The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, September 13, 1860, Image 2

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'''''VRI7,IPBDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 'lB6O.
WEEKLY rßEssov
For SATORDAY.tteat,Iik-aow out, and an be had it
the Odle*, is wrappers, readp tor smith*. It oontenut
tbe
VERY LAMER' NEWS FRO)11 ALL •QUARTERP,
An well ee Pl.tOrililsoe eL tint Podsr tOPOU of the
-No weekly toper pabilehea le litter wad tot
petition la the ale, to malt° War Mondial - of town,
ift•olv I, * . rit COW(' i'inaleika Wan et UM tau for
tb*,irbsestins week. ..
. CONTENTS:— •
oyilorma, Postilt.;-Natmniten.
ORIGINAL
,STOR Pasolos.
IrmitCHlA'l..LitecooiL Josnerce—A Dononto
1 71 : 1 kioneL,Ttcnir —A liatttitollUt Con sssss
NARA ei—lloo Aocwool oT vlts EDIVIIDWIED
Art* , 1 0,&:- . Somas 8. cal) MIT AT DAlicneirT-40vITI
CP. P.ataila.prin.—lnenTaels of PottiLlTion IN
Lira* V TITID ISTA 7 II-0112 PAISCT 01'W' Lis AND
TUT CDIATET.I4III—/Peinten aliti ; EIII114.11,1 4 0101 ,11. 1
~ PI O. I IT ITEIL LIED2-111D INTSIIDSIIO,
Tit 4TIC , P . ATTIP..'OTTTitT Olt Tali ‘llnOttsE.
2 . itia , erl-7 I, Vizir or Tan Tana DipTOCIACT--.
" TIT;CiIpiIITT MasSADalts to ellin--
Com Poolno's , Potosaost arzacit—lntrostoorcr Coo
lotOr‘en-iitei aaa lareann, al:T.T.tnie OT TEE
STIATIIIICLADT - r "
POLITIOAL,IDEITICTI CoL. litoOLtris AT. TIT
Wsiiiiitir4l,‘,OfroLioso MTAHTIII AT CIADD'S FORD
...PELT! 0#".111011 , Dolmas' Mimi AT
LuAtir don/tole Eicreixim tN
atellOtA, AND MATTI AND-. 1118 OATAIIITIO.
Das OP Lola MICIIIDAII—Titt ROYAL TODD IN OA
CON RE4ONDENCE.—LITTERs ITION "OCCANION
AL"—L 111031 " KATTA"—latreanTloll NEW
YoITTANTTRII PITON TVIITIA PTB-4111 LA*? 8111...
TITOT. OW A. BY-11021. GITTIATION.
TELEGRAPHIC.—Ix, &acme' NEW. sT Tztat
esiria eton Errnors,Cilurolum, AND ALL TARTS
Qr.TED UNITED STiTIB. ' - ' . •
COMMERCIAL.—Wassur Ravin* OF TED Plunk
-Tan Eh:4M Idanstrr,
MARRIWS EvATES,
THE *KELLY 1111:88 is famished to saboonboro 44
S ii,Der , fiar. hI adoenee, for the lowa Goon and to
anbaot Twenty, when seat to one address, WO. in ad
glut*. Skate °Olga for tee at the ovular of Tun
Pant OlDinT. in wilivrens. ready for stalling.
Peet paost—Ohisreb Singing; Drawing Room
-PoitraitHari; New Ameriaan Oyelopsedia ;
Speissit• Of. Hon.-John Sherman, of Ohio; An Ex
tensive- Post WRNS Robbery ;;- An Ex-Judge AT
raiAgeWf-tp, t Nerds, Matiressee Pilled with Wood.
Pulsars Peen s—The Disaster on Lake Michigan ;
Thejine Arts hißhode laland Marine
Intslli
pesa:
The News.
Mime the comutencemeal. of the present cam
pain; it has.been our-aim in ' The Pro's to give a
fair represteitetion of- party priwoiples as they are
taught - bias. leaders of •eaoh party. • This is due
to lltiOilidireOf this journal, who. desire to -cor
reotirundelittand the great lanes With the conic.
try,hila,ifterirearlag all sides, to form their own
opinion•qtr the questions of the hour. To-day John
Sherman, of Ohio, speaks for the party of which bob
an acknowledged leader. The ,sentiments of Mr:
Shermanwill be found in his operith which we, print
on another , page.- It was delivered last night at
Madinat Rail; In this alty, to an imamate audience
of our elitism. It will be seen that Mr. Sherman
elaborately end frankly states the Republican ride
of Aliericeir polities, and that be attsoks With much
bitterimisi the penal:ate aid PrionPlsa of those who
oproiii•thetheeries and platform of his party.
The additional details of the penes sad dream.
atatese attending theists hmentabie disaster nPon
Lekeldiebillan to the steamer Lady Night, as pre•
senetanntite fourth page,, wAI possess an' addl.
!loan :and painful - interest to our reader.. A
platistaiene• and painful impearartee Sc given to
this deplorable calamity. , The deep grief .which
has hillen4pon the people of the West, and which
persedeitell classes and conditions of our fellow.
awaken a deep feeling of sympathy
tntlLi•
'tieirts of ail. , The courage of Captain
11014:::;velio - f filially met his fate tamest within
grasp , of the shore, and •wbo • etoed• to • Lie
pest ..with • 4 intently that will Ariake •We
name immortal, commends , a universal feeling of
admiration and feverous from the teinstrymen
the b.nored Herndon. - Tbeliffirent incidents f
that awful heir, when, amid a mullet revelry and
mirth,' fear 'hundred living sods were confront, .l
by death,, in the mbistat, its meat 'appalling aro..
• and rise up tons him the printed "pens,
and:
, Isaeent .to the loseginitfon - , in terrible ratio:,
thcawled realities of that hoer midnight diraF
tor.
ThaltaittL Star arrived ntiNew York yeetenisY,
from 4 ilenoirli. - - 'kat 'dates to' Angest,Mt. -
brineir . 117 1 21,,,840 el iti,spibpie; and two hundred ati.l
two.netorhgere. Panama
- pipets to September 1
are bariabt :The Odedeee of the Worth Star here
been' anticipated by the pony express, and tiler ,-
are,, therefore,- no items of • intelligence for net
readers Trom Pastime we learn 'that ter. Blum
an Amerierin 'resident at Bieusirentura,-bad beet
— gel 'et. Panama for the tion..payment of a no te
gives:,to the anetom.house authoridas of Barn.,
venting far duties. -Ike American consul was in
trestistltieg the matter. Tim United States stet
era Sadie aid Peireonth ware at Alpineal/
We isernitkatthe A:entire need by the Prime -
of We ittliit Jobe, N 8., has been sold by.euc
Sou, .Prince's" bedstead' brought slfti ;
Duke of Newasatie's bedstead, 1663 23; reaeptio,
emir on which the Prince sat Wrote's* ootnpat...s:
511 dreisibletable,"wlib glass and marble p
-Went* learn from the Haultakee Dame,
that the Nina* of Wales and Mt party will go fr..
Claus* to St.' Louts oaths Illinois Central liu i!.
road, in a venal train, and that the train rt P
matte halt at Kankakee long sucugh to give P.
partly - an apPertunity to go on a prairie -thick , I.
lartot:;,f
Wain glad to learn that very recent &wenn ir
fromiterepe, - Ind especially from the eastern r•
of rionsiderably previous reports of the
condition the'erops, 'Although storms et
loaners beve; done moot damage in the .Rumien
grain-beerier provisoes, there is a strong, belief
that the ,leariest • will turn out to be a good one
Spain' will • balers' Large surplus for exportation
and,•,44(toest Piety; of an excellent quaky. Thy
deficiency will be thinly In the Brithailslands,
Rolland, esd Germany, but as other crepe here
not minted, to thc same extent wheat, the d •
inanClitay!ifilt prove so great as many have en;•-
poesd.:litesi.lmtila, vanquantities of ries will be
ouPgititt-
eneitement throughout the poli
eel pisettesioi, New Tort, relative to the proposq.i
fusloia . betMeen the anti-ftepublioan parties of tb
State,: ,A despatch from Byrume states that Jul, a
A. Green, . 3r., chairman of the Breckinsidgis Sta. e
committee; his written a letter to peinlittehmond
in whiali ha ezineiress his readiness to accept so
proposal of Messrs. Wood and Loftin. The ImYree•
don aipuirs, to berentertsined that the attempts et
a compromise will not . prove sncoessful.
Ms now dednitely Arranged 'that Mr. Ifineoy
will some North. ' Me is anneuneed to arrive a
Annapolis on the ieth instant. Me will probably
visit Washington on the 211th; where he will bare,:
etived by a eetesmitteis appointed by the, Mreoldn ‘
ridgellleY Apiedatitna, After lowing Washington
be Will eidt Moir Pork and Philadelphia. •
We see by our Western ezebangetfrom Missouri
and the Rot that &largo number of Kansas peoplo
are already Seeing from famine and winter. Long
tralasci wagons, _bearing the involuntary exiles
with. their an 'now daily he seen passing
through 'Leavenworth on their way to -Nebraska
and lowa. , • ••• ' •
From Harare, we learn bythelltePiriOli7, lays
the New Orleans Preaptika Of the Bth, that expo.
ditioim to the eld,of - the-, Spanish people of tbo
kland.of tian'Domingo, in their war against Hay
tienoidotittnielqidetly to be Sited out In that port.
They ciirr3f out anis, isemosition, stores, and pro
vidoialeverithieg, indeed, neeestary to give it
the oltarseter of. a imUltary_ eitpediticm "slept the
cams. - And we are snared, on the same *Mho.
rltj;,thaf it his the fill'irimpatides of thieutho•
1474016._ - .' • .
row, poople have an ides of the extent of
the Isilk- , trade in Ms tetantry. Speaking of
It. the *eintelottai :Nye : "It Al eittfeteted that
there 'aie now. shout, thirtralit tale in operation
In dlterent tierts of the United Stites, In whieh
from. eight Mound' to ten thousand hands are
ioltitiotiltelsPlilid: About three•fttertlas of the
operetivie in - children udder stamen jean of age,
who aril - ,engaged at 'eomparatively trifling wages.
The eatireyslue of the inaeldnery and mills eon.
Booted with the silk trade *estimated at three
millions of dollars. • The average oost ofinanufee•
tore on silk goods to about onit.helf of the value of
the rel,Leaterial. Taking, therefore, the, ask, o f
the import of raw , silk in 1115 ii at one willies of dol
lars, we shall have about two millions of dollars as
the present Tallied the annual prodtietion of silk
goo& td 01'mi:felted States " ,
Who is the diNtiticinal Democratic
Candidate I,'
Tbe , !pen:lo4 Men. Alexander N. Stephen., at
Augtists,„ on fl4orday night lest; is the bitterest
pill theiimltiOrldipi men have ever had to swal
low. _ - :lliers is no gilding or sweet powder around -
It to the tietey the teeth - It is th e raw material , ,
Of 000, end the Breekinddge.Delmerati an stmt.
pallid: to golp it down. ' Weil o ',We are not sorry
for thing ;they. have planed theasselves in a false
positton.-with , their ~as OP.°, and they must tithe
the - oonsinuonene. : It - is somenhat Wok!, it Is
true; t 4 Mil thelobriale 'holm,* SO, lepg looked
up to Mr. Ilianheis _as the, prOphet..and, Me g o f
Georgia, D.aracierseyi new: turning from htin with
. word• of :inprtfaidii- hitt 1t tette etyle of - phis
Derneeratki Sheets. to pr** men only to long as
they , agree witlithein, and as men rie there is a
differemthif opinion, to iiviribilierrini Mr Stephen',
-Itoworpr. t h inv it eh trotter thiteiti ene - min attack,
an hisoirtordcwil/ sink dimplaito the inartsof,the
pooffilk,elto etilittawnpestitateDitalkinridge parry.
The4ll,Ciwthatllortglm, * by everyone, end
rate_of.Sid AtnielltmiY; Ula ifilstiosalisaadidoloo;and
riti . m oo thig *support . him, wilt lento that ark.
of potnimatotafetym.eles, , lisU-nterildterett party.
We thitilio_/Ifnild thavO beatcsrlier 55 4
. Mose cm-
UM* * 111, c,StePhene, te!, hays'. amed himself
di tt
nu n i tithtandelel, mid: tilasmi , liclinveteroo 7
VW if tie omit .-, Mai o, hp liiitlaelditi eththrwise i
in** 00.(ift.ilfuleil4 -, 'ioltiitnidtifillifdletl, we
10 0 ' k l l l i*dit - Or tgat bosomy Of 'mow NM
i,ellifig whisk hicamiketkig paha:
ilid:— . „ . 14. 9 .. M AN) 4444ffi11ik. , ' ''''- , -..- • -
The Straight Douglas Ticket.
Yesterday's telegraphic despatch made sad
work of the straight; Electoral Ticket put
in nomination by the • State Central
Committee, which represents the regular na
tional Democratic party, and we therefore
give the following Oorrecled list of the Elec
tors :
RiIICTO John Coma.
DISTRICT ILICTORS.
DISTRICT'.
1. John Alexander. 1. •Joeeph Leuhaoh. 1
t Freillt. htoever. 14. 'lease Beokhard.
3. Godfrey Aerates. us. •14bree D Jaokeon.
4. Ferri WRITIDAR. 16. Win Ig 0011111.
S. O. jtenhr. 11. 'Joel „Danner.
6. Jos uowdall. la• Sae 11. 011:0FLTd.
7 Dam "ITIFO. 15. rine, /00 , 0.
6 (ho . fintnia. 9... "J B. Nowell.
O. Joan !tot 21 John Celohn.
Itt o. r .
'wart. B . 40 r :i ti l l o rrehrill.
It * b IL neheetsr. IN James B. Leonetti.
'lt Gaylord Ohnroh.
•On the Reading Taket.
It will be seen that an entire change has
been made in the electors from the four Con
gressional districts in Philadelphia. The
gentlemen appointed by the Reading Conven
tion, Messrs. Staves, in the Ist ; PATTER
sow, in the lid; Oaocxerr, in the Ind;
and' Baznnint, in the IVth, having declined
'or refttsed to support the nominations of the
regular Democratic nominees for President
and Vice President, bare been replaced on
the ticket by Jour AsExannza, in the Ist
district; Puns-mom iTOZVEIt, in the Ild ;
GODFREY Merzoan, in the Illd ; and Ls DWAIID
Waxman, in the IVth. These citizens, it
gives us pleasure to say, represent not only
orthodox, old fashioned Democracy, but the
best elements of industry, enterprise, and in
tegrity. They are intimately associated with
the peculiar interests of the districts in which
they live,and are widely and favorably known.
Ardently attached, as they have allays been,
to the Democratic party, there is not one of
the fonr who has not repeatedly, during a Hong
life, given signal evidence of his disinterested.
nese and patriotism.
With no disposition to disparage the gen
tlemen who, after having been placed on an
electoral ticket by a State Convention which
piofessed to support regular nominations,
have declined or refused to sustain the choice
of the regular National Democracy, we think
the new electors of this great city named by
the Douglas State Central Committee entirely
worthy of the .confidence of all true Demo
crats. Of the other new names on the ticket
we have hardly space to speak, except as to
Josars Downam, of Chester county, a gen
tleman of extended influence; of Wien
nine, of Bucks, formerly a member of the
State Legislature; of Grosor D. STFrZEL,
of Barks, at present an associate judge, elected
by the Democracy of that county; of Joan
Brutes, of Lancaster, one of the most in
fluential mea in that empire county; of 'Wu
man L. Dzwear, of Northumberland, late
member of Congress from his own district ;
of WJELIAM R. GOROAS, of Cumberland, for
twenty years a leader of the Democracy in
Cumberland Valley, and of JAMES S. LEONARD,
of Clearfield, a neighbor of Governor BIOLER,
and his political opponent, and devoted to
the cane of Donexwe and the Constitution.
Now gentlemen, Democratic candidates, from
Governor down, which will• you take, the
straight Democratic ticket, or the false fusion
ticket? The question we put to you will
have to be answered by yourselves, or the
people will answer it against you at the polls.
The Italian Imbroglio.
The steady and determined zeal of GARI
BALDI in the cause of Italian freedom, his
wonderful exertions to achieve it, and the re
markable encases which has attended his ef.
forts to overcome apparently insurmountable
cbstaeles, have rendered Italy a point of more
general interest to the civilized world,
during the last few years, than any
other portion of the globe. Despite her
ancient renown, and all ,the glories
9f her , past history, a pall of midnight
gloom seemed to 'have settled so thickly
and closely around her as to have rendered
her fatnre an utterly hopeless one. But the
actual achievements of -the last two years
have far surpassed the expectations of her
most - sanguine Revolutionists, and now the
downfall of the Bourbon rule in its last Ita
lian stioaglsold, Naples, appears to be almost
inevitable.
To Ganuis.inr belongs a much larger share
of the true glory of theta great political
changes tins will probably ever be conceded to
him in any official shape, for his reward will
consist mainly In the approval of his own
heart, and the plaudits of the masses 'of his
countrymen, rather than in personal aggran
dizement. To the latter consideration he is
evidently indifferent. Hie sole aim is to be
hold 'his long down-trodden and oppressed
nation free and nutted. It is true that hi•
individual exertions could not have accent.
plished this great end without efficient aid
hut without his siagle-hearted devotion to it
the present _condition and probable future of
Italy to-day would be far less fortunate than
they are. Given has skilfully fought the
diplomatic battles of Italy. VIOTOR Humanoid.,
with a shrewd eye to the interests of his dy
nasty, has given many proofit that he was
worthy of the generous confidence upon which
the common welfare required some point of
authority and power to centralize itself. Lours
Nszozzon, partly to gain military prestige,
paitly to, gratify biz pique against a Court
whiCh had been the most inveterate
foe of his 'dynasty, and which, worse than all,
sneered .at him as a parvenue, partly from a
sincere desire to protect his ally front athreat
ened encroachment which France was, by her
traditfonary policy, bound to thwart, if she
could_ possibly do so, freely furnished the
mighty legions of his country to humble the
haughty pride of Austria, to drive her back,
defeated, cowering, and subdued, and to warn
her, in the only manner which could prove ef
fective with her stubborn counsellors, that
henceforth she must cease to regard Italy as
her prey. But GARIBALDI has made his ap
peals directly to the hearts of the people, and,
as the Soldier of Freedom, his sword has
gleamed with an irresistible eloquence of un
daunted bravery, which has achieved more
than any of his compeers, because it has
inspired the masses of his 'countrymen with
a determination to work out their deliverance
from bondage, to, strike for themselves the
blows which break their fetters, and thus
laid the only solid foundation for a free Go
vernment by evoking an irresistible hostility
to tyranny.
Now that the fate of Naples is soon to be
decided, the powerful (3Overnments of Franc:
and England officially announce their determi
nation to adhere to the policy of non-inter
vention, and Faustus IL can count upon no
foreign aid to protect him from the just in
dignation of his people. Indeed, he will be
fortunate if there is not it very large band of
foreign volunteers" arrayed against him in
the impending contest, independent of those
who originally anstained Gasrz•sar in Sicily,
for advertisements for !‘ eximrsionists " to
Sonth Italy are openly advertised in the
London - journals, and it is reported that the
desertions from the Sardinian army to join
Gasraaani have been so numerous as to al
molt threaten it with demoralization.
Meanwhile, in the midst of this impending
danger to the Bourbon Cause, a deeplaid con
spiracy on the part of the Count of AQUILA,
uncle to the King, to overturn the present re
gime and to secure hie own elevation to- the
throne, has benn detected.' He was obliged
to leave the country at once. The army, too,
Is apparently as unreliable in Naples as it was
In Sicily, and the whole pelitical aspect of the
country is snob as to indicate that the harvest
is ripe for the sickle of GARIBALDI.
Charles Dickens.
The reading public will be glad to learn
that Oummas Moguls will publish, next
Christmas, the first number of a new serial
story, "to be Completed in twenty monthly
numbers; with illustrations by, "Phis." •
LOBOS POSITITZ GoLD or Gay GOODS, &o.—The
attention of purchasers le requested to the large
and valuable essortmont of British, Prowl, Ger.
men, end AMSFIOSO dry goods, embraelog peak.
ages of staple and fancy artistes. in woollen,
hoisted, linen, Cotton, and silk goods, umbrellas,
cutlery, German ware, do., do., to be perempto•
rily sold, by eatalogne, on six months oredit, oom.
monolog this morning, at 10 o'olook, to be con.
tinned . the greater part of the day, without inter
mission, by Myers, °foghorn, k Co., attotioneers,
415 k and 415 Arch street.
Lases Poalmg SA LS Or harms, Pasozavvi,
be,—N.Pancoast, auctioneer,
will 8111 4 at morning, at 10 o'clock, at 712 Mar
ket street, sine Modred tots of Nab and pre
coned . fruits; *ptekles, Moats, glassware, ma
°binary, to. Catalogues now ready.
• POIATICAI, Miturtuo.—The members o
the . Young Douglas Campaign Club 'di
taimt.tbiciaantog at Meta baadquartara, stardom
tom=e Ot-iltai asst Obeataut • atulita_ j for the par
mum
posent adoptinirs soistltiOni eleotlug ota
THE PRESS.--PMLADELPMA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1860.
Time's Changes.
The Kings of Belgium and Holland have
met at Wiesbaden, and bad a friendly inter
view of two hours' duration. It is Mated that
At a very early date the King of the Nether
lands will become the guest of the King of the
Belgians at Brussels, and before Christmas
this visit will be returned by King LEOPOLD,
who wishes to consolidate the good feeling
now existing between the Royal families and
the people of Belgium and Holland by accept.
ing an invitation to visit the King at the
Hague. The heartburnings and Jealousies
which sprung from the revolution of 1880 have
passed away, and in Holland the King of the
Belgians will certainly be received with hearti
ness and enthusiasm."
There is something for grave reflection in
this intimacy, late as it is. It shows that
"Time at last sets all things even," and takes
away the anger and bad feeling which the
ruler of Holland could scarcely help cherish
ing against LEOPOLD of Belgium.
Thirty years ago France bad expelled the
hated Bourbons, and the , t glorious Three
Days of July" had ended in Paris, hailing Louts
PHILIPPE D'ORLEANS as at once a Citizen-King
and "the best of Republica." After a time, it
is true, Frenchmen came to think that, in
substituting LOUIS PHILIPPE for CHARLES the
Tenth, they had practically realized the moral
contained in the fable of King Log and King
Stork.
Thirty years ago GEORGE the Fourth and
Fat had just departed this life, so little re.
spected . and so wholly unlamented that Lon
don made a holiday when his gorgeous funeral
took place, and gave itself up to joy, junket
ing, pic-nles, and jollity. War,rest the
;Fourth, chiefly known, up to that time, as
father of a great many illegitimate children,
by Mrs. JORDAN, an actress, whom he shame
fully deserted iu his old age, was then on the
first flush of popularity as "the Sailor King,"
and the Wellington Cabinet were determining
in what manner most explicit to deny the ne-•
malty of Parliamentary Reform, and to as
sert that the idea of such a thing was pre
posterous. Earl GREY was preparing for the
Premiership; Tory PALMERSTON was ready to
turn his coat by becoming one of a Reform
Ministry, and HENRY BROUGHAM was ready to
bound over the heads of all his contemporaries
at the bar, and alight upon the Woolsack,
Chancellor and Peer.
Thirty years ago, Pope GREGORY the Six-
teenth had just been elected to the tiara;
FERDINAND of Spain was doubtless discussing
with his fourth wife, CHRISTINA, (now Mrs.
Munoz,) how the Spanish nation would take
his abolition of the Salique law ; Don lifrauzL,
who had usurped the throne of Portugal, was
beginning to perceive that his niece, Donna
Menu DE GLORIA would speedily dispossess
him ; stupid old FnArmis the First, the great
NAPOLEON'S father-in-law, was misgoverning
Austria and tyrannizing over Italy; the
lath CELABLES ALBERT was on the eve of
becoming King of Sardinia; the King LED
win, afterwards LOLA MONTEZ' friend and pa
tron, was poetizing in Bavaria and developing
the Fine Arta in Munich ; the late King Bom
ba, of accursed memory, as murderer and por
jurer, was commencing his reign in Naples
the Italian Duchies were under Austrian sove
reigns, MARIA LOUISA. (NAPOLEON'S Widow)
living as nominal ruler of Parma, the actual
governor being her second husband, Count
NEIPPERT, the one-eyed; BERNADOTTE. under
the title of CHARLES XIV., was reigning in
Sweden and Norway, the only one of NAPO
LEON'S generals who retained a 'diadem;
NtosoLAs of Russia was carefully studying
that wonderful document, the Will of Peter
the Great, with a view to obtaining a slice of
Turkey; our own ANDREW JACKSON was on
the second year of his first Presidency, whet
ting his beak for a fatal pounce upon the
United States Bank; and WILLIAM I. of the
United Kingdom of the Netherlands was just
beginning to feel that he was very likely to
lose Belgium.
In 1814, after the first downfall of NAPO
LEON 1., what were called The Low Countries
(including Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg,
&c.) were united into what was denominated
she Kingdom of the Netherlands. The Prince
of Orange-Nassau, hereditary Stadtholder,
was made King, and reigned as WlLLins I.
When the French Revolution broke out, the
feeling extended to Belgium, which, sepa
rating from Holland, declared itself inde
pendent, in November, 1880. In the July
rollowing, Prince LEOPOLD, of Saxe Cobourg,
.vas chosen King, and, though the King of the
Netherlands objected, by diplomacy. by pen,
and by sword, Belgium retained her newly
gained independence, and, still under LEO
POLD, is one of the most thriving kingdoms of
&rump°.
The Prince of Orange, eldest son (and
eventual successor) of WILLIAM I. of the
Netherlands, had small cause for friendship
with LEOPOLD. In 1815 this Prince was se.
lected by Gaosor IV., then Regent of Eng
land, as husband to the Princess CHARLOTTE,
of Wales, 121 E; only child by ilbfated CAROLINE
, )f Brunswick, but—as ladles sometimes will
be—the Princess was self-willed, determined
to choose a husband for herself, and selected
Prince LEOPOLD, whose worldly property, at
rho time, was about $1,600 ayear. The Prince
if Orange had to wear the willovr. LEOPOLD
married the Princess Cuartkorrs, receiving
from England an annuity of £60,000, which
has been paid to him ever since his wife's
death, in 1817. Thug, the Prince of Orange
was literally done out of a wife, in 1816, and a
kingdom in 1882, by LEOPOLD of Cobourg. He
ascended the throne of Holland in 1840, on
his father's resignation of the Crown, revised
the, Constitution in 1848, died the following
year, and never would meet Lkororm.
His son, WILLIAX 111., who took the consti-
tntional oath at Antwerp in 1849, immediately
after his accession, is a young man who evi
dently does not inherit the hereditary hatreds
of the family, has shown his good sense in
establishing friendly relations with LEOPOLD
of Belgium, which will be strengthened, no
doubt, by their personal communication at
Wiesbaden.
LEOPOLD is the most fortunate of living So
vereigns. At one time ho solicited a small
staff appointment from NAPOLEON, and its re
lhsal was a heavy blow to him. A pauper
prince, tho heiress to tho British Crown fan
cied, married, and enriched him. The Crown
of Greece was tendered to him and refused,
before he accepted that of Belgium. His
.econd wife was eldest daughter of the King
of the French, then the Ulysses of roll -
sarcha. His regal legitimacy has been fhlly
recognized by the marriage of his eldest son
to an Austrian Archduchess, and of his only
daughter to the brother of the Empe
ror of Austria. His sister, who lately
died, espoused a Grand Duke of Russia ; his
surviving sister, the Duchess of KENT, is mo
ther, and his nephew is husband, of Queen
'norms ; and two of his nephews have suc
cessively married (one still surviving) the late
Queen of Portugal.
Wo must conclude, satisfied with having
supplied our readers with subject for reflection
in this rapid glance at Time's changes within
even a single generation.
The New Municipal Buildings.
We have received photographs of the de
signs of Jong Moelitrunn, Jr., for the new
municipal buildings of this city, which were
accepted by the Commissioners, and have
been much impressed by their beautifill ap
pearance. The design for the Court House
hears a strong general resemblance to the old
Capitol at Washington. The main building
in the design for municipal officer is some
what like Spring Garden Hall, but its columns
are longer and less space is occupied by the
base which supports them. It has also two
large wings attached. The material of which
these structures are to be built has not yet
been decided upon. Proposals have been in
vited for white marble, blue marble, and
brown or sand-stone. White marble has al
ways been a &verde material in Philadelphia
for buildings intended to be architectural
monuments of the city, and we think from the
plans the new edifices would make a better
appearance if it is used, than it any other
color is adopted. This point, however, will,
we presume, be settled by the Commissioners,
and thrn Councils will be called upon to de.
Bide whether proper accommodations are to
be furnished for the transaction of our legal
and municipal business., or whether this whole
subject is only to be "agitated" for another
generation.
AVOTION NOTIOE.—The attention of buyers IS
particularly called to the large and desirable as•
sortment of flrst-olosa boots, shoo!, brogans, and
,russets, Iso be sold this morninfiyat 10 o'olook pro.
'Windy, by catalogue, on four_ months credit, by
Philip Ford & nuotioneere, at their store, Non.
530 Market street, and 621. Minor street.
Who shall Rule Naples?
LuarsN MURAT, son of King JOACHIM, ne- I
phew of the first and cousin of the third Ni- I
roma, has turned' up as a sort of a candidate
for the crown of Naples, in the expected event
of the King's flight and the liberation of the
Neapolitans from the hated Bourbon yoke.
It appears that he has been communicated
with from Naples, and his reply, cautious as it
is, shows that he has not the slightest objection
to a throne. His significant reply runs thus :
GENTLIMitit : / have received your letter, and
answer without delay. The only positions accept
able to me aro each as are unambiguous and open.
I will never make myself an obstacle to the popu
lar wish, however erroneous it may appear to me
to be.
I am a relation of the Emperor's, and, there
fore, not altorether free ; any eat of mine would
pledge French policy more or lees, and in the 'ore
sent state of unjust distrust now being excited by
hostile parties against the Emneror, to whom I am
entirely devoted, nothing could be more pernicious
than to lead Europe to suppose that Napole• n 111,
who is solely intent on the welfare and indepen
dense of nations, is merely thinking of replacing
his relatives on the throne.
When revolution agitates a people, the popular
will alone, freely expressed, is able to put en end
to disoord and uncertainty, because it forms for it
self that supreme law to whioh every good Italian
ought to submit. -
In the present state of things, it will be profitable
for Italy that a constitutional Government should
be established in Naples as speedily as possible, in
order that liberty may be assured, and that the
danger of steamily or invasion may he averted. It
is proper, then, for you to know that I would not
take part in the movements of your kingdom unlsse
the people, released from all external influence
whatsoever, should have legally and solemnly
manifested the desire of having in me a pledge of
independence and prosperity.
I should then be strong in the Resent of my
cousin ; I should then bring with me the French
alliance, the sole and sure guarantee to this'nation
of lasting independence.
I sacrifice ' therefore, all private interests of my
own, and, oaring solely for the nubile interest, I
conclude by repeating what I have already said
elsewhere, whioh is, that Italy, in my opinion, will
find again in a confederation her ancient poser
and former splendor.
Receive, gentlemen, the exptession of my parti
cular esteem, L. Mandy.
Castle of linzenval, August 10, 1860.
NAPOLEON CHARLES LUCIEN MURAT, s 0•
cowl son of the famous cavalry general and
CAROLINE BONAPAETE, third sister of NAPO
LEON I, was born at Milan, May 16, 1803.
ACHILLE, his eldest brother, who died in 1847,
resided for some time in the United States, of
which, we believe, ho became a naturaliZed
citizen. In 1824, ho resided with his uncle
JOSEPH at Bordentowu, New Jersey. LUCIEN
MURAT was in the United States when the
French Revolution of 1848 broke out, and im
mediately returned to Frauce,When he became
a member of the National Assembly, by
election. In 1849, he went as French ambas
sador to Turin, returning in 1860. After
the coup d'etat of December 1861, ho was
made, Senator, and allowed the title of Prince.
In 1855, when public indignation was strong
in Italy, against the late King Bombs, LUCIEN
Musav was openly spoken of as the probably
proximate ruler of the Two Sicilies, but de
clined taking the initiative to obtain that re
sult. He is a man of some talents, good cha
racter, and steady habits. In 1827, ho married
Miss CAROLINA GEOROINA FRASER, by whom
ho has live children, three eons and two
daughters.
WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENCE
Letter from " Oceasional.”
[Cot tesneneeueo of The Prees.l
WASHINGTON, September 12, 1860
Although the Presidential campaign, up to this
time, has not been so exalting and tempestuous as
that of 1858, daily developments foreshadow great
and startling events in the near future. The
Southern people, within the last year, have passed
through many severe trials. They may be said to
have gathered the experience of a century shoe
the incursion and the execution of John Brown.
Taxes is undergoing an agonizing process on ac
count of her internal disturbanoes. Ambitious
politielens and bed men, taking hold of the Harper's
Perry invasion, es it were, with one hand, and of
the dititoulties in Term with the other, have
so managed to confuse and confound the Southern
masses that appeals that would have been rejected
more than a year ago are now gloomily accepted, or
eagerly endorsed. Of course, the men who look to the
overthrow of the Union revel in the antioipation
of disaster. The Southern fanatic, governed by
his fear or his bate, has lashed himself into'futy
by what be supposes the injestlee of the people of
the free States, and refuses to accept any oompro
wise short of a oomplete surrender to his de
mands, or a dislocation of the Confederacy. lam
not an alarmist. I have full faith and a confirmed
confidence in the perpetuity of the Union of Abs.'
States ; but any one at We centre—za natter
what his feelings may be—who reads the Southern
papers and bears the Southern extremists, will he
compelled to admit that the foes of the Republic
in that quarter are resolved to resort to violent
courses should their projeote involved in the elec
tion of Breokinridge and Lane be defeated in No
vember.
I have beard moderate men from the South say
they have no doubt that, lu the event of the
election of Mr. Lincoln, South Carolina, Georgie,
Alabama, and Mississippi, will, through their
Legislatures, take steps to retire at once from
the Union, and prepare, to use their own
language, "to protect their sovereign rights."
The fact is, Rhett, Fawley, and the Charleston
Mercury are the exponents of the Breokinridge
party in the South, and will force that party either
to fake the position of submitting to the decision
of the ballot-box in November or to take up arm'
against it, should that decision be for Lincoln
Hash may be said to be the certain fruit of the war
made, by Breokinridge and his friends upon the
nomination and the platform of the Charleston and
Baltimore Democratic Conventions. While hold
ing up Mr Lincoln as their pledged adversary,
bound, in the event of his election, to draw the
sword upon their rights, they contribute to his
triumph by dividing the National Demooraey. In
the meanwhile, I regret to see that the fiery spirit
of the extreme men in the South Is responded to
by equal intolerance on the part of ;batty anti
slavery leaders of the North. The position
assumed by Judge Douglas in hie Norfolk
speech was unquestionably the right position, and
the great body of the Northern Democracy will
never countenance any attempt to prevent the in
auguration of any man fairly elected to the Pre
sidency. On the contrary, they will rally to his
support, and maintain him until he commits an
overt act of treason to the laws. But is it not the
perfof true statesmanship for the leaders of the Re..
pablioan party to contemplate the condition of the
Southern mind, irritated and exalted as it is, and
discountenance the bitter and acrimonious temper
of too many of their organs and their orators.
The result of the Maine election will, of oourse,
furnish a text for copious comment to the Southern
fire• eaters, and in proportion as they exult the
true friends of the Republic in the slave States
will despond, and such men as Alexander R. Ste
phens of Georgia, John Forsyth of Alabama,
George W. Jones of Tennessee, and Governor
WiokJiffe of Louisiana, will be shorn of their In
fluence for good. Ido not apprehend that the ef•
forts of the friends of Breokinridge in the South
to destroy the Republic in the event of the election
of Lincoln will ho suoctessful. I repeat that I
have every °enflame in the strength and perpe;
tuity at the Union. I. know, too, that the North
era people are not only devoted to the Confederacy,
but that they laugh at every menace of the extreme
men of the South against it ; and wherever these
menaces are spoken, dare these men to fulfil
their threats. All this is natural enough. But
he is not a Wile man who, as ho listens to the
orimination and recrimination en the part of the
Disunionista on the one side, and the ultra Repub
licans 'on the other, does not from this review
extraot food for thought and for conservative and
common-sense action.
Both of these emotions must understand that
there is in the masses of all parties a supreme
affeetion for the Union, but whin the friends of the
Union in the South aye forced to believe that the
South hes no influential friends in the North, end
when the friends of the Union in the North are
driven upon the Idea that all the Booth is against
the North, who shall say whore this state of
things will lead and land us? OCCAMIONAL.
Letter from "kappa.""
((7orreepondenoe of Tho P/Obil.)
WASHINGTON, D. C., Sopteraber 12, 1860
A greatwrong has been committed against thou.
sands of poor men, women, and girls, by the ex
tension of Howe's sewing-maohine patent for ano
ther seven years. The grounds on which the
application was 'made, as produced in the argu
ment of hie counsel, were, that the half million of
dollars acquired by the inventor as profits Was not
a tnrilelent remuneration for the actual advantage
derived from the use of the invention. After
having heard the arguments, the Commissioner of
Patents reserved his decision until Saturday last,
when ho granted the application, and extended the
patent for seven years. In making his decision,
he expressed the opinion that the profits which had
accrued to the inventor ($500,000) were not snob
as the value of the invention entitled him to; i e.,
that he must make $1,000,000 more, at the expense
of poor sewing women.
Proposals for tho construction of the Pacific
telegraph were yesterday morning opened in the
office of the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury,
when bids were found from the following parties :
Hiram Sibley, Rochester, N. Y. ; Theodore Adams,
Harrisburg, Pa. ; Orville Clark, Sandy Hill, N.
Y. ; John a H. Harmon, Detroit, Minh. ; and B
F. Ploitlln, St. Joseph, Mo.
At the last meeting of the Jackson (Breekin
ridge) Democratic Association, the obairman an
nounced that the Hon. Mr. 'Yancey was expeoted
to arrive in the city about the 20th of the present
month, on his proposed tour to the North. On
motion of Mr. Rimer, a oommitteoof Ave was ap•
pointed to wait upon that gentlemen, and request
him to address the association, and the citizens or
Washington, from 001110 convenient locality, to be
hereafter designated. Ae Mr. Yanosy is an
nounced to arrive at Annapolis on the 20th, he will
probably be here about the 19th. You may have
the plosions of hearing him in Philadelphia.
We have now a oorreot list of the census returns
asi furnished by the deputy marshal. The poptda
lotion of Washington city amounts to 61,400 inha
bitants, which lea gain Bina° 1850 of 21,399.
No. of slaves in 1850 2 113
Do. do. 1880 1,811
Decrease aim 1850 299
The number of dwellings 10 242, of families 10,788
In 1850 there wore 6,345 do. 6,730
Increase liners 1850.. 3,897 4,0 58
Number of marriages during the year ending
June 1, 1880, were 840.
Total deaths in 1860 1 068
D o , 1850 590
Tureen of deaths in 1880 over that of 1850, with
an increase of population of 21,399, only 469.
The census returns of the District of Columbia,
compared with that of 1850, afford the following
interesting particulars:
In 1850 tho number of free inhabitants in
the District was 48,000
In 1860 72,134
'norm° 24,131
In 1850, number of slaves 3,687
In 1860, " " " 3,231
Decrease in tan years
The Degroot matter has been brought before the
Attorneypeneral. It is very questionable whether,
after all, the $119,000 will be paid.
"No fusion with bolters and scooders " is tho
cry of our Douglas men.
It la not true that General Lane is going to do•
liver an address at the Rockville (Md) Agrioultn•
ral Fair. Old Joe bas no timo to think of anything
else but of his slave•code equality, and to praise
his young gifted, gallant, and lucky Kentuokian
friend. KAPPA.
Letter from New York.
RUMORS OF FUSION IN NEW YORK: WI/AT RAS NOT
SEEN DONE: WHAT MAY BE DONE—THE FEDERAL
OFFICERS—CENTRAL RAILROAD BUSINESS—
GREAT INCREASE OF EXPORTS—gIIE MANIA POI!
" PUTTING UP HANDS"—IIORE SWANS PROD
EUROPE—NR. FORREST.
(Correspondenee or The Preee,l
NEW Yomc, September 12, 1860
The friends of Judge Douglas in Pennsylvania
need have no fear that the Demooratie State Cen
tral Committee of Now York will take any stove
with the Breekinridge State Committee, in rec
.
velum to fusion, that will compromise the Douglas
.Demooraoy elsewhere. With the Breokinridgers,
as an organization, they will hare no negotiations :
Ist because the Green State Committee do not en
joy the confidence of the influential men of their
own faction; 2d, because the Federal officeholders
will not give them money or support, and 3d, be
cause the party is almost unanimously together
in support of the regular nominees. It it;
more than probable that the State Committee, with
a view to secure unbroken unity, may recommend
the substitution of five or six first-class national
soon (who have heretofore supported Mr. Breckin
ridge, but have refused to act with his State com
mittee) in place of the same number who are now
on the ticket. Such an arrangement is quite
likely to be consummated, but it will be made up
from gentlemen an this part of the State, and en
tirely independent of Green, Dickinson, d Co.
It is well understood that Butterworth, Soholl,
Cisco, and Dix, have done with that crowd.
The New York Central Railroad Company's re.
(saints for August have been officially made up and
declared. The aggregate is nearly $690,000, which
is nearly $lOO,OOO in excess of the receipts of the
corresponding month last year. It may be assumed
with entire safety that a company whose business
is increasing at the rate of nearly a million per
annum, is on the high road to prosperity.
Our export trade continues to be very heavy.
Last week the total reached $2.173380, making an
aggregate of $62 830,375 slime January I—an in
°realm of $23,000.000 over the exports of the cor
responding period in 1859 The amount of bread
stuffs sent abroad was $788,839. The general ag
gregato is swelled by the large movement in mis
cellaneous articles, of which the South American
and Asiatic countries are taking large quantities.
Sinee the sailing of the allied fleets to the coast of
Northern China our exports of domestic goods have
greatly fallen off The news from Europe is oalou
fated to moderate the export of breadstuffs, and to
*hook the speculative movement in our food mar
ket—two things which are quite desirable at pre
sent.
The mania for "putting up bands" is raging
among the boad•punobero of this great country
A chap has just acme on from Now Orleans, Jen•
nines by name, who wants to whip E. Price in
Dartioular, and anybody generally, for ono thou-
Rand dollars The vigorous Jennings stands six
feet three, and is a " big thing" In other raspeote,
The fanny men are noting his points, and will
probably soon trot out a man to do "potato.
trap," "peeper," " smeller," "bread-basket,'
and all that sort of thing.
Eleven Owens. of the came 'species as thole pre
sented to tha oily by the oorporatlon of Hamburg,
were reeeived at Central Park on Monday, from
England. More are still to come Those just re
oelved are very beautiful. and add greatly to the
►ttraoticns of the little lakes.
Mr, Forrest has taken rooms at the Metropoli
tan Hotel, where he is expected on Friday. Mr
Nixon, the manager at Niblo's, has secured an ex
cellent company to sustain Mr. H. during the en
gagement. The system of adtnission will be
somewhat modified, and the noble army of dead
litta•ts will be curtailed to the smallest possible
' , sorbing power. Eaoh daily is to have two ad.
mission., only, and a seat for each. How the free.
men will tt take on" at this invasion of their
prescriptive rights!
THE MARKETS.
lAsugs erode% with bale' of Pout at 85 23. and Pearl;
at 16666.
1 1 1.01111..-r The market for State and Western Flour is
brier and prises rule in favor of buyers The foreign
nelillPO• Bohemian hod toptlenor to sonsewtrat elen
tle the market. which reefing however. partly subsided
to-day. Reeeipte 6 759 bble, and the *ales 1 330 bbls, In
cluding suesrfine 'Mate at Se 10as 76 1 extra do, at 86
astl 10; superfine at 861003 75 ; O.IC do at 86
sem; and round- noon Western
Ohio at $6.15626 26. Tllt
Souther n
Plpur is bhls, at 1 :;;q47.1. o favors
n the buyer, with sales
60 ° 448 1 far
extra Om a Finer is steady with salsa of 400 bble at
85.7003 SD for stmerfine. and 86 10m7.60 for extra. RIO
l'inur and Corn Meal are steady.
GRA N is quiet and god, with a fair
demand for export ; white, no change, with sales of
5.000 ha at 81 60; Chicago spring at $1 2301 28 Corn is
steady with a moderate I , quip , . and sales of 30 000 but,
including We•tern 'mixed at 680690 afloat, and 700 in
strwe. Rye is firm at 760130 a. Barley is dull. Oats firs
at 38m40e for Southern. Jersey. and Pennolvavia; 400
Ilk for Canada and Western , and 4t042 for Siete
Pnovisions.— he market for Pork is unehanged.
•itles bbl, at 819 49019 60 for new Mese, 8 10 15 for
rill do; 814 13014 MO for
of v
813 28 for old do
Beets unehassrd ; sales of 20,3 hblr at the prime of
Yesterday Cut m are dull n steady,or Shoulders.
and toKeeito for M ama. Lard is with sales of
1 0 bb's at 127..f013}0. Butter and Cheese are un
changed.
NEW YORK CATTLE MARKET—WEDNESDAY,
‘ . OI)T. 12 , n —The reneipm have been 4.727 beeves 119
Pews. 690 Vests, 13,965 Klee 0, and Lambe. 8 038 Swine,
sibnivi rig a decrease of 1.26/ Beeves. 71 Cows. 140 Yeats,
1 647 Simon and I emirs and an increase of 3 9117 Swine.
including I ON) sold at Bergen. New .Tersey, to two 14 , iw
York butchers, and 100 at Hudson River depot on Sun
dae.
The second darts business was not any mono active
than the opening trade of Tuesday. The cool weather
had a r Ohm favorableinflurnoe, and butchers, when
ready ?o buy did not make ae much fuse of their ne
gotiations. I.lTOneTn. also, were more anxious to TO
aim. and occasionally mot buyers by " splitting the
derma° " when they were not wide apart in their
views
A few droves sold at an average of 858. some 845 a
number 11E0063. Boise tails were taken as low as Wats
629; the, were, of course " hand oases." finnle good
flesh fat Steers, th.msh Min hosed and rough-looking.
sold at 51)409n. Quitea number of this description were
in market. We quote at 6to 9Sie ; general selling prices
Urge.
The sheep and Lamb market has advanced the .4.b
head wan an wive demand. We quote at 82 I 0 nl.
extra 8600. Lambe at 8204 60. extra 80 00.
Vents are steady at 4c6).40, a few To.
Mulch 0.1911 are sellmc at 823 to 840 itY pair. hand
tnne at 860gree. Swine are rather lower; sales at 6'.‘e
e 3 a pair. common distillery-fed at Co. Only a felv
lett over.
Public Amusements.
The Ptognmomc, a woll-condnoted dramatic
and literary hebdomadal. in tho adjecont village
of New York, has the following announcement:
"On Monday, the 17th, Mr. Forrest will make hie
first appearance in several years, and will open in
Hamlet. A vary excellent company has been en.
gaged to support him, consisting of F. B. Conway,
Charles Fisher, T. E. Morris, Martin, Fenno, Ca
noll, Donaldson, Hawkins, Harrison, Cooke, and
others; with Mrs. Conway, Mrs. W. C. Gladetane,
Madame Penis!, lilies Le Brun, Miss Kato h'i3her,
Jo." It appears from Mr. Nixon's announce
ment, that the choice of 14 private boxes and 250
orchestra seats in Niblo's Garden, (alias Theatre,)
for Mr. Forrost'a first appearance, aro to be sold
by *motion this day, the remainder to be disposed
of as usual, at the box aloe.
The combined Italian Opera companies will
commence a fortnight's performance, at our Aca
demy of Mole, on next Wednesday evening, with
Patti and Brignoll an Amtna and Minna, in the
"Sonnatabula." Signora bet Pabbrl will appear
the next evening. Madame Carted and Madame
Colson will also appear during this brief season.
Madame Gatraniga commenees an engagement
at the grand theatre of Lisbon on the first of Coto
her, where her husband, Signor Albite, the fiddler,
11 01%14/ad as maitre du chant.
Mice Annette Irma and Mr. Edwin Adams are
winning golden opiniono, by good acting, at Wal
nut-street Theatre.
Mr. J. S. Clarke, of iroh•etreot Theatre, is
about playing a star engagement at tho Winter
Garden, New York.
Mr. Edwin Booth, dining hiJ engagement at
Boston, will appear in " The Fool's Revenge,"
adapted by Tem Taylor. He will also appear all
Captain Norman, in Bulwer's " Sea Captain,"
and will produce " Henry the Beoond," a tragedy
recently written for him.
The new and amusing burlesque of "Leila
Rookb," will be brought out at Aroh•atreet Thea
tre this evening. The Florenoes continue at..
traotive.
Mr. Cameron has a benefit at the Continental
Theatre this evening, and an entirely new sot of
entertainments will be given.
The Ravel troupe are carrying all before them
at Molionough's New Gaieties, which opened on
Monday with a great house, and has been crowded
on each night since.
Miss Caroline Rishings' Concert, at Musfoal
Fund Rail, Mira plane tomorrow evening. Mr.
Thunder will be the eonduotor, and all the princi
pal avhilable vocal talent in the oily will be ren-
dered tributary on this occasion.
WILL JUST SUIT ntr, LentEx.—The ladies
who pass Warner, Miskey, d 'Merrill's store, In
Chestnut street, above Seventh, should look in at
the Skaters. They will see thorn mounted upon
new•fashioned skates, having wheels Instead of run
nners, which enables them to go through all the
exemises of a good skater upon the ice, with this
differenee,that it may be done in summer as well as
to winter, and in the parlors or entries instead of
the surface of a frozen river. Nothing, could be
more suitable for ladies than this graceful and
healthy excretes. By premising at .home they
could become accomplished skaters by the winter
season, and Join in the eporte upon the Schuylkill
at Fairmount Park, whore skating will be a more
fashionable amusement than ever, now the moo-.
modatione are being provided for thole who will
fregnent that spot in winter.
LATEST NEWS
By Telegraph to The Prem.
THE DOUGLAS BAREOUE.
Nnw Yeats, Sept. 12 —The Barbecue at Jones'
weeds was attended by about twenty thousand
parsons. Meagre. Douglas and Johnson ware both
present, and their appearance was resolved with
enthusiasm.
In the course of his remarks, Mr. Douglas said
that ho was in favor of a cordial union with every
Union man; every man who was true to the Con
stitution; every mon who was in favor of enforcing
the laws in all contingencien. If Major Brookin
ridge was in favor of enforcing the laws twalnet se
cossioniste, dlsuniontsts, and Abolitionists in all non
tingenelen, then he (the speaker) wan with Mat Be
loving that the Union was In danger, the speaker
would make any personal sacrifice to save it. If the
withdrtwarof hie name would defeat Mr. Linoo'n
he would at thin moment withdraw it, more espe
cially if his withdrawal would insure the eleotion
of oome man who was true to the Constitution and
the Union, and would enforce the taws. He be•
loved that the only organization that can save
the country la the Democrat:o organization. He
was in favor of maintaining that organization.
He proceeded to eulogize its history. He believed
that the Union oould be maintained only by ornsh.
log out Abolitionism and Southern Disunionist:a.
Ile appealed to all Union-loving men In favor of
the enforcement of the laws, in every contingency,
to rally with ono common electoral tioket and
beat the Abolitionists, but he conjured his beware
1 to =limp fusion, no bargain, no compromise with
the friends of any candidate who will not pledge
himself to sustain the Constitution and the Union,
and to enforce the laws under all eiremnstanles.
Hz-Governor Morehead, of North Carolina, and
others, addressed the meeting
Messrs. Douglas and Johnson were serenaded to
night at their hotel.
The Wreck or the Lady Elgin—Coro
ner's Inquest.
• CHICAGO. ElepL 12.—The coroner's i ur• has COM
maned the investigation in relation to the wreck of the
Lsd • Elm.
John Jerv is. of Milwaukee. tes'ified that just before
the sehonner struck. I was grinding at the middle germ
way, end saw the schooner about twin minutes before
t• e collision ; ehn appeared to he coming towards Ina at
about an encl. of 45 degree.; about half a minute before
eho struck I loft the gangway; Cantata Wil.on was at
the after gangway. and asked come one on the ea/former
if they wanted to come no board; the reply wan they
did not think they were injured: they would stay
where they were; the sehooner woe not dipping aft,
I saw a light on the enhancer before the collision,
hut none afterwards ; I went down intn the eilal
bunker and raw the water coming in very fent ; I
then wont over to the break; the steward was there.
trying to atop the leak with mattresses; the vereel had
before been listed up; the captain attend at the edre of
the scuttle. ordering the men to fire up as fast es possi
ble ; I then went aft; the rapta.n went et the name
time, end gave orders that ever, Chute lirge he thrown
overboard ; the captain. when next t saw him wee
coming from the bow; ' then went below to see how
long we could beep afloat ; when I rot to the engtne
room t", anomie had just stooped ; I went back to the
actin. the hold tieing then half fullof water; the
captain and mYself Ora got twenty to twenty-five la
mas up on the hurricane deck the b at Wont down two
minutes nfterwarde,• there were between twenty and
thirty obildren on the forward part of the hurricane
C; it wee very dark. end minim , at the time; the
hell commenced r name almost at once after the col-
Moon, and the whistle commenced blowing at the
seine time.
Thomas Cummini.e. who was on the Leidy Egin. tes
tilled—Si:hornier did not strike the steamer quartering,
but at right angles; she ran square into her: the
steamer moving. lamed the schoneer round ; think we
ware about ten miles from the shore ; sow a vestiel'a
bvhtafterweloft tho steamer ; think we could have
loon a light on a vessel three miles off; did not tee
the sehroner a. for alio got clear of us ; saw that all the
steamer's head lights were up • the schooner was
mining about dne east when she struck )0.1
Is IL rut, that the boats Coins to Milwaukee
should pass vessels on the larboard side; i think a
vessel under that wind and headway coned have
11l aided the ;dimmer if within twenty rods of her by
great exertion ; even if the vessel was but three times
length from the steamer she could have avoided
doing .move damage by rutting her nelm hard up; had
the schooner seen the steamer halts, rut's off she aould
not have struck her egearit by gross nesbeence:it seems
to mo that the helm of the vess•l must have been pot
down instead of up and that wee tho cause of lie disas
ter; the schooner ocu'd have laid within a rule of us 'ill..
tor the oollision with tierleet wifely; it was not very
dark. &though raining heavily.
Sohn Wren. heat mete of the August's. testified that
at the time of the collision it wan the eaptein's watch
and the penned mate was no dealt; when the mitten
t 1 nuo 10 I called the captain, who got nn dealt an the
squall xtruolc us; shout ore-third of the foleenil aid
one-fourth of the ra0.11,1 , 0 were ue when we etruelc the
steamer, when I saw the steamer's lights I lined the
captain sine nut. " Hard OD:" the •teetner was then
uroelong our how: the "chrme" elbowed nhlte light
from 8 to 13 o'clock ; don't knew whether the ri d at the
time of the collision o nnt limit-A the helsmon answer
the order. "nerd up." but did not entice acv 'hence t o
the vessel's enunte : the Alienate. steers wild—thi,t is
3.1 i not answer her he or middy ; it was nor two
Minute. at the nntside. alter the order that the vessel
0-funk we heard no noise whitevo, from the steamer
after the onllislnn
(lenree Budge. second Y ate, says it wan the ~ ,D tam'a
we toh; I wen on deck: the veevel's entree an 'oath
liv neat under full sill. exanot the main miff topsail;
wa showed n white light; fi et PR , the steamer's lirht,
'bout ten minutes before t °stied the coptnin shirt
min Point on 'he weather hoer: it was about twenty
minutes Wore the collision when 1 called the oapton :
milled him hroause it looked equally ; when he CAM. UP
showed him the lirht ; he ran forward and looked at
lt hut made nn remark to me nhout tt ; from three to
fire minutes lisfere we streak the -sterner he ordered
the holm herd up. end the order wan ebeynn. but the
tassel din not mind her helm ; I d d not hear any ewer
on the steamer after the • nllitnen ; the wind wee blow
ire en we ennui not hear ourselves from one end of the
vernal to the other.
I , rin of the nnharater'n urea, who Wne stationed for
rs , ia •e a look-our. more that he dal ant nee the
ntnnamee light until Just as the I:nut/tin ordered the
hrrim hard vo
of
whom t rMilwau k ee e beau moneyed
Mott of resided et
From Washington.
DZSPATCUR9 I , IIOR CHINA— !MAUER 1111111NOL12.
Wa•ttrewToN Sept , 2 —A despatah to th.Nevyi Ps_
pteat fronl.l, r•lTicar .tri Wine. rf the Peat trtim
squadron. gees that It is .elleved the, Arno Wee and
ord Rl.to boys urge , ' the leadioe oommand•ra of the
French and Besti•h fore. at the month of' the (tem. t o
nommen°, hostilities at ones. Seltuont Vaitioe to he
folly prepered
An nffintel letter states thee the new stentn•hip Semi
note had an 4 ved off French Guiana, in thirty-one der ,
frnm Norfolk.
frete,i ne o'r barhour. toporiutondent of the Her
per.. Fern armory !teems been removed for oolit• oa l
reasons as stated he tendered hie resignetion. which
the Pres dent has dsolined to *anent..
WA ittNatex . Rent. 12 —The New Orhteos rnetla hare
en . frequently fel ed to arrive within the emhedale time
...thin the ettet nynth that the Pepartment brut taittkn
the meter Into consideration with a view to remedy
the matter.
W. , h,n the mud rear about sixteen millions acres of
nubile lands have been offered for sale. bet orrn• t o
ve ell-known onuses , . the sale. have been smell, end the
returns, so far, comparatively insignificant.
Massachusetts Democratic Cour million
Spnistoptino, Mess. Popt 12 —The regular nano•
crnt State Convention mot her• to day. and woe aban.
cloned to the flutists', men h. the other wino Erasing
I). Pe tab. of Penne field, wail nominated fir Unvernor
by enolamatinn with a full State ticket. Isaac Davin
of Worcester. and Charles }helmet of Los. wore
Itemen olootnra at la , ge. Strong Manilas resolutions
wore adopted, and the fooling pun aleut was dee deal,
against fusion.
Lincoln Meeting at Doylestown.
DOYLZsTOWN. Sect. 12.—A !erre. enthusinstio meet
ing of the friends of 1 mooln. and Curti,. war
held in the court Anomie. last evening. Caleb N. Taylor
Presiding Able speeches were made hr John Goforth,
of Philadelphia and Daniel Ullman, of Now York. The
meeting adinurned at e'even o'rloak. with cheers for
the candidates and sneakers, after whioh the Wide
Awakes of this Anrough, numbering over one hundred
mon. serenaded these rentl•mon, at Cowell's Ito'el
whore they were stopping. and brier but eloquent
anecohes were made by hem in response to the com
pliment.
Connecticut Breclancidge Convention
NEW IlsvaN, Conn., Feipt. 12.—The Breakinridso
' , tato Convention mat in this city nt coin. and was
otganizod by the eieation of ti. J. Interest! as preei
dont,
The Convention then took a recess.
. .
Ilavity Conn.. Soot 12 —Thn Democratic Cor
rection has nominated Ralph J. Inse•snll and Thorns,'
H. Seymour as electors at large. with fonr diatnct elec
tors. 'flier are instructed to vote tnr Breckinridro if
they can elect him, lint 11 not, to vote for any national
to to defeat Lincoln.
Itepublican Nomination
l'or..nwenrein. N Y. Fopt —The Repohllcene of
the Twelfth Cull gresaional distnot hare nonnnate4
Stephen Beaker for Congreem.
Agricultural Fair—Virginia Politics.
Witarturio. Soot. r. 3 —The fair of the Western Vir
ginia A gricultural Society is now in 'oil blast.
1 he olty IC a amine of much excitement. Amine to rt n
various solitiral demonstrations going on by the if e
vublioane and 8.11 and 1. verett men. The Reriblican
Wide-Awakes made their first turnout. and the 11,1
Guards paraded in large numbers. The latter have a
meetinr at the Atheneum, and the former at tto
court Louse.
. •
The Liteckinridse men have their meeting to morrow
night. when Senator Macon will deliver a speech.
National Agricultural Exhibition.
CINCINNATI. NW. Natutnal a •ricultuyel
to ' , Mon opened here to-dity, Professor Cary. Olt behalf
of the citizens of Cincinnati. enderinc the grounds to
the United States 'oetety. to wino!' President Wager
mode an appropriate miaow.° Tb• time Of tenet the
entreen bed been extended, owing to the itotwasitiiht r
of roonving theta within the Vine originally fixed. The
oNintntion, as a whole, eurpasses any yet wen by the
suoietY.
Military Celebration.
Sopt.l2.—The anniverwarT of the ism].
of Baltimore '%O oolebratod to•daw with considerable
spirit. The wilds's paraded. airi other festivities
marked our citizens' appreciation of the event.
The weather ie quite cold, and tho wind has been
blowles a gale all day.
The Ohio at Pittsburg.
PITTSEIIq. 86PtOrnber it —The Ohio raw , ' in seven
feet In the °lntone'. awl is still rising. Boats are oleo.)
tor all twat points. Boats have arrived as follows
Linecom from emnu mom ; ill loam, from Wheeling ;
Kamm o r a t i on , from Zanesville. Tho following mato
are loading ijaetinge. for Ht. Isoig: Emma Graham,
Err ZInOtIVIDOi Millnrvil. for Wheeling; Euehee, for
New Orleans. The following bnats have departed: Ve-
Imam for Cinoinnati and Louisville; D. E Dsker, tar
Wheeling.
Weather clear and pleasant.
Horse Exhibition at Kalamazoo
Km.sltezoo Beet. 12.—Tho national extdbmort or
horses commenced hero veinerday, and promise• to he
more than ever aucoessful Rome of the finest hem , .
to tho nonntry are on exhiblton. [Hoye Tornpio and
Fthan Allen are among the number. Two thousand
people were on the sr( und. notwi Wending therein.
Supposed Slaver Seized nt New YorL.
NRIV YORK. Sent. 12.—The bark Wethergate. wee
seized b. tho l'nited i•tates author ties the morning,
on suspicion of hems connected with the slave Mee
Departure of the Africa with $380,0p0.
NEW Vonx. Sept. 12.—The stemnihm Afoot sailed
thin mortann Cyr I.ivarpool, 'with 43x).000 In Sprolo
330.U00 in bank bills.
Sinking of it Lake Schooner
CLEVELAND, SEDt 12 —The schooner Vermont. loctl
ed with whet. sunk et the pier yedterdey. NO tires
were Wet, Her cargo is 'roared.
The Steamer Illinois at New York.
Nate YOHR. Sept. 12—The steamship Illinois from
Southnmptou nn the 29th. arrived t this nett thus after
noon. Ile r admen have been antiotruted.
New York Tea Salo.
NIA.; Wee, Sent. 12 —The tee sale this morning moo
spirited, and the fun cataloguo was sold et the PT0V1012.7
prices,
Spanish Consul at Phi adolphia.
WAsalawroa. Ner President Ens rsoog
mad non Phi Ilnelos
his smoan de In Chios as oonsul of
Simla at lidelo
giarlretß by Telegraph.
EALTIMORR. Sept 12—Flour I ohdy a ea. "Wheat
active at SI 9001 47 for 'NI a d 81 4101 76 f'r trhite.
Con, allot; yellow 700790. white 710730. Provleione
<met. Pork—Mess H 1915, rr.men 815 Rump 8 1 4 dl
Collect active ; 1110 1311;1111o. Whie - ky steady at 23540,
14e.
NEW Oates:is, Boot. 12 —Cottondeclined 14;
2 200 bales rold tad ty at 104,10 N. Corn nrni. mo
80c. Rectified Whiskey. 233. Cotton freights to Liver
non!. 11-16 Other artiolre unchanged.
Clisicintisri dent, 12—Rion •in very dull, and quota
lions nominal. dale' unlmportant Whoat dull. Coro
firm. Provisions duil. Mess Pork SM. Nor ey market
unchanged. Blot:lenge on Now 4ork dallat X.
Tna CENTRAL PEMOCHATIO ASSOCIATION
will meet at their headquarters, corner of Sixth
and Chestnut streets, this evening' at n o'olees
Gen. John Davis. of Ilnoke, A W. Borman, Ftq
of Montgomery, and other distinguished tpeakers
will he present and address " the mretlng. There
will no doubt be a large attendance.
THE CITY.
AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING
10 WALITOT-s TRYST TR - RATS Walnut and Malt ate. —
Lov• Miller of Whetstone."
savraor gr. CLARKS'S Artell-sTRItST THSATRK.
Areal etreet, above sixth.—"Latta Rookh."
McDonouon's Nzw (gentiles, Rade Street. above
Eenond.—" The Ravels"
CoNfirontrat. Meares Walnut et., above Eighth
Carnoross and Shareley's Minstrels.
PENKSYLvANIA RcADs‘ty no THE FM Ant's, No.
1025 Chestnut etreet.—Exhibition of Paintings and
'Sculpture, every morning and afternoon.
Rg.PUBLICAN MOLTING AT TIM WlGWAM—
genital 01 THIS HON. %Mitt. I.l•YataN. op New
Yong.—Last evening a Republican meeting was held 1
at the Wigwam, Sixth street, above fimwn when the
Hon. Daniel Ullman, of New Yo k city, made a long
speech, oo^upying more than two hones in Its delivery.
Hie remarks were very discursive, tonchinz noon all
the pnyninont political questions and parties of the
day, and he was for ifed with a narpet.bair full of docu
ments. hooks. and repots of spesohee of dicinguisbed
Politicians. from which he freely endted. The artrt of
his areument wag to induce he "American." to
whoa, he particularly addressed himsef, to support
Lincoln end amlin 'n preference to Bell and Eve - en.
air MI nein reviewed at Wirth the subject of the
twelfth .rotten in the platfanrunf the Amerie in party of
1850 w hich he e"neiderel wen the mate of the de
'Motion of that part. 'Chi, twelfth Faction. he said
Nana" dodgins" tne question of the power of Conereri
to lesislate upon the enbiect of Flavor in in the Territo
ries. au4 the refusal of the American National Council
to meet the question squarely end openly et that time.
caused the defection of the New Fneland St 'tea from
the carts. and. consequently. Its defeat and diners on.
He considered that the nounoll should have taken the
ground flint Congress bad to vista. to leslslate upon the
snbloot of slavery I^ the 'gates where it exiats; tint as
to the right of Cong Teas to Poona:A upon that subject
for the 'le - yeomen. he entertained no dount. He be
lieved that no great party could exist in this country
unless it took a decided stand upon this question The
nen:womb° party had bean patch ins and salving it aver
for yearn oast. for the purpale of keepins the epwi e of
office. but now they were broken and disorran zed
upon this very question, with no hope of being re
urotod.
• •
He said there were. many teen in hlth positier
tams:eine the some dedgieg " (iteration new A few
aelf-liPeOinted delegate', without an• conatituen y,
had met in convention at Baltimore. end put in noitil
nation Bell and Everett , end oalled themaelvee the
".Conatiti venal Union perry." and adopted as their
motto. "The Union, the Constitution, and the enforce
ment of the laws." A very pretty name and motto,
(mid Mr. Ullman ;) but I'd like to know if there is any
enliven' organization in this counini that don't go in for
" the Union, the Constitution. and the enforcement of
the Mrs?" (A voice—" Not inany."l The " Union
natty." as they call themselves. are doing the very
thing that destroyed the American ratty—trying to
dolt " the slavery question—and be predicted that
they You'd fit d thernseleesoverwhelmed and destroyed
in the same way. tie admired and respected both thou'
0 pdtdat-s ; but when their friends undirtook to pre
sent them to him es " American" nornnationa. he dif
fered with them on that point. John Bell wan never as
•American." never Joined the A meriesn orvinizetien
in Tennessee and, as far as he (Mr. Ullman) had seen,
John Bell hail nevermade a speech avowing the prince
nles of the American natty. As for Edward Everett,
he Wes a great rhetorician. but he was not en " Amen
can " in ro!itien, and. for seine Tears post, lie had been
el d.ng off into a kind of wiehr-washy Demouracy.
[Lau liter and eippleuse.l Tr pluckr wee an Ame
rican at heart. he never land eooneh tn avow it.
I Renewed laughter 1 Then, as for Washington Hunt.
the head of the Bell-Everett siert, in New York. he
was no" American." Dlr. Ullman evd he had solici
ted slr Bent toJetn the American organization in New
Ye, ton without e ue0 ,....
Mr. Gilman reviewed the question of fus'ou to the
Rate of New York. to defeat Lincoln. and said that
only two of the ten Bell-Everett man rut on the instep
ticket Were Amerieenn, and one of them had already
hacked out, and he expected the ortier weld do en soon.
ho ream:nine eight were old foes Whigs, who in
dulged the foolish hope that the old Whig party wee
Koine to he revived again. [Laughter.] if the enema
tinn to inooln 'wished to concentrete all their strength
against his election. they should have included in their
fusion Gerrit Entith's_party. eive them five electors on
the ticket and out Fred. Douglass' name at the head-
Then they would nave a pretty piece of Mosaic work
[Laughter ] AR for Fred. Douglass. he (Ultrasn len--
eidered him. although ha had %Malik skin, a head and
shoulders taller. in t lent end intellect titan any eandi
&it(' now up for the Presidency. even atephen A. Don-
Slag, his namesake. the Little Giant. [ liners!). He
denounced the fusion movement in New York as a
scheme to transfer the " Americans" over to their life
(rug enemies. the Denali:irate. who had always despised
the " Americans." and spit upon them when they i the
reeerlire) were in power. He would not be than
transferred. [Hovel alvoicea hero cried out, "It can't
be done
Mr. Ullnitn next pivoted hi the Cocotte Committee.
and re-d from the report to show their-money bad been
Paid to the •' Straight-note' Paneellven's to keep
FL third party in the held to divide the People's party.
and rim e "bate to Buchanan 1a 1856 The' Strantht
r We" of 1355. said ho.are the Bell and Everett party
o 1450 [Applause ]
Ire contended that Abraham Lincoln oaaneled P , B"
oisnly the 'time ground in remit to protection and the
non-extension of eleven , to the Territories that Herter
Clay did. and he read from the speech of &mato , 11-n
-n Democrat, to ern"e it by the answo.> elven
ha Lincoln to Donzles in the came ten is Illinois In
ISIS when they both "stunped" the State together.
We left Mr. Ullinen spenklear near ten o'clock. when
we wee., 00 ,,, e.ned to close our report. The mowing
wined to less remarks w eti a great deal of attention.
but. cloopt when a hew polnP., were sharply touched
nron. there was very little enthnsissm.
Tag SPERM OP HON JOHN SE(T.RMAN AT
NATIONAL BALL—The Rettabl'oens aseembled In Im
mo)]ae nurnbate last eysnlu: at National Hall. to haat
the third of 66110 S of addressee In favor of Free
dom anti Prateotion." from lion. inlm Sherman. Be
eight o'clock every available cent was filled. At
night, the Republican rime in in military
or py. the hand Mem+ " Hail Crilumtca." Thor bore
fray e,lken bitnrerei and were received with oheere.
',dr filed upon the pia%) m amid mob syphilitic, and
qt^ etArderd-bearer o• muted the tun in front. Ihe
!ovine.).s rare three tremendous cheers for John
itherirno. PS that rentieman appeared. Re was aoacull•
peened by a number of prominent Ropnblimins.
After mu=le Mr. Ley, r Rutter reed the lilt of pin
p rvtident—iamrtn Verreo. Vice Preaidento—
nu.. Tatham.Ata. R. Robert+. Conrad S. (drove. Wm.
R Thomas and Archibald Mointrre.
r. Vii rep intrnduced Mr Sherman. Such a recep
tion we have seldom non accorded to anypolitician.
amid the strareline. confused hurrah, of the maples
Up. , the floor. the diamPlined cheer of the invinnibles
h4roelled diettnat y up. For full three minimise the ur
Milken rheum continued. Finally .ilanoe wag restored,
and Mr. • herman delivered hie addrese,whicle will be
L and fully reported on the fi at page.
During the address. Mr filhermen WAS rapturously
cheered At times the ane'ense was repeated until mar
nornanus end almost dee faning. •
After Mr Sherman h d reminded. load calla were
made for Hoe Thraldom , eleventh, of thin Stare, whet
, a.B on the platform. That gentleman came forward
and thanked the assembl. , or their kindneele, crying be
would make a ape eeh at another
At a lab, hoer in the evening. th- Invincible. pros
needed to the Continental and serenaded Mr. Sherman
That gentlemen armored on the balcony and made a
fe , . , remarks limekiln. the assembly for the honor it
ri ti him. During the arldren an enamor wee made by
.rime prilit•cal oppsnents of Mr. Rhenium to trade a
Mine% but It was quickly repressed
THE POMOLOGTC tL FloclETr SEacom
OP pelt EIHISITOII. —The Pomolosioal
woolen , exhibition at A rriernhly Boildings. wee well
attended yesteribas. The discussion wan e ea weeo
leg aid afternoon. At n tee le:piety ten
dered a anireo at the residence of Mr. nhomse P.
terries. of this city We give below a hit of the ea ba
barite, with Rome remarks upon their 'trees:es a fruit
<rowers:
Urn Marshal P. Wilder. Doreheater. mates . ISO varie
ties of
f prere ;J. R "inert. Quinn., Illinois t#l2
oal am Reid. El•astrith. New Jersey. 125 swami
nn Chambers ftnrlineron. •ew lenge, `l3 pear.:
Smith & .anehett Rarneuse. New York NO peas ail
rilerioleve & Rarry Rocbeeter. New ork
sears. So &pales 50 plume: Franklin Davis Virgin a.
re +poles • If R. Rohr. vitalism. 23 pritrs,2s apples;
Oliver Ta:lor. 12 sapling 6 grapes: Col. W Iter L.
teem°. North Carolina.lt reales and pears. Roamer
none grapes • T. T. Lynn, Plymouth. Michigan
03 apples, 19 penis ; Prof. J. J Mapes. Newa k.
' ear I matey. 2it pears: !.post & Co.. Roche, er, ve pears
end apples; Samuel T. Aherne, Ph'ladslphia,K pears,
6 grape, ; Col. D R. Dave., illartfo.d Coneestient. ap
meg and vno
anes; Wilim . in
innamicon New
~
Jersey ..pram. 22 apples; Ruffrilo iincieulturai So
' &city. 9 grape,. 97 pear, 21 apples ; B. Stratton. 40 Pears
not ”P lee; icllwnod Thanom. nenneylvanh. 100 apeles
and rears ; 110vOY & Cn . Bestvn. 25 nears : Mean Bag:
tor. 30 pear,; Rev George B. Ida, Springfield, Maim .
R,.; Dr. Posnion. yraenee. 55 no re; T. W.
Field, Brooklyn. New York. a branch of Flemish beauty
pears, eight en inches long. containing 34 pears, weig a
19 eound• ; tree planted two sears.
POrt. Mar hal PWi d - r hen been coltioafing and im
porting pear. for thirty •eare. He hi , . tested nearly
eight hundred varieties and has ire s of every variety
is his ornbßOS. Mr. Rove - of Roston, editor of the
Hort icultu...l Magazine, has the same number of
peare He has been . in the nada about twenty year..
n
He sells certain v one, of pears annually at tweet!
dollars per barrel. Pilwanger & Barry have the lamest
nursery in the world (mooring five hurdrrd norm. each
acre averaging' ten thousand trees and plants. 7w
have sold $175001 of trees in a single year. "harlot
Downing. author of the " Prill4l of A menos.." and bre
•ller of Andrew Jsokaon Downing. is said to he the
finest florist and horticulturist in the world. He hes
tested upon hi. grounds Mown every variety of fruit.
compriaing 1,900 of pears, and as many of apples and
reecho.
n r . q W Greet , ..,c lona Wand in the Modem river,
has expended 875.000 upon it barren island in the pro
:atom o' grapes. He hms green-houses whirls cover
a n
acre of ground, and is now absorbed in the dissemi
nation of the Delaware crape. Dr. Born tan. the popu
lar geologist. has dev , ted great attention to the growth
of peen. He nas ay
geology. fine collection. His enthusiasm in
onlos subserves his zeal for practice( geogy. As
ho m Wan ,
up nt armong certain fruit, to certain
seals. Nir. T. W. Field has taken a barrel sand sot'
neon Long trenched it to the depth of three
feet. and covered it six wham deep with manure. His
partiality for peers has here been indulged, and he Im
ported the most fatuousvanaties from every quarter
of Punnet He has grown them upon soil which resist
ed the cultivation of pomtoes.
The following apples were planed upon the prorntie
wad list &Angell. &mock Coddling. Forums R.V.I.
Maiden Fiit'll. Al bite Pippin. Cannon Pearmsle. Sam
mar Sweet Paradise, Fall Wine. Willow Twig. !amber
Twig. Fatly Joe, Puorhs red. Boma, Summer Queen
The dienusainn yesterday afternoon was noon the
m Inca troll, berries, etc
Clitnzen of opinion have also taken place in retard to
theengin,' bon of new sorts of fru to Formerly, we
looked to other musical; now we rely more am meta IIY
on our awn needling. for the best results " Plant the
moat mature end perfect seed of the most haply. vigor
ous and valuable varieties, and, as a shorter process.
(miming more certain and Pansy results. cross or hy
bridize your best fruits" Kurth was the p esidene
edvtoo. a•A toe testimonies of most of the members
113 , 0 Verthoation to it.
We ate informed the: Philadelphia tot materially de-•
chord as a fruit prialurangHere was orga
nized the brat iocietr for the premotinu of American
as ,culture. Her , . elm. one , [Wei the first amoeba -
non for the advi.nreir nut of American bnrticulture.
having, fur one of its trading objects. the intr.furtiori
and cultivation of new and cholas varieties of fruit.
At former exhibitions Philadelphia uniformly carried
off the palm for sunnor display of fruit. At later dai•
plays, bowed. seept, amateurs hat o made count tip
none. There some tine specimena frorn Phaadel
pima at the present exhibition. tut the exhibitors are
none of them praotionl Trutt-grove a.
THE PHILADKLPHIA BAPTISr ASSOC rAriox.
—This Ass,anation will he'd its one hundred and fif
third seesion in the Fifth Baptist Church of Philadel
phia Sensom street. below Ninth, on Tuesday October
yd. mo at 1 ohil. oh P. M. lutrodnutory sermon lir
Hey J. A McKean. or Rev. (Forgo Hunting alternate.
throttle- to ter, by Rev George te• Anderson. Messrs
Winston ti , rtleljr, and Day ere the Committee on RB-
I ;roue • snice a and are expected to report the first day.
lit the las; session, the &lurches were desired to pre
mire Meta- ell sketches of their origin and pros7esa.
which pall be raid at •he meetings.
The North Plitindelpeia Aseoeiation of Rutin
Churches hold its third annual session in the
Etaptln Church In Germantown. commencing On Taos.
tiny, September t sth, at 2 °Won't P. M. The introduc
tory sermon tY , Roy. J Green Mlle.. of Harflablirn. or
Rev. Munro Freer. of Reading, alternate. i.areillar
letter by Rev. H. Westeott. of Manayunk.
DECLINED BEING A CANDTDATR.—SamueI
Jackson. who received the Damoeratio nomination in
the Fifth Representative diatilet, has deolined being a
candidate and the onvention wilt meet again on Fn
day evening next, to receive the resignation of Mr.
Jackson and nominate some other person to fill the
vacanov.
W OMAN BCRNED.—A woman named Mar
tha WY nn was dreadfully burned about &even ~.'clook
r t ' l n e fri v yralr bf hero F: cn i nort ' a e k a i t u's a 1 61 v :1 - W411 7 u Mge
whi a drunk. Ner imunos are en eArione that she can
seemly live. She was taken to St. Joseph Hospital.
FM , REAL OF AN Am n.—The funeral of
'tin. WM am II Reed took place on Intialay afternoon.
It woe attended by members of the theatri. al profession
and tie Fairmount Fire rompany. The remains were
interred in odd Fellows' Cemetery.
SELF.CT AND COMMON COUNCIL will meet—
their summer reeve having olessil—this efterroon
her WI have their hands toll of business for several
weeks.
LEGAL INTELLIGENCE.
QUARTHEL SHSSTOIIO--Judge Ludlow ---
The argument in the woe of Julia %feelers, s h,d
with Aron in firing the dwelling of Mrs. bletkoe.
1617 Walnut street. occupied the et ention of the court
until near two o'clock. at five o'clock the jory came
Into court and abated that the e wss no possibility of
agreeing upon a verdict, and a.coo-dinely the court
°Herat, their ibroharge. The accused ten pleaded
guilt, on three bilis charging larceny . . end she walla n
ter ced to four years in tee Eastern Penitent ar•.
Marks si arm was aharerd with committing an
sex, ult a , d battery o-f Inc w'a 'Jo alle:ed that the
no toed was in the habit of boating her, the avuoie
difficult• mount- nut of a free in. id erce in liquor. lie
had not. shs rod drawn a ober breath sinus election
der. and his whole time was oven the -• public."
The accuser. by his appea anon and conduct in court.
bore emu e termini yin support at his wife's erection
in regard to d He could scarcely sit on his
chair. and hi• o unoel. becoming disgusted with his
conduct. threatened to leave him to his late. The ME
cars of the court used their best exertions to keep him
quiet, but with Indifferent sunees., ad he persisted to
endeavorine to call the names of his witnesses. His
tongue was an thick that the names were unintel , rible.
aid while batenonig himself preparatory to an , Cdress
to Tie jiry. a verdict of emits wan readied
The court held an afternoon session, at which Mari
morph, wee neq uatrd r f a (Marge of assault and bat
try. but o cored to pay the.oonts
Jemes Hick , nn wee convicted of a charge of assault.
committed upon Officer Lare.
Pilaithn ThiCandlese was convicted of a charge of ma-
LQ
Mart aleOnwsn was acquitted of the charge of keep
ing o tippling house,
Liddy alo•-ranagan wee sequitted of a charge of the
larceny of fifty centa. -
bat
Ma
tery Q uinn I Q was cony - toted of a charge of assault and
From the IsiWeaus.
~.61MITAL or Ma NOITX
The steamship Korth Star, from Aspinwall Bair
tember 4, with ~,,791,680 in specie and 202 ?amen.
gore, isnired at New York yesterday. -
The North Star sailed fret _Bawl:ark August
21, at 12 30 P. AL, and artivrd at AaP i t t P llll Au
gust 29, at 9 P M. ; Failed from thence Stmt. 4.
Left at Aspinwall United Stated. tricots Sabine,
United States atore•ehip Falmouth, British brig
Bolivia. Bark Xanthe, Captain Tuthill, sailed for
New York on the morning of the 4th.
SPECIE LfBT PER " NORTH STAR."
S.H. Wsir ...-...... ~eA0e ' W m. H0ge....... . _ 810 COO
Order 12.398 P lo
Howland &. Avowal! 9 3t7 Eaottanee 31.000
W. 8e & Co .. 40.000' Conroy & O'Connor. 4-000
Epeineer & Co. . 4 INIP; P• 111 ene XeUt & On. MOO
Rooms lirosA Co. 39 OW Dunoan.nnernase &
Order .. Co 114 000
!t. Meader &0. A. 'ffeeetadte , Broil •• . 3 One
Peen.— It OW Fr etr. a &. jog
JJ Reiter & Bra • ~.. 94 bail Alin Mechem, Ilk. St lee
Tune 11IiCehtll & do. . - 10109
.. _ ... _ . !00000 Well.. d 0......
1!0100
Sfel'y. Berne. - & - Co . COM , : me
IL Patrick , 30 0 I W & —Sche
11. Cohn t. If COY .....
lrruet,dter Broil 13.0 Order— --
.1 Petrick 4. Co I 7 Onet
ngene K.l y & Co, 40.0001 Total. • 8791ASe
The North Star brings Panama papers to Sep
tember I
They contain not a word of news, except the an
rest in Panama of Mr. Blom, an American eidgen
residing at Buenaventura, for refusing to meet a
note given some time since to the euetom-honse
authorities of Buenaventura for duties Fifty of
the foreign residents of Panama had solicited the
prompt interference of the U 8 consul, who was
already investigating the subject, and promised
that strict Justice should be rendered to Mr. Blum.
Since the above was written, we have received
the Panama Star and Herald of . September 4.
From it we learn that M Blum wee released from
prison on the 21 lost . on effewing an arrangement
satisfactory to himself and the Federal authorities
regarding the pa sward of the pagarm at Panama.
The Sta r and Herald says:
Notwithstandmg that Mr. Blum het matiefied the
Federal authorities here, and BO far released him
self from any further obligation. it is Wight by
Rome that his property and sureties in Buena
ventura will not be free from seleure and met sta
tion by the Government there, who may also claim
the payment of the amount into the Buertarintara
custom house, as ex pressed in the )agars. as they
have already done in another similar ease.
This, we should think, will hardly be attempted
in the present instance, unless, Indeed, such a step
has already been taken prior to information reach
ing there of the payment of the dues into the na
tional treasury. Any further attempt to enforce
a second payment should, cf coarse, meet with
prompt resistance. Mr. Blum had the right either
to pay the amount at Buenaventura or into the na
tions' treasury at Bogota. fie has adopted the
latter course through the agent of the General Go
vernment hare, and thus has legally dbaharged
the debt, end by doing so he puts himself beyond
the reach of being legally troubled agile.
Annexed is an extract from a letter in the same
paper, dated Lima, August 14 :
"The teat fortnight was somewhat unquiet, as
the outbreak of the revolution was hourly ex•
pentad, bat everything soon took a peaceful aspect
again. There wee a disturbance in kca, whieb
lasted only a day, when it was suppressed. Gen.
Castilla is well again, and visits the barracks
every night: Some aymptems are already skew.
log themselves of ooming • quarrels between kim
and the Congreas. A proposition was made the
other day that all guano contreets should be re
sented to Congress before the Government would
accept them—a measure not at all after the taste
of Castilla.
" We hear of the disoovery of considerable
tracts of attltpetre being found near to Cats
which belongs to Bolivia ; tide may remelt en
opening a more direct European trade to Benda
then has exited, and will enable it to - eem
pate succesefelly with Peru in an &effete
of great and inereasing consumption. The
affairs of Bolivia wear the same complexion
as all dtatutbanees do in the south American
Republics—petty jealousies where there ought to
be union, and revoluticns which spring up like
toadstools, in a night, to be destroyed by the
morning rain. We bear that Gen. helm has ar
rived in Tacna, and intends unseating Linares ;-lte
will meet with the support of those whom the pa
triotic meanires of Linares have offended, and es•
penally ofille priests, who owe Linens a eowdde:
rob!, grudge. Castilla, doubtless, will support
Belzu.
FINANCIAL AND CO lIMERCULL.
The Mono)! Market.
Pa IL A DELPAIA. Fee- 12, 13411.
The market Is ve y steady for all the better oleos of
securities. but mining stocka. inpuertaln bonds, end
epeculative shares are negleeted. City sizes brought
Rate fives 97 Pennsylvania Railroad OS. Cant
don and Amboy Norristown ZON:. Reading 23V 6 to
23.'4, Little echurlld 1 14' Union Bank of Tennessee
The went of a night train from New York to &Mon,
by railroad. hoe been frequently expenenoed by Rhtle
de'phia men• heats, who. in order to reach New ork in
season for the Sound boats. are compelled to leave Phi
ladelphia br the morning line, taking a day and a Mold
for the Journey to Boston. A hue from New 't ork.
leaving after the arrival of th s evening mail train front
Ph!Ladelphis, or. at least, after the airiest of the after
noon train,. would b. a great accommodation. end, no
doubt, well patronized. Put readers will be glad to
bear that thins is a ptospect of the establishment of
inch a night Vett A conference hes'itutt bean held
between the mtnage•e of the railway lines between
New York and Boston, ar whirls, the Boston poet
muter, Mr. Capes. Was present, and strondy
urged the importance of the train. Mr Twitch
ell, the president of tee Boston and Worcester
Railroad expressed his willingness to commence
tin z the train ham edistely. with or without eompecsa
eon from the Government. feeling that the great eehlis
oonven•ence from the service would lead to its beteg
ultimately remunerative. This opinion yet a melded
in by Mr Pond, the president of the Rartford road.
Mr. Chapin, the president of the Weeteri Railroad,
had doub•s of the DOCUllint7 sirenseer f the coespeides
from running such trains; ban• if the musters of the
other portions of the line wished to establish it. be
would ea-operate with them. as the public seamed deal -
ro .8 el it The only other manager of the lies. Mr.
Bulkley, the president of t e New York end New Raven
Railway. expressed himself as not yet ready to set la
the matter, but would endeavor to come to en eat, de
andsroald notify his associates. '
The Journot of Commerce is severs apcsqdr. si.
meter, Cobb's hammier ng. ft
When the act nf Jane Si was vsesedientantslault -
the loin. there was& resets( satis , aotioa hen at do
Prospect of anon a ispeedt
proposed that the whole limn should be inured ger pie
longest period and et the highest rate of onsirseelpst
nutted h• the not—to ...a: Tsr•ntr yes?, at &in.'s's'
cent lithe had been d me. end a lengths solace iv
and sr nt to Fri rope to enable fit mita hidden; to am-
Pete for the stock, the whole would have been taken at
a ur !Mum of Iwo and a half million, thus re , none eke
face of fl'e public debt. Insteed of this. a temporary
amply of money was obtained by s. reissue of Cresson,
notes, i n the vain hope that the winter could be bridged
over in this way. and the lean rearmed for snot or
year. We call. it slim:mon at the time to the error of
this theory. and th= resent advertisement ts suffi
cient evudence of the correotnam of our lodgment.
The money murk t 1- now In e [TES prortioas state for
low bids; the harvest pr , spectr In London are Leo fir
hi in• to levee 'north promise of a very staled comp.-
titian thence ; end the short time the loan is to rue.
end the low ratra of intsr.mt, will both teed to limit
millionsmiums 09'n ed whi e the fear will nother some berme this m a' be all placed keep some
Miters from mahout e spac e anon. These so far
as we can e.RTO the plain features of the ease, and
ought to be fairly stated. At the same time. it is well
erourh to rememter that thedtanding debt of the
United States is smelt; the credit of the opuntry un
doubted ,• the good faith ofthe Treasury unimpeacha
ble; and, es far ea any security in this workimmg be
free from hazard, this may be said to beef that cha
racter."
The Brunswick (Mo.) Press says of an interesting
ueury eve. now arguing before the Cunait court:
" A moat intereatms point came up as the last tem'
of the Chariton Cruet Court. to the mule of the lifer
.ban!e' Bank of St. Louis ast. Passe and others.
• rha was a snit on a note in the able* or what oar
bents are pleased to roll • bills.' and they classill as
• rxehang, r and It duTsri from a local note only to the
fact of emus payable at the parent nets Put of the branch
hank . at Ilrunsmtck Thomna 4 . Pr co, Eel.' was =Or'
ney f or the bent, and R. H. Al oaths, Esq. a for the de
fend*ots.
• The grounds of the plea were that the bank ts for
bidden to 'lke more than seven per cent. interest PR
notes h‘virec over one hundred and twenty Jaye t.
than cx months to run. but is allkored to take a rea• on
ahle prem•um rn notes. b•i.e. kc.. payable out of the
oounty to which the hank is located. The hank Emoted
one per rent. premium. to addition to seven per mitt.
Interest, a mountint, arcordint to the lutes of t•anks•
nine percent interest, and actually. counting re-ex
°hens° and the three cmeiroundones In the tear. to
about fourteen ter cent. The .defendants ' , flitted that
the bank is located at et. tone.. and not in Brawsick
the bank and all its branches compr se but one corpo
rate bodr, which is located at the point where the note
is payabfe."
• The roll reins are the earnir.ts of the North Penn
sylrani% Railroad
For Ausult. 1303
game month Init
Increase..
In Gr.,C mutt menthe of fi,al year
Sanl3 tune last year
Thu fo::ourlnr nra tso itilpinents of Coal 1 ooa To
wanda by the Barclay Railroad and Coal Company, (or
the week audios t rrt• St --- • 13 41 00
PrOVIOUi OhlrlEtllta ... SS; IS
..tuoqlut for the Idaioll -
same tune Last Year-•._..__..
Increase ....... . . . •• • 21115 9 0 5
Philadelphla Stock Exchangc Sales,
Beptember Ix, Hi°.
!tirostsz 12 E. 2S. Ba . XIX Walmat Etre*
FIRST BOARD.. -
1 20 ) Penn% 31 ...• . 2r.il 23 Cam & Ant R .15 127 , 6
JO2 32.22 63 it I. . ...124 1 2 sto ._.... bs 22.2%
254.0 ' , Neat cbas 7a....-71 3 tb6 6.5 122 3 a
' a Bean% It 4-.% 2 Wait Ybils R . r . • 622•6
^.. do 48 4 , 13 Lit &Lai R .. 1ta.1.1%
A titeen Stecatea... 2241102 73062.20. 6 6 Mat.. -.7%
d" •_-• • • --• 20 i) 6 11cd , by 0f blui2o at
1211 Re ad ß.6633 - 66 . 161.2331 3 arch -et 14.-, cob 17
00 21
1 0..0wn.kbat•73.% 22 Wthiuulton R. Si
12222 023..832ene.1at.23% 30 Meoh‘nbasßk2sw22.27
100
no --..cab 23 al 17 do 23,232.22'
BO do.
_.......cib 23% 30 Corn Ex Bk ..27
60 IBorrts al cab 2g321, I Union Bk of Tean..ESX
10 do_ .__-.. 87S1
IVETWEhti BOARDS
5 Academy of Atualo
MI Paean .--• • • • 07 ,y
600 CItY • I°2 •1
2011 ..... —lO2
169 do
2709 City 63 K 8 0-- 16256
VW d0..........102.16
1090 Cam tk. Am 66 'B3 86.1 r
609 City R 6a.-- .... -101riti
1000 i'ecn‘ It 2 In t .92)
6 , 00 Sokt 77•• 'Blbalro76ll
001 do 7630
CILO3INI3 PR ,
Bid. Asked.
Philadelthla Be-1112 10214
Plula 69 103 X
Phtls ea....new—MK 106
Patina ea_lnt off 97X 97X
Read R—.... 13 , 1 ft
Reading Ode 'PI. 86% 87
Read intan 'BO in or) 91 9I
Read mt Wl._ tes
Penns
Penns It Id 110.6a.91%
blot Cl con dv 67% 00
Nior CI pc 119 116
Soh N 61'82 taoff 76 1 4 731;
aohuil Nay 1m 6a BA. 8 6
Sohuyl.._•lastBtlk... 9 'XI
n 118•1 NAY art— 23'i 34X I
dmira • 6
14e0 Rah New Ca 'B2 ....te.283.‘
1 Harr i a aura R. --ea
10 .315
12 Lehigh. Berl p....M.42N;
8 d b5.42N
4 Chen &
70 Norristown R 6 4 %,"
le.) Wllminatne K. 44
ahull 1.5
OW -ST EADY
Br 4 4•:n i.
!Elmira IL ...prof 131( if
Elmira 74 13 .. 71 71
Lan & Inland ft— 13 13V
Len Ct tE N. _.— 5.53‘
lehCl h. N Sarin Sri 41
North Penna R... 10 Joy,
N Penn& N 64,....T33 7 . 4
IN Penne R 10e. 104.+4 10
Catakrtesa letni b.
Frnkf It Srtata R 43
• • •
Seca- d -
Third..;B3l 43
Heat ttnille..l:2l 31
Spruce & Pine 11
Green k nowt., .n •
Cheat & Walnut:. N
I
Philadelphia 31arkete.
BEPTVIDIR 12—EvaitINO.
Fr ova —There is not numb il•mand for Flour to day
hut the market n. firm with sales of 422400b1:11s ,t 15.25
for good tuner fino. and $6lO to extra. and 2.5(0 b is
Western extras and extra farm s on private terms and
16 7607 60 lfr hbt for extra famtit and fancy brands,
sa to qualitY Rye Flour is snares and rodbnr in a small
way at $4 26. Corn !Real is also searee ; 3040 bbls are
reported at $2.60 tVir bbl.
Wnaar.—There to steady demand. and prim are
firm, with antes of 7 Old bus at from el nel.<s fl.r fair
to good and prune reds. mostly at tie Main rate for
Peiware. afloat, and from Vidal 55 for Gammon o
ohoioe white. Rye is wanted at ao. Corn is in better
demand and about 6 000 bits prime Noutheru yellow
br 'or bt no. afloat Oats are steady in once, wit. sales
P 1 2 600 bus at sanencia for Southern. and 37e for
ennsylvania.
Rat x.—tat No.l Qeercitron in stead?. at 174.10 Der
tc n.
COTTO9.-1110 inalkOt ix stead/. and a small bnainesa
Ding at about orevleo■ rater.
. . . • -
Uaoc•4l v...—The movement is mostly oOnfined
Cntiew %blob is No better, and 4WO base ft/crooking
Himeio, on time.
3.—nm market remains Inactive, and
prices the same as last quoted.
SEED. —Croverseed to wantpd at 'gapes rs per b e;
about 400 bus TitrotnY gO5:lZt e: 66p 6 2 from fire.
and $276i21.87)Cper tat. from second Ita.ds.
Winsir Beillline a WWI Way tr. 243fe for and bb:s. ono no for Oldo do ; drudge le wanted at fro. and
blade at SO per gallon..
/V. 44.3 .12
..34A19 20
_I34U as
1281 311.3
.woes 37
t 34.341 ..)