, . , ... : , . " , , , ~,.. .. ,_. ~ • -,, :- ~ . '.: 14 V-, , . , .. , - . ... • , ~, ‘: • : ~, • ~, _ i • . .. ~ .„ ~, \ . }l 7 p. y ~ , , , .. , •.' -, , - , _ _ ' . s . , 'l'"''''''4 '-'-'"'''''-'- - -'" -- ' - '` - "y.r 4- (4.4kg'ilitts'-'0? . ...r .' '' , ... , .4" , _ .-, . ..,. ~ ,r , ~ ~_ , ~,•~ j 1 , .", 4t, * _ " - ' ~.. ip.i.ivi47ATF,,- : ; A: -. .kiW4:;: -- 5:7*-;-•'•': . , ,•:,,,---',..-;_ 1t4,1 - t' , ----% .- -- .., ,-- ,-, - , - , , • - ~ -9.,;‘,...,"‘ A ; ilt' ,. ii ;• • : „,-;:[•:;:•-•..-: --:•••• :-.:: itrit tt • - ~ (-- ~,_ , , ~ - ,= ,,- -P ,- iv ,,- " . Y-r--: s , ---. .''-4. ,- .4 - At"4-:: 7 - -;:-- -•'-'-- .---- -.- -', - ,-, 'i \ k "i. , "1 ' -1 .. 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II • , , -.U.-. t ' _ pilmitty ~,, ,„, ', 1 7,,' - ± , ,-:'. :,.,- :-, ' „-- -,',-- =.--... ,', -•.:', .2„ - I. , • - .•'::: - '. : • ...- • • ?...-... „ ....."14, ~.. . • --- • ---- ,- • • :., - ;?..:•••17-.!v......,.. : i'k• - i :, • '•''' ''',‘,.;::!:;•:'l.C'tk;':' , ~. ;'..7.•-•;-'_'• •1. 11 . 4 .'" -• itl Mi,.........z -•::::!:-` ..,,--'-' ..,..:•.,"- .:, , '• • ~.• .'.' •-‘. - A,--- .. , . , . . _ ,,. „, ~,‘, A.....-4,-,-,14.--, . 4 000411,pphitaiiiiti. , street: : ,::,--..• . , -.-, • . ~, ,- ,„ .......,_. •„,-.. . ,_ „„ --., —.-- . , ~,,....._ .-,.....;..........?_.-,,,,,.... , . , , y,,, , , „-,,.h. •:;„-,,k,,,,:_-. ,.., x -., '•i",,:t t - :, :. .: _, , i ,„., „ • ky- 1,: „. . „ • ~ „ -- • . . ~ _,,:&iiio.- .1., • - , „„Air.'-'-''-jt Aitlesili , - ;:‘A - 1 - ' 4 : - - - 1, ,-- , •:. '.--,.• . .4 4, fi1.. , 4 - 94 ,- ,--7-• - ZN,: -. 1 M- 1 ' , `,"Y""! , thintiCl.rat,),Vilitivo,b, lc „ . , ~. .• . . . , '': , ': , • - ' 1 ;'.'4'.., , W4,.. ki i i . , ~-. • ~ 4:itiow,, , 1. .1/0. 4 - ,-,....---, ItPES ,- ,..i.M , f,.4,-444.... ir r eiwil moteltiks , VOlitt:. - 101129.1,k, - * . , . • ~..,.... . • ... .. , ~ ' . ',..,..!', .„.. , -,?e•T;' --• • 5,.. .. 7 v - Aniiii-toohiviAleird.**:,4 - ,:.:,- ~-• , , - .....i._.• _ ..._,— . ....... , . , , •_. . • .. -fir: lx - -t.;,......-1,......5, ' .. .. . , ''W -3 -4tltleft - fir:ifikitliefal - Li` .1. , .--f , , , ----- I= - "-- ' ' ' PHILAD ' ELPHI A , 410 114:eirying. ii***l.l.ll l l it lb mar moms; titt ll - • , M ileCity s 0 Tilroll ) 66! r , i I 2 I oft " 6 00 . - natal: ly ,„4 ;.1,1.:;.••'"" 10'000 ).. s 0 ao • ..,I,;,,;;;;tlToreitiooAlgt .;`ti• Regi4i4oo ., . 0 4a \ f ' '' ' ; ',.' .3Z - 7 WM* 7714):4133 747). ' ° ' -- 3 - EP9Oktattb 6t44,6611g'6401 Oln~f win seed' tri 4.7 41rittn411,9ft !'t•-• • ' .:.: 4 4. - tiaiiii.- ; i•iieliat6sle4iu* f :ti m i: UN -flatitorcila 11,414„ ~,,, , -• ' • ' -Ammo - ,:_;;" -4 i' 2151071 TIOP I Ki A gili k k i Citi ) it t iA 0011)111 , k -. ' 5 'e'.0.!),0*" 1 11 124 1 m AiiitOkiijOkslooilfOrmiA; = 7:25 ' 130t1113-AND:rl2lHOES.:t—TitiOlubdorlber' bseggzi tkisita Luis varii,Vitikk'ot zone '7:)!Aklttgartil latzustling ‘,4lrotrbs.t.-: ~4t 1 11011 , 0 61 . w.. clionnfre!, • aid& c li;tidiifj,4.ry ra,po,7tor: .16;, PIXY- j u trilarto o .o4BNTlA*B.N l .B, • ;iitoktP{sii3;lto, roe . `Afiri! plea. 4 3 ,4 4 1 ay : lirnirSof,.Wrw.. retolzaOrtlf,";:atid , : 6111.8T, , ,AltAIIIIVAOT.OBIr pos*t t, 8 . 1 ,4 ) Y3lladerlpWisi.;,, • ~'2 - - . l66:nanntrditiiindiifewit now, _ tot. 63116T6. _rtlin n tice_• r,,-4.61n0i knkaltt..e7,43ol/N-Tar•F•ll7*• feir • -. NALIWWF • • • • '''',-,--'''' , :r2:2;. l '' -2, Ln222: 4, 22"g3: 10 ''' 2 ; 2 = , -;- -, i'A. , , , 1t.,.. , :2;F - 2;,:.2. , ..;, 7 M' .',. .%;apift ; Cz l to , ' , ..A.'" ~ :q- , ;,- , -.=! --, .-I`T , ~ T4,-,x r,-'• - ,:7-2.' , •'::2 ii: ,- a=2': - -,2 - ,22.,..2 , i 2g -, 4 4p, FiT is.. Thelane4 1404 - 14 , 4 ,ortmentto the oikri of z,)11011 . 8A1011.1iiiiEN;:-.:1' i 7 _ '4O it' „ , ;•_l 3 -Nif A TBN, NEIMAN eQ1:118,1141,;81T011, i'dide-e'lo 4 °#°:kPf `OLOYiII &a t PRlftigic. ;: , , , ,.`;NO-,84,(311,318T23UT Stmt. f <3 ICtUIP4La 891.1.118, . r . ..4:4011; , t":1 - -.4'.; , 0 , 4%kx. • 4 471 1.);,;:i.t). 11tO,Mit;AtTlX-,4 lA' 47 , ti ; " 4 : = . - - e - Melte -- 1 40; • • i-pJlte rat,oo, • :' bait 41Vatitaiiii;"sitibir**,.10#11'opiiii,ft it* /Atia4A,iic;i:iftiiii, • •• ••- - • •,-.1.,e'-'•;, , •.:•ClitilDsrp, *cuuntlitApivf. , t , s ' ' 10 1[ 45 0 :111 1 40$0 4 1-* . i':WIII I K- -b .M .,0( : - ','9liiitabriV.Pitilir:Oft29: l r4Orki to tyro/avow cid& the':llriisi , iitious of igowrig,:at ii low iitos tli6T bpi bi±ipiailikie for 4ht,thi - toldipioe:e,Yoi*g -•• UTTER IttyrEitrAL AND IMID.IOIIANTIDLIIN botl, motions Ni hastofe.ritAikesiAhli #piiiesii.irirnebt of_ goode in • rhitaiteiihtei,iatiVe"4l44llo *it ittiati* • fiernii.nt'ii#,Witii•tliti,"-kdrititiv*iitilisatjokel:49 the "i-T4°-.AfP4f3teiWiil'UTl4.3lVeltivll *film 05 4,t 0 ": 03240 li.).Bll:ebi 1 'll6l/m -- I'r ' ,"71: i - , - . , :':!,TAIVOS. - , ~ ,;• , , ~, `''''-f 4 " -r ..':::4",-,, i ''%il Xiiiiiiii33llliNT/140, WALN,TIZEMBIIIITS, - . , ,. --., , , - .-'4.:-' ,:: - ,7 '.:--- ' r , t., -- , - - ;:., - ,,_..,:..,F,_. , 14 : ,,_,,, .k - 4' :- ` , c , if: , -7t , '-' I,, P ' - ;:'0A 41, r i'?,., 7 WVI I - 'Ailt7P ( , a , ,•;?., • ` .-,. ' . .' ,..4 ' !,, Vi4‘;';if-,-4-'-' , ...”-- . 4 ' . . n tral' - palostasizit:4.: &et fF-,,11;::,4111* aimil!l;orr f t -- I -, 0 - t 1 sada :a hiss - . - '..:R'liii.ratitiabonti;L i t iIIPPY't VIII°, . arE ,2°)l/ I lL t h r - i,,,, \- , ',::',Asaaelalit4 - tkitlarailikitylkab4lit.(c.,All thole who u a ere -- -; - ,, , ,i',Opatjatical ..OaY itti n c t ,4l4,llo l # ll lA,r-,t;-, . ~ *alnvit,tit t0 6 41:„1",,c,,,, , , , ,, : ik,74., - i I,r 0! f , ..-tv, , 414.1.41inglige Paa%?o,latty; i f.4,,,..l4llltaiposila. ' ' -,-. .x..: 4 iNiktiaila'ail/ai,irifitatv,--,:‘ -,,Y,;'5 7, - ,- ,'''',...„:,, ', 11,01.114-- ,);6AMILII.LNDEE,7BAFEB.“ 441,14istortment - ot; •a y a 040.0 ttri 1/V314, 21111. A 0 7.0_110 0: . - ngtialitANDZlC - - , IVIY I.olt °Pi 'fintlVAß B 40 4: *air ahy dthea istilbgibirisnt tL VW' 'PirIr,,.BV,9ISO3;; ?O VATSON, ";- 44. ~00M)/.01irett l YyL ~ - A: A. ioi:o4 • , . - • 4ir itisCstionctal*.fit 41:11) , , - .DOMISICIO111.ABDWARII,'.46tibrredidpittfalk' ,ssoAktkottouttot,opthOtradt to Juts , ortiodicividoh ~Vdt7-drt,9dr Alloirftst .rdtad; Our sededt' ootiok 114.10 . , Ojeckr 7 11 6 01 4'11 6 0 -17 ftgt!!ii "LOU; PR,UPi ; t a ddlitditap - 410. 1 /10*!biliti , 4f 0 . 1 ;1. 4 4 ,6 *10 itatto. , iM daperfor--ined add - 144W B. -ddidr. Om* r#ll-0,0 l' , ° ll l 7 .Vr,: , 4 l EPitC 4 e.l l4R . ! it !" .t ' • -.in 4 *0 1) 801,4turialt pad es slot Taoks,bradiri Rae ' Clout 'and' ilidading Cut dad Notop fistwilhigimillkkoirsiLooks of ell 111.0,1;;Ont*ii .Xszsigia I..ozpij.kzeo,lcatah !tg; awn. '0931248 RUH ;IN tif Wit ruiltifiekiiii4 itsegoir:straftwiliMMlUSTAll,Tlltreeti;O ts otordolt . - taC , At,v. a:§.111016 140,410i,(4 OtbAnMnitalgi• . 41911114MBH.O.FitAalit Wcow, - 1 1 4 ; 1021ftit„1 "2 ' 41mwaim log the oaf di the -71orella • €41198-ter • - .: 49 l r i tale t tik or lf i kiSibitiii 74),ImPeatt tie tore %a l /L:4 ,4 rx..wiiizmarn"Tr , . ° ' uh t si DrOM64 itOr diffeeint P Oll .oqr the iftdeitt Issei tut•4l`ls nl4lO 6t; • • ",=" BOir 2:43. 9' - ,lolloleottle O DEALEiLB'IN OIL OLOTHS. . - The 134earibeKhrMng fatillittog „ for Mann • . 11(0911,, OTAIR,Ind - ' orp C193T105; .". now- proinweeta Otter givathtSutionuotta to Barns ttoinAlkpirta or the country. - - - , latgoiond'attotte Stook Costantly on bon& -taken, lid notioting Dill. who NAREHOUIf,A, No. 229- Street, hili. atO,Stßilr ,'TgoMAE pOTTBIS, Mannfaottwer. IV/ 4-0 Se,4HBATINGS;FOR EXPORT. BIIOWN4 , BLEKOHED, , BLUE MUMS. 1111.4.172`,& LIGUT,SLIEBTINGS. ' Satiable for: Export,. , for Igo by & WELLS, 81 . ,, , Stisilh. , ,E,SONT, ST., 1. itivLBTITI.4 ST. . - - S • 0015.11 „ RIONANDSON'E _MISR ,LINENS, ~.171.11,144. 4 43LL5, 33L41 3 811t,13,, /!lco. 'fIiSNITD/lIIIRS at 11,10114,11.D50N , 13 LINBNS, end theft ifedroutl.-Pobtiinink , th6 GINOIGA GOODS, ihoidd *GIL, theltrthiles they jpurhais are - scaled with tks hatustoi of itie fikai; - ,NIONALEDSON, - OWDEN, /WV . ..guarantee of, the sonn_dn e rt NA durability of Mae . Mile S'aiiiloit la reasredes4stiallyoseisaer es large gnatitittei et interior And deteetivo Linen, are prepared, 46411011 .lifter- liesusen, and, sealed with , the name :or 'BIOELISIXSOtt by Irieh bowies, who, rerraleu of the tiduri,thtta Inflicted alike, on - -the 'Amer can conannier And thomahufsetarers ths_ geonine.Goods, will not .essallfsbantion 'holiness an. oSolltahlik while Pia -demo can be. lopsesCon Goods et *worthless iit7tCobßit:ti ii..i.ooKß; ;-isanta; aa outrace Street, New , • tiipttiNtsittiltilt L' DW.,E Li . & su s, • '.:',o22,l3l3.llBTNllVetritet. • lineenteelvedi per idete:dire, nee , stiles Jewelry, Chatelaine, Vest Shahs. " •Spleadidlane Hair Pins: - Wands,tite Baekete; • • • - Jet floods and!rvreriVaase.', • ' .... , —;Coral;•loaea and Morale Sets. , " • - ' Sole Agents In Philadelphia for the sale of Onarlea frodshenN,LONDONMINE4I.BEPEBS. • nor S ;' • IuFIiAM PLATE ' b IVITLia".(uP as < A Di oaiaae" OP No. 805 BiL ab 0,13 4:30,4._.8ret, obbial • f o ijoje to the Tred_L" mad 'gismos:lElElde Buz., iIikAIRTEI,OOMiItUNI 0/43lackars ,!se 18-24 y of :nova' ; ,11Tousge, 06%4 and 1100B8BLE,IN8i-v01406170,0A.170 platlagon BrOAZZI3. :Opo Olt • RB 4 B tltll • f r_ m f ' Lii . yawl°. prompily.ade., &RI RV 0 Wlll, - • P • .4iIIIII7ST,IPEPIONT;'' " ' , • ,1'..1111 , 11T.311. . 81.11101, tirOdit, anuok. 011 lU ,parta of thomorld, _‘• 14 1 .00104 1 .4 1 0; 3 1 2 tORANGIVBBOSTIBio 40 Son* THIRD /Direst, - and szosass vit *hiisdeipits, ill/L10,114111L1T. - 'OK 11:1110171t. MAZUR, ,11 111[41.1ThEn..)3KOW2f, & CO., • LTA. BANK-NOTI/ •friocut,:ferip BECHILUIeII tHOKBUI3 N *Met of !NIRO and' cirusentur Surety . itSlllOl/LPIIIA. Nolleetiani made, and Drafts drawn on an arte.of the Oulted. States and the, Canada'', on the ,most favorable poUedHeai wady hod Ilraits drawn on ingland and Areland:', • : , ; ,;;;NounirrO 1 Notes .boUght. Band ~,WArranle l poujilttanditold;r4oealeriln epode and Bullion:. Loam `endlisai Pinar - - ...;.11tOokaandLoanabought and sold on Coin:dation at Ilia Board arltrokara Bbiltatelaide and New York. . RICILUID IL. PABST, - Palle far - - Qmx*issionor tor: • Mtathiptai; _ , . renneylnals and , New Jentity. .1111,R,•1", & B 0 0 1'11 B • ''saokasa GINISAV 1404/Y AOMS 00ifirRYANOBBLI, 'TRONTISTSII.7ST atiee'HlCTol2l6, • ' , : - ILANICATO;MINNZBOTA., — ; ' partiallii'',Wention' t V loaning - and ' finding . Xoixey• for ninileaMontir met% °them, :sad oolleatias Distt#, Notes, $6.;, Avg' 'ottani of ',sonny: or busbies. *VI mam a', prompt ideation. -Rater to - • geriteinri 'fitith'eri)?PhilattolPW: '':;,l2tanq Hattieo;e. PanSe_lPhist— , 1 Maud Rudolph, Philidelpnic , , I.tharlekEll.ht k_ 1014.' 120111, -Con* ilterattotus to their store, invite to their stook of 'Bllrerware, *ltch ls ; - yit griii...i . ais*uirge;'etfording **levy of pattern and 4:041o; nPantpiielott by ant bonne in the rutted %notes, FMB '4IIALYTY , VIIAN ANY MANUFAOTUBED • 20R Viii.ll 'URI IN ANY 2112 . - 023__TRW. WORLD. ' - ' Out standard 0fe..204000 trirts pure a . .ig Axxviricupn pad OOO-1000 , ge It will De nen that we'glie 88 p i ne finer thin Ski .4 .2141 ?" and Yrench,i o lni *nal° Data fines than 60)44110i steeling.. Ws intit alt ew •Wvit oirlotirtnaitheittg cow:scud with toe refitting depart- WO of Ms rroki ced _Eli! tee Affost for nun' yens, we ,gwfi•rasiu, the.qualiti,u glove (986), 'which ig the •jiiitst that Caa bs mad, to br sereitereble, •nd will of'sefdemeds DOW thin the °abort, ;:tide'r mannfaotucad. WM. WILSOIf. - & SON, B. cosier NIPTII mad OIIERRY N..Bir—Luy Wuxi greilYei mandillottired t a lfirM ~• • • • ,noti, "1446:play:Nom tfillo to .14 ..11714irie!:' - is and ie2B..ta tb p gni • Sor,;eft. FL - NBW,YORIt - PlANoB; , celititited for limo, tench, keriblitty, 'and.toetyMoilmaremee. TOMovea, ,ALAjg, emd Wind XIV,- Pesti and - Pearl koye, for '61(4...fr0m $l9O npwarde • Alto.' PIANOS to rent. ,:, 0 7A111113 BELLA/C,' 249 IMO% Street., &bore Sme, 8010 aeon; for Ommloss & Canfield, and J 0. lf.aelier. • • - n0111.131* OfISKER/NG - A - .SONS , , M a . " te4....:0t GRAND PARLOR -G RAND, 11JRRIART P/ANOr/MEN. its'intAelett - d ol4fetrnnutkotey In the tested ep . .. r . -,.. ~...,,. ~,„ ;103VADLIEGUili IN 18 . 21 - I ' * attalfwaßin time ire h ive , , ' *ADN', AND: BDI,D,'TWXNTY - TainailiD iWO ,111INDRBDAIAN00, • • - - inittayo,tooltred,Oo 'foithionials of Ulu& BIIPBEI• 011.1 TY; 18 Silver ) nod 4 Brosoff•Mofols,'. • - • ,110vr -Piano!' to R. 4 Tined, end ItopoSted. - notran, is at 1107 OliZartiptB6reet, - - 0e.5-41fit ittillinfl ' 'Palrtt v ibil'it3; . .' , , ',,,74-4-reeetied,srielesvint stook at 31,.&9101, 1450/0 - 1 CO., MINIM & MEMO, HALLICT, DA , VIB & C O „ O. and OITA &AM. El PIA -NOS. 141i1.0141- ONS - pc bert-Aluility,l4. - - - J. N. GOIILDII,- ','; . _ - .8;311, oeipkrArilftril,snd OBJESTNUT du. '?sl,&l l fri ,`, ~' . -_, --, 7 --i - - ' • - .- - " - , '-grottfe,toorteig 11 , 11 °Nil . 0 lONZB T. . 11 1NE** 181 : 11 004#:' PP*, -BINH 41IXER BONBONS, • 211XiAD OM:MUM • Irsitilit44ra, Mid for isle Wholeteali and Ratak, by , •:` WSITDI AN, Po • I 210 " lEfdRHBT irnium Ikea, iit . i A'WEP7/Tri fittest. - -, • rfIaILTIMBER DEiIfsERS"." , 11:''. - 124,1300 !eat naiapn'ad , Dina Plank and 84;800'848Wieo nal DOnfaiinitee,andtlitaliPlank. - 20,000 " 6.8 and 4.4Dontdol. „. gi ' 44aanntlin 5 • • 48. ',Anb and Oak. Plank and Boards: Dnxcisaletat D.' D4vxt do , ".00 , 8 ' , Wholesale and Oinimistioti, Lumber, ,Terd, ..DROAD . alma, between 14 04 1 ;40-TO.Blikieete; • IVOICEXPLOSIVS-BURNING , Flitr/D altwein now Inanntleotnyingi and %ie . IrrepareCto' WWI I . . BUJINING •FLUID; which • * ea • not 'Grp - lodeln the ,neetineeriunt2ol - artlello has been ' Men , theetWl nee, enst subjeal7ed to the seined testa Welt the hest Opeteel talent n,thioitr Wilhintt Aingle bitei It the - ndbll6, feeling - Ord': denethttli-grentdeeSderatintiles hien *thine& . F 1' in & 09Froint; _ 1,1-' 419 IC TSIBD litOot;= down A:PPIASt;TA =tai 4,91 i; ago „-. tba,"19.8ftek,...1)04 , 4 19 Itatrint. netail Elrn Goat. HAWLS, SILKS, CLOAKS. L.T. LEVY '4sc CP. HATE NOW IN'STORE 'A LARGE ASSORTMENTS I OP RICH HANDY DRY 00008, SUPERIOR LINEv AXIOM, • ' ENOLIBH HOSIERY. , SHIRTS, and DRAWERS, To whleh - they invite the inspection of their 'CUSTOMERS AND THE PUBLIC., All the leadleg articles In their : STOCK have been - portrd direct from -- - •EUROPE, And many of them were manufactured exprenely for their RETAIL •TRADE. L. J. LEVY & CO., Give particular sire to the 'oinelienne of all the varlOus fabrics which they offer for and assure their • easterners the prictorwlll be found, at all Cm% to conform with the low- - • entretee ruling for sing . artleiles In • • OTHER STORES.' , 809 & , 81 1 ORESTRIIT, STREET. CIREA.T:SALE 'OF - BROOKE SHAWLS , u+ • - AND OLOANS!I I •'• Unprecedentei Ba'galria ! ' 3 •' We've bad a perfect rush! Wefro, selling an immensity of Goods! Oir tradeta !fluvial's! ' 'Our Mode of doing bit/times seems to motlysth gen& ral approval !! Namely— "To• Have But One Price." ' To sell Cheep for Cash "Never to misrepresent C lo #lo order ' TO IifiROTIALBI3." ' • ' "TO deal fairly and Justly, Old Wait dion all ottitot. inert with attention sod politeneea." ' "Thus to gain their confidence 'and: keep it by:ltort.f tinning to do right'! 1 THuRiTVEY do OE49*. we naTe now on band • ~ -, Ratettlent Long Bibebe'ihawls for $5. • • . ;sun better quality for $10,814, $l2, St4tt/5f $111;1120; $22- and $25--' • • • ' • Square _ Brooke libawafroul $5 ' to Sit Long end Square Blanket Shairle ineverrvariety. Ohildren'e, Ulises, 'and Gehtlettou , s Shawls, &a. , Gaol Black O loth . Olneke for SS; • ' Bveryother quality and Styli for $.O up to $ll3. A JOD.LOT,OP cLomcs /MU LAST SEASON, AT HALE 'PRIOR! - • , Beet B'aok Mike for 500. to $1.50, figured • Rich Fancy Silks really beautiful., 1 Every variety of DRESS. GOODS. CLOTHS!'' °AMBLER'S!! SATTINETTS, !! ! - Heavy. Black Beaver Olathe, fine Branch do., &0., •• Blankets Flannels, Linonef and Ainallns. Itr. fact no better stock of general Dry Goode can be found than at THORNLEY- -to ouiSm's, Northeast Owner signs& SPRING OABDIN. WINTER OASSIMERES & CLOTHS. . New London Styles Oemdmores. Ladies! deportee Cloak Moths. 'Beavers, °Aston', and Intochtllas; Bladk Olathe and Fine Doeskins. Veliete, Satine, and Cashmere Vesting. Boys' Oaselmeres ant Jacket Oaths.. , SHARPLESS BROTHERS, EIGHTH, & CHESTNUT Streets. BLANKET LONG SHAWLS: Jusforened; Several kondreils of Long Blanket Shawl", of now designs and full size at s 4 SO and $O. ' SHARPLESS EIGHTH & CHESTNUT Streets. ItERINOS: JL' inn sissortmentet Breach Merinos, in ell the pallties,.trom 06 'cents to $1 26; including 601118 lots unusually chesp„ 1311/11tPLIISS BROTHERS; ' r - nol2 ' " MOUTH OHBBTNITS Streets. ' SEASONABLE 10103. VINE 'STOOK GOODS AT LOW P . SLU SHAW M. LB, CLOAKS. RAULANS, EYRE de FLANNELS,' BLANKETS, ao. ANDELL. voußra AND AMR 11AWLS, FROM, TEE LAST AUCTION, WHOLEOALP. AND RETAIL. Broglie Long Bhswl ' - Brodie Equare Shawls. ' • ' Weoll.aand Mintiest. ' • liztra Pine Plaid PIMA. , . EYRE & LANDEtra, -- 701:111.R11 AND AIWA ByItABTO. wig - nom- AUCTION THIS MORN -1 lot Platii MU, 76 canto, ltintrari nf Z l ..46 ' Brown ' 4, $l. EYRE LANDELI A , .n03.20r • YOUBTH 'AND AROH STREIT& IRLACK BE AY CLOAKS -7 EP A fin eassortment tirst•olssa goods. Prises from E 5 io M. .000PE11. do OONAHD, • .no M. corner BIN= & MARICHT Sta. - MOURNING WOOL PLAIDS..." An Auction lot best quality, at 50 tents. COOPER & OONARD, nqb ' • 6.• E, corner NINTH '& MARRET Eta IIITEST QUALITY BLANKETS.— Extra large /Liget Also, robaloro and low prydo. - CODFISH & OnIIARD nob , S. , coma? k. MARKET S t e. iILOTHSI AND':42IASSILVERES of every description, for Ladle'', Gents', and Boys' wear. COOPIOR & CONAR 0, nod B. R. corner Zi IN rii & MCRSET St". WIDE VALENOIAS.-6.4 Bayadere goods from Anotion; 44 omits. , COOP VI. & CONA.RD, B.nob Z. corner W4T & BIAIIKEIT Ste .11101RIL.ADRLPHIA2 VENTRAL SHAWL JO. AND MERINO EMPORIUM. BROOKE, STELLA; BLANKET, ADD MEN'S BRAWLS, A general aim rtment, trnagualled in this market. WRENCH' REYARSIBLE MANTLES, with rottodoeniere. New sad desirable • FRENCH MERINOES AND CASHMERES, • from 68 eenta to SI per yard. • . WRITE AND BLACK CASHMERES. SUPER LYONS BLACK -BILK VELVET. BLADE FRENCH LADY CLOTH. lADIES , but quality ORDERED KID GLOVES. . GRETA) DOUBLE STTTOIIIID KID GLOVES. 100 SateFRENCEI CAldra/0 COLLARS it cum, at.sl per Set. DAYADERB SATIN TRAVERS, LUPIN'S ALL.WOOL DE LURES, ka. DBESS MATERIALS, In variety. • WELSH A DALLARDYAL FLANNELS. DRIB A BED BLANKETS, and -FURNISHING GOODS generally, At the LOWEST PRIORS, for CAS K. CHARLES ADAMS, orSO Eighth and Arch etreeta. CIREAT BARGAINS IN DRY - GOODS.— r Nal 8. V. IL UUNTER ' flea EEMQVED from No.Bo to No. 40 South SECOND Street, where he to now prepared to furnish the Ladies with a fresh and well selected stook of DB.IIBB GOODS, To which he inel.a their attention, being determined to wall at exceedingly LOW PRICES.' N. D —A. large aesortment of Broche, Stella, and French Blanket Shawls. Alio, a variety of Silk. and Oloth'Circulare Constantly oil hand.'at the " OLOAK EMPOBIIIfd," No. 40 South 81100 ND Street. FA.LL AND_WINTER CLOAKS. - OPENING ,DAILY. FMB oLortt 'RAGLANS. ELEGANT BEAVER RAGLANS, MOIL VELVET OLOAGS, ' 'Elegantly adorned. with BAAL LA(3103 CROCHET, AC., 40. - orzita. OLOANS. The !treat and meet varied stock of these faahionabla OYER GARMENTS, At the *Meet range of prices, and suited for MOURNING, PROMENADE, AND PULL DRESS COSTUME, THN PARIS MANTILLA & CLOAK EMPORIUM, J. W. PROCTOR & 00. 108 CHESTNUT STREET Otonco. INQUIRE FOR ,THE ROYAL, OR one oLIBLL PATENT OAS-BURNING COOK. ING STOVES—Meyers economical,- consuming the gat and smoke that are usually wasted; dura ble by having double in.lead of 'lngle plates; and eon yonieut, having large ovens and being ready bakers. Our now patented DOUBLE-OVEN STOVE is the beet *engrafted up-draft stove ever invented. It will beat a large boiler of water, boil two dinner pots, broil a beef , atmk, bake bread and pies, and roast meat, all at the some time sac with& pin& fire. Inialids, and all persona who appreekte the influences of van'llated apartments; upon health, will be pleased with our PORTABLE ORATES and MODEL TRASH LINETOVV, which are of beautiful and ornamental pattelne, and give a cheerful, open fire. and thorough ventiMtion, - - Strict sconothists will be eatlafied with our SILVER'S OdS-CONSIIMING PARLOR STOVES. btany of the floqualed - gas-burning - stoves introduce cold air to the top of the fire, the effect of - which in to cool the stove end vista the fuel, precleely, as if a stove door was opened above the'fire In s true gas-burnlog afore, the air should helmeted; In shot-air chamber, to &tempera tore aufilorent to iguite'the gases, on the nine principle aa liadefited is our gas-burning cookiog stoves. In additinti to the chine, a lerge assortment of Parlor Coliiing Stoves; Parlor-Etoves, for_ coal or wood, Hall fitovia, Portable Heaterii, Cooking Stoves, of everide sorietion, Gas Ovens, Stove natural, and Repairs may be found t 111 eiery variety; at our Warerootnit, No , 209 Norili SECOND Street, above Race., NORTH, CHASE, k. NORTH. . • - SOMETHING HEW.-GAS BUR. Nati COOK STOV.O.-1 would respeotfally call the attention of the public.% one of the greatest improvemente ever Introdneed in Cooking Stoves and Binges—the &weal of • the gag arising from the OM, by which means le saved 60 per tent: in feel and also more: intense. heat :thrown to the, bottom of the Oven.' We street the burning of the gases by Mean* of a bolltnrcentre.piece, perforated an the under tilde, which admits, the' Mr .in , a, heated Mate to mingle with the semi thus siding Its combuetipn; Ind causing a flame to pus wound the oven equal to a wood fire. This im provement Mee preserves the centre piece from making daemon the floe, thereby saving the expense otrepalrs. One of the Stoves CAN BEI OBEN IN OPERATION .6 ,1116 MAnltHr ,Street. Manufactured by' JAMES OPEAIti Inventor and Patentbei (late North. Ohne & ',Ytortii,) 1116 MAUI/VT Street. Dept:M.Bmo CI_OSgSN- • BUTTEIL-29. Tube Prime aishoss Baiter. • Tor ask by OADIAIR, & C0.,:.' 108 AR= stmt. THE NEW AMERICAN OYOLO/VEDIA. . . „ NOTIOX4 TO Tog Fogvol4 In response to the nunterouccolle for the, Nth Co 'time of the NEW ttbaltlOAN - OWOLOP.LHDIA, WI beg to elate that itlite been delayed by an accidental lose of en itiportabt nrauntoript in the mails, 'Allah had to be replaced It le now PRINTII,D, and wiithe issued ea soon ee the edition of MOOD. copies required by the present is bscription Ca, be bound in the varlobill styles required by the subscribers. '" I ~ groin the lion. Theophilus Parsons, LLD , Htw Pro , • . lessor in Harvard University. " Have you room for a Word about ltiploy and Dana's new Oyclopeolia? I have frequent OCOISIDU tones con l and I am rie 'delighted Wi , ll'tho two volumes We have that I must ask you to allow-me the relief eftwering, very , pimply. what Lund them—that is. the Tory beat Cyak ptorila for prectleal Dee ever published, I _have same knowledge of all In our own langusges, and of. 'few of 'thus of the continent of Europe. ; The beSt and' argot of these surpass this of Appleton 4 (nthe en nt to which they carry out epeciol diesertMl4l , 4oll t this Oycloprodia. Is full of the best- mottos-, Ilyalill ul se lections and comp: palm, and arduldna 'avoidance of mere show and yerblegef room le , foußd for an iiumeree carefully, and accurately. The book etchodfoli amount of the latest , information, Alt tutit.;alearly, 44 ade quately reprereite, the ability and knowledge nyakilable at thia day for a work of the kind., ..- ~- .• , ;', •:'`..l r, Its mOrit and extreme - eheapnosu must-plaso it eventually turnery Library. And if 'agotut wortfrom ono who lies found out Its excellence by - plating . re of it, can hasten or extend its diffusion, my. purpese In writing thisbrief notice will lie accomplished."o.': .......• - ::'l.l ' Will be completed in 15 volunies of Vapors; de4h ,, BOLD BY SUBSCRIPTION ONLY. 7 , -- ' , Price' per Vol., io cloth, sii ; Libraiy.4oo, - $4. ~ 1. morocoo, $4; half Resets, 64 60; each pay4blVo44lo. livery. D. ArPLISTON er. CO. ' ,Publisho44l.l, y nel6.2t , Noe. 849 and 24b 8r0a.01,,,. ITALUABLE BOOKS FOR 'onuGaist i gi., , 1r -01.IEMI6TS, AND PERVllME)l3,lfientblmfitt ee' of protege; upon the receipt of the price as iittieh- . tti ' .584. h ., - • , t t' -"T - 'N.j.:l., IhforflOs Chemical and Pharmaceutical Manipubill .t+, i A. pew and enlarged edition, with 0ver:500 ,4 4 - tions - ; . - • , ..' - ..' ~r ird;,ss Beesley , ' D,ugglste' Receipt rook and Veterinary!, malary.—The third edition Just ready, • with Over AL new receipts,. • : , ~ -, - . - - • Price , $ll . Mule, is Bormulmy ; a companion 10 the Drag . - • .14earpt.11ook. New edition.; , - Price; $l.-. 7.4 Beeeleps Book of 2,900 PreForiptions. . Pric o 4/1 : . r . 3 Nome's Whose Art of Perfumery , . , Priori $l.; 4,' . 1 Horton on the Art of Manufecturhis Soaps. •_... r.. , - '''.., . • ' Price,' $1.13 Y..' 4 Nosirs Qualitative and Qicintitetive Analysie. l ,: , ,,r it • Price, 310 Overman'e Practical Mineralogy,•Assayins audatici i Price? , $94 4 ,4 _ Wright'e American Practical Receipt Book. , - - -Ai Price, 10. ; . . A New, Complete, and Deserriptive Catalogue of hi - • • cal, Pharmaceutical. Dental, and Scientific WOO, With Mess Anneted, tent free open appliestiont . ' LINDSAY A DLAKISTON, Publisheri , foil Phitutelpht4.o APPLETON'S RAILWAY GUIDE. EHOOND EDITION FOS NOVEMBER Now aaILY, WITH CI CHANGES RINOE THE EDIT/ON)0 TILE 18T OF NOVEMBER. 'l'4l - PRION 95 CENTS. ;Fhl (Doom the Boston Journal j' 7.. " Wei should as soon think of etattina , 'on oiir foOrpey wlthoutlavaHse g as toga on a journey withoit the latest. edition of this useful work For July tty T. B.y.u?.pasoric BAo„ . arii taz.::9oo ik —.....,.. cc BEAL, and byA .'-- A gents of ?gowns Pitegibbon , on the note of the Phil , dolphin. Nil ilmlagtoo t and Baltimore, qunden and Ani , boy, and Pennayivania Railroads. I ' D..toriorrort & 00., Pnblishora,' ' aol&.8t , , : 848an241.8 BroadwaY _ !-_,, FATE ENGLISH PUBLICATIONS:' IMPORTED, AND FOR SALE BY 0, 7.4R10 & CO.. No. 88 smth SIXTH Street;abovi :chestnut , : THE AQUARIAN, NAT,URALIST A' Manual' fo the Seaside. ' Dpp I. Rimer Jones, With eight ooloredi plates. SMall Bvo , cloth. THE MICROSCOPE. By D. L. Clark, ,Being popubsr description of tho moat Instructive and beautik fat objects for exhibition. 12mo , cloth. D'lriltAßLl'S CURIOSITIES "Or LITEILATURIL', NeW and revised - dition. Edited by the Hon. rselt. M. P. ' S tole., I2tho cloth. , THE MINISTRY OP , LIRE, -By Maria ‘Lolielf Charlesworth. illustrated. 12m0., °loth: , MILTON'S L'ALLED R ,C. Illustrated by,the .11t4? ing Club' 12m0., cloth. •, • THE (MILDEWS 'PICTURE, BOOK OP RISK HISTORY. Illuatrated. 12m0., cloth. - u: - FAVORITE POEMS of the last two , Cant les.3 Beautifully, Illustrated with wood eograyinge -by the' moat emlneot Boglielt artists, Square Soo., cloth gilt,' BUTTON'S MOT/t NARY' 01? PEOTOGEAFEV Illustrated with wood onto, 12m0., cloth. AIERI:NONB, iii - aiit, .1118 TORY •OF FRNDEBION TUB Thomas Carlyle. With maps and flue portrallon steel. role . royal Bvo., cloth. • . • ' TADDLIAN'S SELORDD 'POMO, • With memoir 11 the Rey. F. II Lyte. New edition, enlarged. 12rne„, cloth. ' PIMP'S DUDS AND OODDESPONDENO2I. With Life and Notes by Lord Draybrooke. Sixth edition. Complete in a vole .12m0., cloth: , „ • THil LADII4 OP • IDIVED HOLLOW: : Dy ,the anther of Mary Powell. 2 Toll,l2efo4eloth.: • „. /foreign 11 , ioks imported to order by °seri steamer. ; Monthly catalogues of New and Old lingUsif Books,; (crotched g ails on application. tont MORTON SUNDAY SCHOOL UNION, 000kEll CENT, and other Bkotohis from "The Cour, try Pastor's Visit to his Poor 18lno, cloth. • A record of Rods gracious dealings with the meanest and humblest of his creatures. Bundapschool teachers and other visitors to the abodes of poverty and misery will be encouraged by it. As a testimony of God'a faithfulness in bestowing , his blessing , upon labors wrought in Christ's name among the children of sor row and suffering, such a record has permanent value ;• while it also serves as a sample, of the method of ap• proaching, instructing, awl winning those who are sup.. posed to be alienated from the common sympathies of Ufa. Published Saturday, September 11th. LOTTIE'S TIIOUGUT BOOK. Beautifully illustra ted. 121n0.. cloth. Published Saturday. September 18th. ORACLES. A daily Scriptural text-book on an en tirely original plan 22m0., cloth. To be followed on Saturday, September 20th, by GRACE TRIUMPHANT. A brief Memoir of John nemhog, By a Teacher. 18mo., cloth. On Saturday, October 2d, HOW TO LIVE. - Illustrated in the Lives of Frederick Perthes—the Man of liminess. Gerhard Terstoegen— the Ohristian Laborer, James Montgomery—the Christian Man of Letters. 12m0. ' cloth. On Saturday, Oetober 6th. HARRY SEYMOUR; the Little Boy whose feet Would run home. 18mo.i cloth, On Saturday, October 16th. Mel. COOPER'S STORY or, the , Golden Mushroom. 18mo., cloth. On Saturday, October 28d. KITTY MAYNARD ; or, To obey le bettor than,eso 31lice." By the author of Irish Amy,ir "Ready • Work? ate., eta: 18mo.. cloth. On Saturday, October 80th. A WEEK WITH FANNY; or, The Fifth Command went. 18mo , cloth. Embellished from original de- signs. On Saturday Norember Bth. UNION NOTES ON TI IE GOSPELS; compiled and prepared with especial reference to the wants of Pa rents and Sunday-school Teachers. Part 111. LUKE AND JOHN. Edited by Roy. !Lobed J. Partin, of Leroy, N. Y. limo , cloth. On Saturday, November 13th. ALLIS FAMILY; or, Seems of Western Life. cloth. DAISY; or, The Lost Lsmb. Ilkottlfully illustrated. On Saturday, Noyo.,ber 20th. THE DRAMA. OP DRUNKENNESS ; or, *lateen Scenes in the Drunkard's Theatre. limo., sloth. On Saturday, Novotober 27th. 013111.17GLE t or. fillerlonory Lir. in Africa. lihno., cloth. Pally illustrated. Several other boob of great interest Trill be published during the season, by the AMERIOAN SUNDAY 801100 L UNION, No. 1122 CHESTNUT STREET, ' Philadelphle. And for sale by all Booksollord. 5e244 THE NEW NOVELS. lust published: A siert Motorlca Novel. by F. D, duenatal, author of . 4 RE ATItIOR ONNOLII • • - - • - • Translated from the Italian by Luigi Monti, of II or. yard University. Elegantly bound in muslin, with a superb Steel Portrait from the celebrated Drawing by Francheri. Price $125. Aztract from an article in the Boston (louder by Pro femur 0. C. Belton, of Ilarrazd tt There can be no doubt that these novels of Guerra ai of marked and high literary merit Their sty o is clears pare, and vigorous. The pewer of the author is shown In his brilliant pictures, his vivid descriptions, and his brief, energetie ,elprowlena of feeling Me characters are drawn with short, sharp strokes, as with the point of a sword. The reader becomes a spectator. Prom his post of observation he sees a drama enacted before him ; the scenery and costumee are perfect; there is a fearful earnestneas and vitality in the performers. With parted lips and cheek growing paler, he watches with eagerness die progresk of the action till the aor tal' falls." eitation. VERNON (IRON'S On, HEARTS AR THEY AR'S. A fresh and glowing American Fiction, by a promi nent Southern authortes. Elegantly bound In mus.in. Price SI- Brom Critique of Southern Literary Messenger. " The novel of Yet non Clore is in our judgment the beet yet produced by an American lady. In no Ameri can fiction has the interest been maintained with-each power. Pathos is the quality most at the writer's com mand. The Incident of lliabs blindness le narrated with wonderful and startling naturalness. and effects the reader more, we think, than the similar occurrence in the csee of Muriel. in ' , John Halifax, Cent/amen." ' - These books will be sent by mall, patitge paid, to any part of the United Staten on receipt of the price. RUDD .t CARLETON:Publishers and Bookselleni, gioll3-tnthe-tf ' No. RIO BROADWAYiti. Y. CIIIMMING'S FAMILY PRAYERS,' V A New Edition. Now ready, FAMILY PRAYERS, for every Morning and Even. leg In the Year. With Reference to appropriate Scrip ture Readings. 2 vole 'Volume 1, January to June; Volume 2, July to Deoember. ALSO. CUMMING% APOOALTPTIO SKETCHES. , 3 vele. Do. LEOTURES ON OUR LORD'S MIRA ODES 1 vol. Do, LEOTIIRES ON 011 f LORD'S PARA.. • BLEB: 1 vol. Do. PROPPIETIO STUDIES; Or, Leoturel on the Book of Dautal. 1 vol. Do. TWELVE URGENT QUESTIONS. Personal, Practical, and Pointed. 1 vol. Do. SIGNS 'or THE TIMES ; Or, The, Past, Present, and raters. 1 vol. Do. LAST OP TUE' 'PATnIA:RoiIs ; Or,' Lessons on the Life of Joseph. 1 vol. Do. Minor Worke, in S vole. Sold separately or in seta Price 75 cents each. . Is will do the heart and head good to read Dr. Cam.; mingle writings; they will cheer teeny a pilgrim on his; way to Hearen..—Chrisiian Advocate. LINDSAY & BLAKIEITONII. Pahliebers and Booksellers, • soil 25 South SIXTH Street, above Chestnut. riIHE AMERIOAN SUNDAY-80110 0 Jr , UNION • MOMLIMHBEI NORM THAN OMN TUOVBAND OHO/OH ILLUSTRATED ,BOOKS F oIi.a,pREN A ND' YO UTH, • Being the Largest ()enaction in the Country. TONT ARN W PLI6HING , REW'BOOK EVERY PO SAT O OB RDAY MORNING. Elegantly illustrated Catalogues may be had wittiest ehano.'ltY addressing THE AMERIOAD FUND AY-SCHOOL UNIO ''"' 1122 ORESTNUT Strad, Philadelphia._ X' large eisortmaot of Bibles, together with the da wotional books mid 'the fallow; Erengellosi 011urehes, always kept on hand. New Illublientioni. 'NEW AISPARICAN o,YOLOiVatiii PROS 11111 011168 OP Tllif Published BstUrday, September 4th FIRST. 18AIIELLA ORSINI DAY. : ' NOVEMBER 16, 1858. Ctle . ',llrtss. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, VAS In The Howie of Commons. Sitting in the Strangers' Gallery ofthe House of Commons, in London, you- directly face the chair, on.which the Speaker sits, imposing in his full-bottomed wig, heavy robes, Immense dignity, and present'salary of $80;000 per an num, (with splendid residence, rich furniture, and a service of Plate costing $10,000,) while he has a prospective certainty of a peerage, whenever he retires, and a life pension of $20,000, a year. That Speaker is. Mr. JORN EVELYN Dorm, elected in 1867, on the re tirement Of Mr. Smtw LEREVRE, now Lord Emmy—elected, by an obsequious House, at the dictation of Lord' PALMERSTON, who was Premier ' at the time—elected simply because ho was brother-in-law to the 'Duke of Portland, who has grettt Parliamen tary influence, and had therefore to be bribed in this manner—elected; as Rivas then alleged, d as It, has sineelinnernitr le!qatilifleatinifet for the post ot 'pirst Moner of England," as the. Speakeris called; as were possessed by any gentler*, (even the late Iltr,".74uni AmmottoUpfs, ,who, if he 4d, the manners of a bear, certainly had fiome brains,)—elected, indeed, againstthe general , Improssion of the members, who, as we have said; WaT13 , 1311 3 almerstortian harness, and 'had te'cariy tint his wishes. , • • . . . r.'Spe'akerlas one advantage, however. - fe has a handsome, though somewhat stupid face, and lofty stature. HO looks very well. in his'offielal attire;-:—no one Would think him e t ditliard, Milli he - opened his lips. , He wants dignity,tirinnessi • intellect, • and knowledge. Although hetes been thirty4lve years &Par lamentoffierel'ehai ever shoWe an eminent talent Ter lilleneO,; . (tho only proof he has,erer 'git4m• of fiagaelty,s he knows nothing of the practice and precedents of -Pa , liament,' and whenever an appeal Is made to'him shows that he knows nothing,- Mr. WALPOLE, the pre :pent:Home ,Seerefary, has .to tell him what to do. -'!War,ronieWnuld:lavo been a first rate speaker,' "tontf u rlif tf' Tory, , and Penifinurrox did ft waif put the , primer man In -.the „proper- place when - the proper, man leld anti-Ministerial opt :Mons. “ , -BretrAnualooks pityingly upon the •Bpeaker,:rindliPilly *ilea at his blunders. eni„jornr:lnithim. pulls his hat over his ,eyes, and laughs in his-sleeve at the foliate of PALMERSTON'S pet. , Lord Jour thinks that the I 'Speakership would' have been a aloe thing for fidgets about on his whlepering fiercely:to Sir Gronor at's- TJZIti ex-whipper-in of the 'party, And there sits' the Speaker, literally on thorns, fatally' 'conscious that he IS petting his foot in it, that lie really is 'ctthe most desartless man" in :that legislative body- of 858 members, and ''plunging deeper and deeper' into the mire Lavery step he takes—that is, every sentence _hetdMrs. • At last, in the sheer despair' of olpless incapacity, he looks around the House 111 a desponding 'manner; and probably hall, I ,•• titter in the reporters' • gollery over, his head 1- ' .Which does not go far to make lairm,ceraforia.: able. He is in a mesa, on a •matter *of petite 4tentary prattlee, ,which: a two-years old ' , ,lnetiber ought to be master of, and knows not that to say. The House awaits his decision, ;'in solemn silence.' , •Ile , •has 'already decided "the' point- twice, within, the •• lastjirenty , Mites--each time -,wrongly, as;Aias leerii ReVed to ibediesatisfaction of the and tu.ntie_naziirlkties•i4xikte°:-. Never did a well-preserved gentleman of fifty nine look more like a puzzled nincompoop.: At last, Durum looks to Pirdifelfrroff, across the table, who shakes his head, and gives a grit; sad smile—as much finger as sorrow. Then Bfanasm looks at the Clerk of the House, who solemnly bows an assent, and slowly rises from his seat at the table under death the Speaker's Chair. Row, this same Clerk of the House is Sir Czars LE MAR' cinarr, a fine old fellow of sixty-three, who , started as a barrister thirty-six years ago, was Chancellor trtovensti's Secretary in 1810, and sine° was successively Clerk of I the Crown in Chancery, Secretary of the Board of Trade, Secretary of the Treasury, 'llnder-secretary at the Home office, and orally, in 1850, was made,Clerk of the House, for life, with $lO,OOO a year, and perquisites. Sir DENIS, who knows Itatseli by heart, and is supposed to have Jefferson's Manual in his desk, is a man of letters also, having 'edited lloniez ic Memoirs of the Reign of George III." He rises, - heavily and slowly, and, half-stooping, waits until he wan catch the attention of the bewildered Speaker, At last, ci his eye in a flue frenzy roll: ing,"th at groat official glances down, atid, to his infinite relief, finds Sir DENIS waiting for hint. Leaning forward, with his hand to his ear, to collect and concentrate the whispered in formation, the Speaker receives a brief in etruction of what he Should say. Brightening hp, like the sky after a thunder-storm, ho enunciates, in full tones and a very pompous Mannar, his third decision upon the disputed point, and this last decision will stand, for every member who has eyes to see can per ceive that, this time, it is a decision upon authority which cannot be questioned. ' In the tc Votes" of the Commons, printed daily during the session, showing what was done yesterday, and what is to be,done to day, there appears nothing to show what a terrible muddle rc Mr. Speaker , ' had got into tho evening before. No, Sir DENIS LEMAIt- MAST has taken care of that, carefully entit ling all but the • right decision. But what a very unenviable position for House, Speaker, and Clerk! Ot all the Speakers during our thine, none was so indifferent as this poor Palruerstonized DEVISOR. There was Mr. MANNERS SIITTON, , i lrno succeeded little CHARLES ABBOTT in 1817. Annon WAS the hero of 3100IIB'S squib ) commencing-- There was a little inan e And ha bad a little south,' MANNERS SUTTON was a tall, stout, hand some man, with a somewhat flushed face, and a slight cast in his eye. Nosier was any Speak er more fair in his dealings with members, the Speaker having a voice-potential, when several members rise to speak, in declaring which had (C caught. his eye." Indeed, his Tory friends always declared that, by way of ;floor his impartiality, he would give the ;floor to a Whig rather than to a Tory. He reigned happily and even merrily until the Reform Bill was "passed, in 1882, when he re. !signed. The Whigs were in office, and afraid of him, so they merely made him a ;Grand Cross of the Bath, instead of giv ing him tho usual Peerage and pension. ;At last, when the first Reform Parlia ment was eleCted, Lord GREY began to fear that an experienced Speaker was a necessity. So, ho actually invited MANNERS SUTTON to resumo the Chair, which he did, and kept tho -new House in as much control as he had kept the old. But, in "November, 1834, WILLIKR IV, turned out the Whigs and let in the Tories, PEEL called a new Parliament, and the Liberals made the election of Speaker atrial of strength. Mr. JAimsAnzamtountE got three hundred and sixteen Liberal against three hundred and six Tory votes given to MANNERS SUTTON. How ever, Pim, took care of his beaten candidate, and MAnsEns SUTTON, in compensation for twenty-seven years occupancy of the Speak er's Chair, at 'the then income of $60,000 a year, pceived a pension of $20,000 and a peerage,'as Viscount CANTERBURY. Ananononnis, his successor, was a joint of the Liberal tail. Be was a needy Scotcbman, whoso family had been quartered on the Pub lic Treasury ever since the death of his father, Sir Reim Ansaonountz, in Egypt, in 1801. He was a lawyer—but not good at that. Ho was a sineourist. Ho bad entered Parliament, through the interest of the Duke of DEVON MIRE, whose upper -servant (steward) be had becn. He was nearly' sixty, when chosen 'Speaker, and brought the manners of, a hear into that dignity. It is difficult to imagine a human being more brusque'or bear like. His voice was harsh and his looks were repulsive.' His face resembled a nutmeg grater in , its roughness and a pomegranate in its expression. Ho was a good man of busi ness, however—punctual and exact, though partial, making a point of not seeing clever_ Tory members when they rose to , speak, but calling upon fledglings of that flock, who wore not likely to damage any cause they,oppoeed. He resigned the speaker's chair, after having occupied it for four years, and received a peerage as Baton Titmexamtmin, with a pen sion of $2D,000 a year. He died a few months ago. Mr. Strew LIIFEVRE, who succeeded him in 1839, and was re-elected until his resignation in 1857, was one of the finest gentlemen in the House of Commons, whether as regards ap pearance or manners. Tie was fifty-five when elected Speaker, but looked many years younger ! , He was so well instructed in ,his duties - , so. frank, courteous, and fair intheir, performance, that, from the first, his word was law. He was, in fact, a'model Speaker ;' and, therefore, the moral and official antipodes of his successor, poor. Mr. EVELYN DENISON, the 3.16 7 -4 4, - h August , 1843 , [r.•LEFnvaE, ilad ti te•the bore of a debate upon what was then considered,•asimpraeticable a grief-` Son, for the consideration.ofti British•Legis. claim* as the Ballot•would be`at present: Ai slittip; clever, talkatiie little Man, liti:EWXhif -Of- Idverpool--a speoch-mitker rather fluent than elonnent—ha4 brought on,ti motion for' affirming the prine.iplei of ,Free 'Trade,"to Which ,principles, at that time, Sir Roam , FEEL was decidedly hostile. Pfixriwas Prime Minister, •and had a - . voice Ipbtential in : the Route. Many members had Spoken, and' the debate was supposed to be nearly closed when, in'a 101 l such as usually precedes a vote, The, • SPaakeilti clear voles', pealed eat ; the- wOrds sc The, 'Honorable' 'Member, for Durham?? Whereupon several hundred : pairs ,of le. gislative eyes looked down, :rather cu-' s ;lonely, to the lower i-part or the House, on the right side of Which; pOt. far: from the bat, stood a short, square-Made," round-faced, blue-eyed man, about thirty yin t * , of age; with curly brown hair, no Whiskare,:a; clean-shaved chiri,' short near; and very con-:. fident air., This gentleman, 'with ;unmistakably'. English look, and semi-Quaker attire; bad been elected for Durham only -a• few weeks be. fore. , He had unsuccessfully 'contented that borough a' few months previously, and the. Anti-Corn League, then rising into: pa toncy, 'had 'paid: his election expenses :On: both occasions. Ho was Weil .known as a public speaker of great force and Skill,• from his numerous exhibitions at iinti:Dern meetings in London and the provinces. - He i now arose, to make his niaiderieneeth n the, Herne of COmincins, and this metalier for Dar ham, over fifteen years ago, ,, was • the •riow celebrated Joni ,131ticiirs,: ' - WhoSe ' .recent speeches it Blriningham . are -SO,Damocretio that Psminteros,and Naffir are -, alike, awed and astonished at his baldneise •„; To-Moue!, we shall contintitithis even sketch; at the, risk of, leaving the hetiorable gen- Henan witting 'for tWenty=foUrtiousit. to de.' Hier: hkina Iden-speee;n. • • , Tll4.4lEoiNitiiNii JOBETIoI,Gk OF TiIX . TOOE, X . gitiocoatoy N TIIOBATTLE-ORDOOO. OF WRENTON i Stephen . A. Douglas litunluated for President. The True Democracy- of Trenton, N. -J., the friends of Stephen A. Douglas, Popular Sore. reignty, a Prot:Wive 'd'art!, and Free Lands, tied x~E:.,risz'six`dntriE_7lhvntuhar~g in. the lnasr Saloon of Temperance Hall, to rejoice over the recent triumph in Illinois. The meeting was called to order by the'appoint. meat of Jos. Wolverton as President, Peter Scully and Ches. Jones as Vice Presidents, and Wm. B. McClain as Secretary. On motion, the -President appointed William Driest, Jonathan Reading, and - Augustus Green, a committee on resolutions, which committee pre. sented the following preamble and resolutions: Wmenass, The people are the only Boom of power, and pestle's the solo right, by the voice at a majority, to dictate the policy of the Government ; and ' Witeßess, Their sovereignty has been acsalled. and their majesty insulted, by the attempt of ooe of their servants to usurp the prersgative of kin masters: therefore, be It Resolved, That James 'Bachmann bee forfeited the respect of the peopls, , and the allegiance of his party, and can no longer be considered as a Demnerat Resolved, That Stepheit A. Douglas, by the prompti tude with which ho resisted amenities usurpation, and the energy and a , ility with which be hoe advocated and stultained the pripciples of True Democracy, le worthy , of the people's contiderice, and 'entitled to the highest reward in their power to bestow Resolved, That we w mints hlra tut our candidate for the Presidency in 1809, subject only to the popular will as expreased through the ballot-box. Resolved. met we tender our hearty thanks, to For ney, Wise, Walker, and all the other gallant 'spirits who hare firmly stood and bravely fought through the trying ordeal of. the past twelve menthe. Resolved, That The Press be furnished with a copy of the proceedings of this meeting, with a request for their publication. ' The resolutions were unanimously adopted, and Mr. Augustus Green Was called upon to address the meeting. We give some portion of his able speed. Trentonians !leHow Jersoymen ! I should be false to the requirements of this 000431011 , false to your generous kindness which has. awarded me. as pro minent a position in.tfiese festivities, and false to my own individual feelings did I attempt to con ceal the joy or deny the pride which animates and inspires me. When I remember that scarce ono year since, in opposition to the advice of my friends, I risked pecuniary embarrassment in starting a pub lie journal among you devoted to the prineiplea:of True Democracy ; and when I recollect that is the columns of the True Democrat" I ventured the first expression of friendly feeling and encourage ment which the Senator from Illinois had ever re ceived in the State of New Jersey, could I help re joicing at the palpable and marked indications, sthieh t everywhere encounter, that the coed thus sown in the confidence of hope has not fallen by the wayside but is steadily and securely ripening to the full maturity of an hundred fold produce. And is it an Unmanly or an, unworthy pride that I feel when on re-reading the 'assertion ' I hazarded some twelve Months ago, that before this time the "Little Giant" would lied himself the centre of a - large circle of warmer friends than ever gathered around any individual :since the days of Andrew Jackson? I find that the pro. Oldie promptinge of personal and political friend ship have not been deceptive, bat that every d'y'e and hour's oxperiende brings louder and stronger proofs of their complete fulfilment. I look upon the kind attention with which, a few weeks since, you listened to a comparison I felt it a privilege to make between the President and Mr. Douglas, and the hearty approval with which you endorsed my estimation of the character of the latter, as the blossomirg brightness, and this rejoicing as aomblago as the first fruits of that grbrions harvest which our own Now Jeraey, will yield, in 1800, as her tribute to the sterling worth and unyielding integrity of. Stephen A. Douglas. I am aware that these rerainisconoes May seem somewhat ego tistical ; but on looking back to the time when fearful souls hesitated and faltered, and the faint hearted fled in dismay before the responsibilities of the hour, I am neither afraid nor ashamed to say that I am proud of my record, and prouder still that it cannot be impeached. Who to Stephen A. Douglas? If time sufficed, I should like to go with you in imagination at least, to his native State, to tried and trusty old Ver mont, whose rugged rooks are emblems of that stern and unflinehingpatrietism of her eons, which has made elastic the name of her verdant range, and imperishable the fame of her " Green Moun tain boys." ; I should like to wander round that "cottage by the brook,". Where oft in childhood's happy hours Ills Infant footsteps strayed, and wonder with you, if the memory of those eter nal hills had aught to do with forming that firm and unconquerable nature of the man, whose " boyhood's years" were spent within the shadow of their " cloud-capped tops." I should like to go with you where stood the log 'cabin school house in which his giant intoned was first taught to spread its pinions and trained, for the lofty flights of later years. I should like to show you the shop of the village cabinet-maker, where he toiled to earn the means of migration to his now western ,home in the Prairie State. there to fin d the hearts of its people large na their broad seven. naha, their affections strong and unehengeable as the inexhaustible fertility of the - soil they culti vate. But I am'tvarned by the flitting 'moments that it is net with the past but the present that we have to deal; that it is not what he was, but what he now is, to which our inquiries must be con fined. The moist serious—nay, the only charge that I have ever heard made against the private charac ter of Stephen A. Douglas, is, not that he is a brawler, &bambini, or gamester, but that hole a plebeian in hisctastes and associations, is too free and familiar in his intercourse with those who neither rank among, nor receive the countenance of the aristocracy of wealth and greatness. I con fess that my plebeian sympathies are willing to ad mit the full force of the charge , and °lane its 'truthfulness as a credit rather than a crime I love him, that high as he has amended the ladder of t in; ta t has not yet forgotten hie .humble that, great as he has become, the linger ing memories of earlier years still freshly cluster around his bead, and exert their ohoefful in fluence upon his every-day life and conversation. I love him, that while familiarly grasping the hardened p alm of labor, he has both theinclina tion and power to make its owner feel and enjoy 'that en'olal equality which' ie menhoed'S right and that hie mental auperierity is never exhibited TWO, CENTS. except tOotasten the 'pride' of curb' the 'rapacity of the purge-proud parvenu, who looks upon the ehikiren of. poverty as the born ,serfa of his do main, the fruits of their labor 88 hie legitimate prey. . , , As if to add privetainiailt to party perfidy, and make the struggle for aseendaney a war of. eider., mination, Mr. Bilahanan not-only became the aggressor, but in selecting as' the, point of hie attack' that pripoinle *Mob, originating with him. Mr. Douglas might reasonably be supposed would feel the deepest mortitioation at _seeing assailed, the President, betrayed a feeling of jealousy • its compatible-with welt-assured greatness. and ed.:M at the very outset deprived him of all but pur chase& sympathy, and hireling support. I do not intend detaining you by, a recapitulation of circumstances with which you are all familiar; suffice it to say,that Mr.l3uehanart denied, by hie notion is Kansas affairs, the doctrine of " popular' sovereignty," and,by so doing placed himself in op position to the party in general, and intentionally to Mr. Douglas in particular. this com prise all, or even the, Most aerions portion of the ,personal difficulty in whieli, he Involved himself If his letter of acceptance was true he sank his individuality on becoming the Presidential °and' , date,, and wits really transfignred into an emboli merit of the Cincinnati 'platform ; and the question then arlseS whelher,'lsy kipping oft the leading . principle 'of that platform, ,ke ,did.rnot, actually behead himself and leriisa,us without a President? If so, it follows that Mr. Breckinridge is, rightfully entitled to occupyithe °halter Stete,unlees it be con tended that Buchanaes,gliost must walk the white • house for two years locker' Sufi paniablicont for his" 0 7f l i i rtlxlelfaeOrati*W.tflitgrele 40 r and ifideelist - N residentla itcsiaine Cc' • You `Wye - mite Pirri..prlnqatile,Aqt eno# Yalu creed—Alint'of K the Reitip and a proteetiVe;Milrf.4 am:natural promptings'orl your ;On. itiandont:spirit, the - other you inherit tut a legapY. roth,thiteltellitfge of the good,,themthrulxike,'gtsigoWitinali,llli the .etasngglo:Tik,tha,4preraiiiipf„theAnty: respectribigend.;:eiltk - - efer 7 ., muse) that thi3 . ompritietiAbsitet44,4Mild been still further Pclitifeeed; had not been Ad l ett the aesislise,o , ..k.r:liosiglaa.; and his trusty l friendeOladl rTilealijuitt it peen. able' to den trol all of ; these : om adlie*t, during the last' winter, you's.' ntesest. efforts would ,-have been entirely unaralling,,and :ICargais AroichL not' 116W)34. ;00Litig forcrardsio Iliat:peasermhioli she has' at test so 'nearly gain ed. In selecting the,ma-: feria]; Anti dleetitictlie llepregentattres wee. are te*, compose ,the )31xt..._CMIgieed;_the Alcieglas Men; es anti-Leeeteptimirplintoortits,:haver given you - all no. doubt . cheerfully admit' thatitheir Mfinbirtandtheliedincaoy have fp inst d an ementiaraintotreetivielcinent In producing the revolution that, hint.Ast'oconfied, ' In the further efforts ;Oat AMY hays:M.o44A' :to Constimmate' the ohastisemeni! of Ateintisre iofideljty, Yost deritfy'rely sipeMike fuitbeeeMietions of, abti;Le.f fiourptou'D'emosAte,,atirl feetwarranted in isktr 4 tng,t.htitlifilMseersectationitiousrill. not,beOtt; appointed...Knoiaingannn de,:bY,9oo;jelkie: that 'tiledivision - 4111k which separaMe;va ta„,notzim-• paseablet, felt' got the lingtingenrWash- , ligtorilittinVor ,PTeir York,' "..that. thet t mattbred , clans Idioalr'return wanderings Mad nnl, on and refores.?", And *where shall wailind o.'nebler, tower, ef - Strength - aisitiltivhielt we eistil& - rallY and unite than the riarni of , Stephen' A;; ; Ilonglas, who, ns, Senator fiesiardsaldon 0; recant speech, crboldly and 'sdc-s ilantly'refused. to execute the behests of the iskrie-,!, holders, anti tat that account has been denoium4 by them for hiseOntemii . 0 9.!!• - • • • * - AN,-INDIAN WAR , , • - • • OiTIMIL rini , ontii.i.czo*-"= , 4f- - '-' i: - oFtaArONS 'in Weamitctionaii + cini-4Liteacto, ' ' "" .;:or twetiliihnnitst, st..-, ',:-- * - (i'rom the Wahine:en lini4 : "%fliev:ii4.', ' i Hnenoirktirtia;piaivitlinr Or. riaPantrio. Fort Vanconver, ( ..Gf.,)';o6tobar '2, lige —fin: Since my,letteref,thd.23l ultimo to tliv,Adjutan3 Genial, T, hove receiVhd s, felior,tilem Ifiejer,, sr , nett, of September 24th; annonneing•hia,retur to, Port Stumm, with the column under iddeoinut , d, after a,maroh of fi vehupdred and,five-miles. t . • Pldyeriebed'Oloblittlefty,rialles north Of tlidfort' mite O'Kenagoirsendtaknnt Cram noinfie point inehto hourseinXpeditionti"Weebur'thet*elleYd to the right ppd. ieft , 3o:therAisterteentlifty.miles The Indians woul& reatmeetliteidnhottleibuilby . greet entertirisi Nil stieeepOrtiakiegtuid doing • Justice St Pon thereinto mbee;or.thosd who !Lt. - tackedibti miners ;1101 4- eatiW ififiefe, Owittatid, • Qaalchini tied•thtkenrentry,nither unable to unite the, -.t mi ribes-I've-Mt? lar-deePetit.lPg of teeistiolr the troops with -enees; The,,Mojer,fieetteoyed =doh eflheprot4dions 'and-delser'utiblec the stoairior these Indians, and - elit-tlidrefistriti eliiiiiiai, has impressed them thetUrCher beitilities'Od, riot 3d be apprehended.: Theedgaitiliedlsidiatel*nt settle few steek 30. the . bialmenll*Hfditine,,,. ,forlPt o _, N!' tion or fey sale: The irapresalletnalwAY-dißeue by the troops Was_ dn'ialitoylliitt .thisia.l.l l 3- livered - the,cattle ,to . :3ltetlndinii,"eigaiiVnifir,.. tf. •Infilareethe bronghtllim&ffreinie , the.thnittilelf tid ae, serrenlietetl- b lir bil tili"VAnk:44" - by the inner° sjor erne "This oor osm-, paign of forty-four, days . has., illustrated the ca parity of the comthander,ifie entire , of the officers and soldiers, and amply repaid the toverinnent. Frtm Colonel Wright I -have dated to the•2stb, of which I give the following summary, vie: -, . _ On September 17th he . m pacieCation with the Coeur d'Alene, vtliong he found anZions.to soh ' mit to any terms as the price of peace. On Sep-- t ember 23d the Spokanes arrived at his camp in the same spirit, and yielded ready- submission to the same demands. The terms, granted. were. in general terms, snob as were stipulated in my let ter of Juno 25th to the agent of the Cuter d'Alenes, Rev. Father Jos* who wrote me: at their request, before the troops were put in motion. These are, the surrender of the authors of the attack upon Colonel Steptoe, the delivery of all property, taken by them, the free and unmolested passage dell whites through their Country, and hostages for good behavior.. • *., et *' * *- . On the same day (the, 25th) Owhi,•principal chief of the Yekimas, who had been, driven .from his country by Major Garnett, entered Col. Wright's camp. Be was placed in , irens. Essen Qualoble arrived - the next morning ;• This man was implicated in the murder of the Indian agent Bohn, previous to the outbreak of 1856, and since then has been the most determined in hostility: lie was executed: -On the 25th the howitrers abandoned by 'the troops 'ln the spring 'were' TO' covered, and also the remains of Captain Taylor anti Lieut. Gaston who fell at that. time. Col. Wright marched for the Pelonze on the same day. All engaged in hostilities have been beaten, and all except the Palouse have been driven to terms It is not probable that . they, single-handed, will make a stand, and I am prepared to find in the next despatches from Col. W. their submission. The short, and on 'our Bide bloodless, campaign is over. The sudden assembling of the troops took' the Indians by surprise; their- energy and sups; rior arms threw them into consternation ;" the ex penditure t f life and treasure in a long war has been saved ; peace is obtained, and a control over the most warlike of the Pacific tribes which need never be lost, The energy and good leading of Col. Wright and Major Garnett are seen in the fruits obtained. Their officers .and men receive their commendation. They have proven good sol diers, patient, enduring, and active. I commend the zeal of all concerned to the General-ineshief. I am, sir, very reepeottally," your obedient ser vant, N. S. Cx.orirs; Col oth Infantry, Brevet Brig. General, Com manding. Lt. Cot. L. Thomas, Adjutant General, Head quarters of the Army, West Point, Now York. - _ HEADQUARTERS DEPARTMENT OP THE PACIFIC, Puget Sound, W. T., October 10, 1858 : The results anticipated at the dato of mg last letter (October 2d) in relation to the Pelonze Indians have been realized On September 30th, the Polouze submitted to the demands of Col. Wright, and gave hostage for' their good behavior. Some of these peoplp,.knoWn to have been murderers and robberi, were then executed. There are now no hostile Indiana; the work of tho troop is finished, and I am enabled to withdraw to the seaboard the summer reinforce ments for operations elsewhere. I am, sir, very respectfully, your obedient ser vant, N. S. CLARKE, • Col. 6th Infantry, Bt. Brig. General, 'Command's. Lieut. - Col.- L. Thomas, Assistant Adjutant Gen-' oral. Headquarters of the Army, -West Point, N. T. HEADQUARTERS EXPEDITION AGAINST NORTHERN INDIANS, Camp thirty-five miles southwest of Cmur d'Alene Mission, Washington Territory, September,2l, 1858 —But : I have the honor, to submit a resume of operations since my communi cation of the 15th instant. - On the 17th instant, the entire Coeur 41' Alone nation having assembled at my camp near the mission, I called them together in council: I tlien !Anted to thoni the cause of my making war upon them. I made, my demands specifically : Ist. That they shotild surrender to me the,men who commenced the attack on Lieutenant Colonel Bleptee contrary to the orders of their chiefs... 2d. That they should deliver up to me all public or private 'property in their possession, whether that abandoned by Lieutenant Colonel Steptoe or received from any other source. 3d. That they should allow all white persons to travel at all times through .their country unmo lested. ' 4th. That as security for their future good be havior they Should deliver to me one' chief and four men, with their families, as hostages, to be taken to .Fort Walla-Walla. After a brief consultation, they annormoed their determination to comply with all the demands, in every particular, in' sincerity and good faith. All of the Coeur d'Alene nation, with the mop en tion of same MX or eight, were present at the coun cil; and, as an evidence that they had provionsly determined to make peace on any terms, they p b e ro rt u y gh th t e w y i h th ad tha b m elo t n h g e f i n r gto families, the a G n o d v al er i n t m he pro perty or. to individuals, ready and willing to submit to such terms as I should dictate. Tho chiefs and head men now came forward and signed the preliminary articles of a . treaty of peace and friendship, and in the course nf the day fulfilled, as far as practicable, my demands, by de livering up hones, males, and. camp 'equipage. The chiefs and be en now expressed great grief and apparently a d oinre repentance for their misconduct which had involved them in a war with the United States. I have - never witnessed each unanimity of feeling, nor such manifestations of joy, as wore expressed by the whole Coeur d'Alene nation—men, women, and children—at'thOconoin eon of the treaty. They know us, they have felt our power, and I have faith that henceforth the Coeur d'Alenes will be our staunch friends. I marched from the emir d'Alene mission on the morning of the 18th, having With me the prisoners, hostages, and many other Crain d'Alenes as guides, Ste: Our route lay down the right 'bank of the Coeur d'Alene river for thirteen miles, where I encamped at a point where the river has to be ferried. It occupied most of the 19th in crossing the troops, animals and stores, assisted by tho In dians with their canoes. Leaving camp on the 29th we pursued our march, still in the mountain, and the trail obstinoted by ; fallen trees, until we struck the St. Soleph'erlier at thirteen miles and encamped. Again we found ,t,*(010, : ti-zpon#Orqribitrcts. Oormpo:aesit TsuiFaxii ,, wilieleate bear is mind t4eSsalgjdiag raw IverVeorreheeteatfoio tthist , belieeotpanled by the a AM of th" IS an* to Imre =redness of iha -trioaTephy, het Aar ibte :of Iteolort "Turgid he We shallbigreeily obliged to irintlemen to POnnisylii, Tanis and other Beaten for contributions giving the rent news of thidaj is their , partlaulnr kedittee, the iesettiece of the einireg the bare"' of information that ivillheintertertieg lethe geeerafieidet.. a river which ontild - not- he forded, and our two boats:with the Indian Canoes were instantly called Into regn!sittqn.= salient 'the- gimeral supply train was Crossed, and recommenoing at daylight this morning; by 12 M. the rear of theroolumn was ready to move. - • , - I shall march toTemirow for the vicinity .1)1 Lieutenant Colonel Steptoe's battle:grounklo ob tain the'abandoned , howitserg and in the expecta tion of meeting the Spokane and Pelouses. 'Very respectfully, your obedient servant, • . - _ • A3.l9lllGar, -- -Colonel 9th Infantry Cotrunanding. Ifo‘ the Austria got Fire. ' The -Mir York Times oontains the followirg totter, whiob will be, perused with — painful inte rest: lirrt: -I have patiently been 'waiting to bear all the evidence that I could in regard to the origin of thie fire. 4- ' • _ . . . . It was, said _that the Atutria took fire from the tar -bucket upsetting; ,ho.„ There is only one par don that knows anything about that tar affair. and bow far does 'his lestunonY'go? — He saw the , fourth officer go down the 'steerage steps with the bucket and a heated ohain." , The additional story. " that the tar,wai seen on - fire,P, deea notappear in his statement„ strfai . as, I Can ,disedier. and seems to be a gratuitous' surcalemeat for the sake of answering a public' question; ' -- : •If this porton (I,do not know his name—he was the travelling companion of. Messrs. Smith 11: Cox. of -Boston) saw the chain' fall:ipto . the bucket of tar, grid the' bunk V, `. : Zallektng' 4 hY ;the XVi tt ' 5a4,40 ' je.t:,.': - 'e , ..'. -- 4, -,- 1. , ' 0,,, . 9100slideetealgiter4Si }rho q _ Le, - lot .iiipit - as its f 4; ti t t, l dth tbfirtii*ovast)liiilliii, biteld an WU, thrientleatVll ask - inattrtirsterfsideilt fierhf oh encestaneekvehloh• as yet: hilietheintteitoldi and Witiolaytp ri zatelieeritaworthy of-tiOtiee ,by a Candid .f ' -.. - -' . -.k, ',- • . • - ... - -. .ooweiillit the ,. 'Aitetr4 hil'el tithitiffe front the ftitititifei ir - ? - ; , ';'''' - ' 4 ' - '- -' '''''''' '' - - ' ' -- vt , TiiiifteasimPly•these t -- - On - -Salihath morn ' bag (Seititriabliii - 12, , thettday. bereft"- the- burning) ,there Pqrtilastadifeetil,pastesgetto pass, rigor that ibe - ttpteduliell`ritede alhet .`,`,thif. we „Would be in New York September 18„'"' (the felldwirtg Bator day 4 The iasPairi litieteld-iirt m' day - previorg, ,howeyer,.thakwismorild.liottlararikat.HeriTork until the *venial - of fhelettivartharizoreing of the 20th, 13nt.iririithis ita.A. , bese4brerklaitx or two ahead. aid the - 18th watt thefixed as trenratri val..', The `quietition inay_lie dikedtialiat'd(Uii this -Prove? , ha-mno.bk I answer: mak ing,iifiShirdtheinf the rate ofenly.-211,mileiiper dayi-but seeord ing to the ,terrecof ,theAritt We Anekreeke 2 90 - We litdhaiksilling init'ilaik,Thitil somewhat bead sev-had trititettirnoatoritiOahadithairidera ' ble:rite.of the tails, Witt:Ohs nerth - breeke;:vrehad, 'fp - Overd, good i see eririallier, erikyet-knade ; only 211 miles a day. NOWithis he 4 iminirig - thq risk 6f laleti , eird adiri, `deteingrfea :Mariete at 290 Miles. - . Bat arse matt this, beta mere reported scandal ? At mig ht ; been thought so hall thirbbeen the end °fit.,, .But the tiffeet of 14atia,lithattlfuy, w soon seen : as "About Inoon 'Or Balliathi * Sept. ; II; , the black 'smoke-began to pas:toff from - the-smoke-pipe.' It .was thiehr ilvalrYl dear eland thatgare-thefirst cause - of apprehension. At evening, when it was growing dark„ the smoke changed to itanie, which, wheb - it' *our rgariyaerk , riiinind;-friiit was over eat-4 came raging out 'of- thei emokt - 4106 iii the flames from a- blatt-furnacififteciver twenty feet into Ale air,, It.w.lit - ittarrifie s and some. what - of a peak; tiiisted"onkaterd - t- he officers quieted the passengere..l4 tial ' OY-. were Wegririteir kludaf dealt Whitt T;.. id - not im ,derttand Managing P - abip,.be `red-of no danger,„they were ore_deloug-ei itt-tebe appa 'rentlY satisfied._ The-female:4l l k /.., 3 „aW, -an d heard scream the kindest; waslrip.:erictriat ' wore tk i, i , gfairit Worsted - dritsa;and - w :.frierampaialed by thepirtioialffermen)With was - ked up by - Maier 'Brassie theiwiter4-andrdnee - ;_ - ught in-the Va io rons to HeetrYork. , ,, , ,,,, ‘,4,- , -- ~.,.--, I -- ~.:Thetinie that the ; : ~ •.. , . , . ibis Mott fearful Warelthen I Wagretnitifig ', -L ihe hews; after we had eronoltided - tifel!Md ;$ : -7 :alff'rt - feriaile e, at a Confiddi r eidiitig. ' atitiyi taken at the time .irt,..MY - m - emoraridn. ,, , ,- z - . , 'irithaf.!.t-What discord ant menet -amid • - • '-: .n, the - bows, the eolatinity of - a - lonr, ,,c td:Tan the ;46 . 01r - dee - dr the loud laugh, as i 1 - `• king: Sorreaktut let.Vien us a feudal ' 4.4aetnijiamtee-41tietuilikf hell)? Retnembr.tho-heirkotttkveestel.wal about forty 5041 ankthichnokeepipe alieut_treerity•flye feet , vl,'.7Mk; 'and:file flames, nearly, ifwot . quite; anti feet alitiVetha'aisoke-pivieff - a aileron' of from :fate le wviiiiir Yeti o 'savage _ Appte e 1 ,-._ That must base been , peertliarlyiatkees. I 6 coal! The next- day, until theYeatietwas in Haines : was thief state of Alegi seen., -.: - „ Yiflf canrsethe .vessel 'heated:. To itarrilqui. lheliiii,,-sitie of the Smoke-pipe . ouliforday morning (Septeinber.l3) ivesvoryaansomfertable; when tither mornings "Vetoed entirely . c, , ous ef.. , sus3vit: 1 .940: 01 ltertoe :tiesa theleatt .. lie7p - ti-WAys be. iatiCdoryeereepPiewively.bot,-, and,lt.Was ei-- 0 0Iditi bellifeireeellie,fo_paal:frolifflpre to aft :- eiTait':-,---Viii-iiietlitifitiftlferatate'or things, brit ev erything was unusual this: day, and a complexity ofbrainlees endeavors seems at last to have eucceeded in destroying the . vessel, and with it hundreds of lives—perhaps - et' acme. Taking the 'Captain's betting, together with its omditioned 'requirements, and the wend fire in the furnace immediately afterward; and these feats tell the simple story: "That they were irrersiag. 'the *mil to the uttermost, and which, resulted in'a step beyond the lattermost." - -,- - • • , • Now, at the tide the attain Was giv en, the flamer were coming-in under the quarter-deck They must have - ravished already two hundred and. fifty feet of the Ship's length. If the tar.bueket was the esuse of- the fire, the fire started in - the. fore part of the steerage; -and tocompletely overmaster the midthipt; and find their way under the quarter deck, by the time theralerm -wa s given, mutt be explained by other pririciples then that of common sense." • - • - , • - Could the fire ot have originated from the fur naces and how flames could rush through the steer age: which had prepared the vessel for its fate; by rendering - Ift like,tinder for the . Will not this-better explain how the flames were en far aft at the time of the alarm ?-' Will itnot more Satisfac torily explain the rapid..,spread.iif the flames arid the 'mystery _Of*, burning? - Will It not give smile - clue to imeinertheceptairea fatuity ?'"Could not a guilty - ,00nsoieneeL.W honsefoluness of 'doing wrong, and the. fear of this.-result—have -been causes which made the captain a ehild when ho should have been a giant? These oircumstarees I disclose, to be reasoned about as intelligent read ers may see fit, They seemed to-radiate abonta point which; as yet, his been undiscovered—per haps by them it may be approkimately gained. . , - PHILIP BERRY. Tnioranioar, Szartrunr, New Irituarnme, N.J , Noy. 13;1858. GENERAL NEWS. „ . HARD Pnacw.The little village of Warsaw., in the State of Mississippi, is a hard plum: Twelve fatal affrays have occurred there lately: - The last one took place between- one Dorsey, a merchant, and E. L Magruder, aoarpenter, on the 18th ult. An exchange says,-froM the fact that 'Dorsey, in the morning, at breakfast , observed that he was eating brea kfast here,thia morningy but would eat kipper in—= &hi evening,"_ and that Magruder, on the road to town;told some one to make his coma, as be didn't intendge live that day out, it is evident that there was an old grudge between them. They subsequently met; and settled it with knife and pistol. Dorsey caught his enemy as he tried to run • away, after shooting several times, and nulling out a bowie knife, about eight inches long, plunged it into Magruder's book, just below the shoulder-blade, go. the hilt, *ht.:ol4'MM the force of the blow,' broke off.. Magruder-died, and Dorsey, wile had received several pistol bullets, walked over to his bootie, replying, " shot plump through ! ” to the question whether he was hurt. lie survived about fifteen minutes. , Sundae OP A. YOUNG SPORTSHAN.—A youth of about ten years of age, a son of J. Knox Walk er, Esq , of this county, 'actually shot Mid killed a savage specimen of • the: catamount, near Mr. , Walker's, residence, about four, miles. from the city, ow Saturday. , The noble little boy wounded theartimal•at the first:shot with his rifle, acid very deliberately, put a second charge in his gun, with Which he despatched the animal. The exploit is one that would not have been performed by many' persons of mature - years without an attack of " buok-agne." The little hem was in the city yesterday, and was the Unconscious ohject of gene. ral interest—kiklamphia•;•Atialande. --, • • ' _ Timmons Runew.i.rd.=--The Port Gibson '(La.) Reveille has been informed-'5 that twq runa way negroes were seen a few days ago .Aft Good rich's' Landing,' ee perfeCtly disguised inthe garb of Indiana as, to elude detection. They were painted, had rings , in . their oars and goers, horse hair top-knots, false mouetanhes.,,Mankets; gene, &e.,:and the deception Was perfect. - - - They took passage on a boat for Memphis about: an fore the arrival of their owner, who, having. been info'rmed Of their disguise, came prepared to iden tify them ' but a little too late to do mdre ' than 'to; - telegraph to Memphis for them."' : • Przanno's : Ton—rize INTETG The editor of the Bangor (Itfe,) Whig has been shown by Mr. Timothy McDonald; mate of the barque Damon, lately front Linte,•a section of a toe of the great'Pizarro' :who ,flourished three centuries ago. Mr. McD onald; with two.of his friends, obtained access to -the vault of the great Cathedral of Lima, where rizarro lies embalmed. ,By liberally feeing Ttheir guide they were per mitted to take away one of his toes which they divided among them. , The body was in a tolerable state of prerervation. NOVEL NODE ON PUN/SMIENT.—A child being attacked with a crying fit.yesterday, and the Mother having used all possible efforts to still , it with no effect, she finally got provoked and poked its little bead into a tub of water. What a cool ing effect water must have on the passions! We have beard of an application of the - shower bath upon raving maniacs, but never before heard 'of an instance like the one we have mentioned.— Nato Bedford, Conn.. Mercury: PESTATJOTION OP PLYMOUTH BraoE.--The ' Plymouth Rock, Mass., says that theireeent storms have made - sad havoc with Plymouth beach; the " senhating broken over in eight or ten places, oar- - rying destruction in its course, not only to thq breakwaters which the Government beafrom tip 0 to timeereoted, but so far destroying the besot, itself, that an entire' exposure of the wharves and wharf property before the approaching winter shall have passed may be safely , ardioipated. BLeaß Lso.:—This is a new name given to a new disease in cattle. It prevails extensively' - in western Pennsylvania, - In manYinstanoes the cattle seem to he in a healthy condition in the looming, and before night are dead. , ' Oa- exami• nation, the skin and flesh , on the ehoulders are - 'black, almost pittrid. No cane Gan be assigned for this disesso—neither.have any, tried remedies - effected a ours. Mtv 'Berry - -'• A GREAT , TwAosDrila Sullivan, said' to be , one - of the Mot -eminent - Shakspearian adore and scholars in England, about to come to this country. He lately bad a farewell benefit in Liverpool.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers