=.=E= 3114 ritAss, .:4111ILI.811,1) P#ILZ:I , (4IIIiDAYI IMOIPTED,) . 1#4, 1 k,';; rORNEY. - '''',o**lo67.Pl44' elicstrcr's Mum*, -: -,- .. .• 1:,,a) LI L li" , P ICES 8 t • time: .01ar4;*.NVOIlti,pay#4, to r Atio, Ottftlrta. mos to aaaeboro,Out of tit* Otis at Su Potitia : jatiraaloo; W r i 0 11 .40 . VtOtte atOlenu; Topa . ' Oottaait vox opTivaiii 11, , 1,10y111 Memel for Use ~):•-,. - If 14 T•;*l9 Vi4,it 1 •`• lk 1 2 F 1 I Megid toillbfotiboitookit:4l4 44* TawDel •,,.-., •" 4 - 4 'llWAttf.7-"mit \, ..1,- , ,f'-' , ~ , ,- . ,:53 •.. ~..'vlifictt.x.4.- Oirglit. - . . . - waiii.ri,poka,-*14.14.wat ip adosaikti :bY ~. ,suat, (per geesiiiejau orsawlikes,,i, ' is A -, 11200 0- *.* - • 4.;A . Coo i i. ll* 00Ploo, ~ . :-, ..) ,# 00 TOR copies, 4 e• • • ',, ,„, ti , ' 12 00 Teility own " '-' ' ir A 4. addrava).... IKI SO ',' TaroW 00plott oillio, ',, (to Widmer or seek '- - ' - ' 6100150 4., ' X.:. „:' ' ` ' ' 140 Pori Oho Twilatpotto'or ofor, we *tit alizil 40 : Resteikyy to the sittet-up tt Ulf Okb• • ' kf'Attrollol4lasso roquanoo to aot • omagento for 'sin tuSiOtTrt ' , ~- - 1 ~ , THE WEEclila Mikis& Tim cimir*T AND BEST' WEEKLY NEWitAtEt t THE OMTRY. • ,GRESAT. unitrizus,.Pro rizbuis 1 t • lt UM W1T11.4 - .TRJOIB foiniblt•bot fron: itlta Oity of Alidlettelpbi4; eteri fietuoirky,.. , ,t • • -• ,' •-• i• .i . ~ r , . . c :„ - OR la. opPf ea* oPen'tialaiii'arieekgell,eee lan lkplkold the 404, oTtltelttrktes.:7 le , . , reekk See" . 14, ..P•m• 1 / 1 0it',0q144.411 be •. • awl tiii.e Aoei4ee, 34e triiffA:‘ , 1- ',. , 10.6 ,1 7.94ede' - NWrit:fi'id: " iieltiW , `Sitat 7 ''',- tiliMP :' ,blii: Fibbil bee.. ditil*l•ltitttrititiff . .'' , qtr•LtirflXto. _ tiff els want Old VIII Irian, c -. , ls. joiebuisu ~ TILO W,OEUT TRIM f• . . paper, dear, new37p• A xxid la ,- ; chin , far birdivirt . Ir k . it oonytOne •Il4he Item; ot, diftyt-Oto'retrialltoo• :. freort the, Old World and the', ewf•Domeitie mean ; 'avneei Moots: or Ott *viola, ktwkettO Ltter•rfAx *lain; _llliCellaiieone Bilertioni ; the'progrete at .40- oulture fa All Its various deyortme - ute, Ace, ,ko.;'., • •• Cg" 'Tops, kilo viably ili Oita -yam' • • ' , z , , ' THE WI LY PISA 'will be sent to • -" ' i r ' asiblueribere, bj . "-stral, 'la • • - -" - la 60 .Tierftuft* rlicotor OcTiolfr when sent tc, toe id- TIIILIO4, 00111401 c MO - ,- -.4 ,. .. -- , -1 - 7 :,:,;,V*.:olli ;T*4o/3 0 / o' ,'-101. fi n t ~ k r , I• ,4 4 1 16 :1 C; !!.geyterAP - ofsike Olib r • ; - ,..4* • ',••,• Past altirirarkreliirti44., to 'ea: 1i, k ,.-#l l . 4 tir fre WNNKI.Y pESIL - t,";'•: - - '', ; ' ~. s '•• - . I 4111 Oriee`ta it'i„grrifaror' if roy political4k Pe ..i . lifter , Merida, liod=, stIC otlibre who • doh* • atilt ttliti - 'Weekly Newspaper; will exert thetritieltre• to glvir TUN WOOKLY PROS slur stronlation hillier reaped* sellibborhoods.' ...; , - - • -•• • ,I ~- .•., •:- ._ ' t iOHN -1V;')- FORNEY. -, - ,-, ,' , 7 • -',- ' Editsitihad Arepriettii. • •Publieittori Oilafit, um winpiro . l44Bs,Tro, 411 '`• filtestarot• Otretit Pidlidelithio. • - • - - ' . • MEM . • _,,........,..« ---- ii - - - 7- 141. s, , limply/OLE , WA X : BII.Ba C ,,I— • es sag.TapatEAD, -.,- - - J COM"' hit...seemagile t.:g -, ' ' iiiiireCallUtteßOßSOTt ' • di hnpart ' • '-' - ....'074.0, i 1 ngues whi it ‘;' , ; : -611. - Anthe 'de- 00 1 1- 004 . pi AireDeßAl2ll,l4,j7r. 1.=.0.iV Mal; i,judio aa/1 awe trod, , t ; siiimokiiiti art 7 „ 2 , hiao OAERrnuT a '-'.:e-cicrtll6lhll ' 1- ... . - ~~3~~~ti"s: " - ,1;1.17ABI 111111 t OOK 8 / - 11.1 r A. aiturr, kW. YORK: -`- ':'* - 4 , V*4:4.A.1. i,Bitro x za, gas . A2;:22#1 .61F the /light sm. - --Vaud Zetited t with ialdeniniriuid Motor, hrlt.-iiheltna liaakestia,-0.. O. Math • Sd i-3,,-tine, with Portrait and.lwalatitailatter:, In 2 Tap.. "Price DI : THE NOCTES Vitianni I. D. Lockhart, linteilLtirg,andDr., ' with Memoir)! and Notea:hy Dr; B. Sheltnaldaidtaaiir.' Third Mann; Ia 15,10#nes, ifi*OrAtaita and tat , kiddies:: Price 40. " • " ' AILSOBLIANIB2.• The Ditiodianaona Writ- ' ~:7haite of the late Dr.: lfeglaraAhlltelOrith a Memoir and No*, by Dr.,a,.. Melton Insnicenlic Complete - lot ttlunt_ A es withOortrait, Price, per vol„ 'cloth, Ila . , - law OP UM RP. MAN. JOAN PAILPOT ONRRAN. „,'• Ily ble ihia;Wm. liiintilialivue' !..wit*Yeassazd Ad ' 4 ditiotte,'hy Br: U. he tan letaeksiiifiVead - "portrait . 5- .5 - "iiiiiteerettot thisslitillel'lblii" ARIDA.- yule., Oloth. ..... 4 'A m u gc'. - 1., - ,. 1 ~. , ',v.:, , . . .. , 1 aIIOIIIRIENBAIND7 TAR ontunnwrns ; • Na. Osist Mart i Notatthe:llrst• 'a Isidy Itorgan's Novels ,-. - 110".Asettaaoes. 7 Ivit4 , sa /11t1Mbletical and Notes, by I % It , .#VI#UPP *1 ,61 A10i , :, FM*, 32hPh„ ~loth. '' '*ARROOTON , B NOSTOII3B. 'gonna, itialint UN, ,'. , ow• Volk ' lly Sir kaseh .Bamiagtoni wl , t tom by Barley. Poarth`Edltfon. : - 7111.thlle Olt .by ~ Dr. Idarlensie. ; 12ua0., cloth. , P01•1 1 .1%.."-ke MOORIVECLIPP -- OP; SEDERIBAN." Memo of the ' - ; Life of the MEW Mir. ilichilid Ilriselmiliterids4. By Thomae Xnere;" with , Portrsit. 44 ~DA- 104, 4 ,. " Sixth ßattle". 2 stoic; .12m6., cloth. - ,Piletiliti;. ,- , ' EMIR BLARNEY! : . -B, 'Dr. It: 'ilbsittits Aa,e3t. , -, ; , " - Ibtrd =Moo, 1206., cloth. PIM/1W ' ' 1 2 114 - MEMORY Op TAR WAR IN TUB i - ' ::,.B.T.- Major General BON. F. P. Na pier ,, , 'kW'''. :4•{: , .000 last ifer/sed:'ilauthah'erhh ,obrividxsorina ~,,. ~P lans, trol.brtraftsblil Btael Mmi'lkOWP lo6 :- Wei; ;l i# *Ms: 12otif elolgi':Brhaf s 3 M. ''- '. . -` 7 't. - . t . il , Anzirie-pEknotaa.,l3,lro. , otilis**4-Poi, , NON% Prize ig, SO: ', - , 1-", ,, ' , -- ' ,'' -, , . -'.:,:', l 4 - Atkik*Oltrr• Nt. - .' . 0 Adittni.4l - .. 6 4 1 1 0 iii ti— 06 ''''37'' - ' - ininrilt34o4,x:• - • 14. -P &Loa 4i - AfaarW : 4l: - v . I 't ' _ ' - I. TOlSikti*Dit ; 2 ;t 01 ,4 1 t0 4 ~,,,,S 0 .1 4111, 1 M0410400L - **l iiildli4ire till ClltXtrlt and hAtOgirtfil -, -„Xs order to rat . ? Itimititieis or 00...* 1 . i4 4 : o •4 l, 4tullow i st t • =,•' , 3:WiLutri irm•is shot, tii*OrVri, l isr •stailittimaitildticst, * 1 4141611•11,11e, int alint. ."-lisenliont yes are nrit iikrioiif elision, tot oral fe _W ' et' hi, SOU 'lloaki it 14111' OW priee,iiitd very mos ,- MEd, in iddition 'nyniona wotnh bertirk eat - • - Watchav leuttitt,7 , lot;:;' BA- 11 EY;le POW/Nul l Omar. amoutut taxa wolf Am** , their 1 44 0,0 40 r fh o gyfOssi- *"1 4?• 1 7 , Oltleino and Omen, Piiiirlfdt% Dflll 4 WATUESii, • feedftetly or hand s° splendid ete4o(ol4.oftt Watehee; oeftlf the eitetteitdte. I);VILONDS., Itoettleeeo, Dradelete? Drooping, Dezalinse, /Issue Rings, and ell other'artiolee in the 'Diamond Doe. *Wan of MN' DIDION! nW i iiii,MadOneo of chap% fortrueN'trialiinir Pork pieta* tinkle% ; RICH CHAD iTRWEILRY. 7 . ". , • beettelftl ftmortmeet et In the new 401 tot Jeweler, meat oe s itosete, W ehioe sett' Otofta, peed, Cita, thoelountillifteftiittal; 146 ,* 0 .24 1 . ' 0 0% 01 0r 24 0/fAranni *sa. Aleb,Biitmi and iro , , how ) V nip* ase •upariei.r qiumt7- - , Anfmttwkw/7 11. A. ragniarrlYr; ' Liff MANI:3Ift traltati'ds VATolt %UM ii#garip ot*Arottio, 11PrittlIOD EVRSlitco:49: - W • ' ' 9"41"141414414#7; =.46vikolmaxeinixor. 414.A.DWUL & tri 4 Pc 481011.11821113 T; AttLOW:YIPMITititrt • /ispottatit.ol4Watanit mat Nisi Jewahtelitantrfaatn nira oflOtqltagiutdAdatathard !Blear Vs &Wrotkii and 49000, Ws' spate foe thelssle et :Max* beitaltam's AIM Mons Aold Medal trandan Thitekalpara—ill the ,sitesonhand, wieH44.64,-1216, Wi t , , Enaltatiand SetufWatchasaa etteat,pe‘e. " Mob taablenablaiiirelt , • • fibelitialft4 last dg" rifol S. sARDEN a suet— • 'Us . .4gistrAtamaiW "mit or 011, , ,V0R-414 • ; Alt* Olne#4 ststs,i baniitittrowiand • Job th lads' - 0111_ cis VOWEMIXO Aniolihtre, PITONue dannaril - W Inats BAY• vrtkoslvross, ssi groom; vil4Lta, . , I' • ' odh4 .144.14 . t . bg as silm otteetal. peS-Ir 144.vArt -;• - JILAI i:rF4T4R I 4IB (TABLianuxota.2 2 ) Q. W. GORIER PWT 419 , A terse assoilmentlit SILIPSIt WAILS, ,of mu de- Selption; tonstautlp Cu hand; a itiqde to order to mat* say pattern desired. ' - Importers of Sheffield and Birminiblip imported Ware. se3o,4iAlly L'ittANOIS4..DIMOSQ & -SON, late ;of Daboub Cams' & CIO:, Wbolimale MANUyAQ TIMM 0/ J&WAILKY,BOOORBBOUPZaawet,PLIa. ,4•lplric - Ritmo)/ • WS.II . /01 ' 04. anal fiats 1100011tte 14 - " Mat . ' r - Vg 4 / VAIIPBEL S ,11,E8TA , - ‘-' B°3 ,t 'Mu thoks,viatterii;Gie4;.qronae, Neeett Nalmon, .htiseetkilei ypteeteb qeefrfineeis Bay Abs corn sod Oore Oyetere, irith , every) rirlety et (* . AO', led or .6emeetto, le eAleoe. ,.- :Oteetil'arthi floitp,,end Terrapin &lONA settede,gi lathe fitoetastitottee,'"st ,JOHN OAMPBEht,'N, No, 521 atiNONlTAteeikef poette the %tete*use, . 0, ,....... -,, N.ll.—No eIL, se pi , :otos Lhelt , ,been,ehlteechs Om Proprietor iti t iup tP,li'etee eetOttehment la the ii O4 lamit,4ooy goner—the seeoWetory I,e)u4 for 'Ow seeemeiculitio of lelyste RerNek for, Dixtpees, • Nuppent, to:: =" 4 ' .--` ' ' ' " g ~- _ • • b' , U3,l ^ ..ilotriltictilorpidies towards NIA, Week, • MKRORANTEP ISOTEL, ' 10011 TOOTS Ono*, Axon: mostirP,' " 54-tf iretisoils - IivILL • jitAmarrill oat JAGER' V V' BEEK liiip,(4l,lllo, gozaturza Ott, BIM de/Phia• . , •,• • • 01P IitoGOIYRINSAREATAUSAIO,I, Secarii- OA reit pPrigir S/40.44 - 1100.WALNUT,..4ami• 'and Whet: fistiorklislit rom. ionalled tolthPritersOOKAP!o4l; QUQTT9otra—Ventir 'Or li r * ,si r k t P• 7 oug4enelril,fituWO. B. A ( mAib t a, Croprietor, . „ IT E. &B. SOHELL~A , CITY MAlBlAlilyous 41.3i)in c iAiCitilitire TAOTON.Y ' ocimpitevt tekt' "pelitir I+l3l rdUirFli. •• ,„ rtuLtrin Where enattilalithP etidalilillVAliTliL, i 'TONK IdONMIENTI4 !AMY! TOPE ,sad IlidlOORINEF;. dtduifa 'applied upowigabstibLi terms., 4 1,4244indhg A.. 14 , i ; • .c•i; • Ad sedlift =kir r‘iriffiti;j9W4 l 4.* * 4 ,ote-, 1 1 11 , 4 11. 14 1 7 F ' `1",'•!:"1;;' MANI L,l4* 174443 w PPIPE JO 4 orttris9 y Li , it Rooo2la B, 4rt7„?*Tp'afgf4l 2 4 ra t ,to4*,.PS!,4o9ArogirillMillt, POO, , v ..0'» i; A 9 tlia.3oo ollitlawat twoust.42 vmorr. lare.,o4looopr, , . , .!..1,1410 , ' • , ' , • Aigretl3. 4,1. 41... ... i••• ' .., • i'•.1.4.0, •• , ;•44..,:„ . 010U, • .. . - - - ------ , . ..... , . . • •,,.. r ....... . . . • % \l\i 'a i i i ". , - ~„ '' , -'..., ' 72 . \.,: \ „„‘;'0,1'1 , '''".• 11 1 7 . ' '',', 7 -4,14 "-rii. . .. i I > P __.........._--- . . ( ._.... A - - -.;,,,,.:. - - - - ,...74 %.d 1,..--ii; 4. 7 ..,..; . -.-: . - : r trv itt ... ..--,-'"\ • (_ , A / itimffit;''AZ‘ 'Whili Pr: '''''' - ' . > ...•' f 1 !." -- ' ~ *.,-. - ) i l l , , 0. 4 / .. . ' t4.'. -4.;;.;',..., -.we . ' ‘ , ,,;;iswai , : ,ilion -.,.••••• ....!„.141r, • , ".., , ' Mill . - ir t o.. L 11 4 ..I . .. .1... ... , . ~,, .7........ ~ ~... v.,......„, ~. .... . . ~,., . - . ...,,...c. , . .. ...., . 1 . . . .. •,....,s___., ~ ..- • 3 v ,‘ • ~' MI /11 ,,._,/ . K . - ;4---- -- ..--ivf.i.t z ., , . ~ 1 r C - , 4 e1.......,,;1..: , ;.... •- J/ , ' ••% .!•_,,,, ~,--...;-.- • ( • . •-•?.....•••••-•-• ..........,----,......,:„.-- . ' 1 _______ ..,.-, ... • • . . . . , , .1.1 ~. 1. V•v , l , 1 .111 . 11f0A - .11) . 5...,......4,,..10 - • r VOL: 90. ;*ITIBURN MAll5ll , lt FEMALE ;• ; • '7.'DABSIt, d. ii.!imwaitarf;r on Manna &loom • W. H. 0. MOB) A. If . 5 Principal, Teacher , In all Department,. • • -•- Rev. Q. W. 0114TMLD, Teacher In the Col legiate Ihelinttfrint. 11111“ M 14.:41NDRBSON, Teacher in Prin;sry Depot , meat_ JULTA A. isittOlS, Teacher of Manic. JIILIA.,P., DAItHIj, Teacher ot Drawing end e` s Paig ession of this intilintlOn commenced on the first MONDAY in October, and will continue nine and %SAW mqAttu. . , THITIOIN,_. PlttlaitH I ...PrlseariDapartment $3O; Zutansodiate Department, $O i . ORtiOXvllitiviont, ,$59;" Inoidental Yoe, V; arailudi4n,fhel, ..; Hula oiS'Playm , or, Hotta, PO; TO or littramon i 5 y Pencil or olionochruutle Draw 414101191119sitir. Odor falatlig VOlOll PhltHing ; $4O. lunottlatdlatin, 1aeit,4214 - ' ' . . 'J '--.44"Xtlitioislites must bo,sitHed bereft 'Any pupil; litzqt.%ltarai.-S ".. z.......1„..,..* • 'Atoirli ooribo`Obtaboo lu 'private Tantilles at ti2".o * 0 Ver Mouth, ineltoling was , _ ; and lights.ol , % The 14tion ?musses for illissitation laliatu Moo superior ' it any sititiOr pue hi the Scsit ," Vlore is not 'he iliid, - in aMf Female hatiOol; ro - Off o4FopiitO ObougoA4 and PhileSoilhioal Ap.' star A more extensive Ciblnet for V i tating all tot Aof Mural History. ' Theso m Ire in da lli v ii Vll - ' , o ege bulMings are urlorgOlnr4l amain, and o thing will be mod, u outtortabletaa los sible.- - Auburn le ee aver itealittr ttitmle tor. It anal rat, wad The Preetdent awl Bare the entire content attgli=nittligrivtleaintreind e4116 .. r X B .--Persotui wiahlegiviter, soils, or otes ittalytei, may hive It done by smiling to co 274( ProreteouJ, DARBY ROY•IiViLLE- BDM ART Tikhool 'Year, nonelet lug 'Of iwe - Tsang , will com mence on the BXOOND WEDNESDAY of September, and 4cats the last Wednesday of adtie Wooing. ??..prinal Ono, Troyretnalo liendeuuy.—Tuition free. %Inter Term commencing September Vito:abuse for WOO 'and 'lmalA, including 4 1 .1c4- nosearfes connected with It; Nash tui focal roptiireships, , eto„ $ 226 .per onnuta. 4 4 addlt!opal ellow tyr made tor, music, and the 'crthinu Annenseund brenehos otioioale education., • 'Whip a fixed arair.li sB.so"eer enntun (one-baif Pakdble 4t the commencement Vf each te"4,l :rill be received, And for if m the pupil entitled all e advantages of the Insti tution. = Pupils may enter it any period of the term, and are M Th to'pay only from shuttles 'di entrance. The luatitattfot fungal:MS all possible hollities for thorough course of useful sod, ornamental education. The Prinelimls are assisted by more than twenty Pro , feints 14 Teachers. 2 Ostend% dOilrilif of Imams isre annually delivered bprofessotshen:dairy, Natural:Philosophy, Deal°- ow, BotanyeAsNieozny, Ind Alontichi. „Trills Institution im furnished with a valuable Library and extenalre Philonpisleal'Apparatus, a welLseleeted • &bind of Minnie .and Sheila, and Map, Charts, plebes, and Models.. - _ovary facility is afforded, for the thorough study of the' Trench language, The Preach tuners reside, in the family, and adapt their system of to the on of the language in conversation, DIPLOMAS are awarded to young ladles win...NW& kdaleti satisfactory examinetiona in the full course or English atodieo, with Latin, or one of the modern languages,: OVATIPTOATES tO,thelle who bare eons- Plena thislertiereentee, ",, ' 7 -The"pepthe are reeeired into the family of the Princi pe* in 'whin eery !arrangement is Made for their phytiedi education; and the improvement of their man ners mut morals, 'They oonoprivate rooms; two in each, the room. the fernie teachers .andiliat of an .13Ap i er s ieneed no n e being mow those of the young The advantages of this Institution are the result of the. socommodated !Unities of More than thirty rums of its onward progress.' ' ' Circulars containing more particular Information may be obtained by application 'to the Prinelpalc, John 11. Willard and Sarah L. Willard, Troy, N. Y. The terms for day scholars aro $5 per quarter for the introductory 4limi of English studies. These are Read ing, Writhi+, Spelling, Grammar, Arithmetic, Nadi wants of graphy, fleography, for beginners, and °Salop fos eginners. , Yet the second class $7 per quirter. This Includes an Mellott/deg constituting the eitenalvb coarse of Eng -4 TftIISTEREI. BAIRAIKIN ItAIISIIALL,. President. • ' Irina It. W;ty.sns, liecretyry. and alseorder of limy, ei..ofilelo. Senlinnin IteraliaU, John D. Willard, ( Ylobert,l6AW,lntan, Thozness7. Elatellitot loritei o.lteirtt, ,2110 Staw_L :as Van Schoonlioven,„ "Temetheo Zdweede, Geo. B. W tK -- , 4 ~117.1 Olowee, . „Uhl' traltbett Gribwohil ,yohhidelfaiyi " *'" • ----- :0020. Ali .00 BT. i WitE I, ra LESS; .• wi la , r2 4 tirAw i tarato 'is 0 01 4 1 4* 1 1901,1" i 1 .41 4i t ay ) : , 4 e .i,::, , 4 4 , 4 141 =5.4 . ' "it :14,an;i4t4Iti'lloiStUfrfi ti le 1110011113 1 41. - WoomitllleliTliiird Oa , •:lIT_, or. or tio,llootor, , root M!kse, ntis of Mal P,X11.- d e llog.., 11, • . ,_, ; . -. ; , • ~ ,"' 11, 7-AM t „. , :it :W. r 44 - f , '. 4 •1. jam 1 :Si Agoupia, 168.148 ' • ' near itlima, • # Jur for Kall t gaa s g r a w , , 7111 , 1111N0-,0•0- IMAM 47:10141DIRTIQ Ipy thapttlial. ramkkoms, in a okart. tt Ilia 110-OriBiakor Ilasoura irr saying, that &vita ,iet yaw a large .utralber of persona aoquirod '111135111185 IDUOATros,elalillog many to muse p *We dritottio and others to torments Rartr twine Ucayali - in22-Bm. 1714 OTENDAINia 'FIins..eiDELPRIA COM. ituatit, comEGE, E. E. carnet of sEvEETE And CHESTNUT Streets, _SeeondAnd Third Stories, HOOK - KEEPING , PENMANSHIP, ovary style, COMMERO/AD LAWS AND POWS. • OONNEUOLLI, qAx,puldatoNs. LECTURES, &o. • ' resit Student hes Individual instruction from comps tont and attentive Teachers, under the immediate saperrisica oDthe Pried*. One of thrtEest Pennies! in the 000A117 hes eherge of Ore Writing Department. Pious oral and sea Speohneiss and get a Catalogue of Terve, tam PROFESSOR; SAUNDER3' WEST EIIIIXEEXPIITA. Whitover. is more Ilse a trivate The mune of stay Is extensive ..and t °rough. Pro fessor !launders will -reoelve 'a few more mills under .fourteen years of oge into 'his family. Enquire of Maim: J. E. Enver end HathewNewkirk, or col'. W. Yerney, Editor of this Piper, whose sons or wards are now miimbers of his Willy. eepthl-tf (tobacco' attb eigara. LIAVANA CIGAR ALL meat, inok na Memo, OnUncut ' Canso Tediej topes, 14 and 140 Um, 10410Ke,and constnntly A handsome assort- Parlays, Sultans, Jupiter, ConyersAssAns, Union Americana, glom Cabana, &e., Zoe., gigs, of all sites and quell• receiving, and for sale low, OHAfiI,BS , TRTE, tw) 138 WAUSUT Street,. below Second, second story sall-ly , EgIGAROiI)ABANAS AND PARTAGAS swans4t4 - abides Invoice a these eelebrated ibramiann bona brig "New daily expected from IFfoltbiati, and for low, by CHARLES TETE, ' • • M 410138 Want street, below Second, &icond Story. %flamer; at dam IopEmovAL.—CLAY & JONES, ATTOR AL noys-M-lAiri have removed their LAW OEVIOE from No.lBlB. Fifth Bt., opposite Independence to No. 271 SOUTH FIFTH BTRBST, below Prone street. L E WI t 3 S. WELLS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Na. 2 AIRY STREET, NORRISTOWN, Pa., will attend with punctuality, and to the beat of his ability, to sit Intainem entreated to hie cave. nal-Sin WFEL - DOITGREUTY, Ai'TORNRY ig LAir, gouthetat Corner of and Crat gtreata, 7g)ttadelutita. wady fitirEß:s Tact utE, ATrouggy AT LAW, QXNTaIf strait, Vott!vilii, Ps. ant-1Y iirc proof Ontso. SALAMANDER SAFES. larle assertment et ' 3 & TSON% PHILADELPHIA M WA AEUFACTUDED RedukteNzpna BAITS, toote Ar ' ' VAULT DOORS, Itor IsitkeeiNd /nor • "' • to any reriia nee. IRON tiIiIITrEBS, 1111 Flea IAIIMS Wigs S N e e, Other, by eihab il ehOn e t in the • Ard nos ex. WATSON, ROTIRTII street YLfiadetph, a. "CgArk stal.B-tt ertilanyt, s. Offit.BWES* 00. - (1. t I* COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 48 Math YHONT and 44 WATER Street, Philedelphia. 014 0- ER S. EZ D 'On eonalgroneit trona' the Interior of Penneyhanis, 'Where one new Oleaning Mill le nbir in general nee. ficr.A.no, TIMOTHY AND RED TOP alma*. 'on blot • oel2-tf IHR - N.,Drk BRXNNER-C—OMMISSION 1,11 .ItOII),NT3 and Dealers In Borelgn and Awe. trieit VlEDVitlit and OUTUIDY, Nos. 2 3, 2 3 and 27 tfoil•h_Val'a Streab,liskt alb above Oonimeree street, MillietkOligc • . an.l4t (4,ItARLES TETE, 0011)1.1831011 MEE OilANt wd tnitolt4r of HAVANA AVAMItIi oteVylieWaides street. gooond dory. 00147 14 AS - ' JAZO.-- , NOTIOS TO PENN III,J rftlf ilmittigy AND ISTOSItHHEITAIB. The akdb ghed'ate at prepared to pureloteO for 'Coat, prime lover MK Of the new erop, Pontolylvanto itotolgoitpbritote* Airmen, by sanding' ample!, to our iihireaa; vaitie.tall Niue, enfolds-la the jpriee at whirl, me.igytor: . ..l'artiee aritatibg UMPIIO, by which to arataa to qtatlitheaa hare them eset by mail, wag tUL ~ - J. H MAU & 00, •,-. OW " 44 Sorb. Vato4, iiao4 44 Water streets .11318 aIA APTOAMEARJA.N TARRED "t'AmALICIG-sr&istices mtets mg:macaws 18 " 1 " 46 It"; 'WM VIM ) MLA & CO. • 80 0 61 ' , ?ii si Is - 64 r s- s. Whisivni 0 . t u lt , ft iiiAOALTEM) liortS %der Stroot fitOlftfailf:oftTlittrzsvltrgAß-oAst 5p44;,..-96_buittrisbcratig o no4ollLtraijihrov,ck Co', nolo4l • ``, ' - 214), Dileive tonne, etrangire Qpibe ht For the benefit of strangers end others who may de etre to visit any of our public* institutione, we publish the annexed Bet. < ' strew° Pierce Of AMOSINNNT, Academy Of Unite, (Operatio,) corner of Broad, and ,liocust streets. RArch Street Theatre Aral, ribose 6th'streeit. eath:soles Oarnen, ' Olinetuut above Tenth. Hatienel Theatre ' Sandford's Opera Honse,(.l4 oplan,) Eleveove lighth. nth, below Market, and Oihi9Li Walnut, ab I Walnut Street Theatre, northeast corner Ninth and Walnut. Thorned"' Varieties, Fifth and Chestnut. ' Thomas's Operallonse, Arch; below Seventh. •' _ LONA AND SOINNOLU, academy ofNatural Sciences, winter of Broad and George streets, AUderay of Fine Arts, Cheetnut, testi° Tenth. ntitlete , Pond Halljohostnut, abose Tenth, Traiddin Iddittitie - , -- Nn. 9 South fteVentit street. anhavatenr lasurfortokS: Almshouse, west side of opposite South street, ' - At rise (Prlends , ), Walnut street; above Third. ,Aetion for the laiploymeat of Poor Women, No: ,242 Green stoat ",•• - - -• Aeylnul for Hest Children 40 NOrth Semitic 'street. - • • Blind Milton, lineomear Twentieth street. Christ Church Hospital, N6..8 Cherry street. City Hospital, Nineteenth *trot,' near Coated, • Clarkson's Hall, No. lel Cherry street. Dispensary, Fifth, below Chestnut Arent, Female Society for the Relief and Employment of the Poor, No. 72 North Seventh street. Guardians of the Poor, ettlee No. SO North Seventh street. Germnp:Spolety ell o. a Beath Serentketnet. rete,,for thendlesi7Miik , , earner Vnef-third east hteenth sheet. • ' New Ma - OV. Asylnut, West cad Wood streets ,Hlgb,pentlt Werd, Masonic* Nell, Chestnut; obassfieventh street. * Megdelexi Asylum, corner of Mace and Twent,lo-fint se 0 , ' orth ats. iiin Dispeuriiiiy, No, I Cession street. „ Aeyinm, (eoloted,) Thirteenth Street, near Callowhill. • Odd Fellows' Hall, Sixth and Mines street. . Do. do. 8. Ni corner Broad and Spring Gar den streets, Do. do. Tenth ;Ind Sod% streets. Do. - do. Third and Brown streets, Do, do. ' , Ridge holld, bAltrif Wallace. Peru:pimento Hospital, Pine streekbetween - and Ninth. Pehntylvanlalnetitute for the gastrin:diet' of the Blind, corner Noce and Twentieth street., • panneylvenla Society for Alleviating the Miseries of Prieons, Sixth and Adelphi streets. Pennsylvania Training School kr !Motto and 'Feeble- Minded Children, School HOMO Lane, Germantown, Office No, 15) Walnut steel. Pbtladelphla Orphans' Asylum, northeast cor. Sigh. teenth and Cherry Preston Retreat, Hamllton t near Twentieth street. Providence Society, Prue°, below Sixth street. Southern Dispensary, No. 98 Shipper* street. Union Benevolent Association, It. W. corner of Seventh. and Salaam 'treats. Will's Hospital, Race, betweeh Eighteenth and Nine teenth streets. - - • ' St..Totephis Hospital, Girard avenue, between Fif teenth, and firateenth: , Episcopal: Hospital, Front street, between Minting ton and Lehighiarennes. Philadelphia, Hospital for Diseases of the Chest, S. W. earner of Chestnut And Park ate, West Philadelphia, 1.1)5110 811/11.01NG6. Custom Hopas, Chestnut street, above fourth .County Prison, Paseyunk road, below Reed. Oily Tobacco Warehouse, Dock and Spruce streets. City Controller's 011 ice, Girard Bank, eeoond story. Commissioner of City Property, office, Girard Bank, second story. City Treasurer's 00E*. Hirsod. Bank, second story. City Commissioner's Office, State House. 'Oily Solicitor's Office tit he , below Walnut. City Watering Committed's Oftthe, Southwest corner Fifth and Chestnut. Pairmonsit Water Works, Falrmouht on The Sehnyl kill. Girard Trust Treasurer's Oftice,Fifth,above Chestnut. House of Industry, Catharine, Above Seventh. House of Industry. Seventh, above Arch street, House Of Refuge, (white,) Parrish, betweell Twenty second and Twenty-third street. amme of Settle, ( colored ,) Twenty-fourth, between Parrish and Pop er streets. Health 01gos, corner of Sixth and Sansone. House of Correetlon, Bush Hill. • etreet Marine Hospital, Gray's, Perry road, below South Mayor's office, S. W. omit fifth sad Chestnut striate. New PenitpeNsry, Coates street, between Twenty first and Twenty-second streets. Navy Yard, on the'Deltware, owner preht and Prime streets.- Northern Liberties Gam Works, Malden, below front street. Post OSee, No. 227 Dock street, opposite the Ex *thins*, ' • Pest Office, N 031411001, Queen street , below Shacks, Klaxon street. Post Oilier, Spring Garden, Twerity.fonith stseet and PAW:kV:WIN Avenue. - . - Phileho la& ,11-schrtspro, Amer Third,: Walnut . and 0• ; • 1 titen,Letti Plags**4 Oft, :k!., -- .ll?§Wti street., liritofkgristitat• [O'Neal and Dunidi Broad and 'Mimi fittest*. • • Peurps rower Nontuneht, Beach, above ;lianas* ~rMahlkß Mehasl, M.E. !ornate *PM' tad Wien MaVe rastlirobgt,i i so . l a 4; " • • ogee;pats or .thirden Qutoutlisionees Opritig Gorden Thirteenth streets. • Union Temperanee Hall, Christen, above Ninth street. United 4 State*, Mint, ooener of Chestnut and Juniper streets. United Mtates Artiotal, Gray's Perry Road, near Fede ral street. Naval Asylum, OD the eishuylkill, near Sotith street. United orates Armysnd. Clothing Equipege, corner of Twelfth and Girard streets. United States Quartermaster's. Office, corner of Twelfth and Girard Artists. COLLIONS. College of Pharmeng,„Fane street, above Seventh. Enlectio MeditaffillSege, Haines atreet, west of Sixth • Girard College, Ridge road and College Avenue, Homeopathic* Medical College, Filbert street, abov Eleventh. Jefferson Medhial College, Tenth street, below George. Polytechnic College, corner Market and•lgest Penn Square. Pennsylvania Medical College, Ninth etreet, below Locust. • Philadelphia Medical College, Fifth street, below Walnut. Female Medical College, 229 Arch street. University of Pennsylvania, Ninth street, between Market and Chestnut. University of Free Medleine and Popular:Knowledge, No. 08 Arch street. ,Loosszos or COMB. United - States Circuit and District Conde, N0..21 Fifa street, beivr Chestnut. Bup,reme Court of Pennsylvania, Fifth and Chestnut etreete, • Court of Common Pleas, Independence Dintriet•Courte, Noe. 1 and 2; corner of Sixth and Chestnut streets. Court of quarter Sessions, corner of Sixth and Chest nut streets. • RELIGIOUS INSTITUTIONS. American Baptist Publication Society, No. 118 Arch etreet. American and Poreign Christian Union, No..l44Ohest nut street. American Sunday School Union . (new), No. 1122 Chestnut greet. Amerman Treat Society (now), No. 929 Chestnut. Alenonist, Crown street, below CalloWhill street. Pennsylvania and Plaladeiphla Bible Society, corner of Seventh and Walnut streets. Presbyterian Board of Publieatio* (new), No. NI Obestunt stroe t. Presbyterian Publication Howie, No. 1894 Chestnut street. Young Men's Christian Assoniatiint, Lin, let Chestnut street. Northern Young Men's Christian Association, Ger mantown NOad and. Franklin. • Philadelphia Bible, Tract, and Periodical Once (T. H. Stockton's), No. tali Arai street, Bret house below sixth anat. north side. Lutheran Publication Sooloty, No. 732 Arob etroet, below Elghtti. • RAILROAD LINES Penna. Central R. fi,—Depot, Eleventh and Market 7 A. 1.1.,,8fail Train for Pittsburgh and the West. 12.66 P. M., Past Line for Pittebu.rgh and the West. 2.30 P. M., for Harrisburg and Columbia. 4.80 P. M. Accommodation Train for Limretater. 11 P. M., EXprose Mail for Pittsburgh and the West, Reading Raiiroad—Dopot, Broad and Vine. 7.80 A. 1.1., Express Train for Pottsville, Williamsport,. Elmira and. Niagdre. Falls. • 3.30 P. M., ae above (Night Express Train.) ' New York Lone.'. 1 A. Id., from Kensington, via Jersey City. 6 A. 31., from Camden, Accommodation Train. 7 A. U. from Camden, via Boraoy City, • 10 A. M., from Walnut street wharf, viaJerserelty. 2 P. M. via Camden and . Amboy, Express. 8 P. Id., via Camden, Argeommodatibn Train. 6 P 81., via Camden and Jersey City, Mall. 6 P. M., via Camden and Amboy, Accommodation, Connecting Loses. 5 A. Di., from Walnut street wharf, for Belvidere i llinatOn r ' Water Gap, leranton, ks, 6 A. 31., for Freehold. 7 A. M., for Mount holly, from Walnut street wharf, 2 P. M., for freehold. 2.30 P. for Mount Holly, Bristol, Trenton, 8 P. 20., for Palmyra, Burlington, Bordentown, As. 4 P. M., for Belvidere, Easton, dco., from. Walnut street wharf. 6P. M. for Mount !folly, Burlington, As. ildllimore N. N.—Depot, broad and Prime. for Baltimore, Wilmington, Now Castle, Mid dletown, Dover, and Seaford. 1 P. It., for Baltimore, Wilmington, and New Cantle. 4.14 P. M., for 'Wilmington, New Giotto, Middletown, Dover, and Seaford. P. M. for brryvllle, Yost Freight. n toMaltiroore and Wilaningtntr. North Pennsylvania R. R,—Depot, Front and. Willow. 6.15 A. M., for Bethlehem, Easton, Mauch ()taint, An. 8.46 A. M., far Doylestown, Accommodation. 216 P. M., foillethlehem, Easton, Mauch Claunk, tee. 4 P. M. for Doylestown, Accommodahou. 6.86 P. d., for Gwynedd ) Accotigmodation. Camden and Atlantic R. R.—Nino street wharf, I.EO A. M. f&Ailantio City. 10.414. A. M.,Tdrauddongleld. 440131•, ton Atlantic City. 4.46 P;31., for fladdonSeld. Po,. Westchester. Dy Columbia It. R. and WestetwAiter Braneh. Prom Market street, south aLte, Woore Bikhteentb. Leave Philadelphia? A. 51; anti 4 P. M. a Westchester 6.85 A. M., a et. SP. M. Oa StiliDega Leave Philadelphia 7 A. M. • , Westchester 3 P. M. Westehbster Direct Railroad., amto peozoon, b robbi : Btidge. Prom northeast Eigtsteenth and Market streets. I Leave Philadelphia 9, and 9A, M. 2., 4, opt P. M. 'Penneltonnt 0 thabbs Bridge, 7, 'B, snall A, 11, and 4aP. M. • On Saturdays lag train from Peg:m*lton at lA. U. Ott linwealet Leave Philadelphia 8 A. M. and 2 P. M. Pennelton 2g A.M. and 0 P.M. Germasilotes Norristown' R. 14.—Depot, 9th mail , Omen. • 0,9, and 11 A. M. sad a, 4.46, 0.65, and 11.16 P. M., for Norristown. 6 4. M. and BP. M., Jos Doteninglogro. 8,8, 9,10, and 11.30 A;,. and 2,4, rr, 11,"and 0 M. fer bhestnut Hill. •0,7,8, 9, 10.10, andll,Bo, A. If „sad 2,24.10 i 4, 9e 0,7, 8,9, and 11.50 P. M., for Giratantown. Djkseter Palley R. R.—Leave Phi ladelphla 6A . U. and 8 P. M. lesserebowningtownlM A. M. rind 1 P. HI • ' BTAOAIIIIOAT LIMES. 2.80 P. M.V4tohard Stockton,. for Borden:A fr• ux alnut street +sitar I. 10 and 11.4 A. 11 and 4 0.1. for Tammy, ,nitiltt ton' and Bristol, (roan Walnut strait 9.80 A. M., Delaware, Boston, pai gennebeo yij r Cape • - May %rapier bolo wßernee street. 1240 A. M. sni 2,8, and P. R., John A. 11 •6 T 66 r litnyton stud Thomas 4. ►papa, for Pertsited ; Bnr , '‘te. : . / - 4 4 / 4 61 Wto.to-f v. • PHILMIEUVAMt . • .< a, ' ''• —,...-.,. -, . • . 1 --,'• '.‘ • •i , - - :„'iz . Z 11wA iolas-..t" V,V d pt ' ~ 3 - "11:,, k I:, A . 'FRIpAr 4.,.'. a-attlAi (~,,'"*:::,,,' . AMONG rag jl , loo***lll' NiI:444WLI. The Fund flyr Indian ,31utiny,'Wir in (iimine . 44 . 1 00/ 1 00 , England, already amounts-InAliatr It will, probably, rel&A V t ertddlia!' .£401),060--equal tO $2;004, safotrq., The manner in which ItiMa been raced h plain. First, by indt,414:11009, - 4 next by Collections medetin itelOW11)1 , worablp tbroughont all . Lio#lk l 4o:ft 13400134,' Some few of the'indlirldi ample. Sava...—. - Pro) Mr. GALI tier Al the Marquis of Loimp, year, the Earl of Riporywortl. and the Duke of 'Cjevolndd,liorP AiefrOEk ) a ; L i o year, were, each aid log eu*ueltll,lol,o, weather" (in genorealto:, ot ,kuniseAardii each was th? 11#04!: - ktk„*kr' l ", . 4 * .' i' .- Noble the Mgt: . - , :ontiiii*Ori' , `,. rally emu, WO- '‘'i ',• * 4t-116111101hIdobb ' l e the Weg , t:';' * ' - / t2 11 4 ON, 4 # I t h l k landed estaten4 •,;-'-',- ,opu„,kftinimp‘to this poor matno,i' l is.,,,,‘„ , . , ~ -of it c 700, 0 9 0, got'! ,:' .' ( `'! /, '', l',: ` ,l `'' , *',o l l4' £lOO. To be sure, the as did fled to inOline the nobility f* . :0,1113944:',{ 44 Vtoliontn, with allowances of abontA6Qo,Clol,o a year, and a privy purse of Adir,loo,litt' aAill awn, gave .£1,060, Frisco Atassiii.4 0)14 ~....0 much' as £OO,OOO a year, 'gave. 4806.'-' , Ii Duke of Cambridio, , bin ,utetheir and . sisters, about £40,000 it, Y.00t , " - Ott , : )1* iillicli , they mainigedto'spre 4209. ' . The Duches 00 Kent, mother Jo. tto? ' gkieisig;,,io l 44:, l 4 l :4*Oilteii Span-pauper, to!tbri.nungtof 4110#16,per, it , ro-'1 nun; could afford no' morethaiy : loo!,„''': ' ': In truth the BritisliAtisto`Otie4l4,9g On! t i richest in the won , have behaved sbamelb i lly,' altabby in this ma ter:. They `llbirialtstio--4 Weir anapagei. ', liete: iikaiiAP:., - .'isT4l3.,ltte tee Cur tkerdiellitiaiiiii.gtora lialithing Ist , 4:'"4144, *lf 'S otitit/OebtilshOtud, 'risk , peerage•as contoinlng ,aboit, 'a -thousand in emptier, this is a small proportion. The Idea of mon worth £lO,OOO to £60,000 a nay, giv ing only £lO to £2O to what certainly is looked upon' in England as a National Fund, is con temptible. There is in England another class, the Baronetcy—one degree next below the titled aristocracy—which has boon equally miserly. The members of the Iloase of Com mons also have held back from contributing. The °stated country gentlemen and the wealthy commercialists have also hung back. Em phatically, then, it is the middle and working classha—what we may call the People--wbo have raised this Indian Fund. , , The seventh donor of 21,000 is Mi. Trtscia- East, the novelist. A very remarkable do nation his must be considered. , It appears, in tie advertisement, among the auras Subscribed in Paris, as W.MMIEPEACE TiIIeKERAY, Etxj., - 41,000 It is doubtful whether the whole of Mr. TIIACKERAY'S property can consist of more than £lo,ooo—perhaps not as much, for the high station he undoubtedly occupies in Lon don and Continental society, from' his success in literature, is not inexpensive- The capital of the Marquis of Westminster, the richest noblenian in England—easily ascertained by taking his annual income at thirty years' purchase—exceeds two million pounds ster ling. He gives the one-twenty-thousandth part of his property ; TitiCICERAir gives one tenth of his. Which, indeed, Is the noble man I Living solely by his pen, Mr. TRACRERAY has given largely. It may be said that he uas given ostentatiously—a charge which we, for one, believe •to be wholly unfounded. His amour propre is very large—no man can be on better terms with .himself—but TIIAOHERAY is the reverse of ostentatious. lie was born at Calcutta, fifty-three years ago, and his associa tions relating to India are probably so strong as to have induced him to exercise this mu nificent benevolence. Of his [sincerity there can be no doubt. A man who voluntarily gives up the tenth of his whole property, in aid of a public cause, must indeed be devoted to it. There is covert aallro, whether intentional or not, in the tacit reproof conveyed by the simple announcement that when the wealthiest noble gave only £lOO, this hard-working wan of letters gave .21,000—an amount equal to what Queen VICTORIA herself had pre sented. If the nobles cae blush, they will surely have flushed cheeks now. OUR WORK IN 101 EN. (For Tile /Well i " We aro poor, and at tho point of starvation. We cannot steal, for that is against the law. We not beg, for that is beyond the limits of that o haramer which as workingmen wo aro not pro pored to part with." . Address of she llrorkiugsven- to the Mayor. Itir Dian SIR : Weald it not be well at the promnt time to summon to your side a few of our most respected citizens to aid In devising a plain to set some of our unemployed laborers at work? Many of our citizens only wait for the opportunity tocontributo according to their means to such plan as may be devised for the speedy employment of the willing Inifids now earnestAy seeking for labor. The following has been suggested as one which would, give such an opportunity, and at the same time confer a groat bandit on the city Ist. 'Open subscription books, so that our ci tizens may contribute in amounts largo or NUM!' according to their means. 2d. All moneys contributed tok , this labor fund to be appropriatedTer the direction of the Mayor, the Chief Co missioniturrof High ! ways and the Commies'() rof Citiffoperty. I Pd. The Mad ,to bo dist4rsed on 'spelt pub. lit: works as the ContributYrs the improvement of the streets and higilwah ' the grading and laying oat of •our Park above r Fairmotint, or the laying out and planting of Hunting Park. Lot this stiggestion bo acted upon at once, and hundreds of our worthy 'poor will be pre 'tided with labor. The touching address of the workingmen will draw -out thousands of dollars to be applied to their relief. Eyery ono who can spard a'dollar will gladly.come forward to the rescue of those who aro willing to toil for a subsistence. , - A Oman To the ion. RICHARD VAII.X. On Friday last, Breono and Sievin and his son, charged with the murder of Robert hfoßensle, his wife and four children, near St. John, N. 8., were arraigned before the court, when Weems pleaded guilty, the elder Sleyin said he was " net clear" of the murders, and the younger Slavin pleaded not guilty. The elder Blevin'e plea was recorded as not guilty. The prisoners were 'then committed for trial, s NOVRMIER 13, 1857. CALAMITY. Pima; tb tiAniiiltleLaiA!!9, Flag, Extra, Saturday, itclibir 2 - 4.3 - On last Friday night:between 12 and 1 o'clock, the alarm of fire was heard, which caused all of our eitithlia tbathiere &Whim to rush to where it ..." 1 IRATVIOII to' be. It was first discoveied by ,010 r. , tfohaut ' in the wholesale establishment of 010f0,001vattls Co ~on tpo levee, when be imme ^ lately' Woke up: three - or four that were sleeping in the building, :WO ibbn afterwards, notice was givett to them approaching that powder was in the latorb,lnd fits explosion:Of two-or three kegs a few oatiantea leforwAho. last eanoussion, gave n good many waling., • L .., In '..tlail ,tnowittiroo, '3lr. Woodhouse and several iitliehr IMOOMatt in getting:two hundred kegs of pow** into likialtwer bosh the warehouse of Chas. . istnittlftrt , h,t; wiAllt thit time this work was llith,d4tt, qr. '' v 0 0,1 tho fi rm of Woodhouse 4' ti , wet O a r . i - • toggle tintir papers, which lialwtriltall ' clthidlitg. when the ea 10. al" Icok" " 14 ' IrMallinglirn, and seri. itpWu g3f&r. l lllllen '.'Finring. this time, Mr. U . kg 1ket`,44 1 440,01.104-.l4r.•Portills, wore in 044 IJO, I,4isitt7 Riliebetti street, getting 'their, pa i r2initsntipe . This store beinciust op hollie,:" t ' *der , ' b' *Midair botibtOnnon cora ,llltid, tlir ShitilithelsboldlistablishMent, throw tilietetiVlVlgt2-11 IVA , r..w0., lit Tery_hadiy. • ~111.. J, 'V wWleind in the morning, 00010 ' ' I settle hr 4 ills limbs being burned Met • itsii ne‘betn 'found, and :1 4 14 43 0:414 1 51 1 1 , Wd11' - .In , t4-_TnilFif yet. it not lows aWay. na .ir , , ', firt l n expired shoat two bout, ollot , he w ' ~ Alk,t .- .:.• . 'TIO/Nte bit& , -,4 ••• ~ '-i: , , .14 mti i r *lii,Litatioi,, ;110,: . ' (-:-„, .• "- , 4 4:•, litoit Mere " 1 4 0 2:4•110:' ;•11inthitit in the back part Owl 481,,wit,orp,the fire cough t, which eve , Moloatoty. at the same time to - idatr t'illtioa*lon.' - . The explosion greeted confusion for several tuttfuttMraialal , wcinderment in the minds of those ,aktniusu4 ,tlu, nk their slumbers by the loud report AO I.9 e ttOaring of their dwellings. Many web Eti , . beds—roofs, bricks, boards and ttlide, ' • ' -.121 ..- ' , ' ' ng in on thorn—crash of win , Melt -, .' 0 ..... s, and the tremendous force, ;ittgl.vit ..' • ~.--. '-'-- ' , bursting bars of iron from 49 0 % i . '''• i.• . ng for the alumberer to ~, at Bit / , ' ' '"` soon restored, and some of our 'taut "e Woos went to work manfully. They 131 , 0gidtAikeir names will long bo k 4 f AO 9014 1 9tRTY services they ren iiiis whre ftfrnlshed , and a line of tin the river to the firo. 3 O QM. Taylor and Capt. Dawson, and the soldiers of th e gap kw, deserve the grati tude of all for the thar;ess 141154 in 14110010 y entered the scone of .o.o.lftlY''''' 1 41401Einnedp ordered the steamboat arimpus Istwied oppostte tho fire, and she playod upon 1.10„ho1dlDgs with hor pumps for thirty-bve bcnirs. "lied it not been for these active operations the holatellsoledoubtless, would have been committed 'to Ow* ; and had there been any swift breeze re l-y 0 liwould have boon almost impossible to ce destruotion ; but fortunately It was iiitiMl otn, AMU 6b e diffionit to estimate the amount each Aohabt.- - him log—every oue haring his goods, 4 :4 4 9 ( , olltatflitilse, ko,, , more or less Injured, A le 0 rt,kll ;commence Out on the Levee, and sup. ta Bet, demotes of some of the merchants have tltined .., Charles Stillman it Co., blown down, $1.0,000; S. A. Belden , k Co., burnt, $15,000, loss 1 iOf rilers i li&.; lin 2 3 l ;tely p eVo.... i frip a l r it stored; d J. ;117 1 p g, la the La; lumber; I. IT, Lou,ea wooden I ttitaltg,,actupled by If. O'Connor k Co., in shop, labit; A. Linde% burnt, $5,000; Marcus Radish, smashed. in, framed ; Nicolas Grisaenti, and Mrs. Nakbolty's houses greatly 'Oared. Along on both sides,. ,of Thirteenth incest, from the Levee 0 10 M tebeith' street, including the drug and book store, a great deal of damage was done likaubeth street—J. Morita it Co, destroyed tocoolvD o Mfula. Vincent, fatiey goody, greatly in r rningues, Victor Salle, and Magnin ~. i mps, idi. mamba houses, sustained some lees. io.ifiiicifentonees _known as the Masan property, far round s (Nedra; stare, were torn and chat teed *good deal. The Dillon Buildings, owned Asivifirce Radish, protected the upper corner of .Sibiabeth street, From Webb to Miller's hotel to the bank the loss has been heavy; doors, nil:Wows, and roofs, dry-goods, liquors, h ardware , &a., broken or Injured in some way. Twelfth streethas shared the same „I:atm"; I:losers. Werillidit, Fernandez, and othert(thjured It . good' deal. A.Adarge - abiourit at the goods destroyed in the wafter . , 10/ WM 9n consignment forldealoo. :,.. '. is non-arrlval, of, the • regalar , , steamer from •fc to ' 'Ortiena on last Maude) , week WM th n 09 1 190 9f10191 1 8 amount or silver and' 'gold being on hand, but Mostly ill of this is saved. henry Maultby, of Corpus Christi, lost about $2,000 worth. of groceries which he had in Gal ' ycA's store, • . • lithe entire less of property, dry goods, ke., may as alitlx4ood at 050,001 E, , - - ' •,—„ a.: Q.c lest Ventlifii Morning! the iag of ti min wet Mind, end aeon afterwards his b od y, in the river. lie was a Mexican. We learn that the convent, which t 3 over a quar ter of a mil° distant, had its windows and doors broken open. A good many doors in Matamoros wore unbolted. This is the first fire that has occurred in Browns ville since its existanoo. It has been fortunate. We don't suppose there is any town in the State that contains so much combustible clatter as this. The most of the houses are frame, and very close to each other; the streets and alloys narrow. It is now for our oitizons to look to these things and better prepare Tor future aeciden Important Case—Heavy Verdict frrom the Wheeling (Va.) Times, of Tuesday ) ' The Circuit Court, which has boon engaged for the last tout or five days in the trial of the case of Stephen De 800 vs. John S. Wright, aces(' involv ing some Napo, was yesterday thronged with visi tors to hear the arguments of counsel As this ease has elicited more than ordinary interest, and especially as it has now boon decided, it may not be improper to state, in a brief and twilled man ner, Its more prominent points, The facts, as we understand them, then, aro as follows: In the spring of IBM, G. T. Deßee, being in Chicago, bought from one Nelson C. Roc, who was then a broker there, a note of John d. Wright, dated Feb. 1, 1851, for $20,000, with interest at ten per cent., payable in ono year. This note contain ed a atateusent that it was secured bye trust deed. Deßoo, It appears, was afterwards tuado to be lieve that the note was altered after its execution, so as to make It bear interest, and that this alters. tion was made by N. C. Roe. Ire thereupon had Roe arrested for forgery, but Roe insisting that this note was good and unaltered, Deßee dropped the prosecution for forgery upon receiving some collate ral securities. Dane afterwards assigned the note to his father, who brought this suit against the maker of the note, John S. Wright. Wright makes the defence that when be signed the note it did not bear interest, and that the words, "interest at ten per cent," wore added by Roe after the note was received by him, and before It was purchased by G. T. Dello, end In consequence of that alteration, it was veld, and that he was not liable for any part of it, ko. On the trial, Roe was sworn as a witness for the defendant, Wright, and he swore that Wright had ' engaged bins to negotiate a loan of $20,00D with interest at 10 per cent.,and gave him his note for that amount, which mte was secured by lots in Chicago; that he (Roe) took this note to Buffalo and obtained upon it $5,000; that upon his return to Chicago, he told Wright that he could only get I that sum ; that some time afterwards, be asked Wright to glee him another note, as there was mother party to whom be thought he could sell the note; that thereupon Dlr. Wright gave a new note, without interest; that at the time of giving this note, Wright asked why it was nut made with interest. Roe said he tilt iiot wish it so; ;hat he (Roe) tallier, to negotiate nitti the party he lad in view, afterwards added the words, " interest lU per cent.," and sold it to G. T. Deltee. The plaintiff claimed that the note had never been altered, that the witness (Roo) MOM falsely, and that it was a scheme to cheat De Roo; or that, V the nolo had been altered, such were the relations tetween Wright and Roe, as principal and agent, that Roo had authority to add these words, us it lad been agreed that Roe should sell Wright's note fir $20,000 with interest at ten per cent. The case, es we havo already stated, was argued in a very able manner by Mr. Lontoino ' of Chicago, on the Fart of the arid by Colonel Wheat for the defendant, on last Saturday. The ivholo of yestoi ilay was coupled by the arguments of Judge Fry for the defendant, and Mr. Charles W. ltna,ell for the plaintiff. The jury, after being out lass than an hour, rendered a vordlot for the plaintiff for the fall amount of the claim, bolos about Mysterious Affair—Probable Robbery alai Murder. (From the Janesville (W b,) &sealant, Nov. sth ) Wo learn by a gentleman from Brodhead that three men were arrested yesterday upon the charge of having committed a robbery and murder in that place in September last. The names of the per inea charged are given upon the streets, but until ortuothing more deilnite)s known—the crime itself losing so terrible—we deem it best to withhold them at present. Suffice it to say that one of those Inculpated has occupied a prominent posi tion in the &immunity whore he has resided for years past. The oircumstances, detailed aro us follows: A detective policeman from Chicago has been solpurn lag for a few wookepust at Brodhead, for this jam peso of ferreting out a gang of counterfeiters, sup reed ta,have their headquarters there During his stay he made the acquaintance of the three men woad, and warmed himself into the coot dance of two of them It semis that a gentleman wont to Brodhead in September sat for the" purpose of purehasing a ho tel, and bAgainefor it, but, the next morning ho was an bad not boon hoard from since. His roam ii'eariliot learn. ' According to the aon fotsion said to hives beta Made, ho was induced to visit the barn of ono of the aceused, they having previously cast lots as to %shrub ono should kilt kin, While they were there, one of them, and he to whom the dreadful task was allotted, retired upon a pretence, and rimming, struck the stron ger with en axe, killing him instantly. They then took up the body and tying cords around it and Amine, sunk it in Sugar river. The stranger was known to have had a considerable amount of mo ney, and one of those accused of having been en gaged In the murder is said to have recently homed quite an amount in gold to persons in this oly The arrest of thstles Implicated created an intense exeitemen lefllrodhead yesterday, and the river was ,to dragged to-day fur the ra- Ornsin7 ?of the body. It is not knonn bow much mosey the stranger bad,' but it is believed to bo elute a large amount. It almost surpasses belief that the deaire for gold would impel men to the col:emission of such a dreadful crime, and hope- Wally scab a man as one of them is who Is incul ated. We shall wait for further developments b efore we give any names. Scarlet Coeur, of tho most virulent character, is raging among the children la Cincinnati, THE COURTS. ?nun ADAY ; I3 PIIOOIIXDINGB [Repotted for The Press.] • DISTRICT Coons No. 1--Judge Stroud.—John Mackie vs. John L. Getohell. An notion to reco ver the balance of an unfinished account,. Verdict for the plaititiff for $315.50. Charles W. Whimii, George W. Whiton, John ' 11. Whiton, and Whiton Oakley, copartners, tra ding under the name of Whiton A Son, vs. the Camden and Amboy Railroad and Transportation Company. This was an notion to recover the value of two horses alleged to have boon fatally injured by transportation on the Cara of the company from Now York to this city'. On trial. DISTRICT COURT No. ,2— , Judge Hare . —h the case of Ferroo vs. Mahar& (before reporterkl:the, jury found a verditt, for the plaintiff for 1 , 9,DM. John Stauffer to. Nathan Barrett. An action on a promissory note. Marshal for the' plaintiff, and Varmint for the defendant. Jury out. • Tho President and Directors of the Insurance Company of N. A. vs. Robert S. Barris. An ac tion on a promissory note. Gerhart and Powell for plaintiff, and Charles Gibbons for defer' it. COMMON PLEAfi—Judge Thompson.— Conover vs. Mary. Grownloy. An action' validity of a will. On trial. UNITED STATES ConnissioNEn's OPI missioner Charles F. Baslitt:--lid , r Richard Brandell, and William r charged with selling counterfeit hal altars. Edgar IliThop bears it cop' His and eonn lots 4tgd a Dos ottleasirtut • us The Code of Honor.-1, oharged with a misdemeanor having sent to /*cry Conner a a duel. This case excited much attentidis. David Paul Brown, Esq., appeared for the CoMfi- onwealth, and Judge Doren for the defendant. The plaintiff, a Mr. Conner, is a shoemaker by tr 440 thli V -e• Indent a pedlar. . • It was given in evidence that digriges of a do mestic character had existed hayfork Me,garties, and that they were neighbors. fee difffoultiee reached such a height that the afenaant sent. challenge to henry Conner to reed him at Point Breeze, and "tattle the difficulties." Conner did not accept the challenge, and it was proven that Callahan then went before his house and used ex; citable and provoking language. twiner then appealed to the law for protection. Jtulge Doran 00m/fenced the argument for the defence. Re alleged-, first, that the challenge wag not to fight a duel, and did-not come within the limitation of the act of Assembly prohibiting duel. ling, inasmuch as no deadly weapons were to be used. Second, that even admitting the challenge to ho a true one, the plane for the fight (Point Breeze) was not within the jurisdiction of the court, as there were smite dozen of places of that name in the United States, no one of which was particularly specified. Third, he ooatendedthat the whet° affair was a joke, and in matter of et nothing more thanuninvitajion from one party to another to partake of a little excursion, with' eat fish and coffee. The judge delivered a very good speech. Daijd Paul Brown, Esq., made the concluding ergo-- rnent this 'sorbing, for the prosecution. He cited numerous authorities te"prove, that to fight a duel, in the acceptation of the tuft of Assembly, no deadly weapons were necessary—a duel being neither more nor lees than the hostile meeting of two persons, whether armed with artificial illtapoeS, or merely those bestowed by nature. It mattered but little whether the place was Point Breeze, in California, or at Point Breeze, deer Philadelphia, inasmuch as the offence consisted in sending the challenge, as laid down in the , indictment. lie thought it unnecessary to attempt to prove that the affair was real and no joke. The evidence suffi ciently established the reality of the feet, and the evil intentions of the challenger. Judge Conrad delivered a very forcible and eloquent charge to the jury, in which, after reviewing the eircumatances of the ease, he befd that a challenge to fight with lets was as much a challenge to fight a duel ea theagh fire• arms or other weapons wore to be used. The eye of the law also made no distinction rn to the place of the intended combat. The 'violation of the Jew wee in the sending of the challenge. Jury out. Commonwealth vs. Adler .P.'.Zovell.—The de 'fondant Wait charged with the hiSattl* of a prongs eery no to of the valued st,ooo*.• 'no ei iwianstanbea of the case are detailed la the foihntl/ able °harks, delivered to the jury by hiailotior edge. Conrad, ,which, we commend to, the,peottal owe eeaders. . 1 ; . r .•911.14001 t..: '.• ." G" . “'"nn OT Rata , fitetT.: iiAt.an=:tttnel this Ames would, fcggt theefattt44i tie ehltgee .aidnide chant of - hitherto Imblemlehed charaelor, with a fraudulent 'and even felonious pamentiou of tati or dinary'petutniery titiniusetion', 'retnafkablOA but; nrildn't linuedtoe freed alike of , sda' ltnii isxtensitenlets, reallieepor lute' t, n dttr earthqpiahe,thatzends,tholandt, butisobow td the guts and vehen,bvemptoy, is ao badly genera that It Airiehreed Impirtaut to determine where InlefertUna map Mite Midi,' taped Its own ultra preached affliction, or where it is rendered de-' graded and hopeless by the presence of fraud and origin,. The honest bankrupt has an exalted claim upon our respect and proteotion • but the very duty that wo owe to unfortunate ! integrity demands that we should not permit the dishonest to claim ite•place or eliarelts advantages. This indictment charges Adler F. Lovell with the larceny of a promissory note of the value of $l,OOO. The history of the case, so far as it stands upon neutral ground, and is undisputed by the parties, is as follows : The defendant was, in .1855, a member of the flan of Brown, Lovell, S Smith, in Third street, below Cherry. Ile appears to have bad charge, entire or partial, of the financial business of the firm. Ile was known to Osborne Coniad, the piose outer; in 1840 ; and was subsequently engaged with him, up to the transaction which forms the basis of this °barge, is various and large pecuniary opera tions. The prosecutor and the defendant (the lat ter always noting for the firm) frequently inter changed notes. The prosecutor endorsed the paper of the firm—he put notes in their hands to be discounted—he gave the Cote of at least ono other person to the ,defendant for the same purpose—be gave the defendant notes, and he, this defendant, would have thorn discounted, end use the money, and in a few days he would return it. Ile received "something," it is admitted, for some of these accommodations. In addition to these various ope rations in notes, the prosecutor, Mr. Conrad, fre quently lent largo sums, one, two, and three thou sand dollars, to the defendant. All these opera tions aro stated by the prosecutor to have boon "settled up." Thus it appears that many and important pecuniary transactions took place, throughout a protracted period, between the prosecutor and the defendant—transactions is voicing mutual trust and confidence, and impor tant, in regard to the issue before you, as exhibit ing the terms upon which they dealt, and the manner in which their business was conducted. On the 9th of November, 1855. the defendant procured from ttow prosecutor, Mr. Conrad, his note forsl,ooo, to the order of the first B. L. & S., at sixty days. This note is the subject of the present prosecution. What took place when and alter the note was given is in dispute. I here confine myself to what is admitted. Of the facts in con troversy I Via submit the evidence hereafter. The defendant signed a receipt for this note, which (pays the receipt) "I will get discounted anal pay the money to )11711. " This note wes shortly after wards deposited with Howard Tilden for a 'few days, who gave the defendant the full amount, vie: 51.000. This stun was not paid over by the defendant to Mr. Conrail, but was given to, and credited by, the firm of Brown, Lovell, Smith., Shortly after the firm failed. Mr. Conrad, the prosecutor, was sued by Tilden for the amount of tlab note, and be summoned and used the defend ant ns a witness in support of his claim, In April. 1850. Before that time, the defduclant had been in the West on business, but returned, and shortly after he removed to lowa. In Septemler, 1857, the prosecutor instituted against the .lefendent this charge of larceny ' • and, upon the requisition of the Executive, he hat been, nearly two years after the alleged wrong, brought hither to answer it. In this meagre review of the facts, I have excluded all that aro the subject of dispute. It is proper hero, and before reviewing the tes timony. to invite your attention to a few plain principles of law, which should govern your deli berations. You must have been struck with the signal dissicilarity of this ease...in all its features, (rout these which you have been hitherto invoked to hoar and determine. Constructive larceny, a class col crime which, arising from refinements In knavery unknown to the fathers of the English code, wits, er necessitate, brought within the folds of the low, by an extraordinary exercise of its ex pansive and Leontrautile energies of construction, was not unfrequent in Pennsylvania before the enactment of the statute punishing the acquisition of property by &lie pretences. This valuable remedy has redeemed the law from the miserable necessity of a forced constpetion, by which suc cessful frauds were at one time dragged into the class of larcenies. But constructive larcenies have aliveys been regarded with a just jealousy in Penn• sylvania; and she law, as recognised by our high est tribunal, is to simple us to exclude all detibt, and no just es to remove all scruple in its appliett tion to wrongs charged es larceny. In sells miscasts the present, the first and most important reqdisite, that which is indispensable to the establishment of the charge of larceny, to the antowts Arantli, or the intent to steal. You must be satisfied, by the evidence, that the defendant woo, at, the time he obtained possession of the arti cle in . question, sit bean a thtef—that ho then and there intended to steal, Fpr, if Its was innocent of the felonious intent pt thei,.. time, DO after lapse from virtue, no subseq uent vtsitallon of successful! temptation, will render it a larceny. If the original set was free from the intent to deprive the owner of his property, and to appropriate It to his own use, though great wrong may . have been perpe trated, that wrong is nut larceny. The ordinary evidences of the intent to steal are seoresy, false hood, the clandestine conversion of the goods, con- Dealment, flight, and the other various and well known indications by which the forehead of crime has, from the time of Cain, been marked. Of course, there are many wrongful and unlawful takings that aro not lareeny i but which are known as trespass, or as obtaining geode under false pre tences. Fraud, however dark and monstrous, and though accompanied by the diehonest acquisition of the money or property of another; is not o hcoys larcouy; nor wilLk conscientious jury convict of ' that offence without being satisfied that, at the time of the Wag, there was the intent to steal— folonlously to dispossess the owner, and to convert the property stolen P the taker's use. But it Is necessary, also, that the taking should be against the will of the owner, or, in the legal phrase, invite dentine. If the owner vehintartly part with the ownership, however grossly he may I have been cheated into the concess i on, it is not lar ' cony. If ho consent to abandon his property in the article, though he may have been deluded hy gross fraud, the taking is not larceny. But there is a brood distinction between the owner delivering the actual property or owderehip, and only delivering the possession of that property. There may be d elivery of the custody of an gni. Two CENTS. sle by the owner to another, without a change of propertty or of legal possession ; and, under wrists state ot facts, there may be a larceny. Larceny may be committed by a person who has a special use of. goods, When they are delivered fora /lar d fatty purpose. In such case the possession: it supposed to - reside in the owner, and the taking away, the oonversion of the goods to his own usehy the parson who al holds ahem, Ultimate. Thy evidenee he support of this indiottanot is, ito . be found mainlyin the testinsopy of thuggoseen, tor, Osborne Conrad; iusti' in 4ic receipt meson to him by_ the defendant. lie states that oil thp of November*, the defendant Mae to bite, and marking that he, Ceticad, had done kips Ist favors, asked if he wanted money ; said he hadVi balance in the M.. and Ef. bank—the bank bad of, fared bier ti.diseount, and he coital*, °lselin% Conrad. CoUrtd accordingly drew ep s, liCkitt signed It, isid2g.ive it:to the defendant. The Ist-il ter gave a receipt lathe name of the Arm of Wl4* be WAS St member,lor Wino* which, the receipt states, I will getlisnonotadi and pay lbAliatater to him." Conrad . states that ha Wee aceetirliW amount of this note ; that the defendant moon left the city, and that no one save the partial , was present at this interview. not, otiose Ob.. tiemory kito been itopt to jasekelhat lotto inotttoolt of this ii The prosecutor mid, exchanging papar,trith / lie atterwards sidd, "V few tjnoes." The elides notes tree frequent end to, •Ife says,: l' I don't root per." Itin the ;mixt sew andoreetit,.bitr paper. ife s : °I gilt no svands,*o obi of the not it u andetill liter: ' , Tin Butthe etellMiltret deterinined *link fwenceel dance; and add mannasss.' by indiehittni. pathetic. and errors: Truth is a; its courage, etternese, the witness-stand, the i k scions falsehood beigeyd more asutientsly it, is 1 (for the of a wit ter uttered, testimeny) t . The answer of tbedefei purpose of the defender ble ; that it was his li seeds of the note; that —the moss wit wit ridged shows that -Mr. Conrad postponement of the pi toned the use of the an that day—daturday--1 sudden and expected V If so, if the testimony seems to afford a strMei But if, from the torti Hera thet this defentim toitit eke intent to dery ments obtained please and if the prosecutor were to tits session of the note, for a spectra parpote, but did not pert with the if the defendant obtairoad 'pedestal with the intent to steal it, to depth it and to convert it to his own nse, verb it to his use—it was le lette may be the character Of the deft painful may be the circumstances if snob be the facts, ho It *linty which he steads chested. Three issues—ids : let. Did the -..:}ottaiAkbba.. the note with a felonious Intent? and 941" T 4 Peal prolocutor, in parting with 'it, retain Niu e ship, and lastaftt to the defendant the tem qbeliked ponteesion oniy, and for a 'spell rib , 'pose-are questions off eat, tube detertnitaly4 the jury. . In au port of the efligettitintof a feet W tent, Cote or/Wealth oh s' " the, q., - fondant - tea bee, ' and ' , . . *Mir flos' Me ~,, id& rellerflto , 0 :.• ~., , ' prove -that hie sterent at id eta.. , 'ad biz , : stated:' ,4 Eriiiek Attie - leei - . ' ' taanithipaytditediod Ell/ ... -'• ,t- , 10 li i tbsiiiii'd half '• • ''' •bg ~" : . ' Thr )7l kttlig , ttgliiii'iltil.ailld.illi .....„ .... -- . fatilet: l4 erii;tfilifie Viattig; 76di to houtopthot • tio•odootri • .sO4 P i e et ,Itato onM priVO that ea, orediebta lttlx t . Men good; and B. 3. Lore% a - mamboed states that he did not than antielpdel.-- , and that its suspension was caused: ky two z peoted failure of Mr. Brown to mike e#11 . 104 , 60,C". If this witness bo believed, and he iennt - im peached nor contradicted, the answer seems to be, eutfiel on t. The Commonwealth alleges that $q defending: was guilty of falsobeeli in repreientitigtte . the:pro.- scooter, two weeks after he received the nisi that be had not got It disoounted, but' t the same Utah he paid $2OO on amount. This statement restos solely upon the 'testimony of the prosecutor. ' On the other side, it is in evidence, by Mr. Tilden;' that be, on the day of its date, bad advanced the full amount of the note to the 'defendant, its a loan. This was not a discount, and Mr. Tilden states that be expected the return of the mopey within a fair days. • Flight raises a legal presumption against a de fendant; the prosecutor spoke of the absence of the defendant as an escape, and had him arrested as a fugitive from justice. There is not, oven in the statements of the prose4utor, evidence of flight. On the contrary, it appears that the prosecutor used the defendant as his witness in en action upon the note in question, and was in full and frequent Intercourse with him- If the allegation be unfounded, and it seems to be witimat prod!, it does not strengthen the'proseention. Having thus presented the feats midpoints of the Commonwealth, I will call your attontiot to those of the defence. It is urged that the ease of the Commonwealth, depending solely upon the testi mony of the prosecutor, Is not made out by that testimony; that no offence is shown either in law or morals, and that the extensive and confidential business relations of the parties, the defendant haring "settled up" all proviCoss dealings, left an understood discretion as to the thins of payment, and the receipt designates no time of repayment: The testimony of the prosecutor admits a free and large exchange of notes, and frequent loans of money, that exisibit a high degree of trust between the parties. It is also argued that the payment of $2OO, by the defendant, on'account of this note, as admitted by the prosecutor, proves a mutual and amicable understanding between the parties as bo this trans. action. There was no allegation of fraud or wrong. much less of felony. If this be true—and stated by the Fresco* it is not to be doubted—it seems conclusively t xclude the charge,of larceny. It is also in evidence that, shortly after thanoto was given, (the note not havingbeen direousted by the bank, but the de:endsot_ having, upon Its se curity, berrowedsl,ooo from, Tilden,l the prosecu tor agreed with the defendant upon &postponement of its payment. The testimony of E. S. Lovell and of James S. Smith, if believed, and it Is unrontra dieted, is conclusive. Such an arrangement is cer. tainly a final Miner to a ebarie of larceny. The failure of the firm with which the defen dant was connected—for the amount of this note was not appropriated to the personal use of Lovell, but was placed iu the funds of the firin—stieuld not, it is urged by . the defence, be regradedits a circumstance against bins. It is argued' that the integrity of the firm has not been assailed, and that its insolvency was the vaulter an unexpected and overruling calamity. It is true, that the pre cones of commercial misfortune cannot, of itself, be regarded as evidence of fraud or wrong. The elements which govern the destinies of commercial enterprise and labor are often beyond human pre science and power. No purity of pnrpose, no in tegrity of action, no skill, prudence, energy, nor self-sacrifice, is sufficient to 'avert, in all eases, the calamity which, arising from causes remote and beyond control, may sweep away the resells of many years of virtuous industry. The churlish and uncharitable spiritthat would add to theheaty afflictions of a life's honest labor lost, the heavier sorrow of unmerited reproach, has much to an swer for. It appears, by all the testimony before us, that the defendant has enjoyed an elevated character for integrity—a character which, ft seems, has gone through bis commercial reverses• without im peaahment. The prosecutor himself invoked the defendant a &witness, in regard to this sery note, and after the tremsactiost alleged to hue' been criminal. Ifineh'n character would raise a doubt, whore no doubt existed; and where there is a doubt of guilt, will heighten and confirm it. While the prosecution alleges night, the defence complains of an inexcusable delay, and urged that this accusation, which might have been made at any previous period, was suppressed for Trip two years after the alleged wrong. The 'fon dant was often, and for a long time, withi this jurisdiction ; but during that tune no charge was made. The excuse alleged la the prosecutor is. .that he expected the paymer4 of. the note—an allegation inconsistent with the belief of larceny. After this delay, during which interval it seems that the defendant had attained a'respected et* prosperous position in the West. the prosecutor in stituted the present prosecution, and caused the defendant to be bieught from his home in lewle to Philadelphia, for trial upon the charge . Of larceny. IC the defendant be guilty, this delay ts to be con demned Its a culpable neglect of a public duty.l he be innocent, as an unjust and cruet attempt to use the for'ins of law for the accomplishment of a private and selfish object. It retooled for you to determine from the evidence the merits of the pro• secation, remembering that if there be a reasiln. able doubt it is to be east into the scale of thedie fendant Verdict, not guilty. District Attirhey Mann for Commonwealth; David Webster, Esq.,• for defendant. One day lget week a merchant in Gardiner, Me., offered to give a barrel of flour to Bev. Chas. Blake, the Baptist minister in that alto, provided the young ladjes would haul it to hint. To this they nauseated, and having obtained a solidi pair. of trucks, the barrel of flour was placed 'ehereed, and about forty young ladies took hold of the ropes and drew the barrel about half a Laile,,qaoae of, the steepest hills in Gardiner to the millfeter's, house. The Gardiner baba; Big *hat wlHert• In g on, beaded the prenatal ' pl4adson3a ex cellent music during this hail. ere walsrfarga crowd to witness the proceedings, and a cabinet. maker brought out a very handsoineroeking-chaff, which he fastened to the barrel, and let it go se an additional present to the minister. too hutaitt *No hew Is e 444 , . Oorrisrointented mind the follaniatneWs - wanififerfelitaMMlNPo 44 ifs thi whistut• rose. karersifakst.stio Wm*" stoit slaida be 3014". 1 1141 b ,kio 441 tbete:Si lfs k, 411r. ai11t 6 40 1 4,011111M eillmmodh oo/14 5 ,/' 1 "04011/00041114111M100.101.00110/11AN "r- I WilitA.l4.llW NON MV* O* the POPUIatiCV - to the l 'lta;W at teg s pi s leg, bet44oo **ll.o 011011 A r of ° M e a l : ciamwAiloodiairodlost • - Vrit e h is • ' at - 3 '"'" is imm s dr i LIM A Oaln •i • • ir t , RI •1 • •• thirWa: e e m e f e e l l at , s alute .,, 494bige rntor.iir.Witerark icastyi thlt•irttro tan . MrSed4l64.—bN?jecioPf ybith struck , luta/ ,11 aliaas instantly. ' 'XI . ' aFie a 'of • Bk.:ott 'son* (Va.) •tiiikirOactifiAriw-liild , Itativeek: , - Ja es Sey - "Javiednikplesistgatii wita: n wial pat .' li 1 6 j 1441 11 4 Mktet ,a WW)6 ,I ===l Hoy n lan , Troia' Sonthire e at Lodge, where he had beetilberiti,s-The hady was lonnd lTinikcltthe lakee,ttia hands grasping an oar. a 14.0 1 1114.1 1 141440 s okttiotds44l4ollmdfailarisid: player in R o cheater, New York. made a most extraordinary run the ether ditr v4f4 v opposatat, 36 and d count, a dd :t to game eat, the se, , e titer*. 100' id continue. Ile did oltadlesmicsalobcipkite 4 - - E,,thergo &wetter, residing aI4VAIL Wlft • it wult.,of Cautiple,3 q(k., 74 44 en lientiy night or lass Oentreville;and AhlbllithlltSgic -...41•• had been driuk ink,„ft,' ,` ; Mlts:BriiMari;wire James O. Brapnan, the Atiirlitelfedarliieed ihißtate Moon front Olde ban.derdseedber intent:lnn to ooentaliany her husb ago, and to Alton, the. to Milan doting the whole term of his Impristannaent. Enilthihr,ll76' oldest sitrriring son of tit*: late 4 0h.tneltiati6e' Oliv it LTlvororth, and btAhhr , ttLXx,•tieeetetarAilihnearth.: and , Hoe. Hen& rdttwer,th,, Cenimiadoxer of Patents, died 'oii the 2d that. , aged.'7a years. '/At 'at Masonic frail, Loulavllle. , bolitaterdty nitbk - thd star Ur g foot WAS daYAQPlAltlaikalSiE boas people are oat It ent maLlirmt,tatsentanneace of the • wratatetteratir; irinAk fititelof Clarke tount . y, Indiana, committear nalteeleit week by hanmaclonselfi, The **innate. son had been be broken by the optimal:duff of a favorite yourik man corrected at liforfolk of Tiflis & tbstmailit' , keen-been eenteaced toil.. peni tentiary. for ...tass. years, On Friday tight hut he made anrmineeessful effort to commit mykie. The Lancaster (Pa.) Island Polly says that the PeseibSit. of that city, will heat Phi.a delphia en the occasion of the dedication et tie National. Opted Maim.. Rev. H. tartmegh, pastor of the First Ger. man Reformed Church in Lancaster, Ps., has re signed ilk charge, to take alai% January tat. George W. Lie a- noted borne -thief, wan eactormat bra Pittikaiegh -Wedueaday to three 3 ' 443' V*00.411t7--., . John Aildrder Gene tars dike of teunaylriuda,,diad suddenly at Mar tial:a:l4°i ettstli 'mat' - DAM , 'tilinteis'*th i f abnoutb, macciasara in ktlilnig iiiirdser ie fhb woo.ig in that vicinity on Saturday last ; og,te_ of which, when. dressed, 'Weighed 140 pottada The illness of Governor !Buell, of Illinois. is Ns likely contradicted. Re is 41 his nsnsi health. 3Liss Fanny Fita Farren, a daughter of 31 Barren, 4bb Regress, is pining with mach eacteis at Louirrille, Unif.eA Stare 3 afeametPasitatan, destined tatabe East Indiet, it soon to be put in comtuizai, AC Ncrafoik. roatmaater General Brown has appointed Philip R. Miller panma-War at Reading, Pa., r.e. L. H. Wuudre. Au Extraerdtaa ry "Mere` by the Seas of Malta. [Mat the Pliashetatt Union.] A few days ago we mentioned the Illet that a very distressing 021.1111 of vast manta under the ta• tice of the Sons of liana s (that or it worthy resi dent of the Fink ward. whetted been lying up( r. a tick bed 'kin tight menthe, and is danger of pat upon the streak krill s landlord,' and thot the ' Sons" had tajten prompt mcuutat for grant ing relief': The landterd was determined to di, wntess the iefartnnOe family, as he had a fen.,-1 right to•doe,betanise they had fallen in arrears some Mon &Am, The " Sos - appointed a *enmities ta'''atttitan in'the'inatter, and they did their ditty wn . lbly.. They gni oily rented a coastottetk little house, employed a woman to ecru band cleanse lt; trek; and yosae 11 gene rally comforta ble. They -wet% retreaded (on Saturday ereningl. twenty frog on thirty in number. to!the voider.., : of the sick man. They had two wagons, at, the door, ready to eairy ofalt the hcamehold erects of .the family; and as "many hands man urt, t work,' ' the •, flitting " was one of the fleet* uponyteord. In the cracking of a whip, the invalid, Via wife, 'two daaghters, and a Sian Wits transferred to their new .elatiallwa , where: ate aired planty,cd ito. visions, and. bettor than .Il4,,tticy ascertained th it the rent had tecetipaldrbeilfree months in advance The father :was 'ria itn, With *hi to evening that ho bad to be ° Mend itettt th e tarn upon alit , able bedding; hat ho 'sponi A/ad himself in NM 'tunable gnarl* with 'S bboarlag prospect for wintar. : Tfp " ove" wpaArnpaiwnitinfoio.. s Tirty of the natektispeetaltle men ;n the city, autheamtua g it private' ratidetsee'after nightfall, and' seinfry, tarns trerytdlingoorifs, children. and all—aught well havo„eatid, an excitement, Althongh. the Whole nOatiborhood was attracted to the spol, na on*. isinft-nathont tbtrtiveneding. reie; "Solis" did not attaxaseown, butitteseltbantal Itnittly per foitnertheir charitable mission.—nwt Ind to abet another. ' Ono 5044 awthei a tole; this itiniatned mat aid*: and tleatozie pots and kettles; bere,want a Ipaktif Arad desre another of wearing.ipyare r Bht:the mold blo'siaht it was to - new of half 'dozen or We Rost aretweßn peak .tip Wigliworeftwkalwille. That very tnaltletY., we" aidte hot, ( the fa trettylitst raellin 6 siir.per upon it, being wholly unavrawwrittenttniimplated moviag,t and notafilltif n"Miltitt' % S their nstgera bunt. „Bogujoo wat wonn-ven ntongli tho &tore IraS 1 100 ""ho t abfailiffw - -Ichwe was =el word i-7 - stild4--`1 .3%1". i t Fe .tatitt7) l 4ll niuit9il itb tltt-Maspoitell as the eforeend rendßigi arm go , IWO -like 'Reese Of /lab* thitfaiirout, a' 'max" deem that r Ak4Resdasktnlittieof Iltiduessie' him ablo t .sit they expenee. The back rent Rea t fif bht eine inan'itilts nothing but his due, dome. he '6wOr to bliss It, and we leOpe its I will get It ( 7 ) with interest .other isonflards, who may be compelled to retort to the extreme 1 measure of throwing sick people upon the street might ease money by tasking lottown their ease to the "Sens of !deltic"