.ektaffq, MERM g: gt-.Ak_. - .,----, i , llt itr_ f, _.,., :: ...,, 4 1. ~' i :,.. ''- 11,;;.):..z.,...., I'r‘MODA - "44iiikiile '6607, Yule rses; - ; The Oeimirwhe elhilltOßNlPLe: oyll Tont An itimsibriSktetWetket,S Bee* ,Ayres _ *eV- Mmoirld•o; tool a lollso l ea, Posaitt-itimil-14-0479r ' 1 ,4 10 0 ' eimrsthop*MOOkett,A!i.*:o..,:rork, Wald; I 'l° l '". To, _ irett _ -EMPtc. Pig . e t, . O'etitOriteltliewidtelektew. ftlelroll4 thriiii4/1 0110041 =1 101 .1 0- her of ti e.. Mr. Joilesterit bat inthithietittriettitathit Governtn4sf r ,Radro 4., but litt Misgthe served fora brill : orm bite.ArttitoXlMettiietietN'. and in I,ll4llloskreletipsi„:iy popalfcvote;cue of thei‘t( o 4,*o4g4W l o. oo # t 61 . 1 0 4 e0 4. • Be wasitboti .Aelirke , :etwiet.*; f1e.4 8 %;,*! the 18Stied ;1812, and in afew diyi, will he;f4o 2 4l4l:?Pliarri', 4 4 Gotereor . Jonwsoe made a_ most' favOrable , iniPtiselori upon aleirhe'ollshiviur _ him. Be is it type of the true on ira many intensely. attached to ths!peadiarviiiititatiolut ;of South; and, until withie,thieetyearepaid, identified with the extreme miet , ge; 'icaapted the reipcniefbilitleir of his present conservative positien', o 14,; ifief, 'hatefully reflecting :Upon the issues involved iri the: present caw/am; Governor dit,Uoti Vee. • with Preld, dent Buesisestt, Whet the tuner sent.' fors Roamer 4. , WALltre , to rifLittes* and ,allotied him withanipleacithetitf to allow this . peefde, of the State;to vote, pon theli 3 Onnettintlot4he-', cause let believed that this Mlghtie,Cconweiset into Miitet of intervention skabiat the indite tons oi , theSoutlif and, 'Abeppfqi*lllie Comer other men` In the Aver State., he denounced Gov. W xgre for his pe ' rsist'ent `isdherence;to the practical principle of PopuleiStivereivity in Kansas.; 'Sit' *heti , . siWithat the Ad ministratichhid played fldse to WILZInti and that boutit.ii* to - be igtioredihd Ontrited, , on account of Jae ,erdent, championship of Gov. Wstuse, su*alad' that President had resolved- to !make • Lelotippet; Cud the, English : lM, testa of : orthodoey in the 'Demo cratic ranki,l - hd, 411ce Termer; of Georgie, like Hissnosan,: - M. South Serolina;iaid, like many, Other then ; independent ruten In the South, revolted 'at the *Chicle midtook up arms' molest the Administration.. But .no thing did te 'Mouse the indignation, of Jelistecii,' the WM:of theiddministration' upori';Srepstioe ; ,,A.'..Socaras,. amp/4 had - for More titan twentybeatithe"Morthern idol of thelontliein people.. Retold stood by theutililialthisielleatorio. - The Represen-v tativigliliedletehoth branches of Congos* , he had 4011 age* himself iletinimealtiee of tlii!it*Ereio North hfliiiiident ettectinelit . to the Mehland the inetetiteeetthe Smitluels Statelw %Shortly after he dame inte.Coagrects, in 1944,1thitirilt - Chilidt in the POOdMiltanoh of tbiSithietteilelathrif*lnAvor otthe; South; While- !Twit *ileac:With tone Conies AD4e;"i*tke. - iie . i ttl,ert;el. the ` boundary between Mexico a ndtdetthited Stiles. 'Oen' he dehildietSdnierilliorios; threw' taste fine l 14404; upon h im , Hein,; of by'Judrie- NeW OttaimetPrior*the bailor the eighth Win l:l ator or the Sout• hern :iiiehieutth." - -, end_ _ rheji', 40 - chanipionedlherolk hatowtsizimon not,* war' *hey 'with 'Mexico; he- spoke in favor a SontherePreaident.— Whenim epposed , the ' Wilmbt'PrdvLro; , heopposed what he'.con cefved.. to ; a wrong Upon the' gouttient States. -When 'he took put:: Com- - precut's! Measures, of • IEISO,- standing by Car and Oetitkinie; and "."tbric,. euently;-. ,cOndlicted the" it* reform which' repealed:: the Almond ,COMProusise,, he *MI 'all the,Mme toting for 'the South.' And ',when he" , yielded `: to ' :meet- Bvekk: esti/401 48513,: he , did.* Iniqaeitionahly, becatitihe'_plititkot the election of,Mi.. Be- Mae watiiicadialle the Yreeekiettott Otte inetithitont et the . sieve States. • lietice;4:4 cm) JOexiost, of Gootilitkitisetitig; as be may iiiit44thiot befote,',witlf.l)WWDovotss, inspired by- the, true feeline**Eimitheiu s gentleinari, reftieed to second the Omaha of the MitionsiAtteit; nis*tali* : lol, 4 l l iis' tetrepitt' and-independent Senater, ; tiOnt ',TOOT/riot. ' Jounce,' thereible,; *sharked_ in - .the. campeign for . Doemtse,:yrith .M . 11lieietlaudasM of , his fist-',"F ture.v, He, Morrie Ifni the "et . the . redemptiOn of the country from sectional.. IsM.,',ainftdrise fn Diaticask Bimirelf largely idenziatt---e.ol.—eae - " a ta : pii?foittsdif impressed with•a id@ata bs " colored Population of tbelletittr, were 'better cared.for than-the , free coloakt popittilio`u*, the North, be loOked upen Dotaiis the man, of till (diem in 'Abe "free,' &Mel, ~ to waken and -to coOlolidittO' patrioticsentkoeist; In fit.: Tor of the Sonthem[iMapia. - fence,, when Dsiolem-Inite.teraou. alSettator-frem: AAA UMW," born Georgie; declined the iiorabuit tion for the Vice Presidency, conferred upon' tlyttaDaltimore Democratic °mention, ,Itotorlots_electioneering., of 'his trimidir to thit sairdiation mato and who'd the - National• committee, - appoliaathi ttOls*lth**.recutainatioe, pentpatrtcken by the unexpected,' declination of FmzeirMair, looked arotaalfer a santbern man who 40 not fair to Uphold the banner of self-goliernitient elites Stafgs, DroVernor Joexsoi _came forward and accepted 't' from the hands, Ofthat committee. ' ,' • „ Ile Ilia coine * frOm hislionie in Geo r gia, *we, luthezeldstet as inthimitatori arid; Judieed community. tie has 'lulled that *aim He hat comeigroin. Glvorila to the,42 4 Tertii Witii.''S4, lll 4-.,!4,;:**lsr - >50,4 4 411 11 t,, 'for the pupae of spesitingto , *erthetuDeii pie. He appoint in-New Tork to4lay;fit com pany with Judge and trill cm doubt' awaken great enthusiasm-by his expeeltion of tkolidiesquvoliad In this present ,extramdi.- ; , ialYsitnale; r ,Jodgelteurass, the candidate vl thafregalar donsereatiee Democracy, Just lotatmd •from a brilliant canvass in Virginia, laarylkind, and Peinitylmala, and Atovemor J(iaisox, qie , 04veholder, Athe - *ammo for , 'Ytte rtedd,llers f,fuoetgiTiell iroAi t= con= , ot Lii own isartip'r ,10 4 11,,1w0 4111. iiiipsiriniNei 70* 41 ""1a1 4 " 441 ,2 " 'war** **eh 'fc'r *nth* hadienee4 : . by the 'A* nommoii # o slort . 't". *I" common piatformre" r:: • • t-A , - t • , t -" ia *tiable - truct, it I,telizdAY/ 0 1 4 ::00 11 4 ,o 4 olo :o4o l oDe e :C t 'i/ 0 0 4. —dttete tyrannlcal,Klaiiid. 1600 i, and of GA, : latkaaby."waocesslon to' pow - er' la - ruler. otthe- Allegdoce Of the Two 'Mania: It Imo be la that this finevoition of. Italy,- go- long :, - **golteroed, 1011:11telare for of roloa gararaNWL, and we heaelet,a letter. item ,to ,thitAfle -"iiiiithe Aimee; It fe not brfriOlaatifer _;,' H iat,f the temptation of :aoerahis Ifs*" ,to „ 416040it'' . IL trallsPind , too, WA Pros. siVeleteptii:migemsat *MAW* does 'aiot ',l6 4 gtidler.'suiy :picakisi;of *ippoitialiptikt„Tepev thite . attoicked. OM* !# !wilt!li.priblopete,Obse 1441iIi4it %EPP Vort o a Eft! , 0 11) !&1 1 4 hsYt * l .4ftk thWirttite of thiltokSl*:- . ' .`; A .. De bo , inectoitt Tiekif:. ,- ).,, .1 ; 4, Deus, teinorap _ _ o - to ' ''':' Witurbe . seen. by, a , , ,14 4 . 714144‘ -- 4ttitetirlilifithlV . itAat a Pere. t r enilei void .of • ., , y '' , , Tft,kee' bat been z f P rilled r 1. - . f i - 4 o---' ' '',4 eteett;er'efieeeitilt. 8 1,1 h, ' '' , iiiiinirbigitoin**WO per, ve . , , s i 'I - ••- • • • • r. tothlnurldheobit° : tkiwi'4444oo P,- ' iareilititgilide-, '-'. 114 tetkeif °reit De,i llo ., , , • 0 ,4, !AIM .thee3oo4-493 t°-I*gal # r °" lll fr.orosati' ', liai l - 16 - iniPP6 Y k lam titliii-n7jiiitierele „;eitietero)idie airier. .10,,,,g;04::r1„ —',,,, ,-(• r",',l*Athiii(4oiir#o9 DiPuo""mti,!'- ~ , - .11::;:-:•; - , 44 t.S•II , 'LI , Zr-,P . • ---..------- 2474144* :Porsot PArigi• -41414 '• - " 001 '0, r „.4- ' - new i t r sh. *OW (va: Rua - 74' - - " kt'totir tiosilytop,) sb• firoOltoli v '-!;:- I.f*Asill'ides *rat , 1 1) , AC - 40sus!,, ~, de ro k . -..;l 44 .o****lllkr. " 144 r it,i V- 41Prewit lorsHolt , .. .. 54 ' tld - i!tic "it - ' itilOWittO Me, 4 Ott illeAst. ~,„ . , ' . ,', L001., ii t i t t VM41120r. ,1 ~„. , Itor „, Niiet: Ar ViliW g ek.."Ve l l j,..........." l3 !? 2 Yill ittil lt itt ' y , tiliLigi ,fr As c iu, N po.4. z , -, "fter , s_kiiii..±. 2 ,: i y- - 4 -1,- it. ~,,„„.A . .... ~....„. Vo:fati - g*lttiflilliA,, liii ii . "i - i 1.....7 14 • -.5,.V . - -iikownviwit, at cl • r•ti s 'lstg•aillog }on;.tilir bita , --,?/10# oswooi 'Rik' ' hienirlitilly,',A4 I. -; : 900 01 ",,,, D ow mai, . . ~-rtr--140.--4,4400.-ot D. D. itaidtly,tmitfurrad Atia_tteltiri. Mt. WNW:moot, shy, a€ tko 0 _,011110q04111.11% cirgadiDlitelOollsge. . i i;,„.1. , A Itemarkable Cos dot.: The Contrast between the Enttidee silt Pi'44 Britain, so far -tbl.":3exp*e ;of ' _,_ : u government is concerned, striligi alltlienght ililMirids, in both il corintriert,,E•fit•irt •Pro: bially in England. To pub i i inlhatidainest denim, popular discontent extensively pre- 1 -# . llOl England on account of the increasing weight of taxation, and from this discontent swinge a sir ong,desire to,...quit _a country .wh• 4. qvi I • • V* , 1 ere the any a r e eo-hea ;hurt ened to litoride Mr_ the lontrionereMar.of -the forth,, Mite I%W: ~4 . •, 5 :i 4 .. t t., , ti. , ... , :e" - : T • Mi. Reran, in a recent letter to.the Seer= . eery of the' Northern, Reform GulOns aye :. , , ''• '",' - '' 't , Roe:untie; Angesllo,lB64. - 1 ' Dm-Stri : The resolutireirla hg• Mr • nir Lae eteit.sternnoli.plessuroa I, ans - only lorry that ' rilY'sFortijmeettere es froattleitle the Rouri - of .ocon r.-.' In Man* site 1 140. 1 4wieed; don 1 64 the to of the Riedirr reigay hse I,looll' .• 1 1: 1 4rwilltert Who :bee atteraPtild tai It a mistier the public remeron bee been nablemnsakein•Patrintle and' attitationel. The el" have heolibiodwillted led handed almost OM 'all - Winer example,' aid .the 4 terries. ' irttiob'altinld be their senanteead guardlemt here hadereetheir marten end - spoilers. I. know not *belt We thalllete • ebenee, bet our late' and pre Net entree ofenot`bi'emitinuir without danger rorahlimit — it.' •Potalbly Welaysiediesprintments and rennin In trade, ettleh may drive us to take satin of the enormilainun.whioti is annually and 'rieedleary taken from the proceeds of the nation', int/ashy. , .Ingland, with its population of thirty rallifora, will raise aventy-tecomilliona in Govern went tuns this year. The United litotes. with an estimated popu lation of thirty-two Intitious, will . rata shunt twelve millions iu -Federal and State Rovermeent tens this year. Raw long will tor• land meintale her position in the nos with this burden, aud'what instittitiokis therein the &net Mb lyettai that Lifelike tribute,, of silty millions sterling a year ? The thee •ma r . own* When the people will dimmer that monerobles and Mistoori. 0411 may he pnrehosed, at, too dear a rate, unless monarchies and aristocracies become snare tease." :Thesn,be ,bold ivords; - and' true, which if Written and published forty years. ago, during tfteroignof George' the - Fourth and Fat, and tin government ;of :bliatlareagh - and, tiao, Liverpool and Sidreoutir,woualosTe consigned 'their author in a dwigeoni or tb transport s- , thin, as a writer of sedition and disloyalty. Mt': Baran has bit the right nail on the head. ISlth more moderation statement than par tisans generally exercise; be, has somewhat underatited 'his Case. The taxes. levied in England, for" the , present, year, will exceed £76,000 in their net amount, and , the, cost of colleCtion added en, the whole sum will be over $82,000,000. In thellonse of flommont, little more thin fOrtnight eve, Mi. LININALY complained that the Ohancellbr of the Exchequer (Who, a few evenings before, bad persuaded a thinly-at tended House to allow hint to raise £2,000,000 on Aaiun:pier bills, on account of the bad harvetite) hid exceeded the estimate of the year,' , 170,000,000, by six millions sterling, and that the enormous cost of collecting this money was Obc:millions'mpre. Here is &gross amount, of taxation amounting, in one year, to $410p00,000. Against this the public ex *wilt* of the United States, for the year ending' , June 80, 1858, we quote from the American Almanac for 1860,) g was $81,586,. 867. It;is about a dollar in this CountrY to every 'pound sterling raised in Great Britain. Something more than Mr. BNIGHT'II estimate, but still a vety , remarkable contrast. Fully_ one-third •of ' the British revenue is :disbursed, in payment of the interest neon the _National Debt, an enormous incubus which Sits heavily, updn"the heart of the ration, and de stroys: its „energies - by Paralyzing its circula tion. •Thousands in England feel this, but few have the courage manifested by Mr. Butturr, tomato) a public proteat against the nefarious syitem which robs the industrious for the henifit brthe drones of society. • • aisd Irenttlaing Railway' . Our resides will remember thsitive, some months ago; pithliiihdd ate grade; haying referenda to as. tain inninxiinte in thi,'Scsantific ,Ainerieen, upon the importance. of lb' more; thorough 'system of -heatingead:ventilakag reilrOad care. It was then too latii,liowevar, for our tuggeetioni to be acted upon by railroad eoiopinfet Isar amen, although we ate glitt-bi know that several of litembave since ithile:,aminteritlable - .Rots in that direetion, and that others are new instituting measures for the adoption of the great railwaY stove Of the day—the patent Rallway-oar Heater and Ventilator—in, vented by Mr. James Spear, of tide eity. This in yontlon, as we thee - stated, fullrantleipatati the imperfeelions oOlustlyoinaplaixted of by the Bto. yeas* Ateirieue, by gemming,' in the most perfect .meaner, constant and thorough ventilation, and en egialfied temperature in the oars. The abeoluti ' dixtemfort attending railroad travelling in winter. not to mention the liability to oontraot colds and jeopardise heath, is so .objeetionable to an en , lightried community: that gentleman who have roads in sharp will be tionitalting their own into rests In oomplying with any reasonable demands of the public in this behalf. I • We-ire gratified that the palm of victory In of toting the ingenious imps...aararlibolio referred which have already been given In The .Pregq, tinder their proper head) should have fallen upon a prominent Indladel-, phis manufacturer _ and inventor, . although we abonld as ckeerfully %hist open the general Intro• duotion , of ao !linable en improvement had it emanated' from any other quarter. „ _ Railroad companies that have tried heater, among which ireeeyeril of the pros ipal ' ones in the VOWS, hays: exproited their entire Fa-, tisfsetion as to the imprtrvement, and in in save. ;re! fruitage:es have given a practical exemvliflea• lion of this by ordering these heater* for all their ,ears. As regards the comfort of riding in cars thus heated and ventilated, we can state, expert. mentally its d•olded superiority over ethers. Last 1611110111iir Spear fitted tip several sleeping oare on our own Pennsylvania Central Read with his pa tent heaters and 'pipes; running along the entire length at the bottom of the oar,. convoying the heated air...in-dose proximity to the, pomengers' feet, which addition was alio' considered so sibs. factory that the" bottom pipes" Will probibly soon bosom* ereperel. At the present- time, We learn that he is executing large orders for the' 'idudson River Rellroadi and the sleeping Cars on the New York Central: • ' " • We have taken the liberty of referring to this 'abject :egaln as we eats:ono the proper warming and ventilating of pnbile conveyanom, la this age oftrayel And retria l to be a matter vitally in West* to' Oar' altiteria; and or ' no email sanitary thiporterth. There Ii still &Matti Merit of the above heater witch we omitted to state, that should' not be overlooked, and that- iv,. Ilan' liability tit Ito the oar hi me of an accident. Of thU;'tfiie retembei eontiotly, the Mee of our paper famish en intithanthg illtudiation; which occurred oione of oar Widen roads a few months ago in *Mob' the ninth beater of lar. Spear's patent in the' train," of all that were overturned by the soot , dein, 'wee the only, one that did not communicate titan, the ear or poosfflipro. i-For this hrformathin• of those who Are num qualrited with' "the proullaritiee of this improved imam. .and .torstilitor,miry state that the denh/larksitienof heating and yautflating is thus Ingenkrealy: ereeted : Prom the , heater two pipe. kereld to the top of:the oar, one enolooed within ,the other, audrinironlY;the outer one vbdble, and • Sagefrinibut on. 'opening in the toper the eaffor stigma. _ Th'erie pipes, ere so oonstrireted that the and gama from the Ira, and the interim. of RSV,* pair cep the firmer -pipe through a emu T ietitliatort edipllted with a fatutel remind with •oriihr puss .sot-the endi, Which, „facing front and ion tame at - Mune of fresh•Seruned air 'down the :large pipe, which, in its pomace in contact ieftfilitir pip. and the surface of the stove, becomes pealed, mad through aistrturie is passed out near the !bier, asuman a oxidant eironlation of heated Ourit Alf, and keeping 'the •teruperatnre` of the car nalformthreighout. • The large outer pipe is sup plied with isdamper r by which the ingress of air mayibs regulated according to circumstance. With proper attention-to this the complete comfort of risarepra gittehbuid, even In the 'severest' risstlisit" the suniyanee of 'either too much heat n* tilptstove, thkeortiliseritsteee. seity of opening wiedemrto the ~ 4 fLsoorrifert Orthois more remote, lid the veld Mete of the extreme ends of the eau, obviated. These advautsger, and one prOwri•bnprothments idiot the inventor has recently mast we ditch, °emblem to ranger this adadrable wattle ting heater worthy the - attention of MU* erinipinhos everywhere, — Wiwi it stated u an 'piton," of the ramose" M "Mit in real life that the son aid heir of lbid Lovalioe,,Ake grandson to whom will, nitimattely go the bilk of.** late Lady '24yron's largliffstilled profilist/1 sad who now bettomos Ea irati-*(isinirb by bit death , is,'and hai, fora' tainatforibi• - time' past,' beam working at weekly waylemiart Wilton in the smiths' deportment . of 4ftallwielt"usinal. "cif!'" solf ofan earl, and tits tootitts, -- cliarrny by writ, tido l b: nianique nee. Vi:4,i'tarirtleae l e delights!, to 'show pewee the • b e lko,L o or Byron" large' Wend property, If sadgkagiter of Numb of lisfrartii ability of her mo ihint,Ada, the only_ danglitor of Lord Byron. ' SaartQ ' - TF~eWO* ;Mil; Cbtbniels of the 25a1; AIN*, obaion ol o4Piksti 1 /707 411 4 0 4, „R.rwlfir:4o4wrtitswtitoz,,,i4o.4q,i, ils34ld, :bolt tot raiding. .ar to . ye' diatßl pioraltton bales tee& by otet oe-theta, that they gonad tight it out donWs•bostelled allot Bt M it woe switYtottbi, the ;other; aid fitioistmulteneoue-' .1,04 of tbent iitii!ikteetet,ly , killed." New 1(otlit - Aitclitteiscirov Its norosiii "%axis apytruolt, tiss ?Ns assortaxo nos." cases /1 —VW alde rman, or the Eraakta• Ap Owe If Gln tor seeeenlair the wroneet alit E y. g t rt, ten_elearore, and two =one ~„uirm,orwi.uracr, tea °Malign THE PRES&-PBEILADEL,KHA, WEDN !)I . ?Ay, SEPTEMBER 12, 1860, wesseamkiir ocaumiforDicproe' Wastemondenikof the Meal Waeinicarox . , Sept. 11, 18111); Aa / predintna • in 'My .last letter, thiAspubli- OSIIII hive swept Maine from the sea tolltel/atmda frontier. Whatever may he said of Mr. Smoit, the candidate of the Democracy for Governer, (and a most excellent man he is,) his assault upon Han nibal Hamlin - in regard to the Braeiilan mission was a fatal mistake. But yesterday's work in MilatTas done by the Breekinridge men. Yon will .pereetiii- that' thilibriooracy have gaited latgelyupon the September election of 1856, four Years' ago; and there is no doubt that if the whOle party had been united upon the candidate's of the party in the present election, a very dif ferent remit would have ensued.' The result of the Maine election is fail of prophetic philosophy. It will Inspire' the Republicans to renewed ezer.7, tioni. It will intoxicate them. They will ga. then so much encouragement from this election that they will Satter thetriselvei that they cad advanoe even upon their Preterit Most advanced Position. The September 'elation in Maine has been a tort' of forerunner 'to the Presidea tial eleetion.• But it ought to be recollected that the result in Maine has not always indicated the !nicest of the candidates of. the party who have Carried Maine in September. 'The Southern poll `Miens speoulate:. w pon the majority for Wash burne over Smart In this arise • They say, if Maine, a State in Which' the conservative element should be largely developed on account of her great Ship pink interest, and her natural cotnmeroial con neotion with the South, thus decides in favor of the Republican candidate, what hope 111 there for Mr.- Breckinridge in the 'free States, and what .prospect of being able to prevent the triumph of Abraham Lincoln? 'lf there are real Diettnioniste in the Sollth--lif South Carolina has resolved to secede in the errant of the elation of Lincoln ; and if Alabatna (the Legislature of whioh appropriated $200,000 to be vied in such a contingenoy)'has de termined to tarry out her policy,' now—is the time, to abt. Why de they not anticipate that which ibrn immeditte followers of the Breekinridge Men •of the fliesth have 'rendered almost certain ?' They say that in the event of the election of Abraham' Lincoln to the Presi dency they will not wait for an overt act, but will Immediately secede from the Union. Why do they not move at once, because the election in Maine proves that Abraham Lincoln will certainly tie ohoeen- for the next President, unless, in the meantime, Mr. Breokinridge shall withdraw him, self from the field, and the fire.eaters and the Die unionists of the South shall ground their, arms, and yield to Douglas and Johnson. If _there had been no'Breokinridge non Juliana, on Monday, there had then been. no complete Republican triumph. If,' then, the Republicans sweep the North, it'd!! be the Breekinridge party who will contribute to the Republican success. It follows, then, as the night follows the day, that keeping Major Breeltinridge in the field as a candidate for the Presidency, ia to secure the election of Abra ham Lincoln. The logic is entirely irresistible that Breckinridge favors Lincoln, bemuse the election of the latter will, upon the Breokinridge theory, secure the dissolution of the Union. occ to men. Letter from “Kappa.” (Correspondence of The Prem. 1 WAHUMGTON, September 10, 1800 If the telegraphic reports should prove true that the Douglas-Bell :9ommittee hive emisonted to give to the Breekinridge inen ten elsotori on the ticket, you may for certain put down New York for Lincoln. The friends of Judge Douglas in that State, and they form the maas of the Dentooraey, will never consent to vote a ticket on whiob nearly twa-* thirds of the candidates are against their tender& beirer. They will 'spurn the attempts of those trading, miserable, spoils-hunting politicians to sell Ores favorite candidate, with the utmost con tempt ; for there are very many amongst them who deader Breekinridge worse than Lincoln. The latter is the usenimone defile of his party ; the for- - mer the stindard-bearer of a fit4ollllloll and disunion faction,'fostered by the present Chief Magistrate, nominated to stab in the back and to defeat the regn ler candidate of his party, a traitor, renegade, and bolter. The very numerous German vote will OA pectiny become refractory; teethe honest Dutch men easnot oonesive that, In order to elect Don friss,- they must vote for Bell, and Breokinridge A etraight-out Douglas ticket, even if in connection with the Union men; Would have carried New York. The adinbeion of the Seeederti,who have now hardly 5000 votes in the Slate, and will be nowhere in No vember :will drive off at least 50,000 conservative votes. 'ln vain Mr. Douglas beseeches his friends net to have say entangling alliances with the _bolters, knowing that it will insure bia defeat. .Bat the rotten politielans, whoomfortunately, are yet 'Parer are not heeding the will of the peoplp. hfr. iluelninan is chnokling._ "Bietelea.hoMere and paid airventa have succeeded. New York will go for Lincoln Nvery true friend of Democratic pinelples must be aware of the fact that, without - the vigorous Mitts of Mr. Dougles;the siert, would be now ex &tot, and as dead as the Whig party. The prin ciple of non-Interpent'on will always be the en. creme law of the land, at least se- long es the Union lasts. Any party, no matter by what name It may he nailed, If it honestly and sincerely vindi cates that principle, will be the rating power. So long as the Democratic party Omsk to It , it -was victorious; as soon as it forsakes, _lt defeat must ensue. Any amalgamation with the opponents of that principle will always be accontreniad by dia estrous efts* The_Groseon ticket, being snob ....ersarnation, can never be elected.' The Demteratie party never succeeded by an alliance with the enemy ; always won its battles alone. Great .preparations for brilliant fireworks. in honor of the Prince of Wales, are now being made at the United States arsenal. It is expected' that the whole codfish arlstoeraey, as well as the repre sentative. of the RIP :V., will be here in large numbers, to do honor to the future Ring of Eng land, provided that Louie Napoleon does not carry 'nut his islet', in the meantime, and make a descent upon Albion, conquering it like a ;second William. The Irish will certainly not prevent him from do ing eo. On the contrary, Napoleon knows too well 'be !Mantel hatred existing between Ireland and gegland, and, cunning as he le, be will take ad vantage of it. to, after all, 'ow belles who will dance with the awkward:young Prince must not be too certain that that they confer that honor upon a future King : " There is mans a slip Between the cap ato the lie." Mr. Forrest, the great tragedian, who was 'Pre sent at 'Baltimore when Douglas made his lest sorted', has expressed hie surprise at the great in fluence over the minds of the people which the Little Giant exercises by the peculiar forte of his rhetorical powers. Be asserts that, during a pe riod of more'than twenty years on the stage, he never witnessed sub a magical effect of the voice of one man upon masses composed of such different elements. Douglas, having spoken so much in open air, beta to be exceedingly careful not to dlea. ble his throat. Therefore, he spoke the first part of stanch in a lower key, not to loud u usual, but equally distinct. The enormous number of peo ple Sling the guars before the Gilmore House to its utmost eapaolty, eager to listen to and to oom• prebend every word be said, abstained on that at count from all load applause, and preserved such a quietness that every untrue of the speech was heard eves at the corners of the square. But when Judge, Douglas commenced to 'meek of John 0. Brecittraidge, showing him up in his dubious po sition, thepopuliteetbreke out in nine tremendona cheers for Douglas, which shook the ground upon which they stood Douglas himself, fired by their enthusiasm, assumed a higher key, speaking much louder than before, and was constantly interrupted onehderg cheers. Ric speech in Baltimore was that will not moon be forgotten. Mr. Breolkin. ridge's speech was thoroughly dissected, and every plank taken from under him. nut, where Is the man in the United States who can stand the sledge hammer, blows of the Little Giant ? KAPPA. Letter from New York. RE CIPTION OP JUD:3II DOUGLAS : NZ OPPOSER 717870 E , 1:1111 BRECKIVIIIDGERS--DgAlf ;nonmetal) IE Tors —44: LiTTISE SZTARIIIED-.-LAA svexclictim's Boors AT THE TRADE AtiudA.ll moor ; ,LAVRA KREMS, BARIUM VilL -1.14318, MISS OIIIIIIMAN, WADIACE, 11,0111131, Xl2B. PUGILII92B---Mll.. . Gala? 111231017. W. 1.09:1700031d0i100 Of,The'Pressa . - Haw Vona, Eoptember 11,1860. The room of lodge Douglas at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, hive been orowJed to-day with politimans and gentlemen, all congratulating him on the brilliant and dashing style in which he Went Into the camPeilmi in Virginia, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania. The Judge Is boosting in oppogition to any fusion with the Breclontridee men, in this Mate, maintaining that even if the latter Posemesed numericalatrength, which they do hot, a union with thim would be in diem confliot with the principle, he beg battled for in all hie sieseohom that snob a coalition would lose him thousand" of votes at the South, and rather thaneountensnogit hewould re tire from the canvass. At a muting of the Douglas I:ln tro' CanlMlga Club, held last evening, Mr. T. 0. Field" Introduced a series of reablutions denouncing 'the ,re p Aped coalition, and enstitined them in a speech of stir ring eloguieneie. They were adopted without a dieteiating WO. 'lt tea seats feet, altogether unpreaedinted to our local polittoslalitory, that daring the present Prem dential oanyssa Tammany Hall has coarsely raised a hand in behalf of our candidates, and Mozart Hall has peen equally ignites. The whole, labor, thus far, has been Performed by the Central Club and the ward clubs, and they. have done it thoroughly, and well. Truth is. the issovle have come to look upon both organisations as - hindrances rather than helps—as oombinatiods kept up for the adyanoement of an ambitions, selfish few, Instead of to promote the general welfare of the party. • Dean Richmond is In town this morning', and has galled a meeting of the Demooratio &tate, Committee, n Feder of this weal; He le not only opposed. fiat footed to an, formal ftudon with the on ly State Committee, or party, but sere that e blemnorntio Comm ttee are airnostunan =only aga wit it. He had n interview with inige . Donlan/ this Montle end their views are in entire humour. Laid evening, some member or the Breckintids• State Committee returned to mr. Wood the proposition mule byeim to tht Itreektnridtere. Mr. Wean ran away be Ore It cone be Utd , t 9 him, he notable event or yostor'ey'e book trade sale war the disposal of Lea & Blanchard's invoice, whirl amounted to eteee—the largest invoice ever sold by them. These% thus far ltits been 11, (rest utensils. Pib ilehentand lisaliropte I nigh entrap. and tottuttt upon a [Oland winter Wanes, larger than they have had in InsPr Years, roe, pommel swoon. *MO commenced het eve. lung. "Defied etylonOtielf. At Idiom ifeer4 es. ft crowd Ittiveu a tee i r ld ren, to qu irt Oil firetl.erformanoe ti 4a Yeats fo4,l7. , PloA t at."lgi.ph°ll"4ll l . -16Po l leieRgek .4..zatir4"°l74:hirrittel:l4 trirairritibuDgiaallry otthought and felicity of egpre ,elop.„stisti Keene nee oieeneo, starched. Med !rodeo UP I POPULOUS V 414-4 4 ,147. WO* the We !PP all"ronti - show Da samal 7 hketastiand teat that nava formeu Ine i r i gosoul ii t i ottare of her m d anagement • - Winter t r a i ty f e ul G l m n d n t.li t a t , he e MST theatre iffirlog the season, Tinder the exclusive mattaxemektot •• thank Jacasoe—Mr. Smart' having ista .,i rrd liv a ,o 4 two i r o ebta s trush holiness, tee H. Weng.oh opts. Da thurnday evening. with all board comp-gap exnegt)olin iitongbign and Dlott, suotemiged by H. Ogivannore and aMr ivortdn The veteran tionoineposs With a new 00113eityo u r !spud from the Trench of Scribe. called '•T, atoy pr fifty Tests MlL"Jamey, watch sod wife Ore dome ebninegewere to large autocue at the 4 , 14 Bowery . PtillOtt PAU been complete 7 transfortned by Mr George Wood, dad is pow one of the bent-amingett houses in town... Wood nait ensued a wonderfully clever solnette, rare. W. inrightox, Barnum also reopen _ it#4o6, Ins neat speeoh made mu e t . . Prosperous as the Muelleln ,i rt . r .r. larger meet his receipts for nos mon iv *illtn in any five months sines ha OWO - ''.Leaving the theatres. lstnsttn *Cron the wily te the City Assembly Rooms.* tiers beer et thOtieapd have paid a dollar @soh. to rtl4 ll l l l •Ag, Mon got up for the Worst° J 0.% 111403/09 • TR* tie stars are all Present,- te nse . Aaron onee, ed Cusco and and John Woods, as performers. alit . c r orgert i lszy Lazarus, a cid otbev pegs as spectators: The dollar figure had the • sot to bring out the better Glass of fanny men, and ancygentlemen, and-dank Macdonald 'mediated about eight hundred dollars by the operation. Next week Mr. Forrest opens at Niblo's. Ills re appearance is looked forwatel to as the histrionic event et the taxi. they' Ille v appiov Impatient Ir?r I Ttly t t . r ‘ Vork---at hereto perlornielloebro:l73 . 4=l4 i : There m varrgreat anxiety to hear Mr. Forrest. and be wilt meet with a rsesport thervannot fait to bring out, in their highest verfaptiop, the ,great gifts With which no is endowed' , - • '; " The monster bat one tomorrow it ISituiiverest topio of talk. It is to ben barbecue as ther,understand one do it at the Wroth and' West As I write the Ms Kentucky ox weighing 2WO pound, on the omit. rn dergoing that tromendons roast whiok te to fit tom for the sen.ral maw to-morrow Many of our morchant manufacturers and ineohanics have resolved tog,Vo their employees a,ho flay to enable, them to participate tnAls novel and patriotic` festival ' It floods but Pleasant day to make it the great demonstra tion of the year. , • MOTEMENTS OT THE IDISCHINRIDGE BTATH HITTEE-PILOWEHOTS , -WHET THE ,O.OVRRNEIENT OFFIOIALI WILL NOT DO. (Correspendence of The Press.) NSW Voila. September 10.1800. The political ouidnunes have been great'.' exercised, -during the last three o four d nt the efforts of the Brock' ni idea State lommitten to face wth the regular Demoniac) , From reports public .ed in this Morelos's papers the. casual reader might inter that terms of fu sion had actually been really agreed upon, and that, henceforth, all to to be plain sailing. Exactly the re venge at thin is the fent True. there hes been a con ference between the Green Ytate Committee and a tub committee of the Democratic State Committee. hut the latter delerated no power whatever to their sub com mittee either to propene terms of °omen) nine or fogioo, cud when the State Committee reasnemble and receive notreport. re fe renc e not be followed tip with flta on in to s. Miens° of the electarel ticket. The Demooratio State Committee are clothed with no power to make (Manses. The ticket was tom'. nated by the State Convention. coil the only power conferred upon the State Committee, by the Conven tion was to till vacancies, as they_ did last week. in the Oneida distnot, by substitdting lidr. Mann in place of- Mr. Hutchinson, who declined. The Plate Committee have not the leant power to create vacancies, and it is j not at all probable that any tan men will withdraw for the purpose of giving pima to ten Steolunridge tnen. The ultimate result, therefore, of all the then and talk about fusion will be that the Demormaile State Com mittee will litre nothing to do wit• it. but will go to the people upon the platform and with the ticket they have a ready placed in the field. There were funny petformaneea In the Breokinridge Committee just before it broke no. When the ohitir man of the Detaberatto Intb-COtninittee had 00 . 0111ded, to reoommend eiyin the Breckinridgere ten electors. it wee found that, te chairman of the latter was wen eat. He couldn't be found. Smote were sent out. Mat they discovered no Green. EITIIWIAOII were dispatched to plume where it was supposed he mightl he round, but he could not he honied uo. He was emphatically invnible Green." For four home ise oelleatuao tpatiently awshed his return. when Uwe. ascertained. hat he bad left town for Snag euse, not wishing to g through the heart-rending formalitylif ae adieu, There was Schell. not kno.Wing exactly what to do r, beside him was Mather. who is attemes cheery and By the table eat Ilatob, the brightest and sharpett of the crowd,with a smile on hie thee that wee net emiley. Sam Browne, of Otsego. strutted about the room. not very clear mg to what' should come no near, and Gen. Aaron Ward, with that courtly and geduotive way of his. was shooting all cods of pleasant' proem: Lions and thing', into the ears of those who happened to be nearest. It was a rich spectacle. And then going of. them began touree and swear—a:are streaks of ;Dye lenity corning from the mouths of the older end harder oases, Would teat Dan el Itongherty bed bee , sent 1 His graphic, powers of descript i on would have' salted down material in_whioh he could have revelled for a month, et least, .But enough of tble. The Pederaloffieers here, acting under inspiration from Witehlngton, will not array themselves ageing the ticket nominated by the Dangles Democracy. The results In Vermont. Missouri, end Icentuoky haverail moniabed them that the people will, in the coming cog. test, not be controlled by °dicta% and the •otlleitle rhL city, who give tone to those In other parte of the State, are too astute to commit the "happy despatch ' Upon their preelous selves. After the Democratic State Committee shah have heard the remit of their eub-eonernittee, and deelleed to give It approval. yeti may be prepared to li`e Go vernment functionaries of this State fall graoefuby into line, and Buyport the regular Democratic ticket as the only mode of defeating Lincoln. LATEST NEWS By Telegraph to The Prem. Republican Meeting in. West Chester [smut, DESPATOR TO "TRE MIBEI."] WEST Onsersa, September 11. Hon. Jona Snartgaa.enoke to.night it the large hall, which was densely crowded. He spoke for an hour, advocating the homestead bill, and argued that the Republican was the only party who,would secye to the country a protective tariff, a home. dead bill, and secure the 'Territories for the homes of free white men. The curse of slavery Should never extend over a single foot of free territory with hie vote. He thought when :end linens/lax left the White House he would be the let Pilate; crane President; and so mote it be. He ,thought Penurrlyania was the battle ground, mad ahe must dead.' the outwit, Ho „wu cheered 'stintingly, and, after closing, the whole audience roevand gave him three rousing cheers. Loud calla were made for ilfr. litcyoraiiwho Came forward and spoke for half an hoar in an earnest and effective manner, showing his , ovum on the subjsot of freedom in the past, and Ain 170- .2165 n at present. Cheer after cheer was given hip so ho progressed. Re denounced Donnas as a politleaVmounte. bank and knave, and doolered that he had de. flounced him for yeare, publiefy and,Privatoly that he bad 'been , false . to Kansas, false 14 freemen, and that ho could never treat him again. [Applause.] He dead that tee men dare say be had left his popular sovereignty' principles. He was for free white men and their righte whop thrown in, competition with slave labor; and as BitacKlNallnin wax always for slavery, and Don 'auks did not care whether it wee, voted up or down, he wont for " Ohl Abe," who did care. He was applauded nod cheered continually. The Widendwakes turned out in a tophllght parade ' and mustered_aovorel Vuadrell reennied ..aa toot, with bands. laiterns, laid torches. X. FURTHER FROM EUROPE THE CITY OF WASHINGTON AT NEW YORK ?IRV" YORK Sept. 11.—The steamship Cite of Wash ington, from Liverpool, with dates to the apth, armed at tide port .o.day. The following &wretches contain her latest advice.. The Tim save considerable amounts of gold min ben° to be Bent to BP In In nnYni ant for wheat. With this exception, the continental detennil is not go peso. in as might hare been expeoted. The weathe. this rooming bee an improved appear -01.710 0. • • At Mark T one, yesterday. prices Is to 2s in advance or those of Thursday were s.sked. but sot obtained, buyers being unwilling to concede to the Improvement Letters from Odessa speak of the excellent condition of the new wheat. The crepe in Is engine are very good. hut in on the the business was uusattsfaatory. of fressa on the 25th business was paralysed for want Arifi u Mbursday.--The Austrian and Prussian Am bassador/ have monied their coven of the Syrian Cop befitted before quitting Paris on leave. The dates wilt be filled up and the signatures of the other +inherent dors added tie moon As the Turkish Ambassador has re ceived fall power for a definite signature 01 the Con vention. The cholera had broken out, with ineremied violenoe. at Malaga. Fo 1 hundred person'. have been attacked in one day. and fifty of thorn have died. Logoott Yam:inch IdHT.—flugThe only axle by public auction, oonsisted of 278 hhtle arid tierce.. C a m Elea. which sold at 981.61 , to so, voila market needy; the pone estee are raise at full rates 9en unonanged ; common ,ongou quoted at is. ole. id. A fine day has canoed a pause in the dema nd—market firm. Saltpetre quiet : a little business yesterday after noon at Os. Ed. for affer cent. Tallow market firm at 52, on the spot ; Ms. g .052 a. lid.. October to December. and fit . ad Wit3a. Ed. anuary to March. It is stated that N apoleon has resolved to create two new regiments of Emmet,. The speculators on the Paris Bourse were discussing the effem of the fall of the Bourbon dynasty at Naples. Accounts from Castile and Catalonia state that wheat line Olsen noneidertalln. in ooneequence of purchases made for French and English hnusex. A Turin journal assorts that the admiral incommand of the French squadron at Naples. has received orders to observe the shortest neutrality, and do nothing that may interfere with the defence of Naples against en attack. The order to prevent the departure of any more, volunteers for fhoirly le defended by the ministerial' rrunlets of Turin, on the ground that the desertions from the Sardinian army to join the natinnal cause had comae Co numerals an to threaten the dealotalteetien of the army. The official 'outwit of Sicily deelares, so no labi In appneah'e to the Johrnalo, they are subject to the mitt of the Dictator. , Disarms, Anguet gg.—The Neapolitan troopS Were at hulkedby Garthaldians near 13ale r bywhom they were surrounded and defeated. An armistioe was then pre pared. Tim Commendmir airier referred propo sition to the General-In-Chief fortis decision. In the meantime the enthusiasm of the Neapolitan troops aba ted. 'I hey became disorganized, and dispersed , leaving the batteTies without any _defenders'. Vilgarna. Wednesday.—Notwfihstanding the positive announcement mace try several of theldermaiinewst papers, of an approaching Intetvlew of the Sin barer of Austria with the Czar, at w nth it was o stared the Prune Regent would be present. no ate* have been taaen with that object up to the ereeent Inotnent, either by the Emperor of Austria o. the Czar. Out of omit deration to France. both Rover. fins will °venlig abstain from tar ins any steps which might be interpre ted tie an act of coalition against her. 'State Palate's: TUE Doam.to mmotoast, TICKS? KARR I 11817110 . Sart. 1 1.-T he D e mnoratia (Douglas) State Esteeattive Coremertee hem* epoonneed thpfollow lug as the Democratic electoral hetet r ' • 111.E0'10/111 AT LAION. * Richard Veux. John Cessna, 1)14T111411 2 / 4 1CTOB.S. DISTRICTS 1. John Alexander. IS, * loseph Lenbcoh. 2. Fres*. Eitoeiret. 14. . mum Ileok,boW• S. Godfrer Metzger. U. .411431 D Jaoh4ol4 4. VAiwiird Wartmen. 18. 'Wm . aortae. 6. ° G, w.fittoohy. • - 17, * Joel . Deemer. 2. Toilet owdail.' lii. * Jesse D. Crawford. 7. hate antes. 19. Francis 1..40 , 15. 8. Geo. etits6l. 20. .J B. ilowell. 9. John Black. si. John Celohn. W. [3_oo. Gross, 21. • e meal Mareliall 11. Wm. L. Dewar!. , 23. 'Wm, cook. 12. "t 3, S. 'QV inchester, 7.1. James B. Leonma, . *9th Onytord Church. * Ca the fteedins Ticket. Congressional Nominations. kacit IlanEa'. September 11—The conferees of the Fifteep_th Congressional district met to-day Enid nomi nated Hon. S. E. Hale for Hooves' by apolutabon. ClUMBEBnitrls, September 11.— he Pegiooratio conferees of this allow Itteesnibled bore to-day and unanimously nominated Hon. W. P. Bohol!. a Bedford oounty, for Congress. Republican Meeting at Chatabersbutg. CIZAMBItiIesoRG, lOW. 11 —The largest Meeting held in Franklin noun , ' for Many years took place last eve In It was called by the friends or Licumin and Ham lin. ever a hundred Wien awakes were opt with jambes and tupelo. Mr 'McMichael spoke let two hours. and was ranturonalr mulauded.Martha meet i n, the neither was esco, tad to the residepoesa Mr. MO lure wr McClu r e , hee were delivered of sere. McMinhael, McLellan, and others. Opening of the Bide for a Pacific Telegraph Life, , WAsTIINOTON, Sept. tl.-1h Pe relay of o. th t it mi sery to de , opened the bide for the construe on h,n4 Will by the Govotalaent of a teleeTsph floe to the t'a! The proiensal. of Hiram S.ibley,. repteeettllng the Western , Union Telpsratiti Line, was in Aortordance with the mutinous' sum previved In the act of Genovese. l Usual Ofte GP-0 00 otti rot annum. and Dr, IC for amine'. m d esessa n worde Vi the upon despatches of sram portionate de uction er iength. • Theodore Adauvi. of kart iiiblifet rfie, old 129,000 per annum for ten leave Orville 01. Th, or Sandy 11111, N.Y.. and d. of t glarott„ bid 82C000 per annum for ten T once. • „ r•etilin, or ht. SPlebdi MAP e throe bide, First. 110.000 Per annum for ten year,. .. .mond. OM elute. arty& to transmit all trovetnment' despatches at ILO for' thfloat ten words. with the stienal deduction upon those o f !tremor length., , Third,-I/900 dig°. wi' ll aptoposition CO rem et pony 0/lifffehh after the nom 000 mime of lute are flaunted, at the weal telegraph rates. until the line le mpleted. For this, however, the ant makes no provisio oo n: There were present at the opening of the bide. Messrs. Floklin. James B. (*reliant and A. W. Bee. The hut Retried gentleman Is connected with the Plumy - die and tit. Joseph teleareph The Feeretary of the Treasury ivillProbably make hill deolsion donne the week. - Change in the Gotrernor"Geiteralskip b • • Coo. ada. TORONTO. 9ept.11.-1 he Oloba ears lhat !lir Pon wick Wilnarna will temporarily succeed Sir kidmund Amid ae Governor general of °ands, as October, . - Movemelaii , `l:l. 4 sTitrAd i tik e ‘r e slaWrtin believos f 6 nc.re foretlthea need ' d to te ejaff ir l., men iu l ie do ► ~rreo l ar ',mar LiDIAM t metbw/th /°°'° 0 ' a jetiTTV.t m a y ',, ° 4l.lir Trortii, onti9A to take Watlimt If possi.lato. t mum Olt that Welker voulo march to Moats iriaiart4th provisions. otottlimi*. &0.. from. Ruetao. @mete to Pesch the retha land noon. Great-People's Meeting . at Riverton. ItivßATfiti.N.J. , Sept 11.—A very lame and spirited Lincoln inviting was held i here last evening, under the auspices a. the Utior_du Cl ub or this iaee. Alfred 421: 4 151g 17:4 1 2. 1. 1.. d E0ni , 044 311.:15% cr,u. 0.0 u t snle 2101 41M irirsikiss are syip /idoi; 4 l heartily, a"d at th- °loss Arbours. for tne namph visitors were .given, mingled wittestainta for Sabin and Hamlin, The Prieco , of Wales. . . , . th T eP o s n m c 0m e W. f g to p dllr—The ya cht me in loacr of The Prince laid the Jmnier ateno of the proposed Fhetue of the Queen to be erected in Uniee,sitroarh. e then ',mime the marmot) .. . the normal school. and botanical Karderus , - . - An address wall presented from the Relleville deputa tion. but the Prince expressed his resret that he was unable to accept the invitation to attend the Belleville bell toqnsht The Prince spea to Lo, don, C. W., to-morrow. 'New York Congressional Nomination. Nsw Yost. Sept. 11.—Ifon. lames I. ll.feKean was to-day nominated for re-el• otion to Congress hr the Republicans of the Fifteenth distsiot of New York. More Recruits for Walker. - NSW OntsAra. varty of fi fty volunteera aro wowing to leave here. to jo , n Walker. The Proposed Fusion. LB'NT bent• 11—It is expe•ted that Mr. Demean will denounce the fueion in hie npeaoh to morrow, and that the State Committee will TN eat all overtures Monster Republican Meeting at Chadd'o Ford. 'OVER 15,000 PEOPLE PRESENT Speeches by lion. John Sherman, lion. John Hickman, D. Elder, and others. , Yesterday was the anniversary of the battle of *Brandywine, and our reporter found himself, at ,ala o'clock in the morning, on his way for the battle ground. The road, oven then, was crowded with vehiolesiof all descriptions. Three.quarters Of a Mile southeast of the old Birmingham meet log bowie, where the Amerloans made their stand against the British, near Chedd's . Ford, where there is now a bridge over the Brandywine, at the age of .a mood and upon a broad meadow, the stands were erected for, the speakers. The roads in all directions, from West Chester, Cheater, Wil mington, Media, Maryland, and hundreds of other places, were lined with processions, carts, wagons, -truornflOrse, drilled infantry, and onagers upon foot. 'Thousands of countrymen wore flowers round their bats, like the Italians, and all of them Yelled and shouted, at every opportunity, as Ame ricana only can do. By nine n'elebk the clubs ba ps to arrive. They all bad bands, and all their bends played. There were red caps and lead colored capes, lead.oolored cape and. red capes, lanterns in, abundance, men from everywhere. . By twelve o'clook, notwithstanding' the rain, Itbere were upon the grounds opposite Chalkley Ifarvey'e house, at least fifteen thoneand people. Some of the most enthuallath3 of threl.preeent In sisted that the number was nearer twenty-five thousand. It would take much more time than we have at this late hour-to desoribe the booths, the grand'parade of over one thoneand drilled cavalry and infantry, and the fields of carriages of every ebaraoter. At • two o'oloak Dr. Taylor, of West Chester, called the ,meatlng fa order, and nomina ted the following Officiate, who were unenimonsly elected: President—BAY4RD TAYLOiI, 'Vice Pres.:de:ay.-Bon. Sketchley Morten, Jas. Andrews, and Joshua P. Byre, of Delaware coun- G, Pa.; J. Smith Bather , ISOM Acker . and John iffin, of Chester county, Pa. ; John M. Butler, Wm B. Thomas, and James Parra., of Philadel. phis; Isaac M. Rooks, Bon. David Hazard, and LetnuelDrarssr, of Sussex county; J. B. Coursey, Charles J. Temple, and D. B. 0. ffepkins.• Kent mantel J. o'' Clark, 'Jr., Thomas J. Merritt, end James Soott,,of Newcastle county, Delaware'; aid Wm. E Coates, James Jeffreys. Absalom Ro wan, Dr. John 011 pin; and Wm.:B. Gleason, of, Maryland. Score:arise—Delaware county—L. P. Barmy, .Joe H. Hinkson. end Edward .Heed. Cheater Ornanty—gmedley Darlington, Dr. D. W. Ilutchin. eon. and Dr. M. 3', Pennypsoker, , Philadelphia— Howard Ellis, E N. Hallowell, and Levi T. Rut ter. Delaware, Sussex county—Ed. P Dr. W. , W.'Wolte, and J A. ristsard. Itent man to—Chas H. Day, Qeorge S Atkins and Alim N. Hall, New Castle eonnty—Jan. P Peoples. Caleb Marshall§ and Ed. Thomse, Maryland—Win. H Eider,'R.Way, Jun - Wilson, Jas. J. Wagner, and .1 P. Oman. Chief Marshal—H. Jones Brooks, of Delaware . ceuntY Ars:Stant Afarshals —Gen. Wm. F. Small, of Philedetphia•, Capt ..- James Othberss, of West Cheater ; David W. Eyre, Dr. Grlntrbew, of WC. mlnteten -; Charles Wilson, of New Jerifey, and A. Walkineliew, of Philadelphia. Captain Sant Ihttitt. rf Chester county, Commanded the seven large oomnaniee of eavalry. BaYauD Tee , en ESC. Ware takuor hie cast. said it was the onnanon minx that when thins* lie pteltinr, Verve they mend. It Was thought we had our worst Administration under Mr. P errs. but things have not mended ander Mr. ireohanan. When In ' , drops. and eaked how the terrible thins, seamed in It awes bare taken Vice in free America, he nou'd mile answer th t We wore unforluaato In nut choice of a temporer• rule.. When Pierre's ammessnr name in he had nankin* ton'''. linwever he thought we had at let toasted bottom. When Illitenottee authority *comes i CUlVOTel3 l .ll=l7s he r n m v s e irm ai i i t t t y ed u rn.Tkoinf VI! antlintail"hreginignoarnlaretredd.Te had no maned Ihr deepontlenor. Within esti 7 00•11 the area of freedom tt.d hose extended bv theadmweion of Caliromitt, free atinnesnta and free Oregon. and by the Weaving of , 0.". d. PTO Velma wont I coo' , he added. I a metro:lse 1 Uneelfish adbmenen to urineiple will always innate triumph m the end. Onr polio. w 0 net a s; short-slubted one. lonely, merely to pres•nt in terest its best irnint lie far in the fetus lit no, then. earn= on the battle bequeathed by our fathers eich.o.three yews alto. ways war aramst nu Coerce the though he. in his Mannino). petnlemee. an d dreary awe. maybe onnridered to resemble the old Hine—hut George the Third with three hundred and fifty thou I ' m a d • eads—a hrdra.kinr.Arnned upon cotton and mourned with tnbauen—who now extends his tinny armoire over these domino. which the Cnnstituhon has Otbented to freedom, [Applause I lie wen d intro nuns the gallant standard-11-are r of the Republicans in I ,Coneres, lion Jona Rumnmas. Mr Sherman wee greeted with hearty applause He wee delighted to meet upon this splendid arena the Republicans of Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware. The battle field of Bran• 'dywine wen enumerated ground. 'Here fought for the liberty we enjoy Washington, Lafayette, Ster ling, Sullivan, and Wayne. "-Though be 041110 from 'a country but forty or fifty years old. vet they had 'a country, and a Constitution, and a Union to pre serve, and preserve them they would. Mr. Sherman reviewed the rise and fall of pro- Vieille parties, analyzed Judge Douglas' record on popular sovereignty and the tariff, appealed to the people for a union of all the opposition elements to put down corruption In office and' establish a jest and honest administration of the Govern ment, and concluded with a high-wrought eulogy of the Union and Its cherished blessings, The vast crowd cheered for many minutes Mr. Sher man, Mr. Broomall, Mr. Hickman, and Mr. Har vey. At this moment meetings were organised at four different places. It was utterly impossible to re port them all. 'The speakers were lion. John 'Dolman, Dr. Bider, who gained the general ap plause by a masterly argument on the political la• toes of the day, Wm. Pinkney Ewing, of Maryland, Itobert L. Martin. of Delaware county, Wayne ItfaVoleti, of'' West Cheater, N. B. Smithers, and N. B'. Bradford. of Delaware, and Judge Holley, Wm Moran. W. B Thomas, Lemuel Beeves, and Dr. Smith, of Philadelphia. Air. Dickman was repaired, at ono of the side stands with long•ooutinued applause. lie said : Parlow-Omegas, Lames Ann Otrert.ennit In my remark*. at thts time. I s l a b have but little to say about men. I prefer to groat: of that with which lam more intimately acquainted. it, subleal, to-day, is DernOepay—the old and the new ; or, Democracy as was, and ea it in The (Anent of those who achieved our independent's of the Government of Ermined was not so much to he re loved from erleVanCee which then *treaded therm. as to establish defences against the danger of rehire op preumn. Our fa, here were nut selfish. hut philanthro pic. Then did not regard themeelves alone, hot pot teeity. They were patriots in that canon to which the word shouldbe Understood. If thee ham not looked bo ron() their own day, they would have re m 00.1 Zed they would have done worse—they would have COMPTO. Bettfiging their eyes upon a distant age. they contended for an enduri•ig anecdote. They believed that - man—that universal men—had natural right* to be retarded in all human law,, and that they could only be lost eleht of under tyranny ; that the greatest of thane wee liberty, and that death. even. wee to be rre ferred to slave , y. I do not Pay that this made up De melersoy, but I do assert that there Oatt be no gel:Mine DelitOortioe without thin gentiment. lk isnot to be believed that there can bee general Demoormy 'Gamut liberty. and it le next to impossible that there ahonld be liberty without Democracy. Democracy betas the power of the people to rule them eaves. makes It the moat pertmt guarantee the maw a plin i tieve for individual and e prosperity. Any OMR short Ott places a people at the merry of a man or e4onto Cede , Republics. freedom cannot be h o d without utter depravity. trotter other corps of govern ment, 'commit egiat without Almost wiewennineri vir tue. Derain lles the value of popular power, and the danger of thenareh las and aristocracies ft wus natmel embod i ed at leedi c idea of the Re volution should be in the deolaration of our independence. Anil. accordingly. wo there Bed tile enUnelittinri that men are created equal , and en dowed wilt t e inalienable right of liberty; that Go vernments derived thetrinst Powers from the conecet of the enrerred lima that it is the right of a people to 'Rory r abolish old Oovernmante, and to inetitete new. In a word, the equality of man. and his tight to control Onyernment. are made most onnepiouona and emphatic four anoestore had fneiated upon teen they would he e faded to relieve thentseiree or monarohmal severity, lnd their struggles and Wale could have resulted in no isting good. It l e but recently the discovery hoe been trth, that the exstereive ohms." all men," is onpable of very diverge interpretation's. and like the Cincinnati plat form, can he no read es tomtit all Imamate and opinion.. At the time of whieli I *cask. slavery. not to the white man merely, hut ofall cores, wee felt to be a crime exalt:let Nature. and it had no advocates en a tight. It Wan reserved for politicians of more doubtful patriot iem, if to .nforin the world that it is then craft° not the highest type of eivilizerion. Herein lien In? Buhl° t. In the teaching; of the fathers I find the annient emooraoy, end in that of the dissenters the modern. It was Thomas Jefferson who declared " men are created 13(1U , .." end clothed by Nature with the rieht to control government, 'I hat consistent natant. long re verenced an the father of the Pemooratio VirtY. PTO olaim.d these sentiments to the world. and at a them r " ;:eZ h eTim e /ii- en lro: i n a s " n o :4l " l7.7ilo 4 4. s !;Vll;= Dlositt Garrison. or Wendel! Phillips, hare ngul rig North ern Abolitionists in & concern' vi Inge, but the comm. teal leffsmon a son ot' the ROW)). Pfhiregu"R a people— the rottions•-when io an go eauidd him to Pthke b fe ned fortune end hon on l yee rounding which blio and he Pr muleated th e truths uronf ee Go vernment con wier rest. Coloes men are created equal there rennet be equality of rights among the comp. rent members or Plate : end without the power o acetrot Government there cannot be safeguards for li bextr. Wet whet Were the particular opinions of the greet AMennen 'esteem:in upon the question g ra te n' Widolv dietratating t You will needn't me ICmpt to in &date them in brief. Rei made no effort to concel t em; the oontrary be rave to th em all poreible pu b betty. Ile dattlared /*lnvert to be mad. Up of Ma s , unremitting despotism and degrnd lea g submisalon. lead• e ti i ithe child.. to love war to the worst parolees the min who could retain his almoners • Morale unite*: such titeums i ee wee n prodigy. 'That he. who would Permit, ore f of the citizens' to tmtnple on the ' tights o the other half, teensforMing ti one int:gam:pots rang' the other into ithistal be-loads. with ettearaVon. That the Th 141400( telt tom rend only be see as Inns as t eteMitation, remained in the minds e people that 't eite itherties 'troth. g il t of trod . The the abolition tar altatt g r c r aver Ine to him en egei t at oi ltztt:w r li n tligt: :frOrinerto h oi r tA t life n r ° ll t in al w r gim i g. Thews were Ma Manta- not for a Angle yeer merely, or for fi ve or ten gat4r. but throughout a lifetime. And when SP- Itr i etach ' hug depth, elluding stain to the elahleat• he titetr• nly sentiments helm been forty years before t petdie I had I repented them forty times they would have only Intonme toe more wale end threadbare '' ntranite and abutting exprebionn to fall from one Who .olainted to hi a ilemporati It le a great pity be' does not live in our day, when he sod d taught' better things. There us not a petty Itederal Ogee-holder be tween Maine and (ialifornia—not one piththle nartitan in the North, who 'lone; in doing the Wooing of hie U . overseer—who would not inform him of his en and treshery. - ite lettermen. before he framed the Deelaretion, when • and the Decieretlee. after he framed the .141 Deeleeellen befere he was Preoldeet, welk't h h e, fra l ler r Y l e l. 4D e t u ' rep elle tot: : t w o el . Pre l l te nt' nod the Misr) ;Refit. one' veptlenant to the eo w ery i ermetple of liberty, le hat Brimming at the present time can rtlieee e Cttl ill = a atg , ic to it treated A NhitTelinnx sane. sa d _ General Joseph tenet , know too well what elute Mite requires of them to venture upon suell ut- Monoose Even Stephen A. Deuelaimm t hing to keep one foot within the oriole of the Demoeretio organs zation. has found it neeetnary to use all hire ingenuity to emceed hie thouehte upon the solemn. [do but state that which we all mutt have observed. when I see that all OW Is Teemed, in•this entlity.fifth year of menia -1 'faineance, for a freeman to prove that he hag no Do nmeraoe in him, ta his tinned avowal that slavery is a vice.and. consequently,should not he extended The I father of Pemnerney denounced the institution se ptinitettl, but we, who revert his name , and wish to fol low in hie footsteps, may not eo rotated it without the most enmensmed eprespetrition from nut own teresete-- from e. 12 oblique Prestdent down to low-priced poet maitere. , Ofng°47corv'enrrgietiAlidva'l7-fig: to irth.rjhtT. mud or a mere ga Mee and deletaing slaver^ than acre before calmed Mn Chrietsnized - nation, In this re spect there to no real dstinetion to he drawn between the two parties profre 'iny te treetain Democracy. I take pleasure in making the admistlon that there are WAVY notable indivieual eXoetittnne; but Mlithe ad thosete of Pa Breckenri d ge, a hods. are en unwilling me of Mr. to bear witness areinet the exactions of slavery. nithoegh they constantly cry out against its injustice to their chief. I have nev r doubted. end.. assured , y • it is now ton bite to doubt , that all that is needed to purchase their full eupport of the broadest demo ifs of the ineti notion, is i s promise of a full support or them in return, In the email. all p sties defend the reletion of master and slave; they even go to the extent of of ascribing to It a Divine parentage' What Democrat in the North, Ousted to speak. deeleims ageing either eta pon e plea or ite practices? Time are not tenement! they have not reed in vain; nail they know that it is un congeniel to growth. end advancement, and virtue. Thee know that for more than half a centn y the soften of slavery wen degenerated end remst:d. end that the .power of Concrete to erevenr its extension taste tutroitted both he word anti deed They knew that this newer us now denied Retire and that we are to he forced to allow that It hue consetet noel eunrentees trim every font of oar anti emide of St.te limits, And yet who of there nil takes =oh a roseron of remittance to theee now claims all to make ea feel secure in his Wein ? There is not one. The reasnn for this In but id) anperent. The soul of Dom o erno v , f rom a writ of freedom, has be come chanced into a print of Meyer,. It denies the equality of ma u. lie sympathise are for the South , and against the North. It hen berme a Eynon, - mof eeetionaltem. There in et gisring dearer threatening our Very existence ; a deadly torrent coils itself. in otieb day and before our eye , . around the vitals of the Republic, and Dernooreoy heeds it not. Slavery infuses its poison into the We ldor-el of the North. pernerziar our powers. end yet Northern Democrats seem to approve the act. Do they not ate-do we not at( tee that the interests of freedom and eleven , can filet, and that Government is wie l ded for the brnefit of the degpotiem ? I e aunt recnrded against the . Democretie party that they mistained the most flagrant of bands, in Kamm to meth out rithtful rule? That they ex banked artifice to force a slave State Into the union against the with of the people. and to oxolois free Staten in defiance of the wielder will. and in violation of their own determined legislation? Are these the emits of the teachings of Jeffereen ? Can this be the old Domeier. ay? Is it rot the new? What shell we say. what do. finding that President' thot pleil 'to tin our views. to de right. (wing the Fouth tern. Amite-like to betray us to work not intigultr t What ought we to say. whet do when Ca hine's are to ohosen Henetnrial committees selected, And effmeo everywhere filled. as to sutendize the North for the nerrandigemear of the &lath to ena ble them to rule over us forever? The friends nf , Breoli lined re and beetles alike reply. •' Notting I" ' Nothing "' Say nothing! do nothing! Most ennwetent Democracy this• to elevate Liberty by threeting Freedent beneath the heavy hob nailed foot of Player , ! Ale. ftreekie edge is the tum ter Tontine ler slavery. and he would not have ut [et eeeltml on the euldeot, or his nous might re-re to Affright ne. Mr. Doe r lee Is aeminent! hermaphrodite, e giant of the neuter eendereand he wood n-t envies us to take sides with while labor, lest he ahonld he thonght a man. nor with black labor. leat he should be known ea a woman. Ooe word! .peek! Ant I! Let sm. also. have en eye to terrify. a toilette to threaten. an arm to execute. Why should we not maintain our digaity. mu honor, nor intereste. our temple r Is it unlawful 1 rf so. then how treat has been the outrage practiced upOri us. " he time hat eorne for we to take aides, to turn nor lanes either to the North or the South: those won look upon the ground will he embed to powder he Seth the massy wheels of the Olinda hearing the ark of our i'estlny. Fellow-citizens another geld-beer!, g State, of large egrecultural eapabilimeg. in about to rise en onr western hornier. Tense 'who are etrivine to people it ere moving from the North and the South toward the Teri-item On the one hand. you will digeover your lonamettend neig h lora. from the farm, the manuteritory, and the work shop, carrying with them the testitutions or freedom ; on the other bend. you will 'Merve the meter and his ignorant and viiiinum bondman. dragging after them the institution of slavery. The one seek resentful homes. where by henott industry they nety support feminine and Infuriate free-horn children; the other yid breed children for the market. and blast the earth Into har ronness. These two elemegot emigrant. will battle for the supremely, for the• sap not live side by side; that is Impossible. Nave we any sympathy to extend to e.ther ? or wawa entirely itoconcerned es to how the contest ma, terminate? it we desire the murices. of the despot whose gone trudees with helm And broken step, to the cennking of ehmesiand the sibs of the deso late. we will support Mr. BrAlrinridee. If. however. we have been able to out ourselves oft' en far from the immilses of a tree homenity no to be unable to °hong*, or if we have become false enoneh to decline to °homes between the two orders. hetween rirht and wrong. we eheuld murrain Dennis:i he won d he our represtentgtive mall. But if we have lonia, and heart, and gout seemly ofeporemate the doctrine. of leaf and the twee of the Poem : if we would bele that community whieh wives with lieht and flesh(' tread to the song of the ploughmen. the hum of , the rapid wheel, end the ring of the anvil, we will diatmeumn our duty. end do it. regerdlees rf denunciation. knowing that Ood end an good men will be with net we WIII rote for 'Mr. Lineoln Who"' the hervett Ohms in goldtdat no Dee to laggard • When Victory Is w thin our reach let no one ciuml. When do anion to offered. let it not be surrendered to a fee. , I have romewhere rend that when Gantlet wee taken by Marla Antoinette into the movedhere the Dalaphin. of Primes was overshadow aside the ceding hair which ed the countenences of. the Stir tiny. and. kiss nit him. said to the mother. " + &neve him ter ithertY, ma• dame-tt is the condition of hie life." And I sty to env, to all. educate yourselves, for liberty it is the condition of your limes. Our father. relight for freedom, and no • enmplished it; our tethers voluted freedom, and be quenthed it; and. if true to ourselves, like them we will defend it to the lept—to fee Jost The Miaow:wand patty wee founded lie e wile man upon the leading truth!. the indispuieble+ natural eight.. to which I have refer ed. ea anon a rook. The foolish ' have torn it down. and rebuilt it none the and when ih. rains shall &Vend. and the deeds mime , and the winds blow. and heat upon it. end it than fall greet will en the fall thereof. The rnly hope for thrice loiter ing within De creaked and tottering wells lies in early and swat gm" is. It wee not intended the t Denim icyshould Cone at in a seine merely. It VAR planned to oredime mantes TIP' elm' , re to the well•heing or men. It bed four prie• opal objects in view. The *eleyetion of the lowly.; the e x tensi o n of the area of fieednot i the &tenets o f the tenon ; and the advancement of the glory of the ' corotrr• Thu Conatlutioe &Wares that" no title ne nobility shall be era ted by the United plates" Thin was ne wsmenr to maintain the nal ien's Peters Von of human equality. It place' vented tied labor upon a Perfect level as 'o the t mire of office. and the o-nol 'erttlon of Government In the 03e of our tionenie inw the child of toll. In coarae terming drienme with the sweat of the brow holds equal reek with him wen elntlere himself _+. rurple and Am. linen ano tares seine, any every day. tier tirodeneke are no noble es the Bedell, Au long en Democracy iad the ruiners of life and beauty, its banner* bare aloft this benevolent tiles, rod ender them its proudest iotornee were en:thieved. Neither convention line meetine oceile assemble without an outpouring of effeotion 'or. and eapretilinpe nt determinatine to stand or . the interes's Or" the tot ing ;ninon/ " The alien And sedition laws were condemned- as odi as and repealed temente they violated a right of the masses • that nt free speech. and invested the °flitter with a winotnty le - commit bin with the Ameneen rin•ion that the Inwret citizen and the highest were entitled te equal immuni ties and protection. The Rank of tie United Eitatee was destroyed. not so much upon the ground of its sin neristitutionality as Vest of its degree to the tete - trine CIVACI President reekeeuee Male nreument wee r ad dressed to Wintry, an' lea triumph wart neetteed through the warier of that interest to which he thug appealed. Net Derneereey did not lead him to he Ifere that the rich ehnuld be melte ember. and thepoor poorer; but rather that 'he weak ph' uld not be placed At the merev of the strong or tabor tie made a prey too tenni. The conclusion was both sensible and humane. A Jerre majority of «eery people fail to reach a oondatrin of wealth. madam " rower is always stealing Iron the many to the few " it Is ' the many." and not "the few " vireo we fare ought to he especially 'earned. Where now. is the Demoemoy. elf humble Mend. Si at tetra its ettnd by rem aide in your erieuition ' or your enema &env bone . and cells u one you In be of good cheer, that you shall b. invigorated end reenemenceil? Ate! where is it? Pint me to it. If .enesible. Where it it foiled. in oreaniettion or easoomenn ? It w is. bet in tint. The rievillingion'Orthil tyrant. that "raping! should en labor r"tkat.f.K‘or white men are servile, and ought m tn he bound in fettets: that they, and truer wiviis nne children Omelet lie held, no the negro is held, to he soul sad &limier!. and pellet it end torturer& lime se Infused Pere' into the modern LW , nere.o) no to metamorphose ali its aims and Make tt the Instrument of de.ponsm. It is now effectuallir menneeil hr the owner of the black man. 8 0 as to enable him to Imam himself unright eous!) of our inheritances the free Territories of dm country and to force en, through spoliation, Into the Fume Neatly cnndition as hue slaves. It is Within the recollection of umet, if net all of ne. that the Dereneretle party was keel in its demend for extension of the " area or freedom " that its bleseinys might he the more widely entitled. We teen understood the pulley to be for the benefit of the foreigner end our own surplua pepulation Now. we know the errirt is nnetinually twine mnde. by ell means lawful and un lawful• to armoire territory for the growth nf slavery Rhine. The most talented and influentialDemecratio lend i lenders ere encased. direotly or in oreetly, n this work, without a murmur from Aar one bearing their party nnmo More than this. if nominee. the more powerful wing of the Demonracy insist that under the Constitu tion of our Government, brought fooli in a Mitred of OW eeroorl and alive of liberty. eleven), cannot be ex- cluded from any soil we now own or nine hereafter -n -quir ; and the other Wine. in subotence , reel , r •• We don't exactly loop- how Chu mat be, we await the settlement n f the quest inn by a ?Tart having a nom 'non feeling and common interest with yeti. and if yon]] gain it decision, we promise thnt it shall be enforced promptly and faithlully." President Jackson. ay aeo - ordinate branch of the Government. Applied the Con• Plithfinrl es he understood it, and he welt an acereihred Democrat IEI his day : Judie Bowles, a Senator. would interpret the Constitution 's other. uneerstand it. without weentine their passions and prepuhp e. J erg- Bon end Denting 1 H 306011 and SAW' I 14 41110 0 ace. from the hennaing of the Government doge In to the yearn 1847 8 Admitted and exercised the right to exclude slavery from the Territories. Now firma mar denies that same right m'et emphajlenlle. or nt least doubts It. Vow veto imperfectly our fathers must have understood their own worernanthip They homed the fundament ril log. 3et had beta what ooneeption of its meaning It woo ?mermen, to their puny otrrtiring to tell us what they intended. Lot us rest assured i.f this. and Duet to history to prove its truth, that whilst the ancient DeMooramf survived the Constitetion was co read as to favor freedom end free men : tau. that hr the random Deemer/toy. barn of the brein of John C Calhoun, It le, and will continue to be so distorted es to eneoureee the spread oleic:err . The Union, altral I OWeerrieft by every Democrat lc 'Settled as the bulwark of nor liberties, is now ri,esten, ell with immediate deetruccion by tetra who maim to be ;he Pleat custodians or Domnotatio principle'. With an insulting arrogance they ley claim to unlimited ru'e. without regard to the wishes of 'ha majority or tie guarantee, of law. upon the Ignoblepretext that it is indispensable lathe cause of humen bondage. In thin way. we are to be brought to submit to the UPe•pati , n of A minority. In order that those who would lay unholy hands wen the altar nay he brined to keep the tierce. If the people of the Untied awes shall Meet a dent not:motored by the Pria. or a portion of the South ,we are informed that he shall never Ire malign rated. a d that the i onfeder.gy will beiat an end. 'I hese Democrats do not gionosal their oratorio either placard their concerted tree,ou. end would affright us by their very reek legman. Do they know Ile? Are we ind .ed. In maven as to nate and tremble befo's each heaven /terms outrage ? Ilrve eotViree Northern blood. from Northern hearts through Northern veins. nt such a vomit ? If we deserve to live we will dare to die in •volt a voila as they wnntd tome upon um rtpoa ee-ar held, in the battle tar the right. rild Northern. courage ever fail 1 Not on sterile plains, nr by the margin of stagnate streams. but in the pare brmalng air live the real armies of the nAtion li and woe, woe to the riders that trample them down. Our Northern neorde will neither avoid per vireate any oblieation resting upon them. Thew have ever treated their itouthern brethren, not only with.tnetice, but with rimreme considertion. end they will veritiese to do. voluntarily. Bet let aggressor.. beware the der when force ne violence shall be resorted to to drive the North into concession, When that crisis shall acme upon them they will meet it as they ought to meet it, and the now perplexing questions of slavery extension and slavery domination on this continent will be set tled forever. • . Perhaps the moat deolorab'e effect of the thane of wino's!. and pol count winch I shall speak. uprr , the ch•r•ete of the 7 tioth history and tlon sufficiently indicate the intention of the forme Demo. croon to gain for our o ,, vernment th• rood opinton of the world. Thin they hoped to d • by making it atomic and equitable. Its security was not to tent upon sin armee nor, indeed. upon its arms. to mach noon de strict ormiorrody to the most ristd .ulna of right. It was planned for &model. end the earlier Administrations never lost so, ht(Wads fact and then reenlated their notion accordicely. It had its to tin in, and was long sonnueted or, the brondeat phi a throe/. It wa• de milord to attract tooth the 'it talon end the offect'ons of mankind. The sonerol condition of our rage every where woo one of ahleot eubjectiont the laudable Pur im's was to &irate that onodttion. I.lherry hod no no local habitation; her temple was to b• fi my erected hero. In other amp tries authority woe tented upon what was preaomotuonsly coleil a 0.41- d i.pt ed one m a ny here it was to be exter dad to the Cod•equalised mail. In short;_our Immo was to "an ambito for the °owned." What wou'd the nn thirst Dernoorso. make i I It. has not longer inn thins to sit .• equal rind exact jar Go and on en tirely rftrelatn , of the morel sentiment of to idely-ex tend•d Chrictiantty It morel no de ire to merit et en miums from the Wine and gond. It ties no ti.artgo and consequently would not make monitors for, the g neral venom. " o it, linens and rjavery are but names. not existences ; W And integrity and irtirr , end virtue arid Vote. insensible expressions. i It bro tharnOrid consists In elevated onnajtion, an t l e th e at tributes of mankind ; and law is not to strengthen the wen •to resist, hut the etrong to invade Unche• ked. would carrY us bock to the parbatism of the dark +see. ales, who sheilldi mare to beer lie Minot p:lnnente ir at lich a cost to um as a 'citizen of Repubill Arne , float , " 0 judgment, tacit art find to brutish . • And men have lost their moon." Tho °inclusion I would draw from Oat I, have said, io. that lto nooraoy. in the day" of its it lorr. was the ninon of Liberty and the guarman ul c‘nometi. but that It hat tunic down to be nut the tool of a tytant. and a parent of elates. Felluw-nititens, let me make an appeal. not to mach to ott, es for ottr erminonoonntrY• / I 'er** call be no tlMtottehty withont law; and ours recta Anon the dou ble 'beefy of Constitution and IltatUte- TM , structure oannot be - ereaerred by mule-Inlnitur Its toundationo. AI Wl' leourity to by virtue of °ovarian tint, And Our Goverment by Virtue of law, we pan only grotetr as long as we maintain, the AT*Maar Of lair. To lay ruthless bands ltimg it wott'd (ply to destroy our 40 4 4 own arma•. tut to Orate , H ,„ ti w ord end a repro:soh " Our home d.r. ' lity ; If ones parted wit i li z mait,ont be eiai li• es .. For orlartheee en solo balls." •ilfe) w ~ t ret stoup to blot AK Oar moat st ator ;Herr; het in noV, hay. it in ileaf eiVolote of Ofa ii :.e Off, ~ ,..o ear whoa duty, and. oldlat doing tt, Let ea. ISO Y ilrutil;rn to .t il tra iiii lv t . h ar. :f at t th e b::r t ifit . ore' tneretsekratio abler towlrde a Aril State and, It I , l l l — n r i t'astte 17 17re . ..t 0 r fehdll stands d . e T t l' en e et e o d f e l " t?i l s law—the Taw of the Constitution. ant the law of God. There is ail Immortality of infamr. as well as an un tonna ity of glory. and it has happened that whilst tiwt winked were reaping the one. ehiln ran have been reedy to client the other. The elme bight that Elemetrato t fired the teMtds ofltremls at Rph e .,„ m ai . lar.th . Great wall bora in re to. fro. ar the moment whoa pro- I noses , ho „Al e tlanaetin the ettedel of, Lberal , ariell to receive universe unr themselves teteverhostine diem... he the second W homage. ~ a shinstons, will H a ve no fears for the thrive. but be prepared for . lE. There are o.onte At ttot &vet .315 t If they to d the Ilahtnins. it •11l 6aAttotillatto here nor here. vs* virtue. I ate'lle encio, and vator which rave ne a Triton. will pres rye it toe distant and eraterul 'minority. At the third stand, Mr Robert 1,. Martin of Media, asked. Why ths assembts.. I this meal °Gam from eve y welt of Industry OMIT wersult of 1102 , 1tbie sit tivitr -from ell the departments of labor of arts. Is - tars, and professional excellenee,tri pursuit of a coin man purpose—met r tether to promata a commons oh tent / It wee not for the rratiheation of a love of at onement Not fro the p orOOdoir of& la ateorery *erre& Th e erect object w-p to spears the blessinse of n*.- dom obtained for ea by our fathers, The object of the Government was 10 Hoare the hl wirnall of freedom and the promotion end %sonar of all the interests Oonneet ed with tt But it had be•tt perverted from able benefi cent dells. A part , falsely calling itself DelaftratlO, and appealing* for the sunnort of het:ringlet. With artooh its epolo.lwte and defenders (Meld rot honestly' pretend that tt had an, genuine armeathr. had &bayed its power. and liedperverted its lesttiorate use ist power, in opposition to the interacts of freedom. And in Oell'ilt of a s rate m of policy directly antes() nate to It. [such had been its course. esseclally In refereuse to protection to • merman industry. My. Manta wo n t At length into the d emission of the ticetentioti statism. He contended that it was the Oneeretiye duty of a govern ment, circuited fru the benefit of the people. to put forth its power f r the etconrasament of the tsarinas! Internet, of the country., •lie referred to tho notion of the ChlorritO Convention'. in nOrtunaang Mr. Lincoln, at moderate and conservative. . . . Ile /crowed himself/sponged In extreme/. If the Peo ple's Tarty were sectional, whieh he denied. it was onty beause the Southern estates would rot ocrdtally join in the rintnotio purpose whioh animated them. Ile de nounced. in'emettent le canasta, all dhcloyalty to the Union- The aupeorters of Mr Lincoln were TOMO:red to maanta.n the ITnion at all hazard's. hey were confident that the first you of his Admi ntetrattnn i iederd the hour of hie litetisturefion. would true to the country, the whole country, the newsmene of a wise. mat, 'tad einiverretive Goteraseent, He spoke earnezly of the importance of Pannellvazis In the contest. Mr. Poster had never shown himself es the aetive and earnest fr end of Pennsylvania interests, end. on national questions, he wee now berme the permits in that worse then questionable volution of a Datialia trimmer. Andrew G. Curtin. on the contrary, wes a bold. ontepoken man Every one knew hie sen timents no we. not only the friend of American In dustry and of freedom. hut its earnest advoeate. Mr. Martin spoke feelingly of the interests or Penn py.vanis in the GOWN , - end referred to the memo which gathered round the, sone.. or the day. He im plored the men of Mary land and Delaware then pre sent. whom he had the honor to address, to of to the vanguard of the areal, art.? of freedom or laio. He said that this would be an era In the politinat hismrr of the country. Ilmt he Appealed to the mouses before him to unite in the glorious effort to rectors the flovernment to theprinaiples and ptentioes of the Fathers of the Republic,. He conoloded with an earnest appeal to the M 4.0 of Pennsylvania to rally earnestly and energetically to the support of their own interests, and for their candi date for Governor and Co agreu. We regret our Inability to give a fell amount of all the proceedings. They would almost lilt a volume. We cannot omit, hosrever, to mention the representation of the several Stater of the Union by thirty-three beautiful young ladies. They attraoted more attention of the rising gene ration than the bands of muslo or the eloquence of the orators Chalkley Iferwey,Teq., kept open house. ills *Retaking to the oanaforta of she reporters were heartily appreolated, end will not scan be for . gotten. THE CITY. AMUR EMENTS THIS EVENING WAVCIIT•RTIIii.T TIT CIPV. Wei tint and Ninth eta. " Romeo and Joliet"—" Bowled Ont." WARAT!ET & CtAliltet. ARCH-RTIOCICT TRIUMIX. Arch street, shove ni4th. - -"lrish Emmet' —"Yount Actreea"—•' Aryan L'LrOn. " McDnsnenß's NIZW r3AiRTnt, Reel ,treat. above ®eonnd.— • • The Ravels." COJTINRNTAG THE•Tille W6innt et., above Eighth -- Carnaros. and Sharplavin Maintain. Pnexavtriata ACAlDrillt Or ram FM! ARTS. No. 10 0 t5, ip T e . , 33, 9 3 1 1 . 5 er, ' . 3g 0 e rn t..i n E g .33 4 304 , 3 , 1 1 n oZ n. PaInhog! aad, Mi:PIING Or Via BOA.RD OF 80ITOOL CON. tioLLens —The board wee 'allied to order at half past three o'eloek. by Harry Bnmm, president. There was a fall attendance. The minutes of the last,meeting wets read- A. aounp.noleationa was received from the Eleventh section, asking the pur chase of a lot Upon Morris street, east of Second. as the site of a school-house capable of accommo dating eight divisions ; referred"to Committee on Property. Ono from the Seventh section, asking that a chnrch, at Fifteenth and Lombard streets be rented as a sehool-housa; referred to Commit tee on Property One from Tenth 'matinee. asking for en appropriation of $6OO for night schools ; ,e -tarred to Committee on Grammer, Secondary, and Primary &h eels. -One from tha Twelfth section, asking for S5OO for night schools; another from Twelfth section, asking that a house adjoining primary ',shoot No a he used for echo I purposes; referred. One from Fifteenth section, asking for a transfer of the balance of item for stoves, este:, to furniture item ; one from Fifteenth notion, ask ing for SI 000 for night schools ; referred. One from Eighteenth section. stating that Miss Iheriet Bondi's° had been chosen principal of school No d; one asking for permission tonpen a nubile eve ning school; one from the Nineteenth section, asking for hydrant in the yard of the Carroll grammar school ; one from the Twentieth section asking for $7OO fot night-sahrol• purposes; one asking for permission to purchase a Int on On tario. south of Mager Omits at $Y 00 par font ground rent, for building of a first-class grammar school One from the Twenty-fast section, asking that the salary of the Menaynek grammar-school janitor be raised to $3OO. One from Twenty seeend section asking for a lot in Church tans for a new unclassified publio school Gee from Twen third Reclean asking that in the Marshall boys' grammar school the tesehers',salarlea ho raised One to raise Berton nriolassaitied whew tbaseaak of a gram...roan= fe•an the book•publssh tog firm of Sower. Barnes. & Co., asking for the adoption of Greenleaf's Common-Sehool Arithme tic) at certain prices ; also of Monteitk's Geogra phy. Mr W Griffiths sent one of his patent self anti og von tilat ors, asking that • the board gives It a trial in some poblio school. The committee on Atm:emir; reported as heretefore announced in The Preis. The oontrcot for fuel in the First district was given tot} Wright ; in Beetond to Simper t Co. ; in the Third. to Bumper "dc Co.; in the Fourth and Fifth to it G. Tbe following boots wero proposed to be intro: &toed into sobools: Webb's Historical Compend iums. Plillbrlek's School Tablet, Worcester's Spell ing Books. A member said that be should vote against the introduction of any now books. Mr Leech said that Miss it ebb's - Compendium and the tablets bad been cent to the board a long time ago. If a member was unacquainted with the character of the books he deserved reprimand. Mr. Stull said that many members of the board bad not been connected. therewith when these pub lishers asked that their books should DO adopted. Mr. Male moved that action upon the Matter deferred for a month. Mr. d. B. Smith reviewed the address of Mr. Leech in a caustic manner, amid much laughter. Mr. Fitzgerald said that a committee had re ported in favor of these books, and mines) , to the committee should induce the board to vote as they had reported. Mt. Leech make another address favorable to the adoption of the books. Remarks, pro and con, were made by various gentlemen. The resolution postponed for ono month. Mr. Fitzgerald moved thnt Blaster Green be ad mitted to the Boys' High School, notwithstanding his Wadi deney of age. Mr. Richt° said that there was already a pop lar prejudice agelast the High &hoot lithe rule was transgressed, the board would with justice be accused of partialitsr. However worthy the appli cant might be, he thought It bad policy to trans gress the role. Mr Hollingsworth maid that green lacked aevan months of the required age. Boys had time and aain been refused admission who lacked a month. Bo g ys of. age already tilled the school tot/Tarnow. ing, and Mentor Green wee very young and could etrord to bide his ttmo. Mr. Fitzgerald eulogized - Master Green ire a brilliant bay. Mr Richie anticipate t a huantity of brilliant boys if Master limn was admitted. Hot pressure system Is even now serried oat to rivets in the public schools' And small, however preoceloirr, boas cannot have the strength of mlod necessary to endure a full cou-se with older pupils A1t,44:4311 said the rule put a premium upon stupidity. He should vote for Master Oreeu who would be an ornament to the school. He thought that the rule should be suspended entirely. The ayes and noes were caned Master Gress wee :erased admission by a a vote of 0 to 14. Permission was asked to ereet a new Wharton street whool-fiouse upon the Site of the old one. Referred. • A communication was received from J. B Lip pincott .fr Co, offering to furnish Sargent's Series of School Readers at certain prices. Referred to Committee on Tezt-Burks. Adjourned. • • It is just to state that while samples of thi pre• posed new sohool•booka were placed upon tigiCon trolleys' desks, the reporters were left unprevided for ; the latter gentlemen are yet expeoted to an ronnce the titles of the books to the public. Is this fair? The new Historical Compendium is the produo• tion of Miss Webb, of the Zee.-street• grammar school. THE TiilsiNtiro Sciroor. rod hiteosn enunarits.—The w offering day" at the Pennsylvania Training gamut for Feible-tuinded Children will be held to-merrowlThursday) at I the Insfitatlon, Media, Delaware county- In ad dime to the regular trains during the day, a ape. ' ofai train will leave the depot, Tbirty , iirst and Market streets, at 9 o'oloek in the morning, ex preFsly for the aooominedation of 'visitors to the institution. It is expected that a large number of person% from Philadelphia wilt be in attendance and arrangements have been muds to accemmo date the 'Ostrom 'with dinner and supper. During the day an exhibition will ba given by the obildren Tbts institution It one which is especially de serving of the consideration of the benevolent The present buildings are insufficient to sceomme. date one-half the applicants for admission, and the mensgers desire to extend the sphere of its useful need by the erection of an additional wing. Foe this purpose, they have at present $5 500 in band. They desire to raise $2,000 more to avail them ',elves of a subsoripfion of $2 500 which will be made by a gentleman, conditioned that $7 500 shalt be previensly ratted This' will melee $lO.- 040 towards the obJeet. When this sum is ralred by private subsortptlon, the State or Pennsylvania has engaged to furnish $lO 000 additional. With the $2O 000, It Is estimated that a new wieg can be oreoted wimple of hennaing the afeenmmed %tins from 00. (the present number in the Institution) t. 150 or nearly double its bresenteapsoity If this about(' be aocompllshed. $lO 000 more will be re quired to tarnish the new wing, lay out the %rounds, be, and to meet this the managers will be compelled to appeal to the liberality of their fellow.oilltens, to raise one-half this sum, the other half being furnished by the State upon the seine conditions as the donation spoken of previottlar. When this improvement is completed, it to Wisps: ted that the instittdion will be self•sastainlng, the labor of some of the more advanced penile now be lug uitfulty !potted, to domestie purposes, and of 'ooosiderable advantage to the institution. 3181Vincil OF VIII PAMOCA_ATIC °VT Fx- ECVTIVIS COVIIITTIM —A meeting of llidebosly,wea held yesterday afternoon at Flanagan's Motel,' Stath street, below Rice, John McCarthy, the presldent, in the chair. All this member , of the commfttee (ti) were filesent. A coestderMile por tion of the session was occupied' In Allapalietof the contested test of the' repreeentatire trout the Twelfth ward, It was atpried to refer th e whole matter back to the' • Of Oa ward, it an election to be held et' utile, email next, the pla4e 4. A-714 — realigg - lit City Executive COMPlit' _ A communication was Como' Ileows mitlee of iresemie Ida miewatlir bast- mt Girard House, relatiectfuribag ► . AM A " log of clrisenebt faeorbf Me w& traerselD- Foster as Govoraor ot-Psoisyliakit.:=3l.4: R s, V. hfoGr .th moved it b• soCeseeLto coessolttee of three. This was amended by NT- Ousters M. Leimoring, who moved that it be laid upon the table, which was agreed to. The meeting throughout was harminfour. ACOMINTAL DRAM—last night ilirllit eight o'clock, AS Mr. Henry Hinkle, bookbinder, Inflanittesul place, Fourth street. ebenr• Cbstetnet, wan shout leaving 3rM.pliece of :badmen, le the third story of the building adjoining the Eest'ern etarket-honie, be "fell' down one eight of stel holm tie third story to thsrieitond, and f reettsred ids skoll'An badly that'lletif dlehlinglyr itessolt. Ms partner. Mr 41onard.blertimsh, wag in. °out hplay with the unfortunate - Maw at the In is testimony before the amour's jury. Mr. If nr doelt stated that they Wereleartreg duplex* teem tear . 11Aillinisett went down the stairs Ant, Mr. Maki* remaking to look the By the time Mr. 'Murdoch reached the second4buy lending be heard Mr. Hinkle talitine dews the-stekt. is fall was not checked until he reached the where Mr. Mardoch stood. Mr. M. eat id JO as sistance, and nosily west ether IL The trnsest was entirety dark, and the *Abut of the isfiff7 to Mr. Hinkle was not dreamed of until HON and assistance essee, when it was found that the ester inmate gentleman wu already dead. Dr. Atkinson, of Spruce street, above Sassed, wag prpmptly at the scene, but nobleness indst- Race could have evened to sale the /It. et de ca terer. Ibir Doctor gave it as bin optnites, beim the coroner's jury, that Mr Hinkle bad hoist dead some time before be mitred. The body wstesrried to the store of Mr La- for:', OA the actuthwest corner of Fourth tenet and Banstud place, and the coroner sent fur. A jury was empanelled, who, alter bearing the testimony in the case, rendered a verdict of " accidental death." Mr. flinkle was about fifty years of ago. Re eaves a family to mourn bit. sadden despise. THE ELECTION 0? CHIRP AND ASSIMPft Enormous —Lest evening, ineetiog of the Board of Fire Directors wu held at the hall of the,, kir* Asmoistion, Fifth end North streets, to nisfre the reports from the respective ameentalee at the steetido of Chief and Aseistent Engineer* of the Fire department, which wee held an Monday eve. Ping. Reports were prasentat from itv , eemetr• ay in the Department, Sit in number.. The asett. eats of the Vigilant Hose Company was sot recede. ed, inlootterquenee of se Informality. Thiemink. pany Toted for Sailor. for Chief Ennineer. - Protesta were Presented. &phut the Votes of two companies, but not received. as they should be presented to City Connelly. The protests will not in say way &Teat the general mutt. - The Collards; shows the vats for Chief Belgium - and the names of the Ansi:tont Eogineen elected • _ roe CHIEF ancrurn. David M. Lyle ...OS eempaniet. John R. Sailor 23 ASAISTAST ENGIASERA ILICTIID. it Fire Division—Samuel ft Press,. ' 2l do George W. Downey. 31 do Sitarist C. Pord. 4th do John Wispenny. . Lth do ZTEEt Jones, ..„, Great interest was manifested t o the prooud. Inge, and a large crowd adembled in front of tie hall while the meeting wee lICSEESIOH. Wh en th e result was autartmeed onadde, 11 we. mitred with lead chasm ALL ABOUT A HAT.—Philip Davis, a bright-eyed colored boy. whoa, individuate bes la very thick lips, was before Alderetpa poiliers charged with the leroeny of a hat. The kat Irked to be worth not lea thin eight anti. 'no promo. mitres" had It oartfally wrapped in paper. It items that the hat was Insatebed from the Used of John McCloskey. on Saturday. by a colored lAA who ran away before he eonld he rho The prosecutrtss 'odorant,' the colore=h Philip Davis. Philip was held in WOO ball, to answer at court. be indulged to a pleasant dif melon with the proeeentrers sad thought that his mother might be persuadeeto go his bath hro new point of law ware evolved. llosprur: Deus.--The-followiog cisea were admitted yesterday: IWO' Dorsey, 55 years bad Mt A/Ikt haul the cap of his knots injured by Unarm!' a ladder at 919 Market street, yesterday afternoon: Prune's MoGIIII, 14 years old, bad kis 1•11 atm Injured by a gate abet deg upon Mai anddrily, in the Twenty•fourth ward. LASCIOTY or CLOPHING.--A MA earns before aldrirman Boitlar: ye eaday • Igen the dump of stealing coats eel pants fres la. Maw. Market street, and MOO'S Bleoesaattrel. Seses4 street, clothiers. - He belonged to the fraternity of " barters." and was In the employe! JVIr Bloom • *withal. His comrade In the theft its sway. Re was held to $1 DOD ball. Rtrstaso wrnt , Paz Cairrariii.—LAt stunt of fire yesterday neon, ems hays Pedant the apparatus of the Kensington Wean Company, and went out for a " Yin." - 114 boy telso Isar imbed the horn fill order the wheat et Sus* lad Coates streets, and hid Ida hied oripboi- • • Tns POMOLOGICAL SOC MrT-4/milidmi? DISPLAY or Feurr--Iseisaarrmo Discressam— The pablio has read, perhaps, with mnee oorioslty, the announcement tbet a National Poutological As sociation was about to. bold nil biennial end** ta this city. It taw behind a vim ing title *my dry, disensaion. and a snries,of isansatinithe tax peewit's With similar hunrenlass, me visited, the roams of the Arnaud,' yesterday...“ AP. embly Buildings, and looked with aineent — tlare" surprise Upon long Mee of pplane,. ladesfsritirtbe mutts of the orobard, the vtesyati, mad Ili hattt bone. At the foot cf the MOW.' SilgtSe work of Venn* fruit treeelltmule genets trees, lnestaiiirettelralt, And ,ta tbil• rear, between banazu and to Mahn In front is s row of _ dwarf nigh user - betting reaches of mguifien pet* t color and else. Pesdant from theta trees. sr* clusters of letetema' trapea—ll bunelv of white SYrial weigltinit pounds. IDS of lafatott .. 40 : i t Icg alz ponds. on of _black Jll Lone cf e rrsokeutbe l il wt u''l lrdag four nondineearb tbs shadow of Measly dales of peenes, and and berries. and above arsiairded tbe none of art great . pioneers of Pont Identity & ftoxe, of ;Amenca ; - Van Mons & mei, of liter/gins.. Al one wanders through the rune of ripe apples sod dimpled pear* sad see/ gleaming through - vistas in leaves wax-like mon sad ersaberrles, the sense growl intoxicated, and the • restful straggle in the mild of Bre to grasp the Ilerbtidea fruit Is comprehended in all its great tesr.ntetlen We saw a singlopeeett rsearatingl3 by 141 teethes in chetimterence, an apple 14 by 16. a pear 12 by 16 We saw apple-pie melons tars called because pies made of them - are eteareidi - preleaptibry different from those made of apples) of three feet long circumference. a tingle bough 'of . _ pears 14 inches lng. with 24 pears weighing 23 potande A stogie firsts hos 211 varieties of Trim, 1 06 of by pies, and 60 of plums. There are seventeen States - represented. Among the notable fruit-growers, etc.. present, are Marshal P Wilder , Mats. ; Nicholas Longworth, Oblo ; T. W. Field. N. T. : J. E. Mitchell, Philadelphia; T. 0. XUZHOU. Mont gomery county; Rev. Cleo B Ide, 'Springfield, Masa. ; Ellunger A Barry, Itoonater, N. Y. ; Jas. Pundits, Philadelphia; T T. Lyn, Plymouth. Mich. •. U. R. Bober, Imderiekrg, Va.; Wm. Recd, N J.; Prof. Mope, N Y., eto. The society' now fourteen years old. This is its seventh exhibition. The. aliens of last term were reelected .yesterday, yin: Pratident. Ron Marshal -Ill; Wilder, of Mass.; Senetary, T. W. Field, of New York; Tresses's, ,1 •P. James. of Philadelphia Mr. Wilder's admits was a prantical exposition of the objects of the society. the - lines Of the past year relative to fruits, end the objects which • would claim Attention at the present meeting. He raid: If this easociation had rendered to nth*r tervice except togase to thrtwortt ttp iceboat cetelognie of fruits. le would have fulfilled an important redesioli but it has done mons at has env:waged and originated many kindred assaatations. has brought trieeiher expe rienced cultivator', and made them teachate °Leech inner. He also "toted He following general rrinclpir,s 1. The healthful development of fruit trees. pm of other living tubstarges. derends on the regular reception ist a certain quantity of eftrotrials food. This Tood. whether derived from the earth. air. valet, smother contrived throosh the meddler. Of the strocemeere acid the sail. Wet,, we havessalt an otiose eat imperfect restful of the atmosphereand other meteorological sureenthe Gent *Otter of ha , tine has committed the soil directly to cur can and tioatment. 1. To this POWS' add tbore'entiralien'inient in favor of 'borough and perfect - drainer. narefenal to ail cal:t esta", husineasysalatle to Ma IrniggiaVit. 3. Pl o t loos usage= to the extersence of the I-Orlabr.:,- effects nee proper preparation aerie sod for foot treas. both in the nursery and in the orchard. Mr. Wilder concluded as fallowm We hare unman here end on farmer occasions, cf the edratnement wl.to , h has been made in penicdoty in our see and coun 03. Ten is to be ascribed termto Um great scheme of Providence whin has developed scab inutendons ...putts in the march ofetellisattna and all the arts of life. Human pursuits ate allied by taloa:tee so inti mate. that a remarkable diecoverr or improvement in one advances them all, hever oefore has the rshlio mind been so profcardli lf moved, tor thelimerstes . mankind en concentrate open ecsrte to +then totloo perf ec t ek.ll, to reward labor, and to multiply the solo= forts and Wenner of lite. A prominent feature of the dilbli/lbe /atm Vas a vaeo of luscious fruit, Owed upon a plate norror.arluer. reflected it tile a beautiful pfeture. The town to come before the society are tntaresttra. The list of fruits will be rearrested. There are three masses sat down in the end books - soidsr.schitariee t redeeisi. The sweissaro-,/,1/ of the last catalogue are now to he placed no the 0r.'1.- Valloll lie . and a new premise-well list made rut. Ihe teatime of the yeacristrop tp this country will tea quo.- tion of Interest. This dearlati 15 variously attribmed grafting or beading. arida change in ths teunoOtAlaea. or to a pestilence which deadens the trees. Tau ex hi taboo of Hui , Is said to be the hUtpt VLS:I , I erpr raised. The ("ruler eem , on held to tlos city, was in the Chinese Museum, tear ears ago. The ad.soblialltY ti' certain fruits to certain local ties ie are,,,, rd br this sooony. Its listaltoolatoo veer the whole Union. and to frail grower. Ott., I. Teats of to 1 tare been expended to p•oduce en ashitition lige the present. hare are some specimen. of rank. weld fruits whin have been Comestieated, and ore cow the naest tf the °rent" sad the timers. TILE friends of M. Bissell, in Rochester, were exceedingly surprised, on Tuesday, by the appearance of that gentlemen in their street. lie was imprisoned, some weeks slues, in Catnap, on a charge of being engaged in a consniracyao burn the Rock Island bridge, and bas jest been liberated, $3 000 in gold having been deposited us hail by prominent citizens of St Louts. Mr. Bissell baa charge, it is laid, of 22 suite agsdrot the railroad company wbioh owns the bridge in question Those suits luvolvo claims to the atnetint of soh 000, and it la not very likely that his el pariemee in Chicago will make Mr. Bissell any less relentless in the prosecution. lie intends to bring suit for false impriaonmsnt against all concerned in his arrest. Tus lion. John Forsyth makes the•follow ing.einphatie disclaimer of the charge that peen tonniary considerations bed been brought to bear to influence hint to support Aix. Dangles I have never had a pecuniary transaction with Julga Douglas to the amount of a farthing. Ile has never 'paid soy debt' of mine, not seen 2J• vetoed a sitpence to me by way of loan, gift, or in soy other shape, either on aoomant of pri- vate debts, or on aoeount of The IN-ester. lie is not even a subscriber to The R,.g.stm,, • TuttEE large sharks. between nine and ten feet in length, wore caught, Thursday, of Fulton market slip The lead Ash and offel thrown into the water at this point attract large numbers of these marine monsters. 74ght of theatwereadver• tised as on exhibition alive—admission three iont One of them wee nine feet kupg—N Y. Son. AN, engraving has recently been published by Brockhaus, of Leipsie. of the monument de signed by Bletichell, which the Germane intend to erect in honor of Lather. The isle of the en graving is intended to aid in raising funds for the monument. ' _ A Fnerannes TotrasAurmi 14 to comioti a few ;imp at Clyde, Dear . ,/ tochOtilr• (lint pre- Poritions irebothli made tor l 4;',w large _teat has een erected. The et nrumnllon of coal Itt Vtibal; 1411,000 030 tone yearly, brought from ebrcald.,They hay sree4 by the pound In Paris m0rr,593,000 NaniloT to the nava oileers attaehril to the ?Moir 'fork Thom are won biz4l44 14" eteeirAeltri pt he Bank et Coaramte, Km cArk.