• _ti _ -41 FRIDAY, ,OUTOBER 21, 1859. Two, WEEKLY PBXS'S, For Saturday, October 22, lc now out. The number Di use of unususl interest, containing a full account of the reeentINSURN.F.OTION Al' HARPER'S FERRY; compleie details of the funeral services of the late SE NATOR BRODERICK, with the eloquent FUNERAL ORATION delivered on the occasion by Col, Baker, as welt minim& other interesting matter. ' , • • CONTENTS: ORIGINAL "POETRY.—To ALLIE IN 'HEAVEN. • OUR PORT-POLIO.—IVATanioNy—,Tna EVERLAST INO TAPER—A Cußlous NARRATIVE.—Is sus WELL MAini2P4MMEILITY o FAME—THE DOG Or Ex- Plinintars—Trarrino A PE:INT—THE ADVANeIor. on EEINP ABLE TO PAT—A GOOD RULE—WHAT GENE RAI;JACKSON COULD NOT DO—A. Hon DINNER—IN -71.111NC11 OP Hmng--A Toucu OF THE SUBLIME— ERROR—LUOIMEOUs—LovE—ANAGRAH. VORRESPONDENCE.—Immas TROM. " OCCASION AL"—THE BRODEZICK,TRAGEDT. , EDITORIALS.—"Ton LOVERov THE gitrort.s"--fixn- VILE INEURRECTioNs—THE 011,EAT VASTERN—THE VOTING JN,THE BEH.ER DISTRICT—MR. DucHANAN AT Howl—THE STATE SENATE—A BEAUTIFUL TM. SUTE•A 001.117LEISON—THE MEET CENSUS—SCHA/STL, THE CAUCASIAN AHD-EL-KADER—DEEIS COUNTY— LAMT-PRANELIN—JANIES MAD:EON—Tux Enemin- ICE 'TRAGEDY—THE PENNsyLVANIA. 'ELECTION— WLI.LIANE , MACENVORTit PULED—TUE SAN JUAN PUMICE/LET—A Wow: TO PIETISM:MO. NEWS..LTHE LATEST NEWS ET TELEGRAPH PROM EUROPE, CALIFORNIA, AND WASHINGTON—MARKETS ET TELEGRAPH, ETC., ETC. • , MISCELLANEOUS.--Hanpan's PERRY INSURREC TION—THE DotL AND 'Ts - ALLEGED CALBEs—OcTo szNattAN VISIT—THE BRODEEICK, TRAGEDY: Po - XIIIAL ORATIONS-ROW BENNETT CAPTIVATED DU ERANAN—THE OVIEDO NUPTIALS. FOREIGN MISCELLANY.—THE QUEEN'S VISIT To TEE GREAT EASTERN—THE BRITISH AssOcI AMR BALRIORAL—DEATH Or Paorzssou ALI SON. AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT.—WINE MAKING —COST or WHEAT—WINTER BARLEY—LEAVES As klaxons. FORSIGN CORRESPONDENCE.--Larran PEON CONSTA NTINOPLIL TEE , RITY.---Ting VOTE 07 PHILADELPHIA COM PLITE—WEEELT REVIEW OP THE PHILADELPHIA MARKETS—THE MONEY MAIIKET--MARRIAGEs'AND DEATHS. ' Tilt? WEEKLY PRESS is furnished to subscribers at e per year, in advance, for the single copy, and to On, s of Twenty,, when sent to one, address, 520, in ed ger:mi. Single copies for Sale at the counter of THE Yeast Ma, in wrappers. ready for mailing. Pres? Pa.:ie.—Notices of New Books; To Texas and Dick—No: 8; Ideating of the State-Rights Democracy of the Twenty-Third Ward ; Personal and Polities!; The Late Senator Brodetiok—Did be leave a Will? FOIDATU Paon.—The Courts, Marine Intelligence. The News. From Harper's Ferry we learn that peace Is com pletely restored, and the citizens of the surround log country are ones more resuming their occupa tions, eonfident that all aquae of alarm has passed. Old Brown is considered out of danger. The fol lowingic tho most important of the letters found among his effects Parsttnono'. Juno 4th, 1859. "CAPTAIN' ions Snows.—My dear Friend : wrote you a wook ago, directing my letter to the care of Mr. Kearney. "He replied. informing Inn that he had for warded it to Washington. But as Mr. Morton rewired lest evening a letter from Mr. Sanborn, saybog your address would bo your son's home, viz. West Andover, I therefor° write you without delay, and direot my letter to jour sou. I have dons what I could thus far for looms, and what I could to keep you at your Kansas work. 'Looses by endorsement and otherwise have brought me under heavy embarrassments the last two years. "But I must nevertheless continuo to do, in or , der to keep you at your Kansas work. I send you 'herewith my draft for two hundred dollars. Let me hear from you= the receipt of this letter. "Ton.live in our hearts, and our prayer to God Is that you may have strength to eolith:mu in your Kansan work. "My wife joins me in affectionate regard to you, dear John, whom wo both hold in very high es teem. "I suppose you put the Wnitman note into Mr. Xearney's hands. It will be a great shame if Mr. Whitman does not pay It. What a noble man is Mr. Kearney. Row lib erally ha has contributed to keep you in your Kan sae work. Your friend, °Minix Sum." The mails by the steamers North Briton reached this city last night, bringing ns London papers to the sth instant. lier news we have already given, by telegraph. In regard to tho San Juan affair, the London - News of October 3d says: "The Government of the United States shows how much importance it attaches to the firm and prudent management of the difficulties which ono of its of curs has rain(' at Sault:an, by sending the Let soldier of the Repnblio to the spot. General Scott, who has before this superseded the impetus one Barney, is a man whose reputation stands in no need of theatrical coups. Ile is no sentimental trifler, but has been trained; in the school of war fare and in the responsibilities of high command, to respect the great interests of eivilizition, and look to the consequences of public acts. Thio appointment of thop dietinguiened officer Must be flattering . the' people of Oregon, who may fairly indulge the reflection that nothing abort of the folly of their leaders could have induced the 'veteran to undertake in haste the long journey to the P mine—, At the same time the General's inis don Is a token 9f the right feeling of the Wash ington Cabinet towards this country. After his arrival we shall hoar no more of the ostentation of throwing up earthworks,, and planting useless cannon, end calling for volunteers. Pending his arrival, General liarney.has received orders to be mole circumspect in his - conduct, and the instruc tions of the President to General Scott are, it is said, of the most conciliatory character." A large and enthusiastic Democratic meeting was- held at Trenton, New Jersey, on Wednesday evening. It was addressed by Joel Parker, General 31: R. Y. Wright, candidate for Governor, lameti IL Semi, of Camden, and Colonel James W.:Wall. Mayor Emery bas signed the bill reorganizing the Detectiire Department of police business, and made the following appointments : Ohief—Capt. Jacob Bennett. Subordinates— Mirkle, G. 11. Smith, Wood, Sommers, Levy, Franklin, Bartho lomew, and Sohlemet. High Constables Russell and Bookleyr will not in conjunction with this do partmerit: 13464 Odenhfiimer, of New Jersey, has written ,the- following pastoral letter to the clergy and laity of his diocese. It Is the drat official act since hle . oonsissration to the Episcopate : "RICHMOND Va.., Oct. 13, 1859. "Brethren Beloved In the ' Lord • .Your choice of n Bishop hoe boon consummated this morning by my consecration to the Episcopate of New Ser. say ; and 1 make it my first official oat to offer you, One and all, this my salutation and blessing. Hit please God, I obeli/se among yen as soon aspossible , after the adjournment of, the General Convention, and in the meanwhile I' invite mush communion tions from my reverend' brethren' of the clergy as may enable Ins to uedorstand their wishes in regard to Episeepal services. "May the blessing of God Almighty—the Bather this Son, and the holy Ghost—be with you all. Amen. Affeetionately. your Bishop, " W. H. Onaniaittlin." In New York, yesterday morning, a police officer was attracted to a house by the piteous cries of whilidren. On entering, ho discovered the dead body of a woman, with her three helpless offspring weeping around the body because they 'could not awaken her. She died from intemperance! Her husband Is now iu the penitentiary, as an habitual drunkard. Notwithstanding the unfavorable terminations to several of the balloon ascensions recently made, we learn that Mr. Lowe (who ball just oonstruoted an immense affair which ho calls an -air ship) has a great number of applications for passage, from gentlemen anxious to accompany him on his first voyage. Be designs to take short trips, and the necommodationa for paisengers are said to be very complete. - The Atlantic Monthly. It is said that those enterprising publishers, Trim/cos & FIELDS, of Boston, have paid ten thousand dollars to the assignees of Pamirs, SAMPSOIt, & Co., for the copyright and back Stock of the .atlantic Monthly. It was offered to , an extensive and' enterprising house in this city, (Cuans & PEransoN,) and by them de clined. Undoubtedly, its proper locale is Boa. ton, ivhern its leading Contributors reside: Ws: Srows'a Now England romance, "The Atialster'a Wooing," will bo closed in the No vember number, now nearly ready, and has aireaily been published, in book-form, by Deese & JAcgeox, of New York, and Tao- GAZT, BROWN, & CIUSE, of Boston. The ad , - ratable " Professor at the Breakfast Table," by Dr. 0. W. Bunts, will be completed in the December number. The actual circulation is said to be about forty-five thousand a month, but the cost paid for editorial labor and to cetdribtitore averages eighteen thousand dol birs per annum, which is doublo the amount paid, in its 'pahniest days—when Witsou, LetinArtv; Rode, and JiLkeuirt wrote largely— by Blackwood's Magazine. CHESTNUT-STREET BRIDOE.—TIIEODORE ClTlttEit, Esq., has called upon us to explain that ,ho, has ,been the steadfast fiend of the Chestnut-street - bridge, as the records will sliOol and that, though his name appears on the , roll of the Committee on Surveys, ho doer 'not'zneet that- committee—the time he oiiii:tlei , Cote: to public affairs being bestowed upon the Committee on City Property. Bay ing ,only the - desire to further the' erection of the -so-muc,h4ecded and so-patiently-waited for bridge, we eve Mr. CuYLEg the benefit of isilitviition," which leaves the responsi bility tipoh 2etr, o.arritz,, the Chairman of the COmtaltteti on Surveys, and Treasurer of the llT,e4,llol ; llqphit Railroad Company. , 141,Z OF HOUSES, Itit;;; 4 4G,fieliiileltie sale at the Bazaar, on batur• day:42lo*in be the largest , and most eitenairo thlidlittitakaa'plaes thig' year—embracing a earl. "et7,9lllbfkritrely::oltbrett at guidon' Inoluded, 141 4,, ‘,4_lityfe'r,el.," ,driving, establishmentS' nom itris!og h9 l ll s ilt ges ; slelghe,'Mine")tho property of , gentlemen breaking op their Elfablem. Apo, several well-known fast trotting horses, be• sides ail' entire establishment, by order of exeon pp; partionlayi sea adver t isement. Abe Administration vs. The Demo• 'A•good many honest people attached tolhe Democratic party indulged the delightffildrearu, that after the October election the officials, and the self-constituted managers of the Adminis tration in this quarter, would take especial ' 'pains to conciliate the opinion they had out raged, and to prepare for harmonious and vic torious action; - We ; ourselves indicated a hearty diapdsition'to co-opin•ato with any dis interested movement of this character. Not, indeed, that we supposed the President and bis immediate advisers wonicl themselves en courage a restoration of peace to the discord ant and' divided councils of the Democratic party ; but that the instinct of self-preserva tion would induce the men who have allowed themselves to be used by the General Admin istration in this quarter, to yield to the expec tation of the masses, and if not openly to unite in measures for the restoration of peace to the party, at least to retire from the leadership they have usurped, and to allow patriotic men to come forward and guide our organization to success in 1860. But all these hopes and wishes have been dispelled. The intrepid men who have sym pathized with THE Films in its steady stand for the ascertained principles of the Demo cratic party 7 as illustrated by Judge DOUGLAS, and explained by Mr. BeauAmax and Mr. BRECEINRIDGE themselves, before and after their nomination—have not only been assured by the oracles and organs of the General Admin istration that they aro henceforth to be exclu ded from the Democratic party, and to be re garded as , 4 rebels,” deserving only of execu tion; but now a systematic warfare has been commenced upon another class of Democrats, nearly all of whom cordially supported the President in his most calamitous Kan. sas policy, or ardently sustained the Ad ministration State ticket at the last election. This class of Democrats includes hundreds and thousands of the purest and ablest nren in the party, and may be said to compose a large majority of the voters who sus tained that ticket at the last election. Among these Democrats we may be permitted to men tion such names as Hon. CHARLES BROWN, JAMES F. JOHNSON, GEORGE WILLIAMS, ED._ WARD WARYMAN, ALFRED DAY, FRANCIS WC/WADI:7H, WILLIAM LOUGHLIN, LEWIS C. CASSIDY, WILLIAM V. MCGRATH, GEORGE R. BERRILL, RICHARD VAUX, JOHN MCCAR THY, and a host of others; known, not only in this city, but throughout the State, for their consistent and constant support of the Demo cratic organization. We are not disposed to take any credit to ourselves for having anticipated the measure which was to be meted out by Mr. BUCHANAN and his adherents to all those who did not yield to the Administration in everything--not merely in the matter of Kansas, but in its subsequent proscriptions of public men, and in its still later dictation of nominations in the city and State, and its offensive intermcddling in the alteration and erection of repulsive platforms upon which they were forced to stand and fall. But we cannot refrain recalling to their attention the repeated declaration in this journal, that the time would come when all that we have as serted in reference to the determination of the General Administration to break up the Demo cratic party unless its destinies were unre servedly committed to its keeping, and to show ut; quarter to those who might presume to take any course outside of that marked out by its officials in this city—the time would come when this prediction would be abundantly realized. And that time has come. It is here now. And those who have deplored, and in some instances denounced, the course of TnE PaEss,*may, in their own persons, realize, at this day, how little they have made by palter ing or faltering in reference to the duty which they aro now, we are happy to say, constrained to perform. They adhered to the Administration when it was pursuing, with inhuman ferocity, the men who refused to yield Democratic prin ciples, and we do not complain of the course they took in The premises. No know most of them to be honest and upright men. But now they aro traduced themselves, simply and only because, intim exercise of their duty as Demo crats inside of the organization, they meet together to consult as to the best method of elevating the Democratic party from the de plorable depth into width it has fallen, and to make such preparations as will bring the divided masses of that party together in har monious array. Looking to the future, they behold the vast interests involved in the elections next year: first, the important considerations involved in the choice of a Democratic mayor and Councils in this great city—a city always Democratic when the party is united; second, the Governor and Legislature of the State, in October of the same year, upon the complex ion of which latter depends the election of a United States Senator for six years; third, the entire delegation in Congress; and, fourth, and more important than either, the triumph of the Democratic party in the Presidential campaigiPof November of that year. These are interests of commanding magnitude, emi nently deserving of the attention of the best members of the Democratic party, and singularly calculated to call forth the patriotic exertions of every man who entertains a sincere regard for the wel fare of the country. And yet, only because the gentlemen referred to assemble for the purpose of taking steps to secure all these im portant interests to the Democratic party, they have been assailed by name, and traduced with as much virulence as those who 'are co operating with TUE PnEss in its persistent warfare upon the treacheries and follies of the General Administration. If this last exhibi tion does not teach the active men of the Democratic party in this city, and throughout the State, how little they have to expect from the tender mercies of the General Administra tion and its agents, we shall be greatly mis taken. • In singular contrast with the blind and fatal courses of those who have managed to take possession of the organization of the Demo cratic party in this city—entirely through ofil dal influence—the manner in which the gen tlemen who held positions under President Ponce conducted themselves in reference to the struggle for the Democratic nomination for the Presidency in 186646, may, at this time, be happily referred to. General PIERCE was an avowed candidate for renomination. The gentle Men holding position under him in this city were nearly all his devoted personal friends, and we may say of him that no Exe cutive since the days of General hcasox was more successful in gathering around himself and his Administration the warm and sincere attachment of all who were connected with him. Mr. BUCHANAN, a citizen of Pennsylva nia, absent from the country at the time the canvass for the delegates to Cincinnati took place In this city, was also a candidate for the Democratic nomination. He had numerous friends in Philadelphia, who were most anxious to secure for him a united delegation from Pennsylvania to the National Democratic Convention.. The entire power of the Federal Government, in all its departments in this city, was in the hands of the friends of General Pinion—as It is to-day in the hands of the de pendents of Mr. BUCHANAN—and yet, during all the contest for delegates, no voice was raised in objection to the course of the office holders under General PiERGE, and no effort was made by those gentlemen to proscribe any man for indulging a preference for JAmEs Be cLtNAR. On the contrary, among the subor dinates under Hon. CIIARLEB BROWN, (then collector of this port,) as well as those under Jona MILLER, Esq., (then postmaster of Phila delphia,) and Col. J. IL SNOWDEN, (then, as now, director of the United States Mint,) were a number who were openly engaged in the different wards, canvassing for BCCIIANAH delegates. It is stated, as a signal instance of the magnanimity of FRANKLIN PIERCE, that when some of his enthusiastic friends in the lower wards of the city, who were desirous of car rying delegates favorable to him, suggested that several hundred additional laborers should be employed in the navy yard, ho refused his consent, stating that while ho was willing to employ as many thousands if the public service required them, ho could not agree to the appointment of a single additional Man for mere party purposes. When the county Convention met, which elected the delegates to Harrisburg, several persons hold ing office under the General Administration were chosen, and went to the State Conven tion the active and earnest friends of JANES BUCHANAN. Among this list we remember the names of FRANCIS MCPORNOK—since re moved by tho present collector, for his sup. posed DQVGLAS sympathies—Tin:was JOHN CRAWFORD, and others. The result was a harmonious Convention at Harrisburg, a satisfactory platform, the election to Cincinnati of a united delegation, the nomination of Mr. BUCHANAN upon the distinct Popular Sovereignty ground, and the perfect union of the Democratic party of Pennsylvania. In this connection it becomes us to say, that in the campaign of 1856, among tho most efficient, vigilant, and self-sacrificing and generous advocates of Mr. BUCIIANAN, Were CHARLES BROWN, collector; JonN MIL LER, postmaster; R. C. HALE, surveyor; ALFRED, DAY, navy agent; and HENRY C. LOUGHLIN, P. BARRY HAYES, GIDEON WEST cart, and GEORGE R. BERRILL, United States appraisers; and many others, who (without caring to inquire whether they would be re tained in office, many of them declining reap pointments) labored only for the success of the Democratic party and its candidates. These gentlemen, in concert with Hon. Mennen VAUX—thon mayor of the city—devoted themselves assiduously to the good cause, and in several instances displayed a generosity and disinterestedness wo have rarely seen equalled, contributing the most potential element to the success which crowned the exertions of the united Democracy in that year. It is no less significant that most of the names we have mentioned were placed on the black list by Mr. BUCHANAN immediately after his election, and that, while they have all sustained his gene ral Kansas policy, they are to-day, with scarce ly an exception, marked out for denunciation by his creatures, because they dare to assert the right of acting for themselves in the prima ' ry elections. Now for the reverse of the medal. Sir. Be- CIIANAN is not a candidate for co-election—or says ho is not. The Democrats of Philadel phia preferred him in 1866, in the vain idea that he would be a peace-offering to the coun try. The office-holders of General PIERCE, respecting the popular will, assisted to gratify it. Now, when Mr. BUCHANAN is not in the field, the Democratic masses of Philadelphia look to some other name as a pence-onring for 1860. One class (and by far the largest) prefer STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS, another FRANK LIN PIERCE, another Mr. BRECKINR/DOE, and another Mr. GUTHRIE. And yet what do we witness? The most indiscriminate assaults upon all who do not yield to the dictates of the office-holders of the Administration; who, while professing to have no candidate of their own, insist upon electing delegates to the State Convention to be controlled by themselves ! As we said in the beginning of this article, the crusade against the State-Rights Democrats, the "rebels"—a terns of reproach, which they gladly accept as one of honor—had, at least, the plausible justifica tion of being a war upon men who ask no terms from a degenerate Administration; but the attack upon Democrats who have been willing to sanction, or rather to tolerate, the General Government in its treacheries, for the sake of the organization of the party, posses ses, if possible, a wider significance, and teaches the lesson that we have fallen upon times when the servants of the people assume to be their masters, and when men in office—a contemptible minority at the beet— attempt to claim the right to domineer over the disinterested majority. There is in this spectacle a philosophy which is entitled to some further comments. Meanwhile, we sub mit to the judgment of the Democratic party of Philadelphia, whether the " rebellion " of THE PRESS, beginning, as it did, when the Administration was flushed and' filled with power, has not been strikingly vindicated by a most salutary sequel? The Meeting at Bridesburg. By the proceedings of the meeting at Bride. burg, held on last Wednesday evening, which we publish this morning, it will be seen that the Democratic citizens of the Twenty-third ward aro making a resolute effort to rid them selves of the. despotism of official dictation, and to direct the energies of the organization of the Democratic party into their true and appropriate channel of protecting and enforc ing genuine Democratic principles. We trust this movement will be followed up in other sections of the city. There is no doubt that an immense majority of the Democratic citi zens of Philadelphia are bitterly opposed to the policy of the Administration, and that they are animated by a strong desire to protect the Democratic party in future from the inevitable defeats which await it, so long as it is regarded tho mere representative of Dtlehananiem. ' The official influence In this city derives its strength not so much from the numbers con trolled by it—for they form but a small portion of the members of the Democratic party—but from their discipline, their unscrupulousness, and their close attention to the primary assem blages, which control the nominations, the choice of delegates to District, State, and Na tional Conventions, and thus influence the whole policy of the party. The power of the Federal officials is last waning away. They have sanctioned a gross betrayal of the prin ciples of the party, and they have brought down upon its devoted head a succession of terrible defeats. If their counsels prevail now they will secure, In the great Presiden tial campaign of HO, a national repetition of the disasters they have already brought upon the State and local tickets of all the Democrats of the North. Tho Democracy of Philadelphia, in deciding whether they will submit to the selection of delegates to the next State Convention, and, consequently, of delegates to the next Na tional Convention, by the Federal officials of this city, virtually decide between future vic tory and future defeat—between the continua tion of the party as a powerless and unsuc cessful minority, or its re-establishment on a new basis, which, by its just concessions to the demands of public sentiment, would in sure future triumph. There is nothing needed to rout the cohorts of the Administration in every Representative district but a resolute and determined effort, and a full expression of the honest Democratic sentiment which abounds everywhere, at the primary assem blages of the party. it is evident that no men aro better satisfied of this fact than the officials themselves, for fear and consterna tion are displayed in all their movements, and in the tone of those who arc their champions. There never was in this country, since it secured its freedom from the yoke of Great Britain, a more complete exhibition of despot ism than that which the Administration pre sents in its relations to the Democratic party. Men aro pursued for honestly entertaining opi nions so orthodox that none dared to question their correctness two years ago, with as much vindictiveness as if they were the veritable outcasts and felons of society. All the ma chinery of the Government is brought to bear upon them, so far as its power can possibly extend, with as much ma lignity, and in as tyrannical and ferocious a spirit, as any despot of Europe ever evinced against the champions- of liberty. There is scarcely a classic appeal against existing ty ranny in any ago or country that does not pre sent many striking points of applicability to the present position of the Democratic party in its relations with the treacherous servants who now assume to be its masters. There never was a greater mockery upon any cause, just in itself; and which possessed a hold upon human sympathy, than the application of the word Democratic to the Federal Administra tion, or the control of the Democratic party by its officials. They illustrate and enforce, by their daily acts and policy, nearly every ty rannical theory, every anti-Democratic doc trine, every despotic sentiment that has dis graced the human race. But the masses of the Democratic party are too ardently at tached to the Into principles or liberty to al low official despotism to continue its influence for any extended period. Thu genuine Demo cratic spirit of the nation is rapidly and cer tainly asserting its dignity and power, throtigh the aid and influence of thousands who are sickened by the despotism of which new evi dences aro daily presented to their minds, and by the weakened anti distracted condition into which the Democratic party has been brought by the treacheries and tyrannies of the Admi nistration. ELEGANT CITY RESIMBNCES, country Hanle, farm, valuable business stands, small dwellings, ground rents, stocks, &c., Tuesday next, 25th instant, thirty-flue properties—part peremptory sales—by order of executors and others. ace Thomas .h Sons' advertisements. Pamphlet catalogues to. morrow. ORPHANS' COURT SALES: Thep will also hoh large Batas on the Ist, Bth, and 15th Novo mber, b. order of the Orphans' Court, &e. AUCTION NOTICE.—B. 15cott, Jr., auctioneer, 431 Chestnut street, will sell this morning, commencing at 104 o'clock, an assortment of zephyrs, knit hoods, talmas, scarfs, gauntlets, merino shirts and drawers. Cashmere, buck, end fur gloves, gaunt lets, (to. THB PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1859. 7 We may expect to hear, from all parts of the South, that the people in that quarter of the Union are greatly excited at the tragic evt.nts at Harper's Ferry. This is but natu ral. Tho ultra-Abolition sentiment in the firee States• for the last twenty-five years has been rapidly tending to extreme measures, and there have not been wanting, in either sec tion, political demagogues to fan the flame. We, who reside in the free States, can hardly conceive the sensitiveness of the people of the South after an excitement such us that which took place in Virginia a few days ago. Every variety of apprehension will be anticipated and suggested, and many honest men will no doubt be led away by the general feeling. In such a state of things it will be well for our Southern brethren to turn their eyes to the patriotic and sympathetic fooling in the North, where all classes and all parties-- Democrats, Republicans, and Americans, with very inconsiderable exceptions—stand ready to sustain them in all their rights, and at every hazard to protect them front the horrors of a servile insurrection. This fact should present itself to the reflecting men of the South, and should guard them against the slightest encou ragement of any stop which might look to com prehending the freo States in the ,olightest sus picion of sympathy with the actors at the late tragedy at Harper's Ferry. Violent remedies will no doubt be suggested by violent men in the South, as a protection against a repetition of the late sad scenes which have so much aroused the country. Such recommendations can do no good. Tho sympathetic feeling for our Southern friends, roused by the Harper's Ferry anitir, may be followed by a fearful re action, should not the Union-loving men of the South respond to It heartily and at once. 0* The Public Ledger of yesterday seems to be nervously anxious in regard to the authorship of a communication published in this journal of Wednesday, giving a descrip tion of Joux BROWN, of Ossawattomle, and stating some other matters in reference to the movements of leading Abolitionists. - We gave the " observations" in question as a mere matter of news, having expressed our own opinions editorially on the same day, in the most explicit manner. Tile Paces never prints a communication on any question, without first obtaining the namo of the writer; and the " observations" in question were enclosed to us by the Secre tary of the Anti-slavery Society in this city, who, whatever may be said of his peculiar opinions, (which we have always opposed,) is among the representatives of a class of anti slavery men in this city who regard the recent tragedy at Harper's Ferry with quite as much horror as the Ledger itself, and who profess to operate entirely by argument, and ridicule the alternative of the "bullet and the ballot." Wo harilly think the secretary of such a so ciety would be a .<yery formidable witness in the hands of DistrihAttorney VANDYKE as an accessory before the Mel, on account of his communication sent to TnE PRESS. ARCH-STREET THEATER.—" Dot," as we raffle!. pated, has made a hit bete, and may be played ad libitum—which means as long as the manage ment de:lre. Mrs, Drew and Mr. Dolman ploy the parte of Dot and John reerybingle remark ably well, and Clarke's version of Telly Noichoy is an extravaganza of the first water. Mr. Oil bort's Caleb shows the fine artist. Tho only weak obaractor in the oast is Bertha, for which, favorite though she be with us, we find Miss );Wino Taylor not quite competent. Miss Angela Sefton, (laugh ter of an old Philadelphian favorite. would prob ably have played this part better. As for raelle ton, by Mr. Wallis, wo hold to our original opinion —ho has shown infinite talent in treating this character, as it wore. WALNUT•STREET THEATEM-000Uptfflell aloe whore (at 0 azzaniga'e Concert) prevented our wit• flossing the performance of I' Medea " last night, Mr. Showell playing Ja.gon to Miss Davenport's Medea. This evening, for hoe benefit, Miss Da venport plays in "The Stranger" anti '• The Cricket op the Hearth," taking the port of Dot, with firm Thayer in her original character of Tilly f4lowboy, and Mr. Perry no John Peery bingle. This should bo a very attractive pro gramme, from a most attractive, amiable, and no compliehed benefiriatre. Mies Davenport's engage ment closes to-morrow evening. GAZZANICIAN FAREWELL CONCERT.—At Musical Fund Hall, last night, a very large audience as sembled to assist, as the French say. at the Fare well thincert of Madame tlazzaniga—who had is great " Farewell Reneilt" at the Academy of Mu sic, some slx months ego. Just co, dpripg the last seven years, or thereabouts, the Ravels have play ed the "farewell" dodge. It has breasts so coin mon as to remind us of the hero of Prier's ballad, who "Sow rjlted the halter,now travelled the cart; And nfren tonic IMO ; but wee loth to depart." It i 3 to be hoped that this is the very last leave taking of Gazzaniga, and, on the approved plan of speeding the parting guest, we shall entreat her as kindly as n tine regard for truth will 'allow. The hall MIS nearly throe-fifths full. During the first part of the performances, which went off rather coldly, there was no more—which certain. ly was a relief. During the second part, a email knot of loud-handed auditors twice encored Mr. Sanderson (inisprinted Sander., in programme,) Madame Olizzanigit and Mr Perring, in n duet, once, and each separately once also. Mr, Porting, an English singer, was put iu the blunder pro gramme RH Signor. .Madame Oarzaniga, who was neatly attired, looked much better than when she bade ',Fare well," on the last previous 'suasion at the Academy of Music. Itcet, which has improved her health and appearance, has evidently served her voice too. It has lost much of the wiry tone which in jured it last season, and has gained clearness and sweetness in the lower notes. Concert-singing is not her forte, bemuse she is a dramatic vocalist. yet she gave with no emelt effect the duo train Travlata," wilts Signor Ardavani, end again a duo with Mr. Porring. Of her solo, lhongh "Ali: Mon lik" from "The Prophoto" was good, the best was a sacred Cantique. She was not very effective in the trio which closed the Concert. The want of n second female singer (a contralto was PyidCrlt. Signor Ardevani, from New York, has a very good baritone voice, eapidde of much expression and ho manages it tomarkably well. The grand aria flout " Lucretia Borgia" was extremely well executed. We hope to hear him in Opera. Mr. Perring, always careful and accurate, was educated in the best Loudon school for singing in concerts and oratorios, and distinguished himself lost night. ills first song, ono of Beethoven's, was too long, but in the duet and trio with Madame Gazzaniga, ho sang in a manner quite worthy of his reputation. His ballad, " There Is a Flower that Illoomoth," was the best-deserved encore in the evening. Of Mr. Sanderson's plane-forte playing wo shall only say that lie now stands among the artists who have played in this country during the last seven years, inferior only to Thalberg and Gottschalk As a composer, too, ho has high merit. The two fantasias in tho programme wore composed by himself—and so, we believe, were those which lie played so admirably in response to filet:noon-calls. Hero, Recording to public advertisement, closes Madame Gazzaniga's professional labors in this city. In Philadelphia, her fine voice and good acting first received public recognition in this country. Like tho man who picked up a diamond, we made much of our treasure. All went on fora couple of seasons, and then Madame Gazzaniga be gan to exorcise those caprieen which petted vocalist ' , glory in exhibiting in foreign lands, and whioli they dare not attempt to display in their own na tive places, where paid singers are not allowed by the Government to disappoint the public. Herr, however, we saw Madame Oazzanign so puffed up with praise (and unaccustomed dollars) that she positively declined to appear in the same opera with Madame de la Orange, certainly one of the best vocalists who have ever sang in this coun try. Next came Pauline Colson---young, talented, and a more altractli o singer than even La Grange. Whether Gazzaniga, as is most likely, dreaded the results of immediate contrast with Colson, we know not, but Rho declined Ringing with her also, all the while fearfully petting and patroni• zing little Madame de Wilhorst—who is only a neat drawing-room singer, at best—and public ly presenting her with bouquets and receiv ing them book, as publicly. half an hour later in the evening. An a woman, Madame Col son had a Chihli to the womanly kindness which tlazzaniga did not extend. As an art's', every judge of singing must admit that Colson wee every way more cffective than Orizzliniga—both which causes, perhaps, may account for the unkludness with which Gazznnign floated her, At the last season, when Gazzaniga returned here, with an overwOrked and evidently deteriorated voice, she was tolerated rather than admired. And the to leration was because she had been petted bore be fore; because the public really did not like to cen sure a woman who seemed to be doing her best to please them; and because she announced that she was bidding farewell, at that time, not to Philadelphia alone but to the Uni ted States. We know that she was not return ing to Europe then, and we said so—for which we received considerable censure. That was in March. Now wo aro in October. We still doubt that she is leaving a country whore she made, in a single wee,(, double what educated men, in various pro fessions, can earn by continuous hard work in the course of a whole ear. We doubt it—front what we have heard. I f, after thisselemn "Farewell," Madame Gazzaniga should retain to the Academy of Musk during the coining season, she desei yes to have empty houses to sing to. We untlentand that negotiations are even now on the lapis to " pre vail with her" to sing another season in the Opera hero. The riddle want novelty, not an amore of a farowelled singer, Public Amusements. Letter from isOcerisional." [Correspondence of The frees.) WASHINGTON, OoL. 20, 1850 It would be in vain lo disguise that the whir at Harper's Ferry has erected general alarm in the Southern States. This alarm has been exhibited strikingly in Washington city. Patrols have been stationed by the authorities at all accessible points, and much uneasiness continuei to ho felt by our citizens, mato and female. But in every such crisis as this, there be a Providential compensation. The peril of the South awakens the natural affections of the North. I havo no doubt that the population of Penipylvanla 'would rise en masse to protect their Southern brethren front a servile insurrection. The tonic of the proms of all parties In the free States is healthful and emphatic in denunciation of the insane but horrid plot at llarper's Ferry. These (hinge cannot fait to have the happiest effect, not only now, but hereafter. Let us hope that they will plant the seeds of fraternity and I good—fooling among all the States of the Union. It was Only yesterday, as it were, since the Southern States were enabled to assist, the business Interests of the North, by means of their heavy crops of cotton, rico, and sugar; and now that those States may be said to bo in some danger from their peculiar population, we are called upon to witnees a simultaneous move moat of eympathy and co-operation in their behalf on the part of the people on the other side of Ma con it Dixon's line. The immodiate political effect of this outbreak will be felt its the coming elections in Maryland, and you need intim astonished if loth Winter Da vis and Morris's Norris should be defeated for Congress in Baltimore—especially the former, whose iccout speech has exhibited a strong sympa thy with Northern fanaticism. When 1 saw tint a loiter from Gerrit Smith had been found =sag the effects of John Brown, I could not believe it to be possible that this moat plausible gentleman, who served in the Congress of the United States from 1553 to 1555, and whose whole life had boon one long profession of peace ful purposes, should have lent himself to this ter- tibia tragedy. Gerrit Smith, while in Congress, made a very favorable impression. Ills appear ance was exceedingly striking. A very handsome man, of about fifty-five years of ago, with hie shirt collar laid broadly over his neck ; a fine, healthy, florid face, and portly, erect, and dignified form, ho wawa study. _Having received a classi cal education, and being possessed of uncommon advantages as a popular orator, ho was quite Cicero in debate. Ile delighted in the most ele gant hospitalities, spending his money with a fre quency and freedom that was a subjeot of general remark. Ile was ready to gratify every appetite except that xhich expected wines or spirits, and he presided at hie board with the dignity of King Arthur at his ' round table." Thu most welcome guests at his house were Southern men, and they with their generous, out-spoken warmth, epoko o Smith as ono of tho best fellows in am capital as one, although well known ns an Abolition ist, still as ono to be tolerated. I thought the an nouncement that be had assisted in the late MOVO moot at Harper's Ferry was a mistake, until ono of his Abolition friends in this city called my at tention to his letter, written on the 27th of August last, from his residence in New York, in which It appears that the peaceful Gerrit Smith really con templated, if ho did not advise, a speedy and bloody end to the slavery agitation. A single ex tract from this letter will sullies : "No wonder, then, is It that in this state of fact. which I hate sketched, intelligent black men in the States and Canada should nee no hope for their race in the practice end policy of white men. No wonder they nra brought to the conclusion that no resource is left to them but in cod and insurrection,. For insurrections, then, we may look any year, any month, any day. A terrible remedy for a terrible wt one. But come it must, unless anticipated by repentance and toe putting away of the terrible wrong. " It will be said that them insurreetionn will be fail ures ; that they will be put down. Yes, but will not slavery nevertheless bo put don nby them? For wing portions are there of the South that will cling to slavery after two or three considerable insurrections shall have filled the whole South with horror? And in it entirely certain that these insurrections will be put down prompt ly, end before they can have eproad far? Will telegraphs and railroads be too swift for even the swiftest insurrem. hone Remember that telegraphs and railroads min be rendered useless in an hour. Remember, too, that many, who would lie glad to face the inaorgenta, would he bust in transporting their wives and daughters to places where they w odd be safe from that worst fate which husbands and fathers min imagine for their wises and daughters. I admit that, but for this embarrassment, Southern inen would 'email at the idea of an 'onager, Linn. and would quickly dispose of ono. But trembling as thee would fur their loved ones. I know of no part of the world where, so much as in the Smith. men would be like, in a formidable incurroption, to lose the most important time, nod be distracted and panic-stricken. " When the day of her calamity shall have come to the South, and fire, and rape, and slaughters, shall be filling up the manure of her affliction. then will the North have two reasons for remorse : " Ftrist. l'ltt she wee not 'thin: ochatoror tho atti tude of the south at this pound to shale with her in the osponse nod lona an immediate and universal eman cipation, " Second. Thot oho wits not willing to voto shivery on of elogtence." Everything conspires to render the next Congress ono of the most interesting, if not the most disas trolls, that has over assembled here. Not to speak of the tlAubt that hangs over the organization of tho 'louse, all the late °vents will bo thrown into the balling cauldron like so many explosive and inflammable Ingredients. The South will come here indignant, tho North defiant; but I am not without hope that the sympathetic spirit which has grown out of the late insurrection will, so far from adding to the excitement, teach all sides a lesson of forbearance and unity. When the free States in. dignitutly frown upon the raid of Brown and his ill-fated followers, it is, I think, no time for those of the South to Indulge in aarimonious threats and denunciations. "Out of the nettle Danger lot us pluck the flower Safety." Gradually the fecal" of woll•known political leaders begin to make their appearance in this city. Already numbers aro to be found at our hotels and boarding-houses. Years have made end inroads into the ranks of the regular vieiters to Wm:l44ton. These who come here, come either no Representatives In one or tits other branch of Congress, or to make this capital a pleasant resi dence during the jointer, or are interested in various measures before Congress and tho depart ments. When a public man once gets a taste of Washington life ho rarely ever recovers, but is tam' of coming back, whenever an opportunity cffers. The consequenee is, that gradually our city is being made 'nip permanent home of pant hers of members of Congress, ex.illenators, and ex officials, who find it agreeable and profitable to contlime the relations begun in other capacities. There is much to interest all of them hero. Biltriet Attorney Van Dyke, of yourcity, arrived here two days ago. It seems to be understood that intertit,Atie war among the Philadelphia (Ace holdeis is, at last, to be settled ; anti in favor of the District Attorney. Ito has, heretofore, stood almost alone among them—having been bitterly opposed by the collector, the surveyor, Mr. Hoary M. Phillips, and Mr. Robert Tyler, aided by Attorney Goleta' Black. All those intlitences ',method the President that the Administration State ticket should ho tri umphantly elected, and as tills prophecy utterly failed of fultiltnent, Mr. Van Dyke (who took the other ground) may be regarded as tho victor. I do not think he will Ito disturbed. lie Lae intellect and pineli. I ant told that he has already con t iticed the President that it is utter folly for him (Van Dyke) to co-operate with tho set of men in Philadelphia who have reduced the Democratic oto in that city from thirty-eight to twenty-six thousand. Your District Attorney, appointed un. dor Fierce, R. 4 a friend of Buchanan, in place of A shmead, holds Oft under Buchanan, and I would not he a »hit astonished if ho should turn the tables upon Hamilton, Baker, and your excellent postmaster, N. 11. Br Arno OCCASIONAL. Note from II on. Charles illroa The Following note from Hon. CHARLES BROWN, of this city, explains itself. The simple word of such a citizen outweighs ten thousand falsohoods: DEAR Siti 4 : In the Pennsylvanian of the 19th instant, it 13 asserted editorially that at a meet ing of Domoorot4 Bummed to have been held on the previous evening, "Ex-Collector Charles Brown offered a °solution" "denouncing the present °nice-holders." "Ex-Collector Charles 2.4(mm tiered a resolution" "denouncing the prestnt National Administration." I have only to say, in reply lo this charge, that I havo not, at any (into or place, offered any resolu lion, either for or against the present office-holden, or Xational Adnunt qration, or any other Admi nistration; nor have I beoti present at any meet ing whore any such 'monitions wore offered. The whole story it, therefore, a falsehood. You're, 4e., CHAR I.P. 4 Boma I'mrmtaos's Lot Mailitztar..—The \ovem• ber uuwbu, klat out , contains a fine engraving, on nood. Join Anderson, my Jo," worthy of being oymiled on steel. It also has, besides fashion• plates. &e., to ant' e a pleasing domestic 00011 , `, painted by Meyer, and engraved on steel by Illninn 'Jinglers, 001:4 d " Watching the Baby." In ninny and many n hozncitend, far and near, the miginalh of this happy wenn may be found. The reading part of this popular magazine is very good, null LOIIoP, pith satisfaction, that young Frank Leo Benedict will continue to write exelu- SiVely for "Peterson." Two splendid mezzotint pictures, engraved expressly from original paint- ings by Hamilton. ahc Stanfield of America, will be git en as meiniuml to club getters•up. Each print will be of a size to frame. We may add that the mush, in Peterson "is always very especially good. Not by any wrens apropos of that, we beg to ask when Mrs Anna S. Stephens' apparently interminable story called 't Gillian " is to end? COSMOPOLITAN ANT JOURNAL.—From Messrs. Hunt & Co , cornet of Chestnut and Fifth streets, we hate the la.t number of this handsomely-illus. traced wink. It is issued by the Cosmopolitan Art Association, of which Messrs. Hunt are solo agents in this city. The frontispiece, entitled "Life's Happy Hours," is a beautiful sketch, charmingly engraved. NI% La :Mount a'n't balloon, tho Atlanlie, which watt abandoned by Min :ti tho Canada wo d+. bat boon teamed. and ratutned to Waterton n woo• what torn, bat I:lviocabto. henry Ward Beecher at Concert Hall Last Everang. The annual course of popular lectures before the People's Literary Institute was inaugurated at Concert Hall, last evening, by a lecture from Honey Ward Beecher, and a splendid inauguration it was. The audience was literally overflowing. several minutes before the hour of commencing had arrived every scat in the hall was occupied, including those in the gallery and on the platform, and many who desired wore unable to obtain ad mission. Commendable pains wore taken by the mana gers to prevent the sale of more tickets than the hall would comfortably accommodate, and their sale at the stores was Stopped at 5 o'clock in the afternoon and at the door several minutes before the lecture opened At thirty-three minutes after the time appointed to commence his lecture, Mr. Iteecher's appearance upon the platform was sig nalled by a perfect thunder of applause, and, omitting his usual•extemporo preface, the lecturer at once announced his theme to be " flAnnat.a MAKERS. " The lecture which followed had the merit of being new; and, although less boister ously applauded than some we have heard him de liver, was in ninny respects their superior. lie commenced by saying that be who made right seem better than wrong, and good better than evil, applied the most powerful antidote to mischief. As in the natural world, not storms and thunders, but dews and mundane bred harvest, so he wished, on this ocensivn, rather to avoid sarcasm and the hu- morons, and deal in milder weapons in whet ho had to say of bargain•makers," a term which, 'for sundry reasons given, he preferred to that of mer chant Wherever there was bargain-making, we might be solo there was life. There was always a pulse in the village store, whether there was any sign of adivity in any other interest in the neighborhood or not. It had been the habit of men to stigmatize bargain•makers as selfish. Well, suppose they were, ho would ask in what rcspeet they differed in this from every other class ? Was there no mis- representation in tho medical profession' no lying in the legal! or was there nothing entirely free fow falsehood but the Church 7 [Laughter.] It would bo found, he said, that the most gene rous men were not to bo found among the lordly princes of acres, but rather among those who were using their money in traffic. If we looked up to commerce through its branches, we might see its docive'll features and imperfections; but if we viewed it from some towering moral altitude, from which could be seen all its grand ameliorating tendencies, our impression would be very different. Cattiness made men practical, and thus reduced everything to a substantial basis. Speculation, on the other hand, was represented as a balloonist who went up without knowing where to, and gene rally came down. It was Commerce that bad mspacked this globe, whioh before IVA 9 a locked trunk. She taught men , ilso to delve in mines, and Board' tho bottom of streams. She needed the winds, and took them captive for her sails; she needed something more, and was now applying fire and running races with For three hundred miles from our coast, and all around the British Isles, the bottom of the sea had been brought up and mapped through her en• orgy. Commerce, too, had made the world a whisper ing gallery. Iler feet it was that forded the omen, and proved the possibility of rendering electricity Inseam; of instantaneous communication around the globe. The 9 awe ship which carried rum to the Indies, carried also missionaries with the pledge ! Commerce alone was a universal monarch. The King governed his subjects, the Emperor his le gions, the Popo his devotees, but the banker was a universal lord. There was no tribe on the globe that did not understand the language of the dollar. And whatever might be her motive, in the long run Commerce would be found working with God. Man's selfishness always sowed winter, but out of winter God reaped spring! So it was often in this world, the mischief which man contrived end ed in benefit. Commerce and religion were un-. luestionably working together; one, front a divine motive, the other from a selfish ono. Commerce had at last learned that the civilized were better buyers than the barbarous, and for this reason was beginning to favor civilization. In the comparison made by the lecturer between the workings of Commerce and of Providence some the interesting peculiarities of Mr. Boocher's [recently much•eommented•upon] theology wore slightly uncovered. Commercial experience was beginning to teach men that liberty is profitable , end, said he, let every storekeeper in the land once get the idea •hat this is true—that the dollar-and.conts interest of the world teaches liberty—and every doctor of divinity will swear that the Bible teaches the smite thing! [Laughter.] Ile did not mean a profane oath, of course, but a sanctuary oath. [Renewed laughter. But there was alligher motive In Commerce than mere greed for money. A knowledge of men, all moonier of substances, forces, and manufacturing powers was needed and possessed by the successful merchant. The unwritten book of the human heart went down into that widest and deepest library, the grave-yard, un read, or we should see in multitudes of stores along our crowded streets, underneath the outward efforts manifested, the purest and noblest motives of men and women, struggling to achieve objects of human affection, which, if kpown, would lend a divine halo to their toil. The threads of life were woven in the loom of the heart : the figures stamped upon the cloth were but the outward act 4. The relations of Commerce to intellectual culture. moral culture, politics, and humanity remained yet to be considered. Ile would not say that a colle. glate education wee absolutely noceseary for a merchant; yet it was a great advantage for him to have it. Ile believed that any man would be all the better fir having an education, no matter bow menial his vocation; in fact, the lower down a man's position was in the social scale, the more he needed to be educated. It required a greet deal more intelligence to be poor than to be rich. The edi tor needed culture end varied attainments, but not more so than did the farmer, the mechanic, and the manufacturer. Tho world was God's library, and every man should use it. It Wll5 no disgrace for man to spend his lite in selling little things, unless the smallest thing in the store was the man him self! Speaking of the relations of commerce to more culture, the speaker said it was a false aspersion upon traffic to say that laxity of morals was hulls. pensablo to success Practical commerce, he in. shied. was founded in equity, and absolute moral correctness was the first requisite of a successful bargain-maker. A dishonest course was in the long run like a bursting cannon, while it might injure the object aimed at it destroyed itself, and was very opt to kill the engineer who fired it. • The relations of commerce to politics were next considered. It was not the church and the pulpi which needed integrity most, though they could dispose of a little more than they have. The men in our land who had sold their rectitude for pelf had been paid, and always would be; and that merchant who took sides with injustice was a sui- cide. The way of integrity might seem hard as flint, but it was sure to end in the orchard and in flowers. No man hod less excuse for being a time- serving politician than a merchant Commerce, in the last place, was considered in its relation to humanity. In tbis connection it was said that commerce was the world's plough Whether it would be eventually devoted to the gospel of love, or of the whip, was a matter of the gravest importance. (told 1 , 1118 the world's baro meter. It went down when storms agitated the nation, and rose when pears prevailed The lecturer was loudly applauded at the close. By the overland mail from California wo havo tho following account of the arrest and holding to bail of Judge Terry, for tho killing of Senator Bro derick, from the San Fr:ovine-0 BuMean of Sep tomber 24 : "Judge Terry, who had been arrested near Stockton, on a warrant transmitted front this city. was brought down on the Stockton steamer lost night, and this morning appeared before Juden Blake, of the County Court, and gave bail fur hie appearance to answer any charge the Grand Jury might have to bring against hint. Ile was brought down by Sheriff O'Neill. of San Joaquin county, and met on the wharf by seve ral of his friends, who had collected for the pur. pogo of escorting him to the Metropolitan hotel, where ho put up. Upon arri hat in the ally the custody was transferred from riff O'Neill to Chief Burke. and ho remained constantly tinder his charge till telensed on bail. " The arrest was made at Terry's ranch, in San Joaquin county, twenty-Gvo miles from Stockton, on the 17th inst. At half past nine o'clock this morning Judge Terry was token before Judge Blake, and a bond for his reappearance in court, in the penal coin of $lO,OOO, woe given by himself as principal, and by IL Walker Hours, G. W. Trahern, and M. Y. Tru ett, as suretico. The sureties Mate under wttli that they are residents and house-holders, IMurs a nd Trahern of San Joaquin county. and Truett of Sall Francisco county. rinett find Boars ju.dity in the sum of $5,004) each, and Traheru iu Ow $lO,OOO. Alter giving bail the aeouio I awl die ,harged." tivrernor Weller, of California, it rites to the treasurer of the Washington Monument AMocia lion no follows. •'ln coMplianea with an net pasted by the last Legislature, 1 Imo this day forwarded to the Hon. Wm. fled ill a draft on New York for 411,000, with directions to hoed the same to you California proposes to gin this amount annually towards the e:eetion of that noble shaft to the tummy of our \Vnshingtou. • ' Dr. T. L. Nichols, formerly a writer for the press, and a recent convert to Catholicism, dc. livered a lecture in New York, on Wednesday night. $lOO,OOO In I)ust from Pike's Peril:. Sr. Louis, Oot. 20.—A special despaLch to the RrieLli ca„ a , a grip of men arrived at Pt. Josegiol3lo:Ler day 1 tom s Peak. bringing 6.1tv,00,,, in Appearance of Frost in Mississippi. NOW ORLEAVO, Oct.2o.—Theta was frost near rinks Inirg, Mugs ,3('SIJRII) flee Istettitter Ent ('ity. 4 . 2 1 1 ,, K , r' i, ( 4 )RA t :t v ,\:, ,;, ( k 1e i t ,;.( ?1 , 4— . - . 1 I 0 bteatt et Littitt,l Clt) THE LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. THE HARPER'S FERRY INSURRECTION CONVERSATION OF BROWN WITH SENA TOR MASON AND OTHERS. HIS NORTHE It li CON FEDEBATES Cook's Wife at Harrisburg, and Cook Supposed to be on the way to Canada. MORE SUPPLIES OF Alt MS- TR-ACED-Tili CHAMBERSBURG, PA GOVERNOR WISE IMPPTES COWARD! TO tp, PEOPLE OF HARPERS FERRY', AND CON PIRES TIME TO FRIGRTIENED SHEEP. THE EXAMINATION OF PRISONERS. Captain Brown Considered out of Danger B itrimono, Oct. 20.—1 n a con, creation held with Captain troy, n t esterdsi , in the presence of : , enAtor lion. Alesits. Faulkner. Vallandiclioni, and others, hn made several answers which cle Iris demon utrate the complicity of numerous persons in the North ern, Western, end Eastern States. Ile refused to fla mer the question whether he hod had is conference whit Ciddineo.of Ohio, about his Vin lain expedition. Ile nilinitted that he had eorreopondence with parties at the North on the sublect, and had numerous sympathi zero in all the free :itates. . Despatcheswere received here to-night from !lasers. town, which declare that Cook's wife certainly went to Harrisburg on Tuesday, and took hoarding en the same house with Brown's daughter-in-law. The sheriff and his deputy, of Hagerstown. followed Conk as far as Greencastle to-day, and the impression there was, that Cock had left for Chamt,ersbure. The impression at Hagerstown is that Coos passed throu,sh last night. 76e sheriff was credibly informed at Green castle that a load of boxes passed through there on Tuesday. for Washington county. loaded is ith rifles, pistols and yam The sherdris going in search of them in the morninr. The stace-never of the Charnbersbrircline also eon firing the etatemente I Ln refATES r. erence to Coq:ilea wife. . Mr. William Le, , gentleman from Charlottesville, was brought in to day. 'lector arrest. causing treat ex citement. He was soon recognised and discharged. Mr. Ould also left for Washington last evening, thus virtually leaving the prisoners in the hands of the Vir ginia authorities. It is said that Governor Wise is not very complimen tary to tho people of Harper's Ferry. montane to them cowardice, in allowing such a handful of men to hold a Population of 'loath two thousand inhabitants prisoners for twenty -four hours. .Healsospoke ofthe fact of eight or ton men keeping tufty or fifty citizens in confinement. One rcuhed— " IN ell, Governor, but scut must remember we were packed torether like sheep." The Governor replied: "Yes, I know that; but, I must say. I think you acted like sheep also:' The hearing of the case 'yefore the examining Court of Justices wlll probably take place to niorrow. when, it is probable, the prisoners will be removed to Wythe ville for trial. Captain Brown is not considered 'al an, danger from h./ Rounds, though Stevens will, it is thought, not sur vive. He, however, hos it powerful constitution. soil UM recot er. THE LATEST DESPATCIIES 7IARpEles FEEIty. Ont. 20--10.30 o'clock P. M.—The excitement here has not abated in the least. Rumors are multiplying every momenr. ffnine authenticated statements hare been received from Ch•mbersluvg. shun In; that niece supplies of arms and accoutrements have been tracked to that neighborhood. The people will persist in believing that then are surrounded by wee and accomplices of Ca tarn Brown. The withdrawal ci Colonel Lee and the Washington marines Intl night la.s increased the general eonsterna lion, and the citizens to-day, tinder Colonel Barbour,of the armory, were endeavoring to organize companies for the general defence. The Virginia militia, bow s% or. in not very tractable material for the formation of efficient companies. as all hands want torte coptaire. Scouts are out in the mountains searching for Cook, but there is no doubt but that lie has ere this passed the Pentuolvania line, and is far on his way towards Ca nada. Every stranger that comes here ie looked upon with imspicion, and several ha, e Leaner:mad on the charge of being spiee. Washington Gossip. WASHINGTON, Oct. a) —The official communication from Fncland, in relation to the San Juan difficulties, is caceedinely pacific and conciliatory. The deepatches throu.th Lord Lyons to the .tats Department are the authority for this Henry Clay Mudd, connected with the clerkship of the House of Representatives. has in hand, it is understood. the publication of Judge Douglas's new pamphlet. It wilt appear this week, and it is presumed that it will not be copy riehted. The relent of the Secretary of the Treasury, am be lieved. will be very favorable. as retards the finances of the country. He will be able to get on without a new Lon, and will have treasury notes enough in hand to eu , pply the Poet Office deficit. roe rumor thst Gov. Fiord will he appointed minister to Franco, to succeed Mr. Mason. is incorrect. Mr. AD piston's name Is the Mast prominent in connection with that office at present. The Western Evangelical Convention. SECOND DAT. CHICAGO. Oct. 20.—The Western Tract Convention was engaged vesterdsy forenoon in the discussion of the resolutions offered on the previous day, watch were adoptnil, with slight amendments. In view of the uarper's Ferry affair, a resolution to the effect that the Convention desired the abolition of slavery by peaceable means alone, was unanimously 'cl Pre ' rtmmitteo appointed to report a plan for tract nuerntnon3 presented retort proposes the esta blishment of a Cmtad Menu lorobtainimc anti-staverY tracts, herever published : the committee to be em powered to raise fends for procurine the distribution of each tracts ; and the Cincinnati and Boron 'loonies to be requested. by formal action of the Board of Direct ors, to accept the committee on a United Agency. Af ter considerable discussion, the report was adopted, and a committee of nine was appointed to earn out time in tention of the Convention, which then adjourned. From Washington. WARHINOTON. Oft 3)—District Attorney Odd and Colonel Leo have returned trout Harper's Ferry. The trainer, soon rater hie arrival. had a conference with the President. and the latter a long interview with the Se c retarr of War. United States 7itarshal Johcson, of Ohio. who is now here, saf s one of the parties engaged with Brown wu prominent in the Oberlin reticle. Judge Black Ilse returned, niter an absence at his home in Pennsylvania. Jetties MoMaster, of Pittsburg, has been commie monad as assistant surgeon of the els y. Edmund S. lie Luce lute been commissioned as chief oncinoer of the navy. Parties hale beer arrested here for uttering counter feit cold dollars, and halves, remarkably well executed, but lighter then the genuine It is supposed that several thousand dollars worth have been thrown into circula tion. They were brought frorn Ptulastelplun. The Episcopal (lcueral Convention. RICFP4 0t n. 0ct.20 —The Rouse of Deputies has re- Solved to adjourn on Saturday next. A telegram has been received from Dr. Clark, of Con necticut. declining to accept the nomination as Bishop or the Northwest Territories. It is presumed that he hail not hoard of his subsequent election. The Missionnrs Committee reported back the resolu tions on reboots intolerance in Cuba, strikinx out all retain ei to memorialising the President on the sub j ect. The report of the Committee on Canons on ministers officiating in the parochial cures of others was de rated at great lentth The canon reported by a majont s of the committee was finally adopted. The House last night adopted the resolution requiring the House of Bishops to reconsider its action in relation to the use of the Common Book of Prayer. and throw the subject into such a shape as to admit of the joint action of both houses. Destructive Fire at Leavenworth, Kan sas—Loss $120,000. LESVIV:WoRTit, Oct. 31—At three o'clock this mora ine, a fire broke out in Bassford's Billiard Saloon. at the corner of Shawnee and Main streets, and before the flames could ho arrested batten buildings, with their contents, were destroyed. The loss is estimated at 813%000, about two-thirds of winch is covered by insurance in Eastern offices. .Messrs. Russell. Slaters, & Waddell's stores ware oonsimied. Los. 5,70,000. Insured for oue.halt the affiount. rho other principal sufferers wore Messrs. Lucas Moore & Co E..Alles. J. U. Feud!, J. P. Applegate & Co., and Verandah & Shotwell. A number of dwelliffiis were also consumed. Description of Captain John E. Cook, MM=llM===l • BALTIMORE. Oot.tl).—The following is a description of " Captain" Cook, one of the leaders of the recent in surrection at Harper', Ferry, and for the arrest of whom SI OW reward is Stands ifOLLI 6 feet 4 inches to o (cot 6 inches h weighs Mt pounds; walks with his breast projecting forward and head leaning toward the right • has light hair, with a small growth arouno the d a llDer ' llp, with a sallow complexion and sharp, narrow I . . It is generally conceded that Cook is stilt in the moun tains et irginia or on the Mary land gala of the river. and the nei.hlamlitiod is so closely bearded that he can hardly esene. From liavanu. ARRIVAL OP THE STEAIIEit DE SOTO AT NEW YORK, wITO $2.50,h00 IN SPECIE. Ntsir YORE, Oct. 20.—The steamship De Soto has ar rived at this Curt. with Havens dates to the lath lim o and nearly it quarter eta million In specie. The He Soto passed, poing into Havana, the United States steamer Wyandott. The political news is unimportant. Sugars wore very Sent. Fretahts rather active. Ster ling exchange IlarIP : lir cent. prem. Northern ex change bat i tr cent. prem. Marine Disasters. THE solowan ELLEN HUSH, OF PHILADIALPHIt, SENE. NEW OILLE,,Oct. —'lllo ship Authrt,c. (rem NPR York, hraced hare, reports thst the bsrk Au...ustus :Mayo. Irons New York Inc ilmans, had been Ashoreon Moselle Shells, ant subsequently got oil by the wreck ers. The brig Don - lin• arrived with her crew, and nr or ttnn of the ca'cn of tne schn , lner Ellen Bushd Irons fer Oalveston, which sprung a teak at ses and sunk. The Colchester Bank Case. ‘bLE DISCHADOE OP WARREN LELAND ••-- • - • • ILARTFOUP. Oct. ak—Mr. Warren Leland. of Now York, who has been on eannunation at Colchester , chanted. principally on the evidence of Samuel F. Jones, the cashier of the Colchester Bank, with ce frauding that bank of V d : MO, wan honorabl, ache-tied to-day• the evidence clearly disclosing • black-nod • porpoece. Mr. Leland has been re-.arrested on two other counts, and the examination has been postponed for err weeke, Mr to g 1 ,1114 bad is the awn of 0.500. Thus probably ends the farce. rf OM reins CIIARI.rSTIIN. Oct. 20 —Tho Courier's t peels! New Oriciir.s despatch states that the lover, at the latest re port*,**-13 increasins. Galveston and Hooston Frost had mute its nrip,sranco in portions of ftlissiit s,PPl and fexas hut the crops acre uninjured. Another attack nu tha town of Brownsville was ex panted. w Out r Oct. to.—Houston and Cnlve•rna ad viers of tho PO.II state , that the, te‘er was unabated. Tbe Indians continuo their deuced, lion, on the iron ter, and the lannhos of settlers u ore Ileum: for safety The Funeral of Gem Peter J. Stryker. ROMEII Cill] • . N Governor hla ord., 0,1 nut the itnlittn tram New Bren.wwi... Llu thoth, Newark, and Ironton. to attend the luneral of tho Itte Gnnerat Peter J Sir, her. on tomorrow. Extra trine will to run to cunt no the nnut my. Cricket tiIMIT rem C. W.. net 29 7 A trotte't between the North anti South of hrt.thtnd of tie •' All-Enzlon4 Fle en" sylti pitted to dly7etto itto.no . on 0 - eh s.de— which ,1 „t E „ in in t , of tho .North. The total Score woo—North 52: Fouth, 33. The encl.eters leave for Rochester, N. V., this roe ninr• The Loss of the Propeller Troy FIVE 11011 E CP TUE CREW PICKED CP. Pox r Sauce. C. W., Oct. 20.—Ftto more of the Crew of the propeller 110). (not 1 ox .1 v. lueh fohndered on Tue.s.ll) tog ht, ott Point Dubuque. lot% racked up. Thor. , wore twenty-three person., on hoedit. and, ei.(111 01 A 11(1,11 are known to le“ e been aired. The Vermont Legislature. VON ITFI Ira. Oct. 20.—The Les,istature has 11,,;artito \V. Dean, of Stratton. as Seetotar, ol;tat,. ; t tsIUEI S. CAMP, ns r.osnt.at-arn.s; IVIII ht. Pineree.ol Weathersheld. as Audoor Hiram Barman, CI Winds.a. as Superintendent of the r , tata "'se. and A. G. Gardner, of Deflator...on. as Butz Contonastonor. Two or the Santa Fe Mails Over-due. TIIER INDIAN DIFFICULTIES i DEBI Sr. LOL 15. Oct. 20.—Tuo ni the gynts Fe DIA:hI Were due nt IndeTendenee on 'reeedat and hire nor yet or n ed. Fears are cntertiined tint Gather difficult en t. Ith the Inds Inv Itrioo 0,01 - f2d. illassaelingetts Polities. DEICGMER To INK CIWILY.SION * COVENTMN. Bo.ToN. October tl9 —Tha Deowrithe Convention o nil Fourth Con Dowhet his chosen James Hilo, and I.iie WI, (sup( used to he in favor of Dough, h as delh,ates to the Charleston Con%ent , oa. The Yacht % and erer on - for the Coast of Africa. Set AS\ %tr. Ort. 20 — . Mr. Black. the shippine-master Who ens earned our in the pneht wrluttrer. ha re tnrnett In n small boat to the mouth of thn rtl er. He elrorty that enhtno. \! trtin d 09 .t ,, 101i 31e t. sant he is r. 01114 to LLLr her to Afilt a torn cargo of slaves. Thu Nein nskii Election. FT. Ilan+, Oet. 20 —BeIIITII , fttall A ebraik% and oats the FIRLA brook, the DelLontVllo oand , Oce 0010.11 to (0 COllOOll.l, THE CITY. AMUSEMENTS TEIB EVENING AMICRIC•II ACADEMY OF MUSIC. Breed and Leven.— `Mace Pills"—" Tisht Rope"—" The Conscript." WAL3CT-STIZET T . wester Wahnt and Ni nth streets.—" The Stranger"—"The eth.ket oa the Hearth." WffiaTLlT k CLA.2IE's. ARCS-52'2M TEZATSIC. Arch street, shot e Sixth. Dot "—•• Tan Tv, Wivea." Sic D•r<ncos I Glirmsx, Race meet. below 71 , rd--. Entertainme Os al ghtb • NATI4iNkL liALL, Market strret. be teen Twelisk and 'fturtßentn.—Doanettis Tutturd Dads. Goats, and Monkeys. BAvvozers 01.111.1 KOLVM. Eleventh street. above Chestnut.--Concersa nighttz. ACADENITor FINE Aar.. 1 3::$ Chantal': street.— Ex:La/imp of Paint.chn. Statuary. /to. 31Ecrucc or Corxr/Li —Both branehe♦ nI Conn oil met y esterdsy afternoon at the mans hoar. Setecr rtaaNcit—Alllllllbdr of petdions and COlllllO .. nteations ere presented and appropriately r+farted. Amon,: them vas one from a latirlaer that a portrait of lhomas e, painted tk) Jarvis, be admitted into Ir.dependenee Hail. Another CeitilillUelleTheillVlV received fie qn the otteers of the l'htitilel phi& Sink ode ran: to rent en, eal roost over the hacking MAIL at a rectal of e CIAO per aa nunt. 'rho resolution to Lae water ripe in Nineteenth sad other streets was passed Mr. Parker presented a report from tae Water Com mittee, recommending the transfer ad certain appropri ations; also, an ordinance relative to the yr ireseni at the water works. Both of there were knot over under the rules Mr. Leidy presented a bill prohibiting ehol com panies from constructing turnmos upon che.r within the limits of their termini, vitae:lt Die of Councits obeli have first been:Ad:reed. Time matter was also postponed. All ordinance giving preferen-e on the track of the city railroad to passenger and mail can of the reriasll reale Reamed. was presorted by 31r. Le.dy. and peered after a debate of thirty-fire minutes. The Committee on City Property presented a report re stave to the eretion of new pdblic but langs. The plan recommended by the committee is sum ar to that re ported by a former committee, in Deeembe., 1.5. V. It proposes the erection of a main be lan: its parallelo gram form. extend:et down dasch street. am feet deep. add running outward far feet irt tne Campoote order of architecture, to correspond wan liddependenee Accompany mg the report were resolutioas sector toga toe necessr y and expediency of the present plan and that the Commissioners of thty Property invite prom aals for the erection of the new baton,, at a coat not to exceed iinsli 3 Oua. This matter was debated at consi derable length, and finally adopted. dnotner r port was preseutrd from the some committee. accornuanisd by an nornance appropriating ry3.care for repairs to Spring Garden Hall, and that wean repaired, the second story be devoted to the purpodes of toe &loot Control lers. The bill paitied finaty. The ordinance for the purchase of Cie Kertiny.ten ;as works was then taken up end parted finady. The po,ice bill, in e nea by the Mayor, was sent in to the Chamber accompanied by the appoint., ante, een satind of Clot. Jacob Bennett as chief. with the et lit detectives already actor: as such • C. Bdektey. the tormer nominal ch.er, hem: returned ea clerk to the chi.* elect. The appointments were ceafirenect Mr..Nomiaa offered a resolution directmgthe Chief En.ineer to increase the number of laborers in h.s em ploy, in order that the increased se pPIY cf water't. cer tain unproviated ireetiots ot tee c.ty may be expenited. Agreed to. air Leidy offered a resolution to minim of the t ma tees of the gas-works wastoer a certain plan for den crating can by the deceinyortion of water is of any value. and wheiher its introduction would render neces sary the comstructon of new retorts and machinery. Adreed to. . . 'The ordinance authorizing the reserratiou a the val uable portion of the mac Let shanties from the =le, tree taken up and disoussed to a tedious len,,tb. the ordinance was a e reed to. A bill atipropriating SOU to the department of Ra cotver of Vales was adopted, alter lb Mod the Chamber adjourned. Comm,: IktiTSCU.—The usual number of communica tions and petittrii.it were meets ed and referred. Ateong, them were a petition from the First ward, askins forme toy in; of water pipes; a petition ter a pool Foe Depart ment, aid a petition for a culvert over the Cohockati cr.ele A resolution wee adopted to attend et the Cora/n . 0.31'1 ofb. ca. at 3 o'clock to-day toe:tin:Me tee plan ot a ta.dzis over the 'eche, ill, at Chestnut street. Mr. A. Miller submitted his protest ageinst the ection of the Conunitt. on berard .t-state In accepting the bond of the Eastern Market Company in place ot zeal estate, as required by o:Maurice. ea temente for the lease of a lot on Fifth street. below Market. A tier semen discussion, it was ordered that the document be entered on the minutes. Mr. W. 11. 'reams called up the resolution extending the width of the footway on dprosz ijanden streeteweet of Broad street, which was cot agreed to. Mr. O'Neill. in place. submitted an ordinance sego tat n. the pavement of footways. Mr. Backer. or the Committee on Finance. trobreitted a report. stating that there were Yr:AS Go/ in the einkinp Fund. and recommender. t e app,opriation of this soon, and a new loan of 471AltA). to meet tonne falluag due in Lied. A resolution was attached. al:dhoti:tor tie Trea surer to keep separate accounts for time tattle teden s ine to the Sinkine Fund ; also, a reaolution directina an ex act record of the ds es trial' tae lams of the city. and the dote of their m tturity ; also a resoityme errecin‘ the clerk to advertise the ordinance authorisin, a lam ot a. ou eon; all of which were coaselered and agreed to. A resolutton waa mboutteu reutiestme the Oct. Treasurer to report what amount of the water toad cul vert loan has been urtotiated, and what amount of it has been expended for current expense. Agreed to. The Colutulttre On dory - e)s at:hunted the tonowiny report: Yo.lr conduit:et be leave to return tee peti tion from the FhwidelAna City l'alrien s er Itahroa.l Cotnpany.solteiting Councils to take early action in the matter of the Chestnut-street bret4e, and expretein: their readiness and desire to pay the tem ot oho 00 for that purrose. as directed by their charter; and state that as tar as the dm) ot your commit:so extends, they have performed eeerything OS their power for the forth reeve of this des.red icorro.'ement- e ord mince of ,Nov ember 30. 112. provides for the bet - inc of a east-iton arched teethe, with certain pro visos. which are 1. That the elm shalt be approved by the Board of Surveyors. a. That it snail be app•ored by. Coonrds ; and 3. 'fest a hum shah be cream,: ice this seem fie purpose. 'the lust or these molst , * has been complied vita. aill We have now submitted for 00 at Lou deal, n which ha, not only been aeptoeed by the Board of entvoors, but ha• been et.dorsen by Messrs. J. Edgar Thomson. J C. Cr213.-HI. and irisatet Welsh, three civil onstneers rf ecdouteed vac:seal abrlity, upon whose 3mi-silent we can welt de pend. Wo now ask that tour epproval mat he siren to tee plan before us. when tee retnaulting woes will be with the Mduutittee era Fenetnee. As for the netteasity for this structure, soar co.o.mes cannot do ',tier than by ref- rrinz Chamber to the Internal'n t reports presented by the Caertaitt,e net Suravy a nod Re, nations WA' and Is;,.<. WOICtt mar tea foUnd nm tits appendix. accompanied y a report (rout tee Chief Entorcer and Surveyor relai.ve to the plans and dui gas presented. We wooki also ,rate tTtr these reports were called forth by the petition of o.ii six thoueinl of our Largest proper:l-6.okt nand roost m eow:dial citizens ant therefore racoon - nem! that an early act:on of Counct s tons be had uron the resolutte3 now upon the preardent's applOa In. of the plan oZ the Chestnut-street bride, as rent to us by tee Board of Warner called up the resolution Tamed by &lett Calmer. releaeluo Wu property of tee Good latent Ea glee Corn pan, from ft InCrtv.,e. and rr was adopted. The orthnance le seed by Select Council. apputtinx $l2 WO to the Contro:lors of the Public Scaoo:s. irs eased op. No quorum •ot.u.:. the Ccamter aWouracd. ROWDYI•v.-IVe arc cyst yelled to write this brief and eitini6eant caption en often that we fret constrained to is ith great earnestness " where art the scare r" Not that we suppose for a moment teeth valiant enile men are where they should not be—steep.nr. dome, let-ding, or smokier a Boothia; pipe b. 3 comfortefje fire. No, Hessen fort, d. We harlot so Curb then-Mrs Wt, on tho contrary, think them all. from tevir mbar!? whnm neither wind. weather. slee p , nor fiegyer ran terrify from kits duty. doss to the humble .tat who emits his weary way thron,h the dreary watchers of the noht. a tenor to moron;-doets end evil-tb okers—abso a all such base suspicions. Yet, eettlemen, pr.! let us ask why is this eft-repeated rowdyism' AIM net mile why me it. but whips are a e when it mitre: It is troy den cereue, we kveir. to I.e always around when mis siles, fire-arms, and pucestie muarece are ntundantiy desplsyed. bet police are out of -hose who can be terri fied... at least are supposed to be. lice is a case vh•elt we copy from a repo et mode by one el the lieutenanta to his nor, the Mayor: About fire iielmit eesteiday morning, is ',arty of rowdies entered tt.e put: c house at Is 'nth and line streets and cteritee a I.g:urbane!. Knives and billies were freely exhibited, bait ne person was injured. The ruffiace. alter demolish or linmereme article., were ejected from the pretui Cis, and then brote Borne or the windows In throwint some. at them:' No arrests were made—ne usu With what re. r u t we write "as usual" we cannot describe. R e feel for the officers, admire th i r cennt,e. and will continue always to sine their praises; vet, in vlew of these facts. to startling ' so painful. and r, Manning. we are v.topelbsd to repent our question, " Where are the police 1" OHO iI.NIZATION OF THE DETECTIVE Mayor Henry yesterday gent into Select Council the names of the officers appointed under the bill tor the or ganisation of the Detective Touch Lately passed by Councils. The names ae es follows Chief of the De teem ea— Captain Jacob Bennett. Officers Messrs. Mirkle. Levy, Sehleinte. Bartholomew Franklin son, triers, IX - mei. ant: Georee H. Smith. Clerk—Mr. Buck ley. High CoeSiable Russell, who be, seen in the delft to. e business Inc en many years, will an m conjuncritm with t h e force under Captain Bennett. Mr we are told, will be appointed an If 1.6 Correa b.e in the place of Mr. Soihniers. The pos.tiun or hi. h eunsinl le. vacated by Mr Franklin, remains to he filed, A. Si'. Hlsekhurn, to wane the poem .n of chief was ;entered, will retain toe yo.t at fir.. marshal, which he has tiled with such ronautnunto 'lbis h neck of the po llee business Will remain distinct from that of the detsy sir. The new elicit s eider upon their sphere et ~p. rettons to day. We really hope the) will not eere,eihe to occupy the miserable quarters they now occur, but will be accommodated with Other and more comm. does q use ters. As they ere accommodated now we reser do nut know who are the worst pro. Med for. at the Cen tral Station, the criminals who plunder the cormaumiy or the eteeers who protect .t. PCuLtCMEETiau or Til g rogigg. A.SOCIITIOC A meet. tic of the frierds of tnis aemeint:en,ll be held this creninc. at :Musical Fuad Hall et half test save! o'dock. The tre•et,n, wi.l euuresseil D il ut e tier. Atr. rard.en. Rav i Mr. Jeeerr. Bee A. A. and the Hon WM. D. Kelley, 'rite oieect of this tz.cetin, is to interest the pubbe in the work of room, ie when the se.elett have been en.afed. one lades who have Le. it taboret: for the " ref omit-lee, emptoiment, arm tri aireetion of fen ales art o have led immoral 1:4 es." feel, that with their restrn ted furies and thi-aee.mpreditteiMS of the Roam, House they ale unable to meet the dams male upon ilium by Lila unfortunate alas, 'I Icie ass, etatioll lies been In ea tstenee Inv user twelve Sean. and the :mount 01 void it has accompliseed to alit s; inc curate O. WO hope that the interne will IV. use "! most grattfrinj and enthii.instic eh snider. The aroe for Weds to ie ii au, ti a hot. as et mild rest a arri the oh,eet of the. robiest suit bravest 4.4 coar..c -le olio that we hope will not be disreitrdad. Triere is no held of moral labor where the hawse - rips are c reefer tto the one occupied by the members ot the }lndite .35,.....- eiltlol2. The appeal they snake toe benevolent people will, we feel, meat with a &tin, response. DOINGS or one FIREYEN.—The firemen of this oily are having glorious time in the way of par-dine. remietnx, and dein:, the hospitable to their bre th ren el other cities. We have had no less than two parades this week, and Ono company trim abroad. lair •hose benefit one of these parades was ers-insted. Inc mem bers of the Constitution Fire Company, of I-HM.I4 h. alter atey me with as for two days. tett yesteidei. Fot the special edincation ot these pcopes the steamer of the Internet Fire llonipan) was played yesterday more ls.: in Irmet of the Custom House. the trisi ass eery Zretrl) mg to all who witnessed it. 1 here Inis Ill3o:110r parade. lest eresine. of severa l fire cemraniee. on actedat of the return el tea Celled Hose from abroad. The dieldalr *LS very ered.tebte, consider/I, the weather. Wlreci was ext.emel cold, and the enthusiasm et the spectators <0205 e.nlat.le • eonsn orb', tear we hare hid parades erou.th of the firemen eon a : the pint few weeks to tall lit - Par runny it month to come. • Too ranch ot a road thing apoils It ." as the ad tee runs and tlieLJella p trades. however good they ma, be. are me exception to the rule. MitmED r. , rt Lire.—Ou Wet:H.4l3l evening a man. filmed Abranam Wx!“actsort. was arrested Upon the char s ., ben., fit tt a tatts of tale,' L.e t , at 'craw tiv.-s a tail. natt.ed S3,uuei Alleuma, !o3t as et on last eltmday u4.bt. It soca a that NILLII.--103 and Irlends poi mt.' a Nna.te with a part, vt tv:l to W est trallacelpai t. and the) threw irtoclea at each °Nies. One vt the Dieu threw a thh,e at the t ola. a h struck 'cunt ellen:ma in the et e aid tlestlJ,ter the or,au. KECrING A DisonDmiLT ILrsE —Yeiteriy mon in Peter and Mary Metstar 'were arrested on tr. e:otr..e t keetbn; a Cato:del," Lo-er, is Lean or street. below trirartt avyillUa. Tne pisco is ac,. 1.3 oarnett a,tuat,a va Co:11,11LO cress and in lon en,o) Mont or the odors that ore a stied nt_ros% its it mkt) be -1011. 'in* inruat lilt t. tend:tuts to reps titivated at be.a , a s. to r nnten areirequent. 100 accused were ton,..tted to prison, to answer. Tire number of letters z:r.ile,l st the. Fosssicn In Ulu' city, thirtnA the qu‘rter coil.ne Sep: 'afar A R 111 4 754. l'ust,:e 51. 4 1.4 ,1 4 .. 1 45a 2 t 0,47 ; . 11 e 11 .0 tot rl rree.iti Mere T.;4,..t.4 11,44 vase 44,:• Use I 1-my root 1011,4 I,,sre 7.5 4 :ever,, aue 1:7 ON Ikeret tntde hi , . a rent 1i 140 Ll2c, ; L wj piLka.ea el at lops uric The etert_r cuLU -I.er ut letter, nd,rrlsed o re•l. Too following r• arrive 1 from Sac :twat! 3f•aterthl in 01 z"ti:e , wor • Airs D ,J. M. 1 , , ts. AWL,. ut hot,os Y.. , aztls. L. J. C. 1. nr.r). K. Mls4C. kison. A. J. . , r. C. Arnie own •ttld Arderaoi. Jut no,, J. H . tu.u ) , %5. M. 1..735e nul tuo 11.th3 coerth.e. NJ,RHOW ESCAVE.--On Wtqnes lay Light In in -10/ICIIO,I Pl , l It, down for n nip wi ‘,IT. a Inc[ on Etel,. to Street. nn Sr eit,••,) , •r. A clf cine nn,! one till tkoryi dcorin, to,' r l 3: • torah ne car ; 330,1 Oter the Shin, but no ric ip-ed a it tinned hand and n Laos:id DE tTLI or A SCALD CITIZEN.—.Mr. 'Paul raTiltiln, a tentlennn well known and e,tzenr,t3 .ty n merchant. otd at .l•S , estdeLee. at Le.er,y. A J..on ioesd” ni. ht. too; moch interest in , mt , rmcfneat of hen er:?, IA he tins thero at his ow n Lest. ALLEGLD 110¢5E on Weilneeilay evenin; a soon nit )1.0 . .;!.n V 33 arrested in Filth street, near ,p,uee. on In' Lsr.e of atelliaS a pvr oft aloes whim ue h.d in The linlm.sla are alleged to hai.e been 2. the Franklin Hotel lii.kkrket street. —Yenterday Inorninx. between twAre end one o'clock, a fire broke or.t in the iron to.indri of Henry iireen Ai Co.. et the corner of atn- In 4 ton avenue, in the ttoond cant the Lu.oat vat in:itreit, but not to a ser eerious eaten% PASSING GuIATERFEIT ItONLY.—Ott Wtdr - 40.adgy afternoon A'ders,:an (t 0 tte,: Fn , a.buel Hat to nowt,: •ho ,hlrge ot nz ountertett five dollor note/ of the Y.•tn4P4 Fkuk anti the eimton liar k of :sen"Jetset. SrArtsricAt..—Sinee the Inth inetszt there hare „ rnved f ro m S rutLern ports I'.l3'Gl feet of ye:l sr lnet I.,rds nod se...till:lg, 13;C0) feet et 'chap pane tumtve, tSr.l,Ol) lett ZAvo p:ekets, find:l7 ships' kneel,
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