The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, August 22, 1860, Image 2

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    11F-371( - Jr*. pp& T S.
-.01/0101MINOWbbes:ri,o,
410 .al
er e strabito Chroateeleba boo Pe.
novoLlloute' °oboe; Seheylklll oe., Pa
„..:;111.bbanow Bows, libuieb OW*, Ps.
bil.,o4,,ipis=eb Komi filebotrebenk4
41oirel, beedsaenbahurp!Y
,)1? 441WMA11.04a‘iiklintOWD,..Y0.-.
, atraultia_Ci
felt 4 N. '" •
immii*pealtinumitmitaYMVt=si 't
, I. Wimp iiol9lo4:ollbistabil, 14 1. 1
- 414 , 1.1if0 - 61 # 1 ROMA. .9,10 0 1= 40 11 540 1 1 , 1.
'l4llbetiegellusibi. tea. i4":,4;"!
IftsWark lllFllRraUW4Aketteed be
14419 ' .; :er ll =V ra"
• -so • t•
t•
71: •
,
- WIDIIIISDAT;4IIOUST',22;IB6O.
, -
:an PA.S. /10,0 1 4( , ;
; , p ontid i a
ppy
I ntaiiiineCiass;
Cie." '
the Now Torten are
IT•asote- Minna
- 00 4 1 . 24000 .4 0 ii ,Poaki . p p.
Or_ '
1 -5, - `
Tian
Ifaltdmore
- ;:l . :;f444,birelay, laterite will bejuithmlito*ally re
* ieleeds Wanda to return, to ,Oldosgo ,the
=
90 , 641004.89 1 ini1k1u coan9'
Lii , onio 24 4l:io. 2lol _,l ii 4 ea Hon '
• q - r., for mealestion to mmigram by
Hoolt;Mairal Ilitirb), and Lin
fightintioe ticket
• na6 -
3niiiitidoit iMifaegifjoiitardad; - and Madder
,-;:t 1 , 1
:Ott Rfttliii4iim. !ay) ....4100,tloat:,diliii;its Pro
:We-print op Abe ..tineth pegs the 411 leportrf
eif;Jedge , of , the Supremo
• 3- ' iiireiMio:n to the' po r t ;111.aohiiie
ewe, tried Aston, ,
Thefiriseerot .Wetse is settle remising
:BM iMetage of *a Canopies In the eityitii&althli.:
•pieeteee. He attended .bete'on . thisidiye • The
,`,41 bOug .crowded with : - 'l%* weather
Wm; enough to , ziiiihe. the2raYill youth at
b0_12 11 !, Atom- ,be hold, ht the Piteliament
Mcnectieday. ;
trAh • t ,, ,We i have, later sews from Hayti by ihailesiyaiM
*4 'bark Ariel; thiptain'pbeihniani eV/1141[101'90..
`the rietideht of
--.'bite.tllloll—frost • ad
been tiesedhigly troll mealved; Ant bit return
INSYt 2 MitPtinee tilempba sielmo t troorMiuktiod•
**IOW& ajeke,elearifgOit .. tbi da2T'`;' /1 / 4 .
eieiithfni tiiti:o4o* ilfe6flttelf A 10:
~,t 1 4k 1 , 5 1 4 kimbitg ibiruakAtc.Ruf ,- "PlitiNt yip
rupli,l. Mid dabig the Wier. magiliotie Malmo;
• •
Yanketi , talie kindly to the Boy: and 4 1. 1 404 ,
14 ' 4 His remption in Beittoll•Mall'ittba , ,,
oharaitei, ind:ieliaoted ninaii OMAR '
- , ; ,:ai. f AdAtaiathr , itoutiyoutpl• of ,that , We
1.414,4 , 1 , ,t *ate that be in gninglio Mahn.. Alis Boy Aso nOt ,
eitt seiiiitee Prealdisetisi: returnees es et.
Nei W***l* *We*yinic:joimeirnii 1
i r : ' ??reinistimilboomi:
,OWlrkk. m Yoradt:.
0:10 tau, g.i.sehreor , ?.. tom Kenigen-bed a friandlYineet:,.
r , E 4 iewatallies in that Stato - kuomeMilii+l4 , PtiMd:,
:Theiii!eri a liiimbei - et amateurs p;teaat :;':7 l*.
), t•fiurori silly.ronrkifooll3lo* l o.ci
was deemed telosehompion of thearaue
Mountain State. All this took plikeerds7,
• :1:011 iihemitaing mane ferty•eve urinates of _ '
Haittbx we Issue. that the filreattastern,
4 ' IL *l-si Wl r eil% tiff Thirsday last- arrived there at
-rya;./ Alet.PbottOws.: to!elflki* 40 4 . rdiki,,Bvening , aii 4l
t , nosailid.spanied idwaseideek tidittext h.
I. g t z y l
By mem ' t itans an impression' pievitts is addle
gitietileti that mkt:lei» BM (013(3 leihibited it the .
ObictE; glues
pretsiont`JlMWill Prove a andlident. *entre
t> eau+a•dtotiesl'd;tbis siateetent, Large Pri,miaraa are ;
e r • Mitered for settle,. and It is altogether liktd)thit,
department will prove the best ever seen in,Oble,
3 ' bloats MID. Japan State Att.! a , MO' SD
• • *missed =inhabilaati teat) swalldwitd , wp by an
1 0: 1 1* 1 0t; • •
- • aco;ui.lbitraild McPherson hit; • been retiotitheated
raft riOr Oessmess, bribe Obseibersbarg disirlot, by e
Ildinddleans. The of Bedl and Bvirstt
1 I i.havie:aVinissesd Idetsti as ioandldetwein
" %Vim from ti Pifth dtstrlet:
" Wegeaptd es d le
oeo44dt bout 4cluisTyle'sap,iat
ht ba syteekturlie; 'akin
Settle 111 kter es an diplesai iiri„ the ressididierjuke
urn expressed s &site tivtadrear. We!ars glad
ifi'a r tax r;f4hadge' , ..Desilas It*
, .
,theitdry 1.60 -, ; • - -• • • • -or
stood at 114 in the hospital, the meted *el
4ort', l iol`theleat bra Miregod-fmaorati time 110:
' • it the arm nor the heat Met of
'l 4 ' l 4poi4,rattnost 4talitabitK -
piouro-pasty hie itioliee - 'Sese
o iestag the
bermel
ein asesehasotts ;Dow:. The gar
/If; manta hmadtplof that diem. '
eat-aortic. gentlemensiziod
Hog v ' Op-i new seasatierrfos York.' B. hitt
t:is.4.co n a d* i i naL
ii#4,Gothase,".:4o.lWastitt'
sa ,• AV.; fteP 44 01 , 1 1 i 'oo 4 '4' )Waet
WO: ffir , three 'YOWL 1 1 4 weight_
_lo_llo4, l igh;
q , n , / - jziktalitet is berets aid emit ? mortal ati 7/M4i .
test .berrite sumer all terpseM , for Atilsolteog
on taatileeTta v!ai
of tiOlutett ek su, %I/6'll3lo*i*. fa,iatoti.:
I:bitto, ll **tatti: 44 . 4l 4*il:
1014 11 141 1 44 . Ak.l 4 ..abOtt. ;PO liet:" eon
• s. 4kir ,l'ikotCbefok i , pqraeili watot, mai tuatdhac . '
r'llil-itatratil, , ltitett ke tarrlviai at" the utotropplla" thine
pia, a public riatteTtian
. .
' 800 nevaattir I,llloSifti . ,, `.
• The" telegriptdc ,wkini:„,iimiitirajaj on mon
'J r, c. S dsy laid; brought die folloiviserregrt` of the
speech of.Benstor idaiost„ or- Yfroqrdi,
thertii*OUratic piste convention,
f Otinitevuie, Virginia ::,: 1
• - ' '.4 i110,3f11800 dedstad in hif
to-day, that thepathDisirtea'crtit by dui fzfiradtet
7 , 11: 1 f Mr , noestesiaade directly it) the A l, datteneieno.!?
"tti iedueed to a Mond
.k.ll Z:lie 'Anne iho
is the sathor of the foregoing
• . '•'; . tieirer - tee the, Potomac "on Are ; not 'by his
steteinuniship' nor by the
-.`w% , . vendor end form of his speeches. The !those:
' is decidedly rich, and' 'Atha] decidedly-Ow
f•2 l -!!Nr inctsitistic: ' Nu'in.bole the radvocsey of !the
'right 01'the, tionth'to establish alaierf,in_the_
aziajciSti,
• t ,,,A0 1, 4eorP,'ltfp Pyi E Ms o , 3lo l l vOl e / 0 0 0 41_ 1 # 7
. .:...Areice can , lead , Mr. DOUGLAS, Oti
a ` l4 " :4 ody chic, to thei-a6eeney & the 'abolitien of '
itti(oo)ethe'Stites ? ",tehere it luta:B by
1 0 11 * -. 7 4 , i i l ea re4/ Y
401iit except it. be the
•i' %i = iteestrio -Senator from" 'Virginia: But, It it
ri:o4l ipireilsely- such , . btdderdaahi as ibregoing
`-;t1 Conduced;,
A picidciee 'se - drone(' strife; and - entbeide the
:,cut tAvaXbi c knalt9. l 4 , 0 0 i 1 4 0 iiiecil ) le•
;, ; „.„)fe however, that the Jusane
;-, -en of-sg.dbolificestrnny. raised by Senthern
ez
• braid. against every one 7hii:loes- not axe
• r lit , t4ciiidarse: - every: tkew - Aititted theory they
tr";,:l,ll.;.l sksaY 'fli teadOpt; cesinejlonghr deceive or
cajole...inte/ilgent ..and "reflecting men In lav
.11.i.„,111leatter. , e • f . • •
. „
",f Vt .
I:7/04 1 4n ' ~41 / 0 / E.O.' P4 , r, who • distintinished
41 , ..histsalt-44-sbet Diattntontheefing on Hot.nay .
7l e:':akeeeh' which, he
_
't „ .-01.94... 4 1 1 /.•laeloolten to eause
1 ,, 4 1: StOlllAll6 mei earnestly , supported the -fusion
473 ';
,„ furniebee''the'„Hint`, wiP i t We
hire been it ormed that tow .weeke ago he
to r il 6, atoned - Weasel' to', be "flecidediy faVerabie
on' which his; mete that flop!.
1 0 141;1* " I . l "P t4d;llT, T 44 f lif P r bieti:94: . E
loysAs; err:
, -11' - .'4,7-‘,":.:".;iryeinerit having; Inc)" -bri per! , od. e rtwohl-,
,A4q:413 4 - m - 4 - o,gied liolitiCal-patitifirt.;;• He etidently,
" 41 ' -* lo' the'; B ctial-tolif school of di
-fianoot, &AP.. pa
- -Ire are not wire' that , the- article ho
11 ' *131grechitiitage*al Ut Rentnity-=
. , wainesnote it to not—bu pommies a Inn&
• " =fi r i-thtiff."- - iii4kirobVirojoertY than: that fainene ewe
-, pt. 14.: "•
Bfitide'plicon,
vm;••, ~ ,,- 1 . ige,P4 ,l
tot i -t.‘oritlippeatto Xi i
t vertoff: the - gallantliaptain from a Irieloet anti
sillscf3 A_!iill - 0211?1.1fratieti bine *el a 'aitteent Were of
ipt4 asirsicate . , of , the
- iextioguiebed- young Kentucky ittateardtln
ifithe'ohariottet" of the
3 , ~ e .coLtite, Captain napilinsiatolAt. ready is the,
4 ::fi r kElltilakrbigl_coiii, amore, 1)1e,
lieadepteititfir itir4inei" and it' i
. •
ls
-0,i1,1.11.,-.l,onlylnat thlit'be aboniChere - tho fall " benefit
ztf' , •-• P . ; h afit.'-' The: theory has' b
eeeih y eh l a*de
-,
01 r
I konerbefitr,,r,
14 lo o te 461cht
4 '''"-rq ,w,oug',Ainnif that 'Who sett.
, (4,1 to tho'Fidotot
vi4W'r4l.7 gilloreintotrat) oilman Pailaskeif be A' sook,ter,
heied 40)10. eut
herwei t onAhisibriairtant anhject, ,
.... - 1 - t elk*Otiit**lffif#9l4l6
. ;.
. 1
--4 I "- "
Tke Tow of tlke ?dare of Wales.
The tour of the Prince of Wales through
Canada np to thlttinie has her unattended by
any rentmkablef Rieident, fatietrywhere great
efforts have beckliiiiitto riffiehl*Pol
much eclat as rieliakbut4",:fieMi hithertif,
only visited Waits 'citffehlaire'vWparatividi
unimportn#ol*„„hillie 'Aint,lltMe ag
mince in anY of iibi t qabliptleitti. He arrived
at Quebec on Saturday, where he will remain
for several days. The public buildings of the
city, have been extensively decorated, new
fourid - niche's erected in bliTherior;and
,3iktil4)ballitiiii#43 be given.
TAaptitwtpal OftrAmt.derert, how_-.
ever, - to be made at Montreal; !there, for,
months past, extelislio '-have:
ball:Oil Tait eta' irender; it as imposing ail per:-
Bible:Wilier ball:robin has been constructed
for the nStellen," istranbir building of
'4 ) ,Aii,, , *,`liet:l4 3 ,`,'elreniiiGU : eipe. A cones
pendent of,the, New -York, Titus describes it
as ka:lnge, vast:room; 216 feet in diameter
avinl,Mintidning,B23oooleet Imp/credal space.
Inihn centre platiorni;`2o feet in diminter,
oneditch the band. will be seated, and which hi
supported- and: surrounded by eight pillars;
eitiyareiliteh will tr briillttntlp illuminated.
Arenadifie vest apartment stretches an lin;
mentiniallerY;;MiableOf fielding comfortably
about 2,000 people, 'supposing two-thirds of
liblefir to he ladies 'with' hoops, and a greater
numbe4shoild the proportion of Women be
smeller.; • The front of the glittery is paneled.
The - ground color is . pink, and the traceries
are chiefly gold and green.• Medallion heads
of Hinge, Princes Qneens;,and Princesses are
.geiterotedy, interspersed ; and we must be al
lowed to am thgt if, Great Britain had really
been governed , by snob conalcal-looking scaly
waga:Mriose,theteirephilienteri, she would not,
weld:MA oentipY the position which she now
does.„ fiinnY9ookingelikis are not often
seeni , oath - very 'aquiline nosed, such, peen
thirty' peliited' tieerdi;crach :eery huge nine
taches, stien,,extraordinnilly developed fore
; heads, and such singularly shaped , heads, we
venture to assert, never were attached to any
legitimate member of any royal family."
A. new Crystal Paiace bias also been erected
by.tbe 'Society Mr :the: Advancement of "Arts
end Agrioultnre. - Its diMensiong are one hun
dred and eighty-fear feet by eighty feet; the
thinsepts are sixty feet; and the height of the
roof is eighty -feet.' • An exhibition of speci
mens of all hinds of Canadlanproductions, is
1t:5.1)6 Inaugurated i?i:Oie,Pel7lo in , this Wild-.
Mt:ion:the' 25th init. after Thlch it is -to be
opened to timpubSc. He , is also, to , inaugurate.
the Victorist Bridge doting hinvisit toMon
treat. All the public buildings of the city
have, been thoroughly" repaired and , adorned,
iirgaionnialis have been erected, and a num
her of 'heinithil, Mabee constructed. 'lt' is
expected •that•thi Canadian population-will
"turn out eldest en main to ;witness the grand
litititsit their metropolis ' and, to swell the
throng assembled to do honor to their future
.„' The:Ofthici'ecixeitc' publishes, the following
announcement fa regard to his' mode of re
; . •
1. Mit al Ifighilms tba Penes of Malec will
probably arrive , at' Quebec About the 17th or 18th
trfrAtiguat,Mid wilt. operi,,therViiitorie Bridge. at
ldontreel, on 'the 25th enlist month. .0n or before
the $1 of ileptamber, he will visit Ottawa, and.will
ipbotiimidny (9_tt ) at Toronto., Bts Royal High
dem', 'Whiwqmat merements will be re/Mated by
:ciretamstanoes. ; • •
"2' ReMptions 'Or l evees will probably be held
Iflghnese at the .tillittilug plsem:
Olathe*, 'Montreal, Ottawa, Itingston, Toronto,
Hamilton( and Loudon: ' • • •
3. Any gentlionan"dedions of being presented
to his Royal Highness at one of such levees meet
came hi s
d name and address to be left with the
iquarry able Royal Richman, or with Lieutenant
Colons Irvine, A. D. 0. r 0 the Governor General,
it lama one day before such' levee takes place, An
?juk01"0.111/S rat a can only be made in eases in
whiol ' fates "001 so. soon after the
Ptinoe4lanivele e to mho its observance imprae-•
feeble: ' ". •
4.. All persons ant British , itahjeete; or not ha
hitaally incident in Canada, mast cease their name
'lied address to bs transmitted sr aforesaid through
the consul or vies ooneul of their nation, if there be.
-use - st , the plies, and will be a..asidased , as s sa •
tented to his Royal .Righiasse by snob conga or
viol, consul." , '
b.:At the' levee every person will' bring' two
'raids; Matinee, 'Written: containing his name and
Oleo ,ocrittlitary,or militia rank (if' any) One of
in:Weenie will be delivered at the entrame, In or
der that it may be compared with the list enema
Previously rablidttad,, and. other will be read
by"the or Otra*lli in waiting at, the time
of presentleg.
Attar'Mis' announcement of his name 'sash
oedipal will Pay his re:poets to his Boyd High
ash•by bowing, and will pan on. .•
7. :Coloeols meamending distrists, °Moen and
meschen of tho'netlye fora, who may be present
ed - will aD Paar fn uniform
perm aim addresses
from Misled • Wales 'to 'be presented to bim on
his arrival at 'smiteattadon or place, and in some
• - 9.• Grodes of-iB addresses -be pretested to his
&lei Initial's must be tramonitted et least one
isy before it 'ls intended to present them.. At the
nautilus* WM Partonlarip requested that copies
f all addreseee which it is desired to present to his
'Royal Ilighnees may- be 'forwarded, as soon after
they eue,, framed and adopted , as- possible, to the
thoretary_olther Gdyernor General, It. T. Penne.
father, /Feu' cliebes.
, - .
_ Jitter he leaves Montreal his movements will
ba mifollowa t - _ • •
'• On the MA he will go to Ottawa in a epeeist
— Sept. 1 itio will lay the fodudaiion Mena of the
nee Parliament Buildings at the new capital, and
grand diaper Will he given to 1 000 workmen on
the pus infra** of the new hell.
• :on tbe3ithe wiltgo hots Ottawa through rare.
tintrinoi teems to, Kingston. Going from Ghats
Portage he wffl be asnompanted by a Mat of one
tioudred ignore, with Indians. He will go
sb taiga the Thousand Islands by steamer.
jO,nthe 4th_hemill visit at Kingston: • -
.tOo the sth he will witness a grand regatta.
Gotha 6th be will Varney to Toronto via Belie.
'vine and'Lake of the 'Mountain ;' thence by rail
road: •At Toronto, he will meths and address and
have a reception .opposite the Parliament Build
ings. The s plop .at the Parliament
Roue.
' On the Bth bit'opanS the University Perk, gives it
reception at Osgood Roll, and Loopects the Veins,
tear oorpe:
On the - 18th he gess on an eyenision to Ulm
• On the 11th he goes fruit Toronto to BXocis, and
thence to London) • '
On the'l2th, lath, and 14th, he' will journey M.
werde Niagara Falls via Par% Brantford/ and
Fort Erie.
The 15th and -18th will be spent at the Belle, at
which - piste therch horse talk of giving him a bell,
but it is not likely tolake Plea*.
On 'the - 17th ets . aihibition and entertainment
willies given to the agiloultitil population ; the
new:water works :wilt be inaugurated, the city
sehoole visited, and an exhibitiost of Indians wit
nessed by.the Boyal _party. •
The saint course to be' pm:seed atter leaving
•fffegari hes net'Yet been &aided upon, though be
tifil probably gefronclluSdo to Olnefonsti or Pitts.
- he rifsAlid by, Baltimore: and Ohio' Reed to
NoMPBe O II, .Roinrolocite will :terry st PHs.
'deiPhis one Aria, sad thence go direetly to_ New.
;York, 'hoot which point be will take his departure
for England, the fleet hiving gone round to New
•York to meet hint. •
A Political Burying. Ground.
'Thattrnly`influential joffrnalitbe St.
„Lords
. ,
Republisetts, coMatastitiS upon
,the late elec
tion is Mlaswnit ; says c;
Jaekeertle majority may go.to fifteen thousand
over On, if it does not exceed that vote, -and our
impression is that be will .beet the deld v Never
wee a vaster- iletoty aehleved. and never' bee
eloh.opposition 'ban .madi to- any man=-Ito
bitted: audiring- 111111 d stusenspalooe—in this State.
We elabst forblet, therefore, a glorious triumph—
s' tritimpiti over ail-parties sirsyed, kr opposition.to
him, and following him with unrelenting fury-
The Ineenskteriblessoilon of the Defoooratio party ,
that broke off Smut- Ike i repair .nominstione,
and made so, -ruthless a war tiPon him cad Mr-
Reyetolds, become they, promptly delayed, their.
ititintfon to .sustain'the regular nominees of the
Oetecierstie part* for President and Vies Prost
lent, may now me where they stand iti the 'esti- -
Leaden of -.the Dentotwatie party of Missouri
Whole hosts. of fsetio,na and unprincipled pond
-4aitis have beet led on , the shelf by this election,
end 'the Demoorstie 'party will be the better for
fhe pnriliestion. A week will show th e asset re
, istion of .parties to each other, and the only ems
' 'gen eril bor e An stye to the renziocreey is, to stand
by the =advantages they have obtained—to yield
nothing to the,enesey—to ask nothing that not
'rfgbt;', nor yet give up scy th ing to mentioe'or en
treaty froes'any gutter whatever. Another' bat--
title- Whet foaght in November, eel 'mother vie
tory,te be ems, and it ie. only, in., union that there
le
„.
, .
11E0-Ill*Tris are bein g dug for the Disunion
hitsin every othert!outhern State i and In No
vember theme graves win be filled, • end the
tomb.atenes erected, till the South will be, Me'
a burial-gionna, but no terra will be shed over
memorials that will mark the spot where the,
enemies ef thostinion shall forever repose. .
Acktraituritistarr.=—We have tether& the Hon.
• Thomas 8, Morena, M. C., for the following pub
* doeumear The Coved* Inseetigation ;, , Report
of the Comiatesioner of Pattuti;for the year 1869 ;
agg thaltsiateg, the Secretary of the Treasury,
transmitting e Report; from the Register (Regis•
firer?) of the Tramury,on tat Commerce of the
'United . Stater; for the year trading Jiute'3o, 1869.
I 41P-
.;:lAsierunt Names, t-N. J.P two sat , electioneer,
431 Ohestnat street, will - seil, this morning, at ,10
tealoakOlfty &ten Menet arloket jackets, a line of
nest_ st3ile' embroideries,' Joined , : blonde, laces,
Rrweilifloii•ro, ten new bead goads, art Involao
f jewelry, /143 , to which the atteetion of the trade
layttedi - • Catalogues sad samples now ready.,
Osuumhi Exthilosunzsear.—Ost Saturday 'after
ne6sl;- also 4,sherlostr alarm, fall Arown, wu shot
thi s 'otsoic;,s&. few band rsd ya r ds
front's' tillobrilid Shia
,11.11 ISA on thi Mrby
THE PRESS,--PIRLADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 113450:
George N. Mindere.
This extraordinary political genius, who al.
ternstely excites', the surprise of the country
and the indignaMort of 02Wistitnintstration, has
:keen fereclotsaly &inured isythe organs of Mr.
n oct ri4 A s. for
Wrestled to
twd chimacteristio lettere,
•
the one - restled to the , people of his native
,• - •
State'ef'Kentnekr,,,agalntt Mr. BIZOILINIUDON
and his . Disunion**, and the other to the
Old Public Functionary est the , head of the
Government. Both 'of these letters were
printed in TEL Puss, and it is but just to state
:that they awakened universal interest. ' The
people of Kentucky responded to this appeal
by a handsome rebuke of Major Ilaticitisainout
in their late election. The President's organs
chow - thit the arra* 'frtinithe bold and fear
less boW of Mi. Ssasnitti Went' clean through
the rhinoceros hide _of power, and they
yelled in a Inbitagoisiging eberns. The Lou
isville Journal, an opposition - paper, steps
handebrisely forsrard ,in vindication of Mr.
Vannits, in the following interesting para
-graph i ,
EINVICRT ON ORONO. N. SANDNRB.
The Coarser, akes to task the regular DONN:KIS-
H° stiol,llniou ,Press for. pobliehing the address of
George B. Sanders to the Kentucky Densooraoy ;
as if he had not as good a right to be heard ,by
•Kentunkiatts as the Flidells, Brights, and Yencers,
or even John o.. , ftreekinridge himself. We tell
the Cormier that George N. Sanders.% the peer of
Mcjor , Breokinridge by, intellect - and by antece
dent.„-
•
The celebrated Kentucky resolutions of '9B were
written by the immortal Jefferson at the instance
of George .Nieholsta, the grandfather of "Our
George,”. the leading lawyer and statesman of
Kentucky, (in her pioneer days,) who made their
long journey to Virginia to see Mr, Jefferson face
to floe, and urge upon him the draftionof a paper
exposing Presidential ssrumptiou and Congreselon
toompsolon in that day. . Oversoming Mr. Jet.
fersop's scruples of delicacy, he triumphantly re-
turned with the resolutions which have slime be
come one of the beacon lights of the Democratic
party, Colonel Nieholaa oeleoted. as the honored
-moverof these resolutions in the Kentucky Lestis ,
=lature,his friend, John Ereekinridge, who, proba
bly did not himself know their origin—since, in
.18211.,Mr• Jefferson, writing to Nelson Niabollii• re - .
mettle: In keeping their ,origin secret, ' l, your
father fulfilled his pledge of honor ".
In November, 1843, George N. Sande% called
the find Meeting held in the 'United States for the
Admission of Texas, et Ghent, Carroll oounty, Ky.
Sanders presented his resolutions, which were
adopted by acclamation, end he was appointed
Moorman to oorreepond with the different condi
dots% for the . Presidency. This correspondence
elicited ; letters from Ames R. Yolk, Tyler, Bo
'charter, Woodbury. and the celebrated essay
or -Robert .11"/ Walker on the i'Reennenation of
Texas " Mr: Van Buren did not renly. and. in
the spring itwas rumored that be bad decided to
go against, DAIS. Some anxiety wan expressed by
Democrats in Kentucky on the announcement.
What shall we do?" , was the inqatry. "Throw
• hide 'Overheard at oboe." was the prompt reply of 1
George, with characteristle division, rash or pru
dent, as you please. Mr. Sanders was a delegme
to the Convention that.nominated Mr. Polk, and
was settee in producing the result.
As to hie coarse in London, which . the Courser
so natriotioallyattsoks, be not only won the heart
of liberal Europe ; hat ever faithful to his country,
be took omission ditty personal popularity to speak
for the South bottle liberal 'leaders in Parliament,
Flume, • Cobden; Wham , Gibson, Layard,' and
Bright, as well as to the distinguished exiles of all
nations, who were then gathered in London. And
whilst he staid in England hakept 'in wholesome
cheek" the extravassancea of the anti.slavory party
In his address to the JeffersOnien Republioans of
'Europe, Mr. &Indere, after-putting the whole
country right before these great mitadsoonoludes :
In all these instances they must recognise a pa
depot' charsoter to Welk can safely be trusted
questions of own internal policy, with the cer
tainty of a solution houorishle to /merles, Chris
tianity, and to tamarind." , The address met with
a hearty response. Pity that the „South did .not
always have as vigilant and, faithful a representa
, tire abroad.
It is 4 part of the Courser's policy to deny merit
to NrySanders where he has to admit themes.%t.
Somebody else, it appears, is always ready to be
used by him. In New York, London. and Wash
(Neon: some greater inch places himself st George's
Areposal for the special °fie/Noce of his ideas.
What a magician is George Sanders! At Charles.
too. this , ever.prerent genius was inditiog
Sanders' awful despateh. sottish made the dry.
hones quake in the White Sepulchre at' Washing.
fon, one spring morning, whilst the editor of the
Courier was no doubt In bed, dreaming of Doug
las? overthrow.. • •
,George N Sanders at New York stands with his
Party. 'but above party, the faithful ally and
vigilant sentinel, not only of the Demooraoy but
• of the whole South, and when be en'unds the alarm
it la time for Southern men to awake;
Public Amusements.
A31,011-STRIIZT TIFIZATRIN.—The season having
commenced, we have the opportunity of
speaking of the company and ,of the new drama,
" Vanity Fair " It bappens that we do not
consider. Dion •Bencleault, its author, as a very
surpassing dramatist. Such -a thing as en ori
ginal thought reiely intrudes itself into his pieces.
But he bas great taot, ninth talent, and en map:d
elta feeling for and knowledge of stage effect. At
the present time, these are very desirable qualifi
cations in a playwright. His new piece, " Vanity
Pair," is equal to the general run of hie compo
sitione, and hai been put upon the stage, at Arch
street Theatre; In a Very handsome manner, and,
-,:ocatioymeran - eXeeliesit perrcurrnion-4-__nir_
very ample ]-•s ..1 Cliire; - tate,*,,....__
pereotrtion - iii fun, Ls also as well fitted as if he
had been measured for the character. The, part
of 'Maxims Latour, 'played by Mr. Showell,
assures us that this gentleman oats be an artist,
when be takes pains. Latterly; at Walnut-street
Theatre, his acting was careless, as if he were in
different; to every portion and everything around
What he wants is • a couple of seasons,
out. of • his native city, in • first-clam thee
.tre—at Wallaek'e, for example, which is to
New York what Wheatley'', is to Philadephia.
Loral favorites, who always are applauded by the
gallery, because *mare local—if for no other rein
tion r are apt to play to "the gods," and thereby
becomitstilted, roaring, and mannered. Mr. Showell
has to avoid this, and be (menet do better than re
collect in what manner Mr. Perry, once such a
promising actor; destroyed himself by exaggeration
of velee and action, at the Wainutstreet Theatre,
merely to obtain "e reception" or "a call
from the gallery gods. Mr. Showoff is a men o f
..sense;and culture, and therefore we have' hopes
that Be will eschew the temptation of mere personal
pbpnlirltj and proceed, as he has now begun,
with' the sole purpose of winning hoar by sheer
merit. The nmonectien of Mr. Perry, (who is now
doing well, and stat Ally, in California,) reminds us
Of • new aster at the Arch, Mr. Lewis Baker.
ii notdevold of talent, but we pelmet help think
big, when we see him on the stage, of Mr. Perry.
. when • not In his best condition: swells his
voice and exaggerates, very much in Mr. Perry's
manlier, but 'does not inn into hie extra's,
gene. In a word, he may be called Perry-and
water, at times. As: stage-manager, however, he
will have ti good deal to dti behind the scenes,
which will keep him from too frequently acting
Mrs John Drew, the best stook actress now on any
stage, requires neither oritioism nor eulogy. She is,
all she deserves, a general favorite. Miss Nagle
(Mrs. Murphy) is 'always • respectable matinee—
sometimes more than that. Miss Emma Taylor.
with a pleasing appearance, elear voice, and a good
wardrobe, (we wish the bid more tate in ooetume, )
will always hold • fele position in a theatre --not
likely to set the Delaware on fire, and not likely,
on the other haud, to play any character (eiteeptit
be Dish) inn middling way. We warn her, in the
apt* of prophecy, that she will have to look about
her this season, for Miss Rose Skerrett, a new mem
ber of the company, is likely to be extremely pop.
War. This :youpg lady, remarkably well-looking
and graceful, takes the place width Miss' Angela
Sefton. was not able to fill last season. She it young,
but even now is a good actress, and bide fair to be
a decided favorite at the Arch. In the place of '
Mrs. John Gilbert, we have Miss Wells, in the use.
fel end old woman line—there is neither gain nor
loss in the exchange.
For that genuine artist, John Gilbert, we have
Mr. Chippendale, a steady, reliable actor, but not
equal, in any respect, to Mr. Gilbert. The minor '
changes and additions are for the better, and, on
the whole, the company is much better than it wee
last season, "Vanity'Pair" will be repeated
every evening this week, and it is intended to give
en afternoon performance on Saturdays.
Weinter-eraser Tnnarms.—lt is raid, but no
public announcement confirms the report, that
Mrs. Garretson will open thus theatre, next Mon
day evening, with pan Anglo-American operetta
troupe, inoluding Miss Annie Milner, whom) cepa- '
Willies es a prima donna ere wall known, Is
not singular that Managers, whether of Italian or
Buell& operahousea in this city,
,should persist
ently forget that Miss Caroline Ridings belongs to,
and resides in this city, and is areeallet and actress
of no ordinary powers?
itiaboaonon'a ealarlita.—During the recess,
Mr. McDonough, at a very great expense, has
wholly remodelled and enlarged what used to be his
little theatre, ip Race, below Third street. As
many as two thousand persons can now bo acoom.
paodated in the Auditorium, and the stage is now
slaty-two lest wide and forty deep. Mr. McDonough
will open about the 10th of next month, with " The
Wonderful Ravels," who lately drew immense
houses at the Winter Garden, New York, and are
now equally encomia' at Boston. This renowned
and everlasting troupe iteunder contrtot with Mr.
MoDonongh to bring out at least one entirely new
piece during their engagemeni with him. The
Ravels will bring with them the celebrated Chia
tight-rope performer •, also, Mons. Matthien,
Philip Martinetti, Julian, Ignaoio and Paul Mir.
pnettiOn addition to which there will be Paul
brilliant; Toledo, Tophoff, 'Andrew Lohnisn, and
Prates!. The female performord will include
Fritilee, Line; Windex;' Looiatinh, Copal, Deane,
Lehman, (Aleut, PhilllPS, Last season, the
'Ravels leased the Aesuiemy of Muslo,'where none
but the Aristoeraoy eared to go. At the Gaieties
thaymill play to the respectable middle classes—
in a word to the People.'
Oosurzersavar, Tenerna.—Wbat used to be
Weloh's National Theatre, Walnut street, has
i
changedlie *tine, and will be opened this evening
by Onfllefois i 6 SherPleY'S Minstrels and operatic
burlesque troupe, °enlisting of fourteen perform.
era,. and Mr. F. Brower. There,will be a nightly
obange. of performances, and good programmes,
Wled with novel varieties, are promised.
, ..ays, rut POLreloursr.—At Ooncert
Hall, Chestnut street, there is newAerfrustrg,
every aeerdas , this week, with a witkitile , on Mt ,
turday, st:saatterrunkerhe, slues the.time wheh
Alanronlitaktikapi bed no egeiel.'Sti ventrito:
althoush 'he iscitlvertised, NT$-
atinalYt*' ll il e tift*c " : 14 441 ;Dillet
founded Witiiihernemerowaniterldittetrwlit iifill
titles which de,not belong itriktest .- H. iiian"tilitith'
gifted, eHlful , isseniouti ihilappreaurain gantli• ,
man, with wonderful native', poems ferprisiagiy
well :eititivaied. Ifileareer la Europe bee been
very fortunate. He has great readiness and skill
as a wiserd, also, and we promise nob of our
readers as visit him that they will-be agreeably
enteitaig 4, ,
1./A:): V I I) :4 (0) A
, Letter flora 6 4 occastonal.”
Cooion <mien** 01The Frits,"
VtaenvaTorr, August 21, 1880
I notice the following paregrapb in the Briti•b
organ of the movement, nittoolled " net
'ainstatuttoti," of thii morning:
"TOM Wllllll9 FATTIER TO Tlll THOTIOTIT:'—•
The New York Tribune reports .that Mr. Forney
hulled a conversation with a Borten gentleman, to
whom Mr. F. 'unhesitatingly expressed his opt-
Mon that .Pettemyliania would support Linooln.'
There is no doubt that Forney's sympathies, as
well mills active efforts,,, ere directed` in the same
road with his predietiona ; andthe truth lane doubt
stated in the same payagreph from which we quote
the above expression, when it says that thousands
of Douglas! men will positively withdraw from the
contest in preference to lending their aid to Break
inridge.' . These thousands are of the Ferrer
stripe, and Forneyt of course; inspired the Boston
gentleman with this prescience concerning their
contra. If not correct to the fullest mama, it la
only because the Forney Douglasites, after putting
no a ticket to catch deluded but honest Democrats
whom they cannot lead entirely nista sight of what
appears to them to .be Democracy. will probably
go and vote for Lincoln direct. Mr, Forney will
accomplish his Olin radiation if he can. He is,
probably; as false to Douglas as he is to the De
mooratlo party." " • - •
Now, there is hardly'a friend of Breokinridge in
the South who does not openly and everywhere he
elers that he - would prefer the election of Lincoln
to Donelad. 'The whole movement of these min Is
intended to precipitate that result. This Is the
language of Many Of their orators. In order to
give your readers a specimen of the terms applied
to the supporters of the gallant Douglas, let me
quote trims - the columns of the Constitution of this
very morning. "A correspondent, in a letter written
from Alabama, denomioates the friends of Douglas
the Leopard Demoorsey;" another correspond.
ant, writing from Warren, Ohio, and ttfem the
t' Douglas mulatto and brindled 'Republicans;"
and the illustrious James M. Mason, of Virginia,
declared, at . Charlottesville, the other doy,
that the path. marked out by Douglas "leads
directly to the Abolition camp " Thu Byrne
petby of the Disattionhts is so constantly di
rested in favor of the Republicans as to be apparent
to all eyes. 'The kuttegcncer this morning cow
tains the speech of the Hon. Jesse D. Bright, deli
vered at Indium/olio on the 91st of July, which
repeats the vilest phrased against the Senator from
Illinois, and out Herod' all that has been said try
his Republican adversaries. Let' give nu
some choice specimens "We do not inter dto
here Stephen A. Douglas sad his cohorts oratomid
down one throats * * ie * "They
wish to place the Demeaned° party IQ the position
of a bucket tied to dog's tad, to be droggwd
through the mud wherever the dog moy chow to
run." * * * * "If you relieve tte,
fortunes of Douglas, and stand with him on the
rotten, Janus faced platform, you are irrecovera
bly lost."
Now,' what does all this mean but helping tie
Republicans? It is an smoandid way of doing it
but it is the most effective way to deolsre the re
gular nominations of the Densooratio party a nomi
nation of beltere,and then to turn the Modred/ of
millions of patronage of the Bodoni Gormentrnt
into the modest against , these norminatione. Poch
it the comment upon the paragraph of the paid
British hirelings or the Administration.
I am sow convinced that the dreaators of the
South earnestly desire the• election of •Lipoo'n
They intend to make his elution the canie of ine.
mediate withdrawal from the This will he j
their pretext. If they wait .for four years, when
the Denteeretie party is united, and a conservative '
man is chosen to the highest othea in the gift of the
Antericarppeople; they will seek in vain eves for
the shadow of a provocation to break up thteCon-
Weeny. They will be lost in the overwhelming
majority of sound Democratic votes in the free
States, and will be unable to rouse their people at
home to the commission of that act of salad° which,
they are now trying to force them to. Rely upon
it, they prefer the election of Lincoln. Now le
. their time to break if ever, and you have only to
read the columns of the Constitution to be con
vinced that the whole *theme, beaded by Breokin
ridge, was gotten up for the simple purpose of dis
solving one sisterhood of Stites. •
The Republicans calculate confidently tiron
being able to carry New York against all odd*
They argue in this wise : That although last Year,
by • oomblnation between tiat Americans and
Democrats, they lost most of the State ticket end
1 1k 1 r atta i t - ittin-ureeitinridge bolt against, soy dint.
lar fusion. They claim that all their heavy Interior'
counties will give larger majorities against the
Demooratio party then they have ever given No
fore; and when reminded that in 1850 Fritnont
was more than forty thousand votes behind the
united vote of Boatsmen and Fillmore, they reply
that largo numbers of Amerioane who went for Fill•
more in that year are now ardently. en. operating
with them, and inetanoe the course of Screw,
Ullman, and the immediate organ of the ex•Prest-
dent, (Fillmore himself), the BuffiloAdeertissr."
On the 'other band, the enormous growth of, the
city of ,New York, with He husreatied. population of
000,000 souls, and its probable popular vote of
100,000 to November, indicate a majority for the
Douglas and Bell electoral ticket of some 50,000 in
that single pity. Add to this the fact, that the
Americana in the late State election 'have been
able to pelt a vote of from 80,000 to 100,000, and
you will see that there are two Mee to this gaga•
tton: The Republicans, though expressing the
utmost confidence in being able to carry New Yotk
for Lincoln, candidly admit • that if that State Is
lost all le lost, and are therefore eenvassing the
State with uneiampled aotivity. All their best
men will be thrown into New York, and that, and
not Pennsylvania, will be the great battle-lield.
The moderate men of this organisation, hi pd
vats circles, complain bitterly of Mr. Seward's
Roston vetch. They do not hesitate to say that it
was betended as a Brutus stab, and yet it in evident
that it the Senator spoke at all must speak in
that way or be accused of cowardice.
As showing the strange medley of present poli
tics, let me aell your attention to the late remark
able artiole of Mr. Seward'a Immediate friend and
organ, General James Watson Webb, of the New
York Courier and Buquarer. He Seems to desire
to break the force of the Boston numb of 'his pa
tron and idol, and comes up to all that has ever
been expected of any party profeesthg to be friendly
to the Southern people.' Be tells his readers that
" the Constitution gives no right to the General
Government to abolish slavery In any of the States
or Territories of the Cahill, and consequently It
cannot confer Any such right upon any Territorial
Legislature ;"'that " it Is a paramount duty of the
General Government, and the object of its crea
tion, to protect the States of the Confederacy in
their right to establish and perpetuate slavery ;"
that any attempt of Congress " to abolish slavery
In the District of Columbia, without the sanotion
of the State of Maryland, wield be a gross breach
of faith ;" that " the negro is physically, socially,
and morally in a better condition ne-n slave in
most of the slave States than be would be in a
state of freedom ;" and dually, that " every At
tempt on the part of persons not inhabitants of
earth State to interfere with the institution where
it legally and constitutionally exists is a crime
against the Union itself, and that it is not only
the duty of all geed dame to frown down any
such attempt, but, If necessary, to bear 'arms
defence of the rights of every State to regulate
its internal realm as to it may seem expedient'
Now, if this is, in fast, the Republican oreedt
it is not so understood, and yet who doubts that
General Webb is an authoritative exponent of
publican principles ? Ho himself claims to be the
especial organ of Seward, and be takes a position
exactly the reverse of all this. What to the phi
losophy of this singular eontradlotion ? What
dose It moan ? Does It not Indicate the growth of
that conservative sentiment which is embodied in
the Cinolanati platform, and in the practical prin.
oiples of popular sovereignty and non-Indarven
tiger ? For if Congress can give no right to a Ter.
Mortal Legislature to abolish slavery, it can give
no right to protect slavery In the Territory, and
this, of tonne, takes the whole subject from Con
gram, and leaven it with the people them,
selves, Not less extraordinary, however, la
the position of Mr. Dreekinridge and his friends.
Rxoeptliti the fire-eaters, and beginning with.
Br eokinrldge himtelf, there Is no one of these
men who her not beep, up to a very late period,'
the ardent advents of this very salvation priori- ,
pie of non-intervention. ' And even now, while de•'
minding protection Ibr the institution of slavery
in the Territorteathey cannot evade the practical ,
argument that they can obtain no apoh protection
from emigrate ; and so here Is another concession
to the doctrine of nonintervention. Also, while
contending that the 'Supreme Court ham decided
that the people of the Territorial cannot legislate
upon slavery, (when in fact it has decided to such
thing,) they refuse to rest their cue upon that de
cision,_ bee**, forsooth, in process of time, the
Supreme Court may become a Republican benolt,'
and then may reverse the alleged decision of the
present majority. Thus it is , that on all aides—en
the Republican side and on the Disunion, as well
as on the part of the sell and Everett conserva
tism and the Douglas Dentooreey-r-there is an so ,
olarnatlon in favor of the much-denounced and
still-attacked doctrine of noa•tntervention.
OCCASIONAL.
RithiIILDING OF A °AR ifoost..Workmen
are now engaged in rebuilding the extensive oar
factory of Messrs. Kimball & Gorton, on Pennsyl
vania avenue. Thee structure, it will be remora
'bored, was deatroyed,b7 pi several evagsheainCe.
LATEST:
~tl S i k i . WS
By Telegxa
Front
fielljan?
iraaltraahreal awit; 31..--1910 members of the
Cabinet kid an mensal meeting, at the , State
Afraftmeritto:day, ComMunteationa - ors all le.,
ior tent ouhleote as* tent to the Presideat at M.
ford Springs. -
Minister McLane is here on bnetnese - connected
with Mexioan affitra. .11 is known. from the latest
advices, that the Liberal Government is extrectiely
Anxious. to know whetwlll be the course ritthe
United States should there be an armed interven-
Nonclifseveral of the 'European powareld Maitico.
The Were probability of snob United 'action, Riot ,
mai reeoneiliat ion of the Liberal and +Amok par
ties being considered unatteinablep ozoitee more
thin usual interest. •
- It IN further known that the Liberal Giorernment
desire tho return of Mt. MClLszet- in preference to
the appointment of any other person so minister of
the United States.
the Prince of Wales sn Quebec.
PRZBRIIITATION 010' 111111 CA4HOLIO BIABOPH-THE
=12522!
Quango, Aug. 21. —The Prim left the Governor
General's houge Mil morning to take up hie red
dened in the Parliament buildings. A drenching
rain continued during the early part of the day,
At eleven e'olook, the Prince held a levee, at
which 411 the Roman Catholic bishops in the pro.
views were presented, together' with the judges
and members a the , Legialatule. The Spentr
read the address, to which the Prince replied la
appropriate terms. The Speakers of belth Rouses
were than honored with the order of knighthood
by the Prince. About a thousand gentlemen were
present during the prooesdings.
In the afternoon, the weather having cleared cff,
the'Peinee drove to Montmorenole Falls, on the
road to which a dozen grebes bad been erected.
and the houses were dressed with Sags and device'.
The crowds gathered on the highways cheered the
Prince lustily as be passed.. At 7 o'clock in the
evening he returned
The grand ball rill take plaoa to-night. A num
ber of ',minion/I*M be present.
Railroad Accident.
DARING ACT NP - AN SW/INSTAL
&Awful?, Aug. 21—The four &cloak train from
Philadelphia yesterday afternoon, on the Belvidere
DeUmiak+ Railroad. Met with an aooldent, when
about a mile below Prenehtown, which might have
caused a terrible toss of life. The axle of the ten
der broke, hut it was discovered instantly by the
engineer, who whistled " down brakes,"-and pulled
open the throttle valve. •
The train wasjerked - olear, and the lives of all
the passengers were saved;
The baggage oett:teaa - turned Wide down ; the
first passenger earliss thrown crosswise of the
track; the eeoontl oar , was thrown off; the third
oar wee thrown completely lathe track and into
the wagon road
The passengers have not arrived bore yet. The
track is clear, and there will be no detention ex.
eept,to this morning's train, which will not resell
Philadelphia until 2 &cloak:
No one was hurt by the aeoldent, all on board
'he train miraculously. °soaping with but a few
scratches.
The Missouri Election.
lux conPvgruni OP ?UC Liam,Allman.
SD- Loma, August 21 —The Democrat thee esti
=tee the complexion , Of the next Boon of Awe
tentative. In the State Legislature:
Republicane 12
Iltacklarldge Democrat"' ' _ .. 26
Union and Conatitatioa Men 88
Douglas Demoorata • 48
Ten counties to be heard from.
The Atilonene Election.
Tortismrat, August 21 —Returns of the 'vol.
oast at the recent election for Governor and Don
ate:awn,: bald In Arkansas, have been received
from forty-nine nonntien. They present the fol.
lowing totals:
Fee, Governor—Renry M. Rector (Opposition
Democrat) 7,358; Richard M. Jobnson (Democrat)
7,091.. ,
Six oiinnties ar e yet to be heard from.
Sc_buylkill county Politics.
POTWIVILLE, August 21.—The People's Oenven•
tion, 'ebb% met here yesterday. nominated Hen
JametcH Carppbell for.re•eleotion to Oongress by
aeolatnsition
Daniel Kock, Henry Huhn, and Lin Bartholo
mew were pinoed on the leittelatlve
The renvention was largely attended. and eon•
olderable entbusiarm wee manifested during its
proceedings.
Mr. 13reckunridge.
Loutsvit,Ls. Aug M.—Lettere have been gid
dies/me from Lexington'by". Samuel A. Field. Jr.,
f Louisiana, on the authority of Mr. .13trookin
ridge. contradicting the reports of Isis withdrawal.
And saying that he will reply In a few days to the
danderous charges of his enemies.
The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.
BALvitiona, Aug. 21 —The reported aoonmota•
Hon of freight, in large quantities, at the Ohio
river tertninna of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad,
waiting :transportation eastward, is unfounded.
Notwithstanding the unusual quantities now ar
riving at Parkershtirs and fienwood, the ample
transportation facilitlesufforded by the road pre
vent any aconmulation.
'Bake Ball and Ciricket Batch.
14'6%4 Yostx, August 1 11..—The conqueriug base
hen, morph between the Exoelplor and, Atlantic
Clubs will he played fie Thursday
The elichnt halwaen the Mayon saleetedi
by the St. Omega's, Club and the Canadian eleven
will be played at - Montreal an the 20th altd 30th
Instant.,
.Ifirnati enesittit.'Angent 21.—A petrified Linen%
Wide Alake Club bee been termed at Unionville,
in facie &bandy. Litet evening they made their Bret
parade. It wise brilliant eirdr, end attracted
ranch attention and entbnelasto on all Mee:
The Great Eastern at Halifax.
liAr.rfas. ditg. 20.—The eteeterhip' Great rest•
MIL from New Ye* nn Thurediy. teat; arrived
here at belt naat 4 o'clock on Saturday evening,
end sailed again at 9 o'clock the next morning for
Liverpool. — •
'.llton. Ed. McPherson Renominated.
,
Caanarnonono. Pa., Aug. -21.—The People's
noloiererelovel Gonfeeetotk have onenlmonely Bomb ,
noted Hon. Edward MoPberion for refrolootion to
flongesse.
The Steamship Arabia.
HALIFAX, Aug. 2n —Tbe steamer Arabia !tailed
at 8 n'elooit We morning, for Belton, where she
will be due to-morrow afternoon
Ntirkets by frelegraph.
RALTIMOIE. Anirn.t M.—Flour to dull and droonina
Vtll ' Aa r aie n lta l l w r r - ' d e. s ; " il i te74;,_:;! i te 6 / 3 . 1.4114 at
S. ttlt
4.11; rittMl. waits 75a180 1 ,Prootti, an art . 's's ;
then! have Men feria satep at bblk tneata at 04 et Min.
Ranon--Bhouldara Stdea 11)4o. Wtttaky dull at
21340 •
utult 211.—Flonr in van , dolt at $4 000
t6O Whiaky is 1,11,1 ant at 17Mo. Provisions nnohanr ed.
Pork firm at *la 7502). Money unobanged. Yarohanae
On Aim York Cent. Prettatttn•
66 Atlantic City and Baden-Baden."
(For Tim Presc3
" A Traveller" is Woo= to oritiotse and quote
my - correspooderar, but ho will please to do it cor•
really. A broken am:Annan rarely conveys the
meaning of a complete one. "A Traveller" quotes
me essaying, "no human reason extols why At
lantic' City should not become the Baden-Baden of
America." My • phrase was; " I tee no human
reason why Atlantic Oily should not become the
Baden-Baden of America. at feast in celebrity."
This qualilioation of " celebrity" will convey a
•tiserent meaning from that criticised by " A Tra•
yeller." Idid not seek to institute a comparison be
tween Baden-Baden and Atlantic City, as to their
natural qualities, of whisk lam fully aware. Bs.
den is the most cerebrated summer resort in the
Eastern continent, and, as snob, may fairly
idealise and represent the most celebrated summer
resort in the' Western. I sought to indicate no
other points of resemblance.
The matter is' a trilling one, and hardly worth
the attention of your journal, but the record might
ae well be right. J It. Y.
The York Gazette and Fusion.
(For Tha Press.l
After seeing the great efforts of the Bon. Henry
Webb, chairman of the State Executive Qom.
reittee, to bring about a "fusion eleotoral ticket,''
t thought the following fact would be of some inte
rest to . the publio. In the Issue of the York Ga.
rens, (of which Mr. Welsh Is editor,) Immediately
following the adjournment of the Baltimore Con•_
!mutton, it Was stated that their sheet would sup.
port the regular nominee. Bat this did not on,
tighten us at all; for it failed to state who ho was.
The great inquiry IR, who is the regular nominee ?
or, who does Mr. Welsh believe to be the regular
nominee? And moreover, einem Mr. Welsh be
lieves that one of the Demooratle candidates is the
regular nominee, why doe; he labor to secure the
support of the irregular nominee? These are les
portent questions, and deserve deolded answers.
LATINO.
Brutal Prizil Fight.
TWIATT-PIVII ROUNDS IN FORTY•TIVII
(From the New York Express of kat evening.]
There waea prise fight between the two notorious
millets, Australian Kelly aid Dan Kerrigan, near
Island Pond, August 2L There was a large crowd
of the fanny present from all the great Atlantic
°Mee, but especially from Beaton, where many bad
assembled to see and take pert in Keenan'," pugi
listic exhibition at North Chelsea, on - Eeturday
The ring'was pitched about fourteen miles from
here. MI the arrangements were publicly made,
end no interference was eTperlonoed from the po
llee. Most of •the crowd left •Bostoa for the place
yesterday morning. and there were many rich
"scenes by the way.?' '
Tiao combatants were bath in fine condition, and
betting wan about even. Kelly wag known to be
an exceedingly game men, baying fought for six
hours in Australia. The fight was a sharp one,
and trill conteeted. Twenty-five wounds were
fought in forty five minutes, but oa the twenty
sixth round Kelly strook Kerrigan a foul blow,
tone losing the fight The prinolpals and epode
tors then made their way bark to Boehm. •
Thia despatch is confirmed by the folloWleg tele
gram to the editor of the 11/fp - per :
/SLANT) Pony, 21s1.—Frank Queen, Clipper
office, New Yerk.—Xerrig in won the battle by a
foul blow, Twenty-five rounds In forty-five mi
nutes. J. M. TURII6R, Reporter.
BLONDIN AND FAWN' AT Tilt FALL3.--Yeek
terdny afternoon these two meters of vold•alr"
notoriety performed on their rope. at • the Fella .
We are informed that e great many people were
present- A steamer bronitut from flamilten, 0 W.,
to Niagara, alx hundred passengers to witness it.
Forint seemed to be more confident, while perform
log his feats, than on the first trial. A smell
rope, with iron rings attached, was fastened to
the coed, and the endear) let himself down about
half way toward the bed of the river, and there
eremite& several perilous manoeuvres, to the fillet
delight of his audience, Biondi!) Ellen eahielte4
himself, but the greater attraction of Parini work,
act peonnimily M his dlsadventage. - 44 41 ° 1 . 112
wort:4*r, 180s.1 '
THE CITY.
AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING.
WHEATI.IY & CLAIRE'S AUCRACTREIV TIMATIIIte
4reh street , above earth.— " Vanity Bot
use."
dONTINIXTAL dinWstout ,. o * l o 6—,
Oaraeretwand aberuktr's &Nista; -• •
CheSillOt etrAIA, aborts TeitOph.—,
Madre and Ventriloquism, ni Prof. Lo, •.
,* :
THE LOCAL CHRONICLEILqf
IMPORTING IN PRIZADELPRLA.
HOW THE NEWS IS OBTAINED.
The reading pubilo, Who look to the daily tedseire
with the 'IMO avidity with midi* they tom to
breakfast, know. little of the .trouble incident to
reportorial life. The' mottoes of pettj police and
hovital osiee are frequently regarded with Indif•
(Greece or contempt; but the labor with which
many of them are compiled'shonld entitle them to
more charitable consideration.
It may not be amiss to stets in brief the charms
tem of the•partlee who ooileot the oily news and
the manner in which the collections are made.
TDB PHILADNiPNIA AND Till NNW YORE DIDANTiII
The Philadelphia reporter has not the field for a
display of ability which members of the tattle
fraternity enjoy in New York city. Cases there
are of daily occurrence, which call forth every
descriptive and alitlytio energy.
Those unique characters which delight the pen
of a graphic George roster or Charles Dickens,
are not in Philadelphia, representatives of large
Glasses, rather Isolated eases, which the reader
would not identify. Where we And a single pu
gilist, or rat-pit proprietor, or oraeksman," in
Philadelphia, the New York reporter discovery fra
ternities or organisations of snob' character.
Sensation items appear upon every band, and each
newspaper is provided with a corps of reporters
sufficiently large to admit of a perfect °besides
tion of duties. In this city it k not so. A single
individual hail every variety of artlole to pet In
the morning a sermon and • dotes polite oasts; in
the afternoon a graphic sensation Item and list of
ossunlties ; in the evenings politioal meeting, and
pet hapa a murder or a robbery.
In many Philadelphia newspapers, the reporter
averages fifteen hours of herd, uninterrupted labor.
Besides, the compensation for reporting le not
nearly so large as outside parties suppose. Ambi-,
Sone, energetic, end talented writers find it neces
sary to labor upon two, eometimos three publioa
lions. We know of some energetic members of the
P/311*(1810111 reportorial corps who have in hand
four to five newspapers per week. It is not untie
quent to see the tarns employee engaged in an af
ternoon, a monism and a Sunday paper. In
cases like that of the arrival and sojourn ofibe
Japanese, the same pen devima;end transcribes
orveral dissimilar reports. Great fertility and in
genuity of style is rewash' to do this.
onassirrOarron s ow lISPDXITing.
Ordinarily there are three typos of the reports
eat genus : the" Jettkins,! the praotionl report
er. and the fonolfai reporter. The, Jenkins is a
~harseter Indleccons to New York atty. Like
certain tropic plants, he &wishes inoidentally
'utd temporarily in other elder, bat about the greet
dailies of New York be la a permanent inatitation.
History does not record the first Jet:at - huh but it the
earliest Aterature we find traces of his handiwork.
fu times mete modirri Zia is of common note. Boa•
well wee p Jenkins wb.n he foliosied Dr. Johnson
frog, plebe to plane , rad ohronieled the minutest
detail of his domande and literary life. Macau
lay. was somewhat of a Jenkins when he delineated
the petty chareoferisticis ,of Belga* . and Jam).
frelawney warn a Jenkins—bitter and unprincipled
—when be pried into the merge transactions of By
ron and Shelley to perpetuate them in' print.
The Jenkins we regard as the most gifted of re-
porters. Le Inuit have the eye of se Argue and
penal" of a Shakeyesre. If " .I . fornaty," of the
Japanese Embassy, pet his hands into his pockets,
lnd matters "champagne," the Jenkins must de
lineate him In the set, and diva every variation of
vole,. If Tommy's hens is long, or Tammy's eare
are brief, the Jenkins is bound in duty to express
'hose Important hots. Be must hold a magnifying
mirror up to nature, and nothing extenuiste—
slthough he frequently retards
_feats of malice.
to the Jenkins the New York Heroic( owes mush
of its popularity, for gentlemen of his ilk some
tithes possess great desoriptive power, sod con
siderable °ability • In the. analysis of ohs/aster.
Witness In owns of the New York prints the re
ports of conVersations with Hicks, the pirate, and
in the Times of list week certain accounts of the,
three Africic boys taken front a slave vessel.
However ewe have wandered from Philadelphia.
Jenkins has no local habitation In this city. 'ln
the Sunday papers he sometimes appears, but with-,
~ ut the gravity of style charaateristio of the ori
ginal Jenkins. Of late, however, ,oeitain Indies
tions of the reign of jeakins - in this sober town
save been remarked. We may than expect to hear
the exact height in fractions of inches of every
I ward orator, Criminal, and olescrusas:
IMACTICAL aitrostosas AND 1P1N91117%.
The practical reporter is a Isseeeiiiiiin tai niws
asca,g— pia hatoss-23a410tallAleatuink4-rttii
play of taste. Be is generally a ptionopapho or.
t stern writer of feats. A single joke would rob
'dm of his prectleal name. He looks upon a flow
ery
adjective or a plain metaphor very mesh in
the manner a Puritan would listen. to an extorts.
d on of levity. Be is industrious, generally
and the only membefof the whole'fritternity who
lays up money. ; 'The Jenkins and the femlfal re.
porter are dealting individeels whoa. liven are as
vivid in detail and u Wild in destiny as those of
ibe stage hero.
The fanciful reporter deals largely in modest
~ e ntenoes end smooth adjastives. Re will heighten
torottlight profession into something equivalent
ro Mitten's des/Optima of the burning lake, and
,nagnify the appearance of folks going to church
into something more magical than a roue In Alad
din or the Naiad Queen.
That paper is beat represented locally whiob
gathers into its reportorial force writers of each of
these clams: for variety is the food of the reading
million, and a local eoluMn made up of the Oontri
helots of a stogie elm is very monotonou
We have extended what was to be bat a brief
article beyond its limits. As a general thing, the
reporter is impulsive, generous to a fault, an I
easily led astray. In no position has youth more
temptations, and consequently less promise. Those
who survive the ordeal of the profession are men
capable of meeting any foe.
There are in this city gentlemen who have la-
bored alma
,newspapeta as local chroniclers for
more than twenty years. They have lived to re.
t•ord the deeds of a generation, and the future
historian will appeal, when they are forgotten, to
the articles whloh survive them in the daily files;
they shalt live unoonsoiourly and unknown In the
pages of memorials yet to be.
The reporter does not cling to his proferslon
rom choice. When fairly dorneettetted Into"the
trade, be is, in some sort, a creature of necessity.
The Jenkins and the fanciful reporter are the
truest types of what is known as the Bohemian
character. They exhibit In childhood a precocious
talent for literature, and indulge at an early
period in certain impulses to rival the estates.
They pen poems and indite Actions; publish as
article in a weekly paper, and amid many articles
to the same paper which are not published. From
such petty beginning!' the impulse for authorship
Is strengthened, until it becomes the one rating .
passion of life. When the mind of the boy Is thus
made up, he turns instinctively froni his /Woks to
the great world of action and of scene. Be feels
keenly, the need of enlarged experience. Con,
treating Ida potty stories with the Bottoms of the
great novelists, he sees that the secret of their power
!les in extensive observation and the lied; of man-
kind. To what profession shall be link ltimeisit
that he may enconrege Ida literary ekiil, and at
the 8111nefilnly earn a livelihood? There soma to
he' but 'a single path—reporting for the daily
press.
Let it be borne in mind that the character we
describe is of unobtrusive birth and without
wealth, lie engages upon hie seat'-selected career
with enthuslaem. Every line of the day's report
ing is vigilantly perused in the morning. Ills re
Aorta are compared with those of other paper',
and hems in the future a rising career and an
opening fame.
Alas! that such aspirations ahonld linger
through a weary, boyhood, and see with
each new dawn the promise vanish and the bops
sloken. For nob most be. Net one reporter out
of one bundied'incomes an author. Not one Jen
kins or fanciful scribe out of fifty ever published,
a poem or a novel. The desires which engrossed
the whole mind of the boy learn to fold their pi
nions and grovel for breed. near the corlesaton
of George G. Foster, who was one of the finest
newspaper writers In this country, mitten in his
detaining days t
look in vain ever the weary journey I have
passed to trace the tilvarthread of that path, wind
ing amid the flowery wildernesses which in YOuth
I fondly est myself to tread. Poe by one, as that
patbwey led from the roof-tree of my father's
home, do the vestiges that marked its outline dia
appear, until all ere lost ; and my way, trackless
and uncertain, merge' in the indistinguishable
vista of the unknown forest. And so,
not without
having achieved certain portion of' that select"
which, in the abstract, I promised myself; and
with no reason to be direatisded with the general
results, to widish my ambition and my labors have.
thus far brought me, I find intellectually
speaking, metamorphosed. I am not what I was,
w h a t I meld be ***; the dreamy poet of sixteen,
whose humblest vision,' were millions of miles
above the very loftiest things on, this hum-drum,
every-day world, bee come to be the patient work
er et the laboring oar of everyday journalism.
The philosophio explorer of the lowest phenomena
of life end human nature, in those °hopes and
phases which in the old time had for him no ex.
totems ; patiently gatherlita utrtke fragments; the
taloa , Of every - dal life, be has song - ht, by the
poetical instinct *bleb fe the motive power of ills
existence, to invest them with the colors of his own
Imagination ani embalm them Ip the amber of his
'dull attention." - ,
The practical reporter's seldom afflicted with
these despondent reflections, lle does not need to
look beak through is long publio career to blighted
promises, for be never knew them. He frequently.
named' to proprietorstdps, and sometimes does
whet ts better•-Meares the trade altogether. In the
Mawspaper, as in meet smeatioass, the
WI tins poor, mild* the meehalle grows w MY. --
had we time, to ad, to whet
361110 W
.linnalag oat" of lout rernMengi
whiehOleddhtiVe individual' take by contreet
I Skin wlspie *sporting Wham of a daily paper, and
'employ sfe4be" to di the aeThal labor, while the
'major poilihm of the pay is pocketed 'by ' the coon
tract's.
The awn is Which items are obtailitlej* .ol
less importance. We gave an instanee' in Tire
Press last week, of the dlffimalty of the tasli t. :ltie,
Mayor's cam, the Central Police station, and the
Dottrel operating _room of the Hire and Polies,
Alarm Teleitrapit, miltairly,inadisvous. On •
fain: e*easdoil i wo - not,fliwsidate';‘t length' the
Wraßalsr of Working._
~SII O 4PA BEGfiIiNG gintaiioS--
P 16711411611111, AKJINDICiII4I.—reir ClUltatil are
mainformasi of the ; foot theta t !u . g , port i on o f
the'ltinerant !Saigon are impostor.. ', - St matter of
curiosity has often been the disposition of the food
I irldah. they .Obtain. IYi. Bite moon to belles*
, that snore than Cane hundred parsons eh wagaged
in the small business of earning a livelihood
Through the purchase and sale of these charitable
donations. In our weekly round through Baker
street we found, • few days ago, a mailer of small
shops, in the bow.windowe of whieb est dishes qf,
nicely baked meats. Upon one dish were sundry
' lots of veal, variously used, and of very cleanly ap
pearances. On the adjoining Aleiscre saw portions
of beef, shank bones, fragments of stealt.,, eta.
Thess ware cooked in every style, mad, Meek
at worst, delicate fragments from some restaurant.
We were told that these were the assorted lots from
pauper's baskets. Some of them had been per
ham partially gnawed byskiteben girl, end otttsql
had been promliononsly gathered from the table* .
of the wealthy. They ;re bought up at average
prices of 12i cents per basket and sold at prime
ranging from a peony to three' premien per frag
ment. They constitute tbe sole food of a great
portion of the detains of thew reverty.strioken
alleys. Perhaps, alter the charitable do Well
to bestow these morsels even . upon 'the mendicant
impostors. They dud - their way at - petty charges
to the tooth' of the poor. .
Eirr.SigsslON.—We underiltand that
there is Much indignation expressed in custom
house <dreier because of the removal of several
young men from the Jefferson Collage steps on
Monday evening, during the Breekinridge rum
meeting. Thirettlowa toot pleatithe Midst of
the eloquent and eoul.inspiring ramirka of Robert
Palethorp, Esq., and was bawd by the 'Janitor.
The youths removed threaten to dire Southern
custom from the college unless the outrage is ,ex
plained - and its author removed - by the heap,.
An ersplanadon trey be found in the fact that the
janitor could not base lima aware that a ing t =
wag'bele/ held. Meetings ere generally so
to conger of a certain number of people, my one
or two hundred. When ten or twelve noisy young
men assemble on $ doorstep, soil the marble, and
elatin , in violent Attar* their removal, or a call
for the police ,
_is a matter of necessity. This was
the Care on Monday evening, and the young men
should not lose their temper. Thejanitor certainly
did not know a meeting was being held until he
saw the morning papers. The mistake was natant!.
PRIMARY Evacrions or vas PrOPLIC'S Pax.
vv- = Cart evening the' Members of the People's
party met in all the wards of the city, at the plow
designated by the Mama of tke People's Anklets
nous, for the purpose of making general nonsina
ttons, and also to seed a judge and two inspector,
for mesh preeinat, to eonduet tkeiresd electrons on
Tuesday evening next, on whichweeedon one delt
a ate will be chosen to represent -eaeir•.pnelnot in
the Congressional Cionveistien of the district one tit
represent the precinct in the Pint Senatorial Du
trig Convention. and six; delegates to represent
the ward in a city Convention to' nominate candi
dates for all the me came, to be filled at the en
ruing fall election At the due' elections candi
date; for Assembly wit be nominated by popular
suffrage it testi 'ffemesentative dirtrict.
Anornmr. Foonpurio.—Child desertion Is
becoming very Common in our city of late Within
the past two weeks seareely s day >pleased that. Wit
have not reeorded one or more cease of children
being left on'door-steps end Wires places.,. The
latest cam occurred yesterday morning A ?Conran
wed seen to Mop In front of the door of Hese..
Hamilton, in Panel street. below Marriott. plies
a !whet on the step, ring the door bell, and then
run off The basket was found to contain a health,
male infant, apparently Wilt twenty months old.
The little atianger was taken to the Piret-distrlet
station.house. Christian street, near Tenth, and
was temporarily plead in ahem of ilmAridarr
who attends to the ebritnitiof the belt
SIAS `LIOMPAIiY FROM TBOT,,
• New Youx.—Niagers.Engints, No. -7, of Troy,
Ne:W York, Will pay a 'Mini; tilled'', on Tuesday
next, sod remain several days. They decided
ripen visiting Philadelphia, bat made no provision
for an escort to receive them on their arrival. One
of Mho r Seers of the company rtailiessed s letter to
the Sunday Mercury, of MIL city, stating this
feet, and desiriei that an mood should be given
them, mad a place to house' their engine , during
their stay. The letter was , published, and in to
Spare to it the Co/urnbla Rom Company, at a
meeting held on.Mondsy evening, resolved to give
the strangers a reception on their arrival, end
telegraphed the fact to them yesterday ,
Sevens Rain Lase Evinfewl.--Yeaterday
afternoon there were slight droppingi 'of rain. At
three o'clock the drops fell facts and , clam: 'OA'
in the evening. shortly after eight; the .shower,
mime down with great velocity. 'The rain fell in
literal greater The windows of henna seemed
to ber opened, and the early gad the latter reins
came gushing in simultaneous torrents.' The quit
lightning *bored upon the wives to quiets moose
orlon, and in the estarld eves of the 'Pollee sod
Pica Atenx.Telergre . gh, the hellastreek ail atones,
• -4, -
ismodivrivimai m air t it h MAY;
Slotted time, threztenedto make ,
@Great a deliffc
3f4ss Atasit
,false germ
of are wisroreated yesterday :ilternoon. between
One and •two o'elosk, by the starting el the State.
noose bell. ' It seems that a barrel' of turpentine
fell from A dray, a Prost and Motet dm* and
the magenta serdtered over the street. - A Isis=
ohievons boy applied meta to the turpentine,
widish blazed up and, reused an immense rooks
The operator of the Sieli , wark ration-holm
teiegraphed Mid a eteansboat was 011 fir • at Mar.
keg street wharf, and ken o the alarm.
Ten RIGISTRATiOrr Lavr.—Tho Board of
Health have entireties& the Health Officer to give
notice to physicians, clergymen, aldermen, mxtone,
and undertakers, who have neglected' or refused to
comply with the registration law, that all delin
quents will be proreented according to the terms
of the set. on end otter the Id nt September. The
hew provides that those who reform or neglect to
Perform the duties required shill forfeit and pay
for each offence the sum of ten dollars.
110SPITAL CASIS.=-A German named Joshua
Groom. forty•five yearn old. had his lett 1,3111
fund by being MS over by a gar* loaded with v
ans, near Seventeenth and Market strut ta, yester
day afrerscen.
William Myers, hilysteroyears old. a bleak • i
smith, Was admitted into. the hospital. having his
flight arm badly bided tat a mule which be was
shoeing, near Norristown, Pennsylvania, en Mon
day
Damonarq miss AT RID BANK,—On
Mondry efternoon, James A. Parker, eon of Gil
bert S. Parker, No. 1317 Spring Garden street,
was drowned in the Deleware at Ned Bank. He
had been Spindler ti few days down Jamey, and
en his return to Red Penh wept in to bathe, and.
it is eupposed, was' taken with the cremes. The
family le well known in the city, sod the red no"
Mliftlt will cart a glom over It and his circle of
acqntintenees.
OeXtillto ' or. Tun WkiWast. , -=-The Wigwam
erected on Siath street, above Brown, he the
Re
nnNls*n parts, ritr the tower** of bolding meet
itte,..do., define the ensuing State and Iratinnel
elections, willfb• fertilely opened en iletnrdey
evening next, on which occasion the People's Oem-
Paige Club, the plernablinmelovinothies. the Con
tinental" and Widta'Aereke . Club* of the el , y, and
other asonoietiene devoted to theltepnblioan dud,
are expected to participate. •
A RELY° or VTR '.IIIISROIIANT PATROL"
—Yosterdsy morning, ► quantity of onacli:trialting
eto-k and materials, with about twenty-right oar
ristres, the property of Mr Joseph Reek. were
sold in Beeline street, Third, below Walnut.
Among the , vehicles disposed of was the alg for
merle owned b 1 Stephen Girard. ro brought
116 50, and was re-gold - almost immediately for
$2O
ARFAULT AND BATTIRRY ON A. CONDUCTOR.
—Yesterday morning James Boyd was before Al
derman Welding noon the charge of committing
an assault and battery upon the rondnetor of a r m.
denger railway ear. at &woad and Rice streets .
The accused got on the oar, and when his fare was
demanded, refused to pay and steak the °endue
tor in the fee. when a general row • ensued. He
wee held to answer.
ESFROTII or TIIR RAM LAST NIGHT.—The
onlvert at Fourth and Christian streets, and .n
Third street, Our Wharton, *bleb Were an bad'y
damaged by the heavy rein on Monday week, were
emsslderably injured by the heavy rain, which
lasted for * oboe time in the early part of last eve
ning. This wee the only damage done by the rain,
reported upto a late hour Ise etudes •
NRITING AT YRS BELL AND EVEREST HEAD-
QuAlavase —Last evening general bleed. of- 'sert
neweee, addressed the Cooptitutional Heine party
at their Beadsuattera. Tenth andlibasttut street*,
on the prominent- polities', Wises of the day.
There was a goodly number of pewee in attend
ante, and the address of the General treated
much enthusiasm.
Ny.w BTUM Fritz ENOINN.—The Wash
ington Engine Company will house this afternoon
a new stem dre engine, befit 117 Messrs Poole
Bunt. Baltimore. There will be co parade on the
mealiest The new engine will be put In service
immediately, hiking the place of the large steamer,
which will be returned to the builders .
CONORITIIONAL NOMINATION By Mx Blell
/ND Beane" PARTY —Oa Manta, evening. John
8. Lilted), Bog , wet:deed In nomination br ass
delegates from the Philadelphia portion of the
Fifth Congressional district This portion eons.
prise mitts or each of the Twenty-gut, Twenty
seemsd, and Twenty-third wards.
Thareirnrure.--The man drowned from the
dash, of the steamboat John A. Warner, on her
war up from Ceps May, on Saturday, is supposed
to be a Mr. Charles Dougherty a painter by trade,
who resided in Wood street, between Seventeenth
end Eighteenth. He leaves a widow and three
children, New York' Markets of Xesterday.
New
c;i4td c sa ee of to bb at San% for PO;L,
THIS NINNTY.CENT PONTAGII STAMP.—The
ninety•Dentpostage stamp, °spree)? intended For Vt.ora.—The market for Stve and Western Flour is
the assommodstlon of our merehmits, is now for 7r4 . 1! . .2 . f .27 d lir imam lye nfth-mt partical.r change.
sale at the Poll • ogros• The centre of the clamp Oliv . see,"'"ef fi r rrorsi t Cr ""
Mrwße r g e t r i a g •
has a representation of Washington, front a ae to
rot- env, into any freight oniscpmentrouept at lull rates.
trait taken at the time when he resigned the CODs • mhi ''h , at Wimegt• mid too high a,
Winn of any Datil in
mend Of the arlikl , on doer shipments. the hoise•trece Pninhagge n i
n n y
' " I t t ""tiV 7 . cad !fob so as teen. raffle pranot
FATAL Akoninnwe.--yeatemitay afternoon, a vtia,„74l"e b ,ring. ma linDne ai n s l u r C
mita vetoed D. fiesta, while driving a wagon seer • •••
1---e--afor 'ZOOS dO ; Alio& u for Igoe t 6 ce Western
the Ts cony Print Works, in the Twenty. third ward, Omer.% or common to medium extra do. and dam
fell of and thawbeele peered over him, causingrklo tte rg il i sr le hr s.& of mgtrit t ralig:°7 0 44%
simnel isaisnt death. Aldermen DMA bald On rrltat • IrodVo r r 1121, 1 1'..;
it - guest, and a verdict of seoldeutal death were- fe.loaase loran ,ado ; atm avr Brawl) wse; ge o'er
dared. roe o ,o, lcepvea: MEW/7W for Peterabore oily. ea I.
Mil;4l bs for Richmond ci,v. Commie Flour is quiet,
MiIIETING OF CONSTABLES .—' 'he ward COO. eedy SAO ;nu coetiOnd inch:mime IWO abie at gSro
stables of the city held a Meeting on Monday eve- t a sleri e t n i= A n lof s a ir k r I JA F At l lr o al
tying, at Sixth and Jayne streets, to devise nfessurel is fittn. with sat.. of Oraraimate at IL Jersey at
for their common benefit and proteollem The con- glee. are ease/lees st •
Itsbiee complain mush of the , interferenee Of the • 1)7:-,,T,;,---„,7,1;:l'hhelt;rirZtVir=sialgt,ieg,Reis:
pollee with their business at magistrates' rates. which me principally teen for shipment. is rootnoted
ACCIDEHT.—A laborer named Loughead bi" hick rights to barite,. whtle some sed caches.
, • coh are a n t eß PO;OMMO hr lOlt I trade mid !ads
waa eeverely braised about the head lint trevninc lett, nrO intl-es. Receive*. 413 etwaelti. date* trim
by falling from a shed attacked to a dwelling in Jelled thus fir. 30 0. boarolef Rt 1 0. 34 . 1 " for red
oho c im b erlim i . l i e was takes winter Western • t. 311 fervldtextealsen, SLY fordo
Xeutnekr ; et l ike amber In
to his rmddenoe in that viedaitr.' /tki Pupils 0 core wield torgeomminuns to-day to
tr4thriiiita7VAßuar Ofttiat—Judge
oleo bidet — aellieshes — iiitleady at ton
o'olorth, tie 0 0, 43 6 . 4l .l o •An4titoill half Poe elms ,
o'elook, erbettls• 0 0! 01, H1 1 03 W 4 dkar, diargea
with
_Pairing oo'si,terfnit gots, was taken up. The
" 04 44 keep. a *tot is Ate southern part of the
el% and the Loney aliege4 sereaterfeit was
given In Annie. The.Govstantaat firtied to idea-
Ul7 the 0 0 44 sod sccereogly a verdict of not
suIR7-wae mitered.
QUARTER liennalOsta--Judger
Ia th.a,fratof the Distriet Attorney, Henry S.
Rigert.; prosecutes the plu. of the Com
' monwealth. The .. prime scats" will be eenehtdail
thle week. ear whisk the eerie of partial on bell
'Toile& Lsu plemitui guilty to a charge of steel
ing:a trotter or coltOtad seetemed Is eight
mmtha imptieentatrit.
.•tileortsiataLb elleged, w y qiurasd with
stealing • ten-dollar bill of Mr. Wm. Pine, • white
man. Georgians enticed Mr. Flee to her home,
and there rohhed him et Mt mosia. The ferT,
on the prineiple no doubt of " mere him right, '
rendered e verdict of not guilty.
William Tombs was convicted of a cheep of lar
ceny In stealing a coat sod a quantity of any, the
property of Robert Winer. - - --
CA7IIOII Immo@ was put on trial, charged with
stealing sixty-one Moadeof Iron. The property
was stolen from a wharf in the lows, motion of the
oft!. Ind- Saltitiftrds 'altered for sale to a black
smith, by *Emma. who bade companion with blot.
Immosothin ached *het be had loon,. aaaart l4
that the iron had been given him to sell. and the
blacksmith who bad purchased the iron said to the
°earl that it wee the veniality; imPremiall that
the Iron had been given 'him.. The jades directed
ao Other to go after the witness named by the sitt
onst4l . The °Seer returned without the vitae's.
The fury rendered a verdict of guilty.
Etutoos Is the man who was onaviatad, with John
Capt., of the murder of Christopher Soeban, end
sentenced to ter beagal.- After tries in prison for
several pone ;under this eentame of - death, both
were pardoned ,by the Governor, to 'ldiom it was
represented that the sag .had biome thoroughly
reformed. Shortly after their release Card* was
*hot dead doting a Armee'. tio‘at Twelfth and
' Christian street,. Now Barnes again makes his
a in the dear** Wiw charged with
felon. He am setiteneed 1.. months' Im
rims/mut.
Elisabeth Gheetanlield was enacrieted of a obergo
of committing an assault and battery upon a boy.
Sentenced to font months in the eounl7 prises.
Peter Pitsener was charged with eommitting an
assault and battery upon his wife, with intent to
kill her. - It seems that the .caned, while intoxi
cated, got let, an altercallmswith his wife, and tak
!ogler by the head be attempteilto enther throat.
Mrs. Fi loon*, exhibited to the jury the Mar of rho
cut In the throat The ivy correeted, bat added
a meounnendstion to !mercy.: Seatemed to eigh
teen months In the comity prison..
Virginia Stratford wee convicted of a charge of
meeivieg melee redo. Benham deferred.
Robert Reed, colored, was convicted of a &lenge
of emomittine an assault and battery anon Manta.
rat Batter.: tienteneed to one week is the couaty
prima.
John - Thompson was convicted of a ohm, of
stealing' two newspapers. Bent/seed to three
month.' imprbonment.
Charles - &Moray woo aotevietod of s charge of
ar»ay. Sontomo deferred, •
riN4licltAL AMY- CONMERCIAL.
The Xeier Market.
- • PATLADetantu Aunt X.
?be stook mallet ins dill fhia worming, RAMO=
'Ra t tici.d - shim declined X. Peon' Myatt, Mo
lnar idtlifity4 Saimling VOJI aUad7 at tha eadliat
firum of yerarday.- • - - - -
The week! y wino* of the basic et tie/ city of New
York, an Satentai. IL MO. present fa the ORM
us the follows!}; cheap, front the preensts exhibit Of
Ass, 11 t . ,
Inatentst in teems
erpsoiw. ... .
ars it elreabits.n. • . ...
Vectors" in esdnisit
.7 he Stowe ester
hrrOtteir :Own Avila Mawma Meat movement
Orr. the . loess and domande and wernet out on the
epee* avenue &twat the tan • eatiefented in on, re
viewer i k liormyke of the week's atovement While
the Mahe e'e dewy frog MC the Pah-Tren the ht
iyrip.eav 8170 NO. The. &spoilt Hoe he'd, steady. The
atestat for wooer moss Maumee et math the some
Wet sr er the
from
Of bestrew. on Paton:lnv There
a wod invoirr from the htolteeir sSwee4P' eerie on
trapnrart Wan ; swot or rho tender. et hank tat mer
seat. sad tbs mime Iran is the note on the street.
theath oseeptitate arsewltmade in favor of ..feet nor
%twat sod to tome f the o'd tenet lore wines egoaey
ts votantertly heft 'mirk theta. Them is whey deli Ami
te( in discounts.' of the beat ohms. outeide of heat:
the oferier dr- watot hill, coattail" restersts, and
"emote hat teethe kenkwattairdinatmettristr has with
short anesetaness at Cr cert, whris the general rule,
60 dots to 4 Mott thee fel. cent!'
- -The +amines of the-Paet6o Pailreeet rot rely, ItAl,
were 6147.104. en increase of elelle oter,tbe earairms
Corlett .1639.
The- earuhess of the Central-X*4mnd Corneae/ of
New len*, fur the month of July, MO. were
elte 373 38
Pot the SSW. , month butt r ear— ...... . 79.431 Tt
• Inmate tie oar ant.). • - 822911 SS
We get the following statistics of tne New York end
London elating beenee, from the New York Courier and
Esquire?:
" The Wrest
In
of .iaseketigea at the New York
eleatina hear. In fey one • day oral febtroh 19. Pet,
NO 515 Tel .; an, awe Fie
Ws week *setae'
Mar 4. 1837. SIM .484 - 776. The hawked - 7*er Itss that
en diet tuttober 1.1/11f. MUSS SS 'DILL
The imalleetA. moun t of einhanyeeln any one day
tine October 30. I‘l., Pa ; fey en. amp meet, the
weak eadist finvevat sr 2. 1901. 611,09.104.
.•fe Lontina.lbe almanac }ease. *w WS.had el-radY
attain edi amok }Reeser teat tar tkerenetial benidatim
'of .£991)11111.0110 skirling o. Z3/00 941.19411.9. it mar re
' eland on ittvans. saeareitme.
or rather is base sofas. - et ineweer. wok s masa of
trataaatiewe elan atteataugi 1910.1101 o•Rtees,9lll Ma
Onetime eanealty.' irat.strof properileotte saloon to
the late N9-esesirett for tkeltsi ikelance betas Nen
www, met a ftistitiog is wevonals the r ltnnete knnsa now
dioweeette ettleatately with MeV wes bairn woo; all is
settled by the transfer of. , ntos front ase mamma is
wailer [alba beeka at the Mask Zeglead."
Tale eleimishtbesetoessfellradoptedMee Inates,
•
u co
, ite f he sa tem ak i i aln i a bill e ima tet ree 4 - , --
eseit•oboola an Oa de ioaiktaak wield obviate ail the
rioksoml labor of amidst Ilk poky inky dm. The
Londol barkers hone the edisatege of es le this in
tteoee: sod ykForot Asir 'Nokomis of siz etdUone
sterling per dor wittiest SM isfareaatioa of bank Rotate
or Colo. Om avOidotellieeeeettre labor. lees of tote
and I riskot, yosmosktos-SoJoad Star the Pleat of
The G.Alcoriari4 a- *Wont of the amount of coal
tratreorred over tee tohrth Witt
_Redirood for the
weak sliding /most :111;1111b
•• PriteirgM7. Tontl.
Tone. t".t. Toniaairt. Teen Cwt.
114 1 / 1 4 00 2 MI. It es 1141 10 161 965 03
F.astßitgor ILAT 301.117' 111 • 116 706 16 P 7.7011 ae
Conned..-•.. 1,663 tO 61.316 CO 61 374 04
Mount Oleantet...... - 7174 03 7-161 03
PpralfNountak....: J,lt3 . 07379 56 67.5!0 06
Coleraine .... 371 07 V.ollr Or IVO( 4
BlN4vp /fiandnw.... .., 319 11-704 01 12 047 90
New York' and-l-ebmbi an 03 76343 1s 75,9111 14
North Benne Mount.. 1,11 1 Irl 66,617 US /2,744 19
South Ssling Motint- al 16 411 06 671 119
12 MAO 14 1 6.710 ot
Rig Black Cre el ..—. NO 06 60.610 48 27554 13
German 613 00 16.1110 16 311 84 16
Other BhtD9ere• • • 142 19 5.161 14 &MI 13
Tot.). 11,173 -
Carrest.nding we ek
Increase— .5,438 17 1,10075 07 772 15
The iron tonness over the Lehigh Vales Railroad,
for the week el - Aims Av.-test 18. wee Loa tons.
Previously frost December 1— 111911 *.
Toed
trrh, folovin g is be amount arena! minted over the
Shamokin Valley Red Pottsville Railroad:
T 060115,0 for the week enable August M.
812IIN time lu year.
tacranse—...
Philadelphia Stock Exchange Sales,
Anion al. ler
itiapoaen ST B. B. Itu arauveri. &KV Weald Street.
Pawl' BOA HD. Cit. es —..10144 Rue & -19
10 do 1000 Cam& Am 60'57.ve 94V
100 d0..0inr.1006 IN do .114
ixq ston X
Wsimic 54 100 ILO Pens Mini0n.......37f,
5011 do. .100 St Del UV Canal—. 4 19 1
10 liarriabu'rg - X...05. 06% 15 do , - •
10 do 00‘341 9. Union Bk of'renn..
0 PI Penns It• •-•-• • • lOW
BETWEEN BOARDS.
SOElat & Wtlltamgtß liiiloo Perm Min _
00 do ••.. Ltf. a Del Dtv CaasL--45A:
880307.11-SOLISD.
400 City fa X 0.- Jail 17 Leo,trlo. 0 Mk. ...... —.06
10:0 StadkikS RSi WS.. 73 Ica Pe c.... .. 4
new eo 115 ice vv,
.1019 Lomita/ Rdo '4O-'01941 ISO Pokey* Nom pit .63 ZS
sPo d o rm. .... 4tg pho.
4 do .101
27 do __oh,: 7
M eohatifes' ttank...2s
1) !Ki 1C
Id L4lol ri v .41V1
CLOSING PRICZB
Bid. As&II. Ri.d. Ask.sd.
Philadelptus So- lOW 101)4 { Elmira R....vra1l ..
Phil* is IL.— 10114 _lgg, El 52/r4 74 73.....70
Pbils ils...nwir 4.0114 /yid 14 —. L . 1334'
P lc Int otr l ß 14111 CM N.,- . 5414
P
2..,.., 23 .151 . 31. Lab Cl it /V Porls.4l 42
IWvis '714. 514( 501(ilorth Psalm 8 ...10 1 4 0 .fi
44111 int off SOK ft Pastm. wO4 —. 7 3, , 74
Bead mt Oa 'llll.- 711% - -11/V Pen- a R 10...10 , ,i 103
FrX, hi . - T - vii. ti 11 % Ptak[ re :,:, i l t: ' 11%! :). ;4 2 :04
*or Clan dreg /NI ST See /15 Ted ate it 4434 50
Zr 04: 1 11 v / u n a
0 . ,.tt 1 7k 2 71,U t i V I Z t'bri i i r t :14 9 '3 ;
1
1115144171havlin as storuns *. Puts . .. 11 414*
t 1 , 05 171X1iv841/.- , 141 rem & enates...2l34 15
deo,. 3.44 psi-. 137,„ 24 Oben & Wentrt.- 5/34
Ethltralit.... ..... 53• 53i
Phil adelphia Markets.
AltroCST rt—Evening,
There vim some little import demand for Floar to
day. eaks imploding about 400 bids fresh-ground in
led as. mixed brands. at e5.314e537.;i: straight tot/
are he'd hisber. and S lee bbla Western extra at 1110 i
0570 4f, DM; mostly at the Comer rate for a straight
brand. 'Fee mates to the trade have been to a fair ex
tort within the above ranee of otiose for aUDerfine and
extra, and - 484600 4ir bbl for fatuty brands. as in
await t• 14ye F our and Corn Sisal are but little 311-
Quired for, and dall at 'tenon* quotations.
. .
Gnant.—Winat come, in slowly. and meets with a
fair demander fell rater. bat prime lots only are want
ed; about 8 ors bus have been taker at from let to Liao
for red. and 137 to 1110 for white of common at d en - e
aualige. Rye IS weard. and Ste bus new sold at 730.
co r n maintops doll at larno for yellow: about 1 000
bite rair Peneeylesniarm at the former rat., O ata are
unchanged. and about 4 NO hot new Boutheni sold at
ag e % doer t old are bold at ret44l.
Rase—Further small Wee of Ist Ho. 1 Quereitron
have Men mede at 1,11,1 to jr ton.
COT7O.I‘ re more Itetl"s, and zem bales have been
taken at rither better mesa. ranging from 1134 to 110.
east, and tent months, the tatter for middling bur up
lands
Gsocsitra* isreq Diet, anal:males of any consequence
are reported to alter santstiOES.
PILOVISVsa.—Very tittle 'Mine, owing to the finials,'
of ho'd.re,whotra,re Wong edvarmed rates for R. , er n and
• e:ted }teats Lard ta tia:l at Win for }lever and
ebeele ore Mood). the former aching at 11er130
pecked.
Pigns.—ii bout RP bashed& Timothy sold at 181..yeer
2711. and 400 bushels from reeond ham. at 83 fp , Wawa..
NO bus. Clovereeed ale r mid at t , ir lb.
Wit is mare. and firm at sixemio for Pennsyl
vania and tbio We; werzoio tor dtudge. and Z/340
for bads.
14 497,390 12 5C61 MI 06
el WA% Oa 377,01111 OT
Weak. Year.
CM 04 113 323 le
4 813 05 93,p114