The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, February 06, 1860, Image 2

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6, 1866 ~ - ...
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„frosa,llarrlifbitrg ; ,Por•
epgal;pQd,PoUUpsl PhUgdelph4,Workmen•and
thelr Work. Vowels Pimp—List , of ',Lettere' 80,
34,14taa0k-itto Pldiadelplikaost Office i. >EiArina
Intelligsinoe. '• ,
Itty Clerk.
Thnglerk of the These ef_..!pienentatives,
niedialely-ipaii his °led*" SW:lintel P. BsttnY
iarnsi•XS(l.,..sf,Phlledelphlai his Chief Clerk, and
tket - Aistieitadhlf,Elatardaraisutned the duties of
;„,Mr".,GilpinYs",lleqtiests.
*telt werecorde - d the death of ilsnair
O t. ;oo4*;,".gsq.' NO hive now state that
be.has disposed of hieprOperty;which is con
saldihbla Tor '4Mblic : ',Purpoies—after life-use
4.itd..moth6r,' and ' the payment of
.110CVIDO varieuslegaeles t :The residlta
,
fibm the Bulletin, - will be appro.
Whited Omsk( first one-third part to the
Thstorical Society of Pennsylvania, to be in
.. feittq' 'the'while steeks of the city, and
40iiie period of ten.years orionger, if deemed
40dient; the luco'»ie that may have accumu
• latO to, he used ferthe erection of a fire-proof
library building, to be•designateil gc The Gilpin
the Iffsforical S,obleti of Permayl-
After the ernethsa.of - said
•
build
leg,tbe-trastees'are' to appropriate annually
te the ibraty. the income of the said third
15d t f the "estate:' The 'entire library be
tci
_the deceased is „to be placed in
none of the books, however,
1 4,_. 1 t0r taken from the library, but
are to-be used (with liberal arrangements)
by ; itudents.„ , :at the library: k.. The second
ono.thitd parket the said reit and residue -of
the'estate, is devised to the president and di
rectors' of the Perinsylvtinia•Acadeniy of Fine
Aiti, , to . hkefiirropilatedlit the same *ay,, for
theaotirpose of 'wattle. 'fire.iiroof Gallery of
tbeTifih:Pa,its; to be apart , of a fireproof
ilae . cif the said. Academy, and io be designs
' ted”„the Gilpin Gallery of the. Pennsylvania
Acadetny.of Fine Arta." After the comple
tion of the building, one half of the income is
to be appropriated mutually to artists in paint
ing,,scujpituo, and architecture, for .the .beet
works, plaids, and designs in their respective
branshea of.art, such premiums to be'mVarded
alter such pnbllo Competition ' as
the trustees
dceuisnitable. third—The remaining third
art to bonyeated in the same way, for' the
ge of tho Iliatorical Society - of Chicago,for
urpose arectiriga the - -pri
mf. building,i
„ andib'be deiighated,ce The tallpin Library of
):,,rhklti4Ori&A Society of Chicago.".
•k..T,bbkis, - indeed,lrincely munificence; and
nAlY,triatainethe 'high character' which - idr:
00.4,11.144 made through a-long and - brilliant
•
üblia Amusements.
ThebenefiEloason eemmeiteltiii. 7 "This ever-,
itgriti: the Vain'nt•streetlliestre t ,hirs. Duffield
Pcalo),lber iriends. ‘.l4solieth'' Will be per.
PleKik. - nthe faiiirstilvitti,:rs-ttppettritig as Lady
.k..tetuth., one of her beet persontittutte ;
'lloDoiletiith, torillsebetA ; Mr. Showell kit Afacdv,ff,
110 'Anna Correll as first lining witch. A
fFf'na e" gitipli of 'Mr. G. -W. Smith will make her
finCippearsnee tuoi , dentinal.. The fame "An
- - kluriniptanirifieeacin which- Miss 0.
to
ma Pining. Bowers, 7 111 play,' is to conclude
th tirici fife , .
evening, also at Walnut-street
Theatre, , ;ktra.: Thayer at home" to her
friet* - the. palls:, This excellent • 'dock.
-.. " - letrisir 4 1 Fai.&Wind karguerite,", taking
iiekarigheal alnraotor of Martha. , This 'spectacle
preceded by , the-lost .now comedy from
ondon';..l A ilustened to Order," in whirls Mrs.
Thayer, afro. ' Cowell, • Miss 0. Jefferson Mr:
Keich„*. - Shawall, Mr. Thayer, and Mr. Jefferson,
will perform.
• ',Mr. Dolman, of Arcirstreet Theatre, ono of the
'- MOO careful actors in the city, takes hie., benefit
'll,C . tlii,Arels” 'tin Thursday, and will appear in the
gliamtotgHAmiet—ck ohs meter which, requiring
• more intellectual than physical display, we dare
day he' will perform very creditably. "The - other
_,P , Siformaneca for Mr. Dolman's night are, not an.
noWreped:
Jlt A/ch.:street Theatre„ on Friday evening, Mrs.
- Johe:Drew orb° may be desoribed as every one's
faVoritiOrllt have , a benefit. The new comedy
'! 4. 4"" husband ; to Order," , and A b o:, li ve ly p l oy
".,Everybody'e Snead," ,constitute her. attraotive
At , ,litnierime„eyenheg„(Friday,), 'Mr. Joseph
'•304. ...14';bOn•ani Jove
lkininefit,'Meitlitutatiummuallistreng programme
-,,the.-trimedl o , , of "Fazio, ". with' the part of
bYances by Mrs. Veal° hus h, her first appeiranee
in four years; Mr. Shasion .poisonatlag Paris.
Also, a new comierpliy; by Stirling Boyne, of Len.
don, called "Nothing Venture, ,Nothing-Win.".
Miss Sane Coombs remains three evenings{ Moro
at Arch-street Theatre, and will appear; this min
- Idol?, as Partleenia ; to-morrow as .fulut ; and inn
Wetineaday.-rehe will appear as Julia In ".The
Lianahlmok.'? Her engagement has been remune
relive to the treasury of, the Arab:, '
Tfie r preieritis the last week - of DreitiM's Parlor
dyer's and Proverbs. There is a change of per-
Puma= each evening,. and Concert lieu has,
been crowded with highly-pleased audiences. This
evening the,pleoes ere "Nothing Venture, Nothing
ate,'!, and "Love's Libor Loot," with admirable
perforreancesbetween, by Signor Oliveira, whets an
excellent violinist. We have never had any genre
performances, by a limited company of man and
wife at all in this style, or a quarter as good.
NOtwithetanding the " Magic Bing" continues
highly successful at Dan Bica's, it will positively
be withdraira' at the expiration-of the present
Weak, sa a grand Baste - in speoisolols to be pro
duped. On Monday evening next. As but a few,
more representations of this pleoe will be given,
those who baronet 'witnessed it will not regret
taking:lm earl y' opportunity of doing so. An ex
- *Client Programmeof ante In' the circle is also an
144rteed.-, • '
.This evening, at hiefianough's Gaieties, and for
the benefit of ilir..Thomae, (who absurdly degrades
lita given name William Into that immensely mean
d)stillintivbiefßilly.9 anew spectacular pantomime,
the 7! /Bar, of Beauty ; or, the Silver shower,'!4lll
be I.predimed,- with new scenery, costumes, net..
ehliMry',:nroperties;enpeintinents, and innate. Mr.
E. M.' Hernandez will. be' the • Harlequin;
Calla
dine end Vete s, the Clowns ; Nicholls, the Pants.
loon ;and Miss Julia Prince, the Coluithine. This
is her 'first appearance here. hem all that we
baba hierd, thin 'pantomime wM be Mr. AloDon•
ough's chef d'aizure:'
Signer BMX. continues at his Temple of Wonders,
theatnut and Tenth, and Is open to visits there
oVinings, add - also upon the afternoons of Wednes.
daY - midlistarday.
'The liloramle and Autornatiel Exhibition; , in
Sitederien's Boerne, 'Sayne'e Metroiolitan Hall,
Chestnutstriet, above Sixth, is announced' to close
oivnext Saturday. - Tboro 'are exhibitions every
etining,' and also on Wednesday and Saturday, ar
thritic* This Theatre of Art 'ls as well worthy
alfirit as any exhibition now open in this city.
'TO , day, F. B. Clutch's painting, entitled " The
lieitrt bribe ifindes,'' tiiii.bo eitibitod at the Aoa !
de,inyef •
-On; Thnreday leveeing, Signor Baucarde, and
Signora Albertina Hammel', will give a "Grand"
Concert at Musical Vend 111111, assisted by Signor
Arditeankjitigoor Ideicoarerii,*id Mr. Pittison.
;liii,,h,Cirend.Y..Ottisone, Drees Ball of th e Phila•
dolphin Typographical Union comes off at Musical
Pend_Mall, this evening. • ' -
"The Mainnerohor llaney;D,rese Ball, - to-morrow
Opining; at Mitslealturid - Halt; although: not ad
. voiliscd:aa,k'Granti," Promises• to be, what it
Ways Ins, been, one of the very best' balls "of the
Pitit,a s (Manx AND OTHER BALES 'Real Hs.
tale, Lowrie , to•marrow,"at . 12 o'clock, noon.
Bee Thornier& Sons' adveetieemeels had pamphlet
catalogue: • . •
The Trial 'Of 'iSteptiegs, the Harpers
r6itiqueingent.'
Vsol Feb: 4.-TI Mel of Ste
phens progressed yesterday, and n fall jury was sworn.
rhe,ometung !peaches of the 'Mallen commuted the
day. ,
„
int-7214p CONCLUDED—VERDICT op von innr—
,BTEPH.z4e Penni) titilbTY, 03 .ti,L TA6 COUSTS
11(0010K 1/1 roblvIVAI, 0180118.
_ 01090, 1:, -, i- ,
6b.,4.-litie trial of -Andrew
charged with treason, murder,. and lioneinivoy,
Ices concluded te' day, .
PIO new eiidende war Midge - ltd. —'
,The epeeobee of the soonest were meetly of a political
character;diecuselog the present position of the runle
t on between the North +Ltd South.
- 1 -The .Coitimonwealth ninde a 'IMP the
case 'without - argument, hnt• wairdoolined - hi the
counsel her tliedefenoe, who desired to be heard for Me
client-' , • -,
'fording mane the' opening argument.
naunced as a falsehood and UNA.' the assertion of
Mown that lot was to receive akt , from the laboring
awes at Moses Forty. fienisimed that they were
- ttne thd C6l7lllHkaloll Mid to the ewe of Virginia,
: - 44111,113fotred to their mitten in twinning to quell the in
:memo wee polof of their :fidelity: He & De luded...with
weerneat appeal to thelury„fo vindicate the 18W, sty
' Hi s t too prisorier as b riodthlret,Y Villain and wretch,
- woreeseen than his 'meter:John thown: - . -
4 adlincit. rot the defeat:Nina° an able and
sin- -
= quent sneering I tong lute. 0. de tailed narrative of the /lee
1.124 Mittens et the _Republican part., and °toeing with
eatestilostAPllool,to the lury,.to spare the nto of the
.
, A,ltAreW nunter Anoso ori the cart of the Corn.
idlle replied 'other arguments of the eon-.
- fdettiedefifre - withiellihg etreet e had no coon:
- danintin'the I) en Meetings which lind.been, held'in the
Ho be unotiftnatAtibr invasion of - John biro wir
-. - sdheen a tioneht,to the Etoutb, as it non onotvia them
• •
toe peeitienitiwtittin they werleteeed, ,1,16 referred to
bops of ninntono antilop/ or trectnon ot
qtur cot rind ,deolared Mob the;klonth -wow, preparea
itleffiet - , '
Pas cono,yoa. oboottpc Jo tea JiHy at font 0 pluck
ihialiVkaurdantt lamb' TheY'rWritol; and after 'IV
woo Tuiputesabiterma tamed th wandiat of ;Irani
o' 15th 'tenets , lidietment. = • • -
.priediterleie es fthe "verdict- With Mimi petted
Orenent,afttiferin IP/Pdotell to ' WI !! tt i ° en "
4P3till!"/.lllOlltV - _ •
THE FORNEY JUBILEE IN WASHINGTON
Another Anti•Adminietration Triumph!
PERCHES OF CELEHRA,TED MEMBERS -OF
CONGRESS FROM EVERY SEGTION.
OBRENIIIIIE TO THeClAlittli ELECT; •
Rejoicing of the Citiaene of Washington
We give below the proceedings at the For.
my serenade in Washington, on Friday even
ing last. The New York Herald, with its
usualjournalistic'eneriy and activity, the neat
morning contained a pretty full report of the
speeches made upon'the occasion, although
they bad to come front a distance of over two
hundred and forty miles, and, after hours, upon
the wings Of the electric telegraph. Wo pub
lish the speeches, with a correCtiOn of a few
natural - inaccuracies, and regret that we are
not also able to'. lay before' our readers the
noble Union speeches'made after the
at Xi. Coims's !supper table, by Hon Samna
H. CAMPBELL, .q Pa., Hon. GREEN ADAMS, of
By., Hop: Oparsroenza Herman, of R. 1.,
and others : ,
BUSEp , II or sea roaxii;
• Colonel Forney - , upon his appearance, was
greeted with enthdiastie cheering from,those in
the street and in the house. Me spoke as follows:
Cirmens OF WISUINGTON: ihave ilia few words
to say to you upon the events of this day. I de.
sire to address them to those insiders well as those
outside of the hospitable heme of my friend Coyle,
in reference to what has transpired in the Rouse
of Representatives this afternoon. For this senti
ment, demonstrated In my own person, I am most
sincerely thankful to yen, and I regard it as' a
testimony of Approval of the result of the day's
frootealAge. limy, gentlemen, there is something
*Whir in thia „ d emonstration ,• and, first, let me
say, peculiar to myself. Gentlemen, four years
ago this very evening the Rode of Represents
tives of the .United States, after a long and most
harassing sessioni:,was at lett organised by the
election of Nathaniel P. liankse of Massa
chusetts, as Speaker. ' In the discharge of
the duties of Clerk of that body, the same
AS performed a=by Mr. Allen, who retires
to-day, . I had ,the ,honor to receive, at the
hands of the repetteentatives, of the people, a sig.
nilloantly Anitnimotte endorsement. And now, by
the expression of the representatives of the people,
am spin- returned to the same position from
which I then voluntarily retired, olotbed with the
confidence of the whole people of the United States,
In these four years, gentlemen, many changes have
taken place. I retired from the Clerk's chair in
the year 1856, with-my heart ardently beating to
Bee the man whom I thenoonoelved to be the favor-
Ste sou of Pennsylvania elected to the Presidential
chair. Gentlemen; I had had no higher hope in
life beyond that, no aim or object. Then all was
osnoentrated in the one *bombing feeling to see
that man's aspirations carried out to a successful
issue. laseisted In his triumph. I same back to the
State where I was born and there, with whatever
selfishness was in me, if any, I, gave it all to that,
man and to his cause; and the result was that he
was elected President of the United States—to the
high °Moe of prissiding,lor , a time, over the desti
nies of this great country. We, in en part of the
country believe,,genttemen, that the District of
Columbia is common ground—that it is mine as it
is your home. [Loud shears, and Cries of "That's
so.' ] I belleiand knew, that I have a, right to
speak here, de's have a right to speak in Philadel
phia, at least that therocan here be no ostracism and
no proseription of sentiment and that freedom of
speech is here wisely and widely tolerated. When
that is proscribed, when free men, from whatever
State 61 the :Union they-may come are denied
freedom of Speech in the splendid metropo
lis bearing the name of Weshington, than your
Union Is-virtually &Melee& [Cheers.] And there•
fore it is that in this place and in this presence, I
desire to say, 'that in elect ing /mewl Buchanan wo
thought we acted in arniordanee with tho spirit of
the Demoorlitio party, which is to the effeot that
the people' f the Territories obeli control all their
domeatio institutions, slavery Inclusive. Lout
cheers.] - There had been no going back of this
bond, but. after. his -(Mr. Buchanan's) election,
when his ;elevation, to, the chair of once was se.
eared; he disregarded hie pledges, and we discover
ed that a new reading Dad heen suggested, a now
gospel presented to our fkith; and teas we Who at
first acted with him, never believing that we who
had adhered tolilifaittt should be excluded front tho
Deinooratio party, wens sought to be excliided. Con
sequently, thereeult has been as you foresaw. That
result is, that the General Governmentof the coun
try has turned snits power against the men standing
in my. relatiop,to Mend James Buchanan, elevated
to be President of the United States, has booome a
despot: - (Mt tit "Alit "he has"—" Give It to
hint.") A'adiespotinire intolerant than any ever
before kdowa' in the history of this country, who
has performed note of tyrann y which, if attempted
in despotic Itranoe„ would - ,. create a revolution
[Land otters, anti ones of clood.'l I Hayti, with
'pain for".Penesylvanis t thait never In the hletnr.V
of the etantry, never m the annals of any rresi
denttlnutthere been,enah a - proscription of men—
neverinuoh 'w - proseriptlon of individual opinions
(Cheeri.) When learns raised, to that high posi
tion Whieh he hasdisgriteed÷rabied by the votes of
the people of the North:-.Ani,idedipsd himself upon
bonded knees to sustain thePolley of Self-government
in this Territories ., But noteavitat do we see? Why,we
see againithis own people, and crouch
ing once more upon hid knees—thin time before the
South that deepiseShim for his cowmen. I Cheers.]
When I tee all this, and when I see, aim, that the
greet Deptocratie party have not risen in arms to
protest a against it, I have only to say for myself that
I, for one,. will _not submit to It. (Tremendous ap
plause from inside and out) I Will 'not, I ssy,
submit Wit, but 1 will join hands with' ny party—
with Areerloans, with Republicans, frith any . party
of, nieu.4-te rebuke such prosortptiOnltaleitm. if
you - telt me from this,. Diet therefore I 'am op.
road to the institutions of 'the South , I say 110.
fOheors4 And I reply, that on the contrary I
feel, the same. devotion to the South that 1
have ever felt. (Continued cheers.] Now, lot
cue say, without protracting these remarks, let
me say with regard to the Republican MOM
hers, that they have been most arroelonsly elate.
dared; that the .whole Nopublioan party of the
North• have been - olandered, in having been held
responsible for the unfortunate outrage at Harper',,
Perry. There have been expressions and opinions,
and sentiments uttered by the leaders of the he•
publican party, against which my honest instincts
and party prejudices revolt. But while this is so,
let me say that the very moment that the news of
that invasion reached the North they were struck
with horror, and there was not a man who did
not denounce end who did not deplore it. [Cheer&
We have to these days sonic singular statesman
ship, particularly among those who are allied
to tee Administration party, and amongst those
who aspire to be candidates for the Presidency. I
say this business of,holdlng a whole party respon
sible for the ads of a few individuals has gene out
of fashion. Are the Democratic party who sup.
port the rights of the adopted eit item of the cone
try, to be held responsible for the votes of their re
presentatives in Congress hero who voted for an
American for Speekori, Certainly not, , Bence
I protest against the assumption that any part of
the people an my region are in favor or would
support any set of men who approve of the doc
tnnes of the Helper book, or who put themselves
forward as the champiens of times who would at
tempt to invade the State of Virginia, and crimson
her soil with the blood of her people. ll.oud cheers J
But we are told that while ail other men are to be
forgiven for their peculiar doctrines; that while the
American party are to be forgiven, the Republican
party are to receive no absolution. If you allow me
to sa y—but e I think I will say it whether you al •
low me or not—[cheers]—the Demooratio party,
as Mr. Buchanan would make it, is devoted
solely to the perpetuation and extension of sla
very. [Cries of "That's so," and cheers.] But
I as one man who is resoved to stand by the
rights of the South, who is resolved to see the fagi
tive-olave law executed in the letter and the spirit,
I am resolved, for one, to protest against snob au
act.' [Loud cheers] This country has a higher,
a noisier and loftier destiny before it than the ex-
Woolen or perpetuation of slavery. [Loud sheers.]
I say it frankly, that I regret it is in existence.
speak as I feel, and when I see all the power of
this Government ennobled for the protection and
perpetuation of that Institution, I must protest
against it. [Cheers.] I have seen for the last
eight weeks men, Northern mon, and X was
ashamed to see them, lending themselves to the
depravity, if I may be permitted to use the term,
but certainly to the degradation, of endorsing snob
principles as these. But, gentlemen, to bring, as
said before, these desultory remarks to a
close, let me, in conclusion repeat my
thanks for this demonstration. 'You may re.
member • this passage in ti Mazeppa"—my
friend, Mr. Jackson, of 'Kentucky, will also re
member—when Idaseppa (I cannot repeat the ex
act words) is bound to a wild stead, which is
turned off, nod which flew with him over mountains,
through valleys and forests and nerves rivers, per•
sued by wolves, shoats back to his tyrant and per
secutor, that some day be would return to repay
him. (Loud cheers.] " Some day I will return,t'
said ktazeppa, "to thank sou, Count, for this un.
courteous ride." Gentlemen, have had the ride
teethe last two or three years [loud cheers], but
I have also, Mine,ppit-like, come back, to Bettie
with the respectable and venerable gentleman at
the other' end of the avenue for that ride. I am
returned to pay my respects. [Cheers. A voles—
" Give hies li—.l ; Ito has no friends."] I have re.
turned to settle mounts with him. [A voice—
" Don't spare him ; he shot us down, like dogs,
with marines,") If he is now sitting in his easy
chair at home, to-night, he must hear our loud and
hearty cheers, and they will remind hint that his
old friend, - Forney, bee come bask to settle the old
debt with him. [Loud cheers and laughter.]
Mr. 'Forney, once more thanking the assemblage,
retired from the wlndr, loudly cheered.
'The. Ilnos' alluded to by Mr. Forney are as fol
lows : • '
They little thought, thatilay of pain,
, When launched, as oh the liglittilnee flash,
they bade me to deattuation dash,
Tg one day I should come Main
ith twice five thousand home, to thank
The Count for tin uncourtecus ride.
They played me then a bitter prank—
NV:lieu with ths wild pone for my quids,
t t hey L IT tt Te e d t t o h e flank.it foreniZfrii,
Foy thou at last sets all things even
4Wef ell o
y b et:A t t k ii i t nt h o o t o l is r, er
'Which could evade, if up org,ven,
The patient watch end vigil long
Of him who treasures up a wrong.
SPEECH OP MR. 010111tAlt.
' Load calla were made for Mr. Hickman, who
appeared, and said that, in the (mallet between
the sections in 'this notus:ry—for wo could not
deny that such candid existed—the patriot could
have but , One desire, and do but a single act, and
that was to secure equality , and justice to all the
sections of this great Confederacy of States. There
was no difficulty in regard to the North, and there
should be nO diffieulty with respect to the South
The great; mistake that was made by Southern
men,,which created much of the diffioulty and
confusion of the present day, was in assuming
such mon as Lloyd Garrison anti Wendell Phil
lips to be a type of the great Northern sentiment.
There. was , no truth in such an idea. We were
just as much fu.stitled In the North in assum
ing. that .a few extreme men from South
Gaveling, Georgia, or Alabama, represent the
sentiments of the great States of the South.
Why, it , had become treason to the minds of many
men of the present day to make the declaration
that the .Union of these States must be preserved.
He thought that those who heard him Would agree
with him that there can be no safety, there can be
no seourity, for any citizen independent of the
Union,- There was no sectionalism in the North
worth considering, and he wished he could say the
same for the Booth. lie trash, I, however, that
there. watt less there than he had been led to sup
peachy the signs of the times. The North was
;Vf
eminently conservative, because the North was
eminently wise. [Cheers. .1 A man who would say
that the Union should not be maintained at every
cost and every sacrifice, was not a true American
citizen, andlwas not a wise man. [Cries of 4, Good,"
and applause t i There wag no man who could look
beyond the Union. If he tried to do on ho would
took into a perfectly impenetrable cloud. There
was nothing beyond it for any man to see. To
talk of such a thing was worse than folly—it wee
extreme madness.
Why should we throw away the commanding
position we have already reached? Wo bold power,
gentlemen, immense power, in our hands. We
are a nation—a nation of the first class. We are
tonight the envy of all subjects and the dread of
all sovereigns. The Russian slave, beading be
neath the weight of chains fastened upon hlm by a
relentless despotism, °Modes; the means of liberty
as they cross the mighty waters, and longs for the
hour of his deliverance. The Irish peasant, as he
nears his crumbling cottage walls to meet there
want, and the sinking, famishing frames of the
mother and her offspring, raises his streaming
eyes to heaven, and devoutly thanks his God that
there is an asylum for the oppressed of the nations.
The Imperial Autoorat, that man without a name,
whilst attempting to rivet more firmly the manaoles
upon his children, curses the birthday of our na
tional existence, and pales at the onward march of
eternal truth and justice. The Nettie Queen, the
mistress, yea, the robber of the nations, seated in
the midst of wrecked and ruined millions, hearing
of our increasing strength, augmenting resources,
and popular content, feels the throne tremble be
neath her, and with haggard eyes contemplates
the decline of that greatness, built by the rapine
and the bloody ambition of centuries.
This la the great inheritance wo have received
from our fathers; let us bestow it upon our cliff
dren unimpaired, teaching them that, next
to their God, they owe their chief all action and.
reverence to their country—a, United tountry
[Cries of "Ie will," and applause.]
SPEECH OP JOHN B. gASKIN
Hashln next spoke, In response to loud calls.
Ile was happy to join with those who eurrounded
him in congratulations on the great moral and po.
Iltioal triumph of their distiognithed friend, Col.
John W. Forney. [Applause.] Before making any
extended reninrks, however, ho desired to read a
telegraphic) despatch just received from Lanoaster,
the city of Colonel Forney'e birth and of Mr.
ohanan's residence, which had responded to an op.
peal made in person by the President, just before
the local fall election, by giving a majority of three
hundred against the Democratic ticket, the first
Opposition triumph, he believed, ever bad there.
[Laughter and applause.] . The following is the
despatch
Lexcesran, Nil. 9, MO.'
SOUN W. FORNEY. Waithinsteni
Lancaster city, the birthplace o r Forcer, ce c mi t o
bates him with one bemired ghat on his election as
Cle,k of the ROUIIO,
This despatch was received with three cheers,
and great enthusiasm.
Mr, Baskin, continuing, said that he looked
upon the eleotion of Colonel Forney as the greatest
moral and political triumph ever achieved in this
or any other country. Four years ago he had left
this city to buckle on hie armor es the Warwick of
Jaines Buchanan to take hlin what he is, and ef.
ter he had elevated like to power, because ho
wetild not abandon and betray the principles on
which he had won him a victory, Mr. Buchanan
had been hounding him,
and those who stood up
for principles with him. To-day the representatives
of the people of this Union, fresh from them, had
elevated Col. Forney to the first ministerial Mee
in the most popular branch of our Government.
[Applause.] - .A greater boner) in his judgment,
than would have been Verney's election to the
United Steles Senate, at the time he was cheated
'out of that office by the treachery of Dimocratio
friends. [Cheers Ho Was en anti•Lecompton
Democrat. Seven out of eight of those gentlemen,
elected as independent men,
had cast their votes
for Vol. Forney, and with the generous aid of the
trisole Republican party, had succeeded in electing
him. He regretted that not a single vote in his sup
porthad been oast by the South Americans, as the
anti•Leeempton Democrats bad generously united
:with the Republicans in electing Hoffman, of Mary
land, a South American, their candidate for Ser
geant-at-Arms, and he regarded their failure to vote
for Forney wen evidence of Southern seetionallem as
against *Northern man, Ileffseante election proved
that there was no sepia selfish feeling in the breasts
of Northern men. For himself, ho was for the whole
:Union. He would proteetslavery *bereft exists ;he
would enforce the fugitive-Awe law, and would re
cognise the right of the people of the Territories to
have slavery or notes they preferred, giving them
the pewee to clod their own Governer,ln order to
prevent one mediated by the President, at in the
ate case of Nebraska ' interfering with' that right.
lie differed with the Republican party upon the
subject of Congressional intervention eget no t slavery
he the Territories, es he differed with Southern
men who dealreddoogrestional Intervention to pro
tett elaVery. He heel planted himeelfupon thisCin
elnnatie platform, and if the Republican rty,
' when they framed their platform at Chicago, °aid
not with that practical good sense which they ex
hibited during the last Congress i in supporting the
Crittenden-Montgomery hilt,
and sustain the don.
trine of popnlat sovereignty and opposition to
the peonlations, frauds, and corruptions ofithis Ad
ministration, as they had all acted together in the
organisation of the House, he was prepared to
unite with them to boat the party now in power in
1860. [Applause.] Ho wished to mention an inci
dent connected With the election of Col. Forney.
They all knew that from the commencement of the
session down to the present time the New York Iler
alit had indicated the course to bo pursued by the
Aministration members in the Route, end that they
bad implicitly followed its advice in more than one
instance. A short time ago that paper had, at the
instigation of Mr. Buchanan, as he knew, revived
the Forrest letter, and had suggested . that it be
read fetal the Clerk's desk when Forney was nomi
nated. Singularly enough, this bad not been done,
bat expecting that it would be, Colonel Feeney had
addressed him a letter in ?elation to this femme
Forrest letter, 150 much miseonstruoted and so mush
need by thte penny-whistle newspapers that follow
In the wake of the Iterald to prejudice Forney.
Ifs would have read this letter In the House, but
there was, ne beeessity for It. He would new read
let however as be knew those present would like to
hear it The fallowing is the teeter L .
• Yltastimormr, Feb.rittea •
ALT Diet Bra :l need not remit to golf:Mat my name
Manna sattudased with the mittens o clerk of the
Rouse, rather tbrouen the Jertieltte of kind friends
like yourself than because Many efforts of my own to
beeome apandidate. I have importuned on single re
presentative for his vote. In the present condition of
Poetics have preferred to let evenly take their course,
tarn lam nocerned, nuuntaining the eesition
have held for Me last two years, of uncoinpromptigir
hostility to the prescriptive anti sunmeless yeller or the
preent ednunistrat toe of the tielieral Oevernmeneene
of hearty co-operation with all men who look to the
ovetthroW 61 that edininlitiratldn. its advocate and its
endorsers. I have l*en informed, however that
House.
nnip name shduld be presented to the
alk a line to be made on account of a letter
w in I wrote nearly ten earl ago. in wenn
tio with the case or Mr. Edwin Forrest. 1 bad
hoped that no one would be found willing to make this
rim of devotion to a cherished. and, as I believed, deep
ly-Wined friend, the pretext of an assault upon my re
putation. If. in writing this letter, I animated an
error, I only became COIIIIOIOUI of It when I saw how it
could be misconstrued and it I needed any assurapeee
that this error had been overlooked, I pad it IS My
election to the Clerkship of the Hones in 1833, in tee
unanimous endorsement of my concoct by members
of all pastiesbesot that body alter I had presided over
the deliberations of the Homo in the stormy
atm* le of 1855 and ISM. In my notetneuen, by the
Democrats of the Pennsylvania Legislature, as their
candidate for United States Senator In 1807. and in the re •
peated voluntary tendereofdiatinguiened official position
Of the present P resident of the United owes, woo has
not permitted t le recollection of my nanny years of
clutnipionship of his aspirations to outweigh the fact
that I roots not conscientiously follow Ii in in lie
abandonment and violation of the pledree aud princi-
Fles upon which alone he was chosen Clue! Max istr-te.
will not imitate the example set by his personal organ,
the New York Herald, in making the revel,. non in a
Private letter a matter of public , discussion. If I could
melt so low I might find additional evidence of the fact,
over his own name, that my
_connection with the
Forrest oase never deprived me of a matins ol his con
fidence and AIreCLIC a, which i UP toecertain period, ha
so lreelykand no flatteringly bestowed upon me
lots can make any,use of tine note you see proper.
Should the House elect me Clerk, I will accept the Mime,
and discharge the duties in the sprit In which it is con
ferred. Should the result be otherwise, my position
will remain unchanged. I have tried the experiment
of conducting an independent Journal against all the
office-holding power or the Federal Government, an I
will not eurreader my relation to diet enterprise whe
ther I gain or lose the position with which my name
has been once more associated.
Yours, very truly
Y. Av. FORNEY.
In conclusion, Mr. Raskin remarked that the
election of Colonel Forney was a lesaon to all future
Democratic Presidents woefully those who might
come from the North. 'lf such a one, as in the moo
of Mr. Buchanan, would allow himself to be
frightened by the threats of a few men like Slidell,
Cobb, and Jacob Thompson, and made believe that
Georgia, Alabama, and fdissieslppi would secede if
he did not force a State fete the Union with a
fraudulent Constitution recognising slavery, to
gratify them with additional power in the Senate
of the United States, ho would live to experience
all the censure and disgrace now heaped upon Mr.
Buchanan.
SOf UCH OE' Nit . TAPPAN.
Mr. Tappan, of Newliarupshire, wee glad of the
opportunity to mingle his congratulations with
those present upon tho great triumph which the
people had aehieved in the House of Representa
tives to-day. Nowhere throughout this groat Con
foderaoy would the election of Col. Forney bo re
ceived with more heartfelt pleasure than in his tar
off home. among the snow-clad hills of New Hemp
shire. lie thanked Cod for the eleotiou of Col.
Forney. By it the people of the country, without
respect to party, had shown that no man who took
his proud and manly position in resisting the
frauds and outragespf James Buobanan's Adminis
tration would be allowed to bo crushed out by any
such despotism. [Cheers.]
MEM OY SENATOR WILKINSON.
Senator Wilkinson, of Alinnesots, said that,
since ho had come to Washington, ho hardly
know where be was, Ho thought, before ho left
home, be loved his oottntry. Ile had been brought
up, as he might say, at the feet of °mallet. The
first that ho know of politics was the name
of Harry Clay. tApplause.l His youthful en.
orgies were all aroused in the canvass for
that noble old patriot of Kentucky, and he
cherished the same feelings yet. When he
retleotod on this slavery contest, and re
membered that he was mated a traitor if he
asked for a little foothold upon this great
continent for the free labor of the North, ho
thought ho heard the great patriot Clay re
marking, that before you can extingslish this love
of liberty In the human heart you must blow out
the great moral lights about us.
The ceremonies at Mr. Coyle's house were eon
eluded by a collation, sentiments, nod a general
good time.
The Territorial Question in Congress.
PROPOSILD ADUISSION OP KANSAS INTO THE ONION
UNDER THE WYANDOTTE CONSTITUTION.
WsettimPrott, Feb.l.—A number of Democrats who
are here from Kansas have conterred with the Southern
Democrats in COIKTOIII, and propose to advocate the
admission of Kamm into the Union with the Wyan
dotte Conatitutio changing the boundares so as to
include Pike's Pe li,
ak and tlie_porrion of the Tern
tor yof Nebraska south of the Platte river—the (Mango
to be submitted to the vote of the people of 'Canals,
and when ratified they are to be admitted na a State by
proclamation of the President.
lion. Marmot J. Parrot, Senora! Pomeroy, Judge
Amy, and other Republicans who aro here I rom Kan
sas, insist on the admission of Kaman under the Wrin.
done Constitution without any alteration—that on
stittition being already ratified by two-thirds o the
Tarritorg.
The question of population will not ler urged, es Judge
Pettit, in Kansan. has Said he is confident that the Ter
ritory
mimeslum one hundred thousand inhabitants.
which up fully to the requirements of the English
It is also professed by the Democratic Senators to m
oist the organization of any now Territories. They want
to attaertotalt and the region around about to Ne
memos, white Utah and the Territories south of Kan
sas are to be annexed to New Mexico, and to follow its
fortunes. To t^ts It is objected, that, having secured
slavery in Now Mexico by law, this immense Ter, itory
should not be brows ht under the same enactment, which
might Recurs, it to slavery tomer.
From Washington.
• •
WARllittoTor , Feb. S.—Colonel Forney has appointed
P. Barry Hayes, Esq., of
_Philadelphia, es hie chief as
sistant. Mr. Briggs. of New York, wbo voted for Mr.
Pennington, did not vote for C..tonel Forney.
The Opposition conference was in session three hours
to-day, and decided on recommending (leorge Mars
ton, of New Hampshire, for Doorkeeper, and Josiah W.
Luctun of !Meek, for Postmaster of the House The
question of awinger was discussed, hut no gonolnuon
arrived gt. The indie,tions, however, are in favor of
John D..Defrees, en editor, of Indianapolis, Ind.
Bank Robbery.
el,anssvibta. Tenn., Feb. 1.--The Branoh Bank o
r annessee, located at this slam wait robbed, On Thine
I's' OW, of CLOW, mostly in gold Qom
THE PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1860.
THE LATEST NEWS
BY TELEGRAPH.
FIVE BANS LATER FROM EUROPE.
THE NORTH AMERICAN AT PORTLAND.
The City of Baltimore at New Toni.
nipottant Free• Trade Movement of Napoleon.
Cruelty on Board American Merchant Vessels
ONGRESS NEGOTIATIONS RESUMED
Napoleon and the Villa Franca Agreement
The rope Refuses to Cede the Rebel'Provincels,
RETURN OF COUNT CAVOUR TO OFFICE.
A War between Sardinia and Naples Predicted.
The steamship North American, from 'Liverpool on
the 38th ult., via Queenstown on the 10th, arrived at
Portland on Saturday morning•
The steamship City of Baltimore, with the aaron
dates, an toed at Now York at noon on the same day.
Advice! from Europe to Thursday January 19—fiya
days later than the steamship America's dates-.-are
furnished by these arm ale,
1 he stottihehire Alla, North Briton, and Primo Alhet
had arrived out.
Thd kan eerier Naitoleon has bladed a strong free-trade
prOgre o .
The d u tyn cotton has been abolished by the French
Government,
negotiatioas for the Confirms of the Primer" for
the !settlement of the Italian difficulties haVelmen re
clined.
GREAT BRITAIN.
In anticipation of the meeting or Parßaia!, on the
Mtn oh January, Lord Palmerston has issued the usual
circular to his supporters to %helloes, of Compton'. re
questing their attendance at the opening of the session,
as bust nose of groat importance Is at onoo to be brought
forward.
The leaders of the respective entities' hed likewise
lesued inVitations to the customary dinners Which are
elven prior to the aseembling of Parlinine t.
At an adjourned meeting of the tireat dip Company,
the resignation of the directibe wall race rod, the ma
jority against the amendment for on mess tine coda
mitten being 1 OM
A committee a investigation was subseeuently ap
pointed, and it was resolved that op new dirdotors ehotild
tie elected until alto. the presentation of the committee:a
report.
The two mates of the American bark Annaepreviout
ly reported under arrest upon the aerie of }lame
caused the death of six colored seamen, by brutal trent.
merit, had been brought up for examination before the
magistrates at Newport, ele idolise of rebel mashy was adduced. but it was awaited tor tho deemed that the
Men died from the *deem of yellow fever, which had
prevaileal on board the vet eel.
The American minister having sent a protect tiniest
the Jurisdiction of the court, the magistrate hail to Me
nne the charge. 'I lot protest was accompanied with
the request that the triloostretee wain detain the de
fendants until the !setter could be Inquired Me by the
Amerman coneni, so that they might be remitted to
their own country unaer the extradition treaty.
The magistrates considered that they mild not hold
the accused without the formal requitition, and • they
were aceoraingle discharged.
The mates had to be conveyed to their ships wider
the protection of the police for fear or the fury of the
mob.
The Lordpn Times bat a strong editorial on the ogee,
' in W blob it mph:
These crimes, for- which the American merchant
service has become justly Infamous, demand thalevietex
attention of a civilized people."
Another ease of cruelt, on board the American ship
Wizard K ing. which resulted in the death of Os victim
And undery one an leventreation before the coroner In
London. fhe jury. in their verdict, state exammtion to
been the cause of death. but ati theorem tame
charge the officers of the vessel with gross atd cruel ne
glect.
The Queen had accepted the services of the employees
an the Cunard Mail Service at Liverpool, at a eons of
artillery volunteers. The force has been ortemzed by
Itl r. Maolver, the agent of the line, ea will number
4:0 men.
The announcement that Lord Cowley had returned to
Paris was premature. tie did hot aisle° there till the
17th ult. On hue arrival lie had along audience with the
Bmperot.
A telegram on the suldeot says the F.mpetor requested
Lord Cowley to declare to the knellell Cabinet , LW.
although &servile q an ultimate understanding with
Yn 4 land an the basis of non-interventlon,, it was In be
understood that he alwaes needlecraft himself bound
tr the enengemehts at Villa Franca and treaties of
&nigh.
'Ohms reserve was maintained duririx the last negotia-
Bone between France and btu:land.
The assembling or a Convicts is therefore slid Pe/el
ide. this programme being fudnded on the treaties of
Zurich.
file Times concludes a loader on the Emperor's letter
to 11. You'd, no follows:—" We are in no coati mien our
selves et present to reduce the revenue, and we are op
posed to commercial treaties' but mill we home that it
may be In the power, of the Chancel or of the Exche
quer, in confederation of the invelse these challigee
rase give to British commerce, and the probable bi
omass in the airtime revenue. to ranks some redac
tion in the atlas on Fterioh Products. which Iles at
any rate an er a negt of good will.. The two onetime
sre at length early bscise op the same rate oq to pa
tent an which kith may be victors, and where the one
which mk! most has a right to expect the most eohd
advantage.'The Deily News, reviewing the prospect for the in
troduction of Imo trade Into Pritime. We that it will
Vera much proinoto tee ;welfare of the proneb,in
or43,lo their )inowledeo arid skill, and 'increase the
power or r ranee. If Louis Napoleon hail been required
to give Europe a denionetretion of his ottallidenee ti tn his
own power he could hardly have complied more e cote:-
able then by annonneing a policy or free-trade.
The Daily News seppome that, the °beneath of the
Exchequer is engaged in reformine our tariff, and does
not limit Ms views to Mere beret reilliatimm
duties °make yield very We revenutior tab. with the
wine duties, are as dust in thq baladoe comps ird - to
the Immediate And Immense advantage we should de
rive from convineine the French. by One condom, that
we are heartily desirous to promote their prosperity.
and enable their Emperor to succeed mhos W/6. and
noble prate..
The Herald says international tindcle Menne:node
Internecine war, a generous einulabou re to stimulate
the Markets of prodnimon and consumption. the n. al
of the counting-hougie to replace timid at the berme,
e
PI ti
glory n measured to tip the number et
gilled and wounded. if it se true. as all stetted philoso
phy hag taught that the conquest of the external world'
for the benefit Of, Med in Calla the noblest alma of
civilisation, Lows N apol eon It about to meter on a hew
c•lreer. Will she the brightest lustre on his
hanie end tly a rty. and consolidate hurthrone—to con
ger unspeak blown. aon the litAry of France:
The 4 , lver her Bart, though the ure reeeley On
by the Enipefor of the Plena. wipe an Mare° d
lug letter published in our eaPer or yesterday ihe teumf
•er a purely commercial character, it oannot fail to re
edntiMeeolll medical bearings towards this enquiry.
. he Daily Telegraph, rtna a leader by ' , Lyme the
French Firmayor hem et ength dee:aped ha fever of a
volley what, tilt be toys le developed, will recto* hint
totes confidence of England.
The Moraine Star sass that Mr. Cobden bag added
pndt'.er Claim to the gratitude of the country, for it in to
hie exertions, backed by the zealous on operation of M.
Miami Chevalier, that we are indebted to the new po
licy of the Emperor.
FRANCE.
The Cabinet of the Tuileries him formally resented
the negotiations for the Commas. anil has, by tele
graph. informed the Northeru court. of the desire of
the Emperor.
Napoleon hna ini.ressed It most imminent free trade
marialesto to N. Pould, tho Minister of State. The hater
as, in effect, as follows:
Palace Or Tlll Telt:VIM. Jen•S. MCC
" htox al Ica Le elm melte: Note Ithetanding the un
eartaanty that still prevails on certain points of foretell
policy. a martins solution may confidently he foreseen.
The moment has therefore arrived for occupy Ing our
selves with the mimes of shine a areal stimulus te the
Mineral branches of the natiOnal wealth.
" I address to you with this object the We. of a pro
gramme. several pert-of which will here to remora the
approbation of the LA/misers. and own which you will
concert with your allemmeg in order to prop re the
measures beet adapted to give as neulture, industry, ant
commerce a lively impulse.
• The truth has been long proclaimed, that the means
of exchange mull be multiplied in order to reindeetioan
meree flourishing; that without competition Industry
remains etetionary. and keep. up high mimic whieb lire
opposed to increase of consumption; that without a
prosperous industry to develop cambial, Agriculture itself
lemmas in acetate of infancy. There is a general con
motion, then, in tire successive development of the
elements of public prosperity. But the essential emotion
is to know within what hini s the alto ought to favor
them several interests. and what order of prelerOnse it
ought to grant to each of thorn.
• Therefore, before developing our foreign trade by
the exclinnte of proctice. our 'sericulture must be Im
proved and our industry freed from all the internal
fetters that place it in a state of inferiority , . Atpresent.
not only are our great uidertakings impeded by a host
of restrictive mutation' lint even the welfare of those
who labor is far from Maine att el nett the development
at hat in a neighlornix country. It as. then, only a Fe
nnel system of good political canonry that can, by
creating national wealth, distribute competency *Meng
the working clime. • • "
To compensate the lota that the treasury wall mo
mentarily experience by the reduction of the duties on
the materiels and articles 01 general consumption
as rood, our budget offers the resource of the "to king
fond. which may be aospeeded uutil the public revenue,
raised by the !armee of trade. shall permit the fund
in question to come into operatiOn again.
• Thus, to son np:—Superession of the &diem on
wool mud cottons; grailual reduction on sugars and cof
fees; improvement eisergelically carried out of the
ratites of communication ; reduction of chargegon the
canals, and ormsequently a metal diminution' of the
prices of oonveyanee ; loans to agriculture and indas
i try; oormidemble works of Ambito utility; suppression
ot prohibition"; treaties or coninieree with foreign
Powers.
" Rua are the general beam of the programme, to
Which I bee you to direct the attention of your unless' uss
who will have to prepare, without delay. the erratietelif
law destined to realize it. It will obtain. I gni grisly
convinced, the patriotic support of the Sante and the
Corps LegiCatif both jealously desirous of Macell/a
tine. with me, a new Ora of peace and of "scaring' its
lifi Tie p
ne l lits ,, to p Er s an g e s e. NAPOLEON."
" Cant act' vitT Prevails le the dif
ferent ministerial a departmeras for the inattention of
the programme contained in the letter of the Emperor
to M. Email."
The proposed changes are not extracted to take place
before August.
It WIM stated that the French Government was about
to proceed against the gimlet,' of Bt. Yuma de Paul, a
most important eliaritable associntion an Prance. tad
that rho Minister of the Interior had informed all puttee
functionaries that they meat choose between waning
membeye of the assimistion and retaining their offices
as abbe functionaries. •
ltwae also reported that the Papal Nuncio had deliv
ered to M. HaTlOllO a note from the Papal o ovetime..
dated January 7, oatmeal a fennel and offices p r etest
against the programme of the pair yhlet. 'd ata Parc
et le C'onstrus."
The Pope lies l a
replied Napoleon.t positively taming
to cede time rebellious machines.
It is believed that the current event, will had too
wet' between Bardinin a, .1 Naples.
The note in tne Monitcur of the 10th inc., has pro
timid a great hielialithen at the Roma Court.
A meeting 01 Cardwell, wee held to day at the Vati
can. Fresh despatches from France for the Pope ar
rived yesterday.
Greet agitation prevails in the Marches. .
Bologna is to be fortified.
fhe offurrit Piedmontese Gazette aunouneeg that tliti
I Ring has accepted the resignation of the Ministry, and
his °tweed Count Cavour with the formation Ma new
Cabinet,
Malmo, Jan. ld --Feveral cannon and a quantity of
amniunition were found in the farts near Tetuan.
The Moore showed an intention of attenking theepan
fish position, but a few cannon chola seined to renttise
them. Every preparation had been mane for .paatim
the river and advancing on Tetuan.
PRUSSI
Prussia is increasing her error to 40 000 mon.
A (ISTRIA.
VERAR A. Jan. Ir.—The Austria 11Mdilliati Comers
to on fur toe reoulation of the boundary line hoe already
held three meetings. Trio Austrian mutton house
officera trove been reinforced by the uul tory order
to avert provocation from the other aide of the frontioi
CIIINA.
u.
Dates from Hong Kong to the 15th of December are
furnished by tolegrnph.
The imports were in a healthy condition.
The Chinese were strengthening the dermas of
Pekin.
INDIA.
Bon BAT, Den. 27.—The inarkete extremely dull) rot
ton 2 rupees to 3 rupees lower. All deseriptiene of gray
goods and twat lower. Freight , : slightly hardening.
Linseed In demand at 4 rupees to anon pet
ifxchnnge on London Is It'd In 2s Nth Money easy.
L
Hy telegraph to quo siistown4
Perrot t Weilnesdar.—fne Potrie earl the prohibition'
will not be sholielied boron) July. 1831. when they will
be reduced by proteative dillies of 900015 per o+ t.
Before adopting any definite resolutions, the ,umperor
has donlitett to hoar the opinions of the prinoipal ninon
facto. tirl.
Al A DR tn. Jan. 14 —The Spanis rd g continue to approach
Tetuan. and en attack is soot) expected.
Benin has satisfied England's claims in fed.
roreign Commercial Intelligence.
LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET, Jan. le. The
market opened on Monday dull and with a delatnig
tendency, but retained, a morn healthy tone and Joy
cony by the nativity displayed during the latter part of
the week. Tho market closed gouty last amine; 20
WO hale a have boon sold during the ;not three days. The
salon on Wednesday included 4,000 boles to speotilatore
and for export; and on Thureddy ti U.U.
THE I,Averr VIA gIinsesToWII4—LIVIIIIPOOL, Jan.
loth.—The cotton mar hot °Mead steady on Mredneeday
evening, with an advance of Sid. and the asks of the
day amounted to 18.0011 hales. The market touter is
toady ; the tales Are estimated at 15 000 bales. dales of
five days 07,0,0 tales, including 7 500 bales to specula
tore and fur expo.
STATIL or 'Lague.—The Manchester markets are
imarEtit In(tin node
hi liBll ' l l l.4 l,' A ll et n atarr d ,:-Me se re
Richardson 43; el ponce i upon Breadstulfs lower, and the
market dull. Flour per doll, at easier prloef, but un
changed notation.Whont my dull, and Id lower
white Os Wails Gil; roil Oriels Pd. Corn mill, but
' l., l l d ign iin d v t 3l MlPlO :51 ARKETovlsions
are very lull, bitt quiet.
It
dull. Pork quiet. Bacon
qu il i . e lVF. l tt a g 41; nominal, ILK ET.—Su v, (lady.
Coffee steady. Rosin mendy, at es 41.11)4s 60 (orcorn
;non. Rice steady. Spirits of Turpentine firm at See 6d
036 e,
LONDON MARKETS Breadstuff,' are declining.
Ungar buoyant. pollee firm. Rice firm, and slightly
advanced.
LONDON MONEY MARKET, WEDNESTAV.—Con-
Nola 9546.90 i.
Triune Var.—Consols are quNod at eso.ieet.
ce n
The Bank of England hat advanced meg tog per
t.
Foreign Marine Intelligence.
St vona . N ov . 9,3 _sailed. ship Lion. for Philadelphia;
Blopotriffe, fur ditto, Deo. ilth ; Nord, America. Jur a
vannah. Arrived at Oibraltsr, Deo 3i. Clarence, from
Salumore.
STILL LATER FROM EUROPE.
STEAMSHIP ASIA AT NEW YORE,
NAPOLEON'S FREE-TRADE PROGRAMME
TILE EIVOLISII REFORM MEASURES
Commercial Treaty between England and France.
CONSOLS O.J. 7-S a Dri 1-4
New Tons, Feb. s.—The rend mail eteamahip Aria:
with Liverpool dates to Saturday, January 21st, arrived
at this port this afternoon. She reports the arrival out
of the ateemehipe Glasgow at Queenstown, and Arago
at Cowes.
The Asia's admen are two dais later thin were fur
nished by the steamship cite of 13alttinu e,
It is denied that the French Government Ir ten de to
proceed aenrnst the society of Sr. Vincent de Paul.
Napoleon's free-trade prozrandne re received very
favorably in the French d,part.ncors.
'the commerelal tarry between France end England.
it was expected. would be mimed in a few di)s.
Chances is the French diplomatic corps are an.
neunced.
hi. Barret wilt ho ohanged from Had , ria to Constar:.
tinople • the Doke de (imminent from Rome to Madrid
Prince Latour Daurveryne will be gent to Rome.
It is rumored that the Pope &mance the marl of the
French troops Hem Rome.
Tao POlll OlITTOSRMOIOITt! of ill/ London Port tele
graphs that the current rumor that the Pope had dev
Ms o'd the evacuation of Rom by tho French troupe
In tbeolutAy false.
'I na .mrs correspondent. however, gam that unless
the French Government disavows the famous pamphlet
•• La Parsee le Congress," it will certainly be callcd
to withdraw Its army.
GREAT BRITAIN.
't he English news is not very mein tint.
It is stated 111 the London journals that the Ministeli.
al Reform measure in ready for Parliament, riot will be
submitted to the If• Ulf Of COILLInOf a at the earliest op
portunity.
1 be Earl of Derlo . at a banquet Riven by the Mai or
of Liverpool. expressed the hope that the ensuing eels
mon would tyitne•e the adoption 01 a good measure of
reform. He batieked nuatiervotive patty would op
pose Tin fliCitOill OpOolltion to it.
Jainea Smith. it sailor on board the ship George West,
wino r tabbed the mate of the vessel on the pOSI3OI from
Now Orleans, has been delr'•ered up. under the extradi-
tion treaty. to the American consul at Liverpool.
• nutria Willname, of the Brunch bark Imogene. hgs
been formally presented with IV sold chronometer from
President Buohanan as a testimonial for his bun a.
Idly to the crew of the wracked shin Fieotwood, o
Roston.
.
'l'he Maritime Chronic* ease the now commercial Irak
ty embraces on the side of Fiance the suppression.of
prohibition. and a reduction of the Mates ois coal and
i ron . Oa the part of busload. a !edam ton of the duties
en wines, spirits articles de Paris sad silk.
LONDON MONEY MARKET—London. Fri-
day lavoning.—llin increase in the tato of discount has
had no effect on this looney ninrket. 'I here is every
probability of a continued elllux of bullion and the
likelihood, in that ease. of it further advance to throe
and a half per centum was under discussion.
The first stock banks havo raised the Wee for dopoB
to two per centum.
FRANCE.
With regard to Napoleon's free.trade prorrararne, he
la represented to have said, in roply to certain anion a
tinny, " The manufacturers who exist solely bemuse
they are protect O. have peon aware of my intentions
for five years, end have bad plenty of time in prepare
for the change. rho ■t stem of prohthition has had its
day. and I have not the power torsisc the dead."
The London Herald's Paris correspondent reiterates
a previous statement., that a port. on of rho French Im
perial Guards had received camping equipage. and that
the regiments quartered at Versailles are ready to min e
at a moment's notice for (tale. as the °dicers believe.
The Paris Bourse closed firmer, and Reams were
quoted at 69f.
ITALY.
In regard to the charms in the Ssoltninn Ministry. It
Is nand that Count CeVeer will certainly hare the
Foreign and AL Fantl the War Department.
A conspiracy against the Wand Duke as said to hare
horn (heel/NI:10d at Florence. Several arrests were
made.
wt'se l iii r e d e P a a u Y ee th ,;'r ra l f°,`,l,',`?!Li i t t :ll7l‘.lll, l ll l rAn t eos Sel
mes the statement.
. .
A solemn reconciliation to reported to have taken
place between Cardinal Antonelli and the prelates who
have littheno been opposed to hint.
Attacks are reported to have hen maJo upon the
Swiss ♦old.ers by the population of the Marches. A
sharp content took place netween them at iklanerata.
1339123
It ii rumored that the inerealed intimacy between
Austria OW Itufsia has in view the subjugation of Hun
ken,. The Government; 410 rapidly growing more in
ttmate.
A telegram from Vienna declares that there:As no
truth in the rep tried desertionof Hunger: an eoldters
fron t the Austrian garrisons of Venetia. Several
agents, now°, er. have bean detected In tampering with
the Thing/oleo regiments, and phieed under unit.
MOROCCO.
Theposition of the evnnish army in Morocco remain
ed unoltangod.
PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE
sENAT ema n mono
. .. , Feb. 4.
The Senate met at 11 o'clook, but there w*e no quo
rum. motion toon eis Recommit in
On the Bonnieadjourned till Mondaialter
noon at 3 o'olook.
i BOUM.
The joint resolution for paying the clerk employed in
the Donnell. contested-election rue waa passed finally.
Mr. Vitazelit °Scared e, resolutton providing that the
posinuister of the House shell beep an nooeuut of all
letters sent, and moved to prooeod to its consideration,
but it not agreed to.
Ale. battzsa moved that when the Rouse adjourn it
he mail &Undo afternoon. nzreed to.
REPortil op CORMITTEEs.—The Committee on Vice
and Immorality reported, as oommittod, a further sup
plement to the ace regulatutp the hennaing of eating
Prima tted restaurants.
The Judiciary Committee ilocahi reported. as coin
mtited, a further supplement to Co ant entitled an ant
relating In agencies of Foreign insurance. Trust, aid
Annuity Companies. Alio. an act io confirm certain
deeds nut noknowledged in conform y with the not to
r stemby. passed the Inth any of April. 1953, entitled en
Retrofitting to the sale and conveyance of real manta
SO COLAtiolttOd, Also, with a nevi ti re recommende Go 0.
an not for the regulating of the weighing of coal in the
oaf of Philadelphia. Also. in bill for the Mater security
Who RUCs of daily laborers.
' The Committee on Corr.. .alone reported, with amend
ment!. a teller s tpplement to the act incorporntim,
thefflelawere lutittilnalety Insurance ColllPanft also,
Ecommitted, an sot to Incorporate the Chester Briton
I
tore Company t shahs hot to incorporate the Hunting
ob Turnpike Company; also, a bill to inaorporate the
ttig4 l l l ;r ft a r t l i r n i g, A re '' :1r- til l h ° l ;s e. ' o u ge i c e oTt r Navigation"e'lc
c 0 ...0 r i a tall to incorporate b e West Ehtladelph in
eterket Camper*. ; a bill to incorporate tee Western Oil
EilinPany. and a bill to incorporate the l'ortheylvenie
allot Company.
:the Committee on Roads. Bridges. and Canals re
ported, as co i witted. an act to incorporate toe Browns
...tic Delaware Brut o Company ;non, as omanetted, an
act to Inoorporate lie 8 resburg and hew Yrovidence
Turnpike Rortal Comm env.
The Committee on Railroads. repent's( as cOrninitted
an act t. ineorporate the Fusquebeinna Volley Etalrond
Conleallet.algo. as CoMlnitied, an act to incorporate
the Phtiattelphat and Montgomery County Retire:id
Company.
An net for dividing Mauch Chunk into tarn wards Pegs
•d enall ; also, an ant to incorpotata the lie.lllo VII
Warship cif the Chu oh of God •" elan tim supplement
loth, not InOoporatint the Birmingham ling Lorn Perl)•
BILL, ttl l'i.sek —r. lt
—AeAllti PM d in piece a bill
to elmltsh the Dowd elßevenue Coinniissionerg. 'floe
6111 00 biro 1,11 the powers of the hoard of Revenue
CO(1101180000114 en the Auditor General, Attorney Gene
ral, and State Treasurer.
Mr. Cases, a supplement to the set to Incorecrate
the had Penne; Ironic Itoilrend Company. It stows
the company to construct ateral roads to now mines 01
att•(11.11.
Mr. CL Ana, a bill to incorporate the borough of liar
, whoa into a oily
Mr. tir trittlt, aloll for the bettor resUlatie of the
militia systemo of the Coninionwenllll. 'll 1
has is the Intl
prepared by the went tiulitory coneentitin in aticon
oipr a.rrilOurg.
O'Nr. ILL, a supplement to the net re ells e to the
exemption ci property to the t aloe of 5300 10111 exe
cution nod gale, and for the protection ci the widoe;
and children of decedents, a no a supplementm the
net incorporating the Locust lino Imm , . o°m Corr
n : -
Pm /Ur: PANCOART, a ball to incorporate the People!, In
' surance Company ; also, a bid cream; e Board ef Li.
aer.i.in‘ Engineers.
The House. on MOtton of Mr. O'NEILL, proceeded to
the consideration et the further euppleinent to the net
Incearporerung the Pei mare Mutant bunnies Cum
' pony, Which was rood a second and third tuna and
p tused•
the bill incorporating the Brownslorg and Delaware
Brid g e Opulently w is else considered nil p 1.1.11. d.
The supplement to the not =Cremating the rittli l itirg
and Warren Railroad was pnssed tionilj.
'f he Rouse then adjourned till Mottlay afternoon.
LkAVV,WORTII, K. T.. Feb. 4.--The Territorial Le
gislature hoe Visaed an act inmrpor itiiir the Central
Overland Conlon - on and Pike'. Peak Lxpreas Coin.
puny, being a icon:emelt:en of the Eike'a Perk Ea-
Ftee. Company, with on increased capital and wider
eld of operations.
A bill abolishing airway has been tinder considern.
ties, hut no definite lotion lm been liken upon it both
branohee of the Legilinture Lema prnicipally engaged
with local
moron I'. Conway. the Congressman elect under the
NV) roulette Constitution. loft collie day. ammo for
Washington, to appear before the renate'a Harper's
Ferry Investigating Committee.
Judging (rein the late adoption of the W)andett •
Constitution, the boner tt Moil to that the projnot for
et:darting the boundaries of Kansas u dl to voted down
by a large 'normal.
The new. front daft Lake by )eatertis)'e arrival i.
unimportant. It was /mid that oo relatable uuonei riot.
existed Miltin% the hoods of the Church, in enneetitiriice
Of the evidence. that a huge emigration w ould fake
plane form the Territory, spring, to Pike a Peak alit/
Carets Volley, Brig huh Young fitrongi) opporiee such
bung ration.
Marine Disasters.
Nonrohs, Feb. 4,—The schooner Eliza Jane, of
Barnstable. from Mo.:smiths. twltand to tiOtroik with
coal, was lost an than Chennpeake Hay, dorms the sale
of the Wet ult. ?.Ir. Chase, the mate, and a esanica were
drowned.
• .
ee selmover Harriet A. Roma, from New York.
hound ioledelpnia, has arrived here with loss of
calla, and leaking.
'iris steamer Virginia, Intone for Richmond, had her
engine disabled on the evening of the 2d instant, She
Atuotteded on her t n r to•t1 ty
t t. schooner no 021 Willoustibr Point, Union does.
the schooner Juliann, trout Providence bound to
Huston, has been seized for a uotrntlon of the Inagua
tom laws.
The bark Uruguay is afloat.
31.3101/SEB EDWARD .1. CIARK. DI . 1• 1 111.ADKI.
I.IIIA, IN DISTRI.Si.
N 01001,%, Va., Fob. 4.—The schooner Edward J.
Clark, of Philadelpina, hound to crew 1 ark aWI coal,
,Neat ashore on Willoughby opit during the late storm.
The vessel is leni,ins•
the ands are Wet, and the crow
froatbitten. A Pan 01 her cargo woe thrown overboard,
and she has been towed up.
"rno schooner Minima Bed is ashore on Currituok
beach. 'ler cargo has bean landed.
ClIA161.1:.ITIIM. Feb. 4.—The bark Gleaner, lately afire
and scuttled near Apalaeineoia, has boon raised and
found to be but aliclitly toinrod.
Reported Election of M. S. Latham a
U. H. cantor trona California.
WAsSil ViToN, Fell. —Prlvate novices received II)
the overland mnJ stiste tent Milton d. Lolham Won
eleat.ett Unitoo tltates Senraor by the i'shistete Leo,
[Mule. The announeement Is as doubtless premature.
The Harper's Ferry Investigation.
80 , V1 , N, Feb. 6.—Redpath hut rexttltrd not to re
upon('
.to 111111U110113 of the Nonnte's !harpe r'. l.slo7 inveatigating couttnittee, lie hex lett for pert.
unknown.
The Cher!ogee Rnc. s.
"giiAitt.INTON. 8. Co Feb.l-111 the fire race to-any,
888.11/5" won the /wood and third hehte agaitat
."D.r River." In the second race, • ('snotWorthing
ton" beet " Julia Cooper."
Collegiate Expolmam.
CLEVELAND. Ohio, Feb. I.—Ftfte etudenta have been
expelled from Keroon College for retarder to pledie
themeelven to attend nt roeitat lone.
Markets by Telegraph,
New Ont.'s+, Fel, 3.—l'ho Cotton market closed
dull to-day, with a doolino of al on lair qualities. The
itos amounted tod 31. a) bales at Wig a lo for middlings.
Sale, of the week . 4.5 090 hales.
Receipts " ° i OINI
Corresponding last year..._...17 "
. . two
Exports of the week .......
Receipts ahead of last year 2,4,4 w ••
Receipts attend of , ast y ear at all Southern
auk 000 "
Stock inport "
Mess Pork is quiet at 517.7 satin 4).Y 1,14. Coco—Sal es
of tho work 4,em hags at tarl2lgo ; imports 'or the week
4000 bare. titoek to port 25,200 Pus. Freights aro un
changed.
BAVANNAI.I, FeL. S.—Cotton—Sales of 310 bates to-day
at a doelino of on lair quahlten ; Ihu market is do
pressed.
CIIAKLEITON. Feb 3 —Cotton-2,0W hales were sold
to-day at a decline of Si a
Monit.n, Felt a —Cotton—Soles of MOO hairs to day tat
10)ro lair middlings.
tiolea of the week.— ....... . 19 OW boles.
Recetpts ' .... WA
Receipts of the Alamo woelilest:monson 2)
Receipts ahead °float year lus 700
Stook an port • 24, 5.4) "
Value of the exports of Ito week ... 52221 141,)
Freights on Cotton to Liyerpeol, 1/1-31tr IT-32 1 t la
Baer°. I 1-10 f. Exchanee en Now 101 l paritg 9Y cent.
discount, On London 7'148 V cent. pre intutn.
Alosti.e. Fob. 4 —thrtS>a elosod unsettled a,d exulted
under the influence al the foreign names t 12)10) bales
weep Kehl today, at M64)1030.
Amnesty Granted to Virginia Duelists.
Rictimo Feb. 4.--The Ler:Water° or Virginia
have hawed a bill declaring an amnesty to all pereens
who were engaged in duel., pre VMS to Jan. DM h.
Darning of tt Preolytertatt church.
Co'dBUFFALO. N. Y.. Feb. 4.--The d'reahrterian church at
Erre county. waa destroyed by hre on the lit
instant.
4krrivel of the U S. VriuttteMerrtmaek.
itqurox Roam. Feb. —Tim United Mates frigate
Nlerrimack, from the Pacific. punied in tmda.r.
THE CITY.
AIHUSEMENTB THIS EVENING
CONCLAT HALL, C h estnut street, aboTa Twelfth,—
Drayton's Parlor Opera..
WALNUT-BTkENT THRATHIM. COMO , ' WM/Mt ani
Ninth.--• hie• both"—" &orifice "
NATIONAL TIINATHI3. WAIMIC arrest, betwe Fight!
tnd Ninth.—Dan Itioe'a Great Rhow.—•• heT Magic
Ring."
WHEATLEY & CLARICE'II ARCO-STREET THEATR
Arch street, shove dath.--" Ingor "—'• Naar
Ilthrurth."
BANDEKOO , I 9 II EXHIBITION ROOM, Jayne's Common
stealth 411111(1111e. Chestnut groat, above blixtb.—Thin
ion', Museum of Art.
MCDONOUGH 4 GAIXTIVI. Raze street, below Third
nrertamments
TENIPLIt Or WONDE6ll,llOrthealli turner Tenth Alf
.hrAntnut .treAtit.—llignor Blitz.
ACkt.EMY of FINK ART'. lOU Chestnut street.—
Churott's rninting." The Heart of the Andes."
A New Political Party.
MI I:TING AT NATIO3AL HALL OP T/16 FRIENDS
CIF TUE UNION AND TIM CONSTITUTION.—Thert
w ie an oz'zoninlY larea inc , On.l. on Saturday evenlne
n pursuance of a caq, addressed to such citizens ol
this community as were dissatiified with rite Republi
can and Democratic puttee, and were willing to form
new patty for the protection of the Union, the Conch
tution, and tho laws of the land. The ineettnq was yen
large, a circumstance easily accounted for in the ai -
nounoement that Millard Fillmore. John J. Crittendot
E (ward Everett, Robert C. Winthrop, John Mitor
Botts, and .thos 'would he present.
The meeting on:tugged at 7 o'clock, by the °helot' o
tho lollowink( officers:
Pithe.ll.q.'“. JOHN S. LITTELL.
NICE IIuisILUITA.
A. J. Boohoos. Nem. E. Engleton,
Snutiel C Morton, 11. K. li. 0 ..1e,
Or. Wm. Harris. L. P. Mohr:anus,
Wm. tg. t wings. Ann:nil Cooley.
Edward Sh.priec, John .1. Hotong,,,,
(also P. Moran, tioo C. Presbury,
Cithur O. Cofl,n, Dr. Al. A. Hanle),
Morns 8. NA Ain. ()eine' Iladdoelt,
Ja.ses Jeffries, Vol. • • Drown.
F.kle• '. Diddle. ' Chas. D. Freeman,
Edmund O. Dutilh, P. Jenks Smith,
t,le.x. NV build-n. Peter uelger,
8 e al. W. 14 Courbe y o John Fry,
Edw. P. Yordon, A. Roberts,
T,....,5. T. Tasker. David Faust.
Dr. Jas. A. It icon, Wm. Holahan',
Henry O. Loughlin.
li LCllltranitA,
(arid 0 Alert:lemon. Junes P Kelly,
Win. D. Sot's, .1. Led) and Bodge,
sditiond C. Seelig', Howard J. Adams,
E. flosses Joilnes, Geo. Al. 8 / 1 , 111 ram,
Icwouh P. Tobias. Divid F.
Morgan.
George
Sparbawk, Chas. E. Morgan.
Oeorge Grote.
- -
The President, in aeximing the chair, made a lengths
eptech. in which lie and: " In other dam in the flush
of youthful hopelulnees. with ell the energy, ardor, and
erithuentem of an ardent nature, sl ,l,,, note
with many of you in vain endeaeore, for the honor and
prosperite nud glory of our toiletry, to elect a succSnsot
to IN ashington in the person of that men who • was not
for an age, tot for ell tine,' whose glorious and t out
inspiring name will descend the stream of time' in
the commingled halo that line rendered illustrious and
[moons' the 11110105 ol the sages 01 Vernon and 01 Ash.
I Ind. I come to yen now, at the kindly bidding of some
of the purest of our fellow citizens, in a tune ill unex
minded excitement, in the midst of the realization of all
the evils consequent upon the stupendous fraud that de
rented the etre,: expression of National preference,
IfOM minx the Lonored gravesof 8011111) who were
among the fathers and founders of the ' Great Republic'
—front toy home eta erittlle-epot of our ohoriehed liber
ties, upon soil !tilde nientiontoe by the shedding of they
Wood—not !We for tile outposts indicated by
my dlann
gulshhed appointment, but to rewind awl that the claims
pate miser are fir hicher than the claimts of party,
and [lna the exigence of the tune demands the sacrifice.
on the insulted and violated altar of our country, of
every tin of newelation, howsoever strong, in her extra
cation Irmo pretent disgrace and from impending rum."
Afar alLsling to the dunce Incumbent upon every
true citizen he laid that "the greenlet crime ever coo
corned by the heart of man was terpotrated When the
ililleactilate saviour of the world tag nailed to the la
noiiiininus cress There is one other crime magni
tude second only to that. I speak with dol Iteration and
reverence. It moat not lie Perot Hated in our day. i
foul commission would be disastrou• alike to our own
welfare, to the weber!, of our children, and to all our
siwcessn,a upon this soil, end to the beet interent of
inaiikind to the doss of time, and would dale. e the and
W tll friiteribil blood, the iiieviwt,l o result of anarchy
and of divided hearts. Let no indiscretions, no tiorelic
to na of o.lr, maks it easy to our successore to fall into
th l 5 r, ad 10 ince 'bible ruin.
•• tVe hats f Olen upon times of extrnordinare dan
gers ; are upon the a urge of revolution. heti section is
arra, ed in angriest hosiility arm t wictoin. in tins city
of the Docl.tratton of the National 1 vdependence -
within twat of the very spot from who'll was first , r 0
elaiined ' ',betty throughout the land, aid to ell the
people'—for the purpose of reasserting the principles of
that Dacia reti on. and an abiding devotion to the Con
stitution of the country, and loyal submission to the de
crees of its wise expounders. The notilsat champions
of our rights are no more of earth. We. the people,
must now. through united efforts, preserve the Consti
tution and for this sole purpose are we here to bight.
Our( sovereignty hies been ignored—our laws disregarded
and contemned. We must rely on oureele es, OW being
.nir he per, fier correction of these wrongs no tie as a no
tion, and es individual eitizene, and we will achieve
their correction. That glortoue lentrlnent of the great
defender al our political tank 'Liberty and Union. now
rind forever, one end inseparable,' kWh,* every emend
swells in every mealy bosom now before me. There are
hundreds here assembled wets stitch their inspiration
from the words of Henry Clay. and woo will beam'
erect with spirit unconquered whilst hie eftdurea„tn
11,0 cense of bterty, of union, and the national pros
pent, "
In ding, Mr. lotted! said, " we have assembled
this evening to form an organization whet shall look
to the prosperity of the, whole Republic, and scours the
protease or laws conduci•
e to tots result; which :hall
Secure to the legislative. the exeoutave. and the mu octal
Impartments of our Government protection tome all at
tempts to undermine their independence and to destroy
.heir integrity : an organization which will r. p.ese all
Ilitoll4lll on the rights vi States end Territories by the
eche et denoteoguas or of hearis of inednien which
will secure the sanctity ofuSupreme Court and en
iorcement of en it laws, whether they direct the rend!.
fliru tit' batmen slaves or the collection of revem e.
Thug is our one glorious aini. and upon on will depend Its
noble, magnificent consummation. Defamation. rid!
oohs. corruption, wit r It be exerted to a.complieh our
lielitgeniZetiOn, but in tier fidelity to the Coneritution
ad ifs !awe, on our love for tile Unten, and that 01 our
enlightened fallow-bit xens—North, hi nth, East, arid
West—for we Allow them existence depends.
We must not alienate one heart from its alle-iance.
'• When a 107014 n ambassador waited upon the Spar
hen with a declaration of War, he expressed sur
prise at the unprepared orinditton of the city. • Sparta
gas no walls.' He was conducted by a Senator to the
open ground outside the city, and WWII the lone mid
steady line of Spartan heroes, with the welds,' Behold
our ramparts.' ege have been told that the 'Colon is
without sslegwarde, that the people of the Keysten,
tate rue unfafthfUl to their emnitetutional obligations
But our fellow-citizens from sillier tate* who are with
it to-night when they leave their Menus nate and
shall return to those nearer to their homes, and are
irked by thaw, done Pennsylvania sit.port the Coneti
lotion 1 tin scene will rise beret e them, and they will
ensurer, the bulwarks of the Canon are 11rc herons et
err sons "t
l'he speaker c`ncluded amulet great aryl into, In
nod cries 01 " F111111Ure." alter which ha rend the fol.
tow init preamble and roe lotions:
•• Warrens, a tar, number, it nut ii.deed a largo re,
ority of good and to, ci eitizero, in all part a of this
See. a All Inereas lig concern, licit a CM'S rattle
n the polities I the m entry Isla, li u, •y anti acted
iie attention ol the 11,040 indilf, runt. nod alarm the
nt 1110 most hopeful patriot; and wboteas it is ',a
lloyed that the endless protraction ul nn in ensely sec
tionnt controversy is the sole .aura which has nrrat ed
Met 11411 of the :Sates of vie Confederation in littler
enonostty nstonst the other, 0 . 7 1,11 r d that fraternal
confidence aiming the people a hien IS el et , a hers the
tniy ettro 1.13111 of national hermit y, slid to engrossed
the retard el the liovernmeut as to 010 x. It rietltet
ill. it it has 1101, in (net, 1.141.0r1 AWN) ll' rooter to
CI ion any 01 tiai great industrial ti torrste t I
ho notion; end whereas it Is 011V10118 Olt 1P0111.••
• it gismos, as now constituted, must necessarily yer•
„equate a stole, sermon ham su untiatdcily disturbed the
c,,re and injured the 11113111rit, Cl oeoote. and that
•I o null rodsonah:e hope 01 deliveries the ~ o uritt,
rolti the disietrous iliktritetion into which 1111, lotion.
ti, tin !MIMI in 1110 10',.,3111/,11011 it a trul• fi41I•1114I
d irty, whiell.btlldoloAl) nroWwg.ill s-ctiount gnedtiont,
Ind rnkm, lop its pktforni tho l cl.ritioieo, omit.) shit
puruly as ex round, bt the btipri. run Court, thrt.l iro
‘ l , lllO no other ends than the presort Ilion IA our h edersl
Union, Icy a careful retard lot the weii're 01 the pee,
uf Milne litatea, and b, rennomstsin, toe ti g ov, t .
rent in accordance with the conciliators spirit and In
tentionof iU founders: therefore,
•• nt we, um, note here assembled, is
C) inpatliv with .he man lit..elllll and Lon..r en or the e. II
:one ening 1111$ niettlins, do hr retry 10r..113155 n orseit es
t . at pa.ty, alucli shall be sI, fed end known as
he " Consttteat'n•el t tilos Association el rilllnAle.-
711.4," and recomoiond that the vcripls vitae so. oral
counties, trltitnShina, nod villages of the ntlnte. take
ine atm roe at once to cstablish organic 1110 8 1 to net In
concert with tll a, eSuelatton.
iietol, I, That the Chairman of this morns to
‘utliorizeit toe opoll.t, at his earliest coot emence. one
catgut Dom' molt •art. Pho shall nut as it general
coionlitleo Wgial iisnu. lannnf. and tit it it,.
chnirlollll of this ifie:tizz he chaitman of said sonernl
Jon:unite° "
Too recolutiodi wore adopted amid pent applauae.
and mingled with loud and Dictated cries of "
and Botta" rho cr,eident transomed to the
audience Mr. Henry %town, who I ng this "Star
jpanglod Danner," amid the most intense enthucasin.
9. W. Unison, Lac., then said Ice had a most Un
/ rntelul task to perform. From causes over Witten the
committee of arritesementa had no control, end which
:outs net it , la helped, the di itinguighed Kentlemen
annouuoed for the et ening Mould nos ho relent. They,
bows, er, had sant the wannest w cods of la morally and
encouragement. Ile would read to them, there fore,
the letters facetted by the committee of arransernente.
klr. Groyecin then road a letter trout Hun, John J. Crit
tenden, regretting his inability to he present, tint situ.
patio Zing strongly with the mot ament.
During the reading ar AI r. Crittentlen's letter there
u sa a Kin a deal of ant lanai). Alter it had teen run
theta wart, loud mats fur 0 "b
-se
ion," and " Hotta."
'llia Poising r. I ho: ton, rentleniett awl fellow•
,itizans, that you Will also stint uudtvcde.l atfection
the toddler( of these ietters. 'foe sentlemauta had
S ditlicult to proceed, units% tutelars ts p coutcavil.
Alter a little delay interns was restored, and Mr.
citation toad the rolloising letter Dom Edward o
rett
•
rt.lcsi sro I reeeivosi your !emir el the:Alit oi Ja
nuary but evenion acituniutilif The with he formation
01 the "Conant unwire l limn Ai's...cation." and mitt us
inn 10 the Mass hoe* find tw be held, under it, auspices,
On &Mutiny next Eagnemenla 010 cent-Alin; nature,
in this °undue, will pUt it out of ury . tower to anoint the
meettng•
1 lolly concur in the opinion that the present state of
Public ndairs Is of n, very tint cal charaoser. 01 the
two knot patties loch now diCide the aunt,. tile
aepoblienn is. of not essay, purely notional cud the
lieritooratte• by the tor, o 01 csteuitistaneen. me rap 411,
viocuming so. Ihe former patty does not expect to
..oe, bit is /little electoral awe at .11c isopbalcitin. root. -
EMIL beyond its hoction 1,11111tite; the I itte•, linen psis•
,easing Men.; II 111 the central ht . ltell, Is not surd of car
rying tiny one Ul Winn. I hate no [oho( 11l s , it
. • ection, decided on a purely sect, mat boars, would
nun &separation of the °times; nut It seems to me
eastally certain, that the Caton canna° keg aulwist eller
the °Leonu a have permanently assumed Li at °tinnier.
On the contrary ,doe hostile logiu‘s, already en deplora
bly cane between tne two sections of the °wintry, ,
will become mom andmore intone, tilt acme denstrous
occurreece — in and, Veritahe, a slight one—wilt tring
0n the catastrophe.
It ie in vain to argue !against the prebatility of
suchen event, Vicente a would be madness to break
up the Union. All great nothing! cps Inmates, not
caused by loreiKti violence, are breingla idiot by the
madness of Men and parties It in hi?
itakinent, to rely upon the Wert ao n ~re
and controlling power, to pre, nut repot:a.m. ;No oho
can think More nighty then I 11,1 both ..1 rim prr.eul
Ind time prospective intleenee of Oa Wert 11, er tree lot
lane. ot the einottry. It Is the !mat Mat it heft
llge over Loden val lip Prot Nene° on a null. , ein I -
li Led men. But Ido net see how the West in.
to pre, nit a rupture 01 the hates, when the too, rest
gections of the country Lino become to egnm , . 1 a i l
against earth other, that they will not ea - upend,. tc or
ganising and Carr , ing on the (government.
\flint le needed le a Aponte 11101111 burst of rttr. , lie
(0011110 front one end of the Union to the other' n ie
mai of 'internal regard I , ctweeir North and Inuth; a
Willingnees to tascrilliinate, In loth sections of the
country, between the a bleat WOrn• and deed, ill A low
extremists and the men of the right•thmiting And right -
ieelinglvey , o all, a conscietit,Uus
herence to the thinstitubon, not, indeed, nsperfect
system 01 Sol Orinnent, but as the hest we Shall 0% Or
'I tae, United or iiiiiparate, nail, all I firmly helm, ei, the
beet ever fronted to. the V. istloni of non.
Wo are liberated tint, Want tit nem' Washinithen,
an President ol the t'etforal tonvennwu, scn, almillt 10
the C.Latitution. ha role I rem his seat and
otter a ',lion plum, uttered twee solemn words:
°noels! 1110 °talcs i ens t tine On ellinit e olls l l tntloni
the pr. tithilllY Is, that an opportaults will nos or rLt.ll
odor to cc• eel autilliet Ili peace — llia 1:011 Will be &awn
himol.” Under this" excellent Constitution' . we and
our Inners — by friendly co operation when we ha, e
agreed, and It mutual toleration end fo, pt, trance alien
wo have alllercil—lnns 0 lined for set any years, and
crown and prospered beyond all entillnei. If this co. -
rilatUt on aholl now or et er • rejected," ennth• Union
-übsisting under It lo ti. 05011 up. the next Liotstitut On,
alter 0014.011 e. and woes for which me,,,r, nal 00 P. ,
Will on d envied at the mouth it the o ,trop, by Is
111111 ten CllOlllllll.
In tile earn. at !lope that your !Iv itherobons neat
d anode., may fund lu the Into/et lob 01 hare oily be
tween go d (Marna In every Itection 101 lie count)
1 remain, gentlemen, )o.lr friend asitlloll , •W
.111Vonti
C.lath rep,Edo. C. Fro.l. W.
Lirtl).011.1,1111111tten I inn d
A loiter wns raid loan Rim ti hl, Conrad, Of 1 01.1130111 e,
th NlllOll the plat ottlis tit Inith 11,0 dent, tilt yuttk,
worn too lea ed, tint nn r 110011 oafish 1110110 I r the
Union tin Con.itirution. Be Ilia loot [Merit
eter) poSsiblo sin 0. ell. slid re,. anted Ina irebility to be
pleitent. At Ilia cone.us.iiii. them war a neat S l 4l sit
wines onin: Orin. out Fillmore " rot
lenient." "Move we hoienn," flattish lur I . ll.rnsuo,' ,
Aimee dim es," he.
. C, Perim then lent it 10A' letter from :dr. Fill
mon.. ex Pioesins °is amnia) to La present, a. W1s1•
Inc inn movers in then eller the 11(111011 tuna. t Ino
reading 01 the totter Woe greeted with g fret at ilause.
and three cheers for ire writer.
Uhir. l'oehm acid he had lust !laden interview with the
non. J. It. Ineeteollotho stated to Imo, that linfotetteu
eireumstenees would render his presence impoasible.
tint that he wished the andlemen present evert poem
hie emcee*s in their exertions to ettatotu the Consuttv
Eton and reatnre pease to the Beton. Mr. P. then read
letters rrom (Inn. George Brim, Hon. Breams Brook■,
lion. John M. Botts and an onginni letter in the hand
writing or Bimini Webster. dated in Irdi. The reading
ur Mr. Webiter',/ letter was greeted with great un
done° Mr. Peohin only read n few extracts trout the
letter tif Mr. Botta. and stated that the whole latter
woul.l make about six colum• aof 4 newspaper. He re
ferred hilt !Wirer/ to the nubile prints fora perusal ef it.
Alter the readmit of the lettere. there wan a stampede
of about one-third or the audience. Nreerthelets, a
toothy crowd remained. determined to make the more
merit a success.
C. C. Lathrop, Esq., Geo made a speech. We had
°one here not as sectionanate nor as partisans, to vow
flie-ience to any man or nay statform. but mainly and
1,1010 as mimeos of the United States of Ame tea, to
- ow Allegiance to our country's Constitution. We had
ome tie merchants And tie business men to renew our
devotton to our glorious country. We had mine
',ere not se liepublieans only. not ait Democrats only.
not Is monitions of the People's party only, but as Ame
ricans and friends of the American Union mid the Ame
rican Constitution. I A ppleuse.l
The Democratic party
view of
tne Kansas
alehreska theory with a view of p 1 .asiug the South. tot
to-day we find the a one party wholly and totally repo-
Dating iL The glom party bad attempted to creak the
freemen or Karma and covered the senior thin benuti
id 'I crittoty with blood The Rtpipbt cans accepted
the new isfue, and iit dine ere data: 'nor, to intimidate
the South than could ever have been done province
m the abolition al the Alissourt Compromise. This
theory et ill cling to the Democraticnuts like the shirt
It Nessus in the fabled Stony. Nature bad spoken
niftiest el ivory in the Territories—and no alarcholder
would attempt to carry his most valuable property into
t had market.
Mr. Lathrop connloded by an Appeal in (Ivor of the
'mon and the eatelniahment of a now Conetittitional
Union party.
ho Presidant then Paid be would introduce to the
iudienre a citizen of Kentucky. and one whom he bad
lo doubt would be welitimed to the city o' Pintadelphis
—Mr. Mark Mundt.
Mr. Mundy said the proudest gift nor forefathers
Ivor transmitted to na—th Constinition—wilt now in
°openly. It was time, in this duty of disaster ar d die
m or, for 113 to rally around the Constitu'ion, and do ell
met lay in our Power to thwart Ile onewle3. re was
favor of tie movetrient to eytablith a new party. and
Doiliteed the aid of the conservative masses of Ken
achy in carrying it out. He was greeted with much
P. W. Grayson, Pen.. was introduced to the audience,
trind loud cries of ' Broom" and "Older." .He said
"hat he was in favor tuf the moven eta to establish a
tow Constitutional Union party And would sive it toe
old or lute pen and his f mee. heels and confusion. A
mi e Dri. rim is ere." Cries "
cheers
4 ' , "'n,'" Shut up."
Kemp Quiet," cheers and
hLues.l
o President. I know I need not appeal to an en
hance like this. an audience of gentlemen. art erhirst
met courtesy 3 r eminently characteristic of mug et'
Pittindeiphm. [A voice • Thattiso." and cheers.)
Mr. Gras non said tie did not intend to make a speech. ,
nee to stifle the roll for air 11100111. The wish of the ,
whence to that respect would be most certainly r mkt
istit. Ile merely amts to say, as a member of the Cont
i Mee on Arranteinente, that he never saw ea Audience
leport theiteelvesso well, end to thank them fo' doing
.0. fie noted their co -notation to the Lost cause. and
then retired . !hid lunch applause.
immediately the cries for Broom" were repeated
rand much cockatoo. Mr. Broom was not n the plot
.orm, and some delay was expeilenced elide he was
itre.eg his way through the Crone'. Vote. on the plat-
Aerie— • alone we isdi.mrn." Voices en the don—
'n coed the woken ;' "Shut up . " •• where'sßroom:" " There he is. emcee stairs ;' " Harrah for
Broom!" a - d so on, until the tall form of Mr. era• m
nude its ow/trance on the path:um amid great Cheer
he President. In audience toota cad I roar call
in Mr. Broom to lei° the stead. (Mr. B. horn took off
Ili overcoat at d hat, and advanced to the desk.) I now
a ire the pleasure of introdue of to you the Hon. Jacob
Broom, of Pioltdelphin.
A Voice In the extreme end of the room. " Is that
Hurrah tortoni!" eras of "No!" laugh
ter, and chest's fur the speaker.
r. Broom had not :trended to speak• but he could not
resist tie. call of his follow Citizen. Ife would say ttra
tos heart Vi33l:n the right place. [Cheers.] Ile rejoiced
imfore fled that thereataa at lest a platform upon which
he could speak and address his fellow-citizens as Mb
low-eitizens. [Applause.) Fur sixteen years he had
been devoted to tne very cause that was being defended
to-night. What brouget us here to-nicht Voice,
• The nikeers," and taus liter. We came here to 'mad
by the Union; to show that in Fhtladelphotwhere Ame
rican liberty was born, there Was Still a power strong
enourh to defend it, even to the death. (Applause.) Tee
conservative messes of this country werestronser than
iota opirmente imagined In Isai 003 (04 men rallied
mould the eminent patriot Millard Flinn., it. [three
cheers for Fillitiored and defeated John C. Fremont.
That conservative sutra still exists, and under the name
if the Constitutional Union party trill accomplish even
srsiver results. [Cheers.] IVe had become disunited
with slavery and anti•etivery. (A voice," 'That's so,"
•iit dieters) While we octet hereto condemn the fa
nat tea to we nl6O men. here to condemn the dautuonuste
of the South that now control the loCCifistO party, me
tinder it have controlled this Dovernment for eight
rears. As patriots, we were sink of both of then if
we only east our eyes Mold Virginia. we could find a Is
(titillate effector Republican teachings in the raid Of old
John Brown. of Harper'. Ferry. k Cheers and mattes.]
'I tie question of savory in the 'I erritortes was purely
questmn of constitutional conitructom, and we, as
:also s, should avoid it. Ibe nupreme Court is , ho Is
:Minato tribunal lor the asttlement of this question,
Ind to that ttibunal he would leave it. Mr. straiten eon
:lulled by condemning in attend terms dtiumen acts
non in both sedumns of the country, and retired amid
treat applause.
The preside• t stated riot it had been determined to
,peri headquarters fo the friends of the new inure
ment, where they would be n all times happy to see
Moire who sympathized with them. The annonne•trient
vould ha 11,11.13 *lien the astangements were COU3-1111•
inattd
r. Broom proposed three cheers for the cause which
were given, and the andieuee dapereed t the heal play
ins" Yankee Doodle."
AN INTERESTING City Iv COESIT —Saturday wee
the lost of the December and Jemmy fibrin of the
court of quarter Sessions and the proceedings were
;sweated of unusual interest. In the do:k wan an epi
tome of critnina hie, not without its sad story. and its
Impressive moral, and none mild ;axe upon the vota
ries of clime therein assembled without reflections of
inelenchols char
latitel Price. convicted of the murder of John
Embele. was called up for sentence, by Judge Allison.
l'eunard c hitcher, keg., coons ti for tlia pawner, asked
tra continuance of the babe until 19Lturd.7 next, at
which time lie would argue reasons fora new trial, and
n arrest of Judgment Affidavits have been fled in
Curt which have east many doubts upon the question
of the guilt of this defendant It is alleged by the
friends of l'nee. that Witatira Carr. who was in the
trial which resulted iu this convict on of the former, is
wtitteie to testify that he fired in solf-defenee the fatal
shot. The fins( issi of this canna is awaited with in
terve.
George F. reteriren, who plead 'tufty °tor a year
inner. to a charge of forgery on the Kenstneton bane.
and who was subsequently convicted of forging the ma
hatma of Steptien Totem to a eheek on the City Bank.
was called uo For !sentence. Judge Allison commented
et collie length coon lie historei,or line cane. and refer
red severely ro the refusal on the out of retention to
'wily against certain per one wno had been indicted
for maintaining gambling establishments. On account
ci the contempt which hod been shown to the court, be
intended to date the seLtence from the time of its in
faction.
Fetterman informed Judie Allison that he hod in his
possession a paper which he had prepared to read in
court.' nt ha considered this trimmest' rr now. In re
tard to the first lor.ery he had always creels admitted
hie tiudl, and P.m/mord his sincere resrsta hereat ; tint
in reference to the 'Foram f .rgery he would declare be
lore runs and Biel his entire innocence. lie dmarled
conversation wrosh be had with Mr. Bushes. president
..f the City Bank. in wh ch the l‘tter assured him that
the bank prnteced asniii.t the claim 01 Tonkin, melee
rutty satisßed of reterman'e innocence. 'file defendant
spoke warmly end earnestly. end declared tnet no Met
ter whatrenteeee might he imposed he would ewer hese
the moult consciousness that he wee a vattim to the
chime or a bad man, and se each alone. an otzect of
punishment
Jud-e nlbann said that he knew Fetterman had, from
the very first• rroteett.d hi. innocence of the Tyrant lor
zery. but a jury had thought and , iectitred otheronse.
lie then emit. need him on two bills of imitctruent, to
for t ears in the Eastern Peintenitar).
Doil , hortY.eoinitel for the prisoner. has always
had an atom,: atone of the innitcame of his client, and
has doleoded him w If remarkable zeal
Ashur I'. Drew, who woe conk !clad n few day I ego of
&sums and circulating an older yurpottin.: to hare been
drawn by to. firm ill C.. V:. Carpenter & Co, uvon the
firm of .t00.m..5: ten .k. Co . for a large quanta) , of aul
yhatd quinine. ear evidenced underbu an impri
iment ni oneent ni year in tne county
tot
Webster, colored—a proiesaional thief—was
donioac.d to roe rt fine or one tent non the coat of p n
semitoin, and undergo an imprisonment in ate Evora
Penitent:era for three years
William tr. Lswfence, a ward deputy eonslable. who
OW convicted of committing en asetult and battery
upon a Lerman, was sentenced to p ay a fine of two
rents and the costs of prosecution, and under.o an on
prwonnient of two r, tams to the county Pelso/4 Lae Lars
fence wept like a chtid when undefined.
bomse D. finite convkted of attemptine to pan a
counterfeit note. was sentenced to pay a fine of ono
vent and the emits of prrirecutton, and under.° au im
prisonment of one y ear in he Co44ty
rub Ptillsrd and Elm trod Pollard. ..Acts I of com
inittnoi rowan:: end hatters upon John Goner at.
were sentenced to pay a had acme dolor and the cent
of 440adelttion.
Jima Cos.rot a. conricled of committing an assault
and 44 tie ry Upon e11...an Pollard, w L 4 sente nced to pay
tlllOOl ono if tar and It, costs of Protectn:Jn.
Julia Sweeney, cues it led of murder la lad second de
gree. for the While of Richard Caret, in Za
court. we. eisr.tenced to eta Year. or.Prisoani , at tn re
ri
yarsie or koittus cotinisment I
Pant koor to the
astern Penitentiary. :iweeney remarked: "Lod
knows I had PO latent :0a of taken; Colon's life."
A now I'm!. on motion of D. N' . O'Brien. het . was
granted be Judie Ailiton to Alexander liourde lon who
was COliVictekt Borne Line Snot 04 charts or tors e .
re ie.! 4414104111144. 4114.11111 corpse !We were die
-I.ooq of and some miscellaneous nosiness transacted.
atter which the coon was declared to La minimum' fur
the term.
WIIAItTON'a PATENT Ti) AVOID ItalLnoltr
B.cliCtico.—By this improvement, all the different
fines of cars unioh traverse the etrecte of our city. will
he enabled to 1011.. their own routes with centime , .
end them...lid the inconvemence and del, which the
unsettal qr I. an of movable switches at tlo Crlners
note entail, °rem them.
lir the tom; transfer of the Learnt flout tine outer
to the tinier treed of the d"utile 're id a l'ee:s. the cur.
dezierted to so .1.31 tla are canted, be the s l ic tit incit
hetion of the inner refl, smoothly au I contently over
anie pier the intersection. while the other brie 14 cers
need a f alteration in the wheels, and must follow the
dirertron of the noel! rail. The additional cost of the
new form of wheel is merely that of the extra roil of
test iron forming the inner tread. and does not exceed
jilt) per uteri, whichis a matter 'Cry little ins
portorme, especially when the additornol strensth Is
token into oonstderation ; wan , the Sr' ate , cutte ,
for the brake, to act upon tines s really eiftmener to
therm 111 rave teint; the emotion of the MAINe tread
wheel, they will I fit twice as tofu as the tientl form of
a heel, since the inn er tread Lein.: 0..1. need lor crest
Ills into rstetions wilt Le comparouvely new when its
cuter tread is worn out. Aft interested in [oilioad
mailers should (report I his thermion., who. h ISt-W . lot
drairalde upon attain roods and city Psss•ni,er wide.
Ira modeis at cars and thanks can he seen at :Oct.: , e.
Th•rd Street.
For rem made a different applicothon of the seine
prinetplo to eyed. In this coon, the r - euler track is
continued al.soi.,tely ft/dirt:Oren and continuous from
city .In only there! ire. rill Cars with whee's of the
shape e only follow the usual norite. Such on/ 4
as ore need for !oval Ire relit ins noes. being prof idol
with W 11,51 LAVIC., tins extra tread. luir.t‘o &Sit:MA
oil the track at any station., prod cod Pets an , or tu ,
of the siiinse no wished, in the in; It. none,
The Consists ol en inn.r For of iron. C.
re tail lone ln.rt.m pervendiCillirly, and Alt.* lit... Tit
1110111:AtlOC• sl that when tilsced to pomtion the extra
Cie la, without any r0r.13 iniverotptibls carried°, cr
acrose the reeulor trunk w Cheat (widow: it. and te
mined on to the eidinc. I Ms switch is never in the
leer of the throden trains. no matter 'Whether oven or
shut. our es the Varnish Immo hire the orebnory room
VI uheel, the awueb, a, fan as they are con erne.,. doe,
y,r
exist lien must so , t , 11.1q.
lot) 1 . .11.1r:2. 1, d speed the e - gineer inns, PTO.A.,tt
;net ail Cum nuts
I h , In eir of tee possense re are not plied ur,..l.fr the
'normal nil is...eopetent or career, a eitelt-tendero.
To the 111.1011111, Dub e C this ins Cotton es of impor
t itiCa—aSel , 111011c1 , 1 fit suret, for hutooo lite thoutit Le
Sdopted. When not in use the switch is mewed sofa
wore towards the centre of tie trot.% and is out fit the
Way of local freight tr ins alai; but no matter how It is
left, it men in no manner affect the ex - scoter train., and
thrieu:lltreteltt trams,
Twit .bier to ere thee seine ' —perfect •*fete to al:
thretith trains whether fdr tsar^uer e or freizitt• and,
et ere advent ate to lona' trade Wit any other form or
switch posorsoes. Almost y eekty we reed of fearful
accidente from misplaced secant."
gra.t 151,1114 r W. 141 I , ` rt'octr I in the /Iran; en
peruses of the roads, to mein torn are now ernO•iyeil
an hare, h) thin plan, they world not be re jutted In
like manner. railroul trot ore nit nerd td; in all re
41.3•1 s n terth:tly unt.no l en trazk is maintained.
henna OrrICX, Feb. 4. laid—'Thu number
of interments in thecuts cf Phi . odelr d lio for tie week
.cd,11% Feliruare at 12 ..... „
forte:Lae
ISn ne. .
Croup
Corm.tion of Lun. .
Co nrumpt son of Lung.. !
Coo ettleosne
Drove, , Brain ... I
" Chest...—. Fease:re
D.erstee 01 lit• I ,
Heart . ...•
nyeen:ery. ..... 31
fever, Sesulot, 171 foss e.
lollomustlors. 800 n.... Id, Wrle
•• Lon.. ... 111
" ,sr,, Iros, tie 31
Met cools .
01,1 •.! • • • • •
NW! Born. .• • • •.
.re 'I lirout
petto .....
're tAnim
Unknown
W hooonz Congx
2 • M01'..3 .
4 Vl' •:-
10
_ 41
.
. 2 I...itr Deer.
. 1113et.ren 1 end 0.
enar S .
. 3 From the Alcichouse
—I Vroclo oC oolvr
139 Country... ...
ARTHUR 111'011'F:8.
11,rilth °Moor.
I=!!
Tug Ntnt it. (It tuna—There Wle a soo t
lime at the Nation tl Guonts' or rote en enturday night.
The I coda penis nee Unlit', Coinethe the weiftb
lie-101 , 1a :new 1. rla try, oreo , nt...td to the Natlassi
Wlll.llllll tin•fi.'clit elit ro. eh t•va . l LT; eno..leh to
I old Circe ornamented own Elea' hew), Jro
b ladles.huh eloounts. itint•ry (got ten's, e ire. ea.
nor InO , o• e, J ell lhn ontierhento ticce.a y inpuoult-
Cen!ain Boy le, of the Intl-pcnienee Guard
n food it etch on the oeC,ioo. aLich le as pre.
rin re..uonncri to I ) Vo.trun !Ale. As Boon as this
intettolln: corm my was cronceltshett, and the so.
v.:010.u, ere ern n3itirel Cecil its conetust , t 1 had abed
hic ry, Captain roll* tellownl up the Chair by t recent'
in. to Cantiln I.e tcreonslly the !oh cinieorn arena.
cci eq.iipicenCt of "The u.d comics d of
Toler m men Lora 01 the Indep r donne Guard. to which
Leternity Captain LA In 11,14 lately •lenten 11P b. it fury
nion,b , r. More srecchiftlng follow ell, after wh. ch 'he
l . o onyny Lit nown tun a: !ec.litt or , :eh c cue ho
nored by prover et:nation, hod soccecOto: ha speerhee,
1 0 . 1 0, touts, 'be.
Tag SC:CDAT ralNaCittri bus Cu. —On
ilatunlar. in the Court of Quarter Undone. a alotron
rur a new in the can of John 8- Jackson. caetneted
for the habbeation ota libel on Dr. Smith , oral. thecae
nolortett. was argued by D. W.t.'Brank, Eng . far the
defend int, and !Notelet Attoiney Mann thr the Con
snoewealtb. Ihe follow - um were the reasons anted to
sup Dort of the 1110t1011 sad 113 'meat of rudiment
for due Trrll.—.l. The re act wan azaleat
the law. it:m.l:ldt as defanc ant go bettuitiallt Preyed a a
truth of the eh.. roes in the alleeed
S. The learned Judge charged so T.gorovaly and em -
ehatically apnea the tfrlace, than the Any anderstool
the tananue as an a:prim:ma of opinion await the
ade,ed offender. the defend/at.
3 The learned Judge erred -ct charaing the Jury. that
the alleged noel, of itself. ..e a ee . e y.e." eaee of
„o we , and that they should accept that as fact from
the court. .
for met ! iefi. is arctic y Judsotent.-1. The
bill of indictment is rot aisned by the Diatnet /atoms.
as espreml,r. required by the act of Aawamley.
The toil of indictment smproperiy s os i esdss
"contrary to the act of Assembl. aura ogee made
mad a resided." when the offence charged is an attune
at common law rimy.
The cuurt held the matter fender adviesea•nt.
"GER.-OLN HALL Or Ants."-1n 11020rdaDee wit
the provitions clan act of Amembly. Faded Is springs
suiocuptions are now twins taten for the purpose et
aecortn i r n sunisufficient to build Good. substantial.
weil.aPPointed theatre...Of course. oar &armee fallow
citizens to end to do their snare. both 16 bUlt6lll, and
in 511161101(1611161 new and protievorthy same- It b.
however. intended to draw to this sty French. rands
tlle. and small operatic companies. and to afford salami
for the innumerable darer entartatoments vette are
even now succeed tat hermits spite of tie sours absolves
of a fit and atitstrte terild Ins. in spite of the utter Vast
of the commonest requirements oi audience and eel
formers. be authors of tens selleme look with obeli
rie at espectation to our forme residents. to our mar
chant,. sad to our muse, seaerady. who Pup. OMR
Measure and instruction to be drawn from a walk sr •
remind variety' of tn.-atm-al and other amusements. for
such aid as sb It secure the prompt nod efficnent execo.
twit of the, plAn. For this purpose. the shams have
been pat at fifty dollars each. and subsertption liett with
a cot,. of trio ch.iter, are left at the store of itr. Stubs.
Chrstput etteet. nod silk Jhl r. del pot". Chestnut
street corner or Juniper. (it the tunny 1C11111661 that
hare teen a arced to gissrnitidelphia storm use:etre of
6 , 1/ 411 a•ze. this In ClVillj the most practicalsis and the
ono att moat 1. counsands ttself to the prompt and
frleudiy aid 01 our theatregoers. -
Ft , )ZII.C.. 01V•tlEtrIgli .31 Fr PATIIICK'S
—F u °ere! services far the late Rialto" Neuman, ~ 1 11..•
eelebisted at t. P• tt ice's Iturctt,laracebeth scut Le
duet .tracts on Wednesday rr.otioag twat. at tune
o cloak. Hick masa wit, be perfcaue d. arcturo.e
meats i atria the r 6 urns will be the lame 4.11 though the
bodr of the d. ce aged prelate wan actually present. A
leer, Ikeeet catafalque has tern toil for ups 00- awn
ay hlr. ninon chartlanal, the, well-known nectertalrer,, of
No. 21 &nth I hirteeat street lab° rreraped Umiak's
did lucerd decorattoua at It. Jahres Chafe*, when Ile
tody ot the B enop me there. Ibe pew ealatistau... has
els 1,1 ck pact's. each on feet bier. whi - h_loalert a
canopy I nun ohlea fiefs drapery deseesda. taper the
con.ny theta 11l he c. Me. with the crop. la the.
VW, f r, a c.. the a hole tote belled by forts-10a wez
tapers Mr. ki.inlard. with Ins usual enterperse and
lUkrahtn hal prepared thiesplandtdcwartihm•
surtonnatn-s and it atilt he used try If us 'epos cumin
funeral occasion whet each a .4-elay will be desired.
ifie ae . eices at It. Parnell a Clutch will doobtkza
attract a large crowd on Wedasedtge
Cll4toft) taint litisntietnit —Last erenlag.
Coroner rennet held an inquest on the body at A cicala
al aged to La., been Pail.' by a s triotbei. Margaret
Lynne. at the Alle; hen,' Moose. Market street, vast of
Eighth. Several sills. the ate employed Rath triestime
is this house. testified to the birth at the ebtlai oe Wad
nesdsy esen:ng last. szd to the boding of the deadismy
in the loft. lir. b. P. lirown Mine a post swum CU
miention of the body. lte lulus were inflated. 'reek.e
was tt matt tot the loft side of to, head. an a unto aimed
cut on tins 'tont part of the head. A cat of the Lad war
eutlico:tet to canes death in the intent.
. . . . . .
Reserve Officer Cullen testified that Margaret LIM"
admitted to lout yesterday eitertown at the Central
fitat ion that Ile sets the mother of the child. and had
put it in
fired 1.1.,t s heden ie d as still-born. When
atm ens trrested. basin, had a child.
The eurtmer's July rendered the for:trete: cc rdict
1 hat death was caused trs_want of plover treatment
at toe hard, of its mother, Margaret loons. at the time
of its Lath. The mother wan committed to answer at
court tha ehar;e of infanticide.
Tna Wz era ne Matra Ire Caxya3T ASSTYKR-
Stitt CM aresrtos —lle first annivertly of the Wad
•re Market Company wan celebrated on tat:inlay. night.
A horde me set-cat was brejsrsits for the oc•ceston, ra
t • a y ziensire ea:Ain ttnc er the martet t lymme. Sixteenth
snd Market streets. try that prince o . caterer,. Id mor
Caspar tr. Kerry After the substantials had been die
posyd of. the chair wee area by Mr. rind, Licers7- and
the cronies woe loused rep pieta antilvith • wit. &ca.:.
speech, and treatment. Meseta Window. Z.
mete timhem. R. M. Pechert. C. M. ttosder. John T.
Re I:y. E. C. Wa lace. P. Lowry. Lows ht. Chastens,
aid other. contr.but no their quota to the reemal en
Jt),Ment. Tne remaita of Mr.. on, were of an Mier -
est.. character, an I were freqns'util atqlsieded. VW'
retarren prineipaliy to the Philadelphia
' vientOLirs, the Meatiness of "ehinneirar (VIM were
define I to their true meaning.) rind the memo of the
comet y whore sanirel sacs was Was; esteemed.
ltraliti UY Stttoot Coareuttimia--Iliaa body Met
on Saturday afternoon. specially to eonaider • MSS.
Istnmexttna tent to the Board. Of 1.11 emith a Co..
vompiaining that the Committee of decalitre bed
awarded n contract to lbomss Peter, for certain books
hit a higher rim than em th h Co- had °feted bet
ter books for. It Mao coinplai lied that kitten reek k.
BOas had been seiected to furnish Bibles at sweaty
cents each ho.her than Smith & Co_ had offered: 'a be
sul deo t rase rise to conticerable aLsc MWOOn. and it VIZ
strongly contended that the Board could ant set until
the rep.. t of the committee was made. Witnont Wine;
In any decisoni on this matter the Board ad,on mad. ty
a Sots of 11 ayes to 10 nave.
Tan Case. or ROBEll? Tnomrsoa.—The jur7
in the case of Robert I hompson. tried Tait week for the
inui der of John Came. hate wt yet treed upon • var.
war. Thew hare been out from court since lheradar
afternoon, l.st et three o e'ock. nem is amiss race
tr of opinions expreased as ti. the result or the fury's
deliberations. 'lke itnytellelen of some is that the Ver
dict will be an unatialited one of guilty, while canty
others think that. to.ijsy wits *noose the tesental of
the tie fends hit. Thconpeorn wan to the dock madam:oar.
and was removed before the adjournment of the coon.
, This was deemed lobe an me:ctn . p axedinr. and he
was sent alter, and the rout t adjourned in his Presence.
Clvlt. Corars os SLICRDAY.—larfer
Patce—
Jud;a .strony. Bichardson re Town—Motion for
halotentleir de'endent •esi obstacle ~e dict.. Also.
motion for new trial. Argued by B. tankard. Rev, for
the cc tier, sed by J. M. Kash. sod P. bat..
water - .
3 r
naoo ntr —Job es Sherwood. Here. and
St roud.—Correer motion lat.
Cuatos rtaas—lodzes Thern9w-41. and L.:lkm.
The Jury, in the ease of Frhtley as. Aloe :ms g. came
ado ('Suit watt a rerdtet to lacer of. the rlatonn._
A .Mt ET '3O or nut BA/ —A meeting of the Bar wee
heht cm Saltness morale:. is the PePrabe Coon
Boom. on the des h of the Rom Joel Jones. - hill Joe.
bee Lowrie presiding. Remarks were made
Perim. , Eel . and othem.enlosisne of the kith inlet.
leotard end morel character of the deeeised.
SERIUC a ACCIDart.-00eDeligle McLaughlin fell
front the third-elOry window of hie rend/ems, at Cr errs'
and %Vesta:meta. in use Nizeteentlt vrard, about tero
o'clock en natoiday morning. a d ta,kreot lumsell so
•
severely that his Life is &sleeted Of,.
FATAL RtSCLT.—.l.mnsix O'Brien. • men Vila
was rue over by sear lauded with coal-- or e. day left
wee., died at six o'clock on Saturday erestiis at the
Per. ass tracts limiter.
tztiour FIRES —Thera were two or three slight
fires on Saturday n.sht. tut none of them • ere limithP
of spec sal mention.
EINAIiCIAL AM) CURIMJISILCUL.
The Mouey Market.
ruittnagarta. Feb. I, INgt.
Lehigh Valle'', Lehigh Narigation. and Korth Fewa
sylvanis stock and seenntiea base bona rad.talld ad.
vane in g for a tune rest, and are now firm at the
Latest nuutstior • itead.ng Railroad and SenvYtkill
Ntragatlon leeurities era not held in *teal favor. car
rind State Leans are steady at uncommonly iligb figettea
Penes, Irani% Railroad abates eed a. ST. BJ tbev ay,
the matting of the steekbold-ra will be held on Monday
pm:nun g. Yebtnaty 6. at ten o'clock, at Sansetn-creet
Ral .
Tte money market noatinues enkolled ar:tie 'mfr.
ta'.. Lice ;n‘ wed fieeh in good raper at ab,ct set
v‘..l per cei.t. for chefs names et lane; Seven
AI d A kali to nine for longer t me. or names not Sowell
en .Irn..ted from these rafts on SA loin no fifteen per
t. for klrer grades.
Ttoa afternoon pasta of to-dS) LAJINISti a war man
ta, fe.t. ss iol:t.ss:
A tan thn.eruuswiLered ten-.. War cote. ynrpo•t•
in: It. b, tla :tut its.te of the e,t7 lient..f nn, Maw.
Lost uy,e r crAtt.r. view in t.) nn. illbt.ccleaere-tvold
in,a &e.; right end a savor waked. At•ered
fr..nt k eoutna :s o+."
The United Utateg Tr ensury rtuorta tho gr.:lust et
rr one) hnni,sub,,ect 6o oral:, on the IDd Jaguar, lust.
at
Our rs:oss,l Winslow. rf the Cv-var-cra
/Aar .e:sls 0 Irs.itt y Pea elrajt. sad is SeaorsT•T
le. t aissensvag t 4.lst sole c f erer7 citsect ke
et.te tto C. We 44.0 C With eteSUP3 and IY.. Crk4Orle
[hoot Inn relleerew Iron kts meet of the
morn n; Iron a 4..b,t0t of norts routers at it 1 1 .1 1 .1
oput. the aoYah:e •
•* s usual It es dry eras.ca of the Leflell:l3re foreorre
years I tat, A tag hot n greaes.t...l 1.4) aeetu I. tat
neon .nick and bill looker. L eider the znetraittle gel
law. tail chs..l of U . N.:, rs suressty nes • I Prate ton
01 it
te4kus Lome tr canu4,l
, 0117 of r ,e4 , :ek ,
HAL vs rev of the ort.tna•ott of the erSeYht hi t.the,
are L. to set apart is aut,eets of an odtous tesumhea
li.to the prectse tuatara ul 0081111 esupeltyl er..4 Pus. -
4 tr sr.aseted 17 each intat , us). aka to sader re son
heeLue to en elamon. ender the form of a tax:
r,o in ex ot..t; lava The .7f..-ate or
Ne• lore toe *4 , 4,2 ,4 a tar-s.rhsed :the! by 1 . 3 .•
I.'r. n; et ery depot inert Cr trite in her toll:mit
-01 n rerriil , 3/11 101 ms t. , to p7;pe:sse..f
~1•1. • .4't vs Ler re - re , :a h.ra rea roSret
-1,412 1,1• of r • VI. ratio ;, , ,4tan a4.l•entliie cherec
tens:, it Coq . elehlere .s ear aa =net a ne
e, no) of a tray ;rest n.ti 4I t neat set sOSetel.:4l
Without a V it intv.tehlt.
Li
kienee to the duty trar.sactscr.s of ear Beaters' Loud
filer r in, torten t.t tie urviestv.r Ctanot to.'“
any tri in a.i.Ltson to t•se prerat- r hey have drift-
Mad, otter the usfatraease co:Alt:ea of pc...v.7st and
cotton/yr,' etts,s. to ProPortta.... e l te-say n sns l: that
situ . tNe;wit !rear le.eral members Of ISO P.. rd
hale teen .1 , 1, en t.• it aursumg. er in lor tht.r
Own ZNOW Yore. mere the alai( pollee of toe 8 1 Wt•
enCourstos Evan; al arts , ity, end L.fers a premium to
clintat aLit enie - rr as. There has mot. on the
tsv,er hard re., urn , ls ssp;ltest.an for adassreass to
cur lksarsl ass cu t'se trine, of tit Is lb.s
a tux, to lirroiso en un.1.4 Sod verve:4o'e tat
on tit useurter..t la th.., a t roe to repel f :sea
Ph, the usual! r a rtteh or the styes hustcesl of the
s..utarr h•ch sEA tettred !IVO! We ;loch nor
toot the bestslythlre 101 career. no; WWI b• a presort
and stashes:4 sole. eructs a pia,: tea—Y.l le.vek Is a re .
prsorsea to rte trVe.,l4th.:*•
eraLew,Lrit.A ESCHASIGE, BALES
Fel-sery I.
Xsres ts^ sr S. I'. tLATPC•IIEt. 31L Wslast ?SINK
FIRST BOARD
C tGafa . .!se* wi 10 Le4:sh Scar-.... ab
}Wit .tv 21 el. , )53 23
aim C ttaw4st 10+ 2tti :3 d . . 121
luo 111, V tta 'et/ eau t`-+yl s Musell , it E.. Ei
Ito! C 4,11 S Am 61 :0 • 3 Sear 3t , ld n• •tiaj
Au 0.1111 C. 12 es ... 53 DX nit,' Can Fief t 3106
U S rreaSs acqra. Iwo 2 ta,l3l,ft Naa
-21331:4 Senn !Peen, R....
z. 3•.• .stan
It . 73a,
BOARP3
... l 7 IS FL , h /11: , sr
51-CJND BoAX.D.
4f , Is F.
Ss U Tres
Venal. ... %Sm./
Fky) do . . I i re: 3tu11.111 IL* .1
iv C f . . . Fil f..pmce F.rl R
tyr Cltt S .Netr Ns t Bt.
ie C'A; R . . 9t4
0311111114 G PRICES—STY-.U) Y.
Ltd. 44 , 4 F. 1,k4.
Hu. frls, !J'! If
K 1.0 & £m.. I I•4'
"—.104 " 31 Ist Ino+l fI I 3
14411.. 3.1 Vey 43i' tnnrt 114 14
__. 1 y 19 11:14,15 .. 11 113
t•Cr 70. 73 +0 ,Ixt•!4&•::(..(4•&..lsr II
•• (•t 3 , Penn.& I'••
0 'es .3 70 "
Prnus .0 _
.
•• •++.•'• t.'++.*t win& R - I
M•+ 211. Cor dt oil . 5; Ss ' 1:•( lit Luc 33 34
ptrl.4. o 3 4C6 10'24 Fratlt & :Vat& R
?•+ll4(i :(&• to S. 04 &A ,Ero'dirt..rd• - • :I," IP
tott f I ißsee&Vt.t.4-11.4 IL 3.-I•
Philadr.lpbsa Market!.
I—ltrerang.
In Flt t't? re to IXT• ttr ne earani In nate to-day,
pm; t• trtet is qu'et cut steals, at prertnua 114,1,4
tt, , ns -: - st=ns a ‘aerfit• n rsteer lea:x.4'st LS G'S
t t. ILt the tra.'a are tae ca' Later, at Inc
tt3 t..) for tortntnn. rased. sad rood Laverty!.
• 15,6 Cot extraa.•,ltra,a t•-tlt t a tt , ?a` t t.tgl rtz
nt lii 1 la 1 . 1. linty Ftnnnts. Vto 11 , ta tts • Pia F l,-, l'
Om; at $1.3 425 and Parana Garr, atml at tX7S Ito•
t Acre ' t'
tint lade or no drin sad bre.taer. heat—ibis
man,t cant.rot•s 'onatd,ao.l prtcati Sheatat. ASLEF,
euiall low orals baslaz found buyers at 1..,11-14*
'r foe t pram. rea, • n‘l 14.21.5.`c lot 1, - b te w lc 'rote.
It, If s'. mt. on arms! at 91-z. Core 14 Ittattr
to 0,,,, ntd rather scare*: sates incineta &tout
L'Ott tn , thelon • P rW. In lota. at :Sr in stove. Qat, non-
Wine. wt.% cut at's...Jr 2 cc° bashes I-eat:at:nt.'s are
rettltted at tea • tat , n scorn. quertr,tron taut Is
net ntet.l at 2:i h.„aers •esteratlY Lek
n tne. nil tzar, is litt . .• Cr eat- as dote. inct'4 , 4—
• mara•t cnuttnues du't tutees csume t , ./f1 5:3
Curly, and R. 1.. smut s.a.e. , aty are repotted to day
1'
at . nrentar rate. r
tsra,at s El:ars is Iva Co.l4tlLerlt
'ttul tat 111Arngt IL ewe:. -ft SZL•34II
Pro, mt.' , t—Tr.a 11l trart 1 . 2 firna bet te,s rt.:Lit; at:tl
inch to to ,n,„1,„ t a c ca•• It)'.4 ; In) ,I'eta
• lat.rs 7,; 15 tao ftt eta I molts atacua
a des at ani so,ce Beet ttrueats
Syedr—Tto demand for C. natant/ as I tired. sal •
Nat milli ea to a•t resorted at Z!1..71.2312- 1 / 2 . rai
rloding e (mm at , tn‘nd aadat at tr Nyack
rnanthy is ann , a 3 t•cs Itts Wh•latty stra•ta o.i
tot h. at :I for Pr,..-u; C11121',,, it.: haJs I Zs2rNe
lot :ns:ls an • Dltts.actl Ito .at Vlatteta Ca.
L w r•Oo Monday a large Jeleptien cf the Demo
cracy et Essex and liaison CaLlatitt siti:ed the re
'Hence of 01-00yorDOTROf01111 PM*. cn the Amts
of the Pats -is river, But Noway', to meet Senator
Douglas The Senator was in Ms happiest mood,
a,..d shock hands all renal Daring to. eraniag
the Fully puma cf a C:ic sapper, at whirls be
was toasted. The &mat): respowled, akrariag the
cqnpany that the Colon was yet see, .rd as not
to tvuotio yet awhile.