THE %tuft 011 ,4 0 00-iffkiOnVUT STREET ••• - - PILIMS. , • - iNnoong.esimrs ifilkyfili,coPWiiiblis to toe Cantor. Pdaiiied to Maio . raters MO UM City at thz Dorzaii Pee Asyut, FOUR' DOMANI von Mort moxral. Tsai= DoMaits4oar Siz Itoirrini- - !mina* id 5 Iraq, for gm ties* ordered. • ; 1111-WEISIELY PRE6III: " Icita *r illsri out or tho City it Timis Dot, liklo I,l**i:title: In kilvanimi.: " . commusstos. 'Votress. THOMAkr.U.:O/1.14 MIROHANT Ito. 219 031/89Tli= BUMS% PRILAINLPIiU6 tit was bi m0'1%460: 01,911181, PARcrt ',1700/1498, BEAMS SIIALMme, mrs, ao, )11A08; 01181Ei1'lY, trim pintas *OYALBI9if; .21i) Oilllll, *ices FANCY C34I3BIMERES. amials , MUT UNION CIASEIIIIIEREsi sit =MG% VINTWaI, SIL LAALNEP litaigst VBLVXTO , " sitiniyi.liezmun & inmxffloon • ea: 11$ inizsrairs sl.. 00ALILMION: itattlwas ?DX ME LILLE Or 1 3 1ALEADEIAPHLI1, - MADE GOODS. EIZANG. COFFIN It Co um amour IMAM , 011 hr, by tlho!palekaire, 4eo followfwfaiorlptio AMERICAN GOODS. /MSS AND is ISM? TIMM GRIN= INJIBMNAOT DRUM 4110.13 PRINTS 21 . 4 0 1 U1D '421. D BROWN ilialmaGs, DIELERIENNI AND DULLS; OfiNiDADiN, DENIMS, AND EITELPNB; 001NrAtJ8AN8, SILSSIAB, AND RAE motion muninis AND PRINTED LININOS; RHODN ISLAND LnisNyB; • -PNELADDLPNIA LIMN AND OHNOK8; IDINTUOICT JNANO AND ciarrONADEs; Mew CLOTHS AND INDANYIIi AletrwOok AND UNION WINS; NI;AoN AND 'Amy oAssINNeNS; BLACK AND Nam DoENSINB; , SATINETS AND UNION CIABSENNBSB ; CIASNNAIDITTNEI. 111460iluta TON' • MILLB, TOMMY BAY STATII &ALB. diliA4ll4l of allidson, is mat vivid?. Sadlosssd sad Prottad TABLE COVERS. *OR BEAVERS sod BROAD OI f OTRIS. EtiALIVIORAL SKIRTS. etnintuel, sad Thimble' and Twisted, COATI:AM 114SICAUNAll sod bossy =PAY& CLOTHS 1114 taIINEIII sad °mu; FLAN "digs isar isiatrirsixes. sato br - FB - OTHINGHAII & WELLS, 34 Ileldb, YJONT Oldest. add 1711-1 t ' 341 LRTITLA Street. SILLINERY GOODS: 1860. LugootN„ WOOD. 725 bIEIESTEUP BMW, tleie ideekkikkike *meth ' • 1121tAW.AND SIM( BONNETS. • • FRSNOK PLOWNRS, - 24ATH1S110, RIBBONS. Childreen end maw BEAVER ! BATS. - 11111014. end tallest seetirtment et the kind In the eats. sen-natineihn T H Q a ' RENNEDY 63 BRO. " 9 • • - • - • . „, . . • CHESTNUT , STREET, BELOW EIGHTH, Him opened • BPLENDID AIIf3ORTMEr of THERM PiowEitsi HEAD BUM RISATHISIU6II/110f48, =LAW GOODS, BONNET. MATERIAL'S, • AT-LOW PRICES, as6.2in a t • FALL. 118,30. ;- • • RIBBONS. BONNETS. MILLINERY MOODS EXOLEBIVEGY. . 134•18tve now on hand, and daily relneins. &MO sasltssesoseseortaeatof , iir4Y-DiUSOROT/ON , BONNET , MATERIALS. - STRAW A3tII•EANOIf BONNETS, WSW diUkIIfirANTIP TAT& SHOTBIII, /1114011-AED AMERI ' OAS PLOWER/.' ,lharittaiJi; AND intik , ariniiiivridial Wigs )11thurrAxy LIEU; ' . • To teketk tedentention oaks trade I. Olmsted. 1109011infd, BROOKS; soku-sei " - • 431 MARKET 'beet. North side. - HATS SAD , CAPS. , 11A7,8TORE. •op E.. :FOSTER, ttet• of No Beath Third dreex,) • " • • Emelt tate Oil /tor. at - NO, 831, CHESTNUT atfiatloa ST.. AwI filed if vfltioperi6i itYle, tit• anti , triat o lv.F grt2o%, „ OP - • *ow SpilAriii• *re 11110110•41111 k• C• -H. 0-A.R.DEN-60 00.. • • • Maukeener" stead Whokoala Deal — ia , ~, - gm otte*oootie, FANCY ICIGE AND,wrg a wsit ARUM Q/AA FkOWISE4RO ' _lllllllllO/4 as * L froa,Noo aid, 6.0% a WSW* , ' ' ' likir halt lop ' is iiiinfwitv ?Rif re=latiri Inw ur _ , : 11""illi --, , . aisitri - FIURA►• '. FUES.I - FURits! GEORGE _ F. WOMRATH, AND A 41. - ABOui4ENT'' E 13' Mlselpli of the Pablo no itivitid; oW 4m ci.dinuro. lc* Ea. TA - ponvitTy. n.im 43 PI IP6E7. ' min nor imam iniss 3 ' s wigs' , a4tD -7#IIIIIONABLIEI eon& 1 4 , t , • • ^ *it 16. . , Ja s .. I (0--•• . • y - •on • - - .44 •-r 7 0 7- • • h - !.! 1.1 1 1 - ; - 1 - NEN - A • k 5 170:71 , -. A - '-' • --1 -Cecii - 7 7 • ! et= .73 • • • •!' • • VOL. 4.-NO. 63. SILK AND DRY GOODS JODDERN. WILL OPEN: MONDAY, OCTOBER BTH, ‘ A. Superb line FRENCH AND GERMAN DRESS GOODS A 0 m AUCTION. The attention of our oustomere is invited. JOSHUA L. BAI.LY, =PORTER AND JOBBER, No. 218 MARKET ST., LARGE :AND ATTRACTIVE nom • • • 101 PALL AND WINTER BALM. SH.ORTRIDGE, .BEQTEIER. & 00.. IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS, No. 440 646.RICET STREET, and No. 416 MERCHANT STREET, PHILADELPHIA, MR" &r ir em e lr r it I ,I EI FOREIGN and AME ,I3IIY GOODS. selected nth a view to the interests of CASH and prompt SIX-MONTHS' Beeline, to which they invite the attention of the trade. A 1 4 TY ri STOOIC Mita' POlisreglearanaglonn Ord found Pieewh melte ere. d PromPHY. at LOWEST MARKET ae4-2m CLOAKS I CLOAKS I TO WHOLESALE BUYERS. EVERY NOVELTY op THE SEASON. AT THE LOWEST. CASH PRICES. Mintehinte own patent& pupae op if desired. HENRY IVENS; set-!m No. 43 South NINTH Street, A . W. LITTLE & CO.. BILK GOODS. If o . $26 MARKET STREET. .uB-3m FAL.I.4 1860, OHAFFEES. STOUT. & Co. FOREIGN AND DONLEBTIO DRY GOODS. wl6-7m No. $93 MARKET STREET. mAsnN t WOLFF, WHOLIBALI WILIAM 1111 FOREIGN AND DOMES= 'DRY GOODS. 334 MARKET MUIR% Cub and prompt Six-months' Boyers, of all soottona . I invited to an examination of out Stook. aoB-gym• REMOV In commutes of the destntotlon by fire of their TS= Brasst Ikons, YARD. GILLMORE. & CO. - HAVE REMOVED • - TO NO. 610 CHESTNUT ST.. '--• BoViR BIDE. ABOVE SIXTH, ' PHILALILPBIA. They hare sow °Pea AN ENTIIItE NEW STOOK • , . OP SAES AND FANCY DRESS GOODS, j .;BRAWLS, GLOVES, RIBBONS, DRESS TRIMMINGS, 4 - e., Together with &LARGE ABSORTMSPIT of , - STAPLE AND FANCY WHITE GOODS, IRBROLDRRIBB, LAM, MANTILLAS, Re. Raring received but a email portion of their FALL • IMPORTATIONS, PTIMOSS to the Sr., duty are enabled to &Wee . , A NEW STOCK. ,to 'bleb they invite the attention of their Customers And Boren generelly. sus-tro 'W- 'URTIS. AIISTIE. & MoVEIGH, IfdPORTEINI AND JOBBENN9 IN DRY- C3':o 0 D'S. Ito. 311 MARKET attest, above Third. . . awVi Wart', in tiff e italisighi. ralLaniania , l e w rigr. ' ' ' R . WOOD, MARSH, k HAYWARD, IMPORTERS Asp WHOLESALE DEALERS IN . DRY GOODS Ann CI'LOTHING. IW. 309 MARKET STREET. In Fell sad Winter Moot now oompleto and re ‘dg i or nen. eitsl **AVER HANGINGS. pAPER-H ANGING. (TALL TRADE.) HOWELL & BOURKE. Ravin removed to *Cr new "tore, °OEM FOURTH AND MARKET/ "TRENTO, Ara now prepared to Idler to the Trade a large and elegant suortntent of ' WALL PAYER": BORDER', FIRE mums, wuitiow ovatturiO, All of the sewed and beet designs, fro west tilted ante* to the linen - GOLD AND VELVET DECORATIONS. !What' Aid Wartiirs clerelionts ',did° well to 'Wilt the e&ANiolusisAt of - HOW&Li. & &DUREN, tf MCOONAIN FOURTH AND MARKET NERBETN, mas-ssa = PELLADELPMA. GAS- FIXTUREM,'LANIPS, MUNE OIL OP SUPERIOR QUA /AL - LIM KEROSENE, or COAL - OIL LAMPS, onAithEmEßs, muoKETa. Roanfiotared lad for W., et LOWEST WM PRIORS. by WITTERS & CO., No. SO NORTH EIGHTH STREET, N. R. oor. of Filbert. between:Market and Arch,. 09 14-2 m , GENTS' 11JRNISITING GOODS. G,INTLICHIIN'S FURNISHING GOODS. Noir eeening, a serairb arwortinentof noveltlas for r om,Fol, , AmtgApvive t waya sEt seise* in London and PILT 6,10 which peel attention Le invited. d. 80171 T, Sld EITNUT dtmi self A few doors below the " ContSu lQfs WOOL Now 'in store, sod for sale at the lowest market Woes, a large Stook of the moot desirable grades of ' 01110 AND PANNSYLVANIA FLESOES. arms, LOW AND =DIMS WOOLS, 11}Mlt watchmen me requestod to esti and exclaim BENJ. COATES, 147 Market Street, Philadelphia. THOMAS TI-.011/PSON, SON. & CO., IRFORTY& AND . JOBBERS OF 'CABINET-MASERS' MATERIALS, ' 238 8011114 SECOND STREET. Brooatells. 'Wheat, Rom. Damnaks, and overt doltoription of Furniturobod'Curtaitt Goods. oeo-2m 11, WHOEMAIKER Ca Co. OWNS, !MS* OTIN AND UNMAKES Nitibessi firtAilr Doran AND lON Moot& CARPETING AND OIL CLOTHS. • , - - - --------- ALL TRADE. F . igeCALLUNE & OARREV MANORAOTURJERS, GLEDf Eollo_ MILLS, dERMANTOWN, Also, Importers and Design in OARPETINQS, OIL' CLOTHS; MATTINGS, RUGS, &c. WAREHOUSE, 509 CHESTNUT STREET, (Onsostte the State Home.) South Southern and Western Buffers are respectfully Invited ern WI. • aul7-3m CARPETS, OARP_ET.S. BAIIIY da BROTHER. No. 920 CHESTNUT STREET. AN INVOICE OF ENGLISH INGRAINS, Just opened from auetion. Price 76 cents a yard. riArtY , Bo .BROTHER. VELVET' CARPETS. Now open, the neireat patterns of • ENGLISH VELVET OARPETS BALLY & 13ROTHER,. No. 920 OfIESTIIUT Street. TAPESTRY BRUSSELS. We now offer for rale the limn nasortment or those popular Carpetinge, at ONE DOLLAR A YARD. • BAILY• tic BROTHER. No. 920 CHESTNUT Street. BRUSSELS CARPETS. Of the beet quality, in great variety, at N 0.920 CHESTNUT Street. DAILY & BROTHER. DRUGGETS, CRUMB CLOTHS. &c. The most. exteneive stook we ever offeced, in all widths end sines. DAILY 8c BROTHER. MATS, RUGS, &e. Axminster, Velvet, Tourney, Brumle, Wool Tufted COOO, plain and bordered, of all eine, in great variety BAILY & BROTHER, eelg-thetu-dm No. 920 CHESTNUT Street. BLINDS AND SHADES. BLINDS AND SHADES. B. 3. WILLIAMS. ' No. 16 NORTH SIXTH STREET. Is the moat extensive Aleaufacturer of VENETIAN BLINDS AND WINDOW SHADES.. The largest and finest assortment in the oily, at the lowest grioes. STORE SHADES made and lettered. REPAIRING promptly attended to. 001-tm LOOKING GLASStS. LOOKING -GLASSES AND PICTURE FRAMER, Of every variety. ENGRAVINGS, OIL-PAINTINGS, 4c., AT NO. 826 ARCH OTREBT. OEO. F. DENKERT, MANUFACTORER AND IMPORTER. PICTURE, CORNICE AND ROOM MOULDINGS, oot-Dm Wholesale and Retail. LOOKING-GLASSES, POIMAIT AND DICTUM MANIA ENGRAVINGS. OM PAINT/ MB. iltfo 4.0. JAMES S. EARLE & SON, IMPORTERS, MANUFACTURERS, WHOLE SALE AND ABTAIL DEALERS, • EARLIV-IGALLERLEB, REMOVAL. • EVERETT, HICKS, Er CALDWELL, CLOTH HOUSE. Rave removed to ;22 MARKET 'STREET. Buyers are Invited to eigeinine onr nook. UMBRELLAS. S LEEPER & FENNER. WHOLESALE MANUFACTURERS 1 .. ov MBRELLAS AND PARASOLS, NO, 326 MARKET STREET. • , PAILADELPUIA, i l now ' eking more then iIVE RD RED DISTERISET veruntras ov UMBRELLA'S of every ye, from 22 to AD Inches. "Havers no have not had 8, & F.'s make or goods will find Mei *me well spent in looking over this well-made Otook, wl oh Mendes KANT, POVELTLES r SW UM wig& lifewker . • . en2B-3m SPORTING GOODS. iS. - PISTOLS. SKATES. &c. PIiII IP WILSON CO.. NA AOTURF 4 Ith O.BBIJPARIOR 8, Import4nr and Dealerta HEAVY WORK. -Both new from two spool. without the trouble of re winding. and rune with little or no noise, For ante at No. 7AO ARCH Street, Philadelphia, and No. 73 BALTIMORE St., Baltimore, Md. 001 3m TUE REST MANUFACTURING AND FAISIE_Y SEWING MAD RIMS IN THE WORLD, AT L M. SINGEK. CO.'S. oe6-3m No. SIO CHESTNUT Street. WHEELER & WILSON, SEWING MAOHINIf..,S. 6118 ourzrNor ISTP.EET ; SECOND FLOOR 3738-3 m W . F. 111H.LINGEtt it CO.'S BILUTTLE AND DOUBLE-LOU BTITOJII SEWING NIAOHINipS FAMILY USE, TAILOR SH S, OEMAKERS, VAI! SADDL, No. 628 ARCH ST.ea. 4 ,ET. Price of SHUTTLE MACHINE. SAO. Frio. of DOUBLE-LOOP ,STITCH MACHINE from OHS upwards. The eimoleet and moat efficient nasoldnee manu factured for ell kinds I use. P, S.— MACHINE EILLX, COTTON, NEHDLSS, OIL. eta.. constantly on hand. hit-em WILCOX & fIIBBS I SEWING MA CHINE. Tail:great and inoreatang demand for w x ft. Gibbs 'inns Machine to a guarantee of Its superigtezoienue. Vrioe eao. ott FAIRSANKS' So Warehouse, 710 ORES NUT St ea-tf SHOE FINDINGS. ISAAC BARTON & CO.. IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN SHOE. STUFFS. ?MOH AND ENGLISH CASTINGS, GAL LOONS, PATENT LEATHER, Mr. ALo, GOODS FOR CARRIAGE MAKERS. No. 38 ROUTE SECOND STREET, Philadelphia. HARDIVA RE. MOORE, EIENb ZEY. Co. . ARE NOW. OPENING • THEIR BALL STOOK 0 HARDWARE. BslY MARKET, .w 418 COMMERCE STREET PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1860. , Prince AlbertSe Letter 'to' the gassers. By ?My BARD Or TOWitp. traLL. "Dearest mother; Pie crossed the Atlantic; And, to keep you from having the blues, I will pen pima Myst epistle, Whioh I II gem with some items of news. " 1 was hailed by Canadians loYali And the maey receiv h e art s as one. ' Well I know that their are my mother's, By the.weloorne they gave to her eon. " With the fairest of Matrons and maidens have danced from the dusk to the dawn ; And I made a misstep in my dancingl' I am free to acknowledge the corn " I was lost to thyself in my partner, '‘• And, alas I to the floor I went down As my headwas not cracked by my falling, - It may Pear, in the future, a crown. " I've impinied in the size of my musoleg I am well. and ars eery as a frog: ' I've a bark that's, a powerfultenie— 'Tie the bark of beautiful dolt Of a,dog that tome was presented - He Ta y sih n e d ta r ilrif o ristrA s t b d alttlit ~ And has Wito l d my heart, through my " I have 'seen the majestic Niagara. And Ina pleased fat my joke do not "rime) Rather lime with the fallf the water. I- Than I was with theof tho Prince I have viatted Washington City, And l dined with the President there I With leated with with hgre4Stlir he gave me; his home, his niece, and his fare. " As Buchanan so kindly received me, I moot grieve o'er his very ill look— Oh I ho can't be a dear with the Denote, On account orbit; being a 'Buck!' T shalt act on the couniel you gave me: To my.mind youradvicit I recall— prl return,,eno. your arms shall ambient me /4 a Suit Mal the famed ToWice " / shall wnte you accounts of my - Journey, Till, rejoicing, Imam you again In my home on that Woof the Ocean, Which is blest by Vietaria'r reign. " I enclose you Mr love in thielettar. From the depths of affection profound 't But the children will hate to excuse me, For I can's send enough to go round. " I will Age epistle, rtear mother. With a Meuse which m y boso unveils— I am y Prince affection—your Art, The of your heart and offwales." - Our stook of Fall and Winter Chething is now full mid complete, adapted to every Market. and uneualled for variety, style. and, make,. ' Abe attention of wholesale and Retail buyers is invited. et TOWER RAU., 410 MARKET Street - , Philadelphia. BENNETT, , A , CO, THIRD STREET JOHIIIND HOUSES BUNN, RAIGUEL•, & IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF FANCY DRY GooD8; No. 187 NORTH THIRD EVIRRRT, NOW OFFER TO THE TRADE AN UNUSUALLY ATTRACTIVE STOCK OF GOODS, CB]IPIIIsiNa. IMES, RIBBONS, DRESS GOODS, WHITE GOODS, EMBROIDERIES, LACES, CLOTHS, OAS SIMERES, VESTINGS, 110- EERY, GLOVES, AND TRIMMINGS, Together with a. fall and varied idea of , FALL AND WINTER SHAWLS. To all of whiob they invite the attention of CAM AND PROMPT MX-MONTHS BOYER& oct-lm RATITLTr3E, % 00., Nos, 220 2d3 NORTH THIRD STREEre HAVE NOW OPEN THE LARGEST Ant , MOST COMPLETE STOOK or , FRENCH, BRITISH, GERMAN, AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS They have ever offered, and to which the attention ot CASH AND SHORT-TIME BUYERS Is respectfully solicited. nlrirgE " T r 4 " ,VagoinlNVlLT:4l:lll. `t l tuumrsassou r oy e any other house. seta-1m THE attention of Buyers is solicited. FRESH FALL GOODS. RIEGEL; & 00.; IMPORTERS AND JOIMMSRS • DRY , GOODS,` - • No. 47 NORTH THIRD STR.Vr t • Would respectfully hwy.° the aktentton of the trade to their , LARGE AND WELL-BELEOTED • : Stook of • FRESH FALL GOODS, Which they are now °coning. We are daily In receipt 'of all kinds of North rand desirable goods. Call and *awns oar stock, • ' set-gm JAMES,,_KENT.- SANTEE; & 00.. IMPORTERS, AN,D JOBBERS Y G O O D 8. NOS. 889 AND 241 EMIL TRIED STREET, ABOVE RAVE, Respeotray invite the attention of Buyers to their neual LARGE AND COMPLETE STOCK OP FOREIGN AND DOMESTIO GOODS, Among *limb will be found a general rtiororiment of PHILADELPHIA-2/LADE HOODS, Macho largo variety of new and'oonfuted styles of I PRINTS, MERRIMACK SECONDS, &u, suit-2m THOS. MELLOR di 00.. $ NORTII THIRD STREET, IMPORTERS or HOSIERY„. RUM AND DRAWERS, sICIALL WARES, 40, Joan B, ;Surma, Tuos, MELLOR, EDWARD BAINR, ' Giro. O. Erin. AUE-ROI FDLL, 1860. COOPER. PARHAM. WORK. impotteia, Manatacterers, and dobbere of HATS. OAPS; FURS. AND STRAW GOODS. iro, 41 NORTH =RD STREET, below ARGIL PRIIJADELBMA. MILTON COOPER. WM. M. BARRAN!, ROBERT D. WORK, lir Fall Stook now complete and ready for buyers, cull-am SOWER. BARNES, ad 00.. ' BOOKSELLERS .AND PUBLISHERS. No. 37 NORTH THIRD STREET ) Lower title, above Market Street/ rbiteßteirtils. Invite the attention of 13oolmeUere end (weary mer chants to their very large !took of &Moo) Books, pub hohed In this and °marmot's. together with Macellane go.,s Ir. and Blank litrigrortierns:ro%: amonueldotitire tne follorag TOE CENTRAL GOLD REGION, BY COL, WILLIAM GILPIN, (Late of the U. S. Army.) ILLUSTRATED BY NUMEROUS IVIAPS. One vol., Bvo, bou o tin olotb. Pdoe 31.96; ands liberal opnt to the tra~le, This book is pronounced the most wondoiful, fio, and oompreherisive treatise on the geography of, mir continent ever published, • • SCHOOL BOOKS: SANDERISSERIES OF READERS. BROOKE' NORMAL PRIMARIi ARITHME TIC • _IS ate. BROOKE' NORMAL MENTAL . ARITHME TIC-- • .26 ots BROOKE iii-lafirrArTßlTll-14E- BY E. BROOCH, A. M., Professor of hUthematies in Pennsylvania state Nor mal Bohool, Liberal terms for Introdnotion, WHITE'S COPY-BOOKS BY T. KIRK WHITE President of Penneylvantfi Oominoratal College, PELTON'S OPTLINE AMP& This series of SIX SUPERB MAPS is SOW eldoPted In almost every school of note in the Union Where geo graphy is taught, and has PO equal. Pries SIM for full set of six maps, or 110 for set of nenuinhere imps alone, aug-Sm CAST -STEEL BELtS I , • Fox carditoings, BALE DT 'N.A.NMOR & 00, fsf-tt Sao COMMERCE StoseL MARTIN & QUAYLE'S • • EITATIONER4 p o i r. wTAITit ODOM 1051 W, AIN& El'ltiEW, • AlL** tu.smilent. 'PHILADELPHIA C V.) e C.) 4 . 134TURliAY, OCTOBER 13, 1860. Tolichtitg the Italian Cipeiit. ' The public, who were allowed the opportu nity of hearing Madame COLSON for a very brief time, on Wednesday evening, will re gret that this magnificent dramatic vocalist is not to charm them, this evening, in "The Si cilian. Vespers." The Italian Opera in this city has tt caved in." The management say, in their card, which wo published yelterday, that, unwilling to• incur heavy loss, they de cline giving any opera hero until, after the elections have terminated, but that they will certainly return for the regular winter season bore. Common report assigns Impecunlnsity as tho main cause orthe stampede which has taken plade, yet the pecuniary results of the Prince's night surely must havd been enlist dorable. • In an article in yesterday's North American., which repeats the arguments we used a fort night ago, (touching the failure of the, late Season,) we find the following praCtiCal state'. wont It is perhaps too muoh to ask or expect on every night snob audiences rul that of Wednesday even leg; and yet It is within the power of Philadel phia to maintain such in array of fashion and ele games, if the opera performances numbered no more then four per week. Here is' just Where all the diftloulty lies. Managers come hers bat for a week, and they insist on playingevery night. This Is too mush even for the most enthusiastic habltd6 of the opera, It is not po'ssible to sit six nights in samoession at the opera without feeling wearied. One must forego all other recreations to bo a regu lar attendant on snob a reason; shunt fdi the la. dies, it would prevent them appearing in full dress on any more , than ono or two evenings. To pro. pare Big different toilettes fer one week is asking too much of them. It would not bo don 6 in Roy city in the world, and cannot bo considered pre°. tioable here.• We are aware that the idea of mana gers is thht there ought to be enough people hero fond of good musk, to make a different audience eve tynight. i lint, as regards tho opera, this is a great mistake. In Philadelphia, our resident population encourages the opera to a comparatively greater extent than is the cite" in New York. But in any pity, the olicle,of parsons able to keep a carriage, and sustain the outlay of full dross for the opera, is necessarily limited. One sees generally the Same fates atthe'porformance miry evening. The proper,planitould be for the managers to perform only on the evenings of Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, and to give a Inatinbe on Saturday. If there be an opera played on Saturday night, long experience here shows 'that it will not have more than half an audience, for reasons that are well known. But, the metinbo ,ori Saturday afternoon has never been,given to a poor house. If this could .be arranged so as to be, always certain, we are 'quite sure that the seasons would be muelt more profitable than at present. One thing we will take -oetraidon 'to • remark : • If the New York directors, Instead of Maintaining their large and expensive company all at one place, would divide the force, and place half in Philadelphia and 'half in New York, both Academies could be successfully carried on at the same time, and at much less expense than the managers are now under." , Moat of this is very true—au of it is to the purpose, except the proposition to give half an opera company to Philadelphia, and half to New York, an arragement which would not satisfy either city. If we have an opera troupe et all, let us have it good and full. .By and by, in all probability, we shall again have an, operatic company of our own, as at first. It was not alone the frequency of perform ances—six operas in as many successive nights, —which made the public lately too dissatisfied to encourage the opera, but the non-fulfil ment of promises to the public, to bring out certain singers, and to produce certain operas. This was not the fault of Nannies: SrnaxOserf, wolmow, for Ile has heretofore been a man of his word, but the eflbct of quarrels, and seces sions, and • ifficultics, which prevented his bringing Comex, and PAMIR; and COUTESI to Philadelphia, •as was intended. We cannot find it in our heart to condemn Mr. STRA KOSOIT for the crimp of having been unfortu nate. As for the sudden break-up of the season,' so auspiciously inaugurated Just' Wednesday evening, it does not surprise us. Philadel phia has been, and is, too indignant at the in sult f put upon it by Mr. Duman, in inviting his cg distinguished " friends, the BENNETTS, to the best box in the house, to think, just now, of patronizing any concern in which he is interested. The public do not want Mr. ULLMAN, after what ho has done, and poor Mr. STRAKOSOII, who bad no complicity in it, suffers also, because ho is partner, for the time, in this opera business with Um.u.s.x. Whenever Mr. Srnsnosou is able to dissolVe that connection, and separate himself from Mr. and Mrs. TAMES GORDON BENNETT'S especial friend and inviter, he may return hero, with Comets, PATTI, and whom else ho pleases, and wo venture to think he will then do well. There is no feeling whatever against STRA ICOSCII, but ULLMAN is as unpopular as an ope ra-manager can be, and that is saying much. This result he owes to his ft distinguished " friends of Washington heights. The Evening Bulletin, which devotes some attention to musical matters in this city, has a sharp article on the subject before us. The concluding paragraph fairly states a principal pause of the decline and fall-of Italian opera In this country, of late. It says : e A good deal of the bad management of the opera is the result of the course pursued in New York. There the managerti seem to be entirely in the hands of the editors of the Herald, which en courages them in all their false announcements, mid applauds them oven when there is the grossest breach of faith with the artists and the public. The delusion exists that it is necessary for time suc cess of the opera that the Herald be conciliated in every possible way; whereas, ever sines that journal has bean the spooial puffer of the opera, there has been continual loss of money at the New York Aoadomy of MAO. We see little hope of a revival of the opera until it gets into the hands of people who will have the confidence of the artiste, the public, and the press in general, and who wilt have the courage to oast off thefatal piffle° of the I Herald, Which is now do dearly purchased." Wo are drifting back, in this city, to first prin ciples, from which It was a mistake to depart, three years since. We suggested, a fortnight ago, that the proprietors of our Academy of Music should engage a, competent manager of their own, and empower him to engage a good stock company of singers, able to represent Italian opera in a satisfactory manner, and that occasional " stars," as they arise, few and far between, in the musical horizon, should be engaged at ,intervals. This would reader Philadelphia Independent of such managers as Mr. ULLMAN'. PERSONAL —La Cluinioli's miniature portrait of Byron has boon suooessfully copied by Fanoni, and attracts mush attontion in Paris. Tho face is said to be very beautiful, although corns think effeminate; the collar Is turned down, and tho figure is wrapped in a cloak of Gordon plaid. —Sir G. ilayter's picture of " The Meeting of the First Reformed Parliament," for which agrant of £3,000 was taken last year, has been placed in the Commons' committee room, No. F. In tho im mediate neighborhood aro to be found Mr. Watt's "Embarkation of Alfred," and Mr. Pickerogill's "Burial of Harold." —itieleaonicee small picture now at tho Man chester exhibition, of a "Man Looking out of a Window," which only meauures eight inches by 1 1 .,a, is said to taro been sold in Paris for 800 ulecas. . . —J. k C. Mosley- will commence with the let November, n now, cheap, religious periodical— the Monthly Paper of Sunday Teachtng— under the same editorship as the Monthly Parket. —some admirera of the late German poot, Max von 1-chenkendorf, have rocolvcci to honor hie me mory by a monument of noble shisplioity, to be placed on his grave, on the " Gottesaaker," near Coblontz. —A German paper says that thoro are thirty seven Hungarian °Moors serving under Garibaldi, one half of whom wont exprestly from Hungary to Italy, the remainder having boon emigrants. Ten Hungarian °Meets, it adds, fought at Me. lane, and of them seven wore killed or badly wounded. The Nashville American says that Gen. Wal ker was a native of that city, and has there a large number of acquaintances and personal friends. ! 4 His father, Mr. James Walker, a Scotehman by birth, le one of onr oldest,'worthiost and most highly esteemed citizens. Gen. Walker is the third 'son that Mr. James Walker has lost in the Nicaraguan cacao." The model of Professor Drake's group for the Berlin Museum, " The Muse Watering Pegasus," has been completed by the artist. The muse Measures nine feet in height : the horse, with the head, thirteen. The group le to be oast in. the coarse of this year. • REEIOI.OUS. The Doctrines of Swedenborg. [Reported for The Preen] A LECTURE ON " THE TRUTH OF TUE NEW CIIURCR DOCTRINES, AND THE MISSION OF SWEDENBORG," DELIVERED ON E SUNDIV EVENING ' LAST, AT TRH NEW CHURCII TPURPLA,' AROAD STREET, ABOVE SPRING GARDEN, BV DARRETT. On arriving at the TOMPle:— . .tiiieditip.OY:finished new edifice—we foun,d the hunsa /I) Ailed. that extra '.seats in the aisle *OW being. introduced,' The 'singing by the °heti, Who • occupied 'a' gallery, slightly elevated aboitte the'inairi floor, was artispo and impressive, and ;if, r_egittiect bait few, npmeate after the lecture was :Commenced .to learn that the speaker—a fine-looking' gentleman of- about forty; five—was no less a man of dulthee And kblliti , than a thorough Swedenborgian : , , The name of Emanuel - Swedenborg, raid Mr. Barrett, in opening, Tisis,often referred to in °han' tlistfourses in each a Wax:A . llv give'tha impression ',that:the New Church wee' ii 3114 on ;Biyedenborg, ; Itarteiad of on the Word of God, ..Tiis.was.a•great mistake. It was plaid, nevertheless,. that Stieden-- botg , had a divine miSelen ; that he was providen tially raised up andlpl;eps:red 'fel , 'that '-niresion.. ha t mission had beepale.iirifoi ding 1.0 . fle told pf a hjgher and more spirtiasilepe auoi3 WOT: and of a clearer reveltitidrilf the state of man after death. This was indeed a. - great. claim to pre.,t' In behalf of any man, than which nonebigherbonld. bo conceived. .„ . , , Ile was filr'ribout to consider some of the ob jections with Willed& or Swedenborg's .speolal dlvine IlliiMiriatiOn, and mission toanake a new revelation, was 'mat—not, indeedra revelatio l to supersede the one:aireedY given, but:iither t the-more 'perfect unfolding of that. One of th geeitest of these objections mas; that Swedenborg Old neither wrought ; 'nor pretended to work ml. radio. Failing to do this, said his opponents, he was unworthy of credit, and his - revelation - could be nothing more than , imposture., The speaker quoted high theological authority to prove that in the Church it was accepted as an axiom that mirat ohs constitute the only sufficient evidence by which a revelation from God could possibly be authenti! °Med. This objection—viz : that Swedenborg must have been an impOstor beetinsehe wrought no miracles—it was his parposo to consider in the pre'. sent discourse; in doing the question web considered in the four following aspects : let. Ile would inquire, What wee the state of man to which miracles are adapted,' and what the nature of the faith which rests upon them? 2d. What reason had: we for demanding mire. , ales as the only euitirient evidence on which to rest a new revelation 7 IVbether miracles were suited to the present age, or oompatible'with a dispensation such as the Now Jerusalem claimed to be? And, 4th. Was not the evidence whiob Swedenborg has given of his divine mission not only .better adapted to the current , age of the wcrld, but abso• lutely stronget than that of miraoles ? In the discussion of these four questions or pro. positions, of - which &Mere synopsis is here only in• tended, the speaker said, with respect to the first— as to "what was the state of man to which mica: aloe was adapted," bc.—that wet knew that man, before he wandered away Prow his Father's house; was perfectly oo'gnizant of the Lord's omnipresence in his Wisdom, and Power, and Love. After man had wandered, away, however, the condition of his mind and being rendered the display of the mira- , ! calms noce,ssary. kiiraoles—which were 'defined by the beat lexicographers to he events and effects( contrary to the established course of things ; devia-, None from .the known laws of nature; supernatu ral—were heteme r in an important sense, a conse quence of moral ;disturbance or eccentricity. AS an illustration, the phenomena of electricity We7o' referred to. , • While the electrical conditions of the atmosphere were presorted in harmony, there was not the least intimation of even -the existence of that powerful imponderable; but let the conductors of that fluid' become eleranged,•end thunder, light ning, and storm was the result. Just so it was in the moral and spiritual world. To eonflrm the truth of this position, the miracles of the Bible wore next' summarily glanced at. If we compared the miracles: of the Jewish and Ohriatien eralioetiehould find them: A — dissimilar in kind - and character as the two dis pensationi were eteentially different. The Jews,' for example-, had no idea of determining the truth , but by miracles. They could only tell 't whether the Lord- or Baal be Cod" by the answer of de sanding fire.: Thus we should constantly End that miraclea of their day were pee:elle:4y adeptedi to the low , character of the ago in- whloh they; were performed. Among these Were instanced the' parting of the Rod men;, the Lord's descending on SineVancid fire and smoke ; his appearing to Mo.! ses in a flame in tho burning bush. In perfect ao- ; corder= with this, also, was the fact that the mis. sion of Moses had been entirely of en external character. He We to deliver the Israelites from their external bondage; and by no other means than that of miracles could 'this oljcct have been attained, the miracles wrought having been of a! nature finally to compel Pharaoh to let them go. Then, again, if We turned to the New Testa- ment, we found the miracles there recorded of a' very different character, yet Wholly suited to the; ago and circumstances of • that dispensation. Christ came to speak of a Kingdom to be sat up in men's hearts; and the rofelationa then made wore of a less awful and terrific, but a more inte rior character. In other words; they were less ' oompuleory, and left men more free to believe or disbelieve. This, to the Jews who had been tradi tionally and otherwise accustomed to a different procedure, was unsatisfactory ; as it was said, they"sought a sign, from heaven." The point he wished to establish by this was, that the divine I nuentleolations differed according to the different dispensations. And in vibw of this difference, which was plainly indieated in the Bible, was it reasonable to suppose that the earns miracles would Attest the Lord's Second Advent [the New Church believe that the Second Advent is already pest]' that' had boon performed at His first? So far from this being' a 'reasonable' inference, the speaker hold that, as the 'Lord's second coming was to bo of an internal and spiritual nature, any such outward mixable would-have been improper. But he had now to consider the nature of the faith which rests upon miracles; atia'ta show, that the faith this produced wait of rs low and ephe meral character, be instanced .the- case of the Israelites, who, in less than a month after they had been awed by the thunder and lightnings of Sinai, danced in adoration around a golden self. This wee p, because their faith had rested upon exter nal and not on internal evidence. Christ bad him. sell proved that thefaith that; evoked was not real, when'he said : wiled ye believed Moses, ye would have believed um'', The second port of the rabjebt was next consi dered,' viz : Whit reason had we for dethanding miracles as the only tattbient evidence on which to rest a now - revelation? ' Ono of hid fireCreinarks under thie head was, that; under the leirish bliponsatlon; it was not customary for the Prophets:to be thus accredited. Of ell the sixteen whose wrttlnis wo have in the Old Testament, Isaiah was the Only one of whoin miracle was recorded. But for pone of diem bad such credentials hcon required to attest their au thority, and yet Christ quoted their writings re peatedly as the word of God. SOI/10 had endea vored so explain this away •,by,saying that, as the prophets lived under the Mosaic Dispensation, the miracles wrowibt by bleaes,!in which . thei be lieved, were equivalent td their haviog wrought them themselves. But this was a lame argument, and Was in feet like crediting the Popo of Rome and his ministry With the postai' of working mire oleo, simply ' because that Church dignitary bo• lieved in the miracles wrought by Christ and his Apostles. - , : • There woe, on the other hand, he thought, abun dant Scripture authority for believing that, so far from miracles being a requisite to establish the genuineness of revelation at the present day, they were the signs of lituimilare. Thus we read In Matthew, " There shall arise friss:Christi, and fut.e prophets, and shall show great signs and wonders ;" and in another plane, speaking of the . " beast," in the , Apocalypse, " He dooth great, wonders, •A` and deeeiveth them that dwell on the earth by those miracles whieli ho had. power to do," &o ; and again, of the Wicked ono . to be revealed, it was said his coming was " after the working of Satan, with all power, and signs, - and lying wonders ;" 50,.t00, we read that Pha-, roah called the megioians of his day, who "did in like manner (as did Aaron) with their °natant ments." These, and other quotations given, were enough to show that miracles were not sufficient to prove that a teacher was divinely inspired. The miracles wrought by Christ—the incarnate Word—were, on, the principle already explained, held to have been perfeotly natural under the eir cumstanoes. Assuming the external form of hu manity, He - had performed moat of his miracles upon the bate, of mon. - Bat these miracles them selves, if rightly understood, were belt the ihadows of the greater things of which they were but the, -reprosentativea; and especially was It .t.O be ob served that they had not been wrought with the view of evidencing the divinity of OhilWa mission. Ile had never boon known to wort a miracle to convince an obstinate unbeliever. It was also to •be noted that the miracles wrought were generally the 4141 of ties faith of those who witnessed theth. In Illustration of this, we had such passages as "thy faith bath made thee whole," ," according to thy faith be it unto thee ;" and still more striking leas, the record, " He did not many mighty works (miracles) there, because of their unbelief:" And this, was to . seause it wee noieotisistent with the divine purpose in this way to Mara the tube- TWO CENTS . . 1 Roving heart. Christ had, in fad, rebuked the desire for this kind of testimony to his divinity. Thu, he rebuked " al:ft:mil and 'adulterous genera- Con" for seeking after "a sign ;" and : so because their requiring a sign, or miniele, wits the test evi dence of their unbelief. The speiker:thought, In view of these things, that wa had no reason for de manding miracles as the only aulfioient tividenob on which to rest a new revelation. . . Ile was now ready to take up the then/ part of his sabjeot : Are miracles suited to the present age, or are they compatible with a dispensation such as the New Jerusalem claims te be? ' . 'Under this head thc, state of the 'soleness now; and their undeveloped' oonditien theiniande of years ago, was comparid. The present ,age was said to be, one of rational inquiry- and reason. Thera was now , comparatively little, dieppsftten to credit external prodigiee of any kind. „Bather was it the ob.areeteristio of the present e/a - Jo believe 'nothing' that la not anceoptible of te rationelexpla nation. 'A familiar illtiitratiori of this we hid to the modern phenomena of meemerism, or animal ;nag netism. These -had 'been ...seHeeding for • Years : yet how few there'wera 'willing to accept ithe tee. gunny coneernieg,chetn,,no matter how,nneteroits or ho w re alleqa4le.:itt, Micilfle! k ;PM!, ''Y ate pet disposed ,to . attezym yee f ysaitX,;4,, .4 F i t. nesaps, b_tit fite t y l rieuegett ,4 0 . iegnitai, _use' matt away in °Nor 0 evade ifailfairiugin'whillheihsel mot themselicailen iiiiiseMtorlly 4etrastiated. Certainly no better "prey? eattte - Ite. 'ittatuted , to 'show bow 111-adatited Were : misstate •to the .present age. Suppose, said he, 'Sweden.' berg had wrought-miraclee, they would hard /Y have FrFingii 4 V , 3.nYth1Y5.:,. , e103 1 I -then . the leughterand ridicule -of the-uneonvinced. Her the spoakgr ; however ', deviatineelightljtroru th general drift of hid • argirment, , told, WI thafifiw - elenborg, on, the : most , undoubted , authority; ha ' beep indued with extraoedinary powere,yeetetal verging on the miraculous.. Thus it was ligoot* biy attested that he had, in dose instance„seen a - conflagration three hundred mills ,distant, and, while It was in progress, desorlhatrrhinutely and correctly its aharaoter and extent; itsci, dot he had repeatedly livid etirtVerei.twitli deceased per, the tolitimony'ef ithlish 'nand the fact be: yond•the postibliityinf: doubt; and yet; notwititi. standing these .thiogeortell authenticated as they ,are, how few there were who were-prepared to adi mit BwedenberOolnim to an extraordinary ilia. 'ruination on shirt ground alone ! The language of a Calvinistic ininisfer in England' was quoted to show that he would not have believed in the trutli of Swedenborg's revelation had it been attested by • a miracle. I - 1 • . • The speaker next defined more fatly the nor) light which Swedenborg had been the instrument of shedding upon Revelation ; stating that he had explained the connection between the present end the friture lb such a manner as to he at once beau- SW, grand, and harmonious. But, this revelation was of no value until it ties rationally received. He thought he bad said enough to show that; al though it wie the aim of miracles to oothpel belief, they were not necessarily convincing, end that from existing conditions of the human mind, they: were ill-adapted to the age in which we live. , In the fourth - place, be would 'respond to the, question—fa not the evidence which Swedenborg) has given of his divine mission not only batten adapted to this age of the world, 'but absolutelyl stronger than that of miracle's? There was, said he; a disposition in modern times, to look into the rationale of things, and it i was not to be- expected that the doctrines of thee-) logy could have escaped this eorutiny.- This mission had been allotted to Swedenborg, who a, had given to the world new revelation; a system vast, magnificent, coherent, • perfect; entec.whiell i would stand the test of human reason, and which; • dourte and will not shrink from the severest test,' He had spoken in. the 'name of god, hut to man's: rational intuitions. Ho enlightened the under . standing. He had rested his claims wholly upon the credibility of his teachings, and they who in-1 vestigated would see that no ode but the Father in 1 the heavens could have revealed theta to the mind of the author. This, the speaker thought, was vastly stronger proof than the °videos(' of miracles. Miracles, unless wrought continually—and then they awned to bo mint:dee—must teat 1)73 human testimony. Here the speaker submitted the foll Owing : Sup pose, said ha, a man ahould come to telLa• commit-I pity, wholly Uninformed upon the stibject, all the; facts as they appear about the Movements and' magnitude of our solar system, and, all the' other i heavenly bodies, and the relation sustained tol them by our earth,'and should, in iietteetation of the truth of what he sold, work- a nth:dote; and then there, should come another, who wrought no miracle, but who, instead, explained so clearly the: principles underlying all these movements as to -make it perfectly intelligible to the understand ings of the people, rabble of these two *bald be sooner credited? Undoubtedly the latter. The former might proclaim fasts, Indeed, but f until the understanding was reached,. the mere 1 miracle could be but momentary . in It, impree. gone. Not so when oonviotion was earned homel to the mind through the medium of reason. •, This, he thought, afforded a good , illustration of 1 the difference between miraculous evidence and. that kind of evidence which Emanuel Swedenborg i gave of his new revelation.. With a, brief recapitulation of the arguments i presented, and the points sought to be established, the lecture was concluded, when the choir sang , a hymn, and the congregation were dismissed with a benediction. The speaker was aromentative, eloquent, and at times foreible, although in 80 ex tenable a field as be proposed to cover lee single discourse he was necessarily obliged to give mush on the mere force of assertion, without attempting the proof. This was especially true of what was alleged respecting the exact objects and effect of Swedenborg'a mission. , The Water-Gas Correspondence. E.R.TitoTTELESQ.. President of the ,BFant of Tele.fites of the Gifu Gas Weeks : • Sin : Elereivith we beg to hand you, in a con nected form, the whole of, the recent corresponds once between your Chief Engineer, Professor Cresson, and ourselves, in reference to the Sanders prows for making iliaminating gas, respectfully inviting, you to its oarefutperusal, as well RE to a study of the following brief statement of feats that haVe transpired In they . period that has elapsed since the date of our closing letter. ' In that of the Professor, here given at page 46, he announced to the world the existence of a " dzed purpose to lay open to the light of truth, as occa sion might require, every attempt to mislead the public) mind" in reference. to the effort to obtain cheap light by means of the'process oeDr. Sanders ; and yet, from that hide to the primp/ he halt re pained as silent as the it eeveeenterffinale liffishaving since been published for whioh lie has made him self responeible'ta the people he had eolong Why has he been thus silent? Has It been that the " occasion'.' hist netheen given him l e Could be find in the certificate of hir, - Bells'ln reference to the at tempt at blitek-rnallitigDil Sanders and hit friends, ne "Attempt to mislead the :nubile 'mind," shill• client to warrant him in again appearing before the publia ? Did he discover no such " oceisiOn " when he road the letter of his songiving so direct a contradlotion to all that he bad said of the intro duction of the Sanders prodese at the city works Could none be found in the letters of his son's at torney in reference to the effort at compelling "Moore and the others" to pay to that eon the enormous amount Of $500,000 fora useless patent? Has not each and everyetarement that had then been published been sines affirmed end reaffirmed, ac corn pe OW by most oonolusive evidence of Its perfect truth? Assuredly it has, until the whole has taken form in the following Clear, Olathe, and unmista kable charges of Berton§ minonduot lit his capacity of citizen, as well as in that of chief engineer of the smite, subraltted to the direction of the board et whose head,, Mr, Pteeldent, you have been placed : - 1. Tnat, having undertaken the offload referee, he hat wholly fatted to perform its dude! ' the par ties to the reference having never yet obtained_ the Information required, for enabling them to under stand their respective tightened duties: - That he has spared no pains' to Prevent them froidebtaining elsewhere the information that he himself his refused to furnish: • ,• HE. That he -has been prompted to this COUEEO of-nation by motives of the most discreditable kind. . IV: That while engaged in destroying the value of the property of one of the parties to the refe rence, he has nesaited the characters of members of the other party, making charges against them that ho knew to be destitute of even the ahadow.of foundation. V. That, for the accomplishment of highly die oreditablo objects, he has published numerous state ments that are wholly devoid of truth. • VT.-Thee he has made " unreliable" reports to lie employees, doing this with a view to promote his own private Interests and those of his family and friends; end fleetly, VII. Thattle conduct, throughout this tranvia. don, has been pooh as is utterly unworthy of any person olairaingeo be recognized as a man of honor and a g,entieread. Such, Mr. President, are the charges now recorded against' Professor Cresson. Their publication wee accompanied by en invitation to him at once to meet us before eminent and impartial citizens, fully au thorized to hear and judge of the evidenoe ,that might bo adduced on el tb OT aid e—Rldeolde the ques tions on whioir we wore at issue—and to deter mine both the mode and measure of reparation to bo made. Here, certainly, was the " occasion" so umehdesired, for laying "open to the light of troth " the " attempts " which, ache had charged, had been made " to mislead and abuse the publio mind " by " fella-eons estimates of the cost of pro ducing gas from water "—bat, has he profited of it? has he dared to accept the fair and Moral offer so promptly made? Has ha not, on the con trary, shrunk from investigation, thereby permit ting Judgment to go against him ' in reference to each and every charge that had been pireferred ? That he has dope this, yout e Mr. President, know as well as we oan do. - Conclusive as is the evidence that he himself has this supplied; further confirmation has since been furnished, the Girard Hones having since been lighted up—and the lighting having boon continued during many weeks, to the entire sad 0 faction of its worthy and publio•spirited proprie tors, as Is shame by the following letter : CusseD Hotros,CIIEsTEED STREET. rhilacfelphip, Sept, 2,,1010. DEAR Siri : We have used the Order gas, made on our premises, under the patent of Professor J. Milton Sanders, for several weeks, and Did that I,thheemnordaeloeframpaino3nefacoptouerLire s e l a m ta p b le it a sh d, na n v en tr a l:V el a r- . featly. able to manage it, with some instruction at the outset: TEO quality of the light is exCellent, and per feetly reliable, while the cost of Its production, compared with thaprice of deal •gaa, is economi cal. 'route, reSpeotfully, - • PREaletaiv.Bl7Kßß, & To itatiftY C;Cateielisau reasiffeete 71FIE WEEKLY PRESS. THE' 'WEEKLY paws will be MI to entwordaers by mail (per annum, in advance,) at :ALCM Three Coyle', " 6.00 Five " •$ Ten 0.00 .. " 12.00 Twent, " " (to one adereas)2o.oo Twenty Guinea, or over" (to address of each subscriber,) each. 1.20 Fora Club of Twenty-one 'or over, we will mad am extra copy to the getter-up of the Club. Feetmeaters ere rettesated to set se Avrotetor . Tux W.lnewt P 22015. ...CALIFORNIA PRESS. leaded three liaise a Month, in time for the California Steamers. ' • As jou see, Mr. President, the disease of "un reliability," MS:anted after the refusal of "lifoore and the others" to be black-mailed to Meow tent of $150,060, disappeared so soon as literent bad eseapedfrom • the Professor's handss it had so disappeared; he :could readily have eat's ded himself ; and, yet, at the very moment that the Girard. Mete was furnishing evidence of_the perfect imeuracY of all the claims that had been made in.behalf ef• the proeessof Dr. &indent; he himself, through the journal of which he is elder director, was assuring its readers that ",the Sen ders patent" had ',Jost exploded here, after a temporary notoriety obtained by, means similar iii chiraoter": to - some of these bow ao comaion ly ; used for popularising 'sehesee. in Prattoe!* Such an assertion as this, made en der then existing circumstances, end coming from any other quarter, would have appeared extraor dinary"; but knowing, as we do, that it is bet the first step in man's downward progress that is diffi cult, we need be surprised at nothing coming from Professor .oresson, after-haviog reed the conflict '" a f *..eutents of his sea and hi n uelf . ao°B-4°- felted. to.' . Of - all'tbe questions that have 'bean raised be tween the Professor and ourselves, that of veresety inoluded, there remains but - -one that hi yet on settled, and that has riferene to.tbe cost of Pro ducing the several kinds of gas made from coil, water, 'end weed. Antidote el prove that this tat ter, 4 . o efweoith-4S - Cressose Retort:ire ck r than a t i fltherrhuanplahed:tellsenee se a et. Penuche the. ilium upon,whielt, was .beinedbile insertion that Water gas wad more 00 1t 1 j. then key other. aware] by . es In the - Opening letter of this vorrespendente... . That" those' these sentsitnetitlLnicurt have been ; utterly, untrue—that , they Ind-been coneested with a, view to promote -this celeste in terests ofPrOfessor a / 4 EBEO and his fri•nta; that is gieldf Hied bevies kitowin a tit„,and4lllsdly de ceiving is'eniployeri; tholgt" nishing, evidence of his entire Unfit:deer foe place m.whichlut is even yet maintained,-sre held Pans iPrins,rp ..prove, ; whensoever end irlibreiseetet?, deniklessrfoard shall fur eishiassrith &Pio' OP - theligures Ifitst Vete then .That yea inn em the Propriedy, if lot area the peeigesity;for doing this , usourot fel a moment question. ;Unlike the Profeesor you esn haven& interests adverse to a full and fair,elauti nation- of all thd questions that have e - been rebel between-him and yours renteotfully" ' - HENRY 0 aiirgv. 1, •:•• MARMADUffit 11100 LE, ,c .A. HART, Committee:, OFEICIL OF TOE K.EXtTERE COMIPLICZJ • tupnday, *Journal of the prsollin - lastitatd 1 4 onntally. Professor erasion us n ot. the 4 , eitaft , s ite sournakbut it is well known to be merelT„ttes +iieite of his opinions. • • Meekly Review of the Philadelphia Markets. PHILADELPHIA. Oototter IS. 1181. The political excitement of the past week hashed s tendency to interrupt bueinese, and the _Prodnee mar kets have rnled iractive - since our last - review. Berk is scares and wanted. PIOUT End Wheat are held with inure firinnaer, but the sales of both are. Moderato, and Corn and Oats are doll. In Cool there "ig a fair trade doing at previous prices. Of Coffee the market is nearly bare, and Regain and Molassei are quiet. Cotton is firm and - prices have ruled somewhatirregular. Fish are on fair demand, from store. Foreign Fruit of all kinds is scarce, but domestic is abundant. Hides are held firmly. The Iron market ie unchanged. In Lum ber there Is not much doing. Naval Stores, theie is a •batter demand. Oils are held firmly: No change In Fleeter. Provisions arenuiet. and for Bacon and Lard Prices favor the buyers. Bice comes forward Morrie Seeds, rather more doing. Tallow is quiet. Tobacco is rather more active. Wool is without a teration. The Ureadeteffe market is without any quotable change, but vet e firm eenerally, at last weekts rates.; the demand for Flour, however. hat been limited, bath for export and borne use ;• males oprimnsing about 7.000 We. in lots, at $6 0%06.76 tor mixed and straight au perfine $6 8136 for selected lots. $671606 for - common and goad extra, and $6255.1 60 , for 'extra, ;amity F oar, aooorcung to quality; the sales to the trade ra-ge at the above rates for suoerfine and extra', end $6.75071' bbl for fancy lots. The receipts. and stooks are mode rate, and the market closes stestly, an 4 rather More ao - tive. aye Flour and Corn Meal are but little trondred lor ; the former sells in a small way at 84.15.aud the latter.•eenna Meal, at 83 80 t' hill, with lig'ht Mocks of b° *.the following honsale. the inrp - ectenaFlour and Meal, 93( the week ending October if. teen Ralf-Parted" of Bartels' Of enperfine.l-_-.'..4-. do. - ..... 104 • do. ;ruddily ge r .- t dm -•—. 79 do. - Corn . . 764 do. condemned.-.- ..... . Tqtal.-,..: -.17 681 WBEAT.-The market Opened fairotrieringe and sales; ptices at - the .C.lose were • fi nnee. with s better inquiry; the sales reach 46040 bag, inotudinif inferior to prime 'Pencsylvacia and Western- red at 4.12001.530. good and prime kerathertfillo 41136 a L 36. and white et .91.3001.4.0 for common and ,fair, and ell di mad) for prime Ohio and Kentucky: Bye Is in fair de mand; 3,100 bus sold at etki tor Yeinaglivalne, MOM for Northern, - and Ta a77e. for eoutbezn.. Cann is den. and prices shout theism.. with sales of M,OOO beel low at 740. closing r that...firmer: fair Jerse so ulat Tie. daunted at 70a7M.• Oata are also dell ', sales of - 11,003 bus at 380360 for Delaware, and 374 for esnatel , yenta. Batley - There is not much dyi ng ; some prime New York seed at 90e. , The lay sale of Barley Malt was at 90596 a. Rye Malt is verily Moe PROVISIONS.--There is very little doing in any do seription 1 theatoak of Porlets - antelf, and held an few he nu e; sales of mees,,in lots, at afikeeB2o. acids lot of clear at 821; prime reams frem 814 to 16. - Beef sells slowly for ship storegatallierM 4#tb6 Bacon-there are some few orders commis In from the South . bet the demand_ for city consumption as 'extremely small; sale. of Name. , which are &arm, at Melia for plain sett fanny onnvassed ; liate - for aliderr,,end 9ako, cash. and 60 4033 - fir Shoulders. - Green Mears -th let of in gait sold at 8340 on time. Laro-the I s Ifmi bid the stook is very-moth reduced ; Weird ter bbls at, liegal3e, , sad hems et 1340/414e, harms. Butter is in limited demand and pr ices ate steads ,sales of solid-packed atteolle, and roll et - temita, as in grab ta, the latter ante for prime Pennspvanis. New Vet* Cheese is in moderate request at 11 6 / I }io 4, ft.. METALS-ln - Fig Iron there is' little doing ; some of the makers have sold all, they cam deliver for the balance of the year. Prices are firm ; sales of leo. 1 anthracite - et 82160523, leo:2 at 82140: and No Sat 20.00; a sale_ of charcoal Brooms at $6O, months. Railroad Bars mind:nand tiaoso ; a eale of old rails was made at 830, 6 months. Prices of Bar and Sorter Iron et ruin." ea-last quoted Lead-There it very little stcmh °fele here; a sale of 1,030 Pigs Vietnams was made en private terms. Copper continues did BA here le but little stook bore. and the de mand is good. with smeltealesne Dario. 1 Quereitron at 4 2 7012 WV' ten, which Is the ad vaace. IIEibBWAX melee ; the last sale of prime yellow , wan at 340 1' lb. . _ CAN BLES -There is a steady home consumptioi l A, mond for Adamantine and further sales have bean at 180, 4 and 6 months , for city-Made. Byrum and a • low arc dull. (10e1..-There is lets doing, and the shipmentamalting from the Schuylkill sett Lehigh restates are moderate. trims efe firra,"arid- as-the season ad vances a mill fur ther improvement .is - entiomined. -The recent cool weather has ,eaused more inquiry for home Use , acid sales are rnedentrat Cl 26.0,94.111 per ton. • •• • • COFFEE.,,s he market is firm. bat nearly bare-of stock. The gable are eel: fined to 2,150i1 bags, mostly from the market. including: Is r to, good ana Orme' ajoi at 113geilgu hagueyra at lea, and Cape ,at 140 per lb. 4 COTTON domes forward sloWly, and manutacturera Manliest no disposition- to pa:chase beyond immediate yenta. Priors are _firmer. but.without any quotable change; salmi 0(010 balee r , nsing from 5o - for inferior to 90 Mr 'tamed, and 100 WA:frier lb, case and tune,for middling to fait ireahtY: The following le toe movement since the Ist Septem ber laist,,ea compared with the previous four years - - • 1,121. 1E69. 1868, , 1557. . „ • Receipts at ports.. •• • 263 000 26a,000 Ziair 0 102.000 Export to Great' ritain. .45003 • 71000 •40 000 NOM Export to France........ 11.0u0 23,011 23100 4 000 Export to other F. Y.-. -6 OM - 6MO arid 2010 Total export. .. 63,060;1000W • 66 ND 35,0011 Stook on 361,Ce1e 2sB ' 217,0041 i 1011.000 Of whick , aorinittie paktweek, ineindettia the above: Receipts etaiorts. . ... ,65,1:11:0 „Fe 000 93 003 MOM Export to i-reat Britain. , Bggid. -20060 • eOOO - 7600 Export to Franoe...... • 7.460 9.00; - ~ Export to:other P, Lour - 1 ONS • / 010 liOn Toial exports.. . ..• 9,000 • 98010 196011 13.t110 ielpir—beo tease at the potts,compaind with last scar, 4,92:1 bales. _Exports-Deoresse pr areal Britam, 24,00) bales; decrease, to France. 12065; to other formers 'party :the e.leeratioet.axer Lune: Ilotal decrease as exports, 28.000 balsa _ , • DRUGS- AND' DYES.-The'ssles of all kinds eras limited, obange pricer Soda sh 18 arriving More 'freill,„„v and m 1.402fg0, 6 menthe. •Creatolof, Tartar lukaldwitti mom mmaeaa. Indigo is very quiet, and the salts, ar.e.contieed to le feel chests of 13enger, net 360013&i, and .Madrae WS 815,M. 6 mouthy. lftells-hlitok ere) 'are firM, einfthere intibeisi it Mo derate store demand ; sales of madam No. IV. 410 605 ; 19; large do, at $20 ¢ 31; large Its, at $1320514; medium do. at 810 ;fares as, et 890; Madrpra de r nt ; and small at 'ISV 12 13),:a. Codfish tspaajtom .V.4ao/ lead blots klaqkerel,3l4l.COnitala Cctlngn sold ifin Navel* terme. Pickled Derrieuee waive, and selling atal2 53:60, - Sealed rind fe Ma Boit are Mare* and wanted. No change in Salmon or Shed.' ere,lnenUve, good Western Call at 48c lilt CIA-The market hibareof all kinds of foleige, but suppheir ,af new Retsina are roots caseated. Se veral cargoes have 'Wien received at the Bastward. Green' Prlrr axe veer abundant; and are *clime at at Ur to $3 tbl. for csaillunon Jerkey and best New Yolk. 'Thud Apple, aredall et 40Dife. Dried Penedos met oomi agforaread teete zfreede.and are steady at der 7o Mr uonered quartent,and,Bo93 for ussfared halyees and 10813+3 for Tined. emetic, trial Ste more abundant. and sellinsait ellen bbl. - ' • -"" FitEjOßTo ler - erpoof three lertioninuch offer- To San Francisco acme smements are making via V ing ; O r a! 'A W L l Ad m on r " no el a n's h a d g C err l i s ee 6d te . a h n a d ve lS b .h es e ¢ t ma " d i e d . New York W eat vowels were chartered to no to he Went Intbes, out and book, at a roupd sum. ttb::Artn:elBl'll:llo7'olritot.quiry 'or eithe r exact price pot made public. the Boston packets are re a getting Mo'for Fleur:Abu. Yet ota,n, ,n e on for measure ment gnoile, and _al 25a2,40 for iron. tor the South the rateeoontinhe se bier gaated. Coal vessels are in demand ysotirNiti4 t , b and a s3 .Off B provi . dimeean d Crude or Clarified and no mice leav e transpired. • .1 - Lu d ep sol -;- 0 11ifi s ier o ti f tld p h e A r Lfell it en c,t OlT e .lll s66o 7l . ll 4o 3l : ll lse t m brrria et SZAM 41 ) : too, 06.11. 1 BIM!'.-1 here is no stook of Amerman or foreign herein first hands, mil no ardes , have been reported. RIDES are held firmly: baknot much dome, extept city slautliter, - whien are setting i sin All lots. 1018 - continue screeethat uneett•ea; sales of new Eastern at 28033 o; and Vircrtent at 805360 t lb. LUM 13 ell.,The active season is about over, and the eaten of nil descriptiona limited ; Hemlock is selling et $BOlO et , Mene lfelloarPme, San Boards at 813616; a cargo of English Dattneseterbefore arrival at $ 1 M; a cargo of Phakets ,Ordeeht .13- for, test, and. $6 for d rent MOL ABSEIL—The market. is tilet, and prices ere without quotable onanse • *ales of played Cabe at 24e, and Muscovado at 21rr804 4 mos. INAVALBTOREB.—There has beetless doing; among the salea we nouns 1,000 bble Rosin at $100101.73 for Do 2 and 31.00 forint" grade and fine No 1. Wilming ton l i er s goatee, end worts 83 w 3 23 ; Pitch ranges from g 1.201 Z 4P bbL Writs of Turpentine to held firmly: sales, in lota, atelte43o; the latter is for /sew York We. 01 LB.—Linseed Oil is rather drill, and sells. in a small way. at rketS2e,m omits and bble. I.ardOilispuelanneed, and there is but little stook here: sales of winter at so, 4 mice. and summer at 930. Red Oil—Nothing doing. r l'alm Oil there is very little demand.. • Imieorte of Sperm and Whale Oil and Whalebone into the United States for the week ending Oct. 8, IMO: .13 blita Op. Wile. Wit. Ihs Bone. Total for the week—.... 3,015 es Previously— 63.063 132,809 1,012.041:1 - - - Prom Jan. ito uste--..„66,278 152 l'B4 1,072 WO Sams time hist yee.r..—.'...131.727 /95,722 1,61100 PLASTER is unchanged, with sales at 52. 7 0 .If.' ton. RICE.—Si oak is very light old crop sells at 43ie, and new ato3ll 3 ' hi 4 mos. SALT.—About 24,000 bus Turk's Island was dispOsed of on private terms. ShEDS —There 18 a good demand for Oloverseed. at full rates. bat the receipts are light; sales of 1,100 bus at 86 for Prime new crop, old at e 0.75, and,a fair quality of new at 85.75. Timothy sells in tots at 8276 bus. Elskseed us rather mom plenty, and seas, on arrival, at $1.62m163 gfe bus tam R.—There is a , firrn feeling in the Market, and rathera more doing ; sales of 600 bhds at 6,4m7, 4 ‘5• Porto R iod at 6,,R673,0 ; and New Onetime at 7.kielto ; 11500 bxe also sold at 6:40, all on time. KPIRPTP.—Toere is more doing fn Brandy. which is bringing full prices. Oink are Steady. 'Ruin is sailing at 53a340 for Boston. Whiskey is stsiuly, but not much doing; sales of Ohio bole at r,302,94e; Penne at 233. Wide nt 2lgo. and dredge at 21%0223, as to lots. - icily ie held for higher prioeir and no fur ther sales have been reported. American is worth 834 eaq par ton. ALLOW is 'unchanged. City rendered is worth 10Ato, and country ORieddic cash.' 'I . IiAS are firmly held bat very unto/aro, the high views of holders limiting operations. - TO BACCO.—/ herein more inqUiry for Inland prices are firm. Kates of Kentucky am& Maysville oa puvate terms. Mmtufatitured Is so ling *WWI, to the Strident steady prices.. WOOt.:—The market has been inactive einee the 6ualion mule. Bales of 01.(00 Ma at 650673‘0 for full blood, and 45/1500 for medium amiss, and 403 4 / 1 0 for low,- ' • - .
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