~ ,,,,,,, - -i tT- ! ---- . - - - ,-i -, ,,,,- - ,- , ‘ ,-- 7 .- - 7.-- - --:- - -- --. ,--------- - ,1.. Tef-z,4tTingq,p* , --v,: - Eily:4sl:toi -ai-vr. - 1.? --.0-.44- . .,: i.•, - - c :::,,' ~,-*".., -''' M el-4 *" . `l I' , 11:.' - - 1' -,. - 4 -- fr 7 11 ''t .. ft 4 l loS .' .'"' 00.1'11 - * +. 4 .. :A/ /1 , 4 j u i , t, ._ • ' .I', g - ~,. - .. - • -: ' '' ':* . li.',l=4 , , '-','..., ':' ,i',:, •'' ' '' V '''' ll ; }- '' ': ' '. i ' --'''' ,V . ,‘ - •=!, ~ • ,•-•••""0k'.0 0." , ' r. ..- ° ., - 1 S,,,,Afw 7 , ; , „,44n4thitylitArlAirlSAL i 4. " : / 'T. -77 - z - - -n-16..., -1-. i.; , :• 1,1 ..r: -9 - , 4 , .A.• , _ 8.212,16 j,/ WilikW.` oi nath' o r War fiats - . ......- , i ' - - i 41F 0 .14 4414 raint4 - " , A l o w er x me - Nab Labe*:: i)Alile* Th, PPaaa " ~I • i + "--- r-item"; =.,-i 13214, ' . 10.1181 Seaft."l" —,-,..-lretraelpi'olimr. Atwoot Rekkobbsel,4 _timfoolratiorrsom,; Lidiat:tiett•ri immlaws ...um.... t .n.,4,.."-Pitero66l. i crft Olt"- - ate in Demon i c wad . Me , 0 ,1 1 0 1 1 ' .;, •P , Alltkif,':-.- 18110'0_ ...,It 10 0 ° ' - - Ica ti, ',,:% -'' t-' -41 ilftluet*Jottal • °Um t!Ae p roW W it Cl' 1860, ' the National i,,,,,„ aris64 , Mr.- !Maim' -'' - thisliarp'floak ' o 'r• , *40440 WO* th en ''ittea- /1/4°164...„,"„aai1l 444ta Oath first ballot,' , tie prominent ''''..."',,, hilil 184,91144N,P1P. ' '' ' 14 firteLlfr` A IVCI L UIA ' ' ' LAI' sa. 'OA .-. - ',pm , ialt.,,, Aid. '1 th e 1ia11L,....___„./1"--" ballot, (the -bat • takent on the feursaama,, ,- oetho,chatewailept) e4 ' t' ' rourni'6l7 4 ' ',.. oft ten to 1521,1th0 exec - cr. Aktr-lir ~ _, r0.....,..tea.) thus No t' 2 'yotaetat tot . ' tO uen n te el `"". ;;Fth . 4l bowel*: curing a sakten* ef the votes 10 4 il if Te t„ ea .` The' Ile `' white "A g e Dev°l46 , mad in the next day ,the coltoittglateer nags. It - win be Convention by !Oa . r. _ 0 seen that t t..44ll4"fite l t t i be o f ih ji e io li te i c 70 the bad "* lved 'it iiFten'tvia, insis*vciti-... Convention, ea; w, „tee; or malty , dOsh-- 11011'1..111st hig hestrenelveieiodidde=d4 th itg that cut for th e - the ban n time , daring Aim a$ any on. , , , , i , . Cha!lestonC°l-1 - *Abrams Jam 4, 5856 . „ ' , a rs : , ,Prob the tatte t or P roce et teat we w eeNeek " , 1 ger that * o ' o °, 4 m o ye a tiou, whio eoe , a d e cei le , e„ __, -me,. oi our ilkt•lahmte6_,.e____.---"ihe *OOO2l aus,_, t o bear la al_tr. _f Wi, , For a aad an 'Liamatere senieq f " falibas X 10,7a.A.---7-0;, than tbria7,., : 0 " C; -AM *wings •• .7-iftho tddidnVOl7' :11,4iflortfk* , ,M 4 41/10101* ' thihatimay of air wtete ~ , : omodem.ab vha jaw 4111 lot that l'. ' ellwEell„aratt ta 4 , d n dre osot ex-' ' ...iolteho th e 'tet e e,,s_ eee w o 11 amebae the De / **Ulla& of .Q`soe. s ad setsalPhialele pie ' - ' *WM. Wsnalea!s_,it,,.: ree' noolter ei , e any eiberuo. odiyooti or me./ Suluatee , _....."l„, ee a lima --, . who, is Aloha to ik•v--1- ty o f the c4powetie "a+ rte! ruble* ar a M or f r i„,,,k, mute/I iti ,4044 - rria, 44 1 14 la l- - • poroosM mkt oaM" • V! r' Iliastisoßliideaso, i-70 - WPM or , endanger ' Y wwwhiefatiosa disturb , , , , . = ofoer PltattPtel* A. poirOLAS " .tf. ' ti l e 0111!,41*- 44 / I " 4 l ltbe proo oo dbge ''-` inthi sialipit report ' „ the reading of '? , vou liw ni , it be odd ,‘, °tad con .= ' teraitat bY /Ogee" as° ' - ' ' ihii4tiikattii w.ae•htf - ot ter which Mr. A Ms I " g HatolorOt id • , - -, r,goldsite; Sum . n n it ..,_,,. now the , choice - '‘ Wilt-4(11*-4ia*I. , = * :,..1 4 ,,,5,m05t , yO.- ' of - all. Nl* elete ,,,Y" em ° ~ :3t c. atiaszur; or , ,•eraeett ei4 - 0 teat ',"'-' , Nation ' - •' 77, t A , a hohiaait",,et" the Dem ocratic ooti. Vemo ...mates, a ft er eokgiehat oi • Central 0---- d oye -h e ra vo votes , said`:..o Vermon t;is- , 3 edo_ , , parsoe, e who was bora and , -i.e . ,* remits ' so n , , - e bold, the - cited amidher thor moo champion inthe elogeeet, 10ati1 ' 0..... „ .. e In cesslhi 4: tbe , Bo 4 ±,pihielpie ol `r:' -:, * A lta &ma 0 ./.......' ° 1 .• • - A , Dogow. fj SOW' eigiltarlirilial 1 e o f COS. 1 ' e has been : forth. r e l lm - at bi i _i'-.-; Batldf, Vim mu t 64 act"? , „' ,, ,-; =‘, " ' w a lla hm a rnWill wa , , 'Vermont cou rt, eern th owe ripe, 41101/.!?,..,..= Uy to the sodomy *Amman or reSseY Wet - am =.-77 - ..• ' • •.. ~ 'il ' aitl hi° to wake 19 - had ”so facta ss 191 party , .se State _,,___Domooratio t , th e Withal of ts• g reet ' - 77:-,; , ar . Avsz; N - , iti ' oar Cearenitott• 111 ~- ~..,,, ,:,(Ilaretatelic_,, Carolina -the seuill gestiet9an* tiia; kC':' .presume 4*l / 4 wk the majority reSort on f ir ' ; 7' -SI e e t a w—i a casting th e ,vote; ° '., - *Ora e1"134"4 paid a high statlitt - ,°-• lall mate toeS t i m , ' tbe "litowing 8111-- ,iarttttiiliet:2o to the platform hi Wee eitlciat a lu S ten n ; , ew t , alt ta breed ,- -so lat , sly,„eallsos ea ank . .. •, • iotOki 004 natio nal ` n r",t be uk t ,i, miough ,• ile nothing ca n Matte of the Repoli ;.tt, etry_ t - thoht, hapairiat tr e3 - 1/ - , from it Id :.re.e . e ., te ii Witho u t , aurtiat" at tnotis4e 'a* P ' Tr! --7, - ' ate, in ast fear PrOPortiorisLA'- - ) - vat him B,:! )ll)h72.fitte OSA; as . then fm t 'Mu - - to , lio• he lh. "very, -1! pr, itle,P4 4 504 !1. 4 f 1 - I .. S he did not - ' - joilkidniom if :Lfit4c***PAer Y._, Air to be for"' sal; mope's ; Mr. livemew ..,,,__ ,, ,,,A-,Latiiii - - - ,woo tkitike, wadded* .. : orpo••• • ‘.0., ozi r a i.. 4 T i nv -iii;ii i `l O hi:1160 ; 0 , , i , )1(r;:-PMWM,,.....„..,= —ietitlg.l. t ,.-, ' -'"" ' 1:, Innadliulgill'.".'... ' - thavete et 1/ 1 4Muri, ~ Mr. koa:azion `041114_,.._, iii aii,ioartilkian'Y ItaW.l. BO 'EthA34."4"minn - shieVoi Delk!:;" 'the-.l)emottvao Urld" - - - Ao is i e t : ,- - --- -, ' dip U,t. ~, 1-I_-.; ,- ' VM4OII id - I - -iis, *NI' g,, * ,‘ lads *withdraw his " hits directed his fri • T the=y . . ' Hot of -tboselio before ,-,OBogie - tio l l - e# l .',-, '„,;..,,....,,, - orsi-: wik:siniillbt, niff r .l i , Prim.. '!,.. - 4 dig cherished t ` 4114 744iSt°1-1*; ; . Other speeches '' .e' ,A,-,ifte, heaahl'uf -114% ": r r 7 ' i ' Ilinf -4 1 4 64 ) 4 - ' "...,,, ,-iooiikabirnainifioU"••._-,i'-, i tt i; i• i„, : •, z . --. : , , , l .T ltsi sidge h 7toes' Doi*.i illie .1-;.;14'ii.4:),-*--ia th ir,,i.:iii.7.47**imo.l/214.;-frli: that wilb44 lit 1 , 4 ° 0 " - ' '' i ~'ln in. bite' o;ao his 44 000144 in /86, , *----, e , _, States and men' - F Conven t ion the ' i ve eL Y, h ecezeo of his advoeseY , , . ,!.. • . lti*Vmill ~--", ~ him, and' --"' voted - 4,Par,aor P" efei g al Y' ° hefteeThiaai lia - , a se from t h e Convention , --_ r . . 4 /SOS, when 4440143114' -,AB6 t,:ie‘edo - ismajne,i4iik uf I th -; -,..;.-Mr.-Evenoix#l-9 , , ji n a *He Judge' vo,o llol lrieldr i ttur i , , ~ . 3 ,, i ,0 f - h 7 s lJ t o that ma- -, 1 , -, -.:..,"-,147......, ..All-4-es4'itionairaa'a 'mufti"' "-11 77 %.kia -, -1860 . Jade Denn"" 4ll, _rU", ; 1 ,-, -, ', ..,,,,.`'„--;•., ......,,,,..r ii s i oe t ty ' i :t f th e votes. i:•''„? .-- , 4,,-ileipt#4‘,ll-f.,14T "''-',,-initioon. every one '..',.:;'.4.,,aki4: I! .._,_ Y ' #l,--- hin et i es S, . and . n - -ma' ~..,.4 - 11-, , - - ed it. •=•-..-‘,.... electoral ~,, b t,e- it' re presented, ~..7,,,:iti*,4 o: th e , 4en .., 9p. . , .., •Z `...' - '4 o ifir tio' °L""l6ll,whi tr,.. 4 iiteu e ~:o.Puthsn -- '"-- ' '1 ' PI),"0"ti ri°,1"4.1.t fl a Y- ......- - he' hiiiio366,_ , ' l' ..,..,, i ti , bertha ' rinniber, - 7:77 - . 'th-itijerftj ' ' " ' ' ° 'he i4 SWOT. of i .. _ —.- _whim declined , `eitorteitmile hyany - ' 7 1 ,i J pelikeipb ruallt'rlll ' li t rhfa favor, ' 1'„,"",,'2:4- : ,',.at tda'eneinOeillikt°',lllo4dra!i- i, ~-.,,,,,,:; I;)';:=,.,`,,;l:'.*liiiiiko .4 -f-'l4l6°Y.:'' a nd + s fur, - :,,i.4.,kr.'„,/, - ?,.", ? r% While ha vu applauded _ '"lfil.A6r,okilill -,...;A4-5,-...1-4rfliso* vit,! . , fp!, 0. -;•'• ... . . hi e te -t wje tit h e d = - r.5 . .,,,,,,..,.-, -1,..... t t i produce ' bar 2 o o4 7* - i i t h e .5' • ..0,7,4. : - A .- 4 ,,, ux..... ' , D ebt s , -while in ''f . '''-'l' ':. -...,. by; ~a ;dminie*stian uPP O to r‘dikotwete. -_::;:: t; .4 %esprit:64_, ..**h#,, Lairatilsl4!4w7Pir.4-4101, Wild' '''' '' i : /10Minne17;_,..------' -. 1 181 TO 'to the t.-- , `l' ~, , ;:,.. , y* I. th is J....womoOny we ,leave . -.. t ~ , , .;--:-,-,. ''. - ff , talft________ ,, _''' , ~ .,, A 7o;4 o , , ve leit .ae f decide. a. - , ---e -." -,' - ' '''4 sn Lu m .""l!:-',,,"'" '..- liinit.- e ijidi fi Deoaaaaand e- , - IVAIkOOM inl4 ' • ''',iAines tasift i tole lib ',---; eilia***-6*o4"*Are of the imitiliridio t - 'llrith hie*4 ool ' seitii" -°l4 ,< t 46 ~,,, . , T . , ' - ''',.l--' ' ' 'i illlebte. ea. N . -/ Infrigo ° phicidespeteh - --li 4. net,thatetelollll _ p . 4., llreltnatlY re- -I ' Tu e : Pft,lB,ll'.fx "•"--: r w hingtoer ' n;404, tointlett:, -,,,,,•-'-trnnon'-''ll4 though, •we be 'P ' • an a -• , .z. , y.,4•-•'-: di ,di d „1.....--i.etftn th is Ifeu..._.-' • -ltetween - • iiinosa 4Riviro, . -toiihich mew „..nnb. ,', ~,, ' iiiidispu , x „,,, 00 -- 0 a --.-- • , ---••••• -1.1 "'"I'''''nenii..... the .o;AC''',. - ,:- 'irt;i t y report of - - ..---v , ”" •!,.'-'tt:iintr''--- trom3l4l4"""' the Mae , • -&-"'" --' Ikiii'nAlibel it, :r li P ilial in it, Ii ....4 I ,:A n Pe 441,10 W-1111 41Etellt eigl)e,t, Prmojile ':.'' P."lgiiiii:**toisi*th••4#l,,te.,..„N''"..!l -40;4ti._e , tr, ,pt*Oriii..„,„..44-ii,h#o4-,--i,f., ii, 4 , to. ~.;-. -1., ~- ,itl ,•::.14: -0-4The4lP :.sod,ttlient " ;'-...'''' 4.--,. ~,e ,,'' - “ ii.d..... ii0.43111111101111* rdidervell,,the-!' ',7.,,,,,,T--kr --issr . eppm-.,,, -.-: :(ii-,-., 'l(ll li , oi,'.l,owo:tas4sf'. ''• - ~04.3:44,,,,,,„.„ of '''''''4'-; ••`•',:tleii-e--,1 "'z' ''' ' - ha,- Aifsourts ' l- ` . "••., _ , '.l4PfA.''imi'• large tn 1:1;:Agi4.0.,4?-t.'l!". , b , windy •-',.:•1_,!..:?•'; ••ifti-,• ikii-o*" 6 Jorge Danko, ' 10 " ' ' •'-)-- thellelee- , „,,,,,,„,,,,..., ef. amino* Wen .".• =l,r4--Y' ‘J",iiiimitibia irbir--- - suottliel'- _..• f • - • .`,..i,,ii• : ,-....-_,iiiite-ipid an_ ~ ,• A: - -, i , if -„L.J.,,,,.:: --,".-.• ...7,.- - - ,witiksisit.„., ." f mimed' 1 : 14 . ,--:1-1.,;s4=4,00—.i Nil`;"•-ilisitt-litiloWwlaatirei' ":' ' l . `'- '‘; ..,- r - 1atej4.441 opptPriiut th a t ite , -: sotto .•&:-'-'---e •-•ei-..*l"""rjggyreint,..,-A0;„ iiifOrtldtiisZew, 11.4*41..airif --tr'il'n4Y44,-X; *14*#,14 l'altitsiCMW•irt"44i4;ralu', '‘.. ' ,, :f ,e,*: N. .7', 3)0700, ► of l 4 4 :q____," , tifitl;,. ~, , - ~-, ~. : 4 s, ~:;,r _,,,, ,r- 0F.5.....7.,..i.j..0 s4ll.ff?'"7. "', _ ' sco ' MI ifgr';';/:'-F, .;.,k.,'*--7,17100.**1, iii,itioliikimi 5" -1,:-'2,-„:,. 0o i 1 ; . .„..„- 0,-..i? -iiii,.--6,,iiiiotoil -...,,..„:„.,,''tan..1.11-"'” ilk,- 11ab0ip ...... _ , . ' iakirtVklij..... , Wit -w.".!- iv pswitrill" , " 4,11,06/".. li ''','--,44 ,01''.7-*(64-411411111011-s -,ii..i.loskif 4! inlik..butioit.•wie -‘,',5',-;T.-imioiitiol4trr-z. z‘„, ritieo'l,_ l....i. „_,!E! ~, Cl' 'tiiii -4tt.-1?-t.,,,•-,D4,7:1, -•,-4 ' , ' '":' .:.,•,',l-'), ! ) . 4••• , ..•...... -is** tXt.'n4z Zaisiiiti**lre,rlrt.,-- N.,,,;::,,,,,,i0:: .. - '-- i 5 ,1 - ° :1 1 abl4AA . Mr. Bocdh hoe 64'101) . i4diii'44.lnioMi . at Arelpatreet arkeee lo!kbhinea ' this 'VGA. On the irf , It** 10=41W that he performs betbell.thiCit • hmk- t , M4..0141400 before: Weenies hat eirtMt* lafhla former deadenoy. It, Is rounder, fuller, end more eapable of expreailon than before. Con sidering that Mr. Booth has had two difilaulties to 4tieotenid Adth.4-namelyi hhunntb, maids fgther's -• • tlies,4= B6 great deal during the ..Micketively e he hat been on the stage. ThidditillettillitidAmredder , Doetir were rival., ke#Plerilienboth left SOPA wlie have taken tc'thif, li lrefwidon.C:thitilati a, here indictor, who, early became a decided manneriet, ,has got .on . byilltnt . munarkahle rap t and actually re -kilned a imiteraCalaraft irialColti,) to wit se- his brgral4 4 7 ark, - 4 1 1 401 1 01'. !dr Ale! merit 'being tbs't he laite'very - icirefully, sod itudiedeeituine with irneelesc Not one adonis of gintni WM , ' lighted' the heart of Charles Kean., IfehinmeetiintaT aster, grid nothing more. Ed alma 4 1 '146'4 ;Cato; has many faalte; "but - 11.6 - eme ' elan deny that he is a man of he eau iittiklOgiroleyolew:_eik the _ syure. Charier:Haan never. rhos ;Mere on...deed level ; Edwin Booth "siketeeavulo,the 44044 enoellense. Charles Kian,,wbehtpowility,,never can improVe, while Mein Booth r searesly -half so old as Kean, bee Carle whode - constant' tendency is to advance. . lire: 104, - - if -Itertiontinue to improve, as he lately haa - dineAdirlitiboth will deserve and Obtain a reputidkuvis woild4ide . his father'S. -Even itoir,lie ie a fine perfbimer. His mat of obaraoters prficis, weak are Hamlet, this evening ' Pes.rsral t o . m oirew.' ; Nseherd , dos. :21040.4 on - Wed nesday; 9tae: its on-Thuradij.. • ' , 7,- ,4lfaliteit•etreet Theatre, this evening, Mrs: Will "tithe her benelit;_ When we eon:: trait the preamit ininegement of this theatre with what it was: two 'years ego, the .00xisperison is so decidedly , : favorable - td Mrs. Gairettson, as the "itibliclmeni;',.that we- are tsonfldent the hones will ; be,emwded tbir The perfainninees will be -Westland Muirston's play, " The - ,Pitrician's Daighter bilihich - .Mr. - and Mrs. Waller, litre. D+ffieid seal Mr.Dbewell Will play. The Meda -1 lini4elke,'L `eowifoled by' Di. cuitedrigton, ' the: iliehestrit greedly enlarged on this maiden ' and* ilonotudlig drams Will be "The Widdiin Nand," :Abe -of , Clairitola by Mrs. - Ciweli; Mr: Nemple, for the first time, l ot ; Frani. DrCwer and Mr; IL Parker; from the National, also performing. • "TheWlfes Ikeiet,"-written for Mr. and Mrs. Charles -Keen, end first played by thetri in this eanatry,,lss:, ..184eXitteriento at the Haymarket TheatrOsindon,,in !awry, 1818, With great and deserved sates% , was lately reproduced it New Yciik, by Miss :Liars Keene, and -had a atireesfol run of ,several weeks there. "It will be played at Thetieto-nierrOWeventsg, Mr. , and Mn: Waller-playing thooluiraotere of Sir Walter Aneyott and 'Lady Eveline, (played by the Keens in Leaden.) - Mrs. Coivell eithe Page, (Miss Reynolds' pait.),:,,MissMilleras *cud, a Puritan waiting nun d,,to_ Whiab MCC Keeley - pve great affect in M. 134eWilli, *4II- believe . , as Lord Arden, 'and Mr. Tocng ei - Jabsz, the olainons Steward, - * ,Chiersiteiwittidned at - the Haymarket, by Mr. B. well ; reeiolleet,- as tine a per foreman."' in. NS wey imentlAever be desired. Since As meow of " The Hunch back" and is The Wife," no modern,. linglish s play has been -pro,dneed with greater merit than " The Secret'? Mr. (1. W. Lovell, who wrote it, is author, also, of "The 'Prevost of Love's Sacrifice," end other - good plays: It is whispend that ." Ingomar," given to ~thi, w orld ,as, a- translation by Mrs. Lovell, : Woe Judea& executed -by her eon and • Pn)ished lusband,:—those -two , relatives, with affectionate: einniatilin; their. combining to liaise a literary reputation forher they toyed "The Wife's Seeret," the charm is,,that every W ildcat nitaridrand,prObable, and that the langetage clear, impreadve, and easy., The interest - of,,theiece never fags _ We shall not de- PrieS44l-iers-erikireet_ unit by telling , them - the Plat - ,_bder,elntd.„ MINK it that the scene is Zugibilt, and the time'steit five Years 'before the fleitorittion'.4 that,',,preelons esapegreme, Charles Stioart;!:, - the tierry„Moneroli," who deserved de- - capitedion great. 'deal:mote :thin his father, 4ealettlii is the main feeling in the play--flir_ilral. win Of his Wife: Mee. *miler Will Mohan the charge - teeof the Wife, aturros - plore,unil, above all, so very womanly and wifely. Titers, li not i bid tart in ,thtpley.-We "nreisteil," as,the.Prenoh say s when pefforraistat the , lisimarket, and eon therefore give a decided opinion as to its merits Aiskitee,eu.. , Mrs. Waller, we, predict, will make a great hit with this play. Mrs posenteitee ditties ; is, becoming, quite the- grMindser„ , ' , (Join - c)'toefe'S ' In Wiiikoniter appears ,as Caleb Quotem ; James Seirtipar ae Lass* llieTatoiter, with wage; and Mime seed Pries, "aaGtlaas and ;:Lacy. Nor this along, brit Charles Gayier's burlesque, i, The '4 2 ; Y# ll -" * tiair.ri4t Young - By the ,wihf.',Ale led has suoieidid" so. well, that Mr: Metionengli hie hatiorlinhd"!tTlie Fiotaie: Forty Thieve"; aloe by ' ' Mattes, the onsallestlgiii of, her ago; iuyTtheretois'the greatest eartostty" in the world, eogrinnoiliir".-lerees d ' afternoon , met evening, at Assembij Bsildlna, esgirior, of heitinSt and Tenth. She singiiit half a doaen songs, with considerable .4)ritiotle *Mot, and.. really , la .so thongh beattillitty proportioned, that she stands npen her . . toomptisin laintomitne, in, whioh he mete, le the leading &Wooden. He has nmsio and danc ing - Oa" and a new piece, " The Brigands," will be Fr9dacm:a this ai, , MinC, A 'Sdireble' sittxdrtil eompany, the New Orleans 'buten, specs troipe and braes band, will com: Mince giving Ethiopian performancer; of ir superior inns, in Concert Hall; Chestnut street; on Wednes - Germania: Oretestra will 'give only two Mere Frifilleßiduramis ibitieeMon—en next Saha , ifey;ind on, that day week. In writing about the dramatic eve* ti of the past `ant tie promises of the present 'week, we cannot ftiyget Alts . 'lt Most' emphatie , failure, ;se mid an ex. hibitioa Me ever ' witieseed."_the (so-oalled) perior aid Illo'ireni" of Mr. F. Dewrenee , and Mr.-N: K. Richardson, at ' Musical Fried Mill,"on Wednesday and Friday. The only 'mammals' featsire • Weis Mr. 0. Jarvis's admirable Pea: FleYing- A oohed:boy `la the age of tyitdvii,insitingasbadij as Muter illoberdson did, would deserve to :be 'birotuid. , As , for Mr. Liw- Irlitlik7he hailseither Wee nor Manner. • After the tratiWirldeeinmarebecited, a stampede among theamidemeiCeotailemied, and tleis Went on, plode aftel, PIMA, lentil , by the time that two-thirds of the programme was got through,' (it Which time 110 ; 4136 -Ped,)' the' &adieus was , two-thirds smaller titan, hen Hie pertiinienti imam anO iid The only seemed "to retain any auditors was Mr. *Turvitfe playbig., -The'. ambitions ;young gentle man -who made nen; 'fixeco liad a few idhs fiten lit, is •apOsimpossible that any ho w*: iikdatuandrild 'be even eaoh a Wearable of Winne ash* perpetrated. Looking back at the oPtaion,whieh we expressed !dike time, we able Minblimied - that we erred, as we often dd, in glitinif only toelotbsattrig amotice • 'of the lint night's ;," Failor - Dianies"in which there was' ; The ,1114drised youth, who on this ootuule* Milled ~, D ogiatirre desire, end Inwtelinuistf ;limn sMag-eared 116.111111.; may take iii weirdler it, that he never can become a Ros e* :If is, manner hi" *retched,' his yoke harsh, hie ~ularas .awlieraid;nnd his, fees devoid of ex. preesion; ,, ,We moat ,sincerely lament that Mr. Cad sidy; Whom we know.to be a respedtetill and Intel. Bret 'irentlesein t should have host money, as 'he 'Meat have done, by thil speculation. Eon" weeks aim, we expressed oar opinion, not , 'Orogether' favorable, of Mr. Beeoby's perform ance:Of Rrehard //I, at Walnut-street Theatre. eidinittint, freehand fully, that he bad and, Indeed, we see no mama why-be may riot biomes a good actor, pro.. "bided hid dais net soar too high at Met NU error, ifbiirall; ores an the bight side,—he did not snag, garkimi the contrary ; young Richardson le no. thing batvent'ind - Oviir.vebennent• action. He has a distinct *Midi of brad, band, arm, leg, hut, of bodj, - for nearly "Very separate word. We tell .bls Aud, is our Opinion, Baking pan ever Conquer `litpaitaxeraii defeats, as we told Mr. Beetihy that, if he pill apply hinnielf to eatMg, in a 'regular Hiestail before a miscellaneous audience, be has a _fah:'passiiiiet 'of ate day•teseoming a good motor. , Aditit;iswEnerassezois.—Bronitalleador A Co. ire hail* litaintunber of the pornhill Maga 'ghee; the *entente of. Whiolt we ajwitineed, by an ,63lPlSeni some IWO ,ago.. Also, the' Illustrated Loselea - Neesi, sad 'the Illustrated Nom of the 28tb. With the last-tuned le giiou,a 411,..portralt, : align*, on Steel; of Sir nonlikiatthil, one ct the list:appointed English Judge*. Ai the way, so littlepoetry did Washing 'toil' Wag ever wilts, that the following lines, by the Deepilese- Album (Deeedene was the C4.'o'/% l6'l 'o' )1 ; P15°14 ,Doper sattior of •,'Uledailes - , 7 3:..wi1l peru s ed with interest; Attlifnelfid , 4lMic„ 4iiiiirsetionter the votletithroes;' ' "I'ltettottais reek tide feirees h tfas; • Ands ity the tribute ol'a . -, `ll l, benkeetrth and kprelineee combine— , 'Whit heiehiths4 : sweet ' , sight ' Winn to ohms still "soiled of no, Wein tliffnselOy pip* stiselsierriis of inevitionlioti none t , ; Gojaoill), the into Med sew the rand ; MO* sso4 hilirtry Ivied that blow!, ; • ,41(Mn the Mammy Mew thy hand."' Awl tetten on tee crop that groerthr ireiesso them thole - sides mine* , o s towe l " keestsioe feeling spends: , - kotilSikhiSetatiOS thodised horses, ""Ajid 'refeedieeintsktiftst tlieneesd friends I ' • 1440440 i ORt si I7 l lesii! 4 tr 444, 4114044.44,druht , • . - troilli ; tbat,Ornt v*Stiuli - RPWO . , ~,14 7;r0, 0 40.0304 41iffir sought. Nowtififotif aisOr • kesion &it ; Pat et Stores Shrine his trlblits toss, TS to he hoe irmibinned theft. WiensnOTOll kir°, ivxit IL MIL WAWHINOTON CORRESPONDENCE. - *Biter IVOrti " °CeltsMufti." (CorresistideneitifThelieis.l; WalCt SiffiltOtf, May 13, 1860. BM; Eli Thayer,'=of iluasehosetts, introduced the Popularlovereignty liom into the House of Re presentatives on Friday last, and managed him with a degree of skill and 'courage that would have done- jostles._ to., even Van Amboy& himself. He showed that, however much this femora quadruped bad frightened parties and demoralized palladium, if treated-well be-was among -the moat, amiable.of his tribe. The Repubilein leaders were a good deal 'monied 'at the practical thrusts, of Mr. Thayer; Who is; himself, an active member of their Organisation and 'a delegate , from Oregon= to the 'Chicago flonyention, and they denounced him with considerable bitterness. Mr. Thayer is one' of the representative men of the age, and has dis played atavism perseverance in his attempts to in troduce free emigration into our Territories, and Oen' into the slave States. his colony at Ceredo, Virginia, almost entirely made up of oitisens of New England,' greatly Misrepresented as it has been—particelarly'elnee the late troubles in. the 'Old Dominfon"—has'.: been a decided tri umph, and if Governor Leteher wilt show as punch forbearance and liberality towards ft as were shown by Governor Wise, it cannot fail to become a flourishing and profitable settlement.. He is deeply imbued with the idea that to the people of the Territories should be entrusted the entire ma nagement of all their affairs. He is the best wit ness against Congressional intervention, beginse he has a eon that, in despite of Executive and Go varnmental interference, in Kansas, the people have triumphed. You will remember that after his last nomination for re-election to the present ,Con grass, it was proposed to reconsider that nomination on amount of his known'-popular sovereignty proolivities, and that he went before the diatriet Convention in Maamehusetts, restated hid opinions, and secured a confirmation of the vote ' , by which he Was placed before the people as a can- , didate. The Gto6o of yeeterdayeontains a fall re port of his remarkable reply to Mr. Gooch, of Massachusetts, who undertook to lecture him for his attempt to engraft popular sovereignty upon the 'Republican, creed: The reply of Thayer con vulsed the House with laughter, and showed that he was no less conscientious in his professions in regard to the princiPlea of self-govermikent than In hie practices. I commend the speech to you and yourtroaders ai t. rare bonne tounhe. Very little work will be done in Congress during the present week. The same understanding that erne had immediately betore, and during the sit ting ,ef the Charleston Convention, to the effect that no badness of Importance should be tram:met ed, has been agreed upon in regard to the Chicago Convention.' - Governor Seward has, I understand, left' for Buf falo, New York, where he will be in communica tion with his friends now in Chicago. He will be powerfully and persistently backed. Such men as Thurlow Weed, Simeon Draper,p3latehford, Spauld ing, Governor' Morgan, and others, will leave no done unturned to put him before the country as l l their candidate. He feels, and they feel, that this is his last chance. They regard the Democratio party as hopelessly destroyed, at least for four years, and neon fide 'idea they will demand his nomina- Hen, alleging that if any man can be elected, hal can be elected. The extent and resources of the Seward organi sation have been widely 'and foolishly misunder stood. He has placed many politicians under obli gations to him ; has voted most liberally in the Se nate ; and .has lived here in this eapital.with an open-handed hospitality that has commanded the admiration, even of his political opponents; and be is believed to have a hold'oo the affections of the foreign population of the United States., The diffi culty he will have to encounter will be the charge that ifohosen to thetiblef Magistraoy he would be too generous in his administration of the Govern ment, and loo' free in providing for the troops of friends who' have adhered to his standard through good and through evil report. It, will also be shown that,, identified as he hu been with the alleged odious doctrine of the irrepressible con filet, he could not gather to' his flag those men gtbo have beioine alarmed at this dogma. In any event he will be enabled to dictate terms if he can not h nominated himself. The men who seeeded from the Deniocratio Lionel Convention, at Charleston, find. themselves in rather embarra ssed circumstances. Scouted and oondenined at home; and denounced abroad, they feel the full went/ of the punishment which their treason merits. In every Southern State, whose delegates seceded, steps have been taken to fill their places with good and true men, and instead of this secession. weakening the party, it has only'arcused a determined spirit of conservatism, which has taken IZrririK. l .. 3f .7-. 11: _,... * %tt - s', who idly dreamed that the day for destroying our glorious Union bad Thb secession of the Democratlo delegations from several of the Southern States was a prsconeerted and well-arranged plan. The scheme had been systematised and eencoeted In Weehington ally by the leaders of the:disunion movement, and it was put forward as a "feeler" of nubile sentiment. The plan had all been arranged by Davis, Slidell, Bright; Bigler, and company. The, country *IS to be divided into three Aristotle. „ The Northern Stake and, Southern State( were to constitute tire of, the grind divisions, and the country from the ridge, of the Rooky Moaning west was to consti tute a third. • This list division was the prise paid for the eo-operathin of Lane and Gwin in the work, and fully explains the, otherwise unaocountable conduct of , the Oregon and California delegates at Charleston in ascending, Yancey, and those who acted with him, in all his movements. This grand eonspiraoy also explains the course pursued by our own Nigler, and those who permit ted him to lead them in. the DigirOattiOn. By the aid of this light; we have no trouble to read the comae of their 'votes against the Cincinnati plat torm and in favor of a platform endorsing a slave code, Congressional intervention, end adroooting tho reopening of the slave trade. We also under. stand why Governor Bigler was so anxious to per suade tho Tennessee and Kentuoity delegations to withdraw from the Convention, and to Indue6 them to threaten to djesolve the Union, which, ao be said, would rodeos the Value of property in Philadelphia millions of dollaro." The scheme was g mammoth concern, - and, if it had sueoeedod, might have scoured the traitors a large amount of, spoils. But now that it has failed, it estates nothing but scorn and contempt for those who would sell their country to mare their NM* ends. The Union hl far too strong to be, torn asunder by the puny hand, of- each men. We smite at the simplicity of aheir earnest attack, and rejoice to see the consequences fall like fire on their devoted beads. Now that they have failed, it is ludicrous to see them striving to get book into the phrase is de serted, and to bear them folioed,' denyillirlheir intended treason to the party and the country: Mr. Smith, of North Carolina, the American AcV ministration candidate for Speaker of the Rou'se of Representatives, who received the votes of Mr. R. Joy Morris, Mr., Scranton, and Mr. Junkin, of Pennsilvania, ,Mr. Nixon, of New Jersey, and _other opposition members, under ,the supposition that he would favor the protection of Amerloart in dustry, voted against the Morrill tariff bill on Thursday lest, thereby justifying those gentlemen in withdrawing their support from him after they had reason to' distrust his profession on this subject. They were roundly denounced at the time, particularly Mr. N. Joy Morris, for changing their votes, by several of the newspapers in your city, but.their suspicions have been fully sustained by the course of Mr. Smith himself, who, had he been sleeted, would have proved to be one of the Arrest thorough-paced Administration men in the Rouse. It &tree me pleasure to say that Mr. R. Joy Morris and his friends deserve credit for the course they took fn preventing his election to the OCCANIONAZ. Anciron Noricn.—Tha particular attention. of purohasersla rogues* tO.the large, Attractive, and valuable sere ql.ffrenoh, Qerman, Swiat,,lndia, and Firitish ,dry goOds, embracing 1150, lota, of oholoe and , desirable tansy and staple artiiles in worsted, wootlett cotton, and linen fabrics, to he, peremptorily soil by oatelopes,'on sin months' credit, commencing this morning at 10' o'olooketo be continued ,all, day, and part ,of the evening, without lietitation, by Myers, Claghorn d' Co., Auctioneers, No. 232 Market street, , THAD% ,BIINIORIID C 48!! STRAW GOOD/3.—8 Scott., Jr., auctioneer, No. 431 Chestnut street, wili sell this (Monday) morning, at 30k o'clock, a most °holes and' desirable assortment of Ladles' dt Miss es' new' shape straw And • fancy bonnets, from low to very riot: high cost fancy hats, hats and bloomeri, men's li4 toys' hats, to., to which the attention of *trade is invited. Erns/WYE RALE—Extra VALUABLE REAL Es vars.—Thomas k Son's: sales tomorrow, at 1 2 'o'alook; noel), at the Exchange, will comprise 80 propertlei, many of whieh . are to be sold perempto rily, by order of Orphans' Court, Executors, True tese, and others. See advertisements and pamphlet eatalegues. , = wouid dill the ottentiop of our readers to'the sale' of Vitt - Brothers on Wednesday next, The :ilecids comprise some very rare articles cf iertll, :and ' would well repay a' visit. They will .betptin for exhibition to-day. ' ZSTI4I/11W11 • BALI /OWL MIMS, TIIXODdIi Nnwt , .-43ii Thomas Bons' advertisements, and r,E4P.lll444lltologuss bunted to-day. attention or ppropfts dealrloo.o pllreMp 014 i for oonutry residegoes ke invites} 1q aq Over: Alientent to•day's paper. /PIX*9IIIIXOITIIitENT iR WOR6INSTER, MASH.— NV* reoetied the following telegraphic (teopatph at slots hour Mat night:' WOROIHITEtt, May 12, 18130,:,-EnthnsiSetio sp ,,,PtiOn of tips 49k : 40,144 otelogsto at torso from fakifoohusetti:—Ove thonsond *lions present ..45r militio , „po r npopiss oat—ifre. works, Navies, Sto.L4Mvil . olKortf" 114 hit red dente by an bromine proossidon— addre ss by George IT. Bendy, Usti., and responded . to by Davis in a most- follottonS' manner—.cheer upon cheer for Stephen A. Douglas and every delegate who Toted for Douglas,—New York Herald of yesterday. THE PRESS. -PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, MAY 14, 1860. ATEST NE WS By Telegraph to The Press. PROM WASHINGTON. SPECIAL DESPATCHES to THE PRESS.” WASHINGTON, May 13, 1810. sattaroa BAYARD ' OP DELAWARE: - Senator JAHNS 'A.I BAYARD, of DetaWarfi, turned home -on Saturday, and will remain there for about a week. I understand that it is proposed to call a DemOoratio meeting at New Castle, at which: himself, Mr. WHIT/LIMY, the very able and attentive Representative from Delaware, and a seceding delegate, in company with Mr. BAYARD, at the Charleston Convention, will appear and reader an micennt of their stewardship to their constituents. It is deeply to be regretted that these two - gentlemen considered it to be their duty to withdraw. from the regular Nametape Convention. ; I am not earn - rind . to hear that they will not Milt a re-adinisSion into that body, unites Their ''constituents should elect them to the Baltimore. Convention; in which event it is to be hoped that the Demoora ay 'of New Castle county ' will instruct them to take the course they refaced to take at Oharleiton—that is, to vote fer Fast igiate A. DOUGLAS from first to last, an the only man the Demooratio party can elect in November next. Mr. BAYARD was a delegate at limos, but I have no doubt he would be bound bj the expres sion of the wishes of his people at tome. 'The beet comment .upon his, withdrawal from the regular Convention was his secession from their regular dis union Convention. He can now make all good by returning to the fold, and being, as brought to be, a faithful representative of a faithful Democracy. THE NEW -DUMMY ATTORNEY OP CALIFORNIA. The Senate of the United States,A 'Atm amaze ment of all parties, as I infoinied - jbu ottflateisliy, confirmed, on Friday, the nominatiosof , CiALROUN BENHAM for District Attorney, in' place of Dr LA Tonna, resigned. Mr. Batumi had" few claims upon the Democratic party. He was appointed District Attorney of California under the Adminia tration of President Fillmore, and :milkylaced by President Pierce. Can it be possible that his only claim to the recognition of the Administra tion was his complioity in the fatal duel with BRODERICK, and his known frieitdshlp for Senator GWIN 4 The articles in the New York 2ribuns and Times of Thursday add ,Friday last, prove that the original declarations of the friends of DRODNRICIC, so much assailed at the time, in regard to the causes which led to the death of that laMented pa triot, were correct. war IS NOT GEORGE N. SANDERS REMOVED The despaieh ,of GIIIORGS N. flowage, '.navy agent of New York, to the President of the United States, which cost that generous functionary nearly twenty-seven dollars, bids fair to become as famous as the bulletins of NAPOLEON during his campaign in Italy. Its brevity is equal to its impudence. It created great indignation in the household of the President, and yet, strange to say, up to this mo ment SANDERS retains his place, and complacently refuses to discharge the duties thereof. Is be kept in because he may become a valuable witness be fore the Covode committee, or is the President in a league, with SANDERS to allow the latter to perpe trate jokes for the amusement of the country ? TER PRESIDENT LIAS NO ORGAN nO PIIILADEL- The troubles of his Excellency increase. The failure of his investments in Democratic journal ism has been' illustrated by another instance of newspaper, ingratitude. reappears that 'the Pennsylvanian, the family organ of the President in your city, lately edited by his reputed nephew, General Geonon WASHINGTON' BARER, is about changing front In favor of Dot ae its articles now clearly indicate. The first step towards this change wan the somewhat discourteous removal of Mr. Ilexes from the editorial tripod, and the sap posed elevation to that position, which be formerly tilled with so much ability and power, of EDWARD G Wiese:Eq., one of the most notorious and un subdued rebels" in the country. Unfortunately, WRNDIaLL'a resources are failing, and he is com pelled to refuse anymore subsidies to Administra tion papers, and therefore the German dootor-who hu charge of the paper referred to is forced to employ talent and take lush a inure° as will bring subscribers to kle list• , It is stated here, upon high authority, that Bella tore BRIG= and ELlDELL,beretoforeunderatood se the representative man of the Administration, pub -Upsuegatfirl islzukisammukkimiluALP GlazExam 4 Immure TO elllO4OO. The distinguished editor or the New York Trt-: brine, Eon. HORACE Onenrar, has been ideated by the Republicans of Oregon, in compsny with Eon. Enz.. TalYsn; the equally well-known Repub•, 'Man champion of Popular t3orereignij, to, re present them to the Chicago Convention. pIPPERZN9II BETWEEN TOOXDS A.*D'ISTEPIIRKS. Hon. Apwasupsp,ll.Eirapasse, now attome, in georgia, has declared In favor of the principle of non-intervention, artriigainst the seoessionists from Charleston. lion. 'Reamer: Tomtits, one of the Senators in Congress frevathat State, realm; mended the delegates from gear& to withdraw from the Convention. These gentlemen have been warm friends through life. The question is whether they will remain so In view of the dis agreement which seems to be inevitable between them on this great question. SEWARD'S VOTE AT ontoAao. The best count In Washington of the friends of Eigwaup is that he may receive two hundred votes on the second or WO ballot at the Chicago Con vention: _ The total number of votes is that body, as far as can be ascertained, is supposed to be s fopr hundred and sixty, whioh would leave Mr. SEWARD minus thirty votes. MEND= OF DELL AND EVEUETT The friends of BELL and EVICRXTV are greatly elated by news recently received from the Southern States, and from New York, New Jersey, and Penn sylvania. In the latter the old Whig sentiment bra been.rovived with all its enthusiasm, and there can be no doubt that a large yote will be polled for what Mr. SnienLay i emewhat disiespeßtfully calls the " old gentlemen's ticket." EXPECTED DEMONSTRATION FROM HENRY 'A. The shrewd game played ily MX. 11Frxran for the Presidency has not escaped the critical oyo of. ea -governor Wan, now , at hie home near Moo mac. Do not lie astonished if Governor 'fun ihould come opt with a .yery heayy thunderbolt against the secessionists, notwithstanding the violent tone of the Richmond Enquirer t and his long coquetry with Psewswpo Wpop. - PROSPECTS OF 11TR PASSAOS OP TR:E! TARIFF DELL I understand that Mr. Tooting, of Eteorgia, lately declared that his vote should not prevent the pas. sage of the Morrill bill through the Senate. If this be true, and that fearless stateamsn should take ground in favor of the Mouse bill, be could do mirth towards promoting the settlement of one of the moat vexations and Irritating lines of the day. I trust In Meriven he le bold and brave endue' to do so. • TgE eirMIAL REPRESERTATIyEti OP ORPIERA.L cumEnoN AT' CHICAGO FROM PENNRCLTARIA. It is dated hero that the Presidontitat Interests Of General Clektanort at Ohleago have been en trusted to the fare of Bon. Annuaw,ll. Daanan, of Northampton; Don. Sosarn &say, of Dauphin; MOB`HOW D. LONNY, of Erie; gen. amour. Pen- Timm', of Delaware; and HENRY D. Moons, of Philadelphia: prom Indian"( his claims will be adv,neated by Eon. JOHN B. Booo9 ' , and from lowa by Mr. Da Wotir, a leading politician and lawyer in that section. 7 RECEPTION OF THE JAPANESE EMBASSY. Thp 'lons° of Emma ntatives agreed to adjourn when they adjourned yesterday, until Monday, at 3 o'olook P. M., with a view to be present on the arrival of the Japanese Embassy; whioh will pro bably arrive at the navy yard early in the fore. noon. The Senate adjourned over yesterday until Monday before the invitation of Capt. BUCHANAN, commandant of the navy yard, reached them, ard, as they do not meet until 12 o'clock, it is doubt. full whether they will be able to take action in time to attend the ceremonies. There acorns to be a difference of opinion as fo whether the President will receive the Embassy at the navy yard. An evening journal, supposed to be familiar with the lutentiens of the 'President, mays that the Embassy will be formally received at the Executive Mansion, on Wednesday, in the presenee of the Cabinet, and other high dada% civil and military. There will be a military display at the navy yard, and a military escort also, for the Ambaesa. dore to their quarters at Willard's'. The mayor and oily ootmelle have accepted, an invitation to attend the ceremonies. The whole tsple 'Walk herein this Embassy, whieb everybody iiteurlons to see. It is to be hoped that the recep tion at the navy yard will be imposing, but as yet little preparations seem to have been made for the warden. - TRW OOVODE COMMITTEE. . The Covode Committee met today, but examined no witnesses. They aro on the track of the agents who did the natal In pitting through the Inglis!' bill, and !mowing ones," or, rather, those who so profess, allege that rich developments are in store. Ae good' old lather ;Minutia (peace to his ashes) used to say, !, lypus v'errons ; we shall see, we shall see." , At all events, this committee exer cises terribly* Mt, litromumut and Aidge Brwn, and Will probably . :intraertatiWe - 94v, piattilt OW Tan mantinprOrit C442NBNTTO.N. It is sai4 that' q ?l e.repos thit hq.iyent 01314,rieqtpik - ,:,lllB,*(ol,waiit,t4ototth oertably, even for a gentlemattaf Atfic easy complete - e and: tegerotts frame. The platform Wittoh he itiothttur at Charleston will probably prove 40 fatal to him politically, u the platform which Jack Ketoh uses IRPORTART, IF TRUE. Tilnoupa THE SENATE is to doomed individuals who mount •it cone. The Governer has reason to regret that he went to Ohtirieston, whether he regrets it Or not. Eletotdd have known that however good his WWll tieffor fin* taken this resolutions, like Mr. Bo ons:tan, be is too weak in the knees to withstand the bully and bluster of BLIDELL , III33 Barony. AN ATTEMPT TO RESUSCITATE A TEREITO- DE =;! Mr. °now made an effort this morning to resus citate the bill to organize the Territory of Idaho, =brio' 14 the Pike's Peak"- Country, which was laid on the table yesterday. He stated, in reply to objections to his motion, that the bill he proposed to consider differed in particular—an unimpor tant particular—from that which he reported from the Committee on 'Territories yesterday, and, on motion, of Mr. THAYER, of Massachusetts. laid on the table ; that he reported this bill on Thuriday last, and moved Its postponement until to-day. TheMonse proceeded to consider the'bill, when it was laid on the table—yeas 91, nays 78. Thus has the Mouse again vindicated the principle of non-intervention with slavery in -the Territories, for it was the attempt to regulate the question of slavery in which was fatal to the several Territorial bills, which now sleep the death that knows no waking, at least at this session of Congress. At every step DOUGLAS 'triumphs in the triumph of his great principle. DESERVED COMPLIMENT TO CAPTAIN TURNER The citizens of Vera Cruz feeling profoundly grateful to Captain TURNER, of the Saratdga, for ids gallantry in arresting the piratical expedition commanded by MARIN, and thus rescuing winch property and many valuable lives from destruc tion, are about to present to him a beautiful and valuable sword: PROM CHICAGO. L9pecial Despatches to " The Press."l CHICAGO, 'May 13, 1880 TIIE CITY OF CIIIOA,OO. There is no city in the Union better suited for Convention purposes than Chicago. It is easily reached by railroad from all parts of the Union, and its hotel accommodations are second to those of no other city. Chicago is de lightfully situated on Lake Michigan, at the inns- Non of Chicago river with the lake, and is in fact composed of three large towns, being divided into North, South, and West Chicago by the river. The south side, as it is called, is devoted principally to business, all the chief hotels being situated on this side, and also the two fashionable avenues, Michi gan and Wabash, which are lined with magnificent residences, the homes of the merchant 'princes of the place. The north side somewhat resembles West Philadelphia, in the manner in 'Atoll it is laid out, the dwelling-houses being surrounded by fine gardens, and the residents exempt from the bustle and noise of the city, whilst the west side is devoted to manufacturing pursuits, and its popula tion composed of the laboring classes. The resi dent population of the whole city is estimated to be from one hundred and twenty-five to one hun dred and seventy thousand cools. At present there are about live thousand strangers here, and it is expected that by Tuesday night the number will reach fifteen thousand. PREPARATIONS OF TILE UOTELS The Tremont, Richmond, Briggs, Adams, Mat teson, Sherman, Revero, and other hotels, have prepared accommodations for a greater number of guests than there is a probability of their enter taining. They expected many more to be on the ground by this time, and it is understood that there are thousands en the road who have been detained by the heavy rains, and who will arrive to-morrow. The heaviest trains are brought in over the Penn sylvania Central and Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago railroads, which are doing an Immense business. • THE onnzEics ENTERTAINING THE DELEGATES Most of the delegates and many of the outside visit ors who have arrived are being entertained by private families, who, with a generosity in striking contrast with the sharp practice of Charleston, have undertaken to provide accommodations for large numbers of the strangers free of charge. Demo orate are vieing with Republicans in extending civilities. THE READQVARTERB The Tremont Hotel, at the corner of Lake and Dearborn streets, is the grand exchange or head quarters, where the delegates most do congregate and all the caucusing it done. The large office and passages on the first floor are already constantly crowded, and it is almost impossible to force your way through the throng. TILE EXCITEMENT commEmalso delegates have arrived, and t r777Zr eandidate ere actively urging his claims THE OUTSIDE PRESSURE The largest outside pressure is from the West, particularly from Ohio and Illinois, whilst Now York and Pennsylvania nre both well represented, independent of Orlr respective delegations. THE FRIEND OF WII. U. ISswertp. WK. IL SEWARD is being earnestly pressed for nomination by the shrewdest Dud richest politicians Ps the Repel)lice° party. His principal manager is TIIIIRLOW Wrap, whose band is soon in almost every movement made so far. The opponents or the New York statesman fear and dread Walla's power. TIIE CHANCES OP N. P. BANKS. The nomination of Demo and Evened-r is being quietly used against Szwonn by the friends of tiov. Beams, of Massachusetts, who mart that it is neoossary to piece a men on the track like RAMO, who has been identified with Americanism, in order to carry Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and oven New York. They point to the feet that apart of the Republican ticket wea defeated in New York by the Americans last 'fall an oyi dense that if Savant!, or any qther man who has been opposed to that party is nominated, the whole American vote will be thrown against him, and the Empire State thus be lost to the Republicans. THE PENNSYLVANIA DELEGATION. Most of the Pennsylvania delegates, particularly those from west of the mountains, are already here. Hon. ANDREW G. CURTIN, the Republican candidate for Governor, and A. 11. Mamma, the chairman of the Repuldican Stets Central Com mittee of Pennsylv,'ania; are also here. It is un destood that Guam and his friends will be satis fied with the nomination of SIMON CAMERON, but is this cannot be accomplished I think they would prefer Ram., of Tennessee, with a Republican on the tioket for ylce president, They say that if DOUGLAS IS 110IatIlatat at 134MIDOTO it is very doubtful whether Pennsylvania could he carried against him, even by a combinatien of all the op• Position votes in the Stqte. SEWARD TUE EITItONOEffr CAM:MUTE, The fffends of &mann are the most sanguine, and confidently count on his nomination from the sixth to the twelfth ballot. They complain bitterly of the course whioh is being pursued by those opposed to him, declaring that they are not actuated by a desire to make a nomination which will produce harmony in the party, but only by a determination to defeat him. They oharge, further, that peeked delegations have been made up from Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, Kentucky, and Missouri, for this purpose. Ms nomination, however, they look upon as certain, claiming Pennsylvania, Now Jer sey, and a part of ghlo, Indians, and Illinois at an early stage of the ballotinga. THE xisly ENOLAIID pELEa4TEEi! A large 'majority of the blew England delegates will vote for SEIr4RD OA the start, brit they are not:, to be relied Ewen, and the indications are stroMg that they are at heart the friends of BANKS, andhrlll, If possible, bring about such a condition of Odra that they can spring him on the Oonven• lion tle a compromise candidate, DATES AND WADE. BA'r ICE has very little strength, and will not be kept s ong in the geld by Altoona. His friends are then 'counted upon for Senator Wean, of Wi l k), who i¢ loonling up as a formidable candidate. If SETVAnD is not nominated, WADE will be. flis friends seem to have a good understanding with the Banks men of New England, and it is certain he ean'oontrol a majority, of the Ohio delegation ; though the Bewardi tee, who seem to bo the only op ponents he has, say that Madan and Governor CRAMS'S friends will never Submit to his 'lumina tion. THS►DEHOORAOY INTERESTED The Democrats here are using considerable in fluence in favor of SZWAUD. They say that they will carry Illinois for Dounr.s.s by a large majority if be m nominated, no matter who the Republican nominee may be, but they regard Elawattu as the weakest man who can be put up against DoUGLAB in the Middle States. Their indignation is great at the treatment of their favorite at Charleston, and you may rely upon It that there will be thousands of the Western Democracy at Baltimore to see that the "Little Diant'' has fair play. The Philadelphia platform of 1856 will undoubt edly be reaffirmed, Pennsylvania will try to get a strong tariff plank in to help thorn at home, and it is rather probable that this will be accorded to them. • Arrival of.the nonnpke at Llarnatou Roads Maim, May la.—About twelve o'clock last night the steamer Anacosto arrived here, and an, hennaed that the Enited takes steam frigate Roanoke had anchored in Hampton, 'toads. The eteamer Philadelphia is now making preparations to repair thither, and it to confidently expeoted that the wilt roach Washington with the members of the Japancao Embassy about noon to-morrow. Rejoicing over the Tariff. Portavit.t.g, May 12 —The flews of the passage of the tariff bill by the Rouse of Aopreaantatives caused great reploing and entbnaiasin hare yester• day. A salute-of one hundred guns was fired In celellyttion of the,eyent. -liientenceft ' lll otitelagghter. • alasfaitir,.llfay. 13,=-:lfetinati Walker, imitated re; hitting ..lohn Meekersen, bas been fauna guilty of manelaughter. The penalty is ten years im prleontnent and $l,OOO dm MITITII COMIRESS.-FIRST SESSION, U. S. O.IP/TOL, Waseinel°74.lE4' it The Senate is not in session to•day.. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. On motion, it was agreed that when the Heusi adjourns it be till Monday afternoon at 3 o'clock, to enable the members to witness the landing of the Japanese Irmbassy previous to that hour. Mr. Cox, of Ohlo, asked leave to vote, and said m he Wished tcrexpla a remark of his made yester day. He said the Japanese matter was an expen sive humbug. He did not moan a humbug per as, But owing to the utter indifference of this Congress as to the Mexican treaty and eommerescwhere we have a trade of - thirty millions in Nutmeat, it was, comparatively speaking, a humbug to run after the antipodes. Ho wanted Congress to look after our neighboring interest. Gentlemen were afraid of Mexican annexation. Ile spoke amid Grins of order and objection.. Mr. Gaow, of Pennsylvania, moved to take up the bill to establish a temporary Government for Idaho, wbioh on Thursday, Wag postponed until to day:. Mr. CLARK, of Missouri, raised the plat of Or der that this bill was laid on the table yesterday, Mr. GROW said that the bills were not identical, - - - - the one recognising two•thirda of the Legislative Assembly to overrule the veto of the Governor, end the other merely , a majority. The Speaker decided that the pending bill was not tabled yesterday. Mr BARKSDALE, of Missiasippi, replied that if this decision wee right, the action on any bill could not be °one:bided. Mr. GAow maid that there were fifteen or twenty thousand persons in Idaho, and argued that if the General Government bad the power to acquire ter ritory, it is its duty to make arrangements by which settlers can be protected by an established government. This bill was the most meritorious ono of the series. Mr. OZ ARK, of Missouri, said that every foot of Idaho is within the organized Territories of Utah, Nebraska, and Kansas. Mr. Cesa, of Indiana spoke in favor of the bill, saying that Pike's Pealeis six hundred miles from the capital of Kansas. The people there never have their own provisional Government in defiance of the existing law. Re controverted Mr. Thayer's views about Terrltorialfurlediation, and hinted that the latter web not sound on the Republican party faith. Mr. HOUSTON, of Alabama,' charged partisan motives on those who supported this aeries of Terri torial measures. Re moved to table the bill now under consideration, to establish a temporary Government for Idaho. The motion was agreed toyeas 91, nays 78. The , Rouse then went into Committee "on the Whole on Territorial business. ' several bills were passed, including those provi ding for the completion of the military , roads in Washington and New Mexico. Adjourned. The Japanese Embassy. TRW TO HAMPTON ROADS-INTERVIEWWITH THE AMBASSADORS ON BOARD THE ROANOEE. - NORFOLK, May 13--Evening.---The steamer Philadelphia left Portsmouth at 8 o'clock this morning, with the Naval Commission and invited guests, to meet the frigate Roanoke. The weather was magnificent, and in about an hour the frigate wee reaohed, her sails being furled and her tops manned in compliment to the visitors. The band ac companying the Commission played national airs during the succfeeding ceremonious visit to the Roanoke. Captain Dupont, of the navy, Captain Taylor, of the marine corps, Mr. Ledyard, son•in.law of the Secretary of State, and Mr. Postman, the in , terpreter, were taken on beard the Roanoke in the first quarter boat; the second boat conveyed Com mander Lee, Lieutenant Po±ter, the 'Secretary of the Commission, Mr. McDonald, and invited guests, and the third took the reporters. In the cabin of the Roanoke, Captain Dupont was formally presented to the Ambassadors, and exhibited his commission from the President to take charge of the Embassy while in the United States. Captain Dupont introduced Commander Lee and Lieutenant Porter as his associates, also the Preai dent's interpreter, and Mr. Ledyard was intro duced as the representative of the State Depart ment Captain Dupont welcomed the Ambassadors to the country, which was ?expended to briefly. The ceremonies being concluded, the treaty was uncovered and exposed to view, and a friendly in tercourse evened. The preparations for going on board the steamer Philadelphia was then com menced. The interview between the Commissioners and Ambaseadors, although much more republican than the latter evidently expected, was conducted with great dignity on both sides, and marked by apparent reciprocal confidence in each other. A feeling of deep interest pervaded the spectators. . The interpreters of the Embassy mined freely among the visitors, and responded to the congratu lations in tolerab ly _ good English WASHINtriON, May 13.—The Embassy will arrive here about noon to-morrow. There will be no for mal reception on their lending by the Government, further than the extension of appropriate oonrte ales of welcome, under the direction of the officers of the navy yard. The grounds have been placed in the beet possi ble condition, and no means have bean neglected to make a favorable impression on the minds of the visitors, who will be conveyed to their . quarters in carriages, under the escort of the marines and the military of the District. The precise programme for Wed4esday, when the official reception is to take piece, hes not been perfected, as there are points of diplomatic eti quette first to be determined, e officers of the army and navy have been no dent that t e r that it is the desire of the Presi former will accompany ,at the reception. The Executive mansion on that i meal-in-Chlef to the From Washington. WAIMINGTON, May 14.—There is an intense ex citement pervading Governmenteircles, caused by a rumor that extensive defalcations have been dis covered in the accounta of a Federal officer in a Northern city. The German rate of postage on letters between the United States andiftbe Thurn and Taxis pos tal district, conveyed via Bamberg, haw been re cently reduced to the uniform rate of live cents, the same as when conveyed via Bremen, so that in future the single rate of letters half an ounce or under between this country end the German t.tates, under the direction of the Thurn and Toxic post office, whetter conveyed via Bremen or Hamburg, will be fifteen cents, prepayment optional. lbe single rate of letter postage, between the United States and Switzerland by 'the „Hamburg mail has been reduced from twentpseven to twenty cents, prepayment ontional, as heretofore. which reduction goes into effect immediately, and is the result of the reduced rate of ftercanzi Postaite on American 'correspondence transmitted via Hamburg. Tto lagl.slide on the Pennsylvania Railroad. MM f &MIN, May 13.—The obstruction on the Penn sylvania Railroad, caused by the recent land•slide, has been entirely removed, and the passenger trains that left Pittsburg and Philadelphia this morning have passed through without any deten tion. Live stook and freight trains have since posed, and all trains can now run with their usual regulerity. The Philadelphia train west, to•day, had over two hilmired pasiengors, most of them bound to Chicago: They will maks connection with the train that leaves Pittsburg with the Pennsyl vania delegation at 2 o'clock tomorrow morning. Democratic Meeting at Atlanta, Ga. Anannin, May 13.--* Democratic meeting wee held yesterday at Atlanta. The postmaster made a speech. defending the Southern ganders; from the Oharicaon Contention, and denounced Mr. Dog gies on a traitor to the DemoaranY and the South. 11 0. Yancey, Esq., made a long speech, taking eimilar grounds. • The meeting weather' adjourned for a week. The Fire and Apoident in Bristol, B. I. TWO LIVES LSET--S*VEY PARSONS BADLY BURNED. [From the Fall River Nova, May 11.1 About two o'cicok thin morning a tire was dis covered in the ratio of the mansion of Mr. James F. Do Wolf, in Bristol, it. 1., about one mile east of the village, and in about an hour and a half it was entirely destroyed. The alarm was soon com municated to the village, and many persons im mediately resorted there with two fire engines, but their efforta wore unavailing to save the building. The furniture,which was obstly and elegant, toge ther with the tdato,was removed in'a somewhat da maged condition. Mr. De Wolf and one son were at home; the remainder of the family were in Providence. The housecoat originally not far from. $25,000, with the improvements that have been Made upon it. It was built about forty years age, by the well hnown James De Wolf, grandfather to the one who ncnupierit. Insured for $12,000 ,9.000 in the Providence Mutual office, and $4,000 in the EtinterN Company. Most painful and thrilling incidents are eon nected with the tire, During the progress of the conflagration the chimney from which the fire caught and connecting with a furnace in which a Ore was lighted yesterday for the first time in a fortnight, fell, bringing down with it the burning floors of the upper stories. Previously the fire had be ea confined wholly to the upper portion of the building, and a la-ge number of persons were at the time in the dining ;um removing furniture. Several' pavanes were completely' covered by the falling brieks and burning 1114814 of timber sad flooring. Some of thout were taken ont,of the rains by the byahmiere, and others managed to make their escape unaided, Two, it was subsequently found, lost theirlives The names of those who are severely burned and wounded are, Charles Sanford. (works in planing mill), Dr. 0. 11. Doling, William H. Richmond (sailor). Henry R Cook (printer, and foreman of Bristol Phreois, ethos, and formerly foreman of Fall River Daily News MUM, Samuel Chaffee (a boy), Thomas Lanorgan, and John Bonne. Several others were slightly burned, but not at all se riously. Mr. Richmond was shockingly burned, and when his ooat urns tetnnyocl the flesh almost entirely Peeled from his arms. Mr. Cook was also badly burned on the hand* and arms, and also about the head and face. The others were also severely in- jured. The wounded were taken immediately to the village, where medioal and other necessary assistance was rendered It is the opinion of the physicians that they will all recover, and this of ternoon they are quite comfortable. About eight o'clock this morning, evil some hours after the people bad retired from the ruins, it was discovered that 'tiv.it persons were missing. The horrible conviction flashed through the mind that they had been towned to death, and the fear• fol thought was oven oonfirmed by the dreadful reality. Their names were B. Lewis Waldron, teamster, forty years of age, and. Eliphalet M. Horton, o mason, aged thirty years. Mr. Waldron leaves a wife and four children, and Mr. lie rton a wife and two children. VUTIEBAI. HERVICHS OF 8, G. Gcopatcm, Esl., AY Sr. BAItTIIOLCMV.TeI CHT4llll.—llie funeral seryieeS of S.. G:lioodrioh, Vert , the ohimseu'e Voter Parley," were performed at St. Bartholomew's Churoh, Lafayette plate, at ton o'clock yesterday morning. The church was crowded, and all of the most distinguished men of the oily. in literature, art, and business, were Present. The Rev. Samuel (look, D. D., and the Rev. Morgan Dix ablated. The body was enclugeet in a rosewood coffin, mounted nitti Alva, and inscribed with the name and age of the deceased. The beautiful anctimpiestive Episcopal service was ceid but no addresses wore made. The lion. John A. Dix, George Folsom. James C. Derby, B. IL ()raker, P. W. Boardman, it. P Tuckerman, Charles Gould, and Diram Retchnus, Eggs., were the pall bearers. At the conclusion of lisp eere monies the remains, in charge of Mr. John Can trell, tho undertaker, were taken to Woodbury, floupeotiout, for intermeut. Mr._ Goodrich won equal benor as a puldieber, an official, and an ou tlier, and his many works will "keep his memory green."—New /ark ,Herald, yesterday. THEE CITY. ABIAYSEBaN'TS THIS EVlVfnte. t iat,,nuaL Tartaa;t Walnut JITM above Eighth. t+ooute of the o ne star"—" Olio"—" The Bri gands." WHEATI EY & Mauna's AUX-STREET TZlArait* Arab street, above nixth.—" Harriet' —" Blue Devils." vveLnur-Evaitirr Trinavuu. corner WalDot - And Drinth.—" The Patrician'. Daughter"—" The Hidden Hand." AsSEMELT Bottnucos . . T and Chostnut etreets t Levees of the Little Fury, this afternoon and evening, 3 and 8 o' Moak. HATIOSAL HALL , . Market street, above Twelfth.— Bolomon's Temple. - • - MoDorniveit' a Ciairrixs, Baas !Wen, .helow Third,— Entertunmedle nightly. PENNSYLVANIA ACADEME OE PINE AXES, Uktii Chart eat street.—The 99th Annual Exhibition. A NEW s Pntesi IN THE ELUTION CONTEST— TALLY PAPERS MISSING --The counsel of Mean. Harty and Downing, and their friends on Saturday, made an' extraordinary discovery while examining the papers connected with the late election. It was ascertained that the returns from twenty-five dif ferent election divisions of the city were not in the office of the prothonotar, of the Common Pleas, as they should have been, according to law. ;The pro thonotary, 0. D. Knight, alleges that all the re turns that were sent to his office were pirt under look and key, and the inference from this would be that the election judges in those divisions, had been derelict in their duty in not depositing their papers in the office. On the other hand, it is trended, with, equal positiveness, that several of the judges of the precincts from which the returns are missing are willing to swear that they left them at the office. The mat ter will undergo a legal investigation, so it would be Improper at this time to - conjecture where the blame rests. Duplicate copies of the tally lists and other papers are plaeed in the balletboxes, which should have been sealed up on the night of election, and left with one of the aldermen of the ward. In order to get at the facts of the ease, an order was applied for on Saturday in the Common Pleas, di recting the attendance of the alleged delinquent election judges before the court this morning to explain what they will know about the matter. It is probable the coact may order the opening of the ballot- boxes, and the examination of their contents, in eider to gerat the facts of the case. It seems to he conceded that the returns have been lost in the prothonotary's office, or taken away, for some purpose or other, as an examina tion of the tally papers wee made at the office of the prothonotary on the day after the election, to ascertain the official vote for several of the city officers, and if these papers bad none& there'on that occasion, their absence would have been die covered then, as it would have baba impossible to have compiled complete returns of the vote without all the tally papers being examined. The feet of one of the afternoon papers of that day publishing what purported to be the figures taken from these very papers, would go to show that they had been left at the office. The missing lists are as follows : Seventh division of the First ward •, Third division of the Third ward ; the First, Third, and Seventh divisions of the Fifth ward ; the Fourth and Eighth divisions of the Seventh ward ; gig divisions of the Eighth ward ; the Eighth division of the Ninth ward ; the First division of the Tenth ward ; the First, Second, and Sixth divisions of the Twelfth ward; the Second, Fifth, and Eighth divisions of Thirteenth ward ; the Third, Fourth, and Eighth divisions of the Eighteenth ward, and the Seveth divielop of the Twenty-third ward. • - The circumstance has caused a great excitement among the friends of both the candidates, Mr. Bully and Mr. Downing, and charges of fraud are freely made. The Democrats are actively engaged in ferreting out numerous canes of alleged illegal voting, and it is asserted that a considerable num• her of fraudulent votes have been discovered. In ono house in the First ward, it is said, where some seven or eight men alleged that they resided at the time.of the election, not a single resident can now be found, while In other parts of the city, newe -1 rous places which bad been crowded with " board -1 ors" before the election,•are now deserted, the " boarders" having suddenly found it necessary to leave. These are some of the rumors that are talked of "on the street." Whether they are true or not it would be impossible to eay,.but there is every probability that a Searching investigation will be made as to the alleged frauds. • : ,' Essexisaas RA/LWAY TROUBLEII.—The pats .. . anger railway companies seem determined to glie the courts and thelawyers considerable trouble in the settlement of their difficulties. At the late ses• sion of the Legislature, the Bestonville,Mantua and Fairmount Passenger Railway Coinpany had passed a supplement to their charter, by which they were authorised to cross the Wire Bridge and extend their road by a double track eastward along Callowhlll street to the Delaware front of the city - - This legislation does not please the Fairmount and Arch-street Company end the Race and Vine-street Company, and accordingly these companies ap plied on Saturday to Justice Read, at: Nisi Pries, for an injunction to prevent the work of- laying tracks east of the bridge, as such tracks will inter fere with the rights of the complainants Both these companies now wimpy Callowhill street for a distance of two hundred feet east of the bridge and they contend that after they, purchased the right to so use the street, the-State beano autboriix to interfere with them by the - construction. of an other road. The counsel for the Beitonville road then offered to abandon that part of Callowhill street now occu pied by the other companies, and instead, would lay the rails upon Diddle street. To this the eom• plainants object. They gay that by such a course the plain intention of the supplement charter would be defeated. The charter allowing the ex• .•.•• • : . 411.4glata!sake a 0 r o ugh route from abandoning the portion cffeigh., • . at plamed of, the liesionville Company would require a new road, having hotheads within the city limits east of the Sahuylkill, and thus would be 'brought into direct competition with the complainants, Justice - Read took the papers, and promised a de cision In a short time. ' , The Race and Vine-street Railway Company applied for an injunction *gab* the Restonville and Fairmount Company-, to rostra*, them from laying their track from the bridge along the !streets occupied by the Race and Vine rails to Callowhill street. If the injunction be granted, the Heston villa end Fairmount road will be unable to lay their rails on Callowhill street to the Del aware, as the Race and Vine•atreet Company will hold the key to the bridge: The Km tonville and Fairmount road have - been try ing to effect an arrangement with the Race and Vine street Company to run their care upon the road to the Exchange, for which privilege they were asked S 4 per day per oar. This may seem a high figure, but the- regular travel upon the route to heavy, and the farm travel in summer is enormous. MILITARY .I.IISPEOTION.—A line display may be looked for this afternoon, the occasion being the annual inspection of the First Brigade, First Division, P. M., which comprises about one half of the military force of Philadelehia, and many of the best drilled companies. During the post year the companies have, with one or two exceptions, in creased in strength, and several new ones have been added to the command; among them the French companies, the Garde Lafayette and the Zeugma, who pill make thole amend appearance this afternoon. Among the companies which de serve particular attention, without disparagement to many others who are also exceedingly 'effi cient, are the Philadelphia Grays, Captain Each, who, having devoted much attention to drill, are in a high state of discipline. The artillery regd. ment will appear, for the first time in a body, with their new Minnie muskets.lately issued. The in. soention will take plane on North Broad street, above Brown, in the following order and time: First Troop Philadelphia City Cavalry and Black Hussars, at 3 o'olock. First Regiment of Artillery, at 31 o'clock. First Regiment of Infantry, at 4 o'clock. First Battalion of Rifles, at 41 o'clock. It is probable that a grand review of all the troops may take place, such having been the cus tom for the last two years. , THE OLD MADICET SPACES Ole MARKET STREET.—Workmen are now engaged In paving the shed spaces in Market street, between Front and Eighth streets, and, when they have completed the work, the West Philadelphia Railway Com pany intend laying a double track down the centre of the street between those two points, and re moving their single track and long eidelings west of Third street, OM have been a source of annoy ance to the merchants on that avenue. When this improvement is finished this Street will ho one of our noblest thoroughfares. The West Philadelphia Company have also got rid of smother coerce of me noyance from the burden trains on the street, the connections having been completed so that these oars do not run, as formerly, on a portion of their track between Fifteenth and Seventeenth streets, where the old " Iron Markets" stood. They have taken up the Pennsylvania rail here upon which one aide of their cars ran, and replaced it with one of their own. The same company are also putting in "frogs" at Broad and Market streets, where their rails cross the Brood-street road. This ren ders the arming there perfectly smooth. STOLE SET Oli FiItE—COSPESSION OF THE TIiCIINDIARY.—On Friday night, about 12 o'clock, a stable attached to. the coat yard of Mr. David Smith, on the east side of Broad street, above Fits ' water, was discovered on fire. The stable ill mediately opposite the Franklin Hose House, and the fire wee first discovered by two of the members, Samuel Bailey and Hugh Ingram, who extinguish ed it with a few buckets of water. The fire being evidently the work of design, stoploion attached to Peter Weldon, lately 'Tinged Bap; priaon. He had been driven from the hose house, and the two members above referred tit succeeded in having hint arrested, and on :Saturday the accused made a full copfemion. Gaya he was drunk, and feeling angry in regard to the action of the company in expelling Mtn, he broke open the door and fired the premises, first releasing a horse standing in the stable. Weldon had a hearing before Alderman .Femington; and was committed to answer at court. SHIOULAB. CAUSE OF Suietne.- - -The body of the man found In the Delaware river, at Green street wharf, on Friday, has been identified as that of William Meteler, a German,- residing in Coates street, above Eleventh. The deceased was a mar ried man, thirty-three years of age, and a shoe. maker by trade. A note found at his house showed that he contemplated suicide on Thursday night last, when be was first missed. The only cause which can be assigned for the act was a slight quarrel which be had with a neighbor- about the change of a twenty-dollar note, and hie veracity was doubted. ATTEMPTED SvtOwn.—_-A Colored woman, named Elizabeth hkerraY, Zefddlag in Mervine street, attempted looms/At subside on Friday, by Ifjmping into the Delaware: - from one of the aighn's Point ferry boats. She was rescued and taken to the Second-district station-house. She is supposed to have become deranged in consequence of the death au eon a short time since. . ' THE GARDEEMRS' Pnoonsestyz SiO4METY.— The stated uteetineof this soelety will be held this eveniag, itty the usual piaci. The subject of Ma -cures will be under discussion; and an interesting essay will be read by Professor Stephens, of Girard College. Rem/Canon Magmata PoerroilvE44—The masa !Footing of the Constitutional Union party to ratify the notpluntion- of Den and Everett, which wu to have been held this evening, has been post poned until father notice. Bo; HIIIIT.—On Saturday afternoon, a little fellows flee years old, named David .1", - Oblides, had his right foot badly eruabef by a railroad wheel falling upon it at Pine-street wharf. He was taken to the Pennsylvania Hospital. • • .• BUILDING litSiOrtmlirrS the present there are in process of emotion upwards a•three 'hundred. new which has caused our building Mechanics to be kept very busy. - The indicationsare that there will be more buildings put up this' seition than at any previous one. • I.ite following are a ferret those which are .now in progress ; On Pennsylvania avenue, be tween Fifteenth-and Sixteenth. streeta, - ereatury Is going up. it has a front of sixty feet, and is ninety-eight feet in -depth; the, building will be three stodge high. A factory is also being built on VA street," between Front and Second; this struoture will be twenty-one feet front by fifty-six feet in. depth.. An edifices for ,the,congrege tion of the Second Presbyterian Church of Ger 'mantotre, the - itivier-itione - of wilkt- araa laid on Monday leek new' In et Tulpehoeken end Green streets. Apl ng-reill is in coarse of erection at Coates end--Beach streets; it will occupy a space of thirty-six by forts Sett Another mill le going up on Green street, Germantown, which is forty by sixty feet in size. Thirteen dwelling-homes, three stories in height, are in progress upon Brandywine street. west of Twenty first. A row of thresstorj dwellings, six in num ber, upon Aspen and Forty-ninth streets,' in the Twenty-fourth ward. At Sixth and Dickerson streets there are four three-story buildings going up; in Sixth street, between Oxford street and Columbia avenue, four three story dwellings; on Susquehanna and Thonrweistreets, nineteen, nt the same description; five on Thirteenth street, below Federal, and eight upon Pine street, west of Twentieth, and nine on. Nineteenth street, above Coates. Seven two-story dwellings are being erected on Snoquehenna and Twenty-fifth streets, five at Newton street and, Girard avenue, fourleon on the west side of btocker street, above Seven teenth, three on Greenwich street, above Third, and five on Adams and Sepviva streets. THE DrOTIONMIT Melt CONAUVVED.—On tardtay aternoon, a final hearing was had at the office of Alderman William McMahen. of John Ha i rxis, charged with borrowing copies of Webater's Unabridged Dictionary, from the public schools and citizens, and not returning them. Several parties, whom he bad paid his respects, were ex amined. Miss Laura R. Bell, Miss E. B Burt and Mr. Jacob Cadwahuier testified that Merritt had borrowed a dictionary from each of them, and Mr. Rathan L. Coulston, janitor at tbeißligh School, testified that Harris came to him a few days since, and desired to borrow a copy of Webster's nun bridged, which he said would be returned in fifteen minutes. The janitor refused to lend the book, as being against the rules. The next day Harris, by some means, gained moms to the lecture•room, and_ aftertaking the book himself, stopped the wife of the janitor, stating that he had got the dictionary, and would return it in a abort time. Shwremon etre ted with him about taking it, but without avail. After hearing the evidence, the Alderman held the prisoner in $BOO to answer. Most of the books have been recovered. Harris is a man wits evidently " don't reed the papers." He lamented bitterly that he bad not seen the announcement that be was going round borrowing dictionaries, adding— " If I had seen it, I would not have been caught in this scrape." He will probably know better next time. , S/LOCKLYa - ACCIDENY ON THE PiNNI4YLTPIA RAILROAD.—BurIy on Saturday evening, as the down train of the -Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany from Harrisburg stopped at Parksburg for a few minutes, a man named Wilson attempt ed to assist a friend in getting upon the train, when the traitv„started, and Hinion slipped and felt between the - .oars, and the wheals of six of the ears - passed , over both his Lisp- iblive the knee, nearly severing them from his kedj.,' - The unfortu nate man was taken on board the train, brought down to the city, lad admitted into the Pennsyl vania. Hospital, :where be died about 12 o'clock. Coroner Fenner viewed the body yesterday morn ing, no inquest being necessary, aft& which it was given in charge of his friends, to be taken home for interment. MEETING Of THE Swelassr.—A meeting of the friends of the Seamen's Benevolent Association was held at the German Reformed Church. at Teeth' and Elbert streets laid mete, A sermon was preached from the teit to be found in Psalm 1£1: "Thy way is on the see, and thy path upon the great water." The sermon embraced a umber of interesting fasts in relation to the ease elation, and showed it to be in a flourishing condi tion. Aaarvat ors &raw. Fram:Nantrx.—The Greyhound ateam Sre engine, whialt r was built to eastward, is expected to arrive in this city to• day, for the purpose of giving a vitiate trial of its abili ties. At a trial at New 'liven, Conn., it played a horizontal stream 251; feet through a nozzle nearly twe inches in ditmeter, and's' perpeedieular stream of 190 feet, with only 55 pounds of steam. This la very good playing. _ , CHANGE OP Looaritne.-The Good Intent' Hose Company have purchased is property on Fifth street, boleti Pine, into which they wilt re move about the lint of July, of which time they will house their hew hook and ladder truck, whims boa been finished for same time, but owing to their present house, Prune street, above Fourth, being ,too small to receive it, it has not. been housed. DEATH PROM INTEMPERANCE. —A WOTHaII named Ellen Vermeil, aged 50 yeate, died at lies tonville, on Saturday night, very ruddeniy. Coro ner Fenner , held - an inquest yesterday. Verdict, death from intemperance , and exposure. ON aceorrlyr of the landslide on the Pennsyl vania Railroad at Mifflin, the trains were detained in town until yeeterday morning, when they com menced running again in 'usual. A number of o ra t es started to Chicago, era hat evening, Occasioned by the burning of window curtain. at N0.,1730 Chestnut street. It was extinguished without much damage. Aceregsrr.—A. woman named Ellen Johnson fell yesterday month* on Baulk street, near Poplar, and broke her arm. Situ wee taken to the Hospi tal. LEGAL INTEXLICIENCE.—NISI Pitlra--jusfied Read --Mary Mamma andotherg vs Rh Ptioe and Joseph B. Townsend, executor,, and others. In equip / . On zaturday morning the following donee wag made in this nese: " And now. Mar )2 h. Ism this cense benne come to be beard at this term. and basins been argued by =tinsel upon bi I easwersrand mantles thereto an vexed. and having been duly angaidined, it is ordered. adjudged, and deemed- that the_mmsondents. vie R. Pnce and Joseph B. Townsend. =nineteen entora of, and devisees. unit under the w Rand codmils or Pd want Shipper, Boni, deceased. do make and execute a deed of conveyance-for tne preen tee described in he hill and exhibits. Waste in the city end coon•, of h.la delphis. unto the complainant, in the ementions fnl- Inwtng.to wit :--three nintlnded' fount' part. thereof unto the said Mary Mannino and Marotret • hiplines ollmne, and one undivided fourth pan thereof mere Alexander L. Hayes and Townsend Whelan. in tenet, for the uses deolaren aid expressed in the d ed exe =Mil by Catharine Yeates t 'them dated the ninth day of July. 1367, recoided in deed-book . Al) 8..1. 1 0. Ha. lase SOS and the complainants are ordered to pay the costs of this snit- . . .ouder s. Lapeley. Motion for special injunction. Motion shielien 'Harder vs Mintzer Rowlby. Rule to show rause why the judement of 1 fa. eboald not be met aside and made absolute. Kirkpatrick vs. Kirkpltriok. Rulega take off non-suit discharged The Fairmount and Arch-street Passenger Rsilroad Company and the Race and Vine-street Pastmler Rail road Company re The .J• eternity:lle. Fairmount rod Maetna Paseenger katlrotd rf. ...onnurix. In equity. An aPellention for an injunction to restrain the corporation defendant from extending their track diwn Callowhdl street. se authorised tg the supplement t their charier, paned at the 'earnest= of the Legislature. Decunon reserved. • • • . Eirsviner Cooug-7-ludg•Shszinvood.--Sasso Wisdom vs. This Perm,leant& Heibroad Company. Before re ported.l The fury:came in on Saturday morning, and, being unable to agree:were dimhareed. Imago ehrahamsand Daniel Eckman sr. George Trip ner atd Han-eh. his wife. and William P. Corbel. Am action of ejectment. Jury out. COMMONIPLEAR—Stutges Allison and Ludlow.—Nortmt ve t The Howard Fire Ineurance CoMPIAT of Frillulai• Phis. In equity. An application for as injunction to. the Whitens of the comtvtay from disposing of the agents, and for the ttepointmeat of a receiver. The allegation in the bill wea. that the asset* thecom-- Puny are about to ba *assail away. But this is denied by the defendants, and they asked time to prepare an an. ewer. •.1 he arose was continued until enturday, the court in the meanwhile sagging the emttinnarg order. In the mailer behalf esf John Fallon.* motion was made, in of Cignaopher Fallon, to compel the trustees or assignees of John Fallon to enter seen usugra Elgisions. — JudgeThompson.—The case of Ro rt J. Douglass, charged aro hipejurr. wits onncluded on eruurday evening at to o'clock Saturday was de vnted to the argument of counsel ; D. P. and it. E. Brown being for the Commonwealth; B. B. Brewsterand R .P. Brinton for the delence. The speeches of Mr. D. P. Brawn and B. B, Breesterwr re eitremeirpowerful. At seven o'clock the fury . retired. At nine thee returned. The prisoner was not in attendance. The court warted until ten, but as he did not arrive, bin boil was forfeited. Vie verdict of the Jury a 11.1" guilty." HEAL7W OPrirn, May 12. 1880.—The numbrr of interments in the pity of Philadelphia for the creek Catilag Clay 12, rease.-- Asthma Dec ~ A5phyxia..........• ..„ .. 1 A . Cancer 3 Casualties - 4 ONAP 5 COngeatKon f s t Consumption of Lungs.. 36 Convulsions 1 6 3 Di...... niarrheoa...— ..... 3 Dr? , pay I' C 6 Deceive of Brain.. _ 4. Heart. i Dysentery nobility -• • 9 Erns on on Brain.... • . • 2 ......3 Fever, Peerperst........ 2 Sleauttent.- ..... 3 ........ 4 Ulceration, Stomach.... 7 Unknown..... _ 2 V &wing 2 Adults— .... iE2IMMII .• .... Typhoid- - -. 41, Gan crane. -• • ......l latkupmetfon, 8 larynx Lungs...," 16 B. do Bowels. 7 . - y lisaus-a-Fotn-". • - •- elarasmm Monsies ••••••••••• 3 1 Old ago • • - • • • - • • • 2 Bor • • • ‘• •• • • - - 11 Under Y gear.. .. Between 1 and Under 5. .........._ 92 From the Almshouse _ 9 People of c010r......-- 3D Front the country 1 Tice Douglas Meeting at New.Orlenns. The meeting called by the Douglas Democracy, at Lafayette Square, last evening, was largely at tended. A platform with flags, numerous flam beaux scattered around, a hand of 11111$10, and an ample supply of fireworks, gave the square its old political appearance, and rendered It a pleasant place to all those who interest themselves in the affairs of the nation, and love to snuff the various odors of coming events, and revel in the shadows before. The object of.; the meeting, as published, was to give the endorsers of Douglas an opportunity of' taking counsel together, and of protesting against the secession of the Louisiana and other delegates from the Charleston Convention as an act com mitting, or tending to commit, the people of this State to a measure destruetiye of the Union. Messrs. Lasso E. Menu, .Michael Hahn, and Judge Illest,ted. severally addressed the meeting, making spirited Dnion aud: Douglas speeches, which drew forth a considerable amount of 'noire -7(1118 approbation from the multitude present.—N. P. Crescent, May Q. - - FIINERAL 4:17.8t181178. M. CONIqOII.--7 he funeral of Angustsur Connor, who, as our readers will recollect, diet from the irjuries re ceived In his .attem_pted.- balloon asceasion from Palace Gardens on Tharsday last, took pteceies terday afternoon', at two o'eleek from his tate resi dence, No. 171 Mott itriet. II large oatoberathe relstives, friends, and Acquaintances of the deceas ed were nesent i together with s number of mem bers of Pilgrim Lodge." - Nik".243, L 11 . G. P . to which he belonged: - .The services at the house were oonduCted'in:att .itePteteien 'nearer by the 14 cm. Mr. Sawyer, pastor ,of the Orchard-street I r ttiverialial church. The features of the deceased.. showed no mark.,of the eskosseident by which be died, except a amen brelse"er eat upon the right cheek.—Nero York Herald, ywarier. Total.— 203 ----; 21 112 ARTHIJR HUGFUE,S, Health Offi'oer
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