. ‘ i r 1 ,,. - , :. .• - - i t ''''''' ' . ''..-' ' ?' ;2 l'i''; ,: i'-cl ''- . 'V - 14 , kis ' ;-. - • lit. V • ,, '' 9 ;" 4 ..,:. l' , '''''• ~ .1 elm , ~ .,....' , 72,,,, ' z . — uw0i0—.......g . 114,14 '.,, -- , ,. .4.11:1/O ,, IRAIE: MAY 8-, 41160keT i oo,„p_oliirotiliam;....o4,l*--, wasi &ed , -410110 - 44tisi6.4101421bNimill, 6.100811 ii 103 4Preiariiifi•Airdolie4 B ol" l c4iAloitaillsobsi-Itsfer***lriloreitff CV , ibefThelfitittOßlOMkale, - I h r" - v "rilihrialliii7 . ll'..„ f lr°2 _ k . 7611VIIIARIPOIV ' --- - 10,40164 4 m, • '- vmrsNiy****ori4iW Apds l igise - bait dm) Ma 1 0 Nenikadlo4** ti ,4 "; 01 . 0 #A 11 " * 1... / §euiaff *xr7- -th e k4 1 .00041* tli:0 1 * 1 ;,diORPMC4I4 'i nt di ,thip.Afinialitra. '.41/0114 11414'Mlre darif. 400114 o; lL lW e l titsl ll ' th-e, Bltt*elits*AllhO'iht : l 4ll ' . tall" '‘:,41104**171i,-='!!'"16,0,1.-id t will n o ise -1:,-;,,AtkittiV611404" oboeaie their caol,latta " I*::paPß!!. with .40 14,0aik4.100EI;Ic 41 0/4 - ineit4 .4 a -, '! h47 : 4144 " 0 ~1 1 4 ; rtMletee Itetthiee4 l o 4 4 Oa ?AY impractic ab le - .*:;v l : llo agri**4 lll telehti,el o ,l. l ,efilli 1 .041 t -Nf i p e t ,l t h e ta f t A!* ll - C , llO Fh t 4,6- ,1 ptsilhili'lejihett . :;eitece4o l 44,loKOlPTA,_ Iltertel!itPtile''lt_bi_nlßiN a" ___ be t 4 o both *46 I batibil ": " ljir oaltll S ' c l4lolll4 r. " 044117 1 ;4 1 01e9eFekeat teeied l 7 o g;thioN'e to tedrn ;oiiiiheth; I,4lW i litalhae; -41saiscptc goe °moth', , - ' lietalbtleaff ibt ont. 414 vatitre. the . cov2: 400,07 , crimewl9t,,,b4 -- wnatn they_-suougus or . *-; e aid " 'fa . biteiteee' witk" C 9 ' - Ur Nor ete4tile eet:Aelete tiett 71 ,-;lstenvitifir„ _ =lllbaatd eileymaneettautv-Vhetraripetsithan , ftliotirait tipafeht bet* theitof ail the -‘" 914 infailonef the'vtgot:.! 44•141 - 40 Par: PeOcoctstif De-T 4714, s` se 86 *O"k:4Y ‘4,4's,oo4Publioin sewers say; the Republhaui-imeesure ;pro- to it; isOiewiy)ifici the 'le- - Goisitiattei.- If; :thee, IS la propoomml4a •nakii thir nexCoanipffkit *Cggla - for 10110r1404-'lo' 110010 *ad wiiidonii Whip Natioial OopylOons ,:j 4- # 1 ,',W.4- - .4o:: : *st':-Poi.4fireSiiiii to' - Pab l , l 4 tpit „ PutiOiti ..1,1k0; # l 4' *itch nombista .0 2 *Ire th e basis of tisk hernia those' itea ittrq Were. ,us l 4osoo.,poPalaT, 'MO Slone with the - 11rolaters and Aholitinn= situation •of things •altnost Sinai= =Jar' fa now n*eting I and we 'aliciuld' rejoice, &int.:the Organs of -the'leading political com :.:binatlons sitiwaring, to . the people'a will by geed enatople;' 'lf the Itspabli atiall_th tall' back of 6 l l ,4l4eteilenfr they tr,,,j;:wlll• hal forever just as s - Detoodtatt will • 101 , y:they fall at Balthnerti - On 'the 18th of !In P o 4l_ UdiPraigia subset in Imeakersnie4e.• -Mtn than, throw theinselyea Y-7 1 ***PretA*4'0 1 0 *tie7i whit@ can I, iteo4.4iiiickelk*eeiN*kei - -:*ere 4$ living asd seats Pripet* by which' everything can I'4 iiaaifillishod • .4- Rears of lifsealled•for 'Lettere: IYO Oudot a:few 4syi ago to the receit, 5 ' Aida Copse atitherlatog the return of let - ' • foist the Ake to which they were directed within eireeloilehie times to their writers;-if the Alger endorsed' their Aimee thereon. ' , Ai this is s pi Polltile hii. pottance tO*iirteror men, " AisuPliiti'th4 lad •;• below.. The.olvaatagea sterateg *oat Ito pro bight b Y a hr li e TrOiortioliCotelerelll send Wore contain 116;•rouitoresa or reknieg to hapottast 'pub: is to hir apied, thet , th e ilepartatent ;, apelatily Oka bigtnialeall;to-4qat , --,lstetert as are necessary to , the , -Tiw, lac toil !filcieke,r - Al Apr 'ln -to mss.rotaie essidivareS • -lettaralethei Post Mac , Ass* *wawa hp Ski Smits and Memo of" Re; lipowaisOva 'of irresei &toe et 4fAiirke ow/so That,-wtia any moo. fm , litafetilassAgßAW /sum OM or , her Imo and Peet reoreew4 1e wetter thartaf, tieeissiOter, ratalwas oun r ow a* , It Ai dh e me the, _aiwi ht ..ths tore-ate writer ries, dew* St WIN by • wall tot said oat williehlfotereilialt itero~, )07 t . :4 . 0664461 1 , 011111414.1 40141141161ni atatn ~/elareal Pt the set Moo af,the wriest sad ewe - riwaistpleallotfircoeimuter. Apponot Apra; -, • Theloath theeithe ;• ••,. peep , alo-- ern ;a:firfeit Wog 10 1 04' 14 hirOtiOtetatioe b4ii• on by Lord Zos{n Ressiei ► , the fret of ••;- h oe ,thul t eyhe eth ee le - h e i r hi the ';4filiCialg Aiii. )-Ol u .v. 111 4. 1 - 4 4 6 i precisely 4•4 *la? rattittmeau,,reas-Ttittea at ,e6tiwo — ,rtileelro r -' `I'Ai'', 01111 0; noses biorkt one,. olity [ le rolikeelliHt, lad delluake: to th row dolt is ther:Oop/e's IVO irotiii‘ 0 14 '';' 'Atatieleri wheelboom s-iisleisy, V . 004111 gray le* 14 the L o ad, c ri } Sokti7X# l 1 4 r 1.0 1 0.4044that aritewithat thall liWitippehiaii- SO how: Sei -1,14#*. 1 1 . 1 ,f; 11 - 11 -411344i ' 1 0wt4 :tom e 'T bii fivdmia be b. Atoriimi k *,lidet, w hereas #atil ss ateest . will -‘- iktiktn4:44o44' lool6, oo,ailes !either Started ibelkeeftet illlt The sea' ---'l4lngdrilseamertioutteugl i sika "war aisbaypigmid•phpeopoia• , le - a tigriiiter' prefewiles teak 7 4-1 1 99 , 414 . 111046 , , 41.5;141 *rind* theSaone Ctetlda&blohi air • 4'10640 ba,,plioef../5; . 6. TOM*. Book this = " ....,,,,__.':'' iiiii4ratoliz7: - of ei e6ri • r ," ', ib* te.,;.4.ine lih tbotiszt ii :i'' it-1-4401'*Itiii i g il s,:14:7,7mbaiarilawt ifilitifift:*' -` adl9o,4l#l.#' t s iiceilygo*--, !-.::-Pt9:114;24417,-ettf-1 ',-;l;;Tlico,sge:r7i, -. ,or 1101:T. ''': 7,W:it, , , _ g!.., . , er, - 0 Iwo , . b4 i,), '' '1 -;Elf__,,_-_-: -':. : etklooHtmestibe 41111.- -: ;;::-;',:tekiti• T.040,1.4. 4 **4441,F#014i' ,`„,)."../i4,411;04:i450c.*1-- '',1;414,40,1 < 'iltailM•tr "''''''-' . -- 1 OUk_____' --ii-41/10*1141' :;••oiiiiiv ~ , .44,1-.,n,F,.y: • , - tlie '1 e ~ ,. 7 , ~---- , - jmitia4- , o f . A.- er•zzaaiii„ gt,o7dhaeur:,_ .- ---- —'s , ' ' .44. , , kli4ilo. u,W, ~. 'amok. le im aar t e d - '" - ,14 The i: ,_'**.: ll l ,Tidi- 4 . 2 ,,!5: :: - - 1 .- ,-, , twtuininmg. ,-*-;':'-'1,,1i ,iii4oo.-- • - : - ~1 7 . ..., _, !lAN' ..;;;; ~.,14,,,,, - m e - el:04 ----7-72”"'' ),', i'llepaal o l` , ...- , • ,a,•-0..,1__,___,-, 1-1 i n d i u m %''-1 ibe'-,filmseilaidss 111',..Tinliothinik: ,4'71.- **,EOW -''' ', • st-,41 . , ..V .- • 1 ~ he i ihili . :','''leastilippt ;lliiiPOTßEaur''-7 ' va,,_:"'!"''' ' ' '1 '• '" '''' 1,- _l, .- :vibleh . "I'y:*,!--,-, "' '..''. :„. . larltAtirtiNeo CorfaitioirTkers aro hitting' . 'oosoitatoo Iwoltttot MO* oil **Matto to lic rot • polfotitid 'At' that Cairroatics. 5.:.; (413f001050, mow SAC littfit tit&r m° , sfordato nif • - ,j1114/0/11* to mwa . The ;Moult of Moen: Bat* ' moifil.ottn‘ ottitelliffOo in oil osoftlot smolt of' ili No . sit* Joiskitil, ti, As ova Atm", , ilk the. Ekof all thiiiilwilott lof illigst. Pilaw woo, 4, t0104:7 1 11.1inir ProtOs ter : • likiLioillikirl*" 6l l ti ln lc , Ow - f t ; , ft WO*" -tittf;64llolifo" tko now ..' glakioi*** ' loirmi os,' ' Wooly Milkob '- T - *Moe .011111 MAW Wait or* wilt** , , , sittioCsoliiiiydooodoi of viottorovromper•-1 Pgiikiiiol. likllliintit tho wii . , .64541111 Ws; ~ D, toromfoototiomiworovoirl x., ,: liatiiiitit tli-etirol ff, am i, , .... firgya --- , 7 1 -- -,* - ' l ll , l l ll r. 7•4r,r&—iiiimiguitiquitfyiiiiiigLiddf*tosh of ,o ~, ite, 4 1140.111. MW , iliCsoitooot /goo us ino . Ittgr o rsOkilift , MY* ..f . , ' - 'n , '; ' lit a tii.k . „ ftg lAn; : 44 . - .1 ' Self *id la , , ? , Avoleckiiioadoir, ice; i OW rtf%, , ,:' - ',' - '1 .1 ~ •;, • . 2. a tft -110hdrali (1 't4t.-.04'. °At r T." '. 4 -Saf , ":- 9 -' 74 .4e'' .*!; ; , ' '''''ll.l/' 'faitaddiet ,_ L P I M I MPTI, I, el*.li, ',,% *ilk ' _...,,,_.._'- 0010-' !r •i ' i bi l i m i t u , ' l P ' 4 1 40 ` I7 'LW, ••" " ' 4/141 1044 ", , I I s , ' ,, 'r, 0, 40 ,i s , ~, ' - _Alfroikesiomimi" if ' ~, .4.1 1, ,.='.41;. 1 '' ,4ll '' r t.: 4, " 4 0 .1 1 , '; i, ,' t nt *4l LI ---'' 4 1 : , :I; 4,"' ` l'''" I ef.z.• .. ,,, t4icili -,,, *-4 , 11 4 ' , m-,-" t..,1.,. :00.0=-oftirk .. 14itt Altr'..-T - ,-.—, , , , . = V 14 4: •-, • .-...i. ;fild albite .. -1 , ~,,,-.64: .., -, Aii - ldiow " '- ra• . 40411 - -`-.W--- e- iy..%s:' , ' ~,:"‘,T"' ^', , -.,,_ • , The, Neldsodiet Geweral Conference. The proceedings - of the Methodist General Confemail; new i tiea.ion idOliffedo, are at fricting Much atte*ittini/aSerine44 the ink podium of the lifiat4MigiTfe - Wrgenietitkiii, rePregentes sod Nitiiteilitig geeeti6eil It will have under conaldi#yerW'. ' • - At the mitaibitit*trildsi-bwe'ividremill were presented by the representatives of the Irish and Canadian Netball*, and read by 1 the secretary. • The Church in Canada has ...i,_Altlemetuti value:of, its "chapel put: . •468,7, .64; tualtit, has a seminary of WblthWtloo: The Church - in Ire- Condition, leskerineWas the prevailing: reu ottitepeerne,bielleidedli Ca. *4400**4`., .411041.3.04*/*4riblieh ed:lll-IfeaSiviatiess, and-as the Methoditit pop: tiloivi3Osiktigaryeityapidly, to the United • :,•710_ t , 1091444,Y44,.4:thp:dsitWaii the • weeding; eCthip;tepitdrenidal .addiees.'of..' the idaliapt; Width rgiVwti getiertil:-historyef , the position :and the Church, and "Oioble.a4eit,W.if ill , tti;Opeiettons. eng- , gigetrthitea'aliteationaltbeard- should be slit pOintektiePievbit-the'ereitlat'OCio; ninny colleges, s 0• pestMusie, new , in eidetence may • li.aPtlnt.e. eltilpiniedf„ : The ; , inorease :of - the ' Muiday-siditilde is 'alluded teS•_:lllritit . latch aflifk ttoi ,litho catalogue of Sunday pchool b'oeiti;ano the number of teeehere and 'scholia, ire-rapidly inciessingc .iTitts - lublicationi' of that qhniehlive"heicsitili'VftnrinitirOrlt. The . and eulated -Addeo their last:General Conference, in I (Mete; lietrid-,volinies,lartd the monthly inns- I ;iistOd4ilioti:-;1‘ tr,Ook,Nees;", ; Is, 64,170,90Q.' ihtiesmier of= members and probationers in 1856Wite199;481; and of 'Ministers 6,408; the', , former in 1869 numbered 974,846, and The let ter 6;677l , 4ishing anlitcroase respectivelyef - 17401 1 14i'Mtd - 4,409.'• , ' , Ther-ntUnber eit Church , 0 1 1#1,4 1 :000; r tindel i parsontgesi ' 2,640;with en aggregate estimated value of 821,841,024, an increase in.ttio_years of 960 churches; and 8 40 lorioitairi it elsdafitiellef 88,8414624: The IdsluiPs,iietintaind'iisi. retnaxksble deli' of,-ileihodlitat--theadi ax beptient „le 'MN 'being Wis -alighti'dangei of 140414 etionsty. tOWaiO!';the.4ontrine of intinctegeneration."i There- are' the , .00 1 4' difficulties' in "stationing , the preticbere inisege - eitiet on account cit - previortenegotia- Hone between "milnitters and congregations; 'end - seCtlolui the' emPloyinerit 'of erri ''and,,,ltiesioaraible''lteacheis; who have used denunciatory,: language; has led, to strife; add. to' slight ealestions. The bishops con elder - lbtthere success, if not insuperable, objections to admilNlig ,iay. delegates intti, the General 'Conference; bat suggest that they Might he tionstittited a ,cp-ordinate &seem -14,70444 the, retire time tos the General COnferenixis of the clergy - as an entirely sei :mite .hoity; tint Peeving upon the same Measures; -yet they- see, no urgent necessity kir:Mien - this change. On the subject of Slavery, the bishope,, indeed ofyielding to the deininds of a large party of the Church, who With to exclude from membership all eLtre holders; re - endorse the views they expressed four-pietism°, which were, as follows: ' "In our judgment, the existence of these Confer ences and churches (in slave States) under their present circumstance", doss not _tend to extend or perpetuate skewers/. They are known to be organ tr. under a dieeipline which slave ry obantoterises as a Vest evil; which makes the slaveholdernell. gible to any, official station in the church, where the laws of the State in which he lives will admit of einanelpation, and permit the liberated slave to en jey •freedoet; Web &trembling a travelling -minister who, by any means; bemuses the owner of a slave or slaves, lades he executes, if It be praoti cable, a legal emancipation of mob slaves, con formably to the laws of the State wherein be lives; which makes it the duty, of all the ministers, to en- Meeupon all the mutton, the necemityof teaching their slaves toned the word of God. and allowing them, time .to ; attend Amon Abe public wcrsbip of Galen onr_regnlar days of Divine service; which prohibits theilmying and selling of men, Wale; and children with an intention to enslave =them, ' Pail/quires -what shall done for the extirpa tion of the *SC of slavery. , this discipline fusel* circulated Sion; the pee*, or ce rtainly within the reach' of any, who -desire JO esseitne it, - and , with - other Chnrebee ex isting in the.: teeke-tarritor, ;without these eheet • meow thesis &aletieseadVoidereasee bare either .hreleetive Orally Sabered' to, e r' from preference ruerMated with, the Methodist ' liplieopd" (iamb. In alive iastanpes , their, Marsh relents. bevel 01. POO•oUOP , O to ONO poril,And. fa nemererte *sae to gasrita. Bet - mirth have, bete c their moral worth amt,C l uistian and4rudent condu.t, that generallythey have ham permitted to enjoy their religioue , inutiaddes,, and serve and worship Goineeirdieg to-their eonteleuees.", • OniiiituidaYi a large _sittiober„ of petitions' were presented on the'elasery quection,o,nui, jarity. of Which' were, signed by the e.t.prognst.- 3 elves,", who favor a change in the rule on islet , very, and who .ire isildielij in a'-rmajority Oil .the- Ohirtittelok.Sldietigh they .miks' not Ceed'ln Carry i ng their point by s conetlintional Sots.: It Is 'SopPOsedthiit, the dCbste on the 3 Slasety..queStlonwill he sery animated, when tkirlrcotnesup tier coulderation, • - OrrSaterdei, the ~ repoiti of AM book agents ektrewroirk „cinalmsg. were presemted end reflerresi.'- Ike WOW:rot* book concern simiii,that it Phisesses a net capital in real eitate,' cash, merchandise, printing office.; and materiels, ;.bishar*, and notes, and book tic conitnof,Ssp,72l4) ; and its sales, diring the !bur yearn, ending in 1859, (exclusiVe of thoseln hjew York) were as follows • - • .Axgoant 8113011. Oseh Paid: -844400 ... .. $128.461.95 83,915.54 65,489.02 141514, ' 84,80749 94,110:30 Theaihibitot•the Western book concein at Cincinnati seta forth the 'total book and perio dical sales for, four years unding January 21, 1860 ; braiat city, and at Chicago, at $1,127,- an increase over the previous fikir • years,' sales,- of g 250,688.82. The Wade& book manta, however, cOmplain,that their cottiOrdhaa been overta sked to pay the sundae the Methodist Episcopal Church South, under the settlement Made with it, and that it bait; tiorifore,'betei drained of its Cash capital, and itsoperations thus materially crippled. „ e M=== Min 'meat, this' matting, he'r per t:masala the play of " 4 ' Guy crowded honk atifainut•strimit Thaitre, a oordlatgrestlat to thu 4 #0 1 4 14 $ 1 4 ;110 ***• • , • • ; ,!liri,,r,/ , ; .444 1141 - farewell benefit, at Arab. ithwitTheeresi.Mbovening: , He is a gonna:pan lot' ability' id lhareatim in sad oat of Ids prefer. We'ziiie'sietififilor that the'vritole prim of rhli(eitiallrbaittilY Mate i our whh thai be may Hili al& ,ireiiiive sere miletastial Proof of the high setlenatkin in which he ia held; At the eleei.ef the PrinieritiehiouHr.Hoiman inters into the,liar, Mid we hope that be may irequiptly appear is " Wel mene,” in the sem% with equal °mint and profit. ' Mr. 'Hiram' Corson will give et hie imimineiVii(Matoli 'street, s imbue on Nancy finiefeation, ifinstrited by various :Mating. f ib poets, which armoires to be most inter eadMr. - :llr;'Horsosi has made a profound study of iI Mid ramie with that. happy disttrivtioa ahteltienits *drawing-road, Yet her all the ex preedia thiatage. Tim preallarfeature of these readinp *onside in their being millet and private, with fast ipam intliolent tar sound,and with all the horafrite and O'se4arcia of i'Private soiree. Bird- Mamba and hidat lied halls are poor encourage mints ie llenataie,. - . ``:To £l. Iron Joke' Morrissey. Te Me EAU.' of ids Nato, Fare" Dawes:' I ma by the newspaper., slue I arrived from Englaud, titakifers,ap'Peera to be tome (Meiling expresse towards. MR ta,tble oellutf7. fates part I took in thelito-fight „between Sayers and Heenan. For r ., the entertained of me by the fighting tra uma "4 - Mire hist little, but Ido wish to have tor Ulf; is iii proper light before the, public, end,: "' Mit:object In vlew-laddress you these lathe irk Own, tie part I took 'lithe fight was Maretytibusiestalone, not thinking :for a moment :that it istrild ptou ask stations' affair". Nieman bisaitif mid :I!_iirait'aio national affair; be did, not onisidielt as Usk:, In betting, my motley Upon 111 r. sad 'ln going to, England to witn es s the - 4 Aid_ po mote thin many other; did, , and 1 1 7..,X OWfi .ho &skid out u sitar/tit , against :tibukpiddio *pinion should be abetted, I cannot bey. _ ~'., "It is im,W I'ent the tonsil, lad was the chief mitigator at breaths tap the fight. Now, as far' settle 'vatting the ro wilt eamoirud,,the; were not .51 at all. The'ru, were nearly pu ll ed out attkii., g round , Mod the mom thrown . down. • I dolls impons .nha .was present at, the fight to say Met I titer opened my , lips to "make any disturb• asse, from the commencement to the end of . the fight. In Tint; I spite" to no one during the pm. ,of thei_lighti , hut stood quietly by, and saw qwbolaiirile without making any . , damasks, ,7, - ,:- lefetensi 14.- - t.be :filb 6 l4 l, 4's" •OA ' datuito , • 'lltd.,ttilte hiSaltisg up. and the tepaliiiitlei the • ,; z,olo - lot,lo say anything until Mr: , - .410 blinds wire boost I wish to ' • him Mioppottlitidts of replying to any state ,ltral .. 4 017hoireofter _mike., - I have pen .it 4 1 _ i oats of the eewspaperi: that. Heenan had S - Mard, to challenge Me, Now, I kaatttlits ifinfilloo, 'tuft Ahrough .04 ' ;log hello. nothing to faith Mar, „iffit.Ol ~.„. t.'„,, " :. - -: ,_ L M l ZZoorid 44 .iif-"s i i i tlial Pil l ion I __,_ __,bk Ake* of by th e ends ' 44 , Nr;-Uomu.. , yee there Ls no totindi , fMlf. Mr seekeed- through Easton 01 1. 114. 17.#_ a f i re ` .*ll and Strived 10'0 efF 10, 1 1 (1, 1 1 1 11 - ...: ~ 1. ',,.slefir Alen as V. . . Weire'Or.. — Aim' • ' itsidij,r; *mei, do., ,12 Oileekjeie,tit the 4eibeese; , amid. suit s ,e4sjeiefily seei eoudri prepinty * l4 order aim, exsei , lied :othere. Simo ItMeeed4)llloetigvidliosiderito km 1 1,4 4 4'4 Ceti* WASIIIIGTON COMISPONDEN CB Letter Milli :«Oeeaii enal.•" lectreasenlienee of.,The, May 7. The hainM: among the Leonmpionites at Charles. lon was leirfal to behold, Nothing like it has jmen Witnessed sine. the Invention of Conventions and of platforms. It - was; the gathering of the harvest which grew from the seeds planted by the President and the South. It was impossible that any other crop should result final snob a sow. The -Presildent;' as this the' trou bles in the Democratic) party, suffered most, as - he deserved to suffer. He had come te be; flielhalifilselfrinfaMblSC Having obnquoied the arrnistation,,wpcurged sucat.ofthe party phief tains info approval of - hii garnishing polloY, he believed -that, he could also anoaeed in Conven., failure, has been -awfully complete. „hint a vote was given ,for. hinr. Die 'name is not mentioned in any one of the several platforms. No vat:ewes raised in his honor, or oven to palliate Ms admitted offettesenpon Demoonoy,ind upon deoen fflible Cabinet, with the sutherftton of Mr. Ten ney, who rescued some two, 'Votes' trona the general melee, and applied them to himself, were treated with equalindifferener and eentempt: It was nally 'otherwise with hid imteediati prededessor, I P i rstsiltiityieree. was a formidable candidate I for re.eleetion, , end; though hotly opposed and persistently misropreeented, he received a steady add- a' heavy - rapport on ever] ballot. He bad many warm and active friends', not merely among who'thoeb plane under him, and -still cherish ,hie nimp And bielnunerols noble, quali tins with affection, but oniong the moat disinter• sated and diatiagidsbed Democirats in the country., Probably the-worst part of the contrast is; that not' one of the:dare-holders of Mr / ilifolianan raised a voice iratte behalf. It is tree they nestled out Inetructio f in reward_ to the Platform; and in re-, silting,' with ~unexampled bitterneet, the, nomi nation 'of 'Judge Dangles, and', by • such means Precipitabai thts catastrophe which made en adjournment necessary., But this was all they did. It was; however, moat especial revenge—his moat graceful- and grateful return for the nomina tieneonferied arip him at Cineinnati;4-a nomination generonsli lififeried, to by Dangles - and, Pleres, - 4...r0 powerfully edineeted hy,both,--espeoially by-the Senator from Illinois, who .gera;thoutands of dollars: to the. 'Motion ;of. Mr, Buchanan, and' wide the Morthiest ring with his masterly appeals 'the' people', aome' forward! in, support. :,Whinf. Illinois ung _trembling the coatis, and whon the , hearts of. the bravest quailed in the, doubt aerated by the ,uncertainty of the issue, it was to Dough s flier eyes were turned, and he justified the - confidence alike, of the candidates and of the country. It wasprodloted, when Janes Buchanan was elected, that he would break up the Democratic patty. The declaration was laughed at and disbelieved; but events have shown that it was no idle prophecy.. If that party' shall go down to the tomb, it will be Jamei Buchanan who hurled it In my letter of yesterday I spoke of Caleb (lush ing's groin injustice in the ohali. Te-day 'I bear that nothing but his hasty adjournment of ,the Con vention prevented the passage of 4 resolution of the severest censure of his conduct. His friends , 'did not date to procure for him the thanks of the Convention, as they knew the attempt would be Indignantly and promptly rebuked. What the Chicago Convention will do, is the next inquiry. That body will open its sessions on Wednesday, the 16th of May. Mr. Seward's friends confidently claim that he will be nomi nated, but others are equally confident of a different issue. It cannot be denied that he 'has many de- Voted, and resolute, and able supporters; that his hackers are men of money as well as brains, and that he himself is exceedingly anxious to mike the race. The but information leads me to believe that his most dangerous rivals are McLean 'and Wade, both of Ohio.- The first is advocated on the ground that he .has not been identified with late party divisions; that be occupies a high pilule in the alfeotions of large masses of men North and South ; , that he is known for uprightness of oharecter ' and long experience in the public( toenails; that he has nerve of the highest quality, is exhibited in his different. with General- Jaeluson ; that while suffidently anti slavery: he has pronounced in favor, of the con stitutionality of the fugitive-slave law; and that he would, therefore, nations-lite the Opposition, by rallying many Southern votes to his standard. ,His adiersaries admit his ability, and corded. hie elahis, but amid that be is too old for the Prost deney, being now some sivanO.Ave years of age: They' dread Smother old' den, they, say, in' Shut' elevated:and trying position. Benjamin Wade, At Moot be . oonfeesed r bss ' some advantages over Judo*. McLean. ;' He is younger, and more "energiitie and ' progressive.: Me' Is greatly betited by "all parties in the Northwest, and has a freak, feeriees, and quaint way 'of saying whit he thinks,- that has made him quite , a favorite In the Senate. Then ire have Mr. Came. ron, Mr:Chase, Mr. Bides, Mr. Sankt!, Mr. Read, Me. Pennington, Mr. Dayton; Mr. pessenden and even John Eihmont. But am dispos ed - to 'Mink - , without the slightest feeling bribe premises, that the Republican nomination for President wilt - M taken treat the three parsons first named is thi parity:apts.' A geod -Mat will depend; however, mport. the , pletfornf laid dolen'itt Chicago; andl ,pereeite that there ark nary diferenass on this point. • • ' : The Baltimore Convention of Wednesday, which' 'will 'no doubt put forward the hest candidate for, President,' elpeots lb conciliate 14ml:diets sup. port ' ,bY discovering' a eonservative nominee. Dates or Bell is the favorite with many delegate. Strayed' is urged by ethers, end. dots J. Critten den is also advocated.' John McLean will find a hearty , tidiest& exerted for him. As against these :Veterans but one argument is raised,. 'is that they are all . too far advanced in years.' Everett, though not much • disinited, is probably the mart available, and he Is unquestionably vigorous in intellect . and in health. This Conventioi will hate its own, - share of troubles. If it hi elttlent on the slavery question, it can have no help from Ohliages and if It eatrathgantly bids for this help, it • may loos In' the' South. That it cab, inert wholseopte in. flume on the two. great Parties is A seltevident proposition. , Why not place Donglai in nomidation' at once, leaving the Democrats on the 18th of June the simple duty of ratifying the nomination? This would be a master-piece of strategy. Letter' ftca Charleston. [Chrtievoadenee of "The Prom" oIIiELVITON, May 3, 1880. It became evident last night that the factious minority, which has Urn opposing the nomination of Judge Douglas since the opening of the Von. vention, erittldl only' be eongnereci in one way, and that was by an adjournment over, to afford the people en opportunity of expressing their opin. ion, Aocordingly,- this morning Mr. .oestosa, of PennstYlvante; from the Douglas Executive Com. mitts., presented to the ;Virginia delegation a re solution adopted by that eentsolttee, which Virginia 'acesipted and presented to the Contention through her chairman,' Mr. Hassell; immediately on iN assembling this morning. By the adoption of the resolution" the Convention stands adjourned to meet at Baltimore dn. the 13th of June. There was an effort made to hold the Convention datable, and' your city would certainly have been the place selected had not the studied mierepresen. tattoos Of John Roberts, Henry M. Phillips, Col. looter Baker, Postmaster Browne, and other of the Administration delegates from Philadelphia, in. duos& the Northwestern delegations to believe that the popular feeling of the city was overwhelmingly against their favorite, the Little Giant," Lewis 0. Oassidy,liseu, and other of the Douglas' men from Pennsylvania, corrected these misrepre*enta. tions whenever they heard them, but so busy bad been theie =aligner' of the true sentiments of your people that they suoceeded in exciting the fears of the Douglas men, and in keeping out of your city, in June, thousand* upon thousands of people, and antneMenee amount of business. the merchants, matahoturprs, cad trades-people of Philadelphia should abolish to gratettd remembranee this ftiiii'dfy sot .Of their Administration representa tives in the Charleston Convention. IndriDouglas'bad lusty friends in the seceding delegations Who , were governed by the majority of their delegitlone; and be bad also many friends in the Virginia, ,Tennessee, Kentucky, and North Carolina delegations, whose votes he would 'have received at an early stage of the balloting had it not been for the withdrawal of so many Southern States. The effect of this secession upon . the re rosining States from the South was so great that they feared to yield lest their people at home should hold them responsible for surrendering the in. 'tared* of 'their section. The Secessionists, who were constantly on the door, notilthitariding their formal withdrawal, , and the other enemies' of Douglas in the Convention, played upon this fear, and taunted their that if they would' stand firm New York would desert Douglai and give the weeders an , Orportunity of returning, by Offering' to' support any candidate Who; was preeented by. a. united South. 'Fowler, Butter wettb, and John Cochrane, of the New York dela , gstion,eind a number of Slidell's tools from Penn •sylirania and • other States, Were eonstantly Circu lating through , the Virginia, Tennessee, and North ,ffsiollis delegations, during Tuesday and Wednes day, giving these • assurances, The Douglas men, although aware that this iiialdiotui game wisbeing played against them, took no notioeof it, but tried to harmonise and to reeenollelbe •prejudices whioh' bad been suited In' thole delegations' against the :nominetkin of their' eindidate. Their 'only fault , was that they pursued entirely too oonoilisto7 a course, though, perhaps; tinder the circumstances; it Was best, it they wire really in aneinemy's cont try, land the Latide of their enemies; for even Vie ghda threaten* that unless the resolution requiring two-thirds of the vote of all the shutouti coI (SOS' uotee,), tirsis adopted, she would with disk': The introdapti on of this propesition, with the threat aoeomPanying it, indicated that many of the, Boutheri - doloistos who remained behind had only done me to defeat Douglas. fit feet, they did not' White tif deeleire that this Wits their ',Neat; and I' hiard'mYself more than one of tlttrai, sty that they would Mks any platform if they could Wirt arty THE PRESS. -PHILADELPHIA, i U..SDAY, MAY 8, IMO. . , 'Other man tlimi him, milijoiMatteOtion to the,maiinisiiii . #ltiigkia..primosiarai Wis ad mitt 4. ‘, ' 01;Piaildettt! finishing, 'de- Oaring It 414. irg:Ory'Ainui , elearly inoriolation of every ^priiiiiplis of perthiniiiithry law7a4 of right and jades:.; No one APprovid, bnt , tha oontriiry,,eviry one condemned IL Oise of thalami ultra of the anti-petit* mow fronOi r irgfidiii,WhO I believe, 'represented: lib BMW. Beeissiten Convention at the mime time that he voted in the regular Demeoratic" Convention, declared - that Caleb Wasting, In this deoision, had shown him -self4liartlinsii-end not en honorable pmlidl eit nor ; Etnl it the same t ticie lidded be, had ~ , ,the otilea been any other 11444 it ws.o,ioi' Mite, , aid every other Southernfltateosmild have withdrawn; I give - you a brief eitrnet from the. rapOrt of the hitercury, showing the•spirit In which , this results .tion'yar, presentid,' and the sidioulows.sophlstry ,ertitt which crashing attempted te lioister up his outrageous decision Mr. Howard desired to offer the following' rue lotion, which question Arp 9itiksideFed a privileged question t.' "Resolved , That the President of the capven doh be, and be is hereby, directed` not to declare any person notninated for Tresident or Vico Presi dent nnleas he - shall have received a number of votes equal to twathirds •of the votiti of all the Electoral Colleges." . . Mr. Russell, of Virginia,' said. that tbelleelsion whioh the chairman made on this' question Would decide whether Virginia -Would longer, partielpate in the prouldinge of this Convention.. Mr. Rioberdeon, of Illinole,'-moved 40 lay the resolution on the table. - " The question vrastben taken by Mates, with the following result: Yeas 1113. nays 141.• • - Bo the resolution war not laid en the table. Mr. Stuart, of Michigan, contandodethat the re. solution was not in order.' The effect of arras to change the rules of this Conveutton, and it must, therefore,-lie over for one day.- -Ho weft% reed the rule of the Conventicierapon this subjs.:it:l • gele mo ti m a, Thattwo-thirds of the.whele num ber ot,votes given attellbesmeeentry to , * novena: tion of &candidate for President and Vice President by this Convention ", • There was the rule, that two-thirds of, the votes glien shall be necessary, t Was there a gentleman here prepared to- admit the doctrine that at any-future Convention ,a mino rity of the votes, by merely refusing. o vote, 'could break up their dsliberationeT ...The mere statement of the 'question itself was it. °wit best answer.; The language of the rule wee—". two-thirds of theivotee given." 'Given for what? 'Why. 'given Mr 4 can didate for President ofthe'UniOd Stater. Mr. Pngli: of Ohm,, would Mks tile, friend to state disHietly hierinestion of Order. •: • , - ' Mr. sfetillernand, of inquired If there could be more than one question - of - order rifled at The President: The 'ge'ntleesan himself was Making the third cjeastion of order.. (Laughter. Mr. Stuart' .would not detain the 'Convention farther With the diseuesion of this question -of order, asked whether gentlemen' rteriapreil., pared to seta new pretielient,"eildeh' Weed false.' tune times enable one-third of the gentlemen at tending a National Convention to break it tip by, refusing to Vote? , Mr. Phillips, of Pennsylvania, trithreitted the question of order that the gentleman fremldiehl gall (Mr. Stuart) watt toe late in tniNing his point. The resolution of the gentle - Man' from Tennessee had been introduced by, rhanimoul etiestrat, and was in the full poisession of the'Coneention,i Re would erubMit that, wording to ell 'parliaineeterY tttles, the Jrantleman from Michigan was too lets in making hid point of order.- The President., The' froth' Ilifebigair has raised the point of order that the motion of the gentleman from Tanneries*. will imagihrte a &singe of the rule of the Convention, as adopted at its present session, in aeoordamie with the rule of the Convention of 1852. The gentleman from Pennsylvania (Mr. Phillips) objects that it is too late to make this question of order. As the Chair entertains a diferent 'opinion upon the question, he desires to state that opinion. The restitution of 'the Convention of 1852 Is in substarree, as the gentleman from Michigan has stated it, that two-thirds of the whole number of votes elven shall be necessary to a' nomination of candidates far President and Vice President. •Now, it:is true that. in a rigorous construction of this order, it, applies to a nomination of candidates for President and Vice President by this Convention. Thee fee the Chair amours with the gentleman from Michigan. The Chair is not prepared to de termine what is the• force of the words "votes given." A prima facie impression of the words might be "votes oast" in a ballot in the Conven tion, but the role does not say so It maw the &b• solute, independent phrase "votes given." The gentleman from tiftobigan objects to that construe- Hon on the ground of alleged Inconvenience, that of having the nomination oft Convention prevented by the secession of one-third of the tiblites in that Convention. The Chair can see that the argument of Inoonvenienme taimilletentlystrong,ifnotstronger, upon the other side. A Convention of this tort hes no legal authority. Its sole authoeity is its morel authority as theWepresentatiee of the opinionof the party whose members constitute , ifs party, It seems to the Chair that the inoonvenienoe of awn ming that the nominatio n , by a fractional pert of the Convention, although it may be that of two thirds, conelltutes a binding nomination upon the people of the United States. is a vastly greater fa oonvenienoe than that widish would arise from the fact that a secession of one-third of the mashers would prevent a nomination. nomination ,*".. be 'made by the Constitution is a eonatitnikmal seems sity, It is a form of recommendation to the con stituents of.the Convention. That recommenda tion. in. order Abet it should hays morld'ibthority with the persons to whom it was addressed , should be the not of all the States of the Vale* ;Ldp. plumed The Chair, therefore, is not prepared to 'adopt the construction of the gentians, feogrMigh igentif the rule of J 852, end, thmetogt,'llte"•Chair is of the opinion that the reseintion of .the gentle,: man from Tonnes/swill/dr. Itowart4 a oes -crest 0912. dilute such a moditleation of the - lug rule, the Convention as shall result. it - /ie over for one day. • Mr. Stuart. I trust it ie not neeseery 11w me to, say, :that; in tilting , en sq use rs/from thesientrifet of the Chdlr ,l t Min n 06 uremia SCAPA of , res• spurt for the 000tipint of e Cha r.. OMR* that the construction given by the Cheitto the liver& "votes given," 'as relating to the._ Ogee *here given, can never rebelvetheasnetion,oflogio. ,- Cati, this . Convention give a‘ *eta anywhere rhise . .thate here'? ' , „ Reached that two-thirds ortheirates'evea here” is met , : that supererogation , " 'All eye crates ern here, and they ass be given moldier° itlse.• The rule, therefore, is plate and, palpable. Two-thirds of the votes given on a question.- C beg gentlemen to remember that the nomination of a candidate for President and Vies ,President is the only question we can make before this toady, ;that in its - business. requires a tulaeliirdeavoto.• Now, *y with the tamed .reepeet fee theisredding doer, that the imeittrutline of timee-wenols to the plus *here giVati con hot bear-the test of , kwesti gation, for we can gite,- a • *oho -seedier. else unless we for _ imenewkoris else. Ii of the Maned importance that this Convention should de. bide rightly. Let us malt essryquattion upon the broad principles of Tight—de -not lit us Gom m. wise our honor in doing a thing we do not believe to be right. Is it not strange that the chivalrous South raid consent to take advantage of such a, decision, they tbemeelves admitting it to be wilfully wrong? The fact is, I do not think there has been any genera/Hy orehivalry, or evenbonor, displayed by the Beath, either in the Convention or in their treatment of W elters to this city, and if they really,poseees these vie. Wee, and do not merely bout Of them, they were west careful and particular not to waste any of ftem upon their Northern brother Democrats. Upon this decision of Cushing being sustained by 'the vote of New York, they were in greet glee, decimal that it was the defeat of bouglu, and sousejilthe seeedhur delegate* even bad the impudence U ik timate that now, if their Shifts were invited bsik, they would return. The : invitation, hoiemf, was not extended. Cushing, denounced on the platform ea a , scoundeel who ought cot to be believed on his ' oath, by a gents. man from New °Adam, took the Apt, opportunity to leave the chair, where he' at miewdly Ander the indignant glances of every honest man in the Cm vention, and slunk of to Slidell'[ to And - relief In his congratulations from the load of infamy Which he seemed to feel he , was laboring noder. There fano doubt that bad the Convention refused to elm tutu this decision, and had Virginia, Ueutuolly, Tennessee, and North Carolina thereupon with drawn, that Douglas would have hien nominated en . the first ballot by receiving over two-thirde of the votes of those who remained in theConveatien; but he would then have been only the oandidete of a section, as Missouri would have been the only Southern State represented. . It was, therefore, deOmed but by some of his friends to retain these States, and, in order to do so, New York voted to sustain the decision. This vote Fowler, Buttorirorth, Bigler, Slidell, & tt., at once published as the proclamation of an inten tion on the part of the Now York delegation to. der Bert Douglas. Had the Convention continued in session, and bad Judge Dangles at any time re: eelved two-thirds of the votes cast, the sequel would have shown that New' York wu 'inti mated by a spirit of the purest friendship towards Judge Douglas when she east this vote; fart she would then have moved to reoonsider the yeti) by which the decision was sustained—would have aided in overruling it, and would herself have pie. seated the resolution declaring Judge Douglas 'the nominee of the Democratic party under the twO ! ' thirds rule. Let not the Mende of Judge Douglae enspeot the loyalty of the New York delegation. With Richmond and Cogger' at their head" they will be found voting their thirty.five votes at Bal timore Al at Charleston on every ballot for Judge Douglas. The friends of Douglas hut 'a wily end unmet. pitons opposition to cope with at Charleston. It is unnecessary for me to allude to the head schemer and plotter against him, for his oheracter is well known in the country; but the number of Federal office-holders and oorrußt lobby men 'who Infest Washington, end who surrounded him on this 00. onion, were enough to excite the feats of *oval?, man who knew their peculiar modes of operating, that Douglas would be cheated out of the, nomine e ~ tion by these unprincipled men If there wee en} way in which it could be done., I learn that when' Slidell end Bright heard that the Convent tion bad suddenly adjourned to Baltimore, they were taken entirely by eurprfte. Their seeds and spies had failed to obtain information of this in tended movement on the part of the .Douglas men, and the first intimation they had of ft was the 40W13 of the adjournment. They' regarded it as a complete cheek-mate to all their design, and said there eras no farther use ie trying to [defeat Doug las, fOr Jite nomination was near oertein. ; They felt that Thiltintore was not. Charleston, and that the 'inierepreseitations, which Bigler and: other Administration, tools had' been palming off upon, the Southern delegations, as to the hadn't) , 'of the Democracy of Pennsylvania to Douglas; 'Would not pus entrant in the Monumental City, where the Democracy of the Keystone State can be on the ground in, largo numbers to speak for themielves OCCASION/IL Asql*dsr, *ilretil sheet Senator'Bigler. to tole chi; hebinktoopit thiesest Iles7 4 4-the . Are•eaters. When the Souther* States seceded he was es Itseli la small boor, iad, in the enottensent of the raw mien* called a meeting °U be sPest4gloithie dale gatioa- lAmediately upOstAis a,djdirameniVet the ',Convenoo. happenedlOie/Ifilhilitiviii,obertly eftei` ilatirskiournment;Oditheardleinimttor of our degeguitee ask 'Bigler:why 'ha - bed called en's& St With - a sionplamed look, antishrtelhig• his tialdisbaat 'aa if be was really itshapted' to tell ke slowly hemmed and bated - opt thit liatutdctidled the delegation together to Adsorbate bow they intended to oast their votee for President on the morrow; and, he added, nervously, "to take into consideration the exigencies of the ease presented ',by the withdrawal of these 'Southern 011°6'4"e s±- , ; t s ' Ol Well," sainawsen with a frit:dermas fin which k honor him, - though althea everything' he has done here deserves eentraro, • if you mean by that that you want to know whether the Pennsylvania delegation ought to withdraw or not; I, fdr one, say never." " And I," " And I," reneated'several others of the delegates who stood around, and whO, before had been eating witlr,Digler. One of the Douglas Mort then asked - the Senator whether he did not think he could jest as easily ascertain how the delegates desired to vote on the Presidential question as he had on every other question as it andre„ in the :contention, there •on the ground. He admitted that he could, and, after some further, conversation,' he waived the meeting.' "A' canons' of part of the delegation was shortly afterwards held in Josiah Randall's room, in which no Douglas man was •stithritiod. I did not learn whit 'transpired there, further than that several of the Administration. delegates., among, others a Mr. Dent, of Potter eounty, advised a secession from the Convention of the majority of,, the Pennsylvania delegation. The amaxing toadyinn of this creature Dent to the' South le without parallel. In total disregard of the well-known, wishes of those who sent him here, he has - steadily voted for 'the most *Went slave code fire-eating motions, 'and actually broke the stock of his - umbrella in pounding,' as figleman'on obeers, during-the delivery of ,Yan osy's disunion speed'. It would be- well for, his people to look after him! Whatever the decision arrived at in this caucus may have been, one thing -it certain, that Senator Bigler was busy direStly after_ it among the Southern delegations whieh yet remained in 'the Ootiention, icoitriseling and ad vising them to withdraw. He made the distinct proposition to E. B. Jones, a Tennessee debigate, thettethe "aoitservatiVe Southern Stites +mild swede they would be joined by a majority df the Pennsylvania delegation; that such a movement would hive's mouthing etwit Upon, the buslneits in terests of the °Bret Philadelphia ,and the State, depreciating , property millions 'upon :millions of, ,dollara, , and ,the, • result would , Ire, that they oould carry - Pennsylvania, for -, t the most ultra Southern man they might choose to nominate In bolting Convention.; Demmentis unneces sary. It seems almost impossible that this can be the sameWilliam-;ogler who, 'in 1855, when ho was renominated for Governor ofgpr State, was BO free-sottish in ht's tendenolei that be refined to al low a resolution endorsing the Kansas-Nebraska hill to be:inserted in the platform.of the Pennsyl vont' Democracy,. Watt he weak itithe knees then, or is he weak in' the knees now? Let " Owe atonal" answer. LATEST NEWS By Telegraph to The Press. PROM WASHINGTON. SPROUL DESPATCHES t. “THE leitEßB.s' TWO WESTERN EDITORIAR EXOITESIONISTS Our any is just now enlivened by the presence of some three hundred editors from the 'Western cities, accompanied by a brilliant company of la• dies. They are a fine body of men, and I wish JOHN Rome Taoism would ask them to Philadelphia, and tot them see our great Appian Way, the Penn lylvania Central. They have now seen the Balti more and Ohio Railroad, whose guests they are. It is among the favorites of this region, and I 'would like them to look at Philadelphia and the Pennsylvania Central. These make opinion, and they should be considered. JUDGE BLACK FOR BREMEN?. Quite a movement wee made in the Penneyl yenta delegation to put up Judge Bunn for Pres-- 'dent, but there were eo Many candidates for' Vice Free Meat that It failed. Mr RtoLan, Mr. Dew- RON, Mr. BnonnsAD, and Mr. RANDALL, were reepeotwely suggested. Mr. BAKER, your amia ble and peaceable collector,- wanted BLACK, but BIGITAIR resisted it on various grenade, and the bottom fell through. , It is thought that if BLICEC a name had bees presented "it, would have carried the Convention with a hurrah. THIC TAW,' IN THE EOM. Mr. SHERMAN, obelrman of the Committee of Ways and Means, has concluded a searablug speech in favor of hiolunt.'s tariff bill. Ile was followed by Major SonWawa, of the Berke distriot, *hose frank, plain way of speaking Is greatly admired. Polite of his Perils were exceedingly ; well -'taken. Re spoke clearly and, boldly, and, though in poor health; allowed his rigor and hie ineerity In all he add. :Pori, Ott VIE NiTkONAL PHIIITIIItI MICE BILL. On Wednesday next it la expected_ that• a vote trill be takett On Alm tail to eatabllstt st national eating Oboe. This led great and a meritortooe Satire. WHAT todsti As I predietee talittoal jugglers are already at work to eitirrille eeomelon heresy Into our goal, Old elide. The State Central Committee to paled, I see, lox; the 10th of May, at the Mor• ' chants? Motel, What game to afoot now ? Xs it proposed to legalise -Manion? To denounee Douglasithe Idol 'et the people ? What le to be done ' [rizSPAttailat sa;txsABBOOLLIED rues.] ADDRESS TOM= BRORDIINS, URGING TRCIICRETIIRN --DELIICIATNA TO , 4114 -CONSTITUTIONAL UNION oonvx snow, ko. • • WASHINOTOIC Mtly7.--An address to the sue dere from the 'Charleston Convention, showing the urgent necessity for their return to the National Demoaratio Convention at the adjourned.meeting in Ince. was in emaciation today, for theisignaturee of members 'ot Congress. The movement is in tended to forestall the meeting of Conventiene in the seceding Rate/ to supply the van 'moles ,ocoa cloned by the withdrawal o f the delegatem. The number of delegates paining through Wash ington, on the way to Baltimore to attend the Con stitutional Union Convention, is larger than was antioipated. All the States will be represented except the Pulite coast. It is unpaged that not more than about twenty of the Republioan members of Congress will at tend the Chicago Convention. The Washington navy yard 111 being put in bettor condition than it has been for years put, and ex tensive arrangements are there being made for the reception of the Japanese Bmbassy. trite Prince of Wiles' Visit to America Vin iluirci To 3:41t. is Jut?, New Yong ' May 7.—Prom private information we learn that the Prince of Wales will sail from England about the middle of july, with an escort of five or Six eteamithips. lie will land drat at Et Johns; in Newfoundland, which Ooternment has made .arrangements to gire him A suitable recap lion, end' sail from thence to Halifax, Nova Sends, where the English' North' American fleet, ender Adrairallfilne, has been - ordered to rendezvous, to valetas him. After a short stay there, the en. tire fleet will proceed to Quebec The 'Prince will then visit Montreal, Ottowa, Toronto, and Niagara, and it is hoped that he *CI be induced to proceed from Niagara by railroad 'to New York, and the fleet be ordered to joie him . .. Ahem, and sail from New. York direct back to England. When the lest steamer left England, it was not definitely decided -whether the Prince would yieit New York or Washington. A memorial has been addressed to the Mayor and Common Council of this city ea eating: that, the Prince should be invited to visit New York and receive its hospitalities. Among the signers of this paper are Cyrus W. Pleld, Wm. C. Bryant, Motes Taylor. Henry Grinnell, Peter Cooper, Samuel P. B. Morse, Wm. B. Astor, and other in. duential citizens. Illileincholy Accident. NWINEN:NINE ORMDRIIN DROWNED , AVOINITA. May 7.—& report has been received from Camden, South Carolina, stating that twenty r nine boys and rls were drowned on Saturday, while on a Albin pla•nio party; The whole party warei,ln a boat n the middle of Bo ken's .nrilt- Trend, near Camden, when the boat so ddenly lank. The water was drawn off from -the pond, and nine- teen bodies were recovered. No names are given. The Massachusetts Dernocrattc Dale gallon at Home. A FUOI4IYII ELAVAI AMONG T 11115.1 BOSTON, May 7.—The steamer Spaulding, with the Maseaohusetts delegation from Charleston, ar rived at this port this morning. A negro crawled front the coal bunks of the steamer, yesterday, in search of good water 'On being exe mined, he said bts name was William Brook, and declared that he was free. Doubting his statement, the captain altered his course, and intercepting the steamer Benjamin Before, bound to Baltimore, transferred the supposed fugitive slave to that vessel. Arrival of the City of Washington. Nam Yonx, May 7.—The steamship City of Washington has arrived, with advloes from Liver pool•to the 25th alt. Her dates have been untie'. petal by the arrival of the steamer Pohemian at Quebec. The'Burned Ship Switzerland. NEW Yonx,, May 7.—The 'ship Switzerland, be fore reported as having been burned at Apalachi cola, had 2,500 bale, of cotton on board, valued at $120,000, whioh was insured in Europe. The vea l*/ wea valued at $60,000 , insured here. The Editorial Excursion. . . • iteuriwoitii, May 7.—The Western editors have grand entertainment to•night at the Eutaw 'Mende, given by the merchants of the city. To morrow they will make an exotirsion to Washing •ten and Mount Vernon. , . .Death of Ex-Governor Tazewell. Nonrorat, May 7.—The venerable Littleton Walter Tazewell, formerly United States Senator and , Ex•Oovernor of Virginia, died het* on Run -043') In thq 85th year of Ma age. ' Death' of Causal Haiiii. - Mew . 'YORE, May r.—The Joitrnal of. 7, tYi that private ,advtoes from Japan confirm the Dort of tillkdeath • of Townsend Hints, Eni., the esteemed United atatos Omani General to Japan XXXVIIII CONGRESS.-FIRST SESSION. 11. 8. CAPITOL, WARRINGTON, May Y' - -- e -ee SENATE. , `'°.. e, ee. - The galleries are crowded this morning, the poluteof attraction being the speech of Senator Davis on be Territorial question. A large number ofladleirare . among the audience. , . ~ - Mr, CHIANfiL ER, of Michigan, afore & reeolution Sr, Jommg. - gr. - ig may 2.-7 he steamship Brattl, to admit the Governors of the etatea to the privileges of fromGal wa y , h i arr iv e dere yesterday with Lime the floor. Referred to the Library Committee. pool dates of Saturday the 29th nit. The Xtresil A private bill for the relief of Israel Johnson wee was put upon the line between Galway and' N ew passed. `York via Bt. detil!, in platter(/' tittelfeaMetrOlf"s - ANTHONY, of Rhode Inland. presented the ,re- plan, - monetrence of , the patentees and mechanic+ against .7" t lk ' It . I Rumitoktevfiltaf • arresciheyink taken place in curb an elterittion of the potent inn& as theft take Don} the emeicante the right of appeal from the daemon o Paris', growing out of an Italian plot againkt the the Commissioner. , . The hill to settle the titles of certain lands fat apart R. Bel,e'e 4ifis bee iptitilishisti the formal "arMian` . d of for the use of helf-breed 'urbane in Kansas was taken up and eroised: enan for t h e belt, Mother theistasertion that-bet Mr. DOOLITTLE. of Wiseonsin, presented there.- won IL' ,Thati paper, however.•treeds the claim as tutions o' the Wisconsin Lege.lature le favor of the preposterous, andrimerte that the chant:me wire in homestead bill, end egainerthedianiminetioneyroposed aver of Sayers, and had the referee witvalsed the against foreigners. Ordered to be printed. The Territerial Resolutions of Senator Davis were thirty-seventh rennd would have awarded him the then take n whale' - . ate, David, of M i ss i ssippi , Plgebe ato mere", e sitmediaai okititligite 'Mtge thatliajeriMill not Senate wr. DAVIS said his resolutjons were but little more be able to use hie arm for two months, and probe-, than a mere announcement of the principles of the een- bly more. .. emotion The present di ffi culties ere the gems whinh Two' hundred *minds have been collected for the founders of the Government had to confront. Tie ce nt amexgithe members of .the House of .Coin-' world tint argue about national and inhere, t rights. but I Sayers would Want himself on the Constitution. which all are mon.. , • • • -•— - - , sworn to slipper*. When the tempter entered the gerden I The voting In Savoy. on the annexation . sies of P.den. be was the fine teacher of the hirher law. Front .. ~.. ...,i. the effect of the introdu c tion of that higher law. Cline . ".1. , ` ..... effilfleditwillubdrig d itiimsalvi, of which sin and death . end subjugation. Why, then talk of . xi - umber only twelve hundred voted in the neeative national righte Who was to sit at Judge to I A alight insurrection bad er.ourrei in the French try them f ,The Constitution was the law of every i • . . . .. ~ posseamons in Atrielle, oue ,re had been promptly Amerman: rind wei• can ensue ne , 'onetime ,Snide of the forma of law and order contained in it One great i suppressed . '• • .-. . . enurce of the difficuity was the theory that thin was a Baron bingek, who recently committed suicide, Government of one people. Instead of a compact be- is said to have bead 'dismissed from the Austrian twron separate sovereignties. This &site of - sa t- 1 rate and independent communities .hrototht about the Ministry in ooneronence of complicity in the gigan early Battlement of this continent. elm Declaration of tie frauds lately die:slivered: ' , • ' Independence wag net for the weenies, united: but for i Great defensive preparations are making by the them get erately : and toe Constitution was adopted. rot . ti , the mega of the• people. out by the Sate. severs ty. Chilies& •' Two British vessels are reported as This vas further en Mined by the circumetence of the having been sunk by the forts at the month of the irrerueir eerioile at wiech the. Constitution wee rate- i Peiho. fled tor the different States. ' Ho teed from the debates in the New York T.egleititure. and the Lethe Liverpool CootOgertgegl Letelligence.atuyes of 1 other Stets,. on the ratifimtion of the Conte ution, to LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET, April 2e, •-The support his view ; 'wherein the 'Toped wee What that : Brolterte-Cirionlar mempts that. the Cotten market- has the Plates could at env time. when neriessarrereeesume • been team Ant . with an Improver. ant' oe • the - mid the powers which they had delegated to the General dbng and lower gallium., which here fully reeever covernment.,. Da referred to cotton as the great bond ed the decline of last week. The fair mralitles have of tinine between the St^tee. 'The diversity of the pro • taro advanced. ,The merest to , day closes firm at un dimenne of the two motions rendered e free Interchange chanted prices. -• • . . •• . of commedities neetteery. How eurprialng, then, teat Termites of theweeileamount to 91 bet:ales, including a brink should receive the cemmendetion ef Carte 16,000 bales is speenlittome and the same amount for ex. number of Northern Retweriente Ow. wbieh foetid fault pert. The sales of to dev Certifier) ere estimated at because the South uses rte sorties to purehase Northern , 12,, , '00 hales. ineludineet 000 bales to egoonlaters and ex menpfac'oree I The Porte demanded protection—first, portent.' The market chosen firm and dative, at the fel because it was its Tie ht. And. second, because it was the lowing authorised quotations: • , dote of the Genera , Government. • ~ ', *, • Fair. Middling. Mr. Davis read from many d etintulehed anthenties Nei- Orlestrts.l. .. .........—.. • ...7X flif to /hew t het no power was given to the i- ene ra l Gevem- Mobile.. ............ .........74 ...-• 64' meet to coerce the elates and that the idea of A OnMMII- - Upland.... .. . nit, or Independence tifiVitiled among toe leading men There is a s t oc k of LOgraell bale. in post, Moludine of all sections at the ferment:in of the novernnsent. tlee Ouo hales of American. Hili glen /inserted that the General Government hes no The various el reeler, report an advance of I Illebed. powerenionit the importatioge of any State. ;If there ST ATE OP TRADE —Tpe Manchester advice.. ne ts a protectivedutr for which the 'Metes were taxed. by • port en advance In prices, from the effects of tentative what right wangler. property to be deerlyed °fib's' pro- demand for rood, batten I On this team after days of disouseion: tee,' • 14 aVRES COTTON MARKET, i Veednesday.)-eNew saw the Demoreatio Convention broken up, add the Orleans Ire, oritipugire incisolegist 106 f illn. ens et 99f enemy'e,party unitinc jcv , llll, for Its funeral. He had ,The trier qualities are ad v ancing in ence._Thei eats of faith. howevor.that the . Democracy still lived I that it the week amount to 9,500 bales, and there is a stock of would honestly meet the issue. and that the masses of 290000 bele:sin port the conntre would sustain it The Whig party retried LIVER POOL BREADRTUPFd MARKET.L.The to live. Thotrah differing with it on the point+ at Inane, Breadstuff' market is gener•by quiet. M. este. Rich. he would render hrimare to its faithful ex herence to rirdran ee Spence report Mundell and difficult t0...D01 what. It thnurht right.. Then riame • the Rai" el pater. atitekl eteele Wheat steady ; red 10' tedet'fle 11l ; While which anueet be overturn the Constantine. Thus Hoes Ileetles ed.„ Corn quiet and -mm11111.40 um:Maimed i that many of the members of the old who, Party are mixed 861036 s 6d i yellow 37ed37 61 ; white merges ed. noting with the Danmeranr, now, ea tee 'only conserve- 1 LIVERP.-01. .ROVI*IIO`4 MARKET —Previstees tire party. He trotted the hopes of the conservative i venerate) , ate doll. . Mews. James McHenry & Co. element would not he disappointed. and. thanks to Pro- I Big land. Athya & Co.. It ichardsom Pp-nee. & Co., and vidance. he believed tt would revive and reunite , other., report Beef slightly lower. The market was Mr. Davie .referted in the fourth end fifth of his ..heavy,-hat there was ion active demand ate decline of series of resolutions. whieh a: warted the right of slave I Beat The decline was chiefly on the inferior egalitiee. property to protection in the Territories. and the duty whlob the holders were pressing on the market, , port of COnletlPllB to Fell that this pretentron was feinted. i was inlet at 77e &labs for new. Bacon firm. Lard He steed half way between those who nuierted the ate • quiet at Mesa% 6d• . .. solute power of Congrea over the Territories and the LIVERPOoi, PRODTIftE MARKET.--Sugar quiet eimnitet-severeignty men. C.narese had power to ent,ll- but firm. Cores gum , . Hiss firm at 44 Id wee 3d. Spirits Ihihtemonrary Gevernments in the Territerlle. Be reed of tutine dull at ers • -- , , from Judicial authorities to sustain the eiewi embrebed LO N DON pee MONEY M 4 tan. Priday—The sLon In his resolutions and asked how that could now he don money market is unchanged and easy The bullion enneidered &Judicial ge•stenn whinh has already been in the Sank of Englend has increased to xato('o daring derided umpire. and selected as referee .in the contra- • the week. , L . , verily. It had been derided that reither Congress nor TSB LATVT. the Territorial Legislature has power to impel, the right ( Br teleg ra ph to Ga lway.) of property. He was less now than ever disposed to Loknori. Satorday.„—Console Klieg& .• . suhmtt to the doctrne of squatter !ove ra te , ty. It wolf le vseroor., Saturday.—The cotton market is firm first brought forward by a geed and great man ie DM, ' the sales to-day are estimated at 10.000 bales. who re.red the Governm-nt co-Id not stand the rude chock of contemlinx parties. It was a fallacy that should ba exploded. Wont was the result in Kansas. where the experiment wrie first tried? Did it succeed? No. The bovernmsnt hed to Interfere to preventdesolatint civil war. eneerese had no right to abdicate any power con ferred ne it to trustee. • Looting towards Mr. 'Douglas, he asked. what armee garner to us is one retention in place. weighed against the interests of the country! Of reason right, and :na tion, what is there to anatein •our policy? He then *rimed to show the abseirdity that Coneress could clothe ie. mere agent with powers which it did not possees t self. This was allowing the recipient more then the donor had In give Be bed first heard U n ite idesi of non-inter vention in the Rebate of the United States. and It lied beep hamtrumed,out to emblems tweedier, resin... lie denied GI - t the deettine n ruin intervention. as former ly enderetond, denied all right of Congress to legislate in reseed to slavery. At the very time the doctrine was breeched. the fugitive-slave law was ens Wed aged le els lateen taken in reeerd to rl in the District of C.- tumble, We reed Clsre neinion on the subject, to show that ha who was the originator of the doctrine. never gave it the interpretation claimed by the edvorate• of , Popular sovereignty. The Senator from Illinois, in ffite. opposed every prnoneition which paseedthe.enate, and voted for the prohibition of slavery from the Territoriee., In lam Convene. in metier on the Territorial billselett , out a provision regni rine the Tenho' ial Leinsleture tb enbmit the mots to Inc revision of Congress and this was claimed as a conceesion of power by Goners**. TWe. however. wee not so . as C o ngress subsequently ineerted the provielon in other hills, and moreover, Congress could nntaldioste its powers. Be ash ed no more for a leave code than fora horse or machine ands. He did want the Territories to under, steed that they had ne right to interfere with the rights or property, and it they dill so. he wanted Congress to intervene. ,He only asked that the constitutional either of the &mitten, ettniee he respected. fin hoped that Aiiralwiefi would 'levee surrender her equality of rit hts avoid any glover The country tied reeehed *rebid n 'en war I An armed bind had invmded a eouthern e S te. and the qtrantion was. what must h•y done hi sate l t e nottetry 1 ism:aerate are sowing bromdoast throligh . nut the land incendiary doctrines , and he caller on the Senate to "remake the n wreot minelplem. anti bring beck the Government to the doctrines of the Cnnstitu lion. They were asked• if a party, proferei rig Menthe,. to the Constitutinn e of the country. had rot pretension of the Gorarnmenteto await celmly an overt act. - Was not a declaration of war an overt art? If a hostile arm, stand before Your alt., must you Welt till it woe wicked? Ise would meet them et the outer gate. Yet for this the Petah is ehareed with mei:owing the. Government . The determination of the !teeth to Maintain he , *rinse tights bad been tortured into & me wahio h w e W ndet a t n e biker e warning s o ti onh e d t b ha n tempered with for um long a time. et: Minch or kir of indi ...Day sposition. is' speech was inaudible. He com deed mr BROW/11,4 Witigigilotth replied to a remark of Mr. Davie. that the second fit the series of resolutions presented he the former affilieted with the views of Deugias. if thin could be shown he would strike not any languare gnome tide of snob a oonstrnetion. Ti, I therefore withdrew the second and third of his resole- i gore end aerate the the following in lieu thereof: Rose cad; -That experience having already shown that the statutes and the common law do not afford inf. flatenterotsetio Males e property.rome of the Terri.'' torte. bevies failed. and other* bovine referred to pass seeds few. It het become the ditty of Conrress to Inter pore and pass such lows as shall siva to slave property in the Terntories that probation Whieh it given to other kinds of property. That there might be no mistake, be would say that hit, N S ueupport any torno .i ne h nt h of alLtt' i r f s h o";: l i ll t li c .4 1111141 1 r: i tl i O i n e . Tl i r W11111(1 ; ' ergo to sea in 'n e oneke boat.' gran/ ' nV rtVt ro l tlri than Plt: A 6 Zn r r . l 9 r v o . m r. llrl i n t o y ! 'L a ° d no Mr CLINOMAN , o North 1.41 °Pori 5,...id most of the speech of the Senator from eliesup Mr. ( r. Davis) met with his approval. He cored rot. hewever. admit that there was ROT middle ground between non-intervention end the power of congress over the Territories When Mr. Coss asserted the doctrine of nen-intervention, stich men as Daniel S. Dickinson and John G. Calhoun +men seil it. Be read •a long extract•fmm one of Mr. Celhonn's Imo , ohes tn suritain Oil* asee•trien That deo trine 111/100/1 rroll l / 1 1 until Ige) when it became a part of the publio law by the ye ex of the Smith. He re gardedlt ea a compromise between the seotione, which ticusht OD, observed He read the last clause o the Maas It ribtaelta not to chow Gint Contras* •ntended o a yhgetti all potter to establish end protect or to prohibit elavery in the Teetitofies. *MO etinciple of non-interventien wen re-asserted in the elinoinnati platform.and here. is Wherretheiparty stands noW. It Wes a nompmmise between the No t h t y , end &tura tied should he respected, Admitting that the GUtiteme Court had, in the fired Scott decision. asserted the power of Congress toprot set el In the Territories. wee there any none: don to newel.* this power? None at aIL No necessity existed to break the compromise. Withent concleding his speech. Mr. (lineman yielded to a motion to adjourn, Agreed to. Adjourned, WAIIIIINGT9N; May 7 _ HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. • Mr. BURLINGAME, of Musa:Musette, from the Committee on Foreign Aram, reported a lull, authori sing the Preeideat to annoint a fill minister to Sardi nia, at a salary of 1112.000 yper annum, with a Secretary of Legation itt a, imtary of fel 800 - he hill wag palmed without debate. Mr GROW. of Penney Ivania, desired the postpone ment of the ommideration of Territorial businegi. which was the menial order for to-day until 'l' bursday sod Friday next. The reason for this change wee. that some of his political friends desired. at the ob-se of the week. to go to the Chicago Convention, and did not o.re so monk to be on the record of the Territorial business tee e a the tariff question which woo/ be the next on- Portant en STUN,. consideration. Mr. HOI of Alabama. wits rot willing to vote on the GOT question until after the Chmego Conven tion had_ met. Mr • PRE bPS. of Missouri. nurses tad that the ,tanff Veation might also be portposed and the House could en proceed to the consideration of the post office and other enoropriatlon bills. Mt_. GROW said be had moved. Mei week, to postpone the Territorial business tell this we. k. hetanse gentle men en the Democratio aide *ere absent. at Charleston. He did not think it fair they should now force its -con sideration. _Those who desired to attend the Chcato Convention shall, as a matter of courtesy, be sirmlarly aonommodated. Mr. MORRie, com a nola. gave notiee that when the TerntoriM b its up he will move an amendment. giving the power to the impels of organized Territories " • M( sleet. all of their own efficient. Mr. MARK. of Missouri, expressed his willingness to Arrant the indulgence. Mr. Grow's motion to postpone the special erder. the consideration of Territorial business, until Thurs day nextotrevalled by a large majority. - Mr. BOTET,R., of Virgiia. voted In the negative. saying that although the Un ion ronalitntional Conven tion will meet at Baltimore On Wednesday. it seems to have been ignored by both the Democratic and Repub. Henn psalm Mr.f3ROW. I thought you would get through In a day. Mr. POTELER. I think am able to assure you that it will he a harmonione Convention. Mr. SHERMAN. of Ohio, offered a resolution respir ing that the deaths on the tariff bill shad be closed to morrow at 1 o'clock. Mr. HOUSTON said Wmsubject should not be footed on the House unexpected', . He moved an amendment extending the delta% to Wednesday at 2 o'cilnek- The amendment was not agreed to—yeas M. nets 118. Mr. HOUSTON said he would aa soon have the hill Weed Drough In twat. minutes as to agree to Mr. Sherman proposition. Removed to lay it on the table. Not agrea4 te. Mr. Sherman's resolution wag adopted. he House then went into Committee of tbe Whole on the state of the Union • - Mr. SHERMAN, of Ohio, said the not of 1857 was complex. crude. ill-dbrested, and passed by a combina tion of host-le sentiments; and an it ought -never to have been passed, so it should be now repealed. This not took efirot on the let of July. 1807, when there wetei seventeen millions of dollars in the Treasury. arid. on the fins of this motato, the debt errs over 'sixty and a half millions of dollars He referred to fasts avd figures to show that the ordinary receipts are far below the amount necessary to meet the PXOOII6B of the Go vernment, andpointed out eases wherein large reduo lions can be made in the appropriations. If gentlemen wou d only devote their energies and intellect to the ordinary operations of the Government, the total ex penses Gould be reduced to fifty millions of dollar. annually. As to the post suite transportation. there should be economy. nod the expenses of the Department ought to be paid out of its current tromp s. i He spoke of the }meant extremes as being more expeditious and safe than the public conveyance. There was but little bore of material reductions. however. while_ teeny spirit and sectionalism are rampant in the land. He congratulated the country that sectionalism at Choileston bad reached the lowest depth of polities! degradation, and could do no harm in the future. The publio lands are not to be looted to, in the future. as a source of public revenue. The bill now under consideration will yield from sixty to sixty-five mill one of dollars. bused° duties will give twenty-five per con ta in more than ad valorem, as they all, to a great extent, out off frauds and false in voices. Ha at ;tome length, advocated the passage of the rending bill. which he considered simple. certain. effi cient,and affording a reasonable protection to the inte rests of all semints of the country. This. lie con-ended, should not be treated au a party measure. It was ex traordinary that an • dminiatration which has been ruu. nins the country largely in debt. should °spot° a mea sure which will extricate them from this oond.tion. Mr. 8C HWARTZ. of Pennsylvania. rose to vindicate bis private character. He. together with his ecileag b ue. (Mr. Bioko:tan) and Mr. Baskin, of New York., ad been assailed by the CON3tituttOn, the official organ of Mr. Buchanan—a paper not sustained by public patron qge, but fed by Federal plunder, and which attempts to degrade those Who dare advocate the -People's nate and interests. , • Be represented the large Jefftreortianlooristituenor tf Berks, not more to his unerimprommins hostility to reachery and corruption in ethos than to the infamous career of the present Administration. He spoke of his predecessor IJ. Glanoy Jones) as harlot truckled to power and supported the loathsome Rnslish Hatless bill. Tno Contritutica had used toward him lansuare which would shock even the indeoenoiee of Billings gate, He B uchanan , er hasain John Schwartz than ['reeident wh lost the oonficiencia of his oldest and, tritest friends, and now trembles when ho meets thsim facie to' face—after having deserted and then tiatrityed them._ In &moll:mien, he advocated the pro tection Arrierioon industry. • . Mr. GROW, of Pennsylvania, advocated the tariff bill on the ground that Its passage waxnecessary to nicer the wants of the Treasury. To be fair, a tariff must have ban specific' and ad valorem duties' the former to apply wherever articles ere nearly of the seine kind, and the letter not only io scours a certain tied unfluotu atins revenue. but to shield and guard the industrial in terests ea a secondary consideration. _Mr. BLAIR., of Pennsylvania,. end Mr. STEV4NB, of Pennsylvania, evoke in favor of a protective policy. - Mr. I. LoitYNog, of Pennsylvania bemire° inci dentally involved intim debate. in oonsiesuenee of some remarka relative to Pen_nsrlvenla Mr. MAYNARD, of Mannerists, gave Me vtewaupon the tariff. The committee then:rose and the Hones adjourned. n 44,,ing PROM EU • i pg. Stiontlir Broil at St Johns, p. AL? T P(aItoLEON••ARRESTtI AT , TERRIBLE TRAGEDY NEAR EASTON. MURDER OF MR THOMAS 'RICITAitt§ON Bin:term Rated by the lions of their Vietha ,HASTON, PA:, May horrible murder wee committed in this vicinity early to-day. Mr. Thus Richardson, an old, wealthy , and respectable farmer, residing' three Miles above this place, on the Lehigh river, had, an altercation with two of his laborers, which terminated fatally to all three One of the men caught Mr. Richardson around the neck with a soyth!, pulling him down timin the fetioe and holding him in that position while hie companion beat him on the bead with a rail, finally jamming the rail into ties brain. ' Two sons of Mr. Riettardson, on coming to bit assistance. were threatened with death,rumil the murder of the whole family. and blaming of the farm-hones if they, were interfered with. One of the boys, boweYer, went 'into the house, and get ting a double-barrelled gnu, shot both of the mur derers dead. • • • . A Week Later fro®' -California. ; • , - Br. VoStra:Mny 7th. The Pony Express from San Frandsen April 27th. arrived here last night. The- trip was made in nine days and four howl, and the last 120 miles in eight and a half hours. BM_ PII4,IICISCO, April 27, 9.40 P. 21.1.-The steamer Cortes. from Panama. with the passengers who left New York on March 30th, arrived at San Francisco on the 25th. Immigration from Ohba Das commenced. Tilf ship Flying Mist. from Hong Bong, brought 470 passengers. and the ship James Brown ie daily ex. peoted with as many more. It Is estimated that-$35,e00 in drafts are trans.' milted eastward by the pony express's, which may reach their deetination and be presented for pay ment tWelve days' before the steamer having the trrssare to meet thrm arrives in New York. 1, The pony ezpriie, *latch left 'St Joseph on the 13th of April, arrived, at San Fr,anohloo .in !Aloe days 'and seventeen' hones , Telegraphia despatches from Carson Yellow state that the Indians between Salt Lake and Carson Valley have 'stolen'thirty horses, belonging to the Pony Express Company. A new supply will be lent from Sacramento, but the ineemMg express may be three or four dap' behind time: FAsjaplir pit the .thpapartake• (1111.4 e lux or lIMIRTNO. HAve.-prosGitaca, .Mayli—The *batmen art now in the ntidat of their Ilth harvest. The Chesa peake Pey In perfectly alive with shad and herring The /lentil; are coming up" immense panthers and the fishermen are, making fortunes Bond ft said have naught from 1,200 to 1,800 barrels of herring at one haul. Osbourn, at, the Battery caught I.ooo' barrels at one haat, and everybody b catching from 300 to 800 barrels per day. This rut of herring is said to he the largest for thirty years We have splendid weather for the stewing crops. and in their Prevent state .the prospect for large crops In very favorable. Meeting of the “National Democrats, at New York. New TONIC: May 7.—A meeting of "National Democrats" was bold at the Metropolitan Hotel this evening, ex-Mayor Mickle prastding. Strong .resoltdkins favoring Gen. Houston, aa a candidate for the Presidency were adopted. 'The proceed. 11:10 were marked by a spirit of great anthills= A committee was appointed to make the, impels. eery arrangents for a grand mass meeting. ' - Fire nt Boston. enstirest.nosits ensssorien •BossoN, May 7 —The chemise! works of Rodger and Lab , were destroyed by Are this morning. The loss auneunted,to.s2o,ooo. The Revenue'Steamer Harriet pine. Nsw YORI, hier.7.—Tbe ihslnd Stites stealer Harriet Lena arrived here this tionshig.. " ; Aftirkets by Teleirrapb, - BALTIMORM. MIV 7.—Flour quiet; quotation, Tia chanted ; Howard Street, CM. Wheat dull ; white. 811662168 red. $1..0111.6(1 Com active at 711a7ba for ,whlte.aed76B79o for _yellow. Provielems firm at un changed prices. Whiskey quiet itWo. THE CiCTY. AiIIUSEMENTB THIS SW:MIMI lllALtrarvamitzt carnet Walnut an 11Inth.—"thy niannenn"—"The Jaonbits." - , WRSAT sT k CLARKS'S RESTI-STRIZT TSSAIRE d r"oh street above mixtli —'• The Hope or The Rome' The Willow Copse"—" Maypole .uenoe. • TIAT•ONAL THSARTIE. WSISEt street Stave Eighth Vol aulent."—" French Danoing lldaater"—" De oho umeen. A sSlMElLT;llsnumsas. Teeth sod Chestnut 'treats Levees of the Little F&ITY, this afternoon sad evening at 3 end 8 o'a took. , • . . •• NATIOVAL HALr q , ' Market street, above fweyth. Solomon's Temple. . hICDONOVOR'S OAIITIES. RACE EMIIIM. below Third. Entertainments nightir.'. - PENNSYLVANIA ACADEMY OT PM AIM 1025 Chew nut street.—The .Sith Annual Ezhibitioa. FATAL ACIOIDE2IT O,N Tan RZADINO BALL noAD.—Yeaterday, about 12 o'olook,aa a passenger train on the Reading Railroad was approanhine the city, when a short distance above the' Columbia bridge, on turning a abort curve, the engineer die, covered a woman lying directly on the Wank, is front of the train. The engine was instantly re versed, and the brakes put down, but the inmates of the train bas too great for it to be stopped so suddenly, and the,cow-enteher stritik the woman, lacerating her body, in a dreadful manner, from lnr feet upwards, as she was lying with the lower part of her person towards the ears, and her , death was almost instantaneoue. The body was conveyed to s house at the Co. lumbia bridge', where an inquest was held by Core ner Fenner in the 'afternoon, and a.yerdlot of "ea oidental death" rendered. She deceased was as certained tobe named Rebecca Caasiday, a middle; aged woman, who for some time put had beer addicted to intemperance, and wandered allow from place to place, apparently baying no home One of the witnesses testified that she frequentl3 got upon the tracks in the way of the passim trains, and be had often taken her-from the tree). when she was not in a condition to take care o' herself. The evidence showed that everyprecan Hon was used by the employees of the road to pre vent the aoaldent, when they discovered the wo man,'but it Was too late. The Wonsan appeared to he a ,stranger in the neighborhood, and it is not known whether she has any friends or relatives Some time back She supported herself by sewing for families, but latterly elle was unable to Obtain employment in this way, in consequence of her un steady habits. THE NORTHERN HOME FOR FRIENDLESS CECIL DERN.—The anniversary exorcises of this inatitm tion. took place on Sunday evening, at Si. John's Lutheran Church, Race street, below Sixth. The annual report was read, showing that during the year ending May Ist, 1860, there have been admit ted 190 children, of ^which 124 were boys and 66 girls. Of these, 62 were committed by judges, 95 released by parents t Daring the same periodlB3 were discharged.Of these, 117 were indentured or adopted, 56 resored to relatives or friends, 2 sent to the Girard College, 1 was sent to the House Of Refuge, 3 eloped, and 4 died. There ate at pre sent 153 children In the " Hemel" boys 135, girls 18. The general health of the timititutienli good. Since the opening of the institutionil6 1853, the number of children that have been admitted It 1,500. SERENADE POsTrONED.—The serenade On templated, by the Keystone ginb last evening, to several gentlemen rettirried from the Charleston Convention, was bostplosial on aeoonnt of the wee , ther, a heavy rain•atorm prevailing shoat the time the affair was to have taken place. It will "come off , ' tonight, we Ire assured, without tall. PIWARELVITAY 11 , 0881LD.-4: Mi. Enoch, of this city, was itibbed's, abort time - Mn.;e ,of his watok Sindloooket.book,on board the Steamboat D; Lirebear; tying I 2 the htree 'at NNW - Orleans. The pOollit-hook bont P.Od $2,42.5 in money, and a number of ealuable papers., alit iiwtTlltU (14 , 4 **W -l ih . Fri045 7 '44,14010•0ii0t. Death- EFFECTS - OF' 'TIM CAME LES • U -4 / 3 3 biSvatligitaWOß.lC.l3. - '3! ° !f d Pi ,l444l J4o l 4 l FLAW , leOceks a ire ,broke Q l 4 in tknwelkkaneria,ileery , watelaKlAnwmt on Filbert- street; month belateintiittieatit, kept by B. D. gbitibb,43Aled'ilial"-Plifiktiphis Tattersalls.”l Thelindleagzois one-and-achalf atoriee,-high,, the RPM. Date Isaig- 'toed fir storing hay anti home beds blt wa %Stint AA feat fronthYloots-tinui-10A.Seekdesiramfi rs f rom Fllttprt. - sf , XO4, - 4 0 :41;Moilf.simak ihe rear, eanedf . A.Avor_ 'Street. Th e ire-wet drat dis covered is the ,npperitertida of Alke;,dhotid ing, at the soithwest corner, and it the time nearly all the staple map were absent at citnnir,:_lha weather Atli aietinviiirwarm, the whole building was as dry as tinder. and the Samoa. spread-silk, ugh rapidity that, in lye mi nutes free:ike - Aims' the ' Ant NOD, the whole upper portion was enveloped in one *beet of fire. 'There were font .stehlemen in attendance, but they were so pabinatricken that, for a few mi nute 3, they scarcely knew what to do, but in a abort time they commenced to remove the bur-et and,. vehicles which were atonal in the building. There were forty-tiro horsesia theiteble at the the”, of which fifteen were got out, but theyetnoinder (twenty-eight) perished , ' bathe Amuse, aL4 IIII le" than half an hour the whole building was a mass of rains, Beside*, ;the home, n:ntiaabor of car riages. harness, horse feed, and_wererat toot of hay were consumed: The horses kept stibleestablielement were of the most reelable...Mad waste of the - enbashs being valued at less than $2OO en A:tattle &nem ware estimated:to:he worth from .$1,600 to $2 000 *soh. flirt:Wm `of - thole burned;belonged to Me. Stetson, and the 'intertidal. &ideate individuals, who kept them:there at - °heel Mr. Stetson's hdraes burned was worth VAN:. Mr.;3 , but elabort thee before had. driven het et pair ehrth, $2,000, which .werothus ,fortnnately, eased. , Qua of the serves burned belonged to Capt. John Rigs, etud was worth $1,500. Mr. Samielit Showers had a Fairborn: worth 81,000. Mr. Joseph IC. Ceigell. , lomighorsa worth 8800, which had been- fneuredhp till Satur day lest, when the pokey _expired. but Mr. O. ne glecting to' have it _renewed.' he lows the value of the animal. A Mr. Ostably also - lest t horse ItOrth WOO. None of the hones wervitrured - The B delOti °Ube lintiate in the efternoon wag most lamentable, The mangled rehtains of twenty five horsei could be matted, lying in all dirt etlor but mostly in the stalls where they with their heeds and legs burnt off, sod charred to a crisp. The stomach of every horse lice burst open, and the entrails were erreed The men w`o were first in the burning banding state ths.t they at tempted to out the horns loose from the stables in order that they might run out, but after a fow had ,beee, thus liberated, they eranmereeti to kink and plunge about, so that it was not safe for any one to enter the stable to aid Chapel' eretterre c to oar nothing of the: danger of the witedirstrae Are full ing in and burning all who might be so daring is to Vfitlttlid in-, After the !.bullding: bad Amen... , gutted" by tbt fire, the upper portion of the moth. wall un sliver street fell outwards, end Several persona, In the vicinity made narrow ,ranapsig_ftwa hang ix Jorod by the failing man. The - upper - perticri. of the north wall, on Filbert street, wasrlleddewe after the flee, - - The loped the - '.buildimip.alleteekis estimated at sB,o6o„unon which there wanneinsetretaera The proper IbrimodjlMlOnted MdieWellitesinfamily, butbad inientry been prat:timed 'Win. F. Potts, iron merchant, of Market-street, who was shortly to - take pooramiraeof it. . The fire spread 'east; west; aid south of the stable in whieb, it osommenesd.. ,The dwelling No. 1228-Filbert street, fo the east,"rairinid by Michael Andrews. and occupied by ReTtUalt Oeidaittl, wee damaged oaths rear part, the reofired bath-house burnt, and fences and attededestroyed -The furni ture was also mach injured, k y the water. The damage to the bones moored billeSllol4,., Bast of this, No. 1226 Filbert sited. at :IMesti , story brick dwelling, ironed IsYldne end occupied by Mr, Jolia. Mai*. fahramizeiale store on Chestnut street,. above- Ifteeenth, was burnt out a short that. aga,l had the roofpf the bad( blinding destroyed, end the back seal oUtiks mein building badly, damaged by,de0...'...164 belle& hold goods wet. transieftendilSdoseigedisft-geortsr. The building 11 inaineif iltt_ the Inee'MeleMation, and the knit to the, fundtesn,..a elan serietakAl serenest. " " " • Adjoining the, '!Tatterstalie,P, in the west, on Filbert *old; Maki itatf-afttrydeedtte f ra me build trig,: °Whet Ihj Chaim, Both; kffreet portion of which -.wee occupied- by , Campbell, as a abep, and the.: rear perthY Asktrilardt,- The oP ber portion isete- binned ':.off, • insethefereiture of the oecupents safes' eeresiderahly from - water and hasty removal. The building is innyineured. - Next to this, on the sambaed corner -*/ Thir teenth and Filbert, la a largejltior.stoef brick building. also owned by Mr. - Beek, the lower por tion occupied as a flour More and liquor store. sunk the upper portion by a school called - the Penn Institute. The stores suffered no damage, but the upper MAIM 'were injure wider,. and the windows facing the Tenement," on the east, were burnt out, end the roof Faelianydertrayed. laae covered by insurance Next to the corner, on Thirteenth street, was 11' smell alley,- containing.* twoMorp datithile.frame house, and a three-story brick, owned' by Me. Buck, and occupied by emend families. The roofs of these houses were buint. aid' the &miters of the inmates injured. -,Tbereofsof a row of frames, on Thirteenth Streit, eitindittg to Sifter• anat. also owned by Mr. Bock, were on linisereraltimm; but the enemies* of the inmates stadlirmain pre vented the , flaws fronisprieding. - S.- isidl in the rem of thette,the upper, part of a frame build ing, belonging to Mr. Buck; and need to More wale, de., was burnt On the "south side of Silver atreet:fseing the south end of the - Tottered's,' .thres brick shops, connected with the rear of the store, of J. Mater bock A tons, - afore desiora,lll2l and Albert Glee. son, 1227, Market street, were damaged by Ire. On Sliver street, north side` ef the Tatter mils. were several three-story, betel' Idostale, owned by Michael Anatomis t ' one Of which fronted on Sil ver street, and the others on *falai COWL Them were occupied by amend - hairnet; who suffered raisin femininity 'otter and-harry removal The roofs of all of them were daniaged. Insured. Rut of thh,Cra Silver. were two email brisk derePings. owned by Mtn. Patton, end occupied by several' families. The reefs- were burnt, and other darnusa contained. A row 'of smell heuseOttill further east e ithitcfrostini Street n ied , Fart'y s eseurt sailed Heritert.pipea. moupied as the others, owned by :Atom were lase 11te total loss by the fire is estimated at from $20,000 to, $21,000. The fire' was caused by the curettes use of fire works by a stektty of three or four small lava, Con nected with - retpietable families in the neighbor hood 'Xhosa boys - peneured • doubled-beaded. Dutchman," sind faking_it into a yard adjoining the stable mg the west. there "sot it off.' This erratic piece, instead of taking the !Inward course expected by the boys, ejelid directly ewer and upon the roof of the_stable. The dry weethcrbad made the roof peculiarly infifromable, aail it Mon igni ted. In but a few minutes a bole was burned thrOugh, and Milne fallirg down Among the hey and straw stored in the loft, the tacit upper por tion of the•ttablL'irsa almost-in a moment in a blase from one and to the ether. ' Berms] of the boys Wore arrested alter 'the dm and they very !rankly told all abort the matter, and explained 'how it teemed: Ma - Where min oo criminal intention on their part, they were libe rated. The firemen and police labored with indemitablo perseverance and energy to'prevencihe greepread ing, and to sane all the prpertydhey could. The weather Wm ezoossirelY_ 'warm. 'Mid bodily labor was very latiguiltg• me Irani or the imam fire engines in preventing a. :Vast cont:+gretteri cannot be too highly eatimatekes;but dar-theireervicer. it would hays been impotsible to have pawed ted the fire from spreading over a whole tdoek around. The sparks and Lig ht bar materiel sat ire to the roof of the-Ball s Bee* Hotel, - Martel erred, below Eleventh, and numertios other poises for a square or mots around, but the whole agab be;rh , wl being aroused and *ILA-. therspmatof . the die was prevented. While the Union Hose Cleespiuty was pis SeLl lag to the fire, Frederick Croups, a Ivan; lain. run over by the carriege at Tientpllt b ind lowhill`streets, and badly injured about -thrbrolt. He was taken home. GOARDLVIS OT THE POOR staled meeting of the „Board of Guardians au held yesterday afternoon, at their chamber, in Seventh street, near Aroh, Mr. Hobbies in the chair. The omens of the house on Saturday / 11 # WB3 . 2.323 Same time last year • _ 3:2341 Increase. Admitted during the. past two weeks, 195 - births, 5; deaths, 19; diseharged, 10; eloped; 39 ; fur nished with lodgings,'l77 ; mehls, 391. Dr. Wm Marburry tendered his resignation as sidling physician at the-Philadelphia Buspital. liocipted.„ - Applicatiows were made ler.** same 'position by Dre. GCAirrgii T. Ziegler; A. o.lstilla, Alfred R. Bmlthi and O. B. indsos:' Laid on the table. . Dr. John Wiltbaneirealgnation as atiooneheur of the same institution was reoeived'ind accepted. The steward reported that he had received $BB-01 and paid the same over to the treasurer. The treasurer reported: tblit. he bad 'reettived $1315.56, and paid theism:is over to the city. The out-door agent, Mr. Selby, reported that he had - collected $391T5 - bitiltond end support caste, and $35 of-the emigrant tax. - - The statement of the expenditures of the visitors was read and laid on the table. Dr. E. McClellan submitted a petition,''brune musty signed by eminent physicians, recommend lag him for the position of scoot:chine of the Phila delphia hospital. - Mr Linnard presented a resolution that orders on grocers, by visitors, for out-door relief, be dis continued, and, in oases where relief le neewmary, coal or flour or provisions be substituted instead. Mr. Saner moved to suspend all out-door relief except in extreme cases, and then - Inert° be given In consultation with-the Guardians: Adopted. MP. Linnard offered the following preamble and resolution: - . Whereas, The board having determined to do away with perquisites to aalaried officer!, /18 far as it is compatible with the public interest, and having added to the Salary of the steward $400: therefore, Resolved, That the steward providin g for the . resident physician charge no more than actually expended, and that the Hospital Committee have charge of same. Agreed to. The same gentleman also offered a resolution that the distribution of tobacco to paupers, except on the recommendation of the iittinding palliate% be discontinued. Laid over. • A resolution to hold the future meetings of the tinard at the Almaihottee was Agreed to, and the board ajourned. CORONZIOS Imatizere.—During the month of April Coroner Fenner held forty seven inverts; the: suet , to'jbe county being, for Coroner 8 fBBB l £188; juries, $70.50; witnesses, $39; burials. $1.60; incidentals. inelading nod mottessa,'sloB ; snaking a total of $556.50. or Tali BA/I.—A meeting of the meant era bf,the Oar Will. be held It Mon ftl- day In the 14 isi,Prius courtroom, to take proper raeonreg for the purpose of paying respect to the memory the late Non: Thorsen Sergeant. ELECTION or A Pnovoar llr TUE. Vairran stry.—The Rev. D, R. Goodwin, D., president of Trinity College, of Hartford, Conn., bis been elected Provost of the Univerdty of Pena.)lv.inis, vice Rudy Yetheke resigned. Gons,:tdro. Errztt.—Thelatitlinsiement of eharging seven ennui teak for Amebae's:Alen' on the city rallnitys.went Into operation riltsnieY. • .iturrAitaubn. , :-On Sunday everthrefev• E. Adams Was installed as peeet of' thiNerai Broad-street Presbyterian Church.