SJ Vrtss. WEDNESDAY, 'TUNE 18, 1862. WIC RAVI been at some trouble to procure a faithful report of a meeting of sympathizers ; with secession at the town of Dover, in Dela ware. We give it to our readers to-day as an elegant specimen of the literature of the war. It will be seen that our good friend, Mr. CHARLES 'BROWN, late collector of this port, who so rnysteti..usly disappeared from this city some months ago, appeared and made a speech full of pathos ant emotion. The regret we fo 1 at seeing Mr. Bnowst in such questionable company prevents us from sympathizin w:th his sorrows as deeply as our personal regard for him would lead us to do. ID makes, perhaps, as good. a case against the country as it wag possible for him to make—and tho insufficiency and spite marking his sent o r.c , sere the best proofs of the strength of our cause. The sentiments of Mr. Bnowri and his friends will ref'csh our loyal readers, and esyecia'ly those who aro en deavoring to n or:hip—God and Mammon —the Us ion -and the Democratic "party. They tell us all manner of strange and ontradictory thing+. They are quite eloquent about the cc wild and un scrupulous " designs of tho Administration, and very philosophic over what they call the ‘c rt seised nd non-delegated rights of States.", They aro anxious abthit trial by jury and habeas corpus, and extremely sensi tive (but this is quite natural) over the " arbi trary arrest of American citizens." There is not one . word of sympathy with the cause,-however—not a word of fellowsh'p or kindness for the hundreds of thousands of brave men in the field. We look in vain for any evidet co of healthy and honest talon sentinuut. We are bound to be lieve that none was manifested, for our re porter would gladly have printed it. There is nothing but the constant abuse of Mr. DI COLN, the North, the cause, and the Republi can party. Secession is mildly called acc he resy" and not a treason. Mr. Meows w.ts wont to use harsher phrases when denouncing the old Whigs and the Lecompton fraud. He looks upon Mr. JEFFERSON Davis and his fel low-traitors as deeply-injured men—the vic tims of an Abolition faction. To be sure, they take a strange way of manifesting their resent ment, but still they deserve our sympathy; they should be permitted to murder and deso late, and confiscate, and we should recall our armies, grant them peace and triumph, and turn Mr. Li - scowl out of office! ' And this Democracy! Is it not heart-sick ening that, amid all our woe and calamity, these men should be permitted to embarraSs the Government, assail the loyal men now blccdirg for our country, and plot to break down the power of the Republic ? Have they no sense of honor, no fooling of shame 7 Is it not time that all true men should uniM and mush their disloyalty and half-concealed treason ? The ballot-box will answer, and complete the work so well commenced by the sword. Nit. COUNSELLOR Gowan did us the honor to bring this , newspape: into the Court of Common Pleas, yesterday morning, during the hearing of the case of THOMPSON vs. EWING. It seems that, during the early' controversy in this case, we teat occasion to say what we felt to be proper in relation to the claim of Mr. Tuomesos. Mr. GOWAN now finds that We. were endeavoring to prejudice the case against Mr. EWING, and asked the attention of the court in reference to the matter. It appears, however,,ilutt the court was indisposed to in terfere, but excused itself by saying that it never read .articles published in newspapers •pcndinia case. This ends the matter with the honinable judges of the Court of Com mon Pleas ; but it suggests one or two facts in :reference to Mr. GOWAN. It is only recently that the corinsiA of 'Mr. !Arm became singu larly sensitive on.this subject of prejudicing the of Won of the court. It is not many , days since one of the counsellors of- Mr. Eivisci nn dertook to influence the opinion of 4tievonrt; by milking a speech in .1118 favor, while ducting anotht r case. Ile not only made - the speech, but s me officious friend took. par ticular pains to ha% e it printed and sent to all the newspapers. When the mitte- was before the covet, sen:e mon ha ago, there was no such delicacy on the part of Mr. EWING'S friends as ,tu newspaper criticism. The newspapers friendly to him r.:ng tee changes on attempts at fraud and defiance of the popular will; they were noisy and fulsome in their adulations of Judge LunLow ; and went so far as to call a public meeting in the Square, at which Benntrr declaimed and Wrrrs threatened, and the lesser lights deliberated over the most incen diary propositions. We have np desire to prejudice the minds of Judges THOMPSON and LUDLOW, or of any gentleman on the bench. We are sorry that any remerks WO may have made interfered with.the daily enjoyment a peruse' of this newspaper afforded them. But, at the risk of another public notice from Mr. Counsellor Gowiov, we must express our opinion. We do not like the l*pocrisy of those who lived on newspaper criticism when it made capital for them, but who object to it now. Wo do not like the position Mr. Ewiso has taken. We had hoped that we would have followed the dictates of his own conscience, and not those of his party friends. By remaining in the Sheriff's office, ho tells the world that he did wrong in accepting it under the old decision Li' the Courts. lie received his certificate on the prima facie state ment of the election returns. The highest court in the Sta•o has decreed that that State ment wes illegal—that the returns, on their face, give the office so Jona THOMPSON. We do not know abet rule of conduct actuates the friends of Mr. Ems°, but it seems to us that an honorable man would have said, eg I resign this place. I accept the decision of the Court on ilie law involved, and I do not wish to enjoy the honors and emoluments to which I am not entitled. I think I can prove frauds inmy opponent's canvass, and when I have done so I shall ask the Court to give me my rights. But, while I am doing so, I will not enjoy the rights which are not mine." This may not be law, but it is common sense —it is fair dealing between man and . man—it is the way Mr. Bwrao and his neighbors have acted during their lives, and it is by con duct like this that he retains his good name. We do not say thatMx. Emilia should abandon his la &Snit. He swears, to his full knowledge and belief,' that there were frauds in Mr. Tnosieson's canvass, and perhaps he can prove them. Had he taken the course we indicate, be might have gone into' court with a clear case, a consistent record, and the sympa thies of the community. He would then have appeared as the claimantof his rights; now he is in the atttitude of struggling to retain an office which the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania says he illegally poseesses. He has ingieniona coun sellors, at d be may make a protracted contest ; but whatever the result of that contest may be, it will be a long time before Mr. Elmo obliterates the Impressions his present attitude has created. - Tbe people will ask why it was that Mr. STEVENSON was placed in office by the decree of the Supreme Court, and Mr. TuoSiPsoN kept out of office, when his case possessed precisely the same merit, and was based upc•n the same state of facts?. ...nd they will be obligc d to Mr. Counsellor GOWAN, OT any of his colleagues, for a plain and atraightkrwa►d answer. Taut Avrata which happened near White Rouse. on Fi Way' last, though unsuccessful, was nevertheless important, as it might have proved most disastrous to our army before Richmond. It• was a great mistake to leave such an important point as White. House with out a force sufficiently strong to repel any at tempt of the rebels to attack our army in that direction. And it was thoughtless, at least, to have left the railroad, upon which our army mainly depends for the transportation of its supplies, for a considerable distance, entirely unprotected. It must have been known to those whose business it is to know such things, that hitherto, in this war, the enemy have found means by which they have generally been ap -prised of the condition and situation of our • tutu, and this alone should have induced more than ordinary vigilance to guard against • a surprise. White House, together with the railroad running from it to the advanced line of the fumy, has been of immense benefit to the Go vernment, and the rebels, knowing this, have doubtless lu.en .planning its capture with a view to rutting off our communication with ; the main body of the army. Their bold at- tempt on Friday night was for the purpose of jutting their plans into opera ion, and but for their mistake in firing into the train before burning the bridges, destroying the railroad, sod cutting the telegraph wires, there was lit tle, if anything, to prevent the consummation of the object for which they came. 'I he desperation of the rebels, with the!r capital besieged, and their cause becoming morn and more hopeless, will drive them to wild and unscrupulous expedients; and with men of known disloyalty scattered through the country all around him, and who avail them selves of every opportunity to communicate . with the authorities at Richmond, it will re.: quire the utmost care and vigilance on the part of IN cOmtwor to frustrate and defeat their de signs. Wo hope this surprise will not be repeated, and that it will teach our commanders the subtle, desperate, unscrupillous character of the enemy with whom they have to con tend. WHERE ARE THE " RADICALS ?"—The ques tion would have startled us some months ago, and conjured up all.sorth of goblin terrors. ' But now, an answers sweeps down from the White House. The history. of party names would be one or the most in. structive records of man's littleness and bigo try that spite and malignity could pen. Wherever they have had any sig,niticance, they have been invented and affixed by opponents, either in derMon, contempt, or deliberate perfidy, in order that the party tlnii maligned might have its influence weakened by a distorted or partial exhibition of its actu ating motives. These stabs in the dark are really the severest blows that.a person or party can receive—the method takes such admirable advantage of the ignorant tendencies of the mass to discard reason for prejudice, to follow the dictates of passion instead of charity, to indulge a laugb at the exponso of truth, and to sneer where they should at least examine; per hap respect. When some courtier, idly loitering about Whitehall, with brains lobs° enough to rattle out odd fleshings of wit, sportively pointed to some passing Puritan's close-cut hair and nicknamed him Roundhead, who could imagine the terrible influence to be exerted by the title, the party passion it was to call forth and quench in blood, the bitter opposition it would provoke, the human life it would sacrifice—front IlAmpuna to CHARLES htmeell ? It fa not comparing groat things with small, but great things with greater, to maintain that the false application and unfair attribu tion el the names "Abolitionist," cc Radical," Conservative," and the like, have been the Ouse of more jealousy, feuds, corruption, .persecution, and relentless hate, than the im putation, by - unprincipled cunning, of any other titles to any other parties in all history. The term. ((Abolitionist" fairly im plies one .who simply desires the aboli Von of Benmbing; and the great political something .of our country being slavery, the term] has ccnie to be applied exclusively to those who desire the abolition of slavery. Such a spe cial separation of the word from its. more general meaning was all fair enough, because it was made by common consent. It was no stigma ; it concealed no slur. If it had rested there, it would simply have described the wishes of the great bulk of the North and a majority of the South. But it did not rest there. Because there was a handful—the merest handful—of men who insisted, with evtry fanatical clamor, with all intolerant dogmatism, upon their particular means as the oily one capable, of resch'ng the generally-desired end, the word was quickly seized by unscrupulous partisan magogues, and 'violently affixed to those whrie opinions and acts alike repudifted it. Ihe design was evident enough—to over whelm by slander what they could not con-. quer by honest political force; yet While the people saw 1136 trick—must have seen through its knavish sophistry—they suffered themselves to be gulled by 9 so apt is projrulici to rule in our country, where free discusson of poli tiis leads to sharply-formed and sharply deltnded opinions, and so to intolerance and dogmatism. Thus the term gr Abolitionist," so harmless in its etymological derivation, so insignificant in its just application, was attach ed indiscriminately, by the pro-slavery party, to all thi it opponents. Passion sedulously fanned the flame that paltry intrigue had kindled, and at length a whole community thrashes itself iato a fury over a mere naive, an imagination not baying the slightest basis of fact, or, at best, nothing greater .thane a score of insignificant ultraists, Indulging their eccentricities somewhere about Boston ! With equal grossness the term ri Radical" has been abused, and with the same malicious purpose of further hoodwinking those whose passion spontaneouily blinds their reason. The word is legitimately an adjective signify . ind a that which pertains to the root of a mat- ter;" and if it be used• as a noun, its only fair meaning is "one who has a tendency to go to the root of a matter." In this, the light of its derivation, the term savors not at all of cannibal ferocity, nor implies any horri ble aptitude whose indulgence would upset the weakest nerves. It is complimentary rather than otherwise--complimentaty to the resolu tion and force of one's manhood when it is not contented with a superficial view of things, but seeks a stable . basis for opinion. But who ever no thinks of using the term in any such sense? Who does not rather see in it bloody visions of political mu tiny, violent disruption of all social and civic bonds, anarchy and everything that is nation ally horrible? Again are we practised upon by those insidious ringleaders who do not scruple to pervert even the - fountains of the language, that their selfish or traitorous ends may be fostered ; and the success of the plan can be seen in the fact that one or two Now York journals have drawn their life, and an extensive life, solely from adroit vilification of their opponents, and by ringing false changes upon words. Now, it is time this was done away. We have had enough of it. We have consented to -curry on our political wars for years by these weapons, and we are now finding their recoil destructive. They are unfair, unmanly, treacherous—sly boomm'angs that return and overwhelm their users. We have long been spending our strength in dashing, with Quix otic chivalry, against wind-mills. We have 'Mellen our lances and our heads against sail like motive powers puffed into endless revolu tion by the breath of noisome 'words. We have actually believed that a spirit of " aboli tion," "radicalism," and all that sort •of thing, has been stalking through the landla rampant defiance. We have even attributed all our present troubles to this imagined ter ror, and have magnified so far the importance of a few •wretched fanatics as to make them the means of overturning the whole American nation ! • So much for making tools of words, and motives of prejudices. But these tricks of knavish journalism are powerless. The times are too earnest to tolerate such spiteful snarling; and, as if to demonstrate even to the blindest the ground leasnese of our fears—at arty rate, if transferred to the present crisis—the most opposite theo ries are uniting. The . great-hearted, honest eoultd President of the Republic is gathering them all up into the grasp of his unfaltering will. CHABLIS SUMNER gives his policy a most cordial support in the manly and affee-. tionate appeal which we publish to-day. On the other side, Governor Grainte, of Missouri, sends a courteous and hopeful response to the President's thoughtful• emancipation scheme.' In the eyes of the whole country the c radi calism" of both . sides is ended. SUMNER sought to got at the a root" of our difficulties, and prescribed his solution of them. Gover nor GAMBLE strove towards the same end, but chose very different means. Both, are now merged. "Abolition" does awt exist, except as Mr. LINCOLN indicates. Even the extremis's give in their allegiance. We see the whole concern actually buried, and can now act and speak without having the fear of it: before our eyes. Let us not, then, bicker any longer, like children, or storm about in political slang. If the occasion for this ever existed, it does not now ; all chances for its resuscitation are past; and when we now ask, be it with scorn ful boldness or timid fright, Whore are the . 4 g Radicals ?" the only answer will be its eat). .. WE CALL ATTENTION to the correspondence published elsewhere, between certain loryal citizens of Louisville, and W. G. Bite wisLow, the fighting parson. Mr. BEOWNLOW declines visiting Louisville at present, and fires a broadside at the sympathizers with rebellion living in our midst. Ifs rightfully stigmatizes them as belonging to the late Breckinridge party. , ,„ , Shaw vttv cosrLto.r.between thellierrlmac and the Monitor was announced in England, the Times declared, in one of its prose epigrams, that the British navy was thereby practie illy reduced to a couple of iron-clad vessels, and the boasted naval supremacy of England lay only In the tact—that no other rower could be said to have anything afloat which was able to oppose these two: How the naval armament of France came to be overlooked in this last estimate, was not stated. The House of Commons, evidently taking its tone from the Times, (which declared of the combat in Hampton (toads, that "it seemed as if the power of science, more ter rible than fire or tempest, had at once swept from the seas all the navies of the world; as if, with a min such as earthquake never made, it had shaken down towers and broken up for tifications wherever mart bad erected them, on harbors or promontories, all over the globe,") passed a vote that instead of building forts for the defence of harbors and ports, the British .Government should cover wood with iron, convert broadsides into cupolas, cut down war-steamers into mailed war-rams. Parlia ment, in its sagacity, jumped at the conclusion that shore batteries were powerless against Merrimacs and Monitors, and that an ingenious enemy might run up the Thames, the Shan non, the Clyde, the Mersey, the Severn, the Bumber, the Dee, and, laughing at shore batteries, easily bombard London, Limerick, Glasgow, Liverpool,. Bristol, Hull, and Aber deen. However, though the British. Government suspended the construction of coast and har bor defences, they appointed a Commission, of able, practical, and scientific men, to inquire whether the circumstances of the battles at Rampton Roads and below New Orleans war ranted the abandonment, in part or, wholly, of coast fortifications. Tbis Commission has reported, unanimous- ly, that because of Merrimaci and Monitors, powerful landdefences should not be neglected. Their rationale, which is very simple, has been stated over and over again in this paper— namely, that ship-armor which could be forged was proof against a largo gun with an enormous charge of powder; that guns can be made sufficiently powerful to shatter the sides of any thing that will float; that to obtain this power great size and weight in the piece are indispensable; that mailed floating batteries are necessarily limited both in the weight of their armor, and of their weapons; and that, therefore, they are inferior to land-batteries, which may be faced with iron, and have the locus standi— the place for mounting and firing the most co- lost.al guns Finally, the Commission con clude that a combination of forts, which Inv be constructed of iron as cheaply as of stone, with a certain number of iron-plated batteries, is the most effectual and the cheapest defence of naval ports. This conclusion they base on the theory "that the power of destruction by meats of artillery is increasing at a greater rate than the power of resistance, and that, if batteries are built strong enough to give full scope for the increase in size of guns, they must inevitably prevail against batteries which do not givp such scope." We have only to repeat that the conclusions which the British Defence Commission halo just drawn were arrived at, in this country, by civilians as well as by men experienced in the art of war. Auosa the bravest journalists of the day we must name GEORGE W. PEARCE, Esq., of the West Chester Republican and Democrat in this State. Long identified with the Demo cratic party, and esteemed for his high cha racter and great sincerity, he has wielded a vast and a just influence with friend and foe. Be is .now one of the most earnest and uncompromising advocates of the war, and one of the most fearless oppo nents of the Traitors. He upholds the hands of the Administration in the spirit of confi dence in our public servants, and denounces all who act otherwise, whether the sympa- thizer with Secession or the Secessionist himself. The loyal Democrats of Chaster county endorse his patriotism and honor his courage; and we are not surprised to hear that his paper is attaining a very large circulation. Certainly, if industry, zeal, talent, and devotion to principle, ever deserved con sideration, they deserve it as they are ex hibited in the case of GEORGE W. PEA.II.OE. LETTER FROM " OCCASIONAL ." WAsaD:Gtixj,.June 17, 1862 The debate in the Senate, yesterday after noon, disclosed a general desire for an ad journment early in July. The House has twice adopted resolutions fixing the time. Soma of the members arc opposed to any ad journment". They say that the perils of the country are so numerous and so novel , that the Representatives of the people should re main here, in the double character of coun sellors of the President and guardians of the public welfare. A better and more general view, perhaps, is that which avows the fullest confidence in the wisdom and firmness of Pre sident Lincoln. There has been legislation enough as to the management of the war, according -to this view, already—the true course is to leave the case to the President, and the military authority under his control. There will, however, be no adjournment, until several important pending measures are en acted into laws. Among these are the bank rupt law, the Pacific railroad, the tariff,' con fiscation, &c. The tax bill is nearly matured, and will be passed during the present week. All these Measures have been partially ma tured, and could be disposed of in a week. An immense amount of work has been done by the present Congress. The war has cre ated new wants and called for new qualities in our statesmen. Much of the legislation has necessarily been directed to this anomalous condition of affairs, and will of course be sub ject to the risks of trial and the criticisms of tbe legal tribunals. At the best, no systsm, under such circumstances, could be perfect. The work of the Thirty-seventh Congress will, however, be tested within• a very short period, and my belief is that it will be found to be reasonably adapted to the public exigenciesaThe men who hold back in this hour lest a bold innovation may not be attended with pleasing results, and who fear to make an experiment lest it may end in an ex plosion, should recollect that even the blun ders of 'the brave are excused, and that the fearless leader, in war or in civil life, is ever the most popular. If we havebeen educated and surprised by the; wonderfni• working:of the financial .schemes of Mr. Secretaiy Chase, we shall be still more, educated and surprised when the operations of the tax bill* are disclosed. The fact at the basis of' the, just legis'ation necessary to the prosecution of the war and the maintenance of the public credit, like an immortal soul in a human frame, is the confidence of the people in the , cause of the country and their chatty and willingness to make any sacrifice in this behalf, The coming elections are so important to the members of the House, who are looking forward to be' returned to the Thirty-eighth Congress, and - so interesting in every other aspect, that an adjournment is almost neces sary before the first of August. The "Senate will not, in my opinion,' be able to resist the anxiety of the House to meet the people, face • to face, on the great Issues of the day. Upon• the result of the elections, which are to be held in October and November of this year, will depend the political complexion of the next popular, branch of Congress. The Breckin ridgers fully understand this, and are desirous of taking advantage of every expedient to indiice the people to sopori the Vallandig ham policy. Should they succeed, they will have done much to cripple the Administration, and to ignominiously close the war. The " friends of the country should not be left at 'Washington, wasting precious time over use less legislation, when their energies may be better employed in vindicating the policy of the war, and the conduct of the President and :his Cabinet, before their constituents. • OCCASIONAL. SALE OP ITALIAN MARBLE MONUMENTS, &C.- Armin. Thomas Biroh ik Son will sell at public sale tomorrow morning, 19th inst., at the marble-yard, Fifth street, above South, a collection of finely executed Italian marble monuments, tombs, ,ko., recently imported from Italy by Messrs. Vitt Brother. Catalogues are now ready, and parties desirous of purchasing handseme works of art for cemetery purposes would do well to attend the sale. We understand it is the intention of the Mesars. Val to remove that branch of their busi ness to a more central location, and for that reason they advertise the sale. The monuments are all of fine finish, and are ready for immediate erection, Which` can . be attended to by, a competent person on, (ho • • THE FRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY. JUNE 18, 1862. FROM WASHINGTON. Special Despatches to "The Press." The War Depa,tment has despatches from Gen. Bic- GLELLAN'S boadquartere, dated 4 o'clock this afternoon. leo especial movement bad taken place. The weather waa fine and the roads Improving rapidly. Our cavalry yesterday paid another Ylait to Aehland, snrprleed a port, of rebels at that point, drove them off, and captured some property. The advice. from other quarters contain nothing of public inteieet. • From General McClellan's Army. Rem/tentative (F. A.) Comti.um returned te.day from a visit to the Army of the Potomac and General Mcet.m.i.A.s's headquarters. He given a moat encou raging account of affairs. The army la to a splentid col.ilition. In effective fighting numbera there 1s but little doubt tout us fully clued the rebels, while, in cer tain army accoutrements, we are far superior to them. The weather is cool and pleasant. Amendment to the .Patent Laws—lm portant Action of the Rouse. The House Tweed a bill to dny amending the patent lure, by providing that after the paisage of this act the examiners-In-chief created by the act of March 2, 1861, shall not constitute en independent tribunal in the Patent Office to revise and determine upon the validity of the decisions made by the Contmlseioner ; but that their dmiessball hereafter Do merely advisory, who is to prescribe rules for their action ; and after the .soconi application fur a patent, or, after one decision by the COUIDA/Siollti in cases of interference, the party who msy he dieentiatied may appeal to either of the judges of the Circuit Oonrt here. The second section nrovelos that every natant shell be dated as of a day not lator teen six months after the time at tbich it wee attend and allowed, and notice not to the applicant or his agent. And if the final No for each patent bo not paid within six months, the patent shell be withheld, and the invention therein described shall become public property, as against the applicant therefor: Provided, That in all cases whore natonta have bet n allowsd previous to the passage of thin not, the six months shall be reckoned from the date of such onstage. This is n very important proTiliollAnd entirely changes the Oxisting law. Section three repeals the old law requiting a renewal of the oath on a new application; and s the fourth election authorises the Commissioner to increase the salaries of the clerks to the old standard prior to August, 1861, whenever the Patent 011 ice revenue may justify it. The Cam of Representatiye Wood. The Committee of tho Judiciary of tho Ifonse this morning took up the case of BENJA3IIN WOOD, a mem ber from New York, charged witb giving aid and infor mation to the enemy : The investigation promisee to be brief, nod one feature of it will probabli , dlocloeo the statement that tkpacchea tandt by him hive been sent out side 01 the lines to rebela In acme against tho Govern ment. If t Lest a Law—Slavery Prohibited in the Territories, Tbo Efonso today finally passed the Senate's aubsti tate fcr Its own bill, to secure freedom to all parsons in the Territorite of the Upitsid States. The bill, as It 19 a law, was originally d. WO UP by Mr. ARNOLD, of as dis in the language of the Ordinance of 1787. It is as follows : That from and after the passage uf this act there shall be rmither slavery nor involuntary servitude in any of the Territeries of the United States. now existing, or which may at any time hereafter be formed or acquired by the Unit, d States, otherwise then in punishment of Crimes whereof the party shall have bees duly c3nvicted." Despatches from Commodore Dupont— Death of Lient SprobtOn. Commodore DUPONT has forwarded to the Navy De partment a report from Lieut. Cone AvMoa, of the United States gunboat Seneca, at 3layport Mille, St. Jobn'e river, Florida, announcing the death of Limit. Jong G. Srnosvox, the executive officer of that vessel. On June Sth he left, In command of three boats, with Acting Moster4. 11. Itonctts, Master's Mate FISK; and forty men with small arms. Be was accompanied by thirty men from the Patroon. The object VMS the cap ture of a man named Canons Huttrox, the captain of a company of rebels now in the vicinity of Bieck creek. I woo informed that Hamm beaAed of having hung a negro rilot, who was captured at the tune of the death of Lieut. Com. Brno, near Smyrna, and, on that account, I saiehed him all a prisoner, for the purpose of securing the general tranquillity of the persoos along this river, moat of wilco.), I doubt not, would gladly acknowloige the Covert moot of the 'United States, were they not in fear of violence from mon of this character. Lieutenant Sroosrot; landed at early daylight and proceeded rapidly with his party to the house of BURTON. The latter, it appears, was apprised of his coming, and met him at the door, armed with a double-barreled gum two pistols, and a bowie-knife. Upon the demand of Lieutenant Senosrox lii surrender hintsolqktiiieonir, Etrwrou fired at him with a pieta( ' the ball.euterlng•high itp in the left breast, and instantly. llocrox dhschargid the other pistol and gun without further in jury to our party, and was instantly wounded in four places and brought on bona. He is supposed to be mortally wounded. Several &hots were fired from HIIHTON'S boons by persons who escaped. MM. TON'S firing upon Lieutenant Seitosrou, supported as he was by a large force, was a wilful murder, and involved the necessity for his own destruction. Commander Dupowt, writing of Lieutenant Sraosrox, saye*: - 6 , He was an able, brave, and devoted officer from the State of Maryland. Ha bad come nixier my observa tion on the China station in 1838. distinguished while in command of one of the boatsivehich destroyed the rebel privateer under the gunatof the Pensacola navy yard, in September, 1881, and bin whole conduct during the war has been gallant and meritorious. I con eider him a great loss to the fleet and to the service." Z. L. PLCNID, Er], bearer of despatches from Mexico, arrived here on Saturday. Mr. PLUMB left 'the city of Mexico on tbo 21st ultimo, and Vera Crnz on the let instant, and brings. ratified copies of the 'metal conven tion and extradition treaty, concluded with Mexico in December 'est, the ratifications of which were exchanged in the city of Maxico on the 20th ultimo. The news of the defeat of the French at Puebla is folly Confirmed. The Mexican forces were not, as has been stattd, in greeter number than the French. On the con trary, they were len in number, and a portion only of them had the advantage of entrenchments. The fight It as bravely contested on both sides, but on each of three deter mined chargte the French were valiantly repulsed. and forced to retire. Since their retreat to Orizaba, the French tortes have been closely hemmed in at that place, bat no eats; k upon them will probably be made until the disposition of the Einperor is known. ft to still hoped that be will withdraw his support from the restless BChrfneS 01 BALIGNY and ALMOSTE. The policy of the Constitutional Government thus far has been purely de fensive, and no feeling of animosity:has as yet been avowed against.the French people, or the Emperor, but the batted against SALIGNIC and ALotatcri, and their partisans, in intense. Meeting of Pennsylvanians. • A large and enthusiastic meeting of Penneylvanians was held to-night, at Willard's Rail, for the purpoes of forming a soldiere' relief association, to minister to the wants of the soldiers, from that. State, in the hrs. ['Rids. Sc. THADDEUS STEVENS yreaidati, and WILLIAM ELDER was elected secretary. An executive committee of tire were aypolnted to draft constitution and rules for orga nization• MDEETE. FORNEY, EATON, and SAILL were pointed a committee to attend' to the immediate necessi ties of the soldiers pending a tall organization of the aseociation. Remarks were made by Ideal's. J. W. rOlt• NET: WILLIAM D. KELLEY, W. K. LEHMAN, and Dr. J. PuLesvON. Earnest Ltributos were paid to the energy of the Sta-te authorities in attending to its soldiers, and it was understood that the association should be an auxiliary to that end. It was also stated' that seven hundred and eighty-five Soldiers, from Pentiaylvania re giments, were in the hospitals in Wasblnglen; and three hundred and forty-two In Alexandria. &ion hundred and eighty dollars were subscribed for the special com mittee; three hundred for immediate use. The meeting then adjourned till Thursday night. The Tax Bell. WASSIUGIOS, Jane 17 War Intelligence Mexican Affairs The committees of conference on the tax bill are MM. king effective progress, and hope to be able to report It to both HOUK% cre the close of this week. The commit tee, decline to boar any new arguments on any special features. The Sons of New Ifampshire. A meeting of the Some of New Hampshire was held last awning to take measures for the care and protection of the tick and wounded from that State. An associa tion was farmed, of which Senator DANIA VLARK Was cboeen president, and Senator Haim chairmen of ilia ex ecutive committee. 'A committee wieccrin'edlo visit every hospital, and a handsome int d ratted for the object on the spot. Rebel Reppitiffroth Virginia The Lynchburg (Fa) Republican of the 9th instant contains an editorial, predicated on the statements of an lutist' deserter from KING'S division, in which it is asid that the Secessionista at Fredericksburg are most con temptuous iu their conduct towards our Sag, and the ladles are especially violent in their insulting conduct, and frequent threats of punishing them are made by the United States officers. . The Lynchburg prices currant of June T quote prime white wheat at $1.35®1 . 08; dour superfine, 5167.50; fs ndly, 55.211; bacon, 25in300 per pound. Civilians Returning from the. War. The steamer Baltimore returned to-day from ..tork town and White Elouse, with a uutnber of ladles and members of Congress. Gen. ?..ll.xee, or Illinois, who le lit with the typhoid %Ter, was among the pamengeta. Naval Surgeons " A few acting as3tatant aurgeons are wanted by the Navy Departmeht for temporary service, , .Post Office Aft'airs—Maryland and Vir- The odic° at Stuntneee store, Washiogtou .county, Min lard, is discontinued. VIRGINIA.—The Mike at New Salem, Harrison county, Virginia, ie re-established, and Silas C. Davin appointed postmaster. G. F. Bunkin, at 12everly, Randolph county„ rice J. Birkett, resigned. Waltir B. lloeg, postmaster at Fairfai Conit House, Fides: county, vice Henry T. Brooks, resigned. M. W. Reimer, postmaster at Jacksonville, Lewis county, Virginia, vice John G. Arnold, alto abandoned the Ace. George Consul, postmaster at Bush'a Mills, Lassie conistr, Virginia, rice Joseph Hall, who abandoned the office. A Audwalt, postmaster at Pulltown, Paxton county, Virginia, vice M. Cunningham, who abandoned the office. . MWellaneous. At A lexand t ia, Va., to- day, there was Quite an imposing ceremony Performed. Mayor HoHaitzia, Cobinel ORE °oar, General Coors, end Colonel Bactixr, of New York, with other officers, ladies. and citizens generally, were present. The ladies bed presented to the tr Union Society" a splendid national flag, thirteen by twenty-the ' feet, and it wan thrown to the breeze on a strong Union cord, which extended from the City Hall to the north west corner of the market-house building, very conspicu ously. General (Rout and Colonel GRID:WRY delivered appropriate and eloquent addressee. The floe drum corps of the 91st Pennsylvania Regiment Wes Drama, and e'en fributed greatly to the general Joy • Havered of the churches have been taken possession of for hcepital mamma, it being deemed Indispensable : An order has.been sent to General Burfratt to releaie . the forty-font men' of the New York linstneer Regiment, Ems time duce deported to Tortugas. The Secretary of War and the Negro Regiments in South Carolina—Ete,has no Official Information on the Subject. The following wan seat to the House of Repreeentati yea to-dey : WAX DEP A RTM r, June 14, 1802 Ron. G. A. °now, rjr Speaker of the Rouse of Representatives : Btu A resolution of the Rouse of Representatives has been received, which passed the 9th Inst., to the follow ing effect : Resolved, That the Secretary of War be directed to inform, Olio Muse if General Acturott, of the Depart- Inf Itt ►f South Carolina, has organized a regiment of South Carolina Yolunteere for the defence of the Union, com posed of black men (fugitive slaver,) and appainted colonel and officers to command them. 2d. Was he authorized by the Department t 3 organize and muster into the army of the United States as eol diers, the fugitive or captive blavea ? Bd. Ms he been furnished with clothing, taiforms, &c., for such force? 4th. line he been furnished, by order of the Depart ment of War, oith arms to ho placed In the hands of these sieves 1 oth. To report any orders given said Rip:reit, and cw respond( nce between him and tho Department. In answer to the foregoing resolution I have the honor to inform the Rouse— let. 'that this Department hail no official information whether General BUNTER,. of the Department of South Carolina, bee or Ilea not organized a regiment of South Carolina volunteers for the defence of the Union, com posed of black men, fugitive slaves, and appointed tbo colonel and other officers to command them. In order to ascertain whether be bus done so or not, a copy of the Bonne resolution hat, been transmitted to General HUH TRR, with instructions to make immediatereport thereon. 2d. General HUNTER was not antharized by the De pot tmcnt to organize and mn,tor into the army of the United States /be fugitive or captive Mayas. 3d. General liunTitn, upon his requisition as Com mender of the South, has been furnished with clothing and fame for the force under his command, without in structions as to how they should be used. 4th. 110 has not boon furnished by order of tho Do pnrtmcnt of War with arms to be placed within the hands of those alavoa." bth. In respect to BO much of said resolution as directs the Secretary "to report to the House. any orders given said Iltorsrt, end correspondence between him and tbo Department,” s tbe President instructs me to answer, that the report, at this thee, of the ord'ra given to, and eor re.pondenee between Generailfurcren and this Depart ment, would, in his opinion, be incompatible with the public welfare. Very respectfully, your obedient servant, EDWIN N. STANTON, Secretary of War Later from General McClellan's Army. WHITE Dolma, Tn., June 16.—Several guerilla parties are still hovering In the rear of our army. 011 Saturday end Sunday a small party were prowling around the coun try on the opposite side of the Patounky, their object being to await en opportunity to destroy the shipping at this point. Another party was at Charles City Conrt- Donee on Sunday, and to day they are reported to be In the neighborhocil of Williamsburg. Ten of the most prominent citizens remaining this aide of the Chickalio miny have been arrested. They undoubtedly gave infor mation upon which the rebel have operated on our rear during the peat few days. The rebels made an attempt to drive in our pickets in front of Gen. fleintselmam for the purpose of ascortaioing our force and position. A few were woundtd on both aides, but none are known to have been killed. An order was Maned to. dip, by Gen. McClellan, extending the department or Gen. Dix, so as to include Yotktown, Gloucester, Williamsburg, and West Point. XUYIITH CONGRESS-FIRST SESSION WASHINGTON, June 17, 1862. SENATE. The Medical Service. Mr. WILSON (Ben.), of sfaasachnsette, from the Com mittee oa Military Affairs, reportrd back the bill for the increase of the medical oriels° of the voluatmr force. The amendment abolishing the office of brigade stir geon wee agreed to, and the till passed. Bounties. The report of the committee of conference providing for certain bounties, was taken up, and the discuPion continued at some length, on the question of alteration made in the text by the committee. On motion of Mr. POWELL (Dm), of Kentucky, tho report was dieagreed to—yeas 20, bays 17—and a new corotuittEo of conference was ordered. Treasury Notes. Mr. CDAYLMER (Roy.), of. Michigan, offered a redo lotion that the amount of 'ewe-tender Vestnary notes al ready authorized by law shall never bb increased, but the Secretary of the Tressury be and is hereby authorized to issue one hundred millions of treasury ten-days cer tificates, bearing till per cent. interosr,ln addition to the Any millions already authorized by law. Laid over. Pacific Railroad Tho Pacific Railroad bill was then taken up. The question being on the "amendment offered by Mr. Harlan, to make the road at or as neer Fort Reamer as shall be found jeetifiable by actual surveys, it wee discussed at length by Meesrs. Harlan, Pomeroy, Lane of Kansas, McDougall, Morrill. Wilson of Maass chneette, and Henderson, tied rejected—yeas 18, nays 21. The pupation then recurred on the amendment of the committee fixing the commencement on the 100th degree of longitude. This amendment was modified, on the mo , Don of Mr. Clark, so as to make it on the 100th degree within the Territory of Nebraska, and adopted. A large number of amendments proposed by the cam mittg e were adopted. On motion of different !Senators, a number of 13:l1138 were added t , ‘ tbo lid of corporatore, and the bill waa re ported to the Senate. Adjourned BOWIE OF REPRESENTATIVES Patent Laws. Blr DUNN (Rep ), of Indiana, from the Committee on Patents, reported a bill to amend the Potent Office Law. Pse•ed. It mevldee that the three examiners-In-chief shall not constitute one omnipotent tribunal in the Patent Mice, but that their duties shall only be advisory to the Com missioner of Patents. -That after the second rejection of an application for a patent, sr after oue decision by the Commissioner in cases of tnterfer,nce, the party dissatis fied pith the dect,ton may appeal therefrom to either of tbe Judges of the Circuit Court for the fistect of Colom bia. 'mat every Wont shell be dated se of a day not later than els mouths after the time which it was allowed, and that the law requiring a renewal of the oath of the applicant be repealed. Provision is)nade as to the pay ment of the salaries of theexaminers and clerks. The Confiscation Bill. Mr ELIOT :(Dep.), of Massachusetts, front the se lect committee on confiscation, said he was instructed is report, in accordance with the direction of the House, the bill heretofore referred to them, which was introduced by Mr. Porter, with several amendments—the latter be ing approved by that gentleman and the other friends of the measure. Mr. WICKLIFFE (U.), of Kentucky, denied that the commt'tee could report anything but the bill Use4f. Mr. PBELPS (Dem.), of Mieeouri took the same ground. the committee having been iatrueted to report a certain bill only. Mr. COLFAX (Rep.), of Indiana, said the committee bad been instructed to perform a specific act, end when that woe done, the functions of the committee expired. lie held himself bound in good faith to stand by the In ettuctior.s. The amendments were inadmissible. The SPEAKER sustained the point of order. ' ltr. WICKLIFFE exproaeid his pleasure that he was so ably sustained in his objection by the gentlemen from Missouri sod Indiana. It showed that he himself was (Latmhter.) Mr. ELILT (Rep.), of Massachusetts, then reported the bill exacilr as it was referred to the committee, designating what class of rebels shall forfeit their slaves. Mr. KELLOGG (Rep ), of Illinois, raised a point that, the gentleman having previously made a report, could not substitute another unless by the direction of the committee. TLe SPEAKER overruled the question Treasury Notes. Furtlitr proctttlings were interrupted by the ixrpira tion of the morning - hour, when the Efoute went into _Committee of the Whole on the state of the Union, Mr. PRIMPS, of Missouri, in the chair, and proceeded to the consideration of the special order—nomfily, the Lilt to authorize au additional issue of the United States treasury notes. Mr. SPAULDING (Dep.), of New York, said the mode adopted six menthe ago for raising money, has worked well, as a war measure. Neither the executive nor the legislative department could place a limit to the expendi ture of the Government dining war. All they could do as to contract a debt which is necessary to sustain our army and navy. As all parties are agreed that there must ho a vigorous prosecution of hostilities, therefore all parties should afford the meana for that purpose. The Secretary of the Treasury should be clothed with ample sower to meet any contingency, and be Neel/Ad vote to confer it upon him, believing that he would exercise it 'wisely end for the best interest of the country. The ground upon whirl, tbis bid rests is necessity, and hence immediate action is eseendal. The Treasury bill was then laid aside. Slavery in the Territories. The Houle concurred in the Senate's substitute for Mr. Arnold's bill. It forever prohibits slavery in the Terri tot lee now existing, or which may at any time hereafter be formed or acquired. Agricultural . Colleges. The Senate bill donating lands to the several States and Territories., for the ostablldmpetit of colleges for agriout. tore and the mechanic ruts, wee token np. The House, by a large majority, refused to refer to the Committee on Public Lands. It apportions lands to each State and Territory at the rate of thirty thousand urea for each Senator, representative, and delegate, ac cording to the census of 1880; the- Interest on the pro geeda of the tales to be appropriated far the above-named phypcses. The bill was passed—pm wasp' 28. Adjourned. - . • • Destructive Fire at Cincinnati , Ctxotaxtri, June 'h.—Yesterday, at. noon, a fire broke out in a rope-walk owned by Henry hackman, on Columbia street, mar Mill, destroying it, together with some sixteen buildings in the vicinity. Forty or fifty families have beeVrendered homeless by this calamity. Several of the inmates were badly burned, while others reeds narrow escapes. The flames spread so reoldif that a pile of coal, of nearly 500,000 bushels, caught fire, and busload with great &rosiness for several hours. The loss is . estimated at 340,000, on which there is a partial in . Aunlvertary. of the Battle of Dunker Milt BOLTON, June )7.—The eighty-seventh anniversary of the battle of Booker Itill to hehasi generally observed to day through this State. In the city the custom house, all the banks, and many of the stores, are closed, and the people are crowding the streets to witness the mili tary display, which in very 'meowing. The day 19 being °beet ved with more than the usual demonstrations of pa triotism. Arrival of the Steamer Nova Scotian 31 mistiest., Jnne 17.-Tlio steamer NOva Scotian ar rived at Father Point Ude afternoon. Der &deices have been anticipated. • • Denraciive Fire. 0.1811.8. Del., Jine 17.—A fire occurred here tbio atteruoon,.by. which the large engine bowie of the Delaware Railroad Company was eutirely •destroyed. Sevaral build loge In the town were damaged by the roofs taking fire from the sparks. ' The Steamer Africa BOSTON. Juue 37.—Tbe damage s received by tbe steamer Africa in the ice off Cape Itace will be repaired in the ravel dry-dock at eharleatnwn. Tun- Tritesaarunw.--At noon on Friday, the temperature, as indicated by one of MeAllister's glasses, was,Bs degrees, or nine above summer heat. Yesterday, at noon, it was 73 • degrees, or three below it. SLAVEHOLDERS'. OATll9.—About .two thousand claims have been made under the bill abolishing slaver/ in the District of Columbia. Some of the ciaimante aro of very doubtful loyalty—but they take the oath of alle giance for the sake of the pay. Oae of these gentlemen, well known for his treasonable affinities, was asked by a good•natured loyal friend how he managed to take the 'oath. His reply was: I consider myself in the hands of the Tankese, a prisoner, and whatever I do to save life or property is really forced out of me; I sin not re sponsible for it. And when my Southern friends , take Poiesession here, if they ever do, I shall consider myselt absolved from any oaths I may have taken to keep my self out of jail !" This' was cool and bold, and particu tom Southern in its style Or morality. At least one fourth of the money appropriated under the emancipation bill will goluto the hands of rebels ; but as thsy readily take the oath, there is no.help for it. SECESSION IN DELAWARE. =Enna AT DOVER YESTERDAY. SPEECHES OP CHABLIS DHOW, ELI SUMS. BIIDE, AND W. P. MOULT. (Specially Reported for The Profs ] • Yesterdvy afternoon, pursuant to call, a meeting was held in the 4)oaq-11011st,, at Dover, Delaware, ostensibly Democratic, bat, no will bo seen from the report below. really Sterol). It will be remembered that a lithe more than a year ago a meeting of the same character was bold at the tame place, and that a fell and accurate report, and the only account published, wee given In our columns. The elite of the fleceraton aristocracy were much offended that a Yankee paper.hart dared to send one of the North- ern modsille to report the oroceedintt of meetlegi of Bentbern gentimen, end dire were the threats made Hs to whet would be done with said reporter should he show 4.1 face again in the city of 'Dover yeelertlay we lieard, through reliable corremoni- onto, of tho tneetiog to he held, and ono of our reporters was despatched to tho spot, to catch the stray words that were expected to call from the lips of • several gentlemen, well known for their sympathy with tho traitors who are in az me against the Union, but who have not the courage to take up tape to support the cause they edyocattl• -The meeting was held in the State Rouse, n'"l twe-ttory affair, simnel:Mad by a steeple. In 00. story of the bnildieg the Coati of Kent county Outage, and there It wee that the meeting was held soon after two o'clock the crowd began to assemble; and - took Possession cf all the tables , chairs, and benches in the room. They were a cations crow. most of them were farmers from the surrounding townships and coun ties, some were residents of the town of Dover, and others, like the reporter of The Press, had come to hear and see. There were a few gentlemen there, but thoett kept Tar Moot Cron) the great onwaahed, and did not Roll their ielllol3 hide by contact with the brown hands of the etnnly ferment. SPEECH Olr BON. 011A1WER DROWN. Dlr. Charles Brown, late Collector of the Port of Phila- delphls, made the first speech. Ile began by saying that the institutions of our country. onr civil, and almost our religious liberty, hail been invaded. A great calamity had come upon the nation, and brothers were cutting each other's throats. Why was it that this groat ca lamity bad befallenithe nation ? lle hay shod tears, bitter tears over IT, and he wauto•l to know how it ..eonid be averted. it there was any way by which tho country could bo relieved, nud peace and barmen' , restored to oar distracted country, ho wanted to know how it was to ho done, for It was the only way to save the country. Re called upon his hearers to throw aside all prejudices, of whatever kind, and sacrifice everything for tho good of the country at large, and restore peace to the unhappy laud. [Cheers.] Be wanted all meo to do If,; became the WOMB that a man might take, however insignincant such course might be In itself, might be of the utmaet Importance to the State and country It was a great question, and en, said the speaker, great events have el m• et always been decided by small votes, and it might be that this would be t o exception. Should they lose the election, it would be a deplorable event. The spectacle of a million men In arms against each other was a terrible calamity. Men on both sides aro being cut down daily, who are compelled to take lip arms, and bah aides believe they are right and will fight. This unnatural, horrid state of things ought to be stopped. The [weaker did not think that the South were entirely right, but that they were wrong in many reapecta, and he was free to eay it as hie beet opinion. [Signs of disap probation.] He thought there was no just cause for the taking up of acme by the eolith. [&•voice—l do think so, thougla]• • He thought, however, that the Southern people were strongly provoked ; that Northern senti ment, and a fear that a Northern Adminittratton would wipe ont their histltutlors, and they then took the step they did. [applause ] But bp did not think that the South was entirely joetilled in Ming np arum. Still, he believed that they were sate in the Union, nod tbet the infiscomatory speeches were only for the pupae° of gaining some 'particular end and making political capi tal, and neer intended to be carried one. The speaker ' to support his theory, referred to Mr. who, he said. before being raised to the Presi dency by the des h of General Taylor, way pretty strong on the abolition question, but that after he obtained the chair became a national man, and dropped all hie pecu liar views. Now, he asked, what are we to do? This was a great question. They were here as the Democratic party, [applanee,] to organize and to °home candidates, as ex premed in the published call. As a nation 'they were eminently men of the present. They bad nothing to do with the peat, and all destiny is locked up in the future. 'lbis year and tl e year coming will decide the fate of the country. Whatever they coutd do for the benefit of the country should be done alone.. There was a difference of opinion now at the North. Ore Rd, g In which all parties agree, the Republican con eervatives, as they call themselves, and the Democrats, wee an a:dent desire to save the country, to restore it to the condition In which it wee before this war began. [Applause.] But any man hero or in the army, staid the apeal.er, in the Congress of the United States, or in the world, who desires to aria this unhappy family feud of ours to stilt() down tbe American Constitution and American liberty, to bring a despotism on this country of ours, which has been geverntd by the Constitution of Washington, Jefferson, and Adams, may bas arm be polited. Be wanted butone idea, the restoration of the country to peace and unity. [Apotenon] The speaker desired to know why whole tracts in the country had been desolated, and the inhabitants driven forth like the beasts of the field to find a home elsewhere. It made no difference who they were. Why do we boast we are above the eavages, the pagans, or the hea thens of ancient times'? For what do we beast that we are a Christian nation ; not that we were Christismain a kcal sense, but that the great majority of the nation were such 7 Why, then, said he, do we carry on this war when it is commanded in the Bible that we lore ore another') [Applause.] Wo were till brothers still, and it was a stn to abed a brother's blood.. They th-inght they were doing a good act. Let us pray to the Father to forgive them. Here Mr. Brown, overcome by bit emotions, drew forth his cambric and tripod his eyes; a'tor which ho re bound. Mier several rept Miens of the sentiments contained in the foregoing paragraph he gaoled etneches, among them one delivers dby Pre-ident Lincoln, while on his way from Springfield to Washington, in which be said that "the question wee one to be settled by negotiation. Negotiation tenet be had first or last, and It wilt ha better to do en before we go to war than after we fight an expensive war. and have to urge:dia.° after all." The speaker thought that if those sentiments bad been recopied all would have gone well, and the seceded Atates would havoi returned ; but tt was not done ; •he under took to coerce them, and they all want off. If the spirit of compromise had been carried out there would have been no war. be apt alter then draw a comparison between the country at the time of the revolution with E•gland, when many of our seaport tewne were in the poweseion of the eremr, and the present condition of the The country was not conquered at that time, and the English had to treat with no for peace. That was the reason why the Government at Waehinston should offer terms of peace to the. South. They were not conquered, but now was the time to make each overtures. They could never be conquered; they might be, subjngitted but an army of 700,000 men would be required to keep thein in order. The . Union would not bo worth the blood of the meanest e.ldier engaged In the war If the Union wee •to be reconstructod on such a elan as con quering the country and bolding it as territory. There were three parties In the country Rho clerked to reetore the Union. " • One which desired action in the Speediest manner, and this was the Democratic party, with party tickets male by natty men Those who believe in chastising the people a little, and then gradually bringing the Union together. Another party are in favor of prosecuting the war until the Smith give up and confers themselves beaten. This seemed to excite the wrath of the ex-Collector, end be stoke feelingly with ingard to the brave people of the South. Re did not think tha, they would ever ac knowledge being vanquished, and he was sure none of his hearers thought so. [Here Kuno one gene out "You are a d-3 traitor." Much confusion ones d. considerable noise was made, and prest threats were declared se to the disposition of the offender, provided they caught him; but he successfully eluded their grasp.) After order was restored Mr. Brown continued, and expressed hie inability to appreciate why a Governemet ehocid force its views with the sword upon an trammel people. Be then spoke of a fourth party—those who had been endeavoring to further the schemes of emancipation, and abolition bad brought all the trouble upon the country. They had at last accomplished a part of their work in the abolition of slavery in the District of Colombia, and pow they had a confiscation bill up in Congress, and bill for the repeal of the. fugitive slave law was to 'be passed, so that no master could claim hie runaway slave. He wanted to say that the country was made for the white man, and not for th e negro, and that free n Irmo labor abculd not be allowed to supplant white labor. [Applause.] Be wanted to live by the Constitution, the instrument framed by Washington. Jefferesn. and Adam, and which Penneylvanta, Virginia, and South Carolina bat made. Theirs was the true policy.. The projects of New England, high tent!, a strong Government, her fa natical philosophical. religion, had all. failed; and he would then ask, shall the Government be broken down that they may carry one their ideal of universal emanci pation 7 [Cries of no, no i] New England patriotism was not to be trusted: for when is foreign army hold posses sion of the capitsil of the nation Illaesachusetts sent no volunteers to save it, but was preparing resolutions to go out of the Union. Thus the long harangue went on forfeit two hours, and a more treasonable a 'meth was seldom listened to north of Mason and Dixon's line. It was filled with abuse of the brave men who are now righting the battles of the republic; dinouncing those generale who have issued proclamations of freedom, and of the " army of slaves to fight against their rightful masters;" charging Pratt. dent-Lincoln with deliberate - perjury in having violated - every principle of the Constitution he bail sworn to sup. port.; denonacieg the. President , for the suspension of the batheas corpus. debleileg that there was no military necessity for any.of the acts of the National Executive. Mr. Buchanan did not escape censure. To him Mr. Drown ascribed the late failure of the Democratic party, but ho was cheered to fled it was being built up again. Mr. Ell Saulsbury read the reeolutioos. We cannot do more than gives abort synopsis of them. They declare their agreement with the doctrines of their Representative in' Congress, and proclaim their devotion to the Union and their desire to see the Conte deracy Preserved ; that the authorities of Delaware are in no way reepensible for the attempt to take the State out of the Union; that they are in favor of the Union as it was. and the Constitution as it is; that they are opposed to the sectional and Abolition party in power; that the Government, judicial and legislative, may be guided solely by the Constitution, without regard' to exkm ordioary • mensutes. They declare that every person is entitled to a trial by jury in time of war or peace, and protesting against the imprisonment of Menus without abearing or trial; that Delaware is uuilhichingly loyal ; denouncing the conduct of the war—that it waa rather a war for the emancipation of the negro than the restore tion[of the Union ; •thet State rights should be resented ; lest, that the Republican parte are answerable for the war.- The resolutions were adhpied without a disseuting voice. ' • Mr. Brown Uen appeared on the platform and made another 'march. He wanted to know, if the Government could treat about war and exchange of prisoners with the South. why they could not treat of peace? Bet the crowd had tired of him, and, without wading for his pe roration, which, to all present appearances, was an hour or co in the future, called for Saulabary, who came out and said that he thought that ho had made a pretty good speech in reading the resolntione. Still he would say a' little more. Tie spoke very feelingly of the able and pa triotic address . of the aged patriot who had preceded him. They bad met in this campaign to defeat the foes of the American 'Union. who, while crylnglgnion, Union, Union, are plotting its deetructioo. [Applause.] It Is Abolitionism—nothing more, nothing lees ; they care nothing about the Americaa 'Union. He had not forgot the history of that party as shown in the Chicago platform, mud their great principle was the (mein- Mon of slavery from the common territories. He charged them with being hypocrites wherever they were. The speaker wits much incensed at .the prjoct to free. the eleven of the South by the emancipation bill which was now before Clongtees. The party in power were desirous of blotting out the institution forever.. Thse have done it in the District of Columbia, and now „the fugitive-slave law wee to be repealed, and Delaware was . to be overrun with free Peen:tea .• Delaware was for the Union. She had never propeaw4 to secede. To ear that she bad, was a libel on the name or Delaware. Stephen A.. Douglas, more than a • year ego, said, that the great end was with the Republican party, and the Crittenden compromise was framed to avert it. That proposition wee defeated, all the Bepnali , cans votiog easiest It. and every Democrat and Union Men, cave a few absentees. voting in its favor. Edward Didgely, Sekretate of Stabs of the Common wealth of Delaware. was the next speaker. He cordially endorad all that bad been - said, deeplreommiserated the Wriseot position of the country, hated the Abend/mica, end avowed Menial a Union man. He then dolled, and the meeting adjourned. ' A SLIGHT FlRL—Yesterd'ay afternoon, about 1 o'clock, a tiro occurred at the dwelling of Bev. James Crowe, on Second street, below Daupbtn. The .tiamee were extinguished before much damage had been done. ANOTHER SLIGHT FlRE.—Last eve ning, some clothing caught tiro at the residence of Cathe rine Brill:abash, southeast corner of Fourth and Coates streets, but was eitlnguished with trifling toes. THE CITY. Special Meeting of Councils. A First-class Navy-Yard to be Constructed at League Island. MESSAGE FROM THE MAYOR • A special meeting of Oily Councils was called by the Mayor, for yesterday afternoon, to take into coneidera lion manures for tie immediate offer, by the city of Philadelphia, of League .Island to the Federal Govern ment as a site for naval purposes. The members of Select Council assembled together then's , after 4. o'clock, Then. Curler. President, in the chair. After calling the roll, the Mayor's clerk was in troduced, and presented the following ' Message from the Mayor. To the President and Members of the Select Council of (he City of Philadelphia: GENTLE)II.:ISI: The necomity for prompt action by the COUI,CIIO et Philadelphia to avail aught toward nearing the location of the proposed national naval depot within Ito limits is deemed by me a public contingency that justifies tie cell of this epeeist meeting of your Cbamber. The Ft dent Government does not pommies at any one of bsaapecial navy-yards all the requisite facilities fur the Gm atruction of iron-clad yessihnof-war ; and hence the .sand for another establishment which may afford all essential conveniences for such purpose, and may com bine therewith other advantages. Time is good causes to believe that an immediate offer of League Island na the site of nth projected navy-yard would be favorably regarded by the Federal autheritior, and would probably result in its semantic* atd early occupation. This bland, situated at the extremity of the Fivet ward, is cloned by the PenneyivaniePOompsny for Insurance on Lives and Granting Annuities, except one acre at the ex tremity of Broad etrath purchased from them many years rince by Meters, Harris & 00. An accurate annoy made in the year 1846, by E. 8. Saunders, gives an area of 400 acres of fast land with 124 acres of marsh, east of Broad, and more than 67 acres west of that line, making an tag- I negate extent of 600 acres. The correspondence with that corporation shows that they are willing to sell it for $300,000. The lot owned by Messrs Harris &Co , con taining shunt two-thirds of an acre, within the island bankovith a front of SOI) feet upon an 80• foot street, which intervenes between such premises and their water rights, and which lute value from its capabilitiee for ferry landing, is tendered by those gentlemen for $lO,OOO. in cluding all, privileges and rights appertalain. After careful it Quin , as to the fair market valve of these pro perties, with ceneideration of all eiremnst time, and their present ownership, there seems no reason to esteem the prices respectively named as exorbitant. The manifold advantages which must ensue to the city from such imita tion of naval workshops anti warehouses are readily ap parent; but their importance is beyond all/compute. We local or personal interest will justify any hesitation in effecting the condition and purchase of this Island by the city and its offer to the Federal Government.. The enlargement and improvement of the channel of the Delaware; the incidental and additional protection to this city thorn naval attack; . the extend!• n of buildings and population; the increase in the value of property. and thus of municipal revenue ; and the etimulna that would be given to trade In almost every brush, comprise bat a ' few of the benefits which must attend the accomplishment of ibis project About 150 acres of the Girard estate are in close vicinity to the island, and would then be mule capable c f improvement, that could not fail to yield ample remuneration to the city. The staple products of the State would be in constant demand, to supply an indastry which would aid to de velop its mineral wealth ; wniist the possession within this city of a national establishment of such great im portance Would induce a lihsrality on the part of the Federal Government towards Philadelphia which she has never hitherto enjoyed. The probable adjournment of tbo preseut session of Congress, at an early moment, and the pending cionsf deration by the Havel Committee of the appropriation, melee it of urgent moment that no unnecessary delay should be bad by Council* in this action. An unprece dented opportunity seems to be now afforded for pro moting the interests of Philadelphia. The rejection of such °peer tunity may canoe the partial, or even to-al de • privation of many of the advantages which it at present enjoys. The subject is commended to Councils. in tiro hope that they wilt duly estimate the responsibility under which they must make their dererminatien. Very respectfully. ALEX A NDIFit HIGH BY. Mayor of Philadelphia. Mr. WETHICIULL said, : the message of the Mayor so fully covers the ground that it was hardly nocessery for him to add anything. The necessity of a suitable site far a great naval depot is frilly shown by the opinions of the Secretary of War, who bas asserted that uo navy yard at present offers sufficient advantages for the establish ment of a proper depot. It is eminently txpedient for us to promptly and at once present to the Federal Govern ment League Island, as offered by the Pennsylvania Com pany for Insuring Lives and Granting Annuities, at a coot of $300,000. This gift would bo of -Immense im portauce to Philadelphia. as we could thereby secure tee only navy and in the United States for the erection or iron-Clod war nimbi. The expenditure of so large a sum necessary to erect the works, the annual expenditures for material for the construction of vessels, would add very materially to the prosperity of the bseiriesa and mechani cal departments of the city. Our State abounding• in coal and iron to en almost unlimited extent, and Phila delphia the natural outlet for these valuable mate rials, renders Philadelphia as in no ordinary, degree the place which shall be selected. The Federal Government are convinced of this, and as they see the propriety of the step, let us not be backward in the matter, but promptly pees the resolution, give the Matti, even at a cost of $300.000, and by the great, ad vantages to be derived it will prove to be money well spent. It will do away with the old navy yard, which bee always been a drawback to the Improvement of the lower section of the city. The navy yard given up, some eleven or twelve acres will he thrown open, and street, will be run through, and the entire smith will no built up, and the additional tax received thereby will more than pay hack the interest on the °witty. No other po sition around Philadelphia equals League Island In the advantages it possesses. It contains four hundred acres, ample space for a naval depot of any extent. It is below the Horn Shoe, end the navigation is not liable to be ob at:acted by ice; the depth of water in the river-front Is hens seventeen to lave-My feet at low tile, amply emiff dent even now for ordinary vessels,' without deepening. It is also of a proper distance from the ocean, so as at'all Woes to tie tree from say attack which could not be anfß cicntly resisted by proper fortlecatlona. Up= all aides, it is conceded that 1t is o rite propor in every respect for the designed purpose. la. concluding, Sr. W. offered the following preamble arid resolution : Whereas, There is a reasonable probability that the • Fcdeial Oovel•ameat OrlllloCdro a navy yard for Iho con struction of iron-clad vessels - of.w w, and for other na val purpose?, at League Island, In the city of Philadel phia, it thu staid iticuid be presented to them by the mild city; end, whereas, it appears that the Pennsylvania Company for Ineuramea on Lives and Granting Annui ties is the proprietor of the whole of Leagno rebind, ex cepting about one.acre thereof owned ny genre Jos. C. Harris & CO. ; and. whereas, the said corporation have offered their right, title, and In'erest to the city of Phi ladelphia, for the purpose afore aid, for the price of three hundred thousand dollars, and the said Joseph C. Tlarrls & Co. have likewise offered their said premises for the 1.11/11of ten thousand dollars; therefore, Resolved, by the Select and Common Council/ of the city of rhiladelphia, That the respective offer& by the proprietors of Leagne Island, for the conveyance thereof to the United St. es. fel the location of a nary yard, or on eel depot, be, and the Patna are hereby accepted by the city of Philadelphia, at the prime, and according to the terms therein proposed, and that the City Solicitor is hereby authorized and directed to prepare all necessary memoranda, or contract to insure the duo convessuce of the said premises whenever accepted by the United States for the purposes designated. kin. DOLMAN said that, as chairman of the special committee of Councils on the subject of eel/miring the navy yard, he wished to state that the gentleman from the Ninth had not stated all the advantages that will ac crue to the city of Philadelphia by the removal of the navy yard to League Inland. In the brat place, the alto of the present yard, by its removal, ail: open those atreete and the riverfront to business and private improvements, sod thereby yield a large revenue to the city in taxation; tan, when this great naval depot is established at League tel a little village wilt immediately spring op to its vicinity, which will yield a largo revenue to the city. la taxation. The benelit to the citizens of "this city, by having such an establishment there, -be thought he did rot exaggerate, when he sate would be estimated by mil lions. It will be worth millions of Jamey to the citizens of Philadelphia. The committee, of which the speaker was chairman, had paid two visits to Washington, and the committee were unanimously of the, opinion that League Island was the proper place for oar navy yard. They had an interview with Secretary Fox. and submit ted their pins to him, and explained the position of League Island to the city, its advantages, to, and be immediately fell into the committee's views, and said, "That was the place for it." The Navy De partment is of the opinion that none of the navy yards of the country aro adapted to the building of iron clad - vessels. A first-vines yard for this purpose must be located somewhere, and the department at Washington is in favor of making League Island that place, If it it presented to the Government. It is far re moved froze the sea, nod would he safe in case of a fo reign war. It is below-the Horse Shoe, where there is a great aceumularion of ice in the winter, and which is the great drawback -to our part. It is in ea ry way adapted ; thewater is deep—the bettom is hard—a battery placed on the southern portion of the island would com mandthe only channel by which vessels can come up to the eds. The speaker considered this as one of the most iml ortat.t turd advantage:me opportunities ever.offered to the city of Philadelphia, and hoped the resolution would ' pass. Mr. Fox called for the reading of the message again; after which be sold, unlesa there be some urgent neces sity why this ebould be acted on at once, he would prefer that this document should be printed for the use of membere. We can have till Thursday to consider the matter. Mr Marmara said we should be prompt, for the rea son that this was, not the only place in the world where ench a navy yard could be erected. We have great ad renamed in coal, Iron, ,Ic., which may secure the eme tic n of the yard at once, provided we make this offer to the Geyer). meet. • , . , . • , Mr. Meador .earnestly urged the passage of the rem lotion, at once and usanimendy. t It was a matter of the first Moment to Philadelphia to secure a great naval sta tion. Our present vary yard aas much too small, and uctwithstandltig the uniforin excellence of the remote constructed here, it was unfortunately too true that this stollen bad not met proper recognition by.the Government. She bad always been at the foot of the list when appro. priatioes were to be mado to the different yards of the coentry. The segregate cost of the - seven yards at itoeton, Portsmouth, N. H., New York, Philadelphia, Norfolk, Pensacola, and San Francisco, wan $25,655,000, of which game sum only the miserable pittance of SI.- 652,000 bad been expended upon the Philadelphia yard, while that at New York had coat over six millions ; that at Norfolk five millions ; those at Boston and Pensacola four millions each, and that at San Francisco over three millions. He l ad every confidence in the enema of this measure. lie could, couceive nothing more vitally important to the interests of the city and the State. It would give us the grandest naval station in the world, and would Bemire the expenditure here of minions of dollars annually, while the Government would derive incalculable advan tage from the close proximity of such an establishment to the great source of supply of cord and iron, which aro so largely to be consumed br our , navy in.the future. It would add inuesen- ably to oar trade, and, once stream phehed, Philadelphia, instead of being at the foot would be at the very head of the list in the confidence and at tention of the Government. Ile was glad the proposition bad been brought forward, said was gratified to believe it would receive hearty favor, as well in Congtose as in the Navy Department. It evi denced the fact that Philadelphia was at last to be pro perty recognized, that a great city which conld canta ta:tie 30,000 of her young men to, the army of the Union -was dente d entitled to some share, at least, of the favor of tho Government. Mr. CATIISAWOOD favored apoatpouement. Ile thenght there was a Mager In the wool-pile--a "big job" for grime one. He did not care if the Mayor did recommend the matter—be, like other men. was apt to err. Dlr. LYN D replied to thin. He did not thick this a sub ject for speech-malting, anti denouncee the ideas tittered by the previous speaker.' Mr Fox was anxious that every effort Councils could' pc seibly make to foster aod extend the mercantile and • mechauleel skill and employment of the citizens, should ho promptly and generously contributed. Widi regard to the subjt et. of. the . navy yard at Philedelphia, ho had - Biwa, a exteuded a friendly hand in sustnining it. It was by a strenuous effort., made by hint In the early part of ' bla Council terns, that a street wan prevented from being opened through the navy yard, which, if not stopped. would have ruined the establishment, lby dividing It eon eabere near the centre. It was upon his motion a committee bed been appointed to confer withthe authori tit s at 'Worthington, in relatitin to the present station, sod this committee had labored diligently to effect the object. and now this proposition, submitted to Commits, in rela tion to mttattlisbing a navel depot at League Island, met with bisbearly approval, provided that it would promptly and fully hi carried info effect after the property would be accepted, but he could realize. upon the pas sage of this matter, even the acceptance of the property by the Naval. Department, conditioned as a slte for a navy yard or for serval purposes. end yet by some cir cumstance, such as neglect, embarrassment of conflicting interestreltastetn opposition. or antagonism of some oth er sort, or if even the-Naval Department, baying accept ed, should promptly stop forward amd communicate with the proper committee, and through it to Coogrese, it teightmeet with failure, for want of appropriattou. Now, his object in rising wad to obtain light before voting, not to oppose the bill, but to gain hilormatiou as to sant rauces for the future. Of all other periods, this present one amieseed to him to be moat fraught with responsibility. On the one hand we have a most propitious opportunity of developing the handiwork and skill, on an enlarge I sea's, of Philadel phia mechanics, and thus foster an important branch of the city's prosperity, whilst for want of maturity 'of so important a matter, we may plunge the city into en ode- Hon to her present doormen!' indebtedness of e 300,000, and have no adequate return for to Was an investment. He deelred roma further word as to the detail of this subject of negotiation, Ad he supposed it could be given without iropetilling the matter. Who would give it 't Mr. GINNODO thought the Mayor wee sincere is the matter, and that ever) thing would be carried out to its folltet extent, provided the city would appropriate the land. The diaensaion was continued at length, and a motion to pastime and print for the nee of the members was lost . The preamble and resolutione then paled by the fol lowing role: YEAS—Baird, OWN, arta& Dolman, Dougherty, Ford, Fox, (Anal°. Ingham, Lynd, Mclntyre, McMillin, Ma gary, Uhler, Wallace, Wetherill, Cuyler, President—ll. NA ra—Cather wood, Ring-2. Mr. Wsinr.itici, then offered the following: The Select and Common Councils of the Oily of Philadelphia do ordain, That the Mayor be, and be is hereby authorized, in behalf of the city of Philadelphia, to offer a grant sod conveyance of League /eland, at the extra mity of the First ward of the laid city, with all Ito ripari au rikhtr, to the Federal Government as an abso lute gift: Provided, That it chat be accepted for the lo cation of a navy yard or other naval pnrpoeee. Agreed to. A resolution was glee paned tendering the oaa of the Germantown and Richmond halls to the Government for hospital purposes. Rho Chamber then took a short rococo. The Bill Returnid with an Amendment. Upon rertsectobling the bill providing for the donation of League Inland wee returned from Common Council with an emendunint to appoint a committee to act with the Mayor, which was at onco concurred in by the Chamber, and the president appointed, in accordance with it, Blown. Wethertll, 'Heaney, Dolman, Baird, and Catsin se the committee. The Chamber then sojourned. COMION COUNCIL. The menage of the Mayor and accompanying deco- WeDIS were read by the clerk. Mr. SITNB moved that they be referred to a joint com mittee of Mx front each Chamber. At the tfoneet of Mr. QUIP Mr. Sites withdrew hie motion, and the former gentleman then offered tee Whereat, there Is a reasonable probability that the Federal Government will locate a navy yard, for Um con strnetion or iron-clod veseele-of-war and-for othernevel purposes, at League Island, In the city of Philadelphia, if the said Joined be presented to it therefor by the meld city; end whereat, it appears that the Pstltlefl venia Company for Insurances in Lives and Granting Annuities Is the proprietor of the whole of League Island, excepting about one acre thereof, owned by Messrs. Jo seph 0 Barris .4 Co.; and whereas, the said corporation have offered their right, title, and interest, to the-city of Philadelphia. For the purposes &foresail, for the price of three hundred thousand dollar? and the said Jr seph C. Barris & CO. have likewise offered their said premises for the sum of ten thousaod dollars : therefore, /Indeed, by the Select and Common Council of the city of Philadelphia, That the respective offers by the proprietors of League !mend for the conveyance thereof to the United States for the location of a navy yard or naval depot, he,lend the same are hereby, accepted by the city of Philadelphia, at the prices and according to the terms therein proposed, and that the City Solicitor Ia hereby authorized and directed to prepare all necessary memoranda or contract to insure the due conveyance of the said premises, whenever accepted by the United States for the purposes designated. Mr. Quint also offered an ordinance authorizing the Mayor, in behalf of the city, to oiler a grant and con veyance of league Island to the Federal Government as en absolute gift: provided that it shall be ecieptei for the location of a Davy yard or other naval purposed. The motion of Dr. Site, being under consideration. Mr. HARPER was opposed to eending the matter to a steeled committee. Tho importance of the matter was such that it should be acted noon immediately. Council ought to act as a Committee of the Whole. Mr. Crtasswgr.r.;hopecl that, In view of the urgency of the measure, prompt action eliould be taken. Mr. HOGDON quoted the debate in the United States Senate in relation to the parchare of League Island, to chow that there was quits an improbability that League Island would be accepted by the Government. His own opinion was that that point was the very worst that could be selected Philadelphia had already contributed men and means for the Union without stint, anti he did not think that our city should now be called on to give the Government a gratuity of 5310;000. hr. CaasSwia.t. answered this argument by stating Math+ money would be lot thcoming in the end, for the benefit which would result to the city by a nary yard, such as is proposed St League Island, would be incalcu lable. It would employ hundreds of laborers, who would thank Councils for this whe measure Mr. Quz.NN urged the Adoption of the Navel's views, and contendid that no fitter sdace could be obtained for a neral derot. Pr EITES withdrew his motion, and Council rewired itself in'o Committee of the Whole. BARPEII then spoke earnestly in favor of the adoption of the ordinance. lie could not see that any real chjeetion could be made to the measure. It would immeasurably benefit the trade and nroeperity of Phila delphia. The question of 'mice ought not to be a bar to the speedy presage of the onlinance. Tho interest upon the 8310,000 to he yaid for League Island would not amount to more than a cent and a quarter on the $lOO. Lr. SITES seconded what bad been already maid to vs fence° to the matter. He heartily favored the measure. Hr. Looonedx &timed that In the past Philadelphia bed been sadly laggard in ,forwardirg its own interests. it bed received comparatively little patronage from the General Government, while other cities and States were immeueely favored Should the Government accept the gift proposed, it would add much to the national, mer cantile, and political impotteuce of the city. Mr. Bale en thought that no harm could be done by referring this matter to a special committee. The invecti gallon of a committee might do much good. He sets to favor of the site, and deemed it the beet that could be had. Be took pleaeure in elating that in a recent con. vermilion with the Assistant Secretary Fog., that gentle man freely stated that the beat tibias of the navy were conatructed at the Philadelphia 'Navy Yard. If that we! e now the reputation of our present yard, what would it to should a magnificent yard be constructed at League Island'? Yet, Mr. Barger thought that Caminito should proceed in this, as in every other matter, by re ferring it to a special committee. Mr. FREEMAN, in greeting upon the proposition. inci dentally alluded to the fact that the construction of the navy yard at League Leland would be the forerunner of a notional foundry near the limits of Philadelphia. This city ie the largest manufacturing city to the wort], and its advantages are daily becoming manifest. • 7he ordinance wee agreed to, and the committee rose. 311 r. ExurSON moved to take up the resolution, and it was agreed to. The ordioanoe was agtoed to, and, on motion of Dr. grins. on additional section was passed, thst joiet com mittee of five from each Chamber be appointed, to act in conjunction with the Mayor. The Chair appointed as the committee Messrs. Quinn, Barger, Bulger, T. Y. Adams, and llodgon. Adjourned. - THE SHERIFF CONTESTED-ELECTION CASE.—Yesterday morning the Sheriff contested-elec tion cage, Thompson va Ewing, wet resumed. Before a witness was called, Mr. Gowen called the at tention of the court to a certain editorial in oie of the morning papers, commenting upon the case, and enclea- Vol log to prejudice tho case es against Mr. Ewing. To this iudgre Thompson end Ludlow replied that they never read articles . Rnblished in newspapers pending a case. It could net therefore obvert the judgment of the court. The evidence commenced with tbe cell of far. Knight, who wee examined in repaid to certain papers rektnired to be filed in the office of the Prothonotary. The papers of the first division of the First ward were missing, and the corrt made en order to produce the boxes. Joseph Fabian sworn. snit in reply to ,Ir. Brewster, Mr. Gowetketated the offer to be to prove improper con dnct of election officers iu the First division of the First nerd. Nr. Brewster objected, as the socification of tho re spondent did not charge the receipt of votes from per sons not qualified voters If the parties could establida tbat the election offices were intoxicated, it could not vitiate the vote of the Zdr. Bird said that the conduct cf the election officers was inch in the disisi di us to establish that there was n elegy tion at all. -The court admitted the testimony. Witness extinined as relieves: I reside in the First di, talon el First ward; the election was held at the Girard Fchool-house; I was not inside until after the polls closed ; don't know the particular hour the polls opt ned, because they are not particular down there ; they opened about eight o'clock; can't say whether the polls were closed at dinner time; think they were closed; generally close them about dinner time down there; saw whisky inside,the room down there; the election officers took some of it; I can't say whether any of them were unk; don't think they were out of the way; after the polls closed didn't notice that they were drunk; they were not dare anything with the election; one of the candidates for constable was inside doing all the business; he was making out the returns and fixing things up about 11 o'clock at night ; this candidate had been there all day, with the exception of about one hour; the election paters were on a desk, and Sic °bleier, the candidate, had them fixing the ballot-boxes about; some of the election officers were lying on the desk; different persons were in among the election officers during the day ; 9lr. Chialer was inside most of the (ley; Alderman Lentr. wee inside; be went in and complained that he didn't get votes enough in one hour, and be came outside and said if they didn't ger him more votes than that, or do better, he would smash the ballot-boxes. [The box of the First division of the First ward was brought into coml. and the papers—return of votes, tally list, and list of taxablos—were taken out and given in Orme examination of Mr. Fabian.—l was absent from the polls from about 9 o'clock in the evening until near 11 o'clock: . . Michael Simon sworn.—l was present at the election in ti a First division of the First ward ; John Oldster made out the return; be finished it up about 10 o'clock ; I was return clerk; 'polls were kept open at dinner time; the mils were closed after 8 o'clock; about half past 8; don't kr ow why they were not clew' at 8 o'clock whisky wee there, and the officers took of it. • Judge Thompson. Was it a bar-room? Witness. Ito sir, it was where the election was held; Chillier was Inside mast of the day; Alderman Lentz was .U ere about an hour and a half; one of the inspectors s as drank ; the returns wore read out !Omni' o'clock t• a returns wore made out by Mr. I Chiller, because eon't believe that any of the efficera know bow; the elec tion officers did nothing after the polls closed ; tho offi cers were not drunk. except one: the clerks wrote the let of voters; everything required to be dons was done; Cl&ler in the morning put ns in the way of going on ; offer the polls closed he filled up the return. Cr stoexamitted.—lt is in a rural district, and most of the %r tore are known to one another. ry Lafferty, an inspector's clerk of the same divi pion. was next examined. lie made ont one list of voters, nod be corroborated the general fealnres of Mr. Simons' tettimenv. A 7 Tauber of papers containing the returns of the votes east in different precincts of several or the wards were then submitted as evidence. after which the court ad jourt ed until this morning. GERMAN LECTURE ON EAST TEN NSFEICE.—On next Friday evening Mr. Hermann Ho kum will deliver an address in German on w East Ten nerete." In the lecture room of Concert Hall. Mr. Ho kum ass for four years teacher of the German language in the •llniversity of Pennsylvania, and then in Yale College. In 1836 he became the auccessor of Dr. Pollen. (who 'aeon after died while a passenger in the steamer Lesirpton,) in Harvard University. Four years later he -risisred his position, studied theology, and devoted him self for several years to the ministry. Daring this time be lad a German congregation in Columbia. Pa. in ' 18415 bo was principal of a classical school in Schuylkill crtuity,-Ps., and in 1849. in Cincinnati he ministered for several years to a French congregation. In 1855 he re m ved to Knox count), East Tennessee, on account of the health of his wife, a lady from Virginia. He then purchased a farm and planted several scree of vineyards. When the South:rose against the Union, Mr. B.had been nett ering a German congregation to Knoxville, in con nection with the Protestant Episcopal Church, of which he is at present a member. About seven weeks ago, Mr. 'll was compelled to leave wire, ehildri El, and property. Pcrson -Brownlow is also expected to deliver the ettMe lecture in English on the enure evening,' FALB Or . ' REAL ESTATE, STOLES, do.—blessrs. 7d. Thomas's Bona sold, at the Rxchnnge, )esterday, the following stocks and real estate: 85 shares Hartford Coal Company, 3 •Or•-•-4 5 50. 85 do. ' do: do. do. 500 dn. do. do. do. 20c.-8100. 15 do. Lackawanna and Bloomsburg Railroad, slo—slBo. SfBo bonds Mercer county, 35 afr cent — s 2l •O • 2 shares Farmers' nod Mechanics' Land and Building Association, $230—5460. • 85 Antes Girard Fire and Marine Insurance Company, sso 51.760 16 shares Tenth and Eleventh.streets Railway Cornea l-a, $35-3660. 1 share Mercantile Library ComPareir--$8.50. Three story brick dwelling, No. 1637 Cherry street, 20 by 20 feet--$B6O. - Modern tbree-story brick dwelling, No. 1341 Costes greet— $4,700 Tract Coal Land. 132 acres and 46 perches, Broad Top township, Bedfrd Comity, Pa, 890 per acre-83 502: 'Tract Goal L and, 'Meares and 32 perchea, Broad Top Maenads., $46 per acre—s3.l3o. Tract Coal Lend, Broad' Top township, 102 accts. $33 per 1ar—£3, 386 . Tract ('osi Land, 21 acres, Broad Top township, $l9 per were-0 99 - Tract Coal Lena, 25 acres and 117 perches, Tcd town ship, Si per acre—s6l. - Coal and other minerals, 30 acres and 86 perches, Broad Ter tows chip. 84.50—5186. Building Lot. Second street, above Jefferson, IT feet front—s76o. • "%8W COUNTERFEITS.—Peterson ' s -De tector tendeue the following description of a' new &ma k rfeit two-dollar note, norpor ting to be' belied by the ‘i Bank of Otoga, New York " Vignette, a loc:omottve and train of cars, rash 'portrait in lower right, state die in left, nod figure "2" in each upper corner. this same plate is bang altered to various banks. Stirekeepere end others. should be on the lookout, and bear tbli iu