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Pr4:4 1 : 4 ti - .. ,- ifil ,, i ,L iif,4646PlitA4 l,l ”.Z ' , a, i 1 .: IMPORTERS -AND JOBBERS " i *T .. dr .4l4sra' X !' :1 2 i NCrrri 51016320 4 , 1 , ;. kis now oiip, ..14;;ti a wVVxiCk;A L 1 30,01r4 In+ , r.he attention Of • intiezal ' - ," - --'. 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V4 4 rAt : xle,7.:i-rvo 6 ' ‘ , ....1.11; ..-,,. ~, • t'e, ,i,P!1••• G OOD •—• ' FANCIY' h DRW , S; :-' . . , „ ~,,,,, • - tOP.,, 11 EPA:. , 9 . lri; PFq". i i-r uiel.-- i ;aid •saleatlea t mbiababey alter laillolo buye:4 bkom , 'illartsof thll3;ilte,dat.l.lo, oir the !neat liberal terms. -, 1 14, 04:117 , , , A.:: : : 1 : 0 7? !!..,,,,,,--,,:.. .. ~, , , ,ftIiI4A t3. I 4Aff.;;I4P.VAIVCA: ', YO 4I 4 9,II i , f • i-= ,4;e4 - 41 41.r.dArrrOwesits , ,arip , pmerants,p1 - ;7 r ~ , )- 1 ,:, : 1062 ( .014 3 N8 ) , FOVAORIIREEZ ' NIVII DOORS BELOW- lri 20.44,4.}*1t8A:40:0 1 ; ,, for:iiittborrostmro oploti stook „af good* W l, "* - 1 WA,* Iffiftlitifiri* thi ,PPRXT ) #FAY, 1 , 13 ,;: - ,I ! 6illogrk of t ,* Quigtiriot,..TerzsTii49;• ,I • qi i oyEa for men, 'Women,. end children, oomprlaing usoilnient ,of orei3boldiidtiq ai r,• •• tigtztekttifyrs siorDRAV7IIBB,' „ Ming iurd-COYLAR3i, PLiglitt,Vo2loL., _ 4,14,114211- CAMBILIOAANDKRAOHIE/8 and '1149 NTOVP , ritits 41,4431-1,7 ji. roitlVll4lipo , of 'Ontlrely of liottOtol t to i v.lo4,,f4sAitsh " !'`i-g7:;;',4=1;‘..i.;;071;1;41;t1P*A'•;';;;;',1:7 43 44 1 : 1" X I X°. , 14,: . Trsi ; _ m.=-1 vltt tattoo - , oroCKn ,i g i, k4 bttl fOl, ',„•• t : "ZiOetrairryft,V4 • „ • ; ; FAVOt 000 D,, tif.l/ 4 /4144g;' 9 ite j 41-.1.--r .r, , afttiellit.h.X*liikVkqt, " 4 5 00 1 °AgAr1!79 1 , 6 ,U1YP . .?, 5-"tiWi'--IX4loll;tatfirN TR2o*, , , - 1 ~•. ;•: ;. e : 044FFER - 1716"-ROBE4TS, ,Aslst_ll?-f, , ,,l , ,ili 2o .lkeAtixtri , Orsitor, -, •;-. - .1,01 'itiPoit , TFAS A.VD4OBSEILS' goAtosi, , ,rtgimuguiceo,coltum.,tat,Asani, yekior (loons; ikttottß) intikvatrial9. it • ,•• If Altat Fiqc AM+, „. 1.4:7.J4-14 tt- cto. •A •'• I ' - ' c V}39 '''':''''' l ll4l 3 .oler:EßS • •- • 7* -4 11 " irtilri " , • , „ :t 4 41 t.ttot L 1 A 11 01 1,13-00 DRy ,1 VAta ( , .." - fel.-Int f4V t .ref,t i~:~ , Earise gtgaS 4 tScIETASSAT-iti •• T • •••• ' • • , L8E11 . 0 1 ,4 - ALIWT ,• .410 Ti p, , euip rf1111111:1114011 Or. iTSYK * 4I.*):t W4LT;*O'BTBD',BTOOK' ' SktitN6,GOODS. Bowed v ,ith direct reference' to the' :Or " X A I DI T I O -9 ? They ran partleatar,-attestlqa,to their,. very line.on; ' , Astra BOSUN ZERltra and fIIkITrANR,WO4 I 3. Troni•thtir loegfoonneetion ,Nrith- the, 'e'en , keDWO reafifihi^.t3friii iteilortleg honso'of , , •.. WM. M. ,MOREMSANN .1 BONS; • ApWthoti owii occiestittenekolth- the MARKETI3 ,91r,E1,7101 , 5,, they:siO,itoloied to' offer' SUPBBB 4ITTLES•Ati:PRibIitAKIniI,TS.TO.I4,..: to 'ciA9ll and • SINRICTIMB - • , , , 4A. IZENt : PER, ' ••, - . .1 - -33 SOUTH , FOURTH STREET, ~I nipartere and Wholeesle Deaters , in " tiittES' 'OOBB -Vitimmm GS, call the pdriictdar- lette'ntion od the . Trade 4 0 their rteeditaene'-or ^BDZNOEUTOMPONNETTIIi 01/.3084 - '114F. , VIM.MMM , II3IB, BlNtk PXlo 4 d.iltl4l.l,Tpii34l3; #.0,1 " • , We are prepared to execute, large orders fcir 6(it: and Marseilles Fringed, Tasiela,'Oordaißultona,&o ' at our , • , - 4014,pm ";' SI'X,EPE4W FENNER. Wholesale Manitfietniera ' ;t4 • , l or .1 , • ,umnitttlA ,s s :AND. P ARASOLB, 4i3O:4I,IAILICIVR- ,; ' , PHILADELPHIA, • Are now mating 'More' then One hundred and fifty dinrent varieties of UMbrellnef; dr every sloe, from 22 to 40 inches. Their assortment of RARA.BOI,B also very lsrvi, and - for variety of -deer in, Styles; finish, and prices, ex'.; coedit that'of ahy'preVionsaesson. "-% ' Buyers.whol havajnot. hat *Lk,. of good , ' .will find tbeir,tnne wall spent in looking over this well "inade Iw:shad MANY , Novzorms, lot mitt ,to be +net ta efseurhsrs. ff. "'e., -, fehl-Bra 1 "jtitT.ko • Se,ATEpIig,TZ, •• • 14 *-T I PWATM • COMMISSION MERCHANTS , AND IMPORTERS. . o < / • MANUFACTURERS„. , '11211..W }ookaltit OP,PIBr - ' 1 1 / 4 NP lit 1,-00tuttanttrott hand A lugs essoitment of ifleio, Penh sylvania SIAAAA, Slue ,pAakAtfANAly, aid gperhl sortrA9ut of - , . • - DOMEATIO Ata,goittunt.*AgilFAnz. v•, . . , ° ; SnDDicrZ 'x~inrlivnrc. WM". , ..I:BVILStACH CP., TIMPORTEREI, .7441NUFA0,TtIBERS, . . .ANEI , • sA.Dxyxin,Et.ya-r.Aft.p*Atays, 'CARRIAGE - TRIMMINGS,' „ - • No., st!, .NpmTyplIFAD: STREET, ; !of wean lifkot Arab, , 1 ••• rq " I 'l9:lE4iiitp.GEST STOCIC tN T.lir gra. 47%aig0 . 0r,,Ta10 aoLDiet SPIRAUP., ffeta-loi ••• ~ • ~hoe•;iFiiiDiit~tt.~ .., 1 34 4:1na & ZlA:allq l ' 4 l% I - I*( 4-'804 90V IMMO "ItopOrtdro of, and Daidarn ie, t ;S:O:OE4:MA T.T,P . '4OTU.4ER4 * GOODS,' And all klade - or Shoe Tools. , ' , PATENT 1300 T, THIEL i ' mukril,isawo?tairopar AuLLs. , en ItB,' THIIEdAB, and ," • ; , - -• -• „1: 1 10PIAB. , ENG LIB H, 181811, aud AMERICAN MOE 6116-tmitl2 SHPE FINDINGS.. • . i t IS: I A4.OI3 - iatT,ON 84 C O, 85 dirTh 'SECOND STA IMP 08.1 1 E1131 OF Azi P7DE.2. 4 44 Exs IN ' 1 ! . F.B,3Oj,.;EAVD' PT, 1..8; ' o4*-W 1 0 5 :r: 02 q941„g4,4 1) : 1: *qt • , • !•••oIIi t ENOLI LEAPTIIEII, Zfigi.A.sTEOBaGibl'• " • alif t Ehrteis th114,I*18; 450.; 40b3 l- ": , • ,EDWIN W 7— g4 I 'NE; : impotter and Dealer: , 7 BOOT, SHOE, aM GAITER MATERIALS, ' Iron ;Building, N. W. corner 4 4.0011,and.FOILUTH Ste. SUBSTINGS, z EBENOH. 7 1 77 • , . 7„. ; ,PATENT , LEA,THEIP, .CONGRESS .WEEI, , TOILILT, SLIPPER upylutti, ' ~febl6llnl], 539.11T11AXAD8,,1.A0.3, . (e'dooeesoi td the 1&t8 Joe: T. Jobbih) $$ $ I:„ 1 540tOli; 04, P 4.1 ." ~":BIOS *Tyro aria TRIMMING 03 - MAGETB, &a., Ica. AT TDB OLD' STAND, Nottfyeaef %titter of MIRTH and ASCU Sr ' seta HE WAREHOUSING COMPANY -'OF -PHILADI77LPHZA. '' ' " ' `,',' Ditio*Ohil. 1 PAiRIOK BRADY, ~ 1 Iv eiTilY: PIRA,',.:, i MARANO'S. lIIIMILY, (130. :4,, , IIARRIPUNi 1k;.47;-PLISABODITON,.. ;.., WILLIAM, NBILIWN, WM: LL BTAIWART, ' , A. A: CRAW VOH.D. 4 '' • ' 4 ' 'PAiItICIL BEADY, Pr Alde t 4 - ' ' •-' '-B. a. ORAWITOR.D, Vim L'restiletit, "WILLIAM ;VENN, 'Treasurer. ' WILLIAM WILLSON, eAsteiary. - . ' f • ' • : ' ; , cLurpso o.lll ; lLLlPB, ; WAre,hottee Keeper, .rnz'vrAtEnooplNG COMPANY OP• e KNONITE GOODS ON, STORAON, • Whether in Bond or Doty tree, et .I:Tarrant IWO/4'l63'p ; e40.4140 ih!trerar. Appitestips may be made St their _ - Osizor, :TspAcco' w,4ltEtousg, ' TNONT AND DOCK 0 T. • . , VIANDSDRIINS AN) oLAyars. No. A. 62)(8. per dos. "9: 76e. u 87e, < 4:100o. ;, 0 Rt , ' $1.2 per oxen.' ' I ' 7 R0w,11.76. per dom., S 1 80w, , 112.26 per dozen. -'''="101 , 111Y EOESTInf, `ce Tinrlllo UTRD /MIN • it,lo/1' -11.1LARIE'• BOOKS AND STATIONERY. :Au/ noomr, Blank Book aterinfraturer, stit.losei end Printer, N 0.1.00 WALNUT Otreet, le ores at - all times to furnish, either-from the shelve, -Ca,make , to order, Books of every description; suitable Jos Beaks, Publio Cillices, Merchant/1; and others; of the litistelality keel& or I/rubrical Paper, and bound u/P.VIO/44,Siei, in thertiost substantial maunoir. Warl, for '3OI.WPRINTING , LOS • every desalpilon. ltagrAting And liitkoomphineoxsented.with orestnese 4 eneral assortrant stuanstystonote siudetuerb• - , tlkligs• neef lirl'iliroWileoitritotion to the inutile) Taitttuni thelkniamittee aar—." This diSPia.j ol blaaY • Umator banking entlzaerettotile n 49 IN the IMO in the A:clan , ' ,pa 1 mtiort pr the material g&d'at • tifuounuoten. tuerit• exrpouv: and 'wit out ',e.t.a lip. JAVVINIFYIA itZ6 spooptiate. ,, ) i . s.. 1,6290.. if idoptis4ii2:bit,''i*rtieiotaL . /Atli JIL„ ogzatatwotrairm above iOfferdstrilitele .for tlidestabitionof ASPliettleo to ALP: easedinrfeeee, , w l doh bomblnecthe fotlirtripg anvehte. -gee Atood And pnverylng qonetidenre, easitY waked :oa , with 11/11Purjiseplveq, all inabetabeis 'tlait'sre solo ii4,,sgeter; hence ta4ll4ting tneteed ofvollarnoting that iiksorpttob; end does not eat rancid, leek property Mono retrieve it ml invader& eognisitlob to Allitlibustittaherr tßxiirostp4 rpr 4: d bl l:olesete end at SOUP'S taborstial 4 Pli4u ll o, :4A1114 - !it 004 r .0: .3,, ,garZitraare. ahLworni, liMiM aLNDOORTYI!O. NO. 3;31 12 per dm. G. 126 - • 7. 150 ' r• ; 5.' T 6 CLAMPS .'F r~a ~s~3+;y'. ,PITILADELPHIA, ,WERNVOAY, FEBRUARY 16, „. r; ~. , _ r , ;. .. , :,.„-.74,0, gfi. 1,0, '..t0. -, ..s,isiii b••• 41 k :',' !"..., ” ....ki t F.RN,g§DAY,FEBRUARY IG, 186ili -. Atet,ter_TOiri . 41 Ocensionni,, ,, !,.:r fportaspoudence or The 1.7058.1 .• . , . , : . ':-,: y ri • , • I have boon in ,a lazy hibernation 'for'the Vit • . ' WASTtiItaTOST, Feb. 15.,‘" three months apparently, but in reality so bog . and conatintly ongagedthaf not one moment hav,it 'I had forthe leisure luaury of 'Seeking my,'lM* and it is pleasant, now to have time 'in whiell;te dash Ulf a leiter of thelyialloa, obaracteristisst toll You through half a column :or Roof the 13,4 ', bled of Politica, the teliiversatiOnfor polgitriall , 4, 11 , Gradgriad facts,- ephemeral fanoleS, and - on; -. 0 exceedingly harlequinitih. • ' • : . , , -- •'-,- -- +'e shores of my Lord 2400. , no: is, to leave 'a shores of America -for-the , Tfagtio,,and flunire,Y, . ~., , ,ta in a sweaty condition' of eieltoment in get g up, for his espeoial honor, a-hall of splendid 4: si• rations and aCcompanimente, but of still -vs er, expense. ' Illonorablei 7 lenumerable,, Oartiori :, who thirst the glory to pluck the robe of nohilr t Ac., AC , sign the' call, and I presume, 'tor vont" ; will pay the bill. These honors to, Lord' ; Na z• are nueleserimd.' 'lle, unneoossarily,' exerted-1i 'sale; hi favoi of the iocoroPtort Swiridlo and. `A , ' i t English iniquity ; but, more than 'VOA this outrag ~ he dins in the ears of our prplo that ho leaves. a for: he reason that ho hishoer, pronsOtid—prosh 'tad front-the United States to the Rogue !,Salan ~ all ! for we rank next the' Ilagete.'! Dutch hotri ' 's: in diplomaoy ate an fait, and worthy of Seettri* their tank, first einongst the titled and the gre4 ,But Mr . Vuehanan had the consolation th ' gore ,Oessley will return, and that BritishA -:' fiance and Interests will be proderiaihant and co ,-i, trolling at the guiding'rudder erOur own. 09vera+, mont. -,,, , ' I -, ' . Mr,,,Buchanon does rend The Pies.i. I knots , it. lie may have stopped his own copy, butll(, manages to take one on the, sly, or borrow acini, body's. Pioneer's letter"touobed bier—drove the' , knife to the quick—and be urges that he, has n 0 been'ungrateful.. Charges ' f ingratitude ;against biro aro the , Bonquo's gb.oat (his,own favorite slum;, tattoo) that rinse to fright the temper of his ; sold , .The house of Representatives has Iliad ivithiiii ; month several spasms of economy. They aro pkti. Barnies deicriptitn„ of the toOth•aoh ft,' whore the , sufferer, to ease hit pain, kicks over everything,: ' especially What isms:Arose:however valuable..,l7yr, and ten &Alai 'oPlinalitiatiOns are'arsattitedAoitlil vigor and overturned with-triumph. FireAfghtira 7 l; paniplitqt•folddri, box-Makers, and stmitiiku,hair_e their salaries reulueed,kelew a living figure., with' IV relentless spirit of economy that would remind 'onli, of, Aristides , or be suggestive °Oho ohamoloOki philosophy of physical subsistence by force Of thji. innigloatitm ; While, on' theoontrary, , millions fair: army, and navy coats:tots, thousands forth° myrt4 . ads of postzotheo agents, who locust the land an : ideine its harnioilY with the harahhesa of tbei cry for the Prerldenoy of the man witit.the. ler ' •. door plate; Minton! and , thousands and hundre& for the Mail rOutpa,:within hailing distal= of eaolf i l other, across the plains—indeod SS . nor„thqt, Ude the Gorman'iand Fronch saint Meta in thenontinei tel wars, 'they could puff ?Make at.'imeh otbeill shako hands'and tip glasses;-all heavy appropri;il ; ,)ions get tho go•by ; $30,000,000 can go for secret, I service for Puba—everything can pass with slight:: Objeotion,,exeept7onlytha huh tail of the kitolul the way of small appropriations for 'the ticker?! here. • Congress votes the public domain away to rail road-speculators everywhere, and has done so'; Millionaires of the Went Eon point to sesh grant Hattie trot stop for them upon the ladder •ot for. 'tune. The house voted what is termed the Agri: cultural College hill, giving .publio. landa to th ieveradStatesfer the prEyttiOE in cash State o the inierestiof agriculture. Mr. Buchanan 1014 VETO the bill, nithoughlt may pass the Senate. Orman 'is admitted', and we . 1 -Owe no thfrty:: three States: Alabama and South Carolino:iu. Whole; and Southern mon from other States4o posed her. They alleged she had not populeonl onotigb. Query : 110 w can Lecompton men rocot ,, elle It with , justice to vote agalutiOtanans and c o Orton ? Use WA:at no epoch Popudttion ‘ ns 'tith'selleirffrileVflysithiPthlitiettei-411;0471-' . I lish bill could not apply to Oregon, for it was temporary question. _What nonsense The a tato meet shows the enormity of the ireeeectlng. certainly be a frao - Stale:arerecegon might be a slave State. Many, of her inentineint man end many of her h2nuontiallom7o favored slavery. ..Now the Oregon bill 'has passW,' Kaman - still be kept out in the cold ? , The, has shack out thi)Upproprintictu fort the Coniressional Globe, It is harmless;, for, until the Contract : with Mr. hires le repealed, the work goes on, aria delay appropidation in only I etones ot' , IC the, tariff bo mined there will not ho an ex tra; session of cagiess; othcrwiso there will, Ice 'neithertressury note issue nor Govevment low will be authorised., But the general disposition settles toward-an 'no:eased The only fear, I am sorry toliny, to from Isorof united notion on the Tait. of:the, Pennsylvania 'delegation itself. Together they will acooniplith the, work oar Sttdo desires ; but wevo for a moment, make cone essio‘l3, and they are gone, and, like tho amphibious ani mals, be neither fish, nor flesh, nor , good red her. ring; 'neither Domoarats nor RoPublisansi' but in that stead in a moat. woful condition of botiviit and 'betweenity. In mtuous, the Southern min who rule the roast aro thb very men who ndhoto with snapper-like tenacity to Southern interosti, to cotton sugar - and tokadao, " nt whatever hazard.',' 'Therefore it is that ansionsos should ncvor decide far the DemOoratio party, and Dr that reason. of inequality and injustteo Congrel• atonal caucuses for Prosidentinl nominations fill into dodiy, and "dieusi long 'years ay. Letter rom Nov York. CornsMahn et The Prem.! The Association for !ingrowing the tiondition • of the g 0 0 .0.119 carrying Oh a work, the magnithde of 'width nen scarcely be realised. Duribg the poet six weoss they hare expended fifteen thousand dollars in minis tering to the wants of the indigent, and• though ovary cue in which relief is sought in scrutinised ea closely as ponsible, there are at the present moment about fotr teen thousand four hundred persons receiving aid fruit the Annotation, among whom are many widows wilt helpless children, many riot and dying; mechanbe, lehorers, pawing-women, ro , who hitherto have Men self-supporting, and ,by failure of work and, other uin eoidable mean are brought to abject wont. There are row tiondriql and elglity=two good persona who Lie• charged, gratulteuhly, the Bamariten•like duty of Tint ing these pour people and ascertaining their true on dittoe e . Catniitielty:' White, 'represented this city In COugreas troll' 'lB2O to loaq,Alel, oft Etaturdak het, after a , brlet,illuess, lie IMO protninent among bur rosrchaut princes:sag ahlieln Congress took a deckled atsintodiluS bank griegtlon which attired up the coun try during the Anualnistratiiine of Jackson and Tau Mien.? • • Since the publication, a week or two einee, of the famine mortality report, in which New York is proved to be one of the most unhealthy mttea In the obuntiy, the regale: Weekly report of deaths it looked at with increased attention. During last week, the numbs; of deaths woo 445, an increase of 22 as compared with the mortality of the week previous.. Of the whore number of deaths 101 were ceased by diseases of the wage tbrOat, Ace.; end 213 wore of children Ilse years of age and under., The greatest mortality le in wards inaab- Hod by - the poor, though In pouffe of the eppeeteei localities the enemy finds a proportionate numb's. of "r. By the . Way, the piefeenional pour—the Legman—the people in indignant eircuntetaniee.. an danseYarilug ton ?ells them, are jest now attracting the partimlar attention or the constabulary. These "vagrom non" ...hit in tboWourth and Math wards, among the Dead italibits and ShoultierAittern. Their habit is to rally out every morning in troops of half a dozen or more to their severed beats, with an much regularity at pciierb men: yeatentay a baker's dozen were arrested, and bit.pght before a magistrate, who sent them t. the Workrbonse for sixty dap each : Among Thom ware old men of seventy, young women with infants, ant men ,Ind women orptidille ago, blind, hell, and lame. One bettnty;nurned Bberidan, ban a morn in - Werth street, and stamotts (the old rogue!) three women 'One of Aerie leads him out etory inerniag Lie poet, takes him his meals, and guides hint bone at night. Alt! the fidelity of woman 1 blest husbands ; think it nerosaary toireep on eye on their w wee, but Ibis blind old toaster,' how con' he keep any- eye on three, and each of thew' ha his blind aide ? glx thousand five hundred dollrn was paid IC Mr. 'Oilman, by the burghers of -New York, on Friday night and gsturday afternoon, for the privilege of listening tp the Slinging' of the agreeable little lady of Biomes. At Laura Keene's, Our Amerioan Cousin s credit - men to, 1111 the homier in every part: • At Ilurton'e, Bayleen "Female Amerman Cousin does the same; and to night Obanfran produces, for the first time, ,it the Na tional, "L. Our Yankee tionsin, l t in which Mound and de the principal chisraoters. The Treacle theatre—fitted up with groat taste, and admi- AblYterranged for comfort—Will he ready for the Come Tent', now on tbo wig, by the let of flarch. That Eleventh Itogibient aro making, preparattens for their fele. on the 22nd, on a node that will ochre any tllttiS of ' the kfnd Tilt attempted on this able the water:. Walter fieston l ,'344., , the Whig candidate for A tbirney tk tierifpf:thiState"oi Virginiso will be present,.and make a epnee'h:: Major Clenotal , WOol, and other gen .tiernen of 'glory, Will be prepent. The 'dinner will take 'Place at the Pa Fare 'Dome, and during thin part of the'skrhoniage the tentlinonial of Ildolpho Wolfe will, be presented, together aah n beeuffully,p , rinted work, prepared by the • same gentleman deeartptire of the trip of the regiment topclunond. It aoatalpa all the , pro• isedlngei speeches ) and ipoi4eute of exclurolort. IMMZEIII . . . . .......__. _ 1 BUtBURt AND' ERIN :RAlLltOikDt_,_ do. lo bands of die. . 'busing agents.: 19.874 33 COMPANY: , - , ' .:' I Interest dole On bonds.. 30,065 .00 . Cost of Coal nn hand re - calved inpaytnent of ' t 011.3 , Duo by Railroad 'Corn , panics - ' Eighth Anneal 'Report ol". the Itlanagetei 'To rho Stockladdors,,of the! Sunbury nhd Enid Rinlroad Company: . . Thehistory of the Sunbury , and Erie Railroad' Company, as embraced in the annual reports here., tofore ,presented to the - stiookholders, hert been one of persevering, but fruitless efforts to obtain cab; eruptions to its capital stock; se:Meant to ticoom, plish the, (Neat for which it was incorporated. I ,rlt'ia a seuree of ranch gratification to •the .pre. Pent ..Board of Managers,.that they tan now con• gratulato the stockholders upon such an improvei went in tho affairs of the company as insures, thy 'speedy end economical completion of the work committed to their charge. • , „By an act of the'General Assembly of this Com l . menirealth, tipprored by the Governor on the 21at of April last, entitled "An ptu for the sale of the State Canals," this Company Was 'authorized 'to •purchase from: the:State of PennaYlveniti the De r laware Division, the Lower Borth Branch MIL sion, the Upper North Branch Division, and the IVest Brano/z and Susquehanna Divisions of Perinaylvania Canal, for the sum of 'three militant' Ave hundred thousand dollars. The purchase money WAS to be paid in five per cent. bonds of the Company, which bonds the Company was 'axial& rizad to issue to the amount of 57,000,000, scoured by a mortgage of the whole line of the rood, finished end unfinished, from Sunbury to the Bar ber of Erie . Tower was also given to the Cola pony; in we it should make the purchase, to sell the property, or any part of it, to other corpora tiona,,or to association of individuals.to innot paroled, on eendition that, if the same should be sold• for a larger sum than the price paid to tke 'State; seventy-five per centum of the excess should be'paid into the Treasury of the Comrnonwealth.l In pursuance of this aot, the managers made the purchase on the torm's proposed. They issued seven' millions of, five per cent, 'bonds, and executed la •naortgego of the road, to seoure the payment of 'the same ' .aa required .by the 'oat Three Mil. lions five hundred thousand dollars in said bonds were paid' to rho State "in• settlement of the par.' 'ehese money,' and, the residue thereof deposited In the oface of the Siete Treasurer, to be appropriated fie hereafter maybe required in the construction of the road. The managers having' received from the Go. Verner the noocettary deeds of conveyance, en• iored upon end-took posseesion of the property, which they, aubsequently sold and conveyed to -ether 'parties, for the aggregate sum of $3,875,000, ae fellows :'- - . . Tho Upper and If ewe , r North Branch Pi- , visions, to the North Branch Canal . • ' • Company, f0r.,.., .$1,600,000 The Weal Branch and thnquohanniTg- , visions to tho West 'lit such and Sus. , uohanna Canal Cloinpeny, for • 500,090 The PAawhie Djvidibti to the Delaware) Company ] for 1.775,000 Total amount of sales 63,875,000 Tho North Branch Canal Company afterwards told to the Wyoming Canal Company that part; f Life °anal wbioh 'extends from Wilkesbarre to' Northumberland; and the payment for the - entiro work, by consent of your managers, was made by the,two companion as follows: By the North Bray% Genal,Oompany... 5500.01/0 By .the Wyoming Canal Company Lamm $1,600,000 The proceeds of these several sales, having ex ,dieded tho amount of purchase money paid to the State, by $376,000, seventy-rive per oentuua of the excess wee paid to the State Treasurer qn the 18th of last, in eomplianee with the condi tions of the act. Of that payment, $231,000 wore in the bonds of the Wyoming Canal Company and the balance in cash-;• • • Thn.detalleof all tbeoo traneactions 'aro fully Set forth in the annual mesas •o of the Governor to the Legislature, now in session. After they bad been closed, and the grantees of this company wore in the quiet possession of the canals, the late board of Canal Commissioners were advised by counsel, that the not for rho sale of the canals wee 'invalid because it: was in violation of the consti tution of the ' State. This annuancemeht, made through the . public papetn,Jbreatened to • mbar- Test very seriously the operations of the company, 'and'retard the progress of the work. The mans tete therefore. availed themselves of (heard op*. Welty that offered, to test ttui question by propecil- Inge in the Etupiehr (Skirt of the Commonwealth.. It was signed before the court, and the validity 'ef-110 act was sustained by the unanimous opinion or:the judges, by whose order a dicree to that *Yeet Alma made and entered,. -IA aoroptianoe sylth• the provisions or the Bald act of Assembly, there have' alto becuideposited in the Kate Treasury bonds of the different canal cent p'grittlt, grantees of the works, as follows ; -. l 9f, , tho,DelaWore Division Canal Corn ,!.;IS, est Branch and Sosquehan Canal Company • 50 . 0,000 Nertlr.Praneh Canal Cottlis4ny. 200,000, :. 4 1;t0119g,ga144 1 VaptiPY s SOO, 100 . . . the aggregate - $2,006,0 . 00 ' - '7hose bonds ell bear interest at the rate of six per bent. per enhitim, and are to be returned to this company—one-hall thereof when the line of our road shall, bO, graded end, bridged, ready for the superstructure, from Williamaport to the mutt* of the Sinnemahoning, and '1 satisfaetory evidence's! •produeed to that 46vernor that there is aditured on available subierip Orilla to the stook of the company. to be colleetekand applied' in' the progress of the Work, one funnels of dollars in Addition to the amount Atha paid in 't and the other half when the line front Erie to Warren shall be graded and bridged, ready for the superstructure. It was stated in the last annual report that all the large' contracts for work on the eastern mid Middle divisions had been annulled, with the ooli. emit of tiro oontraotors, anti it was believed that on a relotting, in, the depressed state of business in the country, a great raving in the coat of the work emaid be effeeted; It was also believed that a careful revision ciP.the - . line would result id great diminution of cost. vkithout impairing the charaeter and rinrability• of the work, or rim terially inerenaing the length of the road. "We are happy to State that in both these respeCts oar expectations have ' heen more than realised. The prading,and bridging of the unfinished poy .tions of the work between Williamsport and Far-. randsville were , advortiasd to be let at - to , * Haven, in -mile sections, on the 2t1,, day of Juno last, and for the work between Farrandevllle and the month of the 81rinemahoning. on the 25th day of,August last., At both of these' lettinga 'it - very large number - 6f the in,ost substantial and efficient contractors of the country presented bids, and at prices much below the average at which such work has been heretofore performed upon any linos of railroad in this country. This they were enabled to do by tholow prices of labor and previsions that have ruled for, the Ipat year, and probably will continue for a year or twq tq vomit. „ The Whole of thlaWork, a (Enema - of (S 3 miles, is now nearly ready for tho superetrnoture, so that the retie will. be laid as far as Farrandsvillo, (33 miles.) on the very first opening of the spring. The Irbn for this 'part of the line, as wall as for the Western Division, has been eentrnoted - for upon very favorable terms, end a'considerable portion of it hoe already been delivered: - A careful examination of the contrasts for the Western Division, extending from Erie to the western margin of the bituminous omit fields of Elk and McKean counties, anistanee of. 82 miles, .intliseed the board to believe that no benefit to the company could result from their 'cancellation. They were held by gentlemen of character and responsibility, realaing in the Immediate vielnity, and a largo proportion of the payment was, to bo taken in the local subscriptions, that id no other wily could be so - well made available. Some, desirable modifications were made in the prices and terms of payment of these contracts, und'tho,sontrnotors were instructed' to proceed vi gorously with the work. This they hove dono, and the line from Erie to - Warren can readily be completed in running order during the - approach OCCASIONAL Nuw YORK, Feb /4: ing Bummor. • ' The treasured accounts present the following exhibit of the receiptelexperiditares and re- Enrees of We company; from its re•organtzatioh in 101, to the Ist day of January, 1859: • )1110313'T8.. • Amount of capital stook paid in.... 53,903,813 13 Seven per cent bonds issued (part of loan of 81,000.000) 527,000 00 Temporary Loans 309.591 19 Income from Railroad TOB 70) 71 Old assetteof Oetripwire ,- 1,735 76 ,Procoesin of sale of Delaware Dlvi- Mon Canal Procoods of sale of North Broach Canal 1,600,000 00 Proceeds of elle of %Vest Branch and Susquehanna. Canal.... Inoome frous.oannle For Road eonsiruution and Superstructure. $3,584,879 07 For Doi/dings, /And, and Right of Way.. 254 090 For Engineering 210,058 58 For Itlatntenance of Way 47,099 58 For Equipment . 37,533 57 Incidontal Ex penses' 205,474 SG Far Discount on Muni cipal and Company Bonita 250 883 74 For Interest to Stock' and Bondnoldora.... 358,453 40 For Interest on Tran sient Loans 1.89,220 00 For Piero at the 11or• bar of Erie 75,800• ;17 Pahl to State Tronaurer ~ 75 per cent. of, eur- . plus received for Ca nals 251,250 00 \ ----- -- $5,555,771 80 Balance :320.357 07 58,87(4122 47 This bninnoo is composed of bonds deposited with tho Sint° Trovorer. Bonds of Del. Division Usual 4, 41 000,000 00 do. W. Branch and • • • Basq. Calm" 500 000 00 do. Wynaiing Canal. 500,000 00 do.' N. Branch Canal. .200.000 00 00 7n hands of Troasator. Benda of Dot Dlyision • • Canal 200 000 00 do.'ll4lyouling Canal. ; 310,000 00 do. North Branoh Ca - nal • • 175.000 00 do. of the 'Oily of , Erie ' 133,000 00 do Of Qdakaltell, Il Company . 12,100 00 Stcoks of the Del. Div, ' Canal Co 100,000 00 do. Telegraph C 0.... 2,0011 00 Bills receivable 102,702 :19 Oath ' 4,119 78 Total $.i,876,132 47 , rXPI:NDITVRtS. 1859. 8,320,357 6 There is, therefore, applicable to the coati:lett° of the road '' The • aboie mentioned canal bonds, deposited with the State Troasu- .rer $2,000,000 W The cash and assets in the hands of -. the Treasurer; as above ' I The balance unissued of the comps, ' niv!s 7 per cent. bonds for simo,- 000 Five per cciat,,bonds of the company depositid with' the State Treasu rer, part of the - loan of $7,000,000, of which the State owns one-half.. 3,500,000 op • . Total $7 293 367 6' . Of the aboira,..tho remind and third 'items are under the present contraet of tho'ciinipiny; an il $l,OOO 000 of the first will be, when the line of roapl from Williamsport to the mouth of the binnemabit. ning shall be ready for the superstructure, anft the additional subscription above referred to shall have been secured. Tills work, as before Mated, le now 'nearly completed, and will be entirely do before the let of May next. The other stomp of the first item will beoomo available' when the road shall bo graded from Erie to Warren, which' San be accomplished by the let of Tnly next. Thera will then remain the Middle Division, from the mouth of the Binnemahoning to Warren, about 'llO miles, upon which but little work bile yet boon done, and the greater part of which is etlll uneon• treated for. ,_ Of the 'additional subscription of one million ef dollars, required by the act of Assembly, butlittle has been yet paid in; so that nearly thewliole is to be added to the amount as above stated of the re sources for the completion of the road, increasing the aggregate to over $2,000,000, an amount, after making all necessary deductions for discounts, con tingencies, rte , amply eufficient to complete the whole line to Erie, and it is believed, also, to fur Mali the requisite rolling stook. ' 'rho only portion of these resources' not already scoured is the additional stook required, and of this there has been or will be secured along the line of the road about $500,000, leaving about $500,000 to be yet provided for, and which the board rely upon the public spirit and enlightened soltinterest of the eitiseort of Philadelphia to sup ply„ so that this great enterprise may proceed without delay or interruption to a speedy eon: summation'. If'this just expectation le realised; there , is nothing in the character .of the work itself to prevent the, ears from successfully tra irorsing the whole line to Erie, biter° the close of the year 1860. The middle portion of the line of our road, eg tending from the month of • the Driftwood,nemly to Warren,,passes i as is well known, through an intricate region of country, and onehithertoisep posed to be very expensive for the construction of a: railroad. Notwithstanding the extensive explo rations heretofore made in this region, it was deemed' advisable by the board that they should be prosecuted still more thoroughly, so as to leave no doubt that the boat and cheapest line had been scoured before the work was put under contract. These surveys have been continued actively up to the time•that the advanced state or the season, rendered their further prosecution difficult, if not impossible. There are some lines that it is deem ed important to have examined still further, so that the board may be 'put in fall possession of all the facts bearing upon the subject, before Wal ing to • a final decision upon this important ques tion. These examinations will be completed as soon no the weather will permit, so an to allow the wholoiline to be put under contract early the next spring, The investigations already made establish the important fact that more than one good line can be constructed through this region with out tunnels, and at a cost at least $2 000,000 be low what has heretofore been considered practice• hie, and so as to place the completion of the' whole line, beyond a doubt, within the means of ' the company. Which et the variant routes euggeeted may pie sent the greatest advantages, 'it is impossible in the state of the'surveyn to state, • but as soon' as these are completed; that line will be es, lasted; which, on a, careful examination, of ,the' whole subject, wlll appear to be for the best bite.' rests of the company, taking into 'eonsidera flan" economy' of 'construction, distance,- grades; connections, and commercial advantages. Since the data of the het .annued report, the Northern Central Railroad has been eentleted to Runbury, and connected with oar roe at that point, thee effording ari uninterrupted i railrend communication to Baltimore, and also to Phila delphia, by two routes from Ilarrisburg—ono by tha•Ponneylvania Central Railroad. and the other Vale Lebanon Vallerrand , lleadlag Railroads. As it has been considered the beet,petieti by this company' to expend all Its' resources in the lifrst for completlen !of 'Abel line,Of :road , to' "EtWitlite,T*4l4slstit centre:4loth the Northern Central ItallatheiCorni' pony to run their trains on our road froth Sunthiry to Williamsport, upon terms believed to be much more favorable to this company than could re sult from working this section ott our own ac count. This contract is terminable at any time, by either party, upon giving three months' notice to the other. , The conneetiona already completed with the snnbury and Erie Rath-mid are as follows: ' " 1. The Northern Central,i connecting at Sari bury, forming, ea above stated, a throat 00mmuni.. cation withßaltintoro, and also with Philadelphia, by two. routes, one by the Polar:Sylvania Central, the other by tho Lebanon 'Valley and' Reading ramie. 81,000 000 2. The Shamokin and Sunbury, connecting at Sunbury, 40 miles in length, and penetrating the heart of the anthracite coal dopo'sits of the middle or central basin. 3. The Catawissa and Williamsport, connecting at Milton, 12 miles ahoy° Sunbury, forming a di root line to the city of Now York, and a third and (Brent route to Philadelphia, by the %Milo Sohuyl kill and Reading roads „ 4. The Williomeport and Elmira," at Williamsport; 40 miles. above Sunbury, focusing a direct line to Buffalo and ',Niagara . Pails ; and oroasing ilia. Now York and le, ie at ,Elmira, and' the New York Central at Canandidgita, distribu ting points on Cie linos of those two roads. Besides the connections already-formed, °thud will bo made, as follows: h. The Tyrono and Lock ; Raven, 54 miles in length, to oonneot at Lock haven, 20 miles weal:of -Wiltiamsport, passing through the rich mineral depoeits of Centre , county:and connecting with the Ponnsylvanittload at Tyrone., , This road will be completed during the 'present your, 6. Throe coal roads,' Roraima and stooped, to, eonneat at Farrandsvillo, and now awaiting the completion of the Sunbury and Erie to that point These roads extend to the bituminous coal beds of the Tang eaccotaak. 7: The Allegheny Valley Road, to conneot at or east of B,idgway, ,00mmonicating directly with. Pittabiarg and the valley of the Ohio, and forming a now and favorable routo from Pittsburg .to Philadelphia. S The' Venango lined, to conned at or went of -RidgWay, forming with its connection an air line through the richeet parts of Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, to pOllllOl/ Bluffs, on the Missouri. .Every link of this extonsive lino is now in progress, ex cept that part of it whin% ontendi from the Ohio Mato lino to the connecting point on tho Sunbury and Eric Road. 0. The Lake Shore 'Road. to oottneot at , Erio, communioatiug with all the principal cities of the Northwestern lakes. Several other coal roads have been projected and chartered, to connect at different' points on our lino, same of which are already in progress of con- Amadeu. It is impossible to estimate the value of the ire manse trade which them various connections must pour updn' the Sunimiry and Erie Toad. the groat trunk line frovi the harbor of Erie to the Valley of the Susquehanna. - . The Ooremittee of Wayland Means - of the House of Repreeentatives of Pennsylvania, in their, report reconnuending to tlie.Legislature the sated the canals to this company, were much influenced in their deoision by the consideration that it would negro the completion of our road. The following extract from that report may be appropriately in troduced to show the estimation in which our work is hold by intelligent men' familtar with the ro• sources, the trade, the improvements, and the ne eessitice of the Communwealtb. ' . After adverting to the opinion that the passage of tho act in question would enable the company to " complete and put in operation this great high way through our own territory to Erie,' they say: "Such a result would be hailed by the people of Pennsylvania as the cominencement of a new and glorious era in tho prosperity of their State. The undeveloped and negleoted wealth of more than fourteen thousand square miles of our territory awaits, in the silence almost of an Arabian desert, a highway to the markets of the world. Between the PODDllvahla Railroad and the New York line, taking Ridgway as• a centre, there is an area at least equal to 120 miles square, within which not one mile of railroad has been laid ; and a very large proportion of this immense region is under laid with bituminous coal and iron ore, its surface covered with vast forests of valuab/e timber, and the soil, when cleared, d susceptible of a high degree of cultivation. 1,775,000 00 500.000 00 00,107 60 "Hero, then, is presented an area 0r'9,216,000 neves, comprising about one-third of the entire State, and abounding in wealth beyond computa tion, to be improved and iloveloped, by the Sun bury and Brie Railroad and its tributaries. "By the last report of the Revenue Commission ere, the a-ascased value of nil the real estate in the Commonwealth, taxable, .for State purposes, is $lBB 276,000. " About $30,000,000 of that amount is charged to the 11,216,000 acres above mentioned, of which the average assessed value is about three dollars and thirty-three one hundredths per acre. . ‘s The section of country in the State of New_ York, through which the Now York and Erie Railroad pintses, may bo referre dto -as an illnstrit thin of the client of such improvements on the value 0/adjacent lands. Before the road VMS conairrieted, the price of wild binds in the southern pared that State did not exalted three dollars per acre. On its completion, and almost in/M0 . 41.00y' after the first train of care had passed,over it, the minimum price at which the same lands were sold, for a wide lenge on either shin of the road, was ten dollars per sore; and they. oentioue to inoreuse in value as the.country file up with now settlers, In various parts of our. own State the. price ofJ n itiordt and timber landohasi,been increased, tlirough'sitidlar agencies, in a inuob greater ratio, at * " lima) , fairly be maimed that within - a few years lifter' that road shall ha.Vo leen finisheino the harbor of Ede, (hewn° mineral lands which • now aVernm in the State assessment but three dolt • tarsi and thirty-three hundredthe per acre, will average at, toast ten times that sum: Allowing ono•tbird only to the 9,216 000 coca above men- , Honed, to consist of mineral Made, the result will be that 8,072,000 acres will be Worth, on an average, • , 533 per acre, or -. , $111,.376,009 t The remaining- A5.114,00q, increasing ,in no greater, ratio' than the New t York lentia; Will-be Worth ten dol. . . late per acre, or+ .01,440,009, . 19,411 78 . . . ... . ~ $1.72,820,000 Deduct' the present' asiesaed value, as .. . , • -1 . I above Stated 30 000 00() ,knd the net gain in the 'mimed vela. - - . - • will be • - ~._.; : .:.$142,82000 Whioh; at tbr . , 1320,357 6 _doh; at the preaent • rate. Ottaxa ,tion, for State purposes, would 'give ' • • holthireased annual revenue to the - , CoMmortwealth of ' ,• • • . 357 00? ‘.‘ Taia ie by, no means an improbable °foxtro t ,v,agaut estimate. It oofera an extent of counter I argot than the Slate' of blaseaohiniatts. Ind of in finitely 'greater battiest:, value,Lbutwhieh at Pri. tent is. so spartleiV .pepulatefi that it is entitled to three ,11 ewes on tatives, only' the National Con:- gross. while •filassnehugetidi has representatiop pf eleveirmembers in that body.; its soon, as the -a in templat*i improvement, brings it into minim, - nicintien taiticthe trade of the lakes and the 'Atlantio <Matt; Its extraordinary:resources, mini ral and, agricultural,-will attract an, enterprising and industrious . . popnlatiorh mills , furnaeett, 'Manufactories' and 'thriving towns and :villages 'will be seattereiloveriti whole extent. • „ • " The trade of the lakes now expends -$BOO 000,000 annually. • Passing' byethe 'city of Erie, the pro dilations of the Northwest stop at Dunkirk or Bur fain, and seek the Atlantic 'markets by way of the New York improvement's. Until 'these improve moots were .construoted, Buffalo.was, anutnimpot taut town. ,Its prosperity dates front' that period. It has since increased in wealth,' power, extent and infinenee, with wonderful rapidity, and is now a magnifieeiat city, with a Population of more than seventy thousand souls. Erie„ with the :test hat.; bar on the lake, awaits , the •failway commune'.tion with ,Philadelphia, whiolf beeh -so lon gdeferred, to enter the” lists as the competitor of Buffalo. When that •is 'eatablished; our Mineral' products will- find an outlet throughhar gates to I the markets of the lake country, and she must b - come,- in a few,Years, ono of the principal cities of the Union. 'This road will plait', Philadelphia nearly fifty miles nearer' than the city of Net, York, to the hikes, and will enable her inerehans, and manufacturers to, open a new and profitable trade with that region." , The Committee on Inland Navigation,. ofthe 'Philadelphia Board of Trade; in their - report an the commerce of the lakes, recently predented to that body, refer to the same subject, as follows "Recent cireunistanaes teem to insure the early I completion of-one of the most important of the in ternal iranravements of our State—the Stabur, - and Erie Railroad. " When the navigation of Lake Erie shell be connected by this great lini f with the various roads branching off from it. to, our own,,eity,,.we shall, have the whole .grain and prednee of N•cirthern Ohio and Indiana, Deuthera ..Miehigin; and that' part of Western Canada bordering on this lakki laid at our 'doors by-their neatest, outlet'. to do ,Eastern market. It will tees, be our own fault if Philadelphia does not Ohara in the prosperity and the wealth which they have hitherto poured so overtlowingly Into the coffers of our neighbors, 'building tap their vast-shipping interests, and than providing the means for that great , return com merce which seems illiv4.7B.ZELETlZany,to flow back in the channel of the export trade." At its western terminus,' the Company - owns one hundred and 'Arty notes' of land,' the munificent gift nf the city of Erie, situate at the most no , possible and 'desirable point. of, that unequalled harbor, containing - over three thoueand Toot ef water front, which is susceptible of being mote' thap doubled by the construction of the desks pro. 'vided for in the plan of improvement - adopted and , partly executed. This will Arm by far the largest and most eommodions uoaldepet in the world,, °Anatole of -accommodating a budiness of many millions of tens annually. Our • rOad will pass for More - than one hundred ' miles' through some of the finest bituminous coal ,fields to be found in the country, an 1 at its eastern extremity connects directly, ,as above stated, with roads' penetrating the great anthracite deposits of the State, forming their nearest outlet to the Great -Lakes, and the populous States lying on their borders. It is safe, therefore, to assume that upbn the completion of the road, (in addition to the pee songer and ordinary freight business which, from its location, it must command,) it *ill become coo of the most extensive opal marrying roads in the, country. for this purpose it will, have facilities, not pcasessed by any-other road,.as the same trains which will carry the icoalefrota the East to the West will return freighted with the live titock:atal' other , agricultural products of the : great Stales .bordering on the, lakes, to supply thO, wants tor:- the minors and manufacturers DI A') coal regions, and to seek through-our Eastern ports Nib markets of the world. . , The, distance from the harbor 'or Erie to the heart of the bituminous coal fields, by this road, does not exceed one hundred miles, thus insuring to, it the carrying of a very large, proportion' of the moments demand, for that article for the Lake , - The nnjbrlioite tioal . mined and sent `to market from-Peaniqiyanisliew arnoants to about six,and .2t,viettreatriat Mite . .bilt• -A • lakeet for want ,of proper fitoilitiee ' for, transpoiti lion, and for storage and•shiptnent t iehma It arrive s there. Both of •these facilities the- completion of our Improvement will furnish. •The distanne froth the middle anthracite coalfields to 'Erie ;will; be about three hundred and with; tale loges possessed by ourithe the, transportation Can .be profitablyeffeated at, a, rate to seems the sup.: 'ply of, the almost Unlimited demand for the grow, , hog cities and immenscextent of dointry sairoubd ing those inland alma, now, becoming .densely Po pulated, bntmuch of,whieh.is - alinost deetitute of wood. - . 1,320,857 6' 47:3,000 0 , No public improvement has' ever Been.,under ,taken in the United States with- a more certain prospect of. remunerative returns to'. those con; corned in it than the Sunbury Pnd'Erio Railroad. And the time is near, when All who are interested in the enterprise will.flad ti eir - highest. estimates of its value to themselves and: to the .ComrSon ,wealthmorti than realised, - - - Submitted by order of the board t i WU. G, MOOBSTLEAD, Presiders; ANOTHER SURPR,IfIREARTY.--7Tbe,WoiGeiter (Mass )-Transcrip t relates that a Young lawyer of - that City one evenlng.last week called oxi.ayoung lady to take her to a-place of entertainment, when she went up stairs to 0 fix" for the occasion. Soon bearing footsteps en the stairs, be stopped into dark entry, and as the eoesingfeet reached the last otair,he threw his arms round keiivaist and placed' his lips in dangerous -pros 7 mity to her eh'eeks A pooh, a slap, and,asereaui,frighteried,hlin Into one corner of the entry,' when the adient of the'old :folks with a lam enlighteaelliin to the fact that he had boon kissing the "black but comely": Dinah, whose demanding steps lie had mistaken for those of his 'eyed.' The lawyer, should . ex- , change olrds with the Hartford clergyman lib,o hugged the black lady, on the Condi:client. SINGULAR STORY. —.k , German named Ifraineilesiding in New Haven, Connecticut, tells the singular story, that while passing through one of the streets very early on Monday-morning, a man before him picked up a paper package, which proved toli•broken, and out of which gold coins scattered plentifully on the snow., He rushed for, ward and they .both gathered up _the gold, the stranger getting the greater portion, and •Kratige about 1.50,' mostly In 31, - and $2.50 pieces, wbioh he bas shown to his follow-workmen. NOTHalt' Suresxm.—At Poughkeopsie, New York, on Saturday morning last, Mr. John F. King, a gentleman somewhat extonsively known as a newspaper correspondent, committed suicide by taking prussic acid, after apparently- haVing endeavored to kill himself with a piatol,'Whloh: was round on the bad near him with a nap exploded" lie left severil- Totters, mid of which; - ' addressed To the Press and the Publio,",evldenoes the most deliberate intantiun to commit the aot, though it gives no dekriltarcason for it. • TIM Springfield (Mass.) Rep'ublican gives an account of an excursion to that oily of Ifty •or sixty double-team sleighs, with seven hundred and fifty persons, from llolyoke, on Saturday lost. - The party - oonsiatod of the. employees of the Lynian mills, ataiglYeke. The teams were docked with flags and evorgreens, and the grand Procession passed., through thiaprouripal- sire is of the - town; exchanged -happy greetings with o thousands that were drawn to witness the spectacle, and creating groat excitement wherever it went. Lme, an aged lady of Columbus, ChiO, 'a few days since obtained a warrant for the arrest of a mulatto named William Foiley: on the ground that be had destroyed her hypinoss, by marrying her daughter, Mary Ann; Very Ptetty white girl, making ad oath to the effect that the girl was eightee , years of ego, when shewns but sixteen. The girl, however: appears to be satisfied with her doubtful colored husband, and is determined' to stick to hint TIIE 'WEBSTER STATUE.—Before the bronze statue of Webster, by Powers, was received, there R . /18'1i desire to have it placed in the most 'public and prominent position that eouti be secured for the purpose in Boston. Since the lank figure has been seen by our °Wayne, there is no objection to its being buried from the public eye in the vtAte.d. States Court House or any place rarely visited by (shims or ctrangerg, ' IN SOUTIIAMPrOIt. MAS 9. on tho"night of the sth inst., 11110. Muria_ doors, while passing near the Catholic Cemetery, was suddenly seised bye men with a dark lantern and,wearing a mask, who drew a dirk, inflioted sevoratwounds•npne her neck, and then fled. A disoa r rded lover of tho young woman, named George Maine, Is suspected of bong the perpetrator of the outrage. AUDIDENT.—At Pittsfield, Masa., one day last week, while a young lady and gentle man woro playfully oimtendieg about ageld locket, the former accidentally swallowed it. The young , gentleman immediately asked for the Gasket eon ! taming the jewel., TrrE'Gynehbnrg (Va.) Republican •state. 4; as a singular circumstance, that Mr. .I.'ll Solomon, of that city, anti Mr. J. If Solomon; of North .Ca.. retina.. a student at the Ilnirersity of Virginia, both died on the some day, Monday, the 31st TUE DAIRY FARR of Zadoc Pratt, of Greene county, N . y., kept fifty cows in 1858, which y tattled 0,500 pounds of butter, and brought (rota 22 to 27 cents per pound, or over fi1,500. Pr= SWERVES, a favorite performer in Joo Sweeney's opera troupe, died suddenly at irash. inctom on Thursday night, of hemorrhage of the lungs. , • . - . . - CiLturlor A. taus, of Baltimore, Md., re cently appointed UniLekStates consul t 9 11.0v.e1, in itusstct, *Ailed, from New York on Saturday, in the ritearnei liftroroo, for Liverpool. Tily,:lkL6sAnnuerrTs LEOISLATURT: 1108 made; • .1 - grant of 52,500 a yenr fur ten years, to no 118:o- - elation of banks for the suppression of counterfeit bank notes., TUE WIPPOOR I LEOISLATUaII $2 have aprro- - printed, by a nnanh y noua ,te, 000 to the W hlooneVernon (muse.' Taw CITY. OP •BATantOltil pave $241,000 a year for the Bayport of ire ematnon.re,boole. W. W. Fosaam, the poet, is . darigorot.sly ill Cinoinaati, TWO CENTS. NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS. Oorreependeuts for II Tin Pane will plaininr la Ivory communion fon onigttio name or Abe mrotes— I4ontoi to lofro one reetneee to Hut typotrupkt, bat one _ efts itr tfiir gaol abolgillt We ehell begreetlyobyged to geettbeheiith Pennsil veld* ni other Stites for iheatelbfaalcitelthle the enrrenl news of the day In their pa:Sugar loestittfy the tesoarcee of the ehiTiihding eonetei;thh !helmets of popplation, or anj Infoznietb/1 be-fetett% tag to the general mese. , • THE CITE - _ AltlllllllMByTB TEM „, , • WINRATLRY CLAP/L.ll'a Arcia.atiu Tuutss c ,- i: Taming th e sTu ' •• . • "Ifyi t trliatir-Sitisier of Wlndi ot , te.." Thar Illustrious Upturn." - NirtoiSf. Oncritc-4 , Van Ambanth'il Iffenagerias , Lent's Cirrus ,Computr-"„..Equustrisu,PircumUtie• and,ArrOlmtio NOS." --; t _ " droDsouou,S, —Beleanoni - from Plays, Genie from Operis, Pautsmbiii, Dinefait, and flinging. lintertgo- Aril:max BUILDINGS gilts; ARREST, OF 'TUB ALLEGED PERPETRATORS OF run /T n l Tll o ll6. = Viel 'men tfotied the,..rmieffi - yeitellifirrieli;of the - niordirane ( nitrite which' Mut beeil Peipitiatednuon the persons of Mis. and Mimi talfoii, of- IfillhOre sMetitterderf county,: and •ot The inaspielori ^ eXlsted in the minds of persona In that vicinity that the twolleotts de sigiedemmingto this city. We elacatearn that the villains were arrested, yeeterditeinorning,ln a wheel wright shop, in the - vicinity of tatboro,iwhere-• they had concealed themselves Although armed with a revolver and bawle knife at the brae of thelr dficoerry. theY offered no ?existence, ant promptly' einvendered their' deadly' weapons.' -The only exams they could offer was that Maly were deeply Intoxicated at the time of the commission of the, outrage; nod wevenot sensible rf the crime they 'were • obtomitting/ They etc:waded in raasackfarr the house after committingthi outrage, and a. considerable amount of : vow:my has lnien;talten therefor:l. They were conveyeittritorristOWO yenta,- dey morning, end:- eommittsil to Inkion to await the moult of the wounds initiated. Miss Walton, althopgh severely injured. Is in n fair way of recovery, but her Mother was suffering exceedingly yeeterday and there IC no prospect of her surviving the ;Inktries shq re-. selyed. ; ; - „ ~ •, , , •• , PASSENGER . RAEGW ATV4 I 4 II 7 4I3 9X .'4l4g axe —Oar citizens for at bast thotpustion of them,Whe bore been accustomed travelling oiler the Tenth ,and Eleventh anehlarket Street roads) , will learn ,vvith.re stet that Nis system of tickets' hill his day be discontinued; This` sited' hail ico,ros of 'gratiflostioii to those selio hire trimetled roods; and was marked as one of the' greatest Imprems meats of the day. We learn that Market-street Comm' deelinee its continuance, netwithstandin the wish of the Tenth and Eleventh-etniet Company that It should be adhered to. .The director* of the'Market street Ocoopsny ' stale that .•ittuti advantage* are seereelY . equivalent to', the. ineouyentencile of the system, Mr Witham: th e ‘presidEot of the 'Tenth and Eleventh street company, in behalf et the altos tors, replies that the Tenth and ElevenWstreet Compute hoe never . experienced the Jammer. Mentes" spoken of, although they daily Sell and on chance ever6,ooo tickets (with three roads in all). A s the Market-etreet road only exchanges 1,500 tickets, or lees, their, •i trouble and ineoneenfoneeii Mist be much less. • Beehlee, whether Convenient or-eotyithe public improve of ' the • astehangeVaystern; and.the paeianger railware were not chartered ; merely to mike money, regardlest of the reasonable requirements et the public. ANNtidi ASSAY AT ' TEE —The, . commltree appointed Tor' tenting the iMcniacrid 'the coinage of the United States Mint lonieleen engaged at the Mint for the last two dam and exieet to sionaide their labors to day. to the businesiof thecinandtte e to test the fineness of the preciont metals used by o e e rten or experiments, and the scale e, weights, to , d in weighing coin are carefully oomporid 'kith the ir an dtad stoles and weights:teal& are only-need on spec al occasions. ThecomMoodou is compared of,the follmsirg • cast gentlemen hoe John Cadealadpr. lodge of the II: 8. Collet for the Bittern Birtriet of Fitussyleadia; James 0. - Vandyke, B. , Attorney forithesiere district, and Cot J B Baker, Celle:dorsi the Poet of Philadelphle,.ex jg:io Commissioners;'Fret A. 'Cos well, of ProsideSee,lt" I:, Brevet itiatar HI Ii: U.SA., Professor of Chemistry -At We'd .Foint Lacy Academy. .Itobert Ewing., Em.. non Frederick Frsliy, and4ohn 6: Sardis, Ewe, of Philadelphia, Om miaMenere apecialird.signated by the tin:or/dent of the .teited States.. - - _ STABUDIG CASE fITHE NINETEENTH WARD —About three &clock .yeaterday: morning, the police men of the Nineteenth ward were attracted by loud c• ice of merles, which.proceeded ~frrun laler.beer saloon, situ a ted at the porrier , of ?root Jul_ XERlect greets, in the Nineteenth ward.. Upon arriving - at the Poo th , y found that a bait 'which' had Commenced on Monday evening had been kept rip , until. this • early hour of the - morning, and that the„party , coMpcied of men and women had become very uproarious and seemed to be eogsged in *general row: •A Germantiad ,leittheplace at the conolu4on of the ihttied, atiCeecenn• panted by , ha wife bat .starfed , for their borne bat were' punsed - by a Mari - named Parsittelif whim they charge-with having initiated several cuts with a Sulfa upon the head of the German.- His in, at. femptinU to defend her' krisband, was - aim m silt on tae Siam wee takenbeiore the pollactirreglat rat e of ho Eleventh district, and war held in the slue of 5.4,010 t laminar. - , • .• , Rosayay.— About - o ' clock yesterday . . afternoon a man had hia arm broken, and wee ,aoyarely io,jured, in the vicinity ot,Third andSilarket Waste, by tieing thrown from tile iragan.' It appears that the - driver of a dray hag beatnt the borne he was driileg fa •t *hooting manner, and-tbe biatt 'finally beestne ea maoaaeable and nvirda a piing°. which bronghtttne wheole of the dray in 'Mot sr.% with the light wagon the , nen *at driving. In bin endeavera to alight' train the •vehiele be ;mu precipttated4o the ground.: wharf he re- Maiited-Ja* rawcaalsatooll,aa.otaasEda.aosaition rec!#.-tilie - reatvra , r,ta'ati!aeo ta.afirriaa" Thir~r.Vriatit r i t V4i,Atiblift*WW. 0 4 0 1 ' kaaa.&-Ottaltlik • Moat Cnandas,..ReOdrder Thum haslodgedi .another dotainor4gainst. George Vincent, and David .Peplow; on thAlberge of haring burelarionely entered the reeidenee . of !David. Thompson, at No. „1001) ; tionth second street, and also for committing an !maul; ant trAtery upon the wife Of thit copiplalnene; AecUeel balm been held on "a variety or ehliges,nrefolk Whitt to Abet of. biting ommerned.with the party whiYart ale the attack ripe the America UO6B Company, on the morn ag of the 39th of,lanuary. , SUPPOSED ; bran-Immo —Tfiedeadlindir of firnate infant, aupusutly about s month obtorae coveied by Offlier,graeff, et Se earty hear yesterday morning, laying on the pavement, near the 'thisaratep Of ahouse In` Melon Street; above- Tooth, the Four ,,eantir ward. Theabild hadevidently been alive when placed on the pavement It bad - nothing on to pratuct it from-the incletheney of-the weather , save thercedi nary clothing worn by infanta. The, body was removed to the etation.honeS, and the coroner notified to attend. EXCITEMENT AT A.lSotioor.-uouss.- , -Qalte a panic was oecxattnal; on IkOndainfternoon,'"While the public roVuol was in emotion, at , the building - acid for „lichoollittrpoges, at the corner of Math loslAtatharine streets. Some time ,in the afternoe?,the_ walls of the Mt - tiding -Suddenly cranked; trighttiong the children in eettlea manner that the teachers were obliged to di mice the Mimed. Alibiingh a greet excitement prevailed at the titsei'we are happy to state that all escaped Lot try. • ALLEGrir FALtlit• PRETENCE MSS —A-man named William Magali hem been; arrested on The charge ot' having obtained $ll3 tinder false pretences. It seems that 'some time tune' WWI'S= -beams ahert of-fends, ,and ; drew -a cheek spin the, Mechanise , Bank., The check wag sold to a friend, whi, upon pressating ' it at the bank. watt informed that Dugan had no 'account at tint Inetktution. • ,t - , - A Want SVAI,—AIIeOIeiI.t9IIPLI of the , coasplsin strongly of thelmmenen Mae am weight of the present stare worn hi them tai denote their at rial position. .19e learn that they have had mennfac lured a rest silver star, 'which he not nearly oo large and clumsy is that now worn which they are desirous of having substitntiedfor the present one. Smarr FlRBiri-About•nipe •o'clopk,yeater dm: morning. a are brokeout in a dr.r.goode eters at No. 257 eduth street The flirais Wahe eartliialehpd before much damage had been done... _ , i , THE COURTS. YESTEEDLY'S PEOCIAZDZXGII. (Reported for . Theresa SEW:tilde dOillti—judies ' towiie * ,' Wood ward, Thorny eon, and Read =ltobliettTe appeal. An ap peal from a decree of- 'he Orphans' fiourt. Argued by blesera.Eandall and Geo W. Biddle for the appellant, and by lideniis. B. H. Erectable and Meredith for the ap- IQ the matter of the petition of Mary ,T, Elwyn. the cony: appointed Allred L. Elwyn; 11 D.." the biriband ,of the petitioner, trustee, without ...reality, to the place of Francis Bailee, Anne Iliza Batter, and 'fling. But let, ail dectiuted. trustees named in the will of Piero] Butler, deceased- Nisi Pane— J udge Strong .— Th e case of Franck' vs Franck; an lobo!, on a promissory CAO, (Wore reported,) still °tea*e the attention of this court WARTED. SassioNs--Indgeilow.—John Williams, _who Is known to fame and the police by the familiar mid pleaning alias rf "Little Chucks," was pot en trial on the charge of baring pieked the pocket rf a Mr. Chambers, oonneetel with the .Erew leg D at- ofpocket-Inaok containing a small awn of money, on the everileg of the 12th of October last. The defenee setttplren that su2leated by the ingenious mind of Mr. Weller, herder, wean his friend, Mr. Pickwick, woe cued fer's breach of protu , se, to wit, a t‘Halibi t' cud in pursuance of this it woo sugge: tea to telegraph to the•Msyor of Pittsburg. in order to show the p ee genre of the gentleman with the pleasing alma store said before him, at the time at which Mr. Chamber. elated the offence was committed in this city. The District attireey did not see the necessity of complying with this reasoliab'e request and the trial proceeded. tie the Mayer ling not forthcoming another. gentle man—who. !molding to his own Sceonnt had the very slightest knowledge of the gentleman in the dock—hap pened, howbver , acedentaDy to i.e Vim to Pittsburg oath. 12th of &Lobar... The jury did cot seem t., be impressed with this gent.eman'c testimony, and con victed the defendant, who wet represented by Daniel • Dougherty, R.q. From Hoyt i--SOulonque's'Abdication 'Be the schooner Charlotte Minerva we have Kingston. Jamaica,- papers to Jan. 2911. The Standard, of the 29tb, says : In our fast we briefly announced that a revo lution had broken out at Hayti, headed by one General Cleffitird, and that a battle bad , been fought between the troops of Sonlobque and the revolutionists From recent - accounts we are en abled to give fuller putt:tillers. It appears that, OP arriving at -Port-au-Prince, General Otffrarti sea a flag of truce to the - Eariperor, offering hint 'his'llfe, and protection to his family, if he would abdicate but power and- save the people of flay ti from the horrors of a 01,11 war. Soulouque rte- Minded time to consider, which was allowed him, but before the allotted time bad expired the im perial troops laid down their arms and made corn: mon cause with the followers of Geffrard. The Emperor, no longer left to his choice, proceeded to make out his papers of abdication, and on the 15. h he caused the following proclamation to be made: ' HarriaNs.: Called by the will of the people to govern the destinies of Hayti, all my care and anxieties have constantly been for the welfare of my oitizons and the prosperity of my country- I held hopes that I could have relied on the affec tions of those who elevated me to,that supreme p o wer, but the last events that have taken plum sin not permit me to doubt the sentictrents of the people. ['have too ntirli Wardship for ray country to bedtate in sacrificing myself for the good cif all. I atalltate lave only one wish, that Geyti may ha as happy ati Any heart has always ilesired. D me .at Port au t Prince,,lsth day of January, 1359.1 ,, Ar' sixih year of indepene.wres (Signed) ' • - " ,:" FAUSTIN. 706 tavro&rtoss tho Napier ban, to be 14 . 1101 i to, privPeged person., will be ;inured to the President and Vale President of the United Staten, the Speaker of the House of Repreeentativp s, and the foreign reinieters and their secretaries.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers