..„ its 4. WEDNESDAY; F 1111111143111( 29 t 1860. Pinar Peas.--Literature; Letter from 4, Reek Itiohardc;".Letter fromliew 'Y'ork ; General News; An Agency to Millet Fugitive Stoics to Return tri their 'glisters. FOURTH PAlNS—Lenin' ' from Humbug ; yroceedinge In the Courts Yesterday ; Latest Foreign News by the Europa;"Dfaiint telligenee. ", The Political.Puture. , , ,Our Washington correatondent, Ocoe. Island'," in the letter published in Tint Pans of stfift, Uiorningi.lifta the Veil abtrye the 'move Monti.. 'of politicians in a mannerthat' cannot fail to ',attract universal attention. No Demo. ,Crat *reed his ~expOsi, 'of the Projecti of the Administration secession parfywithout feeling that we are about to enter upon, a campaign of rindiampled exattinient. There Can ne longer be any doubt that the. high contracting parties of the Federal capital have reeolVed to make the Charleston Convention the organ of the most repulsive doctrines, and. the scene of some of the most alarming proscriptions. There has not been an hour or a day when Mr. Brronanan In the Presidency and the dis union leaders in the South have faltered in their determined puipose to corn mit the Dem . ) matte nation to thedisastrotur theories which they are now attempting to engraft into in old creed. Relying upon what they think is Cer tain to become a foetid vote of the Southern States in support of any candidate that may be nominated under their auspices at Charleston, and calculating confidently upon their abili ty to obtain . a sufficient number of Northern 'cites to carry that candidate thr,ough at the polls, they are resolved to make no terms with that honest sentiment in the free States which stands steadily by the great principle of self government, and to recognisd no man as a can didate for the Presidency who does not cordi-, ally and fully surrender to them. The question' 'arises, what, in view of these thick-coming events, is the duty of patriotic Democrats all . over the -Union ? What advaritage would a nomination made at Charleston under such Circumstances be to any portion of the country 1 Could its ratification by the people in November next more firmly cement the bonds of this Union together ? Unqueirtionably no l , because, while we be lieve the Confederacy of these States is strong. or now than it has been since the formation of the Federal Constitution, the success of a candidate committed to the doctrines now proclaimed by the extreme Southern leaders would do more to weaken it than any experi ment which fanaticism has ever tried on the one band, or treason upon the other. Such a 'victory, in fact, wouldbe a die — union victory; neither more nor less. What other good would it accomplish 7 • Would it assist the do mestic industries in which Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and other States are so deeply in terested? Unquestionably no, because the secession movement Is an ultra free-trade movement, and looks alike to the denial of fair Pay in the Territories, and to the dliscourage merit of these vast elements of industry upon which so many of the great States of this 47nion have heretofore donfldinglyreposod. Would it benefit the system of vast internal improvements, the beginning of and consum mating the Pacific Railroad, or extend our -commerce with the nations of the earth Unquestionably, no ; because the great hod of the Southernleaders now in power at Wash- Tngton, and aspiring to control the action of he Democratic party at Charleston, are averse to everythifig like internal improvements by the General Government, averse' to the con struction of a great 'highway, binding the Pa .cifle to the Mississippi, and, finally, averse to anything that may build np the prosperity and greatness of the free States. What then, we repeat, is the duty of con servative men, Democrats dud others, in such an emergency 7 Is it to send delegates to Charleston to submit to a decree, which, thanks to the self- constituted , masters of the Democratic party, was issued beforehand, to yield to a despotism now in course of rapid and publlc'erection, and to register the edict ofa cabal Intent alone upori its own sectional and selfish purposes, and resolute in denying to any part of the country a share in the con trol of the Government, unless a surrender Is made in advance to all their exactions ? If, from the various Conventions of the free States, a band of bokiemeri could be sent to Charleston, who, wisely appretiating the pe rils of the. country, and opportunely fore. warned as to the designs of the• enemies of the I:Tnion,cepld resist all the encroachments upon ' the equality of the State's', and upon the time honored principles of Democracy,- and, failing to resist these in the Con vention, to retire from it in a body, and them, in =the capital of the Palmetto State, raise the flag of a glorious re bellion, they would do more to perpetuate the principles to which the Natitinal DemocraCy have been committed, and more to secure and strengthen the Union, than any movement that could be suggested, or devised. If Charleston could be induced by these men to yield to their counsels, there would be an end of the dangers which threaten the Republic; and if Charleston refused to yield to them, and they, prompted by the noblest motives, took the remedy in their own hands, and car ried their case before tho people, they would' crush out everything like disunion in the South, and fanaticisni in the North'; they would establish such a domestic policy as would remain permanent for years ; they would bring the North and South more clotio ly together; they would fevive and reanimate trade and commerce in all their infinite varie ties; and they Would teach a lesson to aspiring and proscriptive politicians such as has never been taught since the beginning of our re publican experiment. Water Gas. fio the Editor of The Pros, „ - SIR: As Secretary of the Keystone Gaa (knave nyi allow me briefly to famish a reply to the art( ele, In your issue of this morning„ signed 4, In The Board of Trustees of this company; is, ds anxious to have Information on,the sableot aided to—the introduction of waterlog into the' works of the Northern Idbertits—u your correspondent by any possibility can be. 7o prove this, as well as their confidence In tips quality of the product, and in the economy of the process, I now g ive ou the following extract from a letter addr • week since, to the President of the Northern Li berties Gas Contrail) , : [VI The trustees of the Keystone Gas Company imdruet me to offer to you, In their name, to don. Gone tho manufacture of water gas by Benders' method, with the apparatus 'now erected at the Northern Liberties works. And inasmuch as the resells obtained therewith during the last few weeks have confessedly demonstrated that gas, by Pandora' process can be made when the proper conttions exist, and Wel tie quality of.the light, from en equal quarbelaS In an equal measure of time, is equal, it not superior, to tbut derived from coal gas, they inetruot me to say that they (the , Keystone Company) will supply the fuel, charcoal, hydrooarbon, cost of repairs or, Outages in the bomb, and the labor skilled in the managemedt of, Panders'. process, all at their-own expense, and will furnish the yield of gas from the beneh to the Northern Liberties Company at seventy-Ave cents Per thousand feet. This agreement to continue in :fore? for viz months from the, date of Its adeeptenee ty yen, arid meanwhile affording any of the work men of your establishment whom you may desig nate every facility to become practioally brattier " with the details of manipulation and mode of • manufacture." - -This offer,- the adoption of whir& would doubt less be as " highly gratifying" to the coneumera gas' In that district BB to the "friends of water gas," remains to this date unaccepted. With respect, Sec. 'DAY, Secretary Keystone Gas Company. Phila., Feb. 28,1860. /cLcaraersta NEWS Or run Woni.n..—fifesers. Henry A. Brown le . Co. Hanover street, Boston, send us, the I ll ustrateri News of the IVorld for February 11th. It contains what we suppose must be accepted as the authorised .portralt of the press of the French—a suitable companion {ls she to to the original) to the portrait of Napoleon, re , cently presented to the subscribers to the'same journal. There Is also an authentic memoir. Other portraits; in the body of the paper, show us Count Osvour and Chevalier Farhat, Dictator of l'arma and Modetm, and Governor of Romagna. eln)/of tbaloo stool portraits given with the Illus. trated Netiy . of the World can be obtained from Messrs. Brown, of Boston, on sending fifteen tents! .Tile - ATTENTIQX of the trade; is invited to the gulle t this morning, by..B. Scott, Jr., auctioneer; 431 Chestnot itreet,. comprising an ettraotive • line of nevi, style entiniderice; !does,edgingr' blonde, noes, white good's,. , Mitts, fine gold l, jekeiry, bead .goods; linen.eambrio handkerchiefs; shirt fronts; bonnet' ribbons; flosteri, b6nnets,4o., ae. r , Ur We have" in type, but cis eompellrd to de. fat its p6blioation until tomorrow, a very interest. ing report of the eeoond leohnni of Mr. Plaid, on the Creation of the Universe, delivered lad night fit the Handel and Haydn Hell, =INN WASHINGTON OUR •PONDENOE Letter from gs OemtilionaLls (Correspondence of The Preeal . lYasattiatorr; Feb.lB, 'CND, Whatever may be said of John Brown, of ho mortal, memory, nothing can be dearer than that his invasion of Virginia has produced the happiest consequences. lie was, without intend ing to be so, a rare providence to the South. When he attempted to take the lives of certain unoffending people, ho took the lives of a great many candidates for the Prealdenoy, and when be died, a vary threatening fanaticism was buried In, the same grave with him. The just resent. omit of the South was responded to by the sym pathy of North, and, at this day, if there is any one thing clearer than another, it is that no party that does not reeogniee all the gusianteest of the South can triumph at the coming election. Ten Presidential triumphs for Southern institutions could' not produce mote good consequences than have flowed from the feeling excited by the Dar . per'e Ferry tragedy. But are the fire-eaters in the slave States con tent with this revolution in public sentiment? Are they satisfied with cultivating and strengthen log the newly-revived oonfidenee in the Union, and the dally-awakening spirit of fraternity on the part of the people of the free States? No; taking it for granted that because Jalin Brown was justly executed, end bennee their indignation at his attempt upon the sovereignly of Virginia was heartily re-tohoed by the people of the free States, they teem resolved to ooramit every party, if pos sible, and partloulerly the Democracy, to the ex tremest and moat odious views; and, to this end, they are organizing, preparatory to Charleston, in a manner which will arouse, in the Northern mind, the strongest feelings of hostility to the Southern people. • I have already told you of the way in which these men treat Stephen A. Douglas. Their course to him, from the beginning, has been a course of insult. ,Following the lead of his principles, he found it necessary to take issue with the President in regard to the Leoompton Constitution, and from this point to re-assert, in the strongest manner, his devotion to the covenants and principles of 1816. When he did this he encountered a storm of oblo quy, which would have writhed almost any other man. Immediately before the opening of the pre sent Congreu, and dm its commencement, Judge Douglas committed' himself frankly, in advance, to the decision of tee-Charleston Convention. He hat gone farther; and in his speech, in order to prevent the invasion of States, ventured to repeat the declaration that the John Brown af fray was a result of the teachings of Mr. Seward and his friends, and that the Republican party were more or lees reeponeible for that event. Ills friends in the House of Representatives from Illi nois supported men who were known to be the ens. miss of himself and his principles for Speaker of the House, and allowed themselves to indulge in the strongest animadversions against those who had first raised his flag in Pennsylvania and else - where, and had, by their °enrage and consistency, vastly 'contributed to his sail:ass in Illinois. I think all these steps were so many Matadors. That they were honestly intended I do not assume to question.. They were, however, concession to a reienUess antagonism. If they were intended to conciliate the Southern politicians, they have fail. ad to conciliate them. During be attempt to or ganize the House there was an evident disposition on the part of some Of the Southern leaders to pro claim a trues In regard to Judge Douglas, but lat. lady they have trammed all their bitterness, show ing at once their unforgiving temper, and how fruitless all attempts have been on the part of Judge Douglas and his friends to bring them to reason, er induce them to entertain the slightest recognition of his claims. Since the organization, we have had the Senato rial star chamber in secret session, laying down a platform which is Intended to be forced upon the Charleston Convention, upon which, as upon a guillotine, the Illinois Senator and his principles are both to be executed. The resolutions, elabo rated and vitalised in this committee, are, as I un-. derstund, to be proposed in the American Senate, and an attempt made to put them through as a great national creed ! The organs of the Adminis. tration do not hesitate to construe them as a blow at Judge Douglas, and at all his friends, and the Evening Star, welch may be said to speak the sentiments of the fire-eatere, yesterday declared that Seward himself would harp as much chance as Denial; at the Charleston Convention. The Constittalon, Mr. Buchanan's organ, edited main ly by Judge Black and Air-Browns, a soi-disant nobleman, boils over every morning with vitupe ration of Douglas, ridiculing his Claims, denying his strength, and doing everything to injure him with the people. It is under such auspices as these that the Charleston Convention will /MOM ble. Further comment is unnecessary. The calculations of the Adminfatration party, upon width are based all these extraerdinery movements, are as follows : The National Con vention will throw se many votes as there are members of the Rouse of Nepresentatives and Sena tors of the United States, viz: dO2. The Adminis tration and Seeeesion party claim that they will carry every Southern State in November, whilst' will give them 120 electors, and California and Oregon, which will swell this number to 127. In order to obtain a moaferity of the whole, they pill then be oompelled to Ware twenty-five more electoral votes. These they expose toget in Pennsylvania, Now Jer sey, New York, Indiana, and Illinois. And how are they to do all this? Of canna by fomenting divisions among the 'Opposition This they expect to accomplish by the aid of the ,Americans in New York, and by stimulating personal quarrels among the rival candidate% for the Presidency in the Op position ranks. They are so oonfident that this calculation will stand that they laugh at the idea of making any offers of compromise to Judge Don . glee and hie friends, Indeed, one of them declared to me yesterday that the nomination of Douglas, at Charleston, would lose them bell the Southern States, and would create a strong opposition party in the North; but when I presented to hint the question if Judge Douglas were to bo put forward against any sect:eaten-Administration man who might be nominated at Charleston, would be not rally to his standard an Immense party in the South -1 ern States? end would he not be able to attract to his support thousands and tens of thousands of men in the North who stand ready to co-operate in any each movement? and would be not become, in the event of the triumph of ultra mon and ultra doctrines at Charleston, an Indispensable necessity to all patriotic men ?—he answered that he be lieved he would, but unhappily for the nation, Judge Douglas has himself, deelared that he will support the action of Charleston, whatsoever it may be. We have bad Ron. William B. Reed amongst us for the last few days, doubtless preparing the ma terials with which the Reading Convention la to be moulded to-morrow. I understand Mr. Reed is being employed by Attorney General Black in the Management of a number of important cuss, par ticularly those. relating to tke contest for mineral lands in California. The ex-minister to China has become a prime leader of the Democratic party. He input now a furious Are-eater, and hob-nobs with the Southern extremists, whenever he gets here, with the cool complacerioy that nobody could assume but himself. To hear Mr. Reed talk now, you would scarcely think he was so violent an Abolitionist a few years ago, eo contemptuous a reviler of the South, and so ansiona to make Northern interests paramount in every Presidential contest. Mr. Buchanan wears him close to his heart, however, and seems to look upon the acquisition of such an intellect as ample compensation for the loss of thousands of honest and able men throughout the country. It would be an Interesting thing to me Reed at the head of the Democratic State Central Committee during the coming contest, and it would be an appropriate thing, especially if that committee. Is to be eon doted upon the Federal doctrines lately laid down and instated upon by our new apostles. Do not be at all astonished If, within a few days, the whole country Is agitated by such a demonstra tion upon Mexico as will present new and exciting issues to the people. The pear is almost ripe, and, I have no doubt, In a short time will fall Into our lap.' lt,ll said a number of the military men now In this city, from ell parts of the Union, era preparing to rush to the geld of strife the moment the Ant gnu Is fired. The oenfliot between the fac. Gem In Mellon has reached that height that the empire is being rent to pieces, and the population, once SO bitterly hostile to everything like annexa tion to the 'United States, now look to this country as their only refuge from utter anarchy, and con tinned and bloody civil war. At this juncture, with General Houston Governor of Texas, I would not be at all eurprised if the Hero of San Jacinto should himself be placed at the head of an Army of Liberation, and should override all politicians by permanently Nettling that troublesome problem, and thus make himself the Older Magistrate of the American nation. The President continuer; to be a good deal an noyed by the strange position he is made to °soupy in reference to the nomination of Governor at goading. The friends of Witte swear that they have him pledged to them, while it is not doubted that Mr. John L. Dawson has latterly grown a great favorite with him. Mr. Daisson is not muoh of an Administration man " to hurt," and Mr. Witte, While very anxious to genre the aid of the offioe holders, is quietly diroulating through his friends the idea) that he does not wish to be cond. dered as the Administration candidate. General Dawson le, by far, the ablest man of the two, and, unless he ie " platformed to death," will make a popular candidate. The defeated oandidates will hive a very handsome amount to settle with the power's that'are located at Washington. The Greenook Advertiser, under the caption of "Romantic Union," says "A marriage was oe lebrated at Bt. John's Eplsoopal ohapel on Thurs. day: Mr. Themes Pendred, of Dublin, a member of the orchestra of the Theatre Royal, was on board the Persia last summer, on a voyage from Plan York; when a lady passenger, Miss Marie Kohli, of Berne, fell overboard, the ship being then under full' steam. 'Mr. Pendred leapt after her, And Was the means of saving her life, and this gallant sot led to the happy event which has taken ?hoe." Letter from 44 Ezek Etehttrds." [Correspondence of The Fress.l Mien Mason, Feb. 2d, IMO. It is now half past two o'clock, and Is Florence truly remarks, the House has come "toedead stand After two and a half hours, spent In filibustering, in which the resources of all sides were brought forth with a vigor Dna too smooemiful, there ma "dead stand still. The object of the motions, resolutions, and eounter-re sohlth)Wi, was to defeat Sherman's mileage bill. After all the squabbling, Florence wanted the Howie to ad journ. as there woe not a quorum present, and conse quently no business could be transacted. Motions to adjourn followed, and the yeas and nays are being now called. The Senate is in executive session on the Mexican treaty, and a little bird—an "Occasional" one—has I whispered to me that Benator Bimmons, or fhOds Wand, making a speech—along speeoh—against It. Mr. Sim mons intends his speech for publication when the bar of silence shall be removed from the proceedings of the executive session. The Rhode Islander is a hard-headed thinker and close reasoner. The defeat of the trooty is reckoned on as certain—not only that, but that there will be a half dozen over the necessary number to de feat its rattleation. A distinguished Southerner has plated In my hands the Louisville Journal of the Ml, which, in illustration of " the better day the better deed." contains a manly and forcible article from the pen of George D. Pren tice, on the hurly-burly which the hangers on of the Administration have raised upon the election of Colonel Forney to the Clerkship of the House. The article is such a good specimen of the manly Impartiality of Then tioe, and so suggestive of an honest train of thinking on the subject, that I cannot refrain from incorporating it in my letter—espeolally as that terrible humanity called " Forney" is not in Philadelphia, and will have no chance of gutting it out of my communication. I give it entire: " Colonel House Forney'e election to ihe first Clerk ohm of the Ol Representotives has been a signal for the Democracy, and especially the Administration portion of them, to open upon him the floodgates of their wrath and malice. When they speak of him, no language at their command seems coarse enough or fierce enough to satisfy the requirements of their rage. They forget all the vast, the immense service rendered by him to theirparty for more than twenty years; they choose to forget, that, but for lii , they would not now be in possession of the pieces w Mb they are no foully diagramen, or of the spoils, wh oh they are pillaging from the Treasury ; they remem r only that he pow c refuses to sustain a portion of the y master s machina tions and their own, and for this they would rain upon him the mock fire-and-brimetorm of their vengeance. Colonel Forney has never been of the same political bartyr as ourselves. and in all probability he never will e, but it is to us a miserable spa mole to see him so savagely denounced for the best political acts of hie life by, the men who so Won zed him for the worst. • The charge! which the Administration oaten" seem now most fond of hurling at the i he i v i i of Col, For felf:SentattATernott=e, %T e X that he II: 1 =11r ' , M I ! gratitude to Mr. Buohanan. Ric letter in the Forrest case wee one which, in our opinion. he should never have wntten. It was, in our view, an improper letter, though written in the confidence of private friendship. Still, there Were strong palliatr circumstances in tie case. Col. Forney and Mr. onset were warm and devoted persons' friends, w o hod for a long series of years interehanged kind office! most freely. Devotion in friendship we have often heard ea oribed to Colonel Forney as one of the distinguish leg traits of his character. Be fully believed what ever the fruit mForrest was hays beep, that hie friend was a foully-wronged husband, and we have no doubt that, i n hie Jamison letter, be sought to obtain for his friend, in a inciter supposed to concern that friend's 1 life-long happiness, only what he billy n believed to be 1 scrup ulously, and perfectly true. our opinion % lie sought to bring alma. what he tbeinght a hiet and right rasp t by means which, if his feeling! had been less warmly enisted, ho would Lave himself disapproved. Be that its It may, we all know that his Jamison letter. published yearn ago, had no area whatever in impair ing the respect , the admiration , the almost idolatry cherished for him by the Democracy as their greatest wereoa effeetaye leader. In their estimation no honors too lofty for his deserts, and never, until the alienation between him and the President a the United Mares, was the Jamison letter mentionpd by a solitary editor 2r men of them except in the way of medication and deienoe. , As for the charge against Col. Forney of ingrati tude to Mr. Buchanan, it must seem to every right mind, acquainted with the facts, strangen , and even right abs yd and_areposterous. No well.informed man in the nited Mates doubts that Mr. Buchaean owes to Mr. orney his election to the Preeideney. No manor the least Information doubts, that, but I° l l mlltitirl k i ract7ge rVe d . re s u d io ntgir L n ige g li t ie n 1 pub lishing far more especially, in raising on Dew York Imo t disbursing' I to Peonsylvanis vast sums of noney In the summer of IMfi, Pennsylvania would have lobe ageing th.e Demo emery in her local elections of that summer by sinalo44; of forty or forty. five thousand , and thereby destroyed Mr. bluohausep last hope in the name. The Presiden tial election was summated upon the Issue of the local electionem Pennealvildri, anti Forney's strength turned the scale. Mr. Buchanan deemed him worthy of a great reward, but instead of taking the respiiiisibdityoscon terrine ouch reward In hie own name and by his au. thorty. he resorted to the poor, underhand dev ce of writ i ng aprivate letter to a member of the Pennsylva nia Legislature, secretly _asking that body to do his work for him beleraing Mr, Forney to the Senate of the United States. Mr. F., rebelvins no offer of any yobbo station tat he deemed Worth hie soceptenceis tablished the Philndelphiro Press, and in his able ne uniformly treated his old friend, the creature 'of is pctWer. pie President of the United States with the creates, yesnect and thb highest ooneideration. Upon the miourrened Of the political preach lel o we the Pre sident and Senator Doilz!ae 111 regent the Lebonpeto Constitution, Col. Forney went Wahl Ofe who oppuse that fraudulent Constitution, end, in slain` so, 'well with nine-tentheorthe Democratic party in hie own seri tion. sr ent with anon factor ~atw rs and of PV ty In the North except the wiz -4.0 ce- holders one toe desperately hungry °Moe-seeker e used no harsh or C a ll i gligailTn a tiVlll. - 1! ' ,7. ', V415 " 41:17M; Dontoorotio,oppogition to his atrocious Lecommon polity. He would am tolerate it from any quarter what ever. He waged a hems di bitter war or proscription against all who dated to dissent from him. He made anti-Latta ton Democratic penile roil like 'hotbeds throughout the land. He could pot, to be surelltYp his political, creator from !office , for the latter het no no political game, bet lie pursued him as an editor and as a citizen with a malignity shareened to the keenest edge by a humiliating sense et or‘lgatlons too great ever to be cancelled even if be had wished gooxicel them, " The course of Colonel Forney lAguar oh emergency could not be doubtful. He knew what he had done for his persecutor, and. even if he had been lees. than the tentliperta Lire man he is, he would have given tack blow for blow, /le bite done this vigorously and with a nght gad will. Ha hos suloyed the rough exercise. It hen improved hits Width. Me AP, signally triumphed ovey his ungrateful foe, who, mitio by his u rtactied serfs, now dares to take the word 'ingrain e r upon bier guilty lips. ghat word should burn and b ca ter Ids mood? illte aquafortis or red-hot coals." The ii wrerolied rode " are rather despondent at pre- Bent, between the news Gist be daily received of Judge Douglas' 51100085110, and the frm Iceid the anti-Le aompton phalanx have got upon the Legislatures of the country. John Ifliskman hne made hie appearance on the floor today. He Cooke yell, and &befalls looks batter. for that he in in alone aoeverep tpith his keen, and bitter, and brilliant colleague. I have 'got a glimpse at the call, which I told you was being signed, requesting Munloch's appearance to this city. nothing could be more complimentary to the drama, and to Mr. Murdoch as one of its chief inter preters, than the irdegaut letter which conveys . the invi tation, It is signed by eaveisl gegators, including' a brace of very prminent Presidential hiodidates—Gei. Jo. Lane, and Albert G. Brown, of Mississippi—as ea Saunters Owin, Pugh, Wigfall, Bigler, Hemphill, and others. pl nip House, the moat brilliant members have shown their Mato by jejAiug in the invitation to the ele gant Bator. Among the nudes I ruitico those of Law rence M. Beitt, Boger A. 'Pryor, la'rnstt p. A4ratn, John B. Baskin, John A. Gilmer; Governor Maio. Thomas B. Florence, E. Bouligny. and several others. It Is a splen.)l4 tit boo, cud well deserved. E7E! RICHARDS. Public Annl.lleMolllB. riApor pPERA.-A very short season, in cord quenee of arrangennnts which take the Ullman and Strakosch troupe to Dunham and Washing ton, will be commenced hero on Monday. Ali stated that "the engagements and the expenses of the Company make it necessary that there should be a performance every night." Of this we have no doubt; but, we repeat that, eye° with a change of performance every evening, a whole week of operas, or even five nights, is a. groat pull upon the public's tines. We do not say upon its money— because the price of admission here is an very much lower than In Europe. We shall be glad to have another visit from Adelina Patti and Pauline Colson, with Brlgnoll, Suelni, Amodio, Stigelli, and Ferri. Contemporary oritioism, from Boston and New York, Informs us that Patti has considerably extended her repertoire. She will appear, on Mon day, in "The Barber of Seville ;" also, in the " Puritan'," and probably in Flotow's " Martha." "Der Freyaohuts," and " The Sicilian Vespers," will also be produced. WOLYSORN AND NORRSTOCE'S CLASSICAL 001. RXE.—The fourth of these entertainments will be given tomorrow evening in the Foyer of the Academy of Musk, and, like the preceding ones, will oombine some original with many standard compositions of highest merit, NATIONAL TERATRE.—That "observed of all observan t " Madlie Ella Zoyara, who drew so largo an audience on her first appearance on Monday, ettooeeded in attracting a still larger number of admirers lest night. She (if It be a she) is one of the most graceful, dashing, and fearless riders In the world. There will be a day performance this afternoon, at the usual hour, at which this famous equestrienne may be expected, and Mr. Rice will himself appear in the arena, with his horse " Ex celsior," and his pets. TIIIODON'S ART MUSEVII—(J/YeE'S NEW HAM) —There is to be a family matinin at Sanderson'a Exhibition Rome, this afternoon—a MISS of pie toilet and other displays which Art and Solemn unite to make perfect. &MR Bms.—This wizard will have an after• noon performance to-day at his new Temple of Wonders, northeast corner of Tenth and Chestnut. MoDosonan's GAIRTIIB.—The combination of the celebrated Carlo troupe, with Mr. hreDonough'a own admirable company, beaded by Hernandez, takes place this evening, we believe, and will be extremely attractive. Only, no the Gaieties ate always tilled, and it to a philosophleal truth that a quart bottle can only hold a quart, (though pint bottle' sometimes are quarts, tavern measure), we do net nee bow McDonough can put more people into his house than it can hold ! Mn. BewIIEL COWIELL.-11 may be necessary to state that Mr. Cowell, whe has made himself a great favorite in Philadelphia, as a comic, chase• ter-vocalist at Concert Hall, has a nightly oliange of programme. Philadelphia Trade Sale. Messrs. M. Thomas k Sons have sent us a portly octavo of 30l pages, being the Catalogue of the fifty-fourth Philadelphia Trade Sale of Stationery and Books, which will be commenced on Monday, March 19th, at their Sale Rooms, 139 and 141 South Fourth street. Paper, stationery, do., will be sold on that day, and the sale of books will begin on the following day, and last through the week. The principal publishers in Philadelphia, Boston, and New York, with a few "outsiders," contribute to this sale, and so extensively that the Catalogue makes a volume. Ono large Invoice, covering twenty•tivii pages, and embracing a large and very miscellaneous collection, is to be sold, it seems, for "Whom it may concern." So it Is In the Cata logue, and again in the Index. Rev. Mn. Guianese He New Youe.—This dis tinguished minister, who for several weeks preach ed to crowded congregations In Philadelphia, is meeting with unabated success in our Astor city. During the present week he Is preaching in New York twice every day to overflowing audiences. The impressions be has left in this community are deep and ineffaceable. We may state in this eon notion that the demand for the very excellent pkotographlo likeness of Mr. Guinness, executed by Mr. Gutekunst, Arch street, above Seventh, has increased rather than diminished since Mr. G.'s departure. This picture, by the way, Is almost universally conceded to be by far the moat truth ful of any that have been taken of him. All, there fore, who may. ‘ wish to secure a good picture of this gifted young divine, will find their wish gratified In the possession of one of Mr. Gutekunst's pic tures, OcoAsroarAr, THE PRESS.----PHILADELPHIA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1860: The Democratic State Convention. iCorrespondenee of The Frees,] AMMO. February 23,1860. I think It not at all eXtravagant in me to say that no Democratic State Convention, save the one that met in Itorrisburg.in INS, will be attended with so much ex oitement as the Convention that meets to-morrow. The candidates and delegates ate all on the ground, impa tiently awaiting the hour of assembling—a very rare thing to notice In political aseerablages. I feel very certain that if the Convention wee to organize this af ternoon there would belt full roll.eall. Wm. H. Witte, Jacob Fry, and John 1.. Dawson have taken quarters at the Keystone House, llefiTly opposite to Bourbon'''. The rooms of these gentlemen are thronged night and day with delegates, admirers and borers, who are dexterous ly working the wires, Cornelius 'Wendell. of Washing ton, is at Bourbon's, but for what purpose your norm pondent knoweth not. His presence is the subject of much comment, and several Administration men. thin morning, were circulating a rumor that he intended to mime up his printing account with Bowman and the President by lighting them In the lobby of the Conven tion. The Philadelphia (moue of office-holding performers are here. eager and ready for the show. Colleotor Baker is to act as ring -master, while the forlorn and insipid George Washington will appear in motley. Vandyke is here. very non•oommiltal and very confi dent. The District Attorney's centring match with the Virginia champion of Pennsylvania Demooraey brie made hi in suite a popularity. Vandyke civets to d , ill the Keystone Club, and will make a flare. ficht for Breokinridge. Henry M. Phillip'', ex-member or con green, is here, with the special interests of the Adininig tration in his keeping. Me came up this morning in the same train with the luniinous Senator Bigler. and Put spat Bourbon's. Bigler, as you know, Is the trusty and well-beloved friend of S. 8., and as the oracle of his wishes is Incessantly consulted by the tide-waiters and postmasters. who have come here to reeelve their final instruotions. What the purport of these Instructions is T have been unable to learn. Napoleon Bonaparte Browne, of the post Mike, is o n hand, to see to the Interests of the Administration, Is thin arduous work he is sainted by Marshal Yost, of the Eastern District, Marshal Campbell, of the West ern, and depute marshals enough to colonise a small island in the Pacific. Bieliardion L. Wright Is at the Keystone, trumpeting the good qualities of Mr. Witte, and, Mlcarelier-like. awaiting anything that may turn up. They gay that Wright would like to take Witte's place if lie is dropped on the second or third hallo, The argument In favor of Mr. Witte, that he re an at tractive speaker, would hardly apply to Mr. Wright. The peculiar qualities of the latter gentleman's elo quence are so marked . metaphysical. and statistinsl that the mhos°e of the State would to but questionably influ enced by hie persuasions. The programme of to-morrow's doings will be deter mined. it is raid, by the caucusing of this evening. The temporary chairmen will either Ise William P. Schell, of Bedford, or Oeo. Nelson Smith, with chances strong ly for the former. The contest for president will be be tween John Cessna. of Bedford, and Wm. H. Welsh. of York. Welsh hag the Inside track. Me Is said to be a very fair and impartial man, and the possessor of more than ordinary ability. On the question of contested seats there will be a most animated and exulting con test. The Administration men have marked it down on their shite In very large letters that Johnston and Jones shall be saori4eed. Of these, James F. Johnston is the most obiectionable. His seat IN contested by Samuel J. Randall, who has been here all day, working against Ins gallant end talented opponent. assisted by big younger brother.Bobert.and the rank and file of the Administration troopers. Johnston has not yet arrived, atd so loses the advantages in be gained by early and unlimited boring. I regret to Aar it, but nothing but strong sense of Justice will prevent him from losing his seat. As far es the Governorship is concerned, It is very cer tain that William H. Witte. of Philadelphia, will lead in the primary ballots. His friends claim for him a ma jority of the Convention already. nithoush I am inclined to regard them as being excessively fond of bragging. There is quite a strong party here who are favorable to taking up an entirely new man—one who has not been mentioned heretofore. Witte is looked upon as a:stand ing candidate for gulerpagorial honors, and occupies a very dubious and uncertain position. One portion of hie friends say he in a martyr to Administration influences, while another squad are urging him on account of his party fidelity and. Lecompton orthodoxy. Witte him self is wary. He can't be committed. He has but one lender and that le himself, and dose not care to buckle his fortunes to those of any otlier. The great argu ments in favor of Witte are, first, that he le an unre warded Democrat, and second, that as a stump-speaker he is the best before the ponvention. His opponents reply that Mr. Witte's rewards have beep greater than his deserts, and that the beat stump orat ors are not al ways the beat Governors. Perhaps his opponents have the hest of the argument, but Witte, it is thought, the best of the traek, The shrewdest politicians of the Convention are not the most ardent in favor of Witte. They say that Wit'e's friends are mercurial—that they cannot be in all cue, relied upon, and would unhesitatingly pack up their baggage and desert the "little Napoleon" of Philadelphia Denicooracy In tee evezt of certain inert. table contingencies. Mr. Fry's friends: led by such men as Arnold Plummer, Janet, Turney, and Henry L. Theffentinch, are united, energetic, and firm, and con fide nil, count upon a nomination on the fourth or fifth ballot by pinking up the stragglers from Witte's fold. John L. Dawson, of Payette, has a number of warm and devoted friends, among whom I notice Henry 0, Westley Frost, T. tf. &night, and the busy iliowne, iflg;pr, and Be er. Tile Lancaster dele gation are very enthusiastically in favor of Hon. George Henderson, the present excellent and eflieleut Mayor of Lancaster city. 'Mr. Henderson ih not here, pre ferring the post of duty at home to the post of 'boring abroad." I have Just raid that It is notaible la third candi date, not now before the ConVentinn, wool he taken up. The Witte men scout the idea, but there le some thing in it of more than usual signifmanoe. I would not it; g.lt be surprised to see the name of John Robbins, Sr.. of your eitr, PAR;nrt up on the third or fourth bit lot. Ile heel been at flourlatin's all flay, feeling the pulse of the Convention. He says nothing, but. Jikp the owl, does a great deal of thinking. Hendrick B. Wright is expected by the afternoon train. Tt.e Lurerne delegation have him in especia l ch a rge. they Clore the " goloner no though he were 4, god, and have a general 'idea that he ps the man for any and every position. Mr. Wright, I fear, will be gazetted among the "spattering." Col. William Hop. peg hay the Washington delegation in his favor, but ao regprde4 an out of the ring. I should not forget to lay that Hon. rioklepd, ex-camel oommiesioner. or ex-editor bf themnsyttiign inn, Is in town, as a general volunteer cand idate for the Gover norship. Mr. Strickland's chances for the nomination may be more easily imagined than degoribed. Biotwi i thstandins the pertains' preferences of many oy the del,iirated,f think It most probable that the dele gate, to Charleston will gli'llninetruMed, This Will be suggested and 'metallicd as a compromise 1111 Millie. The Convention will appoint the delegates to Charleston. The redoubtable Bigler, mudded by the buey Browne and 'Baker. has been engaged all morning In button-11°161ns 'delegistee, to order to persuade them to endure, the resolutions presented by Gie I 4 a pe rt Oo r vil canons, in reference to the adoption of a slave cede for the Territories, if It should be szbmltted to the Con• Yeetlen. The platform will probably be framed in nn. coi'danoe with pie expert pf the Senate Committee, and !si proposed to present 4 boorpi.he nomination of a candidate (a :',6iirot is Irmo. nolOs in in Nis secure a% endorsement of the &nerd; Adalnlitystion. When a majority has chosen a candidate, however, it will be wpm to placing him upon a platform that would inevitably mule his defeat. In Bush an event the probability of a itronK endorsement of Mr. Bucha nan's policy would be much leci titan if the resolutions were adopted prior to the nomination. If the General Administration is endorsed the friends of Governor Porker will insist on his endorsement, and I think this will be conceded. I send you, as a matter of I nterest, the names of the delegates at the Convention. I have aucesseded in get ting a complete and current list, after some trouble: let ni_ohard Vans. contest ed by Wm. AL Reilly ; 2. /amen NoLaughlin ; 3. Pm ola N Chadwick: 4. Thomas .1 Roberta. It—Chester and Delaware—Wm. H. Geiser. Hl—Nontsnmery—Philip S. (lerherd. V—Bucka—Franklin Vansandt. V—Lehigh end Northampton—Beni. Fusel. Vl—Barka—Jeremiah Baseman. Vll—Sehuylkill—Henry .1. Headier. Vll—Carbon, Monroe. him. a.^.o Wayne—lL S. Molt. IX—Bradford, Susquehanna. wyoming, and Sullivan —C. L. Ward. . 1 7 (-1;uzerne-9aptuP1 q, Turner. 311—Tlogn. Potter, aloKeen, and Warren—Judge Ly gar—Clinton, Lyomning, Centre, and Union—C, 11, otil4 XI —Flnyder, Northumberland, Montour, and Colum n,- nut LeidY. X t --Cumberland, Juniata, Perry, and Mililin—T. P tlalr, XV—Dauphin and Leban ß on—Cyrua D. (Hettinger. X Vl—Laneaater—Joko ankin. A. B. Bo*. XVlr—York—John A AM. X Vlll—Adama. Fran)bn. and Fidton—J, B. Hansom. • X IX—flomeraet, Bed ord, and Huntingdon—William XX—Blair, Cambria and Clearfield—O. Nelson Smith. iXt—lndlana and Attnetrong—Clark Mr —Westmoreland and Fayette—Weitley Praia. Xlll—Waolunglon and Oreene—Hon. Wm., Mont- XXI V—Allegheny—Ed. Campbell. J. it. Philhpa. X XV—Heaver and Butler—Thomas Ounnspg h. in. XVl—Lawrenee, blamer and Venango—Francis errirk. XXVI i—Erie and Crnirforti. dy XL. XV B lll—Clarion, Jefferion. Pore, led Elk—Keane ood. d REPIIRMIT ATM biLlokygi. Philadelphia-1 Charles M. Leieenrino. contested by]Dr. Jones 2. Thomas Daley; 3. Wm. V. McGrath; 4. John Casein; a. James F. Johnston. contested bY Samuel J. Randall ; Edward McGovern' 7. Mathias Walters, contested by Albert Lawrence; 8. Lafayette Baker; IL John Apple; 10. Charlie Johnson; 11. Michael Magee 11, John Fullerton; 13. John Ward it. Ben. W. Baker la. John K, Gamble; la. Robert Allen ; 17. Isaac Leech. Delaware—N. K. Schell. Chester—William G. Maitland, E. Evens, John (W -ritten. Montgomery—Solomon Feather, Joseph E. Yeager, Joseph Rex, Iduoke—Oliver P. Amu. Paul APpobach. Northampton—Como W. Stein. Joseph Cole. Lehign and Carbon—Nelson Weisel, A. U. Brod heed. Monroe end Pike—Luolen F. Berner, Wayne—Ephraim W. Hamlin. Lo gents—Daniel Rankin, Richard Hutchins, Stanley T. Woodward. Susquehanna—A..l. Oerritson. Bradford—John F. Means. Planets Smith. Wyoming, Sullivan, Columbia. and Montour—Thorne, Onterhaut. named by Wyoming . One to be elowen. I Licoming and Clinton—A. J. Dietrich, Richey R. Bridgens. Centre—Colonal.John T. Hoover. imenbeic Union. Snyder, and imitate—Major John Carmine,. atonal Reuben Keller. Northumberland D. L, hfontsomerY. Sehuylkill-0. .Strau b , J. M. Wetherill, Samuel H. Shannon. Dauphin—Richard J. Haldeman, George Bowman. Lebanon—John Fraul. Derks—Georso Bohan, Eli Filbert, Charlet, W. Fuer. Lanoaster—H. M. North, William T. McFall. J. K.. Raub, Jacob 0. Peen. Cumberland and Perrynbariaii K. Handel. Cumberland and J. B. Bretton, lam Meek. Adams—Joel D. Danner Franklin and Fulton—D. W. Rowe, S. M. Woodcock. Bedford and Somerset—John Cessna, William J. Bear. Huntingdon—Jacob Cresnwrll. Blair—J. R. Crawford. lambria—Robert 1,. Johnson. ndiana—Joseph ht. Thompson. Armstrong and Westmoreland Robert Warden, Richard Graham, Dr. John McNeal, Fayette—T. B. Searight. ifggear-1 Lindsey' Aillegheny—John,Swan, ; James A. Gibson, Body Pat terson, Dr. John Calohan, David 1 , 71lott• relleaver and Lawrence—Samuel B. Wilson, Wm, H. Reynold‘ Butler—John T. Bayard, John Graham. Mercer and Venn nico—Aniol d Flintier, J. K. Kerr. Clarion and Forest—P. Kerr. Jefferson and Clearfield—J. T. Thompson, E., R. Brady. • • AtoKean and Elle—C. B. Hyde, .1, B. Ityde. Crawford and Warren—V. Phelps, Wm. Patton. Erie—W. A. Galbraith. W. Merman. Potter and 'riorit—al. A. Elliott. E. George. I nen among the crowd of tailitioians in front of the hotels ox-Bonator Brodhead, Hon. Ala raoker, Hon. William Montgomery, end every Democratic member of tile Legislature with but one or two (mentions. COULD NOT "TARE TIM COM/41fiBION."—Elonle time sines Nicholas Longworth, of Cincinnati, shipped to the care of the American Minister In London, Mr. Dallas, ten boxes of sparkling Ca. tewba, requesting him to be so very good as to accept one boa. for his own use and tnra over the other nine to his wine merchant, with instrdotions to sell them for what price he thought best, and account for the net proceeds to one NloholaaLong worth, of Cincinnati, Ohio direct. Mr. Dallas, however, returned the subjoined reply: "Dora Silt I Yours ta received, informing," no., &a. " I cannt approve of our procedure. I cannot re concile t he dutlee of Minister rienipeteritieryor the United States at this Court with than of a cruninlesion Illeropliit o . u g 11111 not reoeiVe tbies'gra;e4.ol3.ta,,,,, THE LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. MlTill CONGRESS.-FIRST SESSION, On motion of Mr. MASON, of Melilla. a resolution wee adopted calling on the President to furnish a cove of any report node by the commissioner for marking' the boundaries between the United States and Orem. Britain. On motion. the hour or meeting woe fixed at 13 o'clock M. ‘ on end after Thumb P arse xt. hlr,OA NI ERON .of naen a. Presented a peti tion for the modification of the tariff. Mr. your, of Yeont. from the Committee on Claims, made a report, moompanied by a hill. explana tory of the not to carry Into wept the ninth finale of the treaty of tub, with Spain Ordered to be printed. Mr. BAY'S. of Misaimitivi. moved to take up the bill authorizing the sale or the Federel mine to the neveral Mates nod mutating the aPpointment of superintend ents of the poplin armories The question being on the amendment aritainting su perintendents frem the camera of the Ordnance Corps. Mr. HALE, of New teem lure , opposed it. Ile had examined the studies of the students of the military medenues and found nothing in them to fit them for theseposte. Mr. DAVIS. of Misaissam, mid the Elevator's re marks had no application to the bill. On motion of Mr. MASON, the Senate then went Into executive ammo. ' On the mimeses . of the dome, the Benet+ adjourned. HOUSE OP REPRESENTATIVES, Mr. MILLSON. or virgioi.,,oftrectiy endeavored to 'oration' a resolution providing for the election of ri clieplein on to-morrow. Mr. SHERMAN, of Ohio, from the Committee of Ware and Meats. reported a bill providing that it Mall he the duty of the President to rouse his annual mem. We end the moompanyingExecutive documents to he printed, and oepees delivered to the Secretary of the Senate and Clerk of the noose In time for distribution nt the commencement °remelt session of congress : end that the said pristine shall lie °Med he the printer of the Senate and printer of th se at the rates pre scribed be law t provided that o elf of the sum now allowed for composition he a ll owed to each. and no lir tti more. It is also provided that ten thousand eddittonal copies of the wanes and the report. proper of the de. pertments and bureaus, omitting the Matilda. be printed for the nee of the Senate. and twenty-five thou sand for the House I and that five thousand of the coo- ' plea documente ter each be printed in addition. The bill wee referred to the Committee on Printing. ;fir. SHERMAN also reported a hill proposing that in place of the present mileage of members of Congress. twenty cents per mile lie allowed. to be computed by a straight geogrephical line from point to point t all other ens o r parts of rats on thin subject to he led, Mr. (SHERMAN said that some of the member, re ceive from *5.4130 to SO OW Mileage. Everybody admits that the present system is unequal and unfair. It was adopted at a time when it required as many weeks as it row doesilnys to set here, anil wee Intended to par member, for loss of time as well as the expense' of travel. Tina Mate ofatlairadoee not now extra. He bed before him a table showing that a slam of4lllol.e(eper annum could he effected by the pro reform. The amount provided by the hill is more t an enough to Day the rammer! of a member a and rum Washington travelling in the best style, with his wife and children, if he has nor• hl r. WASHRURNE. of Illinois, ilenreeeteil hasty legisletino on this sill:dent. and suggested that the toll be referred to the Committee of the Whole ort the state of the Onion. They should do nothing to place it in the power of wealthy men only to coins here to serve the eountrb Mr. Bif bltalaN replied that suah a reference of the bill would lie,mbetentially. its defeat. Mr. MAYNARD. of Tortneseee , wanted to know how the proposed straight line was CO to ascer tained. Mr SHERMAN replied that It was to he determined by the Committee on Mileage. Mr. FLORENCE, of Pennsylvanin , agreed with Mr. Wmlikii roe. , He moved to lay the whole ailment nn the table. The time consumed In the ronniderttion of the bill would coat more than it was worth. The (louse refused to. table the bill—yeas M. hers 140 Mr. JOHN COCHRANE, of New York, understood that tho prevent rates eve to be repealed , and the mem bers VI tle mid the actual expenses of themselves and families. Mr. SHERMAN. No. The bill as fowled. provide, that le stead of forty cents. ell now, only twenty cents per mile is to be allowed. end the distance computed by a straight geographical hoe, instead of the mode 'non e% trevaltelf r. STAN ON, of Ohlo, sold that if the bill goes over. this would be the lest they would hear of it. He hived a vote would be Islas, as It amid he put on its passage tinmedlarely. Everybody understood its nature. Mr. I'll ELPS. of klissoun, desired that the bill Amid be printed. and referred to the Committee of the Whole on the state of the Onion. It would be at the head of the calendar. with the exception of two or three neero• prietiee tulle. neilpould, therethre. anon be reached, Mr. SH KOUT: pre f erred thatthe r .location 07) lie meson shoe lueekli I.e , but ouldedngent to its P°I4t,.°I3rITTIVAI Tuesday wouldreduce the mileage to ten oerts per voile. The House seconded the demand for the previous au•stion. Mr. LOVEJOY said it arm simply n bill to put tho le glelntion of the country Into the hands of -- (He war here loudly interrupted lir ones of order, and the conclusion of the sentence was lost.l D uir tion was then (leg ro4 , t h tl. mo ! .. n to refer the Union . t a h n e d r rt n iraa " n t rxri o ti negatived — yeas 37? :fi t y h o e 114 a. te The curium bill was then read. It proposed. after the gth of March next. In lieu of the mi leage now pro vided by the not of IPSO, that the actual expenses of members and their families. le coming to and return ipnatifrom Washington to their place of matinee. b• This bill reported by Mr. Sherman was a indMitiits for this—allowing twenty cents per mile, to be computed by a straight geographical line, and cutting oft the con- Atrial'. mileage. , Mr. WASH ourpm. of Illinois. wanted to know bow large a Ininil• the original hill included. Mr. JOHN COPHR APE said there should be some limitation of %oiliest for while the followers of a pa triarch (mem Ptah would be provided for, apoor isehe• tor. like lionselfiwould Some have alone. (Leiltliter.l Mr. HDEflattifif replied, that when the original tell came up to 1.0 acted , on, the limitation es to families mold tie fixed. Mr. DAVIS, of Indiana, moved to table the subject,. Netatived—r•es Sr. nays la Mr. WAIHIBURNE. of Wining, wanted to know whether tho amendment would not absorb more money than the oils met 1011. Mr. SHERM AN replied in the negative. Mr. JOHN COCHRANE inquired what should be con sidered the famil & linohelor. Mr. SHE RM AN replied that his substitute had nothing to do wit that. Families were spoken of only in the ortgluel hi 1. Mr. COCI( RA NE. Ah! But I want to Dona back to the family relenting. (Laughter I Dilatory Metiorle were made by the cam:mote of the bill yitelly, the substitute. reported 1 , .l r. Sherman for the original bill,arag adopted—yeas /19. nays It. After other dilatory molions by the opponents of the lull— Mr. SHERMAN moved the previous question on it. nasaase, sat inn that if this was not now ordered the bill would an o.er to the Speaker's tat e, and there was no telling when it wow again be resehed. • Vtll /Pe patirrin Pt enTnn. Further proreed so were intermitted by Mr. RUF FIN. of North Carolina. ruing to a privileged question. His name, upon the lan vote for pnnter yeatardile. woe not noon the Journal. He wished to enter his mo tion, to comet it. [Ms movement created mush interest all over the hall. Hy the recording of Mr. Ruffin's name for Mr. tilouhrenner, the election would be vitiated, as Mr. Fora obtained the exact number to elect the choke, 6 (wording_ to the senouncement. be fir Mr.st Olt ERMA innlnsuredthit pig Own moilem should put. '; • Mr. RUFFIN said he would hereafter tame up his aneetion. Mr. OTOIC R 3. of Tennessee, remarked that he foond that his own nam t had been reworded twine, both for Mr, iiiosabretiner nod for Mr. Heaton, while he voted for the latteryeetleman. T he SPEAKER ito Mr. ?Holies) said it wt.' not wi on th Al t r. " FtliliF,N of Penneylv . enia. remarked to Mr. Stokes that he had o n reading frem a nesrenaper. The Howe then adjourned. The Democratic State Convention at Rending. 7111 g CITY CRO.POIto YO lehl , XllB-IcIITIeB PRO. APTCTAPAVOIIMIGS—ARISIi'AIL OP fllE KEISTOIL CLUZI, RIADIAI, Feb. 23.—The eitv in in a whirl of ext`te merit this evening, and crowded to excess All the 'bo ttle erP overflowing. In consequence of thp difficulty to obtain quarters. relief of the private citizens have thrown open their bootee for the ecoommodation of their iriends, and divide) , a commendable spirit of hovel tight,. The trilled from Philadelphia Harrisburg, sail other points, whieh arrived to day.were all fined with delegate■ to the pernocratia Cor i i i venUon, to be held to- Writs 111 1 1: 8 115 . eurriert; are at Bart s Key stone House, wli re the atirao lone mainly centre. The current. this evening, Is ap p arently Illation in favor of mr. Witte. This friends of the several candidate' are in canons to night. The Keystone Club numbering ishundred or more of their Itieitiliare , accoutpitnied by peeve Mess baud, arrive at about thin evening. They bro_ught wilt, t e entail oarlitoo and tired neveral round. on their arrivel at the depot. They were entbuinasticallr vreelVetii Baltimore Democratic Convention. BALTINOIIII, Feb, 23.—At the meeting of the Demo crania Lonvention, test night. a proposition Wm eaopted to choose eleven delegates to re/relent the city In the Btatet Convention. which wilt meet at ititltimore to March to choose deli:wraps at large to the charleston convention, and nine Von4las and two Admit:munition celestite. were elected. A resolution VMS M40;44,04, by a vote or os tone, de claring Senator 'Bowden to he , the fiat alleles of the De ntoarntio party pf Bettinnire for the Pregidepoy t and also sustaining the action of the Fourth Detnooratio conaresinor Contention , which eleoted Nobert J. Brent and ' homes M. Linehan, who are Douglas nun. to the Char estou Convention. The Convention then adjourned time die, with three sheers for Douglas. From Wn gorAiumwrox. vatmoos Mears by a lett er from the Secretary of State. emnrounioated to theft° .• to-day, in eomplianc.o with a resolution of that body calling for n COPY of out poleon's recent totter on the sob. feet of ooninieree and tree trade, that it has not keit . communicated to the Esecotave by the (Mvernment Franotl, nor hair it beep transmitted bt the acting Charge d'Affai re of the United States at arm. .ft printed cop), however, 1.11. transmitted by the atter for the in of the State Department, of which a translation hes been made. The sloopmf-war Vitifelinef, late of the Artisan squadron, ma Leon ordored to Boston, and not to New rk, as erroneously stated. The records at the Santo Department show that the total another of persona embarking at foreign ports for the United States, during the) ear 100), was 165,600, of whom 9d o were males The Mexican treaty wen to•dartdeletted for ****** hours in executive immion. Throe who have not 4.' aided to oppose It say their minds are open to convic tion. The (unfit opportunal wall be afforded for dis ou.,,lon. The Boum mileage reform bill. owing to the failure to order a vote on Its tingsago. igeht to the Beelike; table, anal takes ito place there as the sixth or seventh bill on the calendar. ----,----- Tke Republican National Convention. CHANGE OP THZ TIME OP MIRTIKO—THZ NTH or ALIANT, Feb. 29.—The Repoliroan National Com• matey. him ChSflifed ftlWillt, for the !fleeting of the Ne tionst Convention at Chicago, to the 16th of May. Tke following a the card of the Committee onnouncing film delermtnation HAPUBLICAN NATIONAL ALBANY. Feb. 28, I.B6O—The qUealion of the proproty of ()hanging the tone of holding the Republican National Convention nam been submitted to the members of the Republi can National tional Conlanittre, and their views having been communiosted by totter. It is determined, in accordance with the wishes of a majority thereof. that the laid Con vention be held on Vi'mlneallaw the Pith of May next. linwia n. Mottoas, Chairman. Wu. Al. QUAIL EeoretarY. The Baltimore Cat , Passenger Rail road Question. BALTIVORI, Feb. 23.—The xpeolal committee ep Painted by the Leguttatute t on the Halt-mare city pas senger railroad question. mnde to-day majority and minority reports, The majority, ten in number, re ported tri favor or awing lb. charter to Messrs. meek & Cu. of Philadelphia. 'the minority, onninstins of nine of the committee, reported airninst Fronting the charter to these Panto., on the ground of the alleged fraud in obtaining their grant from the City Coun cil.. A large delegation of the friends of the three rent fare bill went to Annapolis today to oppose the Brock Interest. -4,-- Tragedy in Virginia-• Three Brothers Killed, RtviimmeD, Va., Feb. 1.1.—A terrible a ff ray oecurred In Patsy Nano' county, Yesterday, insulting in the death of three brothers. Capt. Vincent Witehers was engaged In collecting testimony to he ?mad In a suit for the Monroe of his grand-daughter from a man named Clemens. aour,e alllTOrad e mewl, and obtattlina the usistance of his brother. they ;nada an attack upon the captain, firing their ?evolvers nt him, and gracing hie olothink. Mr. Witching Immediately returned the alio%s, end the brothers tell dead at eaoh other', nile, limits this encounter it grand-son or Mr. Witchers. named Su ith. attempted to interfere. when another brother of Clemens fired upon him. finial' umnedietelY overp.wered turn and killed him with hi, bowie•knife. Capt. Witcher. Is seventr•hve yearn of age, and well known as the former president of the i3ans die Railroad Company, The New Jersey Legislature. TIM 1101101CXX AND LIKW , IIIK amLuou. 7'neveoir. N. J . Feb. 28.—A test vote, which wan had in the 11pUlle to.dny. on en amendment to the Ho boken and Newark Railroad bill, showed that it has twent two opponents and thirty-nix I riends. All the amendments were voted down. The 'louse is still in SO6lllOll. The Ho h r . ,..ken_Railrosil hill has been ordered to a thud reading Ng the a mendments prevailed excet suet. as fnehde of the bill consented to. Theb ill will name us on its anal passage t 44 morrow. 'the House adlournecl at 9 &clock this e, ening. BFMI.OOCABIONAL. liegielniure...Extrti Nero]ion. Sr, Lott's, Feb. Its.— he extra session of the Mis souri Legislature, called by the Governor, to take ea lion on the railroad tolls, met at Jet Wpm; yesterday. An orgemention was ellerted or the elootion at Chris- Maher Kriblien, of Bt. Lone, as Seenker of the House. NOIIIIIVIIi of the Anglo-Saxon. PORTLAND, Fab. 28—Itlideleht.--nere ate aiRDI Of the etemehip Attelo- Saxon, nowdun With Liverpool delve 10 the nth MTh U. 9, OAPItOL. WAIIIIINGITON. Fab, SENATE. PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE rebrtlAr7 SR, IMO The Senate is not in tin/ion. The House met at In o' 11 c lo c k Mr. O'fil girt presented a memoial from the City Connell. of Philadelphia in favor thee passage of Ike supplement to the act incorporating Lehigh and Del aware Wster Oap Railroad Company. Sraorm moved that the Committee on Relined. be discharged from the further consideration of the bill referred to, and that it be plaried on the anvil. calen der for to day. After debate the motion wee withdrawn. 'fir standing committees rearmed. es committed. a 1.111 In regard to the rights of farmers in the markets Fof riuladelphia ; a bill incorporating the Farmers* Hole Company ; a bill iecorpomtins the Heaton and /Nazareth Raelroad; one incorporatins a steamboat corn puff ; one incorporating the veneers United Insurance Cutapany ; e supplement to the act incorporating the Farmers Market Company y enact establls linga Hoarse of correction in Philadelphia. The following wore reported av amended tAn not - corporatur the Manor Market Company ; one incorpo rating the stns Insurance Company. The House then went into Committee of the Whale, and took up the private calendar. when the following hulls were severally considered and passed first reading Au act to repeal the 6th section of an act supplementery to an set to ootmolulate and amend the several set e rota tive to a rene rat 'yearn 0/ education by common schools. vaned June I.ltlt._lol, and fur other pom my: an sot to incorporate the Mille raburg,Grat atown, and Rauch (Yap Railroad CO.l an not to restore Russel. Hadlock , of the township of Litchfield Bradford co.. to the rights of ci t seeable ; an not relative to viewers in the boroush of garrieburs ; an act relative to she riff., and prothonnia t ee' coots in Clearfield oo ; an act to authorial the ap- Pointment °fan additional notary pal-lie in Luzern. on.; a impalement to an sot to incorporate the Sowing Fund Society of Germantown and its vicinity. pused the nth f April. 18641 an not to incorporate the Lime kiavint• Institution of Lewisburg ; alt art fixing the place ol holding elections in Blythe township.Sehuylk ill county ; en act relative t• common solusols la the lorough or Allen own. in Lehigh county ; nn art to inooreorate the Dime Savings. of Harristorg ; an notdeclaring Roaring Run. in the °minty of Clearfield. a potato hie h aver an act Myer-ate a former part of Wallace street, in the city of Philadelphia: an sot to incorporate the Tuscarora Female Institute• an net extending the °barter of the l'eanselvama Salt Blanufaotunns Com• any, under the ;renames of the general manufactunag lows of the Tilt of April, 1846; en act t ) Incorporate the sw, Hope Cemetery a supplement is the set to incorporate the Crawford (Runty Mutual fluorine. Company 1 an act to Incorporate the Bethlehem Market Company. in Bethlehem horouith.Nortbempton county; an ant to incorporate the Forty Fort Cemetery As.oois tus ; an net relative to the ellartiene Cemetery; ;dement to the several acts Incorporating the boroorh or Pottsville ; en act ementementery to an act to incor porate the alien and Eat: Penesboromih Mutual Pies Insuranea Comptor of Cumberland county. approved the of April. led; an not suppleirnmtary to an het to author Re the school d tremor. of Chester and Dela- Ware counties to select sit*. for echoot-hnusea, ap proved May May Btb. lear ; an ant to empower Edward D. Pruett to main sin a sheer boom and to erect a harbor boom in Pine creek; further supplement to en eat to in. corporate a company for making en artifirial road by the brat and nearest route from Waieriord, in the county of Erie,. through Meadville and Franklin. to the Susquehanna river. at or near the mouth of Anderson's creek. In. Clearfield counts ; an act to deolnre a portion of Yellow creek in Indiana coun ty a public, hi g hwey an act to Incorporate the trtntreea of the township of Seeking. ~cactus empty I &air to enlarge the powers of the Centenary Food Society o Erie Annual Conferenee , and the Centenary Pan n• eisty or the Pittsburg Annual Conference of the Metho dist Episcopal Chnnrh : a supplement to an act incorpo dating the Nanticoke and Unshelled!. Tu Mk" Road I,loropeny, passed Apral Ist, thlej an act Inoorporatiog Steueliburg Hors* Company of Berke eostaty. for pur suing and detecting horse thieves end other robbers{ supplement to an not entitled an act ireorporatier the Pittsburg. Allegheny. and Manchester Passancer Rail way Comenny ant 10 Incorporate the Pittsburg and Manchester Passenger and Freight Railroad Com pany .• an art relstlve to the estate of D. Peltier; an act to refue.d the amount or enrolment tax said upon an act to incorporate the :rational Art Association; an act to MyA. Iledateelman, Mictley, and Peter Mickley for damage. occasioned by the Gettysburg ex tension of the Pennsylvania Rsdroad, as awl-dad hr the Auditor General and Attorney General; an set for the• protection of persons navigating the A llegheny river: an set declaring Re rosy r co u nt i es,s county. Laurel rue. in Clearfield end Elk and Lick in Clinton county. Podia highways; an set rela tive to roads and brides.. and road and bridge-Idea - a. and viewers In the comae of Schuylkill ; an mot to lay nut a State road In Butler and Alleg heny comities.; en ant to incorporate the city of 'Hardeners, in the county of Dauphin; a resolution relating to the ax - prams attending the idknese and death of Samuel Ballet, a ;member of the last House of R 44 n yes ; An act for the relief of Mercer-horoogh enh oot &s -tyle, in Mercer eocntY I an act to incorporate the In ternational Hotel Company ; an attest to o haps* the name and ass .of the Pint Ries Resimeet of Philadelphia ; a supplement. to Me Rat to ineorporate the Ilarthall Re rinse Institution Of /Philadelphia; Co Let to inert rate the Farmers' wasters Market Col:dean Y f sh ant - . ra rata aart of new Germentown road. lin Gls city of Philadelphia; an got to incorporate the Philadelphia City Telegraph Company; an act to incorporate the Western Life !entrance Company of Philadelphia: an act supplementary to the charter of the 'Peen mutual Life Insurance Company 1 • supplement to an art to in corporate the Philadelphia and (Anal Railroad Com pany. The bill relative to ll.e polies of the city of Philadel phia. Was objected or the calindae by Mr. M o Donoug h. The supplement to an net to troencs for the a rimuou ore house for the employment and support of the par in the bounty of Wealmortiland, was objected of by Mr. Coulter. The hill to wangler/Id Harrison them McDonough, ciy of Philadelphia. wee oblected off by Mr. as was also the hill to vacate two certain street. In the square bounded by Spruce. Pine, Twentieth and Twen ty-first streets. The supplement to the art to incorporate the Dela ware Avenue Market Company of Philadelphia was oh- JectLd tilt by Mr. MoDonpugh. The bill to authorize the erection of a bridge cermet, the Delaware river Wag old scted Nl' by Mr. Long. The committee then rose, Add tie Bret Mn bill. on the also e hat were read a second and third time and poised finally. The House, at o'tlock, nd,ollrned uli Prids; next , t wolof,k. The Lost Steamer Hungarian. A VISIT TO TEE WitECK. Movrawat. Feb. 2:l.—The following despatch was re °el twd last evening 8414 Na TON, N. Felt. 77.—T0 If. Allen, Montreal I arrival here in the Elohemtan, nt aim s o'clock this monitor. One bat, compiate, with the oars lashed to the thwarts, has been found. bottom op, at Port Woos, • nereral pieces of the other Neste here been picked up otf Cape sable. The goods of the wrecked reset are strewn atone the lamoti from Tasket Island around to Cape ftstle, awl as far east as Ratted Island. No more Indies harp yet Loon found. t will proceed pp the wreck this afternoon. A. CSAW7OIO. The Canadian Parliament. 7116 CIOYiRMOR'S APIIIKEI-161T, rim OF TI! PRINCE. tale. Fob.E3.—The Parliament of Canada opened to ay. T e Govsnmr's speech eonsrg A the statement that It l' ara r n ' ls e l ' e l V i ttt i ll i m i lse t ti:f l a s elory int made with the Canadian steamers; allude* to various local questions ,• and suggests legislation in the eurren op and mom of bent notes; oongratuletes the Govern ment on having marmounted the enanciel difficulties. and sere that while the commercial depression haa di to iniehed credit.jt morasses the necessity for a 1/{lOl economy. The Governor rejoitee that there are bat Lew aehiatte of ao Important ottatatlpt ‘lttal4 need le gislation. The Kan'ins-Legislature TAN 1144 ASO4IIIIIIIO SLAYSILY PASSID OTIS TRR 6011RMOIVI VITO. Sr. Loins Fob. yB.—Th• bin abolishing shivery is Kansas bas bas passed by the hliitglatiois of Stint Territory Over ‘he Tito Ff lioSstrior Medan,. Fire at Glasgow, Missouri. TEIBMICV TACTORT Civelmwsitt..eb. r9.—The tobacco rectory of (none %titer. near , filituow, hfnsourl. wee dextroyed b y An on &oder, The loss imnuptiki cuo tobswo. and et,our In nen notes, which wort 17, the safc rue at Girard, Pa. l'lTTenrlci, Feb. —Fnur stores have been destroy • ed by fire in the tors or Girard, !evolving lone of 110.- ono. TA teonnts Isere R. It. Sem. C F. Hoak - well, Hinds k Battle., L. Lovertdse,ti.Kepell, J. Berkey, and W. Nett. Fire at gt. Louis. lit, 1 OCII. ai—Thq lipoke.';ons• or Ntimtl. Rod & wit a vantitr or beton HO rd... wia burnt th room og. rho los e hmOuoto4 to 11:O.M.O. Markets by' Telegraph. 814T1 , 4011,1 , . Feb. U.—Flour firm bat not noire ; Toward anal 0h10,11560 ; Cay Mulls held at 4i man ff. heat active; red,411301/1 ; white gal M. Corn deelinins. WAR/bushels mold al le &wale*: white, Toon.° ; ell w, Thom by weight. Meil Pork is lets firm, and held at all anon; imam 414 So. Wh1a1.47 firmer; sales it 2.5 c. Night bills on Nov York 1.10. Moms. Pen. I7.—Cottnn firm ; isles of SAO odes; (clued middling QUAIIIIOII here improved. THE CITY. AMUSEMENTS THIS KVSNINO lltejoist. T , Welron weer. barinelei Fashib and Rine's greet dhow The Eks phnet of 6isni ; or, The Fire Kiec'e Y 0.:." WALaIIT-AMIFT lA7IIII. awns! Warr end Ninth.—" The peop le' s !Alma " ' The !doer's Vtotim "—" The Limerick Bob" k CLAIIIIre AICII-BTRIIT TB Aron street, &boys Stath.—"Ootoroon." hICDONOI 7 / 1 11 . 11.1ATITIII, RIOS street, below Third. — Entertainments nightly. Eissinutsorr's noose, Jayne's common wealth Building Chestnut street, 'boys 'lath.—TßW don's Mailunt of Art TIMM'S 07 Worms's, nprtheut corner Tenth am: Chestnut streets. - 81(par Blitz. ArADFIrr or FIVE A 1,,. 1016 Chestont street. Churah's Tainting. " The Heart o( the Amite." C.OrtrIIT HALL. ChiltnOt Itrilet, •bora Twelfth. Mr. Sant CoweLl's Molest Hatertelameat. Tuts Italtrient COURT Hover.—Public at tention is being attracted to the eueetiolt of better accommodations for our munielpal court& it ia gue rally conceded that the buildings in which they are law field are stievouslyansdequate, and deficient its comfort and couvenienee. There Is an talent 'Mental for the erection of a court-house which shall be in keering with the greatness of the city. Bet the bill now Wire the Common Council, seys the Erre., learner. pro- I 'ding for the but Wog of an edilioe Path and Cheat nut streets, which will make an internee, enoroach• meet upon Independence liquare.meets with no fatter anywhere outside of our municipal lg culture. Far tram mimicries any more o f that consecrated ground, Councils outfit to clear away the unsightly strueturee on Chestnut street, leaving Independence Hall alone to aband there, with tie throng of paUletio ariomations. Our municipal faith is pledged to a Ger hin extent. to render that Peuare srprthy of the mogul ment which is to be erected there by the Thirteen Ori cinal BMWs. Besides, as the special guardians of the Hail and the ground which have so deep en tritemilt for the whole country. it to our eolerun cloy to prohibit any further occupation of the Nquare by bul:dince. ne w, e• to preserve it in a more attractive condition than it exhibits at present. pi-T=lmin however. may not be influenced by pa - triotics arguments In that case, we appeal to them to have an eye to the future. 't he corner of Sixth mid Chestnut streets is no longer the centre of the city. At Penn Square. where two of our most splendid avenues t a n ?dr It. e tc h h a i tt ampleG teexpti for generationa Cogrt :p e t a n nd inoonvenient or e a c he n. of. There is the meet suitable location for the building Cowie:le ropoee to steel. We earnestty hope that the presen t 'oeuvre will be defeated on T i pursday. blnt only our own citi zens, hut the people o the whole Union. would tie Midi fled io eomplainieg o its musette. Let this bill be re Jetted . and when the condition of the munipial trea sury will warrant the outlay. give us public bui lding. on Penn ftquare, such as will not have to be abandoned by our tribunals during the next twenty years. Aral. Esrey!, STOrge. &C,--The ibilOWinit ate the sales of real estate, 'toots, en., made by M. Thomas & Eons, at the Philadelphia Exchange, yestenlay, at noon: 8.50 Delaware Mutual Insurance Co. scup, 19 7, CO per cont. Sgpo six per cent, coupon bond Logan County hllning and Manufacturing Company. of Virg - mm.9B pa{[ cent. 1 fullshare igu new shares) &111 Frenetic° Lapd Asso ciation. $62.5. 2 full, shares 140 new shares) `Jan Fraimislo Land As- Hociatinn. share Proladelphis Library Company, 654). Mercantile Library Company, 6 b , ,j. Two three-story brick dwellings,tl. E. corner of 9 hind and Buttonwood streets 67,000. Three story back dwelling. Washington street. be tween k.ighth end Ninth streets, late Atoyamensing, ..39c0 Large brick Wilding. formerly used es 11 church,n Queen streetitiermantown , adjoining the Lutheran church . At private rale since host report —Three-story brick store And dwellinr. N. W. corner of Seventh and Par. risk streets. !MOOS. nine-story brick dwelling, Plimenth street shove Par. Toth, arLyou. Three-story brink dwelling adjoining the above, an north aide, 81,zso. TROUDLE.—An eccentric genius, named William lassart,who a probably known to many of our renders Iri ni the fact that for months past be he. been in the habit of daily walking up and down Chest nut street, earning a tin kettle, iniartahly eontsining brick. lint, and wearing a piece of dirty carpet for a 'mewl, last evening, .between six and seven oclock, without asking permission of Its owner, earned the door-mat from the pavement in front of Bailey's iswel n establtshrnent, in Chestnut street, below Ninth. Wrapping it up under "shawl," he walked slowly to Tenth street, where he was accosted by one of the reserve corps. who °Nerved the theft. and was taken before Alderman Bottler. Ile wee in greet tronble in the office of the masistritte . , and inquired anxiously what was the mat le r. The alderman, being in a fanny ynood, rnplitit. 'The plat," and 504 the discon solate to Alolitmenatng, RAISING THE (t TlN."—Ye.NtOrday afternoon Alderman Heitlor had before him a young mon named Henry Feleman. who hot been engaged in s @Menotti° " t i e t ag a ll poets toot P otistorners of the establishmenuimhgad was him for attioleg,.which ho intended to only to his own purposes. In this mode he acted in tho of oEworw & Brothers. In Second street, and at l ace in Bra Ti<•h Wait. where his gams was detected. he guest of tin in jhis respect was deemed br the alderman to be not only_ unprofitable but criminal, and the accused was sent to aloyamensint to await a Author hearing 1101 Moro- CoattmQnosaL trittort Assocurios.—A Large att a r a t egg aotocistion soy held lut elm at Um It. P. eoraer of Tenth and Chestnut street'. m a rr at o a f t a lte . ra n liec inf the :1 1 11 j • VIZ% trr a rnan active pen in the sai poll morretnitat whlelewas insautrited_!?y the rung at *luau! 1101. , The forme nen of_ Coos t t a it uonV annT4tra"osictnt?:rizirricr?artitagt.i.f.ezio pcittild. sod me • 400Thrghnigle Mei red with much en tempura. An endue/A itspeople of Penastirsata we ßr e read, end (mood with t frommet aprotatiee. Mum. flu I, stre . h P thi i garric L4 VisYlh a i d pro -ii ., e rg aa t. mums oi Uniu party. a• numed to the People's party an Mt platform. One of t oespent re avid I n on Wedneeds. lain, at Ifuristiorg. the Convention hut Siren the People o party. hoitly. am, to the Rep mum" that war. Instil, alum red. Tut: KeTsrorrr. Ctra.—This active Demo crab organisation. inpursuance of the resolution adopted en Monday stab,. maned Iteadisie Yrainor• day nftarnoon In a todk to attend the meatier °I OW State Convention wale will ass of st that 14.4e.f to day. The members of t • Club gathered in full forms, with Beck's fine hand of mayo. at their heed -flour ter., Twelfth and Chestnut atresta. and proceeded to the dePot in Broad street. tinder tie mardsidahiper Mr. William fleetly.hel , had with theta tanseroos dm a. re and the{ renowned •• flag" ttat was Wien to On einnats In lax. wh ob was mbeteasently earned by the Club to Wheatland. on the OVIAJIIIov of their 'nut to Mr. Buchanan. The Keystone's yen to Boo" smuts and !Petits cheered for their respective hand. *thee em they rayed a temporary adieu to throe who had rerun en them to the cars. We vii not venture to .a y what spirits they will be in as their homeward trip. Tree WZATIIia yesterday was seasonable and delshaul. The atmosphere wan not so mild se to pro mote lueitude and spring firer. bat the warm son nett trig brightly in the (ear sky hungered the air, and rendered net-door •xeroleta 10 1 • 4 / 01 nt to 1 4". ante. Great numbers or persons were is the streece• and in the afterumn. after school hoary. male and r•- mAle juveniles enjoyed th o llll/104.11VAth tops and )ung ing rotas to en patent that made one lookie the caret.. erelse er youth wlth unalloyed dens t 714 autumn were entered into nth great gala. •WI ins from the lower 'cotton of the city. It wee withT culty that we could keep our extremes from 'nine to contact with the innumerable top that • ars SPIER( in all direction'. • ATTEMPT TO Enna A Sri:Mi.—Borne time duriniL Monday night au attempt .s. made P. eater ihnith g leather store. at the itorthaesteoryiet of gowned and Callowbill striate. The rokbere got halo aa laity leading tri the upper part of the building. and norm manned boring and prying tar the presager ef gaming into the store. After dolga a tool - deal or witschier. witnout rieennoplieto Ile their olaleet. they appear on Imre toevit warp! °c c& they lett their tour. bit. ago .new -I,ar behind them. The fi.nla were round after dwight. It le tuPPoeed that the oldect of th• burglarious opera tion* Irl. (AIWA amass to a CA.OO ofjewery awn untie', d•Poilted there by Ilona* who bra a staid oo tie corner. A BOLD BODBEltg.—LeAlle.g, with fancy bead purees heaping on their Engem. should beware era LOT. apparently about fifteen or sixteen years of iteri. wear mg a blue cloth cap. gray roundabout awl plata. Oa Monde.) evening. three ladies .spice op the north gone nf haring Darden street. near North, were nes esaraut by tudh a youth ae w• dewnhe. end meat the lads was relieved or her puree, and ten with a eon Is sr Ea natural by the rioted.. .11k whirl um pens wasp o f n , r her head. The hor..ith his brow,. rue 471 , 1111.1 Ninth street. 004 got but of eight lit the rune hborlb. of the railroad depot. filcra..—A visit to the different pollee 421- tioem and the Recorde r .' ogles. put OT•tutlf. 'W.ll6d us that the anakthaas of Isar sad order lam toms it 4 a dee.aedi f dal ttm• err a 'titan/or. Ts/1 rogistat et arreide In the borstal dlstrets was Beasts sad eat.- portant. At the Central elation the gall deers wort opened for the greatly nee'llsl purpose Or lurtait. traot apolicopte (rr toiltnnxt tying tio Mire* so lora! Iletneeratte polittelant. mho KM •1 1 •411,111 C to lam Om rim.* &ton ardor their tom of tits proeotkliott Realm/ j un el wt thie tuna The striate. hoirstor. t !truly. THE Lientenanta' returns, amid Almoit a a.4rta of Hun/. yanittraty otorman, at Me Moron's otrin, lett that yralaq oleo. who an Ma ',Jim of Joh, A tlllama. italarlai at the taw at fun toe Chemises Orrin, Wear hiladelpalk. as Maeda} aftttooon. and helped hirristo to a sena/man'. shawl a 110.4 a. lad rattan smelts Ile WY at Pa a lady what dewitriding the ttaire with hie homy. she retied tat thief. and held on to tom until Liman:oust Totem. of the Milteeoth•distnet Wit*, name stoat sad took lam taw nottody„ fiewueammttted to prieoll. ALSW.X or Fula AT ILayarrair.--An &Lula of Are yam rotted at flasaynalr. at to e'dlaelt_gasta r day !Dermas ay the ranter rift of of au, T hat ia. detatitehl.oEletal, Ntarshet Math bora, alter a Way rict to tla• some of tax acollaarataaa. rota/sad Loot me, se Moonlit, at naathaappolaaad with the tonal re tain lug tautly }corner ip 1010•1 at aamMall,Se to tad PLO wooderfol polrell al isnastirstme. Wre me le error; •t"• 77 Ere, from the Larsen to ae immeast. claim. ail prompt. Utaroaaa, sad amulet,* tzustaa tinn. SEPPosin LAscsar.—A Gomm, umed David Dewy. wee before AlderrnAo lee moraine. on onspbelon of ermiltst two mineral Vll4l/ fountains. which had in his pommeame,_ If. vii tri m! to dispel* of Mem when ermined. He refesee to tail where he sot therm They will nustai• et the Pe riled-districto,l4ton-hoes* to slim t ileatwa. The primmer was held to hatl. DIM; Doraneary, Eui., of Plattielphts, he. been a/emoted Assistant Jodie Amomete General. with the rank oiMajoy. by the Adjutant Genital of the Pt•ts. and rommomioned by Ooreraor Parker. Ma jor " liourhierty was In mmrt raised -4r. wiener. Ma new honor iit env hi that he yea taiancselnes ei at that time t will his unlit srsrefel win Kanto. ADMITTED TO THE BAIM—CIIITIeS 11. Boone, son of the late lamented Judie William Y. Booms, bee teen admitted to IlEoeueit •O Illtors•y at law to tae Court of Common }9 ,u to Phitertiliai, As • pubne epeaket and ettentins student. 34r. B. has aireadr en gulfed on enviable reputation, wrack will to of SIIVIC• to him in hie preheepuus. SEIVIISP4 HAILIOiD Acenns - r.—Yeltierday afternoon a win named Peter A. Boyle, sbnat mat, of ago, was &trust by the oowcatetter of the Nev York wax trail at Tremens lino.* aid Alieltheet avenue. and unoastr, if not fatally. injured. He wee removed to the Epirpopet iformtal. where ' , wry atten tion wu shown him. ACCMCNT AT MANATC/IK.—The foot of the holler at Arb.rlCA'r Maanyusk, blur out yasur• dnl 111CM11/11g. sea me two run. truant Robert swu ta and °tort* Adams. No other damage. that Ta do hear of, wu ne. YINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. The Money Market. Ynirapnlnra. P•b. O. ISM A l•rr poor business snis dons at dmlk•fle Hoard thin morning. and a not moth butter on* in 94 aQ•rnoop. Paws remain unchanged. Tha 1720661 market Ili also 'without vantlion. The New York Tints ores las laterthe of the weekly bank statement. whisk present. m the a‘crtigsto, t.k• fallowing changes from IL. previous exh.t.t of February H, loom's* in Lem . ally Log Inetious to Prem. . ..... 111.716 pecroaao In cireototioa. -„ 121.1.6 rouse* le Vodrawn Demme" . . 144.731 and : '•Tb• bank return Ws aftemone doTers very little is the ate man of Ina week from that of last Mon day. The Imes of dieoovst. deposit, gad steels gnu" mod•rololY. While tee err cola:eon u shehtly lower. The spewa average. as noticed in out feriae of ter Morning. is a mune ono ladepeadent or the Calfgeereut rematanec and with that the attest stock of gold to bank to-night taunt be neariy two tailtioes over the tam shoal on the present return. The doeount him ad vat eel lees Jetedirdly than the use in Ike open market Loll week indtented." The &lamina add Cincinnati Railroad. with the pro perty and offsets belonging to It. sou told at Clams/sr on Saturday. by Orlando Smith, in accordance with accrue of the court- Tlot property sou parehuod is the acme of Noah 1.. Wilun i David Gthena.anig Anhui, trust.... under a oompromms *neat for mutati ta lion. The effect of the sale wilt be the reorganization of the trmalkylial . fru of debt, be the Tat7e of tie 'lm part,' is to be represented entirely by the capital stock. all toe mosaics being wiped out The property was sold for the minimum fixed by the court. two Imindred thousand dollar.. The bill legalminy the sale of the franchise of the toad Mu passed the Ohio Howe of Be. presentative* Ihanns previously ;mann! toe Senate hy a vote of fifty foot to forty-one. and l e now g tow. This , *(l4 lucre the completion of tine line through Southern Ohio. and the placing of the whole Lao in con dition for traffic. The receipts of the Grand Trunk Railway for the week rindatg February liver, • „ 111413 TS Corresponding warm last tear• • • - • - ••• 0 Increase— • 11114/36Y1 :L. rinui•rieroael report of Ike Starnes Fesd Coroeute• *tonere or 0h..) tholes drlbt of tem Plate to to ui A~iiir et. stock payabUt attar Dee. 31. 40,1U73 t .b .do. 40.11. ICe 2.113.111 013 Do. do. do. le:1 1.600 OuO 00 Do. ao. do. .31, leaf . 10).A30 CU Foe t* et. do. do. .3/, UM I 01.3.4V3 00 TEXI , OIMIT LoAN. Sax 1 IP_ cent stock. pslable Jul/ 8.4 Redeemed dt;t:int 91x V cent alack tayab:4 Mat;ll, lat. Total torsi s a Jibt p4y %Ma in ?lair York . 111..:% SS ZS DOYI , TIC DIX?. SIX V' cont, stock, pa) Olt at State Trea• sat,' an MS. . . MISS CO Total reimbursable debt Deering interest Iligtgf,l4: In add.tion to the foregoing tier* us etal outstanding. but not bearing Interest: Wok of lb• loan dee alter Dee. 31. Ling Domestic stook issued under set of ling. Total fan,lo4 doat of the Stall. Mr. Wiillam Whltney ham Nan nasal alc.e.alr Certed d.reetor of ibe Nav limey Rriatroad and Treasportstion Company, in place of Etephen Ntihano.r. &Tiered. einfauel Knort. hs4l beta asetrel *secretary nod treasurer of the Ceetrel Rei!roed Company of Now Jer• eer. to fill the %miser poreelorkod Td the de oh of O. :11 . rifILADISLPIIIA STOCK XXCIIANOE BALER. February Ritoaria at S. E. ISLA, . SILKGoat Sum. FIRST BOARD. 19 , 0 City Cs_ ... 101 10 Roo4 R. Dub btf ..10d do . -Now 101 • Lokooti 804- -.. AA. 700 Ck.A it I r I Gsh II I do . •• • . 30Is lOW do I/ I Penns lOW Rood Ras lu a 2.4 a do 30 City R 4 Far A Bi-. al‘o BETWEEN Suaßoa. TIM Picini So. I la .RI o Roiblint R cub 30% 3000 Ca Card Go coop on 21. t ISROOND 14.13 14 Penns R Cit ed‘it NW do. 68 C & A tn - ds V 11 1..... 1000 4p .... II /WO Soh Nay to 43 . ..7I s Td R -30 I.,ehiall Nay .b 3 111 20 b 3 S, 1 do -....... td alst CLOSING FRI Rut Alba Pllllli .mt off 101 101N(i ` tOI t i t,> l l e lac 11% " 110 IT Attat mod is " 140 '14.T0 71 I PuTOJ I V1 1 712 - 0 . 4 . ..7,11 Mor Cal COl2 £3 I Frei& off 109 110 dohlt! Nat , ss 'NA To-V Tao, imps. 71 .. stoop- lt &A Nov pre(.. al do • •... • vs ).o Lehigh Zino.• 'S 110) do lieg do Norristoiro . if* Arneries Flllll Inc. 60 10 roans R..... 6 Unto!, Bit of Tenn. is hided& Bent ORIS—STE.A DT. BM. AOSI I &Ski N &V, MI IWsegot Ett S. I in014:1 6 1 fl d si ~NPcans t..— "60. I " .....91 99 Catawisaa K 1 no Jak , mir Zt Frank & nth R SOS 91S, flea'd&Th rd-at Rnah 11.6.3•1tVi5•-ato R . Philadelphia Markets. Flea 17•11; 23—Evenleg• *Holders of Floor ars firm in their demands. W. them is not much inquiry for export ; 574 Able extra sold at Sre A 74, the latter for Laucrater county ; ano tads common extra family and 600 Vile do at $6 5066:75 for seal and choice brands ; superfine is scarce and wanted at y 515 ; emit, holders refine tins price for good straight brands; the gale , to the trade range from this figure up to 8d 25 ai :43 for extra end fancy brands, Al in quality. Rio Flour and Co n ?deal are quiet •we quote the former at V* emi r the latter at 836 P; #s' Rd. without sales. tient— here is very little °daring or Cellos ; the market is firm bat quiet at the advance; about Loo bushel' rod 1.171414014 for lair to prime. and SO) bushels white at 165 a 437 c. Rye ie scarce, end renneylVania is Worth 910 irk bushel. Corn is arriving more freely. and the demand is rather better; sale, include shalt I 300 bushels damp at Tle no. and 3,020 bushels yellow at 74.2 25 0, meetly at the latter rate. afloat. ' , ago pre d o n Penne sells at 440 and Delaware 42)404,30 bush el. Bark is wanted at 829 for first but them to none arriving,. Cotton—The market is unchanged, and a small b, sinew; doing at about previous rate. Groceries —There la very little movement to note, and no atter. tom in prices. r.:witticism—There as so animation in Ins market. and the sales are mostly in a small wan at prevtona quotations, including Bacon Sides at )(Vic ; ShoUlders 8140 Flame 10346130. SU casks Hams,in snit nod pickle, sold at 9 , , stelie, fge days. Lard a..d nutter are quiet. Fish—There is % ery doing. and the prices of Mackerel are fully sustained, and firm. 140 bbl, large 3's gold at Btu eiSv ail. Seeds are Inlet ; about 300 bin Clo , erseed have been otspqsed of at from 84 23, for common. up to 84l6sta, for goal and prime lots. 'Whiskey is fin 'han g ed; Wm yelling at Of,a ; Ohio do 245514; dredge ago; and hhde 22C V gallon. New York Markets Yesterday. A , 1184 are in fair roquest and firm. at $3.55 for Pots, and es 60 lor Pesti'. pith false of 76 blds. Fimue.—The market for State and Westera is dull, and common grottos are drooping. with reempte RIO sales of 4 UCb Ohl" at 4404 75 for unsound • $3 1 0 0510 for superfine State • 5a.1011.411 for extra, dot Immo a as for superfine Western; as-toaa.43 for extra do; 076.76. ed for round-hoop Ohm Southern as late. with sales of 1,700 bble at ea manta for mixed to good. and $38437 for extra brands. Canadian Flour is Stead,. with sales of It° bbla extra nt 43.0086.76. Use ia.—Wheat to quiet and firm, With sales of 1.0:0 sale M r w ooo u b e s Ca b a da We M st,. on ß apievya t e s e e m sd . w o th is dull and drooping. with sales of MIMI boa at 790820 for white and yellow. Oats ate 6raisr at Mead (or Southern. Pennsylvania. and Janet', add 4,14e05e of State, Canada, and Western. CITY ITEMS. Lust ". )(ohs Tacit"'—lf am Li a teatEmeo: i. the world whole Lams shod* Se esteetwil th• womsest of immoral ham 0 1 is he Ow eatMln - hew. oast towsnLy Miami kit faalow•wwa with bet% That th,a us (rho. seaway owl istallwetur./. m dot V. 41 Ira owe to inky • bust it I wnosity tsar skssersas. who Wrerooleo e the stems of astir . sr Laschatis t 4 us basal ehae••••••• of tawerfacttY ht whourtwww= tho 14traFit t'• um* 'wake am of a Hass, war. EA tmtr-hat tit ht. traerva• as osw• 04 beat Osaka et the , enatsmazny. sad la sus ha mesa* Ow weal !AVIA le. frame. R. Mee hoes Sat is Bees re Itactiewa h 1 what we I twtardhl esw u tkh tee.t lith3 Ls locum of Mews Ratan k Cu. No. y !lard Zia* ruse borth•Lat. war of Fawn. newt saseesara isms rue ei.,lo4 is protscis . s a portabht Chi Ltda. maid re LC:Arm u dratissi v tiosaanstis sea p."4.o4o tirrit , thee•Yeerild. We Lad beretofore Lad oessaioa to max. to um. loath. si the sestabis sante of do halt. tai to it sow mita ostoassay to totem oat noted at this City. Lad thissettOtt the Vales. of the redoest of Mosul Witten t Co's asstrosoloil i fres Itartet ors et to their peasant antral awl esuosodsoas ;Ps - se rs. os Eulal adorns. neve we emend tostaras of this adorable seetable kilt vliei esrset to to. bittly sacrossodeL Ia Use Ent these. W w Ow of Ibis Memos, l op.L. ostisary bureau Ilk is tee• dead •• aelfutly proof sisisiou tic osssehian sr tar isle ins as mosso cod get resat Er. to sum 01 ascf. Tb• aria eaalsomme to rheas hasps is. by saiesas of • rot. brat tioaretted tato SIX IN* 4 . 4 iltOtli 14 " . saw sled from Um isms a eassidsobbe doessre. sod. Loaf soodided I. • steers soresZat globs, to. tattoo of it reed sot sass tef MOM wiu el' said to its peatabboheer, vs au wisely s» Lea •a r ides of the drub Si Ibis LOS des by swiss oho Os Los ousebros indeoso4. ibis el 4 4 IMICAKItAII of Wu ottotosoe du soy doilief. t eloreh. or sable bait. is &Moo tasked the Nod *lout Ise arsureosata. the rat itee4 loner. UT tatsgornfenblei to mat ofobn...usry Lethal aortas:l go, sad its ten is two by a red lido Yee loadeo- Tessrt ad be so estreneily soloed is e 9 ear abed tetras as to pcozsora, is ataxy ours. owl is woes oilers eatirsty sibrests, tbei orates of us eedio, than is Elul retool to beam, es mars* a day Ames sad oat brus.ag is Luna Wilton t Ca laden dos us sto nor for sea rnr7 derernsses- sif *as boss.- fah Tortates ess-lesrattri sad Portents Ws sou sies. Eau. kr du ileac - tastes cl those widuss • oleos wastes Lilt for &caste s.s, Ust dos Lor• roast-s 54.4.1 • bo Load. seat lutes of du I of., stab thef ell at a red voodoos owe The sonebassue.bf rya au, soy be abbot Is •111 Is:awe bum as • Ilwr ••14. A oars sata. sou. ot sue seat rot ta• loam it sot D. iessoiset fa Idd , Loo to 144 iii earn. and bist• Cot tesestly adds.. • yeyiske Woe foe do sollorastass._ Si Earoesse. or Cool al_ The oil Isiah 1 / 1 1/ /tow mod du isms. Las its aso trOs% t3oy Milsoisotart. ars worthy et opens' isetses. 711 sib tint as Motet IS law ea orbs. us*. • tw.W..assi. vials Dane, soils see sase.l squarer, aft it Las bees deoroadass4 tart so.* Itsr:e of thea Terrors* will SAWA lOWA has that too is ku of Us wall C• 1 Call•aaall to am WO lase. et wan*. AO apse* to., as Wes m 1111A7 , 1160.111.,V111 MAMA: sort. CIAMUS el ant WA phi droted tits that ersoaset swot of shotop-sortsge-a, also. sod otbsr—tdadells 11.1 d Littler Si sod , thotreaes. to • ".mart {smeary of sea eadesse i sod Assaf to sows by e'er; amuse robs* the cu. It oil aft Ii bas rota.* Lb* nw sit.l owe ostaNzeteatat of Yam. WO seas& Co.. Eusth sal rawest ossets. Ind 113.rer- S• 11 AA•1111 is do ado Lett toostiatt.. I t doers stoto so desessted soar. A filtss so SrATIIIIRA XrAfALLI - Ti. —AA OA aulaststioso tel ter Ascher& use boa boons s sad isiaraust boson of set toduariat are./J, WA MVO thouht boob wails as osetteo. fin de Twit of laden *DIP is the ray odds deer spore rerrbeeNe. de bet that Kr. Jam 5. Cori. Nos NW [tat tat street who boa boss fat sweat yaws mem the soon sel arsoothesarees of oats uratimilos semaka it ads starter- by are • esleaed stag* Si Calla Oa k 13- ww-§• 01;140114.20 is• SSW seissiesabo Mae. Use 'data oultio4 b bus debt orlon Ina Ise a gresay t as./ seleastad• es *Woos Yr- Caset's ritsgt. We lure boas meal Hosed Ind soreast ewe seoto ha Lis added to Lis Woe Sonolse Oslo is. the preset , wawa, awes atoll tie boosted selebestol Loge Eoffirerstor a soot as be sod adoloobbe oloyeed. We may Ye Mat Ur. Clortels desidoe aesetaegriai see o toys sole art issaara. u.l that IDs alorattet of lie ostssolorair Los desired is. Maki: s7fr•sal of AMA lairtve It Ai. Coos odes* A. tangent-ea Lora poetry tad. Ts bat "dor* Wow. l sm say. luso -10 tie stoat. Brass st...—Csi. WUltss B Ititsiers. u sib 4 5.41 by so adrorshaserat la amebas esbort. tan re eased 1.. Utak book sob statemery care is "te. Da Osestslll it not adore be bas stead so sae at de 'w oo sat moo IatrACUTIP INCI/Amiallittl of Lb* Lad is the oil. With assrewed fieditise for LW tomPerrers of bit Luaus. and a detersoassa so hoes di irodisho merles of It say. we &mai oat that sreesiond V-A.l soar.. VA sand sta faro& Cab. Ifeados. E. W. C4lllTi. d Co , I l t Cl...um street, ULM, futsrsts of sib biota of etre,. s y gee vas, Fasts Maud To • Foe. de Cheroot Ids e- V IMO ?slot Urns. :14 Moeda honso_ Peas Ptstoi :istrers. de Mot= BUIE Lau Plated esators. ha Cheated Sow? Fiso Mated Cate Bobsta. ria Cbeirelit lowa Pate Platt Sr.. ni Cliestost !ea of Ecatrattryr Poo ma Craw Dursec-- ?nip Bole/ h CasoberL voo t duress de stosissa rf dry Ida b lA., ma }Watt eAlOrArt IA the MA AAA os of eitartartly toe tie rare et tho matt oassoisto &Irma dosees. Erostb.st , cameetad sal 110.7 IA 4* of ase:yose olostrieid a orittaslvid obeasesisori. •Id so lawswast•l ire 1445 la inrosaag &mug (151, satee. as eltaraltias. t••• tosessore • errs by swis.: Alt ss a:keno css be Luna! by di.7.ist d3O Wads! street Mgl. - Malta out ill atl cam cot 'Dtsits elitism Goads. Liao sad Ilsaks eartS4o, Cords, ?sr stk. Logos. Cosine. Hooka Alban ladaf , Os aid si oracle Nests are isrttal to assalaa =es etaek. VS bolt In kn. tr. 4 or•Slootoost. W. R. C 1111. Ban f#V IJt Ti) neatest &rot t Btaartrrt. Sit Tlx Awl% Sitria-rtiatii What -Any 4.04 lobs ttroLo eon,' Owes= t boat roll not hat L 3 star a n.arat to stlosoro taw gorgooody,fa mita stirs at Itiora. Molly t Woes,. Aaronson Sorcirr Warr mosfortarigs wider tia Cleattsestal istot.” Tye {:trans ob sots of bows ail stall taseeta sew Ward are ask by Ws. at sad Qt pros strwt. oboes am, bars tbs.' rtfloon ..bops. 84 In Ust ostosstrs prostratoto of tha.r bosuns Is wait thratak ale stlAVAlssat. too a NA; nctieseip at tha rant amine of Van prod:ow& Tao sons funbors lowers, ototots.„ es" spasm'. Walla, ileiriala basica and. frobood. foori , jamly alio* far son or *rouses: bowie 1 the trade. sloe bins talladd frisental.rasi 'ans.!. Tb mon booscia not IRWIN PL1141116. VISO" otpet-re to to boLion fr etswore.otw! doursleati, sod dam ace of tloo soul to Togo are st sonzli ono TwZi tit poor of rooms Si.tsattlo. So mat nos ilks i. 5. tips for Its sosattotarrs. tiot. notirmisten Sly slo. enpails; .lamas.!. flay are osslfoi to resa. u sit u Sew stare, slier nha Cos tier 11." react toy 0,- errata ix Ile prate of lbw artieos Tlll •• OCTOLOCS" AT rut Acci-truCIT Tyco. TIT. •N 3 GT/STILL T STOW at our City7ly, fry.- DA4 lutekdre4a lobo kayo /roe. .ttr , Pc tls tecitnimi of t.l. IsAinreeila lir,. Ur. 11,1 LtA, tit n'...tar uolastum Isoohost to coca worm Goori• nytou"-lop 11(r iTtoottor -Es broodtoltilax.l.3.to. 91. Co toll% olouoloainout to rho trollog prow oCICOoloo:. Love Gar gOok fur " Zoo," Cho Octoroon p.n. Lars ma." Mott /1 *Ma. Oa to to LIU la Wei timai same egr tar two Load 6,141111 mr+ftrall tty morrow Ev.o. Wi NTH tow • trat:ouuts bocce porruhlouk . too stop. dm flit ti 31r. Tonto ho suited otortoott to bs cuttopoilvw at los • sooooot us a Nod, of tioNloto pitywooJ utoatoos. nor f wombed is a brio Pe, teat if clouts and ...I=rolZo tarot*. trues tioo Wass: 8-otre of Clots F:4l, to. tit esh`rastdC.itlirt trof Foosozaor„.7( IC: Ctestatt attest N. 11.-T h u eataaratest eletiakg ostabLeitswas las b., aouseetooa trek Lay acme re IS. outP. LIS NU C 3.4.144 testa Taal' Tea years ale a aca.htst et Tale esearmead " ro:tal tar CU tc." mho IpuLaa' ti :So Irarah7 bre sae Fariti ia•lte k t• AIL sall otosalosa.b tats • lard taaau.hss. Akar Hoe is... tmo is ski riONIALI 0tt%4< , 4.5:' , 1 ?arum* tea bouluitt " beim* 'trotter" w W d..or:ll.soi fat orportac (toLo.-16.1,0 e:ot`,..g. Now eh, os.a.otor. dolowne. sad BE.'y a:2 boy tho.re:oti,fts 5.1 flat asaltaartsre et t00.i...0w-.Cookwo Sto:.••• oats-, nos :Axiom it.,?.. ao4or Lir a oal." 414141/313 $3 A PTZ.ZIT T 3 TI/T ritTilT 4 l esdrirstsad dot suss Hvmsnai but.•• acs n rims: a 00141 T 1110-444 data 14 LIN Empress blig Tb• trona/ Ina t• • Ter) Ls* g•at I t 1.11" 1 .444 - 4, romme4 vr,eh f•• It nairlts. asd ?mat latl t.lss• to is gi per). A da'.tnstr WO Owner Ulm. of do loofwMl r is. ram t%roTISII tA. fsbrta. »breed 71/ a LoVi•kcol ruts to ia.l ra.rs ea•ola a si c,...Tt oftz. c - t. t.CI rut: rat. trul a s loc.": Mr of Cats oil dismos4s. c f the Qnut rate•. llut repart tist o.c.4l7lPraill•itzs design pf nen All( tSa kt astir Ina salt from do Brows Slim.* Cloctilts Its.ll of litaeldsl:. • W gaup. Nos. An sad ion CS•sorm *reit, ra.. - sre sot roasts! Is fact. SPECIAL NOTIOES. Lace ANTI MrllLlti CrIITAIN3.. Iltia et. - bek. vholtaLle te.l mut. W. H. CAARYI. l BM) Tl 2 C eVEZTIirt Stmt. Hut Ha. told (LYS; ONE PRICI CLOIRES4I 07 TIER • 1.17137 asads a the beat lunar. sirmar for RE TAIL BALER. LOWEST ma' ig mess warts.! Rue Filmic AU goods wad* to oyster wirrsatel asui factory. Oar ONE-PRICE num u strieer ad on-I to, as we Wavy totot tie call hit ant tot ASL it. All to. har•Dr troami slab. JONES k asiV4l . t@l SIARERT Stmt. IMPORTANT TO TAT LOU AND Corasms. nit Grover t Baker Berm- Maahia• CostPur Low jun tutroduorod • Div sad ruporim shutt:4 , - Mach.= r. tarp me, high speed. with Jaren Lau arr - I...erns. Pne• 110. Pot Sit. at Nan) CRESTNt, - : STREVT. Ptardalr kis. teN- ti SIIAif II S 5r!.1911 FUND -- NOIITIIREE'r COINEI Secomn tea Wetner S —Ae}cwta re awned an mall end buys emosate. front all ei8011.4 of the comma:nay. end alloys taterest at tlea rue of FIVE YER CEN r. per annum. Wary may Da &airy' 64 etacka Indmia kola a la ties!. Othes open daily. from t watt 5 o'cicok. sad on 31c.r , . day and Saturday until name m tha arenta.r. Frew dent, FRANKLIN FELL; Traascsar Asa ?avatars. CHAS. M. MORRIS. HARRIS' BOUDOIR SZWING MACHIN& -- IMPROVED DOUBLE-THREAD. FIRST nixing At Erila FAIR, Phita.islplva OrtecTill ARCH S. Monti vaztai fall-Jai NALLMANDU FIRE-PROOF SAYE3.-3 Ter,' large wortmeet BALAM ANDRES toe We at tea •tumble g. 11 0 ,111. N 0.301 CHESTNUT St.. ?6.1/dale/me su3-t1 EVANS t WAFtIO:g. Suraxa's SZVFLRG MACHINIS. No. Sawing-• 131 No.l tlesisit 'Dia Fund: Sewing AlmAkio', A ----• 10 Tn. ?mai Balms MatAino— it) L M. 81NG,SR & Na. MS CHESTNUT Stmt. SATING FUND—NATIONAL SAFETY TRUST Co ItrANT.—Chartered bl the Usti of Pc.inhliam. itrLta. I. Money io raceired ovary day.and In any anI•TILL 4110 or .mall. FtVE PER CENT. lutanist is paid Cur MOIISI tuna the day it is put ii. 3. The money is always paid bank in SOLD 'hemmer it is celled for, and without notice. 4. Money is retsina from Ems/err. 4 , lmisrules: or s. Gerard... 3. end Other Trueness, is large or small tams. to remain a long on shard Period. The money reemeed from Depositors is isresta is lest Estate. Mortgages. enema Rests. sad Nam first slam stotritles. 6. Mee open empty day — WaLNErE3Mmit, sotitimniet comer Taint smote. rbiladolphis. J