The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, January 21, 1860, Image 1

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    • ..f.:; !A .: : ;;. , -11,1•Wa:•iipRESS; ,-„, ... ,,,..,.
RifictiiiiiiraWD4ll.V(Bl4AlLYo 11p31100
By :ohNly. rogrizT.
wows NP.'4IT 011E8TNTJT STRIET.
DAILY PRESS.
•
Tairer.va Minyirglix. isr&blo the ° Wien.
• • _
Matlei4 to Subdonliera out of the Silty st DOLIAIIi
iILIC,ANNtri. — *WU:DOLL/MC IrOs Eyoar MONT 1111;
TARXII:poLLAII; you Six. Storiroo—div4nably in ad.
viiiiei for the time ordered., •
TRIMICEILLY PRESS.
- Mailed to sebeeilberikeit Of the City at' Txxxx Doi
LAxt Pax AXIOM 24""e•
''TATIONERY.
18460' ""W- C ' FIRMS
HANGES.
WAL 1: MURPHY& SONS.
`No. dim OREtitNitT STRUM,
Below'Fourth,
MANIIIPARiIIiniII OP
-13-11. A N B 00 K S,
, . • 'Attsde pfLinen Stook.
imp to 4,
,~ Le 1n Drniti
!Votes Covyi a ng• Presses Letts !and
Sitititratkittitaiveharni
nrutaartEnv GOODS.
729; - N'E W ' 729
•
FLOWER & FEATHER'
• .BTORE,
OLEB•TNET.STREET.
er 2411:52V.t GREATLY REDUCED PEWEE.=
READ DRIVES.,;.SII.M I E F ABATEI
rTiAI IKEYORA D OODS.
rl-108.10EZ4TNEDY &BRO..
, 129 MEM= alt. RAND 48 B. MOND BT.
, BOOTS AND SHOES.
lIMSFALL & HARMER,
- BattIPAOTIIIINIS
irSOLEik,LE DTIALEW3
'Let
gopoTp AND SHOES,
• , 140. 4 , lollSif THIRD STREENT.
- A BM Sasoitsea tof Ctiti 'made Boots sad Batumi oos-
Maar oa band: slo4f
WATCLIES, 2 JEWELRY, &a.
gl-LVER - WARE.
WM. WILSON & SON
liras "pedal attention to their stook of BILVBIIt
WAIM, which is now unions* large, affording va
riety of *Warn and design tun - nitinumed by any house
the United States, and of finer *today than is tunituflao-
Wed for table sue Itiany rut of the world: •
Our Otandard of 011yet4,136-100 parts pare
The Ihillehsßterling..atttso4ooo IC
Animal:lp end Broach". 9004000 lt
Thee It will beaten that we ere thirty-five parte surer
data the dm - orb:an and Freneh win, and ten parts inner
than the English Sterling. We Molt all our own
and we putrantte the goat! se above (1011), ',Meth is
the/Wise eliatetta be made to be sereicsabid, and will
resist the lotion of acids snwe t l New gee no ord6
uary Silver ettaestMetifted, •
'WI[. WILSON & SON,
N. B.—Ani fineness of Slyer misoothotareti w agreed
upon, oat positjaity 1110f11 WHO, to PriNgh sad A#l4/4-
atin talutard.
Deters supplied'inth the same ortimhull as lied In
our ratan lisputient.
TO ;HUY- CHEAP 'WATCHES,
Shire Btudn. 8583 1 Wens, arg,
8 net t P. ' :C i ett., tu.k. "ilow, so
vrr,°find /ReelWiegtWer. go to
Jon-6r . BV3ABLio'd. 22 N. BIXTR Street.
HARDWARE PACHAOE HOUSES.
11 : 4441.ri r
, 152 BRENNER,
Nos. sis,"CT NORM rim SUM
MILADELPHIA,
wnormsAmi 00/EdDBBION *now"
For the er4 of aU kindlier
A)1X10,0/1K xußwAcerultED iresawAzat.
AND utrairrito or
0411, .1113101.01; FRIPICItt A 14.1) BM=
11ANDW,ARN AND comma
Ne•Veonttantir (re band large stoat of Geode to tuP•
' ttiferifirate Dealer.
t. NIITSINNWEI
,PILID,
, By tbe casket otherwhoh
DOM' . al nez TOOLS.'
At:man:Him On*, vimou no . De:
PATIENT ANTILB AND' VIVA
SNIP 01111.1 N o,
Auj'other ,kladi is cov,ery voLlsty.-
OR/i8r'0•11,11-1PillATER P/02'014 )
- _,lnueligttf,3 ONLY f)(9 , IIIWEIL
-111405' mom
:mean s'aram.",nto. 'e. SlZlAtele.
t . . ,
AC/SAGE-HARDWARE HOUSE.--;-We
zirloild reekeotfilly WI the attention of the Gene
ware _ widT t_to•ere extecuave Stook of MA-
O yil ti aLltlMAßS, Natoli we , otter et a atria
,Hal or dkria l twrZitOir lieited,eed Goods de
. Um ut thbrotty, giock l rNew Orlutte.
_, WlDic Beep
, ,-,, , - •• ~ a! bokmmtuz-stmet,
, : - lanitiirtiu-ai; OmmoissionMerohdats.
Asa OWN for ;',. onto ad.Ponwatio Rartrra._
c..ittintier WARE.
ftAtINET. VITBNITURE AND WIT LTA
TABLES.
.MOO]E SO CAMPION,
- - No. $ll SOUT H SECOND' STREET, , •
to Outgo on h r exgatt 9ahigot Btuoneoo,
a° • - ET* i t alfAr -
ar artiVAPlAo a N WVAYISONS,
WAtoh sororoooeir tor who Dave row twm to oo
ra g r u ark r 2/-feel theie Talks the *-
ruin. or to tu r tuntAtoos Ts= Smog hcm!)
vo r ono wtth wrtor i of t
&c.
DRUGS, GLASS, PAINTS,
ROST. SHOEMAKER fit CO.
NORTHBAST 001211121. •
10MiTH AND MOEKRIM,
IrAOLNSALE DRUGGISTS,
impoteAlsna psalm in WINDOW 6114138,FA1NT6.
Rag tnettithe attantzen of
COUNTRY. MERCHANTS
to WO tune stock of GOO% erht . eh they offer at the
West ,Mket Wee ooti-tf
SCALES.
lANCRESTER SOALE9.—N — tinter,
tronp,Warehonsei Ray; 0021, Itailialt4
1 .: 1 1 1 .'
A*. 411 St d•chtEilli tLdf_eies Paient). and Belt ,
. mar at .o. UnDITII UT !Wed.
CHAN LES A. Dernsw.
PAULBANItY PLATFORM WALES
FAA 0r . .1 JtiMl
LISVI44. rm . ow,. 1 FEMAIdE ‘ '
e ttenti h n i e ll her
irdiVOUILDREN TEETHING,
a lk , i fog= t i t r a of tegtpo.7 eat
' t
-• • • 0"0„,. a nt. .
~......0. dr met it will me rest to Totweelven
1 . 1 '67.664 - iiniltielint TO Willi INFANT&
Wo re land lo P 'lNttiOia 'for pl.'s: . ,:toe .
• em
' r
m tw . f!r --d
az of
9-_airip a rr
,al. , dr. . , 04 LA.. Op, wta
l A , •. , , ewer 0.4 4 • wan CAM* 1
I
1 ' ''.; ' t broom ,0 tdirtiLALl-- 1
r to& or yeo ~k ..ineiotaatton opts -
, a eotarAt A atli .vj ~ • 1.4.;4 7 Vi t 1f a l •
rf e e47ndni , eogi: ;,„, notal i a t for the
evert -
i tt st ot; or
o t re Vinr di , ' i , ,p i t ritix I= l l so
pintlle ; ,wOrl t e V, OA i t tAll ii en or nnti
It" lne "l 0 fill%TreTrie ; IX
al le d ffire i ,
~, Gra and ::e F
Inakl n Pew *ilea ' has been
r bi' I . V iattrAlif .F OMB&
:It noe or. relieves ri ? Wpm. in tu c t il it
MA" e. Lan
i';'l26 lTfr e ll st ri t a
.ii In " ii t l
t-talA Hove il I
,f, ~ .• All piD 0 COI4 an ovejoom , e a
4 1 , 1 %;,,„ me ; 1, lin s giEc t ri"
or in all oa ff is
ounamhx, A whether it awes from
° th orn IT am 0 ., mie t 4t i a t i o gi er y t ol
rim m e,
gal ° w ow taints 1g do:1(47(170w Vidate,
por t e - :,vrelioes a - ot b *lei, ete b n it
w ry!
rau a i - ili na. EegdfnYYJ /1
a l l. r e f g•- •se(
_V: 111 3/4
ne
i lta g elo " ro ft : az.vtadiliplit
Jo , '''''N.,.
..6i .I, 0 , I • odd eirl•P•ero' "
4*""natiihrestle tbfwr4V
_,A..-11 e. et "
_ ........ . :, ._ _ - r _ • •
J0EM1400,113 PtitE - IXTRAOT OF
tAttknor ppm ana
nrand" I P,r O VUIS
7F-4:rir4lqolo FARRiSH.
AROIL titmet,
wp ATE
El NIA and VINE Strobl&
el.dN,
OA u And largltgaarbef•
iw jk ,',____
ivAvliii-fiqoan '',
'”fr 'ks 41:TrenHne4
, --Aim , " j ou CA."'
4.., ::utteflattil
'
liOltgtlO)3,',l*NDQW' GLASSLon Ititnd
w
'lLJitslobiimii wETlV*li3dgirtggia:
( 0 w it W 9 b
, l
e sa
- -
' ct
, ‘4llo4,oNY=f..iriv eni f o r
r '''.'gV,'l'' onivvitglioafft,
~
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. . ifk^ ‘
"
, >iew -:• ~ ..,„.. 9 -.4 ^..,`,..: \\‘ ‘ l , j I ;',/ ", ' 1 , ''' .. , ,
. c .
.: 11C*4 le r
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~.,-,.:, '. - .. 7-714' ,- ..• ~.- 7 '..., 7 1. Z . - 116 4 - , :. '.-- 5-, -.4,0144,;r_... ,- ,:uptiii 3 ""-- , :i: 'l-'. ;.: :. /0, •A•
- • 'l'•'--4. ,. " - ' 11. : +1';' . ', 4. : '-':-' 1 - -.Al::',;',..ii.:Tii- -- ; ' , - .1 : - . -• i' . ' l' -,Air:; ,, ,," 1- .. ~-,%., '' i f oroVall,' , ; '''',!•:.''. fliir: . A.. ' • :::. ;- ~
..-,;---,•;.-
•-- ,- i- :. ~ :.....F.'. iir'; ..:,:-.:,,,‘e ..-:- '.., . • ~...; :. ....... • 1 0 1',... ! or: 1 ;1;2 ai: , l.. . 0,r... • ....,, 1
OMNI l'•
1 . • ....:......, 1 1
i L. I
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1. .' . -- • , - '4 '; - % 71.: ':.--. - ----... ------...,
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.4
VOL. 3.-NO. 147.
RETAIL DRY GOODS.
LADIES' FANOY FURS
(IEO. F. WOMRA.Tkr.
NOEL 415 AND UT 4511011 STIGIST,
RAB NOW OPEN HIE USUAL
OROIOE ASSORT/KENT OF FURS,
Made of stook aeleoted br Pima in Europe during the
past Byrum. oot3-8m
..,....
'PIT/WISHING DRY GOODS.
ill: MISIBLISSB /MOTTOES have replenished
theirpook ofBtapla Goals of their gam importa ti on.
rnaloy and friqh Linen Floatage.
ph Pihow and Bolster Littens.
holing Linens /Nest sleaoherios.
ran Damask 15. n mask Clothe.
ameak Nara and 'Orlies.
nakisbaok. toils and Dam,ek Towel..
Colored Bo ered 011$411 Towels.
;..,
um& Crash and Ainartaan Lime.
spa. Worsted Damasks . Satan Laine.
dtoe Curtain:, r.inbroularedlv.ltialina.
lari7A, Ur IN't t : I : 2 "F i t ."'""'
air, slue and Oman pab • stollands.
.naliati and Americas nine Panketa.
tar ills Out to of ev try quality.
Mullins, Aboatines, Flanneld and Shrthuta.
alit_ and 803 CH PAITNCT titroet.
B ARGAINS FOR SIX WEEKS.
T i l lf u r & OEIBMa N. E. Un er i inform Th n
and SP I 0 A DSr. w 0 rtlr u i r , i f ure pan di
ft: bho ganeralipat from 30W( • • •
_. 1 6•V i gatiliia/LaDIAS B2 OF PROPITBI
They Ave an Gaga lent Won of
ong_ Broohe Bhanls.
-
)sae fait and Amerman Blankets.
lest rairting'and Sheating.hiusune.
~inena of nut:parnlTeprtation.
~ 'inn!, o B . _ul -
AG L:
many Ctokkoot It on Imo&
A LA , - OE BTOCR.OF FANCY SILKS.
Sot nate of Nook Mike.
blennoes, Do !Atom Oorouto Fortin Platt% Ro.
Many of tho l tbove goods mill be sold
CR UNDER COST PRICE
N.s.—null pay 10 RiVO loft call.
ilkA WAMSUTTA t•IIIRTINGS, SOFT
.. .FINISH just opened. '
illnliV i rkt g l e rit a LiV i rl i t tis. rin nt e ° l6.
il p g 4-4 Undo
for initiate Sbawks.
Betta r t e oltlit Itta r ti:ef, "' Jgitilragfid:r2 P iAt
Cuomo Handkerchiefs, Ise.
Ladies and Hants' Linen Cambric Handkerchiefs, la
greet var
S iety.
Cens. ilk Handkorchiefk, Black Cravats, and Neck-
Sex. •
wHITE GOOBS in v'riety.
'WINTER STOCK, reduoad Inindeo. of au wads.
- Df(SEHI (lOQDS.
Blanket and Sroobe Shawls.
Bed and Crib blankets.
Black cloaking Clothe.
d: J . L e t ad d y r,Z r i a g .
ORRAT REtru e valuis uatikFcbrtutry IHk:whilst
taking stook. ARLES ADAMS,
Ja.14.-tr EIGHT and ARCH stream
nurE PLAID FLANNELS.
flettukt Brooke Shawls.
Ye Cloth Cloaks.
oellen Long Shawls.
ratty 20 and Zt oat Detainee.
1340 and 8660 Wool Robes. worth 87 and 08.
meat Black lifonstelineir,sB to 05 cents.
eant all-wool Plaids.
caBtil al.gB.
for best Fancy Casa atm&
Dead (Mods at 81,,8110, and 81.15.
Ulnas and Csaanerel, 40 to 75 oents.
Ventmgs very cheap.
Id cent fitstrate 811.1 to and Drawers.
Cloves, Ties, .lidkfa, tee, &natio* lota
& voprok.
oo C
ra aid MAxical'.
eye
N, B.—LIN descriptiN E DODDS, a large and desirab lestook w
el
on. Ja
HOSIERY GOODS. —J. WM. 110 F.
JIALMANN, No. 9 North EIGHTH Strse_t, has now
open Ma Fall Stook of Hoeiory Goode. vast Underveets
nualmwersOfeartwrightebdWarner'estferiormanu
facture, for ladies' and miseee' wear. orino Shirts
and Drawers . fo r gents and youths. Morton Hosiery,
~,
...0..... ,WoolleA Hoe - levy, Gloves and Gaunt
iota, ands e glnerellYsppertaigi9g to the Hosiery
buinnees. •W. N. gewootlblly solicits the attenton of
families to I stook , naming them that Ida stook s un
exoelled for variety by any other in the oity, an dthat
hhypdees are as loans those of any other, regular house.
K. it No abatement made from the pnoes named,
stx-wfmtl
tipIiORNLEY & CHISM.
Northeast' corner EIGHTH and SPSINO OAR
DEN Streets. would invite attention to their stock 01
IRISH LINEN EDE &c.,
Of their own direct importation, which they can confi
dently recommend.
Also. an excellent stook or
Shirting and Sheetting Ma ins.
• Endish , and- Ameritan stankete and Flannels.
Cloths. Caesimeres, and Sainted*.
Marseilles Quilts and Comfortably', &o.
selling
Balance o f f Cloaks and Broche and Blanket Shawls
aoost I
Bich Fanny Silks very cheap.
Sestmakes of Black Silk, &o.
All our stook will be found desirable. hie
DRY.GOODS JOBBERS.
IC. HOWE 0.,
IF •
No. 240_ .IfAIt . KIT STREET,
PRILADELPIUA,
Orel' to the Jobbing end Clothing Trade
I. T. BK ABBAVE ft C 0.% BANITK MILL.
'4.11%A cw#
- - - 13LA . CKiff61413 MILL.
SLM-EITILBET. -- MILLBURY,
hlgalEtilifACK, MILLFORD,
And various others of the choicest and most desirable
makes of American PLAIN AP FANCY CASH
=KB% Also. tt line of very choice high.lostred
BLACK DOEBBIIIB. Colored and White CORSET
JEANS, Bleached and Brown BBIDITINGB, SHIRT
INGS. and DRIbi.B.
J. C. HOWE & CO.
Aro ale° Agents of the
MANCHESTER PRINT WORKS,
And offoi the various goods produced by this Coin peep
DE LAINES, CIIALLIES, OPERA (MOTO,
PRINTS, tt-c., Ac.
Jao-thstuim
COMMISSION HOUSES.
FROTHINGI-lAM
WELLS,
34 SOUTH FRONT,
AND 3 LETITIA STREBT,
Are AOENTB for the sale of Goods Manufactured by
the tollowing Companies, vier
ldassacs
LACO A.
seer
/Amaral.
0.14.82 T,
JJWIVIT,
rEitElltit
/Hr.
ARTLET.
• Brown,llleitohe4. and Colored Sheeting', !Mingo,
leans, and Dnlls.
ROBESON'S BLUE PRINTS,
HAMPDIIN COMPANY'S
TW'SBEIS AND OOTTONADES In groat variety.
WASHINGTON MILLS
(Formerly Bay State)
Shawls, PlanQyind Tab'e Covers, Prints' Pod i um
Ylannels a rill-Wool MA Cotton warp Cloths, heavy_ble
snd blue savers, Oassimerea, end Trioots. Also, liar
sera. Oa ets. and Tweeds. ol.otuth-Am
FARRELL & MORRIS.
CHESTNUT STREET,
IMPORTERS.
•nn
COMMISSION MNR CHANTS
OLOTO.
CASSIKEREB,
DOEBKINB, AND
EfitMO AND
STIMIGIIR COATINGS,
MANTELZTS,
PANTALOON BTUFITI
F - ROTHENGRAM tt WELLS,
LlirrlTlA STREET, AND 34 SOUTH
FRONT STREET,
COTTONADES.
41nitable for both Clothiers end Jobbers, in lan*
variety.
'III7MNIER COATINGS AND CANIELMARIITTS
Made by Washington
OrArl i taken for these desirable goods for Bolus trails.
SWIM, HAZARD, 14 UUTOIMISON
NO 114 011E877 , 1 UT St.
COMMISSION IiRROHANTB
FOR THE HALE OF
PHILADELPHIA-MADE
GOODS.
.$4O,
HOUSE•FURNISHING GOODS.
11OUSE BURNISHING STORE.
WILLIAM YARNALL.
No. 1090 CHESTNUT STREET,
(Immediately opposite the Aosdemy of Fine Arte.)
Invitee the attention of HOUSEKEEPERS and
others to hie extensive assortment of
USEFUL HOUSEKEEPING GOODS.
TABLE CUTLERY,
NURSERY FENDERS;
CHAFING DISHES,
FIRE SCHEENfh
PLATWWARMERS,
TEA FOY% &c., &c.
Pl3-tathstf
MMACIREI3
EL—A fine invoice of
bbl.., fir ma
Ti., And Ate r
ewb reprOMM -
Rfrili t tg i gN a k N,; 1 "
1110 0
a Queen Iteee,” the Pet Mouse.
DT THE BARD OP TOWER HALL
For several years we have kept in a little tin cottage
au When white mouse. on which we had bedewed the
title " Queen Bees." She seemed to possess something
more than instinct, and bad been taught miter
which made her very interesting. and the pet of the
house. On Sunday morning we found her dead in her
cottage borne.
Queen Bess " is dead. our darling mouse t
n And vacant now the little house
which eon lived so long.
We mourn her lois,
ahnd: must
indite
•
A Fo ge oo ke " s Q a e n n o ßoss" ho ong light
In robe of Amos ermine white.
She-moved, with fairy footemps light.
In inert then queenly grime.
Oh t such a mouse was never known—
lier brilliant eyes like rubies shone.
And lustrous made her faoe.
But she le dead. and. though a mouse,
There is sadness in our bonsa—
i/ not agrief pr ' ,ofound —
For " Bea, of home a part.
A corner held in eviry heart
Where love for her was fo und.
No more, front wool of lambkins white,
W Idaho step out by day or night
Her food and drink In seek 2
No more she'll turn her shell-like ear.
That she her whispet'd name may hoar.
, When we that name May speak.
No more will " Bridget" have tolease
The good " Queen flew" with ta ke and chime,
And table dalotiall OH I
It made her happy this to do,
For area the mouse her kind :deed knew,
And came at Bridget's oall. •
No more with pleasure will be seen
The cottage home in which our queen
A life of quiet led:
No more my wife (with other cares)
Will have to bon", from " War UP 'ltalia, "
The wool to make its bed.
Alas. no MOM I lily wife is near;
see within her eye a tear,
a must the lid run o er
Well may the tears her eyelids wet;
For good " Queen Bess," our howishold pet,
Will bo with us no more I
There is no other mouse like her I
cm! lose is great ; but why demur f
The lona we're forced to Pear
rut. if for mote there be a heaven.
So little -• Beier " will be given
A plane the nicest there.
Nora—
A mouse is but a /flits thing,
Yet we are moved of one to sing
To sou, our 'stolen. all ;
If you for !rule things don't ogre, •
Then seek the grant—the bargains rare,
In CLOTHES at TOWIII. HALL.
Being determined to closeout the entire Winter stook
In its union, we offer inducements never before ofrotod;
such as plane the best Winter garments within the
reach of all.
BENNETT k CO., No. eta MARKET Street.
NBIV PUBLICATIONS.
IN PRESS.
Wo oball issue in a tea woke,
THE COMPLETE WORKS
LORD BACON.
n ifvolumes crown o3tavo. rriee SIM per volume
Prom the latest London edition, and edited by
JAMES SPEDDIND. M. A.,
Of Trinity College, Cambridge;
ROBERT LESLIE ELLIS, hl. A.
Late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge; and
DOUGLAS DENOR HEATH,
Barrister at Law, late Follow of Trinity College,
It will be the design of the publishers to issue these
work' in the very lushest style of menufacture, and
thus supply s want which has long existed for the popu
lar and standard works of our literature produced In a
etyle fully equal to their merits.
ALSO IN PRESS,
THE COMPLETE WORKS
SIR WALTER SCOTT.
In 21 vols. Finto.
WITH HlB LIFE BY LOCKHART
It ie intended to make this edition greatly 'unarm in
every respect to any ever yet issued, and which will se
cure for it a permanent reputation es the very beet be
fore the nubile.
BROWN, TAGGARD, &CHASE,
3at9•thltu•Jt 93 and 99 CORIIIIILL, Bot Ton.
RVANS' GIFT BOOK LIST-NEW
BOOKS.
IF YOU ARE IN WANT OF ANY BOORS.
BUY 'ITIENI AT OEIORGE O. EVAr
1113? THEM AT GEORGE 0. EV • R ,
11 Y THEM AT GEORGE 0. sVA 8'
gift Book Store. No. en Chestnut street,
cult Book Store. No. ale Chestnut street.
'Tut the beet place in the oil.
Books are sold no cheap as at any ether store,
• end you have the advantage:
Of getting a handimme Gift with each Book.
- I , 4I3WEIJBLICATIONS. , .
LIFE OP TUE .EISPRE‘S JOSE PH By Cecil
B. Hartley, One volume, 32m0. cloth. Prue $l.
THE ()BEEN'S FAT .4 A Tele of the Days or King
Baccd, - n. L RASO Ga
THE B O
IBLICAEN WHY. .11.1 , mill Outdo
134ripturel 'Reeding. Ono volume, ltino., cloth.
Pace I.
IHE ART OF DANCING. By E. Ferrero. One vol.,
12m0.. oloth. Piles el.
THE ADVENTOREB OF SOVATHAN HOME
BRED. By Sam Slick. Jr. One volume. 12m0., cloth.
Price 83.
THE DOOMED ORIEF. or 2 1 0 Years Ago Dy the
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PHILADELPHIA. 'ATURDAY. JANUARY 21, 1860.
Cambridge
PUBLISHER%
AO . BOOKS
SATURDAY, JANUARY.2I, 1860,
Publications Received.
Mr. A. Knight Pedrick, whom wh know to be an
able reporter and an aoourate 0011061er of facts, has
brought out an illustrated Guide ;Book between
New York and ()Moog°. load Philadelphia and
Pittsburg, whloh he calls " The Lightning Lino."
This is a weak title to a work got pp with great
tummy, Industry, and tact. Mr.tpellriek lite
rally makes travel comparatively easy by ' this ex
cellent Guide Book. Ile givoa time tables, railroad
and city mope, and views of the fedrreat eitiss
on the extended line, and also deeortbea the lead
ing objeota of Interest upon the Camden and Am
boy, New Jersey, Pennsylvania Nutria and Pitts
burg, Fort Wayne and Chicago raltroads—a con
tinuous lino ofover nine hundred nu* The book,
if put up in flexible cloth Orem so asjo boar the
wear and tear of travelling, would .b sheep at 60
dente; it is almost given away at halftat amount-
Downing (t Daley have published, in pamphlet'
it ,
an account of the life, death, and ft oral of (he
late Bishop Neumann, of this city, w h the op
mono preached on this melancholy Dee lon, aid a
history of the feinons ivory Genoese ortpitlx.
Callender A Co. 'bare sent us ,Victor jingo's
Letter on John Brown, with Mrs. Ann &Stephens'
Reply. We do not see what women ?have to do
with politico. 1-
Peterson d Brothers have published The
Adopted Heir," a novel of modern Beglish So
ciety. The plot Is well evolved and thaeharaoters
clearly Individualized. Reginald Lyle,' the mil
lionaire, is one of tbo best sustained"eharaeters
over drawn by Julia Pardee. The fair
,authoress,
we understand, has lately been granted* life-pen
slim of IMO par annum, in conaideration of her
merit as a writer. Peterson), have reptblished all
her works of fiction In a uniform manner, and at
ono fifteenth of the English selling Klee.
Letter from Harrisburg.
Corrsspondenoe of The Prese.l
IlAnwtßauua, 4an. lQ
There wore very few new bills introduced yes
terday. Mr. Panama read one to mate* portion
of &certain 20-feet-wide street In the Fifteenth ward
of the oily of Philadelphia. That portion vomited
oommenoes at Green street, running southward to
Brandywine, at the dietanoo of 80 feet. eastward
from Twenty-fifth street.
Mr. Duffield, "an aot relative to taking testi
mony by oonnuissioners for other States, resident
in Pennsylvania." It provides that any commis•
stoner appointed by any court of the 'United States,
or any State, *gild, or Territory in the United
States, to examine or take the testimony of tiny
witness within this Commonwealth, eball bo In
vested with all the power and authority Veltiott le
by law invested in commissioners appolrited for a
like purpose under the laws of this common
wealth.
~.
Mr. O'Neill, an sot to incorporate • theStstehers
and Drovers' Mutual Savings Fund And Ditan Com.
pony. The oorporatore are Danl. Mershon, Philip
Coleman, John Henderson, Wm. V. Afear4th, John
11. Jones, B. S. Hunt, John Boater, Wm. 4: fern,
John Stewart, John Dunlap, and Jame If ! ,:lifarks.
The capital stook to oonsiet of $500,000, is 10,000
shares of $5O each.' Ono thousand shiresrmuet be
subscribed before the company can' go Into opera
tion. Tho place of bushiest; Must be west if Jroad
street, and east of tho river Schuylkill. i''
Mr. Strong, of Philadelphia, deserves thwthanks
of sportsmen, and all those opposed to the needless
destruction of game, for introducing a supplement
to the ant of 1858 for the ' better proserration of
game and inseotiverous birds. It provided that
no pheasant shall be killed between the lei, day of
January and the Ist day of September; no :vood
oo*, January Ist anti July 4th ; no quail of rabbit,
January Ist and October let ; reed birds and rail,
January Ist and September Ist; and Snippet the
same tines ea the law to which it Is a supplement.
Mr. Williston, of Vega county, ohairman* the
Committee on Banks, road in plains s. , petal
banking law. It is one of the same kind "eney
bills heretofore introdueed—the sideltanoeb ,whict
is, making State stooks the basis of elle litpm,
and letting all go Into the 'business who eco erlik,
the law. I would condense its, p ;114,
thought• there wail Any liketthd at ifi w taipi ng ft .
law, hut there is not the slightest prUpiti 'oejlie
ourrone7 ova oaii.la 40 hi Dif trey-such turn this win thi.
The contested election eentutittek this, morning
reported, ousting T. W. Duffield, Democrat, of the
sixteenth district, Philadelphie,, and giving hie
seat to IJr. Wiley. They say that the return of
the election judges gave Duffield, 113 votes, 'and
Wiley In votes, in the third preoinct of the Twee.
ty.third ward, but a re-co/Int gives Wiley 180 And
Duffield only 93. Difference in favor of lYiley 40
votes, which elects him by 17 majority. As the no
tion of the committee le Anal in such cases, the
Colonel had to retire, molt regretted by his Demo
cratic friends, end with the best wishes of every.
body.
Two gentlemen—Mr. Collins, of Payette, and
Mr. Custer, of Darks—are endeavoring to gain
popularity, wo presume, among their constituents,
for they certainly will not got it here, by offering
bills to reduces the pay of members for the session
from $7OO to $5OO. Now, that this kind of patriot
ism can be Indulged in without periling in the least
their salaries, these gentlemen very wall know, or
they might not be so willing to make such moves.
It is done every year, and done, too, with the full
knowledge that no Inch movement can succeed
The intention is undoubtedly to muse the vote
of some miserly constituent ; and it secures that
object as well by its introduction as by its pose
age. No man who has ever lived a winter in Harris-
burg bat is aware that the present sum is enough,
and net anything more than enough, to keep a man
decently; but any one who feels that ho does not
earn that sum could dispose of his conscientious
scruples by paying the extra $2OO Into his county
treasury for the benefit of his oounty.
Mr. Seltzer, who was absent at home, detained
by sickness, Is book at bin post, as attentive and
obliging to his constituently as ever. PENN.
L RAW Reports.
Por The Press.]
Mn. Murat': I take leave to ask whether the
gentleman, who does the law reports for your pa
per, does not travel greatly out of the record in
making The Press the medium of his criticism and
praise upon the manner in which the bench and
the bar, according tobis view, perform their duty?
Take to•day's paper for example. We are in
formed that In a case before Justice Strong, a legal
gentleman "delivered a very title address to the
jury." Again, In a murder case before Judge
Allison, we are told that ono of the counsel for
the defenoo spoke " with great force," and
" appealed dor/went/3r to the jury." Was there
any necessity for your reporter's giving three
gratuitous praises—puffs, I m lght call them, which
I am aura my learned brethren, AO far from solicit
ing or expecting, do wholly disapprove of.
But this is not all. It Is added, "Judge Allison
charged the jury fully and impartially." I know
that the Judge is always Impartial. But, as your
reporter puts it, ono might tansy that his charging
impartially wee such a novelty that it was worthy
of being particularly noticed. I have to apologize
for thus occupying your attention, but thislis
pausing of praise or .censure by reporters, whose
sole business it is to state facts, and not presume to
offer opinions, should be checked. I em, Mr. Edi•
tor, A MEXIB6R Or cue BAR.
January 20, 1860.
The Marquisate of Sligo.
For The Pregs.l
MR. EDITOR : It is right that the mthito should
know that there is no person in the UMW States
with the slightest pretensions to the title of Mar
quis of Sligo. George John Browne, born in 1820,
succeeded his father. as Marquis of Sligo, in 80.
Ile has no male heir, and his heir presumptive is
Lord John Browne. The Marquis of Sligo has
two other brothers, Lords Richard and Henry Uliuk
Browne, the latter of whom is married.
If any one in this country should pretend that
he has pretensions to a title which really belongs
exclusively to the present peer's brothers, he must
be an impostor. Faux.
LIST OF • PATENTS ISSUED TO PENNSYLVANIANS
DURING THE WEEK ENDING JANUARY 17, 1860:
Vineent M. Baker, of Blkland, for improved wa•
ter wheel.
Angina Bickel, of Philadelphia, for improve
meat in crutches.
Win. A. Mackintosh, of Pittsburg, for improve
ment in osoillating steam engines.
Wm. B. Mackintosh and James Hemphill, of
Pittsburg, for improvement In omoillatlng steam
engines.
John Russell, of Gratupion Hills, for improve
ment In harrows.
John Sloan, of PittAnrg, asAgnor toE. 11. Drink
er and Wm. Wir Mil, of same &too, for improve
moot in distilling appttralux.
AN ENTIIIISIANTIO SCULPTOR.-11oubiliac, the
sculptor, was born and educated in Franco,
but exercised his art chiefly in England. His
biographer says that if ho happened to be In
company with a lady whose hands were beau
tiful, or whose cars were finely shaped, he
would gaze' wistfully at her, and has been
known to startle sensitive spinsters with ap
prehensions of matrimony, seizing them sud
denly by the wrist, and crying rapturously--
if Madame, I must hero your hand—madame,
11411 havo your or l'o
RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE.
nevuslon of the Bible.
At a recent anniversary meeting of tho Ameri
can Bible Union, held in New York, the Rev,
B. Hackett, D. D., made some just remarks on the
revision of our English version of the Scriptures, a
work in which, with other eminent philologists, he
has been for some time pant engaged. Ills address
on that 000aoion has been published in pant phis
form, for a copy of which we are indebted to an
attentive correepondent. The eubjeot of Bible re
vision bee of late received en much attention, and
has, practically, become so generally admitted as
a necessity, that the opponents of the measure are
almost certain to be overruled. Thevery fact that
this conviction has obtained site ultermously in dif
ferent countries is in itself a strong argument in
favor of revision. Even in Germany, where the
veneration for Luther's name might ho ex
pected to leave his translation untouehed, the
nubile mind tae taken hold of this matter,
and already measures have been adopted to
secure the necessary corrections. Luther's own
raffinate of his translation, expressed by himself In
the following words, is interesting In this Genera•
tin:. At the close of his herculean labors he
"Though I have done the best I could, I am
conscious of my imperfootions; and if any one
shall triers after me who has more light, and can
improve my work, let him dp it, and let the pee
ple adopt hie truth, and not cling to my' errors."
We may add that similar movements are also tak•
ing place in Belgium, Bellew], Norway, and
throughout Northern Europe, while in England
also it has for a long time engaged the attention of
the public. It Is true, there is some opposition
manifested everywhere, and nowhere, perhaps,
more than in our own country. At the same time
its neeeasity is almost Rolvereally acknowledged.
Scarcely n minister now enters the pulpit without
substituting some new word, or explaining to his
oongrogalton a meaning of the original• not im
plied in the English text. Professors In our theo
logical institutions, Biblical oommentators, and
writers on theological subjects generally, are doing
the same thing, and even intelligent teachers in
our Sunday enhools not nnfrequently find it neces
sary to base their explanations of Scripture upon
" a more correct rendering of text."
With regard to the new version now in progress,
of which Dr. Racket is one of the translators, the
latter, in the pamphlet above referred to, 'lnd!.
eaten the association from the charge of sectarian
ism, and reasons thus: "To what, I pray, does
this charge of leetarlaniem reduce itself? Is not
a man who undertakes this labor to have any re
ligious convictions I Would you entrust it to those
who have no fixed religious bolter?" adding, that
a given rendering of a plumage, which favors one
oreed more than another, is not on that account
necesearily a sectarian rendering, but that it is the
adoption of a rendering against the evidence that
makes it sectarian.
The negative ground, that we should wait until
many questions that tin still unsettled are fairly
cleared up, In the progress of human knowledge,
btforo this great work of revision ie attempted, is
also met with considerable force. " If," to quote
our author, " we are to wait till everything is
known before anything is done, it is quite certain
that nothing over will be done. We must bo con
tent forever with an imperfect work, which can
oonfessedly be improved, because we will accept of
nothing abort of that absolutely perfect work
which Is an Impossibility." To Illustrate : "A
timid traveller site down upon the banks of the
Mississippi, and, afraid to venture, will hike no
moons to crone the stream until the waters have
all flowed by ; and there ho site, waiting and
waiting; and -how long will he not bo com•
polled to wait !" Already two anti a half centu.
rios have poured their light upon them subjeots,
elm the Ring James version was made, and it Is
asked, " Why not gather up the mattered rays and
concentrate them on the snored page, and let every
oyo be cheered with the eight of any new truths or
now aspects of old truths, which research, study,
or piety may have dwelt:mod to ue In the great book
of God's revelations 1"
Dr. Hackett dissents from the view that it is pre
sumptuous for any class of men in this age to sit
In judgment on the labors of the old scholars, and
adds that there haa not been a time since the ago
of Ring Janice when preachers have not exercised
this right of critical judgment In the presence of
their congregations.
144,,prea, of the above, the January sauinbn of
'kat; " ingdite based "—one of the meet readable
religious periodicals of the day—has an article on
Pleiv) vuu . tah , d..
`lnuoh that is interesting in this connection. The
ground taken by the writer of the article In tines-
Sion is, that if the deficiencies of the "common
version " consisted only in certain Infelicitous ex.
preealons. as Is alleged by some, it would be a mere
childish ploy to attempt to modernism It ; as, for
example, the exchanging of phrases like these :
"Shining light" into dawning light;" " grave "
into " under-world ;" .• hoary-hoed " into "gray
hair;" "crown of glory" Into "crown of splint.
dor ;" '• hole " Into " cavern ;" ', nest " into
"abetter," or " hewn down" Into " felled." Such
alterations would not be worth the labor bestowed
upon them. It is assumed, however, that there are
numerous deficiencies of a much mere important
chareotor, dnd which render some passages obscure,
doubtful, or unintelligible, and others absolutely
incorrect. In prod! of this position, several pas
sages aro quoted as they occur in our English ver
' don, and rendered differently. A single example
I must suffice We introduce this one, from lie
being probably more familiar than the rest to
Bible-readers:
Isaiah I, " Como now and let us reason
together, with the Lord. Though your sins be as
soarlet, they shall be cs white as snow ; though they
bo red as crimson, they shall be Rs wool. Rye be
willing and obedient, yo shall oat the good of the
land. But if ye refuse and rebel, ye shall be de
voured with the sword ; for the mouth of the Lord
both spoken it."
In this passage the writer assumes that there
arc several words incorrectly translated, end, for
reasons which he gives, renders the passage as
follows: 4, Come, I prayyou, and let us plead with
ouch other, salth Jehovah : If your sins ho as soar.
let, shall they broom() as white as snow? If they
still be redder than crimson, shall they basomo
like wool? (No* Ryon are willing and obedient,
you shall oat the good of the land ; but if you re.
fuso and rebel, you shall be devoured by the
sword."
In support of this rendering, it is added that the
history of Israel, after God hod thus pleaded with
them, shows plain enough that God did not mean
to say that he would make their crimson-red sins
white like snow, but that ho would punish them so
vorely.
SIMION IN BEHALF ON TUB FOSTICII lionx —The
,Rev. John Chambord will preaoh a sermon in be.
hnif of the poor, nt his ohuroh, Broad and Benson'
streets, to-morrow afternoon at 21 e'clonk. As
the subject is ono in. which all Christians should be
interested, the house will, doubtless, be unusual
ly overflowing. To glee the matter as practical a
turn no possible, a collection will be taken in aid
of the Foster Homo, a moat worthy Institution.
THE POPE IN THE PrinsexT C/118/11.—Tho fol•
lowing passages are taken from a letter received
by Mr. Maguire, from a gentleman in high posi
tion In Rome It is dated the 10th of December :
I am happy to any that the Holy Father is per
reedy well, nod is very grateful for the sympathy
manifested for him by the Catholics all over the
world. The pastorals of the Irish bishops, and
the greet meetings held In Dublin, and the sentl•
ments eliolted there, have been to him a source of
much consolation. Although It is for Mon a mo
ment of great trial and anxiety, yet ho boars hie
troubles with the greatest resignation, patience, and
equanimity, and every one remarks how cheerful
he la in the midst of his sufferings. Remo was
never more quiet than it Is at this moment ; and if
you were hero you would not nee any difference
from what it was last year. Of course. we aro
looking forward anxiously to tho Congress.
Ragland, no doubt, will be the groat antagonist
of the Holy Father, but I entertain a confident
hope that the majority of the representatives will
be in his favor."—Car.4 Examiner.
PLYMOUTH CHURCH ETOUIC ON TIIE HISS.—Tho
iews in Henry Ward Dereher'a church, in Brook.
yn, were reconUy cold at auction. The premiums
received amounted to $16.6110, which added to the
fixed valuation of the pews, make the total rental
for 1860, $29,588, an increase on the last year of
over $5,000. Many persons were disappointed in
obtsining seats, and a general desire for the emu
plotion of a new and larger building was expressed.
A Cuuncit POP. St.svxs—A writer in the 'AXES
Bapreal states that Morgan L. Smith, of Brazoria
county, has built a church for his blacks, costing
nearly $3.909, with this sign over the front door :
tt The African Baptist Church." Ito collects Ms
servants in this house each Sabbath morning, reads
and expounds the Scriptures, joins with them in
prayer, and calls on the pious of them to join with
him. Ills wife also teaches the children the cate
chism prepared for their benefit.
RELIGIOUS PREJUDICIL-A Belfast pastor mouth
the idea that the Irish revivals are the remit of
the Amerionn or aided by the prayers of Amer'.
cans. Ile thinks while slavery le tolerated in that
country any prayer or revival " imported" there
from is not worth having! lie calls America " a
land which has done more to roster infidelity than
any other so-called Christian land."
RATHER Slime —The Georgia Methodist Epis
copal Conference lately reprimanded a minister for
attending a eireue,.and subsequently unanimously
resolved that a menlater or layman who attended
a show of any description should be exnelled from
the Mutat.
CONVERTINU CANNON DULLS INTO CIWICHEIL—
A church is about to ho erected by the lluesinn
Government near Inbertnann, the (ands for which
aro supplied by the sale of cannon balls which
have been picked up at Inkormann and Sebastopol.
A Now MoNtitt.r lidaosztarc, the interpreter, is
to he started In England with tho new year, de•
'OW to an analytical account of the Sorlpturel.
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
PAM! IN HUMAN NATVItE.—The Cafe Foy is a
celebrated Paris restaurant. IL has, or hed, a
standing rule never to call back, or ask an owls
nation from any Individual leaving the establish-
Went without paying. The doctrine wee, if the
gentleman is merely forgetful, he will rectify his
error the next day ; if the omission Is a swindle,
it is better to suffer the loss than provoke publicity,
and perhaps unpleasant consequences. For five
years an individual bad breakfasted regularly at
the Cafe Foy, and as regularly bad acquitted his
each morning's indebtedness. At last he omitted to
do so, but no notice was taken of it. Ile went on in
the Came way for a week, but as he was an habitue'
of so long standing, it excited no uneasiness.
The waiter 'finally asked the proprietor If he
should remind the gentleman of hie delinquency.
no meant," was the reply. "Ile has been
punctual in hie payments for five years, and If be.
is less so now, It Is, perhaps, that he is In want of
money. At any rate, de not let him suppose, by a
look or word, or any want of attention, that his
recent irregularity has been noticed." At the
end of eight months, the gentleman disappeared,
leaving his bill unsettled. It was put down tomtit
and lose, and, in five years more, bad passed from
the recollection of the master of the bona*. Not
long ago he received, _from a distant port, a stilp.
writ of genuine. Make. worth About, • thou:tad
dollars, and Is draft upon a Paris banker for one
thousand one hundred franc* the approximate
amount of two hundred and fly breakfasts. The
latter wan a reimbursement—the former a " re-
cognition of an act of delicacy, rare in any station
of life."
RECOVERY or 110 N. GERRIT SWIM—The Poston
Traveller publishes the following extract of a
private letter, received in that city, from Peter
born', New York ;
"You will be happy to learn that Gerrit Smith
hag returned home; that his health is fast Im
proving; that, though weak, he is perfectly sane,
and talks freely on all the great events which have
transpired; sleeps well. and has a good appetite ;
rides and walks every day, but avoids reading and
writing; does not receive company as yet, because
bis strength is not great. lie is, however, rownd
the village as usual, ministering to the wants of
the sick and poor. liis temporary alienation of
mind his phystelans declare to have been capsed
solely by phylioal disease, In which acute dyspep•
sla was moat apparent, and his complete reitera
tion to full vigor of mind and body Is considered a
certainty. 0. P. P."
ANOTHER Dean SCOTT CASE.—A somewhat in•
toreetiug ease, brought by one Virginia Burnett
against a resident of Hudson county, in New Jar
say, is notioed for trial at the present term of the
Circuit Court of the said county, in which, among
other matters, the right to sue will be brought in
question, under the rulings In the celebrated Died
Soott ease. Tho plaintiff is a fine-looking haltand•
half colored person, born and brought up in the
family of Commodore Stockton, at Princeton, N.
J. Her mother and father were slave!, who lived
and died at Princeton, and the plaintiff in this suit
seems to be the only surviving one of the family.
"Buy Sosiernitia."—We yesterday witnessed
rather an amusing incident on Main street, A sta. ,
wart individual, apparently about "half sprung,"
wee ooming down that thoroughfare, when a gen.
tleman, obviously of Jewish extraction, and iden
tified with the clothing interest, sprang upon him,
and wanted to know if be wouldn't "buy some
dog." The six•footer caught him by the collar,
and gave him a shake that made him rattle In his
boots. " Buy something," he roared, "d—n you,
do I look like a man that would buy something?
have passed hero six times a day &eft., years, and
every time you gee Me you ask me to buy some
thsg.' Curse you, (giving him another riblike that
made his teeth chatter,) do you think yonwillknow
me next time?" The crest-fellers clothier looked
as if he would.—Daily Cincinnati Constnereaal.
REMATIKABLE LONGEVITY—A VENERABLE MA
TRON.—We understand that there is now residing
on Sycamore street, between Seventh and Eighth, a
woman named Isabella Ward, who has attained
the remarkable ago of one hundred and right
years. She name to this city from Philadelphia,
more than half a century ago, and has lived here
ever since. What is her physical condition,
or how
well sbe is provided with the comforts of life, we
are not able to say, but infer from what we have
learned that the fading landscape of time might be
tinctured with roster hues, So venerable a mother
should not be permitted to want for any thing. We
commend her to the attention of the Pioneer Ageo
olation.—Csneinnati Enquirer.
SUOIGE.—On Friday last, Bernard Voicht, of
the vicinity of Plangent Unity, committed suicide
by hanging himself in a neighbor's barn. The de
ceased was a native of Pommy, and came to this
country tome twenty years ago, and worked for
several years in this neighborhood. For about
twelve years hes has leaded. inAse—vielelty of
Pleasant Unity, where be owned nine gores of land,
well improved, and has about six hundred dollars
et interest. Ile married a respectable girl in that
nolgabornadd, - WOO—burg - nuns enters/ "eniterea—
three are living. The oldest is about twelve
years of ego, and the youngest about four. Ile was
in prosperous circumstances, very industrious and
frugal, and a favorite with all who employed him.
Fora few days before he committed the rash act,
be was impressed with the belief that hard times
would continuo, and hie family come to woes.—
IVestmorsland Argus.
One hundred pounds have been bestowed
upon Muse Pardee, the novelist, by Queen Vie.
toile, for her contributions to literature. The silt
tors of the late Dr. Dionysiue Lardner have alto
been generously remembered by the Queen.
r,:t7" Lord Palmerston has granted tlO from the
Royal Bounty Fund to Mr. Plummer, for hie per
vice in the cause of social science. Mr. Plummer is
a young man, twenty-six years of age, who has ob.
tanned considerable reputation from his opposition
to the ehoemakeru strike, and still more re•
easily to that of the London builders. During the
last tour or five years ho has contributed upwards
of five hundred letters, papers, essays, tales, poems,
le., on almost every eubjeet, to the press, besides
a trnet on " Freedom of Labor," whloh was al
luded to by Lord Brougham in his celebrated
speech on popular literature; a tract on
" Strikes:" another on the " Nine Hours Move.
went," which was notieed by Lord Brougham in
the House of Lords; and a recent tract on the
, Rights of Labor," has been dedicated by per
mission to the Earl of Shaftsbury. In addition t
these efforts, be has written a tract for the Scottish
League, prepared a paper on " Strikes " for the
Bradford Meeting of the Social Science Association,
obtained one of John Caseell's priest for au essay
on " Sanitary Reform," and performed many
shriller labors. Mr. Plummer Is an operative in
a factory, and his literary labors have never been
allowed to trench on his daily employment.
THE OIIOANIZATION Or TOE HOUSE —The Wash•
legion correspondent of the Now York Herald, un
dor ditto of January 19, says:
"The fad wee elicited today, from Messrs. Bur
nett of Kentucky, McQueen of South Carolina,
Lamar and Barksdale of Mississippi, Clark of Mis•
soul, and others, that an agreement had been
signed by those gentlemen, and some thirty or forty
others, constituting one•fitth of the members of the
House, that they would prevent a vote being taken
on the plurality rule for an election of a Speaker.
"This is not the prograninio of the national De
mocrats, as will be shown in a day or two, when
Mr. Woodson, of Missouri, will offer a resolution in
favor of the plurality rule. Ten thousand Mr.
Woodsons, however, cannot procure the intention
of the plurality rule, if forty odd members era de
termined to resiut all attempts to allow evote upon
it. The statement made in the House to-day, that
every member of the present House, except one
from Rhode Island, was elected under a plurality
law existing in all the States of the Union, was eon
aidered a severe commentary upon the argument
that the plurality rule is uneonstitutional, espe
cially when Speakers Cobb and Banks were elected
under its operation, and no constitutional question
raised.
"The result of the developments of toolay, It Is
believed, will cleat Mr. Sherman by a mniority
vote within a week."
A Frenchman, it is said, after having all
day long sauntered through his beloved Paris—
seeing its many sights, and "habituating" his
usual and favorite resorta—in the evening relieved
himself of hat and boots, encased his body in a
dressing gown and his feet In penitoufles, and seat
ing himself happily in his apartment, soliloquized
as follows: "Europe is, beyond doubt, the only
oivilized continent. Franco is, certainly, the moat
enlightened country in Furopo. Paris is, we know,
the head and heart of France. The quartier of
Paris that 1 inhabit is admitted to be the most ele
gant and perfect portion of the city. The hotel, of
which I occupy a part, is the finest of this quarter
My own suite of apartments is the largest and beet
furnished of the whole hotel. At this time, and at
all others, I em the first end leading person in my
apartments. By necessary consequence, I stand
at the head of the world. I am the Ego, with no
competitive Alter."
r. President Buchanan standa up to his Le
compton friends, who have been east overboard by
the people they have grossly miareprosented. It
is the way a corrupt Executive buys votes : he
holds out the promise that if they will sustain him
in his odious course, and should be thrown over
board, he will take care of them. In this way he
has taken hare of a good many of his defeated sup
porters, and offered to take ears of others. He has
given a foreign mission to Clamp Jones, to George
W. Jones, to Charles James Faulkner, a Collector
ship to Mr. ex• Representative Hatch, a Judge
ship to Mr. ex-Representative Hughes, the Com
utlasienershlp of the Patent Office to Mr. ex-Repre
'tentative Bishop, and the Commiesionerahip of the
Land Woo to Mr. ex-Representativo Smith. Ile
has offered a lucrative Federal office to Mr. Amass
J. Parker, defeated fur the office of Governor t f
Now York.
Ills list of extraordinary appointments of extra
ordinary Individuals, who have toadied to him and
flattered his unbounded vanity and ambition to be
re-elected, roads vividly on the page of his coun
try's history ! Look at a few of them :
Alexander Dimitry. minister to Central America.
Chevalier' Henry Wykoff, bearer of despatches
to China, who went as far as England, and re
turned.
Francis J. (Inlnd, consul to Havre, but rejected
by the Senate.
Dr. Charles Leib, a Dimity, General Post Office
travelling agent.
James Megulre, sometimes called Pat," tom.
tateelmilr estraortilnarb to travel to Botith Arnett*
TWO CENTS.
as and look after oar ministers there.—WasAigg
tor. N. Y. Tribune. •
ISIIMARNABLII MAIIRIAOI.-MR. EDITOR : OR the
10th instant I wag Fluent at a marriage ceremony
at Bt. Remy, Esopas, Ulster co , N. 1., which, in
many respect., I think, Imputes anything of the
kind that has ever occurred in the United btates.
The age of the bridegroom is eighty-three, and
that of the bride eighty years, both healthy and
vigorous, well to dolt' the world, and bidding lair
to enjoy it for twenty Jean to some. They have
bad large families, that are now theressed te • me
mentos offipnng °fraud children and graabgrand
children. The (deleting clergyman having been
a rolniater in the &Melt Kirk, In the English . "
neighborhood, and now the respected Dominic of
apes, the primitive landing piece of the Dutch
on the Malmo river, has tied the mental. last
in the Scotch, English, steLDutok fashions, bat oa
the recent occasion he adopted a form of his own,
which was culled to the oireorostancei Of the ease,
end gave satisfaction to the happy couple and all
present. The name of the bridegroom .is Sylver.
ter Terpennlog, that of the bride Mrs. Catharine
Van Akea , and that of the clergyman Rer. James
MoParlane. V, Ming all the parties long life,
prosperity, and happineso, I alga impair
DOTCRIGIW.
=:=
A IVIAZ SISTIR—CIOTIda TO CLlaatlalat
Rev. A. 5. Finch publishes in the Brockport
vertiser &card or warning to Abe publio, Ira MS
brethren, the clergy, In parthylar, against s err
man whom he married Nutria& fall, and who ha l
since dein:tad and ruined his. He esylidtu4 btln
his' ruin' it elaboeupllslied UMW atkieding the
Brockport Camp Maettair, a woman, email to da
ter., wakeful . . epees, and preposseming In . apply
:me., appeared, pursued him in • canisp, told
him of her esteem and bow mush she was worth,
and Induced him to marry her. U. consented, the
krilt was tied, and she haring ectomplished his
ruin, forsook him, probably to Ind another victim.
Mr. Einah marts in hie card that tbla woman had
served two men, #t least, in the unto way before—
one residing at Belleville, C. W., tire other in Wit
condo. The Wisconsin man she left in a destitute
eondition, with three children to provide for. Lest
she may Indict defier outrages upon others of our
leg, we give this much publicity to the statement.
Clergymen who may be single—euseeptible to the
inffuence of the sox and the blandishments of for
tune---should beware of females Mall in stature,
prepossessing In appearance, wearing epees, pre.
tending fo the possession of great wealth, and who
pursue men In carriages to effect their ruin.
ANOTHER MICIANICDRIYZN ?RON CBE 8017TSS.-
Mr. Parley Seaver, of Oxford, ayear ago last May,
went to South Carolina to superintend a steam new
ton), his employer also being an Oxford man. By
industry and economy he accumulated sutdoient
funds to purchase a house, and he thought himself
settled fur life. Mr. Sauer, says the Worcester
Transcript, was a quiet, religious man,
.and as
there was no preaching or other religious exercises
in the place, he wu wont to call his neighbors
together on the Sabbath to reed the Bible and hear
a sermon. A rumor got round the village that
" Seaverpreached Abolition sermons," bat nothing
was done about it until Saturday night, Christmas
eve. At about one o'clock in the morning he
was waited on by a large delegation, who, after
ransacking his papers and books, and obtaining
from him an admission that five negroes bad at
tended his meetings—how many whites attended
is not elated—ordered him to leave within twenty
days. Seaver offered to go at once if they would
buy his plane, but this they refused, and he came
away within the specified time, finding it impossi
ble to diapers of his property.
DR. ROBERT J, DRECEINHID . GE'S LETT= to
rue Vice PRESIDENT.—Dr. Breokinridge, of Ken
tacky, has written a very eloquent and conserva
tive Union letter to the Vice President. We have
not apace for the whole of it, but can give only the
concluding portion :
" It is the furthest possible from being true that
the secession of a portion of the slave States, or the
disruption of the Union on the slave-line, is a ne
cessary, a wise, or even an allowable alternative.
It is true the States are sovereign States. Bat it is
equally tree that the nation is a nation—the Ame
rican people a people. Groat nations cannot sod
denly disappear, like a cloud of insects; nor do
powerful nationalities fade in a day, like the Hower
of the grass . It took the Roman Empire a thou
sand years to die; and the Hebrew nationality has
survived through all the possible fortune of four
thousand years.
"To rend a nation in twain is a far more terrible
procedure than for • nation to recover itself by
an internal struggle. Nothing can be more ear-
We, than that slavery cannot be perpetuated on
this continent by means of the rending of this na
tion. With IS single nationality like our,, internal
struggles, no matter how often
.they may oocor,
can never be greatly protracted, and can never fa
tally arrest the program of society. But in pre
duly such a case as ours, the permanent rending
of the nation is a eoleateata—the _
eddeb_oennuserbellfalg so assurelriplir rue mu, oat
dissolution of both the parts—and the end of which
can produce nothing more certainly than the total
defeat of the avowed object of its perpetration.
The firm determination of every portion of the
Union to maintain its rights withid the Union, un
der every extremity, would soon put en end to all
necessity for any portion of it to elect between ter
rible means of doing so. It is the holding in re
sena of this idea oirending the nation, it is the
weakening of the idea of our glorious nationality,
that gives vigor, if not existence, tote many ideal ,
which can escape being traitorous only by denying
that we aro a people or have any nationality. In
the restoration of that great idea, there is a moral
force competent to lave the country by ordinary
means, even le such a crisis as this. Or, if there is
not, there is e. practical force in it competent to
save the country by arms, whenever law is silent,
and arms are the only remedy. It Is horrible to
reflect that the children of the Revolution might
be obliged to shed each other's blood. flow much
morn horrible to shed it in such • manner that
(weans of it could never restore what we had de
stroyed, while every drop of it would be an eternal
testimony against our folly.
" For my part, I am not ashamed to eonfeel the
depth of my love for my whole country, and the
mingled sorrow and indignation with which I wit
nail every attempt to weaken amongst the people
the canes of what we owe to the mother of us ail.
No people ever did anything glorious who did not
believe in God, who were not tetthfol to oaths, and
who did not love their country. When I reflect on
what Clod has already done for us and already
done by us for his own glory, and for the advance
ment of the human race; when I consider what oar
position and our influence amongst the nations of
the earth must be when we become a hundred mil
lions; when I try to appreciate the necessity of
just each a power on earth, and the majesty of Ito
beneficent and irresistible exercises, my very heart
throbs with overpowering joy and exultation that
such a destiny is reserved for my people, that each
a refuge end inheritance is kept in store for man.
I thank God continually that the dust of my anoes
tore ming les with this !oil; th at the hands of my
kindred have labored on these sublime monuments;
that the valor of my friends was a part of the coot
by which all has been secured; and that the lot of
the inheritance of my posterity appertains to such
a land and such a people. As for the South, taken
in its widest sense, God has cast my lot there, and
I have been loyal to her • all the more loyal, that
I have been neither blin di to her errors. nor igno-
rant of her perils. As for Kentucky, if I have left
undone anything I could have done for her honor,
her interest, or her glory, she knows how joyfully
I would redeem that leek of service. But still I
love my country; still I em an American citizen.
And I deny, with uplifted hands, the right of any
court, any President, any Congress, any State, any
combination of States under heaven, to abolish
from amongst men that highest of all human
titles. I have worn it as a crown all my days on
earth. And I implore you by our common blood
and common name, by all the love so many noble
hearts bear for you and all the hopes they cherish
concerning you, so b quit yourself in this day of
trial and rebuke, that you shell boar that title
proudly, long after my gray hairs are under the
green sod. 80. J. Beeektrealeas.
Bredalbane, Ky., Jan. 9, 1880."
New York Photographed at Home and
Abroad.
(Front the New York Hereld.]
There is not a city in the world, the Asiatic alone
excepted, in which the present abominable con
dition of our streets would be tolerated. With the
exception of the dog nuisatize, we are in the full en
joyment of all the urban suburban dmagrinseas of
the Constantinople highways. ilellesponte of slush,
impassable to any but adventurous Leanders, sights
and smells odious to Christian eyes and noses,
and daily accidents to life and limb, describe
in a few words the discomforts and casualties to
which the citizens of this great metropolis are
subjected. Is there no remedy for this state
of things i+ Abroad, we know that evils of the
same kind are fully . met by municipal legisla
tion. In London, in Paris, in all the great
cities of Europe, nothing of the sort is to be
witnessed. householders and storekeepers are
held rigidly to account fur the condition of the
pavement before their tenements, whilst the au
thorities take care of the main thoroughfares. Ns
miner does snow fall than it is shovelled into the
middle of the causeways by the inhabitants; and
once there, the street inspectors have it carted
away. Any neglect of these arrangements would
be followed by the Immediate punishment
of the one by fine, and of the other by dis
missal. The consequence is that in none of the
leading European cities Is the passenger ever In
commoded by difficult crossings, by offensive odors,
or by slippery pavements. Why cannot we have
the mime condition of things here 'We pay heavi
ly enough fur the benefits of municipal protection
to enjoy our fair share of them. We have street
ordinances, we have street inspectors, and we have
street contractors in sufficient number to inaure the
deciont maintenence of our publie thoroughfares.
I From New York correspondence of London Times.]
I fancy that municipal world
are pretty
much the same thing the world over, whether the
Democratic principle of rotation in office prevails.
as in Now York, or whether the offices be secured
bye bettor tenure, as in London. Yet, making
all due allowance for rival claims, I think that
New York stands preeminent among the principal
commercial cities of the world for maladministra
tion of patio affairs. It has an unequalled water
front upon two superb rivers, with a tide of only
six feet ; and yet it le without a Icicle worthy of
the name. Its commerce is carried on over sal-
Reliable wooden Vera, rotting and crumbling away
by the weight of the goods put upon them, or Its
shipping Iles exposed in the stream. The island
upon which it Is situated is narrow, with a crown-
Ina ridge In the centre running longithdinally
with it. The distance on either side to the river
Is not much more then from Temple-bar to Char
ing-cross. One would think that bad Sewerage
enl dirty 'truth ought to be talloT7l3, and yet it
would be ditaordt to And a tarp town more marked
THE WEEKLY PRESS.
TKO WO
oroy Pura will to not to Behouttoro y mail im oscines, is adra
. a . oe,) at— —.....-- #2
Tires Copt% •• - • •—•—• ~.... LIP
Foto Copley. " ... tit
Teo " " ..
—...— ILO
'nasty Coates " " (to oras address) MOS
Twenty Copies, or over, " (to oddrom of
each Elabscriber,) each.-- —•- —• • U S
Fora Mb of Treaty-osu or oVIST., will all sod as
gaps con to the setter-.p of toe Clad
VirPootmsatera at* rotosoted to sots. osooto Lot
Tait WiIIIZT Pans.
CALIFOILNIA. PRESS.
lasaad iktal-Moothb m bur fat tie Cafiforrait
Summers.
for either. Water as well ma other mesas eletems•
linear ebrand,yet the odor of the perm et the
town occupied by tenement houses is anavulled
and orepewering. The Mere life as • a mai et
rook, which °meal to the mutate ahead ereery
when. and. oftener than otherwise, bas to be re
moved by blotting, to give annexe to the harass'.
Nothing snakes a harder or better piensoneet thee
this seek, and yid, arseriy all the tirearie pared
with numb eobbleetcosee. Bet them
are confined to one side of tie setraTatii3e7Co
other side the show of mindripal tawniest dye
great credit to the wealth of the city. The tams
sod ametareents amount to shoat 2 per eat at the
greet valuation. Fancy tech a aseraore et Wades
nee an estate yielding STIII per cent. per swam.
(Fran the Landon nom)
The city which Is the real metropolii of the 'Uni
ted States appears now to have arrived at the at
mom point of bad germination mach so that the
respectable community are extruded a dismal
consolation from the state of affairs, and esyhrg
that, as things cannot manibly be worse, they mud
now begin to mead- The city is certainly the mast :
remarkable malt of wealth and enterprise whisk
the world bee known. In art Incredibly abed
space of this, is has rime free "the rash 'of el
tenth-rate town to be the third et, in the wield
in population and rishe• in thelast ten yam the
larger parr has been entirety rebuilt ; revrirt• sad
freestone edifices of out JIM handy, sad esettle..
es W o
nem have barn sedreStarted tor the 99109.ipestisn 3
Broad way has beers e • ra tteleltett
oteearly 800 tasista i s what will he
Wore beg thatisisktt ; deretileg-hauses
= 1 ,2 .atZ t dielellamis, tat ezermidleg la
the arerwe drrettlege at'
Leadoeene : and New Tart, with Its sabered
now reckoning more Sum a edam ef tabs
bitents, may look forward to being in the next
graetertion, not only the bate. bat where the
mast • beentiftd, sky la: the eretid. all Mb has
been done by private *Capin ; and if the aim&
nfitrition of the city had been in able and hared
bands the resets would have bees far more-ewers.
ordinary. Bet, by all aceanats, der sowaltdpaity
of the city has always been iraidelent aid eerrept.
The highest 'otferer,—the =yen, the aldermen.
end other dignitaries—have been often men Of
dubious ettameter, or, at least. mere (riding wit
ticism; who have risen by pandering to the mob at
voters, ghpetioging in base with tim ruffians of titi
town, and curiae their offtelal pewee oily to put
money Into the pockets oillienualvse and friesda.
The Jo bery has been universal. Erroneous MIMI
are raised yearly, and there te no resale The
lightin the paving, and the cleanleg at Om Mesta
are pai d for In the most extravagant mamitair end
yet are so bad that they would" disgrace a little
provincial town. The odor, even in the bed whit,
is intolerable in a Dot Ameriesos rentmer. Brett
cow Pigs run almost wild through the stretU, and
the dirt of these animals and of the horses it. left
for days together to poison lb. atmosphere. With
the very greatest advantages far draining, the city
is in danger of a pestilence from filth unde
Yet the mraleipal taxation is arch 'aeon=
be borne in this country. Oar correepondent Is
forms us that " the taxes and usaurneata amount
to about two per cent. if the gram valuation." So
that, of an income of dye per rant derived from
property two-fifths are eradicated. The inhabi
tants remain almost passive under all this.
Weekly Renew of the Philadelphis
Markets.
futsnatratta. Janttat7 SI, MIL
The operations of the seek lost part have been elute
limited in most departments of [mahatma. and the mat_
bets generally are dna. Cinema:on Bask contil sae
scare* and wanted at fall rates. Breslau:Ts are bet
little inquired for, and the prices of mort kinds rats in
favor of the buyers. Coal manias very esist asd pri
ces the mime. Coffee is in fair mutat at full Piet&
Eager and 24015.10188 have been inactive, owing to the
want of gimlets. Cotton is bettsr.asd more active at
the dom. ?lib are held with Increased finangas. bat
r there is very little doing. Fruit, no change. Hides vs-
I main very quiet. In Iron there has been very little la
' entry for -faftre delivery. Lumber is dull. la Naval
Stores the transactions hare been unimportant. Oils
are steady. Provisions are coming in from the Wed,
Mather') is very limited dowsed for asp description.
Biro meets a limited inquiry. Clovereeed has baste
coming forward freely. Timothy and Flaxseed are
scarce and wanted. Teas and Totems ars very du.R.
Wool to quiet, the trade being pretty well supplied.
Whiskey is lower and unsettled. la Dry Goods there is
a good feeling to note and more activity in the trade
generally. with large and full assortments. The noels
of all descriptions, both foreign and domestic. never
were better. Boots and Ehoes, and Hardware. are eso
more active. with indications of a teed Perin bwainem.
The Breadstuff's market has been eery dd this week,
the demand both for shipment and on speenistime being
limned, and at the close the latter has entirety gob
sided- The melee of Flour reach only abort sOM bble. in
email lots, at ft&d3e6.62.ii for standard and send etnsielltt
auperfies sad 1151546 for extras. as es quality. the ta
ter for chotee breads teetathes3Co We mixed
all &mated. sold tomeanie. at st3e be ge m a ri at
nn hide vomiting at 94 is. closing with more Reline than
buyers at three rates The snide hays bites bold *a
NO% at prices tensing from idatt to V 25 bbi floe
soperfine aims and troop brands. accord's. to siFtitiy,
Rye Flour is else sellias skied, at 11474 ahL
Cent St.al is ant nisch aquired sad Peassy east:
Meal it held at 3376 ,bbl. A oak of 200 this dam
seed Brandywine Illentwas meld. be sestina. at itie
bbl.
Tee &Bovine is the rniyieStioe of Flour aid Mewl, for
the vesksildias Jimmy _ . .
e L herrels Sill
L
Total --. —.—..— 11 MIS
WHEAT has met watts a limited Ineetry. and teteess
are lens firm. with sales et 10 OM bushels fair and prime
Penusylvsnis and southsra red at sisel36e. and man
tote of white 410.133 c. Rye is wanted. and is takes as
arrival at Msrelle for Feeakelvaglia u! 6 00 far Dila
wore. Coro is dull. bat the receiets are licht. with sales
of LI CO3 b .anals prima now yellow at 76•770 in the
care and afloat. end white Mtge. Oats are Ism &class.
with sales or 10.000 bushels et 41.460 9 ballet for
Pe ansy I msts, mostly at 4.1 c. Barley is study. and New
York sold at Mc 4f9 lathe; a, sale of Barley Hiatt sou
made at to. 4St bathe
PROVISION S.—Suppliee come forward stowlv. and
the sales are of a were limited character. The rearipas
or Port. although small. are etcal to the demand and
prices remain without change ; sales if Western Lod
nits-packed mess at 817:117 50, cash. and on Lane t
machine dotes in prime. City-parted nixes Beef sells as
wanted, for isttle's stores. at $134115 9 bk 4; Waal*
do II dull at 81 0 20. Kilted Bore are comint la 'may,
and sell at 86.7597 V ItO Races—The receipts end
smocks are light, end the demand limited: suss •f
Hams, in lots. at 10012 Se 4s' nis for piala sad 'Lieu
cured; Sid.* at 'Vie. and Shoulders at 80. es dare.
(keen Meats—The receipts are tame... are, and they
are in limited demand. Sales of Hams. in ei.-Itle„st
104
s.Vis Si d es at Phllulder• as 6.905 Xe 41,
O St
quiet, nut prices an anehaured; a leant
tca and Ws at llesialle; ens at 11% unk,
some nun lots of Jersey at the latter .rice. natter—
There is • limited demand for roll at ]sale.; solid
larked at 16X013e. Cheese it steady et 10911 e. Noe
at NlEretB 4•
.— " the market foe Pig Du mintinlitell wiry
quiet. bat
on a unharmed; the aate • of anthra
te hare bean only in a small tray at *mg sag slut
821 per ton. 6 months. for the three =aheA oak
tons No. 2 was made at 822 time. Chemist
Wooms are held at 865.6 months. Priest of hex and
loiter iron moat one as last steered. I ead—Then
tut L tile ea g here, and co este. have come under our no
t re. Cripser and Tints at In gem
and dun.
BARK.—There isle
steady Inquiry for Quereitron. and
the receipts avid strobe being tnfilag. prises are firm.
Sales of No. lat art ti. In tanners" Bark nothing
dater seep nose are nominal.
CANDLI•II.—There is some inquire for adamantine.
hat other descnations are doll. Sa'es of 803 boxes of
the r• rater car made at 17e 13e per tie end 6 moo.
COPP EE.—Th Pre is s moderate luaus. and holders
are firm ; sales of 2 500 bus Rio at 1191 sad 300
bars Lageayra at 32 48 lb . all on time.
COT rus— The market is firmer and rather more ac
tive, the stock taunt very much reduced; uses of AO
hairs, mostly Uplands. at 1101234 n Ti lb. and 1251.3%*
for Outfit. on time. The movement sumo the Islet Pow
ternber last, ea compared with the pre slow; three year. 3
1963. 1391 1512.
Reo.st Porte ... 2.3.0 1 0
5a l. 0
L6:0000 L.L`a 1,710 00 a
El. to 0. Bntata. 174 1213 614 Ors 353 MO 361.200
France-- 256 000 3h7000 141000 117
" other f ports... 117.033 163 OM 93 OM 112000
Total exports... 1.347.1X0 leso MO 000 642010
Stork on band . 1 1:03.00:1 WOO 691000 76000
Of wh ch during the east week. Metall.' in the &N.'s:
Roast Porta.... lit LIM 139 000 76 OM 159 CM
Ea. to 0. Britain. 73.031 24.000 23 003 21 Oft
France 33000 3 MO 10000 12610
"other f. porta. 13 OM 8.170 3CM 7910
Total exports_. .. 111.005 3302) 3.1.0:0 anon
SVX SLCIT 'Callas—Taman at the ports compared
with last reiscre 150 bates. Esporm—increase to O.
Britain. MO Poles: decrease to France. 11 OM; de
crease to other foreign Peru. 43 1: 90 - Total inertias. in
ezycortst ' A l 3i n fli DYES are dull; Anson. the sales are
Soda. Ash at Pi natic ; Camphor at 2ic ; Licence Paste
22c. and Bicarbonate of Soda at MO, on ti m e.
Fllll.-51 ',keret are held with firmness. bat there
it no demand except for store Iota: tate. of No I at
816 60; No.2at 114 AO. Pled Nn. 3 at 418349' bbl, and the
latter route. Pickled Herring are dolt, and range at
*3 ts 8330. Codfish sell • lowly at *275 the 100 ths
FRED3HTS—To Liverpool, 10) tierces of Beef were
taken at 30. and 300 tons henry goods be the steamer,
on private term.. Ne rennet its for London or ass
cha rters
at the West Indies , we conc e several
charters at 4.13 the 100 tha for bazar; es.z a 3 10 for Ho
lmes. foreign port charges paid To Boston. the
Packets are getting Me for Floor. he for Grain. Co for
are [measutemen petals. and Sr lot Iron. To tile heath.
the rates 08 , 3 for Ceerleatnre and Savannah. ant
Walla (or measurement to Mobile and New Orleans.
In coal fret chub nothing doinc
FEATHERS are dull. nod the Wee only in a smelt
war. within the ranee of 46043 e 7 lb.
F RUIT.—A small invoice of Palermo Lemons and NO
Inane Walnuts sold from vessel on terms not made put.-
he. Raisins are gout. In domestic Fruit there is a
fair. businets doinr. Dried Apples command 634 &No.
and Green do at *2 MSS+ le mg. Peanuts ranse from
81 40 to *l.lO 89' bushel. Cranberries are dull. within
the ranee of 3103149 bbl. as in quality.
GillidENG.—There ix 'not much offering, and no
chant* to notice in Prices.
HI DES are very quiet, and no sales have some under
our notice ; the firmness of holders checks caserationc
HOPS are better, but the demand is limited ; small
sales of Eastern and Western, et 130150 gb; Old
aree are unsaleable
511IER.—T he trade being over, no transactions of
moment are remitted.
MOLASSES livery quiet owint to the ateenee of up-
Plies. and small tales of New Otleans are making at us
on time.
NAVAL. STORES.—But little doing; anions the sales
we notice some commse Roam at 8102. and 43 Met
low trade No. lat 33 tn' Md. Prices of Tar and Pitch
continue as last quoted,. Spirits of Turpentine meets a
limLed inquiry and prices are lower; sales anal bbte
at Sits ciao 9 tallon.
OlLS.—Fish Oda are firm, bat the ales are small.
Linseed is in steady request at 6.3057 c cellist. Lard
Oil is held firmly, and the stock is very light; sales of
Winter at 93091. on time.
Importations of Sperm Oil, Whale Oil Whalebone
into the United States in 1859:
Phis sp. B'e'e soh. ms bone.
Die. of New Bedford.. 72 . 1.45 /Xt10) 1443610
At other points.. ..... lea le Matta 53.3513
Total 1 1 39 .. .91 VS 110.01 1.421-S5O
94 1 la 2.•3 1.30a0
1597... 140 240.441 2-1153 900
1-06 .. 90 941 197 FPO 2 592.100
1955 .. 72.9.2 184.015 2 197
1131_...76 Cid 313 SA 3 tiSAltl
Exports of Sperm Oils. Whale 011 a. and Whalebone,
from the United Slates. 1493: 32,3 E bbls Sperm; 8.176 do
Whale : 1.70 T 619 lb' bone.
PLASTER.—Thera is none here; we 'note Soft at ea
9 ton.
RlCE.—Prises are steady: and the demand is small;
sales et $3 .73. d.. on time
SALT.—Two cargoes of Turks Island so'd on Private
term..
SEEDS.—The demand for Clorarneed is good. bat
Virile lota only are wanted. the bulk of the supplies
being of inferior toal, t 7 udes of 2 001 bus trrtlllllo‘l and
rood at $505.25 and pnme et s3.37lidSeo#P bu- FAX
reed is wanted. and commands infra to ba. Of Tironthr
therm Is little or none otTenny, and we quote its& 8220
teg.mki tx nn
SUGAR.—The market has been quiet. .wine to the
want of soupilee; small Nolen of Cuba at ?hi o7Xc, and
600 boxes Harems Brown at Vic, all on time.
AC is very dal; 64)) Lai amity sold on terms
kPpt onset,.
SPIRITS.—There is eery little doles la Bread, and
Ou, mid no ehanxe to note in the market for either. A.
B. Rasa sells as want d at BP.. Whiarey is doll. and
mines have declined ; miles of Ohio and nitric
Poire% M 244,11 6e ; hikes at 101424cDried,
12 4171 ° ,0 4 ceil l i k aidy, at lno for City. and but littlo
aelline.
TEAS continue dull. and &small business doing in en
kind. at former rates.
TOBACCO conttanu u Out quoted, but vs hear alto
lasts sales.
WOOL is held vita nnieh firmness. and the mach era
airyUrht. hat there le very tittle &inc. the ;alas hems
confined to itne'l lots of Blum, at flues W t 1144 tr
41
aft, the Wier for Leo evret.ty,