* NOVEMBER '5, 1859. : ' S9 TMt 6 PAtf«i i -Hon. Re verdy Johnson on the Btahts of the People in the Territories ; Personal aid’Political; Religions IntelUgenoa; The Chest, nut-itreet Bridge; Correction'. Fourth Fags.— The Courts ; Weekly Review of the Philadelphia Varkete; Marine; IntelUgenoe. , -• .The-News.... ThelJew York Herald of yeatorday flays that information was received at the Marshal’s offlco that the brig J.' P. Hooper, now lying at pier No. v . 44 East river, had. been engaged on a clave voyage, from whloh she had just returned. The marshal • and .two .of his- deputies proceeded to the vessel, and took possesion of her.- It la stated that the J. P.' Hooper jras fitted out at Charleston, S. C., r and went to Havana, thence to Cienfuegoa and the •oast of Africa; where she took in a oargo of ne groes, and landed them on the south ride of Cuba. , After landing the blaoks there, tho mate took the ■vessel into s Campeaohy, obtained fraudulent pa • pars, and sailed for Hew York, where he was dis ,possessed by » powor of attorney cent on from Charleston by the owners. When she was first fit* ted oat She was a sohooner, bnt tho mate had her altered ton brigantine, and brought her as such j. ;to that port. Her name is in very Bmall letters, 'and she baa been totally divested of her internal r fittings as a slaver, Captain Payne, of tho J. P. Hooper, took passage on hoard a bark for New York,hut diod on the voyage. * His remains wore kept and buried at Staten Island. Deputy Marshal '.Miller is now in possession of the slaver. Themate - r }g anxiously looked for, and it is probable the bri gantine, will be sold for tho benefit of the United States Government. - The steamship America, Captain Moodie, from Liverpool bn the afternoon of Saturday, the 23d ultimo; arrived at Halifax on Thursday afternoon. :The departure of the Great Eastern for America had bben postponed line 'die, and would probably tot take place tai* year. She details of the peace treaty of Zurich show It to be but a mere- amplifi cation of the Villa Franco agreement. By It tho rights of the grand dukos am reserved. Spain is , .dissatisfied with the tends offered by Moroooo, find war between those Powers is considered Imminent. The Sardinian Government has issued a decree for a loan of one hundred million francs. . The bread • stuffs market was dull and without particular ,-change in rates. The provirion market was quiet. Consols closed on Friday, the 22d, at 96&961, for both money and account. The money market was slightly more stringent. Peter Amorer was arrested in New York yes terday for assault and battery upon his child. He beat his ohtid, a boy of about three years old, till his eyes were blackened, and his faeo and whole body were eovered with bruises; and when the mother interfered to keep him from killing the child he seised a kettle of boiling water and threw It, or rather poured it on her head, holding her in the mean time, to prevent her escape. He was committed. Yesterday tho wind was too high for tho inflation of Mr. Lowe’s balloon in - New York; conse quently, tho gas was turned off. As soon aa A the wind lowers somewhat, the inflation will be re sumed. Just before the steamer Enropa sailed from Bos ton lasl Wednesday, three men, named John B. Boas, David Leaob, and Adolph Bishop, were or r rested on charges of forging the name of Mr. Bon ner, of the New York Ledger, to a oheok on tho Nassau Bank.' Mr. Kyle, who w&s eo brutally murdered in Bal timore on election day, was burled yesterday. Many of the best, men of Baltimore attended the , funeral, to show their respect for the memory of the deceased. The express from Pike’s Peak arrived at Leaven worth on Thursday night, with the comfortable sum of $30,000 on conßlgnmont and In the hands of passengers. This does not look os if the Pike’s Peak stories weie “ all humbug.” At a recent meeting of the New York .Sanitary Association a ssriea of atatistios were road relative , to the number of persons who do business in the : city, but who reside in the adjoining cities and towns. The aggregate of arrivals in and depart ures from the city were, for one year, oomputed to - be 87,255,610, an average of 265,000 a day. . < The Cbleago papers of Wednesday, received lost night, bring us particulars of the distressing aeei dent on the Northwestern Railroad, a short tele , graphic account of whioh we have already given. The Journal says: “ The public excitement relative to the terrible casualty near Watertown,- Wls., remains unabated. The Briggs House was tbrongod this morning with an anxious ■ crowd of people eager to learn every detail concerning the fatal accident. The affair baa cast a gloom over a large part of the communi ty, for the reason that it is an unusual] fui event. Large preparations had been mado for the enjoyment ana pleasure of our Northwestern friends. The excursion train left Oshkosh with a large crowd-of. passengers, in high spirits, when, in a moment, the train is hurled from the track by as unforeseen aocident, and the festivity Is ohanged to mourning. “Mr. Geo. B. Edwards, of WIs., whs was aboard the train, furnishes us with the follow- thlrtem oars,. d«Uly. crowded with passengers, many in esoh car tfring obliged to stand bp. xhey left Oshkosh at a quarter before seven yesterday morning. ! “ At half past ten/botwoen Jefferson and Water town, about eighfinijes from the latter place, tho casualty occurred.-! Mr.- B. .was sitting in the front car, next to the. baggage'car, when ho suddenly heard a peculiar noise and at odco feonotaded either that the road was very rough or that the engine was nronlngoff the track. Before he bad time to think, the passenger car was running upon the ties and tte baggagecardriven intoit, smashing it to pieces. . The floor of the passenger car ran. on that of the baggage, while' the roof of the baggage oar was thrown into the former. Not a seat of the car but : was smashed to pieces. ' “ The forward end of tho car was let down into the mud and water, and many wore injured by be-, Ins caught and jammed between the beams. Mr. Edwgrds was injured somewhat by the falling of a stove upon one of bis legs, but esoaped by crawling through the window. A young man who was sit ting upon tho seat behind, talking with his sister, was killed, but his sister escaped. • “ The tender wna badly smarted np, but the en gine is comparatively uninjured. The sixth ear was jammed into tho fifth one, and broken up. Tho engine, tender, baggage and firet pasaengor car wore thrown from the traek entirely, bnt the others remained on. Tho baek oars were uninjured, tho passongors merely feeling a shock and eonelndlng from the sndden stoppage that an aeoidont had oo aurred. Revenue arid Taxation. 'Considerable changes in the system of British revenue finance are about being agl toted for. At tho closo of the rocent meet- .lag, in tho north of England, of tlio National Association for tho Promotion of Social • i Science, it was announced by Lord Bbobohav : that a meeting had just been held in an ad ' joining room, upon tho subject of Plnanpiai ” Reform, at which had been discussed the re* spectivo merits of direct and indirect taxation. It had been ascertained, he grid, that tho Indirect taxation of the, country pressed with great weight on the .great body of tho people, being raised an ;the Are articles of toa, sugar, malt, tobacco, and spirits, and tho sum raised on these'articles amounted to no less than £50,000,000 annually. How to do without these millions was another question. If ho' ■ said to Mr. Glatjutons, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, You ought -to ,jlo away with the tax on these articles, 5* the reply would be, “ I quite agree with' yon s it is a great hard ship that such taxes should bo raised, but I cannot do without the money.” On con sidering the subject tho meeting came to a most,reasonable conclusion—viz: «That, as lhr as possible, Indirect taxation should bo re placed by direct taxation,” meaning by “ as far as posslblo,” as far as was consistent with Justice to all classes of the community, and to all sorts of property, and as fay as iVas con sistent with tho exigencies .of .tho public service, tho nary, tho army, and civil govern ment, and also, as far as was , possible, con sistent with keeping good fhith with the pub lic creditor, . That phrase, “ os far as possi ble,” covert all these matters he had now enumerated. It was the feeling of the moot ing that tho best sort of tax was a wealth tax—a tax on capital, whether that capital .consisted of land, or money, or' goods, or furniture, or any species of feasible and tangi ble property. Upon one point, Lord BaoconA* said, tho ' financial reformers had been unanimons. There were, besides the articles he had men tioned, 485 articles subjected to duties of va rious sorts, and these duties which crippled our foreign trade and our domostlc industry, did not produce more than £TOO,OOO. Gould there be any doubt that tho duty, so far as theso 485 articles were ■ concerned, should be got rid of. And that they should get rid of a proportion of tho army of tax-gatherers em •r-.ployed to levy, tho duties. The reduction which would thus take placo in salaries would go a considerable way to lessen the loss that would accrue from giving up the £700,000. The popular .shying that « the Queen’s ... eheese is lost ht the parings,” will here recur to the mlndi" It is probable that of the reve nue from 485 articles which yield £700,000 per v . .annum, fifty per cent, are paid for tho collec lion," If tho duties on these articles were Wholly remitted, the loss to tho Public Reve - - jrfie Wpuld bc comparatively small, and tho i (Vwhole arpi’y of cna , o^,.],oUSo officers and ex • f icleemen could he dismissed. Wo do things A' : "vwy Unwisely, in this country, at times, but . ..-Wlhlng so flagrant as this la intolerable, and -! could make It stand. It is considered y lhat the cost of collecting the public revenue pf England might easily be reduced one half. The Power of Office. A good many people are exercising them selves with wonder, that tho entire population of the South should’ jio excited by the experi ment of John Brown and ills followers upon thepeoplo of Virginia. A sensible solution of this wonder would bo found in tho fhet that there is a population in that part of the Union which Is supposed to bo discontented with its condition, and the efforts of fanatics on the one hand, and the fears of timid men on the other, find, in this roason, oncouragement and excuse. Wo propose presenting a subject niuch more difficult of> settlement, viz t Why Is it that the whito masses of tho Democratic party allow thcmsolves to bo cajoled, counter acted, and controlled by a few office-holders 7 That the feeling of tho Democrats in this part of tho Union is very generally against the fol lies of the Administration, even the depend ents of Federal power themselves cannot ho nestly deny. And yet, these dopendebts con. trol the masses at the present time, have con trolled them in the past, and will continuo to do so in tho future, unless these lattor vigor ously and promptly revolt against thoir solf constitutcd masters. Wo leave it to others moro interested and more curious in theso njat terfl to oxplain the secrot of the extraordinary influence of tho paid adherents of tho Admi nistration over the majority of tho Democratic party. As an evidenco of tho Indlgnatio n which the persistont Intolerance of the offioials of tho General Government has excited In other quarters, wo copy the following lottor from a Boston paper, addressed by a Democratic member of the Massachusetts Legislature to tho secretary of a Democratic committee. It is so frank and explicit that we desire to pre serve it os a model for the imitation of those who ore now suffering under tho lash of offi cial arrogance in this vicinity “Bobtos, October 20,1850. “O. 0. Morsb, Esq., Secretary of the Ifewbnry port Domooratio Commitieo: Dear Sir: I received your letter inviting mo to address the Democracy of your vioinity, and was gratified to know that yon remembered mo as a Democrat and desired to hear me upon the prinoi plos of that party. For two reasons 1 fear that I shall bo obliged to deolino your invitation : “First. Ido not think I shall have sufiioiont leisure to prepare and deliver any addresses this fall. , , “ Second. I am a rebel, and can hardly bo con sidered orthodox in the present condition of tho Democratic doctrine. “I am disgusted that we are controlled, silonood, and crashed by a few demagogical offioo-holdors. Wo went to Worcester, three to one strong in favor of Douglas, and in favor of saying so; nut when there, we were silenced and trampled down by a small band of office-holders, who defeated us, and won through disciplino and triok. They gavo us the ‘ glittering generalities ’ of popular sovereign ty fts chaff for the holly, and ohoked us off from giving the enunciation of those principles practi cal direction by doctoring for Mr. Douglas, their dear oxpoundor and fearless champion. And when driven from directing those declarations, wo were ooolly told by Haliett that what they had glvon us, to wit, the popular sovereignty resolu tion, was nothing, meant nothing or anything, ac cording to the occasion or purpose for whioh it was used. “ Now, when a fow offioß-holdew, whoso braton lips are applied with unfailing suotion to the yield ing pap or tho National treasury, avowedij and exulungly cheat the popular will and do* ho, X ask what is this thing whioh is christened Demooraoy, people’s rights, Ac.? I adhere with fond affection to real Demooratio doctrines. I rebel against the dictation of arrogant office-holders, who, rocoiving the people’s favors, Bbould bo tho people’s servants' rather than the peoplo’s dictators. “lain, with great respoot, yours truly, “ Qborqe M. Stbarxs.” As a hannonious conclusion to this articlo, wo now rcspoctfiilly present to pur readers tho following extract from tho great speech pf the present President of tho United States —Mr. Bochakan— delivered in the Houso of Ropro sontativea, of which he was then A member, in 1826: “ My colleague has declared that he would not hare introduced such resolutions bocauso they might tend to injure tho Government of tho coun try in the estimation of the people. Against this petition I take loavo to enter my solemn protest, is it the republican doctrine ? .Ifhat, sir! are wo to be told that Vre shall not inquire Into tho existenoo of abuses in this Government because suoh inquiry might tend to mako tho Government loss popular? This is new doctrlno to me—doo trine which I have never beard before upon tide floor.” ******* “The nature of man,” says Mr. Buchanan, •< f 8 the same under republics and under monarchies. The history of the human race proves that liberty can never long be preserved without popular jealousy. It is the condition of its enjoyment. Our rulers must be narrowly watohod. when my col league advanood tho position whioh he did, he could not havo foreseen the consequences to which his dootrino would lead; I know that he never oould havo intended that it should reaoh thus far; but, yet my inforenoe Is perfectly fair when! declare that it is a doctrine whioh only suits the ealza of despotism. IMs tho maxim of deßpots, that the people should nevor inquire Into the con cerns of Government. Those who havo emlavcd mankind, from Omsarto Bonaparte, havo always endeavored, by presenting thorn with amusements, and by every othor means iu their power, to attract the attention of tho peoplo from tho oonduct of their rulers.” **.* * * * * “ Bat faw the gentleman from Pennsylvania ad verted to tho consequences of his doctrine ? There is no danger from patronage. If so, there is no occasion for jealousy on tho part of tho States towards this Government. AU tho principles which actuated our fathers, which mado them watch the Federal Government with Argus eye?, for the purpose of restraining it within tho limits of the Constitution, were uttorly vain. Por my part, judging from history, when this Government wasjcommencing it when this patronage was comparatively small, it required tho immenso weight of character which tho Father of his Country possessed to put the whoels of tho machtno into saooossfnl motion. I think there woe thon more danger of & dissolution than a consolidation of the Confoderaey. I should then, when the words had some meaning, have been a Federalist, rather than an anti-Fodoralist. I have been sailed a Fede ralist, and I shall nover be ashomod of the namo. The timosharo since greatly changed. The power and the patronage of this Government have been extended, and are felt in every neighborhood of this vast empire. Thero is now infinitely more danger of consolidation than of disunion; and the States should now be jealous of orery encroach ment upon their rights. The argument of my col league would put them to sleep. Upon his theory the British Government must bo very weak, be cause It possesses ten, nay, I might say twenty fold, tho patronage of this Government. "—Gales & Seaton's Register of j Debate*, Vo/. ZV, Part I, page 1862, et stq. The Pledge of 1850. Our faithful correspondent, “Occasional,” sends-us tlia following resolution adopted by the great Democratic, mass', meeting held at Squaro,ln Philadelphia, on the lB6G—th- anniversary of i£hcs<tspfioh of the Federal Constitution —and ashsihat wc it a ptominont place in The Press. tho meeting, wliichyasp'fcßided;oy6r by Georqe SI. Wn such nion as llenbt Frldbrick FBALBTi Macai,Estke,' T. Y. Woloajhuoti, John O. James, Hoair Catheewood, Wit. 0. Klihb, Hon. Wh. M. Hiesteb, and God. Gkoeqe SI. Lacman, of Berks, lion. Francis W. Hcoues of Schuylkill, Hon. S. A. Bbiockb of Lohigh, Hon. Albxahdrb E. Brown of Northampton, Hamilton Aldrichs of Pan-* pbin, N. B. Bbownh of Philadelphia^ J «id' others, Mr. Wharton, the/, president of* fhe meeting, came forward and used thefollowlng. language, which, in less thah'a year, ho form ally deserted t “ There are several questions now at issue be fore tho people of this country, but thb question op all questions, os I regard it, is the truo con struction of the Constitution, and the proper nation under it, in the matter of slavery in the Ternto * net belonging to this Union. Shall the people toho go to the Territories and make them their homes, settle that point for tkemselves t or shall .others settle it for them? Shall their own con sciences and their own self-interest decide It, or shall other porsons* consciences and othors’ self interest determino it? Are the inhabitants of tho Territories mere children, in a state of pupilage, or are thoy men —hardy and intelligent men—pio neers of eivUUation and the thunders of empires ? I say this is thb question, bocause upon its solu tion dopends, in a great measure, tho permanence of our union.” John W. Foiinky, Chairman of tho State Central Committee, said ho had been directed by a Committed to offer certain resolutions, among which was tho following i 11 Resolved, That, inasmuch as the Compromise measures of iB6O wore agreed upon and consum mated by tbo joint efforts and votes of tho le&dors of tho two great national parties in the Congress of the United States, and, inasmuch as tho Kansas and Nebraska bill reaffirmed the great popular principle of those Compromise measures by provi ding * that it is the true intent and meaning of this aot not to legislate slavery into any State or Ter ritory, nor to exolude it therefrom, but to leavo the people thereof perfectly free to form and rcgnlato their domestic institutions In their own way, sub- 1 ject only to the Constitution of tho United states,’ toe, representing the entire Democratic party of Pennsylvania, and tens of thousands of those who have followed the leadership of Clay ond Webster m former conflicts, RENEW THE PLEDGES OF OUR DEVOTION TO THE COMPROMISE MEASURES OR 1860, AND THE PRINCIPLE CARRIED OUT BY THE LEGISLATION OF 1854.” readers will notioo in Janother oolumn of The Press the advertisement of Dr. Osmun, tho well-known young oculist, who has determined to practise his profession in the oity of Philadelphia, and who has como among us armed with testi monials of the highest oharaetor. Dr. Osmun has spent some timo in the oelebratcd Eye Infirmary and Medioal School at Straeburg, and tho Royal Univorsity at Leipslo; has studied under Liebig, and has tho certificate of Professor Graoffo, of the Royal University of Berlin, who is said to be the greatest oculist living. He has also had a thorough experience in London and in Paris. Dr. Osmun is a young man, notwithstanding bis high oolebri ty, and has, we are happy to say, resolved to test Ws fortune and bis fate in our good old oUy. , THE Pit Ton Days from Europe. Wo recollect when news from Europe in thrice days was thought no tardy communica tion at this season. The America steamer ar rived at Halifax yesterday, having loft Liver pool on the 26th ult., and her news reached us by telegraph yesterday afternoon. Tho intelligence is not very important, ex cept that the English monoy market is oasy, consols closing, on tho 24tli, at 96 to 90|. Cot ton was slightly on tho advance, andhroadstuffs and provisions in ria/w quo. As might have been expected, over since the accident, the doubt which existed aa to tlio voyage this season of the Great Eastern across tho Atlantic seems to havo sottled down into a certainty that aho will not leave England earlier than tho Bpring. Tho terms of the Zurich Treaty have been made public, and arc much tho same as thoso agreed upon at Villa Franca. Lombardy is transferred to Piedmont, and, at a Confcronco of tho leading European Powers (not tho usual Fivo Powers), the final settlement of the Italian Duchies* question will be made. Victor Emmanuel, mcanwhilo, calls for a loan of $100,000,000, which is n large sum to wont or solicit under existing circumstances. But what the rulor of Piedmont and Sardinia might And it difficult to obtain, is not so difficult to him who now has fertile Lombardy annexed > to his dominions, with a pretty strong chance of also obtaining the Duchies before twclvo > months pass over Us hood. Who are to bo tho Victims? Since our ' correspondent of yesterday called attention to the usd being made of tho United States Mint by the custom-house clique, In tho olcction of delegates on Mon day, several gentlemen havo called to say that the samo game is being played with the navy yard, United States arsenal, customhouse, &c. Promises of office, employment, &c., are rnado to every Democratic voter who thiß clique thinh can ho reached by such moans, “ if they will only carry the delegates in tho precinct or ward/* for them. Now, as all thoso in office, or who aro now employed, axe stimulated to work for tho dele gates in tho expectation of their being con- one party or the dthor—the tns or tho expectant^ must bo cheated, unless tho Government intends fp largely increaso its employees in this city. As pp HUCh Increase is expected or iutendod to bo made, }koro will he cruel disappointments after tho oe}e gato elections. How many Democrats will be caught with such chaff t Letter Ooib “Occasional.” ICorrospondMce of Tbs Ptmb.l Washington, Nov. +, J8&0. Owing to the persistent offorts of tho Adminis tration to roscuo itself from tho obligations on* teroil into in 1850 in regard to tho rights of the people in the Territories, a good deal of confusion and disputation has grown dlt of tho discussion of that subject. Although much has boen written and spokon, and some complaints have boen made that too much time and paper have boon consumed by tho controversialists, the fact that tho question will oomo mainly in iasuo next year will rendor everything that has been, or may be said, worthy of remembrance and preservation. Tho contest has now assumed a flhapo whioh every inde pendent votor can comprehend, almost at a glnnoo —particularly since the exhaustive argument of Hon. Roverdy Johnson. Ths Administration has formally taken the fatal position that U never was intended by the Democratic party that the people of the Territories should exercise any con. trol whatever over the subject of slavery , while they remain in a territorial condition,and plants itself i/pon the ground that all our pledges and declarations , froty 1850 down to 1856, simply meant that the question of slavery could only be reached when the people of a new State came to form their Constitution. This latter position hag nevor been disputed by any party ! A moro ridiculous speoteoloof stultification and tor giveraatlon has never been witnessed In political annals. Tho attitude occupied by Jadgo Douglas and his frionds Is that always occupiod by the De mocratic party, and any doubts that may have boen entertained in rogayd to it havo now been so effoo tu&Uyolearod away by recent discussion, that no party in the free States can teko ground with (pay hope of success against tho platform occupiod by Douglas and his friends. You have boon in tho habit, lately, of publishing extraots from the speeches of Howell Cobb, of Georgia, on this cow disputed quostion, and your arttole the other day presenting his opinions in 1854, while ho was Governor of Georgia, shows where he stood at that early stago <?f tb? contest. I havo not seen in your paper, howevor, a speech pronounced by Mr. Cobb on tbe 17th of Soptombor, 1856, at Independence Square, in tbe olty of Phila. delphia. It Is so emphatically tho position of tho Democratic party to-day, and so emphatically riot tho present position of Mr. Cobb, that it desorvos to be placed npon record, alike as your own vindica- Uon and bis condemnation : “Why i» it that oar Constitution recognises and en forces the dootrino that thepeoplo of Pennsylvania ■hull make their own laws» and that the peoplo of all other States shall do the same thins ? Is it because tho people ofeaoh and all the States, being capable of self-govern ment, ere best nb!e to provide laws and institutions for themselves ? I want you to understand that it is because you are a citizen of Pennsylvania that you have the ca pacity to govern yourselves. The people of Georgia have the earns capacity and the name right. Suppose you so to Kansas, tvhpt will be your condition there T IfAoarc the citizens of that Territory ? They are mttf from Pennsylvania and from Geor&ta, intn from Massa chusetts and South Carolina, men from all the States of the Union, men recognised in their respective States at capable of governing thtmsctvo. Put when they get to Kansas they aro rendered incapable of self-government, and somebody else must be appointed as their guardians. If they are capable m ths Statos and are not o&p.ablo in the Territories, it becomes im portant to determine at what point they lose their'ca pacity. Where teas ft on the route* Was it avtib THBV tJAD PA9SBD THROUGH ROMS OP THE WeIIBUN Statrs l Oa wee it after thf.t reached Kansas ? I cannot answer these questions, because 1 hold that the non who are capable of fielf-gpvernment in Penn sylvania or in Goorgla, are as capable of the same right in Kansas .” Groat interest Is folt in tho coming election in’ Now York, The President has di roc ted that all thb iqehib&rt'of the Oablpet should writo letters to that' Stated plobibg tho responsibility of tho Har per’s Ferry tragedy upon tho Republican party— an experiment which may or may not be success ful. That Governor Seward and Mr. Giddinge, and somo other of the loaders of tho Republican party, havo indulged themselves In violent expres sions against the South for years past is truo, but that the masses of tho Republican party sympathise with tho movements of Brown Is, in my opinion, a oalumny quito as great as the ebargo that that event was the result of the labors of any coorido rablo body of mon. It is & little singular that the very organs that were so horrowtrioken when tho innrdor of Bro derlok was charged upon the Administration should now seek to fasten the odium of the,ltyr-i. peris Ferry tragedy upon a large portion of the American people. 'ln my opinion, this medloino of tho Cabinet, howover effective it might be if administered by others, will not sit so cosily upon tho stomachs of the peoploof the Empire State, If proffered by suob bungling dootors as tbo Pros!- dent’s constitutional advisors. Thoro are many candidates for tho Presidency in tho Opposition party, who desire tbo defeat of tho Republicans in New York, in order that Seward may be gotten out of the way, and in this effort thoy are assisted .by the Americans. 'The Democrats of JJejv York have a capital ticket, and theii; pJqtßjnn' | boob liberally oo&stvued. In tho election gates to Charleston, they have glvoa great bifehet' to the Administration, and nothing will provent their snocess bat the follies of the Cabinet in inter fering in tho elections in that Stato, and the at tempt of the Administration to bold tho Republi cans, as a mass, responsible for tho Harper’s Ferry tragedy. Occasional. Public Amusements. Walnut-btrbbt Theatrb.—Each sucoessive re presentation of “ Geraldine” is really a new triumph. Tho play is bo woll put upon tho stago and bo admirably acted that, notwithstanding tbo one groat improbability of its plot and the ana obronism of having Crusaders and a Crusade in tho reign of any of tho English Edwards, it is in favor with the audience. It has been judiciously cur tailed, which Improves it for the stage, and is fair ly entitlod to bo culled a good acting drama, with several striking situations, ond an effective dia logue. We know not how Miss Heron playod Geraldine in Now York and Boston, but cau woll believe thathor acting gave vitality to tho play. One of tho York oritios said “Shcrwae/ethe play which was praise somewhat too strong, perhaps. Certainly, flho produoed a groat effoot upon thoso who witnessed her performance. And so with Mrs. Waller, who has mastered tho idloiyocracy of Die character, so to say, and worked It op, by wonderfully fine acting, Into something unusually effective and attraotlvo. Her porforinnnco is fine, all through, but in the fourth and fifth aeta hor performance was thrilling and deeply iinprosslvo. Her death-socne, last night, was terribly truo— oven yot the flxod glaro of tho oyos and drop of tbo undor-lip scorns before us in sad and awful reality. Sho has made as muoh of tho part os tho portoon bear. No one eon cay that a Shaksporlan play has boon “ made” by tho acting of any body. A dra matlo work, which Is the production of oroatlro genius is over suporior to tbo performer's talent. Who has yet acted up to the full realisation of La dy Macbeth, for instaDco. though Mrs. Siddons did and Mrs. Waller doos perforin that oharaetor most admirably ? Tho reason why they havo not quito ro&litcd all of tho poot's conception Is that Mrs* Siddons and Mrs. Wallor, groat though their pow ers, were yot not equal to Shakspero. On the con trary, most other plays owo as muoh of their suc cess to tho actors ns to tho authors. You road Shakspero, and the beauty, force, and appropriate ness of tho language, no loss than the fitness of tbo situations, so deoply interest you, that in your mind the play cots itself. Read & modern play, whlohmay be advertised and placarded as the ISIS—PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1859. greatest dramatic production of tho ago, and you may wonder how it succeeded. Soe it performed, with tho a aids and appliances of sooncry, juusio, and suoh accessories, and good acting, and it may achieve a great sucoess. Thus it is that aotlng may be said to male tho play. Taleot may produce it, but it requires Genius to give it pal pable life, upon tho stage.' Thoro is a groat deal of talent and considerable promise in Mrs. Bateman’s play. In the hands of a oommon-placo artist, Its ono fino character might bo ineffective. Mrs. Waller, on the oontrary, who U a vory Quoen of Tragedy, iufusos it with hor genius, and, breathing lifo Into it, entrances all who look and listen. We put ibo faot thus plainly, be cause it is tho truth, and beoaase, oddly enough, various paragraph notloes of “ Geraldine” in somo daily papers, raise up tho play to tho sovonth heaven of hyperbolloal eulogy, and either omit all montlon of tho great tragedienne , or damn her with faint praiso. What the object can bo in do* prooiftting tho aotross and exalting tho writer, wo aro unable to comprehend. Ono lady is Buroly en titled to nn mudh consideration as tho othor. Be sides, it was Philadelphia which first, In this coun try, reoognised Mrs. Waller’s gonlus, and wo nro jo&lous of hor fame. The whole characters wero well fitted. Mr. Perry’s Bard is powerful, and the first not, in which ho appoars. is extromoly striking, ending with tho horoino falling down, alarmed and subdued by his fearful curso. Mr. Bhowcll (though ho will say cunvent and t ud'u) acts with a groat deal of talonf. A little too cat-liko in tho fourth not, 'whorens tho part resembles a olorlcal lego, with a seemingly honost front,) but bis final spoeoh whon ho throws off tho maei, is very ImpresaiTO. Mrs. Thnyor looked the old woman “of the period,” as Mrs. Jarley would Bay, and Mr. Bowers (a jester who nevor once raises a smllo) spoke his part of the dia logue well, it was not his fault if it was deficient in what exoitos mirth. Two other characters, and thoso loading ones, remain to bo noticed—lf* 1 - Keaoh’s Hubert and Miss Millor’s Edith. The part or Jlubsrf is not a vory demonstrative ono; but it is not a feeble walking-gontloman part oithor. Mr. Koach played it vory jndioiously, and his doolamation was very good. The littlo episode of advonturo iu Syria, wbioh he has to tell, ho related so aa to interest the audionco. Miss Miller’s Edtth was played vory prettily, but tho part requires moro. It noodg power, which Mrs. Cowoll coold havo given it, and wo regret that sho 4>d pqt epstain tho character. Tho music botween the acts was as as pouiblo, of oourse. That otpmal tvocdlo-doo with tho violius perpetually assails the ear. Be foro tho last act the music was mueh bolter than boforo. Arch-stukrt Theatrii.— That extremoly popu lar adaptation callod “Dot,” whioh so imme diately qbtamod celebrity at this theatre, sooma likely to ho played—uptil further ordors. It is probablo that the actors will tiro pf It piuob sooner than tho publio. At the lowest calculation, it is “ good ” for a fow weeks loDgor. This ovonlng it will ho played first, and followed by tho “ French Spy,” ps an afterpioce. This is a very attractive oomt/inatloQ. Signor Blitz, tho magician, ypptrilorfijist. and wonder-worker, holds a loveo this nftornfoQ, nt jils now saloon, JJ. J 3. oorncr of Chestnut and Tenth street. Large Peremptory Salks.—Loans axi> Kbal Estatb, Tuesday, Bth Irbl., at 12 o’clock noon, and 7 in tbo ovoning, by order of Trustees, Executors, and .other?- See Thomas A Sons’ pamphlet cata logues issued te-dtj; and advortisoments under auction bond. THE LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. FROM EUROPE TIIIIEL DAYS LATE#. THE STEAMSHIP AMERICA AT HALIFAX, TEEMS OF THE TBEATY OF ZOBICH. THE SAILING JJF TH]B GREAT EASTERN INDEFINITELY r«SfI’ONBD. Encouraging Experiment* on the Atlantic Cable. EXCITEMENT IN PIEDMONT. Rumored Revolutionary Movement at Palermo. A SARDINIAN LOAN War Between Spain and Morocco Imprinonl ADVANCE I>T COTTON, CONSOLS WfteOO. Sackvillb, N. 8., Nov. T 4« vqyal fnail steamshld America, Cnpt. Moodie, which loft Liverpool at Jjo’cjopk 1\ M. oo October Sid, arrived at Halifax at 0 o’clock last evening. . Tho America loft Halifax at 10 o’clock P. M, on Thursday for Boston, where she will bo due on Satur day morning. She passed, October 23d, at 8 o’clock P. M , off Head of Kularlo, the frdtn New York for Liverpool. Tho steamship Vanderbilt, from New York October Bth, arrived at Southampton ou tho evening of the )9th ult. The, steamship City of Baltimore, from New York October Bth, arrived «t(|uocasU>wn at iA. M. on the 31th, and at Liverpool eaily or tjie foonjiug of tho 31st ult. Tho steamship North American, from (fuoUn October 3th, roacliod Liverpool at S P. M. on the 20Ut ult. THE TREATY OK PEACE. A Znnch telogrnm of tho 13th says: " Tho principal points of the troaty ol peace botween Franco and Aus tria* signed by the plenipotentiaries, but not yot ratified by the two Governments, are ns fellows: Austria gives up Lojnl>ard/,joxoopt Mantua and Peschiera, and ns far as the' frontier Tmfe, by commission, to France, who transfers it to Piedmont. £ena)onj ac quired in Lombardy are to 1* paid by the now Govern ment. Piedmont is to pay Austria 40 COQ.OOQ florins, and bo responsible for throe-fifths of the debt of Monto l.orabard and Venetm, malcms the debt, in ell transfer red to (Sardinia, 2fio.Coo,oCo fra nos. 'lho twoconwaotifig Powers v ill unit? thoir otlorts, in order that reform m the Administration should be earned out by tho Pope. Tho rights of tho duhes of Tuscany. Modena, and Parma, aro expressly reserved to the twoKmporors, who will assist, with nil their power, in tho formation nl a Confederation of all the States oi Italy. Vonotia, under Austrian rule, in to form partof the Confedera tion. Ratifications }vili be exchanged at Zurich within fifteen dais, I'hotroaiyis iperelyan amplification ol’ tho v ilia iranen agreement. A Zurich telegram of tho 21st announces tfiat Count Colloredo was that morning attacked with apoplexy. Four physicians were attending him, but there was but little hope entertained for his recovery. THE PROJECTED CONGRESS. The Pans Pay# estimates, of its own knowledge, that in a Congress accepted, in principle, by tho Jhnghsn Go vernment, the only Powers to be represented tosidos tho great ones, will be Piedmont anu U;e Pnpe.'spd Naples under certain eventualities. The admission of Spam might be natural, but Sweden and Portugal havo no cinim* The huhpindante Btlff says that out of compliment to Napoleon, Austria proposed that the Congress should sit in Parts, but this Wits deponed, and the chances la vored DrusßOls. The policy of England, m taking part in the Congress, was being canvassed by the press, end generally the arguments woro against u. The LoodojTjXime* ana Herald are both averse to England Joining,wOf Euro-’ pe«n Congress on Italian alfsjre, •> Tho Lond'ui post, Lord PalmerstonVoma, asserts that ** it were an idle trifling with, the fncaenc© of England and the fiopea of Italy to eXPCotaby English statesman stall worthy of (he name'wobwnazsrd his own Imputation and tho national honor entrusted to )ijs car.Q. by entering.a Congrowi of which the basis may be »n the oxooution of the Zurich troaty.” Thesamo Journal, in another editorial, regards tho Italian i omplications as verr serious, and the position of Napoleon os extremely omtarrasbing. He Ims un dertaken the special protection of the Papal Govo.u ment. and also of Italian liberty, while Papal power and Italian liberty are in open warfare. It is almost certain that the Romagna will be attacked by Papal froop"*. It is also certain that, at the first menace of an nod intervention in the Duchies, tho troops of Gari baldi will swoop before them every vestige of Papal rule. Under thoso oirepnistances, the intervention of Austria will bo anticipated. part would Franco then play, and what extension would tfio Jtpmau ques tion then assumo i Tho Post concludes by earing that English statesmen wjlljßajco efforts to avert the dangers which threaten £= i't i a GREAT BRITAIN. on and Mil # that thedsftAytwrnnhe du, and orderAAlfSß that .*fl bo returned. No >or age until good progress has been inadotn fitting out tho ship in thornuvh sea-going completeness, and. accord ing to some authorities, there is no likelihood of the voy • age bom« made before next spring. Tbo ship would ro main ut Holyhead about ton dajs longer, apif then go to Southampton, .to completo her fittim:*, alter which a trip to Litlwn is spoken of. It is stated that in her pre sent condition tho dirootorswill not accept tho ship from Mr. hoott Russell. T The directors of the London and Northwestorn Rail way Company gayon grand banquet at Holyhead to the directors of the Great Hhip Company on the Jffth. Tho Marquis of Chandos presided, and mimn.-, tho pueMs were Mr. Gladstone, Chancellor of tho Kxchoqucr..Sir John Pakincton, and many influential men in coiumorco and politics. Spoechos wero all hopclul of the su'-cesn of tho great ship. Mr. Melver. in thneourso of hoi ru niMks, levleiatcd the stntcmont that the Cmjard Com pany wae building a steamer cnnsidorablr iarner than the 4 >eri| a, tmt not so as the Great Kav.trn. Frinoe Napoleon, after minutely inspecting the Great Eastern at Holyhead, paida flying visit to Liverpool and Manchester, and thon left in his stoauior for parts unknown. The funeral of Robert Ktephonson took rjacaat West minster Abbey on the 21st, in prosonco oj a great con course of reoii a, and with every demonstration ol ro siioot. The Abbey was orowded, and tho altoudanoo in cludeilmoridistinguiahed men of rank and proleasions. Mr. Stephonsop boqacoths A’a.ooo to imblio inat-tu tioos. At Newoasilo, Kundorland, Shiehli. nnd other towns tn that locality, businoss was suspended during a portion of tho day ol the funeral, ami many dcmonstia iinns of reipeot toog place, The Traloe Chronicle says that Messrs. Iloardmoro and Robmson, e cotriomns, visited Valentia this week, a< d set on loot a series cf experiments on the At antio cablo, Encouragement ns to the success of tho undor taking, lioth as regards the resuscitation oftlie o |<j an d the fivriuf oftho newonb o, was in tho asoendant. Tfieae gentlemen found room in tbo state of tho cablo to disseminate new courage among its ineuds. LATEST. London. Satonlay.—’Tho Daily News* city article, tm dordateof Friday evening, says: “The funds have experienped asuddon ro.aotion. Tho market opened at a reduction of nearly ouo quarter below tho prices of festordar, and. after tho Hoso of tho stock oxnhnngo Inoroased heaviness prevailed. The demand for monny was active, and it was difficult even to get the best lulls discounted below 2% per oent. No golffwas withdrawn from the bank, but largo nurobagea ol Auitmlmn, m cluoine a portion of the Xllfl,ooo just received per ship k orkshtro, wore made for exportation. The foreisn ox clmnscs were steady, except bills on Belgium, which wero ratfler lowor. iTi l i o n .^‘. mv * , r cily i{ vr^1 , o '. dftt , od Friday evening,says: A telogrnm from Madrid, to the effect that the Spanish Government had resolvod to daobar© war asuinst Mo i°fi'iwv. iU »°» open with greatlioaviuoss, although it.was afterwards shown to lie erroneous, thesiinplo lact being that a Madrid paper hat/advised the Oovornmont to ito to war, the recovery at tho clnuo ofWft l r on, y P ,rl, al. There lias boon anin creiuied demand for money to-day, ftn d a few trapsao tions took plaoo nt 2,*u per cent. Ihe market for railway ? r* l to-,* u ndH and slightly doclmed. £s.°«?n» in Jtu r !i ri,£ 0 /.|k n . nntla r hotvovor, ndvnncod ono r n n 1,0 i fet. Lawronco. and Groat Westorn of Canada also improved. u u, ? Cf i7 anol l ,or Isrgo Russian failure— rlr•nn «*tonsivo manufacturer at SM.ft'i tewasasisz iss ,ioi " ns - u » ro co„ird«,Tbl6 i 'fro.uK.'.Swf in E " l " anl1 ' "" d lhl ’ roi> FRANCK o .. l^l A r ® p ,°l t . ot li hn . t . tl,a Emperor refused to grant an thoeS Jhp from 1,1,1 11,,d roco,ved l’nj’i's for London ,ni *^ er °f Foreign Affairs had left r^« fl !«? r I c ? p ?, nd,nt of fc be London Herald con Upuss to point out the immense naval armaments » prqiti'H.s, particularly ftt Toulon, xthero nn lew than twdMf-two 1 »r,;o hlupr nrn hem* con*triict'<d. TfliT Bourne was dull rml doclining. Routes closed heavy on the 2!nt. at o*f. Aso. , Tho projected Chmaso expedition had boon discussed in the Counoil of Ministers. It was proposed >o de spatch oightean thousand men. but nothing definite was arrived at. Tho troops would not leave before the end f’aria correspondent of tho Loudon Ti»/t<« sa>s he is still informed that Prance has claimed her WAr ex penses from Sardinia, and the Sardinian envoy’s mis sion to Paris is supposed to liavq roforenco to tho ques tion of debt as Weil as the Duchies. Accounts front Cochin Chum aay that the French foroos were so worn out by fatigue and disease, that they were preparing to abandon Tourain, and return to China. The only point which the admiral will not abandon is Scgon, whore extensive fortifications luul been raised, and a stronz garro-on will bo left. Marshal Vaillant is reported *o have written to Na loleon. suggesting the occupation of tho Duolnos by ? ronch troops, to prevent civil war from breaking out. Tho Neapolitan army on tho Roman frontier was m oroasing. It was rumored that troops had landed At Ancona. Considerable excitement prevailed in Piodmont on account of tho .condition* of the Zurich treatr. The King of Sardinia, m receiving a deputation from »ho municipality of GenQA, reiterated his intention to de qnd the cause or Italian independence to the utmost of us power. He expressed the hope that the wishes of Italy would be granted. '1 he Fans correspondent of.the London Herald Bays that the object of the Sardinian Minister for Foreign Adairs visiting Pans ts*, to obtain tho Emperor’s con sent, ponding the Congress, to the occupation of Cen tral Italy by Piedmontese troops, and the appoint ment of Prince Carignano as Regent of tho Duchies and Legations. The Commercial. Council of Milan had voted 100 000 francs towards Garibaldi s subscription for tho purchase of muskets. Itwas reported at Turin that, in consenuenco of Ne apolitan war ships having been signalled in a hostilo at titude off the coißt ol tho Romagna, a Pjodmontese squadron had boen ordered around into the Adnatio. It is asserted that there has been a revolutionary movement in Palermo, tail itwas suppressed. Ono story says one hundred anu fifty robots wero killed,but it lacks oor,urination. Justice continued to he cnor/otically earned oat m Parma. Nowarrosts bad taken place. The municipality had determined on tho destruction of the column on which tho head of Anvitt was placed, Ifjnu expected that tho effective strength of the new Sardinian arinr will be 100 000, exclusive of tho ritto corps and military marine. In addition there will be throughout tho kingdom ai>out 000,000 national guards. Financial affair* in Naples are represented as criti cal. A loan of £6,000,0C0 was spoken of. LATEST. TuntNiSlaL—Tho official lVdmonteao Gazette pub lishes a yacTPO authorizing tho Finance Minister to con tract a loan of ono hundred million francs, by nteans ol thea'ienaticn of tho rentes on tho publio debt to that amount. . Count Rosier, minister of Belgium, has arrivod in Turin, Til© Corresynndeneia Aulaera.fn- announces that in consequence of ;in*apsf"ctorv declarations, mndo by tho huineror of Morocco, tho pmincO of Ministers has resolved to have recourse th nrms. The same journal approves tho action of the Government in ordering the Spanish consul to leave Tankers. Tlio Spanish bishops, in imitation of tho Freroh. hail roinnmnced publishing mato/aUeUers in defence of tho temporal power of the Popn. IiATRRT.—NUimin, Oct. 20.—The replr of Morocco to the guarantees demanded by Spain not being satisfac tory, war seems imminent. A council of ministers, presided over hv tho Oueen, has been convoked. The Spanish funds uoolined to-day more than 1 per cent. AUSTRIA. Itwfts oxpaoted that tho Kinporoy of Austria vym»|d java an tnfdrvmjv with tho tmperpr of Russia, at Jruslau, on the 23d of October. ' RUSSIA. Messrs. Rtoiclitz & Co , tho qourt bankers at St. Fe ersburg, had announced thmr intention tq retire from business at tho cjoso of Tlio King of Sweden was about jo propose the aboli tion of tho severe punishments tnfhctod upon those who quit the established Church. . TURKKV. Alt rasha, the Grand "Vizier, has been dismissed. Ho was to 1 e succeeded by Mehemot Kussaib. Faud I'asha, it was also expected, would bo dismissed. Tyo of tho conspirators connected with the reoont proposed assassination. had died at Hold). A vessel with Circassian emigrants had been wrecked, and 203 lives lost. • Coinmorcinl Intelligence. LIVFRrooi.COTTON MAHKKT.-lFrom thoflro kors Circular.)—The market showed an advancing tendency, particularly for all closn descriptions, owing to Urn scarcity. On middling Qualities of American, pajfmiilarly of Now Orleans and Mobile tliero had hern an adyaiico of it'd, The sales of the weak, of nil de scriptions. footed upW Sty bales, of which snooulators took 2,5Qh bales, and exporter* tj bOO, tho marko* closing steady. Tho kilos on Friday footed up’nOOO balox.’of which 2 fIOQ baton woro lor speculation ami export. Tho Wa/M closod steady at the following authorized qnn- Utionj : New Orleans fair, 7*.'d; ditto middlings, 73 IGd; Mobilo fair.7Kd ; ditto middling, 7d; Upland fair, 7 l 4iT; ditto middling, G lj-likl. ? The stock of ootton in port, according to tha last weekly returns, footed up 513 (WO bales, of which 372,000 were of American descriptions. .MANCHKSTKft MARKETS.—The advices from Manohestor wero unfavorable, especially for India good*, whinli bad a downward tendency. HA VRK MARKETS Cotton ndvancing, particularly thoTitir Hnd middling n'lahtiex. The sales of the week, including tlm Ijjlf, foOt'up y, MB bales, New Orleans Ires en/mo/rc JJ5f.; ditto has loaf The stock in port was 44,000 bales. Wheat of all sorts had declined oonsfudra* bly. Ashes dud, and prices weak. CofTne firm. Oils in* active. but.unchanged in price. Rum firm. Bugnrdull. Lard firm but dull. Whalebone inactive. LIVERPOOL BREAR'STUFFSMARKET.—Messrs. Richardson. Spence, A Company quote Flour dull at 22s wjirjt7s. Wheat also dull; rrd9s3uwPs6d ; wh'te 9*Cd.i> 11s. Corn quiet butfirfn 5 >d)Jow 29s edffSOs yd; white 3s«t37s 4F quarter. * • Messrs. IJigland, A thy a A'Cowpajiy report ft deciin* of Id on wheat nine? Tuesday. Li VK»POOL PROVISION MARKET.—Messrs. Uig ]And, Athya, k Company. Richardson,Spence. A Com pany* James, Mnlicniy. St Comp my, and others report beef quiet but stead), Pork dull and inactive, but spo rulatora would buy at a reduction from asking prices. Bacon dull and quotations iioutin il. Lard format 51 ff Ms mr refining qualities, and 53*/flu* (or fine, which nro scarce Tallow firm: bnti'hors’ (.Q* LIVERPOOL PRODUCE. MARKET-Tho Brokers' circular reports ashes r.toadv at 25s for old pots, and 2>i OLtWsOd for new do; and 2?s <.>ri«?2Ss 'or pearls. Sugar buoyant, at an advam® of tide Is for refining ports. Coffee quiet. Pork stand?: Philadelphians MflOs; Baltimore Jb.t/s 3J. Fish Oils dull. Linseed Oil2se/»2 , 5«3d. Rosin dull an«l|ow«*rt common 4s 2d a 4s 4d. Spirits Turpentmo dull, nt&s&lff&a 6<). Bnripg Brotliora report breadstuff* very dull, hut steady. Iron oleady at i.'s 10n»rjf6 15s for bars and rails Sugar firm with a parti*! advaueo of 6d. Tqa quiet; Congou Jsftd. Cofioo dull, np.l wealeym prices. In dlco sales less animated, ami quofatp-So maintained with difficult?. Linseed Cakes in letter uemnna ; New York £9los; Boston i.'!*. Fish Oils inactive Lim,oed Oil *fis. Rico quiet. Tallow dull at 53s 6d. Bpirits of Turpen tine steady. FINANCIAL. Tho London money market was slizhtlv more stnn rent, but the supply was abundant. The bullion in tlio Bank oi Knsland had decreased since last weekly re turn i. 339 OhO. Bar silver was quoted at sh. 2d.; Dollars 5* f«d.; Eagles Wa. 3d.' • * Consols closed on Friday lor money and no count. THE LATFST. Livxiipoor.. Saturday Afternoon.—Cotton ; sales to day H 000 bales, of which 1,600 bales were for speculation and export. Market cloned steady. Breaditufis quiet, but steady. Provisions dull. Loarxiy, .Saturday AUeronon.—[By Telegraph.!— Consols W’iaOS for money and aecount-the market clobii.z dull. ' AIJERrCAN STOCKS. Baying Brothers report U 8. is Massachu setts 5a hOO; Ponna.sB of ISJ7. XlrrSl. Messrs. Beil * Co. report Btsto stocks aetive. Rail road Fecurities *lnw of suln but unaltered in price. U. S. Cs 9*>J ; U. B. Min largo apconlativn in quiry nt a sljghtfidvatico in prices, tlio quotations being 9VaWO4. AUlvuna ft & cent «... Kontnck* 6 V cent Maryland 5v r rent WnmirhuHtHlßS cent... • Ohiofi&rent Ivan l ” l*cnnmTvnma A cent . *>2 cM IVnnsflvunin 6 -li'ccnt. bonds oi 1677.. .81 <r S»i Toiuif.sro cent , >0 vp 8t Virginia 6 cent • 87>i Virginia A K 5 W llllno'isOnlralijhare'J W cr 35 dis. lihnwa Centthw i? cent b.jnds . . .76 a 78 Illinois 6V f cent 7 i tt 71 illimuK 7 ■b'' cent., Freeland M O 8j Miclii.-nn Contra. *o (t Mirlii’m Central nharcn %t 42 Now York Central it cent .... M er M Now York Central 7 cent m rr <« Now York sliaicu 70 «r 72 Krio 3d mnrtcaco « «t !,7 Knoslm’CH t a 6 Panama Railroad bonis, JV.'t joi €t 102 Panama Railroad bonds. I*Y» rr 98 ama Central d cent., Ist inert.. 89 it 90 TJIO Lnpilon bat unlay reports sales of I’m ted States is at Oi, Bnd ilhmn* Central snares at S 7. 1 * dis count. Passengers by the America. Mr. 11. De Dogrunce and lady, Mr. Gull and lady. Mr* Doxy and lady, Mr. Allen and friend, MsdarncH Whit noy, Macgrojror. Kagor, twoohihlrcn end miran. .'Mrs. v> ixe, two children nnd nurna. .Mpi. ‘Jliorndiko mid child, Mrs. Kmrht Davis, four rlnldr«n and three ser vants. Mrs. Keese, liittlo, ’1 horndike, and iinuUorvaut, Misses Folk, Dosoy, Kills. Alton, Marmot, fonnv. m,ii Naylor. Messrs wlutncy, Crnker, Jr.. Woodward.’ Cun ninctoii, C.irev. Hull, and ladv, Gardner, Sagor. Wigg, Zachmeon, Wlutwell. Macxregor, Ford, Carlisle, DavioH, Tawaul, MoLeod. Jr, Catmore, Johnston, Almston. Cornwall, Hopes and son, Allen. Kittle. Cob dmi. i’lp'or, Mickels, Mav, Clark, Bright, Francos, Motx, Bonn-, Kujf. Sstnford, Hainbrusli, Gulsford, Doykman. Feroer. Power, i/Ciris. Gruest. C«mt;l>ell, Himon. Fmker, Wescott. Hardman, I’arnbuH, May, Cornish. D.ivios, Kmby, King, lluhton. Gnorgc. Fh>- renzo, Worther, Wolateho’m, Daniel, Master WJnhJoy nnd maid hurvant, Captain D. Kllmtt. Captain Cfbwen, Dr. Gretii, Don Juan Mabtro, and Dixon. From Pilic’s Peak.— 93o,ooo in Dust.— Politicul Affairs, LKAVKawotiTJi. Nov. J.—The Overland Express, from Denver City on tho 2fth ult., with S7.UO in gold fluid, oncoi.KKnmcnt, anil $23,U00 in thehandio! passengers, arrived here Inijt nuht. 'l'lie yvcnilior continued untitually favorable for fhe inuics. An election had been hold for officers under the I'ro* visional Government. Tlio result was n<>t definitely known, hut as lar ns ascertained. Steel had & majority lor (tovornor. Kfiorts were b<*ing mado tn induce Dio panplo U»par* tieipHto m the ol q tion for adolugato from Kansas, which takes plnoo on th>'3th Hint. 'J'lio project is opposed by the !oc*d capvie. v Inch arcue m favor of non interven tion with Kans'is nflnirs, they having hut recontlv elect ed a <l.*!o<h!t. <if their own. who is expected tu urge tho immediate organization of tho Territory of Jellcrsoa. Fujiprnl of’ Mr. Kyle at ISnlttmore. Bam immjii:, Nnv. 4.—The funeral of Mr. A. H. Kjlo, Jr., who wn* i.i-inierrd at tho Fifteenth-ward polls, on tilortmn da» , took i-lnce from tit'o rcsnlenre of hn 1 ithor, tn Houtli limit., cr street, nt noon to-day.. Tnorn was nr> uiMneiHii KUtticruiK of iipoplo to view tlio l-ody.nnu tlio remains wore lollnwou to the ,rmvo by tlio moml-oie of tho Betorm AMnciatinns ami citizens gonernllv, oin hracin- mcichatiUi, business and professional men of the highest rcHroctalnlity. 'l’lie moved through thowhnlrimlo business portion W Hanover and Baltimore) street 4 to Charles street, psssuu round the base of the Washington Alonu- Ji'Pnt. All the btoma nml rosidenct b cm the route were closed, und the r»sj-ertablo portion ol tho inhabitanls c>f B'lltm.oro in a quiet, subdued manner thoir deoneymp'kilii with the deceased, nml condemnation of the lawlessness Mini ]i has had such a tragical result. Murylamt Election. Uai.timokk, November <.—l |-o Congressionaltlclogn tion from this 8t ito will bo as follows: First diet no*.—Jninos A, Ntupart, lie in. Kocoiul district,—l.dwin If. Wobstor, Amer. Thirddistriet —J. .Vorrieon Harris, Aiium. Fourth (iiKtnct. —If.AVinter Davis. Amoi. hiftli district.—Jacob M. Kimble, Bern. Hixtlidistnrt.—(monm W. Jiuuhen, Deni. 1 he political comjdoxirn will be tho same nsin tlio last Con res* -Hirer !)*'»: oernts nnd thren Americans Tho Pcii'oeratH Will hav o a majoni v m both branches ol tho Lo-usbifnre. 'J eent)-h jo Americans and forty* nmo Democrats nro r footed to tho House, and ci ht Atnonc.ms i‘iid thiitcon D-moemts to tho Sonato. Ono d.strict is) ct to I'D he ud from. The Inditt Uubher Suits Cirri sno, Nov 4 —I Inn n.online, in tho United States tiremt Court, the .‘ndi o uoaidod tho India rubhor suits, on tho motions made hist \ronk, against trom twenty to tin- tv (inns in thus city, and affinnitu tho title ol ifo rico H. Dnv ,r u/.. ui'im tho ground that Judge Giles's lata decision, on a hml hcarin : entitlod tho oomphim ants to an injunction until rovorsed by tho Supremo Court. Fire at St. Jiouis. br. T.m'i**. bo* ejuber 4.—A block of alwut twenty-five wooden ton* ( n form, street, t.etwon Kitui and Sixth, kntirtiihi, the •• Kn fo*rB’ Boost.” and comprised ol nu'orious ludi (huger. ch and disreputable danco lions*a. wit-, hunt last night. Tho loss was about £l5 OW. ltc\vikrd« lor tlie 4i'fcst of Fugitive In- Ml liter?*,tovn, November 4.—Gov ornor Wise lias issued a proolamatinii otlonn, an« aril ol $6OO each tor tlio ar rest of tlio tollowuo’-namod liuitive insurvents: Owen Brown, Barclay Copper, jvWnain, and Tidd. The Conflagration at New Orleans* mxtv mu:ui\r.« wu.nkii—loss $2j0,000. New Onr.msx, Nov. 4.—Tho firo in the Fourth dis trict last oven in.' dostrovrd sixty dwellings. Tho loss is estimated at quarter <>f a million ol dollars. The firo wns tunbth'j** ormin.iled by an mconthary. The Steamer North American* Fatiiru I'iiim, below (,'m-bec, Nov. 4-8 o'clock I*. M.—A snow storm prevail!, horn, nnd tho woxthor is toggy. ’J'tioie anpenrs to b« not tho slightest chance of thn arrival nT tlio ►to.xinor Noith American to-night, blio is now due.witli tlireodavs later advices. The Case of IHrs. ISlnmlina Dudley. At iuxy, N. Y., Novondnr 4.—A commission <le luna iiro iit'iuirnt'l.-) has hoenxupmntod hy Judge Could, m t!ie cnno of Mis. lllHinluri Dudley, m view of the alleged recent Qin r .u'nr lippositmn mado by her of hor property. The St. T.ouis .Honey MarKct. Sr. Lot is, Nov 4 —Tho raiments at tho banks to-day were tmunrth iiimlo. Si Hit e.\ehsm.o on New York in quoted at 3 i'f 1 jioi cent, premium in exchange for Mis houi i luiulj. Vvuht in Texas. Ni:w ii;\\s, Nov. 4 —Frost made its appoaranco on Iho 23th ult., at Cntvostuii and in other parts of Texas. Municipal Election at Charleston, S. C. CiiAßLhsroN, S. C.. Nov. t—Olnr’os Macbothvos to-day ro-olocted mayor of this oity by three.huudicd majority. T HE CITY. AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING. Whevtlky k Clarkk's Arc»-Btrkkt Thhatrb Aroh streete above Sixth.—“Dot"—" Thrf trench Spy/* National Thjsatrk, Walnutstreot. jetwoen Eighth ami Ninth.—“ Dan Rice’s Groat Show." Walnut-Stbkrt Tiikatbe, oorneff Walnut and Niath •tract*.—“ Geraldine.” or Wondkbi, northeast corner Tenth and Chestnut streets.—Bi*nor Blitz. i McDunocoh s Gairtiks, Race street, below Third.— r.ntortammenli nightly. Bant°ki>’h Opkha Housi, Eleventh street, above Chestnut.—Concerts mrhtlr. i-^i c V’. KnY V K ., Fink Arti, 10231 Chestnut street.— hxluuition of l ainlmga, Statuary,‘Ac. Tjik Cnn'-BtsKKT.— Paul Morphy did not play.at the Athena-uin yesterday, much to tho dis apjKiiuUnent of a number of gentlemen who were on hoed for the purnoao of seeing the young lion in hid lair. Ho will prolong his stay in tho city F ori °d than ho first intended, nnd will bo q| the Athemcurn on Monday. The ex ports from tho oity to foreign ports, for tho week ending yestorday, amounted to §122,020, and the imports for tho same period to s2Ufl,lt>2. All tho prisoners who wonped from tho prison nt New Cas tlo, recently, havo been retaken and lodged in their old quarters. Two wero arrested in this neighbor hood, and tho others in Delaware Tho weatbor remains warm ami ploasant. The evenings aro cool onough for anovorcoat, butduring tho day nothing sorves to remind us of tho season but tho crisp^ sero, and falling foliago Yesterday morning Margnrot Kennedy, employed as a domestic in a houso at Dillwvn and Green streets, was charged, before Alderman Butler, with the larceny of nume rous articles belonging to her employer. She was committed to answer. “The Chip-Basket” i? rathor bare to-day. If people won’t steal, houses won’t burn, and chips won’t ebavo, wo have only to put up the ndio and plane and mako as big n fire out of the fuel as possible. The Schiller Centennart. —The route of tho procession composed of Gorman societies, mili tary companies, Ac., in honor of tho centennial nmiivorsary of tho birth-day of Schiller, has been fixed. Tho display will take place on the night of Wednesday, tho Oth inst. Tho various associa tions, Ac., will assemble at 6 o’olock P. M., and form in lino on York avenue, north of Vine street; then inovo without countermarching, up Fourth to Girard avenue; down Girard avenue to Second; down Second to Brown; Brown to Third; Third to Rnco; Kaop to Second; Second to Pine; Pino to Third; Third tr } Ohostnut ; Chestnut to Broad ; and Broad to below the Academy of Music, where tho remnants of tho torches will be thrown in a pile to bo consumed Tbo chairman of the festival committee will then address the assemblage, after wbUh tho combined vocal societies will sing an ap propriate ode nnd dismiss. Trotting at Point Breeze. — A very well contested trot, best threo in five to harness, took place at Point Breeze yesterday afternoon, between tho trotting pony Jack Cade, driven by William S, and tbo Ijeadloy. colt now called Brother than, owned and driven by Shoemaker. Tho first beat waa won by tho pony—time, 2 10; tho second, third, apd fourth heat?, respectively, wero wun by Brother Jonathan,to waggon, after a close oontest—time, 2.45,2 44 J, 2.401. Thoro woro a good numbor of porsons present. On Wednesday •next, Brown Diok, UcorgoM. Palcheii, almost (in variably, but, wo loarn, incorrectly, called Patch <?»*,) and Lancet, will trot to harness over tho prune course, mile heats, best throe in five, at threo o’clook in tho aftornoon. J)eath on a Railroad. —On Thursday a lad named Albert Scfioon, aged qbmtt cleyen years, was run over at Columbia and Avenue streets by a train of ears on tho North Pennsylvania railroad, nnd was almost instantly killed. George W. Deal, tho conductor, and Shlngton Wisner, tbo engineer, promptly surrendered themselves into custody to await an investigation. In the evening thej- had a hearing before Alderman Olouds, and, there be ing no evidence to show criminality or oaretessnops on their part, they woro discharged. Corouor Fen ner liela an inquest yesterday morning upon the body of young Schcon, and tho jury rendered a vordlot of aooi<|ental death Assault oh the Highway.—Mr. Roberl Sands, one of the supervisors of th i Twenty-second word, was waylaid a day or two ago, at Chestnut Ilill. His assailants wero two youths, aged re spectively fiftocn and ninetcon years • They beat Mr. Sands upon the head with a club having a nail in ono end of U, causing injuries sufficient to con fino him to the house ever rinoe. The lads were subsequently arrested, and gavo their names as William and Christian Rininger. They had a hear ing on tho charge, and were committed to answer. Painfui. Accident.— On Thursday alternoon a little German girl, while playing about a bonfire, whioh «bo and some other children had kin- dled onalofnear Seventh and Dickerson streets, was shockingly burned by her clothes taking fire, ilor screams attracted tbo attention of a gentle man who was tiding by nt tho time, and who has tened to tho rescue of tho unfortunato child. She was very badly burned. A Fearful Leap. —About ten o'clock yes terday morning an insano man, nainedMcMnlfory, attempted to commit suicide by jumping off tho ture-bridgo at Falrmounfc into the Schuylkill. Several bystanders saw him commit the rash act, and immediately took measures to rescue him. A bout was procured, and the unfortunato man was tuken to shore almost ontiroly uninjured. Ho was removed to tho Almshouse. A Thread-Rare Scheme. —A fellow named Jacob Fisher entered tho dwelling of Mr. Knight, Front stroet, above Poplar, Thursday afternoon, under pretonco of seeking nlms, and mat to off with a lot of wearing apparel. A domestic, who observed tho theft, gave tne alarm, and Jacob was arrested. Jle was committed to answer yesterday morning. .» The Wages of Sin.—A young man named Andrew ilfuMHlan, and residing iu tho Twenty fourth ward, was on Thursday night enticed into a den in Pino alloy, noar Front street, and relieved of his aparo funds, amounting to about §5O. Maria Welsh, alias Irish Maria, was arrested, and committed for a further hearing, on the charge of being tho thief. Hospital Cases. —Yesterday, John Ilonlcy waj admitted to tho Pennsylvania Jlovpltal, hav ing had hi? right aru; badly Injured by boing jammed betweon ttyo cars, at phcpnijvlUo on Thursday. Folix Prenoy, a hod-carrier, fell from a building at Rising Sijn village, yesterday aftornoon. He broke bis right arm. and seriously injured his back. Last evening he was admitted to tho hos pital. . 75 et 77 i« «» e»* .. H « S'* . Iw) iUW <*7 1M Match Gamk or Town Ball A match will be played this day, (Saturday.) on tho grounds ol tho St. (Jeorge’s Cricket Club, Camao’s Wood?, be tween the Athlotic and Olympic Ball Clubs FINANCIAL 4Np COM3IEUCIAL. The Money Market. Philadelphia, Nov. 4.1869, This was n heavy day for payments mnong tho dry-goods dealers in tho city, but till the obliga tions of this character wero promptly mot, tho answer to our inquiries at fevernl of tho banks being that no paper at nil laid over to-day. Tho demand for uiqney qn the street was not so great aa during several days pajt. tho financiering for to-dny baring been mostly done in advance. At tho stock board there was but a small busi ness transacted. The announcement of the failures of a gentleman known far and wide by bis opera tions in passengor railway shares produced a bad effect upon tho stock ot the Chestnut and Walnut streot Knilway, which has boon steadily on tho de cline for the last few weeks. Tho stock, wo learn, was offered down to 12], with no bids higher jthan >lO. Tbero appears to bo a wonderful amount of distrust of this entorprisoon tho part of capitalist!!, as well as hostility on tho part of the peoplo lir iog on Chestnut and Walnut streets. The latter is owing, in part, to what the Walnut-street people oonsidcr unhandsumo treatment of the proprietor of the Walnut-stroet omnibuses. Beading Railroad stock improved }, sales being reported, between boards, at 19j, but it fell off ns tho day ndvnnoed, and closed heaxy at lt>jal9i. The following is the coal tonnago of tho Shamo kin Vnlloy and l’ottsvillo Unilroad Company. Week. Year. >or the week endmx October.. S..***! 07 HO 7"t (B Same time last year 4 M 317 ICO 2H 16 Tho following is tho statement of coal trnn“port« ol over tho Hazleton Railroad, for tho week end ing October 29, 1869 : Tons. Cwt. Tons Cwt. Tons Fwt. Hazleton Mines. .ft Old tw ]S2W4 is ]37‘sa •§ Crnnlwrry 2.511 no ftD.l'7 i-1 61.7 H W Diamond ft;i ui 11,°27 u 2 li.'kj 05 Hast Su-'ar l.naf 3.212 It 1103-1 12 111 ft.-1 13 Omint’il HuKo. .. . 02 Nt uri 1J 15 Mount Pleasant MU H 23.W0 03 213’'.* ul llarleigh 200 Ol ... .. 2W Ol Increase 07,767 ll C7,t.*o 01 Decrease Zi7 07 Tho following is tho amount of coal transported on tho Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, during tho week ending Thursday, Nov. .*!, 1869 From Port Certain “ Pottsvillo “ Sclmjlkiil Haven. “ Auburn “ Purl Clinton ... . Total for week 3s VA lft Proviuuslj this year 1 4.U 431 l>j To same timo last year Tho following is tho amount of oc-al tmn-pnrted ou the Schuylkill Navigation, for tho week ending Thursday, Nor. 1869 : From Fort Carbon “ Pottsvillo '• Sc'mvlkill Haven. '* Pori Clinton Total for thn week 4ft 2'S Ot Previoiihl) tins year I.tot.vj uj To same time last y oar The shipments of coal over tho Huntingdon ami Broad Top Mountain Railroad, for tho week tnd ing Nuv. 2 • Slnppoil for the week .... Vnsi shipped previously tint jeujfctnce Jan. 1,1*59 ••• loi.i-ft-3 i Total Shipped to same dato last y ta.'JSl. Increase 2O*'Jo . Tl ,n Customs revenue at Now York, fn-in Jnnuarv Ist to Novenmer lit, 1859, was Same timo in 22,749,3u2 Increase this rear Sl'i'Xi.Yi,’ I h-v receipts of California Gold at New York, this year and I ist, liav o been ns follows : From Jan. 3 to Nov. J, 1859 $33 C<>7 ft c s S.imotiino in lhftB 3u,ku(XJi Increase tins year - 52 867.554 Tho official October return of tho Galena and Chicago Railroad ahowi nu follows : >B5B. ISJS3 Fuat week $4C,7t-9 t!' 1 'i' 1 ' ve j ,k ;• m.ik- Ih-nlwo-k 30 ,W 3-1 niO Fourth woek 3C 179 797 T 5141,652 $113,834 Inoreas- .j Tho traffic return of tho Illinois Centra! Hill road for October Hhows a large incrca«o • jij§ 181.776 Increase 4 .. .ZI t^P 0 *:. phcHthflin, tho cnorectio president of the Edgefield and Kentucky Hailroad, informs us that forty-two miles of his road have been completed, fourteen milos of the Memphis, Clarksville, nnd Douieyillo Rond havo &t«o 1 eon finished, making v os ra^roa J between Clarksville ana ISnsfivmc. A connection haa been formed between tvyo places with only six miles of staging The cars cotnmenco their regular trips under the now arrangement to-day, We havo not yet received , tho schedule of ihe time.— Xathvillt Ban/ttrl M>t ult. The last monthly return of the Bank of Austria states the notes in circulation at 172,K'1,7fil flo rins, and the speole reservo at only 79 ld* or about one-eighth. On Ihe Ist of January last AuatrU contrived, by vast efforts, partially to re sumo specie pnjments. Her financial condition is now onco mure deplorable. PHILADELPHIA STOCK EXCHANGE SALES. November t, 1S». Reported by 8. E, St,AvviAiEß, 31p; Walnut Strep. „ first board. !<» c, t> No*. lot , 6 MorriaCnl Pref. g3lu6*.^ .oScafanim7.',“ s r„'S.; * EE ISo L '‘" , du A,ne, :.. 75 S ;!S Srtl J«-" Wer ""- l’enna R6s.. CIS 1 in fFennaß 377*' to - 7 j® R'/.i'cMh fiflS SJ do 37'tS 10 HftrnsburVK."^*' BETWEE> 37 Spruce Jc P;ne-aU R. II I 20 Sl1i)1 Nav Tref . *5 15 j SECOND 30kO I'cnm Coupon fit . 01 *■*’o lVnn.% !•* 93H MO City 64 Penua R .. 0J Jiw City 6j 9Qi' IUO do s>|i; IUX) d*i 09V .'ySprucoJcl’ine-Btnlt 11 . CLOSING PRK „ , Bui. U St'.toiSa 74....JU2V I‘hiiatf* 9**? 100 ;; 5 ,93?; 100 „ ««w liM lIH.S PennaSa nfi SM»' Reading it.. —. 19 1 ; 19 *. “ 77> a ' 14.793 01 423.852 14 4\<UUU 17 15,085 10 356,155 0.3 371.170 11 Tons. Cwt. 10 f-,2 15 1.795 04 14,712 Ul i 2 .*.47 09 4.'Ml 01 1471,111 12 1,108,634 17 Tons. Cwt. 12 555 15 2 •«(> 01 24 241 10 2.131 10 1,14'>.35<) 0 1.110,217 18 f BOARDS. 1 10Harrisburg R ’6 Girard Bk 4-5 1 do Old . .. n l ; lQOSchyl Nav Pref.— H 10U do 16 2 Phila Bk 115' 4 ' iNornstowaß 49 JES—STEADY a . r Bid. Atktd. **ohn»l Imofis.... 73 Schl Nav itock 8 Sohl .V ? v,pr«l. 15 16',' Wm*p t A Elm R. j: 1 *• 7s Ist mort 47>, 49 , •* 2d mort 8 W Long faland R I Lehigh Coal A Nav JO N Penns It 834 8 1 ,' ** 63 „ “ 10s- so w Catawissa H X 1 " Ist m tils 34 MASdBuR...._»N SF'* " roort 6s ’44 . 85>; “ do *B} 68 69 I’enna R 377,' ra i *• *d ra 6* ..ft> 87 | Morrio Canal C0n.47 o \ “ pref.iosH iWT^i Scliuji *Nav(ta’B2 .Sa l^ Now York Stock Exchange—-Nov. 4. IKCOKD BOASD. ttXWoMista url 6i 10085 |lOO NY Centra! ..,10*1 iIW 4XI) * ,85 100 .4a t i « 3ouo Krio R3d Mtj*S3. 66>, 320 do '.lll fitO 111 Cent R b<l« . &t«w am do Si * 5000 Mich Cent fia &5 !50 do !’*’ k^h! I ?Mhi p* , . l ‘'iD*" • 62, 1 i,1u7 Hudson River R s* M HI Centra! R... . CO .Mich Central R.bCO 4i*i i. ' ftlU Manamaß .bioizr! 475 Pacific Mail SS 73 ' 500 (Jal &, Chic R . ta>lt£ 150 do a3O 73 iKO do ... *3‘ HO do »10 73 'sc<> do 731! 2tt) Cmnberlnnd P"** --- SulCmnlwrUncJ Pret. 14V! SO Clev”»Toledo R Uo u 100 Mil fc Mu* K. ... 4'({sco do *,*,> *iv M Clue & Rock Isld 6J>*ileu do .. THE MARKETS. Amies are selling toa moderate extent At $5.25 for Pots, and $,5.£5ff5.31 for Pearls. J-locr.—l lie market for State and Western Flour is 5c I'ettor. with large receipts, and sales of 14 500 bbl* at *4 85a 4 W for snpet6ne State; §4 95* 505 for extra do ; «4.te<Ts for superfine Western; £5 10c* 40 lor extra do ; anu 43afi 65 for oxtra round hoop Ohio' South ern Hour is firm, with sales of UO> bbl* at ssfions 75 for common .to mixed, and $3.80*7 25 for extra. Canada Hour is quiet, with sales of liOUbbU extra at *5 40a> 6 30. R> e h lour is quiet, with s ilea of fine and moe rime al 'r 3 c ,J °^V W, n Cor ? Wesl 18 finJ frt 54.10 for Jersey, and $4.30 lor^Rrandywuie. CrßAiN.—Wheat issfiarec* aad firm; sales of 50Q byg arnber 1 exas at Corn is firm and quiet, with a-ilea of I,WO bus Southern vellowat $1 O.J, delivered Rye is firm, with sales of 5 000 bos at oSj. Itirlar is steady, with sales of 3 000 bus State at Sjc. Oats ire steady at 3mT4lc for Southern. Pennsylvania, aid Jer sey ; and ttaoo lor State. Cinada, and Western pHovisioNi.-Pork dull, with rales of fIJO bbls at $]5355J537>, for moss. anJ siosT» lor prime. Beef is quiet, with sales of iu> bblsat $104.25 forcountnr prime, lor do mess, §53 975 lor repacked Western, and islMll-vO for extra. Biron is steady. Cat Meats are notional at 9 1 , jr&Hc for hams and n* for shoulders. Urd ijboi\), with sales of iw bbls at lo’.rfWV. But ter iml Cheese are in moderate demind. Wti.sxx Tie held atJfc. .Markets by Telegraph, » ov - * —Rales of cotton foi the list five di's. 9 600 bales ; receipts. 2U 770 tales; exports. inJinltng lUiu) to Liverpool, Cotton closed active. Ooo,| nmldiin* to middling fair. 11s lIS *. sales nfNorth e.rl,r.aVr£i • \L-j'atern, I*s : sterling exchange is quoted at lUJjIWSi ; bills on New \ork. S' discount to pre mium Cotton freights to Liverpool, \; to hew York, V \r;th au auvapcing tendency. Bsltj mor r. Nm. 4.-Flour steadr st £5 STii for How ard street. Wheat dull; sales of *OOO Wi«hets,at*de clinonf &5c ; white, $1 30*1 *); red. $1 ?sal 36. Corn hasdec.ined 2i3c : white and yellow Provisions dull; Me»s Pork *ls* JSJB; prime do sll 25. Bacon o^c. . Whiske* 'lull, spd nomirtnl at Z7p. CiUKtHTON. Nov.-f-The sales of Cotton for the wee* !•>&« bales; receipts 19,5.19: quotation* are un changed. Rice steady. Northern hiv N0*112J«: East prnllsil29. yierhn* exclnn.e 109« J UK* 1 *; exchan<e<n new Vn* nominally st premium for small amounts; bills are quoted at pir to Jtf premium. Cotitn freights to l,i\erpool %.with an advancing tendency ; frculita in cotton to Havre Mobile, Nov. 4.—Cotton active. ar.d sales to-day of 6 W bales, at an ndvance of caused by tne Ainen- Mtddlin-s lO'fOlO 2 *; sites of the werk 23 WQ bales ; receipts 22 500 bales ; receipts of the same week*last year 22 £2O : stock in port HUWbale*. New OuLKsva, Nov. 4.-Coiton-13U)U bales were sold to-day. I lie news by the steamer America caused greater firmness at the close of the market, and the prices improved 5-160. Middling* are quoted at 10V* lie. rhe following is the weekly statement: Bales. (too bates ; receipts. 7u fCO tale*; receipts same week of last jear, od,pQo biles: exports of the week. JOuOO bales; total exports of the *e»*on. 2iM 000 bales; re ceipfs ahead of ngt year at this port. 100 £OO bales; re reii'ts ahead oflast year at all Southern ports, lio 100 twilcs ; rtock m port 255 <JOq Yates; stock in>Mt tir.ie tune list tear. 114 coo bib's. firms! o**cTc. Mo- Isasea heavy at J7},o. Cotlen, K»o. 11 '4J»l2*»c; sales of tlio week. 4 700 bizs: imports of tho week. 5 3iO bass ; •lock in port. 32 COO ba.-s. acainst 21 OX) bits list year. Freights on Cotton to Liverpool, 9-ltid. Exchaue on New ork unchanged. C:\ctNiAri, Nov. 4 —Ftour steady at te* bbl: " neat steady at yi.l3* Corn firm at 43c; fork dull at 314: Bacon quiet at 7.539. V lor shoulders snj sides. Exchange on New York, at s'ght. >* percent, premium. Detroit, ffov, 4 F|our quiet but firmer. Wheat dull but unchanged. Receipts 4 6dJ bbls Flour. 4.000 bus Wheu. frlniiments Ii.KO bbly Flour, 10 250 bus Wheat. rpi-voo. Nov. Flour §5a525. Wheat §l.o9nl.V>. Receipt* l,ft)o bus W heat. Commerce of iSaltimorc* JUltimore. Nor. 4—The fpllawing Is the customs &tatf'n> ei, t u the week : l-xports of the week $175,433; decrease from last year's exports. Ul3 JO : imports of the week $17J)23; decrease from last years imports srt,C2o. There were no export* or imports of specie. Commerce of Mobile. Mobile, Nov. 4.—The expuyUof the week amounted in value to SJ,JfO.OtV. CAMBRIDGE CATTLE MARKET, Nov. :.-Who!e number oi Cattle at market 2 2H—about J WJO Beeves and 1.2*3 Stores—const'dine of Working Oxen, Milch Cows, and one. two. and three year* old. PRICE* OV M4KXET BEEF. E<tn« $7f0.*7.75; first quality, $67537; second quality, s 5 T 5; third quality, $4.*5; ordinary, $3. ... . rn’Ct* OK ■TORE C4TTLE. Working Oxen. pair, from $'0,115.T 150. Cove and Calves, from $25, 30. Yearling*. Shell. Two ears Old. Three Year* Old, s22<f2i. y beep and Lamia— 9 ?0O at market. Prices, in lots, $l. extra. $2,225 x 2.75. Hides. C 17c & ft. Tal*o» 7<*7>ic V tb. Pelts,B7cesf each. Calf Skins. 10eI2c lb. Rrm\bks.—Not any change in prices of Beef Cattle ; a rather better supply of first quality: a few extra, winch were engaged last week, sold at $8 4?" cwt. tut were hardly up to the mark. Sheep, owing to the im provement noted List week, caused a large number to he sent in this week; consequent!* prices declined full Wo 4F head, ami a large Lumber will Be kept o\ er. CITY ITEMS. Fourth Lbcturk ov the People’s Course.— On next Thumlajr evening, tfie 10th inst Ant, one of the richest literary feasts of the season will be served up at Concert Hall, by tho People's Literary Institute, in the splendid lecture of Mr. George William Curtis, on •• Dickens.” To tnoso who are at all familiar With the peculiarities of Mr. Curtis as a Lecturer, we need hard ly say that a subject more perfectly adapt'd to his xe nius could hardly 1)0 imasined. It is m purely literary disiuisitmns that Mr. Curtis particularly excels, as those who havo heard him upon other themes are well avvaro. The life and lal*>n of the first writer uf fiction of the nmetoenth century furnishes such a thome, and those who hav o heard the lecture pronounce it, not only Mr. Curtis’ best, but one of the most splendid lecture board efforts of the afeo. We may venture to s.a> that tl*e next best thip.g to hearing a lecture from Dickens hum.e!l will bo to hear Uuu lecture af Mr. Cuitis.of which Dickens will be the aub,ect. I’oi’Lj.Aii Stove Ebtabli*huen*t.—'We have fre quently had occasion to speak of the v .aluable improve ments in the stove hue made by .Mr. John i*. Cltrk, No. IUH Market street. His style of ui.vntificturins the celebrated Silver'-* Gas-consuming Parlor Ftove has se cured for them an enviable reputation. It is probably in consequence of these improvements that the extent of his sales fins this season already greatly exceeded his operations ol any former year. Jud*.mc from the ac counts bv tliosj most mtunatelj acquainted with the facts, we are safe in sayinr that tho sales of these supe rior P ulor and Office Stov ex have this season been more than doubled. They are Ixung sent to every part ot the I’m ted St ties, and Mr. Spear finds it almost ircposbit !e to moot tlio demand. To the State of Kentucky alone lits sales have this season been very larze; as they have aNo been to Geoma, and ajher Southern States. We ycsterdiy learned tint parties at Washington are now makim; arrangements to introduce complete Moves into tho var'toua apMtmert* in the Capitol at Wnshiiuton. As an icatrument of economy alone these Stoves deserve spee.nl notice, as it is no exa/eeration to say that by their use full sixty per cent, of fuel is saved. Thev are rnanufi'-tiired' by Mr. Spear of the fijst Kut>?iA Sheet -Iron, and the joints .are tuhtU fitted, rendering them much nioro ciiective for h-’atin; r r posjs than the stoves lets perfectly cor»tructe«! l-y ofur makers. A special feature, vh - ch must an* i-e over looked in speaking of tlieso ndimr.ablo articles, is the new* ornamental L'rn vv itii w Inch -Mr. *>p*»ar now nnnu b.cturos them, which are at once a decided improve ment to the appear nee of tlio Htove.and being supplied w itli a rfljtister at i he top, instead of regulating the beat b> opening the door, a much greater raoiatmg lurface is obta i ned than in any other stove now in use. To his newly-mvontod east iron mouth-piece we have already referred, and would only uow add that it is answering an excellent purpose, and will render the stove much less liable to get out of ropair. Persons in want of stoves should not purchase Silver*! p.itei.i Parlor Stove without having the improvements of Mr. Spear, which we have her eoified, attached t* A Micii M‘i*r>Lb PrtiLic Cox\f\le*cb Many of our readers will thank us for in'ornung them that a first-class restaurant! not m a cellar) has recently been opened, by Mr. B Nharp. at No. 15 Fouth Fourth street, intended for the spccml accommodat on ol sen- Demon who finU it inconvenient to dine at home during tuisino s hMirs There are several peculiarities about this new establishment which will be to many a special recommendation; it u conduct*d on strictly tempe rance principles, and the fate, while it embraces every thing that could be desired, is ct the same time such as under the best Culinary regulation*, a scntlen.an w> uld most npprec.afe m his own la-use. Lxcel'cut home iiiu'.o broad, co"d butter, meats an i r aiue m every v .iru’ti, n e-cronrus, anil in snort everythin; that the iiioßl fastidious palate could wish for (with the excep tion uf firo -water t are reuly at all hours of the d\y to bo served up at the shortest notice b> pohto attendants. The i*.Boons arc comfortable and invitin,', and etery tmng presents an clo.tnlmees which we are quite tare the public wilt appreciate. Mr. bhaip deserves a iitieral patronage in this new enterprise, and wo are h,.re will receive it. ••llom'P. to Whom Honor is Di e.'.'—ln busi iicm fife there is nothing more honorable than fair dealing, and, our word for it, those who adhere most strictly to this motto will, in tho long run, Scdtlntit is as foil of policy na it is of honor. We have hundreds of business firms in this city to which this honorable epf tlict wilt apply, but we will take the responsibility of s»ay ing, from personal know that it apphestw none more truthfully ihau to tho well-knowu Gentlemen’s Furnishing Ks'.abhsiimen; of .Messrs It. C. Walburn A Co., now at Nos. ft mid 7 *Nortli Sixth street. The ui-'-prtcs systein is strictly ndhored to by them, and thoir rapidly increasing patronage in trie department of r;*nA» ri*r nj> ciiu</i r t i i»r-/rr sufficiently attests tuo public cstimato placed upon thoir atnc', and, we rereat. ho norable mode nf dealing. For years past, cspociaily at the approach of the holiday season, the name of this firm has been popularly associated with tuc handtomest qottou-up Dressing Gowns tor gentlemou to l>e toutul. Wo are happy to know that already tins season they are furly outdoing them* hex m this department. The moat chvant garments in this line tint we have ever examined we wero recently shown at this establish ment. Thoir stock inevery other particular isaUo very suponor. E. U Wnir»uv d Co.’8 Confectioneh\ Estah t.isHwcxT, Second and Chestnut streets, is desorvodly a centre of attraction. Old. ycumz, and iniddle-a?ed flock there to supply themseh es with the delicious con tections, which thev have the knack of getting up a little better tiian any other concern m th s country. They use none but tho finest, purest, and richest material*, '.am! do business as if thoy meant to do it lor a life-tinio, and not for n tiny, ami th-ielore heme their patrons with pditencyi. and tuo b.st ca* dies and su«ar, cream, chiv-ia'e, and other preparations that the country can nilord. They have now several luscious new thmes got up in "ntieipatiou ol tho comm; i.ohdtys, to which iro invite the special aitentiyn of our readers. oira HMrau, Tulob,-—Tfc, prcrbla] akni of the merehsut tailor* of Philadelphia has made theca proverbisllt kcurmthmoghootthoUiuon- YT© Lst* *a fact, in this department, several estaUiehißeuta kern winch lathe character of tbeirwork,are B ae*caßed in any other Amenean city, anion* which the hrose of Mr. E. O.Thompeon, northeast co*nerofS«Tentb and Waian! street*. da*erves special attention. Mr. Tbom-ecn’s stock is always fal)7 up to the reqm resects of a* Erst class trade, and the Ulent which be evinces in getting op garments tosmt the taste of his patrons, to a the life," is finding a substantial appreciation in the fact that they are constantly iscreasieg in number*. H.* *• pantaloon At*,'* we ueliere.are acknowledged by tLe be*: juJ»es to lw unrira’led. A word AJtGCT ScwiXO MafHtvT* repeatedly in these columns taken the Mwrty of rccom irending the *• Harris Bood«ir” dewing Machines* is ftUrespvct* the best/amr/y Machine in nse it is wiia pleasure we learn that, at the Fair of the Mar» taod In stitute, just elcwed, the highest preminm, a Silver Me dal, was awarded to it. This is another deserved of ficial compliment to a Cr*t-mte article and one which should have a place ia every home in the land. The odiee of the Agest for their sa’e ia tma city, Mr. S. D- Baker, is at No. 720 Arch street. Gextleuex’r FrßUissnc Oo*)D3 —We invite the attention of our reader* th-* morning to the card of Mr Bpence r . doing Uuicess under the Girard Eoese. The stock cf goods he advertises is unsurpassed i* extent, f’esbn*u. and variety, in thu country, and aB who may need artie’es i n that line we would recocs men to call and examine hi* stock before purchasing. ‘‘E«nLE*A.Vs Cravats. These hsT® become so popular an appendage to every gentleman'* wxrd robe, that men of :&s*e do not think of purchasing thetr cravats anywhere else thin a: the “ Cecrrai Cravat Store," kept by Mr. 3. A. Esbleiun. No. 431 Ckeetaut street,entrance in Jayne's flsll. He has a!ao s very exeeßent assortment of Gents* Furnishing Go^-d*. Rrsjpkxcb tor Salt —We invite attentian to the advertisement of Messrs. A. B. Carver 4 Co., under it* properbead.of ** A re idence for*a!e.” T&e property is well located, and will be sold on scconuoodat.Bg term*. Mr. Moßpnr's Moyr.vzxrx.—The eoprect state of the game* plaj ed by Mr. Morphy at the Philadelphia Alhemtum. thus far, is as follow*: At the odds of a knight. Mr. Thomas two games, both won by Mr. T. Mr. Tilrhman. two games, save odds, each player win ning a game. Dr. S. Lewis, one game, same odd*, won by Mr. Morphy. At the odds of a pawn and two moves, Mr. Tnornas, two games.both won by Mr. Mo>>hy. Tho next move Mr. Merphy makes will be so tho Brown Stone Clothing Hall of Rockhill Jt Wj***. No* a» ss j Chestnut street, above Sixth, where he vul get hra •eli a sew md elegant rail. Sewijo Maihivi ov.iu, will b, ia th, AJv.nis.ra.nt nf .Venn. Lninc 1 Muiuti So •» North Third •trr.t, which will tw foilsJ is ..other column. Th. c.rioat .niclM th.y t , „ow l-s -mg lumish.d by thit hot... to all parti of the Vn.rii. Tbe SrraEOscoPE Attn Picmtcs yield t!je gr.at.Bt .njojment, for the smount tareated, of asv thing offered to the public. The finest assortment in the city at tho New Emporium. »* South Eighth street. Jxa. Cbxmzx a Co. JiOXG'a Varieties axd Mrsrrw.—Among the romy notice* published in relition to feit ale tfeasrvj* j, we would mention the name of Md’lle Leoa, one of the mo*i prominent ifanstustt ia the city. Long, the pro prietor of the Southern Varieties, has had the rood lack to secure the services of the alove-cxmed *r/fjrf. Wo would adv»e all to Tisit Lons'* lid see Miss Leon, the great celebrity. The Growth or Wool.—Privat® sJvices frea Aust.-iba mea’ioa the fact that ibe mvroduet.oo of the Alpvx upon the island promisee to be attended wits complete suecesi. The flocks were 10 good health and »ncrea*;ng ispid,y, while the cocnlrr in the vicinity of Sidney provide* moet exce'fent pasturage. Th-stnfor mation isslgnificint. when taken iceoeneeLca wift the vx*t amoaat of woolen fscrex ecatiauaJlv b«l*g zssde into Fajhion.ible Clothing ia the utsxl felie.toc* style of John Hobsoa. tbe artistic entter in the estaWthiarß t of R. I*. M. Estrada, Mercian! Tatlor, No. a South Seventh »Te*L “ Quick Laxtilorps Make Carkfcl TEXAXT.a,*' who save a yortira of their earning*, after meeting a'i the ne«e*<ary expenses, and deposit it in The Frxsk a Raving Fund, No. 1H South Fouith street, t#scw Ctf it nut, where it can always tw had without notice, with 5 P«r cent, interest. The besmesa of th** old ktd reliable Saving Fund is rapidly increasing under the ruyenor management of the present Board of Director*, who coed net their butineis accordiag to the maxims ard jc stri'clieca of Franklin, oe« of which i*: “Be as cxrrc*; cf {property cf otarrt «4 you or* cf rtvr oir* ,•*’ and anoiher: 44 Dr/>icr«fr g/crcfy sad PTemrt’y” both of Thich are praetjed to the letter. This Ssv.ag Fund never suspended, gee advertisement, in aaothe r column. Coumo.v Tiv ami Wooden Ware, Cooking Uten sils, Hollow Enamelled acd Tin Ware, and House Fur. flisVng Hardware genera!!?, at whelegale and ty K. W. Carry 1 A C0.,714 Chestnut street. Ai'TruH Le ives. —The leave* hare been faHic* fa»t danng the pas*. fortirjM. atrewna* tbe ground, acd giving the woods a sort of" baaguet hal!* deserted" ap* p*ar*nce. Jprcpcs.we find tie fcßowiag seat poem c« Autumn leave*, in an exchange paper: •T he A Qtnmn leaf is fatii&e— Failing from the stately tree. From the sturdy oak sad walnut. From the elm that studs the lea. They are fatling, all are lallicg— Sport of every wind that blows. Admonishing all mankind— Of Stoke* to bov their clothe*l Whose stock of fashionable and seasonable Ctomai is unsurpassed by that of any other ertaNUhmsct on this terrestrial orb. Store, No. GOT Chestxst street Fixt Silver-plated asd Britaxxla Ware, Cutlery. Tea Trays, Plate Warmers. Tode: Sets, and a complete stock of General Gooes, st low price* at E. S. Bitte* t Co.’s. S- W. comer of Se sosd and Dock streets. A LETTER from Sebsslopel, inserted in tie Inrj- HJe Russt, describes tbe smvs] of Schaajl in that town. He is » man of W:v stature, this asd broad shouldered, with hollow ejes. ar.d a dyed tward. Bis walk is slow and dignified. His face bear* tbe trace of nviDV wounds, and its paleness and melancholy expres sion indicate profound grief and compressed recret, which, no denbt, is caused by the reflection, that tn all the Russia* and the Caucasus to boot, there ts cot a clothing esiaHishment similar in extent and beauty to that of E. H. Eldridge A Co.** at tbe northeast corner of Chestnut sad E«hih streets. SPECIAL. NOTICES. McClsss" Ivorytypes, No. C 26 Chestnut street. McCLF.ES’superbWater Color Photographs. NJcCLEES’ splendid Crayon Photographs. Mr CLEES' Gallery, No. B2S CHESTNUT Ftrest. A Practical System of Cookxst.—By an American Housewife. We shall commence in the AVir Ter* IVilsa/ next week, the publication of a Practical Work on CuoLery, prepared by an Azrenc&n Udy of great experience, ex preasly for our readers. Its purpose is not to instruct the lsminine public in miposett.le re&ceirents. and in the preparation of fanciful d shes lor which they will never hare occsron, but to teach all person* to make the most of the means within their reach; to boil, fry, ard roast meats, and to c->«’k resetaWes, and to nake desse-.U in the most palatable, rat.cnxl, and wholee*>a.e inanaer. This work will be eootinaed threach many weeks; and those who wish to make sure of having it from be cinnlnt to end, will do well to tubecribe at once for TJIK TRIBFNE, either Daily. Semi-Weekly, or Weekly. Terms—Daily, $6; Seim-Weekly. $3; Week ly. 53. For Club terms, fee Tribvsx of any dat-». Address HORACE GREELFA i CO.. ni Itd.VW Tribune Bai.’dinjs. New Y*ork. Ei.ec-.ayt Fall ash Wlvtsk Clothing At Robert U. Adams*, !cu:h"z*t r. r,vr c/»r n:k u* J .i/nrirr ttr e:t— Dress and Frock Coats of the best quabtj : Cost*, Promenade Coau, and Riding Coats, id all the Utcst styles, and a stock of Overcoats that cannot la variety, style, or qua'.ty. A foil and etKplet* stock ot Black and Fancy Cats-. - mere Psn», of the l«st and clwicest and a » i perb stock of Silk. Velvet, Cashmere. Grenadine. Clorh, Satin, and Cossiniere Vests, all cut, made, and 1 mint'd eqtrvUfvcnstomei woik. expressly for retail sales, I trill sold at the u\ost reasonable prtee *. Jci.*3 Uacel’s Aromatic Vinegar*is not only a great d.smfecting to be used in s:ck cham bers. &e., bat is a certain headache, ccu raUic pains, 4c. It ts a delightful eoamet.c. and ho* obtained a just eelebnty fonts many exeelient hygi enic properties. Sold by all Drurfist*, acd by Jl’LL.i Hal EL A CO., N’o. 704 Chestnut street, Phtladelrh.s. oSUtkUW * llarkis* Boudoir Sewing Machink. IMJ’ROVLD DOLBI.E-THREAD FIRST PREMIUM AT EVERY FAIR. 025 3ji rtula. Office, 7JO AKCII 5: Averts waited llooela.vd s German Bitters -trill poti tively cure Djipepsia. Liver Complaint, Nervous De bility, *c., Ac. BOOKLAND’S BALSAMIC CORDIAI. will poe’.tively care Coughs, Cold*, Whooping Cough Ac.. Ac. Prepared by Dr. C. M. JACKSON A CO., 415 ARCH btrect, and for sale by Druggist* and dealer* fee-?**”*. Price 7ft cent* per*bottle. *e24-tf Salamander Fire-Proop Safes.—Arcrv larxeassortmentofSALAMANDKßSforaaie at reo-on »bl, pncei. No. 3w CHiaTNUTStrMt, PhiLv-.1.b MOO tf EVANS t WATSON Grover & Baker’s CXUI&ATXD NotfKLKSS FiKILT ?IWns E.-'...1f 1 at xxdvcs o rircsi, 7» CHESTNUT STREET, PIIILAPei.I*H! ». The Prices op SINGER'S SEWING MACHINES Hava 1 >ux * \ axomn::: *2l-3m Tire and Gibbs Suiting M\ chikx. 714 CHESTNUT Street, Philadelphia. oc2l t Gas-Lamp Depot—Sixth and Arctt. *e24-3rt Seamen s Saving Fund—Northwest Coitxxa Sxco.xd and Wxixrr SrreeU.—Depos.U re ceived in small and l&rve antonnta.frowi all classes of the commm-ty, &nd allows interest at the rate of five per cent, per annum. Money may be drawn by check* without loss of in terest Office open dstly» fromf nntilfl o’clock, and on Mo day and Saturday until 9 m the eremnx. President. FRANKLIN FELL; Treaxnrer and Becretary, CHAS M. MORRIS. O.vb Price Clothing op thh Latest SrTLSS.made in the best manner, expressly foe RE TAIL SALES. LOWEST selling paces ctarkeu m plain Figure*. All good* made to order warranted vxti»- factory. Our ONE-PRICE System iastrictly cdu-red to, as we believe this to be the only fair way of deal ag. All are thereby treated alike, JONES A CO., ®4 MARKET Street. Whbrlkr & Wilson Skwing Machines. -PhdadclphiaOffice, 63S CHESTNUT Street. Merclianta’ order* filled at the SAME DISCOUNT a* by the Company. Branch offices in Trenton, New Jersey, and Easton and Westchester, Pa. seU-iiu Saving Fund—National Safety Trust Cojcpant.—Chartered by the State ol Pennsylvania. I, Money i* received every day, and in any amount, arge or small. J. FIVE PER CENT, interest is paid for money from the day it it put in. 3. The money is always paid bock in GOLD whenever it called for, and without notice. 4. Money ts received from Gwrltans, and other Trustees, in large or smaii to remain a long or short period. 5. The money received from Depositors is inves’ej in R,.l tit,!,. Mort;«es, Grourd R«t,, ind other £j«- o!a*s s* c unties. 6. Offic. T ever, d»j-WALNUT Btrert, »oUnrM» oorcer Third stmet, Philadelphia. yy Bft-sßiwAth-tojsl
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers