s UTasit E ic 1444afi1ki.,-*ovemaztiniNc.s. Lanoaster 00., Pa. flew gioihitOlottlielismi Mt. 'um. Brian*, Pereraosnaf, Pa. • , AmrdadLravn erartt*e._Qnmber laMlQ .;- /torpopeulloweappidAmt,Pubcia.,o 4, 4o l . 13 . $ Lon* Blum Hovels. cyporits,Vialsiur,!. , ..., MUCS/LON XVIII!. Mann Chitilara; ANlZiltilello44/11.11611b2tbkalt011 - RAW.* Hotu, flothlottem.Pi. ANIII.ICA.N ROTNL, AViaterliffil i V . S. I, L 14.2190 IV 1. , • 40#9.. E m , . NIPII7IIII r C141,_6•41 J. OOTTWErjara city wo R i Y* J. Oottive Illtmet,r 9 0 1; rf• , , oto DELA Oibinstaistl;4l.4: AiggyleAll 1 1 10 11NZia1e..3161114. NAL agisito Itranteer - CLALISMITRIMAZInnktfIuxf a. grFqxriand Op DIRDPOID SPRIPIoi, ordp.. Pa. OLD 11414Aftai!vps,34,fka 111.Latstott grim. keasitiieiti; .! : ,'.; j 7; .' 5 -- 7,- 1 1 i i ” . - '',- 1, _--,'" -' '' - , f 3 l -' ~; ~,. ~: .1t r 1 1.1 1 .it $ ' : i t: , 14' . . t.. ',-,.. . ' „ t. .' ...: ti . .1 - t t: -. 't • -.. t..1 -,., J,F• Sittrttpit'AllGllST . 11;' 1860 MOAT PAa s a.--fiterestinq Litter_fromMissmiri; Letter n .from tßettiitote ; jagl4loo. IptepigeiMe ; Pomo* and PpOseal ; Weekly, 11,Inte* ; :of the Philadelpbta Markets. Fotlirp P,AOa;-7TheClon." ventioa of the Penoeypraate State Tinaliene Aise t o- - elation ; , Totter, from Sopertor f : General - . News ; Life at. Pike'efeak ; , Marine Intelligence._ • The •NeWa. - It tiltmiles tbingto be riob, and very yin., not td , ,-2.30-the world thinks ' and,, what twenid wet,' if vs dared to think otherwboot We hire* is' Rothseklld in New York estate--a vs. ritabliberoti-ta moneyed, baron, with' utlitons in his coffers. The baron is now In Lake George, breathinethe 'fresh air, • and ,renewing hie es timated 'energiel: The solid Men of New York - , in tend ,to dine and spaeoh him on his return:' The affair. Will be select—ilia uppernMst of the upper, ten Only • being' admitted. - , .,Tames T. Brady, , tins eMoiell'earididate fer ' -Governor - of •New York, will hf;'`fri'.,the:',elialf.' Mr. Mrady; wei believe 'is the gentleman . who regrettelithat it was linposslble for him- to:preside over the.Milkei,diriner Some time else.. - The iikoitertont'sit Long Branch; N, J., coneern-, ing the Stipnook toysterlOns :murder care; is be. ginning; to _aubside, undaithe general impression, that the affair is a stupid hoax, arranged with' all ; its IgliodOldtails far the • impose of :meeting sensation No clue wbettevethOuld . be obtoinett of any' ; persons missing, and -the scion' failed to and.ally laidy7Ain which to hold an in quest. titmice the• publicans, ortniiroad Men, may have itrientad the rumor to attraci.browds. Them people arlilide . impla things. Par 'the, pristtmanih Share hire peen, rumors,,, 10929Pirkell Contradicted and • mistimes generally Gladatoril Was about to retire train:Ate', Seglisti'dabinet. ,'• The hat news from Ragland reportlad that the Right Mon. "gentleman's, reel elation was again considered. imminent: He is teridenitispilo initlitate of hesitancy, but the probahilititiKara'thet; he' will withdraw. - In the eveotof Anittingefliab, it is;Afr , Oladsiortei tion to retire fort; time franiPailiainerit'antlPiblic life: . It appears from a Liverpool paper, that Mr Gladstone was lately spoken °flu the pulpit, by Rey ; 15t :. MoNeile nrgreat reputation and eloquence, ,a 0 tbe triennia popular Charmeller of p e Rxekeetter," , tethe great astonishment of an attentire congregatiOn. -- The, • , ; arresCof, Col:Oreas, the forger, was the town gmairroflestOrday:: There wasquite an em. oltententaround, The . Pius office in the 'morning,' in intimnenca of-the foot that,' sit this journal; alasi pereiffheished , the fuel dilates 'of the ri• Mult appreciated the . en terprise fully, in',,piroliminei, rery.bmin extra edition of our-paper. '2.A few addilionalitensi t iOn: tivoio•the'srrest, whiob were omitted in the hurry_ of ,Preparing fhb report of yesterday,, rly be Viand• in another polume. . Among other 'things, our re porters forgot to mention Quit, &Meng Mime . who were present duringthe arrest; and: assisted in Its" copsummation„ were Joseph Mirkel, Detective Oharics'Bioltb,badDiatilot „Atiorney'Mann: • We regret to annonnowtheideith -of William A'. Edwards, Folk; who died at halfieat three, o'clock yesterdifniorning Ordiptherli, at the reaidei3ce of-his father,. qporge W. Edwards, EEq., corner of Eighteenth "and :Wplntit The 'deceased. althingh bed twentpfive yeais age at the 'time of his - death, bad already beco'ine promiuMitas astire_politician,.an4 tm,wita an orator of no mean Ito was a warm filand of :fridge Dorglas, and a politician of the pure Democratic 'school: Tki Itepahlteaas of- ChM hare nam!natott aliTar li:thretweefor Congress, in the NOt distnal, and iMielatgiitond &atrial. ' - , • • - ' hilivir4feeilopi:with it. heed slam 4. e .romei,th'.hiit i .jol;the body' as large sees" as a ter the-Naikon.' The come to", its bOrdeued wifb - ilefails: - of parched crape, low shiers, desert6l*,eitiei; torrid highways, deaths from snn.stroke,..and • tki. ihermoin6tertimong the nineties. As a:mere!practicat illustration , of this-intelligence, a reference to the list ofho; Atm that there is an nnexatn pleT rush 44.• Southern pi;oPle to Oda' city, truproUtinitir on the way,to Cape May, Cre,s 'sop; EptWoi, Bedford, acme other one of the likKired delightful retreats 'contiguous to our municipality. What the effect of Una condi -Lion of the 'weather will be upon the staples of the Eolith, many. of which`, such as cotton, 'rice, sugar, and-tobacco demand 'all 'the non iishfcient: that the rains 'of heaven and the. streams of earth can afford, it is impossiple.to imagine' and it would be improper to speculate. :Different tidingsjeach ifs from the West, every, Journal depicting in glowing periods the bone 'fits of a' kind Providence, and exulting in the prospect of extriordinary hariests. - So, teo, - in- our 'own great*.Commoawealth, "Wo are hourly, greeted, with evidences of agri cnitural'andeline:rat prosperity. ride along the Pennsylvania • Railroad through Chester, tine:aster: and other counties east and west of the mountains, will, abundantly indicate the ' l . ; exteiit, 'of the' season's ;arena, while •three horirs' ,jonrney 'along ~the Reading Railroad, through the tremens° districts of iron and ' will • exemplify the -value of our mineral ' In addition tothis, let as not neglect's:Pass -;;Ing to ;the 'fabulous atones - which .' , reach-us from 'the northWeetern counties of, the State, telling of great discoveries of oil in earth4t : forhiiies made. In. an hour—arid of -the 'excitementii.aedeinkteratiens,conspiinent 'existence or:suph -si state of things, We treat that 'all these, -romantic dreams of'a • 'Pennsylvania El Dorado will be, realized, and that ear people of Yenango, Warren; and Pot- tar wilt establish„within their midst a new, permanent, and•protitable branch of State re venue and industry. Should the harvests of England' fail—and' Prom this disaster May God preserve plc—we have in our power the means of pro-, venting any occurrence Eke the famine .of ' 1848, and of Aping 'a brotherly part towards . brethren in ,need.. And this_ consideration, -'however painful may be the contingency it coittenapistea,l6 not among the least gratify ing. reflections that: occur to us in eontem plaiins the many evidences of State and Ne-, *nal presperity which we - Bee existing. , ' , o7r. We regret to be compelled to announce the sad Intelligence of ^the death of Wmitzu A:EDirmini, Beg., which foOlf 'place at the residence of his father, Groitaz:W...Enw"lium, ,yesterday afternoon. hir,Enweans wad one of • the most promising young memborz.of, our bai., hle„wae , apubliaspirited citizen, whose and of heart endeared him. to all who knew.him. A meeting of ,the mom= bers of the Bar will be held Mils morning, at , , eleFen tho Dio4ipt: contfroom.. • F'str. TO spa.— here are -many gratifying — Cations that thOtrade of the Sea** now openingolli he, in some • departments at least. unusually good. TIC old • and respectable house of , Maims 'Krug k Co:, No 126 Chestnut street, the stook of " *lila we tiandied 'Willi much interest yesterday; -; furnishes an iiluitration 6! this. The speciality ,of this house I. /anent.um Solely, an imMense stook of Which; embracing ail its departments, is now-ar.• t een:g r ad in their eatemive waterooms; • Their' trade id with the joidildg Merchants' in,the large *Ries 414:P -.throughout tha.,l3auth And ; West,' and being. the r. a • sole tenter for some of . the largsaf.Maufactutars, aawr Wee goctfethey keep, their eater ems also large - -in , 151 1.:*"7-,Y9Ok And ))oth of ihtett lido they- Na.r.441t0 1 1if*,4 3 0 1011 ., •,• thud „tis .espietally; true , of „their- lerniantown woode 'of which they hive undoubtedly -the most -1-416 - - , _ , . attentive and ooniplete assortment of any one house 4n this Country. Their'entire second story te to woollens of this elass,'Mabracing, au end -47-a.i4eas - Variety 'of wool ocsaforte, shaWis, talons, hoods,-ind other at tleles, in , thoice new styles; for Tind — oltildteartreitr: : the article Of ass , • L NV t.i'llol-44°9:5.11".11.8,-"IfeFoonoln, D 7 %Monet D. . 0-., 4.4 AA! 0. •4011 q be 1111 1, foie saltsalt , T hiejust Intuited from Bribrata Mountain bioroved phyilque. admirably 4'.; ! r *tfeleetee the; saluliiity: of 'that Ileatant resort ,) 4 - .;• •si Over two no men ainerent vanetintomd Clair stook in other departmeate is equatljttried." -- ITri laths present time their sales, we learn, have far etteaded those of any former season, and they now . „ japan a large number of buyers in town. . „ . . _ . • „ ;Vie Last Card of the POrtsylvautirl:' ' - ;;;;then the popular-sovereiguff meifit Altoona, on the 4th of Usti\ 9 , , I wore denounced by the orgardeif th , Pederal Administration, as ontsidhlad iff*Diniocifitio organization, and as hostile to the regular nominees of the Democratic party. They were gibbeted as inco'rrigible traitors. Their pur pme was declared'to.be.oneof rule or ruin,” and when ant,l3o,llBth i em af terwards attempt tO'voteat Prier:My eleciiini,he*as exelm I - ded by -thiriityniiidOittintthe TederslAdmi, • nititiation,'"ort the it mud that he had forfeited tioriaiintiersidP in the' Deniimiatio The The:mispleartiMkt,cooleir men to Altoo na—like -that.; ' *hich had ~itt*yth,noY assembleditho4Mlne*-40.ineeting , risburgen ; the thirteenth pi April,' in ihe saute year, wasfte alwelbelprinciples of the Petne . Midi° , 'party , from 'mutilation and sacrifice; and, above all, to proteit against the attempt then contemplated; and since avowed, to break up the Union r idt these' Stites.. In order to , she , * the-motives which animated the Altoona tciebels"-r-quoting-. Am ; ofrensive phrase ap-, plied to them by their adversaries, and gladly sec:Opted:by • these: bold 'and thorough-going Dquociati-7wecoPy the following striking and prophetiti`plitle*tifroni the Short address which they adOpted ikn'the &Mai of May, 1859: - " Ii ality pr4er id state 'that the present campaign is Intended' alone to promote the triumph' oficertain ,flindamannit ,pritioiplas. We 'do not 'plead for men, bat for. measures, Ours is not a brotherhood to assist pereeps,,but to advance prin **lee. ;Iva do, that the organisation _of-. the • Democratic party . has been: usurped by .those-.who , have determined upon the experiment &hi:rolling' the South by an appeal to an ex. trenic:pro r slaiierY e lement , and through this els.' moit introduced into titettifrt Nation:l Demo. erotic Convention to purchase the lafrages 'of the 'Northern delegates in that Convention. , -and all this in 'UAW/ , cr theory practically 'asserting Owe the people of the Teriitories, at present, and hereafter organized, shalt have no controlnohat-' ever over the institution of slavery—we hold it to 'be t the duty of every Democrat and of all conservative men, to protest against every attempt to drive the Democratic party from 'its established principles. it is manifest that the Administration of the Federal Government bad determined to conciliate the disunion Sentiment the South, and that that sentiment eagerly re sponds to this encoUragement of the Federal Go. 'vernment, and is daily plaung itself :upon the pliitforin that, hereafter, all the powers of that Gdverninent are to be exerted far the protection of 'slavery in the Territories'; and it is also ma ngier that, in the event of thus protection being refused, AN OPEN CRUSADE WILL BE CON DUO FED ' AGAINST THE INTEGRITY OF TDB 'UNION." • • - • Thele were prophetic words. We copy Meth' from the record of- the Altoona Commit tee. ThOY net only show the motives that animated the brave men who assembled at that point on the 4th day of May, 1859;but they have been abundantly And startlingly confirmed by alLthe subsequent action of the fire-eaters Of the South, and the mercenaries of the Ad minlitration in the North. Precisely what was predicted by the radical Democracy at Altoona has transpired. The organization of the t Dethociatic party has - been usurped by the men - Whir-have appealed to' the extreme pro slayery sentiment in - the South. The theory that the people of the ' Territories shall have no.control whatever. over the. institution of slavery, has been laid down as a fundamental Democratic principle by these 111013, and the refusal of the National Democratic Convention to yield to, this theory, has led, not only to a war' upon the regular Democratic candidate for the' Presidency, but, in the langunge of the Altoona addreei t 4 ‘ so an open crusade against the integrity of the Union." well to repur, to this precedent for the purpose of marking the position of. the men whose 'conscientious consistency is now as sailed by all-those who esteenrit their duty to hound and hunt' them down. From "the heights of Altoona" came a voice not merely of, courage; but' of prophecy. The men who spoke out there were few, but they were bold and The truth they 'uttered was re sponded:to by the people in the subsequent election, and that which they anticipated was ft - lidded by the faithful followers of a corrupt Administration and by the Southern Dia unionists. ' Emery act. of that committee watt .0 a re affirmation of the. prophecy pronouneed at, Altoonamterekhaa a year ago. -The majority of the men who assembled at Cresson on Thursday were called fOr the purpose of rati fying a deliberate aasassination of the Demo crate creed, end or Its heroic chaniplon and lead Oz. The body itself had been selected with distinct reference to the work it bad to perform. Appointed by a Convention re gulated by all the, forms of the Demo cratic organization—yet sq constituted as to make the minority feeble whenever it attempted to resist an outrage upon right— proclaiming' itself to be sanctified on account of its regularity, and standing under the sate sha'ioi of Precedent, the State Central Com mittee, of which WitztOt Hi tuY %VELA!, of York county, is Dechairman, has become a mere machine for the purpose of making wrong right, and of putting forward, as the duly chosen candidate of the. Democratic party fin' President of the United States the merest effigy of dlsanfon. That which was created according to the ritual of the Democratic par ty—that which was the, offspring of the esta blished formulas of the Democratic church— that which, in other words, embodied and ex poUnded the_ Democratic liturgy in all its re gularity, and in all the• odor of usage and of custom, -was, on Thursday last, desecrated and degraded at the feet not merely of disor ganization in the Demobratic party, lint of disunion in the country itself. ' bus is it that Cresson confirms Altoona: and, thus that the irregulars, on the le;ser height of the Alleghenies, after having been 'iosalled through more than one long year by the: Administration and its janizaries, have been vindicated, not by the unsolicited forgive ness of those new rebels against the organiza tion; but by the most overwhelming fulfilment of the prophetic declaration made more than a year ago. • This last action of the State Committee speaks for itself; and would excite universal surprise' and indignation, if the manner in which that body is constituted, and the ma terials of which a majority of it is composed, were not fully appreciated by the citizens of Pennsylvania. No political organization or combination, largo or small, over more richly earned the contempt of men of every party than the controlling spirits of that committee. Their action is not only dishonest, but foolish. and their petty plans and projects to overthrow the organization of the National Democratic party, and to steal power from the people to Use ft for unworthy purposes, are as impotent and ridiculous as they are unjust and infamous. The only practical change in the original "2d 61 July" propoiltion which was made at Cresson, is one which gives the Democrats of the State an opportunity to express, by their votes, their preferencdlor DOUGLAS or DRUCK -INRIDGG. It is true, this may be to" many a source of satisfaction, as it would clearly de nionstitto the weakness of the Secession forces la,bur State. But, on the other band, if the Fusion electoral ticket should be elected, it is although by no means probable, that a contingeuey .wouldMrise under the arrange ment proposed, if it was carried out in good faith, which would sink the whole Democratic party of Pennsylvania deeper than plummet I ever simnded. • It was decided at Cresson that the electoral vote of the State should be cast for any man running 'as a Democrat whom it could elect. New, let us suppose 'that out of a total vote in Pennsylvania in Noveinber,next of 500,000, 261,090 should be polled for the Fusion elec tbral ticket, and it should ,thus bo success ful—that of the 261,000 thus polled 201,000 should be given for Do:fines, and but 50,000 for, 'plittesturtinau—thus showing that but oath-,t,titt!i et ,etir voters favored the election -41**, latter :, if the_ vote of Pennsylvania could elect the Disunion nominee, under the terms of the Cresson resolution he would re: ceive it. And, in despite of noisy partistiu professions ,of a regard for "the will of the majority," and for the right of the people to govern ,themselves, the Democracy of the State would So 'arrange their political ma chinery as to elect as President,,b - y , the elee toreq votes, of the State, a man supported by lees than one-tenth of our . voters, and opposed by morethae nine-tenths of our citizens! An set, of . perfidy like this, if by any possi bility it could be successffil, might, it is true, renew the terms of those Federal official:: Who have so basely prostituted the power they possess, but ft would tbrever seal the doom of the Democracy of Pnimaylvania,-.and -consign-them to eternal defeat. hose who toff obtuse to seethe throe of-thlir:fatal objection, to the action Of `the Cresson Committee are beyond 'the roach :dr:argument of any kind. Again: The true, and only' , honest, eourso of the State Committee, after , the secession at Baltimore, was to adopt the policy : which had always. been previously pursued—to faithfully support the regular nominees of the National Democratic party, and to _ ignore all attempts to divide and I distra i nt 'it. , „The „fusion -project of the cop mitteb, based on the delusive pretext that it wield promote' Midrib:- and harmbnY, has Only ;served to --engender -difficulty -and- dis card; 'and this ' Met - 'was 'clearly 'apparent to till who - *enabled - at Cresson. Yet whed Gen. Macaw proposed a, sensible solu tion to the whole difficulty by calling together a new Convention, through which the Demo cracy of the State could act intelligently and efficiently, and thus cut the Gordian knot of the :exjsting complications, his proposition was almost' unanimously rejected: Thus the committee has announced its unwillingness to trust the massed of the Democracy of the State with the adjudtment of their electiiral ticket, and proclaimed its determination te'chaiii' them to the Disunion car if it can do so. • One of the most remarkable features of the action of the State Committee, however, is the fact that while it is undertaking to decide bow the electors shall vote, if they are elected, a number of the firm friends of DOUGLAS on the electoral ticket very 'properly consider, and plainly, say, ,that they have quite us ;rood a right to decide how they shall cast their votes as the committee, and that they will not obey its Mandates, because they owe their first and highest .allegiance to the : nominees, of the National Democracy. Yet, Chairman WELSH announces his desire to preserve the 'eleetoral '' ticket ft unmutilated," no matter hew refractory those who compose it may become, and he is opposed to all efforts to change i', notwithstanding the diversity of opinion expressed by its respect • ive members t He goes for the ticket for the sake of the ticket, regardless of the princi ples, proclivities, or Presidential preferences of the electors I He tries to coerce those who compose it into the support of the Disunion candidate; but if they refuse, he professes a willingness to sustain them, even after such a refusal. A more ridiculous position could not well be imagined. If the people of Pennsyl vania want a composite etectoral ticket made' up of men with three or four different sets of opinions, they can form a combination fa suit themselves out of the electoral tickets of different parties, but they will instinctively revolt against any attempt of a packed com mittee to make for them such a mongrel ar rangement, and to trade and traffic in their suffrages as if they were tut merchandise to be bought and sold by political hucksters. On the very day that this second attempt was made to perfect a scheme whereby tho vote of Pennsylvania could be secured to BREORIN mos, if it could be useful to him, the friends of the latter in Maryland; at a State Conven tion, struck off from 'the regular Democratic electoral ticket of that State two gentlemen whose only offence was that they faithfully ad hered to the regular national organization of the party and to Judge Downes. Quito re cently, too, the supporters of BOEOKINEIDGE in New York held a State Convention, which nominated a full electoral ticket for the ex press and avowed purpose of preventing Judge Douotas from carrying that State in Novem ber. Is . it possible that in Pennsylvania there can be single sincere friend of the distin guished Senator from Illinois who, in view of suthaction of the Disunionists in other States, will consent to be made their blind dupes in our noble old Commonwealth 7 We think not. On the contrary, there is a universal demand among the friends of DOUGLAS for a "clean victory or a clean defeat," cud their desires will, doubtless, be gratified. A meeting of the faithful members of the State Central Committee, as well as other gentlemen associ ated with them, will be held at Harrisburg, on the 15th of August, as announced in TIIE Pave, a fbw days ago; and, we presume, they will gratify the desires and expectations of V; 11$ Female Labor-LThe School of Design One of the most important problems of tho day is to furnish honorable and lucrative em ployment to females who are compelled to rely upon the fruits of their individua nrprtions for a livelihood, but who are physically un ltted for the drudgery of ordinary housework, mid sufficiently intelligent to bosom° useful in tho higher spheres of labor if fair opportuni ies are afforded to them. Mudik is constantly !icing dune, It is true,' in the way of employing them in factories, in stores, as seamstresses, dressmakers, &c., as teachers, as authors, and even as physicians. But it is evident that their interests, as well as the general welfare f , f society, would be greatly promoted by far- tiler extension of their fields of usefulness. 'lb the energetic young men of our country hundreds of avenues to honor and affluence are always open as they approach to manhood, and they rarely fail, with proper application and industrious habits, to acquire a respecta ble and comfortable position in life, even if at the outset of their career they are pinioned by those "twin jailors of the human soul, low birth and iron fortune." But the destiny of their sisters depends mainly upon the charac ter of their matrimonial alliances, and if they should be so unfortunate as to obtain reckless and improvident husbands, or should from choice_ or necessity remain unmarried, they "re often doomed to a_ galling dependence, or to a life of almost hopeless wretchedness. Among the practical measures for aiding those who are able and willing to assist them- selves, such institutions as tho Philadelphia School of Design for Women are particularly worthy of encouragement. So Ihr as artistic knowledge is concerned, there is a constant it11:1 rapidly growing demand for it in our coun try which might be readily supplied by women, properly educated, and thus in agreeable em ployments for which they are naturally well adapted, they could earn comparatively large salaries. To a limited extent, our School of Design, though yet in its infancy, has answered this desirable end. After obtaining the pre liminary instruction it gives in drawing, paint ing, and geometry, its successful pupils have Wean taught designing, wood engraving, or print-cutting, or qualified to 'become teachers of drawing and painting in the numerous schools and academies scattered over the land. Some of its graduates are even now success- Cully pursuing . each of the avocations we have named, and obtaining for their services a much higher rate of compensation than is secured by women engaged in other pursuits. One of the chief reasons why so many fo reign goods, particularly of the more beautiful and fashionable descriptions, are imported into our country, is that we have not a sufficient number of skilful designers to gratify the ever-varying tastes and fancieS of our coun try with,new and beautiful combinations. New life and energy would be infused into many branches of our manufactures if this want could be supplied, and women properly trained can become almost, if not quite, as serviceable, in this manner, as men. There is a constant demand, also, for designs for illustrated works, and for wood •engravers, and some of• those who have received their first and only artistic instruction in the school to which we have re ferred, are profitably employed in this manner, while others have been engaged at good sala ries to impart the knowledge they have ac quired to the pupils Of distant academies. The School of Design is under the direction of a number of our most estimable citizens, Joan.'" 11.4.aaison, Esq., being its president, and P. P. MORRIS its secretary and treasurer. It has an endowment of $17,000, about $9,000 of which was given to it by that well-known philanthropist, ELLIOTT Car:soon, now de ceased. An effort will shortly be made to in crease its endowment, so that its sphere of usefulness may be enlarged. It is to be hop 94 that it will be successful. Boisterous decla mation about "woman's rights" accomplishes no•good practical purpose, but well-considered plans for increasing woman's facilities for achieving an honorable and independent position, by her own appropriate labors, de serve encouragement and a liberal support. REAL ESTATE A24D STOCKA—Thomas do Sons' sale on Tuesday neat, 14th Instant, at 12 o'olook noon, at the 'Exchange, will inolude, in addition to the 2,249 shares Green Ridge Improvement Com pany, several properties by order of the Orphans' Court, executors, heirs, as., Including a valuable lot (York-road Hotel property) on the Delaware, and several dwellings. Bee pamphlet catalogues imued this day. THE PRESS.-PMADELPHLA., SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 1860. The Last Plank Gone , The Louisville DeinOcrat, a Southern paper of great influence, shatters the last plank upon which the Disunionists and all other enemies of Popular Sovefeignty stand In the following short and expressive article. The Disunionists allege, that even granting that the,Democratic party had been committed to the doctrine that the people of a Territory, tclike those of a State," should vote on slavery as well as upon all other domestic institutions, and that the Teriitorial Legislatures, might 'legislate upon that question, yet that the decision of the Su preme Court in the case of Dred Scott ren dered achange of front necessary, inasmuch as that court decided that the Territorial Le gislature had tee such power, And that the peo ple of the Territory were not entitled to vote upon slavery as well as upon other local and domestic institutions. This is their present 'patent daily cry, but the words of the Louis; vine Democrat prove its absurdity: " We reply that it is utterly Wee that Douglas or any other Democrat agreed to submit to an abstract opinion of the Supreme Court. •The matter sub mitted was the nets which a Territorial Legisle taro might pass. They were to be valid or not, as the court might deolde, when a case was brought before it. " It is provided in the Kansas bill itself; and there Is not a word about submitting to any ab• street notions of, a court. The' assertion that any dbing else was submitted is utterly false ; nor was it agreed that any one should abandon his opinion because the court might decide one way or the other. The decision of the court was to be sub mitted to as usual, whether it was held to be right or wrong. No man of sense—no Demom at. at least—proposed to submtt his opinions and policy to the notions of wise men on the b'npreme bench,. ' ‘• The Democratic, party never wee guilty of such a fault, and we hope it never will be. In the Kangas bill, facilities to appeal from a Terri torial court to the Suprenie Court were provided ; and if any one felt himself aggrieved by an act of the Legislature, there was his redress. If the court said the act was invalid, then it was not to be executed; that was all. Not that the Demo eratio party was to give up Itsfudgment and rea son to the judgment of the court. The party did not do so in. the care of the alien and sedition law, nor on the case of the United State, Bank. Br both cases, the Democratic party wan right and the court wrong. The party, -however, sub mitted to the decisions of the oourt as they will do when the court decides a Territorial not unoon atitutional. They will Flee to it that such an net shall not be put in operation. " We now challenge the whole bolting fraternity to find a pledge beyond this, either in the Territo rial bills or in the speeohes in support of them. It's a libel on the party to proclaim that it submitted its conscience to the Supreme Court, and agreed to substitute its decisions for the Constitution itself. At Charleston, the proposition to submit to what a court might decide, was repudiated by the bolters, 'although the resolution only meant what all good °Mous are required to do; it was sur mised that it might mean too much." TER BEAT, TIM POOR, AND THE PUBLIC OIIARITIP.B— FOOTS—CITY RAILWAYS AND THEIR BUSINESS LAST YEAR—SINGER GETS ITAUGUTY— THORPE'S NIAGARA—SENATOR DICKINSON'S KITH AND KIN IN THE NEW YORK CUSTOM noltSE—A FREAK AND REMARKABLE BOOK OP TRAVELS leorreependenee of The Press.] The heat of the weather makes no difference with the number of poor wretches who at this sea eon crowd the hospitals and public; ios•.itations of the oily. Figures of fact aro always more Gagger. dye and convincing than figures of speech ; and this is true of that particular class who come un der the supervision of the Commissioners of Public, Charities. At their regular weekly meeting, held yesterday afternoon, it was reported that there are now in the various public corrective and charitable institutions of the pity 7,014 persons, of whom 5,429 are In hospitals and asylums During the week nearly two thousand were discharged, and a little more than that number of new eases received. The average keeps nearly the same-,three or four hun dred poor creatures every day wending their way to hospitals, do., to take the place of as many more who have bean discharged. Governor Foote is in good demand for public meetings, and is doing yeoman service in the Dou glas cause. On Wednesday evening last be ad dressed a vast audience at Flushing, and produced a strong impression. Our city railways wore never more prosperous than at present. ,From the annual report made to the Secretary of State, I quote the fol lowing abtraot, wb'oh will doubtless interest the railroad men of Philadelphia: 1863 1869. 1868. 18.69. Third avenue 7.910,462 9.974.101 $163106 $606, 0 51 E,ehth avenue—. 6,768 203 763 .1 ,997 338.410 379 600 Sixth, avenue 6612.317 6479.137. Z 8 618 421,956 Heannd entre .. 4,644 6;6 6.1e13.011 217.467 162 166 Harlem-- ..—..3,069,721 3,49.1,113 165 466 281.933 1 , agonies. Net turnings 1978. 7&66. 1868 1859 Third avenue.... $242811 834.868 (916 u 249 $196761 Etuhth avenue.... 1T789 fa.l.---RU ear - - Sixth avenue r7w2is /0614 Vg::,: 1 04746714 0 4 1 4 01 . 4 .r.4 .111,9110M60,bsisig; over 1813 .den.; that of the "Efilith is 11 per cent.; Sixth, 16 'percent ;.Second, 15 per cent. ; and Harlem, 14 per eent. The ave rage is 15i. percent. At this rate of inorease, we sholi soon require double the quantity of street railway aeoommodations to do the passenger bust nese between theft° ends of the island. Singer, the ?ewidg machine manufacturer, has been naughty. He was yesterday brought before a justice for beating his wife, and put wider bonds fur peaceableness for six months To-morrow, Col Tnorpe (the "Bee Hunter,") sends his large picture of Niag la to Europe for exhibition, and to be engraved. This is the pic ture a copy of which was ordered by the Japa• need Embassy. Senator Dtekineen could well afford to sustain the Administration-Breckenridge Convention a t Syracuse. Mr. Buchanan has taken care of him and hie, like a gentleman. His son-in law, Aus• barn Birdsall, is naval elfieer at an lucerne of not less than $20,000 per annum. Mr. Dickineon's brother is deputy naval officer, worth $3,000 per annum ; Mr. Birdcall's brother is entry clerk, worth $2,000. a year ; another of Mr Birdsall's relatives is weigher, at $3,000 a year; and another relative, named Murray, holds a place worth nearly as much more. It is therefore a•' good thing to do" for them to go Bunk and Break. AV. H. Ludlow bas boon elected a delegate to the Demooratio State Convention from Beffelk county. Messrs. Harper 4t, Brothers here, in preparation the long-expected work of Mr Paul B. Du Oben • lu, the celebrated gorilla hunter and At rican explorer, whose remarkable collection of vrillas, and other hitherto unknown animals, has surprised and delighted the scientific soon of Now Yurk and Boston, and the eurione public for some time Though the gorilla has been known to scientific men for some ten years, from skulls and parts of ono ur two skeletons which have been brought to America and to England, Mr. Du Chattier is the first white men who has had courage and enter prise enough to bunt this ferocious monster In his native haunts. He went entirely alone—so far as white companions were coneerned—depending open the friendship of various negro kings and chiefs in whose territory he found himself. He passed four years In a region of Central Equatorial Afri ca which was never before explored, and succeed ed in penetrating to the distance of four hundred and fifty miles from the oast, discovering a num ber of new tribes, and a vast region of bithert•t unknown country, watered by navigable riven!, and affording inexhaustible supplies of ebony and India rubber, as well as beeswax, ivory, berwood, and copal gum. His accounts of the queer manners and customs of the barbarous tribes, some of whom worshipped him as a superior spirit, and his stirring stories of gorilla, leopard, buffalo, and elephant hunts will make this book the moat interesting and exalting of the season. Messrs. Harper and Bros , who know how to do justice to a good book, have got the beet artistic talent of the country to work on the illustrations, so that we may expect to see in Mr. Da Chaillu'a "Explorations and Adventures in Central Equatorial Africa," a work as credita ble to the publishers as to the bravo explorer him. self—firkin, by the way, is only waiting for the issue of hie book, to return to Africa, for another three or four years of more extended discovery, in which he hopes, if not killed on the way, to cross the con tinent at its broadest point, and thus settle for the geographers and for commerce, the condition of a most important portion of the great African con tinent, which has hitherto defied tho efforts of larger puttee. A friend of mine, speaking with Mr. Du Challlu, a few days ago, about this intended journey, said, "I suppose you will take a considorablo party of whsto man this time?" "Not at all," was the answer; "I will not have a white man with me. They all die." "But why don't you die?" " Ab,'; said the traveller, " I don't go there to die I know the elimato. I had fifty-five attacks of fever, and took twenty pounds of quinine, in four years. Now I know all about it." To " trust in God and keep a good supply of quinine" seems to be the formula for Afrioan travel. Now that the season for fever and ague is again approaching, we deem it an ant of humanity to publish the following reolpo for Its ours, which has been repeatedly resorted to within the circle of our acquaintance with invariable success. It is simply to pound up, for a grown person, say four ounces of frankincense, and sew it up in a blank silk bag, which is to be worn by the patient next the skin on tho pit of tho stomach. We counsel then fllioted to try this simple remedy. SOMETHING NEW.—The twenty-five parts hi the o , :mineue , filont exercises, at Dattutou•h N ti , this year, Were assigned by lot to the giativaliug class, thus giving all a chance. This sneaks well for the academie ohataoter of the Wass. Usually, the parts have been assigind, at the (Horatian of the inoulty, to the best scholars. There were alxty•llve graduates this year. TUE three leading railroads of New York— New York °antral, New York arid Erie, and the Hodson River—oost together eighty.eight millions Of dollars. When we add the Harlem road, the grand aggregate amounts to about one hundred Millions of dollars. The total freights on them four roads, for the fisoel year ending fire Septem ber, 11359, were over thirteen and a half millions of dollars, and the aggregate receipts somewhat over twenty millions, on all the roads of the State of New York. Letter from New York. Nnw YonK, August 10, 1860 Nc.inse , ngera carried. ReceUie Cure for the Ague. Berko County - 44 Fusion'' , not En. -dorsod. Correspendenoe of The Pram] READING, Auguat 8, 1860 The regular county meeting of the Donfooraoy of Berke was held yesterday in the Court Rouse. and the large court room was jammed to its utmost eapaoity. Cm account of the existing divl, alone of the party, you may suppose this annual Convention was looked forward to with more than usual interest, on all shies. In fad, the feeling pervading those who were to participate in .it rather approached anxiety blended with doubt as to its final result. Many Rope)Roans were there as epeotators, looking for a general break-up. From the existence of two an tagonistic Demooratio ollibs—one adveioating a pure Douglas electoral ticket, the other approving of the " fusion " scheme of the Central Cnimittee—a collision was supposed to be imminent. I need not nay that onr Republican friends left the meeting sorely disappointed, for a basis of compromise had been agreed on just in time to prevent a struggle, You may recollect, in a former letter, I gave corns account of the notion of the "Demoeratio City Club" of this place, in voting down a Douglas and Johnson resolution, and " cordially approving" of the action of the State Central Committee at Phila delphia. Shortly after this occurrence a Douglas, Johnson, and Foster Club was formed, and about a week since was permanently organized. This nu cleus of an organization became at once a rallying point, meetiug with such enoouragemont that in less tbau a week it became not only strong in num berg but formidable in oharader. The "Old Club"— perhaps so called on aticourit of its inveterate fogy- Lon, though more generally denominated the " Breokinridge or FUslon" . Club—soon lost, a num ber of Lit members, and a proposition to get UP a transparency with - Douglas and Jetliner' ' on ono side and Breekinridge and Lane on the other—to be followed up, probably, with the mottoes " Slave Code" and ".Non-intervetition" on the other oppo site aides—came near produeing a general stam pede, which was however fortunately prevented by the withdrawal of the motion. These Clubs became the brace of operations of the contending parties, the "Old Club" being both backed by end backing the two newspapers of Democratic ant icedents—vis : the Adler and G.r• zette. Both these papers have hoisted the Bruit laridge and Lane flag, and are warmly advocating the "Fusion Eltotorat lioket," while the Douglas Club is without au " organ," and stands alone on the jostles of the cause in which it is engaged. But I have been digressing For enure days be fore the county meeting, intimations of oomoromise were ieniesionally throgn out by trio Breekin rldgere," nod received with some favor by the Dueglas men; but the latter suggested that no compromise need be expected which mi a .ht look to the endorsement of the State Committee's fit. etch contrivance. In !Alert, the friends of Douglas Insisted upon a liberal basis, and declared their willingness to agree to resolutions endorsing Foster and the Reeding Convention, but ignoring the Presidential question entirely for the present. As mi ht be supposed, under the oireumstances, there was a decided hanging back on the part of a number of the "Fusionists" to come up to the terms Repeated conferences were held, and the propo sition several times rejected. It was only on the morning of the meeting that some definite plan wee reached, though very reluctantly and through a great deal of pressure from the rural districts As, however, no reliable assurance had been given to the Douglas party of the terms being accepted, it was deemed prudent to arrange a programme of action for the meeting in the afternoon, to be con tingent upon a definite and just basis of compro ndae being effected, which in the hurry and ex citement attending the coming together of the meetiug were now supposed to have been done, a series of resolutions and a tolerably satisfactory list of officers having been presented for casual ex amination to several members of the Douglas Club and approved. By come fortunate accident, just before the county, meeting was organized, an in epection of the " compromise" resolutions was de manded, bat the demand only assented utter con siderable parleying, which naturally aroused sus picion. On inspection, an interlineatfon appeared, cordially pledging the Democracy of Barks to the support of the ticket formed by the Reading Convention, unless changed by regular au thority." Those to whom the resolutions had been shown in the morning, declared that the interpolation had been made since. Very soon an excitement com menced brewing from this evidence of bad faith, and bat for the earnest and repeated assurance on all sides that the matter Interlined should be stricken out, the feeling armload would have culmi nated in an explosim. In tact, a motion to amend the nomination for p resident, by striking out the name fret proposed and Inserting- another, had already been made, but was afterwards with drawn. With the understanding that all should be right, the meeting soon recovered its tenser, and the rest of the proceedings terminated harmoniously, much to the chagrin and disappointment of the Lincoln men present. Speeches were then delivered by:Hlester Clymer, E q the delegate to Charleston, General George M. Kelm, J Lawrence Getz, and A. 0 Green, Ergs , when the meeting adjourned. Not desiring to extend this communication to an unreadable length, 1 will only add that the Doug las men claim the action of the meeting as a de cided victory, while the other side appear to be equally gratified at its harmonious issue. When we consider that the Adler and Gazette have en tirely failed to receive an eraturierneut of their coerce, though firing two broadsides a week • r-a significance not to be mistak -n. it is very stain the tuition ofelm so.- p, .1.,....•,,av0a0 61.14ati, tAMPOSIC . UMW like , De. Itocraefof dot ebttntr: In attneluding this letter, allow me to correct a ta• legrephio anurancemont in 10-day's Press, Chit at the Douglas meeting held here on Mon day night a resolution to endorse the sod, n of the Execut ve Committee was rejected." It watt not rejected simply becatoe such a resolution wt never ',eared. Yours, truly, B. ANOTHER ACCOUNT ReADING, August 7, 1880 I am sorry to inform you that the Demooraby of D.' s- have gono back to the tlosh•pote. The loaves and II boa seem to bo more attractlve then Douglas and popular sovereignty. At their county meeting which assembled yester day, a faros was enacted, whtoh for utter abandon moot of professed principle bee few parallels, even in the Rota at poldioel atatemblies. The candidates for office, who took charge of the meeting and all fis proceedings, in order to secure their election to the several places to which they aspire, its Vim speeches and resolutions recom mended a union-of the Douglas and Breckinridge wings of the Dem ,oracy, welch was adopted To a tyro in political queokory. a union between, two sections prVessing atiberenaa to men and prin ciples as aoff,rent Otero each other as light is from darkness, might seem hupote•lble. But nothing could be mere facile to the office hunting Demo crate of this mo,etieg When adherence to princi ple stands in the way of political success, in these d,g,neratto days, the eaoraflem of the fi et is made with lon' little leatta.ion. especially by that oleos of politicians wit, have abandoned former urgent. zatiens, and entered others, in order that " thrift, only follow litwinag " The recent canners to the Democratic purr), in this meeting as well as in others held In otter perilous of the country, from the delegate to (hellesion down to the editor of the Gazette, were the loudest and readiest In urge leg the suppresim3 et principle, %quiet thooe who hove been Democrats etund firm in their supportof Judge Deugles and his doctrines Frde• relies turned Democrats, it h been add, are like the loist hatched humble-bees7which always maka the most noise, tie truth of which wee forcibly ex emplified in our neeting yesterday Bu: In order to tensuminate the union whloh.the office-holders pritosed, it was necessary to d what this meetingeonsidered a very small thing— viz : ignore Presitential candidates and platforms; denounce the prnriplea of the black Republicans ; take acre to aver none for themselves; and ob serve rigid silenasas to preferences for candidates, Thu Douglas Demo rats look on the fraud to which they were witnessa with amassment, violative as was the whole protiodirg of the rule enjoined by the friends of J urge Douglas everywhere to form no union with Seceders or Disunlonists, to do no thing nor accede it nothing that was calculated to ignore the great promple upon which Judge Dou glee has hazarded he balance e,f his political life But the outrugeswhich the Douglas Democrats were unwittinely lei to endorse do not atop here. By reaffi , ming " ihi acts and resolutions " of the Rending Deniccrati, State Convention, the bong. les men are suede ti approve of the J orergu and domestic paltry, net all of Mr. Buobenan's Administration—an achievement which forms the lubjcet of loud boasthit by the Breokinridge men. heart sickening asis a review of what occurred, and disgraceful US ar, the eats which the sharpers and offi e hunters pained upon our ono° glorious Demooiaoy, you mayreply upon it that the true bone and sinew of oar party will never ratify the rwancenvres of tie few who so unblushingly seed aced principle ii order to gratify their lust for °filo°, PETER PLAINCOAT. Speech of Abraham Lincoln, in Spring field, Illinois. The Cincinnati V onnerrial, of Thursday, says : SKUNOPIELD, 11l , August 8 —The great Mass Convention, at Ile how of Lincoln, comes oft' hero today. The city is crowded to overflowing with people The lowest estimate of the crowd in at tendance is twenty thcueand. This is made by Douglas Democrats. lts estimates run from this op to forty thousand. The great Republican wig. ram was dedioated Ina night. Specubee wets made by Senators 'kunbull and Doolittle, and Judd, GfChicago. Tho procession, Welneaday morning, numbered six thousand by Reuel count, and occupied two boors and a half in 'mesh g Lincoln's residence. Popular enthusiasm a mbutmded. Good judges nay it is a second Chicgo Convention with as I• tions Tho great methg at the Fair grounds numbered 15.000 peopb. Mr. Lincoln appeared or. tho ground, and spokeasfollows "My Fellow Citizens—l. have appeared among you on this occasion wain° intention of ranking a tweak It has beer my purtose, shoe I have been itinood in my prtseit proaltion, to make no speeches Thia assemblage having been drawn together at the piece of try residence, it appeared to be the wish of those oosstitufing the vast bly to see me. As it iimrtainly my wish to see all of you, I appear upm be ground here at this time, only for the purpseof seeing you, and etn• abliag you to see me. lvtiess with gratitude that I did not suppose that ny ippearanca among you would create the tumult *Joh I now witness I am profoundly grateful fir his manifestation of ynur feelings Ism gratified tee use it ia a tribute which can be pad to no urin It is a testimony. which, four years hence, you ail py to the next man who is the representative el betroth on tip , questions which Dow agitate the pthin wind. (Chews.] " It is an evidence ha you will light for this moo then, es you nor Mat for it, and even tamer than you now 41,though I may be deed and gone. (Cheep I 1 but profoundly and sin eerily thank you kl.vitg ofd. this much, let 111 CI now add that put will heir the public. chant:stone by others of our friends, lb. err here for thu pur pose of addressingyou, nu let me be silent," (Immerse tipplause.) Mr Lincoln retired fron be grounds amidst the wildest iuthuslmn, boingpeaed upon and carried i hither and thither by the lutnertsn crowd, which filled the grounds to oveilhndng No such demon stration has ever been wittesed in Illinois lancoln'a speech thic afiga.on wac iotally unin tended. lie was xeizQd uphlby the crowd, pulled °alp a c ,reiege, tt‘A lorce4 t respond by a throng wild with ehthusatiam. LATEST NEWS By Telegraph to The Free& From Washington. WASIIINGTOS, Aug. 10 —The report of the in. tended rostitnatleit of Gen. Gass as Secretary of State has no afield foundation, but is predicated on the faot that Ma health has been tailing Air some months past. The amount of Government funds on deposit is $5,081 ; 000, of which $3,272.000 is subject to draft. The reeeipte last week were $4.810.080, but owing to •the payment of drafts to the extent of over $2,500.000, the BUM now on hand is esa by $405.000 than it wee the preceding week Drafts have beau issued for the payment of $2.215,000, thus leaving a net balance of $1.,072,000. Oapt. Simms will leave to-morrow, with a de tachment of fifty marines, for the U. B steamship Sinleehanna. The officers of the vessel have been ordered to report themselves on board on the 15th inst. Destructive Fire in Maryland. TUE TOWN OF SALISBURY BURNED. BALTITIORE, August 10 —The town of Salisbury, Somerset county, was almost entirely consumed by fire on Wednesday, the Bth inst. Over forty dwell ing -houses, stores, eto., were destroyed The town is represented as nearly a mass of ruins. The Episcopal church, one of the oldest in the State, was destroyed, notwithstanding the great eff.rts made to save it. The conflagration swept away the pierce of Messrs. Roder d Towivina. Wm. Burkhead, 0 F Dashield, Bush's 11.1. with se veral other stores, and their contents were partially destroyed A large amount of personal property, stook, ge,,ds, (re , owned by the in.fferera by the coral :- woolen was saved, though the aggregate loss is very large. Most of the psrties were insured in the Mutual loeuranee Company, of Delaware The origin of the Lire is ,Company, known, though it is suspected to have been set on fire. Missouri Electron. Sr. Louts, August 10.—In this county the vote for Governor, according to the omelet count, stands as follows: II Jackson, (Dem.) a 275 J B. Gardenhire, (Republican) 9,215 O. F. Jackson. (regular Dem.) 9 744 Judge Orr, (Union) 12,457 The Republicans figure up Mr. 'Rollins' (Repub lican) majority in the Second Congressional die trriat at 500. Not half the counties in the State have yet been heard from Murder at Cleveland. CLEVELAND, Aug 10.—Last night two negroes entered the saloon of Wm Piokersgill, on Seneca street, and becoming quarrelsome, Mr. Pickeregill attempted to eject them, when one of the negroe3 drew a large knife and made several lunges. one of which took effeot on a white man named William Solomon, who was passing out of the door. Mr. Solomon ran a little distant, when he fell dead. Tho negroes fled, but were arrested this morning. The Zonaves at St. Louis. Cr. Louis, Aug. 10 —The Chinago Zoaavea ar rived here this evening on their return home, and were received by the National Guard. Non-Arrival of the Adriatic. 110 mt, Aug 10-11 o'clock P. M.—There are no signs, as yet, of the approach of the steamer Adriatic. The weather Is foggy, and the wind light from the south. Detention of the Steamer Canada. Tistmax, Aug 10.—The steamer Canada, from Boston for Liverpool, grounded in going out of this harbor last night. bho will not go to sea before to.uight or probably tomorrow morning. Republican Nominations. CINCINNATI, Aug 10 —The Repuhlioans have nominated Oliver M Spencer for Congress in the First district, and John A. Gurley in the Second district. Fire in Canada. Mutt:rot?, Canada West, Aug. 10.-3. M. Wil Hams d Co.'e kerosene works were burned las night. This is the second time they have been de stroyed this summer. Kentucky Election. Loursvius, Aug. 10 —Returns from eiztyfour counties, mostly complete. give General Leslie Coombs a majority of 25.206. The Keystone State. Ctunr.ssvost, Aug o.—The steamship Keystone Btato, Capt. Marsbman, from Philadelphia, ar rived at noon to-day. Markets by Telegraph. BAT-TIMOR/4 August 10 —Flour quiet. Wheat steady. Corn fi , m; yellow 700730 mixed 780. Provolone un changed. Whisky firmer. UINCINNATI. A11:1,11; 10 —Floor unchanged Whisks Ilan advanced 34% sales 173. Mess Pork active at 019. limon active a 1134 esl3. en. ems°. AU4Uat 10—Flour dull at 5 to 100 decline. Wheat firm, hut 2.1 33 lower; sales of 35 (0.) bus. Cer.l wive ar 1.44040 hobos ; ealea 18,000 bus. NEW Oaroarrs, august of cotton to day 445 halve, including 20 balea of the new crop Priors ale easier.without ohenee in audtstious ; the receipt+ 01 new amp to-day wore 285 bales. F our dull at 8537. THE CI:TY. - - --gtiLC_Oonel Cross, --.•. AN AMUSING ADVENTURE OF TIIE CAPTOR The Party Threatened with Airest as Suspicions Characters. In yesterday's Pr,s, we published a fall account of the re-arrest of J. Cullman Cross, the forger, who escaped from Tipstaff Porter. of the Quarter Session, on Saturday morning last. nil account given was substantially correct, but yesterday seve ral other foots mime to light concerning the. (worse he took after he eEc.iped from the otliJer. It tmm that the Colonel woo rapidly driven down the " Neck " for a short distance, and the wagon WA, then turned about and driven op town at a mode rate pane. By this means the fugitive quietly sought a hiding-plates in the upper 'part of !fleetly, while the Once. thrown upon a wrong scent, were searching for him down town. Cross went to a house is the neighborhood of Columbia avenue and Broad street, where he re teamed until Sunday night, when he went to a email dwelling, occupied by a poor woman, in a small clump of houses which stand Mick from Cm lumbia avenue, between Twelfth and Thirteenth dtreets. The woman et the house, it is believed, vas entirely ignorant of the name or chasaeter oi tier attest, and oho had no suspicion that the polite murder who was to be called for the, night woo Ij lonol Cress. A home told been routed for the Colonel in an out of-the way location, and to thin lie was to have helm removed on the night of bib onoure. District Attorney Mann, who bad come up from Long Branch on receipt of intelligence of tm escape of Cross, took the matter in charge and en gineered it to a eulcessful termination. Through information received by him from parties an,, wore uotive in tracing It up, he learned of the ex act location of Cross on Thursday, and of his in tention to ebift his quarters on that night. A, the Colonel is a slippery customer, it was deemed best to " lay low" and capture him as he was about leaving tho house Accordingly, on Thursday night, the following named persons left the office of the District Attor ney in the family carriage of the latter: District At torney Mann, ox-Detective Joseph Mirkel, Delta • tive Charles H Stui.h, Mr. Benjamin Thomas. a citizen, and the following named Ohm of the Court of Quarter Sessions : Messrs. Porter, Ash ton, Barber, and Mayhew. the party divested themselves of their coats. vests, collars, , (as mentioned in Po Press yesterday,) with the view of passing themselves n ,s laboring men, to avoid suspicion as to their real character. Mr. Mann was particalarly successful in his me. tiimorphosis, and he looked as though be might have finished a bard day's work at paving the streets. Some two squares from where the fugitive was concealed, the wagon, clothing, ho , were left in charge of the coachman, while the party saun tered up to the scene of their intended operations. In front of the suspected house there to an open common, and the disguised officers lounged about hare among the Jamestown weeds, keeping a sharp eye on the houi.o and all who might approach or leave it, AN AMUSING INCIDENT ithile thus engaged an emoting incident cc currod. A man who had some exposed property in the neighborhood, and who suspected that the shirt-sleeved individuals wen, after 813 good, ordered them away. They refused to go, and he sent to the Twentieth•ward police station for aid A small party of offioers were sent up, and they ordered the men to leave under pain of being looked up. Some of them pretended to be drank, and they made that an excuse to remain about and avoid a parley. Finally the District Attorney took off his slouched hat, and facing one of the officers demanded it be knew him. 'Cho officer almost doubting the evidence of his own eyes and ears, stammered out that be bolieved it was Mr Mann. The latter assured the policeman that ho wax cox. riot in his surmise, and begged the party to with draw, as time was precious This request was, of course, oomplied with, and the nun•ptussed police men made their way back to the etutlon•house. The arrest was effieted after this in the manner de scribed in The Press of yesterday. FM= The redoubtable Colonel woe taken down to prison In Mr. Mann's wagon, tho District At tort ay retaining his laborer's • rig " and driving the horses. 6o coutpleta was his disoisc, that the prisoner did not recognise him unttl they arrive d at the prison, and Mr. Munn jestit gly demanded his fare. TES COLONEL TAKES IT COOLLY. On the road to Moyamensiug, the prisoner jested with hie captors regording his mcape and recap ture. Ho pretended to sympathize deeply with Mr. Porter, who had fallen into disgrace upon h account, and who had become an oiject of artapi &on. He salt he could not help the mater at the time, but be had determined to make Porter a rich man before he died ! Cross stated to the ceders that, at the time they come into the house to make the arrest, they were all strangers to him, which gave them the advan• tago, hut be intimated that regular iffliers in their ardioary dress, would have :cad e o mu trouble in tufting him. THE OFFICER WRO TRACED ntu our. Mr. Joseph Merkel, one of tho Mayor's deteetive officers, informs us that ha traced out the move• meats of the forger from the time be escaped, and that he put the authorities in pe4se,silou of the facts which enabled them to secure him COLONEL eItOSS IN P11191N. , -WC Visited Moyatuensing pr.cou yesteruay ulternoon, with the hope that poi tutssion tvoubi be a‘corded tri to con verse with Col Cross Wu had resson to belies.) that the public anxiety to hear anything relative to the details of his e,eape would be-grvill..d by a conference with the cchnitod. The T..mbs in New York 18 invariably open t 9 delegatt es of the press, and the great to: Jority of 0111010 , 1 1 1; preter the ocoalionul society of a reporter to the silence and loneliness of the cell. It Bemis however, that the Die:riot Attorney had given positive orders that no ono should he allowed to solder with Cross; end we were accord- Tins large mill at Waterford, R. 1., known ingly refused the privilege. The criminal reached as Femiist., No. 3, was nearly destroyed iy the prison on Thursday tvenina at halt post eleven fire on Tuesday. A large quantity of stook was ohilock. Ile extubitssi some sullenness at meeting eared in a damaged conclitkn. the superintendent, and rergalsed the District Attorney for the fire* OWL He is alloWed to havaMO boob, and has but to muse in nie loneliness upon the long confloement -which ha is ehortly to undergo. All hope of eleapo twat have already vanished from his mind, for precautions will be taken to prevent any recur rence of the nicety-contrived programme of his first ellp. lie has doubtless, by this time, become resigned to his fate, and awaits, with great trepi dation, the approach of Monday, when he will pub eel' needy° sentence. Although it is vain to hope that the acoompllshed forger wilt profit morally by his imprisonment, there is a satishotion In the thought that, for a time at least, society will have lost its most un scrupulous enemy.. LIFE-SAViNG APPARATUS, ON TUN COAST OP New JOBSEIT.—PEIVATS - EaTartralaa'Pa. Go irealuteliT ItfACTIVITY,—DarIa' the , present sea son, an enterprising etuzen of this city, Geo. N. Te -1 them, Esq.:who owns. a tract of land on the coast of New Jersey, called the ‘' Erovenemile Beach," about fifteen tulles above Cape May, has, at his own expense, procured one of Holmes' life-boats, 25 feet long , by 8 feet 9 inches wide, for service in ease of wrecks occurring in the vicinity of the long, line of beach comprising his property. This de scription of life boat received very favorable men tion in a report made to the Board of Trade of Philadelphia, on the 23d r ots January, 1880, by a committee consisting of Messrs. John Welsh, S. Morris Wain, Francis R. Cope, and George N. Tatham. It was tested in the breakers at Cape May, August 21st, 1857, before a large committee of merchants, etia-captains, pilots, and others, besides hundreds of visitors at Cape Island, all of whom expressed much gratification at its per formanee. The boat was egala experimented upon on the 27th of August, i 857, by a committee of the Philadelphia Beard of Marine Underwriters, and by the Board of Marine Surveyor?, all old ship masters, who united in the strongest testimony In its favor By order of the Navy Department. one of the beats was experimented upon by the officers of the Philadelphia navy yard, who reported on the 14th of Ootober, 1857. that the result was highly itatisfaotory. On the 22d of July, 1858, the pram dents of the seven prim:dual marine insurance emapanies of Philadelphia urged upon the Treasury Department the adoption of tine ltte- boat at the sea lion houses on the oust On the 3.1 of August, 1858, the beat wan again publicly tried before a large con course of visitors at Cape Island. A (retake+e of her performance, signed by Alexander Henry, Eiq Mayor of Philadelphia, and forty-seven others. was prepared, testifying to the efficiency of the boat. In &unusually heavy surf, she was repeat edly rowed, by live men. out beyond the breakers, and there, with out using oars, she was suffered to be driven back by the eea upon the beach, which she invariably approached bow foremost, and without shipping water. It required the strenuous oxeritons of seven men to upset her in the surf, and then she instantly righted. Besides these testi menials, one Irma Captain T. J. Cram, of the Uni ted States topogreiptuttal engineers, and chief ot the primary triangulation party ou the United States coast survey, and from sufmen, boat-builders, and °there, testifying to the adaptability of the• boat to the purpose for which it was intended, were alluded to by the committee of the Board of Trade in their report. • Mr Tatham, having, full knowledge of the caps. •eides of the Holmes life-boat, after having wit- Ceased experiments with other life-boats which have been introduced to the public, and having not the slightest personal interest in any of them, fur ther than ascertaining which was the best, hut se lected the Holmes boat, ria, in his judgment, being the must serviceable. In addition to the life-boat, Mr Tatham has invented a wagon, specially de signed for the conveyance of the life-boat to painter wnere it may be needed. This wagon oonaists of four ordinary wagon wheels, held together by a beam, placed lengthwise, reaching from axle to axte. Above this is placed what Mr. '2 terms " the ways," which resemble those of a dray, from which the idea was taken. Between these two ways are placed thirteen rollers, which look like the rounds in a ladder, excepting that they re. volve. The "ways" are suspended on the hind axle of the wagon, dimity in the centre of gravity, and when the least weight Is put upon _the port projecting behind, it instantly til's over, ready to launch the boat, or to take it on the ways after It has been in use. When It is desired to take the beat on the wagon, a rope is attached to the stern,. and one Mall and a boy, turning a crank, working a cog-wheel at the front part of the f' ways," can haul up the boat 0 , .t of the water, or from the ground As soon u the beat ad vances on the rollers, beyond its centre of gravity, the ways and the bow fall down on the body of the wagon, leaving the boat in a horizontal position ' The advantage of carrying the boat on the wagon is, that it can be conveyed from poi* to point with great rapidity A pair of mules will haul the wagon and boat along the beach at the rate of ten miles an hour. This life-boat wagon is considered by Mr. Tatham to be an improvement over the English life-boat wagons, which are heavy, cum bersome affairs, requtnng a large tome of men and horses to manage them. This boat and wagon have been procured by Me. Tatham with a view to show, by comparison, how ineffielont the present U. S. lila boat stations on ,he coast of New Jersey and Long bland are, the lite-boats being exposed to the weather, and many them rotted and unfit for service. True is also the of condition of much of the other life saving appara • tun supplic d by floe Government. The Govern ment has no wagons to transport their life Loan-, and altogether their equipment is Metier to tly.t lurntshed by Mr 'Tatham at his owe expenee. abort time ago, chile the Great Eastern lay off Cape May, Mr. latham's lite-boat was driven reptilly on the e wagon , _ tram his place on Doren :ne Beach, down to Cape May, whence the life. boat was laureleed into the breakers, in presence f a large - number of epee tators, and with Mr. Tatham on board, was rowed out to the Leviathan, end after remaining a short time on board the Anceitkin,ntut .. tife- bolt. Warmed to ,Cape May, forinariee was highly gratifyinebi 7 llll Lowed it. Among those present was Miss Dix, the well kuown philanthropist, who expressed her ad miration of tan excedent qualities of the life- beat The life boat Stadoha on the coast of New Jersey AM Long Inland are represented to be' in a very 1 dilapidated coalition—the apparatus old and al ooet worthless It he alleged, also, that the wreck - ere, or those whose duty it is to see that att the ap ; names are kept in order, do not give the atten tion to their duties that they ehonla. being eppoint et' more from political coesideratiems than fron t espieity and merit There arc fitly-four of these stations, twenty-eight in New Jersey, and twenty seven' Long Island, and It is asserted that to fully one half of thin the apparatus is not seryieeebte ._„ in arse a week should occur in their vicinity Veit' matter should rteelve the early attention of •the Government °Mears before winter sets in, and wrecks occur, when there will not be time to sup. ply what is needed for the relief of the unfortunate shlpwreeked mariners and passengers. In this, no in every oilier relation of I.fe, it will be found that "en 0111:10.3 of prevention fa better than a pound of cure " A BOLD ATTEMPT To ROD.—Yesterday, a men named Sdinuel Green, while drivin; a wagon down Fourth street, between Shippers and Monroe streets, accidentally fell out, injuring him self severely. The oceurretce drew a inward to gether, at.d among lathe's. a lady stopped to see chat war the matter While, she was wilting .he felt r man's hand in bor pocket, end turning round suddenly, the seized the depredator, who WAS trying to steal her portemonnaie. and held hlm ill be was secured by the te:,atand,ra. The pi -otter proved to be Joseph Orr. en n.dinidaal wail known to the (114 , 8i0 precincts of Pito alley, or Trout nue. Alderman George lifeore was rtand ing at hi- taco door at the lime, and w the whole traneaotkn. Orr was taken before Alderman M., who gave him a hearing at once, and required hlin to 6:,1 bail in $lOO. or be committed Strange to say. Orr plumeed.i in getting a highly rep.pe‘stabla dealer in Bluth Second street to go his ball, and he war liberated FloPg AIRETENG Housg.—This vcry old house of worship is now undergoing a thorough re modeling. It WIP built in 1803, constituting the secant Papist church of North ern Liberties, and stands nista the original eite, in New Maltose street, above Poplar The front has been enlarged and improved, by an extension of eight feet deep by fifty-eight feet front The galleries have been narrowed, a new pulpit erected, the ceiling fres coed, and the entire church resented The new front presents an imposing contrast to the anti qu tied appoaranre of the old one From the posh to the base, it is forty-eight feet high Four aeries of handsome brick co'nmns uphold a broad cornice, which Zaps squarely over the eaves of the roof The alterations will cost $B,OOO. Rev. Mr. Cath cart is the present pastor. An ancient grave-yard, coeval with tho old building, Iles in the rear. It contains many very ancient tombs it, COUP LE BOLElL.—Yesterday afternoon a man, named Daniel Crowley, PM overcome by the excessive boil whit° walking along Fifth street between Walnut and Chestnut Some officers o: the Reserve Corps wont to his azalstance and found him in an almost insensible condition They got it ovrriage and conveyed him to the Pentisylvank Hospital, where he died about four o'clook to the afterneen Deceased was thirtpseven years of age, and-leaves a family residing in Fitzwater street, between Seventh and Eighth The corona: , held an inquest, and rendered a verdict in accord ance with the above facts. DEATH OF A STRANGBIL—OrI Thursday afternoon, a well -dressod man, who Ilas said to be an eng,ineer, was pioked up by some of the po nce of the Second district, while wandering along the wharves, evidently laboring under deliriutu tremens He was taken to the Second-district station bone°, but no accommodations being there fur a sick man, he wee removed to theAlmsliouse, where he died the mane evening. There wa , nothing about him which•would indicate what ht., name was fin had a gold watch and come valu able pipers in his possebsion. SHRICNADE.—L ast Evening, near 10 o'clock, the friends of William B Thomas, Erg., proceeded in a body to his residence in Spring Garden str , et, above Thirteenth. and paid him the compliment r f a serenade. Mr T. responded in a brief addreos. after which tbo party were invited into the home by Mr T., and hospitably entertained, when speeches were made by several gentlemen. Mr. Thomas is one of theoandidates for be Republican nomination for Congress in the Fourth district. S 17001: ING RATIL Yeat c rriny Carom Fenner held rn inquest upon .he body of Joseph aged sixty-four years, residing at Levering. end' Lind streets, Fifteenth ward. wh. , died a horrible death. He was emhieled at Fleming's woollen factory, Twenty-third and Hamil'on strait., in the dyeing department, and while at work a..cidentally fell into a vat of amid log teeter He was taken out alive, but died in h few minutes atterw,trtla. He leaves A family. A verdiot of accidental death was rendered. ISCAPRR FROM CAMDEN JAIL.-011 WEd- Reed y night, or very early or, Thursday morning, three prisoners eicled from Caked. n jilt 'nay were all charged with petty offences ['hey ti , uat have received aid from without, in the srs.'s. of Mei or saws, for the Iron bars were sundered as if they bad been composed of soft wood BAsE BALL MATru—'SiAti.RTED yR. INC;1.1" OF HAMILTON BANN BALL CLUB —This melon will be played this afternoon, at 31 o'clock, on th,. grounds of the Hamilton Base Ball Club on elary ( ~r Thirty-eighth) street. north of Market street. iVe,t Philadelphia. An interesting rune may be exj oozed. Acomn\r.—Yesterday afternoon a HUI, boy, Iwe years old, fell , ff a door-step utem, t w hie% be we- s'f ting. in Di.tkirue.t, street. below 1 4 -ver t.„ and brake bbt arm, betides seriously ir•juring biu self otherwise. THE steamboat John A. Warner will leave Poplar-street wharf, Kensington, 'as well Chestnut 8 , 1%0 wharf on the exrurelon to Cape May, tomorrow morning. See advertisement. Lincoln Meeting at Chester. A very largo Lirreola meeting was held at Ches ter, last night. A etand,hatt been erected on Mar ket Square, and the rooms of tie Curtli (AA were brilliantly illuminated. 'Judge Ilinkson presided. Addresses were made by District Attorney Prise, of Chester, and Messrs. Philip S. 'White, Win. B. Mann, and Judge Kelley, of this city. The en theiasm was Intense. Three hundred Invincible% of the Cool:Taiga Club, proceeded to Chester by steamer Pioneer. They were met at the wharf by a deputation of Wide Awakes, and escorted through the principal streets. A portrait of Col. Curtin was presented to the Curtin Club of Chester, by Mr. Ward, on belief of the Philadelphiani; and received in a neat neigh. by Mr Thorne, of Cheater. The. Pioneer left for Philadelphia at 1 o'clock. The night was intensely dark, and the boat•ran aground, near the Lsz stets*. A scene of great confusion ensued. The boat careened as the crowd pressed from side to side, and a rush was made for the life-preservers. In the midst of the confusion some pickpockets proceeded to lighten the pockets of the unwery. They were detected and summarily dealt with. FINANCIAL AND CORLIIEACLAJJ: The Money Markets PHIL USLPIIIA, August 10, 1860. North Pennsylvania Railroad shares advanced at the Streit Board to day ; Pennsylvania Railroad gained I ; Reading was ash ode weaker ; passen ger railway shares are in fair request, ant thdr bonds looking up. Second and Third street, and Fifth and Slat h-street sevens sold at 95; Green and Costes - shares at 221; Mob street ifli. A Sale of fifty shares Penn Mining at'ock - wasrmsde at 2.56 The Seoretary of the Trearttry has authorised the recoinage of $2,000,000 in gold-dollar pieces, now held in the A.4isnent Treasury office at New York, into doable•eagle Owes. The following is the amount of Coal transported ors the Philadelphia and Heading Railroad duzilig the week ending Thursday, August 9, 1860: From Pnrt Carbon..—... Vott.vllle Behaylkill Haven.-- Aulnrn Port Clinton Total for one week Previously this year... MEI To zaniq time last year The following is the amount of coal transported on the Schuylkill Navigation, for the weak ending Thursday, August 9, 1860 : From Port Carbon...... Pottsville Schuylkill .Heven Port Clinton-- Total for one week....._._.._............ 37 778 r`2 Previously this rear -.........-_ 71‘,94 co Total— .—..749 212 10 To eame time teat year-- ........ ...—..—.. 706.08 03 The ehtements ct coal over the Huntingdon and Broad Top Mountain Railroad: For the week ending August 8.... Prev.ously gbia year...—. Totli amount ehi p0nd...... Amount stopped to same date last . The July earnings of the New York Central Rail road were $549,174, an increase of $44,957 over July, 1859 The New York City Controller give notice that gentled proposals will be received at hie office until Thursday, the 16th day.of August, 1860, at two o'clock P M., when the same will be publicly opened, for the whale or any part of the amount of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars of the " Central Park Improvement Fund Stock." The said stook will consist of two thousand five hun dred shares of one hundred dollars each, and bear Interest at the rate of air per cent per annum, payable quarter-yearly from taxation, the princi pal redeemable Novetaber 1, 1876, from the " Sinking Fund for the Redemption of the City Debt." The following statement shows the condition of the banks :of New York city and State, in June, 1850 : City of ' Interior Total LI•BtLIitES. New Verk. Parks. State of NY. Capita • ....•.e 69 758,777 41.736.616 1 1 1 494 la Circu1ati0n.......... 8731.871 20 Int ~1.0 28 8V 191 1' °fit. 8647,283 2,861 100 It 419 121 9117 BAnka.... 0 4 8.174 349 33 117 413 Due 't'ress.S N Y. 8231/ 1.7:7974 86118363 I ndivianal De p ta....79,716 an 39.749 544 110 462 643 Muscellaneucts ....... 672 292 law 192 0132.364 Total $l9l Va 683 811 Back CMSI66 46s 65 Bankt 2:0 anks a ESOURCES. N. Y (3.t.. Int,,, Pate N. Y. . 4 . 3 • • ..... .. • • -8125,1:8'0M ta-i 7h9 966 a 191 104 (63 Overdraftse - 69 !..16 .17639 418.275 Das fro ai Banks -—. 7 013,7:6 S 279 961 18.453.756 teal estate ..... 6,11.06 2 411 T. 113 6716,195 Specie . 21:670= I 52.7 .5 7 24:82.2.9 'nett Eta mt.. —. .... 19.017 997 "2110 IRO St 647,947 i onks... 4, 19 24 842 21.13 : 7.15 36 MO 677 Exesr se account.— 641018 717.2t8 ;XS 496 Total $l9l 369,513 19010 616.732 116105.106.463 Plll l / 2 delPala Stuck EYcdaege Saileg, dolsos; 1 3. IW w-eski-XALA.3I43fi Walnut Street 218 , 9 T WARD. _ - 200 2d &3d.oirreot 75.. 95 VS :Ai Penna. ••• i• 15u0 klorrts /'anal 6s. 9$ Iro d.. . . .._ 103, rtoo Frank & 6outh7s.. 93 93 A rob-at R • ... lots 1% 2210 Car de P 1t.140.141 5 Morris Col pfd 25 2 • 115 Coo d . ....... 10 L 1. 61 20 do- 2d).116 2.9 CAP 6a 101 6l Morris Canal.— a$ 265; 1 0 Ct.) 6a....... int 6 111 s rend' It 615, 60 Penn . 29-161 89 '0131.161 1300 Green eo k. Coates.. 21 32X 74 t 3 1 Irmo Bk of Tenn- talk; do 5 , ;54 3 do--• •.• .. 227 d 2 do 86.; 31 Hi:4l4 H. F4 Ei n , M'.o ?! B 4: raw 10 Ponca H. R...E3 . ..... 404 itarcaxia s rioAßo: , • .5600 Perna Ls ___ 9314 , 1140 Lehigh Es .. .101tg •25 . ..... 701 to . 1 Al I.*higli "(ay .3".4 2 UU Catu.S.Amb63ls btu Cl ty by '74....2J) e 59 SiiCONU BOARD. 40^ Readia4 a6s 7e. 100 tong R •. cash (ki do . '6116 7414 liis) Morris C,nal 6s . 401) tatty R 6, Pl 4 Harrisburg . 157 1 .1; 3 util Caned ... 46'6 4 Farm .Nieelus .••••'l. 31 do .... esni Cius & Aanb 6., '64 Us.ts I Penns H --.... 41 ULUI4i b PRICE.I:-.8 I EA.DY - - BM. ..4skr Fwi. 4 Pt., PluladelpM664 .101 1111.14 - Wmpet & Elm 11. 1 IN I Dila 64 R. • --AS' 101-14'. Wilmer& 78 7o ula de new 10434 11141 W Lona lord it__. 133 13% rearm /la int off 963 s 9c 1184 CI & N.-. 66 'leaden; 24, .ehCl & N :term 42 4234 Kending bds 701 . . , 6..5e 86 -Venus N .h.hi Lemi as 'Winton 90% IN Penn. 1 , _64 .63.6 77 React mt. 6e '66 72 rem aPI 105 A:113, 1181 vans K 4.% 41 , CatawlBsa laTol b 34 .'enna Rid Mt6B - 1.11% t IFrnhl & Scot:. It 49 70 or Clot ndv 664 66% deo & 'ihrl sr, N. 6% 49 for CI plevott, 11.6 llai t itace & Vine-at 28 B,IIN (le al muff 78% 76X, West nuts 64% &J; - Yenta', Nay 1m a- 841 u 86 'Spruce & I . ' churl :gay . 934 1016 green & .22% 21 -,Bac T l Niue yr, , 314, 24 I Chrat & 31 - -"ielv York S tuttlo Exehauge—Ang. 10. sac _al, IIoABD. "0 VD 1.1 S. reg IVY If 650 :oh S IN. I R R.. 23 W la. C. St. 6' , 97.fj 26 do . 2631. _14.11.1 ta. Y. dl. 6's 1812103 211 31h. S. & N.l. G.. . 4310. .lite V/ Fenn 6a SO , 21 do cv 1000 IJudron Coo. Bd.. 89 MI do into 4 PRO Ch. & N. W.lat w. 6.13,,, 'en. R. tep-bl6 add 1006 do .. 63t 0 do 1.14 ion Canon C 0.....,.. 2036' 1 to •71.. 3r. pub; R is . op.; oil 260 do 32) bajii 321 do. —titre 87X' 26 Harlem Reamed _Si 119 do.. . 177 :to do —.... -0 id 3l ten d. 211 mhda 7U •30:1 do. 2.1" i 10 National Bonk-Aviv% 230 do broirk A.ll 234 d Pr o' fin 31 S. .83 : 211 co tau aoi o . b6O 34,3 i 20 Barters( Prof bd 1 141 C. Pref. LEO 15u, .12) (Amato &R. I 843‹ ,726 Erie linitroso 31 lto) do 'lt' do 314 1:0 Chi. Bar trQtrin.blo 89).. 421 Rea.lino tun 30 Ci Cai. 201 du tap 4951 Zu do M 1110 0 eon R... 6 75,: 1 A Clv h . Tol. — . .. s . ta 4. 10 166 brit) 6.13; Ito d 1 121 43 150 Brid.on River It.. 69 ,150 do— - ..•• . THE 81 RitliTB.—tieriEs are steady. at $512 for Pots and $530 tor Pear's with sales or 60 kW*. ILarket for ttata and Weir-rn I , mar is lull at d heavy, except tor round-hoop 'Mho, which in carte and warned. 1' he export demand I. fair for the atter Quanta. tat Inc home trade o 'attunes 'o pa rohase WHIZ, I). The receipts of vll kinds acme:iota 1u 621 ',his aMe the Woe foot op 11000 Mos. at $9204.5 2.5 for onerfine 'fate ; $5 254546 `or extra do; .$603.66 33 for .pperfine Western; $573116411:7 extra do; 618.6048 6 1 or ehipp.n. braids °Centre. round-hoop ...o to. pionth,,3 3 , Floor ra pteady with a fa.r demand; sale, nbls at $52056.40 for superfine Baitimore, 4.b 15,7' 78 for extra ito, $6 for Brandywine. 8.30et0 73 far Goorgetown. 23a7 to fur Petershart..B , 6 10117 60 fnr ichmond. and 48 1103 .Z tor Boson & I.l.liepo. Ca •rid • Flour ie qu.at. with 15,1451 of 61'0 Md. at 86.:a for ,upernne. and 16. o.o'oo for :Xtao. fir ',Flour to reams :ooderately at $3 0011 42 . for roam to choice super fine. torn. Meal 19 11.31 at t 3 tu for Jersev , $3.76 Ir 4 Brardy ine. and $l7 VS2I7 Cu co. tunrheene. Al:P.— I lie losh tree its wil eh yr stonier checked the export demand for Wheat Intlnet.ceS oar troortiot to t.. and the article is dull, and prices f t•: or the bit, Cr. Receipts to day, 38 636 3 .u•hels. whao the at es reported than tar am oath', 20 tiOlbustien..ernoraco r white, n to-k, at $1.37 7m1,43, wh,te Ohio at $1.371.4. red So ..n •re new at $1.304133 and whi,e Indiana at $132 to 1.315 f,„ With on tam. sued 08111 , 11 d, ana the Comparative •iitoil receipts at 70 231 bushels the Coin mproet has somewhat improved ; sales MIAs) bu• he's at 26263.40 or mixed V. cistern. Rye is quint, at 804. bariey coutiLues nominal. Vats art unelt.nord .td cowed at 24.336 tor Southern and Jersey. ano:00 fox Northern and Wes:. orn YnoviAzo 4.—The Pork market II doll and hoar.... Ng' it!, mai of too Mr s 144 $ 843 for 0 , 1 mesa; 810.44 to: aw mess ; $1325 (or old prima. and 811 for now pr , Heel I 4 quiet er,d onehaoked. with ages of ha wale ‘ 1 1454.25 tor country aone; $4 75.15 SO I r count. y `S3L 45¢11.1 SO or rep,: bed mow and sllcl2 for szorn taws. rime mesa line( ts dull ,nd nontoi deaf Hams Met lull Cut Melva aro ficaroa and firm. a 3 for Nho..lll , rs -rid Ile for - arra. For Lard th a m a rket 15 d e b and heavy a ith a Iles 4100 Mile /2.4 . 013; - o. Butter Is In, fair :woes, at tvaltio tor Onto and 124200 for btate, o.r.eea-3 is ate , d, at 8.44 :ENS°. 17111.5)5t fi;m, with atlas of 300 Ws at 21.44 e. Me Central Park in New York tt Prete tieal Failure. We regret to learn, from the following article in the Nov York Herald of thursday, that the Cen tral Park of that city, which has been land out gith so touch expense, will, practically, prove a odlure The Litt-aid says: - Notveihstanding the vast amount of labor end ;noney expeeded oa the Central Park, and the c,eneral progress made there since the work com menced, the visitor who seeks it for shelter and nifort ore of these hot data will be disappointed A faular g little or tiO shade there; and wita.ut a ;recant rhade such weather as this , rota/bet cc ~nt of the question, and a place tf pleasure 6r ,onies a yarn of torment Lt is very much to be rrgretteo that the Central Pak is to dtfi,ieet in this essential element. Tula° is no doubt that at great deal of work has been accomplirhed in lay ing out the walks and drives, buikikg bridgte, vatting tran.verse roads, draining, and plan•.ng sbrubs, but, after all, this work makes eery /tat, -how for the time and money lavishod or it. cad one good, tong. shady eveoue or grove ot lull grown trees wamd be more acceptable to the public just tow Than the whole of P. •• One .1 0 first Lingo which shunt i have been done in oh, pork was to trauiplant a large number 01 toli-grown forest trees • a ten, we believe, were traniplanted trim the ;bores of toe N.i h river, tort they no not seem to have fiou.tobod tort• welt 'IVO,' nor hdt.j , t the nytnrat titnenr , d by lb:, Fra nett I:inperor in Pone when ho wet la} tog on' the Bois de Boulogne, where hito trees of t•oture vowth alight he seen daily cittted along kio Ne t 000. to be pia•ed in their new beds, in whin •bey emit res:Ed securely, wi'huat a le• for branch •thd ? would be worth while spending o good ileal of money to accomplish this. A pork without hada trees is like a theatre without bOt hely ; it to rut the ekeleten of a park after all, be its walks .n,l drives, and lakes and bridges, ever sa perfect Nest to plenty et breathing space, a pleasant sh Au, .1 the most egaeutial feature to a publin park; but :Ye are Wald, at the rate the Central Park ii • n in this respect, that the preterit generation will ~,,t, shrived away before any of ',jay Mei:wives there, like Tityras of old, sod. tegritine JaAii Tons. Cwt. .....- 12.433 11 2 621 18 6 940 03 47,7F2 lv -.1J53,024 02 1,7008'618 1123=103 Tons. Cat. - 8.043 10 -2, 14 02 2 , 400 18 ........ 2 061 00 Teals. .106.925