The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, November 15, 1860, Image 1

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VOL. 4.-NO. 91.
hbtaHi dry goods.
JNDIA SHAWLS. ,
VELVET CLOAKS,
CLOTH CLOAKS,
SILKS,
SHAWLS,
. DRESS GOODS,
Is f raat nriitr and choiat Mtoali mu, at
GEORGE FRYER’S,
Ho. tl« CHESTNUT STREET.
wn-tf
RADIES’ DRESS
TRIMMINGS.
STAPLE ANO FANCY GOODS.
ZEPHYR WORSTED, BEST aOALITY.
GILT TRIMMINGS AND BELTINGS.
CROCHET FRINGES AND BERTIUS. •
EMBROIDERED SLIPPERS AND CUSHIONS.
EMBROIDERED CHAIR SEATS.
WOOLLEN TARNS. ALL SIZES.
ZEEHTiuKNtTTaImas and jackets.
ZEPHYR-KNIT SONTAGS AND SLEEVES.
ZEPHYR-KNIT CAPS AND GAITERS.
RAPSON’S
TBHOOH6S AND. EEPHTS STOKE,
EIGHTH aaS CHERRY StfMU.
WHORMAY & OBISM’S! .11
JL , Cta. DoUM Bita{or 7*>.! -- > •
, poUaf rirntjfiraMAtSNkifbr £li!
Domr Fiftr-eMt suit for ftl.ti! \ \
-SoUm aSvwfr j«*MiitSiikifor 91JSQ !! i!
BBDy<mOtflN PjtlCKßl
4 W »»CMA M .^ ro[ , 4
® Ar»b (Xoaki, Zouava '/(skati. Blaok and Fan or
Good WMr’ireU.ror SI.
A l*r*a Stoek of CkrtW - . „
A Cargo stock of Caaotaamg, SatHneitf. fcVoitmgo.
N. artioTepomht for cauh. sol
A KCn-STRSIT OCSAK~BMPOBIUM'!
- Ajok-akraatcloak Emporium!
Biltitli-atrMt Cloak Binaormm !
Hfe v sBK&r^ffi- a? oTick i
Adam* Bm* fUhfc fid Aw*!
. .. Adam A Boa,lStMk mid AtoAI
E
YRE & LANDILL, FOURTH AND
—I ARCH «TtK)mH3A|P FOR NOVBMOER,
1869. rtßMartnsioa ia Shavte.
• ltemoattoation ia Mika,
Jtemoastration in PoaiiM,
OflmoBttmt|«s. lamswu**'
praoaatnitioa is K«risoM<
JtoMttctrattMiin Oaamafrtff.
~ * ~ m Fwno Cover*. no!21
fHCLDBIStTS SHAWLS.
\J Brirht Bootci Vlaid*. sod
’ Medi*«.CplofißS»i fine Worn,
tad
Btowu. B^ARFtIWa , BHOTHK8 g,
BLAOKINDIA BATINB.
giMnoraa.litr IgdiaSabi*.
• WSftaaodPoioref fop«e«.
Naok and Coloßd,ln» foplias.
no* ‘“'"’'bRA.RPLESS BROTHERS.
IUK ANDDttY GOODS JOBMEKB,
OPEN,
MONDAY, OCTOBER STB,
A Superb Une
FRENCH AND GERMAN
PRESS 000X38
; /■■, r hop
AUCTION.
atlaetioi of oar autocaon la iav) tad.
JOSHUA L. BAILY.
. AND JOBBB*.
um 918 .MARKET ST„
fa-tr - ' -
jjiAl,.Li, : 1800,
oHaFFEEB. STOUT, & Co.
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS.
■ tlflHß ■ ■ No, MS.MAKEBT STREET,
CARPETINGS.
SOWING TO THE LARGE IMPORTA
NT TION OF
I CARPETINGS.
And oonseiuent forced Bale* 1
THROUGH THE AUCTIONS IN NEW
; YORK,
nit ui tublt4 to offer t lute Meorloesit of
VELVET, BRUSSELS, and TAPESTRY
■\ OARJPETS.
OF THE NEWEST STYLES. AT
MUCH BELOW REGULAR PRICES.
. AUK),
SUPERB THREE-PLY and INGRAINS,
IN GREAT VARIETY.
R'AXkY & BROTHER.
mututb Ho. MO CHESTNUTSnoot
BLINDS AND SHADES.
jgIINDS AND SHADES.
J 3. J.wi LLIAMB,
NA M NORTH SIXTH STIKET.
>' Ii tke mort Mt«t(*»'8»»B»flw»ar« ®I
;VENETIAN BLINDS '
•• ‘ */•'* ’ ARB
I ;}WptfOW: ' -
! Ttt linia ial aswt Meortnient in to* oitr, at the
towwtfriM*.
; STORE SHADES loadoand lattared. REPAIRING
WS^^^^SSSSSBBSSSS^SS
1 SCWINO HAOHINES
HEELER &t WILSON.
SEWING - MACHINES.
698 CHESTNUT STREET-SECOND FLOOR.
wHm - ' ■•
JJARRIS^OUDOIR
SEWING MACHINE.
ifa t^A^e^tLAOW^ilPpi aUlLTlNO AND
heavy Work.
Both«wfrom two,Wool, without the trouble of r«-
Mo.TaBALTIMORK SC Daitimore. Md. ocil-Sm
>(WIB BEST MANUFACTURING AND
sMng machines
I. M. <sS gO.’B,
OOAAm ■ - No. 910 CHESTNUT Street,
REMOVALS.
JJBMOVAD.
THOMAS MteLLOR & CO..
HOSIERY HOUSE.
■ H»r« rewired totho Store foimorlroooutled br
YARD, GILLMOREy A CO.,
; No, 40, AND .4, NORTH THJRD STREET,
MARKET and AkcN Stroeta. . -
LABELS
CSPIRtTB TURPENTINE.-bbla. Spts,
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
THE GOLD BRICK!
THE GOLD BRICK!
THE GOLD BRICK!
MRS. ANN S. STEPHENS.
AUTHOR OP THE POPULAR WORKS—
FASHION AND FAMINE, ” “ OLD HOME
STEAD,” “MART DERWENT,” "LOST
JJBWELB," “ MALEASKA. *
EDITRESS OF PETERSON’S MAGAZINE, ETC.
is now engaged on a new story expressly and exclu
sively for the
NEW YORK WEEKLY,
(the best story and sketch paper published,)
ENTITLED,
THE GOLD BRICK!
THE GOLD BRICK!
THE GOLD BRICK!
whioh will be ready in the
NEW YORK WEEKLY.
ON THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1800.
FOR SALE BY EVERY HEWS AGENT AND
BOOKSELLER THROUGHOUT THE
WORLD!
PRICE, FOUR CENTS PER COPY.
Terms* $2.00 per year* with a Premium. Speci
men numbers sent free*' containing a list of premiums*
STREET & SMITH,
PROPRIETORS, 23 BKEKMAtf ST„ .
NEW YORK. _
IfW DR. CUMMING’S
NEW BOOK*
THK GREAT PREPARATION.
Ano work by JBev. Dr. Cuxomoi author of* 1 The
Great Trfbalatioß,” V Apoealy*iro Sjtetehrs,” Ao.
tepnnted from the London Edition hut published by
Kiohard Bentley. ,
The work will be issued in two senes, unifor.m with
“.The Great Tribulation.” The first senes is now
read/. Haro. Price 01.00.
THE MORAL HISTORY OF WOMAN.
, A companion .to ‘‘Love” (L* Amour.) jCraoslatad
from the French of Lecouve, by JDr. J. w. Palmer
This book presents the legal and historical aspects of
the subJeot* as “ L’Amour” does tbe sentimental and
medical. The two remarkable works haye an interest
1 commontWhioh"renders either incomplete without
the other. Umo.* cloth, bound uniform with “Lofe”
and “ Woman,” Price 91 W. • t
„ THE PRINCE'S BALL.
Stedman'e new imtinoauwiem, with humorous Illus
trations .in the style of “ Nothing to Wear.” A fourth
edition of this, popular little volume is sow ready.
Umo, Cloth bound. Price fiQ cents.,
Also, the Diamond Wedding:, and other Poems, by
the same author. lJtno. Fries 75 oents.
. %* The publishers will send any or ail of the above
books by mall, yojtase pa kb. w . , .
PolH.tr . K l3o > fcSWVoRk.
(VOW" KEA.DT.~A NEW" CHEAP BTE
f AKOSCOPK, containing bium. of EGYPT*
ITALY. HOLLAND, RUSSIA. &o. Price CO cents*
The etereoaoope »in the form of a Box.
Just He&dr *
The STEREOSCOPIC ALBUM, Nos I and 11. Pub
lished semi-monthly, each containing 12 different views.
_ Now Ready •* The Ninth Edition of
THE STEREOSCOPE FQR.THK MILLION, oon-
Umiug 12 views of Niagara and the Great Eastern, in a
Pookei btereoscope.-
D, APPLETON Sc Co., Publisher*. ,
Nos. 443 and 440 BROADWAY.
THE STEREOSCOPE PUR THE MILUONWiiI be
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STEREOSCOPIC ALBUM on receipt pf 25 cents. . The
Box Stereoscope cannot be forwarded by mail; hut may
be oraeredofail Booksellers, or will be sent byExpress
attiusMpeaMofthepeTsonTemittmf theu&o«&», .
A Liberal, Discount to Booksellers* Canvass are. and.
NeysAsentsT , nIP-»tatb3t
ft OnUAOKSBAX’S NEW BOOK:”
£ TBE FOUROVORGEfI. 8Hloh(. of Manners
Moral., CoortMid Town Elfa. BT W. M. Tjutotrew.
Or. Touiin.,wiUi IfliutniioßK SI.
EVAH BARRINGipN t or. Hewonld be a Q.otlo
mu. Bi Georg. Meredith. A n.w novel in on. yol. *l,
THE LIFE .AND CORBKSFONpB.NCK OP JOHN
A. CiUil'iiANTijjJtirQraonuTJ.B;X. anSGov.rapr
oftb.tfUt.ofMSm«**i. Br J. F, Jl. effibomt. Jn
W MBip B ?iSSS^‘ Ir BND®POEMB. Br Jojin O.'
Whltti.r, a ooliMtion or piMM aorer baftro pabufliioO-
Onovolwn*. 7. o«nU- - ..... , v,'>
,LBQtiaOS OF THE MADONNA, M r«re«itUd!B
thafia* art), Br Mm. Jm snout onirorm vtuJMw
other work., inbla# and lew, with a rortrait oa .to*!.
"rffil? MORALHISTORY OP WOMAN. TrMu'lilod
from the Frenoh of Legoure, by Dr. J. w. Palmer,
transistorofL’Aumur,&o. Cmevol. $l. „ .
THE GREAT PRKPaRATIQN ; or* RedempUon
Braweth Nigh. By the Rev. John Gumming. One
v Ths ’■ RTEREOSCOrW ALBUM, Non. 1 and !.
Twelve views in eaoh^.76oents.. ‘ *
»T§!h?ON I s]ps , HtC BIfITKD^ATEsT^jL 1 ?!*
Towle, One vol, $L|6. Avaiusble and useful book at
AT OXFORD. P»rt ,;n.
emonf-whlch are soma saw volumes.
' 3^YoHEoT 7 ifuT ) 6n , ect.
Lindsay & blakiston’s physl-
GIANS’ VISITING LIST FOR 1801.
NOW HtADY.
cost the Physician Fiftyor Seventy-five cents>
;t will aave him &a many dollari. ~ , .
price, prepared Tbr 28 patterns weekly. Plain , 80 oents.
»•" •*. sc *» 'Jnoki,7B M
»» “ so •* Plain, 781 “
*• »• BO « Tuokfr 9
“ a j( jp u .. *2
*° w "
or the nee of Country Fiusicians and others who cqm- •
toanatnur own piteonptidns, or furoiih medicines to
heirpatiente. BldAKlaTOfl,
doJS 28 foath 3IXTE Street, above Cheatnok
d <3- EVANS’ GIFT BOOK STORE,
" * ■
Where you cm get boob in every heeertmest of I/lte
reture; eni BEAR IN MIND, >' . :
that helices eettietjrmir retail price,
Call Id, and one trial will Wire you that the bant
place in the city to boy booJwTfi at _ EyAW
GIFT BOOK EfiT AjB&SH MEK T.
Wo, 439 OHEftTl^Tetreet.
TOST PUBLISHED—THE BOOK OP
TEB SIGNERS: Containing FtoSimile htUera
of the Signers of Ue Declaration oflndependenoe, ll«
instrated wit a warty rone engraving*. from original pho
tograpfcs and . drawing* of thaw residence*Portraits.
&Q. Quarto, 68. Largo Paper Copy. India Proofs, Slf.
A.Book tEatno American cbonld be witbost, and a deri
de ratom in every library.
a rawuu « i r BROTHBRHEAD, A
Publisher. and Importer of Old Book*, Autographs, ana
oJI-fm™"' SIS South EIGHTH Btrttt.
okbad. n
ptJEK AND BREAD,
MANUFACTURE]) BY THE
mechanical bakery.
MR M OSTAUmh A* M* TOLiOWIMr
PLACES!
MECHANICAL BAKERY, B. W. oornerof Bread and
Vina atreet*. ' -
C.M. CLARK— ■**••*• Bale*
H. MoNEIL. • • —e. E. Sixth and
Coetea atreet.
JATHO fc SOB,—~ „ ,No, W North Fifth atreet,
JOHN O. MOXEY Ho. UK Visa atreet.
T. P. SMITH.. —Bo. 11l North Fifth atreet.
S. SOOY— Fifth and
W. W. MATHEWS. end
0, KBIOHT.-—.— BrorSfaireetfSilow Wal-
IXUv* - rf
OEOROK OARVIN -.Ho. MU Lombard atreet.
B. COURTNEY—
WM COURTNEY No.JO* South Twelfth
l ( ,v . S ' lufott
: S. H. WANAMAKEH atreat, abox*
B, LENTZ- "MUSS ma
L. HOLLAND &WjoTz,,T£* U 'nU,n
DAVID SADDLER -Ho, » North Elerenth
1, WEISHTMAK T fe*
8, 8. TOMKINS.— No- E>» North Front
ttfMli 1
H — ——B. W. corner of B«Ve&th
Ft MORRIS, —— - ■ ■ wfV, wsd
* Shipwn *treeti. - ♦
e.b.turner;. wo. xm south fwu
SHUSTER S.*Woorner and
, Parrith itreet*..
XHOS. T. BLEST - _Con»r Nineteenth «treat
•andJUdieavonua,
B. 8. SOWN and
j; MOINTYRB———i~ —-Twentr-Moocfl atreat, eb,
ALEX. FULLERTON. —— Comerof Fifth and Chria.
MRS. E. RAMBLER—i-—No. 1711 Coates atreet
D.F.RT.W. WOLF——«» Girard avenno.
WM. McORACKEN— —J3M Hamilton atreet.
K. H,
JULIUS KLEIN——B.
M. NIPPEB . .N. E, ooraer iof Fourth
MRS. F. ELLlOTT—.—S.^L'comat. #enth and
J. L. HICKB, . . o*mdjn, ? S. ill
C. H. RAINIER.. ah
ab. HeTerford tom . ;
N. L. YARB ELL— LenniTFenna.
JOHN BARNDT— ' J Tremont and Pino Grore
. ~ Penna.
OEO. B, TOWNSEND. Went Cheater, Penh* -
M. MoOLEES— . .Atlantic oitj’.N. J
D. HORTON Florence, N. J
EBKRLEIN Columbia, Pa
IJUTLEB HOTJbE,
No. US BOOTH- BIXTB. Street,
Oppoittalndependence Square,
. Condueted on the European plan. .
AooeuAbte at att bouti
• j A* KIWKKNB, Proprietor*
IVfAHTIN ft QUAYtE’S
Of- STATIONERY, BOOM
loss'fusm BTJffiET,'
«» rt .
THURSDAY, NUMBER 15, 1860.
THtJBSDAY,' NOVEMBB& iS, 186$
[For The I’ress,!
To the Manufacturers of Philadelphia.
Oiutmwek : The great political. unfattMia
nhioh have agitated the country Uw4 the nomina
tions for President, and Mill farther excited men’*
minds since the Pennsylvania election for Gorer
nor, have been sinoe seized by tho gresplng.svaTl
oloos, and unprincipled wire-pullers, operators In
stocks, tooreste such sn imprewton OXwooid ds
predate the value of such securities as they Wish
ed to force at a eacrifios from the heads of the Ur
mid and Impressibteholdsr. . .
This ery of-secession, .at first only used for fail
purpose, has, sinoethe Presidential etaotloit) bUrt
taken up by a thousand tongues, by the disap
pointed politician, by the greedy. by
the avaricious 'speculator, and by moot loudly of
all, the Insolvent trader, and the bsckropt ope
rator, who hope,' in a general panic, to psfai
exouse, and find sympathy for an' fenwifilng-?
ness or inability to pay their debts. -V- ’ -'.f>
1 have but little to say oh these topiei£aty pth>
sent appeal being on behalf of those who wM M lb*
deepest cofferers by all this tumult and ebcEOidoh..
•My appeal la for tha operatives, whew daily
bread Is contingent on constant employment, and
on whom thousands are dependfag far the oemmoa
necessaries of existence. -•-
Ton have, gentlemen, the experience o(;1857 to
look baok op, during which thousands vtit’throu/n
out of employment, and to avert thie loourfafaie of,
this great ovU of that period Is the object of tbc
present appeal. , . L ,
3 hat you will sufferfrom some of the,
which effected your interests in 1857,1 have no
doubt. • ■’7 -
To-day 1 have heard from one of oar molt the
oessfal and philanthropic manufacturer*, tbit he
had been notified to discontinue his eonstgnmeaV
until this storm hsd blown over, as no farther ace
oeptanoes would he. at present advanoedpeven on
tho most desirable goods.. ,
l'ho result of this policy, though, peritifl Com
mendable in the merohant, will be disastrous to
the manufacturer, and per oonstquenoe, to the
operative.
That the . argument of self-preservation being
the first law of nature, will be tangbt yOa by
banks, bankers, and merchants,'and the first ex-.’
pedlent resorted to in such times, hitherto,‘has
been to reduce the number of hands employed.
By to doing you would seek aremedy which part
experience, has proved to be the surest method to
increase the panic and alarm; and Util premature'
dlschargo of helpless people, at'a time when no
employment is offered elsewhere, and oh the Ap
proach of a severe and Inoleineut season, I regard
as an act more ignoble oh the part of IhV employer
than that of those who orgajnze a, etnie in times
of prosper) ty. for the purpose of. obtaining a higher
remuneration for their services.
If you find it necessary to ourtall your produo-,
tlons, and cannot find a market for all . the wares
and fabrics your machinory and hand; are able te
produce, I would urge you fa a coarse whiehl
think would bo consistent with yonr.dignity, as a
class universally esteemed ; eoisisfant with the
sustenenoe of your mercantile oredit, which will
not be Impaired thereby; eontistentwlth your duty
of self-proicotion, and consistent with your higher
duty to that large olass of willing, sttuggllng. aad
toiling humanity, who have the' highest* Maims’oi
your philanthropy and proteetion, and Who would;
I am sure, If 'their suffrage' Iras > fakea oh the sub
ject, vote unanimously far the plan 1 mfcjptt. - r
1 would have you run your mills, if neoassanr,
on “ three-quarters” time, or, If absolutsiy uiut
voidahle, on half time; but, if your Machinery
would be Impaired thereby, I'would have you,. In
stead, rednee yonr wsgei is. the same proportion,
hist, foe the reaeons I-have mentioned, , and a thou
sand others I could advanoe, do natdUcharge a
hand, I know.'the cloze wall; am proud to wy
have wrought with them, side by side.; and lhaow
they would rather subsist on half wsges, .life*
gather, “ ranks-unbroken,” thus fare aumpfa
ously on full wages,, with one-halt of their fellow
workman wandering about,' with noth!u fa eufa
nithlngfado/a'nfihatiUtlefa'weAr.
Oommeading these men and women—brothers
and sisters" whom Providence has plaoed'under
your care—to your goodness and protection, : '*
I remain, gentlemen, very respectfully,.....
, ' , On* ov vbb liASonnfa ..Cuu**;*.
Novaman IS, 1860. - -f-bv.'
PEBBONAX, AND POLI'EIOAL.
—The New York Mercury' of yeatord.y aa
nounoes that four Jdnoola .lectors Un been chosen
in New Jeney, Mo jjm. Drawer end Warts, Dell
and Breckinridgo eleotorgon the futon tioket, are
beaten badly, the former by 1,127, and' the latter,
by 3,470 plurality. The defeat of Mows. Vroosa
and Cocdit la not socertsln, although the ffgiinf
. ehdw-that they ltok 397 of the tfotte, neeee'aary to
ihinre their election. So that New defray will
probably giro four Votes for Uincoln and three ftr
Conglu.
—Rev. Henry ft. Guinness has returned from
Bnrope, and is preaching in ,Boston.'
—A Bhowjpan at the fair grounds.at Athens, S.
0., being snipeeted of tampering with negroes on
Saturday week, was'ridde# on a rail round the
publia square.
—The remains of Mrs. Ramadan, and adopted
daaghtor, lost in the Rady .Elgin, hare been moo
verbil, taken to New Orleans, and buried.
—J. 0. Shook, editor of tho Waeo (Texas) .De
mocrat, was killed on the 25 th ult. by Tom Mo-
Cordoll, who gave himself lip to thh law.
—Captain Harley, of the British ship Culloden,
narrowly escaped ft ljnohing at the hands of the
buttons of Mobile, a few days ago, for brueltie*
■ which Were perpetrated tinder his direetlon upoa a
• female passenger.
—Mi. Charles F. Brown, alias Aftemus Wart
publishes a brief yaledbitoiy card in the Olerelshd.
Plamdeater. It is said that Artembs has formed
an engagementwith Pantry Fair.
—The family of hisExeellency, Governor Barks
will leave Waltham for their future home at the,
Weet the latter part of the present week. On Sa
turday evening last the people of Waltham, with
out dtitinotion of party, were to assemble at Bom
ford Hall, to make suitable arrangements i)r a
parting'teetittohlal to Mr.andMn. Banks.
—A singular, card appears in the BrOolport
(11.) Adveritser. Rev. A. S. Finch‘warmth*
clergy against , a woman, who, small In stature
and wearing spectacles, met him at aeampmeeting
in Rookporf and osjoled him into matrimony.
Aftetwaids he ascettatned ihat he wes th* third
vlotlm of ,her'wiles. One of hit predekiwrs
Jived at Belleville (0. W.), and the other redded
in Wisconsin. The latter she left in a dtsUtute
condition, with three children to provide far.
—Plenties says: "An Ohio farmer, speaking of
tho Crops, 1 says that ‘ in sane things the etrih has
failed daring the past season to do her appointed'
work.' The' fact' is, she drank a good deal too
much during the spring end the early summer." ,
• Inmoricicre and the Pope,
i The cordial and affectionate relations Hat ware
understood to exist between .the Pone and Central
Ramoiloleie, just after the return of the letter to
Rome, erenow ssidto hiivp hoen ootuiderably
ohilled in oonseuuenes of snmestions hssarded by
the General, with rtspeot to indUpensabl. reforms
'in Umbria and, the Marches.'. It might be thought
'hardly worth while to dispute about tho measures
.'proper to.ho,adoptad,in,lost provinces; but you
will have gathered from what I.bave.'ainady,'
■ written that hopes are stlll oherishad of recover
ing them. -At any rata, XnmoricieieVhnrght it hi*
daty to advert to the abuses he bad feUpu to exist
> then; but the sole duty ,of his doing appears to.
have been that he met with a rebuff) add wad re
quested ■ (although, .probably, In language i*w
plain) to mind,' bis own bußihess. It seems ex
acted that his departure from Some, which Ji b*-:
loved to be close, at hand, will not be retarded by
any very, pressing solleltaUens' on the part of rhe
Papal Govsrnment. It ia an undoubted fact that
he deoltoed to receive Cardinal Antonelll and Mon
signor Berardi, the Under Secretary or State,,when
they rospeotively called upon him after his arrival
here. The, state of htl health was the alleged mo
tive of the refusal. I bear that two French officers
belonging to Jjamoriolere’s late army, ventured, in
an audience with which they wore bonored by the
Pope, to ma)ro. gome remarks of a similar nature to
those of 'theft'general with'reapedt to' the state ot
things In: the provinces where they had recently
served, whereupon Ilia ‘HdliheSS found Mrnself too
unwell to talk* with' them' and /out iljo'rt' the inter
view, 1 . . .
Uamoriotere’s report on his late unfortunate
operations is said to have bscn given in priratsly
to tho Oovcrnment, and to bo now undergoing the
prooess of pruning and, revision neoesdary to
qualify it for appearanoe in'ihat reniarkable nows
paper, the Gicrnaie Ji Roma- No portion of Its
contests has as yet transpired.
Scene at a Romas .Theatre.
tCorreavondenoe of the Rendon Time*)
At tho Apollo Theatre, in Rome. Is now repre
senting the ballet of Btanehi e Neri, for wntoh
title -that of Giorgio *1 Negro Am been, subati
tuted. It Is founded on Uncle Tom’s Qahin, and
in the original ballet there is a scene when eiavei
(suddenly break and.throw off their chains - This
seine, which was preserved In a former year when
the. same ballet was given, has mv been altered,
'aa Improperly, suggestive, nnd likhly to eyolte the
ißoman'publfo.,: fjre,. Chaim Mejiuppiwwsd, and
tho slave* merely ran off tho itkge. The oon*e
quenod is s nightly demonstration. that Been®
being regularly hii»d,wbile the following scene,
where toe slaves free tadaanqiss with
white women, if as regularly applauded.
.* Letter ftom “Kappa.”
[dorreipondenoe ol The Press,]
WASnraaros, Nov. 13, 1860.
/Sooth Carolina has no courage to seceds alone.
If she had, her Legislature would uot havo aallod
a Convention to meet on the 17th of December, but
would ’ have anted' immediately. Before that
tuif has arrived, the second sober thought will
have convinced the people of the Cotton States that
(heir safety and happiness lie within, hut not
Without the Union. They have hardly commenced
to cfary out faelr follies, and already
their monetary affairs ere in suoh a state that the
Legislature must imitate the polioy of Austria, by
authorising fae hanks fa issue more shin-plasters,
hoping that thereby they will be able fa relieve
the. .-embarrassment. But, instead of a benefit,
the people of South Carolina will become still more.
Involved,-as the neighboring States will not accept
. their worthless paper money. Commercial inter-
Idourse, even between the Cotton States, will ocaso
.undereach circumstances,and the.people,.espe
oially the property-holders, will be glad if the find
of thirty-three Stefas' waves again above their
heads But not only financial embarrassment will
make, secession impossible. There fa toorimebgood
aenso left with our Southern citizens; aathat theg
should heart the rule of “ Minute 'Wen ’’ and anar
chy. (the olllzena of ‘Augnsti have ■ already
kas,. and . others will. fallow. Thoy ’ havo,'. doj
houno*£tte ‘ ‘ reign of terror,*’' which; thsTanbcyi,.'
-Bhctts,‘sfaciabees, p*tUcutftj fricnda of
our worthy Chief lugfstrate, want to introduce
iatoihsfa B/ldrt- Besides, the new debts, created
wiUfafl heayily
thlli shoulders., In short,, the postponement of
tWexecutlon of the Disunion sohOmetill the 17tL
pMember 1* tLe death-blow to ptratildsl|m.. c . w
' S*n»fc(HP
not eo. " Jdia resignation is meroly the
lwtoa?4 he has to.play to get the re-nomination
of Jtbe pamopratio members of the Georgla Legiela
tpre forSenatpr* He and Howell Cobb are running
ia eyoit®draoe for that poeUion. Each one wants
'to outdo other }n dlsnslonism, belioving It just
soir to be fashtopebtoVHh the Southern Ugißla
tors. Neverthelese/it will help Mr. Toombs very
luti©, aa hl* ’poorer in bis State U entirely gone.
yrlll ffbweU Cobh gej the nonilcntios in
tpepauipuß, as I know ftom rery good sources that
he ! lftoks sixteen Totes (which never will be oast
to be Sttoeeteful. AU the abuse and
Unification whloh they so profusely have been
heaplng hpon the devoted head of Stephen .A-
fall, bash'upon their own, heads,
two moreof the enemies of the “ Little Giant”
S|UfhavebUtbegtaM.
< ! in our oity is abating. Oarolti*
all for the Union. Business Is very duH (
more so than ever before. Onr large property
-'boMais tremble,day and night that disunion may
taka plioe, as in that’ evonfc their property would
fifty porcphfc. of Us present value. If
anybody Is for the Union, they ate.
■ r Boyce, of South Oerolins, who recently
caadili speech at Colombia for immediate seces
, ald*^ thought .quite 'differently fo 1851. In a letter
to tha. Hon. S. P. Biohttdson, thoproei
dont of a Convention of tho “ Southern Bights As-
WolaUon” of South darotlna, held at Ohatleatonin
themhnth of May, 1851, he says:
’i** * . * #
“S;-South Carolina camhot bbcohs a hatioh.
Godehakts nations, not man. ■You cannot ex•
temporize a nation out of South Carolina. It
it svQtht impossible; we have not the resources.
W* cpuTd exist. by tolerance, and what that tole
aneewpiild he. we consider the present hos
a rant of the’ ago to tho institution of slavery,
cl Whi* w« would be looked upon as tho pooullar
•apowont, ail map readily imagine. I trust we
IWMlara to look upon the painful and hn
mmaitar spectacle,
,|" StlKitn tho weakness of our National Govern
ment, * fooling of inseoarityjTOuld arise, capital
woutKttko the alarm and > leave us. fiat' it may
■lm mIW let oapltal go. To this I reply, that ospi
'tel is thwllfe-bload of a modern community, and
in losSSgllJou tow the vitality of the State.
‘“ 4/ Government would oe a very,
isohine. Tho cost of a Government is
tt UversltajatHon to its numbers. A small Na
donal9elMjSMt .il necessarily far more expen
•atyo tun a luwhone. Look at the small German
a*ta*jf*ryit**"dhwn with taxation. So it would
m with ha. The Federal Beets would out off all
Maport dntlM, and the. Immeusebnrdan of the
feeiMaMt : .wofid .have', t* .be raised by. direct
fteltaghflnseourity arising frotatho
wUaira of our National Government, together
.Wlththe Mudsa of Increased taxation, would eattse,
,ftrathsr crmlinue, an Immense emigration. Eml
grmiouis naturally goingoa all the time from the old
States fo.it # fertile fit ficrhdos of the West; put
rax farmer burdens on the cltUena of tho old
‘States, And you- add immensely to-this stream of
'emigre tlon. ‘ Unfortunately this emigration, in the
event ofyour becoming a separate nation, wonld be
only from the white raoe, and yon would therefore
b agoing down the declivity of min with fear
ful velocity.
■n fi. Following emigration, and a natural effeot
oz it, would bt immense depreciation of property
lands first, more land being thrown into tho mar-
too ; then os
they would be out off from the Western market.
Mminiis would be loft to tho detain this way,"
it-V* * . * * •
" id. SiemiOß is against the wishes of the
other. Southern States.- Ought not they to hays
.seme' influence with us? Should we not defer to
our allies, who have tioenh/.times the interest m
slavery that we have l How oan wo ever-hono
for a nulon of tha South, if no, a mere handful of
he Gouthern people, tnstsS on enforcing our
opinions on fhe rest of the South ? A ■ Southern
Onion Implies a modification of the extremes of all
Opinions.
“11. A nanus maonrty, at least, of our citi
zens, an-ovpostd to secession. If there were no
other ohjeetlon, this should he oonoliulye.
• “Id. fieeestloß, separate nationality, with all
Its hardens, Is no remedy. It is no redress for
Ike past; tt is' no' security for the future. It Is
only a megniHoent saonfloe of the present, with
out in anywise gaining the future. We are told,
however, that It Is resistance, and that we must
not rabmlt to the late notion of Congress. Sow,
I would like to know whioh one of these measures
we resist by secession. It is not the prohibition
of ulavepiirtsin the Dlstriot of Columbia. It is
Botthepurobamf the Texas Territory, It la
certainly not the admission of California.. Which
aggression; then, da we resist by secession? These
Are all ibe.reoent aggressions which we resist now
by secession. Secession, gallant as may be the
spirit which prompts It,- U only a now form of sub
mission.
: “ Por the. various reasons I have stated, I objeot
in as strong terms.as. I. oan. to tho seeesslou of
Sooth Carolina. Such is tho intensity of my oon
ylblionupou the subjeot, that, if secession should
tods place— o# Which r Save no idea, for I can.
:not believe In the exlstenoe of snob a stupendous
madness—/ 1 shall - consider the institution of
slavery as doomed, and that the Great God in
ourhhndness has made us the instrument of its
destruction,” - '
Letter from; Delaware.
[Correineadenoeof The'from.] -
WimiaOToa, Delaware, Hov. 12, 1800.
The, election i« how over, end, I hope, the ex
citement necessarily attendant upon so great a
change lu tho personnel of the Government. I
fend you the vote gives in our tittle State. In
IS&6, Bnohanah received 8,004 votes; .BUlmoro re
oeived 0,175; and Fremont, 308 votes in tho
■ State— giving a majority, to Buchanan of
i 1,021 votes oyer tioth.
.List-Tuesday Bffioicinridge rpQllcd in the Btato
7,546; Bell, 3,894 ; Linooln, 3,825; and Dougl&a
1)002 vot6e~?frhidh leavej Breckinridge and Lane
mamiaqrity9f 1,369y0teg, In Kent nod New
Cfutle countioi lifiwoln ieads 8e11852 votes; In
tHaoes* Bell/leads. Lincoln 869 votes. How pro?
idlgtouflj the Republican vote has increased in
Ifcuryeart! , ' i \
■ /The of ,Mr„ Douglas had so organlza
ipNew Qastle reason I will
give you ; anon. In' this county we polled 719, in
I Kent 143, and In Sussex 140 votes.
* Tour years,ago this opunty gave Buchanan a
majority of about,Boo; this year the Admlnistra
! tion if in a minority of 1*370 votes! X question if
‘in any district or county in the United States has
i there been srioh a proportionate ohange in tho
’vote; atid auoh a repu<UaUoh'of your dishonored
.HP.' '
New CB6tle county has a greater number of in*
Ulllgeiitmsn and goodsobool* than the other coun
ties,hehce‘the result.
I conceive lhat the vote given to Mr. Bouglas is
remarkable,. under the ciroumstanoes. Wo, wore
without leaders, money, and the organisation of
the party. The men from whom'tho Doxnoor&tio
masses' aoeepted their ftemboraoy heretofore have
gone into the ranks of the enemy. Too many of
our people* totbeir shame be Uspokonj recognized
Jameaßnobanan as tho embodimentoißetuooratio
priueiplees and .believing in the maxim that “ tho
ling can dO no wrong, n took for granted that tho
Preeidant told tho truth when, in his stamp speech,
he said that Mr. Douglas was not regularly nomi
nated A great number of the oldmen of our party,
who hate fought for and with seoeder Bayard many
years, believed that, ,aa ho was herotofore a Demo*
orat, he must necessarily be one yet. Bach men
ate .never put to the trouble of thinking—that is
dene for them.
Benny Briggs* the Administration candidate for
Congress, was beaten by Gcorgo P. Pialier, of the
party. The People’s party was hero
composed, of the Bell and Ltnqoln men for State
and county offices. Mr. Picher was generally sap*
ported by those parties. Mr. Heed, our candidate
for- Congress, polled almost as many votes as the
.dleOtozaf. ticket. Although he did not poll a very
large vote, be made a gallant fight, and his friends
wilt not forget.him in the future. He is one of the
rising men tn.our Uttlo States > Xn this county the
People’s ticket for tte> Legislator© was successful.
A Senator was elected; the Bayard mem .assisted by
many Bell men, who oat Mr. Tatum beoaqge he
wet'h thorbUM Republican, worked hard to
fyeot Mr.’ Brindley. The Pfess, of to-day, In its
Washington correspondence, eays that Mr. Bayard
will not That cannot be doubted by any
one here, who knows how the Bay ardites worked for
Brindley. Bayard not only will not’ resign, but is
working for his re-eieotion. Three Senators were
elected who will hold Over until 1882, two of whom
are not Democrats or seoeders.
In Sussex county, ,the home of /Senator Sauls
hury, his friends -have control of the party maohi-'
nary, and, as a matter of course, the ticket nomi
nated was a Saulsbnry ticket, and .hence auti-
Bayard., The followers of Bayard, true fa ttm
teachings and example of their ohief, bolted therc
gular nominations, and mads up a tlokot ’eoapecttd
of gentlemen on.that and the People's ticket, whiop
was elected. 1 see,by the papers fa-day that Sauls
bnry Intends to Contest- the election; fdo ndt
know from what oause. Bayard’s bolt in.SUsfax
makjs;,it clear that Susaei will he against kin,in
two years hence, and New Castle county certainly
will be. Those-twO counties'together hiako' two
thirds of the legislature; so you see itfaqulte
clear that Mr. Bayard wilLnotbo his own suoues
scr. You may look out far secession,in the Legis'-
lafnro’ that will meet in 1862. •In this county the
Douglas men assisted tho Beoplo’s party In eleot
ing. tho Senator,, although we ran a straight-out
ticket far every office, in Kent 'and Sussex they
did not—and now for the reason why: ■ The last
Degisfatnne, of pious memory, passed what if known
us the “ Lottery Jillthat Is, a grant of a lottery
franchise lor'twenty years to France', Breadbont f
& Do., 'of Baltimore, the latter agreolng'fa pay.'Uip
tTTlt' 11 p<!r nnnnm, ! thjnk 836,000.
! W&faf-liiKyj'Aflo., the flretißen -Wood, just
mepted t» CO»*r*«7r(>m NewiKoyk, have an oltf
grant .whioh wiTl exni« jn 1862.. Itat one.tifaa
•belbhgcil to Dddieyfkkqregofy. of Jersey
Sand others. : Many oPotH/:“down
ybrs and timr
sjoaof tfi?.Legislature by n thkmg.” It fa said
jthallbWkvorrtibuMialljr fortunateln that respect
’at.fhe'iastSession; thatdhe'lotteryihen not.only
paid them handsomely, bat, also ,the member* or
tho Legislature themselves who voted far the bill;
Wood's grant being about to expire, it was hnder
stood -that application would be luedefor a near
graht, heuoe the' neoepaity of fas right kind,of »,
Legislature there, 1 I'fagrot fa-SaV' that the right
kind DgmfrSratiov - Inkroeecfutno*, Bougies
jneaiu ihsjower oounties, atjortt tAWntotnittßlQt,
s werflopposed.to.hny for any.office
otHfer eleators, and ttoy vtofo sueoestfui:
T?o,nomiflitionB were made, fidr4fcl they giro Mr.
Reed tho fall vote. Now,
to lottery grants in totoso WA stood on principle
and nominated our tiokeK-'Whether'a lottery
grant will pass or not. Is. very atpstfonable; ihe
Xfegislature being equal ballot, oaebpawiy
having a majority in the housesLota \ a the Sedate,
Ihe other ini the House. 80 you see the lottery
business great infiuenoe on our burislfition
and political system at thiVtime. \ * .
The list grant was engineered
bent. Mr.- Fracoe being in Europe. . Afler Mfr
France’s return there was trouble in camp,
the' latter takfng'coqtrol of the business, and sum
marily ejecting the otber.' The Soorets began then'
to leak cut, and Mr. Broadbent threatening to
publish now the grant was obtained, the oomuo*
tion wes great. Tho difficulty has' been settled.'
Rumor implicated many men in high Stations, and.
to oqp the wliolo, I send you. as follows, from,the
Delaware Republican a few days ago;
,{ Ricn Bbvblopmests.—lt is anticipated that
rioh dovolopmonts are about to be made in our
State in regard to. the means used to procure the
paasgo of tho lottery grant to R. France, growing
out of the faot that said R. France oanuons all
persons against receiving or negotiating the fol
lowing promiseory notes, signed in the name of
France, JBroadbont, & Co., orR. Franco'A Co.;
1 dated Jan. 22, 1859, at two years, for $lO,OOO
1 “ . “ ** “ , “ « 7,000
1 “ 21 “ « « 7,500
or other notes or obligations of any kind,' dated
prior) to January 1, iB6O, as thu same will not be
-paid, there haviog been no. consideration given.
Oh for a John Covode! Wo could then understand
.what these notes were given for, and bow much-it
cost to proEtltoto.the virtue of our little Stats, and
make, a' tottery policy 1 shop andjrambling hell of
our beautiful OU7 on tfie'mu. Where suoh sums'
are given for each sorvioes, it would take almost
Roman virtue in a Senator to render him oblivious
of tho'beautios of the lottory system; and by suoh
means our little State Is fast becoming a stenbh in
tho -nostrils of olvilir.ad America,' and equal to the
matchless virtue of the kingdom of .Camden'and
Amboy.
I had almost forgotten tossy that James Mont
gomery, the editor of the Delaware Inquirer, hav
flung out tho banner of Douglas and Johnson for
1861. I guess that h*o is the nrst in tho field.
Onr New York Letter.
THE VOSTHASTKB OP K T.Vf YORK AKJ> UIS CCkBKS’-
,4. PRAIBEWGBTHY AOT IN TBEIS BEH*U-r«a
rORRESWDDOE BARNARD —INCIDENTS 'l3f
COT7BT.
t Correspondence of Tho press*)
New York, Hovomber 13,1860.
A fact was communicated to mo yesterday, of a
character so unprecedented in thepolitieal annals
of this city, andso creditable to .the distinguished,
gentleman' who was its . author, the! it deserve# to*
bo, published and .commended in every' paper of
every party,in thaqountry. It istbefiret instance
in thls'city whoro a high Federai.of&qifcl has, flatly,
refused to permU.hia clerks- to beassessed for poll"
tical purposes. I allude to the Postmaster, Genera*
Ulx. At the usual time for calling upon the
clerks .la tho peatofiice for the payment of the.
usual percentage of thqir salary for the, party,
and when the person selected as the tax.
gatherer appeared at the cffico for that pur
pose, he was informed by the general that
he would not permit tho assessment of a- single
cent to be made upon a single clerk for any snob
object; that the clerks were the hardest worked
and poorest paid of any employees of the (Govern
ment. and that It was an outrage to mot from their
small pittance means to defray the expenses of the
campaign • Ho was opposed to the practice in tolo,
and would not permit it to be enforced. More than
that, as postmaster of How York he would no
submit to any political assessment, believing the
practice to be subversive of the ; public interest;,
but as»Mr. His, a private citizen, he would cheer
fully give tho committee five hundred dollars,
which he did. The thanks of every Government
olorfe in theoountry are due to General Dix for
this bold and manly act in their behalf. It is
worthy the emulation of every postmaster and col
lector of oustoms in the United States, and es
pecially deserving of tho heartiest commendation
of the press.
Mr. Forrest continues to attract very crowded
houses. Even on nights when the weather has
been stormiest, not only every seat but all the
good standing*room in the house has been oc
cupied . Last night he commenced the third week of j
“ Othello,” wbioh promises to run a couple of wooks i
longer. At the rate ho has been playing llavitet ,!
£s<ir, and it will be a year before he can
£nl3h his engagement.
It is the fashion of some of the veteran fossils of
the benoh and bar of New York, to elevate their;
noses at tho newly-elooted Judge of the Supreme j
Court, George G. Barnard. ‘ This nasal manoeuvre
arises from the faot that Judge Barnard la the 1
youngest man ever elevated to the Supreme bench
of this State,* being only twenty-nine years of age.
His legal ability, general information, industry,
,and the uniform, correctness of his decisions, have
never been questioned—nothing but his age. The
people, however, entertaining a different opinion
from the big wigs, have placed him on the beach
by nearly eighteen thousand majority—the largest
majority ever cast for a Judge of the Supreme
Court In tho State of New York. lam reminded
of the Judge from seeing, in the morning journals,
an allusion to the notorious Madame Pedro, one
of those sharp foreign female adventurers who.
often manage to “do” our confiding snobs and
snobesßes out' of superfluous dimes. She was
thrown into prison some weeks since on various
: obargos of swindling; but the evidence being de
fective, it was found she could not be convicted.
She was consequently brought bofore Judge B.
yesterday, who administered to her the following
neat reproof:
• “You have been oUatced with obtaining money un
der false proteuoeß. We nave oome to the conclusion
that we cannot punish you for what you have done. You 1
are therefore to be discharged.’ Am titles are at a die-,
oount in this country, perhaps it would be quite as well,
for you to *o back to your own. where you can enjoy I
yours, mid the .prerogatives to wluchyou seem to think
it entitles you.”
Equally happy was Judge B in the following
oaae:
“ Miohnel Harris yielded gmltv to an attempt ai pet!
ty larceny, and attributed his mieaeed tohavint got into
‘badcompany,’ 'Where were,you, askedthe.Court.
, ’ln a Demooratio procession.’ said the votmc man. with
a. serious look amt toqe which exoitodißieat mirth,’.
When aßked what he did for a liying, he replied*Tlftm
a. laborer.’ ‘ well,’ said the Court. *as seoessiou eeems
imminent, the interests of labor will doubtless be uncer
tain, and the wages small. 1 will, therefore, provide you
with work till ndxt summer, 1 shall sentence yon to
eoven months on the Island.’ ”
A Slaver Departs from New England.
A Westerly correspondent of the Providence
Journal gives the following account of the suc
cessful departure of another slave vessel for tho
African coast:
“ Two or threo months ago a mss visited Mystic,
Connecticut, to pnrohase some old whale ships
Which wore for Sale thero. His story was a plauel*
bio one. He had contracted to send several mil*
Hon. feet of lumber to Australia, and, instead of
having it freighted, he proposed to purchase a
number of whalers, fill them with lumber, and.
when they arrivod, to sell them there. This seethed
a good plan. He was advised to send h!s lumber
to Mystic, as being cheaper'thoa to take the ships
to New Yorkv To ibis he agreed as the: best
course. Ho purchased ihe ship llomulus for a few
thousand dollars, and left. She romainod at the
wharf in Mystio until two or three weeks ago,
when she sailed for Now York. Bat eho never
reached that city, and nothing was known here of
her whereabouts until last Saturday morning. On
that day a steam-tug whiah had ostensibly come
down to tow up to New York a now ship, just built
at took in tow from Green*
port, L. 1., wberoahohad been fitting out aa a
whale ship. The captain said she had her try
works up, and her whale boats ready to launoh;
but, what was an uncommon thing fora whaler,
she had a Spanish captain and orow, and an Ame
rican oaptainand crew, with other appurtenances
for the slavo trade.”
A Prediction *—M. de Montafombort, the
ohlvalrio and brilliant defender of the temporal
power of the Pope against the aUaoks of Gari
baldi and Viotor Emmanuel, has written a most
oaustio letter to Count Cavour, in reply to a re
mark contained in a speech of the latter which
appeared to oall for a retort. In the missive,
which, In style, is as vivid as might have been eg*
pooled, wo find the following important admission;
M Ononraiilo,ldareto»ayit.Uoonjjoionce. Onyolir
*ide, 1 balieva, tssuccen. Piedmont Cares cverjthing,
Prance pemurs everything, Italy accepts everything,
and Europe undergoes everythin?. Yoursucoess, 1 re
peat it, appears to me certain.”
Maexxa.vd Coal Tjjade.—During the week
onding Thatadtty, -Jolh Ootobor, 103 bosU oleared
at Cumberland, oarrjing 11,841 tons of coal.
During.the season thow were 2,630 boats oleared,
oarryiug 206,88 S toss of coal.
THE SECESSION MOVEMENT.
EXCITEMENT ISTHRIOOTHEIX STUBS.
THE TONE OF THE PRESS.
L II. Stephens end 11. v, ioliflson lorl'nion;
' ‘ VIRGINIA'TO BE THEMED lATOR.
Unfriendly Legislation ami Fiery
I Rlielorio. - ■
j ... (ioveiiKon.ctißwiH Aiin kb. likcolk.
iXhe i National Xntdligenc'cr of yesterday rays:
iThe' following pangfaph appeariln the Now
;Yofri Times bribe lSihinstnt frohnito Washing-,
tbncorrespondent
! " Governor Corwin reached tin yesterday, and
if tokihg roiaitrkaWyvfell. - HO beHevesLinroln’s
Administraiioit wUI . fco; highly aationel ,4ed oon-:
y«ftiinka Outlwf 9 « wiU.l« the
Best, nostrum which cut in llio sfeaa' liuO U ad
ministered to dhe Soelhert uftttSSb* H*dO»
Ojot thick *t»d*idabl<3bt tit. Utoofe
ebMtopart.and Wotfd So.no good.’ ’
; iW» VO autborfred to at*to that" Hr. Corwin
never mggested-tbwt 'fehr -would' «rer operate on
nor w*l attributed.to Mr. Idnooln tbe
moUve. of being. uavUliog to make a eon-
BfrvMtlre deotagtioti because, tHe Elector*! Cob
IJgesbad out their vote*.* ifi. he olberwlaw
think cock;* dwlaratfcarigwilftU^on
£foper. .
. AfHAT OWBtfU.WiLVJHJ. , *' 'J
of thA'Aail!i^o'sS(S»; , iK&'!;''r' i 1 a
i “ ,We haveinteliigeMe
to» will oerfaHl/enaotdawawoirfeHngdoiamiarS
otai.lnteroouree .wtththoee Northern State* wfaieh
mts nullified that oonetitntionaj provislbnwhlon
baa been trulyoelled tbs corner-stone of the Con- ■
'ititatloa. Ibis meaiure will ba.effeeiosl, midle,
probably intendeds* a*absHtatefor«*c»j«ion..
< « Xbpugh tbs conn try la well pfejiaTed to have »
financial - prtsssnre at thia Uae< yet than is no
doubt tbat it will prodaos embarrassment both at
tie North and Bomb.” ,
TXSBI3BBB TOR/UlflOH.
- Tennessee is decidedly agklnat the Secession
movement. Indaatf, soma ot’ the wrttara-Aher*
rldleule, the .figurative. stylo of tho .Seeoders, as
Making their, cams a. laughing .stock. ■ For. in
atanoe,_ono,asjs;. LetUS.not .be. wtder the hoofs
of the Federal steed, when.a JBepnMleao.FrtaUent
Has got into the. saddle.” Another .cries: “Cell
lino Is:, at ..the gate, and. yet yon deliberate.” : A
third exclaims: “ What, in oomparißOn with li
berty, ;ia, all .tba.filthy, ooin. embowelled in the
.earth t’| Bat, beneath all. this qneer rhetoric,
,there is a profound and earned feeling. ’ 1 ~ *
HB. Htitina A»i> kmnstiB 1 picimrs, ■
Virginia is by 'no me.ak favorable to the pre
cipitate : action., of Bontb Carolina. .Mr. Hunter
reserves his opinions, with his usual caution; bnt
it is understood that he is against the Secession
movement. ,
• Mr. Pickens, of South Carolina, late minister to
Bnssia, goes wtth bis State- ,He Has been at
B town's Hotel for severaTdayar '
/OHTQ CAROLINA KOTBB BETCSXD.
. The notes- of. Soatb Csrolinabank* were, refused:
‘“Pfißimore ip psjmmj offare op the railroads
.diverging from that city, and the bpinion prev.ns
that tile hanks Of that State mnstsospend soon. -
VIBOISIA TO M A MBDIATOB. -
Hon. Mr. Bcooek is infaTOr.ofVirginia.ua
mediator between the Government and the sece
ding States, should they succeed. Perhaps her
position entitles hor to tha t honor. 1
A BULtaris fbOW baltikobb. ■ i "
; The Baltimore correspondent of the New fork
Times writes:, .... ,
Information from .Charleston says tbe .wHdait
entbssiasm prevails. The.wpmen emulate, the men
in their onthuslasru for secession. The Palmetto
deg- is everywhere fiyinr, - Business, however,!*
stagnant. Not a (ingle bale of cotton, wat being
shipped North on Southern account.. Every third
mdn dean a cockade, and only two Unionist voter*
.are known in Charleston—one an old retired
Sootsh-merchant, and the other a native Carol!-
iflan,' rxhc people do not mietrust LinScln, but
they depfeoate his advisers and hi* party'prinoi
ptes. . , ■ -
. ‘ North Carolina; Georgia,' Florida,' and- Xenas
are cohhdenUy ekpeoied tonnitein aeceeaian. A
ODBUnonioation is te be sept to the GoTernors of
tion? 1 Xhe
-nefnso to allow Liaooln’s inJaltimere to:
hold their place*. Xhie.iii ihear nonsense. Xhere
sire too man; Breoklnridgers, Beßlies, and others'
anilcnttogct theii. -
VIRGINIA. 1 •'-
- : '- ■- AK AnkhdltloH.. '.'i ; :.i ■ -
Naaken.
i[Fromtkecbirlottearilla(Va.l Jeffenonlsn-i,
Bpcm« Ssf9*»n<7l?b|B.i«Ui;cannot bpt.be.
deplored by.au good men. It hu cut a gloom on
the oonntcnaneoiof every one of al! partietwith
whom-we ,rtoet, . The future isi feit >y all to be,
ailed .with, gloom, end it may be with storm.. There.
is inrioh in this remit to chill the heart of the
fatriot. : Hrery Bouthern man mbit now faei that
e. i» called upon .to. decide the question e* to
whether he mil quietly and tamely submit to the
rule of a party ronnded on hostility to alt that he
holds saored aoddear ai a oltlsen of thb South, or
whether he wpl. determine to maintain hia rights
in the. Union if he may, or ost of the Union If he
mast. This ieeno wUI soon ho npok as. It becomes
every man. to weigh it well, and decide it with a
duo regard for the Union founded by oar father*,
and at the same Ume for the lights and the honor
of his State and his section, of himself and of his
posterity. , , .
assduditv or sncxsaioif,
: 'lho Leeiburg (Virginia) V/'ashiugtoniaii argues
the absurdity of secession doctrines, and la copied
approvingly by the Norfolk Herald:
The ifholo Union bought end paid- for Loui
siana; it has spent millions of dollars in light
houses, custom-nouso#, usd forts. Can she walk
out of the Union at her pleasure, taking ail this
money *»tt> her*
. California and Hew Mailed coat us $100,000,000;
we hsv'e'.e'reeted a mint, anatom-home*, and other
public buildings at an immense cost, and has she
the right to trudge eat with alt these, at her own
pleasure?
NORIH CAROLINA.
“ WAIOB AND WAIT.”
tFroin the Raleigh (N. O.) Standard, 10th.]
. The people of this community reoeiyed the in
telligence of the first geographical triumph which
has taken plaoe in thie country with a feeling of
mingled sadness and determination, for our part,
onr motto is, "Watch and wait.” North Carolina
Will never permit Hr. Lincoln or his party to touch
the, institution of domestic slavery. ■ Her people
jare at least a unit on this point. They may not.
advise or approve secession,dbnt they will not sub
mit to the slightest indignity or. the slightest en
croachment at:the hands of the Black Republican
Party.
soars caboluta win, act innmnnmT.
The Wilmington (N. C )'Herald speaks thus
obeeringly for the good old State: “ TVe wiUfcsvo
trouble, and there’s no use in shutting ottr eyes to
it; bnt We feel assured tbit the old North State
will stand firm, and whatever may be her determi
nation, that aha will aat fog. hsrsrlf, and. not for
Hie 1 Cotton States.’. The more. secession is dia
shsssd before the people the lets they will like It.”
SOUTH CAROLINA. •
SXCITIHZNT ,irr TBS I.VTgHIOB.
The Charleston correspondent of the World
.says; • •
, QenUemen from the interior of the, State say
, bnt one sentiment prevails, there,,and that is for
secession.' There has heeh a torch-light procession
in 'Aiken, In which two negfoe* carried an effigy of
Abrahem Llnoolnoa » »aU, with tbo followlngin
:soription on Ms right hand: “Abe Llooolu, first
President of the Northern Confederacy.”' Th’o ef
flgy was taken to a eoaffold, hnog by nsgroes, and
then horned amid the cheers of a, large assemblage.
A TESTIMOSIAL TO CALIB CUSBIBS.
The ladies of South Carolina have started a
subscription for a testimonial to Caleb Cashing,'
in, appreciation ofht* ssrvkeS, exhibited in de
fence of .the constitutional rights of. the Booth. It
ia'propcseti that the teptlinonfal shall be a minis-.
fare, in silver, ofthe brig James Gray, wMch
hoisted a Palmetto, flag on coming into port the.
o ther day. The brig belongs to Coming Brothers,
wine BBgoxitminax on tabbsc akd tpatbsuks ?
A despatch from Charleston says; The despatch
stating that Mr. Breckinridge intended to stamp
the, Cotton States in favor of;the Union is muon
commented on to-day, bnt meets no favor’in this
quarter. Some go so far as to say that, if he at
tempts to speak; against secession in this State, be
would by tarred and feathered.-
.There are' quite, a. large, number of vessels. in.
port, bnt the stars and stripes art nowhereto be
seen among the shipping or in the etty.
aouvaioAnouvA: abd traxcb.
The Charleston Cowrtsr,; after quoting a part of
theNewYoik Courtier da Etati t7»« r artio!e in
timating that' Sohth Oarollna-haa made overtures
to Prance with e view to asbertain whether, under
certain olrcumstascss, she wonld, guarantee,tb*
neutrality of one the Southern
oeast of the' united States; remarks as follow*
“That *0 siUy andabmrd a statement should'
have found its way,into the columns of-.a re*p*ota
ble paper shows how fruitful is the orlsis of reports
thatoonld have had nb other scarce-than eioited
imaginations. What party could: have had .’au
thority to make overtures before any definite, plea
of resistance has been digested and determined on,
it would, be dlffionlt to conceive; and why one of
the Uaropoan Governments, rather, than another
with which the South has the largest intercourse—
why -France rather than Poglund—should have
been made the Power to whom ouch overtures were
made, it would be no less (Union]t to.imsgine.
tub nsw, mscßioK roAO.
iFrom the Charleston<3. C.) News, Nov. 9 ] .
Tn* Boeta Oaholina Flao —This glorious flag
how fits*’from many windowaof buildings in.our
olty, ood webopc in a i'ow days to sec hundreds of
them unfolding thomseWes over onr heads. No one
at 'the present time can gate at this standard of
ourßtatewithout feeling Ms heart.fwell with emo
tion, audMa wrm nerved and strengthened with a
determination to stand,by it to the lest.
' : NnwPnASS.— Messrs, Oannaltfttßliggsare pro
paring .two flagso in.-tha best, style of painting,for
the (Florida line.of steamers, the Gordon, and
Carolina. ' The design' to be represented' is a
h'eie '.of betfitb, ov*r which will-bo f wo. stirs,-o#a
for. the gallant State of Florida, and the other for
South Carolina.
The Savannah Republican eOmmsats open the
proooediogs at a moating which was 'held there
some days einoe,.»nd the rtjrathof .which has been
aunounoodby telegraph. , The. lienubUcan gays;
• “ Fob onrseives, we may add," tbit We think the
time has. arrived;for 'Ksmethlnjj to be done either
for * reconciliation ora reparation. We cannot
live as we have lived.,' Dissolution, if not some-
GEORGIA.
fn Wwum hw winw «»ti«djNnifc
OMiltrn Mian, a sd*»n»»,>«*.—;—
Three Co»ie»,“ “ -a.——U Mr
Ten “ «• " - "»«•*
TwentjOo»n»,t>rOT«r‘' ' ' (taiOiiSttlJ
jeeeh mibaorrber,)—■ ~
i Fora .Club tfXMkly-bM M «*»,«• viOilMtaa
aitrKKWTto.Uwjfrttar-Bfbfjtjit^Sßb,
’WjPo««niart<»srtWeeeted toiei irl*e«Wjg*U>
*h* Wmklt Mis'a. ,
- CAT.tKftflMI A .JPRUttf , , .
, imm three t4o» gllrotk/iiitijwlpir tbe OdUml*
Btetmeit,
tiUig worse, snrely nw'aite ns una#itha.«idflt*jr
ordor or things.- No bottor da/to to* thttl3!-' s
in .the face and dial wiffi it pHM9WB« '
viilbe found than the pi fciafat. A zsorMMQt of
etoWr*ali '■
s?iiu2° “ O SIS’ “A carried ibrwartwHtPtJimt -
®«Sfy.- moderation, . B a iSsS' -
excitement Hhitsboaid zheHc 'the ’eo&ddn
people wWTea-theiy are In‘tho J^htwwSif#. 3
r ll ,? 8 ” 1 , poaoo.aad haßnhiy
to m»t hit' Snhappy eoantiy, 'or i# die
honorahVe; «jgW<n, aid fodepehdoßtßoHtleai a-'
uumtt swtfon'. -‘-yd fortta
obtain it; bat Abald the latter becor dWfafiW
Will be no fahltof Our own. On all dneettont that
may arise Geprgi-a should avoid preoipitoteaetftib,'.
and; on refleotforf.art fur' heraslf; 'BheaboaH."
sternly refnro'to be embroiled, or driten into
mearares,.brothers, against'H« own witlandthe
convictions ot her best judgment. Whatdrtr dasW'
be het coursi ne shall b< with her, as a loyal aon,
** vie" B ! andto the osdjbf
: L 1 • MB- "If AM A H UAKis AS OFyjtß. ■
call appears in the Hthwuik -
Luhoriadw? 0F CaAT » A “ Couatrtri.tsaj
'ata, and, tqaip HQ* men’wit'b AtiVS—i^feTSLiS 1
aW»ed.I«WOM,- Thereofroo.wt»ueuigS
itf attach yourselves to a military ootihrmSSi
■nieet "any call, /rom tAe Soicth.atajaamaiMi s
nptioa, are invited tonaaet,at:aty-fO&ariihiim.,
I Hone, need come who cannot fureisbWrown
horM - O. A.i. fc**Aa,. ;
• | ' ' _ ' 'A BUBOY. • •
' Client* American, after certain nlliwTlf :
tfeoji oonelttiJes; T ‘.
l in&Tor of eWirir.itnnr^'*^
fcSiSfSS' 3
ti« utter A destruo tfon, of tbe Soi&SSSr&fE?
disunion if Lioooln Is elected; ~-•
11. "Apt» foe a Boinms cojrnrinn^ 5
Atlanta Cvnftdcracy has a*ethsifv2aa'. ;
vfliicftit thus presents:' . . wup, !»... <
r think now thata Convention of tttßntt*
i*!? 5 t ¥ M si, oald b» poJtjx!Md>for it h welloader
stood that, in no case, or upder,any oirfnuaitauM.
bin a statScisl Black Repilhiican President t!5
tie Have State*;- Ibis-we believe (« an
atodnnslterable detecmihitlon of the 6»«h. ■'-
Qar ,-pnly advice ris,.s!aod,firni, South! rßaefc,,.
then, being, tie facta of the case, a CoßvenUooM
aach Sonthern State is unnecessary, for fheMSi
tent, at least ; but let there be a Nstfohal OaaaSa-''l
-- of all the Bt£tea,>toconvene tka gnCf day u
of Janaary, in Washington city, and.etaHwed<*
delegates, two only from eaoh State, . elected,fcv
wa people, and lot theobjeetbe afcaFandtui. ’
changeable Settlement’ of the~"alaveryque«tioa
and all other differe'.ees which’agitate the imbUa
aatad and.alienate thotvfo stations. In **•■» Ata
*ntisn. lot eaob Motion,of the Confederacy wje-,
»pnt Its ultimatum,, and then, if a satisfactory a>d ‘
sinieabla adjustment of all. dlßertneet eamStW '*
Jfectedi than, and not till then, sbtmld thwSdtek, '
iwittfdfaw and eitibiuhra separate s i imiUl'
.Snoh a Conreeiisn taboaldtba ocapceedottfce
antfst, the moet exporleneed and nmeeiialln
w«te 'lt aneb aball be the will of the people, they '
-Madnot fur th» resole/ And lot’tbdlSSES-‘
-that Convention-bo referred to the peoß]* : fbr Mr- ‘
Jlotionorratification ** f - :; :
, antranns ann jOHsatra-roßunios.- • '
:Mitnano«TH,nK, .da h ' Not. .13 —Han. iXtx.
Stephens positively denies .that bais in teioraf,
.saoession. He wSlmako.a conciliatory spaaab at
.thisplace to-night.■
- .Stephens and HereCbel V. Johnton will uaia 1
.union speeches at Atlanta somelnlghtthlsewafc '■>
. ! ' • - 'FLORIDA.' -- •: r; i*-i *.
I From the St. Aurnitine (Florida; Exanuaer.] •
,S“;W.bat SHiLL PiosiDino?—Saoada.ofooiim! r
What rarrshe do in the event of LineUa’aitiee-, -
tipn, hot assart herself as a-frae, soT*rdatt. inda
pendenUiouthern State r Will she, c'ariibOiteH- ‘
Sea bar rights, hen boner, her aafety-i-eistnitill ‘
at tba fact of Slack Republican power? *S5*Mr >- -
itbe thought! Shame be upon all-; who thtek’i*!, -
No, never shall our ehivalrone. State bowse lew.
Her brave cltisenswere not born for soeh daltaea
mait. No true ploridi&n willriilnkof'it a mo
nient with any feeliitgrbfitittfbu oMmner ond da- -<
( t«tatton. ’ • . „
o oot. HovsTON on the xbus n wnst&s.i ’ -
! Aoorrespondent of the Oalreaton affll v'
Item Independence, Texas, October zl.citm jS' <
following alcatdi of a speeeb diUyand.^^Hi’iS'’''
(Jot. Hons ten • ■ - - -| '.-A m.syj a?
!'< Inra«anito:thCr»eant rald'and >lnalnMi^tte : 3 i
i 1) he.said ft bed bean
represented. The feat wa*,.that rtbesw JiaA.baaßt ,
oayone whiteaahhtuigln Tuas
-—Herndon, of Henderson—and two nsjrteaaV'ahd' '
itpate nsvor had been a vihl or hottiW- lHuii-- T
fjtnnd in the.posaeseion of any othelrasgteu ¥•«#'
«ate; thus intimaflag very clearly thst thaptMte.'
that were punished wore'unjustly pnnTshtl a«'
ti the house-burnings, it had been nporteddflSr ;
time tkaHhete wnt b>grteeb boMedNiteM'lttiS
4tr of AniUn, when in&eithe«e wtim&toSm
*f orlhe4.on.Uiß ontehlrtl.of ti trihUt SUh
i» accounted for the bornlnref ttMSSShmSiif
Uauete of ihe’Dat^'wb^w^Mmgt^S^j^^
he alght regret-thd etestlen' cf
oiutttetionwly.ridcWd, ha atghtteMA dSSXmH
liangorated- . ',Ym !. thay woild-h*Te doi, mt&rt
pVornia dead body. Ifbe.was not;’ ( ,, '.. .
I Y i aelnons forWWcmber:
t From Lb Fol!et,l ' '
; Various noroltios'in' matorial 'haTo bee* tirr’
pare* for the forthcoming s»M«n. Wrastfeajaiie,*
» f«», of lastjraar'agoeds with. aeW faoee, by tie , •
difference in pattern and general; ebaraeier. „W# --
ska; mention, among others," thepophne dt hunt, V
la large plaids, or spotted with -petits now ; dir *
reps, with wide stripes downwards grmn and '
Mack, or Tiolat and black,’are the moat atawaat
colors for this material—printed foulard*deltattt, =
,ln dark grounds, with small bnnohea of flowers;
■ and a sow material called Twin relret, a perftet.'
! imitation of terry relyet, but composed ofsflk and :
i wool. * --.i
, These fabrics are made with plain skirts, bat
very fall; and. the bodies generally here tight -
j sleeves. ~ ' -. ’
; The corsage d plastron is very elegantly worn,’ '
and is very becoming to Some figures. - It 1* epali- -
cable to almost all materials, we noticed a very-’,
elegant dress of violet taffetas antique made fa
this style. The plastron was ef biaek voivat,
richly werkod with jet beads. The' siaeve. wat''
tight. At the top of the arm wash faUnaS 1 , hrore- '
barred with black velvet. In taeh diamond wrmad
by the trimming, was a small jet hanging tKMr <
ijuent. The skirt was entirely without ornamaHt,-
exoepting at the pockets. One on each side wim de
fined by blaok velvet, shaped and trimmed like the
plastron on the body. ' '
; Though moires and Pompadour Silks are won,
taffetas, antiques, and satinsseern.at present the
favorite wear for a toilette habillie, fit there,the
emerald green and the new shade, called Ilavdnne, '
*re the dolors most elegantly worn. . ;; . ;
; Black moires are vary elegant, and thalr effect-.
depends entirely upon the style, and of the trajmiM ‘ ‘
by whioh they are accompanied; ‘ Forihstanblr' Ww -
havqaeen a bleak too ire with'a: boistlioiidsitdoa^c- .
ple-greon silk, and .a ruche ot Maokgauwr* in the
centre. The sleeves were'tight,'aridMM twdwtlk s
«f apple-greeh snk at the top. r Between '
plaecd.a:vnd4s.
. Some dresses are being made with .the skirt-nerr ,
fsotiy plain in front, the plaits'oommenelnf abolit
two inches Ou either side of Ihe furtcnihg. - " ;
' The. Zouave : jaokets »ro beginning to be ,
wadded. Borne are edged with a quitting alik,.
nf the' same color as the skirt with whioh tbnyiSe •
worn; others are trimmed wllh tJiicari*
an ornament likely to continue in favor thranirhout
the Winter. ' rm-r-5.,',
| Maiiy dresses that we have seen hava bMa '
mod with pattes of velvet. Wo notloed. a *IIk
dress, etmleur llauanne, which bed small. pattes ,
jof black velvot,’ edged with" narrow ‘giaMre, ‘
piaoed ■ down.' eaoh seam in the ekirt, and three
.rows on the body, one on. each shoulder and ike,,
other between. ,
j The Maearon and Pierrot huUons are 'Still
yrorn, and have a very nide efleeE when worn with
thick dressess, 0a whfth atnore elaborate’style of
trimming, would be out c£ .place: : i 7 ” 7 ,i
; In-door Jhitte are.worn vrith a (tight strain, a*-,.
■peclally When made of satin. All kinds and styles'
of passementerie fire' making thsir appeamaba;.'
same are,e*tremely elegant The sUrta of.aome .
dresses are made cn points, and embroidered, en
'soutache, commencing very wide at the' ham, and '
gradually diminishing towards the ,wa&t. '.. :. . ;
; . For evening dresses, light materials are most iq ,
'request, such as nets; tulles, illusion,
crape, 3tol, the houillonriees, or' harrow flocaoes;
.are.thensoaltrimmiogs. The latter are genefdly
set on yery full, and fluted. ,
For married ladies, to simple A style of dress is,
>f coarse, not necessary. Lace takes the plaoe dr
tulle, and jewels that of flower*. 'Lteo.Bwneeg!
'should have .nnder-fiohnots of iarlaltme, or they
are apt to hang too heavily. . " ’ ' ' ;
‘ The patriot and theluruoics 'are reprodaoed wfth
very slight veriations. They are made ofjValvat.,
olot h, taffetas antique, tool Xboy fire often trim
med with a sew style of lane whioh has-madr'lti’
appearance, and is -called llama lace, and with
macarou bnttons. Passementerie is a favorite
[ornament. ... ■ ,
.Wo have seen some large oloais,,obnfihed at 'the'
.waist with large plaits lb-toaU'ti#ff*h2ftlljrh’
:little, below; the; shoulders.. Some, sumties .'at* >
'loose jn front, and .fitting behind;. oth*»&Hin.
from the shouldh'rs'“FebM,
figureinfront. • ■' ; vec io n
"■ A new etoakhaa made.ita appearancaoaUed ttwi
Landgrave; it is bound with a narrow Watered,
ribbon. The pllerlne, trimmed in the sinJaway,
is longer behind than in front.. The tleeye'G ar-'
namented with a trimming.up the soampf the,
sleeve, from the' wrist'to the elbow.' The froM o?
the mantle is olosed by a pane, on which rare*
piaoed two'buttons." .
Bonnets are worn largoi advancing in the-fthflt,
and ifuyane at thesides. VelkeiseldomfisrmdlUw
whole ,of a bonnet, hut is generally aeoomnanied,
by tulle, laoo, or orape.. The interior of .the bob'
net is very Seldom all white,’.th* hep Mjtje,'{tenb- >
rally composed of blaok l«ee, flowers, orjraivat*,
A chicarie ruche, often forma, a denu-guirlande,
and has a very elegant effect. - -
livening head-dressej. Cf whatever they tbit's*;
iamßAtaia
lane, are very elegant. A Jvrofie. helittS?®?
wide in the front, narrower at 'the sides,'and. then
wide under the eoab or the bask hair; Is verwafist
pie and ladylike. The hair ,is generally dioried
above theea.head-,dresses at
with hanging drops, either in gold, coral, or pearls,
art very distingue.
- Many coiffures de bat are mnde nf biack valTet,'
mdiadema. Oh the point in fronl,;is pliM w
star or orescent of precious stone*; , oh
drooping feather, generally tipped wiih goM,.and,
falling on the shoulder. " .
Bhould this style'of head-dnst be .fhada fer Di,
unmarried lady or young girl, the vwriW Wa ir*-
placed by gold, ike fcauier* by Series hdAl#»d*o
Nets, are no longer seen, esespt foe KSglltll. rk*Qh
are then generally accompanied by two..JOHJ.f;
velvet, one with long end? idSS^tftfiSr ?jf**J™!»
another, more en,touffei*t hue rida.M #Mt«.
These bows maybereplaoM hyfMW^Ht
esse-the net, thus accompanied, srtyweftuiras*
dinnerh«ad-dr*s*. " - - .•
.o?i