The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, October 19, 1859, Image 1

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aany-mss.
Twarorik Chums Pill Prisxfporabie toiho'dorrioll.
4;llllll . ta'snbormfbailiol,k4thebiti,stiltipoir.r.rio
Pik OINV I6 , Fri PDLlAllUilli'Eleif/110 1 4 1.1111
/4 1 "0 4 ,ri ' 0rt , t4 . 14 loa Bni htoicrits-4147 in ad•
ratio" for thetutte ordeittel,
to sub rfbeii out 46 city as Tun pox,
30)1BIN4irOVME
1859. FAL TRADE 1850;
tiTJNN,: RAIG'pErA, da co„
D/PORTIERS 'AND JOBBERS lIV
FANCY DIM• GOODS.
,131' NORTH TRIAD 13Tit*ATo
. . . . . „ , .
„Ase- „
PrOillirid to , exhibi t at Weston= the meet
oomploto atOOk orgoods over offered by them, present
ink Unterunt ettritottone to the tie& genet Ally. ' r '
The steak etebettiees & ° midge 'axsortanont of evert,
. variety of ..
„ . .
. ,
. .
. .
'NEM"
_DREqs.'opops,
WHITE: GOODS, EMBROIDERIES,
'CLOTHS,' oAl3l4Miliari . 41.10 rBitt9o,
- • - •
HiNTRY ! - 9LoyEsi AND !RIMINI:DS, „
Wio;iWi generstsisortiOt orrallAitd7lntsi
`HA -W:l4 S. •
DASH AND PRO)APT 811 U' •
tr. M. stIEWS„I- . eAttraft4
E. Furrz.
do -1m •
yABD;;-7Gnastrpttn*oy.„
,
NoB,44lAl4lP4llNorritsqns
• a i.
114.• '
• atroinuto,uo;i4fil t iaivitik
firursi*Bion,4i.pii*
GoopicLialsitimmu.-- ,"
us4o- • , -
Lit iSta : ti
IMPO t ifTEREf ANDT,WitO WOZA4 4 / I SIN,
•FSGLIBIi ANA - ,
'SIT E T'1111,41 Al 3
rumba otrai Ellaraisio.jyriktOtCAND '
811011-MANUFACITIMERCAATIOLICO;
Sswint Machine Bilk, Thread sikd !Wm.
. 0 ;x0. so NORTH 17114,D 1 , 3 Z,
;• 44enstiljta4rEkt&VOW.BOin:401113;"
;StririrS/4 ,- .l34. , VsVigii; -tpQ;;
- : !1!! ti.ropkN No u 0 - 0 R,09.4)1LiM
maiyowitulftETl3lo4.ll:l6;,.,
TENOKTFIVIIffp STREET O AB4OI I II J ALICOV
IttOrtiiirifid` fl :
- . 145( . 1004, • 0141?TaX0 : 44il , " i i
•
n.
Jo"-44:-.`"1.:1, -'•ii
-
' '- ' -WISPAWASK,
A0.4)401mt
'; 11%11) 1' 011041*. 47 - 11ti.4. *, 11
; "Roma, rittnicaspOlitor
it-cys.:rra
- 0 1 7 X z,pl!,*ll)esit i i4,4G,
• ..44-3)4 • " " -
Prins:ikraiß'; 1
Jacon Ram+, ' - -
113 -IEGEU 'BAIRIV i air: I OO4
No. 4T 104..1)41er# napatill
O,UR-<PALL, .B:rifdPilir
'snow otonolete Wall. Ito dont:B4; oguilloOdi for
Boom ~/ oio t *Ws Ibithaotoirioth*
Alatoi , AiOToopoothillrioriopiptloasll sadestoatik tor
. ... - ,4tatOptotroo:`, " •ita -11 * I
STOVK BROKERS-.
& PkTER6•ON;
STQCS.,.BROISERS„
NO.' 89 SONtH , THINP STNE;T
.
'
iris rim soil', •
S !ORA
•OF AL;.:TB* . r.ggitriA P.4.BBgiGhla
to whiok theilivhelhei attealonoltatiods. •
- Stook!. and .Cdrozation ° l:ano - bought 'and
sold on comodindon stllle. Board of Brokini, id4Ot •
GENTIe RlVRififfili/NOve.OODS.
al e
Ar y Nr.'SOO,T : late-of the. firm -of, Win'
F • ehestly Sr -4F.NTLEIII: Eutaw
3,.,1NG 14,18.4 - -MIST- _,MAN YW°
11; ms• i cneAsi?:opiisisss ! (iy al d in ,„, ,
t wo
,- I : . l i t itict ' 40: ' situ jail , iiiii,iticn:of iii
1 - r sir smiles& _knew store, sad is prs.
, iiii7-it ordeis °rata It= Al -stunt _slops*. ~, A
- ' Caitigl=tr dd 7. .!!..- • - - , - ± . l - 1. -!!!- Id irieri II
' ''' ,
HARDWARE.
411.09..,' •
BEPOEtERB4ND WHOLESALE DEALERS
• H: R
CUTLEHY J 6 DNS, PIBTOLi s ail:, !
50;9 MARKET 121 MET. 549
BELOW SIXTH, NORT H BIDE,
=itif-Sto: ' PHILADELPHIA..
111100REHENSZ EY & CO.,
EAROX - ARE, CUTLERY, AND OU
14rARE730USE.'_
, . - - , - .•
MARicRIVAND 4.I.B.OOMaina#,UTILI
MEUICIIYAL.
Atm innum . ,: ' '
- .01 . EXPERIENOssm NUM A 1111) ritntithZ
11 ""lbrrit i ltl"er"
__
'FOR , 011/14DREN TENTHING,
'Wh i rl, faoill g harpouortaathing, by wit
*V .11. a IN; ~,,t Fida n uatAott 4 Will WAY
‘ 4". atiarVitto ti' ,P wsti.•
~ cogeons,iimenh Writ rarest ta , yoursehrea
IltP AIM R VI TO YOtrit INFANTA:
, a ko is it s tattur and 2Wm tato a, for over tea
e • Rey, eon ow 4 gee:s sad loth oii,
I 7 1 . 1 1 )11 14 T7P &Elf ?LI 1 .
~ 1 i• 1 • 11 ,1 AR 01 „a A 0 u ttig, ..‘ 11.
.. aver did 1, 4 know art Wanes of
•,i___ • boa . say at • , awl it. 00 the con
- 7 ,-- •0 1' tal , 4eltatt 1 :0 4 tta oparatqns• atid
' „b ac MOPE 0 , daMonotitiatt
) a tit 'l • 4 . 44 4 in ", IV 1 X 4 044 4 ? t :drft 10 1 i
1arM41414311
i tiodattott y .,„ reoutat i llg, at the Sal -
. MLL c f Itleot .joefe ea ,__, .hife, . * mod „ vela
Vero e %to pi mire wg from Hi*
t lbe fauna in saw oFmoa t
ptitrt% ::: ailatiatatere4. , , 49
' We "ZWrze It 'Oß l frtriffecAtt
iMerilafflalWEllVal to has Witt vaat with
•-• sl " l " " Nareatla „,` s Ir_didtrk j , ' ' ''. ,
= itaaa at i rshavoitas %., ttlia‘fratn viun. j hat in
. estoloooolo% " ' atagteata • await
. vas matte au It It the ola m ajOr t a
+i • hi l i 0 Cappanda‘ltattiaataf.
lerta64 f ittt; 4 „„t tin reined end ir k
r
...4 4 ,...0..,,.. MYO itad n trAlt
,A i . 1, X ',het art Hu ram
- wag or non effy ft iz , 141141.111444 et yaw iitly to
'• 14%1 (444 000 " " Tr Et 3 1 4 d tterVer
, if or •
za ' oes -tg ' at ii% *Tatou' r o t
: lagAin a ~,`, 0, i11tM04.4
-nix= , at , ,„„ at r l rr i ..r„,te_ , ‘—;
i t
ria4
i r the feet manta ofOURTIft YUJI
'': m g; " ce
tOusroaTZVArkiaai
r, No. en*. prim kerk. , 'low
-,. 4llof:YOTtlittlitTV
4,t "ircii isle 4:: 1
•FG1124".-200 bblit.; ZOO ; 140
- anarter btit; 2, 00 orullateht Tallow OrMis
3 i,
Ven r if."rirgireMeit sn k a it renag
11011ORM'S' FOOD' FOR 'OATtLE: • '
•, , ,•;',4,..-:1- -'; - .:, .. f.lat limy?! :-; ~ , „
,„,:- ;
1
:' , •;- , l'• - =' , FO gi p! s - ' •
;4fir ttquir vill- ityp_ it itAr l ‘ lN . lll4tis avirargn
;,.. - Pa t =ti; t fittitio 41:41 1 ' 144=111 4 1411i mg &P
42t i tglinlegarri bi glie=g1 4 47 4 7VIJI
• -';( :• 4 % 411 tiC°4l°,4"4lt/Y•ltlik,ko6satt. 1 :411 0„xl
t
Ai t s-. 4 1) airg„ M the ri feh d l A vria l itettel e ati v ru d r ed at
441IttijititAttptatobtston Atirtf!tpildeoit- = 1, , , • •
t;*:lli!!''''''": , ::: . ' : ''''' ''
'- ' FatioNiania.,
-kag - 0 - .*:.4ififirg::44,l, iwiiiiafento
i. ..,. ~
VOL. ?. -- NO. 67.
S AWL SALE!
The' attention of buyers is especially invited to.the
following
BLANKET SHAWLS :
•
LONG BLANKET SHAWLS,
SQUARE BLANKET SHAWLS,
Arisiei' 'LONG AND SQUARE SHAWLS
CHILDREN'S BLANKET SHAWLS
MIDDDESEX, WASHINGTON,
BAY STATE. WATERLOO.
' WATERVLEIT, AND PEACEDALE CO.'S
FRENCH BLANKET, SHAWLS,
SCOTCH BLANKET' SHAWLS,
• LONG AND SQUARE.
,ntiNol - 1 REVERSIBLE SHAWLS.
• A FU'IL 'LINE
SHAWLS.
„Lorick BRoonE,strewLa. •
• SQUARE DRUM SHAWLS.
* lowa- tioc*,',-.
L'ONO bkrititigi- z .
~- L , '
_: " .
A 6 litas:,
StiyAlitg 0 Illt Buoili.4 ..
. • ..-
- ' SQUARE MOWS E#4'W,LS:
o • T;ltflit4 ' 'o ,, l'tiA. WLB a
, ' , 111.1 A COORED CENTRES,
, .`JPATMORPEREA:ATELL 4 OO -
. iirtocaDEßND STELLAR, - . - -
• - PRINT rr it crAcE tilaltWGS,
'' MISS 1811AVIT.S; :
• ' imud*lper rna.,:latirkw,' , • ,
bimpioini:i;n;iotatiiiiis 4:4ment. ot. - :
. •' - •Saii.*.r4S , .
= - / - ,N , T,lrl'il• ;hi.AII , KE T. - -
-.•- •, ', , Ira, B*.to to
c4pn. - 4.tip,P,g9II4I I BI . *IMONTILS BUYERS. 1
- JOSHUA L. DAILY,
.; 2.14 , WARM Bram,
:"00 . i4-iij' . ;',>'", 7l;:'." . ` - ;. : I, 2 '„iiiii;AitplijA;
1854' , 4 61 .1qfPN. - -1.859
-- t iciptal,kpl!tigpit . & - QO,
yr, ,MN riP ,, , , ip :1 , 50-rldarqa. .. ~ ,' ,'•, . , , - . •
30010101116111;iiiiIi208011Ugatt
•31042-.bitiivais, mut ixtll continue to'
7 Mltt-01 - 04: WWII% uiort-'
"Ilif 0 0! , -7111,1N11111: OF* -- ••, , •
.I#Z .i . 7 , ,,,r . ...rdi1" "s''• ' ,' . ; . ‘.. ' . , '
,'.., ,
.:. iVIT:OI ' i j OhIoitD"C4AIATLICTIL ,
..''.7r• , , L -lie -3, - ' t's.:•.Av,.. , :iii - --- -. , , ,
'fi l Y k-1 4 ,' , ..,' . '.', '' ' •." I „Intg I IPA. I P• PAN 7* '
.':;-,,,,',, - 4 : r• - : - ,1 4.- ---.'.
Sliwk airS7ifiii *AK oribmi Cravat&
Lhori, Coomboanhsiillakrathi.- 0" '-' = :--, -
" • . 131IXT/OUWV9OIi:ZEPHYRB, ko.
atm, Fi toisagoktgOOkolltilirrf k LAM osof
."': - . 1 V.-`
`.:11 r . ' , S.W . ! 7 1404 °P 31 Ditateg• -= , .i
litclaVoilvi!"44. o- 441 6 1•54.'S '.-snr- -0 .44ff,? , .... ,,, i;
4:00144,00. • . - ...
" 0 tfte. 6 ,01 1 41: 1 . 4
!•rovilk . , luisititti t. : !,•, .._ 11oj
',lrbitgle-01,..45090.90P0 to
4 4 4.-4.l v c.
, !--**AkekiaLtoktoitwait i i
0 i ,,, .$:- s '-., i
. t 1
4,,,, ,
o pot
0 O ' M t
;644 4•"'"X ‘
~liii,,, , esW -L4
4,10 .
... :o*ol6oo. : , ,, ,44 747441
•,. ~.-.• ..,-, 4 •.,*(4. - - -..,4•11M14 11 W . • • 1
1- CLOTHS!!!
8 . 1.1'01)47-a'A ss & Si'EELMAN,
OLOTHS, VESTINGS, &0.,
NO. 62,80 UTE, BEOOND STREET,
ABOVE.OKEBTNUT;
'Are, daily reoeinag addition to their already large
stoelrer. - . ,
; : c,..FA-1;114 GOODS
Comprised in pert of •
BLACK, 'AND - cotoltED CLOTHE,
4!„ " BgAnns,
"• CAMIMERES AND DOESKIN',
tLAIN 4ND PANCY:CABSTIVIEAK
NUM, TELT= AND PANIIMPA U N IIEt3TINOB, Ecc
'N. B.—A vine!). of Cloths and Beavers suitable for
LADIES! DLOASIS'.and MANTILLAS, all or which
will be sold at reasonable primp. 114-tf
W. S. STEWART ' & CO..
•
JOBBERS OS . AtIETION GOODS,
• SOS MARKET STREET,AI3OVE THIRD.
Minnow to Store a full line of
..11LAPK'AND: FANCY SILKS.
BROCHVAND OTHER BRAWLS,
• SILK MANTILLA VELYETB,
Kell limbs; rind 'alt . & new febries in brim Goode, to
,which we invite the attention of
01111,011) PROMPT SIX-MONTH BUYERS.
, AS..arn
SITER, PRICE, 45a CO.,
yORRIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS
J. W. GIBBS & SONS.
NO. S3l MARKET STREET.
die tifir °genius : their
FALI. & WINTER STOCK OF GOODS ADAPTED TO
.IVIEE'N'S WEAR.
to whiob will be found u fall amiunent of
CLOTH?, DOESKINS,, TESTINGS, TRIMMINGS,
&c.- ' aol-3m
R WOOD,-HARSH, k HAYWARD,
"IMPORTERS
AND
191I0LB8ALE DEALERS IN
DRY GOODR AND OLOTH/NG ;
N 0.309 MARKET STREET.
, IMILADELPRIA.
Pan and Winter Stook now °omelets and ready for
Wen!. ano-em
MOOMTOCIE, GRANT, & CO.,
IMPORTERS AND WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
CLOTHE, CASSIMERES, VESTINOS,
lAD
TAILORS' TRIMMINGS.
NO, 333 MARKET STREET,
aIair"THILADELPHIA.
A VG' 'LITTLE & Co.,
.:,E3/LIK GOODS.
NO. 3Z5 MARKET BT.
SHAPLEKIII, RUE. & CO.,
IMPORT/Iss Wit
LIIiIINBEIOODS,
LAMA an 4
IJIHROIDERIPAL
aso swim sTnspr.
Air Ose Reek, selected in the best iiropenn =Theta
oltlinfree. to lance and complete. sue-Om
- •wittaAlvD4ow It CO.,
4, •
4 9n/OLEDALE DEALERS AND JOBBERS IN
DAY GOODS,
SO.,Ori MARKET STREET,
(And AlkOommetee street.)
vsswtour fousit 'Asti emu, rrownt elm
9sr stoo)r. esseetaili adapted to Southern and West
ern trade, is now large and amulet@ In every gertl
cuter. " aut-tf
do bl4s, assorted,
:CMWAttfrrik
1 85 9 t4L nyoRTATIONS. I B S 9
DALE, ROSS &
1111 iiIARKET, AND Ole COMMERCE OT.RISETB*
AND
le AMOY 1100.1)8,
IW* Sow' 94}thattita stook, t 9 Which that Invite the at
Nation of bwere. atilt-ant
L. .{
r / 4:tr
/ 14..1,4
_ - • `‘• 11 1 •
. • •
.• • • ~. • •
xiirb Ls
.• .
...•„„ , .•• •
1.
• . Mi ll -••• • ' ,, " 4" , 4 -
• -
. ,
• , • - r , z - 11
•
DRY-GOODS 400BERS.
- IMPORTERS :AND DEALERS IN
IMPORTEBS AND JOBBERS
815 MARKET STREET.
KILADELPHIA ,
IIiPORINRB AND JOBBERS !
- - or
SILK
MILLINERY GOODS.
NO. • 2.1.
Now open, the cheapest assortment of MILLINERY
GOODS in this city, sold for cash, or on short time, at
wholesale only, .
RIBBONS, FLOWERS.
FEATHERS, RETCHES,
VELVETS. SATINS.
BONNET MATERIALS, and
STRAW GOODS,
To which we call the attention of tho trade, as we are
closing out our
FALL IMPORTATIONS
AT UNUSUAL LOW PRICES.
No. 21, M. BERNIIEIM & CO., No. 21.
523-lm NO. 21 SOUTH SECOND STREET.
431 MAREET STREET. 431
•
RIBBQNS.
Of every kind, in Immense variety
NEW BONNET MATERIALS, .
BONNET VELVETS; SATINS,
• • itikaaii , iii6,Limmu
13NGLLSB GRAPES, of t h . beet makes,
," • ; PENNON li r iMERICAN ARTIFICIAL
-'•
FLOWERS, FEATHERS, RUORES, &c
Ahs,:talyeet,Fall Miles of
. •
OSA . * , &240.8AN0K , BOSITET9,
And STRAW GOODS, of every deeenetion,
"NO* opetWand animating altOnether the Rost oont
plets'itookot MILLINERY GOODS is thii inerket.
Iderehante and Milliners, from every 'action of the
eountry Sri eordially invited to call and examine our
oPer at the
,CLOSEST POSSIBLE PRICES.
I ROSEiggEIM, BROOKS, L 00.,
,sslo-tuovlo 431 14211111' svioner.
T • T - ITT.T. tIORN JONES.
ss
Imparteiand Meoefaciatuer of
FANCY SILK
- STRAW BONNETS.
AIitTLFIOI4, 21,0virEps, -
BATHERS, RUSHES, &c
The attention of City and Scatetry Sealant ta invited,
to a lam sad vatted stook of the above good; at
'432 MARKET STREET,
Below FIFTH.
at:J..-tiMFERGER, No. 116 North
M/
RENDSW et is pretested to exhibitibe most
motetlnoltllditttert l ttoptle,ooTrieng Ribbon',
to ew t ril at r i t_, L aces, uoV, Velvet",
and ler IMI. • ri An UM wort:
two .W . A . Pattern *prude, to al °tie ipli e would in
attention of Merobunte and idi liners.
a low =o r t e d i epr received from Auotton,anatZat
SOOTS AND SHOES.
,HAZELTA ! & HARMER,
. • MANHViOTURERS
JAD'
wlicirmAT R DHALERB
BOOTS AND SHOES.
NO 128 NORTH THIRD STRUT.
, A f&1 mooninent of City made Dooti and Shoos con
'ziatitly'Oii Mild. • $lO-tf
/daOI:IRDY 4 SON,
3 , -avi4OILVII4IIPT STARLET,. (Ed WOE.)
bAPUIR KORSAis CANA OHE,DAI3E'B BOOTS,
L- SNOWAND 0.4.12TA9,
' '• •
'• •• talks Satan Tirade. mates
__ . .
FALL STOCK
BOOTS AND SHOES.
JOSEPH H. THOM EION--lersetss..... - - 1-1
Re MARKET STRESS,
Have now on head lugs stook of
BOOTS AND itiHOES
EVERY VARIETY, EASTERN AND OITY MADE.
Purohasers vioiting the olty will please call and en
amine their Moak. 1,26-tf
LEVICK„ BASIN, & CO.,
SOOT AND SHOE WAREHOUSE
AND
MANIIPA.OTORY,
No. SOS MARKET STREET, Philadelphia.
We have now on hand an extensive StoolCof Boots
and Shoes, of all Maori ptioni, Mom owN and EASTERN
Manufacture, to whiohwe invite the attention of South
ern and Weetern buyers. aus-3m
CLOTHING.
RAPHAEL P. M. ESTRADA,
MERCHANT TAILOR.
FINE FASHIONABLE
BEADY -MADE O.LOTII I N
AND
SUPERIOR FABRICS FOR CUSTOMER WORK,
NO. El SOUTH SEVENTH STREET,
PHILADELPHIA.
RAPHAEL. pp M. ESTR J OHNS
havin associated with
him as ARTIIiTIC CUTTER, Mr. OHN HOBSON
late of Gyanville Stokes',) respectfully invites tho at
tention of the public to _by hew establieliment, and his
splendid *stook of YURNISHINO 1100Dti for Gentle
men's wear.
He has on hand a choke seloction of Fabrics especial
ly M
for customer worn., and a , varied assortment of fa
shionable READY-ADE CLOTHING, to which ho
invites the attention Of buyers. Ranh article warranted
to s ire entire satisfaction.
41-3 m JOHN ROBSON, Artist.
LIPPINCOTT, lIUNTER, & SCOTT,
MANUFACTURERS AND JOBBERS •
or
COMMON, MEDIUM, AND •
FINE CLOTHING.
We invite epeeist attention to our oomplote line of
IHAOHINErIKANUFACTURED GOODS,
NOS. 494 MARKET, & 419 MERCHANT ST&
aue-im
DRUGS. CHEMICALS, &c.
DRUGS, GLASS, PAINTS, &a.
ROBT. SHOEMAKER & CO.
NORTHEAST CORNER
FOURTH AND RAMC STRIIIHTB,
WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS,
Importers and Dealers in WINDOW WASS, PAINTS.
&0., invite the attention of
COUNTRY MERCHANTS
To their large stock of Goods, which they offer at the
lowest market rates. oce-tf
CIGARS, TOBACCO, Arc.
A . MERINO,
1408011TH FRONT BTREIT,
Has Matore and bond, and
Offers for Bate, a Large Aeuntmegr of
GICIARS,
Reoetoed direct from Harem, of cholae sad founts
Brands, ame-tf
CARRIAGES
OF THE MANUFACTURE OF
WILLIAM D. ROGEES.
REPOSITORY.,
1009 CHESTNUT STREET. • 1011
1164 m
15,000 BOX ES AMERICAN AND
FRENCH WINDOW °LABS- -The moat
approved brands, and Of Ovary arse and quality rOgUirOd
tor oily and sountry trade, at pones adonis, AnglY
Bend your orders lu ZIEGLER & SMDI 'IL Drug,
Paint. Glass, and varnish Dealers, corner lIECOND
and GREEN Streets. 8134
ACKFAEL —425 bble.,TBo he ilveg, 115
J-T-s- quarters, and WS kltts prime No. Is • WO Itta. and
gq halves large No. 3s, in Mors and tor . sal! 12y. WM. J.
TAYLOR & CO., 122 end 121 North Wril Yew. 08
PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1859.
WATCHES, JEWELRY, &c.
SILVER W4RE.
WM. WILSON & SON
Invite sonata! attention to their stook of SILVER
WARE, which is now unusually large, affording a va
riety of pattern and design unsurpassed by any house
the United Staten, and of finer quality than is manufac
tured for table nee in any part of the world.
Our Standard of Silver is 935-1000 part pure.
The English Sterling ..925-1000 "
American and Frenob ' 900-1000 tt
Thus it will be seen that we give thirty-five parts purer
than theamerioan and French coin,
and ten parts purer
than the English Sterling. We mel t all our own Silver,
and our Foreman being consented with the Refining Re
partment of the United States Mint for several years,ive
guarantee the quality as above (9351, which is the hurt
that sax bo made to be serrotesne/s, and will resist the
action of acids meth bitter rhos tAs ordinary Si/oir
vumnfastared.
WM. WiLSON SON,
a. W. CORNER FIFTH :AND CHERRY 13211.
71 •
N.l3.—Any fi neness of Silveri f tanufatitured ao agreed
upon, but positively none inforsO f to Renck and Ameri
can standard.
Dealers euriplied Withfitoi' standard am used in
our retail department. ~ , L ''
Fine Silver Bare, 900-1000 " pore, constantly . on'
band. 1.. au94-6m
, .
BAILEY & 001
YORMINICI:e
BAILEY xrroußN,
NATO rhinoved to, this new rintinroot i White Marble
(Store,
WIESTEET
' MONTE SIDE, BELOW TR4OIRARD HOUSE,
Now opening their P Stook of -
IMPORTED JEWELRY, PIA D WARES, AND
FANCY GOO ,
To which they hints the tine , on of the nubile.
RENEE-WARE, WATCHES:DIAMONDS, AND
PEARLB,:-
AV WHOLINALE ANDVITALI).
JB. JA RDEN & `,
*MANUFACTURERS ANDIMPORTERB OF
RILVER-PLATED WARE
No.RH OREETNIJ'T Street, aboii With ND 40 ,1 11.
rhiladelphlio
PtT OoniAntlysiand ond (Ito thoyradi, RN
TEAT. uo InUON E 6,
&0.,
A
RB,. ETE; OU !MERE, AR
TN/ ' ORE, KNI SPooNs,
• ' NKR, LADLEN,
aitd laming on ell kipds at motel. ne247
REMOVALS;
REMOVAL/.
The Subscriber having
REMOVED'_TO
255 MARKET SNREET,
(The store formerly ocoupled by J. 13, Ellison tc Sam)
Would call the aUention of buyers to his largo and well ,
seleoted stook of
CLOTHS. ovaRcoATINGS.
OASSIMERRS, SATINETTB,
VESTINOS, TAILORS' TRIMMINGS,
And all other goods adapted to Men and Boys' wear
• JOHN V. TERRY.
003-lm 1100 MARKET STREET.
REMOVAL.—MARTIN it 'WOLFF have
AAP Remove where, tat MARRST Street, South side t
tallow Fourth,they one, a choice assortment ot
ran and Winter Boole. at very low slums. 113.2 m
PAPER HANGINGS, atc.
PAPER HANGINGS.
NOW 111 TUN TIME TO
PAPER YOUR HOUSES.
HART, MONTGOMERY, & CO.,
110, 322 011BEITIIRT STREET.
Hove for sale every mitt' of
-
PAPERHANGINGS.
BORDERS, &0..
Which will be sold at the lowest rata, and put up by
careful workmen. 12W-droolo
WALL PARER WAREHOUSE.
HOWELL & BOURKE,
(snow Manuel
11IRCITATiT BTIIIT.
ni r iF6oll rand a large and splendid assortment of
WALLL AND
WINDOW PAPERS,
To which they Invite the attention of
WESTERN AND SOUTHERN ItarYERS
ann.-tat
FANCY DRY GOODS JOBBERS.
SCHAFFER dc ROBERTS.
429 MARKET STREET,
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS
or
HOSIERY, GLOVES,
SMALL WARES, COMBS,
BRUSHES, LOOKING-GLASSES,
HERMAN and FRENOMPANOY GOODS,
AND
TAILORS' TRIMMINGS. ou6-3s
M . AItTINS, PEDDLE,
& HAMRICK,
Importers end dealers in
HOSIERY, GLOVES, AND FANOY NOTIONS,
N 0.30 NORTH FOURTH STREET,
Five doors below the Merchants' Hotel,
Offer for sale the most complete stook of Goode in their
line to be found in the thorn° Starks, consisting of
HOSIERY of every grade.
GLOVES in three hundred varieties.
UNinillaßTB OM f line i l } l:AAWkgB.
& SINR I VAIONTS.
ADIES . ELASTIC BELTS, with clasps or en.
tirely. new non, with en eudless variety o f NO
VOrtil,to whir, they invite the attention of
FIRBT-0 WESTERN AND SOUTHER
BUYERS. aus- N
3ro
•
HATS. CAPS. &o.
18 59. FALL TRADE. 1859 .
0. H. GARDEN 83 CO..
Manufacturers of and Wholesale Deakin in
HATS. CAPS. FURS.
SILK AND STRAWONNETS,
AND STRAWGOODS,
ARTI ICIAL_FLOWERS,
FEATHERS, RUCHES, &c., &c.,
- NOS. 000 AND 602 MARKET STREET,
EXTENSIVE B ST w CK ea DE e ST f
TERMS, LOWEST
aulB3m PRICES.
UMBRELLAS.
SLEEPER & FENNER.
WHOLESALE MANUFACTURERS
oP
UMBRELLAS AND PARASOLS,
336 MARKET STREET. PHILA.,
Are now makK mote than viva HUNDRED DIEPERINT
VARIETIES Of Umbrellas, of every eine, from 12 to 40
inches.
Buyer., who have not heft B. & make of goods gill
find their tient well spent In looking over this well. mule
100 k, Whiek InOtildell MONT lIOVIL7IIIII, not to be met
with alsetalttre. ex6-3m
BRUSHES.
THE CHEAPEST BRUSH HOUSE IN
PHILADELYHM—Look et the following list of
prises for Hndsorubs, end eompnre them With those
Bought elsew here,
N 0.1,63 knob , 62Xper,jjoion.
No. 6 , W kots, 16
.10.3, 64 knots, ST '"
ro. 1, 80 knots, lto "
So.', 83 knots, llf "
Yo. SOW knots, LW "
filo. 7,164 knots, 160 "
No. 0. HO knots,l7o it
HENRY C. ECKSTEIN.
U North THIRD Street, below Aroh,
Mninneistas.
COAL OIL.
•
PHILADELPHIA
PHOTIO GOAL OIL WOREB
BURNING AND LUDRICATIND COAL OILS
I.
Naaafsetztred and for sale try
lIELME, MORRIS, & 00.,
THIRTIETH, NORTH OF MARKET BTREET
.w-em
AM S AND SHOULDERS.-1,700
ALA- Pieces Car Smoked Hemel and Shoulders. Also,
800 pleopis extra. Buyer Cured Hem. for sale by C. C.
NADLER CO., ARCH Street, meoond door stove
Front.
HERRING. --270 bble Pickled Ilerriag,
suo. MO Naomi Smoked Herring, for enbi by 0 0.
A.ADLER & CV., ARCH Street, second door adove
Front, $8
MACKEREL.-725 bbls. Nos. 1,2, and 3
Mackerel, in assorted Original Paokages, of the
West catch, for sale by C. C. SADLER, & CO., ARM!
Street, seoond door above Front. di
MANILA ROPE.—A large stock of Ma
i ria• ads, Roae, all sites, manufactured and for vie,
at the lowest Now York sites,,
WHAYNR ITLER,k CP., of
Nn.l9 N. WATIM and is . Tkl . AWARE A
ALCOHOL, BURNING FLUID, and PINE
OM, in bbleAn& half-bble. hinnufnctured and fur
sale lir ROWLEY, ASHBURNER & CO..
No la Pon tit arva a.
300 riTILS, No. 1 HERRING-100 half
bld extrrt Mackinaw White Fish, in uteri. atd
fnriIARVEL h. M. J. TAYLOR kin and 12.4 North
ot
gljt Vrtss.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1859.
The Diamond Wedding.
We omitted, in our comments on the flunkey
ism and unmitigated snobbery of the recent
wedding at New York, to mention that Miss
FRANCES AMELIA. BARTLETT, the envied bride,
who "floated to her carriage, followed by her
train of attendant divinities," is aged eighteen,
and that the juvenile bridegroom, Don ESTEBAN
SANTA CRUZ DE OVIEDO, is stated by the New
York papers to have reached the age of fifty
five. It is quite a December and May affair,
and the whole transaction indicates that the
young woman has been literally sold to the
saffron-complexioned Cuban, who is old
enough to be her grandfather, and fully paid
for by him. The probable future of such a
purchase is painful to think of. Marrying for
money is common enough; but it has not been
'the fashion, until now and in New York, pub
licly to parade the exhibition of the sacrifice.
The whole affair merits unmitigated reprehen
sion.
The original intention was that, the bride
being a Protestant, there should be a double
marriage—at Grace Church as well as at the
Catholic Cathedral. A great deal of fuss and
bother was prevented, however, by the young
lady's opportunely changing her religion a few
days previous to the marriage, which made the
solemnisation by Archbishop HuunEs quite
sufficient. It is added that the young lady,
though by no means of Amazonian propor
tions—of the ordinary feminine stature, in
fact—is yet some three inches taller than her
lord and master.
At the marriage, ho appeared like a yellow
dwarf beside her. How proud must she be of
having boon bought by such a being!
In connection with this marriage, or rather
upon the remarks wo made upon it, the Now
York Times of Monday assures us that the
principal performers in this matrimonial drama
claimed no privacy, but invited publicity. It
says:
'"They have, on the contrary, not only consented
to its being regarded and treated as a publics af
fair, but have given all possible aid to the news
papers in their endeavor to enlighten the public in
regard to it. It certainly was not without their
knowledge that the fact of the engagement was
made known, months ago, through the press; the
statements of the extent and nature of the bride
groom's wealth were too minute, and we pre
sume too accurate, to have come from any but
the most reliable quarter, especially as he had
not previously been well enough known in New
York to render such details otherwise accessible,
and we have no reason to suppose that the jewelers,
milliners, costumers, and out-fitters generally,
whom he made prosperous and happy by hie lavish
disbursements, were sworn to Heresy as to the ex
tent and character of the orders they received.
And when tickets to the ceremony, cards of invita
tion to both the church and house, were sent in ad
vance to editors and reporters of newspapers in
their professional capacity, there wan room cer
tainly for the belief that a description of the sad r
would not only not be regarded as an Infringement of
the proprieties of private life, but would, also fulfil
the, ust and reasonable expectations of the patties
most prominently ooneltrned."
Wo copied the Tribune's account of the
marriage, because it was at once the moat
brief and least exaggerated, and we were
bound to show our readers what all the Moo
was made about in New York. What we
chiefly condemned was not so much what the
newspapers said (though tlio tiunkeyism and
snobbery of the Herald's nearly three columns
and a half of high falutin description was a
sort of moral ipecacuanha) as what Fifth Ave
nne did on that occasion—the Five Points con
tributing /heir fashion ,and numbers to await
the throng of persons in and around the Ca
thedral who thronged to—see the bride's dress,
as the Herald candidly confessed. The whole
exposition, betbre the public on the wedding
day and in print the next morning, is "racy
of the soil" of New York, and never could
have taken place in Philadelphia—even had
the lady been twice as pretty, the Cuban
twice as old, and his dollars twice as Mime..
THE BRODERICK TRAGEDY.
A MONUMENT TO HIS MEMORY
(Correspondence of The Proul
QuiNoy, Illinois, Oct. 12, 1859
DEAR COLONEL FORNEY' : I have no doubt but
you, and the entire anti-Lecompton Democracy of
Pennsylvania and of the Union, have received
with profound regret the news of the death of
Senator Broderick. Ho was, indeed, a true and
noble man, and has fallen a martyr to his devotion
to principle. No threats could intimidate, and n•
bribery could roach him. Ile was a pure patriot
and an honest man, and stood In the Senate as a
wall of fire to stay the present rotten Administra
tion's wielced and' plundering schemes. • It became
necessary to remove him out of the way, and MB le
cation was favorable to the success of the conspi
racy.
The most extreme and violent Lecompton pro
slavery Administration sentiment seems to reign
supreme in California, and, for the want of reason
and argument to sustain it, breaks forth in violence
ant blood. That was the only free State in the
whole Confederacy whose Legislature could ho in
duced to pass resolutions of instruction in favor of
the infamous Looompton Constitution, and it will
be the only one In the next Presidential contest
that will sustain the damning policy of the present
Executive anti his advisors, if the Charleston C 6
vontion should be foolish and suicidal enough to at
tempt to follow it up. Of all the men in the holden
State none were so prominent or bold in defence of
Popular Sovereignty as David C. Broderick and
Joseph C. MoKibbin, and hence, although crushed
at the election, it was not enough to satiate the
bloodthirsty demands of tto Administration, and
their lives were to bo the Unfelt of their refusal to
submit. The generous anti gifted Ferguson made
a most eloquent and powerful speech against the
Lecompton Iniquity, and he fell by the hands of an
Administration Leoompton man for it. Broderick
opposed the same ineasure, and he, too, has been
stricken down by ono of the same party.
The conspiracy that struck Broderick out of the
Senate has other oldects to accomplish, and hired
tools can be found' to consummate them. Douglas
is yet left. No man Letter understood the spirit of
the Administration towards the Illinois Senator
than Mr. Crittenden, of Kentucky, when he stated
in a letter, which was published in this State
during the late contest fur Senator, that the life of
Mr. Douglas writs in danger. That efforts will be
made to dispose of him before the meeting of the
Charleston Convention, I have not a solitary
doubt. lie is the Mordecai that sits at the gate
and refuses, at the aaorilloo of principle, to do re
verence to the wicked Haman.
That the President secretly rejoices at the death
of Mr. Broderick, no one acquainted with the
feeling that prevails at Washington will, for a
moment, doubt. That he would illuminate the
White House if he was not restrained by the fear
the people would pull it down over his head if
some of his devotees—or rather the devotees of his
power and patronage, (for scarcely any one noir
respects him personally)—would serve Judge Dou
glas as Mr. Broderick has been served, admits of
no question. It was publicly talked on the streets
lest winter, at Washington, that If a certain
friend of the President, who was pursuing the
Judge with great malignity, challenged him, he
would be entitled to a clerkship; if ho succeeded in
getting him to fight he would bo given a consulship,
and if he succeeded In killing him ho would re
ceive a first-claw mission. Although these re
marks were made partly in Jest, every ono under
stood there was tool much truth in them. A
Senator who had pursued Judge Douglas with the
greatest virulence had hardly stepped out of his
Senatorial position with the full permission of his
constituents, before he was given a foreign mission.
A reward—a largo reward, no less than the patron
ago of the Government—has been held out to crush
him, and every other man who would not bow
down and worship at the command of power,
and sanction the moat Iniquitous and damning
measures.
In California this power has boon almost su
premo, and the President will justly bo hold re.
eponsiblo at the bar of public opinion for the con
sequences of Its exercise. Johnson, who killed
Ferguson, and Terry, who kilted Broderick, are
neither of them responsible, though the latter held
a responsible position, to which he was elected
before the Vigilance Committee passed sentence of
death upon him. Those men wore only the in•
stroments of others, and of the spirit of the con
spiracy that did the foil deeds, and that influence
which prompted them to imbrue their hands in
blood will protect then front punishment. They
know well what they were about, and what risks
they were running. The trial of Johnson, who is a
Mississippian, was a mockery, and that of Terry,
who is a Texan, will be the same. Thornily guilty
parties will go tenwhipped of justice before' a legal
tribunal, but the retribution of public scorn and
indignation will be sure to overtake them.
But my pen is running boyond the design I had
when I commenced writing. I wanted to make a
suggestion in regard to poor Broilerlok. Having
had ample opportunity, during the last two sessions
of Congress, to become fully acquainted with his
character and his worth, and knowing him to have
been a high-toned gentleman and truo patriot, I
propose that there shall be a meeting of his anti-
Leeompton friends at Washington city, say in De-
cember or January next, to take measures for the
erection of a suitable monument to hiellitemory.
Ho stood with us as a moral hero during the fear
ful Locompton struggle, and now that he has fallen
a martyr to our cause, shall wo suffer him to pass
away without a suitable testimonial of our respect
and gratitude ? Shall we suffer the gush of sorrow
we fool at his death to die and let his memory go
out forever? What say .you, Colonel Forney, to
the suggestion ? What say you, Judges Chapman
and Hickman, of Pennsylvania ? What say you,
Raskin and Clarke, of Now York, Adrain of New
Jersey, Davis of Indiana, Senator and Represent.
atives of Illinois, and the long line of worthy ad
vocates of anti-Lecomptoniam ?
What say you to the proposition? Let us at
least moot and hold a consultation on the subject.
We shall be unworthy of ourselves if we prove un
grateful to each other. If the proper effort is
made there can be no question but that the hearts
of the friends of justice and right will swell with
grateful emotion, and that they will pour in their
contributions to the noble object. I speak to you
through Colonel Forney, and hope, Colonel, you
will speak for yourself.
Mr. Broderick leaves no relations. There runs
not a drop of his blood in the veins of any human
being, and let us see to his fame. lie sleeps his
last sleep upon the far-off shores of the Pacific, but
lot the capital of the nation ho honored with a
monument to his memory, upon which shall bo in
scribed an epitaph something like the following:
TIM ANTI•LECOMPTON FRIENDS
OF THE
HON. DAVID C. BRODERICK,
WHO FELL, WHILE A SENATOR IN THE CONGRESS
OP TUE UNITED STATES FROM THE STATE
OF CALIFORNIA, Or THE HANDS OF
MEN? OF A FOUL. CON
P I II A C
A MARTYR
TO HIS PRINCIPLES, RAVE ERECTED
TIIIS MONUMENT
In honor of his moral courage and heroic opposition
to the unjust demands and malignant spirit of the
tyrannical Administration of James Buchanan.
POSTERITY WILL HONOR HIM TOR IT.
I have Written, dear Colonel, this impromptu lot
tar in haste, and just as I felt and as I know the
facts narrated, and send you the original draft;
you are at liberty to publish it in The Press. J.
LET A MONUMENT BE REARED TO IHS
MEMORY
(From the San Francisco Timee.l
A great man has fallen—ono who had done snore
to impress his name and character on the history
of California than any man living. lie was a man
who came up from the people, and, by his own
force of character and integrity of principle, made
his way to the highest position In the country. In
that position ho had won the esteem and respect of
the wise and good throughout the entire country.
Though but recently elevated to this high place,
and having on one side the blandishments of power
and the prospects of basking in the smiles of execu
tive favor if he would desert his principles, while,
on the other, he was sure to meet the " insolence of
office," and the most relentless and malignant perse
cution, if he adhered to his convictions and follow
ed the right, ho did not hesitate for a moment, but
boldly jumped into the hottest of the conflict and
did manly service for the great principle of popu
lar liberty. For years ho had been bunted as by
blood-hounds, because be dared to breast the tide
of slavery aggrerslon, and fighting for freedom he
fell, ensnared In the meshes of a bloody code. He
has been during the last nine years the most pro
minent man in the State, and he always exercised
his power and influence so justly that no man can
cite his record to his disadvantage. lie was a true
man; true to his friends and true to his principles.
He was a great man. None other could by his in
dividual will wield such an influence and be looked
up to by all as a king, made so by the great Archi
tect who creates kings and potentates.
But he is dead: fallen en the great battle ter
popular liberty. Though unhappy In the manner
of his death. the cause In which he was engaged
waiter' sacred and as noble as that in which Warren
fell at Bunker Hill. And now let the people whom
he served so faithfully and courageously build him
a monument Let it stand in the heart of the
city to which ho had devoted so much of his ener
gies and with whose history his name has been
so closely identified. On Portsmouth Square let
this monument be raised. Lot It rise high up to
wards Heaven, add on each side of the towering
column let the words be engraved: "They have
killed me because I was opposed to the extension
of slavery and a corrupt Administration." Let
the friends of the departed at once move In this
matter. Let the monument be worthy of the man.
" Let it rise up till it meet the sun in his coming;
let the first rays of the morning gild It, and his
parting beams linger and play on its summit."
THE DUEL AND ITS ALLEGED CAUSES.
From the Alta California.]
It has been charged that that portion of the press
which has been the most marked in its tone of eon
damnation of the causes assigned for the late duel,
has simply resorted to invective and denunciation
against the survivor, without bringing argument
and facts to justify such a course of proceeding.
Whether or not this charge was intended to apply
to this journal is a matter of indifference to us, as,
if it was, it is simply a gross misrepresentation.
We not only condemn and denounce the bloody
deed. but we bring facts to sustain our position,
such as the warmest advocate of tho brutal code
can neither reinsay or set aside.
Acoording to a promise already made, we pro
coed to review the correspondence which passed
between the combatants, In order to prove the cur•
rectness of our position, expressed some days ago,
that " no good cause existed for a duel." Appa
rently. in response to this assertion, the seconds of
Terry have published the correspondence referred
to, which, as we remarked yesterday, instead of
furnishing any defence or palliation for Terry,
makes the affair oven "more monstrous than we
had at h"r3t sapposed."
In his first letter to Mr. Broderick, Terry de
mands a retraction of certain remarks, of a person
al character, made by the latter at the breakfast
table of the International Hotel. Mr. Broderick,
in response to this, desires Terry to specify the par
ticular remark or remarks.referred to, which he is
asked to retract. The latter replies as follows:
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 9, 1859.
HON. D. C. linonxitimr—Sin : In reply to your
note of this date, I have to say that the offensive
remarks to which I alluded in my communication
of yesterday aro as follows
I have heretofore considered and spoken of him I
(myself) as the only honest man on the Supreme
Court Bench, but now I take it back—thus, by im
plication, reflecting on toy personal and official
integrity, to.,
to., de.
Thus, then, the offence charged against Mr. Bro
derick, if an offence was committed, is simply this:
Upon one occasion, he, Mr. Broderick, voluntarily
expressed the opinion that "Terry was the only
honest man on the Supreme Bench," or words to
that effect. Subsequently, Terry assails him (Bro
deriek) in the Democratic Convention, in the most
outrageous manner, no provocation having been
given him by Mr. Broderick for myrrh an as fault;
ore the contrary, eves!, reason going to establish
Mr. Broderiel's right to expect friendly treat
ment at the hands of Terry, if the heart of the
latter had not been callous to those finer sensibili•
ties which male gratitude the warmest impulse
governing ordinary human
Mr. Broderick was then, by this attack. placed
upon the defensive. The man whom he had
praised, for whom he had, when all was dark
around him, and his (Terry's) existence seemed to
hang upon a thread, spent his money and bent his
iron energies to the task of rewiring him from an
ignominious death; now turned, as did the poi
sonous viper in the fable, and stung the hand which
befriended him. What then did Mr. Broderick
do Did he strike back, did he crush the man
who had, in this gross and this monstrous manner,
violated all the laws of gratitude and honor be
tween men ? Did he not, will ask the stranger un
acquainted with the facts, grind him beneath his
heel, as he would a venomous snake that bad
sprung from the wayside and attacked him? No'
In 'pity and contempt for ono who could thus de
grade himself, he forbore to strike a retaliating
blow such as he justly merited, and simply said,
according to Terry's letter, publeshed over his
own signature," I have heretothro considered anti
spoken of him (Terry) as the only honest man on
the Supreme Court Bench, but I now take it all
bark.' This was all. This was his response given
for an assassin blow *trade at his fair fame by one
from whom ha had every moral right to expect
nothing but friendly words, or, at least, silence.
Bow then did this leave the matter? We direct
this interrogatory principally to those who have
attempted the task of justifying a resort to the
" code of honor" to settle the difficulty. How,
_we
ask, did the case stand at this stage? Mr. Brode
rick had once, of his own volition, expressed a fa.
voluble opinion of Terry, as one of the judges of
the Supreme Court. Subsequently he is assailed
by Terry. ile then simply retracts the opinion
thus expressed, without preferring a single charge
against him (Terry), withoutofferieg a word of de
traction or denunciation, thus leaving the whole
matter In precisely the same condition that it
would have been, had he (Broderick I never hare
opened Ma lips, or uttered ono word, directly or In
directly, concerning Terry, except that he himself
—if any cause existed for a duel—was tiro party at
tacked, and ho alone, if either had the right, Van
the one to have been the challenging party. Let no
man gainsay this, for here are the facts, plainly
and logically set forth, to sustain us in our position,
and they oannot be disproved. It matters not how
warm an advocate any man may bo of the laws of
duelling, if he will but disabuse his mind of pre-
Judie°, and sit in cairn and dispassionate judgment
upon the matter, he cannot, without violating every
principle of justice and right, arrive at any other
conclusion than this.
Under such circumstances, who shall dare assert
that we have denounced the survivor of this duel
without good and sufficient cause? ' Who will say
that wo are not right in characterising it as an sot
for which no excuse, no palliation exists, and which
ought forever to condemn David S. Terry to an
eternal infamy, in the estimation of every honora
ble and candid man; and to call down upon him
the concentrated vengeance of a Deity whose laws
have been blasphemously outraged and violated ?
With this evidence before us, what other inference
can be drawn, ulna other COM:10ton otin be arrived
TWO CENTS.
at, than that there was a fixed and determined In
tention, on the part of Terry and others, to force
Mr. Broderick into a fight for the purpose of tak!ng
his life? Any pretext, no matter bow trivial,
would suffice to enable this purpose to be carried
out, the conspirators knowing full well that the no
ble and fine sense of honor then possessed by their
now dead victim would cause him to stand up to
any combat that they might ask for, rather than
that cowardly hearts should even dare to hint the
gross libel that he possessed one particle of simi
larity in his composition to their own base natures.
Such has been the history of the cause of this
lamentable occurrence, this monstrous outrage
against the laws of God and man. Such was the
pretext made use of to kill David C. Broderick,
California's steadfast friend—a man whose like we
ne'er shall see again. Yet, those journals which,
prior to his death, heaped, every day, whole tor-
rents of invective and abuse upon his head, now
turn their column rules in mourning, and, while
they laud his virtues, and pretend to lament his
untimely end, assert the wicked libel that hie mur
derer had cause to do the damning deed. And
they who write thus are " honorable men."
—"I rather choose
To aprons the dead, to wronx myself and you,
Than I Ind wrong muldt hoorablestnen.
And they would no and kinn deed Crrenen wounds,
Altd dip their napkins in his snored blood;
And. dying, mention it within their will.,
Beatieethrrig it ne a rich legacy
Unto their issue."
11121=1
" Whose daggers have stabbed Clegar."
They now weep crocodile tears, and pretend to
the mockery of sorrow over his mangled come;
but, while they put on this heartless show of mourn
ing, they forget not to traduce the memory of the
dead, by seeking to create a justification before the
public tribunal, of the heartless conduct of his
murderer, by misrepresenting the course and tone
of such independent journals as dare to denounce
in fitting terms the full, unmitigated. and mon
strous nature of a duel, which has terminated thus
disastrously to the people, and to the man who had
given no just cause of offence, even under the most
rigid requirements of the code itself.
(From the Alta California.]
For our own part, we believe that if Judge Ter
ry had not been urged on to this quarrel, it could.
and would have been adjusted without a duel. If
the political enemies of Mr. Broderick had not
stood in the way of an adjustment, this duel would
not have taken place. These may now tvjoice
over their triumph, as the wretched human habi
tant of the jungle rejoices, when from his hiding
place be sees the lion that stood in his pathway de
parting from his post. •
SENATOR BRODERICK IS DEAD
[From the Alta CaHormel
The lion hunt is over. The jackals that long
hung howling upon his track are at rest after their
feast of blood, while in the cold majesty of death
sleeps the great victim of their murderous deeds.
The chase is done. The quarry is laid low, and the
dogs have gone to kennel. David C. Broderick is
no more! He was the hunted lion, and they who
have forced him into the quarrel which made a
sacrifice of his life, were the hungry pack of Jack
als that now, from the dark corners to which they
have retired, are contemplating their foul deed of
murder. There Is enough in this melancholy affair
to call for the • bitterest condemnation that the
tongue can utter, or the heart can feel. There is
enough to justify us In heaping maledictions upon the
authors and alders in this foul tragedy, but we will
forbear. It is properly within the province of a list
and a righteous God toilet his curse upon them. This
is already written in a text of Are upon the records
of _Heaven, and constitutes a fearful debit against
the mortals upon whom it falls, which they will be
called upon to settle in an after life. The curses of
men are but trifling indeed as compared • to this,
and we may do no more than fo invoke the just
vengeance of Heaven, without resorting to the
more trifling alternative. This will fall upon and
destroy them. This will set a flame of torture
within their hearts that shall never cease its burn
ing—that shall, whether sleeping or waking, haunt
them and goad them on through a life time of hor
ror, filled with self-reproach, and vain and idle
longings that the past might be retraced, and this
base, cowardly, and wicked deed be unperformed.
For the present, let us turn from them to Indulge
in a few words of - melancholy reflection over the
sad event which has transpired in the death of Mr.
Broderick.
Seldom or never has the great heart of the public
been eo deeply stirred ea, it is at the present mo
ment. The political friends and foes of the victim
of the murderous code aro alike unanimous in their
expressions of condemnation against the conspira
tors who forced him Into the fight, and in their
grief and sorrow at his untimely end. To speak
well of Mr. Broderick has ceased to carry with it
the charge of striving to aid him in the pursuance
of the objects of his political ambition. The cold,
senseless, and inanimate lamp of clay no longer
moves obedient to the dictates of the giant intellect
which once inhabited it, and the admirers of genius,
honor, and a brave and indomitable heart. can pew _ s.y upon the altar their few gilt - offerings Or praise,
without being held amenable by his maligners to
the charge of desiring to promote the advancement
of his political fortunes.
It is, indeed, a time to put on mourning, to fill
our homes with lamentation'', for the true, unself
ish, self-sacrificing friend of California: the man
who, whatever was his ambition, wee the best, the
purest, the only true man that has ever fairly and
honestly represented California in the Senate of
the United States hm been basely sacrificed to
meet the demands of the foulest and most blight
ing code that the cunning of man ever gave as a
curse to his race.
Ile is dead! and his murderers walk abroad un
punished, except as their prototype, the first mur
derer, was punished, when be went forth with the
mark and the curse of a justly incensed God upon
his brow. People of California. let this serve. you
as a lemon. Think, as you follow the remains of
this murdered man to their last resting place on
earth, that it is the bloody code. the base, blacken
ing, damning, and cowardly code, which you have
tacitly sustained and tolerated in your midst, that
has brought about this great public calamity—for
a public calamity, indeed, it is, as this community
may yet learn to its sorrow.
Today we have no heart to attempt to do full
justice to the dead or the living. Let these few
words suffice for the moment, and it shall be our
task to fulfil that duty to-morrow to its utmost
limit. Meanwhile, it is a time of mourning and
sadness; let these hold their sway over the heart
for the moment, ere we turn to consider more mi
nutely the days of evil which have come upon us.
A Graphic View of New Jersey Politics.
f Coneepondenoe of The Preacl
TRENTON, Oct. IT, 1859.
EDITOR OF TRY PRESS : Mr. Buchanan still Con
tinues his proscriptive policy in this State. Heads
of postmasters with anti-Lecompton proclivities
are falling weekly into the Executive basket in the
counties of Morris and Sussex. It would really
seem as if the President. smarting under the re
bukes that have been administered to him, in his
fierce rage Is determined to wreak his vengeance
upon the Democracy of this State. It is the gene
ral belief hero among our leading men, that the
Administration would gladly welcome the news cf
General Wright's defeat. The General made the
first speech in behalf of Mr. Buchanan in New
Jersey, and it is well known that no one gave
himself so unreservedly to the Presidential can
vass; aml yet, when his friends asked for
him a third-class mission, the President passed
him by on the other side, and gave the
appointment to ono of the Stockton tribe,
whose bitter enmity to Buchanan is well known
here, and who was wholly unknown in the canvass.
The course pursued by Mr. Buchanan has no
parallel in the history of the country, and cannot
be accounted for by ordinary rules. Life-long
friends have been thrust from his side, and their
places filial by those whose fierce enmity to him
had been loudly and openly proclaimed. The
statesmen of the party, whose experience in the na
tional councils should have commended them as ad
vipers, ho hes ignored, while ho has surrounded
himself with the miserable tools and drudges; and
this very hour one of these creatures—what the
French call " rime do, Inn le," one who will do any
dirty work—is " the power behind the throne
greater than the throne itself." Since the days of
Pelham, in the reign of George IL the world
has never seen a man at the helm of State who
resembled this crafty minister so closely as Bu
chanan. Fir Banbury Williams, apostrophising
the Goddess of Prudence, thus speaks of Pelham,
and the portrait, drawn with a master's skill, is
the " counterfeit presentment" of Buchanan :
Turn to your altars. on your rotaries shine,
Bee l'elhnn; ever kneeline at the shrine ;
By you atfirit. by slow ilegree3 - he rose.
lb you the zenith of his power he owes;
tansht ham is your middle tour,. to steer,
Jrnportiolonoderate. 'omit I to anon,
Fearful ttc tomtty, to frtrodAta coil,
1 (Ma taotorousty bow,
And 30 obwrrant never to offend
.01 ce, he Quite for pt. tofu ,friend.
Sang versed in Dotittu, but poor in Part , .
The
tattle
tricks, but not the stotearnan . 3 arts.
Ifist tattle obrthent to his purpose etell
Atone 11114 compromise his utmost Al n."
here is a glass which certainly reflects our esti
mable President at full length. When the worthy
minister of George and the Sage of Wheatland
meet in the other world, there will be a comel3' of
errors there every day.
Them shall the two political " Dm:tilos."
" Like brother and brother.
Go hand in hand. not one before the other." J. II
James E. Murdoch is about to fulfil engage
ments in Memphis and Mobile. During the sum
mer vacation Mr. Murdoch has devoted most of his
leisure time to the study of Falstaff, and it is his
Intention to appear in that character in the course
of the coming season. He is also preparing a lec
ture upon Falstaff.
Mr. W. A. Bartlett writes a note to one of the
New York journals, denying that his daughter ac
cepted the proffered adulations of Signor Criedo
through the medium of an interpreter, as his
daughter spoke Spanish, or that she visited him at
the St. Nicholas when confined by illness. In port
ant, if true.
George D. Prentice, of tho Louisville Jouttici,
will deliver the first lecture of the winter's cuerse
before the Historical, Agricultural, and Mechanics ..
Institute of Lancaster city on Thursday evening
next. The subject will bo " American State. man
ship."
Mr. and Mrs. Barney Williams made their first
appearance in New York, at Niblo's Garden, last
Monday night, since their return from Europe.
They were enthusiastically received, and Mr.
Barney Williams made a short epeeoh at the end of
the performance.
The monument to Henry Clay, at Lexington,
Uenlueky, is "ompleted anti ready for the statue,
•
THE WEEKLY PRESS.
Tun WIZILT rills will he sent to liabearThent
mail (per annum, in advance,) et— ...
Tnree Comm. "
Five Cop i es, " "
ren Copies, " ..
Twenty Cosies." 11.6 (to One &dams) 30.31
Twenty Copies, or over " (to address of -
each Subscriber.) 'mob —............. --- IA)
For a Club of Twenty-one or over, we will send as
GUM COPY to the getter up of the Club.
Sir Postmsaters are requited to sot as assets foe
Tat Witsimt Ps tae.
CALI FOHNIA
Limed Semi-Monthly in time for the Ofthfotnit
Steamers.
GENERAL NEWS.
A Yourto Mkx Sgcrr ST A ffatap.--On Sun
day evening last a young malt, named William N.
Geckle, was shot at Newark, N. J., by • man
named Daniel W. Horton. causing death almost
immediately. It appears that the two had been
out together during the day. and in the evening
Mr. and Mrs. Horton and Mr. Geekie were sitting
at a table together, conversing, when Mrs. Horton
ACC uted her husband, in a playful manner, °Charing
seen drinking. This he denied, and appealed to
Mr. G. to corroborate the truth of his statement.
Mr. G. replied, "I do not want to expose you."
Mr. H. then took up a revolver, which, on laying
off hie overcoat, he had taken from] his pocket and
placed upon the table, and, pointing it at Mr.,G.,
said, " MITO / been drinking?" At that moment
the pistol went off, and the ball entering the mouth
of Mr. Geekie, he died without speaking, and with
acareely a motion. Mrs. H. immediately fainted
away, and Mr. H. ran to the door and shouted for.
help. The neighbors came in, and, finding the
victim of the sad occurrence dead. the body was
allowed to remain in the position in which it was'
found until the arrival of the coroner. Mr. Horton
was taken in charge by Chief of Police Whitney,
and is held to await the action of the coroner's.
jury. Geekie was 22 years of age, a native of
Glasgow, Scotland. and has no relatives in this
country. Mr. H. was an intimate friend of the
deceased, and is plunged in the deepest grief at
the sad occurrence.
OcrooanAnuri Visrr.—We Intl an akre-ea
ble visit, a few days :since, from an octogenarian
gentleman, resident in Portland, and well known
in that city and in Boston, among the merchants of
the olden time. He still retains his faculties, and
his memory is yet fresh and vigorous, stocked with
remembrances of an almost past age. He is pro
bably the only person living, at least in this vi
cinity, who is able to say that he has seen: and
known two loch distinguished characters, resident
at the time on different continents, as NapoleiM
Bonaparte and Robert Fulton. He met the great
Emperor, in one of his night excursions from Pa
ris to Havre, at Rouen, and_ was present in the
company of Fulton when his first steamboat was
creeping along up the Hudson river. We are hap
py to say that the gentleman alluded to is in the
enjoyment of excellent health for a man of his
years. He is one of the few living men who con
nect the present with past generations of men
Bunker MU (Mass.) Aurora.
USPLIfAsANT PRITIC-tIaNT.-1•33t Mon
day afternoon, Anthony Weboiky, the man who
runs the engine in the custom house building at
Providence, R. I. while engaged in cleaning the
boiler, got one of his kne.m wedged in between
two flees, and stuck fast, with his head and stetaild
ens outside the main bole, and the rest of his body
inside. He remained in this position from half
past one until after five o'clock. It was impossible
to get inside the bolter to render him any assistance
without knocking away the brick work in which it
was embedded, and cutting out one of the plates of
404 of which it was constructed. This course was about being pursued, when he succeeded in extri
cating himself with no other injury than a swollen
knee, which did not prevent him from walking to
his home in Cranston.
A Cuniosrrr.—The editor of this paper his
in his possetedon a plain gold ring one Aundrear and
,
rty-eight years old . It has engraved on it, in
old style, these words: "J. W., obit March ye
7th, 1721." It was ploughed up by one of the ser
vants on a plantation in the county of King George.
The ring is of pure gold, and is supixeed. by some,
to have been the property of the father of General
Washington, as the initials, we believe. are the
tame. The owner has been offered and refused the
cum of two hundred dollars for it.—frarresuan
(Va.) Flag.
A. DLTACHMEIT of marines arrived last Tues
day at the Brooklyn (N. V.) Marine Barrette. eon
sisting of the guard for the United States steamer
Saranac, which is to leave on the 20th instant for
Panama via Aspinwall, to join that steamer, and
eight men to reinforce the guard of the steamer
Brooklyn, which Teasel, after leaving Minister
McLane at Vera Crus. is ordered to join that por
tion of the borne squadron located on the coast of
Cuba. and relieve the steamer Fulton (loot) in look
ing after slavers.
Gout Ftert willed were originally brought to
this country irom China, and once kept in glass
vases u objects of curiosity, now hare become
quite numerous in some of our rivers. In the
Potomac large shoals of them may be seen evert
ing in the silvery water; and they are quite
common in some of the creeks that feed the Hud
son river.
A BEArrira. model of the steamship Great
Eastern, made by Mr. Stimpson, of Boston. has
been • placed in the Mechanics' Fair at Port
land, Maine, for exhibition, where it exeiteitench
admiration.
A 31sraos.—The Frostburg (Md.) Gazette
Bays that a meteor of unusual brightness pained
over that town on Wedneadav_olaht teat_ .....h.,.2ho
s....46..a.croorcorrireurviir MVO 7T - Wirkll 01 silvery
;parka lomat hundred feet in length.
THE COURTS.
YE Si alitt•T'll PROCIXDII4IIB
(Revolted Jro The PresLl
QUARTER SESSTON9-7witt, Ludlow. --leaf.
neu in this court was punctually renamed at ID o'clock.
The atmosphere of the room was extremely oppressive,
and we are inclined to believe that the preluding Judge,
who has manifested a constant retention to the proceed
inws of the present as well as the last term, must be a
sufferer to a great extent. from the numerous annoy
ances n i the place. He. however, does not seem to gas
effuted in the lent; but , judging from the exponent.*
of those whose banneu requires them to be °ply teen
geocally in attendanceed this somewhat improved Bed
lam. we know that it is the very lest gdace for there
who desire either health or peace of mind. The Cosecty
Court Howe is a first-olus nuisance. where the per
petual conglomeration wh ich kinds of noises is hi/gone
of the many evils with the locality apnea= lo be
peeniliarly affected.
The case of Abraham Racers, charged with the lar
ceny of a horse end wecon, was called an. It was al
leged that the defendant stole the horse and wagon from
the State Agricultural Fairground. The defence 11114
"'Mar. and a numberof witnesses were called to ;chow
that. for several yearn, he had shown evidence of in
sanity. Verdiet.'not inaltrT , on the emend of insiaitY.
John Fidel wes tried on the charge of committing an
assault and batters via George F. Womrath. turner.
Defendant is a conAnctur on the Southwark sod Frank
ford Railroad, and the prosecutor was a pa
ion hs
the road. The Car being fell. be took a position
oat
the
hind platform. and was obligee to move three times to
permit ladies to enter. Fusels!. at Coates street, the
conductor told Mr. Wofierath to get out of the way. Ile
tried to do so. and before he could do it. the coedutor
repented the remark. sating that if he did not get off he
would put hem off. Mr. Wornrath said that he had gaud
his fare and would not ;et off. The conductor then at
tempted to put him off, but not being able to do it. ob
tained the assistance of the driver, and Mr. Woturath
was put
Several gentlemen passengers on the car testified that
Mr. Womrath was unable to eet into the car . and ,
though lame, had to stand on the platform. When re
quested to move he did so es far as he was able; when
finally requested by the oondector to leave. he asked
where he should go. Re was told to get oaf of the war.
or he'd out him off. The defence was, that. tinder the
!utterer the company. the conductor was obliged to beep
the platform clear nod the doorway unobstructed. and
he was Nit performing his duty. Witnesses were called
to show that Mr. Womrath was in the doorarne.but alt
armed that the tar weevil crowded that Mr.Womrath
could not stand aeon the platform in its crowded state
without narteally obstructing' the doorway.
Judie Ludlow peed that when the railroad ersrepaesee
tele passengers they enter into a contract to eternise
them with suitable acconimodatlons; and it was the
duty of the conductor to gave Mr. Wommth the bear ac
commodations in his power. ILin the discharge of his
duty. he had so crowded the platform as rendered it im
possible for pa sewer. to stand wittmet blockeng up the
doorway. it was his fault. and not the fault of passen
gers. wed he rendered himself emenable to the law to
putting Mr. Wonerath ad the platform,, even though ha
dot it without forte.
A verdict of guilty was rendered.
Francis }flamer was put on his trial on the charge of
stealine a piece of cloth. Verdict guilty.
Hush Dour horsy was charged with having committed
a very violent
. !UR and battery with intent to kill a
Xr. McKenna she
pt
of • hotel , at the sot:un
cut corner of Eiehth and Carpenter street,. The accu
sed had sakeiffor liquor. and upon hems refused. inflict
ed a daneetous stab on the welt arm of Mr. McKenna.
The emend stated to the court that he was is liquor
at the time of shecrosirrence. The jut") . found brut
gutty of assault end battery. Sentenced to undergo so
intprisonment of three months.
John Fink. alias John Mine, was charged with the
larceny of a small quantity of hied clothe., the property
of Mn. Connelly. The defendant alleged that he
s• former the property. The jar.. doubtless believer.
that a good ninny articles are found in the same way be
professional pilferers, rendered a verdict of guilty. Sen
tenced to five months
in the counts Anton.
Albert Boker,
colored, was changer, with indecent ex
posure. Verdict unity. Sentenced to lax months in the
county prises ,
Thomas Potee. the driver of the car of which
who auts convicted of an assault and battery. was eon
doctor, wee also rued nn n charge el assault and tot
tery on George W. Womrath. The defence
all
that the prosecutor was standing in the way of cruses
gen entering or leaving the can. Verdict guilty, with
a recommendation tO the mercy of the court. Ben
tentiett to pay a fine of is, e dollars. anal the (YAMS cf mo
secution.
Jahn Fidel, the conductor, was sentenced to pay a Ik e
of dla and the cost: of proseoutto.t.
Joseph R tithe was charged with the larceny of some
springs. It appeared that the prosecutor had obtained a
eonfeesinn from the crooner of too molt. by means of
promises of favor. X est: t not sulk,.
homas Raney aras chanced at ith she borresele crime
of incest. The evidence, which was dist-esti-1c
in its details. exhibited the fact that the defendant was
a man of vary Intel:merits habit,. Verdict
John Herron. convicted r n Monday of larceny was
sentenced to an an prisonment of tour months.
Francis Kramer, larceny, was sentenced to undergo
confinement of six months in the count. pukes.
The jury in the cross-action case ore...Ault and his
tory between R. flail and Dr Chosor.e. slier hong eq . ;
all night. come into court and stalest threr inability to
scree. They stood eleven in favor of Oslorne to cos for
DWI. D. Dougherty. Esq.. represented the former, sni
George 11. Earle the latter. The Jury were discharged.
Judge Ludlow stated that he we .1,1 surpen I sentence
for the present in the cue of Rule!, after which tie
court adjou rn ed.
U. S. merle Cot Itr.—.7 mice rier.—The tele of
Rattle vs the Lehigh Coal end :a /tweet ion Company for
an altered infongewent of a patent. was resumed -was
nwnini. The hest portion of the sea s onwas
occupied by a lengthy argument from George Herdic,
Est , for the defence. To-day. Mr. Kite r. 'reputed to be
one of thy ablest patent lawyers in the countre. and a
Practitoner at the New York her. will mate his nu
renta er, b e half of the plaintiff. The CAW ...I rrobai:s
not be disposed of for a day or two yet.
CORSON PLEAS—Judge Allieon.—lfugh
Jte-
Neelie. executor, re. Daniel Curran. An action on a
eronowiery note. Verdict for the sltinta for SHoal. J.
B. Colahan for plaintiti anti \L J. aletcheson for defend
ant.
J. Penn Craig ve. In.. Grigg et. al. An action °Fre-
Dlertri. Verdict for defendant. Value of goods ens) :
rent in arrears ell:. Lex for defendant.
Daniel Reviewed vs. Elva Entland. An action for la
beer and materials. Verdict for the plaintiff for
Thompson for plaintiff; R. E. Brown for defendant.
ro
Leighton vs. Bancrof t & Bonstead. An action to re
cover a balance alleged to be due for work dine to
buildms. a foundation wall. Leonard R. Fletcher for
plaintiff and Amos Bilges for defendant. tending the
examination of witnesses. the court winsurned•
DISTRICT COL'RT—JUdZe Hare.—Peter Femur:en
a-a. Edward H. Faulkner and Genre. Hoopes. An sett.ln
of ejectment to recover Tvess , as inn of a mill eroPerty•
situateon the west side of Hamilton street. west o f
Broad. IL L. Dougherty and J. F. Jon. sun for plain
t sf and Blukburne and T. S. South for defence. in
trial.
COERT.—.Jege Sharswood.--Jcitepti C.
Fa (sons v.. Thomas Carroll. An action on a CroMptsors
not. , No defence. Verdict for the plaintuf for is -try.
Built( for plaintiff, and McAllister for defendant.
Peter L. Righter Cf. Charles F. Thatcher. An 1 e r...,
an a promissory note. Verdict for plaintiff for 931131.
F. C. Brewster for plaintiff, and 1 atm for de tendu.a.
Henri L. Ddatrothln Co. vs. 'William S. Frick. An
action on a promiseote note wren in payment for err
tam repair done to a canal boat. The defence set up
lyres that the contract with the plsontiff was that the re
pairs should to in workmagithe manner. when. in re -
aht v. they were not so. The defence asse elleze that
the•n overcharge. Crs-I,em tot
plaintiff, and Phillips for defence.
Peter dry der vs. William J. A. Bilker'. An s n
a promissory note. Verdict for the plaint.:l r _
%° ,,- . 16 for plaintiff, and Parsons for dweller , . Ad
krtitnaerd.
'The Ilon. John ',etcher, Governor elect of Vir
ginia, whoa serious illness was ann,•enre.i sane
days aro, is reported to be getting better lie is
now able to leave his room, and in a n pro b st ,ib tl ,
will soon be restored W health.
•