The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, October 29, 1860, Image 2

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    Vuss.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1860.
rum Peas. Administration of Justice;
Washington Correspondence; The Anti• Slavery
Convention at Kennett Square ; Legal Intelligence.
FOURTII PAM—lnteresting from Sonora; A Let
ter from Ralph Farnham, the Veteran of Bunker
hilt; Genared News; List of Letters; Rotel Arri
vals ; Marlie Intelligence.
Our New Arrangement.
Tho continued and rapid increase in the
circulation of this journal has induced us to
purchase ono of Taylor's new double cylinder
presses, and to remove our printing office to
another and more convenient location—thus
prfividing comfortable accommodations for our
numerous staff, and thereby enabling us to
add to the-spirit and energy of all the de
partments of the paper. We hope, hereafter,
to hear no complaints from subscribers on ac
count of the late delivery of THE PRESS.
The News.
The steamship Illinois, on her way from Liver
pool to New York, has put late Halifax for coal.
Her advices have been mainly anticipated. Gari
baldi bad advanced on Capua and taken one
of the bastions. The Royalists, remembering
Voiturno's day, were retreating towards 'Gaeta.
Victor Emmanuel, evidently intending to antici
pate the proposed plan of Garibaldi to proclaim a
slotted Italy fromthe top of the Quirinal, bad an
nounced his intention of entering the territory of
Naples at three different points, on the 11th of Oc
tober. In the meantime, Austria was fortifying
her maritime defences in view of any probable
trouble. A European Congress, on Italian affairs,
was about to beheld. The revolution in Mina was
extending.
The anti-Lincoln parties in Now Jersey have
united and formed an electoral ticket coniiiining
throe Douglas Democrats, two Breckinridgo men,
and two Bell mon, to be voted for at the November
otcotion. All _other tickets have been withdrawn,
and the opposition to Republicanism in Now Jersey
now presents a united front.
The Presidential canvass in New York is being
fought with unusual animation on both aides. On
Saturday evening 'there was an immense Union
meeting at the Cooper Institnte. Considerable en
thusiasm preiailed round about the building, and
in the early part of the evening rockets were dis
charged in front of the Institute. Mr. Joshua J.
Henry presided at the meeting. The first speech
was delivered by the Hon. Charles J. Holum, of
Kentucky, who was followed by Mr. Gerard, of
New York city, &Id the Hon. Mr. Stevens, of Ore
gon, thelehairman of the Secessionists' National
Committee.
A despatch from Washington to the Herald states
that the Secretary of War has censured General
Harney for disobeying the orders of General Scott
respecting the Ban Juan affair. In consideration
of his eminent services, General Harney will retain
his position in the army, and will be allowed leave
of absence fora period, or be assigned to the eons
rased of one of the military departments, as he may
prefer.
By the avrival of the Isabel, at Charleston, wo
have advices from Havana to the 23d inst. There
had been no change, in the sugar market since pre
vleus reports. The crops promised a satisfactory
yield. The Spanish minister to Venezuela, and the
Spanish consul at Legusyra, together with one
hundred and twentyeia Spantsh subjects from
Venezuela, had arrived at Havana. The report
that a fleet was fitting out at Havana to aid Mira.
men in Mexico is denied.
The steamship Now York sailed from New York
on eaturday, for Southampton and Bremen, with
one hundred and fourteen passengers, $107,800 in
specie, and 12.000 pounds of silver ore. The City
of Blanchester sailed for Liverpool on Saturday,
with one hundred and fifty passengers and $150,-
039 in specie.
The steamship Matanzas arrived at New York,
from Matanzas, on Saturday. Her news is of
no importance, having been anticipated in the
despatch received from the Isabel, at Charleston.
Senator Toombs, of Geolgia, made a speech at
Montgomery, Alabama, on Friday evening, on the
issues of the canvass. Tho assembly was large,
and the sentiments of the ore or of the most ultra
character. Among other things, he urged th; re
sistance of Lincoln's election to the death.
The Administration hucksters, in their
anxiety to elect BILEORINRIDGE, now advertise
that they have effected a fusion between the
Douglas, 8011, and Breckinridge parties in
New Jersey, by giving the Douglas men
three, the Brockinridgers two, and the Bell-
Hes two electors. The trick is too clumsy
to deceive anybody. The straight DOUGLAS
Democrats of Now Jersey will never touch
the ticket—they will repudiate it precisely as
the people of Pennsylvania will repudiate the
fusion electoral ticket in this State. At the
moment these Disunion coalitions are presented
to the Democracy of the free States; -the
South is rapidly closing around BRECILLISELDGE,
the Disunion candidate for the Presidency,. and
refusing all fusion. Southern States, hereto
fore claimed as certain tor BELL, are now, put
down for the Secessionists ; and in order to
effect a complete consolidation upon BLUM
MUDGE, BELL and DOUGLAS are set aside as
no better than LINCOLN!
As an evidence of the spirit that prevails
among the enemies of Judge DOUGLAS in that
quarter, we refer to the proposition lately
made by Col. GanDIJER, editor of the Augusta
(Ga.) Constitutionalist, under date of October
22d. As a Douglas Democrat, anxious to conso
lidate the Democracy of Georgia on one elec
toral ticket, he proposed that the friends of
DOUGLAS, BELL, and BREOELNRIDGE should
come together as the Breckinridgers in Now
York, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey have
proposed. This offer was received by the
Breckinridgo Disunion paper, in the same
town of Augusta ; as follows:
"Mr. Douglas is advertised to speak at various
points in the Booth, and will, doubtless, urge his
squatter-sovereignty dootrines as the true princi
ples to guide ne on the question of slavery in the
Territories. Ile may reiterate his determination'
to aid Lincoln to put down, by force, the very peo
ple whom Cal. Gardner would have united to re.
siet him. We could not consent to vote for
electors pat upon a fusion ttchet, pledged to
support him, rules the State as all over Breck•
tnrtdge and Lane upon the true principles of
the Constztutton. We have the same remarks
to make of electors for Bell. Oar opposing wing
of the Democratic party should abandon Douglas
and Johnson, and vote for Breokinridge and Lane.
The 801 l men, also, should come to their support.
If they will not, we shall be glad to see all parties
united in the event of Lincoln's election in oppo
sition to his rule.
"Breokinridge and Lane men ! you stand upon
the ramparts of the Constitution, Stand there
firmly still. Stand by your rights before the elec
tion and after. Sooner or later, your Douglas and
Bell opponents in the South mast come to your
flag."
Who does not see through this transparent
scheme directly into the hearts of the Dis
unionists 1 The Douglas men are to fuse
with Disunionists In the North, so that
electoral tickets may be chosen that will unite
with the solid South in favor of the Disunion
candidate for 'the Presidency; hilt there is to
be no fission between the Douglas, Bell, and
Breckinridgo men in the South, because such
a fusion would reduce the number of Disunion
electors. Will not the Democracy of Pennsyl
vania, New York, and Now Jersey anticipate
this fonl'attempt upon their credulity, and put
their heel upon it on the sixth of November
coming?
PEAI3O2IB desiring straight Douglas electoral
tickets can bo accommodated, by sending
their orders, with the money enclosed, to the
office of Tun PII.ESS, 417 Chestnut street,
Philadelphia.
A.rawEßa TO COBREO£ONDENTS.—K. 0. B.
means Knight Commander of the Bath. Viotor
EMMATAIOI has not been excommunicated by the
Pope, and we do not possess, and therefore cannot
publish, the form of excommunication. We be
lieve that, before the Revolution, a pound sterling
was of the same value as it is now, a fraction un
der five dollars. For replies to other questions we
refer to_a Dictionary or a o,yoloprodia.
LAMS SAME OF FrIENTH DRY GOODB.—The at
tention,of purohasers is requested to the large and
valuable assortment of French, German, Swim, and
British dry goods, embracing 700 lots of desirable
fancy and, staple articles In worsted, - woollen,
cotton, and silks, (including 1,000 dozen rich silk
ties, and &lA-collars, .ko ~) to be peremptorily
sold by catalogue on six months' credit, commen
cing:lllk morning at ten o'clock, to be continued
all day irithout intermission; by Myers, Olaghorn,
k, Co., auctioneers, No. 4131 and 45 Aroh streot.
" TILL PRESS" IN Nine, YORK Orry.Copteo of
The Tie:,is oeie be hid every afternoon at the Newe
Ageney'of Mr... Augusta Brentano, No. 63t3 Bread
- • ;
RTINORMOSEI, Busnmen STAMM, 001INTItY SZATS,
13TocxicAO,—Tbninas it, Bons' iinleto•morroir oom
priaA..,27 propert ies , ender of - ezeantore and
otheia;',ll3ne nav_ertiseraents and pninplilet
The Fusion in New Jersey.
TEENTOBT, Dot. 27.—The Union electoral ticket
has been finally settled. It contains the names of
three Douglas Demoorats, two Breokinridge Demo•
crate, and two Bell men. All the other tickets of
then parties have been withdrawn.
Political IViro-Pullers in Austria.
In a Prussian paper, the National Gavelle,,
of Berlin, under the head of Correspondence
froth Vienna, there is a communication rela
tive to the manner in which Austria is mis
governed, which is at once singular and signi
ficant—first, from what it reveals, and next,
because its appearance ina Prussian Govern
ment organ shows that the House of Branden
burg is nothing loth to expose the House of
Hapsburg to contempt and ridicule. The
substance of this revelation we here subjoin:
Three parties now struggle for influence in
the Imperial Court at Vienna. At the head
of the party advocating immediate and straight..
forward Progress, without any arriere pensee,
stands the young Empress. Some months
ago, the Archduke FERDINAND MAXIM!.
LIAN, enlightened by his experience during
his vice-Royalty at Milan, begged and en
treated his brother, the Emperor, to desist
from the narrow and mean system of oppres
sion exercised in the whole Empire ; warning
him that, sooner or later, the same causes
might be followed by the same consequences
in other nationalities. The Archduke left
his country in disgrace, taking with him the
memory of very bitter words from the Em
peror. The Empress exercises a bolder,
more legitimate, and more perseverant influ
ence, and is sometimes more successful.
Every morning, before the reception of
the adjutants, who bring tho Reports, she en.
ters the Cabinet of the Imperial Husband,
there she reigns for a while, discussing and
suggesting the highest questions of politics,
directed only by her heart and patriotic inspi
ration of the right. She has not been taught
history. Ambition and intrigue are strangers
in her heart, but her eloquence flows from her
soul and from her presentiments. She looks at
the exiled Italian princes. She is very much
concerned about her younger sister, who was
lately on the Neapolitan throne. The echoes
of the complaints of so many oppressed na
tions penetrate the walls of the Imperial Cas
tle. She reads in the features of her Impe
rial Husband the cares that devour him; her
heart is rent at the thought of her children's
fate.
The second, the Concordate or Compromise
party, finds in the mother of the Emperor
(the famous Archduchess SornrA) a most
capable, strong, and indefatigable chief. This
party also advised very broad concessions, in
the hope of reducing them to the smallest pos
sible capacity at the slightest change of for
tune.
The third party is the Military Court of
the Emperor. As was said of the French
Bourbon race, by TALLEYBAND, cc it has no
thing learnt, nothing forgotten." Even now,
when the genius of that Monarchy is ready to
extinguish her torch in dismay, that party
relies upon the sabre, mistaking meanness and
obstinacy for energy and power, and cannot,
will not, admit that circumstances may be
ever stronger than the Emperor of Austria.
Amidst the struggle of parties, the Emperor
stands yet, but is shaken by recent events.
He is in a fatal dilemma. On one side he sees
calamities and continual disNrbances, but the
sweet habit of absolute power, too ; on the
other that power's division, but peace and
general satisfaction. "What's in a name?"
he said, not long ago. Certainly the name
does not change anything, but the complete
abandonment of the ancient mode of govern
ing might work wonders, even in these ex
treme moments.
Considering, under all aspects, the politi
cal position of Austria and Europe, (says the
.dugsrbarg Zeitteng,) we always must fatally
come to the conclusion that a Constitutional
form, binding Centralization with Decentrali
zation, is urgent and indispensable. Austria
wishes to renew her truce with Europe, come
to an understanding with her German confed
erates, and shake MY the bonds imposed upon
her by political-religions obligations. Aus
tria, wishing to become the buckler of Ger
many, and to be ready to repel a common foo,
must, at any cost, Introduce positive reforms.
Would it not be a gain for her to abandon that
mean routine policy, that rotten bureaucra
titaf Sys..em, - or-rtiose pat,4 7 -oonockasaicono f hot.
undermine the foundations of the monarchy
Would it not be better, throwing all that trash
away, heroically to take a firm position upon
the constitutional field, where she would find
general approbation? The policy of expedi
ency is every day more impossible. If the
Emperor will entrust the guard of his crown
to his subjects, confidence, regard, financial
resources, and peace, would arise. Those
who advise such a policy are tho interpreters
of the best friends of Austria, from the pa
lace to the humblest log-house.
The Board of Trade Excursion.
All the accounts which have reached us of
the progress of the Board of Trade excursion
through the West indicate that it will not only
prove a very agreeable trip to those connected
with it, but also decidedly advantageous to the
business interests of our city. At every point
it visits it is received with marked attention
and great cordiality. The Western merchants
are evidently as anxious to obtain accurate
information in regard to the business facilities
of Philadelphia as wo aro to disseminate such
knoWledge, and they have given marked mani
festations of friendship and good feeling.
From the numerous conferences which have
taken place between the representatives of
corresponding interests during their journey,
important results should flow. It is evident
that the Northwest and Philadelphia could
promote their mutual prosperity by a great
increase of the trade now existing between
them, and it is only necessary that an exten
sive and intimate personal acquaintance should
bo established to satisfy all parties interested
of this fact.
Of the great agricultural products of the
West—her grain, flour, and provisions—a much
larger quantity than that which has heretofore
been purchased here should find in Philadel_
phia an advantageous market, and a superior
point for exportation. This one subject alone
is worthy of the most earnest consideration.
The great West, with her boundless agricul
tural resources, is capable of feeding whole
nations with her surplus products. It will re
quire but a comparatively few and unimportant
improvements to make our city the favorite
place for exporting a very large proportion of
them. The energy displayed throughout the
whole region, which the excursion party will
visit, in surmounting any minor obstacles
which impede important commercial enter
prises, furnisher an example we should not be
slow to imitate, and there is an ample amount
of business ability here, to establish all the
necessary new facilities, if it is once pro
perly aroused and skilfully directed.
Philadelphia, as an importing city, holds a
much lower rank than she should aspire to;
and it unfortunately happens that, by the cue
tom-house returns, her direct importations are
made to appear much smaller than they really
are, for the importing houses located in this
city annually bring into the country many
millions of dollars' worth of goods through
the port of New York, which are never owned
in that city, but are merely entered there and
duties paid upon them, while they are actually
in transitu to our own stores. And, mean
while, our immense manufactories aro an
nually making up an extraordinary quantity
of domestic goods, many of which aro pecu
liarly adapted for the consumption of the
West, and Western merchants are in the habit
of purchasing them in New York, after they
have been transported from Philadelphia to
that city. Considering that, as a manufac
turing centre, Philadelphia far exceeds in im
portance any other point in America, that
rents hero are comparatively cheap, that for
probity and business fidelity our merchants
hold a much higher rank than their New York
competitors, that we are geographically nearer
the West, and possess superior railway com
munication, it is singular that we have not
already obtained a much larger share of the
traffic we are inevitably destined to acquire in
future, if we do not shamefully neglect our
business interests.
TIIE BODY OF ALEXANDER QUINN FOUND
IN THE SCHUYLKILL RIVER AT VIEE.SIR HET
WEARY —Yesterday morning the body of Alex.
der Quinn, missing and supposed to be murdered,
was found in the Schuylkill river, near Vineetreet
wharf. The deceased was a man of intemperate
habits; and had been last seen in the company
of McLaughlin, at Twenty-third and Hamilton
streets, in the Fifteenth ward. The latter had
boon in oustody einoe last Monday, and had under
gone a number of hearings before the alderman.
Suspicion was strong against him, and a number of
petty circumstances were magnified into evidences
of his guilt. • The body of the dead man has exhi
bited the innocence of the prisoner. No marks of
struggle wore found upon him ; he had evidently
strayed to the bank of the river, and the darkness
of the night, mingled with his Inebriety, had
blunted his perceptions of the danger. The arrest
of MoLaughlin should be a lesson of sobriety to
him. The incident of a drunken spree would have
ne hard with him as evidences of guilt had the
body been mutilated.
Douglas in the South.
STEPHEN A. DotterAs spoke, on Satttrday
last, at Chattanooga, Tennessee, and to-day he
begins his canvass in Georkla by speaking at
Kingston, to-morrow at Atlanta, on Wednes
day at Macon, on Thursday at Columbus, on
Friday at Montgomery, Alabama, on Saturday
at Selma, and on Monday, the sth, the day be
fore the election, at Mobile in the same State.
These efforts of Judge Commas strikingly il
lustrate his foresight and fearlessness. Unap
palled by defeat, he pursues the path he laid
down for himself at the beginning, with heroic
perseverance. Ho saw the necessity for grap
pling with the enemies of his country b the
slave States, and resolved to go there, accom
panied by a single friend—our young and gifted
townsman, JAMES B. SHERIDAN, Esq. At this
moment, when the enemies of the Republic
threaten to raze it from turret to foundation
stone, and when the hearts of all patriotic men
tremble, for the first time, lest these enemies
may bo powerful enough to seduce the masses
of the Southern people from their allegiance,
the services of such a Northern man as STE
PHEN A. DOUGLAS in the South—conscious, as
he must be, that there is no hope of his own
election to the Presidency—cannot be ove
' estimated.
We - perceive that up to Friday last, when
Judge Dona LAS spoke at Nashville, Tennessee,
no attempt had been made to commit personal
violence upon him, although this bad been
threatened by the Charleston Mercury, the
Memphis (Tenn.) avalanche, the Petersburg
(Va.) Bulletin, and anticipated by Colonel
Gnaw:En, in a late number of his Augusta
(Ga.) Constautionalist. If the knowledge that
sueh services as DOUGLAS is now rendering to
his country are being discharged in the midst
of danger to himself, and in the teeth of a ra
pidly-concentrating Southern fanaticism, does
not close the lips of those who are assailing
him in the free States, then all magnanimity
has departed from politicians.
SwINDLING THEIR FRIENDS.—Forney & Co-,
at Philadelphia, Laumen & Co., at Reading, and
Daldeman & Co., at Harrisburg, firms doing a
heavy business in the straight -ant trade, are said
to have won an immense amount on Curtin's eleo•
(lon. A great deal of it was won off the honest
portion of the Douglas men, who did not suspect
the treachery of their leaders, and therefore staked
their money on Foster. The gains of Forney, Lao
man, and their associates in this gambling opera-
Con are af t down at sixty thousand dollars.
Straight-oWDouglasism pays pretty well at that
rate.—Valley Sptrtt, Clumberiburg, Pa.
We copy tho abovo paragraph for the pur
pose of informing our friends, R. J. Hamm
armt, lisq., of Harrisburg, and Gen. GEO. M.
LAUHAN, of Reading, that wo aro greatly in need
of our portion of the sum which it appears our
offending trinity won on the election of Col.
CURTIN. Having conversed with both of these
gentlemen sinco the election, and nothing
having been said by them on the subject, we
take this public opportunity of calling their
attention to the fact. Tho small amount of
twenty thousand dollars—our share in .. ' this
successful venture—will be singularly accepta
ble now, as we have just been at a large ex
pense to provide a new steam press to work
oft the rapidly-increasing edition of this jour
nal. Col. HAT.DEMAN can havo no hesitation
in honoring our draft, inasmuch as he has
more than enough of this world's goods, and
Gen. BAUMAN is so renowned for generosity
that we have no doubt he will send it from
Reading on a special train. Should our friend
of the Valley Spirit (who has been carrying
a great many burdens for the last three years,
and been compelled to submit to a vast wear
and tear of conscience, in order to bo worthy
of the favors of the Administration) be out of
pocket because of his over -confidence in Mr.
BUCHANAN and his virtuous policy, and will
call upon us on his next visit to Philadelphia,
it will give us pleasure to reimburse him and
all forlorn et seceders" out of our portion of
the winnings.
WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENCE
Letter front 66 Occasional."
[Con espundonoo of no Prom"'
Wesoixorom, October 28,1880
Distrust of Demeeratio instincts and examples,
fear of the popular rule, and secret contempt for
the feelings of the mimic:, although time and again
rtuola.anan, he always steadily
denied until ho mounted the Presidential chair.
Vain alike of his person and his acquirements, and
aristocratic in his bearing and his tastes, he con
trived, during many long yenta, to hide hie real pun.
pose under an exterior of frankness, and to disarm
the suspicions of tho Demos racy by continued profes
sions of attachment to their principles. Scarcely
had his foot to%ohed the Presidential stair, how
ever, end ascended to the seat of the Chief Aloes
traoy of the United S'atee, before ho sot about
gratifying his own purposes and fulfilling the pro
phecies of his opponents. Nearly all his late efforts
havo been to establish nristooratie or monarchical
principles. Ilia war has boon one persevering,
relentless crusade upon the rights of the people,
upon free opinion, upon independent action, and
upon the American Press. To deny to the majority
the right to rule; to attempt to make. the minority
States, although resting upon the institution of
slavery, the controllers of thelnajority States; to
orush out furless journalists struggling for a living ;
to arraign the popular branch of the Legislature;
to make the Executive superior to Congress, and
invulnerable to attack or investigation ; to mis
read and misapply the Federal Constitution; to
buy votes like Walpole, anti cell offices like Ba
con; to prate economy, and to revel in the most
frightful corruptions ; to cow the seeds of disaffec
tion among a happy people; to break up popular
Conventions, and to hunt down the candidates of
the toiling millions; and, finally, to aid and en
courage aspirants to the Presidency whose success
must inevitably destroy :our
. country ; these are
hie works. What foreign foe could have done co
much to lower the American character, to endanger
the American Union, and to render it an easy prey
to those who will hail the downfall of republican
Government on these shores as the triumph of des
potism all over the world?
Hence, whoa Mr. Buchanan received the Prince
of Wales at the White House, with open arms, be
welcomed him, not only as the representative of a
friendly Power, but as the representative of roy
alty. lie entertained him, accordingly, with rare
refinement and dignity. Here the 0. P. P. was
playing an honest character. Since the depar
ture of Baron Renfrew and his suite, the regal
odor file the marble halls of the Presidential pa
lace. Little °ln is talked of but "my Lord"
this, and "my Lady" that. The President revels
In his experiences at the various European courts,
and delights in contrasting the public mon of the
old world with those of the new. If he wore not
now greatly advanced in life, ho would make a
tour of England and Franco, in order to realize
the reciprocal affection of congenial rulers, and to
receive the felicitations of those who look upon
him as their groat agent in demoralizing and
bringing into shame republican institutions on
those shores
Among the other kingly pleasures in which the
household of Mr. Buchanan occasionally indulge,
that of sailing in the royal revenue cutter, the
" Harriet Lane," seems to bo preferred. That
beautiful oraft has been a sorter Cleopatra's barge
to the ofbial aristocracy at this and other points.
It cerriodjthe faithful to Charleston when they went
there to breakup the Democratic party, and to pre
pare to destroy the Union, It bears them to choice
watering places whenever they desire to relax
from the over-heavy duties of office and of society
in Washington. They float upon it to and from
Mount Vernon, and when the Prince reached South
Amboy, the " Harriet Lane" received him into her
friendly bosom, and here him in her arms to those
of the waiting thousands of Gotham.
A. few days ago, when Secretaries Cobb and
Thompson went to Now York for the purpose of
more effectually spreading tno virus of disunion,
and in order to terrify the merchants into the be
lief that nothing, in the event of Lincoln's election,
could save them from utter bankruptoy and ruin,
they had Pm Apician saturnalia on board the royal
yacht Harriet Lone. The two Secretaries, with
Collector Schell, (the übiquitous and never-opened
Schell,) and a number et ladies, gave a day to
pleasure, appropriately closing by a visit to
" Washington Heights," where the chaste and
costly hospitalities of Mr. and Mrs. James Gordon
Bennett awaited them. I am not permitted to
describe the splendor of this entertainment. Ben
nett lives like a retired East India nabob. Of the
thousands he has amassed, and is accumulating
from the Herald, a large sum has been appropri
ated to the purchase, improvement, and beautifi
cation of Washington Heights. Nothing that mo
ney can obtain is withheld/ in order to add to its
attractions. But he pines for society. He longs
for the presence of the gifted and the pure ; for the
assooiation of statesmen, scholars, and divines—
in other words, like most fortunate men, he
aspires for something unattainable. All other
wishes gratified, ho yearns to be forgiven for
his long war upon the best and most upright
men of the country. Every such visit, therefore,
as that of the Cabinet and their ladles is a God
send, and Bennett cannot bo too grateful for the
honer thus conferred upon him; particularly when
his recent and reneated assaults upon Secretary
Cobb, including the most serious charges, are re
membered. The Secretary of the Treasury, the
Chancellor of the Exchequer, turns the prow of the
royal yacht to Washington Heights, accepts the
eagerly offered hospitalities of its owner, and for
gives him for all his bitter sayings of the past, as
a significant intimation that all he may write on
the other side, hereafter, will be acceptable.
It is a pity that the President and his household
cannot employ the Harriet Lane to waft them to
Wheatland. Unfortunately, they must travel
there like other human beings, in ordinary oars
and over ordinary railroads.
The President, to whose Jackson record I re
THE PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1860.
forred a few ddya ago, AlliverS like an 'aspen leaf
before the threatened catastrophe of secession.
Having sown the storm, and now being called upon
to reap the whirlwind of disunion, he has neither
the courage nor the weapons to stay its progress.
If he follows the lead of Mr. Cobb and Mr. Thomp•
son, ho loses all hold upon the other members of his
Cabinet, and will be compelled to close his days in
the South. If he takes a middle course, he will
fall between the two extremes without the respect
of either. The next ten days will be full of inte
rest. The almost certain election of Lincoln; the
violent threats of the firo•oators the apprehensions
of patriots of every party; the intrigues of those
who ekpoot to participate in the spoils of the new
Administration ; the distrust and sensitiveness in
financial circles, will give to everything that may
transpire between now and the sixth or tenth
of November, an aspect of the gravest im
portance Let no indulge the hope that Provi
dence will continue to preside, and watch over this,
the last refuge of the oppressed of all the nations
of the world.
The Pennsylvania clerks in pay of the Adminis
tration have been Instructed to strike every Douglas
man from the Reading fusion electoral tieket—par
tionlarly such mon as Richard liana, Jesse Craw
ford, and Gen. Bowen, of Fayette. The most ma
lignant of all the Disunionists on the Pennsylvania
electoral ticket is the somewhat famous George M.
Kelm, of Berke county, who, from having been a
Know Nothing of the blackest stripe, is now appeal
ing to the Germans, and to the adopted citi
zens, to vote for him, in order that he may be
re•elected to assist 13reckinridgo and tho enc.
mica of the Demosratio party and of the .
Union. This man has made the circle of politics,
having been on all sides, ending his onreer by
worshipping James Buchanan, after having pub
licly and insolently assailed him. Ifeim, being at
the head of the electoral ticket, and the represent
ative of Buchanan, Breckinridge, Yancey, end
Disunion; of personal hostility to Douglas; of
Know•Nothingism, and of opposition to popular
sovereignty—the vote thrown for him is to be hold
up as an evidence that the Democratic organisa
tion of Pennsylvania is in favor of all these shame
less heresies. I speak whereof I know.
Public Amusements.
Thoro is literally next to nothing to bo said
&out theatrical and suoh performances of the past
week.
At Aroh-street Theatre, the Monkey Boy' ,
will be repeated twice—this evening and tomor
row. It is a piece better noted than written. - The
great exertions of the performers have alone made
It tolerablo bore. On Wednesday evening, Mr.
Edwin Booth commences an engagement here, and
will draw large houses of course—for he always
does.
Upon " The Dead Heart," and the bold ex
aggeration of the announcements respecting it in
the advertisements and bills—as "the novelty of
the age," and the chef d'ecavre of the Nineteenth
Century—we have already spoken fully and freely.
The piece Is a good sensation drama, with some
striking situations Mr. Edwin Adams and Mr.
Wright, as Landry and Latour, have shown them
selves good actors; of the two, Mr. Wright is the
most artistioal in this part—though Mr. Adams is a
better general actor. Miss C. Jefferson end Mr.
Bowers also merit praise. Mrs. Gladstone did
little more than look pretty as Uathertna Duval—
's part which may be said to net itself. She ranked
as only a accond•rete performer when a member of
the Aroh-street company some two yenre ego,
and hoe not improved since. At Niblo's, in New
York, where the "Dead Heart" was brought out
on Thursday, the newspapers tell us that Mra. Con
way played the part of Catherzne Duval, with
thrilling earnestness and effect, which shows what
Mrs. Gladstone ought to have made of it, but did
not. A pretty face does not alone make a good
actress In performing, "handsome is that hand
some does " Bat we refrain from dwelling on this
lady's palpable inefficieuey. '• The Dead Heart"
will bo played all this week, end probably next
wook also, for, without an unplagiarized itaid_cnt
or character in it, it is en attraetive piece.
A striking temperance drama, entitled " Ten
Nights in a Bar-Room," founded on T. S. Arthur's
very feeble story so named, has drawn crowds to
McDonough's Olympia Theatre, (Race street, ,bo
low Third,) during the past week, and will be re
pented this evening, for the last time. Coadelia
Howard has a leading part in this play, and the
other characters aro well sustained by a very good
stock company. There will boa Matinbe at the
Olympic on next Saturday afternoon. Those who
attend it will see a very pretty theatre, and very
good performances.
At Sanford's, there Is a new burlesque called
The Prince of Wales' Ball," full of fun, like all
the eccentricities produced at this establishment.
Mr. Dixoy appears as the Prince, and Mr
A'Beeket as the Duko of Newcastle. There aro
numerous other performances of an amusing na
ture at Santord's every evening.
Madigan's American Consolidated Circus Com•
pany, at the Continental Theatre, (what a number
of C's, to be sure! ) have made a decided hit.
The equestrian scenes aro capital, andPeaoh mem.
ber of tho company is distinguished for some so
cially. surprising or amusing.
Van Amburgh's Menagerie is in town, exhibit
ing thrice a day, and commencing at 10 this fore
noon, at tho corner of Tenth and Oallo:shill streets.
There aro two sots of performing animals. Mr.
Langworthy, in this show, takes Van Aar:burgh's
place, and is raid to have wonderful command over
the wild animals.
This is iho Wizard of the North's last week. His
arrangements are, Monday, Qom Victoria's pro
gramme; Tueaday, the Emperor Napoleon's;
Wednesday, the American; Thursday, benefit of
Miss Anderson, the wonderful clairvoyant; Fri
day, the Wizard's own benefit; Saturday, the ho.
milt of Misses Eliza and Flora Anderson and the
Wizard's Farewell speech, and en Saturday, at 2
P. M., the last matithe. Concert Hall will be
crowded and crammed every night this work.
There is one King of living Magicians, and his
name is Anderson.
Tho Rehearsals (an odd name for finished per
formanoes?) of the Germania Orchestra will be
rammed for the soma, at Musical Fund Hall, on
Saturday afternoon.
We copy the following from the Sunday Dis
patch. We have had no time nor opportunity to
inquire into the merits of the question involved,
but rather than do injustice even in appearance in
a matter of this kind, we insert tho article, at the
risk of wrong to one of our own ostablishinent. It
is a law with this paper to report the proceedings
of all meetings fairly and impartially ; and if in
any ease this fails to be done, whether through re
portorial license or any other cause, the instance Is
exceptional, and without the approbation of the
editor : _
Aart-SLAVERY °mos, Saturday i flot. 27.
To THE EDITORS OF THE SUNDAY DISPATCH—
Gentleman I ask the privilege of baying through
your paper, as affording the earliest opportunity,
that the account of the anti-slavery meeting at
Kennett Square in this morning's Press is grossly
unjust to the society which held it, and personally
injurious to some of its members. It contains
things that aro not true, and perverts others that
are, in a way to give them the effect of falsehoods.
I acquit the editor and proprietor of all inten
tion, in this matter, to do injustioe. The article
was inserted by a reporter, who had, doubtless,
purposes to serve, inconsistent, in his judgment,
with a strictly truthful statement of foots As
secretary of the society, and correspondent of a
newspaper, I had made a faithful report of all the
proceedings, a part of which, at his request, I gave
the reporter. He thanked me, and hoped I would
not be disappointed when I should,see an account
In print, as he would have to dress it up end "put
a flash heading to it, in the style of the New York
Herald." I said I did not care how ho headed it,
or what he added, if only he published the pro
ceedings faithfully. 1 was willing to trust them
for a refutation of any unfounded comment or in
ference of which they might be made the subject.
But I End, on opening the paper this morning that
a largo portion of the proceedings are omitted ;
that others, written In the flash and perversive
style of Bennett's Herald, are added, and that
the whole is presented in a form so incoherent and
defective, and in some of its parts so exaggerated,
as to make a most unjust and injurious impression,
I don't believe the writer meant any harm to
the Anti-Slavery Booiety or any of its members ;
he acted under a false impression of tho rights and
duties of a newspaper reporter. His object was to
get up a sensation article, and in doing E 0 to per
beim subserve oertain other purposes deemed by
him important at thisconjunoture. Ho was doubt
lees also under the impression that a dish thus
cooked and served would be more acceptable to the
owners of the paper, and more palatable to its
readers, than a plain ungarniehed statement of
facts ; an Impression, which, in justice to both, I
believe to be wholly unfounded.
Wo Abolitionists must rest under the aggravated
odium of this article with what patience we can.
Such burdens we are accustomed to bear. We can
bide our time till the slow, but certain march of
truth brings our vindication. The injustice done
to ffir. Purvis, however, by the wanton reckless
ness of this article, might possibly prove more
serious. Ills position is somewhat peculiar, and to
make him an objaot of hostile observation at a
time of excitement like the present, is, both for
his and other people's peace, a rather dangerous
experiment.
I will conclude by saying that if anybody
wants to see a correct report of what was said and
done at the Kennett-Square meeting, they may
find it at this office in the forthcoming (next Satur
day's) number of the Anti-Slavery Standard.
Respectfully yours,
MoKist,
Corresponding Secretary of the Pennsylvania
Anti-Slavery Society.
FURTHER FROM EUROPE
The Steamship Illinois at Halifax.
Ilemnix, Oat. 27.—The steamship Illinois, from
Southampton, bound to New York, has put into
this port. Her news has been mainly anticipated.
The Garibaldians had taken the south bastion at
Gamut.
The Royalists wore retreating towards Gaeta.
Victor Emmanuel has issued a manifesto to
Southern Italy, announcing that the Sardinians,
under their King, would quit the Neapolitan terri
tory at throe points on the oth instant.
The Austrians were reinforeing their garrisons
at Mistrial and Dalmatia.
The programme of the future Congress proposed
to be held on Italian affairs will be examined at
the Warsaw meeting. It will then be submitted to
the English and French Governments for their ap
proval.
The Pope's official journal has published an aril
(declaiming " St. Peter's pence" from all the faith
ful, but declaring that the Pope will not accept a
subsidy from any secular Power.
The advisee from China reoeived via Russia state
that six thousand of the Pekin militia bad been
sent against the English, but the people of Pekin
were generally favorable to the English sauce.
The Chinese insurreetion was extending.
LATEST NE WS
By Telegraph to The Press
Special Despatches to "The Press."
wegiilNGTo74, Oct. B, 1800.
Hon. PRESTON Emu, chairman of the Itopubli
can National Committee, baying finally oiosed his
rooms on E street, left Weahington on Saturday
last. Do expresses the utmostmfidence in the
Olootion of the favorite, and seems to thin]: that no
declaration will be necessary on the part of Mr.
LINCOLN, after the November eleotion, but that he
will silently await the voice of tho ballot-box, and
will only speak when the morning sun of the day
of his inauguration shall unsoal his lips. Mr.
RING is among the most sagacious, consoientious,
and resolved, members of his organization Ho
is an old Democrat, and will sternly insist on
keeping tho new Administration—should LINCOLN
go in—to tbo record.
News Rout California
Jo MuKinnitt is gallantly on the stump in Cali-
fornia for Douses, and made a recent blanch at
San Francisco, soma two boars long, which era
ated a marked sensation Ito is out in to latter
defending DOUGLAS against tho charge of refusing
to speak in f tvor of linonsurox, after the death
of the latter. The Douglas boys seem to have
taken possession of California and of Oregon. Col.
BAKER, the now Republican Senator from Oregon,
like lint THAYER, of Massachusetts. is strongly
for popular sovereignty, and sees, in this doctrine,
the only way to defeat the Southern buceanoors in
the Pacific Hates
importunt Union ManifeNto
It is Mated that, In view of the Increasing power
of the Die unionists in the South, the conservatives
of that quarter, headed by linrinv S. Paean of
Mississippi, ALEXANDER .1i STEPHENS, of Geor
gia, ISAAC E. Moron, of Louisiana, Gen. SASE
Housrom, of Texas, Gnoncre W ToNzs, of Teams
800, TIMOIRY PINES and Wm. C. RIVES, of Vir
ginia, ALBERT Kum of Allrsusas, and JAMES
Gurnnin, of Kentucky, intend issuing a manifesto,
assuring the conservative people of the free Stases
that, in no event will the constitutional election
of Mr. LINCOLN bo regarded so O cause for break•
ing up the Union, unlespLe.should attack tho rights
of the South.
OCCABIONAL
The statement that Secretary Conu intends to
remove the money of the Government from Now
York to come Southern point is an injurious fabri
cation, which cannot be 'oe sternly contradicted
and denounced.
The Old Democracy of the South
I have. no doubt that Mr. Boon:ram has been
addressed by a number of his old Democratic
friends in tho Southern States admonishing him to
fight against the Dieunionists, and I think ho re
ceived a letter a few days ago, from a former col
leagno while he was in the House of Representa
tives, which has greatly disturbed his real.
Resignation of Cobb and Thonta.on.
Should LINCOLN bo elected, it is now positively
asserted that Secretaries Cone and Tnotteson will
resign, and rolire to Georgia and Mississippi. to
assist in the preparations for secession The Score•
tory of War, Gov. PLovn, and the Postmaster
General, Cot. 11m—the one of Virginia and the
other of Kentucky--have determined to remain at
their posts, and to stand by the Union, and against
those who sack its overthrow. The coarse of rho
Secretary of War will b., closely welched by pa
triots iu all parts of the country. Ile will be cern
pelled to take the initiative—either for or against
Southern traitors—and I am gratified to state will
not disappoint patriot:el expectations It is said
he has not folly made up his tiled no to what
course he will assume in the event of the formal
secession of entire States, particularly if such
secession shall be the apparent eel of the people,
but ho will resist and punish all oases of violent or
individual treason. The ditlieulty, at the
will be how to prevent accession.
I understand upon inquiry that the banking
houco et Moos S Co did not take $3400,000 of
the 010,000.000 loon, but they suWcribed neatly
that entire amount for Now York capitallEt--EO
- of whom v,•ere feeding Republicans The
amount actually token by R10(16 kt Co woe
about $4100,000. The correction is signiEcant.
EnwAnn BATES Of Uri, and S orator z.4lm
-3roans of Rhoda Island—two of tho most corser-
Toth - 13 mon in tho country—begin to be favorably
named: the one for Attorney General, nod the
other for [icon:tory of the Tzeniury under the Ad
ministration of Limcor,N, rhonld tho ballot-boxes
decide in Lin favor.
LITER FROM EUROPE.
ARRIVAL OF THE ASIA
NEW Yonic, Oct. 28.—The steamship Asia ha
arrived, svith Livorpool and London dates of Sa
turday, the 13th inst.
Thu steamer Europa bad arrived at Livorpool.
The Uardinian Chambers hays adopted the law
of annexation. DI. Cavour made a spoech contain
ing n menace towards Austria
•
The polthcal news is not interestin g.
Details of too shipping disasters by the late gales in
the North Emand the Balite continued to reach Lloyd's
in great and duAreGning, quantity. Alga Cotton-laden
eroamer Arctic was lint near Hosted. and eight portions
drowned. o ship Soohie. front Riga, bound to Bos
ton. Was aha :toned on the Pth inst. in the North yea.
the mate and two Boonton wore drowned.
Vice Adnural Sir Hnustnn Siewalt had succeeded to
the command-in-chief at Davenport. vice mlintral Fan
thaw, who retires. owing to ill health.
bon. the Harry Smith died on the 12th test
A grand requiem had taken place at the Boman Ca
rbolic Cathedral, Dubl n, lee the Irish woo tiara lotion
in Italy. _
FR fiCE.
France is ',toted to have supplied &album with
tO lOC muskets am! eleven ircllions of poreursion raps.
The monthly returns of the Bank of Franco show a
decrease in the cash on Mind nl ninety-ono mullions
francs, and an increase in the bulbs discounted of nearly
twenty -zone
'I he Paris Constactionne/ publishes an article tarried
by M. Eninfaes, deploring the intervention of Sardinia
in the Neapolitan States, and regarding it as a direct
contradiction of all the principles involved by Surinam
herself. The writer concludes by saying 4ttat It apper
tains to Europe to redress forgotten rights. and to re
mind the Government, which has deviated Irma its
proper course. of the respout due to the laws which are
tumbril: on all the States.
.
.AFr - eaoli note tins boon rent to Switzerland relative
to an insult to the Fronoli Sag.
It is moo officially announced that the French and
English Plenipotentiaries would, on the Ruh, sign a
1:011V311 1 101i containing a new tones of articles inserted
in the French tariff. Refined Sugar will be taxed 40
francs per 100 lalogrammes. rho import duties on
machines nrd Instruments will be reduced.
Tho Bourse was firm and animated. Rentes had
a gain advanced to 69f is.
N APLES.
It is stated that the Ganbaldians w old not attack
C11.33/1 11010r13 the 20th of October. Ci3rl l / 3 1‘11 Ja said
to have been wounded at the battle of Volutrno. Ilia
total losses at that engagement are stated by the Paris
Parse to have amounted to 4,500 men, while that of
the Royalista wasuot so great. Among other incidents
of the battle it 13 recorded Clint, at one of the most
critical movements of the day, Garibaldi naked for one
hundred resolute men, and among those who rode for
ward with the General was Count Arrivabone, noir to
ono of the first Milanese families and noting as corres
pondent to the Daily Nous. 'rite Count was not area
afterwaids, but it won hoped that he wan among the pet
sonars. &great many of the wounded on the field of
Volturno died for the want of ambulances.
There was a cannonade tinder the walls of Canna on
the gth, and the liaribaldions gained fresh positions.
Hostilities were afterwards suspended for twenty-four
hours to bury the dead. 't he cannonade recommenced
on the 10th and continued on the 11th.
A deoreo ie published ordering a vete on the 2:at of
October, by universal suflraYo, on the following ques
tion: " Do aon with Italy to bo indivisibly united with
Victor Emmanuel cc Constitutional King and his legiti
mate descendants l"
.
stii.to of Naples had improved, and the funds had
advanced.
SARDINIA AND THE ROMAN STATES.
The statement that Prussia and Russia had issued
Protests against tin Sardinian policy, Identical with
that of Austria, is denied, but it is nevertheless ad
hered to by sonic authorities. The Paris cerzcsmplent
of the London Morning , Post asserts that there tins
linen no protest by these Powers, in the diplomatic
senor, against the entry of the Sardinian troops into
the Neapolitan territory, but it must not his under
stood front this that they tiro not opposed to the move
menL
The Saris correspondent of the London Herald al
ludes to the probability or a Congress on the affairs of
Italy.
In the Sardinian Chamber of Deputies the order of
the day, proposed by the committee, rendered nomnse
to Garibaldi, and unanimously expressed their approval
of the project of law t,r the annexation, winch was
agreed to by IJO votes asninst ti. The vote was preceded
by a speech from hf. Cavour. defining his polio/. Ho
urged union. and caul he clewed Home for the capital
of Italy. and littered is mennon against Venetia.
The Cardinal Archbishop of Termo. and the Cardinal
Bishops of .Ancona and Jesi, had been arrested by the
Piedinontese. Tho Cardinal Archbishop of Beneveulo
had been obAged to leave his diocese nt half an hour's
notice,
Tim 'Roman journal announces that the sum eontri
uted by the faithful to the Holy are was 1.00,0c0 crowns,
rid that it had all boon expended.
h Vtator Emmanuel had arrived at Grotlamore, whore
headquarters are estabbshad.
AUSTRIA.
Otfioml information had been received of the re-es
tahlishiner t of the lights on the Austrian coast of the
Adnatio.
. •
The continued preparations for war by the Austrian
Government had given rise to a report that a forward
movement was in conteinplatton.
The London Globe assorts that A ustria's preen ra
tions were caused by the threats of Garibeldi, and that
81,a has no aggressive intentions.
The Grand Vizier had arrived at Saimaa, and the
Duman minister Ind presented a notice octal:denting'
of tin return before he had completed his mission
News had linen received of the zreat Persian victory
over the Turcomanea, near Alarm.
The Governor of Itoida had arrested the Dutch Dra
gomen, but two Dutch frigates having threatened to
comma the tons n he wee released.
AFRICA
The mails from the Went coact of Africa, with dates
from the Cape coast to September Nth. him's Leone
to 21st, Bathmal to 23th, and Alateins to October 3d,
had reached England.
1 le matt-steamer Cleopatra, go long overdue, was
makin g her way to Lit ewe) under canvas, having
broken her town shaft.
The screw steamer City of Norfolk succeeded in get
ting WAY front Why dab with 1.300 alnves
Tito British ship Alecto had taken the slaver Constan
tin, from Havana, as a pn2e.
LATEST BY TELEGRAPH TO t , tIJEE.NSTOW2.I.
La anoN, Saturday 1 vening. Clot 13.—The funds are
stationary to day at the closing prices of yesterday,
with very little Winners The chances shown in the
bank return aro regarded with satisfaction than other
wise, but it has tranapired that a further large amount of
gold, rumored to be Myren £2l 000 and £3O 000, has
been taken this day from the Bank of England for ex
portation. The railway Share market is dud, the pro-
Rarattons for the fortnightly settlement claiming alien
COLOGNE, Saturday, ] P, M.—Qinen Victoria and
Prince Albert. accompanied by the Prince Regent and
Princess Frederick William and the young Prince,
have just passed Cologne on their return to Breese's,
where they will remain to morrow. On Monday Her
Majesty will proceed to Antwerp and embark there at
P. Al. for England.
LONDON, Oct. 13.-I'ho Paris correspondent of the
Post telegraphs as follows: "Several journals lay
vreat stress on pretended assuranees said to have been
given by the reneh Government to the Pope on the
nutrient of the integrity of his States. There is a con
fusion in this which it is necessary to point out. The.
French Government has never spoken or wished to
speak except of the preservation under the authority of
the Holy Father of the territory of Rome, properly so
called. It is with this view that it hen reinforced the
army of neoupatten. and not of all the States of the
Church, es people affect to believe.
Pants, Oct. 13-3,251'. M.—The - Bourse has been hea
vy. and closed at 1.13 f. Mt., or 200 lower than yes
terday.
The Pressa contains the following
The great Powers, with the exception of England,
have signified to the Cabmet of Turin that they will not
noosing° the blockade of Garda.
The Perini ataten that the itntry of King Victor Ern
manuel into Naples will take place on the 17th inst.
LIVERPOOL, Oct.tber 13.—The steamer Molds, from
New 'Pork. arrived here yesterday.
Arnved—Ship Windsor, Forrest, from Mobilo : ship
2 ` 1 ,,, w.r d Stanley, from Now Orleans.
oaANCIIESTER. October 13.—Tho state of trade is fa
vorable, all desoriptions of goals have advertised. and
yarns aro 3.1a94;t1 higher.
lion. Pre.iton King
111,1111 . 1011 , ; 111111101
Lincoln', Ca bi e
(3ItEAT BRITAIN
CEISE2
Commercial Intelligence
•
tronaPool,. lialordny, 0003 -t-Tho Haien or Cotten
to-day amount to moo bales, including 1,000 to erolcu
latem and, exporters. The Inallird Muses firm.
11AV Ski COTTON Id A ItKI4T, Oct 11 -New Orlearm
trey ordinfore 91f, ban Pa. Sales of the week, 11,00
bales; Monk in port, 103 WO bake. The mitiket closed
firm at If advance.
Liven POOL, Oct. l 3 - firendribilla are quiet , hut price s
‘ 3 ' nti nue , tfldY• The circulate of lituhardson &
Somme, Wakefield & N.M. and Borland & Athya, re
port Flour with a deelming tandem-mines havin4
declined Id 11111100 the week, the closing quotation la
VeoPrde rah Montt itaq declined 2 , 103 d entre Tuesday.
Malden the dentine far the week 4d. lied Weetorti to
quoted 11e lid ,Pl 2 1211; Southern, 12s 2ibal2e rid: white,
12e4p118 ; Cornelonfor and yellow, lifiolltis
Id; white, 36en,404 Oil.
PRO VISIONN.-Tito market doom eteady, and prices
are titular. Pork quiet ; pollee firm, Illeen quint. Lard
dull; wilco unimporttmt • and quotations barely main
tained. Cheerio tins declined 4621.
pummen.--..dignr quiet. ~nlleeeteady. Rica firma o
ein firm at le id a4s tld for eignmon, twits of Turpen
tine dull at 310 Ottani :Id.
LONDON 13.-Meee e. Paring Prothere mote
Brearletude quirt; white wheat 61,1,653, rail °fl q ank'.
Sugar firm. Cone steady. Rio) quiet. Orman Tur
pentine Ms.
LONDON MONEY MARKET Out. 13 -Console are
quoted at 92%,129.2!4' for mono) and 03 fur account. Auto
mean acounties are generally unclurnired.
ARRIVAL OF THE STEAMER CITY OF
WASHINGTON.
Nnw Yorx, Oat. :17.—The steamer City of Wash
ington, from Liverpool, has a,rived. 13or advicca
aro to Thursday, the 11 th that, bat hare been
mainly anticipated by the despatch from Cape
Redo
The Jura, touched off Londonderry on the Sib, and
reached Liverpool at 7 o'clock on the morning ot the
9th.
NAPLES.
Full details of the battle of the Volturno, which took
Place on the Ist of October. are published. The Nea
politans, reheated nt Su 000 strong, made a general at
tank upon the Garibaldtans- whose numbem, from first
to last, did not exceed half that of their antagomins.
The Neapolitans, taking advantage ella thrk mist, sur
prised the Ganbaldians and carried monis of their post
bone, and for a time were so successful that it appeared
as if everything would be last to the tir.rinaldnina. At
thiojunoture Garibaldi went forward, revolver in hand,
nod encouraged his men in their desperate resistance.
Gradually his supports came up. and the Neapolitans
were charged With the bayonet. They were everywhere
driven boot, broken. and routed. and after eight hours
°fighting the Neapolttans were flying in all directioes,
and wore pursued by their conquerors close under the
walls of Canna The loss of Gardialdians in killed and
xvourdied is estimated at from MOO to 2 000 men, and that
of the Neapolitans at about 3.000 in killed and wounded,
and from 2,060 to 6.000 taken prisoners.
The Royalists retreated into Capita, but a brigade of
Germain was cut off rind driven into toe mountains.
On the 3d, the Roymists made a so, tie from Capua for
the purpose of supporting the German column thus in
tercepted, but were repulsed.
It as said that the King of Naples and his brother were
proamt at the battle of Volturno.
Rumors had been current that Capua had surrendered,
and that the Royalists were retreating on Gaeta, but
t WAS not confirmed, and later despatches state that
the line of the Volturno was still strongly protested ;
that fresh redoubts had been thrown up by the Royal
and that, notwithstanding their recent defeat they
wore Prepared to defend their position.
Garibaldi had solicited the King of Sardinia to go to
Naples, and had requested that 14 WO men might be sent
as soon as possible.
Admiral Persano left Genoa on the 6th for Naples,
with the whole Sardinian fleet and about 3,01:10 Pied
montese troops on board. According to late letters from
Naples, the battle of Volturno lasted nearly two days.
General Berton. being in pent clanger, sent a telegram
to the Marquis de Villamanna. who despatched to his
assistance 19:0 Sardinian riflemen, by whom, It
the victory tine decided. barns gunners, on leave from
the British Rhin Renown, alto co-operated with the Ga
ribeldians.
The English press were eiilog,istio in their remarks on
the generalship of Garibaldi and regarded his last
great victory as the virtual conclusion of the Neapoll.
tan campaign, and the lastllchance for the King.
The Piedmonteso journals all vent that two batta
lions of Doran's:lien and a division of Piedmonteso ar
tillesy took a part in the battle of Volituno
The Paris ['atria publishes under reserve a state
ment that " Three Great Powers had protested against
the entry of Pied montsse into Neapolitan territory."
The entry of tne tin:damn troops (which were under
command of the Kingl into Neapolitan territory is
said to have taken place on the sin at three different
Points. Deputations from numerous municipal bodies
in the Neapolitan State were constantly waiting on
Victor Emmanuel, and inviting hint to oceanic the
sovereignty. . .
,The Riarquis do l'allavacini, in hia quality:oll'm Dic
tator, had requested INlnzzint to leave Naplea, and Limo
otter hind ttIICOP his departure from that oity.
A roost that the bombardment of Capita coin:nano-NJ
On the Gth lest lacked confirmation.
3/1 ttDINIA AND ROME.
The position of affairs in the Papal Etatea was un
changed.
'Ontiorall.amorielmo hail arrived in France, and wou'd
settle in fiorinlnirr Or Brittany
It was asserted that the Pope had refused a ucanniarY
indemnity colleted by Napoleon and Victor Emmanuel,
and thnt ho would Tomato at Rome.. .
The Franohoocumail Viterbo. Velitri, thrift Vecchia,
Tivoli, Pnlestrina, Traenati. f Prams. and Vain - 1001mo
The Austrian Cabinet had cent n note to the Papal
Government. in which. staring!' the t 2 ordinian inva
sion is severely censured. it is declared that the inter
vention of Austria, otherwise than in the ordinary
dielornatio way , in utterly impossible.
Despatches from the Rus.inn Goverownt received
in Runt° recommend the Pope not to quit his capital,
nor to pronounce any excommunieation, but for the
present to confine hisnsolf to protesting against the in
varies by Sardinia.
A manifesto had been addressed by Victor Emmanuel
to the people of Bouthern Italy, explaining the line of
policy lie has followed. and the resolution taken in con
sequence of late events in Italy.
The prisoners taken at .Ancone comuised 3 generels,
17 superior officers, 331 subaltern omens, and 6 792
privates and non commissioned officer!.
GREAT BRITAIN.
The English news is quite unimportant
Heave gales Lad been experienced, and tire shipping'
had suffered goveridy, t ut no Amerman vestals are re
ported among the (innate S.
It was reported that Queen Victoria was to he honored
tvnh a grand Jane at Cohlenlz on the 12th inst., at d that
the Prince Regent had invited the greater part of the
(ierrman Sovereigns to be present.
Prince John of Bourbon 111 again urged his claims to
the Swinish crown in a letter to the London Times.
He adirms that in revolution is imminent in Lipam.
EEEZEII
French troops were embarking ris rapidly rs mumble
at Toulon for Rome, and a report was current that a
third division was to be rent,
'The Minister of the Interior had issued a notion for
bidding any subscription for a sword of honor to be pre
sented to Lamoriciere.
The Paris Flour market was firm. and wheat was
nguin rather dearer. It was an admitted fart that the
wheat crop wan, no regards quantity, men better than
expected
The irou masters of France Ware much dirsatisfied
with the reduction of duties on metals.
•
Thu Bourco was dull and lower. Itentes closed en
the 9th at 59 80.
The Paris Monileter na.va that affairs in Syria have
entered n new phase. Military action will now almond
moral influence. -
AUSTRIA
It is asserted that a movement of troops was pro
ceeding on n vast soale in Austria. Heavy trains, full
of Bottlers and war ina'erial, were forwarded by night.
Thorn was', great concentration of trees in Venetia.
The accounts from Hungary continue threatening.
The excitement was extenomr.
Some of the Gorman papers insinuate that Boron
Mons:lo7li lint gone to Coiling for the purpose of nego
tiating with Lord John Russell the cession to England
of a seaport in the Adriatio.
Newe from Pekin to tee commencement of July had
boon received via. St. Petersburg. but it containa no
thing of moment. The insurrection was gaininr. ground
Financial.
LONDON MONEY MARKET—The extraordinary
drain of gold from the Bank of England continued to
exercise, a depressing effect on the gook market, a..d
Console have further slightly deohned. They closed
flat, under the influence of a speech by Count Cavour,
breathing continued menace to Austria, at 02?Cia927ii
for money. and El for aormunt.
In addition to the .1.:600,000 in. gold required for the,
Brim tie d'Escompto Pane, 1200,00 was required by
a London house on account of the Bank of Madrid. On
the It th the withdrawal of gold from the Bank was 1111-
preoodentedly large, .1. Ph 000 in bare having been taken.
Brune eumincrna.l avriteTs say the gold taken was not
likely to ho epogrliiy returned. and preparations were
being made against the probability of an advance in
the rata of discount.
. . .
Tim demand in the discount market had been heavy at
4 asfr cont.
lia . ales returns show a deorento3 of £413 975 In
the bulhon.
•
AMERICAN SECURITIES.—Messrs. B. Bell. Ron,
Si Co. report as follows : The market for American se
curities remains without change of iniportanoe. The
pest week has not boen one of vary active business; Out
the market (more particularly for State stooks) Is steady
and prices firm:
United States 6IV oent bonds,lB6B ..... 96 0 519
Do 5 4,1 Y cent bonds , 333;0 94
Kentucky 6 1.1. Y cent b0nd5,196172.............92 94
Mart.taral 6 4j , cent Ear bombs.- •• , , ....... 92 095
S tsMtlniaohUßOt 5 4SY cent sterling NO 0102
6lnsissippi tY cent Union flank b0nd5...... 12 0 15
rennet lye.= 6 cent, .... 85 087
.. .
• . . ... .. .
Do 6V' cent bonds. 187 , .... ....... 88 ® a9
South Carolort 5 qp. cent bonds. MG ......... Si 0 88
Tennessee 6 ts' cent bends. divers. .. . .. 80 es 82
Aractrint 617' cent bonds, 1896 .. 88 61 61
Do 547 cent et. bonds. Lsl3 .......... .ao 61 , 62
Illinou. Control 707 cent, 1-78............ .... O 7 so g. 9
11e 6 cent, 1975 ...... .... ... 87 an 58
Do Shares. ... . .... ....... din. 19 cs 13
Mullion Central e D. 0., /EWA . 91 too 83
. - . . . .
New York Central p o.notoonvertiblo, 1833 39 ca 90
do do 7p. e. eonvertlble, 1834 .. 91 in 95
do co shares... . . 81 cr , 93
New York & brie 7 p.o let mortgage. 1857_ 93 ct 95
tin do do 2,1 mortgage, 1889 .89 it 91
do do do 3il mortgage, 1883,.. 93 it 54
do do do Eha re 9.. .... . . ....... 10 ce 41
Panama 7p. e. 18t mo - tgazo. 1565 —... ....101 41103
Ell do 2d mortgage. 1572........... 99 0101
Pennsylvania. Contra! 6p. c. lat mortgage 183710 kg 91
Commercial Intelligence
LIVERPOOL. Oct. It, A. Ill.—Cotton—The Broker's
Circular says: " A largo business continues to be trap.
emoted by all classes, establishing generally a rather
limber range of prices, and buyers find it exceedingly
difficult to operate except at an advance of ,i.‘d Itjs
lb. in
usetul deter ptions , although the supply of all kinds is
still liberal, Brazil is dearer. equals are in EC
the demand, and partially d4fs' lb. higher. the
week's salon have been 52,120 bales, of which specula
tors have taken 20.600 bales, and expoeters MAO,
The business yesterday was about 10,0e0 bales, in
eluding 2,000 on speculation and 1r
- expert, the market
OIOSIIIK firm at lull rates, The official quotations are as
follows
Fair.
Orleans . .
. ...... 7
Uplands .... • • 7.10 WM.
The stock is estimated at 786.600 including 616,00 bales
of American.
At Manchester prices are again higher, particularly
for yarna,nnd producers are AO bully engaged that a large
extent of business for early delivery is now impos
sible.
BREAD.TUr —Messrs. Richardson. Spence, 8: Co.,
Wakefield, Nash, Co. litcland, Atliya, 84 Co , and
others, report: Flour dull, and 6d lower since Tuesday,
making the week's decline Is. Sales at 28sce3ls Gd.
Wheat in limited request, and azain laid cientel
dearer, making Id in the week. Red Western, Ile Gdm
12s 2d . ; Fouthern Its 2dm 12; Gd : white 122iIrs. Indian
Curs is 11) good demand at 36s,reils lid for mixed and )01-
low, and 30scir 403 Gd for white.
Pnovtsiogs.—Beef continues stow. Small saies of
fine India mesa at 901ess. holders rather firmer.
Pork firm, but quiet. Bacon inactive, but firm. stock
of American nearly exhausted. Cheese is again i&6s
lower under further arrivals. Lard neglected ; 'armee
barely. maintained. Tallow °scar d, and cr nsiderably
lower in London. bat hero buyers are not willing to pay
the high prices demanded. Butcher's Aur:nation has
fetched 642256 x.
PRODUC lies—sales of 450 bide at 2.3 s 6da2.38 for
both rots and Pearls. Sugars firm for refining sorts,
but drooping for grocer; kinds flollee quiet. Rice in
good demand by speculators, and lull rates rea i zed.
Philadelphia Bark-8s 6.1 for finite, and Baltimore 7s Gd.
Fish oils quiet. Cod, 42.13, Linseed Oil steady. Com
mon Rosin firm at Ps rd:rfla 6d ; medium difficult of sale;
fine continues scarce. Spirits of Turpentine quiet at
21s 6d6 Ds ad.
LONDON MA RHllTS.—Alessre. Baring Bros. re
port breadstuffs quiet and unchanged, but more difficult
to effect sales White Ameriaan wheat 620665; red
fillitfils. Flour 3012340, Iron firmer at ZS 5801:6 103 for
bars and rails; scowl; pig 62e Sitsbas 6d. Sugar quiet,
but close with a good demand. Coffee unchanged. Tea
quiet; Congow Is Id. Tallow greatly excited and to
dearer on the week ;C. C. 688 &Icons. Spirits of Tur
pentine 225. Rice quiet. Ode firmer : Sperm k 103; Cod
.I:55; American pale Southern £3l' Linseed 31e; L n
seed cakes firm. American bags 110 lea ; Sarre l . l3l
To Id.
The Kentlicky Races.
LOUISVILLE, Oat. 27.—The fall rnees on the
Wcodlawn Course closed today. Meidoc won the
three-mite•hoat race against Dick Turpin and Fill
more. The time was—first heat, 7 m 431 see ;
second beat, 7 m. 491 are.
Chicago Items.
CHICAGO, Oct 27 —Lill ,b Diversis' brewery was
damaged by lire last night to the mount of $12,000.
The loss is covered by insurance.
Dr. Wm. B. Eagan, an old and respected citizen
of this place, died this morning of dropsy.
The Election in New Mexico.
Sr. Loris, October 26.—Judg,o Rectal Toy, who
introduced a bill at the last session of the Now
Mexican Legislaturo for the repeal of slavery, has
been ro-olootad without opposition.
Senator Toombs in Montgomery.
MONTGOMERY, Ala., October 27 —Mr. Toombs
spoke to an audience of two thousand persons hero
last night. iie urged resistance to the death in
Case of the election of Lincoln.
Governor Curtin at Boston.
BOSTON, Oat. 29 —Col. Curtin, the Governor
cleat of Pennsylvania, addressed the Republicans
at Fanouil Hall last night.
Markets by Telegraph
OINsiNNATI, Oot 27.--Flour unchanged. Wheat dull ;
red .9.1.0 . 1.14; ; whits .9,1.C88112, Corn dull nt
iNlitsl4 dull and decline(' • sales at laic. Money I. 111
good demand at 1 0 0120. ' Exchange on New York firm
at :6 per cent. premium.
Now ORLEANS, t at. 20 —Cotton—qules to day, C,tuo
bales; middling sold at-The Bll gar mar), ~
9Y B
stiffer, but quotations unchanged. ... ,;.
Other articles unchanged.
The Kansas Land Sales.
GEN. HARNEY.
WASHINGTON, °Mater 'B.—Notwithstanding the
urgent solioltations for the postponement of the
Kansas land Bales, the 3ooratory of the Interior
has not regarded it as proper, under the existing
laws, to submit the recommendation to the Prost- 1
dont. with that view, as in the case of those soon to
be offered in Minnesota Tho relief suggested by
the Secretary is, that if the
,lands pre•empters
shall not bo sold, they will have the benefit of the
twelve months credit allowed by law for paying
for the lands, which thus become subject to private
ant:) ,
The President has made a decision in the case of
Gen itarnoy, which will be promulgated through
the War Department. Though ho is regarded so
having violated the orders of Lieut. Gen Scott,
he Is, in consideration of his distinguished military
wireless, merely slightly, but offioially, censured.
general Harney has been here for some weeks
awaiting the FNeentive determination.
lie Lexington and St. Lents Railroad
TO CONNRCT WITH Till. PACIFIC RAILROAD
Sr. LOWS, October 27 —Yesterday the Vrco Pre
sident of the Lexington and St. Louis Railroad,
contracted with Messrs. Cheritema, Ilartkon, cad
Valle, of this city, for a supply of iron rails for the
entire length of road from Ft rmers' City to Lox.
ing on, Missouri, ft distance of sixty miles. This
road, which win be completed in twelve months,
cunt aora at the former placo with the N:arm road.
The above contract ITIVOIVC4 n quarter million of
dollars. The rails are to he mannfurturcd here
from Missouri iron
The Pacific Railroad
Four SMITH, Out 27 —The overland mail bring.
the gratifying announcement of the completion of
tha Pacifie and Atlantic Telegraph line from San
Francisco and Lou Angeles, on the Bth ult.
Congratulatory addresses were passed between
the Mayor of Los Angeles and the president' of
the Board of Supervisors et San Francisco.
Senator Latham set the first polo east from Los
Angeles on the Bth, and loft for the States on the
sumo day.
Letter from New York.
(Correspondence of The Prem.]
New Yonx, October 28, 1880
On Thursday evening the groat Burton-library
sale terminated, fifteen days having been'ompied
in disposing, of the library and effeata. The en
gravings., prints, and portraits brought moderate
prices. Clara Fisher's Shaksperean Cabinet, of
nineteen pieces, netted $5O; the Coffin medal
brought $0; the great Clay medal brought $6;
motel watch, dug up at Bunker Hill, $2. 75 ; Wash
ington's repeater, worn at Valley Forge, $63 ;
Talma's repeater, presented by Napoleon, $155 ;
two goblets, from Shakspeare's mulberry trek,
$32 50 ; tea caddy, from Shskspeare's mulberry
tree,sBs. The library furniture, *hich closed the
sale, went off at extremely low prices, the moat
valuable articles not being honored with a single
bid.
The congregation worshipping at the Calvary
Baptist Church of this city reoently presented
their pastor, ltov. A D. Gillette, and his wife,
with a costly service of plate, on the twenty fifth
anniversary of their ma-ringe. The presentation
took place at the house of the pastor, and was the
occasion of a pleas int reunion of the relatives and
friends of the pastor. Tho value of the silver
plate presented was about $l,OOO
A large company of gentlemen interested in
billiards met at the opening of the Tournament
yesterday, at the Union-square rooms. A game
by . Dudley Kavanagh and James Lynch of 100
pants was pronounced the most splendid exhi
bition of the art ever witnessed. Lynch tends a
run of 129 points, and Kavanagh runs of 113, 00,
and 53 The latter 'eon by 101 points. The con
tests will be continued daily at 2 o'clock, in the
following order :
Saturday—Kavanagli and Geary ; Tieman and White.
filonday—Kavana,h and White; Tiernan and White.
Tuesday—Lynch and White ; Tiernan and Geary.
Wedneaday—Lynch and Geary; Tiernan and Kava
nagh.
Thuradry (gentleman with ladies only admittedl—
Phelan and ;he winner.
. .
George Francis Train, the representative Ame
rican in Europe, who has been teaching our cou
sins the uses of city railways, is shortly coming
home with a like valuable commodity acquired in
exchange. tie is building a lot of the Loudon
Hansom (or shovel) two•wheel cabs, which he in
tends, wo learn, to run in New York, under char
ter. A light neat one-horse cab, carrying persons
reasonable distances at twenty-five cents each, is
one of the groat wants of New York an i
could not fail to be largely patronized.
Yesterday was the last day for naturalizing.
At the Republionn office nearly 4,000 tickets bees
been given out They opened their office on the
13th of last month. Most of those taking out tick
o's aro Germans. At Tammany flail, where the
ticket office opened only a little over two weeks
ago, corns 1,300 tickets have heel distributed.
- The " Woman's Library" is flourishing greatly.
The rooms are thronged every day with women
who desire to avail themselves of its advantages.
or with those who feel interested in its success, and
wish to lend it their aid Among the former aro a
large number of the teachers in our public
schools, and four fifths of the books which they
take from its shelves are histories, paemoirs,
travels, &c., almost to the entire exclusion ofli,gbt
literature, which many have predicted they would
alone require.
SALES ON SATURDAY-SECOND BOARD
6000 Missouri Co . 701,i 100 Reading4l
3000 N Carolina G 5..... 93 195 Mich Central 8 . . ... Ott
1000 Tenn GI '9O 81.1; 100 do GS;
200 N Y Central H.— • . 80% 250 do .... ....... /19.14
4 0 .030 81 100 81 8&NIa It -181 i
.....
004))do -- ."""
847s;iii , ao • ..... —• • • 15 14
29 do .........b3O 8134 50 C. Ray, & Q. R. 633 79
200 do .........050 8104 CO do ~. . ....0.30 70,64'
250 do ~. ._.. 8(1341500 ,74 HPr N Ig . 6 35
/0 I rio Railroad. . 29 1100 PanalLa R .... 830. 21
110 do ..........660 23 101 111 jets ft a'p.....6 1 40 71
NV do —....- 284 200 do ... . 7034
24 0 do .. .- ..... —2B 100 do .... 0 . 30 703:
110 do .........x602754 100 do . .
b 3 _._. 70 3 4
150 do ............ 2734 160 do ........0 7100
160 do ... .... 660 2714 103 Oat & Chi R...... . 0700
.. 030 63
121(101 . Pa ifive:ii:: 21 ,5 12 Po :.::: - :....1310 670 , 4
100 do n . . .'....... 5734 400 clev & Tol R . :12
50 Ilarlom R......... 1514 700 do .... 611Wri 32
100 do •••• • • 1 . 1, 0 IT
. •
h 0 de i , el fi;.4liii) chi & Rook bl%
100 :leading 41351150 do ..—. 61?;
THE MASKS'S&
Astirs are unchanged, with small sales at $525 for
Fats and Fouls.
FLetip., &c.--111arket for State anti Western Flour is
dull. are a shade lower, with receipts elan 255 bb s, and
sales of G,CCO bids et 85 25rtifi 35 for superfine State and
Western. :55 11.75 10 for extra State, 5550x5.74 for
extra Western, and t570z.5.8) for round-hoop Ohin.
Southern Flour is h avy, with stiles of 100 bblE at $5.76
taG for mixed to good. and 86 10n6 75 for lauoy and
extra. Canada Flour is quiet. and rather easier, with
eales of 200 bb's at 55 75a7 Si for extra. 111 a Hour is
steady, with small sales at S 3 30a4 55 for common to
choice super fleet
GRAlN. — Wheat is about one cent lower, with a ma
dente export demand. with receipts of 164.23.3 bushels
and sales of 20 100 bushels at $I 24.51 25 for Milwaukee
club, &1 33'1 for vivito, yen Western, $l4O for white
Wei tern. and 8157 for white Michigan. Cora is firm,
with stiles of SO 020 bushels at 69c afloat, and 70 in store
ftr rimed Western. Oats are quiet and without strik
.ns chance.
. _ _
• •
PROVISIONS.—Pork is quiet and unehan• ed ; sales of
100 bids at 818.60 for old mess : 813 :Morin for new mesa ;
813 lia:l3 25 for old prune,. 814 37 for new prime. Beef
is quiet and steady. Cut Nests aro nominal. lard
dull and unehanged. with sales or td bbls at 12..;z130.
Butter and Cheese are um:Longed.
Wnissy is firm, with sales of 101 bids at 230.
T H E i 1 't
AMUSEMENTS TM EVENINU
WUEATLEY & CLARKE'S ARM-STREET Tile vraa,
Aroh street, above bI.KIR.--" 7he Monkey Boy "--
.• SWUM bwains."
WALNI7T,TRENT TOE VMS, tYalnnt and Ninth ans.—
" The Dead Heart A Popular Comedietta."
McDoNmant's OLTIIPIC (fate Uniches). Race stren.
co
above Second.—" Ten Nights in nßar-Room; ; Or. , fhe
Terrors of Intemperance "—'• The Artful Dodger."
VAN A3IBURGII A: CO 'S MAMMOTH MENAGERIE AND
GREAT MORAL EXIIIRITIIJN, Tenth and Calloviull.
CnNcEPT HALL. Chestnut street, above Twelfth.—
"The Wizard of the North."
CONTINF.NTAL THEATRE, Walnut EL, above Eichth
The Groat American Consolidate] Cirrus Company.
SANFORD'S OFERA HOMER, Eleventh Street. above
Chestnut.—Concert nightly.
BARBECUE IN THE TWENTIETH WARD.—
The ex-roasting on the Ridge avenue, opposite the
passenger railway depot, was the occasion of stir
ring and humorous scenes on Saturday last. It
bad been announced that a huge Allegheny ox
would be roasted with a calf and sheep The ant
mils consisted of an ox, weighing 745 pound'
colt weighing 286 pounds, and a sheep of
wards. The ox was put over the fire on Friday
learning; tho calf and sheep were sent to the bakers
and appeared upon the grounds at three o'clock
P. Ti!., in a number of smoking stewpans. Tho
ox was chained or spitted en a pole or axis, which
wss made to turn over a hot fire ; the drippings' of
grease fell into an under lying trough of boiling
water, which, as each unctuous drop mingled
therein, steamed and hissed in a 'very violent man
ner. The appearance of the ox wound upon the
axis, an apparent mass of putridity, the flavor of
which freighted the breeze with nausea, was cal
culated to disgust all delicate perceptions.
The crowd was very largo, comprising every va
riety of individuals, irom the juvenile retailer of
peanuts to the beef-eater in the sore and yellow
loaf
The grounds presented the usual spectacle inci
dent to such demonstrations A number of urchins
hitched themselves by a long rove to asmall wagon
on woodsn wheels, and ran the ox bide around the
lot. The spot, it may be mentioned, stands on the
Ridge avenue, immediately opposite the spot where
the celebrated mail robbery was committed in 1830,
or thereabout, by Porter and Wilson.
In one plane we found the small woman, designed
as " ono of the seven wonders of the world.' The
other six, in the shape of some bipeds in knit.jaok
ets, and pants of hyena plaid, stood curiously
around, variegating the showman's descriptive re
marks by some extemporaneous witticisms more
pointed than delicate.
There was a beggarly array of national flip
hanging in a sulky, criminal way from a few
stumpy poles. Under these emblems of the thirty
odd sovereign States, almost as many vendors of
the national beverage dispensed yeastic beer at a
half dime a mug. Tho lad with peanuts was
also represented, and miniature gingerbread,
mounted on wheels, peregrinated from end to end
of the green expanse.
The roast, by which we have separate and dis
tinct reference to the ox, was pronounced worthy
of distribution at four o'clock. Thereupon, with
the assistance of a stumpy black man, a butcher
proceeded to out from the haunches, shoulders, and
ribs, sundry fragments of the average dimensions
of a unman hand, with which a half dozen tea
waiters wore heaped. These, being placed upon a
table, were seasoned with copious quantities of
salt, and ouch slice sandwiched with sea-biscuit.
Au individual then mounted the table, and said
that at the blowing of the bugle, the "feed" would
bo given out. Straightway the crowd, which had
been slowly accumulating around the enclosure,
was agitated as with a sudden hunger and the call
for " grub" became very grievous. The dividing
fence was shaken almost in twain, until a stalwart
policeman tore off a plank and belabored the
rowdies.
Tho bugle was blown; the rush was tremendous
The " groat unwashed" set up a fearful shout, and
the meat was " meted out." Volumes of crackers
were tossed over the Sea of heads; a slice of beef
was tossed full into some gazer's face, dripping its
disgusting liquor over coats and hats. Even this
did not avail, and suddenly rallying, the table and
stand were broken down by the rowdies, who filled
the area, made way with the beef and completed
the disgusting picture.
Thus passed away more than a thousand pounds
of beef. We saw one wee begone man who carried
a basket, repulsed from the table; the fragments
which the ruffians, who were fed, trampled under
foot, might have gladdened hie ohearless dinner the
following Sunday. And in the blighted meadows
of Kansas, where thousands of woman and children
era creeping In want and praying that the aurae of
famine may he removed, the magnificent ox would
hero been an argument quite as effectual no the ory
in the East of " land for the landless "
The meeting was called to order about 4 o'clock
P. M. lion. John Wood presided, with a long list
of vice presidents and aearotarles. David New.
port, EN, of Montgomery county, wag the first
speaker. Ile spoke at considerable length, argu
ing that the Republican party woe a truly coneer•
votive organization, and claiming that it was:the
duty of all national men to unite with it, in order
to plume Abraham Lincoln in power, with the
moral support of a clear majority of the whole
popular vote in his favor. Mr. N. wee followed by
John Dolman, Eiq., who was particularly effective
in his remarka. John M. Dutton, Jan Wood, Wm.
Moran, W. M. Bull, W. B Mann, John E. Newport,
and other speakers followed ; and the meeting did
not adjourn till a late hoar in the afternoon. It
was throughout a very large and quite splendid
gathering
FIRE IN WALNUT L .: TRIM—DAMAGE $lO,-
000 —On Saturday afternoon, about four o'olook,
a fire broke cut in the five story brick building,
No. 130 Walnut street, below Second, and for is
while it threatened to prove very destructive. In
the basement of the building Mr. Charles P. Ralf
hod some 200 bales of cotton packed away, and in
this portion of the building the fire originated.
Mr. Rolf, with his head porter, had gone to the
collar for the purpose of counting the boles, the
lost of which had just boon deposited. They took
with them an encload lantern, when the porter
stumbled, and, falling, broke the glass, and than
ignited the loose cotton. Bath Mr. Rolf and the
pastor endeavored to extinguish the flames, but
withisut rucleas, and they then gave the alarm.
The firemen were nail on the ground, and al
-1 though the floe was confined to the cellar, it
burned stubbornly for over four hours. Water
was turned into the cellar, but owing to the drains
leading to the D:ck.street culvert, great difficulty
was ex, , erionced in flooding out the fire, whims
persis'ecl is smouldering among the packed cotton.
It was not until the water in the culvert was
bucket up that the fire gave way to tho hremeu.
The less of Mr. Relf is estimated at about $3.000,
which is fully covered by insurance.
The conduct of the firemen was admirable,
and
clic; tcd the warmest admiration of the merchants.
In the upper portions of the building there was a
qmmtity of valuable goods. On the first floor,
Messrs. Patterson cE Bolton had samples of liquor,
and them were damaged by the smoke. The FO
cond story was occupied by Charles Tete, Ma
torttr of fine cigars, of which there was about
_' , 5,000 worth in store. In the fourth story, Mr.
Fstocis Peters had $2 000 worth of furniture
stored y and in the fifth story a stock of
whisky and other liquors was stored. and owned
by Messrs. Mackey v Wallace. Hone of these
gentlemen suffered from the water. At an early
hour, Chief Engineer Lyle issued orders to the
firemen prohibiting them from throwing water
into any part of the building except the basement.
Hare the floors were cut through to facilitate
operations, and the only water used was on this
portion of the building. Thus the damage was
mostly by rmoke, except to the
cotton, end the
whole less will be about $lO,OOO, whiob is covered
by insurance The steam-fire engine of Dr. Jayne
was in use by the Southwest; Hose Company, and
did effective service.
The buildings on tho oast and wed of the burn.
ing store wore somewhat damaged by the water
which ran into the cellars.
The &mega to the cotton will be about VI,OOtt
Meesra Garrison, liquor dealers. on the meat,
had their collar flooded.
She store of Pe:teach McAlpine, on the oast,
was also (landed
Other adjoining stores were somewhat flooded.
Total loss, $lO,OOO.
THE CASE OF EUPPOSED MURDER—TRE
PRISONER BOUND OVER.—On baturday afternoon,
another hearing took place, before Alderman
Hutchinson, at the Fifteenth word station-house,
in the case of Thomas McLaughlin, charged with
being concerned in the disappearance of Alexander
Quinn, on Sunday morning, the 21st
At the hearing, Saturday. Officer Stringer testi
fied to seeing Quinn and McLaughlin together at
Twenty-fourth and Spring Garden streets, after I
o'clock. when Quinn fell down, but whether it wee
from a blow or intoxication witness could not ten.
lle advised the two men to go home, and then left
them AlULaughlin said they were going home
Mr Hyde, who keeps a hotel at 1556 tlallowhill
street, testified that McLaughlin came to his house
at 6 o'clock on Sunday morning, and took a drink.
He had a little blood on his nose, which be washed
off. Ho remained only about five minutisop tying
that ho hal been whipped down the street, amb
robbed, but gave no particulars
This was all the evidence the proreeution had to
offer; no, niter some discussion between the eounsel,
the primer wag held In $l,OOO bail for nrwthwr
hearing on Thursday afternoon next.
SPEECH OF liON. A. H. REEDER.—T lie
rooms of the Continental (Nub, on Chestnut street,
above Sixth, were moderately well filled on Satur
day evening to listen to an address from Governor
R3oder A brief address woo delivered by Hon.
henry K. Strong. of tbis city. The president of
the club, John Goforth, Esq., in introducing Go
vernor Reeder, said :
In July. 1851, a little more then six yearn ago:Frank
lin Pierce. the President of the United States appoint
ed to a place of high trust and responsibility and
honor, Andrew H. Reeder, of Pennsylvania. lap
pllle os went to the Territory at Kansas and fulfilled the
duties of Ins peat. In liotaber, 1855. that gentleman
was deposed f orn that office of tints; and honor !Mayen
of his honesty, and his 1111mm:tit,. and his irOegrity.
[Applause.) In May. 1,15. that gentleman.:whe had an
toyed the confidence of the Executive of this great Re
bublic.:.nd whn had been deposed by that isxeautiver
ecause fie had refused to do its bidding. was driven
from the Territory of lifill , AlS by a villainous indict
mutt accusing him of high treason and misdemeanor:
In 1856. a little over four years ago. a rows for Ins devo
tion to free homes for free men ; for his devotion to the
priIICIUI3 of giving the territory of the United States to
free white men, was hunted like a criminal from this
territory of the United Mates; and now, to day. in the
latter end of October, in the year 0f1863. the same print
emle of free homes for free men flaunts in the breeze s
Vrid on the banner of the party is inscr,bed Victory. ,
IC * OrY App'ause.l "The blood of the martyrs'
Iles been the seed of the Cheroli. and the oppression of.
it corrupt Executive ban made a party coring into
power full fledged, and able to meet and conquer those
who give it being by outrage and oppression. [AP
planes.]
MR. REEDER'S ADDRESS
Governor Reeder woo then Introduced. After thank
ing the meeting for their cordial reception, he proceed
ed to discuss the policy of agitating the questions of the
dep. 'Change is the order oi the day, and it is the win
(tom of Providence in governing the universe. This
will he found to pervade the animal and vegetable life,
in all the world of mind and matter. All is change,
universal change, except truth itself, which remains
forever fixed.
With this as a starting point the speaker proceeded
to castigate those claiming to Le "°onset valve" who
are forever denouncing . this " agitation." These phi
losophers would have the world stand still. They ig
nore the agitation going on alt around them, and they
were very much in the condition of the mall who stood
at the door of 14 Gales ark and refused to take passage,
concluding that it wasn't rein; to be much of a shower,
after all!
There is another class of philosophers, who expect
the Democratic) party to cure all the ills of this life.
The speaker had, n, t long ago, met one of these philoso
phers, who had every reason to be dissatisfied with the
conduct of his party towards him, but he persisted in
sticking to it because it was the Democratic party.
There were many things in this contest of which the
R e publican party could bo proud, but there were two
things of which they had particular reason to let I pride.
Ono thing was that their opponents did not attempt to
meet them and combat their principles, as Oct forth in
their public declaration of principles—their oreed and
proclamation. c.nother thing was that all the other
Parties ti ere in no fear of each other, but were disposed
to unite nosiest the Republican party, hoping thatwhen
the lvg fight was over, and the big enemy slain, they
would have some chance in the seramble to ensue.
Tim speaker then reviewed the different parties. corn
moncing with that of Gerrit Pmith, whose principles of
negio-stealing differed in but one resent front those
entertained south of Mason & Dixon's lino. The negro •
stealer in the Fouth took the black from his home and
his country for gain, while the negrn-stealer in the
North helps the negro to steal himself from the noires
s iv. for the purposes of humanity Next the" Conser
vatives." who want everything to stand still. They.
however, were not worth while wasting time over, an
they had shown their strength in the Late contest. They
were thy victims of their own invention. In their de-
. . . • • •
sire to ienore everything. they bad even ignored the
election: [applause.] But they deserved credit for
their success en propagandists of their own principles.
They have so far eucceeded that they have made
converts of the Democracy, and that party now ignores
them!
The two wings now claimed the attention of the
speaker. and they received some hard hits. Reclaimed
for too Rcpubhcars that they now upheld the principle.
which had at first belonged to Dea.ooraeY, as established
to Thomas Jefferson.
He said allthere Wan of value and of rub tones in the
creed of Democracy IS now to he found oat+ fin Re
publicanism. Ile life and soul and heart and brain we
have, while two deinomliztd factions are fighting
over its empty and shrivelled skin.' One of these fac
tions (or parties, if you will) has a singular history.
and a singular composition. Born of an accident. and
against the will of its founder. he would have gutted it
it he could, after its immediate purpose was served,
hut it had grown into a power and a consoientiommess
which was beyond his reach, and it oompelled him to a
course of action which he had never contemplated.
Composed, therefore. of a set of followers mostly
honest, patriotic, and sincere. tied to a leader whose
correct ambition overleaps all those eonsiderations,
and whose dogged resolution is his only recommenda
tion. warred upon by the African Democracy with a
bitterness unparalleled, and its prominent men out
lawed and proscribed forever by their former menet
atee, it is impossible that its organisation can be long
'interned, unless it can get the control of the politics of
'he South.
It is true that Mr. Douglas had the best of the argu
ment on the score of consistency in creed • but when
we know that the great virtue of the party is to be
progressive in the advocacy of slavery. t hat would
scorn to be of little account, especially as his enemies
charge that lie agreed to move on with them in that
direction, if the Supreme Court would lead the way,
which it has done That he would have kept Dos
pledge when he crone back to the Senate cannot be
doubted. He had melted a party for his re.election.
which. whea that was accomplished, had served his
purpose; and he wen ready to dispense with them.
But they were men whose wonscienoes and judgments
revolted at the increasing demand for fealtyto
slavery and whose manhood was aroused at the in
telerade arrogance of the slave power, even inside of
the party. They demanded of their leader a per
manence of organization , and a resistance to these
demands, which,however it surprised and annoyed him,
compel ed obedience. Thia was the chanter of accidents
that gave rice to the Douglas party. With these honest
friends at the North demanding of him to stand firm,
with his ambition and hie touthern friends drawing
him forward, inconsistencies of doctrine in his essays
and hie speeches were a necessary consequence. To
Once them up would be an amusing and interesting
task, but time does not serve. Suffice ft to say that he
has met these exigencies in a manner that few men
could have done, and that he owes his success in this
to his audaoity, his ability, and the absence of all scru
ples.
But what shall we say of the other fragment—the
ruling. controlling power, e s it certainly is, of the party.
I insist that it has well earned its title of the African
Democracy. That organization. call it what you will,
is in this contest our natural and prominent foe. Our
issues are with them. We are Antagonistic in identical
lines throughout. We take isms with them on every
disputable point. term the questions of protection to
American labor, of gratuitous lends to the free white
man, and upon the rent overriding quote ion of slaveryextension,
extension, wo face email other with well-understood.dt.
varsity of ornion. But whatever the questions of dis
pute may which ere cannot
tracelect of contention be
tween us we back to the question of
slave and free labor. Labor of one kind or the other
is indispensable to a nation as blood or breath to the
human body. Experience line shown that the freeman
and the slave cannot and will not occupy the same field.
The one demands, and is entitled to hare, as a part of
the reward for performance of his duties to (moiety. the
respect of the comely, full toleration in equal rights,
unobstructed accesta lies high places of society if he
can climb there, a corn or support for himself and
family. and the means of educating his clrldren.
The free working man is not only entitled to these as
a matter of undoubted naked right, but he is only a.
dumb man and a blind one, cumbering the busy paths
of life to little purpose, who cannot see the t. as a mere
matter of policy, it is the highest and plainest interest
of society to grant them; and that 'humanity and right
aside) the working man will cost the residue of society
less in this condition than in a condition of degrada
tion. The slave does not demand. and as a stare alone
is not entitled to, any of these, for if he had them he
would he no slave. Under the se stem of slave labor he
onn be allowed no rights, hardly that of life
Education and information must he denied tom. All
the coma sin of food, and lodging, and clothing which
he gots are to as' gauged by the necessity of preserving.
the health and strength which are the property of
hie master, and of stimulating his forced labor. A
miserable pittance clothes him—a peek of corn meal a
week feeds him tie can have no wife or children that
lie can call his own, any more than the cattle which ho
drives.
It needs no argument.to prove that these two systems
of labor cannot mingle. Slave labor cannot endure the
competition. Free labor scorns and tennis it if it can
he avoided. The slaveholdere who rule the African
Democracy would force the competition and sustain
the slave, by the backing of their capital and the favor
of the Governmeet, until the free working-man is
driven in disgust from a field of labor where the me
chanic' is bought and sold in the market, or sinks to the
level of ignorance and degradation appointed for the
slave.
Having accomplished this in the slave States, the
controlling spirits of this party, filled with the idea that
this country is made for the African and hie master,
seek to Africanizo the ToTitories also, whilst Inci
dentally they are grasping at every addltronal right
in the States of the free working man, which a Federal
court of their own complexion oan give them, no
matter by what new and startling perversions of the
Constitution. Laboring in the same direction, and to
the same end, thor seek to import against the law, or
by change of rho law, no matter which, new hordes
of their favorite Africans to strengthen and enlarge
the system ; whilst they demand our contributions
of money ter negotiation, std of men and blood for
wars, to acquire new lauds 'which are either African
tzed already, or peculiarly adapted for tne process.
States which have declared their asthma:ices to adopt
their African labor find them willing to throw the
doom of the Union wide open for their admission.
Stares whirl, raiser the banner of free labor have the
hounds and wolves of slavery turned loose upon their
soil, whilst the, statute book end the courts are Closed,.
and these freemen are then told from the high places of