The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, January 30, 1858, Image 1

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    ' rtaun2tEti , DA.4, 1 1:111.10IBIPPIPWFD , )
* Y ARM Ni;0 1 }..1TT,L,.„ t .
evPiCg i PlO.-417,;018XINit 614'104
- 1 k4 11 0r , : , ;!! ,14-, * 15 1 . 11 .1
"2'04 Ai{ I,f*tilitTr,aihr.4o.,`,l , o
MUM to Fabsetibees out of the CIitYSI,thiIDOLLAR#
P Linn* %Ton Ifokbeint fez Elwin Ides.Sat4 Tlesse
net.
Do4,ll)VigitTft, istAt4, l o,r, 4,4 flti.knot. f9t98 4
tiioa. - • - • ...•
: I•.Y 00. ski:,
Mat i to s mut .oe.the oityo.i.t4P.Aws.
Ling Its Alustrettfla ftbec • - r•
_ WEEILLY
TulfsSiblr pinks - ; wlllibe sent to anbeaeituil by
moittit(fineflurbmo ll4 Thlibebt , ill 00
Thresogoplen, 00
Tiro Slephoß ; 884
Ton - 22 - Ob
Twenti %cults, ,
Ono' oddtese). - 20 A
Twenty goples, our,. &detente( Suit
eseh- ' ' 7 1 1 TO
Yora 1711 b of rlienty-bolt: dr, Oval we wtU eend an
extra - copy laths rgetteetu of the Olab. ' r
ll:rfeetteWensuetteueetost to set u Agents for
Tee WseshT TARIM -. 4 7. , . TI -
e -J 1 05 44 !.
WAgSt i ATO- 1 0 11, -Mi l itt M E N:
'??o.oYtklatietirOßAOS 4 11 1 .1 1 i
.IcatUrfit AI ta itacsamagi „
and adshilcxyr eloganclesidifail r'*l."
MUM; 00111001MI1iD'D11111/111i1T17 4-‘
Cloollementalltddlo call sad exataine.
"25,abi- . 911111;WOrrilioator,
- , ,
FAAS
- FAIRITANICA* ZWING; , I
lif4Bolfact irAti4 , a6 cuisATNOT .5711/I.ST,
ja6...3m), -
.S.
1011PAILET-14 00.,11HESTNIITIVIMBET,
t J; NlPalltaldtliiii of
Barnes )Ininutct tux=
Undertnett lespestlas On the yeeraidoo-stabidtell
Mane
iiie 61 411,06.1.14,
--'- -'
'le ildilli {.•, 6601161) " A
oEntr" ir limaymPr ll , 7 7-1-71--'or mrtil 0 , .21
aracri s i --; iiiii El4bl,- ...,,.)" gl 4t WaY l - 3 7 ,
d of ' . luPs . ii it,4 4 4 1 47,- :--- - •
y;:ti;(i.kliliti,VL:i .0
anclaBsTNUT titio•f, • •
HenreellAredi ittnarooni, noir Arlie; ,
Sowdri, Oliargsdno, •VrolYbolor, -
dpird„Rd'ins, dlotr Pine. „
Pruft Brandi; No Deakritrl , • •
.lot goo& trinitiroVioed. l, l • :•••0
Carol, lir' and Mon& Seto.
VolerAgentai inakUs444litii, for fdor sale of Marin
PrOdstirineo LONDON T1N.L.N.841P111113,. • dolg ,
oll;VER : "
'WILLIAM
ni - ANUFAOTUMis OF I.ll.ria„ FOE,'
ivasTAßLisusn'uo,y, , - • "
.E1....* 001111111 ilitB /RD a tills lir r
large aaeortment or OILYEtt , $4 4.100, of erets
reriptlon, eonetantly on hand, or made to order to mate&
ennrettern:deetred•r ," i YE r c
-
?r. (; B/rD'lngtegO ImPortoll
Mare. —
• - • 'ser•dePrli
.
y ; t sr.:iAttimskit lino:.'
,
0 , miaow iotrowas
BILYNR-mATED ' •
No. Oheotrod secootrlibo've , r.ll.td - ;• (op .tire,)
Ooristantly on hind and for sale to the Trade
•
TNA!-Nors, -oartikiNNlio#i..BEßT7 OP NANgi
PlTgallaßi GOBLSTS WALITESSIL: SAL,
NSTNf easToßs - mityka BEI/ONS; NQline.:-
LAbtazi, tte!, ko. •
0n.( 4 4 11 4u11f o(metai,
„,444,
Itlaitib.
A M ERIOAS GOLD; -
.rs-' — rrEw TORII ; '
. . BALTIMORE,. • ' •-
end Boivita
,• ,
BoagIO:parlio14
B.
.
TINIFLEY,3c
37 Botitb:TIIIRD Reek
Atif;RIOAN'O42II,AD
NIIIW-YO.l - .EX AND* OIIAI4GB •
=wimp: • :"
OIMILENT:,BAT.BO,, •
• • •
OSONIBB 44:00, -
-
,
nowatr,— " 40, EIODFV# TIILILD sr;
<.tatiotierg.
BLANK. BOOKS AND STATIONBRY.
DAM - SOL hotriur, Blank Itook linnutketuser,'
Statioiier and Alin*, No.-140 WALNUT Street; is prey
pared at all Almesto turniih, either from the shelves
or insire.to ordereßooks or every description, suitable
for banks. Public( Clblaes;lferchsots; end others . , or the
beet quality, ot English or ktneristil Paper , gni ,hOtinil
in various styles, in the rhOstictlisteritial wanner; •
Orders tor JOB ,PRINTIbict of every deiteciptioiti
!1 711 : 441 : lieldtiees
A.general
()Amigos lea, liCianiis io4trifiufinn kitite.Prolddin
Institute, thellommlttee say—ii• This - aspley 0f,104,
books tor banking end utereantfle tisilittb4i bait in this
Exhlbltton.v Vfielielection ot thi:naterlal is4ood-the
worknunishfir,roost , excellet4l , 44 their Shish
IPliaratPe 4 14 0 113 dAYFFiVriati.t-- •
r 1 S~ tUPOIIG R 4llcpgcln~xsJ Vs: ;_
SUBSORIBtitS- DAY-
Into 'ar /hatted partneiship, dixecociodenoe
with ths Otete,of Aeoembly ; in snob made guid,pub.
videdi,nonten the Arm of RUM AL leo ..the ,
traneaction'of the 0349941CILBUSIfilbkin the city_ of
The pore! 'pest' nere:pie ',OLEethNT,
11.11ETZI,ferrieW.:Ctudle Dann% in the 'State; of Dela ,
oexii, dad ffy.ORGT. DEht; the onty - of °Wan '
in the ettitwotlteerJensiy; and the sp . wild" partner,
ISALCI MITES; of the conntrof °tataliter
t , In Oho
State of NewlettleY• 7 011)411.44 ceoh coaolinated
by IdkA.o RBBV.EB !eabght,theusand dothwg,
The p o rtgerehly oeuunenee, on - the diet"dey of
Jtatallf 408, lad MU' 44,6114 p) - 171 i nit 411.411-11111
ds/Wf PectiPahntitta "
- '-; O Th arEVE V Aii,
rI'Z. , t GEORGN' Dftti .4. •
- -
COkArtil
eilattng between the eu s eeeritote, tinder the firm
of BANDALL;#4I42IODI7O, inAbtottfeY dirwthed
mutual mama: •,,-1 •• t
BAUTIBL . ftANDALI;.3s - itay nutholized to settle
the Dulnessat lei i!onth IMONT street( , ,
; • • • 814 WARD ItArilLth"
1 , •„' , 13. A. KNIUDI.Tp,
, EL J. EANDALL.
Pint,essiesti4 Jen. p,16513; •
B. coati:we the . Cosi buelneierron
his own account, at 161 Bontb PBONT, above'Welnut
z *
;TIME OOFEETEEESHIII HERETOFORE
,•,ezistiagr tuiderthe Ern of ELME% k 00.
ie t h is day dissolved by the death °JO. 0, LAUD,
The huhu,* of Alto late Aro! will-beAtettled bj the
surviving }arthen, . who. UV* aseoclattat with them
I, JOHN WI E 8;, W.. D:11$1111L1.11. 11..)A8W.N,
!ander the fine of MEG and PM
eontlromo the Dry Goodajoblitmavi AnipOrthiglillirtees
lie heretofore, at NO. 4f poi% TWAD,street.-- , 1 1 " ,
prtn - auttin; , .
„ . 'a•Aoo - s it/Eoll , l'
;WIC, S. HURD, ,
'JOHN WINST,'
W.' D.IIPONSLNII,
--,-. D. B.:. Async-, ;,
;; ; -
Ne4.610.er fly 1067:
(10rAILTNEASHXE`: - NOTICE:',-", Th'w* tui
derelgned. have entereCtiato-' edpitteenittplithder
:the vernerof ALTBIII7a At:OMM, for the trantetotlen
'orall'oreignipd Noe& Conimfeelort '7lstiettiets, st - No.;
.241 ,- CWW , Pretreitti.• • ' • •
• , ; ;GROWN W.,AVBRI4Uff,t •
•-•.' • • CIOBBNS.,,
4 wit. toe den PO,S, ' •
N. B —Being agents for the - moattielebrateemeke, of
Li en Goodein the United Btatee,treworadpattivolarly
iotae th4tettehtfoliof thetpuleV l•-•••• JaNttatt
Eti l ftiSZA 31:11401)3111 t4i ....
our.binineirinAkdailtyliom this to at o. 820
CHESTNUT gt*,• es; WBBSTBR,
identifeotartre of ffewliv Machines.
'elf] 'lB6B ' " fici.ord
-141Wiia1icinI: : ' , 1!
: IIiBIEYSIOLLIM?tikOOKKT , , DAY...BOOK
.: A. /OR 1968.-Just pubthhed and &feats by
t .i:.,-
°l ;!gteU . id?iS4oih64ll 4, li het.
I 114 1 247442
tttitaltu' ii"Alty#l4,..4i - Vtibleifor dottcv
"Arittlnr.rit:r"--ii:="ri th° 4 " .4 ,l"'"'"
widow 04 . 000ains.Pmpoolons, efftorc. OF,llieti
ompereUve Thermometzto 444.44,134th5--81.mple 44d,
ledicitull,,..Tabie4_4( , POW% et Alt the ,ptinetol 6tot
Intl* 61;t1Obitmoo43rteititsittet and Typit,
larats jor'llo44 - ,r 2 1420644; 'Baal Aecotitt, ,t "
uti44' Aditme, 1111444 , ,Aeotipikti - 402441 fbi, vie;
I„akimmbiotootriompseg.. m0te, , 434gib1i2,. Palma,
aud.AnGtOsnidediOnt PetiodicAta t &o., - &o, ... ~
Billit - .1.0"0rt4.. .:.....;0P,,, la. i ,c.fi:oPerittitnt*of - :4leier,ii
entinontfuternosta Gr" use: rtottentint; pi .. o2timmorg.
lust
truikt tfite lithe Mooing Will 216' a went bitherti
ansupplted,' and *tb: tOtieer to Its fututittq A p ro it ta dhe,
aril bothipprU' indelte 7 nnyandieettonnlegooquig
40440.414n5, Aditicnoy2,ce..-.—.” ,':,,,•' ,-, ~ i ' -a 5,.., ~
.T. 40 64074 various
26 and 40 ittients, ak,'
bound sc. various styles. _ lad .
11 . 4T,RWE .0.8310LL'..
JAMES IL &'SSItIC• "
• ',, • , , • • !
"Pik! , Aiti!N; :0, i
OIJ j'A.NIfIARIt
the.kaantliai
'-r - YOTATUB) . - . • • • , ;
rittl.ol, err Ttovpv*:prixtti Eittnaporr. , l -
a P . 7% •
• •
103$ 1ikti41.147 0.001414 a.
i•leitihn •
e:11:IIILABELion14,1
fiAV'UV 1 000 r ., 0 1. 1 . 0 ; :
lib,. Fro, , Lsrd lop MG
PTO ASDALLS1111141011.1104:
AeIAW. 7 .:-=' ,7 4 7 1.1 9 AClA.o4ll=Jthitemorsvr4sulh.
lITISIMSVPIMIOR NO. 401PW.O. , t'BREAD
T1T, 4 04 4 / 0) Awisialiwavetitdie satioilirJeiby
iirlarVigrOlMULtm.X lOT
KC50P,frA7<,0,40044.4.44,4/41044.:-
SAWA-WAR it3Aoolo:...pßit
.1-lAAMpAktagd,ogittiorth.,,,t,ls . l434 ,
iNt l l. l ,O RA7I, I 7,:t . K4°A I APITIFA , • ...AM
011814 , 1**ND AXE :I.OAN( TARRED. tIOTTON4 4,l 2oo`biletekS4,lll.tddlillo Mid
.11. 1 11'1)041MOIX4Pin#0011? riettoly, , " 7t./ Allogyairpottos z piltore stee Air • a,"
IbriwitiVbt 11`SATNAVVITIAR* CChfr • '1 ) Vid4041 , 1 UR) ,••
OVic ',.'m,416.1P-K. - ArSts , l#44slllo , llo , 4lj.- I
.stPflitrtn ,
At". , T - at t'"
VClt
trritrrickictintle ire. oft*. tlicYLI EY.
I BY TEE DARD-Or TOWER 14LL.
Mt.l'attleton Ooke hadleet eittled
pei4arthle ha event prettY detlein lge till; -
And
,
)twin betty heind t or,,bl4 •purpose !Sainted, ,
Se 16*.1{Pold hrtolded Me bill up neceipted.
He bad mind in he (lance; ;Ad been happy and gay,
Hntislt/et, like oot•pide uptekethe htehway, ,
;echhadhicii, lAstaler p , ay
Pohe having settled, that date; gone through,
To they'll' of Illagnra Viddiag adleA !
leekltlfted ' to hiehdless on the Filtlikienne,
:ppoticirapi oset - anAntly! - "othin g to 46;
Ho rmild tibm. Fee' nertahi; it peace be should ides,
With. She bleasingstanninQ him, the fault . es hie assn:
NireddM•life;to . hit lipe, he'd the chalice at blies,.
AO angels had blotted thaeoldiroid alone. • -
ltwite laps be side him, her hand he - was preening
SEM
No tones to
aralleTeiiiiiiive
`,With nothing fortdditwnoehance for transgressing,
lidenatran bloomed with the presence of Eve.
Streit thet ixitreiyieti the Si vv will pardon ;
1 , Ahdluithig done thaiirlil net think to compare
, hire. Littleton Coke le Mk Eve lit the garden,
„With Volk nothing to wear.'
'AsT stint now remarkvii kfr.Voke and his bride • '
;,..reere sitting together, that ls, side by side'
And there „thay had erithiperode when no one wan near,
The tritlesaci treasured, Muniments so dear.
Ile Would, fah ker • qtmeticm, and Webb, reply
In lop heroler Sipe, or 4 glenpo from bet ad
11
loud eheella Mit appear MUM least overteisked
By the ansissie abe gave to the questions she &steed.
And threeoeltlieetlairenisikte en fresh from the Mott,
Ali! well might 'they grimie fora moment to part.
• rf, p erch a nce for en hour he left hie abode,
She - would sit down and write him a sonnet or ode,
In Which fancies were flitting, hright summer birds,
0 , 0 the dowers of, love In ' a ltoret of 'word':
*44.-
„WaiPiligonsill'thaprond marudep,where -
-Afra igen COliehird bleeeed with an holt:—
, X v4rittire the joke, thoughlt may be a brittle one-4
Tite ',gait edition o{'” Coke Upon Littleton." •
Its feirtaVell were fide, its cenipletion was fair,
Itabyea adiefehitiel,andaurly its hair.' •
WA a fault or a blemish, he name ouldesPyi
aloe the dear baby would worry. and ory,
.The mother. enfeebled, deprived of her rear , -
Vet willing the burden and. trouble to bear,
Nei there in her chamber, the babe at him breast ;
, Ifut
why, was the huslmrd'audiather not there ?
Ifeladgmis to Urd dab;' obi hadneen him depart—
"' fir her tender devotion so" kind and in true—
'With no word of approval to strengthen her heart,
her trials and itttrothsgt ttatlifitetb •
&Me cruel , old:allow, some bachelor, may be, ,
Will ask if a marktolihr *ire shou l d be'tl(l4l
-Shand put on an apron, and sit with the baby,
lAa always be ready with pap, lflt cried.
Assuredlynot ; bat thid mach he 'should do :
When Vito :was cOerburdened with trouble and
i care
• To higerett l 'arid the vows he hid plighted be true,
And always be -ready her burden' to share.
If her hopes; could bo lifted, her heart be made light,
:By his deariploredprieence, hie glance; and his tone,
No nlnti Amide allure him to leave her at night '
To murrain hie absence, nupitied, alone.
(To be conoludatnext week.).
week will Baba Littleton Coke; co .my
cordate Will:seo,,; am closing out, BENNETT, also,
st TOWER RALIt, 018 MARKET Street, is dosing out
his:winter stock of clothing at bargains never before
offered,. If it won't pay to read the poetry', it will most
'assoredlj pay to 'lnvest money in clothing at Bennett'e
present' prices.
• DERN MUTUAL' LIFE ' , INSURANCE
00111YAtiletece - N..-11. corner TIIIRD and
:DOCK StreetaiPhlladelphie. .. ~ , • .
Thq following ..STATEMENT of the 'dike or the
Company 16'00118MM to eoplorinity with I prorlaion
of theOhattor : ..
. ,
RECEIPTS imp.THZ YEAR ENDINO DECEMBER
at, 1807. • •
PcO,Premitins and Policies $161,704 76
Interest op Inyespnents nod
Dividends,
00,412 21
$202,110 97
LOSSES AND EXPEN
ma BES 'DULLING TUE ..8A9113
• '
DULLING
Locate 19, iimoniiting y
40 • 9 . 45,700 00'
Expenses-1414M0, Advertising,
&c.. 10 , 109 49
.-__ _
Rent . , Eitide and City Taxes '1,915 44
'AgeboyOhartio,Oorambiskupd,de, 7 ,203 91
Itginsdrazioe and Interns • ' , '6.444 57
-- $71,371 0
.41FTT OF THE ,COMPANY LIABLE 2 . 0 PAY
, • '''' L051E29,-JANtistalr 1a2,1868.
9227,92690, Potinsybsaina State 80nd5..•. - . cost $25,803 73
qcsoli 00 Philadelphis.'oity ".... .i 65,846 26
-. 22,000 9041leghony County ii' i..." " '19,04500
•10,800 00 Washington ii ..
...„ is 7,626 00
10,000 03,P1ttabiugit.0Ity " ..... ii , 8,325 0 0
92,000 00 rooOtylvtalsTtaihoid Bondi. ' 4 ' 20,700'00
1
.-• ,080 00 4 2 4 10ith Ptods Ivaitis 44 ' 44 - 0 22 600 00
- 1, ,000 00 R4adiog . ' " 44 . 880 00
,000 00 Union 0000 , 'si .i 13,477 60
,000 00 G. L. of Peanovfvoola 44 . 6,610'00
100 ohore6Westorn Bak siock ,‘ 6,862 60
100 , . o ,' , ifanistaitireisi mid Itactuusico i
. _ Bank ''''' '' ' ' - " ' 2,784 00
aigyvan:7' - '"..`:-.11 41--- 84 -
186 _ i , [Brand . 130
ldfo Insurance .... ‘,.. 3 525 23
"
asopenmonni. w "
r084c0.... 16,6g3 01
Ils --4 c; ' New Orleand Ott Do ' " 15,301 60
's47o3fa c et, yr x •r m tp.• • ... 4,087, 02
Mortgagee, Ground Boats, All tint lie Di. " 128;598 55
:14/071, on Pollelos Susd Collatertde 80,091'47
BillsßetelvaMe s ProinlntiNotee 96.870 27
'Seal Bente; Office Building37,o 4 6 73
Senp Dividend of Ineurattee Companies..... 39,309 00
'Agent.' balinai of their Ao'obiatte due ....' 18,951'28
, qumisrlyPsymente oil Policies issued 11,933 10
Bauble' Mud and in Beak 83,078 03
/Minot on Investment te, lan.,lst, 1858._ 11,303 24
OfOce Furniture • - 1,221 16
grjuaklici nee Idsuranoe Company 300 00
~ ! • r
pidua:tieiii Lone dew Lu 1868 --
aurintee Osgtal . • •
t .
~' PIIILADILIPHIA Jan,l2, /858
' At an ellretio . ll, held at the Office of t he Com .
piny en
IooNDAYillew4th bet., the following gentlemen were
,duly sleeted Trustees, to serve for three year.: ,
John O. Bremer, '" ' Bon.lionin Coatim, '
,: lifilliantMartin; -• ,- ' .' . • Diehard. El. Newbold, • ,-
1 FY. B. MsPariatol, William P. Hooker,
aosoph.ll,.. ‘'o,ttor,, ~ , William M. Earn,
le, „, . James Easton. ' -
-
At 4 ineetititOf the lioard of Trusteee, held this
wishing, Di.Nl I.E. Tou,Ls.a, Esq., was unaniteenely
elected President; Arid haldOEL B. lITOIESB, Esq.,'
Vise President, for the ensuing year.
The Board of Trustees have thisday declered a kelp
'dividend of TWENTY-FIVE gso. - CENT. upon the
Yoh premiums paid Id 1857.
They have a lso declared& cash dividend of 810 PEE
CENT. upon the'serip dividends of 1850 to 1867 - bleu.
sire, payable at the Mike of the Company after the so
pond day of February next.
'•,-' !DANIEL L. MILLI; President.
''' 'SAMUEL Z. EITOKII3, Vie* President.
oisli 'Wi Elosmon, Secretary.
/NOSEAST OF TWK ACCUMULATED. CAPITAL OP
i
-" THE COMPANY',
' i
111 a it /e49,*44EAWAtilt Capital, f 31,862 62
J nary 1, 3850, do , do " ' 86,843 02
J nary 1,1861, do " ' - do - 142,682 19
Jinnaryl,lbs2, ' : do • do - 177,913 80
, 71unlarY 1 , 2868, ' do ' do 218,986 66
Jihanary 1,1864, do - do 361,301 , 36
Jinuary 1,1856, do • do 410,681 07
lineal,' I, 1 6 60 , , I do -- -• , do 613,956 22
Jinuary,l, 1867,, ,do . , - do ~ : ... 011,226 08
January 1, 1868, ' do _ do ' 116,700 83
LOBBEB PAID SINCE TEE 006111INNMEMBNT OF
i Lz , ' , THE -COMPANY. ~.
ToFay 1,1849, one policy • - 6 6,000 00
Tp marl 1860, 'four pol ic ies 16,600 00
To tromm.l., 1861, sixteen policies 48,000 00
To Janus" 224 1862, twenty.thitee policies... 64,800 00
To January 181863, sixteen policies 34,600 00
,TO January 1,1854, eleven policies 29,260 00
To January 1,1866, twenty-seven polioies... '89,817 00
TWJanuary 1,1860, dfbleupolicles 86,800 00
2 ° 166 ' 1 "7 1 t 1062 5. 01 67. 01 ? F 6 1 1010 1.... ...... 28,300 00
To Jdnuity 1, 1838, otuetoso polltiOs 46,100 00
!Ye.l6-16 2023 27 80-8 6
,VAIICE:ItIITUAL INSURAN43: COM
-00Ice'411 OffESTNUT,Street.
. , . ThEttaDilLPHIA,Jan, 11, 1868. ,
' !The• following STATESINNT of the IMMO of this
• Crompluay, onthe 81st-December, 1857, is published in
&mums of tha ()hatter ;
_Cupid I authorized and anbeoribed,
i AA in po,ooo,
ASSETS.
T onda and 91ortgages 48,025 00
Cash on baud 11,624 04
Balanoes due„ viz: agents' accounts, In-'
termt;
Bine l'eoelvable,Premlims on Open Policies,
' • " 001 00
".• REOICIPTS. • '
Fredonia' 'on''Fire Blake, amounting to
191,7171'200 .. , 12,888 74
'Premium!' on' Inland Ilfshe, amounting to
11108,064 -
." , - I.OIIOS, SAPIII4BS,S, dco.
Vie , Loser . settle d. - 91,15r19, (dimputed
i96;000,) • '•• 8;157 18
' Inland ] ;owes ' 000 00
Bent, Advertising, 'Salaries, And all other
I -, • ' • 5,88877
liehme , P3smituns, -Be insurance, commlk.
tionspko, • • • • 1,165.05
At"Mul •Airtutsl Ideating, of the Stockholders, held
VI 6117 i the folloiring wets tilectod Directors to servo
enesCr !
06 1 . -ZW ,• ' • , Win. Walters,
f Barth% ' it ' , J. Vaughan
b; 15 ; ithafi' , • ' • Rosenholm,
Ad , / I •:''Obas;f3tokos, " •
Cl h" ,/tl Ph l nhoni Hairy Lewis', Jr., •
ROI ,; Xsermani; • su m „
d ll4 . „'s . la'9leatll l .B , th',o •% , !ectore a auo. W. DAT
y ir r e is,7o lnati d ep t. , l/ 41 .4414. - , t 1 4 ,° 10 . , ~,Tll. 8.}3. MARTIN
Jalig•tuthidit• = W. BLAUOII/*.seeret.my
CT8,D143-LAMP It 3
, ieepeotfullyinfimned that °Sloes here beet:tenoned
kJ'the Illetriet SuPerintendents of Public Idghtik, at
vrideleeitliediaarit swotted td give inforination resp s t‘.
hyg aro:ldeate Ind.:lime happen to tha Public/AD:4ms or'
of any fa il ure in light or eetingulehing them at the
proper Iltaer .ros if not properly•oleaned E 4 in good
lighting oondltion. • -The B6oooks will bekept by Joseph'
BaN,v, No. 808 Wharton at., Pint Ward; (Merles Duty,
kiP.oreldlstrist,.No.-AlLaittee at above Sixth; Hiram.
(I, Mai, No. 820 North SIM et., above Drown, Twelfth
Ward plllll. DOW* No.l24llothates ereetl Fifteenth
Ward; Thos.D,Soirlly; ass Olgoe,Tvienty.tourthWard,
riaeet Philadelphia; it H. ) chidden, ,Das
natylasestid Wretv(Germantowni) Wm, N. Market,
Mie,'Plrenty-Ttilivt.Ward (Prankford,) anitht the
PlaaOline seventbitrestybelaw Market. • •
By order ef the Trustee, of the Philadelphia Ow
Wtirb‘.. ''• ,•• •• rn • _A. J EllHiles``• ,••
oet•e Superintendent of Distribution.
,THEI„E.ENNSYLVA_NTA.
74filikilact" g ) ;ip
/1 9 'iwkolootrif
Ny.,ty,,thwitt :j 6 jay ,
en° 4fltglrr 11.61 - -
r be'd:etiedll IhigOlebt Thrsidore will bob old
toldeiNDA - 1, - thbdotdoter ldirobilbeef et , tho, oleo"
telldfloiplobyidie - adejNaRTUT Otoooe.
,110 , 401,-,13,+ f„ItIpMI4 410711,,gacrita . TS•
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1111) .
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Notitto.
716,780 83
100,000 00
816,734 83
$386.267 00
sioopoo oo
E4t rtss.
SATURDAY, JANUARY MM.
STATE CONVENTION.
At a meeting of the Demooratio State Commit
tee, held at Buehler's Hotel, Harrisburg, January
•
19,1958, it wee "
' Resolved,' That tligneixtD,emooratio State Con
vention be held at Harrisburg, on the 4th day of
March next. ,
Pursuant to said resolution, delegates from the
'several Senatorial and Representative districts of
the State will eenvone in the Kill of the House of
Represent/414'88,0t 'the Capitol, on THURSDAY,
MARCH 4, 1858 at 10 o'clooh A. M ; ,to nominate
candidates for Judge of the Supreme Court and
Canal Commissioner. and for the transaction. of
snob other business as pertains to the authority of
such Convention.
C. R. BUOSALBW, Chairman.
J. N. MITCIIINEION, 1 ii erretar i eo
41 .4. .!lALDIMAN, •
FRANCE RISES TO 'EXPLAIN
Their present form of •government le a sub
ject of unceasing difficulty with tho French
jounMls and reviews ; and the perplexities into i
whleli,:they: are thrown: are frequently very
arnheing. The quespou ie cortainly a very In.
volved one : 'The Goveininent 'mtiet . be legi
littiittei but then,it runlikrukt be toolegitlmate
AW:a lint tie safeltseated .able throne;
.0 w ere must, he'reseriible, and where must
he diger NO the
. kings who have preceded
t.',#le'[is a .cantitutional Sovereign, yet
he trust be distinguished from Lows PumprE.
He must be the Emperor, refulgent with all
the glory of his' predecessors ; but here they
are again stranded, for he is also the true re
presentative of the people and their servant.
lie must be exhibited as the convenient
mouth-piece of the popular will, while he has
a very embarrassing way of uttering' his own
opinion and not theirsenfranchised France
enjoys a free press, but Mon Dieu ! La Presse
Nap suppressed. They are in a sad puzzle.
Ns.por.zots Is a great man, no doubt, but his
grea'tnessos aro so mingled with littlenesies
that'broad assertions and sweeping. paragraphs
will not describe him. Ho is an Emperor but
not too much of an Emperor—revolutionary
but 'not too revolutionary—he is deinocratic
but not too democratic. ! The .line of demur.
cationis very hard to find; and the journals
are very liable to overstep it in their fever of
authorship, and they aro then forced to re-
treat, with whatever of grace and dignity they
can assume in their rapid fluctuations.
M. le Vicomte DE LA GIIZRONNIERE, in the
Revi‘e Centemportiine, has hit upon a most ex.
cellent method of avoiding all the shoals and
quicksands. What with careful sailing and
cautious coasting, the article is so excessively
lengthy that we cannot pretend to give a trans
lation, but will do our utmost to reproduce its
points ; for, in common with every other arti
cle that we have yet road in these Journals,
the style totally unfits it for literal translation
for oar own dailies. The numberless excla
mations and interrogations ; the questions and
answers, almost dialogue In form; the asto
nishing bursts of eloquence; the endless repe
tition and amplification ; and the peculiar me
thOds of emphasis,—all render them so en
tirely unlike our own style of editorials that
the literal translation of even their most mi
ens discussions would be a burlesque. Mee
tican leaders are certainly as denunciatory and
declamatory, but still they have an essay-like
form, compared to the French bulletin, which
might be fitly described by that misused title,
so much affected by, second-rate poets, "a
scene from an unfinished drama."
The'ocuaelott of this review is Lilo publics-
Son of ".A. Now Commentary upon the Re
public of Cicero" in the Revue des Deux-
Mondes: The critic announces that ho finds
in it a careiblly concealed animosity to the
preminverovarnurvert-wr zreareeriantr•rnar—circr
author, IVi. Villemain, an adherent of the de
parted monarchy, uses it as a means of attack
ing the preterit institutions, and especially
the fandameatal doctrine of universal suffrage.
Cicero, Xenophon, Socrates, Plato, and St.
Augustine, are all made to declaim against
popular dictatorship, which M. Villemain evi
dently considers to be the true character of
the present Empire.
But the fulminations of Omao against the
democracy of Rome only serve to show the
'depravity of a society, that, notwithstanding
the virtue and inlightentnent of its patricians,
was enveloped in paganism, and defiled by
slavery. The prestige of the tribune and the
eloquence of the orators will not compensate,
in the eyes of the world, for the decadence of
morals, the oppression of the subjects, and
the open barter of suffrages. In a society
where liberty bordered upon slavery, where
patriotism rested on venality and corruption,
and where the circus was the vetattbule of the
senate, there would be justice and relevancy
in the anathemas of CICERO ; but it would be
an outrage to our civilization to compare it
with that shameful dictatorship which was not
of the people, but of the ,populace. To re
proach the universal suffrage of the nineteenth
century with the same species of declamation
that burst 'forth in the forum would be to
falsify history, and to wound Christianity,
civilization, Franco I
Neither was that popular dictatorship, of
which the Convention was the representa-
Sire, an instance of the effect of universal suf.
frage. The Convention was a revolutionary
rather than a popular dictatorship ; it was the
oirspring of the clubs, and it was no represen
tative of the nation that trembled under its
rule. Far from being an illustration of the
effect of universal suffrage, the Revolution,
instead•of springing from that principle, only
!ed to it; and in the Consulate we find the
true beginning of civil and religious liberty.
Universal suffrage, as it has been understood
and practised for sixty years, has been only the
extension of the eonstitutivo right ,of the
French Government. It is not the monarchy
which has constituted the people, but the
people who have founded the monarchy.
Succession to the throne under the two
first dynasties was decided by election, with
the difference that the nation subsisted then
in the aristocracy; the people were not yet
emancipated, and the bourgeoisie were not
born. By the choice of the nobles Nen; and
Wolf CAPET were raised to supreme power.
Election has always been the true source of
power in France—informal in its origin, never
unrestrained, yet it has always existed—ap
peering at first only in the camp, then as the
appanage of the nobility, and ever widening
until it heti, at, length .yeached the people,
That election le the principle of our law
can be seen in our history--;the only Govern
ment which has not been overturned by the
French nation is the one which they willingly
organized and accepted. The first Empire
succumbed only to the united forces of Eu
• rope, and oven in its downfall, retained such
power that it has regained its place without
effort or violence. The rock of St. Hele
na Could net, destroy the power of that
immortal name, or the force of its organizing
path:lpin. It has slain one hero, but the mar
tyrdom of the man has resulted in assuring his
glory and grandeur to his family. And every
time that universal suffrage has been consulted
In the past sixty years, the French nation has
replied with the name of NAPOLEON.
'ivitween the 'first and 'second Empires two
Wen*, at monarchy were made both pow
erful'and well arranged, and both uniting all
the 'condition. o f success and enduritnce. But
both failed; fof the reason that neither the
aristocratic monarchy of 1816, nor the tour
giotin monarchy of 1831,, represented the uni
versal French nation. Their basis was too
narrow, and their institutiona tonld not restet
the assaults of an ardent add disturbed de
mocracy.
' The respect for authority was' naturally di-
Webbed by these'revolutions. •'The exile of
dynistiee, aud the, banisturient of the nobilityk
had- irretrievahly. :disgraced the old' forme of
Government In the eyes of :Pie people, and It
became necessary to search elsewhere for the
elenient of power. We folind that the words
of Vergniand were more applicable in 1848
than they had been in 1788—“ It is only France
PMLADELPHIA, SATUR
that can save Prante." In our distress we
tarried to the true soeme of power ; and what
has the exercise of our right of suffrage done
for us ? To it do we owo the defeat of the
Revolution, andtherelabllltatlon of authority.
Thinks to it, we have eicapod from the tyranny
of the dubs, the excestes of the deinagogues,
from. the perils of a general war, end from the
destruction of all the social forces.
But what can there be in common between
the rule of the majority-in a society snob a.
out's, where it is and can bo only the moral
strength 'of opinion, and that popular dicta. ,
torship which elevated the ignorant plebibM
of Remo only to hurl him buck again into tieril;
tude 1 ,What is there is commop betwe#
that tumultuous acclamation and the free and
regulated elections of a people elevated by th*
bonds of religion, of the family, and of indult-,
try ? Compare the democracy of France with
that brutal numerical sovereignty of Rome—it
is q comparison, between servitude and obis.:
dionee ; license and liberty; the dominion ot,
the Ciosant and the empire of law and right:.
Rut what is a dictator'? Let us defintoll4,
much-uSed word : It is the dominion of one
over all. It is the empire of one man Over the,
silent law. jt Is Owsar passing tbo Ruhicon ) -
and re-entering Rome td drive away the quo
ate, and bending all resistance under tbeMv.
condom of his, glory . ind hle'gertlus;" It
Orani.i.ell thiarmi to govern the parlia
ment; employing the parliament to immolate
tho king; using the regicide and the blOod,pi
the slaughtered- monarch against the parlia-
Ment, that ho may raise himself above his ao.
complices even to the title of dictator. It is
the eomite de salut public decreeing the terror
in 1708, and making France and Europe trem
ble under the axe of the Revolution.. .
There is necessarily something dictatorial In
that genius which lays the foundation,oe em
pire, for energy and detorminatiou are regd.
site to incite, to direct, and to moderato pub
lic opinion. For this reason it has become
the fashion at tho Academy to call the Em.
peror Niroteox Ist a despot. There is no
doubt that ho possessed the despotism of de
termination and genius. That rapid, WO.
rious, and often absolute dicision, which wag
a part of• his character, was evinced equally on
the Held, of battle, in the Government, and in
the - couneil of State. His Government, also,
the link between the old and the new, was
naturally of an exceptionable and transitory
character; but the reign which secured both
civil and religious liberty to France cannot be
classed with the empires of the East. Haro.
LEO" was an organizer, not a despot-1m or
dained, ho commanded, but ho never op.
pressed.
Coming down to our own day, can we finds
dictator in our present form of Government?
Is it in Nivoune, thrice elected with a una
nimity each time more imposing? Is it in an
Emperor governing under a Constitution, as.
slated by Weider/I, not imposed by the
caprices of a Parliament, bnt responsible to
public opinion and the Chief of the State 1 Is
It in the 'control exercised by a Legislature
originating, like the Emperor, in the choice
of the nation 1 Can it be found in a Senate
appointed for life, with the power to °prase
the promulgation of laws, to denounce uncon
stitutional votes, and to propose projects of
national utility Is it in that magistracy, in
dependent of control, who interpret the law
without any guide but their own consciences?
Cr Is it in, that liberty of the human mind
which manifests itself in the academies, la the
College of,France, at Sorbonne, in books and
reviews, under the solo reserve of respect to
the institutions and morals of the country
The present Empire has been inaugurated
by the consent of the people, and the instittt.
tiona grant to the Emperor only those powers
which are necessary to a governor, leaving to
the country the right of examination and in
t .
rude experiences of the past, and inspired by'
the spirit of 1789, the present institutions
neither sacrifice liberty to the inflexible laws
of order, or place order at the mercy of un•
bridled liberty ; but they present to the nation
a vast frame-work of government, capable of
combining both in their happiest relations.
France knows this, and she has confidence in
the man whom she has placed at the head of
affairs. In this confidence she accepts all the
necessary restrictions, as a guarantee of repose
from her long agitations, and awaits the pos.
sible ameliorations of the system as her hope
for tho future.
SABBATH READING.
INFLUENCE OF A MOTHER'S PIETY.
There was MO an obscure and pious woman It►-
ing in the south of England. Ilistory le silent re
spooling her ancestry, her place of birth, and her
education She had an only eon, whom she made
it'hor great business to train in the nurturo and
admonition of the Lord. In the seventh year of
his age, his mother died, and a few years later, the
lad went to sea, and engaged at length as a sailor
in the African glove trade. He was soon an adept
in vice, and though amongst the youngest of the
°raw, he was the moot proficient in guilt. eut his
mother's instructions sent their echoes to him, and
though it first he sought to defend himself from
them, they grew louder and louder, until, listening
to Clain at last, he became a fervent Christian, a
successful preacher, the author of books which the
church 'will never lot die, and the writer of hymns
the use of which Is co-extensive with our tongue.
This wayward son, whom his mother, though
dead, addressed and reclaimed, was the means of
the conversion of Claudius Buchanan, eo
gashed for his labors in the East Indies; and the
Star of the East," a book published by Mr Bu
chanan, first called the attention of Mr. Judson to
the missionary work, and sent him an apostle to
Burnish.
The sailor, turned preacher, was also the means
of delivering the Rev. Thos. Scott from the mazes
of ruinous error, and of introducing him to the
way, the truth, and the life. Mr. Scott prepared
the Commentary known by his name, and wbioh
still continues its mission of converting and sancti
fying power.
The influence of this same minister and author,
in connection with that of Doddridge, was princi
pally instrumental in making Wilberforce the
Christian he was. To Wilberforoe's " Practical
View of Christianity," the conversion of Leigh
Richmond may be ascribed, and Leigh Richmond
wrote the "Dairyman's Daughter," and other
tracts, which have contributed to the salvation of
thousand/ of souls.
That obscure and pima woman was the mother
of Rev. John Newton, one of the ablest and most
devoted ministers that ever graocd the Christian
Church.
WHATI'S on WAY TO CANAAN.—Of the several
spicy lessons which Mre Stowe has managed to
teach the white folks through a dark medium in
her "bred," the following hit at the seetarlan
prejudices too often existing between Christian
denominations, is too good to be lost :
" Old Tiff,' for their mint, aniso and commie
wrangles, while inquirers are asking the plan of
salvation. Old Tiff' has the care of the children
of his dead mistreat, and having told them that
their mother had gone to the lend of Canaan, one
inquires as follows : Undo Tiff, where is the land
of Canaan" ' Do Lord-a-mercy, chile, dat ar's
what I'd likeiro know myself I's studdin' upon
dot ar. I's gwino to oamp-meotin' to find Qut,
Ds been to plenty of dons ar, and never could
quite see elec. 'Pears like dey talk about every
thing else morn dey does about dat. Dare's de
Methodists, dey out up do I'resbyter'ans and de
Presbyter'an pitches into de Methodists ; and don
both on 'eme down on do Pisoopals. My old mist'
was Picoopal, and I foyer seed no harm in it. And
de Baptiste think day a'nt none on 'em night; and
while dey's a blowin' out at each other dat ar'
way, i.e wonder in' who's de way to Colman!"
The Waterford (Erie county, Pa.) Enqui
rer publishee " a list of seventy-one citizens, seven
ty years of age and over, now living in Waterford,
end within a circuit of five miles around it. lie
aides these there are others whom ages we have
not yet obtained.. Their aggregate ages amount
to ,five thourand fee& hundred and fifty-eight ;
average ages seventy-seven years—sevep years be
yond the three-score and ten, assigned as the lim
ns of the Ills of men. Their combined ages would
take no beck to within four hundred and three
years of the Mallon of the world. The popula
tion of Waterford, and the circuit of five miles
around it, r+lty he estimated pretty "
correctly at
4,000 inhslAt ants: Physiologists toll us that on an
average ably One in live hundred realties the age of
eighty At this rate there should bo only
OW persons of that age In our 4,000 population,
yrhisrens we have twenty-five In "one list whose
average ages are eighty-three and two- f ifth year,
each.
The Vrestininster (dd.) Democrat announces
the death of James Ramond, Esti., a well•known .
•membor of the bar of t oat phme,
" , JANUARY 30. 1858.
4 ' BY TELEGRAPH,
-ItENN9(OANIA :L4OIBNITURE.
r iiegaieatrrih , JAL 29,1952
• SENATE:I ,
. .
The Speaker presented the annual statement of
tbs , arawMnis a the Dime ,firrriage Company of
Philadelphia. r ,
Cfibfiltral ,petitiona vie» presented frrim citizens
etiltillidelpbis nand ' Northampton county for a
ut 4%tion bf tbe. Tavern License Laws.. .
16 ,0,11 s in . fuvor of the,Olvard College !anon-
Xerlt }
• 41. mi dlan ds igrinst, the incorporation of the
Teeohs Paint Dye Works was presented.
,All 4F, onb against an additonal railroad on Mar.
MlS'*et, Philedelphia.
-.4 ligia.,reeoliption a Alm Pittsburgh Board of
Tt On faVor,of a late to limit bank dividends.
-1,,r 4 isseektiettat frail thendladelphia Board of
*tire Isi &money. ..
t " t al e , 11 1 4 1 1c T i t: i f ) . Of A m; t i e ti a b L u r igl o ti c e 9 r i tli r o ul r i e b al
l i itte
• te ' htlidelphis. '- " •
‘.
.....i , *potato
the.
Girard College Passenger
NtrilWat -" ' ' ' •
-w i ::.y....,u'r a t- i u' ll a t 7d r o e i
‘ m ilf Cl • .141:';itr.".f.,,1136,mr„ 4 , ?it !,,
Ir. • pp, 'ltl,ia,ltarornierwidth,. -
. • , r. Itextoat,L, and to bieoiporate the Second
At', - 0 street Paltieuger Railway, '
At
. „1 2 , • r.ltrexamow, a eupplament to the act In
, , ...;, , so.. flit•tbs Danville, Tottsville, Philadelphia,
. 0. :a" , ,•
hen T Railroad VeropapY. ! . •
i f tti
: „ .Tyairet; a lilt to authorise the ilevorner
~ ,7 , , lit' n' appraiser to Rases& the damages of
~: e :and Others by reason of the eale of
`r " t, , tido., ;
s -
-''' ...Ber4.,_•a reeolutiost to' instruct the Pi.
.., .
~... 0.. Mitts. to Inquire whether any, and if
- ,• 4
~6 . :' egislaelart - is haceasary, to secure the
, , •• ~ '. errhorids ana-weetwo esoeritiew of the city
u 'l -, ; -, • •, • habi•ceismiy of Atlegtoinyr ..
„j ; • 1- Pl 4 takeutlP and IstiellY,diseuesee, When
'lil• !sat torteldoration was postponed.
, •10 . - i. " - i.kfteettalt or Bitt,l.—The Mit to ineerpe
.l4 tit • -Graf. , Line , Plank - Raul Company, wee
pa to committee Ofthe whole.
veldt private !nibs , were also eaneiderod . and
s i , gq,-
0 ,,, : . • : . : .
:,, 1 ~ ..°E'ol y s. E 0 ktp:REstNrApiirEs. .- •
The: hkil, „to' titer's' pt the American Meehanics'
Ball 'AMOefatiort of Philadelphia from taxation,
wairetairted 'negatively... • , •
lied it reeotte.avt.i...lllr. RAitawr ra
t:ted itte, bill giving the ,courts discretionary
~ er tO,lioprisort or not, •lolatore of the Sunday
13 Mt: Ywattenwv, the, bill to incorporate the
ail Vinsent's Itotna In the city of Philadelphia.
By M. Bonasos, ono preventing private Lodi
"Muftislk4o swanning corporate semen.
-I Jy W. WlnttEn, a supplement to the ad boor
poratitrthe Penn .1101110 Indigent Widows' Asy-
Jaen of Kensington.
By Mr. Mam,or, an act reducing the number of
Gammon Councilmen of Philadelphia.' ' ~
pitta.. • Ptatez.---Itlr. FORTEIt read a
l i h eist
X hitilti , rndotsjng'words the 'words taken from or.
Packer's inaugural addrias relative to Kansas.
1 Ids'. Perrin moved to etalteed the tale,, to pry
coed to the eorudderation o( the resolution.
r The question was taken and lust, the vote stand
ing yell 40, nip 4.5; the rules require two-thirds,
Tb. resolution was {referred to the special com
mittee MiKensas, whittle, on motion of Mr. Bantam,
wee increased to seven. •
Mr., McCtuna moved to Make the resolution the
special order of fdenday.' Loot—yeas 30, nays 81.
Mr. Anneranau read a bill for the prevention
of vice in the city,
Ats• - • itAirear, a supplement_ to the Mechanics'
Lien Irate of 1808. , : • . •
Air. Dattr.TAtt, s bill preventing die Baltimore
and Wilmington Railroad from running their lo
homotives east or the Robtilikill river.
Abel', a:supplement' to the aot inoorporating the
North Philadelphia Plank Road Company. ,
Nr Manua, a bill ,to incorporate .the Anti
itteet Painter Railway
Alf. Vitale, a supplaraeut to the aseautive lax
oltlBB6. *. • • ,
Mr, Wissuss, a bill prohibiting the Germantown
Railroad Company from running their cars In the
Tirentieth r ward.
ATKIN* ituvple meta to the Set consolidating
fthe city of Philadelphia. •
I EIW. ESPOIITSD YAVONASLY.^4IIIOSVO United ;
Mr. EVANS reported favorably the bill empowering
Say Councils to fi ll vavinoies.
SJNNSINSSATION OF BILLS —The bill authorizing
'the Book Mountain Coal Company to borrow money
rtes passed.
lbs, bill refunding the money lost by the Eastern
Penitentiary, being deposited in the Pennsylvania
Mink, was taken up
Bonding its conskierstion, a motion to adjourn
wits curled, '
'Adjourned till to-morrow
From New Alt:lce.
Br. Loots, January 29 —Thu Banta Fa mail has
?rived.
- The newisfurnished by the papers is of an unite. ,
portant cheraoter.
The annuity goods wore being distributed to the
.P%politonlitians.
t
the publio printer of the Territory.
Secretary Jackson bad arrived at Sante Fe.
General Garland had gone to Blphasen.
At a publio meeting, held at Santa Fe, a Belies
of resolutions wore adopted, cordially thanking
Secretary Floyd' and Postmaster General Brown,
for their recent arnoial action affecting the Tenb
tor y.
Depredations by the Apache and other Indians
ward reported.
Revolt In • Coolie Ship-The Vessel Fired—
Slily Coelles Shot.
BOSTON, Jan. 29.—The ship Kate Hooper, of
Baltimore, from Macao for Havana, on October
15tb, with coolies, was at Angieo on November 22d,
waiting for mon from Batavia The coolies had
mutinied, and got possession of the ship, between
decks The ship wee sat on fire three time:, and
the officers were obliged to shoot fifty of them be
fore they could be subdued.
The Canada at Beaten
Boma, Jan. 29.—The steamship Canada from
Liverpool, ma Halifax, arrived here at one o'clock
due afternoon. Her mane will be due at New
York at midnight, and at Philadelphia at noon
to-morrow.
The Aulerica Ontvrard IJound
Ititsrsz, Jan. 22, 2 o'olock P. M —The Ameri
ca arrived at noon, and has pet sailed for I,lrer
pool.
GERMAN PIEWSPAPERS.
PSILADELPPIId, January 23, 18143.
I find the following notice in the Scientific
American of January 16th
" Gratuatt Nawararetta.—lt itl /allied that there
are ton times as many newspapers printed in the
German language in the United States es there are
in Germany. This in certainly creditable to the
German population of our country, and they ere
usually a thrifty, peaceful class of citizens, espe
cially outside of our large ("Idea"
Although I am rather used to it to heir Ger
many and its fifty millions inhabitants slandered
and misrepresented, even by Man who consider
themselves above the masses, and should certainly
know better, I still find the above too strong even
fora "Dutch" stomach to digest. If It don't take
too much of your valuable apace, you would per
haps oblige some of your readers (at least me) by
publishing the following statement, which I have
taken the pains to extract from the "Gorman
Newspaper Catalogue,' published July, 1838, in
lielptte, Saxony.
This catalogue embraces 158 pages, and contains
not merely the titles of the papers, but also the
names of the responsible editors; the number of
Nos. issued yearly, the size of the form, whore and
by whom published, the yearly price, the number
of circulation, and the price of advertisements,
which are invariably charged by the line, say 8
or 12 or 18 mints for each petit lino or its Apnea.
But to the statement. There aro published in
Germany, Dairies, IVertlies, Monthlies and
Quarterlies, devoted
To Theology, Philosophy and Freemasonry-- let
Philology and, Pedagogic 08
" Jurisprudence, &Waco of Government and
Cameralisties 88
" Bibliography and the Book Trade 38
" Arohrentev, Geography, and Statistics 85
" Surgery, Pharmacy, and Veterinary 81
" Physics and Chemistry 78
" Agriculture, Science of Forests, to 129
,4 Technics liieohanics, Mining, Metallurgy,
and Military &lime 127
" The Arts, Music, Theatre, and Fashion 99
" Miscellaneous contents 111
.‘ Papers for the juvenile age 21
Total 1088
Palidtral and Neraspapers.—(Dailies and
IVreihes )
In the Anhalt Duohies aro published a
r• Baden 23
'. Bavaria 138
'. Braun), 8
.. Denmark (Bohleewlg-Holatoln) 23
.. Franco (German class) 8
.. the,Free Cities, Bremen 8
Frankfort 14
Hamburg 18
" Lubeck. 8
" Hanover
" Herren, (Grand Dnoby)
~ do. (Electorate) 13
" Hesse Hamburg 4
" Lippe-Bottuold 2
" Mecklenburg.Solzwerin .t Sirelitz .... 15
" Hassan 8
" Luxemburg 6
" Oldenburg 9
" Austria, (German Provinces) 65
" " (Hungarian Provinces) 19
x Prussia, Province Bradonhurg (including
Berlin) 96
Pomerania 44
Posen 21
Prussia 00
on the Rhino 95
Saxony 66
Salmis 102
Westphalia 58
Hohenzollern b
the prineipalities of Reuss • 8
" Russia (German Provinces) 13
" Saxony 94
" the Saxon Duchies 30
" Schaumburg-Lippe 1
" the principalities of Schwarzburg 9
" Switzerland (German Cantons) 83
" Weldeok 2
" Wurttemberg 53
•
Number of political newspapers 1 310
" of scientific and miscellaneous papers.l,o9B
'
Total 2 416.
The number of German papers published in the
United States and the Oanadaa may probably
amount to 200, I. e. about one•tenth of the above
number. Yours, thICRIIANICIaI.
Front Chinn
The Approaching Attack on Canton—Strength
and Dialmsitfo74 of the Attae4ing Force--
Conference al Macao of the English, French,
and American 'Represetteatit.es —Policy o/
/lir. Reed.
[Special Correspondence of the New lark Times j
U. S ELAO-Sate BAN 'JACINTO,
Howl Homo, Friday, Nov. 27, 10.51.
The attack on Canton—which it was supposimi
would here bean constneaced on the 17th Out
has, fur various reasons, been deferred, and is vow
es-peened to take place about the first of next
month. The principal' reason for delaying it is
that there is now being, hold, at Macao a con
ference of the several repreeentsti Tea of the United
States, English, French. Duteb, and Spanish Go
vernments-, the result of whose deliberations Ad
mind Seymour waits upon.
- In the mean time, the Admiral is congregating
his forces on the river, between the Bogue Forts
and Canton, and has now a force of abouL thirty
vessels, stationed as above stated. Ile himself Is
now at the Second Bar, about two mules below
Whampoa, this being the bigheet point on .the
ricer that, his flaxatilp, the Calcutta, is able to
reach. During his operations at Canton, bit flag
ship will be transferred to this Coromandel—a
small'steamer. Owing to the fact that Yeti boo
numerous epic, in and around Hong Eong. Admi
ral Seymour enteral!) , avoids giting publicity to
his intended operations. Until active operations
before Canton commence, I shell be able to furnish
you with but little pen's.
Rumor bas It here that Mr. Reed bars been Influ
enced to act in a war which may not meet with
the approval of his Goyesimaut—in other words,
that the resulted' Ids mission here will be a further
Intolviment of the' United' States tato a co-opera
tion with the English in .csarrying on a war with
the Chinese, This lea voice from ate.ma—a vu.
men from this conference of diplomats in session
there; fonts truth I will not reach, but this muck
will r a r y, that in Ibis eountrg—where things go
tee -tomer Is oftener right than wrong.
"tie 't air I d• !resew, rig : that great Infitoodee
are being brought to tea...woo on, commissioner
to make hits act in 0G11R01141106 With - Um Pow
ern who aro at rarlanqe with the Chinese.
American Merchants, and those denominating
thantaolou Americano—l mean those gentry, who
are a tery ; nproarous elan, who become naturalized
Anierioane to have the ,protection of a powerful
flag and of a great marlthnd nation, to anoint and
pretext them in Wilt opium smuggling and coolie
stealing speculations—are constantly on Mr. Reed's
track, urging on him the necessity of co-operation
with the English.' Their reason for modning—their
urgency in advocating hostilities with the Chinese
—is satisfactorily accounted for, as we shall see
Enormous claims for property - destroyed at Canton
and Whampos hare been brought In against the
Chinese Government by these gentry. There
clime Include, besides a five-fold value put on the
property destroyed, !char their protadfs preffts
worad Jape heen had there not IVOU a state of
war existing here, As an Instance, the English
have a 'Maim of 025,000,000 for property destroyed
at Canton, where $1,500,000 would amply cover the
whole loss That you may not mistily) the figurer',
I repeat it—twenty-five millions claim, to one mil
lion and five hundred thousand loos. American
&aims are ln 'proportion. Large fortunes Wilt be
made by many parties, on their olaims for paltry
property destroyed. I trust that , our Govern
ment will appoint a commissioner of claims spe
cially for investigating this business.
Since writing tho above, I ant enabled to give
you the following additional news: The English
forces are being gathered together at Wangtupg,
below IYhanthoa. It la now confidently expiated
that the attack will be made on Canton about the
let of December. The occasion of the delay until
that date is that Admiral Seymour awaits the ar
rival of Colonel Holloway, Commander-in•Chlef
of the English marine forces in Chine, with an
additional force of marines, who is expected now
daily. The forte widish will be congregated before
Canton will be as follows Royal Mutates, 3,000
Blue Jackets, 3,000; Royal Artillery, a portion of
the 39th regiment, now stationed here, together
with a FrenobAkerese of about 300 marines There
'will oe also 13 men-of-war, eacryln an aggregate
of 100 rani, and 20 gun-boats, *soh carrying from
two to five gone of heavy calibre. Law as this
force Is, it. is none too large if we may credit ru
mors which roach us from Canton of the content:
plated resistance of the Chinese. They will re
new on a much larger scale than heretofore their
attempts to burn and blow up the British vessels
by means of lire-raga. We shall see what we shall
see.
The American ship Intrepid arrived here on the
24th. baying on board ninety Crimean soldiers
whirl/Labe had rescued from the wreck of the Brit
ish ship Waverly, which left Shenghae with a
cargo of Aye hundred soldiers bound. to Swatow.
The larger portion of the soldiers were rescued by
SOWS vessel whose name WWI unknown to the survi
vors picked up by the Intrepid, which vessel was
commanded by Captain Gardner, which wars en
route for New York.
The disposition of the United States East India
winsdron is as follows : San Jacinto, Minnesota,
and Levant, at Bong Kong. The Portsmouth fa at
Moose, baring been detained to carry Mr. Reed
there Ostendos roxnsatibut. By the mail of the
24th loot, the Levant received her orders to return
to the States, for which she will probably 'tart the
10th of next month.
az- tirifavg.
YliforgßDAr'S PROCEEDING!!
(Reported for The Press J
UNITED SrATER Dinrnicr COCTRT—Judge Kane
In the case of Alexander Downey, charged with
passing counterfeit gold coin on James Monteith,
before reported, the jury returned a verdict of
guilty Thos. K. Finletter, the defendant's coun
sel, moved for a new trial
DISTRICT Cotter No. 1-Nudge hare.—ln the
Oen of Thomas W Jacobs and Edward Ii Jacobs
Charles Bender and Charles Worrell—en action
for maintaining a nuietner, before reported—the
jury returned a verdict for defendants Messrs.
Manacle and Brinklo for plaintiffs; Judge Par
sons for defendants.
Samuel A. Harrison vs. The City of Philadel.
phis An action to recover the value of furnaces
put in the Nisi Prins and Supreme Court-rooms
Jury out. J. Johnson, Esq., for the plaintiff; Wm.
L. flint, Fagfor the city.
The Grand Jury for the olty and county of Phila.
delphta. made the following presentment :
PRRSENTWRNY OP TOR GRAND JURY
To the honorable the Judges of the Court of Oyer
an d Termini, for the city
and county of Philadelphia: - •
The grand inquest for the city and county of
Philadelphia, for December term, most respectfully
present the following :
Since the commencement of our official term,
which has been a protracted one. we hove acted
upon seven hundred and ninety-eight bills, charg
ing various crimes rind misdemeanors, via :
Adultery, 2, arson, 11; assault and battery,
328; bigamy, 1; burglary, 4; conspiracy, 1; Cl
tortion, 1; fornication and bastardy, 10 ; false
pretence, 15; forgery, 1; highway robbery, 1;
larceny, 193; manslaughter, 2; murder, 6; mis
demeanors, 216 ; perjury, 4 ; robbery, 2
Of these bills, a large number being of a trivial
character, and not sustained in our judgment by
sufficient evidence, three hundred and seven have
been ignored or dismissed. In relation to the
oases for smelt and battery, many were of such a
character as to forbid, in our opinion, their return
to court ; convinced, too, as we are, that the al.
dormen before whom they were heard would have
been justified in settling the same, thereby not
only relieving the Grand Jury of annoyance, but
saving the county much expense, and the parties
involved trouble and loss of time.
The Grand Jury have visited the County Prison,
the Eastern Penitentiary, and Almshouse. and al
though they arc unusually crowded with the poor
and unfortunate, yet they are conducted with a
remarkable degree of cleanliness, order, and aye
tem, which is highly creditable io the officers of
Giese institutions. The ventilation, however, of
the cells iu the untried department of the County
Prison appears to bo defective; the atmosphere le
offensive, and no doubt injurious to the health of
tho prisoners; the attention of the inspectors and
councils is called to this subject On the govern.
merit and discipline of the Fastens Penitentiary
the Grand Jury cannot speak too highly; it is,
without doubt, the model State prison of the coun
try ; the Pennsylvania system of solitary confine
ment, blended with the kind and humane treat
ment and instructions imparted to the prisoners,
received, as it justly merited, the approval of the
Grand Jury.
The liouses of Refuge, for the white and colored
juvenile offendore, wore also visited by the Grand
Jury, and they take pleasure in attesting to the
. •••worthy character of these institutions, where•
n are leeeed nearly five hundred boys and girls,
the managers of which twircea.itient in their efforts
to reclaim the young from a life of crime and vice
to ono of morality and rectitude.
Tho grand inquest, by invitation, availed them.
melees of the pleasure of visiting the Northern Home
for Friendless Children, This institution, like
others of a eimilar character that now adorn our
city, impressed upon our minds its groat utility,
viewing it in its mission of mercy, dispensing as it
does its blessings to the unprotected and often un
oared•for child of misfortune. We cannot, there
fore, but feel deeply grateful to its founders and
managers for their disinterested and noble exer
tions in behalf of friendless children.
The Grand Jury deem it proper, at this time, to
call the attention of the authorities, or remind
them of the greatneoessity for the erection of work
shops in the Almshouse. There is ample room for
such buildings, and on the sotto of economy we
are convinced, from observation, that the city
would be materially benefited by the erection of
the same. At present there is a large number of
the inmates of the Almshouse able-bodied and
good workmen, who spend their time in idleness,
from the sheer necessity of want of room and ma
terial. We hope, therefore, that an early effort on
the part of Councils will be made to bring about
this most desirable improvement. The attention
of Councils is also sailed to the very bad condition
of the bike-house in the above institution.
. . .
This Grand Jury, like preceding ones, sines the
enactment of the present license law, has been
sailed upon to not on a large number of hills,
charging a violation of said law, and in many in
stances deemed it proper to eat aside testimony
which we were convinced was prompted by perso
nal spleen or expectation of pecuniary gain. The
license law, as it now stands, we believe to have
felled in producing the good effects contemplated
at the time of its enactment. No law of this
character can be effectual without it is equal in
Its bearings, and the want of this feature in the
present law to apparent, and to a great extent ren
ders it inoperative. The Legislature of our State
being now in session, we deem it opportune to ex
press a sincere desire that they. in their wisdom,
will repeal the present unequal law, and substitute
one more equal in Ito spirit, exaolleg in its treat
tiO7t, and more beneficial to the molar of our
community. '
All of which is respectfully submitted.
Jac,. KESSLER, Jr , Foreman.
Attest, Win. C. Ilednes,Feoretary.
Judge Freeborn G. Jewett, of Skaneateles,
N. Y., died on Wodnoaday loot,
TWO CENTS.
GENERAL NE WS.
Quite an excitement was occasioned about
the lilting Lediq Esttainsxy at Bethlehem, sari
the Lesion Argun; dating the CltrisUnae
by the sudden dhelPeosano• or MS a t h e
who took it into her head to torn away and wand*
matrimony, without the tionsent of her tssebert or
friends ihe herniae of our atory le a spoiled or
phan girl netowerifteett yule of age, with ea un
divided interest in a; splendid farm in Hanover
tawnship, and the groom we imlieve resides le
New - Jersey. They were merrted et Ausaurara.
Rae had been plated et the school by General
Filtimer. whu, lee her gaurdiao, treated her a.
kind father would bit owe bbtld , and it h to to
feared she tnityilive to regret the day whoa she
reused to listen to aid be governed by his per• .
tat advice.
A little daughter of the Rev. Mr. Cute
man, of the 31401641 d Episcopal church. in Bar
tithing, Pa.. *gni between tee east three yawasy
died en Wednesday. The Herald up. day
lest week, we think it wu Satarday,the deewed.
In company with en eider sister, lea-playing In
'the kitchen, when by secldent they ran against a
pot of boiling ohocohle The bet liquid WSJ
splashed over both the children, bat the one that
has sines died less Injared west severely, haring
been ecalded horribly upon the brettet, arms, and
other parts of the body. The other escaped with
lest injury." " H
Eighteen prisoners rent ntly mule the ir escape
from the (0 rein debt Mame.) jail. Among Meet wea
a notorious countmfelter, named Chapman, who,
about en hour after &sang his liberty. walked
into s piddle bar.inesmisi that Tillage, called foe&
drink, sat down maims the company prima; war
were talking ie , hat ii ti . s t remise joined M the ems
verstinaa' Asa. Wall onslialVdrialttseg
and tailings *Mont betegFeilmL M
th ere e then
went to th e (mot door of the ea hone, nag.
}he hell, and said be thought VW &belt (0
leek tip, end he come bona, to go to bed Of
Connie they:wre glad to me hike.. , •
The Poettnaster General hes ordered the fol
lowing post otiose to be established : Briar Creek
Station, Colombia scanty, Pa , Jabs 0. Jacoby
pnattnseter: directly an the Laekawantui mad
Bloomsburg rasin.ed. Datable Selo, Butler town.
ty, Pa , Michael Wideehefer postmaster; imme
diately on route (rim Sarmsliarg to State Lick.
Appointments. —Philip Wiseman, palmate/
We:ford, Allegheny county, Pa., rice Wither;
Mcjilaner, resigned. Israel Taber, portmaster,
Cook, Erin' county, Pa., vice Hervey Davis, to.
signed.
A. noted race-mare, named Pons )(Moe,"
owned by the Mon. John M. Botts, of Virginia.
met with a fall on the reee-courae at Charleston,
S. C., on Monday, and sustained - a terrible frac
ture of the left fore leg, rendering it doubtful if
her life can be cared She Is a beautiful chestnut
sorrel. three years old, entered for the Hutchinson
stakes, and expected to be the competitor of
• Slasher"—the favorite for the Uutehinson makes
Midway between Wilkosbarre borough and
Nantieoke.'uts ibe bank of the Stuqtahanne, Heed
nod died Joseph Steele Esq., who was born is
Dauphin county Pa , 26th October, 1773, and was,
at the time or his death. eighty-6,e years old. H.
was one of the early colony of flanovertana, who,
migrating from a township of the aims name in
Lancaster or Dauphin. occupied the loser portion
of the Valley of Wyoming
Nr. William Starr, one of the oldest inhabi
tants of Savannah, Gs., died suddenly Monday
night. lie had been inspector of the ensue= at
that port for many years, andi though ninety-three
years of age, be has preservei Ids mental mid
bodily activity to a remarkable degree, and ems
actively engaged in the dada' of kis past op to tke
very day of his death.
A German gentleman, named Muller, has
un pal down shoat lye mill ene of eggs of th e
lake trout obtained from Lakes Ont rioana
31 chi
aa, in streams leading into Lake Saltonatall,
Caen lie boa also pat down about a million of
the eggs of the white Oh in the game lake. It is
expected that in two or three years the !eh will
be of marketable site.
' The Rafttmaa's (Pa.) Jouraa/ SAJI that but
little timber bat as yet been hauled to the slyer
bank, In consequenee of the scarcity of snow, and
unless we should bars eunsiderable winter betieters
sow and spring, our Eastern. frlooda won't be
bothered mach wit& reolsernbundante of lumbe
this season trom Clearfield vacuity.
Several gentlemen are in the city, says the
Washington Union, who have been summoned
bare from Massachusetts to testify before a com
mittee of the Home, appointed to investigate the
alleged corruption of Congress by Lawrence, Stone,
et Co., and it is understood that the examinations
have commenced
A decision has been rendered in the &ape
rior Court of Cincinnati which virtnallyetabtkettea
the validity of the assignment of the Ohio Life and
Trust Company The action was brought by the
assignees to replevin the aka furnitnre of the
company, which was seised by the amid" la loth ,
ty the judgment of certain creditors.
Mr. John Thompson, an old resident of
Hewheld township, Washlngtoneounty, was sad
denly.killed on Monday hut, by falling among the
machinery of attire:Wag machine. His body was
most shockingly tuacuped. Mr. T. was much re
apiiittod away his neighbors and friend,.
J. 11. Jniars. Km.. k lawyer, who we...L.
eently killed la Claiborne parish, La , by 'Loam
lawyer named Egan, was a native of Somerset
county, Md. He emigrated to Louisiana in 181.9,
and WAS thirty : one years of age when he met his
death.
The farmers of Butler and other adjoining
counties In this State, we see by the Western pa
pers, are ploughing and otherwise preparing for the
planting of their opting crops—the present mild
weather being peculiarly adapted for the work
The Presbyterial, .Jdrocate sanoancea the
death, in Washington, Pa , of the Rev. C. Dodd
Sir. Dodd was the oldest member of the Washing
ton Presbytery, and was mach esteemed by all who
knew hurl.
A Western paper says, the only two classes
of travellers on the railroad, out there this win
ter are those who are running away, and those
who are running after them
Henry Plyman, alias Spillman, has been
arrested on the charge of murdering Daniel Chia
holm, near Oakland, Allegheny county, Md., a
few days since.
The Savannah Georgian announces that the
banks of that city have determined to resume spe
Cif) payments on the let day of Jane nest, or at an
earlier day if they can obtain the 00-operation of
the bank. at Augusta and Ohaslaston.
On the 2d inst., the United States supply
steamer Shuhriek. Cape De Camp, from Philadel
phia, hound to California, pat to 44.. St_ Thanias
short of coal, also haring sustained damages.
Captain Peabody, of the ship Knickerbocker,
fell overboard and was drowned, at New Orients,
on the night of tho 20th inat.
Patrick Lynch, residing near Union Mills,
Carroll county, Md , was found dead in his liens.
last week.
John Jordan was killed in Campbell county,
Va., on Tuesday, during an affray with Walter
Withers.
Mr. Chapman, landlord of tho Fella River
House, Vermont, committed suicide last Sunday.
The new sloop-or-war now being built at
Pensacola is nam ed the "Florida."
Texas News
By the arrival of the Charles Morgan at New
Ortears, on the 23d, we have Galveston dates to
the 20th inat The papers cousin some further
proceedings of the Democratic Convention at Aus
tin. The following nominations for Btate otScers
had been made :
For Chief Justice.—John R. T Wheeler, of
Washington county.
For Associate Justice of Supreme Court.—C W.
Buckley, of Fort Bend county.
For Comptroller.—C. It Johns, of Ilaye county.
For Treasurer —Cyrus H. Randolph. of Hous
ton county.
For Attorney General.—M. D. Graham, of Che.
rokce county.
The corre.pundent of the Chilean says •
AU good men and true—and neither of whom
ever saw Sam—but ever bore the banner of De
mocracy.
Resolutions have been Introduced Into the Texas
Legislature condemnatory of Commodore Paulding
for tho arrest of Walker.
The Liberty Gazate is severe upon the Admin
istration for the conduct or its agents In Nicaragua.
Tho Victoria Advocate has been converted to
the rives of Senator Douglas by a perusal of hie 1
speech on the Kansas question. It says :
According to our judgment, Senator Douglas is
in principle, right according to the professed
doom.— -retie Democratio party_; and most bold
ly, and ably, and has be presented an 3
sustained his opinions.
The Richmond Reporter says: The roads are so
bad that the stages aro now dragged in with am
eulty by six-horse teams, and cotton hauling has
entirely ceased
We learn from the Waco SoutAettter that the
Indians have made another foray upon the citi
zens of Erath, Doeque, Palo Pinto, and Coryell
counties, and on a more extensive seal. than on any
former occasion. The extent of their depredations
was not known, but it was certain that they had
murdered two white men, one negro, carried off' a
white boy, and severely wounded another negro,
and hnd driven off a large number of the most
valuable horses and stock
tinecklaz Suicide at Lancaster
'Prom the Lancsater Times of Jan 2s) I
On Thursday afternoon, between 4 and 5 o'clock,
Mr Frederick Bailsman, aged about 55 years, com
mitted suicide at the residence of 1119 Mater. Miss
Catharine Bailsman, in East King street Mr
Bailsman, otherwise and familiarly known as the
•• Squire," at about 2 o'clock was at Brintnall's
Hotel, in East King street, where he was partially
intoxicated Being naturally quiet and unobtru
sive, ho remained at that place a few minutes, after
which he went home
When he had arrived there he became eomesrhat
querulous and incensed at something which oc
curred which had disturbed him. He then went
up stairs without expressing any intention of com
mitti❑g suicide, and left the impression that he
was going to lay down in order to sleep, and did
not wish to be disturbed until topper time , he
must then hare prcceeded to the garret directly.
where he obtained a tope, with which be hung
himself.
At 5 o'clock, hie sister not bearing or seeing him
since he had gone np stairs, supposed that he was
Mooning: and intending to awaken him, she went
up into his room, but did not And him there. She
then went np to the garret, when she found him
hanging by the neck Shocked by this sight, she
commenced screaming, but before any person
could come to her assistance, she cut him down
The neighbors hearing the unusual bustle, and un
able to miscount for it, entered the hones. The
alarm seen became general, and in a short time
there was a large crowd gathered around.
ROTICI TO coaaltsroNmoms.
Pi r viindolpAG-14tbdwilikskiiimliewt•
Wait w fallkrutse rodeo:
Ivory Soomesualage. nod 1# iiiimmosied *VW
saga* of fit ori,t te bonyimeseit
Lis typortigir,' Ist do. ids 14 Pupa Aiwa be
'written a,pcs
We WWI be sreatly eltSsal to helecoa la Pesmarle
v*ta sad tem Sideforestebelese lidos Ur at.
rest mire or the day to time perttsalar leseittes.
retatrees el We suessadJas stesatce, We laaisso se
PersbWlers e eel ete leamews Walmel to Irlieseles
t o law leweetle resise.
wittLY &mew or Two ter
IPPLIA ALLiumgr
PartAßissfsta.isamo VIM
yam ?mist* mama preamit a saes lamest smpsiea
sae*, but lb. tram animus to malt 6flistaarts a f Indio
an rUn War 'butyl- Quedoni. bar but
flan Is little at ems Yea itsmomeamet adws lass
nu <lda. amd Plat Simla mime- Olaiii• Ina ink
tb. dy tresttam Lavin limas( ti. cammormataa. 064
fa to ',try oaks; fates sad Mamma dart mod smait
tla. Harm to 'actuated Lass' art Ist WM b.
gaited altar Ms Ism martat boa insmmodtp
Mat. aad pnas are . ; assama L l an allswiloanaL
Tory littl4 dual la Lad_ Natal glom ma air mia
alowly at WI water. caatatisaa aft adaL
tits ulna traukaa bat tta aarld L. eat bums inni
adj... bee Is Area Closersasi tam best la pad
dasamd Nal solitass. Appose ear Smrsited
Tau and Totomao an Imr Teal Mae ts inst
TlwrsW brats vs Was amdatatmm me
Smartattft a t Dry Gloat , Mal met sadamds.
war rid* lime:
•• - mar tossed imams*. us Illor
mu hr saw . • Swot Ommoad, boa Oar
siosorat rod hoar oposalailo,iloara lb* borer;
'boot 6,000 bbis boil bils taproot of ylnorodor
pion', Toree . al film $4 Slhodiltt bor tomoram Gad
cord las eleige *nada et tupertsjo. StAlllls he Oa
ks Ng sin rasa, to ~wt UAW. lkif haw INN
"SO braa 4 as PAIL% . BeellW4l4llo dldlosso Wa
nt Arms far standard broads 110 alas, -pro who
for ibo soft IV* Moats mat labors bas
malsara siQM blaa novo of ik alarroloaSS. 'Ito&
)lacer boo rose den. aid limithalsarttridridosto.
mall Woo at 11.166.4 Cora *mg *8 ass ow.
mat red for, sal call
s'
drldTbrof tIO)
fra
balo tilsollariolid
rails. - irao Mos
W bar star rbommal trirboirtitalit dais at
MOM bilkoil A gi.no*Lib Sit
toed Poßwi endabreiontilaiisia he miss ihr
for ?dais •fjppiag_. 4 2 o.l MIA* Ark.
gala lots's: re eti.' IlSiSolita this - biwoopm",
tiro, sot It bar lain itasireito sormaritordoorlosil
or sky. Ws at ikaat Miala awe yafklae at ONO
N,. la aim, ace! MOW do- alkalk aamilbe ab ilbsa
am. Salsa at walla at, dish clala Chia
bail Soo Imo sthi, sad prima las &Us of— Not
"so Isabela P =styli - axis lad
•Delasia•af,sat::
-
borascetes tor )tees aim NEIL, lee the seek est. s
leg Jeanksry r lee/
U. 41 ea of Nrivt.
bombs
46 72"
- 111444)*P- t• - • •••
Ogni •
Caollaamod .....
Total. i lulled
THOTITIOS3.—The twelfth et all kb* ate
and the tearteetraser, bat Uses alai . Mate &bit_
laali isles et Itiefornelike Perk. 144. SSD Pad
bans! tor, Au. Ited Ltd he Lift 4.. i dam Med
of Wes Beal* .kip Korai afar everted OW der VC
dews las beta setet,.tbart It cre Aral Unlade vamps
la. Small sales of Musa at lee He tar plaki sad Law
wed. se is guilty Wes' and . gfeerdense are alsrea-
Me ludo the drama. at as'irea,asd the Wan id tett Keg
150 make bale awe salt si thane nape. The dewastg
roe Balk Vesta k.. beta that*, kat the midges
DAC and meta rather inner. Wee et Meted Name
et 1 'calm eseth sad 60 days, sad Ilbeellers tl etellige
per lb Ter Uri the itemast MS bar leur. Writ
420 barrels at 1 / 4 401(5, sad keg 411411 all*" fr era
sad Una. gotta Issuing krealibsoly, sat wimples
Redondo deraual, ler mild plaid al liens pie 111.
lad Bell.. liellerta reittir. NUN wawa iad
dors era earitsaired, bet doe Miler on tan at li/-
011002311E11 —Re sub! !tar Sprit tar Immo !eel
Sall, and, prim* them, the Woe 1100104,
Cabs at Se, esd ^S lehda see ere" Toss Salem let ler
to, or_ time, The Wier *Grim be. Mos gibe. sit
Lik• indica salsa withdraws; HO hip ale at Ilypitlik,
ma lea kegs Iwo at /10 p ith in Om. IN
lames erotism, dell. sad trkill OM UMW. A 11111Mit
. 1 / 1 1 d Cale hirer add at Ds, TES Mae Ift• eletaitatidl
'Ala, sad maw Syria at 101e3Sc, se tear.
METAL& —Mere has tome eery ettell ildeirdrOle
a+g teem, awl prier are Sled" matlaai. Stliajlars.
errs. or 2,000 taw dash:leis dla 1. art rimmillt M all
cut, for (stare tell reel, !cot* Tiges talL Steernot
an held at 170, ail motto Tikes el bar WI 'Poise
I roa centene• bat ;toted Lest;-'ner• sane ler
.1.117. wet Leah yip, Yet Spastilt. Use lies eedit at
51g a 511, e. Comer—Theft so-usual kit eithsr
Sheathing or Tallow /data/.
zazx —in: doe! d Quiratrie Y b4M, sal Ns. I
• &Med at 1/ ton ; race keittas refute Our leant.
n bogs laltaroaro moi4 als334P fa.
ULM • X.—tkozall saki et mild Tenwir We Eakin
at .
CANDLES —Than ta • snot, bnani Sae ell Naas
inanatim, ant min at ibtlans an mann a* tie
toe V s,l and • anat/ba. Stern and Tel*. an 411.41.
CO AL.—Tba satin bad nanneastado abeada. Than
an bat re• Orden :Kiln La, Mid Lt. ILLS vsathaz loan
the demand
COTTON —The tuntmlas arse" 6 , aes Tram?* pat mo
MIS *l6ll las• beadens7
demand. Alma **b. Uploads tom ken dispar4
stalk .§r ID Sir itadteary, sad 11,10&124 to malidasg
j!kit, cult sad 4 maaLlu.
151 1 —lloaag lba tedea u Voiedidse
Feeders at 3) 4131(e. LW dada u 149. Oda It Pi-
Gambia at Skil, 114.4 ilittra at 4601155, e. mar.
TB/THERA —We goo la West- ru s 3 4.1.444, eat
roilt —Ntsdurrit are srith =tore {!:moonlit
las demand is Balta.!, and salsa coughs/et to mall low
from story at tue VIM $l9 Poe s, Rat
$9 for 34. Pulite.] Llernag ass selLaig au a iniaa gear
at S 3 3.0itt3.73 41 , tibl, sad CodtA a 93914 21 IP
lia)
YRtiT —Me of tempo fk wary Sigh, aa4 Uwe
traaranions ban lola Stadied walla IDa bap of hr.
raer quotatnaa ; farther ado* of °maces aad Loom at
SS 15 VS SO it Dos non bra beta non daaaad for
Dried Apple., with sales st dwd.we fp b. DEW Psfebef
tin cot meta Levant( attar, sad than an wary_ two
woosiog forward. Small Wow of sorpored at HUM&
Grew Applee are useliasapd. - iniilmarriew an to grip
tegasat SOr bU
711 EIGHTS to Liverpool are dell at2o hi for fru,
0.011 W for grain To Loados the rata" are steal at lif
030. per tea A email /owl was chartered for Cubs
et ilk for Inger, sod 113 br moloaeos A tel. kr Jo
melee, 04 $3 49' IRA, oat mad loins. Cotton mot •
limrtea inquory at former rates.
GINSENG —A few small lots of crass hart lees oat
at 43 &We V is eash.
GUANO —Xotikiag douse. asf lerkee vosetaally ine
eheorot.
lIEMP coat/oats .try Vail, Sid SO 61 / 4 4 hi, emir
wrier oar notace.
III'OES are dull; about LIM Cutsuie nuld *a Woo
cot made publln. Some pn-clasne ka.e nbro been muds
in Nov Tett
HOPS.-43=11 Isles of Zaitern tut Weston at 1.
Ile tr lb.
LZATHEIt Is not so salts, bat priors an steady for
most kinds.
LUX/MlL—Nothing doing, and price* in surly
nominal
NAVAL STORES haee been my quiet, and the
sales .f Rosin, Pita., aced T. limited at former rates
She demand for ftirite of Tarpentiae to Totter, with
sales of ADO barrels ►t 13.14 e, cash sad time.
0112.—Sperm and Wale runtimes as bud quoted,
but there bas bees very lath douse. There bus been.
family inqniry for Linseed Oil at 60132 c, cult ►cl sixty
days. Lard Oil is scarce, bat there is not muds do.
man,' for It !bile. of Whiter at td Se sia time. Rod
Oil la firm at 60a cub.
RICE.—She demand has been moderato, bet priors
are better. dales ►t 33 tl.s3 .6, cub , and short time.
SALT.—No anir►le or Wee this reek to etutire goo
tatioul
SEBDS.—There is a good demand for Clammed, mad
all offered, about 400 bu, sold us lota at TA Zeit .14
La. About SOO bushels recleaned were 'token for ex
port on terms kept secret Nothing doing in Timothy
Sr Flaxseed worthy of remark.
SPIRITS —The priers at brandies fame bane., sad
there II bat little selling In Gin sae there le bat
little doing it hickey—the demand has been better at
the decline. Sales of I;X° bbl." Pen. mil Ohio at Zer
Tic; closing to-day at these Sgunsa—kkis 6119)(4120e,
and dredges at lTaßlic
TALLOW —We n-te em It mien of city rendered at
Iles Ts•
TEAS.—There Is a better demand for both Black ani
Green at former quotstio.
TOBACCO —Leaf Is dull, and price." Corer buyer', tat
intentactiared 1p steady
WOOL —.Holders are arm in their demands, and
40,000 The fleere and palled hare been taken by mann
future!, at from 30 to 60e lb, on time—the latter
for tine chi's.
at the Peer Haase bT an In-
[From the Grua/bars (PI )IteFebt!can.]
On Monday afternoon a horrid murder was per•
petrated at the eounty poor hone., by an insane
Irishman named Denzil! The victim, a child,
whose mother's name is Frits. Dennis is the man
who come two years ago was tried in oar court Per
arson, in burning the barn of a Mr. Neel, in
Deny township. He wee eciptitted on the ground
of insanity. and was ordered by the count to be
confined at the poor house, u a man unit to ran
loner in society. He has been an Inmate of that
institution ever einee, evidently lamas; he would
lie in bed for about a week, and then for a lae
period keep on his feet most of the time without
exhibiting any indication of vicious habits
On Monday last a young lady who tese.hes a pri
rate school in this borough, at the earnest ripsiest
of a number of her pupils, visited the poorhouse,
accompaniedby some twentycfberlargut
The steward, Mr. Hammer, accompanied the lady
and her school children through a portion of the
building, when he was called into the oMee on
business. The lady visited the basement of the
building, and in the long hall met Dennis, who
showed evidence of excitement at the children—he
appeared to want to ,bun thenx—subbed his hands
and shied off to one side. After pe.aing the chil
dren be proceeded to the hall door where the child
aged between one and two years was sitting. 119
stared at it a moment then took it by the feet
and struck its head with all his force on the door
sill, knocking out its brains and killing it instantly.
Anotherinsane MAD named Miller, who was
near at hand, sprung at him to seine him, but he
failed to secure hlto• Dennis than ran oat of the
yard, met one of the male inmates going towards
the house, struck him on the head With a clone in
flicting a severe wound. He ran down the road
near where some inmates were chopping wood.
Mr. Hammer who was in pursuit hallooed to them
to stop Dennis. They attempted to do so, when
he ran violently against ens of them, throwing bin
down and breaking his collar bone. Before Den
nis had recovered his feet, Mr. Hammer caught
hint, a struggle ensued, Hammer struck Ma two
or three times with hts fist, when anis' tance ar
rived. The Eatuderes was secured inikheint
ais
r o an
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un
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