THE PRESS, 11.1111 DAILY X imouresto) BY JOHN W. FORNEY. °Moe, No. 417 Oheetnut Iltroot. DULY FATAL, iwun Ossts tin Wan, parable to ets surrfors Monet to Sutoorlbors out of tie elty at &t DOLLIIS Pto Minot; Tout Doit.Ago tOs DIOR NOOTOO; Tinos Do LLLLL rout Six Koarso, Invostabli la u 4. tome Coo the tt coo otitoroi. ' SWIM t. Subs... Nam out .t W Clty at Taw DOL. LU• tea AJUN, to ilaviecc W BLUM PARS'. In galas? Pause .•111 to Nat to thabeertlere by . viral (DOP glaillto, la adroatt) at. ' 22 00 Throe Cool 1, ‘• u. fr CO . lire Coploo, 4, tl 800 Tea Coss, " if 12 00 Twolity Coaled, " "(la Deo a tdr0ar1...... 20 00 Twenty Voyles, or over, " (to adctrame of, mai itabeerlbor,) oath. .. . 110 lot a Ulla of Torstprne or over t ire will mead la Oat?* bar to Om gettor.op of the (Nab. Tao Inr•Ama Yoot mi ototPtoroarma. are ripaseted to set as Alecto for CALIFORNIA PRIM. I ooed loml.hionthly Is Nam for Om 13a11forala Steassera. tUalt4co, ittoclrn, gc. BAILEY & CO, CHESTNUT STREET, Manatsetereet d- 11111TISR STERLING SILVIS , WARM, Czar their Impostleo, in the premleee oteltultely, CRlseee and Straiten lif• hafted to 'flat 0111 . wort futory, , WATCIIhB Coaataatly ea hand ► aplinelld Moak et amputee Watehee, of all the eolebratett makers, DIAMONDS. Radium, Hewslate, Broothea, Pinar Nap, aa4 all other ;alleles In Ih• Mama Ilac Dranise at NEW DICIONS will bo mote trio of e►atp tot thole wishing watt mods to oldat. RICH CIOLD JBWELRY. A boosU'al issottment of 6U Um ssw sdylss 61 Mao desoloy, outY Maud., Mae sad kludi Ossuo, • Purl, Cusl, Oubmselo, Varislsito, Laos, to., Mo. 6111111111LD 0111T01111, lA3ISTB , WAII2IIB, &a. Also, Boma sod Aforblo OLOCKI, of sowed ityloo, Id of lopotlor Qailltr. os14111w&w17 JZ. O ALDWELL & aye 432 CH ibTNUT fitted. Hare rsoolrol, per demon, now otyPoo Jur*l.l7, C 6441414.4, Toot Chola.. flplookikl (sup, halt trait Stood', Bupr Paakoto. Jot Goods olad Viewer TOW. COM', L.A. 43.4 310.014 Sofa. foie Aped/ to PhlL.dolpbla for the Ws of Charles iratati4aa's LON DOS 21111i-XlillPill3 dole QILVIR WARE.— WILLIAM WILSON k SON, YAJVJFACt(RHRs OF /MYNA WARE. ISLITASLIMISD Mk) N. W. CONNIWI 11/12 /ND A lure ostort , nosit of ILILYSit WAIN, of ovoq , ds eerlptloo, entlitaatly oo load, or malt to inlet to otitch way patters Alealt.D. Importers of phellolS sad DlNglnglum Imported wart. ItSO•dkwly I S. /ARDEN & BRO. ar• suorletoinas AID tllPOAlala OP 1311,VER.PLATRD WARN, • No. 101 Obootool "knot, above Tani, ,(op MOM) rhllsdplphlt Canstontly an hoed and for polo lo lb. Trade SRA 88TH. COMMUNION BERVIOII INTO, URNS, PITCHERS, UOBLETE CUPS, WAITHRS. SAS IENTO, OASIONS,KNITSS,PPOOSII,SORKS, LASI.KO, &s,, &a. • till&los Oaf plating oa oil lauds of instal. sally usings. %cats. T. 1. •1111.A11/11. ABRAMS & MAYER, ri ATTORNEYS AT LAW, LOOK Pa., Will attnal promptly to all prolautalooal MaHAVEN dams , es trastod to them. Spacial attenUou Ores to Um memo Nos of elalms. , EIIXIXEMO • Owe. Wei. P. Packer, Irani As nr, Pa. ; L. A. Madcap, Proddelit Lock Haven rant • tionarid D. I. Jakkina*, Loaf Haven; noel. A. While, Look HAVOIIi Almon Scott, Lock Mimeo ; Bonita & lairthoree, Philadel phia; McFarland, Erma, k Co. Philadelphia ,• tram & Watson,' Phlholiilphia; ni Pelee, Philadel phia; Hon A. V. Pamela, Ph iladelphia; 7T lot k Co.,lldiadalphla ; Timor PC Dolt, Phila. dalphit; Mo. Jame* auroaida, italletoota, Pi.; J. W. liallezia, EN., Philadelphia. JJ lel.te Alal. K. biaounti . 3 1 C""A' AIT I ( g )R 3 21 1 gF11 1 11W, cetit RRRRR ergo, PA. C 01140110116 promptly ottoodod to. 113-13 t • H 0. THOMPSON AND O. M. CO• AAR . 102, C0NV12,1110216. 01001. 0011110 i ATTORMIT AT LAW, •0 - 7 No. 9 1$ Altoll most, below 1•211. VlGOrl2llnEft, 00111=11rii= =ANT oaf Import*, of HAUSA aiemut, oits.) zu Want Mow. maid *tom REXOYAL—. 0. IitANOITT, , HAM CUTTER AND WM ArAZNRI lion noosed to Ir 4 0111tIrtN01 attest, km dem 110-, Imo RLIMINVII la./ Broken. CHARLES E. BUCK, SEAL Z4TATE TiROILID AND AQINT, No. 114 WALNUT STREIT. Noma late* putensnod and sold. MuNI 'onto& Unto and Wound Rost. eolloctid. New mewed oo mortgage', *mad roots, /Le. • . Trodwiek Inley, , I Wm. D. Loth, rat. Monte 1.. Tbot. P Sparhawk, Jame Duslap, In., Caleb Jam, Iy2 111 m A UGUST BELMONT, 2111241t1r1t, . 10 DIATIR BIZEIST, ' ' • . NEW TOI 11 /maw Lotion of Coodlt, %WWI* to 'lmam or 01l pule of the warld. Jed&dge vuomsz &Co. kJ rescis mo licrwon !moms, No. 40 Boa% TN IND Bind, , nu it. LOW to Ms 114154 aut Ilamuut of thUadolpbta. NT•ly 011A11. 11,41/1.1111. W. t. *IOW'. • I. UNLIT, a IVIANLN Y,BROWN, K it 00., E.N,O TN, STOO EN AND NICNANON MA. K.R. sonber'ef Tam and CHIIIIIIMIT Dim*, Ei=lE/13 Oallonians nada, and !India drawn an all auto of the Col MI Mateo and Um (UAW, oil the most tamale Memo. • OoULatloel mad*, and Diana dims is Iladiei sad Irelasi. Vonsreat Pima Not booed. Lied Wormiatti tosstst an 4 odd. Dobler, la Spode rad Bullion. Lahti sat ?law raper suottated. Etocks art L.miasbeilibt eel MI as OesuidestOo St Ole Board et limns" la tslle.Nlplte awl Elm York. jelthis " • IDIVAILD 1L PAM, INWARD . Z. Ne=io for Coast/&sot Mit tosasylvoolo Now lamp PARRY Ag BROTHER, Dpwklaa k 011PRIAL LAND AGIXTI utA CONIIKTANCIIIS, IRONY STRICKY, stow HICKORY, ANKATO, IAINDIIIIOIA, Pay parthrtilar attesting to bulge aint Wrathy" Nosy for non•bildiats sad neon, WI 'polled/4 Deets, Notes &a. Any ham or mom or WANG, Sin twill* prompt ottootloa. lotor to Wood Nowt, & Co., ?Alkodelphlo. ' Dab, low k Wlt6.n. Pkols6lpAls. Sheep, Habtos. & Co.. Pillodetelta. aklmv 4 asataleb, (Mules NIA. & Uo. , Pkiladelphts. tarry £ Iltandobk. PAlladalakla. myk-se• TTAPESTRYOARPETS.—JUST OPEN -IL, tilsge lot of npuloo TapootryCloopoto, to Os mold st • km prise. DAILY I Intaini, Casa OAMITIVIVEM PIO 011u7stre lUilliti3 THREE-PLY OARPETS.— • kw! amortmoot of aes , ratans, as ralamo4 Flaw, at HILT 4 11110THISII . ma own , Erdal' " ournparr k. 13 ,E a D onp li ttl/ Alt i al llgL—i t lO ti !) . o2 tc Y o lg o . bat mail. and MAW, at all p ialTt, to 111.23 par rid. . DAILY k mlOll.ll 114. ourvarr ntr.44! IIEST iIEAVY BKIISSELS.—A LABOR J-J , tot of at potions t obtatm ot7too, low s ws.DAILY & ,1101111114 OBLY OAATNT ' OTT OBTAIN°, OT MEM glgticultural. 1 iI:P O TED MEDITERRAIMAY wur.yr.—Tri sobotribers base now la 11011 th r .," hood 'we hashed* aura quality Rad lifeelitarraaosa W heat , of their own Imputiotion, direst from ono at the boot ssein4-worlog *maiden in humps. - • The attention Of lamen to requested to nit Wheat, so it to helloes' to be the-beat attlete at lb. Mad iree- Darted into )blo wintry for a number of pan. It hu to j e a owl:ordeal party In };Drop., solely with the • 1.. w of 'mt. ri ourilegior 'Wel* for **Alm eel t. larva:me wishing to *hemp lbws reed, tido Le in apportualktaeldam met with. • - Per sale, .n 414.1/Utica to lull at the hoed Wars haw.* of P. 3, mom.% a co.; au6-2w• 103 Ifirkot aM 4N. Front of. • EARLE's 1 1113 AW & EERS' 1 .I._ . .._ -; LUBBIOATING GREASE, _. the beat LW ebeallost compouret fat growling the Wes of OMNIBUSES, CARRIAGES. CARTS, DRAYS 614 WAGONS, And HEAVE MAGUININT. yor mile In G. lona, Isoli, sot bomb, by au th. BILUGGISTS is thip Ilty smiths MANUFACTURERS, PQATRAIT, , .. i boom No.lB Bourn "(Arlen Pr.., . .. Q.AL&D 011..-26 .Cases Rood .quallty sad MOURN /EAMES, SO TIMM Lyllett Nip got. and kr isleer WILLIAM IC YIATON, 115 eia•tb /ROMP bereet. /X OALLIIIT PAINTINOO, V)011.1NO-OLA881121, 1■ mil tariety LTA bble., garnikleti n . LTA old Mosongshida pure Rya Whistoijost remand sod for Ws by ikiLl4•lll H. yistult, 1111 Olt UMW! Strati, WS 114 M. O. !Inv, PC JANn L MAIM 13021, A 51r).111 Go Ward Haan ficaing .91achinis. - -- 'TERRIS' a ' BOUDOIR' SEWING ISA- R* ottitit, is Ow& to tho peddle ai flee mat rola Ida lare;eit> lor'rilsil Itaehtseet• an, teeeill saw from Ili la deer olitahoo- la ia taolb,'Ne oil Leads of good*, from omega Subic to t eteami . ealaheied. li to, alsbood • osoSioa; eleoifeirelod he goiiealledad am sersofbal ney yeoebooeml ome , a• MO sad hitt I* 0144 t1 DROWN ' STOUT.-40 casks di Float & by a a 1124 44 twalieww“o4 op.: TIO DIIIaaILITT at ijo . winu w ." i mport .; d i rect from Limi .,, Is this orkiiihms 601,11)4 %gaunt Or fed load, ore lest- ' d e ee k 64 4 o w dub,' wit w TBAlo y, 1 , nowt se Orr asoiltrworod by Aar *that. im sr44 Aare , &X: " . 1111 Pasta /ROST etroa. how Ulm 11'1414 to Owe ksadilid Magi gm sib' g_II2DBICIIE & CO. CHAMPACOM.—A * a. T 4 11 101 1 . 1 .1 an 111 %WI ottelmdif tido tilt. 009 1 4 i i cii. iloastoat noel, of the pada, broad la bond sad wrillentv ?so mow.' op idnirobnur td fief, It if aI la 111040, lot ealo by . New.; dal 14 V SATQN, • amobloo ebot ti vselead,by 041 baany le,*b a d, s a i , . 614. Mot for Perinsilvsai s t. skf too kiss a + - , --• • 1 . iris Pin• do iItONT Pk 'roart-DOLLAiII, _.„ D ORE BONE DOSS GROUND FINE.— .at 04404 oat kW. 11401-1,16311131 0 rate e• 14. A tin aperfor artiste. FM We to large or 'mall Wood troy Ise . S. D. 11.11111 k , Apia, , lift, by 01011110/11.1,11111011, le 00., Jsll4lPpe atiy Om* 10 OW& XPOSTZ WM. i WO *4 S*lll Poliktrop strap, . . • . , . . • - . . . , _ ......... . .....-„,\,\ 7, .. .. •., . . .... ' • ' --"'• •:\ Vi :‘, : //I •''.`r"; ,".':... .. ~. • . ' 11 , r , " ...-7 , tt . . ~ ... . • „ , , \ . ' •,-. .; ~ ..\ ,s • F•Ni 1 fil•'/.." ! ' ' . ..-`' "" 1 7 ..' 1.'.., ' /.....'"- N Vi . - '6 l '1k k•a...... , " 1. '! 'lll • ;'''' '''' i {,;P r. 14 Y 4. . A . , 7 . t ' ' rr. -•-. .. ~ • ' - - 7 i .. .. . .--...-z * 2 . .. - . ';.- - -r t - - - • -,, n . ..,. : . a.; , „,;. ~•., . _ .. .1,, ! ,.,, ...!..,. t _,. ~-, ~ , . ... ~ n „,,,,,,,,, 1 .. .. ,..k _ . . v , . ,r , , ,...,.. .:...,.,,.,., ..:„. . ,."L_ ... . ow • -,:: :. ,-, . N.. :. ~ ..1 , ._. 4 , ; ;; . ....4-7...„ , ;,4 - •...- ~ '',. • '..-1' .1(,.,i,•,•0.i i , --•.-, • - j . t a- .. - i ~..: - - ..;:: ~. ;- , :; 44 04..:, ~,..,,.. __ ------ -.---_.-----;... ••• . . .„-:.. ..e.---- 6 .• ' - _sl . •‘ ~,'slcz 2 ,,- . Z.,c1 : 3111;•:L , ; % -tt . - __,ll --..,-r_.:!• --- -„--.7;-. :-. ,_• !-:,,.-:° - 2 .--4-;. - _-....- _ ,--- -,. ....----,..,,,.......,,,.....,.,- ~. ,-.--... . . ~ . . . . VOL. 2.-NO. 6 . CPS AND DOWNS. COMPTIAD axpittiaor rot, AND DIDIOATID TO, TTENT4rTi'S TOWER HALL, St rca 11110. Thle world te, pout a doubt, the bout, Of any known IS yet. Aud would be better still, by far, If no on. got le debt. The, better far were there no note*, But much ea grata thee. rhyme. We'd thou have music blending with The jingling of the dimes. . . cane ne. Cash down, pay up! Tay up, cash down! nark, hark the cheerful mound/! 0 happy wolf these might be The only upe and downs. We then ebenl4 hate the sharps and fiats, AM motto. upon the stare; Bet still Do Shyloek 440 e, s nor fiats, With notos 'hey wished to shave. A man could seek his roach at night In happy. calm content, • AM have lb. secret on his lip., 4, I owe no man cent." Onoecs— A lady lo a homespun dram! Could weer a moiling tare, With no rebuke. arising from Ca.peld for inks end lam She would not go upon the street, In borrowed plumes to shine, And hero come eredltor remark— " Thomfmthers all are mine!" Clitoars— Then 'We would dwell lo Wry heart, And light In eu'ry aye, While neyer mars, oboes a door, A thetirs flag would fly. But o'er oar tootle. in pride eriiet, Our eoontry'a flag would be, AM boring broke the chains of debt, We should indeed befits! CIORUS— The above song. set to India, hod arranged for the pt. an•forte, may he fond In Irennett'a Illurtrated Phror/p Manske for August, which VIII be ready for delivery at the office of publication, Town Hatt., 618 Market . on Thursday next. A Boe merriment of Sommer Clothing may be found et the Nero* place, and oleo Benoett'a Palfalelphis Herald for August. Summer Utsorta. HAVE HOTEL, WILLIAMSPORT, LYCOMING COUNTY, PA. The undersigned hen purchased the lane end elegant banding, comer of THIRD and PINS Street, formerly occupied by the West Breach Hank, and has enlarged and retitted It In a superior style. Williamsport is oat of the most delightful inland Soma In Pennsylnutia, and his hones, he hopes, will be found pleasant, as well to the traveller so to those sill sena of the metropolle who desire to pass an,agremble time during the heated term of the summer. Hie omnibus rune from hie hotel to the Packet and Railroad Depot. free of charge. Jr2ll4ro W.H.HAY,Proprietor. CARD.—COLUMBIA HOUSE, CAPE IS LAND,. N..l —The enteoriber, thankful to hie friends sod the Willis for the great and unmerited pa tetismo bestowed ap •ek the House this season, begs leave to say that he will tare cholas Rooms to let from sled atter this date. during the remainder of the lemon. The hew will remain epos until 'JAY Peptember L. lIARWOOD. ant-if August 14,111 U. IiEbrOk'sHOTEL, ATLANTIO ()ITT, 11W OMR, At Ilie teretlena et the Its Mood, on the felt, beyond the Depot. Ude Home to Now °Pint for Houdin sod Trissiost Visitors, aal Ohre seoom isotations sisal to any Hotel Is *Cantle City. TERMS MODERATE PT Mike amid keep theitc mite aattl the earl arrive la hoot of the Iletek. ?b• elm are eon- Weans. ifICLIta SEA BAT HING.—TEIE MANSION HOUSE, toot of Peonsylfools AMMO, AT LANTIC CITI, Is NOW OPEN for porta. 'Tor eon ressleare et arriagookeit, contiguity to the booth, sad attesetimser of the adjacent grounds, this Room le sorivsliod. The proprietor has spored oo palm in rookies this Retail! tot ovoid be desired by obits:mt. jr/44. E. LEE. WHITM MOUNTAINS, NEW lIAMPBUIRE. . . Tho PROPILi goon, and /LUXE HOUSE, In th 4 PIANCONIA• NOTCH, an now open for visitors. These Herten are of the Ant elme, and hay* boom" Ike moil of setrotoplixlisd tourist'. They aro Sy" solleasport, we • dellshtfol rood, and ettnoted ornidst the boldest and violet of mosntaln Gentry. the Prolll• Is math Go largest house it the Mountain", new, sad replet• with the oonvotrienoes of modern arst.elsa" hotels It commands the Swot view of Mount Lafay ette, (whirl to bet little lower HOG Monist Wariltinis ton Mo ,) le le lowa Hobo Lake, sad th• 014 klan of tbe • • . rums , noon," 'irldtafad se a lofty elevation, commands the grandest retry for 60 mills down the Pemligetrusett Tansy. The Phone, the Crystal Cosesd•s, the Pool, and the Ruin, are all within a few minutia' walk of the IMMIX HOUSE. Tourists leaviss Philadelphia at 10 A. M., can mach the PLOMu I.IOIIIIR, tin the Worcester and Nashua, and the soston, Concord; sod Montreal Railroad to Plymouth, the sent afternoon, (24 miles by staged or they vaay go via the B. 0. end Al. Railroad to Little ton, theme by stage (only 11 miles) to the utontx 11011bE, In the same time. Mall. arrive and depart daily. Poet-ollioe addrem, PROPILI HOUSE or PLUM Grattan county, N R. MIBAM BELL, Manager of the Pro Ole House. • R. IL DORTON, Manager of the Plume House. for the Plume and /nasals Hotel Co. 1,14-ttlin BHOUSE, BRIGAN VINE ILA Boaa,ll. J., HINNY D. 8311TH, Proprietor. Thlo Dirge and olopotly loath laao to oar open for the fooopioa of visitors. Tara la porlillek or 1146 peer day. Tato an of Camelia and Atlantic Whoa I pt out at the JAW, when a comfortable beat (Cant Benj. Tuner) will ho to mallow to cam am to the Hotel. .I.IT MANSION HOUSts, sIAIIOII 01:1IINK. This elegant estabilainnent, beautifully attested on Um %aka of the Lehigh, la mw reedy for the reap Von of munmer 'fetters, Them le oo locaty In Penn, rituals, nor, wham le the Milted 1144111, which eom WM BO WAY attraction se Ute Taal of the Leklob, and the above Betel will afford arrest comfortable homy to Halters deelioua of alining the icapideset *ornery, InesltattsUbto mines, or stapabielis verb of art of this lotereatin meal. Joddluila • 0101141 nOPPllff, P *tor. a 11 Ai LIPU M D 81111NUS.-I'ILIS vell-known and dollallthal &Imam Bawd will be opened fee the reeeptles of native on the 10th of lase, and kept opus sill theta of °ebbs". The sew and sessions Buildings ended last year are now telly eompleted, aid the whele establishment has etas fitahhid in semis" style, aid the aesegamoda ttens teUl be or a eharieter not esselled In any part of the Vatted data. The fad Till be sada the manapment of Mr. A. G. AMAX, whole experiuste, eearteots toeanera, and attention to bb pmts. ere the asopteet aeon canoe of oomfbrt sad had trostment. - /a oblates to tho ether mow ef sow. It le deemed Etr oi, to stile Mot pooMille as melt Bedford by a. t rldei from DMeellirstrary. TIO OS'ailleit/ hoe mob extensive arrangements to tardy semen sod todlekhola with ~ Bodford Water' , by the, bon) carboy, and is bottle., at t h e following prism, s i t t r ttrbor . , vta ; • i maf Se 8 00 N, E. berry) . 3 00 00 di Do. oak) I 00 Carboy, II Wise. ' " ' 6 . . . St ' Bottled, IN flat, per dom. 1 60 The bards Led einettlly prepared, so th at pur l:Amen may dayeal oat rodelvUg the Whir Dosb and neat. All eammunleatloos should - be adtbreooll to VII DIDIORD MTNIDIAL SPRINGS 00. • f-tf - Bedford Couatv, Pa. illabwuc HARDIVAR ' be silbscriberfi COM- MINION MlllOllOlll for the ado ot 101UtION LID DOMISSIO IIIADItI3II, would toopoetfally cull tho Wootton of the kid* to thole dock, who they aro adoring at lomi rates. Oar oriortosont eon. Ado to port ot— Oboloo,ot all klado— T , Log, Salter, Smut, Ox, Wyatt% Sael.Waps, Stag., Tonga., Look,Bblp, Slot, sod Ootlolaloe. ilidoldstiod L " SWneltuW I Stone sad Moto aad attar lovlii; Solid Box sad other Mbar! ad hug handl* Pry Pa..l round ad oval Ilakrasaa, • . _ 14 11artarla " papal*, ill.. aad Num Dad Tarawa. " fang, Y.a•j eluting Tubes. Ooqu,G oar, and Velar! kraal Nay, Oant, mad atom Adria: Bay, Maui;, ?amain' mad VT larks. Uraiarld Noes 111kratill dad ea, at all kladd Talks, irada r ti 01.4 sad lalaklag Nall.. out w trait Hlagal, darra, Loot/ or all limb; °Wary, tad ruale, Asia, Elidabota, Ham be% Plasm, sod Alm lola, ice, is. M. W. &VMS k .ON, to. all 00111111R011 atm!. iDtnitotrg. HUT 0138 s IrPINTIAT, , X. D., 1 Montt !dohs his Meads that to ha UNOVED to WALNUT Prot, above Itortath. joi4ast BOSES.-100,000 Shin Bonus, bailable ftir thabrsils and Batton Maims, to steno sad for sal* 0110AISDALY, PM ROI, & CIO.. Pi • 104 NOWrid HO ILD 8.-60 111012. Bhonlders, thy In • sat, tot Nils by 0. O. OADIJO, uO., 184 . • Yew%►W A TIM bv.6l. °REESE. —196 boxes Primo Rerklmer V gout, jut landing and for sale by O. O. VDLIik 00., o , virtb Warm ormi New pabluations. THE NEW BOOKS. _ FIRST. LECTURES OF LOLA MONTEZ !minding her" Aut. , blographyi , 4: , i 4 t , sit i n . d .. W t o ra cn i e w n o of Path," "Comic Aepeot of me, men," " Gallantry," dcc. Munn, portrait. Price $l. SECOND. WOMAN'S THOUNIITS ABOUT WOMEN . . . . The Wilt and 1/4 At work by the author of John Mil fax, tieutlemen." '• A piths , . husband," 4, The 011,4, 1, &e. Round In muslin. Price $l. FOLLOWING TUE DRUM; Or, °LIMPOPO OP Fannie's* Lire. Being brilliant Sketcher of Recruiting Incident, on the Rio Grande, Br. By Mrs. Norm L. 9uLe. Muslin. Price $l. Otfant. LIFE OF HUGH MILLER, Author of "Schools and Schooltnaste•a," "Old Red Sandstone," &c. Prom the Glasgow edition. Pre rated.by Tneuae N. Baows. Muslin. Price $l. FIFTIT. TRUE. LOVE NEVER IDID RUN SMOOTEL An Eastern Tale In Verne, Ity T 11011.115 BAILIIT AL DRICH, author of Dahl. Bell." Elegantly printed, and bona.; In Inuitlin. Illustrated. Prleo 60 cents. SIXTH. DEAR EXPERIENCE A Tale. By Itorrint, author of Doctor Antonio," Lorene* Benoni," &a. With Illostratione by Leech, of the London Punch. Muslin. Price $l. RUDD & CARLETON. Publiehers and Booksellers. No 310 BROADWAY, Now York. R. & C., upon receipt of the prise will send any of the above work s by mall, postage pre paid, to any part of the United btates. et43.tuth&eattf TO ADVERTISERS, TO ADVNIITISERS: TO ADVERTISERS: TO ADVERTISERS: TO ADVERTISERS: THE CHRONICLE & SENTINEL, THE CHRONICLE & SENTISEL, THE CHRONICLE & SENTINEL, THE CHRONICLE & SENTINEL, THE CHRONICLE & SENTINEL, Pu'RLIIIIED DAILY AND WEEKLY, PUALISIIED DAILY AND WEEKLY, PUBLISHED DAILY AND WEEKLY, PUBLISHED DAILY AND WEEKLY, PUDL.J.EUED DAILY AND WEEKLY, AT AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, AT AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, AT AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, AT AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, AT AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, • lIAS THE LARGEST CIRCULATION, HAS THE LARGEST CIRCULATION, HAS THE LARGEST CIRCULATION, HAS THE LARGEST CIRCULATION, HAS THE LARGEST CIRCULATION, IN THE SOUTH IN THE mum IN THE SOUTH IN THE SOUTH /N THE SOUTH W. S. JONES, AUGUSTA, GA VALUABLE WORK ON COLONIAL OPlNlONS.—Opinions of eminent Lawyers on 'talons pante of English Jude prudeoce, chlistly concerning the floionies, Fisheries, and Commerce of (heat Britain Coliciuted and Digested from the Originals In the Board of Trade and other De positories. Br 010101 CHOLLiII , Esq., P.8.D., 1 vol. Soo, 816 pages. Just reoeired and for We by KAY lc BROTHER, Law Book sealers, Publishers, and Importers, LITT lit South Bluth street., JEW NAGA.EINE. BRYANT & STRATTON'S '‘ AMZEIOAN MIR CHANT" le now realy, and nay be had at all NEWS DEPOTS. Their Agent, Ospt. J. H. Hell, is canvassing thie eity fer.yearly nabeeribers. Price 12 per annum. Addroap BRYANT & STRATTON, Mercantile College, I. B. °miler BATINTAS and. WHATNOT Streets, Phi ladelphia. FOWLER, WELLS, & CO., 922 Sl* CHESTNUT Stroet, hoop standard works on 1114, Phrenology, Physiology, Witty. Core, and Pho nography, wholwale and retail. Phrenologi csl Elautination with aorta, and toll writ ten descriptions of elk:rector, given day and even ing. Cabinet free to Thltors. Orden by mail to be addressed to Yowler, Wells, Co 0214 Chemical Most. jett-Ilmoitirky t imp 80 Zimmer excursions. FOR OAY.F. MAY.-RXPRESS LINE—The swift and favorite Steamer 4 . BALLOON" Capt. W. WISLIDILS, lama Areh.etteet .Wharf for rein[ Ma t 9 Tasiday, Thuraday, and Saturday Morn, at airlock. Returning, leaves the Cape on the Intermediate days at • o'clock A. M. wariapa titre bleb/dad; gereants 81.60; lawman Tlakets $B, earriage hire extra: Jyl..tn• NORTH PENNSYL. A NIffiriVANIA RATI.ROAD TOR R It WA 'ATER-GAP, DEACON CHUNK, lIATLITOIN, AND TUN LEIIIOII COAL REGION.— Vinton, to the above popular pinta of Seems. Resort will Sod the Route offered by the North Petuayirania Railroad Company, in connection with the .Leblgh Vat. ley and New Jersey Central Railroads, to be novel and agreeable, pulling through some of the rf chest and moat highly enitivated counties in the {Rate, and pow nand of comfortable aecommodatione, both on the road and at the Tenons towns through which It wen% FOR TIM WATER OAP.—Take 0.15 A. M. ft'ZPreits Train from Front and Willow streets, pan thrones Beth leep and Easton to New Hampton, where a clot* eon- Diction is made with the Delaware, Lackawanne, and Western' Railroad. and arrive at the Gap about noon . FOR MARCH CHUNK AND THE COAL REGIVN• —Take 2.80 P. M. Etpreas Train from same Depot to Bethlehem, where clop connection is mad, with the Lehigh Valley Railroad, through' from Philadelphia to Mauch Chunk In 0 hours. A NEW AND PLEASANT ROUTE TO NEW YORK ClTY.—Take 838 A. M. Exprves TVA* to Bethlehem, thence via L. V. R. R. and N. J. O. R. R. through Eutou - to Ellubethport, then se be Steamer, and arrive lu New Tort at quarter put 8 .V. u. Parties travelling North that have a few hou'6 to ewe, will and this s new and agreeable route. /or farther particulars, inquire of ELLIS CLARK, Agent N. P. R. IL., /rout and Willow atreeta. PIII.IOIII/81), June 18, 1868. jetti.2m sa dV ic a FOR CAPE MAY AND NEW YORK. DAILY, at OM o'clock A M. NEW YORK AND. PIIILADELPIIIA STEAM NA- VICIATION COMPANY. The splendid ocean steamers DELAWAFE, Captain Copes; BOSTON, Captain Bellew ; and KENNEBEC, Captain Band, form a daily line between title city, Cape May, and New York, leaving from first pier below Spruce street (Sundays excepted) at 9,1 o'clock A. M Return ing, leave New York from pier 14 North Rime (Sundays excepted) at 6 P. M. Returning, leave Cape May (Mondays excepted) at A. M. Fare to Capel f May (carriage hire Included) $3 00 II 4 or serratita .. ~ 1 60 14 " &moo tickets ((mirage Mr* ex- ' tra) 800 " New York, cable 2 00 II • it • amine Freight taken at low rates. th r eligZSTattl a r re m Au k T 0 1 7 1 vezAoWriAb"RErd'AlirE-at NUE. JAMES ALIDERDICII, Jelfeam Agent. an WNW ' 031T2 SEA SHORE. RAILROAD. ONLY TWO AND HALL' LIOURS TO TUE ERA SHORE. • Oa wed after Monday, June 7th; and until farther no. Um', (Sundays excepted,) three tralw, daily to Atlantic City and return. lira Passenger Train leaves Vine it. wharf 7.80 A. M. &wind ~ 4, 4.00 P. M. Freight Tralawith Pomona Car attached, 4.36 A. M. Aooommodation Train to Weymouth 6.36 P. M. LEAVES ATLANTIO C ITY. lint Passenger Thin I ISA A. M. (Wood 4.40 P. M. Freight. Train with Passengerem attached, 11.90 P. M. Aecommodaflon Train leaves Wermonth t 6.26 A. M, lIADDONFIRLD tRAIN Uwe. Cooper's Point,ll .... A. M. and 2 P. M. Iteddcmdeld, 1 P. M. and a P. M. rare to Atlantic t when tickets are purchased before entering the ears, 81.80. Persons wishing to go down to the Bea Shore and return the mama day, can spend SIX COORS ON TIIN BEACH. Tickets for the round trip, $2.60 Tickets to go down in the afternoon and return next racketing, or down on Saturday afternoon and return on gaudily rooming, $2.60, EXTRA NOTICE. The Aeoommodition Train to Weymouth will run through to Atlantic on Sat.:inlay Afternoon and con tinue to run every Saturday until further notice. Leave Vine street 6 36 P. M. " Atlantic. City 400 A. M. Stopping at all Station... Monthly tickets will be iold at the following rates: I Tor she month of June,llo For the mouth of Sept. $l5 4; .. July, 20 For three tnonths, 45 4. .. August, 20 For four months, 00 Churches, Schools, Lodgoi, Compardee NA Library Associations, wishing special train., should make early 'pollution. Freight must be delivered it Coopere Point by P.M. The Company will not be reepousible for arty goods until reoelsed sod recelpted fur by their Freight Agent at the Point. B. FRAZER, Secretary. J.. 74, wagBRIDGETON.-Tho Steamer EXPRESS leaves ARCII Street Tues. days, Thursdays, and Saturdays, at Sg o'clock A. 11. Returning, loam BRIDGETON Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, at o'clock A Al Stopping at New Castle, Delaware City, Fort Delaware, and the usual Landings on the Gamow Through Gaeta (or MlBovine, Port Elisabeth, Mauricetown, Dividing Creek, Newport, Cedarville, and Parton. . /M-ird Dissolutions anti Copartnerships TILE SUBSCRIBERS - RAVE THIS DAY entered into a limited partnership agrees lily to the provislous of the Act of Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, approved March 21, ISM, entitled An Act relative to Limited Partner ships " Lod the eopplement thereto; and we do hereby 1. hat the name of the firm, ander which melt part. nerwhip Is to be conducted, le J. P. & B. B. OR NB. R. The Bsneat nature or the business intended to be tnoeasted le the purchase and sale of Carpeting in the tit' , of Philadelphia. 6. The name of the 'general partners ars JOHN P. OHMS, residing at the northwest corner of Arch and Twenty.ent street, lo the city or Philadelphia • and EDWARD B. ORNE, reeldlog on the north side of Arch street, above Twenty.erat street, In the mild city. 4. The name of the special partner is BENJAMIN ORME. melding at 241 North Ninth street, in the city of Philadelphia, who. as /uh special partner, hu con. Whetted to the common stock of the said Arm the sum of twenty.five thousand dollar' In cash. 6. The geld partnership commences Jnly 14, A. D. 1868, and will terminate on the 14th day of July, A. D. 1861. BENJAMIN CANE, JOHN P ORNE. EDWARD B. ORNE. • PISLADIMII, July 14,1868. ' Iyl6-tlw Noma. 'NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT J. SITUI DISZOTOS3 OF TIM PIIILADILPUIA AND GRAY'S IIItRIVU FASSNNOIIR RAILWAY COMPANY mule. the 'Wand Instalment to the Capi tal Block of la on each share to be paid, and w.ll re ceive the same on MONDAY, the 16th d► of August cent, between the hours of 10 and 12 o'clock, at the ores of the company, 603 WALNUT Street. #41.3v USU. U. kIINBTAONG,IIeartHri, PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1858. EVVrtss, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1868. THE WISDOM OF OUR ANCESTORS. It is satisfactory to find that, step by step, the Parliament and Government of England are reducing obsolete observances down to common sense practice—correcting, altering, improving, and sometimes even abolishing them. We may not live to witness It, but our children will probably hear of the abolition of a great many useless absurdities which oven yet are slurs upols the political and social aye tem of England. The time may not be far distant when Royalty, challenging respect for its actual merit rather than trying to exact It on account of its external trappings, will be content to do the magnificent on state•occa slops only—will dispense with the attendance; as servants, of a nobility considerably richer than itself—will abolish the debasing practice of making every one retire backyard from its presence—will put such aril:kale as "Grooms of tho State," and de gold and Silver Sticks in Waiting," quietly upon the shelf—and will travel hem place to place, just as comfortably and unostentatiously as any of our Presidents have done. Perhaps, igno ring the antiquated legal dogma that gi the wisdom's in the wig," such of our children as visit Westminater Hall, when they pay_their visits to cc the old country," may find Chan cellors, 1 1 Chiefs, Puisne Judges, Attorneys, and Solicitors General, Sorgoants-at-Law, Queen's Counsel, and utter barristers pleading, argui ing, cross.examining, charging juries ' and passing sentence, without having their limbs encumbered with stuff or silk gowns, their heads lost in huge perukes of horsehair. These and similar absurdities have been per petuated in England, chiefly because they are old. Thirty years ago, when that intolerant old bigot, the late Sir ROBERT HARRY 'Nom, spoke in Parliament of "the wisdom of our ancestors," be got a rap on the knuckles hem HARRY HAI:011011AR, 80 pointed , !MOTO, and true that even we, whose memory Is but Imperfect, (es our readers and the world know,) recollect it yet. Baorarram spoke to this effect, and we quote the words, because in our own coun try there are a good many persons, with anti quated notions, who look upon all innovation as symptomatic of ruin and revolution:, "The honorable baronet says: 'I do not like to talk so slightingly of—l do not like to disparage—the wisdom of our an castors.' The phrase, however, I consider to have been one of the most fruitful sources of mischief to the country; but I einst inform the honorable baronet that that phrSse had been disparaged long before the existencd Of the test and corporation acts— not by ridicule, but by sound argument—not by the sneers of the senseless, but by the soundest wisdom, the greatest knowledge, tho highest intellect, that England ever produced: I commend the phrase to the mitigated cen sure of the honorable baronet. For it was a Lord Iligh•Chancellor of England—a person by the name of BACON, or some such name— a name, perhaps, which has no respect in the eyes of the honorable baronet—who first stamped the seal of disparagement on the phrase which the honorable baronet brings forward ibis evening to fright thl House Rom its propriety. He It was, sir, who first repro bated the eternally recurring phrases of the ,wisdom of our ancestors.' He it was , Who laughed at the phrase of , expertence of PaSt ages.' In truth," continued BROUGHAM, "ir not a contradiction in terms, it is the grossest abuse of language ; for it proceeds upon this basis, that the world was older and wiser when it was younger, than it now is, when every youth knows more than the gray hairs of former times." It is a common and conventional error, in all countries, to laud this "wisdom of .our ancestors." We bavo less of it than almost any other people, but still we aro not wholly free from it. But the British aro decidedly addicted to it. With them, it is quite a fashion to be eulogistic on the social virtues of "bluff King lIAL," and to the golden days of "good Queen BEss," and to speak of "the good old times" as if the Present were in no way equal to the Past, as if Men/ VIII was not a wife-murderer, ELIZABETH TVDDIL a despot, JAMES I a pedantic fool, and his son, headless CHARLES, a weak tyrant. What are admiringly called "the good old times" beautifally illustrate the boasted " win. dem of our ancestors." They were times in which arbitrary power was all, and the com mon rights of man were nothing. The won• der now is, monarchs and nobles being then so weak and wicked, that the people should have endured them. Think of that purple tyrant, nanny VIII, of whom it was truly said that he never spared man in his wrath nor woman in his lust; of that cruel creature, his eldest daughter, chronicled to all Limo as " Bloody Mary ;" of that wilful tyrant ELIZA BETH, who murdered her cousin MARY of Scotland, because she was beautilbl, and de capitated her own lover, ESSEX, because she WAR jealous ref him; of JAMES STUART, " the wisest fool in Christendom," whom even the courtly pen of WALTER SCOTT could not re present as other than mean and cowardly; of his children, who expiated their crimes—ono on the scaffold, and the other in miserable exile. Think of these rulers, and ask how " the good old ,`lmes" can be praised. The historic pogo records how deficient In all that makes a p. topic happy, intelligent and' prosperous, the Ee:glish were in those lauded times. The luxuries,. the comforts, the very necessities of our daily life, were wanting there. Rank and Wealt b Loaded it over honest and humble industry. The Ration was in a state of serfdom. RoTaitY ,and nobility dealt with "the lower orde.'s" astif they were brute beasts; they buffeted' them, .despised them, persecuted theca, viciously bated and strongly coerced them. And," In the good old times," this was humbly subru.itted to. Mie speak not of the earlier perlot.is of British history, when the WILLIAMS, the lisaurs, the EDWARDS, and the RICHARDS roughly ruled, but of later periodi of the time a ten vir tuous Moss was sacrificed, when STEN,int and SHARSPEARE wrote, when lista= fought and was executed, when MILTON compos,sl his immortal epic, when SIDNEY fell on the OW feld, when DRYDEN flourished and Benxi starved—of the two centuries which includ,sd the events of British history, from the acces sion of the Tunorts at Bosworth Field to the deposition of the STUARTS, consummated by the defeat on the banks of the Boyne Water. In those times, women of even the more exalted ranks could do little more than barely sign their names. A nobleman was consider ed erddito who could spell with comparative correctness. The bulk of the middle chums were ill-informed—the laboring masses were almost wholly unable to read and write. Pro fligacy was the practice of the higher ord urn— intrigue the apparent business of their life. Cdatitas II increased the peerage by making Dukedoms for his illegitimate children, a.lid set public example of debauchery unprece dented, even in France under the Regent Oa- LEIIIII. Yet every Sabbath this man was prayed for, by order of an act of Parliament, as the people's "most religions and gracious King," the liturgy thus making clergy and congregation utter a glaring falsehood. Tho evil example infected all classes, and spread all through the social system. But "the good old times" saw nothing wrong in this; they folly adopted the State aphorism that "the Ring can do no wrong." A slavish doc trine this, and a fitting subject for future illus tration—it is too copious for us now. Arts, science, Government, letters, and, above all, the popular knowledge of popular rights, were kept under in It the good old times." Such a thing as a Free Press could not exist in those days. There was neither freedom df action, speech, nor thought. One unfortunate printer who had published tour ►inea of Fluent rhyme, exprosolog a hope that Queen ELIZABETII would marry, to pro ride an heir and successor to the Crown, was considered to have treated " the Queen's most excellent Majesty' , with too much freedom, was taken up, prosecuted, tried, and con demned to lose his hand. This cruel sentence was actually carried into effect, in the heart of London, (on a scaffold in Charing Cross,) the public executioner chopping off the victim's right hand, which severed member was subse quently presented to the Queen, who had in sisted on seeing that the sentence had boon carried out. We take leave to think that the times in which we live are better than those in which our ancestors existed. We feel thankful, for example, that the practical enormities of re ligious intolerance could not be submitted to now, as they formerly were when the Council Of Constance sent Joint Huss to the stake, as a heretic, on one side, while, oil the other, on the prosecution by Caivix, the distinguished SERMON was burnt alive at Geneva. We now have liberty of speech, a free press, equal laws, and a full share of personal freedom. If wo want to travel, the steam locomotive takes us es far in one hoar as sometimes was pain (idly performed between sunrise and sunset, On bad roads, in the time of the Teem, or oven of the STUARTS. Do we desire to cross the world of waters which divides the New World from the Old, we can do it in ten days —a period often consumed, before FVLTON'A application of steam as a motive power, in the transit between Liverpool and Dublin. If wo want•inteliigenco, the electric fluid itself—that which our FRANKLIN snatched from Heaven—, is our vassal, and brings us news ahnost as rapidly as Thought itself can speed. If wo desire to obtain instruction or enter tainment, for the studious or the leisure hour, machinery cheapens, by multiplying the pro ductions of human intellect, and books—a rarity in former days—are at our hand at a cost which is marvellously low. Or, if we ask for a record of occurrences, which corn meets on the transactions and politics of the whole world, there are newspapers, nearly un known and always shackled in the olden time, which spread knowledge through the land, and are themselves the handmaids of civilization: particularly and disinterestedly we can com mend gf Tuf Pawls" in this respect! In a word, the day-laborer of the present day is happier, wiser, freer, better informed, better clothed, better housed and better fed than oven the proud nobles of England were under HENRY TIIDOR. Who, with such advantages, can be content to bo a more ‘, lanador tereporis actiP' In preference to the traditions of tho• Past, how ever venerable the duet which gathers over them, give us the present time of Progress, and the future of something even more supe rior than what we now enjoy. To the ser vants of a fading monarchy we leave all re grets for the days gone by. We are proud to battle under a banner which covers humanity at large, and is inscribed with the noble mot to—" Excelsior." RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. The Welcome News. .To herald the success of the Sub-Atlantic Telegraph enterprise as even in the remotest sense an item of religious news, we admit might, with some show of propriety, be re garded as a far-fetched Idea; and yet, who at this age of the Christian era can for a moment doubt that any enterprise, over the success of which the great heart of the two continents beat in rapturous unison, will eventually bear a marked influence upon the chiefest in terest of tuition/ and ofrnen—fer adramement of true 'Glider this improsion more than any other, we doubt not that devout minds all over the land have at least mentally expressed their sense of gratitude for the al most unexpected success with which this ef fort has at last been crowned, if indeed a suc cess it is . Of the twenty.threo Jubilant despatches re ceived on Thursday night, and which appeared in this paper of yesterday, tho ono from An. dover, Hass., was exceedingly felicitous on this point. For the despatch as received, and the striking contrast between. it and the one from the doubting Thomases of Rut land, Vormoat, the reader is referred to the record. The acknowledgment of the thousand at the semi•contennial dinner of the alumni at Andover, in a prayer of acknowledgment to Providence for the success of the telegraphic enterprise, and the singing, by tho whole audience, of the hymn of praise, "Praise God, from whom all bleulaga ow,'! was certainly a most pleasing Incident to re. cord in connection with ' that wonderful achievement. This subject wilt doubtless con stitute a very general theme of reference in our various pulpits to-morrow. PUILADELPIIIA MlNrsr aiAL UNION.—The fourth meeting of the Ministerial Union since, and including the one on the date of its final organization, on 'the 17th of May last, was held on Tuesday of this week, at the rooms of the Young Men's Christian Aeseciation, Chest. nut street, above Tenth. Tho Union" now numbers seventy-five members—clergymen of various denominations. At the meeting oa Tuesday the proceedings wore of a most in teresting and harmonious character, the ses sion having been mainly occupied with devo tional exercises. The statements made by members respecting the condition and pros pects of the Divine work in their several fields of Inner were mutually encouraging. One no ticeable feature in their deliberations was, the fact that all speculations concerning the past and the present have ceased, and the univer sal theme now is, not how far the present work of grace shall extend into the future, but how they can be most efficiently employed to have it continue forever. A GREAT UNION BOILDINO.—From the American Presbyterian of this week wo learn that a movement is now on foot to purchase a house en Chestnut street for the Young Men's Christian Association. As a great Union effort—as such an enterprise unquestionably would be—the consummation of this move ' ment would be most desirable. A house, for °sample, centrally located, and containing, in addition to the rooms requisite for the busi ness and c onvenience of the Association, an audience .chamber of sufficient capacity to contain thousands, who should there assemble from day to day for social communion with their Maker, would, doubtless, be an important auxiliary to the .Union mauls which have been already so effectually disseminated by this excellent association. Of all the substantial projects yet inanger4ted by this society, the ' consummation ,of ttbia vitri)res as of Para mount Importance; and with its thousands of Mends, Including a large proportion of our wealthiest citizens, who stand ready to do any service to testify their appreciation of its la bore in 'the cause of religion and humanity, our word fir it, it needs but a unanimous de cision on the part of the association itself in favor of the movement to Insure its success. BEDMRD SPRINOII.—Soon after the opening of the se aeon at this delightful summer resort, a daily morning prayer meeting was com menced in the dining-room of the hotel, which wits largely attended. Some time during last week, we learn, an opposition was manifested on the part of some toward this religious part of the Bedford Springs pro gramme, And accordingly an effort was mado to have the meetings discontinued. This in terference was, however, promptly counter acted by the guests of the hotel, in an ex pression of opinion, stated by a visitor to have been five to ono in favor of their continu ance; and the result of which has been that t'ne meetings ore much more largely attended than before. REMOVAL OP xnr BUTTONWOOD . STIIEST MOH- Num MEETINM—The exceedingly interesting Uniott Prayer-mbetingeNhich have been held regularly in the lecturo,roorn of the Button wood,street Presbyterian .church, (Rev. T. J. Shepherd's,) at 71 o'clock every morning for some tuorzths past, will be.removed to the lec ture-room of the ,Fourth -Baptist Church, (Rev. ,far. JeffTey's,) on Monday next. The reatoll will ”) but temporury, Wog den, dered necessary by the thorough cleansing to be given to the edifice they are about to leave, which will probably occupy about two weeks, after which the meetings will be. resumed at their former place. . • fins. Frazxvi.—Every day seems toinfine new zeal into the devoted Christian men wbo are under God carrying on the great mission now in progress among this noble-hearted class of our citizens—the, volunteer firemen. The at, range ments for manning the different meetings held in the various engine houses, on evenings which the reader will find specified in an ad vertisement in another part of the paper; are most complete, and we are glad to see the disposition manifested on the part of every, one to stick to his post. , , ANOTHER MORNING MARTINGe--Prayer• meetings are now being held at the Tabernacle. Baptist Church (Rev. Dr. BrAM10,01s) Vbcatr , nut street, west of Eighteenth,,lrom to qi, o'clock every morning. These mooting aro of a ,Union character, and. are A nttended With a good degree of interest. • THE Tzar, which is now erected at Girard avenue and Broad street,, is still largely at,L, tended every night and three times ; on • the, Sabbath.. The morning prayer-Meetings ' are also still continued In it. . • • • • • JAYNE'S HALL.-The . noonday Business Men's prayer meetings at Jayne's Hall are being sustained marvelously. Every day seems, now to bo adding to their interest, and the ex tent of their attendance. FEMME or THE REvivxb.—What devout thanksgiving to God should be inspired in every Christian by. the fact _that. He comfit:mei to pour out his Holy Spirit upon this city. 'We can truly say that the revival is on the increase. The numbers who meet to pray are as groat as ever, notwithstanding the exodus of 100,-. 000 from the city. Here we are in the heats of summer; business mon are very busy just now, preparing for the fall trade ; yet, every day, punctual to the hour, come these crowds of business men to moot God in prayer. • No human means or influences could thus take them from their business, in the busiest hour of the ' day, and bring them to a Place' of prayer.—New York Christian Intelligencer. TUE AMERICAN TRACY Seem s. in thirty one years has Issued one hundred and eighty five millions of publications of different kinds. Its receipts and expenditures during the same time have amounted to five millions of . dollars. During the last year it employed seven hun dred colportenrs. eiSrann UP OR Jesus !"—A ballad occa sioned by the death of Rev. Dudley A. Tyng is about to be republished, by Rev. T. R. Stockton, 1400 Chestnut at., Philadelphia, in a handsome duodecimo voldme, of 48 pages, beautifully illustrated. PRAYER MEETINOS IN ENGLAND.—We re joice to hoar that union prayer meetings and other appropriate services have been corn meaced in many parts of England, to promote the interests of religion inthat country.—Chr. Observer. Letter from Newport. Notreipondence of The Press.) NEWPORT, R. 1., Augnet 4,1858 Yon have passed a year of most successful journalism; you have more than fulfilled your promises and the expectations of your friends. The public have responded so unequivocally to your fearless and independent course that, for the first time in the history of Pennsylvania, ehe pos sesses a Stare newspaper, whose influence can be exerted for her benefit and progress with. an3' hopefulness of making an impression upon her people. You have spent much of your .time in Washington, and have no doubt seen:the abeenee of the warm, patriotic State pride in citizens of our State whloh is manifested from other,. Tho mention of Kentucky and Virginia Sonde a thrill to the hearts of any of her absent eons, while there always appeared to be a , madam and lietiommess when our good old State claimed homage from her sons. Yours is a Philadelphia journal,. but you are identifying yourself witk every Interest of the State. This le a wits coarse, and if persisted in Will give you Memo° for go-id never before wielded by any other editor, They say Newport is dull. What a. whirl tfs must have boon in the pest years of extravagance and folly if this Is dull! Wealth seems to have tartan enduing record of its work.' I doubt if the world can show a concentration of seek pale- . dal private residences and exquisite rural re treats; such exquisite arboroul tura and refined gar dening The wealth of our land imams to have concentrated its energies to adorn and beautify this spot, whose climate is, beyond comparison, the only delightful one in our land. Newport numbers thousands of transient visiters, all bout on self-in dulgenee, with a round of life diverelfled by all the amusements invented by a social circle of cultivated tastes—the bathing, the visiting, the dancing, the gaming, the balls, and, above all, the drives. And such drives! No exhibition that I have ever seen in Hyde Park can equal the glittering show of three hundred carriages on the beach or in the fort, where a band of music delights the ear, while magnificently dressed women, in luxurious coaches, circle round to see and be admired ; certainly, no where la Anodes can one see mob a spectacle. Your numerous correspondents from the mountains of Pennsylvania have Nature in all her magnificent !Inlander; but bore are grand old ocean and the perfeotion of arts, A vast number are wealthy men from the South, who remain here to escape the climate of their homes, and it has made me think and feet that if a little enterprise and public spirit Icould be started in Philadelphia, to induce them to sojourn with us in winter, we could make our city the Paris of America. Three hundred and fifty thousand rtrangers are now in Paris; snit by liberal ordinances fur legitimate amusements, and reform in some of our puritanical legislation, which makes that beet of days for 'the poor a day of pain, with some groat enterprise, We would en courage, in a few years, a population which would make our retail trade sales and subordinate branches of industry proeporoos beyond belief. Work at this, and keep thelphjeot before you. Make the people of Pennsylvania love Philadelphia ; make them proud of her, and eceourege them to make her the splendid inland capital of our entire nation. They will have more than an equal share in the profit In the market she will afford. Tux Corowzr.. News from Lancaster. (Correspondence of The Prescl latiOArren, Aug. 4, 1858. Never, within the recollection of the "oldest inhabitant," has Lancaster presented no dull an appearance. Business of all kinds is etagnant, and the prospect of revival exceedingly gloamy. Added to the " pressure of the times," the failure of the " Lancaster Bunk and the Savings Institu tion" has operated injuriously to the business of the city. The farmers have not only become sus vicious of the institutions, Jwit of the residents of the town. and have invested their surplus moneys in the West—or in their own neighborhoods— which formerly found its way hen. Some of them, however, have been " nipped" in loaning their funds, at 30 per cent a year, to Western land-speculators, and are now in a ° perplexing predicament" as to the'proper course to be pursued in the future. The crops have nearly all been secured, and the yield has been more than an average one. It is true that the white wheat has suffered from the weevil, but the damage done to it has been more than made up by the extraordinary fullness of the grain and weight of the red. The oats Drop, al though not all cut, is fully up to any former year. The corn and potatoes look beautifully, and the supply, both in quantity and quality, will be one third greater than last year. The political cauldron has not yet begun to boil. From present indications, the opposition to the Na tional Administration will have a "good time" in the selection of a candidate for Congress—there being no less than ten aspirants. The most pro minent are Hon. Thaddeus Stevens. E. O. Darling ton, Esq , of the Examiner, and A. Herr Smith, Esq., formerly of the State Smote ; with the dances greatly in favor of the first named gentle. man. It is the desire of the Opposition not only to sand one of their ablest men to Congress from the " President's home," but ono who, of all others, 14 most obnoxious to the present occupant of the White House. The Democrats are not so fortunate The diffi. catty is to obtain a gentleman who will wept the nomination on the platform established at Wash ington. Before the change of the Kansas policy of the President there were several prominent Democrats exceedingly anxious for a place on the ticket because there was a fair prospect of an election. "But," to use the expressive language of one of them, an intimate personal friend and ardent admiler of Mr. Buohanan, t'Lecompton has knocked h—Mont of the Demooratio party of Lan caster county for the next ton years." It is more than probable that Gen. Geo. M. Steinman, one of our most consistent Democrats, will be indueed to accept the nomination out of personal regard for the I"resident, but without the remotest hope of an election. Notwithstanding the strong anti•Lecotopton sen timent of the mass of the Democratic party of this county, the drill-sergeants of the Administration —the postmastert—will insist upon LoCoMPlen re solutions being passed by the County Convention. Passing an hour the other day in one of our bookstores, I was astonished at the numerous calls for The Press, and felt some curiosity to know the °ire:station of the different Philadelphia daily papers In Lancaster. From the most reliable sources I have obtained the following : Pudic L e dger, 650; 1 cant paper. The Press, 170; 2 ti it Pet:my/melon; 10; 2 " it Osman Democrat, 60; 1 cent paper. Bulletin. 25; 2 " Daily News, 70; 1 II II • Nara . .A inert tun, 35 ; 2 tt '" WOW? /10N. TWO CENTS. GENERAL NEWS.. The SyraeUse (N. Y.) Courier, related rho following singular cue. of resuscitation 'after: drowning. Two ohlidren;it son and daughter of William Sabin, of that city, , went to Onondaga week on Monday, where the boy ventured upon a log and fell into the water. Ills little sister wit nessed the aooldent--saW him rho and disappear again, whereupon she ran home to inform her qather of the accident. Mr. Bablu got bold of the boy's leg and pulled him out. 'l:fished been in the water from twelve to fifteen minutes, and appeared lifeless when taken oat. Re was told out as dead, there not being the slightest evidence of vitality manifested since being remitted from the water. What is more strange end singular, an hour after wards .the boy was observed to breathe. Hvery effort was employed by his parents for his rue very, and at twelve o'clock the lad was conversing with them • • • "It has recently been dlscovoreiVosaye the Ohio Farmer, , f that we have growing eponiane , ously in great abundanoe all o ver the country, in every State and Territory in the Union, and, we believe, all over Europe, too, a hitherto almost worthless and very troublesome plant, but whioh 'contains an abundance of rennin." ' • We are not in formed whet the plant is, but the discoverer, a; Mr. Johnson, is said to have mmertainedo its propekties `after many years or enteral studY and experhoient., By'the new process he tans calf-skin iv two apd a half • days, which formetlyaequired from MA to twelve months. The .invention has been secured to the discoverer by letters-patent eof the United States, and measures ate taking to moue the same inEurope!', . • From letters to the St.. Louis rfuseigeri des Noun:, we learn that a most terrine atom 'i dled' the vicinity of Highland ; Madison county, Illinois, on Monday afternoon last, between the hours of four and six o'clock., The display of thunder and lightning was awful, and in several oases fatal. 'A teamster, named Blase Bellem, was killed while sitting on hie horse. The light- ning struck bins on the top of his head, pierced through the skull, tore off one' of his ears, i tnd came out at his • shoulder. Another stroke kill d a valuable horse. Two dwelling hottseth suffed also the effects of thunder-bolts. The rain fe ll in re tornts, and Silver and Sugar creeks rag edso fearfully that all the bridges on the St:bit:lls roads were swept away. Li ute Wo learn from the Cincinnati Gazette that on Tuesday afternoon, the engineers employed; on the Terre Haute and Alton Railroad " struck" .for their pay, the company belng,, It: is reported, eve months in arrears., They. took posseasion Of a freight train on its arrival at Titre Haute, and tanning it upon a side- t rack, removed . the • men.. Arias of the engine and spiked the .wheels to the filmic. Every engine that came within their reich was served in the some way. One engineer 4ho refused to join in the strike attempted to run the gauntletowlth his machine but falling toga away; wan taken from the engine by force, and the Wheels spiked down. The running of the road was of course stopped for the time lselng:••- 1 The Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows met' at Trenton (N. J.) on Wednesday, with a large to tendancle from all parts of the State.. The eta s ties collected show a very favorable conditlo4of affairs, and the order is represented 46 in a tea n-. ably prosperoue condition, though not so flourish tug as some three or four yeard ago. The fellw ing o ffi cers were amertalned to be elected : De n ty Grand Warden, Gordon W. White, of M n month ; Grand Secretary, John H. Phillips of / Mercer ; Grand Treasurer, R. M. 'Smith, of Btr cer. Int.rmalities were , diactovered in ftft en subordinate lodges, which delayed the announce ment of the result for the offices of Wand Mae r, Grand Representative, and.Grand'Warden". Tho eclipse of September next • will be in Bt 1 on the earth at Ilh. 34m A. M. (Greenwich tt e) of the 7th, in latitude 7 deg. 4 min. north, nd longitude 84 deg. 48' min west; the 'eentOil eclipse at Oh. 40w. •P. M. in latitude 5 deg.l46 min. south, and longitude iii . deg. H. min. witst The litter will end at 3h. 38m..P. M., In, latitude 62 deg! 9 min. south, longitude 23 deg. 24 in east, and the whole eclipse will cease en the e a(th at 4h. 44m. P. M., in latitude 42 deg. 31 min. south, kegitude 11 dog. 9 min. east. 1 Tho . Eastport fille.)' Sentinel speake 'of! a story afloat, that a boat was kit week seen . near ,West Quoddy, without any one on board. . Upon rowing to it, it was found to have a fishing , Nue attached to it, whiob, being hauled in, allowed oa book. tobe attached to a halibut and the other to the wrist of a man: ~_ The s upposition was that a fish bad heed hauled to the surface when by so e t. l Accident the hook •eitight, in'the wrist of the man, who was eartletollpeard by the:weight of tins Ash. , . . .Totleph Wright WM hung at New (Melt a , , yesterday week, for the murder of Henry Eee e. Aristotle death warrant bad been read by one f the sheriff's deputies, the doomed man wasask whether he bad anything' to my, He, then - id justed himself on his seat, and spoke as retie : t. Gentlemen, I• • am: prepared( to die, and' it s nothing to die when you are once prepared. Gel tlemen. we,all is Ave ,to die. ...LiererSlik(l., t . 9_: hale 'natty oh znypwritinful Mtn: - • Arnett. ' -• 4 - . On.ThursdayMr. George Wilkes, editor a d proprietor of Porter's Spirit of the Times, com menced an notion against James Gordon Bennett. for en article on scurrilous newSpoaper literature, published in the Herald. in which Porter's Spirit was olagaed with the Alligator of StephAn Ii Branch, and the Red Pia! ,of David Wemysa Johann. The damages are laid by Mr. Wilkes at $25,000. • Tho Sherman (Grayson county, Texas)Pa triot of the 13:b ult., has the following: Colongl Titus, of Nicaragua notoriety, crossed Red !river at Preston last week, with one hundred men, well armed and equipped, on his way (an ho stated) to Oregon, as an independent filibustering organiza tion, but It strikes ni somewhat forcibly that be, with his command, will ere long bounder the flag of V idaurri, of Northern Mexico. A meteorological writer of the Boston Traveller states that " the month of. July was the coldest for fourteen years, or since 1844; and during the last thirty-four years there have been but four colder Julys. The first half of the last month was of very nearly the average tempera ture ; the second was about three degrees be low it." Ono of tho Savannah, Ga., papers says it is rumored that the bargee B. A. Rawlings, lying near there, had landed 750 Africans. It woe aIF6 rumored that oho was from the west meter Africa; had no papers, and intended paying the oolleolor of the port the penalty of $5OO and taking out DOW OM. The committee appointed' at a public meet 4 tng of the citizen. of Memphis, Tennessee, to in• quire into the management and condition of dui Citizen's hank, have made an exhibit of its entire liabilities. Its °limitation is set down at $29d,- 837; to meet which its assets are deliolent by $32 000. Tho huckleberry crop of Now Jersey IR much smaller than last yenr. Ocean county, it is estimated, will furnish only $B.OOOO or • $lO.OOO worth, from 'mantles which last year furnished from $30,000 to $lO,OOO worth. The whole crop fromTurlington. Ocean. and Monmouth, it it esti muted, will not exceed $20,000 in value. The fother.in•law of tho Rev., Renry Ger.' rett, the colored clergyman, who wee killed at the late railroad aoeident at Swinelt Creek, his re., calved from the Central Railroad Company the nom of $2,000. The Rochester Union says they pay $5,000 for white men. Rudolph gam that onco upon a timo a co lored cook expected company, of her own kind, and was at a loss to entertain her friOnds, tier mistress said, " Chloe, you must make an apoln• gy." "Good Lord! aussits, how can I make it? I got no eggs, no butter, nor nothing to make it with." Tho Portsmouth (N. II.) Chronicle reports that horse•maokorel or maokeret sharks aro quite numerous near the Shoals, where quite a number have been taken with harpoons, averaging in weight from 800 to 1,000 lbs. Their flesh is said to resemble beefsteak. An attempt to sink an Artesian welt at Co lumbus Ohio, has developed a fact in geology which is new to the devotees of that moieties,. The well boa already reached the depth of 1708 feet more than ono thousand feet of which are through solid limestone. Dr. Graham, who was sent to the Now York State Prison for the murder of Major Loring In the St. Nicholas hotel, and was pardoned by Goverror Clark, has just been elected city Op stolen by the American Council of New Orleans. Samuel Morgan, under sentence of death and confined in jail at Portemputh, Ohio, to be hung on the WI of September next, for murder ing his wife, anticipated the hangman by doing the j,b himself on Saturday last. Tho Pittsburgh Journal says the banking house of Arthur., Rogers, at Company, corner of Fourth and Smithfield streets, In that city, fur prided payment on Tuesday, and tho doors of the establishment aro now closed. As a pic-tio patty from Washington city were returning from an amnion to the Great Falle on tho packet Flying Cloud, on Tuesday eve• wing lent, the eteersman, a young men named (how Ladish, fell overboard and woe drowned . The Boston Traveller understands that Or ders have boon received from Washington to to store to their owners the $l2 000 worth of sugar soiled a few days since, on the ground of the un dervaluation. The Hon. Ellphalet Greeley, a prominent citizen of Portland, Me., died in that olty on Toes day. Ile WO formerly Mayor of the ally, and at the time of his death president of the Casco Bank. Mrs. Mary Hickey, of Savannah, Geo., died of sunstroke, on Sunday. John Zane, late postmaster at Martinsville, Ohio, fell dead on Monday. • NAVAL IttrutimEN o E. — The following is an extract of a letter received by the New York Times, from an officer on board the United States steamer Germantown, dated Whampos, China, May 17 : "We ore now arahored in \Memnon harbor twelve miles from Canton, having arrived hero from Hong Kong Gant boats aro all out, armed, provisioned, and otherirlso prepared for an oatbroak, which to momentarily otpooted in the last named city. The English aro momentarily expect ing an altaok; and in that event, the Germantown and her officers are all ready to protect the lives and property of American citizens doing business there. The American, English, Preneh, and Russian squadrons are all in the Gulf of P'Chelle. I un derstand the Powhatan wilt go there in a week or two. 1 HONG Kona, May 300851 The Powhatan will relieve the steam frigate Jacinto, which aviled for New York via Bata; via and the Cape of Good ilope'on the bith. The flag of Commodore Tattnall was transferred to the Powhatan on the 13th, when the usual sa lutes ware fi red. This fine ship, whiob flee been constantly on the move for the past floe months, will leave as soon as she completes loading, pro. hably to-Morrow. 'Her destination' is supposed to I bk the mama goat of Mao. , ifPnerf' TO -C • • y , SPONIDENTS. Oonispondente for ~ Td. . Passe w ill pl ow pm!. mind the following ralet : Every oommanlestion tutu% wompeatod by the tame f the writer, An ordei Were the of the tyiegrephy, Mat one aide o the ebeet should be written upon, We shell be greatly obliged to gg men In Perouri* verde and other Stet." for oontribui 4 6,14 M the our- Mai news of the dey In their part! lonelltlee, the resources of the: surrounding oottatrjoio filarial* of popeletion 7 or an 7 Infortuetion Met will, toterostitog to the geneial reader„ . , . Weekly Review of the Philo Iphia Markets. • [Reported for The Tress.' „ YRILADELPITIA, August 5, .68. Basiness opens Slowly, and the produce reitkets harebeen only moderately native during thelast week. - Bark is Some and Wanted. Breadsbi \ fs have Cu upward tendency. -Flour has met w h but little inquiry; Corn Meal, .Wheat and Co have advanced; and Grain of all kinds continue, in light supply ; The Coal trade is dull. Iron ' also depressed, and prices favor the buyers. Cote tan 'ls quiet, but without change In quotations. Groceries meet with a good demand, and the want orsupplies of Sugar and Molasses, however, atfectm business. Fish are inactive.' Fruit no change. In Ilemp and Mides there is very little doing. Naval &Ores 'and 0115 are steady In pries, but without much "movement. Provisions are in, moderate suppli. and prioen arottdvanoing. Rice 15 Arm Beeda-:Clover cad Fla: seed are In "P eat a t *roved Pricer, cud TlmothY Is also ar riving and selling. Tess are better. Wool !smel ling rather More freely arid priees well sustained. W hiskey'is seam. 'Di Dry Goode there ham been more animation netleimbli`'hoth'emong the Com miesion and Job homes,' the latter of whom are looking, for an early opening of trade; the prices Of all the !Whig articles of Cottorand Woollen muerte:A=oer° Wittaint material; change; the' former, however, erasion he4,:and of the Ist ter, Ate [jai& are mest.saloable, and . Fancy 01/11t. • Metes are bringing full prim. Bncip,sturre.—The reoelpt and stooks of Flow continue very light, nod prioes, owing to the high rates now entreat for :Wheat, are firm, but ship •pors have left•the market. • Sales for wort cow prhe* only about, 2,000 bbls, at $4.50e4.75 for frosh ground .super from old, and $5 for new Wheat Flour, at *blob latest' it is freely offered; the retailers and bakers arebnying at from 84.25 to $4.50 for old stock ; $4.75x5 for 'fresh ground super.; $4.7585.25 for extras,. and $5.50.0 for fancy brands, according to quality. Rye Flour is soiree. and tether higher ' small Vibe having been made at $3.50 per bbl, - Corn Meal—the market Is nearly bare, and Pebusylvatili Meal Is wanted at $3.75 per bbl, • • Ineneotion•of Flour and Meal for the week end. tug Thurndaj:; August 8111, 1858: Barrels of Ellverilne . 4,991 -Do,. • line. ' 44 Do.. Bye It Do. Cori Meal ' 9T Do. Condemned • " ' Tr6o . ,7410 , „ Wita'AriTTlM market has been poorly supplied this week, and priors hare advanced balOo per bu on the better qualities; sales comprise about 15,000 bus, mottly new; Southern at.115a1250 for red, and 125a243a fur White, the latter for prime lots, including some inferior.pareels at from 90 to 105 e, anti mixed from 110 to 118 c. Ittle hie met with - 'etiady demand, and all offered brought 730 fbr old and 60 to 650 for new. Coax has been , very scarce and--pried; are up again; from 10,000. to /2,600 bus hare been sold at from 95 to 1000 for Yellow, and 950 for White. Okra have been in better demand, and *bout 18,000 bus 'have' been &posed of at 38 to 280 for new Southern, and 420. for old -Pennsylvenia, In store and afloat.. - - tiaooznius.Themarkel: ha; been nearly bare of stook, and ,witif a good demand prices of most ktnds tend upvrerd: The only transaction in Coffee `worthy of remark lithe auction sale,' which took place yesterday, itoluding 31300 bags Rio at lel to 11 /a, at 60 and 90 days, and 4 months, averaging $10.77 the -1,00 lbs. Of Molasses the market la nearly bare ; sales have been Inman lots at from 25 to , 350 for Cube, and 35 to 370 for Porto Rloo, on time. The demand for Sugar has been UNTO, and all offered, some 000 hhds, have been sold and resold at from 71 to ale, including Cuba and Porto Rico on the canal credit, - • Paortstolta.—The market for all kinds has an uggirlend theeteek of Pork is very much oe,at zl ilmlee of Mess have beau made at 313.3,18.25 per bbl. , Prime Pork le mime. Of Beef, the bales are only In small lots for chip stores, at $10a18.50 per bbl. flacon haS been in fair re quest, but the high view's of elders street bust mega. HIM have been sellingln lots at from 1010 al2l, the latter for fanny canvassed ; Bides at from Bhollrlors, 71.17io.'Salted Meats are held for higher priest ; 4:morales:Of Hams ere reported at Safie,cand Shbuidere at-Oldio. Lard continues scarce and in request at 111a12o for bbls and tierce", and 12103 e for -Rego. Bottarmeets with slow sale at 11a12o per lb. Cheese is dull at 7aBo. Eggs aro lower, selling at 116 par dozen for West ern. , r . , . r lltizraLs.Thereline in, the Iron mar. 'kit; and about 800 tons &throats pig metal sold atS2l. for No 1, : $10a20 for No. 2,,and 8181191 or Re. 3, cash. Scotch ri g , the p rices are nearly po- Minisc; Blooms And 'Roller Irop, nothing doing worthy of notice ; Bars and Rails are Milady, bat ..qu.tet,xe quete•the former at Webb, and the lat. 'ter at'EfO tten; twilit-0T Treed Om stalk: js Itery light; the derrand is Hall.; Ameridan is held at ,$5.87a8 the 100 lbs, cash. Copper is MO no have only a sale of Yel l metal- to notles at 220, 8 months. BAUK.—Thete is very little Quereitron offering or selling, and first quality, No. I, is wanted at $32 per ton ; holders now ask more. , Ratting do lug in Tanner's Bark. Bnaswox —Small Sales of good Tallow have been made at Sic per pound, at which rate it Is wanted. OANDIR9 —There is no 'change id price, and pity mule Adamantine are quoted at 19,403 per pound, email sales at the former figure; nothing doing in Sperm or Tallow Candles. Coon—The supplies coming forward aro light, and prices without alteration. hut the demand, oath for shipment and home use, is far behind that of for semiotic Corrox.—The market has. been inactive this week, owing to the differentia in the views of buyers and sellers ; the spinners have come for ward slowly; salon onlicomprise' about 700 baler, otology Uplands, at from 12ia1310 per lb, cash. Stook and receipts continuo light, and holders firm. Maras AND Liras are rather more satire ; among the ADIOS are Soda Ash at Mallo, Alum at 210, and Crude Bilmetone on terms kept quiet FEATEINDS are quiet, but scarce, at 448480 for Western. ' hon.—The market hen been inactive, the de wand being mostly confined to lobs from store, at $l2 for old No. 1 Mackerel, $ll for No, 2,and $7l a 8 for new No. 3's; a few new No. 2's aye been sold at $l2 per bbl. Pickled Marring are dull ; prices ranging from 52 5053 25 per bbl, as to qua lity. Nothing doing in Codfish. FRULT.—A cargo of Sicily Oranges and Lemons has been closed out at from $1 50 to $4 per box, and one of ILibama Pine Apples at from $7 to $9 the 100, according to quality. Green Apple! and Poodles are arriving more freely, and selling at $1.50a53 per bbl for the former, and 75ca$1 per basket for the latter. tio,Gro.—The prices are unchanged, and very Stile demand for any kind. • . • ' llane.—Thorn Is very. little. stook bore to ow rate id, and the market is firmer; , there is to in quiry from manufacturers;' we quote undreued Western at $113a115 per ton. . Bors.—The brewers are buying in a small way at from 6 tO lie per lb Singe.—The market le inactive,the stock be ing mostly out of first hands. The saes of dry Per nambuco Marla noticed last week,was at 150 cents, 6 noontbs. LEATHER continues very intuitive, without any change in the prices of either good stook POlO or slaughter leather, and quotations range at from 25 to 330 per lb. Lunette —This branch of business continual very much depressed. the supply being far In ad vance of the demand. White Pine Boards sell slowly at 514217, yellow sap der.--at sllals, and Lathe at $1.25 per M. • • NAVAL &ORAN are without much ohinge4.soo bble of Rosin have been sold at 51.50 for eommon, and $1.60a2 for No. 2; and $5 . for fine. Ter and Pitch are steady in prise. Spirit. Turpentine is in small stook, with salmi at 460 per gallon, std some oh terms not public, Oth.—Fish Oil Is inactive; we quote crude Whale at 554600, and Sperm at $1.30a1.40 per gallon. Linseed Oil is firm, but quiet, at 71a72c, nod Lard Oil at 850. Pcsoren is wanted, and if here would command 52.62 i per ton. Rica.—The stook is light, and holders rather firmer; sales 100 casks at 31a310 per lb. SALT is without alteration, and most of the re• cent arrivals of Liverpool ground, and tine, have been taken on terms kept private. SEED.—There has been Rome little movement in Oloverseed ; 200 bus sold at $5.50 per bus and 800 bus do at 90 per lb. New Timothy is beginning to arrive, and dealers are buying at $2.25 per bus. Smuts!—There is no change in foreign, and little doing in Brandy or Gin. Now England Rum Sells In lots at 37.1386. Whiskey Is scarce, and there is very little animation du the market sales of Ibis at 25 to 270 for Penna., and Ohio at 251260 for hhile, and 24525 e for , drudge. SUljAo.—Saloe of Sicily are reported, on land ing, on private terms, and for some American $4l 421 !misah• ies of city rendered are making at pez t, t o o ,, ll . , Odo por lb. TSAS.—The market has an upward tendenoy, and both Green and Blacks are bringing 3 to 5 , cents per lb , more. Tortscoo.—There Is very little selling, and prices ' of leaf range at from 5 to 15 rents per lb. Wiese are steady In price, but sales are unim portant. ‘Voin. Is arriving more freely from the West, anti the market is rather more active, but the buyers take hold with caution. Sales Include about 125,000 lbs, mostly Aimee, at 33 to 48 omits ooeu FREIMITs are very dull. Flour Is quoted at 2s. Grain 6d,and heavy goods at 205 per ton to Liver pool. West India freights are unchanged. Col liers are getting 90 to 05 cents to Now York, 81.05 to Rhode Island, and $1.95 to Boston. A man named Michael Illbhutt watt murdered at hie store near Lowndeehoro', Ala., on Baturday morning week, in the mast brutal manner. Ono James Aiken called at llibbett's store,' and ailed for some whiskey. While ho %VCR drawing the d onor from a oak, his back being turned, Aiken eipproaobed and struck him on the head, stunning him by the blow, and preetratitnt him on the floor. The mleoreant then took hls own (Ilibbott'r) bowie knife,"and out the throat of the prostrate men from ear to ear, severing the jugular and all the other Yang. The murdin or was arrested. An encampment of Gypsies hes been eetab- Robed flyer Buffalo. in the n• ighloolood of the PR Indian Mis-ion. 'There ete twenty-five wagens. The Buffalo Pa press thintta the wit gis the eaten that woe !woolly &lion from , he t.ciitht.erhotd of Ott - 1016mill, on moo wyw of tiliovina: p•openFl.. t les. They say they ore f tote ()unmet' owl barite. bbire,.Englaul, a- d th .1 thry aro waiting. for tletiteha.....l—...tee three intutirtd ,or .he tribe—to jet,. them. They %ill ho cr..tered ttfleaves their present quertate..
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers