PITELBOD ' lin l wi r rAtitl32 7 ..... „ 1 MAT; it yei 0 its 4 , :p70RN0:11. _ 4447 . 1 - i ., 40 , 4i7 . iiiiiiiifi , : , esirifiktatitttt i55,M011001111101011404_ ,. .....„_Ne11i/Ualtr.---.--..... iLigier .0. 42 .1 4 42f0 r fr 77, 1 1 .91 MIT'a ktprimitOtitirrig &tic& iiiiitt***lntiViiea , Tmen Ji~/110 1 110 1 . 910. ,, ? ,,, ' 5`, f .Viii ii , t thpi t. ''''';''''' t. tithrairritirtritAti $•. 4 ,4*..1.6.1 in *MIS rllBll'irill 14 creak tolkbotelboti upeerult.-th Onlaket,)s l o,..l.Ti,w4veot Parc . 1.147 -t i , kit 1- , -- vz 1 , ;-S , - ::::ilt:TL,7„ ter ea,,,a4i4tisti 04 . 1 , 4. ...st-rim A-21.a. 4 i`...iiiellt cm c ,%4Aolg,„;, inta iu ltriaat A* oloo ' ..: 174.7'4441,1 1 14.42,1:1WAV 10 rots% ANtlitcrlt u ßFlXl4 , r s, Timvolika - arsikl..x.k., .14 044, mi... 3 f34,41A3 1 7,107_,WWW413MW VlARgAttgAli*,)Uit , WEEitrAyNkahtig.tat vt ; , What itrathEit TO tit•lntitp: TwarszKvilitsl.l*Mik - WIYIe Utttattptilij bratty ttattltdieVv , I,'37,x.wwwygtoq . . 4l tt .tetettittt4a.tiOONMAtlittlfttsWlWitit aptitaiLW tat/14- 4 MlOttott 441- 11 1111 00 11 1 11 . am -11PvtleY41 1 14AstiattinOttl „ rtl! atittt ttatttikailSs thri.# 4 .4 0 140 1 aft-WC ' 10141 -4 Ottte oetrii , tk itlttbeiNetri 110 C, hoar itot 14441tuk PIOP/mPlattr 0 4 0 .1 1 .~14:490 1 7A f 5 . : itsv,siviwauosouits*swfti,io iosmo *Al* colt "t A i tf , t4 4 *Ok -49,-,t . W OgErf2i ItArtr ? 4 , T • • ===a -- r - 'M e•yt Wiltnintlintlibip-.4t-, ''...oolflatitata , i 1 ; Smlpsee allthe tats itioilosaty ~,, ,t, _ , CIIO4TIMIt YrniffAt- sr 7.. -14,att the 'details Mizitfer,al _.fittild2l4-i,_llr , GedFINAU, 'OOll/142.,B5yi,,,Ayinr'^igef : , !,.,-; - W r o . n ., 4r e, L .Pr l nt ''''' . .l - 40 unrioNur 4 1: : Vocks, - 1 : 4 VALUABLE, LI BE. ARITA) Op Ks w E'Dle BERvithe kite. SOLD 4-41.1"4.0"8* ISKETOIIIIB 2111112i81L ;SW DitVißlithiliat Riebard ieCp.lll4ted , fritheffßelaldfaied -Notes, d by It. Shelton NaolOmU, . 0..1. 4 . 11r1t 71 3 Sio n, with Dertialt at Dries $2. ' 4 • _, _ THE 1100222 AMBROSIANIIV , BY rioDerWir a ls" 1. G. Lockhart, Janteeflosaultind Dr. htighift."' with llemobio antliotei, W,'.2.llltettolilitakethil Third Stiffen. Dap- yeltunediarith Dbittalfl,MlClW strolled. - Pride r 15.•• • " ' MAGINN , B MISONLLAINTE The mumelliinfeierOrnr, • inge of the late Dr. Mation. ',..Bdited,yrith, itslioir and Notes, by Dr. IL nelton'hlsekeluibi:' Otimphite bittumee, with Portritt. Tat, per wit, olothAß. LISA OP THE RT. HON. JOEINPLIMPOtOMIXAN. , By hie Eon, Writ. Renry Currant frith Ifotelalid ditions," by - Dr. 11".'Bheitoir bfackehte, awl a Portrait on Steel and Di-idrolle; Third:Edition. -12 mo. cloth. Triee $1 26. - 4 - • - Tax mains unit iltms O'FLUZNRTUB; -Donal !Dory, belts the that-of Lady lißeiten's Sorge and Bonianeeit WitiLah Introduoilan'ant Rotes; by Dr. R. Shelton Maatitiisha. '• 2 role4l2ifie;,'ol6th. Prise $2. ' " " BsaanuFrowia thOktotas„l46onia Ovrn Time, • 'By latish illarrtasldti frith 311ff/tell' , " Dons by Dula,. Togrth "AdDien. With *moil 100 , Dr. Mackenzie: 12u3qg cloth:' MOORE'S mint Or, M.4RIDANT Mewls' let. Life of the Right -1103r'llicharellfinalerlflierbblit By Thoutsa Nom; .I , o*tratt. and Bra-ensile. Bluth Edition.' 2 viti.,l2/no., cloth . rticejo.; ,- BITE BLARNEY. 'By Dr; R. Shelton Kinikenebl: - Third Edition: 12mo cloth.'-;Price $l. TRH HISTORY-0Y TRH WAR Di mais Ptsrasni. By Major Oenifial-Bir W. N. P, Napier, froth the au thor's last revised eclftbittoritb afty-BilHilape and - Plane; Ere Portraits sir Steel; and a 004108, Inde.tj 12mo, cloth.' Pride $ I 601 .APINIVS PENINSISLA.B. WAR. *comptatela 1 va4 Bro. Price $2 60. ' - e " 'FOUST. 3IJ d. IF: Ilaulloglna author of 11 44.1 * Alice," " Alban" ool+, Brno. ablond Von. Price $1 25 - - ALBAN ; or ; The Matorforarttrang Puritan. Br J. V. Iltuallngton,. yoln, 72m0., clink .; Wog 1114,.-4 0074 f t.. 10 :J tUatitep, BAILEY CO.;(7IIXSTNITT' , STRESt Minufacterarn „ , BRITISH STERLING. SILVER:Y . /4a; trader their invention.' on , Die irtuoisti - Citizens and Strangers ern Invited to Irlidk •• 41,40 0% ,• •• •' - .„ - vrwidate. • Oesistan Ely on lona a splendid stock of Superior Watches, of all the celebrated makers. . 'DIAMONDS. tiaakime., przegete, Brooches ? EauMinipi, Rings, and all other articles in the Diwiedid line.' Drawings of NEW "DESIGNS will „he glade fres: of charge for those wishing work msde_tp order. BIOS GOLD JEWELRY: A beentifel sasertinent of all the now allial-ol t rine Jewelry - , such as Monis, Stone and Shell Cameo, Coral, Carbrulcle, Margaisite, t , &o. SWEPPIELD CASTORS, RABBETS, WAITERS, zke. " Also, Bronze and Marble CLOCKS," of newest style, .ani of superior quality. • inl.4ltw&wly C• 8g A. PEQUIGNOT, ••- .MAIIIIPAOTIMPASS 07 WA.7011.0A1001 ' ilapotisas 'oi wAtaits, •• • • tyg. 801:11.15( THIRD 871177 T, Anosr gui*grstlT, "PIIILADAPHIA. " 00316 . 617 PIIQUIGNOT. Atoms Pimegroli. ael9-Bmosit - TAMES E. CALDWELL J. 419 S OICESTNIIT, BLOW FINTII STRUT, Importers of Wats:boo and Pine Jewelry, PJestutseto. rots of Sterling and Standard Slifer Tes ts,. , Porks sod Spoons,, sole *gents for the sole of Charles Frodshmo'a, new sates Gold Medal London - Timekeeper the an bard, pries* s2ss, $276 nhil 3.4002 ICoillsh and StrissWatehes ai the lowietSeec! , 'filch fashionable Jewelt7, • •Sitedield aud American Plated Warm' • jrS. JARDEN Sc BRO:, • „ - • . • . , - • ItArroPAOToatsB AND.ll(PonTinti ' 811,Tita-PLkTBD•WAII„ . • . 'No: "804 ChiOtout fitted% 'atoll Third, oktf otaiOd - • • • ,- Phfiadephis: •—•, - •••• Constantly on hand and iorsals to the Trials, TXA W OL 'OONNUNION: OIDIVION URNS, PITONNIsa, GOBLNIIS„ OIIRCIWAITNEO,' BAB- , • /408,0Arili), ANIVBB, - BPC9NO, NOUN, ' &44, Gilding la platisig alllducto of O ILVE3 WILLIAM MILS 0/ to 'SMI, ' itiyg i cruiins opanysorbo„ ; MiSTABLIMIATI Mt) `„ ' .", „ nrrn Milan T - A li/to assortment of MIXER WARE„ or orory,dto, 'oorfption;ogoottotty 00 , 11,aullmqrada , !4 Orle!tir, trek , :: 11 trpct ri :atnedllekt• 411)d Sir tlitilghlia: l o4o4o4 vno. Kaskakry. IfiIRANCIS P. D I MOSQ & .L Dubotq, , thisrow EG Co., , Wholeule ,BIANIIPAO, T 113411118 Wt. iNWEL.RT,BOf, oanthruriarget, , Plna. "Axon DVECHKI, 8111 KINGSFORD &SON'S'PIIRE T tydWEGO BTAnCIT.Vor the latiisdryilme'estaW. Itched a greater celebritythatidiaa aver been obtained by any other Starch.- This has been the ?await of Itemarked superiority id (plattl, and its invariable uniformity; • ' Tha public may be enured of the eonttenance of ,the high' Maude:id now eatablithed-; r ' The production la over 20 tona . ditly, eat the &intend 1169 eatendettliroughont the Irritate United Stater, OA • Working thus on a very large scale, and tinder irigid liffetem, they are able to secure a perfect uniformity In the quality throughout the year.thogreat do,' aderaturn in starch.inaldrig, and realized Pelff far the ttrnstbne. 4 .-.Thd pig iieit'StaTeit that can made; and 'is 'always wanted by consumers; and this will be stip. giet to there by the Chimera ateonn Its their customent ave litirned which is the beet, and ask for it.- , ottier.: , wise they Weald be likely to - got that allege - on which the largattprontraci be made. " '' • ~btrt Itingefordbaa been engaged lathe elaafaattire'or Starch contiuum , mlyfor the last 27 years, and, d using the whole of the' period the Starch made Under hit super vision has, beep, beYerel any questioZ,' the ;beet in the market. Frit the first 17 - years 'ha had Charge of the Works of Wm". Colgate& oo:'at which period vented the process of the Thainifeetrire of Corn Starch. m r ,krik. for KINGSFORD'S STARCH; as The name Oswego has recently been taken by norther factory:. ..lt Bold all the beet fencers to nearly ovary part •* of the country. - . „- T. KINGSFORD & SON'S OSWEGO _CORN STUCK (fer. KOKO, kc.), Ma obtained ate equal 'celebrity with shelf surd, for the laundry. " Thisiartiele featly pitrei and is, In every 'respect, erinalle - thebeet ,Becutudivarraer Fault, besides• having- additional qtudi: Iles, Which raider Itharaluable for the dessert. ' -fiotato ft** been,enteneively.packed and gold 1181 Con Stink endhae given false impreaolcids to many as to the reanierite of our, Corn Starch. • Prom GS great dellisq and purity; it he coming Eden Into general ties aa a diet for Infanteitivalide! ; • r .2;bIItMOGG. t. CO., Agente, -" — 4) . 35414 '• ' • , 290 FIEiLTON Street, 11:1r; QOll-Glltill t or oftitas g SUGAR-CANE 17 BSP-26 Wihetatavidifihy:- • - • .O.ROASDALB. PRUWE, k CO no 10411, Dt&ilare aretitiL 1.1 .ALE ROPE.—Buyera Ito invited to ea ,sap mad azolzd46 oar Msuth Bale/0114 wtOdfa wif tan ,teas sal es lorries Aturican, And russetis siiperior to ,0,044 . 04,44,011 '0:84A10gi;1it 0 ‘. • ial tio• 5a:N.:19067:0' t4abit-- - -tiOtAk . VA:C„))It, 4 - 11 - Slaking .Embossed rziating, %t o gw(pserlibututsteitniklel Ottairberry attaeseb. &mad mad. Thir4b , aaa , 1144,9pfstpat ormol: plabaitsittia. Fa. ' 11,12.11* TONS `47,' miTpITELL , & osom4 toes improio Nl* PROEM:Mg or ifirm,. tormmrpr: ordrr iar,zl moor& op 7 ',1 0 4.9 -tz , 14(004 ki".' pew* peottil 1 Afttiararnti g a—oo' b§tit siltot ciroistum—tur Q. t3E3t E ' on AECONI~ ixt4 !UR ID I' 7 r l, OOlO - 4te • ba hiteldta Koji hiVateit itteet. - C. 4T/Ofilto ll o7 ll # 419114#04113TXR, 60281 „v.-7.-2W,T",464:1,:1ip1i11dX0Vi.X.•••:(,g4-g1i.V.P.4,'.74..,--.3L,..;',....17.,, .t,1jt2i , ',.."Ati.. , .. , 4 ,9 40. -•,..- ,-•5,,1.--.-....,..,,,%; ~,.".„. „ ....,..L . ..,,,,,,,1 , ,,,,..,„, „ ,.„5 , ,,,..,,,,,,,,,,..„, 4 ~.., , 1 ,, 7 ,_ ..., _ . , ~, _ . . -,- „......,.....,......., . .. , $-.• , • T ' IA 4 41.A014 '_ il ' ... ' .I. . . . - -tt , * • , .;.1: , +1,. , T., , "•• 1\ I.! \ ‘ ‘ \lt li l . ',.:qt.€l' ,- • -,. -- -- ire' . , '1 . 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'• ":,:.*--•'' ''' - -T.--,----- . t , 1 - rot ~,.. • • ~ =, S-, a. ~. • . - - . _ ,--. -,---, , si z to ......4.1--- -- % ..-t ',,, L ,, - , 7 lir -,..-,i -•,•: ""'";17 . - - 4. - --=':-:•••!.:,••- , ...2.---•"."!!!!'„_,. =•:..---,- ...._- ~ . • .. et.' - • :41.4 ;. . . , - - ~"*"'",. 1 - ,-, ,` , ~,1,1•_, s ~; .3 ..,, - -,,f.: t..1Z1 -6 77: - ". ~.r.- -, _ - - ---- '--'' '`-----'-'" ( ,, . 1 ". ~ ..., ...: , , ':' ,' -.."' • ' ',", , ~" ', .j. *,. '.,. '.,.- ... ,-, '',„: •• ' .... , ;., • .4' -,..—..- ." :. . . . , - '•' ". :-, :; , ) :.• II 1,, 1:,...r.1%,.., ,r . .1,;. •,, t ,.. , - , ,,,, , , !, t , , ,, , ,,,, 3 ) 1 • • =cm= ,it z 3 •: , 1.`11 44. •=' • 4 ` •• = .!• 7 5.‘4, , :1 -t= Of; La: . ;- tw •1; ti•vv.) , * •• 4 1...; '•••• , .-`0 I , _;•• 0nr111 ,, 14 , -, - . cr.44.41,1'16-1-: , -c,-,4 .4r, -- __ 1 i•-•4=fAileallleila:ooo744ll;,l P1"ko - '1.1" "fditAVAYllkattr WU . I'Vt• 4 11 1 ' 01 7- lA;ft A44 s lll+ ol A 6 ite*WAoficiiiii - is ‘ Rlai4itit r c ZNIAMA%Ztii-Wilitrit l iS" i varatirtivaar . idisittitits vlik l yrer , 11:::::::Wit!igX 7 AtEhb ~,, Art Mew, : •OM e ;'MAT 4 THE T 4 THE LW iMiitili Mi,Ottiß 4 00,, tierttatore ex: 07,14,Wht colstet t tir4 l :4o,, ba d igerg iß in , m wt u alp b 0 osirles ink fort 6 poops° of 11-1 1 01661.04. — , e , iltdbil& •=‘ , -J‘ id ' ,1,13 ii) i4'e 001t11100 $ 4t 1. ' t ? •, x 0 ~e-rv - 4 , . , 40, 4 4 ( "7, x , ~.110414)..'....,'h...31:441. VOlt'SfilitiVENVik..4ii -C4f fzi , .._ . ' .1 4,i- V r4t 4,4' k VAZEP,4 I 4-1 1 ,4k 1 Gliry ,-. 4`f aa 1-' . .:,'{- , i 411,000Odidili015114011111W % 4 honlica,* ' l x it .....,, :`r l ;l, ,,s ' Z' -.--kiptivigrotoßoobo ---" "- ' , VotifinntelD:P 44 '-'-'"--''-',' i tfubleot to•Donfogratialiales. -147 at ~te-ni:443m0t....:. .TR°Y'nniumy. ,_SEIKLICATIN%-THE :School ,YesaylosialatiagoritWo , Tasms, 11 , 111 gout. ZO ND , WYMNliraltat of itoptetabot i , 2 1 1 P otteZttrinillelliviedior Otatiiie ' • • • !Wilma,' Olio, Troy/orate fletoltutri—Tuition fiat. Willterl_flrocloPionottil Onctornber 101 k. • ' a or arc,A baud, facluciini ell lug ' Area withittaaoli Retook twat, wanhing,•• - light; "efal.fAii /2261petrasintini.. addliloaal 'clmp is mule for._masto Amid .the, other ,oluatueotal 'ltianofies of - female iiadeatioti:AThere a &tad 'Pain preferfesii• MO • 111111i131 (oat-half letyahlo at the , eoworiepeoment of esoactorm) will Do receive:44l,4d for ' lt the entitled to all the itilvantagee of the twetl- f, Pupil% maY enter att any period- of the terutvead ore ttokurfalortr only fro:etie time at entrance.. , , 'rho Institution, furaishei pOsitble facilities for thormsgh , rmentsd'ornitsful Ida ornamental education. The Prinalpals are araisted by,more _than; twenty Pro fessors anti Tiashers. fixtetediecourabiet T4Stoies arstYannually delivered by'Crofewomt on Chemistry, biatemaPbildiophy, Geolo mliotamy, Astnmomr, end ilocution..„ - . Thin Institution isiartilshed,with . . salvable Library nig 'ngtoiiiive Philosophic il - APpanktall %veil-selected cabinstl ofildlnarals...and. ame,liaps, , charta, - Globes' and Models. - Cier ' y hoilltyle,akoreted j toi' : ihe'',iteine - figh'stay of thelfrencklangitage.. 7 The lkentlitoachercrostda. Ahttrealltirt A4ol4 l 4, l raTi4eln Pr mate the lahanage' fit conserpition. airkided to piing lades ;wire Oardoratisfsetokleessurdnatione htthe Toll Oodiso !of i m a n i= l : 4 l4 . l4 . T w r i ltarT t it i tr 4704! h b e i= plated the partial course. -The Papilirare received into the family of the "rind. pals, In -which every arrangement is made for their physical edaeation, and the improreinent of their man- , ners and morals. The becupy private rooms, - two In g edeantaget of this Institution are the result of the accommodated facaities of more than thirty years alto onward progress. °Oculars containing more particular Information may be obtained by application to the Principals, J otta - 14 Willard and harsh L. Willard, Troy, N. Y. • The torn for day, salmis= are $4 per quarter for the introductory class of English etedies. These are Read ing, Writing, Spelling, Grammar, Arithmetic, andl menteof Geography, Geography - for beginners, and Geology for beginners.' , For the sewed class VT per quarter. This includes all the branches conatitutiarthe extensive course of Hug. Ash studios. TRUSTEES. BENJAMIN 'MARSHALL, President. Jona II: - .WiLLano, fiecretary.'• • • Mayor and Recorder of Troy; ex.olicio. Benjamin MarebaU, John D. Willard, Robert D. Thomas W. Blateliford, JoreusA.Heartt, . Riles ,Jan Van Solitonhovon,Jonathan Edwards, Q. B. Warren, Thomas Clthree," John A; Grimiold, • John Gilbert.; 44ll °c29 ,- • Hmir.'or St -. :TAXES LESS, PHILADBLPHIA. • - • • • A 1!A241.1i1t ROAMING A0E001,104 )% 301 11. A. tArrons, Rigurom - The Animal &talon *l4 begiteon TUABDAT,' Sep. tember - Obindarii to be '64lged at the jobb Store of A. RIVIERA, R. w: esprilbi MUM anp 01.1MTNIIT,or tbur Rigotar; Yoga , Ofilee;Yallit or SoLvilkill, 40104, , sulf4m N OTHING SO NEEDFUL; TO ENABLE persons, male, and female, to gain a shays of this Irorldill Irma and comforts ea a - ,BI7BINEBB 11DBOATION, , LUDT BROTIMBiIi arsons AQADBMT, Noe. le and led BIRTH ittreet, near RAGS, will reopen on NoliDni &BPTEMIIkJ Ist, for fall and winter Rtuilea, embracing a knowledge of _ WRITING, BOWL-JUMPING AND AItITHSfXTIO by simplified methods, las short time . THWLEIDVW take pie/mire saying, that during the prist year a large number of persons acquired a DUMAN BDITOATION,enebIing many to secure pro. Stable Situations, and others to prosecute their boldness operations surnessfally, _ au22l-ilm. VRITTENDEN"f PHILADELPHIA. COM- ItEECTAL COLLEGE, 8, E. corner of SEVENTE sud CLIESTNET Streets, Second and Third StOriee. HOOK-PEEPING, PENtIANSIIIP, eve* , style. COEURBOIAI, LAWS AND POEMS. : - _.OOLEOTLIW EEROOt EIi, ILL CALOGLATIONS. , Each Student hag Individual instruction from mope tent, and attentive Teaehers, under the imMediate supervision of tho Princlpd 110" Of the Bost Peinnen in the Clonntiy hta Wargo of As Writing Department. - Please call!sa ate apecdAiens and get s Catalogue of Tergui, &ea - ocSy ---- .11011040F,EStOR BAIJNE.NRS' INSTYrIITE, Jd• WZST No fleminary whatever, is more like a private family. The course of study le extensive and thorough. Pro• fakeer flounders will receive a few mare pupils under ,fourteen years of age'. into - family. Imlafre of kimono; J.sl. *River and Mathew Newkirk, or Col. J. 19. 'Porney,editor of this Piper, whose iron( or wards are now members of his family. sePtl4-tf At. Dam; 00T$ AND; SnOES.-=-Tim subscriber `has on hand s lirga'and sailed atdck of BOOTS sad 8110L8 wbt hbe M fl sall:si the lowest pikes. GEO. W. TAYLOR, nonly 8. E. comer PLlall sod MARXEM VALIOSTOOIt:OF BOUTS AND SHOES. -701311P1111 . - TBOAIPSON a 00, No MAR JEST StrootisTA‘ Nos. 8 toad 6 FRANKLIN PLAOR, zow otore , A tarp vell-tuseorted stock of BOOTS Pod IMES, of City sod.Raatero lasonfoctare, which they °Or for yds on the beet terms for Cosh, of okttko mut afedtt. —• , , Doyen me invltod to oall owl examin e their stook. sol-dtl cc A BIERICAN ELOqUENCE," JUST PIIBLL3.IISED IN 2 , VOLS. Bvo. with 14 Portraits- cloth orahiets, $5,• sheep, se; half morocco, $7 j ,tained from TAN, Sole Agents, at the Arcade Hotel, - "- , OH.P.SPHIPP Street, Philadelphia. Sent to any address free of postage. - = Proofs. of the Portrait Illustrations may be had sena. lately. for $3.50, comprising ;--Otta, Henry, Ames Hamilton, Adams, Norris, Nmrnetti . idarabell Pink nog, Ranolph, Clay, litebstei, Calhoun, end Rayne. , n021.1t D. ii.PPLE , ToN & CO., New York. Notice 'to Zottsiontes. TICEYIO CONSIGNEES. - The shIi,PIIILADELP.III.A; from IdrelToolui , disaarging under general order, at, tifllEntli STREILT WIDLEIN. ekt ne firnees wilt plate Attend to receipt of thin. goods. ann. TIIOII. RICIIARDSON & CO. IVO - TICE TO CONSIGNEES..;--The ship A. It PHILADELPHIA, Captain Pool, from Liverpool, is now rawly to discharge at Shippen street wnsrf: Con— ognesa will plow dollyer.their permits to the Custom house *facer on *bard: goods not permited hi five dirtwitt be sent *public store. vo nt ..THOMAS RICHARDSON & CO. • .• /HOVER SEED.—NOTIOR TO PENN. avvvotkvatustus ANDSTOIPIIRUPPiIifi. ; t; Tp e nadeirlipied are now prepared to perchame for Usk prime Motet Beed.of the new crop. Pennsylvania storekeepers and fandere v by 'ending samples to our address, can, at all thee!) leteertai4 04 Price at which were baying. Parties wishing simples t by which to 41 1 HIPIrtfthrd as to qua t ltty t tiut have them sent by men, !It Asa wilhg iis. ' 'J ,011.011 & ,00, 48 ;forth !font, and 44 Prater Arcata CIA' tiOIPtLSSIONERS' 'OFFICE. , , • '--, - •,.„` ~ . ,Pluatuu.,l9lc.A, ttovti, tuber 18,18 , 5 4. 1.. : ;; Patiltbkiil iiiit *Ns' ap4ot ibis DellutvEne_ t ; Lit . es* S i t 4, l k) 4 !Mol ,l ore ° l9l l , ' E 'r PI " 9 , ii*JM:ll,, '''' TAXIS X 141DDY, di, l',;(nn.milisionarl • '' ":5 '' /AIM leap', i Boots attb 53.40e5. Vubltratiotto ~.~~ „ • ,„''A' - ":' - ',.;:•li,!--ri,•-:'';'; - - ~,,--;,. YrEPY.PrvAt,,#,frittawit, 2p, 1887:, oAsn VERSUS cf,a - ttaurir.tt...' • ~ ' .Th0'„.7.3 , 04 46,..the - 'ConetiMent'Cortes of ',,Siiiii drove 'Mtn exile Queen Onararma, ex- R °got and lue Met' of :th ‘ o reigidiag S cpi OM& . ThiishiOeffid have Aare°, perhaps but 'they alse,stopped her pension , and confiscated her innuetstS, property, on the plea that 'sive' hadl ! swindled the, ptiblie,eUt of vast limns, bidween i 1883 and 1844. The ()barge was a curious one,' I and rah -in' tifer follpiiltis effects that, Queen Miura ' Criazsrura nn BOunnow, widow of r 2 RD*OD,', and, Sy his Will, Regent of Spain during;the Minority ,of 'her, Adak:, daughter, the present Queemltegnant, had contracted a inartafge*lth llfiwniz; n sergeaht in the Guards, &It sines blevatii(l,±4 : the ,ifiy,high4Pt rank In the, Spanish peerage, and now called Dom Au ' Otisfor Yi:nteanno IdniMe It' Safiditzz, Duke Ms, Rbitizenis i ,that.-such:.a marriage took Place in.lBBB,lmmedlately , after the.death of r*,,, T imr;yll;;`, - ,4lllit, t ,pitoti Mintage, her. guardianship over her daughtte(hecatne.null. r d444 , o4 , o , iiicporeof:ttkfioy , 4. [ -7-60,150141-44',444 .6.ilu4ploi. lotinhoive enif . , , datiblbruf; of -theairge, ,43 i ,ll ,"'"iti ( t°i 4 l l -d9 ' toArd'i'4 ll P. q't 4 4/:ii ) of, i ikli`t pf.dhe tie glen( Of. Spitim., i - (10 thing; :hi this irate; which4penis tolui assumed `by UCcaseis and. kotr'ilinied by berself,43:that, within a month after her hue hand's "(kith, Queen 'CitnISTMA formed Intl- Mate: reiatiiina; With .linnoz;:svhich, If she 'was pot alluded:to idim.would-have been highly , improper. , Several childrenwere born to the partieehetWeen'lBBB and 1844., ;Tide lenoto item'. ,- Therefore-the Cronindssion or the Con.' stltne e Co nes'as u m id; (witi w ha t , (vo n ld have been great delicacy, if money were . not ue z the bottom Of it) that Queen CHRISTINA must hive been, and was, married to Mum; Imitttibilk :biono efter alio:. become 'a widow, ;though she concealed the,fact, on account of .the , high Rublie; funetione,ime then had to ;(*ictiPes4ICROPO , Regent '; , The Commission were- much more careful ', P.: l ;l : tip",,llarneter Y of',QUeee 'Cuicreithathe ..herehte of the Safe story—than even he:itself. .For she denies having been married to Munoz earlier thanlB44, and the Cardinal Archbishop of Toledo, Priinate of Spain, testified that Ile 'mos and herself appeared before him,' on Coto 'her 1?. 4 1844' whaii`a having reeelvedthe de ; elevation of freedom from engagement; and of 'Cbrunfist i'espectlng the information of wit,aess- i es ' , apdhaving dispensed with the' throe 'eanoni ' cal monitions," he celUbiated a marriage be tnien'thoni'and at the same Mine, having re ceived a: papei,signed by both, pritlea, giving ;in the names of their children born before the lnairiage,'“ copied'tlaeSe nausea in. spaCial re, esters, and deposited them in the privabear , chives of the , chapel." ' There is no doubt Olathe Cardinal-Archbishop made a, correct statement, and 'that Queen 'Camilla . did not Marry Metroz until 1844. It would hive been: very easy for pIiaISIINA to have whitewashed her somewhat ,soiled character by - acquiescing in the Commission's presumption that 'she , was 'really mairlid :to Mumma immediately after the, death of King Pam:mom—thereby giving legitimacy to the half a dozen 'children born to her between 1888', and 1844. .But, as that would involve the 'repayment of the large allowance She re ; eelicid,as Idegiiii( Of Spain ; and guardian of herAlaughtertfl4or, by FIRDINAND'S will, she ill:mite fife* all thesOltheticiruitivlienerer alio :Contracted a second rearritige-,rshe ,has-actu ally 'preferred to'be branded, before the World, to impUre, during a continuous period of eleven years. She thus escapes refunding Clemency , immunit- submitting itoilttLl , brand uffeli7heir 'elterftMer the - rn 'and ,humiliatierrwhicn - fifstaywiltiertainly preserve. When such a woman, the daughter and the widow of a King, thus openly avows het shame, what can be the standard of morality in Spain ? What wonder if even the reigning Sovereign, her daughter, is lightly spolcen of ? THE AMERICAN HORSES 'IN ENGLAND. A. short time ago we publisbed the result of the running fur the Cambridgeshire Stakes, at the Newmarket Houghton Meeting, on the 27th ult. We gave such details as we could find in the daily London papers. Wo have just received (by the City of Washington mail steamer) what may bo considered as the official account of the race, contained in Bell's Life in. Landon for November 1. • So much has been said touching the fortunes of the American horses, On the English turf, that wo aro persuaded that many of our readers will be gratified at receiving come authentic and cor reeled particulars which wore not given in the former rather hasty report. The Cambridgeshire Stakes, we may promise, wore won thus, in a single heat : Idr. T. Parr's Odd Trick, by Sleight of Rand, 3 yre, 7 et 4 lb, O. Fordham Lord J. Scott's 51cestieeima, 8 yre, 6 et. 5 lb, French Mr Jackson's Bsuuterer, 3 pre, 8 et. 12 lb, (In 3lb ex.) J. Osborne 3 The space ran over was the Cambridgeshire Course, of 1 mile 240 yards ; the race was ran in 2 minutes 10 seconds, 0 seconds more than in 1855 And 1858; there were 185 subscribers, of 25 eovereigoe each ; 88 of these paid £5 forfeit; and 81 horses (Inoludiug Mr. Ten Broeok's Prioress and Babylon) actually started. The nett value of the Stakes, as won, was 11,810. Tho running was made on Tuesday, Oct. 27. At Newmarket, on the previous Saturday, says Bell's Life, " seven to ono was the highest offer 'on the field, and Mmetissima had the decided cull of El Hakim; but neither was in particular de mand, the two animals in most force being Prior else and Tricolor, the former of whom was backed radar freely at eleven and ten to oar, whilst the latter, who had boon ' knocked out' by offers to bet cite thousand to ten against her the day be fere,,advaneed to fourteen to one (takers) on the strength of having ' cleaned oat' the whole of the Woodyat-es lot in the interim !" The odds were thirty-three to one against Odd Trick, and in the evening there was a "move" at tho city ren• dezvous about the American nags, which resulted In Prioress being sent bask to twenty-five to one, and Babylon becoming as good if not a better favorite than hie stable companion, but without the outlay of much money. Thin arose from two reports—one that Prioress bad been worsted hi:Babylon on a trial, and another that Prioress . had pulled itp lame the day before. That these reports were, not long credited was pretty evident front the eagerness with which the few bets that were Offered against Prioress were snapped pp in "well-informed quarters," which soon caused such a reaction Julies favor that during the 'short stoppage at the Harwich 'junction en route as little as ten to ono was taken about the mare, and ono thousand to thirty offered against Babylon. As a sequel to the mystery it was hinted that' a preconcerted "telegram" was forwarded from Newmarket to London on baturday afternoon, containing advice to "lay against Prioress and hack Babylon," and to that the movement was at tributed ; for (says Bell's Life,) on reaohing New market we were credibly informed there was no:roal cause for alarm to the Yankee maio's backers, and amongst the select circle at the subscription room in the evening she was quite as good a favorite as El Hakim. After the races, on Monday, Oot. 26, the betting altered. Odd Trick was in !thong demand at ono hundred to eight, white Prioress and Mcestistima went book a little, and ono thousand to ton, and one thousand to fifteen were offered against Saun terer. There were inquiries after Babylon, and one thousand to fifteen bet against him. On Tuesday, the day of the race, besides many of the; British nobility, there wore present a CODBI• derablo number of foreigners, including several leading members of the Prenoh Jockey Club, namely, the Duke de Pltejames, Count F. do Lai Grange, Viscount Lauriston, Monsieur Robot, and I °there. In the betting on the field, the French mare (Mademoiselle do Chantilly) and T r i co l or were in strong force, and both gave hicestissima the go-bye, although the latter loft off very firm, as ' did Odd Trick and Artillery, whilst 'Whistling Willie, after all Bora of prices, from ono thousand to ton downwards had been laid against him with in 'the !sat four 'and twenty hours, returned to his 'old price of twenty to one. Prioress had few supporters at last when it transpired that m r , Ten - Breed's own boy, (Tanksley,) who rode her , in' the Cesaretoitrh, was "up," vice Ford/taut, eta:ivied for Odd - Trick. • Tho - impression, no doobt, was , that' eh' American jockey, ignorant of the ground, had less chance than ,an English ono, familiar with every yard of it. 'Aftor,ropeated efforts to start, the cattle went of! , , Whereitione of the favorites were anxiously inquired atter, bat gi Hakim ) MOW, TritA9rt .fTVp.INT:SOO, NOVEMBER 25, 1857. and Prioress:were, out et the fightileihre reto*lNS. - thirDatic't stand:l - , At :that pains- thso-Pronts . ank-• co m prised 10114 dp,c4aatillr,*th' Saintereilit• her ,quailoia - ,t!in • pia lower l 'ground,' jgrd4n:thit, - . Iland,Miestsattaa,,and• Odd Trick', eaob looked sulliciontly formidable to win:rant thisahotitis raj dead in their behalf, the btiole-mritertiln - rirthiniii mgaiding thejaha of the itroinninntsidenil-4fre in-the Aland and the,:blaok' with' interest:' In o few stratisiurther Hand's flight was over, iittd:thebopearei'i4rlh4lis Frattce .brng ,extinguiebeci :before,:,rettaliticfetb4' cords, tho'home was left` Oda !VII*. fittlintehet,,' and Zestisalot, but was rio longer doebbrals soli Fordham,l who , bad been' hitt horse some. time previously,. "sending him : Out,' l landed Qac Tria gallant wihner by two 'lengths, 4tellieef-' 2 ma beating Saunterer for the socond inene'y nook. Neither Prioress nor Babylon ever, showed: in the race; nor-did El Hakim and . Querat ran the; dead bent, With :rric:lol,3 l ; Cesaretrilob,` prove formidabfe;`-,ii,ilthirit* homes in the "long rato".,havo hithert47.oo, 'The betting at starting t was. seven to ofiriaglOPJV El I.laltlea; Min to One itgaina4aaini6lol44tt.' Chantilly', nine to-ono against 'X'AVeler;,tinlVafuti against Mcestiesima, one - hopdrelf*eight koffttliti Prioress, one hundred tci - eighP;OgAinet ono Inn tired:62) ",agbOtittnei at Lupo," oh. , bluk died to ski against :Fright; tilt'' {o oho .agahhit i , I Whistling Willie; thirty, to ..i)ne stgain'et'lgoietWin, Dobler, thirty•threo toono against Cyrano, thirtpil ;thied tn. one 'against , Qithenqlttra(ll4rlVbetivlw lone against the Plush iltestrol l one theeiaitillOietaitoW6Miebn; and ono 4mitaaridl6 ton ngainst4elgt,4la...,.,.A.A air, Pitir,.(Atner at, 64(11r,ik:113.0,012-44AtitalYi .ning"evation'i. upon trot repotitionc!..jitelatitypat't+ triumph; and.tliti ,eorpilmonti-lpithrAllitOmigt mentittid skill deservedlyM4ribidly, tlllcalott .tidonoi , lhe6Potily.expxaksoll in 00 riitylt,:,eyen fore. !y..111 run tol,4l4:oVAllOnelldi* which Odd.Trichothossiercely , turued a tair,Mlo 4 l 'brought to the post. Mr. P. a wlnniegs.are-iet ported to be litho short of £20,000, and' his- twit dential commissioner, and one: or two Odom, !dt 'oludinc Mr.' Bates, Miro* in for• good staking, I Most of tho gentlemen ,won upon thelaim=it-was their turn—and the result will of course itriakeat oonsiderable bole in the Doncaster slut Cesare' l'.witottsainnings Of. thohook-makers . The three last on the race were Prioress, Whist* ling Willio, , and , Babylon. Prioress, - as, winner - of ' the Oosarewitoh,' carried seven pounds s.eatrit ..weight—making seven stone in all. • „ COMMUNICATIONS., [roe 'Po Press 3" - ' ' ' - having' observed by an extract-ln Abe New York dot rna/ of Commerce„ fit& Pitts burgh Gazetto l Tau • Passe, and subsequently. the-Union and Patriot, a notice of an import ant financial proposition, which seem''' told.- tract piddle attention at this time, and vita*, if carried into practical operation, it is 'he- Hayed. by many would afford . safety, great relief to the people, and, in a commercial point of view, be incalculably beneficial—the fact that the authorship of the measure seCias-to be disputed requires me to ask the favor'of you to insert this communication and the' ori ginal project in your valuable and widely cir ciliated paper. I. do this, as a duty due to justice, and to the gentleman who was the real author. On the last day of the extra session,Gen eral W., a citizen of Ilanisbnrg, called me at my seat in the Sonato Chamber, with. the manuscript, requested me to End it, and .if' I approved it, to - have it presented, simply for the purpole of bringing the matter, to the no. tiro of the people. I readily acceded to his desire, and accordingly on the 13th of-Goto: her, 1867, did so.- At • the time- of presents ' tion, I stated in substance : w That at' tho request of a distinguished gentleman, would, with the consent of the Senate, read and present to the . Senate, the Preamble and resolutions refored.fo. That I took occasion to say that I could not _At the time (having had•no time •to reflect upon its importance):endorile hilly' the principles indi cated in them;'but Presented theM hemmed* the 'very distinguished source . from 'whence They =eluded:" Leave teas` grantedi:4o;aliti, was a motion to lay on the table and The foregoing is a true and unvarnished statement of facts connected with the history of a measure that seems to have obtained many friends, and to my mind justly * ' Very truly, your obedient servant, 0. M. STRAND, COPY OrTnr, ORIGINAL In times of great commercial and monetary *risco, and at the present time espeoially, all the usual places for the safe-keeping of money, not in the custody of its owners, aro deemed to be, if they be not in reality, untrustworthy' and as the retention generally of money in private deposi tories induces temptation to larcenies and rob beries, or originates in the salads of its owners and custodians the fear of each crimes; it is, therefore, greatly to be desired that such a place of deposit should be established by low as may, to some ex teat, remedy the evil : bo it, therefor*, Resolved hp the Senate and Rowe' of Repre sentatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylva nia in Genera/ Assembly suet, That the Senators of this State in the Congress of the United States be instructed, mid the Itepsesentativesof the same in the said Congress be requested, to advocate and procure, if practicable, the passage of a law of the following effect That there be established, at the Mint of the United States iu Philadelphia, an additional of f ice, to be called the Coin Office, in which the fiscal ex changes of the Mint at Philadelphia shall ho Unseated, and where depositors of the crude pre aim metals, or of bullion, or of coin of the United States, shall receive certificates of said deposits in sums of five dollars, and multiples of the said sum by convenient gradations, up to the sum of ten dollars; all sums not coming within this pur view to be paid or received in coin. Those certifi cates to be payable at the said office on demand, always in the coin of the United States, The duties of the officers of the coin office to bo confined exclusively within the objects of the law; for the faithful discharge of which, security shall be required, and a transcending or culpable failure in, or default or perversion of, the same to be ac counted a felony, punishable by imprisonment in a manner like that provided for in the act es tablishing the Independent Treasury of the United States: CITY AND COUNTRY BANK NOTES For The Preei.l Why do the Philadelphia banks, the Third street note-shavers, and your city money edi tors, unite in crying down, and discrediting Pennsylvania country bank notes? If you did not have country currency you would not have any. Why? Because the city banks notes were nearly all run in upon them when they suspended, and they have taken good care not to let them out again. But why not lake and pay out—lean out— the country notes, particularly when they will not pay out their own 1 Aro they afraid to keep them over night In their vaults 1 If they arc, it is a guilty fear, that is calculated to make the country banks be very chary about trusting their specie, by the million, in the bands of city bankers, to be paid out in case of trouble, as was done by the Bank of Penn sylvania, and no doubt some of the others. Ought not the city banks to have as much confidence In the country banks as the latter have had in the former? It is a bad rule that will not work both ways. For the last seven years the city banks have had a monopoly of country bank specie ; an addition of about a million to their capital, that was banked upon, the saute as deposits; and now cannot they trust the country banks four short months? Are the country banks not safe ? Are the city banks safe ? What constitutes safety in a bank 7 Specie and other available assets. Well, the city banks paid out all their specie, and part of the specie of the country banks that ought to have been held sacred, during the run upon them. The country banks saved ' their specie. Then, as to the other assets, what are they? Mainly bills receivable. And whose bills re ceivable are the safest? Where have all the failures and suspensions taken place? Why, unfortunately for the city banks, they have nearly all taken place in Philadelphia. The gilt-edged suspended paper of the commission merchants, the heavy manufacturers, and the extensive Jobbers, fill the banks' portfolios to the tuna of millions, and front twelve to forty eight months is the lime that the banks arc obliged to carry HI What country bank is saddled with such an incubus? None, unless it went out of its legitimate sphere—refludng loans to its own customers to buy this fancy paper, at usurious rates; and if there are any such, they ought to be wound up by the strong hand of the law. There aro scarcely any failures or suspen sions in the country, and you may rest assured that the old banks in the interior of Pennsyl vania, that were in good credit in August last, aro as safe as the city banks, and I contend safer, because their bills receivable aro of a bettor character. And why are they of a better character 7 Because either the drawer or endorser of almost every note is an owner of real estate or an owner of valuable real property, that not affected much by mercan tile moistens, whilst the gilt-edged paper of the city banks has nothing to student it but goods in store, of a perishable character, notes in a portfolio that may or may not be paid, and ledger debits. Whilst the termer is almost invariably paid in fun. Tho latter aro apt to be compromised at fifty cents in the dollar. Bete, I think, I have given a reason why country bank-notes aro as safe as city; and inasmuch as the latter brought the suspension upon us, and then ran to the Governor in hot haste to get legislation, they would do well to carry out that legislation in good faith, and with a good grace, lest they get some less fa vorablq; , staqvaummi,, ArtiPPEAL FUR THE MANUFACTURERS `AND INDUSTRIAL CLASSES-C. 0. F. groi-the Prams.] . "Tag PRESS of the 4th inst. contained a let ter dated " Lebanon, October 26th," over the eligttattire of "C. B. F.," with the following caption : " An Appeal for a Protective Tariff." the ,vriter appears to iM sincere, and is some- Mt of a " thinker ;" but, unfortunately, Ike - too many others, does not think deep neth, merely glancing at the surface of mi. Re eloquently portrays the difficul th les and distress the manufacturers and work- I g-!lasses ate laboring under. In this he is, labs t, true to the letter. Every one knows it, I Overy ono sees it, and many thousands feel if ; Inittlio entirely errs in Milli Ming this distress, , or, ally portion of it, to the tariff of 1846. ;Why it is utterly ridiculous to suppose that a ;cornatision coining on us suddenly, like a clap of,tOunder—a thing not strange or new, but ,of 'rpeated occurrence in the last half con -114%, under all sorts of tariff's—the cause 4.41 a and palpable to every man of common r setitib---should be brought about by a law i ;.;tl cloven years since, and under which we t,prospared until a few weeks back. Were l • t for the apparent sincerity and good in *ltElons of "C. 13. F.,"' I should think he stti,7:quizcing your readers, or was no good 'al laetr in attempting to raise a false issue, and tlistartiug the attention of the people from ittiti -tfue cause of. our misfortunes, and the `l9, 0,0 against: them ;in -future—a thorough ,antElffoctual reform in, our banking and cur rilysttni, to which, happily, all eyes seem Wen' 'Pected, not, excepting the innocent ;140c13holders of the; banks who have sunk a Jats33 lainount Of their capital, and, in sonic etitruitsiej - the whole of it. niteletter in question contains so many of t.itsiirallacious views of the day, prevailing in ;047 direction, that I propose, in a few short , 0 •148.4; to notice 801110 of them and to make an ,al; not for -a "protective tariff" but for ; umufacturers, operatives, and all tho in i ur 9 63 iPes,whese interests and welfare arc rm Id, tight for in a very different direction. ,I'dnint. - profess to bo much of a political economist, and only bring to my aid the plain "Cohinion-sense of an ordinary business man ac coition:led to do his own thinking. 'The 'Brat of "V. B. F.'s" fallacies that I , Shalt notice, and which is the " burden of his ,song,"ls the silly and ridiculous "scare crow" of-which wo hear so much, "balance of trade." - He says: "During the last eleven years, from . A 846.10 1856, inclusive, we havo bought foreign wares and merchandise to the amount of 82,2 44 ,527,061, and in the same period we Itave, Sold to other nations breadstuffs and 'other productions to the amount of $2,029,- - 172,496 7 4eaving a balance against us, taking 1 tbo' Woven years together, of $222,854,165." Oh' Mise statistics he bases a long argument , Ito show the suffering stato of our country— jhafit has been impoverished to the extent of ; this balance—that it Is the cause of our present diftlanltles, and on the strength of it, utters a truism :that no one 'doubts, viz: "Nations and- 13tdirkluais, to be prosperous, must live Wain. Asir income," taking it /or granted that he has proved by the above figures, that we, as a nation, have not lived within our income. le has taken the eleven years SpeCeedhig the tariff or 1846, and claims that this "balance of trade" is an effect of that tariff, (if so, a strong argument in its favor, as I , show directly;) but this does not look like fairnosa, to say the least of it, in " C. B. F.," fOk the reason that the very table or statement of the Secretary of the Treasury from which he takes his statistics commences in the year 1821; add shows the same proportionate bal. aneOliMng the twenty-ffvo years previous to 18.46;anil the footings of the table show the excess pf imports over exports from 1821 to 18514nolusive, to be $684,418,505. To any Ope- Ikequaintod with the subject, it is mille nnia/4y to 'say that the figures produced by "C. B. F." prove exactly the reverse of what he claims for them, and that this "balance of trade," - instead of being an evidence of loss, is a elear_evidence of gain. , Not}.ao not intend to go into a long ar ray of figures and statistics, but appeal to the common sense of any man, and ask him, if ho otter knew' or heard of, on God's earth, since the world began, of any country or nation that has grown, in all the elements of wealth anti greatness, to the extent that we have, with this "balance ,of trade," , uniformly against us. From the Organization of the Government in 1790, to the present hour, where can vaa_atsa auji e_vAnutsqrse - mM c „ a, and States that bare Vora carairound us—the forests redeemed, apd the lauds brought into cultivation—the in numerable manufactories and mines in suc cessful operation—the thousands of miles or railroads and canals that have been created, and all within the period above referred to, with this "balance of trade" always against us t Why, the Hinglv State of Galifornia, the ac quisition and Creation of the eleven years re ferred to by C. B. F., is worth more than sat ticlent to cover the two hundred and twenty two millions of his "balance of trade." I might rest the argument here; but to make the subject plain, and to show the real cause and effect of this 'balance of trade," the modus optimal by which it is brought about, I will giro a simple illustration, that « C. 8.F." or no one else can fail to understand, and can then judge whether it is for good or evil. A merchant ships to a foreign port—litteana, for instance—one thousand barrels of flour, costing here sti per barrel; it is entered at the custom house 115 an export of $6,000. Sup pose it to be sold at Havana for $8 tho hat rel— sB,ooo, clear of costs and charges. Suppose, further, that this sum Ito invested in sugar and shipped to this port; it will, of course, be en tered at the custom house as an impua of $B,OOO. Item, then, is u case where, accord ing to the custom house returns, the import exceeds the export $2,000; yet the merchant, part and parcel of us, has gained that amount by the operation, and we lino received $B,OOO worth of sugar labor for $ll,OOO worth of finite labor, and are benefited to that extent. To still further simplify and illustrate the au oct, sup pose " C. B. F." (hailing liven an iron district, he may perhaps ho interested in that article) has in Lebanon 100 tons of pig iron costing and valued there at $2O per ton—s2,ooo; he sends it to his agent in this city, invoiced and charged at that price; it is therefore an export from Lebanon of $2,000; supposo his agent sells it at $24 per ton, or $2,400, and invests the proceeds in sugar, coffee, dry-goods, and other merchan dise, which ho forwards to Lebanon. There, then, is an export from the town of Lebanon of $2,000, and an import into it of $2,100. 8.F," a citizen of Lebanon, is $lOO tither than ho was, and the whole community is bene fited, for it has received $2,100 worth of mer chandise for $2,000 worth of its labor. But au cording to the theory of "C. 11. F.," and those who think with him, the town of Leba non must be in a woeful condition, for its im ports exceed its exports, and tho c , balance of trade" is $4OO against it. Now, reverse the order of things. Suppose the agent in this city should sell the iron of "C. 11. F." for only $lO per ton—sl,ooo—and invest that amount in merchandise, sending it to Lebanon. In that case, C. B. F" would lose $lOO ; the town of Lebanon would lose, and be so much poorer. But, says Mr. "C. B. F.," Lebanon is in a glorious condition, its exports CATeed its imports, and the "balance of trade" is $4OO in its favor. I shall pay my compliments to "C. B. F." again. V. ASTRONOMICAL OBSINIVATIONS for The Press.] The past periodical return of the August shower of stare (Aug. 10) way studied by enter of 141. Ls YXRRIER, from Paris and Orleans, by simultaneous observations, to ascertain their actual distance from the earth, by calculating the angles at which they appeared to the two observers. lint, out of about 60 seen, Mr. .T.Los, who discussed the results, could be cm lain of only SIX being the same stars seen by both. These six stars, at the moment of appearing and of disappearing, were calcu lated to be distant front the earth as follows No.l, 31,000-11,000 metres 23-7 milts. No. 2, 38,000-25,000 21-17 '• No 3 , 31,000-21,000 • u = 20-14 " No. 4, 37,000 5,000 No. 5, 83,009---13,00 No. 6,110,000-60,000 " and their rapidity, as 14, 14,16, 17, 55, and 75 miles per second, which siren's the curious coincidence, (for in the very imperfect state of our knowledge about these mysterious visitants this fact is little mom) that the highest were the swiftest. M. Le Verrier pro poses to take Paris, liamhouillet, and Melon, this year, as observing stations, likely to yield more satisfactory results. In 1839, Do Vico, at Rome, and Nobile, at Naples, made simultaneous oh:tomtit/11S of this sort in the nights of We 233, 21111, 25th, and 31st of August, and saw the same meteor 31 times, and so exact were the results that they served as well as the best ordinary methods for correcting tim difference of longitude of those places, 43 leagues apart, while Paris is only 28 leagues from Orleans. The three places now chosen by M. Lo Yerrier are 11 and 12 miles distant. Nulty Brantner, an old widow lady, aged about eighty years, residing about four miles south of 13eonabore', did., was found dead! a her bed en Sunday morning, by a little hey residing in the neighborhood. Deceased had been living "solitary and. Mono" for the last thirty-flue years, and. possessed considerable estate. Sperm oil is selling at Now Bedford, Massa• olutaatta, at one dollar par gallon, THE CURRENCY. (For Tho Prof.) Currency platforms are the order of the day. 'We find them in every newspaper. It is as it should be, for it is only in this manner, and at such times, that a private"sovereign" can do something for the benefit of the institutions which are to protect his earnings, if good, or to ruin hint if otherwise. At the time of the last tariff revision I heard numerous pre dictions, in private, that the alterations actual. ly adopted would produce the result which has ensued. Perhaps a little more effort in public would have prevented them, and thereby either staved off the crash or mitigated its in tensity, or done both. Partly to economise your space, and partly because suggestions which ask for the support of public opinion must be so plain and simple as to speak for themselves, I shall lay down my platform very dogmatically I.N renewal of the existingbank charters when their present terms expire. 2. No more bank charters. An amendment to the Constitution to prohibit them. The Independent Treasury system intro duced into the State Government. 4. Repeal of the 7th section of the act of March 22, 1817, Purdon, page 77, sec. 98, which declares that co no incorporated body, partnership, or private 'individual, "other than such as have been expressly incorporated fos the banking, shall Issue or circulate any pro missory note, ticket, or engagement in the nature of a bank note, other than those issued by banks expressly established, on penalty of VA to be recovered by a common informer." It is clear that the curious enactment last cited, which is peculiar to this country, is at once the foundation of our present curreney system and the source of the peculiar charac ter of the present trouble. It erects monop oly into a principle, on the reasoning usually adduced for doing so. It is heterogeneous to all the rest of our institutions, and of a char. actor with the governmental principles in vogue in continental Europe; yet it exists hero, while continental Europe has got on remark ably well without it. It feeds monopoly; and thereby creates artificial credit, the great characteristic of all vicious financial legisla tion. 'We have found self-government to answer most admirably in everything else ; we have found governmental interference to damage us in all things, money matters especi— ally. Why not try self-government in money matters 1 ONE 11UNDRED LIVES LOST! Fleet of Steamers Blown Aground... Details of the Cataract nod /Bonongultela Belle Explo sion. From the Cincinnati Commercial, 231 teat ) Our special correspondent telegraphs us from Louisville, on Saturday night', that the steamer Republic, Captain Stewart, had arrived from St. Louis. She reports that sixteen coal boats (the same that descended the Falls last week for tho Memphis and New Orleans markets) were sunk during the storm early on Wednesday morning, in the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, in sight of Cairo. The weather being exceedingly cold, night dark, and the river unusually rough, only twenty of the men were saved. It is supposed that at least one hundred 711011 were drowned. The steamer High flyer, Captain T. T. Wright, reports encountering the storm in the Mississippi river, between Rick man end New Madrid. She passed three other sunken canal boats near Hickman. The steamer 11. D. Newcomb reports six boats as the number lost at that point. She passed up after the High flyer. As near as we can learn twenty beats were lest, containing three hundred thousand bushels of coal, worth at least $30.000. The less of life is deplora ble, and will bring sorrow and distress to numerous families. Tho crews were principally from Pitts burgh and LOlliff We, and the vicinity of the Palls. Pilot C. It. McFall, of tho steamer Gladiator, roports sovorAl other hoots swamped and sunk as low down AsNow Madrid. Tho Lady l'iko, on her upward trip on Friday, passed a small Big Sandy coal boat, containing 0,000 bushels, sunk on the Kentucky shore, a short distance above Carrollton. There wore two boats lashed together—ono saved. Passengers who arrived on the Diamond from Evansville report the storm along the lower Ohio perfectly terrific. No boat was able to run, and all had to tie up. One of the pair of Hyatt Co.'s monster cool boats, from Louisville, with 20,000 bushels of coal, was sunk, the crew barely escap ing with their lives. She was out loose from the other boat, which it was thought would be saved. A number of the crow of the lost boat wore on the Diamond. These mon report that a pair of I)( !! 'ts T l . t ."l l .2iN 1. ? ' T " C - Z 76 . 0 F The St. Louis Democrat of Friday contains the folloaing account: bra ~nee w rocora a distressing accident to tho Lightning Line Packet Cataract, Capt. O'Neil, which resulted in the loss of lire lives, and the scalding of fifteen more peraons. The disaster oc curred en the lith instant at Lisbon, a small place below Moscow, in the Missouri river. The only information we havo in relation to it 6 contained in the folio% ing telegraphic despatches, received in this city last evening. for which we are under obligations to Capt. L. Welton and Dir. C. W. Ford, of tiro 11. S. Express Co. 'lotion, Nov. 17. Corr. WEGTOV : BIIIIIIIIIItIreCOVOT, (WO MOTU r2g, lying nt Lisbon, F , calding, .natnely ; lYiiliam -Imo, Hartford, Conn., dead; Blackburn, Cars county. Mo.. dead; Barney Bailey, bar . keener, dead ; 31eboriald, express messenger, dead; Thos. little hilts, first clerk, slig,htly 5C3 Wed, not in danger; '3lr:target), second clerk, do; Thos. Hogan, St. Leak scalded; the boat's porter, and barber, r,olldetl; Leo Jones, second engineer, lost , live deck hands and fireman. names not known, t•oaltled ; IYoodbridge, Loring, and Modem . , slightly scalded. Will bring the wounded down on the first boat. .I.ks. Ca;dain. 800 vttaal, Mo., Nov. 20 —The steamer Ogle'- by pmactl here at fivo o'clock this evening, with tho wounded passengers of the Catarnet on board. bound to St Louis. Her ofliceri report that twelve of tho persons ecalded by the explosion are dead Governor Walker. of KAUBBS, and Colonel Cros man aro on the Ogle-try. It to reported that Stark Mao7ey,mentber of Ibn Logidature from Brunswick, was scalded to death on the Cataract. uETAtt..s Or THE nnoovnArtEl..l BELLE EVPI.OOIOO. A cot respondent of the Louisville Comic, giros the follou leg particulars of the disaster to the Monongahela Belle Mot au CITY, 11l , Nov. I t. Edanrs Lortisrillreourirr ----Our citizens were nqn,lnded this evening, by the iotelligenco that tho Monongahela Rolle, a smell otemobo.,t, run ning between Columbus and the Coal Mines, had blown up. Feeling sown anxiety to know the particulars in regard to the accident, we gained the follow ing: The Monongahola. Belle is owned by William A. Sno. Nelson, of Ifickutan, and rune between the 8 1, 000 points When at about noon of to-day, (Saturday,) ns she was ascending the river quiet ly, and dioregardloos of dangers, her starboard bailor exploded. blowing Soo. Nelson from the hur ricane deck down to the fore part of the lower deck, badly bruising nod enabling him. lie was struck just above the eye, by a piece of iron ket tle. from the cook-room, leaving an indelible im• preoSiOn. The cook wan 1,10)111 through the cook-room into the river, and was rescued from a watery grave by the life-boat. Two of the firemen (white men) wore so dread fully scalded and blackened that it was difficult for some time to determine whether they were block or white. W. Nelson, who was at the wheel, escaped an hurt. The 11. pollee which was near, promptly went to her aid, the officers rendering every as:istanco in their power to render their condition comfortable. Tho cook and firemen wore taken on board of the E. 11. Fairchild, lying at Columbus, and car ried on to the hospital at Paducah. Mr. Nelson returned to Hickman. The accident is supposed tahave been o,casioned by the water in the boilers getting too low. Tho hoe hooewlll be about two thou9a nd dollars, the fore cabin, pilot house, and chimneys leaving been blown away. The accident oecurrcel three miles from Colum bus, near the chalk banks. Charles R. Deming has been arrested at In dianapolis, Ind., charged with purloining money. letters from the post office. lie was in the employ of the Sintluel newspaper, and had a key to the Sentinel's lettet-box. Decoy letters were used to catch bins. Ile was arraigned before the United States Conimi,sioner at Indianapolis, and held in $3,000 bail for appearance before the United States circuit court, which not being given, he ss as placed in jail. Ile nos raised in Lafayette. and was thin son of a man of high character. For a time he was mail agent on the New Albany and Salem railroad. Companies C. and L, second regiment of United ♦;totes artillery, now stationed at Fort Snelling, have been ordered to take post at Forts Ripley and Ridgely, their presence at that post being no longer neceFsary. The Sioux tribe of Indians who inhabit that region of the country, and who have been in terror in Minnesota for years back, have nose revolved to live in peace and bury the hatchet. Tho headquarters of the second or• Tillery are establit,hed at Fort Hamilton, New York harbor, Lieutenant Colonel Diuderk in corn• mama, 7U-11 Thomas Allen, the engineer of the steam tug Noah P. Sprague, which was blown to atoms at Detroit, was picked up wounded after the ex plosion and sent to the hospital, where he died next day. Every soul (nine) who was on board the vessel is thus dead, for all the rest of the snow were killed at the instant of the akoident. A judgment of over $2OO was obtained in the Harrison circuit court on Friday last, against the Kentucky Central railroad, for killing two horses. A driver attempted to cross the road in Cynthia na, with his wagon, when, no signal being given, two of his horses wore killed. Capt. Walter Coles; for many years a Repre sentative in Congress from the Danville district. Ve., died at his residence in Pi ttsylvania county, on the 13th inst , after an illness of name four or live days. He was about sixty-eight years old, Mr. Alfred Randall, well known in former years as a hotel and restaurant keeper In Port and, Mo., committed suicide in that city on Fri day, by jumping from Voughen's bridge, Two slaves, convicted of an attempt to tour der Mr. William R. Brothers, in Nansemond 00,, Virginia, last May, were hang on !tidal bat, THE STORM. TWO CENTS. Raillgg of he Adria'le. [From the New 'Sark Daily Times of Tuesdayi The announcement that the Adriatic was posi tively to sail at noon, yesterday, drew thousands to the dock at the foot or Canal street, and out upon all the pier•heade along the North River to witness her departure. Au - hour before the time of departure arrived the sheds upon the dock, and all the available standing-room which would afford a view, were occupied by dense masses of people, who waited with great interest to see her off. There being a strong flood tide still running, and a gale blowing from the southward, three small tugs wore sent for to moist in canting her bow off shore, so that she could go out without striking the stern of the steamer Atlantic*, which lay at the head of the pier. When them toga were en gaged it was not known that the Webb would re turn from below in time to render the required assistanao ; she, however, did arrive by half-past eleven o'clock,, but the small boats were permitted to take the hawser, At precisely twelve o'clock the feats were cast off, and the toga attempted to swing her head clear of the dock. The tide and wind were so strong, however, they made but little impression, and it was evident they would have to call in the assistance of the Webb, which was lying at the pier above. Captain Hazzard was then hailed and requested to take the hawser. The next instant the Webb was in motion, and had passed half her length ahead of the steamer, when the order was suddenly countermanded, and the Adriatic started out of the dock ; before the Webb could reverse her motion the Adriatic's stern struck the Webb upon the port bow, making a slight indentation, also chipping a mail niece out of the Adriatic's stem. In swinging clear of the Wobb's flag-staff caught the end of the Adriatie's outrigger, arid broke it off. The mistake of at tempting to clear the dock with so little sheer was instantly apparent. As the tide took her bows, the tugs were utterly powerless, and she was •srrung heavily against the end of the pier, carry ing away some of 'the piles, and crashing in the side of one of her Francis' life boats against the projecting stern of the Atlantic. Three or four slats of the wheel-house were also broken in, and the corners of several floats of her wheels were broken- off. This was the principal damage done. W th some slight eoratehing of her paint sbe floated clear of the dock, and in ten or fifteen minutes more she we, headed for the Narrows. Cheer on cheer arose from the multi tudes, es the guns of the Adriatio announced her fairly under way upon her first voyage across the Atlantic. As she passed down ahe was saluted by several guns from each of the following steamers: Atlantic*, English steamer City of Glasgow, Her mann, Ericsson, City of Washington, (8r.,) Quaker City, Black Warrior, Philadelphia and Roanoke. The Cunard steamer Arabia bad all her flags fly ing, and when the Adriatic passed her dor& she fired a salute of nine guns, the Adriatic , gracefully dipped her ensign, and replied to each salute with her own guns. In the midst of this general de monstration of good will from all the steamers in the harbor, the omission of a salute Item the Ariel, Vanderbilt's steamer, was remarked. - • , She passed the flag-staff of the Battery at 12 o'clock and 33 minutes, and was just 40 minutes in going to Fort Hamilton, 9 miles, her engine mak ing but eleven turns per minute. The ensign upon Port Hamilton was dipped as she passed, and the civility was acknowledged on beard the Adriatio, by a similar movement of signals. After passing below the Narrows, the Webb ran ahead about two miles, when the Adriatic was oh-' served to slow her engines, and blow off steam, whereupon the Webb returned a short distance to Inquire the cause. On nearing the steamer, Capt. West informed the tug that the packing boxes around the pistons had become heated, and the en gine was slowed to allow them to cool. This caused about half an hour's detention, the steamer all the time going at II moderate rate. Before she reached the Southwest Spit, however, a full bead of steam was put on, and the Webb found it as much as she could do to keep company with her. In passing Sandy Hook she attained a speed of about fourteen miles an hour. The strong southerly gale against the ebb tide caused a heavy swell on the bar; but while every vessel In sight was plunging heavily, and the sea was washing across their decks, the Adriatic seemed not to be in the elightest degree affected by it. At 3 o'clock she stopped her wheels off the bar, and the yawl of the pilot-boat Elwood Walter ran alongside, and took out Mr. William Maxwell, her pilot, who came on board the Webb. The company assembled for ward and gave three hearty cheers, when. at 31 o'clock, the Adriatic started upon her first A Bantle voyage. Her first night at sea will he a dark and stormy one, affording a good opportunity to test the advantages of the calcium light. Mr. Yule, the secretary of the company, Mr. Collins's son, Mr. Craig, Mr. Livingston, John Dunham, Esq , and several other gentlemen, were on board the Webb. The Adriatic is advertised to sail from Liverpool on the 9th of December, and is expected back here on the 15th. The Woodman Case—Addltlonal Letters Tho Now Orleans Delta says; The following letters, which were written in Boston last Jul , wore not published in the Komi • froretTfif.se teitouf. We, however, have the origi nal in our possession : My dear Carrie—Mother, as well MI yourself, was not very well yesterday to-day, however, she (mid I hope you are) better. Please come and spend the day with me, and tell me—by bearer— D—'s servant, by the by—when I must send a carriage for you. In haste. Yours sincerely, THURSDAY MORNING, nth- MONVAV MORNING, July 27-1 P. M. My dear Mrs. Woodman—lt seems that you are determined to avoid and contradict um. lime, pay attention to what I am about to write, and be lieve tam You should know from experience that I am not easily battled ; but as you do not appear ever to believe so, it is now my intention to prove to you that such is the case. I had made up my mind to leave town this after noon, but owing to the manner in which I have been treated, I shall remain, and you shall see too You say. " You never will og tin," that "I shall not have your portrait," and that "I must not trouble you." What nonsense! Well, 14e will see who conquers. To-morrow morning I intend to call on you evil], and I now beg of you, not alone for my .ike, but for your own, to see me; for if you do nut, so help mo Almighty tied, built say and (1 ,, that beforn Mrs. Ilazz trd that both of us will have cause to repent. Do not forget that I have been with you for threeyears, or that I have proofs of all that I may nay in my possession; some of them old enough, to be sure, but others of a sufficiently late data to convince the most obstinate. I was on the point of carrying out my intentions this morn ing, but thinking perhaps you might really be ill, I avoided Mrs. Hazzard on* for your sake. Here after you cannot escape me, for not only base I a -py on your mui emeno, but I also do nothing but watch you. Had you answered either of my notes. or said one kind word tome this morning, I should have scorned troubling you Not having done so, you have left sue but one courso (the ono I have determined ((pan) to parole, and believe run I nal pursue it. Do not goad moon to folly, for if you do lam ealutido of doing anything. You know me, beware. hlaby, I have directed the bearer to await your answer Do hind. Say you trill sett me, I am not myself. I care not for the conse quences. I have not seen you for three days. Pity me, or I shall go mad. Please see me to-mor row. I have much to say, and will crawl to you on my knees if you will grant my request. Will your Do, please do, or be answerable for the con sequences. Your refusal will drive me out of my senses Much as I 10Y0 you, dear baby, I promise to leave you for over, if you will only ace um alone for ono hour. That tied may bless you, and pro tect you from such misery es I suffer, will be the prayer of GARDNIIR FURNISS. A correspondent of the New York Tribune, writing from Williamsport, Pa , under date of the 2Oth, says t' The case of the Commonwealth against 'William Bard, for the bomiolde of Samuel on the 7th must, terminated to-night, at 11 o'clock, after en exciting trial of twelve hours, by a verdict of acquittal It appeared from the evi dence that TIM had Burt by the throat, and up against the wall of the inside of his cabin, while Burd's own unnatural son was beating his father with a piece of board, when the old man seized a butcher-knife lying on a shelf, act plunged it into the body of his assailant, Hill, who almost in stantly 'fell dead. It was, undoubtedly, a: clear case of self-defense. Tho verdict has given uni ersal satibfactiou. Reeling, Emery, and Lloyd, for the Commonwealth, White and Seaten fur the prisoner." During the excavation of a street In Evans- We, Ind., November lith, the workmen came ao the remains of a cabin, eighteen feet below the surface of the earth. This wonderful subterranean house was about twelve feet in length, formed by upright posts set in the ground, and boarded up with split oak puneheon3, secured by wooden pins. Tho puncheons, and plus were partially de enyed, but still stuck together. Within the walls were found portions of an old-fashioned spinning wheel, a wooden maul, several pairs of boots and shoes, and the identical charred stick which the former occupant of the house had used to punch the fire with A correspondent of the Ellsworth (Me.) A mericon relates that a daughter of Capt. Blod gett,of Brooksville, lost her speech two years since. Iler father had con.,ulted the physicians in the vicinity, taken her to Rockland, Portland and Boston, meeting with no success. Early in the present fall ho placed her iu the hands of P. P. Quinby, of Belfast, the noted mesmeriser, when. strange to tell, in a few days, without the aid of medicine, but simply by the power of will, her speech woo restored, full, clear, and neatly as strong es ever Tho venerable Alexander Nesbit, for many yenta an Associate Judge, and subsequently Chief Judge of the Criminal Court of Baltimore city, died at his country seat, Ellengowan, in Baltimore county, Md., on Sunday night. his death was an nounced in the Criminal Court yesterday morning by M. Whitney, Esq , when Judge Stump, as a tribute of respect to the memory of the deceased, immediately ordered en adjournment. The grand jury also adjourned on the announcement being made. On Saturday last, as Mr. Peter Freeman, who w ee engaged in driving one of Messrs. Shel ter & Kaufman's .Mt. Penn furnace teams, was proceeding between Knauer's tavern and Bell's tavern, near Reading, Pa , he fell from the saddle mule, and the wheels passed over his bead, and, of course, killed Lim instantly. lie was a eober and industrious man, and leaves a wife and child to mouri his untimely end. The Norwich (Comm.) Courier says facts are coming to light which awaken the most painful in:s pleens that a number of deaths which have lately occurred on Church street, of that city, have been caused by lead poison, from the pipes through which the water passed from the aqueduct. A number of others are now sick on the name street. On the 14th instant, Mr. john Waugh, of Bowling Green, Caroline county, Virginia, a car riage manufacturer. was found dead in hia bed, having burst a Wei:KJ-reml by violent evughing durlos the zdaht, allitTlefft o C9441P01‘1 . 41111711. Cpmisporaltki,to kir " n ot bar m mind the) following resit: • • Every eomzeuilbestlesi rant Ds ateX:rairaled by the auto of the writer, 1311 °Myr to Inure tuxedoes, to the trporrephy, but oto tide of &hut should be written ape°. We shall be greatly obliged to gentlemen In Pallor/I yantaaatt other Mates Tor aeatribatiesse giving the car load aft* of the day la their. partlealaar localttlee, the yeatureat of The ettoreaadlag eotiatry, the human or popalationa and anytafonaattas that •W be Intereetieg to the general reader - - - GENEEAL NEWS. One John Rules, of .Springfield, cams to his death in a terrible manner on 1E unday erening, September 13th. near Colombia, Oregon Territory. The Tuolumne Courier says th at he had been in dulging freely, and being.rather noisy, a friend volunteered to see him home. After some trouble be was mounted upon bee friend's horse, and, for greater security. hie legs were tied together under the horse's belly. The party then set out for Springfield, Male's companion leading the horse. When near Broadway, the animal became restive, reared and fell beck on his rider,.but inamediately sprang up and galloped away like the wind. AA the home got to his feet, the caddie turned with Rules, and being fastened to the beast, at every bound-his head dashed against the ground. This Mazeppa-like ride was checked at Brasea's lumber yard, upwards of a quarter of a mile from the starting point, Rules was taken from the horse dead and horribly mangled. Ms arm was broken in several r1ab....1,..and his brains mingled with the dust of the road. The Boston Journal - says, would one be lieve, without looking into it, that we are in a fair way of_ carrying the number of sovereign State*, originally thirteen, and now thirty-one, up to forty-seven! lot so tis In 'the first place, 'there are Oregon, Kansas, and Minnesota, whose Constitutions are already formed or forming. It is hoped thej will be admitted the coming winter. making the members of the Confederacy thirty four. - Then New !leak)°, Nebraska, and 'Wash ington, already thriving Territories, will swell the aggregate to thirty-seven. four new States to be carved out of Teias, according to proviiions in the treaty of annexation, will givens forty-one. Two additional Statue demanded from the area now in cluded in California would make forty-three. Arizona; Neosho; Dacotah, and Columbus Territo ries carry us up to forty-six, and lovely Utah wilt make the ferty-seventh. .. . _ Twenty-goo ye.ma ago, (in 1831,)while two brothels ' named Wright, machinists, were working at Dayton, Ohio, one of them became attached to a young girl named Mentz, who wets then living in the family of a Mr. William Machir. The two brothers afterwards worked for Rose ;Winans h - Co., of Baltimore, and family became interested in the enormous contracts of that firm for sleeking the St." Petersburg and Moscow Railway, went mat there, and both became very rich. Ten years ego the brother who was interested in MissMuntz died. in London, leaving her by his will $lO,OOO. Miss Mir.itz left Dayton for Preble county Jeans ago, and though she tau been advertised for, has Out come forward to claim the legacy. The surviving brother was at Dayton last week, and left there for Eaton, hoping to hear some tidings 4)f her. We have news front Canteens, - Venezuela, to the Ttli inst. The American Minister, Mr. Eames, and wife, had arrived. Senor A G. Blanco bad been appointed Consul for Venezuela, at New York, and Carlo Ganuendia, Consul at Philadel phia-. Venezuela was free from revolutionary movements; abundance of rain had fallen, and the craps looked well. The snanees of the Govern ment were In a bad way, and there was some talk of negotiating a loan. Owing to the scarcity of money the markets were exceedingly dull. The following are the current prices of produce:— Coffee, 14c. per Ib. for washed, and Enmeshed cocoa, 121 to $33 per HO lbs. . • cotton, 17}8.180. ; indigo $1.03 per lb.; hides, $l2 to $2O per 100 lbs.; deerskins, $lO per dozen; goat skins, $5-50 per dozen; lignumvitio, $l2 per 2.000 lbs.; Indio, $2O per 2,000 Its.; brown sugar, lintle. per th: • The SaginalvEnt'erprirs saga the mills end Itunherfug operations in Northern Aft-amain in the vicinity of Green Pay, end other points, have been mostly discontinued, on account of the pres sure of the times.. Consequently, 'a large number of men are thrown out oremployment. Bat this is not the worst. The mill owners not being able to soli their lumber shipped to Chicago, have not the means of paying their hands for the put sea son's work, or of shipping them the necessary rug plies of provisions. So there are hundreds of men and many families with scarcely previsions enough to sustain life, far distant from any farming region. Many of them, it is stated, would be glad to ,get away, but cannot. If them people are to be snot lapin these woods, by the close of navigation, with out supplies for the winter, it will be with them a season of awful suffering and fetus! starvation. One of the largest meetings ever held in Tammany Hall, says the New York Herald of Tuesday, assembled there lest night to ratify the nomination of Fernando Wood for mayor, and the other charter nominations. Iron. John - Kelly, John Cochrane, and Colonel Doheny were the principal speakers. The atm,* harmony and en thusiasm prevailed. Another meeting was held in the Park at the same time, the hall being inade quate to accommodate the immense mass. There were the usual accompaniments of music, rockets, cannon, and calcium lights. On the adjournment of the meeting, the crowd proceeded to the St. Nicholas Hotel, where Mr. Wood addressed them from the window. On Monday last,gays the Abingdon Virgi- the 11ev. James M. Weeds. w o was sent to the ad joining circuit by the M. P. Conference about the same time . , was brought to this place a raving ma niac, and La now conened awaiting a vacancy at the lunatic asylum. "What shadows we are, and what shadows wei Pnrsiie i" A young lidy, whose parents live about forty miles hack of Covington, Ky., bat wbo has herself been upon a visit to her relatives near Columbus, Ohio, attempted to commit suicide on Wednesday by stabbing herself with a pair of scis sors. The only cause assigned for the rash act is the death of a favorite mocking bird, which seemed to distress har mind. The " solid men" of Boston are in a fever of excitement concerning the reported defalcation in that city of Mr. Samuel Lawrence, the senior member of the drtn of Lawrence. Stone, & Co., agents of the Bay State Mills and other manufse taring corporations. The Great Western iron rolling mill, at Brady's Bend, Pa , has discharged about 7titt opera tives. It has been engaged in making railroad iron largely, and the demand for that article halt ing fallen off materially ; it is curtailing operations to suit. Capt. Walter Coles, fur many years a Re- presentative in Congrem from Virginia. says the Danville Register, died at his residence in Pitts sylvanin county, on the 9th inst., after an illness of some four or Li o days. lie was about Ge years old. Capt. Coles entered Congress in l - '33.3, and re mained a member of that body until he voluntarily retired in 1813 lie wu.o a zneinher of the Virginia Legislature in 162 2 34. During the war of lilt 2 he held the office of captain of dragoons, and served upon the Northern frontier under General 31 ado Hammon, of Smith Carolina. The trial of James Kerr, for the murder or John Bietle. was taken up in the Over and Ter miner of Washington county, Pa , on Friday . af ternoon, ilumed t.ttOy after the retiring of the Jury in the Jones The prisoner is a man upwards of seventy years of age. and it is admitted that he shot the deceased with a gun, in September, 1856. They lived under the Rune root, in a double house, and it was in evidence that they had each threatened to kill the other. The case went to the jury on Saturday evening, and the question in volved in the i , se.te is, the degree of homicide. The Detroit Free Frets, of November 14, says that comiderable excitement was lately, °awed at Ontonagon, by the arrirel of a party of Indians front the head-waters of the Ilenon.inee river, bringing with them some remarkably rich epeciment of gold-heating quarts. They repro tented that the country was rich with the same species of mineral. Same of the loading mining men of On ton rgom after examining the specimens, formed an agrcewent with the Indians to guide them to the place from which they procured the specimens. A man, named David IL Ware, died sud denly at Taylorville, Chti.tial county, Ili., a abort time ego. Ile is supp. 4 cd to be a native cf ono of the Eastern States. From a memorandum . . book, covered with leather, found in his poclzet, he had evidently been examinin lands and clams farther West., probably in Kansas, in March last. "Claim made 13th March," 1' 4 37, .tc. In the Innt of the memorandum ra written ".7. I'. FoAer, Bellevue, Sam county, March 4, 1557." The Savannah Georgian of Saturday says: We toilee in our Mentp.mery exchanges, that the Legislature of Alabama has decided to brie,..; on the election of United States Senator. Ao this vote teas considered a test of the strer Ath of the rival candidates, Ex-Governor Win.too a nd th e lion. C C. Clay, a e shall expeot shortly to hear of the election of the latter-named gentleman, who is the present ineumbad, and has repre:gented his State with distinguished abil;ty " The Albany :! , :atermtin a few days sines pitched into the men for not tisitieg their a in the State Prison—ems:as:leg the COD rf women whose husbands live at Auburn It bow . ever made en exception in favor of ow man e.b., did visit his - wife at Sing Sing, The teto,:n,u taken out of this solitary ease. however. for three Weeks after her I.:dense, the woman , mie 5- , Ir-• , - I , and's watch and eloped lei tl4 a 11,1-41,- * At a private soiree moric,:le, given by his excellency the British rezidecce in Washington. on Wednesday evening, Mr Thal berg, 11:11e Fretrolini, lie and lime. Strakosch entettained a diqingui.shed ecal:paby. Lord Na pier made to the ladies a gracaul azkr.owlrdg ruent of their services, in the h ape of several aI a able tralrare.r. The llamilton Spectator, Nov. 21, sacs: The Opposition wil l no doubt be gratified to learn that our predietion3 are likely to be rerif,A scoter than they antieipated. We are now in the midst of a 31inisterial erisis, and probably in a few days we may be enabled to antomuce a diEsolut,on of Parliament. L. 11. Allen, a stranger from ll'estorn Now York, died suddenly at Trenton, N. J.. en ;s:ttnr day, of consumption. Ile came to obtain medical treatment. llu was in the bar-room of the hotel when he died, and Mrpta re I 1. , be quite cheerful Valuables were found urvit biro after death. Ht. friends are unknown. At a husking frolic 4 , down east, ' latdy, two hundred buThels of golden yellow corn were hus k e d, forty-eight girls kissed, ore couple mar ried, and se*en mom •• engaged," all in one even ing. Talk of stagnation to businest! We learn that Mr. Simon Connor, of MOM gooier), township, Indiana county, Pa . went cut en a bunting expedition onSetnrday last, and suc ceeded in killing three bears, alit( whieh were fat and nice—a good supply of meat for the winter. The Buffalo Courier has some details of a now treaty just made with the elenesas at Tona wanda, by which they will be enabled to retain at least 6,500 of the 12.900 acres of their ancient home at Tonawanda. An oyster sloop capsized near, Freeport, L. I, on Sunday- Captain Canady and a. boy 'stem drowned. Samuel Gibson has been sentenced; at Lan dialer, Pa., to ten maths' imprlsontnant fonsltarp