.;
Jones, sikVienna, Jeremiah B..Blaolei at Dendon; I Al'es,,rs. gem. end Thomas Arwg. The usual religions
. sketches took place. All the emigrants appeared happy
and the Chevalier Wykcif and' P uranois Jan ,enst, i eti te n ted,
Grand, with roving eommissient- our -.European
corps diplomatio will be as exoeesively diplomatic
apd as profoundly silent 'and tinkescwing: AD - ilia
veriest Sir noniron onuld wieti. :00-eleAstax,.,
raliltnnEP A ondejuv ofrke
ntrapirreeistlon by our citizens °Ma nobrelert
' krprlea of oar gifted' countryman—Eon. Edward
Everett—in his efforts to preserve the• tenth of
Washington, was again signally attested at. the
.sademy of Musio last evenivg. Nearly every ,
seat ia that spaolous edifice WM occupied, several
minutes before the hour of oommonoing, and many
remained standing during the entire evening,
rather than avail themselvee of the few teracoupitd
Beets in the upper part of the house.
At a few Minutes before 8 o'clock, the orator, 1
amompenied by Professor Cep*, of the Univer
city of Pennsylvania, Hon. Judge Thompson, David '
Pant Brown, Erg , and several other of our meet
prominent citizens, appeared upon the platform.
At 8 o'olook Professor Oopphe proceeded to intro- vices
duos the orator of the evening. 3100 'Nan 61 490 90
In doing so, he said ho felt that he bad been ..9„,^0, _Nqrgibla 61 • 9 8 % „,,
highly honored in being assigned the duty by the irol'ufiro''' 8s W 4
Ladies' Mount Vernon Aseooiation, through their WOO to 91% 1
Vioe Regent, of introducing to the audience the 350:9 to /01 81
Hon. Edward Everett. His Introduction was fall t 1: :rg l To ,1 i a
of eulogy of the ladies of America and the dig. HOOD I da 82
tinguielied gentleman be was about to introduee, 1 6 0 0 0 13 d o ° , a 1 1: 0 1 V I ,
stating that it who to their efforts that, if the 1000 OM fie 170 04 —
United States ever became the - owner of Mount 7001 N Y47en es 91
Vernon, they would be mainly indebted for its Ig2.7,,T e r z e c li d i: 4 7 5 6 3 21
purohate. . 2000 Rut 11 21 mtg 97
I
Mr. Everett, In opening, remarked that he did 15000 In Can 649 80
€ooo e fOst
indeed feel it to be a distinguished privilege to re- e•d d o
so%
pant, for the fourth time, his address on Washing. 6000 do, , 810 00
ton before a Philadelehla audience. Next to 3 2 r a j 2;111741- m 1 g
Mount Vernon itself. Philadelphia hold the next i 62 Bank of America 112%
place in the personal and national memories of 60 1 P A b , ce m als x %sok 110 0
Washington, and he felt sure, therefore, that our 100 DOT & trel k ce 1 91 I
citizens would not suffer themselves to be outdone 60 nenton ei IS%
in this patriotio enterprise of scouring the home of 6 p, P.,02.)/14113°06° 80
Washington, by any portion of the Union . The ito do 8134 stx
formation of the Ladled Mount Vernon Almelo. 10 3 9 . 11 1110 92%
Hon of the Union, the work that nasoolation had Fjc; N v• , D a ," „ ,„ tr ,„4 A gi;
alread y accomplished, and the work which yet 960 do' ' 85% 1
remained for them to do, were here alluded to by vg do', 'a n t i
the orator in eloquent terms ; adding that it was 1, 0 es, 1 SIR
to consummate this noble object and not merely. 000 do , 69%
to eulogise the character—which indeed needed 16” " 69 %
0 Brio 115111.010 7%
no eulogy—that he was about tuaddrees them. 100 do 7
Having concluded his felicitous introduotionloo Hudson Ely Ato 81 i
I
(during the course of which he was repeatedly ap- SECOND SWARD.
planded), he was ready to commence the delivery gOOO 11 $Ss 105 pox so Ohi o kRI et 50%
of his wonderful—we had almost said immortal 50'n 'Virginia etas 94 tOO do blO 6114
LO'o 1 111 Amur! Ft Or 531.1 150 do 90 se
—addrese. 5OOO N Carolina es 97 390 N Y Central It 70%
Of the oration itself, for reaeens that are gene- • 500 11l Cen ode 81% ICO do b3O 70%
rally understood, we can do no more than speak of grjp, 8 , mti go ~ A.N . 100 to
.5 ;gm
its suocetsfut delivery and welcome reoention by the 1000 Mich 8 2lmti 62 100 liaison Inv R 811(
audience, as even our uncial outline of this elan of IVO do
.. 89 100 do 180 ill
literary entertainments would boa violation of 1 5 0 0 0 g i i i i k e ;: ( 7,,,k 1 7 p 2 0 1 1 1 !: 7 0 .4 252
Cloy tr
oc fr T n el R tr (
Mr. Everett's wishes with regard to it. We enpy iono MP 'alga 84 100 Mich Central R 41 g
350 Paolfio Mell S 85 60 do
Bay of this oration, however, that, although sub- icBo 40
80 1 do t 116 X 190 do 580 41)(
etantially the same whenever it is repeated, it pre- t) do $31815 90 do s6O 40%
seats nevertheless, in Its aoholarly conception and 303 do 4 5& ,66 m,‘
II: 50 : T S d il l ° do h : EI . :c r.
, N 1 R ills'
grand rhetorical symmetry, something new each 1 lee 10,, i 3 44 1,00 do 8%
Mg
time for the heart to appreciate in the character i 108 ( CleT& Ruda° 101 160 01ev C ol - k OM 06
of Washington, and the • mind to admire in the i; .( l, :1,""'" Co , •
1 1 2 ; 10 60 001 d 6 : Old 11 620 6 1 %
Mx
grateful manner in which its noble features are ' . 5 1 Z,'6 ' 1° , 1 7 1 /1 1 660 1 Y 6 991,14
portrayed. Mr. 'Everett in this celebrated ad- , Tilli M /OHM
dress'carries us to the very summit of rhetorical Mines aro inlet atft, 62% for Pots, and $5 76 for
excellenee, and from which wo are sure no one P 7t. il o ' ret —The at
and State and Westena Plour Is
can descend to the lower level of the sensation settee and evoltat and 16a450 bigamy with light re
olap-tgap which so haughtily bestrides the modern ; 1 .10;0 " g L a r ir t o ttpn ot, tlt d ; n140%4744 for unsound '
leotrtre-board, without regretting that, with abun Ma so 1 r impamne Illatern ; $7.26®7.60 r LX.rlref.xtorii
dant materials from which the finest spoolmons of do • $7.7608 for shippinprands of extra round hoop
orators upon all subjects might, with proper out- i 4 91 1 g1tborin Flour is betlf l n, with PAU% of 7 000 bbls at
tune be developed, we see around us so few rising $7 75u 8 for rOMIIIOI, to mitad. mid $8 2609 90 roe extra
Everette. • Maeda Canadian Flour 1184111 nominal at $907 76.
It la true, the orator in this ease—from the na- o o 6 o a otZ i —,, :Vil a 7 t 5 ,,,, b r60ni=t,e 4 1 1 1!:, r7l i nTer ' ,Bll2 (l 4 '
tune of his theme, and the laudable purpose fer , re- white western, 98)4 611 demented Chicago Whig,
which he is laboring with so much self.saorifieing t i l th s e fo a r te r s e e d .f P l7Po7l r b u tle t 's 2 t Vt f w or bi gate C r o n re ml i x , er t 9 t Q
aasidnity—carries with him, as it were, by right, ognie for yellow. ,
the warm glow of a nation's heart ; yet, there is a , Barley la Oren, with Wee a' l 000 bee at 683 for own
simple grandeur and felicity in his style that ' r o a ,, n . lk a t t a p te r . „l t o ya u fs ,,,,, nr ,, m . a f t : ,,, t lf:,.:' 1: 8 .1 1 7 1 0 0 5 00 8 / o f 3Cl or
would evoke the enthusiastic admiration of a out- ; anethern, Pennsylvania endJerser, and 010080 for
tivated audit:me., no matter what might be his' State, CA1308..1111 Westera. , i. w
Crams'.—There coatin to be considerable in
cab eat. nuiry for bosh (Moth and ut and prince have an up.
Gone through the alembic) of his Ilnely•ditel • ware toril , nol ; .alas cif 1,8 11A1Pli Bags in Boston at
10 , c l i e f . or o fX b iti a ; t 11?1 , 0 . 1 1 0 1 f , nr fiv n i 4 2 2? tl i g b ,. a o r q gAi r 1 23 r o ll ,
plined intellect as often as this oration of Mr.
Everett's has, there is, of course. every reason for 0 motile For standard. °Moat/ Ito f.r halm bass,
its having become thoroughly divested of 'every and for standard Moth an treely making, but re
particle of literary dross : and accordingly it pours f Deur (Runlet. •
forth a pure stream, now broad, mnjesti 3, and Itlntoo.—Twenty.onrootts Gaktenala sold at $l. 22103
deliberative in its flow; then dashing and spark-...
months raovistoNs —Pork Is firmer soles of 350 bbis
ling with all the brillianey of exquisite finish, if ft s, glum 26 for new "eae, mash for Prism Brat lit
not of genius, while hew and there a smile-pro. 1 8 , " e . with eats or 610 bh'e eln'ry Pr me ; sl2sa.
vnking ripple tells of the gentle undercurrent of R ei T ILI7O r , C . 0 .71,T;0 t , ', ..tr 1 . 5 13 " for repacked
quiet humor that oontraats artistically with tbo Primo Moo. Beef 1 ,, arm at il '4. (Moon And Out
4 o o wni l
a t 1
from
mh
I li r er
or gi t 6e l r o e d nAo a iii i tfeero
advance
d sires . .
more uniform , gravity of his eloquent produotion Monte al i stetly lard I.firmer'Anth eaten "7 600 bbls
v n o w held at /24 Batter and Cheese
JP,
Stily say what we may—and too much osn e ar t c li g l i f, C , t '''''' t ,
80areoly be said—in praise of Mr. Everett for hie 1 Ssurrersta w l , er .
r„ 6 , a ll,l,, a ,i i r s ince, at whit:
timely and sueeessful efforts in behalf of the
with sales ot i, i'ooobble at 303.
Mount Vernon Fund, the fact ought not to be re ,,,a to ait•r their Mocha Bina 2,600 bags were
suppresied that the masses of cur people, who l a l i n a ri n al:i B lit e l o eat m li.Lon New 1150119.71)11U5 for spool
thus willingly contribute their money toward the' se
,• EtROANT Punnorunk Piatto4mrus, Oanrurn,
same object, whenever the opportunity is offewd, ',HMIS!' So bet:ter,
brillianta r e
Everett
a n r
s o
tt lce s
i s devoting honornb e h
i p s a t r i t m ; e, tor wh.lo the
this morning, at No. 014 Chestnut treat, comprises
holalents, 1 AND 00TVALln FuriNtrllllE.—Bildi a Son's sale
been 1
a la n yi i n s g th up e i one of the largest assortments of anterior furniture
menu. reared this season. Alio, four elegibt pianofortes,
f a o n r d
h i
s t m maysolf,b
whate, er h t i o s wealth
h i
gh . oleo, m a 0 le l m v
twelve suites chamber cottage furuture, and other
in h
or ten o'eleekwh 0 desirable articles. . i
meat no l b t i e W s i
a t e o t f t h w a e l e l h n e e t u y a r t m ts ill i o y r f u r h t e e i w s a acoroduNisTrYi'imen• end urin g
r
a * l o o o s u e p d t edb Lis address;
ll its ddra vd , 5r0.07,,f__,1111-51001 hßlang
Trtz body_of Bony Spav, a resident. of
Reading, waffnund floating in, the ricer Sobnyl.-
near the Big Dam, about - three mice below
ihat olt,yrrecently. Ho
Tinian up
s sposed to have fallen
nto the atreani while
TftE LATEST NEWS
BY. TELEGRAPH.
• • -homicide at Cape Island.
Jerome', nitorakon TO TR% P 8 1 .83
GArejecintri May 12 —Ao altercation occurred
laekight, about ten o'clock, between Matthew Curran
ald limits Conner, at the hones of the former. Dck ing
the fames, Curran 'tabbed Conner aim times with an
ordinary pooket•lcolfe, producing death in a few mi
,Olfirer George W. Smith evaded Outran and
lodged biro !Mail till,' morning.' An horst was held
,by IltiyikWakO,`and Outran 'wee committed to answer ,
thenbirge of moiler it'd* beat term Of court.
FROM MEXICO.
Tjuv Steamship Tennessee at No Orleans
The Passageof the American Mails
Forbidden by Robles.
GREAT CONTUSION AT THZ CAPITAL
cultroT OF PRESITIEICY EXPECTED
An Outbreak Feared
The Church Property to be Mortgaged.
Jets* Cassava. May 12.—The ateamehip Tennessee,
which baterrivel at quarantine, foretells's datee from
VertCrut to the Bth instant, and from the City o'
Magic° to the let,
-
men
Robles was at Islet's, with one thonsand
men had Weed a decree forbidding She metre of
the American; malls. A scene of great confusion
reigned at the capital.'
• A chimes In the Presidency woe eons expeot.d,
A renarat outbreak it was reared would occur shortly.
Minima was endeavoring to raise money In Europe
on the Ointich Property,' the Archbishop , having con
tented to its mortgage. •
The English and Brevelt lleete Ware still at Sao.
Mtge%
On the gdiistant Minima's tamed a decree closing all
.tbd Gulf ports to foreign commerce.
Onadaisjirs hes been ruptured by the Liberate.
thatefforts of the liregy to raise forty ne'llions to sit
them/atm of Mhamon hes on far been unsuccessful, and
...there rise no hope of their raising ativ portion of It
New 081.11A.N8. May 12.—The eteamer Tennessee
brings Vera Ores dates to the Bth inst.
Onedalajara had been taken by the Liberals, and the
eapturent Tepia,San Bias, Colima, and Monsanillo had
been orkunrrned.
' - General' Mere had been completely routed by the
- lAberals, with the loss of 600 prisoners, among whom
the Esisswil Is believed to be.
General, 'nobles- wee still at Jalapa. surrounded by
'.:(oiserateArelludia, Le Lave, and Trsconis. all waiting
the raitaltof Affairs at the capital. If driven close Ito.
blew will procounce.
The indignation of the British residents against Mr.
Otway ie yeti , strong.
, Plots are in existence to oust Mizamou and reinstate
Gan Zaloags.
The clergy had ,proposed to raise a loan of 210,000,-
003.•
The nth.° position of affeirsi is finally.
Mr. McLane, the United States Minister had return
edlo Vets erns from his Tilsit - to Aftnatitian, in bad
health.
WASHIltae March 12 —Private despatches .from
Mexico, received st New Orleans by the Tennessee, sod
telegraphed to this laity, repreecot the prOsPeOt of the
Liberals for taking the city of lilextoo as enoonragivs.
The efforts of Miramon to rr I e money in Europe on the
Church property ere considered futile. in view of the
bonne condition of affiirs on that coat atr t
The eipture of the city of Mexico b• the Ooristitu
tionsliste L tousiderea merely u question of time.
Increase of Telegraphic Business.
jfelelfettit,May 12 —Among the evidences given of
theinereesdng business of the country, especially of a
mercantile character, it is stated that the number of
menages daily lent over the various 'telegraph linen le
..vailly greater at the present time then ever before.
The three printing telegraph Buns of the American
TailsvraPinaolepany, located In Wall etreet, known as
the Boston, Wathington, and Net , onal wires trenemit.
led on Wednesday, respectively, OM 888, and 4.12, pri
vate susuiges, and about six thon'and words of public
seal reports, and that too through the very disagreea
ble storm which lasted the whole day.
Extension of the QuebeE Telegraph Line
' FOREIGN NEWS ARRANGEMENTS
Iltorphy at New York.
ToniF. 14.12 literphy, the ohm Wier,
Ye the Persia. eiapa several
.who estrlvot Vila' ,
sae e$ Put evening it the monism , the New Y or kohsae
~lobehinorcerirsatos. He 011 l moans In - Oke elty
'and:then prowled to Now Orleans.
' , Now .10.wito,a Mey 12 —The steamer Tennessee
fiticiatell Nicaraguan whin:. to tb: 2,1 inst.
THnaie xpeotal importance...
Mr. Bally tato (savoring to boy the Nicaraguan
OnaroWitoror to Ma olinoes.
Sudden Death of a Steamboat Cantath
Totatno, May D.-oaptato J P. nowt, I rawly o
the steamer Northern Indiana, nod lately of the Want
*in Metropolis, died suddenly, In this oily, this after
From Havona.
• - CH/RUSTON, May 12 —The etesiner 'Lobel, from
gamed, on the 10th !wt., arrived hen sp•day,
The star market wee quiet mid prime were de
•
Mot - es waennettangid In laotation.
New York Stock
reining°, May 12.
100 11406 m 11 prf 33
100 do 80
400 gaoling It 481(
800 do 48%
210 do 160 48
200 do 820 45
1220 11101gon Central 40
160 - do 40%
55 do 40%
810 do 40x
100 do alb 40%
TOO Molt Eo &N Is 0%
410 do 8
250 do 74
204 do . 7X
100 do TN
Igo Minh B Goer 243 i
520 43 HO
100 do 445 2DX
75 Panams R 1 1 4
160 dO 118%
4 0 0 do . 118%
107 do r6O 118
1175 TIM:1o% Con It 55
70804160 s & Chi R 60%
RO do 630 00X
'OO do 010 00%
100 do 610 80%
300 do 620 00X
100 do blO 10%
250 do 82
10 do
100 Ole. & Tol R 81021%
350 do 24%
700 Oklesgo & 111 59
100 do 58%
00 do NM
100 . do bow 281 y
200 do 645 50
s 'l CI 5 do Dl5 65%
B & gala R 60
, ituartott NOTICE —B. Soot+, 4., auctioneer,
491 Chestnut street, will sell, this ;owing, oom
tlenalng at ten and,a half o'clock,' ree hundred
otibkairioh new style bonnets, bloomers, hate, ,to ,
001 4;1 the best aseertment of 134 pods offer
ed 91e, - •
THE CITY.
AAMEMENTO THIS EVENING
Nrw Weirer•Branrr Trervar.- 4 ‘ The iron Cheat)?
Don Ca•oor,!?',
Wising% Ni6mtki, TREATILII. —" Oar Bomale
Amer, offot Cousin." , •
A 1111810.11 AOADSYR OP E111810:—" LUCIA 111 Lam
znerincorP—" La)avorita."
WISMASLIST & CLAIMS'S AROMSTINIT THILLTRIA—
" Robert Emmet"—J< Comedy of Irrors."
PSNASYLvATITA AOAUPXY c/ Tall FINN AILIS.—FS
hibillon of Painting* and Statuary.
MoDixonanla Gararlaa.-=Seleations from Plays.
Gems from Operas. Pantomimes, Dancing, and Ringing
City Councils.
Both trenches of CiminoLls held their stated meetings
yentordiy oftertio3o. - ' . •
BBLECT COUNCIL
Mr Onnsman in the chair.
The foil wierr communications were received and ap
prnpriste'y referred :
Several Belting for the introduction of gee pipe and
erection of gee Imps ; one relative to hackney eoaebes;
one coking for the erection of a new station bone to
the Twenty-third ward; one from the Good Intent
Hose Company. asking for the intendment)* of a Are
earn in their engine house; one from X. R. Barrel, re.
letlvo,to the Water Department ; one from Charles IS
Neel.. City Commissioner elem. tendering hie securities
es required be an act of Assemble ; one from Strickland
Enema. nonstontieer Charles -Reid for messenger, in
place Gen. W. Ditonay, rufgrird
Mr Oho-lee 'Chomp= Jonen offered a bill in piece,
sotholeing the Commissioners of Markets to rent cer
tain stalls in the markets on Market /treat.
The Chair decided the hill should lay over under the
rules.
A motion to proceed to a second reading resulted SS
wows Ayers 12 eye 7.
Mr Onyler desired to huow whether a two-thirds
vote wee no required to consider a bill more than once
at the rune session
The chair decided that it was not necessary in the
pre.ent instance.
Onyler read the ruled, and Melva. Neal, Momn•
tyre, and others. expressed a desire to randen.tand the
deedelon of the Chair.
The Chair ordered the first section to be read on AB
coca reeding, atter the reading of which
Mr. Mcl n tyre moved to rarer the bill to the Commie.
stoners on kiwkats. Agreed to.
he President presented a commeolostion from the
controllers of public schools. asking for an Immediate
appropriation for the erection of a now sohoel building
in the Itightsenth eeotion
Mr. Mclntyre euhmitted a violation that all the no.
finirhed business or the late Commit be referred to the
same committees of the preened, Council,
bones owered anaolatton for the r ppointment of
a committee of three from each Chamber to examine
into the tree paid warrants, Ac. Agreed to.
Thin Is merely a coutinuance of the committee ap
pointed by last Oonnellefor the purposs stated.
Mr. Benton orerentedn rerointion for the appoint.
meet of a j tint committee on'the subject of onnrertia t
the Girard farm In the first ward into a public park,
to be called the Girard Perk. Agreed to.
6.rousage wee received from the Mayor. vetoing the
resolution making an appropriation of $1.750 for-extra
services to clerks and men:engem of the late 0 urells.
lhe Chair decided that the present Om:Bolls were
comneteot to take :lotion in the matter. although the
resolution wu weed by the late Ormnoile.
The yens awl. nays were called on the resolution, not
withstanding the veto, with the following malt—
ayes 7. nays 11
The Preeldeat then announced the following standing
committees for the enemeg year
COMMITTIZEI
Ifinsnee—Thompson, Neal, Wetherlll, Leidy, Drsy
ton, Haldeman.
Water Works—Parker, Neal, ;ones, Mclntyre, limed
ly. Norman.
thus—Read, Jones, Parker, Leidy, Benton, Brad
ford
Girard Eutatu—Dayle, Bringhnret, Read, Peters
Beldomno.Lstivhlin.
Oity Property—Neel, (layler, Leidy, Thompson, Ma
Intyra, Dinhlin.
Folloe—Jones, Ford, Peters, Bradford, Leidy, No•
MM.
Vents sad Fire Department—Mclntyre, Ford, Nea
Brinaba••et Bradford. Lemon.
Health—Partelet, Wetherill, Parker, ilmedly, Lough
lin. Lemon
Poor—Bringhurat, Ford, Bartolet, amedly, Benton
Norman.
Prisons—Read, Thompson, Lemon, Britrhurst,Bmed
ly. Earteet.
Sohools—Mclntyre, Peters, Wetherfll, Mules, Neal,
Eshleman.
Pores) , and Regulatloos—Wetherill, Davie, Peters,
envier, Molnpre. Norman
Railroad—Leidy, Read, Davis, Imes, Benton, Bolds-
man
Malmo—Enos, Ford, Neat, Drayton, Bartolet, Nor
man
, Compare 11111s—Peter/, Lonablio, Mclntyre.
Port wardens—Thompvm, Mclntyre, Parker, Weth
erill, Thirtolet, Lemon.
Law--Jonee, Curler, Beaton, Ford, Zoog, Drantrm.
Markets—Btinghttrzt, Cayler, Davis, Bead, Peter,
Dayton.
Verify each Account; of Oily Tresenrer —Thompson
Pinker, D 11113196
00311dON OODAOII.
Mr. D G. Vomits and Mr. Denn'e preeented their
credentials, and were sworn tn.
The 'Chairman announced the follosilng standing
committees for the ensuing year :
Finance—Megan. If miter, Potter, Simone, Baird, W.
B. Thomas, and Randolph,
Water Works — Messrs . Bobb, Manuel, Riley, Schoch,
Harper. and Davis.
Oae Works—Mesers. 'Mister, Herr, Oat, Eldridge,
Bowker. and Dunk.
Girard Estates—Meninx. W. B. Thomas, Starr, Habib,
Miller, Hacker, and Clem
Hichways—Meners. Bullock, Hodgdoo, Harmer, Mil
ler, Ninestael, and Oyer.
Our Property—Mrears Case, Has, Pomeroy, Stmt.
ton, O'Neill, and Bullock.
P-Ree—Menere Potter, Steer, Rehfeldt, Thompson,
.7ohnson, and McClean.
Traits and Fire Companies—klessre. Craig, HAM,
Somme'n, Ricketts, Zane, and Colhotin.
Health—Meems.'99ard, Hunter, Sites, Wation, Lough
lin. and Graham
Fow—Messrs. Creswell, Brooks, Daub Fonst, Libor,
so Blaster ,
Prisons—Masers. Doer, Fonlon, Thompson, Dye,
, Welts, and Layer
fiehools—Messrs. Gamble, D. G. Thomas, Wattsem,
Lacing, Stewart, end Watson
Sarver —Meems. Cattail, Werner, IfOaaeIrISP,ORSIO !
Ip,bb and 'Perna •
••rarms—lifeeers. Dennis, Manuel, /idler, Aldine,
Rodgdon, and Fisher
Wharree and Landings—Memo. Ihrie,Bain, Malone;
Home, Leigh, and MrDside
Law—Messrs. Ingham, Mister, Donnie, O'Neill, How
ard. and Quin.
Markets—Messrs. Houseman, Pugh, Bowers, Ober,
Slinger. and O'Brien
To Compare Bills—Messrs Gamble, Kerr, and. Ing
ham --
.. To Verify Gash ACcounts of Olty Treasurer—Menem.
Catteil. Seormsa, and Helm
Mr. 0 M. Neal submitted the names of his securities
an City Commissioner.
The Chair enbmitted a petition from the hackney
coachmen, asking a repeal of the ordinance compelling
them to take out a lionee.
Mr. If tier and ()there submitted elmilartlecuresots,
which were referred to the Committee on Pollee.
Mr. bleOleao, one for du ptpee in Fifteenth etreet,
from Catharine to Fitzwater street. Referred.
Mr. Heins one for a fire-alarm telegraph box in the
house of the Good Intent Hose Company Referred.
Mr. Simons, one for ••ater pl "es on Sixteenth street.
Referred to the Committee on Water.
Mr. Broke, one for water ',lnes on Washington ave
nue, in the TwentiSh ward. Referred to Ike commit
tee on Water.
Mr. Gamble, one from the Empire Hook and Ladder
Company asking for the refunding of the expense of
placing a ere alarm .elegraph box In their hence Be.
ferred to the Committee on Trtiste and Fire Companies.
A remlzincui to tap water ninon on 'Treaters avenue
was referred to the Committee on Water.
Mr. Dennis. a reenintion reuneating the Committee on
Water to report the expediency of planing hydrants on
the principal streets. a greed to
Mr. Manuel, a renolotion directing the Highway Be.
partment to pave Mechanic street, from Sirquehanna
avenue to Diamond street. Referred to the Committee
op Highways.
Mr Baird, in alarm, an ordinance supplementary
to the ordinance reorganizing the Department of High
wave.
Mr. Dennis, in pls.°, an ordinance describing the
property to be returned to the Receiver of Tates. Re
ferred.
Mr Gamble. an ordinance authorizlng a loan to build
a bridge over the Schuylkill Referred to the Commit
tee on Pittance.
Mr. Justice. a resolution req use tog the gegen or to
report whether the On ydians of the Poor have a right
to enter into a contract for coal for the ensuing jeer,
Referred to the Committee on Pour.
Mr. O'Neill submitted a resolution to change the
days of the stated meetings. This was amended to Re
paint a Joint committee to revise the roles, and then
vqted down.
Mr. W. B. Thomas a petition from George W. Mar.
phy, asking the release of certain property from a lien
or jadgme t. Referred to the Committee on /Mance.
Air Baird. a retail:aloe appropriatiogSin for the re
pairs of Washington.etreet wharf. Beferred to the
Committee on Wharves nod Landinge Adjourned
AFRICAN COLONIZATION.—Quite a large au
dience gathered In Concert Hall, last evening, to hear
an oration on African °glomlotion, by Hon. .T H. B
reatrebe, of BeUlmer°. The iddrelie wad delivered by
Mr. Latrobe before the American Colonization Society
at its meeting in Weshington, and subsequently in
New York, Albany, Ha - rieburg, ant number of other
places. At the meeting last night. Samuel II Perkins,
Reg , presided We noticed a numb .r of our most do_
Uncombed citizens on the platform, and in the
audience.
Mr. I strobe, on being introduced W*9 received with
much applause The work of coton'eation, which wee
now pursued with FO much difficulty, would morn be•
come a work of voluntary performance on the part of
the black men If as many emigrant; as left Burope
for America every year we'e to leave this country for
Africa. in ten ye-re the work of removal would be co
complieked Allowing for the increase during the pro.
ores of transportation, twenty years would amomplieh
the work. To ha sure, the reallsation of sunk a scheme,
and in moll a space of time, bed never been rontem.
;deed by the most sanguine friends of colonlaation He
mentioned the circumstanoo merely as an illnetration
What was the condition of the negro race n America
at the present time? In Individual cases, to be tore„
there may be found colored teen, f intelltgence.vroalth,
education, and relative lonian in sulfate. But with
the mime this Is not the ( 1 / 1 118. Gradually the itbors
Deformed by them, end which some years ego they
almoet completely monopollimo, are being nactrpal by
the white man. The labor of the caulker, stevedore,
card laborer in Baltimore and New York, of the loag
ehoremen in New Cesium, of the waiters in private
families, of the firemen and deck hen& on board of oar
eteamehl pa, ones universally performed by the man of
color. le now as universally performed by hie white an•
tagontst and bro her. Society, feeling. prejudice, and
even the law of the land, recognise title great disparity
between the wee.
The efforts of many well meaning men to raise this
elms to an equality with the whites, only serval to ren-
der the oppression of mete more odious They hare
not now the privileges they I ads unto ~ e r of years ego.
In Maryland they Toted in Jen And it we. a feet
whloh perhepa many or hie audience did not know, that
the popular almost! o' Virginia Merylend. and Penn
eylvania In nee stx ut the begin ,in or this center..
was the e le work of Benjamin Bannaker, a fres, and
pure man of color. (Applause ] Wben two races lite
these come In contort the weaker most deteriorate
tho old story of Apmalardß and , he Moan In Granada,
would again be en•oted Two race• who do not Inter,
merry, cannot equally and permanently occupy the
soil.
I , In Maryland, the free colored man had been treated
with coat leniency; end yet the Legislature of that
State trotted solely to the great icevitab e necessity
that must betel him—his removal from our eboree. In
Maryland the ratio of free colored pormilatirn was 18
per cent. In Pennaelvania 2.7' per cont. In Mane
chueette leas than one Per Cent. In Connecticut ten
then two per cent. In Ohio 1 8 per Cent., and In New
York 1.1 per cent Or, in other words. there were more
free colored people in tbo small State of Maryland than
in the two great Baton of New YOrk and Ohio Mary
land legleleted for th. great necessity of colonization,
She had given 5300.000 from her treasury towards it,
and aver recogn zed ite vast importance.
Granting then, that the tendency of our ministry's
legislation le to gradually overpower the weaker race—
whither can the black man go? He had tried Hayti and
found it wanting. lie bad been Invited to the Weal
I n di a weeds, by the British Government, but it was
to be a hewer of wood aid drawer of wafer. He under
stands the motives that oak hie presence, and evades
the Invitation. Whither but to A frias—Africa, with
its vast reeoureee, its great extent of territory, its glo
rious future or empire. and its elimate—so peculiarly
salubrious to tbe do or ndante of the blank men, yet too
deatruative to tee leuropeari, that it guarded like a wall
of B•e the empire of his Where from the Incursions of
the white man.
In Ohio, tee free meo of color had received on combi
nation. They had, at lout, byld a meeting a few dliTs
no, and paceed recalut one In favor of combination—ln
. .
farm's, s'ore's, and labor. Combinations would Rive
there wealth they thonaht and wealth would give them
prover. In doing this, however, they were but inadver
tently wOrking out their own drip iny—aunderatiog
tante suebetta of the colonization Reheats.
The white race w.e Increasing In tenfold proportion
to the other. Joining the future by the pelt. in 1000
our population will be 200,000 000 and In 1930—a pa.
clod within the scriptural Molt of life allotted to thou-
Mile of louts now breathing the breath of life—there
Will be 2t0,000,000 people inhabiting the territory of
the United Staten: Where will=thertrielek man be then
with this marvellete increase in populatinn ? He would
commend the the Melt to the caref'al and Prerrfal coa
eideratlon of, the friends of humanity barer* him
_ Herrerdfog 'Atria% as the • futare of the colored race,
and Ldtsria as the seat of African empire, it wan wvng
In the Government in the Hefted States totally to dis
regard it. It won d eventually be for our national wet
fare, serving - to draw elf the redandant Colored popula
tion, end relieviug ns of what must inevitably b mama a
great national burden- The Indian;-long years ago en
tered Into 6,eoutest, Itke the one now prevalleg—a
contest in whith the war woe between the chivalry and
valor of Europe and the ceurave of the Indian—sod
now the lest feeble , emeent of the descendants of Pow
hatan and Hind Philip, of Mount Hope, are .repidly
retreating towards the rising eon before the tide of
American colonization. The future of Liberia:Nal as
grand as that of California •and Oregon ,• and jest 11.6.
oertiln as there are new collectiog on the banke a She
Oolamble end Sacramento a nation of white - men, KO
certain world here be in the _borders of Liberia a na
tion of Intelligent, ednoated, 'pm - earful, and reeneited
men of color. -
We are sorry we cannot, on account of apace, follow
Mr :Latrobe so fully and closely as we hare him re
ported in ournotes. file , oration was filled with many
atriklog facts biarlog on hie theme.' Commerce tire 1 , o;
Dilemma to advance the amuse colonisation. Already
the tragic in human lints was supplanted by the trade
In ivory. gold, and . palm oil. Commuolottion was now
as frequent between the %tailor Of Africa tied London
ea between Constsoti °pia sad the metropolis of Brits'n
He felt he Minot exaggerated in estimating the great
Program to be made by colonization. Livingstone and
his colaborers had already thrown the light of eivilist-
Hon upon' tbis hlthettobanighto region, Ind the future
of Africa would be blii.sed by a free and gallant people,
and the institutions of freedom and progress.
When Mr Latrobe took his seat, he was greeted with
merit applause.
D. Halley, rose in the audience. and said
be wished, so an htinable Member of the Pannsylvenia
Colociz tine Pociety, to raise his voice In behalf of the
Proi"ut, MIS to express the setisfaotion be {alt et
lie
teniog to Pe able sad eloquent oration - of Mr Latrobe:
It wee an effort that dliourd be heard by others than
tbo.a assembled- there. Ha accordingly offered -two
resolutions, tendering the thanks of the audience
Mr Lstrtbe for his address, and asking on behalf of
the Pennsylvania Colonization Society, -a copy of it
for publostion.
The resolntione _were carried amid great epplauee,
and ester the benediction heti been pronounced by the
Rev. Dr. Chester, the meeting adjourned.
BROOKING CASE OF Nsomicrk.—Yesterday
morning Lieutenant Puller, of the First Police district,
witheeeed one of the most shocking eases ornegleetand
destitutirn that we have heard of In a long time, at the
house of Timothy McCarty; on PMsyunk road, gore
Catharine street. Timothy is said to be an ind wartime
man, but his wife is represented to have become a via
Om of the intoxicating bowl, and, as • Consequence, ie
very slovenly in her habits, and negteets her bonne,
iregueotly staying away for several days at a time. Mr.
McCarty Inas borne with her dieerepanciee until forbea ,
ance ceased to be a virtue, and be accordingly entered
complalot to A'darmatt Titternisry, who lased the war
rant for her arrest The Lieutenant went t, the bowie
for the puronee of arreetipg her when he round the premi
ses in a filthy condition, and the only ocaripant an infant
about 11 months old,' in an almost keens ble coadi
Von. It Repo .re the , hild hes been unwell for some
time pant; anti when the ()Meer went to its minter, es,
he was horrified to and that it had Itto in one position
for so long a time, that its left side was thoroughly de
cayed. The child was removed to the station-hoses,
where it woo kindly cared for, and afterwards sent to
the almehruse. The whereabouts of the wretched
mother has not yet been discovered, and its father is
engaged at work some distance ham the atty.
THE Consoles.—But little business was I
transacted yesterday to Connells, both branches ad-!
journing at as early hour. The members have hardly
got into harnetn. A great deal of unfinished business,
from the fed Beesley, is mouldering away In the desire
of committees, and it weals _ be,well for Rome of our
councilmen, desirous of terming inmortality. to take it
up, and bring It to the light of day. We can name some
ik
two or three very important bills: That for the eria
tint, of public imildings. introduced by Mr. Cuyler and
which got as fires its third reedier, is one of great and
greeriog imps armee. Without speaking of Mr. ruylerle
particular plan, the idea that suggested It should be
brought to the reltice of Councils at an early day.
There is soother bill on the ales of the Common Coun
cil. in relation to a rearrangement of - the p-esent
Windings. It should meet the attention of m embers.
There are several hints contained in it that m ght be
Improved. Another tell foe the extension Ode Police
and Fire Alarm Telegraph, reported by Mr. Moyer. on
the last day of the erosion, which Dwell the Common
and wail postponed In the Select, is worthy of attention.
THE ' WEATHER has been uncertain during
the last, day or two. Neither rain nor shine, but
snatches of bad weather here and there, enough to
make the world look gloomy, and a number of spas
media and futile attempts at raining. In the country
the mope are prospering, and farmerevule their hands
and smile at the prospects of well.filled granari.s and
bounteous hervents. The markets begin to Writ fresh
and inviting with their array of early edibles. New
potatoes. pees, beans, and other early, and desirable
garden vegetables are brought from the surrounding
farms, oo each side of the, river, in, cad loads. The
price, maintain their own for a day or two, but a re
ductiou may be looked for soon.
FINES —As a matter of interest, we print
the amount of lines paid into the City Treasury, from
July 1,1868, to May 7, 1851, by the aldermen of the
city, First Police district, ft. C. Tittermary, $199 ; So.
cond, Willem Allen. see; "hied. F. B. Freeman,
$258.78 Fourth.o Bracer $179; 'Fifth, Geo. Patchett,
$234.26: Sixth, J. Snyder. $101.86; Seventh. W H
Butler, $207.84; Eighth, I:Planklettm,lloB2 87; Ninth,
W. G Opera.. 8,530.08 Tenth, A. A. Shoemaker,
$298.62; Eleventh John Cloud, $37490; Twelfth , J.
L. itillieser.' $24 TO; Thirteenth fe. L Ramsdell,
$lO3 80 ; Fenrteenth, J. King. $213 7l ; Fifteenth, J.
Elliott $l5; Sixteenth, B. P. Warren, $3l. 92
NAVAL AFFAIRS. Yesterday morning,
Commodore Montgomery hoisted his flag on board the
new sloop-of-war Lanceatek, and the crew from the
receivlog ship went on board, numb/ding, in ell. about
five hundred ;weenie. The sloop west hauled out into
the stream at two o'clock In the afternoon. The eloor.
of-wat Wyoming will be put in otter for, service as
main aa possible, her destination being the gams as that
of the Lammeter—the Nettie noniron. Orders were
received yesterday to fit ant the frigate Congrene -with
despatch: Tit s floe vessel has been at the navy yard
for &tweet a year. The frigate St. Lawrence is ex
pected to, arrive at the navy yard to-day.
'
_thread bn Fourth and Eighth atreets is progreselne
very rapidly, o W o '. rte w . 4-41 . - a - ndlallairrolreens, Lid
from • Germantown Itelboad to - Race street. and the
thoroughfare is in travelling Order. The - workmen are
now engaged in putting down the ties from Arch to
Market 'Prods. On Fourth street the road Is completed
as far down as Chestnut street, and the work below
that street is going nn steadily.
CONCEALED WES.PONS. —A man, named
,Thomas Mender, was committed' jeaterday, by
Alderman Remington, in default of two Mt:mimed dot
late ball, on the charge rf carrying concealed weapons.
Me brother bed been arrested for druakeaness, and
Themes wet& 1.0 the station-house to inquire in ' , weird
to the molter. On the way, he 'truck a 'man in the
month with n blaek.jac k. end wee talon Into custody.
Ile denied having the weapon, but it was found' in his
pocket. -
THE FARMERS and vegetable dealers on
Market street are making arrangements to remove their
stands into West Philadelphia., They intend to stand
on Market street west of the bridge. They wnt see a
good opening there, to doubt, for their wares. The
time for standing on Market street onlr extends to the
first of,fuly, when they will be compelled to vacate the
old stands they have occupied for ao long • periot or
our eitra history.
Tait Towa Is agog about liforphy. The ar
rangements about giving him a reception, which have
been noticed from time in this Column, we are happy
to say, approaching a succeesful termination. The sub
aoription list Is at the A therm 'm, where it will remain
tor a day or two. The Invitation to Alorphy has been
forwarded to New 'York, but his answer bee not yet been
remedied. It is expected in a day or two.
WE PUBLISH in to-day's paper a - Bard of
the State Whiskey Inspectors for this port They
seem to have in view the goal of the public by en•
forcing our Inspection lave, which will not only give
one State brands credit in other ports but will also
proteet the purchaser at home. All persons confer.
sent with the liquor trade are aware that something of
this kind is necarary.
WE were much pleased with a visit, -recent-
ly, to the lifontgomery 110 el. N. Sixth street, above
llowhill, to fled such excellent aterommodatione se
Pre offered to the travelling publics. The proprietor,
Wm. A. &heels, is a gentleman who underatanic bin
biotin re, grid freely extends hie attentl as to bie ens
tomere We hope swam+ may attend him Re de
am yes the patronage of his friends and the people.
Ramona' Hotta.—The Southwark Hose Com
.
puny will return from Elaton Ma orating, and will be
escorted, from the depot of the North Pennsylvania
Wai tread by the Hope - Nose Company. Prom telegra
phic accounts, received &Mr, the last four days, we
learn that the flett , hwart Rose Company have melted
every attention (lon the Emmen and the authorities of
Naston, and we have no, doubt they w9l re urn home
well pleased with their visit to that beautiful borough.
SENT BELOW.—A number of Individuals,
who Can hardly be called um, were co omitted to
prison, yesterday toorelog, on the charge or beating
their wives. This shameful conduct is becoming of too
frequent occurrence, and if some more rigorous punish
ment u'd be devised for these inhume° wretches, we
think We growing evil would soon be checked
DEATH FROM INTEMPERANCE:7A Inn
named Peter Moran was pick ,d up et as early boor
yesterday nicritlng In the Firth ward in n beastly state
or in'oxicelion. He wee taken to the Ilnion•etreet ate
Moo bowel and a pbyetoinn summoned but bercre be
arrived, Moran died. CoroeerPenner held to inquest
and rendered a verdict in accordance with the facts.
FUNERAL OF Ma. Gr.zukr.—The funeral of
the late Joseph Glenat Uric place yesterday morning,
from Besurb street, Iten.logtort. It -vas attended by
TN John's Lodge, No 115, A. Y. M.; G,rard Hark
Lodge, No 214, a. Y M ; Breach Benevolent Baelety,
and a large ormeourse of relatives and friends.
RUFBIA3I.I93I.—A day or two ago a man
ramed Henry Biddy, resrilog In the neighborhood of
pifth and poplar streets, wee severely beaten at Sixes
street and Girard avenue His irjurfre are so revere
that come fears are entertained for his life. The affair
arose out of a quarrel between two rival and ruffian fire
companies
HELD TO BAlL. — Franois McLaughlin and
Patrick Sullivan, officers of the Seventh eleotlon divi
sion of the blitinteeo 14 ward, have been amebic!, and
held la bail in 5600. to answer the charge of beving
wilfully and knowingly reJetted the vote of a vial,.
and voter at the late elention.
SALE OP A °LIPPER: 7 . The clipper-ship
hlornitz L , ght" was sold at &notion yesterday iraorn
ing, to Mr. w. J Buckner for SC .500 I.IV In rash and
bat! in approved paper. payable In Philadelphia. The
iesael is 000 tons burden, and six years old.
•
TUE PIIILADELPULt. steam fire-engine was
iried yesterday a`ternoon in Seventh street, - above
Arch, for the parrose of Noting the efficacy of several
new conplinge The per'orrnarce was witnesved by
large crowd or porde and gave entire eatletaotion.
TEE LAFAYETTE RIFLES paraded yesterday
atterecnin t and nnnehed exceedingly well to the music
of the Lafayette Time Bead The company was out in
fu'l forte. and presented a very creditable apppearauee
Ltnswar.—A few days since the vestry of
the Church of the Tnte•oe•eor FIT-et•d ao toenrance nt
t 5,000 area the life of their pastor, the Bev. A. Oardea.
THE Coat. ThADE.—A large amount of coal
Is mining Acwa, the Edam:lm end Ohio Railroad
from the Cumberland mines The shipments from
Piedmont and Cumberland In one day recently
amounted to 2 500 tone. the railroad company are
adopting ovory posaible measure to increase the
intone of transportation
A NEORO woman at Montgomery, Ala., fell
into a well there a few days sinee, 130 feet deep.
One of her arms was broken in the fall, and her
bead was pretty badly out; but she was quite
oheerful when drawn out.
DEA= OF MAR. Sourie.—Tho lady of the
Ron Pierre Soule died on Wednesday, sth inst ,
at his residence, on Rampart Street, Now Or
loans.
LARGE SALE EXTRA VALUABLE REAL ESTATE
STOCKS, /60 —Thomas k Bone' Bale, on Tuesday
next, 17th inst., will comprise a very large amount
of first.olass city and country property, by order
of Orphans' Court, executors,' the United States
Government, and other*. Pamphlet catalogues
to morrow.
BALI?, of PAIN2INGS this morning at the auction
Seim or Holmes at Quigley's stables
bee advertieemente, auction head.
FINANCIAL -CUMVMMEBC]AL. 7
The Mepey, market,
PRILIDICLPHIA,.
With the serious and - diaressing, as world rolls
on, We get a good deal of the %dimmr and diverting.
Of this letter Os - eater to 11l is an item of noire that
hen gone over tel , ,;granhio wires 'to ell'naits cif the •--
country, giving the world to knowthat . and,r . the --
crimetanode of the IhOstile: attitudes of -Dntwpean
ma
tione, and the complitallons of Italian
so.ltics; the
renowned stockbroker of SWalletreet./scolitittle;thie
-taterfacoasion °suf.:more' to fall. lasob is raid to be
down this time for two millions of dollars. knante "
the - Wow York stock market follows according:to the
'preeedents in sosh asses made end recorded, everything
that was week bee -gone down frem one to three nu
cent , and the brills sod bears are all in s fever. IS s
few d.yethe redonbtible;XScob will settle with
his ere
dlto*e after his usual fushiton, seed be reedmitted to the
stook board with the old'etereotyped compliments upon
thicharsoter sea par dealing; the puletiOl Will street
will beat evenly solo, and prises get blotto pte►icas
The news of the failure of Mr. Little helped tOskd
little to the fall that hu baen Wog on etasd'•ly for
soar, days at our own Moak board; North .Pennayliiinia
per cant. bonds MI off 2; the ten per cents X, and
the 'hares Beading ltalboad shares. 7 ; rentaylra
nia Railroad shares, State fiver!. and city pttne' were
steady at previous quotations _Lehigh Navigation ad
vanced jji and come other socialite& came held athigher
vices.
'flee money market hos tightened teroreetrity, as we
believe, but gale &Gladly. The rates of interest on
call loans and paper on the street have advanced from
g to 2 per cent.
• -The semi-monthly number of Peterson's Counterfeit
dated May 14th, Is laid on our table this even
ing This number is fully. rip :to the.high standard
which Mr. Peterron has adopted for his work. and which
has rendered it the favorite among detectors, .We.ere-,
peolally advise all atorekeepers to read the fourth page
of this 'number carefully, as it describes acurrately the
vignettes and other marks by which the principal 'stelae
plates can be Id• ntilled, when the fertile genius of the
coariterfeiters prat:Lees (rub beanie by new alterations.
No notes on any Merchants' Bank, Mechanics , Bank,
Barmen , Bank, Trident' Bank, or Vinton Bank, should
be taken Without referring to this page or the detector.
The amount of shipped by the Wyoming Canal
.
Company, - 'Tins
For the week ending May 7th, was 12.976
Amount previously reported 28,192
Total since opening of navigation on 4 , h April.. 41,158
The Increase over previous week wee 4 045 tone, not
,witlastending the navigation wile interrupted two days, in
consequence of obstructions thrown into the eanal frcui
the b. d of the Lackawana and Bloomberg Railroad
Company. •
- The Belt'more_ BUR sari: "We mentioned yester
day that Ell Beatty, Req., hat declined the Wiles of
cashier of the: Hagerstown (iid.j Rink, after a service.
of (Iffy-three years. We have now .to add that iffr.
Beatty died on the sth list., a few 'days after his resig
nation. in the 64th year of bie age. He wee one of the
, most sterling cititene of Hagerstown-It
The extension of the Delaware Railroad to the State
line has been put under contract, and Is to be completed
to laurel by the let of October, and to the State line
by the let of November.
The earnings of the Baltimore and Ohio Battiest non
tinuS to show a decrease. -In Atoll last, as compared
with April, 1854, they were as followit s.
a,w. )g6g
..sat 4147
Math Steil . ....
Wasialvaton B rao eh ... ... 38,659
N. W. Virginia Branch 18 382
Total—.
Decrease .01401
The following is a table of the receipts. for the me
sent and the, lut fiscal yeas of the company :
MG:bar
limrember
December
Jemmy.
P4brnary
Man*
April
Decrease this Year $llO 852
," The following are the racelpte of the Morrie Canal
Company':
Total to April 80,1859 823.671 73
Week ending May 7 , 8 085 13
--831,556 86
.014,683 00
5,028 09
Total to Hay 7.1858..
Week ending May 8...
Inore,an E 11,845 21
The fopowlog aye the reestots of the Delman Divi
sion Canal Company :
Tntal to April AO, 1859.
Week ending May 7
Total i _528,931. 37
Pomeiat's to same time to 185:4, aL^ot $lB, NO,
Sarniola of North Pennailvanfi Railroad Complay la,
April, 1859 s'B 761 51.
Ia April;lBsEl - • 25,243 35
.
laareaee - . $3,519 18
In ilre months. ..Mrs April 81 ' ' - V 21781 80
Same time laityear 110 , 848 4,8
'Marine - 118 880 72
PHIL4DIoLPHIS arrotni E 1.0k1.0.06; BALE%
- May 12,7880
•
ND BYl4.lBLas-targWat &
AND NsoNA,NDS ASSOANNIS, dall7/IWABT OALLNia SHIELD
. IZD 0818111171 BiR Jaffa.
FIR3T.
'MO Peons 51-2 clerk; 93
20 30 do.
93
1000 Olty es ' - - RlOl If
600 do -.New Own 101 X
1760 do - loti 1613 g
isno do Now 104 g
800 do New 104 . 4
1400 do New 104%
100 0 N Pr. R 89
600 do . 88%
1000 Pitt',
1000 N Pentei R 64
5/ Penns .
.. .lols 5 9N ,
160 Beading R..lpsoen 233 -
•100 do b4srat 20. N;
6N West o pet. 1,5 ,
5 do . .. . 55 -
20 Ttesv 55N
-30 Coro Ex Bk 24%
20 Lebigh . 63
20. d 0..... -
6 ',high Beetp . '23N
Om 7s 63 1 Hamabg R..000b 56N
1000 do .. R Bet 7a 60 -20 N Penns rt 33
600 N Peon It 63.... 44 4 Wised Bk 49N
600 do 6t Peon Sp Bk..sma 33
/000 do ...... 64 10 /AWOL VSI 8.... 42
B STIVEEN BOARDS. ,
660 PUMA 6s. 03 14000 Penns 5a .
SB
=
200 Penns 515 93
600 do 93
1003 City 05..019 0451013(
1603 2d & Bd•st IL 7e.. 91
1000 do 91X
1010 do -91 J
10)0 do • £ll3i
°Penns 39%
20 B av Mead 11. ash' 6. 31
100 Lehigh nerp envo 2331
CLOSING PRICE
diked.
1 Bk at N Americs..l43
2 ' do - 143
.3 do 143-
.30 iiet% Oani.l - 3i;
.7 Forrieriown It - 513(
10 Gaud Ilk, 01d.... 12%,
6- _ do ' - •12x_
2 do - •
_UN
2 do . 1:."4-
1 do 12%
.8-4:INBSTTLIID.
Mat Asksa
82111 iii Stoalr.
u Prof 10
Weriapn & Elan It 8X 9
7a 19 mtg.. 72
t 2 X
Lois Island 11 11X
Lell Coal & 51X 52
Tama B 8 8X
fir ' F 8 64
. . . .
It 8 tio. Mt
Plena ea 101 101.14
It lot 101%
" New ...104 1043(
Penes 6e 93 93g
Heeding 11. 23X 2311"
" 88070 loofT 84
mt 6s 94 96
" do 3 88 76 74
Penns B 38X 07%
" 2d to 83 in off 9034
bdor 0.1?al Con. 88%
‘• pro r 107,1(108X
Bata Nav eg , 89 • 74
1m034 in off 81
cg —•
eatatiess 6X 6
let mt bdn - 54
Freak k South R 64 65
21& 36 8t R.... 52
Ita44 & Vine St B 43
Philadelphia
Pamiosimni, Iday 12-1/Ming
The linear; tendency still continues in the Bread - -
Mon market, and bidders of Pleat:have idianced their
pretenalons fully 250 bbl again. TO-day the tales
include about 703 bbls g - od sago:deo at s7soi 2 030
bbta Western. extra at $7 78, and 300 bbla extra family
at $8 Of bbl, at which rates there are now more buyers
than sellers. The seceiptit continue very light. Bye
Flour and Corn Mall are better about 100 bbls of the
former sold at 14 76 and EOO bble of the lattei, Penn
aylvanta, at $1 Of bbl. Wheat—There is net much
doing for the vent of stook, and about 2 600 boa found
buyers at a further advance, ranging at $ 75m1 80 for
good Led prime reds, and $1 85esl. 95 for white. Rye
is wanted at $1 40' bu. Crrn le rather batter;
2,000 bus yellow told st 980, afloat. Oats are
firmer, with soles of 1,500 bus Pennsylvania to note
at 59mf00, in store. Bark—There is but little doing
In Qua:citron ; lint No 1 is bald at R 32 iff
Cotton—There Ss no new featox; in the market rbuyera
are holding MI far lower Takes, and the miles are mret
ly to small lota, at irregular rats* Groterles—The
market is unchanged, but very quiet owing to the the.
Weans in the views of buyers and sal/ea.- Prow-Minna
—There le more doing, with salsa of Bacon Rides at 93(0
and Shoulders at 7XO. now hell higher. - Pelted meats
are olio wanted at 7o for Bbontoese end OXo for rides.
Lard is firm and Butter dell. Wh'ek•v unobanged,
with but lit'le offering, however at 283(#090 for Penn
sylvania bble, 60e for Ohio do, and 27% milie for dredge
dP' gallon.
Markets by Telegraph. -
Fitly' °CLEM,. thy 11 -The w•ln,. of (lotion tn•day
have only been 600 bales, the market closing dull and
nechansed
Be LTIMORE May 12 —The ezeiteiteet in the matt et
for broad%tral is Increasing; Flour has advanoPd 26
canto; Hew.rd-etteet eons at $T EO. Wheit Is httayant ;
ea ea of white at $1 90e2. Corn has also advanced ;
yellow malls at 09 canto Provision, active; nacre_
Bid a. 9X ; held at 10. Meat Polk, 017.25 Whlfik..y,
30031
Cliental:tens. May 11 —The Cotton market continues
unsettled, with sales or o• ly tloo. wee
B•YADNdH, Mry 11.—Nothing doing in the Cotton
marks t.
lifootts. Mar 11 —Cotton; 1,800 bales sold to-day.
Ho'dora are willing sellers
ilictuarert, %lay PS —Vont has aPwanerd ?bounder
the adrtrea trout New York; 2,000 lbs sold to day at
$7 tam 7 80 ; Whisk.,)• 27a; Prorlei,aa ore .arited and
held out of market; for Nese Pork $l7 bee been (Meted
but refaced; R • ono 083$ ; bulk meats OmmB,li ; std
held higher ; Lard 1)
VELLANS Mn' 12 —The Cotton market Co Rein
unsettled ; the Wee to dal were only 1 2 ..00 bolt ; Flour
arm at $7; ro•a ie deelfoine; Pelee at. 03 ; Pork buoy
ant; Pales of mess at C7el7 25 . -
S. clat4li. 407 12 —There is little inquiry far Cot
ton and p•tcee are weak; the receipts of the wok
have bean 4 000 ts'ea; stock in port is 85 000 baled
agairat 48,000 bales at,the,same time last year.
A few afternoons since we saw one of our
large wholesale merchants standing near Trinity
Ohuroh, on Fowler street: His Attention seemed
to be devoted to the ladies, but his eyes did not
min their faces or their forma, bat appealed to
&nee rapidly at the material which they wore.
The :object of his visit to this fashionable tho
roughfare was to notice what amount of goods of
American manufacture were worn. We joined in
the inspection, and it vas singular to notice that
not one female in twenty, of high or low degree
passed, who was not dressed in foreign fabric. A
nation which thus pays such enormous tributes to
foreign countries must expeot a crisis once in a
while —Boston Gazette. •
STEAMBOAT-COLLISION.—On Friday, the 6th
hist , the steamboats Cedar Rapids and Lucie May
osme in collision near Quincy, on the northern
Mwsissippi. Tlie Lucie May reached the shore,
where rho eunk in about Ave roiraffes to the
cabin floor The Cedar Rapids was not damaged.
Three deck passengers - sT the Lucie May named
Martin Robinson, Patrick Minim, and Cornelius
Johnson are missing,
,and were doubtless drowned.
TUE Mont real Gazette says, cr The notori
one Chevalier Kiritoff bee been appointed by the
President of the United States to carry out the
newly ratified 'testy with China." Can the
zette mean the great unloved, the suitor for the
hand of beauty, the ornament of foreign courts,
the confidant' of foreign potentates, the Sather,
manager, politician, and yet nail him Kirk , 11 t A
man might is well to s humble eitisen.—AßOston
Courier 12th, . , .
AAR. 1859
33T 372
84 llt
24,581
$4 , 43 F 66 1,369,667
369 067
1868 1467.
..892806 - 296191
.888 169 361448
..836861 , 379259 ,
'1859. ' 1868
-327,176 817.513
..821891 677.044
..410 061 439 061
. 369081 483 663
.32,540,219 - Swivra
19 711._ 59
-
TfO 91
- 6,193 46