The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, May 24, 1860, Image 2

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t_i . .iiiipojoftia****ooll* niktinitiA; n
„,iisavimilowiegkildhlriad tireksOi•Viehle.
seam banal:dons workmen," and our con:i
mams was on every sea._ Six months after
the recommendatiotiti‘of Mr. Guitars bad
been carried outianCtis44torift,wnt-_,Ol. 18 5 7
hatkbecome a lawrirt* !otAiolo44,l6ii
paralysed, and the fiKafteriatt#ltillea\lMO U 6
which has crushed °neon 'Mctit,. and
palsied the en e'
Yet, in the short spice of four years, an at
tempt is made to foist upon us the wannest
advocate of this moat obnoxious revetme mea.
Anr! ) selkClir 4. - ',* ,71T9sPiteitonA- The telhhish-.
1/4, t he a d vocates of Mr.
Slitraelt idtwad att& tariff man, is
With
geo4 - 1 1 1*.ftuAgobt!#Oleiel :Oka law so.
earnestly and so p6ftently advocated by Mr.'
Gossuktwalt *Oat so--Itlturather tbo trying.
644 Petienie - to have our delegates excuse
Aeir:*** OtPl4,,tieitoO: by an appeal to the
* li fte d gioishAtip of MV.Gwrinue to the doe.
trine _= of POtee4lo34.l.lYltk The : tariff: act of
.Iftt.4;Witic*. re4ni4;S,RM !Anti ni`'ioal and
standing on the statute
liii44-tij°44..11.14414 t'fi t adVir:ateth ` e claims
,Oritio , :SecietarYt of the Treasury at whole
fits, f`!lt'ilt - okefi'pasited;:eit 'the ground of his
.devotlittito, protective tow •
tilr•The• Washington States is exceedingly,
Tani ioiu ' to provq ' that Tun P a sse is not in 'or-
Wet - Judge Dorriais; sad there not speak bi
,hityitthority; or the authority of his friend's.
14,4ea1,,` - c-fooo*:Opirisioi.te calm
. the poi
torbedljuliof :The fifties bpassuring it that
„Tnlt'riandi ts not the orrin, and never yeas the
4.1*. ioo4gebeetit.i4, or or any other-, can
aide for the Presidency, and ti concede to
all go ironer' that'.inaylhe gained by any
artstr'relatitht 46'64 distiognished statesman.
196 apeWourtiwn °Odom irtthis Journal,
atidlagirtrika*ano t 4 tha're',ire have
;titer halted.to.inquireiwitetheitheyirere
,ttiatoryth, The Stisitit "p: t any of: the worth y
:,gentleme whom that paper inay be supposed
-to eeprosent.-0 Our present offence is, that rie
declared - *. *Opt:, support 'other
rasp fir I*hti'arn'ong: the, list of: those
•prondientlY':hemet-thr: the , Democretic na
'nhiidier;'Moods: The
Ilea regards • • this , as. , •In the - highest
degree: - .treeionable, - - and Solemnly assures
the ?Muth' faist it. does;not` sneer arii
,proval‘ or. -tbe.-ttiends Judge.. D31701..1.8. 3 !
DOlNrtetpiMbi4testiiei:idcoteinPorary ., lcnor.
'thiathe s goittlierriorrandes of • Jiidge ,DeVitth,
atinoutfaitheir determiestion , th OPPnip
1101 jiiiiird! at Bakke*, 'and' via it, not
zieryliithineWOPtiPers whi . : l ' 4 "i 4ti his /4 1
claims to the P residency , in the Northwest
anit'otaisittere,thrikiheY express Molt iambi.
.thea in ireatiyerery: Cue, to_support him and
Mei aerie t • • •
•-• These are paiiikatict aphiriiiite recta, bat'as
this evidently'the object of , i.Ths 'Watts" ta
,extilbff,tta imkind feeling to " Tins , Nagai?.
iri:haio ;AO thatit should be tilind to
that which is so atisit.t?4,evariP impartial
. :
. •
emreliveassano.Wpon, stnume to soy, has just
iitteetiodefi in Winning:the approbation of the
`IOW' "Xi:* prose - trithorit - , distinetion or ea
coition ofpirtY. he was absent, at the,
- Charleston. Convention—where, by the wag,"
he Was - riled mit,* partictdirly nice corpora
tion-job-Wei put in hand; namely .to speed ,
'Seine" 01006 in tainting 'five thensand copies
rot. po o e C ommittee
11e; la' 'it"' I %wail
ap
pointed:loBsB to , Malta arrampwrients for the
.celetbratiokot tie Atlantic:Cable. Woot,
hoc exeielseit his Privilege,* Mayo!, to veto
'tiC-resit'autitorizing this palpable job. -
ICtliiietiPort4wastmed 'any merit. widoh
doubtral, It Winks certain that nopublis intereit
sun Mash aoltatthis that.. That estebration—the
"erventablek - esestakit—the attending obootaatoo
,Olokipt flip= the oecasion4-havn
'pared moist MO* longer any patella value.
qßati bowsaw• meritorious. the aliarter inter-'
amiss prevent thipuirtioldpg of the report ex
-oept. by tannest node, an upon Haled bids and"
publicly advattliang tesdays. The: restriction elf
titegbarit-laspendive - and maw control. It
premeents arvinalperabier barrier to the adoption of
this resolution:. I therefore return it without sp
fleinshierhig;tbst, the interest Of the oecoeion
C* l .'.:o4.,t 6 YfUy; that tfie Atlantic Cable was
oat Omit .keno eV-which, New York, like a
i feitthet!iiiititkplitel, ti , Went of sthalf cock ii',
ended, not exactly in
' , a far n de joie,:- but in the burning of the City
no necessity for err
;pending:: sBo,ooo,yor three hundred cents;
upon: ;perpetuating-its memory. lir. • Woon
had exercised his Power, and luis
iliippedlatho bat a inandilotia waste of public
'rise - Arts.
. upon rather doubtful authority,
that some a the salami of • Newirork are get:
thAt
11411 4* Iliad ow*. importation.
- of aettutilyrio mut
4rt.is.ts'arO 1 :1 3
11,11ZPOLIii ammicisnea',,tiowilidter along season
•teindilreteravoind"fitsitict - Oli the 'pert of the
Pulblir.4.9ll4lthilifintiipsiiil their way,without
- proldiAtoryditrupon the importations of pl 4-:
tares firra, In rennin- - cambia, too,
Anierican :Went;is lionorahlY recognised.
Icsausince, Ancsros, Lunn,' and Brunk
irivi'a,Oriori'eligied:-.00.be0 of like toi4 l
.AsiiidesaY oehistlind,.! of illicit; for many .
*ars' 112.11lirkorhimo neitspapens will mat.
"Ci41414:415: Gaylen,
atid;! even---eiltidn the - last
*4.15:!,,rp* , , ,atfldfors fri Eng.
,4 13 4;-
a prohibitive duty could be placed upon
initiorfintlon'otAndiderent copies and vile,
linitatimmtof tire Old Nesters of Italy, Spain,'
Intniti,'ettd the tow Countries,which so many
American touilsirfpiuchsee, ' at high *ices ° as
-erfailuttn, , lS Ironldibe , a proper thing: A goCd
rign4Or.saiAinitritiad isbetter, in an
o;:ilaii',:ivietiO.for,eign daubs':
Montover, the value of agood pleb= incimusei
*th- Moreover,
igirwoetigo°4
inveitMent. .
Dlow„Movelesaleciiremialli "depletion, under
Ae ifuo of l 'Xkolkil4 oo *PAnl!' of #erald
thee Irish roam% " T he . Colleglium," will, bb
, Prod o o o lt_ , Arob-oirlo, 4,l l i4frof thin ,B rant &
Mr. diammelie rater, who has steadily made
"amelderabliedrese. is hie prefeledon, her a bone.
M edlreliret:Mieet Theldrw, Ahls iverdnit, on which
*OMANI Klee Wilk permeate Paidiite,
tithe "'IMO " ,
1, Ifoltantook!s doneartsit Puna. Nail
**is tiff iitiCirrinting, for particulars of ihioit
Woliefortio:fliorpri*aroo idgequid In The Preis
. .
at-ilialkoseageWo "
to • groat attraction
Within three isys tartainat
ct!e sgoiC to:Baltimora coat
• '
ITiaseriabere, of „the , 'Want of, Trade will
Aim ilireirelitOoppirtniti this, nettles to heir
from DrAtersem e eyleaellea Snit pteu of &ode
;tri*urati* 6 -iitteraejs'atitt rolseStuttstattous win
by SO fit x.Woistifitiiiio Wear toilers taisi.
4 11 11*.thattneki7 Ot tblttli0. 1 1;: he "reel
.lacireet - ofairilaiwridtaaftit- dm' Oohed States in
eirietet lobate if the devr ispsdition has kin
'Ptioltiod*.*Sti*liitituleui of the, Pout Sur.,
:CLOPia**l6;'4o .4 bi . eliki alkaline
moo, to wawa% csiemeree - Is largely. WOW* lir
peas* 'hitt-441W froair.obstsvat.ins suet of
, 000 OrtilhOris , Dr. ; We
.eanpbtdi gbt that Ilia, mare lute will 'gladly avail
the arelless of thi pr,llls4l4aftiOitY , • •
Tittle ililltiorMit thmostimal.•:-Titht . joitinal, In
'lke luta:set of the rtiptiak aterombuttion, the edi
:,014410. of l orkiiikkha *Wadi' Wei tOottinod bY Mt.
Jima 111:„DhAtersel; 06inee ha - no , Ohl , week in*
bes - 11 # 10 : 12 0 1* - 441,-, Futile a nsuoh impnOrtel,
, appeirmaset Vohs, Its preaent managomenk:
,CArintildetim alriedly era marked ,lmilostion of
and intarkise :and. ability' noir
ovine - tat to lti eolantaa oannot fall to monis for it*
high pogitionamencovrellglinte journals.
"AttetiolOioitcti ;' , -)The itertteetatr attention Of
S parektaeie lerfetOteitod to HO,seueial, antt
lir SOU* trittob; . l3ertoan,
latits, e anti Ahotetratin ievin
►iinirritifjleepekeit - i end lota of Maple
444114 04 1 4tePAtOtsita wArstod
lesettes,fekelee e refitipatede , eloadtie, twof
Nati% tos be b, 41 4 . .
*kill* *, titedlt i 7ootitui!iiielng' Ate
)0 100 044AII:lesiti*/ 1 ; o*-14?6,64/4 4P:dif
Off 11,1104,18141 4t,biiii.1111k 0 ,411h0rn,1&:0 6, 1
10. _
SSrey
110 ;-'rn Mirka etivert, ' 1 - '
..` r j
AttotioltaikArtoi—riret;ebehi 4411 'i{Lennon I to
l airigeoVe‘fiteeteilateerlitteni,bitegatiCetistr ,
sll444tita, 4C,iiiistkigtlette`aiiirein4, bat
OTa*Plik, rWateAC o ' 6 44,Pi••
.selociet4emo skew ;, th pad sw goods to
bethg `one of the tolat
tli ?I#ll 'it • *gun;
: 1 1iSitti# 1 .1000 1 0/Giiiii*it
heeekillithuit „
, oa l itteettoe. to the itito , of the oettek
to fair tote to-itas At 12 Mr,*
trolAilitete. ll **44,t,'
pork
Letter from 44 OcesetenaLP iLA
(Correspondent,* Orthk trtrak)
, itatitteloroit,*(23, 1860, I By
Might jeans ago, *.the 7th p[ January, the
;teem "of RePrieentatitect of thelLitilted States ,
WiSonted recta lloomith as their guest in the old
The UV* waetnitiresilie ,btiyond desorip•
than., bad' bien prevlenalihonored by a ,
}great publfit'. - entertainment• at' Jjaaltion Hall, in '
which he pronounced one of
speeches; or ratherinspiratione; l atcylongtwass tar
ried
away by the feeling which prevailed In ()Very
State In the Union, invited hlea-to *Mt the piindlat
branch' of that body .While It was` In full melon.
I give the scene as I find it in thoptirnals of thW
t' The . hour
'wait
P. M. having" strived, the select
Committee - to wait anon Loule`loallith ' enteridq,h e
hall, Arerroandritslhat. gentlemen .-' On arriving at t ie
area to front of , the olerk'e desk, Mr. Carter, the chair
man, Announced that he had thd honor to present Go
vernor Kossuth to this body. - " .
; ,•,! The inembere qiv - Ing risen from their seats neon
the entrance of Louis Kossuth, the Speaker. resins,
As the 'organ of this body; I babe the honor to
extend 'to Louis Soighth , ehrdial wekome. to' the
; -Rouse , of Itepromentabves of the United States: is
' , Loins; Kossuth then replied, saying :-.
icaretitarkable feet in theliistoriof man. :
kind, that while,lhroage all the Pant, honors were be ,
atvwed upon glory, and glory wes attached only to Me'
oessi the legislative anthorities of thid great Rena We
'bestow hdlioninpon. a pertreonted exilernot oonapietioui
by glory, not favored b 7 inooess t hut engaged in 5, Jdal
cause. ,
There hi et - triumph 6t Re klubncein principles in thi
• ,
= '!` Sifi.f,thnnk,in my own and thy country's name.
the:lionise Cf ildprinehnitiviis "of' the traded Staten for
the honor of this cordial welcome.'
" Stanton, of Tennessee. said, for the purpose of
allowing member! ,to pay their; respects to Governor
Kossuth, be would now move au adjournment.
' - This motion being agreed to the Home adjourntd."
Another mene.was enacted• in the 'House of Re
presentatives, ibis :morning; Right years ago we,
weletoned , the progrenive tips of the Seim+) 'floc,
a representative, of- the Struggles "peoples" in the
far north"of Europe; who; afterstudying the Ideal
of our own inetititione, foolishly attempted to ad. , '
ranee thet example, and :te; 'intiedneehitt•
owif theory„ among , the feudal Hoverninentei
To day similar honors have been paid to the repre.
sentativeiOrthe'Asistici tribes, of these wheknow ,
little of representative, liberty, and who hair. 'fOr
ages,been Slut out from all the evidences of the tit.
unaphs of that great Anglo-Saxon movement which
is stretohing , its infineneer into every part of
civilised and noolvilized World. ,
I must modem that the apiearinee of 'the Jape.;
nese has not enchanted me. My first impression,
were not agreeable: Not being able to converse
with them, I cannot of course speak of their intel
lectual qualities, but their, physiognomy was that
Of a cross between on Indian and a mulatto; and
although More intelligent in, expression than the
:Chinese, there waa that idiotic, manifestation in their
vacant aad nuent'husfastio manner which 'did not
come up to my . idea of the pietimeh which hive been
drawn by those journals and reporters who haie
been presenting those Japanese as models of polite
ness, intelligence, and statesmanshi p. 'lt is true, they
had a crafty look, but it wee the gaze rather of the
suspicious savage than : the ; inquiring mind: It
might to be recollected, however, that thescenett,
into Which these people have been suddenly intro
duced, are 'entirely new 'to them; that, until the)'
saw e San Premise° and Washington, they never
knew what the highest order of civilization
was; and that, able as they are in their
own, country , - and might become in ours,
they may "be overcome by the novelty of the
oimumstances by which they are surrounded. How
'they will deport themselves when they are trans
lated into Philadelphia, end afterwards dropped
down into that vast sea of sin and misuse, of pro
geode and affluenee, of noise and nonsense, of curi
osity, and commerce-New York—theft God and
ours' alone can tell. It would be a curious expo
eure if the - private comments of these "lawless
upon what they are - seeing and hearing could be
disclosed to the American public after they had
concluded their mission.
Precisely' at 'one o'clock, the Japanese Commie'.
dine* attended by their retinue, entered that
portion of tiM galleries allotted to the members of
the foreign diplomatic Corps. They were escorted
by Captains Dupont, Lee, and Porter, of the United
States navy, and by the committee appointed by
the House of Representatives, Messrs John Sher
man, L. O'B:Branoh, E. Joy Morris, H. Winter
Davis; and John Coohrane. The interpreter, Mr.
Portman, sttended the chiefs or princes, and held
constant, conversation with the Japanese interpre.
tel, who conveyed the various, items of informa
tion as they came from Portman, describing the
animated scene as it was passing before his eyes
and theirs in the House of Representatived.
I berealreidi described the impreesiOn which
the faces and maniers of these people made _upon
'me; but it was curious to observe how little they
weiwiffeeted by the noise and confusion prevail
* among the ,repreeentatives of the civilized
United States,' While they were looking on, the
great epproptiation bill. was paasing through its
last stages*" and I have no doubt they were be
wildered by the calling of the yeas and nap, the
constant oriel of "Mr. Speaker." "Mr. Speaker l'
and 'the general excitement which"prevatied ati
round. After sitting in the gallery for some fif
teen minutes the three Ohlef'prinees descended to
the door of House; escorted' by the commit
tee and the Naval Commiinion, already named,
and • took their seats to the left of the
Speaker, in the space allotted to them for thdi
'purpose; alter 'which they attempted the' InVittition
at Speaker Poirnington, together with their ietinnii,
to partake of *'splendid Collation in his moil. At
the Coneluslem of thilleast they returned to the
Holies and -remained melded flt. some twenty
minute-4, when; at a Signal gitien by Captain DO- -
pent; they pasted out thrtaigh the - main aisle, es
eorteC by the committee' of the -Hoose, who bade;
them an affectionate farewell afthe deer.'
It ought to be added that the, princes bad previ
ously visited' the Senate, and other' gaits of the
Capitol, andaxpreued great satisfaellori at whit
they had' seen. _ - •'• Ootisatottau.
Nl . ENitati 1 OF TIM KEItTOIE
tlesicst of now. lonic Leslie, or lii i mois.tThere
'was a meithig - of the Keyetine Olub last evenleg,
at their:hill, 'for the purpose of heirinien addrees
fromfrog the Hon: sobieLogazi;Member of Congressiiir
Illinois. "It was late before the meeting was coaled
to order, - and the president 'assumed the chair. ,
Wm. E. Lehman, Esq., made a few remarks of a
very, eloquent chisraoter, which were welt received.
In the midst of Ahem Mr. Logan arrived, in °env ;
,pany with L 61111 5, C. Cassidy, Eacj. The gentle
mares reception was most enthlisisstio. Be said it
always gave Mai pleasure to appear before a meets
Mg of Democrats and hold with theni a little con
verse. It helped to enliven their spirits and give
backbone, . the , coming campaign., As a cam
paign, it promised' to hien, 'of the most terrible
ever fought upon thisWmtinent. The' Repabiloane
had already nominated a man, whose only remits
tion had been 'gained by an -unsueceerfal 'oontesi
with-Stephen A. Douglas.' [Cheers.] There war
nothing In the history of Abram Lincoln to oom•'
mend him to the People of this heti; it
was true, come puns the miaow, and was a solf
made men, but there wait nothingin him of st giant
Intelleet—he had. never held forth his arm to the
weekend powerless: There Ism 'nothing especially
remarkable in Lie, eireer._ Ile had been a eueoese•
ful lawyer; Isis an obecura member of the Illinois
Legislature; and hod served one term in the Con
grese of the nation., While in Convent he only did
one thing to distinguish himself, and that was 41
Tote against the supplies for OUP starving soldiers
of tho Mexican war.
The speaker knew Mr. Linooln.irell and meant
nothing unkind to him personally. In social life
he was a gentleman, and was admired by all who
knew bim, but as a public man he poisoned:none
of the qusditeationa neoeseary to an Amerlean
President. The question which presented Bien to
his Mind .was‘-Whet than we do to defeat this
man, end the party be represents? It we placed
him in power itwould be the death-keen of the
American Union: R was said there could be no
Possible defeetion among the supporters of this
ticket. The speaker • believed there would be a
serious. defection. Ile had come from New 'York,
and he knew that the Republicans of New, York
-would not subuilt to the nomination, for the reason
that they thought theme:dyes . defrauded in the se •
leetion of a candidate, and on the support of
thousands of them inight the Demonrucy count:
The epeolitscautered into an elaborate review of
- the state of affairs now exciting In the Democratic;
party. In the Cincinnati platform we found the
doctrine of popular tiovereiguty:. On it we Placed
distinguished gentleman from Pennsylvania, and
ideated him President of the United Suttee.
.Duitrig the Administrathin of that gentleman, a
number of discontented spirits agitated the dogm:a
Impraetioable.dogina--of : shivery in the Ter
ritories. ,They had endeavoied to so* dissenslOn
among the maaser• of the North and South, and
thus pave the way for a dissolution of the Union.,
The -Demooritle :party, North, Etutt,, and West,
Were sulfated with :au OlWoinnatt , platform, yet
these men Of the:Petah were clamoring for its abro:
gation.. It hed.heen good-enough In 1808, 188 i,
1868,'Und Jvh,j'wee- Iriot go'od enough for 1.080 ?
- Mr. Logan Irevieked yery lengthiiy the positiciii
Of the Administration 'it the Chirleston Conven
tion, arid' den6unlfed the Breeders in bitter terra's.
Re hoped they would nominate A ticket at Rich-,
mend, in'erder that the oortelry might see Mir the
fire-eaters would be crashed in their own hoenis.
Miewowed bimrelt witting to support whoever was
thevenninesof the, Ealtiuloie Ochivention, bat de- -
eland thee he was the friend of Stephen A:: Dougfas
for thattioniinition; The West gave Penneylvanin
Buchanan 185 5 ;,'why should notTenneylvarda
' l a t e iti ft *id ',..noilefie : When the isintker . oon ,
eluded it was near eleven:o'olooh. Ile was inter-
'ritpted during hie retriartif with' load Sheering.
Tho,A.ate Railroad Accident.
,A • ,
'May 23. .The Ist* 40'1, railroad
incident in 1, torida yew not on the Fernandina and
o e dir 'llellroad,, as stated hi the lirst de.
oixinarea' on" ibo Oontral road be
tweeilleeksenville lend Lake • .;
/ • , , .
„;: —•-• 00 11 Off
11 1 % .28 ,;r 4 tornado, the most viol
.leisferep r iselierienoed; lisped pvet today.
illitiwas Were - unroofed,' beet uptpated, and tme.
addereble `ether ilashiordime '`• ;" ; - '
•••• Two Wm ware killed and several 'wounded: 1,
rnAtkikik rim deeksofoo.ii ,b9stoksfge. InVolwagui
Ansorster rhomboids diunspel *lllkee.
THE PRESS.--PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, MAY 24, . 1860.
TEST ,NFA.WS
'The Pre/01,
PlKalt WitAriMg4
CAPTUNt - b? 'ANOINER:SLATAR„
The Official 110aaintaits Concerning It
TIIE TARIFF IN THE SENATE.
THOPROBifilik iron ciWri,
10711 D OP TRADE.
itlpial Despatches to "The Pmi."l
, ,Wealumaro.7, May 23, 1860.
THE DOCUMENTS' IN: REEESENCE TO THE CAt
TORE OF TUE SLAYER ITELLIAM
The following in, the Prieldent'a menage, and the
letters accompanying, en this cub** cent to the
Hoare of Representatives yesterday afternoon
...wrs,sionovon, May 12, l$W,
TO the Finials and If oitie' RrPretantotreer
transmit, herewith, the copy of stetter dated yes
terday from the Secretary of the Intenor,acmmunica
tins thi 6o"pr 9f a letter:addressed to him on the 13th
'instant", ~ b y Pinivennt. 'Mortanb.. marshal of the
southern (linnet of 'Florida, From this it appears that
tientrtnent ; Stanley, of the United states steamer
Wyandotte; captured the barrios William With about
680 "afrieen sisgrOee on board, on , the south Ado 'of
Cubai user the Isle of Pines,. and brought her tote
Rey West on the 12th instant. These negroes have,
dotibtless bean delivered to the marshal ;nod those cap
tured en board theWildlire will make the- number in
his custody about one thousand. ) More may bridal')
exkoted at Rey West. both on account of& de-
Spieney 'of water sad provision*, and its enamors to
Talker fetter,is one of the Worst .soots for an African
negro depot which could be found on the coast of the
United 'States. ' iAalLrB BUOIIANAN.I
" " OZPARTMICNT ON TliEhalillOß > May Slaila.
Sia : On the 16th instant I had the honor to forward
to a Copy of a letter, reoldved et this department
from the United States raesubal of the southern district
of "Florida,.relaficin to the capture of the slaver
having on board dve hundred and seven
Africans ;,and I now enclose,. herewith, a copy of
:other letter pet ,viasived from Marshal Moreno, 41-
forming , the capture of the bark Witlisan?
with five hundted.'end - fifty &dibble, by the 'United
States steamer Wyandotte.,
"I have respectfully to suggest that, latismuch u It
willbe mast difficult Mitt experogive to provide for the
setionuttodatiatt And NOM heaping of e 0 large a number
of Africans, it is of the highest importance that early
missuies be tiken'for their removal from Key West.
I have the honor to be, very risieotfully, Your obe
dient servant, — J. TROMPrsort, Peorctitry.",
' " u.B. MalialTAL'a OPYMEr
' • " 001171111,21DIMMICS Or FLAMM! ;
" KEY Walt. May 12,140.
nElis the honor oir the Pith initani of commutd
eating to the department the unbars of the'bark Wild
fire, with (.014fneatur on board,* by the United Stated
'steamer Mohawk, Lieutenanp Commanding Crates
and of the arrival of the bark and reeaptivel at the
port. I have made every Provision* that the limited
means at my command will* permit iith far, their lige
keeling and comfort, and am pleased to say that orifr
twenty deaths have occurred sines' they were landed.
• ," I have now to inform the department that the Unite d Staes steamer Wyandotte, Lieutenant Commanding
PabiiieStanlet, with the prise bark William, with shoat
GE Afnasne on board; arrived here lest night. • '
" The bark wall captured on the south side of Chiba,
near the isle of Pines. 1 shall endeavor to relieve Cap•
teen Manley of hid charge as scion as roan complete the
additfons to the temporary quarters put up by rules
the accommodation of the Wildfixell cargo.
"I must call the attention of the department to the
great necessity of removing these Africans frcim hale
at the earliest possible moment. Their continuums
here_ for a period of two or three months will exhaust
the supply of water on the islend. and will render N
necessary for ale to charter a veriel, and send to Rd
vans, the nearest Port to this. fora supply. The sup
ply Of provisions Naha small, and. with this unexpected
addition to our population, will soon be consumed. I
have ordered a supply of stores to , be sent to me from
Cnarieston, but it is extremely doubtful, if they:will
reach here by the Est owing to injuries sustained
by the steamer Isabel to her machinery on her :set vey
age from Havana to this port on the 10th inst. •
"I would respeotfullylMEMOt to the department, (if it
is the design of the Government to make KU West the
dopot for 'recaptured Atrium.) that authority be given
me to build such ; quarters, • storehouses, cisterns, Lc.,
as may be &woad necessary for the aucurnodation of
the same ; also that a fall supply of atores'and ciothLW
be sent me at tbsturlieet moment..
" I avail nougat the departure of the United States
gamer Betulnohi - (Coioduntler Frontlet', United States
howl', to sail trvdaV for Norfolk) to forward this hastily
Alivitten destiatoti.
" When recently, in Washingtoh I rude sonlioatiois
to the President for the use of Fort 'Parlor for theAti- -
00minedation olreoaptnred Africans, which he declined
granting. I have the honor to again renew my applioa
tion for the use of, the forte end the hutidings adjacent
thereto smolt' are not - at present occupied, for the ea
oommodation of sub reoeuleee u may be broughtheu
during the summer.
"1 trdsr that the Mutilators foi feuds foriarded to
the depsruneat will be muted at an early,day. •
" Very respectfully, your obedient versant.
FERNANDO MORENO,
" Rutted Stites Marshal Bouthsta Dlittiot of Florida,
"lion. J. Tsoureotr. , . . • ,
"Neoretarr of the Interior:. Wpattaatoui D,
PROBABLE varit OX TIII TAIIBF M0R114.1. Nl* IX
.
Anrnowr, BI4IL BINOSIA.IIS evasion, claiaxi
aaa, cnina, Clor.taavan, barrvarpur r a„Ancan'
Doosarrin, Dtraman„ lsortnathne3 roe- -
ItALIII, BAXLIX; HARLAN, XXIIRRDY, Kurd,
Patios, filswann,Elrittons, Banaan, - Tear Erni,
Tuonson, Taman'', Wang, Vflannraoi, WlL
aos—terenty-nindin favor °NMI bill, with a fair
&anon for BAYARD and SatralitarryortelaWara,
Eakin; of Indiana, (lasss and-Poss; of fdleritd,
NienoLeoN, of Tennessei, and possibly Tonnes, bf
Qeorgia.
COMMITTEE OP THE pRfDADEDVLIIA BOARD ..OPP
TRADE.
Messra. Beret, Iftaises, and :Monroe, from the
board of Trade of thiledelphis, wetted upon the
i!resident yesterday, and made, an earnest appeal
• to him in fayor of the tariff bill before the Borate,
He tiaihd them ` wo 1. 'Now la the title hr
the tariff men of Pennsylvania to speak ted "look
•to thd Bantle." ' I
The recent capture of the slavers by the 'officers
of the American navy opens a bide field of Obser
vation and experiment. It fills the naiy with'eni
bltion and afire North and South with the queetitib,
"Whet shall we,do with the Africans?". ‘f Shall
we keep ,and feed. MINN here free and saiago?,"
"Shall we Seed thetri back,,or allow them to he
sold as slaves on our own soil?" These are aria.
questions. They demand statesmanlike reflection
and prompt Sefton. ' • ' •
ORNAI , - ENPUBLICIAN NNIITINd IN PIIILA-
Mend. TRAIN,' of Bilife4ohll6l,thl, POTIM, pf
Vietconglo, and probably Satittaaw ' of Ohio, will
Address the people of. Philadelphia, on Satarday
evening nett. . .
GvALL, of Tense, oonnieneed his speech th
.morning ea follows : ." Mr. President, PounLaa
deadP , He ought to have added that when lip
dies the Southern despotism dies too.
[DISPAR : OII3IS To TUE AII3OOI.A.TED E11.6.911.]
• • ••• •
THWJAPANiBIII AT TU CAPITOL. '
ihy • 23.—The: Japanese viel
the Senate chamber at neon to•dtsY, necompitua
by the Navel ,Optumissioners. The princes, al
six of their officers were received on the floor,-in
furnished with seats in the southwest corner of the
chamber. They, were soon surrounded bye Mini
bee of thafiettators.'
Mr: Mason,of , Virginia, was preiented, Mid Ado
position as airman of the Committee on Foreign
Relations explained to the Japanese, who were
furnished with printed' plans of the ttenitte rout,
and the Capitol building. :They viewed with at
miration the splendid ceiling and other parts (
the chamber and exhibited - intense , interest as
the mode ,of.Conduoting the legislative procee d
Inge.
_,
&meet' the Inferior Japanese were in the g
leries, and ethers in the rotundo Of the capitol.
Subsequently they were conducted by the Co-
gressional Committee to , the seats in its WO
gallery, set apart for the diplomatic 'corps. Mt.
Portman, for .the committee, explained to them
through :the Japanese
,ißterpreter,, the - nature of
the proceedings.
The yam- and next 'mare' being ' ' called at the
time they entered theisely.. , '; ,
The galleries were dehaely-orowded with spec-,
titers, end at least one half were ladies.
The Ambassadors were afterwards received •
the tipealter in his room' ' and then furnished wi
seats on the floor of the House in company wi
the Naval Copimission dnd Congressional 00 -.
mince.' The inferiors retained their planes in 't c,
diplomatic gallery,
. ,
The Japanese remained but a few Minutes. i
The Ambassadors passed out of the main aide,.
Messrs. Shearon, Jean Cochrane, and Branch milt
having an Ambassador in his immediate charge
and the others of the committee, Mr. Morris, fd?
Pennsylvania, and , Davis, of Maryland; together
with the Naval Commimioner, followed in the roar.
The' Japanese in the gallery, simultaneously re
tired. '
—Harried movements followed in the galleries,
which, in a few minutes, were nearly deserted, thi
spectators rushing ont to get a view of the Japanou
outside:
The Japanetie proceeded to 'the rotundo to 'exit
mine the plotares, during which they were r
rounded- by a dense - crowd. After passing rove et
hours in' the Capitol and premises, they refura4
in carrisgesto their hotel.,
The, prinelpat °Metals of the Japanese delegation
'to•day spent several hours at Brady's photogrsph
Tillery, witnessing the prosess of the art and stV•
ting for &three. , .
The cattle diseasain Massachusetts ie attreoting
attention in Congress. Tho House copuulttie oa
Agriaulture having been `direoted by. resoluttin to
inquire into thasubject, ientfor the SeoretarV of
the United States Agricultural Satiety to dey, who
gave a succinct history of Coo aisesso.
Tie following nkl I 'officers have bee,n'app'..inted
430iird or:V . 111ton et 04 ;Naval ',leadenly •et •A'n.
nspolls, ,to,nset on tge lot of duce—via;:, thtpt.tial
Lavellette, alendy, Price, awl lY Y ft.
Taylor,
,
,A. cruise In the eohool.eht,o Plymouth "to Trenbla
and Spanish pee, and.the, More by.
„tbe
eae,lleontetni4sted at An'tittly day'. • '
Oepaxkure•Of; tlie_ Steqmor ma,
lizw Y9BK, May 23.—Tb6„atenmn411,, It lii
sailedlhig morning for Llverponl, with £dail 06411:1
dp eo ie - 1 A„.
• Reath 'of non. M. C. Prest9n.
Ai:41014, , Shay 23.-71oia. Preston, died
at 'Ooluinbiai 8: 04jesterargy.• -" • - "
Multi* Burnsidei iniesterielyi wake' metolAsit,
died Wanly, at lisettbarmlhie atNrmooe
TAY IIYNATXIO
Tu SLAVE TRADE.
I,)-,
wiavALL's sr4a.cil
SNP JAPLItEIIE AT BRAMC.'Si
MS CATTLII DlBll/411Z
ExrgeTiD•unuißx,
`&BSIVAL OP PERM,
THEEE DAYS LATER FAN EUROPE.
WIL,tX.DZ 13WILY
isnehip Perils, Captain Jed.
iint4 l o o "allit 4 from Liverpool at 1 P.M. on the
llith bet., end from Queenstoitn Ott the eiening of
the lJtb, arrived at .ftew Cork yeeterday after•
noon.
The eteaver North Amerioan reached Liverpool
- at 4 4' , 0100k on the afternoon tiro } nth instant.,
, The Arno.,,atii+eit fiontheraptot; oft the night
'of 'We 11th. .
MAT garrets:- •
In the Hoare of Lord, en the 10th instant, the
bill abolishing the duty on paper was read a first
lima., ILOrd Monteagle gave notice that, when the
mealtitia Musk on'for its second reading, be should
more that It be read a second time that day eix
months-4untherWordff„lhatat be rejected.
The Earl of Derby also pledged himself to op.
pose the bill, as he 'considered that ita rejection
would, improve the financial position of the Go
vornMeht. '
In the Sense of ,Commons progress was made
with the wlttb licenses bill, '
.On - the I.2thi in the House of Lords, Lord Wode..
house; in toply'M the Earl of Maimesbury, stated
the result of.the negotiations in reference to Oen
tial America.' The Bay Islands had been ceded to
Honduras, *under COnditions which Secure protection
for British 'subjects. The treaty with Nicarauga
had beenelgned, but was not yet ratified. He also
atatedlhit the'riglit of passage over the Isthmus of
Panama bad been recognised.
/At ha /louse of Vommonaddr. Digby Seymour
called attention to Abe state of the law relative to
collision at sea, so far as foreign vessels are 000.
Muted: .
' FtibiCi- said the Board of Tride were
elifelto theiretportanoe of the subject, and had
entered intbeommuMoatton with the Foreign Office
lithe matter. - '
.
Iburbin called attention to the French
fortit dationi 'at Bt. Pierre, Newfoundland, which
Ife,regardedas contrary to stipulation".
Lord 'John Russell maid a report had been re
ceived frdm the Goventor of Newfoundland relative
to these fortifloations, and it was referred to the
law °Siert- of the Crown, who pronounced that
they were not an infraction of the treaty.
131 r Charles Wood explained that the official in.
sultaidinitionV .Sir cO. Trevellyan, Governor of
Madras, in publicly opposing the Indian financial
scheme of Mr. Wilton, had caused tho Government
to feohil hint - from' the Governorship. High corn
plimithiscisere paid to OM general administratiOn of
far O. Trevelly an ' by OW G. Wood and Lord Pal
moreton, who both regretted that the Government
was otompelied to talc* the severe course they had.
Siillen.Werd;Art present Governor of Cey
lon, is sp ok en of for the Governorship of Me
diae. •
The threatened opposition to. the repeal of the
paper duty, in the House of Lords, , was regarded
with much interest, ea it might possibly load to a
ministerial crisis, and- would provoke a serious
issue between the two Houses of Parliament.
A Are mionrred On board the steamer Prince Al.
bort, three days before she arrived at Galway, but
it was - speedily. subdued:. It appears that the
steam pipes. became ' overheated, - and that some
corn, wch was stowed near them, caught Are. ,
• 14... i, thet the Stook Excheocii committee ,
whi wasioveetkrat the operations ofPulinager, the
diDf it oashin,ll not been able to tines the possi
bility o ate , hiving ip reed loseei on the stock .e.*-
change, tonal to one quarter Of the extent of his era
besstemene." le, sii steady established that he had
are; tranasotioas on the turf; bur he is .said to
nave tfinfililly bePti a winner. An impreeeion rev/tiled
that metturities for some -portion o r the entheaste meat
aught yet be disoovered. , The Times miltOrially Pro
it
tut* ;dust the Mullins up of the matter , which the
plea o " sullty,” is caioulged to produce.
1. a oy oortesschdettel, between Lord John Russell
and rl Grey , "relative to Weir respe c tive courses on
the re ormotueriot. had beau published. The London
Times, In en editorial on this correspondence, omens
that the Cabinet haw been fiercely at variance on the
commit Tat' trinity. the budg et , the fromohum , the in.
(- Mr i t Prrgentrftattfetlide% repeal of Ineepaii% duty.
Colonel°, or the Volunteer Rifle Corps formed of the
civil sisevlos employe] ii..
Adddlogal sur-ere of gun-boat, built by private con
tract diinns theßussian war, had developed more rot
tenness in the vessels and a total unfitness for further
oervioe. ,
The " Cpttmi Slimily emulatio", had held their an
neal meeting at Manchester, and tuned a lengthy re
port upon their proceedings This report claims that
the association has already bee - of direct benefit to the
cotton trade, and sh'ows that great efforts have been
made tp extend the legion forth' production of (meas.
and thereby make the trade no longer dependent neon
one gouriso for the simply orthe raw article. /Lig limed
:teat the efforts of the amoolatlon stimulated the An,eri
can plasters to those extraordinary efforts which pro
duced the enlarged Fwth of thepresent year. One of
the 'seekers predio that the next year :g yield oloot
ton /auk , r9to amount to 1,000.0D0 bates. •
Dr. Langley, Bishop of Durham, has been appo.Med
Archbishop of York.
-Usury Kaye Porton, first ranee. and Thomas •King.
Second mate' of the American ship Evening Star, had
been arrested An Liverpool tor volent, lisasult
lined
seaan. nutlet Samba' 'odams. The mate IMO
and dosibarg_ed ; but the second mate was r. mended to
aim% the ebbe of the injuries, plush were pnneitially
Indicted by him. .
PILANOR
.
' 'lt rtifirr hod been 'ea - 17W Ilia the Free,* Govern-
Was bad d;Fianded grAelanatunun from Prussia relative
to the' sus entatoca or its war budget, but it was pro
siosin.do un minded. -
,Tie euperior Qoupoll of Commons*, appointed to in
vestigate questionnrelating to the oommermal treaty
with „England, i had held its 4 , st meeting in Pane, and
vrold continue to meet three times awash. ,
The monthly returns of tae swank of France show ass
Ina the orals on bud of about 3300.0J0 france,
in the bills discounted an merges, of nearly eleven
in Jibes of'france. , ,-
Tke reriseorrespondent ofthe London Herald suede
that seldom have the _relations between Prance and
togland beep op .& more unsatisfactory footins, than at
, tr Bourse closid flat and lower—Rentea 70.28,,
,THE CONFZEtENOIi."
There le nothinenit moment relative to the promoted
Cont!,renott.
A liallfiVe Wean= say e that Ensland (phi, atreen to
the uonterenoe on condition of being et It rtr
make .
,tny engealittinrhith try,vity.gott:regg,44l,
a4iisTogr
- - 13Villtilgrlio% ND. ,
41u *Med thatritty flayoyarde recently ettaeked the
an custom home on tbe9enevene freetter, and that
theta were intedohanced. 1:11. Baba) authorities lodged
a oneenlaint at Turin.
.).:XPI2DITION TO
Garibaldi'', expedition to "Shelly engrossed a, bark.
share of public atteLtlon.ll esorreaeondeat of the [Melo'
Wales desorltes the departure of the expedition front
Genoa on the 6th of May by midnight:lt wee composed
bta.lloo volunteers. Three steamers were lying to the
omeg, to which they were conve)ed in detachments
from various points along a ranee of font or five milts
of Doses, The ougaenitation of eb lance. body , ou ti
eaven spot wseavdided.lhordernot to hil additional
perplexity on the bovernment. _Nearly 5 sons of
all kinds flookel to the beach, to bid the g allantad ven
turers ^ Good M t leed," f • --„
As al AI *Geribaldi's volunteers, they were of
every grade at palling—noblee, soldiers, artists, phi
stollens, down to mutant& and Workthen. The °titbit
s:sem of the wooer , in-, garriton. at -Genoa has been so
barracks
that it was neeesaary to confine them to their
barrack. to pravopt. their deserting, in order to enrol
themselves. Garibaldi had sanguine ho pes of cutting
B
out some ono or other of the eapolitan matte which
were on the watch for his appearance. edict, Geri
beide, able Ilitiltotant. was to star in (oar or five dais
with 2 000 more volunteers.
. . .
The expedition' is Wit' to' have been well
_provided
with arms.ammunition. lied provisions; and with es
cannons. Garibaldi le laid to have exehanged for gold
three millken, francs in notes.,at the Daub of benoa.
The Vilna Journais publish a letter from Garibaldi, in
which he nays .” It is the duty of all to encourage. aid,
and to augment the number of combatants agarnst op
pression. it is not Abe Insurrectionary party in Sicily
whom we are assisting, hut - Sicily herself, where there
are esernies to contend wt tb . It wag not I'who advised
sti insurrection in Sicily - 1 - nut from the moment tho i :er
Sicilian brethren threwthemselves into the stru ,
considered it my dut to eaglet them, Our haf t e cry
will be," andNiotor nimanuet."
It is stated that the expedition was not to land in eiol
- was intended to breast diversion in Calabria.
The British Mediterranean fleet was cruising between
hgalts and Sicily. ... • • •
There ano news of importance from Sicily. The la
test accounts represent the insurrection as still continu
ing. The beeenuarters of the Insurgents was at Cefa
h°l4gryPiefrann.plialselvoeurzar ti l r e zig u ittacked this Po;
ration imsnocess
• - • • LATEST.
- There is nothing etitheatiais t% the land of Gari
baldi, adttikligh o,l4lPotgwaspurrent that h o ed landed
at Orlisint. In C alabria.
A Genoa Miamian state that the disembarkation of
Ineursents coming trolVill erent parts of Sicily and Ca
labria had taken place at repent. Itwax rumored that
,an insurrectionary movement had taken place in 1.111-
'taints, . r . -
iNkomo and Messina were destitute of provigforel,
nd Govemment had organised a steamboat service to
urnish teem with the necessary Lupe lee.
a Turin despatch of the Ittli states that Oaribiiidi , s
vessels had toudhed at Talcuoala, iit Tuscany. in order
to tehe in proem° s to put the combatants in better
condition. and to addieome officers to their ranks. The
vessels tilde sit out again: • • •
, Berthaldi had takemwith. him to Sicily his ouly son.
atr ei tti d T r ? a leVu li h e l . entor the calf eon of the 11 striout
.r -, .• - , , . ; ITALY. , • : - ,
• '
The ntroleljournal .of .h ome says the reception of
King Victor amrrixneel by tee clergy . Cl • Bologna., wax
very di transit til, What the litrin papers represent:. The
Xing was tri have raised seven days at Bologna. but
remained only _two rayeon the toll of the Romegni.
which he appeared veryanxious to leaye.
The enlistment of 'nehmen for the Papalarmy was
promise very successful,
- It is stated that a suggestion was pending in the Papal
Government lor the cons oration of an Assembly at
Rome in which every Catholic flqwer should be repro
seat by some political or, administrative person of
note, or the earpiece of examining Intoltbe question of
refer.
ei ts
AUSTRIA. , 1
M. Planer, ' P of P OI giesiiriewvhi who
i lllo i provisionally l, i = i d l e e
i n
nitely firmed In that office. •
It is repaid to re-establish the Ministry of Coli
n:Mee etlitTithile OlfArke. , which was last year united
with the/Batman of r insure.
Wantem " of the newly Organized Council of the
Empire received their appointments, and the first
hitting o the Council was fixed tor the 21st instant
Genera S Benedet w endeavoring to bring about an
in!
arrangement between the Government and the six Rot
garlans who declined their appointment to the .Council
et the Errepito, , tending to induce them to sit in the
countil. ;
SPAIN.
Marshal I:O'Donnell lied arrived et Madrid, and was re
solved with much enthusiasm.
The sal of Atha ii was to enter Madrid on the 11th
inst.
• Count Mootemolin and his brother had embarked for
Port Vendfes. The r".cently-pdtdrabed renunciation
of Count :neaten:Min is authenticated by the Corres
pendenela 4h:tetr a / a .
A Puerto telegram of the 9th', says: '`lgerotlattons
are taking 01100 on the autibiet of• the lath capture of
the Amerman vestals. _ •
ent/ hitedred Men, belonging , to the dimoiplitiarr
companies, at Alca'a de Renate', on the Bth. Or
der was re-es bliehed lif the otvlo guard. ,
. _
' . '
Resorts r .- TURKEY,
- r
rs gain danaiiiiii that Russian intrigues in Tur
key -were age' *Seat . A strong Russian force was
Leine ooncentr led on the Prink. •
The Porta is tated to have resolved upon. declaring
to the Servitin ileputtition at Constantinople, that, in
principle. it by rio means eeknowledhes the hereditarY
rights of the family of P Mee Milorme.
. ' , INDIA AND CHINA. ' '
r Telegramein ration of the Calcutta and China
mails had'reaeh England, and the malls also arrived
L t o gn agt :T! h,e °man portion to be OOrivined out
'The' dates ltreo l Calollitft; April 13. lions Kong,
K t
e r° IParnlit t tlit
he {at it o f E_xchapire 'had receded to 2i
id, . qua. tosS6per dent . in favor of hngland. Govern
my% seourities hat &insiders* improved. Imports
de . hl-nee eaglet} Freights continued to imerove,
here was a vamp at shanghai, anti trade was sus
irtiddeigyoluisrquST: o f fiV i relmis d h,tvia d .44T h rad the
thi i hretocke frii i n u t l t i tirrget ' ln itttfol ' Attin of ativai n gl
prices. Exchange at 'Shanghai was , quoted at 6s Wens
TM. an atlyanoe 0(3% per cent. L ;, i - . ,
e t Meng Eon:. the guotillion Ina in DIN, an advance
° l 3 l ' , ‘ trit=iiiingt - iiets stooke vrensixia ' llai i prices
bilker. 1
, The China news tine *tweeted to lead to en increase
ni,the demand for sit vet for export from England. •
*twee *lnnored tut a collision had taken piece be.:
twliwen the ituseistis and Chinese on the frontier. . i
• . The ultimatum of thiYAllies was declared to the Chi
nese authorities on the Igor Maroh. An answer wee
e emoted *Ana comae, 3f the Intik ..when the mail
„gills's: ulna' tO. no - uriV Phuitan immediately:
alte. were arnyieir from ladel in quick aue
, 04. No pan of .tha ryeneh force limn .hurope lid
VS& , , , . . ,
; • ' 10eittlie4Ttian w a r e undue red. '' Freight," a4vanatfi g.
Griveyament _ telegram; dated bifida, Afini 21, &n
low:lees that Lord , Clyde . pr 0 uld • return to,zaglana .1
- - * • 1
,uft ,
Fr batigrasq two' tie Ohverzinr l/ingirai. dated
Al e . *ph - a nistanwinele , at l'eshitur; *enacting
n ix , t , onn o li o on migo.eptehenelou, wee," ht3triii
'prong exextrers
. ..by A titro.bcy l ol l4 W l tn!' 4 11 0 .quitt.
•ItL e • far!O lirritfiitithihT.-11y tillegrap . n. t in,
' , • : i t. twee noonoso .17_ trovicet steamer thet
ea
~ 5 ea the Nth itkltantsdneett their
- ' • ' . , goarlinAicpertirtit: ,t4 ~ : , ,
I. ' . wean • edemand or money at the book at qie
i..4..' • Ale. 4140t.the. otoonent:hotigeg - thervette i a •
• • . eniy7 at ashen yew ',bag.. f: / - .3... :,,
, ' rf ens lai them 01110 X MiStklid.eimitia 6.
1' ' ' 01 1"le Vryfundai. which, oying to uninvoyonio ni •
. o Continental emnelloni toot. ,1 A or.. Moat land
• r. Themarket op jolt 11th was depr ewd and
gritiWN°- gartcP:U 6 Zle.','.°,l ) ,s l glillopg
, cleilial tat - Ernotarringitob°
,„k.8.,,,,, Et, en. , cuote brir.elly.er at lie Id n ;
,c le
ra
. e. d ovit i,, llia, , itin . Lilt '.
11 . Detateterietyreeir tie very
RHO Dna Crampons 111 Arnefinan Ma •
ritiee, and our quotations are to tiidmotit tart entirely
oominal.
United Rtates 6 9 ,9" cent bonds 1863.......•• • . 98 mlOo
Do 54, cent. bald, 1874.- .... ..... 9114 e 901
Alabama 5 41 3, cent. bonds e 77
Kentucky 6 *t* cent. bonds 1%8-7i . ...... ..... -. 50 0 92
Maryland 5 qr cent sterling b0nd5.......... • 66.190 88 4 i
Matieheheeetta 8 49' cent. Bt. hands ........101 09103
Miseista 4ee cent. Union Bank bonds.... It e 16
Ohio 6 cent. stook.-- 97 m9B
Penney vaults 6 , lir cent. stook-- .. ....... 55 0 87
61P' cent. bonds, 1877...... ..... Fa a gl
South Carolina 511 fr cent. d honds. 1866 . 86 aBB
Trtin i npritretot)dt fi;ll`, ; :',ti.B.---.- ... - 79 ,4 : '.4.,',
o cent. Galling boo., 1828 91 ant
Montreal 6 40 cent. borate 1861.... ..... rio acs
Illinois Central 7_61 1. cent........_ 81 co 86
Do 6 ter eent.......... ........ .... 78 e 80
Illinois Gentral freelande, 7 4fr oink 92 es 93
Do shares ... - 43 a ssdi
.
Mlohigag o Central 84P' cent., 1869 . «. . ...... 84 0 86
shares ..... 43 m 45
New York Central 6 IP' 0ent......... ~...... 82 as 84
f a . ,_ 7V c e nt -...........,...... 93 is NI :
shares.... .-........_ 70 es 77
New York & Erie 7 cleat.-1387. ~.. 01es 02
- Do 7 cent., 1869............. 84 - es 86'
Do 7 0ent..1883 ....... ..., 76 - ID 78
Do -7- neat./ 1862... ...... ~.
a . 43, 0'45
Do shares .._ . -
.
. . ......... 18 • 19
Panama 77 ; x' cent. /at Intl; it . ti . onda. i 865 .....100 "mlO2
Do 61 mortgage, 1872- 88 eelo9
Penn's Central 6 6ft . cent.i.... ..... ............ 90 0 92
LATEST VIA QUEENSTOWN.
[Per 'Peres.]
LoieDoo, May 12. P. M.-Bar Majesty and the Prince
Consort proceeded to the camp this morning, at Alder
sham where . hey will remain till Tuesday.
The fonds have experienced a fresh fall. The share
markets are decreased Railway stooks very heavy. -
Pears, May 12-The Patric of this evening contains
news from Genoa to the 11th inst., stating that Col. Me
dia, the friend of Garibaldi. was craws, ding the
pre
wol nakeaomm nddxpd i fo on takin h part h i C w o i n h
6 000 volunteers have already been enrolled All the
arms hake been puroh•sed of the manufacturer
Great excitement premle at Genoa and t embardy.
from which quarters almost 'all the volunteers have
Icome. but it is extorted, however, that the energetic
diplomatiolans w Week the Government to prevent the
depw tore of the second expedition. ,
The Patric adds: The Neapolitan Government is in a
condition to refute all attacks.
The Opinions - Nartonnie.believes General Garibaldi
would diseinbatk at germane, on the frontier between
the Neapolitan and Papal States, Another, variation i n
the same Journal affirms Calabria to be the ordie
embarkation.. .
aThe Wand Duke Nicholas of Russia, is expected to
rriver in Pane next fuesday. .
Items, May 8 —General Lemon o here continues to con
centrate the Paent troops at Taman°.
'the King of Naples has subscribed 1,000,000 solidi to
the Homan loan.
- • • •
Num. Baturday, 3.36 P. 111.--Pocree very flet and
agitated. The final ow:Motion of Neaten was 6985. La
ing a further decline of 40 centimes since yesterdaY. •
Commercial Intelligence.
Livaapoon..May 11.—The ea es of Cotton for the
week have been 56,000 bales. including t 600 to specutee
tore, and PAP to exporters. Fair qualities have im
proved fully Xd; and the quotations show an advance of
X on New Orleans and Mobile. Middling and lower
qualities are. firm. bat quotations remained unchanged.
Holders offer freely, but show no doepowtion to p em
sale,. The sales to-uey (Friday ) were 8010 Weida
eluding 11,too bales to speculators and exporter,. The
°loam; quotations are as followe - . ,
Fair. Middling,..
Id_ew Orleans...-. —.. 5 7.4
Mobile...—. 7SG f 3-td Uplance
The stock of purl, ie 1.000,b00 bales. inclu
ding_ 83 i,OOO bale. of Annerioan.
8 re PE OF -TRADE..—The Manchester advice* are
favorable, prices °losing firm, but rather quieter.
LIVERPOOL BREaDaTUFFB MARKET, May 11.
he market closed quiet. Corn has a declining ten
dency. and all descriptions are lower.
Moseys. Richardson. Spence. k Co. revert thewesther
favorable for the vicuna Flour and Wheat are firm
Corn has declined fd; mixed is quoted at Paseads ed.
yellow M . ideates whtte37o.lBs. s .
MUM. Wakeneid. Bach, & Co. report yellow Corn
lel having declined le. and white 11..dlin ns the west.
rapliß Pitt tV BUM M BE it.T._—The market
closes nu with 21 declining tandem'' , Beef is in fair
demand at low prices ; Pork quiet ; Bacon is buoyant.
and Lets higher dunce Tuesday. Lard is steady at 67 es
" LIVERPOOL -PRODUCEM 'RlCET.—clugai ie
slightly higher for some descriptions. Spirits of 'fur-
Dentine heavy at 551 ; there was fauna collie At the
Coffee quiet. Rice firm. Ros n Arm. at a .might ad
vanos for all qualities; einninen is quoted at es Mots
dd.
•
Comore. May 11.—Wheat iles'inins. Tea has Slight-
Iv advanced !or all (malaise. Selena of I urpentine
dull at Ms &I.
IuvNIP.PI MoNN.Y iticititET.—For American se.
ourities the quotations are maninal. and the sales claim
mirtant. Consols are minted at 9509834.
THE. LANES r.
(By telegraph to Queenstown.)
LivEssoin.. Sunday.—le the Cotton market the sales
of yesterday are estimated at 8 1/00 bales, including 1 600
bales to speculators and for export. Ire market closed
s.eady.
Breadstuffe closed quiet, slow of sale, but prices tin ,
altered. Yr.:melons quiet.
LONDON, Saturday, Y. al.—Consols 94 e 96.
XXXVITII GONGHESS.--FIR ► 'ISESSION.
U. S. CAPITAL, WASIIIIIGTON, May 23.
SENATE.
A message was received from tho President relative
to the oeptute of more !warms off the Isle of hoes, by
the U. 8. steamer NV> andotte. Itelerred to the Judiciary
Committee.
- Mr. GRIMES, of fora. introduced a resolution of in
quiry, addressed to the secretarr of War, in regard to
the Fort swilling iteservation.
A discussion ensued as to the propriety of sending the
ing_uiry to the seoretary of War.
Mr. DAVId, of hlissiseppi. contended that it could
not be addressed to the President.
Mr. MASON, of Virginia, and Mr. PESSENDEN, of
Maine, opposed this view.
The resolution was Mon adopted.
Ms. HENJAMI et, of Louie tan& from the Committee
on Judiciary. reported a bill in response to the Presi
dent a message, relative to the disposal of the neiroes
landed at Key West, and asked its immediate ennsider7
ation in view of the urgrney of the case.
air BROWB, ot mussiamppl, objected, and the bill
Camotion r.
Ca of Mr; MALLORY, of Florida. the tall to
Increase the pay of the navy wall titsen up. and the
amendments of the House concurred in. '
Oa motion of Mr. HUN NSA, of Virginia. the Senate
insisted on Its arnondment to the Military Academy bitt
(the appropriation for the Texan Hegunentl, ana asked
pat a committee on conference to appo Med.
he Japanese err ved at a quarter past IS o'clock.
and their awn. ante craned a decided sensation. lihey
were introduced to the Seutdorea
_Mr. HAM.MON I), of tenth Carolina. re'erred to Mr.
Wilson's speech and his reflections upon the southern
ludimary.asriabliehol in the limes, aud stewed to know
weather any such speech was deli versa!'
Mr WILSON, of Massachusetts, said that he tad priq
pared his speech with considerable care, but had not
real it all to the Senate, desiring to save time, as a dis
position seemed to prevail to attend to other 'natter..
tie thought that by so dulnghe correrred a service on
the Senate. particularly as i t contained allusion to no
Senator. Me spoke for fifteen minutes, and ti en stopped
to save the time of the Senate.
Mr. HAMMONu mid that the speech contained re
flections upon the judiciary of his Staus.'which, if de
livered on the floor, would have teen tostanqy re
pelled. Be protested against the practice of publishing
speeches not delivered. In this case it was made to ap
pear that the Senators from South Carolina remained
silent in their seats when the high judicial officera of
the State were assailed. Me pronounced the (Maws
contained in Mr. Wilson's speech as unjust and untrue.
Mr. Hammond then_ proceeded. , to .vindicate the pa
rity of the Scrota Carolina Judiciary. and hoped that
a motion would be moms by some older Senator that
walk, VA a stop to' this perpetration of forgery and
fraud...
Mr. WILSON rejoined, He had put nothing In his
seeoh that he wan not willing to avow, It bad been e
frequent practice ler Senator/ to put into their ape rhea
matter additional to that which was spoken on the Boor.
He reiterated the statiiment that the judge in Chitties
ton had grossly perverted the law to shield persons
guilt, of violating the law eta net the slave trade He
had (added to the popular serum sit of South Carolina.
which •avoted the revival of the; slave trade.
Mr. HAMMOND replied that the groat mane of the
People of south Carolina did not faro , the slave trade.
and concluded by some that the senator trom Meese
chusetts. and tri here en mat a de of the chamber. *ere
chartered libertines."
Mr. DA Vld offered a resolution instructing the Com
mittee o • the Library,..to report some mode tor obtain
ing correct reporter f the debates urthe senate. and
that measure, be take to prevont alterat one in speeches,
changing their moaning.
The subject was then lard over.
Mr. Davis' Territorial resolutions were taken up.
Mr. WIGPALL. f Texas, aefecided the action of the
Southern delegates at Charleston. He prohounced Dou
glas to be politically dead, and denied rbat Mr. Buchan
an ■ letter of accepuinoe justified the intereretation•
put upon it by the advoyales s iir squatter sovereignty.
RI was not right to ores a distasteful man on
Me SA
the sown. - Mg, 'Douglas h not a baker's dozen in
the rout's, andante( not get the vote ot a Uncle Soutli•
ern Butte, except in preference to a Black Republican t
and some Rutin eight 01 the states would rather have
a Black Republican for President than Douglas. He
did not want a slave mete. He claimed that ;be whole
question was settled in tho Bred coott rasa, if. indeed,
it was a judicial question at all. tie denied that the
Democratic party ever endorsed the rum oroMille mea
sures of 1050 - i anglify was not the choice of the party.
nor of his own friends It . Douglas wishes harmony is
the party, let him wohdraw' hie name from tire can
vass. The South will take almost any other man. II a
epubli an is elected, he will never be President of
thirty-three Strang.
Mr. DOULI rTi.E, of Wisconsin. said it a vote coo Id
be taken he would say nothing on the e resolutions. But
if the dilcussion is to go on ha should ft I it his duty to
say something on them. The Senator from 'Punished
said that the Senator from Illinois was politically dead
jf so, th is wan 'the longest funeral ceremony he ever
heard.
On lotion nf Mr. HAL*, of New Hampshire, the
further oonsideratien of the eubject was postponed till
to-morrow.
Adjourned.
!LOUSE OP REPRESENTATIVES
The Renato Paeifus Telegraph bill being under entun'-
Air. A GLY Y, of Meseta:Musette. spoke of the salt im-
Portaime of such oonennunloabon between the two
macs, which cannot he eflkoted for rears to come, ex
cept by this incases.. Ile deeded that it creates a great
moimpnly. It coolers no exclusive privilege, but mere
ly grants the right of way.
A number of gentlemen earsesily caught the floor,
amid the usual confusion.
. . .
Mr. CJI,FAX, of Itoliana, said they wanted action,
not speeches.
Mr. e MI Cif, of Virginia, thought it unfair that the
debate should be confined to the 'needs of the hill.
Mr. aitilibiY replied that the dismission had been
confined mainly to the enemies of the measure.
Iturine the 1111bAllquant proceedings,
Mr. fi&R.P.i) of Ohio, rose in a point "of order. rela
tive to the ereva ant disorder. He said it was impossible
to unnerscand what was going . on.
The Speaker auceeeded in effecting comparative
quiet. . .
Mr. CLARK B. COCHRANE, of New York. moved
to lay the bill On the table.
The matron was decided In the negative; yeas Si).
"ghost Blither action the Bowie went into Commit
tee of the Whole on the state of the Union on the le
gislative, examitive, and Judicial aoproprivion bill.
The amendment to strike out the approving: ion for
the Auxiliary goerde was pending.
Mr. FL tt eNCE. of Pennsylvania, caused to lie read
the resolutions of the City councils In reprobation • f
the disturbance of the Republican serenade on Fatur
dos evenin -
Mr. WASHBURNE, of Ilinois. raid the last resolu
tion vfne untrue, T here was not a pofieeMan on the
ground.
Mr. FLORENCE remarked that there was bat one
sentiment in the community, and that Wag in detest*.
tiol or the riot,
Mr. CA VAR r. Li,, of Nu , ' extrema. said the distorb
once commenced at the Washington Moore. The .
err followed the utocesanin torte street with al rite
.iolenoe of an organized mob. Xhei was not apolice
inazion the ground.
The amendment was agreed to,
The °maw tee then rose
Mr. WAIRBUBNK, of Whims, desired to obtain the
floor at an ehily period. to engage the attention of the
House in relation to the distlngwithed citizen of hie
Btata, (Mr Lineuin) who had Jolt been nominated rie
the Republican candidare for President, and who would
b. , elected. He intended particularly to review his re
cord in Congress. and correct the gross morreuregenta
t one already made,
The House non- conearred in the amendment re
quiring the official reporters to report only the proceed.
men, in order to exclude undelivered speeches, and con
curred in the amendment striking out the appropriation
for the auxiliary guard of_the city of Waahington. The
bill, as weed. approprietee about five million seven
hundred thousand Unl.ara.
'the House went into committee on the hill matins
ennwipilatt ens for certain 01,11 expenses. moludin; the
Coast Purvey and Licht linage eatatilishment.
On voting upon the amendments. it was flatulently
wenn ned that a quorum was not in attendance.
The mai parlinmentn.y intone ev,.re tenoned to for
the le urpme of securing' the attendance of the aliment
mein tare.
Ar seven o'olo It P. M o the duo aware °loved. to hear
excuses for the absentoee i some of which were on ac
count of eloknees ur absence from the city. The other
remote were ooinical in their charaoter, and excited
merriment. For instance. Mr. lioulirn.r. of Louisiana,
had " paired op " ' for life and is now on n Wedding ,
tour.
Mr Winslow, of North Carolina, it was Said was to
day very assiduous in hie attendance on the Japanese,
and it waa reatonnblo to suppose that ho was, now ab
sent extending the national tourtesies to the represen
tattvesof the sr. at 'I yo no. [i aushter.]
Mr. PI.ORk..NOB, of Pennsylvania. In it the alone
'o'd coon ? [Renewed merriment] .
Mr. Winslow was not (moused.
• Other members - had been !Mixed with the pains of
lothger, end hettl, cone to Hardt of Rotuething to de-
: Mr. ROOVI ON, or Atahatna wanted a recess fur an
hour, in order to tive,the !meant-at-arm. on oppor
tunity to Obese op the oUteiders. In the meantime the
member* IP 11,1 Wet(' present could en to di, nor.
'rho BPEAKtiR ginr. Colfax temporarily presiduhr),
declared the when rora recces to ho brought er.
The euegeont at Arms repeatedlyin ah
senterm
Among theta woe -Mr. Barr. of New York who. as
no eXellee. mild there hod been such continued enilte
and confusion that his heed ached. and he went out for
fresh air. Thin an emblage - was like a toWn.meetlng.
,and almost turned hie head Laughter
Mr. JoHN CO tff.tt AY4 E. of New Yolk. thonght his
cielleaAne onaht to lie eaburcd unconditionally without
the payment of the hoe nod free, tbr tt was evident that
ho was deraneed, elaa he would not have returned.
[I Reg Mord 1
Mr. MILLe. ON, of Virginia., of martens fatia on the
Molter. 'troy veto engaged Id a gta're Mgr. I! 'her
WOre t4l count a farce the sooner they
Ante the bolter. , - - suspend proceed -
h
tonme were heard from other abreateee, some of
whom pleaded wilt •
Mr.- MON'I OOM Permaylvan . a. thought it
Would be bitter t o dJoutn. This: weir all a faratc [pries
rbrder.l
Mr. CUNKLINO, or New York , Bald he didn't 149*
irkethei he had a godi for teirlaraur
who had bad nu e, twee thy
tef..l
Additional absentees are. from time to time. boffin*,
V lore thetlmr: teexonees wore not estallte.
molly minted by the lstl
logo opixittiOisoOr: •
motion of ter. BR RetAft. of Oho, all Anthem'
11 ".° 66 Q 11 1111, in thik nail of the Honda .itere &intone*
• .
Neveral gentlemen Said it mini unjust end unfelt td eni
ewe the remaining absentees, when the others had bead
timed. , - •
After farther noisy troneedinrs,
ithU s e nrain went into Committee or the Whole
OD the stare of the Un o, on the civil aropriation bill,
and soon thereafter reported it to the House with va
rious amendments.
Athaif past nine o'clock the House adjourned.
Important rtai!toad - Movement.
HABRISDURG,r . May 2d.t— A. y Isiter - - ia en =
thuslastic milfroad meeting held'heie fo-day;
composed, of etroug-delegetlette front= ti sibitth: '
western counties of the analelsewltere.
Chief fatties DowrieVat tb Supreiti6 Court, pre.
sided, and was assisted . by is numbed Of Off ?Mt;
dents.
Hon. Jeremiah S. Black, Attorney Gener/r ot
the United States, together with Col. &diver. of
New York city, and Mae other prominent gentle.
men, were appointed a committee on resolutions;
who reported the following , preacable. and. resolni
tion,,whiott were nnaaitnousty adopted, els :
Whereas, Ithas been made manifest to this Convent
Con. upon the most commutate evldettoe, that a railroad
from the city of,New York to the &Mtn river and the
heart of the great Want, may he made (ordeals that
eight millions of dollars, and twenty equated miles
shone• th.n be any other rnute now in existence
through Penneylvania, mid fifty actual miles shorter
than
through
y a
it ro nute through the State of New York;
therefore he
Resolroed That a committee of five_persone he ap
pointed for the mimosa of laying these facts before ea- ,
pitalists and other persona who are interested id tele
;treat thoroughfare of trade: and inviting aid titseouts
the azieedy completion of this i mportant enterrise.
The committee appointed in compliatiee with the
resolution were Meaws. Thomas Meyer, Teaser
Rubes, Johnlieeina, A. P. Wilson, and Whitton
Reilly.
•
Impottant trOini'Dlexictp.
DEPOSITION OP 31 IRAMON-ZULOAGA ASSUMING THE
PRESIDENCY-•7HE CRISIS ntrareina.
Cnaimams, May 23 —The Conner has a ape•
vial New Orleans despatch announoing the arrival
of the steamer Pocahontas, from Vera Cruz, with
dates to the 18th •
. . .
General • Zaloaga limed' a decree en' the lit
instant, deposing Miramon, and assuming the Pre
shimmy himself. 'fhb movement had Gauged treat
alarm.
Miramon hod sustained serenni rivers et, aid hit'
posed heavy loans on the oity of Mexico and" the
foreign commerebil bowel.
(demand Ulna, with 6 000 Liberals,occupied
Guanajuato, on the.sth of May s prepar a tory to at.
tacking the oapitai.' -
The Courier s despatch says the crisis in Mesloo
is impending. Great distress prevails.
Zulosga's expedition against Puebla -was:form
ing tinder Gedpral Miranda.
FIN -INCIAL AND COMMERCIAL
The Mosey Market.
Pu ably 2y. UM.,
The business of the Stock Board wea limited ito-dai,
without marked variation in prices. Penner Irani ai
Railroad shares were weaker, closing 'Si be!ow the
closing prices soeterdar. Schuylkill Navigation .was
atendY for the pfeferred stook, at fi. No transactions
are reported in. Hamitic Rai lroad shares. Generally
speaking, the market's quite • firm at vrevlous quota
lions, with a scarcity, of coders from invaiitors..and nki
speculative demands.
The'rrOuey market is without any variation front the
anoint unser severe' Weeks peat. the simply in the
hands of brokers is abundant; the amount of good
paper manufactured in the course d eye- y..day hwddessi
limited even below the ability of the bank, to absorb it,
so thatlittle hods its way into t e beads of the brokers,
The Col Owing Is the amount of cog transported over
the Hazleton Railroad for the week ending May 19,
Week. Previduely. Total.;
Tone. Cwt. Tons. ...got. Toni curt.
Hazleton 3 921 05 44.170 02 48 092 CS
Cranberry 2,410 02 26 621 01 20.401 12
Bast Sugar Los' 2 25 , 07 41 v 1,3 06 43 033 12
Counoil Ridge . . .... 2.371 •0 40 3V 04 - 42.698 01
Mount Pleasant...::. .01 11 8 912 19 7 6 , 6 14
tiarleigh... .......... 1.240 65 10 793 09, 11 730 05
eddo 1,03411 9,15713 10 841 Ie
Total
Last I ear..
'3 925 11 182.380 17 193 278 09
14,1153 15 123 319 12 131 402 49
Increase ....... 59,031 03 58 873 10
Decrease......, 15715
The following is the Pittsburg bank statement tor tte
week preceding May 19: ,
BA NKS. Circulation. Specie. Loans. Depo's.
Bank of Pittsburit...4l23s 876 SII 4 OOM 01 aso 9 2 3460.1,792
Exchange Bank..— 493 tut 174.751 1 552 055 3113.881
Merck & Mech ZVI 282 13' 9iil 1,045 273 kW 079
Citizens' •• M 3775 19,519 • 6631!4 812 072
decO;rrtes'..,
Iron City
Allegheny.—..
747 416 , 73.661' • 771748 160 520
2136.0.6 176,26 b 766 125 215 711
Imo" 106.996 864 236 1E0,109
8291 984 1,133.719 '7 11118 el 1 9O .773
Last ~ 2 011,268 1 028 86L 7.4167971 890,310
Increase . 4 11,338 41.858
Leo reale.. ... 66,704
...-.
us ... .t .
reasitry end " Dne to Due by
other Notes. 9artke... Ban.
Fituiburg ..... ~ 1341 096 147 63. 11122 3713
Exchange.— 131,365 27.4131 39 314
o_l. le BL 11k1 NH . ' 61%673 27 314
atlteens' 38 191 " 79 Sus 24 863
Alsehrtiuos'.... 41,469 15,333 16 72.
Iron City...... 51,090 632 . 20,715
Allegheny .•••• 43 999 MAI 13,029
Last week.--
korona.. -. „
1,821 2.906
The following is the coal tonnage of the Shamokin
Valley and Pottsville Railroad Cornelia,
Week. Year.
For week ending May 19, /9M., 4.04 15 80 MS 01
Came time last year 4 as tal 42.616
leonine ..... —MS XI , 7.738 8➢
Philadelphia Stock Exchange Sale.,
Mew 23 MO.
R2P01121213/27 B. E. ELA731111211. ELM Walt Strut.
FIRST BOARD. .
WO Fenno 6e.......... 242 Cf *Bah Ngv pref..oaah 23
&O City da new. 10626 RIO do oath 10
1000 , do .....411aw.10622 100.Banna 4L_ .e.ab 3636
5(13 do 0ew.1864" 23 do ...., • ....b6 3074
0000 Soto, I Nay 66 '83.. 74 SI Del tetanal las.— 221
18(35 do 'B2 ..... ~ 74 2 Cam dc AM R not
30u0 do 'O2 ..h471 % RI Lelnalt Val R.—. 47b
4.206 do '72 —cask 93 2 do
/000 Cam &Am 61'83.. 90 A Littl•dahuyl....—. 13.
110 do 83 .96 )13 Mint4hill It.. B _— . ...' . 61%
1000 Reading R2l , W... 73 20 edeohanioeank... 26%
1930 Catawlesa It litre. SI A WWI& 8aak...—....1.7
1000 do lit int 32 " 5 'do• —.117
23 Del Div Canal.... 41% 11 Western Bank.— 61
2 Beav Meadow.... :
_63 11 - 'do ' ....... 64.
60 aoh Nat , praf.cala 20 . -
' • BIITVIISE
4050 N Pa R 105....2dys 93:44
4WO Plows FL dr /et mt.loifi t
301,0 do 1013:
SECOND
605.0 Penns coup 61.:... 3334
2A40 Cit) MO
050 do .........203
600 do .... —753
/.Lo do —lO3
1800 City Gas 62 ..new.lo3
MN sons et,.6s Istrotdo 7 3. E,
3uoo Csta do wissn lit int .
I
WIN .... 3 2 .4
1000 tio 3234
HAX) Littlo Scholl 75... 82
1152.1 Greea Ifidge 34
CLOSING P'
Bid. Asked.
Philadelphia 6...153 - 15355
Pnila ae It .104 1033 s
Phila. as. ..new..106‘,7 106. ti
Fenno Is 917: 93
Reading R... 21 3-16 21 5-16
Sending lids '75.. 1310., 81
Rend nit 51i 115/55
Read tot 6s 'Of— 7272 73
Peons R —thy off 21 18.% •
Penes R 111 adds ,
Morris Col con.. Zit 66X
Morns Cal 5rr..111 114
BahtulNay 6x'B2 70: 7 47‘
2churls4avlm 6s, 81 83
Philadelphia Marlwls
PAILADELPIILA. May 23—EvisNING
There is very little export demand for Flour, and
mines are unsettled and lower. About 1,000 bbis sold a
3550 for aup,tfiae• and 85 76 for extra, which estab
lishes a deotine The trade Amboy= an a small way
at from the above bores up to 86.5187 60 for surcirfine.
extras. nod fancy brands act aiding to quality. Rye Flour
and Corn Meat are quiet. holder. asking 841250 fur the
former, and 83 50 eSr bbl for the lab or, without sales to
an r extent.
Ptruvar is plenty. and dull at previous
about 2,500 Nobel, only having been sold at 135e1400
Int fair to prime red; choice lots are held higher, and
15110160 u for coins on alto pri • o white. Bye is lower;
euo bushels Perms. Ivanut. sold at 833. earn is on
change • about /0,000 bushels ) e how sold at 7.10730 for
fair. ane74e7d , for good and prime futility afloat Oats
are dull, with salts of 4003 busliebtedefe for Delaware,
and 4• for Pennsylvania. ,
Mega is but little inquired for, and/talk/0.1 quereit
ron is dull, at 829 sp . ton.
COTTON insets with a fair demand, and about SOO
bales mild to de at steady rates
Gnormates.—There is a gOnd ieguiry uyar and Molasses.
Molasses. and a large Inmi fiii.S
ness doing in the former et
full prices ; the emend is itiostiy for refining
Pam. isior,:s continue in demand. bait the winners of
holders Innate operations, and there ph tae or no tans
doing in Bacon. Green Meats, or Lard, for which AO
advance is asked ro.day. Mess Pork is steady at 3 18 al,
and Prime at $l5 er Md.
films are very quiet ; there is ality little rloverseed
offering or selling, and we quote it at 84 Walt Isqr bu.
WiIt•EILY is chili and
a
aidbdata22oo Mo thndo,nernMo,Drudge etdo
xchange—Ma y 23
New York Stock E
5000 Tenn l's, '9l ' 91 , 1 100 Pacific Mail 3R. Si
6.100 A 113,01111 tra 811; 50d0...... • 8936
11010084 '1" 101 - do ....... sag
woo do 11/0 0 0 — • 1 8 14
10 band. 90 Erie 18:5 . 49 . hat N Y
2000 "udson a 3,1 twee 9014 301 ''rie Railroad. 139 2316
300 Hudson Rid tinsel 90% 210 Hodson Hirer • 4 9 1 i
10:0 flat Ism 2.61 nitge .94 1100 do .. , . 49
1000 Mirth S 2.1 mtdo_,. 44 120 61x011 Central 31
WOO W,lst 111 93 10.1. • do 3114
031 - Mean Bank es 03 Pairuttre1.R..........1mt4
210 Cleve Er. TOIOdOR 31 BoAn . .... '
200- do - ,14013114 10 Cleve ttte 11,--. 12
- THE MARKETS.
Asuss are shade better. with sales of 30 Ws at LIT
406 36 for 1' Is. and 86 63.19 for Pearls,
Pialtre.-^" , he market for fitabs and Western Floor is
BO lower. th roam trta of 16,209 bile, and soles Of 13 030
hhts at 90 40 10 fn. ea p., fi no `/are ; 83.1045 2134 for ex
tra do : 85 05 .0 for suvarfine Wes era : 35 1505.43 for
extra do; :35 Mc G for extraround-hoop 0 hjo• Southern
11 , 90 it lower end heavy• witn aelPa f 1.11011 bide at
35.75660 25 for taxed to rood. and 86311 07.76 for extra
Cainnthn Flour is droopi ug, with sales o 400 Oh sextra
at ea 7601.40
Gaeta.—W heat is a. .hide earlier,with trit e l.23 f . of Bo deo
bushels at us for Ch icor° Or' o 211
X. 31 _or . 1 11-
waukee Club' end 81 Al Mr red Western. vomut lower
for unsound. with sales of 100 COO bushels at 57066,3 for
Un.nund Westerd mixed. 015670, for s..und do too for
yellow. and 700 for round do. little aro, steady at 37e340
tor Bnutlleill end Jersey, and 400420 for No. thorn end
Western
Puny itdons.—Perk is dull and hatvy, with sales of 100
11.1 a at 817 50 for old Mese ; 917 02 for new do; 912 60 for
ald prime; and 91344 for new, en. Bear nr quiet; sales of
lac Ides at 840450 for country primer 6503.53 tor
Catlett,' nose; 8841050 for revoked Western and
eilavi*.au, for extra do. linnon is quiet Cut Mesta
re 91111 at 7108 for nhouldane and for Ham..
Lard is firm, with sales of 100 tibia at 1 isionno. Sat
ter in dull at 110160 for Ohio, and 130190 for Etate.
,Phrase is qu;at. o.t. 40 no.
WillaKEY le firmer. With sato, of 300 bbls at 220.
NPW YORK CA'ITLR MARKET, Wedne•daY, Mar
2t.—Prices are still Very low—extra fine totality oniv 111
YP lb. st ma ket 11431 Beeves. 115 Cows. IVI Yeats.
5.90 Sheep and Lambs and 4,2de Swine. The sleek
is mntnly Iron, the far West. The prioes to-day and
Yesterday were very similar to these of last week,
probth y a few' more sold at WO 41 7 th yet the
average rate w nn higher. We quote from ealtia,
average blia. The enmity was setsrally fair end -the.
dium, including Some vet fat extra stook. Quite a
number were slop fed at Westerd distilleries They
weru. however. god and Int. Provers are now de
spairing of seeing any advance established. and specu
lators operate Inure earrifel y. -A number, to day. have
not made their salt, snd others lm a escaped' losses try
tee "s tin of their teeth."
COW. — A rend COW with young calf Cl her aide will
sell for 3ied4s ; common at *21030; extra stgorag,
The market ia dull
• Veal CAMP are stalling from g3fititip lotto., as to auri't
tY• fin es tenemily at Sto ann.
Swine Areselling statre cents groan for remmon slot,
fed to prime heavy oorn-fed. • • ,
Sheep and Lambs ale lei* nientir, and irre in demand.
e 5.9 tietlao. Jamli elonre.at Blown
mitt. quite freely. Nye ntinte at 4 INSYSiti line for
la from Piew - Jergey, , end
sheared. arid brio' WOOl OR. M. • Grnny and Olnew
sold 1 : df bend
o ftz
from
Ohio,
9 from New York.
New York Tea Sale.
NEW WA,'Mel 23—The Ton male this lumping was
spirited. and nearly all the na•nlogne NMI anti; at an ad
vance oriel° for the towsrnces of green. and n shade
advance on the , better kinds. II•son adalar yonng
Ilyann 29060340 ; Gann order 40a60 , i0 ; Imperial 3.00
470 Twankey Des3to ; Congo 320.
plackets, by Telegrapk.„-
• *Li*? *al ti.—Fiour dunk! itowlird itreet
to, - im}ro2l4l soles at, api4ismitorle_
.q:1: Trod' Uorp do ll an 4 aeiVised
1:111 yellow el" PTOIII ons steady. ki
tole 613114 e.
t it
Y
dtiUdffll~tdTi
wattagtii filer~t- haitra-entitir retaaTalt.
Aroh ' t reat- .thove. Num.— roe Cotlerea Hewn Or.
The Brides of Garryowen.".
,ArA
,t—
-tatux-arairre Tair.ashi Oder Weln° l -"•
01 1 1‘7.'" /he Lady of Lyeae',. The Widow's vie
em."
_ Moamar. Ftl VII Weit.Loeuet street.
KsriHohnetuoles laread Farewell Cowen. --
ASSEMBLY BBILDIEGIS.TIMB Bud Chestnut striate—
'l,eveeli of the Litt* Pahl. pt itatent sad a Tonga
8 ad 8 o'clock. &
McDo flacon's tlatime, Awe, atrlelkholow
Enlertatnelelle ELISIM-• •
!...PEZIRSYLTABM Aoadawror Flint AMTS. 'S* Chen.
nut street—The rth Anneal Extubtetoe.
CoNviniTtim
SzconnAik.-4he Convention 'aenenetilett 'enter.
day morning in St. Church,' ai Ins
o'elook, csir Divine serviee., Eight Rev. Moir*
'otter, Diihopfoithe Diothise, In the ebedg..
The Miming wear read,by the Nev. Benj.
Dorr, reotor of Oftrtst Church:
The sermon wee prettified piles% Wiliam Pres. .
tonireetoi of 6t: Andrines, tilbureb, Pittsbwrg„
front John ivii; " - thon
gayest me I have given them!! .
The sacrament eta- flan admirdetered to the
Members of the -Ctivittion by- Bishop Fetter, as
sisted by several ef the elfrigjuseii.
The Dr. Dqoachet offend aseriee of rein
lotion's expressing the gratification fiat bi the Con
vention et the return :of Bishop Potter froth his
Roropesustour,rin improved health, and conveying
.
to him the essuranoee of the kindest *Amin( the
memboris fbr bm utur •we ant happteek
•
The, resolutions : were, adopted unanfmously; the
question being put by Assistant Bishop Ilowinea.
Bishop Potter, iq -ruspaitse,returned his _thanks
to the Convention' foe the kind feelings expressed
towards h aw , and:Oita that his whole fteripes
slietild be detated to the waif/woof the Church. -- _ - .
The Bishop, after' this, lee hie-seat, when the
Rev. Wm.' ItacenStevene, D D , read a letter fele
Bishop Potter, givin' en neeetalt ; the 'EPbeePel
duties petilinried by - hPlit during the year. tearing
that period he bad cfacNted on 21 occasions, at
329 oonfirmetiona.,„ to the b'apth . of Franca be had
also- administered elatitirresdic:s to an • American,
previous td This - Biehop shoo officiated,
on several occasions,' kt-the FrotestNnt Ciut,pel it
Home, and admihisteridlherite often:V=l lo u In
several eisesin that' eitp. - . • The' idocenseN took a
general view of therchuddimt of-the dirseini re
commended the eiteblishisitint of 'a dioceses lioN4-
ii2g school for boys, in order to secure a MAWs
cient and permanent supply of elergymen.
eons of indigent ffiergyreeh aboard be educated - at
such an institution. with a view to their, assuming
holy orders. He also-suggested that the-dangle
ters of such clergymen should lai-aimitarly -sups
ported end edneatede when theiresseelle were slur
ble to furnish their( With` in eduesition switable to
their station in alai expressed his gratifi
cation at the ereetein'of - the new Episcopal, !Ravi
tat, - which would greatly enlarge its sphere of
usefulness. The Board of Dioeesen Minions eta
recommended to the consideration of the Members
of the Episcopal Church as an instititlisei eistitied
to their confidence and support. Ile diseatited et
length the subject of dividing the diocese, topieb
had been agitated during his absence abroad. if
' it were shown that the churches interested desired
swab a division, he would not oppose their decision,
but would take measures to bring the subject be
fore- the text tleperai Convention,: Whielt would
Ait meet till October, 1867, 8e expressed ntr opin
ion upon the propriety of the meantime, bet }eft it
enti rely with the Convention, and if it were deemed
ne sugary for the interests of the Church, be would
cheerfully : acquietee.. - °
Assistant Bishop B'owm'an then reed a report of
the Episcopal duties performed by him during the
past year, which contained-a number of maudlin,
relating to the deacons and priests ordained,
ohurchesconsecrated, number of persons ocatfeetri
ed;d.c. During the year he :confirmed 11%0 pus
sons. The report discussed at length various sub
jests relating to the welfare of -the Church, and
contained many suggea'ione as to the pulley to be
pursued to promote its prosperity- $e stated that
there were twenty churches in this diocese with
out ministers, and in view of this destitution, he
be recommender the estatdlshosent of an itinerant
ministry, to supply the deficiency. lie reviewed
at length the subject of educating youths to pre
pare teen for-the ministry, and stated that, while
other= meets 'had 'established and endowed schools
and colleges, where their doctrines were taught,
the ProtestantEpiseepal Dieeeee sof Peatnyleissit
had no institution of the kind. fie
~reeoesm
ended that Allah inatitntiou be created, -where
the Masa clergymen sad other youthrmight 're
ceive, a fine education' to qualify them fee-the
ministry.
The reading of both reports was listened to with
deep attention, although they consumed the time
for nearly ono hour after the hour fixed .ffer ad
journmeat. --- • -
The ttev. Dr. ildeßee offered a resolution that
the fer.bins of the addressee of bath-Bishops ne
ttling to the subject of episcopal education be
referred to a caw mitt's; <mutating of two clergy
men and three reymen„whieh .was sherni,,efirer
whiett th 3 - Convention Adjourned
srrnsuroon esartrx.. „:
The Convention met again at 5 o'elaisk.
The elistion of clerical and 14 delegates to the
6 enteral Conference was postponed indefinitely.
The Chair appointed se ,tbe ,ecenasittem, ender
the resolution offered by Dr. Maas, at the Warn
ing session, the _lles. Mr. Mcßae, Bey. M. W.
Morris, F. B. Brant; Tobias 'Wagner, and d. B.
Parker.
. .
Dr: Divechet; from the conseddied appointed it
the lest convention, to eintaider _the propriety, of
limiting the division of parishes, pirasentedkite•
port, which slated that owing t. - the action of the
last General convention, in repealing the new
canon upon the subject, the old - canon was new in
force, which gave the bishop, by and with the ad
vice end consent of the Mending committed, power
to decide upon the subject when' the' Diocesan
Convention did- not. tans emestviently,
there was no necessity for myelin/twat present.
Appended to the..roport ,wpat reenittion to the
foregoing effect, and another asking that the com
mittee he diseherged. - • -
Theecnsideration of this report led to a long de
bate, which war p articipated is by Rev Dr. Do
cachet, Rev. Dr. Howe. Rev. Dr Vinton, Rev. Dr.
Hare, Judge Strand, :Geo:- 11;-31fluirton, John C.
Cresson, William Welsh, Mr. Felt, and other*,
which occupied the whole seasioalilltio• adjourn
ment. This question came up in the last Convert.
lion, when there wan'ts 'Spirited - contest betwebn
the Church of the Nativity and the new Church of
the Intercessor, both located in the Foutteeatti
ward Tee rector of the Church of - the Natirlity
alleged that the Church of the Intercessor was
located within his parochial bruits, and asked the
intervention of the Convention to prevent it. Tho
Convention took the ground that the lowest politi
cal' division of a city—that of a precinct tot a
ward—fulfilled the _requirements of the capon,
which dealers,
..that any village, town, in•
corporate,' homuch, or city,, or the recog
nized divisions thereof, "may be made the
boundaries of a pariah, and that the Church of-the
Intemeaser, being in a different precinct from that
of the Church et the • Nativity, the decision was
conswpiently in its favor. Some feeling beteg oc
casioned by this decision, the committee of attach
Dr. Ducaohet wee ohairoLn, was appointed to eon.
alder and report upon the subject of defining 'the
limits of parishes. - -
The deb ire yesterday showed a strong Arena& in
favor of removing all territorial restriction?, if it
could be done withoui infringing upon or violating
the• canon' law. it being contended that there
-should be perfect freedom for -any clergy
man to earoblisti C .church. wherever he could,
providvd he-did not influence the families or con
gregation' attached to- the pariah or church 'of
a brother rector. ' Theee restrictions and territorial
limits were also considered arbitrary and eldest to
to the people, who should be left free to go to any
church they Please. no matter whether it was in' or
out of the bounds of the parish in which they re
sided, Cy the construction put upon toe canon by
601110 of the tueu*ers, a minister had no right to
perform any mlnlsterial mot outside of the parish
with which he win connected, unlem with the con
sort of the rector within whose perish the dory was
to he performed.
BOARDS: -
4 Spine. & Pine R... 12
100 o
be. Matuallna.. ... 24
00 d 24
Del Ma 1n...... 24
Mtn 03 I hay_ pret.bs 20
13 -
21 PVIIII6 38%
, uo &Aiello/i mining..
ZO Bear oloadow R 112
Gres , & Coates.. 21
, 40 • efUll[li
LittlsPohoylkill.... 13
N""oeeh x 11(
6 Pllll3 ,l ft Bank— -.1.7
10 da ...- ~.. • .11 7 '
443 O'neolidltinn 8k... 33.
6 Common Bk full pd 41 ,
CES-DULL.
Bid. diked
Sohay -*lay Stk... 8 85i
Fah uyi NM. ZO
W & him 781 m.. 61 ..
• - • • .. • ..
do 7a 2 m.. 12 14'
Long taldl2l:
Lehigh Cl & Say. 23S' North Poona R... 9
vorth Fauna It oo ?ay Tog
Nth Parma n RS Sata 94
Cats lot rat ML... 31 54.14 -
Frkd & booth R.. 54 64.
13• o & Thd4ta R. 43ti 41.
Rama & Floe grit 3234
The report presented by Dr. Dna/sabot was finally
accepted, together with the first resolution reported
by the committee, thait"no action by; the Convention
was at this time neeeseary The lost resolution—
td discharge the ocaoittee—ents not agreed to, the
subject being referredback tothem to report more
fully.
In the evening there was a meeting of the
Board of Mow - lone of the Dioeme of o penntylvania,
bold at the ehurelt 'Adlresmi Wore in 4.40 by
Wm. Welsh, Rev. Mr Oliver, Rev. Henry b.
Bpackman, and Judge Oonyngham. The annual
report was read by Rev. Mr. Childs, whfiall stowed
that the receipts during the Dant mien months,
divot) the organization of the Board, were 55.491,
and the expenditures $4.700. The church was
orowded with a large congregation of ladies and
gentlemen. ,
DISAPPtARANCE OF 'A PANAL BOAT O_IP•
reix. the oiiptain of a ottpal boat, named Maitin
Hudak, who hag . boon employed in, carrying, coal
between Pottsville and this city, has been misting
Since Monday night. The last person who saw him
was James tiaras, a hand employed upon the boat.
Ho says that both he and the captain were intoxi
cated, and got into • quarrel, while the boat was
lying near
,the wire-bridge. Not wishing fo do
any mirehlet, Barns alleges that he ran away and
did not see the captain afterward. Nor did any.
body also. His cap, as well as a hat belonging to
Barns, wee found upon the boat the rext morning.
Barns hoe been arrested and held to bail by Al
derman Hutchinson for a farther bearing. The
missing captain has a family rest:MEl eta West
street, above Coates.
- The body of Cusick was recovered last evening,
in the dem, abo:o Fairmount, and :the coroner-no
tified to attend. -
- KILLED ET TUE EXFLOSION OF A BLAST.—
Yeaterclay morning the coroner went to Box
borough, and hold an inquest on the body of a man
named - Wittier& Green, Who met hie death under
the following circumstances: On Tuesday errnirg
the deceased was at work blasting rocks in a well,
twenty-tire feet below the memo Bp Boma tail -
plianoe a blast exploded prematurely, and Mr.
Green was instantly killed. A son of the deceased,
who wan above ground, demanded ir,to the well
upon hearing the explosion, end found the body
of his fitter frightfully - rahtilated The deceased
lived at Manayuclt, where he left a family. A
verdict was rendered in accordance with the facts.
ALMOST .t Sxittuts ACCIDENT. —A bout filia
o'clock yesterday afternoon, whi'e a laborer Wft3
engaged in paintirg the front of The PEYAS
build
ing, the ecafultt, made of a ladder placed in a
horizontal foeitior, and suspended from the roof
by•ropee, suddenly turned. The man alipped, f e ll
about tan feet, and lit on the awning, which gave
Iraq beneath bia weight, and precipitated him to
the stets of the La Foment of the funding. A
crowd of citizens aurrounded him atone, supposing
that he bid been seriously injured, when, to their
astonishment, be informed them that be %efts not
hurt, and at once returned to his work.
NARROW' Escan.-- At a late hour on
Tuesday night, s drusketrauanialiapnu the rail
road track while attempting to get on a oar at Be.
cond and Reed streets. - The driTrr promptly put
on the brake, murstopied the viz instastlyi„. Had
it beim others*, Ilia"inan *Mile unquestiOnably
have boon killed, br sesarelybijnrsd ; as it was
tAshasiOtiiiiok his ear and issersted it.
Wrkte rwdetiee,ll tbisidednily
where the sodded erearred.