TICE E S S , XXVIIIPTIO HTIOIEN - ' I.* C"Fo R ornese , arc, iti7loa6aitl7l,' :OILSKIN DAILY TB.lttillts" • Twinia 111 x Woos,' poyoble to thi 06171111.1. ,litalled to fhtbneitiles bat of the OlthAt 8t: notion tont. Als: prooiToLLoso rot Moor Mootuo ; Taxan iakinstli DeaktiMe t rtie,turerlabl,y avows ter the tine, 0#0)049.4 ISSLE PRESS,' mina re out et the Otty, at Toni Dot, iSSREILL E , P RESS „. be dent t Bator!tiro by 10, 1141*4 1 11541 $471040 at 42 ' 04 Throe , - , - OS live Ce' tea, " - ' ' 400 Ton 0 - ' "" ' 12 00 Two* Cop If address)',... 20 00 Toaotylloplasi4riafor," (to address of era -- subsoriber), each • 120 for IV-Oub orTifiratrono or over; wa wW liana an *atm salarto the gaiter: 41p of the Olot. • - trr lyeetnisetgts, a r e ; requested to lot as Agents for Ton *Boni ShiPlan* F04':E.1444:1.4..0, AND rii.44.1.fge.;1057. Nair York and , limn Steins&lp Oompany.—The Vnited Snitea WI, Steaks&fps AUG., .2,998 teuli David tines' Commander, and BOLTON, 2,500' tone, Yamed'Altton,'eommander, leave New York, MM. cithamptoni for the years 1851 and '5B; pa the follo wi ng dap : LIATE XIV TOIL ' •", `.': Fulton, 22 Axago,. Saturday, Jan., 9 Aram, d 9 ct Sept. 19 Dalton, , do. Deb. 8 Sone% Arago,_ do. , March 8 Amigo Nov,:`, 14 Salton," , do.: April 8 Ptilton,";:dn': Dee. :12 Amigo,— "do May 1 ' ' Prdtott =do ' May 29 LL_ IiATII4O. -, , • 'L11.0111.4011. 1.. , [1.8411 - ft; :,-, ~ . '_ : -,-. „ . 4%7. .-• , • _.' SleePrlßeedeTj'Seig. 25 Arsgo r Nadnesdah.l.7. 24 Sultello.:Ao.4!4SeEk. ,2 T„ ' • Fe1f914,.-,:. AO., -',. Se .29. t 4l. • t.'lf"Tig --: , --10-t,,P ~-{, AZIP, ~,: , *Ft_ 7 . - J, 0 El M,. , i.1 1 ,, . r E g- ,!); 1: -IV: 4. -- "77 , ~_p 1:, . , ' „1 ). 1,,, , rt - , vnitoii,Y46.l,..:liii.l:2 -:. ifiAt6,,:: , do. ~ -..,;Saiiiie ango,, -., do.: -.,.. Nob.:9 , ... Remo,. do. -•, Fob. 10 Talton, '-do,' -, Alloottle , Yukon; do. ~ Mar.. 10 Arogo r - ,d0,..1.„.4Aprit 6.. I', Arago, ~. de. , AOll . 7 Silk* 7 ;40..1: /Levi A :). Eldtodi do. .31s t S AVlraFt - -MO' ' , l'Une • 1 ri "! AiatOp . ', d 9. , runt, 2,', Nactosi7 - dP'Y 4ll 4 2 i O ",'' S4lteiki, - - SO: .. - ' 1 : z5 ,,,, e9 . ~ ....,,- ,,,) , , ,,,iiiviiii.aimii:, - L .: ~_ ~_ ,'' - itmi ,- tiii note id litenthan4,* iv '31,1 1 ,1. T . eabin,',Bl likkondOiddiiis7s..; '.-- ' ' -' - ''- , .'' 14Otailtiledediq RoirtheontstOit 4 to' New YOR—Eleet OstdOi9oo trice; Stootol Cabin ) 500 hum. - - ' " ! . Yoe festilit oripmeage, apply to - -,. MO WI RTIMER LIVINGSTON . , 4put, 7 Brooding:. LIAA.II 13.111" , , ine. OROSREYA co: % ic ... - s ou tioto. Asgamet,Evtioymay i : ' ",_ • EXPRESS' ' Aim - - 'lt P aris: - OHANGIII )52C. 00,p , ,-- 1 -'- - ad QA. V.A.H MAII STEAMSHIP LINE.— 1...7 Panora BOOED. Rho ;well kihosm first-Chum Aide-wheel ateamehtps STARR OR OROROLI, and ftEYSTO2tR STATE, now form s Wieldy Ittm fortM Bonniest% Bthithweet, one of the %Tiling every SATURDAY, at 10 A!. jrritstt H.W'REATE OP GEORGIA, ' 'l,cont'3% . G.titirt; Ooonnender. ifilreeeekrefreight , on TIIIIIIBDAY, October Bth, and nail , SATURDAY, October .10th, at _lO o'clock . '..talitiTl o .& ll s llll. REYSTONE STATE, , ..,OstentAti Maainmam, Commander, Will taaibirttgoOlit on THEESDAY, , -WA mat onTATMDAY; —, at 10 o'clock" A. M. At SavannahO ' mni ship eonneet With, eteantertV for Tlorblis and Baratta, and with riliroed for the South and Southifintl.'; - - COW( PUMP • ' ' '6 8 No fit 1.8 8 1;00 - 1;08 .' - 011, 13athxday. morning. No Ma of ImitingAganti rittorgre ForF " l '"l'Vel 11 ,Yr 1 .111 1' n . 51 NOrth Vizir as Agent co A.. & On. FOR FLORIDA.-Btemnots Madura mid Elt:' lan's loan florminob eVery, Tuetaby aryl Eatarday,,, FIE;I.IXVir ,1411BRPOOla lINSTED STATES ugx, compowing this LinO are - TheAMANT/C, Capt. Oliver Eldridge. The BALTIO, Capt. Joseph Comstock. The 'ADRIATIC, Ospt.l'amea West. Thom oltipot WO bon built broantreat, expressly for floinatneseneeerelaii; every care has been taken in their coustritetiou, as also in their engine., to ensure otrongth and speed end their aolonamodatietut for passengers are umulquollim "atitiatur stid. tomfort. • Priooot Soma !Aim Nett York to Literpool, In drat cabin, ISISOi in mount O f Opp from Live rp ool to New Tort SO end TO plisse No bortluisoour unless paid ler. - Th 4111411 of - this :11.nehere improved water-tight balk ptade.' • pitomotb,Dlll4.o4 SAILING: 1501 uBlB 705*.'.'11011'117817001, r ilitantenituielll, - ?riga' -,wodoooloy,/mto26, „MT , latardsy, s laiy, 1, .180 N0d0e566,,1487- 8, -1867- ay, July ASST. WedMiday,_pitr,22, 1861 AwLl;'" • rISST 1861 &today, Aug, 15,t- , 1887, Wednesday, Aug. ia,: 1857 Siturdey, Sept. /2, 4887- Wednesday, Beat '2, 067 - SettirderiSePt. 20; Ind Sopt.Boi 480, Maturdity, 10; • -.1861 Wodomdo,o, Oet. 14, .1867' Siaturdity,;o4. ;,,1867 Wednesday, Oat. 03,- 1867 - Strurdity, Nov. 051 Wednesday, Noy.ll, -1861 asturasy, Nov.;Xl,l 1867 Wednesday, Nov, .1857 saarsol pea Wednesday, Dee. IL: 1867 " spy `[ PO O - 22, . A 851 Forfroleht or k plieantir;_nppifici - • TOWARD; PILLOW No. 50-Wall street, N. Y. BROWNtainlanA - 6118. 1 116841PANNAND../g..00., SP•Austin Priors, " ' • • • table't The - iintott.et,threshipe trill...not he seem o gold> Siker,' smoiiii d e, Jetralry.pr.solouirotohat or utotuti, - -ituleM,lBll2-o Wing 67r ti OS, - therefor Mid the volutiltirsitturtborabo :t nel-11' °Atkrugif lia u rinals. g i_l3g vAIROW/fi*CLUMIST, AND DIWOCI/St nortilassacorniir F,WTH , and ommammuo Soot ,Isi - Philadelphia, 3sole rm./mixture: of pliollvo.. F-Raragrik: old JAM4IOA t ormomai whlob,,,t,.ret?guised prescribed Or the Medical Fa. eul ikit " ' h " b4 " ;m ti llui 1°46i41 .0414Y $0 01: o aVitiarfaMat's Taw madatieem i preparation et - nonsual Dolor -the fintobier‘ monthi; no' lam* -or tratellor allbald'bef;stitliout It. : - IntrelaxatioU'ot the bowels , in r4tie ß •ia t t , ittlrltjaValltib sa tlaknea~ It .fa an sat i " qiiLlTlON.—Persons desiring an article that oui•be reilid uon P ai ed KW/fro. th pare Jamaica. ow aim, a l o udbe particular to ask for i 4 Brown's' Ea sense of, I t ainaica liiingpr,p,whick warriented,to - h• Mt_kgalregented, and Phipailid. ohlrbp - 11111D11- BROWN, end for side at his Drag and Chemical Store, north-east ;corner, of , Pl/18, nod IRRSTNUT i Street', Shgedelphlei and by all the respectable Drug gist' and elpstherarlehtiti the N. Stet* anl-gm aiditti, ' mitt in WILEY ar;.tO.,VIIESTNUT STREET., illaonfocturere of - " • 10.1przsirwriattgict aims WARD, under tkeli iiisom#On an the prettifies ,sxoltudrely, Citizens and Stranger; are UMW to vhdt our manu factory,: • ' WATOHES. • - Occurtantly on 'Leh&a eplendid stook of Eloped*: Gold - the 644nuted inshore. &N V§ . • - - Hommel, llrseidets, — Broeshee, Bar-Itiogo, Player- RIP; ittld all Othef, irlloteil In the Diamond line. Drawings , Of IfEW:4EXIIIGNS will be Made free of itsarge for thoie wisidug work wade to order. RICH HOLD JEWELRY. ♦ bsouttf4, essortmant ,of ill the new styles of Pins jewelry, such as Minato, Stone and Shell Cameo, • Pearl, 441.84' Oirbuncle, Nagel:as, lifElDileLD edit-CAB, DieIf.DTEE, &e. iled,'BrdiirOud Mettle CLOCKS , of mired etylee, and at 4. - rioitistitty. - , auloartfwlY. S MIII- ff E 4lli - - 7 I " t';;7ltrY4orags o OP SE3IR ~. ,i ixrDAa flOUNia YiYTBIiD C4ERRY ATIUSICTi. A /in* a*rtaileitt STUVER WABB, of every, de scription, constantly on hand, or made to order to match an y pattern deafred, , • Importers Of. hheflield - and Birmingham imported Wale , - • PEQUIGNOT, r = 'O wAton oeras fir .VATOMIB;, , • 121 fioura 21112MBT11pET, BELOW 01L2STMIT • 1 , 4,11 . 41) E : ' Closani*PiOtfatfot.,: , , t " Anoint% PaoioinT. • - vott* OALPWR . & , 10 'y1544.482 OnfirrNut'AEGOVIIPTII MID?, ImnpM(MikdAlretehee ead. Ana Ml:retry, Itinufaetit sus bt-Stallbir fad Stahidad Silver Tea Beta, Ports and Bp oo Pavaela,aglente_ for the sale Ohaelee Prodahamis new-. Medd. London Timekeepers—all the etaea4dlftnd $2OO, $2lO, and $3OO. PeilleVeind defeaWatchee M the !mieat prices. Rich litildonahle Jewelry. fdiefiteld and AMariesa Plated Warn. y - ,A,;741/rlgl 4 l_ & BB A ltlZilt s ,aZia ' r iwn , a !, ahrive Third, 49„ proars,) ' , o&kortifOit haat kilt or We to that'll& - MlO i t iIdOMMOItION- 'USW& 8118, *rim, MO. PriA7rwarfen Ri?Bith -m4457.187 twErBOSQ =&• late ,of Vtriab&42W (lira: delphle •,” - JamaLL Dtrimeg. - - Vs. U. Dospoq, 0 tto anti ',lsiah) ... AVAN2COIGAiIIifr—A handsome eased Potsgm, • goltens • —' • ; Juplto, , ' ' Onnvendotes, - " • • Torif Lapse, , n : ThilonAineviosns, oos; • ' Plots onboo, ka., &e:, ke.i inlf,l,ll and tad Sogsvi still aim and timil g . Y CH ties,- a Mrs and Odnitaitly itscalving, and S' far Ws litt, TENN, (osiV)1118-W ARLE AINUT Shea, below &mid, isoord story .nl -s, ECINAIW A VOtrt • : : 4140 PAITAOIO r'P A ll l l 6 M:w i rt il ff iL lie oyAtt% gari, fl oy WOO/ lbw, by viTAltlma T Widout stroitt; beiojc Sedosid, 6btoon4 Stay. 11", nimuiela , r , timolsok w.ruarur it. of ai It hilhadoda; utorri auntWarvoi man r flialkierapt ip . 40t. T#440.2* *1).0„ - ; tar holcollihrlore BATS i iSTßilar .690DS, - , 43..xaziorsturamatoiluw.soNbitriv • - • icAsnizem. - .Atos/phk-ino,uaßzs,' 'SATO: RS, c c , 3 NAlLfttitreet, • • '( avt , 'lllo4)iiiltai , - 11 Witte; je"i'llaillinir 50, AO. ,P.' 4l, "4" , h;zhte sel.24C fila Nlikkilt:rASOAD ~0 40, 1) 40 .4, 4 A m ax it triable No. $ s, RWOOIKOM21) " 4E,• 3111 WALNUT at” bast/PM/10A i; O s ; . 1. •--•- ' • - " ‘\ ,1 .1 1, ' • ~..-.‘ „ ,*NN 414 %1 ., •••••• kt if , ' • " • s s: \\V " . .-7,14 t s ) • • -AI • . ••• • r 7, _ • • 1 :•:. , - je • • .;•-• ... • t A ••••;,---,. ••; ..• • i iv- •• • • • •••- ',:.••• • •-•..... _ -. • - VOL. I-NO. 54. Strangers' ebnitte in : For the benefit of strangers and others who may de sire to visit any of our publid institutions, we publish the annexed Hat. ' • : Tobin MAIMS Or tßualialltil. • Academy of Music, (Operatic,) corner of Broad and Latest streets. Arch Street Theatre, Arch, above 6th sheet. . Parkinson's Gardeni Chestnut, above Tenth. -• National Theatre surd Circus, Walnut, above Nightie. ' flaisdford's 89[1 Opera ,30,(Ethloplani) lleventh, below Market:. " • - - Walnut Street Theatre, northeaat corner Thai and Walnut. . ' •: , ThomenPs Varieties, Fifth and Chestnut. • l'hourts'e Opera Route, Arch, below Seventh. ' ' i alma ADO 80155050. • Academy of Natural Sclences, corner of Broad and 'George streets!'s. • • Academy of fine Arte; Chestnut, above Tenth. Artists' Fund Hallphestnut, above Tenth. , ' Franklin Institute, No. 8 South Seventh street. morsvoalort rillfrouvrOte. '• • Almshouse, west -side of Schaylkill, opposite South 'strait. "Almshouse (Friends% Walnut street, above,Third. 'Association for the linplognisint of Poor Women, No. 292 Green street' ' - ' -Asylum for Lost Children, No. 88 North Seventh Blind'Asyhussi, Items, near Twentieth street. ' Christ Church Hospital,-No, 8 °harry street. • ' City ilospard, Nineteenth street; near Coates. • • Olarkaon's Hall, No. 183 Cherry street,' ' • .; -' Dispensary , Fifth, bloWso l /estrutt etr,et . t - •• ' • : •Feniele Society for the,ltellef and 'Berpifllieht of the 4 , 06 r,, No. 72 rfortia Seventh - Octet. - . Sz4lrfetvhl 4 l!•tieeriitio, 11e. 21, North,Seienth, 'shirman Society Hell. No: 8 South Seventh strOst:' ' 'I/chne for Friendless Children, corner Twenty-third and Brown streets: -'- .- • • ...' ,- , „ ,Indigent Widows' and Single Woman's Society, Cherry; •esSsit isf Eighteenth street.-- - -- - '-- MatellieHall, Ohestintt, - aboie Seventh street, ' ' 1 / 401 4. 0 n• •Arthume eorner,of Mora and eTwenty-flret - :21 anaDiaBsinsaii,*'o. - 1; sii44 - eardeli street: . hairs' Atylani, (eolorad;) Thirteenth 'street, near 111 th Call Irbil!., Odd 1161108IP Hall,l3iXtli and lltines'atrest. • ' I Do. do. 13.11:eorner Broad and Spine:tar- I ' • ' • :den stMets.„ •, • ' • • Do. • - do. • tenth rind South streets. • ; Do. • • do. -Third and Brown streets. • • • !,- Do. ' - d6.- - Ridge Road, below Wallace. penusylvanla Hospital, Pine' street, between Eighth and Ninth: - 'Pehns_ylvsnia Institute for thelnstmotien of the Blind, corner lace ant Tirentieth street: - • • Pinneylvaile Society for Alleviating the Miaeries of Public Permit, Sixth and sadists( street*. • " Pehnsylvanis Training School for Idiotic and Feeble- Minded Children, Soho()) Hama Lane, Germantown,- edict No. 182 Walnut steel. Philadelphiii 'Orpheus , Asylum, northeastaor. Nigh.; breath and Cherry- ' - —•' Pmston Beheld, Hamilton, near Twentieth street. Providence-Society; Prune, below Sixth street. ' Southern Disperuary, No. fa Shippenetreet. ' • ll' on Benevolent AssociAtion,•• N. W. corner of SeteOrth and Hansom streets. • ' ' ' ' ' • ' • Will's Hospital; Rase, between Bighteenth and Nine. teezith streett.L.: • •,•• • • MI Joseph's Hospital,- Girard avenue, between Fif teersth and thirteenth. ^ - • - • •- • Episcopal Hospital,'Pront 'street, between Hunting. • don end Lepb avenues. ' I Philidel e Hospital for Diseases of the Chest, S. W. corner of hesitant arid ',Park ' its, West Philadelphia. ' I• " • ' -- • mem imanrses. - • :. Cistern' House, ohp/stunt-street, above Fourth 0 nnty Prison,Paasynnk road, below Reed. • , Car Tobacco Warehouse, Dock and Spruce streets. -- City Controller's oMar, Girard Bank, second story. Otimmistdoner of City Property, office, Girard Bank, second story: z• • " •• • • ;• ' i ' • •• COY Trouurer's OHM, Girard-Bank, second story.' '4lO ComMiestoner's Once, State House. ' . • Cityllo/lcdter's 0110 e, Fifth, below Walnut. , . ' City Watering Oaramittee's Otliae; Seethweet Omar Fift and Chestnut. F unres*t Water Worirt,lainiernat on the' fichuyl- Giriad Trust Treaturerls'Ofilee,Tifth,abeve Chestnut. • HOnse of Indestry,llitherinp; above Seventh. - ' Runge of Industry, Senna above Arch street.' • HOW° siißOrnge ( white Parrish,, betsteen Twenty-, , sec and Twenty-third street. . - - . . - il In a of Refuge, (colored,), Twenty-fourth, between P Oh and Poplar streets: • • Ittalth Nice; corner of Stith and Bansom. • Ilbusse of Correction, Bash Hill. • . - ' tto. n ine Hospital, Idtayra Ferry road, ' below South etre t. • M yois office, S. W,; corner ' and - Chestnut stre' -• ' - - New: Penitentiary, Coates - street,' between' Twenty- Ant Ind Twenty-second stream. • M NilsEard, on the Delaware, corner Front and Prime . , , Nirrthelli Liberties! Has WOO, Maiden, below Front 14:1/Mee, No. MY Dusk Street, opposite the Ex ' ' Post OHta;llemington, Quoin street, below Shacks -P -Nice, Spring GSOden, Twenty-fourth street and Panhajdrisilatorenne„ . , • • . Phil/dabble Riclurnge, corsier Third, Walnut and Prick streets. -• • • , ' • Philadelphia QiutWorke,Trientiath and Market; ogles, N 6.18 S. Seventh atriet. •,•' _ • •'- ' ' - ProussylvaairilnstituttforEsal and Dumb , Broad 'and Pint streets: " - • • • Peerl?sr• Trolly Monument, `Reach; above Hanover High iietbel, S. Ri'etruer Broad and Green bile Manual Sehool i Senfeant,alinve Plinth:. errs Office, No. ti Stats'ltouse 'beet wing. te Gouge Ghertut streetAettretinßitth sud 84td) oil ,'Mute House; neer_eigth street.' ring' Garden , Oomnessiouor's Hall, Spring garden hirteenth streets. i on 'Temperance Galli Ohrlitiati, , above Ninth Red States hint, corner of Ohettnut and Juniper ts. t iled States Amnia, arse, Perry Road, near Slide val,Asylum ' -on the Schuylkill, near South street. • Mel States Army end Olothing Equipage, corner of fth and Girard sixesta. , ' • ted Stated Quartermaster's • Office, corner of Mk and Girard streets.- - - • -• • ,•-• •.• comints. - olkharmsoy, Zane street, above Seventh. brain Medical College, Widnes street, west of Sixth, rard College, Ridge road and College Avenue. mftopathie. Medical Sallege,•Filbert street, above !terser' MedicalOollsgb, Tenth street, below George. lytechnid College, corner Market' and West Penn ,2' f: •• • .nneybriuile colege, Ninth street, below t. .1114.101 i Medical College, Pltth street, below , V . Hole Medicel College, 229 Arch street.. , • ir Sty o e of Penosylvanie, NinthNinth street, between Markelguvet and Chstnut. i 6 IF varsity of tree 116.11 . aluis sad Popular Knowledge, No 8 Arab street, ' , - . ,igh..llolf OP 00132P8. . bed ilteitinWroult and District Condo, No. 24 F Street ' belowiChestaina. • • , • - Winne Court of Pennaylfania t Pifth and °hesitant h trt otoOrainois Pleas, gndependence ga ll . Diet Courte, „Nos.' 1 end - 2, corner of Sixth and Ont stieetd. Court of Quarter BeselOnlr, corner of Sixth and Chest nut streets.' „ ' • . (1 - , • • ZILIGIODS INSPITUTIONB. American baptist Publication Society, No. 118 Arch atrolet. , . Aperican and Vorelgn Christian Union, Ito. 144 Chest nut street. dltdierlatur Sunday .Scheol Union (new), No. 1122 Ch tout street.— ' ' , *merlon Tient Society (new), No: 929 obeettint. Kerionist; Crown street, below Callowbill street, Pi o nnsykrotria and Philadelphia Bible Society, center 'of Tenth and Walnut street,: ' I , 9 l )2terlau Board •Of Publication (new), , No. 821 Chestnut stree - t. a ~, lhilbjteriati" Publication Nome, No. 1384 Chestnut rr.': , • Tong Men 4 Christian desolation, No. 162 Chestnut • Northern Yount Men's Christian Association, Ger- - ruantounltossl end Franklin. ;. , ' Philadelphia Bible, Tract,- and Periodical Office (T. ILlilloticton , e), Na. MD Arch . street, Oral home below Stith street. north Side. titawllerlo RATROAD LINES. - . " • . . Pe ea. Centralli. R :—Depot, Eleventh and Market. 7 . M., Mill Train for Pittaborghtnd the West. 120 P. ht., Pest Line for 'Pittsburgh and the W, e s t. 2.60 P.' m., for Harrisburg and. Columbia. ' • 4.60 Y. Y. - Aceonnoodation Wahl for Lancaster. ii p... 5., farm mail for Pittsburgh sad the West: • 'Rio fog Kaliroad—Depot, Broad and Vine. 720 A'. IN., Express VIM to: Pottirrilje,,WLlliamoport, ~ Elmira and Niagara rale.: . 11.10 P. ki:, as above '(Night Express Train.) t ' - , • -,, NW 'York 'Must: ' 1 H., from Kensington, via Jersey Oity. ... 0 . . M., from. Camden, Accommodation Wain. I, bf.', from Hamden, via Jerse y HUY Mali. A 10 A . M., from street wharf, 100 Jersey ally. 2 t. M. vls Camden ant Amboy, Express. 8 P . id, via Comden, Accommo dation Train. I fo IL, viieClamdan'ancl Jeremy City, Mall. -6 . H.; via Hamden sad Amboy - , Accommodation. , ,- ' -", 1 ,;,,. : Cossetting Lissa. , ' -' 1 .XiAresiWahnststreetwkstf,lorSehridern,Nostosii' I - Water Gap, Swanton, Eke. 4 A.M., for Freehold,. , ~. • ~, 7 4.114 4 14 Mount Melly, *MU Walnut street wharf, 2 g., H /ler Ptech o3 4. • l.'„).1-- \ ' ' 910 P.M., for 111044 Itolif, - iin,"Trenties,:hill. 3 P. M., for Palmyra, ButEngton,',Bordentown, &o. , 4 P. Id., fOr Belvidere, Heston, tko., fr om' Walnut attest wharf.. „ ~ , I . .. lllif., for Mormtlolly, Burlington, &o. • ' j. Balltimoso it; 4.-41opot, Broad and Prime, 8 8-18 p (or Baltimore, Wilscjogtou , , New Oastle, mid.. 1 - , • dletowu, Dover, and Seaford. 11'. M.; for Baltimore', Wilmington, and New Castle. 4.116 P: M.; for Witmintton New' Castle, Middletown, , , ' , Wirier, and sa b re.' * ''' , p;111.3 for Perryville, Put Weight. • , . , /1J P. U., for Baltimore and Wilmington. AVM .Pmenspindata A..8.....di1ep0t, front and Willow. 0.18 A. N., for BethlelMin, Bestow Manch Chunk, &o. 4.46 A. Id., for Doylestown, Accommodatio n. 2.l6 p.m., for Bethlehem, Beaton, Manch Chunk, &o. 4P. kr for - Deyleatparo'Aceonimodation, " 0.16 P. 11., for Gwynedd; Armommotition. ' ; Candela 0.4'40440c E. - E.—Vino street Whirr 7.10 A. H. for Atlantic Oily. 19.46 A. AL, for Haddonfield. 4t r; M., for AtlauttatEty. ' 4. P. X, for Haddoolield. . Pbr ster - By Colambfb }Lk. and We stch esterce Branch. Prom Market street, month ! • side, eb6Ve Eighteenth. plan Philadolpbla 7 A, m:, and ; P. M. • ' y s Westcheaterfl 80 4 - , ht., and a P .4t. ' ;,iire Philadelphia 7 A Olt , MNom:au ' ' ' ', Westeliester 8 P. M.' " Weetchuter Diteeb R ailroad, to Poulton, Grubb. 1 t Prom liotiviel Ni . ghteenth apd Market 'trees) Leave Philadelphia O r and 9 A, X ~, 2,4, mud* P. M. , ,Tentkelton Grubbs Evidge, 7,8, small A. Id, and I . 0016 Pad.- IMI lintirdiyir last train hone Penuelton it 7 A. M. , I. ' "'On anneara ' , Idisy. PhOlhdebtda 8 4.m. end 2 P. M. ' , , ~,, ;_. penneitou IN A St. and 0 p. hi, 117erinaniMin '#` NontitEivilis 14: R.—Depot, 6th ~i 2 r! .. 1 1 4,% c M ir ii 8 12411 •, 1 - 11 , 0.16,'' and 11.16 P. M., lel; M. and 8 P. 11,, for Downrn, 6,8, 191 andll.B9 A, 11,, 0,4, 1,6, 999 9 • • i'll ' 'o' 4 l%l 6 o l = 4ll • • ' 9 , om ir i giea z t, 010, 4,6, Pandid9hl4, M tg . it ru ,4 6 004 1 / 4 119( Aild. 4641 P. M. • •BOASsr-1 • 'link • • 1 . 1144' . 49' cum ' A* - 491,919' finl=!Pr Aim 7 1.., , , ,, ,1, 1 !;446 A. M,, an 6 4 0Ae 1.761.;' for' Tawny, Burling. irrotift,s s runt t o reir 0 6:4 wd Y Z 7.50 kit titer below 8py964, Mree ° l' , . ..,12,4111",310.F. iota A. War ner .14Uogtoil ko_, , "r -il!,410/44,4,.&"m. ofmoooold i Joro4oMay, 41617 -1.*.q,,,..2 46 11 1 6 4, 0 71h i gur, 9,94 , innudny, from 'label is Wino Anb fAquiie. TILD WHEAT WHISKEY.-'-E. P. MID- N.-+' & BROTITER; importeis of Wince, &o. Also, sole proprietors of the 011 Wheat Whlekey, No. b North Front Street. meoll..lut PORT WINE.--In bond and entitled to de banters 250 otitis St. Joseph , ' Pure Juice Port Wine, in qrs. and eighths. Ten puncheons John Ramsay Islay Malt Scotch Whis key, 2 years old Yllty pipes Anchor Ohl. hlarett, Martel, Bouret;and J. 3 Dupny Brandies, al of which I goer to the trade at reduced prices. JO9. P. TOBIAS, int27-81uoil ' 88 and 80 S. Front St., below Walnut. A LEXANDER V. HOWES, WINE AND ilk LIQUOR STORE, No. 226, Southeast Corner o GEORGE and SOUTH Streets. ' CI. LEWIS, IMPORTER AND DEALER IL/. IN PINE WINES, LIQUORS, CIGARS, Ao., 28 South FIFTH Street, Philadelphia. RANDIES.—Pinet, Castillon & Co., Mn. rett te. Co., and other brands of Cognacs of various itint gee, in half pipes and quarter casks • Pellevoisin Rochelle Brandies pale and dark; in half pica, quarter °sake and one-eighth casks, all in Custom ouseatores, imported and for Bale by ERNRy Bo N & CO sit S Nos. 271 and 223 South Fourth street. , 111 4 TIBIAE • Se , 'BUTZ, PORTER, 'ALE .25, AND LADED DRER,DRDIVDRV, No., NO (new No. 9.38) North ISM Street, Pptiaaetphis..-3hswping -910o!rii:prot4.11.)!.#00pdloc, ; .nnt.tt galela nub ftesltutranto. FirE,OLD ST.A.H HOTEL INALA.H.MONY R. 00U RT..:—The' nubile ate respectfully Informed Um the orb STAR HOTEL is Still in existence. The prOrietor wilt be glad to , see his old , friends, and pro mises to furnish them with a superior quality of Ale, Wines, and Liquors. He feels assured, that on paying time visit they will not be disappointed. He is also preparedto tarnish Oysters in every style, at the ehortest notice. ' • Lends from 10 to 12 o'clock. cep 24-1 m JOHN CORLEY. WILLIAM MANNING'S CITY LAGER MB SALOON, No. 2,32 Carter's Alley, delpbia. 50p22.4m MoGOWAN'S RESTAURANT, SOUTH west corner of BROAD and WALNUT.—Game and 101 l other delicacies in season. Families su_pplied with Oysters on the shortest notice sep7-7m B. COFFIN,— LEWIS THIRD WARD HOTEL,. (DEMOORATIO HEAD QUARTER %) Sctith-enet corner FIFTH and QUEEN Streete, sopa lmo Philadelphia. MERCHANTS' HOTEL, NORTH SOUTH HPREET, Anon ktAantr , PHILADELPHIA. ,au2l-11 MoRIBREN h BONE, Paoratiroza QcOTT ROUSE—Corner of Irwin Street 1.7 rind Duquesne Way, Pittsburgh. B. D. MARKER, Proprietor. aul3.Bm 50131 AGENTS WANTED.—A HOME STEAD FOR $lO !—Third Division.--$310,000 worth of Farms and Building Lots, In the gold region of Qulpeper county, Virginia, to be divided amongst 10,200 subscribers, on the 7th of December, 1857. Sub seriptions only, ten dollars down, or fifteen dollars, one half down, the rest on delivery of the deed. Briny subdcriber will get a Building Lot ur a Farm, ranging in vale° from $lO to $25,000. These farms and lots are sold so cheap to induce settlements, a sufficient number being reserved, the increase in the value of which will cempensate for the apparent low price now asked. 'Up wards of 1,350 lots and farms are already sold, and a coMpany of eettlere called the 4, Rappahannock Pioneer Association" is now forming and will soon commence a settlement. Ample security will be given for the faith, ful i performance of contracts and promises. Nearly *Alpo acres of land, in different parts of Virginia, new at command, and will be sold to settlers at from $1 up to $3OO per acre. Unques amebic titles will in all eases be 'gives. Wood-cutters, coopers, farmers, &c., are waited, and five hundred Agents to obtain subscribers, to whore the most liberal inducements will be given. Sores agents write that they are making $2OO per mouth. Pa full particulars, subscriptions, agenda., Ac., apply tot • atr2,4-tf B. BAUD E B, Port Royal, Caroline county, Va. Eietuing filanyines. ti $lO, $12.-O WING THE GREAT tongingg the sale of WATSON'S $lO FAMILY SEWING MACHINE, the subacriber has secured larger accommodations for its sale and exhibition. Ile has leased the commodious roan No. 814 CHESTNUT street, second door, where they are now open for the Inspection of the public. JNO. E. AtoMULLIN, • e/16.tf 814 CHESTNUT street, above Eighth. '0 WESTERN TRAVELLERS. f3PHING AND SOMMER ARRANGEMENTS. "NORTHERN CENTRAL RAILIVAY. O pAux TRAINS„ F)19)I. BALTIMORE TO and 4NO „ - n and after June lot; lbbi, TWO OAILY TRAINS will leave Calvert Station for Pittsburgh and all West errs and South or Northwestern cities. VIE MORNING MAIL TRAIN. ' Leaves Baltimore. daily (Sunday excepted) at 8.15 A. bl.onnecting with the Hail Train over the (treat Penn syliataii Railroad, and arriving in Pittsburgh at 1.01 A. I. THE AFTERNOON EXPRESS TRAIN Leave. Baltimore daily (Sunday excepted) at 3 P. Id., forliarriebors. THE NIGHT EXPRESS TRAIN . . &eaves Baltimore EVERY NIQIIT at 10 P. M., con• netting vs ith the Lightning 'Express over the Pennsyl vania Railroad for Pittsburgh, arriving at 1.20 P. M. All these trains connect closely at Pittsburg with trains over the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago .Rai/road, and its Northern, Southern and Western connections. 07 Passengers for Chicago, Rock Island, Burling ton, lowa Oity, Milmaukee, Dubuque, St. Paul's Mad ison and other leading cities in the Northwest, will save out ' hundred miles 0 . / travel and (CO hours in time, with leer less changes of cars, by taking this route. irEr Passengers for Cleveland, Sandusky, Toledo, and Detroit, go by this route, and the time Is unequalled, being 113 miles shorter than by any other route. fp"— Passengers for St. Louis, Indianapolis, Terre haute,Calro, and all points on the Lower mid Lipper Mississippi, make less changes of cars, and arrive in ad yance of any other route-, nod to Cincinnati, Columbus, Dayton, Louisville, and other prominent cities, as quick as by any other route. All Western baggage OIIECICED THROUOLI and ha:nolled With care. FOR THE NORTH, The 8.16 A.M. connects closely with Express Trains over the Dauphin road for Williamsport, Rdcheater, Buffalo Niagara Fella, and Canada, thus forming the most direct railway route to Northwestern Pennsylvania and Western New York. Passengers will Sad this the shortest, cheapest, and most expeditious rote to Niagara Falls and Canada. Through Tickets are issued to Philadelphia via Co. tunable and Lancaster by all the trains at 83 each, each train having sere connections. Passengers by this rote avoid tresselled bridges, and all the inconvenience of ferrying across the Susquehanna river. Passengers for Hanover, Manchester, Gettysburg, Km mittsburg, Carlisle Chambersburg, go by the trains at 8.16 A. M., and 31 3 . M. WESTMINSTER BRANCH. The Cars on this road make one trip per day, connect ing with the train at 3 P. M. For THROUGH TICKETS and further information, apply at the Ticket Office, Calvert Station, N. E. corner of• Calvert and Franklin streets. Sep2B-tf 0. 0. A DIMON, Supt. CITY COMMISSIONERS' OFFICE— SEPTEMBER 24th, M. NOTION IS HEREBY GIVEN, That the Assessors oaths City of Philadelphia will meet at the following places on WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, and FRIDAY, the 30th of SEPTEMBER, aed Ist and 211 days of OC TOBER, between the hours of ONE and TEN o'clock lii., for the purpose of adding to the List the names of such Citizens who way have moved In the respective Wards after the last Assessment, or who may have been omitted by the Assessors. 0. M. HILL JAMES M. LEDDY, Oity Commissioners. JAMES LOGAN, First Ward—At the house of atonal Jas. McOlaskey, minter of Tenth and Pasayunk road. Second Wesd—At the house of Folyord Began, Poss• yink road, above Carpenter. Third Ward—At the house of LOWIII B. Coffin, south east cerner Fifth and Queen streets. Fourth Ward—At the house of William McMullin, Eighth street, below South. 'Fifth Ward—At the house of Peter McElroy, Fifth street, below Walnut. :Sixth Ward—At the house of A. F. Wellington, cor ner Second and Quarry streets. Seventh Ward—At the house of James Lobley, north out corner Twelfth and Lombard streets. iElghth Ward—At the house of flugh Money, south ..stcorner Niagenth and Ottorge streets. - 'Muth Ward—At the house - or Weterwau'e Western Exchange, Market etreet, above Fifteenth, ,Tenth Ward—At the house of J. McLaughlin, north west corner Broad and Race. 7Eleranth Ward—At the house of John Clark, north west collier Second and Green streets. - . 'Twelfth WardAt the house of Ws. Dlemer, Fourth street. above Dream. ;Thirteenth Ward—At the home of Henry Wellbank, Ridge avenne.nbove Vine street. ;Fourteenth Ward—At the house of Imo Creasman, east corner Twelfth and Spring Garden streets. ?Fifteenth Ward—At the house of Owen Reilly, corner Twenty-second and Hamilton atroeta. Sixteenth Ward—At the house of Joseph Closter, Fourth, above Culbert street. 'Seventeenth Ward—At the home of James Donnelly, earner of Meter and Cadwallader streets. . . Eighteenth Ward—At the house of Newmans, corner of Marlborough street and Franklin avenue. Nineteenth Ward—At the house of Robert F. Bowers, corner of Frankford road and Norris etreet. Twentieth Ward—At the house of Hobert Pollard, corner of Tenth street and Girard avenue. ‘Twenty-Bret Ward—At the house of Joshua Lake, Manayunk. Twenty-second Ward—At the house of d 01390 Render, Germantown. Twenty-third Ward—Birst Divislon—At the house of Reuben Fredericks, Ifarrowgate. Twenty-third Ward—Second Division—At the house of June' Mullen, Prankferd. .Tweuty-tbird Ward—Third Division—At the house of George W. Gently, Bustleton , Twenty-fourth Vi`ard—First Division—At the house of John Leech, Kingseseing. Twenty-fourth Ward—Second Division—At the house of John L. Gorman, corner of Market and William streets, West Philadelphia The Amason will procure their Transcripts and Blanks for the Extra Amusement, by calllog at this Om,. on MONDAY, Sept. 28th, 1817. se26-toc2 C , LOVER - SEED.—NOTICE TO PENN SYLVANIA FARMERS AND STOREKEEPERS. ' r the now crop. Pennsylvania Prepared to purchase for .4 ,T h h , e p u ri n m d e erzi l a nov e e d are Glover seed of atorekeepera and fanners, by sondin samples to our address, can, at all limes, ascertain t h e prico at which we are 'buying. Parties 'wishing samples, by which to be governed as to quality, can have them sent by mail, by addressing ue. J. El MUSE dr, 00, , ,seplit.tf.• • 43 North Front, and 44 Water streets S DIA AND AMERICAN TANKED Boa , OORDAGIL—s superior article, uitouteoture and for sale by WHAVita, FITLNR & 00., ' au B-tt No. 28 N. Water et., & 22 N. Wbarves. VHABLES . P. OALDWELI.--Wholesale and Retail WHIP and OANN Manntootturar, No. 4 North FOURTH Strad:. 504 SII AItPE ? 8 _ MEN'S AND BOYS' OLOTIIING, 14 North POIIRTH Street, between Arch end Rue. sue.ly WELCOME RANGE.-SOLD BY CHAD. WIOIC tr. BRO. 202 N. BROOND Bt. aulB-Bm. WBLOOIa RANGE.—SOLD BY 0 HAD T !lONA NN0,1102 N. 11.1100 ND st, sulB4ar Wants. PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2,, 1857. THE WEEKLY PRESS. THE CHEAPEST AND BEST, WEEKLY NEWSPAPER IN THE COUNTRY. GREAT INDUCEMENTS TO CLUBS! THE WEEKLY PRESS is published from the City of Philadelphia, every Saturday. It , is conducted upon National principles, and will uphold the rights of the Statea. It will resist lanai'. clam: in every shape; and will be devoted to conserv ative doctrines, as the true foundation of public tiros- Verity and social order. Such 'a 'Weekly Journal has long been desired In the UnitedAtates, find it is to gra tify this went that THE WEEKLY PRESS fa published THE WEEKLY PRESS is printed on'excellent white paper, clear, new typo, and in nuarfo form, for binding. It contains all the News of the day; Correspondence from the Old World and the New; Domestic Intelli gence; Reports of the various Markets; Literary Re• views; Miscellaneous Selections; the progress of Agri culture in ell its various departments, &c., &o. , Iv- Terms, invariably see advance. HID WEEKLY PRESS will be sent to subscribers, by mail, at - - 12 00 per annum. Twenty ()epics, 'when sent to one ad dress, - • • - - 20 00 Twenty Copies, or over, to address of each subscriber, each, - • 120 Par a Club of Twenty-one or over, wo will send an entritcopy to the getter-up of the Club. ppet Meeterii are requested to act as Agents for TUE WEEKLY Vass. - I will esteem it a great favor it my political and per; *owl ( friends, and all others who desire a Snit chr a Wee ly Newspaper, will exert themselves to give THE WEEKLY PRESS a large circulation In their respective neigiborhoods. JOHN W. FORNEY, Editor and Proprietor. Publication Office of THE WEE111.)1 , Puns, No. 417 Obeiltnut Street, Philadelphia. Vrtss. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1857 DEMOCRATIC NOMINATIONS. GOVERNOR. WILLIAM F. PACKER., OP LYOOldll4O 00172177 JUDGES OP THE SUPREME COURT. WILLIAM STRONG, or BERMS COUNTY JAMES THOMPSON, or Emig COUNTY. OA NAL COM hiissioNEß. NIMROD STRICKLAND, ov CUESTEB COUNTY CITY NOM 811Xl ODOM J. ABBE INAT/ONS. 170 R, RANDALL. MILT, J. C. KIRKPATRICK, I JOHN flamer, c. H. DON.LVAN, ORO. U. ARMSTRONG CITY AND COUNTY. 11300011711 JUDOII 001187 OP 00111110 X PLILI.B, JAMES R. LUDLOW. SENATOR, MARBELIB. RZOORDER OP DEEDS, ALBERT D. BOILEAU PROTHONOTARY OP TOR DISTRICT COURT, JOHN P. ICPADDEN. OLXXX OF TOM COURT OF QOARTER OFFOONO, JOSEPH CROCKETT. CORONER, J. R. PENNER. . COUNTY. AOSSMELT, JOHN WHARTON, JOHN 'St WELLS, OLIVER EVANS, HENRY DUNLAP, J. N. ARKIN, JOHN M. MELLO; JOSEPH H. noNNELLT, A. ARTHUR, DAVID R. Wow's. JOHN H. DOHNERT, TOWNSEND VEAIIIILET, JAMES DONNELLY. JOSHUA T. OWEN, EX-PRESIDENT PIERCE The best evidence of the personal qualities and political sincerity of a public man is the judgment of his immediate neighbors. Such a Man, after a long battle with life, on his re turning to his own community, there to resume the avocations of peace and of honor, sur roinded with the respect and good will of his fellow-citizens, enjoys a prouder consolation fat; than when greeted with the buzzes of par ti4ns moving in the atmosphere of ?Ilya' flatteries. Before such a spectacle, animosities are regretted and forgotten, harsh judgments revised and repented, and early associations rOalled in all their freshness. But when he who has tilled the highest office upon earth, to which he was called by the unsolicited suf frages of his countrymen, gives back to the pePple the power confided to his hands, and retires to the bosom of his own State, to spend in; peace and in comfort the remainder of his dtiys, we are presented with an example such as! the annals of few nations can furnish. In nothing is the peculiar character of our in stitutions so singularly and beautifully illus trated as in such an example. Unlike the monarch, who is compelled in leaving his throne to leave his country, and who, in his solitary and reluctant retirement, preys upon his own proud heart, our WASUINGTON at Mount Vernon, our JEFFERSON at Monticello, our JACKSON at the Hermitage, our Vitt Bo- REM at Kinder Hook, and our Poi at Nash ville, become ouco more a part of the great constituency which they represented in the Chief Magistracy, and are clothed with the rights and bound by the obligations common to every citizen, deeming it no less important to be true to these duties in their primary rela tions than when they were called upon to dis charge the high functions of the Presi dency. President MADISON, after his official term, became a member of the Convention to reform the Virginia Constitution, and Jelin QUINCY ADAMS, for years after his term, was a dis tinguished member of the National House of Representatives—instances that show that while we select our best and worthiest men as the Executives of the General Government, yet this is no bar to their subsequent accept ance of humbler stations in the service of the country. On the 6th of March, 1867, another Presi dent closed his four years of labor and resumed his relations to his immediate neighbors :—wo allude to FRANKLIN PIERCE, once more the re sident of a quiet country town in Now Iltuup shipe—once more one of the people, sharing with them the rights and duties common to us all. The same qualities that made him so many friends in the Presidential office will adorn his station in private life. The same ge nerous, chivalric, and sincere nature which sur rounded him with ardent supporters at Wash ington renders his d ignified retirement an agree able seclusion. Ho can, from this seclusion, look back over all his experience in national p'oliidos wain:int feeling a regret or indulging a remorse. Circumstances devolved upon him more than the usual share of difficult responsi bilities; but, through all the tempest of ca lumny and the roar of factions, he maintained ono consistent and courageous course, and steed steadily by the fundamental principles Which he laid down in his Inaugural• Address. Traduced, as few men have ever boon tra duced, he is daily furnished with evidences of the benignity and justice of his policy and the injustice of those who questioned it. The able Cabinet which ho called to his support re mained by his side during his term of office ; and although two have since been called to their final account, they seemed to have been reserved to complete the record of his Admin istration. In after years, when the historian conies to write of his Administration, the cen sures and the condemnations of heated parti sanship will have disappeared, and a just and impartial judgment will place it side by side with the most illustrious in our annals. Immediately before President PIERCD left Washington, he was addressed by various pub lic bodies in language of the warmest affection and esteem. His pathway to Now Hampshire was strewn with the good wishes and ardent applause of his countrymen. Here in Phila delphia he sojourned for some weeks, associa ting with our people and attaching to himself all who met him, by his dignified and capti vating manners. The fact that he had been elected President by a party seemed to have been forgotten by general consent, and when he departed to his own home, he left behind him hundreds who, had they known him better and earlier, would have been his strongest sup porters. Among the many testimonials of this character, the following correspondence de serves a special notice. We copy it from the Bible Society Record, for May, 1867. What is peculiar in this correspondence is the fact that Mr. FRELINCMUYSDN, the President of the American Bible Society, was himself the Whig candidate for President on the Mawr CLAY ticket In 1844. His allusions to General PIERCE reflect credit upon his heart, and the reply of the •ex-President is marked by his characteristic simplicity and elegance of style : AIIEHRPAN I.IIIILR ILIOIRTY MUSK, AIME FLACK, 14KW YORK; Jantiary 10, 1817, TO FRANKLIN VlElick:, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED Boatman Arm De e m Sin : The Managers of the American Bible Society having recently prepared, with unusual pains, 11standard edition of the Bible, in imperial quarto form, instruct me to present a copy to you 'us the respected Chief Magistrate of our favored Confederation. In doing this, they feel :wined that you accord with them Wile sentiment that this Divine Book stands closely connected with tho rise, prosperity, and future walfare of our free institutions, both in Church and in Stole. Their fervent prayor is that your suoceemis, in all future time, may entertain the ARUM samary convictions. With thief deeply settled views as to the influ ence of thd.bible, the managers are now endeavor ing to plamois plans, legible copy in every house hold of our 'loved country where it is not found, and:where tre is a willingness to receive it. To further ee aan object, many of our best citizens in every AO and Territory are lending their elfective aid,' , ft should also be added, diet much t..i) effort is wade, by them to furnish this book, which has done eo a ptch for us, to the Republics of Spanish Anieriee, to still more remote nations with phial , wd . haye intercourse through our widely epriadotpieketee, and rapidly extending Christian tuissions„. , „ '. With 4 1 ifnill thins expressed in regard to the Ili14,•; 1. , k, minute trust, sir, that you will accept the vol c' •iit, not only front its own excellence, but, ne ,tIC ttitren'of their high , regard for the office whiok:yonlipid, and also of their desire for the wel fot;auditilipinmu of yourself and your household, now UM 4 . 0111111110.1. With these expressions of respect and good will on the partof the managers, allow me, dear sir, to milli with treet sincerity, these of Your merhohedient friend and fervent, THEODORE FRELINOHDYSEE, President. ' • IVAsnrsarosr, February bth, 1857. Duna Sin: I have received, by the hands of Hon. John'lli'Leart and lion. Elisha Whittlesey, a copy of the Bible, in imperial quarto, of the stand ard edition recently prepared by the managers of the American Bible Society, accompanied by your letter, which informs me of the purpose or the managers to present the copy to rue as Chief Magistrate. , Pormitme cordially to thank you, and the mana gers through, you, not only for the expressions of gratifying personal kindness contained in the coin tuunicatien, but still more because of the interest ing occasion with which those expressions aro asso ciated. Although in our political institutions there is no union of Church and State, yet the religion of our Divine Saviour is not the less an all-perva ding principle of the laws, tho sentiment, the moral and social existence of the people of the United States. Christianity animates our nation ality; it is the Duo epirit of good government; it is Uncharacteristic, and peculiar quality of modern civilization; it is the noble bond of connexion, which, by community of religious convictions, attaches together, and elevates into relative supe riority tt intelligence and power, the sovereign States of Europe and America. And wherever Christianity diffuses itself among all the nations of the earth, it goes to be the herald of civilization as well ee of salvation. Of this last and best gift of the merciful Creator to his creatures, the holy Book is the inspired record. It is full of all human wisdom, but still more of that loftier, heavenly wisdom which doi wends tri us from on high as the audible voice of the Almighty. As a y memorial of your pious labors to the end of placing a copy of the Bible in every household of tha habitable world, and first of all in every house hold of our own beloved country, and as a sacred deposit, this copy will be transmitted by ins to my suecessots, to be their intimate counsellor and sure guide in the arduous duty of administering the executivo affairs of the Union. With Eentimonts of grateful regard, I am, very reFpeotfully, your friend and servant, FRANKLIN PIERCE. HON. THEO. FRELINOHUYSRN, Pres. A. 11. S. FASHIONABLE FALL STATISTICS The study of statistics is generally con sidered particularly dry and uninteresting. Tkere is an opinion that a man might just as profitably endeavor to extract blood out of a turnip as amusement out of statistics. That opinion is wrong. Not only profit but amuse ment can be obtained from Acts and figures. We speak from experience. Yesterday-, being the First of October, many of' our fashionable modifies threw open their rooms, to crowds of eager and expectant la*, and displayed what is called their dis play of "Fall atuf Winter Millinery," all the way from Paris. By the way, how appropri ately, simply, and even poetically, does that little word , g Fall" express the particular sea son in the midst of which we are. How natu ral that the fall of the leaves, in the sere autumn, should suggest and supply such a pithy term as this. As we were saying, the first-class ntodivles opened their rooms to the female world yes -terday. What has that to do with statistics? No more than this, that on a careful calcula tion, no fewer than fourteen hundred and twenty-one ladies visited these fashions' exhi bitions yesterday—that each of them, on an average, tried on five different bonnets, (which makes 7105 separate and distinctive tryings on,) and that, on the same closely calculated average, only one fashionable lady in thirteen, out of all that crowd, actually made pur chases. We believe in the accuracy of these statis. tics, solemnly delivered to us, as correct, by the best looking and most extensive modiste in this city, who ought to be informed, and who is well informed upon the subject, and who, whenever she contributes facts like these to our store of useful and entertaining know ledge, is as welcome in the editorial sanctum (to use an old expression) f , as the flowers of ?day." Allow= represented Monsieur JOURDAIN as exceedingly astonished at finding that he had all his life been speaking prose, without knowing it. Our fair modiste will be equally surprised, no doubt, at our informing liar that the information she condescended to give us comes under the head of Statistics. But it does. But of 1421 persons who tried on hats, bonnets, caps, and other Paris "fall " head coverings, yesterday, only ono in thirteen actually made purchases. We wero curious to know on what possible pretence the other twelve could go from place to place, tumbling over the beautiful and delicate fabrics, and not buying. Ono fair friend informs us that it is scarcely expected that many purchases are made on the opening show-Any—that the round of visits is made for the purpose of enabling the ladies not only to examine, but also to compare—and that in a few days, under ordinary circumstances, a pretty good per centago of the brilliant fashionables might re ,tunt and purchase. But,—and, as 'Wuxi' says, "here's the 111 V—there is considerable doubt, as existing aro of ordinary circumstances, whether any thing like a prettygood per centage will return and buy. There is no diminution, we aro as sured, of the feminine desire to have the head handsomely thatched or covered, (if, indeed, bonnets, as now worn, can bo called coverings,) but hard times have sot in, and men cannot be coaxed or frowned into opening their purses, at the call of their wives and daughters. Bon. net-buying Is usually considered a cash transaction, but where money is absent, little can be done. Our heart bleeds for them, (editorially,) but we really fear that our mo distes, in the present season, will do very little business—from the scarcity of money. Things have come to that pass that the ornamental must yield to the necessary, Retrenchment is forced on people now by the pressure of the times. But this is a ques tion too important to be discussed at the fag end of a light article. We reserve our opinion"—as the judges say when they have to consider the conflicting authorities cited by counsel. CAMBRIA COUNTY [Correspondence of The Preen.) JOHNSTOWN, etHuinTiN 00., Sept. 30 Editor Press : The Democrats had a largo and enthuslastlo meeting hero last right, in Pronhei sec's Halt, which was crowded to overflowing. Gen. Packer addressed the meeting for over an hour in his Usual eloquent and convincing style. Resolutions were passed endorsing the National Ad ministration, and plOdging en undivided and hearty support to the State and county ticket. The Demo orats of Cambria are delighted with Qen. Packer, as evinced by their loud, long, and enthusiastio cheers whilst he was addressing them. The whole county ticket will be elected in Cambria, and the majority for the State ticket and county ticket will be very large. Yours, **** To the Editor of the Press : The communication in to-day's edition in refer ence to Mr. Stockton has my most hearty concur rence, but why should his audience have so uni versally left before the end of the sermon ? Please be so kind to ask the question. A t3onsontenn. COMMUNICATIONS. OUR BANKING SYSTEM To the Editor of the Press Sin • Can you Gad room in your journal for a few thoughts which the present crisis has revived They have been matured by the observations anti reflections of many years ; but the pressure of cir cumstances may force me to offer them to you with out the attraotions of style. Our banking system is essentially a bad one. It is not our fault, any more than the system that has imposed slave labor on a portion of the South, for which it is unfitted, or the one which has imposed a public debt on tho people of Pennsylvania. We inherit it; it was perhaps a necessity, or at least a wise policy with our forefathers, and it has tome down to us with so many heritages of a better sort, that it would be ungrateful in us to denounce it very angrily. It would ho unwise, moreover, as I think, to attempt its hasty reformation. There are some habits, oven bad ones, which it Is dangerous to change abruptly after they havq made a lodgment in our constitution. Barikaare the mere representatives of the com munity. They era managed by men—the same into that manage the buying and selling, the ma nuftioturing and importing,. the speculating and spending, the laboring and thinking business of the world. „'They have just our impulses, our e,vm pathics, our follies, and •our faults. Every one knows this, who thinks. Wo have no right to expect of them, beetmae they are dignified with corporate titles, and live in mar ble houses, and insoribe their engagements on pic torially-decorated paper strips, that they shall be wiser than the mon whom they employ as their re presentatives, or that, when they have been misled into improvident dealing, they *hall still come for ward, as the phrase is, to the relief of others who have erred like•themsolves. Let us not, therefore, be too Indignant at the banking institutions, which our own legislatiie wisdom or folly (no matter which term we prefer at this moment) has incorporated into our systems of finance and currency. We have been complain ing, until within the last fortnight, that the banks would nut lend out their notes in exchange fa our own as freely save desired; but we And now that they) were lending them out over-freely, for wo all sea that they have lent out more thrin they can redeem. We forgot then, or we forgot now, that our notes were payable in two, three, or four months, but that thoits were payable on demand. Tot, even at this moment, and in the easno breath, some of us condemn the banks for not discounting and for suspending payment. This is all childish, and finds its only apology in the right which oaf feriug, of all sorts, has to bo querulous. But though wo should not blame the banks, more than we do our other insolvent neighbors, it may be wise to avail ourselves of the repose, which by the old law of reaction, always follows a state of undue excitement, to consider what it was that in duced our sutforings and theirs, and to see how tar we can guard against it in the future. We cannot change the laws of our nature ; bat we may per. haps make their ounsequenCes somewhat lose dan gerous; just as the people of Mexico have learnt from their expectance of earthquakes to live in ono-story houses. Lot us first inquire, why it is that we incorporate banks at all ;—or, in plainer words, why should men who engage in the business of banking lso more favored by the law than the men who engage in other sorts of business? It would puzzle us to find the answer to this question, if the question it self wore now to have its answer for the first time. What would it be? 1. Is it that the business of banking is more im portant to the well-being of the community than the other businesses in which mon engage? Lot U 9 see. The first thing man needs is food ; the next, raiment; the next, moral and intellec tual culture. Yet no one thinks of giving legisla tive privileges to the farmer, or the wool-grower, or the tailor, or the schoolmaster, or the clergyman. This, then, is not the reason. 2. Is it that the business is less profitable ? A bank, so far as this question is concerned, is no thing else than a money-lender. The law gives it the right of charging discount, instead of the in terest which other money-lenders charge ; that is to say, a bank that lends me ninety-four dollars for a year is allowed to charge Tod interest an a hundred. It is allowed besides to discount on its deposits; or, in other words, to lend out on interest the moneys of other people for its own benefit. It would seem natural, then, that a money-lending bank should be more profitable than any other money-lending concern ; and the eight and ten per cent dividends of our banks would point to the KIM conclusion. This, then, is not the reason any more than the first. 3. Is it that the business is morn hazardous ? Why should it be more so than that of any other money-lender? The banks run no other risks than he does. If prudently, cautiously, honestly managed, it is just as safe as he is from the chances of loss; and if its losses are imputable to its own imprudence, or fully, or fraud, no ono would think that these should be compensated by special privi leges. Neither is this, then, the reason. I have suggested these three reasous, because we all of us admit that if it is really important to the State to have capital employed in some one particular business, which is either too unprofitable or too hazardous in its nature for men to embark in it without some special inducement, the State may wisely furnish that inducement. If gun powder were not manufactured among us, and could not be manufactured profitably, it would be well to pay some ono a bounty for making it, that in this essential of publio defence wo might be in dependent of the world. On the same principle, though with less clearness of application, some of our statesmen have vindicated a protective tariff But it never has been asserted that one branch of business, not more important than others to the public, cud at the same time not less profitable nor more hazardous, could properly claim a special bounty, privilege, or protection at the bands of the State. Unless, then.atherebo some reason which has not presented itself to my mind, the business of banking may be safely and wisely left to rest on the same basis as the other modes of employing capital and skill. But how, thou, has it coin to pass that banking in Pennsylvania, and throughout the United States, has been entrusted to corporations with privileges above the rest of the world ?' The answer is found in history. The first chartered bank, the old North America of the Revolution, was noth ng but a device to raise money for the Government. Congress wanted funds to carry on the war, and it bought them of individuals by giv ing them special privileges in return. And from that Limo to this, the whole business of chartering hanks has bean one of bargain between the Legis lature and the stockholders. I do not mean that it has been always, or even in most eases, a cor rupt bargain—but a bargain it always has been. Tho bank has always been required to pay a douses for its charter; or, in other wordy, for its right to do what individuals bad not the right to do, or else for the right to do it at less risk. It has been a hard bargain sometimes on the side of the stookholders, sometimes a profitable one; but a charter is a bargain—a contract, as the Supreme Court has told us, and, as such, binding the State absolutely and forever, or as long as its terms import. Mrs, then, is the reason, and to my mind the only ono, why in later times bankers have been incorporated, while farmers, tailors, traders, and schoolmasters have been left to work their way in the world without special privileges. What are these privileges? I have adverted to some of them. First, they aro allowed to deduct the interest on their loans in advance ; but this is a small matter. Secondly, they may lend out on interest the money that others have deposited with them for sato keeping. This, however, Is not a very groat matter ; for if men choose to leave their money in the hands of a banker, knowing that he will lend it out for his own profit, but at their risk, it is no concern of any one but themselves. It is their own lookout. But in the third place, men who put out their money in banking corporations do not run the risk that attends an investment in other branches of business. If any of your friends, Mr. Editor, should think it wise to embark a few thousands of their money in the enterprise you hare begun so laudably and so well, agreeing with you to ac cept a dividend of your profits, you know, and they know, that they would be answerable for all the debts of the enterprise. Not so the partner in a bank. He puts down his dollar, or his hundred dollars, as if it were at a faro bank; he pockets the gains if thorn are gains ; but he cannot lose more than he has advanced for his share In the ohanoes The law gives him this advantage over the publio with whom ho deals ; it is something like "Meirds I Win, tails you lose." There is a fourth particular, in which our char tered bankers differ from other dealers : it is that the law gives them an exclusive right to make what t o c alled paper money. Very perilous money this is, and very perilous the power of making it, as well as handling it. In the times of the Revolu tion, the old Congress and the old State Legisla tures engrossed this business for themselves. .The " Continental money," as our grandfathers used to call it, did for a while to purchase arms, and for a while after to pay troops. But it began to less its value almost from the Jump, and before the end of the war was hardly worth the paper on which it was printed ; it is preserved now in albums for the autographs of the men who signed it. When the TWO CENTS Constitution of the United States was framed, the' story of this paper currency was painfully fresh in the memory of every one; and it was with an ob vious reference to it, and to the destruction of for li - tune whirls those experienced whose patriotism tempted thew to accept and keep it, that it was provided, as the organic law of all future time, that. " No State shall emit bills of credit, or make any thing but gold and silver a legal leader for the payment of debts.” It was an ingenious device of the State Legislature that substituted banking cor porations to do for the State what the State was for bidden to do for itself. Our Yankee sister State, New York, has got round the Constitution quite nicely, by allowing the banks to manufacture a currency, seemed by a pledge of State indebtedness : we see something of the same sort when landless John Doe binds all his real estate as official surety for the sheriff; but John Doe is backed in limited sinus by men who have 'property, but do not wish to bind it. Fo, however, his, and the gold and silver which the constitution-makers bargained for, has become bank paper. it has been so for almost three quarters of a century. and in these later times we hare realized the fable of the golden apples, which, beautiful on the tree, turned to ashes, as soon as they were plucked. But it is a waste of thought and time to complain of the Past. The preSent is upon us, and we have to prof ide for the future. The bankruptcy of our banks; and the control which this gives ns over them for the permits us to dothis more completely than we could have done at any time within the last twenty Tears. now :ought we to go About it? I' suppose ma one dreams, in this good•natured conimonity, of an indiscriminate onslaught upon the banks. All, of them have, perhaps, been more or less unwise t that is to say, they bafe not been wiser than the rest of the World. Some have, no doubt, been over anxious to make money, , as some of us who are not bankers have also been. Some, it is said,•have abused their privileges in one way and another; and it may be that some few—though as yet I have not heard this charged against of them—have been knavish as well as indiscreet No reasoning man—l had almost said no conscien tious man—would wish to involve the unfortunate and the fraudulent in one fate. Indeed, our sympathies aro all the other way. Thei, stock of our banks, I ant sorry to say, is much of it held by persons who ought not to suffer if we ean:help them. Widows end children, and aged people, and charitable societies—they had no busi ness to be dabbling in bank stocks, but we did wrong to tempt them to it by our charters of in corporation—these and others like them are grie vously interested in the resuscitation of the banks. I would not harm is hair of their beads. ' But how are we to protect ourselves and those who are to come after us, against the discomfort, and alarm, and insolvency, which the present rya ton brings back. to 'us every sixteen or twenty years-1818, 1837, 1857 For the man who has no stake in the community, who may perchance gain eomething but lose nothing by a change, the an swer is an easy one: "Destroy the system alto gether ; abolish the banks ; and let us take a new start." Just so. the man who lives in the open air may exhort us to pull our house down, because it leaks in the roof, or because its proportions are not as seemly as they might be. But it Is not for these that I write. The question is for the people, the real people, of the State; and it is a practical question. I think I beard' you say cnce, and it wet well said, " there Is no politics in suffering." nave views of my own on this question, and if your see St to publish this letter, I may in the course of a few days encroach again upon your co lumns. Meanwhile, I wish to revive the best me mory of our Pennsylvania legislation on this sub jecd, by subscribing myself OLD FR4BIL BRUNK LETTER FROM AR OLD CLAY MAN." [Per The Press.] I have road with much astonishment a letter from the lion. David Wilmot to David S. Brown, Esq., of this city, on the subject of protecting the industry of the pountry by duties levied on impor tations of foreign manufactures. Differing, Mr. Dittos., from you in times past upon this questions MO differing still more from Mr. Wilmot, I confess that I was takes abed by the opposition puff of Jai Wilmot, whom I have been regarding as a free-trade man ever 'since his first appearance in Congress, and whose speeches in Congress and whose votes there, on the tariff question, certainly proclaimed him a free-trade man. I have heard him on the floor of Congress utter sentiments so opposite to those in his letter, and so hostile to the interests of the estimable gentleman to which ho addresses the letter, that I have reason to believe that the epistle of Mr. Wilmot is not the expres sion of his own feeling and opinions on the impor tant question which it attempts to discuss, but a mere effort to make political capital ontiof the par tial embarrassment of financial affairs, and to se cure himself a few votes in Philadelphia by a mis representation of his own sentiments Has Mr. Wilmot changed his views on the ques tion of protecting industry ? If so, when and why 7 Or is he the same free-trade man that every manufacturer or commission merchant in this city has hitherto regarded him? Every party man in Philadelphia knows, and the gentleman to whom that letter is addressed also knows, that during the contests of parties founded on the question of "protective tariffs," a mall& cetion of duties on imported goods, to assist the imerican manufacture and sustain American capital and industry, David Wilmot was regarded ail the bitterest opponent of protection, and his vita was always counted on and received by those who were against protection. Whether that vote and those speeches were right ok wrong, is not the question; but what I want to make the people understand is, that Mr. Wilmot, who, as a Pennsylvanian, so annoyed the friends oK protection and voluntarily placed himself in opposition to what the friends of the tariff regarded as their true interests, is now seeking to " come it:over " the people of Philadelphia, in this hour of distress, by a letter, in which he refers the distress to the very course which he pursued, and recommends an opposite as a remedy. Mr. Wilmot was always regarded, hero and else where, as a Now York man; and when his Tote was given in opposition to Pennsylvania, and especially to Philadelphia, the cause was found in his social and geographical relations with Now York. The question of a tariff is, if not now settled, to be adjusted by other motives than a wish for votes, and tho seal of Mr. Wilmot for manufactu rers requires au older date to be effective. AM OLD CLAY MAX A Singular Cate—Robbery of One Merchant by Another. [Prom the N. Y. Courier, Oct. 1.1 George E. Parmelee, a merchant doing business at No. 25 Murray street, was yesterday arrested by Officer Van Tassel, of the office of General Su perintendent of Police, charged with having, du ring the past two years, robbed the store of Messrs. H. E. Dibbler, ,t Co., occupying the first door of the same building, of silks, satins, and other costly goods to the aggregate value of 330,000. It ap pears that for a long time past Messrs. Dibble, ,t Co. have sassed large quantities of goods, and though they used every exertion to ascertain where they went to, and who stole them, they were unable to obtain any clue to the thief until recently, when they were led to suspect Parmelee. They at once informed the Superintendent of Police of their suspicions, and Officer Van Tassel was deputed to ascertain if they wore well founded, and, if possible, to recover the goods. The officer faithfully performed his duty, and soon ascertained that Parmelee was the man, and that ho had within a few months shipped about $lO,OOO worth of the stolen goods to Philadelphia, to be sold at auction. The officer immediately stated for Phi ladelphia, saw the goods, and stopped their sale, after which he returned to this city, and on in quiry ascertained that Parmelee had sold a large quantity of the goods at auction here. He then ar rested Parmelee, and in his store found seven hun dred dollars' worth of goods, which he stole last Sunday from Dibble° & Co. On his arrest, Parmelee " owned up," and made a confession, in which he explained the modus ope randi of the larceny. He stated that his plunder ing operations commenced about two years ago, and had been continued ever since. He always performed his work on Sundays, and got rid of his plunder before the store was opened on the follow ing morning. To obtain access to the store, he made a rope ladder by which he descended from his own store to that of Dibbleo & Co. Ho then se lected mob goods as he thought proper, tied the package tokether, and fastened the bundle to the bottom of his ladder; he then ascended, and hav ing reached his own store, drew up the ladder and its appendage. Tllogoods thus obtained wore then packed up, and before Dibble° t Co.'s store was opened on Monday morning, he had them shipped for Phila delphia or Baltimore. In this way he managed to abstract from the store goods to the value of y30,- 000, $10,700 of whioh have been recovered. He was taken before Justice Welch and committed to await further examination. Parmelee is a single man, thirty-five years of ago, and for the past three years had been carrying ou a wholesale straw goods business. Ile was, previous to _going into business for himself, in the employ of Messrs. Dib bles ,t Co., and during the five years ho was with them his conduct and character were irreproadm• ble. The Mormewi aro breaking up their quarters in all the eastern States, preparatory, as is sur mised, to a general migration to Utah. Recent news from that region represent them as quito as belligerent ,es ever, and disposed to resent the ad vent of national troops among them. Elder Kim ball recently preached a " sermon" at Salt Lake, in which he remarked that the provisions for the army would be allowed to enter the valley, but that the troops would never enter Salt Lake City. Recent advisee from Fort Kearney state that a heavy leisure of gunpowder had been made in a Mermen Mtn, NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS. Correspondents for "Tait Pine" will pleas bear in mina the following roles: Every communication mut be seeompente3 by the name of the writer. In order to Insure eorreetneet in the typography, but one aide of • sheet ehould be written upon. We shall be greatly obliged to gentlemen in Pennsyl vania and other States for contributions giving the cur rent news of the day in their particular liorslitien, the resources of the surrounding country, the immune of population, and any information that will be [Omitting to the general reader. GENERAL NEWS. An old and very sharp broker in Cleveland, thinking to !exam the express charges on a pack age of tr.oney, marked it 51,500, when in reality there were $2,340 in the package. It went at that rate, but unfortunately it was lost, and the broker not daring to claim the whole amount, had to ac cept $1,500 from the express company, thus paying for his sharpness. The best of the story 15, the company found the package after they had paid the broker, and discovered the chest that had enriched. them 41...R.50. • A man named Roble was drowned in Spring Lake, near Shakopee, on Tuesday afternoon last. He went to the lake in company with another young man, on a hunting expedition, and ventur ing into the lake in a frail boat, without oars, he made abe with his companion that he could swim , as fast as the boat moved. He was soon seiied with cramps, and the wind carrying the boat away from him in spite of the exertions of his comrade, he sunk. In Norfolk, Va.,on Thursday, a party of persons thought to cean out an old cannon that had been lying around since the revolutionary war, in preparation to firing it on the 4th, and being unable to draw the charge, (the character of which they did not know,) bored in at the touch-hole, and filling , thelarity with powder, touched it off, when a ball' came whizzing out, and did no other damage than to enter the house of the • United Engine Company. Jesepli Baker, seventeen years old, had a diffralty Oineinnati last week with his parents, leftlthe,house , and , cams Woe. intoxicated. His motherehidedhim, atia he, partly from anger end partly from remorse; went into an ont.honse and ondinvored to. hong himself ssilkt his suspenders_He would no have succeeded in his attempt had not 'keine 01:63 entered the - tenement, and inter foniii with his purpose. - • At Lancaster, on Wednesday rasa a stable. and a few - mall out-beildings, in Lime street, near East King, occupied by Mr.. Shaeffer and .Baker, . were set on fire and burned to the ground The stable is a common sized one, and was filled with: hay ; in the, conflagration there was a fine hone,. death. The fi re was undoubtedly the work of an in valued at two hundred and fifty dollars, burned to cendiary. ,The Fredonia Advertiser has an account of a murder at Wright's Corners in Villenoss, on the. 13th. An altercation took place between Allen and Silas Phillips, eons of Richard Phillips. The father attempted to interfere, Allen struck his father three or four blows, the last just below the beak of hie ear, itia broke his neck; he died in stantly. Allen was emoted.: • • • • Illinois officers have lately made a Lail - of thieves who have been committing great depreda tions upon the freight trains of the Chicago, Alton, and St. Louis Railroad.' 'About two thousand dol lard worth of goods were found,. consisting of sugar, tea, coffee, coats, pants, hats, vests, carpets, liquors, silks, linen goodi, soaps, and a general as sortment of all manner of merchandise. The whole number of. public schools in Alabama is 2,260- The, average length of, time ducing .which the school* were taught, a small fraction over six months. ' The 'iveragedaily at tendance is 37,201 There are`embraced in the re-. port lift private mime* having 3,774 pupils; 74 academies, with 3,995 pipits; 20 colleges, with 1,990 students. • 4. steamer has just been built and com- , pletely furnished for the navigation of the Kan -8218 'MVO!. Its draft is SD light, only seven incise without cargo or supplies, that it is belieied it will be able to navigate the Kansas River to the town of St. George—a higher point than lust been reached by boats hitherto, except once or twice..., year, at times of freshet. • l'he Secretary of the Interior has received a letter from the United States Marshal of Mime. sot* Territory, in which he status that he is busily engaged in making arrangements for taking the census. The work will be one requiring much tinie and labor, as many of the counties are 02 great extent, and very sparsely settled. A gentleman of Nantucket states that he has a Bolton gray hen which in 106 days laid exactly 106 eggs, and in 228 days laid -216 eggs. Occa sionally, when aim missed a day without furnish ing the usual egg, she would come as near making good the omission as possible, by producing a . double-yolk egg the following day. We learn that a :company of Swiss have just bought a tract of twenty thousand acres of land just below Cannelton, in Indiana, and intend to settle upon it, having a town for the transaction of their business, near the centre, on the bank of the river, and dividing the remainder of the tract into farms. The whole number of public schools izi Ala bama' is 2,260. The average length of time daring - which the schools were taught, ei small fraction over six months. The average daily attendance is 37t'203. There 'are embraced in the report 192 private schools having 3,774 pupils ; 74 academia% with 3,995 pupils; MI colleges, with 1,690 students,. Mrs. Graves, wife of a conductor, on the C4noord and Montreal ftailraid, was on a visit to Wells Rirer, - 71; the' other day, and asshe had never aeon the inside of a telegraph office, &visit err paid to it, and the first message that came to it while she was there was one directed to herself, announcing the death of her husband. - Ttie Rockford (Ill.) Registet puts in a claim for Winnebago, as the banner wheat-growing county in the State. One township alone raises 150,000 bushels It is estimated that 66.000 acres or wheat were put in in that county, producing, at the least calcination, one minim' six hundred thousand bushels! The Chinese sugar cane syrup has' been °tiered in the St. Louis market, and brought from forty-five to fifty cents per gallon. It is said to be a superior article. in New Orleans some sold for foity-five cents a gallon. Cuba molasses fells at sixty-two cents a gallon. 'At a fire at Pasland, Me.,last. week, Mr. Andrew Newman, a fireman, pe rformed a valorous feat by rushing into the dames to rescue a child which had been left in a room in the third story of the burning building. The child was badly burned, but has recovered. During a severe thunder storm on the 19th ultimo, the entire stock of eight fine blooded ewes on the'farm of Mills Roberts, Eeq., of Gates coon- V, N. C., which he purchased of Mr. T. A. Mar di, of Norfolk county, were killed by a stroke of lightning. ;About one hundred employees in the black smith, sail-making, and laboring' departments of the navy yard at Portsmoath,Va., ware discharged one day lest week, on account of the acurnit - p of work in those departments. :Mr. John Lyttle, of Pea Patch MottoM town- ship, on arriving at York, Pa., from Baltimore, attempted to jump on the Harrisburg train while iq motion, but unfortunately fell, when the cars passed over him, mangling him terribly. ,A thick of over one thousand sheep arrived. in Bangor one day last week, boned for the Boston market. They belong to Messrs. Coburn and Howe„ of Lincoln, and were purchased is Aroostook county, and New Brunswick. There are in New York four hundred and ainoty-two establishments where ready-made cloth ing is manufactured, and a number of leading houses do business to the amount of over two mil lion dollars a year. A farm of two hundred and seventeen acres was recently sold in Plymouth, New 'Hampshire, for which Ex-President Pierce was a bidder. It was struck off to an Englishman for the sum of $lB,OOO. Mr. Pierce's lushest bid was $17,000. The that experiment on this .lontinent of lighting a city with ges made front peat, was sae cessfully tried in Portland on Monday last. The light was clear and brilliant, and few of the citi zens were aware that coal was not used as usual. , There is said to be a scarcity of journeymen echanies in Charleston, (S. C.) Carpenters, are in demand at two dollars per day, while black smiths and moulders command two dollars and fifty cents. Six Indiana ran a ten-mile foot race in Buf falo lest week. A Cattaramins Indian named Smith completed the distance in fifty-six minutes thirty-two seconds. AU the others were nearly an hour. ' We understand that the Masons, who own the Masonic Temple, Boston, have finally concluded to sell to the United States Government, and that the price which they demand, a trifle over $lOO,OO, has been forwarded to Washington for acceptance. We understand that Messrs. Thayer & War ren, shippers, agents of the Liverpool packets of Boston, have engaged 5,000 bales of cotton for shipment to Europe, from several of the Lowell companies. It is stated that the real Asiatic cholera has made its appearance in the lower sections of Bucks county, Pennsylvania. Several deaths have taken place from it in tho vicinity of Falls, and Bristol townships. Dr. S. F. Reynolds was bitten on the thumb, at New Orleans, a few days ago, by a young rattle snake. He immediately seized a hatchet and cut the thumb entirely off; before the poison had time to extend. A man at Hartford, becoming 'alarmed at the failing condition of the banks, drew out his deposit of $lOO in gold. Before he reached home pickpockets relieved him of the coin. Mr. James Ward, who owns a large number of tenant houses in Chicago, has, in view of the hard times, visited all his tenants, and redused their rent twenty per cent. Willi m Vongba, the last surviving revolu tionaryresiding in Sumpter district, S. C., . He served under Marion and diedlas so t I weak. Sumpter. The Macon Telegraph thinks the Democrats will carry every district, and that Brown's (Dem.) majority for Governor, in the State at large, will be 12,000 or 15,000. Henry Ward Beecher addressed an immense throng at Brooklyn (N. Y.) on Sunday evening, on the present financial crisis. Thousands left the church because they could not gain admittance. William B. Ogden, of Chicago, the richest man in the West, worth three millions of dollars, has been compelled to make an assignment. To carry a Collins steamer from New York to Liverpool requires eight hundred tons of coal, enough to keep an ordinary family forty years. John Dana, a young Syracuse rowdy, with highly respectable connexions, has been arrested for killing a poor colored man named Reason. The steamer Knickerbocker sank at her wharf, at Albany, N. Y., on Tuesday night. She was heavily loaded with merchandise Ohio is the greatest wool-growing state in the Union. Six millions of dollars' worth has been raised there this year. Six ship carpenters were drowned at Nil waukie, on the 17th instant, by the upsetting of a boat. Over nine thousand lecomotins are now funning pa railroads in the United !States.