Ivate4 rw's p ‘. 4:4; t OJRTDAT.ti =CtIESTNUT:STIttIiT • TXritt, l 4:olfistreitu - Virrilialeble :to the - order!. • Maffes to aubtotibersoetig the Attr B!r•Dott•tile. es a Amex I, Out Aett,eas sol/tame !Oxtail.; Taxes ' itiptAtt Atoeraiq htextiebly la Semite Itir the' tlieerileree.. l l ,, O •.• • , • -•••' :il4lll-14,IVAICEItt,Yr !Ulf - Maned to Sublitolhere out °IA° lAty, it Timis Doi.. -o.ollise Sax In Waggle,- r ' sent i!deseribeis by t:hual; (per litimint;ldidituitte;): • ^ oq 1.•; ! Tbnkfi Ooplemy zr: • " ' • 00 ,Fite Oopti,s, ." Er : 13 00 -j•iiih766iroi; = - ii" ic •-• aokleti ' , c 2 , (to two. o4drets);,2 20 00 Tfoott,Ceploa,prover, '5- (to *Aare" 9 f 999 ' h • < , 09.r 16 9.0, PAcal /20 - "Foto (nub of Tireaty-bito• Ot - 4ii-or, • we will fund oh w - exkls 99k 3 7.39.11b-gatter•up of t 204214 2, • M" ' l42 !‘"'4'ge'n'tl 21", NVI 2 014 11 :IRTON! El -rut HMLIc 4r-1 , • 1 Embrace ellthe'polotentetosary to, ; o,l= , TA/ENTREE , X fr/101 . ,, , Ana - al the siiid-Ofooit , :logoactoolilttigE loipatt ' - IININET,-170/IFORTi'AND , EVERNIEITY: Gentietato ors lavitett to"ooll Ontit ezatalno;, r 0028-em - - . 4,19 OREFEENUT Ittroot. - • t Eti,CO.i OttiSttlllT 'etTßAlrr, - - Jur Ilannteentrere et. ' - . _ .1/IiiTIBIL OTPILINGinivIrti !ABB, ; irkidee Vie& burette*, on - The - promises - elderly sly 16I F " 4 , 4 " c!c*Kr" - • —' • Vonetnetty on bent a eplindid stook et leiperlor " Wiettkite; ;1c4 , 10 eelebrete3e maker. ' ehkikOhas' Braosletii -Shrooohni, ;tar-Elogs, s inser- Rtnse, and 'ill other ertieles in Ihe •Dieniendllie. . ; renlege,Of,:l4Ner ),p . 381,4148 will be , Innis free et #teritteith'oee'l*eivork - thide nOek.', Rzott •-• tte ~, i k :.);oo,64 l ,4oit4erit, or all; .the new styli' .9f Jinn JeirebioneiMtelelop.fitalliteli_._a att . e el); Otmlumh ; _;,_-,PetelyAketelit„liettentele, Mentailts, - , - 11 , UP/14404 - 'lllllll , MlPs:iusrtosit,:smuurra, -. .wernaitis,: Bronietuid Marble VLoCtlEtti et newest itylsn, : - initdtwitely L & 0 0 IV • ' ' 4/MI giamsTNirt Street', Plitrireariteed, pet etearderii. nett triples , - Jewelry, - - Splendid lanai, Hair Pine. — - WuitStauds,-Purke.llaakete. " - : Jet floods asid. Ylower Coral, Lava and Moiale,Sets., Sole Agents:ln: :Ph il adelphia Yoilhe eels of Charles Prodsham'e LONDOpI TIMLI PRI39. , dab 4 # VER WARE:— - . • N. 7 iviLLlAttwitsoN'& AOL. MAN,O T AOTURERS OF 1311,7113 R WARE, , (FATABLISHED :OA) - • , W coaster. infra AXE, oess irt trociTS. , - Alargo Ituortment -of-W.l+ll3R If OM, - of arab , do. .scription .00nstautly on laand,..or mo4„ , .!_tiokvior to match soLpothlr44,epired t - - ,- • • Inapoitioo of 13heffle - Li kid" Blitah?shOto . tokport.td , .„ , & BRO . : itAaviAcinrasita AND I7lT4Tgati Of - enIVIR4LATEI) WARE, • jg(!, Street,' E i boll, yap ;) loui4aity trn hiuid eiAd Icir4al. to - the Trade .0001gIINION 814,R 1 710.19,88 TA VLENO2 PLIGHBIIIII 00.8.UNTS CIPPI twa, P;lthgreit QOdiog and alfkl;34' ' N . 9; tckt-ttl. •'-lf!cetteas. - • AmEItIOAINT-GOLD,, • ...8iLT17401115,_•. P-. • _ And *TON • 43XCHAAVG'S.5,. EIZOERIBT OURREIVT - RA*, 2 , .., • iti)vclB-4.1t0-K2,85.., , ~no24,ate ~tu~ios~erg.,; , .1101518',ANii; aTAVIQNERY: DAVID M. HOOSB Blank liooi Manulailearer, Stationer ek4d Printer, No, j4O WAIdIOT Street. hien. pared at all Mines to hustle, either (tow the shelves •Or .Mitte to Order; Books of every:desoription,:anitable totlitialtin - Pablin Oases' Merchants, and ethers, or the • , bost enalltforelnglliknid.insrinan paper', an* ib?.4o •In various stylei; thividost substantial manner; Orders Vol 30111•21tIerft.NO;of doeSliPt 4 oU. vitline• and Lithographing executed with,steepens' • - WWI ; ProP• l , so .gartmellt of Enslild, Iklid /mart- , eke ntatinnery. , - ' - Plinoeinfag Mr: trogini =stet - Imelda •'.• - • • •liiitinibi: *Wood:id/4o pay-:.`t This dlsplaT blab.li 10010 Thr wikius.und meroantifo usotitthe best in the I .Entliltdtioit.theoelectlosi•of‘the sradOried fa gond, the' ,Pelreslialitikaide• sno*.tt: JuWitinioit~. FaYSIOIANS , .' , POCKET..' DAT-BOOK 18430. - 7 4ustpuldished arid for sale by • .• • ' , CI:4. PitIOE - No; 83 Booth SIXTH Wept; above Oheirprat. - *, The Day-Rork contains. an Alining°, Tablee of °out% parative MedioinaLposes,,..PlVlSOOS and theirAstidotes, British. ant .frenoli.; Blelllcinal Measures, , Weighls and' Combining, Propertiba 0, Articles a let, .oompaintive TherniotnekrlC Scales, BathS-4iinOle and Medicinal, L't shies:of 'Dense - a elf the (principal pre parations ofAbn Pharniacopia,VisisLog Listand ./.ndex, Blanks 'for, Monetary . Engsgements,-,-13ank Accottni, Notate Addresses, Bills'and,Accountv asked for, Vic eiwattowantObstetrle Zngsgements, and Americas Medic al Porialionle,fca , 4co. • • iinizig ;Prepared" witfi the co-operation of several eintinint member& of the - Profecaton, the Publisher' trust:that this little-Manual will till &want Whereto unsupplied, and-with a view to its future improvement, 4111' - be happy to receive any suggestions respecting emendations, additions, ice.. The above Are prepared for 2 - 5 and 50 patients,. and "boundin yeriona styles, - - , Visgointions PltriyartngelApo. Trr COPARtNEIiSIIII! EtERET_OtORE • ' nudigitlio aigami;lagt 'co . 'Sc this day duaolved by the death Of 0. D, Lamb, • • '..../he - haalnere of-the late. - flrta will b 4 settled by the antelvlog . partnere,' JOcIN IVIEBI`, W. D.' SPONSLER, and D. D:EItYLN, under the Slim of RIEGI.L, BAIRD, k 00., and will ---, continue the Dry Goods jebbing and importing bustnesa ne heretofore, at No, 47 North TlllRD`street. • -PE ITS, RIMER, 2 i. 140011 RIEGEL., • . Whf , - - - JOUR WIEST, - - D. SPONSLEB, Deowmt; . er,3l,4B6i EDWARD , EL LADD will have charge of oat business in this city from this Sate, Atli°. 820 CHESTNUT Street, RUNT, WEBSTER,' & CO, Elsitufastuters of Sewing shinty 1,1868. I isl•Sio. BEATRICE, JANES S. EARLE init. (Tyr, ON 7ANtrAI N 230., The beautiful hBEAMHICX" 0.1r.H01,' ' . . , . ~ . ~ 13..LCRING,. ON TUB ETH ct H ER ERHHUTIOH,,,' StiER RARRLET ROM ER. ADRiEIIO 7 ONNTI3. EAUL/V8 OALLBETE8 3 , 815 011:88T1i1JT 578114 T, 'IIIHE idEOHAITICIAL • BAKERY:—On and after MIS DAY, the 11th hint,lhe lIMOLD from this establielment, and DREAD, , TICKET/3,mi1l be, for sale at thefollowing Depots :• •• • ,• - At the DEPOT, corner BROAD and, VINE iltree . ts. ' 04. Lott CLOTHIER'S, 115 North PIPTII Street. - 'JACOB IrZOIVS, YOUATII, above lIISNET•3I. WILEINSONI3,cor.PIPTiI and - COATZB, GILBERT'S, corner COATESsud PRANEDIN., J.OBAVENt•TINE'S, bor. TWELPTII end NAIIAOE, '4. PANOOAST% corner IVINTO. and OALLOWOILL.. 3. A.. FOSTER'S, 821 ARON , atroot. • - 0.:-YOUNE,1,506.)-01dBARD Street. D. ENDILIT, _BROAD, below Walnut., ~ , - W. W,MA'Plihtll4, cor. , ,ELEVENTII I,OOIiDETi 3.0. ELDENED,..cor. SIM and SPIWOE - ,Other Depots will, be announced from , dsy VI day, as arrangements ore complted. Pemenwvalshing . Dread 'delivered at their dwellings will please register their •names at the Depots, whore bookoi are provided for that perinea.- • , As coin as a stillicient number to'extabilah mattes are rottnined;imeh delivery will be begun. Tickets of two - klode, one fOrthe nee of those who wish their Bread de. 'livered attheir dwellings. and. one for the nee of those •, , vinoefer to send fot t Milks Depots,:frill be provided ..and'for pr sale at the Depots , - ,The OarrhireVrill be in. -•• !Ducted to deliver Mead for parriere!'ticket))) , Price, NlVE,oents ' Trice nf, , lDenot ticketa, ,, NNE-Cents each: • 'Pies Carr era' Dakota,'" LIVE-AIiD.A.IIALY eeinteebeh. ••„ ' • -41411-dtt 0. lifAODAlizit., Superintepdent ” ONGOlLtlifr}r OLD- 'TOM LONDON. -- Jut CODDIAt2GIThe beet spialfla for DOspeysia, D the'lLidneyt,anit aft the Vrinary organs - ; • ' wan BAIRBI TOgi(VAND"l11110011ANS. ThilAte important, radattlOn of the duties on siits -has -porn - aced 4h6 - introduction of thie remarkable' :,artlaloineed, so ditandissaly,ir: Vireos, V{ itkilie appro batiopa ot,,the Medias,l ' raeolthia, guarantiOd Pere and - unadulterated t ISithdrairn toe aonsamptlon" from' the `Titulte - orthe astogilleuse„: It Is recommended Well feunllles try, the best - Sbys'ciaasi ceder as a`enratire Or ae a preventrie 6f the *here disesess. - „ D IONOO11&MP, , ,2,0610 ImpOrter and Sroprletor, ' ;.• pouth now *toot, Plitlidelphis" Pa. '-Pot sate at the prficfpatDrag,Stores of,Shlnidelphiss aod Other cities of the 'United Btatea: 24 South inoNT Street, Bole 4 iftent, 'for the district of 'Philadelphia . atoratothApif f , ,011132.2 , 14. irtlN-ArainLktoTo , , bolt' iftes . t. djeotiro7.lll , Cbet/teaVor forms-s/ri. CUSS. BaStIMAMISW4 AOnSt : titlegti -110 1Pe d Pita G B 81Day 'le OAT : VIII, t gorikszt or - the bakft _ W L:l k ) =7: •=j;.:t-bid;fregitoeil-ilfhlak **PO 1,7-boyEW,-Maugitud,, otymOnix * , J9:rW th o"a ie llafr i ; .C1C104(1 , 4 • , nlitec •/r rtmovivi 7 A nA O3 . I . nI WW A ' Fitt , Ot t c ift w it . ; Walgirtrfitteetililllll "- Corner- , th r th NINTU mug,. Y 011 ' 1 149 1 11 4044-** 44t*°rns'il'66*; , , ~ r' I. L f :. ; ' = l', .; i t'i,, ',...,,,, •i' ..„. *; -' --, ;1, . 4 i ~ Ar': , CT - \ ti -4 4,E , 1; 1,4 1 . , ~, 0fi1i. : 5,:...v0.f ‘,,, Atc:: , .,.. ,,, ,;• - -,,,,,; ~." r-."--• -' • - ,-, -,' -," ''' ' " ''' ''' '" ''• ' ' ' ,-, ••- • - -•,''," - ' ''' "-... '. '''"' , • ' •,,,,,' ` 7 iii ' , i ! ," i;; - ' 1 ::" . - - . 44,1 %k , , , ,:•-mi` l sr. ,- i lipit - 1 . i .7 • ~ • , ....t.v-E:-: , -I‘w ‘.1. - • .1:1 - 3;-' ,',.. 't. ,, 111,1,•,.- -. ~.. '.. --,.. -,'" ',:., . = ~,- , .::1 ,, ,,-:,ZZ..% -,., " , :' , .t, - ' ,0 ' , .:' ! '::-. ' ;': - ;r . , . , ~.: • .. ,:-,:',.:' .;' ' .-., 1 .- - • , -..0.. ...---.----...-• - t ..._ 1 ,,c - . t ."7., .....,.,-;;-&0; li . 114:: . k!'; ' ,/1 ' 7 f'''''.,, .: , :l'..' ' ' ,:-;. , '.. ''''. tr vit . _ , , , , -J.__-::. _., , --- --• , - , • -_ _ _ --,•:: . ir ;,:-,, . .... .• .5 ~: . , . ,_ . I . . ..... ter ~.. ...,-e ..i ' .u f "• l . : - 1 . 4 .'7 i.','.7— .. 1 1 1 r 4i : , i; , 4'. .: ,. ,,• : :.,.:... t ) n,i ,...! . . , ...,, - ,.. , c i,,v , , Fte . , . 4. - -- ,. ,t-„r 1 .... , 4 .,....,......., -, ... f . . , ;.,.....,..:..,.?•.,..... .1: ~,• , - : , , . / - ..• „ 1.• . .,. - .1,. t.r,• (, -:',-. 'r 0.-.-ff , . - - . , ..,'.:' . M M.il I '--,: ;. • . . .; 1 / 4 . .L. ,/ i rk , , .- -: 1iP,,,,- -. ~- M i rl .. ' ..,.. „ : :, ,,, , .. sii; ,_. . - 7 .......--..• ~ - ,:: ...: ... ~. , , :, , , ~, . , , - , , - - '"'" * ""t'''''' - %,'',"'ifrfeltiti t ;'-•; - ,••• / :'• . ;-3,:,, ,, ' - 14 ',A -.,,,,,,—_-.. :::-.lt-i•-2.11 . ..D.,,: : ., .#', • , ~,,,;-;,,,,,,-..;.-?.. --..-..-- . , \•• - . _, _ -.'• , ' •••• . , i ,;- 27 - ' - . . , ...--.„........,......—.- - ~,,.... 4-- , - i,.:Yut . :l;4NO,' - 140; NOilCfo. QFFICE , OF , THE FIRE ASSOCIATION OP PIIILADBLPIIIA —No. , 34' North' FIFTH Street for the tnertrance of BUT DIEROHAN• • DIou p 'IIOOSELfOhIJ . FURNITURE , from lose by &of , ' ' ' Jaycee's' 18,1858. In conformity With the prowlsiona contained In ;heath section-or an Act of Assembly, approved April 6,1842, tbutollowing Statement 9f the Assets of ,ths Ankle. elou,,as tho woe was on the let instant is new pub. RBifrd. Benda and HOrtgisges. ' $406,689 00 OrOundßente ' ' 18,208 eb Meal Estate, "11,163 28 Olty Warrants- t ~- 760 00 CailLon Land - • 16,180 47 Total t...•..• ..8607,689 40 TRUSTEES, • '''I:1E(111(111 V. TRYON, Preeldent. - H, Hamilton, , Peter Prits, JAtob Renry 0. Pratt, 'Jaaolilli'Lex, • - titmice D. Hughes, Iffenry.E. Auntie, Jacob Moyer, - - .:'Jobrt Peter A.,,Keyser,- ' Tttenuti,E.litutter., • John Philbin. ja2o.tit •_ , W ILLSA9I T. BUTLER, Secretary. NiON MUTUAL INSUBANOE 'COM ' x. 4 PA:NY OP PHIGADDLPIIIA; frEAT.EMEN p of the extra of the Company, In con formity with a provialim of its Charter. Prenduina•undtterml nod January 1, 1867.. ;81,402 91 Do. /mired daring the year ending - January 1868 - 264,201 02 TO4al . amount of Premium 5........... 236,764 63 Earned I , remluida durtnir the year ending as earn on Marine and Inland Risks '276,380 80 Received for interest and dalvageo 31,620 70 Logiea r Het t urn Peel:9l=6, Exponileo,R97ln- ' • • suranoaslald durligati46;perlod 852:168 96 ETATERENT OP TEM ASSETS OP THE COMPANY. - JANUARY 1, 1068. ~ 6,0'00 Pinnsylvania Flints Vs C coat 55,055 , 117 shares'Philadedphia 8ank........ " 14,700 7.000 Oily of Pittsburgh 6's" 5,800 , 7,000 " " (Ps ' " 6,700 14,610 Chesapeake =and Delaware Canal Loan 6 , s ..4 " 14,610 41,620 Camden and Amboy 0.8 . ,4 41,713 10,000 Philadelphia County Loan 6'• 4 , 10,300 5,000 North Pennsylvania It IL Bonds, oPs'" 8,760 100 shares North Pennsylvania B. 1t..... " 6,000 40 " " Delaware, Railroad Co " 1,000 Sundry Stocks, Steamboat and Transporta tion Companies, Certificates or Stock and Profits in Mutual Laureate Companies.. 14,040 Estimated present value of the above.- $08,580 Oash on hand - 8,8% Notes reeeivable for policies Wined 95,581 ihtbserlption netes for guarantee capital....... 40,500 Due for policies Issued, and unsettled 'salvages, *ad other debts duo the Company - 85,451 " ' , • - DIRECTORS. Richard 8. Smith, : Charles Newbold, 8. Destonet, . Henry Lewis, Jr., .Prancis Tote, ~ W. O. Rent, A.lO 'Boric, - Albert Worrell, Samuel Want, „ Charlea Verin, Charles Dallis, 0. P. Lot:olmA, Huth Caren Sell, - John 8, Twells, John P. White, Edward. L. Clark, N. Al Smith, George D3Will, O. W. Churchman, D. Salomon, John S, Irwin, ' - . J.P. Steiner, cladtroyirreyg . .111. F. Robinson. NIONAND 8. SMITH, President. ZOSETHCOULSON, : Secretary. - .. jal4-2w , FAME' UAL INSURANCE CON- Ci 1100,411 CHESTNUT Street. ESII,;ADRIMIIA, Jan. 11, 3858. The - following STATEgprr of the anise of this Company, on the - Mgt 11Ad4mber, 11357, is published in pursuance - of the Chaiiiii?: Capital authorised tad subaoribed.... ...... $100 ) 000 00 • Paid in $50,000,7, • nondennd . Mor tgagee 43,026 00 OnolLon hand - • 11,624 04 Balances duo; 'as: Agents , accounts, In- torost,Ac - ' - 5,811 47 Pills secolrablo, Premium' on Open 'Policies, (named,) 901 00 , - ISEORIPTS. Premiums on Piro Bias, amounting to - ...11,717,200 12,868 74 Prooainnuf !on Inland Risks, amounting -to $93,004 ' 904 05 Inlarast: - '' ' ' 8,478 67 7 loans,' EXPENSES. ko. 'Pita Übe* , settled 16T,18, (disputed Losses Inland Losses -• Rent, Advertising, Sedarlep, end ell other incidentals 5,633 77 Return Premiums, ne,insuranos, commis. _ sinus, At the Ariorial' Meeting of tho htockholdera, held title day, the following were oleeted Dleeetote to curve for the ensuing year: - fleo.-.W. Day,' - .Wm. W. Walters, Derolavidoplacott, .J. K. Tatighen, • j D, B. 'Reuel, A. U. Rosenholm; - Jo*. R Drogatirdi Ohm': htnkes - Ohm. Richardson ,'. Koury Leo-is:Jr., ' JOhn W: - Eierman, M. Stern. 'And at a .11.teetlng or the Direetore, DRO. W. DAY ~ , sas.tiefteltrionety'etetted Yrealbent, TKOS. B. MARTIN Yieo-Ventidentjand •, , • - • rg..lo;tittbidw Deeretaiyr:— !PI QUAKER. CITY INSURANCE '.ll--.OOIIPANY.—ONIce 408 WALNUT Street. - PUIL/DILPIIII, Jan 14,1858. STATEMENT of the bnaineas and condition of the Quaker City Insurance Company for the year ending December alai, 1857 : ' Capital and Surplue 8.277,805 85 Smilue, January 1, 1857 $31,571 78 Deceived for Premiums daring - .the year 1857 /62,807 93 Interest received 11,755 10 Salvage aria Iteinearanee 8,361 43 LOSSES, EXPENSES. &o. LeaSes paid - 871,418 45 Dividends su3d Commissions paid, 33,810 82 Relnsarance and return Prerniurns 20,047 45 Rent, Salaries, Taxes, Adverti sing, and Ofilee Expenses 11,125 17 Bonds and Mortgagee, Ground Rents, Coupon Bonds, Bank and other Stooks ' $100,050 00 Negotiable Bills Receivable 155,173 33 Cash in Balk and Due front Agts, 22,442 52 ...—,---$277,665 65 This Company continues to make Insurances against JIBE sad 111ARINE Risks. • . OPPICERB. President—GEOßGE H. /FART. Vice-Preeldent—E. P. 11058 Snore ary and Treasurer—H. It. 00003 HALL. Assistant Secretary-3. H. BUTLER. inn/1070M George H. Hart, E. W. Bailey, E. P. hose, Androw)l. Chambers, G Outten, J L. Pomeroy, Joseph Edward s , Charles G. Imlay, lohri G. Dale ' H. It ()eggshell, Foster S. Per k ins, Samuel Jones, H. M. Puller. 3a15 H: R ouGasnmx, Secretary QFFIOE OF THE NEPTUNE INSII RANCE COMPANY, No. 414 WALNUT Street. Ellll4l , llGrulA. inn. 11,1888. The first annual meeting of the Stockholders of the Neptune Insurance Company was held this day, when the following persons were unanimously elected to aerie as Directors for the ensuing year: . Richard Shields, P.dward McClain, George hlimitcri _ Gustavus V. Town, ; Theodore N. Town, Thomas Heath, W. G. Stotesbury, D. Sherwood, o'. G. Butler, George Scott At a meeting of the Board of Directors, held on the same day, the following officers were elected: - BICIIABD SIII3LDIS, President. CiSODGB MIINSTBB, Vice President. Gimana Boor:, Secretary. JalS-tf .OP THE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD 00. 'PIIILADSLPiIi, - ,lannary 31tb, ISM - NOTICE TO 8 LOOSITOLDERS.—The Annual Heat ing of the Stockholders of thlaompany will be held on MONDAT, the Ist day of FeSivary, 1808, at 10 oiolook A. Of., at the SANSO3f.STREET HALL. Thu Annual Election for EWA Directors will be held on MONDAY, the let day of March, 1850, at the office of the Company, No. 808 WALNIII , Street. jal2-dttel EDMUND t 3111211, Secretary. IVO ALL WHOM IT MAT CONCERN.— ... Notice ii hereby given that it is the intention of the EOLECTI9 MEDICAL COLLEGE of PENNSYL VANIA to apply.to the GENERAL ASSEMBLY of the State of Pennsylvania for the passage of a law to con fer. on the 'said College the right to borrow Thirty Thoueand Dollars, and to issue Cortidcatee of lona to the persons loaning or advancing said moneys, in such amounts so MAU b. agreed opt n, together with inter est for the /L. 30. The said money to be expended In the purchase of a proper lot of ground in the City of Philadelphia, and the erection thereon of a Imitable building, or buildings, for the rise and accommodation of ;the amid, the Eclectic Medical College of Pennsyl vania. By order of the Incorporators. ZOPIIAR 0. HOWELL, President. 'ClotatriAnn P Ponwatt., sec , y. .ina2o-et* NOTICE TO :CONSIGNBES.—The ship STALWART, Capt. Lucas, from Liverpool, is now ready to discharge at aiIIPPEN street wharf. Con signees will please deliver their permits to the effacers on board.. All goode not permitted within five days will Ott sent to public Store. ' " TILOS. ItIOHAIDEION k 101 'WALNUT street. _OFFICE OF THE UNION CANAL CO., PRILADM,PIIII, Jan n 1866. The Annual Meeting of tbo Stockholder; of the .ILnion CaD/410oloptny,of Pennsylvania will be held at t *Office of the Company, No. 228 WALNUT Street, (Pairmhir lluildtvg,) on TUESDAY, February 2d next, , at 12 o'clock H.. whlih time an Election for Officers and blenagems will take place: jal2-4fe2 ; 0. TUOMPSON, Secretary. IitRIDGE• NOTIOE.—THE TIME FOR .2-1 P receiving Plans end- ostfulates for the Oheetnut Street. Bridge,hour by Ordinance of Counces, been ex. tended to 2614'467 liTlttralkißPENEito, Pilaf oneriteir mud Surroyor. OFFICE OF THE QUAKER CITY IN iiJJ COMPANY, 408 WAY NIIP stmt, PHlLADlLeareLoram. 6th, Dies. At a Meeting of the Director', of the Quaker Oily In. ',arenas Company, held this day, at their Office, a Dividend of TEN prat CENT. waa declared ou the Capital Stock of the Company, ' 'payable on and after the Bret day of F.ebruary,lBsB - 016-6 t ' B. CDPI2IStiALL, Secretary. pL 4147 S .- 7 -THS . PSBLIO IS 1.. respectfully informed,that Ofaces hail) been opened' by.the Metric% Bnperintendente of 2 nblis *Lighting, at whloh oltisens ate requested to give Information respect. log sctiderite whichna happen to the Pnblin Lamps; or A ug', failure in lighting or entingniebireg them at the Weeset -6r-1f not properly oleened sad In good lighting oondition. 'Pile - Books will be kept by Oomph Meng, No; 808 Wharton.st,, First Ward; Marlon Carty, fiapt. Of 24 district, n V No, itliainee st. alervehinthLlllrene Kirls, 24cr.1320 North hixth it., above , Twelfth 'Bard'; M. W.Deshoeg, No. 22810astee etwet,ifbienth Wardr2hoLV.Nowlby, Gas Offloe,Twentp-ItourthWerd, IWeet :ridiedidents ) if. EL lA/Wen, .Gas Office,- ' ' ,f l l: 4 401 4 t. r ,T i tlt U d re W r fri ( W e r u t,N4 4l :i i asniGlibes &math elicit; below Iderket, r,..ordor. of the Trustee® of the ritiltdelphia Get A. I; KITE 0 4 ^ ." 11414!hldillt Or Dholltloo. . . , I .l,lrtsz, THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1868. The latest European papers inform us that Spain does not want to Ewell herself of'any co-national and friendly interference to settlo her. dispUte with Mexico. Considering the state of the natiOnal finances of Spain, this is saucy work, and Queen IsAnal, may yet wear a sombre look, elMuld her expedition end in de feat. The condition of Spain, at this crisis, is what no friend of peace, morality,.and liberty can contemplate without regret. One of the finest countries in Europe, tie& in natural pro ductions, favored with a .beautiful climate, fortunate in the teeming fertility of her soil, and'inhabited by a race of men capable of being raised to happiness by mason of their natural nobility of character, this country has sunk into well-merited contempt among, the nations, simply because for the last fifty Years it has been badly governed. „ 808,010 00 Stange - that whore Nature Idved to trasoi As if•for gods, a &telling Ono, -There Idan,,enathored of diotress, Should par it into wilderness!" The evils under which Spain so grievously suffers are not of recent origin' or growth. They commenced in the last century, under the imbecile King, C k uxur,es IV, and his infa mous wife, who raised MANUEL GODOY from the lowest condition to the rank of Prince of the Peace. This unprincipled man, ambitious and unscrupulous, was for many years the virtual ruler of Spain. It was part of his system to bring up the heir to the crown (tile MO FERDINAND VII) in a Math Of ignorance, to surround him with profligates, to render him unfit to govern. The vicious example of the Queen, coupled with her undisguised and unmitigated hatred of FERDINAND, which ex hibited itself in open persecution and con tempt, naturally tended to destroy all of good (and the quantity was sinall) which his mind possessed. But his situation eXcited deep sympathy in the heart of the Spanish nation, already shocked by the misconduct of his infamous mother, and irritated by the mis government of GODOY. The invasion of the Peninsula by NAPOLEON, the overthrow of the Bourbon dynasty in Spain, the, imprisonment• of the Royal family, the usurpation of the Spanish Crown, nomi nally by JOSEPH BONAPARTE, but actually by NAPOLEON, were either directly caused by the intrigues and treachery of Goner, or sprung out of them. A long contest entitled (from 1808 to 1814), which ended'in the restoration of the deposed princes, and the Prince of the Asturias ascended the throne of Spain, as FERDINAND Va . . Never had man a better opportunity for re - generating a State. But, from 1814 to 1820, his entire career was to elevate the thisne at the expense of the peo ple. He perpetuated and multiplied abuses instead of reforming and removing them, He was a cold-blooded tyrant, capricious, cruel, and ungrateful. The blood of the best men of Spain was plentifully shed upon an igno minious scaffold—their crime being that they loved their country. At last the public mind revolted against the tyranny. A sudden revolution, in 1820, ended in FERDINAND'S adoption of the Constitution, which prondsed to allow political rights to the people. On the very day when FERDINAND solemnly mare to, stand by this Constitution, ho secretly sent to Louis XVIII, at Paris, a protest against the acts Whichhe executed in penile. From that hour' until' his death, in 1838; every act of FERDINAND'S tended to the., recovery, f his pouter as an obsolete klhg. In this he was assisted by Russian gold and French bayonets., The result was as he desired. Ile was an autocrat indeed. Dearly was this power purchased, by the massacre or exile of the most enlightened Spaniards, the desolation of the towns and villages in the unhappy king dom, the destruction of her internal and foreign trade, the total loss of her transatlantic colo nies, and her degradation, in the scale of Eu rope, from a first-rate to a fourth-rate Power. At his death in 1831, he bequeathed a civil war to Spain. On the birth of a princess, in 1830, ho issued a decree repealing the Banque law, and rendering the crown hereditary in the female line, in default of male heirs. Hence arose the contest between Don Cantn, next brother to FERDINAND, and Queen CHRISTINA, appointed Regent during the minority of her Infant daughter. After a struggle, protracted during several years, the Carlists were annihi lated, as a party, and ISABELLA was acknow ledged as Queen de facto. The evil example of her mother must have bad the very worst influence on the young Queen's mind. The intrigues of LOUIS PHILIPPE, touching what aro sailed w The Spanish marriages," had the effect of increasing the young Queen's natu ral profligacy. Wedded to a creature alike defective in mind and person—she plunged into all varieties of vice, until her name be came a by-word of scorn throughout Europe. Leaving public affairs in the hands of cor rupt men, and only interfering where caprice dictates, this queen has hitherto shown no re gard for the national interests. Provided that she had money to fling away in extravagance after extravagance, and to bestow upon her numerous lovers, she cared for little else. ESPARTERO, an honest minister whom she had exiled in 1843, she was compelled to recall' in 1854. He is understood to have bad a strong leaning for such a Government as the United States prosper under. But a sense of personal w loyalty" forbade him to make such a change. Ono great thing he did—he banished the Queen Dowager. To have put her upon trial before the Cortes, or any other tribunal, would have involved an immensity of trouble, suspense, anti probable disaatisfaction.— The principal charges against her did not amount to what would authorize capi tal punishment, In the event of her convic tion. They had bean resolved, for the most part, into one groat accusation of embezzle went, and of having obtained vast sums from the toddle treasury of Spain, under false pre tences. As Regent of the Kingdom, from the death of her husband, FERDINAND VII, in 1888, until BSPARTERO replaced her, (during the minority of her daughter,) CHRISTINA bad vast sums of public money under her con. trol, out of which, there is no doubt, she made very extensive w pickings." She was mar ried to Mum several years before she avowed it, and was content to be pointed out by the finger of scorn, as his paramour, rather than, by declaring her marriage, forfeit the large jointure of $175,000 per annum, to which she was entitled as widow of the late King. The whole amount of her illegal appropria. tions has been estimated at no less than $13,500,000. This is a vast sum—probably more than the Queen Dowager possibly could refund, fei s tier expenditure, during the last twenty-one years, has been great. Still, a considerable por tion of it is believed to have been invested in good securities of England, Franco, and Hol land. Within the last half century, Monarchy has been so insecure in Europe, that the dif ferent Sovereigns have usually prepared for w a ' rainy day," by making pecuniary investments out of the countries which I they govern or misgovern. Even the CZAR, until lately, had $50,000,000 in the State securities of French .and England, (withdrawn not long ago, when his mili tary plans and movements caused a require ment for money ;) Lotus PHILIPPE had the precaution to provide for his family by in vestments in this country as well as in Eng land; LEOPOLD, of Belgium, has taken the seine precaution; and Queen VieroniA7sald 1 to be haunted by a foreboding that the British Monarchy will come to delose before her own life terminates—ls very greatly belied by pub. lie rimer, if she also has net provided against a possible future of private life, by Invest ments In the United States and elsewhere. ' Vero the - Queen Dowager, put upon her trial, and even convicted; the utmost power of the' law could not force from tier anything ex- 214,490 24 188,880 SD SPAIN AND MEXICO PHILADELIHIA. THURSDAY," JANUARY 21. 1858. copt what she possesses, tangibly, in Spain. Therefore, avoiding the scandal W Tsearthi, the Queen regnant, of her own Mother's pub lic trial, with all the disgracefurdieclotinres it must involve, ESPAIITERO 0110*64litiirr/NA to depart in safety, with the total. Confiscation of 411 her property in Spain, amounting to about $1,080,000. The morals of the Court of Spain did not improve after the departure of - the Queen Dowager, and the reigning Queen has about as bad a reputation as any woman,- in shy rank, can have. Her tenure of authority is , very small. She has two childrenthe.last,A . boy, with about two ,dozen Christian _names. Letters from Madrid say that if it laid been of the other sex, a conspiracy was on foot to Rot up a revolution, depose 'the Queep, and erect either a new monarchy, or change Spain Into a Republic. This last, we believe, :alone can make Spain a happy, groat, free, and roue nation. There is no reason 'why, as•A Republic, oho may not yet- becoMer* mighty nation. Misgovernment has ruine,CSpahr Profligate royalty has brought inonsictly into odium and hatred.' , The probability, howOier, if a cluiiige wai l s to take plod°, is that they would place ono:. Cher person on the throne. I`larO4ON' would not allow the Infanta to riaeond it, married as she isle the Duo DE Ifortrkrisilhn, The COUNT DE AiONTEMOLIN (soifiat Doai Cantos) still claims the crown, delays, but his supporters are few and his elali#3 vie* Whatever the prospect, there is glooro4here; to folly, also ; for, with an empty treasury antV the_aceidental sex of a child preirisutine:i . revolution, what sheer insanity is it Air Spain to attempt an invasion of Alnico I r SPEECH . OF HON. T. J. co.rrEir Below we give a portion of the deNzto' in Senate, on Monday last, on the bill 4r.iimer., porato the Minneltaha Lodge of the I. 0. Sons of Malta. The beautiful speech of Mr. pop. FEY will amply repay a perusal, from ttti torical information which it contains, tut Avell - the ennobling sentiments it indicates.; 1:: The bill puled the committee of the wholc'and. being on mooed reading, Mr. BELL called for some information in trilifard' to the object and character of the bill.. iltr. COFFEY said— 'The Senator from Chester has requested sin isx plans tion'of the charac'er and purposes of tho-in stitution which this bill proposes to incorporate. These aro fully indicated in the second section in these words: "'rho object and design of eat; cor poration shall be the collection and dishunimpext of moneys for works of charity. the relief of the por and unfortunate of the Commorivrealth,'wtth out. distinction of sex, color, ago, politics, Or re. ligion, in such manner and form as they shall deem proper and to encourage the feeble and iriexpe rimmed to persevere in the paths of rectitude and virtue:" I might content myself with this extract Eton tho bill, affording as It does so full and clear it:de claration of the generous and beneficent objdOlit of this organization, but I will he pardonidlor illustrating still Further these objects by a brief reference to its past history and to some of Its pre. sent peculiarities. The Order of the Eons of Malta is a lineal*. ecendant of that order of knights founded Abut the middle of the eleventh century, which, under the name, first, of the Knights of St. John, after wards Knights of Rhodes, and lastly Knights of Matte, formed so distinguished a part of the chivalry of Christendom. They were originally a peaceful fraternity of hospitallers in Jam , salmi, established, ns the name indicate - it, far. the purpose of ministering to the wards of the pious pilgrims who visited the Holy Laud. In the twelfth century religious real prompted them to take up arms in defence of the faith, end for many years Christianity found in their berets oeu. rage and mighty skill its chief bulwark. Rivalling the military achievements of the Tempters, they avoided the licentiousness and arrogance which . . marked that haughty order, and blended with the clash of arms who gentle ministrations of charity and peace. Driven at last from their early. home , by the conquering infidel, they settled for awhile upon the Island of Rhodes, and in the sixteenth century took up their residence in the Island of Malta, where for two eenturies they stood sentinffi upon the outposts of Christendom, and held at bay the Turkish power. - , , But the ago of chivairy Is gene, and - OW "newo inatitstons" o Mere modern Hume have4trippild Om mighty heroes of the sword-sordaromort.-ebretre` They gradually spread over Europe, and although their military occupation had ceased, they yet re. mined in their now and scattered homes tho ice• pressivo rites and solemn ceremonies by which were inculcated and enforced tho pious oblige tines of charity and love. Prom these have sprung the order which asks of you to-day the Malls a a mere efficient organisation. No longer assuming to ho the defenders of Christianity on the field of battle, they claim only to be the sons of that illus trious order of knighthood which gave to Malta such undying fame. Discarding the soldier, and rejecting too the sootarian features of the parent stock, they have returned to the simple rule of duty which inspired the founders, la the year of grace 1048, to establish n hospital in Jerusalem, ter the relief of sick and destitute pilgrims. With silent zeal and patient energy, the Sons of Malta pursue this high vocation. Seeking out misery wherever it may be found, they extend a timely and effective relief. In the true spirit of charity they do good by stealth, and no eye bat the initiated can see where the secret benefaction falls. The world knows the results but not the process, and the nil sterious minister of mercy, ea he feeds the hungry and clothes the naked, asks no reward but the sweet luxury of doing good. There is another feature of their organization which should not be overlooked. All other bene ficial association!, I believe, are founded upon the principle of mutual aid. heir primary object is to benefit and help their respective members. But it is a fundamental principle of the organization of the Sons of Malta that no member of the order shall receive its pecuniary aid. Ile gives, but he takes not—he is the minister, but not the subject of its charities—he lives in the order all for others and nought for himself. Surely no society founded by snore human ageneies has ever so fully appre ciated the divine idea of that charity which cover eth a multitude of sins. Besides its work of pecuniary benevolence, this Order seeks, through its teaching s and example, to " encourage the feeble and Inexperienced to persevere in the paths of rectitude and virtue." This is, perhaps, its highest function. By its lee sons of wisdom, its solemn ritual, its searching examinations, its happy adaptation to the higher intellectual and moral faculties, and its tendency to excite seif-examinatien amongst its members, the Order of Malta seems formed to bo the hand maid of virtue. Nor does it chill the soul with frigid forme or gloomy images. It is not only lin prersive but genial, combining the instruction with the attraction of humor and wit in their high est sphere. I have said enough, and I will close with the prediction that this institution is destined to a proud place amon the civilizing forces of the !Igo, and as mot in the progress of the race invoice the aid of more elevated and refining in dilenom,the character and purposes of the Order of the Sons of Malta will bo fully realized and valued— ,‘ Making their future might Magnetic o'er the fixed untrembling heart." Mr. BELL said that perhaps ho owed the Senator an apology for calling upon bite, and expressed himself satisfied with the explanation. Re had not boon a-ware of the existonce of such a society. Reapproved of its objects, but ho was not altugoth or satisfied of the necessity of its incorporation. it could prosecute its works of charity without an not of incorporation. Mr. CUTE', egplained that they desired en not Of incorporation in order to enable thorn tobold real property, accept bequests, tie. They desired to build a hull in PhiladelpLia. Mr. BELT, did not desire to oppose the bill. lie heartily approved its object. Opening of the Lebanon Valley Railroad. (From tho Reading Gazette.] The first through passenger train for Ilarrisburg, on the Lebanon Valley Railroad, left tho Reading Railroad depot yesterday morning at 0 o'clock, 15 minutes. It consisted of ten passenger ears and ono baggage car, drawn by tho powerful locomotive "Humming Bird," which was gaily decorated with flags and wreaths of flowers, in honor of the in. teresting and important event Ono half of the care wore filled with excursionists from the city, bound for the Stateoapital, to attend the inauguration of Gov. Packer. Among the passengers were Gen. Wm. It Heim, Tins. Young and Swartz, of Reading, and Dr. Rood, of Norristown ; and the Reading Rifle Company, Capt. E. S. Boas, accompanied by the City Band. The remainder of the cars wore filled up at the different stations along the line. The Lebanon Artillery, Capt. Embioh, wore added ' to the number of passengers, at Lebanon. A spe -0141 telegraphic despatch informs as that the train passed, over the road without . the slightest deten tion or 'weeident, and reached the Harrisburg de pot at the appointed time-12.20 noon. Ile appearance was greeted with the loud human of a largo crowd which had assembled to witness the arrival of the first railroad train from Reading. The regular passenger train which loft this city at ton minutes past ton o'clock yesterday morning, also took up a largo number 'of our citizens, to attend the inauguration ceremonies. A largo meeting was held at the Red River Battlement last month, lb° proceedings of which wo find In the Toronto Globe. A MOM of mobs tiono was missed, demanding the withdrawal of the Hudson's Bay Company's monopoly; annexation of the whole country to Canada, with a represent ativo form of government; and exposing sundry misrepresentations made by the company to the Ilon)e Government. A gloomy picture of the Con dition of the country to preoonted by a corre (mordent of The Globe, Ito says : " The most gloomy forebodings for the future hang over the settlement, while the want of many of the noose earies of life, such as soap and candles, not to spank of luxuries, such no sugars, winos, and spirits, Makes everybody discontented, and still more disgusted with the company, as those things wore left at York factory, to make room for the troops, whose room i 3 better than their company, and no doubt the company will find It so soon." Bishop O'Connor, of Pittsburgh, arrived a Havana on the 10th, in the steamer Black War rior. He is suffering from disease of tho brain. 1 , 410111 *ISSTAIORrLAND, COUNTY. [Correspondence of The Press.) ClitxENsai;na, Jo.nuttry 18, 1858, Ent : About two weeks ago the Westmoreland County Standing rotnmittee called a meeting for tiis evening, that the Democratic, party might ex• press lhoiropinlen'On the appliCation of the Kan. bas Nebraska cot, and the rights of the people of the 'territories, with special reference to the Kan• sus-Lecompton Constitution: It being court Week; the people from all parts of the Minty were assembled, and 'at an early boar tho court room. was tilled by a large mass of James 0. Clarke, Esq, chairman of the County Committee, was called on to preside, and a Dunlklor of vieelweridents and secretaries were appointed. - A committee of thirtoon ems thereupon selected to prepare resolutions. • DUring their einem, Mr. Clarke addressed the meeting in a clear, calm, and logical exerninaVon and dismission of the Kansas difficulty, the position of tho party, the principles Involved, and the duty of the people. The Committee on Remlotions, by their chair man, William A. Stokes, Esq., reported the follow ing, which were unanimously adopted 7 The Dem&rnoy of Westmoreland county, in mass meeting :mumbled, do unanimously resolve: 1. That the fundamental basis of American freedom is the right of the people, without die tinetion of locality, circumstance or result, to make the laws under which they live. 2. This great right, assailed during the 19th Presidential contest, by our opooncnts, was glo riously vindicated by the election of the Demo. made cendiaite3. ' 3. This victory was supposed to insure to oil, and ,ospecially the citizens .45f Territories of the 'United _States, the free enemies of sill political • right. by which to declare, establish, and maintain each institutions, policy, and measures as a ma jority might deem best adapted to promote their prosperity, security, and happiness; and 'this without any dictation or restraint from any person or officers, or any unauthorized, interference what- 4. Gish independent freedom of the . po' pular will eari only be attained by a full exorcise of the in dividual right of the elective franchise, and this, therefore. is the true teat of the validity of Consti tutional Government. 5 Wherefore, Congress ehonld admit no State Into the Union, except with a Constitution ratified and adopted in all its parts by a majority of all the citizens to be governed by such Constitution, which nail fority should be real, not fictitious ; fair, not fraudulent; direct, not implied; and any thing short of this, is a mockery, a delusion, and a more, infamous in net, and disastrous in copse: Tweet!. 8, To abandon the people of a Territory to poli tical intrigue, unfair intrusion; or lawless violence, and than defeat the true expression and absolute application of the right of self-government, would be a violation of the honor and abandonment of the maxims ,of the Demooratie pony, and must finally result in rupture of the bonds by which the party is held together, and consequent sacrifice of alt that mutes the freedom, greatness, and glory of our country. 7. Resolved, That whilo the radical element of Democracy, the declaration of the supremacy of the popular will, in essential to party unity, inasmuch as it concerns the existence of the Republic, it nev er has been nor over can be hold that difference of opinion nn points of policy may not be tolerated in perfect consistency with the organization of the Democratic party. 8. Resolved, That we cordially approve the views of tho President of the United States on ques tions of foreign relations and the currency of the country, and-concur in the general eentireents of the Inaugural address anti the annual message to Congress. We recognise in Tames Buchanan a wise and experienced statesman, an honest man and true patriot. and have full confidence that, if need be, domestic discord,' ripened into rebellion. will be erushed with all the fierce of lawful power; while the rights of the States and the people will be guarded with jealous care, so that the honor of his Administration:he preserved untarnished, and the glory of the Republic be made to shine with Increased brightness, 0. Resolved, That we look wills assured confidence to William F. Packer, the honest, experienced, and able Governor-elect, to reform the abuses of the State Government, to secure economy in all branches of the public service, and to vindicate the interests of the people by the perpetual prac tical application of the doctrines of the Democratic party in all the measures of his administration. 10. Resolved, That the honest acd manly course of the entire Democratic press of this county, in denouncing Milhaud contemplated in the Locomp ton Constitution, ar.d in adhering, in regard to Kama, with inflexible fidelity to the tnto spirit of the Kansas-Nebraska not and the essential rights of self-government, meets the warlll approval of the Demooratio party, whose sentiments they have expressed with both tenth and force. ," 'A tuotinq having boon made that Mr. Stokes be „aaarns _thet.mettinta_that—gen.tism came forward and dells seed a most powerful, en ergetic; and irresistible vindication of popular sovereignty, and denounced with intense scorn the business of those who would attempt to barter away the eighth of the people and tho honor of Pennsylvania. It is impossible to give any idea of tho concentrated forms of this groat speech, which, though long, hold the audience in fixei attention throughout. At Its close, on motion of Alexander McKinney, Esq., It Tins resolved that the cordial thanks of the Democracy of Westmoreland bo tendered to Mr. Stokes, After resolutions to publish the proceedings in Tnn PRESS, and all other papers in the State which adhere to the doctrine of popular sove reignty, the meeting adjourned. CITY POLICE-JANUARY 20 [Reported for The Press.l DANGERS AND DIFFICULTIES OP AN AMATEUR CHILD'S NURNE.—Mrs. Catharine MoGlatherty and Mr. Peter Kerrigan were brought up this morning for fighting and riotous conduct. Kerri gan la an unmarried man, who rents from Mr. and Mrs. Mealathorty one of the third-story rooms of their residence in Fitzwater street, whore he pursues the trade of making and mend ing shoes, Mrs. McOlatherty has five children, whose ages range from four to seven years; and, her husband being absont, she concluded to place these darlings under the care of Mr. Kerrigan, while oho went to market. rotor found himself in rather an embarrassed position, when (after warning him of the importance of the trust thus committed to him) Mrs. MeGlatherty departed, leaving her cherubs in the room where he was engaged at work. In a few minutes Kerrigan had occasion to lay down his lap-stone, and it was forthwith picked up by Phelim, (the eldest born of the house of McGlasherty,) who, finding it hea vier than he expected, suddenly lot it fall on the toes of his sister Novas, who set up a roar of torri. ble intonation, and, flying at her brother, tore out his heir in a manner which set him to howling iu concert. Anxious to pinches° peace at any price, Kerrigan brought out from his cupboard some bread and molasses intended for his own supper and generously distributed it among the young MeGiatberties. Teddy, the second boy, disposed of his [station at throe bites, and then clamorously demanded more, which Kerrigan could not give, as his stock was exhausted. But Toddy, suspect ing his entertainer to be actuated by motives of parsimony, endeavored to givo him a lesson on the subject, by slyly taking a pegging awl from the work-bench and sticking it into the elf of Kerrigan's leg. This was rather snore than K.'s equanimity could sup port, and, leaping up, ho soloed a leathern strap and gave Toddy sense cuts which caused him to yell like a Comanche. Phallus endeavored to res elle his brother, but only involved himself in the same misfortune. Little Patrick, the youngest of the brood, roared with airtight, and Norah aoronmed loudly for her mother. • At this terrible .. .juncture Mrs. MeGlatherty her self rushed In, her face glorying with rage and re sontment "Is it murthering my children ye aro, yo blood suoliing blackguard," ortod the, "oh, you wus then the haytlion Jokornut, which burns up the innocent babies, and then throws 'ens to crooky diles." While thus spooking, MI - 8.1%10G. enatohod up an unfinished boot, and applied it vigorously to Kerrigan's rib. The unfortunate Peter. being no match in physical strength for his excited land lady, had no resource but to throw up a window sash, and cry "murder." Some of the compae elonato r eighbora ran to the nearest tavern, (the only sort of place where policemen aro sure to be found at all times and reasoned and an officer was persuaded to some to Peter's deliverance—not, however, until the integuments of hie tildes and book were bruised as bleak as any other piece of eelf•skin in his manufactory. W. Monsieur Blonde], whose appointment as Belgian Minister to the United States is announced, is the gentleman who represented Belgium at the court of the Sultan from the spring of 1819 to the summer of last year, when, owing to his alleged undue interference in the Danubian Principalities question, his recall was requested by the Turkish Government. King Leopold and hie advisers having declined the request of the Porto, the lat• for sent the offending Minister his passports, and a partial rupture of dtplomatio relations took place between the courts of Brussels and Constantinople. Previous to Mr. Blenders appointment as Minister in Turkey, he was many years Belgian Consul- General in Eicypt, Mo Is said to possess considera ble diplomatic talent, is somewhat distinguished as a scholar, and is suspected of belonging to the clerical or ultramentano party in Belgium. The Norfolk Herald records the death of Mrs. Mary Dale (lore, at the advanced age of 90 years. She was a native of Princess Anne, and sister to the late Capt. Wm Dale Woodhouse, of that county. Their ancestors were among its earliest settlers, one of whose, descendants was the Into Commodore Dale of the American navy. Mrs. Virginia Tinker, consort of John It. Tucker, U. S. navy, died in Norfolk on Monday last. Mrs. Mary D. Galt, mother of Dr. John M. Galt, died in Williamsburg on Sunday. RELIEF OF LITCHNOVV: To at," . . mutor P of niL T A h n e zw e u s s ;: January 15, 1858. Under the beading " The Ilelief of Luckpow" an article appeared In the leading solemn of this day's Ledger, Which, if allowed to go unnoticed, would lead many unsuspecting people to form very erroneous opinions of the ran! cause of the present struggle for supremacy in India; as well as make the Zoglish people entertain the verygroundless idea, that Anaermans sympathise with them When they wage a war bf murder, robbery, dethrone ment, aggression, and confiscation, upon the un offending people of India, - Coming from the source it does, this article de serves more than a planing notice. If you will, therefore, he so kind; as to grant me a place in your influential and widely circulated paper, I Stall attempt to disprove many assertions, and Cor rea maluzions, which the editor of the Ledeer, usually well Inforafed, has allowed himself . to arrive at: Ite eminences by stating-- • If the &pop' had fought live men, Instead of con ducting themselves like devils, it would not perhaps bevebeen difficult for them to have !Inured aid from thin country td a very considerable extent. 'Surgeons would hays gone to their sick, and officers in abundance; nor could It have been difficult to make this struggle out as a second war of Independence. Hot several causes have combined, by degrees, to turn the whole tide of piddle sympathy against the natives, and une quivocally lee favor of the gallant defenders of Luck now." What are the causes that have turned the - whole tido of-public sympathy against the natives? Surely, he does not moan to assert that the came of 150,000,000 of people fighting for their liberty, their families, their homes, and everythingAtit is dear to them, deserves to be " stigmatized, or to lots thb 'sympathy of the world, - because a few savages intoxicated with success, the phrensy of religious fanaticism, and the memory of a thou. sand wrongs and inhuman barbriiittes ' perpe trated "by the 'rulers of India, on them saties, their - wires.' and ahildeen; and' their fathers, for generations, have committed crimes, awful and horrible, it is tree, but. certain ly not more so than the modes of torture we Sod recorded in the Blue Book of the Houle of Commons, as heaving been used by the representa tives of the British Government, to extort taxes, the moat unjust and odious that the imagination oak Ooncelie. The history of 'lndia's wrongs is no longer a sealed book to tha world, and 'wherever it has been read, it has not failed—for with any human heart it deal& not,—..to excite the wannest sympathy far the cause of that,robbed and down trodden people. In France, m Russia, in Ger many, In Italy, and in Ireland, the people and the press have spoken out, denotinotd British usurpa tion and robbery, and wished success to India. Even in England itself, there have been found men of high standing, who in the pulpit, througtl the press, and men in the halls of the nooses of Lords and Commons denounced the East India Company as robbers. and their calamine hideous than !AV ago ingenuity email invent.. And that, at this state of tho.proceedinge, an American paper of wane influ ence which had been hitherto rather silent on the subject, should cowe out mule° warmly espouse the cause, of the apparently successful party, and condemn those whose cause it has once acknow lcdr,ed to be that of jestice, flannelly exe.ites sus rioted' that .lov - waling more than a love of jusl ice and a desire to g,ive its readers the whole truth, prompted the writing of the article to which I allude. " Scenes," says the Ledger, 4' such as those of Delhi and Cewnporo, may have been emoted, Ina wen:3llocm so recorded in the whole world's his tory." The editor of the Ledger would, front this assertion, seem to have read little. of the world's history, hutnot only can ho find scenes as horrible and revolting, but (considering the cir cumstances under which they were enacted) far more so, committed by English soldiers, in almost every spot of earth cursed with British rule. Who that has read the history of Ireland eon fail to see that inhumanities and cruelties, before which Indian munlers ream nought, are recorded as having been perpetrated by the soldiers of Crom well on the inhabitants of that 111-fitted land; for there, too, were men and women and children bru tally murdered in cold blued, without any cause or provocation; there were pregnant women ripped by the pikes of a bloodthirsty English soldiery, open and their unborn babes flung in the air, to be caught on the bayonets of demons in human form. But not to Ireland alone do I look as the theatre of English butchery. /a the massacre of Menem, less revolting and awful than that of Cawnpore ? Were the cruelties perpetrated by English knights et Cumberland and Bannockburn, where they stabbed the wounded Highland chiefs lying on the field of battle,less barbarous than the acts of Sepoy soldiers Look to Spa'n, and tell me if the storming and occupation of Badajos, when an infuriated end drunken soldiery laid impious hands on all that woe pure and spotless—when temples were dose crated—neither ago nor see spared, and ladies of the highest respectability- and cloister virgins, torn front the sanctity of their retirement to be violated first and thou murdered by British soldiers. Does the editor of the Lerfacr find here anything to equal the scenes enacted at Cawapore and Delhi?" But there is, if possible, a worse tole to he told of English murder worse, fur under the teachings of Christianity the net was plotted,' end the foul design • evs,r-a,. not heard i ttrt Whert-e.eeemplished. Li tteston, those who have Bltgirs session of the islands of Now Zealnud, she met with an obstinate and succebsful resistance from the brave savage natives. Equal in numbers, they not only proved themselves equal, but superior to the English forces, and the latter were defeated in every engagement. The missionaries were resorted to. They wont to preach Christianity to the na tives; they told them they should rest on the Lord's day. and that it was wrong to fight: The natives belies ed, and on the Lord's slay laid down their arms. The British soldiers then set upon them, unarmed as they were, and butchered them in told blood—mon, women, and children. Does this equal the massacre at Cawnpore ? Ah! it is a base falsehood to assert, that the world's history recordk no darker deeds than those committed by the Sepoye. Those circumstances and deeds to which I have pointed are more awful still, when we remember they were enacted by a people who arrogantly claim to be the standard-bearers of Christian elviliestion. But the Ledger aperts that this is " a war against ourselves " What does the editor mean? Is he really serious' I can liardly think so, and from this ono assertion would be half inclined to think the whole tone of the article ironical. Does it follow that because there were a few Americans in India when the rebellion broke out, and because the natives could not discriminate between an American and an Englishman, that the Ilindoos waged war upon the American people? This a. , - sertion is only cquallid by the absurdity which pervades the whole article The writerscems to have sot out with the intention of eulogising the conduct of Gen Havelock, and did he confine himself to that, I should be by no means inclined to find fault with his doingso. But when he assorts the British army in India is commanded by men who " exhibit no retaliatory vengeance in a single edict, even when their troops were hushed with victory," ho es inces either such an ignorance of foots, or a desire to pervert them, that - de...ryes the severest condemnation. Is it not known to all the world that the edict of "no merry" 1108 been s ivon, and the command faithfully executed ? Is It not well known that men were blown in dozens from the mouths of cannon? Ito not the officers bout that they hang every native they can get hold of? The English journals themselves Atte that no man, woman, or child was saved at Alla ballad ; and tho very latest account.; state that, when the head is nut knookod off the victim, it sinks from view in a pool of human blood How, then, can the editor of the Ledger tells us that '• no retaliatory vengeance have the British bol diers had ?" They have bad all this; and this murder and butchery, (oh! the English language has not words sufficiently expressive to convey en idea of its brutality,) tho Ledger calls " the no blest deed of bureau. of Christian heroism." But not all this perversion of facts can blind the American people to the real nature of the struggle. Oa the side of India it is the cause of right and justice—they fight on their own soil. for their own homes, for their families, for their liberty, and for their altars. England is there a stranger, a rob. her, and a murderer, withont soy right of God or nature. She plunders them, she has plundered them, and fights to conquer and plunder them again Who hesitates to sympathize with her Americans do not. "Till right becomes wrong. end wrong right," thov still not They remember their own struggles for liberty. and remember England's treachery to subdue them. The voice of hborty and about of defiance that breaks from the base of the Himalaya finds its echo in the hearts of Americans. who cherish the liberty they themselves have won, and sympathize with its cause wherever. the world over, the etandard of freedom in raised against, oppression and wrong. lours, J. F. C The Icing of DelhD• Mode of Execution The following has bean communicated to tho Poona Observer : It appears from a journal of a European traveller that a new and fearful mode of execution had boon adopted by the King of Delhi The instrument and process are thus described A box, snob side of which is fifteen feet Omar°, is constructed of timber eighteen inches thick, dove tailed together, and braced with iron rods. The outside of the bottom of the box is covered with a iplate of beaten iron, one inch in thickness. The nterior is filled with perfect cubes of granite, weighing in the aggregate several thousand tons. A machine is erected after the manner of an ordi nary pile-driver, but of course on an enormous scale, and of tremendous strength. The moos is raised by powerful machinery east in Birmingham for the exprets purpose, though it is to be presumed that the machinist by whom it was furnished had no idea of the horrid purpose for which it was intended. The human victim is placed upon a block of granite, of a corresponding sutfaee, buried in the earth immediately beneath the enormous nines, and cos ored with a plate of iron. At a signal given by the vicramadaoic the executioner touches a spring, the mass falls, ar.d the violin], crushed at once, is suddenly annihi lated, and spread out like a sheet of pasteboard ! The huge weight being again raised, the flattened body is withdrawn and dried in the sun. When completely prepared it is bung over the wall of a public building, there to servo as a warning to the multitude. Tim Leavenworth City Ledger of the Bth inst. says that three young men. Henry Baker, James Stnith,and Alexander Francis, arrived there on Thursday afternoon, the 7th, direct from "Fort Bridger." They came the whole d,sta her. Claire hundred miles, on loot. and areompliehed their .lurney in forty- fire days• They report that the day they left, six Mormons came into camp and reported that the Mormons were in a state of civil war, Brigham Young and about one half desiring to march against the troops; the other half being in favor of the troops coming into "halt Lake" and establishing a military govern ment thorn, and overthrowing the present powers that be. Theo gentlemen left Leavenworth last July, with the train of Henry Charles. On their return they were caught in a snow-storm, at "Book Ridge," and suffered considerably; but they weathered the storm, and tame through without any molestation. It was certainly an undertaking this season of the year, TWO CENTS. THE TERRIBLE DISASTER AT BRODELYN, P;obffo Hchoollier op Pire—Serts Chltdres Mittireand Orem the New York Daily Times of Tneedsy.] • A little before 3 o'clock yesterday - afternoon, Publie Bobdot Building No. 14 of Brooklyn, earner of Concord end Navy streets, IY. D., was 41SCO • voted to be on fire. Theta were nearly OW pupils prevent et the Alma the Are broke out, and 3n the excitement attending their salt from the building seven boyi, between the ages of 6 and Itrye . sra, were embed and suffocated by their compani ons on the middle landing of ,the lower, stairway. Their Llamas and residences are itS follows : 211/1 DOD 1. 'Henry Plass, 10- years old, eon or Garwood Plana, private watchman, residing at lio. 78 Carl ton avenue. 2. Henry Le Blans, 7 years of ago, son of Am hilts° O. Le ICano, grocer; residenee.No. 186 N 011.9313 street. . . 3 John William Groin, 5 Years ald, eon of David Green, wagon-maker, Concord - Alva, corner of Radom avenue. 4. 11. C. Smith, 6 years of age, whoseparenta re side at No. 3.3! Bridge street. 3 Stephen Bloomdeld, 7 pars old, parents resi ding in Gold (Meet, near Tlllary. d. Peter Bunten, 6 years old, am of Um. Phebe Pentell ; residence No. 334 Gold street. 1. Wyek, boy about 7 yearn of age; hie father is a cooper, reeding on ;Oxford street, near Myrtle avenue. The above children were all tittrocated, and.only one of the number bare any marks of extents' in jury. raiz LTIORED. - This far we , bane bee& able" , to find bet three other: persons seriouslY injered. Abijatt Pearsall, savenyeareeMzeud son pf Ann ithnie,yeernan t nividinin Card atreeknesr 41.1. lacy, received intoner injuries, and id ,the opi nioa of Assistant bu rgeon Bill , of the Police, be eannotlive long. - . - A son of widow .Ryner,aine,years of age, re siding on Mull street between Prince andJohason, also received such injuries by....betng .trardpled, upon that be milord, live. Mrs' Ryner bad three., children in the sobool at the than of the Iteeident, but the others escaped injury.% • Another-boy bad orie_of .his legs brokeii, by jumeingfiront a window, hat his home could not be ascertained. Savers! others *e: slightly bruised. A rumor gained considerable enzreuoy last even ing that there were more children under the mins, but after diligent inquiry_ we concluded there is no truth in it. Ou,tbe CAntmr7, the pr incipal of tho school and the polide unite in the belie! that the worst is now Irmisth. • • 111 E BrILDI2I6. Public school, building was lactated an the southwesterly ionic,. of L'opoord said Nary streets, western distriot of Drool - cirri. 'lt was built 1111553. • The fire was first discovered about. 23 o'clock, as near as can be ascertained. by !dim 11. M Beebe, a teacher in the primary department, second story, in a lathed-and-plastered partition wall, through which pars the tin heaters. It wee undoubtedly from these beater! that the fire wee communicated' to the wood-work. Mils Beebe, with great presence of mind; locked the doer and informed the piaci pal privately of the fire. In this manner the pre -1101100 of the fire was made known to all the teachers, and without creating any unnededsary alartn. Mine Beebe had sixty small children under her charge, and after having notified the, pOnoiptsl or the fire she dineisw , d the thildrenoind they, taking their clothes and hooks, left the Premises in very good order and without accident. All the children in this end of the building escaped without difficulty. The fire spread with great rapidity toward Navy street. A few of the children jumped from the win dows ; only ono of these, however, was injured, and this one, a boy, bad one of his legs broken. - - Not many minntes had elapsed after - the first general alarm before there was a panic among the scholars in the Navy-street end of the building. By this time many of tbo boys bad gained the street,,and had been going out In good order, obe dient to the orders of the teaehera. But when the smoke came drifting up the stairway, and it was noised about what the trouble was, the bop who wore behind became unmanageable, and rushed to every direolion to escape—a few to the windows, but the majority to the . Navy : street stairway: The great rush was on the stairs immediately leading to the street. These were filled with small bent ; the older ones, in their anxiety to escape, nulled upon them until the whole apace was packed with children. Of course the little ones were pressed down under the weight, and here seven boys lost their lives—not by fire or smoke, but actually smothered to death. The teachers acted very creditably, and were the last to leave the building. A number of the scho lars also exercised a discretion mesh beyond their years, and among these we heard the following named: Jamas McFall, Smith C. Roof, Jolla 3. Bray, sad William Mackay. There Ina, at the height of the panic. endeavored to r cetera artier. and rendered valuable 1183i8:ance in pulling tho small children oat of the mass on theatairo. and passing them out at the windows. The slum of tiro soon ettpsoted &lax: crnronttrn also a large pollee force, under Deputyupo n .- tendent Folk, promptly on the ground, and every poseible assistance was rendered. Officer William H. Brown, of the Pocond precinct, wagon duty near the building when the first alarm was given. Ho entered the Navy street door, just as the stairway became blocked by the scholars, and alone dragged seven of them out and planed them out of danger. The last one be got hold of was the boy PiesS. who was then alive but insensi ble. Ile took him across to the Park. and placing him upon one of the seats, despatched a man for a physician. Dr. Firth, of Gold street, was soon on the spot and rendered all the aid possible, but it was of no avail; be died in a very few minutes. Officer Drown then took the body to the station home ; it was subsequently identified and taken to his father's house. Soon after Plans was taken out, three others were taken to the office of Dr. Stow, on Nassau Sleet, two were dead before reaching the office, and tho third died In a few minutes; the others were imme diately identified and taken to their parents. Miss L. French, one of the teachers, particularly distinguished hermit: in aiding the children to ea. cape from the building. It is said that she lower ed as many as a dozen out of one of the second story windows. A boy maned Martin, whose parents reside at the earner of Stanton and Concord atrects, leaped from a window in the third story on Concord Street. Ilia fall was broken by the people under the win dow, and be escaped wilhoutinjury. A scholar relates thst a little girlie the Primary Department was one of the first to discover the fire, and gave a scream. Before she could direct atten tion to the cause of her alarm her teacher had her under subjection, and thus a panic in that room was prevented. Frederick Ward, son of a boss in the navy yard, residing at No. ill Prince street, jumped from a second-story window on Navy street and was caught by a policeman, who landed him safely. There were in all about nine hundred children in the building, which was calculated to accommo date twelve hundred. At least five hundred and fifty attempted to leave the building by the Navy street door. Many of these were from the other wing of the building, and they contributed mate tialty to the excitement. Die building cost the Board of Education $17,000 in 1853. It was not insured. Many of the school- books and a great many volumes belonging to the library eero saved. During the fire the scene about the building was truly affecting It was known that many lives bad been lost, and the number was at one time repwt ed as high as twenty. Parents who bad children in the school flocked to the scene, all anxious to assure themselves of the safety of their little ones. The majority of the scholars had disappeared, and many parents were kept in suspense for hours. The dead were taken away as soon as removed from the building, and seine time elapsed before all were identified. The excitement was intense, and there tens deep sympathy for the sufferers. Every effort was made to relieve the suspense. In this work the police behaved nobly. LATER NEWS VROM KANSAS The Election—Gen. Calhoun on his way to %I ashington. (From the St. Louis Democrat, of the 16th.] Two gentlemen, of Kansas City, Ido , who reached this city lest night, having left home on Ilfonday,the Ilth, inform us that at the time of their departure, although the returns were scattering and incomplete, it was the impression that the Territory had gone for the Lecompten Constitution. This is very contradictory of the previous reports concerning the election, and is undoubtedly a mis take. Our informants state that on Sunday, the 10th, lien. Calhoun procured, at Fort Leavenworth, an escort of United States troops from Oen. blar ney, consisting of fifty dragoon& and proceeded to Lecompton, where he arranged his private affairs preparatory to his final departure from Remus, Ile returned the same day to the fort. Re is net probably in the Territory at this date, and is on his way to Washington city, where, in all proba bility, unlike his predecessors entrusted with au thority in Kansas, he will receive the most unqua lified approbation of President Buchanan. llis most infamous conduct in the Territory entitles him to it. Calhoun will probably pass through this city during the first part of the miming week. Other gentlemen who came down on the ears re port that the Territory had gone overwhelmingly against the Leoompton Constitution, and that the Legislature is largely free State, while the pro slavery State officers aro all elected. The first serious Accident, says the lowa Citizen, that has happened on the M. & M. It., hen to be recorded this week. Too miles west of Dav enport. timbers had been collected and piled up near the track fora new bridge across Duck creek, whose waters at that point are nearly ten feet deep The up-train—it is supposed—jostled - the timbers and threw a heavy stick on the track. The down train reached the TAM after dark, nt full speed, and was thrown off the track within sixty or eighty feet of the bridge. The engineer seems not to have discovered the obstacle. The locomotive rushed towards the bridge across the tics, dashed it to pieces, and plunged into the creek, dragging the tender upon it, and making a cam plate wreck of both. The passenger-ear was drag ged partly over the bank, but Rot a person .inside was injured. The engineer, (Mr. Morgan,) an ex cellent rnan,) end the fireman were both killed. The engineer won covered by the tender and drowned. He was found at his post, looking almost as natural as in life. The fireman jumped, but was crashed by the wheels of the tender. The Brazilian Government advertises for proposals for the construction of an immense thea tre at Rio Janeiro, offering premiums of $lO,OOO, $4,000, and 2,000 respeotivsly, for the three beat plans. The proposals MO to he sent in within nine montlts from the 13th of November last. NOTICE TO mums poNzormas. - • o;i4-4,..a- Z",ilEr Wiz: l4 lw I. Wed the fatkresit ratio: .11Taq oestuaaeloattiat *lst eaceaetwaget by the risme etttu 4 .zltia . 4ar„itrdet to to.s; eoarattaeleot the typography, but oni sae et a 'sheet should be vtittea upon. Ws shall hi issatty obliged to/maw:an L reansyl ruts and other States kr sonbitottiona giving the cur. rat twin of thfrdei la, their iartto, tdoe ioestit4i , the resounds of the awronottlagr, eonntty, the ineresae of popolatton, tad any Inforwation tat whine latatecttng to the general reader. ' - GENERAL NEWS. The New York Journal of Cimunoros says that, owing to the eirationed heavy weirterly winds which have pressiledfgr the last two mouths ves sels boned westward , from rairopean ports are malting oncommonly long pasuges . With those carrying passengers, at this ;anion of the year, a long passage proves very injurioua and destructive to health and life. - Ship lever, more particularly, is apt to make fearful work taunt emigrants, ill clad and provisioned;" and, above all, poorly sup plied with pure ate which they do not receive be cause of the Inclemency of the leader.: It L al most impassible to force emigrant pavement upon deck during rough and wet weather, many cap tains indulge their pa w sengera in their deur* to remain bo'clar, and th e result. as this season of the year, is that ship•fever Is almost certain to oom mance its deadly work. -- - • The. lowa Stale 'Jeered of the - *h learns from a gentleman just returned from the North- west, that a messenger bad arrived from Calhoun In ringing the fa mil ya a band of Sioux Indians b ad murdered a ea thelntle Soar rirer, and were eommi ttingall manner of de.pfedii dons. Thu inhabltants - ef eathcern and adjoining counties *owe aimin g , and - haatenhig to the rescue of the settlers on the Little Sioux. Trouble with the &AS wee anticipated. It will tie reteentbered that this is in the region of Spirit. Lithe, ohm so many families were reassucred last spring. The Victoria bridge across the St. Lawrence at Montreal, whieh has been ittthe course of erec tion for retard years, will be the lar g estod finest in the world. It is An ; be two miler ion. The total amount of masonry in the _bdditstill be 3,000,000 cubic f r pet„witieh, at In lestiolte ton, gives a took Wee,, ,fs_qateen. of dm-Piers art , o4 ;411.1tif,“ that 'eight more he ft' Awl: nenr" Vesting only two to erect in le s Sit, - 2The tptsifsecigtit of iron in the tubes will he 10,400 tolls.-"see bridge will poet abautlis,ll6 l irBo." - "' ' The Gospel &neer nay!: .Chieitia:Le spoor phidif for s Yank* :The' abrade ease' him the ages fever') The; ester ha daribMa. The food, aseeohed by ifteneekers, traideasirClyetaptia. The whiskey. attehollea" makes hire arshy. 0r; If * temperifieelnai. three per aeet: Mewls ours to bring ;cm the blues. Throughout the entire Western eotmtrwhomesiek men araplentier than. anything . Xis more wire ind pmiesenis men wall emigrate thither by our advice. .- : ,,.., . ALF correspc.ndent,,af. tits Hertford,. Conn., Press, mentions the owes of a , men named nut Curt*, of Brittol, who the last forty years has slept-and- ate! his morning meal in barns in the neighborhood. declining ail invitations even in the eldest weather to do otherwise. Re - die d toenai l ly, lensing a lair property "An Inatome* is men. tinned in the Stamford Advocaat of a • man who during , tee cold winter months would. remain dor mant. Rdoweektat a time - . 4 = • The St. Louis • Ripublicas corrects the Evenix* IF.tes skirl of a mystetioes' Murder at the West. The missing man ut . David Kenton, of Barton, who has relatives in St. Lot& He died at Cleveland while on Waspy to fit-Liali, having fallen into a atteetn of taitterwhile temporarily in mine. atetreogiving fein/ies vttktE prevented him from resetting himself: His body - was recovered fifteen days afterward,, and taken to Boston, .telintettstimarkinried: , F , brakeman_ named WiiHam A. Hann, on the freight train. ilia accidentally nut nom and killed after the arrival et the train. at Jersey City, about 11 o'clock on Monday evening. Part ofthe train_ ,naa *fog banked ip to i turn-out. and run over ltim on the track,nansiag death in about an boar. - He Irell smartly man, and laaTeB a wife in Jersey City. - where be lately Mont to retide from One of the Eastern State.. - - - -• " Saturdayoutlifr. ltinKibben wit going bourn in his baggg along the'Allegbeny and But ler plank road, bin brasbiro frighte ne d and ran off, throwing him frOm is seat sad trailing him for some distance, until they were stopped by some imm-mt - MoOonneira - store in Du Queens borough, Allegheny county, BA.. McKibben _was ao eirierely njnred i that he died , a few minutes after being carried info the taw:: , The R. Benjamin C. Gra ft on an aged _ and muabfaspaelad minister af the Goapsd,of the Baptist perm aslon, died at bes feeldenee in Cot tav aireet,' in qambridgeport, Altai:, On - Tuesday 'trek, at the ifge of secenty-tiro years led four menthe The deceased- was is satire arlfaapor', IL L, and, during forty yams? valuistration has been absent from the pulpit - but four Sabbaths_ Captain Lott, of the steamship America, at Boston'on.llloridsj s ratirrifog:' from Liverpool. re norts beery westerlyweather 'entire passage. On the Bth instant, let. Istl lon ‘ 23 30, :exPell eneed every henry gale froth southwest to north west,' with the barometer down to 213: -On the Ilth,lat.4l 51, lon. 5 54.40, had ,another heavy gale from southwest to northwest. _ Mrs. Pens, the daughter of Mr. J. A. Jet, of °bout, Sy., lost bet' bnsband by death three Weeks since, and became insane. in ootatetittence. Lest Saturday she strayed away bout hope, and on being searched tot, was_ found dead...in The Woods rear Louie. 'She hadlainglerself with her hanakeictliaf to the limb of n tree. - The Portland dhres atatee that thwAiwelling • --- • •aweika-"Kut.ma,,,--„tr.; ot,-Lbrenware, I•9s contoured by ftre - on the eve of the I4th and that Ellen, an only and mash-belayed ter, aged about IT, pe rished - in the (Isams. Two moat narrowly- *soaped. Mr. sad btrs..E. were absent at the time. A correspondent of the )if[ford - Jevons/ rays that Me. Damrell, reponse ntative of the Third Congressional District of • M assachusette, 'pro poses, at an early day, to resign his teat in Con grate. llis disease has recently beemire much ag gravated. till he has scarcely strength to write his own name. The Belfast Ode.) Ira Preis states that a company of Tolontoers is being formed in Cam- • den, and will offer their services to the GOTOI9- moat for the Utah expedition. A gallant young man, Mr. George G. £sterbrook, is the leading spirit of the movement. A man, named Anderson, was killed in Plemingburg' ity.. a few days since, by a ban from a gun in the hands of John Glover. They were both friends. and were joking each ether until they got to angry words, when Glover shied his gom and Bred, from the effects of which Anderson died the next day. The Boston Traveller says that the recent favorable weather boo prompted the Gloucester fishermen to resume their dangerous and uncertain business on George's Bank. - Some have started already, and between fifty and sixty weasels are about to sail. _ Last Friday afternoon a young man — named Moses wasdrowned while skating on Se bago Pond, Maine, is company with several others. Moses skated into a hole and was drawn under the ice. His ago was about twenty-fire years. A sword worn by Lieut. Coil. Dupoister, a British officer, at the celebrated battle of Mountain, was presented to the Tennessee His torical Satiety, at its last meeting, by Captain Edmiston, of Davidson county. - William H. Smith is on trial for the mur der of his wife, under circumstances of peculiar atrocity, at St. Louis. Julia Johnson, tester of Smith's wife, has been examined for the prosecu tion. The late Hon. Rufus Bullock, of Masud:lu nette, left, among other legacies, 510 000 to the town or Royaleton, $5,000 each to the two religious societies of that town, and $l,OOO to hit pastor, Rev. Mr. Bollard. Mr. Panl Morphy, who won chess laurels at the New Yerk Convention, bas been chosen Presi dent of the Obese Club of New Orleans. and pro- poses to play two matches blindfolded, after the manner of Paulsen. Signor Ronconi, agent of one of the opera companies performing in Havana, drew the capi tal prize of $20.000, in the lottery of the 15th ultimo, in that city. The number of his ticket VMS 11,794. Mr. Frederick Berry, a son of Dr. Berry, of Prince George county, Md., died very suddenly on Monday morning, at the residence of the late Washington Berry, near Pittsburgh. The Providence Post notices the fact that not a single murder has been committed in Rh.de Island during the past year, notwithstanding capital punishment is abolished. The whole number of convicts in the Mas sachusetts! State Prison. on the let of October last, was four hundred and forty, twenty-nine of whom were under sentence for life. George Braxton, who was stabbed in a drinking saloon in Newark, N. J., the other day, has since died from the effects of his wounds. Mr. James Stanley Smith, one of tha edi tors of the Auburn (N. Y.) Daily A suriean, died on Saturday last. Judge Benjamin Northrup died at Cleve land, Ohio, last week. The Grave of Patrick Henry. Until very recently •and the people not only of Virginia, but of the whole Union, ahould hear it with chagrin and sorrow—the grave of Patrick Henry has had no stone to mark its locality, no monument to invite the eye of pilgrims in search of that sacred shrine. The Richmond Enquirer, however, says that at last the pious and patriotic task has been undertaken, not by the State that proudly claims the ma'ernity of him whose dauntless spirit and stirring eloquence awakened the slumbering spark and fanned the flame of American freedom—not by the notion that ' , boasts his name" and kill reaps the reward of his ser vices, but by the two surviving sons of that fear less and gifted champion of liberty. The Enquirer thus describes the tombstone jest placed over the remains: It COV9ISIS simply of a solid wall of fine sandstone, quarried on the place, nine feet ten inches square, and two feet high, with a superstructure sax feet Square, twenty-two inches high, with marble slabs projecting over the sides. On one of the slabs ii tnscribed : "Patrick Henry. Born May 29th, rm. Died June 6th. 1799. His fame his best epitaph." On the other: "Dorothea Dandridge, wife of Patrick Henry. Born in the year 175.5. Died February 14th, 1831." It will thus be seen that his wife sleeps by bit Bide. In Charlotte county, at Red Hill, the resi dence of John Henry, Esq., tbe•e sacred relies lie. Would it not be well for the State of Virginia to add a single stone, at least, to tie modest monu ment that marks the grate of Patrick Henry? Dn. HALL recommends, by way of preven tion against taking cold, that persons going out of heated rooms should (4 keep their mouths shut." The caution may be very wise and judicious, but what are the ladies to do 1 Tan Sacramento nmer says, in the course of a report of the proceedings at a public' dinner, "The 3layor of the day, and ladles, etc., were appropriately and elegantly drunk, and the party separated in doe cheer."