• „r 64 ,..8,400:‘ 1.1 t 41 . 100 $ll, r " mars ci Ryon* v 4 vg -'iNikois.zwait* ••irct. lignifek i l i k aP O nliglir • • .014,7•1•, 1141611 ii f 0111 :: ithE, vuza:i:L . l ,ttv ntome. - -': . 41 . 154 A! ' ':4 ' I iik . :s4 , •`l - i11: . :75.3 1 ".,:i a l' - ` " ,. _.__ , ,Ntiiiith , ik: , nit 7 Y :44:, ,i ' ' , .'inktionliiiiiisioni)iiiitik ' Id* - , . A ._ . : ... - . - • -I :tifii:ileicA4 Otailis , • - !111it''...! "7- A, • . • ' , ' .'llterrifilititii: eiti " ' - A. ' ' '''iiiiikritlaiii , Ti' rriltf=t44l=44-" - 1 *Pi - SO e 4 1 4 1- itliii A ifilifigi dt lasuM6 — .100 4. iii .! h i ~,., * l v ith ir i ! s a t lonT'Cliriii 1 iiiin lidiikotie die= - ' ounnional.., Viiiii, , t - Mkoile tbii , ?'6o . , - r`dltiilli Lam* spa t!of, a,, woOrgioiriorliart; tog biiiii' ' ' -ailiOdii k ,iitiein'tkin*F,mi and of ' ' , Nis,i l. o) 4ll ( lll Y4 s iiiribe feu. ' 4 - ' ' " ' ' iiiiin•iiitidtditiosel w la e g ata ' ) 1- :. l # l oo:*oo4,'at ti i ralgsar ,: iii , idnilVOttliwttornorthi 'Witg iiititeiiiiiiiiii*tia iiiidif I widoVidikkafiz iliirledeidioloold* 'suittetav lit Off 4 . 4iik e 4itittaiim ii- -. '114 7 1406101 1 . 464 haviiiinniii a iekeivaisio, 450iroatiiirig , - tbsa - a pp** oltaW67:11111.14W *Wader , osi tipilibliiiiiVaidnitt:#ool. (Mug Oisiii,t wail Oovitioll, ed, to Isiiiii7-VanNiail Oka* on so. .oast Of his 'loviiiWiiiiiiiior idearniiiiition or 1 inooliligifihoinonte 1 114' .- litiii these itoir‘*4, part ariiii lw illit i Nioin — ar dik i i iik i t : •Ago** youusret Son; and ' AAA*: tio"_ - ainogi"Ot ibi, "I t ik,th!= c l 2444 ll t o° l , t#:! sag atf, tifnB 'AO** re; . 0 -'4 ... ,, a_ .... 1146011ali t 911141 : 44u : 0Oiiiimii.i4ianv ' I abrillkAiL,t l :lll l lo* ' .2, • *Me isitiok t ' 1. 4= 1 .. . ' - !. . - *l*l"* _ Rod - -- - W**( l 4t 6 iitthp - Oni*l•K Kara doobiod on, n a Oainprlnloo, lnelinipo is 1 "iiitllPt r i,b7 9 1 9 1 ,Parif t A 4, _ . 'fi'..:•*:terf, fore up* `, . _, , "eddiOnatloOokie_oriFio*Oc* 4. ' is doniiiii.wboikinpitido plopoood oonipioisioeirill - iniano,l,it !ond!oggf? ~. : , ', ,• ? -:'; , : -.,,,- ,r' Irtf* *Witt to: menee today that the „ vaini t iw w w w w, i w o wigwam_ tiast;,, , A.t., I raft!qii a / 1 14 0 8 1 . 1 0irslinthat Ib. Kim' of Peeeptbk*VitAttfPbbAbttieblifel elnterdii7" t d" bbAnjar , titnntiokb7, l 4 - Disithit, Omalehtl4 , lll. L , ,Bonteferi; elytieintni of the•ltilieetatleasseM, Timative Committei.' feethnltti; • _ Yset aj at West Ofeitei,l/in.lfebt Timms wee "eilisowit a 00,0 1 41 b.l; the ItoPeitilbati' MINIMA :geosfitte_eskinAttatti fonts., elaranettlneptem. 'llsetwennomes tspiwiented Delintimpleiniveltaiter-Istantlie. John Breeftiail Utai t iaalaatedOtamain *sty; bet the prwar~ we. too y OVA_ Anfiefe' /Cfleer tiatimAjajthh, sp. tiliteepeased is the matimmetoted smut Pitokit_e! 4 ` 4l- ' Wilk/ 'TIM Poleittit flak(kikeltitrint :rte r it , tha liar4Pa:;: BorA . thiAiiiikiwi *aid lint Ailik4 o ft gientsb , solos. Ttil Moon was shining at tie tune. The phenomenon Meted. WM *boat one; o'clock this mosithiw ; At the tfewrOf this -writing it is eleitly ;4 4 0 1 40e.frOit 10 ;: 1141 : 11 • 1 0 41 . we. retile rt* , .411 * . alOaral * O . • • AZlNlitheiem• swim Peedent on Wil , aadaya litteryas received in Wads/neon from Wffitua L. Alum: at , Mesas; tdattait um he will einitt,NintCalm*Lthn tiMt*7 1411 (' )i i#Ailettlit.ig put* ',oft* _tpr. Forliwits*imPin‘entil 'Uri" Mose of thilleskitothil eentest. , taneseirtli be greeted tilesividlethey detest ate P ril " l l4Wat Id! - Acittiew JAtirwijkitft w or kl*A44;l o *l l 4o 4 ,aa*_//o , 4ticala, autettmiskiiiirpeWsLase•wethemat to matte that Jade* Danko, sir hi. reteVat=toAiis State: * lll a t =reA 2 44 111 t: Ointli;NOtit 1 4 bsptsmber' AMA* B P h iliikat lll 4 6llo nliNikalloal at Bonier 0:111. 01 T, f Trafifitel iii isinitai iiiiWith 4411404 Oak innoute tho , Astit ,- *Pneop Mehra m # 44 o ***9 l 4olol4*,*l/044)A141: sankised-AmerfteteLT WeAkine..itsien , eitekt reeoblietk*lnsilk(lhnonhiwatliirmisi. the 0 1 0 11— Iftl 1 / 1 111 #4 1 Ibb"41140 Ni t l s l lloh lll o 4 **Sint l4ll 4 l " l o4 l 4* boa dotwenk:Mnaleohtbxxii.Ammiit *4** ; Ineseserciiiisresaiit , PastieleneW Ammo ;is *my f et1 004 1 1"1 1 40• 14 7‘ 20'0 44 gaiti'mnik w t lat . -. 8 4. 3 14 04 0 1 0 1 40;bk ***if- TM** I•.<, ,tvA I..TU'i IVltio Paseo* Waleo:li rlr.vi ,-.-. WI Ale thOiPlthe*eieoiftheVth*** th` ', the sl4i tbudi f sitirsow iirosimo**** desitoxiidWistikworoW inei4t.tiiii***: toigidir**4o6l: thet-Vii 6 14 , e.: 1 ,7- , ..9x0fr! _._. ThOAPtieiset,ol:4oetto Lam appear t 6 loan - bat* ffitiNkliiliVitt ' - iltkerliellt . 11 00 - 10* theiath4lsththlithOithieViii - 7!, - netielletei, to ;ititr , todis,:etnelttog,otiniiii. v ito-, aretieegflPo l 4o ll ootiieth4thiji, 3 ,lo dogrel** 400 5 ,;44 4 :***41:11104: thNivenirse#:Viiit!i!o4? awl 'Obi of the ' 0 4 40 **Ifi:V70i* lik. patiiiit*Oheiii.**ltiiiSlit*seii e 4 " l *A l ol"qtoletneri.!•# 4 4 l ,o;f4o l (4l: o - .theiggthWifthiet*deli4 2 4.o4 6 o4/4 tiotikootto Aiiitaittaiklectotroht.`, Hie , ro t i, ibetOfet#;_jiltrii*e.*tktha : O r Oit r e- , Prjaithieoi**4lo,4 4 / 4 0:-.41#04.gtoicw dipw,, !,gooostreleg4lol*o24#l7 lie d: /ge. efegieildrOet o 01 114 3 i *A P l iiqi voiirito 4 i ll l:oeOleettsiitilertitntie4 EU W 161111411636 lieolitiOlteil Picolie;tioar-' *toil *9. Xll*-4,- theitt - 4,iii#1%,*..:41f the ieetkiel,'eeiCie4 bei - theeote i.be s s,:e4ateieliit dim - Whiled ifrith-tho !Volley *WWII*: Dots: am , ad 0 1 4 0 1 7-7 f .z.--,: 7 . A_1 , , , : •_ ,-. : r; ,7 •..t , -,tr i •1..) ' T hl ik 43 4 l o l # lr * i **o l ** griiliteliiii**4 - 410;_ii*Sely i* : **. A t * C ijk*: l oo4eiki, - 61014** 14 Iiiiiii ,, i , ' 4 104 ocii*** .. - ; T WIt''0 1 ***10 011 0 I to eitW i thke bick A4o%.**o l :lo l l l o4,:.: i iii:r4o- 11 0:PAiiitee:W: j 36 . OPP eall. f t6 " ii 6"i i iiiii iii4 , -**1 4? ,4 NillitlaniliVii/ 4 .wsierLto- the - 4;iiinviioi• I I I SaT t a lM M . 41 1 .01 1 40 2 . 11 = 11 4 Mt Or~ii llli M . ''l / 4 = 1 " 101111 Ar i k e istil i p *Cil t ." ria .,.. .: rig . 1411Wrbati wt 110- . 4 4 46 ,10 Gax liali t l* 7 ' 7 7 77 , 4,.y.1.4 4 14)11416440/* gook • ' cUuotj 0114 1 Okek4efeltheeilaositeiwoee estkekt* - 1 rf , AP 9, ,k,h ee !•lo, o W;' llo so4 ll: :' ' ' ' :- ;# o4s 4'*i i WNW Aii*Pitsliiiitlii;434.l,44,!illk I,loll***3l -- ,0,: ...-.'. , v.tit, • 1,94 . ,thiv T r ostniisk: t,il,i, 4***l l :o 4 llo 4 osV;tkewli*.:4,ii AquigA;i*, j(4010424.0i45t,iii* ''#(o 4-40 -Pt i rth i r," oo4o -', l * - 0? a, ligis#O4o4 l o 44- * * ******** 17 T 7 Aiftiiiiiiil44,o4 l 4 3 11 C OH)* cd . A .-_#*.: ItitaftpAirP43,6lokolf,l4 ._: . :' , 4rAfgtrglij ..0 0 00‘ii,** 4 - 4 10. 1 #04i:1!-i lowar g re:APC o l4 .l - * ' A TOtilig#' '"'" , , ,„ ._., .+s I, ,4 . ' 41 1 41* F2r1 4 ‘ e4 " 111 = h doe* 1 •' " 'At ~ Niv.h , .:7 l, P?_: ~,- ,N gk t :The AgOagy. of Vice President Dreg*. inridge. c kTtic moat ardent admirers ekthigaeatakek, noldidate, for the first Mice *Abe 110 nilka Musa people cannot rii* ;i*lly" And • .*MY the helgthYAP o A,~ilatO Jef the Vice President, n 1 Ida Ingten, Kentucky, on Wednesday last, with- king that he has fallen short of public VkisPttellon, _and_ below his repetition as a • :thilkter ;ird surneaami • lairjer.-: , -11 t , :Arouati d im4p4logi.4ld lie awkward a**117.4t,13.4311- hY:daPrecating. the pub-, stdelii,Wrsiti,,TCfpiee'with the, Meat illo calgi 4.4 agai n ~ saai, that the i AlaitaiiraWailli the P9 33 /9" attic party has been predireedbi hire, and 44 by At phiuVonists:- Nor ispintiat 'kr ' pla00.1108.: aiei—aaett AO' se, eag4r," *slat Pesttiou , st iffaieqififtreavall, tbe ipeiels Wine Mal **MA proof et, the. itrhiler-hedietes being the enemy the Unteni - littleforcedter admit thst he it atiPPaite — dlii the tlpen Mnieibis'Of die Union. While; he pi, 'emir( hi'firyor ; n 4, ± oltritatuttOeld gualan,4*,he it ; at - thiliesd of it Conspiracy, the wrowed,:purprei yi..WtriCh` is to Mike a 'Minority control, ibei maialterlet—the, States, 'ieitlito pervert Um Coestitution from,its _true 11114etst D by fate:WA interpretstionso his not intrigued 'for the itindintitin,Mid while -Mtn:4100o ex -7..4i hie questionable conduct toward Mr: Gerintri4hideo,4ldenio, is he'Cannot deny, *Ow ,friends went to Ohaihratorr to=advicate.:ol alettlegtee and daft elk - charge -was , :publicly made, against therivirithe' Melds offifm,litrruinvin the ltrartierh* delegaticei. •- • • . !hat, fiellig the gallant • lsopliioCited d i4; • the - Yirsi'Prasidenti ihould WM4IO hitintliatten," 'Bo*A*o4;44),:ti,:)3x,ennipitotathiiti like :tikaftei. , ...hed. , , we l ap tie mast' t hive,•hit whini , snub s, he de-, ,llherately decla red that Judge Coronas was , itat 1 . ,-isgelarlY nominated• for the Presidency, Baltimore• Convention was de 4eirli;net niilY 'cr fithe:T• SPhit 'Of jetties; but ' :ienne' ''Manlirity." . ''Prayi Mr. I,hmokreitimis; - NAY' 4111" 'not Your disunion "delegation" •at ,Oharleston retire when, the iditform of principles enunciated by Judge ' Doriaraa was lidd'doWn:there inasmuch' as it Mina Warne, Otthat subsequently 4enidet at Baltimore 1 It ought to lime been enoioi 0 'pima**, it.,i144, they, remained A:dotiventlono aftei haiing by their presence Chirlestort;• yteldett to the platform, only lii'cider-te,acrxMplish the defeat of Dorrowii failing in that, to ids& up the Deane undie,oigaidsatloin. pityou concealed , this Set in erdiet4 iruilen'inedihe entreordiniry Prifnises.upomirldoh you bate your apology. Vii a ;Wedded le unfortunate in most of hhioiplerratiorni,p4, ticulirly in thit which his retinal to vote for Cass , and nue in VHS. Nett he favored Gen.' TATLOX tor** Pneddency in 1847 as an indfrudept Snandidde;outdde" of the regular:. Demdiatic W*6 l / 1 010n; he bowsaws mid 4iikhis,cai rind this pretereuteno_ftwaa to "„jo hunting'; *tiredly of the electlon,,he frankly admits. ,ta "milli% When Ai politician desires to fridittermien his party or -Its rand'. `dim* he' Withdirrirehiterielf to pit some such ;pursuit that Which' led the young .terr. tuckian, from the /reit:politica battle fletd.in" E'er - Bat when he comes to explain ; his connec tion 'with the 41aziWub-ifebraaka_ bill, and to obliterate *die in . ihvor of Popular soveielgatf,°De? Is s till more unfortunate. 'Boidlahlele, l .4.deastna" in fivor of the ggitt s of the Territorial - LeeilliOre to abolish or iix****44.4**Axor*teor* *paled-, Ipina,le for, the fir 4 F 4 111 ;7 41, ellistAinis - token aewn .by,coingetent repeiters—declarationx d own •• distinguished Democratic! orators, and deelaratione so well understood 'by the '(iabf_if iielergethitrintiii recent period Kr. I Ibutoliiinoeir Was isippOsed to be among the cliereet ..**** of 1 41 1 1* Sovereignty: ilteinPetto the con- —#olhesarcoatiiiitatia'illorrhothyre , kit* the 000*p:oldie Isipitrantelt dispinnetiffirtofthetrAt4diates:kticies not Itt:::Tiftsitnteri,: - Atfewi•thet: the grell4 hLf °lll lo 14CORIPOrtOl' r e te;isdanit thelostitutlen etilavery-Inlhe letAte - r,tee- - elta-uoffighfle 'of the people there '-favaidt*Alti,.l3,lol4o.flitirt,/ Am why do' dose f Because, eVert2Jl **Alleged Wier iiitot-A0 of that Viani, ll • 4 ever - ivNe4Pait :end sterniStesiS anthotityakateessfully. denies,) theArtSherft Stnifiedindste, heti*" ?fight:well ..*ltert the kuptaute.Ckrurt shiliboreorennined by 0104 TC ? I firefdanes'end, Affe preeeht jetity.iime senidituto Minority,: 04 will be 4,ooedihi:-)delpotiny tivelshin,reversing that oPoti l lOgOlki Refte*ehtees now Ifidrolinacuspieiti in right, however; and so decided, Shei irettittsboitud***t slaVevy In the Teind 7 ler le* zedetreft , the ToPokr Wend; efiellf.t.lbfa,Mirltrofirr,heing sworn Tetegterito: 4l o s ftitffroSeni- * of . ‘ trzpid tits*, is also hound by its tetthJe; ett, iPell'lthe:,chnitttuttert' eff,. leter towlibytheattehest, Judicial authontY, and iu SitithttlL,P* 13Pfiti:*! 1 , 441- 'exercise- its "cis** thia onhi r effits of slavery in the Ter-' Andwhere does thli folly lend - put ;fa illatienifen;eardeston, and* dual disruption stf thit.CfnifeftracY f If Oongress ,ftees not). will:rets'exel4r the power contended for: -by MC lintritti, then ela , Ste liot ifeWo'hxtellthehtd , the loge of OW •Pftefltien 'etet.telefftetti,to Almon! -ttui fi004:0 Toclimr; .11301-7;*' other Stipperteraiwhelay that when Couiress'edildl fag SkildiLthele:thitiss; our Goverratient- is an ' 344441146 e: i iiWe'd'fieot*; - aftfl„ 4 .04. South' ailmtosvainahilludde of- the_disfon't • A/oer ~.the`: `Yethrig'',Vheit:;Treldent is willing to Stand upon tbls`PlatteVin we Cannot "Lk , bht It iyr,lll4 - or", and.nomes in fearful "Si'6"l434'i3f h i ft*-1 4 e 6t to!**Iftion of 4erriktosl9.4o444"*Metitlipict.: We :Imo. that: Wiffreunite; habit tit: Mr. lianoxisumOsi, Ipja:beteq*,,ll6,,hgsfainti, die candidate " the Irte1 1 0!t et''shf'Ffeneiri while, contend. tut ;thetlfettpla; of the' South clad take theft slaves Into the Territories, aid hold them that In deflation 91 the local laws, to say that he .0, rAkeolirmiid",fer,the meads. of Cori. ipearlonal promotion, but was *lll*towalve ;mthedTi, l o, Mete efort tkoalleged Aupreme ConnS.", tut hoW, We *ern* Wife asofd the :direftd iiteinettee hidheid`.up ht 7.4*cif sufl'Rtirrri, and be true to bls emit, to.atiOTort thePonstdetbiii he'pre *eel to ittnisestusi • . . • Oilier ;' •,*oei 4l 44 4 :P9iien ' end • his rfi;have leo _.l upenitr,Dincmsinan j*his 'sttpiiteters Ater.Distielcutiata, or neither Ai INNr/ !Fin the way for Distinion; ti*ittterkt: :mss t#,,CoinOlidate,it *Heiser Patty upon a, 1 i dillieue i 4 006 * al; -bY : try* to. elensie I;shwety.abonwall °lberian:es. I: ' The' , lion . Jour J. Caritimat - is one - of I :these, and' not the least pert 01 the duty of the . I Vine Preiddent, :,ois Wednesday, was' to .st; I hen*, *perry the gigantic blown of that treat , 1 oitointh.-, p•o r: - sr. Dartniernmilias always to*, the PeisneidDiend*‘;Tonirtf: Swims ewer,. 2'o4' 4 4 ,8-* 7ll 4*AstArisisocuted tar and It As! eleita,see, 62 4 when 1 0 . Ostreasnent is compelled : to place Ifr. Sancti iitivon , in ther Mitts& of: is Distudonist it is c r air c tbicluce, " thaC , venerablo - "conseriative lesolit-leffenes ti to be his molehill i duty. to raise his hithd - t the - parricidal attempt of I the men wild 'ati ridliititinder tie - Secession tt. _.,‘ - ,• ~- .• r , ,_ _.:, • • .7 : 'Aft :...4:l4Wfleunn, / veers., ~, for the old-line Mike „Of • Kelttu4Y. Miiiti '44 • ' iPlP,Aigni - Lis , ; Imaltillenditpoirthis mitten/Ohne, I'M me taliketment is backed sastiwidorsed by some-of the- blest Distinesits in ,that State. - No won &Obit hinAlionsittMeressa should quail before Pilikii* - 1;1011' Ilt baiifeei to it 4 feet ! , *; of 4 6 04 8 itigit:',irliik'ciatiPelled to • en-, 1:00;_, AO "-40 1 40 1 1 0 ; 61. lais new - 4,6*,eption. moimpumoo,t4this****,,, i i,„in Aid , seakttnwarttitrtiiti;,*iolt Yelow;usittiAti er n connection with the Disunionist.. , Itelsozi-; Air Meat:lie AMA lieobetneyed lute Passionate! litireeitnita , iiittra conteiniietotit declarations.` lO'C itie 'NOV ittl; We 40 - nirnoupe', M ' OWAta'..:l44oMkti**imlWP,l,dtoi • -'-: if:SISPAOSIOO7,:,O 4 Titii044.+#4.ii0;10:9401D". , ... , , - :,, , ,1 "iltgivillmtot Fluidal of --. 4 • a a rs•: f t e :tit 4 aisitwom%m - ilmaisii;noweados& ...aeceb#l,ll l / 1 4 , 4146,417:1 010 4 . 1 44?..- ;1 44 7,- Ant . hiss 4= o4 4l=tr : ff!t # 44l offrosiiiiiiitiV*l4% al gt 444o . ll. l~o l4 , o bmiiaMeerselo; tieluittiAtic be begl formed, as DW- I * 4 o ll , " 41 0 00 #I t !mid Wined. THE PRESS.-PHILADELPMA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1860. no impression upon them; 'And if hohad-An swered as Donases did not,:to'the,silin4tlie, anK IMvo: more7nteeely 'id6nt led seising on - Miles of the Union, .- • ' And.so - mtds our xoview;ad. the apology of -"foe rtaiidailt BlikObitralDO • - Unman Sacrifices at Dationiey., While England, for many years, kept in re- Pair and adorned the Pagan temples of Ben= gal, and supplied the courtesan dancers, who were as much a part of . the religions ceremo nies ,eihe Brahmins as the priests, and while 'Che r et' ill more roc 'milli winked - at the: Turkish' trade in Circassian :besuty, yet; to her eternal credit be, Ati,slicv iiheoriore thin all 'others, saved the.Werldfrein`..e'recirriance of the be fore almost universal ...drowning of infants in the, widen riftheGariges;'and the destruction in .the Suttee of the within , upon the funeral pile 'other 'dead husband.. Aid even now, when thenfrillsed *rid - has been shocked at the terrible; massacre of Obriethins in ,Syria, arid appears absorbed inmeasures for the 'pu nishment 'of the murderers, and the preven tion: of finther outrages trent: Turkish *icier's, an honest' effort seems to have beau .put -forth by, the British Government to prevent the usual large slaughter upon the !grave of the deceased King. A' -West African journal states that His Majesty HADA rums, King of Dahoney, is about to make the cl Grand Custom," in honor of, the late King Geso. Determined• to surpass all former mo. naroba in the magnitude of the , ceremonies to be-performed on this cocas ion; RADAIIIING hem made the most extensive preparations for .thi celebration' of the `Grand'Oustom. A great pit has been dug, which is to' contain human blood enough to float a canoe. Two thousand persona Will ilre sacrificed on this occasion. The expedition to Abeakouta is postponed,. but. the King has sent his army to make some excursions, at the expense of some weaker. iribis,nnd has saccadis in capttring many unfortunate treiturea. The young people 'among these prisoners will be sold into slave. ry, and the old 'persOns will bo killed at the Grand Custom." In the House'of Commons Lord FZZIODY in quired of thelUniaters whetherany attempt had been - made to dinned° the King of Dahomey from the - conteuiplated massacre; tc Ho need not impreSs upon. the • s lionsti the importance of taking sonic steps' to prevent this awful Sa crifice. 'lt might, indeed, be already tob late for interference, but probably there was yet time, as the. victims could .not be collected very speedily. No time should be lost in im probing upon the King of Dahomey the pro priety of .abandoning that , frightful custom, end the kings of that country had always been inclined to listen to advice-from England. Unfortunately,. thia_cottn — trY make treaties with African potentates, except upon condition of the :abolition of slavery—a very excellent plan when it could be carried out, but, es , the late King of Dahomey said, when urged to give'rip slave dealing, his army, his' Gdvernmtnt, and everything were sup.; ported by the produce of his shaves. Still, the Kings of DahomeY had expressed a great de. sire to haricernmerelakrelationia with England; whereby slavery Might be Undesmined." Mr. 0. FORTEMCIIII said it was unnecessary to .remind the noble lord (Fumes) that Da homey *as not one of her Majesty's colonies: finfeared' that the announcement of a "con templated human massacre, by that monarch we! I ten'trire: As anon as it came to the knowledge ef the noble lord (J. Emma) he sent a selenui message to the, King Of Daho mey, remonstrating with him, and we:min/him. that if he carried out his design her Majesty's Government would taint- hostile proceedings ageinat him in any part of his territory. ,[Cheers.] - Re had great doubts whether this interference , Would be effectual. Those pr.. tentates in the interior were hardly vulnera ble to our'ships, and, as to the remonstrance by of prissimuirlee; the day forthatlad hardly,come yet, .Re was told that the Gover nor of the GoidDoast once remonstrated with the King of Ashantoe on a similar massacre, relic said that be should be glad to put an end to thine horrible . &tokens, but that he ducat not, so rii l ittOreiei #ie'y in the, superstitions 'of:the:People. Everything had been done' short of employing actual force, which be was afraid could not be brought to bear in the pre sent case. . . We earnestly hope it may not be too late to prevent the bleeds , rites in honor - of - the "dead Kiwi. - At all overdo, let the je Grand Custom? , by, consent of the Christian Powers,' be done away with foroier; and . 41) numbered with - the things of, the past, Me the horrid diabellsM of the Jiggernant car. , , Miss Caroline Richings. The name of CAV.OLIIIM RIOKINGIII, an 'at. tide of whom Philadelphia hats every cause to be proud, 'has become a household word not Only in this city, where she has been inbught up and educated, but in various other local'. des where her, rare natural gifts,-her wonder ful- skill as a Vocalist, her 'tweet-toned voice, -her, easy ,and naturally graceful. mari ners ; and, above all, • her excellent private Character, have won her unirersaladmiration and reepect, She is now,,onUe again, tai this City, crowned with the applause arid kindliest regards of ;West and. South, Some of her immediate friends--now propose, gcwithout having recourse to any of the usual formalities or prow, bleef,correspondence, that her Many admirers id this 'city, and the public generally,. 01'6 iiaye;dtaing 4er.refeasienal career, de tiyed. any, gratification frontr.ber: marblinge r. sheuld unite in giving herit suli• itentiaLproof of' timilereat,regati4 anii high es thnitiOn in which' PhihidelPhia bolds her own artiste,' by attending the Concert she hie been requested to street the Musical Fund on Friday" evening, September ' 14th. dll the, available talent the city affords will be "engaged.'? • Ibis• charming vocalist and most accom plisheil, young gentlewoman , must have an ovation worthy of her talents and her chartic ler, of her professional and prit'ate worth. Lit us' hope that this intended Concert will,' indeed, be an ovation of which she may be proud. The Late Embezzlement. It is, unfortunately, a far too common an occurrence for men' who gain the eontidenee of iadividuals and Oommunities to ehemefally be. tray it. The generous and unntsimeting re• Hance placed upon' their Inteoity le often, in' itself, et temptation-which they are too weak for , too' -depr,irod to relict. MOW: :those who tire' popularly ankymed to be entirely above sus philOinot unfie , quentlir prat, tabs' the react 'un. cruitivOrthy poluniary transailtions." The reeent 'reported - embessiement in -this'city, by one who - presenWit ; in" ,unable rsputetion ; for probity, le another -Intitanee of the prevailing teadeney to ;fraud among' those who, from their imolai position and mime:4 high eharaeter, - should be -ineepable of perpetrating felonimis swindles. -William H. Oratikki, Riq., a young lawyer, who has heretofore 'poems:et eseellent iiputition, and been en :crusted with' the transaction of Important burineas by si sushir of wealthy eitism, appears to have executed a forged power of Attorney by whisk ha obtained the transfer of one hundred - shares of serip, and one hundred and seventy-six shame of meek of the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company, belonging Writer ,Penit Geakill, Nig., (who it OM time wail absent in Rump., and'for •whom Mr. Otaltbe feted IS attorney to collect hie dividends from that company.) This fraud was perpetrated setup Months ego; but was also quite recently der oetrersd,'after the return of Mr: Oaskill. Other enibeislements, variously estimated at from $l6- 000 to $30,060 are , reported, and it is supposed Cribb, sailed under ad assumed name in the Adriane forilevre, on the 26th ult. His wife and child were, at the time of his mippolet flight, at Rochester, Nel%; and in common with his nume rous !Hindi hithlir city, are' deeply grieved by tale unexpeetiod disgrace of one they had deemed incapable of OIL ' The Illsinseipril Buildings. by our report of the pro eeediega,Ol', yhe OoannissiOners 'of the I'ublic at, itieif, ineetint yeateiday, that BasitterifoaPiad.tbella 33 . lll /44140 ifflinrntra, Jr and proceed Prom/447,0 adreithur for proposal to erect the new edi.: lices.:n Stith: proptositioilvia Way- be made in iicitnilli t irieo With Mite notiter will' he 'wild.; efe*,'andii 'solaria : elide with the 'parties who isivintigeotta terrine on or "befOre the 26th of the:"preaent ale/ it the; be the di4,of, the lailivtalipprore or Alock,4l4,agrpetnlnt, saktorAuposittouran i #a:-,414 iPt• asattotatparoblattailstekooptod Use fifittead valuable , aatortniani.of , ../bagnatt.frottro,, bigadailifattolds*,lholay, and list car pel; ateritfas,,thanote, cocoa matting., oarpl 111140,11: - , - - "cabman a Ode* aiaortatent of wa r pairiebaiiltebrt OrniOtettlysoldilyisitidoluti, oa oftabletieniettleitatattiatalagaiktiattalaw at .1.0 (Moak, by *omit:ll6om, a Co., motion , MI & Nat. 41$* ma 4 416 Ank otrtet, Gen. Foster , lNSomerset Speech. We are gratified• to boiktkilitlils theta*. Lion of Hon. Brost DiPlertt, at an early day, to state his • postitels , on' the • Territorial question ; also, that he jediipmatly rejects the construction put twin h.ts •Somemst Speech by the Administration organs, and insists that the report in THE Pales of that speech con. tained his true sentiments. As an evidence of the truth of that report, we copy the follow ing synopsikof- his remarks at Somerset from a late number of the gittsptirg Post, in which it lie Seen - that thatritter regards him rut °cooing precisely - ther potation • assigned to him in the letter from Somerset, and published in this journal. The Somerset Democrat, the old orthodox organ , of the Democracy of So merset county, contains a report of Gen. Pos. - ina's speech, precisely like that contributed to Tun PRESS by Mr. RODpr, and in entire ac cordance With the extract copied • irmii 'the Pittsburg post. • All that We desire to accomplish In regard to the struggle soon tote'debided is, that there • shall be l nh'fohl . play and no double dealing. • We copy * , "Mr. Foster delivered a very 'able address, in whioh he distinctly defined his position on all the questions of the d 01.., lie emphatically declared that Inestnuoh as Congress bad no power to legis late in regard to the domestic In/Muttons of the Territoriet, that the poker of legisistion:was abaci. lately, vested in the people of the Territories ; that they alone were directly interested, and that their will alone could determine the queetlon of slivery, or any other question in regard to their politiool and imolai condition. Be ; deprecated the needless agitation of these exciting questions; they could ef• feat nothing. Slavery would ge 7 where it wae proll ta- Me, and nowhere else. • It was beyond the power of man to establish slavery •in Kansas; the negro could never compete with the white man where the white man could live and labor.. All the Wrangling of parties was but. the oontrivanoe of the common enemy 'to, defeat the Demooratio party, by introducing discord in our ranks' The friends of• the unintry and the Constitution should frown on all these attempts. The Union was the result of harmony, aid harmony 'wee necessary • for its presereation. Mr. Foster then :discussed the tariff, avewing himself 'in favor °Us tariff Whichweuld protect, Pennsylvania interests,, and referred to his ibte n Congress, es aceordant with these views." - • WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENCE Letter from "Kappa." leorroseondenoo of The Prete.) WASHINGTON, Sept. 6, 1860 The arrest of Mr. Goodloo, a correseoneent of the New York Tvntes, has created quite an excitement in Journalistio circles. He is charged with having libeled the Secretary of War in some letters about the De Groot matter, and has been placed under bail of pne thousand dollars. - Of all the newspa per correspondents in town, I know of only one who 34 not opposed to the payment of the 8119,000, as awarded by the Secretary of War, and that Is the correspondent ,of tho Ned Tork 'Herald. Various reasons axe given for this support. The Secretary of War has the oasts again under exam!. nation, and that alone shows that there mast be something wrong , Walleye quite an array of New York Brookln ridie„nion amongst us, marshalled by John A. Green and Gideon J . T ucker. They are here for the purpose of reoeliing the Consent of Mr. Bucha nan' toe fasten with the' Douglas-Bell men noon ditionelly.' Collector &hell, who was here and in Ridfdvd . on the same errand, did not gowned with the old man, hh opinion all a paid eervalit having little weight with the latter, Tucker, Green. Griffin, and Mohlahon, of Albany ; Miller, of Spen cer, and Hasbrouck, of Ulster, not being office holders, it is , expected that they will _have In flneneerenaugh- to induce the President to be lees stiffineaked for he is averse to' any fusion width may give Douglas the aleetoral vote of a State. But, the Breckinrldge leaders, aware of the fact that their forces become smaller and beautifully leis teem day to day, so that on the election day nothing, but disgrace and ridicule can be their re wartrfor their treaohery, want to fuse under any Oiraumitaimes. The - Houghs! and Bell men re' to give there' 'Some ' electors on their thket,laithough not opposed to taking their votes, thedleaders of the Breekinridgti faction, for the purpose of covering up their weakness, and to save themselves from a political grave, will now vote for the Union ticket unoonditlonelly. They tell Mr. Buchanan, In order to excuse themselves, that they merely do so 'to prevent. Lincoln from carry ing kew York, thus throwing the election into the House, where either Bteekinridge or Laze may be elected. Bat Mr. Push an an , not wishing that Lin.. coin shall be defeated,' as be wants to be the lad Dem:shall° Preddent, is unwilling to give his per. Mission. Sahel]; an 01mi-holder, had to go how., lirtietherrldeaks.Tuaker, Green h and consorts, will . hey° more success Is more than doubtful, Presi dent Buohanan desires to have a Dinite ticket in every Northern State. Old Joe Lane swears that he will follow Douglas wherever he goes, and make speeches against him. Hs Milne his 'friends to bet all the money they* have, on Brecklerldge'S • and eleetion. The' poor old breireadoomm really - to - be pitied, and it la °met to deprive him of his illusions. Hie friends listen attentively to him, but they won't bet. On the 4th of March next he leaves the Senate for his future home, on Salt River. Re la played colt , " Roger A. Pryor is stumping Virginia for Brack.: %ridge and Lane. Re It doing good work for the Opposition, end, therefore; the 'Union men' do not think it necessary, to put Ron. Thomas A. It. Nel- - ion e of Tennessee, upon the track after the youth ful statesman,. ffir. Nelson is a gentleman for , for *hair. Mr.-Pryor entoriains not • very 'great predilection, since he received from hint some use ful lessons in rhetoric during the last session of Congress. LATEST ,NEWS By Telegraph, to ~The Preis, - MR. DOUGLAS IN BALTIMORE. WS MIT TO MR. BRECLINIUDGRI ORRIS. Banyttiorti, Sept, 11.—Mr. Douglay was reoeivEd by Ida Magda la this oily talls i y with a great amount of enthaelsom. ; He will repirte the *took of Mr. Dree)daridge to-night, after a aerenadt. ;which Is to be given him by the Delthaore Blues', band. There le zonoh anxiety, manifested to hear him. /10,,11, lure Sro Harnabarg tomorrow.. " " ; ; SPREOR Or, HR. DOUGLAS. atterrmOna, Sept. 6.—Mr. Douglas arrived hem Frederick at 4 o'olook this afternoon. He was re oeived at the depot by an immense concourse of hie • friends, and was cheered with great en thusiasm. A. crowd followed hie earrlege to the Gilmor House. - On reaching the hotel, a copy of Mr. Breokin ridge's •speeeh,_ as telegraphed from Lexington, Ky., was plane d in his hand, and he immediately applied himself to the task of reading it. • , At 8 o'clock this evening be was serenaded by the Baltimore Blew. band. In response to the compliment he at once appeared on the lower bal cony, of the hotel, and wu greeted with loud cheers. lie proceeded, with 'a stentorian votes,to address en immense eaceourea of lletenere, being frequent ly Interrupted by applause. Mr. Donelasoommeneed by expressing hie dew>, lion to the Union and his determination to exert all the powers of the Constitution sot its preserve. Coe and permanency. lie would ask nothing foy, , his own bitate-;-no right and no immunity—that he Waild not, grant to the Southern BUM& lie promoded to define the non-inteteeution doe tries by - many apt and amusing illastratione and analogies— He Add the slavery goodies Meat be settled by local exigencies. Where slavery was profitable. there it would go; where it was not, It coati never he legislated into existence, • The et emery and fanatical men bt the South thought that, because slavery was desirable siteettale la titudes, it ought to exist everywhere The fanatics of the North thought that, began,' it was not de slreble in •thaLmostion, it ooght to be abolished everywhere; We, on the-plains of Illinois, once tried slavery. a'When •it was forth& incompatible with our interests , it was abolished. , . When,lt wee fond that we could not make any money a t 11 4 ' we tonib i t philanthropists; and abo lished it. It was a great error to suppose that Congteseional legislatiou coebl resits% the mat ter. If it was found contrary ' to the interests of the„ people ' of any Territory to have slavery, all the powers of 'Christendom could not throe it upon them. So, If It was found to be to the interest of, the people to have slavery, there it would ge, defiance of the &i:Ots to rohibit It. It t the fundamental prinel Hs pl p e of the p Vederal Compact that each State Shottid be left . % paid% laws adapted to, their oiroumstaneee. He next referred to the Wilmot proviso ea an attempt: tq enforce an unoonotitutional infringe-, mint of the rights of the people to regulate them selves' and regulate their domestic, affairs. lie held that the right of the master to his Clare was independent of Federal authority. Slavery ex-, istedb pe are. in these Oolenies before the organisa tion of the Federal Government, by virtue of local laws, Alludincto the Secessionists, be sold their doctrine was to force slavery where it was not wanted., They agreed with the- Black Repoli'. eine in the assertion of the tight . of Congress, to interfere with slavery.-.one to force slavery whine the people do not want it, and the other to Walsh If whore the people do want It. One wants.Oon grids to 'interfere against the North, the other against the South. The greatest curse that could befall "the' country was there' sectional parties. There was but one remedy for notional strife: the good-old Dentooritio creed—non-interfering:lo ,by Cowes; with slavery, in the Territoties,'M the States, Gt in the Ilistriot of Columbia. Ho then referred to Mr. Brookintidee xporchi iwhioh, he saki, had only. been placed In his hands 'amide arrival here to-night, to which hd proposed 'briellY to respond, He said that Witairookinridge in' defending the aotionlof the fiseersionlato, chart- Aid thirirrim•otreat Theittre Oonvontien with at- According to foist on The Democ racy' nett dogma, and - the 'leader of thit dogma, . the dogma et noir biterrention, 411 that my friends es„iged-at0tr,.414.• -tr, was a telnifralltiOn act 01130 '"ar lsrin, On which Maim - Beebe en • end ecktnridgo Were nominated and stalled. , - - • , (i That platform untitled the ,dootidne of non-in ,torrenNon—they ootdd hare hes) !Meted' en I .any other. - ' Now, , John'l) , Hreoltintlago folio - You IttrAtino Asti isgood, Dennaorat, or it friend of the ,1390thorho.a.tands whet, fear tihyita ago, at,a retori s bolding Lt isO be tter thin Mi'Aitelitfoldek- add 'the,' rather,lhan hkVil• Aortal ftioithitet:he Pratt` to, see* DA' mootatio party broken . Mr, Breokinridgo mys"thal 'he ispporbid' In'oppisiltion to General , Teylo'r eaissathey-repreebnted•hie,pri9olpies,•N, .Mr, e l m had just then written the famous litchelion leapt imorting this dogma of non-inteirriatien let *eel quoOtion.of slava* id the Territories: t. Oan, Mr. Breekinridge, and himself (Mr. Dangle) were then all in favor of this dogma—all worked bathe same harness. The Hmt•liitis - Wels.'" ster, the immortal Clay, and the whole:Whig par.., were thou is favor of the same dog". le. He proooeded at great length' 10 show' by the ' moo ns of Mr. Breekbarbige •thatillide dogma was WA Up MO* time of his amleetamns of the semi natio* for Viso Padden! , and .thaa inia as tido dogma that he • was sleeted, to 1858. He (Mr. Houglea) , went to Heatuelry and, addressed the people for three mortal hours on this question of popular sovereignty. He explained itto them jatt as he had explained it to this assemblage to-eight, and Mr. Brachia ridge stood by his side applauding him as he pro. grassed, - and patting him on the bank for his ef forts behalf; of this dogma.. [Cheers and' :!.; In brptember, 1850, Mr. Breokinridge visited Illinois, and Amble Arstinkehalf of this dogma, and he explained it. so 111111, that he (Mr. Douglas) could not restrain himself from expressing his de light by patting him also on the bank. He de mired then that the whole South was sound on the dogma. Now t we in Illinois are threatened to be ' hunted down bY, the very bee whom we thew raised to the Vice Presidenoy on this dogma. [ln alluding to Mr. Breokinridga's speeoh,'Mr. Douglas always spoke of it as a '. stump speech." Mr. Breokinridge, he continued, asserts that an; not the regular nominee of the party.' But I assure you that I have never descended so low as to aooept a nomination from less than one-third of any party, or when 1 was not the drat choice of a 'majority of my party. ' He would not have alluded to Major Breokin ridge had he not assaulted him in his speed', made at Lexington, yesterday. Be had charged him With breach of faith in relation to the derision of 'the Supreme Cori& Now, be held that no honest man would oppose a decision of the Supreme Court. If Mr. Breokinridge had not been nominated,. he (Mr. Douglas) would have beaten Mr. Lincoln In every State, but Vermont or Massachusetts. Mt. Douglas then proceeded to repeat his views as expressed at Norfolk, declaring that the election of no man would be the cause for a dissolution of the Union, and that he would bang any man who would raise his band to break up and dissolve this. this Union; as high as Virginia hung John Brown. Afie did not believe that Mr. Drookinridge was a disuelonist, but he did believe that every dis unionist in this Union is a Breokinridge man. (Great laughter and applause.] Mr .Douglas concluded with a powerful appeal for the Union. He was for burying Northern Abolitionism and Southern Secessionism in the samegrave. He returned thanks for the atten dia that had been given him, and retired, after speaking for over two hours. • . Later from California. Os Pony Fames Err. JOSSPIII9, tiept. 6 —Tao pony express has arrived; with California advises of the 25th ult., and Elandirieh Islands tOtbe sth. The pony express arrived at San Yrancieco on the 23d ult., with St. Louis dates to August 10. The news from the Kertuoky and North Caro. line electrons had put the Bell and Everett men in spirits, and they were pushing their State organi sation enetgetleally. There le but little news. All the politloiana arc preparing for the four btate Conventisng to be held at Sacramento, between the 12th and 20th of September. A correspondent of the Sacramento Unaon writes from Virginia city that a party of seven white men, who had been missing some time, were burned to death near Pyramid lake by the In diens Their charred remains were found chained to trees. The bead' and cheat of one was not burned, and by this moans the rest were identified as the party that left California for the washes mines in May under the command of Norman Conpill, formerly from Cambridge, Washington county, New York. Large numbers of emigrants continue to arrive at Carson and Honey Lake Valleys, consisting mostly of families MARINE INTELLIGENCE. Arrived at •Itn - Franoteoo; August. 51. at amen golden Ago. from Panama; and chips rionpareil and BA Roca. from Nev . Yo•k ; tiara P lectilo from Sid. nay; bark Helen -W aim,. from Manila t bark 41.12- 800. irtrol. from Hamburg; vohr Wtld Ttgeon. from 'el" York spOkert Jan* 8, let. 17 N. long. 40. Ship Bleak Prince. Imm New York, for San Frenctsoo. August 15 let. 3640 N long. 1.59 W. ,_ship Monwaoh. tailed—Hark Parrot. for valpersiaci. UMMBHCIAL INTEL. LIO NC E.—The market haa lost much of the excitement which characterised it on the pview week. and the eonntry demand seem to have been oneeked by the advancing tendency of prices. There la avgood Milady business doing at the teet quote tines, the armee throughout bems well sustained. Wheat comes in heavily, and is taken freely tor export at about $1.50 ;9' 500 the. The sup sly of tonnage has been increemed .7 3 esterday'm arrivals, but there is no thing Imagined. The Cisorg ea c h o f for New York with 3.000 roma of 100 Bs of wheat. 7 000 hides, nearly ISSI bales of wool sod an assortment of rosewood. The w_hole cargo ts valued at WOMB. The burls B. F. Shaw cleared for Australia with 600 Nook; of wheat end 2.000 qUarter sacks of flour. SANDVIIOII ISLANDS. Dates from the Sandwich .Tslands to the 9th of August baye bean received by the bark Yankee. The principal topic of exalting interest Is the developments of oMoial irregularities, the par. deniers of whieh ereglven, reeulting•from the In. reetigation Into the affairs of the American consul at Honolulu. A bill before the Legislature for the establish. merit of a bank, with paper ourrenoy, W2B warmly disoussed, with considerable Prospects of its put. sage. The paper circulation of the bank is not to exceed $l5O 000. . The ship Horning Light. from San Francisco, arrived at Honolulu July and galled on the 28th for Baker's Island. The British bark Kathleen hauled from Honolu lu with a cargo of lumber about the ilth of . 'August for Abbey. [The transmission of the remainder of this des patch wee prevented by the wires being rendered la-operative in consequence of the aurora borealis, 11.41itary Encampment 4t, York. Yong, Sept. o.—The military encampment is now In full blast, and the town Id crowded with people. At least 20,000 persons were on the camp grounds to.day. There are sixteen companies participating. 'General Wm. 11. Kelm, Glance! COMII I IIIA.nt; Lieut. A. N. Shipley, Acting Adjutant General, and General Wilson, Adjatant General of Penn. eylarada, are en duty. The encampment commenced on Monday, and gie troop have been drilling three times a day. They have acquired considerable profieiency and drill well. General Kelm commands the highest eneemiums for the admirable order and superior military skill displayed, both In camp and on parade. The general parade name off this morning. Amens Be chief features was the appearance of a number of old soldier, of the war of 1812 in the lanky, Including fourteen from ijarrisburg under oemmand of Capt. A Krause. They were honored ,with a position •on the right of the oolumn, and carried with them their tattered gag. • Among the oompanlee In parade were the Na don't Bidets, of Washington, Capt. Schaffer, and the Law Grays,_ of Baltimore, Oapt. Berets. The Marine Band, of Washington City, discoursed de. lightfal music. - There was another parade this afternoon. All is life, gaiety, and enthusiasm. Senator 'Douglag. tOMPARAT;OV,9 f'Oit HIS RECEPTION" AT READING--; HIS GREAT 141111 pg 04FTASS TO rixkiDs AT NEW YOHte, WT. 12. R4apiera, Sept. 6.-4 teasive preparation/ are being made bore for the reception of Judge Dou glas. He will arrive in Saturday morning's train from Rarrbdirg, and will address our citizens at Oolook P. At. Ho will leave for Philadelphia at 4} o'clock on the same day. !Id McLean, of Philadelphia, who Is now here, has received a letter from Judge Douglas, in whioh he stiteatis acceptance of the invitation to be pre-, sent at the grand barbecue to bo given by his friends at Jones' W_Cods. in New York, on the 12th lest lie assures Mr AfsLeag t‘lt by rill rd. tively be on, hind; and ' nVI at odeasibh it4en make his great speech of the cants/Y. ' ' The Cnott4.lg.l7. Eacitempnt. REFUSAL OF TEE ?MRCP TO /Amp 4T NF.4.lsylvos —lna TORONTO ORANGEMEN PROPOSE • COMPRO- BALLEvium, U. W., Sept. 6.—The Orangemen of this town turned nut ID strong furoe to renivo the Prime, but he refused to labd, end the steamer left for eoburg this morning. Tonoirro, 0. W., Sept. 6.—The Orangemen have decided to parade by themselves, and not to Inter fere witl the citizens' reception or procession. It is doubtful Isbether this proposed compromise will insure his lapding. , Chester Con.nty Polttles. Wise Oarattn Sept People's party ere all alive In dile region. A club was resontiy organised in Marahalton, one of the " deadest , ' townships In the county, and there aro now over ono hundred.",` Wide *Wats" there. The (theater county deputation tote groat Peo ple's parade in Philadelphia, on Sattirtley pm. hag, will numberover Ova hundred. Of these, two hundred and flay will be mounted. The• dotage. don will make an imposing display. From Northern Mexico and Arizona. SPRINGFIELpi Mo., Sept. 6 —The overland Cali. tomtit pail from Sah Francisco on the 13 h, arriv ed here te.day.' 4 passenger from El Paeo con firms the recent report g the revolution in cihihuit hue, and the light of the Liberal Goverpwent to Sonora. ' The Arians !gold mine' are pronopnood a hem bog here was did' times throughout the country on the Rio Qratle, with bat little proepoot of Im provement. . State Politics A STRAURT•OUT DORMAN ELECTORAL TICKET Herrmann% ''September B.—Thu names of the Danglarideotorg from the Congressional district's bay, now been all returned, by the Dlstriot Com mittees,, tc General A L lioututort, chairman of the Demooratio State Executive Committee. no straight•out Douglas electoral ticket will be pub. Wheel forthwith.. . Venuont Election. idorrpatizn; Vt.,' September B.—Returns from one hundred towns givo Fairbanks (Rap ), for Go vernor, 18025; pax. (Douglas), 0,268; Harvey (Breekintlige), 1;380. Fairbanks' majority will exoted 20,W0. %Ise House stands, so far, 13 Ile• put licians to LI Democrats. Inopenglag Itllexican Pronisuciarniento. USTI; ORMANII, Sept s.—lt is reported that a pronunolamlentq in favor of the re.eleetion President °mord* to authority in Mexico, has been 'planned, sad orill goo 9 bo proclaimed. Nomination of lion. John linkman foy • Congress. , Wnsr Contra ,rt Bopt . Johi Illokunt wee toothy nutuimorody nominated, by the Itepub• iloan conferee' of the Math Congressional district, for re.aleotion to Congress. Wieconsia Democratic Convention. liimireanum Bept, Breoilarldge State Convention, in eension here yesterday, nominated a tali electoral COAL The Reading and Columbia Railroad: :Ram llte; (doyley:l4er oontraol for,lbe building of theßeafing and ,Columbla Railroad was this day awarded to Jamoeilloore R , :C0., - of Yotk. I , . • • Mallets Dr TeAegrftph4 • BALVIIIOIX. Bes,O*Flour coat bat Meed,rt 34weril end OMo 86; Oity_killa held at the came to heat Arai; Weetera I 13.30 I L4O; red f 1,3002.30 Jlotobe r t * L ow tie. , Dote 'amtve t yellow tOoTh o; ,. c ite Ifeki_ o attadvaime. YrOilairmatmlat anflunahansed. Culree a tiVe ; anlei at Mt ofilia. 'whisky hetws SW: . S t a tf ..„ 0 " ~ , , notefaareAng; - ,3ear;e. , - - -Cmlort firm ; 3 MI balsa Bohr, at Weinak" far Matinee 1 , 104. r adfaurinly tgaM l .o. 80, Oalisr 'i t Arai a: o . 4 9Via ' .. , Kt4YisF° 14 ig' g t , i'9l lN ArE • .••, ,- ' •• . 2 ',:. ' dart ikw ignmtaan, Feld. e : ,-, C1 0 1,14 6 if utv;. ~ ~,......,„r , ..,,, ~,i• ~,i advancing L Wei 4 6 . a a mat at , ~ . Molasses—Yriaes irregular. 34444 ork ix held b . ~Lard dull i tabPle 34 4y fh , .. , Baca* firm. I k relshte etd Aea g lte t neei nn ` atutlecl gip rr , gi) . rgritt . 4 b eg :WI Ttrat 'g z; p; Wheat soti 3. .li ve ap_d advanced 2soun onolaat, a: change on New lcOrlt 3i per pent, pram The Prince of Wales. , 1 61SRIVAL 6T CODOWIG. Qoaotrao,'Sept. 6 —The Tepee arrived here this aventus and landed, there being ne signs of any ; 0111 P1•14MINsietratIon, He attends the hall giro in nu hoain;thht• evening. The bell-room ttWt Mower; trien prenonneed unsafe, and the floor is .bidrw ptop*Ut up to avoid anfdangor. Preparattoni at Toronto. Tontatvo ;13ept. 13.—The streets are thronged to night, and the preparations for the reception of the Prince are being vigorously pushed forward by the coundetion_ °LAW) arches. and other deoOratiOnil. Ile - IS expected to arrive tomorrow afternoon.- - Bell and Everett Meeting at Richmond. EICONOND, thrpteinber - 0,7-The New Bell Clu b s. home was dedicated Aida - evening, and wu the mouton of an Impair* deMonstration,lneltiding a toreh-light ?mouton end fireworks. Among the Speakers, vierel . Mr. Morehead, of North Oaroitnti,, Mr. Preston, of Virginia, and ethers. AMUSEMENTS TIM EVENINO VirusitTLNY 41c CLAVIN'S ASCII-STREET TUZATAIr t flash street, above ninth.-- " Ireland as it Was"— The Young natpm." - WAVIIIT•FTRBIT TniaTai, Walnut and Niuti di.— . Fre Diavola" CONTINENTAL TITEATRB Walnut et., tbove Eighth Camomile and Sharoley's Mmetrels. PENNSYLVANIA ACADEMY 07 TII FINS ARTS. No. 1026 Chestnut street. , -Exhitntioa of Paintings and Sculpture, every morning and afternoon. The New Public Buildings. JUIN 411111UR'13 PLAN ADOPTAD. Yesterday afteynnen the cotamilioners of• the new ;ilitia buildings held a meeting at Fifth and Chestnut streets to determine upon a plan out of the number submitted for their inspection. Judges Stroud, Ludlow, Allison, and Messrs. Henry and Ottyler were present. Mayor Henry occupied the obair. A letter was submitted to the board from 11. P. Young in relation to the kind of stone to be used for tho buildings The board then proceeded to votelor the selec tion of a plan, which resulted in favor of the one offered by John McArthur, Jr. Mr Cuyler moved that the president and soore tary be authorised to advertise for proposals for, the contrast for the erection of the buildings so-. cording to the plan of John McArthur, Jr.—snob proposals to be for their erdotion of Lee marble, of Pennsylvania marble, of brown or other stone, and Piotou or sand stone, as the board may here after determine, Agreed to.. Judge Stroud moved that the proposals speoided by the 4th section of the act be submitted by the 18th instant, whloh was agreed to. The Committee on Control)* do., reported as follows : The sommiftee appointed to prepers IL form of the contract required to be prepared by the fourth section of the not of Assemble constituting this board. and to consider and report as to the course to be pursued by the board to earry.lnto effeeit the thi d and fourth hoo doos of yard abt. in conformity with the deognon of the Supreme Court on the 21 of august. IWO, herewith sub mit a form of suuh oantraot . . nu the consideration to be paid by the city of Philo delphia for the ereotion ot the proposed public% build logs Is 'arse/ the oornnopsie have b -en nartionfarty se dulous to obtain ample (ROOM) from the contractor to insure the faithful Derformenoe of his duty. For tom purpose the uses , right is reserved to the oar to remain out of all the money to become due -ram time to ilme. while the buildings are in the course of erection. twenty per cent. of the, value of the mate tats and work done and furnished, at named periods of airtime non and moo rtainment. In addition to' this. the con. traotoos are to provide the personal asourity of re sponsible indivultuda.'to be apptoved by the hoard. to the amount of two hundred thousand dollars. the buildings to be erepted not being liable to the mechs nice' lien acii.,,No othevitattlerseourity cut be atom' cart or • easonsoly required. The fourth 'option of the not of duembly directs the terms of the contract to Do publiehed at the time of ad vertising nroposals for building. No length of time is designated in regard to the advertising fo, trued mope gals node, the contrect is to be traosmitted to the Cnun efts within four moalbo slier the first mesa in; of the beard. (whloti meeting took alarm on the 15ih day of atay lest I it le inexpedient if not i myreetiontile, to non tines suojy advertisement beyond the 16th of thapresent month. he selection of the site for tee bedding., within certain presciri limits, the unmber end, Sae apartments the apart Men wh ichthey should contain, the ebb the architecture. the Sled of , materials of which 'he buddies, should be composed. and the extent and MA OISM)) of the seeerity to be given by the contractor. have been specially and exclusively vested In this board by the act of Assembly. _ In !cermet to the sits, the ciente(' the buildings who* . have been transmitted to the board by architects. in compliance with the plain terms of thefdvertigement. issued for that purpose On the /10 Ray 01 . July last_ conclusively show that no other teleotion could have' been made by the board Omni that which bee been made. , TOO board sit en, early etaae of its brocitisdings—on the wf Jul* IRM—MOTS than two mrates since adopted reports of committee. its abuts; of tne numbei and MAO of the apartments, whtoh should be °merits within the buildings to he erected, with, a designation of the particular nee for Which each depertment was intended. These repolsies part of the autbentie pro imedins of the temtd. Were published substantially. if not m their Merit minuteness, In Moot of the 1101111* pen) of the Oily. , No - one, so far ea is known no the board. haa ever objected to the nilmber and size of any such dens hated apartments. The position in the build leg Which the several apartments should occupy was net:alumni!' left to the disciplined Judgment of arobi teats. The decision of the Supreme Court, while it states tlm proceedings of the board up to the time it wee pro flounced.-w ere 10 substantial compilanoe with the tot of Assembly, Intimates' that on osts point, namely. whether the contract proposed to be made has been ju diciously made, the city condone lift to•esetees their indsment. It IS the duty of the board to °entrant and trap, nut it to those bodice on or before till Spa day of 'the current 'Moab: ' • Oregon . arson). • I concur in the above report, except as M en much ma relates Maio seleotton nf • site. TURO. CU TZAR. A resolution was adopted to advertise for pro. postale in Th t e PT(I.I and ; the Philadelphia In _ • gut for, - - The board then adjourned until 'Wednesday, ltat inst., at 4 o'clock: OftfiAlflitATlON, OF Vila DgIiOCII,ATIC CITY Enitonvvn 001.0itiiin.— : Lint evenings meeting' of this body way held at the county court house. John M'eartfiy,on snotlonof Aldermen McMullin,' r wee culled to the ahoy. Mersa. MoMoiliu and Harkins were appotnted secretaries. The creden tials of the dirrarent members were presented, *ad the oontested seats referred to a trommittee.'. The following were the contested Seats : First ward—George W. Creasy, (Douglas,) eon. tested by H. Leieenring. (Breoklnrtdge.) Sixth wirditobert Batr, (8.,) contested bilis. Evan, (D ) Eighth ward—J. Brady, (8.,) metaled by Jae .3. Breen, (D.) Tenth ward—Alexander Converly, (D.,) con tested by John F. Reed ,_(B ) Twelfth ward—John Dunlap, (8.,) contested by Lewis Rush, (D.) - The Convention then proceeded to a permanent organisation. John MoCartby; of the Second ward, a Douglas man, received 18 votes, and was declared chairman; and Win. McMullin and Thos. E. Harkins, also Douglas men, were chosen seam Bales. Wm. V. McGrath, (Dongles,) was elected treasurer. The committee on contested seats reported that they decided in fever Of;th• following : 11. /else°. ring, (8.,) in the First ward ; Robert Barr, (8.,) Math ward, and James J. Breen, (8.,) in the „Eighth ward; in the Tenth ward, Alexander converly, (D.) The Twelfth ward was referred back to the same committee. The stemmata* re mained in session until nearly midnight ,when the tod jy adourned , to meet at Robert 'Flanigan's hotel, ont3lx.th ihcive liace,'l4,l.hrpe o'clock on Tuesday afternoon arp. Reporters were excluded from the room. An far es we could areertain the Douglas men have four teen members, the Breekinridge men nine, and one ward, the Twelfth, undecided. Tau 84.1.1813trax FUND.—An. adjourned meeting of the Ballebnty Belief Committee, w;e bold yesterday afternoon at 3 o'olook, at the rooms olthe Board of Trade, Wra. L. Marshall, I;pt , le the chair. The minutes of the last meeting were ysp asl4 r.pprsrprii. Mr. James Palmer read the Iblforjekelti,er. I regret that my ingarements at the Isi c nk vent me from being present at the mettle of thg Com wltte- this afierno 11. Below r band a memorithismo of reosfts far the Naliabury sufferers I have transmit ted t shall to-day transin.t the remainder. I gen herewith a letter I have reeetved from the obatr map of the caltsbury Committee, so Td HUS aro yo 4 re resp Nun ect . 0111.1148. Letter from J T. H Waite, chairman of the Relict Dcanittec at_ Balisbui7 : ti c yt y Pent. 4, IMO. fifit.Tnos near It; atm inolng I re: °hired your note ennlosic e u k on the Phi aztelpbfis Bank for ape thousand oUtitt. td. he *veiled to the ne one Wee ol the ialferere tee fire here, Iber to assure ran, in behalf of the eorritnittas aid our r•Ilow oiti zoos. dint wa almreolete this prompt end liberal eon. rouity of the people of Ph latielphis vi.th mans earne , t thank!), and aim aunts yea tuts hi avpliostion will brnten the he +mot mono hinonent. • Beseeotfoily yours, T. H• WAITE, Chairman. ootffporetarr offered the renewing report of otions: geperted at but mestLog .i 15544 50 " minas • 1 250 00 • • • $2,001 66 Attest : Jati■6 razstaa.,lleoretiu7. On motion, the treasurer be requested toenail the balance on band to the °batman or die Salis bury Relief Committee The committee then adjourned asne .MTLITARY.-7The Garde tataYet, e Pe/Yided through our striate' yesterday; to ootomem oration of the birthday of Lafayettei and attraotad sad versa! attention by 'their fine' appearance. At a laps bon, in the afternoon, they repaired to their armory. in ehestnnt stEept yip!, Third, where a sumptuous banquet ' awaited Gulp. Tba soldiers. did ample Junius to the entertainment, which was interspersed with music. 'song, and laughter, and the festivities were prolonged for scrotal bouts. TAKEN TO Porrsvm,s.—Janos Donnelly alias ,; Liboay," ono of the notorious characters lately arrested by Detective flendersou, on the charge of horse stealing and burglary, vas taken to Pm Will° by the deputy sheriff of that place yes• terdny afternoon, to answer numerous charges of burglar/ at court. lie was sentenced to nine yearn in thir.putorn Penitentiary some years ago for al. miler Orilatd, but was pardoned by the Governor. Tun OoMMriD appointed to snperintend the reception of Judge Douglas will meet at the rooms of. the Central Democratio Assoolation, at Pinta and Chestnut' streets, at 'eight o'clock this evening, to complete the areangennente Atm', AA the programme to! Saturday evening. Nor Ore' Y ET.—Owing to the threaten ing oondition of the weather yesterday, Professor Lowe was compelled to defer his 'departbre for Europe in his monster balloon.- germ' persons visited Point Breese during the nay for thh put pose of witnessing the' premed asoeuelou. We learn the Professor has everything in readiness, and will Mtn positively today. • --- • lEPIOAL SMARM DIBORDIIIILTO-,—YWi terday earning about one o'clock a- couple of medical student', created A sensation at Tenth agd, Stamm streets by tiring otic a regolver in thastreeti They blared away with the weapon without an lip• parent object; and they considered thetasetimi ver y badly treated bows° they ware misted 'staked to ball to answer. • • • •1.. • • .; • • • Satimr. Tntap•-•:-A notorious sneak thief, named George Cooper, was arrested at Second and Queen streets, last orenlbg, with a clueittit7 of door Tooke, keys; &0., in his possession. Cooper has but ragantly, •licien; disohasiod- from ptis•To t ur era be . served out a term. He was °Unmated blr man Dallas for further hearing. The ales await an owner, at the fgrooond•diatsiot station. A DorfoLAS FLAG frill••• b& railed by Aliohael Redmond, al 124 Aroh stroot, this eve ning. between 5 and 6 o'olook. • ' 13,P111r. Robert Purvis fake as to pita the fol.: lowing ;, . " MR. ZDITbil . : . eleeedlngly mortified 'eked hunilliated elthe - prira S it made to play In - your reportnee'slietdhb Inu:r4 the or•fli„. 4th inst. Without questiobing in the least_dbe fibodness of the striker's , Integtimst, I must be al wed to, say that has ten an unexpected erryin - referrlbetri r What passed in a private oosrvorstloo;:ndalogpooroovar, e t ua misapprehension or detect of ucemory,Yf 44, Jito some - inisetatemente of teem. - 1 den eh looteofy,to go bay parthrithere; brit ir irtitypeitet' thir efportalt theelicipterlme Rai tsikrtir*- tootmay, 7,1, Ito drinailliooe Bzberry, September e t .1860. A DAT ON TUB DELAWA.I4I—YACHT RAZZ Dieu RAOEYUL -, BCilliii f#1440,11/1411161 Looaw. —The lewd oohsins of T. Fresi,itave announoed, la from Oiritimato a, oertalieontes , ong twenty treqyaohie for the ohelapions of the Dols e .. . Ati l at e , Boareely a week t " pires without *orlorre rile", 144 theiruricalW.of our readers 'gee prailably *A ezeited„ Ap.tkaltni something of the oh*ster Of a rosette. nit the incidents of a race. There is ititrinsioally nothing either moral or Immoral Ina trial of speed between boats. The brutality somee attributed to ap. boriS - rase cannot apply here, tallthl be awed time the Interests of Vif•inalldtig an d -„A s id o i ici-uld,witibjerfeaVilitatiferthaeattiotarset minlatild Wear. ;11111-itallAntinSittlf ilePlleste that immorality la - 'dwelt-linked in-our emintry with pPailiypleasures. Gambling, betting, * IL I batty, "profanity, and. viee intrazdably. themselves with American physical amnsemente. So In yachting if tha 'ordinary..riatine of a re gatta It likethit: *Melt we Widastaimi.yeelittilay, we must denounce them as immoral and dangerous. The yachts wlstelvAmilel rylablirdiyag to what Is known as the Delaware fleet. There are some ten or fifteen in all. They are not more than twenty two and a half feet long upen deck, and are provided with eatriggerr upon ehf4d the gators stand when the lboat careens. They carry a broad jib and mainsail, end are built for railing only. One might as well go pleasures/tiling In a tub as in one of these yachts. They are liable to momentary upsetting, have no accommodation 'for peasengera sad the +mew must shift at every took from outrigger to outrig ger, right and left, running six feet from theeide of the deck upon a narrow plank, which may mo mentarily unhinge and submerge them. The oldest 'ot these yacht§ to the L.' Theodore Elting; the present champion is the George hi. MR. The latter his been beaten by a yacht oelled the War nook or Bryant, although the latter, it is said, is not etrlotly a twenty-two.feet yacht. The crews of these boats are weevilly ematbeetici with some fire company. The members of the Riling are members of the old Kensington Baena; the litalse longs to the KeAllingtOn R 0 . 31 CO. Melt SI Of tliirk are fishermen'oi 'valerian by calling The bent menders or " sailors " of thiusi bate heeisp# *mi ler positions in aquatics to jockeys upon the turf. The best " Jailors" in the oily are 'the brattier. Godfrey and William Krouse. ,These gentlemen command twenty-five dollars per diem for their -services. The rivalry between the several clubs is very great, inclining to palette amity. We have been compelled to record, of late, numerous quer- Vele betweenrival ysionnen t Then are abontien , yachts of larger did:aloes - apart the Delawkri: oonstitutlng a separate diet. These seldom eon• tend with each otheroustl• belong generally to boat builders. The twenty-two teat yachts are not expensive. A hull , eisetaifrout tumid) auo.,, Rigging, fiats, etcetera, will swell the amount of ,expense to $5OO or $9OO. Most of them are named after prominent politicians, who preens, OH* with suits of flags or of sails The Bill nd the Bering are widely known and nioely matched: They have raced probably fifty times, with alternate seeeees. Upon Sunday alternate the erhole fleet may, be seensinete.s, e t the city, the red shirts of the tplek ners dotting the water, and giving a plotureeque contrast to the white sails. What we have to may of the menu of wkkedness witnessed yesterday, on the steamboat Logan, will not directly impli cate the members of the lutt fleet, although it is to be regretted that the management of the twee wu up( made vitlimore sopa to motallty.i Nos can we entirely forget that the steamboat was crowded with the friends of the yachts. The boats started from the Water Works wharf. Kensington. At nine o'eloek there -was a dense crowd at that point. The six contending yachts epee anchored abreast, extending quite across the river. Their bows were turned up river, and the sails and jibe were Inept about tltelloonts and bowsprits. At the wharf the steamboat ,Logan lay, crowded with excursionists. Just below snorted a tug, likewise filled, The steamers' line were ilYing. Passing through all tyPee of People we trod the deck of the large boat. From the promenade deck the seine was animating in the extreme. A mania a skeleton barge . was rowing toward all palate 'of the ooispese,-*heethig marvellous dexterity, and making the circuit of the fleet very swiftly. At a ulistarcia he looked like' man afloat, with long oar-like arms. Skiffs, buttus, and small scows Innumerable, rowed hither and thither with no apparent purpose, and in the pauses of the nisll of papa l sea could bear the progress of the Vetting : " Ten dollars to eleven on the Baling." " Two dollar' even on earth :that the-Bill teats every boat." "A hundred to tan that she rounds the buoy ten minute; pisitbe :starL"' [Nob profess were heard on every band. The quantity of takers seemed to be limited, although there was each bantering, blustering, and swearing relative to the merits of the several 'belts. At half past nine o'clock a large fiat boat was rowed to the elates of the line of : yaihts, and ii Sus Listing the (Leek of each was ie °outman: In eve minutes a gin was fired. The crier leaped up L. a mo ment, the sails warn hoisted addle the smidte'nkLe dying away, and each yacht turned her bow down the stream ' and darted away under a' full cam& Thep shouts rang up from the multitude on the wharves, the eteembastatrioleaUy sing their halls, the planks were taken in, and we followed the line of receding sails. The parties on board the Ammer merit a pass ing notice One half of them were boja. Re' noticed a few barefooted 'robins at dome? 124 .0 years of age. They were nonahalaratig smoking, or vigorously expectorating tobloeo lOW They wori cricket or knit litokets- andidtkirdeW Sans had probably saved pocket ilmiley — TWEntlf44l l olo In anticipation of the pleasures of the day. here were also older fads, to tap= eeenew of excitement and immorality werd not new. Some of these had patent leather banns end Ape 014 4CPIldekPos, surmounted by dirty colts, with ravelled Ira. *et COMM. They stood hipabottsn, and seemed unable to dispose of their arms They leaned for support against pilot and,wkeel bonne as if ix- The men were men in physique alone, Mentally they were dwarf, and morally thirr Were dent Sensuality war plain upon -their foreheads, and every movement bespoke the rafliantm the loafer. We speak of the great takfority of the entrarelesisic: There were some who felt u we, that the AMl o eli' Alone were evil, and'vers ashamed ' There Will forward bar upon the boat, and, likewise • 'bend 'for the sale of bow and •Ilbeep's rearm. 'The nbiqultiona. bay, with a basket of ants, etas there as everywhere. Ile 'mama in. his ,unigil rein, and made a' beery male, &fair width be watched the remaining sail. • We had an opportunity to test the ilatoareating character of heet There was- no Mt* Iftpasecit board, yet at an early hour drunken men wire seen on every hand. The Messner stepped at Ave or alguatarta the city front. - A wretebed band'of ;Mask en tits upper deck, played a single tune at each stopping. place, and at lieblwatratet wlutof gig or eight black. lega came aboard, with sweat.cloths and roulette tables. They arranged themselves in various parts of the lower deck, secured their decoys at the price of a drink, and commenced a systematic course of gambling. The dice rattled, the roulette hen spun on its plate, the money shifted from the band' of the betters to the painted squares upon, tbe tables, and thence to the trickster'. pdaket.' refit pounds gathered around those : the Young with curiosity, the old with desire. Tim roulette gambles wag an old man. gray hairs sparkled In hie looks, but the lines of his laded sad bloated face told only of a bad career. There was also a handsome, flashily. dressed blackleg, of powerful frame and bright eyes. The lower half of his face was prominent and heavy, Indloative of the animal. We bad the pleasure later in the day, to gee this individual and a ounfederate completely "cleaned out" a notice., . •.„ There vies ti small boy, terhaps ten yeare old, who lyd bia'Ailose nervonalt on tbpippastrpletb: .The dice tell. Lis eye,Witted up , Hp baXwon. Ile staked again. and Asian ion, and again. At tett be turned away, and held up a bright half dollar to a oomrade. "Boh,'!:esid be, 'fib eleiseferistio oath, "I've played for the first tinie in my lite, and see whet I won!" Had that boy kit at hilt grit ear, there' fillet have ended his gatg td in; crepe. Agit le the rst Huth mil mskflaut an adept oy e Tife•lotig aubi. Packs of cards wore breacht curia the after noon, and the 'Oyer wee piled plentifully ;anon the exciting all.fonrs "4 " ruA " macho occa sionally for the table, whop the each would mys • . terlotaly disappear. ' Meantime the yachts scattered in every direc tion. There was tasking, and reefing. and malt. log Occasionally. • man Jesuits ovalboard front once craft, to lighten the load, and was picked up, by a batteast. The boats lay becalmed otT Red Bank, and resorted to the Ingenious scheme of baying iiieh Other. .41 times they lay in'n direct line, broadside-to the steamer, with beautiful ef fect. Some one would then gad its lathy tiled with wind, and would eery rev In ediroisoc -web utt utterly tedious, uninteresting voyage we never knew Thera was a light on the steamer to the afterneon, at which blood law and elm* were uninterrupted. The boats rounded the buoy baths following order : Eating, Blackman, Cassidy, .k.loqi uterfolt, Hill, Mann The two farmer were-two Mlles in advance. The latter was becalmed three hours. We reached South-street chaff at five o'clock, fatigued and thoroughlydi/silted. The Olaokmau wen the Ts!, by Clew fast, the paling aloofly following her. LEGAL INTELLIGENCE. QUARTER SESSIONS—Judge I udlow.— David Anderson plead glint) to ache/is - of liallonY in stealing a 101 of hareem from Mr. W. 0. Smith, of West rhiladelphia, Sent IpslMt for its Months, Mary Reese was ainvieted of a nhargeMstealing two pairs of gaiters. The accused entered a shoe atore, and while the proprietor's attention was drawn totems customer', she walked off with the tatters. Seatanced to four months. William Walter and John Smith were gouvlotea Of a obarge of Weeny. George Mutt; was acquittal of a °Maga of lir' oeny. : Sarah Ann Sterling was acquittal of a enarga of. emiutt and battery upon-elarah Sterling, her daughteriirtiaw. - . Jacob 'Weiner was ailmloted of a niarge -of assault and better": tattletale for twenty days Henry Lawrence waa.oonvicted of a charge of assault and battery upott_ttry Benjamin ; and Omelet, Meath% who was obarged wit/ash* taint Mune, Wall Acquitted: 'Henry wu sent below for twenty days. John' IdoKeown, John -Drew, Mathew Shields, Lewis 0. Williams, William An derson, and Andrew' McGlone', were placed on trial, °barged -*with burglary, in entering the dwelling of Air. David J. Charles, No. 606 booth ; Eighth street. - The prosecutor, a yery esoitable Individual, told la very ORTIOILI storrof hening!his 'house entered iby the party of defendants; and-robbed of three guns, eight - kW** and 11.5 is tooszez.i tie had been ;with hfaKeown during the early pert of tlfeeie. .ning, and showed Mai over Lin houle,l Me wife and obildren being away. While with TataKeow4 be platted that perfou's j a,.. .1141°A several ' drinks which he alleged were Irtigdeo ;:that after this the defendant" came to bit home and he gave them pie and n/ilki and tiltkr left, _and be - then went to sleep be the .thitd: Mot; Kars. At two o'oloek he was awakened and he taw the defem dents leaving his hoes. , by the window. Charles then got np, And with nothing oa bet his shlrtAin vlsite idqii.eown's tavern, Orel! doors above; and took kitoklirdrialf, abitit - karitniflar was also draggadri.oB thsspni/Nred kis guns and , knives. Sultacquently,lesfated the dreg given biro wasjalan. , After • he•-liad given-Alt- entdalak: rAtinartea created so FIR eurtmentAnt , paplneff 14 w toat and starting np tboltertleadlnete TRW bi which the judge waseltting., ~ • t The defence contlindat that (be whole story was the limeadea of a May man's brain. Dr ' , itentokr, , fbilfatiftjr,hystillati ed Mit OW* teetitiet"thetJ lett aildns , o.ool.llololllr.-111ita ex citablesisis;ltlievibe fiitWbakitoatgisiagway to frevent.fi * tittf ~..iasiestrybileavety temperate Mk 44414 taut, ' r beitiinAll occasion ,'net,t44 pt. glary Mr. Charles mane to a or's oltiFe ib . _ ao titeoheict phoild on le e asasmsms-maresat was on the rge'd an Minsk of anistessea-pern•_; - Constable Fftinegan Wiled that after the Mid. leg over. Mr. Chiles' WC= him Wed 'nide and Megeon laskpothieg , to de frith the lingtiary. - Mt. Quigley toitiiitid that Mir; Charles semi to - his livery at able and - asked to a Aid j< the pea • pie Who wise after MM. ' - • - It Wee also frt ethlalia• that Mr: Charier tomcat Mama the alleged burglary, vent tab the' -; butlers Yap - Deli door, aag meow tie man would notstraw some. nails from a, ma milted him first with a billy, and afterwards with Avis. • - -woo other wittier"; as* Meted at. ten relook 05 40 mornleg d -tilts allagod burglar, NM ha wu then almost mute, Sind be , • Ire ibpret„ i !debit "_ --imilailaeigaliaisi.- as trato this, provided Abera!gagas, went to sown's to get a drilk. They - did - se, sod 1 . 14, than made no complaintor being robbid. , -Tha whereabouts of /he party diet wrs was' 0 . 00W5, and the District Attorney abs the _ proseoution . ,•aid - sr verdkat drug getitiiiii - mr. termed by the jury. - - • FITIANCIAL AND The Molter litairket. Partuastitu:l4o3.-UOL There wea a MOM bride feeling gim - stook market to-deg. anger which Pennegh sada Ralf- - road share*. Korth Penasetveade six pot see& lamb. Imagh Navigation , =ant , d the .eeler•timng s t oc k s gu Improve& - Bohemian told at Ix., Ifeaaevt vents Railroad shame trete finn at U. Haeltegarri Railroad wea weaker. and fell eff le MN. - POWJOIIe Detector sends tti tit following duanp• tion of *`haw sad d wiring Oiled fiverdolar Dotson the Pittsfield Bank, rtglikaPV , ./ 1 1.4m. ns 2 Lawn ennead eagle. oval male pOrtrait on right and tau lower left comet. ReJ tinted. This plate has also ban altered to the Prttaield Sint of Illinois. We sive below a eamyariaon of the trade of tie loading railway lanes in August. VOL and .Wolgant. MO. u ilet,LlMceir.l3llli. .New York Central. A • 4l ut 71aawa l o Bow York sad am...—. WV ale 'MN, Illinois Central....... —.— MAID Stag Valens and tai1wat0................• 1 1 /11-4* Melt Chicago and Rook i Cacti .. . lie 000 Male Chicago, burtiogion k Quanely Li NO 211411 kliobigan ..lantral.--. ..... ..., )4UM MAO khohiaan Roatkorw , • —...—. IIIJ) ' ISSN - Cleveland spa Tokado.-- ..... KM 66a00 ' The gratlying BWe:twat that - twehre wrntioas 'or bushels of grain had been out W goorlogt.hoda bloats elope, daring tha month of Anent Iwo. in weedinsed. The ferment of the Ifortlwoot are sweats/ tri, s,liveir sense of their true Maria. and realminainimer air felt as ponohle neon their great harvest. W apply it to the extinction of the oruehina load of debt. at high estoo of interest. whiob has been for sa moor Tram Intim sou the veil eeMealf. e A cielir fettle iSth• grelidgee Wont. to fast as toe fanners tar their debt,. the tam chants, who have famished they hulk sipplues. ame pa it • in funds to oar their Easton erednom. watt esti - 6tedit to obtain faruiir aka" ofjoods. 'The ragroad .sizmaeloo era 'stilts their fair glare of dew good: time - that has come. while the teroommeneemitt el the work of patio( off debts with the barest returns VIU sees (17alaas the happiest offsets sums the hewiseee al Ohs satMe country. Let the trot IMMO ta ilaetheit LI fast as possib a. Within a fa" dam vast. eats,tha NOON Ma) Jos:- nat. there have been large arrivals hams radmilsot corn, oats, barley, rye. and near. TIM Xmas aad Western depot I. crowded with rt. Noah hasiess joke emissions; sod theta wore large shormairts futejthala-, beyond. Moat of it goats, from It. UM; . 9•111,141014 and other places In the fir West. The Pries at . DOM IS here held at sheets-dm weals twat* /OMIT Pat billil•t• • Tha following ars the eartatt quotation- for epees* domwtlf trzelairser*et, - se Mule,* tit Oneida k Oe. bit:floury, feo.fo gout& Thini attest - Old kuts r.t, da115.....11;1.0A.C1id-Aut•vioss seta. ....1416- ..„, _Aar". i aoversuiss..... i = 1_ Idegioaa d0i1ar5....1.05•7 tit aptdeoui-il 8 pszosh • .LOB Tv% tka . l.trs . 7.11 B. li intr. " .• • ...DX (Prusouil Hs Five franalt. •-.•• • .. ge " rilidiror.--- —TM Qom= orrras.--.1.111 Smoak ocebtoo . as . . .11211 growth . ..-..--LlO Plitrlot. - • K. YF.zah'ge. par _. 'Pittsburg— XlO PC dia. elt= it ; Af,dpai ebrasu-... Xto 1 • X • atetimond:::. XtoX' " • - I " , !, - . j ,. .. e a su ne fiaTi n. .. :-... - 1 :•••'- 1 tens ..a. — .....:1 to 4 .. ..-...........: ." , .. N.Y Omani.. ' 1 " •Keirno t t s. 4r.' •• Meier. Drexel & Co., beakers, Nei Ltd easily Third street, famish to vith the follovittrenotaticas fur land yarrsots, _ r:. LAXD WAIJLAX7i. i..... 75111 St Th~gwrbit Philadelphia _Statile . Wichita,* Sties, _ _ Boptember Rsroz to & sLitrisane, is•Cwaima mint ' FIRST BOARD. 'I KO git-T 68 K 3 0 /01.% I - 7 Doliv Cheat .. 47 10030 .01 Co et KSO lot. oo I I d o d i 1 MO at Fs R 80-.2 des 7314 124 Poem& 1......,.t0t0Leil .- Lado ....2 ifesllo% Se —: S&LsJill 1 i4l Lehigh W 100 G sdo -Silis..Bl SO W Cbettati le .7b 1 Hartisbati A • •=:-.1 12 VW Koh Play al 'B3 .-.7.5.14 10 do ....,.... .14 - MA Qbee VA Rga 1322.401 10 'do ...-... 1 Ku end,. k Saab 74 .. SO W. dth' i ......4,1 . 8 Lehigh p p_:...-:..eli &im iii ams lt -Is. A 35 4so 0 , ....-........ 41 ' 10 do . - ...-....-.41 41 re at likoootJo. g ,- -I el duo --. 4 1 */ cots W 2 Moms Caial....--: Pi : ... 1 - '• ' 81111112 CS 20.11,0D15. -' . - - sail Pi, it ifs.. 3 dig JIM I *arils Casa ... int . . .. . - : :, " notiebi MAW. • , • r ' ; • -' *Ca Csaat IP rir enclit — tiltseasser illiatirr... - 6olM i tirgit.4/ A P a sm as trii..A S ' - - i I°do ..T. -7;4g - . ; . -...-..:. =loft rifirrsiVy . . - - • --." Bid. Asisd. 3..: .ftli t a=. poleaxes —lOl S' laix Emits L.. re sa L.-- lel% max:4louts, _ _- ilk ~- . 77tY - Mr' kla i5...n5w..1133 111113Vaaso WWI I 611. 13 U 4,. as...satof MC .MI Las 4A & 311.....,...15 Se It tv air t i illa 1 4 1 0, 401ALSsill i i . .1 , ....., INA nit as 91 . k i la .3 .0 1 0i.....a _ i•it, mt is 'iti.., itii Ns z sac IL. ± , 47. 1 4 ," isoab . VS , it ld mile. it Os rat( & &with a— as - rot wads ad .17 117 Ir d i r i*L AS ~ eV ECI ordsolt 4_ .414 20 XIF ma Thii Thii est !mil —ars .OS - vial Ines" , SS, fisesso - 13 rums —:. 14 tr i VIC,Ig . 7 21. k ll' F1Tt1it•?°.....".. EllsTrs 13...... a II - --- - PluladelpiJa ilfarkets. . Ihrtattpra fa-lfratstret, There iilaas lett - Alf iii the fireadstilfa tsarist to !lair• bat pieta avearitbeelmapeeetakeeekimps twiny ata4 Plea of standard poOka• ars reapalea at 1/4 NC at erfiaoh rats sOtitrfattitkt lota are means sad wanted; MO We extra mid at U Vie 'Ma extra" family at $6.60 ; I COO tads 1384 mills esarat,liaid sablit Diaatonda mills extra. •ad extra family'. oa tarns kept private. The trade are buries is leerorrewalwel.att tie above figures for allied as aad extra,. sad !ZOO, 1001 at higher rate. Notable dolts La ire /kw erAlonv ileat to alter quotations. 44au Wwwarli Moreirtesta fo 4 d lo alt sad rata it tk ad/acto shoot COM ars beta weed of at a tea for ootoilt SOO 4 GO MI. 111 Least fat for bite the tett r or god lifestert, Jr Lam:l l a n ttruitr agartitkelr errrit i raifer . t. ta• alter far DOM* -OW are rubor quiet sad I! shoot AAA Isualot Is fooad ars at .113 , 46.1111e4,311c0* a 4 • the tatter rill for Wm, Delaware. /ISM. bat um. 0 4:41 -4 4.attrottroa ustarady at cofrox trtarket Is ateadr;' talk - Wee or 1 * be ea to note. at trait wee". atocallis -Theta la a.m. HO. Oyes. d rC Sr ; vales of ai o lot =Ault at lealrdeerrir oe uate. th' is.dolsc to - w or Phoetstoxs la ma jil AVNEl . 7litilrli halt !wt. moat do ac at previnax,rigiA" ojt i N c ritiAl . kCtie VI; T101 X 0*41 4 40 rifor3l , F• lim: is seance. Petnarleaala bble maim in a EStVaY• a' 344 . ( nue at With trudge and hada o a , gallon. CITY ITEMS, 1. M. NMI'S AT 00.'1 —lttrellott Let of the seventh voleme of this lane folio Journal keel been bald on °kr colantipr. sad been oreVabte watabee ft la. ft fa jetbilabett la linalbeliand Gerais. be Mem& I. M. Slater ik Co., tie celebrated Beerier Machine itenursotutere of new York. The Ems yap is es belhshed With fine wood eagrestom of their mutate- tory and wore rooms. and one of their popular instro- Meats f their No •hnit le Mach/Delia the beady of a (air operator. Among eke tending ennteete the sketch of their Philadelphia '!lice, on Cheitant invioi. store Eighth. eondonted ty their gentimwooly 'seat. Kr. 0. novii. l Mil he loud with retort*. It viit. of mamy up 9 rytood ;hat this pub - Aeotiott ¢inlaid br ibeee Ijq adWitisitnt el hones it cantons& winch ;backing :Miler. not itri.tly communing titer ovis bast: nes?, worthy of *lnuit. The Immense ealtbse of this annufacc 4ti an how. may be inferred from this herew -I;esw Miser 14:nitwits sbetreselvel to the &antic. . . Wm. /I flimsy's-Ix d Soas.—ln, &aegis? ee -1 hums of - onr to key wt /he toned the advertise, Meat of items. Win U. Florstrninn rt Sore. the tele biated mannfastintra of lack ea' 'trent se 4 piwttress Iq Una elty. Their fe r silitioe lot Fatufsetq tog everything belonging to that depart- . t ari OQ Nati ); WWI VIA 4 1191.0140 e 11/ rite relit comment Kew tinneosessry. Their imasenes ISO'C,ra. at „Ttfili emi Cherry atYo4ta, Loons of the won ders of cur wearier)* and their extensive iehervont. formerly the capacious Friends' meet, hoe se of the FeolttY now worshipping at Biateenth and Cterrla now exhibit, a strick..made up expressly for the fall y 6010.100 trade, of fenoi dress aims*, cord..bindiaglie velvet (rinses. silk and gilt telling.. buttnna.l,.raide, Berlin ntio,Trt. Ehsti‘od woo . etcetera. 'never! con- . etivet4e 'smoky, whisk. la eta's' hest soisaLeteneset.ta. Perteinli not surpassed, if it is seceded. is the et . ..entry. We have several times nromised, ourselves the pleikaura of making the tour of this noted famtory. end witneming She rations nutotifeeturing eir emu arias the view of giving the reset to our readers. and say do so at an gal, day. AZ a Kraal iltdearrilli Which sem Mi. ingenuity. enterprise. add skill amble, to eitusnms as rivet'. the establishment of Messrs. Borstmenn 4 Boas certainly racemes • mu apiesteni plate, filekrelant's from all parte of the Val= will Radek to timer advan tage to enemata thus splendid, stock. ifogriiry IS rya Baer Pottcr.—nsi tratlt of this trite adage is very happily illestreed is the um - bounded gammas that Rurnside's Pare Rye Whisky is meatier here sad elsorhere, to - although the tempta tion to make an impure but pa abide shominstion is treat, th • celebrated Whisky is always found ;fem inist, purer, wholesome, and invigorating. and to eon eepuence it la reaping the reward it lb Justly merits 11, the hands of the publio. Cagey h. STOCKDLLS. Psspin. 'om, N 0.328 Walnut attest. Bcivrvvt rILENCIL L or ELEVAXYLT INNVX rATTIIIIII% TOIL COiTt. VErts, as. VANT/S. oe MI/ rcla. alma. Sanaa Mann. 01 HAMS° 01D111. in tae most artuaie and datable Disarm, by a cm , : of tlwa moat eltillfol artistes and workmen in th e world. Bold at Uri lowing " pries." for ...a, by 011ANYTLV4 STO4II. NO. air Cliadast street. and a valaable and anorul 3tr,T liwanannina oath article sod. The fall worth of the moor inaraatted 'and attire esti saction PTIII2. Bowarr's KIDICATZI) Pies WM llla ealthillt re medy for all derameatents tko bolas. Wiriest ow, dreams, mok and Immo; lmodarki. dreoessus. MOO ko. Persons or sedentary kdratiooll OWN am lamb They are reliable! ead aaftr. sad *root dellsltmed t ern be taken at ail timaevilkent inoonyearmos. iisd- ^ tan no sonar, I *yam to tie torte,. Visa Ifs Yu v. laxative MM. while tan fife are madomat to pintligell an a r tParnmte - 14tramai oar by9.o. Hower, biztil sod Vine, and said by leaflike Premised Prisoner fps, ti &Masai& ' ' ' 1 4e Tat Pautzug cliWlT:iii,lielditklt-A MUDS that thl l ,llll/11148.0( thlt Trail la Upper 5.044, iset ikrolorliOoati, loostox-'442.- !oak:Ansi ItoitvaithisMr iimoiiiirrik Thu* *is Toodmi ng tescr,vors-ceiltias , 0 1 154 k inoMmuir. Adlik 004 *big boom lo thetr or* woe 116641%his 1,4 thimit.ed.rA6 61606 644 66 1 011p1t 1 . 6,11W411171i isessuisoo irmsta to mirsisilini; korni: aM is siestiosam s6f ellf,kviivilivi groom", toriiirej •10.}kt *Ora. Obi* Cbtkiet lie et = 104: ilsogi; Nos. NS and $Oll %Neat% stmt. Om UM