The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, November 03, 1857, Image 1

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401(14., , v, ; ,1f0RKEY.
atyiimotrur:;slitzET,
; wik t,
- ioyablio to 120 ; eartlikri,
insuiatpstotArlborooutoft e 010 ,- , thi!Dok.l.iidi
' ,• ' !WARM j-.P048 D01.1414i .01.111022Notell; Taut
D oLtAs o 1 .0,213,210w520, tavotlol.o-0 04Twoo• for 11k0
2 . -;41!-Iltle Eli if ,
• .“ • ••_Lll,4lo:o,oo4oiibirg oat t,tto Oltr, Tifilui
241=2; In ooktopes;- - • - -
lei it„El2l2'. 7 ` -
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r2lOO 'MI to' 2almoirlboro
• ~ ";e • loin; oiotcoiritico," - -- stt " 24 - 00
.11 c o ok 6
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c o lgo is - - to
1--0,?11.1tio Dopey r- "•: • i .a. '." AOO,
S'lnnty " " (to one '20.90
, 1,-(twonty 00,ploo,ororie r i . 0 (to 104soos 9tiraak
- .1 11 °'*liberb 0641 *. • 4s, ' 120
• %an, l'aimatpono 01. onar,-wo.:01 oad ae
t oitt4 - copy 'fifths tottts , ap of ttio 0120.„ ,
to- l'oitiosilters aro rooknortod tO f O T
!ow • '
TRW EKLY PRESS.
THLC#EII,PESrAND,, B EST
•,
iVREICErNEWSPAPETV IN THE 'COUNTRY. ,
i 1; 6055 iro owaai
THE WYBBLI Piga' littatitatted from' th• Olty of
relledalpian, every 12stanidy, ••
. „ aooduabod upon ,NAtional:palsieiplipt, ai4:*l4
, tfi(ifetttl'oftfka States. It will resist Nutt
' 40m, 'la , 'Miry Chap.; ixfir *III be devoted td`ototserec
. s4oto Ataltripeo, Rm. the •tpa folnuletlottns•onblia
Priti e goso o44 °Pd*;• NM, Saitrag
Igiag radii:C*o t2ted ttli to yrs.
thittlln. WEEKLY. PRIM ptiblratied ,
I .yArL,FPit,.W.4I4 , 74I , XtRarSt la ptiatatqa Mara; what
Marttr ' g 714 and in Vlrt9.soratilating,
as a sin ot t • day t Oci Mows
*COM World and , the Nay f:
,Sef449; RaParas at,taa , vafiaaa'Mulfft, Zttarari
Nina; Itsealliasona Faleationa; ilia progress,af 414-
datiertmente; ha., fee. • - •
••••47.1 . erint; inicariably in advance. , • •
, !U 31/1211iLLY be vent to •• - •• ' '
tattawlitieni, by mail, at - - t 2 00 pc ammo.
'' • • Tarot coi2eF, when cent to ena , ad- •
• • Twaaty!Clapita or over, to address of
•-•••• •• =•••• - avich ottnartisr, *nth, "- •- • • •• " 120 • , I f , , •
• •." tor-it Mb ,TllOOl-41111 Or Oar, SOF!!
,• , aztaaeolt t. ,l4o sottex-ppg thaVtab, -
„ .„„112 1',440"kd *4.1 Atautit
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1;i4 1 4.0 14 4 . 10 6 . fiat fghliiiik74 o llo# 4 *aW
Vaittutige,anit „al opt!tilva wlty - Atedra' a, ttatt•OWO'
Piatiopaparartu'..'atattliketabalaaa t,•giv,e TRIP
-wsiorar 2111111.taIaittjtaatitttatillititat5 . ”spaattaa
- I POrIrINSTi
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„,„ rabilastioa me. wp t p f t PAW*, tic kit
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'f` LAWARBUIZTON I ,WaNIMITABLIC 1 „u. , ,,
,;. ', , viv , : p ~.1.1 6 , 00,117 it iV108 TVAloitgAD, 42 ,
s. • , 2 - i • !^,-- e , ' Isalwana ell** - Inlasneetaisutl,d' ' . ~. :t
—t2..,. , ,2. , ,--2-,?,(tiattlt 23CUIVIV,“',- ,, . •
lad all t he' details and steer eleginaleseddah likens",
~ , 1 , •"_ ~...PIIIISS, 002dIVIT,,,AND.DUIPairaTX. -'- ,
'' 1 - - ,V2antleliittinsitinsttp4 to call end arming... - •', ~
'' '' '' 1354 '' ' Add 0118$TIfill, Street::'
' , -4' --',/ AIfBABLB LIBRARY- B 0 OA B.—
‘ , ..,-1) ,:- 3.‘ , , , , ;1 =, ~,, • .j.:-:.,-. -; lognsuggsb m r• • , ' , • ta , ', , l - 4 i ',
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ov i ßd
',..i , ,, ; 7':, ,44;:)^.( - xx, - , - , 414.- is 4,0,.10* IX:4 It 8 .
aii - or tni'Olkus BAIL: . ni the Algid - Wire.
Liani , B4•ll;le I' - &Wed . with!' lifnwoleand
'"‘ 11 ",i otos, by R. thation - Warianile - 03..0. L:: ilb.r..st..
,)--, . 1 ' tilos wini-PiiitriltaOrthantralta jetten:l,llo,rols,..
..s, a VIIII:NOOT1Rll4KB1101011111. 4,l. , Profailatijacist,
t 7 ,-, i,.;a4..fk, lanhisint ; Janwallogrorni oNMawiniaV 414
„, n, ~ ,„,',-„lwitia Weaigriis sad Itotaa i by Dr, Pahaltoa UAL
~..L. ,i,_,'A V i rd litetition:.-In. 2 TplataatOrith, pari*Varkt "ia
'-- - VIMIIN , BIILSOkiafOtt.' kha liiiiii4a•oll'oWrit
,"`lairsatDel-Wsgtaa. - Iditad;with - alibi:noir
0,1! itp.;. f sat WilltiGiii"*. R.. bbelionithiclientif.`, Onniplent
.., , .., ,, , ,,. ;taell'atthrans__ ,iiithrartrait. Trice; two rot.b aloth; Wi:
-.4 , ALMA)" THII 31. ; .1104.4011N - HON. otrlusol.
illy,ltia Son, Win. Henry Outran; with .Note ll and Adk,
.', l'Aeutt.4 l o l4 o ll li i i. l 7•PC1 11 . Wm ton liinakestils t nild • Porinat
0 ~`WA N in 4 A_An1 1 0.,,T 1 )443 131021 . Praa.; alotii.
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46° V :26: ' ' ' ' ' ‘lliii.
,1881 +Zs , allaii - ABB 4 nOi Mk ' l'Ai; a is/ ,
-' "•!''' ---- .. 1 24612,0iblitti i1t:42,1 . Indi !forgoes Novel
'- 4 V 4, -'49l4:lllWooniiii. 4, ith 10:Ifitioitatioti` awl - Rintek, by-,
- ar:fik likiatnn 41140kninnii. ,2 . TOLillinicii cloth.
I .. : , AWIJUN9IOII , II/11TOtilliLlthotial aketalies4 hie
9.lnerime: . / 1 7 iiit Jonah S itannwitow, *nth allttatni.r,
ity Duly, -.2oarth, =Mow mltli Wady -by
1:1 • ) ibroi• MEOWS; . 124 , 0_,04 44: PIO, kla SF .. IqA CA
,711aniura LISP -oV,AermAtik“.:444motra
hiarV ia of Of
• l AN' dt thd Bit Ron: Richard l'ii-i44.10i Iv
' f lit 'ltioisia; ar. refl. 'lrpiiraik .02 , lahlkano.
with If4ltioia w Wu
. - 2 .; - I.2amogotit, -- .lrioi
,i, 'i WIWI 01 , 111411SETi ' l+x 'Orr 24 , etiattonlrauitina: hi.
1 , t , ,-. 'AT itediditton?Atimo„ cloth, f Prini ti: , L_ _ _ 1, .' e '
.. ~,,,,
Tag 2.113T08,1r0Y TWO wait nf MHZ TEMOMPLIII;
•1 Si*r Gums) Sls W.l; P. Napier ; ' th e so
' ;ftic!!'" -WO mimed ,ilditlop, vlf.ky filty,ll7, )(WWI
t : PlszuZ4ve.teriranit SteeiLin4. l • (4 l l 44t*! ll 4o,
mr_44oj,l2lo,'_olteth," Pride $e . -
• - ALPEWB PENIMILMARIVAIL - ; 'Ocisoi.l46,ls ion
XI O."' • .
ValgifOUST: Sy lanstitigfesiikithor ott•raidi
itAiLeip . "t Anslip door l ye1q.1202m. , - , 1141.0611241:•
••7 1- Alec r• z• •••-• • '1,1, 4 ,1;N , •• 1 •
•• • 400 i Of, 7441 gAsioMoialintbsliedut.ii7l:
T a r qi4Oili) Mr*
ITENDERSOXIctir
hitYlitkArartitt . AllOll Moots.
6 - I.dreddst to Ow/ thd "dub obi, heeteeemisipol
1.; . ittoonfAndladonn the bodk4noldrinibllool4 Wit
labewar4icsit* IMMOlVMlrqMarMoortir::
rifonwyporoba So
isOritwoom ,zo -ttursained - idutrp, :
looddn, Gittin :WWI otfrodi toilllpv'- Oatlßl
-
e nr eidnblistanist, look at caxvaldaddolifixdti imd soloo
• :41:be yourindron. ,--. ' ,
1,1. NAoadliort name* iiatipnokseipmpllV,ltinnTery por.
I d oft ass thoirkg oniudierindVind itasi many
.L. - wilkstfi . facidatttet#,,iptesent wan, 5p.1148
-•-; TORN 041,P.ML &:SONOUBLIOPO;
MRS, to the buistrownoun hnie
gray facials rase and lioareallodlor: s Genileme4 book
kworma wlathed to 4011 and jaditel= and v
taar.and oslicallinsoashooki Ilk sutra'
I or lartuquaptitimo . Bonk* man 3r rednhisil from
rikict100. ;
qUktViitil,figtocice, lecj „
APlttilitEr CO, OffeSENT.TartEXT•
Iffogintsottuirs of .! • •
,*: -iarrreir.skuirt,ilvitit; rnc . „*.o9l,
Naar ;Iftelt toitiqiitioliP, on t i t,
,
- Ottimilt sad fitro4Fra are invited to ridt 05tr 4 12,3i4A
7 - 4),1301325:!'
Cietii,intr u
os ••• • :Aunt itopeotaiimist•
ataban, 0 All thicelobto44 pas,*
..DIAMONDS.: !,,
'Altooklaboof 1114.41041 'Br o Q o heal 04 0 4 4 011 1. 4,
• art alf alto!' *Aides I SA
zhawl••• m
et )4vi' DOIGNA 11!- Ix* NO. .of
Out* #041 . 4 1 work mm• ord* ,, cl
RION GOLD AWX44X..
, A ' 4orilh*, Mir*, isetAt'.of tbs. now Oslo et semi
. lariByt eaaM oktortalo, /nob) anAlibill Oa**
Alat~tilaiti, I
'
ONITOMB,III,4I4KWIB,
Also, um,* lug 0,4144, 9LOOBBi Aimed
arta of *parlor osltti. ," • ,
in ,It A:' PEOTIGNOT ,:: ~,. ~..,“ ~. ; -.. .
gLi. MANDY/VA DRUB OP litnatbkalps '-',"
- • liwitoostmts Olt WATORIO • '''-:•':'
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.„-•„; 4Lialspallf t Tarim frigtivr; MAW 411,1410,
ii 1 ift,A,.) - I,4ttitilDszlPilli*,:w:e.: , i :: ~-„-
ckaratin , Pear/MKT. . • .s ll MWSiiiffirittin :t;
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co
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' ;:ipta opilorito iota of ohmic", haapla
1: -, •ociolottle4l4 1161111' LondOE i litnekb•pili- :thP,
'':: .' '!-SliPti otataidiliaMlVK Italtie
' 'e: ibillikagivdri*Olissiktlttilovost
rte.
OA fashionableJewelzi.
!VOW Aii4.01 , 4 1 00 r 1 4 14 Wiroli. , ,t- :, '
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4 , 000 1.. , , f k , ,',.1 4,....., i,, •• '
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%• B;I4ARDNM , 4Ig SEM t' 4 ,
q , ,gitidi i6NONOS I . III
100.11011-PLAVNI)FWARN, cc, : -
01140..11014,CalittaitjittoOto,libovi,Mirdi et".9ij .
-
a.
Of band aksd or 4 •
gefiATA,
GONOTS - 411 ' IBA ' BAIA ,
;CASTORS, KtliPXO; 101 - 110111 K, •
;
Goipouiti 0414 0,16 sn'kuie f . moo; —0•107::
. , .
A 7 WILL VULWAWOIAN. I j
11.4n01`10.70. 4 .E 1 til OF. SILVER;
4111411)M1112,)
ANA 0111AAT
- A latiti,ott MAAS, eery di.
I,4oo4l'iifkiidt4 a asidl colora,notak
atina
i p mpoloo
woe • 41:0;i1.0.14411"4110161"141*6
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• DAYEd 1014.
NiMitiAoi
. .141phio, . •
:1,1000 D 6 P 9
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:, OttePrOnf ‘P41411,
- • SALA-RANDY& P• ;
- A ladoVaiiimat ' •
Oilaf il lV TEK Aa s r a ir4 " iiiT
01 ' 7.. • .4
• • ..Plte r gik io .....
ak.a
• • ),-
, WM, now tank. •
, JCSON":1:00 Air;
Os ea pia taint v tr= Game in hi.
• ~ • .31 .48.*
70. !sowtkonr ,strid.l
Wes
.14440 a 10:0444.0**
vtiza rials.'bitz Leal!
8*014,9cm0t..z2.01411:x..,
11/1 (GOWAN'S - RESTAURANT, SOUTH*
MX west of 1511,04 D iunt WALMIT.--eacke
liabalat , cothrt dillasolos to sews. Viuntltei 1m 1 21 160
with Optors ou the sheeted none., ' ,
-- .
111111E0HANTS; HOTEL,.. , -, . , _
siORTR YOUBTIL BTU* ' '' l .
. . ..,, ....zom siiiivi
m4...11' ,;
TIIILLDELIIITA.,
'lfdal"" 01 8 " 5021 . 8 1 rikelitucro4l
,""' 0901'T HOUSE—Oorier pt„Triyik`stresi
.tag' rutabout wily; pittaburoi. j ;Asilt 4 4aHin,
t
rsoittiatar. • ''''' ° ''''' _
• ._
" t'.l I(i() IRON bt. urAtltinns AND
CAPITALISTS... • • c . • ... : 11.
alittiTSW/FPATZSr. HosaiWIHON A , .
- Tide eAltukblelAtentton—being thitimit,Al44(A. tar
-ipsnidectuting , Hoitwahoists exit. afretid 04,btAlwitt ;
041, itoir offootio* 414 onlivetalgs W*l,
*Won v*4 be bo-to• volittAgg It psts' , '• Jbint
amid Compant'sisittoottokm for L'lgkrgil Oaf. of thi ,
• ALVAN.IIIILICINS, .1 ,,
`farm/TU:IAM litreet, !Quit' Vorkt,
112D70011 Mt 011.3 PRICES.'
PV)lll:s•Wat oft nistinies or Oat,
Ja131303.0A161011.1 1 410N°+ tt-tx
,; asatersatarint]Purrisis. Sa4 ' olllnV
311•44111040t0oleof
MM=
IN -THE tOITRICT COURT FOR. THE
orrir AND COUNTY Pp PRILADELpati, '
iteiflpto Vigo of N.' W. iddrileon vs John
Vogel, Instriet Court, inne term ,1861: • No: 688, 'feat.
11,14, to Lehigh county • •„" ,
Auditorappointedby;the Court to distiibute' tbo
fund Ir141:13 AV IA the pale orpereceva property under
cme Init . , wilt Attend to the nutlet; of hie appolnutent
resTvesday, November $4,1857, at, O o'clock 4.1„, et
his No. 104 illashlogtoo Noon,' So the city or
'ThStidelphts,*kkeri and, 4 vrhere hit persona are required
tc pivuent their adios - , or be'doborred from coming. in
upon eald fund. • A3SURRAY STEWART.
Auditor.,
'COURT LEAS
COMMON P'
'A. TEC AS &TY . AND COUNTY 08 PUILADEI,'
,
•
'1416; by ttor 1034 frfeen, .eco., vs . Charles
D. 'Carr. Sept. I'. ISM, No.'lo. label for divorce.
And now, Oct. 24,1857;. on motion of `Henry 0. Kato,
Erg for Ilbellent, the Court grant d rule on retpoudent
to show tense why a divorce' a vincula matrimorpt
ehettin wit !Po, deemed. ! Returnable Saturday, Nov.
:741;
_4BO, at,l9 o'clock 4. 1i , „ or 21-tokfr-4t#
n AN.II OF • PENNSYLTAII,IA.—Pun,A.
41-:. Dictate; Oct. tith, 1867: , '
NOTIOBA speelal meeting of the 'Stockholding, of
the President, Directors, and Comirtoy of the Bank
Of Pennsylvants,": viable held at the IBunking-house,
on the ninth day of 110 , 0141r ; A: D. 1851, at 12 o'clock,
M. to dahlia:tine whether to accept or reject the pro
visions of the act of Assembly, entitled "An act pro
viding for the resumption of specie, payments by the
Berths, and for the relief of debtors,!' approved the
18th instant.
; :64D BAISTX•7 - 7 - PALL4przrare, 04tobtir
'10 1 1;23,7867 apac)l4lneeting of the Eltnekholde'reifir
_ s wilkbe &Olt ~11, aping Hopei on TIM
121A.TtikOltdrit dirotl,4iefixl36l' net; atnii ,oroloak J'
IV,lo:4ltillaknionirldefatioa tbo het of Logisiatitro,
approved 11301 loet., bh 41ed u Ari . Api providing for the
pgaupption of opooterpayitobpthe banks, and for the
roller ot ;1010110
BOlUMBElt',4lashielv,
101:1111WARIC BANK. —FituADELPistA;
_ bii..22,llo7.=S;Spechtitheeattot,theri3tockhhtd
*tier Huutteillt be held ekthe Eauklnit-himee, nn
TISIODAY;Atio &I dip et November'next. at Pi o'clock,
aitenvl6 Vaa iilUVOOPOldellitioll the het of the Legials
*trot appeoredebe theft Inat.,'eatttled act provid-
Int fekhhelitekmption of speelepayinente by the Bank?,
.hod: for the relief of debtore. , l; - •
eidtreltNa , ST.EFIL, Cashier,
AOTICE.-FARKERS' :AND '3IBOEIAN
1. „MEP
:Notice fa hereby given filet's meeting of the Stoekhold
ore of this Deck bee been called by the Board of Direetorp
under the provisions of: The vserebth neaten of the'firA
!Jr the Gennat•Aseembly of Ulla atatei entitled Anne
cr t jing the trump Pork of specie payments by the
andthe thereltel,of (labiate approved the "t3th
'diy Of Odder, A.D. 1857, lobe id At the Denking-
Howie of thte Oorporatlon;,on: DAY. the third day
:AT November ' XeSLAt 3. 4 e. Welack /I- , fq • t h°
ptuvoie of 'taking ditto etwelderatiori thb acceptance of
the provielona of the .114 act Bs °ilk' of the hoard,
...." 1 04054 :1 •. AU E LAWN, °wilder. •
PARMERS'AND BANKi
Ihmaiiitoeis, October OttoP7. '
the nal 'tootle° for Director 9111 be held at the
Dinkitig /lodge, on.III3NDdY, the lath day of Norm
beirtest,hetween'the hours of 9 o'clock, k. lit., and 3
o'olook , P: M.; and On TITEBDAY, the 3d day of Norma..
bernext,ll. Meeting of the litockholders mall be
; Wad st the Batdetug Roue, at 4 o'clock Y. Zit, agrees
:tilYto the oharteri:
offi4elo/4. . : „oh If, - LBW, IS, thiebler.
t
4ANIC , '"Or 005tilit80E,'Plittamteult,
Al 000E44 21;i1361:-Lbiotioe bOroby given. that's
meeting's! , WO. fltookliolddis ot thin toetitution sill Ls
held st the Banking House, on TURSDKY, the I3d dny
of November noxt, at 12A( o'clock, to inks into; contd..
'der*Alon,,tink seti entitled "An , set potiding foe re
frillnpflOa of pad vaynaonti,!' , peasealb.el the
*Imo! Pectosypranini and approved the 13th. dsi of Or
pber pteseqt. B 1 order of Boird of D ir ector*. t
- o.at-ttiato. Vbrov aj J. 0. DpriNrd.,'Oenlyer.
j,„C'ENSINGTON - 'BANK ivirittA
Oatober .annual meeting : of the
ateckholdere of title Bank will be held et the banking
fiousei an, , rpsepAr, November, .1867, 6t 12
.048.4hestittN3
,
election f thirteen Directore"te' eerie ensu
ing yeir willtAe place at the Banking-house, on Mon
, 41rittie of 'Noretaber, between' the beers of
it 4. 7U - end 8 P. 111; MIRES,
4 . p.oeBthastnt . M6 - - - 'rata/ter. '
.OMIB. atAkto:
" W IDIA dfj; 4 1 14 ' 17
• . 6.6 v1P
tiretiptiotroritionatlmet, or,ovidenbe of Its excellence,
,issyend - thatesnelit.thirY , have 'derived frourit4 nee since
OA intro:44o4On; into this 'country r to those who have
no.,t/Ps, 4 0 04,t4.4 0 11 1 :4 0 44toneei:tritli 114 OROWN.IIie .
11.1 Idqubr,. lt.tuAy Do.wig4to sate f. few. (semi t,
Bilital Ent INDIA PATAti ALE
Oisitts ma a harerage tg ths superior Ouility
Or the hop t snd }wlti the mineral properties et the river
r.vistor innandiately einsi - oludeatlng with the' 'brewery;
and the mist:fifth skill'applha in its znamiracinrs.• , • 7
- _EMI EAST /NOLA PALE AIX ,
Trot telng ipreeteneiVor atrangthened to please vitiated
pstftn JS, thererorroseither, heating nor heady, but
atop* 916#44 intietl&s,
•- „• nsiamp El rings PALS ALE
li the' 4slight 'and' Belief!. of the Indian Subaltern In
-his , raining- bungaisne;4ll'e Worthy rival or Wandy
pawns*.
, ,
MIME
MEE
VOL. r--NO . 81.
legal ,Aroticcp.
• • .-13ank NOiceo.
By order of the Doe.rd of Directors.
0029.459 Afieletant Cashier
LE WIS! B:lir ATTORNEYIa; ATTORNt AT
ASSY STEW; NORIRISTOirS, Pa,
arilliatielad vita rinetaxlity; met to ;the, beit , ot 1.18
shlllkortaall Wow sotsootell folio oars • 6014ra
WA D,PrtWYMP 1 r;: rienONEY
A!' . .r i ttorgerheixt.porsiir rrpf IRGICTU and
Yntlighdplqi '
11/1 YEAST,R 0 Ir BE A Atr4notr4 -! AT
riXAVIALW. tIMNThAI iitripit,Tottcope;.P l , -. . • atiOr:
PAL ALB ;,
Isithn,drink without sikloh no . Lift ciLu boc6cord eta--
'nujouynay by drk potudblo. •, • • :
a ilia .DAepEABT INDIA 41'"
ALr'
to England of lord and baginan—
' diichess and nurse.'
HAWS EAST INDIA
=NIMiSMiiSM
BM'S NAST INDIA, PALS ALB
Wilt keiy in all alltnatei veld Is 'good at all Mee
INDIA ALE '
e . e° , n • 1 111374.1 P A P S a T n 7:24
ilimonouneed by the medical faculty one of the most
i'hgleeente beverage; that can be taken, and is lou'nd to
be not leas agreeable, to the ;palatothan,lt Is benenclal
'to the health.
DABS% EAST ilThti PAIM AIX ,
ri 1:1071itsally Conceded to - be iniriyalled In excellence'
by soy other imported Into the United States.
Dealers and tongue:ors still find It thole Interest to r
glverthla Ate a preference.. Poi este in task and bottle
by .• • • 111011 AS DIoIIIILLISN_,
,• Agent end Goitelgoee, 44 RVA:VXII St., N.Y.
itin bloat 1161montenie, William et., corner ot Bearer,
and Ohainbete, corner of Brcoulivi7
' Ituthstlendte,lB•Pine atreet.
' " • • Berrre,lo Pine street.
,•,,' Riehardson & Rarer, 120 Water et.
, • George N. Burgess, 44a Broadway,
„ • - :HAL Lolling ,887 Broadway.
OQX.,D;:/ifINV• :FOR SALEr.,--Tin STJ.B.
porilm,.attprs •,for, 061 e, tfith a perfect title, the
•E- y e rt lr D X' n t4 4 °%/tB .lO 601,1). AND cOPYlat
mint el tintratfithitenTroto Concoct, Cabarrns county;
15itt'Oarollint, With' this 'Mine la a plantation of 796
ketrek'Onsithellont land Watered and wooded, and
'pledge gIENSION'IIOIOO, with' barns, 'miners , haulms,
, pivierf iliCeaglaw.housecand-other building's; new
:steam even., 4a. horse • power ; Chiliads 'mills, stamps,
,munpeoknomismoingell the machinery and tools no
toritke.foliequipment of si mine, in good order.
Miamftisifti4 baen,workaa. at . Intervals for the last 00
Jetts, and , his always been profitable to resident pro
rioters, bat kesneVer been worked for soy length of
time filth 'Werra and 'machinery. • The shalt. and
galleries are we constructed, the storiplngs bar., never
been taken Outiaisd from 50 to 76 ;miners can be moat
:.Abit•MPloyed to tbe old workings.: On the property is
formidable veto of copper and Judi which hoe never
burawOrked; 14 a new gold rein , lies been, discovered
'alike the first thjexecretti, which Circe men hale
, been at work, *dr,ing but ['titan hundred; dollars a day,
- With'['good proapectof its 'eolith/natte r ' '
• ' net 4m , 011/ittl,EB S. GILBERT , 181 Broadway.
A:Ekti 6AS l" GA.B t I 1. 14 ,T1EE • UNDER
m.4a stmliKuitoad tioPeettotty cal the attention of the
publlota Oa hat that WO byre and. are daily reducing
the prise 4f Philadelphia ilia, from $2,25 per 1000 feet
, to the lowprice of, $1.50 plrlooo feet, by,theirlSODDh
IEOI/44.T0/11 which levee 05 por cent a clear saving
of TS'eents on $225 thereby reducing the priori from
111115 to $1.50 per 1000 feet:
We are daily potting thellegalater on all the priori.
pat and prominent bulb:llhp In the city, churches,
libraries, factories, hotels, and - other pabito buildings.'
hies, also beini,pisca4 on at tho Philadelphia 'Ex.
ARP.. ItAadraila oroiectlflo4ot to foyer of the said,
,Begulator; 'fternithoge, hexing, tried it, selsoirleir the
0
be
11.1001,0 ekel4, coil Rst rats faiti ,l B s ,,
gal orall y ' are •
iequeited
to lOW 'falba!! order/. , Cost of 'Regulators* froM 88
''ltywarti;loootalng Ordms , , tbtaugli , Blood , s
Dfflipstatt promptly ittentlad n , ,
De r -iffilf etiOrgotio,•enterpriaingland
_nersoreling
men !mated, to;esoreas for the mpD36I,II.I.atILAV:IB ;
ains melte from 12 to 86 per day/
sootBT,T. KNIOLIT & CO,
, 01444 No, 44 Booth Fifth xtrost,
eiderlm ' ' ' next to Blood , e Dospatah,
d'a •EE S ND /KARL QI , •NEW JERSEY. 1
—ma auvr WCILLZELL COMPANY
lit, slim prepared" to - receive ,ordergrfor this important
Manure. For all lands upon which ashen are beneficial,
the Molls lnore.tbaa a substitute.
:- Protegee? Coot, hi jilt annual report to the Legiels=
luid'atNewqessay, gays/ Thei canto et these Merit is
'best ',saintin the , rieh -and 'highly etottrated district
'which hsl been ifililtata, almost made, by th e i r u se
but it mart* is/tares/dog to exainirie tho'caussa of their
greatvalue id Atria/Otero; and to:compare them with
°theater/410am— 7 example : ghopoltieb alone may
be fikettgt an average dye , per neat. of the wh o le
;freight }fart, buohltahea dry weighing eighty
pounds, and laths, pr?litiribin tl , o4tlOtlidi would contain
thiirl.oupde or beagle $ Ode le iSeally se • teach as there
is to 'it bushel ortinlesab, ad near) ashees , - And again—
it to peabable that the treaty/doe of the Marl le to be
tonna in the .factithaa tointains nearly all , the Nab ,
NOM** ;meow" .14 104°,014 , 4a mitt 0f out conimon
etiltiyeted plants. „ r
000; detirsred. on board Leapt, sit /1/0 elliallYeA At
the an:4aq at Portland Itelghte k on ariloo %"T
Jersey, seven cents per bushel'. For Anther ."
sea Weldor, nut free of postage. Orders for
tether feoNTtren wilt receive prompt attention.' Address
Ditherer the tindentgned. • • • '
• • • . 'Oll/flitiEL9ltAtta t President,
• Morin° Post Office, New Jersey.
I , , ,T2,,PPAN TOWNSBND, Treasurer, '
420. t satketrest, New York. „
utiles°. W. oywoon, Liberoll7, No, 16 Cedar street,
-Navy York.
13...Ph0ge -Marl for Sprint aro • should
meter immediately, to sem/rens early shipment.. Orders
Fill
be filled la totation, oet 29-om, • .
t /TOYE ICO D.,-NOTIOE TO PENN
f,
PAItIitERS sump.
r Tfie,apdersiguld ail now prepared_ to , ,„
ften;•pritros Motor Seed of the sendi ng s IP:o"..1;„fir
Storrikeeptri sod 'farmers, "by , ji t ir on i. - .A;;
ed dy
oa fs'
et Cu time, aseertplei the l i o a. - i t - ,;, h r h r
,we ye Aerylleg. tri bleh a te
4 timtnied to onlity, can , have them sent by milt
airman sui. J. II alLadE de
„seritV 7 tt alb Proat o sed Se Water streets
NELOOME HANGL-L-Sorm 81 • ( MAD.
, Atiaq BRO. qlll4lO NISROONP Mt. anlB-8m
INrifig—lr *les Maio kOst;tor ease by
I , Irktll.ll ttsoAtienia,
- —• • • „ • Xto Vortb Water Street,
VOTTON- , 4. 100 lades 'Gulf (lotto% la atbrif
' L P icireiv"?Y' J
ILOTIN & kIAuALIFITBaj
' • +Wilier* Wotaltrot
iii ~ ~_ ~ , i ~t
Obtuational.
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA:
• VEPARTRENT OP MINES, ARTS, AND •
' AIANETPACTIIRES.
'cannon or 1857-1868. '
Tbe.Winter course ofatoitruction he Mae Department
will commence on TIIBSDAY, November 84, arnt•be
,continuos ae follows:
MECHANICS AND CHEMISTRY'.
Protestor 3. P. FRAZER, TUESDAY and FRIDAY,
at 4 P. "
' APPLIED MATHEMATICS.
, Prolessor Et 0. KENDALL, MtyNDAY and TIMMS
DAY, at 5 P. M.
CIVIL, ENGINEERING, SURVEYINQ, AND CON
STRUCTION.
Professor F. ROGERS, TUESDAY aryl FRIDAY, M
0 P. Id
NEOLOGY AND MINERALOGY
- -
Professor O. B.' THEM, MONDAY and TIIITHDDAY;
at 4 P. M.
The Lectures still bo amply Illustrated by Modela,
Drawings, and Spotkeens.
The ,LUCtltreS will NI continued mall the end of
The °burette may be attended either singly or to
lother.
. .
, • , '. TERNS.
• For any one Course ' 15.00
For the four Courses ' ' 16 00
For a . Wkets„spply to FREDERICK DlOll, Janitor at
the Univorsity,sorth Building,
...And tar information
respecting the studies, to
YAIRMAN,ItOGIIIII3,
Dear, of the Faculty,
Weet Bittenhociso Nolte.
HALL OF ST. JAMES THE LESS,
1.1 PHILADELPHIA.
A FAMILY BOARDING 401100LAOR BOYS.
ARV D. It. INYEllilt, 11801`01.
The ALM* fiesolon will begin on TUESDAY, Sep
tomboy 1.
Circulate may,be obtained at the Book Stare; of H.
HOOKER; fl:W.'oornei EIGHTH intd 'CHESTNUT, or
of: the Rector, Post Office r NON :of 'Eohnylklll, , Phils.
delphia:. 1:1 q 0 • 6401402
,To.t,rto so .s,Ernrur, TO ENABLE
"iiraTreoZta gslo a share orthis
, 81.1-SIN-EiSTETDUOA.TION. „
" LEIDY "EKQTHERS , BUSINESS ACADEMY,
Nes.+l4band 150 SIXTH Street, near MOE,
will re-open' on , MONDAYt . SEPTEMBER lst, for fall
and winter Studies, embracing a knowledge of •
WRITING, BOOK-REEPING. AND ABITHMETIO
by simplified methods, in a short time .t
TELE LElDY , B„take pleasure in saying, Drat, during
the past - year a large number of persons Acquired a
BUSINESS EDUOATION, enabling many to secure pro
fitable situationsl4wid othen4 1.4 prosecute their husludre
operatizus suceesafedlr. • • aufaan.
CIRITTENDEN" ) PHILADELPHIA COM
fdEROIAL COLLEGE, 8, E. corner of SDVENTIt
and OILESTNUT Streets, Second and Third Stories.
.DOcifE4IDSPING, PENMANBIiIP every style.
00ltll1EIIOIAL•LAW8 AND YORAM.
COMIBP.DIAL DALOULATIONS.
LEOTUDSS, d:a.
Nach Student has indlildael Instruction from Compe
tent 'and attentive Teachers, under the Immediate
supervision of the Principal.
One or feet Penmen in the Country has charge of
the Writing Department,
Please call and see Specimens and got • Mauna of
Terms, &e.
•UROFESSOR SAUNDERS' INSTITUTE,
JIL: WEST PfIif,ADELPULI.
No Seminary whatever Is more like a private' family.
The course of study' is extensive and thorough'. Pro.
tosser , Saunders Ira! receive a few more po Q lls wider
fourteen years of age into his family. Enquire Of
Messrs. J. B. Silver and Mathew Newkirk, or 001. J. W.
Forney, rdltor Of this Paper, whose Sous or wards are
now members of his family. septl4-tf
Zommtssian ittercliants.
4:445E
up • • ' GIINTSItAL
" COMMISSION MERcIIANTS,
4$ North PS.OPIT and 44 WATER Street, Philadelphia.
• ' • ' 0&78 . /ANZLY RECEIVING
‘OLOY,ER . SEED.
ou "conelEninent iron ' the interior or Penniylvania,
Where oar new Olenning Mill le now in general no..
.986, moray , AND BED 'TOP shrive on
hand. sal2-tT
HANDY & BREINTNER--COP&MISSION
! IitNRCUANTS and Dealers in Foreign and Awe.
noon IIARDWAIiN and OUTLF.ItY, Nom, 22, 25 Rod 27
North FIFTH Street; But olds abort Commerce Week,
Philadelphia. ' ata-tt
CHARLES TETE, COMMISSION MER
CHANT and Importer of HAVANA 9EGAR9,
(New) 188:Welnut greet. second story.
tits, Caps, &r.
(1 . IL GARDEN & CO.,
.plonutaoture FOUR S , e Deaiere
WS, CAI'S, STRAW GOODS,
.EANOY BILK AND 811LaW BONNETS,' '
Afir,fnOi.stb %FLO BOUCHLS,
FEATHERS,
No, OW(old ; No. 306) MAltENTlaraot,
'," nolOtr Sixtb, mouth side,
And No: 6224p1`t0R Ettoet,
o.tutkot Gasuco; r- 4,44044 Doltgymt.
4took+:/lotohants aro•rempeottully ttratd +to outosjo ut
Mt )ZIV - Si PASOAL, ' '
lIATI'NftB;
anl.Bm No. 8 B. 81X.T11 street, Plrllsdelptkis.
ASSORTMENT tEHIGII
AND BDRITYLRILL COAI, la at
' IX DORMAN'S YARD,
BROAD STREET, above Y/110.
Bold et reduced prices. Cell and am Gal -Ow
17( NOWLES° COAL DRPOT, NINTII
and WILLOW.—The Spring Mountain, Sugar
Loaf,: and. Ildeleton Lehigh Also, best Eshuyikill
Coal, fur sale.. Tunas cash, • octngccult
-
Wilfi LAS. IS A TON.—BUYERS
ur and consumers are invited to examine oar
stools' of i•LERIGLI LOCUST MOUNTAIN and BLACK
, lINATLI COAL." Our Coal Is selected expressly for
family use; being carefully screened, we will warrant It
free from slate and dust. t. We sell 2240 1b5., ,, being
S4O the, more" than sold by retail dealers, at "25 cents
teat psi
/Jae, on hand a full supply of "liflo4D TOP 'SITU.
51INOUS COAL" for Steam-generating, lilacksailtsing,
and /tolling-will purposes. This Coal cannot he ex
celled.
Yards, BROAD and VINR—Dig Rip', "TM LIZ. is
A TON. [ seB-Bus] LEIGUTON & 00
POALI COAL 1 COAL 1-TAGGART'S
CIELT.ONATED BOMINO MOUNTAIN LEMON
00AL.- ,
J. &IL OARTER'SGAMMWOOD,TAMAQIIACOAL
' GEORGE W. SNYDOWB PIN& YOUST BCOUYL
SILL COAL.
RANDALL & MEREDITH
Hare for sale, and are constantly remelting from
*bore celebrated Collieries
COAL OP ALL
There le no Coal mined anywhere, Donal la quality
these s and a trial wilt convince any one et their great
ampenerity. Our Coal le very carefully eareened at our
Yards, and we will warrant it perfectly free from slate,
duct and all Impurities. Our ratoss are al LOW as the
VERY LOWEST.
'Orders leftat oar Otitoe, No. 3112 1301:1111 YRONT
street,above Walnut.
Orden left a our Yard, OALLOWLIILL street, below
Itlelkfl street.
Onsets lett at otir Wharf, WATER street, above oAle.
LDWRILL—or sent to either place per Despatch Post,
will receive prompt attention.
Purchasers for Family nee will do well to call and ex.
amble our Coal beton purchasing elsewhere. au4.41
I am daily receiving, at my yard, the best quality o.
SCATIYLRILL AND LEHIGH COAL. lily customers,
and sit others who may favor me with thetr orders, truly
rely on getting Coal that will be lettetnetory to them.
No inferior Coal kept at this establishment to
oiler at LOW PRICES.
ALEXANDNR OONNTRY,
N. E. corner of Broad awl Merry Ma.
L: AND 8011UYLKILL COAL.—
DALY, PORTER k CO , COAL DEALERS, No.
821,PRIME Street, abore Elghth i keep cotudantly on
hand, at the very lowest ratee, a full supply of Lehigh
and alehuylkill Coal. , an I.fan
:UMBER AND COAL,--MONTGOMERY
& REAM, haying connected the Coal wici the
Lumber Inteinem, inform their friend, that they have
mule ebnintotil for a Ripply of tho beat qualities of
LOhigh and Ochnylkill Coal, and are now ready to re
ceive orders, Twelfth and Prime streets. Orders may
be lift with Mr. K. KILPATRICK, No. 18 B. 111111.1
;treat, or with Mr. VD'. D. NEALL, corner PINE and
WATER streets. aultian
Mines (tat kilutoro
1113ANDIES.--" Pinot Coatilion," Marett,
other °pavane of various rtatages, la half
pipes sad quarter caake Pellevobda Rochelle Brandies,
polo and dark, is half pipes, half casks, and, eue.eighth
casks.' ;nij3orted owl for sale by
' HENRY BOHLEN & CO.,
221 RIO 223 South ponrth Istreot
I'OHN • MoCOY, WHOLESALE WINE
el AND LIQUOR STOUP'',
311 and 3138. Wont and Water eta.. bal. Sprote.
10 punohoona Gray's celebrated NOTOIE WHISKEY,
, In bond and in store. oo 24-2w*
pORTIVINE.—In bond and entitled to de.
bonture 260 cask. St, Jocephie Pure Juice Port
Wine,,ln gra. and olistitha.
, Ton puncheon. John Bewley Islay Msit Scotch Whin.
key, '2 years old
Pifty pipes Anchor Gin.
'Marett, Martel, Bouvet, and 3,3 Dnpny Brandies, al
of which I offer to The trade at reduced prices.
JOB. it. TOBIAS,
fra2T-amee 88 and 90 0, /front St.. below Walnut.
ALEXANDER V. HOLMES, WINE AND
LIQUOR BTORIL Nor. 226, Boutheaet eornor o
GEOM.% and BOUM Street( 6.6.1.11
0 I. LEWIS; IMPORTER AND DEALER
v. IN am. WINES, LIQUORS, 010.1LRS, &a,,26
South BUTE( Street, Philadelphia. sal-Iy
BRANDIES.—Pittet, Cast!llon & Co.,
rett k Co., and other brands or Cognacs of 'mums
r , half pipes and ylarter make • Pelleroisla
Boonelle randiss pale and dark, in half p i p es, l quarter
Du ll
Duke Cud one-elglA all in Oneteal Soave gores,
Imported and for sale by
HENRY BOHLEN k. CO.,
att 6 Nal. 221 and 223 South Fourth street.
& BUTZ, PORTER, ALE
Jlir AND LAGER DEER BREWERY, No. 820 (new
No. 988) North THIRD Street, Philadelphia—Shipping
orders promptly attended to. aul4l
lOtitgo an tEljemicato.
FREDERICK • 13ROWN,--ctrEmisp
AND DRUGGIST, north-must comer P.IFTW and
OEUISTNUT Streets, Philadelphia, sole Manufacturer
of BROWN'S RSSBNOR OP JAMAICA GINGER,
which is recognised and prescribed by the Medical Fa
culty, and bee become the Standard FAMILY MEDI.
OINE'ot the united States.
Thhs itssence is a preparation of viipousl esoellenee.
During the Slimmer months, no family or traveller
should be without J. In rolaretlon of the bowels, in
nausea, and particularly in sea sickness, it In an a di eu
end safe, ea well as a pleasant and efficient remedy.
OAUTlON.—Persone desiring an that can be
celled upon, prepared solely from pure d'ABIAIQA GIN
GER " e el ( ' be Particular to ask for 4( Drown , o Se
lene° of Jamaica Ginger," which is warranted to be
whet it is represented, and it prepared only by PEEDE
at" BROWN, end for sale at his Drag and Chemical
Store, north-east corner of FIFTH and CHESTNUT
Dante; Philadelphia; and by all the respectable Drug-
Vete and Apothecaries hi the W. gtodoe. 0,0•801
PHILADELPHIA, 'TIJOSDAY. NOVEMBER 3, 1857. ,
,
4 1 4 t S,J'
TUESDAY NOVEMBER 8,'!887.
Expitcsivz
That the , fairerpokier: of creation Oltould
feel indignant under the, reproach, direct 'or
implied, of having greatly contributed, by per-'
sonal extravagance, to,.the present ,unpleasant
pecuniary state which has depressed alin,liOiet
Is by no means surprising. They nail tub Rig
tables upon us; Very adioitly, if they wish,
They can accuse us of waste of meuey, and
We can only plead gullti—someihnes with and
sometimes without what the French ciplirta of
law call ! , ,extenuat.ing circumatanees,?' ',A. , fair
eorreapondent i (Juliet) did tthls, fercibly
enough, in our paper lately. She ntit'pet
ulna -
mit 'us, as she has na become tdilic
writer, to examine her arguments. " „
"Tobacco,. cigars, spirits, wines, tce.i" eixt
imported (she tells us) at a cost of over" aixte
million dollars per annum, besides the, proat
of the retailers, which is two millions five
hundred thousand.", The greater i port of thiii
amount, we admit, is spoilt by 643i:tale sex, iii
all ranks of life--;theugh we hare witeessed
such a phenomenon, now and then, as a lady
taking a'glaSs 'or two of Champagne, sliefry4i s
raadeira, without app.:tering
,to_ eppajdOri
operation by any means an unpleasant one.
We confess, too, that women i 0 not fret
quent eltibs-do not keep . fast horses—do not
bet at races—do not go a yachting—do 'not ,
frequent gambling saloons—do not participate
in ,n great many vices to which young 'inert•
take as naturally as ducklings 'take tb Water.
Neither, to our knowledge, do the fair se*,
rush into Third-street or Wall-street, bearin g
or bulling railway and other stock; putting fort
tunes in jeopardy, as certainly as if they de
pended on a hazard of the die.' There are so
many bad things which women leave undone,
that we must candidly admit their great supe 7 ,
riority to us in point of morality and virtue.
Wo come to the principal accusation
against the womankind—the too great cost of
their attire, which (its Dirrintsto said Of the
influence of British Royalty) «has increased,
is increasing, and must LP diminished.", 411'
the blame of this, however, (as we shall
pta
rentlyshow,) mist not be,thrown upon our fair
friends. But that the evil exists, is so 'unde
niable that the new 'number of the Weßtniti;
stet. Review devotes its leading article; to a
consideration of this question. Here, is att . -
extract; and the" argument, though meant td
be applicable to European femininity, fells in
this country quite as strongly:,
"Ladies who used to dresa handa,ontely on,
thirty pounds a year, now find that sum insur•
Went for their goWny alone; and middle-class
young ladies, who have hitherto been satisfied
with twenty pounds a year, are new driyen to
their wits' end to keep up 'with the mode stall;
and they have recourse to cheap showy silks
thatwill not last, or light gauzy materils
quiring a style of petticoat which :makes the
dross a costly onef after all. Maid aeryants,
who have before deposited something in savings
banks every quarter, now feel morally compoll- - ;
eel to buy twice as many garde as formerly for
their gowns. .It is but ninopence a yard,' the
mistress says, when the gown is a print; but
the gowns aro not all prints • and if all require
eight or ten breadths in the skirt,i the differened
at the end of the yea; to a girl, whose wages are'
ten or twOlvo pounds, ' is not small. Eveelh6
cheap print gowns reqnfre so much making, and
are so troublesonie to wash and iron, that the
custom is a tyrannous ono to those on whom It
weigheleast. As for the moat numerons 'order
of its victinta—that of middle-oml adiesi—this
year, 1857, will be a mortifying, or disaitrotin
one, in the faintly history'of too many house
holds. The cost of dress has beconte sa dispro
portionate to other items of expenditure as to
create serious di:faulty in the homes of men of
business, who have hitherto been ablo to pro
vide their wives and daughters with
.whatever
was needful to moderato complacency. The
rich silks of the day, under their tarieue names,
of which every lady now thinks ono at; least
absolutely necessary, cannot be had for n Wife
and daughters, with the prodigious trimmings
which aro equally Indispensable, under 'a ten
sum than would maintain a country clergyman,
or half-pay officer and hit family. The para.
pliernalta of ribbons, laces, fringes, and flowers,
is more exitenslve than the entire gown of ten
yearn an."
Women aro so candid, that we can confi
dently appeal to them, and ask whether they
think this picture is a caricature, or too bighly
colored. They will admit the truth, we
know, and say, at the same time, ft Whitt can
we do better be' out of the would Mein out
of the fashion."
'The fact stands boldly ont—tho trimmings
'and accompaniments of a woman's dress, in
1857, cost a great deal more than the dress it
self would have coat in 1847.
On the other band, male attire has become
less expensive than it used to be. Every gen
tleman knows that. There is no comparison
between the cost of male and female dress.
To pay sixty to eighty dollars for the mere
materials of a handsome dress for a lady
is not considered out of the way—for
one dress, be it remembered—while an
entire and good suit of clothes for a man can
be obtained for the same amount, and for less.
The difference is that the gentleman's suit
will last him for months, while the lady must
have other sumptuous dresses to keep her
wardrobe en suite, and fashion will exact fre
quent renewals, tho modiste cunningly arrang
ing a quick succession of novelties, which soon
puts the fatal brand of "old fashioned" upon
all that is not of absolutely the vary newest
quality and make.
Tho same difference of prices runs through
all. Thus, a gentleman may got an excellent
lawn or cambric pocket handkerchief fOr one
dollar, while a lady will spond from film
dol
lars to forty on about two square Inches of thin
muslin, surrounded by aeon-work,orahroldery,
and taco. A gentleman's hat, at the dearest,
costs five dollars, and it will last him for
months; but a lady's bonnet (to be worn off
the head, by the way) costa from nine to
twenty dollars; and she will think herself very
badly treated Indeed, If she has not two or
three every year, besides something extra for
bad weather,
Within the last twenty years, our fashion of
visiting watering-places has very greatly in
erenied. This, of course, much augments'
(probably doubles) the cost of woman's attire'.
In England, the costume for watering-places
Is the very plainest and leaat costly—forl,ea/A,
rather than what is called pleasure, is the object
there. With us, instead of quietly recuperating
in the gentle and genial summer months,
enjoying country air at
,one place, or fanned
by Atlantic breezes in another, we go in
for a repetition of the entertainments and en.
joynwnts by which we have been victimized in
winter and spring, and this required now and
costly wardrobes. Indeed, on the average,
two months at a watering-place, with perpetual
daily changes of dress, is as expensive as a
winter's campaign in the city. Put the extra
cost of woman's attire, if she be "in the
world," against a man's personal expen4ituro,
and it will not be difficult to say on which side
will be the balance of cost. Both are much
more considerable than they ought to be.
For our own part, we attribute some of her
excessive expenses to two causes—both of
which do not arise from herself. The first is,
she is in a manner led into them by our sex.
Men have an ambition of appearing much
better off than they really are, And this leads
them into a great deal of display which might
well be avoided. They think that if a 'thing
be well gilt, all the world will tulto it for ster
' ling metal. Thus they particularly affect rent
ing houses comparatively above their actual
means. Every one knows what a large house
leads to—increased expenses of all sorts; and
if we aro bound to condemn a woman for dress
ing above her means, ao as not to be unsuitable
in appearance to her habitation, bo assured
that the punishment wo should award her would
be merely nominal.
The second main cause of woman's running
into personal expenses, above her husband's or
father's means, is that, in ninety-nine cases
out of a hundred, she is kept in utter ignorance
of what those means are. What Is called
"Keeping up appeamnces" is so much induced
by lip artificial state of rocloty, with us, that;
, — 7 -
utuess a wife, dauhter, 7, or steer be lold what
U. malt's real situation' is, sho may fall into the
trap he lays for the rest of the world, and pe
lleVo hitn to InVad well °finale pretends. If
admitted team% into 'our full confidence,
instelta '<if railing at Client, things, would wear
a yery,dilferent and flinch bettiw aspect.
In England, a tuan'a wealth or solvency is
not measured by the appearance which he
Inakeat•-•for, Mcleod, very rich people, especi
ally these in business, often affect• plain, dati
alma sordid .living. There, a clerk with
$2,000 per innurn, may dress better and live
better than the millionaire Whose books be
keope; for outward 'Show Is no test of wealth.
litit k , with
,us, it 'is'tio much the practice to
judge by appearance!, that a rising man of
busloesa, often ;thinks it ~ politie to appear in
the .world as if , ho had risen. And while
he, dose this, :taw rarely is the govern
ing or female head of his eetablish-
Ment 'made Pally- aware ef•' his actual
eit'cumstances and prospects 7 The re.
~suit; , treats )his ' apismodio
meodatione to biieconoinical t as mere out.
breaks of a niggardly spirit; she dressed up to
the station in which she tindst (or believ9q
,herself placed; she spends money freely, be
cause alto believes she can • afford it; and,
when the smash minims, 'instead of 1 being
blamed for her extravagance, 'deserves pity
for being herself
It is the duty of 'every man in ,business to
let his wife and daughters know what his
pecuniary position really is. When this ,con
fidence is bestowed, trustingly and truthfully,
, a 'trite woman, rather than intrude on means
the exact amount of - which she keows, will 'be
content with expenditures far within these
means,
rforiorsOF BOOKS.
• Ferdinand Frelligrath, the greatest ofliiing
German poets, has! translated (with the same
metre) Longfellow's (c Song of Hiawatha."
Thu:poem, in its Teutonic dress, reads almost
as well as in its American, so thoroughly faith
yet spirited, is this new melon. Frelli-
i gratb, who subscribes himself Longfellow's
6( sincere Mend andadmirer," is'the best poli
tical poet living, has suffered for the liberality
of Lis principles, and, since 1850, has lineman
'le i living IMLotaton, as a Merchant's,clerk,
This translation is neatly printed, upon, good
paper. '
The name publishers • have sent us, also in
German, and w illustrated" with numerous and
very indifferent wood-cuts, a popular and con
densed account of tho Grinnell Arctic Expedi
lien, 1858-55, under Dr. Kane. What there is
of it (for it is much condensed) appeara: to be
carefully and faithfully rendered.
The October number of Blackwood's idaga
:sitte (published oby• L. • Scott & Co.,' Nov
,YOrk) has come, to hand, • It contains several
Phapters of Bulwer's newlife-romanee,f , What
will be do with it I" a further portion , of the
Welling story ,'Janet's Repontance,"
UniOrogy,", pule tolerable poetry, a lively
and, accurate sketch •at literary • people on
Sorsolety, and; with ; many, other lartiolei, an
citrate .examinatlon'oF tiThe Syrian Dente
to' ellitst." On the whole, this is a first
isitOtundier.--:-(4gcnt for Philadelphia, IV. B.
Zieber.)' , • '
We have received Ifteat's Merchants' Maga
iittfront.fulyto October inclusive, being the
first four numbers of Vol. 37: This periodical,
la.aitanchatittnstitaitlcoh!,.>„in
world 'as' BiaeleibOckl is in the liferary. The
large ftmcounkof,coriginal, and valuable contri
buted matter In ,each number is very groat.
'greomaallitot; the editor, gets people to write
fott Ithil'upon Subjects Volleli they thoroughly
"knout; Wad; ' 1,(1111I10:4 :h9 gyArls Information
06141' Variety ' ' of insurees. "The' resultAs a
thoroughly reliable magailao, which is now
,authority upon commercial matters, accepted
as euell at hetne and abroad—the principal
chin-Aerie of 'commerce all 'over the world sub
;actibipefei and filing it, as' a work of refer
epee"' o Zieber, ' South Third street, is
404,ifetelhooraligasine in this city. ' •
, IT.* are also indebted to Mr. Zeiber for the
new number of The Knickerbocker, the father
of the American monthlies. It is edited by
Lewis Gaylord Clarke, who, as everybody
knows,(for his name and fame have widely
sprea,) is, really, one of the most genial of
men, Ilislditor's Table is a genuine article,
racy of the soil; full of wit, quaintness, learn
ing, humor, eccentricity, and, above all, over
dewing with the gentle feelings of humanity.
Ho has a great number of excellent corres
pondents, and honestly publishes their names.
We particularly notice a spirited translation
from ranger, by Charles D. Gardette, and a
further portion of A Month with the Blue
Noses, by Frederic S. Cozzenn.
Counterfeit Money . afloat Daguerreatyplete
charged with Photographing Money.
tyrant the Otnclutuitt Thum]
The searoity of money affords it floe field for
counterfeiters. Paoplo aro apt, now-a-days, to took
moreiy at the dame of a bank, and not to scrutinize
*lovely the character of the note. Ohio, Indiana,
and Kentucky money making up our currency,
countafoltors have to confine themselves to that,
and it anima they are doing it. The police made
lovers] arrests list night which aro important.
The tint no eball mention is the captain of the
canalboat Jim Baker, running on the Miami Ca
nal. Me Limo is Won. Nardi. tie nes arrested
last awing for passing counterfeit $1 bills on the
Northern Bank of Kentucky, and was examined
in the Police Court this morning. It 'moms that,
yosto•day afternoon, he made throe purchases of
eiteth:ng at the store of Dome Flohr, on Main
atroot, between Ninth and Court. In cash case ho
made his payments in $t bills on the Northern
Bank of Kentucky, all of which worn counterfeit.
Wthin a few hours, therefore, he passed bills of
the some character, and all of the saute plate, at
four elifferent places.
About 9 o'clock in the evening the affair became
knows to officers Erwin and Higgins ' of the
Twelfth ward, who traced the captain to his boat.
They found him in the cabin, and took him into
°treaty. In a wallet, lying on a washstand, they
found several bills of the same character as those
donor bed.
The above facts being testified to, Reall lyres held
In the sum of $1.200 to answer the above charges.
He is a young man, and is employed to command
the Biker. Ilia story is, that he sold a portion of
his cargo, oh hie late trip down, and received this
money In exchange. It seems that ho was ,under
the 13%10110e of liquor yesterday Ho has boon
but aahort time marrkel, and his wife is now with
Two Cf his crow wore also arrested, but not
beinglmpliested by the testimony, they wore dis
charged
Themiunterfolts circulated by Reall are from a
new lane. The engraving is coarse, and the bills
eau wily be &touted by inspection.
Auditor arrest, and one which has created eon
/lidera& surprise, is that of the proprietors of a
Kowa street Daguerrean gallery. Their names
are, Alta W. and Henry M. Diggins, and their
gallery is located at No 105 Fourth street. The
charge against them is that of pilaw, raphittg' bald
nom. The arrests were made by Minors Bloom
and Lieketta of the rivet police, who make the
chargt.
Panc.—The following Eastern story contains a
moral welt suited to the present times: "There is
an old story In the Bast of a man journeying who
mats dark, and dread apparition. ' Who are
you!' s'aid the traveller, accosting the spectra.
em On Plague,' it replied. ' And where are you
going ' rejoined the traveller. lam going to
Dammam" to kill three thousand human Iming3,'
said tie spectre. Two months aftorwarde, the man
retorting met the canto apparition at Cho some
point. • 'False spirit,' said be, • why tloAt deal
withmala lies?" Thou deolnrodest thou wortgoing
to alaythree thousand at Damascus, and to! thou
haat shin thirty thousand." Friend,' replied the
Plague, be not over hasty In tby judgments; I
killed, indeed, but my three thousand—Fear killed
the rest.' "
Among other Innovations which tbe num
moth Learner Great'Bantam in about to inaugurate
will bo tho publication of a dolly paper on board
for thohonoilt of the travelling public—the rev•
lar strablio" of travellers—whom gloomy be bear.
lag norms the ocean. But this startling Couture is
anticipsted on the western waters of the New
World, for the New Orleans and St. Louis 'pact
rearm James E. Woodruff now sails equipped with
the forte and I:interior for the publication of a
regulardaily paper on board during her trips up
and darn the river, with a job oflloo attaohed for
the pitting of bills of faro and other work.
Qn the 14th ultimo, John Blair and Alfred
Jones, while engaged in dlzging a niill.ruee on the
waters of Chestnut Crack, in Carroll county, Va..
were buried alive by the falling In of a mass of
earth aad reek. Mr, Thomas Blair, the father of
one of rho unfortunate young men, was the only
person that was with them, and mime very near
sharing their sad fate. As the bank fell in he was
covered tip, excepting his right arm. Ito soon Duo
aeodecl,bowever, in removing the earth front Mr
his head, so that he could breathe, end could hear
his son Trying for help. Before he extricated him
self both of the others were dead.
Tho Livingston (Ala.) Mestenger chronicles
a bloody affray Aloft ocourrod on the streets of
that village on Monday, 19th ult. The parties to
the renoontre were Messrs. Jamas L. ifoluoserorth
and Thomas A Bowles—both highly respectable
planters, residing near Bruorsrille, in Sumpter
county—and the difficulty originated in a misun
derstanding, which had been nursed for some Limo.
Both parties were fully armed, and in the collision
Mr. Ilainasworth was instantly killed and Mr.
Soaks dangerously Wounded.
The Rienzi Clipptr brings the painful intel
ligence of the death of Gem BOOLO, which event
took piece at his residence in Tishomingo county,
Maas ,on the 17th ult, lle was a regular deeeend•
ant of the distinguished Gem Daniel Boone, and
was said to resemble him not only In personal ap
pearance. but also la hie qualities of bead and
heart. He had filled various places of honor and
trait in Ilfiesleseppi, sad was universally Wined
by hie sequaintanate.
COMMUNICATIONS.
AN IRISH vlsrAuvrEn. I
(Forme Preis.)
The now novel, now pnblibblrig In numbers,
by Charles Lever called w Davenport Dunn,"
bids fair to rival his previous ' prodtictions
In interest. It i 3 now maquestioned that
the "strange eventful history" of the late
John Sadlier furnishes the materiels for this
work. Perhaps a few personal recollections,
of the life of that great defaulter, by, ene w i
h
kn o w him well, and had Intimate Mennen re-
latierm with Lim, may prove of Interest at the
piesent time. ; , , 1
Jahn Sadller was born at Shrone Gill, In I
the,cciunty of Tipperary, Ireland, in the year'
1814, and was the :third son of Clement Wil
liam Scattier, a respectable country gentleman
of moderate possessions, and not a poe'r farm
er, a 8 Lever mates blot. Be was educated at
Clongowes College, a Botrian Calholio semi-,
nary of great reputation, and though lad father
and his two elder. brothera, James and Clement.,
Were Protestants, he himself becanie a Catho
lic. having completed' his collegiate 'cbutirsi
with tonaidesable diattrictiou, he belected,the ,
law as hili 'preterit* . and-,wita,.atitnilltted tto
practice air an eqeriteyla 1837: 1 . ,
. Ile soon immune disdngeished for Ithe+Mite
fleas In all matters relative to finance.** real '
estate, and W V his admission as a' solicitor of
the Court of chantery in 1840,be warseedily I
'employed Mille very highest class of 'c ance-. 1
ry busindas. ' About this time the‘ , Tip °wiry
Bank," which proved sofatal to all cm:enacted
with it, wan *darted at his suggestion'. Ens'
brother .Jaines (now a Sugitive from )~ t stlee)
was made , its president, and all the di ectom
and shareholders were Lis 'relatives or lila In- 1
timate petitioned friends. Prom the aecOmmo
dation it atforded to the 'cianatry,gentlemen
and the better class of fariners, it soon became
a popular institution, and extended ilts ramifl
cations all over the country. Branches were
opened in all the principal townsin It-allied,
and they became the favorite depositories for
theepare funds of the wealthier cuss of agii
culturisis: 'Meantime John Seances business
connittled to 'lncrease at an extraordinaryrate,
and it became necessary to 'remove to more
extensive offices than those he had been ecett
-I»inf- - '
A magnificent house, which had formerly
belonged to one of the Irish .Noblesie wag
purchased by Lim, In Great 'Denmark street,'
Dublin. This splendid mansion which had a
chapel in it (its former owner having :been a
Homan Catholle) was now desecrated by be
ing converted into law offices, and its chapel I
fitted up for the use of copying clerks. Its'
marble staircase, no longer trod by the feet of
wit and beauty, now streamed all day} long with
a molly °roost flora the hiughty but ruined
peer, to the froize-coated peasant, and all in
teat on the one errand—to retard the . threat
ened foreclosure, pr stay the Impending, eject.
meet. ,The' Tipperary Bank, the creature of
John Sadliei's own creation,•now sent op by
every mail its quota of, protested notes, the
unhappy makers and endorsers of which had
speedily to undergo the rt peke forte et dare",
of legal proceedings. Writs went fluttering
down by every post to every part of the
country. tr Capiascs ad ,respondendunl'P were
issued, that were never responded to, and
~ Capiases ad. aulisfaciendum' became' any
thing Lut satisfactory to the recipients.
I have known as many as forty of those In
teresting missives to be sent from Great Den
mark street' in ono day. But this was the
smallest portion of tho immense buktiess
transacted in that noble old structure. Chan
cery suits involving enormous inter-este, and
. whose 'termination no human calculation could
foresee, were carried on, and moved over the
legal chess-board by his directions. . Balt a
dozen receiverships under the Court of Chan
cery, any one of which would be a handsome
iwarde d ncomet h e i r tl a gr m e an at with
finane moderate
litie d s esi an re d fl, ht .
(then) unquestioned purity of character.
Wealth began to flow In upon him, and with it
came the (to him) fatal ambition to transfer
his abilities to' • another, and a more usteuded
sphere: An opportunity was soon affordea bim,
and In 1847 he was Introduced to the worthy
burghers of the town of Carlow, who had be
come dissatisfied with their representative in
consequence - of his 'Support 'of Sir Betted
Peel's Irish Coercion bill.
Through the influence of the Roman Catho
lic bishop, the late Rightltev.Dr.llaley,whose
heart he had completely won by his li
beral sentiments, he was elected. lie wont
into Parliament an avowed opponent of the
then Government, and became a prominent
member of the so-called "Irish Brigade."
Ills speeches in the house, without being elo
quent, were sensible and suggestive, and he
speedily attracted attention es a man of con
siderable premise, and was always attentively
listened to.
Meanwhile was passed the act for the "Sale
of Encumbered Estates in Ireland," the idea
of which was furnished by him to Sir John
Hominy, the English Solicitor General. The
practical results of this act caused an entire
revolution In property, and proved the doom
of many an Irish landlord. Instead of a long
and tedious chancery suit, any creditor hav
ing a judgment against property bad simply to
tile his petition for a sale, and tho estate was
put up in lots by the commissioners, and the
receipts divided among the creditors accord
ing to the priority of their judgments.
Some ludicrous scenes occurred ct these
sales. In the case of Delany es. Lord Porter
lington, whose Irish estates, if not the first,
were among the very first to be sold, the peti
tioner Delany was blandly told by one of the
commissioners, that after paying the creditors
in priority there were about two hundred
thousand pounds, still due, before his judg
taunt would be reached. In all these sales the
name of w Sadlier & Co." became conspicu
ous, either as the solicitors for the petitioner,
or the owner, until the name of Sadller and
the "Encumbered Estates" became almost
synonymous. All this time, it may bo sup
posed, the " great defaulter" was not idle. His
name was to be fiend in every London paper,
either as the successtni debater of the previous
night, the talented and able President of the
Swedish Railroad C 0.," or the fortunate re
cipient of a splendid silver service, the grate
ful donation to their chairman of the board
of directors of the w London and County
Bank."
With some ono of these avocations watt his
name constantly associated, and he occasion
ally varied the scene by a visit to Ireland, to
see after his immense investments there. On
the accession of Lord Aberdeen to the Pre
miership, in 1853, ho was °Mired a seat on the
ministerial benches, as ono of the "Lords of
the Treasury." This was considered by his
constituents as a desertion of the principles
upon width he was elected, and although ho
wrote them a long and exculpatory letter, in
which lie stated he could benefit his country
mere by being connected with the Govern
ment, it was received by them with incredulity
and indignation. From thenceforth his fate in
Carlow was sealed, and at the following general
election, notwithstanding the most tremendous
efforts, and the expenditure of large sums of
money, he was defeated by an avowed tory,
by a majority of 07 to 91. It became necessary
thou to seek a more,aocommodating constitu
ency, for in Parliament he felt ho must stay.
hi some respects it was his true , c metier,"
and like most men who have achieved a suc
cess there, he became fascinated with it. It
was, too, of vital consequence to his ambi
tion and guilty schemes that he should again
be returned. Who shall say that at this time
even the dim and terrible Mum was not sha
dowed forth to him, and the first step in that
unparalleled career of fraud and crime had
not even then been taken? My own convic
tions are, that, at this early time, he bad mis
used or wildly speculated with HOMO of the
enormous sums that wore constantly passing
through his hands. Ile may have hoped that
his seat in Parliament would have given him
opportunities of making some great stroke of
fortune, or that its tcpeastigr" would have
shielded him from shame. Iris hopes and
fears must now forever remain matters of con
jecture. For my part, I never doubted the
catastrophe of his suicide, for he was essen
tially a proud man, and when detection of his
frauds became inevitable, death had no terrors
for him.
After his defeat in Carlow ha found in Sligo
the men be wanted, and it may be said that, in
ono sense, (a pecuniary one) they found the
man they wanted, also, I have beard it said
that his recollection of what it cost him to be
elected for the borough of Sligo used to make
him Milliliter, and ho was not a man easily ap
palled at the expense of anything be wanted.
Lever's description of' him, under the soubri
quet of " Davenport Dunn," does him, I
think, injustice. Ills manners generally were
quiet and imperturbable, and you were led to
wonder at the influence he exercised over every
one who approached him ; but it is not true
that his eyes never sparkled with fun. I Lavo
seen him when his whole face was lit up, and
heard him tell a story in which various cha
racters were introduced and imitated with ad
mirable point and vivacity. For II man in his
position, and with his wealth and influence, be
was the least ostentatious person I ever met.
Although on the most intimate terms with
ninny of them, he was no servile admirer of
the aristocracy.
Perhaps ho knew thorn too Intimately for
any excessive admiration. I have seen him
chatting and laughing familiarly in his own
office with such men as the present Duke of
Buckingham, then the Marquis of Chandoa,
whose Irish estates his waged, with the
present bord Portarlington, over whose fa.
TWO CENT 4 p,
, d;ito
ther's estates he was :appointed the receiver
by the Lord Chancellor, and with the preeent ,
Lord Clifton, the man who lost seven hundred
thousand pounds before he ;vas twbety.live
years of age, and ono hundred and' fifty then",
sand founds in three nights • play, at a private
table at :Brighton, and paid it too!. the
years, 284544, John Sadlier was a large' pm.'
chaser at the sales under the "Encumbered
Estates Act." Much of this property was es
tensiblY purchased as trustee, but it was well
understood among his friends that he Was the
real owner. Efts success in the. management
of
„the " London,,tend County Bank" mailer
him much sought after by banking and rail
tral, companies In London.n
the year ltibb he was lutituately connect
ed, either at president or leading director, with
the following great inatitatiote having their
offices is London : the Grand Junctionliall
road, the East Kent Railroad, the §l9l{S Rail
road, the ROM; Beilttled, the'Swedisli ;11.aiL•
toad, of which he was- the 'chairman; beakies
several coaland wining companies:with enet
moos capitals, Whowynames I do not rezopmbei.
was, besides, a large apectdator, :sad was
quite Indifferent es to thoarticJelie;ppetabided
in: ' •Asinitatree"olWbbti adidlo.have,
toot troAo iii.sugars &Ire,
His lashes ht this time mud tit4en im
mense, and doubtless precipitated,the terrible
catastrophe of his suicide. ,It has beezi•
,COS:ereAt atoms that event, that ilia brothei
James who was the manager of the TiPperary.
Barak:allowed him to overdraw his account
£280,000, or over a ni lliou or dollars; and he
forged -Swedish railway and other shares to the
amount , of £209,000 more.. , • • •
The smmediafc cause of his suicide Was the'
tlertainti bt his being detected as the forger,
of a deed 'of the "Encumbered 'Estatei Com.
missions." , , On Saturday, the Iblh' cot Feb
ruary,. 18E43, he sold to a Mr. Wilkinson, a
:solicitor ,of London; an estate, in ,the County
Limerick, Ireland; received from hire- the
purchase-money, (£9,000,) aid gave Ault gen
tieMin What purported to be'the Original deed f .
with the nenal assignment.' • -
• Upon calling at Mr. Wilkinaon's office - later
in the, day, ho learned, to his dismay; that
he had started for, Ireland, taking the, deeds
with him. Detection, he knew,,was new, in
evltable,and death had no harrows for him
equal to the shame of discovery. With that
stern composure that only wren men are cepa=
ble 0f, , h0 calmly prepared for the worst. He
called upon his .solicitors, the Metall. Norris,
'by Bedford Row, and made some arrangements
for taking tip liabilities of the Tippeta-ry Bank,
that would mattre on the. following Monday.
At half past ten' o'clock that nighthe appeared
at his.cleb, (the, Reform;) and spoke tolls
friends as usual.
' On that inscrutable face, no , eye could
Corer the hell that iaged within, dr the dem
purpose that lay close to* his heart. JA. few
minutes past , eleven he reaches his house in
Gloucester Terrace, Hyde Park, and stilt calm,
and Composed, orders collec. • A. few, initiates
past twelve the servants 'hear the hall door
close,' go up stairs and find en the hall table
an extinguished candle; and two letters, ono di-.
reeled to lira. James Saditer, his aister.in-law,
and the other, to his intimate friend, 4 Hobert
Keating, member for Waterford. ;•I - • •
On Sunday morning at lialipsik leight
o'clock, all that was mortal of lohit Sadlier
was found by a keeper of Donkey's; on Hamp
stead Heath; one of the 'wildest'spots M the
,suburbs of London. In his , pockets were
found some gold and silver, a piece of, paper
with his 'name and address written in a bold
and legible band with a pencil, and by his side
was a silver cream pitcher, with hie crest and
arms engraved upon it. • There malaise a
g. l Essential., Oil of Almonds'
which would. contain • two .or throe ounces.
This Was empty., ,
Oti the examination Media! his holm°, after
Ms death; to Taylor' on Poitains" was (Mind'
with the leaf turned down at that chapter head
ed c , Essential Oil .of Almonds." Oa 316n
day morning, the 17th of, February, the world
a Leyden was startled by the announcement
of this 'suicide, and all sOrtstef conjoetitres
Were rife All to the' cause: Mends 'uperl
being applied to, could give nn explanation to
this terrible event, but it was won to to known
to ap. Xr..,Filklnsoq,,gpoptlta
of assignment at the officeof the Commis
sioners for the sale of Encumbered Valetas,"
In Dublin, found, to his astoMahinent 'aid hor
ror, that the original deed vast forgery, al-
though so perfectly executed as to require a
reference to the book of records to detect it.
Filled with Indignation and alarm, be hurried
back to London, and arrived in time for the
inquest. ills testimony on that occasion was
the first revelation to the world of the guilt of
the unhappy suicide.
Ile that a few days back stood so high and
proud in the estimation of the highest and
proudest was now the cursed and execrated
of thousands. 01 the many hundreds who
fawned upen and caressed him, there stood
by that stark and rigid body oniy.one weeping
and faithiW friend—he who received the last
lines he ever wrote. From that letter, di
rected to Robert Keating, M: p.; I will select
ono passage, which will show that remorse, at
least, *as not dead within him. After speak
ing of his guilt, he says: "Oh that had
never quitted Ireland: Oh that/ had resisted
the first attempts to launch me into specula
tions ! If I had lets talents of a worthless
kind, and more &mum, I might hare re
mained as I once was—honest and truthful—
and I would have lived to see my father and
mother in their old ago. I weep and weep
now; but what can that avails" It may be
said here, that the verdict of the ooroner's
jury in this case was the very rare one of
fe 10-de-se, or that the suicide was committed
while the deceased was in the full possession
of his senses, and not under the Ma:fence of
temporary insanity.
This verdict would, up to the time of the
fourth George, have vested all the goods and
chattels of the deceased in the Crown , besides
subjecting the body to the senseless disgrace
ofbeing buried in the highway with a atake
driven through it, and even now, besides for
feiture of goods and chattels, deprives the
body of Christian burial. The authorities in
this ease very properly declined to exercise
their barbarous privileges, and surrendered all
the property to the creditors. This fell far
short of satisfying them, and from the financial
world of London went forth such a howl of
execration as never before was heard. Stock
brokers, share-brokers, and brokers of all
kinds, and the shrewdest financiers of London
found themselves in some eases with immense
amounts of forged railway and other shares,
accepted with the most undoubting confidence
as collateral. The amonut 'of his liabilities
altogether was over two millions.
Of course, the Tipperary Bank, now that Its'
great financial head was no more, could no
longer stand e up, and the most painful and dis
tressing Scenes were the resuleof its failure.
Thousands of persons in every part of Ireland
had deposited their all in it as an ark of safety.
In Ireland' the manner of John Sadlier's
death and Its immediate cause was looked upon
by many as only fulfilling the requirements of
historical justice. The inventors of the " Gull
lotiae" and the "Scottish Maiden," both
perished by their own discoveries, and that
the guilt of Seim Sadlicr should be discovered
through a forged deed on the "Encumbered
Estates Commissioners," whose acts were re
garded by many as confiscation, was consid
ered a just doom.
By the terms of the charter, the shareholders
were hold liable to the full amount of their pri
vate fortunes: and hundreds of innocent per
sons will thus be ruined. It was not for some
months after the death of his brother that
James Sadlier became a fugitive, and he barely
escaped the officers of justice who were sent
to arrest him. He has, doubtless, carried away
suilioient funds for a support to whatever clime
he has gone. He has been publicly declared
an outlaw, and his name erased from the list
of members of the House of Commons, where
he had sat as member for the county ofTippe
req. The name of Sadlier has heconm a
scorn and a by-word on Irish lips; and John's
career will long serve to "point a moral , and
adorn a tale," as one who, with great talents
and greater opportunities, left to his race, as
their only inheritance, the guilty distinction of
being related to the great" /SIM DRFAULTIM."
2ld October, 1857.
Tho reorder of Adolf no Baror, at Aro hrsville,
Pa., is as much of a mystery as ever. The Read
ing Journal pi Saturday says that the reward of
$5OO offered by the county commissioners has stimn
lated the police to increased exertion, but, up to
the 'present, not the slightest clue calculated to
lead to the detection of the guilty parties has been
obtained. In tho early parr of the week informs
. lion was telegraphed to this city, from Phcenixrille,
that, eat 1174iVilillni at that place IT suspected;
but, although a searching examination was had,
the evidence wee not sufficient to warrant his de.
tootles,. All the suspected parties, it is said, hare
satisfeotorily accounted for their whereabouts
during, t h e e ms , the decalwas supposed to have
been committed, and particularly during the night
when th e body was conveyed to
,it,s hiding place.
We understand that the dfileeW are stilt on the
alert, and It Is probable that the mystery will yet
be elucidated. The eseltetaint in the vicinity of
the tragedy still continues With little or no abate
ment.
Information has- been received froth the
Unitas &et a s consulate at Vera Cruz that the
steeple of the old church called the ?delved, its
terra de la Ararceddowing to its dilapidated oondi
flan, fell down about the let instant, A. this
steeple has served for many years past SIJ a land
mark to vessels going into the port of Vera Criss
by the eastern passage ? (see Blunt's Coot Pilot,
idth edition, ',age 293,) IS believed diet a htstql7
ledge of its demolition will prove Important to
Asatrioaa ohipplag.
nit=tl=E:Oß!
46, vsnit
'sled th ftungull*li
042.uVa., ft* vut wit le
e= tit°
awl be rearnapealed by the
Woe of thainiter. ire( or tai. 40 Were °Garrote's' is
the trpography, bat MI aide of a Aida ehouhl be
'rittsaurla•
wlolsUobitg irettilealrel in Penzuryl•
',Ali re& °tire States fen eentripatioas Orb/ the
ear
rent nice of :14:tie their Peitfealar krerlitier, the
rshourees" erth's eretsendu pg ecieritri, the *ruse e
popalation, sad eel saton4iic a tai will in interesting
r, fr A c k . l r
GENERAL .AVEWS.
ily e the ; arrival of the. barque Azar, at New
me,hare news from fs.ral to the Ist alt.
Captain 011shr,'One of the passengers in the Azar,
;Medal theid 4111-be i scarcity of provisions, °lrinsg
prineipttlif.,ltT the.aoyers gale which had visited
the islands, .prosintflog the corn end damaging
'the etopi. ' On'tife lend of Mr. Dabney, the Ate
titan consul, -Oyer. grid 'hundred large pine trees
were torn
L tip ; by the soots. , The dior brought
ninety-two passengers. Of this nine* eighty
eight Ate Portuguese, many of 'whem are eu route
for California, and Wham engage in the
nhaling service, tc..• she also bnin t tlst nearly
1,00 letters and 1,600 barrels of oil on freight.
'The 'United Statelateantehip „Saranac, Capt.
Kelly, arrived at :the naval anchorage:, Norfolk,
Va., on Friday awaits& in diatme. The Saranac
lift Philedelphia on , the 10th ult.., to join the
P`ielfiesimadren:•bat oh - Saurday; Sunday, and
Maeda, lit, when „ show-1300 elites east of Cape
the encountered At sareession of gales and
i tied' weather ' during %shish sUir het eying jib boom
'add jib boom, %teethed: Cap Off the •bowsptit, env
. 41 1 4 0 ilPste. • ltseitly. injured tire frame
WO OK tneminity, mirth the machinery out of
the ode firini sir of the ems were
~ ‘Catkleallt has been a Y most
1 4.4 t.
•rrileti tin>, at :Dorhi Stanley, Canada, on the
2/3tl> elf., win! morkestrione _than sae fret
Thh' fortewszi iit tie: heaviest entrerers :
• Thi th e In 'of tlae free Trader was
.$40,00( 0 .;:lthoth iranshonse and con
tents, littered, s. l ,ooo4.lthoth al:ha/ma's wane
hottievinid eontentei ?anon Insurenee, $ 8,0 00; North
iteautieseir Hoch;' portly. itteered, $4,000; S. Alan,
b°1 44 1) On/sr Mtalllitnarance ' 33000. The
schooner Ilushanart„was burnt to the water's
1 A I respectittfe' looking . j'otung
bitaself Ocarge Headley, arrived at Chambersbarg,
Pe., on Friday, theZtth also, and
_vain; into the
jewelryitore of Jolin s tfatton, iinsoen pitted up
*lethal witches' tanned et 6386, and maid off, but
Naa pursued ; and arrested. „Monday. he was
tried, connoted, and sent to the psnitentjary for
twonty-bne months.'tie - stated that he had a
family ii Pi ttsbergh. baftliat be was' formerly a
Clerk th e eatemireleh Mussel Messrs. Bingham
'Co., enteitinutre.
Yeaplie:ars D•pm ,an official statement of the
triaiater Of 'Virginia; that, for the twat year end
ing the Seth of feptembeei there was reeeived into
the tremry the awn of 37,829,194. This includes
a Valance of $73,37.7 an hand at the beginning of
the year. The expenditures re.mhed. 111;449,=,
loaning a SssecC.en the let instant of i 9,971, of
which $37,121 is applicable to .the credit of the
State, and $291,93). to the sinking fund.'
Chirlea Holman,' yotidgest son of Orin Rol
.mas, of Lancaster ; Moe.; died -a few days ago
from the bite of a etolitet. Onieedbieday morn
ing he complained of pain in hie mouth, which
made it - tpcnediffattlt foehlui to est. Soon a con
aides:this:Swilling was ebserved upon ens tide of
biq few and.l4o,om.tendies to Life brain, erelong
Predell &terra tioe., and at, last mortification set
andibiall/diiitlftelloseite" ' •
- • .0a Wedaeadtgrhlgbtweek;oA6AcikStorm,
Loin ZeLaut smutty, Ohla,irin felted to the grove,
near the Maxineillospludot St. /Ada, sderat.per
ished. • Revue taken howpitil 'Mit carefully
attondeddtest died he Vrl4' of ' coogeeted brain.
was onlyiestmod Via •that be get on a boat
at Tally, and went to St. Isntio—rthot he was robbed
, on the boat,'ind had been for fens days and
nights without abetter oe food. • •
• Predusteoet the Oaliforels' Mittin the
. l ast. sir 74 , 41 £ ,pat 49%1A , 1443,01,006; these
'of
in
Aaattelta Glace tnetrdleNvery, At $226,8t5,000 ;
or $739,904,6W in • all— ao Grease of abiat one-
Wed., LP:mains. to the best ,sti;istie4 *Mien, on,
the Yeloe of preeione teetelf boom In 1.458 The
total imbue of gold and silrer in the world - et the
pretest dams; tbeb; is Storirratif $21300,660,000.
' -Rho • Tellabasseel (Florida) papees give a
iq.arAlL t utotSteeniary affairs in that State.
Trade t o
see erert,tbipg, for tbe pre
eent,t temetindinsl,"ltitit immedl ate pttepeet
Of a ObAtige, he the batter. Aweffort blabbing to
hare eig ,ex,trs session, of the jezistatele, to de
vise beans Of relit , .
• Arabi . l4 the.inarriiies .In fachionible life in
Parse :sr* those dr ' bJeca of ibegiter We,
iliatjust.ok,Drinealacty.ht_Armoiea, , to toe Mar
quis det lel ! and ,Of. M., Qllivier, , lately elected
tenet,' to tbt Coiple Lialidetir on the 'Republican
ticket,2 Madembiselle it ti, deneder or the
4resi P* 1 14.• . • • 4 •
The third artinal fair of. the Alabama State
Agricultural Society will be held at Montgomery
of the lith, 'idtls,' , letb, end 20th or 'November.
gua , Edward-Everett will tisk Menigemeryduring
toe felr,,eed deliver his celebrated orsalon.on the
Mb Mid' eh` " ter Of Weithingten ,k Oldie Um
Ladle - VeManhthemdititet.'
J. B. aleks,•* milllAdothe eltbseliig Read- -
ins,Ps., died ;Yawl Maldwalr se Ms , ruddisasti eo
Saturday had. Me. had apone be market in the
• tobreirtg,'smtvisevren, qn to Well, bet *boot raid. day he wrse gelled With sadden Slams "and died in
a Sew minutes.. Apple:y.(4' parallels covhdoaect
his death.
On the 49th nit., in Staunton, Va., died,
at the residence of Der Commerder I'.
T. Omen, 11. Navy, Afra. Anna Heti& Hender
son, wife of the late Dr. Thomas Henderson. U. S.
Army, 'and dsagliter of Commodore Thomas
Trnxton, aged 65.
We understand that Mrs. Fremont is ex
peetsd in New - fork •by the arrival from Europe of
the French packet now due, and Colonel Fremont
is also expected to strive from California in the
Bier of the West. Mrs.' Premont returns in conse
quence of tidings of the autism of Colonel Benton,
who, however, s now recovering.
• llir.lohn Wale use married at Litelfleld,
Kentucky, on the,i2tl tilt. to Miss Lustiest Jearet.
The bride la 38 years old. 30 imbed high, and
weighs 45 pounds. The bridegroom is 0 feet high,
weight 141 pounds, and is 33 - yean of age. The
parents of the bride are wealthy.
The following post-office appointments hare
been made in Penerdvania: Jesse Bower, post
master at Nippanors, Lycomieg county, Pa.. in
place of J. S. Sarsierson, resigned ; Henry Brown,
Paalwasier at iiistiteratittrg. Centre county. Tic-. J.
R. Burket,,retigned.
The receipts of the Georgia tretsni7 for
the greet year ending on tie Nab Inst. raarbed
$949,8413 DIS, sea the diebereements for the same
time $511.72.9 90. Of the Warta of 5437,8,3.15,
the ma of $35.564, °auditing of bank gooks is
nntraillthle.
In the case of Lawrence va Kiernan, in the
Brooklyn (New York) eity cam; the jury came into
court, Saturday, with a vetdiet of SLOW damages.
The plaintiff was a servant girl in the family of
the defendant, who accused her of Meiling money
and jewelry.
From the year 1852 to 1856, both ine)nsire,
the actual tors of life on the ocean was four then
sand three hundred and sixty , three. Ont cf two
thousand one hundred and Ally-eight strive. only
two hundred and sixty-eight were loss in either
gale, storm. or hurricane.
The loss by marine disaaterr, during the month
of October, is estimated at two avillioas three
hundred end two dollars- Among the Philadel
is vessels which suffered are the ship nonpareil,
barque Cordelta, and brig George Whitney.
William FL S. Smith, of New York, went
to Hoboken on Saturday with a fishing party. but
drank so much bad ithtakey that he died durinr,
the evening. Another one of the party is not ex
pected to live from the Mee came.
Wm. Jones, of 'the thirty-ninth regime: t,
found guilty of murdering Corporal Reynolds with
his bayonet in May last, after arrest for absence
without leave. is sentenced to be hanged on the
11th of December.
Hon. Moses Tenney, State treasurer of Mai
csobasetts, has sued the Emma '7'rot,dlar for libel.
laying damages at 520,000. The libel is alleged.
to bare been contained in an article reflecting on
Mr. Tenney's official conduct.
Tbo Chicago Joecnial learns from Spring
field, 111., that Governor Bissell is at present in a
very precarious condition. and suffering severely
from the disease under which ho bas been laboring
for year".
rriTtite ad vices bare been received from
Arizona, indicating the election of Lieut. Mowry
as delegate to Congress, without opposition_ The
election was held on the 2d of September.
Tho Democrats of Newburyport, Mars.,
have Ileteleitleti Hon. Caleb Cushing for their re
presentative in the State Legislature He accepts
the nomination.
George Foley, an aged and esteemed citizen
er Cincinnati, died ruddonly on Friday morning.
letres a danchter and family of graadebildrea
at Baltimore, Md.
:Hon. CLtariea Polk, es-Goreraor or Del -
ware Slate, died at his residence, in Milford Han
dfed, on Wednemlay leaf, in the inth year or his
age.
. The tieecue of John A. Bannister. a stu
dent at Applettui Oit/iseensin) Unirer:ity. ocenrred
&abort time since. lie 111.9 bigbly spoken of by
his fellaw•stndenta.
De, Kitt Seaver, a young man mach es
teemed 'and well connected, committed enteide at
Darien, iris., last Monday night. Apparently
no cause.
A whole family of the name of Hanson, re
cently died in Bangor, 31e., within nice day!.
'Pint the daughter, next the mother, 1131111 e father
deceased.
Emma S. Bradt boa Just been acquitted by
the Onteamis (Wisconsin) Circuit Court. of the
charge of poisoning her busland last April
Two Vomen. rimed Sophia Miner and ?Irs.
Smith, died suddenly in Newark, N.J., last week,
from the effects of Intemperance.
dame's Head, a soldier of the Revolution,
died in Scott COtlbty, Va.. on the 4th ult.. at the
a‘liranoed age of ninety years.
• Capt.' Jesse Powell, ins fif of anger, mur
dered his son-in-law, John Morehtier, st Annapo.
, on Saturday might.
An extensive revival of religion is in pro
gress among the Methodists, on York Spring, Pa ,
circuit.
The United States sloop-of-war Cyane, Capt.
Bor.. of the home eqaadroa, has arrived at Hemp
too Roads.
A daughter of Major T. B. Flournoy. of
Arkaueas, died at Eclairs, Woodford county, Ky.,
on the 2Sth ult.
Richard Reif, cashier of the Louisiana State
Bank, died at New Orleans on the 1.33 nit.•
Caret Watkins, a native of Virginia, was
killed on the railroad, near New Orleara, lately.
•
Rey. Chas. H. Disbrow, an Episcopal minis
ter, did Murfreesboro', N. C., lut week.
Hog, 'cholera prevails in Prince William
Unity; ya." On e farmer has lost thirtyfacr bogs.
Mr. liradford, of Trenton, N. 7., is said to
be the oldest printer in the Vidleo Stets.