VU51 4 41;1/AI F / A Bf A t i l t‘r i ' l XC l P/ I #l F .f '4 ;70 11 1- 1 # .0 Af...4Q401.WW: IF 1 05 1 , 11 0i '4 a 0845754 r 5 rik4 ri e,l , RAntIM I ICSIA to 3 ,111 M 4l " 11 ' 1 ?„ariailVt 1 4.1P179 1 1 WtAt 5 4 148 4 ba l l 4 of the Ottrts MIX D 0161116 124 - .C 1 R 4 .."V".4 141 11110/, lhaele Nowyma Tin dtdeetayosjitf L Xevrei e,nTaellfwypkwAyaztoe ter thellinw Mind • -Vek" *VA* ,E l'l 4: l *-itlEli 111 44VikOtnktitit *O4lO Titin. Dote .w S.. vnii l / 4 , 141.7 4 1 , Alimuwin Ite Rio, to fintweelbent Ingt t"r - s l47ikti a amnoeik $ 2 00 t = 2O Tbre 3 . o Pleol .... t o.*t.t. 500 rfre st . ' . ~,,, •. oo Tan thpipt,• ^ e t vot zo . tx , Twenty Copleb; `lteirailoidnigOli °° 'Rwant k rilopter, or 'ow 4t fo volltesi For s.vig Timuts o dia. 011.,(100/TWO SOWS 04 • el" COPit 4 ,9 the.gette*wp of the 01114 • ArtTfluolt 4 4,t9llot as Amid for "SIFI tt A,V" . 41 • ;NA T rIVO. II I4Ik:PRESII4 , • • X m**, iwoil.-Iliontidei kr :this 0A" tht Coltformhw 7 ipIeALLEIV. ; arOO4:OHEE;TIVITITEtprri • -A.A. $ r t . ;4sKalitirsofliatii ' • 4C - ttrisiongture-ormai -'• likaar4kittliesitmoit,Lat , th4 . piapiaid esquAlr xisq 'car ,I!isvi. ifzeratillBl: , - - ' tairi4o,,,witedAik iplein . fild'utoei at espiiica, - 'Maw, at all ths.i" isted 'askant: .D.EI . gl • tps4l . l_ Itixert. , Y , l 36 tos o4 4 4 l , 99o l o4 l FilbtAt'aiimeetune. gettautoitiltwirriogotuNwitobiTiiiidy:Ma'Pf:. ~ ffisi ' 44 untikorapjvq , • b•atlif4A 4 46l44,:•l4*.it ow itjla.of So . iyikeinii ,l 4l l sMhdtit , km' .!- .13111M1i, Imiltome int ?SAM* .01,008.0_, of 'Tsawfult atylea citd ofy!nerictiquallty.:. ar r iiiyotleii • b :A.:O A LDWE ar - 004 •_•- f , • ", _ Move mehrApletostvkatterft; neiest7l4l , •. evicatb:Otiattlatsis; Yeat BidendadAatis 1410 hes: -' . Pratt Stands, itor4r . , „. Jet Geode Oa" , Coral, t.J*4. And 'Hotels Bete. _ Bole ligentilfi; Phili i i i t i akte Nita sale of .. gliejies Prell4amlicGONDON T -IL8BP)1118: -•- (taw • v•, „ . r -111,1411,LIASUWESSCRE & SON AbiIYVEACITCREAS SIL VER' MIAS, . , CEBSAIII4SURD luso B. itpcogaiu rarts-Atto tumour Bisons. , A lame ageortnieat W. 81410111 W USE, of everydi grouptioa,,ootiOtimOly onS,oud i or raode.to - order to meta any p,,ttkrn desired. . It of ettoiff , old Sod 'lllr4ighLasii; lyiported 8. - JARDEar tcIIRCF, ~" 1 . .. • ' l4/Mirk:lir/as 110011ITIZI t-,411,911E LATED WARE, • - 00. 1106, Onootnnl atooo -Third, • tap Oonstinflo On,bond and• for rala to,thO l'nutO a.& rim, - soxturrnoN'sariviewarra, Vaia; AITOGBES., GOBLETS , QIIPS. WAITERS RAO !CA'S, CASTORS, Kriroxs, - -6PooNs, sc6sxs, vaxasslce:reo; - - Gthlinicond rloting on , kind!, a! metal. so 2-17 7.440b1i** II COM- A IL. IaBSION MIIIIOIIINTB for thisl2lrd FORDICIM AND> DOMESTIC HARD:WADE, 'Would respectfully call the ; attention of the trade to tiler stook, yrhkic they are offering at lowest rates. On'r assortunont con. Meta In part of— , Obelus, of all lkinda.-Trarsi, Log, Haltar, , Dresst, Cow,yittk, Dock. Wapn,"Stalw, Tongue, Look, Ship, aline,iffid coil Ohalne: The omelet:rated n Ids llorlit Dais 1 Stone and Sledge Wright's airlODic. Anvils ;. Solid Do* and other ehort.snCiongladdlo •Yry Pin; round niul•onl ' -• superior Plies and awe; Bed „Berm. Bienialeewilatety Pose ; -131liating Corn, Graaf and Drier Scythe.; ; Hay; Corn ; and Straw flay; Andre, Tanners.; and Bppding Yorke. Satan andline!; Shotaltieindiedes, at all kinds. Taoke 2 Noul,a, fiVoi,o Clout, antiltbigiting Nails. , ea.it. sail Wrottektßutt llinges, Screw*, FOckg or 'l4 Ixt nal; Ontl_Batai Pomo', due, Waists; Ham , men, Plikes, and other Toots, &c., - • (I,,LNWIAck SON, . N0.'4.11 OOMNIIIIOE Street... QClMt~i .BILARP;;MAILOR,I4B, - --ITOBTH 11011,RTH stmt, Wow 11.10 V, • Making and trimming Dreiss or Ihonk Coats; • Maltinfand Plitnlooni nellpats; $1.76.• 41rE,5.,;1411,,N B. I NA N, ,NEIZOttANT s 7 TAILOR: N 4.16 mi - dlB South fiTßAtilt, ABOMMISSTIITIT. - •' • • - ,•• ' • 7 -• A large a i d well sel , ntiC stock OLOTEllisid OAShIMMA ilways on hind. • • Alf 'Clothing midi this .2stailleinunit VIII 'IW , Of the heeidtlehillxi,the znottAshimable • ayUcger,atientliaLgivin , to WILITOBM.OLOTIV VIIIPOOTVAND48)1011E-The !fiabeariber ALP rAall onjUs44 law au4„ , rez44. F*1.48000 lea MORSwilled). *A yin the Icrorest_prices. - A••• GRO. , V7t TAYLOR, - - , l3:llL'ooneer-TIOTEI =A MARKET - 'iiilrttge - ante n fa V ERTi;SHOOMER ' munitsiai eLd WINDOW - GLlESMoittibiat bandit NOUS= bad ildOßltreetb,Ttabdelpblaz , i -• • •-:'• • - 8010 Agents for the sale or the celebrated lfleratfe, Plate Wear. , , f,;• td4B-11%,:: ezIEGLER ?SitITITP ,, WHOLESALR aotithviat 'comer of 81100NDFmad - GEM iitonts., ,-hava stony and O ,OF 9V 4 t*,° in ata Mita purchases : ' laat . Ten. Bad. • • • Gum Arabia; p t aked Mot :WVa..' henna Alea.••• "- 1 '• • • • ou Aniseed. • pans ctreen; OLDranii, WirE-1a10), - ',SINO PArIiTS, - 81o;•;- , ottfeWkliepisblleWhltiLladollno Palate, actors Paraiba's; reduced prices chat ire 'mita the attention of dealers ind consumers to ear stock- , ::1- a "It m1;14 , 8. W. tpr, *VIA: and Greesiate,: _ AATINDOW S i"' 0 v ctAits; I—Wo,imitiKtke attentfoo of the pp tio G)or aixtobeive: ;stoat' of•Dreoeh 12,4 'Attetitaxf Windowgiltte, Tholarge weli.ieleeted-WeVof QUA anefaitly 'hand - ohAbles- WI 40 , nu All'ordeni with dotwattkAtrt lorr - De au,r other hones to the city ~2 "1.11131,11E & SMITH, • WhaefildE-Draggiettil 1 / 11 4°:;:::B. WO O /1.0/7 ,9 ! o °°°° ° e M firP°° gr.folll4: Mot anbAanettunuaro.- CHINA AND ei5t1313.,^1 ,- . , • - • ":t ' . fikaidi r itizikr wain,. ma saarp„ atm - titmenhEr4 -, -..z.J._t•L 4 :kit t , t4,.. . WILL MI Roi2l l AT US DOWNER PitiONl, 14 7.7 . _ luau= witsoleiti malt, ,718 oximirrritrr syzinrr. ,• • . • Z.-A1114 , 1111 loaned Vo partisli at rossotabl f er mi. wys,pfcg,_PLATE., t yoS;;::-IfAMOi Xlswi4Tpoliited the OMR VataNTB for the es e of their efikell'in this clty,firCisti'lireparedi toast hi the tilde br, sedum awn Eroßpurojtocar...an:,4o4,,,poßxium for Wiainn Ftplitf Rough Plate; fee Ploore and Slollglitiiriwidllltered - Plate • i of Urge the, for Mirrors. Ti,. Mug will be sold et tbe lowest )/liceli-F4YlWWw,lO.Odypator 1110Sfy-vspect a lb say Ater ronstied; 31,011T. , 1110hILMOIR Ac 004 ^ , „.• „Ode =4: Window,Gansa Warshaw., : 'IC'. nor. of lifOr t iarli winira&ClE Btwiete,' z l'-gibarctratitr eigani. VIGARS, OF FAVORITE ,BRANDS V Igor imartixteltegluttellirolOotid btenm house at liaratia, in store, and tacatvedbyntery mina from thstpM*,.-WO& 130Nar -,- .LW OI-, 7 '"rilr . 4,ll**UtaaßaNtingelflt, Li AVANA OIGAPIA ts , levall . ,, raha,,,, - -,,._;', ...;)"" , ~... ~ L re= i ,.., ; .; .;., ;,.. I , li lasit, ' O 7 : biteitkni 7 " :* ' 'l3' • ' AinatiaLii 1 ' ,, 7--' 003 ,0,, ~ ....,1 he., 1444 ,V,i:tiiii tili 4 162 Mf, i Q i :44l - lan k Liestor• an 4 of . , , ast,#4 . 1"1 ok kale-lov4 - r : , - i. mply - (00 8 0 WAVlagrt,tftrooli ' s i ,:, -1 bid_PW, 6 0 03 4, A5410,1111,17' e ARO; 011.132L1V1TACR:194114. Victsa.:La attpla . "At waiAlm buol,bilig fiitisalr.br ' seetr ,„ l . ;:q 1 . 6 . 1 9 ..97 1 / 111 ,r, 41 :!. 1 ! . ..5 a & n 0 . 7 E"' 4 '' ' • =, • • • REI3 , '.*ALLIIRT , ,tt ••,7•-•,...;•••• PAINTINas,.: u "";,' LOOKING-GliAfifEd ; an Es, ' ''''"••••••-• : ;• re oral , , _f -• • •• • , ligyfj - • ; .1 , 1 #6.i1 3 0 : 8 T 4 ,11 .0 4 4 41 1.411,704.4',i118,1011rir4.11au1e.1..: MIK : 3_l/ linpintorn sat JilFholesnro Diem in anti r. .Wii sant gU ms, lifb-1017. MAlUMlTiltreet h ibtiwnen nib ilitnenth orkniabi. jaw TAW sc-BEERStrt...I. 1.4 ollgiorb; - Yt - WwiL,IIBRIOATIIMORISAI3E) ~ • _-• the tititteatbheepeet;eomtlifim vottAthe aitliii .(001 or 403,c2r . i. .. CA PA „ . 1 :4111 1 e4 WA 13004 , ,- 1 , Iptp,.- „ . -_,..-, . poori ft , eel; e - fetl44ob!h§,Y. en the, DRII Vill Ig. the itb , dthOlitatllfAUTUßlOßSif - If "/` • WA' IfiIOWIEWATAIIItrieII. ,• iri:SRMAICIAGLOAR%.,+.I4;4OeO c . brig mulior!ral23B,toltoo j,yl - 6 14.7M-lhaT' sesit,",;= =lll M=Ml IOW?. r 4.4 a `3' n.. • • 1 , c. , • ( - -, k - / . , ~, . , . .... , ..., . , . . . . . , t..:Z;i: - '; , -.:- . .":.,:•,:- .- ,t_. . „.. . . 1 , ...„1. , %% . 1, 1 I ; / . ..f ;r ill ip . . ... ~ ....... . . A ~.., ~ .. . , , r,..... k f o. ;,-AT,A,.,; ~ , .:,.....-...,..._._. - -,----___.„ , z , ,):5",,.1,....,., e-,-.,.. , -; . 4 . '2.1';' ,; E ...: " . ...- ...- 'Ve ;'-, , v!) - , - ,....gigk - ',... -- : , - - . , C:7, - . ... . •ict , . 4 ., , , . , , . . , --; '• ' ••••--•'''; ' ,::.' :.. ' 4 ' •'- ' "Z.: `lam \' .- 5.1. 2' , ..4,., l ' 4 11126ii V e U. - :' -:" . 7. • ::.•. ': - ?...- : • .j',.; ''-.. - '7 - • ~,,-• L L ; bp •. I . 16, ' i ; , .f , / • .:_ .4 v. ~ „ , . . '' - ' • .\ ' • -.-• -)h. ' l' ' C' - ' - %..Y r2 74 4 I I - - 11181 ' - • ~,.. ~:,: -„, r•. 5- ~..•tp, .. _ i i , -If ,-* •`, . 1 , -.' :-.;-.: ...'- 1• A ' ..:' 4 Y. ,, e. i ,. 93 ,, ~,....1t41).i I.' : t l i l,al? , -......,..,4%4. ....,-...: 7Bil ,',:r.(.....:: ..._ ...,, ';1 .., "i.., '• • . • ' ' -;•- " • .:.,-,,r#. 2 V...!. , , , , .:t" , .; . :!. 140,/,,..,:v T!! .. . , ,,,..4t):: . .........‘A r .:..... ?:..0‘,.,-.,4.:.,'..i:::',..,...41/".4f-r.:..tili-- ..... _ . „. . .. L . . - •,.,.. . ........... - - - . ... ... . - •.; : ,--f.- -, .. R.,;, v ,-.....:- ,„:. tie ___ ,_....... _____, .. , ~... ~,„..., .....:„...., _:_. , ~.....:r ~..,.,....,.......,, ~........, , .. _ . . ....irc0.......-- -4.,.. , ... ... • , -..... -...,....r.,..--.,,,-- ~.. ' ........r............., --'" .....,........ft., - -•-,., . , - r• , -•••••&.-.. • , • . • • - i - 1. - ~ f.,••• .., . • • . • • .....- 4=V0t:".74. 1 . ,. . AWL = .O-f.g . ( = ONt'===4:=l.WP. , l.V.,rV,',..‘.;, l =Yril. ,- .../ .=, I ;',,, f,..;', - ....:= ~'. . •-' . C = ',... 1 i. -_ ~ ~:.~"~, ~ , ~,: • YOL:..iiNQ;' 30'. LOVERS. -BY TIM BARD TOWER MILL. Thor was alovely maiden, -Possessed of lovers throe, Whose mind m w i l ' A d oll s or w elVi r ce ,r iro b u i lTbo. .They RU were very.houdsome. ' .... 1 1TO . tnif . ..twq of tholprro TgeChi;i4as poor*tth questionett2 .whicle Which fdehoo.e- - -It w a puzzle', -But at last. the told Ma three i ef.hat eaeh must wcite a letter„ 4n4. the onorgunienta hec choice should be hoby a preaented, ;.' • l ia r &Dation contd. command, 1 Awl_ to him, and to no other, • ' ' "She would give her tract and hand. Dickfocitepled - • Baying, p Darllng,. , tis my prayer, ; •That you,,tcknoe united, May my-hone and fortune share. ,Then, leader of the fashions; • , 7 Went •S•ciiri — grintnese e'er will doubt, While tninoline you're spreading i ;Upon hoiips.the largest mit?, : „Charles, In a brief Of his fortnne gave account— Told of means he held Invested, Quite astoundinginainountr ' , And bald, "If you will Wed , Youthalldress.with'eneenly pride, - -"Atlideepinaatlifilighlecaps When your robed stmlabl aside I" Then Willie sent a tubules,: - ' Audit read in letters bold, • • "'l'holeth quite unblessed by fortune, 'Flaring neither land; nor geld, • .Ble.h:my heart In warm affection, . • -And I buyrny raiment all, At the mart of style and fashion, Knoim as Bennett's Tower nail." The road use letters, " 'AM Mr Vet wittrlove did sllttiii; • I . Bye raurniurett,“.l.willief.deareet, r• ••I am thine, and only thine! • In clothing bought of Bennett - Von must e'er respect command-- !lath in love,' Mid thus appareled, I • You shall hake rnyheart, and hand!" Thetis:di got their unaware,: - And they cried, ah cruel fate! . To Benuett's then, they hurried, •,> lint the Went , alas! too late ! Williod his lovessete married, I And the happy pair oft call, For suite of children's clothing. - At the ‘‘ hliminOth Tower Hall." r.BNIINICTVB TOtfaa HALL CLOTHING BAZAAR, 6113 Elarket street, south stile,. between ; Fifth and Stith _ Onmmer limes 'HAY' HOTEL, WILLIAMBPORT LYCOMINd COUNTY, Pa. The undersigned 111iipurehased the largo and elegant bUllding, corner of THIRD and PINE tbreet, formerly Occupied by the West Branch Dank, and bee en'osged and tefitted It in a superior style. Williamsport is .one of the most delightful inland toads In Penneylrania and his house, he hopes, will bo found pleasmit, the traveller as to those rill teptforthe matropolla who ,dialre to pass an agreeable time daring :the heatediann of the antumer. libantanibits risnstrom his lintel to the Packet and Rallroird'Depots froe of charge. ' 148.11 m. • W. 11. IDLY, Proprietor. • E DLOE'a • HOTEL, ATLANTIC CITY, JX*SLT, -At the termlntercif the Bathoed, on the left, beyond thepepot. - Tbtelititime fa' - NOW OPEN foe Einirdeng and Transient 'Visitan t and offers seconi millistions equal' to;any. Hate] in Atlantic City. TERMS MODERATE Tartleelitionlit heap their seats until the care arrive in front of the Hotel. The illtne are con• elitouble. t • EA BATH IN G .—THE•MANSION 15.71 Hovey., :loot ,of Pennsylvania Avenue, AT- TiAt Tit } CITY, is .1 , 1019,0 PEN (Sr guests. For core '4nliance of arrangement, 'Contiguity to the beach, and attrastivenoss of the adjacent grounds, this House is Tke prOprietoi 'has spared no pains in sCAISing - this Fatal ail that could be desired by visitors. 420-Int B. LEE. WU-TE .MOUNT . • NE WHAM • • • • The -PROYILIt HOUSE, and YLUILE MOUSE, in the:NRANCO,NIA NOTCH, are now open for visiters. Thesellonses pre cf the first. class, and here become -the' resort _of accomplished _tourists. They are five miles,apart, on a qelightful road, and situated amidst thetbeldest and grandest' of mountain scenery. The Prolate:is much' the largest house at the Mountains, new, and., replete with the conveniences of modern first-class hotels. • Itsommands the finest view of Mount Lafay ette (which is but little lower than Mount Waehing tonil.ls near Egio Jake, and the,Old Man of the 'Mountain, , - •TEIN 1 0 1rLtIME 110178 N,". iftusated on e. lofty elevation," commands tb'egrandest irtrfOr 60.inlitidoirrithO Penahreimesett Valley. The lflutuatthe Crystal Caseade., the Pool,' and- the Basin ininutos , ..walk•oftha _.I , LNM); uOtreEt • - - 6V•rptliit4;ieo.iing PhiLtdelphlu at 10 A, M., can reach thoYLOMM ROUSE; via 'the Worcester .and Nagdma, 'anTthe Boston, Concord; and Montreal Railroad to Plymouth, thonext afternoon, (24 miles by slated or they triatso'oiri the 111. C: and , ) iailroad to tale torsi thence by stage (only 11 miles)_ to the .I , ltol/ILS "NOME, -in the mama, time. „ Melly arrive ami depart daily „Post.oinoll'addreee, PROPILLMO3SE. or 41.13M8 HONSN, Arafton county $ H. - 11.1.11AM - BNLL, ' - Manager of' the Profile Monte. " • R. /I.IN:INTON ' • •- ' - ' Manager of the Flume douse." los the Plume and Francosia'notel Co. ~471441.1 m - ' • • .• . titrWiliTGDON ,IVARPS. SPRINGS.— "The,,Wasnt Opiu',, at , thd basa,, 7iYamtor'a Ridge, die utiles north of Biabingdon, - oserlooling. 'Banding EttontfOreek, and entironed by romantic hills and **Banda; have 800 hated hy the former pro. Older of the LeaMfb notse: The extensive Hotel -Butbilnge, Bath llnses, to., erected at great eipenss by General A., P.-Wilson; the ;owner, ,havit been coot pieted, and the greyest been beautifully mad out *.ii,dimiornr.l. Bole' Batiks and Chambers are airy lend comfortablyquirdshedond . the prospedt iron the verandahg for beintY amulet be °sealed, For half .4 century these Springs have bmiu celebrated for their medicinal qualitlesinrid the great virtue of the Waters in ample adecOsne, The temperature of the deter la 60X degrees, and for balling is delightful and, invigo rating. Tst the woods and streams game and flab abound. Reno= In purstlit of health or, pleasure will And this a mosVdelightful retreat; and its ,nearness to the PeplAnntis Railroad and itseiteapnesseire it a decided ter t ags over sot watering place In the state. The prlotor has had years of experience ln the bnilnets, and tiff pains os trOuttle`will be 'spared to make guests oorefortehle. run from fluntlngdon to the 13pfinge on the arrival Of the different Railroad trains ; faro 20 tents. rambles accOmmodated at moderate :t• • ^ ; 7 JOAN R; NERD ; Proprietor. Ir.pett BliallaSi near Rtuatinsdon; Pa. gßillAirl'lla HOU S E, BRIGANTI NE Beseh,N. J., LINNET D. MOTU, Proprietor. This M elegantly located hotute is now open for the retteption of rlsiterls. • ' seine oOr week or $1.26 per day, ' a* cars 'of CaMden arid Allantio -Itillrinid ; get - ont at /the Inlet, where a ootnfortableTtait (Oast Benj. T6ner) will beln readiness to !many them to the •'' . ifi EA—BILTHINAL - - T h po p qrAluctiourißy 'OPE ,1810 D , iVi he •Ul tsiat ti egr l49 ` n tr ° l ar*l t Ortrt.trfrior • r on, 0 • n' • nrisurpasuebj BoyT bn the Wand. ..JANKB MORAY, Proprietor: QBA-pBA.THING-004ALTICOLTEM,<MPE iISLANI4 , N..I,4hts Arallandwn and popular MAO* /11 in open to needles eleitdre/ It bite been put , 1 2 ii complete order - cad every, attention will be given to estotto puska their vialtplesaent:- The-table will ise pbitschiPtiTSuP:Pliodk with' the luxuries of the semen. Inlarge p S aten t % to snit the times „ , :je244wtt LtAlthlct.`piopileior. QE,A:'.. /tATIIING-3APE 'ISLA3I4D.-11k.' TIONAL iIOTBt id aVe OWL'' Price 6 f 'Bowl $ 8 per, Areeit.. °Mara link UMW." ' - ed.BRZTOON, Tkeprretor. Et.raitOir FALL, , , OAIDA COUNTY, NEW itill,Tbe 'dotal at the,above celebrated pi a :wad:Y*6o opea for the Beeson, awl can be reached "111 ajea , boatel from Now torY, st s exPence, 50 • frOinlitait tattle elsitore" there vithin an hour; le2l4Bt4at.tirk2tilli IVIANSIOA HOUSE, : 4413,01 i (MUNK.. idegant:eststatqhmentomintituily situated ...onAte pants ef. the lebigh, baton reedy for the recep thefor analroer vialtere: 'There le no loralifir eykventi rnori'perliapri NAM United Stated,,wltteh nom , blots tarktany ittractionslui the valley of the Lehigh, and the are HoteLerill milord amoitonaforteetatotee 110110r0 dello:moot ylewlog thontagnlfloent scenery, 'inexhatatible minas, onenapeadonaworlucof art of Ode intereating rpstcra • 5, h. t•W‘• ' • • t " . l • 11w :.014003)1 0-0 TWI31712111:111 AND °HALT AMON SPRIDEOLUDOUBLINO GAP, Peitti'a, ere open -se 'alkali kr& are- aceereible' eikbt on , torcatbi.44,l4rtazttfolktrAbizazl 9 ..l4.. wet.. 04 to the Sprier, *bore yeti arrive at 6 o'clock th its r a cr,ficainli t ,„iior ,tc t uticniare, , lnquire_oi _Meeare. .16.5440.44 . 5, 81n, el Thut lame liteel,_B. 8. 41T1 4 441 j tit 0.? Varragt,ertolktturi , liv o tn w , Minn% PeetrOfflos, Ps.. Apr it .0 BPRINGS;—THIS. •,well.ituaW* and delightfullBuminer Iteaort will be 'opened OT,therarapeion of-Visitant on the 16th of •Illbe,;zuldhept Olifallota the ljf of October. , • ' The pew and one Buildings erected Ltst year are yco dzoirlullmpleted,'and,the whole establishment hu bean l'firniehed hisurrior style, and the seziommOda'• bf I;o'M:dee not ettaelled lu *my past of the ltititabitattatz • - '• • " o. Tia•otst willt4 luster the management n t i lr.j i ti sitenolBl3B ,IgagtimA ri glye.Vz: zung e gt SMlttaoo -of ,comfort *midmost urea/neut. , • ltdditiali tithe other *solid iteciessit to decked &Mr e x a lt Iltgratr o r reach Bedford by Abe 1104001al hair madelatemlitTe athatements to =WI , dealer!, AA Individuals with U Bedford Water' , -by. the bartel, earboy, hibottles, at the following pricesot ep IPge Tit: , • • Rpr, ii;barrel (=Mug - 54 00 (WO' . .. , . 00 rPr ' iitiqet,r7); 00 ... ... 200 jr,101.511501. • •- •2 25 • 1:550ttl 5,54. ess 1 1)0iiintitallosemie - •. 100 ,1211 .5..51515107 are.: carefully premed: so. that pnr . Masora- o w depend ppm receiving the Water fresh andAro, W P • .Panferlioilsidimild be arsaw to . #llll7lllB 81 , 111881G13 0tl butt 4 l94 ,' 1f '" ' • Pu ''" sorord aointty; Pa, „ „ . , e 4; . •' 1 ! Dilentietrp• - • •• KINGOBITRY, K. ,D.,' • ' - " DENTIST, .„ . 'Would team ..tgs friend* *UV he het REMOVED tO 11IS3TALSIDT Street, KIRA. )111Ovetth: " . ' le4-9m OurtE gqsz irtrSi,;(ll;iitrign ,PlrrE -4%,ct Ir . orpnriliiiattiiiip! r in s ig in tole 11 . 71 . "31 oyerl"• 7 • • "104 gortk'Deltware avennii.r New publications I IFE THOUGHTS. - • , m-J, TILE GREAT BUMMER BOOR! HENRY WARD'BEECHER T 6 while away the long Laura of a Summer day, to till the mind with new and high desires, to draw us into closer communion with the great truths of Nature, to happily mingle amusement with Instruction, read LIFE THOUGHTS! . . "No uninspired work is superior to It." —plies Brandt. "It le full of sprightliness, seriousness, wisdom, and wit.”—{Nei York Independent. " They are characterised, by ari epigrammatic force, a beauty of, illustration, and rare felicity of expression, that render them eminently worthy of preeervation."— [New York Evangelist. " It abounds in those vivid, earnest, strong - and pun gent sentiments for his preaching IS remarkable.” —plow York Observer. - It is Beecher all through.."—,-(Albassy Transcript. TAKE IT MUT - YOU Wharorpc yfa go, as it is a book, not for as hour, bu rdr all tlinea. THE BEsr BOOK BOR SUMMER nEADINe -18-L ' Beecher's Life-Though's. Whether yen are about to regale yourself with the cool breezes of • - " - ' OAPE MAY, - . or to be invigorated by the bracing air of the . - NT/MIA AtOtlpiTAlNB, take 1„ , - I.ifFE THOUGHTS" , , „ a , 'comnanionwlib. yoUr "No ono ever heard Beecher's natural, easy, graceful, gushing, noble 'eloquence, who did not feel ennobled by it, and with to hear him again."—{Dally Poet , Buffalo, New York. • " This book will be prized by all families throughout the land, who appreciate talent and religious worth airoldned."—{Nor York Daily Bun. XL la worafinatilly full of beauty, and of the forcible Ill'ltstratinn of troth!'—Mongregationatist, iloston. 'This is a u - durrio to tato uP at heart vihlelt come to the experience of all, when the soul craves a glowing thought, or a tendar word. and has no desire or leisure fora profound meditation, butte quickened and strength ened by the touch or the right cord under the master's hand."—pally Mercury, New Bedford. Mass. " The whole book before us Is running over with his own hearbeqperience ; with touching figures drawn from sunny Nature ; with - probe-like puncturings of some vaulty; with earnest tnanlinms; with beautiful cont. parlsons."--{Transcript, Worcester, Mass. You will never regret the reading of it, for Its truths will follow you in the walks of life, and stamp them 'selves upon you. It will thus return you A LARNE DIVIDEND • for every moment of time spent In its perusal, es the renders of the 2n,000 copies already sold Can testify. PHILLIPS, SAMPSON, & 00., PUBLISRERS, BOSTON, MASS Trade supplied by J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO., jy2il-1h sat 2k Philadelphia IETERSON'S DETECTOR for AUGUST IS READY THIS DAY. It is the most complete end reliable Detector of Counterfeit Lank Notes extant, a. d le c irefully revised and corrected 13E111-3(ONTIILY. and la published at the exceedingly low price of el per year for monthly, or 82 for Bawl-monthly subscription. This Detector Is considered A No. I by the business community, and no nifort will be spared by the publisher to make it VIE BEST DETECTOR EVER PUBLIEIIED IETERSON'S DETECTOR is published twice a month, on the let and 15th. Price 10 centa. !Ifi NE W• COUN TE BF ti ITS—PETER BONI bETECTOR for August Ist is noir rowly. PETERSON'S COUNTERFEIT DETEC -1 TOR for August Is now ready. Get it at once. CET THE BEST DETECTOR—PETER EMS la that ono. 30 new Counterfeits. STOREKEEPERS should have Peterson's DETECTOR nlsniya at their deek. 311 NEW COUNTERFEITS have appeared t, since Julylo, And are tally described In PETER SON'S MONTHLY DETECTOR tor August 1, published this day. Everybody should have it. Single numbers 30 cents, or $1 a year monthly; or S 2 a year for the semi-monthly. Call or send to - T. B. PETERSON it, BROTHERS, jy 2S 20 31 No. 308 Chestnut at., Philadelphia. GREAT SUMMER BOOK. 4081 OOT, THB AUTOBIOGRAPHY AND LECTURES OF LOLA MO.NTEZ. A. handsome limo volume, elegantly bound in muslin, with a superb steel portrait by Roger.. Price El. 0011T101111: Autobiography, Part I. nominee of History. Autobiography, Part 11. Comic Aspect of Lure. Beautiful Women. Wits and Women of Paris. Gallantry. RoManiani. These lectures abound In the most spicy anecdotes and piquant reminiscences. They show an acuteness of perception and an amount of careful reflection and re search which 'are truly surprising. the more striking from the highly moral tone which runs all through them, and adds to their beauty without detracting from their brilliance and art: "As is usual with women of an entire mind, Lola Mooted is • great talkeribtrt understands the art of con -lennoop suosqe?ttlynever tribe-WeatietitnieNtsria. Let Lola Montez bare credit for bar talente, Intel ligence, and her support of popular rights. On foreign politics she has older Mewl, and has been treated by the political nigh of the country as . • substantive power."— A merican Law journal - "Lola afordoe is a woman of superior talentsi of ex ,tenSite 213adifig, of great political information, an er.• toneive traveller, a forcible writer or Eng a better linguist than half the college pedants, and one of the moat. charming pf conversationista,”—Banton Daily Post. . Tblabook"w111 be Bed by mall, postage paid, to any part of the United State's, on the receipt of the price,el. RUDD & OARLBTON, ablishers and Bookseller*, Je22•tathsdf No. 310 BROADWAY. New York,. ATA LIJ .E WORK ON COLONIAL LAW-:-CHALME RS , OFlNlONB.—Opinions of eminent Lawyers on various points of Einimh pritdence, chiefly concerning the Colonies, Fisheries and tiommores of Great Britain : Collected and Digested from the Originals halm Bo ird of Trade and other De. positori•s. Bp OZDROE CUALIKLBS, Esq., 1.R.5., B.A. 1 Vol. Bvoi 816 pages. ' Just received and for sale by KAY Is BROTILER, Law Booksellers, Publishens ' and Importers, Iyl9 19 South Sixth street. EW'PAPE R—ic THE NATIONAL BIRCR 0;10,' , au Independent Weekly Newspaper, de%oted to the real intermits of the tolling millions,” will be issued from the Office No, 10S,Si South TIIIRD Street, (second story, )in about tea days. Look out for it, as Its contents will bo interesting. The paper will be of • the largest size, and gotten up In the very best style. Send in your advertisements. mrsw. mepAzINZ / BUYANT & BTRATTONI dbIBRIOAti WANT" la now rawly, ;and may be had at all I.4.RWS DZPOTB Tlar Agent, Ospt. J. 11. Bell, le °amusing this city' foriearly enbeeribers. Mee 12 per annum Address BILYAeIT & STRATTON, Mercantile College, B E. corner SEVENTH and 011BOTNUT Streets, Phi ladelptds. • my2B;ly • •,: c FOWLER,- WE 8, & 00., 922 011ESTNIIT 4 Street, keep standard works on 1: . Phrenology, Physiology, Water Cure, end Pho• • nography, wholeinde and retail. , Phronologi - cal Examination, with charts , and full. writ ten descriptions of character, given ,day,and .even. ing.. Cabinet free to whiners. Orders' by mail to be addressed to Fowler, Wells, & 00., 022 Chestnut street. Je9-Bmolf-wky t sap 80 anb grapartnerabips. rrox • UNDERSIGNED have this day formed a copartnerahlp under the arm or MO CLIILEY, BROTRER & BREWSTER, for the trans action of the Importing and Jobbing business in Otoros, and Worley Good ,11 No. 23 North H FOURT Street. ^ HUGH: it; MoOAULEY, • DANIEL 19.11oCAULEY, • - 011ARLE8 0. BREWSTER. July 14,1868. Sy 1-thitu lm . TBE UNDERSIGNE D F3RMED • copartnership under the style of FROTHINOIIAII & WELLS, for the transaction of a GENERAI, DRY GOODS COMMISSION BUSINESS, and have taken the store No: 84 South FRONT Street, and 86 LETITIA Street. • • THEODORE FROTHINGIIAki, .L..,. - , KIRK E. WELLS. . • irl/LAD - 11LPHII, J Una Ist, 108. je2-2m TIE .',SUBSCRIBERS HAVE THIS DAY entered into a limited partnership agreea bly to the provision, of the Act of Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, approved March 21, 1836, entitled " An Act relative to Limited Partner ship'," and the anpplement thereto; and we do hereby certify: ' • • 1. That the name of the fine, under which each part hershlUlto be conducted, is J. P. & B. 11, ORNE. 2., T e eneral nature of the business intended to be Unwise Is the' purchase and sale of Carpeting in the city of Philadelphia. 3. The name of the general partners are 301111 P. MINE, residing at the northwest corner of Arch end Twenty-tirst street,. in the city of Philadelphia; end 'EDWARD B. ;ORNE, reoldlog on Ole , nortlz side of Arch street,' above Twenty-first street, i n Said city. 4. The name of the special partner is BENJAMIN (M16E1'1.1014 at 265 NortltNinth street, in the city of 'Philadelphia, who, ae ouch special partner, has con tributed to the common stock of the said Arm the sum of twenty-Ave thousand dollars in cash. ,„ 6: The said partnership commences :my - 14, A. D. 1868, and will terminate on the 14th day of July, A. D. 1861. - BENJAMIN °BNB, - .TouN °BNB. EDWARD B. DUNE, i'illt;//3*l:lllj.k, July 14,1868. lyls-Bur 10110- ERRY'a BLANK BOOK MAN lIFAC .TOILY:—Rembmber YOURTit and BABE In buyingg Anal:runt Books. I make all my stook of good material, and sell at fair prices. . Je4-4nt 1 1 300 000 stvl gen and 'NV LOPES EVERY et 0: PatioLieryE l eTellisunent i je44m ' FOURTH and RAUH. 114 LANK BOOKS, MADE IN ANY DE -1.11), SIRED style of ruling and binding. A .good as sortment of Papers for customers to select from, at Blank Book Manufactory, le4-2ro. 101:11tTH and RA0.17, LAMILY PORTRAIT' BIBLES, BAND BOMBLY bound.' Old Blblei rebound, to look and Wear good an new. • Oall and hook at the etyles, at PXBRYIB Bookbindery., Jad-RM . • FOURTH and RACE. LIERRINGS=.BOO bblg. Nit).Kitis "Herring 800 bile Ixtri Piiirouidland ditto 120 bbln Potomeadry netted ditt o nostore and lot osieby ' • • JNO. f 2IDY & 00. invlBl , ' Nee lab Anal. WITARVIIR. 71.140W,N.:,4T0UT,.—,'40 casks lc Final & JUIP Wllliambp, imported direUt from , oudon, in 'etori,and,for-sate by • WM. iTON, bdis' 215 Routh v e Ettroot. 01USESE.‘--1.86 bozos ,Prima bounty , jot landing and for sale by • - 0. LIADLIMI & 00., _ Nn 0 fklarth CIpARET.-160 thuies•low grade Bordeaux - • so quality do. in store and fdr Rale by - ' witt.amit H, TRATON, ''!l6 South IMONT at A °COUNT BOOKS,. MADE OF' THE L - 11. beet kook, let city miles. Call and look °inn' the stook et , • PERRY'S Blank Book Itlenntactoryi jet2ni • • FOURTH end RAUL SN:f Ult Clpz 4l rtssl SATURDAY, JULY 81, 1 1368 : ' THACKERAIPS ttYolititl OItDDISTIkDD"T About one-half the reading, public li . nyo smiled, ore those lines aro putAyito , ,priht," that interesting part of Harper's Mitgaisab, which contains Part IX of "The Virginianal by W. M. TIIA9KEIiA.Y." The twenty ; -fiftlS chapter of that cynical serial opens with mike badinage,, only too true in de:bitter mirth; respecting the fancy which women have (i)e ‘ are supposed to have) for those .who do- not use thole: quite well. He winds pp With these' , •• sentences: • "Women will be pleased with thesexentarks Val cause they have such a taste for humor: arid •un— deratand irony; and I rhould not be surprieedif young. Gmbatreet, who corresponds.' With thrill( penny papers, and describes the persons .and eats, versahon of. gentlemen wham he - meets.at his dribs,' ;will' soy, 'llold yon so 1‘ Ile advocate - le the thrashing of women ! He has nee shbility soul! Ile has no heart!' Norbathl, trireminent, •young Grubstreet ! any more -than you have mtg' Dear ladies! I assure you I am only joking in tlfei above rowel ka—l do not advocate the threthinget your sex at all—and, es you :can't .understand Ott commonest bit of fun, beg leave licitly (circa' Yoe; that I consider-your sex a Itundred. dales Moro loving and faithful than oure." • It is to bo presumed that down upon " Young ' Grubsireet had"; cause, and that this bad been a provocation. We wondered, as our neighbors did, s6ho was, the victim. We supposed that he must have done some unpardonable wrong, tho dreadful punishment of whidh was to be thus impaled upon a steel pen and exhibited, in that un-. graceful and unpleasant situation, as a terror to evil doers, of all future generations, for THAMERAY has a very proper faith in his own literary immortality. We have been so fortu nate as to learn what was the offence, and who the offender. - We aro in a communicative mood, and shall give a key to the mystery. - Two or three months ago there was com menced, by some literary men in London, a publication, published weekly, at two cents number, and entitled , r Town Talk ; an Illus.: tratcd Journal of Social, Literary, Theatrical, and Political Gossip." It was smart, satiri cal, and saucy, and had considerable success. Indeed, it has it—for it still exists, and flour ishes, and advertises itself, in The Times and other papers; as truly telling ci how the world wags; how its various circles aro agitated; what is said, done, or forthcoming." The leading feature in ct Town Talk" is its independent strictures upon the clique of thea trical critics, nearly all of whom are also play wrights, who tell the world, through the Lou. don newspapers, what actresses and actors are to be admired or slighted, what dramatic per formances are bad, good, or indifferent. The system is an abominable one, tho parent of favoritism and foul play, and also a fraud upon newspaper readers. When a leading thea trical critic who has written, adapted, or translated a play, takes it to a mana ger, the latter is almost under the neces sity of accepting it, of paying • for it, of bringing it out, and, in many vases; of trying to force it on the public, after its worthless ness has been generally acknowledged. Hite refuse the critic's play, the manager almost always makes an enemy for life, and it is very hard to have a leading journal,constantly making a dead set at any individual, or any establishment. The rest of the critical fra ternity may be expected to do likewise. Half the very middling plays brobght out in London, year after year, aro written by the Critics. A puffs B, and the strain of com mendation is taken up by.o and D, and the rest of the alphabet, until the innocent . „pub-.. Ile ' the new farce at the Adelphi, the now come dy at tho Haymarket, or tho new melodrama at the Princess's, and wonder why they can not, for the life of them, see the merit In It which they were led to expect. As for plays - written outside of this critical clique, they get scanty justice. This system has its practical similitude in - Net' York. Not a theatrical manager but - can say, were the question put, that he hes, more than once, been compelled to produce a bad play, conceded or trans lated by a theatrical critic, for fear of mortally offending the particular journal with which the critic-dramatist was connected. ' The dif ference is that, in New York;-tho critics fol low this game tingly, while in London they hunt in a pack. t. Town-Talk " professed to write against this system, and kept the promise. Very per sonal were the expositions, and Very true. The author of the articles, it was perceptible from internal evidence, was somebody in the habit of meeting managers, actors, play wrighte, and theatrical critics. Ho was soon discovered to bo a member of the Garrick Club, and his writings made the theatrical critics very irate. The literati proper belong ing to that Club, together with actors, mana gers, and outside dramatists, all of whom had suffered from the compact alliance and action of the critic: clique, wore not displeased, per !tape, to find their common enemies roasted, and, therefore, declined joining in any mea sure against the Town-Talker. . Unfortunately, some three-and-twenty years ago, Mr. WlLLis' Pencilings by the:Way" com menced what has aineo become a too common practice—the printing the table-talk and de. scribing the persons of eminent individuals he had met in private society—they, all the time, being unconscious that they, were to bo thus • publicly brought Into notice. The Town- Talker (whose name we keep back until the affair is wholly settled) seems to have got the idea that be should profit for his journal by his membership of the derrick dlub. According= ly, though he did not so far break faith as to commit the indecorum of reporting their con vereation, he made the most of having met them in his club•room, and described their persons. Some of' these pen-portraits were flattering and pleased; some were ill-natured and displeased ; some were simply true, and gave little satisfaction to the person meet in tereated. Here is that part of the sketch of TIiACIIERAy, which made him call' its author Young Grubstreet "Mr. Thaokeray is forty.sla years old, though from the silvery whiteness of his'hair he appears somewhat older. Ile is very tall, standing np• wards of alx feat two inches, and ache walks erect his height makes him conspiettous in every assembly. Ilia face is bloodless, and not particularly expres siie, but remarkable for the fraetureef the bridge of .the nose, the result of an accident In youth He wears a email gray whisker, but otherwise -is clean shaven. No ono meeting him could fail to recognise in him a gentleman; his bearing is :cold' and uninviting; his style of oonversation either openly cynical, or affectedly good-natured and benevolent; his bonhomrais forded, big wit bi tirig, his pride canny touched—bet hie appearance is invariably that of the cool, suave, well'bred gentleman, who, whatever may be rankling with in, suffers no surface display of his emotion." After all, this was rather complimentary than not—particularly as the writer had given TuAoßitimc eight good Semi, by quoting him at forty-six instead of at his actual age of fifty-four. However, it irritated him so much that he brought the subject before the Gar rick Club, where he has great influence, and a Committee was appointed to investigate. The Tewn-Talker frankly confessed the au thorship, declared that he had only written the truth, and retorted that his accuser, in The Book of Snobs," had dono a hundred times worse by caricaturing various members o 1 other clubs, and with such fidelity that, over since, the unhappy individuals continue to be knoWn, in club-life, by the nicknames he gave them in his satire. Tho latest account we have received states that, the Town-Talker refused to apologize, and would probably be expelled from the Club. In• the interval, Mr. THAOKEItAT has Grubstreeted him, as above, in “The Vir ginians," and the following parody on his manner may probably have been written by the same hand. We take it from Punch of Ally 8 : I" LIBERTIES OP TUN PRESS.—(From the Ear• iiig,)-111r. Williams, the author of Wittifini lone*, lives at Paregn's Green. • Before he had acquired his present celebrity ho resided in the New Cut, where he occupied a two- - eair batik, and was frequently in arrears with his landlady. lie eloped with Mrs. Williams, whose maiden name AY. JULY • 31, , iBSS . . , wsuißarker; and whose fathe'r wite a fanner in BeraondimV., Old Barker out hp badly; disap, pollting' Williams, who had been' oberishing the elusion' that he had married an heiress, and eh he death of the tanner found himself sold. s‘rhe editor of the Extingutthor in William Oren; he le often V> be" soon -- riding In Itotten Rrui where he may be recognized by a largo ex areseanolin his nose, and a Oast in hie eye -Ills fetbr Wall transoorted for .forging . a bill -, of ,ex ,charge. ' Ills staff of contributors consists of Mr. 'Pau Johnson, Mr, James Baiter, llf,i. Algernon .Adage, and Mr. Sidney Crow. 'They are each of thou paid fifty guineas a week, except Johnson, ' 3l ho:ltets a hundred. - HO was an orphan,' but re •entspi a first-rata education from his uncle, who, 'is nor a ruttier in St. Paooras 3Vorkhonse, ",I}e popular novelist, Mr Jenkirison; is about nee fest ten or sloven in height; he is stont;hai Iredpitiri and green eyes. in one of which he sticks' a glia's. He .recetves a thousand pounds a month fbis publishers.- He has invested most of his lit ry . earnings in Government seourttits, bat, lit ,Y.purehased a' house' for £lO,OOO, and has a bs noo at his banker's amounting to £440 Os. Hid. r t trinkinson is a plain woman; with a rather 44. :set of terro•matallie teeth.. Mr. Jenkinson has abildren,two girls and a boy, The former xerefulous, , and the latter is aubjeot to epileptic ' ti, ~ ..jenkineon generally latter_ three 'shirts a i t eg f ir o - n d fa ' a s tg o toe of a n, 1 04 l o af s n n t t on everyd ay, but w ill e i n it o s n u c a e l r , 'dined at his to ble.he gave =soup and fish, and I irr,Tprndorstend that yesterday he had A fillet of Sal: ' ' ' '" • ' ir. *mit is a billiard marker, and not ooh , ttetAtptrith the EaPwig, for: Gni editor of which 110 was honteothipped the other day bymlittaXe.".. re misfortune ~for the above Is; that it la it• . , 616ser imitation of the :frield.detatis LA! -Of 'Air,'..fAILES GRANT, of teßandom Re atalone-4' notoriety, than of hini of the "Town' 'WO? ' At least fifty - times' before . , , liil Punch thus caricatured the 'alisitrdftied ~ . .„ , gn /mannerism of 'Chases, peculiar style. = Punch' 'article has been attributed , to' VIC ERAY, who, would have done it a bun -13 times better. .Very angry be must 'have RCN to make ' him , gibbet- his fee in a Parroi / , griph of ic.Tbe , yirgitriatu . r." ' ' .... . ..... . , .. lELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. DOWNFALL .OF , MAHOIVIEDATUVI. ‘ , 4 the,-BiblicaLatudent events of no ordi nate charatter are ' foreshadowed in the mos- san.e.of the Ohristlans;at Jeddah; an account of Vhich, from the London 'Time*, Wait' 'pub. Jibbed in this paper of yesterday; and corn= !Twined upon in an editorial., There have pro. hattly boon few events within the, present con tutil more suggestive to the religious world than the tidings of that cowardly slaughter of tranty-one uneffending Christians, in a Ma horaedan town in Asiatic Turkey, oh the 15th of dune. lii' the Apocalypse'of St. John,xiii. s,'t6e reset And there was given unto him a month speaking great things and blasphemies; and poWer was given unto, him to continue forty and two months." To a great extent, Biblical scholars and commentators aro agreed as to this language; respecting the "false prophets," haying at least a partial reference to the Mahe midan power; and accordingly, if the data :men which their argument is based be cor reetthe days of Mahomedanism are fast drateiag to a close. First, let de rook 'at the pleuelble interpretation of .prophecy ;:and then at the corroborative signs of the times: , • This spurious systein of religion, as .the reader'is aware, was first promulgated by the self-styled prophet of the Arabians, in the early part of the seventh dernury—about the year 606...1ty some, the assumption of, the supre macy over the Christian church by Popo Bo- Dike 111, in this same year of the Christian era;, id considered a very remarkable coinci denda. At all events, admitting the false_ roll— giotixof Mahomod to be typified by' the "false prophet "in the sacred text; the - date of his Pinver would - commence; as already stated, about the year 606. The time during which VAS &tier of Mel:llse prophet is to 'continue is ilequited iirL the teat , et fortyand two tticlObeWliiCh period,, by- analogy,. li'dti ,m4tistri4ed to raignify , a terni of /tee/cc/ten-. dred and sixty years, thus: Tho ,4 seventy weeks" of Daniel's prophecy, representing the intervening period between the coming of the Messiah and tee date of the prediction, are known to have been fulfilled at the expi ration ,of foar hundred and ninety years, making exactly a year for each day in the pre diction; so that, according to the ancient mode of calculation—thirty days to a month— the forty and two months of the prophecy would be accomplished in twelve hundred and sixty days, which aro set down as years ac cording to Scripture precedent. And now, adding this terni; during which the power of the r , false prophet " is to con tinue, to the dato of his inauguration, viz : 1260 years to 606, we bring it down to a point just eight years in the future—A. D. 1866. This date, according to the human concep tion of Divine authority, will mark the close of Ilahomedinisni es a distinctive power in the earth. But the language of prophecy is even more explicit in foreshadowing this.re suit, with respect to locality. In Revelations, xvi, 12, we read—" And the sixth angel poured out his vial upon the groat river Eu phrates; and the water thereof was dried up, that the way of the kings of the East might be prepared." As to what id lament here by the river Euphrates we think has also been clearly arrived at. In many parallel instances, the symbol of a river is used in Scripture to indicate a form or system of religion, and in applying this to the drying up of the river Eu phrates—a river which in its rise, progress, and terminus would aoem to indicate geographi cally the section of the earth in which the civil role of the Moslem dynasty has long hold its fanatical sway—it would clearly typify the withering and downfall of the Mahornedan %s -tem of religion. And what now are the signs? Paralysed and decrepit, the stronghold of this false re ligion is even to-day tottering upon the verge of the grave. The last hope of being any longer sustained by the false charity of merce nary wills, has, its the estimation of more sagacious minds than the writer's, beeri sad rificed in the recent massacre at Jeddah. And with this barrier to religious progress once broken, it needs no piophet's ken to foresee the speedy emancipation of the test. With the fortress of this politico-religious imposture once fairly razed, .the cause of true reli gion would have its way prepared, before Which the lesser systems of idolatry would wane like dow before the morning sue. The reader will probably regard this as in some degree speculative intelligence, and yet, speculation as it is, it Would be no hazardous prediction to say that ore the year 1866 shall be enrolled on the calendar of time, Mahome denim, as a distinctive power, will be num bered with the thinge of the past. THE WATERING PLACES.—From the reports which come to us from almost every popular summer resort in the country, we are led to believe that they are not only largely thronged with professors of religion, but that they have solved the problem of carrying their princi ples with them away from home. From statements made in correspondence from Cape May, Atlantic City, Bedford Springs, Saratoga, the White Mountains,, and other 'places, we have reason to believe that the . • temporary lull in the movement here is more than made up by professors abroad. By the following extract fl'om the Lancaster Ex press it will be seen that the work is not lag ging at Ephrata: %g Union prayer meetings'are held at Ephrata Mountain Springs every morning at 9 o'clock, and are well attended. There are also reli gious services every Sabbath, fiev. George Duffield, of Philadelphia, and other clergy men from abroad, officiating. lOn Sunday eve ning the colored waiters, about eighty in num ber, met in the ten-piri alley' and engaged in religious services, conducted by Father -Anderson' a venerable colored preacher." REVIVALS IN COLLEGES.—Sinco - tbe last Thursday in February, revivals have been en joyed in more than twenty colleges and aca demies in our land, which have resulted, as as far as has been reported, in more than five hundred hopeful conversions. • Da. LYMAN REECIIER.—This veteran in ttni service of Christ is repoited' as fast - failing. His memory is so weakened as to unfit him for public speaking. He has been one of 'the brightest lights that have adorned the Ameri can putpit. Mr. Srunoameri Cirarxr..—lt is at length announced that the large preaching hall, de , signed to accommodate tiva thousand hearers .., _ , of Mr, , Sorgeon At once, will be speedily "commenced—thegronndhaving been selected and engaged. - ' ‘• Call.:— We learn that the First Presbyte . clan Church of Chicago have "given a nnani. mono call ^to the :Rev.' Dr. Cuyler, of Now York city, wouccessor to Dr. Curtis, Presi• • dont of Anext)ollege. • ,OriN Coustumett.—A. paper, with Pie title, The gefierat Baylis/Banner, has bmia'starfed in Murray, Ky., to advocate open'e:omastmion: We heartily wish lb success.—Amerman Pres byterian:. : Acoii:rzn.—Rev. Dr. Mackenzie, of Abing 'Leh, Mass.; has accepted an ,invitation to be,,, come pastor of the Baptist Church, in And@ •vor, Mass. , OtIftrOLOREDPOPTILATION.—The Methodist Episeepal'Ohurch, South; the past year, ex pended $76,000 on missions to slaves. Deawa her' visit to Birmingham, Queen 'Victoria listened-, to a hymn sung by 47,000 Sunday; School children. • • , BEv. J. S. KALLocii.---The Tremont Tem ple Baptist Church, Boston,, by a vote, .76 7 yeas to nays, have extended a call' to thair 'former pastor, 'Rev. J. S. Italleek, - t lio bo ap peared before tlienl'and'innouneed'his' accep tance. •Ile will commence: hill pastoral duties on the first Sabbath in September.—Ledger. • .P,AII - 21 1 ,44E,A4Kt0,r0vv , ..-esNikal -140'41;1;14s of tiiii24lliff4ll,ll:nr"...southelldifr •• • t (Goireseamienoe of the rietiTortiTimei.) 'Onneer,t4tr olastra , L - Qtvf , ,,SsitirdaY, , 4ale , 0. 1858.—The ,array,,of -Limb; under command of Brevet Brigadier ateneraf-JohnitoM Mitered this valley on Saturday,dbeltith houror two' 'after szt.y. letterer, that, date Brae mailed -to you. It wait. squint o'clock im,lthe morning:when the -right oflhe'qiitince 'colitietVeineiged from. the cleft of: the Wass, , oh. Mointains., known tut End.: grationXlanon: and lowan to spret4 -its long,line over the Leitrm's road down the " bench," towards' the city.' The 'day was PerfeetlY'clear, mid the" bble,lints of,maroh„conid, , b diatinatly seen as, the troopi,trailed over the4e,ntle elope from the. mermitain-ford to the aver-MA[oth, iiresenting the 'finest possible vie* which could bathed-Of an army. in motion.. ,general Jelne;d9rt Ifildiatited OM order on .the evening prooedieg lilsontran66 to the city,. commanding the • enforeemenreptheatriotest dis cipline while passing tbkaigh the city : Auld order ing the instant arresyg roversmap who. should leave the Oilman tiposhy. protenoewhatever. The objeet of this,: order was aelifeeePand the army presentekan 'example of the ' most-perfeat decorum, noitherby word norileed nianifestitig'the least' symptiims of tho Which it is Well known was felt among the, troops towards the peo ple who; had,--hept them ,freesing on Or,ode ' rives; during a long and comfortless winter. The lineof the army, mit trailed into the city: was ut bundler' miles long, and. when the head of the column bad advanced to the temporary ,camp lug ground west of the Jordan rider flowing' through the valley bottom , we could loo k the General's tent, and see the glistening bayonets and, the stiowy wagon-covere.of the rear still defiling out from tho mountains. • The Mono inagnifi cant and cheering to Gentile eyes, but exceedingly, humiliating to thefew Mormons who witnessed, It —men who had - 1-eneatettly prophesied, "in the name' of Israel's • Gad," ' that the army:fibould' never enter the Valley, and whose private ewer sation and public speeches for months past have, been'full of brave declarations of their power and determination to see that the propheos was ful filled.. It is due,to them to retna:k here,,however,, that they still yntibtaiet their ability to have ex cluded the army,'deolare they sionlithai , e done'it had volunteers beeh sent s instead of ".regulars;" or if the peace commuseioners had, not, come and made them promises whiehthey ohoio,to Oeept as conditions of their forbearance. • ' " • The amts, as• I- have already , said, camped on the Jordan, spreading their tents and,wegons for, a mile or more along Its banks." Ois 'blenday; the 28th ult., General Jolted= started out with a board of army officers to examine the:country, with a view to, seleoting _sites for the military poets he has to eitablfsh in-'-tho:Teiritork. You aro already :aware that ,tilaelso, motley haa bean urged upon his 'attention `b - jelhai people liere, and It was supposed at first thathe would establish the winter quarters there; Further isfornostiont.4oW over, has satisfied him that, although that valley has an abundance of fine gressitrater, and timber, it is too bleak and cold Aerthe. - Obnifortable quar tering of the army during the wieterretuson r besicles being ; too fax from, the valley to command It no readily 'ati ho deem) imporfant"M the public Irv. toresta."The probability , therefordia,.that General' , Johnston will 'not t, Cube less • a suitable locality cannot be found elsewhere. The, purpose of the reeenncdssenee upon; which he darted on Monday last, was. to ascertain by persotial inepeetion whet Is the 'character of La :ville;Tenshl'Skull;•andtikler Wilke; litnglo * thei west or South Of Great Salt Lake; Ho wiedlocern -stabled brhis oljaant, Major Perter,ldeall nant ll'olonel Smith, CaPtido Marcy and Captain New ton, and other officers dike witty, and by a num ber of civilians, including Major Ben. McCulloch, David A. , Burr, Ziemer Deputy-Suiveyor of- the Territory. and Captain J.& Harbin of California —all of wham are more or less familiar with the countries to be visited.. The party were escorted by Captain do Laussure's company. ' During the absence of the General, the command of the camp on Jordan devolved upon Colonel Alexander, of the Tenth Infantry, under whose orders the troops moved, on Tuesday, to Brigham's Canon, twelve miles south of the city, and on Wednesday six miles farther to West Creek Ctilioni for the purpose of obtaining the necessary feed for their great herds, the 'grass in the valley being quite' insufficient. The army will probably remain in its present neighborhood;. its permanent Inca- Hens aro decided upon and designated. General Johnston manifests a considerate desire that his command should incommode the people as little as possible. And although every foot of land in the Territory still belongs to the United States, he is sot disposed to deprive the caftans of their pas ture ranges for cattle. They do not give him ore dit for any such sentiment; but mom of their , -leaders indicate the bitterest and most captions spirit toward him, speaking' of him as a "d—d hound," .ho., batman be did not go at once, with the entire army, to some point, distant from the city - The army being fairly in camp in the Jordan, your correspondent started on Saturday evening for Provo city, forty-eight miles, south of this place, and in the valley of Utah Lake, where the head men of the Mormon church, and the mass of the people who abandoned their homes in this city, are at present congregated. The road to Provo lies directly southward, up the Valley of Salt Lake—for the Jordan river runs to the north ward--orossing a succession of " benches" until it strikes the "Point of the Msuntain"—a spur of the Waeatoh, jutting out some miles from the main range, and overlooking the valley of the Jordan, hundreds of feet below where that 'stream bursts through its ancient wall of hills, and enters the Valley of Salt Lake, with its burden of the fresh and pure water of Utah Lake, of which Jordan is the' outlet. Tho "Point of the - Mountain" is turned by a flue road lying upon a eholf in the crumbling rook, out there by the Mormons and kept In order by them. Leaving the "Point," we descended to the higher bench, hollnding Utah' Valley on the north, where we found the city of Lehi, about thirty-three miles from Salt Lake City. Here we halted for the night, finding " accommodations" 'at the house of Bishop Evans, an elderly member of the brother hood, who rejoices in half a dozen wives, and lots of. babies. Lehi is surrounded by a mud wall, some ten feet high and six feet thick at its base, reared originally for protection from Indians, who, until quite recently, were in the habit of descend ing upon the settlements for purposes of murder .artd plunder. The 'town ordinarily contains per haps a thousand to fifteen hundred inhabitants, but, like all the settlements within a hundred miles south of Salt Lake, its population is swollen just now by the refugees from the latter valley, who aro stored away n every vacant corner where the slightest shelter may be obtained. The town is anything but neat, and has no picturesque fed tura, if we except the Mountain Spur, which towers np in the east, its base within perhaps half a mile of the city wall. Thepeople, evidently, are too hardly driven to labor for the commonest necessaries of life. to be able to pay any attention to appearances. Indeed, poverty marked the house of our .Bishop landlord, who seemed an honest, simple-hearted man, quite content with the rude simplioity ef,his life, and totally oblivious to the fact that,his several wives were deprived of many of those things known as necessaries of life—not to say comforts' and luxuries—enjoyed by the of the farmers or .mochanios of the States. Starting again at daylight the following morn: ing, and passing through the settlements of Ameri can Fork and Battle Creek, we arrived at Provo City by 7 o'clock, patting op at a smell but com fortable hotel kept by " Brother" Isaac Bullock. 'Provo City, lies just south of a rapid mountain stream known. as Primo river, and a mile or two oast of Utah Lake—while the mountain -range rises ip almost perpendicular steeps 'from its eastern edge. It is better watered than Salt Lake City, has an abundance of good water passing through it, and there is more good land in its vicinity susceptible of irrigation and cultivation than its neighboring valley on the north. We found Provo overflowing with the refugees, living In all sorts of habitations—some camping out in diminutive tants of calico or white sheeting, others in lodges of willow twigs, nod still others under the shade of roofs - made of strong willow blankets or carpets stretched upon a frame-work of poles. With all of those comfort was out of the .questioa—but thousands have nevertheless submitted in silence to the order of their priestly leaders which consigned them to such a mode of life. A few of the more wealthy have erected board shanties for themselves, which, in this oll mate,• and during the summer season, aro 'very comfortable. Governor Young has covered an entire block with this sort of provision for the accommodation of his " domestic institu tions." The locality which he - 'has select ed is upon the bench on the eastern edge of the city, directly in the shadow of the steep mountain sides. Here he has completely enclosed a block with a row-of board shanties, one story high, all opening td the denim' do, with no win. dows lookin out upon the street. Thus the build- Mir form a hollow square, with a largo court-yard in the centre, *blob is entered by gates placed near the corners. The buildings on two sides are .fitted up tor the accommodation of his numerous family, and those' on the other as store-houses, stables, do. The Gentile stranger witnessed a novel scene ail he walked down the inner front of the range. of the family " shambles," amid the din otorying ; children, " too numerous to mention," as he passed the long row of booths standing tide bY side, each with a wife at its door I should be guilty of an unpardonable sin of omission did I rail to say something in regard to the appearance 4 01-Brigham's spiritualists. I had very little opportunity, however,' for ob servation, as •I found myself within the 'precincts or the' prophet's homer atinetuary by accident. and was not warranted, therefore, in pausing for inspec tion. Stick glance as I obtained, however, showed GRAYBgARD TWO-CBISTS me that Brigham is'a iiiatiCrsomelastbi - '*id that hilt spirituals are generally edellookimewewan— some or them, indeed „qui to pretty, and of thei,', so far as I could 'judge, intelligent.- I •Siiprtesil: saw in the shanty quarters" somelhirty women;. but whether . they were all of. them wives of the ,prophet, or whether these constituted' his entire ho,usehlld, of course' I not informed. 'iThe go. flo ral impression here ,, seenis to be - that, he•has nearly or quite fifty wives. Ifeenly,clahus Obeys forty children, having had fortyleven'altligether.- Th's, doubtlert,' thehighest figure be Can claim, as the "'Sainte"-consider -a large number of dren a subject of, pride and boast. These wives arq all their own servants, add the nurses of their own children. To ice them sitting udder the:overhing-, , ,. ing eaves of the shanties, witb,theirdumerorut obit dren hapging,around them, all drying, chattering, or Wising at Once; was 'certainly' taiggativeof foundling hospital., • - • T1111,3f(MIION5 RETURNI*6.. f Tho people are returpingrapidlY to their homes: Brigham himself informed me; on Wednesday last, that the people of;Grautaville, in' lovilloeVidits3l' had fast reoeived permission to return, and; intro. ,ducod me to , Bishop William' G. Young, - their leader; — who Wine then , &bent -to 'atart • with his flock. The . pionhet • himself, with aeventeen,of his families, ‘arrived on Thursday night, and-the read betereen here and' Provo it lined with the - re- - turning refrigeee. , On'llionday , next the order "ski ha issued at Prove for the return of all Use families, and it will lie !payed , with cheerfulness and alaority. ' - ' ff. Pastacelpt!—Vh6 be Paritian - ently cated•ts • Gaup -oy , !ran . , A oFTtrrAn,'West t,44,14,44 atlttellyrl9sB:--The, • t;to . ywilrnot; 0. reffWinetel The Annitrorsary !initiate:tn. bidonendonce will be aelebrited *by Gni firing:" of national ittlute, and by other approptiatenermibtlimUArLl.u:tvArf . - General Johnston Ins,iett.trnbi• forty his:visit isk • various vai l oyitorith &view, prealsoting a Cotten • for 'winter Ilturfteis. 'adaaldere the country over which he hasliested tobaeseantiallyredesert. lle bus seen • nci- pointJyttioh, he on as hl ers well, adapted to the usoa of -a•perrianent post; The - ariny:fWilf,idat4 'within' tea Or_ itren days, hewcysfor, to .oletfor'iltallty,"ebo,nt d'orty-itio, "miles from , Salti.f.ity.l4lqoz,..tviva,r4ven Lebi, ,, and fifteen -, or twenty-ron -Troy°, where 'tiaraelti and atorelotniet 11111 - be'' 'orbited. The iocation-WilLhe a favoiable one from which to command:the .aidat"eattiementwith pvomplitass and efficiency . . ' • Gress 'IS very saaree.'howeverffor' largo/ lama: and it has been decided to .4mnd ynok .to goo 40 3 i, ,venworth - alt the animate not absolittely neceesari .to be retained in camp . n ' There brim other atmy news of importanbe. B. `GENERAL' ,NEWR: ~,A'OorroSpondont of the"Ltinitiville °diva writeafroM 'Parisi Tenn.,: that I *, thirgoOepiiiPle of that town havdreeentlybeenieenitderablyexs cited by the depredations gr,eat _reseal, who, under the mime of Jhoes, represented 'Mei , self se the son of tioneranionee, Proprietor of , the' John Itenimok place, Boston.; He arrivedl theme. short time,since , under rather fav,ofablonnsinees, monieds place Of bindnesi; made iirrangeitients ?or the purchase- of an estate'to , thVemoitrit' or . 82d,000 1 and WAS only, waiting -, the -arrival,of z his wealthy sire, who was daily expected ,,; paving re eel red 'ielographie deinatebini,' way 'of I Padtia eall,.to aloft -the bargain and' pay:the cash down.: In the meantime he had replenished his wardrebe hy :resider account arid - Alien; and bon-Owed:tit:iv: ellfng meney:":lreifeearaped betWeim.the Want of two and three - -o'olook on the morning of 'thel9th_ of June, riding a black iklealoan.pony. The last seen hf him; ho and bt9 pony were taking nonage - in a' boat :at Padneab, bound -for Ile is about five -feet six:inehes round:limbs, face, Very : light hair and eyebrows, exeindyely 'blue' eyes,' very nervous In . his movements; and abouVtwenty.alt or ',twenty.sevein :years of age: He telleft long, stery. about haying just retained from an eighteen Months' trip tethe highlands of Northern 'Blexiio,' -where Be hid been t 0 reeefer .his health. t He is evidently a Northern Mani and weltaequainted-with all the New England toffee and the lines of the' Western, railroads, especially` the Indiana Central."' • Oti• //middy morning last ,Honaternes - iliz: WOodwerth, of Chiang% and axonembet cifloow.• arose from . that & that Met, was arrested oh I a warrant issued by:had - on NothetiAllen; for the'crime'Of perjury: • The elidrge *is preferred , bY Sherman P. Tracy, former cashier ,or: the ` , . o herOillio ranee and Beatiting Company," of Georgia', ,The orireelor Vela! Mr. Woodworth was iiireatetritis alltged tkbirie been' committed , by him.sa prole:: cetanterittiesson the•trial of the Beople vsSte glen Bronson, ,Tr..' in the Recorder's court of Oid; . the reet'imittary 'and Fehtnerf tertEkirttli, the.pubile are fatalist end - which tor volyed , certain Are/motions nonneated whla,,the Ante . " Meickante nod Mbehaniee r Rank" ef ettgo;lof which ,Mr.'Woottororib ,, Wei pithideoL! ht 'Broom area Iwipe .tried.loeftWbilterietiAltillhelV - dt" the larceny of $52,(10ft, of _tile .oherobert,Belle from tho, Merchants' 'antr'llfechtinior , ' Bli nk; which' bank Brotisbn wee enabler,both 'trials: chejory:disagreed, and sabsegnently. Air,Haven, , the city attorney, abandoned the prosecution entering a teal pros., and'lllr. Bronson was' Ms olirged. • In Oincinnati, on Sunday last, a Rao boyi aged two and a half years, was found in si weed, shed, where he had bean kept fourtiton days and nights by his 'beastly father, who bad 'married a second time, and, alleged that the child had the dysentery, and he, the father, had platted it there because the senond wife was disgusted with it. The little safferer Was lying' in ono 'coiner;' in a wretched and deplorable condition, fearfullY. ema-' elated, and from every,appearance-had been left there to die by a systematic course bf starvation. The father not only etated that the child was at dieted with the .dysentery, ,bat, that food- had, been offered to it, which it refused to eat. Tho latter part of this story was falsified by the ohlid devouring voraciously spme bread which was given .him, and the former was disproved %y a phyvtotan, who deolared that the child was not afflicted with the complaint mentioned. Both the fathei and stop-mother were arrested and hold for,trial. • , The Middletown (Pa.) Jourtai says that, , !or, last Monday, three boys. from this borough went out into the country for the purpose of pick ing bladitherrieS, and wore not long in finding themin great quantities on the premises of Mr. Jacob, Springer, about a mile from town, While in the act of picking berries they were startled by a ferocious •dog belonging to ;Mr Springer.; The animatmado forth° neck of a lad-of iltr,Miebael Breatle, aged shout fourteen years The boy bat tled with'the dog' for some time, but was finally overpowered by the brute, and bitten seveielyin different parts of his body. The two other boys, in the meantime, procured a stick and beat the animal off. A suit was brought against Mrs. Springer forgetting the dog upon the boys. and she was bound over in the sum 0f41,000. In looking over the baggage of ;,raeqlo, the German invented of the murder of a woman whose body was found near Pittsburgh a short time since, for the-purpose of taking• an inventory of the goods, Mayor Weaver discovered a pair of bnllet•moulds, a wrench, and several ballS. The balls fit exactly the barrel of the pistol which was found beside the body of the murdered woman, and the wrench has been used for the purpose of loading it. One end Of the wrench can also be used for the purpose of uniteretiing the tube. These circumstances, taken together, leave no doubt that the pistol found near the body was owned by Jacobi, and that it was used by him to take the life of his unsuspecting partner. If he were placed upon trial, his convic tion of murder in the first degree would be inert. table. In' Cincinnati, on Tuesday night, afire broke" out in a small frame house oh Western tow, oppo site David street, in a bloolumith'e shop. The fire communicated to a seoond•hand furniture store kept by a man named Myers, and to a tin shop be yond that. A frame dwelling house in the rear caught fire and waif badly damaged The smaller building in whirls the fire took, was wholly burned. and the buildings adjoining so mush damaged as to be of no value. The loss of property must ex ceed $2,000. We did not learn if there was any insurance. A painful rumor was prevalent among the bystanders that Myers and his child perished in the Ramos. A few days since, at Colfax, Ind., Samuel Duke, a man of reckless, abandoned oharaoteri shot Mr. John G. White, the- postmaster of the place, wounding him so badly that he'died few hours: Dukawaa arrested and taken to Frank ford for examination. The excitement against Duke was intense..and it was feared the crowd would execute tammary vengeance on him. The court , hottse, where the examination was had, was densely.orowded, and surrounded on all sides by a large mothering of people The justice held him to bail in the sum of $4,500, which failing to give, ho was placed in jail. .1. On the 17th inst., Mr. John Simpsoh l form erly of Hamilton county, Ohio, residing, about a mile northwest of Mendota, on what is known'as the Waldo Farm, lost' in interesting little boy, between four and fire yearsof ago, in a moat shook• ing manner. The horses ran awayerith a mowing maehine, and the child fellunder their feet. The mower took him, cutting off both legs, cinerarm at the wrist, gashing his hip, and storm hio )sowela, so that when the horses were checked and his father reaohed him he seemed lifeleas;"" • Nearly all, if not all, the drinitini saloons in St. Louts, it lasaid, ere' furnished with atraita for cooking juleps, by one man, who mils them for ono and a half or two dollars a thousand; from about two acres of land, on wilt& he grows rye annually, he sells about twenty-four hundred dol.' tare' worth of straws, They aro packed also, in barrels, containing about 12 , 000 straws, and ship ped to New Orleans, St. Paul, and. the intermediate places, and. the demand increasing. The Harrisburg Herald of the ,29th was in formed by passengers-over . the Lebanon Valley road from Lebanon, that. a fire broke out in that place about two o'oloek yesterday morning, which resulted in the destruction of the Moravian Church and some fifteen' or twenty buildings. The eon• doctor reported that when he left the fire had been arrested, but that no accurate estimate of the less could' be formed. It was not known how the fire originated. ' . . Ex-Giavornor Johnston ; of Pittsburgh,- is about putting in opeintion, 'nar"Tarenttau large establishment for the month - aura of coal oil. This - article ie now extensively used ea a sub• stitute for candles, oamphanaota., and is in great demand. The capacity or the new works will be about one thousand gallons per day. Mrs. Cunningham denies the rumor that she is married to Mr. Bahl, and says that he has not visited her house since the trial. Dr. Catlin; who figured in the baby case, ha; been released from the Tombs. The ease is still on the docket; but 1011 probably never bo tried. . Cornelius Casey, charged with the murder Of his wife, in the village of Thornton, Cook county, New York, has been arrested and sent' to prison to answer the offence. ,; A gang of counterfeiters hair() recently been arrested in Cincinnati. . . r 17wi 1 teepredenti e tor TratifeelP Plemel*:;l*' - 'sr. - f., intrtl4.6 fell/m*4i: ekiLluudettion "Too of the writer. In outer _toiwitere rterreetnea of. 9!! f/P4nollfiiiit °PHNOM Wellii44l444lo:!fliA; Pip dela ilada tolakationi es*ltAbltAtipt, »nl;aeiri ad~ uui day hi: tuft pistio*s.lo,l4,4;,ale r 7ottki soiiimokiaing 31 0090 0 .- rr: , wer bra:Wl= thetwill, tw o lutere_stirl . P.' - f• - " A 3 it MEE= S,- MEMIE .WHYSLItt iIETIEWLIIir THE: PHIZADD.4., , ~ ~;. • -;... : - .. ,- .3 ,19 0 55,,, MAEt1it40,...- , .....,,, ,- . - ' , Putteaust.rma, July 30, 1858. . • .. There his hems, but littls al teratiou noth . mabl e in the f t Induces eireles 81310 ear )a4t'reriew. 'Di:cad- ', ' itit s are held wlth imireArmhosi, owing `to' the; oontinnad' light' reedits . ancr.Priees 'of Flour: - .Whast; OMM 'Arial,' aid Akira ' have .advanced. - ' laneimitiolV"Bark.- islu ~ b etter demand:. and the market"is , hatntoThe Coal trade'eontintita ver7:.:, ,rlulli, . o offee.hlo/10. 11 .: 01 -Salf 4 .1 , 10 41, !i- 6 °Pi aufk itaime. , have . , algp .matir,a t goed ltutaliy, add-for, the ifoAner 'Rrio'cir havelfiCan, itptraisl,.tendaniy._,, OcitiOnkerrik hut quiet., 1 0 ,er Tolitherehas bead ''', ',rum!. 144iy;aral - friiell'ara allitlil filmier: In 'lra t there bait bee'n' hit little =doing: i- - 13 e, Rides , • -there is tint klitite'sitiek, late hi' flisf hands to - ' ope l atelni ., lionaliavir been` `very dull. - Tho.traur inar et, id ~ - - d eprelitedi, t ind 4.0' _West:l34os -soma con esbionsittpriopa wOltid.'haT4llo,.aegedo,-fa..-- Lead is very dull. - In Naval Stores there has been _ rattier more doing butarithqut change - in pride's. '- 011 if are held firmly.. In trovisions there hail been ' mole dolnk: Pork kits 'ilvineed;'aidil'llieTatecta` luml Lard priies are hotter,;-tho, stook is very much "-- - reamed.. • Iliop,has, been,.id , Molviite• - request... - Salt. no,,ohanie,-_ ~OloteraiKedcand- P fax,ilitid. bri,lit` .. demand ) intt themilli i r nrittimpoontinifyilvard„:, , Teak and T,obaenentri „tmer;and,:ifii - fgater*k7' , .jig p, :Wool haabeen-Ouietrbutirlimraneetitter:' N l y Goods there haa hesiummeimpreveinent in , the e rrand from the Western trade ,: but bilainera - Jo i.,irall , :imi4v-4014 1 1 ittirtlke jobbe! B,l lP(. 4 _,N 2 4 - : . Y.; eabe.'ktlairlng-,-.'irt-Atif.- i!tiCkP. -I'll , ' - :illi- fall, 6. - -Goodie( 'all are held.llpoly„smd in Mo flu te4 II t0191.fr . , *Ea flit 11;, ,i 1 , -.,,. i,,, , ; 1 • ••• :, - t v auworti r trom. ip• 8144 , , out: for to e kin ,p A . ..T4 t4e; better. , The ma tte wiliest:real Of Ifltrittltilthelm sniall stook on and, inCiiiirisierdMiduld. 'bothAtie 'ailed en home oonsiunption have camel a Armee fee li ng in. t elmarkedoding.-the lamfavorable 43. rd"ztirkelly-kwaAreen atnikand .yra:advanoe 'oh gnotationsVeper toig,! ' leeently, Made 'and' fre ,griMidltletiPhiVertrieiti 'raiireitteat: while old steSkilfsniegteatel.. - nabe; paler Teat up 4-5410, bet at 54.25 per bbl fot-,sortudolt stook-44 824-a." , .51 -reeentlY made- and.-fresb -mom*: from, new _., W 1 00. 112 4.5 4 4 5 0 1 516 - PtOAl/,, ii:PolC.:Aild "CLVPit _ .: are nd'aitre ,, inalidi ' nishineDrall4Ywratrat4s - 511 ! ' eonsemned at $.3 821-13 75 an aililadlingeht 5 , 0-far •.• . " :g e r h p b a k: - . .4 r tal e. e s ;o i f ei ll t il , !. s tb a lt ie warr a - lad b e a_ t o ll i ti v it;-' 13 citgin Hin fd " V ; iore; . ; ! F i li t litiliatirl - Gi l wititin the ran of the aye ken*: titre : me ditt it/ 13" •42ivfoi" Pairayloinote and 84- i for randywine. with nisi l re:winter andf.anlea., Of kentv.themrocipt i s-havp„been.light and,likely - :M ntinne aninlistopthtirmat.; the-demand las gikal;bidlirteer-liave - advanded baleis_ - per "bu el. The ealeTreach , l2,ooo'bitehads - et 100 s. - 'l2O - (of-inferior I.to' prune Pennsylvania; and 4:io •hera red; And.125a135, for-white.. 4ye =Pg. , in P)owly,,,apd,in indemlinlat 71)45e for old7and . ileal6la for new. 'Corn itritiloa:demand and tat adianeed,; .safeerucoOololuihets `yillcivi' - if" , 20420 ,fifidut. aiming at the latter rite; inaluding-somer ' no 'rainiest 875883, And white at the sameligurts. 'Oa have . een in good -I repeats, sales of 15.000 - -ha ele Sautnern and_ Per - Msylvsnia' moat, at '42a - .42 - for old PenpsyAirktalmdAsteeprrk Siathern 'at 0 6 .. e :, 8130 ,, i a it il didnn o e i rqpi. t. '1 • _ .. t : : 2051, lineation of term and Meaffor the week-end , ' in July2l4 1888: , --, r . •-, ~-, ; .; ' -, ' Da f rime's. of Sup,razie ' ' ' 080 •Be e lsofßeperBne - • "''' ' ..0 ' '''' - ' '••7,122 - .` gO. • nj.e . . - • '.. •'. .19 •;;;:i .0 to or - Irt .• , im. • , Corn rdeal:,..4 ~ -, ~, ', „ 203 0 40.' ' Condemne d ' '' ' " - ' 545 3+ f ~•+ .;:: ‘,.0," , i ' , Lir . V ;(...i.,':; , . • - 7.--.•:•• i I . ••. • T0ta1...-. ..... . ; 8.111 m linocees -4:880 cage Rio 'Coffee' Sold at ilia "‘ 11 ao, nasal'- terms: The • stock -is moderate,and' • pripes, ate:finu ; 1,200 bags. ..191d by lvato contract at 101allial 300 bags St: Domingo at and 800 bagittaguayrilitl 1 }eller lb, an time. • ' Stousaitz s.--Thismark et hat been !quiet for the' xa)t,of, stock, and, priees - arefamer, with sales of - 3)C Mds. Cuba hluscoyado at 25a28e;* 100 'bble do .l26;,iina'so daslat•Poitoitioo 350: -tinie Exada. , :-Tholdentard Optimum active,' awl pri oes. show,a, fartber advituoe,•with light,raciints and stooks td operate 'ln rliareir inolude:alrettt 1.000 Cuba at $714 •50,4ad , Porro , Bloelit $7; , •• -. • SI2O antlsoo.ltoxesnayanw#lll,2ssl • me.. The refiners „have their . prlaell, - , viz Created 10foroliSh • odarse - Pultdrised 101(c; • Pu vrrized Intit, and double' Leatillenrlb's:;••• • ..:• . pauvratoutie , i-There: bloat:ma; 4:fah: ;b4OOl/4c, ; „doing conalderlin Abe MOM) and ` some. ink Onydrrieiit prilma;`,lifei of 7aktern ;Mesa Pork 1124bagigv.100 bbikelear'ot Slikpoity'paolted , Ideks Beef is _sold pal in st,"accaltyrayln.thill'l : • pm Driest ,Baet 7.-1 S miffig•-• • -Bacmr-stinets it 18 plain, atitti.toal3o ilm - frinereitred, according to: quality ; Mei are swum . 1 4• 11 1a.Mtd 44PulaPn 1 ;- -- ,at 13itliChleata 'there has been Mora . 114ngi mid qiricis atejon 'theladrairoe V-•-:sales llama at Biagio; Sides are marce.4:Lard-:-The stook is very much reduced, and prices are fully maintained; sales of bbla at llial2e, and kegs at 12413 c per Ib: Cub. Batter is dull,- and' seth at 110a2O por lb for solid packed.:, METALS.—The Iron market continues very dull, and to effect sales'aome hebierc bare submitted to a farther conoession. • liaise 'of No. I Anthracite at $2l; No. 2 _at .$18.50a19, and No. 3 at .slBal9 per tOni cash. 200:tons Forge Iran sold et $l9, edstmonthir: "About 3,000 - tons of rails Sold on pri vate terms. Scotch Pig is entirely nominal in value. : Blooms are HAM, but there is little or DO demand for them. Prices of Bar and Boiler - Iron have undergone no change. - LEAD is but little inquired for. Some Virginia sold at 510, per lb, cash. Correa' indult, and there is no deinand for either English Sheathing or yelloW Metal. ' - Beznwsz.les of 1,000 lbs yellow at 310 pea poind. „ , Bens.L-Qatiritition is Maroo,'and it has been in ' good remiest, with small sales of - No. 1 at $32 per ton.. .tanner's Bark is unchanged. . • , • Oatumas.- 1 -FOr' Adainantine there has beet a little more inquiry; with miles of 500 boxes city at 1930, omos. • • • „ - - - Coan.—Tke reeeipts are light. Ind the demand limited both fof shipment' and' home' consump tion; some of .the !operators hate - suspended busi ness. , - • • - " Corson is quiet, but 'pikes_ are steadily ma in taiped ; sales of-600 bales, chiefly Uplands, at 13143i0 ford addling and middling fair qualities, Including some 101 l at I.le per lb. The Crop racirments since the let September as fol lows " • ' • 1858..1857.• .1866. 1865 Reo. aiP1tr.'.3, 1 042,010 • 2 890.000 8,467 CO3 2,737 ON - ax. to Cf. L.:1,790,000 1,397,t00 .1,903.000 1,455,000 E. to Arlo ... 378.090 405,002 478,000 406,000 Ex'o'r P. P.., '879.006 404,000 315,000 •73000 Total. fkr.9”..2,c18.000 2,900,000 2,902,000..2,134600 Atli on bd.— 135,000 110,030 ,19.000 166 000 Of whibh Myhre the'put week, included in the , • _ Rae. at Engl.. 11,090 9,000 12,006-, 22.000 Ex. to 0. 8... 23.000. - 91100' • . 8,030 i• 20,000 - Ex. to Fena.,.. , 000 , 4.000 ; 9 000 1.000 6.000 9,000 Total Rap tiiii1. , :34.000 -"'• 14,000 10 000 29.000 • • DittrOS aarrDvas.--There has been more doing ; soles of 1,010 casks Soda 'Asti st 21a30, six mos ; m some Fues ' $l6 . per ton', and a cargo of St. Domingo Logwood on private terms. " - FEATOZUS are actual); email_ sales at 44a40e par lb for good waste n. . Fwd.—The receipts of maalrerel continue light, and the trensaetions limited ; sales of new No 3s were made,"to , arrive, at flf 25, and $7.50 Is now asked for iota' agrait. The retail rater are 81.50 per bbl for old Is, $10.50 for 2s, and $7 50e7 75 for " new 3.3., codfish ate entirely nominal. Piokled Herrinigrance from $2 to $3, according to quality. Fnurt.—Ortingsis and Lemons are source; sales at s2a4 per box, according to quality. A cargo of Pine .Apples, now landing, is selling at Vialo the 100. Domeatio fruit fa dull and the sales small. • Famours are unsettled, with a small business doing at,2B for, Flour to Liverpool; 7d for Grain, and 20s for weight-25s is the general rate to Lon don. 'Nothiog—new 'in other foreign freights. Coastwise rates nettle:hanged and dull. Colliers aro getting 905,050 to New York ; $1 05 to Rhode Island, and $1 25a1.10 to Boston. Girmarro.—Prices are nearly nominal for both kinds. - „ . Guano meetitivery liMited inquiry within the ' dabge' our l as t iuotatione. Ranr.—The stock Is light, but there is very lit tle soiling. Brins.—Rolders are firm in their demanda. A. Sale of 'dry Pernambuco was made at 1610 per lb., on time • Noss.—The deman d haebeen limited, and the 'sales iinall'atll4Bs for Eastern and Western: daramartiamery dull •, the only sales reported are some yellow sap boards at $1243, and white pine shipping per at $ l4 per M. Laths are dull, at 31.25 per M. -" C NAVAL BTORDIC—There has been, rather more doing Bait, of 200 bbl. common Rosin at 8145, and 250 bbls. fine do at $4.6245.50 per bbl. Tar is steady' at $2.12/,' and 'Pitch at s2.' Spirits of Turpentite:meets. a steady inquiry ; sales of 200 bbls. a 4460 per gallon. , Oics.Prices of Fish Oils are folly maintained. 'Maimed Oit isin good request, at 71a720. Lard Oil Is quiet, at 85a860. PLASTFR is dull, at $2.620 per ton. Rios -Prim are unchanged, with sales in lota at $3.25a8 621 for fair to prime quality. ! --ff 000 sacks Liverpool Ground sold on terms kipt private, and a cargo of Coarse at 204 - per bushel. • Snans.—Cloverseed is wanted, t with sales of prime at $5 per 64 lbs. There is little or nothing coming forward.„ In .Timothy, nothing doing. Flaxseed is *anted, aid if here would command $1.6021.021 nor brmlxel. Srunrrs,--Brandy and Gin meet a_g.ood inquiry at provicaiii" quotations. Sales of Nei England Rum at 30s no. Whiskey is scarce, and held with mush firmnare; sales of bbls at .25a260, hhde at 250, and drudge at 240. TALLOW continues dull at lilo for city rendered, and blailo per lb, cash, for country. Titss.—There has been more demand, an d holders have advanced their prices, the stooks boiog much reduced, and 'the shipments from China showing a great falling off. TOBACCo limited inquiry for both Leaf and Manufactured, for the' supply of the home trade, at steady prices. Woot..—Receipts are increasing, but the de mand is moderate and prices are without change ; sales of 120,000 lbs, in lots, ranging from 320 far common up to 450 per lb, cash, for fine. Benjamin Reiff, Esq., of Montgomery coun ty, Pa , died, duly, 17th, aged 70 The Norristown Hrpub/tran'saya he held - the 'cede of justice of the peace for forty-two years, and served four-years as a member, of the House' of Representatives and four years as tt, member of our State Senate In all the varied relations of life he enjoyed the confi• deuce and esteem of 'his fellow-citisens. His re mains were burled - on. Tuesday, the 20th inst., at the Brick Church in Towamencin township, at tended by a large concourse of mourning relations, friends, and Welborn.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers