The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, November 08, 1858, Image 1

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    .AVIC
,
•
rde-xitairrAtoxims
‘iepoitil f 1 titutara.44is t b k isrisbirbi.
'
Ant 4,00,00704.4iii*F.L
00
:=llll4-04465A & Ott
--. 4; Terk gplg, oaf., •
~.1200,
'lto olth *amt.)._ 20,.06
Tweiity
Babikaelbet,) ed014.1. - 15. , Mt..,N41,1q; 4 4: :5..44. 20
.Y.or,v4 , o,loo4'wenV7oue _priscitOtifrk!!,zsiird sux,
7,6 Fra-' 4O l , thr.tlie:gitt4PJP‘9.g:tliqUl l 4.l: ,
.cuifigatertr, ropiester VG' itor tat 40 for
"7" tabor
- .
,?stiesaietio z•
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~;illi~ie~,,~6~
uOtitiattlilo , 9p3P, , g.
Palietito itfi;• Ina:Ili - am Ca ?
-
.102 O.ll2BT#Er lit!!ett
, ° - hootif unity
FALL': STOOSz 4n i>
/ 3 91C 1 4"0:CA-zTX ) ;E•tcPrigae... ,
.71OBBPit 4 - - CO - .;
•
•- '
b:IFBANICLLN, Pl4u.nv
iTl:l5O* ZS ji!,lli,ll, 416`1191,14. ABBOAVID
f , M00,111:4N.15
01P . otibt'Afri'14131 ; g1.11I'mpluia.t . cixtunc'
~,,:Vitialt:P•s7.l9lNr, for RIX# tOrrio for 43h 3 1
eximinellteiissi/Xl4*:
IItiCSTS?I'AIgrEgOES.-=-The subeeribei
litoqk or, DOM
13HOVVithlob wip selfat the lowest_prioes. ;
TAW;OBP,:: 4
natal' 0. 11,11 ..!tqa"0t ?Przir.s., ll d, l ”:FtwaT ' t
O t a 62 = l ' 9 Suraisbing Cfctabi: ,
<,WALBORN% , ' •
- ..eIENTVEStows FURNTEIEII44 STORE,
mow) rob - 6 End 7 North`BlSTlt Skeet, ..•
x.9wng bgd'iltilx.tensive assorbbenitiit
• wealfpens,`nnade -- - 07 - .llll4inel, Culp:we; de Lathe and'
chth(teic. 1-31 , •,1-1" -• •
. Their Itne 76;den-atithing le very inperfor..
L AUD a10Ye . f.;',. 43 APP.4eq,l l . l l'l l 4!/. B carros 4. 1 ."; , #° - ;
Tea Jar Twenty fronnents - :niaelmo
-WWOILESTER Soo( 4_G
°' IJIII0i8:1111WEIT9R14
- . . .
, -
` ',P4apwr, aw:tzukit; SEA t l / 4 1 .MAITTIZACt
,`4.t.th; Oht•Fteitd,lllhl 706 UIIESTNIITiTaVii, oppp.'
Aide the Witsitltigton Tionsa.). , ,
/i.iWINOtuO Ti R frill glue ae)ieretofore;hie pef
vg4.4,*! 1 5 1 .30,41 1 1 6 4Ct0_ the,,Vattlr7g,ml - Itanntaottri4
deparßaiepsq forldo catelosteiLittylh Or 'Shirts
i4rei BhbrieW,
ttydo'aaPPlledon_iiLecnl*erma: ~ jy2Vly
q - • W. "80017; :Oath
orcesieta ds SoctseI,CMITOMWS JMMU"
DIG , STORE arid' sidttIPP'II.OI7IPAOTORT,, 814
OtiSSTSUPStreettoparlyoPpealtetheGirardlroihtep
Philadelphia. ..•
W. S. sreel,d respectfully call the attention of , his
[eraser paireas and bloods to has nee , Store, and is Pre
,' pats l :to,;flit'ordars' for BILIATS at ohort'nottce. A
pirteat' StAliatitatied: ' TRAM, supplied .
with 'PIMP SarlitB and 004ddIS:* ' :13,19-tt
fitokiro.
. . .
AA "AN
•
otta,,• komitirxr , 4o.
-
, A . I t • "
'7 ;Attlisaftli.„
,3 - -)3XX }T .O."11 . 1%1111,7;
, . Nroxxoiiir L. -
Letthiri4'o4 - sit;wratick4;*
. puts tko
,w:Orl4. jego,eat'
• ,
• 7 1 a ;OPX9rE , Atu), liXoitANtik•ituathilti , • •
, - 40 South TICIIID stitrai
sater..9 tab BOlts, auli:3;taoiSis . C.l iblizdetP II
ierrly
, „.-
' 0040. MAXL2Y. - a. H.' FILOWIII.% 31.11111.2 T, 72
- , - -11/IANTLEXA3 - ROWN,ital
- - ,"-tr.*;clcherpr:l4l
• - • • Tori2Ltaimoaik. , _ •
Molleotioso inade,lo24Tritile'draw,w all; ads of the
I.rolted gtatei,ndthe Petuelse, .!" Alie- aiwet 3 faverAble
- „
,- , •4.lltteiiireat , -Jilin)C,l-,.Notee",bottglit:Linii - ArpaEreiate
• beagltt awl iold..•4),lgraialipaciaatalAulll4.i.g,waae
- — 0
••
Rom wrezlwilqinrciami "pold Cotataisaloa 1
- the Bointac:grolcarain Philwielphie. and New York: - =
ltbWAßli Pitsx BIonARD:R;PARRT3
• Not Pyttlic ••• Commb3stotier.for
• ...1 7 egoo,ylvsatt.aod_:. •
• -2 4 0 w ors 9 7- -
160 ii=li it' It O -T RrE" R-, •
LANDeqzkvra and.
99XV.ElltANCEP.8 • _ - • •
,
MANIC.O.Tqi - MINOIESOThi
p - artioalir_ittentloof to:. loaning aid !Dreamt
Money - tor 31012-•rOgOo/48 • owl:, otheraf, an0.;,00 - }lootiog
Drafts, antes' too..',Ooy.letteps of 1 - Ootoar of I!!uskirty
rooolie p t
Food Bawro mprittontion..l] Octio:ilblledolpbfo. to'
,IDolo; &1 7 11thers,Pbilistiolptils - :
Shorp,,Honiesi &OP., Philadelptgoo - .
lUpaXard Racd4ipbl Philodolphts.'„
los 11 - 111-f Jr, Co, - rhilsillotp„;
,- 1 7 arri•Er: BatordlOhlr-Thllittelnkdoi,
.74; ' A z'
„ifte"..'if'44',4N.4o:lll;
g4: - . l **OtgAit,K. -
A. ii.4,o ' naiortient
lEVAREI4- WATSON'Si:
R4X,IP 41111, Erll:l,A - P A. O,T RUB D
BA VE O ) ona
• ' ' Ajor 'flaniiil'and • Etorea. 4 '
hiurt tkkiknijkow irk 1166: - . , : , •
00118,_ 60,UTT,61162:
'On 62 good tainio fulloy '6%0 eatablislitnent '
- qv-f••" ,11 %; , - , 17.111E441itektui by' ' •
• ;1, -4- 'WATSON, -4
- - -Hp: 26 2outhyOIIILTII Street, k
,; • . - t ! gh.!*z,
~ar~maar~:~, i
jakiDWA,RE.-;The
hiIdnION , M_BRCHaIiTO Oir the eels otTphSloll
AND 011,RdT10411ARDWAlldd, ,yrOuld .reapootfally,
tho ' ittoullort".o the tiado to - their atOok; which
- they are °daring ittlinruat'ra*; 6nr assortment
- • t Waslas,- of all kinds--rigs,.T.,OgJfalt.4, Bryant '.
_Alai
'Wagon ), their,- TorTor,Look, Sh ip,
Ague, and Colt Ohnino. • • - -
- - The coley:at/A f l Ft,? , 'gorse Naihr;,- Stoo,aryl Sledge
Ilaramera. 't
-
",W111111W l eilidOU*41ille; Solid' Sok and other.
Abkri 4l, oos4 l , o ,PW-1;i 4 0 4 . 8,3 0:P.Th1,
bike
- -A43Xectbritix.9 - Eaff#,lnewitAllaortidetdbet.
CorpeflrannsandArlor Scythes t ILAN Corn, and Stun!.
;
Tfiy, - diagaro, kano ore; and Spodlng rote. r- I,
Sakes fad Meal ShOdele &dB/ado/I; of all kinds.
ATarkig, Breda, Shoe isilloot, and Olulthini HOC-
Cafkand Wrought _Vitt Clogs", Serena, Looks of all
kinds; Outlorh.Prod , ; l *PnruPaiAnink,gatolnits.,
afar*, ain't'', and OthorTooln,,ka
• ard ll .4; . t - 001dblIthalll Street. •
A.IIMIENTOOGG#ATiti-
OELI'6tNt!I , I3TIi t nIST,
Call tkiittaiiiiin ot.itaiTtegfa tolhe chins* la'thefr
•
ijoAsit TRADE::
Op ( Iliit,ll. , FlF,Pthnipitt,pe the;_t r Thhtittell honee of
13r04e &DI:0 4 114e ;flettorti, to rimLgi.tii
inic.9P,sa
jCi leoey4 f0i;j4414 Utikyi;ttutto,4 l ol l l-121f.
OtteYottipthrtAeie;thtkitirihtago
'BWiTEItiMAT*TitATiAIip iframitOnlivrlousi ,
Aii , 4 ; yirp,r,trxnerkehti),, We Idyll tiontlone, u
hVOttoft;Te'-Whiep::the;,'titl:eet
Phitidjitplit4; thi; beef ofriiiitajiiorix Pio
. = liOriiltta - tho advantages we shall c4ei to_ the
makisig the
• , peihreiiiustiener Pay' foi
those who - de 7 nkft afiftijir #iiiod. Ow
heid: ofeer iirilii7eiebioiy to
loomQhe pullilo of the abefe - ohetige::Orirlet*,' to
xneo . 4 fell eherit'ot Otihtlisiiettekaget
.
iti413;14,1 t , ' LES, 4,NDIP.S,EOI , TING IIL.
:,,,plailatiTil,"4, , i --, I , '. 4 . 1 0 • •,_, 11 - ' ' .
,' A-13,.*,,meir,B1b841ree.40.,VF3,tiiix,,Tnii_r",„'..:,
, :„.. 0 .. ? : r .., . , ON
..-... ...• •41
,• ~.., ,
FOWL,pr(PPIPICES, 1141fpx4+1,
_a p I , , ,
' 4 rivet offered,io thiMAX/V a i v ii o i k a i ,
pediroris tit roduaing.tbtur kow‘Z: n w ig heii , '
. 4 . `,
•-• • , pcti!)frceAbgivalfisjillitidiol , r- , ...
' 1 .1 . ; 111 I'IV V,XTY/fit BkV 013 . X i
, 1!, i,
i fz: )6 4 1 - .:„ ,,,- " r o r r ~ au - iiiiali,i i i mAircr
u 'l i stienr c l - 45rstititaNn i zumajtriur, ~,,;
-t,' •„una Psenaw ~,,,.; - ,-, f,-. . - .
• .: . i . p141P,0it.11381103r.:& 00. $ ~ , ; 17
le *l'l-'4'-. NO 4 l 4o4 looMfitig" .-
~ •vi i .t.:.11;_y..., -,-",,' ;,, ,;.',; ao9vtAfixtket.
itiosi'vh-13tr"
ICIOW 4.1611 'ate iiriplisfed?l‘'
IigIiii,'BVIWING:„PtA 01411i4111 400m0 10 $ 1 0
th'e xtatpMetitiligiet: r 4, 9 llgeriitt l if gf e bilk
'.:.' - : jaisrAteit:-._etwilijailt:tAteetV36:4o4,oozfi v Wee;
Amtink
4 4 1ht.),VVPff , t149 1 #Y0 3 1/1 1 1 1 & 4144th i rrit' 4,1, '
At ,t t
syept,, above •
' :4- 44 ofiridAiititikait4ii?OßTANCE . •
' tv ;:% c- S - iilylr fti . c ,- Itve .. ,t,,,..'• ge46•o6ivAijidaftlierridnig‘t- th e:
" 6 " ..4. ' ! ' ' 5-
:** * -r- - e . '' ' se' Welly !matimid, es th ese.
''''*l i;4ltAitint 2t ris i ns fecivtioli , ,,,iogituto - ; ,do , if ttud er.,of
;:Pr),',....,---'... zw-QlollMPtreePei-40, 04,5*Ing')
i
,
V0,,,,...„....,__ ectug. - Ilifiltf; bA-polors, And:Window
-Arig--..-•=f-,4o,pet %WA...1441,140w Tit: 11 430 lII°
• -re tta VW , ' 4 g^itiii.ter . -Y P lfi r ,!, r ( N °3 ' -t rje-Z.,4 - ;' .- P f # l j.?
,
jtrifhlf' - Wet)"
Trysp; w~
Yl''
~p~s~~.
~i,~
th _
' 116 . , Yf
`7" ' iLikaill 1415,,
4044tRIPRO";,_
nJ.;, ..- f s
INTO: 85.-
Mb - die - sale: Mtn -600/ts:
.li°' RE 4.14113.• /R , OM OLOTHS.
.:r.:.:',Theihitoirther haying malodor facilities for Mann
;•-• ' TABLE, STAIR, dud
• ]• l2 OARRIAtiE OIL 'Op TLIS,
- FLOW:lpirofioreid to:oNi great troloOomento to Buyers
'fromOtiortr,`.Of „ . • ,
A larg#,lui. triihiltipp SW* Conitantly On hind.
(treat - Corkirill itikon in ieleoting Rea, ,who
401. - • '
;WARS.IIOIoBI9, No. 229 . AROllStreet;
.1!HOMAB POTTER. Mane! latrirer•
BILLS s; gitEETIN6B FOWEXPORT.
• - BHOWN,.BLEAOH.ED, &. HMI& DRILLS.
, TaEANY & LIGIIT BEIEENNOB.
,gultable„foi, Export, for ! L it by
in/170 1 1141 : P 11 ¢3r .t.EVITIA ST.
oUt .3
UnAPETINGs: -
• - JUST RECEIVED
AtAIittgACITIIRERS,
Clzi:Oorulpunent, a large lot of
'" , IERRAIE , AND VENETIAN' CARPETS',
1 1.43 be aeId*t:AUCTIoN PETOES for Caalt or olty Aci-
P.P*40.4
wcraim; wasoN, -
jy'2o-frmtcvrtf r— No. 182 OUESTNUT Street
x.pw.psws , LapsH LINENS,
-IY.AIVAI3it6..I3x4L - Piras. ;Sco.
ClONBl7ellgt.9 of 140.11AILDBOWEILIORN8, sad those
.; GOODS, .eliould
ieei*Ore'iritelea they are ;melee with the
fall us* of the firm; , . ,
K` ,
`;334O}ZUIGOON, , _; SONS, & OWDEN, •
m s guarenteualthe soundness end durability of the
This eatitidifs raidered imeentially seem - err salons
quantities of inferior and defootire Linens are prepared,
asason - . after:aeason, , !Lod , Sealed 'wi th the name of
:13I0lidEDSQN,by Irish homes, who, regardless of the
thus, inflicted minim, on the American consumer
add the noinfroturera of the genuine Gawda, will not
'readilTabaltdon busineas an profitable , while par.!
cbnabxs oaia' be inspooOd On, with Goods of a yrarthlasa
, oharsatei:l , - , • 2„, •„ „
• BULtOOKS & B. LoOBB,
.314 . 28-em • kgente; 88 01117110 H Street, New York
fre.Mo-0- iftlqctinCe*
WHEELER -A; .WILSON'S
SE,W IN,G,, , MAOH,TN-E
REDUOED PRICES.
• NEW, STYLI; $5O. ,
All the former patterns $25 leas on eaoh Machine.,
- r "TENSION:
NQ WINDING OF up pta TURBID.
• .
A HE . 513011 - WHIOU, TURNS 'ANY, WIDTH . OF
REM OR; FALL; • • ' ;
' ' "
„ ~62a c l lo# ihtiade4him.,
•Nd. 7:WiElf, OVATE Strad; Trento' N. 7.
ia.lr:6tt 440, iNieei' Wimi Mater ) Pa.
0a741:126.
SEWING: MA
„p4orp is offered, tri,, the, publici as the most rolls
his low-priced Sewing Machine use. It will sew from
Ai to. sixty , stiteheElo , Wall, on all kinde of goods,'
'MOM aoaMest, bagging - to the' fluent ambiicit. .11
'without eaeeptirci;the shriplest in iM mechanical con,
strintionever made, and can be run and , kept in order ;
by subild of-tweire yawls of The mrstantwer of.
43'1*nm:whine, and the qtannir oe errs imam, era Liar
nyitteit to hennsiiipassed by any other. Its - speed rani*
froui three kindred tuft:teen hundred stltehes per mfre,
.•
Ma: ,The thread used is taken dhroctly from the spools,;
idertoirgifik gaoparm - or turimatua.' fact, It is al
'Machina dial:ls Wan* by ever' family in the land., end‘
Miskirmi Ogee • -
YORTX DOLLARS,
at irldahthei,- sold, brings them within the reach df
airea . grey hue — '
;. ; jelfillthictriyitowtica '5,0 . ilantliSlilllTlE Street.
- f'-'33l.4l.lciiiis;, - *.ilidin;.s . c.
E. CALDWELL
TO TIMM,
, No. BZ2.'QHESTIT - HTRTET~ , •
) They !NO:trolly Invite purahaseni to examine their
ncw , bnportialoris an d monntactive, comprising ,
..,
":.'" 'SUPERIOR WATCHES
1171CiU EBTABLISEED MAXEUS
• Onltantherried Agents in Perutsylyante, for the sale
of Charles Tiodshanee acdti Chronometer Timekeepers,
made in Londorri and Tr.tek, Philippe d Co., to (looms,
with . 7nrgenson • lientiog Minute
Repenters - Ind l;ghiniOg- &condi B. Oadisoll &
On. , a Timekeepers; ,K4wari. Pei - re litandt, end other
:18.0ANAT9OLD 011AIN9 AND 9NOUPO 3
NOil.'lll4MoilD AND PEARL,
liiPLks,riotto• AND YLOILNNTINN
,- ;-11,*21=am*
MAGNIFICENT ENGLISH PLATED ON ORR
i;NAN 15'.4yEn FINE _ CUT GLASS
"' .1174.445 ) .OF 011.thINAL .OZSIONS, ,
VOA, DESBEET AND ,ORNAMENTALTURPOSEB
et - OCRSAND • ORNAMENTS,
Folown'DljAffigeßOOlf,
Smqu and p6ii.erfal
SE'S,
Bon s, SPOONS, 310,,
And every article - appertaining to-the table.
11aitertf receive polite intention whether
thelrobjeotle to parches° or otherwise.- , n02.2w •
E'.:OALDAVELL -00.,
tr • = - 822 OFIBBTNUT Street.
Rays reodred, per oteamers, new otyleo
Jewelry, Chatelaine, Vest Ohabut.
Splendid Fans, Hair Pins.
Wait Kande, Bawer Baaketo.. •
Jet Goode and Plower Vaaeo.
Oorsl, Lars End tfoesio Sots. ,
Sole Agents in ,Phlledelphla for the sale of:Charles
Ortetshain'n,LO*DON'TlME-KEEPEES. nor 3
. „ .
T o
JueutrrAlitrunsau aim tatroarali 01
-;. , 81 - 1.VER.P.DATED WARE,
N0. , 804 ,Pheatnat street, Rhos° Third, (up Sri,)
,Philadelphia..
' Conotantly on band and for note to the Trade,
TEA, SEUL" COMMUNION SERVICE BETS, ERNO,
PITWIERI3,.(IOBI,ETS, otl2o , WAITERS, BAS.
EETB, OASTOTtS,ENIVER,hROONS, YORKS,
.L4l LEB &0., Fro,
Gilding and plating an all kinds of metal. ee2.l)
TO ARCHITECTS AND BUILDERS.
' - ACADIA FREESTONE.
,
Now landi i. and shortly 'to arrive, 1,000 tons of this
beautiful 8 both or the
GIL6.4i,AND DUPE TINTS,
tke former of which, for softness and delicacy of color,
is unrivalled 4, .
Per-the character of this stone please examine the
following traildings: -
Toe. Earrison , n, Eighteenth street and Rittenhouse
-- • •
Garrison's Dulldlog, lona street; between eeren•
tooth end Eighteenth.
Samuel Smith's West street and Rittenhouse square.
Mrs. Pet, reon's No. 1210 'Walnut street.
A. k. Worniathis;4l3 Arch street.
barnail Of Wes', Twelfth and Chestnut streets.
Tasatt, Seventeenth and, Locust streete,end
etheis. = - •
ARNOLD .t - WILSON, Agents, '
PRILAGELPIIIA WARMING AND V.RNTILATMIG
WAREIIOIItII ,;
, =1.01.0: - '0•RSISTNIIT'STRRRT. •
iil6.lro r • '7, D. br. vuT,Trst.t. suet,
'WINED STATES GP.VER N NT
LAND LOCATINGIAGNNCYL -
CHICAGO, ILL.
The Inibseriber, hiving had much practical expert
'mace in selecting end locating lands lirthe various Land
Dietrich' in the Western States, has, Unusual facilities
for milking valuable selections for •
- .031 ClAalt
Hating Stivutinirs iimstantl,s, in the „field to make
we' I examinations he cart alwa make the most
'judbroit Imiations: ys
• Londe tutatirparsed for fertility of. soil and salubrity
of riatir i neitrthe line of railroads, nay *cm be
lOWA AND IBDONBIN.
. • ibitisfactory referencem given when required.'
Money, invested , in Kansas and Nebraska, sad
any of the Western Otates, . '
B. OALI9BURYi
r 49 (ILA - DIKE litreet, °bloom.
„a IVTAL aisd 001.0)1ED . GLASS.
Jr- racebibd comprehensive and la
thlntruly beautiful and architectural ap
petidage-WOlurchen Vostibules,"Consattratoriei) and
-altar building; *hero doemed,necasoary to embel
lish; kimiai'.o l mite and eirgint appearance. Any
color may be' ma, elthpr plain or ornamental, elate.
'9l,ttd*itin , ZIEGLER tc ontwil,
Paint, and elam Demon,
ite. , 72-att -Borithwest car. Second and Green eta.
D -E '
VII ;SOAP. - -L-Time, labor, and,
- earedi• In using it, clothed do not require
- soy :boiling or rub - 4114bn vadhboard = -One:pound will
- 10 dearNt tbrelopoundd oonunon Rodin Soap. War
.redttedlogiveldiriect .dutlefaetion:_ or money refunded
It id! deadodlthe'.•ebettest• and beet washing Soap
eta* offered tov the •publia. Manufactured only by
VAN ITAAREN tc ptoTLE.AITH . rot ddle by all on
tkrob#B I'o4olllth wboleudO only by'
• TRAIN to MONEONEI,
72 gook wharves'
- jurONEWATt , ROBAI , ; , -
- TBACIIKIt Of PHNOING I
41 &NM UV -
• MAILICIIT Street, above Riihth. ••,
114 )I?,,AICOVA.MS 1/10.1tAVOT0,-,DIE
ilmz- Sinktig, and Ambosoor InTelopo, sad
Seal _prom ManntiOtom No. V Routh - OLIE.TIt Otreet,
nilastelphls, 4% 2
sal94ma
. ,
•
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JEWELRY.
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OPERA GLABBEB
NEW
SELF-MADE MEN,
By O. O. Seymour, with Portraits
FREDERICK THE GREAT;
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homaa Carlyl
•- COURTSHIP OF -M By I T LES STANDIS e. H
1.
.
Vol
• By Henry W. Longfellow.
HARPEIPS MAGAZINE FOR NOVEMBER,
• • Only fifteen cents. •
IN AND AROUND STAMBOUL,
•'• • '
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•
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LIFE IN A RISEN SAY LOUR, L. C. Tuthill.
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PEASANT LIFE IN GERMANY,
• .By Wee Anna Johnson.
BOW TO LAY_OUT. A GARDEN, •
- -By _Edward Ramp. Illustrated.
FAITH IN GOD'S WORD
• .- By Rev. Albert Barnes. --
And all other New Books,
At very low priced,
At - • LINDSAY • A. , BLAKISTON'S,
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Publishers and Boekeellere,
- nee • 20 South SIXTH Street, above Chognat.
rrinE AMERICAN SIINDAY-SOHOOL
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Being the Largest Oolleetion in the oountry,
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A large assortment of Bibles, together with the de
votional hooka need' in the various Evangelical
Ohurehai, always kept on hand: 0011-tf
IIItaCoRY COAL.The purest and clean
est article In the market, for sale, at the lowest
cash prices, at DEACON & NEWHALL'S Family coal
Yard, No. 835 North Dmad Strset,-below Oallowhill,
• Also, East Sugar Loaf Lehigh, the hardest Coal ever
mined. 0c2.7-120
C .
RESSWELL & WILLIAMS, No. 206
WALNUT Street, are prepared to supply ehipl
pars and common rah enperfor Broad Top Uoal from
Lancaster Mines. °ant
s3 t . 2 S A.
PER do T a r w "FtetilebeeflaWlLToEr
iIICKS' • COAL is the best and cheapest 'in
the city, re-aoreened in yard and dry under oover.
I'icacs' sells none but the very best Lehigh
and Schuylkill Coal, and irairants full weight.
LICES superintends the delivery of all
.1-1. Coal personally, and therefore guarantees it to be
as represented.
HICKS' Yard and Office is at the southeast
corner of hIARSII ALL and ,WILLOW, where he
invites all to can and examine for themselves the above
tact& _ an764m
VI:BRING,' FOX, & UO., wholbeale and
.1/: -.retail Olden in and BOILITYLRILL
GOAL. Lehigh yard—THIRD street and DEMUR.
TOWN ROAD. fichnyikill yard—RAMS and BROAD
streets, Philadelphia.. Keep constantly on hand 'Opal
from the most approved mines, ender COM, and pre
med expressly for faintly use. , fe6-y
pane Soy4o.
6 , , =1 71 OILICSARING 'dr SONS, Manu-
SlAfacturers of _GRAND, PARLOR -41EAND,
M and UPRIGHT PIANO-PORTES.
This iethe largest and oldest manufactory in the
United States, having been
ESTABLISHED IN 1823, -
Since which time we have
MADE AND SOLD TWENTY THOUSAND TWO
HUNDRED -PIANOS,
And have received as testimonial., or their SUPERI-,
OEITY over all others, /1 Gold, 18 Silver, and 4
Bronze Medals. •
ta- Pianos to Rent, Tuned, and Repaired.
BRANCH HOUSE in PHILADELPHIA is at 1807
01,LBSTBUT Street. 005-3 m
man PIANO FORTES.
Itust ; received, elegant stook of RAVEN,
SAOON, 'fc 00; ANSEL & CLARK, HALLS'', DA
VI.B Er. 00., and GALE & 00. 8 PIANOS. =LODE
ONO of bed quality, st.-_, J. AI,,GOULD , B,
- •
S. A. comer SAVANT ' S and OBESTNIIT
inako4 .
-Qrarpttings.
NNW 0 A R P.NT-1 N G S.
!TAMES H. ORNE, '
CHESTNUT STREET, '•
, - ,BALow
- • • _-•
--anynennx-VAILPEpIiGB Will find, among our New
TIMIUNLfige iiiMiety of abotce designa, 'ideated in
Europe Suring • the last season, at unnsfurlly low prices.
In the above is a largo variety of
BUtrEriLS TAPESTRY CARPETS,
As ,
OIVI DOLLAR PBR rABD,
JAMES H. ORNE,
CHESTNUT STREET,
'maim BELOW SEVERER.
ARCH STREET CARPET WAR E
-110IIBE.—Obe hundred victim of English Velvet
Carpotirg. of Oressleps celebrated make, from $1.26 to
$1 60 per yard.'
One hundred pieces of English Tapestry Brussels,
Orossleps make, frdm 900 to $1 per yard
Together with a largo and rich stook of three-ply In
grain and Venitlan Carpeting, Oil Cloths, &o , at cor
responding low rates. As we buy and sell for cask, we
are enabled to eller goods from 10 to lb per cent. below
the usual prices. !OLDDEN & RlOlOl3ll,
, non-Ot 832 ARCM St., 2 doors bol. Ninth et.
ill/ra (Saabs Jobbers.
WNTER OVE4-bOATINGS
SILII•3IIXED GOODS FOR SUITS.
LIPPINOCITT k PARRY,
Southwest corner SROOND and MAILELIT Ste. ;
Have just reoehreil, per steamer PERSIA,
TWO OASES JIM:LANNY Minn OBINOITILLAS
THREE BALES OZARINES,
In MAO:, Blue, and Marengo
Have on land and are receiving Silk-mixed
OASSINEWOB AND COATINGS
T. T. WAY & CO.,
ay •
- Non. 221 MARKET Btreet And 10 011112.011 Alloy
IhIPORMINS AND JOBBIIIIB
DRY °DODO,'
Are now tally prepared for the
FALL TRADE.
The oomplotonom of their Stock, both for
- VARIETY AND PRIDES,
Will be fonnd to offeredviugages to buyers, unsur
passed by any other In this country. ay.ll-3m
amog g m PENNSYLVANIA
RAILROAD OOMPAN •
NOT= TO PIIIL&DELPIIIA MERCLIANTA
WESTERN SHIPPERS
THE 'WINTER RATES ON ERVIGHTS WEST•.
WARD by the different Railroad lines will take effect In
DOSTON AND NEW TORN on the Bth Indent, and In
PAILADELPHIA upon freights destined beyond. Pitts.
burgh on the oth duet.
• The rates sr lower than former Winter prices by
Railroad. Pay:
.PllO3l PIIIIADELPIIIA. TO
let Olass. 2d Olass, 8d Olass. 4th Ohm.
Ooltuubad, 0 51.20 - $l.OO $B2 82
Cincinnati, 0.... 1.80 ' 1.10 00 67
Loni nine, Ey.— 1.50 1.27 1.05" , 80
Indianapolis, Ind. 1.13 1.15 95 75
Bt. Louis, MU 1.80 100 130 95
Chicago, 180 1.25 3.10 80
To other points In the West at comparitive low rates
by Rail, and the anal difference below Rail rates when
shipped by river from Pittsburgh.
, • ' 11.11. 110USTON,
General Freight Agent P. B. R. oD.
Noy, gd, iStg. ' ' no4-4t
W }II T M A. N'o
BIIPERIOn OSINFECITIONERY
SUE MISR SUGAR PLUMS,
PINE MIXED BONBONS,
PINE MIXED CANDIES,
Marinfaotored,and for sale IyhoJessie and Retall, by
EITEPHEN P. WHITMAN,
No. 1210 MARKET STREET, •
not West of TWELFTH Street.
AWNINGS! AWNINGS!
JOSEPH H. POSTER, Aiming maker, No. 443
North THIRD Street, above Willow. Italian and
Vieneh Window - Awnings for dwellings and office w in.
dOwO Mt - Diego for stores,-Awninge for steamboats and
4hlPri, kinds of Awnings, Tonto, Flags, or any
thing in =vim, made to order by JOSEPH 11. SOS*
TER, Awning Maker, No. 443 North THIRD Street,
Residence, No, Ilp,t3onth FRONT Street.
oclelm • " - • - .10SRPII H. voargn:
largo stook of Its:
'A. LIAM fIAMU' on hand and for gal° by . •
WISAYI9II,I I .ITLER &
oil No. 28 N. WATAN OS. & 22 N. WaLNYZN
PHILADELPHIA. MONDAY, NOVEMBER. 8, 1858.
Vitss
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1858
Books on Our Table.
. .
A remarkable hook, by a remarkable writer, is"
Thothac Carlyle's "history of Friedrjoh I ,the;
Second," salted Frederick the Great." Tho Oak'
volume has just boon published by tho Harplirs,.
of Now York. 'The work will be eoMpletedin
four volumes. This first portion does not carry the
far into the life of Trater Fritz, as the Prussiens
called him. Dorn in January, 1712, this Opening'
volume brings Mtn into the year 1726 : his e
years aro, not sketclad, but painted with that •
Raphaolite Minuteness which bat-eyed peopl4A
4 of
the Ruskin school offset to admire. The rise qv
prOgress of Prussia, as a kingdom; is elaborat ly.
and fully traced, and, more particularly, the illy.:
Inge 'and - doings of Frederick William, the If't
King of the House of Brandenburg. • The reset! '
and elaborateness of these historical and biogran •'
lbal details are , truly
,Ctsrlylehis. Here, 'Pipit . 1
Carlyle is industrious and laborious, .as ' well • '1
brilliant and original. As to the style of tb
book, nothing need be said. It abounds in Gin‘-''
MILIIIEIMEI, whioh Carlyle bag used so long that bb. ,
could not abandon them if he would. ButVerlf
graphic, at times, are his descriptions, and, in:th4
life of the Prussian king, they scarcely eeem'e I.
of place. Though, not the wisest, Freud° was,
ono of
,the ." greatest and meanest of manliind,i,! . .
His biography, indeed, is the - history of Ettropi,
during half a'oentury. In these annals, he, ecert'-:'
pies a prominent piece. Monarch, general; . .ineft,.
and man of letters, he attempted many- thijgi,',
and succeeded in most. The frontispiece to thiSt
volume, engraved by Holl, after Antoine
picture of Frederick, a mere child, as The Littler,
Drunimer, is beautifully executed, and riohly'eML
bellishes the volume. -
,-
After the publication of that remarkable storh
"La Dame aux Cam blies," the origin of theOPOrk.
of "La Traviata," and of the play of "
the author was much censured for the pictuii
which he had drawn of a section of Parisian soot=
ety. This author was Alexandre Dumas, the
younger, Who determined that the pubic.° should
really have something to bo incensed aboK
Therefore, ho wrote a five-act satirical comedy '
called " Demi-Monde," in which he daguerreb
typed that class of society which abounds in Paris;
and may be mot with in other great ottios—a clam
of men and women not entitled to be counted aped
" the Upper Ten," but hanging upon, the skirts of .
high-life, taking a position by etratogiol and if
frontory, never yielding all limit 'which they liave ,
gained, gradually advanding into position, with,
warm passions, loose Intrigue, and doubtful means
of existence ever combining to keep them down,
and constantly loading to exposure and liegraao.
This comedy was produced in March; 1855, at the
Gymnase Dramatique theatre, at Paris, and made
no email sensation. It contained' many bitter;
truths, and was accepted as a somewhat highly
colored view of ono phase of Parisian life. It
abounds In intrigue, and really has only two Olin.
rectors, out of eight, who are not roprobatea or:
fools. A faithful and spirited translation of "Demi-.
Monde," by Mrs. E. G. &Inter, has jast been pub
lished, (by Messrs Lippincott, of this oily,) and Is
worth attentive perusal. The chataeters are' well
drawn, the dialogue sparkler, and the plot, though
slight, is well evolved.
Mr. S. A. Hammett, whose new book, palled,
"The Piney Wood Tavern; or, Sam • Slick in
Texas," wo lately aoknowlodged, as published by
T. B. Peterson, overflows with the element culled•
fun. As Rob Roy was at home upon his native
heather, so is Mr. Hammett in his element when
writing about Texas. MB first Work was "A
Stray Yankee in Texas," He lived for several
years in the State, and le familiar with its people,
history; :batting; , seenery, and , oceentrlettles. In
the volume before na, he embodies . many personal
adventures,related with infinite spirit and humor.
There aro recollections of fighting, too, Mated
with great spirit. •Tho- habit..tront.pt
n.v en0m0nt.._.....1,--•rvAnitint — llepassard, be sari
of finding something to be amused with. In ono
word, it is a creditable contribution to the 'printed
wit and humor of the country... The illestratforie,
by J. McLennan, of New York, are almost as
lively as the text.
Lippincott IL to. have sent us a novel, with the
Boone in Philadelphia and Beaks county, evidoittly
the production of a new literary aspirant. It is
called " Violet, or tho Times we Live in," and
though not precisely a religious novel, is imbued
with religious principle. Tho plot is simple, but
the characters are well drawn and . clearly indi
vidualized. Mrs. Manion b 3 an original. Aniong
the lighter amines, the most lively is a visit to a
fashionable watering-place. There are two very
tragic incidents—the death of a woman of society
in a ball-room, and that of a venerable clergyman
in his church, just as ho was about quitting it,
after half a century of service at its altar. Tho
scene might as well have been laid in Now York
or Baltimore as in Philadelphia, for the mere men
tion of the StatmliouSe block does not localise the
mono. Tho style is good, save that tho obsolete
word squirm,' reintroduced by Webatei, is used,
where it might have been omitted. , .
"Shadows," by 0 ll.'Bennett, ie•a republiea
tion (by C. J. Price & Co. of this oily) of an Bug.
lieh work. It is a small volume of lithographs, in
each of which a figure is rePresented;with accom
panying shadow. Thoro is wit, of the pictorial
order, in these sketches, which will servo tho pur
pose of raising a laugh in the family circle.
Dr. Benjamin Silliman, Jr., Chemistry Pro;
Lessor In Yale College, has just published, in this
city, a new work' called "First Principles of
Physic; or, Natural Philosophy, designed for the
use of Schools and Colleges " It is a hand-book
of a very important add extended range of scion!.
tifie knowledge, and the simplicity of its numerous
details is ono great merit. In the vast field it
covers, it leaves scarcely anything unexplained or,
obscure. Lucid as the text is, it is made yet more
clear by the assistance of nearly seven hundred
wood•outs. Under the heads "Magnetism" and
"Electricity," which we haVe partiCularly teL
forred to, for information, we found all that is
known upon these phenomena. There is Oven etc
account of the Atlnntio Cable. There is a good
indei to the work, which increases its value.
From two other Yale College Professors wo have
the "First Book of Boionce"—the first Part treat
ing of Natural Philosophy and Astronomy, by
Professor Norton; the second of Chemistry and
Allied Selencos, by Professor Porter. Tho oats=
ebetioal mode of giving information is hero em
ployed, and our rocollection of the way in whiOlt -
Parke's Chemical Catechism 'taught 'ourcolf, ih
school-days, leads us to think moat highly of
Tho book (published by A B. Barnes ,te Co., Nely
York) Is very neatly printed, fully illUstrated t ,
and will probably take a high place among works
of tuition.
Tho discussion which took, play, in 'this city,
last September, between the Rev. W. G. Brown
low and the Rev. A. Pryne, on the question
" Ought American Slavery to be perpetuated,"
has been published, in a neat volume, by Lippin
cott Is Co., with portraits of both disputants. As
the Preface is signed by both, the contents of the
book may be accepted as authenticated. The
speeches wore full of interest, and no doubt will
have many readers in this collected form.
' A small volume, by the Rev. Albort"Barnes,
which has just been issued by Parry 4is
will interest a great many readers, not only be.,
cause it is from his pen, but beefiest) it treats of a
most important religious question, which he die.
CUVIOS, as usual, with ability, force, and skill.
Tho bookie called " Inquiries and Suggestions in
regard to the Foundation of Faith in the Word of
God." Mr. Barnes eloquently shows the truth of
the Bible, shows what elements enable man, as a
reasoning being, to judge of a revelation, and how
far the Bible assists, by affording evidence, such a
judgment. Ito shows (conclusively, we think)
that the discoveries of modern science _confirm
'rather than weaken the authenticity of the Word
of God, and ho argues that human reason will
never got in advance of the truths revealed in
that word. lie might, we think, have - appealed,
in corroboration of these views, to the faot that
the most important historical parts of the Holy
Soriptures have been, wonderfully sustained by
the antiquities ,which Layard and others have
unearthed in Assyria and other parts of the
East. -
_
A strict literal rendering of tho New Testament
into English, just executed by Dr. L. A Bowyer,
has just boon issued by John P. Jowott k Co., of
Boston. The translation has boon carefully mado
from tho original Greek. The different Books are
chronologically arranged, and the chapters and
verses have a now division. In his prefatory re-
marks, Dr. Sawyer gives a brief but interesting
notice of previous translations, from. Wyoliffe'S in
1360, down to that executed, in 1611, by order of
King James tho First, of England. lie contends
that there was needed now a translation bearing
the same relation to the advanced knowledge of
those times, which Tindal's, tioverdale's, and
King James's did to theirs. Thedearning of the
present times is greater, and, since 1011, the vory
Greek text—has been brought, by: collation and
other aide, to a far greater; degree of accuracy
thadwas ever dreamed of-two hundred and fifty
yeafaago. For.the most part, )3 1 r. Sawyer follows
:the dotrcotdd text of l'iiblsendorf, published, at
leipsie in 1850. We recommend this new tremolo
tip of the Now Testament, not only to the
'donation of-scholars, but to' the perusal or the
whole host of etiristitind in the land. Tho now
Torsion thiows light upon many obscuro.passages
in the old. The chronological arrangoment makca
a continuous narrative of the whole historical
parts.
We have also before ns another edition of the
Now Testament, (published by Collins Brother,
of New York,) in whioh the authorised gliglish
„Torsion' is followed, except:that quotation points
aro very ,sensibly introduced, ,to, - mark distinct
speeches and conversations, and to give effect to
quotations from other parts of the Bible, or from
other writings. The divisions in Chapter and
Verse, originally I:atie l dueed 'by Hobert Stephens,
in oonnootion with his Conoordanco, aro omitted,
but reform:meg are left,, at; tho•head of each pogo,
to the Chapter and Verso with whioli that page
cOmmonaes' There is a good Index of Subjects,
I (from Dexter's edition) but it would have,been
great improvement to have made a ~, , Tenera/.inde;
instead of separately indexing each, book. For
' instance, we may desire to learn what 'references
lie made' to, Angels in tha New Testament. A
general index would tell us at:once, but here we
havo to ,ge over th r ittys,ix pages of separate
dexos to disee'ver that 'Angels' aro mentioned
'tliriCe in Matthew, thrice in Hark, thrice in
`Luke, six times inAcits,'and soon. The same iray
with v:iiracles and other subjects.'
The Rev. Harvey, Nowdoiab Brooklyn, N.
has just brought out .‘ the Harvest and the
Reapers : Nome Work for All, and lieW'to doiew
;Though this title is affected, the book 1s no•i.
'Part of it appeared 'during the rovja-lals of i 531,
:and ie "reprodiocd,'with other matter, apropos ,of
that of 1858. kr. Newcomb, evidently 'a wadi.
era man, donde largely in fasts, and kiiown how to
apply there. Published •&-' Ticknor, of
'Boston.
The now Sabbath hymn-book, issued by 3 aeon
'.Drothers, Now York,'ls edited by Dr. Park,,lsr.
'Phelps; and Dr. Lorrell:Mason; and contains nearly
1 1,300 psalms and hymns, 24 dokologies, and's3 se-
Notions for chants This hie large collection. We
irannot help noticing how little attention seems to
t lio paid, for the most part, in sacred versification,
:kb - rhyme and rytlim. tq secular poetry, if these
points are neglected, the writer is properly ostra.
bided. Surely, they shbuld bo ,minded no snored
Petry. About everipsilm or hymn which we
Meet has bed rhymes. Tito Indoes here aro cop-
Ura. Ono classifies the hymns; another gives an
hiphabotioal list of subjeoti ;, a third giros refer
ence to
_scriptural passages alluded to in the
irYmns;' efourth 'gives the first lines of hymns;
and' a fifth giVes the first wordri of all stanzas but
the first.
" The Tomb of Washington at Mount Vernon,"
by J. A. Wineberger, is a well-timed Washington
'publication, which will aid the Mount Vernon Da-
Alas' Association's efforts. Mr. Wineberger has
"nollected, in small compass, a groat numbor of do
rlails'relatlng to Wnshington and his burial place:
Yib Illustrates theseAotails with a number of wood
efgravings, and has produCed a little book which
'friVery reliable and very - readable. Wo notice ono
‘Mititako. In page 58, the tribute to "Phillips, an,
Riglishman," was spoken by Charles Phillips, the
celebrated. ,Irish orator,- , who still survives, and
'Whose biogiaphioal Recollections of Curran and
Lis Contemporaries 'are as popular in this country
isln his own land.
A Well-Tintelt Tribute.
'Shp following beautiful Verses from tho polished
nadnlwaya successful pen of the versatile Jong
lisouartan,,Esq., will aivako a re , ponse in every
patriotic bosom. Mr. BROUGHAM lion always been
a devoted friend of the distinguished Senator from
Illinois, anti it would have beon strange, indeed,
ifrafter such a triumph as that just achieved by
.TUdge DOUGLAS, the graceful andAequent muse
Of 11110U011.131 did not offer a garland to dock the
brow of the champion of popular sovereignty
[Per The Profs..'
A DOCTOL43 TO THE FRAY!"
tonv attoualtAx
When Saxon raid,
With brand.acd blado,
O'er Scotia's borders cam,
- ,,,41111gave the
• pillage and to llama ;
' "rwas then rang out,
114'64%1b:3111i ehndt, ' -
- prom mountain and from brao :
ad and our right!
-$ Stand Inn and Oght
A Douglas to the fray!"
Oh ! novor Wan
• Unworthy conse
'Linked with that Dallying cry.
To friends a spell,
To foes a knell,
When e'er it pierced the sky.
And as the shout
Rang fiercely out,
Fate owned its °env:tering sway
It Stand firm and fight
For troth and right I
A Douglas to the fray !,,
On storv , s page,
In every age,
Through every path of fame,
ghiry's rolled
May still bii Nand
Enrolled, that deathless name
Speed, as of old, '
The chieftain bold
Who bears It at tile day ;
Stud firm sod fight
lour truth and right!
"A Douglas to till fray:"
, -Mr. need rind Count Patiatine in
China.
[Frain London Times; October 211
nifido some observations yesterday umin the
pegotiated by Mr. Itemd on behalf of the
United , ptates with the Cloyernment of China—
prolably the weakest and most worthless document
the lips among the archives at Washington. To
notion the treaty concluded with the same
deed-barbarous Power by Count Plitistine on the
part of the Emperor of Ituesia—ae itistroment of a
very different: order, and deserving to be ranked
stung the highest order of diplomatic papers.
Russia• wag at the commencement of tho rupture
witli•England in a very different position to that of
all Ills other Eilropean powera. She bad a long
frostier conterminous ;Ain that of China; She had
trade with the Chinese limpire,arricd,on by land
trattport ; she bad 'an established College of Pekin,
nominally established for - educational and emit,
statical purposed, but really for political and
diphmatio °bleats ; and she also had a largo tract
of Chinese territory. recently occupied in a noiseless
thadrier . 'hitt held by a force sufficient' to hold in
chilli ail the military power of China. Theo aim m
slams termed the strength of her position On the
Athiritand, she was excluded from the privileges
Doetniled-to other European Powers. She had no
=Aline, rights Tho right to trade at tho five
parts Was spool Ilanll y confined to the subjects and
sigmas of:notions thorotofors trailing to Canton.
The Ertisians having no outlet to the Eastern seas
brfare they obtained possession - of the country sva
' terei by,the Amor, had never, traded to Canton,
anatherefore had ,ne share in these privileges—
in, foot, the treaty of, 1842 had boon specially
woided no no to exclude them. The object of Iles
sia.tiforeforti;in the 'roomAnegotiatious, was to
gait ittie 4ccitibrt,Of Scouring. and Utilizing her
new,usUrpatiens, to pat herself upon, an equality
Witt the other maritime European nations, and to
up lines - of CoMmuniention batmen her Com
'mane upon the northern frontidt of China and
themiritimd commerce on • the eastern coast. In
herket abject she was- early, successful. In the
south of May lost, by .a treaty whereof know
ncitileg, except by the scanty notice vouchsafed by
the St... Petersburg Gak.rtte, she noqUirett a legal
rigft to all that largo. tract of .Ohineso , torri tory
sitiated to the north ofqhm,wheding, course of the
Annoy. , ,
...
Svc thus,obtaineiVan outlet. by water-way to the
Resits% 'Wig in a latitude sufficiently sonthetn to
"of
passe_ge to commerce for the major part
1 of to 'Year. Having thus secured her usurpations,
henneat - object ~waa to utillso them. Of course,
:shopropesed to herself to obtain the losartiou in
tbotreaty about to bo concluded at Tien-sin of
thOrtost-favorod:riathin dense, and, this being a
:foraione oonolusion, all special stipulations as to
1 nitaktime Matters were to bor a' matter of supremo
indfferonee. She knew that this onerous part of the
,woes would bo done for her by those most in
, tereted in that particular matter. These nations
omit to have been England and America ; but, as
Ruiita, boyond the view of obtaining her own
tiOy, had. also the object of preventing. if possi
blo the pillows° of any other Power at Pekin, and
tbmiroulationorawyothar than Russian merchants
in the interior of China, poor Mr. Reed. wac do
tattled from the side of England and pieced in an
anttgonietio position in order to accomplish them
objets;Eount Putiatino knowing Lord Elgin well
entagh to bo satisfsoil that its would, of his own
fore obtain , general commeroial privileges suM-
Oiett , te answer the purposes of Russia. The last
mot able move happily did not summed ; hut it
vratplaved with admirable subtlety, poor Mr. Reed
bole); this oatapaw, and being made all the while
to Foil that he was working for somo profound
resit in conducting the intrigues against Eng
hut In reality, ho was exactly in the position
of ho oarpenter in llogarth's picture, laboring
had.to maw eff the plank on which he sits.
'leis belijse premised, the 'Russian treaty will be
foutd admirably to subserve the interests of Count
Putstine's master. It consists of only twelve ar
tiolq The first contains tho usual recital tending
it
to e its a smilo under the eircumstanoes, of the
pet . and . , friendship svietoh hee for a number of
yes eitSted botween Russia and China; but it
alsitguarantios..an intoroommunity of securities
forthe subjects of tho respective empires. The
sewed article is of more special importance. It
regilates the diplomatic rolationebetween the two
Cowls, gives to every Russian agent at an open
port F right, of direct communication with Pekin,
andirovules for the passage of Russian envoys, by
Motor by coo, by any route they may choose, up
to tin capital The third article gives to Russia
the try important privilego of trading to the open
poitt; and the fourth puts Russian shipping„ in re
apmlof duos, upon the samo footing with the other
Billion eountrios. •
VF may pass over some of tho subsequent arti
°lett which relate to the presence • of Russian
-Shi?l-Of•Mar in ChincSo ports, the troatmont of
Wrecired Russian' subjects. the territorial jaridi
ttial immunities of the , tubjects of the. rospeotive
nations,: and the circulation, of Russian missiona
ries, provided with passports signed by' Russian
authorities. The ninth article contains a Stipula
tion dangerous to: China,- 7 that 'convention shall
be hold to settle the eontormitions frontiers of the
two empires; the tenth oninneipates the ‘, Russian
Eccloslatithial Mission 'at'' Pekin , " from all its pro
vious conditions of Chinese control; bat the ele
venth draws 'very close the ties that are hereafter
to connect the two countries. This eleventh ar-
Role provides that a regular postal service shall bo
established between Pekin and Kiakhta—a oity on
the frontier, northwest from Pekin, and in a
lino between that capital and St. Petersburg—for
the communication between the Oovernments, as
.well ne,for the wants of " the Ecoleslastical,Mis
sion at Pekin." It' is stipulated that the
nose couriers shall perform the to and fro service
between Pekin, and Kialthta at least once a month,
and shall make the transit in Moon ; days.
Moreover, it is agreed that every three months 'a
convoy shall make the transit between: those
points -in ,a mimeo, not exceeding ono mouth; and
this
,convoy
s hall be equal r te. the transport of
every'king of r toots. The only 'remaining article
cisSist.4•ll ;the , fivored , tratiOn .whereby
,thesneskil stifmlations which she
almso 0,12, use ell '.llO, Jan - oral `advantages th4t
have behn - f,itikht fer"liddliciatitiated'for by Eng- ,
land' and 'Rianoo. i
Wo aro not now dieonseing what the ultimate de
signs of Russia upon China May he, 'or bow far
they may be antng,ontslie to otir' comixterciol inte
rests, Or how fat., by adding to-the strength of that
colossal Power, their realization may become dm -
gorons to European liberty: We are pointing a •
.tention only to the - notion alwi t easolt-of theso ye,
Interest ingand` importmet pogettatioPs. irr til
m u;
point of view it , inipossible.net to adratal ,
somplicily and nominees of file ;iiplouratio in
men t. , Thoreis nothing. in . it'that is ;not! medal 4
nothing i'ti obtruded unnecessarily ; opintrtnnitiet
aro left open for p bemired ,I.:tor discussions, but
nothing' it .'uncertain in the 'c'encetwioris ' that
•Itugnitgtheughtit important toebtnitt.
Asa mere y iece of d i plommy,, it is quite perfect
On 6 html Of °mime we have no right to emu•
plain that'llePupatineintrigned am . ' inst .Gnm.
land and the rest of the world, and .tried to keep
their statesmen away from Pekin, and their mer
chants otit of the interior. ' Having presu'med that
QM nolloy of China Ma' policy of territorial ag
gression,,AL Putiatino. plsyod ,a fair gimo for an
adequate nbimcf.Perhaps we admire hie skill of
fence with fhb Moro gded 'hamar since he was foiled
in the only lunge. that wive. aimed to wound ns
deeply. It may, bewover, not bo unimportant nt
COMO future time, With these facts before no. to re
consider the relation. between Russia and China,
and to diecasa the course of notion whichomnedi
easy may,point out on, the ctoottrrorno of compli-1
cations that May net be far distant. -• ' , - .
FOREIGN 'MISCELLANIES:
'The ball given by Queen Victoria to the
servants and gillics at Balmoral is a soeno - never,
witnessed elsewhere in the kingdom; as the Snot:
reign mixes freely in the pleasures and enjoymentS
of the humblest a her imbjects. The whole Court,
of course, take their cue from the example of the
SoVereign; and lords and gentlemen choose their
partners freely from among the female domestics
of the royal establishment, and dance away with
vigor and elasticity.. Prince Alfred migictini seen
footing it away merrily with a buxem.honsemaid;
whom he had selected as his partner; and little
Prince Arthur, too, had - his fayotito among the'
maids.' Neither the 'Prince his.
the Count
do.Plandres dauced,'but the,Cottntess de, PersignY,f
with' the true vivacity and esprit of n French.'
woman, with ens of the young princes or same of;
the gentlemen for her ?partners, entered heartily
into the Orit of the flee , and danced several times
among the servants
Sir Charles Bright, the eminent civil engi—
neer whothas recently been knighted for his share!
in laying . down the Atlantis telegraph, is the!
'youngest individual on whom that honor has been,
conferred for many years: lio is only twenty-six;
years of age, having been born in 1832.
3.1. Kossuth has accepted an invitation to ,
deliver n short COUTTO of lectures in Edinburgh'
during the mouth' of November.
BULL-TAMING EXTRAGIIDINABT.—TIIO Dike;
of Portland, highly approving the systotn of Mr.!
Rarey in reference to the laming of ltorses;sont
his groom, Mr. James Thompson, to undergo a i
course of instruction under that eminent master.'
Since Mr. Thompson's return 'to Welbecic ho hoo f
tried the system on a valuable but ve . 6' . "vicious
bull, :in Alderney, and which had beceme almost
ntunantigeoble, and oven a terror to hie keeper.,
Be poetised a abort time on him - in his shed, and'
then teok him into the open park, having only'
Alessrs.'J. and A; Field with him as spectators.
After operating on the bull for a short time, Mr.
Thompson and his friends each lay down 'between
his legs, the boast having nothing attached to hiut
ren° asaehtid.,
• Pr is. stated.that .the •British Government
have dicided :aporenonttrifotlnViliftrlon'af Gal
way, capable of accommodating the new trans-
Atlantic trafiro which is' being developed by the
new lino of stenrneVa between that poit'and Ameri
ca. Tho preliminary measures are in progress.
CIIETS.—A letter •has boon received from
hie Andersen, ono of the best playors in Germany,
and the victor in the chess tintrnament hold in
London the year of the 'Great Pixbiltitioni elating
that ho will pass his Christmas holidaya in Paris
to contend with Mr. Morphy.' ITe intends ar
riving in the French capital about the 18th of
Decembor,.and , will remain a fortnight. It is not,
however, certain that the young American player
can remain in Paris so late in the year.
THE Duke' and Duchess of Malakoff arrived
London on the lath : •
Toujourney. of Prince Napoleon to Alge
ria isnlijeurne4 until March next.
, Ix is rumored that nest spring the Empe
ror and Empress or the French tiviß makn a, tour in
Daly, and pay tevisit to the king of Piedmont
and pie Popo
TM; French Government is noiv 'construct
ing a considerable number of comets for the trans
port of card ry
IT is said that tho plan propO3ed to tho
French Government I+7 Colonel Fldherbe, go
vernor of Senegal, connutain extending tho fron
tiers of the rrenell possessions as far. as 'Timbpo
too, which is about 200 longites front the present
boundary. ' -
Tun RECEIPTS from telegraphs in Franco
have incrossed from £2l 080, in I°sl t0'..1:133,32.0
in 1057. The number of 'stations is only 171. The
feria receipts amount to' .158,040, and the Mar.'
selves reosipis to ..VlB,OOO. '
TRY. .E:XTENSIVII ironworks at 13onrges and
Reunions, in the centre of France. which cost six
million francs, aro advertised for solo at the upset
prico'of four hundred thousand francs.
IN FRANCS nearly one-third -01'. the men,
and more than one-half of the women, who were
married in 1853 could neither read nor write.
The• sPlendici apartment In the Palace of
the Luxembourg. at Parts, known as the Chanzbre
u Cloudier de Marie do Nedicie. in about to be
restored The superb wootheorving of the frames,
panels. ,to,has browns werm-eutenond the res.
location wil reqnire great oarn and nicety. The
decay of the tvolod•wark would, of course, involve
the less ovontually of the beautiful arabesques
and decorative - paintings of the period, which
cover,the walls and ceilings orthis sumptuous so-
Called bsd-olistolnr. 'a hese- paintings were exe
outed by no Meg' celebrated artists than Ilubons,
Philip do Chatipugn e, and-Nicholas
Tint Mayor of Strasburg has ordered' that
all noisy occupations; such as those of blacksmith,
farrier, locksmith. brazier, fie., shall only be oz
onised in cloned slops and not before five in the
morning, or later than eight at night '
A ,Nliw 3fErar,tao Auor.—M. Gersheim
has just discovered is now amalgam possondog the,
'singular property erheing almost off soft as wax
when warm. au 4 of hardon s ing in the course of a
few hours when ce01.,. It may be 'modelled into
various shapdi by the sole action of the fingers;
it adheres' strongly toothy metallic substances; as
Miele glass and porcelain ; so th,tt it may servo
to mend broken crockery, rod is equal in that re-
Spßd' to the best mastic. When bard,it• takes a
lino polish like that of silver or brass.
There arc reports in Paris of the resignation
of Count fool, who has held the ofileo of President
of the Council and Minister of Foreign Affair] in
the Austrian Cabinet since April, 1852: It is
said. he will be succeeded by Baron do Bach, Min
ister of the Interior.
It has now transpired that the monetarrar
yaugement coma to between the Ring of Prussia
and, the Prince Regent is that the king is to draw
twteliftlis and the prince three-fifths of the whole
of Ole'revenues of the Crown. This will Ova the
prince .art income of about .C 300,000, and leave
;C2t0,000 to the king.
Tho PruSsian histhrian Ranh° is now at
Venice, engaged in collecting,' in the archives of
the republic, materials relating to the history of
Ent!land during the last three centuries
The oil crop about'Tnscany and Lucca is
said'to be 11 failure, a worm having appeared just
as the olives ripened.
Tho Sultan has made another step, towards
the admission of Europeans into the Mahomedan
rally. Ito has rent a Christian (Ariattirchi Bey,
a renal-iota noble) to ho his ambassador at Berlin.
Tim Ambassadors of England and Franco
continue:to influence the Porto in imposing Conan
vial refeirn, and not without sucema The expen
diture of the' household of the Sultan is already
reduced one-third.,
Tar, SUEZ CLANAL.—M. Lesseps Iles made a
communication to the Marseilles papers. Tho ex
ecution of the canal, with fresh water, would re•
quire ono year, and would have the adrantago of
fertilizing the ground which has been granted to
the company. If , established al a marititne
canal, it would take six years tc complete it. Its
revenue is estimated at 30,000.000 f.
The ✓htgsburg Gazette learns from ''Warsaw
that Prince Napoleon was not more than three
minutes alone with the Emperor Alexander, but
the Czar tells a very different story, Tho'Craeow
piper affirms that the Clz.tr and his guest were
closeted together for an hour and a halt, and that
the countenance of the French Prince wee quite
radiant when ho quitted .the Russian monorail.
But the manner of the Emperor Alexander towards
Prince Napoleon was extremely civil, "hut very
cool." His Imperial highness did not invite the
Czar to go to Paris, but bo told him that he bad
been sent by the. Emperor Napoleon to return the
visit of the Grand Duke Constantino, The Prince
Only called on one Polish nobleman, and to him ho
observed thatho was greatly struck by the meg
nificonee of the palaces of the nobles and by the
miserable huts inhabited by the serfs. The preva
lent opinion in Warsaw is, that no political im
portance is to bo attached to the visit of Prlnoe
Napoleon.
0/1E93 'PIIENOMEN.I.-A correspondent of
Ha)per's Werth, spanks of two little chess phe
nomena, residing in Fayette county, Ky They
are a boy and girl, aged eleven and thirteen years
respectively; and, blindfolded; eau beat any of the
meat experienced pinyon) in that coition.
T:VV,O. I `CENTS:
GENERAL - NEWS.
A' TWO , IIVADED Gri.L.,- 2 rhey have - a twco
he'aded,girl on exhibition At the , Franklin (Tenn.)
,Puir grounds. The Review ,Of. that
h piece gives
the following mount orthis strange' aus natu
red. .The body or trunk OrthiS , onrions and inter
eating being is certainly one, at least. belqwihe
stomach ; this is proved by every test . that.gen bo
applied: 'At the same time the chest, head; neck,
nod arias aro those of two - diatinet persons, and be=
jeer the trunk there are four distinct and perfectly
formed lower limbs, all of which - are used in leo?:
motion.
The brain. and intellectual: organization are
,those of two distinet persons, but with a strong
'desire to sympathize; so that although capable of
'attention to two different objects at the same time,
yet their mental operations are lees firm and cohe
trent than when the powers of both are directed to
one and the samonbjeot:
Eaoh head and heels tlfat'of a sprightly little
nogress seven or eight pars old. r
1
STRANGE OCCUARENGE.,-,During- R. per
formance at Pitteiturgh;,a_ young map, suddenly
sprang up front his seat, and' exola lined 7 that lee
was about to , die; and , staggering-Up the eastern
aislq towards the door, making frantic gestures,
called on "'the blessed Saviour" t 6 help hied, and
begged 'to ho taken' hi:one' before be °eased' to
breathe. The door-keeper ran .to his assistance,
and helped him out of the .door, where he seemed
to recover from his apparent, aberration', and fit
few' moments wee quite 'Told - tired. ..116 returned tp
the, audience, but had scarcely, taken his iseat
before be again rushed out, but withont speaking,
- and left the building._ - .The incident stretek a thrill-
lof amazement amidst the audience, from-whioh
oy_tiulthehtitztoreus closing could : but partially re
,celt fhcm. . ,
:
111.1s,Inta ItirnE hes proved, terribly, do t t
strukive in the late fights'with the Indians in
Oregon and - Texas. ' Oar , soldiers' OW flrifat 'the
Indians at such a distance as to be entirely safe!
Unless • the Indians learn the use of the bfinniq
rifle, they will be eirterniinated Vie Col Wright
alp, in a lam letter to the Secretary' bf,War - ,.`givl
ingmn account of ; e:reeept engagement with the;
Oregon Indiana: "The men fired at the gallimi
red rascals as they would have fired at targets,l
end, the movements' during the action were as or-1
derly ac on a field day. The enemy has lost con-,
rage; hut lie may change hie tactics.' _
Cox: . JOHN A. DAIILGREEN,' of the United ,
&Wee s loop Plymouth; has been at Tampico, re-=
menatrating with. Governor' Garza ,at the treat.t
meat of American citizens there in the matter AA'
'forced loans,,incdrceritiob,lrm."Goyertior Garzal,
assumes the resifebeibility fer"theloreed loan, and ,
will nottko , indemnity for, injiirieft. done:. lie do-1
alined-doing more, or exemptusgAmerienns fromi
these forded levies;lintil he had written to his 00-;
itirhuient; that of Juarez; for more pirtionlei
carnations Snbappontly, Commodore Dahlgreen7
saw Juarez, Who said the pinotlee wesiMpropee
and should not bo repeated.' He &died* to be on;
good, terms with the United States. •
KING Lowe, or BAVARIA..—,A few.days ago,'
says a ;deniale letter, a female .fainted in arta of:
the streets of this city. ,An elderly gentleman,'
who approached the spotuvhere she was lying, •
quested some- of the persons present to go cud
fetch a medical man. They, all replied that they
knew not where to find one. " Well, then,'! said
he, " I will go - myself," and in a few minutes he
returned with a dootor, who, applied the proper
remedies to the poor woman. The kind-hearted
old gentleman was Kim/ TiOnil3," of Bavaria. -
• MELANOUOLY . OGOURRENGE.—About sun
down, on Thursday last, James Steel shot hie
brother William, with a pistol, - at Knoxville,
Tenn., the ball entering the templ near the eye,
which caused his deattvin a very short time.! ,The
occurrence was purely accidental, ;the,pistel going
oft in the yard 01 their mother's dwelling, a widow
lady, who mainly depended upon those boys for
her support., The one is 19, the other 20 or 21
yeara of age. A warning this, to boys and yeung
wen not to tamper with fire-arms in this careless
manner. ,
BRIM II( 6 SIIREP-FOLD.—Itt East Corinth,
Me., on Sunday week, just as the people, wore going
to church, the alarm was given that a bear was
making free with a neighbor's sheepfold.' Leav-
ing the women in the care of the - deacons-=staid
old mon, we suppose—the , males of the,
,three de
nominations of churches went in pursuit - of bruin,
-and,'aftor a long abase 'and herd struggle, sac•
seeded in despatching him.' , The " varoyint "
weighed over two hundred pounds.
, A PUCE Or NOAII'S Aux.—The Panola Stay
soya that Mr. William W Byars,-who resides near
Feeble, left , at the. office of that paper a place of
potrified wood, with a screw perfectly formed in it
which was taken from his well, now in process of
digging, some hundred anti 'twenty feet under
ground. It is - about tivo inches in length; and was
imbedded in what appears to have been a block
M hickory weed, some tenor fifteen inches ware.
It is supposed - to boa piede of-Noah's Ark. - ••
,Jamenusinio ' l Exxrinrrim—A remarkable
aahlbition recently reitik - plach at theaopkinsville
(Tenn.) Fair., Ton brothers, named Brown, all
- mondited otillto'graY ildiseytddinto`theaittphi
theatre; and displayed their'horaemanshin.-all
being good riders. The eldeetmas aged fortyi the
youngest twenty. They had, not all beonlogother
for fifteen years. Their mothor , vrila *Sent. 'and
they reined up in front of the glorieusleatron end
saluted her, while she shed tears of joy and pride.
GEORGE McGow.ax," a discharged Toiler of
the Anglo-American Ilotel t .liamilton, N. Y., was
detected in the baggage•room on Banally morning,
and to escape arrest,'Jumped out of the - wildow,'
falling
,thirty feet to, the ground, and- snaring
serious injuries.- Ile was able to get home, and
was founthin bad by the police, to whom he said
that he got hurt , in a light. But finding that =he
might, the, , unleas he get help, ho acknowledged
his guilt.
SNARE Iftrar.—There was a 'great snake
hunt in Poste's, It ti few days since. Asa Mr
Brown was:walking across his field, ho disoevered
a black snake:which 10 him to believe that there
wore more: In coluplnV. with two others, he dug
; over a small spot of• earth, and took out twaity
tarmanakea that measured ninety-three feet. .
A viitr SlNuui dH untuu.u.srArrnE.bapPened.
to a young lady in - Gineinnati a rem, nights sines.
.The evening, or rather all the day previous, she,
'had been complaining of .a severs pain; In'the
head .and eyes, more particularly. the latter.
Judge of her astonishment and that of•her friends
:to find, the minning following, that during the
night she had become Oompletelieross eyed.
A cotottro mex, - fieni the vicinity of Urbana,
has boon spend - 114; a fow dim in sprineteld, Ohio,
who is ono hundred and tweve years of aao ! fig
hair hi as A ' VllttO as B . BOW. Strange 8d it may seem,
ho does not claim to hain boon a body 7 tirvant of
Washington. • .
Particulars of VitlauirPa Defeat.
Tim following graphic account is ,itivon by. an
eye-witness of this recent defeat ,er, General
,Vi
daurri, by the forces under General Miramon, the
commander of the Morioen Government forces
On the 2dtb of September, General Miramon
sent a detachment of 1 300 men to reconnoitre' his
crimp, with orders to fall book, in the event of an
attack.
On the 2Sth. lie 'ront'out alarger.dotaohment
with ohnilar instructions, and after haring 111140
himself thoroughly acquainted with Vidaurri's
strength and position, on the morning of the 20th,
procured for a general attack '
nit army consisted of 'll,OOO . men, effidered by
the hest mon in Mexico. , • • .
flaring doterininod to male the attack with the
bayonet and lance alone, ho detailed 3,000 into to
remain as a guard for the artillery and military
stores.
He then ordered 3 000 Lsncorns to take positions
on the right and left wings of Vidaurri's army, at
safe distances, and bald themselves in readiness to
out eif theTugitives in the event of a route.
non placing himself at the heed of 5 000 infan
try and cavalry, ho moved toward the camp of
Vidaurri.
As the army arrived upon the hills which com
manded the plain where Vidaurri with - 8,000 men
were encamped. Hon. • Miramon ordered a bait:
and; pointing with hit sword across the plain, said;
" Stadion' of Mexico ! there aro The enemies of
the Republic and the enemies of the Church ; this
day we shall strike a blow that will give rest to
the Republic, and" rebuild the altars of our holy
religion."
When these words were concluded, a shout from
5,000 voices of " Viva Republica, Viva la Inylo
sta ."' resounded in tones of the deepest manual
nom throughout the lines.
So soon, as silence was restored, the bugles
sounded, And the army advanced with fixed
bayonets and lance, orders having been given for
net a musket to be fired until the batteries should
be taken.
As the attacking army advanced, Yidaurri's
gannets wore distinetly seen holding 'in their
hands their lighted port , fires, awaiting the orders
of their commanders, ,but the army of Mexico
steadily advanced. "
When within two hundred yards or Vidaurri's
lines the order to "fire" was given, and 'sixty
pieces of cannon and eight thousand small arms
belched forth their murderens hail upon the as
sailants. .
In an instant, and before the troops had time to
waiver, the order to `• charge" rang down the
line from tho sharp voice of General Miramon ;
the order was obeyed,, and before the artillery-men
could reload their pieces, a largo party of them
were lanced at their gang, and the batteries were
taken
*imultaneously. Miramon's infantry had fallen
upon Vidaurri's Voleutarios with their bayonets,
With such fury as was irresistible. Lances and
bayonets were olottod with blood, while bullets
pierced the frightened fugitives.
Footmen wore trampled under the feed of the
cavalry that had been posted upon the right and
left of Vidnurri. and many of them lanced.
The plain to the north anti east of the Hacienda
was covered with fugitives, flying towatds the
mountains almost breathless, from the impetuous
leincerbs. •
It was n San Jacinto victory ; 500 are, reported
killed •, 1,100 wounded—ono-half supposed to be
mortally-2 000 taken prisoners, the balance Made
their escape into tho mountains with ' the excep
tion of about 250, mostly officers, who escaped with
Gen Vidaurri.
The victors took 560 males and horses; an wa
gons, 00 pieces of artillery, 00,000 pounds of am
munition; besides muskets add the usual--amount
of canip equipage. - •,
Clem Vidaurri, mean
O oxprosslogfirßeilii;wroie,'
All is lost," which being intiirided,. means
that heldill no leiter handle Urt-tu,plio teVinue,
!•434;.:• •
FAIR AT JAYNE'S HALL.—Tho ladies will
hold a fair at Jayne's Ball, this week, for the benefit of
St. Anne's church and parochial school, Richmond.
The fair will open today, and continuo open during the
week. The excellent object or the ladies who are get
ting up the fair will commend it to liboral support.
BALL TO A JANITOR.—Tho friends of Mr.
John P. Gibson, the active and attentive janitor of the
Natio ,, al Ui erds' Ball, aro getting up a complimentary
ball for him, to come off to-night, In that building.
The affair is in proper hands to be pushed through pro
perly.
I wo:Ads-To 1;10/11tEirtiP05.
dorre s 4onlienteior stint 1.11 Pules bear I'M
18i1
mind the following Mint' _
3!Ter7; eoeununleatlon most be-eaeompanfei by the
nine of the writer. In order to insure aorieetnese of
the tipeeraphy, bat :one able, ef4he sheet ekonht be
written upon.
We shall bagreatly obliged t, gentlernenin Penitityl4
vania and other States for contributions giving the Fer 4
rent noire or the day in their 'particularh4lities,lho
resourceS el" the earrininding corontry;the inereisi of
.Population, or any Information that 'will be interesting
to the general reader.
THE: 'CITY.
AMII6sSsiTB TIiI&_,EYP~
.:4ClADinnr of 1A410.-4116 Efraidieli.o4artt'Troip).
illiroser. 0111003 —' LeTthe .
CraircnanD Pon& Ooiicirt Troripe. ,, `
DIRS. D P. DOWSRB' W4.4lXtrz•Sveast Taman.*
" 0 10 blaring " 4., A61o118.? in the Kitchen."
& OtAiißis
, ITinerette )) 4"/Jadies Beiware.n , = '
Dinx,DlNGls...4lgnor DDSs. .
- • Taptetiv
Nightly....l3 VAH.I,IOIEB. 44Cenup3otui., Concerti,
geIiFOUIPE{ . OPORA Entertain
ment&
- R
LOTTEY,POgOy.DEALI2IIByi TRQIITSLB:--
;
- 0
Saturdii miming: at
,half-Past ten ii.!olear.:lthit.itiayorls
epeeists made at deseentlipon'the offi•ea Noa - 18. 21 22,
and 23, , on the lower - 4110r of the Areadoi and-,a - rested
the following namedperionacnithileof hang en
gaged fn the baldness of Sellitigiotteiy i; Peter
Keller, Charles Borne, Wilma Winters- 'Edward-Pol
ling, George P..Srulth, - -L- - Nowtoni JahzuKi%Johnscso,
and John Winters. •
The parties had a hea ring'lre the afternawn; at the
emitral' Station, before Alderfnan' ilanaes 11. Freeman.
They were held in $BOO for 3,A:ix - ties hearing,- The,
- complaint 'was brought, by kfr.,ffirowtt, of, the Arcade
lintel The implements of the - policy dealers ;trade
_were ,exhibited at the hearing The*: officers repaired
separately to theyoorne under the Arcade, known tolbe
ruled for the disposal of lottery tfektits,, and took into
custody eornn of the - alleged-proprietors; back.rs. and.
writers. .-The unexpected official Irian caused the great
est ionsternatlen. .
.
The prisoneraYithile Smiting for th e,arrival of r
dertiMu iFesiernem,,netaied the
,nearly three
hunts, he dismissing the why and wherefore of,th- de-
Manthrni teens and svem.d to think Oat It eratrary
hart that they bed been allowed to thrive' eelong in
. nedisturbed mood. and then rt to be taken In all of a
'sudden " The services of George Reel °Plat attorney
•at lave, were secured to defend the Whole batch
The hearing onfore Alderman Brennan attracted quite
a large and euriotte klr. 3, D. Btriwn stifled
that the :establishments kept b 7 the, primness were
nuisances of the 'most aggravating sort; that he bad
made ntunerons unsuccessfuLattempte to put them out
of existence; thattheY were regular - lottery,policy
shops where doily white,and bleak resortel purtbase
numbered tickets. To' fortify hie evidence, he had be
come poessesed of a tiokethitneelf.-, '
B Brown tmaified Ihist the 'associates of the
keepere of them shops, and sod:Bent therein yes. were
known to the police as common thieves and pickpocke
and that scoundrels of every dtscripticov wore drawn
arband thon, telltale pro-enie seriously effected the burl.
near of rhea/meant, at well es other kighlyreapsetabM
tensnts of the bunting
We learn front Mr Brown himself. that his de..
termination to not to rest until the lest vestige of this
nefivioun business ie driven from 'he building
- Tee FRANKLIN INsTrrtrre.On Saturday
the attendance was not large, owing mainly to the de , -
Messily bad weather,
,and nartally to -the -- fact.t.bst
there 1e en be another week's opportunity of rutting
the exhibition, with a fat prospect pleamuita, -
We have no doubt the attendance throughout thic."o4
'sent week will be large. -
Moir dotir orthe two stands of hollowsware, ' &4. —
it appears we - did - injustice to Moors. Leibrandt; fife-
Dowell &Oe , no well as to Meanly Stuart & Peterson.
The former "gentlemen are 'manufacturers sit hollow,
ware; of almost Pasty Conceivable var:ety and capacity,
as get , as extenaivemzentifecturers of stoves: 'their
tinned and japanned ware is certainly beautital, not
only in style but finish, and we are pleased to, Mt w
that they hits been awarded a prsmittin by tbri'lnatr
tuts as an endorsement of their skill iu title-brsneh of
manu'acture The firm ie one of the oldest and, moat
substantial in the cityvhaving safely parsed through
the late financial porde. As a branch of Philadelphia
industry, all our oitizeue matted proud of it.-' In the
employ of the firm are some two huod-ed end fifty men,
to whom they weekly fmMuse from 51 140 to 82.000,
whilst they have sompacity for at-loset three hundred
more, `They daily melt down "twenty•fise tons of iron,
and; their wor it e' present , no ordmary scone of bustle.
and energy. i There are many articles deserving or special men
tion in the several departments. which we have not had
the- space, Mlthongh welted the-inclination to - psy
palming tribute . ; bat as the Institute remains open
- dutiol; the week. we hope 'to he able to do something
like Justice hi Thai itray of the, products of the skill
and enterprise of our iniastrial branches. - '
.
isrzy Tlifiusit's 'EanlcE.=-The Wecaoae
Engine Company have purched a lot of ground nine=
teen feet front by ninety deep, on the esti* Bide of their
prestmt building, - in' Queen-street - beloW Second, on
which they intend erecting a new honse - teethe se;
oemelodation of the new - steam - engine , . Thltiantrie -
has been adopted in preference to al ering their present
house, and with the view of ke.ping the present
rat - as in service while the alterations 'are being- male.
The front of the new.bni dingwill correspond:with that
of the engine house adjoining, with the exception that,
lostead of marble, - the front will be of brkk. covered
with mastic, to imitatemarble. I The dome - of thwpre
cent building will b k renuree,but the cupola or look
out w will remain; The new' building wilibe tarried
to the depth of the old ". engine house, Which-Is abbot
aixty feet, end when completed the front of the Com
pany on Queen street will be nearly forty feeti_which.
wilt - mike it probably the larg'est establishment Of any
fire company in Philadelphia. After the nevi building
is finished. the pablio schools now ocenpying the second
and third stories of the old engine house will, it is ex
pected, be removedto those room in the new building;
and the roooms thus vacated will be need for company
porposes, the second story of which will.be fitted. op in
handsome style as - a meeting ream.
A Fonima BROOOuT Bros.; -Special Offt--
car Schism artivel in this city on Saturday, Saving in
custody a young, Spaniard, named Alberto Barges Ifng
"les, Maas Alberto Mitaoe , wine is 'charged 'Mildew..
tue namehr .4.'melekTo a check on the Bank of
North - America for St 500. It wilt be remembered that
acme months - since Mans who wee boarding at a house
on Wisrlogtonliquers, d isappeared very mesterionely,
and his - dienpnearaece caused considerable ex-itement in '
the city. - Mew days afterwards it was discovered that
he had forged the above check, and obtained the money.
Mr. dirndl* bharded in the same house with Blifans.
The letter purchased for Himself scold walehand other'
:jewelry, and set out upon his travels. He went-through:
several of the Western States, and finally brought up,
at New Orleaue.r , In meantime. information of the "
{forgery was lodged with - the detective- Waders; arthe
{Mayor ht aka. who immediately took meow:des to arc ,
;reit the rascal. An accurate, denription or him wait
;telegraphed to New Orleans. whither it was supposed.
!he, had gone previous to embarking - for Havana. Upon
lbae ar,lval in that city be was captured, and detained
;until the arrival of Officer Schism with a requisition
from Governor Packer
A COMMENDABLE rirOVEMENT.--liiiiittl.
.ton, of the Second district police with a view to the
'moral and intellectual improvement of the men in his
.division, ban started a reading room at bis station houne,
'ednnthwerk and all the city newspapers bob now
:taken there by the men, each man paying his portion
;the erpegisen. The lientanant is elan desirors 0i:iota!).
lishingalibrary for b... use of .the divislen. and a on.
Cleue, connoting of ti ty volumes. is now on-the
'ehoices. It will be borne in mind that a force or twen
ty men. called the •treserve.P fa Warm. 'OT. duty as
'the atatiod house. and these men must be amused, en•
ertatneti, or instructed.
- •
I Goo&SIP OF THE hiSTlTUTS.—Considemble eat
bitement was created on Saturday. among certain dr.
pies about the Franklin Institute, by an occurrence
which Wes not ex ctly on the programme ' The recta,
an detailed by Madame Rumor are that a walla:mown
wealthy gentleman, somewhat advanced in p.n.s, and
Who is at the head of a family, fell in love w Mt a very
lovely young lad.. who le engaged In one of the depart.
manta of the exhibition and gave some evidence of but
patsion by vending, an a present, to the optrative In
iluestion. a bouquet of harrinoma flowers. Thin tt , antl•
tut specimen of floral erection woe not received.
A STEAM STOVE.—We would - -call the at
ientiot Of our re der* to the adverVaement, it; rchday's
pap "r, of utton , a imnrOved steam gore we have ex
emitted the article. and like the principle much. The
patentee clai'ea that the elide a'tained by it are num.
my. there being required , wo thirds Teas fuel than in
the crdirary stove; a ratified and uniform heat. eafeTy,
and convenience. The agent, Me. IT Downing, wUI
dirpose of tbe,right for thin State. and invitee remele
to call and nee a etcve in operation at 21d Walnut
street, ronrONo 5 up stabs. -
A PITIABLE Slain.—On Saturday.‘Alder-
PWL Tittermary sent a poor degrad.d specimen of
hu
manity to the Almshouse, on account of Win,' a va
grant. Bite wait picked up I • an iatozieat•d coneitiort
in Marriott's lane It wits really mantel to wirsses
the appearance which •he presented as ate wan put In
the van to be taken over to Moakley. WA learn that
she bee a fine set at children, who. through parental
neglect bare been left in grope Ignorance and the deep.
eat destitution Now that winter is cowl goo. or' at
is to be the fate of many a little one who is greatly suf
fering under the acme hard fate? •
A. WIFE BEATfilt.—An hisbmEul, named
James Metes. residing In Twelfth street, below
Carpenter, comnOted a violent tweanit and battery
upon his wire, and then turned her into the street The
rain was coming town io torrents at the time. The poor
woman 'notified the phi ire of the brutal conduct of her
husbaod, and they misted « Jeewes” and restored the
wife to her domicil. flughes was locked up for the
night in the First word etation•h^nee. and on Saturday
morning as sent to aloyamensing prison by Alderman
Titterontry
TARGET I!4AcTicE.—The Hibernia Fini En—
gine T.aget Company, No.j. will pantile on Thankai
eiving-day. ant proceed to Tawny for tercet puttee . .
At a meeting held on Friday evening last, the tollnwirg ,
officers were elected: Captain, John T. Doyle; 230
Lieutenant, James Ward; - 2d Lieutenant. James, lit;
Onlgan ; 3d Lieutenant, James R. Niahtingalb ;
Lieutenant, John Delany; let Sergeant, Francis Fox
21 Sergeant, Edward 0-oven; Quarterietaiter tlargeaziti
James A. Sawyer.
A SPLENDID APPAIlt.—The ball of,:tbe Na
tional Guards takes place on Wednesday event - g. Nov.
tb, at thohall of the corps. The belle of the Guards
aro distinguished for the pretence of the hammy and
fahhion of the city. 'lt is said that "none but the
brave deserve the fair;". hod if this be true, which is
tiquistleaable, the Guards are a gallant comps y, for
the' ladies invariably predominate at their b tils, to
cheer with their annoy smiles the many brave men who
then and there do congregate.
'A ARIGIITER Splendid day was
yesterday! A brighter sun never shone after a pro
long d and dreary spell, nor have we often seen the
streeta more densely crowded with holiday-attired
people. The day was taken from the very brightest leaf
of a good-natured manta almanac—jut one of those
days that the ancients would have marked with a white
bean. The fall fashions were out in all their glory,
end colors of the brightest possible description.
A ce Feta." ACT.—At a very early hour on
Saturday morning; an individual, giving the name of
William Phiszell, was overhauled by Officer Walker. at
Second and Arch streets. He had a box on his shoulder.
This receptacle contained a lot of broken necked geese
and ducks Being unable to give a satisfactory expla
nation of how he came in possession of the poultry, he
was held to bail for a further hearing on envision of
having stolen them, ,
DESFIOIILTIES TO DE ADdUSTED.—The
mem
bers of the Moyamensing Hose Company, at their meet.
ing on Thtmdey night last, appointed a committee to
settle all existing. difficulties with their brother fire
men. This is certainly a good move on their part, and
we have no doubt that those with whom they have been
at enmity, will appoint stroller committees, and have
the matter fa rly and amicably adjusted.
• THE PAID DEPARTIIENT.—Saturday evening,
the committee recently appointed by the City Councils
to o milder the propriety of a Paid Fire Department
met nil organized, and adopted a resolution to send a
circular to the authorities of other cities having paid
departments, asking for information as to the opera
tion of the spiel? az those cities.
COUNTRYMAN TAKEN IN.—A countryman
was victimized on Saturday by a sharper, and had
parted with the beet old-fashioneft gold watch that
ever run " He got in exchange about a peak of the
best eve.doller bills in the country, but unfortunately
the most of them were issued by banks that had never
been chartered.
ELECTION OF A MA:ion.=—To-morrow an
elect on sill take plane In the armories of the comps
ni.e composing the First Regiment of Rides, Third
Br gads, Col T. 4 Morehead, for a Major, to CH the
vacancy occasioned by the death of Major John llic•
Manus.
WIMPED BY HIS SON-IN-LAW.—Patrick
/login, aged 21, was admitted to the boons] on Fatty
day, with his face badly cut by his sorviselier. Patslet -
Wayland, in Baker stmt. between Bisth and parentA.
Maxpeat EI,EOTION.—To-marrow an' elec-
Um will be held in the Gray Battalion fora Lieutenant
- COlonel. The only candidate' named le °apt 8/torge
Ratterlon, a son of General Pattereo4.