The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, July 20, 1859, Image 2

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- NY4o."ll4}l'• .0, Tiifith .sliotriot of rireattnikn;
' for 0040,1111.YIn'''1,;:ago 'iri`ocinievieno s ellC 44*
hoor4101111•alue "-Tr' J . W. asoiroison is thus
pen liiil)1 tilitai.rl'."AT,
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.A°Po#4*,lffx*,,prtrii-i--4,„,t.7,-,;;id George - L!
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ileVe,tlll4 - 3 1,r
LiflirOi,*- a - , 4 l. 6 iitook„' ' sf!iii
.".• rp , :tint several and
boot dilienainistiork!t
nadiateli eeitfiterne Welk Interests:el:id thbir Indus;
tr7 - #=k - hiptTi*Riiinditcsi se nienrioalguestble
I , lli,N4;_itfetekeppiCt-ttemiC,the:efehtsiva eontio)
olrerilie7 ' •
4'010r.l Davie,•• in n delivered before' a
0 410 1 8 ifeA
tbeFderal.law rorhe
, •m „lie -favor s the
, our tv* the eeot
AfiiiiCiiieven6lllni*eAriity ttioliatipii3 3 ol - 1
Ur .0 . 011V?1://A4 4 3{70 ib l. sioh) . lll l 2 ' iviii; for' glibil;
icOioreildprerg; 11`1)iiiial Lion - of the Uoioe.
must enepherlistleiteridiaiee the Atto trine - avOned ••
title:ter? Caie-111 - Ai - ITOfee likcklie Clete' lei
T 6 aBiooriilia ,
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Olninee,s_, la fdiesiniik are
- 7, 1 , 4..!,, .77.,•7.•":" ---- ; -- .
v. C - , Johk#4:irverlOckr,ttaferntot, and B. B. Webb, for
o g i s ittaii4 : §64.; , : , - , ,-.- Ts - 7 ', ' , •
Thif*xoliifiative '.liiiiiiikliiii - digoovero Alf
, "lion(4ll6`f r ifclinc•til "iioniniq,,`On o,,,eliviory,
--.. iluoitiot.f: ;:-/: ittfie :''' ,4 : l V l li"lidligllnk thit th
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-ifialiniafflior,:raitaaiffy.oPTisaDriblaaFal•for soiYo
"„ fat *K . hi Ittplii• - bt •aba hi favor ' bi ibilaterrtva'
ilTedh„o:-16141iltAteOlitninetithf,baii-Pon
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ItlituttostCidit,so p er tOT,,tipoltidt‘ slivtry,in Ran:.
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'- • Gi t nini4l,ll*.-Nottstos, In ialetatt • pullishef. in
,the : sTATtaftni• - 2/ 4 4e.tios, declares Ambkloaroblon in
teiiietq - be dead aid bitted. - '-' - ' -,s' • ;:.:`,_: - ',,
- -- Tiii:Pcitsiiit it the e ' Potted otitis, ise foot:
Dize4,ft79.'..itirie - Taa'ffpf, , e34;if, of poitilatit; to
sluid,e'ikt*lXi 4 'Et5i? 0, 1 0 1 , 4 1430 , , , Obitloti an Ham•
~` nor, cs lantl of ItOitoark, to 'Oiliest -frostats: -
Th r iltislo",,itso.o of our .iiiiloirllidefiendent,3o -
4 a
.yyraprtataly belebratad fa• n roondonz, Q,ufb:o a
' • • twaborefilhbiagelsbid'Ainatioini Wife Yartlatt.
Ininti'6'l4,;olllll`o4ll# ttin-fotio:OnV'.w4iblpob,
• " TiffitoV**finit iiiiiliolf* tit' afam-'4 bi
' jasta,.**ii,f , ;.K.iiiiiplril a.d"l4=4. it t n g .
• ~‘of iutie, far ?teitaiinf and vies*Ptistdont. 1
. :IttPto.,* PtrtYltali. rEnwn Bil toFTto7t.Zi -
X
1 il 'Oniillei facial) tAdY zi Railroad • ,Tburediy,
i
isitfir licit la itio,tiatn'inokrial Troy a gang oi
•' -1, - viafeir abfaifiniedzilifololieeefonoil girimsy tt,e ,
ofor;„iftitifiiii,l,fe,4l4iaike ii:number if. the:: 4 tonat
=` 44ol 4 4l 44. l .Ptiitattf Ita 't!lto Itall:koiri , Two of
03 . to . ilgeili - Aiere subsequerntly arrented, died $5O
440:ScatilOteP3t4' to a; moncbCilxl4lol6l64l
- ibilisril*tiary, ~ :',, --;::, - c
. 1 7 14 , 'ltoPieLtiodolit cell** Iftw,York Poline bao
issiiikiti: folioriing kirlii:?i , ,iol**lNc "061#pii
' • , rne!aiip* -- ;:i&41101 - , : ; The' , Miro:, :of hist ere;
-,' ',- avg.:say:l iiiittdiovi flieeffeot to ,t. spofl ;sate,:;
' `,:•• - -', rat sfrao ,l 4 4 .. , ionlbsYkuntutt,thi l %7 6l !Ab° l o AG,
~---• l'aasioaviffV!, ..",...‘ '-_, i t ,', -:,; , .i-- 4 ,- ;-••?„---; ;:, : -,-
' :"That, the; .valatiooiairbbifii/' ' , 6 iiniallentui
' roatii by yolutelben to tbafiroonaniathas ofhoor,
. 'llitivq, do,,(liot,tho f dlossrof-Poltoo will no
' allafr,ab)l, 7 oolnAtiabotarl,sqatillptiktaf - Or gifts la
• ', ebrdiljoar ar.Ampolfnifbpao,voanfor,_facidefad by
=l , ' .pittsiu,iiii'tio#ol4o: o `„. ',', - . - ~, ~', ~. - .r.
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- ; : i . fikafrntiiiii . . - iii4in'xii,ibriclib ..-1C.!"!'",s; taboo
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6 41 1;k 1W i lk ; a d.iia ' 7 - ,:iit'lCaiiiiii,,'Hlrkwin hive the.
74,0--1,-,:6i'od support of - ali As -im,41,1,F,!1nbt41
oi,ltiir'ia.bfiiiliiit'l4 , ':l6o4 , 4los 41*11 a trillt ,
i t 4 ,
.1.,:- 4 '1, - I,.ii 63066,iritir tallikt. bellso-'-' A ' '
littorir,:,;i,othiii mill ' ,, , t'..baarbildge Nita.:
.In - 4a .'Pi . 4 l :K 4 ° l e s t rigliiiiiisitcoesiiiiitcli '111)44, Te•
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iko aa Wang' ta4l
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are pleased
ith its -wbers
tui -"fill ' d° 0 e '11,91 • la, w
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• .;'=' Tho Drangers,(CDelays,,o'
There are fewmortikellerowighti than to
dea dilatory traveller.a**Stoil ; ibtaiWhalf:
es .some . „ lordly • stelerieCio-M6Ving.aWay, :o k
watohing the ritsliinoJrain hilt. despairilig
•
'yes, from the stitticon.whickhe.bas reached
,o
too "%ie.". • Conanletia that:the' fault - is_all‘
his own, and that his predicament only makes'
him . . the laughing-stock of those who are
lucky, be: in time, he - hesitates
I' iv liethothe °hall - most blame himself, or in
dulgoA&lnsiiitisis.miledicildias upon' others.
There is, indeedoa. rare :virtue in promptitinie.
it is promptitude
.and :punctuality that, make
!he guest :idelcoaid'af 'the, , hospitable hoard..
Punctual as a loVlute the moment sworn,"
ft,-.4aoliitioti alike; frequent and.
TroMptitnde prOserves the credit tho Mer
-- chant; it:Milken home hippy • and whether_ in
'-the pulpit oi•ille playhouse, it is
admirable.-
The :habit; of ;tieing •tt too late " is that hien
der'#bith, Mier - wait "of capacity andinteg
city;istioncto ha deplored in' a publp man;
4E4 he is , no4rrie • statainan'who‘ cannot
.
in
stinatively,, , antleipate ; the.,judgment or. the
expectation, •q, the:-people. Hei is but a
fiopylit.:who:wilta - others have spoken
-can .IPairot hie . lesson. The
,„ •
091U - trin forgiven - a mistake, if he
commits, mildly:ink:With an apparently
- hotifiat:PirPONe. itle the, great fault of the
:;;;:reiient'Administ.ration -of the General _Go•
.veinouenithat it has bees fe tee late" ; In almest
7 aVerything patriptio. • Hasty enough in-perpe r
tratiniblAnders info principle, it has been te-
I tlionalksleW in the correction of them. When,
`.iii ianittitatte moment., it' resolved z to abandon
Raiiidund - Ott the' Ramiro qiestion,'"without
- first ascertaining :the temper of public opinion,
or, revlsink ltiOsivavreptiated ple . dgen, , and the
pledged;ofthli ‘ orginizatlonnpon the' back of
- Which it -.haernionated to power, on that sub
leet; it seeMeie have determined to Make no
iiiicesalen;in the event of failure or,detec.
and, - abOyeall, never to acknowledge,' by
o i liest Of Wise repentance , that it could dom.
- Mit agrieveus.wrong..• .14 ow, ft la manifest,
that if Mr? "inomiitast: and his Cabinet 'had
-been'inapirefE , „,by : Any. reasonable amount of
in'agnanimity;„ibey . witfulditot have fallep into
that :degkadation, from which. all their
etibetgnent ottani have failed to rescue them.
Goe'little word, spoken in time, would have
arrested the waves of public . resentment
which their arrogant perseverance in original
etror, - ort this Kansas question, bid so tierc'ely
areutted4:ll3tit ~they ;Waited, and paltered,
an4, , ,proscithed, raved, • awakening.
WAißation'.'and:Conaiter - attack; and at iaat',
'sitirecoMptaliedfo'nithdritsi . their programins.
from inifteld,•disgracefully and utterly anni
hilated.. . And they gathered no experience
•
from thisseyere ordeal. They refused to be
'taught by this fatal failure; .and, accordingly,
to be 'ponsistent with themselves plunged into
il ' B9r .Coruplication- on ••• the Naturalization
question•- , ;-going.back of the entire record of
:the Demderatle,'Party.;-flying in the fade of
the, iensifive - prdjudictsi•of hundreds. of thou-
Ueda of our adopted citizens—and patting
;their ifiderOatie, - ,ntad adherents lamentably orr
the 'ilefensivOn every -State -and Territory of
the Union. !Emit next how this false 'step in
sought iq'he.cdrrected i General CIASZ writes
_tae letters to "two
,adopted citizens, ip , which
'asserts in diatiedi terms that naturalization
of no valud;should the object of
Itraturn,to , his native -country ; , or, in other
faille; that thereler,stich a thing as half-cite.
eentabipfii this Union of ours; consequently,.
• that4aitery . 'ddiapted chianti is stamped with the
of Inferiority by the ; and that the
4 - riot:principle of the Indiyidual novereignt.)
afman'tipiim:whiali:our Republic is founded,
.`and in , the assertion
_of.vehleti we _went to was
"with itngtapd , liatelao nullified by a proceee
:.s,lWayk - herektfore . rejfacted by the people of
this country;• • There *as an eager readiuess
On the pact of theoppositiontotheDeniocra
tic party,',tn'seize'
upon this iissutioil 'of
:tr? i:otihnsivo dogma, and to' denounce, it
.to the' :'warld yaite' and unntiees
eark::surreitder; 'that ; was only paralleled
oY:thent? Ines eager readiness of therAdminia.
Yrttittfi tterspapet:To Oteel la ifs endorsement
iod",appropal. XidWaY: between these two
ex - ewes" 'stood the greet' body of the Demo
matte pfirty, - ,whie,tiat drat, loth' te . belleVe that
clio!Adininietratien Of its choice had consented
Suclia - yepediation of tt: time honored the
ory; was at-liet "cempelled - by the instinct of
"self-iireservation -to; come forth, North and.
• -.
South; and to "denythaf , th Administration
the•qaarty: ',The Washington Can:
Istantiort give 'the one in, support of the Le
:oleic and - "Hofer letters of General °Ass, ex
toliinvihent- to : the skies siMaster-pieces of
.statesmanship, and declaring that their. con
-ititiction 'the the oath, of natural'
:ziation . -was-the- only just and proper ono.
flatinfr,thus dorerialtiel'Welt and its defend
ibia'ennetinetien, , and in order to en
trench itself still more impregnably upon it,
hav_ingreptrodaded the opinions of fortner
'peitticai, 'opponents's", like Mr. WEnSTER and
if.t.'IEVERETTi On the Same side, the Allininia.
„
.tration now proceeds formally to . abandon its
own ground and to /eau ite apologists and de,
fenders
„the.jurchl,
_lEOrpor's Weekly of the
28d-July, , (fay advanee 'sheet of which we
ans'iledebted• to- our. .Oorrespondent at New
rOka States the present ittitude_ of the Ad.
as compared with the ene to
Which we arenow!elerring, to be' thus
- , Thiairaithetiqtrion of the Government of the
bolted- States, In ,May. It Is now July, and I ,
" . .ktforde unmixed- sailefeatien to be able to de
::,staya thuthe'posttion of the 'United States Is now
ho yeiy 'oontrory, el this--that Mr C.ss has seen
ransom `to , '" hook -sqluie down" from vie 'taws
tat forth In the Le Ulero and Hefei letters—and
that, so far as the word of the fleorefary . Cap be
relied•upon; there - k - amid more; tune prorp sot f
,rowettonto,r,thenittarait . zed citizens of tho,Uni•
;mil Stutter. '
tteinake , theta assertions on the,atrength of a
.z.taipttrib 'from the•Buste , Departnient. - dated Bth
,July, 3869, and - addrestedlo Mt. Wright at Berlin
fa [bet delpsteh; Mr -Wrightis directed to claim
the celestite of sanative of Hanover, who, basilic
;beecitne-ei °Wien 'of - the , United Statea, returned
lately : to fientrier,tlnd - tree 00 . 0 deprived of Mr
compelled rade - mit titry duty. In the
lispalah-to Mr :Wright, Mr' Oise observes:
".What rights 'de our- laws' , eanfer upon a to
reignir by granting him nataralla glop 4 I an.'
.ewer, all -the:rights, privileges, and immunities
whiok belong - to eitative• horn eitheeit, in their full
"intent, - with the single yiallfroation that, tinder
- the GonetituPon,-!tieperson except a naturaf.horn
nitiseo 'fa eligible to the oilleabf President' With
,thitalsopthm, the'naturalis.d °Wenn, froth and
after the date of his naturalisation, both it home
-and abroad; le pieced ,- upon the very same fooling
* etith the LIMITS Oltitell."
- But, net Satistled , with title - formal retreat
from ire own the:AdministrationAt
torney General,'Mr. Biros , conies forward in
.the elahoratorAatipata :published in Try
Panesof yesterile.i; anti ;Plante himself, and,
'per :ioniequence,- the Administration, upon a
. ,
mole-radical declaration, the' spirit of
,
which - thay hetteen in the :following extract:
In *tar& to. therkproteedien - aroui'bitisene in
at brane'and tibroad,ii hive no law
,- erbieh divides them into classes, or makes any tilt
'fierencteattedever between them. A' native and a
'naturalised Anierloan may, therefore, go forth with
, ural:seditrlty over every sea anti through every
lquil under hesvenipelcullng the eohutry to which
thi letter Was born. - Either of them may be taken
no thider a debt eon treated, or a crime committed
by himself ;. but froth streubsolntity free from Ali
pot li
-A
de aloabligalona Woven , country but their own
;MO areboth of themmerican citizens, salami):
exelueive allegiance fe-due to the Government of
.GPO ttnited , Btaric • One - of them •never did owe
• Ifealtyablerthere, atidthe other, at the time of his
;naturalisation, solemnly
_and rightfully, in par.
'„ausiee.of isw. and municipal_ regulation
-threwntferanounired, - snd allured forever all alle
giance) to , &IMO - foreign •0) se, potentate, State,
and sovereignty whatsoever,"ani especially to,,that
sovereign WllOBO ettfierit he• had previously boon ,
if this diet-not Work asolatton of every rola:rat
tie wheehaPaand ,hitato his nattve eauntrk,' then
weildrartedrian lan's , are a bitter *lechery,'
alui,theoath tae autviinister to foreigners is a
delusion'ant ; a-Snare; '
". beets and- ars Were, Persona of a
Oarv.hiih - sipwation.v/to hold that a Patitrat.
Aviedestisits oughtko Protected`by the Govern.
stietifi t hie' adopted country, everywhere except
fa: Os- eatint , Y or his' tat if he gone
'thero,'or is raUeht ; within the rover of las na
1002tovereigea, his art of iietaratization. may'be'
mated aeu , ettere - nulilly,:aiut he well itntne. ,
dtately'eetteeto: habil the riultte'of ark Amen' ,
eatscitstoon;Thtb !be true 'I; has ne ,
foutedathin,,zte.',Jest 4 Ppert , (and its advooates
tesietliratend that Mum any) except ' the dogma
dettlei altogether 'the right of expatriation
siittleillitti 00000:6f hit 'native severeign,and
`[bit s .11? - uatenableer . tta , 1 1. think have already
lis
tblo;,oiew.'soprioried by the praefilie
01thei'Vor14. - 7liieed mit say that 'oar naturaitza.
4MtiliwialtrerepOied.lcrit in spirit as
Wards,' The Stites of
pe Be
e. "%alial praetioally committed against it, ' , lie
firettMent - Would -allot* one of 'its own sabjeots'
~ktelde= his allegiance ‘betwoen it and another
loverelgu;:for ;they all :know= that no: man eta
,te#llwoMmeterar In Europe,' al well Os - here.
'the , 'allegiance!deinendid"af a nattralised reel
000tT. Mot hate been alwara anderatood as exolu
aieek.Aigtere Ira tot- many mow on reoord, bat
raW.trit fled are aniform - aa d- Meer.
41beriti FtenishMetne . naturalised here,
-Wark west arreeted far atiotrocce against
none except a Rtenoll
Jvol,euumetkplititf , bnC - be WAS diteh arged- wh e n
til,:lettletaVeharaoter; es an Atierleats' citizen
e
tit' tidies& -
bril'Aintlieri a native Bavarian, of ter being
brAnierlea, *ad living herefor many
:y.iltay"OitelitilthistAipon , returning to his native
toua t titacid Sestinilteg originai political atal cur.
The fralailent'Oeverntnent, so far , from' ignoring
bin naturalisation expressed a doubt whether ho
Said he:readopted them, Bat rho moat demi
:,„ -
sive fact whioh Watery- repords is the Anomie of
the Bridal. and AmerioiniGivernmenta during
the war 0,1812. The Prince Regent - proclaimed ;
tt :as' hie daterminatloui that eve r , native-born
soltjeet' of the - British Crown; taken prisoner
while serving in 'the Atierloan ranks, should
he triad 'and executed as a traitor to his lawful
sovereign. This was undoubtedly eight,, record
log' th the eommon-law doettine. , 9he Ring 'of
,Bogliond had not given his fount, to the expatria•
tiers of these people. If the Prince Regent had a
right to arrest naturailvd Englishmen, Scotch
teen; or Irishmen, in Canada (as the King of Han
over arrested Mr. 'Ernst .in hie dominions) and
onmpei them to tight for him, be certainly had a
right to hang them for fighting against him. But
-Mr. Madison denied this whole doctrine and all its
oonreguenees. He immedlateiy Issued a counter
proclamation; declaring that Huey naturalized °Ri
sen of the Milted Ste* ebouldhe put to death on
'the' - nretence that he was still a Brilishmihjeot,
twolkiglish prisoners atonal 'stiffer in like manner
by, way of , retaliation. The Prince Regent's pro
olemation was never enforced In a single instance
A principle which our Government stioceasfully‘
resisted under snob eirentastanees will seemly be
,submitted to now., •
' The tippliiiatiOn of these principles to the ease of
.any,riaturallaed °idim' who returns to his native
'country is simple and easy enough.
We cannot forbear applauding the temper
'of this extract. ,It'atates the case, explicitly
and forcibly; but in what an attitude does it
leave, General Hass, who, in his two Brat let
ters,-took precisely the opposite ground, and
in doing .so -was sustained by the Administra
tion papers? The•italicieed passages are not,
only an insulting. reply. to, and refutation of,
the original, opinions of General. CAes; but a
repetition; of tbe:vory argument against these
opinions-as assumed by Ta Pawl and by all
'the Democratienonventions which have been
'denounced, by,these A,drainfstration organs for
treasonable 'rebellion to the , constituted ex
pounder of Democrat° principles, put forward
by the General , ' Administration I i Had Mr.
Br,Aox's despatch been published in May or
jitne, instead of- July, it workld have placed,
the Adlniniatration on high ground. --No fo
reign Governmentwon! d have dared to contest
lt, and its spirit, would' have, been responded
to by liberal, men, of every party. Infused
with the genius of one institutions, it wouldhave
gone forth, to the world, as
,a declaration 'that
we never could, and never would, stibmit",to
any inteqereneewith:the rights of our adopted
citizens, and that they would be protected at.
AI , hazards, against every. Power no matter'
how formidable pr-despotio. , But it, has been
deferred tort period - when its sincerity may
he regarded as more than doubtful. • “Too
Late" is tyrltedn all over and all through
it; All its floe phrases cannot relieve it from
the imputation of, having been, extorted by
nubile opholon., When the partisans of Lours
PHILIPPIC, in 1848, discovered that the people
were resolved Upon another forin of, govern
ment, they attempted to retain their offices by
proposing, as a, peace-offering tothe nation, a
regency representing the young Count of
Penis, : but the proposal was received with
scorn;, and one, stentorian voice reechoed
the popular' feeling when it shouted froni the
crowd, 'bas—it to too late !" And now,
when' Judge BLACK steps forward
,with his
eloquent epistle, exhibiting an offensive dis
position to attack and to , repudiate, if net to
ridicule and rebuke; his venerable colleague in
the Cabinet, General VAse, and to accept and
repeat the arguments of those who, only yes
terday, took issue with Genet:al Case, as,with
the organ of the Administration, en this sub-
Jeetv the American people will, we think, re
call the Words of the, Frenchman, and say to
the Attorney General, tg Your apology is gorid, .
your, opinion is sound; but, Unfortunately for
you;-12 has come too
-late in the day."
The Le Clere and Hofer letters of. General
OAS'S made' a great case for foreign,thivern
ments against our own country before those
Governments bad made it themselves. These
letters furnished them a weapon which, rely
ing upon the, sensitive-patriotism of the pen
'pie of the United :states, they never would
Have dared to use of their own accord. Whe
ther they now be willing to he convinced by
the" recantation of Mr. Attorney General
BLACK remains to be seen ; but it seems to ns
that they will -prefer the argument furnished
voluntarily to their hands by the head of the
C &net, 'General Casa himself I '
We ought to close this , artiele here, but we
cannot fdrbear another ryfiectiOn which it
must suggesttoevery intelligent reader., Hero
'we, have the Attorney General attacking the
Secretary of State under the mune Adminis
tration I n December we bad the •Seertstary_
f ,the .Treesury•,_attacking the President
on, the -Tariff question. During the last
session of Congress we bad' the Secretary
of f the, Navy reproducing the President's
private !Wits to protect himself against a
corimitteit 'of investigation. D sily we see the
Piesident's prliate and confidential organ,•
the New' York - Ikrald, attacking the Presi
'dent's Cabinet. And, as it to complete the
parallel, and furnish a knblime sequel to the
scene, the Democratic party, which put this
dynasty into power, Is being ; compelled, In all
parts of the Union, tp cut loose from it to
save itself from sinking 'into utter and We.
damnable oblfvion. Of one thing our rulers
may be" well assured : If they have been
"too tate " in considering and repenting of
their errors, the American Democracy will not
be ff too late " in severing all connection
that may have heretofore existed between the
Administration on the one band, and that
Democracy on the other.
Important Testimony.
We alluded a short time since to the late
speech of Hon. A. H. STEPFIENh i whoa°
bril
liant Congressional career closed with the last
session of:Congress, to the regret of his con
stituents and ,of the whole country. We have
since received a full report of the speech re
`
tarred to, and find that it discusses the great
question now agitating the Democratic party,
and which, if not settled on a just and equita
ble basis, threatens to destroy it—the question
of nonintervention with slavery in the Terri
tories—with , 'great ability, - and that Mr.
STZI'LIENS, In several ithportant respects, en
dorses the views of this subject held by Judge
Donnas, and the State-rights Democracy of
the Union. He says ;
" The next question of agitation arose out of our
acquisitions from Mexico, embraling also the Ter
mar, of Oregoo, the title of which had fait been
definitely settled about that time.. This was the
greatest of stfl, before or stmt. It involved the
privets of Congress over the Territories, and cue
right of the General Government -to exclude sla
very, as it exists with us, from them. The -princi
ple was one of vast importance, whether consider.
ed in an abet:sot or petunias! vieer. Its assertion
abstractly married with it Southern inequality, in.
teriority, and degradation. Its onforoement prao;
Cosily would have hemmed us_ up, hedged in
walled us around, and prevented all future growth
or expansion. ' Dire voent the South made was the
righsto po into the 7orritories with their slave
properly en the same footing and with the some
epeuritv as other property under the (jai:admi t :on,
Thfr war her demand, and at was on this basis the
settlement was made Toe Territories are to be
kept open for Settlement and colonization for all
alike, without any discriminating legislation,
until thp,sieople o omp,to form their State Con
edtetions for !ulceration 'lnfo - the Union—when
they are to be admitted either with er without
slavery, as they 'may then determine for them
selves. This le non-intervention. And, as you
alt may know, it acme short of what I Wished. It
was in toy view not the full measure of our rights;
fiat required, in my Judgment, the emaetment by
Oongtew of all needtul Jews for the-protection of
stave property in the Territories so long as tlie
Territorial eondliion lered - •
,'But an overtehrlming mdjoiiiy of the South
was against that petition is wee said 'that we
who maintained it yielded the whole question by
yielding the jurisdiction, and that, if we conceded
the power to protect. we necessarily conceded with
tt the power to.prokait. This by no means fol
lowed. in my judgment ; but such was the prevail.
ing opinion p and it was not mull it was well as
certamed that a large majority of the Bou'h would
not ask fcir or even vote for Corgrea lanai promo
tion that those of us who were for it *clued to
'non intervention, Worms°, though it came short of
ogr'wishes, yet it contained no ettorifice of prin.
(Apia, had nothing aggressive in it, and scoured
for all practical purposes what' was wanted; that
is, the unrestricted right of expansion over the
common public, domain, as inclination, convenience,
or necessity may require on the part of our poo
pie; for, while Congress abstained from all direct
legislation on the subject, yet the bills organising
Territorial Governments granted to the local Logi&
latures the power to pass-laws upon all rightful
inhjeom oflegislation net inoonsistent with' the
'Constitution a ther'United States.' This gave
them the-power to pest all needful laws for the
protection of slave property, if the people wan d
them, tharbeing a rightful subject - of lrglsla ,
but none to prohibit or exclude, that being in
sistent•with the Constitution of the 'Gaited States,
aiid , the ezerolie of. a power that Congress did not
'possess and could not grant'
• " This :wits• the eters we, took of the case, and
this lima. goon been ennobled by the Supreme
Court of the United States in the Thad Scott de-
Chien- Thus the settlement wee made—thus .the
reeord• standr, - : and •bp it ram 'still tattling, to
statitOts it was NO up to the demands of the
7 r. through,' her representatives, at the tune,
.thOugh hot•up to ray own, and as by it' the right
of expansion Id the extent %f population and balm.
_city Is amply/loured, which waslhe great practi
cal object had in view. The subsequent excitement
on the - Kansas. bill, , ln 1854; was but a sequel to
that of 1850." • .' - - '
We thus hafd a candid admission from one
of the ablest statestrittil'the'South ever pro
duced, and froth onia who baii perhaps exer
eised-more fiatinenee over the legislation of
thenountry during the last ten years, thm any
other Southern statesman, that the demand of
the South was that slavO property should go
info 'the Territories upon the, same basis.as
other property, and not upon a higher basis;
t hat, vtlille the question of Congressional pro
.
THE PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1859:
Motion of slaveri,in_theNerritpriet*tis ,
sidered, flan - titiOriehetaiint- majorfty,'::tif ,t/}e,
South was against!? tinettProtttOtioiii and that'
gi the yrevailing opiniont! among Southern men
was that Me power toprotect slavery in the Ter.
ritories carried with it the power to prohibit it,
While Mr. STEPHENS deniesthe power of Ter-,
ritorlal Legislatures to prohibit slavery, be
leaves to those bodies alone the right and
power to pass such laws as may be needed for
its protection. Upon this basis, he aseerts,the
settlement was made, and by, it he is ' still
willing to stand, as it ,was fully up to the de
' mood of the South" at the time.
It would be utterly impossible to obtain tes
timony to establish any well-attested rant, of a
stronger and more pOinted Character than that
which Mr. &Tractor, considering hie talents,
position, services, and devotion to the South,
furnishes of the consistency and justice of
the position, of the State-rights Democracy of
the North.
The time has arrived when the Democratic
party of the Northern States has but ono
course left it to prolong, Its existence. It
must stand firmly on the basis of Settlement of
the slavery question adopted in 1850, and ex
tended or renewed in 1854, or it must perish.
He who demands from' it 'an ondersemeht of
the theory of Congressional protection of eta
:very, or who asks it to ignore the great doc- -
trine of Popular Sovereignty, or to 'legalize a
revival 'of the slave trade, urges 'it over a pre
cipice to certain destruction. No min who sin
cerely desires the perpetuity of the Democratic
party should hesitate as 'to the
,doitise he
should pursue at the present juncture. The
path of 'duty and of victory is marked out on
the one band, and the path of treachery and
of'defeat on the 'other: If, under the' gut !
dance of a recreant Administration', tho'Douto:
cretin party can MI seduced into a desertion
of the just and vital piinciplei tiSCUlO.ll,it is
solemnly pledged, it will meet a certain and
ignominious defeat, and any organizatiOn that
betrays the confidence and insults the judg
ment of an intelligent people deserves no
better fate. ' If wise connote
,prevail, if
the true principles of the party ai . e.astoifed
under circumstances ealculated, t 6 inspire
public confidence, Its wonted ascendancy will
be fatly regained, and although it may be-eub
jaded to a few, temporary disasters, it will
soon recover, and permanently reassomelts
proud and honorable position among the po
litical parties of this country. Illinois, mder
the lead of DOI/GLAS, In 1858, showed the De:
niiiefacy the road to triumph, by a firm adhe
sion to true principles. Pennsylvaida,,tirater
the lead of livonsmsre: and smarting underhis
violation of the pledges of 1856, tcilturnitiated,'!
during the same year; the downivard path
to political destruction. Let the lesson serve
as a warning to those who peek amieese in the
campaign of 1860.
BY MIDNIGHT MA-IL:
Lotter froiti "Occasional."
porfeepondenee of The Prowl
If any further evidence were needed that it is
the purpose of a portion Of the Administration
forces to Ignore General Case—the Secretary of
State—the letter of Judge Bicok on the naturali
sation question would be conclusive. 'I commend
you to the manner in which he revises andire'nti..
hetes the venerated statesman now at the bead of
the moat important department in the-Govern
merit. Mr. Appleton, himself, is constantly corn.
plaining that be has all the work of the depart.,
ment td do, and One 'day hat week ,the Adminle
tration paper in your city contained an article,
manifestly from the pen of 'Ur TAM , . in which
General Cass was alluded to in no very respectful
terms. It is to Mr Buohanan's indaite,oredit
that he does not sanction these amanita upon hit
ancient cotemporary and foe. Why, indeed,
should General Cass be, assaulted, at all ?
Le Clare and Hofer letters were unquestiopeblyfilit
his own opinions. Although his name was sign
ed to each of them; his whole record his been
on the side of progress, and he has been ns
thorough American in his internationelpeliok is
any man living at the present day. Uis great
letter, written while he was American minister at
Paris, against an. attempted combination:of Bum.
,petin Defiant' to subordinate this country, , ,asserted,
in another shape, the very, primilples which he is
now charged with' having deserted in the letters
referred to. Is It' not clear 'that :General_ Case
Inttet have signed these letteraipro4e4, in the
AchninistrattoliebißrieTtlinst his ushal (fateful
revision Mr. Buchanan is too old a' soldier to'
be caught in the trap of allowing such 'a done:lent
to go to the world without being overlooked by
bid own ,eyes, and I have no • doubt will
appear that General Gaas Evoke the President's
views in his arguments against naturalized oiti
Sens, for which be is now so sternly celled to no
count by the Attorney General, Mr. Tyler, and
others: Judge Bleak has at:Lib:lan for newapaper.
writing lie is a capital. although an indolent
fournellat, and there can be no doubt that his
opinion of the 18th of July was the resent of a
combination to sponge out the Secretary of State.
by rocking upon h's shoulders th e whole odium of
the Le Clem and Hofer , letters. We shall ace how
fartleneral 0555 and his friends will submit to
this injustice.
' Boma very amusing apeculations are indulged as
to the manner in whioh Bennett, ottlie Pew York
Herald, will take the last somersault or the Ad
ministration on the naturalization questipn. That
moat reckless ribald accepted the whole doolrine of
the Le Moro and Refer letters, although be knew
that the praotiaal effect of the doctrine might be
to return him to the obsoarlty of Edinburgh, from
which he °soaped forty or fifty years ago, ahpuld
England conclude to demand him back. He has
written in favor of this - dootrine in every way, and
has ridiculed and abused everybody who opposed
it, and now he dude himself, deserted by the Ad.
ministration;, and Tammany 'Hail, whioh he has
denounced as opposing the Administration on this
question, upheld by the Aiministration in its re
bellion. Some cariosity ls entertained to know
whether Bennett wilt swallow this last pill, and
come out as strong in favor of the doctrine as ho
has been violent against it.
il'fGeoeral Bowman, of the Washington Constitzt
tion,,Or his titled editor, Mr Browne—a mien of
the Irish nobility—has another fit of grief over
" the manner in whioh , information from -the
department, renehes certain Oppnaitton journals
in the large cities," and Odds that:
"linmorZays that the leaks will, perhaps, be
stopped, and that the sensation , urdals will have
to matte the regular sources of official news."
sow, a word as to the manner in which Informa
tion gets out of the departments. The .attachils
of the papers , in the large allies here are active
men, all the time at work endeavoring to make
themzeites usaftd..to their employers bylraustrl
°ugly earning it wages. Is it to be enpzesed
that the iteadiVapartmenta and their assistants
arch ran t4;the different Washington papers with
Wires, or thatlimy are to,refuse to intelligent and
active Correspondents from otter oilles that whioh
amens the public, when them oorrespondents ga
in person and a olioit them ? The telegraph sent
off, as you are aware, many columnaof the details
of the Sickles trial to Now York and Philadelphia,
while the Waehlogton papers contented them
selves with the Most meagre aaeodnti. The idea
of :Matting out froM the correspendents of distant
papers the intelligence that ought to be made'
public by the departments, shows the fogyism of
those who attempt to control affairs .In this quar
ter.
Jefferson Davie, in hie last spoeoh in Jackson.
illissieslppi, which may be oalled,aaort of reply to
Senator' A. G. Drown, took yeti ultra ground,
declaring that the laws again* the opening of
the Afrioan slavetrade wore uneopstitutional, and
asserting that the election of - et Republican to the
Preeldeney would justify a resort to secession OR
the part of the South. The rivalry between these
two distinguished men has become quite anima
ted Messrs Barkedale and, Singleton, at present
members of Congros; from Petteaissippl, take nearly
the soma ground as General Davie.
,- Occkstoxem.
Arrival or the Stentnititip Ariel.
Nniv YonK, July 19.—Thestonmehip Ariel from
Boothompton on t o 6th inst., arrived at this port
thia afternoon. liar ad vices have been anticipated
by the preVloits arrival of the steamer City of
Washington. . •
Tornado in Northern Alabanta—Deatine.
non of a Railroad; Bridge.
filming, July 18 —On Sunday night a tornado
passed over the northern mart of Alabama, de
stroying eight E pane of the Memphis and °harlots
ton Railroad Dominoes bridge at Decatur. The
loss le estimated at $l5O 000. '
Burning of a yesse! at Sea.
.
AUGUSTA Go; , July I.B.—Tbe brig Fe from New
Orleans, witis torMy burnt lit rim On the 34tti 'of
Jone: - --The oaptain and crew were all saved,
baying landed on, the,oomit of rlorfda.
Trwr pi;tition of the Gonnelieville railroad,
between Pert Perry and Pittsburg, was rut under
°entrees on the 1.2.11-inet.
UP TO the • 9th Instant a •dronght bad pre
veiled in , Tennessee, whioh was doing tanoh dar
msge to tho crops. t
TUB penitentiary at Columbus (Ohio) now
has 845 ininates--148 more than there are cells to
ammalmodate. '
IS stated that there are now 700 visitors at,
Old Point.
A NEw IDEA.—At a camp meeting near Bos
ton the ohoioen of position for tente were sold at
arctlon, and yielded four hundred dollars.
THE volunteers of Chester and Lancaster
counties, Pa., contemplate holding an encampment
at Paoli on the 30th of September.
Wet, HARMAN died at Richmond, Va., last
weak from sun-stroke.
WASHINGTON, Jutyl9, 1859
Le:Eter,,from - New',llt,
DR. DEDELL 40ORPTS AS ABS RISROF Or
- 'OIIIO—DIVIDENDS.Or CITY nArnitaßs—lfoßTALi-,
TY TARLEB-441011)100S IMPORTS—DOIDSINDS OF
FAITY•FIVO INSURANOR OORPANIES—ORN FANS
ACltAirt—T (1 EVANS GOES OUT FOR DICKENS
PRIZE FIGTIThet THE TAPES—MUSICAL rztlerVAL
—sTRAROSCII SAILS FOR EUROPE.
fOorroepoudence of The Preffe;)
NEW Yon x, July 19, 1859,
- The Bev. G. T. Bedell, D. D., of this city, has
noeepted the aloe of Assistant Bishop of Ohio.
Dr Bedell le at present teeter of the Church of the
AEOllll9iOll in this city, and enjoys the oomfortaable
salary of $5,000 per annum, with eorpulateta per
quisites. The salary paid for Assistant Bishop of
Ohio is $2,000; so that on the money question ho
will be $3,000 out Re is, fortunately, however,
in the possession of a comfortable fortune, and can
afford to saerifice the $.9 000 foi the honor of wear
ing this mitre, and being addressed as !Rt. Fey:"
Dr. Bedell is greatly beloved by his parishioners.
Ile possesses not only " Wormy and fluetio"," bat
is a very - industrious, praotioal man; bent on re
sults, and not over observant of the ceremonials of
his Church. For • several years pest be has been
an active member of the American Bible Society,
an the InsAllution for the Deaf and Dumb. '
. 83 muoh - space i 3 devoted in The Press to
your olty railroads, that it may Rot, perhaps, be
'uninteresting for your readera to have a few
figures relative to the earnings of the city rail
roads of Now York, during the year 1857 and 58,
and the dividends paid during the same time.
I copy from the annual report of Van R. Rich•
mond, Slate engineer and surveyor :
• Tot.l Earning.. , Dividerdi.
1837. 1658. 1967. )1369
Brooklyn 01ty... VS° 610 Mb 013 $77,404 $OO,OOO
Bth avenue 841 471 833 410 08,000
Etatleek 2,017 674 916 853 45 COO
21 ttvenue '227 987
262 048 2EO 617 ' 76 000 76 6CO
all 029 401,055 92,600 ,03 CO)
Ind avenue
81 avenue.
The city railroads generally seem to be run la
a handsome profit
Tho reports of the City inspeotor, for the las ,
three weeks, show a steady increase of mortality
as follows :
Week ending July 2
at gg 9
gi gg lt 10
Diseases of the stountob, bombs, and other
digestive organs aro in the ascendant, doubtless
owing, in part, to the increased oonsamption of
premature or partially deaayedifrtilts.
,The receipts at the custom house in this city, on
Saturday. last, were $232,580 48; for the - Week,
$1,972,810, or in the enormous ratio of seventy•
five millions per annum. In this connection, I
may mention that the it/Torte of, books and
brandy are - largely on the increase, which
speaks well for theliterary and liquorary pnoli•
vities of the American citizen. In 1857 the 1m
portatione of books amounted to $154,009 ; in 1858
they amounted to $2OO 215. The brandy imports,
during the year 1857. was $484,442; in 1858,
$219,509; in 1859.81 075.429!
Porty-1176 insurance companies, of this city, oat
of fifty, have deolared their July dividends,
amounting to $070,950.0n a capital of $8 712000,
or Wendy eight per cent for the elk months.
The public's old friend, General Pace, who was
so industriously dined and wined, and militaried
here last year, and who was broken•legged off to
Venezuela, Is said to have hectometre entirely " d; s.
goon' with the internal feuds of that country,
that he bas determined to soon leave for. the
United States, and here spend the remainder of
his days in peace and quiet. Sensible old ouch
Mr. T. C. Evans, of this city; called on Satin•
day in the Vanderbilt, for London, to try and ar•
range with Dickens, to oome over and da some
'Maros, for which Evans agrees to pay a large
stun in gold. Several parties have tried to make
the same arrangement, but either the figures have
not been sufficiently high, or the security stiff
enough, to allure the wary novelist hither.
Australian Kelly and a bruiser named Price
have signed articles and settled the preliminaries
for a Light for $1 000 a•side, to take place on the
Ist of October next, at Point _Abino, Canada.
Both men are now in training.
Eight thousand persona were present yesterday
at the "great musical festival," lot up by Alaret
zek, in Jones' Woods.
I met Mr titrakesch in the street an hour diem
and was told by him that he or tile for Europe to
morrow to engage artists for the fall operatic sea
son, Bef will be book in about six weeks.
£HE LATEST NEWS
BY TELEGRAPH.
Accident to the Steamer Ariel.
[IIPECIAL DREPATCII SO TUN PIUCBB.I
Oita Istatin, July 19 —The simmer Ariel
broke dovra this 'morning, when. off Now Castle,
and ',was towed into that pitted' by the steamer
Coliensey. Bho' received her Baltimore passes•
gore on board, and by that time had repaired and
PO:needed onher way.
From Washington.
Wasumirou, July Hi —The President has re
ongniaed Roan Christian Hammer as VICO COnlitl
of Dentactk; for the State of Massaohusetts, to re
side at Banton,
The B Blab and Spanish ministers are
preparing to leave the otty, for the purpose of
wsitthq the summer resorts in the North. The
Prusslaa minister Intends to vlait Sharon Sprier
for the benefit of his wife's health. The other
wielsters have already left Washington.
During tho absence of the President, the regular
=mimes of the Cabinet gill be held, as usual, on
Tuesdays and' Ftid ays.
The Indian Bureau contemplates the appoint•
meat of a local agent, to reside near the Pawnees
in order to enable it to exeroiso control over them,
and prevent. future difficulties
The Court of Claims has adjmrned till the first
Monday in ariober.
The Secretary of the Interior has, under the set
of Maroh 31, 1859, making appropriation prelim{•
nary to the eighth census, appointed Mr. Joe 0.
G. Kennedy to take direction of the work
It is a vfetl•eseeertained feet, known to the 'ln.
dlan Bureau, that very many of the-Indian dis
turbances aro justly attributable to the encroach
ments of the whites on she reservations set apart
for Indians by the General Government The
whites, having once obtained possession, there is
no way (the United Staves military tome bolos
small) to dispossess them; and sometimes, in con.
sequence of their remaining unlawfully on the
soli, new treaties have to be made with the In•
diens, who are time continually harassed in their
affairs Owing to the inadequate number of In
dian agents, and considering the wide extent of
country over which the Indians are scattered, fi
has been found Impossible, in every ease, to earn
out all treaty obligations, or in time to impress
the Indiana favorably by an exhibition of Vat
good faith, and to prevent diseattsfaation arising
from unfulfilled pledges The present Commis
sioner of Indian Afftirs, (Kr. Greenwood,) who is
thoroughly acquainted with the Indian ober:toter,
and has always practically shared a warm friend.
ship for them, will, it is believed, recommend to
the next Congress enoh measures as will lead to
the carrying into effect of all our treaty oblige•
dons, for the fulfilment of many of which no op.
propriations have yet been made. This is cape.
daily the case as to those with the Indians of toe
Stale of Oregon and the Territory_ of Wash
ington.
From California. •
[By Overland Mall.l
DESTRUCTION or A TOWN BY TIRE—STAUTEDH OF
PENITENTIARY CONVICTS.
Sr. Louis, July 19 —The overland mail, from
San Francisco on the 27th ult., reached Jefferson
olty to-day.
The papers furnish tho following items of
news:
The town of Tehama had been destroyed by fire,
saucing a loss of 3100 000.
There was a general stampede at the State pe•
nitentiary on the 25th, during which forty-three
of the convicts succeeded in escaping.
The badness of San Francisco is repsrted an
continuing to wi bent signs of improvement.
Manlius lerkwaertos.—Arrived at San Fran.
oboe from New York, ships Wizard and Flying
Mist. From Hong Kong, the Almatla. From Sid
ney, the Surinam.
From Arizona and Sonora.
WASHINGTON, July 19 —Private advioes, from
Tumon Arming, to July 23, stale that Peschiera
had arrived at Hermosillo, and announced his in
tion of driving all the Apache !ethane north of
the line, with the aid of the 13)nora battalion,
The revolt of the "regal and Opapta Indians
seemed to have bean euppreased, but another Ink
broken out at the no. thorn part. of S,nora, and a
band of four hundred men, under a Papugo Intliao
le tder, wore creating great rlatnage to property.
It was expected that Lioutenatit Mowry and
Mr Edward 8 Cross, editor-of the American.,
would fight a duel on the sth of July Lieuteuaht
Mowly's grievance to act ',bully° letter oonoerniog
him, eemmunioated to the States newspaper of
this oity.
The Indium In Arizona oontinue theft , depreda•
Mons. A company of voluntcere are in pursuit of,
them.
The Kansas Constitutional Convention.
Sr. Loves, July 19.—A tpeolal despatoh to the
BtaittLlL gives the following teportof the prooetld•
togs of the Kansas , Ooneti tutional Convention
The bill of rights, now under consideration, pro.
vides, among other things, that there shall be no
distinction made between aliens and citizens, in
rektion to the possesaton of property, Also, that
Slavery shall not be allowed to exist in the State
There is said to be a deolded mej silty in the
Convention in favor of the proposed instruction to
the judges of the Supreme Court of the State to
disregard the fugltive•slave law in their dee:ablate
Provlsions have been made fora homestead law,
embracing one hundred and sixty acres of land,
the improvements not to tasted $2,000 in out.
Attempted Robbery of a Bank Vault,
BTutIitIRIDGIN, Man July 19 —A dating attempt
to rob o. bank nts just been detected. Lost night,
amen who gave the name otiobn Smite Was die
covered While operating upon the vault of the
Roneatonlo Bank, in this eity. lie says he bas
been engaged at the work for nearly three weeks.
Ile had almost effected en entrance.
The Slaw Habeas Corpus Case at Ply
mouth, Muss.
Desna, July 19 —ln the slave habeas corpus
ease, before Judge Metcalf, this morning, there
was no appearanoe made against the plea of the
slave, Marla Gaskins, and she was promptly did•
oharged. title will pobably return to her master,
Mr. Holmes, on his promise of More lenient treat
ment. '
The Preeldent Ut Bedford Springs.
BRDFORD SPRINGS, July Pl.—the President, ac
companied by Mies Line, and Mrs. Seoretary
Thompson and her son, arrived here at six o'olooir
this evening. They were crooned from the Half-
Way louse to the Springs by a number of the
citizens of Bedford•
Additionul News from Europe
TEE OITY OF, WASHINGTON
DISILABIA'S PENSION.
LORD DERBY AND THE GARTER
T.l-IEI 0.4921'1-10LIC1 ACT_
IRISH VICEROYALTY.
QUEEN VICTORIA
C10333:)2‘i -El,-FFILTI7I..
ENGLISH NAVY DEFENCES.
NEW IRISH LORD QF ,TDE TREASURY.
FRENCH ARMY OF THE RHINE
WCoI6IAI-10N
VIC:3TO* TMMANtT.Mti L.
THE - ART OF WAR.
SP.A.TO I-IES FROM ITALY
MOVEMENTS OF THE ALLIES.
Loss of Napoleon's Epaulette
MR. OISISABLI AND 1118 OFFICIAL PSHBION.—Oat.
Loudon correspondent, in discussing on Wednea
day the ob•noea of Mr. Walpole's election by the
House of Commons at ghairman of Committees,
gave as one reason which would probably inde
nt's members In that right honorable g•otlemon'e
favor, that be bad not got hie pension as Mr.
Disraeli has " We are assured from a highly le.
speotable quarter. that Mr. Disraeli 't has not so.
eeptod his pension bur baarefused it, oijsoting to
make the necessary declaration that he needs it
in order to maintain his political .positioni,lvc.
'Leeds
340
457
507
LORD DERBY AND TRH GARTER.—Tbe preoe•
dent Bat by William IV. in making Ran Grey a
supernumerary member of the 0 der cf the Gar
ter, hoe been followed by her Iliejesty in the ease
of Lard Derby ; but in the latter instance the ape-
Mal arainte, or demo*, of the sovereign, be which
the ex•Promier's admission into the older wee
made valid, reoites ' at considerable herb, the
serviees of the Hal to the Crown, and expresses
her Pildesty's appreciation of them in a manner
in the highest degree complimentary Thus the
special istailiteCentairte within itself the reason of
the temporary abrogation of the ordinary laws of
the order This has been done moot, more fully
than wee the ogee in the previous instance of Lord
Grey —Court Tournat.
In the House of Commons, on July 5, Sir W.
Somerville °brained leave to introduce a bill to
amend the Cattiolo Act, to ss to permit Doman
Catholics to fill the office of Lord Chancellor of
Ireiand.
Mr. P 'Urquhart seconded the motion.
Hr (I, 0 Lewitt. on behalf of the Government,
cordially supported the motion, and should be
equally glad to' support the Second reading of the
The Mose than went into committee, and a re
solution was mused for the' introduction of the
bill.
Thu Tama VICZROYALTT.—At the farewell re
cormono, on mehdoy, the Earl of Englinton said,
respecting this office : " More mature considora•
tion and a larger e.Xperienee of this country have
only confirmed me in the opinion 1 have, on all
previous occasions, expressed, of the great im.
pottanoe of the °glee I have held among you ;.and
I trust no party in the State will ever adopt the
short sighted
, polloy which would be involved in
its abolition.' -
According to the orders now given, the Ceur
will not viatt, 6an•land this season
The Cobden effete still continues to form a topic
for rumor and di ouseion. The public are likely,
hOwever, to have the whet° matter out at an early
date, for it is understood that the honorable mem
ber for Rnebdale hag seised for an opportunity of
defending and 'medal, leg his noniaeoeptanott of
Mike before a meeting of h s oonstimente. Pending
ibis explanation from his own'llps it would be
obviously unfair to pursue the subject, or either
applaud or rundown &Course whit*, tiowever satis
factory to Mr Oobden'e own tense of conscience
and connitioney, bee been a bitter disappointment
to the nation at large We may be permitted.
however, to Jain in the hope that the new Gostern
meet will not he factiously messed. Mr. Cobden,
we imagine, wilt render a general support to L trd
Palmeraten cortjenctien with Mr Bright, and
even as wide/slat members of Parliament them
eratesmen may render considerable pablio service ;
but, them anent they adept a faotions course their
influence and their popularity will be gone, never
to be resuscitated We may hope, with a writer
on the eul jest, for the formation, in due season, of
a real independent L bend party ; we may expect
a new reform, followed by a general election, to
remit in the construotion of a Cabinet upon a
brooder male ; burto attain that: end there met
be distnterewed union ; and above all, no nein
yellfgent. desperate. unmeaning politioal
wreaking itself upon the Whigs in the interest of
the Tories —Liverpool Post
An abstreet of the navy estimates wee published
with the Parllnmentary flatten yesterday. Tee
original estimate for 1850-60, amounted to
804 00R. The eupplamentary estimate is II 877,-
000. making a total of £l2 682 000, of which £O,
311 000 has already been voted, and . £6,370 000
has yet to be granted by Parliament The prin
cipal ifo we of the setmlementery estimate relate
to the payment rf 8 0011 additional warden and
2 000 aiddiessal marines, with £lOO 000 fora vol•
Ullteer reserve force of seamen. in pursuance ofthe
senitamendatinn_of the royal nommiwien on - man
olog the navy. and $645,000 for building' and rei
pair of ships —1514
Tun Lusa Lorin or. ern Timm:rev —Mr.
Bagwell, the new Irish Lord of the Treasury, con
eludvd hip speech on re election for the borough of
Clonmel with the following very emphalle remarks
upon the state of the Italian question and the
great continental struggle now in pregresa
"Gentlemen - the Italians ere is course of cost
quering the Auettlene; they are about driving out
the hereditary tyrants, and about becoming what
they have earnestly longed to he—a free people.
[Chem j The , oppreeeed Italians ale about to
raise their betide once more among the nations of
the world - (Great applause 3 My Mende, it hap
been the dream of my early life, the °castration of
me matureryeara, that Italy never could become
great until she bre me free. That she it
about to becotre free .1 Mealy believe. [Cheers.]
It is a time in which I glory to live; end A'
live to be old the remembrance of this period of
Italian liberty shall warm my heart, and Stir the
blood in the veins of all who Abell recall to mind
the time of Italy's freedom; Italy! that I have
seen is my youth degraded sod tramped noon by
the tyrant Austrian and barbarian eoidiar—it
shall warm my heart, I any, to think that t have
ever lived to see her what this country must be—
' great. glorious, and free!' [gr. Bagwell, amid
the meet vooiferous applause, was undirsteed to
sty if Gentlemen, in oonotutioe, let me add that
I have never uttered a promise, never made a
pledge, or expressed any sentiments that I have
ever denied, end that I shall not feint and repeat
before the assembled Commons of England "
A French journal says Pannier's army of ob
servation n the Rhino will he established in can.
tonments by It e 15th inet. It will consist of 160,-
000 infantry, 12 000 cavalry, and 400'eatinon.
Measnet, Itlontriox —1 he Nation proposes
that a sword, purchased by subseription, shall be
presented to Marshal Menthols on the ground of
his Irish extraction
The Wallop of Troyes has Issued en eloquent
mandate in favor • f the war.
An address to Ring ylotor - Immanuel hae been
signed - by 305 dignitaries and functionaries
amongst the clergy in .the pros Mee of Milan who
thus renounce the Austrian Concordat, and adopt
toe legithitlnn of Piedmont.
Thu Any nr Wan. —The Mon iteur priVishes
a eiroular from M. Cortland, the Minister of Pub
Ito toetttiollon, to all the reotors of academies, en.
joining them to have all the bulletins of the army
of Italligi.ad to the public. and to have them pest,
ed up In - he schools, as "youth is open to noble
sentiments. and its heart is touched by groat
things, and devoted to iho dynasties that know
how to undertake them '
MOVPMENTS OP TUE ALLIES
The Pare cOrrespoodent of the Post has tele.
graphed during the night a private d apatch, dated
from the Fronoh headquarters, Sunday last: Tnia
morning, at seven o'o ook, the Emperor quitted
Volta, in mi•r to cross the Minein, and • ea abiieh
bit headquar era at Val : loggia We are only Four
leagues from Peschiera, the siege of which wan be
gun two days ago by the S Ardlnians, The cannons
roar der and night in "that direCtion The Aua
trian advanced poet 18 but a abort distance from
Villa Franca, which to ctoonpled by the aorta of
Marshal Niel. It is much doubted that the Aus
trian army will venture to accept a battle in the
condition of demoralisation and stupor into which
they have fallen slim ovr victory at Ballerina
%Hi LOSS OP TWA EIdPISROR'S EPAULIiTIR —The
anecdote of the E unarur having tt wi an epau'ette
carried away by a ballet continues to be accepted
ac true by the French nre.a although it is rather
extraordinary that the fifoniteter, which dwells
upon the rick which the Wupercr ran, and apeakte
of pro,1•0 Iles falling among his staff, should have
omitted to notice such a very striking incident if
It happened. The Pays 'pates a boa mot Lure.
hated to the Emperor an this occasion Ms Ma
jetty said, laughinit• Ma -volla passe chef de
nattaillon." A chef de battaillon wears bat one
epaulotte, while a captain, hie inferior officer, has
two.
FNCOONTED BETWEEN A BUROLAN. AND A
PoMENAN —Officer M F Britt .n, while walking
in the vicinity of Ibirteenth and Sprees &tracts,
at a Into hour of Monday eight, detested a stal
wart negro in the attempt to enter the'residenee
of Geo II Stuart, Erg lie appreaohed tee fel
low, who evidently intended to rob the building,
and, after a fearlul fight, summeded in eapmring
and tak fog him to the leek up. lie gave the name
of Tillman, It appears that the (dawns of that
neighborhood have generallyleft town for the
summer, and given their dwellings in charge of
the policemen of the eighth word As bnrglais
keep themselves advised of the arrivals and depar
tures of families, and avail .themselves of any op
portunity afforded for their depredations, the
police wore on the qua vier MOW Britton saw
him attempt to state the fence, In, the rear of the
residence of Mr Stuart, and primptly entleaeor.d
to arrest him, when the negro turned on hin lie
was armed wi , h a pistol add a short iron bar.
The (lacer had, nefortunetelMeft his revolver at
home. After a short south, the negro took to his'
heels. The ealcor followed in his tracks, and
after chasing him for some time, with the assist.
once of several elevens who joined in pursuit, and
°Mier Edwards. who appeared with a revolt, 2.,
they limited him In William street: Ile is an
old et:fonder ; and on being rearobed, 'keye,
picklooks, matt:dies, a pistol, and all the tools ne
cessary for the perpetration of burglaries were
round OD ME ECITIOTI.
OUTRANN Itv UPPER DARDY.—An outrage
was committed on the person of a your g woman
named Rebecca lames, residing in the madly of
Mr Newton, in Delaware 00110[Y. She was vio
lently solatd while passing a lonely road, and her
'cries for help beiew unavailing. the fiendish put.•
pose was accamplirbed The scoundrel who per.
patented the act was James Dyson, who was
promptly arrested and lodgel in jail to await his
pureshment.
The Newport News states that the market at
New York is so glutted wits ft•h that thelespenss
of traosporta.ion from Newport is not co vere d en d
ehiptr.ute have therefore colored. Fish should be
vary °hasp haze saaordingly.
771 CITY.
%Imo PrESSTTERIANO : CIII THE SABBATH
QUEsvort —ln pursuance ofiitttioe given en last
Sabbath, a large number of the ministers, diem,
and members of the eight United Presbyterian
ehuichee of this city alsemided. on Monday even
ing last, in Rev Dr, Dales' church, Race street,
west of Fifteenth street, for the purpose of taking
action in reference to the rousing of diet -passen
ger cars on the Sabbath. 'De ministers of this
church in this city are Rev. Messrs, B. Dates,
D. D , Joseph T. Cooper,, D D , Freesia Bauroh,
Robert Armstrong, Tbomae H. Beveridge; James
Price, W. W. Barr, George 'O. Arnold, and D g.
French, all of whom were present at this locating
with the exception of the two 'last named, who
are absent from the city There are about two
thousand adult members in connection with the
eight United Presbyterian churches in this place
The following report, presented by a committee
appointed at a previous meeting,' watvery fully
discussed, anti was adopted with almost entire
unanimity, three persons only declining to vote
for it, on the ground that they' could not fully en
dorse the sixth resolution
Your committee view with greet alarm the re
cent outrage upon the sanctity of God's holy day,
by the running of pa.senger oars through the
streets of our city. thereby publicly Petting at de
fiance the laws of God and this Commonwealth
Your committee cannot but regard the present as ,
peot of the times as'oelling upon all Gad'a neop'e
for, deep humiliation and more earnest fervent
Prayer, that the evils which threaten our city may
be averted, and that we may yet be permitted to
enjoy Wit greet bulwark of our civil 'and religious
liberty, the quiet sanctity of the Christian Sab
bath,
Your committee would, therefore, respectfully
recommend to this meeting the adoption of the
following resolutions . ,
Rase/yeti; That as the law of the Sabbath is an
original law of creation, as perpetual in its obli
gation as the exiatenoe, of created nature its
original constitution ; and as God has particularly
enjo;ned noon man that he should" Remember the
Sabbath day to keep it. holy :" such a law, the"
fore, demands universal qbedienae,and respret
Resolved, That as the word of Gad stnrds
alnindant testirroni - thiii the welfare of both - vs: -
Gong and individuals is intimately connected
with the due observance tf the Sabbath. while the
violation of such a snored injunction exposes man
kind to the tremendous tokens of the Divine dis
pleasure, it behocvet all professing Christians to
use their utmost efforts la promoting the sanctity
of God's holy Sabbath, by their influence both in
their own families and In the community at large
Resolved,, Thatathereas this sacred precept has
been shamefully and openly violated within the
bounds of this city by the running of passenger
oars on the Lord's day, to the dishonor.of God,
and the country in 'erbieh we live," as well its to the,
disturbance of worshipning assemblies; it is,
therefore. the duty of every Christian to employ
all the influence in his power fur the suppression of
this evil
, .
P , 30 'wed, That snit has long since been acknow
ledged by our wieest and beat statermrn that
"Christianity is the common law of the land."
our civil officers are bound to secure to the Chris•
tian community, the privilege of erk.ring the
holy re.t of the 'Sabbath in peace and quiet tn.
Resottvd, That we have ground for thankful
ness to Gad that He has given ns civil officers who
are not afraid to do their duty in this matter;
hod that we hereby pledge ourselves to sustain
them in en doing -
Resolved That we pledge ourselves. on our own
part, and will use our influence no tordingly in our
respective spheres, not to patronize on weak days
such oars as are employed in the desecration of
the r abhath, where other modes of public convey.
awe can be obtained. •
Resolved, That we regard the travelling in Fat
Cain nn the Lord's day HA a violation of the law
of God, and that we solemnly warn oar people
against it.
DECISION OP ALDERMAN HIITCHINSON RELA
TIVE TO THE RUNNING OP OARS ON SUNDAY
Bite a crowd of people interested in the Sunday
ear question assembled at the office of Atdermin
Hutooinson, yesterday morning, to hear his deci
sion in the case of Wm, H Jeandelle, who was
arrested on the charge of driving a oar on the
Green and Cates street line. on Sunday last.
The company was represented by David Webster,
sod Lucas Hirst. Hips. Tiae'proseeation wee not
represented, - At 11 o'clock, the Alderman gave
in his deoision as follows- ,
The simple quesion which I am called upon to
decide in the present case is whether there it suffi
cient evidence to bind the defendant over for a
breach of the peace, and fit doing this 1 shall con
sider it in the same manner as, any other care
brought before me es a committing magistrate, and
of eourre, hearing but one side of the ques tion.
Complaint had teen made to the Mayor by cer
tain parties, that the running of the care of the
Green and Coates streets Railway company, on
Sunday, llrh inst., bad disturbed their religtotib
exercises In consequence of which, the Mayor
bad requested the company hot to run their cars
oa S today, as he considered it, under the circum
stances, a breach of the peace. The Mayor ac
cordingly gave orders to the police to atop any
care from running on this road on Sunday last
How far the Mayor was right or wrong in thin
matter. it is not my business to inquire.
The cars started on - Sunday at about 1 o'clock.
P. M., and when at Twenty-second and Coates
strews, were stopped by the police, and a driver
was arrested, and I Was sent for to take' bail,
which was entered by Mr Preebury, for a bearing
on Monday morning at 11 o'clock. No hearing
was had or asked for on Sunday.
Monday, July 113. b, 31 A. M., rules having
appeared and the , witnesses being examined who
made the arrest, upon their evidence, I consider it
my duty to hold the defendant (the driver) in the
sum of $3OO to answer the charge of a breath of
the peace. With the abstraot- qtresticih I have
nothing to do - 'My course on the wrestler is in.
dated by a desire that the_metter may belpeedil •
brougnt — arrorele - higner - trlntrnirlarladfalterw .0 0
matter adjusted in snob a matinee as may be con
sistent with the tights of all parties and according
to the law of the land, an expounded by cur supe
rior marts "
• The or Muster was not arrested on Sunday, el;
though some of the witnesses examined on Monday
were or der the impresslon that such woe the case.
By the advice of 'counsel the defendant deolthed
enteting ball, and be was accordingly committed
to the charge of the ktftoers whaconteyel him-to
jell This mutt-tat Ited;rf question will probab y
oe decided in a short time, us it will be carried to
the Surveme C tart, a petition having been Bled to
chat effect yesterday
Mxxriuts o 8 THS PRANSTLTANIA HOSTIOUL-
Ttaim, SOCIETY —The Pennsylvania Horticultural
BJoicty held its stated monthly meting last eve
ning. 'lite attendance was rather large, and the
display ft r competition 'Roy good
A collection of rare fruits was exhibited by
John Landis, gardener to Mr Altemns, in West
Philadelphia Among his colleotton we noticed
a magnificent variety of neotarises. which excited
ranch admiration A quantity of Muscat grapes
was also exhibited One bunoh of Tokay grapes
weighed four pounds
Mr r 11" Abbott presen'ed a quantity of 00705 . -
.0 blackb-rrles. of the Watson's yeadling variety
ilo bad also several very beantifursnectimens of
the La tston' and Rochelle variety Mr Brooks
bas been very sucoessfal in his ovltivaClon of f.nit,
as the frequent pr*minms 'extendtd to him by the
'moiety amp!) , testify.
Mark Hall, the gardener of M. W Baldwin,
exhibited a fine ttolleotion of oo'ossal blackberries,
gooseberries, end raspberries. The raspberries
wore particularly fine.
N. H. Biathlon, the gardener of Alexander
Brown, Holmesburg, made a very tine dieylay of
neetartnes
In the vegetables we noticed the usual displays
of tomatoes, peas, beans. .to. This department,
we are glad to say, was quite equal to the former
P A Raab exhibited. for the first time, a new
variety of plant, brought from South Amerlea,
aid entitled the plumeria elrjsues."
The array of cut flowers was not quite as large
as at the last meeting, but it was, nevertheless,
very respetoable.
James Pollook, gardener to Mr. Dundee, had, as
usual, a very floe display of plants in the pot
Some of kilo varieties were of a very novel end
beautiful character
Henry A Dreer, the celebrated florist and leads
men, had an excellent display of blaokberries and
fruit, vory,beautifnl an•t temniing.
Mr Hutchinson, of West Polladelphis, bad a
beautiful collection of bouqatis. They received a
premium at the bands of the committee. .
The Society adj turned to meet on the third
Tuertday in !September, dispensing with the meet
ing in August
A NEW COVNTERVEIT.—TmIay & Bicknell,
publishers of the Counterfeit Detector report that
a new and very dangerous $5 counterfeit note,
Purporting to be the true blue of the Wink of
North America of this atty., bat just made ire ap
pearanoo Vig, letter V, with an Indian squaw
resting on a globe, liberty nap. shield and eagle
floating in clouds On right of 'rig head of a wo
men in au oval die Oa left bead Franklin in an
oval die Figure sin °soh onrner. On right end a
locomotive and oars in 'midis Oa leftaind word
five and figure 5 The genuine note is 71 inthee
long and the counterfeit 61 inches - . The bead of
Franklin on left of vig. in counterfeit, haft a lotion
more youthful appearance than in genuine. The
eyes are not as portent, being lice dots, in the
counterfeit The chin and ear are not so clearly
defificd as in genuine. The signatures of pred
dent and cashier are heavier than in the genuine.
the note is coarser also. All the late issues of the
bark of thia nlate'are tiered with red. We era
informed by the officers, that the bask designs
calling in all notes of this plate
HOSPITAL Cease.—Between twelve and one
o'clock, yesterday morning, while Tames Still was
engaged in filling a fluid lamp, in the cabin of
the seamier Eastern War, at dpruee•atreet wharf.
it suddenly exploded. The flam•a communicated
with his clothing, and, in the excitement of the
moment, he went on deck and jumped overboard.
He then swam to the shore. and found that big
nook and arms were slightly burned. Re walked
to the 'Pennsylvania Hospital, where his wounds
were attended to.
Patrick McCue, who was admitted to the Hos
pital on Monday morning, having been kicked on
the head by a horse, on Sunday bight, in a stable,
near the county prison, was delidolli last evening,
and no hopes are entertained of ids recovery
FUGITIVES FROM JUSTION.—A. Cuban, named
Julius bloats', was arrested by °Mier McCully,
an Monday night, at Broad end Vine streets. on
the charge of being a ugitivo of justice from Now
Yolk lie was convicted in that city On the
obargo of having stolen $4O in money and several
artiales of jewelry. He woe banded over to a New
York officer, and taken back. A man named An
drew flees was arrested at Beeah-street wharf, and
taken before Alderman Plankinton, on the charge
of robbing a house in Norristown, a few days
sinee, of a quantity of clothing. He was sent to
Norlislown to await his trial.
CLEAN STREET,. —Our citizens will be
remised to learn that the now Commissioner of
highways, Mr Shahts, notified the oontraoters
for cleaning streets, that in oases where they
have neglected to tuint the terms of their con
tracts, the streets will be cleaned by the Depart
ment. and the expense of it will be charged to
tee negligent contractors.
HIGAWAY Rozocay.—A. man made com
plaint eL [be Fourteenth, ward station house, yes
terday morning, that he was knocked down in
Willow Street, above Ninth, on Monday night,
and robbed of a gold watch and ohatn and a email
amount of money. He was badly out about the
faao by the higt.waymen.
PASSING COUNTERFEIT MONEY. Egmont
Inge° was held in $5OO ball, by the aldermen of
Germantown, to answer the charge of passing a
onuntetfelt $5 bill on the bank of Illorthrimarica,
upon Dr. Kritzer, of Germantown.
FINANtiAIk iw*---0,10114--tgoijk-k.
- ,
The,- *Mil
r
, arLiz l ngnqa, bay
Thee area - itatitido the itaikhaard to.
day, after the small shalt yeater--
day. heading Railroad - Ito k °plaid:it an stearin at_
g, nion the lent ratini - or yesterday; but falleffsgittifir
22X, Pchnilkill- Narrgation, prorated - strak; , openeid:
heavy at 11k', but abutted - Multi the:tbril tir'l73(
.
Baok stookCiire-in little domed 'We note the 41110 f
s few shares of bank gar ch—Thiladelphis 113, Ooneoll- -
.dation 21, Exchange Zia Ar.. ,Plttibuny 66. Monte
Canal aharsa apid at 6416, and the y preferred at 109. ,
Pentaylvania Railroad stork told at 3131(-s pen of X. -
North Pennsylvania, trailer-cents oald at KIX; and
the six•per-tentt at 64 Catawba', sevens at au • -
The money maritet . is, well supplied with (nine,
which mob for investment in A 1 paper. Anythingisf -
lower grade meets with purgation and cannot be lentil,'
so'd at the lower ra!eit. In New Ift.rk thii rate
loan in quoted atiodi and 7.1 a the, dgnre for itrat•Olaae.:.
paper. - The rataehMe sze,falli one per teat. higher.
With such rates prersilleg in :New-York after the bank
loans have been reduatd nearlya Willer' aria quarter
in a weak, shwas that the preasare atlieriorreif: is hat--
great, and that the banks a.e Prudantlytakiast st'aiin. , .
Inge of the general. sue to put thenoselyea into a eater
petition before the fall halite's commereas
"Ifs Morns Canal Company has declared a semi
an'' as maieend 06 per cent upon the preferredatott,
nd 2 per ceot:n - teniketan.OlatiOotsilelf
n the 2d of August. The Philadelphia, .atookialdeni
will be paid at tho °Mesa! Z. W. Clark fo Co. _-
Amount of twat shippodlay the Wywallag - COal Com
pany for the weak stain laity 161bh wa5...13,162 tot.. -
Amount previously raported - ' 166a96 - no
.
Sorel Sine. opening of suavigation" ' ' 178 467 do j
1. , .. ..... es' among, of the kaki of the oity of Aar
Yore, On Elatosaioq , eery /to /doo oteeen.irt.u.. 1 1a / 3 t!•
gate tee following changes irons the previous esthibmtf
July 9: , . ..., . - ''
''.
Decrease in loans • " Ii 103 975
Inmate, In !stole ". 7'4.030
_Decrease tri coroulition -" .. - ' ' 861.2•6: _
locr, sae of u , .draWn'depe , eitil —' "
.1,14,859' -
tn
. -• ,
The New York Ti,sa tale : - „ _ - -
" Tie e bank atatenteni well Siff vrd ilitiarall4 en i; bye!-
Bees el ales. The gore 91. the apse.% average ii q rite --
.qua to the previews ,eetiuletion. -White toe deo...a •
in the I.sue ne $l. ted 6761 e .qn.ily a' imitable,
.11 „ilter -.. :
present' • line, , end - emutoshot Jtotonk.te for *ter tile ,
ano en i :Lie fee ilvicticenunt imeghnt.lorough',iiii week „.
Toe' merrantle - ingsgemews,et lone. 'leer jai the' .
heavy import alaraine.c of moo,' and4ol., ppihillo
be gradnolly l lee.ening end with rem.rieble ease and ,
quiet. At the ions; itme, ttetsioe motey.tinders are
of.klog Tether lower term- fot,,p tat papa th .r. when'.
Lae tnollolloeiwoot two, tailless heeler . Baste esew a... -
done to-day in th fey._ to 'sixty d.ye , ae.eist..acie at d _
per cent pw ADOUrd. Lancer-dates are quoted 7 per
Cent for shrive, ninety days„to IOU: uOulbs;ind 7,110
8 per cent for tour toatir-molthe, _The preference is.
.ore decided y for *he stoner d.ted, it',, at,the lover
rate of interest. Demo= loans are again mode at 6
percent to the atock, brokers.. ' - - - • =.- -_ '
We quote also the 'follow:us notice:46le statement -
from the New York Times : . r , __ - _ -
We have men on the.etreet tO.day a panel (glow- - •
month.' bills. 'Doan in Jane by the ft en Id. (events -
Utah contra:tore .of the Government upon toe ~ , War -
D sortom. t and rcempt..d, ono tidal many, by B,,ere.
tar, .1' B Nem d. Three bile are m.d : for r nod came
of 026 000 es h, °Awls 017 for a cone.derai on already
rendered gat upon what Au horsy. or .fkr. woe& '-
urecedent they am occepted poise's) oar m rotas taxes,
d e. not appe.r. ..: , -
inn Grenada Repubilton, of the 9 h heat , says t
"The sere On the Miss saippi Cintrai Railroad' hive
been roaring several dip to with:. two, roil-a of the
place Trick !genie doutcoue, to progress i the brink _
work aurora the flyer g• 011,0tare11,00, atm ft 1e ZIGW
thooght, by themseng.gied in theidaPrOot dowse - it:m . 4AS :-
of the work. that the-care will .enterlereardiahairt.
theist of rententber i , '-; ' ''. 7 ' _
.7....):dass,T,homstin,pfseident
„of, ,the : Peons. Gen"-: -
true( Railroad hie purchased the firm 0 , lasso weveton.
on the West Chester Direst Beamed • in Delaware
_
couoty—led acres, at s26o"per acre. " , .' , - - _ --
We have ex /allied A new etude-bolt to the " River
Miasiea'ppl', from 81. Pout to Now Orleans," pubj.lie4 ,
by Alexander Haithill, tie, Yerk; and fat tile here Ty
...
T. B. Peterson ec Brothers. "This - new guide - !Dinh to
made upon the plan of Lloyd , a - Westens Flier cl:indif,"
is decidedly in adysnes. clrelionar pittdiceiatias-. as ea -
mere map of the iiversod its bscks:wbilei Abetted, de
cor pt'oos of the - cities- and °bloats of general deteteat
in the Missisalppl Yalley , make lta,valustde, book for
the library -, 5 he accounts of do .de and eartheirMltes, ,
and the wrecks of steamers, by snap. by it's, and by
e xplosion, give the work the "most _thrilling interest.
which in not a little heightened blemiti forty litilarge
auguring, . All who trade with Western people should
mike themselves famlibir with the contents'Of this
kook.- - -
PHILADBLPHIA STOCK, B.SCHANGE 13AL7IPi
Jo y 19. !UV ." ".
Bercumennwr MASLNY. BROWS. At 00.0 1 / I .lar-10S5 57017 X,
AND ziONANOIIVIOIIIII6, 101021117111 COSAWII WIND
AND 01080101 , PllaraVil. - ;.,
_7: • • _ , .
, ilitoY BOAS. i. .- . ,-- - ,
1000 Bob ll'at Ca , a2 be 63 - 10 Nerriatorn B. 60
1000 do ' - he 636 - do - 60:
800. do hi f 8 8 do • - 10'
60.0 NPa B. 6e. been 64 . 7 Penne it 8 , 6 f
2010 do .....bfien 64 & .. do 8 Plf
600 'do ......16on 64 1 Harriette:vie R ...'l,' 68,1‘
20 , 0 lleatiefir It lis MO 80 2 Dom & i,m
8...
..110
1000 Oat OS let int 7. 41 1 tioneo'ldatioe .11k . 24:
400 fehlgli New 6':. 9', '6O Bch Nov Pfd ;cash 113(
1 Morris Col Prld.l(9. 8 Philo Bk.. in lote.llB
6 do 109 8 Exchange Ilk Pitt's 66
26 Id orris 0a0a1.... 643
- B.IITWMIN
VOO Lehigh NW as '
- BROO.f D BO f. RD
moo tub 6s 1"..13. ..... 94X 11 Ponca R... . 2.lrs 88X
600 N PBDIIO Rift.. 89x 72 _do to lots tl.io 89%
Fro do 89.30 -2 do - INIX
WOO Reveg It fl'a '7O aFO TO Bproo 4 Piste Rto a
100) do man FO 'I 80011 14
800 do 110 7 4 4 Basis.* Meadow R.. 56 _
1000 N Poops R 8r.... eB% :0 Habl lissr Pad.-- -17 X
15 Poona .51 704 88R
CLOSING; PRJC3I-45TRADY. _. •.-
Eh , Iliksot, - - - - N . ". -- 4 - Ake
Ph 114.1 3, 9 9 X .4' Pile ' 27% it(
'4 I
. rsaart&3llmll. 4. -13 :
-'t te r ' ,Zit' - •et Te lett rot; -51 . Or:
2.4.4.-mr-rie.r.lalt-00-- -r' -110)4 , ..{: 4,24 .... g .. ea U
Heading IFt. .—. 21% 2• , %10r1i lalasslll.. 10% 19%
0' tide 10.. 80 50% Lebow a 24.07. 48 -
' t ot ii, '44 4 9 91 N Poona ne.i.. sg : sic ,
. 1 do'BB a off 89X 69X. I , Ce.a. .... . 14 04
Parma 11. 81k 938,1 " 109 — Bl
it I
,- 2d m 81.... 80 97 rlstswios R•. . 2% 4
..
Noe Can 1 lon f 4 ' 54% 'r tat mt We 40 48'
. pn.7. 109 - IF&Floutb R Oita 80
fiehlrias ea 812 OS . 2• .1 9. - t B's 1 1.... 48% 4 X
. 1mp.434 .. 72 75 Rooetclrina Bta IL - - lix
se Nat 08. 8 1
Phi lb delphia Marketr.
The Breadisinffs Market is dull and unaettled to day;
there in very little demand for Flour, and holders' are
free sellers at $5 $O l for Boned old Wok reparaire,'aul
$8 16 barrel for fresh roue - de. made from - tiew -
wreak but there are no titers at these rates aisept the
trade. who are buying osulionsly at frcm these dimes
up t , $8 10ml 15, the latter for fancy btaildsae.to gee&
Ito ant freshness. Bye /lour sells slowly at $404 25 4fr
barrel. Corn Meal Is alas
‘ qufet at $8 TO. for
_Penna.
Wheat fs more plenty to• day and pruchesers are rather
unactled et the aloes. aides %Deluding lib2nt4 060 bush
els Olt dr prime new Stutters red at 240 e. and 1 600
bashels white at 14601 0,, the latter for prime Dela.
ware.. Rye is fu straly demand at 852 fit old Penna.
Coro is d to and rather n'ow, bat the 4-mend ban fallen
off, and a Calgt tale oq'y wet made at 8830 'or good
Daiwa:re yellow afloat; tom• holder. ask mere.
Oats are unsaleable a d dull at 4'o for Posies. a (terra
of Southern Bold at sorceth ng lees, esaitt' s pricy.* not
Published Seth is in lightinoPly, tut the demand for
goeroltrou le rot aerie at $2l 60 which lithe el:tiler=
rating rats* for Met Vo 1. Cotton is on et; bet firmly
hold. aid about 100 bales brodgbt full prints today.
Gra:cies
_bare him very Inactive, but without any
eisaagestOnote In the market Prov'slons are telling
in li . mo crate say Wks dealers at Coady prices and
beldam are Oral Bteds—aboutloo bashe's Oloverse.d
a' 55 60m6.15 41 , bushel.; nothing doing In - Other; kinds.
Whisk-y is nochanged; Ohlobbls selling at 261, Penne.
do ale, wheat 20(021e-end drudge at 25,1( -
Maikrts Dv relegraph.
Now 0111.11ANEI. Jall 19 —The now. from Norope,
per the stammer City of Washington, had no et It"'n.
the 110 I on' nostket to.dwr The sales ettotoet..4 to tOO
bale*, w0d.38; g briog quoted et UM* the ta`err of
the Peet thrre day. frot no 8 000 bale-, sod the ft eetpte
050 bales. against 1650 1)1,1,51411m recotp , s curb g the
o.reeponding perind , ast year. Sugar is o.m et 15Xo ;
sloltmei sails at 49X ; freights on Cotton to Liverpool
1 642 d.
GENERAL Persalt.-:-Aulong the worthies
who Opted during the era of the Am. rican
Revolution, perhaps there was none possess
ing more originality of character than General
Putnam, who was eccentric and fearless, blunt
in his manners—the daring moldier without the
polish of the gentleman. He might well be
-nailed, the Haden of the North, though he die
liked disguise, probably from the tact of his
lisping, which was very apt to overthrow any
trickery be might have in view.
At the time a strong-hold called Horseneck,
some miles above New York, was in posses
sion of the British, Putnam, with a few sturdy
patriots, w‘s lurking in its vicinity, bent on
driving them from the place. Tired-of lying
in ambush, the men became impatient, and
importuned the General with ques'ions as to
when they were going to have a bout with the
foe. One - morning he made a speech some
thing to the following effect, which convinced
them that something was in the Wind :
Fellers—Yon have been idle-too long, and
so have I. I'm going down to ~Bush's, at
norsenech in an hour, with an ex team and a
load of nova. If I come back, I'll you
know alt the particulars; if I should not, let
'em have it, by the hokey I"
He shortly afterwards mounted his ox-cart,
dressed as one of the 'commonest order of
Yankee farmers, and was Soon at Bush's tay.
ern, which was in Dasession of the British
troops. No sooner did the officers espy him
than they began to question him respecting
his whereabouts and findings hits, as they
thought, a complete simpleton, they began to
quiz him, and threatened to seize his corn and
feeder. ,
- -
t How much do you ask for your whole con.
sarn 'I" they inquired.
.; For marey's sake, gentlemen,w replied
the mock clod-hopper, with the most deplora
ble look of entreaty, "only let me off, and
you shall have my boll team and load for no.
thing! And if that,w_en't dew, I'll give_ you
my word I'll return to morrow, and pay you
heartily for your kindness and condescen.
sten." -
Well," said they, t , We'll take yon at your
word. Leave the team and provender with
us, and we won't require any bail for your ap
pearance "
Putnam gave up the team, and sauntered
about for an hour or two, gaining all the inter.,
mation that he wished. He' then returned to
hie men, and told them of, the disposition of
the foe and his plan of attaek.
The morning came, and with It sallied out
the gallant band. The British were handled
with rough hands, and when they surrenderLd.
to Gen. Putnam, the clod-hopper, be sarcas
tically remarked-- , 1 Gentlemen, I have only
kept my word. I told you I would call and
pay you for your kindness and condescen
sion."
Faes/caiss.—A. free, open and undisguised
behavior is an 'honorable appeal to generous
minds, and ho that takes an undue advantage
o f such a course commits a kind of high mgt.
eon In the social code.
...:vslni 95
Inr 19 —Vroming