The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, November 24, 1860, Image 2

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    "'“’''SATURDAY, NOVSMBER24i 1860.
nor 1 ~'”" ,
vum KtqiUlk aijit ot wy .otiwr dMlr paper
hi FMlidelphU, with * tingle exaepUdh;. S«-
tisftctotyprool of thU’fcct will bo cheerfully
■giTWi to Odycrtlterg. ,
-''i-'l’mit Monthly, tor Dtotm
;;i)N»f,'-i*»Wie» tl<l, f SfHi. PenMjlT»n» «ni
ro(itiT«-Slm L»w ; Di««»ter on the Western
Waters; Annlwrary i»t tk« Noondej Prayer
' |fgyrim;: Interesting Religious Historical Remi
..nisotoees j Weekly Reyiew of the Philadelphia
FouarH Psaa—Personal and Polities!;
*Y.trte.TiouMea in Kansas; General New*; Marine
/LTntellljiinoa..
‘ The News.
Ve'hMO adrices from California' to November
~ iQth.4y the pony express, which arrived at hi
, Missouri, *» ’ shoUo*'**-
p*ara*for California were still .coming in., It waa
' yote of the State would number 115,000.
' jEe fer 105,508 rates had been, counted, Llnooln
fnSyine 35,636, Douglas 33,836, Breckinridge
3)liik an! Bsll .6,1142. Lincoln, aa in lie heard
. 'tram, had aiplurality of 1,150. The probabilities
” : ..fcydr tlnooln’e carrying the Mate, but an official
■xetarn will be neceeaary to deoide the question.
’itie'lrfgislstaM ii in the hands of the Douglas
Bancocracy, Insuring the return of a friend of the
lete Sanetor Broderick in the place of Dr. O win.
•;Time at last sets pll thioga eyen!”
Africa arrived' at New York yeaterday with
-leUr aewa fram Europe. The only important news
'li frem luly. Victor Emmanuel had at length
'^hltiyad\at' > fifaplee, and formally accepted the
'Sonthern Italy. Garibaldi having
.bneompuihed hli seli-assumed mission of freeing
Sicily end Naples. had reaignad the Dictatorship
’-■rad retired, to hie ielandhome.' Prom Menoheeter
we learn that the etate of trade ie fevorabie. The
tiieth market wea qmot. Flour wea dull, end pro
.Videna steady. ' In the London money market
condole were quoted et 93}»93i for money end ao
cent.' The Heim. Bering report that State
eteekeaad Panama Railroad eharaa had declined
aenelditfebiy. Iha hellion in tha Bank of Eng
’land )ud decreaeed £230,000 during the week. ,
. We npderatand, aeye the New Orleans Pica
yune, that the Constitutional Qovarnmeit of
SHalloo, in calling together Federal elector!,
soielnilly for the choice of e anooeeaor to Jnerea,
aspect thet the nally important bualneet of the
Bew Congrew will be the coneideratlon of propo
sitions for a peeea or trace, to bo latd by foreign
PoCera before it. These propoeitlona proceeded
originally from, the French and English: Govern
insnte, bat Hls understood that they are to undergo
caaantlal modideationr by the diplomat), Conference
at Jalaps. 1 ' 3he parties to ‘this’ Conference, so'far
as known, are the British, Frenob, Spanish', Pros*
atan, and United States ministers, all of whom
have, special instructions in referenca to matters
befhre them.
Amid the many suggestions of the political
newspapers we find one in the Louisville Journal:
*‘lf our good friends of the Cotton States, instead
Su spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to
sbioe thaauelves in n position for defenoe against
tUginuy eyila and foes, would employ John Bell,
Stephen A. Douglas, Mr. Memminger, of South
Rarollna, so* Mr. Brady, of New York, lepra-
I anting the Southwest, Northwest/ South,and East
tf the Union, to oarry the reoont Chlcago-rtieae
6 SUM to, the Sapreme Court, they would bepntting
tkelr money to a profitable, end. Here la a oas*
Isvoiving the right to protection of sieve property
lei Nebraska Territory, the very, occasion required
for certyiog the question op to the coart of last
rsmrt,.where we can have an authorttative inter-
Vtaitelh* ef what the Gonititntton guaranties.”
.ZhC'3Vssu«s alledes to the cotton crop of the
that it has advices'of brat so far
i‘#*y4**th* north line of Alabama, wbieb
Mast bave killed the eotton plant, eo that the crop
of 1361 may ba considered made. Its amount ia
variously estimated at four, four and a quarter,
aad four and a half millions of bales. As the
Crop ia, in the average, a good one, and as ther®
has bean a decided enlargement of the sree plant
. 4 over tbet of any former year, we judge the
lergeet estimate not too high. In the present
tpaaeial andpollUosl condition of the South, we
judge thet the average ruling price ia likely to be
S low one.
An lnterestiug point has bean decided, in a New !
York eonrt. A, committee of the Now York conn
eU appealed to the coart to oompel tho city chant..
berlain to appear, before them end. give evidence j
(onoernlcg the whereabouts of tho city deposits, |
end tho amount of interaat paid oa.tham; 1 butthe
deotslon of the jndge was adverse to th.ooßicnUtwr, j
being to the eficot that tho atateta requires the ep- |
)>o!atkieet of a' committee by both' : boerda ofUhe ,
Roaamcn council, before the city ohamberltin een
be compelled to appear and give evidence.
' Another Maaaaehueetta cotton mill has heen da
ptroyed ty 6re. The establishment was in LsweQ,.
end srae ; khown 'a< Whipple'a Mills. Ttd eohfli''
geiatton took place on Thnrsday night, destroying
proparty to the amount of 310,000 to 312,000. The
calamity will fidl'apvarely upon the operatives of
Lowell, eighty of whom era thrown out Of employ
ment, , \
DitMluTe bon rtosivsd from Csneif, Vane
lacls, ip Ootobsr 23d. Thsrs vu Uttto, If U 7,
tl W jp_fj.- the stoto of tfftlri. >?*rt«'of the aoan
trjt to M qaietjtos rebel! having
tees dhpened, hat most likely to reeppesr on the
tiet'sppbrtanity. The items of news ere ulster*
••wig. >•' -
I There, is; a .strange rsmor from Qeorgia, that
Oerenor Brows, ef that State, will veto any law
MMttosidg the suspension of the banks, nnless the
State seeedes. It is also reported that one or more
«f the Charleston banks hare suspended;: also a
large eettes house—names not given—but this
seieds confirmation.
; Ia Hasr Jersey the banka hare sospsnded speeie
payments. : In Trenton both branohes have sns
peuded- They will pay out only small amounts to
their bnsineas eustomers. '
TBl ESkuiEs of the Union in the Sonth
haven difficult game to play. They mnst ig
hfrrethe Declaration of Independence,*' writ
ten by a slaveholder, and violate the Federal
Constitution, the basis of oik their recent de
toands upon the free States. They must
trample under foot the Farewell Addreißof
'Wasßruoroii/and the proclamation of Jaoe
»oh, (both slaveholders,) and reject all the ad
monitions of every leading Southern states-,
shim in Savor of the Union—inclnding Clat,
GBt9nrri.lFn.hull R. Kn»a, Wnhuic H.
Roa m, and Ambrose H. Sevier ; and they
ntost follow the.ezample of Jons C. Oaihous.
This, with the fact that they have no cause for
their present conduct, somewhat embarrasses
theirjpoadtioh.
' Sooth ; Oarolixa ' is somewhat distressed
abast the practical results of secession. She'
haareaolved to go ont. We are sorry for it,
t&'j inaamnch as she insists upon .going, we
idd her “goodbye.” South Carolina is the
ariftooraUc and spoiled sister among the South
ern States.. She will of course be consistent in
her treason. We are not, therefore, surprised
that*, her'moderate public men pause before
the prospect of making Charleston a.iree
port. Will Col. Oaa, ex-Governor Hasnieo,
and that “ fine old English gentleman,” Wx.
Aires, look this somewhat business proposi
tion directly in the face, and tell us what they
mregoing to do about it? .
:. Wises that Hr. Gnsiutv invites Republi
can farmers to settle in the State of Delaware.
£M?ange to saythat, while the representatives
pi tbe Democratic party from Delaware in the
dfljtioßa! Convention, and in the Congress' of
GmlfkUed States—all ablo and gifted men—
h4yO lately acted with extreme Southern In.
Saenees, the Rppabilcan element, in that State
at the bite election overshadowed the Douglas
Democratic National vote. We: do not won.
obi, therefore, at Guiux’s invitation. . .
Th* waoißAaas under the Administration
of. Hr. Boohamaw have the audacity to eon
tbme to attack the independent men who have
Misted his usurpations and treacheries. Do
tifey not know that even the New York
Herald has at last been compelled to admit
that the conduct of . the President on the Le
comptou Constitution was* wrong, and that
there is scarcely a gentleman ir£ the. South
Wfad attempts to justify the conn* of Mr.
XiicHASkn and his Cabinet? Is it possible
thatweareredoced so low that that which
the Herald denounces, and the South spurhe,
SantUl applauded by the paid slaves of power
jbkMi"State ?, -
/-''CwfrtnuUßi,* SFioniAnoit is indulged as
.|l£li^lpohree! Governor PiOKXRoi Penusyl
nUstMtt iako in hie last .message to the hew
Republican L4glslatnre. , He lta»';a glorious
chance not hiiy , to establish his consistency in
steading hy to doctrine of non-intervention
and pdphlkr put in proving to toe
Southern people that .onr gteit Conservative
Oonunonwealth ha»i»BVer faltered in the fol-
NawsPAPia conmxsroaunn, positively deny
tfcai ottherSeortttHei CotmorTHOKrsoi ln
-4sid toleiTe' the Cabinet# Frtotdent Bmo&s
-
iftM: agatut secesHoai(wbteh. tlia]r;eea-
M ln tavor of secession. M s 4
woakl Gtd Hickory do nnder such clrmun-
Exit Garibaldi.
Tho important netw from Europe, by tho
mail steamer jf/Wca, whlch left Quoenßtown.
on the 11th, and aiiiVod, yesterday, la that
Vioiob Emhasusi. has accepted the Sovereign
ty of the Two SiclUei, which vlrtualiy makes
him King of Italy 1 / Gaitwiuu, loyal aa bravo,
had resigned hist Dictatorship’, and retired to
his island home in the Mediterranean. There
he will remain, most probably, during the
winter- .."What he may do in the next year re
mains. Veiled .by the dusky Future, but he iB
not a man to be idle 'when heroic achieve
ments lire to be performed. ■ Perhaps he may
carry out his. promise of assisting in a grea
attempt to restore the nationality and liberty
of Hungary. •
Dickens’ New Story.
The.openlng chapters oi“Great Expecta
tions,” anovel which Chau.es Diokehs has
jnst commenced, are published, with four ori
ginal. illustrations, by Johh MoLihan, in the
enrrent number of Harper’s Weekly, the pro
prietors of which have purchased tho exclu
sive right of producing it simultaneously with*
its appearance in Eilgland. There will not be
any illustrations to thiß story, as read across the
attractive feature being a spe
cialty of its American reproduction, and the
artist—who so graphically" illustrated “ Tho
Tale of Two Cities,” and « The ’Woman in
White,” is singularly capable of reflecting
back the very spirit of his author. The scone
of the new story opeDS in England, and
already we have two new creations—charac
ters such as Dickens alone invents. These
are Mrs. Joe Gargery, and the hon-pecked
blacksmith, her hnsband. Pip, the little hero,
reminds' us, so far, of young Copperfleld,
during his early life in London.
The ii>EA of Florida and Louisiana leaving
the Union is refreshing. Florida was bought
and paid for oht of the common stock, and be
longs to the Confederacy. Old Pennsylvania,
who looks to the Mississippi as in part her
property (inasmuch as the Ohio and the Mo
nongahela assist to swell the eternal floods oi
the Great River, and inasmuch, too, as she
helpod to pay tho gTeat Napoleon, under the
Administration of Jeffehson, . the price ho
asked to surrender the French claim upon
the Territory.of Lonisiana), will never consent
to release her claim, to the Mississippi, <‘while
the earth bean a plant, or the soa rolls a
wave.”
Although Texas has gone for Beeckin
eidoe, it must be. recollected that Houston
never Was for Douglas, that many Breokin
ridge papers-in Texas plead for a peaceful
and prudential‘course on tho part of the
friends of tho South. Texas, like Florida
and Louisiana, was bought, and. fought, into
the Union, and carries in her capacious bosom
too many free,elements to justify her leaders
, in a precipitate movement.
Goveknob Wise, of Virginia, is pronounced
to be insane. This grows out of the fact that
all good men have had so much confidence
in his . devotion to tho Union, that whenever
he ■ speaks a word against it, they do not be
lieve him to bo sincere.
Italian Opera.
- On Monday evening, "Tbs Sicilian Vespers”
will ba psrformcd at onr - Academy of Musio, Mo
dems Colson, Brignoli, Ferri, and Suaini taking
the leading characters. This opera, which ia
.showy and attractive, is very popular in this city,
and Colson and Brignoli have already given aatls
faoUtn in it.. The price of admission to parqnetta,'
patqnette oirola, and boxes has bsen pat at one
dollar,..without any extra eharge for seemed
aeata. This is a decided improvement upon DU
aaan’a sharp practice in piling on an extra half
dollar.
. Signor Musio will officiate u musioal direotor
and - conductor, .and the bnsinui department will
he in the handa of Hr. Grau. The speculation is
not that of any particular manager, but o r a con
federation of artiste who will divide whatever pro
fits there may be among themselves, instead of
drawing salaries. Thns, every one concerned ha<
an intereat in making the undertaking a success.
. ' The,company consists of Madame Colson, by far
the best, soprano we have yet had in Philadelphia;
Miss Adelaide Phillips, contralto ; Signor Brig
noli, tenor; Signor Sbriglie, tenor; Signor Ferri,
baritone; Signor Suaini, bnaso; and Signor Co
latii, baato. Thia ia a strong oompeny—better
then any we have had here for eeme time.
...It is stated that a young, lady, called "the New
Fork prawns donna,”- will .also-join this oompany.
She hsj appeared in public only, onee- at a re
hearsal in New York, and the truthful Herald of
.that stupendous city anxiously puffed, her, in ad
vance, a long;,time bafore ,aaid*»heareal.j ,Don
aiderlnghow strongly the Herald also, tried to
write np little Madame de Wilhorst ao another
“greatNew-York prima donna ”■ (with ail her
want of manner, voice, and execution,) we are not
disposed to place the slightest reliance upon its
opinion. .If novices desire to. learn how to sing
and act in the lyrical drama, they shenld get the
necessary schooling and practise before ooming
hither. In fulness of time, should this musical
aspirant become a prima donna with vocal and
dramatic powers snccesiiully developed, onr opera
goers will be-delighted to witness her perform
ances.'
The middle Passage*
Mr. Editor: Last evening the conversation of
a knot of intelligent gentlemen, in the habit of
assembling around a bookseller’s stove here,
turned upon the slave trade, when one of the
company asked,’ “"What is the middle pottage, of
.wbioh we hear to muck?”. No one was able to
reply., It wee then suggested to refer the question
to The Press. •
Novsvbir 22.
' In reply, we have to stale that Worcester’s Dio
■tiosary (the only one which notices the term at
all) saya: tl Middle passage, or mid-passage, the
'parsage of a slave ship frorii Africa across the At*
iarit!o 'Oeean. ,r We believe the faofc to he that, in
the extreme warm latitudes, mid-way between the
African and American continents, ships aye'often
beoalmcd for days. When the slave trade was ex
tensively carried on, hundreds of negroes, being,
oloeely packed between deoks, the extreme heat
told »o fatally upon them as to cause Immense
'mortality. Hence, “the horrors of the middle
passage” then became proverbial.
The Netf Administration— Steeling of
Lincoln and Hamlin.
orricx-RoaTiRS at cbioaoo,
Chicago, Nov. 22,1800. —Mr. Hamlin, Vice Pre
sident elect, arrived this morning, and took quar
ters st the Tremont House, where Mr. Lincoln is
' stopping. At about ten o’clock this forenoon they
were introduced te each other.it being the first
iimetbmr have met since their nomination. Al
though they were onee members ef the same Ccn
greM—Lincoln in the House and Hamlin in the Se
nate—they never before formed an acquaintance,
or even' bad an introduction. Mrs. Lincoln, at
tended by Mrs. Dodge, of Springfield. Mrs. Don
Platt, of Ohio, and Gen. Robinson, of Pittsburg,
‘ Pa., and Mr. Gage, landlord of the Tremont, who
Introduced the parties, were present during the
ceremony. ’
, .Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Hamlin, upon meeting,
avoided all stiffness or formality, and entered into
a social conversation, which was soon interrupted
by' an- invitation to visit the famous Wigwam,
where they were nominated. This invitation was
accompanied by the announeemest that this tt
maus building is about to be torn down, and, there
fore, the visit must be made at once, which was
done. iTbe president and Vice president elect
accompanied by Mrs. Lincoln and Mrs. Piatt, and
attended’ by leVeral gentlemen, accordingly en
tered .carriage* and proceeded to the Wigwam.
After a abort tarry, the party visited the new post
office,custom bouse, and United States court build
ing, and returned to their hotel.
An unusnal number of political vultures are in
thenity from Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Michi
gan, New York, lowa. Minnesota, and Hauaohu
setts* and a large number from different parts of
this State. They seemed determined to rush upon
Hr. Lincoln, arid occupy his time from more ixn
£ orient duties with Mr. Hamlin and others, whom
ft earns to see on private business. But Old Abe
set bis free against seeing thorn to-day, and fixed
the honrs between ten and twelve to- morrow, when
he and Mr*. Hamlin will reoelre callers.
Men are here with pockets frill of Oabinets, and
any quantity of highly important advice.
Mr. Hamlin will leave here to-morrew evening
for Wisconsin, on a visit to Senator Doolittle. He
will return on Saturday or Monday, and proceed to
Washington, via Cleveland, Ohio—paying a visit
to Senator Wade $n route.
, Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln viU probably return home
on Saturday- ■
Indiana ia harmonl.lng.. Mr. li«ne, governor
elaot of that State, had an ambition for the United
Btotoa' Senate, hut a prewnre ha. been made upon
him to remain Governor for two year., apd then
tuceeed Bright, and allow. Caleb Smith to .uo
oeed Fitob on the 4th of March next. This pro
iramme points to Schuyler Colfax a. the Indiana
candidate for the Ceblnet. He will be Postmaster
Generator nothing., A. H. Currier and John D.
Defreei, of Indiana, are here urging Colfax s
elrims. *
B- 3. Wtshburne, M. C., of this StaU, and his
brother, ]¥. D. Wasbburne, of Minnesota, have
been here apd had Interviews with Lincoln
and Hamlin. -
_By courtesy the State Department will be offer
#d,to Mr. Seward, who wui decline it. It will
then undoubtedly be offered to Mr. Bates, of Mis
aoari; who may aooept it if negotiations now going
on are su^canfuli
. - SpjJiNGViBLu, 111., Nov. 22, 1860.
The Daily Register, the oentral organ of the
Donglds Demfiofaoy in thG CUte, txpreiiei satis
faonon, in an elahorate edltorial ip to-dav’s issne,
at Mr. Wnaoln’s conservative intontioho, as re
Sips oftoa Korthweet at the apAtemUnn of Soda
iorlnuilmU’HpcMki and to OHM
pi*iaf»m tha.uma aaettqn wUh tho neoessft? t>?
aeAmatioß thapexttoMmi of Cougrea. .
/ It: ip stated dw good authorilxlhat aponidentiai
agnjt of MR jiiwoln aia(M(%|dtli laat ntoht to
RrmMrTAtn’ilJWwßNftiV, *to?pt aseatln toe.
Imiil'nptoteatl'aßfted'this morning frop
Ohio and Indiana, and fait sorely vexed on finding
Mr. Lincoln goe*.
LATER FROM EUROPE.
AERIVAL OF THE AFRICA.
Victor Emmanuel King of Naples.
GARIBALDI RESIGNS THE DICTATORSHIP
The steamship Africa, Captain Shannon, from Liver
pool loth instant, arrived at New Yoikyesterday after
noon.
The Nova Scotian readied Liverpool about 3P. M t
on the Bth instants
The Cnn&rd Company had ordered (in addition to Ihe
Scotia and several sore* steamers now on the stocks)
the construction ol anew first-olaessorewßteamer,of
over 2.600 tons register, to.rake the place of the iroa,
which has been sold to the Liverpool, New York, aim
Philadelphia Companr.,
' ITALY.
ENTRANCE OF KING VICTOR EMMANUEL INTO
NAPLES.
Naplxsv Nov. 7.—Kin* Victor Emmanuel entered the
city at half past 9 o’oSook this morning.
An immense crowd of people auembled. notwith
standing the torrents of ram whiohwere falling
Universal joy is manifested.
Turin, Nov.B—The Turin journals announce that
the investing of Geeta on the land «ido continues.
The Opinions publishes a proclamation of King Vio
tor Emmanuel to ihe Neapolitan and Sioihan. peoples.
His Majesty aocepts tho.sovereign authority of the
Two Sioilies transferred to him by universal sunVage.
K despatch from Naples states that the departure of
Francis 11 from Gaeta u imminent, in consequence of
the advice given to His Majesty by the oommaedera of
the foreign fleets.
Toxin, Nov. 9.—The Opinione publishes the follow
ing despatch, dated Naples, hov. Sth: “On the entry of
the King into Naples, Garibaldi tfit at his side in the
carriage. To day, at 11 A. M , Garibaldi, accompanied
by the Ministry, formally presented to the King tho re-
Bultofihe plebiscite. His Majesty received them m
the throne-room. The Minister, tiignor Conforti, ad
dressed the King thUßi ‘Sire, the Neapolitan people
assembled in their oleotoral comitate, have proclaimed
yen King by an immense majority. Nine millions of
Italians are uniting themselves to the provinces which
your Majesty governswith so much wisdom, verifying
jour solemn promise that Italy should belong to the
Itahars.’ The King replied in a few expressive words.
The deed of annexation was then drawn up, the Dicta
torship ceased, and the ministry resigned. Theemlm
sinsm of the people continues.”
It is asserted that negotiations have been commenced
between Genoral Fanti and the oommandor of Gaota
for the evacuation of the fortress.
fjignor Montezmo'o is about toj>roooed to Sioily aa
Governor Genoral. frignor La Farina has been ap*
pointed Direotor of the Interior in Bioily, and Lanza of
Pubho instruction.
The Neapolitan army is said to be reduoed to about
20,000 men. good troops, butwith none but old generals
at their head.
'iofill up the vacancies occasioned by the defection
of the subaltern officers, common soldiers have been
promoted frem the ranks.
The number of Loyalists taken prisoner at Capua
was 10,(00 andsix generals, and the Piedmontese got
possession of 290 brass guns, 20,000 muskets, and mili
tary stores of all lands.
GARIBALDI'S ARMY.
I From the London Times’ Special Correspondent. I
Caskrta, November 1.
Yesterday there was a thronging and hastening of
amateurs and idlers towards tacta Maria and San Atv
gelo. It was owing to an impression thatthnbom
baroraent of Capua would begin. Wby just tho 81st of
October was fixed for the event is. of course, difficult
to explain, but onoe the idea started, it waa not difficult
to find believers in it. The general inapat'ence that it
should take place had engendered suoh a credulity on
this point that sny wag might tend orowda to the front.
While the tendenov of sightseers was towards the
North, Garibaldi and bis stafT wont down to Naples to
assist at the distribution and oonseoration or their
oolors to the Hungarian Legion and to the Hang&nan
Hussars.
Those troops belonging to the Brigade fiber had re
ceived oiders the day before to go down to Naples,
where the oeremony was to take plaoe, on the Lorgo
del Palazzo, the open spaco in front of the Royal
palace. It W'-s just the site calculated to set otTsuon a
oeremony, with the facade of tho Acral pataco on one
aide, tho two lano buildings of the Forestoria on the
right and left, and the ohuroh of St. Franoisco di Pao-
Ja. with its cupola and aroades, opposite to it.
The preparations for the receprion of the King had
rather enoroaohed on the space, oovering, as they did.
the part towards the churoswitha skeleton triumphal
Aron and transparencies in all stages of preparation |
but sufficient still remained not to mar the general
*tTeot. An altar was improv eed close tn the triumphal
arob- and this altar formed the 09ntre of tho oeremony.
To the right of it was drawn up the Legion and to
the left the Hussars, while the opposite side was oo
oupied by a battalion of the National Guard' which
had been invited to assise at the ceremony. Two
companies of the Bersaglieri of the brigade Eber
formed a double line from the Forestoria to the centre
of tho square.
The daughter of General Garibaldi and the Marohtsa
Pallavioim. the wife of the Pro-Dictator, were chosen
as tho madrtnt or godmothers, ihe first not being
present, was represented by her father. All being
ready. Xiaribaldi, who oame down from Caserta, ana
wasathisold quarters in the Palazzo Angn. was in
formed ot the oiroumstaoce, and he drove down in an
open carnage. The Mass, whioh it is usual to read nn
suoh occasions, was over when bo arrived, and the
ceremony of consecration was proceeded to forthwith.
Padre Giovdnnii a Franciroan monk, who had accom
panied Gamaldi’a expedition almost from its landing at
Marsala, performed the oeremony.
The colors were brought up by the officers, and con
secrated in the usual mannor. After this the ribbons
were tied on. and the nails provided with the names of
the persons concerned hammered in. 'J his being done,
the oolors were brought b&okto Garibaldi, who, takiug
o 1 ©in each hand, addrested the following words to the
officers:
“I am proud to plaoe in your hands and confide to ycur
valor these two flags, tho fraternal oolors of whioh are
so well known on the uatttefield ol Italian indepen
dence. They will be anew bond between 'wo sister
nations. Ewival’italia! Evvival’Ungberi&i”
A general shout was the answer to these words, after
whioh Garibaldi retired to the Foresteria.
The Hungarian troops then formed a square, and tho
formulaof the oath was read by Colonel Moggorody t
•• I swear before God the All-powerful fidelity to
vjotor Emmanuel, King of Italy, and obedience to thy
superiors, i swear not to abandon my colors, and to
defend them to the last drop of blood in the fight for
Italian independence, until circumstances will perm.t
us to return into our own country. I swear obedience
to the national committee and the chiefs ohoaen by it.
go may God h»lp mo.”
Shouts of Kvvita Vllaha t VUnghtria followed,
after whioh General Turr addressed the officers ana
soldiers,saying:
“’Warriors: I needDOt recommend you to defend your
colors, for I saw on the Ist of October a handful of you
not only defend them, but beat an enemy far superior
in numbers. Thecommanderof the infantry belonged
to the famous 3d battalion of our Warorindependende.
Follow him, and I am sure you will never deviate from
the psth of honor.”
Then, addressing tho Hussars:
“And what shall I say to you, Hoasars l From the day
you we<© mounted you have sot missed an opportunity
to moresse the immortal name of the Hungarian Hus
rars. our oppremd oountry looks to you and espeots
from yon. As for me, lam sate that when we &to onoe
on the frontiers you will oom© down like a hurricane on
the enemy who oppresses ns.”
Garibaldi in the meantime had come out on the bal
cony of the Foresteria, whore the sight of him, as usual,
excited hurrahs and demands fra few words. Having
acknowledged the enthusiastic reception, he addressed
the people,saying:
** This is a memorable day for you, for it cements the
alliance of two people* and establishes the fraternity, of
the'people. To-day you 'fcave'OTSWCjeif that principle
of egotism which nas kept the nations separated, and
thus has.iaoilitifad the saryitude of all. The people
with whom yo&'have fraternized to-day have the same
enemieswbCWUireetea you.- Your oause-istheirs,and
theirs is yours. "...
“Dpt, before fighting against this enemy outside, you
have internal enemlfes to boat down, and 1 will tell you
that the chief of them Is the Pope. If I havo acquired
any mem with yop.jl nave acquired that of telling the
truth frankly and witpoUta veij. In using this privi
lege. I tell you that your chief ereroy is the Pope.
7 *iam a Christianas you are: yes, lam of that re
ligion which has broken tho bonds of slavery, and has
proclaimed tbe freedom of men. The Pope, who op
presses his subjsots, and is an enemy of Italian inde
pendence, is no Christian; he denies tbe very princi
ple of Christianity—he is the anti-Christ.
“ This truth you must spread among all those who
are near to you, for it is only when all Italians shall oe
thoroughly convinced of this truth that Italy will be
really free and united.”
Garibaldi had several times to interrupt his speech
on account of the applause which his words elicited
from tbe multitude below.
After & breakfast, which had been prepared in the
ralle of the Foresteria, Garibaldi went to see Colonel
Dungoo.a Hungarian, woppdpd on the Ist, whose leg
had been amputated ip tbe morning. Before icturmng
to Caserta, he wenUikewise to see Bixio,who islam
up with his broken leg at the Palazzo angn.
LATEST PER AFRICA.
Livehpool, Saturday. Nov. IC.—Tho African mail
steamer has arrived, and reports the tl&ve trade as
brisk The Amenoan bark Lauretta is reported as bav
ins sailed from Whydab. September 28, with 600 slaves.
The Amenoau baTk Buckeye had also sailed a few da; a
previously with a full cargo.
SIEGE OF GAETA.
Despatches from Naples state that the Piedmontese
are vigorously pushing on tbe siego of Gaeta. Troops
and a siege-train have been landed at the small town of
Molade Gaeta. and the Pieoroontese headquarters have
been advano.d to Hipe. Oi. the Bth inst. a Sardinian
frigate stood into tbe bay of Gaeta to reconnoitre. It
was ascertained that the defences were in good condi
tion, and that numerous redoubts and other fieldworks
had been thrown up so as to oommand the road to
Gaeta.
A Milan paper says that Lord John Bussell's deßpatoh
is just now of more value to Italy than would be ade
oisve battle. . .
Genera) Lamorioiere has left Home on a ten months’
leave of absence.
THE LORD MAYOR’S BANQUET.
London, Nov. 20 —The nsnal banquet was given last
night by tbe new Lord Major of London. Count de
Persigny, the French ambassador, and tbe Fardmian
minister, were the only representatives of European
Powers present.
The Lord Mayor, in giving the toastof the army and
navy.epokeofthe volunteeisfls the pr de and boast of
theoountry. General Peol and the Duke of Somerset
returned thanks.
The Count de Persigny replied to & toast to the fo
reign ambassadors, and Lord Palmerston to one in
compliment to her Majesty’s Ministers.
LEGAL INTELLIGENCE.
Unitbd States District Court—Judge
Cadwalader.—The United Stateß vs. Twenty-four
Casks of Wine. Before reported. Jury out.
Quarter Sessions—Judge Thompson.—
This court was occupied yesterday, as it has been
nearly every dsy this week, with trifling assault
and battery cases.
But one case of interest was disposed of yester
day. Erasmus Cooper was charged with obtaining
goods under false pretences. In his defsnoe, his
counsel, Daniel Dougborty, Esq , showed the whole
thing to be a mistake in identity, and the jury
rendered a vordiot of. not guilty, the prosecutor to
pay tha costs.
[District Court—Judge Stroud.—Geo.
H. Garrett vs. Elizabeth Gonter. An action on a
mortgage, tbe defence being forgery on tbe part
of George T* Devercux, who executed the papers
under a power of attorney, claimed to have been
signed by Mrs. Gonter. Before reported. Ver
dict for defendant. E. 3. MiUer ana ponroso fsr
plaintiff* A. Thompson lor defence.
John Lehman vs. Joseph Singorly, owner, &c.
An aotion on a meobanio’slion. Vcrdictforplaln
tiff for $101.43. Hannis for plaintiff; Juvenal for
defendant.
Tho Girard Bank, to tbe uso of Gebbard Harris,
vs. Robert G. Simpson. An aotion on a promissory
note. Without concluding tbo case, a Juror was
withdrawn. H M- Phillips and Coleman for
plaintiff: Wm. L. Hirst for defendant.
John Hertzler vs. James C. Shulto. An aotion
ou a book account. The defence was that the li
quor in question was sold to the defendant on the
condition that it w&b to be paid for when disposed
of by defendant. Verdlofc for plaintiff for $4OO. J.
A. Phillips for plaintiff; Hanbest for defendant.
The list was concluded except the oaee of How
land vs. The Insuranco Company, which will be
tried on Monday before Judge Sharawood, while
Judge Stroud will go into tbo other court to dis
pose of a case on that list, which Judge Bharswood
declines to t*y, ap it has bcon before bim twice
before.
District Court—Judge Sharswood. -
Charles M. Morns vs. Milton Cooper. Before re
ported. Verdict for plaintiff. Briggs for plaintiff;
Gerhart for defendant.
David Hey vs. Henry W. Hey. An aotion for
damages for breaob of oontraot. Verdict for plain
tiff for $63110. Woodward for plaintiff; Arundel
for defendant.
James Selby vs. Samuel K. Ashton, administra
tor, Ac. An aotion to revivo a judgment. Ver
dict for plaintiff for $23,467.30. Simpson for plain
tiff; Rawle for defendant.
Morris Penrose vs. John Kiehl. An action to
reoover rent alleged to be in arrears. The defenoe
delta a credit for $5OO not allowed for in the ac
count rendered by plaintiff. Jury out. Davis for
plaintiff; Parsons for defendant.
Mias Isabelle Freeman.
This debutante, whose engagement at Walnut
street fbeatre oloses this evening, has received
great kindness from tbo critics of Philadelphia,
who mentioned her hUtrfonio short-comings as
forbearingly as was consistent with truth, and
were more or less enthusiastic on tbo question of
her pretty face. Should she determine to pursue
the^difficult profession into whioh she has justen-.
tercfl; we recommend her to Join a rospeo table
company- in country, whore sho will have to
play general business,, riot.gpftlpg leading parts
until she is fit for them, and thus pradteBily learn
ing her art. Here, Miss Freeman: has not* suc
ceeded. This evening sho appears as Lueretta
Borgia, in the play of that name.
THE PRESS.—PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1860.
Latest news
By Telegraph to the Press.
LATER FROM CALIFORNIA.
ELECTION RETURNS
LINCD4N STILL AHEAD.
St. Josbphs, Nov. 23.-Tho California advices to No
vember 30. by pony pxpress, was, by somo mislaio
.brought past Fort Kearney, and arrived here this even
ing.
The steamer Sonora sailed on the 10th for Panama
oarryink three hundred and four passengers, and $920 '
0 0 in treasure, $820,000 being for New York. 1
It is believed that tho total voto of tho fiute will nni
bo very far from 110, CC0 votes. Tho returns alrendv
xcoeived include 100.808, of which already
Linodln 35.033
Dour Us. BM
Breckinridge 20.439
801 l 0.943
Lincoln’s majority over Douglas is 1,100.
These returns were all reoeivod by telegraph in more
than one hundred messages, and mistakes have nrubn..
bly oQourred, and the oflioial returns may be required to
determine certainly whether Lincoln or douula* i, n >
carried the State. Douglas will probab]? gain n few
hundred votes in the remainder of the State, butthe
probabilities are now in Lincoln a favor.
As near as can . be ascertained, the members of the
Legislature stAnd as follows: Senaiq—9 Uoublsb Demo
crats, 6 Pieokmndge, and 4 Republicans, ilouHfi— 4o
Douglas, 21Breokinndgo. and 19 Kepublioans. Of tho
17 Senators-holding over from last year,Hare under
stood to bo Douglas, 4 Breckinridge, and 2 »epublioans.
Under these oircumstanoes there are already numerous
1 ouglas Democrats aspiring for Ur, Gwln’s plaoe m tho
United States tienato. Among them are Governor
Downey, General Denver, James A. Mofloueall. and
8- W. Inge.
The contribution to thn Waghintton Monument fund
on eleotion day, at San Frnnoisoo, dacrammito and
Marysville exceeded 91,800. The returns from the
balanoeot tho etate havo not been received.
More than $lOO 000 was wagered on thn mult of
the State election, in flan Franoisco alone, and sonu
Parties are suspicious that the elnotmn returns may
&ve been falsified by parties intaieated in thn bats.
The total vote cast In ban Francisco was 14 41R, more
than B,IXO oxoess over, lant yonr. This satufma the
people that the census jimt making tho po
tulationof the olty but Co,oou,ls far short or the real
population.
ihe Peoplo's reform ticket for munlmoal nffioers of
San Franoisoo, was elected entire, by mojurlifrs rang
ing from W 0 to 4 000. This Is the fifth time the rftionu
government, which was inaugurated by the Vigilanoo
'oiivuiuee, has triumphed. /
COMMERCIAL.—San Francisco, Nov. 10,—TIi©
oommeroial transactions the pose lew days ftv»m (list
hands have been in suoh small lots at to render their
report of little importance, nor do they kdioatc any
ohange in the markets worthy of mention.
One parcel of Isthmus butter has been piaoed at3l>£o.
but further transactions are oheoked by the firmness of
ho'ders. Other quotations remain as last noted.
The weather coutmues fine, and trade with the coun
try steady. The coming week should bring tho Jobbers
into market, but not largely.
Warsaw, Mo.. Nov. 22.—Judge Williams, the United
States District Judge of Southern Kansas, arrived in
townto-nuht- and a meeting of oitizens was immedi
ately called. Judge Williams dobvdred a calm and cool
statement of affairs in the Territory. He has been for
twenty-six years n presidios judge on tbe borders of
civilization. He Is an old man. with snow-whi * hnlr
and flee appearance. He was formerly of Pennsylva
nia, and Attorney-General Plaok was his law student.
Judge Williams said that since Saturday night he had
been in the saddle. He oame to warn Miatourians of
the approaohing danger. Southern Kansas had been
delivered over to Abolition outrages under Montgomery
and others. For three and a half years he had been
presiding judge there, and endeavoring to maintain tho
supremaoy of the laws, and to that end he had used his
efforts, on and off tho bench, notwithstanding tho evi
dence of these marauders and lawless men, who were
there for that purposo only. He had organized and held
court m all the counties of the district. These marau
ders and murderers are sustained by men who procure
means from the BUtes, under tbe pretesoe of aiding the
aufferors of Kansas, but appropriate them to carryout
their designs of rebel ion against the law. They are
the same men who prooured tho passage of the amnesty
and other mdulgenoies, by their promise that they
would maintain tne laws and presorve order in Southern
Kansas; but this has only proved a respite to enable
tjiem more effectually to prepare for the accomplish
ment of their designs.
A messengor of undoubted veracity had amved,
stating that on yesterday near one hundred men hau
entered Missouri, fully armed, and passed down the
Usage to Ball’s mills, twenty miles over the line, with
four negroes prooeor ing in advanoe, with ooils of rope,
&o. The judge then made the same statement, in Bub
stanoe. as has been previously telegraphed, and closed
by urging tho people not to go into Kansas, but to pro
teot themselves within their own line, and to somfaid
to the border counties at once, as they are at ihe mero;
of thoso outlaws.
St. Louis, Nov. 23.—Governor Stewart has ordered
Gen.rroßttohold his brigade, consisting of the Fust
regiment of Missouri militia, the Engineer oorps, and
a oompany of artillery. In readiness to repair to the
southwest border, to repel the invasion or the Stalo by
Montgomery's band of outlaws.
General Harney started for Fort Leavenworth this
afternoon.
PRISE-NEGRO SAILORS CARRIED OFF IN FLORIDA
Savannah, Nov. 23.—1 t has been rumored for levcral
days, but generally discredited, that six free~ne?ro
seamen were forcibly taken, on the nightof tho 17th
instant, from the bark AT. W. Bridge on Cumberland
island, and not afterwards heard of. Also, that three
n*gro sailors, a po>tion oi the crew of the brig Ifm
goid, warp taken from Fernandma jail and removed to
parts unknown.
The Fernondina East Floridian of the 21st instant
asserts the truthfulness of the reports, but attributes
the oause to retaliatory measures against the North,
and condemns thejprooeedlpss.
Judge Futnam, m his oharge to the Grand Jury, de
nounced those acts. The editor of the Floridian says
tb&t it is probable that tho Legislature will pass an not
preventing Northern vessels from bringing suoh craws
toF’onda ports.
Avgusta. Nov. 23.— But little or tbe sentiment re
garded at the North as prevails in-the
South. Here, conservatism is expressed in lit© resolu
tions offered' in the Georgia Legislature by Mr. Ba
rclay:
Resolved, That the interest and honor of Georgiade
mand the repeal, by the Northern States, of the-laws
obstructing the rendition of'Tagitive slaws - ; because
these laws are unconstitutional as declared by the do
oiston of the Supreme. Court.
.the iptoreid *r4 honor of Georgia
, bT Cpogrewof Taws removing
and providing-for
therproteoiion lnTneflfcmtoues, of-Rll property recog
nized by tho Constitution and the oloislons of the Su
preme Court.
Besolvtd, That tbe repeal of the laws contemplated
in the first resolution, and the ermotansuercontempta
ted in tbe second, ato tpe only cohdWMfcunder wßioii
Georgia oan remain, consistent with herMßßand selfj
respeot, tuthe Union. . • • ■ •?£
\. v Virginia*.'-,-
p NoßioLr, Hov, 25—Ex-Governor Wise has offered
htsservioea to Gcv. Gist, of South Carolina, m oase of
emergency, and if not required by Virginia.
Charleston. Nov. 23.— The Farmers’ Exchange
Bank suspended yesterday. \
• Ralsigh, N. Cm Nov, 23. —The suspenßn>i\ of the
North Carolina banks waa legalized by the Legislature
to-day. The other proceedings were without special
interest.
Washington, Nov. 23.—Letters continue to be-re
reived fiom South Carolina, saying that the people
have no quarrel with President Buchanan. The appre
hend ion is expressed hero, however, that the questions
growing out of secession will bave to be prao’icallr
dealt with by the preseut Administration as it is stated
from distinguished sources.that Scuth Carolina will
oortamly seoede as soon as the State Convention
shall so resolve. ,
Tho opinion obtains in oflioi&l quarters that, thourh
the South has just cause of oomplaint agaicst the North,
no Biate ib Justified in secession or revolutionary move
ments, not at least uniil every ooustitutional and legal
neons of r*drep» bus been exhausted; teat no State
ias the right to commit any act wntoh would have the
effect of precipitating suoh a condition of affairs as
would induce or compel other Btates to jjin her in a
disruption of the Union: and that a calm and dispas
sionate deliberation on the part of the peop'e may re
sult in measures to restore general confidence, and pre
serve the integrity otthe Constitution. Buoh is under
stood to be the position of the President.
Tlio Official Vote o, Pennsylvania.
Haksisbubo, Nov. 23.— The full vote ior the leading
men on the Lincoln and Demooratio electoral tickets in
this State is as follows:
Howo, Lincoln ticket.- -.-.267 227
•'ollook. do do ,266 7cB
Kelm, Fubiod do 177.809
Vaux, Fusion and Douglas.. —., 192 291
Mr. Howe, it will be observ.d. leads Mr. pr.liook 459
votes. Mr. Vaux leads Mr. heim H. 462 votes. Tha
votes of the other electoral candidates are not yet
counted.
Bank Suspension at Pittsburg.
Pittsburg. Nov. 23.—Tbe banka of this oity, with
the exoeptton ol the old Bank of f ittsbU'r, suspended
specie payments to-day. The Bank of Pittsburg pays
specie on all its liabilities, as it did during the suspen
sion 0t1857.
Pottstown, Pa-, Nov. 23 —The Bank of Fottstown
has suspended epeoie payment, its notes willberdr
deemed in Philadelphia, as heretofore.
XasNTON, Nov. 23—A1l the banks in West Jersey
have suspended speoie payments to-day. ;
3 bxnton, N. J.,Nov. 23.—Roth the banks of Trenton
have suspended specie payments. .Theywill payout
only pmallapiountsto business pep mthe ojt>.
The Boston BfinUs.
Boston,- Nov. 23.—The Clearing House ConWttee
recommended that the banks discount their entire re
ceipts, and adopt a system similar to that prevailing in
New York, ,
The Pressure m Boston*
Boston, Nov. 23,—A meeting of the Bank ofiloots is
now in progress,in relation 10 the financial pressure.
Augusta, Ga., November 23.—1 t is rumored in bank
circles to day that Governor Brown will veto any law
sanctioning tbe suspension, of our banks, unless.the
State secedes It is also reported that one or more of
the Charleston banks b&ve suspended; also a large cot
ton-house—names not given—but ibis needs confirma
tion. .
Lowbll, November 23.—A fire broke out in Whipple’s
nulls last night, destroying property to the amoupt of
from $lO 000 to $l2 000. Eighty porsons are thrown
out of employment by the calamity, - '
Havre Cotton Market*
| Per Afnoa.l
Havre, Npv. 7.—Sales of ootton for the weekSOGOQ
bales, moluamg 10.CC0 bales' in transit. New Orleans
tree ordinaire, 101; bas, fi-1. Tho market closed witu
lutte inquiry, and it would be difficult to realise at tho
above figures.
Election at Norwalk, Conn.
Norwalk, Nov. 23.—At the municipal eleoUqn: to
day, the Democrats elected their candioato for Major,
and other oilmen.
Baltimore, Nov. 23.— Flour firm at 85 5 no sales.
Wheat firm at $11001.20 for red; $1.250150 for white,
Cora steady at 60063 c. for white and yellow. Provi
sions dull; Pork $l9; Lard 12a. Coffee steady at 140
145.{0. Whisky firmer at2Oo2O>ic.
Mobile, Nov. 22 —Colton—finles of fcCCO bales atlOo>;
the mar>ot is quiet but steady. Exchange ,on New
York 1 per cent, premium, and scarce, merlins Ex
change nominal at par _ „ , . , ....
Charleston, Nov. 23.—Cotton—Bales today light:
of tbe week 4 200 bales, at nominal prices; receipts of
the week 9,600 bales. „ . , , . ,
Augusta, Nov. 83.—Cotton depressed; only a lew hun
dred bates sold to day. ( , .
Bavannau, Nov. 23.—Ihe week just closing has been
tho gloomiest on record, '-the total lalesof Ootton b&yp
Veen 934 bales. Sterling Lxrhange fi&e been sola by
lorced sales at 950. Nothing nas been done in domestic
freights. To Liverpool the rates are X&l3-32.
Ingenious Method of. Smuggling. —About
two weeks since, a man arrived at Hiploy, hfies.,
on a railroad train, having in charge a coffin,
whioh, he said, contained the remains of his
brother, who had died teveral days previous.
Leaving iho train and removing the seeming
corpse, ho engaged the services of two or three
men, whom he omploycd in digging a grave in the
woods for the reoeption of the corpse, which, he
Informed them, he had designed taking home, but
found that he wonld be unable to do so. ,Tbe
grave was prepared, thecoffin lowered and colored
with earth, and the paity left the lonely spot—tho
assistants for their hopes, and the stranger for
the railroad depot. lie left on the next train, ana
nothing has sinco been beard of his whereabouts
A day or two afterward, tho men wbo had assist©!
in the burial woro conversing of the oiroumstanoe
attending it, when one of them remarked that th
coffin was •unusually heavy— too unoh so to con i
tain only the body of a man. This led to furtheil
speculation on the subjeot, and the affair bein]
commnpio&ted to aeyeral other persons, it was re
Bolved to tako up the remains and satisfy them
selves. A parly iepaired’to tho spot; a few me
ments hard wprk exposed the coffin to view i
was taken up, the |lfd raised, and the party n<
a little surprised and confounded upon djsoove]
log that, instead of d corpse, they had interred
coffin full of rifles. It may be imagined tht
tho disooyory created what reporters would call
« deoided sensation.” Who was the “granger?
Where had he gone ? Ahd‘ what were his obleoj
in practising this extraordinary deception ? i
[ll Y PONY BXPRBBB.J
The Kansas Troubles*
Southern Qlovemcnts*
The Georgia Legislature*
Bank Suspensions*
From Washington*
The Pottstown Bank.
Suspension in New Jersey.
The Banks of Georgia.
A Lowell irfili on Fire.
Markets by Telegraph.
THE CIT V.
AIHUSI3MENTB THIS EVENING,
.. Walmdi-stebbt ThsaYm, Walnut anil Ninth ata,-
” Luora ia Jioreia” "Fitaamjth., of Fitzsmiytho
Hall.
WHRATLST&.CL ARKB’6 AROH-STRSBT THEATRE,
HitlithZ oS“- 61xth ’~ Hural
o l ni. H b l i u?"ko. Chestnut etroet,
above Sixth.—Biroh and flharpley’s Minstrels.
McDonough’s Olympic (late Gaieties). Race street,
“ alyflinnorta.” Lonel;- Oooaß
Continental Theatre, Walnut st.. above Eighth.-
The Groat American Consolidated Ciroue Company.
Houbb, Eleventh stroet, above
Chestnut.—Conoert nightly;
Rkadouartbbs. Franklin Plaoe.—Concert nightly.
Alumni Address, at tiie University—
Dhpahob of Provost Godwin of Physical
Edocation— a Scathing Rebokr. —Rev. H. E.
Montgomery delivered' the annual address before
the, Alumni of the University' of. Pennsylvania
laab evening, at the College Hall. Ninth street
above ObostuuL . AtoJghtb’olook about one hun
dred persons were gathered in that ancient room,
and llnssler’s orchestra, perched in a-sort of bal
cony over the door, dlsoQ&r'eed, some goodly tunes
to while away tho time. 'Without,-the rain was
falling uninterruptedly,-and Chestnut street be
low was almost deserted.' The janllOr of the in
stitution was not to be' fbuml.\After a series of
fruitless endoavors to find tho whereabouts of that
oflioial, ho was prevailed upon to furnish a table
two feet by one In dimensions,- which was expeoted
to accommodate the entire l press'.'' Car reporter
ailctd a negro .assistant to,-procure him a ohair,
whereupon that.' doioeridanfc •' of Ham replied
smartly, that two ohair? and a tablo constituted
tho resouroes of tbe institution, and that be had
something else to do, This was so excessively
fuuny that ?ome undergraduate at the door
laughed very Ibudiy. We wore at laat obliged to
haul one of the great oak benohes up to the frag
ment of table; and Rev. Mr. Godwin, provost of
tbe institution, entering with the speakers And
faoulfcy, motioned us to prayer. Wo would thus
extend our ibanks for the hind facilities of tbe
Institution extended to the press; Mr Godwin
iqftdo a vigorous and bitter address relative to
some charges which a leading “ Church” paper
hml made against him; ohtefiy strictures upon his
Inaugural address, recently delivered at the Musi
cal Fund Hall, wherein certain liberal religious
sentiiponts were avowed, and a decided ground'
taaon in favor of physioal education, We have
not tbo spfioe to enumerate the charges and the
masterly answer to them. . .
Mr Godwin’s {address was the feature of the
eVenlsg, illustrative of an independence of thought
apd a keenness of wit highly creditable to the insti
tution. Patriotism often descended into partisan
ship, and Christianity was divided Into sects,
whose quarrels threatened the weal of religion.
Everything which cemented and fraternized man
wak to he studied. Greece and its several rival na.
tions gathered at the Olympic games, where a
unity of feeling prevailed 80 at the Pennsylva
nia University, where the Alumni gathered with
common love. The University roverenoed reli
gion, loved olasslcal learning, nurtured science.
The soienoes should be studied more attentively in
tbe institution, although both classical and fioion
tlflo studies were berated by some parties The
University could not .bo a oollege without both of
these Mr. Godwin then proceeded to defend the
glassies. Great models, and not quotations, were
to be studied. Demosthenes, tbe -greotost orator
of antiquity, waa compared with Cicero. The lat
ter’a business eloqaencaiwaa not overloaded, like
his orations, with Greek quotations Tho Univer
sity hedd&d religion. He had been attacked in a
religious niat» edited by a dootor of divinity, and a
brother clergyman, for some theologies! views he:
had advamed in a previous address. Suoh assault'
was neither genial nor Christian-like. His assailant
had attacfc&i his romarkeonphysioal oduoation, bo
oause he ejoke of Hceflan and Sayers [Applause J
Had he alluded to some Olympic boxer whose vices
were forgotten, they might have forgiven him. It
waabetter tohave illustrations from the living,
present thm the dead past. The Apostle Paul had
said “ I so run,” “ I so fight,” oto„ meaning, lite
rally, “bating.” 1 Laugh tor] So, in a dozen
places, ho lad spoken of tho athlete, eto.—living
illustration of fighting men. If he had alluded
to such nCn in illustration of Christianity, the
Provost wffi warranted to draw a similar illustra.
tion in favir of oduoation. Tbo Provost then al
luded to “ fom Brown at Rugby,” a book recom
mended by his assailant, whioh detailed a brutal
ring fight. Had suoh fights been ordinary things
in Godless chools—the university, for example—or
wore they rot most common in colleges under for
ms! teliglots oare?
In two ooleges known to the Provost, a atrlctly
religious om, and one where tbe students were en
titled to a considerable degree of personal liberty,
the pupils fr*m tho first, on being admitted to the
second, acknowledged that profligaoy and hypoc
risy were rife in the former to far grtaUr extent
th&n in the latter. A stabbing case at New Haven
was taken up as advanced by the P. p.’s in ques
tion. The gentleman who had taken him to task
had stated that a man’s body perfectly developed
WBS not mord beautiful than a hull or a stone
horse. 6uch remarks upon the temple of the
living God were not classical [laughter] nor philo
sophical. Mat was a unit; the development of
tbs physioal developed likewise, the mental and
the moral. The fundamental Idea of the university
Bjetem was that of tbe division of labor, where
oich branoh of labor depended upon the other for
its perfection.
The Provost then defended his remarks upon
dancing. He joined issue with those who held
that men wor» naturally devils. ; As he looked
over bis pupifa in the morning assembled for
Scripture tuitioa, he did not believe them to be
“ cunning dewis.” [Applause.] Tho assailants
had said that hi h&d decried a system of religious
thition In his idoq of a model university. This ihe
Provost proved fr> be false by reading an extract
fromhis atdross. He bad merely said that format
religions cilture coald not receive in the univer
sity a like degree at attention with the znomal.
A reli&ijua sheet outside of Philadelphia had
expressed surprise that Bishop Potter would speak
fn a incetibg yjer© Rev. Albert Barnes'had made
a prayer, lit would never pronounce the shibbo
leth of any olque or sect. After some further de
fenoe, Dr. Gciwio concluded amid loud applause.
Rev. Hern? Montgomery made an address upon
the Happines of Man, mainly a sermon whioh is
of no public atility. It was hot adapted for a re
port.
Mercantile Beneficial Association.—
The nineteenth anniversary of this Association was
celebrated bit evening at the Masio&TFand Hall,
which, nottithstanding the unpleasant weather,
was filled wth a select company of ladies and gen
tlemen. 51e exercises wore enlivened with some
excellent insio by H&ssler’s band. The pro
gramme anounoed addresses by George 11.
Btuaxt, Eft, tho Rev. Joseph A. Seiss, theJUv
A. A. Wil ts, and tho reading of the annuo! re
port . A ltter was read from George H. Stuart,
E?q , statiq his inability to attend in consequence
of sioknessn his family.
The anzxal report was read by Daniel Stelp
motz, Efq. After stating at length the objects of
tho Aesoottion, it sot Jprth the following qs the
operation! of the institution fpr ' tha past
year. Sjloon members „ were assisted to the
amount c $1,585, dispensed in sums ranging
from $35 to $3OO to each of the applicants,
which rdeved their immediate wants. Tho
receipts urlng the year were $3,205 09, and
tho oxpeditures $2 536 09, leaving in tho hands
of the Aiociatlon $40,134.71.' The Association
comprlserB22 members, 55 being life-members,
and 767 mnual contributors, being a decrease of
171 ainerfhe last annual report Faring the year
30 new combers were eteoted, 9 died, and 180
were exelled for non-payment of dues. The
Board nopted the sumifitry process of erasing
from th troll those who had for years failed to pay
their cotributions, as an aot of justloe to those
who we) prompt in paying.
Tbo fev Dr. Ssiss was introduced, who stated
that it ’&s his first appearance at an anniversary
mootini and If he said anything that offended his
hearershe hoped they would put It down to the
acoounOf profit and loss, and make a better bar
gain net time. He read from manusorlpt a most
eloquenaddress upon the origin, the objeots, tho
duties, nd the influence of znerohants and mer
oantilo'Utsuits. It would be almost impossible to
make a abstract of the reverend gentleman’s ad
dress, vthout detracting from its beauty of com
poeitioi and eloquence of oppression.
He |ld a high tribute to ute mercantile class,
and ftd&ref} that the greatest commercial States
have ayay? been the freest. sphb two Arrest and
most (lightened nations of the world were Eng
land ad the united States, which was the effect of
their emmorcial superiority, they having more
eommroo than all the nations of the world com
bined. Towards the oonolueion of bis address, he
rnadet beantiful allusion to the political troubles
whiohnow threaten the country, and deolared
that * fbould abhor any man who would get fire
to th»Constitution, or attempt to dlsmembor our,
Oonfdcrsoy. This sentiment was received with
immiUous applause.
Tie exercises closed wii£ an address tho
Ret- f A. Wiljjti, who oopimepued by saying
that tie reverend gentleman who preceded him
temped him of an oppssum, who pretended to be
laalem and i! you kicked him you oould perceive
no jfrrioal motion in the animal. wMoh soemed
to in&ato that he wouldn’t “ go,’’ but by degrees'
.the aossum would open his eyes, and in an in
sttinUe would “ go” eff io fret that there was no
stoppig him. So it was with the roverend gentle
man,rno bad so modestly deolared in his opening
that b had never spoken at an anniversary, but
wboi he got started there was no stopping
Tbiemmoroua eltpil* was received vltft shouts of
leoglor. Mr. willits proceeded ip a witty
strali using nautioal phrases to illustrate his sub-
Jeot/hioh was that “ storms” were anecessary
oonepitant of human existence. Storms de
veloid the true man, showed up the ohiokon
heand in their true colors, and taught wisdom to
manind. Tbore were storms finanoisl, political,
antisocial. Wo were now in the midst of a
fioariai atorm, but the directors of our
ban), having gained experience from the
stor or panio of 1857, had taken in a
reeiby suspending specie payments, and the
oomunity would soon reap the benefit of this
pruent course. The political storms which now
blatened our horizon ho felt confident would bo
safiy weathered by the skilful captain who would
Bocfce called to guide the helm of the ship of
Bte. He made an incidents! allußion to slavery,
wfehhe deblared was the curse of the country.
It'as a thorn in our side, but it wopld ultimately
pire the cal/atlon of opr country, and not its
demotion, as come croakers prophesied. His re
mits on this subject were loudly applauded. He
n<b spoke of tho storms whloh beset tho morohant
lousiness, and urged all who wished to provide
fdtbe time when the atorm of advorsity might
offtake them, to enrol thomselves' In the ranks
oho Mercantile Beneficial Association.
'ho meeting adjourned about ten p’tjlpek.
Thomas E. Rtjtiihbfoiid, formerly of
t) olty, and at one time superintendent of our
Bibo of Refuge, wo believe, has just been released
fm the Pittsburg county prison, where ho has
sved oat a sentence of one year, upon the heinous
orge of corrupting the children oonfided to the
cro of the House of Refuge, of whioh he was su
rlntendent, in that city Before being roleased
was required to pay the f}ne and ogjtp jqinojrcd
< him, amounting co ovor three hundred dollars,
filch he deoided to do rather than remain in prison
jnety days longer. Rutherford was formerly a
jhool-teacber at Marous Hook, Delaware oounty,
Ah laisn Girl ih Sbabcjh op Her
/■riends —On Thursday, a raw Irish girl, named
Alloe Tracey, aged eighteen years, arrived in this
pity from Europe, consigned to a relative here.
uponJier arrival she loand to her dismay that she
had‘lost the tnemofapdpjp oi thenapio and resi
dence of thophrson of whom she was tn quest, And;
as she Could remember neither, she'was compelled
to take her lodgings in the First-district station
house, where eho still remains.
Aooident.—Henry Craig, 44 years of
age, was admitted into the Hospital yesterday, suf
fering from a dislocation of sbe right febonlcfrr, by
being knocked down by a* wagon In the vicinity of
Seventh and Market streets, yesterday morning.
Destructive Fire in the Fourteenth
Ward—Conflagration at Twblftb and Wil
low Streets.—Yesterday morning, at about
quarter before fire o’clock, a fire was discovered
in the foundry attaohed to the iron works of Ban
son, Farrand, A Co., at the northwest corner of
Twelfth and Willow streets. The firm is largely
® n B ft g®d in the manufaoturo of iron work gene
rally, but their specialty is the making of oasttags
j? r iro * f ‘° nts for buildings, iron rolling shuttoia,
&o. Xhe buildings used in these heavy opera
tions stand upon a lot whioh has a front of about
two hundred feet on Twelfth street by about one
hundred and fifty feet in depth on Willow and
Pleasant streets. They formabollowequare, with
a yard in the centro. The ranges of buildings on
the eastern, northern, and southern fronts were of
W? k > “ d ,h ' e< "tones in height On the western
Bido are small structures used by the oenoern for
stable#, Ao.
Xbe foundry, in whioh the fire originated, oc
copied the northern range of buUdiogsonPleaaant
streot. The flames must have boon burning for
some time before they were diecovorod, for the
foundry was soon in a complete blaze, aud all its
wood work, including machinery used in handling
heavy oastings, Ac , was destroyed. *
From the foundry tho flames extended te the
workshops in the range of buildings fronting on
Twelfth street. The roof and third story through*
out this entire front wore destroyed. The firemen
thought they had the fire subdued at this point,
and some were preparing te leave the ground,
when the conflagration broke out with fresh fury in
an unexpeoted place.
The entire third atory of the building on Willow
street was occupied by Henry Duhring A Co., who
ter tho manufacturing of material from fags
to be used in the making of ooarse fabrics. A
♦hif.? matorial was stored upon the
third floor, and the fire suddenly made its appear
“o“o“™B.thia » spread with groat ra
pidity and inry throughont this range, sending
forth great quantities of smoke, and oausing a groat
The streams of the numerous steamers in service
woro at onoe direoted against tho burning mass,
but the fire burned on until the third story and
r <?°£ decoyed, and the machinery and Btock
of Dahring A Co. were rained.
A portion of the second story of the Willow
street buildings was occupied by Bowen A Brother
as a manufactory of patent detonating oaps for
fire arms. Their establishment was deluged with
water. There was a rumor that a cor side ruble
of gunpowder wafi ; n this portion of tho
building causing eomo exoitement. There waa but
a small portion of powder on hand, and that was
removea before the fire had approaohed the spot
tho tim ® °f the conflagration the roof of
the Willow-street range of buildings fell in, throw
ing out the upper portion of the inner wall. Two
members of the Empire Hook and Ladder Com-
P° D 7 struck by the falling rubbish ana cut
about the head. One of the sufferers is named
Megee.
The buildings destroyed or damaged belonged
to Sanson A Farrand. They are fully insured.
The principal loss of this firm is in patterns for
castings. Their stook of patterns was destroyed,
causing a loss whioh cannot readily be replaood.
The books and papers of the firm were saved, un
damaged, and [taken to the Fourtoanth-ward
station-house.
Upon the west of the properly burned, and im
mediately adjoining it, is a large building ooou
pied ns a manufactory of mouldings, ohairmakiDg
shops, Ac. The flames fortunately didnotoom
munioate to this combustible property, or the de
struction would have been greatly increased,
ibo presence of steam fire engines only, proba
cy) prevented the sweeping away the entire
block.
Tho loss to Sanson, Farrand, A Co is estimated
at about $B,OOO. Insured.
Duhring A Co. estimate their loss at $3 000 In
sured.
Bowen Bros, lore from two to tkree thousand
dollars, whioh is insured.
Tho fire burned stubbornly for several hours,
intending seriously with the Ridgo-avenue,Thir
teenth and Fifteenth, Race and Vine, and Tenth
and Eleventh-streets Bailway lines.
The Governor’s Pardoning Power.
whioh has been solicited in the oases of Robert
Thompson and James Miller, oonvioted of murder
in this oity and sontenood to death, has been thus
alluded to :
Applications are made for pardons for four out
of every five criminals oonvioted and soatenoed in
the different courts of the Commonwealth. No
matter. whaUho grade of orime, whether 000 l and
deliberate murder*, dictated by the blackest malice,
brutal rape, murderous assault, burglary or lar
ceny, the inevitable petition follows the sontenoe.
No lesa-is our aatonlshment to see these petitions
signed by olergymon, physioians, lawyers, and
oven judges themselves. It seems almost incredi
ble that a scoundrel who would deliberately knock
a-man down without actual provocation, or fox* pur
poses of robbeiy, oan find warm-hearted sympathi
zers to petition the Qovernor for a pardon Suoh
philanthropists are false te themselves and their
country, who permit their feelings to prompt them
to throw orimfnals back upon the community only
to repeat thsir crimes. A number of men have
signed those petitions without reading, and it may
be that a large number of names have been out
from an old petition for opening a road, Ac., and
attaohed to them. Smith or Brown is a rascal and
his conviction was a righteous one. Bill Muggins
has been oonvioted of burglary in Philadelphia,
and is sentenced to ten years* Imprisonment in
the penitentiary. First the Governor is besieged
by professional pardon* seekers. Next comes a
handsome woman with & pair of interesting child
ren. She beards the lion in bis den. She repre
sents herself as tho prisoner’s’wife, and those his
innocent children. There are few-barriers that
do not fAll before a woman’s tear.: Xu suchinstan*
oos, tho Executive, no matter bow shrewd and saga
cions, is frequently imposed upon, and when he has
really done a kind and meritorious act, at the in
stance of men whom be knows to bo upright and
honorable, he eoqs a half oolnmn of censure in
some newspaper for a reckless abase of the par
doning power. .
The Nkw Depot of the Reading Railroad
has been reoently enlarged by another division ex
tending from Broad to Thirteenth street, between
Collowhilt and Pennsylvania avenue.. It is pre
claely similar to the section previously 6rooted,
with towers ou either flank of tho Broad-street
mint, of hammer-drossod Reading brown stone
There are three of these towers now in progress of
construction, eaoh of whioh will bo forty feet In
height. A considerable portion of the lot still
remains vacant, and wilt in due time bo covered
with new sections of the depot, built similar to
those already np. When finished, this depot will
be in all respects tho largest and handsomest In
Philadelphia. The passenger*romps, ticket-offices,
Ac., at the Thirteenth-street end, are as yet un*
built. They will present an ornate front on that
street, and furnish superior accommodations for
passengors.
Important Decision to Market Dear
bus.-On Wednesday last, the caso of Allen
against Phillips was argued and decided in the
Cpnrt of Common Pleas. The plaintiff, a farmer,
from Glouoeßter oounty, N. J., brought a'quantity
of apples to tho Philadelphia market for sale, con
tained in baskets of different aljes The Clerk of
Markets, Mr. Phillips, seised them, and deolared
them forfeited under the ordinance of Ootober 1,
1858, whloh requires the measurement of all bas
kets containing fruit or vegetables to bo marked
on tho outside. Mr. Allen replevined the fruit, and
upon the argument, his oounsel, Pierce Archer,
E/q , contended that Councils oould not enaot an or*
dlnance declaring goods forfeited for si violation of
market regulations without legislative authority.
The court took tbiß view of the case, and entered
judgment for tho plaintiff for tho value of the ap
ples eoi*ed.
The Census op Philadelphia.—Below
will be found the most reliable returns whioh oan
be obtained of the population of Philadelphia from
the year 1683, one year after the founding of the
oity. We tftke the figures from the Evening
Bulletin:
CITY AMD BUBUBBS. CITY AND COUNTY.
Bare. DxeelhnKS, Population. Dwellings. Poputat^,
1700 7CO 4 600
1760 2 076. 12.600
1763 2 800 lJflsS
1760 2.860 18 766
1777 6,395 21334*
1733 6.0 M 37000
1780 6 661 42 620 .... 64 391
1800 9 868 65.787 ... Siooa
1810 14,600 96 666 16 682 m .$>
1820 15 662 114.440 20 666 137 097
1830 26 172 167 811 27 968 183 961
1840 38 704 270.623 63 078 268 037
IBW 64.045 • 860 306 60 278 408.762
1860 89 978 668 €34 89.978 668,034
■Tb, c,d#\ij of 1777 vr«« token vhile the British hold
,? '“ 0of ,h “
Until the yo»r 3,854, at timo ooMoJUaiion
wont into eifeot, the oity and count/ Hero Beparata.
3>y the act of consolidation, tho oity limits „ereex
tended oyer thy entire oounty, and tho last oensus
inolodos this territory. Prior to 179(1 there was no
eonnt made of the inhabitants in the rural portion
of the. oounty. In the figures giyen above, only
dtyelHngs are included in the oensus or 1860, and
no aooopnt is token of stored, manufactures, Hork
>>W' 'll pn .ll ’’ WWtogd- « « generally oon,
hodid that census of 1860 la very inaccurate,
“4 P lt X Opunjils yesterday took action to have
the!" ipaoeuraeies sscertalned and oorreoted.
. at *tttlo doubt that the reel population
of Philadelphia at present is over 600,000 souls.
Convicted op Mobdemng a Philadel
phian.—A number of months since, a young Phila
delphian named Tittermary, was murdered in cold
blood, at Charlotte, N. 0., by a bartender tbero,
named Owen Normont. The murderer escaped;
but recently he gave himself qp u ta the ouioers of
tno law, that remorse had mado exis
«p9P unbearable. Within a few days he has been
tried and convioted of murdor in the first degree.
Death of a Son* of General Jesop.—
Intelligence has reached us of the death of Wm.
Oroghan Josup, eldest son of the late Maj, Gen.
Jeaup, U S. A., at Etkton, Ky. Tho doooased
was 27 years of age. He wos well know* in this
city, whero he was rospected for many estimable
qualities *
The Funeral of the late H. K. Strong
will take plaoo from the St. Lawrence House this
afternoon. The deceased will bo buried in St.
Paul’s Churoh grave-yard, Third street, below
Walnut. A number of his friends will attend tho
funeral from Harrisburg, Pittsburg, and other
places.
Asbaultrd ms Brother.—Patrick peuip
sey was ftrrbatod at £{inth and Christian streets, on
Thursdsy fpr making a eavage attack upon
hia brother with a knife. Bergeant MoKeever ar
rested Dempsey after a desperate resistance, during
whioh the aooused was roughly handled.
Arrested.—Edward Rowe was arrested,
on Thursday on the charge of outting another man
seriously, tno night before, during a fight among
sailors, emigrant runners, Ao., at Penn and Soutn
streets. Rowo was held in s2;fioo bail to answer.
Accident to a Child.—A little girl,
named Dougherty, only two years old, was badly
burned on Thursday afternoon, by falling into a
bonfire at Nineteenth and Ohristlau streets. Bho
resided in the neighborhood.
Media. —According to census returns re
ceived at our offioe from Marshal John P. William
son, the population of Media is 825, of which 750
are white, and 60 colored. q,’he number of deaths
Within tfeo year \t put down at fourteen.
Piano Fortes.— Great reduotlon till Ist of
January in the prices of these beautiful instru
ments, made by R&veiy Bacon, & 00., Hallet,
Davis, A Oo.» and others, j. ijj. Gocld, Seventh
and Chestnut streets.
PanEirpTOßY Sales.—Extra Valuable Heat.
Estate, Stocks, Loans, Ao.— £ee Thomas A J3ons v
pamphlet catalogue issued to-day, oomprlalng ele
gant oountry seat',’ and''fipruce street‘real
denaes, and other property, to be sold peremptorily.
Also, the Tyrone and Lookh&ven r&ilrosd/stooks,
loans, &o.< See advertisements.
. ' The Oiifo kuv^p/ 1 ’
PiTTßßuso. November 23.~The iollowinziathe river
report s .■’Arrival*” -Westmoreland* from BrownsTtlle;
Moses from Cmoinnoti; S, E. Baker , from
Wheeling,
The Cabinet and the Crisis.
AK OFFICIAL STATSHKK t OF THE POBITION OF THE
ADIIIXISfBATIOE.
[From the New York Herald of Friday.]
• .. . ’Washington, Nov. 22,1800.
. ~“® r ® \ 8 . no division in the Cabinet on the Seoes-
So far ifc , B 0 consultation has
Saras UP ° D 5t ’ 80 tho himself de-
. thi B owning between the Pieii-'
d s nt Ssoesslonlsto, Mr. Buohanan
toojr strong grounds Mainst secession without re
nofc belliovtf that Z nfrmiUhe
mouths of.be .Missls.iL Cbetr.?dby P .for.lKn
Power, whioh both Louisiana and Arkansas would
become in case .of .their withdrawal from the
Union. “ South Carolina,” ho ujj l “
enter into a oonfliot with me—a eonfllot with mv
self—and upon tho drawing of the first dron of
blood to drag other Southern Stateß into the Seoes*
ston movement.” The President did not intimate
what he would do in that event. He admitted
that tho Booth bad suffered great wrongs at the
hands of the N6rth;.but the Federal compact was
not to be broken up precipitately, and without
reasoning and reflection. He would first appeal to
the North for justloe to the South, and if it was
denied them, “then,” said the President, em-
“ i am with them.”
o Reports reooived by‘the President from
tho bouth are of the gloomiest description. Ho
8a ?i! : * 8 i e no Steam of sunshine yet. ”
. i "f question or the acceptance or non-acceptance
{“ ,£• , reB ;?® a . tlon L of the South Carolina office
holders is still in abeyance. Noneot the resigna
tions have as yet boon definitely noted upon. The
Sn'nfh Dm,4d Bt “ ,c3 M “Mhal Hamilton, of
South Carolina, was reoMved to-day by the Prosl
dent, and placed on file for future consideration.
Mr. Buohanan is hourly reoeiving oongratnla
tions on account of his opposition to the precipitate
action of the Secessionists. On tho other band!
the fire-eaters do not hesitate to express their dis
satisfaction. He denies that Mr. Keitt had au
thority for declaring that he (Mr. Buohanan) was
committed to the Secessionists; and he also denies
the declaration of Mr. Yancey to the same effect.
The President does not appear to be muoh con
cerned about the proceedings of the coming session
of Congress. He is of opinion that it will not be so
violent as the last.
.. T v e , nBu^ l ,f' mi ' w<!ek, sittings of tho Cabinet
aro being held, and no more.
nA™ 1 Bankiko Speculation—Areest
op the MANAOEB.-A few days sinoo, John W.
Dodd, Esq., auditor general of the State of In
diana. oame tn this oity in the hope of scouring the
W f Sw£ ‘s® John
" 1,,7 c6 t, P lO J«‘or and managar of tha “wild
oat banking coßoern, oaltcd the Boons County
Bank, of Lebanon, Ind , which exploded early in
the present; month, with ita notes in circulation to
the amount of nearly half a million dollars. Tho
bonking enterprise was started by the parties
mentioned, and their swindle is alleged to hare
been perpetratod by causing ten thousand genuine
impressions of their notes (representing $280,000)
°fft ‘ n addition to impressions for
$50,000. These latter were sent to Indianapolis,
where securities having been lodged with the
State auditor, they reoeived his signature, and
were put in the msrkot. The other notes were
also put in circulation, the name of the auditor
and the register first having been fraudulently at
taoheu to them. As soon as tbe fraud was disco
vered, an offioia! investigation was made, and the
evidence against tho projectors and officers of the
concern appearing dear, all of them were arrested
save bpoonor and Sweet, both of whom fled to this
city. Dateotives Young, Eider, and McCord were
engaged to look op the fugitives, and yesterday
they succeeded in arresting Sweet, at his residence
in this city. A requisition upoD Governor Morgan
from the Executive of XndLana had already been
presented for the return of the prisoner to that
State, and last evening the former functionary
announced his purpose to oomply with the sum
mons, if, upon examination into the case to-day,
he shall find the foots to warrant him in so do
ing.—New York Times.
TnE Prince op Wax.es and His Ricukond
Journet.—Tho stories afloat with reference te the
Prinoe of Walos and suite at Richmond, Va„ will
sufficiently explain the following affidavit: ' *
City and County of New York> ss ; Theodore
R. Davis being duly sworn, deposes and says that
ho was m the oity of Richmond, Virginia, on the
occasion of tho visit of the Prince of Wales and
his suite to that city; that on Sunday, the 7th day
of October, this deponent was in the Capitol at
Richmond wnon the Prince, the Duke of Newcas
tle, and others came in, and passing to the front of
Washington’s statue, woro engaged.in examining
it, when a considerable ofowd entered, pressed
around the Prince and his party, and indulged in
tbe remarks and critioisms that have been report
ed in the journals of this oily and elsewhere; that
this deponent followed the Prince as he prooeeded
to the position he cocupied in front of the statue,
and was net more thin foet distant from him
during the remarks referred to were being made
by the persons present, qpd that they were dis
tinctly audible, and were of tho following cha
racter: “You like Washington—course;” “He
Hooked it into you English buggers;” “He gave
you the oolio, ■ , %i You had enough of him in the
Revolution,” with other speeches too vulgar and
obsoeno for publication ; that these observations
were not made by one alone, but by different per
sons, and were attended With coarse laughter and
jeering on the part of the orowd, afld oontinned
during tbe Pritce’a stay in tha rotundo; that the
royal party went from the rotundo to the Senate
Chambor, and afterward from the Capitol to the
Governor’s house—during the passage to which
the rabble .pressed, closely upon them until Hie
closing of tbe doors shat them rff. And this de
ponent, in justice to the oily of Richmond end its
distinguished citizens, further says that he heard
no remark of the character described proceed from
any person of respectable;*pfe&)ra&ce ; nor did t jo
seo any suoh in the rabble referred te, but it was to
all oppearanoes composed of lowand dUrenuUble
individuals. wv; Theo. B. Datis
Bworn to this 22d daj *f November, 2860, before
me. Jas\.W. Hub. Com. of Reeds.
-■ No. 70 Wall street.
The Nbw-LottB Mubde*.— Examination
of tub Accused.— Ohe young map, Lam
bert, who is auspeotod of .phe miudof of 'Mr.
Collyer, at New-Lotts. L. l. } ,was under'examina
tion for nearly three hours on .^Wednesday, before
Coroner Wood, at Jamaica. He admitted that,
after leavingjhis' boarding-house:on the. morning
after the murder, he purchased a newsultof olothes
in New York, but where, or of whom, he does not
know. His old elothea he first said he had left in
the store where he had got the new ones, and sub
sequently that he had left them bn one of the
wharves. He was so poor before the murder that
he wanted to borrow the money to buy off a prose
cution for stabbing a fellow-laborer, and he alleges
that it was to avoid this prosecution that he fled
from New-Lotts
The coroner holds the receipt for tho money
whioh Lambert paid in settlement of that difficult*
He aooounted for the possession of the watoh
wos found in his pooket by stating that'ha
taken it out of apawn-offioe in New YoiK in whioh
he had pUced it some time previous!*, xke money
with which he bought the new oKhes, watch, and
other artioles he claims to have earned in Texas
The young man’s statement was very confused and
extremely oontwdlotory on most vital points.
Lambert was bom in Wostohester oounty, near
Sing Sing. His father, Norman Lambert, was a
respcotable man, who worked a farm en - shares
Joseph s grandfather, Henry Lambert, who was
present at the inquest, is 70 years ofsge, is abearty
old gentleman, and professes confidence in the in
nocenoe ef his grandson, and manifests great inte
rest not only in the boy’s welfare, but in furthering
the ends of justice, should the suspected person
really prove guilty. Joseph’s lather died when he
was 9 years old, and his mother when he was 12.
Sinoe that time he has been employed in a store in
®! n S Bing, and aiterwards in New Haven, where
somfi-ef hie relatives Uved. After that, he joined
bufc waB 8000 of his duty to the
United States, and subsequently went to Texas.
At the time of the murder of which Joseph is sus
peotod, he was under an engagement of marriage
with Martha Nelson, who is represented as an ex
emplary young woman. She is a niece of Hiram
woodruff, well xnown on Long Island and in New
York. .
Tho examination is adjourned to next Monday
morning.—2V. Y. Tribune. a
FINANCIAL AND COMIHEUCIAIi*
Tiic Money Market,
„ . PhiIaSELTUU,Nov.23, 1800.
Famo ta dead, says the New York Courier 4 ■ Enqvi
rer. He died, acobrdin* to that authority, on Wednea
at 5 p. ftj*» and yesterday his funeral was one
whioh produced very general redoioins. The same
aimonnoem«ut. with very Uttlo difference aa to
the hoar of his death, may be made here. The
wise and t'mely action of our hanks, la inter
posing for the relief pi their debtors, produced
all that was expected of it in calming the oxoite
ment. and both Ihe stock and money markets to-day
exhibit a oheerfulness and elasticity of tone m striking
contrast with the gloom and depression of the previou B
ten days. In the money market, rates have tqUsn at
least twelve per cent, per annum since Roou of yester
day, At tho Stoo k Board, city sixes advAnocd one per
cent-, Reading and Pennsylvania Railroad shares Y% per
share, and Pennsylyapla State fives gained Af. Spsou
lation is. however, wisely abstained from, and tns
stocks ysuafly rosde the subject of gambling contracts
are as yet negleoted.
*io save the credit of the State of Pennsylvania, the
Farmers' and Meohamos’, Northern Liberties, Ken
sington. and GiraTd Banks paid ninety thousand, all in
speoie. on State drafts to-day-the Girard Bank paying
ten thousand dollars as its portion. 6
The New Yoik Post of this evening says:
The stook market, with its usual untimpatory tem
perament, underwent yesterday afternoon, a large ad
vance, influenced by the expansive polioy of the Banks,
lo uay there is considerable nesitatiotu and buyers and
sellers are about equally divided. Prices are steady—
m some oases lower, ;n others hisUer— but, on the
whole, the aas a strengtnenint; tendency, espe
cially on tho low-prioed stooks. ” *
The market closed steady, but quiet. New York Cen
tral 7 Erie 39K«3i.’HudSon 46046«. n
, off 660C5AJ, Rook Island 69ia6554, To
tU'iattf? 029 '' I llnolß Centra^ftB ® 6 B>i, Iffiohigan Centra^
qew Haven and Hartford is offered atm Cleveland,
Columbus, and Cincinnati is 91 bid add SaaskedT
The ooal stooks are rauah better. Bsftwar*. Lanka
and W e a,„, bTfi, I5«k!d; i>«irlvlsia
&T ® ? at her lower. : excepting North
i n . ao o s h jumpe d to 66. and afterwards olosed at
Misaourisat 71. Ten
nVi^?^al»a^®« 8L Alabatnas 102 is bill.
United States fives of 1874 sold at 97; the five of 1866
are quoted 93«»; the sixea ot 1807, m'XaMX. .
ino money roarkot reels very sensibly th? hVera\
policy of the banks, and on every hand wo ncuioe a more
buoyant leeling—a feeling that tne CcangiaLparplejitioa
ot the period ere fully surmounted.- paper market
is gradually sofiening. and first-olassnames nave pasted
quite Jreelx at cur
rency for good signatures at 18020 cent. Money on
call ia quoted rather Aasier at 7 v cent. The demand
fbntufurfs full.
The shipments of ooal over the Huntingdon and Broad
Top Mountain Railroad, for the weekending Nov, 21,
1860, amounted to ! 4.839
Previously this year. * -. 163,446
Total-.
Same date last year.......
The following i; the aipouqtof coal transported on
the Philadelphiaaod Reading Railroad during the week
ending Thursday, November 22, 1850:
TOE - Owt.
From Port Carbon. . x , 12 <oe 00
Pottavillo ~, 3,7 t 7 JS
Schuylkill iftYC*. 21.748 00
A a burn.... ,V;; C3t OX
Port Clinton—. 4,854 08
Total for one xgaay 4553101
Provioualy this year—*. - 1,7Xf,158 IS
Total „ .1,836,610 00
To same — 1.684,489 02
The following is the businessof the Philadelphia and
Rea'ding Railroad Company, for the month of Ootobftri
1 iB6O. ' igfli *
Received from Coal.--.. .. Ofl $20h798 67
•* Merchandise.. CS.TAS 2i 4g;B4SS7
“ Travel,#*... 5.351 ' "S*oe7 93
„ $368,053 44 $253,«45 90
Wi-ausportatJon, Roadway, * :_ Ji . •
Dumpwce.KeoewaLFund, ,
ondailoharges—344B,233 J3i,£S9
Net profit for the month $224,144 OS sl4^74^*9
for prbVionß io itf 19
Total net profit §Ua3,WS 13 $1,129 763 68
Philadelphia Stocl
Novembe
Hspoutisd arfi. E.Slatmai
!7*!bk
£ L jisow.rf*
i2ftn k #h, ‘h Vai fa . b 5 f9K
ion R 6 ’ ’«•• •
in Amboy,.. ,JJ4
10 Norristown ft:....47
I QO«„. 47
'3B Lehi eh Yal... ."lots £2
s Dei D.v Canal 44
BET WE R]
7000 PennaCs. 1...10ts S 3
10 Morns ul Prf Bdrs.loB
«. SECOND
200 City 6s 100
IDUO fteadin*flfa , B3 1 „ 7S.
16 Lehigh Val 62
10 do aa*
8 do . £2
10 Lehigh Sorip.».«. 86
48 dn TT . 35.
16 do— .56
100 1,0 lots, .tf 55 (
OLp?I«e PK
T,u*. . . Bid. Afhed.
PhilidelpluafaL 99V 100>i
Pniw 6s It S9g 100«
fluli acrr.lM joi
geimi 6s_int off SS mi
Road R „18W 1 5t?
goading bds ’70.. tit)
Keadmtfa’ss 71 v 7iCi
genna n div off. 57)5
£enna R 2d rat fa 865$ h)i
McrCUonuvofl 67K n
Mor Cl pfdVofl..lo7?£ I ms
9oh N 6s’© go 4
RchNavimpfa go
Schuy*Na-'Stk,„». au
KohuylNavprf ..17 20
Elmira R-.s a
Elmira R prf... ..102 15X\
New York Stock
SKCOND
SOOO U 6fi*St’74,Coap 97
6000 Missouri dtfl’e.... 71
,6000 VirSt 6*s 80
2000Tenn6t6’s30
t&O Iti Cea Hit b as— 86%
WOO d 0..- 85jJ
8000 Mich Bo2<l mfcbds 48
6000 Olu & MW2dm.. 18
10 Back of Coin 92
10 Bank of N y 90
6 Bankfctato N Y.. 93
10 Del tc Hud Cl Co 88
‘4O do 88M
15 Hud HIV R. R.-... 463£
10 NY Con RE 77
M do .bIQ
200 . d 0...... 76&
60 do .-...p30 16%
JCO Erie RR~_~klo so*2
100 do 31
300 Har R A 16%
200 do sls 16*2
JooHarßßFref..el6 35>*
200 do blO 36
100 Miob Cen AR.sSO. 63#
60 do bid 64
' THE MARKETS.
Ashes.—The market m dull, with smali si’es at f 1.35
for both kinds.
Flour.—'! he market for Flour, though n< t active,
retains its last position, and moderate purchases are
making for home use and the Eastern trade. Exporters
areas yet inactive. Btato and Western Flour is un
changed, withsale*of 100,000 bbls, including superfine
State at 54.75®4 90; ezcia do at 96aff.15; superfine
Western at 94.7604 90; extra do at 950 l 76; extra
round-hoop Ohio (shipping brands) at 95.sfc*63S.
Flour r« d l P , |» with sales of 3,000 bbs at 95.26
®| Baltimore; 95.5006.30 for extra do;
Brandywine; 95A0a6 for Georgetown;
KlihSoSc^. P ' t °" ,bUrg C,t,i a " a
GnAtK.—Wheat is rather firmer under a renewal ex
port inquiry, which, however, is as jet quiet, Ihe
sales amount thus far to 40.C00 bushels, mol udinc amber
Wisconsin at 91.17, and white Miohigan at 91.i1; Mil
™okee club at 91.16. Corn is steady, with taieeof
ht 64065 p for Western mixed. l?eis
dullat6Bo7Qo. Bailey is steady, Oats are doll at Aa
36a for Southern PennsV Ivanla and Jersey, and SOeiro
lor State, Canada, and Western.
/i.TO roNB ,*“^ p 9rk is dull, with small sales of Him
at 916-60. and Prime at-910 50. Beef is quiet asdun
ohanged, vith small sales at 98J0O10. for repacked
Western, and SlOall for extra Maes. Beef Barns sad
prime. Mess Beef are nominal. Cut Meats are tell at
iQQIoHo lor Hams, and 7/* for Shoulders, H&rdisduM
and heavy at J2ol?)jo, with moderate sales. Bitter
and Cheese are unohanged.- -
Wh; set is quiet, with sales 10) bfrls at 19&9JP .
CITY ITEMi
A Sensible Suggestion.—A year ago,a gentle
man of the writer’s acquaintance displaced th*.judf
ment and good taste of making his wife a Christmas
present or a Sewing Machine, We have thought it ad
visable to take time by the forelock- and say, to-day,
that as the Present-making season u nnmmu onsptce,
nothing could be more appropriate at a gift from a ho»-
band to & wife, a brother to a sitter, or a friend to a
friend, than > one % of these life,time, and labor-saving
instruments. The place to get them, we most not omit
to state in this connection; is the ware rooms of Messrs..
W. P. Uhknger ACo., No.fiffi'Arch street. This firm
is now the only manufacturing firm in Sewing; Ma
chines in Philadelphia, and is one of the largest ia th»
United States. The instniin#Bts they malm arw'Taridd
inoapooitj and constniotion, and are adapted toevery
conceivable class of wo;k, and their prices, moreover,
are a very targe per centage lower than similar quality
of maohmes are usually sold at.
OAKFonh & Sons* Bazaar op Fashion—lf there
is a mercantile enterprise in Philadelphia of whiok our
citizens have reason to feel proud, it is the mammoth
conoern named at the head of this article—Messrs
Charles Oakford & Sons*, under the Continental Hotel*
T heir several depart ments are now replete with all the
latest novelties of the season, of either American or
foreign manufacture. Ladies* Fun, Gents* Hats,
Misses* and Children’s Be s. Gents’ Furnishing Goods,
and Ladies’ Shoes, are all specialty* of this house.
Crowds are now making their selections daily; m
the meantime, _our readers will please bear in mind
that Mr. Charles Oakford, and all his sons are to be
found at their establishment, under the Continual,
andngyrfcerb else {neither of them havsnny oosnsictian
with toy other concern.
INTELLIGENCE POR THE LADIES'—It IS dOubt
ful whether, in Europe or'America, there is a single
establishment so metropolitan and magnificent‘in
every particular as. the celebrated Tana Mantilla,
Cloak, and Fur Emporium in this city,condaotedby
Messrs, J, W, Proctor A Co., Vo, 708
For the elegance, taste, and variety of their garments
they have certainlj so rival in this country 1 and with
in the past two seasons they have, in addition to their
Cloaks, introduced a Far department upon * egal*
equally grand. The wealth , taste, and fashion of the
oity are now the patrons of thisenterprislttgJwiuse,
and strangers and citizens alike agree in pronouncing
their stock toe most superb ever offered.
Ah Inyaluaslb Remxdt fob Nervous Ix
>€ItASR.I«Y AJft> THE EFFECTS OF MSHTAL KxHAUFj
TioN.—huch is the verdict pronounced by the
anthonty uponFrofeseor Morris’ “Bicknuy*;* ” fan
external liquid remedy, manufactured by J6'oefrrH*ii *
Co., No. 62 North Fourth street, and sold hy druggists
generally,) and all Mho try it unit' iB Attesting its
wonderful merits in aU kinds of D''rvous affeotiocs. It
is really a marvellous panaote f or suffering.
Hotter and Cbexsv—Messrs. Slocomb 6 Bm*
■ett, in-the Eastern oorner of Fif.han4M.t
oliant street., koep o- jnatul tlj on hud choice lots of
Rutter and Cheese-, which they are daily receiving from
the most celebrated dairies. Those who eanappreoiite
pure flavored Butter and Cheese should not fail to give
them a o M]. The articles they vend may be relied upea
M west in the market.
Choice Confectonery.—There is
this very title that turns the readers mind towards
Messrs. E. G. Whitman k' Co ’s as- ns’uraly as the
needle turns towards the'" pole. The truth is, • their
salesroom. Second street, below Chestnut; is a sort of
business loadstone, judging from the orowds of cod’
tomera that throng tbeir store every day In the week*
They are now daily adding lusoious new preparations,
in anticipation of the coming holidays. Their confec
tionery is unquestionably the finest and purest mans
faotured. \
“ A Hollas Onch Broken Sooh Goes”—and
it is the same with a resolution: a resolution unbroken
Is as hard as gold; once changed,it is thrown,ttit
were, into so many coppers, and rapidly melts away*
Those who are earning money should make a resolu
tion to save every week at least a dollar unbroken, and
deposit it in the Franklin Paving Fund, No. 136 South
Fourth street, below Chestnut, where the acoumnla
tioc of suoh amounts enables the Company to
safe and profitable investments for their depcstors,
whioh, with the interest compounding thereon, will
realize a sum sufficient to be of use in bnsisess or se
curing a home. Open daily from 9 to 3 o , olock,and oa
Wednesdays and Saturdays until 8 P.M. Seesdvsr
, tisement in another column.
The Latest Case of Suspension.—Suspensions
seem to be the order of the day. Borne of the States
have suspended intercourse with the rest of'manlnad,
the banks are ius (lending speoie payments, and some
folks are talking of suspending themselves out of sheet
vexation. The most sensible instance of suspension
webave heard of, is the oase of a rp** who declared
that he would suspend the wearing or shabby suits for,
the future, and that he would consult genuine economy*
by obtaining all his garments at the Brown-stone Clo
thing Hall of RockhiU & Wilson, Nos. 603 and 696 Chest
nut street, above Sixth
“Know then Thyself; Presume not God rc>
Scan,
Theproperjtudy of mankind is man.**
Nothing obtains more potency in our eatiswsfe of
mankind, and womankind too, (for man embraces wo
man) than external garniture, in whioh we comprise
dress and address. Men are generally judged by their
acts, but first impressions are always made by appear
ances. Henoe the importance of acting and locking
well; and our advioo to all men is to robe theosrilveeiß.
the beautiful and seasonable vestments gottenupafthe
“ one-price” store of Granville Stokes, No, 607 Chest
nut street, who presents each of his patrons with'*,
valuable and useful gift! r
Oak Orchard Acid Spring Water.—This wa*
ter is gaming groat celebrity, and the demand for Ik
Is increasing rapidly. Its benefioial character is at
tested by thousands,and it is pronounced by distin
guished physicians to be superior to any other med>-
oinal Spring Water now in use. The almost miraculous
oures whioh it has performed lead us to believe that it
is destined to become extensively used in the treatment
of very many diseases whioh ordinary remedies fajl to
ouro. Its ourative properties are established.beyond
question, and wo feel assured that it mast, to a great
extent, supersede many of tho artificial compounds of
the day. We reoommend those of our readers who maa
bo suffering irom general debility, or from any of th*
diseases for which this Water is prescribed, to give it a
rial. Beo advertisement. . ‘mylJ-ily
SPECIAL NOTICES-
EVKN THOSE WHO ABE IN THE BN-tOTMEN?
of perfect health freauently have need tohiveTeocursw
to tonics as preventives of disease. We are never too
well armed against tho assaults'oT“'tbe ill* thatftesb
is heir to.” Suoh an invigoratop they mar find in
HOSTETTER'S BITTERS—a roedioice that cannot
be taken regularly without giving vitality and elastici
ty to the system. At this season, particularly, the
strongest pqbu is not proof against the malaria in cer-.
tain sections of tho oountry, In all cases of fever; find
ague, the Ritters is more potent than any aaibiuitof
quinine, while the most dangerous cases of bilious
fever yield to its wosaerful properties,' Those who
have tried the mediome will never use another foranp
of the ailments which the Hostel*?! Bitters professes
to subdue. To those who have not made the experi
ment, we cordially reqomwend an early application to
the Ritters, whenever they are etrioken by diseure of
the digestivo organs. - -
Sold bjr druKKifita and dealer! lensjalljr mrjwherei.
DYOTT *; CO., A»enti, .
233 North SECOND Street, phila.
—163.23$
Saving Fund—National Satitt Thus*
Companx.— Chartered hx the State of Penneylvsma.
RULES,
1. Money ie reoeived everj dKj, and in any amount,
arse or small.
, 3, is paid for money frowj
the uay it is p&t m.
, S. Thassoaey is always paid baokm GOLD whenever
I it la called lor. and without notice,
4, Money ia received from J&c*ri«tcrs, Adminiatra
• tors, Guardians, and other Trostees, in arge or small
• sums, to remain a lons or short period#
#. The money rtwalvod from Depositor* is Invested ia
Real Mortgagee, Ground Rents, and other tnt
olM| eaonrities.
d. Gffioe open every day—'WALNUTStmt, aoethweet
corner Third street, Philadelohia. iitt
Salamander Fras-P*oo» Sijsa, —Aytry
largo assortment of SALAMANDERS for,'MlktatTW
lonaWe prlsffl, New 304_ CHESTNUT
toW tf . ,7 KVAWB fc WATSON.
'' Grovbb & Bakbb, s Oblsbbatrd .
• ' • NOISELESS SEWING MACHINES
The Best in Use for Family Sewing.
No. 730 CHESTNUT Street. Philadelphia. aaSM*
UExchaneeSules,
stas, im._'
.vol, Merchants’ .
wiiapt
gy M Pcima, R. ~., a
tr do ;; 5
25 do . 8
10 Penna H sett
15 do..
'l
10 FlmiraFf«fd...u.:. 15
10 Race A Vi5e........ M
1 Philadelphia Bk~. .‘.104
4fikof NLiberties./. 56
BOARDS.!
152 Re*dm< K 18
120 Norristown R....;... 47
BOARD
BMinehiU R....L-L so
a 'ft* 1 •••*
10 Harrisburg ft
10 00.~~~ it
-10 - 47
-20 Norristown St - r , f 47
20 Lehigh C B)
1100 Long Island UJf
Spßg-VIRm
• BitijAsktd,
A1mira75*73...69
E«hClfcNgori»..S2 M
North Penna R_-,«7X VC
N eg
N Fenoaß Ma-J" V «S
Catawiwaß Con 3V' 4
Cataw.ssa Pref. ...tl - 14
erankAtiouth R.. 47 49
fieoond AThirdß.4B 4*
Race* Vine St JL.25 26
West Phils R..... 66 . 06%
(Spruce A Pine ld£
(Green A Coates 17
Chestnut A Walnut* iS>«
lichange-.ITa.; 23.
BOARD
So M S 1 . 6 . a ';l 1 ? i
toCBurAOR&.s» 70
to do . 7*
80 Panama RR - u%
60 lUCenßßsonp,. -SBK
to ds>.. >.~-L 50
to do. to
to do v_sto m
200 Gsl A Chi RR .;7T. 66
7 do 6514
BSO . do.-~- *6O 65X
100 do 66%
100 ClevATol JL.blO 265£
2to do 29#
to do mt
100 Chi ARI RR Js3o. M
100 do a.. MM
mo So::::.:::;:;:: 3-
200 on - fig
100 do S6M
l»>Pe]L &WRR... tD
25 N J Cen JOB#