'',' - =' , ;" - .' , 2 - ;.i' s- q: , ;' - :' , V-'7 . : , ' , ",: . ). ':'-',,-.. ', , ; - ',.',: - -I:4'-' , .:., - ',4 ,'Z , ,. 41 - 1,, f , ;' , - ,- .'-: t kkIIN_DA, ~ , F oßamirprzo Impaidsr:a.t 4;4463til t re "0 :41 .17 01 14 40 - ,14:443W4i A -1 '1 4 01:1',4 ,1 k ' ti4k ' ct! - '1,5,2140 :W4kitx.P4Ut Or-EISC, = , • • ',.,:Atam*friti*ParlißmF"sliiralait,lo3lr.,. yit 74Ziat rpt:muilko,4l9r4ioi - Wile& ,(MutPui4: l l44`nwo•-yratAr".4 r i ..7.4410 : uopiteii - lIRTAVied 4,11(61' ri.Pi .. M "!" ," " ,"") " t "A11ti. 00 1 4,1 4 .. :;War4 ‘ l474 ; lreittings' c't 'rotriVitatymitirr- r'.7.00,1414:4P1.0" 31 r! V " vl .4.l fcg ll4g gg ~ g;..„;Numay Am, • 4 - "` SA - ....•••111 ..-4p4sfirOitd" a • 0134 , 13 31,1Z1"; abate - 13Ey310!Tgi rt+t,-, • '144101,40444 .: 1 4'; "IPMFNOWILIJitIiftep.a -.; -.4 .2 fr" • Slk ir)E:, - ; - tjit;tll:l4lolinnajar:#49l)ll'iiporldif • , f OD' ibreilaW '4li ! iii* * l F 444 .644174.1*(00:'-: kp.o., 449 31 9PNA- 4 , - ,TAPOT,: , '‘ - Ara lail.Prixdl44;APll-101440.:v-v I- 1-1- ==== a 4 kiA4tiiitTint 7 G:ol) ' 111gik/C/NRI. -~~. f ~. ~fix f BON* MATERIALS TZ4ZiA,r4k4ATX,: - 41 ,Inlarrix0.10u4*bli3h . S0 reaelyed , per: - y., itispospinra MoNTnEh•ouyEls -pi: -pc 110iitriiiiiiyiii**ti) - e2 , loabyahiainipin gabs oontrr. - To moroluinto.noF lislilog,A.tie city, we ex— end,*,2,91.401. *T4a# o l , l9!? , P*4. eforxin?kfing ?4r,Zb9fPr -;, ,;;;;,4 17 49.. 1 .0 1 W4A-4,4 0 0/4.4TAL Rito!vrp)±, F 4 - 14, 4 14 11 . 1 C 9 9 °,1 ' l7l)q c ir , ,V4AXA- f :i::. 1 " ). * isro Bo6tclitilatiuT STRUT - „ Asa noir Prepaieeto , cder to Midi el:tato' mers, , the' 411.1GX,Ser Butß9 NB"; -- • • IttLIAIITERY; croopwr oopagins:skenuioye•:.l.oituavarto this branch:oi The trade, and importing the larger part of their stoeki , eamblut Omit .to ell'et, , an amortmeit unenipassed' extent aind'itarlity;whieh'will be sold - at the' lowest p mo Yore e .. • jprO,I9 . 6 I I .I ALOQN4R _i_Ce 004, , CHEM UT- ElEarm MEE= Hers cow !nhors ii. .f0 4 P 1 1 8 "! 11 "*. t t r 4 c Ar 4,44 .. 1 4, 1 *.tiKA4piya;****.": To it'd they tnllle.t w irtientionl4,the fisdips. augtani* ••' 33 - WEREEir, E=IME ==M W 4 . 1 11,inetilara*ak lo:'eitit4t fil - 1111f, oomplot6 and Few Style; SONNET MATERIALS, 8_ IB801Y8 ; r In inip43 - ; . .l4et;‘, - " inumitECtuiti 43iiRtOANIILOWER8;'%1 - AMP- 4 0 11- 11 U,OHNI,&0.1 &a. STRAW, GOODS, Comprhingsg4he&leairt&le.Eltyles.- 14:#;04:. 4.liir4lrly an '41443132 uporf , clo7, - g: r-f Skoidos viacti CENT:7OI4 .of the reskstfnces,l)i EITBEEr, trill benefit than:Llwires by a 74:1 I,kl :tj $ " 'BIX°ISKS P - - ,'-''! UtiliainVii, r " . - • - , HILpOI4N:'.IONESi . „ • ' • • - •• 11/%lLCiioKig '4 ID 1117101.11,111M1 =ALM{ I 1 2. - FANCY SILK:AND STRAW BONMSTS ) . :44 1 444/0 1 ,44,4 1 . 6 * , k0i4,4194 5 r.ML BITR-ANDMO9L HATS..:- Ticlatantion iat.eity itad-cu9urtry dealer Is Invited nirled ittodi oftheralx!ve ix)* at •••:. t ~ABD " ;ITtiIi - : 0 4 es' Utibtit, re4t"h,l-ri3t ri ll eN c iticty ter ifhrc lBll6 and" E a t n r d a w id ß oilt nne ith teV aboittlolWali,lr4t4i prj*O_4„,W tri4y: • 1:4 „•?., 141;_a+Os4hAlu3nirii 3 / 4 1#1.nd it to their lidnattge txr 111,0311111.914,/,ermifita's 1- 4.lSertil4ers. pitostitAtlii=atre.tro - - • ,• t:44 ) SitioOtiAlliiELß 'AND - NAG tg, 11 !94P #-T) In ahrn, ..n4 for wiio IT:: - 4 7 °. ! -,- • - • • 1 0-,..eit.“ . •,:, - -• • - 2 No? Pl 7►AP.M.AI/4/Avec!ile• e-• 'WHABIAR:gt.7wO.II;:i ' eirmaploq, aU.;OTa3as • ..,"-, - TATtOith,:iiit.tigthatiklifi;TtANTEll4l,, BUIRT.MAK .q.ga r 6 L ' 817 101 1 $ ', ; r, ...W99?,5 0 1' 1 4- 1 44 . Brerry Jana:, styleiOseisqd patersy qt. TANII• vuutralfed inatrutuan44 for, isle sixoy,"2 . #e At footoi7prife.-' I ere ihe seine eensiolielorsis-thie Cregiperii , to Bnfi Agents; and Mersheate ierehailrtg eit orders,- Andlio 4restaifutiitti N. 7.' 11:01:042 - , - BAUDOOk tiEWINAt , MA., fpgf:OP, lo ffim , d.), A 'to rg,4 16 th• meet 4011* ple ilm - PO O4 u 06., I it ley lmm, ail t o 4Ftx,.4,l*tils Jo in Inch, 011 all:kinds goadif, .4,, iwith44 - 9 0 :1 41 ** 41 *Pt ill 0 zi ?,.4101/441 eon itritet*Vver 1nt4 9 1#4, 344- '440 ' 4 la aoll6o3ofil y!ti:iA! • ago- Mkii,:,ITWIPLiTY_ of. — due innoidne, y/71,3rOattAire rm . rant4Yo B Of ur Pt h M ea l'i i u ki, ( 4 ll _ aj. - N j 1 .014-M i s e # froui thno htupi*L'Oliq ' , Pam ', ititchcl fet,lnfp . The t Irnhreia leßal,c9n;dlreatly,fiorn the gpooli, a notnein 011 3111 . 1M101110.,)!Ditiot, it Is al --tiiticadiiititt la wenied fiinl e founily In traland : and Si* irk* i b i ILTE AS M W AI P )'r si•Sifirbwi, Tiithint.4 melt 0) 8; D. , BoUnig, Aida, , -4. 14 014 " ki°o ll .o l/ q l 41 It r i r lase lataltittithii9o7olso,;,:q., ; JILP " • • - -)9teinitsßALN,Ot ~` (toltAuffittAtox;3,, .- • - - -- ,ormuisa :::!?,V • • y. • ..:sk.ilialtarrea4t..tj; .. ‘ti . c. 4 t ,,,, .:1 4 2:,. 1 10 "" r ' r4;50711420 , 431U1444MT: gyL.,..l*4' ' • q- - ,r,.!} el , 1.4C 4 T laq n' , 11 54".":1;iti0.1,4 • ;; ;: ).;71 - liCiti / 2 1 , :41 " er"*NOJIT-4240:' . . 01 . 11 memmor ' . ' . l , lllrm - Ogrital4b F • trn: I - boir te*,ir to; hirotrio4lq.i'Mdp - i, 's.ll•ikachtti'"ii*alvtikili,ii624iillgt 14i 11 )0 4 14 ' : 't tk, • 'DEWARD; ", '2" • ' - • . - --1- 11 0 00fIliffili imizt WAREs, ,602654r.:. " 41 ?ii iat `; ',°° 00 4 piA l i T ITT i V t i t 'a4iceitilt3lsej , :frAlit4l A tijli k fetropi,,ilß44t rates', Ihisy,ssoildespeelallyssalfesttersti on to their stock of , , DI7OICSKIN GLOYKS AND MITTENS. thst.' ,""" )SIIINDY.FLU," ONR/if dIiTOWN,4OIIIO3TqWN., "' ''0111.eft111181RABLI: AkES, - • they hive purchased directly froni the Menu- Dancers for aash,suid'akre, noir prepared; to seU at *seed step.'• " ' ' &WAPNER; ZiEOLER:A.Sc CO:, - r , /BIPORTERB AND aOBDIREV • ;5: . 313N.-110U,RTU Streets-Philadelphia , • v,k 1. i ' '.',., Pi,:f ;j:)t:, 114., • „ F,7070.?. 114 P ORTZBEI • A:620 - B - 9 QP-0.4. , u, • • • ,• . 'NOW 901IPT.ETE. • atai-ew =OE pt. 0 - BELL &C(11+, ti: 1! STRZIOrt :ThriOßTEtta WiffiLifiALE DEALERS IFFLITkOOOps;_;,.. , T.lpusTici DRY ' . • &- W,OODAttEr ' • " Nave now opened ter are 'deity . ' teeetelnk a choke Btoetto, alike and FanajDoode for the' -• .1/AILTRADC - - ' • ;" - BLACK AND FANCY DRESS SILKS, ,BONNET AND 1 7 ,13LYE'D.IttBBONS,:' :;DRESS GoODS .DY,ERY VARIETY, :WlED,(tgoLts AND-DELDAO/DENTES, -.GtLovas.erno AUT.pg.,•, -,„ - • , ;LADIEfp CLOAKS, SHAWLB, MANTILLAS, ke. , pr,o-w4loh,t,hey.inyite the attentlonor Duper. gene. tiny..- eu2O-Ina ' MARTINS, PEDDLE, tr: IiAItRIOK; _ 'l4 • DirOniniellin nr..4.8 in tilLOyESiand - • , • - " - •NA.NOT , NOTIONS, No. 80 NORTH - FOURTH: STREET,-, - 7it's DOORS BELOWTHE - HERCH ANTS , HOTEL; .1 Offer for Bale the meet complete stock or goods In their'llne•to be foiuld in = • lIN/TED STATES, „ Consisting of HOBIBITY, of every grade, GLOVES, for men, Vioinen; and children, comprising aii assortment of oYer 800 Mods, ” " DitkiV,EBB, • F,INI/21:110801it- SHIRTS and DOLLARS, • prim CAMBRIC 41.W1C1M01.1111111 and SHIRT PRONTiO'r- , • !AD1.411 , 81.4 trio , DEf4t4, with Cleepe of entirely lievedesfgoiii with- arC z eridlesa variety of liotions;th jrilteli they invite' the attention of ~ , , •I?LAJ3I:II9ZI3TEItii :00 . 801 . 71114Itli: * aul4-61.• UINTIN , GAM.PBE;.L',Iir.', at CO4 ' = • IMPOBTE.R JOBSBRO . . HOSIERY, - ; ; 1,, - 1 ; • 6toVEB 3 and No: 841 zaenract STREW, Northeastclorvor of YOU BTH.' R. A. Snicia;roaDi FLLL STOCK , OF IOLOTHING. . - . . ..... .. OHARLECittißkiitdii 4%. BON, . "No 88S &AUDIT STIMET ff,OUTILEABT OORNBIt Or YoURTII 3 „ Z i aye now in store III: large and splendid ' aerortment of AV, and WIIiTIIII 01;0TM:bill; ' ireired'nx ' y tex:the douthern and Western Trade, whirl they4er:pir sale on the best teima',For . Osatt, or on the iltlYEad are invited to call lad examine or them sel:Yea.s,,) :: . 3 ! , - . . auLtdm 1858 GOODS. ROSB,-.3a w-rximoEcs, •s 641 MARKET'STREET, SAS COMMERCE STREET, PHILADBLPIILA. S►ce now in store their complete 11010ATION OS BILK 4 D BANDY GOODS, To which the ►ttentioa of the TRION it incited. 411144132 g MIIII/1 0 1 W 111 fi' B g . ANNNT ST. AND =6 otrunoii ALLEY, Are now opening " A lIRESII STOCK r t: spaq3.,,gtt• 7,4N0r , 7" - T. which thoTinolto the 'attwation ,• ; OA= AND; PROMPT- , SHORT TIME BETELS. cni4-2m SPAM:IA:WS. ) DIINTON, 391)12 , T5:: 1 '302 ktARIptt,42O3,BET• AU OPP iheir STOCK onus TO owfitpusuass, • , . GREAT INIiIIVEBIENTEI wu.t. aY °it?p.zw To ' OA/3[i Thi.1344 eimeisM of: I • ST'I'LE AND DRESS GOODS , Anf ti awl well selected. . aulVlza . , Iid.PLTAGH; RUE, -& IMPORTERS WHITE GOODS; LINENS, EMfIROIDSSIEB, /40 GOODS, No. 829 MARKET i3TREET; PHILADELPHIA FALL B'ool{. - ; SILK AND 'RANGY aooDs. , E 4;3; iSc OTT, N. 19; Clorner of INURTH and iIitINIXT STB.ENTS, - Nava aow in ,tor a splendid assortment of sitiKs,;AIBBOA, AND FANCY: GI,OODS 1 OWN IMPORTATION, ,To yr 1 oh they invite the attention of • ' ITIRBT-OLLOS N11T131113. j!, WAY ft 00., • • •• , I.c&RX.ET Street etid 10 MlTlnert Mier. 42 , 11 , 0y11 . 111111 AND , JODB.BiII , DRY 43,00D81-• - Are aow tnll7 prepered for the FALL:.T6AJ R. Thi oompleteaese or nieir Stock, both for, VARIETY AND 14110E8; Will be 14,114 itc; pßer tdrottatte to buyers, near iseeed bisily other in title country. " suu4m AF! R:ITIII•A-N; .I"oNEF3', ds O . • , • - R 0 .2115 MARKET •„- ; • THitotoll4o - OH ALLBY, r; . s, 00AIELETB STOOK • • ov ~ BEASOI;TABLAt DRY itten on n- ,r. iriiiiiiiiiii4 il . the of Buye r 's oohp,;:, froni 914 . arta °IA? Union. _. . • . titlB.2m • GLASS, impowisfts — - , ,-., • • A SP . DiALEREI IN ii081E0; = , 410vm8, • PANOY 1300D0, &a No. 428 MARKEVSTREET, 491474i",- ~ , g: /NA . 1.4T...ii :--:- ~.it:.• i f 3,',/ L I in I. f; . .I:. `i, - .1 , ,x —.-- 4 -- , , ,,x ~.... _ il , . . frJ7-7,-".....7."MeTr"'"r".. ,P r : ...TF "''3"7." 5 -' ' '' ' '' ''''' ' Ato 4 _,,•.•,e,"•,,,,•,lo...,:-11 , ...1. , Wr• ,, , ,,,, ..W.3. ,, C• ~ ,-,.., '.% -• ,_ ~.,,..,;,.?,,,,, 1,,,, , ,, , t„ 7,.. ,,,, , „.„ 72:7 , „ .:,,,, _ . ,_ ,_ ,„...„.,.... 7 , 7,, ,,,, , ,„ „„ , ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, _ „,„, ~,,,‘„.„,......r,,,_ , ~,,,,...,,,,,,,,... . ~,....cti,r, -',' " , ''' -, . - . • _ 4 it^l'lD. 7 - , , :''r 4 ,. e1,814 ,4 4 4,4 4P 3 7„ .".- V ; A :, -- . 1 , : ',."'' ~-,`,-, ~ -,.., -,. , .J.,... ; ,,0e,',....0 ~! • ~i ... .' "ri' , f _ l 4 , 1"- ', ,, ,t .....:7„, ,„., , ~....,• ~......7...„,..7„,4 7 .0 „ ...„..,... . ....7,,,,ri, ~ ~ ,f.3‘1,, A .',.- ~,,-: I , 7 -...:, n 'V' ,; - - . ;. ,,i' '4',,la t ig •.- 1-,V•tol';„ ,, ' , s.. LT , ,•?: >, ,- n• 3.1 , „,„ , • „ ~. 1.. ~, .r, ~7 ,,, 1.., : , -" •, t ' ,C i . 4 . '' . .„..,\,\ ‘ .1, .. ...,,,,,„ —,. -.. . 4 ,.. , . .., , v0.r.41 - ._ -",,, ~,1 17 ‘, ~ I , ~.'; . r I,—, '''• -;:.... ',- 'W ' " -- '-", :- .• i, :,, : , , ;..it,: , c. ,,, -, •:,:T . -', 'l , ,ti t tt ,;, -.,. i.,„.,,,..,.;•A,:,,- -. , .. : . _,-,. .. ..s..f- , AO 11 :I • • - .. ii , • ' *tt f t , . '' -' . ..i . ri. ,--- -- ,64 '. ---1111-I:dff i; . '-'o,, ': -- ': " .17(4? e4 1 -1 ,,w -- :• 's nYrl ... l7 •cl ':' - ., i 1 ,1%.' , , , ' : ' , ,, ;• ‘ ,:.:.( 1' ,: 41 .. ; - 'q I: 1 41: . 6 . 4 ... j ...7. 7,,'" AV- ' ~, • ',, ,_40.-- '''' ' i . ) . '",,V/s1:1 . ) . ; ,. /:'.. — ....004 39 ,!.";' c. .. , - .,.. ,- :......,, ~/.• ' -,,k' „.. ‘ ...... t ., . i....i i 4rivj , ' ! 'it ' 91 2'Al ' }''''''' s t " : , f , .; ', . ;'. ':•';-' "'. -: '' s . ' • '•,' .: ..,.. -.. Yom` -.- •i r . 10 .- 1 1 --- --lill . "7 11"P"-.% ..-' --' ."-..,;; .... ~ • '-- . ~$-"-''' a , .., —": LIM .I ' e, ''. L „,.. . ,- _;:.„: k 4 i . ~......: ~ ~. ..., ..,--- ... ,• - . ; .. , .., .T.,,.. - ',"....4-:, ILLi ~,,, 4 . .,) . - .,i ~, r. , -;', , ~, , , • '' ~•:- . -,.,,,,,, • 'J ll, r N ' i.- '' ' ith ' tiov :minim -NW ?.. IL II --,, ) .„, _ " ~,:" •,, 4, a,. a, •,.„,. ~ , - .._••„..."....• -,,,,, , „.„„:„.,. ~,,,i t „..,..„.-.• ••. '...-- .- • '''?' ."--, ~h d-- ,-. 4- ! , 5. - . ~ IC i-..•: - - • -...-- ._-•-• , ~t 1 * '' , fl ~^-, ', '' '''' ' , '. ."' 4raVoi•At.: t . ,.`,. , '1 ) :1.1.‘ '-'. - . -1 .:' .4, • -.., ' '-' ' I C '' .• • t.,- ~ . .3 -S - 1-- ', ' , ."..". 1 .- - , • . star. ... '•T t " ... .1,:%, ,) -... Peri:. - -..- . , . ..... V„ ... ... ~.. . .. • ..,-.•-,, • - . -.2.4.1.1,, - • ,-- -,..,-- -..--.. . ' ~ 1 , -.: • i-' ,{}42 ;- -:"'",- ' , --•:-.Z.1. Zr.,- r • , . ~ . , Vit:` , / :. ~ '',.?' ' '' '. fi , , ~,,-', ,- ;,' ... -4„.' • l',, . , ; Li. ~ IC L IS .'d , " I :.-`- ~ „ , ~, i t‘ ,.,',l ' - . ; „ . ir ,, ,,, ~ . ,• , ~.., BLANKETS, • AND PANOY. GOON, QIILK:ZUf 0AXP311.1.1 9 72 1858 T 3/obberiy. sktITH, WILLIAMS, " 4 '00., - • • iiimoimmi DiALERs •• tOBEIGIC AND •DOMESTIO DRY GOODS,. „ • :170. 1518 :RAItICET STREET,' . Are now Corlstantly receiving, „Gdobi, Of DeAlr#l9,. Atyles, train 110 tant' idarketd ln fLte Countiy and Barone." rDabNeation parolialiera is aoltolted. anll.-8x- ALEXANDER fc•XNOi9LER . 'IMPORTERS AND'WHOLESALE'DELLEas TiOSLORT, GLOVBS_ „AND FANCY GOODS azioTsiD Noe. , 4 , 80 IA.A.RB:ET A.19),426 BMW:RUNT BTS., 'And hike just 'opened a NEW AND OOMPIANTE 81',008 01 GOODS, aipresaly adapted to PALL TRADE, • - To VitakOie tittenilonof ihetr t otißtOmers and FIRST • ;GLASS BUYEREC lit invited iiurNitnorl " • , . SOUAFFEI lionEaTs, ••• , No. 429:MABANE STREET, • • - • 'swop:ism" .41/3 JOlBBBB OP • HOSIERY, GLOVES, " mar; *emus, COMBS, BRUSHES, TAILORS , TRIMMINGS,• LOOKING-GLASSES, GEEMAN-AND,I/RENOK PANOY GOODS. au24-2m fati '616 •Qtapa. A GARD & 00., " 4 " , • NO. 823 MARKET STREET, RAVI! NOW 1% STORE AN . ENTIRE NEW STOOK Or 'EATS AND CAPS, TO MIMI THEY INVITE ,TILE ATTENTION OF BOYERS FBOl4 ALL PAETE OF TUB aul9-2m* • el EL GARDEN & 00., 4 lillytriAlYrnlEaS 07; AND IrNOLNEIIiN MUSES IN, . :HATS, OATS, FORS; STRAW GOODS, IiANOY SILK AND STRAW BONNETS, ARTIFI OIAL PLOWRELS, BOOTIES, YEATH*RS, a:o., No. 600 MARKET STREET, . S. W. Corner of Sixth street, Philadelphia. MEROIIANTS are reapeotlulliinritad to examine our Stook. anl4-2m - tUatthei3, lexaeltg, . . J. E-.• OALDWELL & 00., 482 CMISTNTIT Street. Hare vired, per steamers, new styles 'Jew , Chatelaine, Vest - Chains. Splen d Pam, Rate Plue. Fruit Stands, Sugar Basket/. let Goods and Flower Vases. Coral, Lana and Mosaic Sete. Sole Agents In - Philadelphia for the sale of Charles frodishiuxOstiONDOlCTlDlE-KEEPEI6B. delo SILVER WARE.- - WILLIAM WILSON k SON, • . MANSFACTURERS OF SILVER WARS. '• . (ESTABLISHED 18120 s. w, Oealsa FM% AND A but s assortment of SILVER WARE, of every de. script:lon - constantly on hand, or made to brder to match an pat tern desired. Importers of ffnefileld and Birmingham imported orMe. - - • ael2o-d&wly • J 8 ; /ARDEN & DEO. . • LI • MA•UPAOTOR•IIB ARD IMPONTIXIS OP SILVER-PLATED WARE, No. Oheetnut Street, • above • Third (up etalred • •-_ , • Philadelphia. Oonetantly on hand and for lode to the Tr a de TEA BETS. COTIMONION SERVIOE SETS; GRIM, prrouzßa r GOBLETS OOPS, WAITERS. HR. - LETS, CASTORS, %RI VAS, SPOONS, NORM, , LADLES, d. 0., lho . GRldinind . plating on al l kinds of metal. : sally esniklizn'p ,furnii4ing efoope WINCHESTER* CO., GENTLEMEN'S STORB PATENT SHOULDER SEAM' EHEIT. MANIIPA42. TORY, - - At the Old Ptr.nd s No: 701 S oupstNuT STREET, oppo site the Waratington House. ' A: WINCHESTER will give, as hbistofore, his per sonal strpervlsioii to the Outtlng and Hannfacturing deputy:ante. 'Orders for his celebrated style of Shirix and Cry laill filled at the shortest 'notice. ' Wholesale trade supplied On liberal terms. H24-1Y " W. SCOTT, (late of the firm of W1N .41 • CHUM' & Boom) 4 3E NTLEMEN'S' FURNISH ING_ STORE -and BLURT MANUFACTORY, 814 011ESTNUT Street, (nearlyopposite the Girard Housed Philadelphia. J. W. 8. Would respectfully call the attention of his former patrons and friends to his new Store, and is pre pared to. fill orders for SHIRTS at short notice.. A perfect 'fit guarantied. COUNTRY TRADE anpplied with SINE SHIRTS. and COLLARS. - iris-tf GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING STORE. W.. W.11271011T, 008 ARCH &rest, above Sixth, Philadelphia. Dealer in tines or Yurnishing Goode, and tnanufsettmer of Pine Shirts, warranted equal in every reaped, to any others manniastmed in this city or, elsewhere, wholesale and retail, or made sabl-tt . CIE If TLE'RE 11'13 *WitAPPERS- OR vii...Dlio3BlNa GOWNS.—The largest and but as sortment in the city, wholesale and retati, with a fall llne of Under Clothing, malted to the season at W. W. KeIIgHT 2 B, 606 AllOll Street, above inhl-11 Leman ale. pLENOVAL:--(11. 0. sADJ.,ER. & Co. have iiLL removed from No. I) NOrth Water otreet to No. 103 ARCII street, mond door above Front. eel RENOVM.4- THOMAS A. DALE & CO.,' Importers and Irlanufantarnro of 'OLOTHAII3' and , TAILORS , TIMNINO% Nara,Banrovrd from No. 19 North FOURTH Mutat to - ' NO. 313 MARKET 3TRZET. an2l•lm CRESSWELL & _WILLIAMS, No.. 20G WALNUT Street,Philadelphis, Agents and Dealers L BROAD-TOP COAL and COAL ANDS, respectfully call the attention of Dealers and Consumers to their celebrated Coal, known as the : Lancaster Company's Mines. This Coal is 'unrivalled in this Market for all manu facturing impanel!, being ant-bituminous, and leaving a clear white ash. All orders, to the above address, for shipuient, or local delivery, will receive prompt atten tion. - Bela& Ra2SPER TON for the beet WHITE ABU COAL, warranted free from elate or duet. - - tIIOKS' COAL is the best and cheapest in .11 the city, re-screened In yard and dry under cover. IiTICK ' S sells none but the very best Lehigh 11. and Schuylkill Coal , and warrants full weight: 1.111358 superintends the delivery of all 11 Coal personally, and therefore guarantees it to be as represented. 'TICKS' Yard and Office is at the southeast corner of MARSH SW. aud WILIAM, where he invites all to call and examine for theniselves the above facts. au.25-8m TO COAL DEALERS.—Parties receiving Coal direct from the Mines wishing Storage and the Delivery of their Coal, 1011 please address S. SEL LERS fk SON, CALLOWIIII,I, Street, first Yard below Broad=" . • N 11.-13 eat qualities o[LEHIOIIandEMUYGRILL CPAL always on hand at lowest sash prices. sel3-Im* KNOWLES' FAMILY COAL. DEPOT, NINTH and WILLOW Btieets t where the ti owe, and LEMUEL 00M, can be supplied In its purity, at lowest UM{ prices.„ 60.21-1m IWICERING, FOX '& 130" - wholettala and retail dialers to LEHIGH and sonuituaLt COAL. Lehigh yard—THIRD street and GERMAN TOWN ROAD. dohnylkill yard—RAO/1 sad BROAD streets; Phaidelptis. Seep - oonstantly on bond goal from the molt approved , mines, ander carer, and pre pared espresslxtor ramllv ass' folflr Umbrellas: milt Varaeolo. SLEEPER, & PENNER, MANOPACTIIREAS OP UMBRELLAS AND PARASOLS, No; US MARKET STREET, INVITE TrtEl ATTENTION OP BUYERS, To Th 4 lo LARGE AND TAMED STOOK Sel4-Ita - WILLIAM A. DROWN & CO., UMBRELLA AND . PARASOL MANUFACTURERS, No. 248 MARKET STREET, A letge assortment constantly on hand, to which the sett.mtumnt dealers is invited• • ' - an2B.lm 11/11 ACKEREL.-888 'ale Nos. 1,2, and 8 ht4slierel, Sn snorted packages, for ogle by • . 0, 0. SADLER & 00, 11141 .4UOH titre ot, 4 , 1 door Iltilroltoo. ~ ., . :.1,,, , , -- .'. E. , 7.t- :,.q-i - .. iTY,,;,' - 'i,.1.., ;Yl , ,_ill•l4;`) !-) -• i i ' l 4 ( 1 19 Ste ,;t•`,. rw , -- i - .: fi' .- 1.1;'4' , t ,...,..... i ,_ ~,,..., ~!, L, I, ), k; . t6,` , , -.......". 4.- :. ,• - i , t t , A , t _ . . sAtii iAY SEPTEMBER I'B.- 71558.' . E AD — READ—ItE ADL THE, fIECOND EDITION, ENLARGED,AI9I9 S . - . VISED, of ,OLUSILZYWPOLITIOAL 'TEXT 130010.1'; ENCYCLOPEDIA. Dir M. W. OLDSKEY,EMg.,' • ' Wabbington, The 'mooed edition of this new and nartluable poi/ oal work, enlarged •and revised from thertrat sift ; is now ready for sale. EVERY nTUMP SPEAKER SHOULD HAVE 0 NO EDITOR.nIiOULD BE WITELOUT , IT. • • Every citizen desiring to poet hiwdelf on the poll questions of the day nbould bare it. It contains, among other things : • - The various Party Platforms. - The American Ritual. - The Kansas Legislation of Congress. Governors Geary, Staunton, and Walker's InaugViel Addresees. ' Senators Green, Douglas, and Collemer's, and Mesilln.' Stephens and others' reports on Kansas.' The maternal portion of the Kaustis.Nebraska Lecompton, Topeka, and Leavenworth Conatitutionil The Crittenden, Montgomery, Senate, and Engilth bills, The votes on the same in each Henn°. • ,‘ Indeed, everything essential appertaining ilte canto, includiog President Pierce's Special Message,' The Dred Scott case.. The Constitution of the United States. - "'- Artier% of Confederation ix Washin'gtoo'n Farewell Address. Ordinances of 1781 and 1787. Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions of 1700 and 1 ,00. Mr. Clay's' report In favor of a 'Distribution' orthe Public, Lands, and able document' against it, within full history of the same. - • President. Pierce's veto or the Indigent Insane au • The Address of Mr. Faulkner on the snidest. • A History of 'Railroad Gran s by Congress, with.tpe rake thereon. President Pierce'e Message vetoing the pier and Harbor bill. 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A history of, with the votes on, the various Tariffst, A history of the United States Bank and Abolition Petitions. Mr Etllmore's Albany Speech and Erne Gayle Let:' tern History of the Annexation of Texas Opinione of Public Men on the power of Congrase , over the Territories. The Nicholson Letter. The Nashville Convention and Georgia Platforms. ' Missouri Compromise, with every vote thereon see tionelly einsaithd, The,Compromite measures of 1850. e Clayton Compromise. Wilmot Proviso. It ' mention. lth many other thlogs too nameroae to mn Every subject is fully treated, and every vote In Con gress, on any select having a political signification, In given This book will poet up the public Speaker fully on • the Kansas and other questions For copies address • JAS. IL SMITH & CO.,' Publishers, No. 610 CHESTNUT Street, PhiladelplGa, Pa. ' Enclosing Three Dollars for each copy ordered, and it will be sent, postage prepaid. Clubs of all will be furnished [Or Fifteen Dollars. • TO AGENTS wishing to engage In the sale of the above work, a liberal dormant will be made. ' - 10 SOUTHERN AND WESTERN MERCHANTS AND THE TRADE GENERALLY. • B • SMITH & CO. manufacture, and have constant; ly on hand, the largest and beat aseertment of BLANK BOOKS to be found in any one establishment in the United States, which they offer at lower prices than they can be bought for at any other place in the coun try. Booksellers now in The city are respectfully invited to call and examine our stook before purchasing else where. J. B. SMITH & CO. also publish a great variety, of , Theological, Historical, Poetical. Juvenile, School and Miscellaneous Books among which may be found : PATRICK, LOWT II A COMMENTARY., CHAMBERS' INFORMATION FOR THE PEOPLE. 0,- J. 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RUDD & CARLETON, Sublishont and Booksellers, No. 810 BROADWAY, New York. N. 11.—Inducemento will be offered to Potential% and all other Atmore who can procure subscribers. Ml24tuthdzsattf JAMES OHALLEN & SON, No. 25 SOUTH BIE'I4I STREET, Publish THE CITY OF THE GREAT SlNG—the =oat superb work on Jerusalem ever Issued. $3.50. HAM IN SYRIA. 76 cents. CARPENTRY MADE EASY. $3. ' NEW JUVENILE LIBRARY. $2.60. GAVE 07 MACPHELAU. GOSPEL AND ITS BIVALENTS. 35 - cents. CHRISTIAN EVIDENCES. 35 cents. IN PRIM PALESTINE, PAST AND PRESENT. $3 50. IN AND AROUND STAMBOUL. $1.26. au2.s.linak TALUABLE WORE ON COLONIAL I,AW-011ALMERB , OPlNlONS.—Opinions of eminent Lawyers on various points of English Juris prudence, chiefly concerning the Colonies, Fisher'es , and Commerce of Great Britain Collected and Digested from the Originals in the Board of Trade and other De positories. By Hookas Camargue, lien., 11.11.13., B.A. lyol. Bvo, 816 pages. Just received and for sale by RAT & BROTHER, • 'Law Book sellers, Enbliehers, and Important, iffla 19 South Sixth. street. HERRINGS -800 bbls. NO.I PICKLED Herring; 900 bbla extra Newfoundland ditto 120 bbla Potomao d.r gaited ditto, now in store and for We by JNO. M. KY.IiNEDY k 00. ISTO N 01.1804 0 010 N. WiLLEPRI. New ipublicatieno. , TELEGRAPH, C4t Vrtss SATII.RDAT, I SEiqE3II3ER 18,1858: ~h The Country, and City panks. [For The Press.] Year Pottstown correspondent says that a large proportioh •of the country-bank officiors are in. favor of oily redemption: If snob - be the 0a5e,...T. , think the sooner the itoekholders of mak: banks elect now officers:the , -better, - for . the' officer of a bank that ham Amen - dosigncdosharterod, 'and put in operation for the convenience of people in its locality can know but - little of his business if it is part of his plan to place' a large amount of its means in Philadelphia, instead- of keeping it at home. Such an Offices must mako a poor banker, but likely would do well at shoemaking—at which business, depend upon it, he would last longer. Such banks as the West' °hooter and Montgo- mery County are, little_ oleo than Philadelphia banks,,and..k. is no hardship for them to redeem. To - the banksin and about the coal region, it is no • hardship to redeem; , beaause the annual,produo don of that region keeps half the world, more or lees, in debt to it continually ; -oven Philadelphia is dependant on the coal trade to.meet o its indebt edness to New York and the Eastern States. ~A nd this fact suggests an illustration of the pro eent position of the country • banks of Penn ' sylvania t to which I - irespeolfully beg the 'attention . of city anti -country • bank officers. Suppose , the , coal trade wore •to cease at onoo, and - Philadelphia, In consequence, ,become, as she undoubtedly would, a - moro interior village ; And suppose the Now.'York and Boston banks, being temporarily ride and strong, (from an soot-, dent- of the times, via: the concentration • of panic-stricken oapital in their vaults,) should combine together for - the mimosa Of forcing the Philadelphia ,banks to keep redeeming - fundain :New York and Boston—what would be the answer of the Philadelphia banks to their demands? Very likely this, r.Yetil course is Infamous ; we are pro dosing nothing; our ihetories are idle, *tinnier -chants staggering under the -effects of the -late panic; in feet, all our industries are paralysed; and if at such a time, when our business mon'require all tho nursing and orkearsieftfent wo can give them; you cripple our ability,'and . forbe us to grind them to the'dust, in order to meet your demituals; their debts to us may be paid or Secured, but they will be ruined!' ,Nor will the injury be , con fi ned, to Philadelphia ; we, of course, will get all our mer chants have to give; their New York and Boston creditors can get‘ nothing; and it is for you to consider bow far bankruptcy of their Philadelphia easterners will affect your own merchants, and their liabilitieslo yam." Now, the position of Most of the country banks is precisely the same as the Philadelphia banks in -this supposed ease, The dealings Of the former are with small merchants, farmers, ~ and =snuffle. •turers, whose debts can only be paid by the pro duce of their-own industry. They probably all have property, which, in the - present state of pros tration, could not be Sold for over a fraction -of - Whatit cost them, if at all. But with' the aid of `their banks, if the latter aro allowed to aid them, they will soon get upon their feet again,,and be `able to moot as well their country debts ati 'their debts to city merchants. The notion of the city banks, if successful, will, • by city balances and the reduction of circulation it will compel the country banks to-make, take at least two and a half millions of dollars of active capital out of the country, and, of course, out of the hands of its industrious producers; and it, .would be well for Philadelphia,. that Suffering community from depreciated currency," to con sider well whether It is not bettor for them to get their country debts paid in said currency, which le only a half per. cent. discount, than to get no- Ailing at all—which, in a majority of instances, will be the case if the efforts of their debtors are 'paralyzed by the patriotic desire of the city banks to eave,them that heavy loss of one-half per cent. !. Messrs. City Merchants, suppose your banks wore An:compel you to pay up at a period when you are able—or even at anytime—bow many of you •nitj,be:left'atanstng at'theend of a month? • You'r Pottstown correspondent recites the great hardship of a Mr. A., who offers the Farmers' Bank of Reading York and Harrisburg bank-notes in payment of his obligation due there, and has to go to a broker to gat them changed. Now, in nine oases outer' ten, the countryman Who would offer such money would have borrowed it from those banks. And which would have been the greater hardships—his being refused the loans by Harris burg and York banks—his note protested, and his property in hands of the sheriff, or the loss of a quarter or half per cent. paid the broker? lie suggests what a great convenience bank notes, par all over tho State, would be. " They would be sought for by business men for remit ting." Then, the ono grand effect of this phr re demption will be to o'erleap the laws of trade by turning the banks into exchange offices, compelling them to furnish it at par, no matter what it cost them, and though the price that the natural course of trade might fix on it would be a half to ono per cent. premium ! This is all very well for the banks in whose favor the current of exchange al ways runs, such as Reading and Pottsville banks, situated in the midst of a region where millions of capital aro employed—banks whose profits 'are derived mainly from the deposits that mutually result from heavy exporting trade ; but it is very different with the non-redeeming banks. Tho 3 have no deposits; their regions of country do not exact tribute from half the world, as the coal regions do, and are, therefore;depondant for their profits almost entirely on circulation, and if they are compelled to redeem in Philadelphia at par, their oiroulation is cut off, and having no deposits, their existence as banks is almost entirely useless, as far as stockholders are concerned, for they have no source of profit left; and as it is not probable they put their money into bank stocks for the more "fun of the thing," being debarred from all sources of profit, they had better wind up and close their doors as soon as possible. Pottstown admits that 'a catastrophe, such as I I referred to in my last, "'might take place, but is improbable." My dear sir, the greatest villanies that have ,eVer disgraced the financial world were those most "improbable." Why, their being im probable is and has been the very basis of success in them. Was it probable that the "pious and highly respectable banker. Sir John Paul," should have turned out a thief? Was it at all probable that Schuyler, with a proud, historical name, and an ample fortune to book It, should have turned out a swindler? Was the Ohio Life and Trust Company's failure considered probable, or the Lancaster banks, or the Bank of Pennsylvania? No, sir. Six months before their ocourrenoo, they were considered tho greatest "improbabilities." If stockholders of Philadelphia banks are willing to rest satisfied with "improbabilities," and conti nue to permit their officers to snake their banks responsible far the acts and lessees of any country bank that chooses to give, them a redeeming agency, they must, sooner or later, be caught, for it is a game of millions—quite feasible—and can be compassed by any rascal who has a little means and ordinary capacity. Nearly all the bank trou bles of Pennsylvania have been with these par banks, many of which redeem in the pity, not be onus° it is their legitimate interest to do so, but be cause it gives them a fictitious credit. The non-re deeming banks aro under the laws of trade, and those laws compel, them to follow the proper paths—they cannot kite their issues, and they cannot safely lend beyond the requirements of their own 'locality and customers.. They have proved themselves reliable in every respect, and their circulation is familiar to the people of the State, who have full confidence in it. It eeems to me thateitithanks ought to find some better beefi ness than making war on them—they 'could cer tainly find one that will pay-better in the and ; for, as far as I men judge, our•banks will fight to the last, as they should. If, however, your city hanks ehriuld ever Bummed in Compelling the with drawal or reduction of the present reliable circu lation of the State, its plane, to a great extent, must be filled by wild•oat trash from other States. Then, perhaps, the "suffering community" will realize the advantages the city banks will have forced on them, and may give spicy expressions to their gratitude, by invoking blessings—moro profane than orthodox—on the heads of their be nefactors INTERIOR. September I, 1858. From the First District. [For The Preeel A strong feeling pervades the southern section of the pity in reference to the ooming election. Among the Congressional candidates the contest wales warm, and it seems to be a matter of doubt who will bo returned to Congress. Florence has the outside track, notwithstanding the patronage which is brought to boar in his favor, and that he will bo defeated is a certainty. Florence is losing ground every day. The tyrannical and proscrip tive acts of the Administration in removing maw from office for their mere thinking, ore wonting sadly against the Colonel. Nebinger will receive the support of every true Democrat. The ridiculous Guisertions of tho Colonel's friends, and the flimsy and fanciful arguments they ad vance in support of their favorite, only mite merriment combined with a touch of pity. Stiok to the truth, Thomas. and though beaten, yet you will ho thought a trifled moro of by . 4 licypc4E-09. Ruigious INTELLIPENCE. ' Letter , from Graybeard: - , . ' '• Nnw Yon', September 16.-18.58". . 4 o'olook P. M.•; -Some twelve:hours ago I Jyrete yon a hasty line Oont a State.room of the pelaware,.lying befew lipruee-street wharf, hirriedly,detailing some the peouliarities of my trip`to Gotham:- I had not time to nthrition thfin'tliet,we reaolled.the pier at a few Minutes prist four ciolock.,: After remaining there near two hours, we left Walnut-street wharf by the six o'clock line this morning, taking break fait on board the Sohn Potter;nthine; r and tarts- . Sig here it half-past, ton; nicking; upon the Whole, one 'of the most aniphibions and oiroutaleoutory trips to NewTork- that your adventurous corres pondent 'has ever necoMplished: The exact tithe' °entrained in :this trip from the city of Tenn td' Manhattan was twenty-five houni, and i this distance travelled (not including an Incalculable pedestrian tour on the lower; top, and middle docks) was a trifle legit than three - hundred Miles. I almost faiioted . that the gonins , of thp„oelebrated,flYing machines of the last oentury;- - which attained the' stunnior velocity of " through - to New York in tyre, days!" . had been suddenly resurrected and purposely strode the main last night to laugh at our recent achievement in the annihilation of time and space. - I grant that my letter thin far 'is not portico, larlib'uidened with religions Intelligence, Yet, as I expect to finales° in the same,envelope a budget, to,fill.the balance of this column, and also -to -in trodnen,a'paragrnph.or two in the letter 'itself,' olipiiedfroetbnitsrba/ exchtinges2khad'the fide opportunity of perusing last. night coming up the bay, I have still some little hope of redeeming its caption. S•r - - , • A word now neje my ' , Verbal exohatiges.;":qo• my list, .1, iPoke of our haltdozen, passenkors,, representing about as many nationalities. Let, me see :'there was a. Frenchman, (who served under Napoleon ;). a Seotehman; (now - a natural ized Gothamite an English sobersides, - ait Irish gentleman, a German, Jew, (a Philadelphia im porter,) and 'is: Dutoh Yankee, to say nothing of sundry polite "colored gammon" of various shades.'" " • ' •- By some wondrous freak of leek for my present purpose, the conversation of ,our,incit interesting little company, towards the " noon of night," turned upon the sabjeot of religion.' The theme proved to be prolific ; anon your venerable Corres pondent found himielf hurried kite a perfect mass of montat note-taking. In undertaking to deed ' pher these, I find thht not a few of them deserve the same epithets that Patrick once applied to his horse, viz : that be had tivo faults—one that "he was not clay caught," and the other, that " after lie was caught he wasn't worth a dim—(this latter term will, of course, bo understood as an abbrevi ation of dime.) " liars is one fact, however, that will illustrate what we have always Contended for—the vast su periority w blob Philadelphia possesses over her more lofty-minded sister in point of moral worth and general respect for the claims of religion among the masses. The gentleman from New York, who resides in the locality of which be spoke, sta ted as a fact, that all the stores—no matter what the nature of their wares—on First, Sebond, Third, Fourth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, and Ninth ave nue?, between Fourteenth and Forty-first streets, were open for buiiness every Sabbath from 6 to H. o'clock A. llf., and some through the whole day, just the same as every other daY in the week. ' The old gentleman, who olaimed Geneva aside blrtbnlace, could see no harm in this provided they enjoyed it, and gave as his reason for think ing so, that he Lad many a time seen hie father engaged in card-playing on the Sabbath, after church, with the parish preacher! 'stating, at the same time, "Des naver vos de theater so fool and so den in dat counthry ale on Sunday One of our party, who had spent five Years in New Orleans, gave us an interesting analysis of the national. shades and religious proclivities which characterize the tieveral municipalities of that city, from which it atpoars that the first, which is composed mainly of a French population, evinces a church-going spirit, the mass of the citizens be ing found regularly In attendance at the Cathe dral on Sabbath morning, whilst the after part of the day is usually spent in holiday Sports. The asirrr_muntoipality, mainly Spanish lii its (mai- PristifonOilalir tole Itiferfei to — theYiSnCV,' and devote - Sunday to the wildest hilarity, such as fancy balls, cook fights, and other similar gross infractions of the law which commands all men everywhere to "Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy." The second municipality, being that in which the American element prevails, was , said to be, as might be expected, more orderly, and in all respects more elevated. Oar Scotch friend stated that" he had visited nearly all the cities of any note in this country and Europe, and must confess, with - shame, that Glasgow was, without any exception, the worst city he was ever in; and he had heard it there stated, within the last year, that there were two hundred thousand persons in it who could neither read nor write. To which oar skeptical Genovaite responded, interrogatively, " Yoe dat a preacher you hear say hero roe" two hundred totisand such peebles in Glasgow ?" Doing answered affirma tively, ho continued, "Don you may take my vord for 't, 'tie ono pig lie ;" from which he !drunk out into an illustrative anecdote, which, having bat little bearing upon the point in question, I will say nothing about. (MAYBE/MD. Great Jewish Fast Day—The Tenth of Tishri. On the ninth of the_ present month, it having boon the first of Fishri—the initial month of the Jews' religious year—we gave a notice of that fact, stating, at the same time, the estimation in which that day was hold among our Hebrew citi zens, and the solemn purposes to which, according to their belief, the ensuing nine days were to be appropriated. To-day, the 18th of September, completes this term, and is, in the Jewish economy, sacredly ob served as the Day of Atonement. As stated in our former article, the ten days of penitence are supposed to close with this—i. 0., the supplications for divine favor, either for the pardon of past of fences, or for the mitigation of severe decrees for the futuro, meet their final acceptance or rejec tion today, The passage of Scripture, we believe, upon which this Israelitish ritual is based, is that re corded in the 20th and 30th verses of the sixteenth chapter of Leviticus, to wit: , t And this shall beqs statute forever unto you that in the seventh month, (being the seventh of their civil year,) on the tenth day of the month, ye shall afflict your souls, and do no work at all, whether it bo one of your, own country or a stranger that sejourneth amok you; for on that day shall the priest make an atonement for you, to cleanse you, that ye may be clean from all your sins before the Lord." Christians can, of course, entertain no defence of the continuance of this ceremonial type, after, as they believe, that which it was intended to typify has been fulfilled i yet it may not be im proper here to correct an erroneous impression which we believe exists in the minds of many well informed people to the unjust prejudice of the Jews. What we refer to is this: The impression largely prevails that, as the Jews believe that through prayer all their past sins are to-day for given, and that all their unfulfilled vows and ob ligations are to-day cancelled, therefore the vows and obligations of a Jew cease ones a -year to be morally binding, which, if true, would, to say the least, resider Jewish character rather slippery. The truth of the matter is this • The expiation accomplished to-day is only claimed to be of sins committed between man and his Maki r, as °entre distinguished from sins committed between man and his neighbor, the latter being in all eases sup posed to remain unforgivon unless the offender in person makes a proper restitution, and seeks the pardon of those against whom he has offended; and as regards the cancelling of vows, such are only believed to be included as have been unlaw fully made—Suoh vows, for example, as were made in an unrighteous spirit—whilst all other proper obligations continue in binding force until they are fulfilled. The prayer invoking this for giveness, which is called Kal Nidre, will constitute the preparatory in troduction to the services to-day in every syna gogue in this and all other lands, where there aro a sufficient number of Jews to establish places of public worship. Of the character of this obsery anon, we may state that the day, from sunset of last evening until the sunset of this evening, will be spent in total abstinence from eating and drinking, and every other animal indulgence. The places of bu siness of even the most indifferent observers of the Jewish ordinances will this day be closed, a failure of such observance being regarded as a mark of the most aggravated heterodoxy among that ancient people. The ceremonial service, as do scribed in the twenty-sixth chapter of 'Leviticus, does not obtain at the present day, inasmuch as the ordinance of sacrifloo was limited to the Holy Land, the authority for whioh being cited from the twelfth of Deuteronomy. • We have frequently heard thiii matter referred to in Christian pulpits as a circumstance of extraor dinary signifioanee—which it certainly is—that the Passover has been uniformly observed with out the sacriffee of the ,Paschal Lamb, ever since the destruction of the Temple of Jerusalem, or as some say, ever since the saoriqep of the Messiah on Calvary for the sine of the woliffl. The main points above given we have taken pains to obtain, personally, from the most respect- - able Jewish authorities, and arehence enabled to r oot (bowls o matter et, pliablo TWO ,Cgmrs., GENERAL NEWS. The .hTew Orleips Pie4tihe of , Sturiday bud twenty-four hours ended =at asps': r! Thd returiis of the lioarduf flealtit;'fdr the number of deaths from yellow _fever ihrouglioat the city - In that period to have amontitedlata 85.:1This is as in-, creme of 21 on those of the preriens,W 0f,49. 11 -th9l of Wodnesday, and is more than donbitAhli4lreraf° the 41a, 6th 6th, 7th; and .Bth Mat road - equal; those of the prevlouely Worst day. tlarorighattVildi ;anion." Commenting editorially on the stibjeet, the iliine'paPer says: " The dry, brief, but fearful records the daily progress of the epidemio—which now holdo,ppesession: onto' one - particular :ward .or street , , , btit Nat its away over the,whole suMclently their own tale to, our, friends abroad of the revere trial we are undergo ing. The fever knows no abateuiiat: Despite'..the large, ne cessary 4 diminution in the ourober of persone open to its attas; 'the fell deetioyei t cotints npbra .victims without diminution o f nambersiand ira- ipossible to fix 'any turning point for thecalainity. ;The ,many indications of fall and coollweathir give as hope 'of, a: speedy.rollef, which- cannot,come,too soon: One - of the noticeable and melancholy, features of. tae mor tality ofthe season hp been the large number Of, deathi among infants and_Ohildien. Parents, poor mid rich„ 'will long irmomber this Magnier with painful remtnis- - cenres. The flood of "commerce - begins to' beat mighty wave around on,' codating-room and depots, our , levee and"warehonses: , . Tls . Immense trade centred hero cannot await the , departare of the epidemic to allow it fall scope and Set Its mighty inns in motion._ Cotton le king, even over death itself.!+, „ „ • The New York Tribune, of yesterday, -tn. an article upon quarantine attains, contains the 'followin information A-difficulty. wee apprehended between the military and citizens last Biasing, owing to the de termination of the' Oaertleton Board pf Health to en=, force their regulatioh prehlblting the Inizial,of the qui: , ',Latina dead outside orthe enclosure.' Two bediSsisvere to` be bided 'on Thurday night; and the Military hid orders to protect the State authorities:: Mrs, McOanna, the daughter of Carroll. the - livery-stable keeper, whose ease we reported a day or twe since, died jester, day of yellow fever This lady, it will he remembered lived within „the -infected .district. This, portion. of Tompkinsville haq been'placed underetrlctregulatlits, no p.arsoni.being.allowedlege within itjtindalitthe former risaidslattr; *been removed, IVA/ lftelidd that, with 4hre;nomore einiestellever will Occur out: ode of the enclosure... The Major and the Com:Station; era of Emigration v i si ted quarantiheyestoirdii, in cont. psny with Deputy Superintendent Carpenter. sudlillY Metropolitan policemen:, Ther were cenveyed thither in the steauser-Dr."Kents. ,The,piollie„were, mint doltm in anticipation of a' row with the 'vluagerer.lshild the hospital employees were burying soma, bo dies ., di it' was neiessary,to marry the bodice " throu gh the village in order to reach the place of burial, and as the inbab' Hants had declared Ahoy - should not; ,it.wss deemed necessary to have a pollee force to prevent any-oat break. On a more mature deliberation,; by the mayor and othens, it was agreed that the bodies should be buried in the night time. , The examination .of Witnesses in'the- New York quarantine (I:faculties is Mill going on. at Staten island before Judge Metcalf. The principal witnesses were Docte , r WalseF, the assistant hoapltal physician. Doctor '11:. B. Thompeon, the, health officer, and Van Buskerck. Each of the witnesses wae, subjected to Severe cross-questioning. The whole of Thnreday_wan ercupied by the 'testimony, which lute an inspertent bearing upon the guilt of the parties Implicated; and develops many important facts concerning themanasle.: meat of quarantine and the theory of yellow-fever ist-. fettle°. - The minter); at Staten'lslaud 'auffered , much” on Wednesday night and .Thursday morning, from the heavy easterly etermi which was accompanied with a deluge of rain. They were all, drenched to theskin, and many of their tents were,inundated, but there wee other place of shelter.' The Only . eue of sickness that use occurred in camp is that of Er-Aldernian Wil liam Wilson, private of company (5, who, from over?, .exertion, wee seized wish a flt on Thursday, and removed to the city. , A shocking accident occurred on the Penn sylvania Railroad, on Monday of Jest week, some two or three miles balm Huntingdon: A freight train - from the east, coming along at full speed, a wagon, with three persons in it—David Myerly, of Omnille, and two daughters—attempted to cross the track when the train was only a fevrrode rim the crossing, and unable to check up. The engine •struck the, wagon, mashing it, to pieces. Me. Myerly and his eldest ,danghter were shockingly mangled,' and the youngestdanglrbir gerere—' ly but not dangerously injured. The . three were taken- to Huntingdon ' where everything pciesible was - done for their comfort ., Mr. Myerly died of •his injuries on Ties- - day afternoon.. The eldest daughter, it is thought. will recover—she was much bruised and ent, but no bones were broken. The Bank of Meow])le was recently blown up by gas. The gas -burner in the iron vault was left. burning. As soon as the atmoseheric air wee consumed (the oxygerrit contains) the burner went out. When Mr. Beadle opened the "Finn And. lighted, a match in side, the gas, having filled the vault, at once exploded,' sending him and Mr, Gillslend with great .riolence to the front end of the room, bursting out the front doors which had not been opened, and dlso trreakingthe heavy oaken back door into fragments, which, strange to tell, is immediately behind the rata. The vault itself is un injured. . 2 „- . Our adyices, from Buenos Ayres are 'to the Roth July. Pears were entertainet that the Brazilian frigate Magi, with a lag body of troops on board, bad been lost at sea, as she was a month out , from Rio Ja neiro, without being heard of at Montevideo, her dolga., nation. Among the passengers wee - Don' Benign 'Lc.' pez, eon of the President of Paraguay. 'On the 17th. July there was an attempt at revolution in Buenos Ayres, promptly suppressed, howeier, by Government. General Urquiza, it- is said, km abandoned the idea of invading Buenos Ayres. According to a statement for the year end. log September 1, there has been a omsiderable decrease from the cotton crop of 1856. The crop in ,1856 was 3.6212.845 bales, in 1857. 2,939,519, and in 1858, 3,113,- 002: TliB' exports of tre yearanfo ontto 2.6e0:455 being an increase of 837,796 bales over last yiar. .01 the total exports, England took 1.809,968 beet', befog 'an increase over last year of 381,096. The exports to Branca during the year show a decrease of 29 855 bales, and to the north of Europe a. decrease at 80.653.. A few nights since a number, of large sheds and a barn, mostly new buildings, the property of Joel U. Roman, near blendham, sue net fire and 'were destroyed with abont.l,ooo bushels of oate,lo to 20 torm < of hay, 1 600 sheaves of wheat; a threshing machine and wind mill, one wagon, and sleighs, ploughs. and, almost all the farming latex:te l ls. The Insets $3.000 insured for $1,500. The fire was caused by a bound' girl, 12 or 13 years old, who confessed the sot, but said she only wanted to see some straw burn. • The Roy. John Finlay,- of the 'Baptist Church, died at Grenville, Washington county, Mies' recently, at the residence of his eon, aged 76 yeare. Dr!, Finlay has been a zealous and faithful minister of the Gospel for nearly half a century. He 'was chaplain of the New York Legislature during the administration of Gov DeWitt Clinton, and has Oiled the pulpits of his church In Baltimore, - Louisville, Memphis, and other places. . The Clarksville Messenger saysithat, a short time since.** young man by the name of ammo L:Stro they, late cf Abingdon, Va,, while in a fit of tempo rary derangement, summed to be delirium tre mens, fired upon, with a Colt's repeater, and severely wounded, one William 'Beaty, a respectable catmint of Red River county. Toxaa, and shortly afterwawlv • ommitted suicide by shooting himself threigh the head. • „ Grace Church, Washington, D. C., was, crowded on Tuesday evening to witneas what is gene rally and properly considered an interesting ceremony. The couple Joined in one were Mr. J. B P. ROIEOO6II and Mies Hannah Gordon. the former the eon of the es teemed pastor of that church, the Bey. Alfred Mi med They were accompanied by six bridesmaids and six groomsmen. There lea remarkable negro boy in Polk coun ty, Texas. He has two faces, fixed on opposite parts of the head, with month, nose, laud chin 50' perfect-that it is impossible to tellwhich as the front face when the body is bid from view. lie is about six years of age, healthy, and of very Bound mind, and runs - and plays' with other children with as much sprightliness as could be expected from one of his age. It was stated a few days ago that Benjamin Thrown had been killed under his cart-whoele ' at Cole brook, Connecticut. The man wholes! with him, how ever, has told contradictory stories in relation to the affair, and has finally been arrested as his murderer. The body of Wenn has been exhumed, and several se vere wounds, one of them apparently made with an axe, have been found upon It. The Rockport (Ind.) Democrat relates a sad oceurrence in that place on Thursday last A house containing a family was blown over a precipice, and , falling about seventy-five feet, was literally mashed to Ocoee, and horrible to relate, Mrs °lambertle was killed outright, and her four little children more or less mangled, but not killed, though it is thought one or two of them will die. ThreU prisoners having escaped from the Columbia county (Wisconsin) jail. a few days ago, one John Murray, under confinement for murder, earnestly desired to join in the pursuit. promising to return sui loon as the chase was over. The runaways were not found, but blnrray,"faithful to his contract, canto back to hie old quarters after an absence of a few hours. Large quantities of timber aro now being shipped over the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad to Balti more, to be shipped from thence to France, to be used in the construction of veesele-of-war. It comes prtncl piety from the neighborhood of Oheat river: and we are Informed that large prices are paid for it The Messrs. Rail, of Cumberland county, Braille° fillings large con tract for Cuba Anna Maria Snttler, the unfortunate girl who came to this country with Jacobi, who le under ar rest on a charge of having killed his wife, in this 'vici nity. in July last, has been, with her child, sent to the unty poor house for safe keeping, aS a witness in the trial when it shall come off. The 44 gone of Malta rr bad a grand, caval cade in Pittsburgh., on Wednesday evening. They turned out on horseback, one hundred end twenty-five in num ber, forming one of the grandest cavalcades ever wit nessed in the city. They were dressed in the garb of the order—wearing their long white sheets, with cowls at. tached. . . The expense of the Donnelly trial, at Free hold, New Jersey, amounted to three thousand seven hundred dollars, with an additional hundred dollars to the sheriff. It will be remembered that Donnelly was executed for murder, On Wednesday a collision took place on the Danville (Va.) Railroad, between a freight and pas senger train . The engine of the latter train 1111111 smashed, and two freight care were damaged. The engineer, named Lindsey, was the only person Injured. There were nearly forty ladies in the care. The Sussex Democrat is the title of a new anti-Lecompton paper at Newton, Sussex county, New Jersey, The Daily True Democrat, at Trenton, has also been revived Both papers make an excellent ap pearance, and are ably conducted. ' Rice's printing establishment at Knoxville, Tennessee. comprising c ilrowniow , s Whig. the Knox ville fie gister, a aneemb omee and bindery, was sold last week for three thousand two hundred dollars. It cost originally fifteen thousand dollars. There aro now in the Morris county jail, N twenty-aix prisoners; there are also els on bail, nicking thirty-two awaiting trial at the next term of court—three for arson, two for burglary, five for m utat, three for rape. eight for larceny, As. A fugitive slave rescue took place on Sun day last, in Wallington, Ohio. The party was a colored boy, and his claimants two Southern gentlemen. There w se a r n i omurrhe sexcitement the fire- upon the wagon, hat nothing men of Cleveland, Ohio, on the 13th -instant, during which an attempt was made to murder a fireman from Dayton, named Kuntz. A number -of arrests were made. cape May takes its name from gaptain eor wallas Jacobsen MeV, a navigator in thri service of the Hatch West India Company, who visited the Delaware Day in 1623. Spottswood, committed of killing a man at Huntsville, Alabama, has been sentenced to ten years' imprisonment. HoraceHreeley is to deliver an address at the county agricultural fair at Harrisburg, Pa., on Priday of next week. Walter Hopkins, Esq., one of the editors of the Louisiana Courier, died at New Orleans on Satur day of last week. He wee a native of England. The`origin of the tiro at tke custom house, Baltimore, was clearly the result of accident. A salmon was caught In the Susquehanna, Xttlar Panphin, Pa., on Wednesdkr. Min - 09FIRROPTINtri " 121 11therCia44"iite h',”1,'.4f1ite(2714 iP " -1.; "3411: 14411 16 ; ' 7h;i7 Memo; coitc:a imetleel l' ' brae loam of the eniter. , -.lto order to lame odefeeteeet et the , L tneempviSet eke die 41,tht dust illuedoi ba 114 4. 31 We. _ , . W ji bekrtitt7,:,llo4 Tanta and other Pates torja;rtri,*ol, 1 :4 1 744 i t44 , ° "" rent new rthe th*Artit**l o oP,ais 11 , 11 res ?Fr ii ak.l4l l -kartniiihi innitlih of ;pnradation, or aqtntin~e{lo n !in 100 interesting to the general reader. Weekly Reviiv of the; Philade lphia. ' ' There ris•still- a want of _ernhaatien•hr the Prodiee markets, aud the treale of the-Mot 'week his Dees light . compared, with fernier - years: S - Breightufk hare been Very quiet, but with light receipt, of, MOM. and a small iitoak,,moit holders are ahm.....11,ye tom , * fhirklifeel, are m r ee; ''lshent Is dull. `Corn Ina been in goodie; ' quest. Oath 1011 , how freely: -Cotton LIM bat very "t a p, : of cii>faie,thentraii in . flret itutidslinearljen hausted 'Maintained. - - Srigarind mettiltli'n" thrilled Minhy itiareviceit iratief•-• lateh , ente Aimee;;?Phi' ironimarket rhea teen' 'quiet, with bat very limited transactions te.nati haTig" I tikr etal ; Manufactured Iron -is steady and rather more active. Lead is seameAnd;pricee are looking up. No change in1a.741, Sterer.,, Linseed . oil trinferr hat in .Pith filtraritlen, P 071310112 raledidi r 'the amain; lk , ritalsant over., Bite is_ hetet - with:More' Annuls. Salt is 'rather ` qulet'lidt . ..'Tobacisi'liss T an upward tendency. Fool of the lost' grades gaol' inquiry:at fall rates. In .Dry Goodillitere. is • r v fair bagmen doing, 'and • trade. holds Pont longer th an- netialithar stooks of both-dementia andforeign-Jahr! . .. 011 are light for the season, Brown • sheetlags end -.fiencslll are dull with 2.7 1 good demerit at fully. fernier . rateri. Drills are firm at . goods Meet with quick Wes al the advance - meted before. Prints' ire' !native, with light stooks offal tie desirable Makes on hand, and prices - are Will iriallitaMid: Ticke;Ohecks,' landetripes are also active, and stocke beep well sold up at prices ringing from 8,,t0 Woollezie keae ra ny are: plentyand .dull, but the Martret-oloseal -rather better, Most of the low.prioed geode being taken Up, and caasimeres 'are more active, the eteeke - arise. diem quallties•-,llBlel4l*h,iedk4o. ioode keep well Sold an, the importation thiejteason being mush lighter t han for' 11060 yams :Piet; and the goods in "drat headri are meetly Well held and Sim, par. and Belgian fairies: -- - • - ' - BBEabSTTIPPB i are -firmly 'held, the ' foreign news being rather More favorable, but with's limited demand'_ both for export and,homp ,nse, and light pupplini_ brief& vivid kiateirly steady, some 4.000 bbis • /Pair only have beari .flisposed'of.rat $5.15115:81X qp'• lahl for old stock; ~,.$6.82)1- for 'fresh ground:superfine..4 chiefly of: the- latter description,' _including -better *ands at $6.75; eitin'afsB - 68 25; 1,000 bblarextrali:• - mily - at $6 60; - 200 half bids at sl3qPirsir; 7and , laver tine and middlings at $4 4fr bbl ,The gales totbe•re tellers( and bakers have; been to a moderate - extent. within ;the range of theme figorea'end fancy larteat fir 47 60. • Bye Flour has been steady - at,_s43l! hblrbut . the receipts are light Of COni Meal' the suceipterind ,. sties are light, at $4 4fr bbl for Penneyliania Meal: WHlAT.—Thereceipfe this-week have been made. fate, and prices are steady, with sales of about 88.000 Mae at 51.2201 SO for 'inferior and prime, red; $1:1 00; 1.20 for-damaged , do;' and $1.3001.40 for" common to good Pennsylvania and Southern white. i'ltve he. been" ip better demand mien of 1.500 bus old at 713080 c, and „- uevret 70 0 75 0 . born has been in good mated, sante' advance noted at the 'doers of hiet week big been well maintained; sales of 17,000 bus yellow. at taile in store; 02092,50 afloat, sod 1.007 bus white - at Ito. Barley is , atBsef 8 000'but Barley Malt sold at 10080 e: Oats " have been ,arriving fre.elyrend: have „been in good de. Wand; subs of 16,000 bus at 450480 for -ITV - Orate for - renda.,•and 60dfcre old do.' ' ' - , The following are the inspections of nem ited Meal - • for the weekending Thursday, September 16,1868: Batt Barrels of Superfine - 284 -Barrels of Superfine - " 18,417 ID°. ',Pine Do. :Middlings - !1.79 Do. - &urn Meal Do. Voodoo:wed • • - 189 ' Total " 0,856 • GROCERIIIB.—The Coffee market has - quiet, the • stock of Rio in first loads being nearlrexhansUd. with. sales of only IStO bags at 9K011,0 end - 1,000 baga La gneyrs Ile 4f '' lb on thee; import bf the litter hie arrlyedthis week. - - The; receints7and,Stoo/01,0f lasses continuelight.bet there has been very Makin gully; mire of 160 hhda and bbls at 28e for Cloyed; 82q for Illnecovado, 40olor Porto WOO, and 880120 for fly.. 'rep. For Sugar, the market has also been quiet, with, light receipts and a moderate stook; sales mach 400 - - blade at 708;0 for Ones andPorto Ricci. and GOO boxes vans at 734 eektio; ail on time: , ; - • iP AOTISIONS.—T he market is dull with 11 - ISt atocice , of all kinds on sale. In Pork the one - ben confined to a few small lota of miss at 818 ;I prime IS scarce and held at 815; and city-peeked mesa- eel at SlBOlB 50 Off' bbl. Prime „Beef la worth 50010. and the market' is- Bacon= The demand 'heti' been limited at last week's quotations; sides of plain and hinny Hams /A _lovaings; vatdeus,-at -gamma,. and Shoulders at fittinfe cash and sixty days: - Of salted - rtieat there'li Yerg-ilttleAeftrlit.Grat - liendS, ,and we qttote Hams at fig OfiXo endflhonlders at 8%070 41 1 to., Lard continues scarce t isles of :bbla sit 12012,0, and kegs-at 180 4p, .5: -Butler. '.:-Eleles :of solid.-packed met roil at nem chketie is worth-U*3 Eggs 150 41r - " ,hISTAIS.—The :Iron market has undergone •no change, tut the deinand - for Pig Metal is limited, silth entail sales of IdO.- rdnthraeito at 2 at $2O. and Lin. Sat iSISI.V. - ton. Book& Pig ismomlnal at- /23 Wif pin. In Illooina and 'Boiler , plates there is a fair in quiry and no variation to notice In prises. "Lead is held with increseed firmness, but there is little or no stock here In first hands ; a sale of Virginia was made at SXo `BARK has declined, miles of 150...h1ids No. I.Quer citron at $31(40 Closintat the litter prim. Of Tan ,ners! Bark there is very little coming forwardiand a cargo of Chestnut Oak sold at $114! cord. . BKESWAX.—Good ?allow Is taken 'op iertealpt 810 ip ib• • " - DANDLES.—There is some little innitirferldrunan. tine, and further sales of city' manufactored have beeri made at Ito 4 lb, including come to go'ont of the mar mot at the same agar.. , Sperm and , Tallow,Candlet sell POAL.—The stocks at the .East are light, no as the Cold weather approaches it is anticiPeed thstthere will be, more animation in the trade: The present cargo rates of Schuylkill white,ish Are $3.25c3 40 ; ,red !aft at $3.4467 60, andlehigh at WM 41 1 ton cash, free on board. The receipts eontinue moderate and the ' COTTON.L-The advisee from thelouth bate - 'caused more firmness in the market, and.holders,have rout up their prices g Mo. The receipts_ and stooks are Tell light, bat the demand is limited, with'ules of 800 hales, chiefly Uplands. atllge for inferior up td 14e for Mid dling fair. and 1461430 for Mobile, cash and time. Flit TUBBS continue very iitanie, and good' Western readily commendlOp f wlich is an advance. • FISH are 'cciming forward slowly, and_ the stock is light; the sales are small lots from store at $16.60e1f for No. 1 Mackerel, $l3 76 for 2's,. and to 60e9.76 for a'S. The wharf rates are about 600 per bbl less. Pickled Gera og range from fa is to 43.25 in quality. Codfish NU. 'slowly at $3,75m4 the 100 lbs. • FRUITB.AII deecriptions of Foreign continue - in active:„ Domestic Yruit is not very abundant. Green Apples range from 703•t0 r Val Dried Apples are worth 7,limile Vr lb; Peaches 'are scarce. - FREIGHTI3.—To Liverpool thee Very little pro duce offering; and the rates are nominal. Some heavy gopds have been taken to London at 26,4' ton; West India freights eve quiet ; a wool was chattered ,to go - to Windw.ud at 700 4' bb l. Coal freights range atsl.26 _to Boston; 90oe5ts to New York, andsl tolthode Island. Teem's are scarce. • . GINSENG is wanted, but there Is no Credo' Ia first ands. DEBIP.—But little stook here, and io sales hare -en reported this week. RIDES are in light supply and held firmly, but there has been no transaction made public, HOPS are held firmly, with small sales Of new East ern at 200, and old crop at 10m12o 4p' lb. LUMBER is dull. Sao Boards sell at $l4, end Soethern Veering at $lB. Laths are did! at $1.15m 1.28 t . • .• . . • NATAL ST O RES. - Ent little has been done In Rosin, aed no amok here.. Bales of Tar at $2, and Piteh at $1.7602., Of Spirits of Turpentine the stock is eery light, and holde.s &retina ; sales In lota at 49050e' gallon. 011.13.—There hes been more inquiry for Linseed 011, but at a decline ; sales of 5,000 gallons , in lota, at 72m 740 4p gallon-11e former without the ciek. _Lard 011 - ie in limited ,apply, and Winter la held at nellOo. Tiah Oils meet a steads inquiry, and command full rem RICE Is in better request, - intl. sales of WC auks, in lots. at lax, eseb: - r • BALT.--Nearly.lll the recent arrivals of Liverpool ground end fine, some 18,000 seals, were preylowsly disposed of on terms kept private- - - • • FEEDS.—Oloverseed is dull, with sales of 600 but fair to good at $5 60E16.25 gr bus, the latter rate for new crop. Timothy continues to arrive , freely, and 1,200 bus sold at $202.12„ti 4ff bus. Of Flaxseed the market is bare and it is wanted, 600 bus brought $1.69 el 70 4fr bus. SPIRITS.—Brandy and Gin are held firmly., N. E. Bum is in limited request at 38 0, 400. W h iskey con tinues somewhat unsettled; sales of 800 bble, in lot., at %%ono for Oblo, 2e0,24X0 for Pennsylvania, 2to for hhde, end 230 for dredge. TALLOW is inactive, with email sales of city ren dared at 100 410 TEAS are more ir.ontred for, and prices continue firm. 1 OBAOOO —Both Leaf and manufactured are firmer, and for some descriptions Of the latter a further ad- Paine has been realized. The accounts from the West note very high prices ruling there. WOOL. The medium and low grades are wanted at full prices ; for otlvr descriptions there is but little-de mand; sales of 180.000 The, ranging from 31 to 35c for No. 1, pulled and common, and Nagle nett for quarter and full blood. .-; • PntasonLifai liflairAwits.—Under this head, the Lancaster Express notices several error which have been made rt the local , columns of the city press It mays: "The Ledger, in noticing the contemplated visit of the Idencibles to that city, says ' " this onus were on duty in this city during the note of 1814, and have the reputation of - be ing a well-drilled company. They were formerly nom. maw' ed by ex ledge Findlay, of this city." The Fen ciblee now in existence, although one of the beet coin punks in the State, is not the weneibles formerly com manded by Capt. Findlay, and were not in mesas° during the Philadelphia riots. There are not more than four member of the old company in the new one. The present Capt. John H Duchman, was Capt. 7mdlay's first lieutenant. The other old members are Lieut 111. H. Locher, Orderly-Sergeant M. J. Weaver, and Andrew Richolts The Philadelphia Press, of yesterday. in noticing the late fire in this city, locates it in Grand street. in. stead of Oheetnut, and puts down the loss of the Messrs. Reese at thirty thousand Instead of 83,000. Their loss wts heavy, but luckily not so bad as The Press makes ILI) The express mail passenger train coming east, upon the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, in charge of Conductor A. 1. Phelps, ran off the tout. on Thurs day, at a point called Willett'attnn,ettant SOmilesereat of Martinsburg. The accident was caused by a mis placed switch. and the eagles, tender, midland baggage cars, ...a the first passenger car, were thrown down an embankment twenty Wet and badly broken. The en gineer escaped, but the fireman, William Dodson. either tell or jumped with the engine, and was instantly killed. A. H. Davis, mall ai nit; w in the mail ear, and went down the embankment with it. He was tam out by Conductor`Phelps and Charles Ehrman, express DM. senger.. He was much bruised, but not seriously. lam Mobly, engineer, went down with the engine, and was considerably brained. Conductor Phelps, Jacob Barnwell, baggage master ' • Charles Smith, belonirliq to the Parkersburg road ; B. Davis, engineer on the Baltimore and Ohio road; Mr. Homier, and several others, were in the passenger car that went down, but were uninjured. A St. Louis bard, in a long poem published in the /lapse/jean, alludee Incidentally to Philadelphia as follows: Or go farther north where the thee and the;' thon' Of the Quaker are putties quite obsolete now • Where the streets are ao clean, and the door daps all shine, Where the girls are 10 charming, nay . , shrostdivine Where the markets are really a eight to behold, And the butter-tub hoops are resplendent as gold; Where on Saturday morning with bucket and hose, A man is brerpinkled whereyer he goes." Rebecca McCormick, colored, was this week tried before the Caritill 'county (hid ) court for the mur der of Frank Miles. also colored, and found guilty of murder in the drat degree. George W. Groves, a - police officer of Bal timore, was shot at by some rowdies on Wednesday night, and dangerously 'Ahmed , A fire broke out on the if th instant, at a camp.meeting, near Dalton. as., at night, consuming eight or Sea tents and wading mat consterna,n, oxfts. Markets. 306
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers