The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, June 23, 1859, Image 2

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    BE=EI
EMINEES
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N .P4Ol- 1 4-tailltltatti Wks 044to,olyai
of hotto;trlit, /Mitt to otio • *Adria; soon :triad:*
Ittortetoptml-tte all .t tato o'ouintir of Tirt Pima •ot•
lot, fitlitillptititii for !Main/ - • • •
- • 4.40 t
BoinOtsisn.,o.inip Ow Books and Matt ors ;
irdtiet4lXlifrY7Orki co(Naturaliled
citistimu l lbsaittlsofhisseets4-alloisi socounts;
frt*liltikida, Ili • Totittitt Pa:Gai •—•941•-
ral.krii4
„ •
• ThePaitln brought intelligesee of the death of
- 74,'pdferi,eeltilie of the-Nationat.Eres, who tiled
'jkiAVAAtqfTaelhe Pthleaa J'ethile r,onee $o
Vetak for health. :/lr:Aelley
entalmeltarliesall 4.10 1 /42f. 4.4 tla
eatioateilefiriThileditlphiss , whore:Mi. Mho. re , L
ehlli iteeeivirig the de-'
Ste"‘A*:-Witi * l OO 4 tlyal4i•aakh. weak te
17149►411'A11444.01tinii iettitiang,took ohbigs,
stl3elife eotkof theidetiantiet,lokerotaxisse edit
tot *OS /1.41131064' James Blinn,: ss
editor of..W.hhOlftlotrjauvel In Oinolnaatt.
1847, Ike*#e' s j,ieleit t eCike. thei.,edlioy,..of ; the WI;
gavel at -Wialih l o ll 4 iri ~ f illak• Vaaitiaa
he amtinted`tWlfie thoui of )ats death. The novel
ef"ftreali Tom'e' Oath& 'fait ippeareil in hie
ootellitto. I)r:, lf illey will' be
ithrilia Jig .si'. l 4oQ4B - Mow by a 'Luis obeli of
friesdiewa edmirocer.
lakitynoilitrfloc 000urred yootorday, In MU
wrotoe:Litlioninittnoot ; Yanoit'a block, next
tho etuitoni.heoiti; "Mel/ c on '
sined.. Itirsasomptid:bi Ante tltentY W l l ll l ll4
Iln"aCSOng Wit the- honirloilt-locoto us Amor
41k ottobire;'..l ort6* I rowloi, atur
itlsto ; Ooßisior;boOksilleti; 111,:lisqon
the -4444 to 100,000 t1ke*1W0.,440,400.: The
dotes' kt.illectedentitiott Iv 64410,0 at Wm*,
YAosfiikahoreitatilibik' apt
Frei*resioßs6:ooo'...l . : - •
t pattli *ft ofil* the [tog, then* *olt founds&
_
WrirtirCAcnihNynol4-414; wes
at : e 100014../.
Ohio Aware, hi the
bessilWW:art; as i°' - Stai'distrietir ate.
litT4 :to ea of-the Wheat fin/0 will-Di
Itairrisied;,iliforthirn — and - Central
ICOStrhpes •Aii-„lciv, in estbzusbal at ;.one-third
Theo Iprase,‘„heweOS6l
the ists/ ipresa Width hits, witklare few yew,
been - put under eultivatiorq andbinsi id no further
seeing Infer, awns, thioonsumers will init - etrifer,
by these frosts.: Nortl mint gialn is in
tine OM/Attlee; the , eereals will ;be aingsdent but
fruit eparoe. IniforticOsrotina the whole wheat
cropsrespr i d,lind the Odd "lik a good one. In
the vicinity of,lBn, Logisadi.:" the harvist had
0011301)11elitt on,hleedey. lowa ' the grain prop
Is erielierkerNithe yield move than - an ordinety
,'',Corn insections of the neer/try, although
a littleheititirenl, 'getting :eleig linelj. The
bunny rrsP;t4he eh/wresting, Of Whit& has own
waseed In Obto, Sr very, beory:'
The grand Lodge of the Order of F. and A. ti.
in Oilifor*baci, - their; annual nieeting at Snore.
meato.lentmeaponth, 6 • 4608 M 4 '04 4 1 4 , 1 4 -
/,'4-42tY,.1.0d1185 were miliromed The whole -
renaltir, of Lodges with* Work _ under- under the
j2riedtotieykorthe linndrod
s l4 • ll lll l 7toiTei4riOrf*Wf o V the par were
P 0,504 , thidishateeatentsso,63l, The anneal
enportsethit• Ifiso4r-Mbitit B an
tiallto bar!
s6,l74o3osinif I „.444dittifittr , for a ilt hid:
of idqt
sway end dreetititte brethren, SLOW ISt. the Rol
De tiOs wi4leiv - and ofilidnin of bre
41 1 4 for iih,OSP4dtd ft* destitute bre
throat "414111, ,sueolitraren, *es° f
and theorafeeknies btitlasn, Md.;
Otirtht ' •
iehisdit i stidd Atlfashiligton that the oaths
gnawat 6 # 4lll l ( Yftkgit 1 31,6 * o r 4 141 ' 4 V "'
29 14"biffpls i titimpilloilit4rth.4tYPurvi444
detest twit.f ientdielot , iliftwittiblit the 4440047
tint Itill'llet r -hioris 'the. OttbwAtion • lista until a
silikOhjitt 'et *Milk* hmtittoimprniie ilte •
Pareft`fWthlo 4 PrOTC Thit
does,' awpoidision - or:Wm6sitoot *aim - 10 t
pas IR "ones Wider be outran( the itmodatton
dietnible geriPt
"'late; ' Na Tiieluei ` 0-.,Ashot of North ' Carolina ._
rlp'e Pup the oht Whip PSrty,
god =acne& itiPieted for hie °muse in
001mitew, of s Nora *mention in Ohdriotta,
0., was vothineteil qui the Oppoeitien'4 eitidiriatorl
for oongrase fries that. dish,dot,' Mr. . Ashe promptly
end pcnitivelyileellsee the nomination, odd rap
he la OT& hit he dOn't go liteiths new agent.
, -
Ao7glinioi4ent firedn Trav:tair, at
isiosaletOndef tiate.lof Hersh 2oo4 writee ill
illtAltellt4g.3o*,llll,lll It'llederiptiod at "bp s
*ad tit stetineitortisfors itolf
tfist Ott sad
Btilisr;t lll o. o 4 l 4*
mark :who is sound 'tot to the/Mi . ' TAO.
TholWitkw*, *tract for the Nouse of Rem ,
itor .4 o l rlfshingtop. has boon awarded to
pfWealkindtp ; and Isaac
if Sior Voxi4 • - '
'on pit.:**ls4 et a. number of the standing
eephedit* - -fl fsotatimilliat the Rev. Dr. Odes,.
fiSitik; Pi 601'4 , 4 b P:.: I4 Pr '
lei for Xet4eree,Y,
-the ordination wilt hairnet It 010 tiencral Om.
' l lo lll .#, TC. I4 : !kid diAteinstend, Ootober
.1134fcsitihr*Ira**;.imite - nleefei of
a* iMp roodefie,-.cd Mk*: T61'14108 pfichoi
al — tbfseert:o r tiag, tea Ottneetts, , Ireland,
theist - 144 1 4 41 " 81 4'A Yikittetar, dear.
44**, ;in, 1 4 PPO#;,4*t for
„
Ili . irVitiod Skitaa'sitiiiichlaiefawa arrived at. ,
IrOtqf .tal# o 4olf 2 ditke ,Ail , 00 04,0 , ' 00.
40 : 11.Wolo j oii,;06 1 0,.; 0 0: 1 f' 1, :' tooff -.1 !ost: Via'
salmi. 0n44,4: 01 1. 4.0.0 . '-roloi!kirajbOrriP 'for
Hong goat In eoneesisineit: • TiO extent Of doroogo,
a e ,' . 14 ,i le fi i id irlynkjiieseiiiiia, ."'' ' ', 1 - , ',''
,A - ifiastiiiiiiit of 'ol.li#ildiiii,l3:.,o4 1.44 `4,1•644'
tWillaiiiilitilfo:4:ot , ikt .Aii deliver t,ii on •
tint* 44 giowiobilimitidrobk . l4loon 4 ry 0
**Oil* ifinway -- thi , Eforasw * l l4* - Eaglidi.'
‘,l4";•fitaiiilie Oeffteallurj, l that or ..kt!,or, I.
? AS /06t4 Priil,4ikai f ;f ' ' '' .: ' ' - , ~_ ,' ' i ' - ,
' 'ltailii" , lialliiit : i 34l 47).4 ll) ,Mit! ii 0 0 0 404
‘kiiii:4larivthiroitiatqAlit , for IrooPitor ,of rtsani
f "„tatt,- 2 1!;,..,*11* - _
j ot .041iftinktis;iinuriOstirled Ale . St.j
J,..roloodlilicutiol44;;OfiliKipill Othilo_4l 4 Abe
'-2.•4l.roiirit-,lP4iti=lt::#(34liill4ll#g,.4(**o kfut 4444 !
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rari
, t;!J.l.4kpiriiji,ore,ria# .";ilOrtoiligliwok - 440440 .0
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•0 te). .- OliiikkvOorioits4 *414.401mi
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. .i' l !LliVri,#i*-.*** i '? 4 - 149,4141 Seiii = ,
: 4 " - A-%-_-;:”' --.-' J . ~ _ : • , J "„ '' ,
- , ...-.../1 - -7. - . - - , J",'4 , n ;•:-', . - ' - ' - -
British Ministerial WAN.- -
Lord Drarm's Administration bait heou'ee'
fbated, by a hostile vote in thellortSe efijete
mons. On the 7th Sane, the Session of Par
liament was opened by Qaden.:Vreroars.,, who
read that Ministerial programme called " the
Speech from the Throne," In which the coun
try was strongly pledged to a pacific policy,
and the passing of a measure of Parliaments-
Refli,olw#o reeel'.lmooe4-
Unto House Lords, iedebato took place
ligionthe alma MistiOn - itiat a rg dutital and
leyarAddresr'!' to the Queen 'Should be vo
ted: ThisAddresi usually is aniere echo of
*honeys' SPeersh, do framed as to present few
salient points for discussion and objection; A
debate arose; htiwever, in which the foreign
and domestic policy of the Government were
tleedy 'Aimed and warmly defended. Among
the anti-Ministerial speakers were Earl ORAN-
V/LLE, Earl Of Damen, and the Duke Of An-
Opl, all of whom have.been recently in office,
tyal . are agitating for a,,return 'baits dignity,
lie;werr.and patronage. , Lord Danny made an
iblkdefentes isf hie Administration, and the
Lora this 'Voted ttio Addresa 'without a di
vision. • . , •
_'liso;the gouge , of:Omninens, the popular
ThMilch of JIM i3rltiatt'Lesialature pursued a
different course. The address to the Queen
W*ll'moved, is:theiasnal routine, - whei r eupcin
the 'young Marquis of Baarritaron, eldest son
et the Duke of Devonsunts s moved that the
'fplleilei',worde' - 'lie added to the Address:
Itiiteg hturibly to Submit to your Majesty,
That emend's' to the'llatisfactory result of
'Mkt„dellberatiiies; Ai:vibe : Securing the success
Of our councils, and to the fscilitatieg the
4lisehaige,4 7 the 'high frinetions of yew. Ma
laity, that year - Majesty's Gerona:lent' should
possess the sonadence of this Souse end of
thecountry; and Ire _A °ern iCour duty re.
spectrally to rept; iWts.„yone-M.ajesty that
"714rdence is not reposed in your Ma.
Jelotr-eeiblet 3 4
Marquis; zithe made , hie first ParliaMentery
elle4O l C,On this;:ocOutiOn;—and a poor effort
it must: have been if he. spoke no better
thin ~hie , father • doetL.-was r put forward
by the Whig party, because be represents
s Dokedom, because his father is worth
$8,000,000' per annum, because his family
have ;been Whigs since the Revolution' of
1658:-and bedsits* the Liberals in England
nalittiltiove a Lord—even though he be a
rapid, otter • - .
This amendment, it will be noticed, de
oboes th'at the Derby Ministry do not possess
the • couddence of the, House-of Commons.
On thin point the Ministry joined issue with
their' rivals. Mr. Drumm was the leading
speaker for the Governinent. Against him,
with ,a crowd of smaller fry, were Lord Pax-,
nentrroi, Lord 344 Evestatt, Sir jamas GRA
fisarat ifsanear, James 'Moon, Soon
'BRIGHTI; MINIM Glister, and Sir G. C. Lawn,
witoi . With the exception , of Mr. BRIGET, ,
(whit, is said to ;have the promise of a seat in
the , ,Ottbinet, sittittld the Liberals construct
one,) bays been in office, and are mancenvring
to, regain it. On a &Vision; Ministers were
beaten try; a -majority of 18, in a thronged,
lionie of 888—which, with the speaker
and four tellers makes a total of 688
present, out 'of 864 members which consti
tute the HOll4. IVO believe, is the
fullest Route of the' present .century. The
no shes% were 810 for, and 328 against Minis-
; Otatlaronal, an' extreme Peolite, voted
and -spoke in favor of the Ministry. Bo did
that extioine Rndical, Mr. Ronal:Tx. Out of
1.05 Irisli. , ntembera, .60 voted with, and 85
'oemnst Miniaters.,. We anticipated thin. • It
watt stariely to be, expected That the reprO;
Nelda - Urea of Trish Catholic constituencies
ocinld artpPort Lord Joint Rusantt, who bad so
Sedulously maligned the _religion of this great
Majority of the Trish popnlation.—The Com
moan adjonined to the . 17ditnatant. ' •
There was a great ,expeotattenipartlenlarly
,among -the! Whig:part*, that Lord Dmanr
li_o*krosigpoadine, and that Ramo ROTOR or
vonid 4 he peat .by the Queen to
fOrii :it dinintattation: It• JR nintuaDy
twaged,that whfehever'oFthe _twain he, iiiade
• •wd to
ialny - .9;i co, 'tomer Win, rim our ownt
par ,
thatirta the eustenCbakiien- for an out, voted
*Water to, realign - office, thieja pot iterarlahl e t ,
.When'Sr.tintait Prrr,beoemeTreinter,ln 1788;
be *as- eut t voted. Pretinently; bat; banked by
the 1 K leg, be 'atently. defied the Oppottton,
kept
„ F ifa •plien t - and lbem by bta Porn
10(citY.
be'sarprlied at bearing that
the Derby retained office, despite 'of
thovote of want of cenflderice. They have a
oompaci, forcp; it seems, of; 810 "mombers in
the Cornmons, while the Opposition; including
tieveral ,seetions with conflicting views on
many POW* ntrinber,B2B. On a second trial
Of:strength, this latter force would probably
diminish, while the Ministerial nehesion would
4ontinete, as it
Nor, even if Lord • Denim resign, is it at
all certain that`Nratirearerr or RUSSELL will
he sent or, by the Queen to govern, the erMn
trY:;.' To 'oho - is, said to have a decided
o,,pcona;-. objection. ' Besides,
...she
„would, of
. -Ireland by giving • the Premiership to,
Ilnisistr.4 and she would alarm Europe by re
iitering;plidiarieron to the conduct of affairs;
dertiestittand foreign. -If Lord DEED should
rtjsigti; the ehaneet of his doing so,being con-'
,thierahlor mllooid not be astonished': at'
learoing that the Queen bas•passed by the old,
OtditiettlitaTekikarid`osited prof o : L antintsidei".',
to feria Ai; Adtitiiifiitiat l ion.::, Thu Earl of Er
Pitge,*(l?frertferlieneral of Canada, Find 0z
*0:61,440:10,434iiii, as not to
hecoma,Prentter, With a Coalition Cabinet.
. _ .
•-• '
,tn'"tbe copious" foreign Intel
NORM recelvati- bzitho steam e rs Kangaroo
inct.Perrie 151014 wf# Poblisited yesterday; we
"lam give iorllwOir tie : taw-4 the battle of
iSifitiettet; iseladhig theoilleial reports sent by
gabeUlgeieaai 4p rriatee Misd`renna. They
icontlnn the former. .rePortti' which have up
ruled, and, show tlist the, • Anstrians, in far
:snicrior Torr.°, .were beaten't;y the French ;
,lhat the French 'ate• much better soldiers
:that` Araiotron has 'establfalled Lis' reputationi
:u a bold soldier, and skiltbl commander, and
'that Milan, the capital of Lombardy, is in the
:Occupation 'otthe 'Allies, and has solemnly
transferred its allegiance to the King of Sar
"
. ,
Austria will not girdway, we 'suppose, after
one defeat, She will take a groat deal of
beitting:Sen out ef Italy, she will proba
bly endeavor, to
.continue. the 'war in the
Ty'rotr There is every reason to believe bat
Germany is Most aturitMS to fling herself into
this war, rather from antipathy to Franca/lan
front regard for Austria: Brit, while the con
tent Is, confined to Italy, there is not the
,shadow of a pretext for the armed inter
ference of Germany. There is Much politi
cal, sagacity,- therefore, in Naromrox's del
aided - determination to keep this strictly an
" • '
, -
few= European politiolane arc Sanguine
in their expectation, that, after the French
toil:44l'# Magenta, it' would not be'ditlicalt
to' end the war, by negotiation. TheYlenne
correatindind of the London-Timer rays that
wo of the most influential of the neutral
POVrers - tweed on' proposing an arrangement
offer the'tlist'greet ,battlei and, if necessary . ,
htillethig.on;the adoption' of . n by the three
' belligerents, 'on the 'following principles: I.
!Phis siceemplislied - fact; that li' the territory
gained ., by -the. victorious party, shall be rm.•
-
oePtalf b y , 'all the: European Powers as the
barde, of CongreSe. 2 1 , The entrance of the
Itialreh, 7 into' supported -by a popn
lar„inanifestationl:, shall: be considered by
the, European Powers as proof
convincing.
iif; thie7:reprobation_ of, -the policy pursued
iii Italy, ny the AnstrianGainnet. 8. The nen
tral Will insist on an armistice while" a
• fiengretis to assembled. : . 4; ‘The extension of
'the Kingdom of Sardinia, will be deemed as
' ftiential, and the pueblos of Parma and M.
with the 'fortress of Piacenza, are to be
•added - to „It will' be prepched to for*
tWittnnbardolVenetian Kingdontinto a State
distinct= fr•ani the Atistrian - Empire, but
-1110fted-cby , anAustrian Archduke. Si h
ao,.thithiefriv afloat in the more ele4ated core.
sststslarlidfil l ; 104 which base tended to al
*o "
Ili produced - by the ,deolarettott of
inik;:44.i4o mto: We consider, such
, - ,wouUtiso;litterli...abiard, for Lours Na.-
'soluoa vsoiald,lsoirlitheld in France if be
testiseatedelo. penal Artier* In any Manner,
hbldluttror way in%ltaly. He. must drive
-- -
olrr;T--
siorAfirr , PAnt..,ltyasis
iii g` ir' th"e':isiaft ' euch~tidq • piaoi of fashion**
*elln-the oity.:4lowers birds, and rondo. At•
Assiimestik are beteg made to hay, afternoon am
ity/o*i teltk 1,000 children,
Mr. Greeley's, Speech in Kansas,
Mr. lloaton,Ganinres speech delivered at
Osawatonae,Kanias, on the 18th of May last,
is highlyvapplau6d by the Rotator!! Inter-
Irentionlet, and the advocate of-the slave code
&mantled for the South chuckles with Melte
satisfaction at what he is plemed to term the
severe'strib given by it to the--to him—bated
doctrine of Popular Sovereignty. The former
goes to work quietly to rebuild the platform on
which Mr. FREMONT was placed in 1856, not
withstanding the same was taken, down, and
stored away in tho political cock-loft last win
ter,.wheu every Republican member of Con
green either, spoke or voted fortheapplication
of the principle of iton•intertiontion to the
-Territory of Kansas. The latter congratuiates
himself that his sneers at squatter sovereignty
have prevpiled to drive the Republican from a
sentiment which, if adopted generally by
Northern political parties, would have hemmed
.in his,“ peculiar institution" within the limits
of the now existing slave States. This is an
other instance of extremes meeting. A poll.:
Real see-swims been erected, and on one end
of which is. Mr, quineatax„,the Northern in-,
terventlonistegaiest slavy,, , . and on the other
Mr...imam G..Blows,,demanding his slave,
1
code, to proleo slavery.. ~Neither, stops to, con•
suitthe wisbes ef tbe ; pep*, who are to, be
affected by this institutten;.and both . agree
that the , question , shalthe, -taken ,ont of their
hands, cud' givenlA;vthe _Rouse el • Tiepin
sentatiVeS, -the iiiii)fate7, - and the National 1.1 i;,
ecutive. Againat,hoth asenmptlens we, enter
our
_solemn protest,, and, while protesting;
raise aloft tbe banner of the people, demanding
that they-slnill settle this question in States
and Territories as they shall see proper.
Mr.. Gattunax, hew:ever, says he has a prin
ciple of Popidar Rovereigulgeroaintein, and
It is thus enunciated t_ • - ,: '-: • ; '---' --:_
- '
re "Thi popular sovereignty which I do believe in
and xr.iteptqtri 1, the sovereign right of the itmert
cmkpeolde—of-the thirty,millions of our country.
roccon.liag thrototh their , oboren RepresentatiVea
lOtnairresa-t-te exclude human slavery from every
square loch of their common domain, and -pen
snob laws as they Shall And neeekaary to enforce
and perpetuate -snob exolnaion ; thus preserving
and conseerating that magnifloont
— domain to free
labor and free men evermore.' ' ' ' '.
;What, to Ibis but simply robbing the States
of till their independent rightsi and making
th.eni, P flie slave's of the General Government?
It la a STaaCtlystem, .of,:e4tralleatlon, by
which - Stetatirights are annihilated, and the
desPOtiset,Of f lCstOt overrnlitig central - power
set uplit-thelfatied. : It will not do for Mr.
Gammas. to say that be would only exercise
thin poeter in the case of negro Slavery. Of
course be is not looking beyond this at the
present moment, but a hundred questions can
continually arise in. which our liberties—nay;
even our very form of Govermaint—May, be
affected or called in question. The central
power, under the control of a tyrant and a
Monarchist, with a Congress to sustain him,.
may in the future repudiate our whole popular
system, and erect in its place a Government
where the States will have no voice. Is this
not, Indeed, eXactly the oneo proposed by Mr.
GRVELBY now? He, to be sure, in dealing
With a question where humanity. is intimately
concerned, but slavery is recognised by our
Constitution. ]very man admits to-day that
any free - State may, at any moment, establish
slavery ; by, municipal reinlattoni but Mr.
Gasimirr demands that (i'ongress ,Mutil bind
]sew States coming into the Confederacy to a
perpetual exclusion of this institution. This
-creates an inequality of the States, one State
•having'a pincer denied to another. 'lint sup•
poise the thirty millions of people spoken of
by Mr.-• Elnextrami acting, :too, thrOugh their
chosen Representatives, in Congress, choose
not to exclude human slavery, hut te.etitah,lish
it, what then ? What isle going to do in this
"contingency? Revolution may bp pis neat
resort, but he will retheinber that a Majority
are against his view of the question, and nom
hers in a reyolutionmay turn the scale (martin
nhand.to-band . fight against the minority, he
their cease ever im righteous. All this
_thing
ia a bald fallacy. Mr., 'I3IO7T.ST may preach
bia theories; and echo them from every peak
the - Rocky Mountains, over which ho is
paining, but the end *ill be Oat the,peoplo of
eactr*:-. 3 -Awcry Territory of this Republic will
their awn: Way, and slairery cannot be made an
exception to this generaltttle, - Congress May
, Miclude it one day from a Territory as a con.
Altion, but the next, as a SLAW, this same Ter.
`ritM3r will snap - its lingers in the face of lion.
g_ress, aid establish the institution. So Mr.
and the party he Seeks to influence, may
justrui well come to the controlling principle
At once, for come to it they must; in the fu
ture.
, But let =look a little farther into this ques
tion. The interventionist of-the TrOune
claims that the
,North after the next census
will haven preponderance of political power,
and this power will control legislation against
the spread of slavery. This may be true, so
far es the House otEeprosentatives is con
cerned; but some six years Will be required to
change the sentiment on this question in the
United States Senate. The House you have,
Ito the 'Executive you have, but not the
Senate. Yciu must wait a good round period,
fOrit change there. HoweVer, when, alter the
expiration of this period, bo it long or short,
you lied that body with a majority for Inter
vention, then you 'come up square against the
Supreme Court.
Now, we do not admit that this court, in the
,Dred'Spcitt decision, has decided that slavery
, goetinto all , the Territories under the Condi
.tution, but its dicta is thee way, and where the
direct case comes up wit have no doubt it will
so decide. What then? Mr. Genstar • has
a' twenty-Years war before him to change the
jedges of that court; and procure men enter
'taining his sentiments. This is rather a pro
tracted battle to bring about a result which Is
now provided for by the doctrine of Popular
Sovereignty. He chooses to keep this ques
tion in Congress, distracting an country for
quite a quarter of a century, rather than at
once give it into the hands of the' people
of the Territories, who are to-day competent
to manage It saccerusfully for themselves. And
then, too, it is a doctrine which effeetually
puts a stop to the spread of •elavery, and •It
does so in a way to toreVer preeltide the South
from complaining of injustice on the part of
the North. The South has no men to spare
to people new Territories—we NOM theta in
large numbers ? and they must go there natu
rally. - Thus mach by way of comparison be
tvieen the Democratic or the true doctrine of
Popular Sovereignty, and Mr. (Inumarr's cen
tralizing Popular Sovereignty.' The one re-
Cognises State rights; the other uproots alt
rights of the States, and makes them subser
vient to thelleneral'Haverninenf..
We now, in conclusion, draw attention to
the following remarkable passage in Mr.; G.'s
speect. lle will remeniner that we also spent
the 'winter of Hitis-13 in Wrudringtoa, and are,
thersfore, Canipetent to *enact his_rularepro
aeritatlons. We quote from his speech
"Ispent the' 'winter' of 11355 5' Wiehington,
mainly - Intent on doing my little all to indult,
Congress to. lend an ear to, your prayers for.pro
tectiousand relief '-- To this end I did my ntimist,
thy pntille argument andirrivste entreaty, to in
rime Congress to accept your Topeka Constitutilm,
and time , by admitting you into the Caton under
-an instrument which however iiregniar in, its
inception and - formation embodied *be earnest
prayers of a' large Majority' -of the then Inhabi
tants of Kansas, and would, had it been accept
ed, , have enabled ' , Moto defend and protect
yorunselvtle. I'f6und many earnest ao•woriters in
this drat, including every Republican then in
Congress, and a few Northern Representatives
who were called Americans;' but such an ani
mal as a Free-State Democrat , or a Demo.
crap of, any stripe, intent nn Putting' You in a pa.
sition M defend. yotirseives'efilelently against the
border ?Tacna then revitglog 'Kansas, did not
And in all Washiegton. OA the contrary, I found
them all intent on leaving you to the tendermer
else of Colonels Titus and Berard, of Oen. Reid
and Sheriff Jones, with yoUr rights and liberties
under the legal guardianship of Marshal Fain and
Judge Lecompte. Of the hundred Democrats in
Congress, except those who then and there re.
,noutored the foul party, - and declared openly for
Freedom and Frement, there was not a man to
plead your cause or lend it a kindly oar when (do
artently pleaded by Seward and Stunner, by Collo.-
mer and Wade, by Colfax and Burlingame. nude
Many others."
' Now, Mr. aItEEIMY may assert that tf of the
hundred Democrats in Congress, except those
who then and,there renounced the foul party,
and declared openly for Freedom and Fremont,
there was not a man to plead your cause or land
it a kindly ear," but be is mistaken. Who was
the main instrument in sending the commission
IC:ansas which brought home oral' exposition,
tinder calk, of all the frauds and enormities per
petrated in that Territory 7 Was it a Republi
can 7 No I it was a Democrat—and one, toe,
who sustained Mr. litconiman eloquently in
1856, but who afterwards abandoned him when
he, and his Administration recreantly deserted:
itui rights of the people, in both States andt,
Territories. That man was Jolts Iflceputrof
the Chester district. But for him, the frauds
►n UM, tided still bo alleged ) but m uot pre•
THE PRESS.--PHILADELPHIA, TITURSDA,Y, JUNE 23, 1859.
yen. And he was misted, too, by other
Democrats in this struggle,
We remember very web the determined will
and purpose of Mr Human in that investi
gation. He _successfully met such men as
ALEXANDER STEPHENS, of Georgia, in a hand.
to-hand mental encounter, and, casting aside
party trammels, forged by Southern men,
sought only to got at the truth. And we may
say, in passing, without expressing an opinion
as to tho correctness of his vote, that he, too, ,
snatained the Topeka ' Uonatitntion , Mr.
@ZELIILT, in thiS particular, also forgets the .
records of the country.
, No man in the Conitnittee on Elections, or
to either House of Congress, did more for
Kansas than Mr. HiCITLKAN. 'Ey common con.
sent of the members of that committee ho
Was entrusted with the resolution aSking'for
Power to send for persons and papers, and the
able majority report was altio drawn and pre.
tinted by him ; and we have not forgotten
that the whole investigation was daily weak
mod by the determination -of Republican_
Members of Congress 'to make speeches ter
Personal . political 'effect at home. '• While the
South wass,ingenionsly keeping nplhe debate,
her sagacious Politicians' were boasting that
the matter was being w spoken to death." Mr.
Monne* having no political ends to ROVED
plish, hat 'only desirous of • getting ,at the
tied; pleaded with the Republicans to con
elude the discussion, but they showed more
intereat in making long speeches than in in-•
'vestigating the dtrOcitfes air...elms. When
the debate was concluded it was found-that
the resolution to send for persons and papers
'would be defeated • by' a small majority,
thro'ngh the influence •of certain , Mel:tern
Americans," and then it Wae,,tliat , il l If top! ,
mks, with' great adroitness, suggested *it' he
WOuld, accept Mr. Ihnin ( ii Proposition, for a
Coremliodon th'itoreittigate, thus securing, the
Northern fe American" vote, and 'consequent+,
lythe important investigation.
- We have thought it. ut right to express, Mr.
GREEtar's misrepresentations, and; at the
same time to justice to one, - -of the
boldest and truest Den:tomb in the nation, ,- •
Louis Natioleo,us it Soldier—The DHU
It appears by the detailed
. accountvot the'
battle of Magenta and the movements which,
preceded it, that Lours Karam hes taken
a very active parkin directing the nianmuviii
of the Allied armies. 'Re, hai not , gone to
Italy as an Idle spectator, or merely to incite
by his presence his generals and trporui to ac
tivity and courage, but he Is Jimmy respechs:
the, military guiding and commanding
of the campaign.. It appears thit a pet-work
of telegraphic wires is set over,eaCifpe*dia.
triet of country se Soon as, the French gain
Possession of it, and over these swift channels
of Intelligence the Emperor , coni•eys bra
orders to his . diatant corps d'arnies. '
The strategical movement by Which orttis",t
was Misledinsegard to the real design of the
Allied armies, arid !minced to send t i tie,priticf-'
;pal portion of his troops in a false dliedtten
at the critical pelmet:lk, When they . werifr4-
caked , in" the vielniti of Magmata, 'ie . , eibm
sidered by Military. mitten to be one of the
finest displays of military genitis of modern
times, and 14'sronmits Is evidently entitled to
a large 'Mare of the honor Of devising' it;
At one Stage ,of the „fight the result wee
extremely erifical." The /mPerial ,Gitaiti and
a few . 2ourives ' with Napor.ion in their midst,
were attacked by a greatly superior irOrlatt
force, and but for the timely arrival or Mar
Magenta,Might pave proved it;
the French.a much mote serious defeat than
it has been to the Anitrians. On the 'otter'
handfit alt the Alll4 GrjrN,Ps4. l .litil ita'raktt
and prompt to their movements as was Origi:
natty anticipated, and' if ooMaforeseen 'obsta
cles had obstructed their' march, the /Until: *
aria would Prohablyhave been unable to effect
an orderly retreat., and their wholnertay would
have beah'in itiunitient danger of destmatien."
The, deipateli. from' Vienna to,Tho London,
Tirriea,stating that general-CoMplainta are preased there aftheblunderri of fierijofhirniri
is, indirectly, one of the highest
'that could have been Feld tiltheittilitatijW
nine of !Woven. • ' •-• VA I.
steadily increasing. ; Unless Nsrenctorsho
aa nondataliableditliesitiontosittar4ilitir
of vital imPorteriec to ta c restAltitale:lfilf:Vt:
niatry cab be sustained' which attempts . ]tii'
aid, directly or indirectly, the cense of
S. -
trla.
Prussia, toe,"appnars to be still actiVely 're
sisting the efforts to enlist Germany in the'
war as an ally of Austria, and the Rusidan
organs rc;joice almost as much in the tritininhs
of the Allies as the French Journal. lt is'
also said that, of the - Prisoners isapfured' by
the French, several regiments were compoied
mainly of Italians and Hungarians, who, re.
joined in their captivity, end there are proba
bly thousands now in the Austrian army';vrtio
will embrace the first convenient opportaniti
to desert.
. .... .
,
On all bands, therefore, Anetrla is sertimely
menaced, and for tho present cut off From
effective aid from . any quarter. *Her liallan
sobJects and hot Italian and Hungarian troops
are ready - and eager to aid her ro oa .4 Her
'.iuttighty and imposing military attitu
.has
been.destroyed.Avictoributi and enthuelaitle
army is - preselitg olcieely',upoh: ilfe'ligels or
/
her retreating ' tegiond, 'dud, tarikwrit • ...Way,
she will, oho 4411 linds,clottds Of ta" agora
gathering areiind iier: " She ea , Mir nsolo
,herself by the' reflection that dark' heats are
not new t4bta: hbitoty, and that,greaCtis, her"
.present perils' may,. be, she has heritteferel
emerged tritunphantly from still mattr difil:
cifities. " ' - ' "
The following letter front Caleb Cashlng;Ainited
States Attorney General under :the. P4l l P O Ad'
.
ministration, will be reed With interest ktithe pre ,
sent time, when there is no much solioltu4 among
„
our naturalized oltizens as to What Willibe their
status should they volnutarity ratans to Ski land'
of their birth: - 1 •
"Boirrost,:lBtti Yam), ISO.
” SIR ; In response to your inquiry Sel to what
legal conditionyou. born in Turkey, andkuateral
hied citizen of t ie United States; will Inife in Tar.'
key, during a priposed sojourn those, trate 3 ;
, "Tis taws,of the United. States do not dmit the
indefeasibility of natural '
Alleglano,e. ho' adios
lion of the'right of'solteapitriation is no Of ;this
pritusiplet of Zile .fundsteelliel Sliblic 1 w of the
t t
American Union. We hold that the L power to
obange,domioll is of universal natural fight,.enb ,
jeot only to inch ootidithlos sniatak bequiche to
reopens the' general gigs Indirof d faitldua interests;
These conditions are the aserglie j .
gi l
the time and bironmstamies, and in thetparpcse of
the change of derision, thlittotnetaonsiskimation of
the purpose, and the ditellaile of alk robs/Sting
obligations in or to the culinary
,eft. Snob, ac
cording to my understanding of theme e, always
has been, and still co:silt:movie. be, e doctrine
maintained by the American °overrun At.
t tt
"It being material to you, however, to possesi
odlolal awaranoe on this, point'L , has* presented,
your o ease to the notice of the grusrotagp.of Finite •;
and I have bit unmet to the ageat - ,lbot, in the
'case of a person emigrating tit the Waited Stiles;
and becoming• naturalized heris,lsitli. no prang
liabliitlez Ur hie native oonntry, rnilitm7 ,or other,
existing against him at the ifme ofhitsetaigr s atien.
'-.-In lamb date the 'law of nations; orsthe opinion
of the ;Ai:nodose Otry(tromeut g11 , 4311,134)..5jght to
any foreign country to inu s rferuwlth im, and tho
attempt to do so would be Could. An dot un
just' in itself, and unfriendly to the' ited States.
"And,• therefor., subject. to thkireeervatians 1
,above stated, you, will be enCi tied' in; Turkey to
be r ',girded as a citizen of the Maid Pastel', '
" r am, respeotfully, ; al.•Cusisinfs.
. "Mr Alezander Slab". . s,
:•
' PultilicatiOrts
From PBTx.nkow k Bttormt
All the rear.llowidp No: 7.:.
Prom W. B. ZtREIER, ¶6lyd strootl
Blackwood's Ara4ravina, for Jpe,
From T. B. Pparr, Gl5 Oheatnut itrifet,
Atlantiellganthln, for July.
,q
PICTORM NEWSPAPBIIIB.—Tbe ,Roglish,ploto
riale are• crowded with engravinse of, noticeable
and memorable Femme and plume t in the pollen
Wei., We are Indebted to Oeximcenin s. Co.,
Routh Ibird and Walnut street, ne*apaperegesta, ,
for the Ilitistrated Lon4on Ne4Os, and ileO the
Illustrated New sof the World, ki• the 11th
Also, for the Eleventh number ot•tho New York
edition of All the Year Round. ';'
• TAR NRXT gLonen binvraan.--Tbere will be
another delectable matinee, at ete Aoadetay 'of
blush), on Saturday. Little Red Itidierlfood,
wolf and all, will be produced, by the jnierdle
performers, who will also give ti ballot, pith the
dance of• the garlands, and the bangnat•aocne
in Cinderella.
Ewen ESTATE, BECTIOITII9S, Rt., AT PERNIITTO.
B,m.—"lbis evening, at 8 o'Clook, J. M. Gom
m), .4c Sons will sell at publio Sale at the Phila
delphia Exohange, a number of desirable silty and
country properties, well scoured ground rents,
mortgages, ,to., without reserve, to the highest
bidder. Catalogues may be 41 at their ofttie,
No. 630 Wulnut street.
EXTRA Lestaa,Sum, /min Bomar, --,ThMnsa
Sons! sale, on tamale.: neat, 2,4 h inst ,11 (MM.
prim i a very lair, amount Of
,Valuable property,
by order of Orphanet Court, 'fruteds, ekeentors,
mad others, MeMaui elegant eM plait realdenoeS,
ralnable business IMMO, ootiiitry liroporty,•,,AO ;
Ao. See advertisements, auction head. Pampb.
let catalogues on Saturday.
pt Apstrin.
B Y MIIIITIGLIT - MAIL.
Letter from i 6 Ricca!dough"
COire,poirlence of Tho Press j ,
wA fluateAtit" June 22,1859
We mild not lore_ right of the main issue in.
volved Li the bloody battles between the Allies
and the •Austrians, on the clout() soil of Itely-
Probably . no nation in the world is more deeply
interested in giving fell consideration to this
issue than the Germans. It is not a war—oaths
Austtlans: are trying to make it appear, and some
of the Prussian ir dtar tio—of Probes and French-,
.tasa, against Germany and Germans, but it, is a
Struggle to maintain mod remand to Italy full
Italian unity . and independence. Let us hold
Lents Ittepoleon to this committal. I knOw that
many *ding" American - statedintin base their
whole polition:orc this question upon distrust of
Louis Napoleon; but up to the present moment
all •hie late ants have ignored this suspicion.
When he interferes with Germany, or attempts to
consolidate French power in Italy, in order to
turn that great eiatett7into a Preach dependenoy,
I it will b 6 time enough to indulge apprehensions
,whieh now seem to be absurd and unjust. nll2Blll
unquestionably, become a„ party to the war
ihould' the Germanic States-undertake to act on
the counsels which are now operating npon - them,
trnd 'who San Imagine ,the eoneequenoes to our
country when England puts forward her strength
on the great battle•field;•whioh must then extend
all over otvilized Europe!
At the late election which took place in ba-
Vague, lowa, on the 113th of rune, an expression
of ppiaion Was obtained significant of Western
feeling inregard to the Administration, Judge
Douglas. a n t the Territorial qqestion. Twenty
nine delegates were elected to attend the State
'onvention, whioh is to be held tomorrow, at
Des Moines, by a vote of one hundred and twenty
flvifor the Douglas men to three votes for the Ad
meoistrailon men. Among the delegates elected,
T notice,' the names of Ben. M.
Dapooratineandidate !or ',Governor,
Boa. S. Wilson, one 'orthe"oldest
Demootats in the State,-and lio,n. S. lienmstend,
pall known in Washington armies; and among'
the resolutions adopted were the following ;
," That we hereby affirm the platform and Prinoi.
pies adopted by the Democratic National Cowen.
Von; et 4)lneinnati, on the 4th day of June,-1856,
and pledge ourtolves to stand by those rind.
plea.
Resolved, That the organised Territories of the
United States are only held in the Territorial
'condition until they attain a suffielentnumber of
,inhabitants to authorise their admission into the
finial as States, and therefore are justly entitled to
he tight - of self government and the undisturbed
reg'.l4Uon of their own* domestic. or local effairs,
,subject only to the ,Constitution of the United
.etate* -
Resolved, Ttat any attempt, by Congress many
Of the states. to establish or maintain, promote or
abolish;the relation of mastered slaie in a Ter
titor3s, would be a' departure from the original
dectrine 'of our; 'Ainerioan" institntions, and that
we hereby declare our unalterable determination
to adhere with - unfaltering Adelity to the. prinel.
pies of popular sovereignty, rand " noil•lnterven
tion bY flongreSs with slavery in the States and
Territorlds,'.t as &tittered in the" Kansas-Nebrask a
bill, and openly and feerleeily die Maim fellowship
with those; whether at the - Sonth or North, or the
East or West; who:oonnsel or in auvinanner en.
!Initiate the abandonment or avoidance of that
rinciple: •
Resolved, That we S'ffi.TM the absolute rove
2refgatp-Or the - States of the Union in . regard to '
their demestie institntione, and, the perfect coos.
Patibility of the confederation of free and slave
Statile to exist harmontoualy together under the
„provisions of our Federal Constitution, and that
the persevering efforts of the disunion fire-eaters
of the South and the Abolitioteltepublloan party
of the North to foment - seotional strife and ant
! mositlea between eitiseas of the North and South
stieuld be, denounced by every tree hearted . pa.
I triot and lover of his country.
• . Resolved, That we rsoognise the right of the
people of Territories, as well as in. the States, to
'regulate and make their own laws in regard to
their domestic allele., subject only to the Conetitn.
Sou of the Caned States, arid we utterly deny the
right of Congress either to legislate slavery into
'any Territory or to Prehibit the name contrary to
the wielles,of the people:thereof.
_ • .ffesetteel, That the suppression of the African
and foreign slave-trade by'the Federal Govern.
'Went, after the year eighteen hundred and eight,
Is oneof the compromises on the faith of wnieb
the, Constitution was adopted, anti OUP Federal
(Union of slaveholdlng and non-slavabolding States
.established ; that a - revival of that trade
itrallid note only renew thine °mantra *Mob ante
menvoked the Inds na tion of'the olvitised world,
hat Would expose the slavetiolding States a eon.
stant terror of servile inserrection, and would en.
tail -* foul blot noon the otherwise fair escutcheon
of our glorious Colon; and that the Democracy of
Unhurt° stand firmly 'and utterly opposed te Any
"and!every measure tending le that diredtlon:
.Resoleo; That it is the right and duty of
.V . to Government of the United States to protect
he rightir•Or its adopted citizens wherever din:
pdtsed, so long as their hold allegiance. to the
elorerninent Mel - hated States. And that we
deay . the light of any nation to Geordie any eon.
tmd over the popnal,rights of adopted citizens,
hither at home or abroad ; and .that in matters
of,, riostal proteotlon and eactitity - we 'reeognile
etenee bettfeen our native. horn and adopted
-
Age :Admintetratton leaerver
fontenapt. . " ''' ,
.. .. • .... ,
' ,
0 -1 r perodve that hit.. Tyler has called NI State
(Ma/mitts* together for the .19th of this reolith, at
tterrisburg, Pennsylvania. Inesmuoll'as the Con
vention which appointed this oommittee laid down
dootritiea at varlanse with the entire Demooratio
*reed, no expeatation can be indulged, of course,
that the compite* will poke a declaration in favor
Tlemooratio prinolpies. Mr. Tyler is notoriously
in savor or 'a slava Code ,for the Terrltoiies. ?3e
does not email it In °emanation, and his more
Win once pat himself in print' on 'that' queattati.
What you of Pennsylvania need is to form a plat
form of principles upon whioh you can mooed.
Anything else is simply to sacrifice the Demooratla
party to the Administration, and as long ao you
allow your Teodoro to act upon tills theory, so long
will your candidates be defeated. OCCASIONAL
:Probable Effects of the lute Frost upon
the Crops.
BY GRAYBEARD
There Imo been so mint said about the deetrue
rive effects of the late frost upon the orops, that if
the half were true, the prospeot would indeed be
gloomy enough. There are one or two grains of
allowance, however, that should always be made
forauch'evil.hoding statements. First, no matter
Califeifelable ttleir °see ratty'ae in other respects,
the maim of agrloulthriets are habitual oroakera
;That th e leeatbr, evilh thhilmjsortent class of OUP
citizens, should constitute 's theme of almoet con;
stout Comment, is not surprising, when yea:molder
that the fruits of their !shore for the year are so
largely dependent upon it. And when we add to
this the characteristic ingratitude of our fallen
haManity, it is not herd to perceive why a season
:of e.peesive wet, a piotraoted drought, or an un
seasonable frost, should be made a fruitful source
of 'eareplalut: There Is this to be considered,
tisoreol!er, that there are mon in the community,
gmong SUS rural grain.growerd, as well ascot olty
gipeoulatora, whose pecuniary interests are always
attbserved by raising a hue and cry about a pros
indite Potion/ In crops, and the consequent rho in
the pries of fltar.
That a *ide•spread antlelpation' of short &tops,
iron though the sequel Should prove otherwise,
mild operate very unfavorably upon the fall
trade r is well understood by our merohants i and
• hove many . of them have been at cons i derable
Faith to ascertain the truth of the lale•frost so.
jlaCitti r Upon the whole, it Is not improbable that
thel;private 'oorrespondenos thus elicited affords
*taiga reliable information - Upon the mbjeot than
thsh telegraphic despatches that bare appeared in
thittiewspapers. The writer has been favored
ivlth'„ , a glimpse at several letters, within the last
fe*days, from Western Pennsylvania, Central and
Vidthern Ohio, Northern Illinois, and other points
'where the frost has been represented as moot de
-I,ottatiVO ; and while it is true that some oonflrm
_.
do it:9ollll6'st apprehenelOMl,,, from their
tenni, 1.4aR01 . 1 to - -believil that imobessernie but s 'of
a limited local charaotei:, and that In many sec
tions the anming harvest is at the .present, time
itn*Rally
One marabout, writing from Waynesburg, Ohio,
sayathat in four counties in that State--Stark, Sum
mit, Carrpl,Nnil Tasoarawas4the wheat has been
eo,muoti injared tirat it will not yield sufficient to
Med the fall crop Another gentlemen, wrstingfrom
the', Western parrot this State,' who has evidently
ansarked dotialeney in the organ of "Hope," says
thal " the mos Vest of hard times in that vicinity
war never brighter than at present." As an off
set to the above, ti, following, quoted from a let
ter addressed to a well-known mercantile home
in pie city, under date of June 17th, from Bloom.
geld, Illinois, may be given as a fair represents-
Jive of the intelligence received from the various
Floes throughout the West and Northwest:
"The corn crop throughout this region was
never more promising than at the present time,
arid We Phut! have at lewd don/,le the wheat time
our
. f a irnir.r a niieipala oiw marks ago ; nor has
the Dig frost ibjored, materially, our crop of any
kind "
'Maier Reels, of the, 9armantown Telegraph,
Whose Judgment in snob matters Is excelleno
authority, says, hi the current number of his pay
par; that in &trip last week to Monroe oonnty,.
thli State, via the Trenton, Belvidere and Dela
ware, and Loeb:limn& Railroads, he found the
ero ps: promising in the highest degree. Ile eon.
liners : " We certainly did not see, during the
whete trip, a single poor field of wheat, rye, corn,
oat's, or potatoes. The (torn, though' abort, looked
healthy, and woe all there, The frost has not ap
pareutly done the least, damage ; and with re.
spool to the frost of the 4th, about which epeoula.
tors iu breadotuffe harp so much, we - doubt if It
w ill e ventually oansa more than a slight injury,
in „w a i n ',mantles, mod not at all affect the
general orop of the country."
A word, now, as to ilur .improbability of a Jane
frost injuring the wheat' crop at all. The most
striking instats° on . record of a (old summer was
that oflBl6 In fact, by men now living, I have
f requ ently heard the • year 1818 spoken of as the
year toiikoat a ateistner, on account of Its remark
able meteorological phetiomenoa of having pro.
dneed this latitude, every month through.
ou t the entire year. Ito average temperature in
this eityytrot only fortyatine,degrele ; the lowest,
believe, ever known before or SIAM The same
comparatively extriordinary low temperature, of
that year was experionoe4 not Only _II/renew%
GO country, but in England, all over the conti
nent of Eitrope, and even in Africa and the West
Indies. It may be observed, by the way, that,
contrary to the generally received opinion, that
seasons in their succession balance each otheila •
their - extremes', of temperature, this remarkably,
cold year Watt folloWed tby as equally cold win.'
ter, extending from January, 1817, until late in
March, as-may - he inferred from the foot thiit
the Potomac river was frozen completely over at
Alexandria, and that the Delaware was olosed
front the 2d ofFebruary until the 9th of Morels,
an ox baring been roasted on the ice, opposite
this oily, on the 221 of February of that year.
Turning from theourset petory,of that ley aum
mar, a brief reference to a few well.rinthentioated
rradirsons respeotingit' ray not'be devoid of in
fereit." There was riot only toe In every month,
but living witnesses, within thirty miles of Philo;
delphia, attest a full of snow in the tnonth.o,
fune—Opn the rye and wheat wore bleateat.
Lhave heard Sty tetlier—a farmer; now, as thenl
residing in Montgomery county, this State—say,
thatthe prepense of snow upon the graln.llelds at
so ' unseasonable a 'sate' occasioned ' tench fear
thronshOut the tieighborhood 'that the crop was
destroyed, Spine 'farmers even wesnoltar"aa to
lend &helping hopd.toProvidenoe by using artill:
oial means to .dieledge the • snow, width: ethers
'awaited the nun's rays for its rewire] ifand to
this day the result of that event is spoken of by
the older citizens ea 'a significant comment upon
the absurdity of man's undertaking to improve
upon the ways of Plod; for the piquet showed that
they who reibid upon the Hand which sent the
snow, ,to remove, it also, acted wisely, as their
crops of grain at harveat than were found to have
been entirety uninjured, whilst . the - fields or per.
tiona of them from which the snow had been arts=
fiolally yleldid nothing but straw, the
Itaearn having been forcibly severed in the pre
ens, along with theanow. ; , , •
The reader will be ready to inquire, how it is
that snob an unparalleled low lethperature was
not deetruotivet. to.the main crop inOH, when In
180 the visleara froat'or - tio late bit 'attended
With such fatal results? The tvath is, precedent
ie directly opposed to the apprehensions enter
tained. The cold its• the• summer of 1816 was not:
confined td'itaingle night's frost,hutatnually con-, dratted thAughout the season,. Infertherproof o
this, it Oft well-known feet, that In some parts
reapereen torrid the 'harvest:fieldi their :oVer
coats ; and yet the„winter cereals were inthiabe
means a failure iln Central New Yollt,whielilwai
evidently not exempt from thefre y eticheritoter of
that memorable season, we have accounts from old
residents that the dello of whelt•were actually
frozen, and yet from the Came toldit the yield, in
many instances; woe forty bushels to the. acre of
Prime Genesee. In the face of these facto ; is it
reasonable that the late frost should forebode fa
mine, as some interested parties would have no be
lieve? The ohenees,At may safely' be said; are
looking hopefollyin a different direction...B4llmo?
vegetables, and !sonata kiridinf frait;insiessaillY
Buffer from rinseaMnaide 'frost, but &ere is
proof that this applies to 'winteeiereals. I doliot
say that it is so, but it to certainly no - unreacona•
hie view to take of the matter, to suppose that tke
recent frost was sent for a beneficent purpooe—it
may be to neutralize some undiscovered enemyof
the w t . .eat,,whioh, if left unchecked ! might have
produced far more'fferloua docientlenOei thin even
those now apprehended from the frost itself.
rHE LATEST NEWS
BY TELEGitAPiI.
Three Daye !met from California.
pIY OyCHLAND.IIIII.I ‘ • ,
FT. LOUTS, Jane 11 —The overland wall has arrived,
with Ran trtnalepo dates to the, 80th
The Oregofileterial.thire met at ralemrdi the lath alt.
Luther Elkins Irmo ohosen President of the Senate, and
W.V . aabat,Apialter:of the Bode*. "
Judge W.lllams sod Lafayette Griiver, the late lie
preeentative in Congress, are „the moat prominent can
d.dstes to supersede Colston Ban* In the United States
Inmate.
The news from Preen. river mat:inners dbxmorsiang
and the shipments of gold are small.
•Governer Irouglinc tow fished' a• dearee pratidlng
for the naturalization of• aliens after three ears , Mi.
Business at fan Yttdeieeo etintinnta Ann with no
prospeot of e speedy revival, Owing to tke large *rodeo
of ail desorlptinns now In hand. Isatern shippers most
disomitione their Newry sbipments.
Pnue Nnwe —retrived— Ships Plying Obildere and
Hornet. from Bostim; ship Gauntlet, front lldng Kong
asileo—ahip Andrew Jackson, for New York; slop
Nonpareil, for filmoglac.
Prom Northern and Dietv Mexico and
Arizona.'
WABHINWTOS, June Z3.—Private letters remised hen
from RI Paso and Arisens tb the 7th rot Jane, state that
the tat* atterrpt to revolutionize Chihuahua by Jose
Ittana Zaioags, brother of the late President of Mexico,
hu been entirely euppreseed enrrstul-ring
without a battle, and being nselcurod.
floe. joint a: Phelps, 'or 111161110ilti, and Lieutenant
Mowry, of Arisons, ere the guests of Judge Hart, of
Ri Paeo -
Extensive prepara.lons were being made to give Mr,
Phelps a grand reoelettos Jo New Mexico
'• The temple of Arizona adhere to their determination
to take no part in tbit SieW • MoMean • election, on the,
ground, hereto ore Misted' their "osembrial - to' OW
gram, of having no fair representation or vote.
' No Vetted
rhopp,irlitt seta- her: own delegaitie io
ooDgress n — olt....et Mowry consents to run again
he will be elected wlthouepposition•
Hon. M. A. Otero mitt be -setureeti .to Oongrese sa
alelegete frocp Neer* Mextlio witboUt serious appellation.
• Horace Greeley wee expected to arrive at P 1 Paso in
Saly.
Destructive Fire lit Milwaukee.
TRH CUSTOM ROUSE DAMAGED-LOSS OVER
5100,000.
litcwsowatt, Wig.. June 8 —& fire broke out et half
put twelye ' , clock this Molllll2g, In-Yew:We bloelrof
banding', adjoining the onitom.botiee, sod that pro.
party was eotleely destroyed The block inelnded
twenty plums of business., The heaviest losers are
Darner & Raymond, grooms; Morton Ponies, drug
gists; and Lewis & Co., booksellers. The loss on the
building and - Melt Ie eetlmated at $BO 000 on which
there is an insurance of only $lB,OOO.
. The costosi-honee banding was also damaged to the
extent of $16,000.
Fagitive.Slave Case at'Wasbingtan, -D.
C.—The Slave Remanded.
WA1301170209, ;nue 22 —Judge !derrick Whir re.
minded to Hagerstown, Maryland, a colored woman,
W4O has hese residing here for twelve years, and who
wee Maimed order the fugitive-Mare law. The
court, having no power to pane upon the question of her
freedom, it must be decided in Maryland. There wag a
large number of,blacke gathered about 'ha jodgebi
chamber', who manifested much interact In the pro
'mess of the rase.,
•
•The Louisiana and 'Tehuantepec Steam
, -ship Company. -
WAIMIEGTO2, JUDO 22 —The New Otlo4llll mars of
:Friday _which are furoishaf by the Southeast mail,
state that the stoakholders of the "Louisiana and To
huantesea Steamship Company have Toted, with a
elcadtar degros'Of untieimity for the can of an addi
tional instalment at tea per Guam* on their *Rhona ,
bona with the 101 of anabling tha company to oarry
ont its mail mitred, awl perhoting such other ar
ranpmeatil as will manta the mums of the enterprise.
:Death of Henry Buehler, of Rarriebara.
Hasuumutu, Jut's 22.—tdr. Bleary Buehler, as a..
teemed ale.seu , of llarrieburg, died et 'hle reltdenae. in
this thy thh - mornhat. Mr Buehler bee far teens
years been a peek.r of the Ilsrriabing snd Laneuder
Stared Oceepseytitit wan prominent in the !important
coal enterpasee to thombincronnte , ,
pie House ofßePreseatatives!Supplies.
WAeutnoroe, ;Mee 22 -The, etteeeeeful bidden for
tumid' og etattomely to the Howe of arpreteotethrea
ere & Rory, of Weshlegton; entities° Amos,
of Now fork..
Sfnking•ot Winans' Experiment fiteasi
• ' ship. , -
BALOIVOIN, June 13 —Wmano , szperimee4 atelei
ablp bse been nook at the wharf i¢ consequence of a
WarkiXl•ll neglecting to close a 'supply pipe. Memo fl e
engine. are ong.god ID pumping her out, and they pill
probably aneaeed by to!rogrroW
The. Post - Office Department.
WAEI9/11CatiN, Jan* 22 —.Borne reforms In the pre•
sent system of advertiator and the delivery or lettere
being neo•eaary. the Post Olnee Department will eyeed-
Ily adopt such to may aerial proottoiblo tad .ottlatout,
and will hold it. allure to strict aecountehtlay for
their own mtetikos.
Violeitt Rail Storm at Albany.
ittall 22.—A violent but steruiprevilled lu
thle vtoicity yesterday, attending the space tf a tulle
fa. width, and lasting , halt ay, hour. A number of
windows were broken, ant flowerer and phut; out to
pukes. ' Jt-
'LIMO from Weiw _York.
,
NEW YORK DEXTRAL .RAILROAD STOOK AND DWI.
DENDS SINCE 1854—ARRIVAL or olo7or no LAN
CRY TANI ENGLAND*" AWFUL" GARDNER
TURNED RALOONIRT AND MISTRODIRT—SCECDDA.
MKS OP TON RAILROAD RIINNERS—RERARKABLE
TROT. •
lOorreepondonse of The Press-]
New Your, Jane 22, 1860.
Men who are in the habit of treeing tomtits (Sum
eau.eB regard with fame eutlosity the following table,
'bowing' the earnings and prise of New York Cootie
Railroad stook from the year 1851 to the meant time:
Prlae of Stork.
Parr ingi. /one. Dividends
1354 ' ' $6 918,834 . 114 8 per cent.
).
1855 8,660,681 102
1056 7 707,248 93 ..
1867 8,021,261 83
1868.... 6,629,412 85 ..
1859 5.570,429 70,14'
A permanent expense, to the amount if about glen,
000perhonum. has been incurred during the pact year,
by the lease of the Canandaigua and Niagara Palle road
The lease lteelt is $OO,OOO, but the repaire - and extra
expenses run It up some $O,OOO more. The figures`
ate quite auggeettve to those whom avocation leadi
them to the investigation of Mork *alum
Among' the .pueergere by the Petals, urlied he t
evening, war Bishop Pe Lamy, fornierly of Phile.
dolphin. Fe in la the enjoyment of exultant heap:
I ment'oned in yeeterday , e letter that through the
- philanthropic efforts of several wealthy gentlemen, a
free reading room end 0' saloon had been opened .in
the fourth ward. in the'rielnity of the Five Pointe. The
plies hoe been put in charge of a former notable prize
fighter, Orville (or a Awful a) Gardner. it Awful,"
who was a great pugllistle now a staid Methodist, and
le ae strong in the faith ee he war formerly in the tight
lie in represented no having deported himself in a vary
exemplary manner for over a year past, and AS being
earnest and honest In endeavors to win • for himself a
good name and a respectable petition in J.:misty. It
was a awful" hard work to bring the ' , old Adam , ' into
meek and Ohristian-like aubjeotion, but he hoe done it,
ad deserves all encouragement.
Several of the more, careful and Thrifty raliccad
and steamboat , t runners ), have made a lueky hit in
buying large quantities of through tickets from' New
York to the Went, at the time the a war ~ between the'
Competing aompenies led to the great rednetlou in fare.
When the fares were at the lowest point these ante fel
lows bought largely, anticipatb g a speedy rise in ratea.
To Ohlocgo, for Thataileo, they bought tioketc at twelve
dollars, which they are now jelling at eighteen and
twenty dollars. A few of them are said to have realised
•largely by.the speculation,
'There was great ado among the horeamen,raetoids7
- dt the trot between Lady Woodruff, George Ilf.:Patoken,
and Brown !licit. Rix heats were run, *soh closely eon.
tested, over a heavy tusk, and the following extraor•
dinery time wad made ; , l 2 pil 22,ti ,220 X, 2.80%,
2.81%, 2 81 .-Wperfortitanad4hOttipassad wader the
most favorahli rapids of iraoleeMpreatlier. At the
,start giaten Dinh was 'tils: taToritif,lt one Intudrad to
forty; sitaloat -the - Reid, and two*: 0338 on Patcben
agold s q Lady Woodruff'. hat when - Vie Lady had won
ura boAls tho - _orlial,naan waked up directly, and tb2
want shoot milking( bats at one hundred to
Beartiely aninewe stirring, The talk of the town
ahoutWar._ You hear it everywhere—in the stied, in
the drawloW•rocm, the barroom,
rim York stock Exchange, June 23.
_.. MOND 20AID. -
...
6000 17 85e '74 reg : 105 - 500 511411:k Bli guar - „
28
1000 Ky 8t 03 • ' , 30234 100 : t 00 . ~, 1:80 48 :
_ toy% at 0.,97, BOO, do . 1930 2734
4100 Idleinnil Ili ' ' 80,14 '44 7.11 Own , -- -- '' 69 •
2000 Brio a let mt td 89 75 Panama It ex 4 117
1000 Li Or &MUL O. 163( 'DO Galena to Ohl 16 61J(
10 Poo Mal Co •68 l6O • do 480,63
700 N Yolk Cent 181 100 •. • do, r 010 O 8 l(
60 do eBO 7234 1600hio & .11•1 ,-- ; 6836
80011eadlog16 - 360-42 t - , , . - .
'14A11103113. • - , .
Aims are unehanged, with entali tales at o 81X for
Pots. and $8 81 X for Pearls
Ftoutt —Thar market fOrlittte ;and Wester.] Flour it
very heavy at a de.311111 of Binioa, with eutalrreiselpts,
'and sales of 44.00 bbl at $5 8000 10 for superfine SteVe ;
$8.506880 for extra; do ; 8560 for moP" -6
Western ; 88oi6 05 for extra di.; $6 6IWI . for ship
ping brands of extra round hoop Ohio. 13on0ern.
Flour is mare &attire, but heavy, with safes bf . -800 bbia
at $7m7.80 for mixed to geed ; and $710.9 for extra
brand'.
.
GRAM—Wheat ft doll, hen y. Mad drooping. with
smell sales of neir amber Georgia at 11 80 Ion) 111
beery and 'Olaf, with sales of 15 000 baobab, at 80.
840 for Western mixed, 85a for yellow, and 81052 a toe
round do. Rye is dull at 14e5950,-, , Rarley le ',ark
quiet, sod no sales are raj:oiled. 'Cate arelower-42e
file for Southem - Panntylvania, sad Jersey, and ime
Sic foriitate, Canada, end Wotan -
a - mimes- Pork to dolT l,nd noininai et 1450 for
hfacc,. $lB 85e14 for Prime.• Beef 111 dull, with sales of
100 bble. at SS 50a7 for Country' Prime; sBe9 for
Country Mira i $100 , 13, 28 for- mocked Chicago; $l4O
15. for }litre Mess. Bacon - end iffnt Melte are dell.
Lard is doll With -vales of ICI bble. at 10% ollXo.. Bat
t sr mid Cheese sre dui, a 4 laafivatations.. -*
WaTerint 14 nominal at 28m2,13,4 a,.
NEW YORK OATTLI MARKET, Waosium 41, inns
22'—At market 2,893- BMUS, -146 Cows, 1 080 Teals,
8,932 Cheep ant Lambs, and 6,700.0 wine, 'hewing a
crease of 464 Beeree;.lol Teals, 1 210 Reg) and Lambs,-
and 656 'Awing, and an foments of 99 Cows. - At A Per.
10n'5..21.29 Beerier were yerdist rAt Bererm, N. M
imi( wore sold to butchers, nioetlf far this oily The.
reeelpta of Cattle were, by lA* Goad: 825: by fludanir
River do 1,294 ; Harlem do 23, and by INleori laver •
, boat', 687 /torn Illinois, 856, were received; ISen
tacky, 932; Ohio, 6891 New York 835, &if' The trade
fit Beef Cattle has b en very slay, both today and yes-
Afrd 9 f et es -*be supply- is over 400 head less tb•n
last week, i t le likely that nearly all mill b4lO dey eon
doirn. The`gnality -Usti :weer Is • Inferior - best: few
really, well fed-bmprel were on eels, and.tise avenge
tol,o* IVA 'ovsi 10996111. The' rites
wore from deladMe, a for as MO as ittellge. Many
mush:. Western steers -wet* 'in Our, :stookr, - also -*-
few Working oxen y some law will be sent tor pastuite to
fatten The Cheep and Lamb market has not rrateriak
- Iy 'banged • There is a poor demand at eel% for ordb
Rye, en d Beloo for dreamed. Good fat Lambe awn-
Mend 11612 e ; drevei Veal. are quiet at lets. Mimi
Cows are only moderately Inquired atter at $26e75
The London Times 'on the' Battle of
Magenta; ' -
(From the London ,TIMeo, June 1l)
The letter from the Austrian :cainp,,and. the
Breneh report of the battle of Mitgenta, both, of
which we publish today, are 'documents forwhiett
we need not aik,attention. The litat;'"although
now somewhat out of date, -is important ne thieving
bow entirely the Austrian's liatiremideeelved by'
the French ; how completely „they had been out=
flanked; how little they expeited the enemy at
the moment they Dame-upon them; or ,ware pre
pared far the Fronob enterprise of following them
across the Voles The French Retrainee, now pith.
liehed in the Monitenr, entirely confirms the
view whiob we took of the tattles which led to the
battle at Baffalort, and 'clatmi the 'credit which
we bad alrewiy acoorded to, the ,Freneh Emperor
of having deceived his enemy by a rapid totem°
tration of foroe on the French left It diatribes
also the,details of theembereaseanente 'thigh tumid
pet but occur in the m ovement
- of the peraindel
And baggage of so large an' army along narrow
causeways and over RAI/ellen river; and it-repro
duces'. in almost Mintier terms, but with lees de
saription'of the olituneter Of the country in whiolf
the battle was fought, , the elrenmstances related
by our correspondent from the Allied Campin the
letter whieh wepubliehediestenday. , -
strategic character of the battle of Magenta
le, however. now for the first time before:wain an
authentic; description.— We already erneeia that
Gen. McMahon had paved the river at Turbigo,
and repulsed a feeble-attack - there made upon
him by the Austrians, and we now learn that that
general had been strengthened in his position by
'the (*remedial's, of the imperial Guard. Thlepes
sage of Menthe' Canrobert's ebrps, d'aintei by the
bridge at auffelora was arranged to correepoed.
With a lateratturosennentWidetreasalistended to
be made by Gen. McMahon to support this pat:
sage. While MoMabon, already on the. Loa hardy side, moved to the attack of the Atiatilen
fine pained at Magenta and. Buffeters, but
Whose strength and - position seem to: have been
underrated, the Emperor - With etheZoadves. of
his Gaird was to force the postage
'supported by the corp. '6N - 0 - ince of - Xleurebert,
and. by other divides:4; which. wire la 'follow
le continuous columns. - The throe which was
to have. effeeted, the-operations -at Baffaloot did
lot arrive at thwappetated time; and when Mehra
hon'a division appeareton the left - bank.of the
Ticino, and attacked the Auittiane en the Turhigo
side of ' their positions; the Ettiperor'fonettitneelf
'et the bead of a iniallet initalrefirrnien' thin lie
bad anticipated. Canrohert . had been delayed,
and the Austrians had, according to the Trench
account, found meatus to conoentrate 'a fen* 'of
125 000 men at the spit where McMahon was now
attacking. The Emperor, with the Zeugmas°, his
guard, seems to havecrogliettoMeMehoniteasist
istrenezdjmt==jl:7.o ' pe 4 z-. 1
Oanrobert came up, and other troops had succeeded
lb discutsegling themeelvaa'frOttrthe confusion of
the choked causeways in• the rear. McMahon,
Whose attack from the -Turbigo side had been
interrupted by a necessity of uniting his no.
limns, returned to the charge when, he heard
the fuelled° upon the Buffeters side of the
Austrian posi ion. The - Austrians,. who had
been for some time In superior force, and had
taken prisoners and, guns,from their assaila nts, driving them beck, we 'are ' not told bow far.
were now in their turn assailed by a superior.
or at least an equal, force, and were hard pressed
both on their centre and left; and compelled to
imamate Buffeters In order to make head' against
Itlealabon, attacking Magenta.. This diversion
enabled the 'Emperor to " trightorilly resume 'the
Offensive," and it is :antincident of great tme
portance in estimating the future chances of the
war that large bodies of litingerian' trek - gm - nevi
laid down their arm', under as it would-appear,
very preening necessity. -.4 bile-the inetnane
were thus vigorously attacked on both sides, and
were experienoing something' very like defection
in their ranks, General ,Anger had succeeded in
getting forty gone' into peen= upon the railway
embankment, which flanked the Austrian position. -
Prom; this be poured Into their masses a destructive
fire, which must have told with fearful effect,
and may account for the great carnage which
the Austrians are said to have suffered. Mean-
McMahon bad pushed -his ,attaelveflocees
fully, and had driven the ; enemy from Magenta,
putting "more. than -10,000. Austrians _hors de
t eombat,' l. and making: 5,000 - ,prlseireni:'
_lege, however, w ee 'so 'desperately disputed, that
it was taken aint - Jetakert no lett then, seven
times, rainfOreementi theirdliettreopeeentlnu
ally arriving upon • theJfield,' and; tui it Would an
near, forming at last a continuous line eking - the
Lombardy banks orate - TIMM/. - , 4 Bitrieettle lasted'
until 81' o'clock et' night; and,: weevil Iteati,titithing:
- of the notion of the Austrian gunAweilinief sure
pose that they wore ve4infeiler in artillery, at d
,rare, of course, at a dreadful disadvantage while
the forty pieces of-cannon- were playing upon
them from the railway embankment.. • -
At this hour, we are-told, the Algerians " with
drew " leaving in the hands of the rioters four
guns and two thesis the moderate trophies of this
obstinately-fought field. The Allies 'wore un
doubtedly the victors, for they heki the field and
the position. !Mattel's° Ma:linker' 7,000 prisoners,
-hut at some of these were taken in regiments, and
'sB they are for the most part Hungatians and
Indiana, it may- - perhaps be • - doubted:whether
the bulk of the Austrian eoldiera now In the hands
of the Allies ihoultbe - more 'properly character.
iced as prioonere or as deserters. The estimate of
killed and wounded can hardly be received with
wrote confidence when made so immediately after
the battle; but fis 27 000 men were really killed,
wounded and taken, some of them must have been
eut lightly armed, for only 14,000 muskets were
found upon the field.
Snob is the French amount of the battle of Ma
genta, and in all Its strategic points it is doubtless
in the main correct. That it passes lightly over
the events of those terrible four hours _when the
Emperor and his guards were oolnreitted' to a son.
test with superior numbers is but natural. We
must await an Alsatian version to supply this defi
ciently. That it speakS somewhat indefinitely of
the French lanes was equally to be expected. We
still require the opportunity of comparing the
Annie° with the French &anent; or - of reading
the account of an impartial eye-witness, before
'we .eae • see lhe' beta - Cot Magenta as history.
will write if. In one respect, however,' it is
honest end candid - There Is no fight and no pur
suit mentioned or Invented. The enemy fought
welt, suffered grievous: loitate, , And withdrew
There are none of those harrowing scenes which
followed mash bettleentithere - of Aueterkts and
Waterloo, when havoc raged harong a 'erow - d of
helpless fugitives, throwing away their arms and
shouting fer quarter to the pursuing Frenchmen
or the' vengeful Priresiten. It is a contest where
the vanquished fight till night, and then, retro
tautly yielding the riot of goner, „quietly retire,
taking with their their guns and standards, and
taking tip a position convenientlor the prosecu
tion of their- predetermined plan .of continuous
retreat. •
That object the Austrian commander continues
to carry out.. Ile fell bank Arst to Abbiate Grati
n, brit a short distance from the field of battle,
and the French, holding so obstinate an enemy in
respect, or, in their turn,- pursuing their own
formed plan of tootles, refrained from pursuit, and
advanced upon the road to Milan. Thence the
Austrian General retired to Belglojosoo. impradent
ly, however, negliteting to call in a force left at Me..
tegano—a negle st which was promptly punished by
a French division. Again the Austrians retreated
to the Adda, whore their previous evaonation of Pa
via showed that they had no Inteatien of resting ;
and, having now orsssed the Addi., and having left
Planting% uncovered, but not, according to present
advioes, ungairlsoned, they tire doubtless still
pursuing their appointed course, and will proba
bly neat be heard of in the neighborhood of Peo
elders. Upon the whole, the battle of Magenta
.bas not greatly altered the oheraoter of the cam
paign, and in all probability, If it had never been
fought, the Austrians would have been on the
other aide of the Adds, Just as they now are, and :
the French would have been also where, thoy,now
aro—at Mien. To gain this' great bottle le an
other glory to the French arms, but to lose snob a
battle, and yet to conduct the retreat of so great'
an army over so ditlioult a country unmolested, is'
a credit to the Austrian army only second to the
glory of victory.
Markets by Telegraph.
Illyriumtn, ISM 22 —Pleat dull iMd heavy. Howard
Street slimed at VI 87x . There were no malts of Ohlo.
The supply of W beat is small, and the quotations are
nominal; white $145001 85, red El Nal SO Corn dog
at 8221;843 for white and yellow lit weight. and 20n120
by meminre. 1. aeon lain better demand and firmer; sides
are held at 9Ner9Xo Pork Is dull still 25. Whiskey—
Ohio fa held at 283
Now ORLEANS, June 21.—Oottoe—Only 000 bale*
wets *3ld to.day, making the sales for three days 1,700
bales.. The reetlpts do log the eame time BIZIOUSLOS to
only 400 bales The Flour ninket is 'tilt Corn bag a
declining tendency. Freights Co Cotton to Lieerpooi
are erns at bled; storage on New York Icell(0 pre-
MiaM at sight NeXe premium -
Paw ORLEANS, Jane 22.—Cotton-500 balsa sold JO
day. Flour dull MP pen Corn et ady. —
ISATANNAE, Jl3OO 81—There 10 little haintry for Vol.
too. sod the Wool, tut work. -" '
FINDICIAL , AND - COMMPICIAI4
;-;
-The • •
, - krutanetrntapputet23,
The opposition to the British ministry haying pr w ed
strong enough to outvote them - ii the neerPirlisieted,
and that upon 'megaton of their sympathy with „hurenia
in the war, add. strength to the Allies, and firmness t,s
the funds in England sod Femme, whisk cannot both" -
Inoresmed by r theuccesmon to pOweeof Lord Reltilanfk , Th.
and his deolaration to favor of ptriet neutrality and a
oontinted friendly alliance with , /knee: - John Bull..
evidently does not mean to go to woe if there It sty
chum far hint to secapwit, and weseaysadlty imagine
the grins sidistaction spreading mom,the lame of the_
cotton epinnere as they learned that litundeltadjahlbor,
henry band on Genmisyhp•lbe: intimaiion that she
would deem their . ingegiocie the War ii • dts'rerhaves of
Buropeansgitilibrium *tie la not einnme ,
ration fa eusi;al WiehatalfraMM - enidfallY;biktitin , •
little lose for ..instris, and the'ruore the'two weakest- •
and Imporelish :mak other,in Ake war, the • Nitta Willi •
Prussia be: plimesd„•_ ; • "'
All they thlage. point a. apiedreidlui - oi.ish,
war ; or, it least, to its being aonlinetile the throf 11 / 4 1" ,
ere that began it, and the - rednetion kite *wind
rate or Bankelleglend to - three Mir cent-teems
to prove that the faith of the ltaglbblertidemsthe
reetilt is quite strong, Ent-thensue great sulmositielf
and a long. standing mount: of In aorta of:grudges that,
this weir bat greedy brought into Vier:big krbled,:taie '„.
exert a greailietlefenonheltaprolortgatlon.,Tim Reich'
Emperor is himself in the gold, &WARW. glory
not soffits him' Valle iititaied.reversia
to as extent enfilatent to nisi - peg& tleirii; without
jug* them to email at beipekrepeetie dateable- Offise
have not hod enough of fighting to get their hands in
u jet, and they will fight the Wretch with good will. •
Mamoru titelforngsriaa fr ; and ,oCher-mubjvcd, nations
in their malts desert, the more determined will be their
awn courage and realetance. At the end of this profit.
twit Mee of things Germany will be forted Into the
wer,lieseis will enter for, the sake of, the, "polls;
Rutland will find it next to impossible to keep out Or.
the! war or out, her commercial relations will be sadly
,injured, and in her trouble', in this respeot oar too ten.
Wive markets of ail kinds will roarticdpate. Oar mer
chants awl busiume mert„theraforsoattooldlook upon
the proseat tura of thing, to Engfaed isie'reulte, and,
'While they aeoept it gladly, keep all their affairs nog
and manageable
There im,is chance thetzthe war wtiP stole *Voted
flat antielpettone of evil will prove empty. In that,
cane It lull be - cosy to expand when the felt Weather
b.comse assured; far easier than to cattail and to real,
Ili daring a time - of trouble: Thema? while itlagef,;-.•
will do us only misehlef. Its ultimate /gut upon Due
trade, commerce. and "mactificinisi. CIL,' beyond all
question, be beneficial ; but to be able to enjoy the pa
gan of benelits,WheW it minea, we Must, in the - Mean.
this. conduct marselves with caution sod grudenete. -
Tieieripinteni Mini to - Prevail" largelY inirtg all
classes of our businese Men; whose reggeted opera-
Mona produe a smutty of paper . and keels even the,
'fame of the eapitalisig fioni Making the goirkf4miukie
light.
The Wont from the Bank of Ragland for the week
ending the B,lt of-Joni", givie the following - results
when compared with the previous week
paella deposits.... - 11,219 828 '..
Other deposits 16 942 782 _Dwane.— 893.478
Rut 3,188 457.„. Teems,. „ 6,314,
On the other aide of the arconnt:
„Soot aseuritfm..lll.oBi.B7o....Unchanged.
_Other neouritlas . 16 049,012...'.Deciet0e...
Notes tmemployed. 10 807,548„..-.1 - norease
The amount of notes in
.elienfa , loit la £21.134848.
being on Inetraiseof .t 41,996 led the stock of bullion
In'both departments 1s £l7 967 687, altowlng an In
attaxe of d.193,..91, when compared with the preceding
return
The following is a abatement of. the receipts - 0.410
Delaware D vision Canal Oompatiy :
Total to June 11, ; 1869 #69 318 Ott
Week ending June 18,1669... 8,943 12___
•
Tote to Jane 3.2 IBM 262 90121 so5„tei
Week 6112114 Jan. 19,1969..,. 6,282 94.
Insmuhp,Eil -
.86,637 a 8
The following Is • atatioWtot of tlii
„rosolgtv of thw
- - -
MEW& Canal postplivq: „
_Totil to .Tiuis 11; IU9. - ' 482.893
Feekendlngl,tinf. I k 26s
„. = _
- < gggfigg ".4`
Total to Innen, 185/1 gbe 820 =
. Weekowang 19; 884,7... ' -•
1.88.1 M. 44
laineassi a 849 IT
ltadusid aslpk iscuissituist on ih lafarruldia`ci
?LS/ideals!' a few days.
ollawiag la is Os shipment of Bushy cost for_
the week evading Jawa„ls. fake,
lifir the aassou, vumaillefug fday "f. •
Vb• roi , olitng is 6.6641
Palley sad Patteallfallaillasd Carapasy
M!EMi3I
Same flriie !Mt 16
1 Taman...
8,548,D1
.
The, I'ollov:bight stittoneo of (xis{ .franapoFted
Oyer for the emelt' -fsimilii,Jazi
' ' W 220: Pasinee97.2:'-'l 4 o7.tit'
- -Tans. Cwt., Tome. Cwt. Tom. Cwt.
HsaletAn 811ner4.11.764 OS 60923-Oa 00188
Oratibers 1886 GS 20 152 14 :1:88 19
rijsmond 022 08 7,212 e 4 7 Eat 30
bat Sugar Lost.-3078 04 ' 45277 10 &St 14
Council Rifts .1,893' 09 89 447 08 41 310 35
Mount Pteaaaat.. VS 14 10,984 17 11 491 11
Total 1110 18' VW 978 03 191 70$ 18
',oat year.... 179 16' - 109,680 1.2 -
.6!0 0(
Inc Jakito -c
rocrassa..;.
Alin /Wig
igranemeAprjAikiap**Af,
mid, the badnesa moo * Hiatiy/kllt Connir mg*
ti.-minedtosionrs liitier
Treble. A muntorilf perisoinisva
Matid tafi Aapngstjukd Itentimill4ll,toad in Isteir
' 'tort last woeit, aadlliey pftoteAl 'pia' Rhs told
titrqueh se,repldly aa, jewelhba, progi4eo pig ,enin of
$160,020 to • subscribed 14 ant by -those ,Maiireetfiti I W.
BelinyikßU ecianty, tti tSe purchase .of iron __'d
amoautlit be' taken fkateek: bonds; :If sorbet
should .tie bnted, The 6991 9 1 07: M i t"
. 14136 . 1 ,1 41 h 6 ''
Wboliroad with skink on1P;11.1t. eau - ha ..wurno4l_. ,„,
(iamb no bonds, About $B6O 000 have already ben az
pended—s6oo 000 areiready-'-sod the halms 'over mid •
above the $160,000 the surck.se cf ihe ken', Wlll be -
forthcoming, as soon as Alio $160,109. is subicribaC
Ito money will be required until the roadway is graded. ,
the following is tbe'Pittabiarelian& statement for
the meek preceding June. 29: • , _ -
a isms Olinniatlon. Besets. t;iins-i - -73asend0e.
Bk pftGburg,. 081 363 $BBB 811-$1 277 709.5;89.1,67
Szchange , Bk ...,514110,460 200,001 .1,477_888 818 892 •
61 &11 101 797 - 106 338. 974'7 1 8 268280
Oltlsena l 109.7 1 0 ,• 63 247 602,018 71 016
61eobsoloe , 216,770 -92;397 726 005 • 78,914 -
Iron Oily .....25 995 -303,740 OM 718 ” 169 048=
Anegbeny 188,690 ; • 80,840 646 003.. 98,911
1,888 478 907 488 8,8c0,2436 679,808
Last ireelr. ...1,878,263 990,688 4 . 008,137 1,t77 8/41
/coreue....
Decreate ...
.7,198 , 1,037
1111,873_
Tteisity=noter , ,
and notes of , Dna tette. - Dna by bH
other bind&
Plttiburit 349,0 6 6.
.7 - 160 973' . ..". 5 ft , 5 007
Exehimote... - .. "107 145 24 763 - 68 7741
M. it 61 "" : - 92,764' 75 807 ' 44'091
Citi34os , ' 21,114 T 473 ' " 16'2.8
' 81 140 • 80 507 - 11,639
link 0137., - ... 18,6:0 — 1 628 - 11 606
, 10,091 ' to #$
' "ass 541 st 3 •' * " - 1T0,842
Lest - week... MO 855 'MAO 134 024
Inere►ee...
Demme.— - 46,043
PHILADELPHIA STOON EauaatWl 8a.14/8,
Jane 2/. 9868
-
lIIPOI7IIIiSTILINIMT naciwx'. d;OO.,HANY•NOTN atom,'
AND InagAsos ssoxisib woarares . 2 comma MUSD '
' AND ogee:Err x 226228. ,
FIRST soAO.
4400 elty 8a • Naw.lBoX
400 - do 100%
8000 do 6.100 x
1000 Osta lat an 7 .51%
1000 Pa 11 24 m 87X
4000 do
108 N Naos 11, 86....84x
1000 PHU Bt Wtr..Ohle
Coo 74.88%
1000 Loblgh Val 11 81..87
90000& t /1 03438 45w0.8-9
2 Pena It
242 i.
12 - do'• 59,X ,
do 8924:
1 1
. Girar o d 112 .2
4d Gi rar d
0
303/orris OW 62
6 do-' 110.65
5 Om & Aux
10 Co A...■
fot AMA{
00 Long 1.1412...:65.1.0%
..IBOATID.` -
'AM) Pitta raW&lnte
Coo 75.68 m
100 kiad R 6633.21 g
7 Plllll3l. R ' lig. 89X
10 PhiladA Bk 114 -
10 do 21a.114
8 Comaisvolal 8k...49
13 !fords Col .b3w0.36
1&O&& R. .11a.218.121g
33 Minolta B. t oan.67X
20 No , rlera 11..b5w0,80X
1 do 116wn:6olf
7 do - b6ra;6oX
38.43711A1/.7:',4
• azadND
TOM Olty 8 e.....New.1001t
11000 100 X
600 Hunt ' u & Wood
Top "e. 66•
609 Long Inland B 63
e6tra.B2
1000 Otitaw>a lit in 7e .62X.
3000 do 62h
1300 N Penns R 66.;.. cid
0000 Cam & 4m 6i 410 62
1000 do '83.84
1000 do 7 70.63
600 Resdlog B be '80.73 I
' otionzurpnr
Sid *skid.
II 8 84'14 MIX
PIM& Coln 9831.96%
it in off.. 1161( ,I 183(
. 4 New isof1100)000li
Penns ter- 93
- Bit. Alkad
sola Nair Stock: R . 9
t , Prat arg . 18_
Wansp'a & Slut 11, 7ac 7.tr
.. Ta Int mtg.:: TO
.. gi 48 48
Long Wand IL. _ 10% 10%
Len Coal , Ana. 48 48X
ti Penns R 8% 834
IS W. 6X MN
" lon 88 00 -
Catteters U ... 6 6
Reading R 21 21.)i
tele , 7o. 80 82
" m6ea 92 95
" do le 73 73
Fianna a 30% 80%
44 2.1 m 611 ..... 27 88
lior Oanal Oon. 64 66
mt bdir 69g 52K
Veal South R 57 60
Ri k. 84 13t11...
. 43, ft,
amatiTfas fitsll as
- ref 109X109
Bahl hoer 66 0.1 ,
,4 76 . -77
Philadelphia Markets.
.7662 22 —l,lTemiat.
Bulb:wee is still the prevailing feature le the:market
for Pour, and the demand. both for export and tome
me, is limited, at former quotations, the only sale for
shipping being" Boo bble enperhol, et fa 75 v. Ma, dell•
vered, at which-rates there are more sellers thanbut.
err; the trade IC baying In small trey only at frorolbis
ewe up to ST NOR 50 bbl, is to brand end quality—
the latter for fanny branch,. Corn Meal and Bye Pi(tir
are Lot lrquired for ; we quote the former at $4 for
Penneylventa Meal, ant the latter at $ll5O
Wheat mane in slowly, and a fe* small lots only found
borers at 1700)175o for red, and 180b1850 for white, or
g od and prime qoality. Rye is dull and Santee in 'a
.malt wry at 93er93c. Corn is plenty and dull, at s fur
ther decline, and 'tooth 000 pus 'yellow eold'at McKie
afloat, mostly at the former rate; some holders oak more.
Oats are In fair dsinind,•with esles of 1,500 ha/beast 50 . 0
for prime Pennsylvania, and 470 for Delaware, mostly
in store. In Buckwheat there bee been quite a panto
to note today, with sales of 100:bus, at $1 41r bu, a
decline of 7 5 0 4p bu niece yesterday. Bark is deo
1 neer, sod about 100 hbds Qom citron sold at 027 50
for drat No. 1. Cotton Is but little inquired for to dry,
and only about 150 tales were 'Reposed of at 11X DUX o
for uplands, cash, the latter for middling lair quality.
Groceries are not very active,.but huger is saillr'g moat
freely, at further better prices. A sale of Coffee re
advertised kV auction tb-morrevr. Provisions are alio
very ineative, tot prim are without any rostrata
change, and the stock. light for the sexton. heeds re
main Quist .and prices about the same, with rather
more Timothy reed r {faring Whiskey is willing sh.irly,
a t2i3o for drake; 270 fcr Penneilvaula bble; 28c 1. r
Ohio and prison do ; and 2530 for hhds.
From Havana—The Cahawba nt New
Orleanit.
Nxw ORLIA/121, June 22.—Tba steamTbip o=D•.rbn,
trout Hams, on the 19th Inn , wired here this ann.
noon
• - 00IIIMERCIAL INTELLTGENOS..—Ha YANA Jane
18 —Busata are dill it ?gee:Mc—Thaws. was-400AM
b xew on bend blelearea Laid_ iet 101 6
2na bbl.. Woo*, On bind lo 600,,b1Witad
1,700 lege. ,brook
on London' isela 4r 0.3 mu,.
onnew York 606 V mt. OulksWit 6V a d ., _ y
===
Yew—
MIMS PI
s3gt oil
—,......„,.
fo oso t.t: