- -: : ---','". -;;,-:'-:, - ~,,,,.._ -,„,...- ~,,,,a.-i • iiiii,- 4 '47 , .--, -.. ~.-10iffi ti a:-.::: - „I t e r. ,,,„,-. 0, : ii- 1 4- , *- -A ,41, - --,-.--i i . q,.;,',_ - ' l - 47/.%.,45it,',.--• ?paistaldi.kqtr!•••-1' 1-alaiiiiikitP-- io-tqltaktk4 1 14 4 '° :- 'fi al fai t ' ''''"'" ' 44' tik ~14-,,,-rirl P :1 - 9, ?' : `'., . :lii**--7---, ' 7,114Y. a . ".. - 0 - -Z , -;."‘-',Z.:•^l , .-„11 , 1 , U , 15.-04:4:',4 .'-- -0171tmotC*4:;if:A.T....144.!Z•mTvo!), fog p_.„.-` ~.,, - 4 - ;: iitsg.9.,-. . A .iii-,?4,w1+77,,,, --"' 1kr,...""j iii4Tl4-Mißl.:, plieriz. m0 4 0k1** T 0 . .,,-... ,-.., . iiiiii*ena;-' '''-i7,:•'''-:":4*:41i ,--. sgaii-PL4llittaiiiiiidit-z: .. gahk..-,-t'---f liiW&liiip4lilf.f y Oil . .P..ftot-w9iilikrOXl.Pl--,--;togarfi rix ~., itOiMr- 'Z' '''''' ' ,; 604,14" ''' iiL-Tit ~; littil **-1,1 I*"'--*****l"it- ''ilio, wimr- !Tzorii, - L , .. f lvi, 4 lr,ifig*VgTi to i l , iii7 ,-71-A1CA,.... G ralikt - 14001f-Mr i ; ,4 i iii t ; pia t e ,;f'-,-iir..l.-Y.”:;2:ftilrAii4irry, 01%-.Mr,iiiiiiii:.4.lipil. :;'5,3,4.°4174-704.atiAvii:+.0/,llT4,°:'fal "iiellifuitti* F-;--""f',':i.#tol,otiiisait.4o f",,t-i,'-irme:l4l,liiiiol&P9t' : .-- 01e..-rn7k '„villitiyis, .T. , -,-7. , - -- - i f ili tAp ' ; * ::-I:4,3vAte...llifievi#',lg°ll!" ~lii-Aoss* :''/- ;I:f6V-vz-r":":lliiiii6io6lo-'43OFt-#OT, - , ,,,•e_:: 4 :: .; I g tile 4 :4r, --, io -, ii,tideimrt , 'WA!, , , , si;ii, „tailip.",tto:4.#lo4-1, ',- - iii:viokt,? o ,EM Q , 5 ., ... I -- 1, r:•4*. -,ll.ool,liiiiiiiiiik***Ll7ls!,,t,i f*li'!:,rlPll, ?---.,„' '''''-...„,:esir.x-09ARAtitiOVYst, ~.-,k-' -- ~.11u4•09.,-T-"'',.-.:10,*--;;-i-,---,a-ifillitielT41' '_ 11413.„4.,cippA12.-.`v ii,i-iii-il.is kf,Z.:4-.. i dioil,4 114. ' , i ' .1A:VA.,,11iiiiiii!, !" 7 ,7 7 i., r .,-;•. ; ,-„1,0,- Selif4 i :r o iijiiiii: r4 '„C::4,:`.,L„irqk ",, '-.7 - ,',.:'-'1.;.15,':,.:w•a.,,,,ii0rg-tii ,wiTtirtz,l.Lf2 l :444,i , miotn! 7t 6 ' 75 - I v .--- ' I;iifOlrik__Lllll4t-7‘, :-If, Al-4', ~.'-'-k'fittiiTti -- 'imaisiroNß!,,kl_l°l!! ' - • -.--:lmmur--- - -,".. .: : - Widifilk IL. 111 0•:,,* (1 ”, - l ii,„,i , sjp, All ': -; "1' ' 11"Skil""7 ? Ir '' ' 0101 , =46111 , •--- - .ZOll, O. .i ; oxy/EllY '' ' lllLlatiitrai ' AIIPCKPL li t'' '-' ' - "1 si;..R.' D.. & 0 . -__'; ' - '' ' " ''-'' lit '0,10'4 • PFL?'''- 1 trilio, ins,— = - -1 0111°,./Irim'ig.:;.Tiiiiiiii'3.74tetAti-470;& lineor, .,iii'vg._*.# l, -t- iiiiii , 5..iti.6m mnT- ,- ..ti-booat-..r. ,fr :.01itiihniiiitA14;AtAt' ••.% i i , 4 - I+iiisis ir - 4 . ... ~ it iii: C tiPi :.?iGiltitAZ:424:*loo:744jilt b i iiit;Z % file a 4 1 4" 4 , 0.. •-,;ptiiii,.4::4,41 :i f , : joitirs 14110 fl."111:11L ',.;Cili*Ut-In''', i ol i ; ; ',a 40 ; 04.1cPiiNX„ -, i,.._ ::040:0',,,'-'l4t.i - ; - 4, sop! MiliAr'f'.: L . . j-- . 311i t # 1 7:4‘; 9 77 -- ::.. , , : . : : , , t . , , ..-:,,, i ., :, , ; ,, , , , •,,,.., 14 1. ,-,,, : - -"''!"f--''''' i'*4loll.* .Nti : 1°. •"17:=- . .itss rig..:51.&., ; ti,i#41441-11q-ki;tuviiii,' irs**ilL'At.,;ini„;o.6 1 4Pr. iiiiiiiti,- -°f zi:or6l rkr 1,: . 71 1 it ikiwokaiii:oA"? ~,,, di. -w290#1':.-rAdi.,^' - 9f;: - Phi14411304; No Tit - cf*toitp Ofkatllol, Addiesa;'!"&ii:' ' - • '.. • • Thie irtfralrok her ii:ne44o;l4:olllkeli6l,4l taigriiiii,#t tot Aar_ . - •11j , „' from - kortAbatribieit'iiieti the - ijoit'sk May. , 'The' 4 4(`'theAlbili r ibericlat for"the 'l44 , otgaf the' late pink; ribbed ;f:: ft we' thought thiEthilrisidaii*cliiinhrPifaiiiptaity tiiiivAtfegie Wiwi itill at- l'ort-lit.Prlie;fi; vitre yet ftlatatedlaet: • _ Thl ririlVa at' I*, loult OiTiObiaq night, ,with Praaellee=dalee dratioarlinino . Olty, on the 4a irstatiiii4(tesultottill thtll4l 4- feat et tie lainaniothitidii tieleit7, l. at kintr Frontlet - 4 showed antn4iptinail'orviilmvigt No doubt waste or ilia'ilettOtt of Itte , lianibsiaa Governor of 4f,' , Virglnii. /t 'ia ' - oaki that Mr. It. fa '6lll st-promosit. • -„, ~ 2 i ite:eatierti Synod' awn's/orient Prasbj: tattaifthicreltjantin sitting hi-01E016y. =A very fatt_report in one. loanl4i4l4.K's in nials - iithpot bafain.thi Synod '74** ,lll 7:i* 0141/01.1001r,f!the _r aeedon-of anion with lb..t:linited"Priitijte la' Mbuieb , 5.T44/4.01-41(mkii;iiiiidsti#04Gr-Pir the inb he itaiiii*WWk"SkitlitiedL* 4 : l4 7 l 2. danbtint figafral Vapid atstee *** l ori t ti" / 4101 P 0 1 00 ihe 04 4 1 0, o. thir,Piall*** the Jiaitot Ma% laitating , With' tritaivtiiii , , . L'' • anon f t i oded.4°, Aiiito_Liti; tooitonosiatiloorop - " eutbettei*Nit dieteti-40 4 014alies' rewe .4ki, ii'euese bithielt ike , rieuevOlit Ai the Teel thieldottioptittoeititille P'Agoitiiiits : ~,,,' , ', 1. - - Mat the einrenlii*4 die . teryilone hie pow to . Wee , a restelettiee-ItPsetlheherstatit geefifili the liatolo*,1"ii • Atoll °COO, lIIMMY . t - ; °42:lnoktheS wettest • - ett* r eetetetee Ter '' ,th ` e .- preeeatnt'of ihttf;teeopor_stnovq; ~"° 5 . .4 ,-r..."' ° 2° --' , °A.A'iaiipas n aotni Of -tio,prionetiltr, kr00.1441 . heobleilk e.enherod;'Weioi &witty et itio too:: *bat ' bad. hot• of the . itlegei.tketteeeee .the fetes ' which might blieleaeell wPreeeet it. ,- 1 -k -- , 4.lTbottitto troops ought 'of,' to hive boa Nit ‘`,iolvoit*'.iiithon t tiiiillimoorionoi4rna kairettlOT) adi kola thus= aiiihabii voomainhuna r g - t 7 4 ; . : .r •, ',AUL the IdierenerfElt ibeefePteetitiee 004. Moo oft lathe bee :4".4,,. fa 11) !'4 7 ,;5T a r t, ..0 17 ‹ tetletheestP%-- , ~ .:'....,..-t, -.. i • ',.. _ -:. , „_,. ~ 's sAtiekiPeteitsteet*OVAttitti; - 4 1 i ' ,e ' dalo a -.. 4 , :**.44,*10.iiAii*#,p410.17, ii , i4a - the iisfahtkr;,ilob.sei*lduied orAi - ei , ...try; .frli _,,, . itspittx r ifik4,:444,,p; diitiaftii, - *Pa ' tot Sgti , - it _ erjo ihkei.4oo",.A.ol4,'ite4::eetiell'itese!. :lie :eendAtle'fa'Ket Aeitiireue)bef iht icitieSiel dee' t_. ILA :ib ii .ttie eimpotAi 'shall 4441_ outland ii.Sz ' tat _ toliM l4 4, ll ii r) ItOsiii*lglititiletelt *li r eilit:.s.4l,:lki, rough et.*Alrifr:i%ill'elt` + 1 '4 1 1441 ;Kerr i'. eili:li.._teed .1104! #4 4l oPaele- rilletoud',44C4o/Flot V s! ‘' 1.,P.i1.1„i4#...,8,451e thlcieeerecakPeit* 1.,` Pk * V*ll4 - 414iiii - dirwiria44.:d , ....;". ^....„ 0 ; . . 4 7 i i s A... 1404 014.fs -1$ •- , ....1.4-4., - -„q .- - ..- ,-. t: r.,-,41 elf . ,7-1 1 , git;wee It utlee louft 4 _ihreetih es '.' '' ''-. 1 e2:-...&tt1711/lisit'ai•lsetqa:the.-tollitw °. ::--:'-‘ an, WO 'toiXtisota,.: ." limo, piii t ott, de. • ' 2 '' .1 41 1a7 . k44 1 -!tri#,lTAilua' e t Coi: rietioaf; Gotd, . litinisC thi.: ide as; 441 W Turk, fOi Hake,. ; ' bi,fit'flia iniiiOtelitelidt 4 J. o:l;talair - ; (lame: -him); . 114:iiei?' *II - 141A wits':'. eteSi!',44 l : Ailkibir , l-` °. BiPtitifftk. if frjailelrWit* recently oilioin flid4C:lo) ilmiel, - e•Oie 4 "1;',1104: fi,i;:oo.l"ongonfo " itlA(f4.*44;tititi*;4 - ekOniC.4l:/i-SPAcri.. e( /4140K401,..topaSTIiiii Itiiv:Air..C.l4-.' zotak,firalrrferfi-Xon.l- 4 442,67,;:imAid,it• i,' The = ,411014404:04-filho:#*aijnolitlini to , 2', OA itt#4l:o4P?it iraoW . if,mii.!Xtwri' *lO. l lll ~ ,-.' , . - 0. 1 44AlliiThtki•OAC:4ilit44, %Wk,* tbi, 's , - jl*** aiii,iiiiloatt - li , 94,1ie!‘.4aitt*Ild; ea, Imam iin:piiii. - -1:!:.-. , ' "°' -," '' • - taifisisiAy.rekitoiiii4 t ii(' irialusioesting FA, t h e 4, .Ihelult , to - rnOriiilta'plithe A nse fir i t s,OiltitioXigin*iii 4.04)4 tkaiiiiititrii# that 331/4 1 lie iptiii44. l ft:lthi:thsiiiiiirthe iliiiit t.iii:T;„*.imill,"4l4..thicl' ii'*iliit:-.:thal` ilidifikli, • tidir." ) "if4,t`lreitkiiiiiksiktaii# ,, :i3 'Won re:: 1 ioliiiiitylatiod , • 'me ''nTit,isriq.r. - - , -3... • Its k4,44A4iriStaitaii aiiii.46otrisloliaisdri. zoqisVilltgoVilsemi - 4 1 0 , 40tfillivau41.v--and , e . -.Wo92 llo lo l o o6l lo~o l jk i ielt r e ithAT • , . .. 1 44A 10- 4111 -. ffelgli f 1 ilk t ic . ixlk of 'iri d tra% ' Vr lhe P t i g i htt of hums - t ;: u.-well lirstilt4g.thi't Khanna& OM Gana, elitinteettiiledlieellie 044 - 14 .10007i= , ;.,., ;.,-,, '•,;, - -•. Ti*llaiiibtOinvill:..,o*4•Lasilledsk.44.444 -,- Tee sI2 1 i j,i: I 1 ii r - 4 a ti-y ort,tod ar 1 isfti ra'i to gii. - 4/r, X ,*tilt, -..rs meirieioE*7'44o 4 Reletesxik, i1k.4 4 ,9i114 leti*l_. WM* Jiriitiete."' 4'. ; - ,l, ef , ":,; ?I, 4 % IBMiair"*llt StAillnliC*ololl . 4o,jt.4m44, ,4 11110 16 14 Pf f *A 1141 4*" f *lialgOri idtklif• , 41 4 40. 4 01 1 !;P* 1 1 1 0 1 1:1*AiskeiVib“ Sik.;* statiiiiitis A -az-ec.. , ;') ; ',X*`'if V4i ; I r'-1-;, ,:, A.:' = ~.t," :-2. - ;A: _ehaniiiropihnoti-.114e. :,'o4giioo:-'_iiielteA. "at " 4 lielitteit:Vilui 'for e'-iekdraiiietosiititono7 ' ctiAiiiif f wee* : are to bi itintg, no Heinuton SPetii.lidrioneeik*-Pheinikopt-to'nako alloy - - by sailvidetai otteiolf attottitlg,s-- ~„, ,t ' , ` C s'lghlitise r nel'llielleeteelifter * PX 4 . 4 -4 •lififfigikilowsiii.44ll4. - posi i o iixs-Itiot 44 ,- o,4l#o4.lhtiot,f; otossifo.o4 , -..1 - : , •.:- , i)vii...****-01300 6 e,r0,41$64,,Weloniiikas •,*4.4410104. **ltallee'!* the grow i ng 10494 in '.- 6 0 vane..lselhe - -91*seii , z1beffurp_ifirgpitosell i tile Vl* iresoirawliwlty- , IR- ---,..., • the ilithial*et.klatit4, 6 i. P 4 / 1 :Ml . 4 111 4104 ' ; ;l4 'Zl,Viiiiiir• 4* Patent 41.; loi _ . .,iitaY,;_ .; 0 1 94 liohb4rlis illii4q,lfgelA , AF.'', l4 P'4' 4 O`'4'''' '24 s ,:t! Pri,`i - " , ,,111**. * - 4 ', '4 1 101 4.0 1. 0 11 4 - for Wow , - ,' ‘• ~ ' **4 4614 '.: ..V." - i- t ..! 1,1 . - -- iitl4 is' Att t - s t 4: 0 11 , 0 ffievesteet 'le r ~ ..r_, . . -, • ,19. , ,, , L + , ,, , -,t 4;g. ' WE:9 tBs9ais - IVt'S . . 1. t ''` ' Oar `Jobbing !pude. 01 Now that'the jobbing tride may be:eikid to li, Mitered upon its ersid-flitial rellt4P. l l,? ~w 4 hive taken s me pains` to eatertedn the c4nPenkrire character oofhe seekon'etrade 'kik closed; and the prkspeettof.. the ftttetre; Vi'lion the whole, the • siring operettas Of Our r . g i bbing merchants have r been e our traitlyarztele ' I terhetritrlititiir7dionOe less , than their usual nent,SefiteSeAn4tlke :meat, yrosperounsea sips, and any ; of the Mitre prominent firms might 'tame hey/slay exceeded their eve ' Flit ligerii-,, Vita increase has been rendered all the snore b y, teOt ` e t Its her liik4Rro! tR,,1i.i1=4.4:1.)ty; in consequence of bnlPcms4rifotAttoo to 46eouimodge it. ,tu Aptary.,nreiliotoa',.!.h sentiments or ,ma n y stonnellteirdeitMerchania in the Tart. ona.brenottes et.the'' d.bing:trado; by advo ftwate- ?Op*. gqinig pp 'awoke early in ,e;.artesoPl, A. 31 .4%47'01;er of our i l / 08 t ern" . 4 4 . 1 4 . 0 1 i illet i :s PWR I , l Pen'the enneetten; ink itt the seinelhai'showt, roved their wislita `'hi delOgto.`.oo: l2 eYe „reliable authority for etethigthet 31inneande of. dollars were loft in : the hands the - .obieis,6ePhiladelphia;`de - ring l tba,early part of `Febrnary, hy merchant.. .ttorn Au; 4f144 : anti *butheett. who had ' irkierl9,-,,iren ncertfitOMeeto pass through to Mier Iner,ketklnet -NM Preferenne, bet be ' ' =Col, pe s tonipirtlyb, toreluess of our merchants ,hi getting -' ,nie stocks " of gieods be :oil- to • , 1,40 t Oct wans of the early triule. ' ,s„ this net:, Miele ' to' Bah -et. course, 1 at " this P timitneiwis bad : been univereal; ° kli?!Fle'reret ffeePtione on Market s re t, , spore jv i.,ooi, lneyitii a stottleaa f r et ,that those ,vpry vfoeßtioasr are In most, vane ' the houses which, by their enterprise,' have ion for. • themselves a Vanier. 10 ' tile' front in*, or Sler,,Mercehtile. firms. And new vsk,ilas PoltiTSl met ,with ' mere general adePtten.,,e, iin i ktO un OW* 3 O OlOll at theti tiVO4-011.11nk-,4-4fibtitiesPepelLonr meg. sheikh. vat, y toad hport_this principle, ..i f4 M ln fi., , F eed Y tor ' tie" as early as trade is jeU rite ettliq?Enitho .thiiiiiiket ; it May. That ' elrierlerlielliiieti fail rapid travel; end the ' 11.1, irFit tAi N ivrailigi Of' goods, Seared hens by our modern rallioalt - connections with op Parts of the llnion;' hivetilu morably °brie tnd die ieceielti of trade commencing as early In season as When it took a Tennes• test' three maths tio come to Philadelphia, buy bin geode, and place them on his'shelves it , hoineile toe esiottgh; but the ringer, of late Years; hits been - ,`pf endeavoring to force thing! intelin appetite extreme, 31 i : IMOrd , hoWever, 'as •te the future. The linstaes marts, on our leading wholesale and iPbldrlg avelieee Preseiit $ comparatively quiet appearace. hat triir merchants eye rev from holailithetlYeZ' fre4ersinceplitiadelphia won laty Weiiilier,ijohl;ing ' Interests mere jest 'wily gared:totibt Men of• braille and_eaplttil ll.,.#6',Ortrient'.'nic44ent:, "le important pottier.: Iv ch 'tiui 'mere - hint holds to the oom , Iket , , ge, hi b ginniug to be tinder s-AO', and` ifia, - ,p , etfi , olifrerednoeil which have torklagexisted between 'rival • interests, on ttoi Ole 'jretitiC that the: prosperity ` of one 141iit'bikdatfisiimitil tei'another, we are glad te she le ;1144 way waito More'enlightened policy. 'liiikierahant;the imuifiettiroy, end the agi , ricodtkirlik,.'are ni mutually necessary to the ri i t e *Y: if • 64 = 1 ; o th er, aid henee to' ho ii...tiOnCithein allow the constituent colors af'a iniatiatu are'necessary to tbe production Of light: 'The most fatal hirdnuice to the true irtiaPerltS? 'or fi' ulerceitik. metropolis is the spirit of exohisivetem among them represent 'Wits industrliklinieresta. and we are happy in `tpetiolteklizat hill spirit among 'es is rapidly traiiiii.-The)l l / 4 mearinee of those aboml nada fly'stablen-=`-the Market sheds-'-will give a twenty years' Impede.. 'to that Magnificeat Witness *venni., atiiiingle sweep: - This Won derfni metropolitan improvement should slow forbene decreitheir deinblittim before - the fall tOde'OPenii-.4111, It;itself, add a bead and alders to"the mercantile reputation of Phi- Ifelptileti`"Air regirdss the preparations. 'for wion.lig Befallen in progress amorgaliClONßOS our jobbing merchants, we may confidently say that they will far surpass those of any ,for mar season: , " In trieiti' of Ceti, an unusually #igo number of firma will be represented by 'Aker eastftnent'merabein'or depleted at '4nr grOavini IPl'44lri4ool44i4lo4iiieArliii, means ter the. transportation goods,coirstwiie - (by land icarlaellities now exalt those of any other: Oily in** trolim), einnisetlalito secure to trade;lviirtify of the• characteristic honer andlntegritYelher Merchants, and her unrivalled iteeitiOn as ii distributing mariet. • 3illegheny -County Coming Right. ik., ; :.contrectlwitiCa county does not differ from one *liven , individual. The right of the authorities to bind 'posterityis' not dia iiimliai4Cthe ilght of, an indlyldnallo bhid his heirs VerY.:Cievernnient or intileipal, rein liapoeini a burden upon. - posterity, mato dispute Ao:ohligationi , POC,LlDO, the action of the esisting,nowerswes. hasty,;or innMelon*, would enstrelY destroy public cou rbuSses ;an& ersdit; Mid !, prevent the negotia efltithire, Wino: liveri - insurping Govern- Mint iieWer:itisini :thole who "submit to it .Other - personaand _fir Jute , , „ _ , • apth.M:of -a portion of the people elf4llogieny, °Malty; tending to repudiation, exer,olle a disastrous influence - upon knao sican;- credit.' In a Word, it•will drive foreign , capital Irons shores. - ' ' oThe 'betide of4.lligheni-tortity were once 'ltteVorit#loestniatiti ,,4 -No - one-ever` dreauied fikilqerYaintianti would be repudiated., This tint( rind prespir:OiMftionntY;',in whose, midst Steed* great ,Mitrepolis of Abe West, was )40444 to .=be strong In,leith. and honesty. prosincerely:hope that thin trust has not been Phstled,md approving welcome,' )the protest of the, citizens against the ruinous ' dentorelishig - -pelley :;of repudiation that Las prevailed In that vicinity. £ mloys of the wealthiest most esteemed and'tai-payers of li!itialiatrg;'Allegheriic,ind the 4014 y,• against, Thiatioa„-apPeeic the:Plttshurg papers. disaimr silliest proceedings in favor of ?iptullation, , ' ,'and express great anxiety to *titmice - their' disastrous littlatince.. Moat Kiln, great 4 , 6,,e,an.d'intitiitfactOng dims have isign'eitthe naPer,Whielihs Very Well 'drawn up. Otar , NewHotel. 1 "The meeting of the stoakholdern of the new iliateleioinpanYi'hild Ml,' Tuesday last, was so twill attended; and the spirit exhibited was' so entiiiiosetio:suid united, that Iva look lorWard • tO;the, inauguration of great establishment !an Ale beginning Of e new ma in Philadelible, lie Understand that the hotel will be finished 'end oacupied - by: the first of February next, Isaufthat the stores are nearly all rented to first plias Inudnemi lee; We hope that- nothing , hii;leitUtidonkto Mike this-hotel the finest and we confidently idok to such 4440 , as:,..catnn ,Cora, tici . SVPIE Esnixisinr, 0,1444.5 s 14e4rieren,,flextinr. Maiteien, )Ltzurrox, snit i)Mturis - Itiniar,:lormot, to see that , nothing is doge intworthylof :the grandeur of the pro iict2antitite 'character: of the .great city in whichltieylocated. le-net I our province -to iuggeet ` a name titr, this 'Wei hetet ; but we think our erenreinitirning he gratified, and iii*i . gigile ( o 7, fp Y r on€ 4 ed reni4sYlvanis 'etat*44 ana,albeloved citize n of .1411;001 1 phim dulyduly>commemorated,_if, tpe,committee shankllgree tii!esii,it>.tbe Mittman Rouse, 'thisteriniess thidfavorite Philadel7 :Pillienteritlie ,tCheattributed-te the MM. iliWiiiikhiohl*worli b'e'en pressed lorl• iFirii;!:,.44 , , , ,tweribleilitions -raised by the hair tj§,i,,,).64:4**Pi 4 , 1 40P *610 , 114 in Ids priWit•:torkrow. and liillituatte4 public - 'serattiari4idllla - fsivot - • h~i 'estio.s t , re t Depot. .I(:iistirS4lii***ii,4ifioatkPf 110.PT**01C'tinii6,4k, seltictien'ef Aiiii4k , toli*Delaware'ffirerclo'bii reached by 11, 0 *,* thik'earo otr,;the renitsylitinia Rait- Cslicribillitreetv project, ortgina tid- 10:-Iloatirilituvii() much to 'commend lotaVei keit tiditet; it our citizens gene iiif4d!*etitil'iiliOjt, the "ibeling in its yit 6 e, l ii***;ol442plierStil." 'While; it is 03,4 41 - 4 4;#1, - OrOil‘`.inice*fi:tOr_ei,eite - eaten. 'bit*Ot,:avintctfli ofeeaiogifieroji,-g. wlmjiptralidituist*ed to ctbo.ifreitzettiosorthe commercial Interest!' of our city the convenience of the ratirok corn or our , etreets - in ,*11444 come the annoyance 'tad dan. 'lleiof having loOnbetives run over them. The Revolutions in Lombardy and Venice in 1/11413. Since the Austrians have failed to reap any edyantagee' from their , t precipitaid iroriallen of the dominions' of Sar idini ,a aril the Crinich troops have advanced in himienie numbers tri - the aid`; of 'VICTOR susleaL, it is Probable that the ‘Lembardo- Venetian provinces will soon becOme' the seat of war, and the sentiments of thelf-inhabi tants towards Austria will therefore prove an important eleinent in tbe contest: Of their bit ter hostility to their oppressors there can be riodotibt: , In-1847,-a striking _manifestation of their enmity to Austria was giVen. trustful of their ability td complete a anonym.= ,fu armed 7 'revidnticin, :they imitated - the conduct the -American "colonists in their, first struggles with_Great HriMin in regard to the duty on tea. ._TnetTmperial devernment derives a large revenue frod its monopoly of the pale of tobacco, snuff, and lottery tickets, and all aliases ;Moiety resolved to 'abstain tient the. purchase 'of, these _articles, for the piarpihM of %diminishing, in. this, manner, the revenues of their oppressors. When persons were occasionally Been smoking cigarain the 'street!, of weie hooted by the poPulttee,, ,Grinduelly Anariela arose' between the insolent soldier.* and "the Milanbie. The officers, hy: various arts,' sitigbOto produce' a collision ,boteteen them. "On the evening of the; Bd'eflanuitry,4B4B, the soldiers attacked ; 11,1;whom they found the streets,t and sixty ozw fillr'iietims Were Carried to the hoo - inore'or tesp peyerely wounded: . Simi lar nainrieneee took ydiee et_yerl* points— "the Peoplap,ersleting inpopular atterapts to entl fsia tiwonint upon the Austrian* revenue, the soldiers eetentitiOnsly, smoking cigars Where ever they Wen, seeking as' Many quarrels: as possible, end brillying and tliis f ariltingthepeeple ea trifling pretexts:Thus an Spiry , Otte of feel ing wail eontienell i ykept tip; but no effective demonetintiort was made nail neve of the re volutkorin Mauna reached he City' br Then a :terrible popflict °centred. The' people demanded the release Oleg poliileal priponers„ and the forniation of a Diatippel Guard, They seized the palaCe, summosigg the inhabitants of the sMronnfling conntryU ', their assistance', w. after `losing a few hundred men, cora peliedAsMaregy,:theAustrian general, to re treat, but be,,Wee natertnnately permitted to mammy, the "strong fortresses of identna Veroll4,, T.beelluireef Milan was foilowed by, nearly, c t ell , the her Pftieo "_of 10 :9barlY, And by Velalearlftiab airata ‘ 40 @r#rOf Republic. dualtme ALBERT, theiil-: tug of Sardinia, marched to the assistance of the 14- eurgents, crossing the frOntier on the very dey Aliet iIADTBRI began his retreat; but in his military ;pavements, as well_ as in the, Policy Of the Revolutionary 'preyptlepal Go yerpment of Milan, little wiadoni, was dis T pigyed, and ge/dep opportunities for strength eilleg the rebpllioU Were /Medlessly sacrificed. 114 - Pioora of. ,the. 4rientte,itatrod pf the people of fonstbar,dy, against Austria weep given, but unfortunately ; their, energies were not skilfully directed. After Capps's Ammar Packed. Milan, RADETBHK hastened to, shut himself lip simply in _Verona. CHARLES -tramcar, bee/Over, PPM victories. He forced the Austrian .fines on the -Witch? ? in three.placesi between Mantua and Verons, but was unable to prevent NUGENT from re tilltbretßS- RAHETBICr with ,fifteen , thou sand men. . Me-,(Pnaa'nns Ammar) also laid 'siege •to • rosolifFa, 0.11 sitar _two da y s fighting,- captured it and established lutad iinarters there. He then pushed hig,eonineetp still north along the banks of the. Lego fiigatda,.andtook•Rlvoli,after a sanguinary battle. • 13u1 .4ADETMOr made an tinexpected sortie at this.ifine from Verona, and' appeared before-Vicenza with, 80,006 men. lie speedily captured that place, and returned to defend ilrerona. , -After Omannss AMAZE bad for soma time maintained a fruitless siege of Mantua, and Ale de warrens other movements,' a desperate and decisive bettle was fought be tween the Austrians and the Pleriment•ir at Somme Oompagna,-In whicb_the former gain ed • a complete victory. - OUARLIttI ALNERT then began his relint, and after entering into capitulation with Renarsny, returned to his own dominions.- The .Austrietke re-entered Milun,:signsli> ins theirreturU to power Or 11.414 aty_,'„They drove twe-thirds of the udvande of; their entrance, that ail the 171011 between the - agea'ofeighteeu, pnd forty years Of age who should be found in it would be ire- Mediately enrolled in the Croat 'regiment, and sentamesi the,monntains. A. terrible confla gration °warned, at the time, and many man._ sions,the ordnence.o4,thilsbment, and a mill. tarihespital wore consumed by the, flames. The Anetrians set Abe convicts of Ports Nueva e liberty, to join heir soldiersth plundering the deperted heuses, the, churches, , wail the us tiertai museum, A forced - contribution was • laid. upon the woilthy men of the city. and 000,000 extorted from them. The Milanese ,and the peopie, of the surrounding country, who cordially sympathiaed with,there, Cannot yet have forgotten iheseoodurrenaes. And when the Franco , Sardinian armies appear, among them, , wo shall, not bo astonished if they are bailed with inuch enthusiasm. ! ,In Venice, in 28413;the revolt iinmedintaik followed the, news 'et , the revolution tut, and the Austrian troops having been quick. iy withdrawn, the Republic of St. Mark wee unanimously declared; but, In. defeience to' 'w ll 4 OPPeFe4,to be the general sentiment in Tavor of a united kingdom of Northern Italy, the, llevernment was surrendered tO a Sar dinian commissary, and Citszau,s Araaaa` lent the city a !IMO sum of money and a garriabn - of. 2,000 men. After the defeat .of the Sar- - dinian army, thaTenetiannyetrunted their in dependent Government, Juider, 'ltarrn;r, and •for a time maintained their peel:ion with great resolution. Their capitalists 'freely goutribu= ted immense sums to , maintain their indep pendence, their soldiers displayed great brave ry, and the citizens, cheerfully submitted to many sad .bardabips. , Their gallantry excited 'universal admiration, but eventually they were forced ,to submit to an unconditional snrren. der. It is • probable that they will eagerly 'embrace any opportunity the present war may offer them to destroy the hated dominion of Austria. , , ;117"41 . r. W/orrcion retires from the post Oftiee to day, giving way to his successor, Mr; linoltin, - who askimeuthe position' this merning.'. The French Performers It gives us great gratifioation to state that the Frenoh dramatio' company, which lately gave so muck satisfaction to seleot and crowded houses, at Walnut Itret,,ThWatre, will :again perform, on three evenings, in the same plade—vie': on 'Thurs day, Priday, and Saturday, of :now leek. Those tornieisebseribas Whet desire to retain their for. Mei inaj ,- evince iherit by attending at the beteetdoe orthif Theatre,: to;morrow.- New end attractive dramas Will be prednoed. • .(40*(0114911 1 11 IfLptt BIATUISE.—On rfatur day, aftho AOademy Of . fdashf, gr: Hood will sratlfy any number of yoting tipple (and their `,4ititifat im - riebto;") by giving hfi Floral Festival, with' 250 children as performers, as at Matinee. He bas put the pride as low as 25 cents to all parts the Academy of Mule. The- steamboat John- 8, D,aroy, log on the ferry hstwoett„New York and darsey City, took the, nldlo in, the slip of the latter plate, at about 3 - e!elOok, iyeitterday' morning; and was burned to nearly:the, water's edge. The denies comma& natal° the new depot building of the Now Jersey Railroad,'but through the aotivi 'exertions_ of the Are dePartment and the : employees of, the company the tire was extinguished so speedily that it is be t-lei/440st the damageto the edifice will not ex- Aced atheusand or fifteen hundred dollars. 4111216A1t OYCLOPrEDIA..--The sixth volume Af this useful,' comprehensive, and well•edited work, is promised for the 19th June. Not ,a copy ia Bold, except to subscribers.; Yet 500 copies will reach Philadelphia, that, being the number of sub• scribers la this oity, who are supplied by Air. John bieflarlan, Made lintel. Ws *ould 'invite the portion'sr attention of .pureh seers to the administrator's sale of thirty. four barrels superior old Bourbon whiskey,, brandies, irtees, ae,, to be obi this morniug, at 10 o'alook, stAtrokoktoreAo. 80 Market street, by iierrellelc auotioniere. • ' • - PouinteronY'lltata or RAIL Baretc..j. Guraraey tt &Ms' catalogue of.cale at the Phila delphia Exchange, thie,evecing ) includes a nuw -ber of very desirable propertlea; also, a. large Cumber of , securities,. to -be AV pore ,without cowry° or limitotion The attention' 6f the public Is retipeolfaily havltid: - ' ' THOmeg dc' Boss' ilimas:--Eltooks and real estate, Tuesday, 7th Janis; at the Exchange'. 'Perefalitory' Cale of 'a Germiinto*n residence, on ;Wednesday, Bth June; .on' the `premises. Fine 'oil paintings Ao-eiorre!, at the auction now.' Sea adverthiemeste, auction heed, THE - PftES—rottitADELPHIA, THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 1850. BY MIDNIGHT MAIL. Letter Occasional.” (Correspondence or The Neap.] W . S.t.sanrcrrotr, Jane 1, 1859. The Virginia eleetkin has operated, as I eipeoted it would, rather 'unpleasantly upon the Presiden tial-nerves., It has °pinioned a public declara tion, in the newspapers here, which has been tele graphed all over the Union, "that Mr:Buchanan will, in no event, be a candidate for re-eleotion.” The ballot-box in the " 91a Dominion" has disen chanted the President, espeolally,in regard to his favorite idea, that, however he might lose in the North and Nortbweet, be was aura of a united rapport in the t outh. , The dodge of denying that' he is a candidate is net a , neie one with oar Presi dent. He tried it sueoessfully in 1856, Await ing untlEthe crown was. tendered to him more than ones before he reached out to clutch' it. , Indeed, it is astonishing bow many people de cline being candidatei for President, considering, how,many mere people desire the glittering prize.; Whether they think to turn obydy from the offer Is the way to obtain it, or whether they deceive themselves with the thought that the people can not read • their 'motives, it IS unnecessary to in quire. Mr. Buchanan - looks hopefully upon the divisions of the Demooratio party. He sees aspi rant arrayed ,against aspirant in the South ;_het Sees Senator Slidell intagonlied by ex• Senator Soule, in Louisiana; Sefferson'Davii antagonistirg Senator Brown , in Mississippi; Hunter antsge niytng Ifise in Virginia ; ithett antagonizing Orr in South Carolina; and even while 'detaining 'Abe nomination for the Freridpimy, he dpeg not keel , tate to calculate the shame - as, and to enitisn'te hope that he may be presented as an olive brawls of pantie and victory in -1850.'' lie has sought this high position too long to Stirrender it after a four -years lease. Those of us Wit'd . I .nyve .400. wale Mr. gcdanart know how to utterly ignore everything likeTrwiting In the ;twit': of Presi dential candidates, especially when they say they are not aspirants. Rely upon. it he will use all his lnOerthe and power to genre delegates to the phigleeton Convention ; and, if bonen do,.nothing else, he can at least retire from the - presidency; having done more to defeat the Denioeiatle party tban any other men who has ever lived. e haye Toed several visitefrom Mi. Beach, opp the arm of Tyler, Stone, l bCo ,of 'your city, Tithe. has teen qloseted with the chief elqk of the yav4! Departyient, • and an old stager here, (one who profane§ to know the ropee,) assures .145 tidal, not 'withstanding Congress abolished the Goal agencies at &last session, and notwithstanding Dr. Hui! ter; of Berke 'eourty, in your State, was thereby 'wiped out of official ittlatence, edit Mr: Beach, of the firm referred to, continues to act as the tooter 'or - agent for supplying coal for the naval marine in Other words, that the favoritism in reference to the distribution of coal ti) dur nary is mainteifi.ed in another shape. , .11 you will refer to Page 7Y of Renee poonment Ito. 1Z ; #, under the head 'of emit agog, yen Mil app . 'enat ffr. peach, k his teniamoy, stetss Uralhis Metber wap the sister of. Mre. Teeny, tke accomplished 'lady of tirtn'Beare ; tan, of the Navy. The departhaent hat artier:. tised for proposals for furnishing '12,000 tons of coal, and r trust that no undue advantage ;be ti.',,,teß of honest • bidders because of the mysterious eonferencee bptwpcn Mr. 'Welsh (the chief clerk oS iti'e navy Deiartnienti and _Mr, Veaoh, the nephew of OM/WV:tail of the Wavy: Mr. linchanen, notwithstanding the disalosnrei made ky tie Inyestlgating OoMniittee of tie lest House of Eepresentailves, ip roferonoeto the Nay Department, entitling. to uphold Secretary If °now as the Aristides of ibis AdniinistratiOn—the pink of purity and of integrity. Now nobody in this re gion pretends to doubt that Mr. Welsh, the 'thief plpris, is almost de facto, the Secretary of the Navy. Tide onse p' Tr friend Stamm, purser in the navy, for long years one of the met affinitive, and irresistible Detnooratto editors in, the _Union, and today in the very prime ,of health and intellect, shows that the Meeretary is , certainly surrounded with some peculiar inpenape. Mr. Stamm was supported by many influential friends, in and out of the navy, for the position of Nurpan of Pipyielone end Cloth? ing, ' now presided over by Mr. Bridge, of New England. The President was really anxious provide for Mr. Stamm, and, I_ have no doubt,' promiecd, the office in that direction. Various ebetaeles were interposed, however; &it one Competitor and then wither were presented, until finally, when hope deferred liad aimed made the ' heirt eiok, the President informed, Mr. Shiai; that he could not displace Mr. Bridge without giving grave offenoo to' Mr. Secretary Timoey. I forbear making an allusion to the competition for 'the Davey of Drage and Medicines, of Which Dr: Wm. Wheelmi is the boad, in the same department, This, cilia Is only another iiitriltie * ll the the tary either controls . the President ; on tho , pnir hand, or else that the Chief Clerk controls the Secretary on the other. • , Tide mn l inatam!enta of Horace Greeley, de. ~. • _ , lafilBth of <agitation of vier-that the Eeptailtosti:Parkr. hyt yet, made., Mr. Greeley takes ground evilest - Popular Sovereignty in all ,its ;Isom, and faith' beak upon the Realm:dein of the Reptiblloop platforin of- 180.0. He takes the ground tha t Congress must prohibit 'gayety In the Territories, ; jest as the extreme South takes the ground that Congress Must protect it in the Territories. Thief is, indeed, a' rare similarity betireen Mr. One. ley', argument in support of his tweed In this re-, smeot, and tbA stripment of those who clamor for; Congreseimral proteoUon for fire ipetitption of slavery in the Territorleit.. 4e pop will. or M i lne; notice this swab, j bare if to /PO ' 1 ‘449 134 farther comment, save to add that, tiilpy opinion, no party can succeed in 1810—whether Northern: 'or Southern—that prooeeds upon the despotic doe- 1 , trine that the people of the Territories are to be deprived of all °mitre! over their domestic hag-, Wham. The war between the Merits *A/ gifts, in New York, having been renewed with Olt I.tsi4tehOlt7j 1 you may look out for some singular developments, The Hard division, which is unqiestionably anti! 4,dministratkin, is led on by Me. 'Birdsall, Cl'` naval offieer in the otty of New York, and by hit father-ixtrlaw, kfoyernor Diokineon, of Bluets* ton, Fernando Wood, judge Dear/Key, liir.'Croit well, and others. Nor have tits pkWpro bore the slightest confidence in the leaders of the Mott vision. It is said that when John Van Buren, who maybe called one of the 'lenders of this in terest, consulted his father as to the proper course to take in Merano to - Mr. Buthansin; the. old emperor eel& to the young 'PUPS' "Yre can do nothing olio but Support Mr. Euehanan John, let me tell you that if he should be elected, his Administration will prove to be the greatest of Mural" . ft is not doubted that Dean Itiotimend,inotivir of these Soft leaders, has began to realize in fn.)i forms the fulfilment of the prediction of the sly and poliehed Reynard, of kfinderhooli. -The ed . tors of the Atlas and Argus at *Many, both shrewd and farseeing politicians, are beginnigje to claw eff, with real New York skill, from the Administration, and it is beyond question that MI. Amasa J. Parker,-who ran for Governor as the Democratio candidate in the last election, and belongs to the same school, has an unadjusted grief with Mr. Ilealtanan with reforme to te appointment of minister to Bngland,".whioli e i will be certain , sooner or later, to Wag forwa 4 for settlement. ,Meanwhile, between the t f wings Mande that cool , self-poised , and grade I gentleman, Horatio Seymour, who - pays, with n eye on each, '' a plagUe oat both your houses," a 4 who, unlike the dying Mercado, has resolved 7 t• to trust himself as the representative of alai r, but when they shall be handsomely united; twit were, upon bun for President in IEIOO, to soar lute that high" aloe, to _labia, with an ambition I honor in him, he so modestly aspires. . . It hi now stated , that Mr. Buchanan Is mieis.. sively indignant at the idea . thrown out in its Correspondence, that he intended to invite Him John Appleton, Asslatent &watery of State,do reside with film In the people's palace—uhleMst the White House. He hem rota:died to live OM, reserving hie "chief hospitalitioa for Mr. and 41. Bennett when they next visit the Federal lupin). Judge Douglas has had quite a pleasant tier through the Southern States to his plantation en the Mississippi river. It is astonishing how, afar all, social intercourse breaks down politicalwe judiaes. I sun told that even the fi re-eatere grid- ed the Senator with distinotion- They could ot forget how pliantly he had fought the bitttl of the South in past years ; and atter;all, they honed himfor his pluck and pereeveranee,ev,en while l ey felt that, for the time being, he was opposeto their unjust assumptions. A gentleman who #a veiled with him part of the way, now in this sty, assures me that wherever he appeared he we greeted with the utmost enthusiasm. The new leaders of the Administration part in Philadelphia have resolved to make clean wor j of it. Having_ succeeded in compelling Mr., 0....„ ....„ to remove Mr. Wes ! .thff; o they are Ow turning theirattention to other, gentlemen he ing high places, and especially to those who hav ad the fortune or misfortune to be enrolled ang his personal and political- Wads during a the years of their active 'Politioat lives. Have ea ever, thought, by the way, that it is a Hal dd that you, who acted tie the Chairman of th /I . meeratio State Central Committee, and Mr. , st oat, who officiated with so ranch skill and Orgy as secretary of that body, and that many Ole leading members of the same 'committee ; slield now be arrayed' in honest hostility to the xis mitons polloy.of the very Administration wish they assisted Motivate to power ? lint as t 10 a teat fast sermon, I stop, lest you might thi 'I intended to preach it, and so, ono more, sign y, self Occasion,- PRINCE! IMPBRIAL CEMIPACWIII.—VIe pe iv. that Reeves & Deal, 204 Market street, a the sole agents, in this eity, for this wine, whiu tlie best judges dealers to be equal, at least, t . the beet Heidelek—whes good Reldslak, now ao a roe, was t 4 be found " at rich men's tables." is a brand which has laddered great popular in Europe, and, holden being the genuine, j aof the grape, is pat at a faiipriee. I t, • ~Letter from New York. THE HAND ,, SIIALL CONVENTION: TALK THHIMO.T :- PRO . JHOTS FOR agARI,VEI TOM-140141M g ADJUST. MINT OF RAII,HOAD DIF rIeuLTIHS --VAHAN ARM' TAL'oOO:FOBEIGte 5T2414E1119 IN ‘IIA - -7THOM, TWENN ' FLORA TEMPI,* - AILDN— LINDTIONANT MINIMAL SCOTT WITH,. AGAINST ;1,011.0-ICAPOLSON — IIIIENAN GOES TO , A FASHION. , ABLIV*ATHRING . PLAOS NIB AFFIANCED FAVORS A. *may; , - Looreeretoodeeoe of The Prem.' • - Nsw YosK, Julie /.1859, The politicians are all agog at the nation of the re - p-esei Ulises of the Hard-shell Democracy ga.hered together. yesterday at tho Astor House, from ell pertain= of the Slate. Ores two hundred gentle st:ten- ', - retparide 4 to the circular that' hAd been ad diedud them by Mr. Btrdesll. .The gathering pirSOS ',lllo[l2itiltilg:: -is not called merely for the purpose of .brassWdola, or Of interchanging sentiments. It is :meant to demand Gem the SIMS, who hare the name rissdr:rwav of the State,- a fair portion of the deltas. ten to Charleston; or else's, bolt, and. an, independent - delegailW'ohesien _by- dietriote, for which there 11 preeiedent,:_and whioli t the Horde gleim t is the only ':,tifik-tO arrive at .4 fair ispreostoct of the; ' llemearAtta party.' It IS proper to state tlust at the pte,.' liminarymeetirg. held at the Astor House on the 10th of May, - ssrorel of the most influential' of the Hard nanageri were Islamist, or dieeented from the pro. 'grammemarked out by others. • Henry W Rogers and . WlWim,Williams, of Buffalo, Attorney-General 'be- Pletere, Pelee De Wolf; of Oswego, Rufus Peolthatni United States -Attorney ffpeocer, aitd alfreral obis' Oiling nun of theintericir, dlionntenanced any hollow prOceedingi; or anything that foreshadowed di rision at Charleston or defeat in 1860. Judge lironion was pre `Sent, fkivi • after hearing i ,statement of the ostsnsible - obi** Of the meeting, remarked, . 4 If the °bigot is to emote a division in the Democratic party, or to seam niselire eihrtence of one, I 111131 opposed to it,"" He , tirtsti resolution couched in the Spirit of bit declare.- sten; im,4coPer! itlierejeated, retired. , ' • Veigommittpe tkppojokid thtit4e ntt71!.14a7 R ieeptii to Nisei file fftiltSObpqrnitten, in order to prodi4 unity of SSetldis,, and to Insist that tho - electian O delegates tq Inkorteston ellen be made subsequent to ti p Next Mitt subatintially iikat they had been unable obtain anyUsq7....l7 ' , ! .2ll "T e . r°r • the int"' CUB of the State Committee. The meetiegt. ' "n"," 2. utter eonelderahle diFcgeelonipaned p. esolteuon reite. ratlug t h eir noon the htite Committee, eng pro- Maid for the an of another Clotirantiou.' Practically, rno'reentt was mated at beyond streegthening the Herd orstettestlinent reviving them for the action which they have, tuidonitedly marked out for themeelvei From ppeeeni tearoom' it needs no far ateltted propt4 tepredlet that big* York will go pr Oberlesfrit, as oho -went to Cincinnati' and Baitimore, with double dale wham, and;titiethe admissionof one or theotheiwill meet kat ao pitch upon wiiaethei lone done at houvis hlWithat ttop agree to do in !hit CRnyeption. Thi Inger' agreeable indigent gonneatet srlt;# the, WOriting trertegiret eg' iti ohm, When gel. dietson in vited tiow,editorial part of the Convention, and a rew othere i le itNipper room, where 'certain agreeable edi bles and potables Wiireanbmitted to conelteration,•and were discussed with ',a vigor ' eacTeed indloatlve of riltunpreent, reialte—eo they all aeld — ei from the banoner. • • , ' The managari of the Nrle Road, tinier a Dreamy. *high they find It dlillonikto neat, have at lengtiiiii- Pteased Willingnesdio pin the NeW lark Central in spume' 4tvanca of freights. The New YorkTentral Sindßeinsylvanla Ventral are underatood to have at rive4 at i aatisraoto t understanding Ltatireek, and this lief &esti:dime lad he frla modfty the course it was emionnotie St h detormiaed ie'paraue. , Daring the month of ..114;'inet elf:feed; time arrived at the ports of New York. Boston, and Quebec', twenty • twd ateamere from Rutopl—an average of nearly one per day. The antral of the little steamer girlue, from Cork, twenty. one years ago, exalted the wonder of the rorl4 Now four or five 00tiliDeover in a Week is re- - bides go bile of She perprppeat tetairrenoes of the The peat trot yeatapiay between IfieraTempie and Ethan Allen attraetel an immense crowd to the Fashion florae gii,ool) gato.nymey was reeelyell. flot4 won, like first heat kefog done in dd, Wide? , le atidltt to 1: 4 the fastest lima ever made tis wegonp. Lieutenant keneral fiaott hes wagered Ore Finalised bottles of 'oharepague that Louts ilayeeon will never returat to Paris, There are gentlemen woo are ready to double the bet agetuet --Heenan, the Boy of , Beniols, leaves town this week for the springs et Avon, litvingstori eautity, where he will spend tile einsiipr Itt - getting bitneelf up for the grand sicrianciage with To Sayerii. Etlerephoted that his seimmet U not only willing,. but ansiotui flat he ihenhi enter the ring egainet the champion of England. TOE' I,44,TEST NEWS BY TELPG•TWII• . , _ Later Foreign News at hand. THE STEAM! ANSRIOA AT 'HALWAX. - ICALI v./a, June' 1-480 P. M —The steamship Ame. rim, from Liverpool on the 2let instant, bat Jot been signalled. below. Her news will be immedwely de-. 4sed a . ckyille, N. 8., at which plume the express wile Am to plorrcrwlnorning. It teal rtgliVilx4t ptseter Areerigt baler below, this time. From Washington. OPINiON OP THE ATTORNEY, OENBRAy. ON THIS RE GIFT EVENTS IN MAUL , ' Waintworow. Janet, —attorney General Black, tor• dePthpintifrnottou of the President. has repliedto the j Ant letter l the )3tsh -judges on the subjs.:4 of the military forte with whfedd the Oqurt • fgt. the Second District was attended. daring the term recently held at prove atty. ' Be nye it le very probable that the i s Mormons have been guilt of allude for.arkloh they de ai,.... XI 'that it ie not intended ~ , ItyrovarZZVAlL instructed .17ttalvitperwhis Ike d Ogler.* in §lidtilif tip litimituale of everrelass and of all degrees to mar, The usual an e a ablialted litodot at 4 041° I'ffi t # public offenders Taus be exhausted before *ay others are adopted: Oa the whole, the Prealdeat Leery' de cidedly of the opinion, find, that the Governor of the Territory alone has power to Issue a requisition upon the oommandlog general for the wbolo or a part of the army; seem& that there wie no apparent occasion for the metopes of the troops at 'Prove( third, that if a moue of the prisoners in custody bad been attempted, it we. the duty of the marabal, and not of the judge, to summon the forte "bleb might be necessary to prevent .it ; fourth, that the troupe ought not to have been sent .to Provo without the coneurrenes of the_Governor, nor toot iii 4,79 &smolt his remonstrance ; fifth, that the iPtiatlt of Wittee ppuelplee and roles of notion has peen in macyvyiye extremely unfortrata, Tfie . Election. ISTORSS4I MAfOI4II , 7ILf ! TIES.I Or VII goyal, NOR SLEOT"-JOIIS S. 1: 1 68VISI !f<PF SII ! ECTSD i. CONGRESS. W451:111101)N, June I.—This eirtalrg's States eye that 129 comaties in V iron% give Lonelier 8,703 ma jority for Governor , Itloutionn, .June I.—A report stye that, In 7 28 coon (r;flortal and o ffi cial) Letcher ill 8 542 ahead. Os it oirßk tonottep gays 51r. Wise, 1,581 tosiority , v.l p 434 Demograttere pongtent or mieJority or over 5.a80 There is no blab In the rapott that /dm IS, MAXIe Ile/toted to Congress troot tits fligtrlgE. It le reForted that Mr. Letetor to very 111 et prime. The Galena Railroad. °Masao, June 1 —The annual eleotion for officers of I.lle (1 Jena Railroad took plum yesterday. and. re sulted,b 6 strogvasjoritv, in favor of the N.wberry ticket. Thin mares the yidging of the Misslealppi river at Clinton, and .ropndiates the Tyner policy in favor of construotiot the bridge at Lyoca, ring the difficulty heretofore existing to the close con. nectionnf, the °blotto, lowa. and Nebraska road. The numbsr of shares represented at the election pap P.OOO. *cadent. cm Ut leelog4 ft oalKond: At.t.vorovs, Jane I.—David bliller ? the miniver at tho building en the tnim.table at the jouotion bf jhe Mast 'Pennsylvania Railroad. at this plaop, was tun over by the can of the Lad& Volley 4silroset hip after noon, in endeavoring to jump off tbp train Irbile it way In motion One of hie lege and one arm ngt. and he-was otherwise seriourly injured. Lie is ato living, but °lnapt twelve long. ALLEITOWIC tune I.—The blued matt d'ed at four O'clock this afternoon, after angering about two hours. H i p Mayer a wife and two children. Four Days seerfrom California. fpy oyanTiatip ,y.ti Fr Louis, lone I,,,The California o eriand roan Ines arrived, with dates from Bsa Besarnasp to the Uth four days later than before reoeived The mere furnish oo news of importmee, A municipal electiou was held at Loa /maim) on the 24 qlt., which resulted la the defeat of the Administra tion t et. hpiheus at pan ?hairdo!? wo 1.0911i4. Pestmetive Fire ip .Jersey .fflft . sEY RAIf,ROAD 1:13y0T ANA EMMY BOAT BaitTinß. NNW You, ;one I.—TO Noy jerpeyhoed de pot, et Tem, Vity, wee pert:gap Ifrfel,@F Iry esrly h nr th a morning, together with the ferry twat .fobril ff. Dem bled et the whirl. The otaitinhost was egtirely new t and cod ;50,900. The denude to the depot le very henry. The Morphy Pinner ,at Boston. B pro , done 1 —The dinner to Paul Morphy took pleas lost evincing at the. Revere Some. 0. Wendell Holmes presided, pod made the opening speech, to watch Mr • Morphs,' responded. Opeoshas were &No pude by ObietJactice Phew President - Walker, of Harvard Ostlers, Senator Wilson. Protestor Agienle , Idr Imng fellow, Anson Birlingarne, and others, A letter from Idward Eterett i excusing himself for non attendance, wee rend, Presbyterian General Assembly, (N. S. 4DIOTIRIMINT. DeL.ltine 1 --The General MARIAN' wee dhsolved last Watt The cominhelon to Invent& gets the complaints against the home missionary em.. braced the• following delegates t Rev. Drs. Ftearne, Patterson, Braine,d, Grans. Wood. and Yowler., and Messrs. Benedict, White, Ammo, and Plnneo The. Aseembly hi regarded as the most practically efficient and barMol3loll4 one alone the division Broil ;fey West—'!arias Disaster. Chrmax.waltow. Weet date,' to the Roth have been recall's& A liritfeh schogner had arrived there. having aboard the captain add hie gri , e of be bark Delegate, of New Volt, from the Spanish melp, which was sank off the Bahamas on the 16th of May; MAIM an denoted etrgo. No liven were loot. Non• Arrival of the America—A. French War Steamer at Halifax. Ea aiviLt,e, N. B. Tune I.—Notwithstanding tie re. port current last evening that the America had arrived aS Halifax, she had not yet reached that port-- The steamer below et S Wale* P. 4i. rim a Prone war steamer. Allegheny Countyftepnbllenn Convent• Prarsonno, /two I,—The Itepablioan Connti Con. vontlon hat nominated, R. 11 Irish for Stets gonAtor, Thornier Mellon for dodge of the Coweten Pleu, end are atilt balloting for member/ of the Alterably. New•Hanapshire Legislature. noirooan, June State Leirialetnre assembled to-day. Joseph A. Gilmore' erns elected' President or the Senate. and tt. B. Bryant Speaker of the nouse, Tha presiding oftleers, as well es the Other °Means of both branches, are an Republican. Naval Intelligence. NORMA, dune sloop.of.war John Mame was towed to the Ronde today, and will call imme diately, for thO West Indleer. The sloop of-wat - Preble will sail In a few days, for the Gulf Of Mexico. Repotted Failure of a sugar Importing }Untie.. powtt.sdo, June 1 —The failure of a large sugar lot pottlog house, or this city, is reported. Sale of Steamships. Nsw YORK, Inne I.—The eteemshlpe Alobems, Pio. lids, end Auguste ham been told at priTato sale to flojlori Vtootdout of the amnia °Ultra] Iteihoed. THE CITY. ASIEGENENTO TED EVENING. `, Wstonia NATION 1,1., THILLTIIII.—" Merchant of ye. Nett • NS* WALNUT-SWAM Tuavax.- 4, Wacousta”— " 7103 k P.IPP/Sd;" AIOXIIMOVOR , IS alllMllo.—Beleotions from Plays, - , Gems from Operas. Pantomimes, Dancing, and dinging: . Tim Elsa Asra,-11 , isibition or Paintings andipstnatir. GENERAL SYNOD •OF THE REFORMED PRES BYTERIAN 011IIRCH—SEVEPITH DAY.—The General Synod of the Reformed Presbyterian Ohuroh of North America resumed its sessions yesterday morning. A half hour was spent in , devotional exercises, Rev. George Beat presiding, and Rev. Sohn McAlester, Rev. J. P. Bin, and Mr. J. 0 McMillen condosting. , 6- Synod then proceeded to business. On motion, leave of absence was granted to theßev. Dr. Her ' ton for the remainder of the session. The Oommittee .mt Nomination, made a report,, Which was read and-reonmmitted. • ' The Committee on Presbyterial iteporte pro dented a report, whiob woo read- • , It Was moved that that portion of the 'report re ferring to the, stria exertdee . 'd diecdpline be utriokon out Not agreed to, 'Rev. IL IL „Nair, of the United Presbyterian Ohureh,`was invited to a' seat as a' consultative member. The loin^bee Committee presented a report, frcop 'Which it appeaxo that the whole nesount resolved for the travelling, enpenses of delegates to Synod amounted to $457.73 ;, the Whole rixxxmlier'ef Miles travelled by the members was 2 230; the amount per mile to be paid by the Synod was within a fraction of two cents. It seems that all the con gregations had not contributed to the fund. The report also instructed members of presbyteries to write to the congregations, requesting-none:4lone in'aid of the Synod's' contingent fund. The re.' port was, on motion, adopted. The Rev.. pr. Pales, of the United Presbyterian Qh wasronitnotiorr, invhd to 'lt seat era oerienitatiVi mentlier. r •ElYhArttp4' wooesde4 tq The qvter of fife 441 7 , 3 60 h was the Oonehbratton of tile report or the Ootoroltteo on Union. . - ' Rev. Dr. Crawford. had hut a,werd or two , to 'say. He loved the Reformed Preihyterian Church,. 4 9 1 7 4041 d her prosperity. Helwould do every thing to promgii 7eP.l.re of that Ohnroh== fante bar bar to five, and was not prepared to go or het daitruotion. net °introit isav trge bun, dred years old, and had bean' perseouted Marty a time during heruxidenUe. • lbw. great business of • the church was to bring others 14 to iti standards, and nqto go down to theirs, : The second reason of the speak& in irofing fgrAhe.s.spriovit i r Testiinoloy of the Reformed I'resbytertm Obt • ge'lad aWorn te4at Tesiititorktirkulltrutikatid, • sincerity, and was not prepaind to ie 3 eot Roy. *amvel Wylie was In favor of the adop t t 4 p h 1 § th e report . Ira was not in ftivor of a gnioin . • Rev. M. Morrison eAlnoltied in the vierti ex. ,pressed by . the ,preoeang speaker. He was in favor of the report, and would vote for-its adop don. Rev. Jelin Mobilllan was also in favor of the repoif, altliouglCEe%noiglit'not be in favor of alt the details. An -ineorporatesLunion: was, in his opinion inspenotleable. The Pittabnrg Presbytery would 'hardly consent to a union on these terms. The speaker then Arent on to examine the legisla., Son of Synod on matters of testimony from time .time in" the biatoey of; het, ohtirot. The q uestion of exteh4lbg eaoreinefital qorpuuifilon - to th mem- Vera of the United Piesbyterfan Chttroh as one that might :arise: Ititad been before Bynod for Eve genre, before, and was only lost by a tie vote. ," The roll of the Synod was pion called by the tieoretarY, eqoh meinber eying hie yiecri on the question aa hie name 'was celled. Rev. John Alford;befOre making' any remarks, gave' notice: of Ain amendment in favor of union by oonfederatiol.l' "tie was in favor of a union with the United oNesbyterian Church, and op posed at mush ' length the arguments addnoed in oprnltion to this union. He wanted the Synod to ra the bietbroti - applying for union 'on what to Malley would Unite. Rewo`uld Support union liy odnfederatiorti beoanee"somethlmi war Vetter 'than nothing. ' Rev. IC 3. Blear felt a warm and lively inter . Whitt in *lb subjeot of union. I. agreed in the main W thc statements and argitments of the report. it was daleetide, lioleyeT, thefaot that it pro posed no tame under whialt - WWWthild nhite. thp testimony of the United Presbyterian Church was vague, powerless, and indefinite, 'so mush. so; be thought, as to be repugnant to a great majority of the members of the -Synod, Be-would cordially vote for the report., Rev. John bile Was" in faVor of union with' the Vatted , Prpetqterian Ohnroh, and for that reason. would vote against tbq report of the" committee. Its bad arrived at this oonolution after Witch care and anxiety The Reformed Olturoh and the Gai ted Presbyterian °buret were similar in nearly all the points of doctrine. - - Tho hour of adjournment haiing arrived, the Synod adjourned-with prayer by the Rev. G. R. 4ofditiani • • li. rsproort SESSION. The Synod resumed. its sesstppj `et limn o'plopk l the Mo'derator opening with prayer. Rev. Sohn W. Bailey presented his credentials as a delegate to the Synod, from the General de sembly of the New Sohool Presbyterian Church. The credentials being-read, gr. Bailey-was in vited to address the Synod. • 44.110114, responding, tendered the fraternal regarOof his .4seetnblyfor the Synod"Be' felt he was expo's/14100i sentlind_pts of the4ssembly 'when he said the Reformed Presbyterian Oberon was dear to them on account of her peculiar his tory. The speaker gave 'an account of the opera- bone of the Seneral Assembly during the last year, andelosed by wishing the ntatostprosperity fo the Synod. The Igti4erator made a few appropriate remarks in raPIY,, and reniprogote4 tae fraternal regard .ressed by Mr. ISsilesr; " tea • n Re*. lfr. clerk, in a lengthy, and fervent speech, 'supported the' rep_ort of the isoramittee, end opposed the, union. lie would not leave the phiiroh of Ids it Cations for'aily other. - Do motion of Rai_ .Tohn tbo )r. gempli, pf the gld pchuot General Asieuthly was invited to u doat rut a opnei/Itatise . thember• Rev It R. Crow was a, union man from.prinol pie, and would labor in his place for the oonsum. widen of that glorious work. Re it ould not feel the fore° of t h e arguments adduced , by the committee against union. Re would he in favor of confederation, if it was proposed. Re loved the United Presbyterian Church as much es his own, and did not deem the points of differenee be tween them great enough to warrant a continued separation ev Itr. Douglass though t the report a mass of glittering generalities. e had nothing to gain by the nnion, or nothing Jose. Re bad not in other tunes flt:eight the United Proshytirliip 4e. pembly bon* in their efforts for union. but he felt non. thp N.OlOll was IrOOMpliebhlg the greatest possible good for that respected body ' . Be would labor for union with all his heart, ad he deemed it the best fog i the. Reformed Ohnroh. Re was not tired of the' principles of his own church, nor could he be. There were men in this church who keyed. the mere form of organization better than tha Read of the Church. Re did not love the Re. closed Church umie thati the Ohuroli of Christ. here Teri men ;n the At.efermed Oburoliwipliel4 principles op the spatter of 13011110 y amfinter communion at varlanae with the doctrines of the Church. =The reverend speaker at much length commented very severely en those who remained in the Church said indeavered'to introdueenther than Scriptural Psalmody. It was said that the i.eople do not want uoloq., There was evidence enough to glum that the people thought otherwise. The beak' Oieft roai/ fro% prisms authorities several entraots Iliestratirig the history of the union moviment. It has been said that we do not want to break up our organisation—he thought we were already In a state of disorganisation. The ~iyyeaddship of Christ as recognised by both of the 'Mulches in Guar testimonies was then son. sidered: Therb warp a greet many opinions en tertaided, arid be thought fortmaranoo should be egeroised.The mission of the Risformed Presto torfanfilmrah hid beep accomplished. Suph was the opinion of many cosirient d vines 11,020511 the water. It had been said that the missions of this church were prosperous—he believed we had +no mission at all. They were under the control of the Old Shoot General Assembly. Ile felt him self called on to sustain with all his power the reposed union with the United Presbyterian litisehi and would accordingly vote against the l epti he . • " Tft tooter !sloped witti an eloquent appeal in favor of union. The report of the treasurer of the Board of Foreign Missions was then read, and referred to the Auditing Committee Rev John McMaster said he had heard of oil p,elng poured . on the troubled waters, bat he thought the speech of the reverend gentleman was the oil pf vitriol. Accordingly, he would move an adjournment until eight o'clock in the craning, for thepurposeCf cannoning thedebate. Thp motion wee agreed te l and the Synod •aa.- PYRNINff PE§STON Might otolook arriving,. 4 l o 1 10 4 Pb ali a the synod prtaseeded to oneness. - Mr. James N. Gifford presented the report of the Auditing Committee,- which. was accepted and adopted. Bev. T. W. 3. Wylie presented the report of the Board of Foreign Missions. The progress of the missionary work was sketohed briefly, and the Board congratulated the Synod on the prosperity of the work. The fatit'that the India rebellion had been quelled was mentioned as a very grati fying circumstance. • The Board recommended that fire missionaries be sent out during the en suing year, either to India or any other field. On the motion to adopt, and to devote a se-sion of Synod to fasting and prayer, having the mission work in view, some debate arose. Rev. Br. giothrle ai4 not want to suspend the debate on union. Be 1710 ; however, favorably disposed to the project. Rev. John MoMaster was certainly in favor of fabling and prayer, bat he did not want to tarry any longer in this pity than was absolutely meow- s $ .Mr. George H. Stuart was in favor of giving a session to fasting and , prayer, in order that -wo Might answer prayerfully the cry of the perishing millions of India. There vas no question of such magnitude before us as thp ono of missions If we pined in this prayer, we might, espeet,tho bless ings of God on us in our efforts to convert India. , Rev. J. Id. Morrison lived in tho far Weat, and the eyes of a family and a oongregation would be! watohing for his coming in the latter part of the week ; yet he would remain and willingly join in' the fasting and prayer., 9n motion the report was rieeepted and made the order. of. the .4 1 SP after the disonselon of the union question. - The oowlideration of thermion question was then resumed. Rev. Dr. Guthrie woald be sorry if the report of the committee wee, adopted. , He gave an as. eount of the early history of the Refornied byterian Church. The bane of Alia Reformation was the , making_ matters of individual- investiga tion terms of communion. As to the doctrine of " Common Meroies," in the standards of the Uni ted Presbyterian Ohnreh, which had bean regard• ed as en insuperable barrier to union, the speaker thought it was - the same in Substance as that of the Reformed Presbyterian Church. They should read the standards carefully before making the assertion. He thought a desire for union was no exhibition of "dislike to the, word of God or the standards of the Mardi. We had oar foreign missions—but had not. tbe United Presbyterian Ohnroh missionaries 'actively engaged in the ser. vide of God? They had mission stations in Oairo; Damsons, India, all over the far West, and on the shores of the Pacifio. • • • • • • • Re would not go into a union (no human consi deration would compel him) with any Church he thought unsound in the etanderde of religion. Be believed the United Presbyterian Ohutoh to be sound, cod : nossOinsly 'to was in favor of it, Yon might as well try to put down the spirit of union, as Congress to put down the spirit of Inquiry in relation to slavery. The Synod of this Church. had courted the other branches of the Reformed Chu roh — had:tried-4.o`",Wter.rithem into union in 1 8 43, and Mow they waritedJeAcireak off the ha. olied , eootraet. The; . .tilbod ctite? martyrs of the Reforreatiesivas flowing in thi(eeilna of the mem: hers of the Noited PresbyteriaeChurch. There muoh trouble about a nande - :'• What was in a name? it would not save one man or another; - - The adoption of the re - tint - Would lead to' a war of 'theology - between the able writers -of both Churches. The positions of the committee on the Headship of Christ, as contained in the basis of union, could not be sustained. The proposition in Christ's Headehip was the work of a Covenanter. The dotstrine advocated in it ,was the doctrine : of the Reformed Presbyterian _Church,, and he ap: f I proved it as being orthodox': was atsertedabet there V7(136 mitten ,ptant In theplatform of the United-Presbyterian. „ sod he defied his opponents to the proof, The speaker then - esatntned'mincifelratie - artiote of covenanting presented beforepe Cogvention.of `Reformed Churches He liederritten that aittale,, and gave 'a great deal of time, anxiety, prayer, ,and research to its composition., The Doctor ex. entitled at Midi. 10 , 111)131w Plopesititintlef.the re port of the committee, and the propositions pre; canted to the Convention of Reformed Churches The defeat of the Covenanters at Bothwell Bolcige and their slaughter. brilie treeiri of 'etialiet WeTh occasioned by their being engaged in ilissensions when attacked by the royattrooks• In concluding, thb Doctortraidlf he Voile not not get all that baulk*); lie would take All he could Vies riOrt ofthe,dontinitteerw_ic adopted, it would fill him with regret.- He wanted it amended before it wit; adopted. Felling in an incorporated union, he would import a confede rated anion{ though he,did'not Woe.% and:would' also support ciministerial and 'siorabiental;Com - - - mnnion among the members of the ebiiroli. The Synod then, on 'nutlet!, adfrarned at a tow tla i n l t t s !C I !! ‘i'"? , s TEOE ..ITotroz os , REPITOR—C&LIBEATION OV Tile 'P.p.= ANNIVSngA&Y =An immense crowd of PailVa wqrg attraoted to the House of Refuge, yes- terday aneyncion,"lfda the - purpose oicadtneesing the institution and partioipating in the celebration of the fifth anniversary of. theopening of this RAW vitae institution. which Is - boated at Twenty eiMond and ,Parrish, streets,. The .importance of thia noble eltdrity to"our city if rime MA! more appreciated. The okra of portals, guar gent!, *whop, end friends, are assumed for chil dren and Youths Whose 'aiceident,'. , thisfertrine, or vice , has deprived Hf these natural safeguards: Pontshinentiand restraint are infiutiness to "be eui,"- nloyed in the fenilly tof well" as, thn genie of, nefege i in both,lowever, ad ohly'aubord ird: luale tips - Veal Means of ildnott,tian , and training for utaful lice, This institution was eseablished " not , as a prison,_ltut ,a SA'aool, whore reforukation, not panishtstent, is the 7,11" i t .ftiir the different denarltuents had been visited, the pemperLy assenthied ; la tbe . ohapeinead eqleols, in the afterm - on. It wag handoomely decorated ' With evergreena, and upon, the wall .we_notioed the following basorlptioni : ' ' ' "-If God be foi rat, who shall bs sgairod is ?"' " our God to a /pint, sod they that worship rflm must worship Bin in spirit and Jai:nth:l " They that tail/many to righteousness shill shine' as the stare for ever onweisig,"„, • t The Hon. Judge ThomPortiras nailed "ripen to, pt elide, and in doing eo expriwied - tkukgreat sure it gavehini to - open the esereffSS,ctiolleiti ft; gave him an opportunity to, sorties pnblioly approbation of the linititution.- He' confessed that Gilt assembler,' beforehim was esight that he little expected to - fle - thifought suidirisreixiblage an evidence of the p,nblio appreciation of Rs benefits. He said the - irietitatlen 'new contained _about five hundred inmates, and gave an Braining adconnt of epme of the stitities in the priniinaleionrt. He argued that the institution wall note place designed for pus ishment, bat a sehool for reforms- , tion and instruction. ; The Rt. Rev. Bishop Bowman then delivered an impressive prayer, after which the inmates of the institution sung a beautiful by iThe Rev. Dr. Stevens nest delivered a short ad d esa. , Ho exprersed his surprise,at the immense, attendants - 9; lind-Sthit, to him, was -a Pleasing aid- , donee of the interest of the community in this in stitution; an institution - WOrthrof sal - their. in. terest, all their' symPathies. He was gratified.to„, Bee present the venerable gentleman (Mr. /WV& Collins) who founded the firm - institution. of the kiqd in this ' cionntly,. and'-Mtio has 'lilted 30 lee it siread thvongli twenty different States of-the Union, and has received within its walls over twenty thousand persons. ;;Be ektited thot, the first House "--of Refuge - - contained bit three - boys and three girls,, but , the 'pro• jeOtor has seen it geOw and - zqlonrish like a green bay tfee "-rho has lived to:See:Ude seed, this 'reborn of the magnificent oak, whose brenehee have IP 4 l o 2if 130 ' PP.WPIIAwoII-litowloisPres,Jl bron bout t oll" ' and almost ffom - theL - Attan , ' tic to the PaoltierP.lfedwelt, at mach length upon the immense benellt resit-Self - 6CM the inetruhtlen` imparted within the institution, ,aold', that it was deserving of their doiditl 14enputhy;erPoperation, and support. This institution, said he, arrests crime in ititmateb to rain, and makes the - child's' blessing to hinaself, -to hie .fareily, and to his 'fol.:, lotroltitene. - •• Mr, rani-T. Jones, on behalf of the manageitt; thanked those presen t their kindness in Coming there to see the beat* and the °finds-en; He told them what the managers had done, what they are doing, and what , under the blessing of God, they intended to do. He gavel& number of inter - eating and affecting lei:adepts of ,stankemitbdttand-with. due: the. House—of the, "any that , hid been re. clairnedlrbm the path of crime,'degnidatloniendi ruin,, and _made ukful, respeoted, and honored citizens.. ; He stated that' meyore of. three - of the Western - aide's, and icianiMerninitriOtthialLeglar, lattices of other States, had' been' inmates of GM House, His -eloquent remarks were lietened'..to. With naivided,attenthin,.ecedmi - atiseited 'More' than one face suffused with teem- , „ • The 'marches were doted' with' prayer. • . T.e2e,tune,,-.- - The National iferiffirterltit cessions - yesterday at Sansom-Street-Itili2 ,- - The exercisea- not being intended to le made itublie, , - no persons were admitted , .sive"ftheieMhe Were "ember's of the Order ; Thls eveing - , however, a pliblie welcome will be - given to"-the._atrangere. now in this eity,,whigh 4 to take place at the AA: demy of hlesio: Maylielfenry - lins bean -invited to preside and give them the welcome, which will be responded to by distinguished - members of the National - Division,in Sheet addressee. Anitinest those expected to be present will be the Hon S. Tilley, of New Brunswick ; Judge O'Neil, of South Carolina; General: Cary,- of Judge Me. Henry, of lowa ; John Hoff.% of Canada West ; Neal D0w,,,0f Maine - R.l3nokley, of Kentucky; and M. W. P;lt. D..Townsedk - of,South Carolina. After the responses, Dr. Chapin, of New 'York, will deliver a lecture on temperance. The member! of the N. D. and the officera,of the Hrand Rivision will 000npY /eats on the stage, with the managers of the State Society. AUOTION WOOL asps.—About 110,000 lbs. of pulled wool was offered at auction, yesterday morning, (terms cash- coder $l,OOO, over-that amount fonr menthe), to quite a full attendance of dealers, brokers, and mtlnufacturers of the eity and adjoining counties, and from Boston, Lon , ranee, and New York. Bach is the gloomy rep. pestanoe of the future that a destine of fatly 5 to /Qs since the month of April-was sustained, - '• 196 bales of Merino were offered in five lets; and the eaten Tanned from 42 to 44f. . The No. 1 wool, 244 hales, fn five lots, brought 30, and 800;, Sleek w 001,1,000 ibs ,3s ;lambs wool, 0,000 the .313.1-; short merino woel, 0,000 lbs., 23; short No. 1 wool, 2,000 lbs , 25; coarse Wool; 2,000 lbs., 15. • • , •. Although no, fleece was offered, the„sate is yet a .correct commentary upon,-the market in fleece, Only that putted is the scarcer of, the/wo. Jersey- Magee is offered at 22 to 400 One lov a Ohio patted fleece, new clip, was to-day sold atllie Dammam. CooL.—We have' given the par , tioulara of the arrest of Washington Taylor, at Longacoming, a few days since, on the charge of Ifiamegoturing counterfeit money, rind the recov ery of about $40,041) in bank notes, together with the materials necessary for their manufacture. Gar readers will remember that among the notes -which had- bean _manufactured were several on the /jank of g, saton..,A letter,wast also foundwith the notes directed to a bank at Keaton, Pennryl Tanis, which contained the fragments of a genu ine fivredollar note upon the bank, from which the vignettes and other orialpental,partshad been out by the counterfeiter to aid him in his business: He even desired to turn the mutilated fragments to account. an he had written a letter to the bank stating that his little daughter had ant the note to pidoes to get the pictures out, and asking that, as he was a poor - men and unable to bear the lose, they would send him a whole note. ExunnTxox op HORl3EB.—There is to be a grand display of horses and colts on the 7th, Sth, and 9th inst., at the Chestnut Hill Agricultural Grounds Great preparations are making to have the display one of unusual interest. Q.ute a large number of horses and colts - frau New Jersey ore alreacly entpred and-will -he on 'esdsibltion. Oar farmers should, make, a ,strong effort to compete with them We - understand the premiums are liberal. Sense fast nags will be present, and rare IlFrt will he offered each day . The location of t grounds is becogiful, commanding 'tut eaten, lito view of country- - 4 day MN not be more pleasantly spent than at this spot, A good baud of music in constant attendancs.' Arrangements have been made, and excursion tickets will be issued by the • railroad company at half price during the exhibition. - A WA.NDEitga.-L. On Motidny,an interesting. looking. chili,- about .twelve years old, wee found wandering in the Seventeenth ward. She was taken to the station house in that diatritit, and as, there were nolminiries made for her by telegraph, the wife of one of the °Stars took her in charge. The story , of the; girl is that her name is tizzy Tones, and that she recently became an orphan. 440 had lived in the neighborhood of Fleventh and Catherine streets, and she went to school at Els. Tenth and Washington streets, After tbp death of her parents she was taken in charge' by a per son residing up town, and on Friday she got lost. Unless the poor child has friends tolookont for her she , will soon be placed in one.of the charitable institutions of the city. - EiCEOuTlON.Detective Jim Franciflithe fa mous clog-eatoher, yesterday, inflicted the death penalty on over sixty unfortunate oanines.whe had been found running unmussied, in violation of the ordinance which prohibiti' dogs from running at largo in this condition during the summer months. Francis is•tudsfptigable in pursuit of his pray. and although frequently bitten, he has never suffered any serious ,results We• learn, however, that several of his aids haie hash bitten during the last' year, and died from the effects of the wounds re ceived rwhile discharging the duties of their po sition. ALLEGED ROBBERY.—On Tuesday evening John Lockwood was token before Alderman Miller en the charge of having robbed the house of Mr. Levering Allen. It appeitra ,thst he visited Mr.: Allen on Monday, watt whom he woe acquaint ed, and it is alleged ,that in the absence of the family ho decamped with three dollars in money,' and goods veined at $lOO. Mr Allen resides on Lancaster avenue, near the Cathedral Cemetery, in the Twenty•fourth ward. ,The defendant .atr. hnowledged the theft, and was committed to 'an. ewer at court.. • , , FOUND Daowrico---The coroner .yesterday held an inquest on the body Of' George Googlinr ty, who was found drowned yesterday morning in the Delaware, at Noble•street wharf. ,The presslen is that he rolled off the wharf into the ri ver same time during the previous night, - having been seen in that vicinity, and was drowned.. The body, of a, man, manse unknown, was discolored yesterday afternoon near Almond-street wharf.' the coroner held an inquest and rendered a ier dlot accordingly. Disn anew nEn InJuans.--Susan French, the little colored &Perim was so seeeeedy burned at Riverton on Tuesday last, died 14 the hospital leeierdejr afternoon, , 0 1 3 1 11;UNTOWN I ripaouzz 'RumAy..we Iest uAitttMaJMMISSOV kikitXXV?ife.i4ent with the Germantown Intapike Oomparyolidelt• Einem them the nriirifeee o la3infi Sidleon - cer- _ tain portions . of road.,for zfilkO mui-or /one ears. It It Srptifted' 411.141C.Mits' over this road ',about' iht4th Jai.v.MaitY;; ., FiNAL‘ll4 4UXCl.4 . l7Kaggneo 7l ;7oi l Orifix, - ::P alleged counterfeiter, leas_ caken - befere I aides Oassady, of Camden, N. J.; liiseiveniuglarui at " - the request of his oottioset,.wielinillY committed to prison to Msait -Thircinee sitittroord- - ed with speatstors *anions to.get a glimpse er this ; ;+ notorious oberootoSir Tits' srarsietsTAn4tany.:ol,gf• the,morninti payers that Mr LiinonClis dealer on ,fieeend street, had been flant:fer,sdidnAhmm,:pedinanee sigainst,btpokadin'g ths pavempno,,is saaggersted, TIM ease was 'heard befo'ss AiL i tti.aatistvatS., but , dismissed. ' . . Ammysitelny,4loileietitii'ndnive rsiry - of 9012,q1. 3f: O; of 0 1' 0011 be roelebreitiO at thiWeele,y 9trintblcon.. , .landuttslyitmitt beam S ix ths this evening:_ .... s ; FINANCIAL , ANiI ' , COMMERCIA ..„_ Alitiesft - ;•:' • _ , Jut.' The stork maiket element atatay i - erto aittet, bat inactive. The pressure upon the inarbet 'heieeekaaa', but there ie no dispbeiiiirtetoqPicelitellr'any Itind of aeenrltierl Zoldiro ire 'Wring at teatildititi bit: te , t zgarket he bare or orders to purchase. Beating litailesedk abliteeloattheacteieheoryiethidiy? gegen Donde wad North PeepayleaeJa :beide were a shade cower;; 17aniden iudinaboiebareeleliVaiseed teem _ 0 - 24421 X., i 4 „t„ lihiabenend . and trtinbles, *thing out of the :egort_:te contract, for taa - 1,1134eg of the track at a omit far-in minuet of the - - Thy other ocentiotte_ Ales - bad a Ilaik etteetiniKin Ahe stock wieeVwfiertakriYiffered Iltre erect - at - 4yj4l, . bib 0404.. 4 , 014 r epn'a Countarj alflatelroa. iL i theiitki,h49l4 - r, York hankie ace peeping • hAreeit ii* Pimieptia tdeeonntry haeltisefee.l; Ttey nicetveitiesii . 04 dip4it at a discount, and thin .vetturp,, them to the bombe in a• 1 , 3 F fliade. There:stiotiti be some Wei. epee taken by the Pentiyttieta bailee tti.rialrent two *V.') a. hadbNS conteinPorp wee very emcee!? aye.. foam of the .. qui' (Aloe driTi,lee'ime'elteit to pine grid IQ, Ole preterit =segment - h.rielifft 'thafr:.taka at ~p ar, and - pay pee.4"uaiter of.;tone fhern redeemed. i iierieri r sOMWirin 4 i 4 iii r ai -0 4 4 , 1 9)V0 ;4- iehiela stuan.mity, mare, hhasettAeleclajp,ltayyt,to.::,.. tee dollar lank selling at ataety-ahutiacehe stet theace" ,- - _ Inartere, re presume tihe" pfy Ate; the redainittiii - of ; conntrj bantrie - Ceo ). `atid,;.:2 at the genie time; bete tie ineeator ibiraimexte-gra;- - „ , batty. , '' 6re of the honest etirene of Pittsburg ; Melading men, of the largeit busMese -firma in the city, hare signed a motestswelnet renidiatlon,,dirarowleg their connection with the proesedieg Inciting - to that end, and 91 97 ,1 ,0 0 6 -19.1%1•ty=1"1: avert ik"-lemswlroo,- , Slob, the popular course' In relaticieM the retuned . Ontscriptione. , are , tringuat, 49C0l the 18 4 ±11 7 1i - 8 02 1 4 8 - trident' that city and emeriti. ,-- , -,_ i . , :-.- ne knowing is o ‘ 40:meat *I the lenstossa of the .12111sdolphis Custom Manse &Abe" month of May : - Mar. -"' 1867. 1858. -1859, - Iderchrndise to ,. _wand:tomes ..- - -- --._.„- .._, - r- -. .. .. _. _.., . - let of month' • - - 1'93:1 - ,1426 1,2/8 ; 448-973,4188' Received in wareboues;front ,-.. . _ - - _ '- . foreign ports -..-.. 10838,238 L -12ii,452 822',f47-I Received in warehouse from-- - . other districts 4 " ' ' - . '--; 61,285` ',-. 12442 -'. 18 ; 840 ~_, Withdpswn from warehouse ' - - - ' for co9sumptlou • - - i - JSMl'il',,:-.V I A9S P.'4 35 : wltur yawn from warehouse _ - for transportstton -, 7.838. 17,1054 260 _ . Withdrawn from warehouse for export • - Merchandise lii warehouse loot of month 2 2115,482 1,159,837 785,671 Rot t erod tnr. con...l3=l;llton ea._ . root from foreign ports,- 819,805 714.222 948 687, Pelee merchandise entered... 179,985 828,726 848,844 i = ~ , - , -,..,,, ntnaB Reostmin, - .:.- -, , , r 1, - 1 - 1866 ',; lii67:,Vt 184 '...- i 'lB6i. '- May '' . .. ... ..." 488 823 200 14t - -178569 1 211 fen Prey. 4 m0g...1 3,6 4 910..). ; 261 679 - 816 558 824 . 885 , .. 1 770.814 1,482,0 139,117 - lilo FM , PHILLDNIXIEU .7120131. 11 40.BAitilii - 134.148 ; 1110 , 011.2.1D1rr BILIIMSY. isaoliif,l6 00-0670c404V-iiocari ~ imn,sxociasleo,oo9o94oo•6B a6lim rasp °Foram Angara - -' lop() Penns 5. - - 404 -98 do - " '-' 99 - WI do —-- .- - .139x 100 deb Nave:Nils : - .:;T0% ,fa do' - ' 70%1 11980 N Penns B 61....8 7 1( 1000 Al Olty Os mon-039w t 3 Cam Er, Amtoy 1..121,10 -..-- , - -..- .. ... 81TWE1C17,13,011,14D11.= ^ ,-.; . 1 , , 9 PIG* R.-......... 4 0% 1490 piiiisiti . 90 .. __„ .. filinpßA 31pliti). - - . _ sago Penni fee....i...1,85.9t ' 10,41tesdIng_lt ' 21%, 169 Slot do. •”.• “..•.110% - 990 -. 3 do ' '' 7 36 .1000 Peh Bairleti6.:;7l3 - -109 - ' 'yde - .. ;:510n,21% ' 30g OR Niy 11s >B2 sawn.lt - ~,-, 7 Bete 1dwid0w.11"..67%.... 1500 - , ~. ,do.,.;eftwit.7l .. 2.0MM.F.x,1ian:16.2.. 94% I 2600 - 47Ms lat mg 7a.... 51 '-' 'l9,- 7 ' do : " - - o' - '94% - 2009 ' de • . '- - 'SI. ", --211Pentere Bk Ifin6 - .l7o''' - 1 Pirina 11, '. , -, 40% ; 9111001013 4 - 4 - 1.,'...64,' I do - - 40% -, 8 . -- -6 9.,,, ~ ,-, ,61, ; - 1001e5Unk...,.,,217 9 .13 2 Moja Ga5..26y5.14 0f 1 00-- -,do,r; 27 X --- ''-" '— otostid 111004D11it;. s ' '-"''' : VW 4, 6 ,4 - ' -•'. __ - Ink '4Biii. - *ill 88 In 017,.: - ., - '97%:97% p 11,,", alfne'9l9oll :-: 6.!'_ . , - , _ , V?' 4 ' " - RinOff: 97 X - 97 .31 , Prat - - "17 11% 1 - 1 €, Newon of -100 :' WM+l,-se: „sem Ai 8 8* Ptensa - 61 ... :.";,-. ' 90' ' 91 . • " " 7,0 Bit artg.:- - 89 — 70 - ' Beading It ..... 21 4 , ..21%.! '`S > 9d. - • .- ---- -.; -, 4o .1 , uti ! ~ Itlei76 ~...,. 78' -80 ILosg_lisleadt- 'Ox 10%1' . rut ti t 44 •91. c, 16 : I rolcasi A Nmr.: 4B - `-,, g , da,--; 036:71. 19 . 12 , _ Penns It '''' 6% 8% Penns II ""' 40 '40% 0 fle. - 'ls fag , ' - cf ~ V r iun , 8? ..4 . 87. 88 --‘, 10s ` -- 88 'B9 1 " prof --- 198X101 - l' -- " , -lot...totade ft:a - LAW Aga Vim the 032. 71 ' 76% PrMd: & - Bonthlt...-• , --.:J 00 -... ; " 730 9 GO,. • .....__, " '79 - I 24 & &I MB.. ; 46% 66 i : . r - I`. ‘'..• %OS it,119(244 48% liCkilla , 23% 1 0 0 ltdoidlog 11 --- Adoo.dig ifdro,OS do 10'Pions autg fl.tito4fidh' . - • " • en Tharloar market is rather more - sleeve, and Wise of 485,000 bble are 'relsOrted at 111 76407 for sitotiou to goal impedes, mostly Western; $787.25 for axti:sei end $7 60 for extra fienUyittio,trade are .buying more f.eely at the, iboVe figures far to:Perdue and entree, roil st to $0.60 Ir bbl for fumy brands, es in quality.,'Bye Fleur le not inquired for, , bnt steady at - fa - 76 0P..141.,_e0ra Meal is unsettled ; sales of 400 bbis Pennsylvania are reported at $3 8731 qfr bbl, bat nioailuilders agoras. Wheat is held more firmly. with Insies of be 8 ; 003 but good to prime - red at 185 - to 1700 'and white at to --ay • corps in Slowly; small sass are re• parted at 926 What ' , Corn is rattier better, aid shoot 0,000 bus Penn& yellow sold at Ole; itioat.=-Oats pare better; 984,000 boa prime Parma sold at:32e, afloat; Dark is in falr'deinabd, with sales - of 80- to 40 bhdit le No. 1 quereltron at Veto 130 for tine gronadinsetber tales - of Tanner's Bark have been made - at' 111 for Spanish 'oak. Cotton .10 dolt sod unsettled; - Maw of about 200 bales to note at the latter for mid. dling fair Uplands, cash. aro mries—The market is very Insatlie to day, and a few small lone of auger and Molasses only bare been disposed of, Provisions-I%e market is dim bet quie; and esmall briquet* doing in Bacon and malted orate Whiskey le low e er; bbls selhng it 270 for Maaton;2B4 ter' dbto Mid PrirOn, and 200 for drudge ibhds are mares, and held at TWO' New York Stook Exchange, June ' 5000 Ml.oottrt Ot 6.t .KV MO Harlem R prd _ 3674 26009 ..--- do '.. ,'- b3O 84% 3'o Iludind A - . .00 42% jOOOO do .PI6 84- 100, do : b 8043 5600 In Coo Mk .b81180 : ' 100 DV* kli I R 020 68 72n00 do ~ , .., .;., 20,116 Mob oe* R .. - 413( adoo - do .` • ' sea log , 130,b1tolt }l . . NI flti eOO 31 9Am Ex Book 101 60 11l Oem R 5151( •. 20 Oumb.rland pfd 10 60 Gal te. Chia R b3O 63X no N Y Oen - 15 7.4 100 do "- e 7 es% 60 . do . -73 X. 60 do ' b 3060 350 Rao Railro d - 6 .100 do 160 64 THE MARKETS. ' - Alma are steady at $5 50 for Pat and #7 , 45 tar Pearl, with males of 75 bble - Fulda :—Sba maikat /urinate and Visitant /Salto "bettor, but quiet, with Brasil receipts. ariCaalaa cf 6 010 bbla 0 Urot.so for oriporlioo , l3rate ; .067.20 .for extra 85.7606.0 for onportne Wester. Von) 7 40 for tiara do ; and $7•3007 06 for extra round boop Ohio Southern Flour is buoyant With Pales-of 800 bble at • $7 6007 70 for commo a to got di and 27 80x9 60 for rx.: tra brands. Canada Plour la nominal at yesterday'r contations - GRAIN —Wheat Is buoyant, with sales of 20 600 Irv, at 81 36 for Milwaukee Club; $1 70 for 'Wertern - res l el, 70 for white Ohio; 8,4 83 to. mls.oB. tiliaate - Con is buoyant. with tales of Goo bus at 903 for Wests , a mixed, Olafer rociad do:arid 9Tes93e for whits. Bye le quiet Barley is doll. Oa'a are quiet at Ora 620 for Reuther°, Pennsylvania, and Jersey, and Os 00 for State:O.nadot. sad Western: •• • . PROTte 022 k is , daft, with nine or 100 bble at Si? for Kees, 604 $151234 for Prime, , The steak on hand aggreasteg 9a 443 bids, stalest 91 392 oaths ilset May, and 43 0215 on fleet June, 1558. • Beef in So lower ; Rale!, at $0 7507 25' foe oOnntry Prime Clog 50 for oountry &tees $h old 50 for Re packed Ohlooe, and $l5O. 7 forlixtra Tee Julys*. returna ore the amok as 340,,nit pkra, mg* wet 52 072 on the 3st Mr," sad 22 053 ^n In Jane, Int. Ott Bleats and Bunn are dull. Lard is dull. wob eaten of 100 bbl, at Ilmol2e. - Halter sad .011sesS are steady . Wunmev Is unsettled, and held ist 270 Net% buyer et • 260. - - MTV YORK OATTLB 1153R.KEY, Widntoriy. atm I.—At goarket, 8 2i19 Baeree 21.9 rows,l kes. weals. 8 389 Sheep sod Lambs; and 0.185 Swine, allowing en WoresSe at TOL Beeves, 648 Sheep and Lambs sod 1,783 Swine, and a dearease of 15 Cows, and 54 Veal. at allerton , s, 3 011 haat were yarded, against 2 413 lent week. The receipt. were largely by the Etude,,, River road and Hodson bores Or, the atneir of Beer Cattle, New York contributed 829 head std Illinois 772 heal. At Bergen, N. J , 176 Beeves ware sold to Butchers for this nt trket. The market this week. has been wall Supplied and. we think 'paltry considered, unequalled in a very lorg time. Two tt ieds of the receipts were above medium and good grades, and full 1,000 head were very fat, ix -, trek quality The pleas realised were from 10 to 101(, eon's —some premium IP ciente; average of all sales, 101(01/. cents. The Bulls , ' and , s Beare , or the cattle trade are widely apart in their views of the pri. o a to-day, as comp, ed selth last we k. Some th ak there is no change—otems Bey, one•hslf to one cent lower. 'the feet is, that many speculators are die appointed., and are itradotus ,to cover their mirco. - capt'oGa of .2a-dape 13208 t., The rates are. coolly— es el 4 ering the marked" Improvement - in quality. and !beastly etas of veinal which ere now in the bureerra then ally bail a seat lower. Mitch Cori are nominal at Men ;Yeah are better end lee, rie,tv. at Serf:No; a few at Ta Serino are selling freely at 1308,ie for still fed, and agora gross for corn fed. Skeen bad Lambe have been more active, and ass 25e 4,0' bead higher. We quote at Cole. tire weirbt. and 300120 for Oa TILWI Mutton. and 18.60e8 60 ra 7 head I . o' 135ipp,- and $3.50 05 for Lambe The receipts were largely from New .iereey and Ohio. , Markets by 'Telegraph. NEW ORLEANS, Mar 31 —The toloo of Cotton today were 3.000 balm, the market &orlon tveopotar ; sold d lines 11+) Bolen for thrre days 7,C00 bole.; Tiliesipt s 1 800 bales, against 6,050 for the name tuna loot year. The receipts at all Elgothorrt ports ate_aola 672,000 taloa ahead of loot year. Sterling eaehazige is quoted at 109;07110 lisierti no, June 1 —Fleur fa quiet but firm, at file 755 Wheat to unchanged: at fit 70e1.08 tritnhite, and $LEOsel 05 for red. Corn is firm, at 860,880 for yellow, and 850e80e for white. PEPE - IEIOOE are dull. Bacon Olden, Ole; Mess. Pork, $l7BO. Whiskey is dull, but prices arm MOBIL*, May 31 —Cotton—Duty 500 bales sold to day atidollogs are qu)tad at 10X elle ; salsa, for threo daya, 1,250- bales; receipts, 200• bales. Cotton freiglit• to . Liverpool Caaamtaroe, May 01.—Cotton-500 bales sold. Mar. tut closed depressed--- _ CrECIINNATI 2 Jr 3.—itorir Ti fa taiedersaskat $340 en 7e. WIIHOLt sour* sod Se`o3 kigaut. mesa Pork $0,50 Lard 11,103. Bulk bleats , aod Bacon are be.d firmly, bat there le little doing: Matey is - firm at Tun army worm, that much-dreaded pest Of the farmer, Jo already committing-raves in some portions of the country., One, of the linert field, of barley in Kentucky, nn'the'She!l!, 7v ille turnpike, ID fast bill!g destroyed b 7 - 11 ale 117'
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