10 . ' ,rp t ik-.. ' I S tsrtt tiltSl 40. P't."kf m4 l l .ll: ll ' t.,,,P,P -:,„ ~,,,, ,: 4 ~. „tri,: 4 lit _ _ „....... _- ,- f 1 s 4 ' = , N- 1- 111 litYVAPrPaiNifillir i , 4 i l irts . lit4t4 1 - itie:4 , im i t - ,T,v44 - 1,4v,y4 ,41 .; 01 :Ki ,• ';'-:`'k ' r' , ' ,. .: - .4;24' ' • `.,6' ~ 6 . 1 " -C, C n t° • c !P c ' i ClM , ..,rtraarh -nil el '-' - ....r , V... 4 , , . is minified .ressiy for , • I •re, -:&,,, , ~..''.,,traao lA' Clift) . i'iror , • eLe*OltifiVit-'otrinre4 ilimailw,litAt Ihis twit,- 1 , -,i - l i T iitjn.oar,l3lty dtsWiniailAiy'Atisintio States, since _,,,:cifOttpfionkif i tgatt?4,49tinfl fur com mis. ;'-artio,""egigtOreM,lpeettapY.,lrtvetrennlemippereesold , _:,,hi s rit 4 oo.4 3 . romgookai :•4 4144 - 414,45/ 4 , 4 x, ,- 4 14Y„,,, 4 ,7 ''' , '''4ool nolvictlitintaintantandedtron WO ilh o .1 , 4,44.q ,,- . - :I‘zigiiil'V'Fg'ilililigiCtiliESe4, ittl , 1,4 el. '1. 4,- ; te e te'h 9‘ co )1.. a '.?"'"Ar tato4 - v ti a' . ft 'aiolue' 41 . 4.4 t. .-. 04 , dor4 i.a , 4 C:l6 ' : '' - `l.Toen4 -401.44444.4..44w0l 01..i) ltvoT, - C', '44010:1;1jA' .I t - itii'4 r4iii. 2 1441 , 4ilikPWctj- 1 1 011 6 0 4 011 0 111006 P 14,noratftAtthiW4ollY400140fAaiPIliht401;'; ' ri11ie44184444416 , 554 44 ,i • s4o.4,tili•vi {ii, ~t3';‘ eW7 fli44 - ' ' ' ' -Ca 40:0 , ,,/, , 61-6 . Th e, piiitip t i-. sir Ir. , '''' ' 4,- 't •%; 11 . 113 ' Aid' 4 1 " . • -' n fte rffdr 14 r c lv r , __,.,i o „ ci ...1 4 sjo , h- rkik 1 ON .41113 - #00 . 40., . ...4 1) M 41110 V/ a 4. 13 i 44 ASh 94-rnk: t.§ , -.1; 1 44-9 , 94 ' .44.1ti1. 1 4 81 4414 e q ° -.90 1 -d i Atte , i J 4, 4109)Qt • sai4l4, X 444 ,4, 0 6014, OPPolatonatkviv som i ttat a,o4 ‘ 4, 9 ,olpDarpballa `•-„a: iro f;a44ren , 4l o p.,,thi l l.ixteipattviClongressional' distriet=iStibli , Stitel easerabled *gain yeaterday; et,-"Akiiitebtft 4 eklildp"lcrteic the' orie';Atiwzaeli` dila itir4loo)V l itniguif!)iifolf tallothrl girdling v k ;3 ow yiroifire tt pitile l ikr bosiiiresk: retr o • A 116A-;74;v4itcyorva, Ina .- ,- xsi, 0 . , OrallitillATAP itikkriabin* , :ii:N. i f7, , t - ,"' . 4 , '''. 14' ~' 2, . aThelelographie.reporb of the muniaipal election 14,tXrbaitnivrartholIansail , Was not _quite teerreetT Iltrifti2aMlfotknutiTeraeOratvids `eieeted= Mayor brMinejerityrand , lid lit phaait t over edict, thW i fiellubliefiNA,Midittiltel s This ithunidlianAwid o t tifAivetriatbi Ilg tilukiiii etilne.°' 4 t 4k P iraPlttn 4,1/11914,4"fiAti,enif S4k viTAit.., r° it,`?iibmiliia att. RdiXilli iho' °Pgjv4ar.eailcA3rostoalon: Were.,181...197 , , 14 ,,, it • Althoullips , tiain Waa-made almost &total wre.ek, , liffiegliri°'44tieri:7l4iPiPX4oPr' /440.1;3 T ef. 04ttett,of- thersaciident is attributed- to the siitlriii l t . Or terailite t ,orins to thiOtte rains ;'- • fj . i r f r z o, _iy-Li gt Ailuilailop-jolljk g e lutelligonce 'of Zdestrtiotiyeifiroltaving 011euriedAhere Y,datoi d ettkitlt,„`da,idite,iifflit-tn%Wp I,aid • dit taeltin'y of:l4'W,grael:Co.; on-Plont itrat, hetween litioadititiOdyidlphy stroqt,. ,- -Sots deveffity : tive” t" , 4114 1 44::.f ,,, , - - , 1 '. z.... '.l. 41%. , * IT- - : '.:',"" .A. , dmihtvrealeight 3:oisterday,.nearl Rh:the:loud, VW',lfeitlOrlorinitignylist edit's*, hf%tlit Itroltiiiihrt4E44Wr,:iine-,44kerrard Ohimens, durinsr ‘ whieh'lhe latter wag vrtaistdeakin thti - thikh.- TlhAlo44o/ 11 .i.diffici40; 11 _,,t'faid" to 10 :Babi . e m striatu-in dhe'Enjuieer.on -Mr, °lemons, --, Ivi 3 OliaiiW,tbe,' l tirion* tiiiiviisparrfed'ciff,by_ a Palloo:m:salt Adlistrf highigan;is Thurston.. He watbeeen; th.vmeans of elebitoope, in the ,nolgify iniittlfolVtif %tan, °anode *Oh IWooider, how he lilmitiolig4iplit a balloon i. •,, -1 , ; ,, 440` •.: - .riVtoWleiterday, 116,1iio:X.=t amb vas, o 'l4 00 . , 6 .f Ouxiiiiin,c4P; O A Ogre's, iVr drown- int I. his tatftila the Alissimippi river, least apting...q „in. Hi Monaghan; from Obarttittin; 0 1. 0. fell= from,a iiiiidtik7ef'ffiii 11 . 9'7 - r Zak tits', is &mat , dey-iiight ) . and was_killed. - - --= - .' - ' Wiki„Atorm of Thursday was very_sevare at New Ilviire ; 34he 'steamer: - Oity of Rertfordj:for ili Wart fordwillt„or'Yr-444,111g ffil f, 4 44 .6 5140 .1=, P4 l "ack to AI 01,01"44" fol. shOlter'., — .The schooner William Dement i, F i arker, drove Frdnd:ll or:finabortW'irent „: 1 .i.r."; - .:; The steamat Philadelpida,efor , HaVand and New 0 rtdrpf c li r g.,#,; .r . 00 4',if NttfOrllrCi. ,40'erdaY , he da7.9f.inaluirtzbeing Paswanda,ol.3o4lai,,2 P. M. 1'4 4 11 0°I 1 .11, nit or K ii i•OTV* sl o:o#f" ,, Witari%` °nOYAktoltd.44:WidOldaiiiihl,' and l'ollbod & from $4,40"0 tu,fB,o`oo‘. ,- -, G.T, , -,-a« ' ‘ = , ... -.,' ItOrStr.kitilliiiiir With's:lir/rat' txhi.: .... •r ,,, • .1 •`, f... ~, billlOUSi e. ea . , , F ''.! ''', • - Ire: a,re;atly..s . ,halibf grihe 16401) bf Horse fairsarid agricullarat itzhihqlonsiv • They 'all 6 e9.fo l4 ,':k ii :* i i. aiiiig v 4, i'mtci;;lsruf;w4ietifell, therti, , Under r jho auspi c es of Notional , SMte; or ' 151113 0 4rinli organizations. ' There is evi dentif sprnOtlrlag irf,ttitse erthittitions`lykinb, apfcaqs 'gest fcA l luily,4iliciilatiorial las' tes anirKytiwa,tiries,.. , -Asy:attiaOlargof i 08134 of, people iogettai•tittad any class of enter- KiillteMeJ' ''''-'' '''i '- —': .- 's - t' • -., ~;~~~~T ~~r~j ;~:=~L' • They have the eamen.irrealatikle - ahem to , , Aznyil*nr:'Wif';')iiill;ftgliti"liaie'to-the spa nlardsf'' great ''rer4l,o *fiki_tai m4Bl4gs and'l - griniV fetes - - :the= ilieat bodi of our i,n4nhitiow being Ileneriiret'idi red* theirieVaiitenCe i! an4411-otherlytte,rettal*C4.;lo,lk. infereited in„n'nfil"....all4l4ll , l,i4.l6atevoi4fomoteie the too;:thai.engilieliirCagrierltn - re , arc' ,preaper.- °ne t they. , We „gathered .in Melt eunarne;larveatiyiandlhetthat thozhtive - rell • boA s tthey4titretr , ,htelrl;the tralpiate gratify thetF.:44 l3l .4oVOPMohiTOr;pleasniein Bet there mist 1 a prptenee of utilitariiiikani Oen,in'the,T,lvia:i . , - enrollhik . .44fh,:ite . h.na#o,444Ofjhat;ol7. at the.,l4oiitakit, 4#-4 11 'i - 004 8 krwio o- 0 m akooc#llofPi, l o9,4ltOriiiAirial pro; greee.74heae,nablhitictea 'ailbrol:htin-a hippy routine of em, ploynient fetid': hie 'de gib rfer,re prn. autkerVyingttluyecif."%froni,hhil,b,rether fari, reeikop_o r kakicji4litaenhl; end ilia: Bth:enfants' to hfe 'ambition and rivalry in .the enlhiegene et superior etbek which •are aseez,nb;ed for , hi ineliection: — . • , 1 !-.!", 7 ,- A _ Butvwhatiyerldegros, of Illettsino , linni VA*AiYikrioi;tinoti• sorrcad,Clnirtn: ovettheSsfol44llo4,s3filie array, of lalent- 1 which thci i T,nol, A n frequently,c4ll • • andYlkei roaaterig Jiddresies which -are delia vertid - et thOma it',`,#.mi4yecfoitc4l44it t the ! prineipal intereit of ihose who , atterni e thesor, elbktiAr:Po l , l 4WAti,t4iziii . l l l;ciitifid -in th e, ‘git.ists , Of::Ske . o4 form one , of tb9ir ; st,:promifent:_ features. Love of o?Fcitement, is sin ini2Leront„prinlipiel of 44of,itsmost agricableignityknitidtin'in WAtiforOing*Oant i typtit'oe'oni favorite ',animal. :Indio iiorSe.. racing'fif,oo 6 d,,firlo r i*!l44;',4l4.V 6 674d down,br,the? morn' • sentialent % of the detntan 7 ItTotbing ronses the htnnan feelings and; antagonists tstrntend;,7l,'illi!fhtr[oitiiii•giet(Of theiivtitili n tiiitofiinirenin6Tb ' ‘ nengisTii of a-/stesn;ibaf 2 irel: . testif to 'risleOvnn*Lek own Jiveo:attieurtlvanone: n•;rivalnontytes: ther%",,Olt.f9 ll( ! , o. l *tirqj.?F i ftl7.4C - 4 1 . t .,P vI M , A 4 : two'c,stfOol,„ 2 .4ol4 - atow-for,.. pu blic qliee a Ti f, 9 l ,4A. l oo l 9tfig i t i ****44ia become `wilting. wee ato t 1 14*.iiii: o , 3l=.l4illit4ii - T the, individual tattles of men ,go far to deter teine,the.chnracteiofthe.#tnggin Whicksbnii, arouse tieiil:nymbatiliesinenrlvall , - will =find °°° 1 0190*.,,ri, g 4:4410iC10,4 416 ,t , them, — The . tottrnaittente Ofilitt‘kiiights of 'the olden lime euligt d ' to . tift:eitiAlOttho.elite k etVitiole king dome.snligninaryta:stooftheltoninintivsl: best tiiik'iiirritle:,"dniith:itidions of Melt;•glnd,intnnf f ;'_rinf grOn t intig"slo:llkinva to crowntit4SictOrn,,,et BANfi f #o 44 o. o ****o4,'ill. °O l granalloq,rn t !y tan:aid:lVA If,thoWevot, - , it inust , ,:bd:copfetlndpiat .paifit - gtiniton';*i f fe4 F oo:4l:4l4Vf6l4lkllrite:, racinOttOnnino'nfOntlflinOriftlintinlii lie injitiafpnCSln tions sheitl4l3'?'fritd , ftilni ; ll4, and 41 1.rYglifi f itijiW r igk i **A i ii t - t,6 tuif.:l94 ,o 4l4toOkiinnjorti aleisiarettlie , , bDioggl kso*nnt * en l ag . e ,* Oho,i7y.4od.A4tk,*eYtrV.iitilblU I biniifOttediiitiNiWiof„fi n2r eilto E cocaltliPiitbso44l4ftti t fr n ooune 4 - The 5f tiiitkorspegll7,orvatkleViiiitiOns, as. f e a , atiiOtOPfe,, anspweyvtii'd4rof!ilAt ran 4 the ef4:440,g-fie,4 ) :, l oistrfiltievated , br.ttie variety 'ofplettal o 111 1 440.elgiagitt ihnser.w"ho-inyO chArgeit ofifiees'ext4bilion.g:shOul4 , be theit gthird sgaidni-NAttbnktflie)nptiob ,e,.olitsiVelys =With 'for' ili4V4*Y4iiiiEctiersi`:of 4tielipicti4. - ontit t 7 Spetisk-hitqst6Antiit3rAttint there are-Wien - - • • 'r Mil . l i t he : ' . 0 :Viltiliiiil, 43Y; 711444tU'le4daiamitin ,f/,, ,x ';' ' 'tarjre4,-0-7ftr'#'''',i'4' `4 Vr). `, , frktridl i fi ffog*lStf 4.,,,,er, '' "ill °'s ilte-IG4t,irtiaalatilf.,lfoug) 10,1... ll,..NiktrAamitillik-igw,ephoimitAiswatins A 4 '.;!'t • the 24Vitatleivil 66-”;'.(i°l*(l4l,3l2%kei'llieto4l,94`ol, eiv.,-itA d4.040,4,3ut.4„",, wv,,.,„ittevocklattat-iou,l”, ,V,:t :','-';i7l6-wiff": 3-iiiiiiiit untiqiiladW'r' ,14 1i'l ii - jmaltatiTorz ' - v 4.. trw-A-.6=-,l,libi-7.0*-kfig,:wirf,...,_. ~4r %j OdAgieliAineitchictrealy. , An Anglo-Chhietienper", didlekthe, Friend atChino ) , has given • .-abitract 0 4s ticie Treaty between the United §/ 61.45 fit., !piety 'on hue 18, at Tien.*,:byg.dr.OpEr;,4l2:the's'i part, of America,anege'l4losl4#rii4rfair.- 11.2(9! and HIVAgh : 2I, OXIA‘M•PIPViIIa.'s It runs as follow r'' lial*:l:';'"%.. 04, „ha.. Article 1 provides for - -general peace,_ and a stipulation for good offices of the United States in ease of difficulty .with other Powers. !thS'lllecritOf` the tettetyost pipe arklgashu s igtoii. - Attielel,WlThe dftiderffilblpation of the treaty at rho ; ro ` lea 6 Imperial aa~, Artiele4; ylpireet correapcndtocalidth-obliga. by,(fteltiloiTedge arid•anirterlaf,the Minister of the United States-with-lbe:Priv.v Council or .PritnogitShieler:atPeltin.," visit an eeourn, ihiaton.,plasurer ime, ofAbe,tUnited atwe ae StlitesMinieter,t•lourrieyto be either,brthe Peibo orbvetiondfroner Sheoghae; , and - 40 • be , provided tiff bY"thei•OhinmeKlaverninentote well as with an libfaillte not le; ooniVriikielitan'tlifentdt;,,ekettisite Of Think° Atkin lifkif 9fitolatititerOhrsti. le with the . , Privy, cane or, ;IMO msemliers,deprited foi, 'thittPuritese.! ,,,, J,,,mtiele-Ifi;Termanentrestuenee at Patin, if:thi , iserinieeded Mother Powers. Sit r k in ofiloiatoorresi.; iendeVeik' " • • ' ArkjoJa~.'T~itozgfeasof-]4finlster with Severer:l4 3 tellokal 7 0ivernosi;:,44., always;:fo he at official= 'residenee.,,lnterviews never tote denied. • t Article , oi; qaterriews ,on terms of equality, of naval commanders with-officiate •of highest rank: laupPreielon -• to leasillioneity without • id ergb ' Htiau ; of .offielabie-",Dbilgriation Mien TortsinewOneslaiiig,SietiMw and TitlWan in For-' moss; andonyotber.granted to English, Fteneh, ot,Ruasiana; Clandestine , ' andoontraband trade prohibited:;OPlnta to be prohibited or allowed% 'peemeding-ttvohincie laaf: • Article ,14. Thrlinited States never' te 'pay' bighei'daties thattile.mosCfaioreenation: • Tonnage duties tot•higher than im posed 'on inestlaVoreUnatlonsq, double' tonnage deles:ebolished? , 'ProspieetlVe enplination_ of ton 4091311.bikeedita;nighthOgses '&o.; ' Ofthayinp, duties;!: to lie -paid in Sydee er.foreign money 4 consuls not to give up papore,beforedutieshre.paidl ,,,,, - - Artia, lol4 : ImmoOttl , of , national flag; and oh= ligationOnititrelity. - • • • t Attiolii,2sVAppreherisSin , of Mutineers and de: der' aid,pheisitMnt creriiidnals, . I 4etielor2B. 'ExaTnsiVii jarisdiction of _United States authoritiqs.over•rigats and intercourse of its eitizens, , ,.. , • Attiolu rt-Mutual, appeals to pliblie officers,. with corbplainta: • • ", • Arfiele•23 Recognition end absolute toleration' of Cliptedauitq', sad prottotleiy of ,Chinese oon:' • • ArkiVie 2:ilt , -29i provision, that all rights, privileges', and-Powers grantedAc any na ",tion,lMmerobantsiOr sufijects, whether political; Meroantile or otherwise, and- not conferred by this tratityon'the' United States, Shall at once inure to the benefit of the'Unifed Buttes, its public fun°- • tionaries, merchants, or eitisens: ' Treaty to be ratified within a-year by the Uni ted States, and by the Emperor forthwith.' - • : °anis foropeeirdary . 'indemnity, either' for English,-Amerlean, or,Pienoh - loges, neither' ad. se:lifted Mu: .deniedOiul rafirted 'to Can to‘n. Perhinnent'LegatterCofthe United States MlMS ter; aftiiroiettlomenV•of • pending question at Can tonvunderstood to be hereafter at Shanghae. The;London Times of AugustBo, in a leader ,rebtoli - we, Copy else Where; bitterly complains o l fibe,:ritlyantagos which Russia and the 'United:States - have won, by diplomacy, from :Chinic With qUe fighting, for ,theni; as, France iintEngland 'ibis grumbling is curiously chatiat . arlitt4: - and very much Of the dog:in= the -manger order of things. Mr. REED haii netnegleafed the interests of his native land, . , w_eitmi.,rdadliy-perceivep, • Effects" of: the: cian Cubic. . t One iiine - tic - aCcaainple outweighs almost any; quantity'of,theoiy and mere assertion. 'At the recent dinner given by the Lord Mayor ot . D'fiblln to Mt:" BRIGHT, chief engineer of tlic.*tlantic Telegraph Company the recipi ent of this honor made some sensible remarks, sbd intimated that the first message sent by, tie '4114) littarAnierica: to England, showed stiofiglY the: inipO4ine Of- the work—it was that conveying, the lifortdation`iespecting the "collisien'tieteitien," the BersPdand:drabia, and , r setting Fetkall:4ziety' as to the subject. Had thairifeiniatififfnot been conveyed, up- Ifratiltilet£,lo,ooo, haie, been paid for 'hiserstree on the Europa, in, consequence of :tile delay - in her , arrival' at her' destination". Mow, "thin something • real and tangible. :Here was a vast amount of painful suspense , avolde4, and a tast 'expenditure prevented— 'simply:hi; a Bash of lightning!' Some Journalists, we notice, are throwing cold "water - Cm' the' Ocean Cable, by hinting doubts its i capacity„ for work. But it has_ worked. 411 .that is now needed is to vs : . "lemfae that:Capability, findtthislias been en. trusted; we think, - to scientific men oft'un. doubted ability,` . , , :The : Pennsylvania Railroad and City 'Ayenne-,- - Necessity' for a Bridge. , iTherenhsybianik'Railroad intersects the pity aifentia--aileut five miles-west. At that -point;',Rnm: the: etiaracter of the grade, h is hopossiblohr. persons or vehicles to notico approsie,hinetrains, ' and - within-the last few Weeka:there have been ',some' narrow escapes, lutd4his,withont - .negligende in-. either party approaching the point of- intersection. even °, ..hya recent act of ASSeinbly, Isio.beihrveyed - Midopened at the joint ex 'Periserol7the:citYind ,the adjoining county of Iffiiiiigomely.<l, - line- has been nut by a joint commission, a nd our City. Surveyor has regulated' the, :grade in such a way as to re :quire a- bridge at the - point• of intersection with theireliroad.: Our object is to call the attention of the proper authorities trithe mat ter;with,the view to protect travellers on both highwais. The only way toflo this is by a 'bridge. , Tho'Lyoz4litgeDiiirict. In the, 'l:yawning- district, Hon. JANES' T. /pia-Uri:Seen' :nominated for , Congress, in opposition to oktralorr, Wuzra, who so grossly' misinprOserirod hbf constituents during the last session of bongress.- Judge Ham is one of. the first men,of the State in point of cha racter and ability. It is deeply to be re 'gretted that the :Democrats of ,this district could,not have selected as their candidate one ',who represented their principles; but as the matter stands,- we- doubt very much whether be'dragooned ,Into the support of a 'nominee who is-steeped up to the eyebrews in tito deepest iniquities of Locomptonism. • ~'~~ Citron:, the Deilllifl4:B County Republican, of yesterday.] Iltairuto AT MARCUS lioox.—The friends of Hon. John illokman, in the townships of Bethel, Upper and Lower- Chichester, assembled in large .nlimbeis at 'Marcus Hook, on Wednesday night last. The steamboat Young America took a dela sratiori'ltom thitr.bototigh.: , Clayton, of Bethel; melded, asaisted'by William Eyre. Esq., 'JbhriE.Werne, Capt. Edward Waggoner, William' Jrinan'Eyre, Charles Smith, john'Larkli, Edivard Berry, George Clayton, Jno. '13.-Id'Oriy,'Devid.N. Larkin George Harvey, Cur tie B. It*, Henry 33. Grubb,l Thomas Marshall, Mrriek, Isaac Harvey, Thomas B. Jones, - Reuben' Pyle, Harrey, E. Pierce, Samuel• Wells,, Sr:, - MoCitrtney, John Anyone, John R. Vate7,:l'introse , Daburrow, Job. Lippincott, Eli ilamiltonyOarman• Richardson, Jr., and Samuel ' ,, :ileoretariettz•David W. Byre; H. J. Gibson, M'Cay. After the organisation Was omipleted; Hon: John Mokman was called upon to address the meeting, ,which he did in a tone of commanding eloquence for the apaim'of an-hour and a half, reviewing, in :the Moan Vale; the donne -of the Adthirdstration on the Kansas question, and showing its violated .pledges MIL Westerly and conclusive manner. On the subjeeter the tariff and' other kindred issues -he was , avowing himself a friend to propietiOn fa its broadest and most oomprehen• sive souse.. Hotwithatanding the rain storm, which Iphavented many from attending, the meetieg wan large, and more - entbusbustio.than any other held in Lower Chichester for'yeare Nzeuraaa, Democratic candidate tlie'rirst CollgreSsirCual district; made a Irrief,,lototeilittg.speech at this,mecting., _ , YounTH-LiorsLATIVE DIEWRICT.—The only oea didttefor legislative election in 'this district, at connected with , jottinalisec, hi Mr. Morris Hardingi ,(son of Abe worthy proprietor of the ,rnqgir#,) whodias resolved the nomination. Mr. 'Hording lalighlY edioated, bee been trained by dile father' iiito"thOiOngh business 'habits, cud will reotive the good wishes, as well as the warm sup -144, of 1e large number.'of electors', The only objscition we have heard stated against him is that he is too Young—a . faidt; if fault It be, which every undoubtAdly, diminish. We ,ohnbld,b'egiad to see,blin in o reaponsiblo capacity, ' Where hiatitlents which-are 'considerable, oan ad. `too" Mucli. negieCted interests of his , „ " eTgcse , A*l3lE4 ESTATE; TIJZSDATIMX . T.-1360 S-4banas &Same pamphlet oatalogue, boll:tang , elghteen,p,raertles, some of. them very 'valuable, and eleVerf of ihem p e r - 6 11 1144 sales , by order of Ales:;; - a - liirge" amount of "stooks, loans, .Sea else adoortisapents; aviator' heed. -11111 TRADE SALE sa:BooKantrants AND STA , ;Ti'oNarii" , 110th "See oatiloguars: OA Friday niglitrthir °Ala . e of Messrs. Frill :}kpro' toter - ; rietii die Ditiass" tor bridge, 'Boris_ comity, z yr as t l rolfon open Bohm soixowhat diriap- Tpobitetkin:tielo:,:a*ioltojaiipif toini tr o th pa ,ii2olitif•dricireic,ther, *ink - the aid of 'goopowdoo t blei :the 100 k of ado off , sod abptraitedlhe con-, tents; tortiintitoti, tO, Only &iota five dollaro. Foca 7011,by eitiatq tHopowili Yfjik ackyity, (Pa - ,) bung him. in his barn', lirreesis 'of "a leather "rein, from the ,ben.kiOtainily Airs Seem-to have, been :the cane. or 'Titshbhanny end. Ile wateged about 0404,77'0i°, yea's, Ind irsii considered by all grim knevi liim m Wrdiopta4- . 144 , 1 **4114 °also. „ 04,...tr , ' 111 E PRESS..4 , I-IThATALPIIIA, SATUADAY, SEPTEIVISER 18. iiStia 'Hon. Thomas D. Harris ! This truly diatingrad gizintlgan—distin guished not only fo itiiii`Oonrigvttd daring in ;the bhtl t em,trutpi,bis abilityr:and sagacity f i tiV e "re-e:lectiett, by':itedliniiitioi.,l, Be is now i t efirmifintativiltrtOotigth4, from the Sprlngtlekrdll.s distri64iti4 statidiiby Don. ones boldly and efficiently. I s lii i the last ses sion his course was marked b:y h!..ireat display off, parliamentary skill tad learning._. Though laboring under severe illness all the tinie,..he. :.l was rarely - found absent from duty. Ho tritlntt , itlPhearts open to roielention,hi,certaid by r ,ottor mons majority- —to_ show heti thit`i heroic statesman; deserving as he itrof,i and capable to, the , highest honors of: the country, stands in regard to men like IlmicttAx, HASKIN, Ha nn -tarn, and;othois; eiffithif following ttiiiil. fueletter TriOds of Hedslx, in ,bii great'striigglo in New York „ , Eitesonx HILL. .." - iTeii..ietersbirg, Illinois, August 28,1858. Gitiviarsizte' Absanbe from home and' severe illness have prevelited an earlier- answer-to your invitation to attend and address a mass-meeting of citizens, witholit ,oisanotton oft,party, at Tarry-, town.sn'the 2d poiihno, to etneert measures for the re-eleltion"tO' Congress .of the Hon. - John B. --•- • • I think you for the invitation 'opt of ,my,power to aompt,it, it gives me an oppor tunity of saying that 1 doilieartily desire the re-eloo- Alan of Mr. Rasliih: We °coupled 'adjoining seals Miring - the whole of the last ifessiori, and I bad the fullest oPportinity of observing his actions and his votes , : They were each an commended him to my , approbation as a bold. faithful, honest represinta• tire of the people. We almost uniformly voted together, and gave What I have always hold to . be Demberatie votes. • They were votes- , in- favoi of the people, and the rightsl of the people, and the people onght.to sustain the man who gave. them.- Bat if,iieems he is hunted down by these Pretended, Demoorars'whose patriotism is 'mongered -by 'the amonneof ptiblie plunder they' have cribbed or' ex-l' nest to crib. All I have to say is, that if the real DemooraoyJurntheir opposition upen.Mr. Raskin, so muds 'the worse for : them, They-will. come to their sensea when it le too la:e to repair the mis chief their folly has occaaloned. I have been twenty years a voter, and never mud any votes but for • Democrats, and :were I in Mr. }Toshio's district I should, vote for him with .the greatest pleasure,_not only booause his record is' consistent with y views of Democracy, but for the higher reason, that it is in harmony with right and justice. He has nobly defended popular liberty and lalida heavy hand upon those more than sus noted of official corruption. For this hale hunted down by the minions of power, and it is the duty ofthe people—all 'peoPle—to sustain him and btar hiin up; for, , in doing so, they but sustain their own-rights and interests;- Whenever the people re fused° support these who.defend their cause, they will hive defenders he longer. When subiervieney to'exeeutive power offers is surer guarantee to pro-' motion, distinction, and power; than , devotion to the rights and welfare of the people, it will• be hh evil day for our country. Believing that time is not yet 0,0410 in the Ninth Congressional district of the State of New York, I remain, with groat re. speot, your obedient servant, ' • - ' -THOMAS L. HARRIS• • Messrs. William Cauldwoll, A. B. Upham, John , Bussing, H. D. Robertson, and others, oommittee. BY MIDNIGHT MAIL. Letter from "Occasional." fOorrespandonos of The Prem.] 3 4 7.tsuniGrott, Sept. 17, 1858 The quidnunc., are on the alert to know-what carried Mr. Buohamin to Wheatland. Many of the wise ones adeot to know all about it. Some assert that he is absent on pewit!) business; some that it )3 intended to secure the votes of the mann faeturers for his polloy at your State eleotion ; but thosebest advised declare that his visit is on purely private business. The President was accompanied by his fast and faithful friend R. M. Magraw, of Baltimore.. , Among the visitors in Washington is Mr. Landy, candidate-for re.elootion to Congress. He is sup posed to be hero for the purpbse of obtainingeome patronage fora friend. Mr. Landy was at first disposed to be very sound on the great ,question, but the "precipitate pressure" was quite too mush him. The New York Democratio State Convention was a defeat, of Fernando Wood, and Bonnett, of the New York Herald. Wood was the active re preitintative of Daniel 8. Dickinson for the Presi deney, and was basked by Mr. Oaten, the New York Collector, and Mr. John 0. Mather, the Na val Officer. "Ilia defeat, and his ejeetion, have given great power to the friends of Hon. D. E. Sickles and others, and prove that the organiza tion of New York is with Mr. S., and against the aspiring sage of ‘ Binghamton,, Dickinson. M. Schell must look put for hie laurels. In the mean while Bennett, who is lath to quarrel with the Ad ministration, will try to avenge the defeat of Wood, by 'attempting to prove that it is really a defeat of Mr. Bashanan, and a triumph of Douglas. This accounts for his Ifling at Mr. Belmont, in a. late number of the Heraa. There is, how ever, no doubt of one thing, and it is this,: that Sickles is the rising ,man of the Demooraoy_ in New York, and the most indomitable, too. Ile is able to take oar° of himself, and, after a long bat tle;oornapies the quarter-ileek.. L say this with out the,slightest sympathy for his Looomptonism, but Out of admiration of the man,-his intellectual resources, 'and his determined pluck. The Democrats of Indiana have one and all re pudiated the English bill- - and it is this only that will save them from defeat. This will be a glori ous triumph, for Douglas. Wise, and Walker. How the Southern mon ,whe have committed them- selves to the English bill, Will like it, remains to be seen. All Californians that I have seen have with de ' light marked down the day that brought the news of the anti-LeCompton organization in their State as a white ono in its political calendar. They are an open-hearted, ehtvalroue and high-minded people; and nobody that knew them for a mo ment doubted but that they would enthusiastically support Broderick and Mollibbin in their right against even their party Administration in the wrong . Dr. Gwin has been so impressed by the tidings from his constituents that he has started hot !Opted in support of Douglas. It is for the peo ple to say whether his trimming shall servo tdm, or whether ibis allowed for any public servant to waver and hesitate to march up to the clear de mands of a public duty. ' Now, there is one foot that must strike every body: It has been commented on amongst petit!. °bins hero snore than once. The next session will open with a very different condition of political sentiment from that which existed at the close of the last one. Douglas and Broderick and Stuart will not find arrayed against them the boisterous and bitter opposition of Senators Slidell, Green, Toombs, Davis. and others. These gentlemen have been cooling themselves during the summer heats at the various watering-places in the North, and at the same time feeling the popular pulse In that quarter. They keenly appreciate the truth that the test has been pushed too far, and that, instead of the Administration 'and themselves, Douglas and Broderick and Stuart are now the representative men of the Democracy: They have abandoned their intolerance, and are eager to de. mend that toleranee for themselves which they have refused to their fellow-Democrats. Truly does Belshazzar tremble after his night's debauch of arrogance and injustice). I am glad to en that wherever there has been a mass convention or assemblage the virtues, the noble bearing; and the fine mind of Broderick have' been extolled in thrillingeloquenee, and that these words of truth have been applauded to the echo. In Quaker dietriots of Pennsylvania, whilst there an dying visits, I have hoard him named and his stations spoken of with a rum enthusiasm. All these things surely teach a lesson. Young men may see that, whatever 'betide for the hour; an honest adherence to pledges and to the principles of the party, where dictated by justice and right, must ultimately gather the crown of laurels and secure the popular esteem and confi dence. It seems that Professor Alexander hag accom plished nothing in his mission to England. An appropriation of $5,000 was made by Congress, with a view of scouring, on the part of England, a colnoidenoe of 'Currency with us upon the deci mal system. The - objeot was to occur° a decimal currency the world over, and to try the first ex periment with England. Professor Alexander wenfont as the agent of the Treasury Department, under the act ofCongress, but the money has been expended, and nothing practical bee been done. The Capitol at Washington! It is likely to be' called Melgs' folly. As to the chambers of the two Houses—never courtesan paraded the Vent tian grade in more flaunting colors and with face more thickly 'marred with paint. Tho dome goes up an hid' a year. In e, generation it may be completed, if the substructure managed to sustain it—for literally, as the foundations are of free stone, "it is a house builtupon the sand." Bat who °area ? Uncle Sam is rich, hie revenues far exceed his expenditures; ha has a surplus re venue " which to paralysing the arm of industry;" he has no Indian ware. There le nothing but a Capitol to °root, and a Moigs to exalt. Who cares fir expense ! Nobody, of - course—neither Demo orate, nor Republioans, nor Americana; neither insiders nor outaldois. do we go.• It is unfortunate that Cen. Jo. Lane has gone to Indiana, to sustain, in the Canvass therm that he comptodpolloy of the Administration which has kept Oregon out of the Union, and which will con tinue to keep it out, if Mr. Buchanan's test be in elated on. OCCASIONAL. On Monday ' last, at Oynthia, Kentucky, a fire broke out in 6 stable In which were a number of valuable horses, destined for the Southern market, and worth $260 to $3Ol each. As the stable contained a large quantity of hey and grain, the Ore spread very rapidly, and thirty.five ,horses, in spite of every ex. ertion to save them, perished in the dames A black eqmith•ehop and a dwelling were. aleo destroyed, to. gather with a jack male, worth $2,000, making the total loss between $lB,OOO and,Vo,9llo. The Allentown (Pa.),Register says: wWe are informed that the fitoeanqns and lionnendaqua iron companies recently made heavy contraers for the delivery or iron water pipes tor the city of Boehm. The contract of the Catafalque cdmpapy id said to amount to 4,000 tons, and that of the Iloquendaqun to 2,000 tons, which, at $19.150 per ton, will yield to the companion the mg little mat of 017.000. The ,111e5ittammi•fo 00 ?. v Grahaner:2lthlizitikAiicrArtlidi' 3 , •Ldefies'' Same; MiskeAsYs'OtUe' , !.. already - rt/a49d.; Godees'Fand not yet, eolue to, hand. , r,` , ,;;,, The eiontinuettati ; 4f. mo, n r: a novel-, • ditto iihioir is 1n:444e of ilistlleationin'Grabahs;: is fully equal to;,the chapters,-and the 'authoress, whoever"sho:be,ris destined teiritake name .in, , ,literature. Another 'pleasant' story is "Clara Lore 'Void and Won." The Editor's " Cabinet of Poses," and "Easy Talk," aro among the best portions of Graham, minstrel, and !exhibikekoholariblii. isitlkta4 pi„dantry: , a genial nti 3uretard geed taste. :••-• • Arthur's - Magaziim has the conclu sion - of-l' Our Children," a fine story, by the editor, and several gooCceufributions'hy Virginia Townsend, and other.popidar writers". This - Poriodioal is profusely illustrated in the fashions' , department, and must be a weloome guest in the drawing-room. We must express , our, -surprise,however, that Mr Arthur, himself a debidedly moral write'r, 'should (in the oritioal department of a periodioal intended chiefly for females;) recommend, in Minis of the strongest eulogy, the attempt on the Life of Napo-, leon 111, latelymutdelin this city. ; Unreliable in • feats and ',indecorous-in tone, it is the last book we should desire to see in. the hands of ,any lady whom:we respeoted.; Lot Mr. Arthur himself read: what he so strongly:recomMondepand,no doubt he. will make an 2apology to -his subscribers,. next month, forhaving misled them:. "i 'BITSINESB LITERkTURN ' Specimens 'of a forthcoming publication, en titled the " Unittid States Business Directory," have been shown us, and' •though we rarely.pass an opinion upon , any wink tintil. it be before us in a complete form, we freely admit that we are faiorably impreseedirith the design of this great publication, and the manner of its execution, so , far as 'we have seen. It purposes to give a list of ail artists, architects, lawyers, physicians, local. clergymen, editors and publishers, printers, mer .e.hants of all classes, manufacturers, mechanics in buslnesi, Jetitioes of the peace, notaries banks and insurance companies, with names of the officers, and whether 'life; lire, or marine in surance, hotels, boarding-house keepers, .ko.. of twenty-nine of the United States, together with a variety of important and accurate statistical and other information. The work is so very forward (agents having traversed through the Now Eng land States and most of the Middle and Western) that it will appear in Marsh, 1859. No village, however small; will be neglected. It will be a handsomely-printed and richly-illustrated work, of 1,200 large pages, at only ten dollani a copy. Part of it will be devoted to advertisements. Mr. Edwin Devoe, of New York, will publish this most important book in Boston, and will personally superintend It. Letter from New York. TDB DEMOCRATIC STARE CONVENTION—NOW TEN NOMINA TIONS ARE RECEIVED—OPINIONS OP TIC PRESS—WHAT TUN RESOLUTIONS DO NOT SAT—QUARANTINE MAT TERS—FATAL ACCIDENT AT , THE NEW TORE HOTEL— NEGRO CONVENTION AT TROT—MADAME COLSON NAOS MAO—ENGLISH OPERA-- t ' ANEMS meg "—man- DID NEW FOSIO HALL IN SIATII AVENGE—STOCES. [Correspondence of The Press.] Now YOBS, Sept. 17, 1858. The Democratic State nominations are received with favor by the various factions' of the Oily Democracy, and spoken of with respect by the Republican's and American's, The Tribune Eye «it le a very fair ticket." The Times rays : On the whole, it will bo conceded that the Democratic State ticket in a strong one, and notwithstanding the threatened defection of Wood and Lie forces, It will probably receive very nearly, it not the entire, vote of its party.” The Day Book (Administration) thinks the resolu tions hardly up to the mark, butthat the ticketis a good one, and con be elected. The News goes It. though not very gracefully. "Sentinel," the experienced and oompetent corms. Pendent and semi-editor of the Courier and Requiter, in speaking of the outcry against the managing beads of the Convention, says : The men who took the rote after Mr, Croewell threw them down, are driving yet, and they drive well. There would be a crash in the coach before the journey was a mile out from the Con. vontlon, if Mr. Cogger, and Mr. Riehmond, and Mr. Jewett, and Mr. Sickles, and the lon g-e atablished guard matt the un;dance,t , The He rald pronounces "the ticket beaded by the popular name of Amass J. Parker, a strong and gcod one." But the noticeable feature of the proceeding!' of the • Convention is what it determined not to do In the resolution'', while the Ildminietrsttoo i■ endorsed in tarns not violently laudatory, the course of the Sena tor from Illinole is not made the subject of that de nunciation which the Washington Union bad hoped its Mende would endeavor to prose and carry. Why ? The interrogatory to readily answered by those who know the sympathy that exists between the leading lofts of the State and Judge Douglas. ' Theae'gentl•men appro. ohite the feet that there is a future as well as a pad, and when it comes to the objurgatory part of the bunt. nem they remember the truthfulness and pithiness of the eaying : _ "Comes, like young chicks no, ever come. home in roost " Matters at Quarantine continue to ocontit intrh of public attention. 'Fifty policententrere tent down from the city on Thursday, for the purptse of protecting Dr• Thompson during Me attendance at the court now being held at Stapleton. The Mayor and 'Commissioners of Emigration visited the Quarantine grounds yesterday' just as the hospital employees were about to bury some bodies. A police foree was on hand to prevent opPosilion from the villagers, but the Mayor, a'ter deliberating and Conferring with parties on the spot, concluded to avert any difficulty, by ordering, them to be buried to the night. The examination of Bay Tompkins and John 0. Thompson for arson - pro. seeded this morning at Stapleton. Pew spectators were In attendance. The prisoners eat within the bar, un concernedly reading the morning papers. Both Temp: kins and Thompson are not In any way restrained of their liberty, nor do people anticipate any unpleasant results to them. A. fearful and fatal accident occurred Let night atthe New York Hotel, Mr. Wm. H. Monaghan, of South Carolina, having fallen from the window, in the fourth story, first to the roof of a small bull ding urderneath and thence to the sidewalk below. He bad for some days previously been indulging too freely in drink, and was last night, before going to his room, observed to be much intoxicated. He wan respectably connected at the South. The negro Convention at Troy resolved to vote the Republican ticket. They have seven thoneend votes io the State, an important aggregate in the pro. sent curious position of parties. Madame Colson maintaine herself fully In the favora ble opinion formed of her merits as an artist on the flret and eecond nights of her performance. If elm prime as successful here asshe WWII in New Orleans, ehe certainly can have no cause for complaint. Her en gagement there extended over three yeare, and ehe not only made but kept the six and thirty thousand dollars paid her by the manager during that period. The English opera company, at Wallackis, Is superior, as a whole, to any English company that . has appeared in New Yrrk tante the days of Mr. and Mrs. Wood. Miss Milner, the prima donna, if not the' equal of Louisa Pyne, to no little her inferior that none but a fastidious taste would draw an ungraciens comparison between them. On Thursday next Mr. Stephen Masson (" Jeerns Pipes, of Pipeaville ") commencee hie series of col& pound doub!e-action entertainment—musical and mt. gratory—at Nlblde, In which will be raid and sung hie various adventures among the Hottentots, Bladoos, Hollanders, and other terrestrials. We are aeon to have a new grand:minima hall, right in the midst of Japonicadom, capable of sleeting coven thoueand perform The location is on Math avenue, betiveen Fourteenth and Fifteenth atreete. The pro prietors are Mews. DeForrest and TIMM., owners and managers of Palace Gardena, and the establishment in to be completed by the first of January next, Palace Gardena have been a great success, and IF the directors manage the new hall with equal tact, they can scarcely fail to make it both popular and lemunerativo. Illinois Central shares, under the better London quotation., are x higher. Mr, Caird, If P., came out in the Persia with the view of informing himself upon the valueofthe company's landed property. His visit, we are told, has no connection with the investigation inatituted by the London body of stockholders. Lt the teeond board Tennessee 6 , a fell IC Paclea Mall rose 1X and mold at 03%; Reeding % ; Rock Island ; Michigan Southern do preferred % ; Ga• lena and Chicago %. , WSW YORK STOOK BIGHIANGII—Sept. 17. BROOND BOARD. 6000 Minnow' 8161 s6O 84 260 La Or & Nil R 214 2000 Tenn St Os 'DO 8O) 100 Erie It alO 173( 1000 Erie P. /Mode '75 825( 5 do 175 j 60 Pacific Mail 88 Co 94 50 Web So&N In 110 23X 60 do eOO 94 1100 do 13% 10 do 94%100 do 630 8314 60 N Y Central R 781( 100 do els 233` 400 do e6O 78 200 do bBO 2754 100 do 7834 160 Chia & Rk 111 It 68g 460 do 78 410 do 681( 200 Reading P. 47 100 do b 3 6014 200 do e3O 4034 60. do nib 68X 100 do e3O 46% 160 do b6O 0834 830 do 4034 60 Mich So It pre!' 94x 200 do 48% 100 do 410 44 200 do 430 46x 100 do b6O 4434 SO Panama R 118 260 do 630 44 200 Olev & Tol R 360 32X 92 Gal & Ohio R ~, 83 200 do 32% 100 do 680 82X :00 do MO 12% 60 do 030 82% 60 do D3O 8234 67 do 015 6234 MARKRTS Corrac—The market is quiet but unchanged ; eaten 100 bag. Java at 150, 25 bags Maracaibo at WO, and 150 bags St. Domingo on private terms bnoos.—The sales Include 800 kegs bl-car of Coda here and to arrive at 6Mc ; 20 tone Soda Ash at 2)c; 2,000 the Pena. Potash at 37c, cash ; 20 tons llammonis, at 18c; Oreem Uttar Is goatee and held at 27%0 180. FLooa.—The market for State and Weal ern Flour is lees active, but without change to notice. The receipts are moderate. Sales 7,010 Ws at $4 0505 for super fine State, 25.4005 60 for extra State, 83 4004 60 for rejected State, $4 9005 15 for superfine Weldon; $5.26 05.55 for common to fair extra Western, $5 6505.75 for shipping brands of extra round hoop. Southein Flour la unchanged ; sales 1.000 bbis at $4.2505.40 for mixed to good brands. and 86 5007 60 for fancy, favorite and extra brands. Canadian Flour Is quiet; salmi 800 bble at $5 5006 60 for the range of extra.. ORAlN,—Wheat is firmer, with a fair demand ; males of 26.000 bushele at $1 for fair unsound Chicago Spring; $1 02 for fair unsound Milwaukee Olub; $1.1501.18 for Western Red; $1.25 0 1.40 for Southern White; $llBO 1.26 for Southern Red. Corn is a shade firmer * sales 27,000 bushel!' at 68074).0. Oats are buoyant ' , with miles at 850450 for Southern and Jersey, and 450500 for State and Western. Rye is held at 780. Rai is In fair demand; Wen 1,000 bales at 460500 for shipping lots. Rinse are dull, with no important transacitione to record. Itosar.—We notice a sale of 300 gallons chola° Cuba at 76c, duty paid. klobsiimis continue quiet, and we b 11 1 ,9 only to no. time sales of 30 tce Muscovado at 28m82coind 45 bbie do at 320. •• • . NAM Svones.—Spirite Turpentine Is in fair re gnant; pales 700 bble at 48X, m49c, in merchantable and ehipping order. COmmon Itooll2 Is quiet. Pine Hostas are active; lodes 2 000 bblo at lime 50 4 280 UR. Betose —We Mateo a sale of 1 000 mate Cassia it 250. Bonen —Row le active and ,tic better; sales 2,000 hhde Cuba at 7m8 3 / 4 c ; 147 moons (from Newnan, N. P.) at 7)6 akko, and 1,005 sxo Havana on private terms. TALLOW market steady; sales 11,000 Iba at 10)0. Wom. —There lea fair demand, and we notice Wee of 150,000 Hosea at 858400 for low grades, and 42at40 for finer qualities p a150,'20,000 The Oaliforula at 240. LA T T-NE,W S T E L ErtA P raiimai. reier*ikiln:vllllll oll3l3 'The 'NatiohaLliArsii,T r tiin , ' Ssainoriar.n, gess.; i3ept;l7.,..,:„,ige , were favored to , day with'datightftil weilhei,'Mad. the earernisiut Of- the National Ilerielihew were very grand, and gave" grea!, , entieraction to the immense Crowd which.wasinattend ance. The banquet commenced this evening. A large concourse wan present, embracing some of the drat men In the country. Qov, Banks opened the exercises with an eloquent address on the horse He Is to ho followed by *dviarekiOratt-ilovelnirr iltng:'a 4 ndb).hets; Tho performances to- m orrow 'promise to be very in tercating and 'to:Milling They 'embracer sinchg other attractions,,the .. donkey races. . rresident Bachanau at Wheatland. Lasoesrart. Sops 1.7.---:-Preeident Buchanan arrived quietly at Wheatland Mat evening He came in bit -private carriage, from Columbia This is his Prat visit home rince'his electibn. Ho has not yet 'visited the ;city, being engaged on his own private strait's. From •IVA'shiington. insuittorom, Sept. IT.—Commander Dell has been appointed light house inspector of the Third district of .New York; vice McHinstry. detached, " Commander Stellwagen has been appointed light house inspector of the Fourth district of Philadelphia, 'vice Steadman. who is adored ' to command 'the brig , Dolphin, in place of Lieutenant Maillt,'who is a witness ern the recaptured African's case, Lieutenant J. P. Jones has been detached from ord nance duty, and ordered an bghthouSe inspector of the 'sixth district, at Charleston, vice Commander Hunter detached. . . 'Surgeon" Kellogg has been ordered to the Norfolk navy yard, vice Dornick, detached, and ordered to the Roanoke es the gout surgeon of the home equadrou. Surgeon Henderson has been ordered to the navy yard. at Portsmouth. N. 11., vice Delaney, detached. L eutenaot Ltmtort has boon ordered to the ()vane. in place of MeLaughtln, who has been condemned by a medical survey. Robert A. Finlay, residing at Santa Cruz has been am:muted •consul at that plaoP and Tapley W. Young, of Virginia, consul at Stuttgarilt. The reniecvous of the Paraguay Expedition will he at !Menus Ayres, a abort distance from the mouth of the Parana river. - Jnbn itchb hoe been appointed chief clerk of the Pen Mon Office. Eleventh Congressional District. POTTS,ILLI, Sept 17 —The Lecompton Democratic Cissßims or Lb° Northumberland and gcbuylkill dis trict met hereto-day, and renominaboi Hon Wm L. Dowart, for Congress The autbLecloopton Demo erotic candidate in Joseph - W. Calce,'Esd. and the rp position' candidate in -Hon Jamie 11. Campbell. the meutbe• in the last Congrena. The contest will be a triangular qne: Tne Sixteenth 'Congressional District. ' ll lenleseao. Sept 11 —The Congremeional contemn of ;the Sixteenth district reassembled to-day. After the 126th uogucceseltil ballot, it was resolved to refer the matter back to the octistituentaof the several cone. Ves There is no hope of a cordial Fett lenient of the difficulty. The AM men are firm in their support, and his opponent, are equa ly determined in oppositdoe. Another meeting will be held on the 24th inst. The Adrian Balloon Ascension--Pert= loam Situation. ADBIAN, Mich., Sept. l7.—Mr. Thurattn the aero naut. who wee carried off by hie bllloon yeate day. was men at a quarter poet one &elm* P. IC, at a great height, in the, direction of Maiden. Canada Wert. as eacertitined by compass bearing, by the partite observing him. After Mr. Banoieter, hie companion, had ali?hted, the briaket and netting were rewired, and the balloon inverted to facilitate the wove of the gee. Mr Thula. ton wee holding on to the neje flatted portion, seated on the valvuboard, when it amended with him. ACeident on the Angueta and Savannah Railroad. AVOW TL, GA.. Ei.pt 17.—A railroad disaster occurred on Thursday, before daylight, on the Augusta and Sa vannah road, forty miler; from here. Luther Northey,- the engineer. a native of New Hampshire. and two fire men, were killed. None of the pamencers were injured. The train was made an awful wreck. The came of the accident wee the kinking cf the rails in consequence of the recent heavy rains. Duel between 0. J. Wise and S. Cle ' Iticromun, VA., Sept la —A duel was fought this morning near the city, between 0. Jennings Wise and therrard Clemens. Clemens was wounded lathe thigh 'The singe Of the 41'1110,11U , was the recent comments In the Enquirer on Mr. Clemens, relative to the Guber natorial q ecation. Air. Clemens was the challenger.' Destructive Fire at Cincinnati,: .011CCUSNATT, September 17—A. destructive fire oc curred at three o'clock this morning, on Front street, between Broadway and Ludlow street. The tire was drat discovered in a building occupied as a land oil Bic- Loy; and the dames soon extended to all the surround inc buillisge. The stores of Oheoareth & Co. and Trench & Wileca. commission merchants; mattress factory of Edward Knight; paint depot of Riggs /t Murray, and lard-oil works of W. U. Fres 46 Co , were all destroyed. Some three or four other buildings were damoget, but not to any groat extent. The loss will probably reach $75,000. The American Pomological Society. . - NEW Yong. Sept 17.—The Pomological Society hem adjourned. The next meeting will be held at Phila delphia in 1800. The eeseino bee been a laborione one, but, it le believed, will result in great national good. Fatal Accident. NCR Yons, B , pt 17 —Wm. H. Monaghan, a native of Obarlenton, 8 0., boarding at the New York Hotel, fell out of the window of hie chamber last Eight, and waa killed. Murder Trial at St. Louis. Br louts, Sept. 17.—The jury in the OAS 9 or George II Lamb. charged with drowning hie wife In the Min. sierlptd river lair spring, returner n rerrict or murder In the fir degree. An arpeal will be takeh to the Su preme Court. . The Xenon. Fever at New Orleans. Nsw amurs, Sept. rt.—The death by foyer yes 4s,yinoThersar4, - - Markets by Telegraph. Moshe, Sept 17 —Colton—Sales of 600 babe to-day, middlings rarging at Ilel2o. Salon of the week, 0,600 bales. Recall:4n. 8,500 bates against 1 000 lest year Receipts ahem' of last year thus far, 0,750 bales. 'Stock In port. 17 500 bales. 8/T.ANNAII. Sept 17 —Cotton—Salem of the week 1,630 'halos at a decline of Verlic Receipts during the week 4180 bales. Rice is buoyant in consequence of the ',o vate storm on the motet injuring: the crops Now ()ALBANS, Sept. 17.—Ontton—Sales to day. 2.800 bales. &lea erne week, 17.760 bales. Receipts of the week, 24 fOO bales Stock is port, 55,760 balm Re ceires ahead of last rear. 27.600 ,bales Corn le dull et 00e. Coffee le quoted rt log cull Ve Sales of the week, 5,750 bags. Stock in port, 2.600 bags. Cut OA 00, September 17.—Flour Is active. 'Wheat de clined So. Corn dull at 593 c Oats steady. Ship ments to ➢uQalo-700 bble of Flour, 11 000 tombola of Wheat, and 8 000 bushels of Corn. Receipts-1.100 bbls of Flour, 3,000 bushels of Wheat, and 40,000 bush etc of Corn. 011101K88TI, September 17 —The Fleur market to not quite as buoyant as yesterday. but the quotations are nuchenred t sales of 2,000 bbls at St 800,5 for superfine, and Si 90a2 5.15 for extra. Wheat—Salon of white at St 18, red RCS] 02. Whiskey is in good demand at 10c Provisions are unchanged. More Foreign News by the Persia Prince Alfred had satiefactorily panned through a lengthy and searching examination at the Royal Naval Academy, and had been appointed a naval cadet en board the frigate Eurydia. which vessel he would shortly Join for rrmanentaod regular service The banquet given by the Lord Mayor of Dublin to Mr. 0. Bright, the Engineer-in-Chief of the At brine Telegraph Company, in celebration of the sue cesefial laying of the sable, took place on the let inst., and wee a very brilliant affair. The Lord Lieutenant, Lord Eglinton ,and his court, did not attend the banquet, and it is said the invitation was declined because Cardi nal Wiseman was one of the guests The absence of Lord Eglinton attracted much attention, and it wan supported the alleged cause would go far toward Omen. ing his popularity in Ireland. In returning thanks for a toad to his health, Mr. Bright warmly acknowledged the eervioes rendered by the Americans engaged in the great enteroriee, and to Mr. Field in particular he accorded the most einqoall. fled praise, declaring that but for the wonderful energy and capability die played by that gentleman, the line could revor have been in exiatence en coon Ile con cluded by proposing Mlle health of Mr. Field and the Americen officers who aided in the enterprise ie and the lomat wed drank with loud and lneg•contieued cheering. Among the teaate WM one to Mr. Lover, the projector of the Gainey line of steamers, who spoke hnpefully of the snecese of the enterprise. Card.nal Wiseman wan enthusiastically welcomed at the bane quet, while the treat to the Lord Lieutenant was re ceived with marked coldness and some indications of derided diraPProbat on. Parliament has been farther prorogued from the 19th of October to the 18th of November. . . Tbo old Government of India had ceased to exiat,and the new Council held its fleet sitting on the PA Met. A submarine telegraph cable, about three hundred miles long, to connect the colony of Victoria with Tan mania, was being manufactured In England. In the course of November next a general meeting to to be held to Paris for the purpose of establishing a company for finally carrying out the project of the Isthmus of Sues Canal. The £t,ooo 000 of capital is said to be nearly all subrcribed, and £400,000 of it la set down for the United States . . The Rmperor has given orders to purchase. wherever they are to be round, the numerous manuscripts which Vauban left behind him, with a view to their publica tion The Emb.tor nod Emprogn left Path; on the lat o Boptoulber for Biarritz. The Mazzinian organ, Italia del Popolo, pnbliahed In Genea bee ceased to appear Daring the ]net three mootbe all Its principal writers spent more time in Ail than at their office. • In the district around Peril, whore vines are cultiva ted, hare the Moniteur, as well an throughout the whole of France, the preparations for the vintage are being made under the most favorable auspices. The grapee have rarely presented ao fine an appearance. and there is every reason to expect that the year 1858 will stand forth among the most favored ones both for quan tity and'quality. The Chinese and U. S. Treaty. (Front the London Times, August 30 J It la vexatious to know that en event no important to our interests SA a treaty with China has happened, and to be without any certain Whop of its details. Tho treaty has been signed ; upon that there seems to be a sufficient concurrence of evidence; but treaties with France, Russia and the United States have also been signed. and how Eogland Is placed in the competitive matt of treaty mongers is at prosant quite uncertalu. Mad we not great confidence in the firmness and capa city of Lord Elgin, we should fool some discomfort at the varying vereione of that Russian despatch which aro suffered to reach Europe. We are told that we should salute no man as the 4t prosperona!t while he is yet alive, end we certainly shall not hail Lord Elgin as encceeeful uetii we have neon hie treaty The a.tho rlzed ve•einn of the despatch just published by the Russian Government at lit. Petersburg differ+ In essen— tial points from that published by the French Govern meet, and make us more than ever anxious for our own news Would that a thread of covered wire were ser pentined over the hills and valleys which lie beneath these Haltom Retie, that the anxious thoughts which now only Ay there might come baok animated ! The Buse and the American, whose position wee Co little dignified in the warlike transactions. have re ectived some reward for their officious coal in dolt:10110 part of go-between. The RUM, ignominiously expelled from the mouth et the Path° when he wentthere In nein gle steamer. mod the American, so cruelly snubbed by Yeh when he made a tender of his sympathy, go up in the wake of an English and French fleet, and aro ad mitted to curry favor by conveying mandarins and mes sages. Owing the toleration of their presence entirely to our force, they receive a treaty as the guerden of their rather menial offices. What the amount of these ready concestions is, we are not told It does not much matter, for England andllrBl3o9 united are too strong to allow any mediators to crone their path. But the Russ, though so complacent in his powerlees little Moamar in the Peiho, has himself been a roaring tiger in the North. It seems that, upon some day Is the month of may, which' le singularly left blank in the St. Peters burg Gazette paragraph, General lifonravieff, without being oppiensed with any of the Intrusive cooperation with which Count Putiatin now encumbers Lord Elgin, settled a somewhat important negotiation with the Court of Pekin. Previously to thin treaty the frontier line between Chinese Mongolia and Siberia had been a chain of high mountsine, marked en the maps an Jo blonnol mountains, nearly 500 miles to the north of the meet southern bend of the Amoor river. By means of some military operations which have not obtained mirth publicity in Europe, and are known only by passages in Pekin gazettes which speak of the fabrication cf arms end guopowder to resist the incursions of harboriaoa into Mongolia, the Ituesians have occupied all that in tervening territory. It io in extent about double the sire of the British hionds, and as it is watered by several streams which comp down from those once frontier hills and fall as tributaries into the Amcor, it is probably capable of cultivation -It is, as we know, not desti tali of cities, but we must confess that our information se to its mot Importance for habitation, and as &bulls for further enoroachment t la not eatiata...4°l7; perhaps the Geographical Society .oe,u,ar,'.lOerehab facts upon Ode rather,lpthreiffithef, point, Tin'," w t t ,,,„ - ever - mal be the vallidebt thin huge slice of Mongolia, it has beau conquered by force cad dedsh, by treaty, „Russia, therefore, is now secureitAgated upon. a , navigable river at about the name tlitatauctS treat Pekin an Pekin is from Canton. s'lf, item. 'ditton,.to -, tide. the :ban now obtained the privilege of freir,trantlit -- Iffirseablects and agents throughbut 01 ins; wemay Well uniterstswlwhat power has obtained the met - dangerottf, , actvartages ; and we can atifd ctleatlyhompieliend that it-in by no means to her in tereet tolo6,Earopean s urbanite pt Pekin, or to hr,ing thrt court icto close relations with European PC"ro. Whether it would be any profit to in to treat that de- Alr"epit Chinese Empire as another Tirkey, or to attempt to retard Rodin - elation, is a questioh we do not discuss; biktit,cannot be entirety unimportant to note the course Of - Russian encroachment and Ruggeri diplomacy in _three .iiistant....regierui. - Aiettlftot.4.ll.,if, ‘ Aufeje, should happen - to havOiny off eilit• - delillua upon China proper, she huffy her treaties of; - May, apt June made we strides' towards rendetiertheir , realisation pee- It it not, perhapej wi Mont.ffa.algriincincq'thle -Li a•', version of the despatch published in the tt , , - Peteri-fl }erg Gazette makes no: meniloo of itt& atiPtilati en for ' thu reception of diplomatist agents et Pekin. We are not hastily to believe that, because this fact in not men ' ti9ned.,it!doenznor exist • but': He Auppreseterrinithe notification of the St. Pete ' rsburg Gazette may show us that by thetemiait Eimieinment hither not con• sidered of muchimportance, or not looked upon with much favor. ' Ire the former catt.hardlybea the' cede, we must takeAhrit latter its Abe explanation. If we are te' 'hard" i Resale" preheing close upon the frontier of China. proper, and in, a, position <to whiaper commando into the ear of "the '"Court of Pekin, tire necessity of some diplomatic agenny at , rosin, Resumes a- new importance... ado ;to. in talented to thin; for Russia has shoWn that she hi reedy to pay high for - a monopoly of the Chinese - market 'Tor her Woollens ; and'we are ail interested in e. mireigenit ml degree, for if Ruania - ahoild obtain any overbearing influence iu China, thatin finance woule be certain fob° brolight to heat upon our - teas In addition to the para graph in the Pt. Petersburg GAzette. the continental pa perncontain statement., uovouched by official authority, ae to the amount of indemnity conceded by the Chinese for the dastrnktion of the factories and the expenses of the war; and our own iptelligenca from Hong Kong is 'o the effect that the new Chinese Commissioner in the South. is eating in practical opposition to Ida auperiore at Pekin; - and ' atteMpting 'to }sine the populace against ue, in the ,provinoe of Quantang ,We have leaned to receive with great eantion the sure:awe seade,. at Canton an tuthe dotage of the Chinese' onteide that city, but we know sufficient of the course of official ha- Ritleso in China to he certain that it is quite impossible for any Elate official to act without full authority from Peki e. We are now arrived at the point at 'which the Emperor must he held responffible for the. , acts of hie Ministers. and. if this information should turn eat to be correct, the present° upon Pekin cannot be safely removed until the Governor of Oantouhoo Aeon ,re called and puniehed. AR to the amount of inderribitA , the report may poealb'y come from Russian sources, bat it fa not therefore quite reliable. Pre,now boon that the information was conveyed, not by telegraphic de spatch from Moscow, as we had ventured to marmite, nut by an aid-de-camp bearing despatches. We have the additional discomfort. therefore, of knowing that the Court which puts forth - tliese meagre and inconsist. eat recounts hen been for many days in Possession of actual &mice of the treaties conolusled.• The European public in not much indebted to Rungian courtesy in this matter. All we ban, do la to wait as patiently as we may the arrival of our own intelligence. and to receive, with proper caution 'the litcongrucnot of news which are vouchsafed to tin from et. Petersburg. THE CITY. AMMEMENTB TIIIB FIVENING D. P. BOWERS' WALTHEYSTREET THEATRE.— " The Youth of Frederick the Great"..—" The Adopted Child." WHEATLEY & CLARICE 41 Ahoo•eTREET THEATRE " The Soldier's Daughter"—‘ , The Willow Copse!', SANFORD'S OPHISA HOOSN.—Ethiopian Entertila meats, Ica. CONOUT nALL.-9anderson 9 e Panama& of the-Rue dem War. • NATIONAL HALL.—Panaranat of the Bible.' THE WATER DEPARTMENT—IMPORTANT Mows 'V or a long time there hat been considerable confusion in some of the details of the lon•inese of the Water De partment, and a reform to better enable the officers of the department to perform their duties has been de manded, by the public iuteresta 44 - ordinance to act complish this nejeet passed Select Cerincil, on Thurs day. by a very decided vote. The ordinaries provides for a re-assessment of water rent' in all parts ,of the city; but perhaps the most important feature of the bill is the imposition of a water tax upon every henna in every street. lane or alley through which water pip," run.• There a-e very many bowleg in the oily which have not the water introduced upon their premises, and the oecnpanta of them are com pelled to obtain the needful element in aralnd•rect way, white the owners of the property, escape the payment of water rents. In other inetances a sin , pie hydrant in made to ',lmply an entire row of houses bet , nging to the same owrer, and the latter supplies, • perhaps a desert houeee, with water, at five dollar" • year The new ordinance provide" a remedy for this abuse by levying a water tax upon every house past which the pipes are run, and which has not the water introduced. Iltie tax in to be equal - to the amount of rant paid if the water was introduced, so that the own er of a dozen beacon, with one hydrant between them , null be compelled to pay sixty dollars a year, haelead of five dollare as under the,preeent system. Thdreffe't of this law will be not only to prevent frauds upon the ,Water Department, but it will tend to prom , to cleanli. neat, comfort and health, by encouraging the general introduction of water. • Ties CONTESTED ELECTION CASE —The Majority of the committee in the contested election cane of George Williams, appointed May 27, have made a lengthy report to Select Council , Which the crowded state of our C0b319139 precludes the poaelbility of pee gentinr at length After letting forth all the facts upon which their decision la predicated, the committee my that they therefore report that James Peters had the emotest number of legal votes, and ought to be admitted to the office of Select Councilman from the Twentieth ward. The committee further my, in the conclusion of their report, that they have an exal•ed opinion of George Williams as a member of Councils. Re hue a familiar acquaintance with our municipal at f dre. His judgment Is good Ile le unobtrusive and agreeable in Me manners,- and we regret to part with him. Nut they could not be guided by their teenage of friendship for' any They - bad a FO -lAmn duty to perform, which was to decide the ques tion. Who is entitled to the seat in Select Council from the Twentieth ward ? Your committee have g ven patient attentioa to all the evidence and the arguments of counsel in this case. and they are - fully aatisfi , d that frauds were committed In the election of the tenth precinct. They regret to say that the ballot-box bee become a very uncertain ex emotion of the popular will. Monstrous fraud* con- Gone to he perpetrated, year after year. at our elec tions. If no one was permitted to vote whose name wan rot to be found on the assepors' lists, such a regu lation, it le believed, ,would prevent one-half, if net three. fourlbe. of the trends. • If tbe lehers of the committee will contribute in any degree to the purity of the ballot-box, they will not regret the time spent in this inveatigatien THE DIFFERENCE —A few weeks ago we allu ded to the fact that among the arrivals at the botelo in our city, by far the larger number were from different porVons of the South. The pup:Mame of Southern mer chants are pointedly mede'nearly, if not quite, a month in advance of those of Welder' dealers and them of our own State. They are generally expected to he on their stair's with their fall eupplies by the let of September, and we believe, although tome two weeks later this gentian than heretofore, On account of the better Will tire for traneportatteriof their goods. that the greater part of the Southern trade is over. The Western iner 'sheltie, and those of Penneylea,nia, are now brolly en gaged in laying in their atqckn ; and in looking 'at the lista of arrivals one will be struck with the vast prepon derance of Ohio and Indiana 'loiters: Dusieess has seams emerged from the gloom which overshadowed It, in every branch, slots the panto of lent fell, and there is styli a general cry of "dull, hard times;" yet we believe our city has had a very, liberal and profitable trade. Everything, at least, 'begins to wear a more encouraging look. Cod we have an abiding faith that ther"good time coming" will not be long per tpoued. A GOOD HINT TO OUR FIDISIDRY —At the recent reception of their new engine by the Boyden Engine Company:Waltham, Rev. Thomas Bill of that town, Fent in a speech, in which occurs the following para graph, which contains a valuable hint, that may be stably acted upon, even by the efficient firemen of our rite : " When the sad fire at the corner of Central and Newton streets tens raging, some years ago, I want with a friend from another State, an old fireman, to look on. Ile remarked that those who held the pipe emmed to him not anfliciently governed by the great prionip!O which is the eecret of All succeen In battling with fire. .This yo irciple is expressed In the most Int bortaat precept. play low. Throw your water—not °u teri of the fire, where it will be turned aside by 'mote, noire, and other obatructions er touching the fire, will fly off in uselese vapor—but throw it at the lowest burning point. that the steam generated may ascend throuth the fire and smother It; throw the water at the lowest burning point, which to. by 'ite emending heat. enconraging the whole fire—destroy first the ring leader of the riot " llAve You SEEN IT ?—Cnneiderable anxiety is felt et the present time to see the comet. which is visible to thenaked eye. It may readily be discovered, by directing Ihe eye, at about fifteen minutes past seven o'o'ork, on any clear evening, to the north western horizon. and ranging with the two Start known as the "Pointers"—the comet being ate ut as far to the left of the Pointer's as the North• Star late their right. Viewed through the telessope it exhibits a distinct nucleus and tolerably well defined tail. The comet Is becoming brighter nightly, but its brilliancy will soon be matetially diminished by the moon. As the comet is quite near the horizon, three wishing to see it advantageously should make their observations from an elevated stand-point. It is sine visible shoot four o'clock in the morning. when its appearance in more brilliant than during the evening. MAYOR'S APPOINTMENT/I.—Mara' 1101117 bas made the following appointments of police officers and telegraphic op.rators More August lath: M Cook, Eighth ward ,• Benjamin P. Sparks, Second ward ; A. W. Stuart. Thir ward ; Butte! Ball. Sixth ward; Charles H. Jeffries, Third ward; James Graham. Fourth ward; Wm. B. Tustin, Ninth ward; A D. Blonati.r. Twenty fourth ward ; George W. Murray. Twenty-third ward ; 'Tames McCaw, Seventh ward; T J. Chandler, Seven teenth wart; Philip W Wood. Eighth ward; Jamea Craig, &wreath ward; William Varremea, Fir h ward; Robert Mcßride, Seventeenth war] ; Wm Rocksfellow, Sixth ward; Samuel Boyd. Ninth ward; Daniel . Jones, Filth ward; William Flake, Eighteenth ward; Wm. Dungan, Twenty-drat ward, and Samuel • (Canby, Ele ven+ h ward.' RIVER Timms ARREHTED —About 5 o'clock yesterday morning, the police ot,t,he Seventeenth ward saw two suspicious looking men working their way op Cohockslnk creek lu a battsatt. The oMcers started out after the man, and the latter hailed overboard. They were pursued and secured, and their boat was taken possession of. The boat contained a number of articles which had been st9len from vennels, besides a lot of chickens, the necks of which had just been wrung. The pirates gave the cameo of William Alice, and Adolphe Frederick. The last named in a German, the other Is a negro. The prisoners were committed to answer, and the plunder was taken to.the Seventeenth ward station house. AN APPROPRIATE APPELLATION.—A party Or young men, whose business interests were effected to an injurious extent by the recent financial panto, Dave organized themselves into a cricket club. under the title of Ifficawber Cricket Club." As they are, hfl• cawber-like; on the look-out for something to torn up," the name is quite an appropriate one ; and as the members are deserving young men. qualified for busi ness duties, we hope they may not long be kept on the anxious bench, but that they . may be successful in ob taining good. permanent buetneee positions, which no future financial or business revulalone may affect. AN ANNorANce.—Owing to some unoompleted repairs to the railroad track in the neighborhoo I of Third and Dock stree - e, the care—freight and paesen ger—are frequently run off the track,. and subject the ;issing vehicle., as well as persons rooting by, to con siderable detention and annoyance. Yesterday after noon there were a number of freight care off the track for en hour and fifteen minutes ; and some idea may be formed of the inconvenience to which the locality wag subjected in consequence, when the net amount of busloesa traneacted in the neighborhood is taken into consideration. THE YACHT RACE ON Tnis DELAWARE.—T6O yacht race advertised for yesterday came oil at the time appointed, and wan the occasion of much interest among nautical men. The wind was very fresh all day, and was very favorable to the larger boats. The stake•boat on the home stretchwas passed' by the yachts' in the following order: the Bead 1 ; Flying Cloud 2; Glen garry 8; Lilly 4 ; Bianca 6, and Yam 6 It Is under• stood the prisss will be sailed for again, iu minacquence of no time having been allowed the smaller boats. HosrtrAi 04tins.—A boy, named David Bowen, aged aix years, was taken to the hospital vestarday. Whilst playinv with some of his companions, at South street wharf, he fell and broke hie thigh. Thomas Brady was taken to the hospital last even ing. Whilst driving a horse and dray. loaded with Salt, the horse fell upon him, at the corner of Fifteenth and Hamilton streets, causing a severe contusion of ova of his legs, and otherwise severely bruising him. ' .OLOTUINCI STOLEN.—On Friday afternoon a man, giving the name of Andrew Mulvey, went into a tavern In Market street, and after drinking at the bar went up stairs. Here he gathered up a quantity of clothing belonging to Michael McLaughlin, with which be de camped. The thief was subsequently arrested. He had a hearing before Alderman linider yesterday morn. bg, and was held in WO ball to avower at court. ri enthusli ' ..."'"'"t''''.- .471. 1111.7 -- e L I `- - -- _ S -- - .Z.Vjlam g EolflhiNeicic - lolvolflyr, 1 ,qh L. . L.. .. ~ on Thursday ovesi e ng, n Lr anlaiirge an d at Weelee j V 1 a _ , q. _ • „Eat ~,tvis.!, , , : , b...y nothing illst. Ilia • ' ': :. •Y" I 'l' ' by Bev. Mr. Pr " ' ° : le l .I. i guittiiii , t3l4if t i l aWfVlif 'Net v''SCiLluitl/44mtaterialill c , the duties of our people,} ' Nab' aLtif , p rt .,l, , , ,, o tr itit tog cbarader, at the con-, now enoplpleageeniimith i ff l ace ii ii . - • - • tt i a 1 ia l° '4'; ' :bi. - . ' `i • . ;. Jo . be.,0: 11 Bowers submitted a superior in d rability - 4.° ';'74re'; ii , rtiOnli Of that, 't°'' which were adopted, brat ortteldaciliffEtiaree ' ':fitOniClVe liars ae: e enii .Bfilietift., • i h i ; 0 . " , rWe have,,dt room for the too en Arch attest. MrtlforMsiotilhisi also had the good •1 magnificent apeoimens of thie thastiliutterial in edifice* b t ...._ ti, t ..., -v d; i r . - .14 . 1 A F C L rr el t ili .7 ' rl ' AN ''' itinen N'Z i a *fadlea l scs bU P tg as li s a n Y ore n w ilg e h r t e ta a k t e a nltr9iliktrr. ICMPlerlt.lo. several iceetit bnikliriritftrOve ,V299l.i.l Thum la•Lis feet, a pleashig tore? in tthif C:tlor Vote heti' .lobn lrehWft...:.".. , nty.foorth ward, with a lot: fltd custcdy, in the twa. ' , ion, of which they could; iifithis stoner which' Conttnande th' 'lidostrkr - f II ofclothing in their pease*, 'r ho priso n ers were coma - ' , , ' .. .-•., , - bas -° - en° * s and Mb bfilYreason why it heretofore not been 'n aive iii * 6 satisfactory accotint. . erren. - The clothing. at a supplyof it has never lifierallr, fit Ati witted yesterday by Alderman A irth wand . station', trodaced more Mishit an - owtfer St the Teboty.4o,. -- - " . been acceteible ..tO, builders 10,-this nterket:., We arm house. 'I4 add. • „ ( ~ -4 . t 4 cif Once,. lamed however, tbatthis want lite at Isetheetr, Gaunt' PenatiwiThei Caddbf -elf . .e .., 'I. have a , effectually remedied througv.st3„,,..entent.k. of ..,„„„ gfiNikellig . . l . olfl e,otWAny - four-a•ottalevill‘w townsm „ld as ' d &Mil gran paradi on the 2fh lost, the protest.. ' " 0 . 2. ~..„..e 1 r. . ...• 8V- •tP° l son,No.l o l6oliestant. } which will be 'IVY announced,-,• lf,litaril flestimi b t. r5“ . °°...._..4.°.9-quarrjel!'hawittgistieedfulcithe hindkote. of Wilmington, will visit theclry dodo' 1114 Windt, :flew and , responsible coiner:lY, a supply ut.leiinate. to and participate in the 'display. Other seCtkint,frent ,:. tlargest debland will hereafter always be.•foUnd en Vorogillarealso expected to be present. The. o ‘..o9ir' sad al will be.the . guests of-No. Sod( thlicitil k -1 the .': ...fadhfor'deii`ies7.4 this city ." Proni 'ar, gd "rai- THE RETITUN Maxon —The-return match he- 111'641.-- .' I°°The'rl. P` 6t of 'imirii4Pi t' -li will 14:".eu l bwalii•the ;Alaaniantoaru and Young AmOriou , Cricket that h: - 11 0 M: r ig "Aliiii Jitunaluiri keit arrived lm .olnba. which ,was ,poatponed . on Saturday : act, will be eAbegeNk-r" ~..- '4.4 , plinetion can-be made at the lidayed'to-dariOn `the ground of the former' club, at this market, for yd.?: ',. rms Wirehowitioflifessrs. Arneht , Germantown. Warming iria Vcritilath‘. agents f ft I tide Market. RABID CANINE —YOBlagclity morning a: child of & wih,on, who ensile els ',-- ' ' --1 ' °T n Mr. Peter Rooter , was attackerhi a dog at Lewis and After all th I ~.1 .• , - aseetlocis for cateringpo- Master streets, in the Twentieth ward, and badly bitten .• , r the e l'. `.! no re , p r ey Aimee", in the'idneme f , r 'about the fano. -It Ws* believed that the dog was mad. pc:laxly for the nternal wanfg 0 \ ~,,, ... .ambd- a i ms Pergeant,Brbilio eyot de animal means of.ventilatiorirpatentcfarnac., ~,,,,,,r ..cip it i. , ' .ANOrligit rain Lill? MO/RENTd7 7 -QA Wea49o-.• niaiteis t and - a - lioie of othesrujefuldn,,-.4 - should have • day`hight, abiint lie fLnistien Onlock, a field lam p ex- eminently fitting that 4.&. wt. ~,,,.,,,,,,, ploded, at a blinks' in ' Hallo:hien Street, above" Sixth, taken the initiative in aTording to onreitizei- , - ,.."7 - 7 -1 in the First ward. .1 he , damage'-done wax very'tri- approved material for the balding@ theMselveD.' - fling. .'l. ,• , ~ .-,"':l' •i. .. %it V.. 35 late "BIT z N.Ely-Fiamortan ~Borry.r."—A -La tn" amuaing nitiment:to„pir place the other evening in COACH iffifiEr.— On" Thursday night, at a ' , , ... , • one liour„,a coach belonging to, Jpoes , HotaLwas Tpeet•Atri Broadand Prime streets., ,TheAriver received a severe of our " West Roe' falides, - Whicti is too-good to b° gash in his log. ' ;-- '''' . lost. An old gentleman—perhaps We should my Middl. °' ' aced, se he is scarcely ever etsky-who bad a' fondesik 1 foistinirtileglakhilarly'llfe =ied which hednot entire. , ly left him I o after years, endeavored to siodidate his ' claims to immortal youth at an : evening compaarrae einging a song with which Awe seers °Crean before be had open ettehltiatett, hisivdmiringitompartione. Eta eV fort the other eveningproved-totstoomething of a fail.- ure. as he had scarcely grinned_ the first bar, before kir lost the toes, and, what was equally unfortunate, be di d not remember the words.-LTheigong that gate him the slip wait entitled ..." My New,Pachloried, Bonnet, "and" the old gent's aechmpllehed ae - tighter wits not a" little inclined to quiz her venerable pt abowthis mishap. 'r r IS charm you with it at Delta's ; tomorrow evening," Was the confident response. Whialiof coarse elfalted a general ha-haw! all over the room. The near evening the old genre peunie%was redeemed at pellets lirpre seating his cetera! daughter With ir bran.iriietrAfiati-- toned bonnet," the box in which it eanie befog libetlisSl• ';Prom Lincoln, Wood & Nichols, No 45 South hemissilw. - street " We need hardly adi that the ,promise was handsomely redeemed. Miss Qtils expressed bersplr immeasurably delighted with both the words Mid the "THE yzß Ikre/t;'B'PROJ:I.I'4I44 G B. [Reported for The Rreasii' QUARVIR 13118610148,—Laggr 11S.the ASCeenlant.—Geo. Clause, Geo.'Ackerman. Lewis ,Bruinger; Jacob firytwo, Joseph Homier. and Frederick Waleaer,_were charged_ with breally assaulting and battering each_other on; the 4th of July last, in the eobi dsliths`of a lager beer] vault, at a place with the arlyan name of Fountain Green.' All the parties were Tentnni. and they fought with the desperation of men- not knowing wt at they fought for, and the rerfniod after the battle wan ankle deep—not in blood—but ligVi As in all such cases there was a choice varietrof sweaelnit, every man giving a different account of how the affray commenced. Jury Ont. thirran Brian DiBrllloT 001,7Wr—JUdge Oadwalader. —The Grand Jury of Ibis. court to-day found bills against Isaac Tfayman,,charged with making and pass ing counterfeit coin; - also against Stiiphen Albatt, charged with detaining a letter from John Gray.' • S. Commiserosna ft* .Orrims—pornmissioner Dar chard.—This morning K.'s Cover anninlrarged with ern , he:sling and opening • letter' , D.' 'NV: Moore, Special Deter ire Agent in the Poet ClMee Department. testified that the defeudlnt had been postnnister at in Somerset county, and that firming there bed been leases between.JArivtown aed 'Somerset, he (witoes-) Feet to work to‘discoref how the lolgeiliad . occurred. Ho fogad on arriving, at Dayldsville .that &letter which had beenittalled 28th of ld'y mintainhig $3OO, had been missed. the ; defendant at that time being the acting postmaVer at Davidstaille. (lie, bas recently been removed.) Upon coming to this city he obtained of Messrs. Truitt & Brother several notes an swering the description of there enclosed in the letter. A small. turner hat been cut off by the person mailing the letter for identification.,.„ „ Ohatlas Wick.; 'Woli=keepir'iif the - Beni' of Truitt & Brother , Market street, ,tystided that the de fendent had bought goods of them for eve years. Oa the 15th of the month Mr. (lover 1 .14 a bill, .giving. eighty dollars in bank bills." The notes alluded to no anawering the description of those. deposited in the letter, were identified by Mr Hoes as having been re ceived from thodofendant. The cue went over for a further hearing. FINANCIAL' AND COMMERCIAL The illonerlflatitet4' P at Lanaciiita. 84;0:17, MSS Dullness rules In the stocieniarket, and a considersi' We fall in Reading Railroad stock has been sCoompridied- . theleellne of all ttie finny stocks; arid 'weakness in some of the more reliable securities. , The , biers arefiry the ascendant and are pushing their advantage vigor only, though without support from emulators ontside of the briaid. 'ln the money market the demand for the return of call loans, which started the downward movement In stocks, has produced no change of rates. Ptrst•olass paper can be freely negotiated at five per cent., and it is stated as a known fact that one of our banks ie ready to take the whole of the • propesed new city loan of $460 000 at pas. • The Pittsburgh, Port Wayne, and Chicago Railroad Company makes its monthly report as follows : Prom Freight -- $78,051 83 - ' - • Passengers 80.181 58 ~ Mall 4 482 29 . 6, Rent of road 6 600 00 Miscellaneous 318 41' ' • Total Earnings in same month hut year -136,718 84 Increase (7% per cent.).... Expenses in August, 1858 . 6 1857 Inereeme • 8 140 poecent.) Net earnings, in Angut, 1858.. . a • 1857_ lacrosse (14 640 per cent) , The return from the Bank of England far the week ending the lot of September, gives the following resnits, when compared with the previous week: 15,627,855....1n0re55e...£175,064 13.674,188....1ueteue;. 888,852 3,689,972....1tk0re55e.. 3142237 Publio deposits Other deposits. Red On the other Bide of the account: securitiee4...f.lo,9lB 381.... Increase.. 29,137 Other securities .... 13,453,924. ...121111:05159.. 888,852 Notes unemployed .. 11,239,030.: "Increase: . ^ 172 990 The amount of notes in circulation is £20,992,820, being a decrease of .259,835, anti the stock of bullion in both departments is £17,797,196, showing en increase of £142,690 when compared with the preceding return. The deposits and coinage at the New Orleans Branch Mint, during the, month or August, were as follows Gobrdeposits $3,773 72 • Miser deposits ' :168;275 31 Total dePosits' 4,000 EEC's■ 610,000 Half Dollars 140 . ,0 ‘ 00 Qaarter Dollars.., Total coinage fBSO 000 The following Is the amount of Coal transported On the Philadelphia and Readingllallroad during the week ending Thursday, Sept.lB, 1858: . Prom PUrt Carbon. " Pottsville d Auburn " Port Clinton Total for week. Previously this year To name time last year The following la the amount of, Coal transported on the Schuylkill Navigation for the week ending Thure day, Sept. 16, 1818: From Port Carbon Pottsville tebuylkill Haven " Port Clinton Total for week Previously this year To same time last year The sterner Bieck Warrior, which lett New Orleans on Sunday last for New York, where she will be dne In two or three days, has on board $llO,OOO in specie. • , SHILADELPIIII. STOUR EXOIIANNJA SALES, Sept. 17, 1888. airoarirt aT WANWIT, BROKE, & CO., 11115L410191. BTOON, AND 1120HANO3 snotaxB,IIOITHWIBT COM, TIMM ♦ND CHXBI74III . BTHaITO. FIRST BOARD. 5000 Penns 54 89 i 4000 Omit& Am (14 2 89.89 X 700 do 89 /0 0 0 - do ; do '89.833i 500 do 2000 Sch Nay 6s '82...66 1200 City 63 R ozah-93 't 1.1000 S'iliii ton R 6-1' 100 X 2000 do 90 1000 Sun ./c Brie 73 oh 60 , 600 do 93' •2CO) Pa R 21 mg Oa —9IX 1000 do 98X 12000 - do do ..92) 30') do n0w..103 X 10 L's R eseng..43X 800 do " 1035( 15 LOtlillT ilk cosh.loB 500 Frank'd & Bth To 87x1 8 Reeding It cseh..23X 1000 Lehigh Vs R.68_83x 100 do cosh..23X 200 Csmd&Am Os '83.83 9 Mechanics' Bk ..27 he 200 do do 'B9 831 100 Wee'n Vs Obswn. 4X 100 do do 'B3 83 89 Lehigh Nay 60 1000 do do i75.86X 20 Briton Bk Tenn.looA BETWEEN BOARDS. 2000 Bch NIT Os '82.. 60 100 Resi'g R 68wa..22% 1000 ROs ....100 I 50 do H5wa....3% 1000 Read R Oa '70... 83 50 do bsera 20 North Bk Ey.120 I 10 do 233 SECOND 2000 Caro&Ani Be, '83.03 2000 do do .83 - • 1000 N Pa R its 69 60 Reading It - 231 CLOSING= P Bid. Asked. 6e '74 ' 1.03X1031( Pula IPe 981( 09' do R.....98X 99 do New .103 1031( Penneyl 6e 89 831 j Reading It 23X 23X de bd '7O 82) 8331 do rites '44.92 .. do mttls 'BB.7OX' 71 Penns It 43X i 3% do 1etm0e....100 102 do Winne 421¢93 Morrie Oanl u0u.42 44 Bid. Asked Rah Nay Imp 6a..607( 70 'do 'stook.... 9 9,1 i do prof" .'.163( 16k Wmep't &Him H. 104" 10A do 'Valet mt. 78 76 do 2dmt....,51 61x Long lanand ....11X 12 Girard Bank 11% 12 Leh Coal & Nar.6o 503( N Penns R 9 . 1 ( 9 do We 5934 New Creek aldaWillel% R CX eyi Lehigh Zino .... 1 1)1 do prof 101 101% Beloit Xi 0.2 tre —66 66 Af L Reading closes CAMBRIDGE CATTLE MARKET, September 15. At market, 1 223 Cattle about 800 Beeves and 423 Stores, consisting of working Glen, Cows, and one, two, and three years old Meeker Beim—Extra, $6 50o7; first quality, sBo $8 26; second quality, $6 25€5 75; third quality, $5 50; ordinary, $4, STORE CATTLE.—Working Oxen, f roin $76, $BO, $9O, to $175 11 1 ' pair; Cows and t alves, from $26, $3O, $4O, to $80; yearlings, from $0 to $l2; two-yeara old, $lB to $22; three-years old, from $2l to $4O. SIIII6P AND LAMM-3 360 at market; priCell, to loth, $1 12, n 62, to $1.75 each; extra and selictlona, $2 60, to $3 each. RIMAII.B —Beef remains about the same as loot week ; the quality was not quite es good. The quality of Sheep was good, and sold quick at an advance of 25c 49 head from last week. A distressing affair occurred in Louisville on Tuesday last, which reunited in the death of Capt. Ell Vansickle, of the steamer John Bell. The partioe implicated in the affair are Mr. Nadal, a boatbuilder, and his son, who are now both confined prloon. A farm of 104 acres, situated in Cumberland :Valley, (Pa.,) was sold at pablio sale on Tuesday of last week for $15,480, being $llO per acre. • - The Dubuque, lowa,-papera mention a con siderable crop of Chinese sugar-cane as ready for cutting in Clayton county. The Duchess of Kent, Queen Victoria's mother, le seventy-two years old. Dr. Barnes' Pile Lotion.—Read what George D. Calloom, of the police, says of it A. member of my family who had suffered for twenty years, was some ten years since cured by your Lotion. Since then I have advised many to use it, who have been cured. I deeml t invaluable." ' Sold at No: 833 I3HIOSTION Street: eelB-2t• . Jackson, JOB PRINT/1B; FIFTH AND OHNBTNDT. Checks, Notes, Brett], Bills Lading, BID Heads, Oir enlara, Carle, and all other kinds of Job Printing, at prim to salt the throe. oel7•ly . . , " WwAT'R ranch. We castes! , , that shirts, and 'een'tleiretri>s Wrappers, that cannot claim to be - of F , ..Walborn , s make," are set down 'as second rate, by common opulent. The popularity of the gents' furnishing eatabliabment of blesars...B. 0. Walborn Co., (now) Now. k and 7 North Sixth 'street, is delifidereasing. and "we 'doubt not but ilitt 'the prompt manner in which they aireply , with their nn mesons orders hasimitch to do with this feature of their . lityrrnfa.—There is to place w know of wkire 'We are more gravely tempted 'to betimes long-tingered, than when we vlalt the confectionery intro," lishmeA`of-BieSIG.")1: V.ittoisirk Co., Second "street, below Chestnut. Without the elighteet nation to violate the eighth commandment, we feel are Irresistible attrabtion'tatirein" our fingers . add tbaire„ tempting plups i trave, that in nine eases oat of ten del. velar's into d wee bit ore theft - before we leave. 'Ban Pant c Eryernen.— An "Eugliek officer writ i ng trim India of the taking of a Rajah and the etching of hleAkalace,,says that they found In the tummy bags containing.33o,ooo rupees, and £BO,OOO in gold, with jeWels eitimated at £200,000. !fliers Were diamonds as large as ligeon't eggsrpearls as big as filberts, and ru bles rare and costly Bat amovg all this bnrbsrie splen dor there wai no real taste displayed, for in the ward robe of the Rajah there. was note. solitary suit sort as could be obtained at the Brown Stone Clothing Ball of Boethill dc Wilson. Not 603 and 605 Chestutit st., above' Sixth. - - smtsolsesrs.—The assortment of cloths, cash meres, and Tedium imported directly for the fall trade, by the great clothier, Granville Stokes, of No. MT Chestnut street, is really incomparable for variety, beauty, and excellence. These goods may be there found in all shapes, ready.made ; on it the shortest no, tics transferred from th. piece t.) the backs of custom ers, by the most . skilful cutters In the United States. Let our readers remember the number " 607, ,, and ma and examine for themselves. „ KEEP 80011160 Up .-The Fenders of T - Press_ are generally well poetedin iegin4lo . thinga generally' worth knowing—and we advert to the fact simply to call the attention of three who have, itherto failed to avail themselves of this great Chin:id - of infokitiation. • that by a careful perodalof Its coltiinns they will read dilly an affectionate admonition to alt to bay their clothes at B II Eldridge's ” Old Fraaklik Hall Cloth ing Niciporluni,” No. 021 Chestnut it. TO YOnNo MEN .—A thorough course of practice in Accounts, 'Unstated by Mummer Feats taken frdm actual business, may be had at Bryant & Strat ton's Mercantile College t southesetcorner of Seventh and Chestnut atreets. You are'invitexl to calf and examine Bookkeeping Forms and specimens of 'elegant business penmanship. 10 397 47 88.32 E 47 83,676 50 2 615 QT 61,751 64 63.040 14 BIBLE PANORAMA AT IiATiONAL HALL.—This beautiful and instructive Panorama will be exhibited the afternm at 3 o'clock, for parade to attend with their children. Sing,er's new Family Sewing Machine.—Alter s fair trial of the several machines that bare yet been offeied to the publie, the nu:salmon* verdictOf ape - !s -tore Ins been given in favor of Sinsees. This is, in faCt, the only machine capable of-larforming every kind of .sewing, and is, beyond all question, the moat com plete article for family 1153 yet Invented, r 4 ornamental, easili'opersted, superior, in nv,e j ep.ct, to any other machine. On this statement, we challenge the world: ' I. M. SINGER. CO , seitlienl2 Office, No. 602 CHESTNUT Street. -- .1110,2.40 07 $40,000 $305,000 - Bb,ooo - $340,000 Tons. Cw 9,078 04 2 414 09 15,878 00 1,817 Oi 8,508 05 Impiarilles of the Blood.—The food and habits 4 of civilized man induce inn great majority an imptirs? condition of the blood, the - source of a great variety et painful diseases, which disturb the happiness of almost every family in the land. A sure. gale, and agreeable - remedy is at ban' in the P.ERIIVIAB SYRUP, afact which minnot be denied. 36,092 • C 4 ...i,107,782 09 For sale in this city by F. Brown, Fifth and Cheat. nut, and Huard & Co., Twelfth and Chestnut. 1 : 143,854' 1,893,193 04 aels d&w tf Jules Hauers Povider never falls to remove all superfluous-hair from the face or arms, after a few vpliestions ; its use is simple entirely harmlers, and, certain lulls effects. Whennedscoording to directions, 4 will form en !with/able aid to the_ toilet for either Tone. Owt 11,223 00 2,462 00 24 576 10' 4,416 10.. . , . Bold byalt Druggists, and at the Laboratory of itrine Heusi. & Co., Perfumers - and Importers, „leo. ACkt Oheatnit: argot, Philadelphia. eelatt, 42,783 CO 767,982 17 810,785 IT Professor Soundets , Classical Institute, at the WEST PHILADELPHIA INSTITUTE, coiner of MARKET Street and WILLIAM, will be reopened on the first MONDAY of September. _Pupils, to the•nam ber of flfti, will be ielielvedWituotri mailmen or TARE car Till PASSIINGRR RAILWAYS (l& SRI CITY 874,884 35 Thug, without expense, by a pleasant and safe con veyanos, pupils can be carried into the fresh - eh:of - the ' country in leas than half an hour from the centre of the city. Several acres of open ground border on the beau tiful groves of this Seminary, which le patronised by many of the clhttiogni!hed gentlemen or the city, among whbm ere the Editors of 'The Press, the Ledger, and The North American and united States Gazette. Pm. pile are received by the day, or into the family of the Principal "We, the undersigned, have had sons or wards in Professor Saunders , Institute and family daring the Session which bee Joel closed. In respect to parental kindness, happy influences, attention to health, and progress in .thotough education. nor expectations tare been fully realised. To our friends, who are looking for a decidedly good school . for their sons, we cordially recommend Professor !launders' Institute. "MATTHEW NEWKIRK, N 0.1300 Areh street. - ..1140. W. FORNEY, office Of The Press. " CHARLES E. THO3IPSON, Thompson lc Rood, No 413 Chestnut street. "J. 8. SILVER,.I4OO Girard avenue, "W. L. SPRINGS, 831 Market street. "GEORGE H. MARTIN, 1626 Walnut siregt. ,, Other Patrons of this Institution : RLI 8. BURNETT, 409 Market street. JOHN 0. MITCHELL, 203 South Sixth street. T. B. COLOHAN; 142 South Eighth street. N. B. BROWNE, 113 South Fifth street. SAMUEL MOORE, Logan Square. V. WATSON, Logan Square. WM. SWAIN. office of Ledger. MORTON MoMICHAEL, °Moe of North American. F.LLIS LEwIS, Penn Square. 117 .No 82111.11.11 Y YOBS 821,104, 100 Reading 11...bb..23g 60 do 56105-23 x 24 Planters' Bk Tenloox ORS-DULL Saving Fund Per Cent: Interest.—. ciATIONAL , SAFETY Tulsa COI.IYANY, WALNUT Street, S. W: corner of THIRD, Philadelphia. Money received in any sum, large or email, and interest paid from the 44 of deposit to the day of wlthdrawal. Money is raielyed and payments made daily, 'without notice. The investments are made to Real Estate, Mortgagee, Ground Bents, and nob first-ohm eecnxi. ties al th charter requires. Offlos hours, from 9 o'clock In the m ‘ rnlng until 6 &dock In the afternoon, nd on Monday sad Thursday evenings until S o'clock. fed ..23x 023 x 6 & Bakers CHLEBILMID r /AMILY SEWING. MAOHINII3, These Machines are now justly admitted to be the Best in suie for fatally sowing, notions • new, strong, nd elastio Stitch, which will NOT rill, wren if every worth stltoh - be oat. Oiroulars dent on appliestion by Inter. ape..y One-Price Clothing of the Latest Styles ' and made in the beat manner, expreasly for-swrin. SALON. We mark our loweat arang pri.es In PLAIN FIGURES on each article. All goods made to o-der are warranted satisfactory, and our ONR-PHION SYSTEM Is at. fatly ad hered to. We believe this to be the only fair way of dealing, as thereby all are treated slice. Thomas W. Bally, No. 622 Market Street, Importer aad Deslerln Fine Watcher, Jewelry, Weer and Plated Ware. Pirst-class goods constantly on hand. The ettlaMlisi, pitying cash for every article, le enabled to sellat - a small advance. Those about purchasing would do well to call. All goods warranted as repro soloed. eed-8m seamen's p3Tillig Fand—Offlce 5103 Walnut street, one door west of Second street. Receives de. posits in earns of One Dollar and upwards, - from all dames of the community, end allows interest at tits rate of Ave per cent. per annum. °Zee open dolly, from 9 until 5 &cloak, and on Mon day and Saturday, until 9 in the evening. President, Pranklln Yell; Tremolo and Booretary 3 Chided IL lien % egetial ➢mires. " PHILADZLPIIII, Ittlf /, 18b8 ISO orntanitrr STBEIRT JONES & CO., 604 MARKET Street
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