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ID . 61 xxotrZinGE:Qr ,Oritarnor, tlo'i ;5.:1_,414,,,`W1:+1,'':'„4a.v:i.1-Eositiiti tiarat•-t4Trni-A.1,1, -. .. ; --,,,iirt,'"° w-- . '`''spzii itintisror :' , ,S 0 „ 8 :” ' - ~ 1 .. ' :t 1 1 - :, Va" 1" ' 422'l'll 'l, x " ---,, - : ii„„--!..,,kilatOr. AfimitESPoNtilitiok t-- ;+ ! 119, 4 , , ~ ~- ' . 7, - ;- „ 1 . . 4' ' " - ""ti i il'it'iati tab, a .bp. ... ~., -y, , , .., : 1-r‘4,p4,4,T1t., --. . ' aviiir 'limn( ior Tram -1.71415;k4119'"1" N 614 '1" attarotot.t. - /utusA, fbara Poof 4 YrAball'Graul, , , , - , n, - ..-4-' fluininfr or ritiliitL4nrEl4 ' t vas linT - Z ic - 2 ! " - 7., .i,f,, , tains ",":'rtin 'l 4 4iltri ' -- lii o 4l :t .' 7, 1:- ank-klif,',til'ill:i'*iizil%P's4' 'l' l l ik aity-I)uit. 4 v 'f' t ' - 0 - via 41A201,- liki• -" rit - lalicsill-limr YORK AT , - ~ _ , , . . -,"'''. b-• - ' ' ToSODAT,"; n. - ' ' - 1 ,- _. __ , ...,1 , -.AT. ,?7 -.- , • i fair VIM An :";, ittabEgatttgOtra,,l.,Tol Lin 0 ~,, ,„ , ~ ." 4 ,31414,6,..bek.:1+;f35 - b44i . ii, 11.,..it 4411-7.-':410111.1W434:::. i ' - I*(l6iiliiiliir io - oia 1 " or 4.ng a fgll , „ k , ,, . ._. ~ ~i 41,44., ,k a., 1 1.14.-iisti... , L. 1,.., , w s Aloksto,ll - PLOoln'N AT IYDnel ? 1,0 -1z SIJIT4O ~ , T _ aI,,i 4, AL PuTNAst-- -All ' 414 P2";1 AN° AIR ' 'cle - Sr.Ltott. , !drat; iii. ',irorion-Titetitarn_on, , .. . , '' '. '''' LAO2II4 FfILZ, :No 5-Non fora of , '"*" T22°u9aa- Latlloff' or Loofa NepOlsoi: , or Bobb,:..IIVAIS ~ .. , . n . A,,,,, 1044 , :r . . !', , , iillitiligoritilac iiiaTatisli- 74ii.‘ 1 , 4 ••• • -,,. , , , -,J-liiiii Aiii.lllo/1118115--14,iSga" N -7 3 `,- ' ,„ t, :' ' '' '- - ii:PTIESS tified ' Vl 8654 1' a . 61 4 '' 11Eill If '' - for`the `singli, copy, and to °bibs ,'1; ,r_itt1.1.3,.,,,viYz A ..., it,,,,,,iir ihtatos, Vbr ii i PILT' 4 "i' -`er.„W-,.47..7.*-- ' at , tit e , , t a i a,o 4 o mu RIM of' TO tronplA ,i'or Ate , _ - Ellt ' 'fl - for - foolltog.-, -,- t. ' 'l f o e;i4V o / 11 PP 4 hhAq' T- •r • , ' ~, :• - ' 9tL ienkl.; Plea .t s Joihii- - Foitrtif"- at the fAitto ;of t -Al " , r -- .. ,--.. "-n, - , -- 'n ,- ' ' - 1 - 11gu'rer 4111 - 2 go: i - -,illiiiirbOtrAllirtfigiVfMA -- i `.', Letter -fr Ont - , UtfOr,,:lip N9 T i l l i ag klii.4' ?" 9 7 ' , 1, bt .• '' ll4l4tioiliarg ; - Leittle i'frold , qitkltion , /!0 7 9, , itittail:llols . 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'', :-,' 1: . • .3,..., ; ;.--,330. , 1. , , , ..,. 3 ..; ~., The 4..er3., -.. • , • 3.3 • <3,7 -.lEly3lbt - 38teamebip,15iii41‘,„iit:,Efillfa*;:y;e "It . aio; • " .... ; itlititelioikluilii iiilvis ti4t,te.E . iiqpe..: ' , Ai, il,iwit`ix '.,_ ...*,the....pr, ,le :. fully - copiLqatli, but mo (Ftrtlier,pai. , , 3.liitilitti,h44 tratutpirod, temeaud the-fact that' the: - 3: :1'4;04 of , Tuntaur.43ll4,'Nodertii are • 4.l3:fiitut:4'. ice, 1 '' 'tlittiefit34lo: , ''N pi•J'i'ioii,if iii:ili,asik . . 4 9 ,iiii,„,, k i a iii,la ' , 24ebte, - (ii,ii era :on tki:iath,i,hon,,fiattlitizi 4iit,i'aili,,,yillk. - pi; eirtsitiiity.c./0:111 atidrets3* Mit 1 1 _ ' ( 1 - 161 4 4444, - lii_taprttioTitvgaivilf sibncliaded I;iiii4tA;.; 1 r tli - i - 6pitset - Wiii o,' , iitlorliiiittielli44,49liC4isl°ll l . tify Witti'' longer RA 101)16e*itc: the `-itttOreatii . ''-!,lVotiliiiiiiP,Nks . ;*ar::4l l o.E;43ittl44dk,tii4ria '. " , ,iiiiialtigi , lotixtwit4icroi.,,,ii,,, - ani:edar k>" hill ii f lidialifAlif_ W iror u ble - pi= 41.4*.0iptituli*tatio.bielmAiiii itlllelAldiin4 , -- ,Fariosifeirtedirtroilio — ta - tds'ais liSkdai,. -- ':;mid,rOariltdi' -, :- 'MAO tAilf', Wiiiiiiii)V6tifiliolid'qii::xniiiiia:_ : - 10 - IfilOgiiali'Ainiiir 7 ) ; (*dit eititeet lila Oottsit ' ,diiii" "( . 7 i kail :been is,a!ge4 A*, fornVp, nd* Oabiniy, Clitinv 0;1364' li:rmilaillteili# ii *0444 'at 'au; - • 4crt:9o .4f 'iVa:fiiiiip§f ) - yeitti;i;`,.hiing t.niestlitipliii,Y., r, ~lifib16101. 1 141" 0 , r the'lif °iv; tlylokii ii'frr,York - 44.1110yi1ii,V.-hlyer. titior'.novro 'Wain , California' . ; .sshtoli,iiriikrbolotind !trout °Ottani: ' ' •-,, -; ,'_ :- ' ' ' A dasvatoli:frota 4,ddle states that tho lADoder. I I ' - Wiitioa' a Pliilsaiiiiiira iesief-fi . okiiroiebri Ito : blle1? - uf:'-- -- kt'llij44ity,ekii:Mtrbd:0 off without . .f - :4,: ". ..4::„Wril Pi ii , ooiaiwas eniiaiid near Freeport, Ilya014:, the 'del l , before= yesterday;' -.A? German; rtaiiiol.pidie:*fito,f„litur:d thif',:_of-16,..ittildrin: 060.:6 - 1461C,kti,04,,!fjcb,a4; - a.;1,-47ictitt;:li:Vilaliad '• iTAti,ti,tflat t it 111gs - 4440 d10,!,‘ It Is not: tited _ •- : trbidnattso led th;thir dreadful ariaid; blit _we hop - e,- . ~ fir the trititobed mtudertir'S_ • own saki, that' Ito . - iv i iAriliitillei-Oit)4 06ilie,rls butter 111143.*04. lir,er:fafkinkl:_•:- ,:,:L: . -,, •,, 1 , -4..,-,,, -...,:::: •_: --;•,: - 61::46r; Jitteies, EN ~. ins' :bs,dit -, dostdnateektr' • Clo);sooti; by!, toir,roitioilatto , ',_ChitiverOit -- nt" /to matt' , coocric&ttitiific4l lif kififierie ''. ",'-- _,,: .416:.Gi000fi; -, iiiiti - OefixfOilig, - -iftirittit'ilfliiio'inted ' ' (6 thblog.7-1 - 4 4 .1 -46 *.A '.l,kg)i*iiii!4 - 4,iiiim, - _-lowaii , . . ii#1.4y0, , .4;0it.0410,44 tliex!iiiii*of postm aster: -; ' IRAti , g: l ,49l%•• 94 4 , ltopitleas , nsighborhooo - Mr.; -.. 0 . matithrtS.ltiiiirt, Is "storrapplylaitoi two Ititan'ti i': ~the flral Is fat an onsiStonairrhiot opin oi„hic opeoi al _ onsetitildi . i4A4 - bilffeiti2l4, , wetting ,, or say, - 4 - ifyii t ii?psollt,,too:foiiint - ctoteo tfop i'' and th o sionottfoiyolsonsposlticia to supersede , tblirelent' - • loather tlits used' on billiard :otrret;-:*,1!lo \' - 'svilf„ tint' - , . -Tetis,ord fidlik. - ofady:ppii„ - 441:,,ph; ifyifili ae it: - 1 ofoliti , 4);`, , ,i,"lpWcii#•.ti.nt,;.4oc(ngpsilltije, , 9.f. Atc;.,4li.viiio'.(liiliooliO:ifilotiii 10 otogniniien - Of : . 1, :. ffailoinittP. l B2olo, ha'heol"-tetthiitol-trAd - 0'; . , • ": nisap•titirlinidat'sdttinln•dif lid I'i, Itittl4r JO 40')ii, i • - iititiii,44 . oitaiii . 'Oitii?, , '—',; `' ",‘"::, - ,3: ;,!/.," .. -- , AFM49 ,I F-hNifi4 l -4 4 4t0tra0•4)zg P;P.,: l *.Ps• gitt•ortbaoi Orhtrinsiii, J ,thlstook 8 tatss f oiht•r_ Itli- i rti,l'GrOdSraittiOutrifAbooirjoodi users-of the. Ilatted:tesafiti; : tti:ita;beld'aiPhlltidolphiton'th'e , -- 1tte44.44 peppyii#i , ,ifeyfi. - ''','. ,' ' ' -,' ''.,', • ,'_.:..,'..:-. -.— ;,§t i i(i l ;mio ' ;,li.47Pß:iiPisiii4l l i*tfait York Xit'his.fltri*4 - S,lria"t Ost,ttiorailr/J:obp.ollatniooro f . - - : attar prasbilfrug aliithit gandto - IttllrOsiX tkoveillOgi: - 1 ' stokuisli7 iott.7.o3linoflittiioeffi.hitientioliii*,' fii . ...‘,-' . otiii4loYilibea'loo4'44, l Fot.iil'irii9; . kniAiiii!: - .;ogni eiteCitT4foliof. 14., , iiWii - 04.: ~ ,i , .:t ; - Th. , - .. . *!‘"4"diloolin sodas a oamndiattos,itoit -to the 'Now r Y.!,t)c : ito:sfti-,,,fotiiikis ; the. •.goeorollii.boitiiirod - fti. f ' I, ett.34i, that Um E mptior.-i'of '11.41415 - tho hind of ~ :t the, Greek: Cl4-;iicii,• - , 11 1 -4,041 ..T...f1t,;. :. , . .._„ 4 411' 7 4 ;Chu r chl" 3 ertil " tadi;''4''' .. -- *, _ter* a z d re 30„I? en ont,, ~ , aniVd9Syndh, - . reabiryi - ,an? - inthritate. baud -•• vrisaetha Point fs forlittri! - qwholtd,l,iitpitin.:,lttit iootoilimillifit.offittro- - Of ' , thol(rtikik6cok L..ol:;:fhisioo .. - ate fitajoigatlf_* 1,,i04, ogo4olid - of Ova Wish= ,00,-„lgott4 oil visa , Ottiie_fit• --- Iti 1ife,4,104.0p,g0i hlefrituilltin or - Athena:, who hits dot anx,shisttual - auttiortty. but manly' :taat'fir - rdattaAltiklhit* . ' • obtirohdirsipi.. ll ,„ , %., :•.' • ,•- ~ , , . 1... :-: : , , , . -., -11 , 1041043d . P6Ohp , , bilif01:iro:stStIthsiii ..hpid-:4 • I• ~ . - stokii H lol ':o lt iVikroi#OE' , #,lfrtfq Firlifuloi* .7 ,_. , : - T;iii,iii f__.`,,iiiii., 4 4:#o_4,;( 4 -4.ax**l-,0400 thukuih ;hot: '' -044;i:1-4 1 0A.9tttl. It Is alto*ddlbat thesisdinifes , -:- 'loo,ditoilignathdfatraitratotiteflltirtitb;dr "tfidOlir . • ' * - ..io,.4ityl'Aftsiovitiiiiiitile'lliiidigd-': ', ''''- -' ',; ', ; ~..',. ltAilte#6,,iiiirec."( itaititto:4l.l4l4:ipili 1111 . /3 , .- - Ni s l 94i s ciA.ll, - ;-4..lit 6 .4PitiVAllag..4,bil 6' fannerly., • . -..-:-' of AkOttihns•ld•ront - id, and, Patoisted; in England' -.•' , -! , :anA'sitallirit,iidhttitros,•st,nevr toliiityltitable. , 41a, 1 ; ._ - ,ailditir:*isitittrioiliad':ittidisradoeyritlidiit`thd alde-defat;s:altiairlii':hftteit'esahlei 'being of ii , eit - iii , oroi'S'ilt4=xoVomfiii.omii;'* lonief. . - i1i0i1.41.0. it 401*0.1,4*icinr:of.oking 7 aon - be, _ ot*ligiggia,cwsor ; 0:44 *lig "pitaifisti - tie; fib* 44iffittiOliiii - iiiie;iirtii,*f6ii.i'of„efy,tfli- - Jt:' '--• -: :,6 th t ko4 lSf*l3_l9; *- )AWizik i t :',, t # oif:rm ~ ,i ,,,ifiiis .41:01Roi , cinati - ,JUSWI6 rsotati ,, zkairs:jaoginorale lai* - 4;04 1 0. 1 1 0 41_ 1 01#0* - tar,A25 Alt obialoi ..-'?•:-:-.. ingirkAroloi4.olipott'lli:iatti4.o4A,,,.tag - e, ~ : 4 11ikibi', ' ,i1 : 0:: . o ' l 4 lll ii s i - iiiiitt',.o 7 4lllll9o4:l:. Z':.'o4litilkol,l Wit it Wielhit7'?,':'''tl"''':` '' ~;..,;.' j.:', ,:1011(0/41e`i.., Vii_tX4l44*; - 0-: lit *4 - AA- -, 1. „:-.,„,:44l.44:ollo:oo*ert,Opirk!),,,Nakt.ioppitlieti. ;„...z . , - .-„: - /Q ui4 Wi , ifi,lis taintiO:f , "--f.1. ,: -?- --- ' , 'd.'''. 4 ; ' - ' - ': :1'- ' . '' ''''. , ' 4 .. , :4'..4..'- - I.a.i, ~,,,- ~- ' ' .',....::: ....rs . , , ".• 1 , !,!.:f..,, - ----..,, -.1.0, '.,& : .,1ii1 , 129ttc..)..041ipti;4. ,, ' os•Treek.iwilido* , 14 G.p. ti` ; - i-lvifilitilf Obs 4 ;99e'llAr', pt .tfe . , :45fl 1 itbk4 'i'filoViiir iliiistii4c;g6 . *,:4l6:l - s., , . f ,tioc6tolitlot ' , ll- . 1 , .:-look*ti.a • k 'honk i..44,sotty` i 'lltho i iviillty,*itzl, -liirilikilaiolit; 'iyir*OttioiiiiciMitr i .l4iiOn'r.,,eit*V' : : -, • 1, 44 9, 14 f ';‘ 417 ' 1 ; -. :51 05 ,0, 1 :4-#,I t t it „:,1 , , i i„ e ‘ ei k„, 1 4 11 ), eli " ---.' tiki.pgk - -....A;sitYctiPi P.7V-kerStP9?!..9PliTil. b 41oltilis . , qit,iiti* tarjtot 4 , ? iy l i, i o e ti l i t 7rfoi vca p tii - on ti 'd ,4, o t n h t .o ; , , j Ailii#Q4;itia)Vilio: 1 :.). : ; , ' -.., - , •},-,;.P., ",.-ri fitliol*Vp:_ifebtoori. !va - sitiivoiftio - 64; idtXtrAtrilKikike 1a t e.;044,74)0 - 4I of* : - .490f*04'1-**.iiii?s_P-' oklimifieziboiribiw, 340 , - 01011 - oii - it44:ftittiii , 14taKkr,:it'.itt'Jviil the liko4..ot,, , ,gooiiie & 4,igili.o - iiiii i 6,i: ,, , , .,, , .. ~%.,, , „ - _-i -- -: , ; , ': ..:.--„--, .:-- • • "Eafrokkeon AtralLs.. : For the lantltritatia-thinitiears, Italians have , drealned..'OkAr,igollaWcAlie7.kAY ° .. theriihed the . . 440.00 . 1 a 806 1 '010; unitedi atul frgo:ltaly4Tliei z 'Arcie - alni6A withirt reach'of Mil in.itAB. iiagerit expaeted it when r..rAnne ' and - . Aardlnik. took.: up arras against The citizens of Tuscany, hiodena,,lnid: Parma expelled their Austrian r Wars, and teddered their •allegiance to Vic- Tho Sardinians bravely. Alrenr4haniselytaiiiito the tight for Italian 'froMOna: 4! - -§ye:cesi„,after,,...sUccess •was gained., -01Fle,thee7riinilt4, I:alibi on , the worldly 4olip,ir:ofAreating your inertly as if ;he rkneeine' -your frlen4;and'of acting to your. if he inai, one day be your 'enemy; ",lightly - ,(lt!";"*liihth44 Icisa . ,o'onlY a niolety_of,hin'lts, 114`..tili;t1rItOry., • - '-,..N.areiso*,:isSitres „his fioldiers, that 'he aaade:peacc,henause.the Contest was .aboitt to - E0 3 M 11 41 cp c,: , r tin no longer initeeping with the:;lnterests. -France btul •in the war.: This 7.seeinslo - f at-apprehensions,' otitert ained by Frainfekof gettiriiinVolved In a, war with other:Geri : nail Stites. it adOppgi. , T IA 111,44 , 4 ,vap , 5a. 1 1 11 ?.'+' " -- OY - 8 0L' ' Wbdataini - x . 1 0_44 . • i' , , , ..Fsl.9cle d'ossitt, Wi3nding, his way-lusts,to .tieniili; beaten soldier and"degraded ruler, .telte.kis army that,ln making , the peace, he , itadllelded to the unlayorablo political.situa .tion,lia;whiohhe Wag placed, because his nails, rat allies did not, as was mipectelf,rcome to lkis asitit,pn`rel "This' may a tlso point a "prtissia 4ind;`, t '''' States. Condemned: by differeht'grounds, that they, held the balance fairly ,hatareen beoth:' . ' • 0,4 - trance and, -Austria arrange, the terms ;of, ths,:peacti.treaty :without' taking •tiennsel -with Sardinia.? .Lombar&ii was given by Ans., Aria to Wronnos, whd presented it to•Vieri)w. Esiarapper..._!.. , Thes Ministry of Sa'rdinia, ,; of Withal Count head,taire resigned offish. • Coma Anus! (if there be she'll a Pm son, frthe telegrams play th'e Mischief with Toreigl - ,stirnanaes) was claargecl t crith . the fti , Siation of a now Cabinet. ,A t mut Ceinit AIIESE, if, such there be, we know nothing,' iticOr.Oe not ashamed to make the confession. .lElis name ; occurs noistiere . in. Sardinian pOli.• Soar, ;1153 could understand the formation of a .4tivernment , tieing confided to D'Artoire :or ..Sot in; o 1 AnOFFEILIO, Howe and ripted'nien ih Sardinia,, but not an unknown .sioti,ntAntstii,;'• 'A'tielnalit point is Genet tAventi;'the , righ't:hand ratan, of .V16.01i lias . resigned „Office probably in dis• tbe eon/411404.0t -peace, on. terms rnorelaTiorable tir4tiiitrlas.than Sardinia bad a right to dictate: , •. /, • • ' 1- • - • Perhaps Anse may bo a telegraphia or ty 'pograpliletinifstitute for'Asile, a Trench cor. 'riiptiOn the name of Count - ZEOiIO, a dietirigedihed 'f3,ardifilan.:;-•sit once Politician ) author, artist and soldier—who was the first Prime iitinister that Vioron twittAriutm ever -had. : . 'He is a Conservative;-yet:it was mairy owing to him thatthe reforms *anted by the ,Oetis c iltittiott of tardinie;:in ' 184.6, were not Jost his; native - land, when ihoro:was ft general',-iAddiati* of liberal" concessions.' ;S/ineeeding.,, , divPira,,.who displaced him in I,Ssfi;•ro.Azsanzo 'Would - substitute a moderate ;fer=sin . i fife";Areh-duites back- among their disaf r "fected• subjects Is . net what Italy looked for. leaSt'ot ' - ntrwss_it'oxpeettd Alitti,the Popci, finterionslythei weakest Prince in - Italy, should . .be'placed nether bead of the new Italian Con. federation:—juever it be folioed, for Sardinia wduld be outvoted upon all questions, to a cdciad' certsfrity:• But unsatisfactory. though Abolmane be, 1/Troweetc has certainly cared 'for 'Sardinia, -his ally,' whose domiujons are Meier/sat •15Y the wecoasion of Loinbardyi Our'Coritemporaries • are slowly beginning to see/4MA lifintus,' and Pesdhiera, two of 'the saifarolit - fortreises, will not belong to Ausl ; .tria,'secting that theThappen to be , located in Lombardy, „as they might have seen by 'a d' at goo Atlas. - - tzi-That,thelpeace should , be viewed with mis truifinlngland; 'enough; 'l,t scents to filika. f hegh arranged 'without , any of the round-about and red tape - formalitletrlef that OirdinnlOcrition?•pigoi;; DOwning street;irrert whfolv now, presides Lori Jone' Itifassr...x,::,a i Eereign;f3ecretary w,ho Cannot , -',,,W,if:hattvit; not yet the French nA.tion manner in' *lllCb. .plAr.e);scin Ife ilta,ilot been ablb ids . : promise' - ilbetatiog , VtiOiti has bitnible4. - Auetilit.' ,Therefore, on hisPeculitir, poil_cy,' should not wonder at hearing; ,ore•-lOrigi :that AU'stria, - with Russia innt.tratce,.irere giving a moral lesson; by follitaiy force, to.. Prussia, or to England. inaaesia`befaie Death. Newyorkka,great place, and New York Coroners -are stremarkable - set of men. In Flilladelplll4 and .n: other places, Coroners do;not.heid tin:lnquestuntil the individual be dead; ' InNeW'York,' they empannol a jury While, the:Person yet lives, ,and get a verdtht accordingly. • • • Qs our readers knew, ono 'ltonaicr d; MAO linked' by drink and, jealousy, shot a bullet• into the: brain of an unfortunate; natnea' STltWaltr,, 88 she was on the steps of a hotel at the. corner of Broadway and Canil street; on Biturday afternoon. The •144 account loft the Wounded woman yet alive, iin _thp; New Terir Hospital. .An ordinary ;Cototterwould.:ltave,•yvaited until she died, , `especially•aildeentorarm, who 'owns to the isheoting,is,ln cultedy. But, says the N: Y. iTributte; ec titAhO suggestion of the'District 14W:tinny, per:deer 4oittLair held an ante ,mOrtern,"e":*autiOtitiOli; on Tuesday last, in the, Case ~)7..inan7 4 l.e..S•rs w viAtri, who was shot," ; 8 : Seveui Witneases,,itedical, included, were extmained,,atuf the-.2'rioune says, lc The testi ttou* here'eloSed; ens the ease was given , to p l . O - ,l46 , ,iilif?;,aftir"ii 'deliberation of a few rendered': the following verdict : That VIRGINIA 'STDSTART elltrlop her wound ing'. by 4 PlBtel,slMt fired by the prisoner, Tionse.t.:l3..l tiCIIONeLD, July„ 23, 1859." „Idacnoi9an. was eininined, and committed. , ' ' 1, -WO-vent:l2'o to say that •the Coroner, how 44eiltdviied,. had no le,gal right to •hbld an Inqueat,befbre 4eatholor to examine or cora l:nit MACIFIONALD; W 1143 was already in safe etr tordy,,,Wed.viastat the , qoroner's disposal, when wanted; if,• after ,* . IEGIZia. STEITMIT'S death, A:jury should implicate him by its verdict. .The Nos e York Herald of yesterday otiutlt. _ „ his - an article, from which we extract the tollertring: -It appoatS by thielhat our corred peudent-cg,Oceasteaid," in tuning his at harp Of , anthonsiinketringi, , , , struck the =true cord tttuh...tti,e'Prvident'a party wished played and cOnquerj/ is au old insahn. IfdblrVideral patronage 'can 'stifle' thi,Vides,of the Democracy by misrepresent and,„by artifices like those suggested, ;41ttroPh' through thp divisions Of Otto friends det_Pronitekt itipitloi4en: It The special dilll - with the Pee -President is a Kentucky - ..pereini 'of ,Mr. GtrfllnlYli poor 'AP . ialte.i i .a.',BOerefarY , of. the -.Treasury. . And I allprobabilityy geloucky, hetween these i _tree; ''Vlrglida between: Wise and :Denten, or -Nevi - York between Dioxrusex and Suvuorm, or Georgia between Conn and ,:iTESIXERIS, of , lilisidssippt between DAVIS and Bitowar,lvill fag to get the Charleston noral 'nation. Neiti'Terk - , either upon Manor or Diticiriliiir,inight,liava - Aecureci the. Baltimore ifoOnatfort '0,1402, had:either consented to, :giyeliay,to„titeather. But the delegation of,l -4855" , -.Tork_ wore ettibboinly divided between mid.Dioxinsosi, and so the Convention flaallreettled:deviri linen Ninon." We tiay.e. isoolvetifiom John id.l3ittler, N0.. 20 ,ohestnitt !drier, a Magnlibiont steel ong,raving Uf PeneraiSitorgo Washington. is something .ofatiritafbiolY pow, the stilted° end general sp. -pflieer..maf the pioturo,beitig very beautiful. It, nutiolt handsome Vetere forifframfUg,. kitforllthei the parlorer the study. .1 . 1.M1013.—C01. J. F. A.cklin, stsioppl,,-18 about mooting a private rest• illneitat his plantation, opposite Red liver Land ingovhtolas 'doggie& to .cost • $1.50, 000-125,000 ,tnote-for. thit - lueni.turs) = and farnishittg. . The fel. ths , plieroUtllis immense Mike : The atylenf.the, , ,odifise is;castellated gothio,..with a treattio en the Mese, tf , lekfool, on .tho triosida. ,mtngs °fiat feet, arid: ea.:tette _ compartment of 1,20 feetAsepvislinnottutect,by a lofty and bean tifally'rproportioned 10wer . .;,. The building will (l ontaiss, , ,so•zsoemsii!exeltnve. -of closotth both rootrwi,wardrobagi Epacicus end amply p r o. .sl#cd. with the modern Improvements, In ,00rntort ipurleiegatoe: tha watts et the building arc hpitatildm with ilasspess or ,Iroor, _John sigtoptigeot c!otat fJr Alabama, (1,0 ,1111: .atop inetaut.. The:de, aegred as taloo -goiretpot, of Maintain, and ray` ,piat6itted,t , l2a Idoptle dtstriot oleo torte ii tho Con. ,tent_ittltaNnita,l Metes. 4te 'Mali, appointed, la 4:8004, , 1 , 016410444104 jpagik ct the ID`ottad r tiatto) ploolsootk,sotthe, diettiot qt; Alabama, sr leb pesitionette ottOntati to eeettprefile the tipie of hf 9 •, An flotir*ltit Osir Illeirohunts. From : interodttitie 'Nth: several of our load ingjathantiati; the v*iiniadepartments of trallii,'Vrd : ' aro:happy to Atkl:titat the existing feeling;jul anticipation 'of- the fall trade, is eminently : hopeful. _ Preparations for a larke business were never - more general in Phila delphia than at present. , The stocks of goods in houses doing'businesti with the South and West are already complete, and we aro not mistaken in saying that our market now -pre sents inducements to merchants from all parts Otth,a_ll,Tilon.suDerier,.,to_any. former ,season in our - history. • In every channel the spirit . 9f irOWlh,g, ofitertitise is . appaient, the 'to. -sulta: of Which , must- inevitably, tell in, our favor. Tn''T)ni , etiation with a leading mer chant on',lilarket, street, yesterday, the latter remarked that ( 4 the introduction in our city of passenger railways, the erecting of our magnificent new market7honses (and the con' , lemplated pulling, down of the old ones,) , and the establishing of Tan Pans, had given to Philadelphia a twenty-live-years' impetus.", Barring the • allusion to ourselves, wo folly endorse the sagacity of this remark, with this exception, that the great metropolitan: im provements hero referred to are. not: the canoe, but rather the effect, of an Increased devotion to our mercantile and commercial interests. . - The :benefits of an increased evinced by,our merchants in ,acquainting tho trade throughout the country with their fad -litieS;l4 advertising and travelling represent atives, were handsoniely realized, in , a large number of- instances, last spring. Indeed, if .we are correctly' informed, the exceptions to a satisfactory trade last season were almost entirely confined , to houses either lacking a proper degree of enterprise, or the requisite means, to exert it. -No matter what croakers may say to tho contrary, old-fogyism" in Philadelphia has had its day. 'I here May be, and doubtless are, a feat fat concerns that can afford to shut their eyes to their own interests, and - remain' stationary (which, in this age, is equivalent to doing'behind,) but the mass of. Habig young homes, of which we have not a few; will either have to branch out from the sloW, beaten tractk their fb,thera trod, or run an unsuccessful race. Not that we - would advocate the branching out which, for want 'of adequate root, becomes.' top-heavy and top ples over at' the first, breath of:a financial storm, but that, which kindles at the firb 0i true 'progress, and •intelligontly discriminates between the wants- of, a slow-coach age and one of .steam and electricity. Our several branches of trade were never more amply-represented-than' they now are. Matket and Third streets, as also, to a certain extent, Front; Second, Forirth, and Chestnut - streets, are flanked With betties presenting advantagea to buyers, in all respects, unser. passed in' Amealea, and in some respects, wo .tnight'sufely add, unequalled. ,A gentleman, largely 'engaged' in the- !Importation of silk goods, informs us that ow: houses ,in that de partment have ontdpne themselves in the mag nificence of-their present supplies; and upon very "excellent authority," we may state also that -the 4 t excessive importations," from. which there have been timorous apprehen sions,,are more imaginary than reef, from`the fact that the shipments of goods to this coon trY have averaged a month earlier than usual; • so that the excessive figures for jute and July will bo counteracted by the reduced importa tions for August and Septenther ; though It is not to be questioned that Philadelphia will, this season, have the• advantage of a greatly increased demand for this class of goods, in consequence, of her additional faoilities for supplying thpui. Our general dry-goodsjob bing houses aro all admirably prepared for the fall campaign. With the commission men on Chestnut and Front streets, the• trade has already actively opened. In the department of cloth goods and men's wear, we have seen opening the moat elegant stocks that have ever beeri imported. A *merchant of high standing on Market street, having the repute. tion athong his, 'Compeers of being the beat bholtel.up" man in the boot, shoe, and leather ImSineas in America, informs us-that the sup- plies of plods In that line n orb never nearly so large, and every way worthy of our great me.: tropolis, Els at, the prudent time. 'From other departments the accounts .are equally flatter. leg; apti, taking them all in all, we think it no exaggomtlen to shy that oiir beautiful city will have it heed and'phoulders added to her rept-, iation send influence in her eac t eossful trade of the coming, season. Mott - icon the mtablish. anent of peabe abroad, and crops unparalleled in their abundance at home, the proipectuhead could hardly bo more promiaing. California. The lost 'California steamer brings intelli gence of a difficulty between Mr. Senator BP.ODEIIICK and. D. Tr.• Yuan; Esq. Mr. PERLYAr challenges Mr. BaODERIOU, which the latter declines in the following letter: 84N FRANCISCO, Juno 29, 1859. D. PE/ILEY, If ass Your challenge of the 27th inst. was handed to era last evenlog by Mt. Brooks. 'lbis morning between 7 and 8 o'clock, one of the servants of my hotel in formed mo that two gentlemen wore below, who desired to know if I had risen. I told the servant to say to them thht I had. The servant returned with a notelts-porting to be tripod by Mr. Brooke, informing use that Gen E J.O. Kewen had arrived, and desiring we to address any answer I designed to year chattel:lga, to Gan. Xeseen; instead' of Mr. Brooks. This mode of procedure wee to unprebe dented, that I had no resource but to deolino the recognition of any note coming under the (Aroma staneea, 14 the hand of a servant. Subsequently Mr. Brooks and Gen. Hawaii called on me in per ms. At this interview, um error committed iu' sending a note by a servant mils surceased. Two :days have elapsed sineo the alleged insult was given. If I had boon modified to recognise your right to demand mtisfaation, you have placed it out of my power to do so by the publicity you have given the matter. When :Stirs of this hind are to be arranged, it is customary to keep them secret, even from Intl :mate friends. :While I. have refrained from malting mention of the allair,4 find it to be the eubjoat of newspaper comment, and the theme .of public coniersatlon,' You knew - at the time you were searching for a gentlemen to bear the challenge that it would not 'no accepted. I informed . you of the fact at the •time the alleged insult wee offered—la the pre. ..$OllOB of two gentlemen—and in language that could not ha mieinttrpruted . Your. ' own sense tf propriety should have taught you that the *fattens see reluctantly oe :cep, ere so different as to forbid my uocepten ce of your challenge. It is but a few days,icon you made oath that you were a eubjest of Great Bri tain. The giving or iweeptirg a challeage could not, therefore, affect your Fulttioar rights, as you are tot a citizen of too United etates. - For many yocrs, and np to the time of my ele vation t, the positioa I now occupy, it was well known that I would not have avoided any issue ...f the character proposed. If comr.elled to accept a challenge, it coals* only ha with a gontleman hold -14 a position equally oloeatod and , responsible, and there axone oirounistmcos which amid induoi, Me urea to do this, during the pendency of the present canvass. When authorized the announcement that I would address the pimple of California during the cstupaigh, - it was suggested that efforts would ho muds to Mice mo lulu did - I°lll4a, and Itiotramined o.tgko nu notice of attacks, freer any sonloe, - ditring eithruS3 If 1. were to accept your etia.looge, there aro probably many other gentle. Mtn Who would seek similar opportunitios for hos tile ineetitga, for the purpose of ncoompliehing is puliticul object, or to cocain public notoriety. I Pannot p.IIJs4 tit the present time to descend to a Violation of the Constitution and the Siam laws, to subsotVe either their or your purposes. Ycoer' drat, to give publicity t 6 the fact theta, was $01.4 Witetititill to Sand toe a challenge, would juitify in gtving a copy of this reply to the pub• 110: C.jecimoiitwocil Will deteimine'toy,coursein ibis regard. - Yours, 44. - 0. Bitonnnicx. In reference to the difficulty between ion. I. 0; DIM - mum and J."llr. (Jona°Tu, already noticed in the Cantina% news, and which was referred to mut4 friends, we tind the follow ing in the Oalliornia papers : • Immediately upon hearing of the award of the R on. cantles 1:, , 13nn1, and icon. Charles S. Fait , fax, Mr. Mcitibbin expressed. his entire willing. Zan! to Joint the stale upon the first oossailis of meeting Mr. Cotfroth, and ahortlyafter on meeting Aff. ColYroth in front of the Si. Nicholas tialoan, on T street, he adtranoed to Mr. Oolhoth, and said that, in compliance with the award, ho dashed to express to him his deep regret for the ocourrenae of 'Thursday evening, ttnucting to 'Mr. Carreto 'his hand, wiilch Ms. °Wroth aceepted, expressing his regret, and his satiefaetion at the re3toratioa of their former amionele relations. •A GREED OLD MM.—A woman named Sa rah Wilton Hughes; a native of Bedgtey, near Dudley, 'died on Batraday last, at the great age of ;113.yeers, without' ny previous illness. She was an inmate of Bodging workhouse. On hor romp vel,,a row days ng. , , to the now Union at Dudley, she performed the Journey apparently without nuy (aligns , . 'Her Muster was a notable one, and for miles around she was recognised as " the nine lives .vroman." ,She lived in tingle blessedness, and nav,sr, had any ohildron., All hor brothers and sisters she outlived, notwithatandiag one Wad horn -15a011! , than forty gears later. During the Whole Of the time . she Was In "the poorhoirse,. al. though entirely blind, she knitted, without any aUI, all the stoohings for the Paul era, numbering nearly 200. Eho oajoyed , good health, was always eery °harmful, hart remarkably neture.—LAtan eze:ite.r.(llii.fs.),Gdatidirtaz. , - nnn e learn that DI el)on' ell's tenet 'teill,'on the 4 1 Annep'rok; aibleh was burnt down laid. winter, will probably, , be rebuilt by a 9pmnzny of 'gentlemen from tbla city, In seaside 'ation of ranuing it without rent for some twelve orClean years. ' Aft: tie tn,bured by the 'beller.expleaten at Worqoutor, Mom; on Bridaylast, aro roootoring, THE PRESS.--PriILADgLP MA; ; 13.1" 4 \ IDNIGHi 7 MAIL: Letiei 11 - oni , : 4 4 0ccaolonaLiv [Coirenpoodonea of The Preps.) - Wesninotox, July 27, 1839 "Oat of town." This is the answer given at the door of almost every prominent silicon, in re ply toe ring of tbo bell, The President is out of town; the Becietery of the Interior, the &oratory of War, the &oratory of the Navy, the first As sistant Postmaster General, the Commissioner of the Land Office, and nay number of hard-working clerks/WM during the last Whiter hotelmen drudg ing -at theft desks, doing the labor for whioh their ,superlara received the credit, Most of the foreign ministers, most of the rich residents, and -nearly all the 'pleasure-seekers; have taken themselves to the railioad'ears and steamboats, and aro now set tled in quiet nooks and corners, or by the breezy shores of the Atlantis. The members of the CAl ntit, who are compelled to remain in town, are de voting themselves to the agreeable business of "Mutual admiration;" that is, oasis one pretend ing to eulogies the other, but earth one at the edam time taking special care of himself. The " oppo ,sition reporters" and correspondents still on the spot, linger around the several departments, end are only too' glad to get 'suet items of news as the members of the Cabinet are willing to give those, oven if they have to be paid for by compli manta to those who furnish such items. But Wash ington, during the recess, contains many objects of interest to the studentand the scholar, Powerful efforts are being made to give 'a new start - to the overland-mail route to California-by parties now here; who are interested ; but they will not summed. Tt is probable that, after Con gress meete, inmates may be adopted; by its sanc tion and direction, to area this objeot, but whilst hundreds of poet °Mose and post routes aro being abolished or decreased in the Eastern, North western, and Middle States, under tho pretense of a necessity imposed by the non-notion of the last Congress in regaid to the Post 011iee appropriation bill, it wenid not do for the powers that be to do more with the California route. By the way, it seems, or at least it has been alleged,that the dlsoontinuanoo of pat ollises and abolition or (lemma of mail routes in tho quar-, tern mentioned, will, on investigation, be found to bg Meetly °can& to those districts where the members of the last Congress were ,z4ti• Lecomp • ton tuen, or voted against the Post Offs 30 appropti• alien bill. There are also • SeVeral MOB in diX. triota in which -Leoompton and Administration mon were defeated attest election. I understand that, in your State and in New Jersey, some of the attach es of the General Post OMee have attempt• ett to throw the responsibility of the deoreate of the mail , servioe wholly upon the sant'. Leacimpton or Opposition members of Congress On the other hand, an investigation will show that expensive and unprofitable Southern routes have, through sinister itAuenass, been con tinued and ineremed, and, in foot, new ones es tablished. A striking instants of this, I am in formed, exists In one of the Southern States, of a steamboat contrast for olrrying the mail on one small route which soma several thousand dollars per annum, where the whole of the postage, from all the offmes on the route, doss not amount to ono tenth of the sum paid for carrying the mall in the 'steamboat. The Southweetern mail route Was this city to Now Orleans, encouraged by the late Postmaster General, and 'the Southern route through Georgia and Alabama, whisk has been patronized by the - department for several years, have, under resent motion of the department, found a new rival in a still more Southern 'route through Florida. The last route, I learn, premises to commence carrying the mails in Oc tober, and to g 3 through from New Orleans to New York by the way of Fernandino and Ot.dar Keys in four days and a hilf, If it stomeeds in doing thie, it will, doubtless, become a permanent regular mail line between those two paints. Re cently one of the papers in your city contained a long tirade exhibiting the repeated failure of the former lines, and the great advantages of the now and ,proposed rival line, and from the detailed statistics giver,,it was doubtless written upon se• mi-otlioial authority, though' furnished to an Opp:- 6itIOU correspondent. No little dissatiafaction ex ists in the entire tier of Southetn"and Southwest ern States, through which the two former lints ran, sit the newly proposed arrangement, and we may anticipate that souse Adttaloistration meta bets at tho next session of Congress will be severe and even acrimonious in their denunciation of this measure, and the balluenoes and means by which it was effected. One of the rules presoribed was the neoes , ity• for b!ds to be continuous through from New York to New Osloane. , it is alleged that more than ono art of engross has been vio• latest, in letter anti in spirit, by- those who have made the new arrangements'. -We leant celerity and punctuality and, reliability in the mail tier vibe, and clamors against arrangements to effect , these desiderata will not be listened to favora bly, but favoritism will not be tolerated any more than such demons. • • you'eatrpot imeglie the fidget that ail are . in hero about Robert MeLano's new projeot of the Illexioan treaty,. °anent Cass deviates that3lo treaty has teen received. McLane is rested pretty roundly for 'throwing the responsibility, in ad. 'Yam, won tho President and hie Cabinet. - Bughavan has been sent for to come hero Immo.. ciiately, stud tend probable , ho here next TuestleY,' and will be bothered more by this question then any other that has arisen during his Administra tion. I do not doubt that if AmLene is left to make a treaty himself, with a pronehre in black and White that the Administration will attend by him, he can mako a hotter treaty, and one more aezeti• table to the country, than ens; made under instruct. thus from here. The idea of the Administration, however, under' any Mexican treaty, being sup plied with money by the next Centeno, to be used to procure the annexation of any more of Mexico, is perfectly futile. Tho purse strings are hold by the House of Representatives The consummation of the proposed McLane treaty will doubtless om elee an abandonment cf the Nicaragua nagotlee. Gone, and save the necessity of sending another ministerthere in the place of Mr. Lamar. Tho true polio , / of the United States as to these inter weenie routes is to build one interior railroad, or niece than one, to the Paoiflo, whioh we can protect in time of war, and whioli will bo our own, and euejeot to our own laws. Let us have a Northern end a' Southern route, and not have the publio treasury the object of plunder for steam-lute speculators, who receive immense teams for little service. If wo do not, within the next fire years, commence a Pa(31110 railroad on ono of the proposed southern, meddle, or northern routes, we may captor to see the pro• vinoial Government of Canada, aided by the Go vernment of the mother country, iconstrnoting one through Canada West to New Albion, on the Paelfio. A Bridsh engineer who was hero a few weeks since gave me information respect ing the feasibility of a rotito running in the Saskatchewan valley of Canada West, which has satisfied mo that the project will be undertaken. lie informed mo that one of the most intelligent and praotisal railroad men in the United States had investigated the data, and pronounced the project praatioeble. Now York capital and enter prise will doubtless be invested in it, as the real terminus on the Atlantic side will be New York. Advienefrom New Orleans state that tho Slidell and La Sero interest there are greatly elevated on coconut of the proposed tienty, as it secures Tehu antopeo, and with it the right to build large cities at beth orals of their railroad over the Mexican Isthmus, to to gatrieotted e if necessary, by de• tee/moonlit of the American army. The treaty is a virtual aoselou, or will BO end in a few years, of the. entire Isthmus of Tehuantepeo to the United States, and it amounts to the cutting in twain of the Reoublio of Mexico above the thighs. If comm. -mated, Yucatan; and the-B'6'4lmm Paola° Mexican States, wilt bo out'eft andseperated from the rest of the empire, and will, err necessitate, have in a short time to organize into a separate republic. The ceesion of the right of way, as it is sailed, through Sonora at.d South California, will also work tho saute effsot, in perhaps ,ass time, as to these regions. It is well known here that an association of New York and Weste.ra spent-. lators, the principals of which are George Lew and Col. Sam. Colt, have made large purohnees in the town of Guayinal, the highest port of the gulf of California, and a proposed terminus of the railroad through Texts and Arizona. Tho late 'United Staten cement at Guaymas, it is report ed here, effaoted these purohases, which include the most valuable eerts of the town far commer ciaF and it in cantemplated to establish, in the- crams of the corning fall, a permanent American population there, wilit business arrange ments of such a character that they will not fail to conk's' the vast soloing end agrionitural resources of the region surrounding the: point. I hove to say that I have got into difficulty about the 'diolosure of the letter of Mr Mike to Me. Buohnnan, and I have 20[10113 approhonelons, growing out of my iatereourse with, confidential neetabors of the Cabinet, that the Proaidont in tends writing a letter full of denunciation of his Most acceptable and favorite correspondent. It turns out that the letter I cent yon was linkes firit draft of the original letter, tent to J. , p. What am I to do under the oirournstanoes? The Pittsburg Post is being subscribed for hero rapidly under orders, at whioh Wigglier Gonoral Borman, of the Washington Constitution, 18 ea• evadingly uproarious. Ile bag no idea of being outbid by Mr. Barr, of the Pittsburg Post. Messrs. Trutt nod, Sclialioroni, it is reported, ere' very revere , againit Cook of Chicago; but his friends boast that the President dare not re• movo him, and it encore to ho the goneral opinion hero. There is a row at tho State Department this evening about some despatches from Moeda° which have ' miscarried, nod which have been opened, 'it is supposed, at Havana. Betne insinu• ate.' that, as the despatches were accidentally [mini in Now York, where they had no baaincas to be, they, wore probably intercepted andoponed by sonic of the agents of the steam•line apoeulatem $0,2 the, eye of closing ray letter I learn that the Pre ddenthas telegraphed from Bedford, directing that a dospatob be neat to Mr: McLane declining THURSDAY, MY 29, int to endove hia projet fOr treaty:4/0. Yon may,, expect r• Bilden, La are; and thelrasioelatos, will not be wellsatielled With this, , The President 'seeks to shift the responsibility upon Congress, Jinks says that for once ho thinks the Presidentis wrong, and that he ought to give General Cass a charms to "SwalloW all Mexico," as he deolarad soma years ago was his desire. OCCASIONAL. THE LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. Three Days Later from Europe. NEWS BY THE EUROPA. THE PEACE FULLY CONFIRMED VIE EITIPERORS GOING HOME. THE GRAND DUXES RETURNING. TROUBLE IN SARDINIA RIG 51t7 0114 7 111N/V OF af Iro UR JAW OTHER aILAUBTER DISSATISFACTION IN PARIS, AUSTRIA RETIES'S TOR FORTRESSES. THE. 'MINOT° THE BOUNDARY LINE NAPOLEON TO vistir VIENNA. OBAITGE BIOTB IN IRELAND. Sao:Vim . " N 8., July 27.—Tho borro exproes, from lialitex,, has arrived with despltehes fur nished by the arrival of the Europa. ,ller dates aro tO tiaturday, the 16th inst., throe days later thou received previously. The etearnahips &ozeaia and Kangaroo arrived out on 'he 13th. • The Ocean Queen reached Seathampton en the 141 t, and the Persia on Saturday, the 16 ch. Tell treaty of pease to fully CODfi , ItIL4, The result of the treat' is genereifymistrusted in Bagland The Emperor Napoleon was on his way home• Be was expected to mash Paris on the 18th Inst., when furtuer details of the treaty wtii probably be announced. In his address to the army, he says that the peace . was concluded because the contest Was about to assume proportions no longer in keeping with the interests Frame had in the war. The Emperor of Austria hod loft the army, nod ,was on tits way to Vienna. Ho had issued an or der of the day, in which he says, in alluding to the treaty of pease, that tt huyielded to the unfavora ble political situation in which ho was placed, be dew° his natural allies did not, as was expeetod, came to his aftlietanee." Count Cavern' and the bardinian Cabinet -had resigned, anti it Is reported that the reasons fur this step were on until:a of the terms of peace being unsaliEtt et ory. Count Arced has been charged with the forma tied of a new Cabinet. Tho Paris oorrespondente of tha London Press state., that there is much dlsaantent tberomith re gard to the tonna of peace, although the fact of passe being obtained gave tunah satisfaation. The Patti eieCiB olje us to the Austrian influ ence being still allontd to rein tin in Italy, and wills for the cxpuldon of the potty Italian POnaes who ore but thu confederates of Austria. The g m pror Naples's, on his arrival in France, whit to preoeod direct to kit. aloud, deforriut; his UMIAK' entree into Paris tilt he can make it at the hold of his victorious army. . _ The Empartr and the King of Sardinia entered Turin no the'lsth, amid the onthusiastio act/Luna- Monad the people. The Austrlau Correspondence officially an nounces the following as the conditions of the treaty: "Austria ar.ti France will support the formation of the Cat/federation. • Lom bardy, as fir as the lino of'the Minch), is to ba given up, and Mantua and Pool/lora, with the other fortresses of the ilistorie Square, as woll as the whole of Venitia, will rout tin us Austrian pos so/sions. The princesof Tuscany and Modena are to return to their States, and a...universal amnesty is•gruutod." ' Tao Vienna earrrspentlent of the London Times soya that three applications wore made by the Emperor Nspoiton to Austria before the Emperor Finn* Joseph 'censen'ed: The over tures were made direst by Nnpoleon. 'The sumo correspondent soya thou the Pope hod boon burned iu effigy at Milan, and that unfriendly feelings existed list/teen the Etnperor Nacoloon and Victor Entuaaaet Tao tartar has lasted proclamation to the people of Lombardy, an nebtolog their annexatien to Sardinia, according idtheir own desires many_ times expressed, and his determinaiion to ameliorate their political condition. Victor k miasmic' entered Mil in on the 13:11, amid the most enthusiastic plaudits of the citizens. It was rumored that itto Eniparor Nalviteon and tLS Etuproes Eugenie malcipun visit the Emperor of 'Austria at Vionna. ' It is ulso reported that thoYconch array had corn laabood tho aouatermaroh for I', ;nee. . . . It Is thought probable that,tha dl.lllitsal of Oar. didal Antonefli, by the Pope, would follocr, from Vie present state of affairs. **rumor prevaite that Gen. Garibaldi was shout illPitilue a preol aviation, and it la considered doubt= lutertiother be would lay down hls argue. trii r le the Ilthinav, .the formation of the llnn ,gaxlan Legion had procetded prosporously, 5,000 vabanteere having ,j3ined. kletter from Rome, dated th . e Bth instant, says ,that the Pope had sent an autograph letter to Napoleon, announoing tile determination to de. mend an armed intervention by tho Oatholio ENGLAND. Orange riots bad occurred in various parts of I.Thit on the 12th of July At Palely, also, u, tilstpriunoe occurred, which became of a serious character, knives and tlre-arms being used • Owe pea vez killed and seven TIZCO wounded danger— ouslq, Tile Ilona° of Commons had passed to second rosuing the bill abolishing, Church rates, by a cote Of 2113 to 123 In both Bowes of Parliament the treaty of pence badlcon discussed. In the Commons, Lord John Russell, in answer to un inghiry, said that nothing or an official character 1943 known, or could be known, as to the details of the treaty till the Ent. per* Napoleon mums to Paris, which would be abet:4 the 18th. Sir James Graham called attention to the for mideble Preach fleet at Cherbourg and Brest, to gether with the gun boats for tile lauding of troops. Lord John Ream!' said that Prance had mace no extrsordinary preparations, and thereforohng land,had demanded no explanations. o,r the Litt), in the loose of Commons, Lord Strafford de Itadeliffa withdrew his motion rela tive io Italian affairs. The Duke of New Castle stated that the Govern ment d•d not intend to renew the liemossi by whieh the Hudson Bay Company held their North Amer-loan territories. A bill would soon be Intro duced for appointing magistrates throughout the territory to prevent disputes between the Indians and Whites; to establish trading regulations, and to ptovout excesses. The Government was not prepared to grant a subsidy. fur the establish. itrionant railways in the territory. The Duke of Somerset said that the cape. dioncy of entering into arrangements for arming the clone mail steamers had been under cansale ratiop, but as the committee of naval affairs in 1852 reported against ouch a measure oa the grated of expanse, nothlog had been done A general survey had boon recently ordered of this steamtuge and other ves:.cl.3 at the tn,,utha of thu rivers, en order to ascertain bow far they might be rendered available for defensive purposes. Itt -the louse of Commons, considerable pro• gress . was made with the army and navy esti mates, and Sidney Norbert explained the pro sent military position of the country and -the menearcs of dotanec. Ile executed that one kindred Armstrong guns would be made this year, and two hundred _before the end of the ilnatialal year. On the 15th, lord Derby pointedly inquired if the King of Sa rdiv la true to party to the treaty of peace, for it wits understood that the Emperor of the t Pronell was hie nay, and not the principal In the quarrel Lord John Russell, In the Muse of Commons, Bald Ile did not kuo4 whether the parties to the ;treaty of Vienna had beau cuusulted, but na for as Eaglaind was Yncerned, no partioulars beyond those published ]tad bccu furoishc" Lott Cowley hied called on the Roach Corrorn. moot for the donate of the pores, but Ceuta Wit• lowskEtold Ilion he could and him be Information uuttl the Emperor arrived in Parts, whiala it was expected he would reach on the 18th, • Thenew tel, graph cable hatwetu Eoglaria and Dermilrk has been succes•fully laid, TbeNeditorreuettu company hod ordered n on• ble ton conocet dl ilta nod nod it is expected, to be lint in November. foe fr;nglisa Government boa fully doterminod to lay'a cable dlraet to Gibraltar and lacuna to Melte An anti slavory meeting, presided over by Lord Brougham had boot. held in London. An address to the bolo of Now Castle was agreed to, request ing th 4 !Luse of Lords to appoint a conunttoc to inquiry onto the present ante of Lao war, trade, us ondlooolio and African trailla is deyonerating into a posy ire blave trade. •Ih, tdiginal of Powers' Greet: Slave has boon sold in L' nion at auction for 1 800 guineas. 'rho Cubed Cleveland was the purchator. lue,statoment, that a now arraogentent for the California mall Ber Vice stn Pattainti had been of fectod with Mr. Lover, is otAttradlctai. The Bank of Enghind, ou the 14th, oduorid Its minimum rata of disonunt to troin 3 to 2i par cunt. thin crop wan fully antioipaten, and ex erolsed ; no influence on tho meek• mar k e t. -The funds optned buoyant and ezeved on the morning that the north Brawl s tiled. Consols being quoted at OH, they coon, however, fall book under tne growing impretston tont the tenon of poteo wore not such as to iaephe ounfidcnce in its durability. FRANCE. The .Proniteur - publishes a second warning to the Ustwers on recount of au objectionable poli tical 'allele. The Paris BOOM olcaed on the 15th at 88' life for money and acmunt, being an advance of f per cont. during the day. They toadied nearly 70f after the polio annottnetrusnt. THE LATEST. f.BY TELIIGRAPrt LOADON Losoos, Jaly If —lt was reported 1 est evilly at Paris that troubles had arisen in Venetia—that the city of Florence Was disturbed, and that the Parisian populace was indignant at the Emperor for his failure to fulfil his 'ltemises Wends Italy. The statement of the flank of Prance shows a decroseoin cash of over sloven million franca. SiVltzeziana has ordered the disbandment of the troops coiled out during the war. Preasla,han ordered the troops on the march to the Rhino to halt. . . . . The London Daily IV4 //,•3:' oily arlclo of Friday evening says: .• Tao funds opened .0 day with a dull appearance, but &wed at i per ceut higher than yosteeday. Tao relent r,re hes attraeted a moderate supply of F bak, but bona fide holders havo little temptation to tell at a tine uhen per omit.?o the highest rate obtainal,lo from do• posit in the reaelvtog establishments Specula tive Inn:actions aro partly In aboyame°, a dlopo• sitien behig shown to await the announcement of tht? Land Chancellor of tbo Throbequer bonds. It is expecte4 that there So nothing la thn Attetro- French oompromise suffieiently reassuring to In duce England to scorn roasonable measures of de fence. " In the other departments of the stack exchange, prices had a droopinglendency The Bank terms attraoted a moderato amount of baldness to that establishment, although first-class btlis wore taken elsewhere at 24, and, in exeeptionaleases, at 2 per cent. Except as legords Frankfoit, Continental exehanges show an unfavorable tendenoy." The London Times' oily article says that the fall of oue Ter cont. on the Paris Bourse on Thurs day caused the English funds to open on Friday nt a fillitht further reaction, but the market acquired steadiness in the latter part of the day. There' was generally a more active demand for money, and at the Bank, owing to the reduction in the Tate, a malted increase took place. It is retest ked that - Sardlnia, by accepting Lom bardy without the fortresses nocessiry to defend it, hos made _herself the vassal of France, and that Italy haSieined nothing, while the Emperor returns to Parts ncmlaally a conqueror,'but, in re ality, a bathed and dishonored man. THE PEACE. no papers are mainly ongoged in speculation upon the sudden eonoldelon of peace and Its re sults Letters from Paris assert that xnuoh direentent Prevailed there in regard to the terms tf peace and the small result of the war, although the peace itself gay.) general s Itisfection. The Slecte, the organ of the Preach Liberals, is dlatall4Md, and says Prate° Will have every thing to begun In a few years, if 'the minutest Austrian influence is suffered to abide in Italy. It calls for the expulsion of the petty Italian primes, the eonfederates of Austria. The Emperor Napoleon had quitted the seat of war, and was en route for France Ha was ex nee t ad to proceed.to St. Cloud, and defer his official entry lotoParis till ho makes it at the head of hie army in Italy. The Emperor and King of Sardinia arrived at Turin on the 15th, and amid enthusiastio aealama tions, wore met by Prinoo CatiAnan and Count Oavour • The Emperor of Austria left Verona for Vienna on the moraine of the 14th. Lite order of the day, published at Verona on the 12th, says that Austria commenced the War for the maintenance of her sacred trenges, relying on the devotedness of her people, tbo bravery of her army, and her natural allies, Not having found allies, Auitria yields to an unfavorable political situation The Emperor cordially thanks the people, as well as the army, who hero again ehown that their sovereign may confidently, rely on their devotedness, if any new struggles s hould occur. The interview between the Enperors at Villa franoa le said to have lasted nearly the whole day. Ph is Parte Monitaur publishes a proclamation by the-Emperor, -announcing to the.sotdiers the ball of pe ice. It is to the following effect - The principal aim of the war is attained, end Italy will became, for the first time, a nation. Vc netia,' it is true, r'ettiairis to Austria ; but she wilt nevertheless be an Dalian province, forming part of al Lotion confederation. The union of Lom bardy with Piedmont creates for no a powerful Illy, who will owe to us its independeueo. " The Italian Governments which have re mains,' iion'ivo, or trbiob have been called back into their possessions, will comprehend the neces sity of Italian reforms A general amnesty will obliterate, the trades of Magi discord. henceforth mistress of her destinies, will only have bevelf to aeause should she not progress regularly in order and freedom You will soon return to France A grateful country will there rezeive with transports those so dime who have reined ao high the glory of our arms at Montebello. Palestro, Turbigo, - Magenta, Alelagnano, sod Sagerlno ; who. m two months. hare freed Piedmont, sad base only stopped beam's() the contest was about to assume proportions no longer in keeping with the interests that France had in this formidable war. Bo proud,. then, of your success; proud of the results obtatned; proud, especially, of being the well-beloved children of • that France who will always be the great nation, so long as she shall have a heart to oranprehiind noble causes, end men like you to defend there. "Warm:Box " VALLEGGIO. Tedy 12 —The preliminary oondi. Hods o the treaty of peace are this% announced in the ofdelal Austrian correspondence : " austria; and Prance will support the formation of an Milan Confederation, to which Austria no• cedes Lombardy, as far as the lino of the Min• do, ie to he given up Mantua, Pesehiera. Barge forte, and the whole of the Venetia, remain Aus trian possessions. The Princes of Tuscany and Modena are to return to their - states An univer sal amno•ty is to be granted " Ton Alonitvir of Friday °anteing the following: LiMiZANO, July 14—The Augsburg Gazetta al -I?ge3 that the cause of the armistice was the exis tence of a dangerous malady in the French army, but to this we clan give a formal denial - The sani tary state of the French army is excellent, and exceeds oven the hopes which could be entertained, frcm the heat and fatigue endured. The King of Sardinia hal issued the following proclamation to the people of Lombardy : "leaven has biesmi our arms, with the power fal aid of our tusgsanimotts and valiant ally, the Emperor Napolebdt, and we arrived, in a few days, after victory upon victory, at the. banks of the Mimi° To day, wo come back among you, to toll you that Heaven has granted your wishes. An armistice followed by preliminaries of peace, assure the people of Lombardy of their independ ence. '• According to your desire, many times ex• pretrial, you will henceforth form, with our an. cent Stale, one single and free family. I take your destiny under. my directions, end hope to find in you that concurrence which. the chief at a State needs, in order to create a new administra tion. I tall you, people of Lombardy, to trust in your King. Established oa a solid and imperistin- Mc basis, ho will procure happiness for a now country, which heaven has entrusted to his go vernment." News from fallen of the 13 11, dates that the King of Sardinia arrived - there in the evening, amid the plaudits of the populace. .11,0 SV:jssty inbeequen.tly prorented himeolf on the bacon, of his hotel, and was greeted with warm noolams, tiene of " Vane a Re." The Emperor of Anitria has ordered immediate oeisation of the recruiting pot commenced. It woe rumored that the Emperor and &sprees of the French would VIRIG Vienna. !the Fropoh army were reported to have cum menoed thoir counter mnrah. • Tn . ° days before the armistice, a war•tax was imposed tat Pietimor.t, amounting to one-tenth of all the taxes on property, customs, 4bo. It was considered probable that the diembral of Cardinal Antonelli would melt front . the state of atttirs. SWITZERLAND ' The Federal Council have resolved to disband the troops in the Canton of Tiolno, where a guard for Austrian vessels will alone remain. They have also resolved on proposing very severe measures to prevent the enrollment of the Swiss for foreign military service An order has been issued to disband the troops nailed out daring the war, and to repeal tho measures ngab.st the cx portatlon of arms, on:munition, ko. ' PRUSSIA The Prussian azzatts says that in consequence of the treaty of pa,loo 0111028 have been trans mitted to tho troops on the march to 'halt at - the respective places where they may happen to be. Also, that tho p , oposal made by the Prussian ambassador to the Federal Diet, in regard to the Federal troops had, under the present circum stances, been withdrawn by the the Prussian Go vernment. NAPLES Additional details of the recent partial mutiny of the 131053 troops are received. A body of troupe mutinied in the barracks, killing the oolonel and several officers of the Fourth regiment, and after wards reptired to the Royal Yahoo, but were forced baos by the ohassearg and hns3ars on duty to the Champ de Mars, where they were surround• ed. 'rho contmonder•in-ehtef of the Swiss called on them to surrender. filmy replied by Rdisohnrge of firoarms, oottniling the goLeral, and about twenty ptivatea Orders wore then given to tire on the mutineers, when reventy•Gvo were hilted, and two hundred. at d thirty-three wounded. A Bostonian, at the sack of Perugia, writes to the Loudon Times, giving additional details of that brutti affair. le says the American minis ter, ,lir Stockton, bee demanded redress and in demnification for Amer con citizens, and by his energetic action will doubtless obtain such as ie to be had. Commercial littelligeece. Livaspaot, Joie Ib—The sales of Cotton for no week amount to 107 001 bales, and the prices have P d . 'canoed Ir.•en • to 3d 1 511104 last Ifehlke. 'the 0 •tton market closes (Loin the rates today bet, g 3,0:0 balsa for speculation and export. The alining guutatieue are as follows : Fate. bleidlings. New Orleant 81( 7 6.15 17teande 7 % 71( Mobile 7,4 7Yi The stook of Colt n in port is 788,000 bales, inelu. ding 808 0•J0 bales of Ameriein KrATE OF TItsIJE.-1 he edvlevn from Manchester were favonble, ell (pantie. of plods having advanced Tarns are (voted %d higher. The high sales have, however, cno•ked eualotria 11..tv sa, Ju'r 13.—The ewes of :Cotton for the we, k 'have bt, n Ip ON belts; the stock ,e port is 00,00 baler. The ens ket oloeed buoyant at 112 C for New Or• lusna tics ordmagre. I.IY E 1 tPOOLCBREADSTIMIPI MARKET, July 15 The weather has been favorable for the crops cud the harvest Pour WA, Tarry dull ; Preach is offered at decline of 2e 4JY rack; Armin,an is quoted at 10 orlls di 411' mist Wheat sell. smile nominally nuchaupid ; the holders are preen up on the market. Western led it quoted at 7e adobe, white 0 , 09 e 01, Pouthern 10er Ile, tiara la dull cod quotat'ons m•mirled ; mix-d cod yellow ba Main 31, end what, 75e074 01 'rho market clonal with ec mem:dug tende+ to ; there being ilttie qniry ard prices weak I.I.VBILVOIiIi PROVISION MARKET . , July It ...The market Moses very dna. ef fa heavy, end holden are promo:qt. their Muck on the market Ptak heavy sod all quallher slightly declines ; quotations are nociir al. btocks nit her( and Pork in ei aiket are v e ry b.rry. Born inhatury 2 but there lu rather more Inquiry Lard quiet. I,I I IIIIIPCPJI. r I . IIIILTE. MARKET, July —Pot Abbrs. stel.dy ; olld in quo' ed at 201; eon, at 27e 010 :Se Pearl A•hea t•4t+aj at 291 , 61 , 291 e Bark, tit 13timin 91 Llnteei Ohl 2Oot/2910. Tallow boa iliclined le Sugm closed buoyant, with Au ed• vA.r.cq for ail qUilittea. U /he ka•ady. Ince heavy Spirits Turtentioe Orin but all 4 •alitite base a ightly decfinoo ; ell.. at MAU. closing at lOr LO..DUN MORD CS, July 15.—Whent clorsa• dull with a 13.1clipe WI too nett of Det4a Whl eta quoted AE 4•er159, red 400411. tape, Muted firm Csll ale also 11 m Tea l) cued etewly. Spirita Turptrtant CIGNA hussy at 10t Blau quiet. Ittru.—Wehh Elkin c oreu mendy, and la batter de• 'hard at ,Cll leg I. on, on lh•' Blida, hits abghrly r o Minced rer all descriptions; Up clueing quelktioun 810611 01 . . Tallow is quoted r t fias , all qoalltien leaving slightly dee tout (-envie has advanced M t entite, ham ad e.+nco+ cove d..la Ty L.os,ed All 280 01 1011005 Jul. Id B ok of Ilotiand has Wooed the me ut ditcouitt to 2)3 .kly cast. C. neols are quutpa at AOl4 c9f.fq American Sway Ara active, mai hove alight y Roraima:l. tullton In thu hank bag de. craned la 053, PAR s - B.:Edegl d!OSed at Ott 000. 8.11 & Co report an A31.13,R10AN 6T4,CKS markutin State ~t ocAo at a 1r 1111 higher. Tha Iddldol 717 n s of Valley nye ' Illinois Control 3:d Seto eaves ware firmer, at.donotso allot of Illinois at 82,1033 discount; 21q1P York Central Bufhirg Funa at 83 : . . . United Stated 04 1883......, 93 ® 93 Ifialhd Alton 5.4, 1814 3 IX or, 93S Alabama 51 bond§ 75 ca 77 Kentucky 131,103-72 12 19t Maryland 53 43 en 95 ,I.,a,aohu+otta 51 Ito Ealol Mimi. appi ss, UOlOll Dank bonds 14 o, 10 Ohm Gs ISO 18' ®l6O Ponneylvsula 61 84 .3 , 94 Do. . roads of 1077 Ei 1 a, sn Tonneettea 84 t 0 CD 82 . . . Virgir.ia o.' B,3CD 85 noston 53( par cant. Goedn 89 - a 90 ):I!lw.iutienirttl 711,FItcsnd, 1860 ..... .... 8- , ; e , ER I'lin ..3 aBit. , nl 1158.r1 P alto. L'2B a 313 311 c, hen Central 5 pi' cents 155.1..,..... 7'4 co 54 11.,. do altinox 90 co 45 N. V Central Gi, 1833 93 it, 55 D., 75 93 co 05 Do. el•aree CO en 71 Now York and .Erio ti m*:go bonds 00 et, CO Tanatnin llonolo, 1959 303 5e10.1 kenti - tani; " titar - tkl *33 3 int multena 90 vt , 01 lIITIOPi FUR 801.201: Wheetwegbi-lind. lady, J Dlnemos and lady, PargaptiMr, MitioMO and lady, Mra Towarband' and obllo, - Mukaud llV)BP.4olrett. Mr Bnsbmora, lady and 'sea, Mr Sturdy lady, two ohlldran and nurse; Mr' Jsw..tt Jr—'llr. A ',Parra°, Castles 11 Brads: Mr Layard, B Wainwrlabt,'Dr. A. Martin, HA. Wiwi., W. H. Daniel, Btspper. P.,A Wish well. George IL Ds Wlinoo. B,Brirga. Mn.rularlck D, Bolton', s.D ! fatal. Bdwd, trick Martin GOldatoW, H. 0 131syckm Mr. Van Bargan A Lindsay, B 1.1 Solomon, Tan Van Duhal, Wawa. Dn oks. Barwatd. Jutieu, Fraronts, Ctittsok. Ladwiki, .olor, kholdoo, Lewin, Law, lintahanaon, Bwanwirk, MltoholL Monate, Comma, Deana, Bayley, Lamm, - els k, Clarke Manning, Bunter, Ewan, Priests, Pay net, Borgia!, Piitton, Smith. 84IPPING IN riaLlGE*cm . _ Arrived Dona New 'knt 12th, Teutonis, at Smiled. 13 4 14 Christiana, at Deal ; Jain Daggett, to the Clyde. 14th, Lucy Thomptint, at Liverpool. ' Arrived from New Orleaee 12th, A Idsnah. at Bremer Qi.bee,atOiroede, 14th, E W. Farley andrepperell; at Deal.' 26th, Havelock, at Liverpool, Arrive' , from litavinnehlittli. Rosins, at Liverpool. Sidled far Nev. k Atli , Obeerver, Loot Ardrooean. 13th, Mary Ogden, from Liverpool, • - 14/oled for Uharleatin 12. h, Mary Washington, from Liverpool, ' idettioranda —The ifnoaulay, from Baltimore, to aground near Mind, From Washington. WAsnimovotr; July 27.;:—A letter received froth Dr. leorneyi- Superintendent of Indian Affaiis ID Utah, states that two of the children - who were spared from the Mountain Meadow massacre, have bean detained by the Darted States District tornay of the Territory as witnesses. against car• tarn white men who are strongly implicated in the commission of that crime.' The tabor children, will arrive at Leavenworth about the - lOch of Au gust, where William °. Mitotic% whose two sons and their wives were among the mnrdered emi grants, will receive and return them to then friends in Arkansas,. The initiatory steps fer their recovery were taken by Mr. Mix the former oom 'Magner, and Mr. Greenwood has zealously Con. summated that humane purpose. . hiajons Whiting and nasiman, Captains Tyler and tJampbell, and Lieutenant Elwood, are. on their return to the States on leave of absence. The public) Dude advertised to be ro'd in Minneso ta from the Ist of October to the 14th of October embrace the Government alternates within the six miles limits of the railroad grange, and the pine lands of the northeast portion of that State. consisting of a million and three varters acres The President contemplates returning to Wash' ington on Wednesday. The Postmestor General will visit Kentucky during August.- - - ; Arrival of the Empire Care New Youx, July 27.—The eteamehlp Empire City has arrived 'frqui Bavarae, with later dater. - -Four Amer iO3n otifitainn had dialer yellow fovea in port daring the,month: . - Sugar was dull and unchanged. In molasses there was nothing doing. Freights were difliaeii to bo obtained. Nzohanges dell; bills on Lon don 12.13 per cent.; on Now York lag per cent. premium. . The California Overland flail STEAMER IVASEINOTON LIBELLED. FT. Louis. July 27.—The overland mail has sr rived with San Prdneirett advises of. the 4th lest News anticipated by the M 0.103 Taylor at New York. - Steamer Washington was libelled as soon as she reached Bar. Francisco. Among the failures at Ban -Pianoiroo were Doroe ,h Co., distillers, and Place & Co., millers. Shocking Tragedy in. Illinois. PRIMPORT, Illinois, July 27 Arndt, a German, living near Cedarville, in Chia county, killed throe of his children with an axe, yea terday afternoon, and wounded the f, , nrth to badly that it is not expected to live. He made na resistance when artasted, and assigned sac reasons for the murder Congret , st , ...tat No lulu:Mon. Ilavrtmong. July 27 —G. W. Hughes, of Anne Arundel county, has been nominated for (ton. gres, by the Democratic Conyentioa of the Sixth district, in the place of the Hon. dittos:Las F Bowie. Accident tone Steamer Thomas Swann Nutt , Yontc. July 27 —Tbe, - steamer Thema, Swoon, which sailed floin this port pecterday Col atitintore, hes returned to day with the loss C' her propeller. - „_ Philndelphia.Vessel Ashore. Whims, July 27.—The schooner B. Watson h ashore on Mobile bar. as is dtselharging her Oar go,'and will probably get Of f to•day. Markets by TelogniPlq. OISOINNATI, July 27 —flour la unebaegel the re °elute have Ewe larger than for solar rive previous, Wheat name • sales of rad at $1 Os; white at 51.1eer LH,: Corn oam." Wulakey 21e. Erovestiane quiet one Uuthang , d. rates Perk $1.6.50. Ontuarie, July 27 —Oates of 2,310 'blies of Cot. ton be ore the revise of the Eeropee tidying. Thor, Were no treneaerioes afterwards. Lour very dull Provielona alto extremely dull. Cotton Preighta to Liverpool , Later from CEdifoinia and Contra America Arrival otthe Moses Taylor with more than Two Million Dollars in Gold. - The United States mail steamship Moses Taylor, Captain J. McGowan, arrived at New York yes terday morning. She left Aspinwall on the morn• leg of the 19th instant, with the PaCtifio mails, pas sengers, and treasure which ieft San Francisco July 6th. The Paoltis mail steamship Golden Gate, R - L Whiting commanding, arrived at Panama on the night of the 18:h, with 620 passengers and $2,350, 6460 fa_ila-trOUSLI T e; PO fotiowa: For New York. For hngiand. For Panama Total $2,350,5(11) 52 The atoamship Washington arrived at San Fran cisco, July 3, from Now York November 7,1858. The United States steam frigate Rpanoko, Flag Officer MoOlaney, was et Aspinwall.' Mush exeiternont had boon ocoasioned at Pana ma, and on the ISchrous generally, by the acoiden tal opening of kiate of the Indian graves In th , Chiriqui distriot, and tbo discovery thorein of large quantittea at golden images, gods, &o. As there aro supposed to ho many thousands of them graves equany wealthy, many hundteda of person, had gone thither, anti already many thousands 01 dollars' worth had beau taken oat and sent Panama. • MIZE= Amtrie en Ex 10.4175 ( 0) Jae Patrick & Co. 378 000 Ante t Ilelemmt .. 190,0101iticbard Patrick. 00 07 ' 13 'oela a Edger.... l 7 bOO J. G Park , r & eon b 500 811 &J 8. Bacot' 8 8 0 0 Wm. Penton .... 9MO CouroytPeocuor.. 7 000 Roan. Faience:UM 45 371 C. W. Crobv 05 . 15 1 ,A 8 Ruatob'm &Co 23 as .1 00 Coghill.:..; 10 301 &herr+ bfor , u&Co 10 , 0 eil F. ColemA i& 00 05 600,5.. Lich & 8r0a... 9 550 H. Cohen & C 0.... 31 00 4 4 G heed & Co.. X 8 '1 0 11. Cummiuge.. 0600 0 .Tiutherford..... 2 91 1 Duman, Eibe , e&Co 00,600'8 , ate &Co 21 No DeWitt Eittle&Co 21100 W. I.Bhgrean & Co 04 o.t. J Durand h Co ... 7 203 J Ttanwocd 2 0 0 J. P AW. H. Daley 5 MI, Strau.., Hartman. . _ 113111 , n & C 0.... 3 838 Soh 1w Bro _• 31 4* Stream Bros & Co , 78,838 . Jaitobt & C 0.., 32300 ruff MoirlabIll&Co 41 800 ,Treallwell & C 0... 20 000 Turner Bro 3 000 ,&. E. 'Fl'ion ' 3 Oot, 'J 13 Weir 25,W. Ya - go 1. (3,7 878 500 Order 27 13 , &Eahopeler 1,140 VooFelt.Bel&Co_ 1432 Fro!. Prob 4 &Co 2. CO B. Foretell 2,000 Ernatehi,ll:&Co 14 008 Vroaman & C 0.... 83 6 2 Gricunll,sl'rz.&Co /4 000 I laddatoith &Co )0 700 Wm. flog & Co.. 86,000 Bawl Daattngs... 24 , 0, Howland & 3.781 W. Ileltar & C 0... 20 MO M. Beller,* Bros. 14 670 J'anaort Bard & Ca. 16 000 Jenniuer &BrewOr 8 tOo' Buono Kelly& Co 152 600 ,liecicY. Byrne &Co 6:00 lomrtnce &Co 11 8,0 Ltatropoli•an Dank 16 DLO Idendtr & &lama.. 11 600 Nxitren 51esi.r... 5 bOO rioultvlier 0r0... 21 WO Foto:Nov for 1000) . • tia,3i a 7; From Aspinwall, 9 725 J. 12 Newton & Co 23,108 A serious disturbance occurred at Aspinwall on the 2d of July, occasioned by a eourrilous article published in tna_Lagie News, a sheet published at that place, reflecting on the railroad em ployers. The printing elloo was attacked by the web, and the presses and all the printing Li:Wo mbs thrown IWO !bona During the disturbance, the proprietors of the newspaper attempted to de fend their office, and several shwa were fired upon the assailants, resulting in killing one man tette wounding five others Iforatto Lyon, the proprie for of the paper, and three printers, named Field. Levy, and Miller, wore arrested. The eighty-third anniversary of American In dependence was celebrated in Son Francisco, with a greater degree of enthusiasm than has man,. fasted itself on any elastic: occasion far several years past. The news from the mines was very favorable Ono of the pipers bas the fattening notioe of the yield of a productive guava deposit: " The la.t weekly yield of the Allison quartz lead was $2B 000 Otto th( mend would. iis IS lid, ~over nit the; expenses, thus leaving the Bam $1,500 per day profit. NE WS 'FROM TEIE MESSENGER. BIRD-A SCOUNDREL 13A EAIN. [Ptem the Alta celitoreta, July 6 ] By the Arrival of Via May Quead, from Tah iii we learn this myswitius vannet had turned Uf there, whence she hail guns from Valparaiso, eft," °fearing for California. Copt Deka eld, at Ta hiti, 1 200 bran (160 pounds each) of coffee, whit ‘vaB iyanaltlig , ll to this port on the ship Ile then ote,red ostensibly for-Sydney, on the 17th of May Whore he trill next tura up, or when and where ,]115600 will overtake him, remains as grout pore a ni ever. This case of barratry in the mast important for many years, and hardly second to any known. Capt. John II Delee is en ode acted man, anti was once a lieutenant in the United States navy. Before sailing from Velpa cairn he sent live men ashore in a boat, and pro corded to sea without them. It is estimated be must have nearly forty thousand dollars with him at penult, folonivusiy obtained, besides 2,400 more hags of coffins, of 160 pounds etch, of stolen cargo the Federal Government have undertrkaa his arrest, with a view to the restoration of built ship and cargo to their lax ful owners TRH FfEIST GUNS CAST IN CALIFORNIA. flir am the Fan Fre.,o acollemo, July 6 J Mr P Donahue, Union Balladry, boa just emu pleted four twentylour pounder Iron hotvitzera in order. Yesterday Captaat T. D. Johns, by repo t at Mr Donahue, inspected and proved the pieces Tney were taken to the neighborhood of the bits sten, where cash was loaded with the proof °barges of powder, two heavy wads, and a twenty four pounder solid chat. Each gun was fired twice in suroession with this charge. in the etino manner as practised in the United States ordnance depart ment. After the tiring, the guns were thoroughly inspected by Captain Johns, and found perfect. They are rnedellcd'after United btates pattern, and are really beautiful and serviceable pieces A detachment of the Bast California Guard served on the occarion. 'There guns era the first ever east in California. _ cOSTA RI CA The advioes from Costa Rica are to the 81 inst. Nothing of special importance had transpired. Tho harvest ryas over. Coffee ruled'at SODTEI AMERICA. • The °dilate from Valparaiso ate to the 1.6114 and Callao to the 27th of June. , The new French chip Mozambique had been wreaked on the Aratnantan coast on the 15th May. the captain, eight sailors, and one passenger pa. dated. The entire cargo was plundered by the &Weir& • Tne amounts from Peru elate that the raisin. tionary movements of Colonel Zehallos were still continucd. Castilla bad issued a general amnesty to all sal. dims and private parties engaged lu the revolt), ion, provided they report themselves ready to sus tain the authorities by the end of July. Castilla bad also determined to deolare war against, F.cuador, and proposed leading his form to peteen. FiNkNOlAVO*votenntiAL. Tlrts ;Mogul, Minket. . Pitibannritta, J01y7,7, IBM The pikes tiretooke 'are ha' the market is weak aril inactive. West Philadelphia Railroad,- Binding litiliroied; and city lease, are at . fotmer'quotatlons.; Second and Third streets vtad,riew,issne, imidiit 33. Penoidlianit 7 qtallrooll stook advanced 1;-sellingnal, . Elmira sailroad, aeiond mortgage sevennosokiit - The Mosta Taylor,:bringing upwards or two mil• lone of gold; arrived at .New York thin rderniog. The news of the - renewed-acentlaulationaluiltion in the Bank of Bagland;And Ake. reduction of lie rate of diming to 21 , per Bent ; the upward move_ ment in cotton, and the general proof ~ that matters "generally;%„have settled down already-'""upon the basis of astute of-peace and good-order, preduen the etTeot of limiting the, rates:, fee Menel,in our market a loaders do aof relax in at.) , degree, the;etrictneas ;otetrournspeotioa which has aharmiterized their operations for soma months. Anything at all doubtful - has bit , a poor chance of a purchaser id the hantla,itf is'-note broker, hoWever anxious the capitalist, may ha to. nave his money it earning a little something " Potsdam's Counterfeit Detector ferAMtust Ist is issued this_ afternoon; Ind will befortad - exten sively useful. The promieent feature of. this de tector is the -extended and-admirable :table of trends which- have boon committed by "entinter falters, and of plates_ known to be in the hands of the fraternity and in late for the produrition of new notes.- The fact is, the greater partortte villainy practiced upon the Puhlia by Lase notes, fa notae-, comptlehed by ootinterfeits,or notes made'to copy and resemble the-genuino Reties of the bank', but what are teolinkrallichlted einrions note, which era wetheograved- motes l with-the-names of the bank insoried, but which boar no rfeserublaneek'it all to the genuine issues. The primilpal - iarietiee .t• the plates from which these notesaro imued are so fully described by Peterson, that one who studies tut pages beconiMi, as it were, an expert in spurious no tea, and knows most of them at the fitat glimtpse Another new and dangerous fraud ie repotted by the tennis/trait detectors, no-very dangerous in ita obamoter. It is a live-dollar - bill, altered to the Manufacturers' Bank ot Brooklyn, New York. The vignette reprosenta the Capitol at Wastriogron; on 'he right is a portrait of f.feneral. Taylor, and on the lower-left oorn9, a feniale. nature is lithegraphed. There is little doubt that the same plate will be altered to apply to many ether banks, and: it would be well for our rendera refuse to take any batik note answevi rig to - this description. • . Biolthellisffsnk-Noie List for August lot is Renal to-day; with - Ida tiaMd.: variety of con tents. The present number, ik & very good, one. The receipts of the Morris Oinal Company for the wvall'ending July 23, 1859, were as follows : Total to Zuly:115; 1809 $l2B 901 Week eating July 8.119' Total to ltdirl 7 1859 Weals, ending 3 lily 13,1E5n1185.1. - • - sios-cos-sr Shipments of am; bx,tho Bialty,Co al Onmp any for the 'week . Eons. Proviout Bhipments - 10874 . Amount for theasason WM, es.' Amount of coil - sL3pped by the-Wyoming (lanai Company for the week endfrg July 23. 1852, 3.mountpravionsly reporied ' • 178,457 .4 rotal Owe opening qt . navigation'. it Thefollow log is the amount of coal transported , ver the lissioton Rai4934 for..tho _week ending Jaly 23,1859 : - - - - •wzgX, rarnotalt.y. oaa. Tyska. 7 Enna. - ' T0ta1..:.. 12,02119 - 240.763 07' 254,776 06 Corresponding week last year... ............. 04 - 171,906 14 - .12i,603 7.71 Increase - ' 426 06 68 Bi 6 13 - 68 212 08 The to:4101210g is,the l'irlaborgit,bankittetoment for the week prodediegjall 252 Evicts Lulu" _Deposits. at Pittabrva.._ $291.8515 $416048 $101,868 $ 85.2 i 0 Kxchangs_Bk.. 418,883 -, 216,118 .1,476 eel 981 089 Si. 284E14 122,01 026 4.6 274_6 , 7 Citizens , ' 177.790 07-14 '= 00 . 5 7 .793 11cohnoics , .... 2 . 17 140 . 74,973 767 COI tit Al Cron City V: 5,8=5 318,961 101,1•z3 818 663 207,014 , • 10t 043' 121,683 7,883,243 1,110,46 8,0et,288 1780,8 8 Ltd week 1 3 881,828 1,0,580.81. 8,9t5pt0 1,134 osi luareere.... ; • • • Treasury not , 'S • and notes of Dna to that .:-- Due by bsa. othir banko. - Plttsbnng .... $16, 1 324 -' -' .1 23 211 _. In 233 gnabarge..... 103 207 -. 23,110 2- r 93 H. 134 81144 - 43 0 9 0,319 Oitisens* • -:10,654 .: , - 13 409 - 131104 Mechanics'.... 11 del _ 108 _ ,-- 12 399 Iron 0i1y..... 6,924 -- - 991- - - .Vll A 8 allegheny .... . 18,141 -: • , ~32,251: - - _.,-0,327 Nu 99 $-'92171 $192,P67 Last walk... MASI 250,tE$ 2dU t. 09 Decressq,... 17,848 83 747 - 67,141 Tice following is pelaat weekly, atatement , c , the Balton batiks: - A - c.pitat stoet" 135.1:0 760 Lassa ....... L 8 216 Gag Pees e 4 012 0 - 16 Due lions . thee bsiska ' - - - tahr Dais toolbar banks 61 4 3 4 ,000 Deposita ' 38 401 , 01 Cisonlailoa ppa 7 0 1 .0 PIIILADELPUI6 STOOD Et.eamtax 1483,118., - 761 27, Ail 66161,INDI4XANLIST.3aoiri,/i130.,8481.N04Z 114001, AND Emmanue' NOLTSNIZI7 claim STUD 466 01681667 6166sTa. ..$2335 354 67 19071;1 15 • 18 472 80 , 000 Soh /Inv 61 1 82 64 5.5.1ir o'l pr. C•ital vitg 3000 - dsi- • ... 60 -2., -do ...,......1 44 - 47 nb LaNialsN . nv 6s 03 1-00 . ........101X 1004 Can et A 3l. 63 , 83 84,14 -- b Loblei, Ssrio ...b5 sdisi 1000 do 114,5 la. We Voila 8....: 49}p 500 Elmira 21 m Ta.. SO 4 "Nodlog R . 22,‘ 1630 N I'd. R 63.-Motro 64 3. - ". 80 231 p :000 do 64 30 Lob'gh Net 4.4 004 Monte Canal 61. 84 20 .do ....... .." 42 . . 7 Penni, 31 89 33 , - do 48 l do _B9 26 NotitstOr.sa TV ....- dog d do 79 69 Lon 151ctd.13,:..;. 10)6 BOWNIM 1000 N Penn* R 63N134 Mackanlal Rani. 26 if "13 Mentnantaa , Bank 28x 6 &If natal 18X 1500 N Pa it 63....206 03%120 Mona Clanal_. ....' 6 0 3( 100 do 9 16 63%1.6 -do C&P 52)( • 0 Long Islacd P..... 10M 'l4 Pant otN Am.... 13)- 30 Perms R 50 11001ty Bint -- - 4334 3 do 39 10 do 42g 4 do 30 16 24 & 3d-still now. 83 1 do 39 I CLOY/R:4 FILICES—DITIL. 8 4 41. Askid ; ' Ss , 63 101 - - Rav Kock Phil% Oa SOX . " Prot.. 1 7 X .- 18 .c n soli ' Wauret &Bins 11 8,1 434 cc New....102X 10234 cc 7a Ist intit,. '- 48 Penns 6s..in off 9034 91,1( Mang Island 8.. log 10% landing FL.— . 223 k 2311.911 Coal & Nay. 47X 48 cc bds 101. - SO N Poona B - - e-g- 8X , c Int ea 1 44 1 0 _ 01 cc 5i. ........,.. es% e 4 cc 40'80110'08 10 , "104.... . ... $9 Penns B .83j SOlo4tawiess - . 10 . _..., 2X 4 c. 28 in 6..... ecg 87 I " let n't Ids 40 Bar Con 1 Con 82152 X 7&8ontl. Rdivra 60 - , i pet die arle4ii 104 X 2 , 21, , RA $ a R. 1., e$ 4334 Sohl Ns' So -Id fi'M po", Ract&Tino &alt. 4434 " loop So .. 73 _ $2,145 OCO The Flour maricot continues dull ; there is very little demand for export, and the only vales we neer of are 250 bbls fresh ground City Mills extra family Soar, a favorite brand, at SO 6.0, and 500 elols extra at $5 75 per bbl ; fresh ground super toe is freely offered at $5 50, without finding buy ers; old steak continuos dull and tieglec , ed. ; the •reds are buying moderately at-from $5 up to 57 50 for superfine extras and foray brands, as in quality. Eye Floor is held at $l, but we hear of no sales. Corn Meal la etesdy, with er tale of 100 trials to note nt $3 75 per bbl. Wheat—There 10 nob much offering, and prime 1.3 held above the views of millers, who are not buying to any extent; eales comprise about 4 000 bus, in lots, at 1181.1203 for good, and 122a124.3 for eltelse reds, meetly at 1200, Including some fair to good white at 1285131 e. Rte is dull at 80.4810 for old Pennsylvania. Corn Is in better demand; sales cf about 4 000 busbeli,_ deed to prima Southern and Pertnsylvarda yellow at 80a810, ohtedv at the lattt:r price. 1,500 has Palo sellout brought 783. Oats eontinne dull, and about 2 000 bus Lave been sold at ISt for Pennsylvania and 363 for Delaware. Bark—Q w aitron bee advanced, and 00,70 blids lot ho. 1. s.ld at $.22: per ton. Cotton—The market la Orni but not very active, owirg to the high viewisoi holders, Woo aro generally demanding an ad yucca, and about 250 bales sold at fall prices. Groceries and Provemone—thero bas been more doing but no changes to note. Whiskey is un settled, with further sales of drudge at 25a, iihis 2Oa; Easton, bbls at 261.3, and Prison do at 273 e 23u per New oik Stock BCCON . .. . 7000 It Carolina% 95.3 a 50 (4 , 1. dr. Chte R elo 6sl{ 1(01 Stomas. 63 83* 100 Chi Ss It. lit btO 0 6000 111 Nretland bds 03 1(1) 0 Y Coo 6.5 74 x 51 Cootment4l Bk vox r.o do 74g 110 Paciflo Ms 18 Co 78 100 Reading R . 45 100 0.30 Railto.d 7 100 - do 44 7,4: 100 Mich 0 k.Ol 1 Oats- US' tro Ustlsm Rsiroia 9,V M bineserae, the editor of the Corm - tee ,d'es Etsts U 1213. now in Europe; sends to 1:13 paper an account of a ead emu:lent on board the steamer Fulton on which vessel hi Masseras was a pi-e ea ger. Ills let.er ie dated July Eith, and the Fulloll arrived at Southampton July B'b It appears % that the passengers on board decided to celebrate the Fourth by the tiring of 8111141 , 53 and a pyre- - technic% disp'sy. The first demonstration. accord lug to the programme, was to be the Britg. at mid-day, of a salvo of twenty-one volleys wore the four-pounders of the steamer. - The cannon - had been glued tear the bow of the vessel, and a rope suspended st a certain distance prevent° the passengers from approaohing too near. All was ready, and every care bad been taken to prevent eisoident. no two cannon were to be tired alternately, at intervale of half a mi. auto each, thus allowing an interval of .one minute to eaoh for reloading. precisely at twelve o'clock the Ant report was heard, bat- the thirty intervening moon& had net expired before there was a evicted and louder explosion,• immediately followed by inked" pain and terror. The report ' came from the same piece, whilst had bean reloaded with imprudent precipitation, and hattipentsne eJsly discharged with terrible results.' Of the two men who were_ reloading it, - one baa, his right hand and wrist Carried away, and the other lied hie left hand shattered ; kquartermaster standing by also received severe - nounde, and a cabin boy, was dangerously Wounded on the' breast- by ptr tient of tte ramrod, "which was broken into a - thousand fragments by striking violently against' one of the anchors. The man moat severely wounded had his arm amputated a _little -below the - elbow; the other only saved one of. hie. finirs. As Soon 'as the fire( shook of surpriteantt, fright was over, the passengers tinkers ts enbsorip tion for the sufferers, which, In two home, amens:tied to eight In-aril' ===dMINI=U 11111 tots. 6701 0,248 MET BOARD EBBW , D BO %BD acs. As3sa Philadeipruaur,trPts. - Jta.r 2T—Evening 'icautuge, July 27. va.up. Vouith ta July at E3i;3l.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers