zti I. , .• 9itt**.olot., _IVESPO:31101 . 40N0; NOV. 16, 1858 ~~~ , qli7;ix . l],l4l. News Iteuvs.. 21./.0410, Tr111 [0 . 0 0111.4 - oboolritiO , " 14 kon at ShaVe Optieritul /3tore,,No: 58 PINS st.,Nov, 16th. • • arum, is MEADS. 0 0100 k, 31 /2 , • 11 ' 4—.40 35 6 : • - Stlpmetat.. Turn DA.11.1 was inato gurated, yes' doing au.s. Pineslt is iftb street, - in the centre _. pot. Jf our city, beginning at 11:1 o'clock, end to continue from - forty-live h$ sixty minutes. At the hour named for opening, yesterday, lief; E. P. Swlft,D. D., (Old School Presbyto- Vlan,) sho had been desired to conduct the open - :leg...services; read over a list of clergy of the various denominations who bad been invited by . the 'Citing Men's Christian Association, to take . the stand. Revs. W.' Preston, Episcopal, • lest's!, •Daptid, U. 'Kendall, New &tool `.."presbyterian, Collicr,lilethodist Protestant, -rand N. Bard, blethodiht Episcopal,: ac cordingly took nests On the platform D r , s w i l l then'gave tut three senses of •the 212th Hymn, "Ohl for , a closer walk, with God." Dr.l. N. Baird Lai in s brief' prayer- Rev: W. Preston read- the : 24th Psabs,'. after which; Dr. 11. in prayer. Dr. Swift then gave oat threevirsissof the 1784 . • .'lt la wag to sines arbors Cautalasa meet In aoclal prayer." • _ _ after which he made a brief and'pertinent ed. dream. Prayer by Rev. Wm. Collier. .. 2 14.234 Reath wee then song—" The Lord's eny Shepherd," after wbioh prayer by Rev. D. J. Timken., Dr. Swift invited remarks. whereupon Valise° spoke briefly. Dr. 11. dall *larked, here, that - in subsequent Meet:- IlliteSettirobld be leas prominence &recite the e ergy. The Young Men's Christian Aiwa:Fallon 'tied desire& on this inaugural occasion, for tat gene of their Own, to bees a etrong olerical rep resentation, but fa subsequent meetings the laity would be expected to take a prominent , part in the preeeetllnge. The reverend gentleman re marked that when any person came in after the meeting had orgouizeti, or when any one arose to go out, they would not be considered as tree paesleg any rules, or as being unotaurteotte; it would befunderetood that they had come as early as they could, and remained as long as business - would permit. Ile hoped that the audience would take Beals well forward where they could see each other's feats, and promote each other's seal and attention. Ile deprecated the habit of :.taking been aide seats, its though afraid of get flew in point-blank toile speaker'e stand. Rev. W. Preston le.l In prayer,- after which the bitle"hymn was sung. Dr. Swift then read the, nipointments of clergy who shall conduct alb entethige . for the balance of this week, (ns published elsewhere,) and a few general rules whielt it wee bopcd toabi be conformed to : AddSeilicto be limited, as nearly as possible, to three minutes ; sitigiag not over eight lines; reading of scripture to about ten MINI; this in order that the exercises of the hour Might be properly diversified. The meetingliftlbe Weevil open to general remarks at 12 o'clock each day; fora few minutes. - . Dr. Swift then pronounced the benediction at 12 o'teock. • The meeting was Well attended, there being - about SOLI persons in the 3lntl=a good portion remake.. The Mall is accessible by two wide stairways, on Fifth street, ea that the public can Alrop in without distwbing the audience. It ls also eataforfably heated and lighted. . 1 1AnnigLemotte.—Below oney'be found the nomee of the dfreigors cleated yeoierday. in /be 'roriqukthoke of thin city, to nerve for the en v:asp yeuri • . • 'Breacrege.•Bit4.4.'Thomas M. Bows, Jas. Leder. non, lathesß. 'Murray, /uses H. Hays, William B. Banjamin.A..Malay,•Alerzandcr W. Walling.' Card, - David - MoOisideirs,' John A. Wllsan, John Sampson, Win:4; Anderson, John B. Can Meld, Bd- Bask of Parearrga---Jno. &silica, Thu. Bake well, 'Robert Beer. George A. Berry Janina Daizoll; Jahn Train, Habra - OW.: Jackuu; McKnight, Wm. Morrison, /Wary Palmer, rich,. lee Voeatly, Jr., Michael Whitmore. • ' 31. Dank—llonsy.L..llollmiul, Robert Gal-• tray. Wm. P. Baum, Robert H. Hartley, Robert D. tarlieg, William Barlrar,Thomas Gibson, George Blaelt.--Sorn eel McKee, John K. Wilson, Walter Brjar r, •Wilkins, Joseph Richards. Gar . sator Bon-L-o.ll4.ekbam. IL L. Fahnostook, Tem. It. liner, Homy Lambert, D e Sawyer: Itoht.. I E. se: lers, S. ILarbangh,,L Ilormrler, B.U.' Palmer Joins 8. Dilworth, Junta 'Robb, Thomas Vawcett*W D. Hirkperricic,.._ 4 7. Clay 7.7a - nl-3ansee Melnley, Diehard Hay/, John Floyd. Thomu McCsnee, Jacob L. Schwartz, llaorya Albree, John Watt, Jame, Hardman, Robert Robison, John R. McCune, D. Lae?. Shields, Willis Bootbe. Purim. B. Friend. 'Bank—ll. Hepburn, Jolla D. Shows Urge-, Hasid Campbell, IVin. Iligelcy, C. G. Hus vey..Wm. M. Edgar, C. 11. Paulson, IL T. Leech Jr., George W. Cass, C. W. Richelieu, James OW Scotts, Reese Owens, IL Biddle Roberta. Ifeekanics Bank—Wees.ll:llolmes, Reuben Miller Jr.,.George W. Jackson, Samuel McKee, John S. Zetrare, John Ger, Alexander Gordon, Wm. J. Morrison, N. IL Smith, Hear.* Hays, Jamas L lien- Melt, David M. Leng,Robert IT will be remembered that Mr. Zadok Street, of Salem, 0., was implicated in some financial transactions in Connection - Pith the Shamokin Rout. We publish the following extrazt from a letter phial' we hare received from Mr. S., in which. Le alludes 'to other parties who were con nected with that concern: 12th Eleventh Month. DRIB. .1 notice In the Garegie of the llth the arrest of J. Wood Underhill, in New York, and that a Broker by the name of Jackson was 'also one of the party. I do not see that D. Robinson. Jr.. wee detected as one of the party, (he may not be,) but. Wood Underhill and Jackson, also Dan. Rob inson, Jr., were the party that I had the dila tatty with at Shamokin; the two former pre __ tended to control the Bank:and D. Robinson, Jr., their cashier. I inn not surprised to see the ac count; snob a party will sorely ere long be de tected. I made& fortunate escape in not getting contested with them; when I reflect their efforts. sail plus to draw me in to give their bogus Dank a credit. I hope you will keep the public posted up with their movements, as developed. I should DOI , be disappointed to hear of the whOletparty eoining to a terribly disagreeable end. Respectfully, your friend, Renoir SMUT. i PARISOIAL.-,We are rejoiced to hear of the immense end =constantly increasiog circulation and patrongent cmr,enntemporarles of the city Frees. While. the' spill fry of Netropsperdom is struggling through what boa been generally eonside:ed a Very dull seuon, it is refreatung to hear that our neighbors are gettiog along swim mingly. One la making the "necessary arrange ments" for swearing that they are entitled to publish the Letter List. These "arrangements" are presumed to have some reference to the pub lisher 'et conscfn: u. —Another of the papers expa tiates largely upon its peculiar advantages, claims to have upwards of 10,000 reader,, to be ex ceeded by but two papers In the Blade, and by but a few in New r ork city! We must bumble ourselves and plrmit these strapping big fellows with their tens of thousands of readers to do all the bragging. We aro free to confess that we have no such subscription list as thee, that we never - did have, and don't expect to have. But If any of our friends who do not read the Gurits would like to receive it, we shall be pleased to add their names to our lists. and If any of our friends have anything to set ' ', and desire to In fant the commercial public' of the fact, let. them tey the ettletrune of the old Ceuta - TEM Pbiladelphit Bullain has an artiole old finial and our centennial celebration, in wbUth . It. praises, ak follows, the scenery our roinfdlitg Cur dingy city: "From the. top of Coal nal you can see ten voiles down; the Ohio and nearly ni for up the Allegheny and Monongahela. Mountain, rock, river and cities are at your feetiaaglorious panorama, which we, who have traveled from Cape rieedopenfo Minneema, and from the ber demo( Cansdato the Southern line of Kentucky and Miesentri, have -yet to i.e surpassed. The motimain ecenery of the Susquehanna is grand and 1, 1 01 7; tbo - Del/time Water Chip Is superb; bun we'd•fr any man to lOok out from the sum mit. ,Of Cost Rill, from a certain tree we can show him, and say that they surpass this viewl At Intik all Pittsburgh would back us that we speak the (mud coma, or QUARTOS BROZIOIa—The case of Co Tt. yes. Blakely and James . Richey, in dicted for conspiracy and for obtaining money nude? tulle pretences, woo on Monday continued until aextterin, on motion of It. Biddle Itoberte, Fa q .• The reason aesigned was the serious M UM of Mr. Win. Campbell, an important wit ness for the defeuoe. . A motion fors new WA was made in the case of Emu, convioted on Saturday of Murder in the First Degree. On making t h e moUon Mr. Marsindl. said that as his reasons were founded on the charge of the Court to the jury, hawould Ills throcrearona for a new trial an soon u his Honor should Ale his eharge. - Nsw Minma—htrs., Charlotte Bitnne, No. 118 street, sends us .f:Topere Quadrille," com posed by J. 11. Tally; also, "Thou Lively Angel Mine," by C. L. Fischer,. sweet vocal gem hinn the German, arranged for the piano. (We owe the lady an 'plop for having Overlooke4 these aheets for several days) ,lawama . Gnome ;ro o ataso h :. 3l —Th-o: 44.4 oo z rzry flb terday cool •u° *Utak pan friaLaago=7 " P li all** ool ; ;4ler i r bor/ • Pt Trial/ sr obrlsetala Jacoby. , fOf the chests; we tried it on the pistol and found Cotter or Ores& Tweet - then --Comm - uwenith , one end of it unscrewed the barrel of the F l ' te l Yes. Christian Jacoby. The facts ill We gone are . f rom the sloth end the other tad itueer' we d ' he well known in the contomnity, that i. 9 .16 thr‘zus tdrilet the clothes and guns were sold about the they have been disclosed by, the preliminary ex. , time it was published in the papers teat Jacoby 111141114011 and the occurrence of events that' was lost in a swamp; articles were sold shout I Could in no manner be kept aecret. • I four Weeks ' , before Jecoby wits urreand. To a On the Saturday succeeding the fourth of itirce--found a bullet mould the eine of bullets July, 1858, a company, of men who were mow- tot the pistol in one of the cii, sts ing in a field near what is known se Cerk'e Run, *beet 22 miles below the city, in C h irt iers tp , VITIOI.III LieweeLe -The various Councils met discovered in a low clump of bushel the dead het night nt City Ball, to continua the work of body of a woman. At her feet lay a large bone- regulating vehicle licences Mr M' kuir Yi b ' n g piatol,ench as ia cutedbyeavalry;and which are worn in a belt around the body, .to which they abeent, Mr. Mlielvy was chosen Pre-admit. are attached by an ear on the breech of the pis: • 101. Information was immediately brought-to After calling the roll end reading the minutes, ' Mr. F.rrett moved to reconsider the vote of last the proper officers in the city. The Coroner, everting adoptiug the proposed ant of Assembly. ' lie elated that the beets of diettihntion fixed in together with Dr. ilardock and several reporters . that act was unsatisfactory to the Councils of for the wets, visited the spot. There they found Pittsburgh, and be made the motion to recon this deed body which, under the July son, had shier in order to come to a better-Undemanding already reached a state of hoeribleput Mr. Coffin and Mr. Fleming oppowl the re refeetion with the other corporations on that subject. A bulletholo was found in her forehead, but ex cept that, no other mark of violence was found consideration and Mr. M'Catidleae supported it; on the body. An intense excitement throughout , and the Tote being taken, resulted yeas 39. the whole community was the reedit of the pub- na y" 17 ' lication of the above facts. His Honor, t h e Mr. Lrrett than said that the Conncils of lire from the Mayor, with his accustomed energy, fellow- PiUsburgh; failing to obtain jue other corparatioue, would withdraw from all far ed out such clues as he could obtain to the perpetrator of this horrible deed. In the course ther participation in the conference As the members rose to leave, a motion was made to of a couple of days it came out that a man adjourn, which the Prenident declared carried named Christian Jacoby, from Germany, had . About half of the crowd then left, when the derived at the hotel of Mr. Ilerwig, near the canal, on Tuesday night, the Gth of July, with Allegheny Commits and those of in few of the his family, consisting of a wife, four children boroughs, reorganized end put Mr. Fleming in the chair; but the janitor, understanding that and a servant, named or calling herself Anna i the convention bad ieljourned, n 1 this pole torn- Sutler; that on Thureday morning he had left cd off the gas, sad nothing further was done that the city for Chicago and the further West with the servant girl Sutler and his four children, we could hear of . bat without hie wife; that on Wednesday evening, noon STATDOENT for the emit preceding inn . 15th the 71.11 instant, at about 7 o'clock, he had gone --- - _ out with hie wife to walk, and that a ft erwards i Omuta'. Speen, L.lllll. Dtposits 1 she had never been seen. B'k Pineb'gh 273,011 530,2621,598,176 745,730 Officers were immediately dispatched to Chi- I Exchange Wk 499,1170 266,040 ' 1,x45,501, 451,1135 cage. There Anna Sutler and the children were M• 1 M. " 1 14.1,717 167,61,17; a 22,21171 2115,11-11 found at a hotel, but Jacoby had gone to Blue . (nieces' Meet ear " i 138 . 750 1 1 .; t 1: 1 1 1 t s ti l : 6 f . ,. 1 1:, 07 , ~! I I 2 , ,',.' ' 2 3 :, 7 landid, a distance of 1G miles from Chicago, to . '''''''''''' I 252 ' 710 A Iron City ° 1 171,075: 97,021' 51b,111 107,31 4 100 - at some land he designed purchasing. Allegheny " 203,7401 101,065' 550,417 92,151 Chicago officer went down there to arrest him, but 4 lacoby got wind of it and escaped. Ile lay in ambush about the country until the last day of August, when he was caught by a public offi cer who had traced him, at Denville Junction, Illinois, where he wee at work on the railroad under the assumed name of Jacob Brie.. Ile has been in jail here ever since. On Monday, the Court proceeded to empanel the following Jury: James McKee,. blacksmith, I.t Ward, Pittsburgh. Moses Borland, geutleman, do do Allegheny. Wm. McKee,. Jr., farmer, M.Min township. Andrew Weible,• do Studer do Ches. 11. Johnson, do Penn do Joo. Anderson, tea merchant, Ist Wart. Allegh'y. Francis Cluley, wire-maker. 11th ward, Pittsburgh. Thos. Rail, carpenter, 2d do , Allegheny. Alex. McClure,* farmer, MiMin township. Thomas Dixon, do Wilkins do Saute. Andrews, grocer, sth Ward, Pittsburgh. John Lytle, boat builder, Elisabeth horeugh. The names above, marked • were on the late Evans' jury. Patties MoKoe is foreman of this as ho was of the Evans' jury. Challenged Peremptorily-Wm. Arthom, James i (lilies; John Boron, Christian 'Hershey, John Me- 1 Goode, Sr., Al. 11. Hartsell, 11. F. Area,. John SL,. 1 Neely, Wm, Brown, John dillepme„ William Carter, I Henry llama Challenged for Cause-Jas. Brady, Joseph Arm- I strong, Johw,llarlitt, Simpson Horner. Set Abide-Feeder', Fry, Joseph Dorrington, ; - John Gormley, Win. Early exeuseit on amount ~ f 'Fun !Weidner . / Pared. el , for October, Scott S. ess. l. Co. s reprint, has been received.and is for sale Afternoon Session.-The Court convened at 2I by Ilnot & Shiner. It opens on an article on the o'clock. when 11. P. Mueller. Eeq , opened the r Court of England during the , regency, hell to nano for the prosecution. He detailed the sir- I IS2O, followed by ono of much' interest un the cumetances which the commonwealth wee pre- , trial of Madeline Smith in Edinburg. The other pared to prove. The first witness called on the I art lelesare all of InUthilllCreet, and, fur a wonder, part of the commonwealth was- there is nothing in tide nuteber about India . Michael Quinn, who being sworn, toadied so fed- i , lona 1- Live in Cr , '" street, am employed weighing Butte xll Lers -ft e would direct special al metal for Simirk 't 1.11,, am not it I int:owner nes t , t l ea t , pu bl ic , ~ I . ~t, I bi„ $ .. ,r , rnnwksliz, on the I 0.. t. of Jelly, in a field of Mr . Ni rn• .. . ' ""' v s 's . ''' '' ' . irks. nuar Cork's Run , about is mile below Joute' ' t ° "' 1 ,,,, ". ., h 'r, ' " " I r"" ' i ~h r "r " F.,rr.„, two non, Joan Burns and Cimietopher 1., eh, Lain '''' Sea, `''' • U. " e m II '''' PrnP , 7 was we-e mowing .vitti_no. that -day we fouud the Lolly OWLIt..I by the lore Dr Br 1 Simpson, dec'd, of a dead woman. We nolo mowing the mud, vs ee'l. .“ Cl''''''''i On"' 0.11 a L'ln front the city, and whoa en, cae ca ne ar whe re th e comma b y ~...] 00 the Scala side of Prualylvatiil creme, got a strong smell, and one of the moo ~.)11 t-ert•'s ~.. somethidg deed about here; mowed a quarter of an Ltsrelsvi -The lice. Frederick 'l' Browu, of bone and came round again, when one said there Cleveland, who is cot:ine:inn a protrazted mem- Iran a dead dug there; come around to a tuft of in g in Es, e is tor dull, %,,;, o h, e. , ally, t Ilr shrubbery near by a ditch, when one of the men put Plumnier'e) had n Valuable over-.oat stolen tra m aside the shrubs with the heel of his scythe and there , t h e h a il e r 4e. neral Rep./eon's residence, an we saw a dead woman; law her face, but couldn't Friday evening last The eh wf Lae not yet Leon tell any thing about it, becalm. it was all welted away like; serer looked but once, the null w. tee , detected Wong; iiiir beefed down foam about her knead; ono ~. of tho men came right to inn... had be,,. mowing; ‘..1,83.10P0L11112. Alin ito 615 AL -J 11 D (Intl, was ' No 4 Girard House, has laid bit our table No I, there two days in the end of this field, the bode ID the middle of the told; it woe about three hours Vol 111, of the 'there named quarterly, devoted after s h e we, found I,f or , te a C oroner ~,,,,,,, d own .to Literature and Art. Tin. quarterly na:. , ts ..sal. che weather was core worm; I.er feet were toward smote per number , or $2 err annum Saliacri;- fas I ant mw her: there was api r • .l about ayard tier. are received ' by Mr Cl Irk rom her feet on tbo ground, I en, itlgl,mneol whoa -e -; sue the lady. n. , At 1 , 41111 . 46.01.1ter. e, of at° moot fa.dusola Crum-FrentiOo4-Where we found tlio Ludy was _tyl, ~,,,,I h e .,,,,u,'„) 5 .,„..-, e ,„, t., rew,,,,,a, will 1,,1i ty porebea from the Lark of the river. , odd this Innen., ~ as ten o't leek, son theec I 0 . I 5 Shown pos-etom nom th e renew be.i.h. the road; 'or alr . Devoe o k ti Firth ' "n. "' bashes where abo wee Mond worn green wool I i „,,,,i,w y w , :C,2„,‘',7,17,,74, Z 1 ,,..,:',„ k,",.,"P -growing; did not t-v any other al he but the ~b,,,ad „„ t„, ~,,,,i,,,,,4 "..' " I. ' L. body a hi-li wan Irog es the link, ihe beiges grew ' thick together and covered her entirely up; Yoe ' weather was hot and dry don't know which of the other two mesepieked up the pistol, which we. a horse pistol; roll not recognise the feature+ o.t the face at all; ./DO would cross tile ditch iu gem; from the fence; you min stop aeITIIAS it. John Buret. sworn-Was mowing in that Geld that day; came to a eery bad smell; said there must. be a dead man or dead women somewhere &Lout here opened tbii bushes and eon the legs of a woman there; went round towards her heed and pushed the bushes away; there was a white handkerchief tight about her neck; her face was a mass of vermin; came op at onto for a coroner; Ulnae' shown,] that was the pistol which I picked up shoe four feet from her; it looked as it she might have shot herself, fell bank and dropped the pistol from her hand; she lay in a elutnie of bashes with Let head down and her feet down with the Lethal, grown over; it was not possible for her Wham, fallen in there, judging from the appear ance of the bushes over her; -eho appeared to have . been drawn in there Lead foremost: never saw a pis 1 tot of that kind helms.; observed bee dress slightly: think It was a blue etriped, [piece of •dreg. shown.] ' her dress was like that; did nut me any bonnet there. Cross-examined-Came fur the Coroner within ten . minutes after I bound the body; could not tell the ' features of the face at all ; face, head and net* all seemed to be the same she; saw DO bonnet there; did not observe her hair; her head lay down and her face directly up; the bushes were about four feet high ; they were willow beetles, nod grew close to. gether : the ground where her head lay wax lower than Where her body lay; her feet were lower than her body; can't say whether the ground or lbe Lusher kept up her body.; didn't OILEDne particularly; the body was abont ono hundred yards from the road t the grass close around the clomp by her feet was a little broken down; didn't notice this any other place; got within twelve feet of her in mowing, before we went to see what it woo; didn't bring the pistol with me to the city, but left it with the other man ; could not tell whether there was a mark en the face; it was all alike; examined the pistol, bet didn't raise the hammer. [The Commonwealth here exhibited por tions of the clothing and the shoes, which were ta ken from the dead body, and the witness thought they were the same] Coroner Alexander, affirmed-Made an examino lieu of a woman's body en the 10th of July, at the , place before mentioned, in a quick growth , without doubt tie *Oman was pitched or dragged in there, I the bushes groaning over her. To a juror -Think she most have been thrown in I' there; am satisfied she wee . = abet there. The Coroner recognized the clothing and identified the pieces which be cut out from the I gown and the under skirts. Saw a shawl, a , fine merino shawl, which was shown and ident- I filed. The testimony of the Coroner disclosed ' .-,---_____ _ _ the facts in the appearance of the body, which Telegraphic XI aritete. we need not repeat. The facts here are too hew Toes, boy 16 -Cotton quiet, t, ,f Lao painful for narration. taloa Ilse tonehrbill arrived too Mohr her Melte. le of The only examination held before the burial was • fret the nooLs t in ur advanced, lb gal Md. 044. tem. superfictal one; we went op and took sample. edit ~ ,,,," '"l, l7,P 2 ll'.l wt l. ' ;'. ` ,L„,l l7 o " „l 4r el ''d ' 4 i 4 „ 1 ,.,',.?.. 1 'Z' clothing; I discovered the braid bole in her bead ' fled; emu hoon.Or; yellow ierr,os line voto.lv t 17 just above the right ear • think amen could not have ! W W I Senth eon ne...e...1" e. eve. 1. , ....4 * 0.1 4 ,1, t thrown the women in there withoutcarrying the tops Ino WWI* , 1 4. d o ildill t0t 1, 5n0 ,, with her: saw no bushes broken down; it was pos. I ra en .. ,, t ra ' k j :l - d t:: . 2 :' . . , • "kaall an , Hock tears 1 gbh, that the body was dragged in, but ono roan ' ' Ned Stok Garret m^ ~ 1t...7 . 1111 4 : ' 11 ' 17 Zr 1 11 "'" 1 . 1 °.. 4 1ds tv...ut 1 ves, i, I might have thrown her'in them. intlene nnd Chlman 71,t.i' l'lrle I^o,. 1,....,, 1, 0 , 4 „,„„,„ 1 Thomas Schaulej, aware--Am undertaker's PO. • O - . T•loms. hue Mine 91; the hal,' Cr Um turnoon Terre i vivtant ; drove the yedy of a woman np from Cork'. •d l!;Lll.pies. Nov 15 no VI or mart,) I. iv, . 1 , 11; saw the clothing; cut oat pieces; gave it to the ~,,,r...., oi ' , 0 0 ~ idd. .„,,,„ . 0 , , , 5 "",...";, 'extort at the Methodist burying ground. [ Cross- 1 toonble fancy estrstarolly at so . Itee 1 moo V. ob.! ilstis olsamittion elicited nothing new.] . n... 1 al..1:11i Wheat 10 'Mier 11 , 011.0.1. sod 0141) 1.411.1. ' ed/ at Cl •,,,,, 110 tw !el tun $1 ~:,, Ido 1... eblts n]. D. L. Ent ea, sworn-tVhmi I arrived, the Cern- ' ‘ , ‘ „,,,..„ . „7„ ...' n , „,„ „',..,... ern ~. , i ~„.„ ? „.... 0 ,,„„ nor, De Murdock arid his student Were there; the „ pm ,w. k. ow • rolling haely t " 4h1441.- lu Gr r JOIShCS Were preen down around the hotly and the I co...Rawl trorsonm Ono. • il no .././..,,,, Jo I oil lever stomach higher than head or body; fare much i re,d sei i.L 4e, ,i . La 1...1., Ia• 3.1• .nr. .1 1.... e„..sat, eaten away with vermin; one band (think It wan the I 0,,,,,,, , No. i , - 1 .evt at oto is .nnt I. 1b0.. , 041, ^d right) epee her waist and the other by her lido; i ::r.:V ic0,r,u"t:1,1:::717,,."'r,1L1F . ..Z11 , 1:1,..3: , h ,, 1V0, 1 , 1 , , , . , hand was fair and apparently that of a women not I eon art eloool anomie "fop . pnood arm, 1:11I11 n ' ,"!?4:l,'- aectifteuied to work ; observed tho left leg no high mei,d at, $ ~1.5 r. , h.e , e ,,, ....". b. ri , . On , at an . 1 .4.• as the beer; them wore no make of detednposition I 0. 1 1 0 . th tit'u'ldndtllll4 scat I" "' l ' d I'"I. 111011 II"' OD the flesh of the leg; attention was called to the . evemeine :at" la sore add m. dlanta , IL $ 4 W. t. , ' to , IDIII , I seek D Dlrec Dan, oho 'llk...rams irsioa shoo by the Coroner; had shining leather about Be `7"..„' ,t,'„ 1 =.,... , 1,.„.... ti:on w 4 m , by ours. g ..], toe and around the sides; the shawl had bees taken eirTien - e r i:,.. so! ' to pay y en p they 114.112.1 off the body when witness arrived there; It had a paying iteateto el bead. but have WeconiJoued mho Ulla spot or dbicolorellon an it, (the spot is found;) soiled the last three &ration matold Moho:Mits..= Inmeeured, I Dr. Mardock's attention to an ear ring'in the car of ""' "'or" l''''''"'" 'fil be tuna; I ' i '' IIIII " b ' thl' whole / hen» will prove abortive, as similar attempts lLitrelLeo.the corpse and lie cut it out. w made In other ream, 41114111waya felled; about 6000 bead have Cron-examination elicited nothing new. teen sold atom Eaturany. Bed foto bend wore remitted, 114. O'Neil, of the Chrouiefe, testified to the some There It no charms In ens/lemon...A not mock was dom.. facts. lie identifieda green-headed shawl pin which Da1.1011:166, Nov la.-Floor quirt, bat Comely. Wheel arm was found in the shawL with brisk stolen. Corn aclro, but Dio Drioos um unchanged . Provisions mitre hut unelisumnt %tasty nuaL Iwo Mull, sworn-Am Superintendent of the -.0.- Methodist Episcopal burying ground in the Seventh Sr. Louts, Nov. 15.-Mr. Brown, the Ludt cur- Ward; Thos. Sehandley brought a corpse to me on respondent of the N. If. Tribune, arrived free, Salt the loth of Jelly, Rid not bury It et core; kept It Lake on the 10th ult. till Dr. Murdock came up, when he took the cloth- I The investigation of the case of the Indians beg off; (Identified the clothing.) In Whaler took charged with committing outrages en Mrs. Walker the body up again, and Br. Arthnn and his brother and daughter, commenced before Judge Sinclair. took the bead. of, sawed it in two to find the ball; General Johnson :went into winter quarters on they foetid a ballet in the brain• it had made a eon. the 12th. elderable fracture. and a little bit of the load adhered Heavy rains with high winds prevailed at Camp to a point of the skull where it Lad struck. Floyd. Mayor Weaver, sworn-(Clothing shown.) That The story, stating that Indian Agent Runt &How ie the elothlog whiolreae loft in my possession; it ed Indian Nguema tube sold as mistresses to the °M ersa left with me by the (fekernere (chest shown.) I cent of the troupe, Ls untrue telegraphed to Chicago, to wfficer Davie, to bring • Snow (elite the depth of three feet on the moon back the fatally and e b,,,,t, a of - Y.cobi to this city; he ' taint , and the ice was three inches thick. Severn brought Ave chute and that la ' one of them; Mr. trains wilt be unable to go through the naountalne. , Baekefen and Mr. Barnhill took ahanrentory . ef the Considerable exeitenumt prevailed at' Salt Lake goods in the thetas. 1 Chyle referenee loth' Pike's Peak gold diggings. Croceexamined-Cannot tell witill'ifft-ift•ib. Numb"' ware Isarieg ger the mime. inventory; ills drawn up on paper at my offic s „ , -" 7- t oy TOM, Nov. 15.-The Bank statement an state generally that there were men's, wo- r oo ts go\ la follows: Increase of Loans, $248,- men's end children's clothing; there were beds 000 ; '4; Apie of &vette $11,000; increase of and Germain, linen; there .were two guns; they decrease of epee% ' u drawn J4 Ollllll $ l / 5 .9 00 ; coatualue produced; were double-barreled gem 1 4 9 0 0 00 ... 4 9 ,,,,w, in ofrotaamon g 240,000, and Were odd at suction , found bullets LI the i ''' N„„ ' -r ' Me, 16,.. , 44 alight finny at** Olt abate l 4Y leurtfull dose gut Must by aka I h i " jig, thpettitne. At Sirsrego ,it is fin ~r., six 14 .40. 1101 $ 1110 40041 4 eses• r i c o ?. ban lid-. a .... ,4!anstonnifistaa %awa i t.= clt . 11 0 1 * 111 114 awl) 0 1 01 1 bwrinok liCtsai tia— : 3 4,6 - 1 4, . - --- .- - : , . I=I=;ICE=E:M!=2 1,619,172,1,331,17710011,3 S 1 1,9115,034 Ln vreck.....,1,551,168'1.322.3511,6,671,55:111.93:415: Increase 65.00.1 ll,s 18 :111,195 De,rease. . N.,tes • \ 01, D..% to . TM,. hy M nth, itinth. lini.l4. B•nitm. ..S. 57,560 „55:1,794 .$173,845 . 1e7,701 12,761 151,744 .. :1q.659 10,4118 1.5:.,209 .. 13,647 17,1117 27,554 .. 22,629 8,1175 91,211 . 21,372 40,5:6 . 22,41/5 23,510 n,3:16 Pitt. burgh F change. Cii17111111 . .. . 31.vhalates'... n City. Allegheny $345,97) $154,794 $ 4 49.315 Last week... 155,112 6214,421 Ansivimisny.—The Young Alen's Christian Association of Allegheny city bold their second anniversary tweeting this evening, at 7 o'clock, in the South Commons M. E. Church. The ex ercises will consist in the reading of the annual Report, by the . President, and public addresses by Prof. Samuel J. Wilson and Rev. James Prestley. The °cession will be an interesting one, and the public are cordially invited to attend. Areouvrmrxr hy the klevernor Jamem A. lan levy, Notary Public fur the city of Allegheny. A LTST of valltaltle Stocks, Bonds end Lend Ws, rants will he sold this evening at the rommeret sal. rooms, Zia. /4 Filth street, by I'. Al. Doris. Tnn hirers of good things. ran have their wants fripplied at Barll . B, Federal Area, Allegheny, they having jog received. direct f the East, a splen did assortitimt of jellies, asserted prcsorret, fresh peaches, lobsters., green gages, de., which they roil, tell at unueually low figures, having purelinectl them at the very lowest cash 'wires. They have also, on hand a superior assortment of fresh manufactured confectionery, comprising the choicest finalities, which they will dispose of cheap for cash. Their friends and patrons are cordially invitwl bs tall, and they will be convinced at once that they cannot do better in either of the Srecese in any bus:neon implies both popularity and capacity; indeed. without the latter the farmer is seldom attained. ‘Vitlt a fall appreciation of this feet, Cernaghan, Allegheny city, het possessed him- self of the required facilities for a first class tailoring outlets., and is prepared to fill all orders for either men's or boys' clothing, in a style not aurpassed by any of his competitors. Buyers may find it their interest to try hit establishment WIEST, On {THIGH 13 THE BEST, VERNlrrct et Won. OlureautrYa Ina quention deIIE and hourly nuked by parents, anxious for the heelth of their ehildn.n. All who are et all acquaint...l with the article. %rill homedkb ly Dr. Celehml,.l Vertothise. pospansl Ly flenslnglletu, l'lttubor,ill. Pa. It b.. never Is., tm ws to lull, sant is one of the a rota din Hist caul,. :mat. A (6 , 0 of our. lately hatadt,l n. Alas , following statement In reference to this Vertnlltuun hew Vona, September It:411, lAntlenten:—A bonny Indy of my acquolotenea had been Ira lung I i 3116 Ivry ranch troutottal wilt. warms. I edrlavl her to try fir. tlcLanide Celebrated Vet eiffugn, pep-Arad by Irlernlng Droe., of Sltteloorgh, Pa. She sexortlingly pop chneerl and tovk one vial, which causal bur to dial/ash, en ninval tinge quantity .if warms Ilea wanhuneallately ' , hewed of all. be dreadful vyrnstome ercompany Dd. dish", and rapidly recovered her natal DWI b. Tb. , youne lady dues not wish her wane mentioned; her reaidorae,hoe• ever, Is')3 .mast, end she refers to Mr.. 'Hardie, Nu. 3 itenhallon pine, llMPttrehmeera will he careful to twit for DR. IIDLAND'S eItI.I:IIIL4TED metatfectortvl by FIa:MIND RIP rs. of Prrnravanu, Pa. All other Vernalfngen In romper. lam are twortlilara. fir. Il'Uttoe'e seratlne Vermllnge, elms !de celebrator laver Pill., tau now Ira Lad nt all m. notable drop atoms. ,ti , ntgrautne reatheat atrium-dere rif to lu,l&i.lorT !LIMING Shag. GALVANIC I.SATTLIZT, ON ELIGCTR.O JIAGNETIL Hamad% for Medical porpoooo, 01 A Tory nryor•or Yawl well La lomat. Imo of Gal rona chorgoo, volavrovor or Exprovo mrts, upon n romstto/o:• orlon Donors. Addroloo Dr. Ago ISI , IVON/t, No. 140 Wo.AI At., Vittohnrgh. Po. aplialms/P E=RM William Mkt, ' ' tlane threaft Ceases of the „. .. A1.,D .-ter Western District yks cs o uf bi ap i ebtAion. ot - Peasurlvanth. ' Clld 'CIR. i i t. G , larmen of elle .ter„), --The case on whits you have now. to render your verdict is au action of debt for interest due on certain bonds, called coupon bonds, issued by the Commissioners of Washington county. The declaration sets forth that the defendants "made certain coupon warrant's, or promises to pay, in writing," in the farm following: " Washington County Donde—Warrant for thirty dollars interest on bond So. 108, payable in the city of New York, on the 10th of May, 1857. For the Commissioners.. ,- A. Stnrrr, Clerk." . Sixty of these coupons, for thirty dollars each, payable at different dates, are claimed to be due and owing to the plaintiff, as lawful holder. The defendants plead they did not assume, and era not so indebted. To support the issue, the pla i lutiff has given in cri Jones-- I .. I. ha yet of Assembly psescii on the 12th of A pril. !ROI, which, in section 7, 04 and 10, author ises the eitisoos of Washington Co„ at the next, or some Fabsequent general election, tb decide by ballot whether or not the Commissioners; of said 'amity shall subscribe to its behalf, four thousand shares in the capital stock of the Ilempfiela * ltailtoul Com pany, the returns of this election tole certified to the Court of Quarter Sessions, and if the judges Iberia ascertain that there it a majority in favor of such leti sebicton, they shell mem an eider oa the Cont- - z inissiosiers to make the subscription. The Commissioners are eutliorimd to borrow ma i coy to pay said subscription, and to ezecuto bonds or promissory notes in the name of the county, trans. ramble on the books of the Cominissioners, these bonds to bear an iaterest of six per cent, payable semi-anneally, and may be receivel as cash by the Ilcmpfield Railroad Company, icipayment of In stelments. 2. The plaintiff has given in , avidence also, a certificate from the Court of Vetter Sessions, showing that suoh election wa held, and tliat the citizens of Washington ha decided, by a large majority of votes, in faro Of making ouch subscription. The will of the people of W legion county being thus ascertained, soothe et of Assembly was passed on the 12th of Feb ary, , 1852, au thorizing the Commissioneru to limbseribe 4000 shares to the capital stock of t Company ;to borrow money in behalf of th Gouty, and to make provision for the paymen the principal li f and interest of the money as borrowed, as in other canes of loans to corporaots. The Commiesionersifiautho • d also to issue certifica , , eof loan or bonds in e name of the county . , beating an interest of sik per cent. pay zite able semi-annually, and transferable as may be directed by the Commissiouere. i The Railroad company are lit receive these bonds -ns cash in payment of The Mock sub. scribed; , •and the raid ccotpany arc also to pay or provide for the payment of the interest ac cruing upon said certificates of loans or betide, until the said Railroad than be completed " The Railroad company is moreover authorized to guarantee the payment of the principal moil in terest of the bonds. ' In pursuance of this authorDy the Commis sioner. executed and delivered to the Railroad company OttOlionds of slooli each, and On of $5OO each, with interest coupons annexed with following. form : Court kore read one of the bonds, with guar antee ufkhe Railroad company and coupons. These bonds, in orderto give them more value in the market, aro sonde payable to the holder, sod thus by contract made negotiable by de livery. If the commissioners had power to bind th e county fur the payment of the principal and interest of a bond, transferable by delivery, the compeer which are appended to.them, are the appointed evidence, by the agreement of the parties to show who is entitled as bolder of the hood to receive the interest due at a particular slain. They are attached to the bonds for the cnircuicom of the officers of the county, and to facilitate their negotiation, add thereby add to their commercial value. The obligation to pay :to . !t unreel is to he found itt :Ito bond, nut in the coup ti. They are not in words an instrument., in writing of a commercial nature, and having •,.. ,r n. , L . ..itahili•y by virtue of the law met. cleat lit terms these litArturilti are not mad, poyatile to any particular person or kis order, or eve!, to b^arcr. They partake of the nature of the peauliar instrument to InLifilli they are at ta,:lied. They tiro ititended by the parties to be c r hea's of debt in the !semis of the holder, and pr,;•if .1' payment when iu pulse:salon of the debtor. They pose by delivery, and by the con tra i of the parties the usage of the country are ,nilieimot evidence of a debt to the holder as agitilitai ate obligor. In toe boost. They are of modern iovent ion, and should have the effect tu. it..cialed by the parties and be governed by the essaircteountry, and not by sharp rules of law applicable - tulthaltia t .of a different na tl.,. The possemsiers of the " r ala (tele evidence, thin the holde r ' h... t.tiobler of thrhonti.for Vine so at least', , vr they wen ant 01%1 and no Ellen, entitled refire the inter `se ilhio vs. Commiteolone of Clinton Co., c t oho. Niece 'topers.. I ititchficil,) 2.4. - Thl plaintiff has protocol etressermis to which the coupons were attached with the ezcoptiou of cercuiteu. Their execution is proved and admitted, and that they were delivered to the Railrual company in payment for stock and to !to heed by them to raise money far the con ,o rurtian 'f the road. There is no allegations, or proof of any fraud practiced by the parties to the transaction. The plaintiff haw shown a prima facie title to recover, if you believe the evidence, which will entitle him to your verdict, unless the defendant has eatabllshed some suffi cient defenc,, which we will now consider. I•t it is v•mtended -Ist. That the county of Washington being merely o sohortionste political division of the State of Penn sylvania, is nut a citizen of this State, within the meaning of the Constitution or the act of Congress, and therefore not sizeable in this Court, To this we answer, that though the metaphys. lent entity called a corporation, may not he physically a citizen, yet the law Is well settled, that it may sue and be sued in the Courts of the United States. because it Is but the name under which a cumber of person, corporator,' and cit izens may ette and be sued. In decidlog the question of jurisdiction, the Court look behind the name to find who are the parties really in in terest. la this ease the parties to be affected by the judgment, are the people. of Washingt on county. That defendant la a municipal corpo ration and not a private one, only furnishes a stronger reason why a citizen of another State should have his remedy in this Court, and not in a county where the parties epithet whom the remedy is sought, would compose the Court and jury to decide their own case. This point is therefore overruled. 2,1. It is objected, moreover, to the jurisdiction of the Coen. 2,1. That, the plaintiff toeing In the position of a Tent niirigi3Co of the chose In action sued epee, and the same being a cam wherein antic could not have hero prosecuted in this Court to recover the contract if Cu assignment had bee's made thereof, this Court has, tinder the set of Congress, no cognizance of a suit for the recovery thereof. This would be a valid objection if the plaintiff claimed us Indornee of a citizen of the State of Pennsylvania. But he does not claim title through any such assignment, but as bolder of the bond, to whom the defendants have directly covenant ed to pay the bond and interest. The indebted ness declared on, results from the peculiar na ture of the security. The defendants have agreed to pay the interest to the holder of the lined, an well as the principal, and not haring dune so, they are directly indebted to such hold er for refueing to pay according to contract. 1 We will next centiliter the question involved in lie three following points: Sal. That, the County of Washington being a pub. lie ri.rp,irainal, erected for ropeses of local govern ment alone. Pin' standing upon no contract between the Legislature and the citizen—and the said Hump field Railroad Company being a private corporation /sternly, organized for purposed or erode and cam cur-o, and as la notitilinn carrier of ineretliandite anti linkrriigurt beyond the limits of said county, the Vonauissionors thereof Were Ont, therefore,authurized to embark either the credit or property of the people' wf raid county ito the Inward of such an enterprise ithout their unanimous consent 401. That if the 00010 Was done owlet' the mrlburity of LEI act of the Logicblare, and without Ouch rot_ soot, thu County thanotlemlnnora wale pro her vier tho :von(, of thu Legislature only, and the contract - . so ro n do was not tho contract of tho people of th county. :oh. That, On OD merrier of Mere power OD the part of the Legislature, in thus practically compelling the people of ono county to build railroads in another, and t thing iho freehold of the citizen without his eon neat for anuh a purpose, by authorising a heavy in cumbrance thereupon, the tail act of Assembly was no legitimate esereiso of the taxing or of any legisla live power, Info sistent with the principles of natu ral juntire, with e tighten( property, and the fun damental law of very free government, and M war with the great p inciples enunciated in ear Deelara.' Lion of Rights, a d equally at war with theapirit and letter of the eon Minion of the United States. Three three pointe may be said to contain a condensed argument against the conetitutional power of the Legislature to authorize the Com missioners to .bind the people of tho county to pay debts incurred in these disastrode specula ., done. This is the great question In the ease, and if it were a new one which this Court were oom- Pelted to decide without the light of precedents, we should feel oppressed with tts magnitude 'and importance. But, happily,,we era relievedfrom this responsibility. The S upreme Court of your State, the tribunal to whom alone is committed i the high tuned of declaring the constitutional powers of the Legislature, bare decided this qitestlon, and, t at decision, this Court, and all the good chin. s' of the, Commonwealth, are bound to submi an to the declared law of the land. Altboug iin the course of this - trial; I may bare pep dopinions whish I jiossiaty might hare, entertained had tbeen compelled to meet.thikas a new questlice; as a member of this Court, I' must. instruceyeti ;t hat the law in question is eoluditutionsi, stukthstile Downie'. Omen of the county had -pewee and authority to math • itaipikrlf igenfottelty With the pro elsionnef.4lth Sieth..edelidtraterrekti/I udif - thellteciiitthkinith , tilt:pet 'Welk* 6 4 1 0 1 thleitnittlibettrallt-littr,- u wall . by every prinelp ttof `moral"reetitode, to pay them to the bona fide and honest holders. With out farther enlarging on thia subject, let me re fer stir:he-teal desirous to have correct opinions on this eubject, in a moral point of view, to an opinion lately delivered by the learned and able Chief .Justice of your State. The following points - will be considered to gether : 9th. That if the instrument seed on here, or the bond with which they are.- connected, were intended for circulation from hand to band as marketable commodity, they are bills of credit within the meaning of the prohibition contained in the first, cli,e of the tenth section, of the first article of the Constitution of the United . . . . ..... . .. . .. .. . States: 7th. That the act of Assembly of February 14th, 1 852, authorizi4 the subscription by the Commissioners of Washington county, to the capital nook of the 11empfielii railroad company, if the same amounted in effect to a lien upon the freehold of the cßizen who holds under a Patent from the Comthonwealth, it is a law im pairing the obligation of the contract between the State and the citizen, and is therefore in conflict with the first clause of the tenth section of the firet article of the (Institution of the United States. Bth. That the saidcoiled acts of Assembly in ti mounting the powers take the properly of the citizen without. his co sent, for a merely private perpoco, is equally a violation of the fundamen tal principles of Republican government., and is therefore In conflict with the fourth section of the fourth article of the Constitution of the United States. In answer to the first of. these propositions, I instruct you that the Constitution of the United States does not forbid States or corporations from borrowing money and giving proper secu rities therefor, and that such, securities are not bille of credit, within the meaning of the Con stitution. 2. Nor does a law authorizing a county to borrow money to make a railroad on the credit of the county, and to be.paid by the imposition of a tax on the citizens thereof, infringe that article of the Constitution .of the United States which forbids a State to Make any 'law impair.. ing the obligation of contracts." 3. Nor is the Act of Assembly in question in violation of "the fundamental principles of republican government, and therefore in conflict with any article of the Constitution of the United States." 11th. The ninth proposition of the defendant is 9th. That lithe set, under the authority of which thin subscription is claimed to have been made, orig. hinted in the Senate, then, upon the principles on which such legislation has been retained in this Stab% the act itself, as a money or revenue bill, would be unconstitutional under the twenty-fifth section of the first article of the Constitution of this State.—Jour- To this I answer, that there is no evidence that said act originated in the Senate; and if it did, it is not unconstitutional for that reason.— It is not a lull to . .raise revenue" for the State_ lath. The tenth Instruction prayed fur, to as That the instruments declared on, import no con trast, in their terms, with the holders thereof by the terundauts in the suit to nay the moneys referred to therein, and aro not so executed as to charge the de feadanu under the lams of this State. The coupons, w, "do not import a contract in theft terms with the holder," but taken in connection with the bond to which they wore attached, they do ; and from the established usage and contract of the parties, they consti tute the proper evidence of Indebtedness to charge the defendants. II t. That if thO papers 4 question were origin ally a part °fa bond, or bonds, containing a stipula tion for tho pa;mtent of the interest referred to therein to the holder of said bond, the remedy, if any, would Le upon the Lend itsolf, and the plaintiff must hare set out stool shown his ownership, and alleged an agreernm.t on tbe part of the defendants to pay the rt i w seine, to order to entitle hi to recover. This preposition in an creel in the negative, for reaA one alrenoly state —see 0.150 the 0500 in Koh Ohio reports already referred W. By the contract of the partie., three coupons are made evidence that the amount on interest slated it duo front the county to the holder thereof. 17th. That tho bowls issued by the defendants in Nye= of tboir supposed ',subscription to the capi tal moil, of the ileinplieol Railroad are to he con strue./ in accordance with the terms of the Act of Assembly end, which the woo wore issued, and that, under the said set, the defendants would not he liable for the payment of tntcreet until the elm, pletion of said road. 13y the Court—The Commissioners had their authority from the met, and that act authorizes tricot to borrov money to pay for the steels, ' • th matte pt °vision for the payment of principal and interest," and to Lane bonds in the name of said county, beating "an interest of six per cent. poyaltle semi.annually." The provisiun that the ke • •• ,, i navy should hind themselves • • al nail interest, and road - to guaranty the should rag tt like row annul et.e obligation of chanty and Um crirperatitio the county had right to call on them to pay the interest. But between It and tha bandheldere the contract the county to Is pay both principal alnl interee Thu guaranty of the Railroad company ado to the Mt ourity, but cannot detract from it. The rommisrdoners have not misconstrued the act, 01 abused their powers in binding the county fst/ the payment of the interest, but pursued its true meaning and intent. On this point see also is cats in point alreutly referred to—l Ohio Slate Rem, 280. The thirteenth proposition It 13th. That if the said bonds were leaned upon an agreement by fbe company from which they have been purchased, that the defendants should not be' railed upon to pay the interest thereon, but that the\ same was to be paid by the company itself until chef road was completed, it was an agreement, in effect, that the bonds should hear no interest so far as the defunoLleas ore concerned; and the same not (wing negotiable securities within the law merchant, are' subject to all the equities which existed between the original parties / mind the bolder was bound to en quire Imfore purchasing, sod is affected with notice of the said agreement. The written instruments show the contract of the parties, the parol testimony admitted cannot &treat it. What answer would it be, to an ac tion on a note or bond, for the defendant to plead, rbpt when he signed it his Do-obligor agreed to lift it, and that he should never be troubled about it lath. The fourteenth proposition is— Itth. That to entitle the plaintiff to recover in / this case, he roust first have shown am actual sub scription in the manner prescripts / by tho Act incor porating the said company, or at least an actual subscription of some sort by the Commissioners; and that. in /be absence of any subscription, or of the issue and delivery of any certificate of stock by the said company, the issue of the bonds was without authority of law, and the defendants are not liable to this suit. This proposition cannot ho lulmitted. The , hood recites that it was for subscription to the sleek. The witness has proved that they were delivered in such payment—whether there was literally a subscription, or written promise to pay, is et little Importance If it was paid; also whether the county has got a certificate of stock, was a matter with winch the holder of the bond had no concern, and is not bound to prove. If the county has be certificate, it can obtain it by exit, if refused. It cannot now plead the negligence of its own agents in themanagement of its busi ores, to avoid payment of Ile obligations. For anything that appears, they have it, or can get it, and in emote° of proof, tho presumption is that they have it. 15th. at if no subscription mac actually 13:1111i0 by t he Coommis:done. In the manner indicated by the law, no subsequent vote of theirs by proxy, sup posing the same to tIIISe been duly proved, could cure the infirmity, or operate as an estoppel against the defendants. This has been sufficiently answered in our re marks en the fourteenth proposition. If the bonds were delivered in payment for the stock, there is no infirmity to be cured. kith. That taking the papers sued on to bo war rants, or eertitleates of loan under the net of Assem bly, It was essential to their validity, se such, that they should be Rigned by the COMllli.SioThm them. selves, or Is majority of them and attested In the former case by tile clerk, and authenticated in the letter by the seal of the county. To thin wo answer, that the obligation of de fendant to pay both principal and interest, is to be found in the bonds, (as already explained,) which areproperly consisted by the Commis sioners, and bind the defendants to pay the in terest as well as the principal. 17th. That tbere is nothing in the act authorising the said subsctiptien• to warrant the issue of any ether securities than the bond, or coruscates of the county therefor in sums not less than ono hundred Jenard each, but that, on the contrary, assuming the instruments sued on to be promises or certificates of dobt or loon, and to have been otherwise well ex ecuted, they are in direct violation of the provision .which forbids the issue of any certificates for a less amount than ono hundred dollars, and are, there- i fore, not obligatory on the defendants.—Act of '52. The answer to this proposition is, that the Commissioners have issued no other securities than the bonds, and, ea already stated, the con pone are made for the convenience of the offi cers, and an evidence that the holder is the per son entitled to receive the Interest due on the bond described therein. This ends tho catechism, and, as a result of the whole, the Court instruct you that if you believe the testimony submitted to you by the plaintiff, he is entitled to your verdict, notwith standing any teetimony produced by defendant, and the manygegal objections so ingeniously and ably argued. [The jury, afterleing ant about twenty min utes, returneff rerdiet for plaintiff' in tbo sum of $1,910.70.D Weans tx Cartunits.—The sickening effects,er most worn medicines bee often prevented their ad ministration to Obildurn, end many. o little natant in oonsequouice been troubled, - and oftentimen nearly eaten up and destiroped by were a, This need not be. There Li esweetandpleasantremodyhtthe form of. drops, prepared. by: Dr. asUeway, of YWladelplW, celled .Nolienteres -Worm Confection,. which is in ersethattemsdp amyl. take,-and with: out ibto IWO* **NO 4r44.lo:called:' "vennifte'4/4)10161, 'howl*" tolerate cjgbt kladi m ii~eigid4 l V orikti.'AVAciOarilt IKlarriNientWfie4s*iskliAilkaislijosta ----QhMarket A2.1U40.1n0 az.dk.l /Tir 6I7II 6IT.TODSCaf t . Nears.= 6. 1354. The pliatewoek Wen a Tattier settee Ones ..The rise in the rives - proving mai:lent to let out the bonnie t th 97.111.1; a large niimber hove derinrtal fully leaded, the &Fight bre log made up mainly of Pittebrugh mennilkotntra. The out. - gofer New Orleane boats took the nom! romplement of eta lasuilible. tota filled nn the cats:. - TIM Weather, to-day be wintry. there le no meant pre mien. ohs tn. Imlllciant to let the coal loan. not There La a large amount of mil ready ha shipment, to the owners of which this enfirreed waiting le.. heavy draw-beck. The receipts o 'pc - alma are maleratety ample, bin Cie . ...-. mend keeps paretiretty well with the anppay , The general tendency; bovraver, to downwards, although the decline, whenever noted, Is alight. The:money market Is without change. There Is not enough new paper making . % increase the demand, and the hanks cannot get any Moro short paper than will terra to keep their discount lines from deoroming. Long paper with owl name* is readily placed onteideat 3'412 cent. The flog etiernlatioto dare not appear to prarpor, and the bulls, after fint.log prima hp in Cincinnati to 634, not, have given way to U. bear. oho hare got figural down to Ward gl Itir,,eraiort menu to tot that there will be hog. cough for all the wimta of the reentry. Tee receipts of hog. in thie city are now averuging 1000 a day, the bulk of witirh is finding Its any met. Mama. ilohnee A Brattier et hare cammeneed pecking, and have oegagod about 3J09 head Cincinnati Th e Casette of lia l itorday nye: "The deer...ohm In the - market foe hoes, noticed at the close hut evening, was more fully ezhibit.:l In this day's op erations. Outs' lcre, htworci, /maimed up tinflinent corwase to giro the trade a somewhat lively appearance, by punihaem amounting In the aggregate to 4,9.0 head at $8,121-4 lingo, r, for future welt-nay. A Small lot of light average 1570 M.) mid at i 5,75. Oar bra! dealer+ are still, generally, bolding back, In anticipation of a further decline, hut It to to la team - kat that at 15,755 - 60,00 n legitimate business would be freely traneartal, truth-Atha the existence of n bottom, temporary at treat, not for below the point upon which gnotatlone ere meting at present • 6tecks of sugar and moiresm cootiene light, and with nn ' active demand to the +mall way, price., aro Item at 7ALS for former, and 30'440 or the latter. (keep Is firm et 113„:en 1 - 1.1.. Corn al in active regulars with sale. of:7,oNi new at 5 - oc, and 6,000 ha do do et 55e—mil to arrive. The ten deny le in favor of metiers. There is a gout local demand for wheat, and prices are firm. Whisky advanced to 190, etimulatial partly, by the upward movement in tutu. A pret in active demand hag spru u for and Wiwone ty enterer,. lookers vin hare radm ng od p the Illinois rium of die count to 171 rent Thereare outsiders buyers for round Otalal atate. Tho paper le wanted for pork lovestments Tennessee paper has also improval, and wo now quota old I banks at .1,4 die., and free Bakke (solvent) at 1(43 dun" The N. Y. Times of Saturday sap: "In Money affair. we hoar of demand loans to Brokers at from J(plyl cent, the laid figure luting current at acme of the large Danko, while eatable lender. acoopt 3"fil cent from their own Brokers.. choice collateral. Dieconnte,on-yee tarday, Outclass paper 4®o? cent., ...cording to date of bills Oared: fair names 01417 61cent." The Philadelphia Bulletin says. Money coutuum abundant on the atteet, end In the eta roam of profitable employ moot for Ika considerable amount le wanking inecatineut le Monde and Alortgagea Trade con. fiance In a 'unsaid condition. Dreadstotta and Cotton are I very d01t.%07. for the latter prime are declining. Coal and Iron aro attracting rather more attention, but in itroeerlee, Provielone, Dry flood. Hardware, Sc, the wan...thine are of a very meagre character. S In New York, during the past week, donwatic Wool Ilia been in active rammt. With reilmeet stock. however. prime have been 'roll maienieed . Fe. item Woad h.. bum actively .ought after at strengthening main Sale* were re ported of about 75,060 lac domienic Stowe at tram 35g7.1gt.; 30,1.100 h, JOISINICO 'MUNI at 3 244110; 450 halm no•aeloni Morocco, and 175 halm Cordova en terms not disclouil. The Imports of Wail Into the port of Now York, from dummy I to Novemtur I, amount.. to 32,27/7 balm, Including 70a.5 do room foreign porta, and do coastal.. The total Im ports of from Janaory I to November 1, 1057, were 47311 helm. In Dimon, during the week min were reported of 17,0,000 IT, Dowry& F eero and Polled, together with 514,030 lha Chill (allot the [lad its the market,); 7C4 hake Cape; Sun do Ilediternowan and South American; it do Mutts°, 910 ballots Peruvian, awl 49 bade. sand:lea at fell prices." The N. 0 Picayune of the 6th eq.; t "Sugar—The receipt* have ounsi3craltly Increased, and price.. generally hasw bee. lower, het yesterday will. a gad demand, we nntlael • partial ten - every from the preele n a d e . cline. The salee the week av markethe ully 1540 Including 100 to day, and the h a chu f m at about the range of our quotation,, which are now ae follow., the demand running recently on the fair grades which aro com paratively firmer : Inferior .. COUIOI,I to flood Common.... 4(653 - Fair to gutty Fair.... Prime and ch,pim. Centrifugal, Clarified and Refloat 04471 S Low Clarified . 1;4(,101 Week's receipts 4571 blelaagoluat 0:1 for the correspond. hie week hut year. Total receipts Once the let of septette her 10.7G1 Mole. against 1510 to the ammo time hut year. Vole Thera has been a mood demand generally, Ina at lower prices, the decline amounting to abort toll gallon In the early part of the week, though apostial reifivery has since taken Our, and Wee market claim at 296627 c for prime and choke. the' sales of the week - h•v amounted to about. reel hid*, Including 120 n to day. Half Ltd* have hero ranging er n Si 'loot the name rates wlik Ws, lint lat terly have beet; glail2s 'lt gat . Week's receipts PoSI idda. against Itfi I O.r the corn...ond. log am It WI al Td teeMpte the lat or es.p p tetn. la, 21,110 MA, a.t.inal :2 , 11 to the ooze., date loot year.” The hlt.rit Lao. Exprom," of the =Alt nit, coutataa an Usill:le on th. , pnwent stagnat.cy of the Can Dale in (boat r its in After goring some , r , ....0tte foe theterpilllty --among ' which aro. -.a - 4 mop. of great, napplow from Northcro .t.arope,•edllia earl-theme the p , tatocrnp—lt ogees -on,. tpeculatt..aa a, r 5 sae Dunn, front which ov, extra, tha fOl - : *Whether aifit rouinm d ab,414, Of We 00.001 supplics from the 1:n41, an.l toot there , 1.41, view of waive o le-at, a reve...l .1 1 too tr...1,c ill place, WLa n the for th-, Imports (red the North of Emope ate at:l4.cl by ma frt.% remain-1 to. In.teen. We fOLOOOL 0X.,-.4 say ~;,e1 a, tan, mpries htlll, 1 . 10 , ror-oderatioa liar of Imam, our prlce• tor wheat ore lower then !hoe , In o f nod oT,• i•mmrts from the °unfit/cut will warmly d prutit. I off, Loa es,r, as the pm.la aro open we *hall get anppihs Iron, .Ire Ltttrr, eta we 01, now leavae , the elorageepers of tato and other praince fur all Europe. lo,..king over tlio returns of the Datil of Trade, we find Vat the Intpot to of whmd, gaol dour no whout, for the Mae months np to the :kith of &titratiore amount to 101 qrs. ft at pn.bahlo, - ton, that. the remaining three months of Importritlcn will eehrly Mahe It Oh le the average amount of Wee niilllons, tuition the frost ftetel in very early and severely in the Deltic. A good deal of wheat Imported, hat gum Into entrust..., Red. in - steely aimed foot Kale at gine cox It la very Maly that the Illzpruportional, high teatt Turley oeta vlll'effvet per ire vrheat In the aptly,. The Imports of ea t. have to wteks„ but by - no maim aniel• • - aumume "4.4.ll ag s zliltur °lron ln outre eur • lauit dinind IV - dent to &midy the &Odeon, qoartang there la *WI a grea ine 'lor t....._ inOfint.lomit, eaporlally In de mouth rent ailm p r.;;Le i r , d o l4 nut reap more than' one *ath of nu uve'ti, r ca. or torte our tumo r . ot roc no nine month. ep to the Web tleptamoo r Nora not te h 02td. , 11 one and. iptarter quarto., !minx 1.,., ahia„ err. Imported the crartripreidlit g period of but year. Ttilii acoidint for tho high f e at grain luta Imnie through. out too seauin. Wr hum cubt the price will again tine aa Coon an the (rent the Baltic aro diarontiumul, am the demand trill thou Ludt. to Increase .arith the approach of the winter mouth, and the commencement of the London ASHES—the market cont.°. cos:hanged and doll: wu quot. tom neniinal at 6, Pearla at 5!,..i.H.63i, and Solo Ark ,Wady at 314461. APPLES—ihrre has Noma larger supply during the week than previonsly, hut prices aro unchanged; valor of grad tecurnon varieties at $3,2503f.f1, and choke du at $4,006; $l4O. BUTTER AND FKOS--tho maids of Bell butter la dot large, and the rocolpts ar. taken promptly . 17(0111 for primes packed Is dull at U t ectl. Ka' 0 -le , n 0...." wool. 0.1 at 14,„ , S t SUSAN the Inquiry is restricted ; Fral..a from first hands of 70 hist. Illebito at $1.12 EX. Lou do from morn at 11,1 E., and 150 do t $1,31,8ma1l lota are hold at $1,611, but buyers at that 11a are warm BUCKWHEAT ELollll.—the market I. rather dull, nl. tleolgli th.datock Is low. The rise In the rite, permitted tho• shipment of what had accumulstod: salsa from Orel baud.' In :webs 642,26 - 0. 100 14s,and form store at g441k512,50. DA(XIN—f. A very lishr demand, and price" steady; Sal. of Shoulders at 64...: 7 ; &lea 01 15.XX.84; plain Hams 1.1.X(1r 10 ; plain asurste..l do 10%411, Fiume-cured do. 12412% BUCKETS TUBS—The faCtury ices cash. Par fund .) at Falba.. AND and Near Bright.. are E prr thie ( teta $1,60 4451,75, and Tuba, $4.76.50,75 lik doe. From `lore, buckets soil In the ratall way at sl.7sfretttdak LlKoo3l.l—there la a lair /supply, and pito. range 80. $1 2.1 per dWteis for mtomno to $3 forth.. .. extra, Inter. Mate greet. CORDAUE ranging a.ordingly. .. . blasilllit nom roil, 13 c V 1 lbManilla Rosin, eat, 11 0 1t lb I Hemp Rum 0. , H, D3 11 e ? 'lmp Pallas ant; 12 12 eli Tamil Ratak nal, 11 e li Di Tarnal flop., cut, 12 e - 41 lb Packing Tank gee, 11 e ki lb Packing Yarn,cvin 10 c "f lb BED CORDS—Manillis, $1.50, 4.2,1,104.3,00 ii ilaa. i nasnii, $1.27. V 2,00 4 -042,75 it doa. Hemp ocil,ll Cl. 11 lb. PLOUGH LINES-311mM; 137 cis 44duk Hemp, 70e.. solatlonsOUTPON PORNO—Ma market Is steady at the fullosklog ip: OtrSD RIMS. Nos. 6 to 10 c t lb N. 16 Noel. ll.l 12.._...: . .... 21 oVi lb N 0.17 ...... ttN. lalb Nu. 11 011 ac pm No. 11, 7•01101/ 2411. A. 400 11 411 dm No. ROO.. No. 600 • 94. SS dot No. 1000. No. c do 2 Cortl4l. chola. 444.401.=c IDTtrino, 2c 11 16 ' do wilt4..lN Caulking. • ldc to Z 5 cola, 014 Family ...... 17c " ,Do do 20 to 44c 115, ° Batting, No. 1, Ide 0 DOverlot Yarn Do No. 2, Ific atodlettlck No R. II eVyd CAN ni,r.s AND SOAP—Canilles are Mandy at Our quota. done:—dlppod 154, mould 13 awl adamantine E1(,421. Soap remains as bolos., steady at 6 far common. 1554 for Palm, and 10 for Sawyer's Toilet and Cai111e.,5% for Chem. kat Olive; sod 7 tic Gorman. CRANRESRIES--• light local demand, sad : abundant supply; wiles In the email way at 512 to the orbit thule. CILEEBl4—tho demand from the trade to to lido local conaumptlon Is nteady, loot not active; warder evles.at 74'. DRIED FRIIIT--contlnuee quits scar. ; solos on ar _al of Apple•at 52,50, and Peach. at $4,6004,75. `: DRIED BIEP--Pausli who by the Volvo at 12E112!,‘..; PEATILIGIS—ws rods sal® or prime avaterri, on arr/ral s : .2 45 but on in muall lots ; from atone they are held in the small s y at 60. PRED—sie note dirart from Snit bands at 114-05, nano 7045 80, and Mlildiluge at $1,1001,10. FIS/I—Mackarol No. 3 noll firm at $10,50; sod hf do ist 5.5,50. lialiteallorang 1,6,605655,00, and Dallitnoro do,o 55,00. Lake Superior 11101.1 $9,044:10,00 it bid; hi cli, Si; Stsiisb,ou; Trout, 35,60 nod l; do hf do, SIM. FLOUR—market dulldegreased; soles on arrival of auger at f 460504.63, end extract 1 , 4,87. Proui stow, sales Si auger at $4,87(0,6,50, oat., et $41,..a.y0t.p, Mill rowdy du at $6,141. Rye Flour, vales from swish. , 5 4 . 17 5. UltAlli—vorno 1,141. al Pim Wive been made to an:. al 41, and at mull amp I lopot at T. 4444. Coos Is warce,aud Dimwit unminal at :, , , , ,co. art Is in slowly MV10.14 awl worts with. wady ado at 7a. II %MET is moderatoly plenty and la selling from wagon et 004 , 7,1 Wr spring, and 3.55070 for fall. It'utav, oak, of Plediterrentau at PiCsRIAI, prime Roil nt 02, arid White at $l. GROCEIUILi—there W • fair demand from Ike rrlsil and country trade for N. O. Sugar at 11140 , 311, by the bad, nod wy.aoli by the bl.l, and Moles., win 4.111•50. Coffee fr firm at 12013%, nod Rice at 0415. ti. GAS PlPD—the fullowtog are Ma quotations for wrough: Iron tubing: Poe Pont. On ~ r ltide j iaa Nye ::: ; el:. • . ..... 14 , i 4 1 ' . " .-- 17 3 " ktldect to the =ternary diigonnt. Per Peet IK rEa Ou Pifa...9y eta " 60 " 2 % " .90 3 4 _Apo 11Alf—A far =poly at maim, turd adoe of now 4 PO V iittrdtarren flidm aro Orm at 0; anti groin salad do at TH(O3; of Dry iltdm, there aro but law in truant mot our tigurea aro nominal at 17. 110113—talts here been rondo to pockets ea. 4!,itit4.,%e. Brun, and the market may Its quoted lino aud lady at these figures. 111 W. 4 NATL9—tbero lati ,(7 nail dams *461..ut ard. num tu*Awaged, and ** r*Peat cm q.° mu. ... - um, Ac. • AOLLAB MAL wanton Bar Imo par 16.1 Per w*,ual ........ •••=---;-- ...... f- unith. pi. w Wl:v. " .. 4 14ki 1neh....-......-.-.11:12, 4 - 7° .... sta. *- 4 48 "-•---- . 4 AtuuL / " ................. " /Oa 11, ilid NOM* ke1....3160 54a ••••••••••••••••• " ~ ad * unA, • RAIL 2 , 01 XL . 6x a lead, Nee Ilit 1rg....-Vd 104 an di t „ .......... Wald * ... AA ACCIPCDAWD 1108,2,.. . 3.54 4 ....6,60 Inch-- ....... -141* ' • - . 4" ....4,76 * ------- ,4 4 :4 . . o, 44.4,76 --- -• Ai 24 * --4 P " ** - m - i — sii." 1 Cat Spilus 8 to 414 Sane 8s IS T• 18 l A _ Bta 406 t 888,6 auid w Tit . • Slifka 3018e8— 1 T.* goad zyi ....,.?, . « _ , I * , 6.10 ad illa'%'-.. ' .d - - :- .! ~. "•••••• '014., , ...• ii,. 14 4 4 22 , .., ,' poniall4k* 0 /".".7^ igkita..l4,4s-1,--45 L111104014/6 j l Tl l is 6 • ? -•.;..!.:---'•:::• •,- - .13c, 50 . tn. 4. -2-„ ,40•111.90,1120!.1.71=-'11-. ''''-- ' - : - - ' •-;';. u :,-..,..,...-,,,,,,,,4•.-:we--,,,,,f..,Z-::•:;.--,;•• `,-;":.,--- - LICATILSR- - -.Ve duns and vreltorg," -1* 0.. I • .... LARD—there it notblogi . dolof rou'llry No. t , 01 , ‘, but there Ls eeiy oltvrLy.. OlL—there It a regular ittanfry for _ • CS; In Linseed tro a. bead of no 1,133, erd It rt3(s. POTATOIEI—etaIee tarn vtendily rtltkitr, , ' It TO and Etabaunoclot at Y. Vi_rr. .• • and illt=t6s47o.and Nesho.to.ut. , ; •••; • .4. SE ;r ammo told ardUt d., tf';,,,Y briagroo.llrnotby Is taken as feel vs oft r; t dLt,CYNI,;,O Ira Io gratin,. Flaxseed 74 $1,65. SAVE—sre not. a fair dontoad, - regular way atsl,6o. WINDOW SLAW—prima tti, fh quatatiotot for the ;mall am, OC: ILI/0. $3,751 :010X11 g15q.7,100; to 9113 and tall to 10.15, • ParaN conatry branda rub, 00 ..vobing mrdium vital, 10 ti a id r/s -wlirrm LEAD—Una mud to • keu for pan. to oil. awl dry tle count. Il f d Laul trd, Wttlil r. 4141.• of 1:114 alt -Set - filial at •224/3. 1111'1E11 AiXIV,. We 1 i 1 1•6111 , 11d1.11[10.1 :acts Irmo th ar omen: t►o chlldror, utol oight melt not known to 01. There Isntst nothing doing. at ' r Etyma Graham arri ve d on itutlsty niAls t • grnund all day yentarday, and tn. titi-tnt.sn r t Steambowt larklater ARRIVED. ti EP, IVED. Lizzie no, Brownsville. Ismirnr, fviwrovil/o. Telegvaph, Jo. Tolege ii.h, dn. Colonel Bayard, Elie%le.th. Cl. liern.i, EllrenStb Iltves—E. fat Din. deltic Telegraphic Latent from Eiliropc.• SANDY iloex, Nor. la.—The Lteamer Vantlcrb , lt, from Southampton on the 2:1 !nat., with four ttLy,: later advisee Iron Europe, has passed this point Litarprediforkerr, Nor. 2.d.—Cottau: smles for ;be pan three days amount to 18,000 hales: all have suffered a further decline of id., and the mar_ hot closes this evening with a doclioiog teriency, the lower qualities being the mast ulfuated. Tho Breadstuff. market has also di:seined; and iu Proviaions all qualities are slightly lower than quoted on Saturday. Spain is preparing to act against Monica. The Vanderbilt had a severe winter passage. her news is of financial and commercial importance. There was nothing new reported regarding the condition of the Atlantic Telegraph Cable. . A new company Mr laying a submarine en:hien - en rialway to Newlbundland lots been ferns-d, nitc a capital of 1.1,500,000. It will be laid free, tie , to Bello Isle. along the St. Lawrence to tlqt lac, Aid thence by unit to the Pacific coast. The ruin of ta.c eompnny is the 'British and C. 60141.1 1 , 140,41 - 111.3 Telegraph Co. The Bank of Fruece returns for (lend'' rhinv falling off in apecie of 111,170,000, cud the rtor 1 the Bank of England chow decree.° rof . The arrirels of specie einto Saturderliad knit:par:Ml to 1348.000, , A new gold field bad been dircovered in A istralia. Thera had boon a coesideroble Sa c nee atiott of the Spanish fleet, and the preparation , agaiest Mex ico were being carried forward with 'rigor. A French vessel from Reunion bail seen reined, by the Portuguese at Oibo, and taken to Meaarnbique, but it was subsequently returned to the owners. The latter suffered great loss in consequence of then:ism-0. The popular feeling at Lisboa woe very' etrong against England for its policy of con-interference in the Charles et Georges affair. The Sultan of Turkey had rizitad the U. S. frigate Wabash. Piedmont coincides with Franc in rcques:ing of the :Popo the deliverance of the ` . owieh child -.lifer tars tohis pareets. Later advice. from India, by telegraph, had been received. The rebelsocaptured Es.gher, bat aftei wards retreated. By the combined moveminte -of the British teases, the rebels were bemturd in Chu.ndaree. Affairs at Bombay continued quiet. Several akirmishes had taken piece et which mueh gallantry was dliplayel. Tloy all ended in the total rout nod grout ar,ort, - 1.141 l -•:, (.y. The rebels in great numbers . • the country. Liverpool 11,,Ertlxtliiim Ifterka.—aloof but is nominally uneltung,,l; ea, , 4 4 20v• sou there ut @I 225. .. If Lest is very dull and lias a abade7: the prices aro irregular and 1 , 1 lower 4 - torn ir l uor e l as sst r r,Gs Gd; n Lite at Gs . • • -.nal:, ern 7.417 j ;$ :id. Corn a ,i e :ne quotations art, Iligallit4ll/4 PAIVW AititC 33S (4, 3.4. rid. Pr.rist"ohe df“rkri.-14 the q 11.41110. are barely tuaiutaita.r: :• s Bacon heavy; there is little - weak: Lard heavy. Tallow • Tire eteamahip Budwu , of the e , burnt at:Bremerhaven, on the ni , t4t ..; She was to bare eailed on the o 2 f orlng, and doubtless bad a large part of L.. The insurance amounted to Ife,tate •• ! . en tilt reser'. A new submarine cable had toes :- land and Holland. The banks of Vienna had re, -- meets. A now mieistey had been eap viz: Prince llobeneollero, ; Minister of War; at. l B 1.. 1 , amigo Affairs. The crew of the Prime shipping free laborer± on the • m.sarred by the negroeg. They A: board. (treat excitement pro ailed of 1: •:: •T. ir in which mr.ent• of ',an ..f - . plaster 4, • 15 death, loot o,re..y or -.treed, and 00 or TO persons were scri. .t.. A letter from St. PetcrOterg t .... , .ao envoy and suite left Kiacbta, on t h e Co c . SP artier about Aug, I, for I'ekin: They Corti r. or the .frontier by `chines° officers, with earl ~e-. ud CUP_ dueledto Orrin, where they were tc..e.sc..l by .3lon. golian officers, who proceeded with they Sir 11. L. I:ahem., the Itritith minister at Persia, was arrester! at Vera, Oct. 20, and taken to the po lice station, in consequence of a collision while ridirtg in the street, botwticti his attendant grotto and some of the Sultan's suits. Madaine IleitTer, the traveler,.is dead. WASHINGTON, Nov. r.,...1,,t1,.c to an inquiry, emphatically denies be ban given passports to Walker's Nicaraguan emigrant, It was the belief of the port of Mobile that they were thue supplied. The most intimate friends of Mr Appleton, deny that he intends resigningtbe ctlice of As. sistant Secretary, as strted, to restate the.edi torialship of the Union, or that he is Interested in the pecuniary concerns of that paper. It hen been snowing fur 'tin greater part of the day, but the snow immediately melted. Sr. Louts, Nov. 18 —The overland mai! with dates to the 18th arrived here Mat night. ,tt tt:n delayed one day in consequence of had route. n the Eastern part of the route. It tn.: tgs through passengers, one of whom vela a arioa Mrs. Croome. The advices was anticipant! 'by the steamer. PII/LADELPIIIA, Nov. l5.—A telegraphic elms match, between New York and l'hilcdelptia be commenced to-morrow evening. The the American Company's lines ha.iti, gratuitiously offered for drat purpes-; the moves will be telegraphed firrottetotiz.. the country. - _ .- 8 c . f.i. Clidt New Yore, Nov. 15.—Elisaboth Corr,,One of th* wounded domestics of tho tiouldy fatuity, died ut City Hospital yesterday. The boy, Cn.tries Gou is not oelltd to reeov..r from lib in j.,ries, and Mr. Goaldy o girl Johanna Murphy, are in an ye: ceedingly critical condition. , - --- • eincinnatt, FOR CINCINNATI—'rhe pplef /. did new pessettger steamer IDA AIAY 4 1... pt. John ?day, mill leave for the above arid f trittrme olato porta fmettively Crs THIS DAy, lath met., 4. 4 P. M. dolt For freight or pump •ppty on board Cr FLACK, BARNES .+ CO.. Agen , P. 17 011 -PINCINNATI—The Bplen- 7 _ L . did demeteedner POTo3lAC.CavtAiertle will leave for the above Awl ail Interns. ito THUS DAY, ICtit lust at 4 P.M For fpltt• t We:, sopiy on boon) or to FLACK, It AILYISS Eit . Orltt F' 'OR' CINCINNATI AND LO[ isroAx.—Th e the new Mahar 112', x n. •r - 10- MONT, Capt, ON, W. Ebbrrn, kayo 1.0 all liitnnordlato ports on THIS DAY I 0 , 1, • • 1 . . Foilllclija or passage ap ply ^n I. I• r • • LACK, DA ItliCia • VOW LOMSViLLE—The dtVinutaenger 1. ter 11.17. EL Cap:. it. Roam, wilt leavn I, Omaha,. Awat 1 ports nu TIM DAY, 10thltata t, ill 4 1 . .. N. upply.on btu. tl or to FLACK, LiAit 1.1 jaasbbilit, Scc. FOIL itt.autor01.1::i11"0011. Copt. J. J•Z,,- 1,11), leuretrur thilaboya 'an c .-att. 9 .7(14,14,. Ttil s DAY, 10th tattant. Pt.r fro:, h t.z , Ward nr itoS FLACK. BAIRN) , s ty). N _ _ ASIIVILLEPAcKE T Ap alolwengCt EtOOrl I,tutt Sal Ilbtand, Clarierrillo in °`' rasbville ou +„.t.lutt Instant, at 10 A. hi. For' freight or p • 9 0 ' board. _ .51: - E0111s, VOR SAINT robis _l2 elate/tor I IARIAER, 6/pt loer , ;, leave (or the above and all itaultnedl-,te I • DAY, lelh ]oat., at 4,v. IL Fort releht.v ; beard or le [Doi . FLAttli. DAB! , VORA ST. LOWS & IiIEOK •-• tr;.-7:- 1.6. Joe. B. WAlllleta ell] lene for the a 1..., zr. dicta ports oe SIIIB DAY, /Oil -., t acltb°‘"d!ritaelc, • opt - ACID Orleans, &E. . . WOK MOIRLIIS Alsd) c.NA' :011LBANIL-710 BIM ne•aeg.r 111", 2 IMPLK, Cept. W.ll. rani% o W Iwo : 7.41 rd. te an ail loteernediste portion 11113 e eDIV, ;i o'cloc g r. el. let freighter IMMO at L.l" Lame, CT tO ' - FLAgNi, tigpits -Lt.); Agelra, 'rag MEMPHIS 11 oßisess:Lale.on. strai.ir DEA' mi =.l J. D. Rhoads. will leave fur nes 'ion*. sou Ai Port 4 On TIIIS DAY.IGE4 lart,For Irfiatµ ' - or 4 • • FLACk.iiititifik • - rDI 7 M — E PIPWAN batistaw-Th. nad. Cite.444ouTif LACK,gAttsrs,-& Kit , - , • Lii Dicaqsy'sotio.7 EISEEEEI r car xu 1 7 it. 1 oro h c <:.:a =ME • snt; ' . =SEIM
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