P• l "YVlOL'itri i . l4 "14110***10“(114-3frw3..wkr: i Mrif . 1 410101'. rs I .l' 01' ii* a/ewe t igrY;, , Pet • , 2 ,42`17 1 4 ;`1 ov.; 4 . ' 0:40 4 400 0 0*.ipobo , , imuitioNomrkvemorio.me' 1 ., r }4'114 1 1 :40V4t 1 t04:A 1: 4, 491 K a • r .'`' I 4 :;'" : 11: 1 73110:01P 4 'VOIO_ ' ff# l.l o - 41/?/0 4 11;Mi '• et the '4olr airellialt•EfrKV4ieger, 'q1etit*1!1 61 1, 4 4 4 0.,N4.! 1 1 471/ * i ik a 's *tikiii,=*atatif : E:bitecrt/;4 eire7;Xertsmis , 4l4oll;—#4llllt t't4i.aatataititi-`,Aamirtatolettddal'aft bas. ler iho Yll6l 31 41'44#11,46100.44A1i.,1411/110:14*.t'l -1-F'4 , • ; n. War tiller" Gnilbehlt' The Battl e Wit Ilitprkakigirt*illtwopm , o. war, is nmerlidff to , one t *Gflikticiv*tio:eikbeniiittea) •‘iieumihniinoris' attotriti ofdt ` ,whleh"ire 4ae+rc' nine behlitibid, in the iriespliitis I;,f 'ithihiPeind'Americi: Almost every morning 1-IV,a+noot the " .*:4 oBo idfat.' 4.7:00/virs in .;tink ' , *, l - 48i i 1 4Y /14°1° * *.ta--1461*1 9 114tataiti l 4le..*ortmkteffmk . ;Fronde, Emperut •ftoyr-ledmie , ruirrOquidoirbi", into iia ,cam iipon 41 ltd laatateit?-41' given. minute, ldeeeeiittion of tri t t . j ) ;- f lf great event, of w it iOrZt :04°14 these iirritramEusesiti ithe figment correspondent • of• ~ the ;."Loridcui Tester, 191 d descriptions iicidents or, vii.Ptft*":"wa! elatiiioe:4*,*4 6l .lour - 0;44k 044**** " . 4)1 4 4 :aliniftaii Off I*stifsepet the (irinree, by which lin! gained a t vitainvatiletelin: PairaPaPar4ciatraaPandeuta ate also , he found in all the European capitals, every manifestatidn'otpublic sentiment, shd , ' every important r!oloilaia.) 4lo a.,t o thi war s l a duly TtirtVoCAli:W•true:that tataalk. prOiesuderie are not unfregieent, bat a lair teleAluidlee Wanennacjirfattalhed; and thus, w 1e IfMperers,,Hings,..lllMstere ? fiieturds, 41 _, 11 11 .51 41Pri09 P? al tif l E- faiihibTthair daily desds.-ef-folly, misdom, courage, cowardice, for"- itupldify,turey'fene are M. ..a.f.V- ; 4:worevrriting - it , ihr the eh lightesinent of the - present and future ages. hile the overehelnied witti'dafaat 4 ?7, tha; atilfer,rnanmavrlni i t iil4g * * "l l* -6. :4(3Wrir i P,h, .4411:44p.p0n and VICTOR, Z)llitAXVlF arilYl*Mbed chi 'tie' aiiusictire'rtt Of tbe yn commen -`<antenifee, alai , „commenced, 4,4o;*-41* , ilfet it:41*11 1 114 11 -ths ,- caolliailln la w& `halerliporsAdtavbrow , ` of Gssisarmr, there . is pOnte4 isbout the ezpinits of bit little Spend:, of *at**, aalqtaut the whole AntiaAr*, 4.1441110103ak nearly ti; 'kindred times as , miry Men as his ruirps, One,. great, cease of this h Slit f42Ftbit . liis divisien •bas 'preceded .• I.l?,i'a tidings t 9 CPPPRiimitri?,PlitnttlilrSorentiner af a Liberating drmy—andthefirsipfithiess ofthe; jogai? entheshisnit,•*hich;• the, Italisis ',141 atthekhought thsftheirlenCelibrialed,llo* sires for rescue from Austrian' dUltipPii abAt I) , lie eratplegiiiie theisitge odiatifinitkins C.ontt4 tendered to idm elth prodigality, and volun teer./ flock tehlikandard to 1111 - the mournfal gaps made in Ids ranks 4-Austrian bullets. The tread Olds foot, scr, hay hasbeenfatal to ALidrian dondrdont-aaPalf•llaa:drivpr %,..- 11 7i*HibOral timi#Parit(o vert ull4B have s44444 4l 4ilib ' eOlikri.jed;-Pit4 - .14r *did , rablifirnserved Some ImAkis ireityo , ye-• qulreiratil l *teneulOi. 24 d 4; : 7 . 111 1 1 *03 ,11 # ~ b il fr.:**l4, . pnintisr4,, , inovements,.., to, attack:;• Aitstibin , te_„wgti;s l L#bi ' . l 4ettlek4f.#'4ivoled.if -diP• vine batectioesf out -. l4 , ltalgailik almost migfct celerity. Ho bean to th~_iey"present'` ; war. 10 - 07,*•sino itiipletikthe s ,- saw relation that , ,lllLsuisf. held 41) 'tiss.:;Ainerican war of 10 4.00 0 nOki;,e#4S - 44 i'l ( *ktiful." gong' 158 Vella particularly a n per t n 7 , tiOnft,f - ; " 411. the absence:of fall details`or tke i battitof aolferinqfe o l l6 o3 4-. ( 6 *#:0 1 7*4 t'J rent mat 's, tbo.illies , coutikue next' m 6 i1th 44 ** 14 , 4-(ll34 4 l4l l)Ctbil.l l, Ween= lion ttio-'kol&of;;3,Viro! Prob&; D 1 ,5 be "4rikkttiltOinieti :Ott :the 't-28th ' duosl6]-in 'Pttft**kkitl.lin wirM,4 3 eeYetike and -..Tsktiairtiator, fan the' forines.:ktlyk it'l. 'melt , kooniv ) that nal.ntonle" oi tini]litliei ion/id:be Wed witb as much joy tp theotinistiOn of TtinflUs:tiblmi been iniinaed, by, tlie. people ' H of Lombaidy. , ; tligalo.t, the , .4.sairbins`st:s arrayed the 1 44Y 8 trooPs who ba t s o ll l US, an d:lltely*llAhoitlf be: by the "dl-4 itatoo-ot , tifinoe , ,ll7aismsonewkinti Inte been' mare fifj f4 l #43Cibe t :oo 4 1 ( . 10'0.194 the Fre nch skitietore Vinigei and byriattii . :seiriforcementy - ok thirtf)!air. from Bad tutirtiMit are evi4ntlY situ buoyed' wit** bits_ ' been concentrated to defendtkeir *nest iffong* ait l oo * 2;44 4o l 4. l o4o4 6 ibilkiii:rtiie h 2 .1 assumed i o MtGantt 'Orlbe**y;arid;_ I n:t-Yeal_ 6 o*** - f*OrsikilkßiliiiiiblY "be ihit9w44:fo hilv'ewnljudgi mint dlreaft* * 4*, movements`lo;ib#.l tr0* 5 .8 . -0 1 :41 1 1; - :, 1 7, 1 0 0 (f*,tti.'),:4eariioidieri reported;- to , be:Ori "wit ; '*ea ' f° l **S 44ll l 6 l"o=.4 if 024body ap.., . naite~l .. th e the ; Austrian force which fought l -foretioenliciird AolreffibP;lt, to thVitiliflCliti*fen 4effiid,iheApittian iti f fissi kat riptirestly-#a: iarlit A l f ia n l f g *t 41(101iostribat'AP.e4t, souse `dogbI 1 1 **: Wen end lirtmtlii'ero Ott 'difliculties 'Mob - tint 'Allies ha*P, 'A (01 0 ) 4 etung#o.o4. - ;thii**bidoiO beatSti),l;iientitrT : ol46lo. before the obj eats, of their dinitmittu can be fallY,acComplishini: I**tei**silp Poitagaq; *Moltkrilved New 4 1 441 1 *# , M41,ifft ti/Mi_tsiaiikt'ckesa' P •l li a 4011.4 11 1, 0 0±Wlidtb meliotia*lt TichatOmoklriviktoo - Pisa*dit t rOsid rdr 114r—W40 4 14 t -igiirs *AC In * '4 4' 1 1 04 7 s'44 1 044 16 -404 b , Ulu 440414._ ,:thmit Was lia*ii *6.0 heti sco' .• = • •:, r " MM l lol4l Hairgas***Towk.Tain*izAistii:PAiffi t ` O l rrPkiies# ll 4 ll :* , 4 Pa* tide. i;t:iki itiobsioAluir**:*l•OPltMkiil i St 6l ' 44 : kaP4**l l 4 two otinelekc , sliar*l4 4l f*ii.,*.* - 1 r *4 4 0 3111 4, 40 / 111 4* ?"'Dlif 404W' 415411144M104,104 44a , :** *A 4 6(this ' 0 ,i0)114 j r..Oesiiimpu: lot 4410#t e ti .-- 410kbasjel*Vittliiiii#1*K)4 laikivagtttiiNg,#/#oo` eC 140 1 4 4#1004,1 6 40.fe.# ,-**ur.47loinsw: To the People of Pennsylvania rEu,oIT-01TIZIlitfV . V. _ - , The Democratic 'Stale Central Committee representing the, State jtighte Deinetwacy oC Pennsylvania, at Weil; last. meeting, held at :Altoona;:in the noun Q Blair, delegated to theitndereigiiodAhe'Ants ..addiesaing the people en all proper occasion, upon the fun olainental Manes involved in the approaching election,' and in that which is to be decided in - 4160.:' Nearly every. Democratic State Con • veritiopitn , thiai , eeetioir of the Union, held flues the adjournment of the Committee, hag_ plenied a itself`broeidly upon tfie enduring 'doe- Ariniithit the people of.the Territories Melte of., the States," shotild exercise esolu lelve-coiltrOl over their - domestic' ' The .Demociata of 'Ole 6,1. '4OO 'of 'Verifient'and 'Of Maine, hive fdrmpliy taken likleirinind,end from the .plainest; indications It ; io Mintiest, :that the veiee of. the, of. New - Jersey, New the; ether States of. New Eng ' lafldand , ' the,-Northwest; bo proclaimed ~forxthe`isame ;doctrine.* .. -The motive Which ' 'l4: le' :theft' - 'etispleiona demonstrations aipetthilicit'onlYtt the -03stincts,Strat the consciences , and to the high; `43titetiOief the" tiemeettairl party. : Taught . - Sttheiiitriiditione that if tbeiWin one element broadly flefined,inDensocratighisteri, it is tha t ssfitilheited, ennedence. in: the, people,' and .rin-1 spired by the recollection:of recent triumphs,,. and die - eint:4l . (ngiifitinebrnld by the thick. `consing'ftitto;the'seniffitent4*potvititseif in t¢e Depicerathr,:„lniart, that nothing can se , hilierahle`ina enduring victory brit consistency in iiPPEctStkl.ei well-understood- De - - - moogatt Only in pentiailvanis has the;standard' of •iretwileititand4dverse dogma Veen ofte r neively ouieletore north of the Pei tomes, without"an. §iceptfon, : indiginini.V rep jot,'*,**Opi tb reel' the Democratic, party ;Egon tbe:perrls of an aristocratic: and feudal '`theory ; ,. namely, _ That the piople•of the Terri -4:10s; sha,4 exercise no Central whetelier oveethe , ‘3 . olect of ihmery,l 7 ,liera, in the State where the Oeciiitation : :orPubliiepdeitclk: Was - prepared 44prkilekti01440kervi!iiitoilititution of We trEk 041444 irairfratned and'fohnded,-Where the , iretriefef,i/reatinitql:le;tree.in.their ;ova *W A LL; pppl4ipn„, apd „free by. their, own Xminejint_Pianifeito, was organized, that ln,the forinof written appeal to the nations, of the earth, and siterwalds prosecuted through seven abowitl,the remarkable - oehourrenoe of, sentiment 11;6,0113'6n ttetitittei•ltighteDenioorata of: 1 1. ,eiiris'yliehla, _at' - their 'S.:invention, held on the 13th of April, rand the,le(ellemcieratie,fritatecien 7 ; Ventions et Ohlisjowe, Vermont; and Maine, the ',E•ollitiirlititi r iernieful• as matters of 'reference, and *Faire." that pit, the Democrats of this Statieneek7.piatjtt. advance of others, but that , heir bold mar fearless example las been fel toned , trberentaC'-thilr : pelitlast brethren have , beer, n eitiabled,te'Seitak outoinatied b' Ifiederal iowett mitioOrrnits,of lan sieves littanTS DBUOCR:-Cr A ,- ' , Resoreq, Ths.,t :tialiberately and beadily rwursiert .antr:re-iindorre the treat, ptiliolnles of popularsevereigril and noti4ntervention, as wall in the Territories ,ak in" the States, non- interven• San by pcingreire• with slavery in the Territories, find iill9.4ntiltilit(o2l - b 'the. r ederal,Ex•outlve eitiCthe franehises Of the people of the States, and that every - effort teferbe'the Deititioratie party of this,:ootintry. . ripen any other,platforut should be rebuked as it,„ proottratiOn foriesting disgrace in the tirst,:pleae,- and forlasting and deserved defeat id ihe - Seeond. , - . -„-. . Reseititd„ That ibis prin c iple of popular sove nitrify ind•noti•intervention. lying, ea -it does, at she baste °frier free institution', enunciated and aeoeptirA;•North - and South. by Leetelatares aria Ones, by i'Cring resits arid. esedidetee, abed -1850:forau Congreasional rule, god re-asseriadin..lB.,s4, - after' the repeal of the witi*U l ' oo 4 l '..° ll 4lse.' the:ale erialple that will forever., amore the: Tavares of slavery from thei„Netionat •• Legielature, and pre anti the,tilinnPh of ; the, Siantei.of the - Atari- Tnion. • . • - • - • .-IReloteref;lhat is regard; With itudisiombled ':litrignation 'and - alarm, the attempt of the Federal Adntinletration. b acked by' lot dependants in the itiortli; - ,imidtheilieuntenisterif the: South, to anm- Mit the'Disniaratteergintatfonte the standalone ;dootrine, that,; in at fien c eatthe pledgee of the De._ • acratio partyinlllsB; arid in 'dlareserd of the le !siltation of 1850 and 1884; Ili a people of the Terri , rairjaThall have no control over 1401 cluisllon. of ilayetifrint that 11 1 / 1 0iMp.IDUst, he inotee red sweat uot merely by t he earn', but by iConfrese; ~and pet conseencrico, by the army and !the may.; that,; regarding the resolutions of ithe,Convention - which miumbled at Utirrlibutig on ;ther.lBthof,,,dritob as tiering accepted: this MOE. ffEEOii:hATEET, we bereby.-repudiete the platform candidates Of , that Contention. ' Assatied,,,lhet - representing, Akira believe, a Utrge:•mejerity, of. t he Demooretio party , of this Strite,'WO di, hereby Most notoriety. protect against Itribetraial; ebildanient; or-mutilation of this greet prinelple,:of 'this ir mahrity ruling, !. appli "ibie alike *'.to the Territories the 'amens to the States;" atotWeitheisfOre reJeat, Sean innovation end nniaild the.rearilutlon ot the late Contention -.ThitkahrtilipriOndllmits the Ate the people of inireryto . theene.partiatime ler hen they:come is Wingate. their State Governments t"-th at yre *inflects , *hold the.fullent ApPiloatimi of the to the: Tetritoriei, and cannot bet ex. -7 4 -* lim-illitriandeitontshment at its Threatened entire ditatiration; se disclosed by leading South ern ,Sileatoity in the Scat debate in the Senate- of the , - -' • • • meroceneoc. -.Thatthe °rim:timid Territories of the .Ualtediltattie l .sithengh not endowed with alt the attributes of sovereignty, 'are only held in the Territorial condition until- they attain .a Illstlielent amber of - inhabitants to authorize t heir aerie lionintirthkUnited States;' and, therefore,' are justly:entitled; to the right of • self.gevernment, etyd the undisturbed regulation of their demesne or Meal affairs, - Subjeet try the Conetitutia of the (Jotted States; and that any attempt by Congress, or any of the -.States, to establish or, maintain, prohibit or abolish, the relation of master and slave In a Territory, would be a departure from The Original- doctrinerof our American 'Dente tionit;7- and thsk we adhere immovably to the inlebiple of 4 $ non-interesstion by Congress with slavery !States and Territories," as de. .stared the KllEURl , Nebratika bill, and openly disellinc!. fellowship with those, whether arthe (tenth; or the North, or the Weal, who mania the abandonment;: limitation, or 'avoidance rof that priadple.7 •• Riuolvad,',Thfit, the suppression of the African and foreign slave trade -by the . Federal govern , . ,meet, after the year eighteen hundred' ad seven, ;it one of the compronilses on the fa ith ' e of which ;the Constitution wee adopted; and • oar Union of elaveholding - and , nowstiaversolding States firmly' established ;Chi te_ revival of that trade would - not only renew these Chteltiee which - once provoked the indistiena - of 'the oivilized world, but would expose -the slareholding Stites'to a (mutant terror of servile, insurivotlim, and the rion.slavehoiding ,drates of, the border;like Ohio, to all the mischiefs and, enttoyanees of a free - bleak population. For theseleasers, with ottieri; the Demeoraoy of Oslo tire opposed to. any snob- revival, and to any mea sure undies to that direetion ; ••! - -,l'vorokoir THE lOWA DEMOCRACY. Resoling, 'That we intim the prlnciPlos of the National Denitieratio, platform of 1858, anti rasa cart the 'doctrine of non-Interveation therein oenteletii2; - ee the only ground upon whiob a na tional Party can o maintained in these eonfedera. taState4. "; ; That the organised Territories of the United are only bele. in the Territorial con -,dition until they attain ra_adilsitent number of In hafiltiete' to authorise their admission Into the Union as State.; and are justly entitled to self- Severer:anti:ad the itindleturbed regulation 'of their oWn domestic dr - looal affairs, subject only to Abe' Constitution of the United States. - RisolveeV That lnestauolk. as -the legislative `poster tifThe'Tetritories atlas Undeniably to all rightfill ablate°, legislation, no-peeper can pre vent:Mini Oni,pciseink enek laws 'upon the sub het of 'slavery altothem *ay earn propiri and .nthither, fi euelitato.c when passed, he conititutio*, r 4 or n o t, can be army deter Mined; not by Con 'ree 8'; but by the Supreme Cotert,:on appeal from ,the 'deader. of the Xerrliintal courts. er ,* 'That it Is a doctrine of the Dame , Cretier par y - tbat all mataralited ettleena are 'en. ` titled to the same protection, both- - at and Areati,ehnt,3B exteneliet , teLticemet i ts.dorn "2414,:-/EUS 'the eves a voiuntary,return of ,euch the land; of their both fora tempo; ihry plernote l - tiOie"not_, plate them beyond the ' 4fl etQf Put protection, but that our Government is" bound : it°, alai them from Injury and la ri at While there at nap haestd. , • t •-• TOWNE OP THIVVERMONT DIIIKOORACY. • ' ..i.:R0801fPf4,X11111 theDemoorsey of Vermont, in 'The language of the Cincinnati National Demo °ratio Convention of 1856, recognise and "adopt the ,prinotplisteenteined in the organist laws establieh leg the - Territories , of 'Kansas „and Nebraska, as •Milbeile,Wg th e fonly sound anti safe window of 'the elevery.tiention.a.morcinterferenot by Con . Ferree With SNOTIV - iE )'late or. Territory, or„in. the-District' Of. Polunitia - Reactive,!, Mist ; tbk :was the bans of the Com , '.ptertileelderieures•of-1850, eonfirnied by both the • Demoimatie and Whig parties in '1852, rightly op ;idled ,to: organisation of _Territories in 1854, 'end triumphantly, ratified •bY the people in the 'Amnion -- Resolasd, That Arid, unyielding adherence to, •sid•unifora application of, this Democratic prin• eipli to the organization of the Territories, leaving the PaoileAketaof perfectly free to form and aim• late,Thefedomeetie institutions in: their own way, subject - Slily:to 7 the Constitution - of the United 'nista; will effectually. andforerver defeat protect Aiwa sectional legielation and agitation, ; tie rights of all: the ,ntatse, end the, citizen* of is „ors portion thereof, and maintain the prosperity, Opal and harraohP of the Union. • verity:or rue /aka Paitocneer. .110,toterid, - Thatthe Government of the United atilmsesheirldhot formic the . lfilitttittion of slavers) . l iptafftriCtreirtMidef evilest this will of the people thitteoffhekthat 'the - people of ' eaolt Territory ehbnid heaticiWtki-Th 'determine the -que stion for rthititnielva, Wlthent the interpoettion of 'Copartner, the Constitution of the United this deottino ld founded upon prhidtpleir ancient as free' governMent itself, „rend."'lslt 'iteardade, With' them; simply dealings that the; ieoplie Of a Teriitoty, like those' of a Signet thell'debide faTheinielvee'whether slavery , .0111 or shall not exist within their limits." ,Thit-the neW doottine', t Con- siltation oonferithe right ' of bolding shat laves the in the -Territories in 'deflators of tite•wiehel of the people Iliereefi: and that Congeal should enact -laws 'Olaf stave property higher righrs than other property. thereto, is a .Wide departing from thee° Iflnol2 l ot, end: would render. the Demaratio party justip,yibaosiousto the charge - of deception and EITEEM . , barley, 'MO )011: Ipts Atlusice:t. 4011.4G,1ti iolljef 14111 long years of bloody war against the armed hosts of a besotted monarchy—'-here, in Penn sylvania. a domestic - Federal despotism, imita ting the example which sought to crush out the independence of the _, colonies when they were straggling for Popular Beverelmity, has direct ed its dependents to place the candidates of the Democratic party upon a heresy never before advocated by any respectable portion of the American people. Whether it is incense men, whose lives have been -spent in effective an tagonism to the Democratic party. have been ' put forward as the representative men of that party, or, whether because the Federal Ex ecutive has himself fallen back upon the prin- Ciples which marked the earlier stages of his politicaleareer, it is manliest that this usur pation is to be persisted in ; and also, that un pit( it IS promptly arrested, it will and must itierishelin our great organization in a con. tinned series of mortifications anti disasters. It ip unieceallistyterecaPitulate the scene at the kdiriiiiistration Ooniention which assem bled at 4arelsbnrg on the 18th of March, to which potnfthis same Federal despotism had summoned its adherents to prepare new hu. millations ,fOr the Democratic masses, coni- Mending them to repeat in the capital of Penn -1 silvan% 'the shaineless proscriptions which bid AlsgraCed it' in other 'portions of the 1 Delon. It was hoped :,that the rebuke I no', ioMiediately adininfidered to that body by the popular uprising •at the Same' plane, on the 18th of April, *mild hate taught the officials at. Washington a wholesome lesson. But tyranny is always blind and always merci lees, -never conceding to popular sentiment until tionCeision is wrung from It by force, and„Olinging:to power Oven hi 60 , 0y_ mo th:6o oT its,diseolutioti., An address, ptirport ing2to,_ speak_ for "the , Demecratio.`party of ,Pennsylvania, bit really uttering • only the ,opinions of men in,- aloe, bearing date at ilarrieburg.bn the .29th of June, and signed by Mr. ' , ROBERT TVEIth, • 9.8 .13119.1tME11, sub stantially asserts the doctrine that the people of the Territories have no rigbta whatever In regard to BliverY, and boldly takes the ad ditional Step, that,in the elvent,of their al' laming to,eiereise such fight, it will be the duty",, op the, l'keengve t ,and,or gongress, to InterprOse for the protection of slavery. Al though one of the gentlemen on The Adatinis • tration State ticket—Mr. Rows., the candidate for 'Surveyor General—bas caused it to be understood that, to a 'certain eiteht. he BYLCl pathlais with the movement in which we are ito* eitgaged—the Administration committee, constititted• to gratify the Malevolent purposes of the Federal Administration and to, Maintain the ,dangerens doetrines alluded to,' unhesi tatingly places that ticket upon the,lasue of hostility-to the will, of the 'majority and the popular 'rule in the Tertiterles, so far as slavery is concerned, and demands an endorse *tent of this idatie at the polls in October next. In view of this State of facts, the duty of all Democrats is plain. They cannot evade or avoid It if they desired so to do. No Democrat, even reasonably impressed with the justice of his principles and the pledged faith of the Democratic party to carry them out' in letter and in spirit, can give his vote for a ticket thus authoritatively advocated, because every such vote wilt be anUndorse, ment of doctrineis at variance with all' our pledges andarirprinciplee. It is unnecessary to • employ many, words in the exposure of, these dectrines. t One of two abrade from the address of the Administratjon committee will, howet4m, shoW'how far it is -phoposed by the Federal GoVernment to commit the Democratic party of Pennsylvania against the rale of the peo ple in the Territories, and in favor of the in tervention of the Executive and Congress for the protection of slavery in the Territories against the will of the people. The following is a apecitnen Where, let us ask, resides the.right of eminent domain over a Territory of the United States ? Is it, not admitted by all to be with the Federal Go vornment? Where shall we "look for the right Chci pesrer to asdertain and fir all Territorial bone :dories? Is It ant to the Federal Government? Where shell we seek the right and power anti doty • to dispose of all lends embraeed In the-Territory? The simmer ..is, in - the, Federal Government Where in the goveraiiient of .a Territory ie lodged the eseontive , atititority? /t is lodged- in the ,Intrida of • Federal Governer.' Where is thejudi olel power of a Territorial Government? In the .keeping of a Federal Judiciary. Where is the le- Vedettes power ? Every ' one knows it did not ex :Jet, and'that it null not legally exist, WU dolled into being by the Federal Congress, in the organic sol of Territorial G.lvernment-: In all these de monstratione of power, and there can be none 'others outside of them in a Territorial Govern ment, We behOld the direot,'positive, and'tanglble hvidenees'of the tresehoe of Abe sovereignty of ;the Government of the United Stateit h ,ptoWnir. oT-pOjoular l sovereignty when 'need as a convertible term with these, as being olikenatenablein fact, and preposterous in login /halt must be borne in mind that the Federal Government cannot sot in a Territory as a despot, or arbitrary ruler ;. and here is the difference be tween our doctrine and that of the Wilmot pro visoites.' It moot govern in a Territory In the sense of the Canstitution, , from which it derives its life and its every function and It is bound to respect, with strict, impartiality, the -rights and interests of all .paittes concerned, these parties being the'Statesiand people of the States respect, ively: Now the Government'of &Territory is not natural and indefessible,"but derivative front the Congreae; otherwise, the few thousand inhabitants of a Territory, after its acquisition by„ purchase,- or as Indemnity for war expenses perhaps, would have the right to set themselves up as a foreign State, if they so liked, and . to deny the Prieto don of the United States. Bat Congress, when establishing a GovernMent in a 'territory, Cannot impart to it authority to do by' feeble Territorial enactments, what Congress itself cannot undertake to parietal under the Constitution, and can never venture to undertake, except in flagrant usurpa tion of powers not delegated but reserved to the States. , , ' We ate oppoSed, however, to the introduo lion Of any. provision Pertiottlarly protecting slave or any other kind of property; into an aot organising. a Territorial Government. But if &Territory at tempt indlifiestlon or , rebellion, in the shape, of resistance to acts of Congress, or to judicial de iiisiona in their proper logien] and legal conse quences, or to any other legitimate acts done in and by virtue of the constitutional authority of the United States over the same, then the Federal Government should at once interpose and put it down, not so much for the sako of Slave, or, any other kind of property, or even of the perional rights of chime that may be thereby invaded, though constituting, a sufficient reason for the movement, as looking to the neewity of its ores pro:tomtit/a. But 'before the happening of any such tot of nullification, or rebellion, and at the time of organising a Territorial Government, the presumptions are all in favor of a legal and peaceful canine of political condnot on the part of the inhabitants of a Territory ; whereas, ths.tioc steno or Congresnonal `intervention Would as. stetne'the reverse. In fine, we are disposed to maintain on thie question and, at all times, the findamental principle of the equality of the States." - It is not difficult to discover in this maze of phrases and abstraCtions the design of the Administration to Ignore the popular rule in the Territories, and to substitute Oongres , atonal intervention for the protection and-per petuation of slavery. • The Democratic senti ment is, that the people of a Territory are sovereign _that a' citizen of Pennsylvania moving into any one of the Territories of this Union lima none of the rights he ; possessed _in ' hie; ,State, or becomes less a citizen by changing his residence. That sentiment indignantly denies that slavery is inviolable, as against the popular rifle, and rejects, with contempt and, scorn, the monstrous - tion'thatthe penile of a Territoiy may legis late upqn ell their domestic institutions, save and exeeptirig slavery atone. The •direct tendency of the argument of the', Adininistration Committee is to consoli date the Federal power in the Territory; to plunge Congress and the country into Irre trievable and constantly-renewing excitement; to keep open the whole Territorial question In the Several States and to render necessary the most stringent Congressional legislation, in order to protect the Institution of, slavery against the people. There is no middle ground -on , this great question. Those who deny the entire right of the people over all their domestic institutions in the Territories of this Union must go a step farther, and de mand the interference of Congress against the people of the Territories. If the popular . will is to be disregarded, and the institution of slavery held In &fiance of the ballot-box and the Territorial Legislature, Congress must authorlze;and the President must exe cute, the most despotic- intervention prior to the formation of a State Constitution for the people." What has the . Democratic party meant by its resolutions, and covenants, and committals on this Territorial question, during many long years, if the sequel is to leave ua in the shame less attitude of denying to the people all right to form and regulate" all their do mead() institutions, while in a Teiritorial cart dilion, and to leave 'them at the mercy of the changing majorities of Oongress, and the va rying factions of the day, while undergoing the trials of Territorial existence ? 15 it possible that' all our boasted professions ofjustice and fair-dealing to our fellow-countrymen in the Tersitories of this Unien are to close in such a farce as this ? It is an insult to the chi valry'', and integrity, and sensitive spirit of the -Democratic party to suppose that this THE PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, JULY 11, 1859. usurpation will ever be tolerated. As an 11- luatraiion oft-the _manner -in which Federal power proposes to allow the people of a Ter ritory, even When they come to form a State Constitution, ao dispose of the question of slavery, it is cinly,.peoessary to recall recent events in Kansas, when repeated majorities, righteously expreised, were set at defiance by the mercenaries of the present Adminis tration, and a Stain organization denied to the people, only because they Would not declare in fitter of the institution of slavery. Here was Executive intervention against the popular rule'at the very stage when we are how told that popular rule may operate! We must an ticipate and arm ourselves for the fhture, with the instructive 'admonitions of the past. The Administration committee, in their anxiety to drive the Democratic party of Penosylvania from the solid foundation of prin , Ciple, always recognised by that -party, and strengthened" and advocated in every recent political contest, : commit a fatal mistake in the conettitction they put upon the following resolution of the last Democratic National Convention. They say they are distinctly op. posed to any compulsory relinquishment, in the name of squatter sovereignty, of the rights of the, State of Pennsylvania, as one of the sovereign proprietors of all the public do- main or Territorial property of the UnitedSUstee, and we (they) still occitpY, without any Chang°,df opinion, the ground - held, by the following, resolution of n tilneinnati Con• vention of 1856, to wit ; , `" Rosa/vest. That we recognise the right of the potpie of all the Territories, including Kansas and Nebraska' eating - throe gh the legally and fairly eiptessed , *ill of a majority of settle' residents, and Whenever the number of their inhabitants justifies it, to form a Constitution, with or without dotnestio alavery,:and be admitted into the Union upon - terms of perfect equality with the other dtatic• • " This resolution distimitly rePresents the marked differenee between the revolutionary efforts of the first squatters in a new Territory to abolish negro slavery or,to prevent the introdno• doe of slave property intothe Territory, by the incompetent annoy of a Territorial Legislatuie; and the oonstititional and quiet exercise of the rights of sovereignty, by the people gf a Territory in the formation of a State Constitution, with or without domentiti slavery, as they may ' etermine. In the meantime, the °Miens of eaoh:-and every State, tieing in all repents equal with each tither under the Constitution, take their varlets' kinds or property with them into,the Territory, and while in'a Territorial condition they and their property: are all ego-illy protested by the Constitution of the United States and-the Dred Scott derision." It is in evidende, tulansWeralile and history= cal, that after the last Democratic National , Con;mutton adopted this resolution, now so differently construed by an Administration' Committee, assuming to speak, the voice of the Democratic people of this great State, President Beaman himself, and nearly all the leading men of the Democratic party, declared that this and the other resolutions of that Con vention, referring- to the Territorial question, were susceptible of but one practical and sim ple solution. Said the President, in his letter of acceptance,with the rettoliitions of the Con vention that nominated him in his hand, and, while surrounded by a number of the most distinguished members of the Convention that adopted these resolutions : The recent legis lation of Congress (the KansaseNebraska bill) respecting domegtio slavery; derived, as it has, been, from the original and pure foundation of legitimate political power, the will of the ma jority, promises ere long to allay the danger ous . excitement. This legislation is founded upon principles as ancient as free government itself,and in accordance with this simple deal ration, THAT THE PEOPLE OF THE TER LIKE THOSE Oie A STATE, SBA-LL DECIDE FOR THEMSELVES WHETHER SL AVERY SHALL OR SHALL NOT EXIST WITHIN THEIR LIMITS."' And the preeent Secretary of the Treasury,Mr. Conn, put the same 'direct and practical con 'xaction upon the resolutions, now construed' exactly the other way by this committee; in his speech at West Chester in 1850, when he declared that "ho would not plant slavery upon the soil of ' any portion of God's earth against the will of the people ;" ci that the Government of the United States thould not force the Institution of slavery upon, the people, neither of the Territories nor of the States, against the will of the people ;" and that " practically the majority of the people re- Presented in the Territorial Legislature would decide the slavery question." "' Whether," he, continued, they decide it by prohibiting it ac cording to the one doctrine, or _by refuting to, pass a law to protect it, contended for by' the other party, is intinatertal—s. tummy ov Tam I.EOPLE, BY TEM ACTION or 'ITIZ TERRITOkIA.y ) , LYGIBLATURE, WILL DEO/BET= eusarloste-01?. _ ... .eu r arg...e v , ‘ ,llllll , nll.llo . lB ,m lll u ar t ir r44 7"b„ t ii o a at ; if the majority of the are oppoaed,tb the institution, and if they do not desire Wen grafted upon their Territory,all they have to do is simply to decline to pass laws' in the Territo rial Legislature for its protection." Now we are 'told by the committee of the General Administration that the exercise of this an: thority by a Territorial Legislature would be like the rash proceedings of a mob—would be resistance to acts of Congress ; and that the exercise of any such authority would author ize the interference of the Federal Govern ment at once to interpose and put it 'down! It will be observed that when Mr. BoinrsziaS wrote, and when Mr. Cone spoke, and when the entire Democratic party Mood squarely united upon the honest cobsttuction of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill, the odious theory ad vocated by this committee was not a novelty, nor was the subsequent vague and indecisive Muter dictum, as it Ise of the Supreme Court, an unanticipated event. But it Was; notorious that every conservative Union-loving States man in Congress, from BIINBY CLAY in 'the South to LBWIEI OAss 'in the North, had der flounced the idea of an Executive or Congres sional protection for the Territories, on the subject of slavery, as unworthy of the con sideration of a free country, and that more than one eminent Southern loader had de clared that the political .opinion of no court, high or low, could be wielded against the mt. clod and inalienable franchises of the people when they came to exercise their highest acts of sovereignty in regard to this very geese tion of slavery. ' Contemplate, for a moment, the position of the Democratic party of Pennsylvania. loaded down with the monarchical theories of this ad dressl Opposed, on the one band, by the array of its own pledges, running through mere than a generation of time, it would be attacked in the rear and the flank by an indignant and or ganized public sentiment, aroused to madnesa by the cool defence of these theories, made in the name and assuming to speak with the sanc tion of the Democratic party. First, we should hive it contended, against the Democratic party, that slavery is carried into the Territo ries by the Constitution, to be maintained there in defiance of the popular will; and neat; as a fair deduction from these startling prein ises, it would be argued, (and the organ of the Federal Administration of November, 1857, quoted in, support of the assertion,) that slavery may be carried into the States them• selves, and held there, too, in contempt of the protest of the people. In harmony with this, we should have the accusation that the Democratic party stood upon the narrow and destructive platform of runping the sove reignty of the American citizen; that the Cdn. tral Government was to control the people in their sanctuaries and in their mueicipall. ties, and that the army and the navy were to 'be quartered in the Territories to purdah every act of the people, 'through their representv tives, on the subject of slavery, as an act of "rebellion." Thus, after a long, career of gallant struggles for progressive ideas—after having made American history bright with the triumphs we have achieved in the name of the people—our great organization would be driven back more than a hundred years to imitate the exactions and oppressions of that British Government whose armies were ex pelled front our shores because they had dared to interpose the authority of their- master against the people of the thirteen colonies. What organization could stand up against such an antagonism and such a record as this ? But if this Administration Committee aro fa tally involved in their attempt to prove that any act of a Territorial Legislature in opposition to slavery in the Territories, would be neither more nor less than nullification or cc rebellion , ' to be put down by the Federal Government, and if in this attempt the committee are con fronted by the frank and patriotic construc tion put upon the Nebraska bill by Mr. Bu- OHANAN and nearly all the leading Democrats In the country since the Cincinnati Con vention, the committee are still more un fortunate in trying to show that there is a difference between their doctrine and that of the extreme enemies of the South. "The principle is the same in both oases, only the committee, assuming to speak for the Democracy of a free• State, ,demand that Congress shall interfere to keep, slavery in the Territories, in dOtiaruie or the popular will, while those who stand entrenched upon the otberconstruction insist that slavery shall,be excluded, whether the people desire to have It or not. What a spectacle is presented in this concurrence of action between the men Whose creed is opposition to the South and those who put themselves forward as the petmliar friends of the South; and what a commentary upon the rapidly developing sen timent in favor of Popular Sovereignty, so eloquently set forth by Mr. BITOBANAN and Mr. COBB in 1866, (though since abandoned by both,) for the adjustment of the Territorial question, and in regard to which even those who have contended for the Wilmot Proviso are being daily compelled to confess that they have been egregiously mistaken ! It is a truth which' forcibly confirms the jus tice of the position assumed by the States. Rights Democracy of Pennsylvania, that no Each reasoning as that now employed by the Administration CoMmittee in this State was Over hoard of from men pretending to be na tional Democrats until that Administration re tlolved to betray its trust. Never, until now, bas it been asserted that the attempt of .a Territorial Legislature to "form and regu late" its domestic institutions in its own way, ' Slavery inclusive, would be an " act of rel el lien," to be put down by the strong arm of power; and never, until the present day, have any set of men dared to'place, the Democratic party 'upon the retrogressive platform of oppo sition to the people of the Territories, on the one band, and of approval of Congressional intervention in favor of or against slavery, on the other, The Administration Committee have now formally presented to the people of Pennsyl vania A distinct and tangible Mane. In doing this they have rejected the patent pretext that the question of slavery in the Territories is a settled question, and- have deliberately re opened a discussion which would have been dosed forever by a prompt and graceful sub %lesion on the part of the Administration to the only tribunal by which this question, can be- finally disposed of. We are againtaught by this example the utter impossibility of bringing back to reason those who have fla grantly fled from it. Our rulers at Washing ton, blind to the admonitions of the times, un influenced,by the appeals of the Democratic press and 'the utterances of the Democratic people; in support of the doctrine of Popular Sovereignty, have resolved to make their new heresies a test, at the hazard of destroying the organization to which they owe their own of ficial existence. As Pennsylvania was the ' battle-field in 1856, upon which the principle of the exclusite right of the people of the Territories over their own domestic in stitutionS, slavery inclusive, was tried, and where it gloriously triumphed, it is right that upon her soil the same battle shall again _be fought in '69 and '6O. And although Demo crats may regret that the President, chosen alone because be was true to this principle, is now the leader of those who are opposed to It, they do not despair of the issue, but will 'cheerfully accept the challenge, confident of an overwhelming verdict at the ballot-box. It is a fiot painfully proving the- tendency to despotism on the part of the men who assume to control the organization of the .'zinocratio party—the servants of the people at Washington; end their dependents and pars altos in different parts of the country—that while they are bending every energy to com mit the Democracy to the extraordinary doc trine of ignoring the rights of the people of the Territories of this Union, they are, at the same time, taking ground against the rights of the adopted citizens, thus furnishing another evidence of their hostility to the absolute soca reignty of the individual man In This free country. Those who deny equal rights to our countrymen In the Territories are not incon sistent with themselves when they attempt to draw a distinction between the native born and the adopted citizen. Regard , lag ourselves as inexorably committed, as well to the equality of the States an to the citizens of the States, and the cititens of the Territories, native and adopted ; bound by ,a common faith—not yet lost to us, we trust, by the successive treasons of men elevated to power by our confiding suffrages—the State B ights Democracy of Pennsylvania are tut deiotedly attached to all portions of the Union, and as sincerely resolved to protect _their Southern fellow-citizens against the en. over been. And they believe that they are en. gaged in a movement, the end of which must •be not only to rescue the Democratic party from the evils now impebding over it, but to strengthen and to perpetuate that organization upon those eternal principles which have here. totore made it the bulwark of the Union of these States, and the indomitable champion of the rights of man. JOHN W. FORNEY, 'Chairman Democratic States•Rzghts Com. mittee. A New D!ap of Europe. There has been some speculation, since the War commenced, as to the future division of Europe—provided that the Austrians were driven out of Italy. Six months ago the Pa risian and London journals described a now map of Europe, in which considerable changes were made, by anticipation, in the dimensions god boundaries of the different States. It appears now, from a statement in the Gatelte de France, that this division•project is by no Millis new, and that, in 1830, immediately before the Revolution drove him into exile, aIAULEB X had actually made overtures to Ruisia, through his ambassador, M. DE MOB TEIMADT. The Gazette de France says this: cc In the month of September, 1829, a memorandum was read at a Council of Ministers, presided over by the King, (Cascaras X,) and approved by him, containing the whole plan to be car ried, out, either by means of a Congress, or by a separate understanding with Russia and Prussia, and by the swords of the French sol diers. We shall simply give hero the sub trance of the paper, which was based on the enfranchisement of the Oreco.Slavonian soil, and on the thrusting back of the Turks en their Asiatic provinces. Russia was to re. ;Anti, in Europe, Moldavia and Wallachia. Austria was to add to her possessions Bosnia, Turkish Croatia, the Herzegovina, and Servia. Servia and Bosnia, better defended by nature and lilt than Moldavia and Wallachia, were to Serve as counterpoise for what Russia gained on the Danube. Prussia was to be extended and strengthened towards Austria by the an nexation of the kingdom of Saxony; she was thus to become a maritime Power, by the atquisition of Holland, and anti-English ; but she was to yield up to FT/MOO SdlTO bruokt and Saracens; to Bavaria a portion of her Hhenish provinces, which enabled the latter ;` State, by means of exchangec, to join two detached *nmate of her territory, and to cede Landau to France; lastly, 1 400. 000 Catholic subjects of Prussia would recover their ghenish nationality, with a capital at Aix-la'-Ohapello, and 'a sovereign of their own religion, the King of Saxony. By this com binatiOn Prussia would' no longer touch the Freneli frontiers; a state incapable of injuring Franca was placed .between her and Prussia; the bends of religious unity would connect Franco with the intermediate • State, and France also acquired throe fortified places, which increased her security on the northern frontier. The King of Holland, it is true, lost his postessions, but he was to place upon his head crown of the CONSTANTINE.% and was to reign at Constantinople over an empire 'of 10,000,000 souls. France was to enter into possession of the Belgian provinces to the Rhine and the Mouse. This plan, as a whole, conciliated all the interests of the Continent, and was susceptible of every modification of a nature te satisfy them." Thus,-it would appear that, even if NAPO LEON does think of a new arrangement of the European territories and kingdoms, which would lake waste-paper of the Treaties of 1816, it is only what that Bourbon of Bourbons, Cianims X, had in view as far back as 1829. The only ground upon which any new ap propriation of territory in Europe would be resisted by the cc legitimate" Powers is the declaration that the arrangements made by SO Treaties of 1816 cannot he interfered with. To hear British, Austrian, and Prussian states men assert and argue, one would think that the Treaties of 1816 were as inviolable as the I immutable laws of the Medea and Persians. Yet, these Treaties have been violated over and over again. In 1829, contrary to those Treaties, Greece, encouraged by France, England, and Rud', to revolt from Turkey, was erected into an in dependent Kingdom. rn 1830, contrary to those Treaties, Bel gium was separated from Holland, and also converted into an Independent Sovereignty. In 1880, contrary to those Treaties, the elder branch of the Bourbons were deprived of the crown of Prance and driven into exile, Louis PUILIPPE succeeding them. In 1846, contrary to those Treaties, Ora cow, made a free republic in 1816, was seized by the Emperor of Austria, and incorporated with the dominions which he had inherited, conquered, and stolen. Lastly, in -1848, contrary to the Treaties of 1815, one great specific purpose of which was to exclude the EONAPAIITE family from ever again , ruling In Prance; the President of the French Republic, by popular election, was Lours NA POLEON ; in 1861; he was elected President for ten years; end in' 1862 he was elected Em peror. So much for the Voaties of 1815. .They have been broken, over and over again and cannot, therefore, be any obstacle to a new arrangement of European, principalities, if occasion should render it desirable. Captain Schooley, 115. P. The United States have been collaterally represented in the ,British Parliament, by the BARINOB (descended from the BINGHAM'S of Philadelphia, where Lord ABIIBIIRTON, the present head of thelamily,was born, in 1799,) and by WILLIAM Barwir, of Liverpool, of the firm of BROWN Brterrnsas of New York. Mr. Bnows has resigned his seat for South Lan cashire, but another gentleman, with Ameri can connexions, was returned at the recent General Election,' for the borough of Dart mouth. He is well known in Pittsburg, where he married, and is thus described by Captain Don, in his Parliamentary Companion, just published,: Fermium-, EDWARD WILLIAM BARRINGTOII : Bon of the Isle norm Sabel:day, of the Royal Artillery. 11 'to 1799; married: Ist daughter of William Inglis, , of Edinburgh . 2ndly,. Jane Marie, daughter of Sir William Templar Pole, of Shun, House ' Devon : 3rdly, Mary, daughter of Croghan; F. q:, of Pitts burg, United States, Educated at the Military College, Marlow Served with the Me Brigade in the Peninsular ,War, and was _severely wounded at Waterloo Afterwards entered the Consular Service, and wee employed to the com missions' for the repression of the Slave Trade with Spain and Holland., A Liberal •, and In favor of extending the framable° to the indus trial claws.' First elected for Dartmouth in May, 1969. . It the date of his birth be here given cor rectly, Captain &HENLEY must have fought in the Peninsular campaign at the ago of of teen, and have been at Waterloo at sixteen. In one part of Captain Doti's "Companion," his second Christian name is given as Wynd ham ; In another as William. Dartmouth is a Parliamentary borough In Devonshire, with a population of four thou• sand five hundred and eight. The registered electors qualified to vote are only two hun dred and sixty-four, consisting of household ers paying filly dollars yearly rent, and seven freemen. Captain SOLIENLEY was elected by a majority of seven over his opponent, Sir Tnomes HERBERT. Accident on the New York Central Rail road. [From the Rochester Antenna, 701,8 A serious accident ((marred to the Central Rail road train, which left this city at 7 65 yesterday morning for the east. About half a mile beyond Oneida, is an embankment ten or fifteen feet high where a gang of men were employed repiiring the track, and 83 the train approached a rail V 33 hat• My laid down without being spiked eoonrely. Tte engine, tender, baggage oar and smoking oar passed over safely; but the regular passenger (teaches, four in number, were all thrown cff. The first one turned oven in descending the em• bankment, and lodged bottom side •p against a lam tree whieh stands near the bottom. It was badly smashed up, and a considerable proportion of its passengers were injured more or lees severe ly 'The next car went part way down the bank. and tipped over, but Was not on completely lived up as the Arai one Several passengers in thisear were hurt also. The third and fourth ears escaped making the plunge, and we believe nobody in them reoelved any injury. Nobody in either of the oars was killed. Among the passengers on the train were Gen Gould, II Britenstoot and eon, Mrs Joseph Bier and Bun. Joseph Wile, and B R . fel ofthis fifty; lifejorLeonard, 11. S. A ;. Dean Richmond, Batavia ; John 11. Ohedell, Auburn ; and George mil, president of the Michigan Southern Itati• road. The latter gentleman was on board the fated train which was swept away on his &ern road and deatroyed. together with the lives of a large number of passengers, last week. Ito escaped in jury then, and was equally fortunate this time Meters Gould,Riebroond, and Modell were going to Albany, to attend a meeting of the direotora of the Central Railroad. Mr. Ohedell received some Injury, but how much we could not learn. Gen Gould and Mr. Book mond were not hurt Messrs. Wtle and Brltenstool and Mrs Bier were travelling to New York in company. They were in the Brat oar which went off, and all of them re wffettt4mitelllag theln to turn Wile hue a out on the bask of the head and is bruised, and Mrs. Bier is severely cut in the face and also bodily,btuired Mr. Britenatoul met with $OO5O contusions. Neither is seriously hurt The children escaped with some slight scratches, Margaret Fatler , ft Brother Drowned; [Prim the New Orleans Picayune Jane 30 ] ' We regret exceedingly to learn that Mr. Eugene Fuller, of this city, who was a passenger on the steamship Empire City. on her last trip, was lost overboard before the vessel reached Havana. The sad information was conveyed in a letter of the 23 , 1 lost , from the officera of the steamer, at Havana, to the agents here.' Nothing is known of when or bow the accident took place. Mr Fuller was missed, and the most scrutinising and general search gave no trace of him. He had been for some months in very feeble health, and, we believe, was not expected to re cover. Mr. Fuller was for many years connected with ilia New Orleans press as a telegraphie news and commercial reporter. Hie industry, reliability. and intelligence wore equalled only by his lava riably mild, correct, and gentlemanly demeanor, and he Was liked and respected by all who knew him. Our own relations with him, personal and on businets, were always of the pleasantest aurae , ter Mr. Fuller was a brother of the celebrated Mar garet Fuller. Countess d'Ossoll Hie fate etreege• ly resembled hers—the sea has claimed both bru• thor and sister. A widow and several children are loft to mourn this lamentable catastrophe. The following le a Ilst of patents Issued from the United. States Patent Office to Pennsylvanians for the week ending July 5, 1859 : Robert Brown, of Stroudsburg; for improved 'robing machines. Miebael Selerleo, of Philadelphia; for Improve• ment in maohinory for webbing single strands of thread. Philip ffribbs, of Jefferson Furnace; for im provement in cultivators. Philip Lel:utter, of Lancaster; for improve went in bores-rakes. - A. A. Most, of Philadelphia for Improved ales do friodon roller " Andrew Patterson, of Birmingham ; for improve ment in mem:that'll.e of hoes. Albert Potts, of Philadelphia ; for Improvement in setting Ras meters in the walls of buildings. James Spear, of Pafiadelphla ; for improved ironing pin for ranges or stoves. Win. Stratton, of Philadelphia ; for improve ment in gas retorts e Joseph Jones, of Philadelphia, assignor to him self and James G. Bryce, of same plane; for im proved butter worker. Chas. Neale, of Philadelphia, assignor to Frede rick Librandz, and W. 14 McDowell, of same plane; for improvement in moulding heads on hollow ware. Wm. W. W. Wood and Henry Howson, of Phila delphia, aseignors to John Rloe, of some place; for improved device for operating the out off valve of steam euglnes. MEICEI W: Wilson, of Pitteburg; for design fo'r sun dials 'Garretteon Smith and Henry Brown, of Philp delphia, +letdown to J G. Abbott and A. Low renao, of earn° place ; for designs for stoves. YE ANATOMIE Or YE ENOINSERE.—The Puneh has the following: Although an area man. yet be is never forgetful of gravity ; and though he damneth and bleateth more than any other man, he piqueth himself on being al ways (sorted in hie terms ; he is a dab at algebra, for which a Y Z is needful ; he is a very Noah at deserleing arcs. Though he seeketh not after taverns, be is conversant with sines, and payeth due attention to his cosines and sick aunts Even though not wealthy, be helpeth to establish many a hank He, aver kind and hospitable, sup pliant chairs for sleepers. and although addicted to rail is never forgetful of the tender; he is a dutiful subject, and though often in hot water, ever payeth fit attention to the Governor He is somewhat of an ornithologist, knower([ all about cranes and crows, kites, tumblers and cooks for hengines, and moreover makoth wire ducks to aid his resonant steam eaglet; to fly He is also some what of an entomologist, understanding files, Crabs, worms, and such tubes, and not above taking notice even of a cows ticks. Though partial to by draulio,, be is not otherwise a rolliok Ing man, yet is at home in high dressed attics, where he often mak sib use of new mattocks in his area speoulations He is a peaceful man, though well versed in trigger. nomstry, and in the habit of making great use of switches in various ways He is of levelling ten• denotes, yet sometimes wisheth he were monarch of all he surveyed tie Is the moat progressive of mortals, axing his way through forests and pinking it through rocks, and, paradoxical as It may seem, he opens a country by putting looks do the rivers and keys on the banks. lie is by no means a hater o' docks man, but well versed in dry dock urinal subjects, and would never desire to pull down the church unless it stood in the way of a railroad. He roverrnoeth the institutions of his aonntry, because in them he reeogniseth the( mechanical powers. The Press he rightly regardeth as the lover; the ten pound voters as the small end of the wedge ; the _House of Lords as the inclined plane, and the Commons as the eorew ; the army be aonceiveth to be both hemmer and tongs combined ; the navy a series of pulleys, and country junto sa in general, pumps His affection for the constitution is unbounded, for ho oniy regards it in tho light of the (tom• mon wheel. Couviction of o Slave bductor. OturecneTON, July B.—Franola Mitchell, por ter on tho steamer Marlon, bag been found guilty of aiding a atmo to ran hwoy. THE LATEST NEWS I . ' :i e¢ ht -...1.:,...7, 01 4744 icrt4-..*4,:tit iesslr. lido' . 1 which th- eras tapowrid, etunsitmeWiallyWith,4l4 o of 'BY - -- - TB LEGRAPH.' water: thredlisbes toAleuseterrithaWatirtrinthen Om coal sleep • and); kith* n conduatedietow sawn widels , 8.1 4 /8 It into VA110141111ded: while. Illlfleantle enal-d rff Important to Exporters of Nun iti (11118 0/ with the water, and tatininn'tir bnakiWil, dellinired '• le . W/i4T-.., Oruelties tit' the Austrians lit cats to be carried airir • 'Shie is nofetinplv "a Woe , Tar el e. &o.saving machine - It gate sa well'lu wet weather as he WASHINGTON, Jul). 9 —The Manhattan Mann- dry, end so facilitates *Woes , , tinder the old system MISS of coal and - duet thcould only by separated well factoring Company have applied to General Cuts tb 'dry - Who. which f 4eauthr-isietWieweir delay. for infoimation as to tariff., on firearms and multi- . In rM w mw th s machlrurweehne foal clasher than the flans 4 f war by the several European Governments. sum ,can do 4.,' The mat emelt Loari'w/tatual a attic Genera 0. ea, 'n communicating the desired Infos , ' of - duet Upon it, looting ,aa - hrightiaaehenfraeMy nation, has also informed tbo company that, by broken." .-. ~ on understood law of nations. snob articles are - ~- contraband of war if conveyed to a country_en. . Philadelphia Allarkets. . . gaged in warfare, and therefore a rightful Prize i ' - ' . '‘• '-- " ---'.- ' - 7atT It -L I C O I / 4 4/g4 to the belligerent country, if captured hy z There has been rather more doing liflitni; and the it. In other words , that the ciportation of maul- priceof old st , It is un settles and in favor of the bay tiono of war to a bollinerenfoountry is at the' risk „,„ p 0,,,, i n ,l,e e jan a W.B - - , Themseiii mirr or the party so sending, them, without rename for "'"-. - ----- ---1-- -, bbl protection to their own 14044/tOrOetit., SOS, part new Wheat, at to 37) ;I,toobbl. old' at* Ad vices have been received bare froth the tristate i Weetern extra at te; and 800 • bble do - an , term liept Wabash, dated Trieste; Juno 18. She would - ye. .. p iyate.• The demand for shipment coniiiinewlheit el; main there two or three weeks, and then prodeed ' the trade are bitylng moderately atfrom IS, 6 6081 litt on her cruise She attracted universal attention if tbt for common to ehcice superfine, extra - se 4 teary wherever she went. At Trieste the authorities 1 brands, es in quality. aye Flotir le held' If 11l 25 and were very severe with all classes of exercised their authority with the utmst tyranny' i, et so ISiOS oreither t o- day People, and ;" Penasylrenia Corn Meal at $3 76 V beT, bat we hear and rigor. • Upwards of three hundred prisonerti - .._ . . ' °lfalloff, and . prices artstureettled - endAteloplag,.with Wheatherelsliacire had been inoaroerated einem the war broke out to notice, at various political offences, all of whom would shortly " 1 " O f about I ' 2oo boa prime " 4 Delaliiri 3441° ' 140 e ; 203 boa gooll„whiteait , l6oe; eaA 409 he pntlo death. It wee dargerons even for per. eons to express an opinion upon any subject con- hue rain:alum Kentucky do, an tern a kept private :Bye noted with the war. ' in steady, with a email sale of old at 88 cents, and afar at aq,centi. Corn la, doll and Jewer,„and a sale of 2,000 bushels _prime Yenneylvania yellow is reported at 87a &Host. Oats coedited* deli and Pannsylvesdaere offered at 42o4230.barwchier - rdirawlikapr titian unmet,. Berk—Qaercibien - soitintiesin'atinidY:da mend, an& a farther email sale of Area Ito 1 waisted , " at $271 V ton, at Whiehiete it is sailed. Outlets-- The market le.. less:firm. the high , „eiswe of hoidens limitlog operations, and about/60 bales have heeniffie pored ef at inequity rates. InGrocerlini the sisorediewt la cohilood to tiogera, With ides, ptistlyfor rellsiluir. at full prima( Proilsions—Thre. to So - binitiaiiiiict:a moderate tusinese doing in the tray of Watt Whiskey is erlileg rather more freely i 'route 350 bbls Weise „iihen at 2630 for Yesomylsauls, tied 213 s for prima Ohio; diodge MI W011 4 1 2 / 4 364* iit.4(4.4,likilirviintati , . , -,- , The Great India-Robber Case. BALTIMORN, July 9 —The great India-rubber nice of Horace H. Day and others against John Stellman is now being tried In the Malted Stales Circuit Court in this city. before Judge Giles. This case with others involving the same Issue, is now undergoing a final licermg, berm going to the Supreme Court of the United States, on the claim of the,plaintiff to the exclusive right _to ma nufacture and - sell What is'teebbforttli known as w yen elastic India-rubber goods A preliminary injunction Mid previously been granted in all the a meg in this dietrlot, and the argument now Pend: log is to have a permanent in;unotion issue, wholly restraining the defendants from vending vulca nised rubber goods A strong array of legal talent is engaged on both sides. Unparalleled Despatots of News. MONTREAL ; July 9 —A orivate letter from H. Stuart, Esq , agent of the New York desolated Prees at Liverpool, reoelyed by the steamer Hun garian. yetterclay, says: "The great advantage of the Farther Point station-was olestli demon. strated on the arrival of the steamer Hungarian, which, thanks to-your liberal supply of news from that station, platted us in possession of the divot of the news taken out by the steamer North Briton in the short space of eighteen days, after the said aerra , left this port—a feat without a paralleL'i Fires at Montgomery, Ala.. lioerneusar, Ala.. Inly-&—There,were three tires in this place on Thursday, and tbe following Properties were, destro3red:,Fonntain -a Abbott's mintage and *Sion' factory, the adjoining build Inge, and the residence of Alexander Fhotwell, together withatables and negro tenements. They were all ineendtaries- Firemen's Fight in New York. NEW TORE July dissraeeful fight oc curred this afternoon, between two fire companies. near the Bowling !arisen. The. Sotnbaiattis Iliad Orals, bricks, and stones, but nn one was killed, though several received severe Injuries. Sale of Collins Steamahips to the Pacific Mail Strarnahte tomp/any. Naw YORK, Jul* 9 —Three G lime steamers were bought today by the Petite Mail Steamship Clompany. The pries at which they :were pur chased has not transpired. - Collision on Chesapeake Bay. BALTIMORE, July 9 —Tb 510AMOT Potomms acme into collision with the !Phonier A. B Woo for Alexandria, on the 'Chesapeake B )y, this morning. ,The latter vessel was euuk, but her orew were rescued. . Georgia Politica..Coagressional Nomi AUGUSTA, GS., July _8 -4011 u W. Underwood hen been nominated es candidate for Corvette in 'he Fifth distriot, In plane of Hon. A.W. Wright, daolined. Lynch Law In'Kentiicky; T.ortsvtum, -July 9 —On yesterday, a mob at Sanford, Lincoln county, in ale State, took from the county jail James ROWOI7, (who wet awaiting trial for the murder of Mre Jea. Oldham in May teat,) and bang him to the ,nearcat tree. From Havana. NEW ORLBA2fB. July 9.—AW arrival furnishes Elevens dates to the 3d fret. The news fa intim. portant haws were active and buoyant. Marine litielligellee. SAVANNA'S, July B.—Arrived brig Morning Ligb from Boston FINANCIAL Am) cuttiMERCIAI The Marker Market PEntammysti, July 9, 1859 All the fancy stooks continue to be negleeted at the board, where orders for investment in first-class seen ritiea constitute the prier pat businees Bebnylkill Navigation preferred cold at 17. ti Welt Phllad•lplf Aeilway at SIX,, necoad and Thir4, street Railway at 42%, and Pennsylvania Central Railroad charts at 38%, a fall of The business was claVe limited. The money minket is rowewliat 'tighter to-day ti-an it has been since the 4,1 i of July, yet lbws Is nn dint. catty in obteleingsnoney on call, with toed enlisters , or In selling flrabalass paper within one and a half per cent. el' bank'rates. The fall bush:teas is as yet too far off to exert any decided ir amuses open the inanity mire bet. sad all that keeps the rates from falling considers bly lower i s th,"....earnti, Willett ►etat , v-of war on a inmt.motailiTt Intone haspsup t. the minds of repiti , .: late Thia atone operstee upon the money market with amuck greater F Stet than esen that report of esirastre Importations and the exportation of peels In large come. It le meld that the preterit nosh of goods from Europe to the United Stater to ewieg. in a great degree, to the desire of European maunfacterere to fill their contracte and deliver the anode be the expiration of the giver time, lest the partite should take advantage of any skeet dental delay to throw no the coarsen The amount of 'geode threw', upon the market lastweek wee much be low that of the cotrempendlog week in 1857—the first week under the operation of the pew tariff - It it thought by many wall-Informed merehants o.at after the *tit fortnigb,t we shall witness a very decided ehaoge to the reports of importation*. They hold tbs• the current idea that our importers. having done P handsome Militias lent emirs, are now about to overdo matters, to a mistake. On the other hand, it to repwt ed.that the manntecturers of, England and P 1111304. mei off by the war from several of their accustomed mar ket', will send their node out to the United Melee on conegument. and so bring about equally disastrous re• 'IOU to themselves and the imparters. Whichever theory may be adopted .ax to who to to blame for too great receipt of foreign roods, nee thing is pretty eer tain, nod that to, that buyers will not be in a bony .0 make tbe'r fall purchases. but will wilt and take adver• tams of the time when the necemitlea of the timers, et innortere shall fl'l the auction rooms, and enable them to Bopp y the wants of their country enst - mete at low ','lase. The 'mercies of the Penneylraq* Central Psalm() Ontoptiny me very busily engaged in representieg air failure of the Pittsburg. Fart Wayne,and Chicago Bali• roxiCompsny to pay the interest on some of tie oblige. Mons ass Miura of the Pennsylvania Cenirst Railroad Company. 801011 of the New" York papers gave the initiative to this petty slander, and their trail of fol• lowers through the Weet are re ashcans it with COmments open it I s a result of President Thomson's ma. I , stand in the rails, ad war. The course of Mr. Thom sui, In bringing to an end the troulties canned by nit petty squabbles of Mr. Corning, of the New York Can tral, end Mr. Moran, of the New York and Brie. b , which injury bee been done to the whole country, ant thousands upon thousanfs deprived o' the means np•r which they bad reasonably hoped to lire, merits all praise ; and the effotta of petty deramere 30 detract Peon • his With character and ability, and to biers the Peer aylvanit Central Railroad Company, will only new opra‘lbenmelves and the New York Mairtrrs whom the) carve Th. bid of Mr. florae. E Browne, of Baltimore, tt furnish Bitten thousand tens of Black Heath coil, de livered on board •easels at Philadelphia. at three do lard and twenty. live cents per ton, hoe been accepts by the Gee. rnu2ent, and the cootrect awarded to him The Min ra , Journal says, Ms le a pretty low flora for coal The Black Beath coal of lichnylkil eatinty is a uperlor article, and the centric:der is not likely to make muck at the -rate at Whieh it wu taken?) The United Sinus .Rai/read and Mining Begiste maculates the chances of profit so follows : The roal t at the OM:tract price, is delirereble at Phis. deiphie; aid as 01solt Itsato will to now gelling in thi we. het at NlO per ton t by the Goma, tbs ettoomnfol bluer has but a malt maren to corer probable in aroma in wet of tranoportation from the mines to rot city 1 4111. he bee timtvgio to begin upon. ittve - sh, s' the coal trod aotioip is s Mak fall brobarse it to pt improbsbu that the earring 101°811,10. from time t. time, advance the tole' aral ehurges, In Whlet ones Mr. Browne , a margin will disappear The Aimee; downs/_ spading of the east trade, gays : - ig The Youeth of July hisa interfered with boatsmen thi' week in Fa uphill °aunty, but it remit to be denied thee the trade here to usianally don, livery oral wee made to poet' noel forward before the advance to trace• natation toils pines oo the let lost , and many pnrcha mere are hotelier beck until prices are more settled A. Far aa We ran taxMl, no re motion hoe been effected it the mice of coil here. Oki operators preferring a Fos pension rather than submit to any further reductioe in prima Of the Increase to the sassily of this year so ar, not more than 800 000 tens bas reecho] the FM• board r the balance woo all ceneumed on the lines bs the resumption of Iron works, dm, lestiqg only a little upwards of 300,000 tees for the increase on the sea• board so fax this year " The Waehington aueLight Company have declared a semi•enanal dividend of Ate per cent. A Southern steamship company has been organised at Beaton, with a capital not 'a...exceed 8205,000. Tee gret.clarie steamers are to be put an the route frost Boeton to Oharlestou, or Savannah, as the director. may determine. PHILADELPHIA STOON EXOHA NOB PALES, Ili) 9, 1869 SIPOISID BY NANLVT BROWN.X CO., BANSONO7II. MOS, AND AXON/NC/ MERU, 111101TRWEIT 001111 TE L ADD CHUMS ASS/Era. IFIRST HOARD. 200 City es 93 60 Bab Ni Prt..l6wn 17X 800 do P 8 6 do aswn 17X 500 do each 93 25 Penns B .38X Read R • 0 200 do Da 20 do . . L 38X 9834 6 Wait in P g IM& R ....61 X x 1000 Lebigh Val 08 ... 87 20 Mo rle 091 Pd-953 2 08 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 (31*. d0 3 Co . '''''' " 14 412.19 Labial, C 0.... 0416 2 dO - 108 N 1000 Cattle , ea 7e.... 46X 6 do 2 oya 10•)1 1000 Feb N Imp 31.15 72 3 do 2 dya.loBX 500 Oatawlasa 10a b 5 60 6 Ram burg B 67 too oh NI, 6a :82.. 6834 5 Maahantaa , 8k.... 26% 8 Aoady of hthate.. 51x 19 Union Bk 2 Teno.b6.lol 83 Nordatown R.... 5011 2 do 101 ABTBR BOARD. 83 Penns B 1313 X 6 'do BeX The Honesdale Democrat nye "The Dat, and Dui sou Canal Company have In Wars. Coo oo the dock a •Waeld hg Dteohina,e which is a novelty worth inspection. It to not need to wash soiled linen, nor the hand+ and faces or begrimed w".kmen, nor the reputations of dirty pCitlolins. It in only employed to wash coal. In the elides, whloh conduct the coed from the core into the canal boats. ate interstices thy, ugh which the smell lame and dust same. Uwe are 6 Harrleburg 8...6aah 57 57d&adatB, 4' New York BL'ock xchange, inly 9. - FIRST. 21690610 113. 1 60 993( 6005 do 99 1 { 5(.0 1 /Irglota Aono His Kurt 63.460 13cx, 41005 1 -do • = 821( 16000 s b 101421( 11000 :.610 82% • 6000 do " -- 37 0238 5001 82.4' .•6600 :do 410.114 2000 Pt lisrollca 68. 96 2* ea PAC Mail fiB Co 68g 6 - do dig i tr c l, elated. 460.; .11. 4 16 111 Cent - 64 80 Din Lie W -.43 6 g iqilloal1116.; - ..4 , 16 ' , 60 - di" - ,„40 . di% 69 - - do - • o 40% 60_ r • , "_ do ~, `.. -.IL - . - 40,11 100 Al B ./ & NI2 t 1 . 1 1 at 24%- 1 150 do 24% 450 do ' " - .... 244'- 100 '';.'; . 4 10....14..430 151( 100-} di ' - k00.24_;. , 'lOO- - 49....a...0/5411( 1 11" do - -2.% ' 50 do 410 241( 'OO Panama Ha.. 16% 108 . ~ do iii 110 200_ 'do ' - 110 220 - d0......8130 11/1 410--" - d 0....... .. 1181( 880 ad & Obiaago BR 6831 600 ' =do - WO 683 E 100do' - '=6lu 8431 100 dl 531( 09 - d. 6 1 68 560 Olive & Tot 08.. o 4 4 100 - do M 021% 0 411 d & Rock 1,1411. 40 •-, 50 ' co - 69; 50 •do - 6511 111% 600 Brook Oily r 1, lt 0 - 6000 Ila- ER &I of br.,71,4 1003 MOMFtBpcl Wok 90 3000 M Eolatra Mlo 600 111 Cent NC. bdif 6000 'do 160 - 84 16000 do 83,11 6000 L iris & Wlmb 1.371 200. N Y Cent U.. 7314 1760' -do - - -'lB% '. 100 , 0 tran&Pt J R.Rba_66 12 she Bank of N Y.. 100.31 103 National itank..;lol.4 10 Bk of Mat* N Y: - .100 4t Ocala* Bank - - 05 60 &m Bzokauge Bk 1011( 10 Bt of North An 10'1 11 rioto'nealth Bk.. 08* 50 DOIX Canal Co tBO 86. 66 Penn Coal C 0.... 133* 60 do 160 Fzi, 60 do 8816 30 ha 111018 c 00 160 00 THE MARKUPS Cowes —The market Is gale*, and priest steady seta■ et 60 bap Rio at no - - Carroll —lh• demand OCalliaillet iitatte4. and )rtes b.re tsiored the buyer:„ = - - CRAM —The wheat marketis without much ebsoge— the aeminil light—wee - or - 4 COO bh at IE6O fn new Western; St 01 for do; 11100 t 12x for ktitwanl•s 0 ub and SI nun 78 or wilt , * %anus ky. Bye is better and in fair derrAmd ; Bs es or 4,0001 m at 886800 Oats are octet but 9rm (We* of State et 45t161e and old Western and 0 Ludlam at 50052 i - Corn is bottomed I. less plants: tvearrivalsase not so large. eae.s of 25,000 ba at Me for old Western ta'ned is store ;Meets for 'mold p-Ifon; clefitof trots orn mizoo, and 950 for a email lot • of,ettoiae White it nominal. ' "-k Metagove rootlike' dell ; eau of BO Midi Pcrto Biro OW*. . NATAL t Tiara --Spirits Torcialine is In ftir "(rest, and with a To& iightetoric of 'obioolod auntie& orr log Ptieer ate alliihtly - bettes_ . the aloe wail's Ibis bte.a Oink!' oider - at 40. ' 101 do. at 45 4005. in merchantable order,at 45, aud 150,d0 at 4aMi544,4" cash. Crude is Jul setl,. bet t ~took leintlit sot the market is ft= at tits &WWI Comeoun.roeil holm, tight atm*, end is •aliclotkorbet4c; Ashur ot tOr- btpls at Si 7 6, and 1 900 do afloat. ntill 11190 for 910 Thu de livered; also 90 sail tibia at Sift; ga. quinr,ss ate 44111 . 0 g 1 . 4 t1 4 heirs but-to riot* ludo bhia pals el , gie ot $5 60 Der . 11101161( - Pitortl , loNit —the del:Cud _Pr ;Pink is. FMI64 aid press of mere a - 0 better ; the oleo• era 650 bide:at $1818%016 25 , or nor moss; $l6 for thin do; 513 50 for Moor, at d 112.54 tor rebus. • ----- _ . Beef leiwltheut etesruee, the demsad llealted-411ww of 170 Obis at 9606 IS fps p tem $6OB 75 for o entry russa.9oltl3 for reparked M.PP. tied 91E615• for aria: 11-11 , bac* are steady st IpfielT, • Baanity inactive at 95i0101. • - Out moats are in fatr demsrd; 'sloe of 141-johde and too et 63io6Xe for. do shoulders ; 1,5(11 for pickled do, and 868,t0 , 0r dap hams. ' -- - - • • lard-le- held--with' more erstuos, bit lit del aales of 215 libls sod tee at 10,If ells. sod retell lee W., Bettor is witheet dite owe- sod ho fair demand at l Leila. 'thesis Jo glen trot sB4,lfe. - Simi—The market 1* quiet yec it 409* for good to prima. - Buoaas eastkot haucoatteaed *dice- O muta at the f0 , 0.e Ilia demand bus subsided somewhat Wtlees •nie *toady; roles of 1 150-taltdo Oats st 578 do Porto Rico at 8.7)t0. and 57 do in bond at 53c0. WHISLIT —Th• Market re hatter, sod Ike demand fo arta limo of 150 IWO 027,82730 - : BO3TON 11/15.11N81, /al. 9 —l/Lotnt.—The reaelott slues vezt4day haeibeen 2OD bbl4.' .She dem.nd .tooderafe B.tes of We3tern enuerflna at 115 e 517: fancy $3.6065.75; tilts - Use 50 Cr °amnion, 56 606 , 6.76 or fatally. and $6.7609 for erui.or or braeds. .oathens to dull; mall males ourinvTat vi rola, $7 1008 60 sf' . Gram —There hare been ina receipts of Grain Mace 'ester ay. Oorn te Waller lied in meradimend ; Wee or yellow at 95n97a httehtli white le nominal, Clem ,ore dull; 1114b1.11 of - No - tn - Pin`•aod Oessia - 57 e lee; g•.4td Talmud 4031156 41 1 ' babel. Rye is sal law at 5103 9," baahal. „ - • TOBACCO AT BeLTIMOBE, July o—We hare very little sottvity to note fri lie 'varlet this week Maryland 'sortie Estes are making within the ramps of 'quotathmati, but puretiserregescrellr stem ratios book ward We quote - Ih. - ter as follow- ., - eemacre 1103 60; good Prdtotety, 84 ;xt ddl'og 16.50813 to; good co floe brown E 65; fine trownS26lo We fig.! of oo tronoactions wqrtby of note to Ohto Tobacco for the week nod continue our last week's gootatior s—,,t • ft fertor to good common SSW,; rod and operalod $9 tO or 50 ; good sod doe red/Wog. and re, od and due Yel low sloe 3. Iferru-kr Tobacco 48 quiet. god we are entirely_ without fates to report. We quote the se the rates for It : Mao= taunt. Tobacco COZODI on to fair Leas. $4 2564 75; grvri do 5565 7 5; common 'oaf It 1,005 ; fair $5 5667 51; fine Cholar S; Cr 0 Kentucky 'arms from 55 4612.5 4 . Theinoretions for 'be 'rook are 42t bleak - Maryland: 811 blade Olio, 108 clubs %entncky. Total, 1840 bhds. BALTIMORE OMAR MARKET, Jtily 9 —There of torn mob animation, and the 'squirt has been •athtr limited owing probably to the smell stock of Crime bare Thh rain. are inotoded in It 600 %sea of common to fair Rio, on private terms a , d •hhnt 400 •gs go,d to primed°, in lots, at 114s:02o ar lb We quote the matket firm. hot cot *am., at sla ewes at lOW cello 'or low grades of Rio, 113001 ygr ro• far do, and lilies 2s for e od to pr me do 11y(mi9M• for Is. .11-Tta, and ilignitea for Java. To-day there wire 600 bags fair Rio sold at Ile - Markets by Telegraph. Waits, Jnive.--Ootton—HaTl39 'Ulna was red to-day; middlings are gaoled at 11 Xerl Vie. The .slae of the weak have b.* 1 4CO 'Wee, and tb* satpts TBO /mire. against 1,200 bate.. 1n...m.74 a m of the ems weak last year. Vrelghts on cotton tally...roof, to Havre, X; Sterling Xxebtoge V moat. vm Vin mew oaLiare, July' 8 —O.tton —titles to dey of 0) A,IM. at IIXe fee middlings. Tin Mb:mines +a weekly statement - +e!es of the week Receipt/ do aim• week of last Jeer.... exports far the week EN3M;MI WIOUr has • declioint tendenee situ at ss so. Coro. , is•d boots& at susw, fieffse closed item at lige ; 'oak to port SO Or'.o hsgs--8 000 bags mita than tears In 4,4 at the same time Ises year. Bavainien Salt 8 --Mittel —Bales of 660balea to-day, t 11,v lie for middlinea BALTIMORII Jahr 9 — . Pinar is doll hut nroaanosd. 9heaz has deeltm d IPerllsn; salves of unite g t - $1 900 •00 11.4 red at $1 25eroi 95 Core i 1 unchsna4 in wine Provaions generally are unchanged. Whiskey !WI at 2To _ New fleteaue. July 9.—Oottar—The a•we Sr the dea nn or Hungarian ban no *Beet upon thn motet ; mita* n-der or SOO balsa. Coffee a steady. Bow sacood-frats sS ttge. -• 0111011011T1. July 9 —Rod•- dull but uncb•nwad_ Wheat—Salsa • rot at Si IOeUS, ant at Si lee 1:21, Coro study.- Whiney to Water; asles'at Wt. Provisions iszonsssgsd; • = = _ Frar klinla Sot. the Governor of Neer Jer " . stip Fpeakivg of the sena Dr. Franklin, the New bF.Yr OA Herald ease: " An the percept' Franklin la prominently be• are the public, it may not be unintereating to Live tome aoommt of his only son. William. about ebom we think little is known by the community it large. Unlike hie father, who.e chief claim is or the invalnebe serriees be tendered bie noun- ry in her greatest Deed, the eon was, from the lost to the lost a devoted loyalist. lisfare the , evolneenary war he bald several oivil and mill :try offices of importarce. At the commence oent of the war, be held the fis4o of Governor of ¶"SW Jersey, ihioh appointment be reoeived M 1775 "When the difficulties between the mother coun try and the colonies were ooroing to a crisis, he threw his whole ir flounce, in favor of loyalty, and Nteavored to prevent the Legislative Assembly of New Jersey from sustaining the proceedingsef the leoeral Omgress of Philadoiphia. These tif , tta, nowever, did but little to stay the tide of popular 4f.ntiment in favor of resistance to tyranny, and - oon involved him in difiloulty. IDewas deposed from arose by the Whigs, to give place to William Livingston, and sent a prisoner to , Connecticut, 'here he remained two years in Bast Windsor, in the bones of Captain Flamm amt. where the Theological Seminary now stands To 1778 he was -otobanged, and soon after went to England. There he spent the remainder of his life, receiving a pen ton from the British Government for hie fidelity. fie died in 1813, at the age of eighty" two As might have been expected, his opposition to the oauso of liberty, so deer to the heart of his father, produced an estrangement between them. For years they had no intercourse—alien. in 1784, the son wrote the father. In his reply, Dr. .F 1 b nk -I,n says, • Nothing has ever hurt me so mum), and affected me with snob deep sensation, as to lied my self deserted in my old age. by my only son; and not only deserted, but to find him taking up arms against me in a cause whereon ray good fame, for tune. and life. were all at stake.' "In his will, also, he alluded to the pert Meson had soled After makingsome brquests, be adds : The _part be stated against me in the late war, which is of pubilo notoriety, will ettemunt ler my leaving him no more of an estate he endeavored to deprive me ol.' " A numnrua in Sillier Mine, (near Norwalk, Conn ,) occupied as a store, was blown up on Mon• day night last by the accidental igniting of a keg of powder. Four persons were in the building at the time Mr tree, the occupant, and abey were oonsiderably injured, GENES AL Ttrioda.—Tire are happy to be able to announce, sap the San Antonio (I CLU , ) Herald of the 16th tat , that the health of our department commander, eon. Twiggy, it restored, he being able to walk about Ms house with ease, and tract acs hie ofitolal butanes& Bd•._ 5 SCO .. .• 1 400 A 9.0 'lO Ot 0 1,727 00 40.800
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers