9.1,./iN , -7,i ...."4 - ' 4 ..i.-:,- ...,0, , 4 4 4'• q,...14 .- , ..7.vz - ~, _. ~: ..,- . t • , ticatiresloo.4lkip 3 4 **t.pron. .0 4?!1 1,v.- • 14‘....iNigVtist41 rbil ,:„. ' l,t i ,i tt A S l4* * A 4erl 's ' i r2a ' ; 11 taoieot; r 4ol .fer w4II W . ~ 6 1, a ',14;. 1,• •• •.-- 1 ' -- T;., i. ' 44 i‘ '' - l ; lcm.ri 4 -.; '' ._ - ~, -., ,• , ~. , . 24, b i g .6 l.-- ...... c „, . conot 44 • . Of r;.Yrodelipytt4, , , , filLsr , . - 't*l r ilaltswr #4 1 e. 4 .9411 I `bi; :,(C.OKT A - -,,•-•: , ;14 ' „Nam!. iffrpmr o, , 15. ~, All XiiiiiiiejmNlabg la tikvindlidigplillit f , ' , ' - ap te tr e o lll'fikek 1 6 :-.111. .trirgiaailtiki ; ' ' . t.ff ' i - 1 '' `' ' Tins Net ore. ... ~ , , r ~ " ma oafter WOW /writer& at msfiYork.l l . t [ 14111 t 43 olllook ose , Bittartpqr norliog l V It 1i ' • i. 1 t4 4 1 1 .1 rtt*,th, 44 ,611 0 f , • `-' -' ' ' i' 4*KVHAP 1 14444+ •,.. _ ~ - 3 ., , tot ow. a, IM lati &Mk pi. UkiAfis.; 4ll iilaigiOistfq l lo, s " of orr,lobooise at ... t.., ,_,, • - '• • ,z ,. :_ 4:•• 5 •'- '''• :/:?..:(•_=!... •;,.,....:‘,..,%: 'l.' ,''ril rt„, 4a; • , z: . p A• 0:4. . 176. • tr,4i.„ 3 4) Oa 0411a541414- gsnrgialk* 4;1.. yL'; t= _ . .tltTfl eV' 0 t ..1 • • Ve & Y•t/ 'r,. ; 4 'lst VEl:eit'AN aw;: . b r. k i; r y. ~• e ••••: :i- - k 14 - 47 ,f - • • •:?".:. • ,4 ittlititof soft' 2fr : al p The stilning9P 0111)4 New York at an early boa Oil - 8140da7 morning, bronslit the. Fretkeli gita ot the,. bettitralinferinok and firaO witloSsey'ef de- 4 seripigni*lthitiewertelt 4 i oiritolOndootici ono ot4iiih was sent to the London Times from tie • Marian camp. It appears that the , ' French army, when it neared the Minato, to gaud against strpriss, habitually arrayed it self rl 4 llO proper. c orer for commencing a 4P4t ~440104.#0A9PetautlY ProPorod for any attfek that.might be made upon it. On I,4lifilseilierfl t Bd:wly4tbe French assert that tharliatilitkiiiiicfatlort of a battle the naatiitivatt*,en 'acoount of extreme beat, the 49 ":. , •t!!!! ) rderP 4 ta t t r in i l At le it° much 1 - 42.9M0i1c0u the follOw l 4l ll 9PailS., ThoY 'l!illi.sllomowbat• surprised when , the report of cannon was first beaid on the Vain St & o'clock * ifitstbe inOtidprof the 24th, but were speedily it***N493 4111414 oom meneepand, siotwithstanding the Strong piisi tlorrOtntricAllatilins and their shPerior 'num b'er were ,et 3 RiloYik4‘r4riv9. i k eln frcn t be fielder resultkowlng : to the euperiority of he. ;I'JitrOlt tireopit, 'adkeethit'Frencli rifled_ can. )011;., and to , the fact that the Austrian Hee was too much extended, and by being thus wea- Jcfriettln tho centre was mgliblokto resist the fiirociong attack there made upon it. -The Sardinians appear to have suffered ter dttring.t.tA 3)104. ,The *Melia report, :which estimate. the French loge in killed end grontidod rat - 12;000; states that Of theSardi ptanticwhpsp,eamy formed bat , a swialrportiou Of , the Allledlorses,) vi follows: ' ••• taialitlhitaidilbsan inaiiiirii;risicr• innately fifasessriSidersible; and do: alt'disourit to `ices than' dtellnerickilled, and leraiontideV, Alittrilkedifi "prlretes killed, B,IOD woundsa7 'and 1,258 iildfirs'idsdng, - malting a total et' 5,615 !threat iit re11:411. Five"pieces of denten remain ed in tlie lion di the Xing'. army as trophies of this sanguinary victory which It bed gained:over en loamy superior illnumber. and whose foroe,tip peered fetuses trou not ism than II brigades l e he iiitoitgran as coMplete u could bZve beeltlteetredialikeArtstrians, who had bravely `stiMuiciad i to;llllolittlik in •tbe mOrning t c&- Sldered.o4)**iitfiernoort bow theyimighf, ‘tiat - drone Ithitleretreat. • Al terrine 'thin% 4h._lol,l49fillWtylijeloped the whole,fleid in .arirneeii, aided . to cover their bight. I , ,TAPO. teort waitlitt• , OnlY enabled, on the night of 1 111 1 . 24 th* occupy the roam in which FgAN- Sill.fossewhad slept the night,before, but he Slum] a dialler prepared for bis predecessOr, aVe.,t _ _40,0* f or own APIA. assomint 4K:the correspondent or the k 'firtietl)4oo = 24'petrtan , ;04 it trtbii*Jite. istaolt9rino the , ikailiii+ •ffirArozsdir iNrlsed) - in!.iAlyan*.lit • di co(d:' 4004 Iherieeton. gv;of is ii will .be eom6•' *titration of Nil e • Deiiiititutle'uff*T: •pith ry 0°."41/* 11 ". q thgr'l 4l P l4 4. 44 11 :404 01 09,!k•404 •Diri°o l V l3 .A l4 o4. ii rtidentfbet itl4ll4' " 141 :00 If it eau isatittivet 14 11 ih,Austbilla deleigateOrhalitill ithse(* . pliift'etii4 '##. 4 Q . dadnerwt of elpot, tomtit be foteultd, tee ',Wed' of -thei -4.baid,isored of defeat ; , ..They end that every Urea t0', 1 4-141idera "of oi/F vrould•t*isisisrS at iT,„4,,1t400, they make a new prefiitatfon for dlOastrip . ti 4: therefore, for this among other:l I i 1 001 ( CO,keolrod to submit to; such , eta*. 414111114Jonger. It has finally Iritttitok,iirbityer , theD einoorliffir pou'eftylk 1#40,1 1 0 °1 de*, - 0;44.1 1 01444 1 . - iittoosifi, by , ,ifitteriett /11614111.0u4.1htifts Adtptaidtii, bode or w hether z it !ikt, Burg)! 404MOrabziNikNintaelciumr, she puitronik.ividgaizitronmui andildrpt tiOients bare le - MOW% ••••••.- ?If.'•Ze .z.it. •I . lp. KOPIII41.• S./Hill. ' . , ,thwev tlisi•siiiiVl4o . l(oistrra in' Italy he has • ./2 -61'..-- . ' : 4 - ,t!...: 4) . 1 ., , ep,eopfe with enthusiastic . ~ .*.' Lz . .... mintitOrhu hen appeared. Tho' ..t, Ji l ! ‘ ".,-..1. ..._ ._.-. '. 1 1 1 0 16 , _..P. 68 alr ""/"..b 6 0.., n - , (4 • 2 ; .• ali4ll,llKelltsKlllWanother ta.n . w*lsiippg; :orkiiiNiir,;:.•Aii'lilitguentt schireec,hloooll. : iiimaritalkH iit( oiiiiirlvlrlebyeekiiipx/44*, ,di. t i iiiii'liiillinifitifiniiieto 'folintie . :ilied Why. -14 'isjilithati.P.tkilislian 4111.6 lit/ itiottony;:iittet,ejjitic*:lrabia`ifai? ; , won GOvennitent•talls n 4 •4 • 31itlital ihei l nape ' A I . th * ja '. ;lie *co • :riltnigary l ;. '' ipiiibifill 'he ' free as Were. our fathers." r , . POD' priaerst, mi apPoarans, there _is very little dean: of the destruction !of .the dominion of 4ustrla in' Italy. • ,Ilittit' When that is Es ,.. ..-: , ruplikhedi.:. Austria :t,trptild .be":1111Ing to Ant ilr •likikw - tres s iyi t:lerever ' reelgoing ' , l o o 22 l Valen r.' "durnlnicriii,'.l.lo. ' doubt whether ',N would iniikt,;jipon also wresting . Annan' from. her grelp 1 , . If, howoror, Vene tia iliould fall into the heads of the Allies, as Lombardy has already Austria', with obareeteristio - stidternalri, shoold insist upon itstoito4; this l in:sk i ";;Fir should not he much 1 . 9 4, .F.;;; I ., eel, . ` lf. ) uI d receive his as ;fflirfs*:;ll4lsWpit kg; ,41berttie. However deget4 ' wigit! , iiiii*lziwiveisitet jor Ilengary may CPW44 - fli:jiOnittlieri:lo s cantingesay jcwhfcgjpiiight , :bileueeesaftl, and tosupis tfliatAit*r.l4ltfisty '0? ,ys: etitintrt id 'On= 65°1 0 C0i11ig0. 1 049, 10 ...A91ia Position of. flinfiAiAlidlilitlioitilll6.lsithr,the dellv .4fiko4fMeMtlf gi e : lgida i; ri!.•, - . " ,': ' ,. • '. ' .1 : :,, 1 -, at 2; t‘ 011 e ..... t . v .e t, ,O . ~...,. •- , I;,F lyiliyitlh6iioOit i . litii . 44;l , -Xe dirding to a. rp,-theralitit'ltien a movement . , 11 this ' . fog a guts past Merging's* a military Torie ,ald - he of the.Liherals in Mezleo: Tive *Won of, tbs Ideltiemr. ( Jun 1 7 1111 0 1 :4 ill daily' ex* pee led at FitrkOrlsaer e ltintupon hie antra in this fitY, a, prothiotret mintory,potlamin, well known 0 -,the pith ilot Wl4.*VOll to him the following .oOtamulYttliA.,._;."'s "••''., I , • • • 11,1 ;ritillitrithidi.iitngtit=tt dr ISION;Oo. • ii,',. ) 4!fttllTti?"%., 4l , '';"1:Z1 1 .11 1 .1.11,1tia! ~, ar artAllsry take Yom ter nu:moot, to tie lope that he NO sy 14 usoftld tioss Soltlatleis its liberties and -pmegbetiii the uplehese of th• Mislaid ,people.'ElS et**, tomtit act organise nue reirlinents In the Uhl or l'irsisyissaii, awl feels twoolldest tint he aria swore the so , oirsrstias of eliovretobis, brave, sod In tatiledt /mat rase,mu. cuter as citliana OF 110idien, Nall. o l,Apqraigftpix 1 ,idung to aid Jo the re•ealllblial• ONlh,tr - Ot,,d lit d; &MO, end preeperlty In your beautiful 40 'Ai Air till liipablii. • ft* andorifyriod has had 'woo, 4.log , •inwiswis. a solller, slitintigh not riot Illnylentra ohli - arellethe WM in sates! Ault tO 10.0. get. $401,1000•11,014 bold quailed to sosisliti, IN well as lijethey,ln , Medi 11,0110se as this. :nomad it, it ho Nosy • ~.ydmapso. Witt Am nuly, answer, uo, ups.. irate X4l eh taCr , fa be, very tuiP,tru4i , nits, , ..•.; 6- , slgnW ) ,'" _ 1 , " *is** Pllits bo titetypetaffps i , *III be somotopstged with ~ ..likes M 4- iiiiiiNtiklkosor to tender to your It ir- Selleaey i tiosmelt(l.4lool4l . Id*/ **, the esyyfoes of two tiltlittio I it0411,21,, , M forthotry or arsine/7, - hold *NU, it rap port of its Wilting Ciorern• Wit, IlAwdes))o its berida strustira to prase-re end OtilmakwilltdlbOrtleo or that ItSpvblio, •Haslng ,0t0rr,,,., 1 ,la Ow lwalas, ;Intones, sad sultrily 1111 , U. 6 7 ! _ St. 4.• , It , t ,ws thrortally some to OW. ' : . . gists ,or more for its proposted I 44., -.' . ' V. i t t tau and 0 c 6, 1 1, 1/, And , 19 0 , 11 . t o i• ~,-.. ' 1 the ,prrprlsty of irsollsg,a ...4 ...,:_, , : I , al 9410 , 0113. Of Brigade , ue th is 00* . . that 10 the etedeelfgeed w! I nth the rotes ilisalior..if mite below ! sae IS m Illitilbsalcsi of the' ~Mimi liVr . fii ivelssests sad elruspastiss be cons , telthi, 11,_ i ,lettati wrist umortvk• to brier the proivisd VON. .ko 1111 .1 . * e • lu th3lto °l"l l 4. tat ' Is *. l it ifltrl4 11 147.. ' . Pi i th PPP- ~. i 4g 6 01 1 . 1 .4 , Ws Ws the horror to IA - , , - .. ,- Tit/ itio4 '&fitOki,f • ',' , '" -tii..4 xN 1110.11INknigase.t).':. . ....., 4 k.#4 1 1 4 , 1/1 *los , .4, 1 4 1 P1is c'fU*gei: r Vii'ema:Biesige; Tkat,Yr.'' ,tg,o ll *l 14 - 1, , eft. Eitai% • b T :r" AiAleruatti A 4 mss: tis, lo rts; •• 4 tirlielt; Pl4l - 11111g 1:01}. bns• ' Imo, bi to trik• " s. tem II: S. HardOlt dediailsifligairois•abangis. him bellls• midin in ,the ofilisfirl -Ora • ordered.' 'Llestimstal Artissmns Ilse kisioAdefisobei sm Pirstr Llessissamet, , uld ; ordonoct to : . separate commend. nlil pines to filled by LlisisterstADoty, who bar, butt' yatently fetsistied from eels, end ' will moss adult- j rably perforsn theresponalltle donee WI 1 411, 01 , 1 1 n* F iD , I. T 4 04 ' • • ,•••-•.'• *,•• •, - 1. -4 '.'i•11...7 **- .- ;-- ' ,thcFrenoh work ready att. sreatethinisofattaeh against the Irk jet*, hid !stalest taken isp vione evening? An easy an queeddi. No 'sooner riga battalion iota of Vallegio on Ildoiviodc observed to rise sn the iitir of Manzatageiost signal, R'idteOft: eassigTione.. I hate Nat the Smoeior of the Vtenolt teoz.: ef, the 2ad, tee era et etstre ; that be raede his, rani, ; end that, on the ether t Of .Atatria waa utterly nimble wad the's:another'or distfiblition' Attics ' inay ',iglu!, 4 Ilia be anticipated in every roisfnt itatian soil " • , "itrkilv • eipeited to eirptiee r,rnaperior 'force; to lam' the lattet. were `gee thelr Attack upon Wein *rly brought . lntO 'dealgueil to 'o'clock itaJaha had comitteiasBl6* Ich a tthey*Vinet. thin:tpg krolOta tolonely_ dtaoye:k SEMI The SplFit ion Cnlifobita. shoVi the spirit 91. it pervades tho 444 . MeFtsoiactora s tlci masses of-(lalifornla, the 'ClAkkaielb:l(9wing;eXtracta front several of the selleal*de !,y the active Men in the late *oseeiallti Convention. , Siolen3BEN% opeeoh will give great satietitotion to his nu merous friends In this quarter.'. The president %Of the Convention, Hon. 'J. W. McConna., add g • "If there is any man in this Convention looking for Raderal favor or Executive patronage, it were heat 'he departed for his home. We In Übe State have passed the Rubicon—we are at war with an Administretionlehloh hoe dirregardei and tram pled on Demo:natio principles, We hare no com promise to;-mein.. (Tremendous °hearing I We wise nelther,ask not grant, querter.,[applausol" In this wee to sustain a'principle 'midrib II dear to U. and in our'onwittd meta let no'Man lok 'behind. [Cheers 'J • With es Contolenise void of offence in political eatistletil that out record is right we ,osuanot faiCto . triumph. [Great applause.J We are, &SI have eald,. at war with th is s Adminis tration. We are, at wet with Its r t, because the. President, of the United State.,the oholoo of :the DiraMoratio party2.,oujide;,lpublio, lies trampled t.upon..the platfelgt,4p4, .the righte pf , the„ people who , sleeted ldm., , Tie hes squandered the tooled' . stoney, end be-, stdwid it upon his per bindings and , ' up.. .Pointeer . Me has, with •an dingratitude that; lacks `a parallel 'to the history. of public turned his batik on his original friends and , absin , doted himself to those heretofore his *ltemise. Three yeare ago when' , this' Convention Calte—the Convention of the Democratlo party of this State— to select delegates to the Mittens! Convention, who were the men that then advocated the claims of 'James Buobanan, end who are, the mon. that now plied by him? The men who then advocated his itlaimi to that position and fought in this house to neon delegates for biro have all by that distin guished gentleman(Duchene:l)i in that position, been ersommunionted from HIS Demooratio party ;• and those who then opposed him are now, by his. favor, feeding at, the ,;", public). ?' [great 1 cheering Book is the position of, affairs not only fn the State . of California bat in every State [tithe Briehanin oarne into Oho. as tbe no. mince of the DOMOIIII.IO party on • national 'plat form. 'Be ban disregarded .the, men who /ought only. _the,sefety and ,proenority of the Union, and thrown himself, lute' the treats:noble embresses `of men who no longer' ago 'thin' 185 l sought' to bring about the *isolation Of the Union.") • ; a veteran I:len:mord liflan ......Tirly;.Mr;'President. I have livid 'kith hot either abort or uneventful. I endorle'every Word . of.the platform that has been adopted by 'this honorable body, and I SDI glad to'do el; glad to have it.in my power to stand here today; in my present position, and ,amonget such associates, of whom I feelproud, thus to endorse' the pritiolplei embodied in -ont platform. Mr. President, with me the spring time, and I may say the seed time, of my life has raised—the 'summer and harvest of my life has ended. -Rat, gentlemen, of the Con. vention, I want you. to distinctly , understand this: That ram, in my own opinion, en great a friend of my country at I was when, in 1814, I shouldered My musket And: marehed . against the enemy. [lima cheering. millet'. lasted invent minutes.( •Yee, mr, and . I feel as great,* necessity •now to stand up for the institutions of my country as I did in 1814, when Imarohed, musket in hand, to protect and uphold the star-spangled banner of our . Union., - iCheers.l 'regret that, the heat of the weather, in part, renders me physically. unable to m sall that I wished. I should not have detained ytu lortgrbut did wish to speak to you. upon One or two things thatlt'might be you would not have deemed to. be whollyfUnlnterestleg, let it • pea' I bane only one word to say, in conclusion : X may almoet say that I was one, who bellied to found the. Government—l certainly here, for a• long time, helped , to sustain it yet I have been branded with epithets , for my adherentse to the prialples of popular sovereignty , Men hove said : Why, you are going to Join the Blank Re-' publloats.? And I have said:.'lf yea mean to make that remark as an 'lseult, why, as an insult I shall take it.' And then they were careful not to repeat It.: (Cheers and laughter J Gentlemen, I have done.. ./ regret that am not physioally able this hot; vie4tthei to say Al that I Intended. (Cheers.[" - * • ••,. • , Autzairhili UNitnisictiaid " In this State, In despite of Executive threats or Exeoutive influence, or all the means of party appli snots t at could be used; a Senator from this' State stood boldly forth- and dared to represent the real, sound, honest sentiments of the pople of California, and ,bCOIIIVIO he 'did this . . h e his "heewdenounced by the . Legislatorial' bit State I say thlt - this 'denunciation' is a diegreoe to the ,reoorda of our State—roheersl4-and that It ought tohe wiped. out as something that should never havee distrat4doll2 records. „Kamera] Slr, when amen steeds boldly,;firmly, fearlessly forward in the defend° of right; when be consult, not the dletathm of the Bxecative obief-mot the donuts. <dation nor thd whining, of, the: whd cringe aronod the throne—for It bps become such —when ho represent, fairly and honestly the gen• ilment of the paonle—te ought to be mitained. 'This is ' not essotly an endorsement 'of the man, but it, le au endorsement of a prinolple . The man has heen denoonoed because be hes adhered to a orloolple ; we.viho.bold that, the primal pie be advnoates correot, li Demooratlo, coy that be should not be denounced for bif adherence to'a .00rrect trinelpluo and that we °old use oar ist .mast elYorl to beim the obloquy attempted to,bis 'fastened upon lath wiped away, The L.egislature of this State passed resolutionf denouncing amen for not , 'obeirine - ibitrtfetiont mbleh 'bad notleen reeelveCb,#hft s,t the ttme--the resolution, of the Leighdathre last: winter Wog ea false to raj w. they ;Were , Whney' In prinoiple. [Cheers. 'And isr regisid•ta the oonduet of our distinguish , SestatorAiltioilerisitYcot ble:',,iseliitagek-do }route , (ll6l(flibin), I ban only say 'that'l ddirdre e 012114: - [Cheers -] "01111. Of them (McKibben) will be before this Padres.; - tion--[cheers]--and ,it ht I seadless' le - express. pn Opinion 'Of, Idio t ' as we can testify . our appreeilris ties,-of hie 'services ; but; with , regard to our Senator Ito enuresis, ,', it Is brit proper that we should - endorse , his oourse ' and in this State 'Con vention - resolve that the in c ry etteinoted lo be Ittelo bed tipOnhluishallbeWiped a w ay . [ tlimersj," the gontleimit nopilnAted for 0 11.1pfaiticti in rapect to the diotrihe . of NO 1111,:ilbariegrety; or non-Intervention '—the doibine f"sae party-1.. suppose it well understood: itters.] have teen no reason ,to °hang e my aith.'Ltiheers I have maintained my faith. [l2/heart ] ant in your hands to day to do whet, you' please; lobsera ;1 and, if eleeted, I shell do the. beat I can to' discharge' the dation imposed. Kiheers I With these remarks, whioh are per. haps sufficient for'this oocfsion,' I will (dose by toting • that, whether nominated or not, it is not probable that I shall, appear before you again to day, at it is necessary that 'I should be absent; but whether nominated or not I shall go into this campaign'. [Cheers ] ' The principles of warpath , are just, ions if I stood alone behould still advo cate the principle; and this dootrlnel have steadily ,held . state Ina', at which time the Kansas-Nebraska tilt, -passed both houses of .Con• greet. We have committed the atibjeoll tithe peo obi af the Territories, weltere delegated to them the right to control their own matters; telegtolate as they choose; ,abject only to the Constitution of the United States, [obeere, j and; intirthe law is 'repealed, to let the matter remain " : • ' .tfiftfpnagy Garrrrra who was 4E1004 fox , , , thonoinjnation of Governor, odd • • "I may say to yon, farther. that wliets;l44lBsf, - by the almost unanimous voice of the litsenle of .the Tenth Senatorial diatriet-Whig* and' Demo ;erat''4lllllp-I was elected to the Senate'of this State as a'Demoorat, and suetained upon the Dem .Coratie platform, with every prospect of endorse Mont and stamen, &tient at the hands of the con. stituentsl represented, I never hasittited for a Moment as to whether I should abandon the Demo• oratio platform at the lastanoe of James Duohanan and his confederates. You know that in '5B, In the s Senate of this State, that I stood openly against. 'the violation of the principles of the Dernotratio party whish were annenneed by James Buchanan. and that I made my battle iu support of the very question that has compelled this Convention to assemble together You also know that last win ter, when this prinelple was again involved, al though we stood in the Senate of this State in a minority, and' the whole number of the minority consisted of but dye, that that was no reason why I did not stand aide by side with tits other four to attempt to combat and stop the wrdifir and outrage that has been so strongly and properly reprobated today.' 1 1 would not have 'referred to this exeept that it was demanded of me, and I only desire to say this to'you, that my heart 14 with you and with the principles you are contending for, (Cheers] It is engraved within me folioerel I believe it was born with me, and that if I was to strive to throw it off, could not do ao. (Cheers.] The rights of the people are stall times Oho preserved inviolate against every attach, ',care not whether it comes from Federal influence power, or from whatever *totter It map Abe threitenett or at. taolted:". • • . TIOn• J. C . liroXinnart 'spokoali follows : '!Air. President and gentlemen of the. Demo °rails Convention : In acoordanoti with the moo• lotion passed this morning, I am here to /depend, Iferbig never been apart from the Democratic) pestarri soarcely know how to pledge ray fealty to your ° platform. The principles this Convention are advocating are. those I ever recognised. as Denieerstio. Dmight go further, and soy why I am in , this . Convention. In the language of one who served long 'and honorably in 'are National Councils, and for four ears roprmented us abroad (Minister Forsyth.),' that to support the Ad:rants. !ration of James Buchanan Is to be no Democrat. , As to my political record both at home and at the National cordial, your kind reception tells , me it in well known—approved, . I have over etipported the princdpie of popular sovereignty in its purity, fairy recesmislog the aptrit She. Declaration of Independence,- That all just ciovemmeate de rived Click powen from the content of the, go verned.' r My past polltioal notion is my only pledge for the future. Tale le the third time I have appeared before a Democratic Convention and ;received its endortement, Ind, as I believe, for a third time r am about to reedy* tbe con fident). or my people. What nave done to have pl aced me io favor with yea , It Is not for me to eV ;‘ but for the future, power has no frolic, and defeat no terror. With yditr confidence I shall ever maintain the prlnolpie I napported •the lard Congress. Gentlemen, the veteran from San - Joaquin (Wahl tilldded to the history of the war of , 1812, when he ehoullicred bin musket to main tain...the prjaolple of,government we . assert to day. Ile says, that. he Is here now, yearn after, bringing hie gray ;hairs into a Demooratio ()onion (bin , to support, with feeble voice and'weakened Origins; the same inherent rights of the people. eur r liay that the musket, he lays down I will kalta.Or. and hope that when years have made me venerable, like that grail atilt be found in aßeinforatia Convention. print tlilatige p'., Hoff:l74W. 001f/ROTU, who was defeated for the north,it( on of Congress In trio Southern MoXiorizx havlog' been phi Ced in nomination nuanimodslyiht; the. Northern district.) said : • - ' therefore . be 'permitted to deport from the usual line. prescribed speakers before Demo °ratio Conventions, and will Static that I was born in Maryland, was groomed , ' in Pennsylvania, Ilastottiter,l bad half a semi:civilized eddostion to the State of Texas, and was finally 'civilised in California. [Laughter ,and cheers J That, gen- Vetoer' is my soots l and personal pedigree*. .Laughter.) Whetber , my honorable opponent (Meeker ) has gone through so many singular scenes In the phase of life or not, I cannot. tell.. I have simply this to Bey, that, since 1851, when I first made my path in the sea of polities, I have been working with those whose tares are prominent alott the popular side of the popular sovereignty THE • II ELPHIA, MC011)404 - linAt ; 18, 185 t, doctrine : Whither tionaldited or not, I shall "". olooorfallY by the platform, and support those 'gentle:nevi...tore eculdessfal than myself- I desireo the nomination, bedlam, as a friend told me, You vrilt eTmpepia , to travel throughout the State at any 'rate.' I 'knoi the edlot hos benn leaned & that • those of who are young men must travel. and I belong to that:olass of people. antiquated as I - may seem to some in polltioe shall make it, whether for myself dr the more IMO. cessintoandidate, tt seems he will prove to be, 130Minated before me. [Oheers.J" ACIDIV:10117 MAIL. Letter from " Occasional.” o.orreapondencie of the Preis.) • • .... Weenomron, July 17,7850 Preeident &wheelie' eipeote to leave for Bedford tomorrow, Monday morning. He will be itooorm• ponied by his niece, Miss Lane, and by °there of his oMolal fathily. T understand that certain pro% Widens are already on hand to welcome the Pre eldent to his old watering . place. There is a alight differeice between his,present visit and that of loot year. Then, he had 'rather , a regal emaciation around piison of Bit Gritje °Muller, a tirittahlitioftetrisho amoral,* used the President't teViremote the welfare of hte royal 'llstitirwii,itifter lie - prooeeded to ceatral America. That siitilectirient, like Many others of the present - 41jiiify,'reititleed so badly that our Amerlcanms jestk haibeilicareitil to leleot the 'companion' if hit trip this year from those only who are known 'to bn immediately in his interests, and WlKV4hile flattering his weaknesses, Will be Sure no talet out of eohool. There 'will diffsrenoe, too, between the deportment of our great ruler now and a year ago. . Then he eurrounded himself with:the mantle of myetery, and"' leolatlon, holding converse wlih few of the outside beiberians, and coldly standing aloof from /doh of his old friends is did not Choose to be ab. 'sent from Bedford, their favorite resort, beatniks he was among the soburnertht Note, howeier, be will be ~, oireet as Summer .' . 1 Lofty and sour before," it is now his purpose to flood 'Bedford with emilea,, to cultivate the acqueintanee of there whom 'he Previonely snubbed, and to. Patronize everybody'who define to come within the atmos phere of his presence. No doubt there 'will be many to take 'arprautage of this alteration in the Presidential' temper. There is still more than a Year and a - half remaining of the Administration' and hungry patriots may probably wring, from EaOhanan promises of reward for 'Over vienoy. Especially will every man be weloon3ed who brings to him good news in reference to the elattion' of , delegates to the • State Convention which is to eleot delegates to the Charleston Con vention. Subh politiolans may be sure - of being well paid for any services they may render: It is the wish Of "the Administration to make the Con vention iu your" State a sort of Copy of the ex treme Southern Conventions—ln other words to constitute in' iten exception to all those bodies the free States which have declared in favor of the Douglas principle. I have been interested, but not surprised, bribe ()masons made here by prOmitaint nten'opon an • article in the New York Herald about " Tammany Ball snaking a Donkey of Itself." It seems that a convocation was held there, and that resolutions assailing pan. 0 . 888 NODS - adopted: It proceeds farther,and dames that they emanated from ~aorr apt sources," and mithing higit-minded or honorable or patriotio," °cold have been attggested from such quarter. • "(I quote from memory the arliole.) The 'resolutions passed at Tammsisy Hall urged the great dootrine of the right of self expatriation, upon which this country was settled, and for ishiCh we engaged In a second war to lain its retiognition. The right of self-expatriation is' a leered. dogma !analog ever* element of our history, indelibly stasoned upon our General Col-. still:Alen; 'and' neogoised in the Constitution and policy of each partioular State. :Gen; Caw, in his late letter,'as I see by the telegraphic abbreviatitn• published in theneWspapers, backs his horses and, assumes the very road that the corrupt tomes" of Tammany have indicated in these resolves. Ibe to ask, mho are these "corrupt eonroes," from whom 'the. Herald, the reel organ of the Administration, pan expect nothing "high-minded, honorable, or ' patriotic V' -The people here say • that Tammany Hall 1e governed by that 'vele, tn the centre of which are the poonpuds of place, oh tenure bf °entrusts, and members of the Demo erode party who have the confidence of the Pre sident, and from wbese !nth:1000U direotion is given to the sentiment - of New York, upon medullar high piddled concern. One genk!eallin, a sterling Democrat, said tome, in speaking (retitle point, " , Wag ever chew, matter in oonfudoit, indloatieg a new creation of the Demeaned° party so . fact el now 1" thought him oar:eat. The vary; Neale .of ,New York pendentive, upon whom all the patronage of the Administration is conoentreci. —the Cabinet divergent each to the other- and all to the grreootive—chow the aecompliabed fact; that Mr. Buchanan hale neither friends within his how* held, nor policy,, foreign`or domestic, but our of unfasion, and ergo no party:. I am pained to ire leitesfidteted to toy Win 444.11 is piper`eieMi.:. ohs wkol• etberatry feeli It. .::I have been, and am' atilltietreat lover gifts •eitolit Confederacy. I know ne North or Beath.. I•rogriet; herrivor, that fifi:lttitett, of Stintfeaybi line, in his repent &pooh, deilviirkti)LlSßlVetii the Fourth . of - July, has revived hie niCpsepeamt to break up this Union. Stiphene, bf GeOrgiVel man for whom have the highest reappiet*Odet made a speech, *blob bas settruted'inueli Mn.tel Lion: He U ilwayit a Southern man, tont a Unfelt man. He tioniti fight for errerj righter the Stites, and , la , werdd Yleld'to of the compact. These Speeches hare awakened dial oressions in private circles 'here upon the proba• billties of the next Presidential election: I was -at a. -party last evening, at:-the re. silence. of a retired wealthy and patrioticgentle. man, who gathers shout him upon many hospitable ocoulons, from all parts of the country, temporary sojourners of position and intelligence. Wpm this Latter one,' every phise of the present and the future of 1860 was discussed with freedom by them. This ImprOmptu company represented rani Northern, Ave Northwestern and Southwestern Stang, and Virginia, South Carolina, Alabama, Missiselppl, and three from Louisiana. After along and most interesting converse ipeen the Poet, the present, and the future, the men promi pont befcre the country for the 'Charleston' nomination wore brought in review; and after a long sitting, this oottalation was arrived at with common accord : That whatever offence Mr. Douglas had given Mr. Buohanan by his mine - on the Kansas question,: of whatever offence Mr. Baohanan had given Mr.' Douglas which provoked his antagonism, Mr.' Douglas had chivalrously challenged him in °tem. .bat in his own State of Illinois; that at diradvan. tags Douglas met the whole power and patronage of the Administration eombined with every ele ment of the ftepublioan party under Lincoln, and within the regular Demooratlo organization; and insisting that this was & Government, both General and State, of white men and not of negroes, beat both, eutaining himself, rebuking 'Juliette executive power, and giving .a rigid' triumph' and making palpable the old dootrines of the Demo crane purl; ; that whatever may be their personal predilections for others for the Presidenoy In 1860, his nomination will secure the triumph, and turn over the Government to one- who has brainie and heart, and the will and ceremony to guide the des tiny of this great Confederacy. I wee immured at the response of one of the oompany front Louldsl4 to the general expression of tweets, how Caes,' Cobb, Toneey, Thompson, Floyd, Blaok, and Holt could remain In a Cabinet where on one or two other points of public policy, each dlffired from the others, making anything but a unit of this ministerial body. "Bully comprehended," said he, alluding to J. 8., to each—C'eti an vachd fait !" . • . Hach surprise has been expressed at the Navy Depostir.ent at the return of the steamer Lanes• ter to your port. It is ramorod that something more Li wrong than a slight disarrangement of . her expansion gesr,'as at firs* reported. No engineer of 'experience / mould retariffor so slight a sense, as I Mn well Informed that most English steamers are entirely without the gear. c In foot, it it an Arnerloan addition to the marine engine, and may be used or not at pleasure. , • The Constitution bee ventured to make a pet riphraelical, ambiguous, rigmarolisb, and °biases'. tory sort of denial that J. 13. ever wrote any let ter to Cornelius Wendell, about giving the 812,000 son to the organ bore, and the other. sop to the organ In your city. The little " Twinkler" hero, that aspires be an organ also, says this is a refutation of one of my calumnies ; and says, also, you write my lettere yourself. But for my so cog. nito here, I would ask extra Billy Smith to in quire of Wallaoh what authority he bee for say ing I charged J. B. with writing the letter de soribed in The Constitution. Why don't Sena tor Bigler and Mr. Baker deny that they wrote the letters I did oharge about this subsidy ? As the denial dodge is to be resorted to in this way, let it be oarried out honestly. Why are not the farts in regard to the subsidy denied ? I notice that the New York Tribune, received here today, states that notwithstanding the denial, Mr. Wen dell had stated to several persons be has a letter or note from J. B. on the subject. I have under stood he has said be has " his handwriting." But Mr. Wendell is not my / authority for what I have elated, and,' though the documents may bo stroyed or' "'oppressed, those who have seen them may swear to their contents at next session of Congress, and Mr. Wendell wilt tell the truth ; and all these quibbling denials, based on misde sariptions of an unimportant character, will only recoil on those who make them. Why don't The Constitution deny the subsidy ? Why don't It ? Tell the truth, Mr. Constitution, let It shame whom it may. The proofs at next session, If you don't, will shame you; and as to the little Twinkler,?' he had as well not meddle in matters wh.oh he 'wawa nothing about. If he would liketo know . what Mr. J. B. thinks of him and of the Star, i can toll him what he said on that subject last Thursday, and it was not very complimentary, Me had.hetter ask.Jenks. While The Conststution ia denying, why don't It deny the $3,000 repudiation to the Illinois ? Is it afraid Mr. Oarliale'e to be met? OCCASIONAL. testimony would have T.O.P. 'l4T 1 ' . ,. 8V0 10 1 0 s • 'VERTAItOt EUROPE, THE stsitiga itoßtsin if NEW iORK. THE VICTORY AT SOLTIEItrRO THANK GIVING IN EIPRANOB FRENCH REINFORCEIONTB PRIASIA• DISCLAIMS ;411, iffirmaDEn nosTo d r i .ir, . French 'Commercial Matters Confidence Bo stored—Largo Oidem troin tho Baited States, . THE 33HG.AH °Bob'.. • Nan , YORK, July 16.—The steaingbilAkttinnie from Southampton on the evening of the 4th St4' arrived at this port this afternoon. She furnishes adyl , oes half — s "day- later than those reeeiod by the tar...mmB4'Mo*. 1 ' • , The Itorussin - reports hiving pasted the' steam ettlp Fulton, honoe for iloitthampton, on the oth Inst. The second edition of the London Times, of the 4th. contains no telegraphic despatches, but mere y.letters from its correspondents . .„ . • The Ti Daunt was *barite& at ilotreilllain on' Sanday, for the vhitory of the French arms on the battle4eld of Solferino. • The same thankegfving was observed in all plaoes of worship throughout France ' • •,• .Naval preparations confirmed active at Toulon and Brest*. • • • Another dtvlsion of the army at Lyons loaves for Italy. Immense quantities of projeotilee continuo to he forwarded to the Seat of war. • 'Confidence has been slmewhat restored In the °owl:nerds] circles of Prezio since the vlotory.at Bolforluo. A letter from' Tiyons days that the' orders re -oelved by manufacturers. from the United Stated; will • compensate them. for whet they lot by the war. It was feared, however, that the faUoirtiof the sugar orep thleyear will create matiouidlnailtlea for the next year. • . LO2OOll, July 4th, P. M.—Consols dosed at 93s Four Days Later froth California. ray Otte;lend Malt.) 111010141011 D BY THE LEGDIIPTON DE DOCRATS. Let) •)•2i='.•i y'i:a:a~u{Yh`Zei;7f:KcS~):~ AN ABUNDANT HARVEST. Sr.. Leap, July 16.—The overland mall has ar rived, wit& an Frano!so° dates to the 24th tilt. The Leeempton Demooratie Convention has made the following nominations: For Governor—Milton B. Latham. For Lieutenant Governer—John O. Downey. For Conran for the NortheruDlstriet—john O. Burob. • . The nomination for the Southern Distriet had not been made when the mail left. • Riots discoveries of gold have been made In the (mast range of mountains in numb°ldt county, Oregon. • Advice, from Colombia state that the Willamette rived was very high, causing great destruction of property. Business at Ban Francleo* wee very doll, owing to the on. ar rival of several clipper ships over due. ' The harvest was progressing finely, and the yield pranises to be more than abundant for home "Arrived ot Batt' Franoisoo, bark Wilhelm, Lad. 'Wig, from London.' A. telegram from 8612 Francisco to Gllro7 r seve ral boure. later than the departure Of. Me men, furnishes three days' later intelligence from Btl• tleh Columbia. A. deed had occurred In Fraser Etter, whioh had risen twelveieet In font days. At Pitt Yale all the houses on the beach were overflowed, and, several swept entirely away . , „ !dining operations were entirely ampended.on aoconati of the floods. • Coal had been disoovered near Queenstown ' Governor Doughum and Colonel Moody had made a trip to the north - orotranoe of Fader river, and frond thero fine treats of land. The tamer Forward brought , down 115,000 in gold,' In the Colombia river the water was forty•tlve feet above low water-mark. Between the Oaseades and Dallas the whole country was sobmerged, and from the Cascades to Vancouver there were not twenty aores above water. - The, Oonventlen_of Lecompton Democrats had' „nominated' Charles L. Scott for Congress from the Bentbaradlatalat of California. :;' ,. .wzit PROM MEXICO. • 2 4 14 IFF4IIBTESNEBBIiti AT NEW ,Qli. 4 LIANB. ;." v'4% • PZCIE. : 34 1 , :ti1rP.'95k1‘7 11 . 1 Y.:1f - ;•;a1r;-•/: - - 10414181141 ie! Treaty botweeillizige • .•• d ide 11 . 1 ./4ed;dPf1.4. 16 .. • " - 'PAW ,DBOL TOIS.OUVROM PRoP art • v.TO BEI IfiSTONAT; PROPERTY. 1" Xi* 0 RI% Li d July 15.—The ilesrositip Ten 'none, 'rem Vera Crus on - tbe 13th lost, arrived here - this afternoon, with $725,000 in spuds. She brings the. intelligenoet that the project of a treaty between genie* and the United States has been agreed upon by Minister McLane and the 'Tuareg Government, and that it will be forwarded to Washington by the U. Et steamer Brooklyn. President Julies .livued a decree bearing date the 18th inst., deelering that the Chureh property was National property. Nay Ommaes, July 17.—Tho:lotest dates from Vera, Orin are to the 13:h inst. The British steamer Teviot sailed on the nth Inst., with $2,260,000 in specie. ' The Revolutionists In Yucatan quietly dloporeed forged paper ,currency amounting to $18,000,000, after the capture of ex• Governor Berrera. President Mlramen bas proposed issulog a and wit also about raising a forced loan from all native 9, ravel fr o m $ 9 M $599 each. The ateamsh p Tennessee was detained tilt the 13th, to enable Mr. McLane to send important despatches to Washington. President Juarez has published a political maul.. fest° confiscating the Chnroh seoular property. • President Juarez's Minteter of.rinanee is passenger on. the Tennessee, who comes to nego, tiste a loan on the Church property. Topic hes been captured by the Liberals Several vessels have . been lost on the onset of Tctopan an d Tuella& during a violent hurricane. The Frenoh bark Annahuso has boon lost off Tani. pee.' The miotresto Weed by President Juarez pro hiblbs 'the clergy from holding cffioe, throwing them on the voluntary support of the laity ; Abe. tides internal customhouses and Internal taxa tion. The' Naturalization Question. OPINION Or JUDOS NIa.ON • Wainunnron, July 17.—Previotur to the proper ation of the recent omelet letter to mar minister at Berlin instrnoting him-to demand'of the Ham merlon Government the surrender of 'Mr. Butst, Attorney 'General Black, at the request °Mho President.; rendered an opinion itt.the case, main taining, the general right of expatriation as Contestable, and, that, in regard,to the proteetiox otour oitis one in their rights atkome and abroad, we have no law which divides them into classes or makes any Miferenes whatever between them. That a native and a naturalized American ()ninon May, therefore, go forth with equal se'ourity , over every sea and througituvery land under Heaven, in o'ndtng the country fa which the latter was born. Hither 'of. them -may be taken for a debt contrasted or a crime committed by him, but both are absolutely free from all political obligations to' every country hat their own. They eta both American citizens, and their exolu • sive allegiance is due to the Government of the tinitealt States. ,Fn :Judge Black's opinion the Hanoverian Government cannot justify the arrest of Mr. Ernst by showing that he emigrated con trary to , the laws of that country, unless It ann 'also be proved that the original right of expatria tion depends on the content of the natural sove relgo,iand ' the last proposition he issure no man can establish. . ! .1 1tespeet to Itufas Choate. , Boston. July 18.--,=,A. preliminary meeting of the men:bore of the &Wolk bar was held this morn ing tg make arrangements in reference fo the death of fdr..Choate. A. committee of thirteen wee ap pointed to deeignate appropriate notion for a proper observance of their loos, as follows : , O. P. Curtis, Oharlee Loring, Sidney Bartlett, B B Cattle, Caleb Cushing, Ed. D. Sohier, P. Ha/lett II George Lunt, P. W. Chandler, Itlekerd Jr.,Dana, Charles L. Woodbury, .F. Durant, and Henry 0 .Hutohins. Dammam were make by Ron. Sidney Bartlett Caleb Cushing, B. P Hallett, and 0. P. Curtis, and the meeting adjourned to Tuesday next. From New Mexico—Proposed Indian A Mime to Punish the Whites. ST. LOMB, July 16.—The New hfoxioan mail, whiob loft Santa To on the Nth alt„ reached In dependence this morning. Large numbers of the Caleanches and Now In. dins were aasembled at Walnut Creek. The Saws were endeavoring to form an alliance with the CaManohes for the purpose of punishing the' people at Connell (trove, in revenge for their having , - banged two Indians of the Kew tribe shert time ago. The •twO companies of troops' stationed at, th e =Mug of the Arkansas were not strong enough to hold the Wine in check should they become hostile. • ®nlltrigof Steamers for Europe with' over $2,400,000. Naw YORK, July 16,—The steamship Olty of Baltimore sailed at noon for Liverpool,. ith 810 passengers, and $1,000,000. - • Tho steamer Vanderbilt Sailed this afternoon 'with $1,337.000. • . • , QinugO, July 16 —The steamer North America gifted at 10 o'oloak this morning for Liverpool, with 00 passengers. Prom the Mee Peak Bitnee. BT. Louis, Julyl6Man, in a letter to Mr. Smoot, or Leavenworth, dated from Gregory Mines, July 4th, says that within an area or size miles square, from five to eight Modred leads have been opened., from three to Ave thousand claims are being profitably .riorked, about ten thousand men are.at work, and from thirty to fifty thousand dollars' worth of dust la obtained daily. Heston Items. Conon, July 1.0.-=-The City Monnell, with the merchants In attendance on the trade sales, are on an exourelon In the harbor" to-day. William Ntokerson was Met night etabbed'eerl nay in an alfray on tjonth Boston bxlcl4ll. "1!*o . Days Later front Europe, THE STEAMER INDIAN OFF "FATIIKi;POIN:I(4 .v,SA:ego of lideohltera ProgressiOgi, TUE FRENCH THREATENING VEttONA. NO BAIiTLE. Cotton' Dull—Consols 93 1.4. .„ FASII&W !Poterr, below Quebec, July' „ 17.—The steamship front :Liverpool, with dates to the 6th last ; hes passed this” point on her way -to Quebec.' • The Efteameittortli,titha from quebe° °0 ar rived out. • „ ;: - The lateet.inteltigetiovfrom_the seat of war states that no farther battles had rumurrod. - The siege of Petiohlefs, Wee progressing, and the Prenehlrebpa are threatenineVerons. ~ - -• ' 'WR : _ The lifted desnatattell As taithaetheiheadquartert ofthe•TcsoPeror Ilatteleon is only,four leagues from , Pesebiers, ithiCh.j . plioe' driderteilgfrocis ;Lege )1 1 - ssirdinl a ns, ,raport of ,60.11 1 :1 1 :. night' and,day,lll;thit(dwegtiei t ; „ i ,The Auntriau a4vanoed poet ,isAint r idwitAls4 tenew.frem Ville Franc*, whioh 4 oseitpled by the army Corns of liarshall/lel: , 'lt muohltinbied whether the Austrians will venture to arreepi battle in„the, present demoralized: oididitlon kOf ' Tabus, Sely.: 4 =lt it'Andiered =that'ii,ooo _French :troop!' have .dliendnirked: at , Imalit and Piccolo ' on' the Adriatic, and that.the -bridge to (Menu has been destroyed:- . - Vatpctiul, 4:-=Oilielal..-The French army inoiesseß by the army cOrpetur Prince Ifspieleon will o perate ! gal* Verotta,'Whitat a - per - Lion', of the Bardieleti arely, will rontbenerthOilege'opera 7 ,tiaras at PasOiderm •• ,„ , „,„ The Emperor Napoleon hailer seat biek;the wounded Austrian office re whited' exchange, and ' hiving requested an' totahangi of other priton,eis,. an Austrian tatter hat arrived with the announce-. toent'that , thei - Bniiierorof- Mattis will also sand bask without pxohange,the WoUndedeptlieers,,taken frowthe ‘Aillettoted -that Ili:, ltfejes tj , iar - tnittally desirous tot an mtehitige of other prie,onere: . Ttlavr, Bardiniara hive 'invested more closely the exterior fortifies - 11one of Petchiera on the, right bankof the'Minititt end ba the 30th- alt :our Army_ eroised the-riyer Wittiest Pestehtera alsonri the left bank :?'.:" " Baena, Austrians have with- - drawn ,The Pledtiventese, are- ad. 'itaceleg tOWards the'Bielyki Patel!, - ":2 • • It is rumitrad'ar Bastigliotte' that the Au s t ri an have retired into Verona.: • The London ilei:ald'i Turia earrespeinientetiti that 20 000 ,troone have been ordered *dm Milan Bresela, and 10,000 from Turin. • •-• •.. ; Thera are' great - eromplainta of the sosiott* 'provisionsOf in the villages orsrapted ; by, therAllles. "PRAIMPOItY, gulp • 4 —it an - extraordinary sitting or- the Garment° Diet to• deiri; Peniebi pre. tented now and-further proposate'reerwating • the rommend4o- obtif be the corps of observation on the," _lmmediately' after- the close_ of the sitting,M. de Usedon Taft for Berlin." ' The Berlin "correspoadent of the London Tivsos 'says that Prussia's newproposals are in the tar ofthe, representative; _or-Russia; end ‘Roglend,_ Also,•that to ia-.ireiek thii Prussian army - Vvilrlie full nieireh:' Two eerpa,d'ainie,willltet obetionid on the Bileslaeltoittler; - To OW against Russia on the lower and' iniddln Rhine, 140 000•Prustaila will be stationed, - and when all her preparations are eampleted. Prussia will probably make her proposals to Prance, which .wlll F uzadoubtedl7 be refused., - Pears,' July . 6 =-11‘e , oftleial oonetemiaatton ( bi tlinGovernnient, of the article in the art; Sitele, 'affirm& that reraeot for Papacy - forms 'pert of the prograntmatchich the Brupcsorßapolwan'is, Carry ing mad': - •The .11fornitsur: de ;Bologna imblietlea s...letter from - Count (favour to the Junta of Bologna, ray lug that Ring,Ttotor Emmanuel would not aonept the Union Romegne' wi th-Pledmonti but will, direst tho, Roman forties to sonottr,. for, Faris of obtaining Ita li an independoOoe 4 ; • • - , Lord Lyndharet meal a epees& in the House of Lords strongly advoilating vigorous measures of defenoh, bath on seetud land:.::-He regarded the assertion that Francis hail no wish to invedisllog• land as, undeserving. of maudderatlon. - 'England might live Itiperiket lidePendenee of Freneh for , bearanbeablyloganly on , the vigor of bet people. '- The Foartlt.of Tett banquet' 'look 'pine at Elt. Ames' Hell, London:; Mosul Oampbell,prealded. Muth enthuslisw: prevailed, and the usual toasts Were drunk. ha, " , Mr. Dallas, the Amerlean Mildew; made a Bpoeok in which - he ironitistred lb* petition of Italy 'to that of , the - States, in 1776;and a:Untamed a;Marni sympathy with the spirit' of national lade pendecuie,exist. where it map. ,He sea. timent to the same e ff ect . • - Okarlea 9ttlien has been appointed President of, the Poor Law Board, with a mat' in the. Cabinet, Mr:Gibson havingrugarpted the ?re - lidera:o'l)f the, Board of ,Trade:; • -- • :"- " It lirunuiredihat Mr. Cowan willbe offered the Ociiirnership,ofManada:;• It is reported again that the VaiperOr Niplleon will'return to; Paris about the middle of July. ' General Pelllesier's corps to observe the fron tiers of the Rhine:will be in - canthoments by the 13 , hInbt.t It will'coinprise . 160,000 lkfantry, 12,-, 000 cavalry; and 400 cannon: • Tlxe:Londou'riseter' Vienna Mriresioudeekileis, that something Onuatud is going On,betwedlitrimeet Buena.i and , Turkel', and le' weed not bElatir7 prised if Turkey were to turn against Anitria: Yournentianeorpe are already on it,Waidbotiggi. AU thilgbers on - limited leave havirbean ordered to' ?In.•1 - Alert Of remits is eutaseted.;,•: • Tgexteli , tioOttelieyeZdefeited' thiraitifot 'Antrinieed:OPtitrld..krfart'-iiMuithue.fffilunal The 10000 f. litionran*Wmlsoo:lMdlitir prencielied 14:killed:and.30 • ' None anddleMilitirleideri:otthe Mutiny, have been defeated and'disperesd at lidwan Pars. , At Hong Kong theltartemstions temhad been stopped by the exoibltent'dernands of holders:l • • • • Comilteredni ; ao;j • _ ' rmen:STEASISIt mumaNT, LivEaroca.,'3Xly,ls. , 4he sales of Cotton for the last three Jaye hare beeolo,,ooa bates:-" The :market Wooed dull, but steady,. The inlet forapeOulation'and export ware 0 000 Wei. Middling Odessa it'quotetat 6%; Middling Mplauds ,• • , f Breadatuff,...The" market Wilhite X &eliding ten:- don't, sU descriptioes-behig lower. than regions quo• rations. s Messrs. '.ll.llolcardson and Borne atelit the weather ad Percivale for•the crops. ; /lour aloe& :Very doll, and holders are overlong on the market. -Priem' bare eligbtly declined; for sit quanta's" sates at 10'0 18, Wheat venrdull and has declined 1e ld; silee - , of ' Weetent,red &rods 40; 1; gone r • anther*, 100011166. — Cpc, ' dull; quotation', of yet, low and mixed kie,noicitnal, buyers demendlog Woo; ton ; sales at On 10de6i at fwhits ties' od. • Provlrdons.=The marketing a declining teideuel. Pork heavy, with, little Loquiryt - Itabon - dull 'and is lower; Laid Produce.-43ngar'illOrm, bet qUOistions are nominal Rosin, steady, at Se 102011 a for common ; • Blue dull; &girlie Tarpeoline dull; at 831,0394 L06006, - July 5;-;-Wheat but holders demand an advance; Sugar firm Itire,6ww. . 71111 ; LONDoIi, hits 6 —The closiug price of consols 'ester day wee sa,vagayi jar atcount.',- To day the quotation,' are 030933( for money 'and account. Auterlosio 'eau- Titles are alow of Me. but quotations are unaltered. Drumm* July Ilblooo.—The Cotton market 131000 tirgo,•with en improved demand. - trans or TAMA —The Minohester advioeSsia favor able, the market closing-aotive, and stooks of goods much reduced. „ Burning of tho Stormier Ravenswood; NEW ORLIANS, July 16.—The steamer Ravens• wood, from Madisonville, for this oity, wairdo: atroyed by fire this morning, on Lake Pontchar train, when eight milet.from shore. There were thirty persons on board,,all of whom, except one, were saved. The boat is a total loss. There was $25,000 insurance. ' The_ Kanse 'Coriseittitional Cenyein= - Hon; - Sr. Loots, July 10.—A special despatch to the Ifulletin. from Leavenworth, says that after a lengthy disoussion, disclosing much wire-palling and manoeuvring by .both parties, the - itanSaa Convention to•day fixed the northern boundarrof , the State on the original Nebrarlocline. ' Reported Failure of rt New York Grocery NEW Yorix, July 16 —lt le reported that Masan." Matthews k , Mitchell , gtooers have failed, with liabilities amounting to 8_140,00 0. Arrival 'et thellittlystone State. Cnanmiron, July 15.—The steamship Keystone State, froni Philadelphia, arrlved at this port this day. The Salt Lake Mail. Sr. Louis, July 16 —The Salt Lake mail, which Matted on the 22d ult., arrived today. The news is unimportant. „ , storm it 'Louisville. ',miry - ma, July 18 —After several days of. tXOl3ll6iVe hot weather, the reerourr ranging from, 75 to 100 degrees, a terrific thunder-storm marred yesterday afternoon; accompanied by a' gale, pros trating trees and unroofing several buildings in the !leathern part of the otty. Fortunately, there was'no loss of life: The Weather at the Sea.Sho re. ATLANTIC CITY, July 18 —We have h ad no rain hero to day, which has very agreeably surprised, the passengers Who have arrived here, having left Philadelphis this morning In a heavy rain storm. The company hero is large, and the bathing de lightful. - • . The Weather at Cincinnati-. n QIROIAAdYI ight. 16 —A slight rain fell - last niht. The Inanition& of the. thermometer have ranged from 90 to 100 degrees during the week. THE COURTS. SATURDAY'S PAOCIERDIXON [Reported for The Prem.) QUARTER Satsuma—Judge Allison.—The ease of the young girl Whiteoar, asking to be dis , charged from the custody of the managers of the Rouse of Refuge, whioh was partially heard a few days since, was continued. Further testimony was submitted, corroborative of the testimony of OfacevLevering, showing that the child had been often seen at night, in Chestnut street, in company with men.; The court, 'said that the evidence , chewed the parents to hi Ink to have the custody of the; Algid, and remaaded her --to the" custody of the maltigers of the house of Refuge. Patitok'AdoDonough, charged with - homicide in, killing Matthew Buckley, and Patrick Ryan and. David Noonan, charged with being'imeessories be-, fore the 00MtliiniO4 of the act. were before the court for a hearing'upon a writ o£ habeas corpus ‘ After bearing,:the court said the evidence in the ease would not warrant them in holding the. de. fondants- They were therefore' disoharged: The churl then took up desertion Cases, in the first of whials; the parties - being both - young, and only married a few years, had 'separated, owing to the intemperance of the husband. - After the examination of the writ, an offat was made to re concile the parties, and the wife promteed to re turn to the husband if he, would promise to „ab stain frOns,the use of ardent spirits in the Arturo. This he promised to do, and the proceedings were suspended. In the matter of the application to take the children of Mrs. Lanigan from her oustodys'and to give them to the oustodv of the urandfather,, the wart mode an order to that effect, on the ground th thet the nether was nun to have the on t. ADDITION*4OIIIIGN NEWS. 13t4iriatoiccrssu. - _ Jost* ven poultice•,assuranoes that the recent measure ,with regard to her military fortes 0 .4 not tikee With &view to the commencement of hositilittea, and thetrffrarate may remain srfeetiV-i tranquil on thatticone? Something was a bsolutely nosessary to do to calm the efferveseence in qr• Main of the German States, but the advance of en army to the Rhine is not meant as a menace, and it should 'not - a Cause of disquietude to the French Government, . Propositions; are also it tid - to he in contemplation, -*hen. the prorair, moment comet, adill's view' to ralettlitomM of the Italian Prttala, a,nd : still take the 'batted - mi. ' --; ,R , septh has ,been,entituslasktiogly.feralved - • - -- - The Vienna correspondent of the London Tire s ;writing on thelst of July, says: - • "There m lioreething , unttenal Bianco, Ressist, and Turkey, and it would not sur- prise me should the latter turn against her former -friend and protector; . Prince Mallimaaolst the: Temiash, ambassador akthis court speaks of ' Ana trig; aierof beilreVerisek,filAiotabisrdY, in a way, which elearly.shoire which - way the wind is blear. lag at Oonstantinoplo. - - - - A Milan. paper says - that when - -Bing Victoir Vormannel visited' the citadel of Brescia be was. shown the plane wherefertyCve citizens* taken:as hostages in 1849, were barbarousi y shot by order. of the ferooione Haynia, and that he forthwith Or-: tiered a monument to be Greeted to them, the'tsi-' pence, to bxdefrayed ont of bis priv founding, •- rAnetherrig:por -odnittne the a an, nenneenient- (heeded ' 0 G. it" which can only mean Gazetter Ufficio/e) that. the Hungarian neral Wanks cud some other Courageous patriots have offered the crown of Hungary to the (104 Dgiretlenstantine „," UtA•ParielawAournal of the : All • hope of reeonquering Lombardy has-vanished for Austria: Rosiest it at the battle of Magenta. and it may be said that she commenced to - lose Venetia at the ..13(ttle of Carlene. There, still remains to berth . gnisdringli. of her fortressis but for troops beaten in every encounter, disoorir aged and demoralised, they are perhaps less a de: , feu° than an asylum 'XitTleitEtiTlNft, AUSTRIAN ,R EPORTS. „ _ aorseapoedenea Zondork.Theed j de it is known to "me that your-correSpondeint 'with the Austrianormihst forwarded, erdeteiled amount, of . the hattle.lit Solforioo,,it:,wortid be a mete - huts of thnheliOhld' I attempt to _give informk, ;lora iglatt"ve,tu the OperatiOnsofahe tereT4 4lll kiii' armies on the 24theflune, Thar faits' havirrielne to my knowledge which roust he commtnicittedilts they are of considerable:interest and important& Narly s in the morohmof - thee...l 4 ;lth the Austrians pereelved - ,bitliatlnrivemeati of ihele iutireriaries that they were arrifte'li attaok"..was,ahont to be 'Made: ristaird2.26l - waiting ti. -- recalie the shock, the Pion& .tintedirsid the •oreinibre; end so _suddenly, that a part pt.-the Apstrlitiaricy, bad not time ;to brightest - before ithelbattliawski. s The heat was , very,.apPressiVe,and - _the afternoon many of the ,m e !rem exhaustion arising from hunger, thirst; Andlotigue - The soldiers,displived great cow:walla:id stead!. nesc - " bat; as usnaVeolneratid blunders were com mitted." Two:est:pa; theSeeend. and Tenth, were . nah.brought:hifo setion - Al: and for some un known ,reason ~thuireseyvvartilierYsof:lo4- guns was net Moved-forward from Volta, although the . Allies, bad many more batteries. in the geld than the' Anstrlani?r ' t . .." 4 - • -It is a delloate- - tuattertto..toilisliosiAin. feWl hound to state Shot it titgenerally , believed there . would,iidt:4:lfseti " a drawn .on the 24th if the liapefor , ligiCtrot beeit - with the army. rto . ir not exactly know what-4toolizplaseghnt hie Mit: jastyle sold, at,a eriGial moment, ta.beve orderid Gen. ileatedek."whe - aoiniitanded the Eighth corps t dominander , " who had 'half annihilated - the' Itardinians," l, olieyedthe or deri,but with arrident'selnetanee,' Vilna &back ,wished to- send .aseorps - agalnstlite..fiank of-the Frenoltarmy,, hut •oottid ~not obtain permission to do so. , The Emperor, -, whebehaved the' greatest poitrible coolness 'during the battle, ycaon bltede lveur" " Pi e g ! r m Yo n,oougsh _ who d isp l ayed -of T , ,a stiongirnmksil disllke , ,to the' ClosefyininitYoUrt, -- . - Jilmoskall thee erresnondmibi estimate_ the total' loss or the AwdAastriarr arida& &t Iron 20.000 25,00034 en but 047414 ltis the slatighter. WWI not`so' greet on, the 2We:ill:I lifinefe Illf It was on,the ; the - )Zioiner, 7 l4.,theacumbor of Mori engage: Via taken into eonsideratiOn.- letterremaved *fronshirrotbism(orebnv your iipe, otelemesiondenlettheNat offlyettbus confines an opinion recently ezpressed - by, me in soonest jo, the military ,quelitirie of the _Croats': a I have come to:Abet limner:oml thatabellmats arelbee last eftioleitt,lfoops in the Austrian. service - Count - fingefir (probably theimarstialASho - is an octogenarian, - iq6l'llo;mm,, ridin riding - shoat pu the field 'id _rig:pirejr, ssid-he rive itbe,Croats'a rntring7 - for their lukewaranbehasioriP,... - . s The cannoned yet Xmas won tremendou!, as a: part ofitkeipierwltArmy.detiog its ietrait_ 11 0,0atellets,to remark 4 ..Isinday Awo,wikehall. have liaistaf 'the wounded, and missing, but yon_will not be far wrong if - yetr:eup-:' poor the 'Abisi-Girsinr , Arrey'llu wounded' alone to havebean about 3:000 ,No general Officers' _were , but Geiterida:Preaneyilla,; PallrYs Blomberg, ead Valte, Werewounded della Marmon& he informid tifilAststrlartf.milliet7 .authorities that. he, beaked Colonel disohgrats, who wait shot through the heed white r lighting ot , ,the heid.of„hiCregirgetit; buried with the honors due to his military rank. - .The Son bt.bierielientGeneielr Beron d • lynattitsi: the (Thief of the War Department, wee deprive& of his, eight Autieg,:the i bettle:,ity*,.,billet passed close to Ms eyes:* poor young man, who bas ebittedifibeeuhrinntht telthisAityl is well, but in total darkness. , The d.rehdulia Ferdinand, Maximilian, and,Leopold, , iri lidd"to have been' In-thrtliromettenite The 2rsteutriiisitaltvealling the . yeasi Ifo nt, station on the rig bank of, the Minato the "bat. Allot fis4lolloo4UntthatlMSelliaikthicittayg the Austrian position _ , - Airing the list daY4il44C.ltisCiteSti 4 '.inito that" is battlehae_hloWittMght onltsti left bank of the Minolo(lostVip'te-airlirl,Xelnoitilestlftlikrir beta of impiiitaziiiillid - vhooni r eolitredirloaTNW tuna, 40. iiiilhnig.h.4q, had Vs bbadsitalf; tors since Thursdaytthe/dik otr - _,whiab i sday file Pseuds crossed therhittelst.' Tour ipiallt 'aortas'. nor.dent speaks of the passibility of a retreat ber hind the Adige.' and therm ream to believe that the nolo body otthe Aistriat ' , army is at this very moment at no great distnnee from That. river.: AlthOugh,no Magellan; ltis evident„to,rne that the expedition 'ant egainet Venice Must-harts great influence on the future movements and ope rations of thelintirinifXmink4;Berisn Alematr. the Governor of - Valero, h 'ehdeivoriag to get rid of all those parsonsylto bile_ no Sled occupation, as he le desirous, in ease of a siege, not tohave any drones to feed: - . General Urban - siontlnuits to onitostroe to - obtaii notoriety, b 9 alennernf Proidaiention4 :p endm:hi 26th of 'June he pablisted,'lnotbef, address to the inhabitants of Venni elate derninWat heel not, yet found its wal to ibis - 614 . , but it known to eon• tam lbe suhielned presage _ "lam necessitated to increase the savatity of the state of 'siege, as sofßaterilittention le not paid to the orders of the serstinaleinlignerdir. • -When the eats, of siege its declared' every soldier le in an _eerily (eine' Behordt)": No - *Wygttl' allowed -to pass the gates without a permit, and the posses; sor of tooh;11 &moment Must Weardalhisisk 'and yel. Jew ribboriand his arm, , ?- , f • , Tba EM rev. has 'resolved' , to remain with hie army in I ly, and the day before =yesterday be telegroplsed to the,Arebduke, Meigeter: the Treat ; 'dent Of 'the gennalt 'of Aliit:Emnire, to' Join its without delay. The Prince left immediately, and it re believed that, halted' been sinninoned to Ve rona bunnies. tbe Branteror sees the necessity for a change of .eystem.„.; God grant that his•Majeety may direct his attention to internal mattersbefore it is too late. • ' ' The Government has received informatien that Kossuth le infßaropten Turkey, - on- his way Hungary. but it is net alarmed, ‘t.becaure it is as. ,sured_that_the peasants will have.nothing at all to do with him.” .Tbis tranquillity of Wadi_ might Perhaps, share; bed 'mot experience tangbt tro that tkriuneducated satiny own „ always be led bY the edneitted few. • - It liaibeen . htatedio me thit the Aaeirian Gov . - . . . ernment ma*, perhaps; try to playoff the emend:, pated peasants against their former taskmasters but any. snob ittsuipt - weidd be a total falure Hungary is, to all intents and purposes, an sesto= oratio country,- and the Alletrian overninen - ; cannot hope to retain its influence there G unless if, can naanago to win th&upPei classes of the people If Austria bad been content to govera Lombardy bhiy metass of the aristocracy of the country it is highly probable that Milan vo now he in bends of the Garda French. ila Count not Reoloberg bag again been summoned to Italy, and will leave this evening for :Verona The train:Bing compenious are, to, be M. Von- Blegideben. the Referendary for German 'Affairs, and M. Bahl, &Government counsellor: who hes been the man of_ oonfiffenee Of 'no fewer thaefour . . . foreign ministarc,,PeliOnis of - Baron Blob's se-, quaintanoe relato that he begins to , talk of the neoessitY,','for soinneharge;" and theree is little doubt' in myroind..tbet he.nrould consent to re: main in office even if the Emperor ebonid resolve altogether to overthrow the present system. • The Minieter of the Interior bar, powerful friends at Court. but it is as sure that he will be outorificed is that T hold a nen in my right hand In foot there are strong indications that the Emperor will sore h eve to part with the kb Haug or. wit h wit Baron Bach. The Storm has king been brewing, and Is about to burst. THE EMPEROR Off _AUSTRIA AT VOLTA. The Emperor went not far iodic rear. Leavirg his staff at a farmyard on the road to Volta, be turned bpok with vehosen few, sod looked on While a last; effort was mode to tight for the pm Melnik of Oavriena.: The lest effort was made, but, to no pnrpdee. Nearer and nearer fell the French shells, tilt ens actually cracked over the herd o'; the Empororood'another, bttrst in the 'middle or his staff. The order for a general retreat had, in the meantime, been carried out ; and while the, Emperor. and the Archduke retired by a env road to Vallegglo, the First army began to wilt , draw towards Mantua. • Its retreat was mid' with little diffloullY, as the Ninth corps still held Guiddiszolo, which stopped the progress of the, enemy. and prevented a dangerous permit. The Second Army, however, had to submit to serious losses The centre of the Austrian pool-' Sons having been foroed by the 'ortoupotion of ft/w -idens at half-past five O'clock, the Second Army had to repel attacks which became every instant, more dangerous, as theAlltes followed their suo• oars with great rapidity, cutting cif the Vallegglo road and -foroinr the corps on their proper left back to Monatimbeno . . and other points on the upper pert of the blind°. The rnatiriel of. the Amttrian - army wee,4toir-' ever saved by. the. speed , °mistral:Mon of , flying bridges cattle river beleW Volta, &nine night fell the Austrianif remained in' possessldeof Mumma banoo Vallegglo, and Gulddleille: &despatch ;annennoes the - departure .of nth from PIROODEM for.Parma_on the 26th nit., aid, Says that the peeps took the horses from his .carriage and dragged him as far as the city gate. Miirkete by Telegraph. BALTIMOAN July Id —Flour is steady and unabated to pram Wheat is lass firm, _tut the quotations are without charge; sales of white at 82 50n1.55" and at St Efirst 38;00ru—White sells at Wage, • yellow is 2se Be lower ; being quoted at 80Et1320. P/ovisleas are nu changed. Whiiitay doll at 2fo. CINCINNATI, Zuly '—Flcur dot( at St 75e4 80. Wheat is offering freely. and the, quotations are aft lower; 'White cello at 51 18in IS,' and red at Slot 05. Oorn firm. Whiskey fair, aemand at 34e. Provirline are more satire: Bacon firm; Shoulders 0,116714; ar etB%. .atesa Park $15.60, NEM Olugatoa, July 10 .-Sales of 'Cotton to-day 14.00 bales. Sugar buoyant it 69{0, Corn' firm Ad • Ihe ,number of interments in, Philadelphia during the week ending on Saturday leatman26s, of whiolkB9 were adults, and 176 ohildrea. Eni • • . : - ;, - Z ;1:_410 - #:-.': ' .•-.- r :-- --_- ',_ .- 2 X - - -- ; -•- ' . !:.rEr ' : ' .: ', : - . ' :, • •r- i , -- -• . ' ' Tan ilrd l r .., iIAYN T gri tti rl iPir S a t - in -- , ' -'4--, dilY 4 liil-heirCif 7 diritteriT-tgio OdfinJud , ;:- - - Coati* weals .Passinger , Riillw,hy bald srgahstlint, . ,"_ to 4 P"Trane -**l.l. l liltssed - lig 'tells , - :, _ --,-, flogili) p arsing' ( org. - nunfiar,g9lllls like - ' ' '•-: arlidlillifilWrohogilialltaierwak '.'f::'.---_. -, -, ~ 01,CIlpit - o: :70,.1diron.or rai,nriVsirlfitig.a..., ,-...--- . '-' ~ F , ~ ,r ,•,--. _ '', . ..• j•-, : -, '' ilrllso - - - , - TO the:Prisideattiatut , Dficitategit;a4 Gratiteand. ---, '• . Coates-num - P loilaikiplyfroOmegif.: 4We:fel ; -- (Tompaitytt, ...- 4 -y. , -.-", ~ i•-•,..-,•,- , .,,,ni.„- _ -- -. ...,--, , _- --.. _Gum alit treoutpliiitt haiheen - itia4 harem in* Ili "--; '_:'hlinorihoranarreafgalinfihiSnishi-streathreihosist -,-, nelsoopol Cherahgoesonalsztereacettseti ihrraTsligh,. .2 : -:' - those Sorslay_lest Mein Telighitghtkuir7ll , o o li ireridlii- tar by„ We tneCina or the: ours 9o - Y 0123,10 _VOiellgllT _ i - wir;',lollbigllk• sznioyanee le einfidiret 00-the -z. ehm hi g ii m d a y.:: ~ .- , - .. ,,, , ft, ,,, ,,7, -.. 1.,,71; Zei 274 t:V.,41," ,:::: ' ..- Tieetreet et one of the delerior-youriby.o*-Jeat-_ . .Etteder.:Athee the, elleitation ,tbatihe elielettneelee , ' ' - iitne.otn,xenirny ; ear, on that - day winionnactillefradr. .. eumatentieter_the *4 8 bleach otAtte ii - 000ttneepos , , .11_, , ett_theriertniableanaletation 'Ott tfichlarelt*Citeuele- ~ - `area worils,behrinkslng.inholitintforlestlifardirtei' , . nfinat e hr rhich„broteethfrlfi;Linairkn.-;:, ,',•, ._.- 814 o h n,of.gitrtfi ; Atifsbl7ritfleftrikrihnr. thiS ronnlntskriifilliroSrsrAtArWiliffiareirthere'', by rotb'ddia. .110, Hanle 4 1 ,11:11inhaunfOritii:•; -,--, m --, wealin_l,,c,.- 1 ,..,,,, , ,4 4 ,,, , ...' 4 ,- ~,-,.-,,,-: -,-•:..- -, = - Vbe et 130 edecisiAkibeeeelati - Of 06 ' ' lederptitile is. voictiottitieol4 - moriciet , ti.—i''' 3 'lt - ' -lodged that "the yandlfirastasek•Orsithinkeraelin , „ - -- elute)* ccgalle = ,tarilt4,l*,WitklttgettithWiCAPtritli' . :_tiCtOtiain eity•icii inraetfegpiihfienininifettliggsicli, - ::- '..- okloir. altlsnlgitheAtithrrleiggte**d naltiliSlVAtikr. , ' beimr-easel kafne`SerssrrareiliseFderfr. - See. ,-- - duet can be:absurd _appette4 clfiyidert: beteg tee beet;';i : , - . nem trazisiated be or , reet - trottitetifer witiiitietatb the : Iviet of the: netabborlONl, er Or anizanyhinateahos, _ ' Doi, I*- he 'Ws_ iffasofityor. ' 2 dep, so, last* dicterhtlitee sanerablt4 foiroliatins per- - possll - - ft , rioaldirs arlitiriforesasSrlinftSfhtsaelr or the - .aublle „ pearks,iiAr.4.loWiley-ht,Lifk:=liis , , _ Onththeowealtla 4s .Teateati l.:- _, ' ,:' ,. .14q- , "?.` 1 - 011 -''f ,l. -•' --- _. .$7 duty is tattehrteelbitt lintel the eatinneawindtli_ 'se theriteetbetta 04cited - rr' PO . blibliedletetW7-,i.:"'=":;' -':' : 1 therefele-#46l4l , fair , ebbi at eittisietteit - - yeti ratite: frotivanycotatept Krllle s teare.Arjrce_r _" • enliven, egellguttlyvhinfillheilifiliti - 1 101 :! °,4 - ": by the Centex* rf the yrOnoiii¢elol.:' --- ' l , • • , fne, - ' _ - :Very reggoeMilir , --- - ,-, •-, ~..", -,',_.;. ,',_ _' - • , • '•-,. .-. - Y- I''-' ).• , ..--'A.kfiX'S'liDitiCillillntal- _ : - • hinyerefghlial_ , Some discussion eireterlittl* itukt*, end_lt was _, - finally delegrolnefillbathbarearelfisnilVnit2can- , mince running - Oulll,Xne e,oloelr-.[ P_ - 4Weact ' '- _ that ;afteCtlost'_lnirfllit!liteelt- Oillileenele live - ' -10 nt Anil- OA ottlet_Kß , diee - oiret.l•4lii-follow- 'big circular-eras - 41So; mtribuled;:_emoing ekketa,, loloYeefer tholtilei_ ..t. ,-,... ~,..., i ..1_,:-.,..:„ ~,,,,,,,,A-,. - - -To- Mr- Supstistrisdkieis ;.• einschwcWE Wit - d'UTiiiiiCe Of ' - She- Card -6/1/ic ark& aleitzovittaielerectit,,rbfleatel-- ;Whia:Passater,Rolitedy,Ccienwinti ;•--- ~i,:z..- . .. - .., littird of - _ , Plteettici: ceilikeepttelleleiPet4ntri• 4 i„,;,,,....,.........„....„,..„, .- as wen se otber - etriete of theeite. - ,beitetdeteres eill . , to ma a portioaUf tbetrietion - thilivien -end °Octet " ----, . street branch or their r tea ottaatedeyi defialti, e,?t, 0 .! the 4anAt ft foleibr ettlettientelekek••• ' ' --"'" "' ''' T. -That the dtileur elan - not ruler sir Alma or - -. ,plette of *meld* et '0 _WO hider Ikea dwitlii nines,- - itifet cars shelf be taken lithatlt Onaditeleie end dill" not to teteiniet or distathatt any ger the avrigrenat_hiari or menilaria *llse worshipping Write/CV/eta: '-.- ," -• If:::-.TheleMelactils ilhillratithilaidVAirling°9` or into'ileticed', -- pebloWto - seter„ therroctioStle mil - y noise or diettitheace,tgiebleof ' -ft:•.- l' . "- , -,, • -.'''. ..-lls - tberleie - ifrite Boiinrf-- , ~----- .: • , PurertentTo - th isznOtiointli - z:Griirr infl-noilinfr,_ = , slreelineetapooxoterlidt a. - ,earfroaohatr depot. - at - Fairmount, about opegetoelt,-,yeben the tol!ipkttlew -- -t interferad ana)nnorpti*iiiinieteirtho,:drittifyel - - 000dooter, Teo, :slept eeveteitt4 ,Offizini ; -_, ortieinadi;inidi'ivinitlii(*OPlXWOO' Theimperintindelielliscirekcio - Wsp _lewd' -._,- 8 11flied - r - ta diellell*Wel-iirtrt4Y , 4 . 11 11 1 4-0 4 1 - : - - - ; - portlee-rirereieltepluirote AT_ itaWitfilibisires; - '-:-,-- ,Or to ol to"f"ii'Aididrg2 -- it - 141el i eliiledlOr . - , --6 • 10 : - &awe - sr:- - ,. : L;-,-: , '•' ''il '' • An imigienioWnAtirin.ieWiti„ii.: 4.4:,:tft, 41.4u T e4 or,usi..jorklmilii i : - ': iiiiiiccinit An Itelen'to:eVeiPthear - - travel,....-TheepeeWertadditheetNealt .. ~ eideration*lKather ittid-Airderlft. Mae: railroad oorportithnie hid ilk rripitii.-84WhOii4 or ; aokorkhc - t-gerinetteoir. rasped' rot the'edlte ind ion - dieters elihess!mtoi - ikresforerqr - elWyert , , hertiscrailk‘ thetelelovelletabliAedgeoey - ' in -Bibliool:_lcitp ;-1%; - thoiATrj - lill4oliteNrblood ' - r i''. reeiritlypielten'YOthe,- 1 eabbeflef _-,...• .. Wlisue;.' - ... - s, 4 WPOPPrn4 -1 0 6 (*litlilidthOl o rilEkOMPwl- - - ,_ tartan, whales! the :most •Uciedei - ' :eheabc--„sod s -- - thetrproptletots - slfflielatelisWergtOdrsiklbith -, : Just , reltjgforf - --1: - The laid* OA* Betide itherel - -, - - , : - .- moremenCluilhisid-t„betri - late -; , - _.-', en - iti'4 , :diellSithetitilYVltillitel f ** - - "-- _ • -.'.----- - it it eAlodier;oleidololi keingil °heti: Om Otettialeendilineeeiondel ' • - --- i_ ,-- , 'After th eglikleiroof she - weeksifit,: ' - ... _ -,"-",'_:•"_ to I biee4 llll PAMdett-tdie - dtir , ~ g.'- - :' s.woil as their earojinin 16;:ilibro- - •. At ..- ''-'--:- ingief 3 thelreelf*l-lielfififilliffiirl - l e -`ls*illt-Of. -'- - Awe. Pee r'lliellii',#WW,llol,-„Meesiithe - detitiod.: - ; end 00014 be ifeefoopllahedlt - 'oiof,leiteetlitellits -- - " welded - o_4o -liomathlMWillt: - I- - . - 1101 0aellleill" iiipt.b . ..J4 - 4,400 - d tia 0 1 in mob 4. ll3 (lF.lfer)l,Xreffiltitar - ~ - 14nW %Ikea -: - oonirOitc - yejr , yeitibt,theeloker ecokliedineet ,- .. - -;:_ : : - -tilent.ta.taterbinklield+Mill - 0 1 1eit:' - '-- - belied ,ef - fitteed , peil eisat:',whietleillflieWAte ------ - asukeidoseeifilielloopir.44=K - AOO - ...4.w44'--gtt, , -,.‘ - 1 - 2 - - - Ifei thoOglo, - ,ltotiewor t fiteklheyl(istriet _klitOrei;-.,-_-=, • feWlef: thislandriklia heerl,loWd[difidtt- - - -,. ler hinitOPittiOriPf-WWW!, - F; 4 74.oAlewintilig- ' ---:." - 40116- '4 l _l4 ol 7l ) **illeitliflt-Owelirligike; .:- : - -lild, delil-011ei_boated,Pekedill '44insilholdec • - ear et. - -len - i:efilheldeilionhathat,:f. ,ir lhey,rinilly`felt tel`deeld.o Irdwrietteal4lllel`tweet- ' miksetheig_lereriltelsisimit:fraThille , -- -- i Wi dys,-;t_il No. , ittiliceadeein,lheasilt , lft 7 _llint l?_, •-;=---- Thl --: 9 4ll keelkellihk:lbtli-leoe ltidtillelnX - 041 0 11,- -- . - -" 2 41Ceieeely-ebjeottlievlisdim***iit . #kosertr,,l.- ,-.:' - 4'd - orwonttitelerligi th e itskrollwirentawegeo,OMW - -'- - ishoritieellisil'A rletbielrefleiffridooOlb'e•idlii - -- ' _that sintecretatit fraWiltitirthielllige*OwildeY. -- 2 - The:visite - to - thWitivialkiles - latptiodieer:sis , - - ... leorli'ilersettid-listlail epaZ ierel,'E " Ww4 s -,10e1d, - - - ..- &rata them of- theitArp:_utol,rei St modu unfit"; . for :ilia - dattilAoti ipadile whelel , : WI-they - _-' would - retain .Ytorthildr-facittlies in-i 1 ottedition Meet' . - dsploritldisOfilleiptile,:lbilitrtemAiiiiptlook=to ''- 'die witterel rainy - but meet oriboie - Wheriwthild - Pik- •.- i,..,,t,rlitrAAbli,elagif4 I -,74,0 1 ,41#,"dk 'weotoniwli il-1:•----1,_- - ,_:'-y,:,_ , I , -„?4,1_, : y;:V-?...7.5- .. ,..,,- ...7 -_ Tliesewiceelkommeikj„ _ '.„. -lllel , opoiljtAsegige.. CT: 6.11,--0"1t,.-iiti•--'-':- Woult.aelieweldatti — ~_, _ , e, , '414 mitaii , - , .**lootiorot , , .!---r: - kb e Y.ilie , -04 1 404 1 4 6 00,0014,_ ' 1 - 111 X 7 ' , - itelnieroomue - 1 400_ *ilk liiidi ill -- - eei at the Gfeeti , eliii#l - Ailiomist,wpd - -11m - Presbyte. ---_- 4+ l -Albo9* - AlidefiltrtlVlVOikdterillvllieeinl;:•, -- bid be n excassixely i eponid - on last , fitalliails Inr,-' ':-- .the enirsstis ' — llikedt-Thittlelpferleus: --, __-_- /trial It'Weeild : illt-plefd*. o. thelldifed amp* ga_Regallogi ',Or ' '' '• iFI ,<-•.- - . 1 .,‘, --. .'; ' --;--- --_.; • - liri felt 'pliant iiiikaiti. Whiel .- -dif Wed,. thelefilatiotbelom ;me ef -AR-. - --Ilortin=-1-be -- world( - , :Thieboriiititerd- of- the' ;Oetitilieritelilien cress, the trismitc-utf_ the vointito &too: and . the Angniortil - Wastitrighirflinili `thee nihni__for_ntelr _ o ,, ,, ^ 4.lll4llf,rhipsiiteillie ilibigithz.l , Viuropealg- - , er - •.deplored thetenAeney,til' Abe timed : Al - 0i ileg'‘ --lerathlPPLtbil o,..4Wilth , lanCltlill4lkorellar. - otie , _ temperance Irk e'er r r atty.,: He would do *Wile bin nowerle.brltitelist 'WWl:might - Odd 'Willi - de; liver a Sermon on thesubjeet -pe=t Sunday::'-The lumen ocoupied ao hour,: In its delliev;: l and -iion listened to telth - ,VitgroutttoillesOylhe con. - cregatten.; - -- ,--- ' - 7•:_ --- -4 - :,.;-, 4fr ,-,„ . i . ,_.- .11(tiriiitiThoeetiooli Jr - oitinilitii,' - en- campments is drawing near. and if the matter is carried out with that degree of spirit that becomes 'he subject; we may smut have, An efporfinity of 'viewing - our gallant a / 3 0'a warlike militia er- • rayed. on the ..tentadileitiv;,l4--pumato~.lhis Neat" the rrillitirl--olSedm ofiritsißiloktoieW7 ilia haese,pstttion,d the- Adjitsmt Geneve% et the State to order the holding eta gestral'en-' - ntropment of - volunteer oMottralliell In:DaY 1 8b 3 10; luring the ensuing fall Mired hetc,that it would be necessary for theA. to pledge he needfatimenritfor.forage, etteatepmeittgretnett and military munpaniee. ,The sum was subscribed,„ mil' Ms 'supppsed this riqueistottitiiEneltilobAnty . Another eneamtmenkitill,U held 4t, m#011;= - 1 , y the - fart:iota - ars it - 0 hinter kid .-tinoubir.oceurites. ...rho day for:thaenoamprueut islitedJor_the.: 30th of September.:-it is said it wlli,be a grearstfair. riir u i ilio :rim ttiiii;:4tritei "vo#4ityr... .4 10 'gagged in laying the new etat - erniain __ ~ t orn; while Amting the trenotion.Washington ' - Ow 'were Ei . hill and Passyeekir aid; have - 'Ms quite - a number or, collies, kilns_ or Whfe -fiefs tb iebly embelluthed-:with' illeiteoleieta ' the .offine trill, contained thitiettineft`teti - ands - beediraiverf Moved* bin among- the, ale the noighberhood.. • It seeing. that the etreetwben :.aid out wee out thraugh et. Jel,ph's Cemetery; end ,It the time the opening wee made the - Wiwi Just - nrned out or their graves were not disturbed. - Pnir.atinpirri - . rIZEMEN . • A lilitiig.--, The Perseverance Ifose . Company...A:tr.:his OW, who started a few dive en:wean a visit to thelgest, bare +verywhere been received with every, demonstra ion of reaped.- OnThrtredaYleattheylsid a visit te Niagara Falls, _eseterted bytbe Bale-Hose COm 'Pan> of Buff.* At the Fails they were received by the finedepartMent - of the place and etoorted o the verhine whits of interest.- On their return e Buffalo they-were. tonuptuoislv , entertained: by he. Washington indenendent-Engine Company. They: left Baffato - on Friday last 'hey will Cr. rive In New roil on to morrow afternoon, aid be eceived by Engine - Company No 'B4, whOse guests they will be during their stay itrthe pity. DESEIITEB:B. I —Four salient ninths Abair- es cape-Iron the frigate Lancsater on Thursday night, and put ashore at Chester.- Daring en at tempt made by the Mayor of-Wilmington and a eosseaf rilicers to arrest 'them:Ally violently re f in'eA. "One of them dianbalged PIACI at the Po licemen,' and the party suceeedeiCW.iffeeting heir escape - It is supposed-they arelloWin - thy. -- AllgiIILT 'Situ -- ;1112 aunt on Saturday Morning a Market W ir q s il was Panting along Thirteenth street, between Tine and Oa'lowbill, when she was attacked-by 'two - men, chose object was plunder - The Woman resisted the knaves bravely, and belng ilded by a belabor alto happened to be in: the neighborhood, the raf ' tans were beaten off. FEEIOIIS ACM:DEPT.—A lad .nameit_Gidtron Hoover, about - five - years or age. fell rrui'lik Oiny on Britirrday afternoon, about thitlYslaist to than ground. We Was so seriously lajuridlbrit bte recovery is doubtful. The aeotAttnt, -,.lkapphned in Wharton street, hitwiton. Marini manna and 3soond. street. - , • : ; •••• Tux ir he. Perseveraine Hose Company at:Let-iew'unte,was continuing )er triumphal Mita over Note York - State. Sbe expected „V. arrive en Friday next, and this 'Toning a meeting of the Etre -oonponlos will be held to make arrengements for their veeeption on theitarrival. • - - lita gallant ,volunteers af , Now Jtirlay - are agitating the enaampment question. Tye Gayer cot. has proinired io order put the whole forbe, if ',agreeable - to the Wfstessof the suite doldiery. A vote is being Within the various brigadesas certain' the' feeling- of, 'the goldters fn 'relation , A. - wan ) by the Dame of Charles itAlanis, -op d - thirty years; had his .hand mashed on Fri day evening, _between the pole ea:wagon and a post, whilst endeavoring to stop a-runaway horse. He was conveyed to the Spitoopel Hospital, „He will most probably lose his hand.-., - • • 'Jaw tt Laucaerma" is stinting MT Ches ter at anchor near the uppespiei,_Shew 11 remain there a few days longer, undergoing rephlre, after which she will go to sea, and assume her position is Aso ship of the Pacific squadron. A /TRW trAILWAre--The Germantown Rail road having been completed, the first oar passed over the road an Saturday.: The trip_was satisfso tory„and it is supposed the rpatiwill be opened in a - day ' A COIDENT.—Thomas Mini had , aoengers of his right hand out off, in-the latter pert if last week, by a salt mill, on the Franlifordicad. Hie lefiarm was badly bruised. 'Heweeraken to the Spinet:V . ll Hospital. PAUTOCINT appropriation of $5,000 elide by . Councils towards the- oornyletion of Feirmount Perk waarhanded oVer_te the HUM missioner au Saturday. SWAM
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