:', 1 4 , R.V. „- Tipu k s 8 gn ry '1? V Xyll, stiil4 141t.'rjs Oito atoll* . - s .!Oinoti„'zirikfinr,*:ohifittitt!,l3lftet:' 't't. i '4404 - '9 ..!....;., 7,-• ,"•-• ~.. • +...." . , ~,, ~. • .P , 1 4 `.;..... F*l.4 . l . r,iiitgif . .':: ' , j it-Afiltinglllllll4 Wirlilini44itati;:ntir ' 61 ' ibvphisetwoit ottliolektiiivOii itiiiii • ,_- - 0:,." ibil FifitiC momuib"*ar mu* ; ortim i ' 'DA -.°i .k." l "" l l lk. :*- 41 ,t / F i iiT i • , . ..* *l' -al eq.A . .-: -1 - ,ARAmmuctatigaras. '‘ 4 q . `litalitte t Solllll4l4ilttlt 'eF• My . it .1.111111DIO&4 ' 4. 111141411 AWNS" 11144111040 `,.4 •,-.trt - 4motiiigiSP liiikii NM liii Ilea *1.1:ialOWI;% , Zitipsegiiiitem - azi iiiiisibia iia.,:,, , ei. 0 ~,, 0 ifini* ,UOI44ICLU - - " `• VC 4 ~.. ..,i,,. Piti - 0111114"'"nt. ' 4 "Ne7, , N . .. int. 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' -ii 9 1141;P:0., f"i?...r,"..-a7 4,i,tkris ~ 'iIItWARDWFAIMIrdAN PANSY; MuktzpAs24l23or - •„. ooinadadaggirfOut , ' Alcmsat *44 -01.1 , 7XqT 141 OrßiZr e zatooviriTOraktio...„. moi.; MPM 4 VMAUVfittirsof 1110Arbebista4ai war; ItalwritAttentioa. , 4l4q4 .! l . -,3,1 Jp-43 •s. ~, UptetlOyallirrNipidi /USW" /11,$dolidiRlinSdiapaditil r 1) 1 4 1 1,1%.95.., Philadolkltioa, „., . mutdolzak, Pbsolamisr -" n 0,21410 eft_ U 145 ZlOugg: - •.„ - . VALLOWTOCirc, fi s lcA? , s, fAv • •-•:.,, z , ..4itite4c :+h.44 i4lasz 44' *Edf.O. ' O4 ii,l4l4fiiiTh2ofi • 7, - .4.1-tato 5,5451 't 4 'AP 404 InAt7*Stusimoit 1314.111114.11111,1041.411/01111116 4.145°. - : 461 44 bikeiiifi ' ilainkrike* A' VI. 4 Irt On:u14100 jairg...fix ale on thobspqmar formulas , Utritill4ll ue,-;1"0 stz T. LEV-2-I;°' MLIK:4/7/401gbirbe ailliCtikiitit4ooifeartireritir 4.4,,TAt 14*.g b:;.1 40. - T.4. 'astry „ eti WOWILESTERAMOMMXICRUB. ,-a• = l, 3 19- MFlFlfut l i, AnfiriltuftitileitAndiritu '"' '' , Yt ,, rmk . A.A l .-4 4 :.t0n-r . -1-.1,10. . 3,, x-, i 4314,0 / 4 . 14 . 4 4* AXIII* 6 4IjOIO I , "a il l • _NZTLC. -444 3 tie , ...., namsoxore, r-, itatzi - ei 6eille _ =4 ,666 - itea ak till.4:Orders fet ht. ' , tele Otylei of Mato i: lilted -At ;Mb ishostpd moth* nWhalirals P • ..,.. ma At *nut. ~--,.-..: f.;;tl -4,24.4, 1 7;:f013M.Y1 i fi r ,k (late botithe ittfoorT i )i_iiiiNTLEMIDIRSt7IIBNIM , a reg is , T A N T o o.Bo4,satir iiioiiiri AMlLAlTAToi'ktrllot.Bl —• • - wEryikitativaioatriny iismikilattinuon of_ o -I =rlVotl i toVel t° 9l3 mr e 'Attie ?I 7 pirfea tr • griratritioa:',oolninir wittolfrenoefflAT,B and 00_IMAIO3:::',1:-Ltlyi_F-ff,--.71 -L.,_4'-etif u , juts! , AN.; 1 , 7.4 1 - 7 . ' 1 - viv.l,-).' .4 , 3 e Phji , Rs .11 1 .=.11 cji- 4. r S 0, yit,t-K:'.:•4mt.':44,4 • E,ON„ iigoompieo4` ; "titi'id4ritt tbeh store, !mite lipeolol Attention tp thOIT dock of taupe, wt4o4fil • iscnOnfurnitit7largi; affardLoi♦farietrar Rawl% ma. re•',• h_JFV,7I4X.;ANX_AtAnt4pMw, 4'l`-' odittantiait Aktit 4.926.]000:0, ri it _3ll The ituuwjelit'spilfrouoh lo.• • ,00moix),, 4 11, 4 1 .9,11 1 4. 001 4 *,P 7 1 •4 1 1,- at "Pill 11 2 3 q"x. tho llmeidaia and Broach seem flu*,: ; :lirpriho t a the Znglitth sterner. mitt all - over otos oiloor,aud x. 13 c g 1.0 ,Nrrll:rrt. our li:woman bsitir eafialtitlapart . mat of rho tfaimtfltatiri*tel foloower*, Iwo, we • ttof ',- giteraetre.lo;4ool.4 ll 4oPllo" s ); Whiaiol49r . Most that esti lartuicale WoolrofillElo; : awl will' we . c-r slot , thi &Wit of airda trivall4)4ll ` O►lN/32 thOoribtall. .1:1T..., .7 01.1 aloof matuthsetarear..?. 8. -W , „.aernet , NlFTll-and f :=T: 4 1,•"' • t1. 43 ,-Aprfinrenint 9r Pi IRM 2 3 l4l Wrsgt.flo) *PP"' npop, bid pas filially n,044 inferiot fcs" ixi Amdriiiiit mid ~tnydi~Wedpfft-y: r. :' , 4 , -;13:fr':991 8 :1 41 / 1 9 1 ta.a. ‘" itriTittg';:td O / 3 0 17 1 1 C Ft li - Ne4:ANDrWEBTERkt irk , e• 41 0 fr A 4:11)- 2 -. -1 5 • `.!.1 Its Itonal wittervinilimA i rlar t:4 ,riellitZeßVAilfgls; Imvotta".. 'l4l44bNio fitIa , OIIBTNUT STRUT. ‘, sus.lfrl - (Erst-urnanot AND SiscurlVal flublariberd hare in stolt,A Ifver Utireil titfif •• -, 0 • •`••• Desirous of radioing their assortment ae tenth a' 3 possible before the lit Deer; thee will sell Ikr 414 NIABY-10W-Pirinie , - gmln. . ; ;Pt', 6il ' t ettrielek;VgirtOit Ogrogittp /14.103 Titir Jar lasurany si , ' - c 11 °Z1 1: 16 .45 "1140Z1 1 , 6 ; fltr•ft/ VONA DODDS AND DDDR ` 11[110.4.T131 , " A `77,7 '0%43* 1, 4;e 0. 44 ' .4 1 -11,13 1 2/ , DROI.a. • • I:ii -1 41,-*** 46 4 -0 6/ 4 4 k 4-Vg-"4l44o6ltettidiari '-t4v)p 4.*-.144 44-A44 4tea " 1144, **Vit ' 40.1 4 ,44N5P11K11 Otreite • ,AN4Via - ItortiOVELOYIN ode • OFAiTtlfr-400fitif "34"tt tata 't-11!1?-'.1ifilliAAPtg , aut _ PlittAts; '04.47;41!iti#11r4, Ma= tig/040"*.aakttl • , ... ..... A 7. , , -- Y :i -N\.\ \ 1 , i /// ! • • ...,,,.•:•.:..,-..-, ::...- ~ , . itt - . .... .. . ~ „ . ,"•'. f ~.- y r , ,,,, -....- - ' . -.. 4;. - ;ii?.- - ',4 ) .l , ,,iii,v_i ... 1 4 .. -- inisi!i*it!he• " '' t, ',,•:. \Vo, i v i 'i , ~..' 1 ' ," . - ;., , V . -:;,: e: -A'..-,,f ; ,, *rft * .•!'-' .' • • ,ar e '" , - ... . --. ... ci, ; ro it :, ...: .: .. ~---. ...:: 2 , „„: „ ;. ,.. 0 ..-......,,,, 7 ,..... * - -- .t .: ~, , , , , :. . .;: . :.: ...i ,..1.'r _. . ....T. .i fy:, i7t e4. , :... ..,.I' - -''''-;7. 75111 1 1r15 t.: - ......:' IlifiiZZ-Ati:AINIM .4'-12. :'.i.A4 44 .:•:• ;• :-'? /: 'f''''' It i' 101 - ir _ ~,,.. r ;', ..,_ ^tf - , . .-;:... .-,-., ~.,: ...A 1 1 1 : '. .. ,, - : .• '.- ?7 4 : , :: , - '., . 't' ... - ' r i'"'' - '""'.1 , ...:Yar"7 1 . 1 . • priV,. : 2::"..- 4 7' . .-...,.."..4 - „--;•ifigA itL_ 1., n,t. I.-. , , ~.I. st\ ',.. fc . . 11111111 ;:i. , ,1.,,... ~..,,,,, i.: ,. "^, - ' 4l ' ~,,,, .- ;.. . . =:. ... :. :• • ... 4 .': :'. •:•''' .1 '+ • ...."- ' • :•. •. • • .. i i . '"!''' . ..,. .4i s•'=rer . : . .':•!:;” -':....• :'.....- :WI"- .-: t i tv; .'. - -'------=== ....: : ,10, 13 - -r - 7---;------L'--i;.:‘ :.•:•. .:-' ...... -'-''''.''' ''' '. .?:._. ! !! 511' ;: .'.?...'.-:,w.".. .. -,. ..;.. 7: - .t. • - - ,7 - • ..;..- " '; ". f =- 4 " ' ..' .. ..‘ • : .T..: : ii" _..,..' . .;- ' —.. :Pi,' . • •' ii 0:4 ' • .......::,:1 . 4 . ••:' .:•• ~••:: C.'1, 4 (0 . . . _.,-.' 2, " , '__„_... --: •—',..-..---,... iA -'.... - ,•-''' ' tE f'7 , ''' 1 ' - &. 744 '. , : - " 4 - , - `'-tt" , ;(' - .., , .: . '-'r,. i'; ,r,1., ...j: , 1 , 1.1 , : . ! , t I ' o ' 3; ' . . ''i -- '- ` " .... 4 a ; ' "s - '%e ". :'' • .' ...'', . 7. r - '., :1 ' '';',noEo.l-- „ _.•:•....,!,. - ;:.. ' _ , : - '-', =,-, •)_. ;„ -,:: '.. .., , ,T. ,`:',i VI; , 8 illY'fr- ,-ISi , , ,„ - fg I,f t o Th n, _ 1112212113 ry. ,__., .-r-..~,. I=ll •;•-wc 2-NG. ' BO. ':;:i - • ':-erig;301,10,110 G - : - , f'• •° -ENE— ••• -- } Q$ }IAA: UT 4'.11 13, • ; ti v oir:of:c#4tywrltias will Had, amon g our taw yips; plogoo demigod, logOOted' In isikin; at uitzaitiAlfr lovipricos, lids * l ive Is 1 - iho of - '" TAPAITAF OA/2Ellh . ••- • • t". .1. -ONE- ' DOLLAR PER YARD. 2:JAMES H ORNE • - ! f • QIIEBTNUT STREET, e l Watt • AtiL IOtOWPOATa.—The pprest, arnolio the d , lowe :Om* pr Slifiumoki yamily Coal Yard., o,sisBs Iqoah - Bridd 8 dellowhat. • Also,Apot_litgaitia:Liikigh t thelisideaf , mlFjed 'R - - - 0047-12te. , 41111 SWELL: eciNILIJAIIB',- No., 206 orribly'slilp portviad rtoriairiAiftlp.:m9oripeillr9,4 -pplioal-fron Idartristirliieir;" - '" - • , °vitt ' 44 ogel'lOVTOlrtair the bo '' • gptv.w mig COAL; viiiisifekilie3 froin'eloto v oi dust. IaICrIC9? CJOUlletbaelet - MA 'eliespeit in ro r ttekiiie4 in 3o#Aitie . o4, - up4er cover. WOKSIt sells 1101i0 themery best • Lobigh frohuyndll CoKitot warrant. fuO irelgbt. filifutt `doliverje of all . IthidarntliirenAd;tberoforogesxanteeo it to be D- oWI? 4 . 4 southeastsoutheast "oioixOf mites IY;LLOW, whorl be Invltitt,in - toltan'onettanitniilor thooisinyos the ahem MOIRING;• rEc - ,( 30.,.:3091egta1p,and JIZ • aiitait'Augirs 1,4 'and. gioatrtiatra, 0044 , .LeArii.rpal4-T1111111; otreetfrand,GEßMAN. - 11.0A.Dzir 849141kIlifyaid—RAOL outtlatOAD strsists, Phi*elplui.itiCepp;ccoutantly. Au. kind .o=l PPP themipitspproyfl lanai ItadAtt.dvatr, anttpre.. a k a . ot 1 5 13 Y l'"• • ••"" 1- 'A &YAMPA 'MATSON'S 1 - Psi kL A.XY.2 1,41E241 tr, A. 0 T 17.1111) BAPAAANDPit , SAFES, VAULT kdolie; , • -For Hamlin and !MM. BANSOLOOKIYAtt - Equal to any no* •,, , IRON7DO, On as goodlangs matey, Mhoe eatabthdinnantln its tinttedinatsi; by 'r v•". 3 • a Nti;26ltontli'VOUßTH Ohrob ;:, PURSE GIVE 1711 A 0LT10?,.. fitalr,iiil.—t-Tili - AXtrh, . VON., X SUISOLCASTS fortheaaleX/POEXIGN: 18110 - -11ABBICALIII,Aoxad-raapaatfany .. a.44•4 1 itte4.0 1 (1) ( atortt l o B tOANidirOtook, whiob Y-. - 7*... 1 Wr54.100 , ..1,,that ilia,ol4oatOsa!, ; a r giiiiiiiii t tlieffike4flraaat i n 'Ox . , Oole., TIM k.- aim.-n,Ba-Waig6 Bina, ToNvuo, Wok Ink% ' 1111410*(kboll *., .. .:. .. .4t,-.1,- , ,, r,- - idpia **slat ik1i, , , 6",.. Us% i', iiiiii - and6fitedite , aammata. t. '-3 , UA - Sti,‘Z.l, tpi f594: , ...Vei LP- .1:1 i eh; 46 1.1,) ,. .. :1. , IM,lty .t f ;saiotbarkerliti. Rolla Momantotfikez .. . , elatAad ,Itaag, Walla. Ng Yana; itato4 inVoTal • Pala. ,_,, ~i , - „„ L ,„ , -ii fail sapetirrathaapa; Bid Norm. -,'',/ Woo ) 1 Wei ',"Slaotlog Taboo. ~,.., .. aw4Vi? forthea r HAW:Iota; Mal itifl ; ., o , , ... .. ."'iial -.. • - ,'Hs 1 ure, Tian ~ ...,11 Spading Yorks: • • '-' •- ' Nan Hoe . 11,11maltand Epodes, of all klnds„. OW, /Brat% 811 W; Olott;aadllnlehlrig - Nallo: Vitogoollfroughtitott Ming* Otoreweir Loam of "sal kfAlaiLatltAliiiieWiallgilsiotpopixer,Ustobato, atm: IsotO,Tloneo, and other T001, , /c•., /to. ,- ~, ~ .„ „,. W. G. LEWIS & SOX, Cr/tArroiltir:' , - ••• •-go.42l.l3oif6fFlßOlf Strad., , ..... , faingfigLinacOutet, '1,1"1:3 ~:; MIDIIOND PRICSB. f fr tterns les; each, •.• - • dievi!AKrioait* . " t - ,nzm oi; F 4 14: ets • zio.i.wpfiTrazon Street , Tiento "N. r. - . tfo.1„EABI" (114 Street, We'd Gaiter, i's, (11ARRI8 0 * • BOUDOUP ••SEWING' JIL!t.- LJL puss, to pfforel t 4 the itiblkee the in(itt rule. bk lier•prieed'aelytii)4344:4l:*,:ol.4l,lo6lo6:4o. sia to stitara to. as knob, on ail kinds of goods, irom,oeanesti bagging to the, finest, outtnbrlas.. It 4, witholit aaoiiptloui the Amplest in itie natitartbial ,Oon• stactialarrairei biiider,"and Sew be 'kept In order 'byn child of , twalve*not DIIIUAILITy of . tiOne; aild:,sheitnrsiffr"tie ITS iroei,,,are:ersi." ten 'tettO hitiiiiihieieedbiairrethaf.;.AtealaustiV4ol, from three hundred tqfflqeribaadrrd stitehes per at., 7 The thread , tuero,*,en"Airikly froni,the spools Iloinsarklor arrninis. in feat, lila e lottelePra thatla;erented by, evert .. hi roily,intire land, mid Ittltil)Mantitl3,- " ist 7 nitatf ar47, • • throniattiilii the 'reach Of i 3. D, UMW, Agent, I 's4s.4lirsa why *mini 6 % 2q StrathElGHTll:lltrW. -;.,-. - . 1 P 1 0 1 41P. ( . l ilb gclitiOit*'- :: R I OBERT.IniIit "& : 00 f' .-- '1" - iS: 6 ' f.- ir,f,iBfiliziAsiii itip'sleisit, i tquip4iroili`42.4Yeiilip i Nana; voirisnis, Fila WiNbOW OLS,BO, Northedat aorneillaTETll and SAOII Strata, Phtlideipyls.-/ - , ~., ,_, SQL Amity foithi) a . lapof Ail, oilebfOrl ,Ilorells giiii inisk: • • ---' ''''' „' ;;; _ , _. ' inus-tf 11 1 11LARK , Sopics'Auni . EtTArONERIrt ALP,' DAVID 111:1100.421, MhatiradPleri ilteeienersatr *der, thh, Tat4IIT h treat; hi pre pared at Uliliated ao_furals 41iAtter 'from theAthelyes .mithe 16' kid; pojacCof TOT deboilKoh, puitablo foiltaulte;PublidtrareeieterehtudeDurd ethers, Of Slie hod quality of, NugliehAr AV'aper, aid bating dek various styles!, in the al master. O atm los . JOB , TELNTI —overy..4.eaalptitkii .larint a taitLithairestddiqr ted.with seatxthii: A geneon gpryral awkethaetit sad Anierl• htAtl. , Oaiumituthg lite. liogauleaintithalon tar Franklin iusutute; - the t kiliat Ilvflay— r' This dhipbii of blank beaus for banking add niereantilienne 14 the lieht in the hitidn; - .: ; The hale4iim,ot thelnatolsl is good,,ths orkimithlihrp,hphir,lxisplliatiind thew !Ukiah 4hd. an. atiottathli I dLappretTiati.':,.. a0284f.„ ; ,, ,` 4 gX,STOO,C OI / 1 1 1 q 21 /0' . I . ;.¢DAMS - lIIPBEISS' 00.;.OFFICII% 'r329 011141TERIT_JMOCSD, forwards . PAILOSILB, ifnllisilEtilr a giADlF.ll . BANN ..110/1111. and r AUX, ei ther, it' .owir ~... el In woosetton ith other B AP ' 00HPAN10,1p,oll the panatpal OWNS dad OWL= of tha Rotted litotes. " 1: B. lIANDIO 2 111) ..... itlait ' • 8•••sed floseshissailloollif" •‘... , Ificmo:AfoiteC, f licirt , --- -,Tpiu.OKFaiii44.. &:,.gioNg, mann ; - . ~fieturittor AR/40,A' 4,111.0R-OItAND, " Q Alo, 'andlll , lt 0117.114,404-91gEg. , , yr le fifth - 4144W anCehleat -- meant - rectory In the 41tiratateg, - 14elhg Vein ' , : I '' ''', - -: ' - - :-?...,r., --, ' v.:it, ". - XEITABLIBRED , ,IN 1828, ' • ~- • .., -_, 91noalebtahtlme Irtilmee -, • t-•,- •- -- r--- k,- - , 4 2 ,1fre , Pep ,TWAttnr;,TILOl 7 / 3 AND, 'rWct .°,:. -"_, :, _.- ttN Olt 2D • 11411118', Al liath l 'itTeelie4lut - tetttlifterilahr of - their 811PERV MTV /:orretvill, ottani 11 , 08/4, ,4-,.1.-,.. 8 , ~ $ ileo ` r . , and= 4 itkiraott,r,ved.t4oparrol„ ' . tlilP/ttrit l vctt,pkprllA totit , Mg tfmrPIANOLFORTBEL: ,;- 1 4_, =.,- ,; . •• .. , . ?Jost timetvediatt elegant steak of NAVIN, - alliKrt 09 .N, kt OW 414. 114.1m11T,1#4;-' and ek tc,,CIP, ~ kr.4INOS. AffilL01)11;, 1 11/Nl3 00 ;at- ' ' - '.11:-ettupg, 1 ' '..r. go ,eaggeor,4ll9lllsl.lll ind;0111181.1111T 1 ", ; reklo4-7,-tel,lq tr e., -.: _,, —,, ~ - '" • : IVl'll:leaDDENNET;Dimitist, !Vila friends thit heiireinsiled I.ll4oll}l2BTriln Otreetilectond dont ItoositAito4.lgint a r !,2 sepl4l4-1 NN ON EXIiiiOSIVEIVURNINGYLULD. L-v„,tivevii. now _6o3lo46*ring, and,ore prepared to iell; ielingleill111111:11D, hoe hem ' the:obViction ap, vett/klieg to the ommition gictiole.:, Of -Ilablllty_to ex.. reds Li deetreyet, WI tusy maw be ?. teem with W.V.; t hal bettiexperimentedrupookaMi Ilubiected , to , tbe stared tests before the beat chemical talent In this gi idthOrdri elegle,fallturermei,We nog oar itt to the 11 % 1 4 12 00 2 4 1 deet that a rgreat, eepldetatem Lae no. tit 4l - 1 4 -,.. eVAIIMAIL „ec .IXIDEIe, , oolitidem-,:Heidi gth4.llll.BD-Street, :above WM. < - . , _ r_ • . ' VERSitSdir. r P.4:o l riinef diibCir, : and' ii.47eat' - '4n uststiltTalotlies'dottot - regurge offitazt - derabbibe6tVirmhboitd_,:f. ole,Pdutd Srla kiktig.im thAb • Pontideraitam — On Rolla &sp.: - Wax- loildl4-4141pdrpeirtiejaittristion crtniondy Wadded. ill 4etcr iliCelliaiiiMt- - iintl.' test washing -Soap gr 4 te ' 9 1ortlisiyy n t~bllbr `•-:{ Kanhhdtd : id 007 -Soap d IELMeEN & poKBON4, ratilia4Pbylui 'y I._,,,thifettLw_2o,64,o."..ixbr, igoz 'publication)), SW OCILILE9TION OF O RUROH 1117010.. . - • THE _JUBILEE, PT -WILLIAM 8,. iBRADBIIII.Y., • ' Peeves one 'of the m'eet ettecessful of this very pops -Igtedthoes winks, It embracee.the gfeefeat.varloty, l in all deiartMents, for Choir, 'Congregational and Sing; log-School tom. - Containing, as it dose, about ha(/' as Mach again Matter as other eimilar oollections issued 'this last teaeop, - en extraordinary amount of aim matter hi'presented, ivillioittornitting the stinderd old tuns, without which no book is complete. , ...TEE JUBILEE container a new &wed Gantlets entire, *lithe - x .l , or the heantiful Queen:"' ' ' 11;:r .IINTAIEBLIODITION.—An edition le also issited, giving an .addltional number of choice new Anthems, for opening and doling worship, in place of the eantata iiintaiei;" Those Whaling this edition will please or der the Anthem erasion. i!dhhshed by ' • MASON BROTHERS, 108 & 110 Duane 80., N. Y OrAtLEEY OF FAMOUS POETS. , ' VOLUME. this is admitted to be the most magnificent vo lume, in all its details, ever published in America.; It is .the first ,attempt to present steel Illustrations, upon the pap With the letter-press, thus interweaving Poetry and Art: • A GM:IMM OP. P. 4.110178 ENGL D AHEM : O.A.N . ' „ With an.introductory Essay by Prof. HENRY OOP, PHE, Profossoefiflngllsh Literature in the University at... Pennsylvania. ComPrititig nolidions from Thomson, Collins, Orny, Noldendth, Seattle, Opyrper, Brume, Rogers,Words- Chur. Lamb, Camp bell, , Horace. Smith, • Moore, J. -Montgomery , Heber, Grahame,' Kirk White,; Byron, ' Mrs. Southey,' John /Coble. Shigiey,' Mtg. Ilemiuis,Kcate, Hood, Mother well, liaisaulay;Brownleg, Tennyson, Bryant, UMW*, Willis ' Longfellow, Holmes, ' ' toker, Siminel;Trentioe,- Conrad, and O tis. 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Mixt htinblestaishiiioniattros. 7i3unday4oshOol teaelters ;and other Waiters-to Gresabblier - orisofersy end•sidsery :wili r rba;.ornmssgslk - i53'.11. 4. ,As a ;testimony of • God's ;faithfulness In bestowing his, blessing upon Labors 'wrought - in Ohriet's name among the children of aor row,and suffering, *such a record has perinanent value; , ;while it also .serres rus a sample of- the• method of op ,proad and winning,those who are sup. ppoo be ;alienated From ; the common sympathies ,of Published Saturday, September 11th. ;LOTTIIPS' THOUGHT -BO OK; Beautifully illostri. ; l'ed:: nmOn Olirth. • ' Published Saturday, September 18th. ,ORAOLIS.--A daily Scriptural text-book on an en ; tire!y original plan, ~ Plmo., cloth. - To be followed on Saturday, September,26th, by GRACE TRIUMPHANT. A brief Memoir of John 1 Flemlag. „Ity a Teacher. 18mo., cloth.. • - On•Sattirday; Octilbei 2d.' • ;HOW TO LIVI: 111tratrated In the Lives of Frederick • Perthos—the Mari of Dulness: Gerhard Tersteegers— the Christian Laborer. James Montgomery—the - Christian Man of Letters: 12m0., cloth; • On Saturday, October 9th. ' 'MARRY SEYMOUR; the Little Boy whose feet would , rurshomel 18mo., cloth. -; • On Saturday, Ootoberltith. UM DOOPRWILSTORY; or, the Golden Mushroom. ' 18mo., cloth.' . . • "- i • ' On Saturday, OMOber 28d. ;KITTY MAYNARD ; or, "To obey Is better than saa . rifice.' , By the author of Amy,” "Ready Work," eta., eta. 18mo.. cloth. , - '-• • • ' Saturday, October 80th. :A ;WEEK WITH PANAY ; or, The Fifth Command ; wont . 18mo , cloth. Embellished from original de ; 'signs. - • , „5. ;. On SaturdAy, November Bth. <• UNION NOTES ON tun GOSPELS; compiled and proved with especial, reference to the wants of Pa , • rents and Sunatiy-school Teachers. Part 111. LURE ; AHD JOHN.' Edited by Rev. Robert . J. Parvin, of Leroy, N. T,IBMo , cloth. On Saturday, November lath. 'ALLIS FAMILY; tr, Scenes of Westernldfo. ' 18mo., cloth. Doillir.;-or, , The Lost Lamb. „Beautifully illustrated. On Saturday, - Novembe r2oth. THE DRAMA OIf.'I3III7NRENNERS ';. or, Sixteen Scenes in the Dmnkard'a Theatre. 18mo., sloth. On litaturiay;NoVeniber 27th. OSHIELLE ,• or, AllastoOary Life' n Africa, 18mo., ; Cloth:" Fully illustrated.— • 1, • • . Se feral other books,of great interest will be published during the season, by the AUBIGAN SUNDAY- 60100 L No. 1122 CHESTNUT STREET Philadelphia. 5e244 tu.tJal• 'And foi sale by ail Booksellers T HE NEW NOVEL S. Jutlt publis h ed; DIABELLi ORSINI A. pow Historical Novel. by le. D. (inerrant, author of - • . , ‘,‘ BA4THIOS 'OE NOL,,, Trane!stud from the Italian •by Monti, of •Ifer• 'yard - University. Elegantly bound in muello, with Unperb Steel Portrait from the celebrated Drawing by Friatheil." - Antraet from- an article in the Boston Courier by Pro. humor 0. 0. Patton, of Harvard College : • 14 There can be no doub t these novels of ()nerves• it ersof, marked, and highitterary merit . Their, sty.e - P olear,are,mid vigorons."• The power of thli author itithOwn In hts brilliant plefares, his vivid descriptions, and , hti , briefi• energetic' expressions of feeling ICS phi:actors are drawn with short; sharp strokes, as with Phe point of it sword.• ; The reader becomes a spectator. rom his poet of, obserfntion he 156(18 k draws enacted before him; the Baotou and costumes areperfect ; there la's fearful earnestness and vitality the'perfortners. With parted lips, and cheek growing paler, be 'watches with eagerness the progress the action tin the cur— tain Ulm." • , aIIOOND. VERNON GROVE; On, 11EARTEI AS TREY ARE . A Ircalr and • glowing American Fiction, by a promi bent Boutbern authoress. - Elegantly bound, In musiln. Plage Froin Critique of Southern Literary Messenger. The novel of Vernon Grime le in our Sidgment the peat yet producedby an American lady. In no A marl. pan Rotten las the interest been maintained with ouch power,_Pathos le the quality most at the writer's WM pia& The' ineldent of PAW% blindness 'is' narrated withWohderful and' startling 'naturalnese,Snd affects Ile reader more, 'we think, than the ' elmiler oecurrence bathe caanorlduriel. in fllotin Halifax, Gentleman." i Th a books will be dent by mall, postage paid, tonny part Of the United Statee,`on receipt of thq RUDD to CARLETON, Publishers and Booksellers, 0010-tuthe-tf No; 310 BROADWAY, N. Y. t antve. PETERS' PATENT NON-EXPLOSIVE B.S.P.GENBRATING OAB,LAMP le the only Patent Berner, that bee Noit.Oondootor Attaohed. Yherpnblle are oantsoned against all other Bahian, u they ailllheat, , and liable to ' eiplode. State and county Rights tor salt, Apply or Wren ••• - . , gala, P: PNTRBS, 4P2 BROADWAY, N. Y. tirAnigniG Arrti - vkritir.a.TlirG V' 2,1 ~‘, WAREROOIIB ' thainbiOrit4r would invite the special attention Of ArChiticit Builders and the public to his • • NEW CULVER' , PANSINT- - BELY-OLEANINNG AND -:VENTILATING WARN AIR PIIIINAOE, Which heal:leen so swtoessfolly introduced during the last winter and gave such general patisfaction, It is so arranged as-to consume . the glees . from the Coal, making It one of the moat ,000nowldal, safe, durable Ulster" now In WIC ' - Rises and nattoins of Cooking Beiges, Bath Sonora, Gas Ovens,Mow Down 'and Elevated Grates, every vitioty of-Its : esters and 'Ventilators, Rireplitoe • StOvesi•Clolßus , Patent. Ohimney.O.ipsi far t he of Smoky chimneys, with a full assortment 4,41 goods la linotorbusinece. . , „ , 2romptattentiornald to Flange and Model A:44r ing, iid prices reduced to Boil the Aline, - ' OILABLZB Niutiems - ' • - , ' (Late Baiter & 'MU (old 400) 'MARKET Street. Philada: .POLYTEOHNI.O aougGE, PENN . BOARE--06inprietng a 'PRISPARATOUY Dz- PARINFM,. Ot -General Solent:lot and Eusinetil gohool, and ions' Technical Schools : , TEE SCHOOL . 011',MINBIL ' THE 80000 L ex °Hsu - 151.1,y., _ , Tax ,sonoovoo ENanumuNci. THE BOUOOL 61i DIECIIANICIAL ENGINEER- Architecture and Design are included in the courses, inddample , facilities exist Zr , o 'Meld and Laboratory Practice. ThclYinter, Banton 10 begin op, MONDAY, Nov. Bth, and toatinue four months, APO/ to A. L. KENNADY, M. D. corMl:Ot . rroddentiaent , y. PIIELADELPHIA„ No tim I 2, I.lf l, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1868. ' Great lllon'e Descendants. • 1 1 ` ' The• titestrafed : Landon News. of the 11) 1 1li: October;• informed —lts that Lord Om* WELL'ESLEY, '9oCillid sea of Me Duke of-11714 LINQTON, had,paid the great debt of narititt 4 and that further particulars„respeeting JO* would bo found, hi a detailed obituary notiolf, l on another page. By somo caroimmesa,!thif f •nstice was not published, and it was by steel- Aunt that wo lighted upon a paragraph In .time London Times, which informed us •that Lerd, CHARLES, who had been in delicate lietiltili 'for some time, had died at Oonholt :Park,, Wiltshire, on Saturday, October. Oth. 'YorYi little 'interest is personally, attached to',thia: gentleman, as he bore the title of I. Lord •J only-by courtesy, as a Duke's younger' 1M 1 .; It is simply on his father's account that he merits notice, for',his life ,was that," of, a ~• well-horn English _ gentleman, w horlii , m with a silver spooon his mouth." - ti "Lord OrtAnnss - Warmatmay, second-sou , •;‘ the Iron Duke," was born at the official rest deuce of the, Chief Secretary of Ireland,, in; Phoenix Park, Dublin, on Jan. 16th, 1808. Hilf• father, then plain Sir ARTHUR Wszisstax,4 the Chief Secretary. Entering the army fiC the age of sixteen, he rose as rapidly; by int , fluonee and purchase, as the Duke of War.i. moron's son could expect. Ho was Major of 'the 16th Foot, in 1837, 'during the'reyelt in Canada; where ho served three Tears; re 4 tutting in 1840 as Liout.-Oolonel, and rotire4 on half-pay in 1846. 'He became full Optima in 1861, and 3iajor4oneral in 1860. 'On :tilt whole, he was little bettor than a pared" Soldier, but by 'no moans so much so as,PrhiCit ALBERT, that feather-bed warrior, who wall created Field-Hershel, with pay of $Bl per day, without over having sewed ono hoim'iri any regiment previous to his appointment to, the highest rank i in the British military,.;ser;. vice.' Lord ORABLEB was thirteen years in tire! House of 'Ctininions,'Where he 'never coiclti; opened his lips; - except to vote. He had'l, high office in Queen Vieronts's household' under the Peel Administration; from ;1841.4' 1846. He married well, and hail left two sotui and "two - daughters; ln" al . probability older of those will be third Duke of Wen. , LINQTON, for the ,Rresent',DiMo, who wilt ho: flfty-two in February, is . Childless,•anCpeOUF liar oireminstances , are said .4e, preclude - 4 prospoekof any issue. • - •', ,""- - ~ ',q Whoever .should endeavor,to exhibit "the'i Iron Duke" as the-hero ,of a' romantic ' love:,story-, :in :which ' , sentiment , is blended.' with , chivalry, Woithi prebabli be laughed sd:. Tetii there, really is 'such an ifieldent t - ireeln partionlitin; and imbued-with the delicacy ands refinement of inipassioried i affection. At„tni,i; risk of , having -this . iittle 1c:4;0-passage 7 i rldit we'sball lake leiv,ko relate it.. -- At the age of 28,-Awrnea Wers.asnev; Or; WRBLEY, as he wrote it-at the time,'iciordini to an autograph in'our little CollectionO:Went, to.lndia ) with: rank- altill,Olilcool; tamed simply by the.:infleenowif his• taste= cratleal birth and "eeliii r eetions, and b,y-ttioney,,: in the tenth year of refinery service. At that time; he wasengaged•• to OATIIIMINETA; iinnupi,`dinghter:Of the, Earl, of I;eriarenb,, and sister of General - Sir EDWARD. IdionArm . PARENRAM, who was . f kMed in the battle' 'of NeerGileima, The ledyiwlio•wairyOling and L._beautifer, was devotedly.7f;attached : tio_Golonel Wirmz!nicr,;tind, her itifectlein was' fully reciprocated. . ,elder brother was' 'a leading part in the war withsreroo Sam, this fOrttinata'Scildier had to leave his led3 4 / - love behind. After an absence of eight years, - during Which ho won rank and renown, ho re turned to England, where he was met by a letter from bliss PexeNums, informing him that the small pox had assailed and injured the beauty which he had so much admired, when life was- younger and gayer with both of them, and, with tender badness, assuring him that she-had resolved to relieve him from his engagement. With the true feeling of an honorable mind, he assured her that her beauty had' not been the only inducement to woo and win her, and that be was desirous of marrying her. Accordingly, the marriage took place, in 1806, ,within six months of his return from India. The only fruits of this union were two sons, ono born in 1807, and the other 1808. In tho spring of the latter year, WanzsLai had to leave his wifo to take part in the Pen insular war. •He roturned for a short time, after the signing of the Convention of Cintra, but from 1809 until 1814, during which ho rose, step by stop, to the highest honors of the English • peerage, be was ,detained on the Peninsula. The strong do of married love Was weakened by this prolonged absence, and the Duchess•ot WELLINGTON, from the Water loo victory of 1815 to her_doath in 1881, was not a happy wife. To - the list, she deplored that a sense of honor had made the Duke marry her, against her own better judgment, when her beauty had become a thing of me mory`, alone. It is somewhat singular that very many great men, in ancient as well as in modern times, have either left no male children, or are now represented. 'through the female line or by collateral connexions. In our own land, tho'name of WASHINGTON stands foremost: Ho was childless. So wore MADISON, JAORSON, and Pour. JEFNERSON is represented, through living descendants, only by his daughter. AARON Duna had a daughter, but no son. General WINYMLD Beevr has daughters only. President BUCHANAN, WASHINGTON IRVING, and many pthersi distinguished as statesmen, soldiers, men of letters, &c., havo never mar ried. It is the same way in Franco. CORNEILLE, Rsoutu, and MOLIERE were childless. VOL TAIRE was unmarried. NAPOLEON Is repro ;tented only by his nephew. GUIZOT and Tniuns have no children. In all other coun tries of Europe the same rule seems to obtain. SHAKIPEARE, BACON, NEWTON, and LOCKE lett no male descendants. Nu:roles family consisted of two daughters. BEN JONSON left no male heir. Poru, Flamm, SMOLLETT, STERNE, STEELE, ADDISON, BOLINGBROKE (ST. JOHN), JOHNSON, GOLDSMITH, HANLEY, COW PER, Joint WiLurst, Chancellor TnuaLovr, and a long array of eminent literary and legal men wore either unmarried, or 'had no male children by their wives. The 'great Duke , of AlAELsonotnt, the WELLINOTON of his day, lost his only son early, and his Duchy de scended to his daughter, by act of Parliament, finally going to her nephew, the Earl of Sox- DEaLmin, when the CnunontLL family thereby became superseded by the SPENCER. Lord HILL'S title descended to his nephew. Lord NELSON'S to his brother. Lord LIMEDOOI4" Lord BERESPORD, Sir 0. NAPIER, and others, left no sons. Tho great Lord CLIVE'S titles have descended to• the Polio family through his daughter. And the newly-made Lord CLYDE, better known as Sir COLIN CAMPBELL, is an old bachelor. ' ' • , • In literary men, this want•of succession is very apparent. To the names already enume rated here we easily could add others of mark and note. REafrismiatunsa left no son. Both of Lord' ER01:1011631'8 daughters 'aro dead. Lord LYNDHURST has no son. Of THOMAS Mooni there is not now any descendant; all his children died during his own life-time. Binort and SCOTT are represented only by tho `children of their daughters. JAMES Afoul , - 'dummy was unmarried. Of artists, the num ,ber who have no direct descendants is unusu ally large. It is the same with statesmen. PITT, ;and Lord LivEareoL were never married. 'BURKE'S only son died, before his father. Lord WELLESLEY, Fox, and PALMERSTON had no legitimate' children. In truth, the'principle seems vary general. , We merely state the fact ; those who have Moro leisure and indus try than we possess may endeavor to ascer tain the causes. Tho'39,tramanzr honoro are not likely to tall . , ; into decadence, seeing that though the Duke of , 39:Ermsavog is childless, ho has two nephews, the sons Of his brother Lord CUARLES WEL ,imoranr. The oldest of those is now heir-pre liumptlvo to the titlo, but will figure as plain Mr. WELLESLEY, until his uncle's death. It is 'Singular enough, (but'only exemplifies another gonoral rule,) that the sons of "the Duke" Wore dull men. The present Duke is rather itolid, with some hereditary taste for music, ,his. grandfather buying composed the glee -"More; in cool Grot," while Lord CusuLts wknr.nrsusir, the second son, was simply a gen tlomanly dullard, apparently with even less brains tban the younger sons of noble fan:titles ,got credit for possessing. Speech of Richard Ilusteed,Rary, IN FAVOR OP EON. H. P. CLARK, AT TUN 000 PER IN RTITIITE, NEW YORK CITY, OCT. 28, 1858 Run or NNW Yona : The omission which calls us together to night, is happily for our people one of as unerdquent oceurrettee as it he of real and; 'abiding importance. Thin is, not a- gathering of politicians. It is not a Republican meeting, al ; though numerously attended by persons of that 'political stripe ; It is not an American meeting, as •this word American is used to designate a portion ,lar class of political opinions,-although many per sons professing those opinions aro here.; it is not a, Domooratia meeting, although I see around me men of well known Democratic tendencies and character. Ido not understand the call 'ns ad dressed to us as politicians, butes mon Funder stand it to bo an appeal upon behalf of freedom -freedom not of the black, but of the white man— Iroedotn not in,Kansas, but in Now York—freedom 'not of the far West, but here at our doors in thil Eatit=froodom not of the forest and prairie, but of our own great city. -To such an appeal-no citizen is at liberty to turn , a deaf ear. No man who Values personal liberty, or who can approciate its value to others, will hesitate a moment to tight be neath a flag ovary thread of which is an heir-loom of freedom. I do not intend , air, to make a political speech; or rather I do not intoud to make a party speech. I am net here to=night to 'speak in praise`or con sure of the administration of JaMeißitchahan. I ern hero to speak of Homo P. , Clark. lam hero to do "what eonselenee dictates to be done." I am here to advocate the rights of free. speech and free thoughts . in the representative of the people. lam hero to declaim against the Slavery of White men in the District of Columbia. lam hero to be hoard unon thesido of honest suffrage in gamut. and in New York, and in favor of the right of self.government—the dourest, best inheritance of the Areerioan Revolution. lam bore because the history of our times proves that "who would be free, themselves must strike the blow." .1 said, sir, that the occasion which brings us to-, gothor -is ape of largo concern. What is it that has attracted this numerous and orderly assem blage of thinking men? What is it that welds to gether this vast mass of intellience In one distiecf, and imposing form'? Why is it that this throng if moved by one common impulse ? , It is because Liberty has been wounded In the house of its friend ; it' is became a Representative in the popular .branoh of the National - Legislature is attempted to be crushed beneath' the maohinery otparty, and frowned out of Congress by the base minions of .power; it is ,beentme the servants of a reigning dynasty, themselves safely, but. hypo oritioally, ensconced behind - fat offices and remu nerative salaries' have . the hardihood and pre sumption to do, the bidding of 'their masters; it is because harm is threatened from such sources to the people's anointed ; it is because " none will servo 'us while there is a court to servo except those who are of a nice and jealous honor." The eanee is worthy of the neon' of the Eighth Congressimull Aistriotiand your outspoken voice 'to-nighti.reriebing in its influences to every part of ourconntry, will bo a cheering assurance that the .epirit of liberty animates your seal, and that your love of right is superior to mere party obligations. - I sepportrthe claims of Horace F. Clark to elms t Hon for Congress upon two distinct grounds: ho Is !honest, and be is capable.' These are the tests by ,which, I judge of his fitness What matt of any. ;party having any' character -for intelligence or Petrillo, will dare say that the trick and cheat, iealled "regular, nominations," is superior to the questions. of capacity and. honesty? :Regular • nominations aro those -, which re• !floor the wishes and will of a majority of the 'electors, and any other nomination is a fraud of the highest grade A regular nomination reogives Its only remotion from the idea that the nominators conetilt the views of.the constitution at large. If ithe system itself be fraudulent, and the people ,have really no voice in the nomination, then the only re_gular thing about it is its regular Irregula- Mty. Republican Governments derive their just )postreitt from the consent. of the governed.. If the °Oran of might proceeds upon any other basis it *deg-railed into the exactions of tyranny, and re- Mt:Mimeo to this is ohedienceto God.,, .f.,..DeMe intake' eapable ?` No one disputes this. That her le a gentleman ornnwreicuti - sfte rr;-au.s stataemanlika sinalities, even these who oppose lib' freely concede. Ile tea man of great natural ability. To his natural ability, he impend& the accomplishments of a liberal education, and the experience of manhood in its prime. ' Is Mr: Clarke honest? Who maintains the con trary? Is he honest? Turn to the records of the Thirty-fifth Congress, and let them speak. ,What say they? The President of the United States placed prominently before the country as the pot measure of his Administration the admission of Kansas as a State. with the Constitution said to be adopted at Looompton by a majority of the people of the Territory. This Constitution reoognicod slavery as legal, and it was claimed that the re turns woro falsely and fraudently made up by men in the interest of the slaveholdieg portion of the country. These allegations of falsehood and fraud were made by responsible men and upon the proffer of adequate vouchers. They reached Con gress, and gave rise to a most protracted dhotis. eion. It was alleged that the ballot-boxes were stuffed, and that persons who had no legal rights as voters in the Territory had been allowed the elective franchise, and that legal voters were pre- Vented its exercise by violence and bloodshed. Even at this remote period the heart sickens at the recollection of nonce over which patriotism, civilization, and huinanity, shrink mournfully away. Of this Congress Horace , F Clark was a member—the Representative therein of the Eighth Congressional district of this State. A motion was Made to refer the matter so as to arrive at- the tenth of the alleged frauds. I was upon the floor of the House of Representatives at the time. never shall forget the effect upon mysolt and others that followed the announoement by Horace F. Clark, "Mr. Spealter,l.l believe that the best interests of the country, and of the Democratic party, require an investigation, and I desire that investigation should proceed under the direction of the friends of the Administration." I confess was not pleased. I was sorely disappointed, and for upward of an hour walked 'and talked with Mr. Clark, endeavoring to -conyhtewhim that he owed it to the party which elected him to support the, polioy of Mr. Buchanan. Mr. Clark's reply was, " I owe to my party merely political fealty; I owe to my country and to my God, patriotism and honesty; and if I must bo sacrificed politically because of the conscientious discharge of my duty, I may as well be - d victim now, as at any other time. I believe," said he, " that the Leeempton Constitution does not express the will of the peo gle of Kansas, and while I am ' ready to vote for ar instant admission as a State, my vote must be preueded by a belief that her proposed Constitu tion is republican in form, and that it is not forced upon her people against their will.. I am ready to vote for her admission with slavery or without it, as her people determine, but never, never will I assist to fetes upon the people of a Territory a form of Government which they utter ly repudiate." I tried to persuade him that he ought to be ea. tided with the endorsement of the Lecompton Constitution by the Senate and Exeoutive.. ills answer was worthy of the man. It was, in the language of a verse of the universal prayer— . Whet conscience dictates to be slime, Cr warns me not to do; This Mush me mere than hell to shun, That more then heaven pursue.ii I support. him to-night bonus° of his answer, and'beoause of his aut. I shall glory in his re. election, bottom T love my country, and bonus° her best interests require the presence of such men as llorace F Clark in her National Legisla ture. 1 support him becauso ho is honest and ow. pubis. I support hint luntause he has been tried, And not found wanting—because ho ban courage and virtue—booause ho knows the rights of free men and dare maintain them. And if this support is to bring upon me the wrath and fury of party— if I am to be doomed to political death, on this account, I accept the penalty, proforring freedOm in exile, to servitude at court. leave you, gentlemen, in the full conviction that there aro enough freemen in the Eighth Con greeslonal district in favor of honest suffrage, and of self-government to ro-oloot kfr._ Clark by au overwhelming vote. I leave you appealing from the blhosts of power in high places to the ballot, whioh, falling "As still As Know flakes on the silent sod, Yet executes a treetneuin will, As lightning does the will of Uod." AN IMPORTANT MEDICAL FACT- - SUICIDE AVIIRTED BY MEANS OF ARTIFICIAL RISSFIBA. TlON.—Several days ago a well-known citizen in Cincinnati, Ohio, attempted to commit suicide by taking laudanum. Ile swallowed about two ounces and a half. As soon as the fact beaameknown medical aid was called in, the otomaoh-nump and other appliances made, but seemingly all in vain. All hope of averting death was at last given ap t)), those in attendance. Some several hours after the mamma the was of the family arrived, but too late, as was suppesed, to do any good. The thought struck him, however, of testing the em olenoy of artificial respiration, so successfully used of late in came of strangulation by water. Ile proceeded immediately to work, and soon began to perceive symptoms of improvement. En couraged, he labored on, assisted by medical gen tlemen, and in the course of nine hours succeeded in restoring the' unfortunate man. The intended sniedo is now well. The entire success of tho ex periment is worthy the attention of the faculty. 800110 AT THE WEST.—Western papers are jubilant over the meows of the sorgbo culture at the West. The Davenport Times states that ono farmer has made a sirup at a poet of sixteen cents a gallon. In many places, in States whore apples' abound, the old-fashioned older mills have been 'used to grind cane with success. MORTIIY . AT THE TUILERIES.—ReEent [d ykes from Paris state that the Emperor Napoleon has requested Morph) , to give a specimen of his blindfold playing at the Tuileries, before the la diesof.the imperial court, and has also consented to be beaten at chess by the young Amerioan at the odds of a rook. Tuo NEWIIIIRYPORT ,HERALD reports the shipyards busy ; there are half a dozen vessels, from 400 to 1,100 tone burthen, now on the docks In that city, and three or four hundred carpenters and constant work. THE COURTS. ygpmfnArnoqamplttels TIIE ALLIBONE AND NEWHALL CASE Postponement . of the Trial for Four Weeks. [Reported for The Pule.] QUARTER SEsszoms—Judge- Thompscon.-7- yest.rde.y morning having boon tikfid by District Attor ney Loughead for the trial of Messrs. Allibone and Newhall, charged with a 'ioiapiracy'io defraud the ettockholdem of the Bank 'of Pendaylvania, , the court room wee crOwied immediately on its opening. • The defendants were present with a strong array of counsel, and great anxiety wax manifested to get a good look at the "Great Defaulter," who looked as cool and domposed—not to any innooeht-las when he need to re. delve his obsequioue visitors. in bin bank parlor. He had a tine, ruddy glow on his oouutepanoe, as if he lied been recently enjoying the country air, healthful elombere, and a good conscience. There was a strong muster of members of the bar, an iiseignee or tWe'of the berth, a friend or two of the "defaulters,” and,a sprink !bog of the unfortunate and betrayed, stockholders. The spectators were, howeTer, destined to disappointment, aOthe trial did not proceed, timelaving been demanded by the defendant/1 to 'ariswer the bill of particulars, which was fnrnlehed to them, in compliance with their pertinacious demand, and the absence of which wee made the main ground for a demurrer to one count of the bill of indictment: • We give a full report of the priMeedings : ' Thh names of witnesses on the part of the' COmtrion wealth haying been called, and attachments retinedted notl, granted, for ,those, pot in Attendance, :Joseph P. oughead, Be4-;Distriat Attorney,roié and hfay it please your honor, I have called the witnesses in-the nase of the Oo mimeo wealth' vs . Alqib ode - and New hall (bill of irdiotment, No, 908, August sessions), and handed'the bill to the counsel of the defendante for the purpose of having a plea entered Neorge hl Wharton, lteq counsel for Mr. Allibone, Said: lundeentriod from the'District . Attorneythat it is his intention to call this bill now for trial. It seems I.' at no foimal plea bas y4tbeon entered T b at,however, will be put in instantly It is not in-regard to that matter th 4 I desire to address the coact, but it Ie in reference to the trial itself. Under your honor's' ruling, there nra three counts upon which this ease will be 'tried. Upon the first and second counts the defendants are ready for thertrial. I think I can say that for both, although I represent here only ono of the defendants • Under the third count your boner',, decision, made on. Saturday, wan, that the defendants were not to be called upon to go to trial withbut the previous proffer and , service cif a bill of particulars by the District .Attorney. That bill of particulars wan furnished thin morning. at eight o'clock. I • understand front my friend, the District Attorney, that he called at the office of my colleague on Saturday, night, about eight o'clock, and finding the olfrde cloned,` he was unable te, serve the bill of particulars then. do not morose that, practically, there ip any difference between the rewire of a bill of particulate on' Saturday opening and a service early, Monday . •inotning, Sunday being dies 1101, publicus. The questlon presented, therefore, le, whither under a bill of particulars which is very voluminous, involving a vast number of facto, all of which, or at lout most of which, have been brought to the notice of the defend ante for the first time at so recent a period as eight o'clock this morning, It in incumbent upon us to pro 'emu a readiness for trial at ten o'clock the same day. Waste linable to say so, sir. For one, I have not yet hid time to read the papor ; my colleague has read it. It is utterly out of the question that we can be prepared Pr trial at ton,o'clock npon a bill of partroubsre furnished at eight o'clock the seine morning. ' Your honor bap but to glance your eye upon the bill to 'see that involves the Investigation of a great number of facte—the necessary Investigation of the knowledge ip regard to thosoiactri, possessed by a very large num ber of individuals—en examination In'regard to which not the leant intimation his been given by the other two countrot the indictment If the District Attorney will ,any that he will try the ease this - morolog upon the first and second counts, we are ready' for trial. ph, Loughead—No, sir; I Intend to try It upon the ,whole bi 11..) Who instate on putting the mule before the Utley on the three counts, it is my professional duty to 'ask, on the part of the defendants, for a continuance of the ease until the next term. Ma third count, in Its general shape, having bean pronounced by your honor 'tither informal—or what is substantially the same thin,;—not a count upon whioh the defendants are bound to proeeed to trial before the ,service of a bill of particulars. it to just the same. as I quppose, under the ruling of the court, estf the bill had been tOund by the Grind Jury this morning, at eight o'clock; lumens.. until the Service ar the bill of partt. enters, your honor sera the defendants •have no notice of the offence laid to his charge ' It would, of course, he contrary to all precedent—end ludeed,rtoirre7 prin ciple Of Justice—that a party should be. bound to go to trial in a matter of this kind upon two, hours' no tiee. ' For these remlone—which explain themwelvm, and In regard to which I desire to my nothing more—we ask on the part of the defendant, for s continuance, until the next term. .„ , Mr. Lougheaa—This bill of indictment, may It please your honor, was found on the 28th of September last, it being an identical transcript of a bill of indictment found last April. In the hurry of drawing the, bill found In Aprill, a, clerical error crept into it. The per son who copie d indictment from the rough' draft I had made, beaded the words •rt July, 1858,” and the bill being found in April, that was au . impostilble date.' Io order to correct this error, I sent the witnesses ageturverearrittivavvencrsruvrazacerner :wan an identical Copy of that bill. exoept.that thiamisroke-was,amended and several trilling forrnalithm (Mailed, ,• I immediate ly gave notice to my Mende upon the Other aide that that course had been taken, having previously furnish ed them with Copies of the amended bill. informing them the rew bill wai. i 'entice' with the former one, except in the trifling particulars I have mentioned: ' About a month ego I We thorn notice that this case world be called up on the 20th of last month. When, that time arrived, the professional engagements of my friend!' on the other elite being deemed a sufficient rea son for postponement, I agreed that the case might go over until to.day. A week ago Mat Friday or Saturday my learned friend Mr. Thayer, representing' the de fondant, Thomas A. Newhall, flied a demurrer to three founts of this indictment: That demurrer wee amned before your honor with. as little delay as poeshle, and on Saturday last you delivered the opinion of the court. That decision was, given with great celerity, and I,am sorry that we were compelled to impose upon the court the labor of deciding so import mt a case In so abort a time. Your honor, in giving the opinion, sustained the fifth count of the indictment, overrated two other comae relating to the embezzlement, drown under the act of 1860, and directed that, before a trial. should be had, the defendants should be furnished with a particu lar of t h e acts charged In the fifth indictment, as to Which evidence would be given. Your hot or is aware that I was - obliged to be before this court until three o'CloCk on Saturday, waiting to take up the motions for new trials. 'As moon at I could leave court I was compelled to wade through-the mama el testimony, which I had prepared to bring into court this morning, and prepare sash a statement as had been declared necessary, This I accomplished, after no light labor. The moment that copies had been pro. pored, I proceeded to serve them upon the defendants and their counsel I frond that both the defendants were out of town. The offices of Mr Brewster and Mr. Thayer were closed, and I was unable to gain admit tance. I was, therefore, obliged to defer the service until this morning, when, it eight o'clock. I served the bill of particulars upon both those gentlemen. I ant now prepared for trial. In reference to a postponement until the next term of this court, I most say that, by such 'a proceeding, the Commonwealth Will' perhaps lose valuable testi mony. In the expoottation of a' trial today, witnesses have been brought from a distance of at least two hun dred miles. Shonldyeur borer think that the defen dants have not been allowed auffirdent time to prepare their defence under,this bill of particulars, sod ehould any order of poetponemoot be made, I trust that it will not he,for a longer time than a week, or two weeks at the farthest. I trust that the indictment will be tried at thin terra of the court. On the - part of the Com monwealth, I am here this morning with my wituessee Prepared to try it. M. Russell Thayer, Eeq , counsel for Thomas A. Newhall—May it please your honor, the incoovenience arising from those delays operates certainly with much greeter hardship anon my client than at can upon the Commonwealth. We are not to blame that the case was not tried in the spring of the present year. Your' honor-,who was then upon the Bench, and who wit. nestled our presence here, in court with our witnesses upon theday fixed for trial, and the postponement of the came by the resolute determination and assertion of the Commonwealth's officer, that he wonid not then pro ceed to trial although the court had appointed that day for the bear witness that in regard to . those Mao we are not blameable. That bill, may It please the court, was demurred to on mainly the same grounds which 1 assigned as a 6anso'ot demurrer lo the present bill—root of car -Minty in the charges made, want of notice of the facts for which we were to Us tried. That bill, after it had been passed upon by your honor, was, for noose reason known to the District Attorney, and to which I neei? not refer, throwu overboard. A second bill being drawn, that also, for reaSelle to which I need not refer, wee subsequently thrown overboard and abandoned. About the last of September or the first of October the pre. Bent bill was found. . . Within en brief a time as possible, after the finding of that bill, I examined its character and the nature of the ehargea it contained. After that examination, it became my duty to inform my client that it wag im 'tensible for me to know what charges he would be called upon to Ammer under the last count of the It was eo vague (being entirely naked and unaccompa nied by a single murk watch could ilentify any trans- Rotten whatever) that I considered It altogether impro per to go to trial under such a bill, however anxious he might be for trial. And I will nay here publicly that from the commencement 'of this cause, my client's anxiety, his greatest anxiety, has always been to have a speedy trial. But I wan compelled to demur to that bill. Your honor enstained the demutrer, and Mi ele:ad that count of the indictment to be so vague and general that it was Impossible for us to know whet We should be mined upon to answer. Upon that ground you required the District Attorney to furnish us with a particular etstement of the charges upon which ho would rely nuder that count. 'Up to a late boor on Saturlay evening, after dark, no bill of particulars bed arrived at my office. I then left, and went Into the country. • Returning to town this morning, I reached my Ohio about nine o'clock, where I found upon my table the bill of particulars to which the Dietrict Attorney ham referred. I have had an op portunity to read it but once, and In a very hasty man ner That reading has, however, rendered evident the prudence of my demurrer, and they.dedoin and Justice of your bettor's decision sustaining it For 1 have found in that bill of pertieulars, even on this cursory reading, matter's alleged againet my client, of which I have not bad, in any sham or way, previous notice from any quarter whatever; a variety of matters entirely new, requiring the subyeztaing of new wits:leas es, the investigation of new and Independent facts; Matters which, may it please your honor, might have been made the milled of a separate indictment by the Dietriot Attorney; matters, I take occasion to says which (If be knew of them at the time when the former bills of Indictment worn found and when the former correspondence took place) it was Inexcusable in him to withhold from us. How, may it please the court, " bad there been no de mnrrer, and had we come into court upon ouch a state of things as this, where would we have been ? It was to avoid this very thing that I told my client, during all the period when he was urging me for imme diate trial, that it was my professional duty to know, In the fret place, for what he wee to bo tried, and that. as a professional man; I - would not allow him, upon any consideration, to come into thie court to be tried upon charges Be vague that it was impossible for mo to advise him in regard to them The very thing which I ap prehended has occurred; amine now have here an en tirely new batch of charges contained in the bill of par ticulars which I found upon my table at nine o'clock thie morning If the District Attorney had confined bimetal, even to those matters of which he bad given [IOU.. under nreeervation that he was not to be bound by them as a bill of particulers—if he had confined himself to those matters and the matters contained in the counts which are sniliciently apache, and which givo us notice of what we are to be tried for, we should be perfectly ready for trial Our wltaesees are here, many of them from a great distance ; . we are ready for everhing of whieh we have had notice ; but to set us now yt to go to trial upon now charges, which wo have had no oppor tunity to see until niuo o'clock this morning., le asking, may it please the (Mart, what is inconsistent with coin mon sense and with justice. Thisnase, I respectfully submit, stande (es was mtg• goated by the learned gentleman who represents the other defendant) exactly in the attitude, to far as the TWO CENTS. purpoiea of trial are concerned, of a case in which a new bill of indictment has been found ..thhi morning: /fere is fresh matter, here are new charges- furnished at this late hour; and it is exactly MI if the Grand anry your honor had, at nine &clock this morning, handed their bill o m no a r xe h a t v h e w h a e p a p lt l a ie.a ted ti : : gr fo a:t ., t ii h ti at x, " against us' containing eight or ten pages of Matter, and counsel hod 'eked us to try it 'upon the spot. If, in oath a cane, we hol asked your honor for a continuance' of the cause until the next term, according to the usual' practice, I believe, of the court in: sunk cues would think not. I tnink that if a. man, indicted under Mid, ri i an PPli de e ' a i U n ° :d l e l r l ; circurnstaaces, for larceny or for assault - and hatterY s ; to enable him to prepare his defence; yourhoner Mudd' grant it with Ont a moment's heettatiom Sucliapplica-! tions are constemtlYmaile, and constantly granted, In regarit to ouch matters, I know of no rule ,applying tOI one case which does not apply to all; and ;,think that, i in pursuance of the practice of the court, in view of the: facts of the case, in consideration of ell the matters to , which I have alluded, your honor will makeno Unction between this case and others in which similar; applicatiore have been granted We 'have presented, our readons, founded upon common sense and Ordinary , justice; and I do not think that your honor wilt refuse' the application. ' - fdr.Lougherid—l desire (though, perhaps, it may not be entirely regular) to say a word or twain reply to the remarks just made by my learned friend If I understand rightly, the Cite of The King,c, , Thimilton, in 7 Carrington & Payne, in accordance with which the order of the court *as made on Satntday,it is there declared to be the duty , of counsel for the de fence, arlien - chartereart deemed notinfilideittlY epecide, to come into court and ask an order for the furnishing of a bill of particulars ; that on such applieatioti the court Mikes the order, with Which the moseettilon is bound to comply: I have not had time to. examine the matter particularly; but I think there wee some ant of, Par. 'lament upon the subject, which regulated the practice, rind Induced thin that instance. At all events, fair and just as' it may be to the defendant, that there should be Bubb a specification, it is their duty to come into mend and auk for that order; and when the order hat been made, it in the duty of the prosecuting officer to com ply with it at once. The order for this epeoifieation wan made on Saturday, and I wont to.work immediately and made the epec.ecation. My learned friends are entirely In error in saying thatthe'ie isecrindoWnew niattat. , ' I take leave to say here that, there is very little,neyr matter. , Prom time to times, as My inveStigatiOn into the affairs Of - thin bank brought to light - new testimony, I gave toy friends open the other side verbal and einnetimea written notion Of the evidence that had aecntinlated. 'The (sated 'attire of. 'the „disastrous failure of the Bank of Pennsylvania, with its cinmenee capital and great Ha bi Mies, have required montlis of investigation' et, thh hands of gentlemen appointed by the highest Authority of this State; the mysteries of that great Concern have baffled the ingenuity and industry of everybody ; who. , has undertaken to unrstel them. Hence it was ins possible that I should progress in My examinationirith- - out meeting, at every - stage Some point eel- I dance, of greater or leas importance, which I had never known or dreamed of before. an important, a very important, part of this cause, as I,design to present it to the Joey, came to my knowledge only last week Of this I immediateirfornished speoificatien t o the 'gen tlemen representing the defence • I did this. not be- C4ll/19 the law bound' wie 'to feeno order of the court hal commanded me to 'Like that'Cours - e, but in fairness to these defendants. I wee Informed by one at lout of their comet that he would ar:cept do Bubb no tice—that it was too +Mott.- - say this may It please your honor, I have given=l eay this linen my profeosional Mid persoftel responsibility— I have glean tellies° defendants intimations and infer, mations of all that him'come to 'my knowledge as fast an it hasaccemulated. • That I' did not give the defiii/ which is given here, is. perfectly true. Mr. Thayer—l ask the District' Attoinej to ear whether there is not matter in the specification fur .niolted by 'him this, morning, of which - be has never given - me the slightest intimation of notice. - I ask' the gentleman to answer that question. - , • - Mr. Longhand —I am not here .to - answer categori. tally questions propounded 'at thetar by any gentleman on the other side. I will,,however, reply to,the gen tleman in my own way. There to such mattek.. Per example, in this specificationi I get forth - Abet on the , books of this bank there Is a large, account known. as .the a sterling account," which was under the direction and control—the sputa. the sole control—of the Preai dent „or acting Preeident of the bank (hlr. Thomas A Newhall having been on various oecastent acting PresiL n eat) ; and-that in this account there is a large deficit. I never gave to the defendants that specific notice, but I informed them in wilting that I wield' Mier, as evidence in this minee,;certain .books .thity bank in which that deficit appeare So,. likewise, ..there in, in this notice, a epeolficaAlon - that' in 1 large au count known ,as " the transient, discount-, ac count,” there is a large deficit, that account being under the control only of the President or acting Prim'- dent. I have given the defendant', previous notice that I would offer in evidence that book, the content. of which, es bank.efilebre, they well knot- or ought to have known. I did not give the,defendents notice un til one - day last week (when, after an elahriritte'inveiti getion, the information come to my knowledge) .hat aro minsory notes to a large amount have been chats - acted from the bank,' and are unaccounted for. Thus 'I an swer the quesVon which my:friend has propounded. There is :natter, there is detail of matter, in this speed-, ficetfon of vibleh I' have not before - given the' `de foodants notice.' I was not called upon to give them notice of anything until directed to l l? So by the order of the court ' ' George df. Wharton, Esg—May it .please your honors, I wish to say but &Jungle word in reply. Ido not rise to make any complaint veined the• District" Attorney He will not understrnd that .1 have any fault to find with him, because he did not famish no information of, which he himself had no knowledge. I have no mi. allot to make that a, bill of indictment woe remit An the abience of information which has only been ob tained since the finding of the bill, Particniarlydo not desire, on the part of my client, to. try, this cue upon an argument'on a mbtion for continuance: There la a regular mode of , trylog the ease. to:1,1004 - st' the proper time. we shall endeavor to confotm„l,had - therefore, not indulged in any reliatic calculated to call forth an =awes which, alight prejudice the cue at the defendant. In the - Wadi of jurors, or of bystanders who may biomes jurors. Thu application for a continuance Ims been made,' not in any spirit of complaint spinet the Metric:l At torney (who. no doubt. has done hie duty in Ihts coda, as . he does to all wee, so far LSI know.) but pimply man act of justice to the defendants. When this information, upon which the trial will in part rest; was not irethe knowledge of the Commonweath until a day or two ago,' and wee not made koowo to the - defendants, antil this very day. there seem a very reasonable ground for sat.' log a continuance until the next term. • • Ju°ge Thompson-1 perceive no reason whitever why this mile should not be determined by the same princi ples which role every case in this court. Those grind-, plea require that ovary defendant than. have anti:* knowledge of the offence with which he Is charged, and of all the circumstances upon which the, charge .s made, to rest, so that he may be preper.d - with his evldence'to meet it his specification, necessary aa a basis for he defence, must either appear upon the fees o' the bill of indictment, or if Were bo a general count Ouch as is now the subject of controversy, it mint appear by a par ticular, giving each notice as will make :that count a epeeist count. • . • • . Thia case, then, appears before the court as though a special mantled been filed to-day ; and the question is, whether that la a sufficient raison k for allowing far ther time to the defendants to prepare • to meet alle gatioos which are now made for drat time. Upon question of mere mann or of. larceny,' ouch' a delay has never been refused, where the, bill of indictment hoe been found the same day the emir list been pre: stinted for trial.. Where a defendant hoe alleged want of time to prepare testimony to meet his cup, we hare never refused to give time for that purpose. - " 1 see no reason why this ease should not be placed open precisely the same footing as every other. The defendants are entitled to know exactly what they will be called upon to meet Io a matter of this kind, re quiring no much investigation, • matter in which the evidence Is so extensive. it Would be unfair to force a defendant to trial upon the same day on which he gets notice even of the slightest fact which he may be called upon to meet:- For at this stage, we cannot tell »bit' fact may be a very material one; AMA that.whicit we might think a person ought to be prepared to meet at once, may be something in regard to whichthe evidence requires for its preparation much ,time and attention, and skill. • For this reason it appears to me that time must be al-. lowed to these defendants to prepare to meet the par- Hauler items which are to be embraced Under the gene: ral count filed. We have been asked to grant a continuance to the next term. In this court, where terms are merely no minal things the nowt sitting the, whole year. round, a continuance to the next term is not our practice A continuance for such reasonable time as may give the party an opportunity to defeed himself ta more in eon, nistence with our course of practice. In 'other courts where a term teats but two or three 'weeks; a 'Outten- acre from term to term la sometimes essential, because sulft , ient time daionot be' 'Oen withotit4olng beyond the term, Here it is not at. 'While, therefore, the court is ready to grant a continuance to some future day, yet, unless a longer time is "absalutely , nbeessaryi the continuance will be confined to some day within this term—this day week, if counsel will boprepared. , F. 0. Brewster, /Eq., (of counsel for de'endatits,) suggested that a continuance of lens than four weeks would not be sufllelent. - Their clients, he had no do-bt, would prefer to go to trial at ones, but itouosal could not take upon themselves the responsibility of ad vising such a course ,The Court died Monday, November 29, is the day for trial. „• . • I/NITED STATES CIRCUIT VoußT—Judge Grier.—Bolted Staten vs. One case of Linens. Petition of James Elliott for remission of penalty to the 'United States District Court—certified to the. United States Circuit Court. R. P Kane, counsel for the petitfoner, moved to rider the petition book to the Dtstriet Court. on the ground that the United States Circuit Court has no jorledlotion In the matter. United States Platelet Attorney J. 0. Vandyke moved to dismiss the petition. The motions were argued by Kane for the petitioner, nod - Vandyke for the' !Jolted States. After argument the ease was hell under advisement. . • U. S. Dm'filar COURT—Judge Oadwalader. This morning Captain Leslie, of the ship Esler, and his Mate, were brouret up for hearing on a writ of ha been corpus. The defendan , a were charged with creel treatment nod unusual punishment to two seaman fn his employ. The case came up for hearing before the Commissioner several daya dace, at which time they gave bail for their trial at the United States District Oonrt The evidence of the ease was, that the 'defen dants ordered two of the seamen to take In chafing war, and to paint the chip Which they - refused to do, anon the groans{ that the vessel was at anchor inside the har bor and it was not necessary duty on Sunday. They were then pat in trona for refusing At the hearing. the judge said that there was .no , evidence of unusual or cruel treatment, and that the conduct of the gallon in refacing to do their duty when ordered to do' en was mut nous DISTRICT COURT-3)111p Sbarswood.—:Mi choel Phntter v s. John Berlin. Before reported. The defendant in an alderman and thin hi an aotlen •to re. cover damages againtthim for refuting toglve an appeal from a judgment Verdict for the plaintiff for $BO. Loughead and Cochran for plaintiff ; F. O. Brawnier for defendant. B Greenwald vs. The Continental Insurance Com pany. Before reported. -An Ration on a policy of in surance Verdict for the plaintiff for $2,110. Peter Maus. The Trustees of the German Religious Society of the Roman Oathollea of the Holy Trinity Church, in the City of Philadelphia. An action on a bond to recover certain moneys loaned to the church. No defence. Verdict for the plaiotlff for $799.20. Ser. geent for plaintiff ; Parson!' for defendant. A: M. B. Seaman vs. Samuel Frank. A feigned issue udder the Sheriff's interpleader net to try the owneratop of corthin 'household furniture. jury out. 'DISTRICT COURT—.Tudge Stroud.—H. W. Farrand to the nse of =ward Hobart vs. Dr. Path Pan. coast. An action to recover $2OO due on prominnory note. Defense that the vote was given is putabitee - for gook of the Mill Iron Comany, andthat ff induced defendant tHall o buy it by re p presentations a p t la to 14 value, and the benefit which would be ga i ne d b y h i s buying ten share., which defendant alleged it wan ne cessary to take in order to become a director ; that in reality it was only neeessnry to own one Share, and that the other representations Rare Mee,• Verdict for de yontent. Woodward for plaintiff Myers for defendant. Joseph Ripka to the , nini= of William 'Allison', 'Jr en ph A io lii i laionm thefl S o t r y e ls r oz e t 0 A bg 00 u o a n e K t g i hi o n n ga t fo3otrarecoverplaintiff: ik the. vi c o t real Brewer o for defendant. . . (4,gAnTga. SEssidxs—Judge thampeon.—A habeas °mins was heard in' which Mary Connelly and Bridget Oormiz. had been arrested and bound OWL on suspicion of being concerned in the stabbing of John Odnnelly. On account of the absence of a witness for thb Commonwealth the farther hearing of the ogee wan postponed. - STEAM FIRE ENGINES.—The Conamon Conn oil of Boston has taken the initiatory atop for sp. pointing ti joint committee to buy two steam fire engines for that oity, the expontre being limited t 017,000. ?man win pism , O t iv,pg. 4 , - 14. " - • 15 'la 11•41. ieriter. - jet ' orWtO Ware 4izietnion :**** ; 1 4. 4 " 11. aket * 114 11 961 1 401 0, 00 1 4%,14" , " r.apik vtitt..L.P.4.lfoA-4,1140,PAV population, or ik : lnt.ortniirektiftee&S/ - to the moil reader: gENEEdL; 1V A Ream App.--The Kookuk Josh:ars:C.l 6 r' the 23d relates this incident: - "At the Lineoln.meeting in Carthage, on yes terday. Captain Appler,, of this place, was there with his field-piece, tiring a " salute, which be bad been Oniployed by the Republicans - to - do. - The powder heinir bad, in this course of the - firing'the gun went offerematurely. , James lynch was at the muzzle, ramming the cartridge, when it igni led. Captain ApPler,.,who was at the vent, finding a premature diadem:go was inevitable, "calleC, "Get away. J!"-hoiding on to the vent till the Are burnt his finger off lip to the first joint, and un til Lynch had escaped, the range of the yawed. It is seldom, in chronicling an accident of ,this kind, that we find ition - ppestoising "the nerve an heroin fortitude that Capt.'S. displayed on this occasion to save his friend from an untimely death. Both were considerablY 'burnt by powder; but neither dangerously- hurt., Captain Appler bad his - finger ampittatedimmediately, and is . on the street to-day - , A T0110111:114 Ixorrterr,'—up. itithe Fourth district, Nair Orleans, says the:Delia, lives a Putt Ma infant , child, and a• matronly ', wadi-behaved nanny-goat. This nanny is the hairy:. foster. mother et ;the rinfant,whicathe fiver, soma:time since, robbed of its parent proper, and shUontirely appreciafet the peculiar duties whiolt; have - de, volved upon her. When she beaks :thilwrogry cry of. her helpless little biting chaige shi , is :by its side in an inetant,-plsoing her, teats at the seri. via aof its thirsty lips. lfreqteintly,the,quiok-ears of the .quadrupedal wet-remsalear the ohild'ecit when She is 'bioifsibg - in the at genie dis tance from the house; and leaving her"own rensaf; she, darts hastily 7off .to supply. the wants of the "Inithertess bairnf"-deppndent-upon her, as 80, minus and Realm were of eld'iltion - this' dngs'or their Wol fish . ' piotio trees: = Welielblife'WeL have told a tolerably strange story above, but truth ld stranger - than fiction. - - LAST :WEEK while some hands were en; gaged In , digging a well on the farm of, Morton - Justice, near Morrie.. Rill, Indiana, they- stmoh e, veto at the depth.of thirtyone "feet. which' Oro. milled to jdeld abundance orriater rbit - meek to their ettrprbie,'inrcleaning it filing it to contain a large attount. of= ealt. -At _ 4 guantirjr,..intii boiled, and the sp_eolmenta now,on,, eshibitionin that, place, and le 'adze an article all gan.hicpro duaed anywhere: ' • • . .. . , - • . , i T a i : There (Texas ) - I n te l lig e nces inform that two boys, namedßenjamin Thompson and James Smith, got Into a qttarrel there lately, when IThompson- fired a eharge of shot Into the bak of 'the other's head.- The Intelligencer Jtays that - . lit is a common thing there to see boys from, ten. to fourteen years of age. carrying about their -pr omos • bowie. knives and pistols, and - denonnees. thin brave and chivalrous - practice of "Young- Texas." _ -.- ~ , -.. r . _ • ~ - :-. - • SWALLOWS —All the swallows of Paris age. Isembled in the Thmalrendome,-a - short •time vO, to marshal • their emigration.' It ,was , a alugMar. and impressive - speotaele. The roofs . of all the buildings *ere idabli with the - sWaridee =birds. hey set CPA soutivin three principal columni: Af ter they had gone, the rear guard moved: 7 e Mani three days behind the flight of the van- - - • . - STIWIGE.—The_ editor ofthe /;toorie county - _(Ky.) News has bean shown a bird of the ;dower peoies, fall - grown, . which bad neither feet nor legs, nor the liaitelgns of ever having had any.' Naturallati . tell ut Of -- quadmpeda "and bipeds; but' what will they - call this anidlal idtbinit an y foot fall? Bare not a:reptile, for;it had- wings .and '3 ° U dIO a N t 1 L . A .A . A2I.MIIISEMEN ' TaI.-7-F int i riie is pne in inoinnati have been arrested for tarring the front, f a house belonging to a lady of_ that eity:who ad giveri them - some - refranee - Prole' the 'deta in:a of the magistrate,- before velem the aianiina ion took plait, it appears that tarring houses is . uite a oommon method of revenge in that city. - Tun Orrraisne_ whose duty it wtui to count ha vats in Rock county, .Pennsylvania, deeded. hat lead•peaoil marks in a:watching" tickets Were not lawful: so thit the names of candidates latioken ant with 'pencil strokes were wanted, as though no "scratching" hattoccurred. A Glamentax, who sitnesepi the qg wean Morrissey and Humeri; says that 110 ace power one of the blows dealt by- Heenan: that the of a watch held in the fland of another person, ho was timing". theta, nt lidieta t ace of ten feet, s i w WasWprinisled iti"MorrleSee blood. !terrible! - „. Tiro 014E4 oarpm.—rWelearn 41iit AO : otiations are 'pending between the manager of he - Boston Theatre and the direator of 'the New ork academy of Kuala; fora` Picoolomitti: opera aftsau ha that city. = : - • A DER OP COUNTERPEITZEttI, iss itiat an d a e 'l°lity, lII', was broken tirreal' e alast ytes omoers n of the gang arrested by_ Unt , from 0 4 10 ,ftg°. ' • " As. PORTSMOUTH,K. ; on- Saturday night eek i• a • watchman, employed! in4the brewery of obh 6wludoll 'fell into a vat_ of: ale' and naa roirned. A Va. Swaia, of Buffalo, has been - trying to kUI his wife with apples, into whiah he had in froduaed artania, BO is , . General Synod of 'tit Evangelical Re. t formed Church, Frederick City, Md.., kFinal -Adjournment. - " - eported for The Press ] . • • WEDNESDAY-.IIINVI DAY The first question-dispesed of Was oneinvolving - he old difficulty eoneeraing,the validity of bete cal baptism.. It weit,hrought up by the request f "one 'of the Rest - ern (dairies for eounael as to the thanner of receiving persons - who had been hap dzed and ' confirmed , - in 'an irrontlar way. The Synod, after much discussion, adopted 'a resolu iaon (by a majority 0f.21) which applied only to e special oases occurring in the closes of Gosh hoppen, without passing "judgment upon the general question. Another item of interest was the establishment I a committee for the translation and pnblioation of standard German_ religions works, such as have Clever yet appeared in English. The °bleat of this ntarement tete provide our' Eklishmembership With the most valuable portion of the German de nominational literature. There are vast treiumres 10 this field which have never yet been turned to account; andthe results of this measure promise to be of - the happiest' kind. We may thus expeot large 'additions to - be made to that class of works to whioh: Ertuumaoher's Elijah, Martyr - Lamb, &0., to , belong. - , , The place and manner of publishing the new German hymn book, to which,we have already-al luded, gave rise to air:animated, and indeed frOlale• Wh at exciting discussion.- The committee to whom t)le subject was referred scold not agree; and pro snted twomidely diverse reports, a minority re port by Dr;Gerhart, and a majority report by Rev. J. Derr. -- The point at keno waa the nature of the &entreat betweeri the Synod and M. Kieffer & Co., the pint-stook owners of the printing establishment at Chambersbnrg. M. Kieffer do Co. halal, all alcnig been contending that by the terms of the contract the Syncid was bound to give them the printing and publishing of all the books. &e.. which might be lamed" by the direction of Synod, without de manding alumina conditions as to the cost of print leg, ,to. On the other hand, many-members of the Synod claim the right of Synod to fix specific terms In oasis caae,'"and' to giye thst"werk to Other pub lishers, if the eetablishment 'tit Chalizbeisburg will net do - it at as lbw rates asthey can get it done for elsewhere. Botht the above reports were ably 'Written;, the minority report taking ground against the alaitas 'of M. jiiiffer 4 co., and the majority report thr them: Another committee of five was ultimately appointed, to report upon the subject at the next meeting of Synod. - After disposing of some other matters, among them a favorable report of the committee on ex amination and lioensure, recommending Messrs. Krebs and Tietzell for licensure and ordination, and Mr. W. Riley for lioensure, Synod adjourned tti meet at 7 P. hi., to ordain the candidates just n'smed. . - - xxzwura' out Brim 'The ordination service attracted a large con• gregation. The officers of Synod together with Dr. Zacharias, the pastor of the First Reformed Church here, were the committee of ordination. A, sermon united to the occasion was preached by the President of Synod, on John ix. 21.23.. After this the committee took their place at the altar, and administered the solemn rite in the manner prescribed in the new liturgy of the church. It was throughout - a moat impressive - service. All engaged, and the entire congregation, were deeply affected—prov'ng how adequate, for all moral and religious purposes, are the moat simple and nuns tentationa forms of service. The Synod continued in session after the ordina tion service was closed, anti received the report on the state ,of within. the botmds of the Church Emit. It 'Vas pietented by the Rev. H. W. Super, and was "well prepared, and encouraging. But the old complaint of the defect. tivenees °flits statistical reports bad to be reite rated. Two classes had failed entirely to furnish sta tistics Hence the difficulty of ascertaining certainly the strength of the Church. This retort was - fol. lolved by that of the Committee on Missions, Rev. Harbaugh, of Lancaster.-chairman. It was a Patter of great interest. The receipts of the Board of Home Missions have exceeded those of any for mer year nearly one-fourth. The various mug sionary stations seem to present a cheering aspect, and although some places have been abandoned. other more promising points have been taken bold of: Two suggestions wore made in this report which will be likely to be put into practise. The &awes that a small colony of missionaries should be planted in some portion of 'the far Weetern field, the different members settling at as many different, but contiguous — points, so as to be able to co:operate with eaohlither. 'The other suggestion was that the missionary 'superintendent be in structed to examine the' various distant districts he may visit with. reference to the selection of some appropriate locality for the founding of lite rary, 'and theolcigie -institutions. These reports, -with some other lees interesting matters ; ocoupied the Synod until a late boor. TIAIRSDAY ROBBING, OCTOBER 23..--OLOBING Bea. A committee of dye was, after some disonssiOn, appointed to prepare a German translation of the new Liturgy. The question of the establishment of a Triennial Advisory Synod, of the two Geneial Synods of the Church, tette referred to a similar committee, to report at the next meetin of Sod. After two ballots, the Rev. B. Bau g man yn wa s eldoted assoolate editor of the Reformed Nissen ger, Ohambersburg. ' The Rev. Dr. Schnook was re elected editor of the German paper of the church. The docket was gradually cleared of the Items of business still claiming attention, and at one o'olock P. M. the membera engaged once more in singing and prayer, and - the Synod adjourned to meetin Harrisbnrg`on the third Tuesday of Octo ber, 1859, at 7P. 81 Altogether this meeting was a most important one for the church. It was also a mostbarmonioui one. Considerablelifferentle - or opinion prevailed, on some of the subjects consider ed, but with rare and alight exceptions, good feel ings were preserved, and all ,parted with cordial regrets that the synodical reunion bad been of such brief duration.
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