.. . . . , ant iiiiiiii*l..4oo-IF:F#ttrfiVc r i!.!:o-,,T* ;15*4441101iiik4Ottlifilt:;-,':Zr ---,;'.-- -: .:010044 - bill7r4bSetirato - Elialfetv=- -- • r va: „,4 -- -i•ur-A.:.4,4-k- ',..-,:-,frdok r , .,„,. 4 . . - gl- , .--,r, ,0,- 4 ,,,,,r. '_;r s :ri s V:VilDAUloll64ol - 64%;-i , ":. - , ivii - 44 - ‘l,,fir,i*.ir f il(*ilitili qo thcoata t iii:-:,4. o, 44o4oiitiofittrtvicr*ltlira i ii. rfir t ox n ivoz l io 40 - 1 .zostr,k orpo . 24 d1; ' l l l. - 1 ` °,1 4 71901.kv#0.4!, , ~ - ,t, -, .N. 4 y- r , , w ii rmiskistis,v43:;,ll.tt‘ e liiifiitiiimOselitsiaolkwlt ~ Count,l,A2 B -po t i t rata: ;t , 4.:r..:*607-"lrf -! V:! ; iiinwifiiitsk:viiit-#l4;Wt - WAR ' ' 1 44 4 4 41 * 11014 , 4'4 ~,w,:ti'mf',.-Te?,., 4, 00 , ~ r 2 pie ~ ,I -I, t r. ~ fi;,..z.*:•lW --„,...., lzMi011: .., v e.ig i eb, - ;5 : 1,31Z4.(Qi,",'„:;, ,, A1::! TrA•J'Al"' A or i '- rTiiiin*-.O4Otf , iVITP:OAI#O I 4II.:VX' , , Twenty 0up1e., # 4 ) 1 , - .0440:, 1' : ._W,•,,,,•:. r i l k 14"W"l r Wig "Vreir";;NriCiorui Yet*Qlo,o ..,,". 0.4.14-4.04.„....„...„.„,„:„.....2 Tn4._,.p.„..„r.„m,4-ef .N4.01.4. , ?5, _, -...._.._____„.. , _---•_.....0)46,,,,,,,,, ........„„....iv4lloAitiAt .*,..1; eil.6 , milAtigiiinkthir lite iiiii-joi.;.*• : Ciiilifoilo: I pr i firtli i a ' A - A 4- rA ti . i4 *:ire l l.nfr.-_ : TM. . ,-_-__. 4 ,.•, 4041 - 44 , 444 -, ..,, seke - , - , ~.,,,,-05,-,41,,,..,,,-,,,,Fi etOt, *1 'l 43 lll•Ma**P-Tilketadicr,o , 1-, .-_ ,-,,' t , ~....-: ... ' - '+ GT04141 iii 44 ;11 aii6r Yaseeti, ,, , f i. , -.4'-',' • --- Y,„.:.;-" ,,, ,,....; •-• - , 4**A4-I(tillikillota.f - ,-'' :: , .+ 74 : l'? ''''''-'• 1 3 01 , 0 4 1 1P40444040111 ittoitett l - 111011101t . NritiatimquoltD9',lllplPAßFA:l , ; ,„ •',,, ~',..4140 1- • WV .., , a'l inuoirkms4,4—it NtcroßEaccmau ~ .mwml..mrowL =nit A large muirtuksilt 4 3 . 1 " 111 : 21 * W l O, l O 40, soripAlii4Omtamiky_ fitaill9mlB4: 1 , 4411 2,4 1 1 .- Ili - jrnvo,49,4Aewop'.7 p - 1 / 2 , wad.. _ • *, 'An-omb". jr '4I.74ItDRIL • ~usrc tiyyeemlk{Wiitir- :41; 14.6• 00=3,1=4"Saleb"hZ-141:.w..."'^'4,' TEA: PIT • -GIV WO ACSTIMeS ivartualtvss."': ,YX:P,M I 9 - 614 , 11,00411 SOME( ". 'LADLE% • tee ' Iceilfnag**Assir*.*Alciaio62-044,.. ~'~1~0(it~`,'~~ , Cittristeg.tlitre4,l____ " ''"L"'''" -- JA- 0 4 1 r r , - MATATEaRimomOLMITAciIINT:.fL; ig.44I4aI t I=e IMT IITNEEr. ,,,A: 'awl , sold: - Moines ' " toil 4 IM_Dta l 49MEMotitoniooollootod. - , , ,4toziorooirod -ren oc: •:o!onfoar a irkto4.7teitte,facod , ..A.l: 4- , 3 x , ,, i" ,,-- o-% 6 , 4 --,' '-' ' - - - p it FilMoilci(iieiy_ ' 4171,9!iwapf,,,i-to: :E! ,, 01,1_ ~,:.- , Monis tol i na , 4 44,2-Witelito;44,,loril ;N, JimetDozdap X ---- ' =;-:S Tal —'-'"1141" 3 .214"' .• ' - , " - .-., - .2. , , ,„. 0 !.b,? 0, 3 1 1";W:: tqe lin. A UG F SZ.BEOWNit i ^' BANYBR butes minors Of enxllt;torituanlslOTrivatiore,on'ag pertkotthe-arpe1d:e4417,A , . , -f,.4 jaaLifte, • • CAOMS 4"CO: 3• - • Refer *AU :Daus toopitiottlikusisaipikhi. - • JeTtlr, - owes, mezzarriZ 333 w W er-i-kfileberit.47,34 3 3- 111ANLEt, •BRpW/ 3 4 - 1if,.003 3 4 - . 3333,-;„: .3 . 3333. 4Y 4 • 1 4 ,4„ixogpres - • V , • e ff. 'lr. Wine = , Oft Aftir33lt*taft alit= unit40411.1 . 41!50Cthe,334.30ek tbek . lawliVietoialer tertee.„ - 3 G.33 ••.1 , 4,- , d ise,Vt s . Cotleotallio,l 4 9 *F ed r a iP '44 q4o l4 l- 64 41 irelendr- 3 4:' , "3 ,3 3 - - 3 ,33 -333 "'-• 3 , 3 3. Unenriontelltek= Notes - ,bongh . ..4o.ool4,l,leslers,ip Spade nedlhallkom Louie. lad 3 111 1;41 , 3 P1=y40. ' et , atooltadd and Old pn„Comeeleelon the Dosed of ilieltilein=l . 19 , 1edilhfs'est jel!PleetivE.t;,e, EDWAIVANMUCIr'''' 4 '!IIIOII/10117 - Pilalt, Nola* Palate tte.Vp..; , ?:az ,• ! ;,c.7o ofa e s iddhiffi n , , 1,101 . 010404-4 - . 411-.{ . .i., f.,;.i ;i , resialylviirdivtoint`t , . 4, , M,,,1art1-yr,-.6 - ,:e;: - , p-frei: x aok,vaa of___.,_ _ -- 4 - 41.1kArve:Nitia•,,, -..i. —A v er „klfswAw:wak-47.0ANT8,„,5a ~-moNr.e.shiri-r,_, A -div-iirdifoici;n:: c- -, ,, ... ._:iitZtALASSILTO; ,- aturna6o7.ll9 l l% -1, - . L _' - ' -, ''' Irikyttaii4Olosirsing INA, unmathig MAW. far- lop YlAkightC s aimt-etkPliiiikareol l o4ll 1 1.: Drifts;Tatei,l4:,-lifylitiOs 605444,711:: VIII ilmelti *MI iitiskitiiiiiVlZAt to *; , - _ , WoaCistuxamot oo.f efitialalpila; , ,,; , ~,,,•= -, ^-= B a rt Dal IWO ' WWlleriPhillaktaillief - i' .11,1'".., , ,•!' • I itharPt k-Oci.cP.bnwle/phia, , -, j ~...- ~, lUeltud "Ipli; Philialplits.;' - • " , ~ _ Olualiiirlalli tkV,Vilitbithatilda: L r , ..,':-..- ' ---: '", • : :p"rgraorgaidloprotlinaakkags-:"•' ,- voni2viiatis , . , Ott!: ! f*. T Etv , sriirtitici-eattErr ;i• - takvitra , ! (01LIATIMIOILTIXISANigg;01714 PaOlrtTiida;) , •PARPSTWASOLUITiIk 1/VP * 210:0121 1 / 4 " --,- ,, duarldl4taaajaiPala baaroa Di OniFp VPA eliNOßHUVAniiain,tVo 7 bualsiebillatb , * ' and fo~%WM vi4tAgg i601i ,404",44.9.,-", - VArWeirEfitileer l . et*PhilerdWdyg 44141i:::t JapoloJDooka ~tc. 461 " t X eT T ' 1 1 X , Oiligihf A . Hoe: '024 Arias, 3r.ll4orgelfiAdapiar, i`Y.T.'ll , oBl•Yrfray, ' ' Ebti•irsArsyldscii," ,--1 ' SeadonakSlaakik; frazads Joselserraf. _ -Kniattr - ;aka , John Hera: • - Atksif e sgerdeikkjeatarstfPialalia .TI3,IM2,O93,I,PANITNewI, NUT Steee4V " _ - - .. Larts erds'lliiiliii4tfitAtiitiatiitelefAille soand,*ftecat sidlkiroiltirtrY3l , lll OVIRTANTJUIL. fem AtetkOtiltpotittothi,dwatititidilind. Ofetwart. tetra? unP 6--0300015 4 11 , 174.7003 01 : motion irvenuas trofq - kOU'D oriLo4 DBAVlStbrigezniliMlouti ViliiiB;24lltoi4, from Sliowardstrk - ,r • RIT R A rr r •PIR ^sn i 4 VW, O L AVINGII:OII%:4InVtIitENV: IX: ao TaIiIaff•WATIONAV 4 smarm • TWAT tole le/lart,-.WAIISIM . ,_ 112111111110171WIlriarCOSSIIr Of 2 11 4/altaTaLwaimskrm•A , a-Pv - , . 1 1 1 1 0 01 0 1 41 1 0 1, "Vilk#TATI t ren,Vbr o p Ir .1 MIIIIIINAWICO4 la/4Am, or asasu, la.. terestyalttnairaNalaYat ikirpaat yii - 1: - tif „Vat: drawrir - 1-i. n JA";t1I11:4 :art....A . , ,, ." - ~ .1-, ‘l,-. it As Apse t OM 047-Irollp ftgefiagal la-tala , saorsbla I irolacoakiktitio, arasniag t "woo Alaaatiy c arA Tlanialarerialaas Ull a MA:. - •.:-.1 . ,-Nos, mrantutosiatuvitivotkv , ... 4 i - .t...___SONIAT- UMW*, 2 0 7 / 1 14/ 0 46 1011 , war.„..7„...., , ,!?4,7-3,0p,,..,tink: ti'l' - 7 , ioriti.6l Room . .lutiopirrinto, italriestaOrow-4tte -0 zoiftni• Draft i rl -, ! ~ natioalaalyaidog ,ta . - vi 1 1.../rsaala sai vi ' m ',1;.44/;; • . Issal a Llialstaar-;" v . .405a114-1 I , ~ '‘ - o.lliamli, • ' - grary:Di sderaSsr.,. •.• M"Vii."l,4l4loll4Yillisatitoadedilly;' ....' The wealassatEdistorfaiaasilse' Sonfarmity• wlia 4 the pravislsaw *OW lakaato b KLUrlitlVATill 114)*T , alatflgi ) 4ii=7.o7lV t ypah , lot awl owaritA` Use as will always - warn/ faAlltrei tors atutlahlawe " lb titeplathaaslar ati; bill& fccuals_Xaatklittkaf 'Pr- Ve. , '"" AL = 4 'er I ''' 4131436-4' Mittr-115 rirAt IN NM 011MWIAlli lam% nnoir:=-4 .N°.-48_1041,1DoaK4,8TREET:Mil PI& rim 88 On) , DOOKTISTRNEVArtirK: A P utialkutpfutitemEesittlaw"rtj, Namsava4iff.DOOK - IMszti= 31 0 1VIV .1.1 sin osNr:rtruirit NOM§ infum.-fliol4f - r 4 _ , • "MitdOiciiftiii;!*4::_,,;,;. et.attr - .1 - 4 0 /SIX FANCY A s4 ll 'e;k4k• . , • , • 1#11 111 ..:= 1 .6,FFM. f'?di l3 lr,7',lltrOzei J 4, 4 -' • - • .•_'• .IVI ./TATi vt, - I • I t- Y./1k: giltiOAMP` 1 • OM'S P/Li+liagi3i . C r r : 757 8 :3 4 !Ve.: • .r , • • SUL.• mot, , ow A• 44 -, • - • - • • • ‘. • : TF,r0,;:,793 . 4);',V040 1 1Pciw ~.m4. - : ,4e * - 4 ,f-'' 4,,,Y001/01111110.117.) 41 , 11 , : g. .. 1: ‘.l' t . ' • ."',-, - '1 ' ,l 2 t - ', 3- Ir,P e'rAt.ita ~,, /... ...-: #A4-4z ~..,ar::',4, si- .• k -,,, - 1,7. li ~ ItA t t r lctit , . 4 i'• ul4 ;li , :i4 :',.. 11,r/ :A' 4 : 1 ' ' . f"...7:.T t .1" itzt . l -, Ti1t!:t:::5:,44;r41,40/411 S T ' t OPP. 52.714. 'i 4 itlattf :IVO: 11 , 01(y:t1 ' '‘. '•. ' 11...;:; ; ;;.i • ' tct tt_tt; It-, xt..txtliti,-.1*.0 t - iii.,:o Vv. ',.., t . i:',1,',44.2: -. ,..Zet:' ! Ar• IdlindiottMcf,"4o., % ,. ll ,lePlOar Pi $ 4 4.0 111 0 4 4 , ARTHUR, .BErgibtAlit;-.'"4":6111i110Yi'-`-; wow :n7jjklipt=iittet ili**Titrent'artatit, - 4 t 4,4411,mu0Rti1ik0.:4 ,- ci i. I try., ji at iti m iti . odtiltvki!Attews; iltialdi btsll Twialiti'VW-inf IMCVoP,WPlttadzia4 poph; ‘ hl6 litg T lO d 4041 1 kilff o tigfiNiol e #1 ,. t . fflhf‘ , Y 00- Drt W " Oki ' illiOisiiidiCitiAliitii?ii. , p f untrotte,-.41-1-&- - .44 - 1_1.,-11,- ,,, ict0.-ffs...rtp: Aitiiiio o .lol.ok.Alß-TIGIEV•, - i -, rl,• o'R i'v".iiitigA%-titifiA-AsaVA NI )- ••" 2 • 4 4 -"which;liiiiiiiiiiivoikiliza4 4 #esOteimitithrtheri maiquitilfoffagiosV4TlM**-7-, , ,a .J,IS - iri -407-0 Aiiii.oolo:4* ,114144*14 G-'a4t , ...:(4,14-...v l'.4,gitt,, , ';:;TORRVlig74.laugpanAcTtooxv,vairgroi;tl "` At "IttrOfi t eritiO,,,,Atirgnitr i tr y : ir-o,4ersuiA pif ItAPB* AMlNV,iivr;i4 • zit 4 044301*4 1 %4 10_9r_ V,tio• %01W.t*A' 'AR40.4 141 4W l ‘t fltir:3 7 ****4 - 44* * _ ~~~:f t Yi :.2:~s. , R - - ; f •- •-- i.- - 1" 4 - 1-J., , _1 tv :-,rf' 'lli ''-,--• V(:)1;e , ' , _ ,-,.4,igau.,ITYRD FAIZ.O2OD-S._ , "Oval , S A VO faaeof NZW ' aiLtB;lllol44olV64 by - • THOUNIANY p. 11: e*AllantWand 4PRiNO , GARD.2I4 - Bought for-C salt% be,iiold only for 0A SU W,Al L .SAULAcrylldeiitly . owirtilkst-Atthaboiro &Owls ores° . alieski,tbeek-nificitasorneitti lave ktories oeiltOgn by ,ba s entor us.; ,; - or BLUM BILNElear, tot tgroxcellegton this °outf it. Vof Ameilostlf_r 4 ;, - ' chilleligeWeamfarlOn, w-P-Now,DelAntts of.himatif4 deslgos. , , , Me o,hbsteli; - witliintkiisraht Tory haisisoino Zng. lishi-Yronehi and Ainsrloan Chintzes. • , • • .0 1 1 1 1)8,84,Swin, ItrOts Shawls, BlpixettitiAnisiAts:;aco_. ••-, - • stookDoiniatilo insattsrAstitke:ctogrOrpalita l ?<c .. , heat familY,Linons of:our own impOrtstiOnr • TAW Otothlo.labler -Covers; 'Piano 'Ciweisi Stand Norests4kti.i ; 4.0140111, Qinsif pores/. foe.; for Metes ontilloys , ,,wesr.... " We' hoh ',dotertittried%to keep „thirbest 4tOok,this estnisin . wo ha,s64#ool.:hlid, - ane so lo ii t itain, our ztlowiitltir,9464oo,4llonsta in pkiladelphla ; te , Buy lie at ti'ttritlNG GARD i EIN Immo:" vv ) ;:osturvisavppiciv.' , j‘:pigsFt. t iN"x l - 4. 1:1;? 1,6 CO,. 4`r 1'4.4 !4 40 41! 0 1 , 9 1 .1" tafortPsnt: Or , New -,g o P4f_ r . = 7 " 4,i1 •' AUTUMN - - ,1it4,4444#0 - 444144 , 44i4:44,0g0h4; irouon teal ae4lbn from thfiatciaks of , other,lntpdrteee:: litOitaknatl;l4izietY;fri boa4ty , 4.2303. ,1116 iiiii4vtbiia of? ' • r 4.! , , , a6z ms-A. vir E. s• - 111 IniritiNtss w6ll asltheic nai,kkortiOcaotra..Thii stook bi4:4ded to. by all the stesmirsr!ireising pals PO, - "as 410 , hare ii4firimaitiiii,fp hate bent to theei a' feleoaoa of any . few G oods fi may appear in arle' 'l 4 809, - ',A*l '811 : OHESTITUT 'AT." antylptS_ ~,'" , _ • • ,i-leoitt*, , Vioatinis, and ‘Breadolothe." - Good/ apseially. for Boysishore: . 3 ' , iii!minor Pant litnEalialling •:• - '" Ia tb baseniant,;:nf -hvaiaLgood maka,by the yard or ,plopo,,iit I Innen per 'dint. on the - AgenTapaolcago,prtOe•i .` - peIYEEnTIO thiiratid'heaff;. ' - - 7.ThiShlit linaoinsiTable Lineno, •• , ; DiviporacinirNapkina.'" • - • - ' - Tlakthyandlihninefi.lffi t - • , - • • DianketifioniiPL.Thher pair nnwardis.,•- ' 4proiis haling aff al ke ",„, ' - PELANTILLA.LitOuief..." ', • aiPe.-I;avalla d0,41-25.'t441:1 3 4. to - - Bat a favOisore 1 hfithtillio 'Land 'Diatom, iodl psi trlll oloaa out" I east -radiation: • - - t+4 Goods foe hannnor and Nall Travelling Dienes.' 17ifer#4,04i peOpaCtark/ ne* ,• , • i„;,000P/1114,00iiiitD . hiffiTH and IL V irT )3E )911M-40 !LAW/ FOAL - 4-t4, - 2• 1- il-t md reUir,1"1"1".i164177 f , EtSliddtOlet r's EIMIN latilijn.g,r27o oo6 o , -- 1858 • LiNool4.t; ' WOOD, NICHOL s, gaorp .13TitERIV-, • 11• P 04/ 1 1 . N.A. TuRB a '• ", ' • PRINOU ' ifEr.yrk, AND SEW "BONNETS, .1.114 - 1 , ' SIVED . I3TEAWDOiDIDTO; ' BinsoNg,q, • $ •-;-• • •.` !i; NtlpHEbi '"" • • MILDINBRY GOODS.GENN: , RALLT. Pattern Boan6ti irrddina ' frlm'm "" ed to oiler: . •KourriEfirr - ANb , ,Nrks,TEgici.l3tryßas • Are 6;1444; Oileini t eiaMine• - ~idowitorsrpi•ii.erodg-rd :=EILBORiP-JONES; " 1 ":: aiagerearoagyeen • irioLsalLs 7314Eaw not rAl k tOr SILK, Alt Pr ' TIVAr 130$$EZSI;. - son BU ANA WOOL; HATS. The' attention of,eikr and "bohntgr dealer, Is' Invited to e large as 4 taHed , 4clek or the &bore goods; AC , '" i.-Y'S4e=M_sA'EST Y**/:ftr ; Alla tra 7,i4 8 881. - - •' ^ teat."atteattan at -*Nautili - n:l , 4ml' `i9 astern ;Bards to our-Pia Styles ors ,AILS,: iALVETOiIar-11 • • FANOLIIONNETa, s - z" ' ' .IWILLINEHTIIOOD9,I '; 'ltotratiaityfor,thetisda at the e towast Mirketirioe;• lITERN4 , 7BEEMAtt,f : - 126 0/1613TNUT'8treet. f ,1` . 8004 *it.tt.: • Egls.; , s'igi.lllA4S; AR , ' • wrisitEl3ol - 8.00 a',l,3X.lst D-.S.H. 0 1 ' .8140',1400D8 Sol7 , ..tuati. • • , ,: t 1:1111,:. and prompto3lX:MONTßl) , btrit2R)! ' Ind ad,* interest td wash! teol# ;Mira; -- 2 ,P•IPP,' No. 34 Noah)OPfTß..a6.4t. EIKE teKERas -)3RorHtliS; : ,„ .• < MANUOILOTUREBS • 1 :' • • -. 411) WHOL~BALaE 41`1:B y - B ABl B 4 , 3 N 4C9 irs,'ANbj3El9)Nos 452 , AND „ = 43t 441 idgEßTr. 1, - ^ widde; . • wo rmltth, Sou ipind pAILADE F 474 STOOK ' : 07 Booms AND sitons. - - •tr JOStPF-Iti - THOidPSCiR & - NorBl4 MARKET STE,EST - ,' • , At, tr' riri Now_nr ireoza 2taan 110 efiis ASSOWSIID- - BOOTS AND OP ioiTy 4ABTERN Nt&NIIPACTURE, I Whioti ihej OA; kin , : ssin on uniltediainis t'S aU end forfani n'thelr*eli; - , ji3l-13 . Stift hat A l l 2Ltrg '''Sj etell -t 7v;ate:f I mb raC% soallliglig 4 *Wok he Kul a the hawser ` '' ' 1 '' i- 4, •• -19 B. I. writerX " #a . nh .' y TA Ia . E R St e. - B - 1 •.' <•-• ', • • oe lin/dugs - 1141111 - 15%,„P.4,1014-, • SiataijulLD.lia, eitok • • - Ofti y!dr„abwitti gotirift. = • ,1;r.. - tti • 4 1,. , 0F1 , -3101411111, AND ' MULES - iAdTNY• • .° • • GALLO° Fp, ;71" 9 -1' • • sunErxtr.cm, l ' l I " E fit . - • • - -,-;PA ITN; ita.T.EiNcii, *G , RIPS MESH, s torrxr prtierzna, uprago, LAOEB, NcitIOEIO 7 SHOE - Mill (Sacceisors fo the late ate pow. prepared to meet the wants of the • tOLD 8Tl1N D; Foitheitit corner of , AROII mat FOURTH Streit*. facilities for IMPORTING and PUR NIBIIING ORM fiTtrllB and TRIMMINGS Nee - t iN ! ,AtiOiltleo,l l Fis°.. l !4 on farirahle terms, are 1 , 2; . attextjaea.44.:TEß 14 la respactfaq, sokapec.. • • j :„.„. : , , •,,W M. JOMNra tc SON, I - ~ a-_ 'a'; ":+i4 i ' ... , did Itc:ftrvizrAarytootAriminittic.! rIII 4 ,FY4iT.ETERSON t , ' r- ANDMAN 177e0TtrilEBEI •'• • lIARNMISSIRTithINGS, - ~:,i;;-..1.4,6*.iii;;:'..iiritis;'::ii''"(36:;: 'iliSl,. F s 4 ,...fr ittgl Atatiet,keni_stnitdard ,i , ,orka, on: .i .: ei OPVISO , Pbrillorti.w_htnn Ctrs, and:Tho., '...,1, liti=4,,:iimr.jd,?,atarolgt: *n_fl , ntlnal v,onninw e gtl.2l day.: and lerps-, 1 o:,iiit " , ,,, f ,RtirrAV l i , Ut .1 0P 1 4214= #OO, ~,, ...'l, ',k? 4 „^T u.a iliir4olii tiospio.o , ;(icpgRAICALAWRO*AMATTIVI , VM. 4:4010,114 Potio#4,, POothes,4 ' O2 .4tCti•O'gqo4sP-M . - -- • -- - . - "0" ), 4. ,4 :: 4 :' -. A'.:.,: ' '''" ',':.'...'',' ' • .- •' " „ ,--- '-- - :' '- - -.-- :,- ' - - ' -.- ' ; --' '' '-' .:: ----- - - .. ~'. ' , I) t\ I 1 ' i i, " ,I / ( '-' - '^-• - . . .'' • :.• ....' ~ . 4t" • • ' • ----- -•'• : - -'. —;., -: :, ..,,isi.' , '". N'lll./.. ~ I ‘." " ' -'•-... - 6' ...5--. * . tl. • * ' - - -1 - -, j1:11 •te .: :_ e _ f !)- --- /c ' ••••••• "•.• , v r iz _._ _ . ._ -, -,• . : , , ..„...... . - -1 1.!:'%"' . ( -1",...:" ~'[. •,- -....• •-,-...,, , ..6,1:r!.._. * .. . ~ ..., ~ -•-: ,, •-=- - ,;',.i.:: 4 k. . 11 • ----1 !"..t . . ! „..„±-(F . , ..7 .- ---- - " 4 - 4 ;if i f - „ , .... c T.:. , , • •:.: E:!"..,•;.•-- , - -, , ,,.„,f ~, .. , ... . , \ .7. ' ' s-- ~ • -:.. '--- ' ' , ~.,:_..;•.,,, ....' , -..t . 5 . , , ,,, ;1 ,.. ,.. :., .1ii i ,... : .. • . . ..:...-' .i,:... 1 :-7= - 1 ;,,,„ , ..1.....?.. f .j.r ,. 9.. . -.:-. : . .W.; . -S,-,i . ,-,-;/ - sit ' ' 7 '-'Y, '; -1 . — l-?. ‘ .',. " r i '' ff ! '' •1.: ( "- - • 't 5,11 'i - • . r ,'t - I, , :, -_,,-• :,_,:, ~- . . , -:.: - '1,....,.. -- 7 : : -' . . ;-, -7;...;:....',C.*.g, - :;. ' :.3,',.-.., .;.,.. • .-..-- it, a' ...'-.. .... 7'''; :i '.. ;..:,.; i:;Zi i ii'' . .;:,:;:s - ,, , 0 1.-.. '' - --2--- . -. . , . • ' .--- - . -,:. -, 1 ' . '-‘ l ''' '' , r ,,,- -'• • "•• ,'r - . • • --'"''''''''' '... ' -':' ':' :\ . r. :' ' ',' ' '.'::.' " ' _..,.. -- :z• - ... .' :1 0 .- 'J.i' :. - _1 - ''' ''=-----'' .:,*"''''''' .'•; :: .'.i' ..- :: : ef.. : !:‘:;:'''''„,:.. - 1-L -..... •, . " :.;;:, -- r " t - tz., -‘.",, ,-, .:' ‘. : .%,„ 5.,, , . :- --777----, , - „ : -- - ---- - 7 I. ' : - .., ; , .....- , . t!. , '„.. t. , ,_ • „,/ • Z (.... : I ?.'. .-...._ : , . . . , .. • , . , , •..... - ~ _ , =ME 'alto _ca Let. • , rfto l ;brar-T,o'a retirDl - geialeman, , fiendeome,froof room, withtboard land the comforts - of honte ;Share ;there are rio children, in the most do: eirable - pill of 'Walnut etreeti above 'Broad; ;Apply; with real name and address, to .1, Q., tate of i" =•' - ; • 50204t0 . TO RENT—T,erge Store and Dwelling - .IIECTIoniPi;Ni): - .1 "Mirth FROOND Sheet; between' Callowhill and WI low streets,. west Bide. Cooking ranges ;, hot and‘ cod...oer• (} u throughout. ease. mein 'SO feet - in length, which will be altered Into dining-room and'klti•heti, SP - preferred. ' Basement for merly rented for 2400 per year. Th sls one or the beet bush.ess orations in the eityfor Shoe store, Dry Goods, or 0 othing house. 2 he entlre,preoilies will be rented to a good tenant for 2.800. per year.. App , y at • . SABIIiEL 'NATCraN , S, No: 224 E oath THIRD Street, below Walnut at. -110, AR FOR. SALE—Perfeetly.new, 40 feet ob iLil ys ce l r el i v tli p o l o j e y k a rn g . t ra a rm u ld e t% , Ale " , aoeo4•Tatep.street, /w . ut • , _ „ below Walnut et. - " •-""'POR ,SALE.4"A'hataisonio • dif - Iwirth. all ,the miwlein; improvemenlh Isxge,able Mid, papery; oto . NEM near. SPRING GARDEN Street. erma-easy.. P. K,Lrirt, bN 14uith PIXTEI Atr L eet„iiiepopdetpry) „ 4414-1 m FOR . -SALE - OE : , .EXELIA.EI4,E hanettomo - new mansiun,lo robussi and 40 , aores, xr.asr.Nnynedd Station. North -Pennsylvania Pito splendid, fruit 'abundant, health unsurpassed. Any person really,dealrinimhandeople country seat in ,eatasnge for cut' pi - Opera', vrill:'find iMe an unusual opportunity. of =manila/dna his ohjeot,-... Apply to P 41..LYND, gouttiBlXTE 8t:, (888.6tity) aul4.lm" .11FOR pretty .Cottage, nine . wow, and o eor niore acres on Wyoming avenue, two milli@ out the Elieend greet Turnpike. Also, stivii% ral. handsome Cottage iota The , neighbOrhood is healthy, beautiful. awl mildly improving. P. K. LYND, AN South SIXTH rty (git story.) anl4-I.ta r w TO 13,E account of removal re 'to our new stirs, the house NO: 432 CHESTNUT, belOw Fifth street.. Possession may ho had about the ant of Cotoher.' The position is one of the most deal fable In Philadelphia. . - For terms of lease apply to • ' - au1.3.1m , J. E. CALDWELL ie. CO. FOR SALE—Valuable Real Estate on North Third street, including ITIREN STORES Thirditreet, - Nes. 422, 424 and 428. Altai two &or atory 111110X1MILDINGS on Diliwyn street, Noa. 417, 419, 421. L0t940 feet front, extending in depth 178 feet Dillwyn—nets an 'annual rent clear of taxes of about $2,800. Apply to W. M. LSVICK, sitn-ara . No. 845 North SIXTH Street. %TO' RENT—Ccunting•lfouse No; 1.30, - , .llll , Nortti:-DelaWare - AYenne - with Hoor extending through to Water street.. Aapii tor • - .IOIIN L KNNEDY & 00., and .. • - 132 N. Delaware Avenge. T.O. R E NZ—The'r second "and, third Iltoiles,of No. 10 - All.Oll Street, second door share north 314. APPI IS.O. - SADLER 'lc 00. enS-tf 9 North Water-Benet 11 1 1011. SALE—A valuable LOT, in the viol nity of t h e Baltimore Depot, ban Improving , ifor partionlare, address - J. K., Box 927 Utio#6. . P HitA TA: 1101 INT AIN-. SPRINGS, .112.41'1,ANCABT2R, C 0.,, PA opened the eighth day of June for visitors., This .lidaltliy, Bwinner,reeort has many ; advantages which r ecommend . it 'to' the 'public in search'of a I/6in place to enjoy the Maintain air during the hot season. It le elevatefitwelvehun; deed feet milord water level, :There are graveled walks through demos !meets, end „shaded arbors ; by the way side'are" many syringe Orthe purest soft .water, at a teinperature of 49 to 51 "degrees of eahrenheit:, At the summit is an' obserintory overlooking - en irea ,of 40 miles ova a of farms in , the highest elate of cativo lion, embracing the whole of Lancaster County, and points , in ten other counties. The deanery tadee away in the boundary of mountains at the distance of 10 miles. It is altogether one of the most grand and ex tensive panoramic nicks to be met within any country. leaklnd of epldorrio has ever bren• known here at any season of. The year. Many beautiful drives over,good roads. The hotel will accommodate comfortably 400 persons. Every variety of bathe. Ali the modern im provements now in nee in dna-clan watering places will be found here ,Alivegetables *sad on the farm. :rite, best help employed in every department.' " • .The Proprietor hatters himself that he will be abie•to ills ample satisfaction 'to his •gnests.• Good stable room. •Good stock of livery horses and carriages on ban • ~ ~ F or fuitherinformationand circulars cation JOBBYR B. ELYS. - . 13, Third mid Vine streets; JAM ti; *. MLLE, 1 , 10. 010 Chestnut street. and on the Proprietor, ' • ' - JOSEPH lEONIGkIaCUEIt; • 'Ephrata Pont Otffoe, Liteaster county, Ps. HAY'S HOTEL; , WILLIMtIBPORT • - xxooaurni itiouidr; VA. The I,tuderelanld . hen ap416 ,: ... • i =by the West-Branch-Bank, And ha; enlarged and refitted it in a superior style ; •Willlamsport le "one_of the most delightful inland towns in Pennsylvania,aid house , be hopes, will be found pleasant, asVrell to' the traveller as to - those ettl , lens of the llnetrepolls'who 'desire - to pass an agreeable time daring the heated term of the summer. - ..tics °mulling runs from his Hotel to the • Packet and Atailroad Depots free of oharge•-• _ "jr28.3p2 W. 11.-11 AT, Proprietor. BARD ~COLIIM~' HOUSE; CAPE IS .I.AND.' J .enticrihery thanktal to his friends and the publielor the great and unmerited pa- Atoning bestowed the Votise this zee/son, begs leave to ea) that he will have choice Rooms to let from arid attar this date; during the remshidega the season. The hoee.eirlD ramainepen,uktil 20th reptember. L. HARWOOD. an9-tt Aorta 2d 1858. HE UNITED STATES HOTEL, TATLAN2IO, OfrY, N. J., Will be kept oven-for lle - accommodation of vents until the drat of BoPtembet, or longer, If the;rtreather le favorable. , Price of Board from this date until the close of the emujor,sl2 per rek,or $2 per day. , WhBB & PARKER aul4. Auitu o it,l3ths 1868 BRIGANTINE HOUSE, BRIGANTINE Bomb, Na., HENRY il. SMITH, Proprietor. This !orgasm], elegantly located howls is now open for' the reception of visitors... ' . Terms Over week Or $1.25 per day. Takeout; of Camden Atlantic Railroad ; get out at the inlet, where 'a, 'Comfortable boat (Capt. Beni. Turner) will be in_ ragtime to' convey them to the :&NS lON ROETSE r niAITCH,OHUNK I r— LTJU This elegant establishment, beautifully altamted outhe banks of the Lehigh, is sow ready for, the nee*, tion of summer stetter'. There la no locality in Penn sylvania, Mr; pdrhaps, in_ the Unitod States;which otnn - blues so many attractions as 'the valley of the Lehigh, &Idaho above Hotel will afford a moat comfortable home 'to visitors desirous of-view in g the magnifldent soeneyy, -Inexhaustible mince, or stnpendotte works Of Ott/ this interesting region. ', • • = ` - • - - feaffm* - GEORGE' HOPPES, Proprietor. D 1 , •.0 D • 6YRIIiGa.:- 7 -4.14/ S . and delightful hummer Resort will be opened to; the reception or Philters with. 18th of Aloe,. and kept open tintirthe let of October: • The new and spacious Buildinge erected lest year are now Pulli.oomPleted,•ind the whole establishment has. been 'furnished in imperior style, and the accommoda tions will be of a character not excelled in any part of Ate United Staten. • The 'Hotel will be under the management of Ur. A. O. AI,LEN - whose experience, courteous manners, and attention to -his guests, - give the amplest iounnanoe of comtert and kindiveatment. • Jn addition to the other means of &Mese, it is deemed Proper to state that immanent can reach Bedford by a daylight lido from Gliamberiburg. The Gompany have made extensive arrangements to supply dealen and individuals with Bedford Water" by the berbekearboy, and in bottles, at the following prime, at the Springs,vii : Nor a barrel (mul ak) bery) 84 00 : ' 8 00 80. (mulberry) L .800 g loah) •• - 900 Carboy, 10 gallons 2 16 ' • Bottles, 'pint, per dein 150 The barrels • are candidly prepared, go that par chums may depend upon % repairing the. Water fresh and arkr, ,All mintinicatiMis should be addressed to ILB BEDYORD MINERAL SPRINGS 00. ' • eard.tr: - . Bedford Bounty, Pa.. Oummtr, exturaiong. VedoA/T MAY.—EXPRESS LINS,:—The swift and.favorlte Steamer RALIJON, , !Capt. ;WHILLDIN, leaves Areb- ' street Wharf. for. Cape May every Tuesday, Thursday, and Siituniaylifoming , at o'clock. Returning, leaves the CIS" on the intermediate days at 8 &clock A. M. Fare $2, carriage hireincluded; Servants $1:60 Season Tickets; $B, eniTiage,NrS extra. , .10.41a:* RI K FOR THE SEA SHORE. 'CAMDEN AND ATLANTIC RAIL D, ONLY AND HALF : HOURS TO THE SEA SHORE. _ • On and after Monday, June 7th, and until further no tice, (Sundays excepted,) three trains daily to Atlantic City and return. - /first Passenger Train leaves Vi nerf ,w a 7.80 A. M: Second4l II 66 It 4.00 P. M. Freight Train with PiumengerOar attached, 4.86-A. M. Accommodation Train to Weymouth 6.86 P. M. LEAVES ATLANTIC C ITY. . lirst Prutsengar Train loaves - 0.00 A. M. Second I,' It 4.40 P. M. Freight Train with Passenger oar attached, 11.80 P. M. 'Accommodation Train leaves Weymouth, 6.26 A. M. HADDONFIELD TRAIN • • • Leaves Doopersa Point, „ 11 A. 2d. and 2P. M. Haddonfield, , • ~• - IP. M, and aP. M. Fare to Atlantic, when tickets are p u rch a sed before anteringthe care, 21.80. Parsons wishing tuna down to the 8016 Shore and return the name day, can spend , SIX HOURS ON THE BEACH. . . . . . jraelMte for ; t he round trip, $2.60. Tickets to go down in the afternoon and return next "Morning, or AMA on Saturdays. 2. afterhoon did return on 2"MaY ll°4llln---g-, 50. EX ra A. NOTION: -The Accommodation Train to Weymouth' will ran through to Ationtio on Saturday Afternoon. and 0011., tinne.to run every Saturday until further notice. . Leave" Vine street ' 886 P. M. ,4 - Atlantic City.' ."400A. M. ~ • ' Stopping at all Stations. - 'Monthly tickets will be sold at the following rates: ler the month of June, $lO ,Por the month, of Sept. 515 •tt ti - July, 20 goy three months, 45 -u' " • Augrto, 20 For,four months, 50 Ohurchei, Schools, Lodgei 3 Oompanies and Library gasociathme, wlshiug epeeist loins, should Make early applicatiori.• -•, , - .... ~ . • , -,„ - "f • reight must be at Coo Pointby , P.M. The Company 'Nut not lke responsible for any goods until received audreselpted for by their If might Agent at Cu. Point. - A. PItAZSR, Secretor*: " • jer.tf • _ . BRIDGETON.—Tho Steamet BX.FR.tISB , leaves ARCEI Street Tues day*, T u aye, and Baturdays, at 834 o'clock A. M: I:returning, leaves BRIDGETON Mondays, Wednesdays; lot Fridays; it 8 O'dloekA. Stopping at Nett/Castle. Peleware Olty,`Yort Delaware, and the usual Landings on the Odhansey- ' Through tickets for !Ellaville, Port Elisabeth, Mourioetown, Ditriaing Oreek,,Newport, Otoda_rrißa, and Belden. IY2B•lnt . 'MAN , at, BEERS' •. - - ' -~,_ , .., IMBRICATING GREASE, • Ilia best end abositest oompbund for greixing the lli llad e 1 otOMNIBUBBS, CARRIAGES, CARTS, DRAYBAnd „NAGlnifffilul MIAVY MACHINERY, - .. 3 I_: ,- , ib r Gra i llT l e %%l e r i &Rd barrels„by an 'the f* a ilia MMISEVASVIIMpIi V 2, 14 . 01 ~ 1 ,-1, 7 -, ;SO. vs KaT,lg, rf444P%,Hiti -, --_-.. - PIIIMPELPiIIA, MOSDAY, AUGUST 1858 . V W. ir. • Tnii Bill) or rowan BALL. 0. V. • • And all the point will yield— Of gable iri,e•fbaterer,! ••• • And Cyrus 417. Field. , A Field whose name will live as long " As ocean naves - Althouglolofieht of enterprise . , Be oierren I'llgive you here the meenageel _- • Which should have tuned the wire, When Clytue had the cable laid To meet hie hearVadeeire: 4 Bleased,are our hopea! tho tie is male! , The Atlentle cable hoe been laid— Let Joy on earth prevail! • " ' • The eleetrio cord•benkath the sea , • „ Blade England to the Brave and Brae— . - Columbia, all hail! , ~ C rod•bless the children and their sire! This meroage o'er the electric wire Columbia sends the Crown—.A "park ffrim fraidoin's holy flame, That goes in friendship's sacred name, 'he Atlantis cannot drown; And from its WSTen each sparks shill•l43o, While Zuglend, lltil Columbia cries ' C.W. P:, this is my text,. To it I Must be true. ' It stands for Cyrus W. Field, ifer - Clothea Well 'Plaished, too." Long may the Atlantio'cable lay, And bind the land with land, That by delpateltes'orerit,- ' an's ind Islay ehtenitend That Dessarr, Of the Tower Hell, Would have the world well dressed, And clothing sells, in price and style, The cheapest and the best. DinfitirVii TOWNS • HALL.OLOrSING BAIAAn, ais MARKET Street,',Sonth , side, between Plfth sat Sixth ',treats.' nbliraticme MASTERLSPIRIT OF THE AGE:' THE PUBLIO'AND PRIVATE HISTORY NAPOLEON THE T_HIRDI With Biographical Notices of his most distiognishop . - Blinisters, Oenorals, and /favorites, . SAMUEL M. BMUCKER, A. M., Author of „ Court awl Reign ,Catharine cl Nleholas I, Einperor of Buses," .f Life of 'Alexander Hamilton," &0., - This Interesting and Tali:fable work Is embellished, with splendid steel plates, done, by Mr:Bart/tin In hic best ityls, Including the • 1 EIti.PEA - 914' THE EMPREfii, QUIgIN-11ORTENi3Ri AND THE 0013NTE83 CASTIGLIONE Thiwork contains' yar 400 pages of ulosely printed: matter;and has been prepared with mat care from' anthentio sources, and frrtifileis a late *ntoofint of Itt formation in reference bathe Bmperor of theJ/rench, ELI& 00IIIM, AND PRANCE TINDER THE OECOND EMPIRE, • • Which is entirely new to American readers. This work is tba -only. one, either fu. Erigah or, French; which boldly and acCurately describes - ' t. THE DEAL CHARACTER, : THE PRIVATE 'MORALS, - - • THE PUBLIC POLICY, OF NAPOLEON THE THIRD.; PriCe, 11.25. • G. G. EVANS, GIFT BOOB: STORE, atait•tim.St. No. I$Q Off_ESTNUT Street 1 ATE: ENGLISH PUBLICATIONS.— Imported and for, sale by Z. J. PAIGE k 00 Importers of English Books, /so , No. 83 South SIXTH Street, above Chestnut. - • - TIGER HUNTING. IN INDIA, byyllliam Noe. Bvo. colored platei EGYP P AND itIEITINB Photographed and :De scribed, by F. Pt Jr. Parta 1& 2, folio. ROBERT'S MC TOIIES IN EGYPT AND NUBIA. Lithographed by Hague. Original subscribers copy. Proof ; folio, half 1110r000D. • HALLIWELLWDICTIONARY of Archaic and Pro.. 'Metal Words. 2:4Als Bvo. cloth. GUIDE TO THE ENGLISH LAVES, by Elms Mar tineau Steel plates, 12mo. cloth: ' BROMIC'S LIVE OF. FALSTAFF; Illustrated, by. George Orulkshank. 8 vo. cloth. - • MEN OP OUR TIME. - Short Biographies of Emi nent Living Persons. Greatly enlarged edition. Thick, 12mo. cloth ' GIT1201"2 2XEBIOLES OP nrs'owx 71.11 . 1 E: Vol. 1, Bro. cloth. FORSTER'S taßAYß,.Bldiraphical and OilticaV , 2 Bro. cloth. (JAMES 808 ALL SEASONS, for the Young; illus trated. - &mare . • , -•• • - PlOl/ES AND ITISIIINGj cloth .2ll, J. rergunon' Umo. cloth. - - • RANDLBOOK POR TRAVELLERS TO EGYPT ; wltb 14 Illuotrstions. 12mo. 11oth. - ,TIIE'eQUARILF al p byc P. IL. Goan, oelored plates Small Bro. cloth. THE OHMS OPTHB BETSEY, by Hugh 211 Her. 12mo. cloth. - TUE BUTTERFLY VIVARIUM; or, Insect Rome, by. R. llumphraya. 'Square live. cloth. TUE PRAUTICE OF ENGINEERING FIELD WORK, by W. Davis 'Haskell. Plate!! and Diagrams. Fro. cloth. - 7 • HOOD'S LIFE OF SHELLEY, 2 ♦oll Bro. cloth. THE SEA SIDE AND AQUARIUM, by John Harper lustrated 12eia. cloth. Fo sign Books - imported to, order by every steamer. Monthly Catalogues of 'New and Old English and French 'Molts furnished patio on ipplleation. auto-St JUST 'OUT I NOW READY THE " NATIONAL MECHANIC," THE GREAT WORKINGMEN'S PAPER! ! READ IT! READ! READ IT! 117°. It contains a largo amount of• matter of vital interest to every one that earns a living by honest in, duetry. To he had at the Office, No. 108 X South Third Street, (up stairs) AGENTS and CARRIERS -WANTED IMMEDI ATELY. L II 49.131,E WORK ON COLONIAL LAW,,—OHALIORSi OPlNlONS.—Opinions of eminent Lawyers on various points'ot Engl.sh Jurist.: prudence, chiefly concerning .the Colonies, Hieheries, and Commerce of Great Britain : Collected and Digested from the Originals in the BoArd of Trade and other De positories.- By (Morton Crisman:is, IR., /A. 0., B.A. lvol, Bro, 815 pages. Just Jeo4AlvedApi. for sale by KAT & BROTHER, Law,Dook sellers, Publishers, and Importers, Soith Bluth street. VEW MAGAZINE. , II BRYANT & STRATTON'S ' , AMERICAN MER CHANT" is now ready, and may be bed at all NEWS DEPOTS. • Their Agent. Capt. J. H. Bell, le eanvasaing "this city for yearly subscribers.. Price 5 2 per AT annum., 'Address BRYA & STRATTON, Mercantile College, S. E. corner WPM= and, OHESTNIIT Streets, Phi ladelphia. political. CLIHRK OF ORPHANS' COURT. WILLIAM IL BOYCE, TIIIIITHANTII WARD. Subject to tho ruin of the Democratic Party aol9-4t* I: 4 1 OR CLERK OF THE ORPHANS' oouwr-- HOBERT G. MARCH, OP Till TRIRTBENTIT ,Subject to the will of the People's Contention. jy2o.lm* - F" REGISTER OF WILLS . ELI DILLIN, OP TUB FOVATIIpTiI WARD, Subject to the . ltules of the People's Party. And, if sleeted, I pledge myself to confine the Office to the legal fees establlshelby law. jy2l4ollt WILLIAM[ H. URN, SHERIFF, RIP'NERNIR WARD Subject to the Rules of People's Party. J 12041 (Idl - W.—The' Undersigned hereby informs hii Mends that he will be a candidate for the Office of SHERIFF 'of tho City and County of Philadelphia, at the ensuing eleotion, if nominated by " The People." - - JOS. H. COWELL. PICILADILPHIA, June 5, 1858. Iyl9.tf "RR CONGRESS:—THIRD.DISTRICT. n1t.4091011. BITES, • OP IMO OIXTIIENTB WAND. PilltdoOt to Domocratla rules, i124.1m* CLERK OF THE ORPHANS' COURT, THOS. E. BAREINEI, .811TIINTIZNTH PAID. Subject to Demooritio ' jy2l-ta FOR REGISTER - OF WILLS, JOHN SWIFT. Subject to the will of the People's Convention jyls-tf R EGISTER OF . WILLS- - • ANDBDW J. WESTEiI tickled to Democratic Rules. CLERK OF ORPHANS' COURT— JOBEI'II A. MONIIEIIIII3II., ' Eleventh Ward Subject to the rules of the Democratic' party. jel7-dto* FOR REGISTER OF WILLS— JOHN OAI3BIN • Path Ward. Subject to Democratic Eales.• jel6•tt FOR, : HEGISTEH HHARLES D. KNIGHT, TWENTIETH WARD Subject to the Veople l / 4 Nomination. " FOB. SEGISTEI4 Or WILLS. JOHN OADIPONLI, OP lINVENTIt WARD. &Meet to Hommel* tutu. , myll•4m Nahum QUIsTIIIIRY AND ERIE RAILROAD CO. N..7—NOTIOE TO OONTIUOTORS.—SeaIed proposals will be received at the Office of the Banbury and Brie Railroad 'Conipany, at WARRANDsVILLN, Clinton County, until 6 o'clock P. M. of WEDNESDAY, the 20th; day of AUGUST instant, for the Graduation, Ma sonry, and Bridging of the_untlnished portion of salsi , road between Parrandevillo and the month of the Sinop mahoning Creek; embracing a distance of thirty-two relies, on which distance there remain to be yet graded about twenty miles of road, and several bridges to be built across the different aroma to be passed over The -work will be divided into sebtione of about one mile in 'length, and proposals are invited ,fcreseh section separately... Maps, plar tl i a O, profiles *lll be ready at the Vorgpanrs Clm,from And after Sho,224ldiy, of Au. Anst, WM MOOltiVlAd i Psteident. 491411T,0414140 1 qtiotPlittaa4k. 0,41.44. '1 r t I 1 t MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 1868. IMMIATIONS. A:Paragiaph, now going the rounds of the newspapers, (We fo'und it in the Irish Mimi /any,) has made ns think upon a subject so very obvious that, therisfore, it is rarely placed upon, that operation: The paragraph runs thus: • . ALL awry Winne. —Sheridan had half a dozen bottles and as many candles before him when the farailiar, spirit of poetic rapture Was upon him, thus philosophically proving that light and heat are the congenial elements of life, Burns corn: posed some of his best songs after taking a wee ,drap," or a "stirrup imp." Thomson - being asked how he could paint spring so beautifully in the midst of winter, replied that he had " an . ever green at Lord Talbot's table.", Savage, over a bottle of 'wino; forgot his misfortunes, and added to them ; and Goldsmith never ocimpesed fetid • tonal, till after he had left the tavern. Byron wrote his "English Bards" between two bottles, the one of; wine, the other, of gin, Dryden ppoduoed his " Virgil" over Lord - Dorset's wine; dad' Shaks• pease wrote hie-" Merry 'Wives • when • drink ing Queen Beis's present of hook. .Barry Cornwall coliosived his best designs over his bottle of claret; and it wits over his port that Looko first thought of ketritiattini the logio of Aristotle, and was the liaise perhaps of his making some egregious blim. dots.- Pope -kept a bottle of champagne in his &nay, " to help.the Muse's speed ;" and Oibber kept one, in his writing desk whiotonust have :ben ComtantlY ' flat. The wits-of former days gebtially mOisained their day', particularly during 'that gastronomical solemnity, a dinner: 'Burke 's habits .at table • were temperate, preferring the ,lighter wines; "claret for boys, port for men, and brandy, for heroes." was.,Tohnson's gradation of lichuor. "Brit," said Burke; „" give me olaret, for ke to bo a - boy arid partake of the'honest hi la,rity of youth." " - • 'Xhe list might beminch extended.' HOMER, yrdm - the infinite /miff; with which he ddacribes - eating and drinking, was ,evidently a good. fiver. Of all the authors WhO followed him, .in this respect, Sem should take place, only • :S„fl'aecond, on account of the evident enjoy i 'ment with which he 'has introduced his lead= due - characters in -the act of taking refreith t . .ment.- In almost every one of the Waver* lioVelsi there II; if not a feast, a hearty meal. What a 'splendid banquet Is described in ;"Kenilworth,"—how heartily in " A Legend •Montrooe," the worldly-minded Dalgetty 'fakes in his provend, not only for tho present .ciay, but for the morrow,—how joyous is the *per of Friar Tack and tqF Sluggish Knight, 4e !" Ivanhoe.'? =We might run on with a 'score of•eiamples, but the 'feet' Is undoubted Amt Soon; 'a Dien With large appetite and . teat capacity,, as well as occasional 'desire' firidrinits, delighted in describing feasts and e,win -bibbing. „ „ trAirkzarp t iq is stdd, tohave,died, of a fever ~ t.freuglat'',onby- . .excitss ,in ~drifiking. That '4lntement was given to the world a few years ,ago, from the Diary of the clergyman, who • ,became Vicar of Stratford-upon-Avon, not ',Many years' after. •SUMESPEARE'S death, and ,while some of hislineal descendant's were ac tually still living. The Vicar put the drown.' glance down in his - note‘-book, just as be had Aoard'it=a popular belief in Stritford;and not aoremoto in point of time ae to - be treated as only a tradition. Of all the ills which the atmse of Wine has inflicted upon the world, 'thrapoetic mind will think this acceleration of - , ftenie SILULD.PEARE'Edeatia about the Most la- Mtantable. ','.BEN Amon' (with the whole retinue of wits and poets, and Cavaliers, who flourished in the time of SIIAOPEAKE, and somethnois associa- Atogetlter) . wee a bon:vmant, and sabred ItiWnsnalitul . alty—fluctuatirtl •A, t t •untwestrel ravagance an. wants For the same moral runs through the life of each of these boon•companions. Selfish in dnigenceleads,- almost inevitably, to the sane restilt—wreck•of health and ruin of fortune. ' Coming later down, we reach " tuneful DEN rule," as Ito was called, the father of local poetry, of which his - ," Cooper's Hill" is. a good specimen. ROCHESTER, whose talents wore wasted on the meanest trifles, and yet whose manner of dying (described with such exquisite simplicity and pathos, by Bishop Stream) probably atoned for the injury which his example had done to Christianity. OrwAY, who wasted his early manhood in riotous company, and died in utter, indigence ; ADDISON, STEELE, and PRIOR, with many more of lesser fame and talent, come • into this list, and the question perpetually arises—well as these men wrote, how hmach more might they not have accom plished it they had avoided the temptation of excess? ADDISON, in particular, yielded so much to it thiat he descended to solitary drink ing, and was accustomed to 'walk up and down the long gallery of Holland House with a bot tle of wine placed upon a buffet at each end, out 'of which ho would help himself until his walk was concluded, simultaneously with the emptying of the decanters. But for these indulgences, ADDUCE! probably might have lived • a venerable . and useful, if-not even 'brilliant, old age, instead of prematurely shuf fling off this mortal coil at the comparatively early age of forty-seven. During the early parts of the present cen tury—close, indeed, to the present time -it was the habit of men of mind, but more par ticularly of authors, to indulge very freely in drinking.' There have been a few strikingly . awfld examples of the ill effects of this way of living. Thomas DERMODY in Ireland, TIIEO - HOOK in England, and EDGAR A. Pox in America,: - are admonitory instances. DER xol)r, who died over half a century ago, was a man of as rich genius as Ireland, affluent in producing such a class, ever gave birth to. Ifoox, with talent for almost anything, indeed for every thing, frittered away his life at the dining-tables of the great and the rich, in the society of the idlers who haunted him at club-houses, in hastily writing clever novels, and producing, in a race against time, the stated quantity, in prose or verse, required to appear in tile "John Bull," a weekly journal, in which he was personal and political at will. .I ) 6u, who has lived among ourselves, also wasted his life away in excess—like CLEO. PA.TEI2II pearl, his soul was dissolved in the cup. Ho perished in his prime, leaving just enough done to show what, under proper dis cipline, ho could have performdd. We have infinite respect for the wit and wisdom, the' gaiety and the gravity, the sound sense, and the sparkling genius of those remarkable contributions to con temporary literature, called "The Noctea Ambroslante" of Blackwood's Magazine. But wo cannot help thinting that, from the enjoyable manner in which luxurious suppers and heavy drinking are therein con stantly mentioned, a great deal of evil has arisen.. When such men as Wtr.son and Me ninx, Ilona and LOCKHART were introduced as growing wiser and wittier under the influence of each successive bowl of whis key-punch, and when the nectareous qualities of that insinuating beverage were described, with the eloquence of poetry and the poetry of eloquence, more mischief was done thereby than could be eradicated by the compulsory peru sal of a wagon-load of Temperance Tracts. Month after month, during many years, those fascinating descriptions were presented to the , public, and the result could not have been good. Our living men , of literary note are nearly all temperate In their diet. THAOKEiAY en joys himself at table (and is therefore praised a s (c genial,") and DICKENS also flourishes in good company. But, with the immense head work these writers have to do, they cannot be otherwise than generally of temperate habits. It is impossible to write much and drink much at one and the same time. There fore, with daily labor of head and hand before them, newspaper men cannot afford to pass the Rubicon of the cup. Apropos of newspaper-mon. A short time ago, we had the pleasure of a conversation with one of the most eminent of our . craft— MORTON Mollfrouenn, Esq., editor of the North American, in this city—and were rather startled by a hit of inforaLation which' he OOmmintCated._, Taking . from - a . booli-ahelf 'a copy of MILTO2I 2 O poems, lo drew our atton, tiou to OM fast that i aitapeOted•of beluf a great ascetic, the grist poet evidently was not ignorant of one species of-drinking: in-a word, that,:in Mix.rox's 'poehy was to be 'found &very good receipt, for the composition of a fancy drink, - - commonly knosin (we -are , formed) by the title - of ( 4 mint julep." More over, on our -expressing surprise at this, he turned tb the Mask of " Clomu,s," and,shawed ac us how - the hero, son of Bchus, is first de scribed as Offering to every weary traveller We orient liquor in a crystal gloss, - To quench the drouth of Phcebne,- and then offers it to the Lady, thus addressing her : • And dret, behold this cordial Julep here,-. That domes and dames in his crystal: kooks,' With spirlteof balm and. fragrant Syrops mixed: NOt that Nepenthee, which the wife of .Thane In Egypt gave to Jove-born Helena, Is of each power to stir hp Joy as this, To life so friendly, or so cool to thirst, "Hero," eloquently and philosophically ar gued our friend, "here is the whole thing. First, the name—decidedly a Julep, and nothing else—the balm or mint, which gives the flavor: the spiral; the fragrant syr4, l so palpably denoting the saccharine element; mixed Up in, and imbibed from; ca crystal •glass;' and, to crown all, the unmistakable addition of ice, 'Which makes the mixture not only to life so friendly,' but cso cool to thirst' that it would actually ijuench drouth of Phoebus.' tioWever, ,(contldued our triend,) iiimrolejs tastes may have deterio-, rated in old-age, when he bad fallen upon evil days; his early propensities were evidently genial, if not hilarious. At the age of twe& ty-three, when be wrote the exqiiihile poeni of c L'Allegro,' be exclaims, Haste thee, nymphs, and twing with thee • Jeid, and youthful jollity, and it is scarcely too, much to ascribe to his great inventive genius, oven at that age, the discovery of the .Julep, of which, .only two years later, he has given the accnrate receipt; in'Oomus.' Undoubtedly,llfir,row, - of , thxy• agination all' compact,' was 'equal to the 'Galen of the & cordial Julep' which he de.' scribes. We entirely agreed with our friend, and re minded him bow, oven in so solemn a poem as cc Paradise Lost," Mnaort had been unable to refrain from an allusion to retied liquors, (or he mentioned in the most express terms, being .c Jbound for the port of Negtis." But we need not further illustrate this- subject, for -we are not without hope that Mr. MoMicitteXt may have an early opportunity (after:the efeetions) of throWing his mind into' the subject, and of producing a lectlire,' in hie Own felicitous Man ner, "On the Antiquity of the Mint Julep, and Muvoles claims to be considered , the .In. ventor of that mellifluous, imbibation." Air this is a curious incident in literary-history; we shall make a point of giving a full report of that lecture-Lif it ever be delivered: Lpttersglrom a *Traveller.,-N0.,11. gorreepc!ndence or The Praia.] CAPE ISLAND, N. J., Aug. 17, 1858 MY Dsaii Panes: From the mountain to the .aoademiclfrove ; from the endemic) grove to the shoreirof the :" muoh-resounding sea," (distrust of the faint remtniscenaes•of our own scholastic days forbids the attempt to write the characters of the• original Greek tongue,) se blind Homer wrote and sang years ago ; thus have we wandered: few short • days, and we return again to the busy haunts of men, and plunge onoo more into the ac tive strife of an earnest working life, till the warm suns of another summer shall vctim. us to seek re fugo and retreat from their kurning heat. Oar feel ings carried us away, if we remember rightly, from the dry feats which we proposed to statei in .st - Tes.mr44 , ..errim-srtiterrrostrwrtitirVY - blir Imagination as it wandered - back' into the past ; and yet we strayed not from the truth, for nation is not fanoy, and' the counterpart of the scenes we attempted to draw was often to be met with in the stern realitlei of the actual ocourrenees of the Revolution. Colonel Ihiphalot Dyer and Jedediah Elderkin, the worthies whose names are so freely used by the author of the bull-frog song, from' whose lines tho extracts in my last letter were taken, were notable names in Windham and Conneotiout. • In 1769,, as oommissioners on behalf of the Snipe; henna company, they visited Pailadelphisi te ad -vocate tho rights, and protest the interests of the New England settlers of the Wyoming -Valley. So eloquent an advocate of the claims of these set: Cora to the proteotion and countenance of the State of ConneCticut, was..Colonel-Dyei, When ho appeared in their behalf before tho Legislators of that State, and in math glowing terms did he dePiot the beauties of that land of their pilgrimage, that an enthusiastio poet (?) of the day thus embodies hid tribute of praise in verso : g. Oilman of old, as we are told, - When It did rain down manna, VIOLA half as good for heavenly food As Dyer maim Busgnehanna.,, And verily, in contrast with the rugged soil and barren hills of New England, the stern eons of Conneeticut might well experience, as they gazed from the mountain-top upon the fertile meadows whirls stretched in broad expanse before their eyes—the silvery Susquehanna winding through the vale—feelings similar to those which filled the breasts of the ancient Israelites when, after forty years in the wilderness, their mighty array passed over Jordan; and entered into possession of the fair land of Canaan. From the upper part of Norwich town, known as Bean Hill, came John Durkee, whose courage and braviiry gained him the sobriquet of "The bold Bean Hiller," and who was one of the , few who escaped from the Wyoming massacre. Here, too, was the birth-place of Benedict Arnold, brave as a lion in the battle-field, undaunted and perse vorlog in the long and toilsome march through the wilderness, but vain, ambitions, rash, and un principled, the traitor to his country, whose memory is deservedly hateful to every American, and whose baseness drew upon him the scorn and contempt of those even whose cause he 'had' at tempted to serve. The house,where he was born was standing till last year, when it was torn, down. Should not the foundations be ploughed up, the ground sown with salt, and the spot left desolate, sterile, and uninhabited—the patriot's ourse—the traitor's warning? - The mansion of General Huntington—where Washington dined with a brilliant staff, and a circle of the most distinguished Revolutionary officers—is atilt standing in an excellent state of preservation, and though wanting in many of the adornments and conveniences of more modern re sidenees, yet surrounded by noble trees and beau tifully laid out and cultivated grounds, presents I to the eye of the passer-by an appearance of solid and substantial comfort, while the interest Which attaches to its history givesit an additional charm. Close by, on the opposite aide of the road, is the family residence of another of the Huntington, who rendered distinguished services in the Revo lutionary conflict., Its appearance is less striking' than that of the one first mentioned. I' stands upon a corner close to the road side, and, while a large hOnse for the days when it was built; has not oven a portico or porch in front to relieve its hard, square outline, and straight front. But beneath its roof' Washington and his attendant officers slept as they journeyed southward to New Lon don, on their way to New York, after the army had left Boston. It was at this time that Gov. Trumbull came froth ,Lebanon at the earnest ro gue-id of Washington, and grave counsel and anxious deliberation occupied the time of great men within the walls of this ancient dwelling. At Lebanon, the Count de Lanni was stationed for some time with his French legion. A gal lant officer and a brave man, withal he was some what noted for the vices ho had acquired, in the gayest of European capitals. The noble Count was accompanied by a band of officers, whose national gaiety led them to participate in scenes of social enjoyment with zest and enthusiasm. I remember years ago to have heard from the lips of an aged relative, who in her youth had been ono of the gayest of the gay, an anecdote of ono of the French officiers stationed at Lebanon, which per haps may not he without interest. Windham was then, as it had been from the first establishment of thei county, the county town. ,A grand ball was to be given at the principal inn in honor of the officers of the French legion, whose presence in the neighborhood had excited many a flutter in the hearts of the fair belles of Windham and the sur rounding country, and it is greatly to be feared many,a pang of jealousy in the hearts of their admirers, whose ball oostumee, however elaborately got up, could not compare with the brilliant uni forms of the military guests. One of these latter, distinguished for his very long and carefully cultivated moustache, was, it seems, in the habit of appearing at the regimental. mess with the ends of his moustache neatly tied up with blue ribbon, that their length might not interfere . with, ibeir wearer's comfortable enjoyment, of hie soup. At then:ma-tables, the day before the gt4rid., ball was to come or, one of hie brother offiopill bet w4b our hero of the bltebbotio . d . niottetitehe, tbatitilitvitg Mt 4, 1 9 "KO* the VAti wittl TWO',PEPTS. 44 moustache adorned ae s ha ?snail) , at Min. The bet was accepted, anOroz!'bY the owner of theiniinhiabhk "1&43:41th uadietnrliad gaiety appeared at tho 13112111 e ribliods (an: donbtedly carefully seieetbil tar ibis ipeatal coca: Dion) gracefully enveloping Illtfatidll bf.,:the hairy, adornments of his upper : r.Great was' the wonder, and many were the' stippretital;Aters of the Windham belles,- as, my informant : related, to me; for sheberself had been an. eye -witness, and a participant in the gay seen.: if I not, actually danced withfeel:iambs cif "ihi' blue ribbon. „ IThe carved image of.: the rosy - god Beeches astride of a cask of generous wine, nr mord-likely New' England • rum, atilt adorns the crotch of the aged elm whose gieen ' brtitiohes for , a hundred years have overshadowed the hoitelry of.analent times; but alga! Windham is,nolongerShe perm ; ty' town. „The florae rush of !the railroad train, as the screaming whistle ecinnds aml, clearfmin the valleitt the replaced faitildned - stage-Coach' wbioli used daily to ithlrl np with a dish and 'Spirit' biare'tlie Viroli . of the old tavern, the four gallant buys steaming froin the 'sharp Patient whieditheybetl•hentidtiien•for the teat half mile. , But: bile or; two listlessidlem lastly sun themselves" upon . .thebeneh lnfrent- of the tavern, instead' of the:sooner moiebtottliult denizens who used to await the arrival of the stage with the mails. And Windham grean,lies stilt and silent through ..the, long hat enratear days; save when 'a loaded: wain, groans along the sandy rOndiviiis: - Whieh cress its bright verdant' sward, or a 'single' 'Wagon `or ancient chaise drives leisurely ifs' ban; ny, breadth; or when on4,l3`undaY," the wor-'• shippers gather— , :sonte on:took:some Invehtelei of various kinds—to the :village church, in modern brightness of white paint and greeodinda , overahadowed by , . wavingtiranehes Of.elpmendwil loW, has within the last few year; replatilml,the.eld bream, meeting-honse, s eitherheiten by the atorini of a hundred Wintere,iihoseehaip Yet sedly;timed hall rang out the summons Proolairn ed lute deCease of ai' tine netintitomed ekingrega. tion, from the bare and sterilii , :tiunimit ;of ''Zien's hill.' Bow many,' many pleasanti - heurvorehild-Y ho e d and of youth has!! A Travelleri , .sperit in .Windham, when returning to thebome; of -pis, theirs, the merry _weeks of . his Inyainer!s, holiday have glided away in the lightsome pleasures ottbe hay-field and the harveit—ln dais ofjoyoneepo4 in the great old Mira; Tied toibiretingnithiliti new ly gathered bay, dila ripe, 'yellow kraii-iin solitat rides on horseback over the hills, along this aurae of some rippling brook, or by the 'ilde braid dirk, clear waters , of the wide-flowing Shetrzeket—in wandering with rod and line along its alder-fringes} banks, returning at evening ,from the, akternoon's ramble, laden with the sweet, fresh spoil of its deep pools and broad pebbly., reaches.z And lbe: .memory of these days, long gone by, is still cher ished and loved, though singe then, I florae .wan"' dozed over many, a land whose,woridersand beau tiee were then .but ,inegined,,,_ and ,loe,ked , forivard to , as far.distant:,fliture AO, 1,4 but a few days slaint, • Beneath overshadowing branches of the WitiCol'angar-iciii ples, whlith'istretohes eivey'lip . :. the . roe'd fropt of that 'loved old house where eo many happy, joyous days, Mad leaked iforth ;upon the quiet landscape, es,the cool, fraak breeie fuelled among the tree-tops; and the.deolining sun wall sinking below the summit of Oturebetne (once to My eyes a very bigh mountain, now,sadly; minis:had in height)`, I „ c ould not but think how- - peaceful, hoWtriinqull and jeretie a iPoilt,waithi., be t o Min the deollninlyears - Oflite, Tat froili the burble anddin - andburry of the • Eevr•whe look at the date of my letter,' , " °ape' Island,'! will have their expectations rnekifjhey read beyond -Abe date. :: ; The commonplace laud. trite postasiesrreaker forged-upon the, beaitiek and glories of old oases, the inelpicl,gerstp Of,a. fastlionable watering Pitiai;T leave ,for- others, 'l' inhale the It blowiladan giving froshneei :over the ' nf. the pl4ge into the briny surf nfoi tliclioien in sunshine and in storm, or sibiered with the rude light of the moon; andbid fariswellle the readers' of The Press. A few short days and 'shall-beat, • • •, A.,Taaystaata,• • Gossip trona ,Now. Aieric. COofrespondence of The Press.] Naw Tbutc,;Aug : ,2o, The Appleton are /repaying several Su; Gift" Rooks, for the holidaysseier'al of them exquisite' specimens of book-eraft: 'First itnimithem to royal octavo, entitled "The Stratford Gallery, or Th 6 fibakspoare Sisterhood," comprising forty-five' Mali] portraits. The plan of .theyorher, , ,the pro- , duotion of Mrs. J. W. Palmer-is Raoriginal.au4t is attraotive. In no repeat is,it a inarn rep,rodu6 7 ; tion of tho e ShakspeareGallerle.so to the Trade; but, with striking no - v,eltir i(nd ttisfe . , combines the 'story-telling' , Lamb with the graceful criticism of Sita. - imileirc,i' ; The editor judiciously keeps her titre' inVieW,ibil, from page to page, as from picture to plotufej she o onduo t a the reader-visitor through her gallery, da., Ugh:trolly describing with storyand.quotatian. It is a counterpart ; and fitting• companion , : the "World-Noted Women" of ,Mrs. Clamdeu, o, and . " The Republican Court, .of Rufrs,Wihnot , Griswold. Another fine book, bite pliblielted on MACAO' the :21st instant, is "The lianaslield * Bank. of Poetry," edited by C. A. Dana—an octavo oreight hundred pages •' It contains 'near*. all `the finest and most, beautiful taller . peeps the Carefully seleoted fromßtiglish, - SiohiPrish;and: *American literature; arranged conveniently for reading and referehoe. It is diiideeinte:ten parts, viz : poems of Naitire; ChildhoOd, Friend': ship, Love, Ambition, Comedy, - Tragedi, the Imagination; Sentiment, and Religion: The'Ap pletons also issue to-day a finely-illustrated honk,' by lire: - Balmanno, entitled • Pew tind_Ptinall;" It contains one handrod and twenty ingriiinge, portraits, views, .to. They have likiMite'in`Fre• paration, and nearly ready-, "Newlark and Delhi," by Robert B. blinturn, 'Jr., - and tional Cosmology,'! ,an entirely new work; by Professoillialcox. • .-• Derby' nod Jackson are receiviiiit from the binders the fleet copies of a work which, in, point of size, typographical elegance, and pictorial em bellishment, can scarcely be excelled. DAB enti tled "Women of . Beauty end' ritiielern; - Jrien` Semiramis to Eugenie.-- A Portrait — Galleitcif Female Loveliness; kohleveinent;'ami`liflualacC." - By Prink B. 'Goodriehl . ' 'refs printed from . type Oast purposely for it, uponextrallsed dored paper, and is superbly bona 14Someryillii; It contains portraits of Semiramie; - Petielotie; Cornelia, Zenobia, Beatrice, Joan of Are, Isabella, Diana do Poitiers, Anne Boleyn,- Mary ()Aka of Soots, Pcioahontas, Nell Gwynne; Lady' Montague, Mario Antoinette, Maid of Saragossa, Anne 'll. udson, Charlotte Brenta, Victoria•and 'Eugenie: The portraits are from drawings by Champagne and Wundesford ; most of them authentic copies, find engraved on steel by Ball, Halpin, /Myer, Jack man, and Rogers. Another volume, also in quarto, and got up in the same style. is "The Court of Napoleon," or "Se deity under the First Empire," with - the pertreite of its Betries,Wlts; and Heroines. - -The'edirg- • viegs,On Steel, will give counterfeit presentments of Madame — ltecamier, Marlisifie Roland, Mtile Georges, Madame de Steel, Madame jiinot,Thit:, tense de Beauharnals, Caroline Bdiaparte, Ma ria Louisa, Gracie - Ingersoll, Madame Hever& de St. Jean D'Angelo, Lenorinand, - Charlotte Corday, Madame Trillion, Pauline Bonaparte, Em press Josephine, Madame Jerome Bonaparte (Miss Patterson). The PIM publishers will issue, in a few days, a new novel entitled "True to The Last," or "Algae on a Wide, Wide Sim," by A. S. Row, a thorough American truly and heartily, in thought and feeling, tone and language. There Is about him a complacency, a wholesome cheerfulness, a fertility of resnurbe, a hopifulness, a glow and persistency, wholly Yankee, In my next, look for another budget of forth- coming literary novelties, with, perhaps, an ex tract from a new poem by that clever and prolific genius, John Brougham. Net much doing in theatricals. By the way, it may be well enough to mention, that the first public announcement, in this city, of the success ful laying of the Atlantic cable, was made by a Air. William Moore, the indefatigable and courte ous stage•manager at Niblo's Garden. The mo ment hu obtained the intelligenee he went upon, jhe stage and announced it to the audience, who received it with groat enthusiasm. VIVIXCEPO. On Thursday last Mr..rohn Knowles, an Englishman, and a resident of Palo' lto; Schuyl kill *aunty, Pa., while attempting lei get 'on a fretht train at Schuylkill Ilaien,ilipped and fell an the track. A leg and 'arm Were shookingly Mutilated. Dr Koehler, attended_ him, and told h i m con veyed home, whore he subsequently died. flu a ge was 44 years. lie leaves a wife and four children. Another warning that no person should attempt to get on a train while it is in motion. The United States mail steamer Arago, Captain Lines, le ft New York on Saturday, for Southampton and Havre, with ono hundred and seventeen passengers and 3108,900 in epeoie. Among the passengers aro the lion. J. P. Stock ton, tr: S. Minister to Remo, and' family; Mre. Estelle Anna Lewis, the'Poet ; Firefessor Whitaker, UM , CatOridge Aiyinsa,ton, mid the Roy. Measrs, Thgassi Ve;;;41 40 Louis . Dino:tier. . - - _NOTICE ,TO COIRREIIVYMONNIII; land the tegeeritig row : - • ITary Ointft,yoh•tAllet_bik' seeenapirdel ,by th ins ottkia ierj, . In prie r to ipsuroisis.ot i•he • t9Poigapif,liit , onexide Of 4 the Jibed 43.1 a bia •.. • , We shall heireatiymbllged to iintleoigot Uk Penniffi rants and other Mates for eontribittiene_efirit rent newe of We! dei fn theiriniiienteneindtfee; the , „. „ resources .of eirtralling Ammar/ribs 1 ° 0 " 100 of r ioptitellin or wk.* InforientlOn that will" be inteinstiii to, tie general ;ender, , . MESE GEN.g#4l, :NEWS. ; ;On Sunday - Week kist a a party of three men from .Gettriantoirn -- 2 tn .4 Montggomery county, and two froth Winohister,ln`PrObje county, went on a .fishing excursion to the Miami , above Middletown, Ohio. Odthe Way they tell in with Michael Selby, who joined the-party, They ell got drunk during _ the day, and determined, for eport,to dunk Selby, but in doing - so - they - drowned him. -- They after- • ,wards dragged his 'dead - body' into the ' , woods, . OOvered it with brush - and_ placed toyer Ibis a log. The parties •were lubsequently. arrested. -Their -names are Chas. Prans;P.Hatore, Ben'. Christine, At.'ireathenstrandef, .7" Haynes, CS Bower - s, F. Coma', T. Oesad, - W:lthinehart: The three last-named- were bald to bail irktbe gam of. $l,OOO. The others were discharged. } Christian Bunkird, of Saltliek township, Fayette county, Pa., was killed on Monday last, by the falling of a tree.- He was standing close by a tree which his son was filling, with an axe on his shoulder, when the tree - fallihi`in' a - contrary di rection- to 'what' either of them expected, - came crashing downz,,and striking Mr: crushed him - id, the earth, breaking - his iege,:and -sinking the axe into hithead and alioulder, cawing' almost in stant death. , - • The ijidontown (Pa.) Genine States -that a men riarear Christian, Heldly, Laserne town-. ship, warkilled at Captain Davidson's boatyard, on Saturday,- the 24th rilt.; under - -the. following oircamstances : He was engaged In turning a °oaf- flat, when a altos! brokec a part of- which ,truck a lever, which struck him on the head, from the effects of- which ho died In a few home. De was a :man of `famili; ; arid!: much- esteemed brhis neighbors. • •i• , •••".` • - The whale-ship'Amior,arriv'ed at New , Bett: ford on Friday .evening,hivingOit board, as oleo'. prisoners, eight of the ,mutineers, " who 'murdered Capt. Archibald Mellen, 'and tbe Second mate.of that ship.' The Junior, under iv nest captain, (Gardner), and 'other - officers, Sailed p f r rotri Sidney for New - Bedford on the 250 of Ailx - Captain Gardner was shot with. a whale, gun. ' By.the ,abolishing: arrest in civil se. .tions," Ro. , pasiedAnsing the last session. of Par liament; imprisonment ter debt is, TirtUally abet laliefin Canada. -- The offeotWill bete empty- the jails - Of- ipper Canada of &Alois: Now -almost everyjalluontaink debtors;_ many Otthetuk large' numbers. . Hop. J. Perry has : b een, nominated as_ can didate for Congress by the Republican Convention of the Second distriet, of „Males . , He received a largimajority on the second ballot The Repub. Roans of, the Fourth Congiossienal 'district' have renominated_ Freenian:E. Morse; _et Rath, for Congress. -. The Douglas Democrats' of;the.Seventlrdia. Wet of Illinois ,have..nonlinated James C.ltobia-1 sou. :-Aiifon Shaw r the meSentmember, was not a candidate for re-nomination. — .,The Republican candidate -hi `Mr. , 11.41 Cg' iestiy; and P;B:', - Shep... paid is' the candidate ofahnAdmintseratiom. ' The brig Lyra, Capt. 'feed,''front Phihidel plata; at,-.l3Ostoti during ,Wediesday night:when off Plymooth, had her foretopmast car ried away t and at the came _time ; : John -Perry of, Debr role, a seamen, was'..throitn,,,olierbOirff . by the wreck of fife topmast and . drolned: ' On' , Friday, the 'l3th" inist:; l'atrick.Tlfradr, wait soloveredy injured= itti ther Creak 'Col lioiy, Schuylkill county, Pa., that hledleilon'tlie • Tuesday_ fo4opring., -Ale; was teuidttitak,thet foot or, the elo pe, and the top of one of the. care slid ofr, ifidolt struck breaking bOtp.ltialaisa. A ditY:,o; two" bi.adai, iletbtrt wkibi at work in a ,cornfield ' dui Promisee :of - Idatsuel Brown, Ittitelokvillo;'fiotith - Daavera,.dug from thamart.h a P. - ..Pine , treeshiliingi":Of-the date of 1632. - • A woman, calling - 4 ,heraelfthe ff Highland walking sixty, aneeessmphoura in air opater for $lOO. Such a foot shows.otropg and mialt - pinak, but also a weak Aead. _ • , ...., .. „ • l i t "It is confki ntly belleiTil that tka gain Nyill. ino6mnie -"• ne between Washington and' .Wheelin etoptleldilaiiroail t to-.da.i. '' -Jenny ':a - recent lefterlci itti'Ainerl= call friend, 'el - presses •"an :eliven desire to moil 'the; ocean once more." • - -=' iiajorSt. Clair_ Denny,a paymaster. in the United Stateaagoyi•died - at Psttsburgh on Wail- Ilatiliaa-,Neere cuegle7ninA t their gipry- by tbelfrest at Lociell;llese:, bli,Tharedai night. - . ' • k. *bile wan'eePtiiien.in Xdriltriver,qlon liestor Miniiiy, W., Orithii - 9th fail,: •" '.' . 4. London' court has decided that_ an 'actor ieribt a "laborer." - , - - ' -4 Interesting' Inditan,lntelligencei t ,: - &flint Oe ' , Man& WlikAtata ::-,,1...*:1 l:.; 1'..: ....:.: 7_ -' .The Commindener eflndlan Affaire has received a litter frottiTonglas IL Ooo . per; Indian agent for 'ihe l, Ohoetiwit:seid.Ohielciliaws,-datel-Angdet sth:' • " , 4.1 - - have :f..6 - report thit the tilted States_ ear-, . veyore'comeleted this hurviiihf the 28•1'nierl'dian' of 404;1014lb:do, from I edriver- tci the'Canodfon - river,ondereetaintenumentelthereon, on.the 27th - - , of July tilt.- ',_ " • ..,, , - , • f,....11 learn, from a priVete soiree at Fort Ailueliie; 'that the, Chootaws anit.Ohichasaws!returned to ' 'their poste on the let Of August; that Mr. ! Tones and party had gone down' the Canadian river to old Zert-Arbuokle, all' safe;' that the surveying party P. 9 'Camanehes, Int plenty ,of. Indian- tratie, belie of quite recent date • that 'the people, west or/Arbeakie 'havh ' moved ? lute' the fort for .proteitten;anCthere have been Ste furlhor.depre 4atione committed - striae my last report ;.,but mi `thl gyfurther .bis -bien ' heard, of the sixty-six her oeWhichtwere stolen and earried'eff.", - . B -the RIM Min the bonen. is 'also in receipt ' 'oft e report of qp, e r expiering: expedition- reeentty Made "by'AgentMoper, which was orsenized .at Fort Arbtiokie,' Mil comprised 'two - handertinder CAPtaiiiiHohltiche and George Jones, moiibering • seventy-two in the aggregate. Bearing tharLient. Powell; with Company if, United States Infantry, ,season - his way-to-the fart, and not feeling will ing:to leave it unprotected,- Mr. 0. awaited hie or -rival till the 31,th Juni. .' = .... , • , ' On the ler of-Jitly,the iiipeditheiatarted;_bist to ColAß.Plokeriswo.s taken. ill on 'Abe ' firs t night - . MO leaving the ftrt, and woe sent back the next- - day- atone delay !Aliened- Tito maroh-, was sub- - petulantly eentinuedielindhreek,- , Where ;the ex-: - pad tion:Mot Gov.. Hestia and a 'party -returning '= to the From them they heer,d'of. the, return ~ of, theservirfring party_ ir Red riv er, Some Chino- Alien who had •aeoompaniddltioni thus far -desert-' 4. , a and returned with this larty•to the-fort. Oa resoling Beaver oreek the„ party messed soverel - ['aqua troilegoing tOwaidsßed river, and that apartynf Camanobei, whieluid ' been prison. - ere With, and were released by the Waehitas, said _they were ashamed to go„ Wok to -their people, and avowed' thiii intention - if proceeding to ..Texas and )nakirig reprisals Otiesing theirlifee. ' ' Besides observing the. smoke of: fires in the die ', tuned towards the.seuthweet, which Were supposed to iMlioate the presence of Camanohes Cr Bangers, rio• fsmident.pf note'happened 'for several Jaye. - - Mr. C. Hite up ibis interval, however,,with very interesting geographical descriptions, accounts of old Indian towns and fortifications, and a sketch: 'of the passage through a town - of prairie dogs, - levetal sores in extent, where these singular soi mat l divelton terms - of strictest - amity with owls ..and attlermakes." - ,--- ~.--" '" _ ''• - , - •r - ...;; 0 Thelath - of *July,tke expeditleneneauiped at ~Ausla Creek . Spring, northwest of- the ,starting poin i i . -I'Here they met a, party of_Wachitas, :end real imed atone Which -hod - , beenistehm by the -Cam riChas, and , sold ,to !the' Vfaohites.- :A' long - talk i wse held _With these people, and- they ex _pres ea constant dread or the Cimanchei beeatise - !hey had aided the whites - in recovering-stolen lion+from them. They, were also afraid of the - Rechise for' the' same "reason, and of, the Texans, because they hid traded with the' Comanches for ,property the latter. had probably Stolen froirithe ..- ,Texons. Mr. 0. urges that the agent should re side with . Wiehitas; end prevent, their, being Imposed op: ,' .-.'. 1 ", ' , ~; - , t -.- , -Mi. - 0. discovered, from the la:salon of the ninety.eighth _meridian, that the Wachitas are living In the Chickasaw district. - Having learned from i the-Wacbi tas that there were no Comanches in the country, except at a great distance to the north, Mr. C. determined to return and disband his ferces He aecordin ? gly proceeded at once to Port lArbueltle, where he arrived' without any- - thing of importance transpiring on the route. Ho thin the tho effect of the expedition on the Indians =will he highlrbenelloial, although - it was mime- ' !mall in its chief object—that of .finding the Ca• winch° marauders, and gaining p back the stolen property they had carried off. Seventy-four caws, fens valuable horses, °° four destroyed on thetn.earoino,nat,ty anrelneso dairy'stables. Two horses, two cows, one mule, two gbats and two calves, only, escaped, but they are so badly burned that it will be humane to kill them. The none in the stables in the midst of the conflagration was most piteously and indescri bably harrowing. The live stook were tied in their Stalls. When the flames first commenced, the poor animals snorted and bellowed with hide ous and frantic force. As the heat increased their cries and groans end furious struggles became ago nizing Some threw themselves headlong upon the floor or leaped upright at frill length INA frenzied energy, and vented their agony in fear ful esteems. The horses broke from their halters, and dashed through the consuming blaze in desperate dismay. The tortured and suffocating - cows tore away their horns and rushed through the blazing piles, and encountered eaoh other in destructive their flesh broiling and cracking In the beat with sickening effect upon the sense of human beings who gazed horror-stricken upon the wretched scene of en alum without power to mitigate the agony of the tortured brutes. 'The yells and despairing cries fif the different classes of animals cOmmingls d with horrid concert, and broke through the roue of flames and crackling timbers upon the still night Air, amilviere borne away in terrifying eahoos to the oars of persons two miles distant from the dread ful scene, Two or three horses, and as many cows, pluoged through the flames and burst in wild affright' through the sides of the consuming greeters, and fell headlong, whining with misery l upon the ground outside sprang again to their feet, and ' sped with frenzied fury across the fields until they , dropped lifeless from sheer exhaustion. Som e rolled upon , the floor of the stable, screaming with immitigable pain, until suffocated and destroyed by the fierce heat. Their contortions, their awful' wails of distress, infinitely MOM _piteous and har rowing Than those of human-beings in the dire ex tremity of. torture, are described by•those who gszed,spell-bound Rion the terrible spectacle, ae surpassing the isOwer of human imagination to conceive. The flesh of the carcasses 41:Livered, and blazed and broiled all night, and filled the atmos pherifivith a sickening effluvia. - Some 'of the cows stood upright - at their stalls, their flesh barbecued; others were without heeds, ' others without limbs n one instanee four or five carcases laid together with their horns interlocked, I forming a oirole. 'lt was a ghastly scene 09A ., template.. A Terrible Story.
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