The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, September 14, 1860, Image 2

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43
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' tins riGi u , =-'lect*li_ N tlkii, t T*Oll a ; The
*pp 4 The Clovele` Invioti- ,
lii i 4l2o# lo3l4,,Tcasi The Praia
lv-" 6l ;rA 3 - i ney _WilerSiitiiilliii*Ot., I Fouicit:
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t7P l 4llllo lll lll l 4rAldir ilkYttredidt4ll 161
104*ftir to the Int. Naples is
`gti t :4l4 ,1 13 4.
..** ll l l #V 401 11 4) .
4- 1 011#1 , 11,Stt.T ;MTN- 111.14011 woe filettootri Too wag
T,Argtol44l l l44llllitSiiiitle4 I.ltia 41#24Oksit't artkAtis
4 #o , #P i , tiztj9 l o4,;l")ny l iosp i t ia
la lryt *
• A ft ****toaotie 1 1414 ' le ;01,6101, inn` est"
0/0.1, InTi hares I •
0 10 * den B• lead th trod. otrilioiiii
padiris
"f 4 -, - .14 141111 •
,i4O. this Inti Auroras.
be 41.42
•
/1100014411*allentemi
ozooadoot bid seq .
.
"OfiellidiAred !id ten
a k atopirtilia - beioista to:nit 1.440,1 pium, apd
• '' wor7 shot P* l ! ll °' Th• °URN., fi b tl!'4 l Pg
*".***"." the - in: Mil ;mints',
• oar 11 ye"! .bairokoothlti; mow w ar, Ben
t
I f thi
l iiiAtilliitoioarniti at , tabcte at Con.'
I,o + ,, :lstasstisiordt = The'leV*lreor sea eelei eghlide
w°P!-A.ta . 0 4 1 1 ; *di Afee,'tterelun• 'We /are
,fort'renight 4 in ItiOy, that Gene* Lasnoriolore
/.. , I.ll4ttiresitsol Ms troops to polar any, toati Bartok
• ' 'The ateiney:lleßotohW antral from Havana,
11311 leitturtatoo to: thif 4tiingt. 'hematite* have not
11 0 3 14 11 7 O NRIVIA ,I4 fmlithWore
r.
ward; both o t Metalline sod Ihsvassof,l
ArOodhnsi; 'N. 1., a it apnblioan Clonition
,ollinty °Seers amine.
A ittd. :liiprobot wore made lotitolt are reiortod
• ,I,"tt i o"4,l4oolated Pteas in a hislinanner. In the
first place, one or them was tall of great " ability
• r'r . " mond limrer;" and the others wore " shariont,
' 1 9 4 61 :4, 1 + 1 4 ) ! NO 00,,•objefobi to these
PP.Vntctr,,lMlNl!s many ao,t"l'al,tlin , please, ,1
• when OR the, newspliera i We to nay for
%"'" coin: "Cr" 04 *ml tfOttl4llo.,
• •priatzr: 021ittithitiiest in• Nem,. give
. 114 facts in substantial' siotunsy the adjnAirsa will
" •ba saitsiolad • •
• , • -..Thoboix'ic !roast which ha! b olo loadlng
ti akplor 44 Igor* riror,faantod out onfTn4arlay
Slag IliCaP o h9iti 44 4 ; 4 4 / 1 .7
: , 07-ffvfr :boloArt,kortildnect that nisktraa about to his oopifed
Nhai: ayi• 'alarvitiOr:Hart•,* !'44llo€'
-4'u7.;;t'i;14440114/4*atht.irwflit'Aire, UMWliffalif of.
4.14,i - - Esera;.4Piiimeitei 1, on • board MOI eeliidher. She
-74z,',xliiiii4toiria ¢i tbe'o4 l l 4 o 1 11 0 1 1 e z AnYed
:'tst omit aim be )isii„ ••• c• •
• 141 0 4 *ie '
'
opium - of thiPreeent rebut Xurope. saththat
ailliononcer andlieteeratoelit in am hupab.. ,
ljahod linriu One: ' The' lad calibrations in tlie
I 'nave 'collinued the•onistsnee of
:0-'• •`-taiom,y; and oonaldelable eruptions have
tOrY_ filikio Place, 0 , ,„attifnlfkhothltate , lotting
ifime t of quatlual 0 f foui , and t iiropuilog an
IMlOlant 1ir, 14 1 10 n..0PC090 1 . 006 pot
I ';'; * ".:o4' A5, 116 ,0' 4 0 8 , thiikeirtoPY,"
' , l;#l•theleftl,•Mu l o ll italnn crAintrallarand have 00.
" -m oildeinaid the "entriebrdblarvinundatkins of whlith
P•
, t; t ;, . " 4/10 NOW 0 141 11 18 , ' PaPiii*itiel theiri;
'lo 6 , l 4 t .icitiParsiftlbOO,Of itliMant.;
“4" , wltileimalgna of yellOn'filver, or anything et the
• aort.,,44l4mineas, after the ateriatton
*hi morlying, puttee alio have been absent . in ,
• lit Starc4o, ritutabliii n4svery.
• **off!, •,/ke*,;l4ltriknuf animation ' and No.'
~,,,, Zoisems returns am au far reported • that the
v.ts
Ptti Tut Ai!' POPOlHition' Of the
' z 2 >t iof 1322,b00; en , theream if only four theneand
. 1 5 - There foltliyg off In the rural
o I "y r eJdigo4)s fti`lba /nuanunietarbig. :Portal
sr srr L:
ziiiiailubas Amoka little:l , i. I
alba filopthef flalleburr (Md.?' are aloili;OOM'
mending, la' ielnittd upon the mane 4f - , ,the lat.
that 'town. , y4nOlis *amebic a
elliiiiltbnie,and 4 Dr. Wm. H.Elder au ofithei,on the
,4 Inung iiietuthas.. irbiedn aid Dr,
.
fre lea
cring their,: pramisaa, ruPeratoip,th
bipditg,ziisd -Mv• Chas. Daniell hari tat* the
Mime tOmardii the erietkini of:a hand.
l • -some eon and • dw - elling.• • • •
• ~. 4 - A6elef, eieer.frour•,New lifealso, of the Bth, pt,
"" /Utast' dam thith eight Icemprolea 'of th e Wilt
• 1 • 'regiment of infantry have been ordered 'to Bier
flpflng t , to., commence ,the oimittiottin c:f 'lost
Other por tions of the rfelmoi,th tom
• ;Utah 'sir bithig distributed ' th rbuithinitiblit Tani.
.}: a e In . , le mos I ,b•-• Pril_ . 00 ITO, re. TIP
• 4 .5 ,- 4 - 4..44lm9mardes are to be Otadosmoi, th e vietaty of
•
, „ t , Ki r „ -,,., ...: -„-, Italtilt-PY. , .. 1 .0 .. 4 , 11,14. , . -,.. 111 14 . • • -t
''' ''''' - '"iO late'reilet it ISkiiitta fie 7tra!; - ,lttfteday Witt,
--, 7 - , - ;. - 111-,lii7;ZJedgelkotgllaa kr t . ! the folteObjiihhttolool se• - ,
coast of the ".dfteevery".of julep : 1.- ..' ~ ..
..''' `''" , s' - . , Aboitr , tbcrair'l776, 'a 'aria;•bi - tletaseief
.
,_,,,,t•11,4:„ Ow? . ' Reiroti 0 1 0404 BO P' thirGOTiftiftk of
, -iz rhoO l eat - aii, .oth4f,'' h 3 L,, i 'ilbig . t ... l. „ ..... :blft;ovroo
•-e-e/5.-: , ' t at aoty • tftse -be 'deet.....,........ Nat.
.q..' . :2 , .'1,-_;"-11 tabi and the.eoloitee,- It , ttoahtt be leoll for at
.• .. -:h -,,-• -:. •,-, tole, la r pteemdm of 'the Ifoithteft 1 territory—,-
.. , ..i : 11 -4 ,;! , ..4.41tat - whiek ;Anow Ohio, Indiala, killeoli 10Iohi
ft -'itetv mad' Wlsoonsla—eo that..whoe tbir mug&
sitab V ta
: - :-;i- i i:.; ' 1 111 i 1 O - POEVite` herald. th , "dire% me
4r , " -.•:--- , ;,_,Airliebi iiisivi tbailreU4stiinini , tat pop
#- 4. 1 , ' ,1, 4**. , ' - rtfltis,! *sok past/ holdieg. -they 'ls puttee- -
~''`:.''.. ehig:f Ha iarizeated 'to tip that he should
-- '---"". ' ' potiatt biro to-a 6
bat
,the - Nerthwest, eongaer
, , i 4heftere#l7i- itinhollti4 Ilit4Ahirthisto,Of- Agee,
, s
. r .i -, T .:4,itsa !is pmild - litoonie
.pestaseed, of ft. -- The. Go-
..- ~—..; ~, 4
.`;'..'.. _einem eaaleatid;,aateett' hiat 'Attmaie the meow
'4': I -,,:' , risk's" acrpittabarg.i - Nit:intim* he awl hp amps
•73 trail& i-.40-'fie l ietkiftwalhe Ohio, elver on rafts to:tlat hale
tg,c 1,• ;,!!: 7- ! , .ithiteteattrUltticiii* 4 o-aft•t'-‘ 6 " lll 4 4 h•re
I ,/,-,z,// :-- a abort, ,ria*,44arTi i &ta, teak; fti : th eft ek - sod
' '' ‘'' %-- - s ” 1 IVoited dolt:Ito the tuftbolowaltawitoftorti,
tri - - P %.. - ey;Tettlaglllo4 - tearth aims
''' .l. ''' - ' l. " - gitlllieeft' 11 VI
f -•, afreaustir - ta:iiiiiiiiikui,:. *hare
~: there were •t
-.,,T,..., s,s s s r
' --.',...''' I- I . attasbar 'oft trewish wito 2 bad formed a sattioiltiot
-",3 , ?' ,' : tiooya;Wag hy,insans ons oidt.titsyNitahlid the
t' . 4 - tt . ;.,• `.- ;Ognaw '' river, aid eisiluilyad ii,tay"Potor Marand's
' . Ast:a ,' '-' .-. house, sumo little distasee fro* -ikil f t9lOl. -You
-" • '' •'•" '; ass "I • ant ',w4ll4sciated • wit,lCUmo , locality.
-•,•,"...' ' ~. fulagbior and ' .. A ' The' remilisd thom "
41 ii G ,nlght,SWlleariyi.7. ',. f MOTTAIBig - warke got lug
littlearnif or tiglmuß l.tigistiww,. (for they hod
• ''',:''', SW aiwyteigesi with tsupgilait, no satior,,,and no
-.;.:-. ~.11,/ff itelli z Vi . :l4: r by, ddatinia *WO to look lutteitolud
inemitia,)and , toot up-ids line of saireh
~-.1 . t . :,-.,;': .. ,'',,iElTlfittio'Nrenote, tosninfaskia. It Ina
,
i ~.s.z , -and ,i, vary AO' IdaY, * itii ha Aerated
si t , ,t,,. it ;Ism, 04 -ao - oow :tits Y1411N. , - iildOgaba to It
-‘-' .'..!!!', '.:. - 1: - Itttile,iptour bli th,' Mai Ilipindahil • k Sint of ,
.--,;,tlialeimAss,Fueltinftliilkijiisp!'thivogti a straw,
-,,, I ';,. -tt• • and thsjiished .ou Alms, orying,.!(Buirsider, you
'• f `i ' `• iliartala, you i"• ghost livaghtsvi Tisa Wrench
' ''' -''''• '''
, m i s s atiaaggrod, ond.fronobst• day to this Mit
A. IT r'er, itava.haant knows "se" Baolferi.." [Re
-I'.":.•'',-';'- .:;;„214;wasilia origin otoor t Sognotdan e and what!
Ohkike rietitaid.to Yrtifturli, ho ha
, , t••• •'-' , • .- - 7 - e - trodood i Vialops ] ,I'
' - 4 r ''' ''
-- "irotla 6 1411 teginisnelisq,setiosiliaightor., that ,when Now they
, . , oiient tholustbY
_of ‘aleffarikkii,'Of altadisop,, of /I
, _,„ Marapill,tif li'WYthe, i of •i' . Swats *aka, snit or,
''' ' ''".lisinitifY 0160:distingichdisdligas arafpAriots as
:',l'.,,, l tr'X',' ;-!'tlirwinid irerilair;',w,e4itgr.wheti You etakli the
. , 1 , • , • , :t-t.-t cr , ‘ leirsellitivid on titit'WO at battle,:via i d r
la
~ , ,,,t -t;;,,,,f4•..1 youtaialas;eradit fit'tha awoke 'wfoo..
'''',Nt'S , -: -fOrio" tiusc:'ftt :of it, -- sotarsigw Water
%' n.!•;,;gil ' .hi *mead; ini; giold; *IWO= *Wm! tho
it
.„,,,,,„„0,:.1_I ~...afav,,,,hislogr a d-s vote -BOW:, the
t'' ''' 4 ' '''''--''-''' - - - rats party vs aid- tut when you claim,
..i.,1_,...t.., , t. ~: ..alai, • of 'the, tale ~NIVP• , hind!' Oftiiiii6olll
4t, !.. . s - , that; [Shoats of Issaghias andaypisagaiti ,
;:;,'; ~.ti i iii,aliOva.. entreat; ;049WIEIL kit; TAY. th e
' ''':':.;-
fr,, ' - 'i ritalii*lO'gooly*** Attowlottgi iiriutige
-'', .• 1,, , L ,lllipl34l4,:lo4:tde ! r T iLieoilify,iiithn illustrations
' '''' ''
of burgroit doottine - i ill . :4BrailiOili In, iiid4l6.
, ‘ .,iatifi4tar; Ind that •Iti that "'lino!!entitled
"' t •'"'`' ''''''46•tha 'oOry'ot the'olisoawaryllow, tO cointiitet
;;;;4:';;'::::' ' ,:. .4iiiilicC's. - ISO eat :Pm!, *gist, J olt Minos
7":' , ...?1:'.: . .'.';o4nifis o . 6 - 1 0/tiralrarrk,4Ti . 4? :' hie- , iiiiinki:
...~,
,04nili,r'pt!e",or alnes, 412,e julep, in
t et i os
N /lad Ent ocordiat)Op!ore,
lks'olaints d¢apmia iaanitubounds,
' • •
ot &deo ihrd , risorestoiruse ogled
*east /weather erhlehthe sift or Those,
,: , ei;oteest;sses to lovr,bassitsless, ,
SlSlt'iowir to sat !plot as
.sYOrin, Sinri,44*o l * SO PhlL"'
Wll'nbligs
_
AMU • •
,••• :Mho •Ctiralle* . ltiehines' &suet taloa, Naha at
• I •,‘ :•"Ititielr 1411,1 thht.aviefasi :The , varj
toStielait, thit eity will lattlidte 411114 it 'earthy
aM;• extreme* iaaiiitibLV p the: public
he *actuates! Threw "It gobs
14'0 10 ; j o i o , , • •
-4;.:;"‘ Aniette 00w111 takehae behest, at Wet:
' '" - 'ep),Orreet' Moitattei-to-alikt, -and win appear' as
- :Paoltlng.l3 l 4fifi,:"4o Lioiti•'•' This Piing
n 101Ps, Orpsfirs 'ilk VI
fverll:&.e , ; qitaatiti r, tar, last islyht;
.at
- - u•• "A* 3 itii'et Theatra;_over the tailor aid talatake•
fru•
it e
WAr, Votes! ,
s i the ehaiseter_oe Type riktior'e,'
lasary", large ;andiatunsluid
iiittiosdlng -the lint, perioniones,
thla"eltY, elphatetioallj
boatitVal,',estegvefeal, Ate..
'4° r'47''' fantastioal, g eographi al. hie
• ,; . ; ;; , X,0114014i04. Jan d'saniiitleit; itlettloaxinical, to
" I .: 9 ,2$ enA 6 0.,9tic1a1 .... , Val*,
6,61 ~,,,t roltealjlidweee,, r estesomitatiakietanevars werite''
:t i rlarry h VTlls' Xenriperjaii
' 14 _003 v , W - -' ,, L;s6llo6ll4.'stoolpgilail pteee At' eiveasitamie,', en—
flaws: goittc; , „ kimono worditiors,,
an f ontravepaso, written' for. hit and Nro Flo.
•oro a 1 ion, vil - itseno, , , It .-hao ,the wlerietiv i ot , some very geod
t llVPrA'ttilisif*k,4, l f,iiir , lid % t" I,4l hirterZ Ithlob if
14tti:o4t:q 11 ' ,*Nieliseetnelloote4 aati,skinivii. lies boon got
'-'OI7A.N. '... .-'= Si hilltio idurphy sad bliabie.
tiV 0 4= 4 ,.. - 11",riltlb, ~*PIII4II to the made, set tho whom and;
' ' - pink** ant 'to patch., The litrodeistion,' in
r e,„,1 1 -,,-...,,, - rolowit Meioses ilguffiisColiestia, is lively,
- ' i r e : ' hat thi - pliy ttosit;'with Afisisses 'Ai th• harOcrfar,
:,- - • , •!`.- sad idoittre es Latta liookii, ii literell7 overilow
11i241.V3;irTAIE,•11110,161E' Th. .Apiioollll Qua
ZlitragY-i, • 401 * ! " 4041 /* Ail •'iltilri; the • Wilildnite
- - feflootko ll irt._"*"inliiii, vtinwstlig an
?Aor
Pfla:4l a t til iP ill '' - ' ; ll .4 4 f l ift l ialithil ift all 14 work.
t, 46 alitiiiitAlibL,`=‘; ::,•'.' '''' I: '-',., —, • 1 ,
1, ...!Ali a r' t .t•- I ,E„r "'' „. r '.• .• • • ,* Ili: - -- --;=:t ', , I
'l34e hr etVgfin•W i;•.sel 4 2#o ta.'iltaV.slittal`VOkississi. - : : .•
si s v0 , . 1144 7 , q•ke 'zllmfa.AsesectitieAssaltdisisk •tosatus Vice Pro;
. - ..:* , 4 1k-,,-Iddahlei win ad6etistita 611iiiettlietti ti Ufa'
•-•-• „ :••..-!_
.;' . ...alti, on Ssturdsy night. ?reparations am
;-
-- ,z: . ;:••!,:" Ailing .; made to give bim as enthusiastic re
,' f,...' . 'Oen.:
NatiMutf Grialabyfag.
It is a commulkitilkt.to 'Minato the' tieo-
Vie of Engl 'rife:dere, bskit
is by no ofAhe
Unitedlttii;VeCif#4 , *l‘ l, e Te6 Pe e ‘''
deserve to e ceihinred for rdefillisitlng a simi
lar feeling of discontentment with their lot,
however fortunate and really enviable it may
compwedwith other nations, we have.
re lit' Refieu.e =evils to 'complain of, and
are' blessed ` with an unparalleled degree of
Pictilati*iind' general happiness. it is true
faisromnetlines ..put 'badmen In office, but we
have'l. the, sailifautlon ot, knowing that their •
terms are of. atiorldnratioc- !We or,
I .`eaSf;ilalii . ;h; 4l * 0 14 *Oeig . 1 , 4) 1 1 4 5101 mi, toe,
when 'thro,whole ., fatale • of 'our intricate and
cOniplicSM+l finaichd - aYstinii- tquable6 to. the
liffolvel; Its
enterprising spirits, but
indrustylons 'Artiisami out
91::: 1 ,1 1 1p34r i tyr:siid , 2 thus: causes much
-dhOwsq, I'ol it, rarely happens that any
14.Pitried" ;elapses ' *pre the 'currents
of ;' trifle; 'tent • business resume' the usual
C10111414' and • restore the wonted . activity
whiell'is the' normal condition, of American
life. The terrible and unceasing distress Which
perpetnaliy freviiis in many of the Countries
of the world—the &want and Aegtidation, the
ineradicable evils of an over.ctowded and illy
.fed population—are:rarely or never extensively
felt in the United States, and the three great ,
.scoprgei ' of 'mankind-Lwar, pestilence, and
famine 7 rioxely visit our favored land. But na
tions, like individuals, are never at a loss ' for
matters of complaint. If they have no very.
serious real: grievances, they be certain
to devise„kbrood - of, imaginary oned, as men
of affliteirce, who', to the outward eye', appear
to be blesseglilth every, earthly gift that the
human heart °Carla. reasonably desire, are- , of
ten' the Most :Unhappy of,molials, because they
suffer 'their' minds to dwell
,` upon Opposed
evils until they , work themselves op 'lnto a
chronic state of absolute inhiery
The'prethnt position of American politics is
exelnpliticaticin' of thie . trath. We
hive, a,' large "Prortimfk of the people of ,the
Beath ju„a "etate 'of frenzied excitement
in .regard to the degree of protection that
should •be given to their slave property.
to such an' extent • hive they beconie eier
cised on thiesithject, that, their leaders have
already !seceded from the Democratic party,
•and are now earnestly endeavoring to destroy
it, for the alleged, reason that the Northern
Democracy would not go far beyond all their
pat ;platfornat, and pledges to
,secure future
Governmental' action for the protection of
'the. rights' of ' property In
,negvoee. Now,'
it is a well - known fact that property is the
most, sensitive thing in the world; and when
eier its safety and security are, really en
dangered, it at once sinks rapidly in value.
And there is no species of property
more •
particularly liable • to' this rule
than slave Property.. If it haa really become
imperilled from want of properlegis*tion, the
evidence 4014 Po r t world be lotted in the May;
liet.,vtdite of slaves. the prices of stocks and
bitmis,,of real estate, Of. merchandiSe, would
'atoms, and universally, fall in any and every
isarket, it thel Act, were clearly eitablished
that such property was in reality insecure and
not in the • receipt Of a proper degree of pro
teetien froth the' Government of the country
in whichliwni owned or held. But while thitt
agitation' of the, slavery question has gradual;
ly been • increasing •in intensity, and demand'
:after demand' has been made in behalf ef.that ;
-peen)* litititution, It .is a singular fact the
the nomthir value of slaves has been, constant
ii• increasing . ~= average price to-day is
ttertriy, if Oct,, quite, foUr times as great as it
Was thirty years ago. It is double the price
that :prevailed twenty, years ago, ,and at least
fifty,per Cent . : higher than the price Which Pre-'
vatted ten years ..ago. A superior negro hand
Who would scarcely have sold for $5OO In 1880,
and ithowould probably have sold for $1,200
in 1860, would_to-day sell in the :South for
.front p,E400 to $2,000. The property wbieh
WO are tekliEl., so insecure that new schemes
Mist constantly be devise 4, and new demands
constantly Made to protect. It,' has thus gone
on anifiralliincreashig rapidly in value, in the
ilieenee of such laws. It any other Interest
in Mid country _were to appeal for additional
protection, with the feet stating in the face of
all those !the' clamored
_for it thatit, had thus
.
steedily advtuice4 in pecuniary value - , those
*ha, made such demand would be abso
lutely laughed' out ofeonnteninee, and no
people would go farther in ridicirling:ank de..
'ltOuncligAba.ahmedity - Tatid — folly ;of the re
tiniiiithart the politicians of the Seuth. Even
in regard to the escape of fugitives, the dis
tricts lehlehlose most of them really ender no
little from tldi cause that they. *flake little
complaint, on the subject; bet it 'is the Re
presentatived of more remote Southern States
(where the escape, of a negro into a free State
is.• 6 :.entirely, unheard-of occurrence) that
grumble most Client the faithlessness of the
North in •regard to the execution of the fugi
tive-sive, law. There are bundreds, and
reliably, thousands, of 'counties in the South
where no such thing All the escape of a• slave
into-Die free States has ever happened ; and
yet, the Men who represent districts thus se
ethe against loss from this cause, are `often
the most noisy and clamorous in _regard to
additional guarantees for the security of their
slaves. '
When we look at the vast extent of territory
now oecnpied by slavehelding communities in
this country 4, at* the extraordinary profits de
rived by the
,planters of the South who culti
vate the greatSoutheni staples ; at the extra
ordinary 'prides which are 'inveriably obtained
for negroes at all the slave sales which take
phiee-,;-surelyi it would seem that never was
there a pecuniary interest in the world which
Vranedisolutely more profitable; and more se
'curtly and thoroughly protected by the Go
vernment; and the idea that men who are now
'reaping • these high! pecuniary reWards, and
Who, far as materiel wealth goes, have such
bright ProiPeCti open to,thona in; the future,
itheuhrbeeOtietiMtly_ making den ands, under
the iereestirO nr ,fearful threats of all sorts of
direful consequences, for additional protec
tion and guarantees, is one , of the most sur
prising features of modern politics.
When we, to the , ultis, Republicans of
the North, who are terribly horrified et the
idea of the possible extension of slavery over
a single new foot. of the soil of any of our Ter
ritories, • and who, therefore, propose to
prevent such an extension ' by Congressional
prOhibitiOn; are "are , almost equally surprised.
In the absence of any poligivestonal Action on
the subject; it'is redueed to a moral certainty
that nowhere, Oxcept,within one or two, of the
i rtrigiTkip of the 'Republiee. 7 possibly New
Ifesteo and. a portion of Utah and the Indian
Territory—could slavery be introduced ; key
ing for the free white labor of the country an
almost' boundless field, not only in Kansas,
Nebraska, mid 'Washingten Territories, but
- idso in most of Utah In fact, our Republic
14 so constituted, in regard to the numerical
stiptiterity.Of its non-shvellidding population,
as .to realer an absolute certainty 'that
_Whenever a real, active, and earnest demand
.for territorial expansion for the free white
population is created,. it will find vent In
the 'establishment of new Territorial Govern
meats, where_, slavery will be practically ex
cluded under the operation of popular sove
reignty; and thus, for many years to come,
the free White Settlers of our country will ob
tain aH the land that they can possiblyilestre,
without the intervention of Congress to pre
vent the establishment of slavery In districts
where it will not be introduced, if a don-slave
holding Population. earnestly wishes to people
it;: and if, front the character of the soil and
cliMate, there is no earliest desire on the part
of the slaveholders to acquire possession of it.
, While "the' people of the North 'are being
lashed. up into a wild state of excitement in
regmd to the destiny of the Territories of the
.Reptddini ' and while they ate earnestly
irn
:pldred"to turn all the energies of the Govern
meat into one *fader chininel, to prevent
the , extension of slavery, it is clearly evi
dent that the introduction of slavery into most
cfttiose - regions, in the 'abience of all inter
ference by the General Gevernment, is a mo
ral:and physical Imposilbility, and that terri
tory, of ample extent for all practical purposes,
for Many years kr come s will be te ndered free
by the action of the emigrants wh6 take pos
session of it, without . the Interference ef the
tederal titoyerninent. , The same causes which
b l ighlheit. shiver/from Pellfornitt, Rene% sod ,
biebrasiM,Although no restriction of the Ge
neral Ottittranient. interfered to prevent its
eatatillaintiert those . realone, *ill also.
Operate;, :10ce zaaoorj, , to- prevent ite ex
tension IV Other Territories of the Republic,
and thus practically render much of the angry
declamation we hear on this subject of the ex
tension of slavery, and the necessity of Go
THE PRESS.--P_PLI-LADELP,WI4, R 1 I , SEPT R 14, 1660.
vernmental Etien'to prevent it, but Ill•founded
mat an alleged grievance which
is with moiiiinsiOnary tl?sin reat
-• •
Ontbe tariff tineatien,Biere have also been
isterci• nnibirk!4. (end Andorrect statements
made. It is uncinetitiotiftblP• true that the
iron interest of our Stfttiihas undergone terri
ble reverses, in consequence of many causes,
-prominent among which is the low rate of du
ties upon foreign iron ; and it is clear to every
rational mind that a revision of the tariff is
demanded, when we consider for bow long a
period the receipts into the Federal Treasury
have to meet current expenses ; hew
many, loans we have been obliged to contract
in a-periOd 4ireforind peace ;Ito* vain the
efforts; eiert with ail exhanited treasury, to
effect any. important reduction of the ex-
Pensee 'of the Federal . Government have
proved; and- it is unquestionably the true
policy 6f the GoVernment, •in devising
means • for • increasing our revenues, to
so model the tariff as to insure the
largebt possible 'amount of protection to the;
industrial interests of the nation. But, while
this is true, it is amusing to see some of the
wild statements occasionally fulminated on 1
this subject. Some orators seem to imagine
I that all kinds of Manufacturing industry are
completely, paralyzed, and that the hum
of induStry is never , _heard resounding
through. the factories of our country.
So far as, at least, one great interest—
the- manufacture of cotton—is concerned,
this idea -is certainly grossly erroneous ; and
yet the
upon
of that article is often'
dwelt upon ae the interest that is in a 'peon
adiarly suffering condition; but among prac
tical business men the common current of
conversation for the last year r or eighteen
months, has been ,the immense amount of
money made by those engaged. in this avoca
tion.; the enormous profit it has yielded; the
extraordinary activity of all the cotton mills
of the country; 'the unexpected• largo divi
dends' paid by the cotton companies, etc.
There, hai,'perhtips, never been a period In
the history of our country during which the
manufacture of cotton goods has proved to be
more profitable to all engaged , in it than
during the last two years ; and every man en
gaged in the business, or who has the slightest
knowledge appertaining to it, is perfectly well
aware of this fact; and yet we hear from the
stump such doleful complaints on this subject
as would almost lead us to suppose that every
cotton manufachirer in the country was on the
verge of bankruPtcy, while many of them aro
even now realizing • princely revenues, and
hare been, since 1868, by the operations of
their mills. • -
The Pennsylvania iron interest has proba
bly more legitimate cause for grumbling, and
for urging upon Congress the propriety of dis
charging its clear duty of increasing the reve
nues by an additional rate of duty, and at the
same time incidentally protecting the great
national iron interest than any other pursuit;
but there is, perhaps, throughout the country
less excitement on this subject than on almost
any other. "
WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENCE
Letter from “Kappa.”
teorrerpondenoe of The Ptesll.]
WASHINGTON, D. 0., September 13,1860
Oar hotels were filled last night by ',promiscuous
crowd. Southerners, who have been sojourning at
the North, are driven by the sudden spell of cold
weather M ; their,sunnY homes. Bat not only
Sonthernere, butes° Northerners, have done us the
honor of paying a flying visit to the capital of the
'nation. It is, however,' neither pletuture nor cold
weather which has bronght them. Some of thorn
are bare in purshit of the 1, almighty dollars,".
a good many of whtoh ire merely waiting 'Mt be
pulled out of the capacious pockets of Uncle Sam,
who is said to be a very obliging gentlemen to
those Who can prciduae a certificate from J. B. The
Beattie telegraph is one of the opportunities by
which it can be aeoOlopllshed. SIX different bids
have been made, and, of course, every one of the
six different parties has its friends and 'political
family spirits' along. Mr. Bogert is here from
Baltimore to contract bribe wire—not forth. wire
pullers—but for the telegraph.
'Another gentleman of mark, Mr. Buell, from
Michigan, Is here for business purposes. He has
been a tnembor of slongress, and voted for the Ne
braska bill, on account of which Mime he has been
kept aelome: General Oast, who is a particular
,blend of Buell, has indneed Mr. Buchanan to
tender him the appointment at - Honoluiu " Sand
wich islands, is United States coml. 13 at the
days of Mr. Buchanan and his Mende being num
bared, and only very few, Mr, Buell prefers to stay
in this bowery. He hopes that something might
be found which will be aoesptable to him, and not
aoopled with the - condition to expatrlete himself.
The friends! of Douglas avert Openly that the
Brooking/drawn in Maine have voted the Ite
publioan tieket--and that by order from Washing
ton. If it. its *tea into tionsldoration that the
Adminfstrago,n Papers are rejoining at the defeat
of tho Desieeratio ttiket in that State, heoamse the
candidates are for Doug*, everybody will come
to the concitudon that the Douglas men are right
is their eharge. The Washington Constitution,
Mr. Buolsenen's home organ, oannot conceal its
joy and mord triumph; It pitches into Mi. Dou
glas most lustily because ho has rot ',synod Maine.
How different would, these traitors ant had tho
contrary been the result ! As in the Case of Mis
souri, they would bays plafrood the victory as their
Own. But their Danites, baring been anooeasfol in
defeating the Democracy of Ijaipe, they bypp
oritioally do not set up any claim, but k ep silent
as to their own treachery.
Nothing has been heard about the Nitre ..
sines it has Wag laid before the At*ey one
rat. Some of the lobbyists, Wangled in the pay
ment of the award, now charge that the sorrel.
pondent of the New York Times obtained his in
formation from °Motels in the Department. Go-
Vernor Floyd is sorry that the latter has been sr
rated, and, therefore, nothing will be made out
of the case,
can positively assure you that the rumors
about Cot. Florence Intending to run as candidate
in the First district, are utterly void of veracity.
The,Colonel has no idea of dOing any auch thing; he
will not work against the regular ticket, put up in
a Convention before which he bad permitted his
name to go for renomination. Those who say he
will ran calumniate him. Alter having defeated
hint, and not suomesded in getting their mats no.
Minaied, three' edniinistration men are shameless
enough to expect him, whom they have sacrificed,
to assist them In their anti-democratic schemes.
Florende is all right? KAPP4.
LABOR BALI{ OP ILOICTRICUOLD
large assorimen..,of superior household furniture,
large mantel and pier glasses, piano fortes, velvet,
Brussels, end ingrain carpets, vases, engravings,
40., will be sold this x;orning at 10 o'clock, at Birch
Bon's auction rooms, No. 914, Ohertngt street.
, Lam Boba or CARPETS, !co.—The attention of
purchasers is requested to the large and valuable
assortment of riohEnglieh velvet, Brumels, super
fine:and tine Ingrain, Venetian, hemp, and list car
pap, rugs, druggets, woos matthr, do.; 10., td be
pefemptoray sold by catalogue on viz months' m
ilt, oommenoing thle 'monang at 101 o'clock, by
Myers, Olaghorn k ca., auctioneers, Nos. 418 i
.and 415 Aroh street.
Twaswa.—Parser Craft, of the steamship Key
stone State, which arrived last evening from
Charleston, will please accept our thanks for
favors.
LEGAL INTELLIGENCE.
,9,IIAILTJM SgssioNs—Judge Ludlow -
In thi ibeenee of - Mr. Mann, the DlatrloVoittor
ney, Charlee W. Brooke, Eaq,, proseentecl the plena
.of the Commonwealth.
Jonathan Harley was acquitted of a charge
of assault mod battery, but ordered to pay the costs.
• William Steer wale acquitted of a charge of Si
sson and battery upon Catharine Metz.
• Henry Mesmer wet charged with beating, his
wife., This lady told • long story of her wrongs at
the band, of her husband. She had been married
two womks when she was atruok in the face, and
had bar jaw broken. Mrs Al. wan a widow when
she married her present- husband, anti while (to
talling the assault and battery she, in the most eit.
cited monner,'oharged that Mr. Mesmer was now
carrying the watch whlch belonged to her former
(( dear husband; and he wan not so good a man, as
he had not a drop of good blood in him "
The defsnee alleged that Mrs. M. sated Impro
perly with the boarders, and finally she, with her
boarders, drove him out of the house . Mr. Mop
meg was represented as under petloost govern.
merit, and whenhis wife was of the opinion that he
was slow in obeying bop orfiem, she strut him.
Verdict not guilty; prosecutor to pay the costs.
Frederick Walhower was oonvioted of a charge
of assault and battery.
Gabriel Elliott and Ann, his wife, were charged
'with bent Catharine Edson. • Gabriel was
charged in another bill frith besting Thomas Mi. •
son, and another bill charged Thomas Brion with
besting Gabriel ROOM This was a fight among
neighbors residing in a court, and the affair was a
mixed one iggnegally. The jury powrioted Gabriel
Elliott of the &resit, end battery upon Thomas
Briton, and acquitted him of the assault and bat
tery upon Catharine Briton, but ordared him to
pay the opsta. ThorainCrison.was convicted of the
smolt end battery upon Gabriel Elliott. dun
Illiott Was silo whieittefi, bat °rasped to pay the
costs.
The court held an aftentuit liszsintand Mieb** l
J. Noel was tried on a charge stea ling a cawing
machine, the property of Mr. Armatrong. From
the orbjenpo. of Mr. A. himself, it appeared that
the parties had *Wilde.: partnership **(sting
twou thou, sad after their separation. and bongo
any aocolint wad settled, Mr. Neal went to the
s h o p: sod ,took maolkine, whioh, be alleged,
belonged to him, u he had furnished the castings
and a portion of the labor. Verdict not guilty.
'A number of petty oases of assault an/ battery
occupied the attention of tile court the remainder
of the afterl)o9o.
LATP . ST r!irEWS
By Tiwaph to The Press
FROM '-OALLFORNIA.
far roar,
*4197 9 657 - En Route tor 'New York.
-- LIST ORSTE&SIZIt'S PAESEXCIERS
GWIN
Oregon Polities-41ft in the D emeas ti o con .
vention—Hot Contest for the IL 13.
Senatorship.
PROM ,JAPAN.
Antra' of the Candiniuhrtah at dome.
Flattering Account of the
- 'Reception. •
joggpg, Sett.-10.—The eon! (*tees arrived this
afternoon-i:ailed time.
0 41,3_17 sip.cisCo ,041st.1.—S 40 1 7 . 61. .
- , Arnred Aug. 00,
tint; DOW Nrowri; Slit. soh(' Brilliant, ftom alti
more; Chip What Cheer, from Japan Nailed 50th, ship
eniamtn Howard ; bark Carrie Leland, [tors Shan
ale&ll.fiEClAL.-sThare are sole , * trimmest:4lone oo
ciirrir.g from first bandit as to make it &Moult to report
the condition of amass. Trad 6 with the °minim is quite
dull. rendering Cos market inactive. and influencing
headers' interests unfavorably. Candles ba-e declined
about 10 4/ 1 lb. with small sales. Pork Is hem, with a
downward tendency. All other Roods are quiet and no
mipaily. unchain* ,-,NIE could rot be ylattd at tile quo
tations °rawest( k• . Ociourrr buyout mein deter
tr
F r i . .. e r e t tLh t iii ke be e e p p a to l°6 e e w o h k il t e hani;nle a n r o e y e ad ar n pii i h n yo g li rkte mi a
Wheat nodule In largely, and dram iltiftVl under the
diflioulty experienced by shipper' in procuring tonnage.
- ----- - --- '
GENERAL NEWS.
The steamer Golden Age left this mornlig for Panama
with 222purshietirs end the mails. and • 81.286 7g in
specie, of ante 41,191,657 are consigned to New York;
and 810 600 for 'name.
The ship Chandler has cleared for New York with
eargo of 21,009 sacks of wheat, 10 bales of wools. 2,e,
hides. and ether dementia products, valued at 561,000.
The ship Moonlight w,ll soon sail for Chins, canning
B
Sour, hay, eats. vegetables. add other artichurauleft
for the utigh and French armies.
The bark Carrie Leland took out a einillar cargo.'
The Pamper° wil soon clear for New York with • a
oars° of wheat, &o.
sheßleotors and Lockett arg under 'yenned..Si:4 •
for Australia with 'rein and flour,
The Vuoirge and Johanna are chartered to load grain
for Liverpool.
The Cowper is about fully laden with grain for Cork,
to flail within elixir days.
Twenty-five square-rigyed•vesseli have' bean loaded
at San Francisco for foreign ports in whole or part with
flour and grain.
The pony exprees and overland mails continue to ar
rive regularly.
The now. from the Eitate at large is unimponent.
Several county_agrionitural fairs have been he'd
doring the week. The exhibition, of stook and general
duineatio' produetions evince remarkable progress in
the material interment pf the State.
Senator Elwin made his fait. political speebh, of this'
Sear before an audience orlopr thousand people at
tockton, on the 20th. Re vindioated himself against,.
the osarge of defeating taste s astir overland maul bill,
and Justified the purchase of Lime lint, et any price.
rather than not have it. as elite for ortekestion. The
opposition to the Ben-tor's re-elee on isroseouted
stgorously, and by politicians et large, Mans of the
Demooratio conventions exact pledges from the Log M
iens, eandidaks to oppose Mr, Own% in the Legisla
ture.
The Creseent City Herald of the 26th, says • diseove-
Tien arm extraordinary character have been' made 10
Del Norte county. Nenterona quarts seine nave been
found which yie.d fabulous amounts of gold.
ORE6Ors.
The steamer Cortes brings Oregon adviess to the
gigh, and British Columbia dates of the 204.
The Democratic State Convention of Oregon had met
and divided nearly equally into Douglas nag Breckie
ridge wings. The former patty called a State Conven
tion to meet on the 19th of September. and a Brooklet-,
ridge Convention will be held on the 18th.
The Portland News sais that Delezar Geo r ge §nuhaenteng
Stout, ed. P Deady, W ill iam Nesmith, r 15. Wil
liams. David Logan, an E. D. Baker, are the candidate,
for United States Senators
The snuggle will be h. tly centered. The three par
tiee—the National Democracy, the Pree-Soiler(Dou last
Democracy, and the regular each
have its earuidoetea, and will each strive to tarts or the
prise br any and all the combinations and influeneel
recognised ea legitimate. ••• „
A great excitement seems to have merengue among
the people of Oregon on account of the extraordinary
mineral diseoveries in the neighborhood of Rook creek,
Kettle ilea, and the Northern mines generally.
The afeetaraineer says that . , expellent:ld persons on
theground assert that the Rock creek mines are equal
to those of Califon/an in its palmiest days" Other in
formation is of a discouraging character. It La carotin.
however, that large numbers of persons have left or
are leaving for the new diggings.
WASHINGTON TERRITORY.
The Washington Territory papers have also glowin
accounts from the Northern mmes. They represent
that a great excitement prevailed at Zattle and other
poget sound settlements. and that them was &danger
of come of the town being temporarily depopulated.
BRITISH COLUMBIA
ininingThe British CoIMOLA intelligence is orinflufed to
al te.
Mai. Doirnie had arrived at Viotoria, from the coun
try In the neighborhood of Hans river, bringing speci
mens of gold quarts and coppervery pure. as aeons
of the saver lead, end plarantrao, of a vary fine euelltY,
fit to make into drawing Prolong. The warns district ,
he reverts, is rids with minerals.
The Victoria Gazette ems that the temverarY %%Vo
lition of &Unlit olumgia is now receiving supplies
almost exoldnirely from the American territory. The
miners are now tinning their attention tot e n oonetruu
tton of ditohie. Between fi ve and six hundred men are
at work on Van Winkle bar. a short distal= above
Lathan City. About one-half pf the workmen are Chi
namen. The diggings will give eine lgyment to a large
number fdr two or three reale to come.
A plane of ore from the Fort Hove silver lead had
been assayed at Victoria. and yielded - 42W to the top. ,
The sphr Ortolan. which started from ban Frenetic*
!set storing for a gold pro Denier expedition ton' point'
in Behrien's fltrafte, on the/kinetic conithent r known
as Beet C s pp. hoe returned. Xto god uould be found
but the soil was brilliant ith r , lea, which b e
for the marvellous reports which had been ant to (mon-,
Innen, and canned the expedition.
' •
JAVAN.
The bark What Cheer bongs dates from Japan to tho
Itid of July.
The hormone steamer Cendinrmorah arrived home
from Ban Francisco on June liGth, xis itonnin p. All
welt.
The Amerman ship Forest Age. na4er charter by the
British elovernme at, called for the ?title oft Joir 11tilt
en The Aseerleimbark Fuouitstoted for Elhatighartt Jul
12 with a. lull cargo of teas and Mae salon at
BM MC nista said to ,be. the meet traluabio - oargo
ever 'herein from Kemeny". •
rti - h r‘ a l ! P ogrmi gu°l :ef l Or di f i'grra b t d . a pet a treaty wits tae
8))&111110 ,orgy - SSE.
'Arts state otiLe carrnttt Wan peaceful.
no morose the Ormditilllifteb had 111111414
Wahl, polo repeat to his goaptrflueltle the
:tonne rre loh he and ties Sr,. .s! • enterte
Whila in Ban Pronoun°
M0NE.Y..14 VA.T.A , MT.
News from Honey t. aka Faller to 'the 24th nit, hdd
been received.
The Wegon-roett expedition bad <math. ted Its labors
•
sad returned to the vishey.
CoL Lander had alas held an tntervirtrWith the or tw.
algal war chief of the Pawote /odium:who desired
space ash promised to seep hie warrior* quiet for coo
mar, to giveit i n opportunity to hethe chute of their
troubles ego hod at Wuhington. Thie Will probably
yet an end o farther dangdr tO the ;Ong elfrah and
oyerlund emigration.
FAISBEN94IIB BY 8774801 ER F'qß NEW YORE.
The following are the names of the maga passengere
bY the steamer (*olden age
M.D.. *otavLegibijinAl)(l.sfiVrlLlVlAL:,ol:334e.
whs., ltr F ag a n, r mats Ipms, 8. If sannasson; Id.
Male, cast, pumton, . O,A. moritgo
meryLeruortel U. Bonny, W. 0 behnier, dare. ra'ros
by, Mile May E.Staldriok, b. F. Jac
s lon 6.144 ire. L.
0. Burt, Cant, Weldon and wire, M. To Wright.
John rarkor, Thames B . Leththn , re, td. A. Carew
gam ohlki, Mliton Ford, Mn. Clayton. Moe Ads Tpl:
toot,'John Edwards, George Bowen. John 'Thiessen. J.
K. Daniel, B. Richardson, 1, T. Caine, 3. M. Boloher,
lob 1 4 3 . : br iL r iga il :1„, Y ) . itut o e . ri i tt k tgurgilet
Maas a. ars. W. ... , Mirtsinger: and PA in the
steerage. •
Montgomery CbVnq rcoiticl•
Nouß4,o34;ftikitt.' l4 .—T t io .t9itfirses' of { Fifth
Conga/Samna' district alit, Constit tionel Union • par-
W o mit , at im PdPFOLltitce 11.41.111 opittorn. at tan
tenhouts, c.V I TIPArn 4 . 1 4rt i arginl. h atelocli t t:
vitfr-Wke County Convention atheyweyda anaemb ed
et the ', r aid. tioe j and Put in nomination a full pont;
ticket. Cha r'l ea o. Esq., and other. dententa
brief addreneai and the utmost entlitudaam ;mailed.
Peoplpts conycation at Woodbury,
4erVey r
WOODUVRI. N. 1., Sept. LL—Tite 'nominating pan
mitten of the Oppoition Pang of this Wanly •met at
thi
colsoe yesterday, I t wu a4dressed by the Ron. John
0. Ten Eyck. our Wilted States boaster. ip speosh of
great ability add power. The town was full 01 stran
gers. In the evening a large conoontse essembled , in
the court house to listen to the Bon. John T. Nixon,
tho representative from the distnct In Congress, and
John ooforth, Ess.,'of Philadeiphia. The meet
mg wee thcjargest an moat enthusing:Jo ever held in
our town. The speeohes were elosuent.'crusitiug. ang
convincing.
- -
nitrating filt I.llp Conewago Bridge.
wo INTERRUPTION TO TRAIN..
MIDELISTOAVN. Pe., Sept. la.—The oonswiro bide,
on the Lancaster and arrisburg Railroad, was de,
strayed by fire this afte rn oon. There will be no lain
mourn to the travel of the Pennsylvania Itailrd nn
communes, es there are two roads between Lasevurter
and this puce and the entire freight. with a portion of
i h oL P iT. gen b ig ta n .
e t The raitigke t y
b egn d s o tt e sti r r
hereto
fore 'run via Elizabethtown win. for — tia, ()regent. be
yon Via Colorable, making the same time.
h 'o‘ Pirjproof %Wens' t -
Aa LIAVeg FOR NfadAgta on eftIDAT.
beNDox, Q. }V., Font. I.l.—The Prink, visite4 Port
Barnia to'-day. held a lovaa here on his return, this
afternoon, and attaining a nail in the evening.
The firemen from oil the snrolunding teem; are hold
ing a grand tournament here to-night,
The Prinoe will-leave for Niagara Falls to-morrow.
via Brantford, Fort brie , and Chippwa.
A saql yrith 'Pie Indians near Fort
Heavirev. '
NEW ORLEANS. Foot. t3.—/be Sao Antonio ifers/4 of
the 7th Met. gays that Can an &area command had
fought a large body, of the Cemenohee,Niowas end
Uheyennee gray Milne from Fort ICeerneY, Ellittur
twenty-nine of the energy. T4e American 101 l wail
trifling,-
New Hampshire Polities.
Coe/coal:, - N. H.. Sept. 1.1;:-The Demoaratio State
Cohventton met here tally. After the adoption of
arrting Douglas regoltitions, the following entlemeti
wee nomtnated for Proeidential elisotors i Henry pt
Rolfe, G. W. Shaw, Thomas W. Gilmer, John C. Sin
°lair, and Wm. U. Clarke.
The Virginia and Tennessee Railroad.
LYNCIIIIIIIIG, Va. AtepL IT—Robert L.. Owen w al
sleeted preandent or tne - Yin:l
wo and Tenne.see Rall•
TOO te•dag, i n pines of J. t. MaDanfel. resigned..
Pater from Havana.
Naw Your, l3ept.lo —.The steamer 1)0 Soto hat,
li •
rived from bVILEM• with detep to the St instant. The
marketa have net materially changed. let freights are
Lemnos downward nog h at mausnsaa and Havana.
Burning of a ROEIIII.OII Factory.
NEW OILBAns Bept.l3.—The resin oil factory on the
New bhelt read WEE dSaroyekd hr fi re yesterday. The
toes if *mop°. upon wh oh thsra was no Iniuninoe.
Sloping of allississippl Steotner.
BintromiSeptenit Meamer.Anrors, Nand
frogi st, Louis tots' Winans etruok a snag and runt
tr l nVatt i a ni
tqfh set Osceola, Arkansas. tin will
book .q.Ay
roo PiitOß Piia l fr•
Dr Joaara thintAS.—The Pike a Peak excrete
arrived here to dayoeith nearly 018,t00 in stool,. Tile
papera contain mainline( importance.
Markets by Telegraph.
BALTIMORS, denternber 13..-ydour st-ady lloward
target, Ohio, and Utty Wilk are quoted at $6. Large
sales of extra were med• at $6 87r9 ren.6o. Wheat quiet
e. .1.6901 for red and $l4Ool to for w late. Own
dab and Dare,; yell dr 7067/0. white Menlo. J'torl
alone l et but unobanabif ; meet $19.76 prune $l6
Code* le very active t Rio 1.19.c011160. The atoek ou
band arnonnts to 8.090 bare. Wltlelty ideally at MG
&UN
FORMATION OP A Y MING Matt / 3 DOIIGLAB
04.gramm Oppn.—Last evening, after the ponolu•
,ion of Gen. Davis' epeeob at the Douglas Head
quarters' Fifth and Obestnut Ogee% an Awned
meeting of young men was held, for the Fulton of
completing the organisation of a campaign club.
Pe pop:quittee appointed at a previous evening
reported a short constitution, naming the or
ration the Young Men's Dongleo gmisign Olub,
and pledging the members to the sap rt of Dog
gies and Johnson for President an Vito Prod.
dent. The following gentlemen were eleeted per
manent officers of the club: Proldent—Fre
dart* A. 'Van Olive. Vies Prealdents—Henry
A. Gildea, Simon W. .Arnold, J fi.
.Flnktm,
Samuel Oalhoun, George Kelly, Corresponding
Secretary, Henry A. Wilson. Recording Secre
tary, Charles Roney. Marshal, Thomas U. Mars
toot. The preiddent, on taking the obeff,Mado a
alert address, thanking ti,. club for the honor done
him, and declaring hie intention tp oppose any
fission with Disumonists or Seeemionlats ; -and fur
ther, to sripport the otraight-out Douglas electoral
ticket. This was reeted with great spel.
The club will meet f o r drill this evening fo rte
first time. The regular stated meetings will be
held on Saturday evenings: A large number of
young men signed the constitution 01 the club last
evening.
T H E'
AMIJIMMENTS Tilt& /5 vsruNo.
yrAtitimosnlja. intitynn, Vinintit and Ninth its.—
;Any of Lyon* ittotoinit O&h".
WHILIAMIT R Cheati's ARCI3-,711111 . Tinksam,
VA WW I above otithe— , • Rooth"— • • Yoru to
uooa Luck.
MUSICAL Foo➢ Est L. Locust ottet t, above Eighth.—
Mies rtiotange' Concert.
• --
Met]Nocran's Nsvf fLurnin, 713C0 Lltreo, aoove
Beaond.—'• The reIIVOIS."
CONTINNSTAL THEATRE, Walnut BL, above L'ialth.—
Carnorosa and Bharpley'Er Mailtreler.
- •
rPOO2OSYLVAOIA. ACAMeir CIP Trig FINg ARTS,
1026 Chestnut street.—Exhibition of Paintinge and
',guipure, every morning and afternoon.
Pennsylvania Training School for
Feeble-minded Children,
DRILLIANT AND INTERESTING MOINES.
The anniversary of the occupation of the present
buildings, at Media, Delaware county, was 'cele
brated yesterday, by the School for Feeblemirded
Children, AU excursion trek left the city at nine;
o'clock, and the regular trains upon the Baltimore
Oentrarßesilroad took out a large number of vi
'gators. Vied trains stopped in the grove just east
of the asylum, and the gay patties, composed
ehiedy,of ladies, had the pleasire of going down
an abrupt acclivity, apd climbing a correspond
ingly gentle bill. , The view from the / summit of
the School hill repaid the panting pedestilane.
They paused to admire Media, looking sternly
from its adjaient hill across the bright water of
the intervening creek, and uttered exclamations
of delight at witnessing the bold sweep of pier 'ln '
the railroad bridge.
Tickets were given up al the door, And the vial
tors;entering the long hall, found themselves in the
midst of a busy scene. The doors on every band led
to sales.roome. These were attended by the teach
ers, ladies from the neighboring county, who ware
probably selected with regard to attractiveness,
It was certainly a pleasant plate wherein to loiter.
prom these bright eyes and brighter Smiles we
met in the hall a tall idiot youth with a most disa
greeable expression and a head like an angular
" t owing. • This individual It a fixture of the school,
and is said to be a good gardener. The feeble
;shaded could be met at all points. They were
' neatly dressed and exhibited congenial tendencies.
In one of the side rooms galvanic and electric ap
paratus was etationed. Persons could here •be
shocked without expense by the kindness of Mr.
Leavitt. A splendid refreshment room occupied' n
portion of the school-room. Grapes in °loiters
were disposed of at philanthropic prices, and a
large sake, containing a ring, wbuth a benevolent
-party carried front the city in a cheese-box, was
sold in elide ' for a fabulous sum. ,
The visitors proceeded to the third story to view
the scenery in the distance. A few, more adven•
term, mounted to the dome and sat in the keen
wind to hear a scientific) gentleman discourse upon
the geological formation.
The dinner was prepared by benevolent ladies.
There were five tables ; at each, one hundred and
fifty persons sat down. The savory ohloken lay
side by side with roasted pig and picturesque
ham; all these, with varieties of dessert and minia
ture aerator vegetables, tempted the appetite of the
stranger. The receipts of the day were all prone
At three o'clock the visitors congregated in the
large !toted room where the children were to ex
hibit their proficiency in calisthenics and vocal
fluency. On the platform we noticed Mahon Pot
ter, 3. M. Marie; Esq., Doctors Parrish and Kerlin,
and others. The teachers were seated thereupon
and many of the scholars. A piano occupied the
centre, and numerous " offerings ' of bead and in.
laid work lay upon it. The audience thronged
every aisle and crowded all the seats.
The children sang brotterus, " This is the cear- -
lyjubild," to the mole of the piano, ,Mss Fisher
presiding.
Dr: Parrish stated the ocoasien of the exercises.
Ode year had elapsed side the school took posses
lion of its new building. The Tenths et the day,
;needfully and otherwise, bad been more than ea
dormitory. The school had not grown up in a mo
ment. Amid difficulty and embarrassment, it - had
struggled seven years for a name and a cause, un
til its suedes could now be regarded as establish
ed, In the Mane of the directors and the chit.
dren,he thanked the audience far their encourage.
mint.
Five boys and a girl then stood in a line, and
went through the dumb-bell exercise, to music.
On the left stood 'the baker of the school, a deaf
youth. Hie muscular limbs and pleasant counte
nance made him the favorite.
A girl then recited Our Natation, after which,
"Little John" (not the friend of Robin Hood,) sang
the Indian Boy'4. Prayer. This was one of the
sweetest songs-of the afternoon The boy was
almost a mute When be entered the establishment.
Ells musical tendencies were encouraged, and he
has for 110G30 time formed a prominent feature of
the school displays.
. A number of scholars again perpetrated th e
dumb-bell tousle. Ibis measure originated, in the
limitation. The movements correspond to printed
symbols, which a feeble-minded scholar invented.
Then an urchin, whose history had been laments.
hie, was brought forward he the Doctor. The
narration of his story brought tears to many eyes;
as there were mothers In the audience whose chil
dren were likewise blighted.
Hard Tuner, conic again 710 more was given
in °horns. It wan very strange and weird to hear
those demented boys and wan-eyed girls singing •
"Let WI neonS onilled oleeeure, and count iii many
tears, •
Where we all sop sorrow with the poor,
Thar 'lt a eons that wilt linear forever in our ears,
Oh hard times, come aloes, no more."
The rode wee deorsd.
Yankee. Doodle „was repeated to , dnmb.bell
mobs
Tice exercises were eopoltaded by , re original ad:
' dries. Then same the auction, at which fancy or
ioles were d(eposed dt at sheeny pried. A bead
basket, from little , l Bemis," a deed entld, wee
014 to Mr. *Pedlar, ot'Upland, for a Various
Wiser artielee brought ;2 f.O end ;2. The chit
dam frequently bid upon these articles themselves
they taro eantanted the rode with Omit. '
At evening the demoted were repented. and a
eagle lantern exhibition added. The day will be
long remembered as an occasion of pleasure and
interest. •
TRW DELAWARE TESJILI'UI ow TEE PEI:E-
R . l'l;mM% RAILROAD.—The work of preparing the
foundation - for the' Pennsylvania Railroad bridge
aorcurathe Sehtrylltill ?leer, above QIWY's Vern', is
pro quite rapidly, the piles for the western
akintodd haling all been driven, and a ooffer-dam
is now Wag constructed, so as to prepare for the
sawing of the plies off below low-water mark. Thle
piles for the first pier on the western side of the
river have also been driven, and preparationa
era now being made to hoe them tilt off near tbe
surface of the amid at the bottom. Upon these
piles is fixed a heavy and substantial capping
of timber, to whilst' Is suspended, by means
of long wrought-iron screws a timber plat
form; this platform being ' larger than the
greatest width and length of the pier to be
built. Upon this platform is laid the stone for the
pier, above the water level, and as every two or
three courses are laid, the platform le lowerdd by
means of the appa sinews, ce that ills) top of
the dasenry only Is a eve water, When lie atone
work is again indeed with In the same manner,
until finally the platform rests upon the Oleg per.
=rent), preplyed tq !delve it. Ily this mode of
proceeding, tide neoetreity of dustrusting a coffer:
dam Is entirely avoided, and therefore the cost of
the eonstruction of the piers much reduced. The
only work being done on the east aide of the river
is the construction of the wharf
RghtihLlOnkT IIdgEVING Al TharoNVILLII,
Twarter.roensvit Winn.—Yesterday afternoon, a
Republican meeting 'was held at Jones' Wood,
neatly a tulle Weld Of neetdnyllie, in the
• Tweinty;
fourth weird. Wile OMoIS aoilMted Idaa n 4alltikl
grove, and the speaking took pled from the den:
ring stage, used for pic-nio parties. Jesse W.
Brooke presided, assisted by a large number of
vice residents and ieoretarles. The meeting was
idded to eoMmeee, et one o'clock , but It was
three o'clock before the spoilt tog corpteepeed. 44.
dresses were made by John iy. Beet, the litiolteye
Blachrmith, Lemuel Reeves, Daniel Minim], of
New "Verict WPI. 7 4. 71r-11, Mortard Myers,Wm.
D. Rollo, Bed' Otani: . ',
.TheLisooln Proteptlve tlinb, of Tweoty- fourth
ward, were present In their uniforms, and had a
small braes cannon, which was fired at intervals,
reverberating end echoing in thunder 'tones
threuple the valley; The People's Campaign Club,
of teMisdelpb;n beaded ,by Pheriff torn, came
011? a, Sllglintiikallt fiva OVIO4, Pea i
l lY PIO
tinitetietates diirleflanduerut pretested south ert.
' thusens. The sp,eeking wail continued till the
shad crevenieg grew Wok and fast mord -the
men did a damp fog sat In, yoleh Imbed lealeY
'of t audience to harrier. the ) helium. In the
ever, gi the claim formed in line, and marched
in e vision throgghtho Tiller, derying torches
andlneluipareneier. c
_ ..,
te INetO ITN UNITED STATES AGRIOUL?
Tart r, Eaut.—The flood Will Engine Company, of
this itt,Will leave this morning for Cincinnati,
(claim. with them their Oteam ere engine which
wiliS W
berered for oompetitiou at the Agricultural
Palt, which Commenced an the 12th !Wept, aid
willoontinne until the 20th,The company have
a Aar Mt-ridable engine,'
built by ..Alexander
MoCauelMid, which has acquired the name of
"0 d Reliable," The excursionists will make a
shot t stay in Pitteharg on their return home,
where they will give an exhibition of the , powers
of their engine. -e
A NARROW kaoApe.—About ti)rpo Ll'clte,6
yelorday afternoon, as Oat No. 4 of the Richmond
lin wan smiling down Second street, below Arch;
a little boy. about four years old, attempted to
or* the; street, in front of the car' Re was
knocked down by the horses. By The en to these
ef ibe driver, the oar wee instantly ;topped, the
telieele resting not more than Wee innies from
Venter ef the child, which lay directly across the
(reek. The little fellow espaped withept tho least
infery. , Too much praise Meet be awarded to
the driver of the oar for his sucoessful efforts in
sating the child's life.
"EFFECTS OF JEALOUSY —The report, of tt
plated attracted tho attention of the police, about
two o'elock yesterday morning, to a house at Web
mond and York streetr, In the Nineteenth ward
They open proceeding to the seen, found James
Larkins, the occupant of the house, bleeding freely
about the head and neck. It seems that James in
a fit of jealous anger with his wife, had placed a
plate' to his head and blazed away The weapon
was loaded with email shot, and flesh wounds only
were iefileted, The injuries were attended to by
a!phyelelan.
f TREI PONOLOGICAL 600IsTr —The discus
ston end exhibition of the Amerioan Potnological
Snolety came to a close yesterday evening The
mission has been eonduoted with the uspal harmony
and success, and the interests of practical pomolo
gy were sobserved and forwarded. President
Wilder, licoretary field, apd ethers, made speeches
last night. The place of the miming meeting was
appointed at Boston in 1882.
t Sr. LUXE'S lii. E CnOltOrt,--This congre
gation will hear is lecture this evening, by Dr.
James Bryan, at the hall of the depot of the Se
cond an&Third street!' Railway. A large attend
ance is expeoted tette present as Dr. Bryan maker
his first public appearance s ince his return frem
New York,. Nis subject le "A Visit to Italy,"
which will be narrated in his eliaraoteristio hump
rod and Warner rein.
INTEEESTINCI ' STERSOSCOPic V Iltn".1.
Among the Interesting features at the Penneylya
ale Training School 'for Feeble minded Children,
In onneption with the o offoripg day" proceed
ings, held eelidedle yesterday, wits a complete let
of sterooseeple viewi of ell the inmates apd the
buildings of the insilbaltdo, articttcelty executed
by Mr. N. Gutskunst, at his gallery, Arch street,
above Seventh.
' A SINGULAR COINCIDINOE.—T4PeopIe's
nominee for coroner, Mr. Aattiony , mad, IS st
resident of the Twenty-first ward. die 'bed been
it. resident of the ward jest twenty-one Montheothe
day of Menorninatlen, and he was nominated on
the twenty-first ballot. lie had eixty.three votes,
just three times twenty-one. lii experts to be
elected by about 2,100 majority ,
Meeting of the Douglas Democracy.:
IsPzganzs OF OKN. DAVIS, OF BlTclttl COMM, AND
lIICNAT W. BONSALL, OF 110011ISTOWIL
DM averting, a large and entaueleatio meeting
of these, to favor of the nominees of the regular Na
tional Deosocratto Convention, warheld et the
'toms of the Democratio Central ,Aisoolltilin, at
'fifth and Chestnut streets. The halt was ttitifito
overflowing.
At eight o'clock, the preaident, Mr. Wm. V.
Mc11:1 :nth Introduced Henry W Ronson, Hut., of
Norristown, who was received with great applause.
Ile said :
He confessed to more than usual pleagure in lialHilninig
that pot tion there, because it had elwaye been to him a
spatter of rejoicing, m being able to contribute. in hie
feeble way, to the advanoemeot of those great old twin
cip'es whinh we advocate. During the last three Presi
dential eampaigne. it bad been his lot to co.operate
with the Democracy of the mountains. and the val
leys, and the interior of the etate, and tluat was the
first time that he had ever enjoyed the pleasure of
standing in presence of the Democracy of h e native
city. Ir indium.] He had reason in be thankful thet
nix first venture nerd eras Lii behalf of the same vie 01-
Plea In the vintlioation of which he had oast his first
vote—that, while others may have changed, be. at
leagt,With the iramoonsta th ere assembled, Stood upon
those tome-honored prompts". He was sorry that they
had, in tf divided awe, to encounter the same old ene
my that they encountered in leVis-'6l-18, Mit It we do
encounter. them in a divided .state, the Douglas men
were within the organization of the Democratic party.
[Applause.]
tie did not prOpOeill to go into a general discusilon of
the issues involved between their ore. , nisition and
that of the Opposition. because his audience were a
reading people in Ph 'adorable. The public press *as
cheap, and eircurated everywhere, and it would be pre
suming too meets to suppose that the Democracy of
Philadelphia were not acquainted With the canoes of
the division of 'the party. They were contending
anima two organisations—either of them mound to
the hest interests of the couatri—t be one was the old
!tuitional Party which they met hod vanquished eight
'mango, nod which they could vanquish again in No-
Vember. Tpe other wee is new doctrine sprung upon
the people that Cot:weals ought to toterfere,' and that
the Federal Government .was boned to cyobib t the
hpeople from bevies control of the TerrPories, and from
aving such institrittans its they might want to have.
Mr Boman then reviewed the hietory of the Charles
ton and Baltimore DenVentione, condemned the cotton
of the flecieddre; end demonstrated that Stephen A.
Douglas was the reg , lar nominee of the National De-
Moo ratio Convention. [Applause.] He then discussed
the platform' of the various parties, and elaborated the
doctrine of poptilar sovereignty. He would not refer to
local politica. but would Myren upon them their duty
as national men. They tied to-day announced for the
first time atraight-out Douglas ticket. [ Applause I
He had raised it at the mast- head of his, paper and
would keep it there until it Ornate in triumph In'
November or at least until we are vindicated
by a nobleeople We are standing by the hied
marks of the D _ p emooraey. and will follow that flag. whe
ther it laws us to victory or to defeat. because it must
lead us to honor either way. lAPPlitilee.] Oar
oppo
nenta have placed in the field a Breekutridge eleotoral
ticket in every Northern State of this Confederacy ex
cept in Pennsylvania. Yeetorday, they nominated a
ticket in Connecticut. Yvnioh Was the _last Northern
State, except the old Keystone, and in every State they
have done so in convention, called outside of the De
moonier. They do not exotica to elect Mr. Brachia
ridge, but mil, hope to carry oil enough of the Demo
cratic vote in all these Northern Rates to prevent Mr.
Douglas from cam log any Notthern Stste,and thus give
them to Mr. Lincoln. If Linoolneames every North
ern State except Pennsylvania . he will have one hun
dred and forty-four voter, just eight votes lege than
enough to elect him.
Mr. B. then proceeded to denounce the action of the
Cresson Committee, and ridiculed the idea that they
should abide by its decision . It wasnot the 'first time
that men had turned traitors to principles entrusted to
them. General Keim said he did not eoneider that
either Douglas or Breohldridge was nominated. and
even if they were he would not vote for Douglas When
these men abandoned the purpose, for wiuoti they were
oboe-n, end refuse •to tai bound by thaesetion of the
Charleston and Baltimore onventinneeney were no
less morally rilty than were Benedict Arnold and
Judas Iscariot appletts.•l :and it le not 'acorn cent upon
am to follow an applaud the coarse of traitors
The committee one placed in the field a straleht-out
thoket, composed of men who are with us on this mime
tion—n.en who are Detnoerats, celebrated for their de
votion, and adherence to, the prineralesof the Nemo
-math, party- s hey go for Stephen a. DOUglae, ea the
embodiment of thoseprincipler. and look upon his past
life and his resent bold and manly course as the Dien
Tmanta(' of his fidelity to the cause of the Democrate
ISPlauseli and as giving Min, the title of champion of a
tree people. t hope I may have the pleasure of "(Islas
ion again before this campaign 'glover. I shall take oil'
my coat and go into this fight, now that 1 ace my duty
marked ont—whegi I see that I can vindicate our princi
ples by fighting for men that will not betray. a am
willing too into the fight, and lend my assistance
whenever lam called Upon. [Prolonged applause.]
The text speaker was that veteran Democrat. Den
John Davie, of Bunks county. He was received with
tremendous cheers, and for several minutes the
ap
plause was uproarious. He said he met his fellow-
Democrats under gratifying circumstances The late
nonnenting oonvenlion had initiaputably proved that
the Democracy of Philtdelphiewas true to its standard
beater, Maybes A. DOUKINI. [Applause 1 Ihe elf
was to the Commonweal, h like tunes to the boor. in
!Weems and vitalizing the whole being. When phile
delphia wee euceessful. Pennsylvania was inflnen. ed ;
and though he (the treelike].) was eal,ed an old fo.gy,ptill,
in Philadelphia, and at the present crisis, be felt a 1 the
vigor and the enthusiasm of youth. He had some rld
notion', early imbibed, which he should carry hi the
grave. In infa"oy he had heard the Revolution fonght
atn. at his father's hearth-stone and was then tape
that the enacts!. for which the Ceiba ra struggled prdA
that of Belt-government—of popular sovereignty. fa p
p'allant.l
Rla first polities' reeollection was of the mantes! be
tween Jelferoon and Adams: his first vote was for
James Madison. in bola these oontesta this shetrent
srincople was involved, momentous in its practical re
salts. Ryes discussed at the formation of the Consti
tution. and asserted its lawfulness in its teetotal:me to
the alien and sedition laws of the elder Adams. The-
old Federalists of 1500, and the later Oppoaltton, have
asserted that Congress ie tne reset power to all cont.n
*woes. hlr. Lincoln in hie epeeob 14 the Cooper will
breakhas taken identical ground. 'The dontnne will
break to fragments any patty, Semicolon or Abohtion.
Mr. Davis then minutely reviewed the action of the
Slate Central Committee. tie wait a camber of the
EXerptivo Opnanitee and had tint known is single PAHA
dolphin committee man favorable to Stephen A. Dow
glmr. A deep.liud whams, had been demise re d e f rau d
the Democracy out f the ballots. On the 24 of July a
meeting had been held at the hierchante ,
elo:el, when
the proyusitton was IhtrOdneed to bring forth new
enodidate. The friends of Mr. Brattiest, rettionsated
What right had that ertMini Dee to to Further th i n car
ry inc out the action of the Kate and N-itt mal Convert,
lions. Mad the committee been intended to nominate,
the Ranchos'Convention would have elven to each -e
-nadorial Matron equal representation. Yet there were
21 from Philadelphia 10 from Harnebers. 5 from Pitts
burg, at 11 ht. Vi elan, tanscaml.ne hot power-appoint
ed in three other Matelots; additional member.. Fatah
heeetonal thstrMt Wan entitled to two vote+ and no
more. But Mr. wish ruled rash out of Meer. Upon
a vote deetaring Donates mitt Jehnsorf the nominees,
the comseittaser eta o% hatte'lla t tg r as . 'resolution
Itlitadertitentkrteat 't er Vote eat fim cast for
Donde.; gtuncould not be elected, for B radii rirldze ;
or. If neither, foribe map of their choice: A change
ankinic4e at 1./.feesoe. although the contrary was
lebevae. here tn• rule midst that the people
fg,liliN g E n t: ri Pt4NiAlg tlgalnuo.°4l;!',?4,
the electors. Mr. Weise, end all Ads inistratton Jan i
sags,'rpted against thls, save Mr. Anderson, Vlr.Weleh
relay d to interrogate the elillotata.abd the thirst stand,
Jput as tt Edictal wrier to the Cresson ei Lao men
saPectie. that either Douglas or lithebinnage will be
oil otr dby the bleotoral thdlece. election r o to
the Senate, either Breoltinndge or Lane cap be elected
President. What: then, wee the duty of ,Democrats,
under existing eircumstan es t They bed been the
dominant power in the Republic' from its migic
Should they stand , by the, reltsbny. Uptnination
toe pmts. or resign tts tame-hoWeNd priamples
that a factionial and a Pertessioniit mar 14 elaoted to
the Chief Magratracy I No one would deny that the
whole cause of the difficulties in the Demotratin party
woe caused by the coarse of the A dministratton In re
gard 10 the Leo - implon question. In the hat Conertiaa
before thin we had fifteen Pemocratio member!, and in
the present Congress we only elected ten out of the fif
teen in Pennsylvania. The people. in Me. decided
against the attem•t to fame en t odious Constitution 011
IVp RA le ° P i ! 1 $ 14 4r;l0:51110 h Z1! t a4I :VV,Z " Tbt: - .
r " Vre eVi a ri o d u tl. E l7?y r tu t igt:tiTuTa ft n Ztlb l e Te l & in
wit;
hit
wherneve you to expect butdefeat have not
been able to make any ealculation. thet with a ticket
formesh,hy the Pennsylvania State Committee—because
they 1111111binsited Mr. Breckfneidg•—we can come within
fifty thousand votes of carrying' the .teetotal ticket of
Penton Irani's. By adhering strictly to the•elean floo
sies ticket you will pet tens of thousands of men who
would never touch a ticket. if. in the moat remote con
tinaoncy, Mr. Breckiandre in benefited by it, Ay-
Mensal
C bare said to Yoe that Philadelphia Is like lungs to
the Lientectatt.i party pi this 'Coinrooewealth. Any
totiVement Imo its
se all over the state.
f Applaune 1 Let (tie advise ,out. then, to at nap, w i no
1 1 &feat 1110, in;, elate the at eameeof Icor Cost men 4-
relra the antilie, come opt ecidedly is favor of the Dou
glas doctoral ticket, an your action will be produc
tive tit the belt results. Any ratline on your part to
make an expression of this kind will operate against us
to every county of the State.
General Davis oonelnded by flaying that he believed.
Breckinridge was put forward by the Seceosionials fcr
the express purpose or eluding Ellison, and thus give
jh Diskulonistetin shrine for dlesol yint the Union.
Wheelie had concluded, resolutions sere uninitnoue-
Ivpassed thaeking him and Mr. for their able
addresses. .
Before General Davisleft the room. Henry A Midas,
Pee.. tame forward and stated that ho and DhaprireA
nitre of resolator tl y afpetorlaig the lam's out
gett d p i n i e I N c et ir s r le a t U f r i t i e wmeeiteir received
d o w s t e r r o y t
tie
lillie°ltltohiirtill.soi;rtc; the resolutions /stirred to:
Resolved, 'P hut the Central. Democratic, Association
of the city of Philadelphia fully and etuphatiolllr en
ti •
dorse th• Ration of Unwire/TY tabi Com•ration. wh eh
wet nt Harriabure cie the 26th or July last. hy the eu.
*bray of which cornea:loll rte straight'. mit Douglas
etentornt• t oket has heart presented to the Venimretto
voters of venns)lvanis.
Resoferili That )ye wilt stand by end support the Ha
-I°lirscArral brill9 l Vaus. anti L.eesna,
herugeo rfit uneutt onacort, of the regula r n „ mi ..
oof th Nation -Temooraey, ttephen A. Missile
and
be el V. Johann, as the eini electoral r, , ,k e r
now to Deleted for hi the tree DePliV(110) of the Kej -
enne , Atate.
Brsehto,l, That we will tut agree to or unite with any
arrangement, polies or eompromise ty which th e t
Itinerant' party is to fused with Bersilera, t ;casslo.l-
lets, Dantninnises,
Sesniutinna *ere adopted, with great en hoars.
without a oinenting Vol^e, RUti at the mention At the
names of Hong as or Johnson there W 44 a ;017801 0(
% m ane.u ating then ailloar . msl, n permit the inure
loan pleating to train a 14 , i14144 1 1:4411P414W Club.
Before tie adjournment, the chairman, Mr.
Wm V. McGrath, announced that he hail receit ed
tele fl raplilo despatch from New Yolk, static,:
t hat cloche! y. ,fchusop, thopp
eooratic condi - -
Ate or:glee Preoldent,:will be ie Philadelphia
to morrdw (Saturday) evening, and will address
his fellow.oi if yens.
DAVOcitaTIC inrise and e.ll-
tisesstlo nteettng of the Bentocratio citizens of
e Ninth ward was held on Wednesday erosible,
at the Beading-rem of the ditooiation, N ,W.
neuter of Fifteenth and Market streets. Judge
Lewis presided. The meeting was ably and elo
quently addressed by Judge Lewis ' Cul It R.
Young, John K Gamble, Wm. M Smith, Henry
7tl. Deohert, and John Brodhead, who przoti trailed
potion la all po [ noo T ato to ;Gera the eleotion
Henry 11. roster, John Broadhead, Charles L
Wolff, and the wbolelDemocratio ticket, at the Oc
tober election. A splendid likeness of Henry D.
Foster, en.losed in a handsome gilt frame, the gift
of Charles L Wolff, Ern , was presented to the As
sociation by Richard Ludlow, RKI , who made a
few remarks in reference to the donor, as a gradu•
atp of the (leers) Illgh School, and as en honest,
upright Masan, end one who would reflect credit
on the oltisens of the Sixth Representative district
if be ehould be elected The present was received
on behalf of the Assoolation by Frederiek A. Van
Cleve, its president, who tendered the heartfelt
thanks of the Association to Mr Wolff for the very
handsome gift. The following resolutions were ot•
fermi by Riohard Ludlow, Esq., and unanimously
adopted:
Insreds The PettOOfftey of the Ninth ward have
aptvintleeto night upon the eve o important Orono
In the history of our errantry i the perpetuity of our
glorious union. Yawn he Fathers of our t'ountry be
gileathe d till atowed tehrontano• to their •eone is
Menaced by that fell spirit of disunion. which until the
present time has been erusned out vy the corseralve
Sea Dintrat of the nountre i the Democrats), from its no.
lit on as the I-nding oppdoent of dteaptoa, can now an
coal with confidence ,o Indere ant men of nil parties
unite with them neon ties broad and comoraheneive
beeit of the Cons Hutton end • the Lame ; therefore,
ls
Nesetted, TIMM Henry D Foster. of Westmoreland,
the Democracy have a rtubernat-r at card:date of high
ammeter for integrity and 'Intl:Ills/nee. la-ge ex
perience in State elfstre• perleetly amitier with the
WOaltirit of all the dePeromituts
.ofour Gove.nment,
and en earnest and sincere (denier that prof itotive sys
tem whi c h therormr °lessee o Pennsylvania haver
lons heeded estrum. hunt electing will be the dee; -
kne lt , s 4 Bl e a r epubliosniam. And will Drove a ref eh ei
guarantee Ito einst diatio,.oraide and corrupt leandaymi,
and elrent• ally prevent any infringement of the rights
and interos.ii of the Peop's
mfiesulned, That in the election of John Bre , lo , il the
mercantile interests of the weesnd Congressional din
triet wilt at least have found et fitting representative.
aneeessful end progreagive Administration of the
tram of the Camden and Atlantic. flat:road COMM' .
ave marked him as an able and energetic reisresenta-
Talgi. tt rtnft h litChan ca l 1 1 6 ,. " VITITT, P o l n c r e c h .. m ru. 1
idate
fo , Reprearrantive we hare an early and diatinguished
graduate ot the Philadelphia High "chant, His poem•
moue nomination wen a fitting noMplimrtit to hie active
And unceasing Worts in behalf of our party. Having
served es a truste• of the gas works fora period of
nearly three ypare, hie independent and nobleminhed
couras in that trust. (the most important in our city,)) is
a acre RahlatitP. th at the 0 1 1IZenil of the Sixth Henri,
eentative district will have a eaphhje, boil, and manly
represent•tive.
lieSolvert, That we tender our since e thanks "or the
bicket presented be the Count.. convention. It is the
est that hap been nominated far many goers. There
is not a candidate on it that ii not taWnt nf strengt li n
Within himself . end we sledge out cordial and active
implant to the whole tioket.
iliglißliMN POMOLOGTOAT. ASSOCIATION.—
, This society, is #ll ill In passion at the Assembly
~ B uildings. The discussion* ale quite tsble, end are
carried on in a spirited manned., They are highly
interesting to those engaged in the cultivation of
fruit. The exhibition 13 also open, and is well at•
tended daily.
libretroeedings of City Councils.
The, meetings of these bodies were resumed yes-
WU/ afternoon, with a fall attendanee and pldek
despatch of bnsineis
BkLEOT. BRANCH
Mt. Gaiter Nees In the ebalr. all the members pre pant,
Whea. to v.adition to very narrietous pnvata ratitOnit
the following of a
members: eater*, were presented bi the
.
For the removal of huckster wagons in Routh Eleventh
street; for wa er-pipo in Bunton find other streets;
Havant for the purchase of Penrose Ferry ,bridge for
public use ; for the extension of gas an water mains in
various quarters; for onmpennation for damage by
overflow of water en August 13. in various quarters of
the mtv't-for cavils/ clisohi avenue, and numerous other
I renter for the remlealo preehset house mi the Fifth'
ward, and for :the laying of water-pi oe.
Mr. eniedlity presiltited a eistarannleatlen protecting
against the election or Samuel Ford as assetant east..
nearof the Fire De sertment thethlrd aistrict ; a so,
one for the garment of mad datnaKes
The gains gentleman offered In ordinance Is prohibit
geese fromaestarmg on the Water of andeenarg•
A communication from the Contr.:Chimeras read, de
siring the purchase of a lot In 'Flogs street for a publics
school in the Fifteenth seam.
Ono from 'Joseph Smith, contesting the seat of
Samuel C. Ford as assistant engineer of the Fire De
partinsat. •
A climmunlcation from the owners of proverty et
Coates street and i.andins avenue wee reed, is Wltlh
the z.rioe of illet.ooo is asked for it if purchased or
cash, and ten nor cent extra if for ground rent. he
comertuumation, states that.ground salmon had been
sold, some time ago, at rae“ - that would br ing ng Ulla to
100.000. _
.......
Mr , . Neal thought that Councils should state whether
they were willing to give this elm or not, but after
wards assented to a reference of the matter to the corn-
The deetoron of the court, coo firming the legitimsei
of toe commission for the *mums. of publiyq buildings,
was road by the clerk. end ordered to beted
A letter was Teed from the chief eDlt eller, an
nouncing his suspension of the Went Philadelphis
Company tor feritl'Oß into the inpatients' of the
West Philadelphia Hoes Company. The chief says
that a rot was the result, in which the locked am
ratifies Were &erred for Sh , ltt two equates, the re•
spectirs members figbting nll the way. H. also states
that, instead of rebuking the rioters. the officers of the
offending oompeng entered hail for them.
Infonnatimn ,that the West Philadelphia Railroad
Company refuses to pay the fl3O per car license fee, and
that the company claim, to be exempt from such pay
ment, was received from Mr theme.
Mr. Drayton reprehended the refusal of the romyany ,
and offered a resolution to atop the running of the care
tint.l the dues are paid.
Mr. Molntyre deprecated such hasty legislation. and
thought the company had eomer_reawin for their refusal,
which the• considered valid. He moved the reference
of the matter to the oommittee.
The President asked leave to state thst en arrange
ment, both es to the toll across the bridge and , he
license for funning' care, was bettor made by the City
Solicitor. and that the courts were to be called upon to
render a decision.
Wetherill didn't think It necessary to pass an or
dinance to compel the 000011A11101101* to do his dotg.
The Chamber has only to pus a resolution that that
officer shall stop the oars, and the thing is done.
Tke reference to tne Highway Department was agreed
T he chief engineer of the Fire Department annottno
ed the election of kie looommor and assurtants, as C
reeds publiahed. eferred to committee.
A note from D. M. Lyle, chief engineer elect. offering
John Agnew and Wm. S. Mann as hie securities. was
referred to the Committee on Pi o sane.
-Three petitions for the ereotion of a reservoir In
Mwenta.fourth ward were thee eresented t also, petition
for a loan to extend the gas works; also, in , the chance
of a preolnot hones in that ward. now held at the Had
thosum school house. to the Roll's Hew hotel.
An ordinance to widen Delaware avenue was re
ferred.
An ordinance to repeal the ordinsinese /miffing the
metalllo letter boxes to be attached to the lams , posts
war offend by Mr Pox; end to cause the removal of
the boxes forthwith.
Mr. Fox assurned es his re lta01) for the movement
that the Government his Increased the rate of postage
on mail letters 'topped Into these taxes. which was
en infliction not intended by therect. He had nothing
to urge, however, as regards the suppression of compe
tition,
Mr. Wetherill dissented. segue immoral of the boxes
wouldn't wittiest* the poebtae charges. Tee bone, were
a convenience that aloes the abolition of private . due•
patches. was indiepensable
Mr. Fox said that became Councild have allowed
thete roses to he put np. the Covent ment had declared
the streets to be poet Note, end now four cents ie
charged for letters that rely paid three before.
Mr. Benton laid that the exec. sea of mail duty were
molt that the government wee obliged to economise in
every point, end could no longer &ford to carry lettere
to the post office for nothing. We now have certainty.
before we only had uncertainty. He thought it was a
Petty warfare against the government to make it
take down the boxes ant erect them elsewhere. be
fore the due results of the experiment bed been tailly
tested.
Itii:btsltou thought that the measure would be like
"biting olf one'e nose to spite one'e face," ,f reople
don't went to pay the penny for mailing they ran carry
the letter to the poet °Moe in person, or send it bra
mese , tiger. To a hot day a cent isn't monk re pay for
carrying a letter ten or twelve squares, andtithe box
es were removers the people Who mow urge It would be
among the first to complain.
Mr. Fox. Th. flovernmentlima Mimed an injunction
against people I Blood's Dispatch) for carrying my let
ters and of course I cannot carry them when my depu
ty cannot.
Mr. Fox sfter this withdrew his bill.
An ordinance srpointing an inepeeror of mechanical
work done for the oily,, at a glary of 411.310, was offered
by Mr Davie.
Mr. Davis explained that a tarsi number of anisette
are being constructed under the direction of the district
surveyor,. All these re putsbeing pin home without
soperviinon, and in alt probability limo& need exten
sive and expensive repairs. Tinley th ey ey are valor under
strict. =vermilion. It is not enough t at the work should
be done,
a but that it should b. done well.
Mr. Nel thought that tan only man At to superintend
the construetion of all motheaten! wyk mast Ns a
" lack of all trader'—it person almost Impoesahle to he
armored. unless he carried with him the accompanying
obarneeprierid. - ' good for riothieg Arany trade." lie
hoped the resolstion would be wilbanawn
Mr. Molntyre preferred to Pie the resolution sent to
the Committee on Burr.... which was sasentid to by
Mr. Davis and arreed to by the Chsanber.
Annotation to inetnact the ommittee of Purvey' to
devise some means to prevent the rotors destruction of
criven.. Or improving the tuad•rgrounti mews-are in
ha vicinity of. Seventh snit Finish Meats, you Te
emed 'n committee.
/l resolution to Appoint a loint ommtuttase to ascer
tain the Ulnas at SILO to the city of a i seeded squares,
for the purposes of public rake. to. vele emit..
A *solution t
ail &sense of • t h e
of. in Holten
wood street. roining the large sctew factory of
lilt rm., Hoopes & mrtmenA, to those gentlemen. for
th• eriltrgement of their verb. was referred to com
mittee.
vrtde ordinance had been sowed before, but was Ire
toed b• tart tailor neon technical grenade 11
Mr Bmitord imposed. on the Aroma trier' the Ifirb
way Danurtrnent had nn other place to donned their
teat, Wilma elherertee eter often toot reed deer roved.
Mr nolntr.re captained thy. the matter hal already
beta before Ms coositutesielAted that teell; was in
it
dieinua, asoily mowed& east ofthe lot an d weight
laid. to the , antegisioloof Wow, nufartn
sale intereet - in . tit etre. ennwerla o the bill
led to MI New, and the present bill is i MUM DM
= •
Mr.ltradford'adnaitted that he stood enrytroted. .nt
an ordinance was palmed as See law provide., en sail tho
1 t atpublio auction„whsa the Arm above vethried to
will bid tor it tie tares Pinot orate* le before ure.d
UP firr i Ctaljr offe
r od &resolution to prevent the Tenth
:Weed Railroad mskimeouiteetion fur ail/owe to ran
Mr C U r i arr said he&Was understood
that the oonneettonslasi. Wets hi.
Mr. Neal understoott= r tite mulle&A oonlyttlies bad
an understanding with rep& to thernatter land that the
City Bohoiror say, they bare a nilit tO lbate tns con
nection. The matler treareAstred to the edritablttec -
Mr. Bradford offered • resolution that pit leaflike-Pr
unpaid ,by [Tensor! shall he endorsed or. tee Qoa.
troller, thenceforth they 'halt draw interest.
My. Pfeil thoarthit that vim Tare popper. and no.
thing more than Atli to poor men.
Mr. Benton said thet warrants sold tow at fire per
cent &minima. -
Mr. Fox eiteted.bearessi poor irea's warrants never
rested in the ir bands. and the people Into whose band •
they fell were not The mite to be emberramired by the
no ciiernenia Ire was net in favor of increasing the
Sot or ths este. for it was bat riming a ben aiter at
My. Braliord cited inmate*. in whims wealthy men
bad sonar tamed a lot of warntnte in We way. and
have come into Connoile demanding interest for them.
Ler it and lorstood or
wafThrlrt drew interest when
UllpAltl.the yaw man in no longer reqiited to
endure the /here. Ilan warrant iii worth It. face an?
time.
htr. Ford thought. that the Qesmmittee on Finanee
should take op the matter. cad imam proper bill fe
culeting the matter. and the epecilbe time when inte
rs at shNlld oseee• 'Yhte. he thought. rim proper way to
proceed.
Mr. II ay said he Celtashatcod as • s dOuneilman to
Meet hieai
eml tents. Li day passed in which te ems
not tweet by Teen. wee ha d'dear I v earned the money. to
know teens. if ever. there would be either pay toast. er
a chased for payment. each people shonitt be Protect
sad the payment of Interest was hide enouth to
compensate for the long debty.
Mr. Dame offered an ameeminteat that tit totem/At on
warrants tomtit:wawa aft r thirty Oa 's' notice has been
given In. three chkily papers that the treasury le Din
pared to honor its oblaittams.
Wetherilo thought that this provision shoed he
incorporated la the warrants, as persons holding them
might not be aware of the time when the city would pap
them.
The ordinance and amendmeat were referred to a
nominates.
.
Mr. Drayton opted a resolaßon, that Martians and
sr ictinet4ons uonce rem the new nttetto tui Idt rota shall
neer mteed Os the
that
effectty Property.
Mr. Bradford said that the of the sew's% ion
Ira, to prepldee Lb, SCUM/ 01 t'e commhenon, and to
frustrate, the ereotion of pie, Wadding' in Yenn Square.
He dui notatree With hst. Drayton, who toys h.s
Preamble that •, the with
are se lo ne, Imperfect. and
vague, andiwith No shoat a time for eemeetttion to be
entered. as to Parsee the elte to me risk of greet po
&Mom". Mr. Bradford said that the endent result of
tins would he to throw unnteessary embarrassment in
the way of the nomen.seovera
Al`. Drayton (nought that if this action wasn't had.
Coisactle might batter turbid the erection of the
but dupe.
Div. Fox made a 'usenet eptechin favor of the reao
- Bet Connell., he thsusht. could Go nothing es
to the spectfontlons. The Lesis , stsse had neeid d
that they were not fi t Meet ue a build tat. They were
under the care of gnvrdugq. and COled only pay tor the
wore.
Mr. MolAtzra objected to the appointment of a °OM
l'arellM.gritn‘r,`,74:;°.'lo=`,°,o"grt."4`,TVl'Pai
in lila hand : but to fro. if be dot go, as a Haht. He
would like an investigation, DO 110101 coot be bed by
nab ant)) the .15th t , ctank warm the etreotficattoneart
to be ' Vi t l.blitittaa,asst ithieed before Commie.
M. zallon mad nn idea of derogating from the inte
grity o the oornmlttert. Bat they hare already accept
ed p:ani aud spent foatirms, and the publie has free ao
rase to them. tie believed them to be very imperfect
nnd.vory vague. and that the coy ia likely to coffer in
consequence. loaf. -- dales cont Mot win be award
ed and Co, cruled upon to confirm It. Cm:moils
panoir Kiva a do eed no.", and without a reason and
if de av green the matter wit be too late.
Mr. Neel thr tight that as Councils al* only examine
the speoifientinne &Halal, on the dot when vreseeted
to coune, there voutd be no aqua 10 yassine th e to
eohmenni appointing h eoinrnitt , w9. The specifications.
are pehilshed to pamyh'et form, and every-
WO can exarnine the pt
The rev, Wien woe narsed to.
An ordinance to lay gar pipe in Fairmont Park was
it lelred.
NO oponintinc a city gardener, to vr,rohase
trees, to ti Id office for three teary, the e Peolnt
ment to be vested In the Mayor, r.t. a wavy of 4603 per
annum.
the Council then ad corned.
COMMON COUNCIL
The following communications and petitions were re
ceived, and ismopriately referred :
Otie from the Highway Peeartment. complain ins that
the direotoi• of the We.t Philadelphia plimenver Ret—
read Company t aye refused to pay toe linen.. of thirty
do tan per ear, is provided by lave Also. that they
have not paid the toll for the nee °Dile bridre across
the Beholitill at Market sorest. The Commissioner
ashy Coupaii whether he ahall forbid the runway
of lie ears until the above o•nditioas are complied
with.
Mr. Cation esplvined that the matter was new pend
ing tinier° the einnt. and we ild be decided en Kliiirdny
neat. and tea communion , ion wag referred to the Com
mittee on Law.
1 . ,
A petition was received from Bobtail r ireetor. in the
Twenty fourth ward. alkine Comities to remove the
place of ti-Iding elections at Haddonfield toe more con
venient location
•r tletteli °flared a resolution authorizing that the
eleotian in the third division or the " 'tante-fourth
well its hereafter held at the Halve-head Hotel. at
81m7-fifth and Vine streeta Agreed to.
his miasmal n nesse sui‘m tied a r entttion eating for
an ere rant to auperin'end the ~ eking vf the piers of
the Maar , arr wore for the oew bridge es er the tchnl 1-
10 at Chestnut street. Referred.
1 he en inniesione re of the sulking tend 'gee sutra the
fo lowinc report i
i ha met annual revolt of 'he Cite Controller elates
that 1413485 SO of the funded debt of the tit. • ill ma
lute dit - ing the year lefil. of which amount HIS Tie will
he payable on the brat of J lir, and it is t o he ma i: a nt ,i
that the larvae vett of the balance will become Cue on
the fitat of in:nu,. next
The nropmty held try the " eating fund or 'en mil
lions." of it,elf envie for Me pu;p - se. to with
the film of altO,(0) to be same/lead on•of the in•oine
of the .- ity ultra the next year,,w ill be amplinable to
tha redimption of this debt, withoht the creation of a
now loan Of such property out a small pert can be dl..
Posed of at Ito par value, and the Parra' of the commis
sioners is reaktr•ted to sale. a t that rate
Believing t e ou c hegts of e oily will be pro•
meted by the so l esrportion ofthe investments of
the ten-mill o io n a sambas fi das may , with the annual
council such
sate 6 1.14: Ile . loan ..
t hitt e ur i i , ol tu t i a 4iii ii l e. e i r t e i n
an: seated that the authority of '415 commissioners ta;
adequate!. en arced.
If his proposal doe' not meet your approbrion. no
alternative will remain bat a new Into to meet that
whtoh is to mature in ISM, and that timely and edvan•
rageol/11 rafiallltrs may be had. tone Immediate , " d olt
Le respeettuttl resuested Mined by Alexander Henry.
'Morse W. Hutt,. and John Welsh. Commieslottera of
the Pinking Fund,_
Heferred to the Finance Committee.
A commumeation was receiitril from the Chief Tengi•
neer of the Fire Department. Mr. rearon. susrending
the West Poiladelphie SWAM , ngine Company for die
oreerly conduor while Proceeding to a tire. Refereed to
Committee on fire and Treats. .1'
a petition aching (or the grading and ravine of Girard
aVenue west of the echnylktll. Maven.' asking Abet
Petreee ferry brier:eta made free. the usual number
or communications asking tor mut lambs. Water... Ape,
&0., were received endrelerred.•
A resolution authorizing the transfer or ss,Cige_ferthe
purchase of lia ter crossing sad tramway grebes to,
grade eprpoe and other streets, wee presented by Air. ,
rotter, from the Committee on Hlehanye, and was
awed to.
The saint eommlthte..rilatorted the damn. dohs I*
the recent rains to bridges. cal mute. Rm. ANA mittratit,
ted -a—ree.turdoo apprepriattat • *lO ear faaiq i tz.
Made • Sr (00 -1 - Ce - br ) agell ' Stew for vat Mae.
822.000 for etemetne, ter atieste. and - market
itteluziganall iha 11 , 001 of Het 000. , - . , - .t e
Mr. Millet in raver of roiMitte aseeepriatiens to
repair damages. but not to cleanse the streets. Under ,
the present system it was argued that it wtuld require'
Tin larger rum than that tot med.! expended, rat in the
sh - ortmeliW4th ' ise Watitisire era wilted to apemen
m r zr , Mr o =llllAli at 1110 Aft Mei*
oa ed are any tester elassaed
Pout meal h IMP 1/0 MitibiKed UM resent heave'
rains, and not tO to wordlyiarbt the new
we. Potter
Wiv s :* Nets were mn-b
cleaner thae - tthVirr i or Mime and aware
adeoetded l.henaasiigeof the above ordinal**.
Mr. Caron wad elalement moo br htr. Fetter
wen most larlhordi Pal ter an wilateC hlerynlon
that the street. Woe r wen 01410111 - thee wry had barn
sines the ..ear ninem had booyelsolgjaplad. dnoh erne
by no manner or means the thet. - We was disnoteta
spin:Wet - thnt the sentlexise hut igat billartiethlt Olt! do -
ling all the motion. In the doWnAwne wards the
very reverse had been the cane. - when the streel -
olesnere roads their arostnwhat before the heave Mire
wasitynatter o" surprise that thee should at best coma
there. self their *cute avers *crazily run atter be the
children, in the Fifth ward, Be hakheard that portion,
of Need street. In the lower sorter- throaty, bad been
alsansed b •,tha residegte trhet_loesai r tf stneg . r . = - .
saget= LW/IMM •tiertwen so fit -
on 48
thy as they ware
,befere ws recent rains eleansed
The ordinance was agreed to. -
Mr. Carrell reported • reent•tio• eating to be di,
charged fmrn the fattier et:Maiden/lOn elf a commun.-
cation from Eliza &nue. of Baltimore, relative la
dam item Likely tri &wrinkle cerviie poverty br 'ha eon -
etretmeame of bri to dal ores Abe ,Eicknylkill Canto:li
ialt. Amami .
Mr. Miller, olwed a resolution eireonns the Chief
Cfansoutsionor of the Highway Department to adver
tise for pimpoisbe fore bsowag.Leessawas —the woek to
commencsion tie ofJanarle Altar lir6l4lnr
m
and amonites@ .'he roe:damn was airesd ts
by a vote of Xi ayes b nays.
The Chamber then adjourned. • •
_ .
Cilla " h? ExTf4 ol WlNAirrowN
Vicsomorrs.—fn spite - or alt ferde to the con
trary. the great Egglish crieketers, residing in
New York and Philaelphis, heist jist . 'rea ," dy. a
defeat at the hands of our young AlleTlMill, which
will never be forgotten in the annals of cricket.
To the Germantown club belongs the honor of
beating at " even odds." the strongest tom of
professional players in the country. If the great
improvement la thisgame coattnads to maks the
same progress which has been witnessed within the
past two years; it will not be long before twenty
two Englishmen will be moldered as the proper
number to compete with half as many Americans
We doubt if rush fielding es the Germantown dis
played yesterday'lus ever been equalled, while
the bowling astonished area Sadler Maser.
liiRYLVTOWN
Tilt? 17CSINCS. I
Johnson. o. Mate. V.
Wright . • - : -
Cadwvader. hit war. h, ll
Wright
Dave, b. Brett .
ewhall. o. V.
P agere/o CCBrell 111
atolemab. Brett . et
Yemen. el Barley. V.
I ,
S. W at er.. b. Ir. b. Brett 0,
Lire,. Ton out ... 11
NICOND rtlll3C 3.
Johnson. b. Brett ... 0
Cadwallader. c. Waller.
b. Brett ... B _ 5
Dana c.Bl‘.lrratt..b.ad
ler
Newhall, .... 1
Barclay. e. aad b erect.. 2
Montan, b. Byett_...„.. _.
Vernon. .3../101 b. aadier_is
IL %Valet. not oat—.
xerAin 3 :
.• - royest., not oat. ......
Byes Let Byes 1,
W ides !O.—.
Totat--:-.
Prove3t. b Brett..._.
Shea
s?
Waller. M b Proissm . .10
Bomar. C. Large, b. fro
-6
vest
o. Newhall, b.
Lane. .. . 0
Brett. 0. 7. Wiater .b.
LECO.ND INNINC4
Warr, a. Noonan, b
Pr! ..m nio rg r. o a. J. Wu . W .- 1....0.
Yroreat..
Barlo ve w. e. Wrotir. b.
Pron
Brett. a. Johnson. b. Pro
: MI
• 7:1
814 . .nr, 0
FL Wright. not 0at.._. ..
Jarvis. c. nd walLader. h.
Large...
Shariatt. large 4
e. Newhall, i;
Large—
Fact.: 0. J. Winter. ''''
Lane. . .
Byte 8. C - eg . B.es 7.
White 6, No pain S --LS'
lwlie. e. 3a:72214 . '15:
1
Meier. e. - Proyezt,
hart 7
R. w nett, C. Dane, L.
Prq9Set. .. .
tarns. lwbeir,
D.
glerrett. c net 0
12 , .115 4 . b. Kephart.,
q. Veneta, ICrro
-0
.
Lee ificfee — e. Les
SUDDEN DSATB.-4 Mrs lever, residing
in Manayunk, wu found dead in bed yesterday
morning at her Ammo. Comte' Fenner was sum
moned and held an irquest The jury attribuiel
the sudden demise to apoplexy.
ONE DAY LATER FROM EUROPE.
ARRIVAL OF THE ASIA
ENGLISH VOLIIITIZI ■•fIIENT.
GARIBALDI MASTER OF CALABRIA
(1 1 ,
TURKISH RETSIStITION.
FRENCH ARMY
.IN SYRIA
GREAT BRITAIN
The artionroMent of Parliament ised tend to a drat
calm in policies to Niglard
Fi s i M a Y f on .
„ %ic li g t tel i =e t ‘t a n t lif i l . r
Fel was on the point of martin: for fes.and, after a
snooewful runty of as, Pare, isk.o, for the Perposel
of a North Atlantis telegraph. •
- Tha Met Street railway is ftglatri,mpos the Ameri
can principle. was insautnratiM at Birkenload on the
with of ,uoutt, sad at solOritlooptillelle vas hithq.
favorable. Mr.Goorge Brain. mai ...motet of toe
wtorpriso. asrw-a Krasd haaanot.at Birkenhead. in
honor of the event, aed - dtlivinint►elharsoteilitie
ahead 'peach. Mr. Tra.e . e of -Melo introduce
wets= eh Logdoo tantlina Dasaelowitre. and •ac -
whens,were meetinc with ever! stiowara
The Lcadon Tym , .- a a lo,d*r tot do abject of i 7 r.
Linctasy'a minion to mamma. re Mks* to ehi lying
matters. nuses an *titration to Ow appointment. led
Lase. igoaptirm winerdt• Ms= of or t*ltrr.c the
business of the country ant of 'the el or the re go -
sibte imp titer at. toretca coon., eel Sea= It to (kg
guard a novas Nebo ererebseed, br nerving the man.
MT for =Amt a7aet amnimilleak twain* for trumea.
Mmme t
a
ts;,a once celebrated setter. to Loam. ta
The raapelot wad Utaaralw hiled4h4ted anmay. arid
runlet stay there unit lite Labs—
A raiser had been earmat that lasaaa' Panel, wh,
trawl tr , eelitstaitt taw - itaiferotin the eleneama n(
kui fine root to the ttantilter ed 'to nee.. ydbeented • a
riounrspltt Itgler from the Kies o flanks
Victor taaamd .deetated Yes loirsaireoc ir =
nta
any loamy to mut the mensal of pablie hag to
that as mass WM ts or to map; away by •,.
A Paris te P s r ars asserts that tam raster wet
*Mont Tda bon sad that Panai weal mom, to
et` InPhilOPer tho e whew in ado Maw at the Car.
of
Ceastinatimoyl stales Qat "IMO rya kJ ber
motif zed. spo that a antenatal a~leas shoat to No
establithett state to the imam and ftedifis hurt er.
las Parts styes a name( Ilia Imp more net k•
MOM, tors to he tleapatclol to /Mee II mean -
teen*n.
. .
ennocties to Ott Coaled' Gieersl of Hid las Rhin at,.l
'ton onset too t wain :mare hod hada undo lili•Cnid
it by Marsha's &lan:Jut and
The Pins Bourse wt. firm, •nd titles nets nth,/
higher, clohing oo th. 31,t at (am' -
SPAIN.
Cb4i6rivtasrreaktiss Jai siriont *Verse ill Ara.a.
At Mame. ox hundred venoms ears anaoLad ny ona
died.ed.A Aladnd dmateS ru. ItAt tla Imporor et tee
Fret 011 his retirn frost 1, torta will At %rye
-1,7,f0t. "pee he le ketn to lime NiltAtTtett enth the
Q imam or Saito.-
• -
NAPLEA
Tall INitratICTUIN LI SPICILY.
NOthitilf of timbre hid °enured in Cilabrii.in4 the
repotted flight of th• Xing from flapies had not f•ein
confirmed.
oeso topetted I eat tsa Connt of Pro woe, attrle
the Klee of Nat .. lid volition w honor to •h. Wove.
rreornirl6C do ag hem to nrotd a useless editOoto of Hood.
and to foltro 0100 example rf tb. Derisres of
tote emus. the r ioribiledeo led Doe of . Ulu,
holdie otteere.vel kilted in to iingsremonst bakes
Pseud. liaritoldi ordered sploondut obedoeses in los
honor..
The proposal to make the laity et Medea neutral arts
dee se without the =attest elms. of -sneers.
It was reported that several n( the Neapolitan
rvnic
tars had declared they armed tot kght scums the,
countrymen. andfin leefral Stetn4 leok place Toed
give it tin oreostUml•
A Naples despetah et ii6o.lltlt Andre says: " TTS n
guild? Droved. to the city."
The FCinn held s review or mew regiments arhrei
have been mat to Citsteittnutre.' The eximfrt,d mth
'miry demons , rauort to (sive of tannes.euon to Piedra,a t
has been adjourned. GaribsYi has left Calabria. bat it
in not known to west dareetssa hkgthe bla on re
events are espected to take shortie. Benet
Bremer has obtained the sat ■ awl watch he de
manded.
A report 'way current thit Cabaret Briztoti }.e.)
been allot, at Alonte'eone, by 724 eolAtera of a L e amn
ream eat.
Aatatement aria aftoat that Gartheldt catered limit.
leone on the nit Atrane. aaai that ha hs,) *nate ed J n
tranaportina Ete van* nrmj tathe aatetaad.
A frill lA.
The Atixtriim Gezerre on: " Aemordine to taste”,
Fe ace received direct from Warsaw. the rrmoor or ee
approaching intemeer between; OW NMeerOrS or Aug
ma end Rosemead the Mae* %moat of Pznasta gam+
more cnosietestei end, aresarationa for that *Yen are.
It Is said, tieist me4o- .
BWIT7ERLAND.,
- -
It in at ♦ted tlint:ttro - Prle ral Cowneitbritint been
hotted by tba Vonnoll Onverannwur Wand a no nattAtlOO
10 1 honor to Forst %Iwo Fro pernr. tephad that Nita sae
• 110C4811112 (of 11411 MIMI still.
Kovoth t.. 1 arririr.lra CA the LNts of
ITo sna rer rlre.l with 4 re. k a ntrxotafrn. H,y -
tended rnorrawnln care anknoww.
Inn tat TWtASOlts—un !TART
CID ItnirPTlONg—itYß IA crntirr.
cratedO? of res.! Pasta, .atrniy letatautasts. can
of Kin fatten put li i the late nataatutrt.
been hong. and nue hundred and Ise soldieries/vit. lie
bed conipePed titre e thoneand innshitsnte of Dmosicear
in enter the army.
Four thousand five hundred sokhere of the Plano]
expeddon hen divernbar Led et Be rout.
Tee appearance of foreign too.ipe Mit been tle signs)
for the manifestation of t-fesli es between the Cans -
rises and Moslem.: partial SOIL, bad taken elute is
Bevroot.
Constantinople letters mistime to express 'etre of s
se eral riiunit agranst th is istiana when th e Flexor*
trooin hi ded.
Sickening details relative ha tl.er late 1233.11garten con
time to come to hand
es linebey a. out of &NO Chriritinw only 1300 were
found Teibiunng, snarly WI women and otti dren. The
corpses remained unburied. The eon:1 grin tall of them
sal An Use 'gaper looms they mere piled in beeps bit
tie (CC high.
tor•eral Beaufort the commander of the French
force.. Ina prOntratrattian. hut praNhaed the hlarunitre
Iron renerios the varttitot.
A Conuttniinnule despatch aa•s:`• Nctsslthstand.nt
the representationn or the aionsesevlore. Kurnhot t'ii
ths remained at Constardinotfie .std use bilarenie do
fiwalette neva in* sted. and ohilLned his departure.
to order that he might be hivitiz hi to trial tr. :qr.,
" The NI et seltn• u inha Wants are DUI a threat
ening attitude. The Karroo:l hos awn Ino reateJ. tot
the sumeri p 37 it 11111111 at-marg..'
THE VERY LATEST.
(By Tolstrasat to Queonstowo.)
GRAND VILI/ARY KNOWaI CV PSIS.
(rt' y.Pruhday,
The great demonstration he e be en for mate
time the lesdin tonic of coayereaToon in Laricaskira
arn* raft ou &stunts/. and Wan in ere ry respect a
Liit
line 'lioness
Rewards o'lo OXlvolnnt4ers warn on the aroma& and
100.0 O) apectators. at the very least, Were present. The
volunteers Were divided Iwo roar brigades of mks and
oi e of artillery, a guard of honor betas formed of Sir T.
Oa aid's hoe body of yeomanry envilty. and the 71iit
Scotch /title Vo'untrier Cory, of Liverpool . who, in their
OM end a fell Richland costume, added greatly to ilia
ydeturesque character of the ocotsion..
LATtsT PROM SYR lA.
DAM.. sem Autest 20. cffical.)—This moraine one
hundred aud ' atxty.se can persor.s implicated in the late
asexcret. and on whomsentence of death had een
Pxwed, wore executed. Fifty seven of the cor,derened
men were hanged in the most populous part of the tit,.
and one hundred and ten of the local police were shot
in the square.
listeir execution has rema in e d or into the inhal4 •
of the oity. which tranquil. To-.,0w
those ror.deroned to hard labor and eetimboa will r••
sent under a limns es bi t Beyrout. whet • they will
be immediately ember deer Constantinople. Ames
the persons hanged we brothers, eons. and payouts of
the rust men la the country. nlo attention was paid to
their rank or await'.
To- morrow all the principal parties eomproutteed wilt
be airsited. tried. at d•nunialuad. The vial of ex-6 0-
renter hmod ?au's, and other 'Lars, is orooeedrne
before &council of war. The agates:lees writ be enforced
immediately after they are menu med.
The gouty peneone who escaped alter the musters
WA/ be tried as Guilty.; They will ondeseo their penal
ties es coop as then are owned, The army of the Sul'an
sets with the moat rutoraue dinciphee.an
d in rfect
loyalty. The aria or justice is triumphant. Perfect
tranquillity seisalop ak the borders of Syria. Order ie
re-mstablulled at MUM and its eneimes.
MONETARY AND. COMMERCIAL.
The rims' City article, dated Friday evening, sari
the better stossecta or th e weether imam imparted
firmness to the funds, and the) here closed to-dav with
a rood appearance. at rin improvement of farther
joins. of gold to the beak gams also contrthoted to the
upward tendency.
There as been ra th er more demand in the discount
mar et but the tranaschona have Mara 'Lica
at 3,.0.17ti per cent. About 41,3 0.0 in rine got, vas
taken to the Bank to - day.
In the foreign esehanzse, this afternoon. no ohs ns ,
of moopocce took Sheen In the COIOIIIIII Ptirdert.
market, &Inas the we h. there has been an indreas.d
demand for wirerelof the prissiest actioles constimp-
Win at the kat eteetedloser
Lo• now. Fri &vetttat.—The_impthvin g Wea th er
has &with imparted R_rostere MAN hod.. and they have
°lllt&dreamed N., m Mote astir*, a
MI etcetera dr
rint rook. All ellait -- Maißkt u lr advice's ars
cloths are
Tka %%albeit ta - nonilathrib's for the atom. Bread
'etnde are drill and ;ethos ere deolthing•
Provisions dull. lewd Inca