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SCI° 2 TGO...IWESit 4 / 1 41 -ratglitig 0 4,4 14 VeMttligrake: eg:, . 0 , 404 , 414 , .414 „IT° . • tc!'t t wit 7," 4c.,:.0.,? tle 11'7 #54`3 t 0ti",41,09414!: NSt4 'T ZdTelginuhnot • (1111 1116 n 94 ZY, - ii uar . -01144,..r0atat co nppi Olnw - Wttati4ll Vdvezide 44 po TAllli g: G o l Fr . ;: k., iderYs,...bat A - 43 , -Sot Tin ir2A.17,, GANTLEItEIfB PAT#tiett9l;tolol- awe: anpr ioe;ozrn mti_wrintr; Rua thi Wrlisforpnt itoratAE 0,4 o , 4 • -. 4' A:IXN WE o R the,g 4 hanadn tafaina, dep ep tiiOrdei nMed;o. fa nColldi dllid , Wthel'al scttar. , :W i h td e M l a ek rt a aU l i • r tradefraPtillikt mvsuoTTA Wl3o' o'intIaiiIeIeSinSTVEMENT(r‘PUENIIIH - '31164-10.0113C1.;:ididL , SUIRT iIdtiNGII.43TORT,, - .. 814 OHISTNIMIV( ,/dfri7; ; Pi.O Ol P.:PP irfri a° 1 4 110 i) , Lid dormer p#ronat:and trtiodit to' hid new Store, and is pre.' pared.Jo:lll,:oikdind lot .11111.11 TS &art• nation. wertedt,;fit. - stuinuitidd.. - K courtlier TAA?ni• With IP II .AcM.TI'VAN I O,k . = 12, '6l IprrA „ , --; z lositi.'„itaraval • sitbiciilt,`, . vomotiapirproniptY•hilade. - , • 0114014;P,• - • ole. r a T- OM: IC,- -PA.-- tIA % M:/3/3411105T0 . !• 3 '. focaztv4R,A,Tozwri: ! ,- , asw,rois - 4 --, tYrfirilleZa Nl • :pieurAND4XosANGX:i.)lo,ssia, id-17 VW: igurw r ta 711/IAWLEIVEROWNI' &FC1.04 BANE-N0T11413T00H,,--I*OHANGI . • 01.5:4 BROICARM •!.% ,A • o'criaxl*.gitiau • Oolfatiolii midi' and Ithitta drainsini of Mita! MAW and tim painaduVezi Irma firSrabla 0011eeti,0193*194 .IkINI; 1 7/Zl*.Aiiitilini UnestrienE . iwkili , * in:anti bne;ghtAnd Bpoweand . 'Loam , -AiaCTlmel , lltooks.sad Looms b•uptand.,aold Commix/pi:4_4 the Ik4g4 1if5,141141" . g:111.04 si* Now, ' - 'Oonatdmioner for • -;.";. New Thaw. ; 114 - • wacii-r.3: fi... 1 .1tE COW _Map' LAND_ AerliValt UNNYNTANONAWY ; ) az-t ANANKATo;t.WINESEATk ) ray iii - tieklubd;attowOon;to,'l9wwhiglawaviwwsiVlN 'Money far wontilWidenta; - mad,.othent linCowillsNwir, DisiviApte.o4:4 l o,liAktVW*4 Ptosahre- 0 4 1 011. " Wood '-'l//futop;:k • Withets,PhiladiotAia. abswirkilaEueb,.•& Co., wobard,ltandolphißhElidelftls. OhldetNEliw& Plailadololais. Safes. .0 - AAptSDER, PAP'Ea•• lari t a*; _,—.... it E l V ae lf? " l4. 6 0' N'S . .." • PIIIIA;D/111.PgIA IMEA.N . ,u,FAOTIJRAD - . 4) -(11111 , - * ,, it ' - ,:tz)-11;ON , p90)1/415EWTTX-1.0., & 8 4 ,, r bgehment la the OnAs good tP!PIo - n u m aD wi t i l :A r i en b t ; " -- ; 7 :tvAsica'a'3VATl3ON;;!.. l .;:fy•,, • iti!'79ll-171111:471.- us, - salMf gfatinmitit; • , AADWAANkIie 84blicebere 111118BIOVICSIORANTO fer,thisate of NOBZIGN' AN DoknismingDWAHMOrmild-respeettnili eetl thcattedifialltthe trade teAthetr stoolc,"*.bloh they are 411'ertsts lie" . .tetee." , :,'Qur emoctetent dots bim:A ot—i-:T , • • •-. lb o OtAirgr. 1 4/ " 1 4 .L. .r!Fai Lciehit•ii iteeioLol; - wiY ;Brci i lrliont 1 0. 0 . Sea LOOk; The cielebxoet!'“ men *xi otf.ine v , aid other . jlo4 Box and other MIf.M;EZ=I;2M st Itertfit , e !!, /inserter' -7114:mid i'DeS Brawl. aim:4l4lor i?...Sesty Saw; ' , Bleating Oota, GroseOitet Stler Barbee U.54190511 1 11,811,1i ri,j4 M 1014 Wits. aty, Ataziarti s nittAille , _„ Bakell -" a 31°4. ; --Bh°l4" roil:4%Zr: SZlP: t ilar Sheei -- sien'art4 tultW lits iouAt mitt , Bitiget, Axim iterer i g to .Loe bito ke s e um f ma ll oratory ; 1144440, PIMP!! ak4 l, MOM Planed, ateki4Or soNi. 'llll COMMEISOS Street. b 2l-1 /1 s&l4 . ll.,lll.llpa4rltAlV;r4 : - oo Oall ihe atiodloa or the PnbUq to the Ghana* la the!: BusiPOL!• from the r CREDIT TO A - OATH ULM > ouzo., ± ad' ebiit+l - holm of Brooke BrioOws of :plow. YOrkj.io tke Palle with'the Anent:actielei of clottiLug' et se low prices se Alkey'ienn be_ wain* 'et the rendpmade clothing - house, enetnMerntrilf here Mtn advantage of AOenti centime is • heintefareito : kiefilhe flieitieliortment iPinde -,1 41 3 1, 1 4iY.,5v4 r t 6 14 0 /44 , , , trat...ftia. - 11 1 . 5 1 4 1 : Pro-- tendon; end fr ithhlhe - advant egli offer to the Priblic ,- ar,nntitinkinglditCPegine;dnetoiner pep for tboneWho ,- do.iieitiispiced having ntirsji /iced et the head of oar Prefeagou, we deem de Optj nececiaii to lit• - •• rformehe inibtid of tie above change of pricem,_to aim ? mind a fell RIFLES. - OD'-i3PORTIN IN ' • sAlegeberiaiiii EOW . ING-PIECES,LRIFLES,, ike ! , - • —Sem offered ikuull DielsousJil• st4kefli,htiftritteel2 vut••ir - : -,44 . 1 4 0 dP , PLow-pitto 0- ...-- N 1 / 1 414. ,111 ; 15 : T ' Blr°l' 111441111'1: to , sr e Oft:EXPIAS/VE43 ' adfiatiriithrhore seII,IIIITrpftSOLUID. /*Web --11111, ilat'expticle In ISo , , oitlititiv6 3 -61434v been osier". mentort - WO4iid edttlieted teethe elOreetieebt before tbelbeee. ablitekiWtsfotit thisAikri without I mingle = uoir.efterObe.tablebile; feeling d9Fia , ' ..•..'"efee thee*. ignite ijeeideretiinitesUei meowed., • aywno 111G1g8TIMPORTA.NON, fori tvisteto;4l.6f.yfititreahey VAY.ltliatf latiito: :;•401.00nril' Olesale - DnigkistNt dellieeOf 'nawrojad clittEN,Ptralloi Ate 'dleptlltit , et -their WhibitMeartaalliiildecOrdaVeolanti Ind "Windolr ;n 1 .° 1 ?"; "Aek b° 41•1600101.14.11W:53,-:ATri; leto WASS.. "actisugitedVitit tifrboP ,%4 AzY, 1; V-AGEAlvrfue,Dailmju; , .thoißert 11111-g," . _ . kt1 i gtrAV 6 04414400),1*,.",.' ; -* 4•414.1gr0tra,...:•N . . • A A 041e--ar ~ -- Aiiiivifit-p *NO ii•, liktuO 1 0; PC - ..,7 1 Ft•-•, • po vg. , i . 111 s -23 :Yers- , ,,, ,, :i'it'1, - . , , - ; ; ;-„ , ;rte,,-,kf.,k4.N.A...•;i?..,-, P , -2 15.. , :v.v.,7 , -,-7,-.-_--..", = , --.- ' VOL' • t- 87. m, j'S x3~ a. - ~ I to DEAL RS LH OIL CLOTHS. — -- taidlltles • for; Mang 7L47QIi; TOW; :and ; - • : '9AURTA)aIi pm . moms, viii*irepli4it,Wiipi gristinaicieine)o.4' to, iluyeti pieta of country. oltfAcis o,!wok Oonshindy on hind. a BtesE'esia'wllt b 3 tat* who c 1 4 007 _-s-IYAB*Eiciin3i, 'ilia: Aiwa atreo; Phu.. ‘34028.1h0.W , , THOMAS Itswirdhotorix: IThRILLS . & SHERTIXOS FOR EXPORT: BROWN.-BLEAsSISDr tc,BLIIR •DRILLS. ~ .11B&VY LIGIrt BILMITINGE4, Bultablefor:Brpoit,, At - isle by, --, • • r.ItOTHINGHAM.& -44 South FRONT ST., ¢ 35 LET/TIA ST. ~ • ~ . ,„ 0015.0 (104.11PETINGp: - .-: , ' • - JUST. nigosivED• ,1 le oTEm - tercavecquAsAs, 12, lot of ' , (7.00111T8i, io b0141'14 AUCTION Pffi4BB for Csah or WV At. - " R ICO I ARDSOWS-: HRH - LINENS, M7‘.7Tr': 71 M7 7 7M77 , 715=1 81014,11M0W1l /Mina, and Wee GiiNtrurs :Voopic ibeidd - 114034:0ik,athap7404thie Tare ' /141 , 4 with the' i3024* . ; & -CASTEN, - Ice a' imithuittiCe'r aCcindliss 'and durall/ty Of the 610,,Santimils rendered SaientiallyneSeasary aa lugs iquotitles of inferior and defthtlye Linens are prepared, Sesiolivifter: Olsson; sand -'sealed the , :nanie , of: Irislabsathauwhoi: rigardlem of the :Ili thus Indicted alike , . on.-tho,,Ameriaan columnar andtt entantsfactarers of Aholgenuthe evade, will not .ththlly abandon a boldness ao prodisble,:whlle par- , lamas lon be imposed - on with goods of I worthless -- q J: NULLOONN do 7'. B. LOOSE, em .4antsala ontrliort Atintiet, Neir York. trobsciablitra. ' WmTEßl,aa4:poATtNas 11,..1111.191031) . 1100D84fOrt dIIITL PARRY,' ‘l3 . ont6reot - O;iii . ier BEOOND - an4 SIAH6&T Edo, pee steamer PERBIA, Tl9O OASES 704kilFlt AVIOB • OOINO4ILLM3 TSBEB,BALEB'OZARINEB, ' 15,1:kaki:Blue, and Marengo ALSO, ; 7#iie on Lend itid"2"yeaelving 1311k•mixed ilif1812:1;11a1B AND i3OATINOO 0);; I.;`, Noe. 011 MARKET' sheet 1014 10 01W11011 - Alloy. IMPORTJBB AND iopsius-, • DRY &O,ODB, . • now fully prepared for the '•,• - • ,FALL ,TRADE. yhi completeson or that; Stook, both foe • VARIETY IND PRIORS: Wii, 114110 ! 1 * offer oaval?taitoo to liven, tunor iilli4Oik'*Otioritithhi ;wintry. sidLiihi • so.c. ji 3.IOALEWELL 84 - 00. ' .i ,-?---HAV,III:B,EiktO,VED TO THUS 219,111A)03L8,13171LD1NG, ~ ..049:822, u nnurriuT-STitnET, • - BELOW ,NINTH They repootfaily invite purchseers to exembe their , , , new Importations imermaii deattme -ctraprlstog T p HES RStjUi EBTABLIBHED , ~SAKEBB Only iiiihidied Agents to iionaripirda for the sale et patios liWodtliatiVa Gold Chronometer Ttinekeepere, WW4e:ialiewletilWatOlt;Gialllieik&to:',4riGeWeva, ,• Jnledm Turgatiiew thintisig fdtnute 'll..isimatora Seoonda: .50.19, Caldwell & Co.!' Tlinekoeperw ; Edward Mane Brandin and other • ' " , OMAII. 18.044 AT GOLD DRAM AND GROITPE, L , . -BIOS DIAMOND AND ,PEADL, 1.4-PLEOIR9ZON ANA, 40111INTINE - :::JEWELRY: MAONIFIDENT ,DNOLLSH PLATRD O NOR.R.• MAN 4SILVER AND FINN' CUT Wain- WARES; ,OF ONIGINAL , .D.ESIONS, YO:Bp D3l3Br;liT AND ,ORNAidSNTAT. PIJRPORFS LRTISTIO BRONZZ OLOOB§ ,AN, D .91iNEWENTS, SOIL THE DRAWING ROOM, &win giod.powerfil r ZEA.,SETS, , , . -•, . P:ci every artieleapnCrteining to the ,tabie: ..:: Minors will ii*ap reeeive polite attention whether the 4 (Meat tato tureitaieor diherwiae. n02.2w E.- O ALDITELL _& CO., J. 822 per Street. Hare reedired, per steamers, new stplio 11Ve p1 iretry, Chatelaine; Vest Otani._ 7tult' ParisOlair Pine. • Ofesels,ll3ugee,/leaketi. - .1 Goode and Plower Vases. • erdi4,l4wa azoliNeesio Bois. fole - Agewte In. Philadelphia for the rale of Charism frodsheasi's LONDON" TIMDICERPESS. aor 8 13;, --- TARDEN tic BRO. IF - 11/01111PLOTURI11, AID W2'ollllll OP BILVER•PLATED WABE 809r:11,estent - Street, above Third, (up stairs ' ) PhlLd ticaiditiatip end Tor to the Trad e _, TEL SETS,' ocommaort sEsTroz SETS, Ulan .:PITCHERS, GOBLETS,' ourgi WAITERS; BAB. SETS,eABTOttS'KNIVZSiaPooss, pow), LAI LM. lko. tee. - 41-fla,P.444,Platlzgp.e eAkinp or motel. seSt•ly iIy*OIIIOKERING: & SONS, Mann taativas of GRAND, Pe.BiOlt- G RAND, QIJABN, and lintittuy. PIAI4O4OItTEIIt - This is the largest and oldeet , manufactory In the United Mates. having been - UTABLISHED IN llita, Mae which time we bayou' MADE AND 'SOLD TWENTY THOUSAND TWO ' HUNDRED PTANCS, And bare - ?ionised as teetimontale of -their SUPERI ORITY • Oyer ail, others, 11 - Chid, 18 Either, and 4 J3roxzeWeitals; ' F-117.!' Phnom to Rent, Tuned, and Bephired. BRANCH' HOUSE in yIiILADELPILIS. is at 180 T CHESTNUT Street. , ' • " oe6-8m . ,1110.-pn roam- FORTES. lust reeolvod, 'an'ololosat stook of RATIN, & NUNNO & CLAM, HAILIT, DA; Vie & 004 iad & sio. 8 P/AlOB. =LODI. 018 of befit quollty, at c " E.' GOULD'S; : • 8.1: oornor 9117NT8 and 08.18TATUT 12119'7'. „ , - T°'"°IIITEOTS AND BUILDERS. AOADIA,FREESTONE. Now landing,nnd shortly to arrive ; 1,000 tons of this beautiful Hilo, both of the • .:` r. 3314E4 GRAY, AND NUR, TINTS, 'the former of irldelsi for Nano' , and delicacy of color ; Nor the - Shiite:ter of thin atone please examine the followig tending* 3 - . • • 7od. 31errlien'e, Rlghteenth street and Rittenhouse ••arrisou , s street, between DiVen teenth and Eighteenth, .., ' - Nantnel Smith's West street and Rittenhouse square. blni:Pet.reotes N0:3219 Walnut Asset. " • Weinrath's; 411 Arab street, Runnel Binids , „Twellth and Ohestnututreete. T. K. Dastaltt; Seventeenth and Locust streets, and others. • • ARNOLD 'WILSON, Agents ' PRIIgADDLVDI A ► WARMING AND TENT/LATING : -WAREI3.OI3OII, to: 431131 AT NUT BTREET; - • - iILTIVIILL, fiern. - • 11NITED ., STATESAIO V B ItENT -DAND LCCATING•AGENCY,: CHICAI4O) - " 2 = The entierther laving hal mak pineal . cal k e i e It t ele i sl t ' UPI= =Anil :grdalseleetioares.oorn "4ltiVinetlfsirseperi 'constantly in the field, to make ,poradtuil exitAnstions, he can always make the most jpitietOite locations. ' ; hiatiiplased - fertilitiof "moll and salubrity "of eitnOte; Geer the Ibis of reticoads j may now be , lOWA AND WISCONSIN: 2 - ' , OsCefecaorr references given when **red. - ,I . M. Wetly - .in Rowan and IdObrasks, and !! .411713tates B. BALIBBUILY t = ' -, sp CLAIRE Street, Chicago. 00,13 - 011.441EP_AGNE:—At oonatait supplY Grille original gettable brand, in 'Oll.l oodioritoro, for ode by WILLIAMIIi Y,II&TON A le?le'10 ,1 0" for Formsylrordoi , No, Ile -ponth IRON T tra , • WOLHE,,WILSON,'ft CO., NoilB2 011213tNt1i Street OPBRA 0LM31388 .I!9*Bi 6P00N8,, Ntili flublicatiemo. THE ROUSE)SIOtt 1300IC. OF POETRY ID. 'APPLETON , 41 * C 0.., - Nos. 846 & 348 BROADWAY, . ' " rave suer ruometrii/ 4 8 , . , ;“ • " THE ii , SI2rEEHOED BOW' Or_kii:OETEY, OOLLIOVED AND ARBUIGID W ' ' CHARLES A: DAN'A. 1 vol., Bvo., 800 pages.. Price 83.60. - , • , OPINIONS OP, ,TEEI PROB. - . (Brom the New Orleans Delta.] The 'voltirris` comprises; in •th6' contents of its 800 large and' elearly-printed pages Ake very- game of poetical writit,' - o ursf American; inglish, Stench, Qer man; Spanish, Italiah; Gireek, and - I:Min authors. • [From the Southern Argue.k - • The elltoipeems to have exercieed a coal:olio as well as %correct teeth pod 'to hive selected bin pieces ac cording to their poetic Merits. without regard to their names, nations ability, or 'epoch' of their authors. , We' are glad to sethat babas given every poem entire, as' well as in the `moat anthebtio'form' •-• iFterit.theOhlosgo Treat]; ' • This Is itch Iceoelleotton of the finem-poems in the language, arid supplies itt , ebethnteasttre the 'place of an extensive libraryit - 'Only a few have the - mania to gratify their taste'tn this regard, and Mr Dana bee done a capital service in bririsiog within • the reach of all the richest thoughts that grace our standard post]-' cal literature. Orom`the Boston Jodrell 3 This -Work approichee nearer to our Idea of . 1444 • foot conipils'ion thee an4Catkiic we hive ever (From the n TleghatTransor . r , Patia'al IloneehoildtiThh/frexter e-stioceetiO,Prery body is eat to' have ItieLedtaiiit'volturtatitaileetrie•to which' they habitnailyttunat&-refer. to 'and' le' , tvida, vt•eum of the waren , olearly:Printed • and ltiditilously,l • :. Se co. hive - .-,IIDONDD AND - DISIAIDTTD; 03, Tna eoinemgs Armen:: .01412M0.- 010th,...15 cents - ' hWEDENBORiI A lIERMATIO P.IIILQSOP/1101. _ _ 'vol.. 12mo $1 RALLEOIVS POETIIAL WORKS. A Ned Edition . .... _ 1 4 v01.,12m0 - - Cloth. 75 cents.,. HALLEOKII POETICAL WORKS. A Nom illus trated Edition. .1 vol.; svo., Cloth, $3 Cloth gilt, ft ; 'llorliceo Action°. $5. • NEW YORK TO DELHI, by the , way of Rio de J. new. An Vella, and Chine, By ROBERT B. murmur', , Jr.. 1 yo.. ISmo. Second Edition. Illnstrated . with a Hap. $125. RATIONAL COSMOLOGY; r Or, The Eternal Prin 'clples and the Noreaeary 'Laws of the -Universe. By Lammas P. Humor,' D. D. •1 vol., Bvo. 879 pages. $ll5. - HISTORY OP CIVILIZATION IN.ENGLAND. By *slam Tawas Bodam 1 vol., Svo. pp. 677. From .the:Sacond'lsndon Edition. $2 60. - n09,2t THE - AMF4RIOAN: SUNDAY -SOHOOL UNION ruaLienas MOM TRAN:ONN SEOI7BAXD , CHOICE, ILLUSTRATED BOOKS /OR CHILDREN AND YOUTH, Being the Largest Collection in the Country. TR ABC POW' rnattenitto A NEW ROOK OY &PREY SATURDAY MORNING. Elegantly illustrated Catalogues may be bad without charge, by addressing THE AMERICAN SUNDAY4OHOOL UNION. 1122 CHESTNUT Street, Philadelphia. 'A large assortment of Bibles, together with the de votional books used in the various Evangelical Churches; alloys kept on hand. oell-tf Savings ifunbo. TEE STATE SAVINGS FUND, No. RAU DOOR STRUT, N3XP DOOR TO THE POST 022103. INTEREST FIVE PER CENT. Bioiaes reoelyal DAIL; and ovary MONDAY BYENING, - JZ • mom, - IN 'IIIIIIB LARGB AND SMALL, PAID,BACK DAILY, PROM 9 O , OLOOK A. M. TO 8 (POLOOK P. M DaPositron our DRAW MIX MONIIT sr moss, As I ZASI, IF DIBIRID. ORO. R..HART, President. ORAL G. IMLAY, Treasurer J, HENRY SAYER, Teller H E SPRING GARDEN SAVING YUND. • ' (Oxivraun sr , aro LisoppArclii es Pamsanura.) 0474:1'..4) - 4Ai.it.1;1t34111 Ira PER 'olNT:inters/A - allowed to Donoghue, and all Moneys Pald but on Demand, • ODNIOR, 881 NORTH THIRD EITP.IIIIT, ' gIoseoLIDATIOI Butunaria I Tide nstitution id now - open for the trawaetiOn of loudness; and it the only (Madera& Basing Pond located In the northern part of the rap-, - - ,The Ofdoe'will - be open (daily) from * to 4K oPoloo And also on MONDAYS and THDREIDAYB, from d neW 9 *{clock in the )iventod. mraieins. - • 'Well* Met% JlllllBB B. rrtngle, Stephen Smith, , jamb Dock John JosephM. Coweld, Hon. 1/enry M. Strong, George Woelepperi Daniel thiderkofler , J. Wester Brew Mon. Wm; Mlllwart, Rohert 11; Dail . • hederiek inneke i • • •-• r • P.O. ~.Inmele Hest, , John P. 'Vanes, Joseph P. LeOlere, George Knecht, _ )hu K"er"T : . ireeld ,t John notrimarmial. • commix n TRORti. 80714111 sevirrG FUND-FIVE PER t7)INT. IN TMILIT—NATIONAL 'SPIVEY TRUST SOW PANY.WALNUT STEM SOUTELWBSTOOILISIN 01: THIRD, PLIILADILLPIVIA. littooaronornn•nr soauSrawn or Paitamgania. Money Ls received in any sum, largo or small, and in- West paid from the day of deposit to the day of with drawal. • The °floe is opal *My day from doh:dock in the morning till ti °Won% in the evening, and on Monday and Thursday *rotunda till 8 o'clock. SON. SWAY L. DENNIS, Proddsiat, • • ' !ROM ONLYBIDGM, wee Prwildent. . Sinn, Secreta DUMMry. - lES Ron. Remy L. Benner, •P. Carron Brewster, ..ltdward L. Carter, Joseph B. Ban , - Moberg Selfridge, /limas Leo, Sand. K. Ashton, Toecph Terkel!: 0. Landreth Mums, Henry Diftenderfter. Money is received and payments made daily. 'Phe investments are 'made In conformity with MOST -provisions of the Charter, .in lilt&L XBTATB MORT eikeze, GROUOD BINTiI, and such drat alma deatui. ties aa will always insure perfect security to the doped ' tore, and which cannot fan to give permanency and eta. batty to this Institution. S AYING FUND.—UNITED STATES TRUST COMPANY, eorzter of THIRD and MUM Win Streets. Large and mall same received, and paid back on de mend, without notice, with FIVE PER OENT INTIM UT at om the day of deposit to the dal of withdrawal. °lce holm, born S nntf 6 Oslo& every del, end of MONDAY BVININCiII frotrkfuntil 9 Welock. DRAFTS for sale on Ingland, Ireland, and Scotland, from LI npwards. Psesident—STlPlLlN B. ORAWFORD. Promoter—PLlNY /MIL Teller—JANlS B. ITUNTIR. ealf-Nif Iloikite 9ittitito: THE GREAT WONDER OP THE NINETEENTH CENTURY, PROFESSOR WOOD'S HAIR S .12, .9.'l' I Nir gays the St. Louis (Me.) Democrat : Below, we pub. 11th a letter to Dr. Wood of this city, from a gentleman in Maine, which epeake glowingly of the superior merits of his hair tonic. Such evidence must have its 'effect, when doming from a reliable source. If milli. sates are guarantees of -truth, the Dr. needs no enco miums, nor useless puffery from the press : Bass, Maine, :an. 40, 1860. Professor 0.7, Weer: & 00.--Gentiemen : Raring my attention called a few months since to-the highly tums field effects of your Hair Restorative, I was induced to make application of it upon my own hair, which had be. come quite gray, probably one-third white; my wide. kers were of same character. Some three months since I procured. a - bottle of your hair restorative, and used it. I semi found it was proving what I had wished. . I used it about twice a week. I have since procured another bottle, of which I have used some. I can new cortily to the world that the grey or white hair bas to. tally disappeared, both on my head tad face and my hair has renamed its -natural color, and I believe more soft and glossy than it has been barer:, for twenty-five years., I am now slaty years old; my good wife at the age of fifty-two, has used it with same effect. The above notice I deem due to you for your valuable discovery. lam assured that whoever will rightly use, tut per directions, will not have occasion to °Clara; diet - my statements. lam a citizen of this city, and • resident here for the last fifteen years, and am known to nearly every one here and adjoining towns. Any use you may make of the above, with my name attached, Is at your aervice. oilwish to preserve the beauties of nature in others as welt as myself. lam truly,youre. A. O. RAYMOND., • _ Bairwoangan : 28,1858. weows HAIR iridgraliiil Professor WooD—Dear Str : Having had the misfor• tune to lose the best portion of my hair, from the effects of the yellow fever, In New Orleans, in nig, Y wee In. dated to make a trial of your preparation, and found it to answer ad the very thing needed. My hair ill DOW thick and glossy and no words can express my oblige, Hone to you in giving to the afflicted molt a treasure. - HINLEY JOHNSON. The undersigned, Rel. J. B. Bragg, is a minister in regular standing, and Pastor of the Orthodox Ohttreh at Brookfield, Mass He is a gentleman of greatinfiuence and universally beloved. ' WM DYER. 811001r7RLD, Jan. 12, Me. Professor Wood—Dear Bit: Having made a trial of your Hair Restorative, it gives me pleasure to say, that its effect has been excellent in removing inflammation, dandruff and a constant tendency to Itching with which I hays been troubled from my childhood ; and has also restored my hair, which was becoming gray to its °rig'. nal color. 'I have used no other article with anything Me the same pleasure or profit. Yours truly, J. K. BRAOO. The Restorative is put up in bottles of three sizes, vim large, nedium, and mall. • The small holds hall apint, and retalle for one dollar per bottle; the medium holds at least twenty per cent more In proportion than the retaihs for two dollars per bottle; the large holds a quart, forty per cent. sore in proportion, and retails for three dollars a bottle. O.J. WOOD & 00., Proprietors, Mg BROADWAY, N. Y. (in - the great N. Y. Wire Railing Establlaltment,) and 114 MARKUP Street, Bt. Denis, Mo., And sold by all good Druggists and Yanoy Goods Dealers: aula.frreia , /int & eorrinnkrittn tgobarca. VIIGUET & SONS, Impor.tas of HAVANA CIGARS, oe2B 4 216 South FRONT Street 111AVANA OIGAR ,S.-100 000_ La Flor JAJL de la Havana Ist, 2d, and. ads, June arrived per brig • 1 111ay Queen? from Havana, in store. and for tale b , WILLIAM H. YEATON, ee24-tf . No. 218 &Tit t le PHONY Street. Vi(TARO, OABANAB AND PANTAGAIS OBGAIbI.—A choice invoice of these celebrated brands on board brig "New Bra, dop exported from Roan", and tbiaala low, by OHAR y TM% (NOW) 188 7iVolngt stniet, below Beoond, - lloposti Moly. P411,04PH1A., NOVEMBER . 10, 1,85, VirEDNEBBAY, NOVEMBER ,10,1868; •" Jeurna!ism in-prance: A Ererich•inewspaper,- must appear •nusat_ls;: facthry hiitii-,Englishnian while an Amer/4 woUld:pr'oli;alily4egard, it as tittle bettar...thiM the, shadow Of 'a , shade. For if newspapots in Einglan4 .111:;?';'krii;e 7 :sto6ken, telling . the ;kW of things, discussing r publie events and'publln: personages with boldness and spitit,relatiffg• 'all tlitif pasties 'every where, American ,110*4 papers de this also,' only a little More. , as common as• the daylight to have the Pef-' Ilona' character, as 104 as the public cendri of, the very highest personage, in.the lTniAu freely canvassed in our newspapers; England,;,`that divinity which (according SLIARIPEARB) doth hedge a King, throws ft barrier:Ot etiquette and protection'aropridthe' siiierefgit; Which checks personal animadiek-' skims, and prevents all personal allusions=ueir• CePt these,, which: are complimentary.' Thna l When Queen VIOTORIA.,:eitr-wigied,l4l,oy, Posmtsh,;:beliaved harshly and unjustly -td Poor Lady FOR/ lIMITINCIS, the English,preSi made no condeinnitory remarks upda', her- Majesty; althoughpublic opinion was uttequiv4 hostile;;catty nor when Vioronik, biconiedit; the Morning Post- foi. having• published .tl4- letters from the'Marchioness of Manual Lord Mutuonaiu, in vindication of her daug4 7 (., ter, Lady noak, trampled that fashionable; journal wider .her ,feet, did the newspapers; ,even hint at the impetuosity of, royal tempelcp nor did they breathe a syllable of reproach'•. when the royal hand that bears a sceptic: jealously boxed the ears of Miss Brume &sink then a maid of tenor, now the wife of ,M: MARSHALL, of Leeds ;• nor—but why catalogue, the little effervescences which . only prove how very mortal Royalty Is, after all. Enough" that, while they are talked- of every whorifi r sotto voce, no newspaper tikes notice of thent. i : With ns, we feat-Put such forbearance would: not be shown. „ Same ,curiorsi correspondent` would work , there up .into, his Spicy,, letters,, some plain 7 spoken editorWOuld comment upon ; them. All that actually,,was - said and done'; would come before the world—and, it maybe,' much that was neither spoken nor acted.''-, j In Continental Europe, on the .othershand; neither the give-the-fnli-detalls 7 of-every.thing, principle of the AmeriCati press, nor the more,- subdued but not insignificant hintings of the , English journals, 'would 'he tolerated for One' day. There is nothing like a free press over that whole Continent. There may be an' itntf Wien of it in Belgium' but it is the Merest' shadow ; for, any foreign 'potentate who fan cies himself aggrieved by any article in Brussels paper hai but to make a complaini to King I,sorotn, and straightway the offend , ing journalist is subdued, by coaxing and threatening, into the decorum of silence, until . the next' time. Over and over again, that, much-pretending journal L'lntlipendanceitelEe (whose correspondents affect to relate dream,: stances and communicate intelligence which' it would' not be safe to publish in Perla,: Madrid, Lisbon, Vienna, Berlin, Etuttgardt i - Rdme, Naples, and Bt. Petersburg,) has thus been dealt with. Not proceeded against; but with harshness hinted at—permitted, but' not countenanced while, all through,' (and, herein lies the jokes,) the said correspond epee communicates only the chit-chat and ges! ! ,, sip of the salons, the cafés, and the, netvspal per offices. The L'lntlipeadance Beige ift.n r il terrible humbug, with its affectation of dread:, fully secret and confidential news, which , dles down, on challenge, to that safety-valve '-. for, peccant editors and prurient book.makere a there is an on ,dit,"ol: there was a mer.?' , ise234Janl _. As to any Parisian journal venturing - ono sentence of comment upon any thing said or done by the Emperor, ,or his wife, or his re-' lotions, or any official—even down to the stout old decort who squints at your passport ere he lots you into the Louvre—the thing is impos sible. The great principle upon which news 7 papers are now conducted in Paris, (and Paris means France, in thin and moat other cases,) is a complete non-communicativeness about what is going on in Paris, and the great far sons who are performers on that stage of public life. Tho Paris nowspapermustknow nothing, think nothing, say nothing—but generalise on what happens out of la belle France, providing that, politically or personally, the Emperor is not mixed up in it in the slightest manner. For the Emperor, albeit bold in heart, is as sensitive as a mimosa about, newspaper com ments. In England and in America, the newspaper reader finds in his journal information upon a variety of subjects—political, domestic, lea al, parliamentary, monetary, statistical, musical, dramatic, literary, artistical, commercial, legal, and so on. He finds particulars of many events which had slightly come to his knowledge, by letter or conversation. He is instructed, by Lis newspaper, on a variety of subjects—and sometimes thinks that he knows some of them as well, if not better than the editor. Above all, be looks for comments upon the intelli gence which the newspaper—the poet Cow- PER'S c , folio of four pages "—sets before him in a muitum in parve manner. If a public officer does wrong, the newspaper animad verts upon his misdoing—we have hoard, in deed, that animadversion sometimes follows when the right thing is done. If a private individual break the law, his offence is fairly stated, and the public are admitted, as it were, through the reporter, into the police-office or court-of-law where the plaint is made, or the trial takes place. If the Executive pursue what the Autocrat of typo (commonly bearing the world•known-and-much-abused-yet-some times-honored name of Editor) thinks an im proper course, loud peal the thunders of the newspaper, and vividly flash the lightnings of editorial wrath, contempt, or hatred. So in England, much. So, very much more in America. So, by no moans whatever In Con tinental Europe, and especially in France, where there are many so-called journals, but not one actual news-paper. What says a brilliant writer on this subject, says it better than we can? Re speaketh thus : c. French journalism is a charnel-house of animated skeletons. The dry bones live, and gibe, and chatter; but there is no distinct articulation. It concerns itself about every thing but that which concerns itself. It is philosophical on trifles, and'is maudlin when it has to deal with realities. It jabbers about India and Cochin China; it knows all about the affairs of the Shah of Persia, and the com plexities of Spanish politics; it is grand upon Frazer river or Otaheite, but it ignores all that is taking place on the banks of the Seine or the Loire. On all home questions the French press is tongue-tied. How do the people live, how do they fare, how are they housed and clad, bow far aro they satisfied with the present order of things To none of these questions do we get any answer. We rend that the beet-root crop has been good, that the vintage has been abun dant, that there is some chance of making more sugar from sorgho, and that the silk worms have spun their duty. We read of the reception of a new piece—of a new actor or actress at a theatre; we read of the papers which have been read at the Academy ; of a new picture, a now statue; that which we can not read is the thought and life of the people. Public opinion exists in France, but It Is al most impossible to get at. The one who does so must have already discovered the perpetual motion, or he has resolved the problems of the quadrature of the circle and the trisection of au angle." There is no news-paper in France, simply because there is no Freedom of the Press. Some other time, we may compare an Ame rican newspaper with a French journal, but pass on now to sbow how freedom has been crushed out of the newspaper press in Franco. An article, called "France under Louis Na poleon," in the new number (for Oct. 1858) of the Westminster Review, puts this oaso of the "French probe in such a very clear point of blew, that wo shall borrow, to hondentie; some ot its facts. „On the coup d'etat of the' 2d peeernber; '1651; '(and not 1852, as ittfted, by the HO- Viewer,) sup Pressed several jour nals of influence, and -in, tho following yeb !ruary prevented the establishment of any,new journal without the previous sanction of the poiernment, who had the power of appointing ,er at least of confirming the 'editor. Exist * journals were not to be affected by this ;dernmand, but the' successors 'of the then *Hors. were to be subject to Goveinnient ;veto or confirmation,' Any journal which published a statement of any kind displeasing to the Government is liable to reproof or Warning, must insert said reproof in , its next number, and may be suspended 'sine die; by "the Government, after, three such cautions. 2'ay more, says the Review, gf The Insertion of the most harmletis piece of erroneous informs -4n on some correspondent's letter, oven if *rived, at second-band, from some foreign journal, exposes to an action for the propaga tion of ,falsehood ; the accidental omission of :S. stamp upon a imbiber issued, or Of a signs taro the bottom of the most trivial para. irapb, even if copied from ,a , foreign paper, !reiniers amenable to a charge of a misde meaner Veiio, and two condemnations in- 'wive necessary suppression.” There are various other ways in which the life may be out of obnoxious journals. One, which' Was in force against,. the Silele and the piesee, for a long time, was a prohibition to Sell any copy On the , Boulevards. - Among the -journals which have been. dia. ,fingulshed by this Anpleasant notice from the Government, we may bero name a few: Le 'pOrsaire, suppressed, 1853 ; La Revue de Paris, Brat suspended, then suppressed, in 1858; Ltdsiemblie Nationale, after two suspensions, Was forced to change its title to Spectateur 44preseed, 1858; Le Siicle has had three I x/ emends ,and one condemnation La Ga 'ie le de France, three reprimands; La Prose, - three reprimands and one suspension ; Le :6;;stitutionnel, two reprimands; La Visite de ILille, extinct; La Gazette du Languedoc, ditto; Le'Moniteur de Loiret; ditto; Le Pro -4174e du Pays de Calaii; ditto. How the press lives under such a system is a wonder. esides, the Minister of the Interior alai= anal freely exercises the right of prohibiting newspapers from taking notice, or 'even of m4rely mentioning, any event which he, de sires to rest in obscurity This article has run to sufficient length, without affecting to relate all the hostile in- Ilninkces which affect Journalism in France. 'With is, thank Heaien, honest newspapers •earn, lot be gagged, though some scoundrelly •'O4ll have been purchased.. And that ho nesty is the best policy, in newspapers as well every thing else, is very fully shown, To!ortr satisfaction, by the unprecedented sue ceps of our own PRESS. 114 Books Received. Nietory of Prostitution. By William W. Sanger, .111. D. 1 vol., Bvo. Now' York: Harper & :1 Brothers.' Philadelphia: Parry .t J. B. Lippinoott to Co. aletery of Preldrieh the Second, called Frederick the Great. By Thomas Carlyle. Vol. 11. New York. Philadelphia: Parry tt. Moßßllani and '' T. B. Lippinoott k 00. Disavows, on Oommon Torios of Ohristion Faith • ind Praotioo: By James W. Alosaniler, D.D. Bvo. Charles, Borihner. ;Attu* and The Btipernaturat, u together condi.: !hating the One *atom Of God. By HerneeThieh 'lCell.. I c 01.4 Bvol. Neirjork : Oharleo - . .Ir*irnal, The Franklin Institute of Pennayl f ,711.erda. Ziovoembir; 1858. yfeinaineter Revieei. October, 1858, (American a":"!: edition.) Nan York: I.,Soott tic Co. Phila. 14!libial..W. B. Zieber. 41 .bwo(kyrafagasice. potober,lBsB, (American Blew Torii: Boott, d Co. lidiis W: B. Zie*si." Life and Times of Rev. Issao Baokos. By Profes- col divnh Hoover 'Boston : (*mild tt Lincoln. Bitter-Sweet, a Poem. Hi J. G. Holland, author of Tltoomb's Letters." Haw York : Marks Scribner. The Lament °Who Corner Stone of the Waehinton Monument, PLANTeD 111 waentaroxoti SCHIAHD PEDIUMIT 22D, ANN° DOIHNIII92, HMO TON IDINTENNIAL ANAMORSART Or TED lIIIPTHDLY OP WASHINGTON. (far The Prem.) On the day that I was planted, Six and twenty years ago, Then eviry pay-triot was a trump, And trumpets made a blow. . They bad a mighty long parade, And long my sleep has been. The CINCINNATI laid me down, Which since has not been seen; And Pee lain nix and twenty years, And neither flee nor grow, Since the day that I was planted here— A long time ego Long prayers were said—a epoech was mule By Lew'e Apostle nub,* Whose worde, I thought, went to the hearts And pockets of them all. ' They, gravely laid me deep in earth, Which is my grave, I see; I've heard of resurrections oft, But there is none for me ; For I've lain here ell and twenty yeam, And neither rise nor grow, • Pine the day that I wee planted here— A long time ago. *Barld Pain Brown, Brq A Botanical Garden. (For The Press.] Some months ago I heard that a noble-hearted citizen of St. Louis had determined to give the people of that city a splendid estate for a park and horticultural garden. More recent informa tion not only confirms this statement, but gives us the further assurance that a large additional estate is to be vested in trustees to endow the ob ject of hie bounty—that a museum and library will be opened in connection with the garden. A correspondent of the azrelener's Monthly, a new paper devoted to horticulture, edited by Mr. Thomas Meehan, says "I have seen a letter from Mr. IlenrylShaw, the noble founder of the St. Louts Botanical Garden, in reply to some interrogatories that were ad dressed to him, for information as to his future plans in carrying out his praiseworthy design. Ile says that the botanical and horticultural garden that r am laying out is not much advanced, but has engaged my devoted attention for nearly two years. The plane are mY own, and the result of several years' travel and observation. Its corn• platten and support will be entirely from myself. The landed estate that I shell endow it with Is near and partly enelosed within the extended limits of thee city, and of ample extent, to be under the charge of a curator appointed by trustees, its object being for the promotion of the science of botany and horticulture. It will also embrace a museum far the preservation of economical, medi cal and other objects of the vegetable kingdom, and a library for works connected with that branch of Natural History. A herbarium of near 40,000 species is just purchased from the mentors of the late Professor Bernhardt of Erfurt, and some books. The furnishing of the museum will boa matter of time, bat I am assured by my Eu ropean correspondents that there will ho no difft salty on that score. My learned friend Dr. En gelman is jest returned from Europe, and I ex pect to get much from his science and assistance. "In conclusion, allow me to express the hope that every facility will be extended to Mr. Shaw in carrying out his laudable enterprise as he rich ly motile it." Oar city contains too many institutions of charity in and around it for any One to doubt, for a mo mont, that liberality is a characteristic of our people. Our various asylums, hospitals, and other oharitiee shows that we have not overlooked the claims of the sink and the afilioted. The splendid pile on the west of the Schuylkill attests our care of the suffering poor But, while with pride we point to these great Oarlike, to our elegant oharoh edi fices and to our Academy of Music as evidences of our public spirit, we look in vain for any beautiful public garden laid out on the margin of tho pity for the benefit and pleasure of the people. This is a want felt and acknowledged by every intent' gent citizen. ,Philadelphia should to-day have three or four such places of resort, laid. out in such localities as would be most convenient to the cen tral and the northern and southern sections of the city. It is true we possess come seventy or eighty aores on the east bank of the river above Fair mount, now about to be laid out as a park, but this tract is not large enough to meet the wants or a great city. We should have a park embracing flat least from three to five hundred acres, west of the Schuylkill, and one for the southern district of two or three hundred acres, so as to afford space for drives, for play grounds for children, for our ball and cricket clubs, for parade grounds, and above all for botanical gardens. May we not hope that some Henry Shaw will yet arise amongst us, and make the people the grateful recipients of his bounty? BTEIIPIEN, Yrom New Jersey. (I:loereeporideme of The Pratte BAvex, N. J., November 7, 1858 'As you sire "aware, the eleetion in New Jersey has resulted Similarly to that in 'Pennsylvania. Lecomptoniem bag been scouted, 'and there is .not wren a grease spot left of the dirty compound, so far Ca Jersey is concerned:. Such a rebuke to Senators Wright, and Thomson, and, ,indeed,, to the Federal Administration, has never been given by Jersey Blues to any of her pubilo aerianhi. Let ns hope it will do them good, and` learn them not to attempt to misrepresent the people again ! But, in order to rebuke and punish the guilty, the in-' nooont are sometimes made•' to suffer. Such is the case in this instance. The Democratic county tioket was composed of some of our most popular men, whose capability for the positions for Which they were nominated could not be die puted ; yet, such was the odium in which the Federal. Administration was hold, and such the indignation felt against'' its" Leoompton test," as exhibited against the gallant . Douglas in Illi nois, Raskin in New York, and Hickman and your self in Pennsylvania; that even personal populari ty and official capability could net save a men upon the Democratic tioket. It is generally con , ceded, that hadVeorge A. Walker, the Domooratio Candidate for Congress, come out boldly and squarely against the " Iniquity," he would have ,been elected—as the majority for Nixon comes out of the Democratic party. 'Not only' so, but had Mi. Walker complied with the popular sentiment, and " faced the music," our county tickets would not be, as they now are, swamped beneath the waves of political excitement. We have just heard of the success of the gallant Douglas • over the unholy' combination against him in his own State. Nineteen twentieths of the Democrats of this inaction of the State have sym: pathized with the "Little Giant" all through tho contest, and now are rejoicing over his victory —certainly the greatest political victory, as it was the most bitter warfare, ever gained by any man in this country. All honor to the Hero of Popular Sovereignty! The Sunbeam office Is, as I write, brilliantly illuminated, to celebrate the triumph of Douglas, Vox POPULI. From Bucks County. Oorrespondonoe of The Preis.] Boos Couirry, November 8, 1858 The results of the November elections are before is. The President professed a desire to localize Kansas affairs. How has he succeeded? Why, he has localized his own Administration, and nation alined the Kansas question ! - What are Administrations when they ran counter to their own solemn pledges, and the moral con vietions of the people ? Let the result of the re cent elections answer the question. • , The " will of the majority" is omnipotent in its legitimate sphere. Principalities and Powers must bow to its majesty! Ile who is the chosen servant of the people, and, in the pride and arrogance of power, outrages the moral sentiments of a free • people by a prostitution of patronage, the most shameful and prosiriptive the history of our Go vernment ever recorded, had better call upon the mountains to hide him,from their displeasure. The people are capable of self-government. That is a truism henoeforth not to be called in question, for lookat glorious Illinois. How proud. lyehe kande before the world to-day ! The Little Giant went forth In the strength of the principle of the will of the majority against his usual ene mies, and the whole power and patronage of an unserupulous Administration and the result tri uniphantly shims the capability of the people for governing theraeolves. The foot of every anti- Leootepton Democrat of the last Congress who was a candidate for re-election being sustained, is a groat lesson for public servants. Its teaohoge are to trust more in the virtue and intelligence of the people, and less in Administrations ; . to let no influences swerve them from the prinotples which they, wore elected to support. We regret that our ineorruplible Chapman was not a candidate for re-election. file election would have been certain, and by an emphatic majority. lie stood up so manfully for the right—never swerving in his de votion to the cause ofpopular government—that we desired above all things to give him an evi dence of our warm admiration. Mr. Roberts, who was selected by the Democra tic' Convention to summed Mr. Chapman, was de• boated mainly by the Administration party, who cut him off on the bare suspicion that he might be true to the Cincinnati plattlirm, and vote to allow Kansas to come into the Union whenever she de sires to do to with a Constitution of her ()bolo*. little junta of Lecomptonites assembled to gether in Warminster, before the eleotion, to de vise ways and means to draw Mr. Roberts ont in favor of their policy. But practical waya and means did not occur to them. If it was not 'out - of Mr. Buelsanan's power to reward these sealoas ohampiona of his polioy, I would mention their names, but the mounderk - oietivienf' his - instuao polloy are too numerous to be foddered at the pub lic 'crib. Some Leoomptonites of Bensalem township, also, who thought it more important to sustain the Pre sident, than Democratic principles, addressed Mr. Roberts sundry letters, demanding that he should define his position, but he could not be induced to commit himself in favor of the English finality. His position, however, was a most humiliating one. During the whole can vass id this district be never once addressed , the people thereof. Just think of a Democratic candidate for Congress re fraining from a full and unreserved expression of his sentiments on questions of vital importance to his constituents ! The thought is repugnant to all our ideas of Democracy. Just imagine General Jaokson living, and a candidate for Congress under snob oircuutstanotta. Why, the old beres breast would swell with scornful indignation, and he would have spurned a chance for an office, only to be obtained at the *loonse of his independence. That Mr. Roberts would have been true to the dootrine of the "will of the majority," t have no 'doubt. But is it not almost criminal in a man not to have been open and independent in favor of the groat principle which was vindicated in 'the election of Adrian, naakin, Hiokman, Douglas, and the rest of the small but invincible host of true Representatives who dared to do right in spite of Administration frowns? - Axri-Briorasu. Philadelphia Retreat for the Intem perate. For The Preen.] Will Colonel Forney allow mo to oall the atten tion of his readers to the above, what we hope and expect is to be one of onr institutions and glories some time soon ? The matter has been talked over considerably, and, like everything of the kind, will have to be talked over much yet, we suppose. But we feel confident that this community will not let it pus off in mere talk. We have obtained a charter, the 2d artiole of which thus roads : 1 "The solo object of the Philadelphia Retreat for the Intemperate shall be to furnish medicine and other aid, either gratuitously or for compen sation, to such inebriates as the executive power shall deem proper reolpiente, under such regula tions and by-laws as may be from time to time adopted.' These times are proving to us, and the experi ments which have been made in the direction con templated by us, that the worst characters can be reaohed and reformed. Our only object is to try to do the inebriate good. We believe that he should be treated as unfortunate, as diseased, as, to some extent, a lunatic, and not as a criminal. Of course, we would far rather that the cause were removed ; but, alai ! this is not. Tito spark ling poison points at us on 'every corner. Seeing, therefore, that the cause is ever active, shall toe say to the enslaved, "Go, we care not for you?" No, no J. B. R., Vol. The Press.] The New York Courier in its money article, in speaking of the bonds of the city of Louisville, Ky., says : " The entire indebtedness of Louisville, in• eluding nearly two millions of contingent and conditional liabilities, which may never come upon her, is less than $3,500,000. As an offset against this, she holds more than $4,000,000 worth of property in her own name, while the assessed value of the property of her citizens, every" dollar of which is bound for the liabili ties, amounts to $35,000,000." It is the last few words of this extract to which I wish to call your particular attention. The writer says—" every dollar of which (I. e. the private property of her citizens) is bound for the liabilities," ho. Now what is the meaning of this? Hes it any substantial comfort, or is it a mere legal dation ? The subscriber, with many other credulous per sons, purchased the bonds of Allegheny county upon the faith, credit, and property of her citi zens. Have wo any security in her property, as her faith and credit are not very reliable? L. FIGHT wrru RUNAWAY ITEOIIOES. Tep slaves ran away from the vicinity of Pruntytowu, Va., last week.,t is stated, says the Baltimore American, that the negroes were overtaken in Fayette county, Pa., where a desperate fight took place, and the owners and others pursuing were beaten back. Colonel Armstrong of the pursuing party was attacked by one of the negroes with a corn cleaver, and would have been killed but for the interference of one of his own servants, who stopped in to protect his master. Another of the party pursuing was fiercely attacked and badly injured, while the negroes made their esoape. The fight took place on what IS known as the Bachelor Farm. A party of about twenty-five parsons started in pursuit of the negroes, but nothing ad ditional had been heard, at last &manta, from either the pursuing or the pursued. Mn. MEAannn's Toys in COSTA RlCA.—in the spring of the present year Mr. Thomas F. Meagher accompanied by Don Ramon Paez of Venezuela, made a visit to Costa Rion, and ' for several months travelled much through the foreete and over the mountains of that quiet but thriving, State. The result of their wanderings and pen derings has been a series of leotnres, the first of whioh was delivered for the first time, on Monday night, in Niblo's Saloon. Being in the main intro ductory, Mr. Meagher's discourse dealt chiefly with the geography, and resources of the State. Dore and there, however, he indulged in a sketch of its soeial characteristics and politiord economy. A series of admirable paintings, each copied from exhibiteden on the spot by Signor Paws, were tt appropriate tamale. TWO: CENTS. IC.etter froni a Distingthish'ed ikamocrat. floe The Pima Now that the atneke'and duet of the late politi cal °Mallet blolvn away, and men have had thiko to look aroubd•thlsm and ,to • gather, np their soattired senses, it is amusing to listen to the various reasons that are given in explanation of a result (which, though loolod for by many, very few believed would come proieitiOliai and to the various remedies that are offered to prevent its recurrence. - By some the late eleethin . is looked upon AS a defeat of tho Dammed° Party and a - triumph of Republioaniam ;, and while many; who olaimlo belong to the former, - are .wailing in most melan choly strains over their fancied loss, others of the opposition are particularly jubilant at what they ase,pleased to call the downfall of the Democracy. 'E'er one, Ido , not so regard To me it is 'an other glorioue triumph of our time-honored pat4Y; another Wetorloo defeat of its oPponenti; repe tition merely 'of the' great national campaign of 1856; neonate net bisay that I am prouder of the Democracy to-day -than ever .I. was before,. and am more than ever convinced that the Ame rican people are equal to their institutions, and every way capable of self government. Surely the ols argon, heretofore boldly mode against us, of blind adherence to party lines and party lead ers, of inability to distioguish between names and things, has been most signally refuted in .the late election. Ostensibly the _parties were the - Ernie that met- in 1856. They bore' the same names, and seemed to rally under the same banner:. Bat who that paused to look beyond the surface does , not know that; the: so:called Democracy was de feated because its leaders had beisome Republi cans, while the so-called Republicans suoopeded simply because their masses had become in princi ple; as to 'the' great questions concerning Kansas and the tariff., real .Democrats , The whole secret lies in this. - - The cause of our apparent defeat is nti-- where else to be found. Names m Olt Contest were nothing, while •iprincintes were' alone regarded hj the people. In the campaign of 1866 the difference, between the parties was well ,defined:,.. on the question of .the management of the United States 'ferritories, the platforni of the Republicans I affirmed that Congress possessed the power, which we asserted was -in the people. The difference RS to the tariff was equally ' marked. Thus we fought that battle, and, in hoc signo, we con quered : and so-just and wise were the grounds which we occupied on Giese queetions, and so ac cordant were they with 'the Spirit of mir institu tutions, that almost with one accord those who had opposed them before the election adopted them afterwards. Then we were equally strong. Oar wen and our Measures wore in harmony,•and we showed our strength when; in ratification of these principles, wo gave to Governor Packer the majority that made his election so famous. Indeed; so popular was our position that there was hardly a press ore man to ha found Who ad hered to the Territorial plank of the Republican platform, and to-day 'Seward and Lincoln stand OIL it almost alone, .while our motto of a revenue tariff, with incidental protection, was , their rally 7 ing cry in the late battle. While this wholesome and healthy conversion was going on, in an evil hour our own men, our stand ard bearers, those to whosehands the machinery of the party had been entrusted, suddenly repudiated the doctrines of popular , sovereignty and placed themselves on the platform of the opposition, as serting with them, in effect, the "sovereignty of Congress." The result might have been foreseen. By all who believed in the intelligence and in tegrity of the people it was foreseen, and we have just come Out of a conflict ,in • which Demooratio principles have again triumphed over the Repub-, lioanism of 1856. All honor to those who fought this battle, and who, while willing 'to .fight for the " men and measures" of the , party so long as they were in harmony, clung to the measures rather than the men, when it had to become plain . that one or the other must be rejected. The lesson then given will be long remembered. May we all lay it to heart. Oar course in the future is very plain We have but to retain our name and our Fined pies, to stand where we stood in 1856, and without regard to names, to welcome as good men and trtie, all who adopt oar cardinal principles. We must also resume, without delay, the me ',binary of our party organization in every county and township in the Union, for it is ours by right, and not theirs, who, in the name of our party, have used it to destroy its character 'for con sistency. Let those who have never left our platform march up to their duty at once, and by admitting Kan sas and revising the Tariff , at the coming session olCongress, show that they mean what they say. If those who bear our, name in Congress, and who in all other respeets are worthy of it, but who have temporarily abandoned oar leading doctrines, re turn to their duty there, and unite with us in this great work, this new phase of the opposition will die away before another year, for want of food to live on. If they do not, and these vexed quo-- lions are left open • beyond that time, the defeat which we shall assuredly meet in 1860 will rest on them; and them alone. Are they prepared to brava the consequences of this course? As Father Illbskie was used to say, 71014.1 .118170715. - ' Iron, ae a. Medicinal - Agent. [from the Heston Daily Advertiser.] , Since the remarkable carte effected through the agency of the " PeraVian Syrup " have been made public, the following questions are frequent ly asked respecting it, vis Why is iron beneficial in disease? Why is it efficacious in so many diseases appa rently opposite their nature? Why is Peruvian - Syrup " bettor than any other medicinal preparation of iron?' To persons unacquainted with -physiological chemistry it may appear strange that iron should form en element of the human body, and to many it may seem unimportant whether the quantity contained in the system is large or small. The "blood is the life," for, from this vital fluid, each tissue of the body absorbs such material elements as are necessary for its nutrition and growth. The blood, whioh to the naked eve seems a aim pie red fluid, is in reality a transparent. yellowish and watery fluid, In which float veil , minute solid bodies visible under the microscope, and called " blood globules." ' - It is to these globules that the blood owes Itasca color, and also its power of exciting and preserv ing the vital forces. If they are reduced In quantity by bleeding or.disease, to that extent are the vital forces impaired. The red coloring matter of the globules eontains a large amount of the oxide of iron, which cannot be diminished below a certain quantity without rendering the blood unfit for the perfect nutrition of the organs In snob cases the fact is made ap parent by general paleness. weak circulation, de bility, palpitations, difficulty of breathing, dropsi cal swellings, cold extremities, bleeding from the nose, ho. In this condition of anmmta, in which there is a deficiency of the red globules, it is cer tain that if the flummery iron can be supplied to the blood, the red 'globules will be restored to it, in the requisite quantity, and the symptoms of disease will, consequently, cease There is in this instance a very intimate connection between cause and effect, and every one will therefore perceive why iron is an important element of the blood, and why it should be given as a medicine when this fluid is impoverished. It may be asked, "From what is the blood de rived ?" We answer, principally from the food. But if the food is not, properly digested, good blood cannot be produced any more than good bread can be made without mixing and cooking good ma terials in a proper manner. The hellcats and ab sorbents take up what is presented to them, and pour It into the blood. If the materials supplied are insufficiently or imperfectly prepared, the fault is in the stomach and not in the suffering organs. The bad blood will irritate the heart, will clog up the lungs, will stupify the brain, will obstruct the liver, will deaden the intestinal motions, and will send the diseaseeprodueing elements to every part of the system. The feeble girl will suffer from ohlorosie and menstrual irregularity, the adult from natural dyspepsia, neuralgia, and head-aches; many will suffer from boils and cutaneous diseases; the bilious from congestion of the liver, dropsy, and constipation ; the care-worn and bard student. from the thousand namelessillsknown as "general debility," and every one will suffer in whatever organ may be predisposed to disease. Who, then, can fail to perceive that the so-called "different diseases" cured by the "Peruvian Syrup " are, in reality, only different phases of disease, depending on one and the same cause, viz : an impaired and imperfect digestion. Where, then, is the objection that the "Peruvi an Syrup" must be useless because it professes to cure so many apparently opposite diseases? It professes to do no such stomach- busimply to cure a single diocese of the dyspepsia, the cause of many other diaeasee. Lastly, " Why is the 'Peruvian Syrup' better than any other preparation of 'iron ?' " Physiological chemistry has amply proved that the only condition in which iron can assimilate with the blood is in the form of the protoxide. This protoxide, however, is a very unstable salt, and exceedingly lisible to be converted into the peroxide by the absorption of oxygen from the air. In the " Peruvian Syrup " the protoxide is so combined by chemical ingenuity as to remain permanent, further oxidation being impossible. In these views respecting the absolute necessity of preservation of this condition of protoxide of iron in order to a parrot assimilation with the blood, we are sustained by the following certifi cate of Dr. A. A. Hayes, the distinguished chemist and assayer to the State of Massachusetts: "It Is well known that the medical elect of pro toxide of iron is lost by even a brief exposure to air, and that to maintain a solution of protoxide of iron, without farther oxidation, has been deemed Impossi ble." In the Peruvian Syrup' this desirable point is at tained by combination in a way before unknown : and this solution may replace all the protocarbonates, citrates, and tartrates of the Wisteria Medics " Thus it is evident "why iron is beneficial in dia -1 " "why it is efficacious in so many diseases, p e o p s istren Peruvian their sy rn n p a , nature , superioran d ' to w a h n y y , then, that the " Peruvian Syrup" must be e i aP t b l e e av n ea m aillt e ll il Y i t c ho inal preparation of iron.'' We submit, admit ted to ben most important addition to the " Mate ria Modem," and a valuable remedy for many of the worst forms of disease. O. [For The Press.] • Don't give the Hon. John Glancy Jones more honors than he is really receiving. -You say that his eon "has boon appointed private secretary to Commander Itidgely, of the steamer Atalanta," of the Paraguay fleet. Now, in the first place, commanders of small ves sels in our navy do not have eeoretaries, (private or otherwise,) but simply what 'is known as a " captain's derk,'? and that is what Mr. Jones is. Nor does the Administration appoint these clerks-- their appointment comes entirely from the captain they Sail with, though the dovernmont pays them. No one bat a commodore has a secretary; he is known and paid as snob. Commanders of single vessels have only clerks. NAVY . November 2,1856. pcoreepongeate for ‘‘ Tera Pat 17 will Pleasibear4w, mind thelellOwingrilleet ie -7 l eri linati*daiti°lkMlBl,l4Bsli-bi the =wee of the writer. In who td Inanire eonWelowe of the typography, het one Aide- ok the skeet - ghoul& bet written r - We shall be greatly °Mimi to gentleman la PlatiON :mils and other State' foloantrilartiona string tikeArtri rent news of the day In tisk Porkie°lAr ti*" resources of the surrounding coontry t - the mamas .0, pnputatton, or any faformallon that will be interesting to the general reader, - ' -i ' ' GENERAL NEW& A NEW DirirrAny Post , rx TEXA.I3.—A ter to the:Galveston News, dated -Ban Meador - Term, October says . Two companies of the Eighth infantry, under the:adennand of,Captain Arthur - T. Lee, have arrived at tigle:Rs - dee& rtated for anew post on the Rio -Giande; near the canon -upon the:San :Antonio nn El Pasco mail route, and .are ; making .preparations for:ldlding - Fort qaitman. ' This post' , will be the mean of settling up out entire valley, whichlti ninetpmilee in length, on an average of three in on east or Texas aide of the river. - Fort Bliss, oppo site EL Pam,Alexlcogis.sitnated at the upper ant of the valley, end" has never beenany proteotion to the, settlements Arnerioansideuttlue :Suites:rim A>rras>` ix b[iefipiirs, Tsai.--0a Friday night last, ayeuth named Einniiithltrerigi; about eighteen - leers of likes waitshot andliadly wounded While Tatiadig- in - front".orthia - Wqrlibata Rome, on Main street, - lie carroPany'.uritli- several Yining teen.: , StrangsoVis'aidd,'ziede some often= sive 'remarks to an ineknoire person they ifiet'uret the street; a quarrel 'mined; When the unknoivit" party draw a revolver' and , fired; the - ball-taking effect in Strange'e right breast, and'iaoged round' the ribs near the point of the alioddef l lliideiirhere it came out. Thilmmediately foliGwrelalming that he was killed, whereupon' his antagonist 'turned' and rapidly left the spot. • The perpetrator of the bloody deed had not been arrested at last amounts. ' w7ilsonr..tii.RiDNAPP . DlG ,CAsz;—,Some . time ago a slave, who called. himself George W. Peaty, rion. away from Tuseumbla, "Ala,. Perris was so white that one not knowing 'him would not :ans. pact his having negro blood in him. lite went-to Pittsburgh, .where. he yawed for a white man s worked at his trade.wbieh,,ivas . that "Of 'Wok.. layer, and maritMl - e white woman, by' 3iiheiztle . i' bad one obildi ' 'A white man named George Shaw, • alio - a bricklayer, arrived' at Pittsbutgbitand hailng known Perris at Insonmbia.,%reoogniied He Informed hie master of it, and then en. , ticed Perris to Kansas, where he was.arrested,ae fugitive from Alabama and taken back, to his owner. Shaw was tried last week at Pittsburgh. `and convicted of kidnapping . _ _ - , - •_ - - Tan Luxiinjf..,o4 8Y136.--eL g4antliniati: in, the laid stages of consumption, and on- hie way to ,the balmy elintatcrof Florida , arrived at: one of the hotelent Charleston, 8. C.';- in. company - with hie lady.. Ia two'or_three dais he died, and the heart-brokan -wife at once prepared, to , rattan, to her Northern home with the corpse of her hinband, The hotel bill was demanded and presented, when —in addition to-the posthanions 'charge for the accommodation or the dead man—ten dollars were • required for the privilege, of dying. Certainty; this is a luxury we bed always thought a -mma, might indulge in - without detriment to hie pane. i How TO EAT GRAPY.I3.-,-*llBll health, the pulp only should be swallowed. Wherithe bowels are costive, wallow the seeds with'the pulp, eject; , log the skins. 'Wh'en the" bowels are m - a too re laxed state, swallow the pulp and skitts;sa& eject - the seeds. That may the-grape be used as a medk - sine, while at the same time it, -verges as *luxury- - unsurpassed by any other fruit. There-is hutlittla danger of over•eatibg - graSs, if the 'above Mei, are followed—partioularly if taken with andform.' ing a part of the reveler meal. We should advise- 'eating them before rather than after other copses-. A Mount Junon..—ln -the Supreme-Court;. New York, last week,- before Judge„Davies, -ther,J. case of the American Hair Company against Ohax.„,vr.. Fogg was tried. ItOcoupled, the 'court ablintrrwo hours, when the jur received - their ehisgaand - ' retired. After a 'quarter of an hoar the jary'eanm in,when the foreman announced that eleven agreed, -- but the twelfth man bad not understood the est-. dense, for he was a, German, who did not-speak English ! The court thereupon ordered the ears to be tried again. - Aconowar.--LThe men engaged at work on the new bridge °rooting on the Husquehanna, at Oonowingo, Md., fell froaithe superstructure,' on Monday week, a distance of thirty-five feet, into the river, where the water' is some' sixty-five feet - deep. One of them went down head-foremost, the' other feet-foremost, • and although - they passed - -through the timbers of the bridge in their dement, strange to Bay, they escaped with but trifling per sad injury. , Hoe.—The story.. Pond, of Fia,nklin, lifitesachisetti, had committed, suicide by cutting his throat with a sickle, tunas out to be a hoax. Pond has sailed - on - the editor of the Woonsocket Patriot, and-represents - that he has been - made the victim of &miler etc- - AO in the papers. and tha Chia property has been injured I lly some, villein who seems At:lA=4*d to . relit hie peace:, , , 1 .'nmet STOPPEDBY A. MONISET.;--A. fe}v 083'4 . ago a passenger on one' of 'the tieing to New York . - ' had a pet monkey, with which beamtuseid,the pas.' Bulger,. Neer Port Chester the train suddenly _ stopped. • The, Oonductor, biakomen; and', every. body wanted to know the cause, but nobody could tell until it was discovered that Master lecke had' taminttd to the top of •it car; and pulled - the cord'" which communioatee with the locomotive.- A DOG STORY.—A- dog was shot-up in. the coal-rani of the itonsatonio Engine Company; Pittsfield, Mass., twenty - four days without food of any kind.: He was - accidentally disooveredron Tharsday,evening last, at. the„regtflax mooting - the oompany, and Crane out" alive'and'kkaing," MA very much tillapidatodatavixtelootnticint.3o ' pounds of flesh in the Interim. - THE Charlottesville (Va.) .4dvocate 'Bart there is now at Mr. Dodd's cabinet:shop Ja that place, for repairs, an old kneel"' that possesses no little interest, as it undoubtedly was the property of Mary, the mother ,of Washington. It• is non the property of Elderiames Fite, and its:connect. Lion with the family of General Washington is fully sustained by unquestionable evidence. DESTTITTION rlr DAVSEPORT;.—.II Is repOrted that fifty to ono hundred laboring men left Raven. port. lowa, leaving theirfamilice while they seek. work South._Many of their families are left whit bnblittle mens of suppo rt . The parting is lied tq have beanie sorrowful e ight—wives and children crying on the shore, and husbands and Whets ort the boats. • A&RON JONES; the celebrated English boner, had, a "benefit" Monday night at il4o:011 theatre, in the Bowery, N. Y. , The affair terminated With his having a "set to" with John 0. Heenan, and the' latter challenging again John Morris' say to another fight. Morrissey announces his "benefit" on Friday evening in the same, place. SINGULAR MORTALITY • AMONG CIEIXDREN Otao.—A letter from Sieauga county, Ohio; Matta that an epidentio dysentery has raged among young children in that section, ravaging every home and proving generally fatal. In the town of Chester, it is stated, but few infants have beat spared by the pestilence. Tan TIDES on the Hudson river, New York, still continue very high, and at Poughkeepsie, of Saturday night, the water was higher than it has been for several years. The water was three feet over the docks at Albany on Saturday. In some plaoea In Fulton county snow lies four inches deep. MAMMOTH CHESTNUT Tars.—A veteran chestnut tree was out down a few days ago, on the property of Colonel Isaac Yoder, of Oloy township, Berke county, Pa., which measured twenty-three feet, in circumference and seven feet eight When &cress the stump. By the rings, the tree ap peared to bo about 200 years old. Prasarr.—Tbe sword worn by Oolonel Jo. Devises at the battle of Tlpppecsnoe,bu been pre sented to the Grand Lodge of Kentuelry by Judge Todd of Indianapolis, who studied law with the Colonel, and was a member of the family at hid death. Mr. WALLACE, recently from California vice Salt Lake, renorte having seen on the plains flt teen hundred and sixty-Eve vehicles, eight then sand and sixty-one yoke of oxen, seven hundred and four mules, forty-six horses, and twelve hun dred and thirty heed of loose (mine. A eaters BOY in Madison, Indiana, recently recited in Sktuday;sehool, 2,233 verses from the Bible, which he had committed to memory during the evenings of six preceding days. Baia capable of committing 200 verses an hour. • A Bogus Bank—The Bills Flooding the West--$50,000 of Money Circulated in Wall Street. - [from the N. Y. Courier and Enquirer of yeaterdey.l The arrest of a guest at the International Hotel, Mr. J W. Underhill by name, for having in his possession, with intent to pass, about $4OO of the bills of the Now England Bank, at Fairmount, Me., a concern that never existed, was effected on Monday through the instrumentality of the pro prietor of the liotel, and from information - subse quently received by detective officers Roach and Poole, it appears that the Western States have re cently been flooded with the bills, and that $50,000 of them have been recently passed in Wall street and vicinity, for stooks, lands, .ko. The bills are 55's, slo's, and s2o's, and are in every respect handsomely executed.' They are signed "Martin, Cashier," and "E. Rittenbard, President." It appears that Mr. Underhill last week put np at the International, and handed to the clerk to deposit in the safe, $4OO in these bills A day or two afterwards he sent an order to the clerk to pay $l6 to the bearer of it. The bills were all slo's and 520's and the clerk paid one of the on the order and changed another from the money in his cash drawer. A few hours later the bill was re turned by " the bearer" ea wgithless. The whole package was then examined andkfound to consist entirely of bills on the New England Bank. The police were then called in ;aid Underhill was ar rested and taken before Justice Kelly, to whom he stated that ballad received them from Mr Wilcox, broker, at No, 14 Wall "street, in payment for twenty-five wain of Western - land. Whether or not the statement be true has not - as yet been as certained, and the magistrate held him to await examination. He stated that his father and him self some time age, started a bank in Cumberland county, Pa., which is still in good standing. but that this " New England" Bank he knows nothing about. It is stated that a bank-note engraver of Wall street, nine months ago, received an order to print five hundred thousand dollars in the bills from one H. T. Downing, professing to belong to Port lead, Me., and executed the order. It is also sta ted that Mr. Calhoun, of Exchange place. recently paid away $4,000 in these bills ; Mr. Wood, bro ker, of Pine street, $1,500 in them for wine. A. Mr. Tomkins got rid of 52 000 in them, a Mr. Jackson $15,000, and John - S - -Dye ' an unknown sum in them. Altogether about 50.000 of the bogus trash has changed hands in Wall street within a very short time. Some time ago our po lice get an intimation that bills on this bank were being circulated, and the shopkeepers were, for the most part, notified, but in this ease it appears that Wall street brokers in money, and, in one instance, the publisher of a bank-note reporter, have been deceived and swindled to the tune of thousands. Who got up the bills, and who were the prime oireniatorn of them, remains to be seen, and the police are using atrenuous efforts to ascertain.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers