, P - liipsw, - pasta uatimaAilsvis itriii;111110:10-01k, Offioe. -PTO : 7 "fiiii4 lll , l t Street. rrai; *am. toltikairif:s. *ftbefailidribllVOrthi OLViietilkimazi 000',Ainfintiklfotia - 4. - -Domull so, -Montt Mo_stroi9 gimimit_ppos4si,..oos azolloimni e boostablyloi lroo7 .h IM for* UMW oritOota• N TI V E `YIVOLLY iiiiiiitoorgOiio outoi the City AR Taw DOL• W LA roi - ozoom, odoottOo., 'Y, wifirtrcralpts; • Ti. Pali ob tOgn pi llil/412101 : 44anC 1 31 , 1t ,WY!...? . ,...: 1 ,'715 00 Tkro• `-' '-""' 00 •Pirotket gt- " op Ton Unpile, " ''"Zrl;lo . s l 4 40 00 Twoutr.,2 o _,Plos, " : , —Lt.° si c k • Twoor vioo, or oil!, ' kr,io /or *glob or Tirostreroo art-em . 7 ,7 extra bop to the IletterlP 9 t ). .arini t A ge id g f o x rootmiotero aro Noma Ti. Ww . Paw. . , sAF;o#CALYIPOIIPIU r, ,'"" • booed Doithlfooth!, !to! for ! 114 !gf!mon!lt 4 1 1drite.' ' S/40 :IC, . - BEDFORD,' , '2.I3IIICIELAYER, -No..9lll'.‘Alt Strool, but', O - t 214 WALNUT 8P.4 Ezehangei-risldeniis 310i0BL111 Rsapti And Ileitstikballk And vitsikedikiid VI kinds of Brick:Work none. Airr, , - • DispateVlNitt thiffiSSll*Ai f elat of reference; ' itolkkiwk TiADAMS BXPREEIS'eso. - ibrFWEi , a r aininior lrramtlefilohnric'reltazta, PACiiratOltii,lol2ollLNDlsp-listm:11011113,.. aRa OPI O / 1 4:sinisr=tff Or fink -LIM; aria . eimnsation Witt Ober MOM= COILPANUA L ,tO4lll O S.pel*st ii TOWNS salol3l,llllitibiltraltittstataii- • *- • BANDIRO*Di "• - A - LEX. ItiiICINNEIr-' IaTT6SNDY AT WC . QBlix81II8(t Pa. WimPiAcrldeA.lA,TrestaxtereAsaa j AxAmiftraug And Dv. T. - T. 41110111; • • - lia*l ABBAILS-.4 - „ t arrolinsirtAT • --': • - - •_I.OOE.HAVXN, Will attend *milli ti(i - ku prof eadonel business en. trustedio them: ,- Idpeatal attantiOn'efen tO:tkeeollee; nienkltronni. Gov. Wm:?. Parker, Harrisburg, Pa. 4:Mackey, President Leek , HavenlitdakiAleneral D. K. daekmani •Look HammHon. 'N.; Willtro;" took Haven ; Simon Cott, LOok - lffaven Barn tt & Pairthenie ,a McParlandiErans, "ik 'Co.- Philadtdplits;' Evazui & Watson, Phlladelphin; Phil* hi:Price ;Philadel• k..V phis; Ronr.Paremul, elphia; . Williamson, PhilsasiniCaf , Toner! er: Diele, - Phlla• de phla; Bon.. Jamie Bunndon, B e lletonto, , Pa.;,4.-W., Qadggki, Philadelphia. .„ 264,1- CtRABLES TETE, bO]iMISSTON• MEE= and :Importer Atr . IIA,ANAL'' EINGABS, (New) I,Bll:Welent street:mond story.: • sel-17 • Amouir, ,- re .6.1300(3 0-4 holuisole Doilds; WINEO, DRANDINSO ,IBKEY OINB," and= /AMOY LI tIiJORS No: 1017. INABNNT arid, botirioo Tenth and Mann% Amts. - ' itao.ll Arit at; LADIES' =1414016 TDB& : , We baie one of the largeaCandlhiest, Elioake of Goode In this line to be found in thilettyi all midi , tXi.#I3BI,Y2FOR,_ 9ua astas„ Which We sin galling at the ' ,LOWBST: P4/CBS. • ' WiniWdkolnUAlfreirlabliarsinssiniadroi MONEY•• RHYLIND . F.D. ' ' I OSIER_ `MAIM; below Oheetait BITE ROBES ; BY TRH BALM OR ROBS, G]go. F. IiffOMRATH 415 AND ARSH STREET, mosk. ,1439,;.4` BLANK 41000UNT-Boos•meNvlreOrtrans, Booksiiwiits;,,:fl.terprtx#a Ot wtaiy mit 17t No - tett' Pattoro, ialtade to * Itcau4 MERINIANTS, BANKERS, BRoemsii,....zeoplistioi AND .11 , AILROAD..004FANIEll Warraated in ind *wed prloio. 7011,11116 N AND D9I4IIIBI7O.r.TONEFt; • BAT.parmrsoxigpuiutharnsp: noll-29i ie sioirrnixkußTa STRXIIT itisA 1 1 0.0 Kai AND ISTA.TIOXIKAY. DAVID It. llb4►N - 81. Book Itautttoataror, Iltatkotorouid PriatoriNoa ifrO WALItUT-lltaratiti Ido.• Arid at all tizaes 'to farulott ) attain , front the stailrat or make to ordordloolco of erory doootitalony ealtiDU for hanks, plane °Meer, Monthaats, sad others of the' halt qua li ty of ,Inittoh Amoriosa,Popor, - aad tonal, to rarioao style., in Us most substaaUalmansor. Orders for 40/1111tniTXNe4C ordry - dooottotios. llaraviatra . ldthovallibismaoutodtait A p,oral 'aiatatmOsit Min ntatioP 4l 7__ z , " Conearmini Xi. NomNs ipiatribation to Ito Inuattla "Institate;thiepiongini• 5tip,J, 4 1111.4101450f blank" Won for. Imaktogaattiornisattlo an to thela the Rabiatuasi;., Tha aoloatips of thotaaterial= thi watinandiip*ostspollisS, Mid-them' , paaraisoo mittuus:toplamortotoP - ,; , :.. - : - ,,eragoing•-, giltaintqo,loqnA7, , lic CO; 720 011:13T17IIT van thelittention 41,1114 pablle 14 Li! thugs to eft Butane, bolt . CREDIT TO A OABII TRADE; „„ On the :name sethe rielebiattal &Mlle of Brtmlra & Riotheieof - Nevi York to farilihihe Pahl& with the finest 'artistes of - clothing - at es loveprieee ae they men be 'measure!! for afthe reedy...made clothing' house', wile our oostomens will have the advantage of BITTER 'MATERIAL AND SUPERIOR ARTIOLIS t ~ • , both uto stile and workmanship; We sl illmontioue, sa heretofore to keen' thettneet sintitinent ofgoads In Philadelphia; and employ the best *lately our pro, feesion, anewlthlheadvantagits we shall oast to the Publio, of nit Mating lite payin g` pay fOr those who - dd'itot pair; end hiving aliapi stood at the bead of our rrofewion, we deem it only necessary tolu. form the public' of the abovUOhloge of Plieset, tOiairi•- mand a tall share of pnbitopstroestie. ,t l o 2 -?ekf • O. Fi. THQOI3,OIc,: - lAMB, N.J. INIFV*Mit* WALNUT STRIATE!, (ONtedniitalaipAiotakNifira,) . . Nu always in Stook a genet r•sortment of . Patties for Pantaloons: , This partied's Girment IS dada • nodality, both as to stile" and At. All thou who hive experionost soy dithoolti tietot . please& itisesthitilt are invited to call, - _ N 8.-s4Coglish Psotalooperi a of, the latest Imports. tioos, to groat variety. nol2-1m ~ettfbcas;,Susiaisyiitg Q~cubir. A Elf ,T.H • A I ORAY,A.T..s9r,oItE; To Ooottantit ' Moo ' E fe e r, ACIItIVISI,N kARIECANii, TM" most toottiMMTO ottleiq' MrsOOO n eed.lottod imortmint of •- 111111143 f - PRIORS.. •- • • • , • • e* intzmu streit;l4o4, e r eyenth,• — r k 0 At -nu; toier Jappea Whoteeolo And Retail; 1 R 0 itA.T.:Boteil . . - siooiiit' - • GINTLEMN2II3 -PCNNISIIrNii,ISTOIS)36 , 7 (New) Noe. 5 moll North OIX.TH Bidet: • • Now on ateislio !went - of Goutliiiiksii4 trippers, Made 6! 1/Iszoisl, Oishmerit,Lane ASA Chintzes. , - , ; • J , s( • Their Ilnoof Tholotelothinfaxeryamperlor., - , Also GloveiG:thaSyt/Aksrs,Orrk,to 3 ,oossfe,,,Tles, no sier", " , k , Last—tea inrelessv-thenelebrazt'snainell , Collar;' Ten for TiOokertfiim ranks! " ol•Imo ISORESTNR411041;01111%24:1003' , liqqplpeautanons: " •., ; • rAvorivgnolfp, WM* NAM.A.C 4 . At tie, Old eteeidi ND: 105011FITNIIT STRUT, °Rio -I Ate tie W Lelkii>_ed A. WXNUAllitrrElt. #1 heretofore; his per.. mond asperilitob ,34:r. the Csaitineane. ltetiaratfrarlei dspertmeitiO Orders forbid eelebritedjetple - ottibirts mut claw Med.f . M.ithezObortellt WAquale trade eepelß4 On tOerell•Futlii • 80°V-Ve: _ •'keinustotlEldeiTialaliNnantsttlekranausll._ !NO STORE" and Buxom mANIVAOI.OII._T,'A4 • 011BINITNUT pullet ! ( nearlyoppoeitiVie ::-` 11:111144 ,1:113 14 . .',:liereier Wifely!AisetteilrOe ittlde A • foi , le pie.; pared , fo;'lDl:ordpre••BWlSTillit • shbetaurtleop Aperfeecet psetrantiott,;l3ollllNTßY. 'PUPA. sippUe4 wIlk.TllOl IrapiTirseut COLLAP4.. jy,19.44 • - iRtI9SESI-4;terinine"F'renr.h, for -kti';o6 , ' III L. -- i . : xi wi giV it kii tr ie w gitylist 4 . 0 . 4 .. ,:,, TBUIVici4 siirow,hh4o'mpiiLßl.„ii47. -1011110it not rat A a fftri*stingiOteirj an t .• , li7-.. 0 4 a 4 figrlisi: iAlsoagith::49x lo . For - ii - z la ma_ r i r ph pessitiefti /Wig s ingl, p ar este r',,,--$:',111_0111111-4hi 1.411.140the11iv44. 4 44. , ,, ~ ~,, if' Ira,74'4.ll AL E X t i /Gt r"Vi t r e .l." A O Raga ' - .- 14' ` -'s. oket4o4 "Or r - RAOSiltig o R 1414-: . -,. --,,kArA -2, Alla Ina .'.'''.:,' 5,3 .., ,it - iir- I .l4 ol fit - polimitrattlistaliftlaiLd6oll, li -iitestlile7-'7.3=T:o•;' 1-i- ' SAM; - ; , -;W - •:! ,-- -1' •,"-;_.: L: :-. , ~,,, --L' . • ( I 1., 7 1 • ";., s. ?".•:....; N '- 1,..1 !;4'`, A , ~.,5i ~,.. / '-- •. '. - rot-' 4, 'et- 4 $ . . . ~. ~, .. - _' • . . .'s•;:,,Z ; .• - •xk .`x 1 f j ',it !. ._ . n , t , ;:7' . ' ... -.. . kt e t i . ' ~,,...;;•,- - ...ir,... '. .. • ."•• .'....,',-. Ot'i t ri` 4 7% , I I -gi -••,_-...--,...: . . c . , ; :-J... -' : : . "- 4 listc tie >4 ,- 41: 001 -- ; , ,:. , . , ...._:„.,,,,,. ~,....,,,„,,,._4„.,..._... ..,.„1/4,-,„‘,,,„,,, 7 - -....-- • ~: '.. • i ...'"" 11:11.-...„ A • .--,---- ---- 17-r17.:? ' ...• '.... - .c.:: .1: - :,: - •.,..: 0 `- . ' . -,- . , t•-, ,--?,:., t v ' .. -,. ,r."...,J?:. ....,7:! bii„-;76.'•'.-.IIII E - if ., ...:'',':,,,),;..:.' - „ - .............. ----'' ---.-'-7-=''''' All, •-'hM ar - CZN11 , 1..;:, .. : .' , lii .-- , .4 !rei. ' , :.-: r. • -., ' 1 ::. -. • A ..... j ., ..--,-1.77,..f.:, -.7 -- ----‘... , .. . '---.• - : 7 'fl",' ''''''''''‘44llo.4'4.tit,','W' ," • ' 1: --, , ' • '.";' iozion : -::' • -- • 0 ".,;.,---- ,- . 44 0.,-"' ,_ . -......... .-- '7-,....,,, i';('., - - , 'f :,' 14 .- .:,;...;.. , % , ",,in , '....' ' • r •'!' :"....: "..' ...=-1-.4.' ~_____.:-' ~ ..g.-7..,..- t. , -.'• ' .i. .'-':. . _,4. •-t...,„---7-7-17.- f ..:,.-,.:1%-e; _ . , • :: '',,, :„..-J!.0,...14/ ....I',: ' '''' . \-;Y.,?'7,... ~,, , - ,_ 7 "- - .:. - .::2-•• 4 ..... '''• -id _--------''----- 7"....t. ,-,.-- -;....:. •...::, '''-‘ ...,_•.-- - -- .2 - : - .." 4 „,--_,.: - , ..0 . . :.. _ . ' . , - . . . • - , -- '2 -=NO.-103. lettail nobs. TOBEAT- SALE OF BROOHE SHAWLS ,' AND OLCiAKB 1 ! ; ' tinPrecedelte&BX•galits • We've had • perfect rush! We're Selling an immensity Of Goode - ' Ouotrade , a increasing! - Oar Mode of doing tuusinesieeepas to meet with gene ral approval , Namely— , , - • • _'"-To Have But One Price." 1 , ..To sell Cheap for Oash." • .•. • Never to 'misrepresent Goods in order • TO RegliOT BALES? - • "To deal fairly and justly, and wait upon all motor,. mere with attention Nod politeness." , "Thug to gain their confidence, end keep it by con tinuing in do right " THOBNLEY "dc OHISM. We hafe how on . ; Excellent Long Briolmi.blawls for $3. . 'BUIL bitter quality Rh. $lO, $ll, $l2, $lB, $l4, gn, $2O; $22 - Usd $25. , "Square Broche Shawl from S.IUP to 8 , 11. Long and Square Blanket Shawls in every variety, Mises; sod Gentlemen's Bliawia, &o. Gool Black Cloth Cloaks for U. . - Every other quality and Style torn unto slB.' A ; L OB LOT Or 0/..0A.K3 FROM LAST /MASON AT HALF PRIOR! Beet B'ack Bilks for No. t 0 .51.80 per yard,. Rich Palmy ltilke really beautiful, • Every variety of BUBB 000D8. CLOTHS ! 0,3881BlEBZB!! BATTINETTI3, &e.!!! Reavv Bleak Beaver Cloths, tine Went% do., &0., Blankets, Flannels, Linens, and blualins. fact no better stook of general Dry Goods can be found than at - H 0 It NLEY 0111.13M'El, -• Northeast Corner Alma & SPRING GARIGIN. n0134f elf "- BARGAINS IN DRY GOODS.-,- Hu 8.- R. HTER REMOVED from y. No. 880 to No. 40 South ffECOND Street, _where he ia now prepared to Itnettah the Ladles with a freah and arell4eleated stook of ...- DRIBS GOODS, To which be 1111111,11 their attention, being determined to sell at exceedingly LOW PRICES.: N. 8,--A large unite:tent of Bradt,. Stella, and Trench Blanket Shawls. , Aber, a yarlety of Bilk and Oipth Circulars Constantly on hand, at the ~ ,. CLOAK EMPORIUM, ,, No. AO South, SECOND Street. Vaccinate .11Drp SREETINGS'POR EXPORT. ..BLA. BROWN, BLEA,MICD, & BLUR DRI - 48. lISAVY &BREETINI2O, - SuißßOTHlNt able-forGHAM & WELL 2 B:port, for WELLS by ' 24 Sofia TRopir 25 LST JTIA ST. 043164 y 'RWIWIDSON'S IRISH LIMNS, 00N,BUIEIR8 of 311011ARDBON% MINS, sod thois desirous . QM:ids:due the GXNIIINIII lagoDs,, should ass that' the 'kWh's they purohue ars sealed with the full name of thelrm, BIOHLEDSON, SONS; & OWDEN, • Ali ► Ignafehtil of the miaow' and derabllity of the ,This o mitten Is rendered essintlally necessary as large griantities of inferior end deibetive Linens are prepared, season after season, and' sealed with' the name of 11101IARDO011f by Irish houses, who, regardless of the Injury thus Inflicted elite on the 'American ebtununer and the manufacturers of tbe, genuine Goods, will not readily abandon , a buboes so - profitable; while per-, obasere can be Imposed on with Goods of a worthless 2 L BULLOOKE do J. B. LOOKE, ings-am ,Agents, Ea ORMlClll . l3tteet, New York rOattliP4 JP 3 C4TM srt• O,A.II.DWELL '&•00•., . el • 822 OHISTIMPP Street. - ' Rave received, per eteamere new etylee Jewelry, Chatelaine, veat'Obsina. Splendid Mani Hair Pins. • , Pratt Stands, knfar Baskets. Jet Goode and P over Vim... Coral, Lava and Monte Bets. Bola Agents in Philadelphia for the sale of Moslem Prodebam's LONDON TIME-KEEPERS. nova S. JABBER & BRO. • P. .111.11117/A61711/4 AND sssss or SILVER-PLATED WARE, , No.-•sO4 fantod Street, -above Third, (up stain,) Philadelphia: - Constantly =laud and for ode to the Trade, TEA SETS, COMMUNION SERVICE SETS, 'URNS PITCHERS,' GOBLETS, oursoriaTEßs, BAB. • NETS, CASTORS, RNIVES,BPOOSO, NORKlii LADLES, U.., /to ,• • • ellang and plating on &Wards of maid. • Way Eitioinse ,futiZre; THE STATE SAVINGS FUND, - No. 041 DOOK-STRINT, NIXT-DOOll,,TO' THE POST ORNION INTEREST • FIVE .PBB GENT NW* received DAILY, and every MONDAY EVENING, ~ ,611nlitiialt; .. of ~ . ..„XN 'OI7II'D''D'AL'AND AND ON:A.I.L, ,; . - -, .- •fl D-~; .c ItI4OII.IIPOLOCER TO • "OVIVICICPTBILT - 711 . 11POSITOISAMSfillaii , i 81.1 1 .11 MOST 211 moxs, AB 'llllllllt,',lP DIBIIID „11.# President. CULL 4. 44.4,Y; Treisturer I. MINES Ii&YES. Teller T" SPRING GARDEN SAVING -1117 ND. (084811118111' PT TES 148118LIT0181 . 0181218TLTANIA.) - ' PREIPITUAL' OHARTKII. ' STYR 2111 . , OlNTi:lntereet allowed to Depositor', ' •• lad all Kamm Paid back on-Demand. ~,,' Oll/011(881, ,a oara, THIRD: SPRINT, • glorSOlDAwies BAIL Bunloia.) Tklelosfitutionia now - open' for the traniaation of In the t Inilnese;forthern and kit par h. t onl of iOkartered Paring Nand located the cap. 'The Moe will be open Idea ) from 9 to 2)( o'clock , and'alick an MONDAYS and 'T from until S &dock In the Ihrining._ - " _MADAMS. • - Prodariek Klett, - John Kessler, Jr., Stephen Oath,— - • James 8. Pringle, John P „Lary; , ', • Jacob Dock,' Hon. Henry I. Strong . , Joseph M. Doell, • Daniel Underkofler, ' J. Meeley Dray, - • IfonVWm: /Onward, , Robert Dalithot, Frederick atsakei • P. 0. -, 3llmaker, Francis Hart, • John P. Venn*, Joseph _ P. Where Olorge Kneeht. ' • , ireeldent, JAMAS PRINGLII. Seoratary, 4310R611 Ti THORN. • ' apal.iftf SentiaTtarto-rrra PER OENT. IN. ..T.IOIIBT—NATIONAL °AMITY TRUST °Mi nn.—WALNUT STRUT,. BOUTZWRST °Min OP THUD, PECILADILPHIL. • ImMarousTati 117 111 52171 Of • PlUenvlitil. Money is resulted In any awn, Urge er small s and b eetroot paid from the day of depinitto the day of with. ~ The Moe IS open enroll day from 0 °Walk fir the Morning till b o'e loo x in the evening, and on Monday sad ThuredlAyevenings till 8 o'clock: -• RON. HINNY L. BRNNIn s President, ' ROUT 11.11LPRIDe1, Vise President. WI. 7. Run s neeretary. • PIRSOTOMO Hon. Henry L. Benner s -P. Carroll /Howell', Id Ward L.:Carter,- . Joseph U. Barr Robert Selfridge,- linnets Lee s - Ashton, Joseph Yates, 0. Landreth Mums Henry Diffenderffer. - ' Money le reseived ark payment' made dully. The investments are made in conformity with the revisions er-the °barter, in BILL TRUTH MOST °KORB, HUOCIND BENT S, and sub first elate semi. ties as will always fume perfect security to the doped• tori, and which cannot fail to give permanency and sta. Wilts to this Institution. • and Iy' " G ' D 8 A P , ..7•711731_001/2Alilt, cornet of THIRD and ORWIT. NUT Otreeta. • - Large and ,small IMO nead, tr.sui paid baften de fund, vithout notice, lath lerri2mat 0111 T MEW MT &moths day of deposit to the day of withdrawal.. Ocoee home, from 9 until 5 &Old& every day, and on MONDAY NITNNINGS from Until 9 Willa*. • DRAM foraide on *gland, Viedand, and Boothia, from a upward'. - ;: • , President.-41111IMIN B. ORLW/O.RD. r-11,111/ .1 •- • , 44 I Brokers. 1).-.11.. , OORSON, , - REAL' /MATS BROKER. Wow Loined on Bond and Mortgage. , Collections promptly made. "Sellildlas • '• NORRISTOWN, PA A trOUST . BELMONT, al- • - • ItANILSR, BRAVER STREET, Tomei Letters 44 eXt7. 2 ;:ila x ile to Treesl len all puts of the world. • e. , ,14.841 M 9,(ONISE & CO., SPXOIII 'AND BXOHANtiII 1111020$8, Ito: 40 South THIBA . Street, • saipAnit.rau. .; Now .to the 14inui• and Baosime of Philadelphia • Jell! • • • • Mute. mammy. w. 8. DINOWX, 11. MAN • ay, ii. M, AN BROWN, & 00., BANS-NDTH, " STOOK‘, AND INIONANCIN - - lIROKEIta, ifibciriser of 'IIIIIID and ONESTNIIT Otreets, - woneassons wade,' and Drafts drawn on all arts of th e ; United Stat.a and t in oknialia, on the moat favorable --- Collections niadi, basd'Drafte drawn oil Erigiand and iraland. , ) • , thultworit baulk Notet bought. •. Lind' Warrants boughtandsold.'„Dsaterdlndpeoleandßulltou. Loam Time repernegotlated. - Maks and Loans bought and sold on Commission •t the Board of Brokers in ildladelphiu and New York. AND JUTE • : - ROPE,' Nanufaotttred Mid' for sale at the lowest New York perm!, by - WEAVER' FITLER & CO., No. 23 N. WATER Street, and 2247. WHARVES. in3l7.2in . - - • Q,14.T)1 I" SLATE I I SLATE I I 1--Rooling ham. plate, °rail shin; and et rex) , lon , raw, kept eon. itently on hand; and for male by 11,WO, /OA R & tr, AD end T De eel. ndroki.o ottmeali and Shaeltatti put on In the best Manner, and ri " r.,IPSYLEN"' BUTTER. 2 übs Prim T Atithikli!atter:':Poistre b - to CIO Pico .14.1. ' Sewing filatbineo. WHEELER & WILSON'a SEWING MAOHINES ) MIMED PRICER. NEW STYLE $6O. All the former patterns $26 leas on each Machine A NEW TENSION. NO WINDING OP 'UPPER THREAD. A HEMMER WHICH MINE ANY WIDTH OP . 07,10X8 626 ORICBTNUT Street,- Pktiladelplda. No. 7 WEST STATE Street, Trento N. 7. No. 7 EAST *AY Street, Weet,Okeetn - r, Pa oa7-025.- IffARRISHI BOUDOIR SEWING MA OHINE Is offered to the public u the most rella ble low-priced Sewing Machine in use. It will sew from alr to sixty stitches to an inch, on all kinds of goods, from coarsest bagging to the finest cambries. It le, Without exception, the simplest In its mechanical son• struction ever made, and can be run and kept in order by a child of twelve years of age. The DURABILITY of this machine, and the gnu= or. DM wows, are war ranted to be unsupluigedby any other. Its speed ranges from three hundred to fifteen hundred stitohee per min ute. The thread need is taken directly from the spools, imam rue TROUSLN Or zinrinonta. In fact, it LI. wee/tine that Is wanted by every family in the land, sad **low Prise of , I'ORTY DOLLARS, at‘whieh they sold, brings them within the mak 0 alined every one - $: D. BAKER, Agent, leag-dem why eowdm 20 South EIGHTH Street. PIANO FORTES. ;net received, an elegant stook of HAVEN, BACON to 00. , NUNNS & 014111 f, BALLET, DA VI/J.& do., and BALE k 00. 8 PIANOS. =LODE ONO of best quality, at J. HAIOULDI3, • mldg- y S.E. corner SEVENTH and CHESTNUT e 4. EXCELLENT, WARRANTED NEW YOBIC PIANOS; celebrated for tone, touch, durability, and tasty appearance. 7 Octaves, PLAIN and LOUIS XIV, Pearl Inlaid; and Pearl keys, for sale, • from $l9O upwards. Also. PIANOS to rent. TAMER BELLAK, 279 South. FIFTH Street, above Spruce, Ole agent for Oummlngs & Oanlield, and & . Pincher. nolB-lm* rfpiori °HUMORING & SONS, Manu facturers or GRAND, PARLOR-GRAND, SQUARE, and UPRIGHT PIANO-YORTES: This -la the largest and oldest manufactory In the United Statem, having been .ESTABLISHED IN 1823, Maas which time we hare lIADE AND SOLD TWENTY THOUSAND TWO HUNDRED PIANOS, And have received as teetimoniale a their SUPERI ORITY over alt others, 11 Gold, 18 Silver, and 4 Bronze Medals. tWr - • Pianos to Rent, Tuned, and Repaired. BRANOH ROUSH PHILADHLPHIA to at 1807 OMISTNIIT Street. - oas4m Collette %riffles. rIVHE ONLY ARTICLE UNRIVALLED • IN MARKET, with Immense ROME AND EUROPEAN DEMAND. • The reason why, is that by Nature's own process it restores the natural color permanently after the hair bowmen gray; supplies the natural fluids, and thus makes it grow on bald beide, removes all dandruff, itch ing, and hest from the scalp, quiets and tones up the nerves, and thus cures. all nervous headache, and may be relied upon to cure all diseases of the Reale and hair; It will stop and keep It from falling off ; makes it soft, glossy, healthy, and beautiful, and If need by the young two or three times a week, It will never fall or beoomegray; then readers, read the following, and judge for yourselves: ' New Your, Jan. 8,1868. MRBdßil. 0. J. WOOD ec CO., Gentlemen: Raving heard a good deal about Professor Wood's ilair Restorative, and my hair beingqulte gray, I made up my mind to lay aside the prejudices which I, in common with a great =my persona, had against 411 manner of patent medicines, and a abort time ago I commenced using your article, to test it for myself The result has been so very satisfactory that I am very glad A, did so, and in justice to yon, as well as for the encouragement of others who nay be al gray no I way; , but who having my prejudice without my rearm le for Betting it aside, areonwiliing to give your Restora tive atrial till they have further proof, and the best proof being ocular demonstration I write you this let ter, which you may show to any such, and also direct them to me for farther proof ~who am in and out of the N Y. Wire Railing Establishment every dsy. My hair in now its natural color, and much improved In appearance every way, being g lossier and 'thicker, and much morilealthy looking. am, Yours Respect- KERRY JRNICINS. Corner Columbia' rid Carroll streets, Brooklyn. lattxciirow, A'a., rob. Id, 1858: Poor: Woon—Dear Sir; Your Mir Restorative pas done much good in this part . of ,the nonntry. bas bibs Slightlp, ditninshingtor Wend years , cawed,. itplosip:DOM`ri RD ,vraS orit• an 114 n o ‘; f • er known e eet. - LI think g i U t l the most valuable remedy now extant, and advice all who are afflicted that way to use your remed,y."You an publish this If jou think pro per. Yours, Re., , S. W. MIDDLETON. PIIILAMILPHIL, Sept 0,1867. PROP. WOOD—Dear' Sir; Your Hair Restorative is proving itself beneficial tome. The front, and, also the book part of my heed, almost lost iticovering—was, in feat, niLD . I !Loveland bat 2 hairpin& bottles of your Restorative, and now the top of my head , is well studded with a promising crop of young hair, and tbo front is also receiving Ito benefit. I have tried other prepara tions without any benefit whatever. I think,, from my own personal recommendation, I can induce many others to try it. Yours, reeptotfully - D. R. THOMAS, M. D., , , No. 40 Vine street. Ite2B-Usal The Restorative is put up in bottles of three slues, via f-Large, medium, and small; the small holds a pint, and retails for ono dollar per bottle; the medium holds at least twenty per cent more in proportion than the small,-retalls for two dollars per bottle; the large holds a quart 40 per cent. more in proportion, and re tails for $3 a bottle. , O. T. WOOD fr. 00.AProprietors, 1112 Broadway, New York, (In the great N. Y. Wire Railing Establishment,) and 114 Market street, Bt. Louis, Mo. And sold by all good Druggists and hum Goode Dee:- & eowlnwky.3m golibag &yobs, TOYS ! TOYS I! TOYS !!!—The cheapest TOYS, and beat assortment. Selling at lowest redneed rates. Vail early to secure the choice. W. TUMOR, Importer, n'l3-Bt No. 24 Booth FOUR= Street. CHOICE GOODS for tke HOLIDAYS. MARTIN & QUA.YLE'S • STATIONISBY, TOY, & FANCY, OOODS X6IPORIII6I, No. 1036 WALNUT STREET, (ezioNr Etzvturrrr.) A eho'cat and elegant seeortment of Goode suited to the ooming HOLIDAYS, comprising articles of utility, taste, and ornament, selected from the latest importa tions expressly for the City Retail Trade. M. & Q.'s Stock embraces every variety of Dolls, Wax, Crying, and Bleeping, &0., together with a large variety of FAPRIt DOLLS, WRITING DESKS, FORT FOLIOS, 11BRBARIUMS, SORAP BOOKS, PORT-DIONNAIEB, &a. With a large assortment of 01111105, Fancy Done'', Juvenile Books Doll Furniture, Theatre'', Stables, Warehouses, with a general assortment of Toy and Fancy Articles. FANS! FANS! PANS! &sleet style Yana, in Silk, °rape, and Linen. Al . Also, Cricket Bats. Bans. and Wleketa. nolo-tlal SPECIAL NOTlCE.—Dealers in Goodyear's Patent for Vulcanised Rubber Suspenders, Braids, Webs, and all other Fabrics and articles made by combin ing fibrous ertbstances with threads or aheete of vulcan ised rubber are notified that unless the seine are properly. stamped or labelled with my name. and by my authori ty, they cannot be legally disposed of in ,the United /Hates Merchants and destua are Invited to examine specimens now in store, and to give their orders for the Spring Trade to the undersigned, EXCLUSIVE OWN. ER OP THE TITLES AND' EXCLUatVS RIGHTS IN THE PATENT for these goods, which embrace all the atylap heretofore manufactured or imported, and many others. ALSO, LICENSES TO MANUFACTURE AND SELL —and the Terms—may be obtained on application to me at No. 23 COURTLANDT Street, N. Y n24-ly HORAOE 11. DAY. TO NEWSPAPER PROPRIETORS.— NATIONAL TELEGRAPHIC NEWS AGENCY.' —CARR & JOHNSON announce to the Preen through out the United States that they are completing ar rangements on a most liberal male, for a system of TELEGRAPHIC NEWS REPORTS which has never before been equalled in th is coun try. They pledge themselves to furnish the earliest and most reliable re ports of all the :dining and Important erents of the day, at a price which cannot fail to be advantageous to the Press generally. All letters and communications to be addressed to CARR' & JOHNSON National Telegraph News Reporters, South THIRD Street, opposite Exchange, Philada. E. W. CARR, G. W. L. JOHNSON. Geo. W. L. :Anson, 211 Wall et., New York City. John T. Smith, Merchants ' Exchange, Boston. John Wills, corner South and Baltimore streets, Bal timore. Por experience and reliability in the hilliness we Would refer to : Morton McMichael, North American and 11. S. Gazette; Swain & Abell, Public Ledger; /wiper Harding & Son, Pennsylvania Inquirer; John W. Forney, The Press ; Cummings & Pesoock, Evening F Bulletin; F. W. Grayson & Co., Evening Journal • Jo seph Sever:is, Evening Argue; Joseph R, Flanigan, Daily Newa; William Rice, Pennsylvanian ; Lawlor, Everett, & Hincken, SundayDlepatch • Magill & Jones Sunday Mercury Jno. B. Jackson, Sunday Transcript. ocatta NOTIOE.—PHILADELPHIA and READ ING RAILROAD.—The I! DOWN FREIGHT" Depot of she Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Com pany, has been removed from No. 225 to Noe. 242 and 218 BROAD, above Reuse streets. An the •• THROUGH FREIGHT " Nosiness of the Company, both OUTWARD and INWARD will be transacted at this Depot. JNO. T. BEATY, met lm General Agent. BAILY & BROTHER'S • CARPET WAREHOUS, No. 920 CHESTNUT STREET. WE BRALL OPEN TO-BAY ANOTHER INVOIOE OF ENGLISH • ' TAk'ESTRY BRUSSELS, ov "CROSSLEY'S" CELEBRATED MARE, . AT , ONE DOLLAR A YARD. Carpet buyero will glad our stook full end of fresh otroo, sail Encino VERY MM. itotig 111211 OR SELL IPtatta ,Ifortes. Ntdires. Carpeting». PHILADELPHIA. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29. 1858. Nei, •jpttblications. IlEpt BAD THE PROPOSAL AT THE FOO it OE THIS. THE NEW YORK OBSERVER, TUB LARGEST NRWSPARER IN. TRU WORLD, NATIONAL, CONSERVATIVE, RALIOIOIIO, ))LONGING TO NO PARTY iN TOLITIOS AND TO NO BOOT COMM Edited by a corps of Clergymen and Laymen of isige experience, hawing the .mott Eminent writers of the day among its regular contributors, and a Foreign Correspondence unrivalled. It le the moat complete ,FAMILY NEWSPAPER . . that can be made published on a large nounix sheet, No that it may be separated, making , • WO DISTINCT PAPERS, each ot in itself. No other newspaper is made upon lan. The . mien sheet contains • fall report of, all the News of the Day ; a vast amount of miscellaneous reading;-poetry and prose ,• an AGRICULTURAL page, conducted by a practical and educated agriculturist; a COMMERCIAL page, edited by s gentleman distingniihed for hie acquaintance with the financial-world—giving the latest reports of the Money, Produce,- and Cattle Markets, Bank Stooks, &o. • a blisoar.aasrous depart ment, embracing scientific,'literary, and artistic matter, with tales, anecdotes, biography, travels, questions and answers, for the Inatruotion and amusement of-the family and social circle. The Rumenous piper is tilled with the choicest ori ginal and selected matter -in every department of Christian Literatura • making a delightful Sabbath companion, and furnishing a volume of interesting and instructive reading every week. The beat and moat accomplished Clergymen, Presidents and Professors in our Colleges and Seminaries, constantly contribute to its pages. One of its chieefeatures of attraction is a ;summary of intelligence from ALL RELIGIOUS ,DENOMINATIONS; a feature peouliar to the Observer, and highly valued by Christians who wish to know what is doing in other commualtiee than their awn. The grand objeot of the New York Observer le to promote "peace on earth and good-will among men." Per this end it seeks to advance all those principles which make the Union of the States more firm and per• =anent ; it cultivates harmony and good feeling among ail denominations of Christiana; and is a !Gaston de-. fender of the righta of all men under the Constitution of the United States and the Word of Cod. In its Editorial discussion, its foreign and domestic cerreepondenee, the vigor and beauty of its original contributions, and the attractions of its several de partments in Science, literature, art, agriculture, and commerce, the New York Observer is determined not to be surpassed by any neirepaper in any country. Resisting radicalism in Church and. State, promoting revivals of pure religion and every wholesome moral reform, on hcriptural and rational principles, discarding and opposing all schisms, humbugs, fanaticism, and every schemes of infiddlity, socialism and vice, the New York Observer designs to be a safeguard of virtue law, and order, a champion of truth and righteousness In the earth. It ie the cheapest newspaper of its alms that le pub bliehed. Both the macular and religioua papaya ate lent for Iwo dollars and fifty cents, in advanoe, Two families uniting in taking it, as many do, will each get a complete newspaper for $1 25 ! !! PROPOSALS FOR SOUOITINCi SUBSCRIBERS: Ta any one who will obtain new subscribers, for tut, we will pay the following liberal commisaione - Poe live new subscribers paying in advance, fifty cents each; for more than five and lees than ten, seventy. Eve cants each; for ten or more, one dollar each. We will send a copy of ono Bible Atlas, with colored maps, on paper of large size and beat quality, to each new eubsoriber, on the receipt of hie name and payment for One year. If you cannot give portions' attention to this work, will you show this advertisement to some clergyman or layman who Will take an interest in It, to whom we will give the commissions mentioned above. We will mend specimen numbers without charge. Your early attention Is solicited to this subject, and we atoll be happy to hear from you immediately, as we desire to offer the paper at ones to every family in the United States. SIDNEY E. MORSE & 00., Editors and Proprietors, n023-dSt<%9 138 NASSAU Street, New York THE POCKET DAY DOOR FOR 1859.-NOW READY, . . .. . TILE PHYSICIAN'S POCKET DAY-BOOK for 1859, with extensive alterations and additions, prepared un der the superintendence of an eminent member of the profession. The DAY-BOOK contains an Almanac) Tables of eomparative Medicinal Doses, Poisons anethetr Anti dotes,' British and French Medicinal, Measures, Arti cles of Diet. Comparative Theruminettic Scales, Bathe, Simple and Afedloinal, Tables of Doses of all the prin cipal preparations of the Pharmacopia, Visiting List and Index, Blanks for Monetary 'Engagements, Bank Account, Elutes' AddraaAes, Bills and Account, ruled for, Vaccination and Cb.tretria Engagement I, English, P•ench, and American Medical Periodicals, A MEDICAL ELOCUB OW OASES la also prepared for thin edition. under the kuperintendence of the State Medical Society, and can be had separately or-' boiand up with the Day• Back, as de9ited. Pocket Day.. Book, with List for 28 patlents—cloth— 60 do do 28 do morocco ' with pocket—sloo do do 56 patients—cloth-31.00 do do 60 do morocco-41.25' With the Medical Record, the price will be 26 cents additional. Bent freo by mail on receipt of the price. 0. J. PRIOR tr. CO., no2o tit 33 S. BIXTII St., above 011118TRUT.' VALUABLE BOOKS FOR_ SALE AT THE PRIORS APPIXED BY , 7. siDt k i,' _ AT YE ANTIQUE BOOKS STORII,• 27 South SIXTH .fillaus • RICHARDSON'S MANSIONS Of Atmd% , am , A, magnificent - collection of plateiyinanjr beititihi* colored. 4 yule. folio. - $26 ;. usual palte., stO. THE BIIILDDR. A`ecompl4t,ol, sett .og s ZikWil. , : l -1-• able erock.l79in thiii;cofivirmtp4t4:, „:4 ron eoxnu -moneorao,t to 1050: Oompleie raid'olisveopy,covely bound, 28 dole Jolt°. In 14, bolt calf. $75; MIEN 8' 110USEROLD WORDS. "A library In itaelf.” Beat English 'edition. 10 ,yola. octave, hag calf ; mat M. $02.60. GHAT'S BOTANY OP THE UNITED STATES EXPLORING EXPEDITION, Quarto. Tho folio aUm or 100 platen. • Published at 250. $BO LITTELL'S LIVING AGE. A compete set. 58 sole. oetavo-10 In half calf, and 40 vole. la panthers ac ntibllthed The. set for $BO 00 quARTERLY REVIEW. A line set from the oom movement. ff. role. Half calf; gilt. $75. , n022-tf 9pHE LADIES' PHILADELPHIA. SII0? PING GUIDE AND HOUBRICREPEREP 00kt PANION eon 1839. Prise, 60 cents. For eats by PARRY Zr, EIoMILIAN, lIAZARD BROTHEBB, WM. S. &. A.tddR'BIBN WIG. B. ZIBBEB, , At the Book Stand In the Girard Gonne, and by al tho railroad news agents. '1127.1w p.LAy & BICKNE:t.L'S BANK NOTE UEPOBTEB. Tho oldest and ablest on the Continent The cheap- eat and meet reliable In the World. Per annum $2, weekly ; $1.26 6=l-monthly; . 16 cents monthly. Sleek cantos 6 cents. and always ready. Subeerlptions may be vent °Mee No. 112 Smith THIRD Street ; Bolletin Buildings. Donlan ?VIE AMERIOAN SUNDLY-SOHOOL UNION SUBLIME{ 10111 THAN ONII THOUSAND CHOICE ILLUSTRATED BOORS FOB CHILDREN AND YOUTH, Being the Largest Collection in the Country. THEY ARS SOW SUBLIMING A NEW BOOR EVERY SATURDAY MORNING. Elegantly illustrated Catalogues may be had without charge, by addressing THE AMERICAN FUNDAY-00HOOL UNION, 1122 CHESTNUT Street, Philadelphia. A large assortment of Bibles, together with the de votional books used in the various Evangelical Churches, always kept on hand. ocll-tf VE It Y CURIOUS, SCARCE, RARE, AND OLD BOOKS bought by JOHN CAMPBELL, fourth and Chestnut streets, Philadelphia. Highest pride paid. Orders attended to In every State or the Union. Books Imported from Bump°. nl9•Bru tiarinuart. ILTARDWARE.—Tho subscribers, COM- L.& MISSION MERCIUNTS for the sale of FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC HARDWAIIIII, would respectfully call The attention of the trade to their stook, wide!' tke7 are offering at lowest rates. Our assortment eon , date in part of— (Maine, of all kinds—Trace, Log Tongue, Bread, On, Oow, Pit h, Back, Wagon, Stage, Tongue, Look, ShlPi Mine, and Coil Chains. The celebrated " L " Itoree Nails; Stone and Sledge Hammers. "Wright , " and other Anvils; Solid Box and other lieu. Short and long handle Pry Pans; round and mud Bake Pant ' . . . ..„ Aladin ie enperlor Pau and Rave • Bed Berewil. g. Axoeleior Safety Pneo ; Blasting eabes. Born, erase ; and Brier Boythea i Hay, Born, and litizvor .nivet. Hay, Manure, Tanners', and Spading Yorks. Hakes and Hoed; Shovels and Spades, of all kWh,: Tacks, Brads, Shoe, Olout, and Ph:diking Nails. Oast and Wrought Butt Hinges, Screws, Looks of all kinds; (Inners, Rants and Pumps, Axes, Hatchets, Ham sters, Plano', and other Tools, tto. W. et. tams ft sox, - No. 411 OOMMBROB Street. P.M I. ADE 1. PH lA. WARMING AND TANTILATING WASEHOIII32I. - • - • AilliOLD & WILBON, 81:100888088 TO 8, A. HAMMON We have removed from our old stand in Walnut street to the LARGE STOWS, No. 1010 OHEBTNUT street, few doors below the St. Lawrence Hotel, where our old friends and the public' are respectfully Invited to examine our extensive stock of Warm Air Furnaces, Cooking Ranges, Bath Rollers, Registers, Enameled Stone Mantels, Parlor Coal Orates, do., .co. We are now manufacturing CIIILSOWS ONLICIRATED PAT ENT NEW COAL OAS CONSUMING PURNAOI I , the most powerful and economical Neater ever invented, and suited to all airmen of buildings. Also, nest and beautihd patterns of Low Do Grates, and Parlor Coal Craton of all sloes and patterns We have also commented the manufacture la. ENAMELED STONS MANTELS frpm Penn sylvania Stang. Those Mantels wore awarded • SPECIAL PRDMIUM at the late Air qnd Rxhi- Mimi of the Panktin Institute of this city. They represent all the rare sod beautiful ANTIQUI) !HURDLE!), are not injured by Smoko, Coal Glas, Oil or Acids, and are mold Wholesale and Retail, at snuck loss price Ikea Mattis. Call and see them. • ARNOLD & WILSON. BEND. M. PILTWSLL, Superintendent. Pbiladelohis. April, lasa...-apPe Ix 53nmtntr Etoorts. BEDFORD SPRINGS.—THIS RIK well-known lad delightful Bummet assort will be opened for the reception of Vielters op the 16th of Tune, and kept open until the let of October. The new and spacious 'landings erected legit year are now fully completed, and the whole establishment has been furnished in superior style, and the aecomutoda- Nom will be of a oharseter not excelled in any part of the Vatted State". The Rotel will be ander the management of Mr. A. 4. ALLEN, whose experienes, courteous manners, and attention to his guests, give the amplest uatizance of comfort and kind treatment. In addition to the other means of awes", itbldeemed proper to etete that passengers can reach Bedford by a daylight ride from Chancbarsbarg. The Company have made extencive arrangements to supply deafers and Individuals with Bedford Water', by the barrel, carboy, and in bottle", Mike following prices, at the Bpringe, via : fora barrel imalbery) $4 00 Do. oak) o 0 8 00 - N Do. oak)mulberry) 400 Oss'ooy, 10, pitons 2 25 Bottles, 1N pint, per dosen 1 60 The barrel are carefully prepared, 10 that chasers may depend upon receiving the Water mesa and tweet. All communication' should be addressed to - iiIDYNDBAL 8P G 8 W. gpio•tl &Vora gouty, 401, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20,1868. Within the memory of the yeunger portion of this generation the Pacific slope of the United States was almost a feria incognita. *l3"can recollect, when Emoted: with ANTOINE foxii . nic at the winter'fireside, enjoying ()ur ea:lves with pipe after pipe of Kinnikinick, or bark of the bets gris, mixed with tobacco, we 'hivelistened.to his journeyings as a trapper aid guide for Government parties through the hills and ravines, meadows and deserts, and davions mountain paths, treasured up his do- Seflplion of San Francisco in 1837, then a mere hamlet, of Oregon, and Sonora, and (ji nni* and the Gila, and indeed of all the Isais, and all the Indian tribes which inhabit tite, between the Mississippi and the shores that look out, beckoning to the gor ge:3ns trade of the Orient to visit them. ThOre he rests himself now, at Taos, in New N,exiee, yet not an old man, and surrounding I blit for thousands of miles he can see popu lona towns, growing Territories and States, .where, in his earlier days, there wore only the wkiderness and the savage. Where he tracked the deer and trapped:the beaver, ran the buf falo and watched the seal, the hand of Indus trylmilds up a trade and an interest that bid fair soon to rival those of their sister commu nities of' the East. The gold discovery of California has been the magician's wand, and it is yet producing its miraculous •results. We owe to it, nn dotilitedly, the settlement of Oregon and Wash ingiOn Territories. It has stimulated extra ordinary emigation to that region; and now these restless, energetic, enterprising men, who; not content with the erection of one em pito, flock to Arizona, (a portion of New Mexico, but which will, in all probability, soon be Organized into a separate Territory,) and from the borders, from Tucson and the rich mines of' that Territory, look with longing eyes upon the untold wealth of agriculture and minerals that lie undeveloped in the moun tains, and fertile fields of their next neighbor, Senora. That State of the Mexican Con federacy has an area of. 123,436 square miles, and a population of some 150,000. course, it is impossible that . any pri vate expedition, like that of Count RAOUSSET, or COMMIE, or WALKER, or anybody else, can s*cceed while the large body of the people are opposed to an independent existence of their ewn. This has been the difficillty here tofore, but just now it is loss so, and the pro bability is that in a few years that obstruction will lie entirely removed. AUSTIN made his Bittlement of Texas in 1821, and met with many drawbacks at first; but as the Texians saw With pride how, through the energy and Indus try of his colonists, Texasbegan to rival, nay ontattigi, her fellow in ono State, Coahuila, thoyi yielded adhesion to the means which were propitious of such splendid results. So it: is now with Sonora to a certain degree. As Arizona grows in population, and her mines are opened and worked, there will be constant travel to the Gulf of California on the west. Indetid, late reports have advised us that Lied. Mowry, the delegate elect to Congress film Arizona, has been surveying a road to:tra4' Guaymas. When a route is marked doWn; and travelled, towns and cities will growl up. along it, and at its termini, and -only fair to presume they will owe their existence and success to our own citizens. Witli 'all their interests dependant upon the rtgovernment of the State, they will look ' ilAtibelyranny and factions arid anar -• ; Chlpro, stigmatised its: nametlat .*;‘"' • sat . Arkrir , Oa wain to tilto any argamen" riper, as:attepirmrtenowliffecten to Sonora, because of ramonttbat there is rebellion in her Irdait , to hurl RIS(WIERA from what in m a* is a dictatorship, and that from Cali Tornio; and'Texas, and Oregon, and Arizona, and the States, (as the Californians callus of the Atlantic,) thousands rush onward to bo in at the death and the establishment of the anti. ciliated now Government, to give what infor mation of the State and its people As we can gather from the materials we hall) at band, slight though they be. Sonora, once on the high road to prosperity, and' with mines of silver and gold, yielding annual wealth to an immense extent, is now in a sorry plight as compared with our States and Territories. The °Sam of the customs, and of every branch of the Government, are corrupt. The troops sent out for the proteo. Son of her frontiers cluster in the towns on the coast, and leave the defenceless frontier people open to the ravages and massacres of the fierce and blood-thirsty Apaches. They aro too flir off, It is said, to have driven to them, through the arteries of the Confederacy, the warm, invigorating blood from the national heart at the city of Mexico. Mr. WARREN, whose book, "Dust and Foam, or Three Oceans and Two Continents," has just been published by 011ABLE8 &turmoil, New York, tells some home truths against Mexi can rule in Sonora. He says that the Apa ches, knowing the cowardice of the Mexicans, venture, oftentimes, within sight of their largest towns, to commit their depredations, and on several occasions have been soon by the people of Hermosillo from their house iiips burning the farm houses not a league distant. Here is what he says of Ures and Alamos : PHILLDELEHIk "Urea, the capital of the State, is situated very near the frontier, and is unimportant, excepting as being the seat of Government. Alamos is the second city in size In the State, and is a place of a great deal of wealth, there being extensive silver mines in its immediate vicinity. It can boast of some beauty, too, being half buried in orange groves, and presents a delightful appearance to the wearied traveller whose eyes, accustomed to the hot and mud-baked towns of the coast, feast themselves upon the fresh luxuriance of its vege tation. The good folks of Alamos are a very stay at-home sort of people, who, instead of going abroad to look Or wives, have found sweethearts among the beauties of their own town, (indeed, they are said to be the prettiest women in the whole Ito-, public), and have been in this habit of doing this eo long that they have all become nearly related to each other ; in fact, the whole ten thousand are ceusins-german, and the result is (as is always the ,ease whore near relatives marry and have issue), that there is an Incredible amount of deformity, blindness, and deafness, existing to an alarming extent, while insanity and physical deformity are met with at every step." The chief rivers of Sonora are the Mayo and Yaqui, and Rio Grande de Bavispe, and Sonora and Colorado. The trade is carried on chiefly at Guaymas, which has one of the best barbers in West Wexico, and at Pitle, a great depot for goods imported to Guaymas. The shipping Inwards in 1862 amounted to. 4,886 tons, bringing 718 passengers. Its pop ulation is over 500. With the following ex tract from Mr. WARREN'S book we will close for this time. It was mooted, it will be recol lectod, not long ago, that a proposition had been made, by Mr. FORSYTH to Mexico, to pay $10,000,000 for Sonora, and it was then sup posed that it would ho accepted in order to replenish the exhausted treasury of the Con federacy._ We cannot say what truth there MRS in that rumor. Here is Mr. WARREN'S statement, however, and his opinion of the future destiny of Sonora Sonora is the richest of those provinces, for, although its surface is extremely mountainous, still, intersecting these ranges, aro broad and fer tile valleys, well watered with never-failing springs, and wooded with superb forests. " Hero, growing side by side, may be found the productions of the torrid and temperate zones— fields of wheat and suganoane and the vine and the orange tree may be seen' blossoming at the same moment with the cotton plant, which is in digenous to the bottoms along the rivers Gila and Ban Pedro Every metal,precious and useful, has been thrown pell•mell from the burning fur nace of the Sierra. Silver, as well as gold, is found tn its virgin state, and in masses , the very marble is veined with gold, and the stones themselves sweat with quicksilver. " With a seaboard of 600 miles on the Gulf of California, its ports are those through whioh must necessarily pass all its own imports, and those of that immense tract of country, comprising the States of Durango and of Chihuahua. "When we take Into consideration these vast tracts of country of unheard-of fertility, abound ing in mineral wealth, the extent of which we dare not dream. utterly devastated and given over to wandering tribes of savages, does not the cer tainty suggest itself to our mind, that before many pato Um Amerloan people, proverbially anstd- Sonora—The New El Dorado. Sous and restless as they are, will spread them selves over this hidden paradise, and, driving out the Indians, will, in defiance of Mexico, and - whether or not protected by our own Government, establish themselves so firmly (ad they did in days gone by in Texas) that the United States will, by force of circumstances. , be necessitated to annex and countenance them? When this takes place, as it most assuredly soon will, who can estimate the 'importance that will be attached to the outlets of a country more rich and fertile than the valley of the Mississippi itself? Guaymas, from its central position and its wonder fully safe and commodious harbor, will 'of course be as it is at present, the principal seaport town, and there are men living, who may see the now miserable town of Guaymas an flourishing' a city as is San Francisco at the present day, more par ticularly should it be chosen as the terminus for the Pacific Railroad, as has been suggest ed. Even now, we hear of heavy American ships, in search of freight, leaving San Francisco, bound to Guaymas, in order to load guano in its immediate vicinity; and knowing, as we do, the valuable deposits of sulphur and saltpetre which are lying unheeded within comparatively a stone's throw of this harbor, it needs not a prophetio eye to gee the day when it will bo filled with California liners seeking homeward freight. • " Once taken possession of, either forcibly or by purohase, the State of Sonora will give such evi dences of her agricultural and mineral wealth as will put California and Australia to the blush, , and the capital and emigration which will at once be attracted will promise such a future as is little dreamed of." The Pittsburg Celebration—Letters from Prominent Public Nen. We gave a brief report, on Saturday last, of the proceedings at Pittsburg, on Thursday. Our readers, however, will take an interest in the fol lowing letters from public men who were unable to accept the invitation to be present: LETTER PROM PRESIDENT BUCHANAN WASmetrtott, I , lw/ember 22, I.BsB.—Gentlemen : I have had the honor to receive your invitation to be present, on the 25th instant, at the Centennial Anniversary of the capture of Fort Dnquesne ; and I regret that the pressure of public affairs, at a period so near the meeting of Congress, ren ders It impossible that I should enjoy this privi lege. Every patriot must rejoice whilst reflecting upon the unparallele d p rogress of our country within the last century. What was, at its commencement, an obsouro fort, far beyond the western frontier of civilization, has now become the centre of a populous commercial 'and manufacturing city, sending its productions to large and prosperous sovereign States still farther west, whose terri tories wore then a vast, unexplored, and silent wilderness. From the stand point at which we have arrived, the anxious patriot cannot fall, whilst reviewing the post, to oast a glance into the future, and to speculate upon what may be the condition of our beloved country when your posterity shall as semble to celebrate the second centennial anni versary of the capture of Fort Duquesne. Shall our whole country then compose one united nation more populous, powerful, and free than any other which has ever existed ?. Or will the Confederacy have been rent asunder and divided into groups of hostile and jealous States? Or may it not be pos sible that, ere the next celebration, all the frag ments, exhausted by intermediate conflicts with each ther, may have finally reunited and sought refuge under the shelter of one great and over shadowing despotism? These questions will, I firmly believe, under the providence of God, be virtually decided by the present generation We have reached a crisis when. 1113011. their action depends the preservation of the Union, according to the letter and spirit of the Constitution; and, this once gone, all is lost. I regret to say that the present omens are far from propitious. In the last age of the Republic it was considered almost treasonable to pronounce the word Disunion. Times have since sadly changed, and now Disunion is freely prescribed as the remedy for evanescent evils, real or imaginary, which, if left to themselves, would speedily vanish away in the progress of events. Our revolutionary fathers have passed away, and the generation next after them who were in spired by their personal counsel and example have nearly all disappeared. The preaent generation, de prived of thee° lights must, wh ether they will or not, decide the fate of their posterity. Let thorn cherish the Union in their heart of hearts—let them resist every measure which may tend to re lax or dissolve its bonds—let the citisens of dif ferent States cultivate feelings of kindness and forbearance towards each other—and let all re solve to transmit it to their descendants in the form and spirit they have inherited is from their forefathers ; and all will then be well for our coun try, in future times. I shall assume the privilege of adyanoing years in referring , to another growing and dangerous evil. In the last age, although our fathers; like ourselves, were divided into political parties which often had severe conflicts with cash other, yet we never heard, until within a recent period, of the employment , of money to , • eany• eleotions. Should this practice increase until the .voters and. their Representativeejla--,thklo tate - mid National tape:Shill liatiome,Wected,:thefonntain of • some, - and 'we mukt. military deepetism.' • A -Demociratto fitepub agree, 'sonnet- long survive unless sustained by publio virtue. When this is corrupted and . .the people become venal, there is a canker at the root of the tree of liberty which Must cause it to wither and to die. Praying Almighty God that your remote pos terity may continue, century after century, for ages yet to come, to celebrate the anniversary of the capture of Fort Duquesne in peace and pros perity, under the protesting banner of the Consti tution and the Union, I remain, Very respectfully, your friend, SeuEH BucnANAN. LETTER FROM 007 HARRISBURG, November 23,1858.—Gentlemen I have waited until this moment, for the purpose of ascertaining whether it would be possible for me to be present to participate with you in the oel ebration of the centennial anniversary of the cap ture of Port Duquesne. or, in other words, the overthrow of the Prenoh and the establishment of Anglo-Saxon dominion in the valley of the Ohio ; but official engagements, constant and exacting, and necessary preparations for the approaching session of the Legislature, will prevent me from aoeepting your invitation. Pennsylvania has many anniversaries which she ought proudly to commemorate. While Now Eng land, with the energy peculiar to her thriving pea. pie, has contrived to make the landing of the Pil grims at Plymouth Rook the subject of annual national rejoloing, and the reunion of her eons in whatever clime they may be found, we, of Penn sylvania' up to this time, have allowed the great event of the landing of William Penn to pass al most unhonored and unnoticed. I am glad, there fore, that you have sot an example in the right direc tion, by sailing upon the people of Pennsylvania to meet In the great metropolis of the West, there to re vive the glory of events which transpired one hun dred years ago. What renders the capture of Port Duquesne worthy of special honor is the fact that it was accomplished by the combined troops of Virginia, South Carolina, and Pennsylvania—a pledge at that early day of the union and proi parity which have crowned the Republic, but then undreamed of by our forefathers Little did the representatives of these three gallant colonies then suppose that a century would find them partners of a great Confederacy, oemented by the glorious memories of a free people, and looking forward to a career which, unless the rude hand of faotion and fanaticism shoUld obstruct it, bide fair to surpass anything that former history re lates. What marvellous change shave taken plane since the middle of the past century ! Tho young Fir• ginian, George Washington, then only twenty-six years of ago, then wearing the uniform, and fight ing under the banner of St. George, then attached to the British crown by oaths of allegiance—he, with all his wisdom, was not yet wise enough to anticipate the great drama of which unquestiona bly ho was the most striking personage. Then that France, which he and those associated with him aided in expelling from her long line of pos. sessions, stretching from the St. Lnwrenoo to the lakes, and from the lakes to the distant Gulf, little thought, amid her mortification at the lOU of such a splendid empire, that in less than a quarter of a century her own troops, under her own flag, led on by Lafayette and other Frenebmen, would be found side by side with this same George Wash. ington, fired by the principles of a sacred Revolu tion, and making common cause against the very monarch whom, on the 25th of November, 1758, they bad met in mortal conflict, the one to oppose, the other to sustain. But, gentlemen, there were other events at that day looming up from the future--the Devote tion, the Declaration of Independence, the seven years war for liberty, the great peace, the Con federation, the Constitution, and the Union. After those came the majestic strides of a mighty people over a vast domain, then inhabited by savages and wild beasts. There they organized themselves into communities, into Territories, into States, and rapidly attained a front rank among the nations of the olvilized world. These aro the trophies of the century which began at Dort Du quesne and closes to-day. Unknown to the brave pioneers, whose achievements you meet to cele brate, they aro living realities to us, and the as surances of a future still more grand and anspi , oioue: I cannot better close this letter than by quoting from our groat historian, Bancroft, the following splendid passage: " On the 25th of November, 1758, the youthful hero, Washington, could point out to the army the junction of the rivers, and entering the fortress, they planted the British flag on its deserted ruins. As the banners of England floated over the Ohio, the place was with one voice named Pittsburg. It is the most enduring trophy of the glory of William Pitt. America afterwards raised to his name statues that have been wrongfully broken, andgranite monuments, of which not ono stone remains upon another; but long a the Mononga hela and Allegheny shall flow to form the Ohio; long as the English tongue shall bo the language of freedom in the boundless valley which their waters traverse, his name atoll stand inscribed upon the Gateway of the West." I am, with great respect, yours truly, THE STORY ABOUT SENATOR DOUGLAS'S SLAYNS.—" Just previous to the resent eleotion infants," says the N. 0. Picayune, 6, the Chi cago Press, a Republican paper. published a state ment, charging that the slaves of Senator Douglas, held in Louisiana, aro over-worked, ill fed, badly clothed, and otherwise itegleotfully treated, and gave Mr. Slidell, of this State, as authority for the statement. " The whole story was an election canard. Mr. Slidell made no snob statement. Of that we are 'fully advised, and the facts alleged as apocryphal as the authority. The slaves in which Mr. Doug las le interested are in charge of Jae. A. Moffat ten, one of the moot enterprising oitisens of the State, a popular and humane gentleman and planter " Harrisburg Correspondence of The • . Press.”. llinarsinnto, November 27, 1858, Mottoes about the capital begirt to assume some thing like the session here, and politioians of ,the dominant sohool are on the qui vane as to the first moves upon the politioal ehess-boatd. The'absorb- ing thought appears to be, with almost the entire bevy of patriots who have " axes to grind," as to the result of the fight for the Speakership, for much lies within his power towards fashioning, by his appointment of committees and the favors at his disposal, the sentiment of the House upon al most every measure which will be brought before it. In our own midst there is an active effort being made for W. C. A. Lawrence, Esq., one of the Dauphin Representatives. He is quite a young man, and potsessi3d of considerable talent. Notwithstanding the array in Lawrence's favor, the knowing ones confidently predict the election of Colonel A. R. McClure, of Franklin. Independ ent of the Colonel's pre-eminent ability, he is an old and shreld politician. Let the Eight termi nate as it will, the tendency of things is to pro duce a no very harmonious feeling in the Repub. lioan ranks. But Much morn than the mere personal feeling among the aspirants and their friends' grows out of the contest. The "Record" of proceedings, which was awarded last session to Colonel It, J. Zelda man, of the Patriot and Union, until nnotber contract shall have been made by the joint action of both branches, is the first hone over which there will be a, squabble outside of the Speakership. George Bergner, Esq., of the Telegrapfi, imagines that, as there is a Republican majority in the House, his support of the party should be rewarded by . the Record printing. The Senate, however, - being Democratic by one majority, may serve as a climb on this movement. A State printer is also to be elected. As to the Speakerehip of the Senate, there are various conjectures and deeplplaid schemes. The rumor Is that Mr. Turney, of Westmoreland, will be the man. Ho, it will be .recollected, was the only Democratic Senator who had the fortitude to vote against the Leconipton resolutions of hist winter ; and that position, it is said, has not tended to a very friendly feeling between him and the Leoompton wing of the party. For the Clerkship of the Rouse there will be an equally warm contest; and, with the host/ of aspirants, I am unable to judge, with anything like accuracy, the result. As usual, Harrisburg presents its claims for a slice of everything, but, / think, with little hope of success. In the Senate, General Miller will, doubtless, be re-elected. Members have pretty generally selected their seats, made arrangements for their winter's quar ters, been button-holed, importuned, flattered, and - feted in a small way, by the patriots who usually warm here for weeks preparatory to a session. A. Jordon Swartz, Rif., est-Mayor' of Reading , , and nephew of "the man who beat Glom Tones:" was in town on Thursday and today, and received the most flattering attentions from his friends: He did mush—probably more than any other man, by his eloquent efforts—to defeat the ex-parson.. He was received at the depot by a committee of our citizens, at the head of which were Col. Sam. Search and Col. Dan. Wagner. He confidently predicts the election of Gen. Reim by a majority far larger than that of Major Schwartz. Whatever of interest or news I shall be alga to glean I will forward you; and es the scramble, soon to commence in earnest, will be a decidedly rich one your readers may not be indifferent to my capital jottings. ARCMS. rhe Central American Qneetion. [From the London Nene.) Washington politicians declare, in letters to newspapers, North and South, that the fruit is ripe, that there is next to no Government at all now in Nicaragua ;" and that the time has there fore arrived for the forties of the Union to take possession of Central America, or of such portions of it as it may be convenient to absorb. On the other hand letters from the same centre declare i that there s, or may be; perfect harmony between Sir William Gore °lmlay's objects and those of the Washington diplomatists in regard to the Transit route,.as long as the , privileges worded to" the most favored nations' are seamed to the United States, Thio, again, is denied by later telegrams and despatches, which say that no harmony of the kind exists at all. While awaiting a final disclo sure, we may learn a good deal from the incidents which are arising in various quarters. It is not a moment for indifference or indolence. It has long been evident that some practical explanation and settlement roust be arrived at, in regard to the permanent relations of Central America with the rest of the world: upon that settlement de pends the prosperitynot to say the existence—of Nicaragua and Costa Rica; and if British holders of Central Amerigan bonds have reason to desire the stability of Governments there, and the de velopment of their resources,lhe world at large is no less deeply interested in the establishment of a free, °pew seourei and undisputed transit route across he lithmus. It cannot,' be doubted that When Congress meets on the one side of the Atlan tic, and our. Parliament on the othei,inquiries will bn made about the state of Central American diplomacy ;• but '" the fruit" appears to the Amerman eye and touch so exceedin. ly rl .e that • i1v.1".u..= 1 1. 'filatalido " • '_ - The`Waebta " lto»'bebinet ' h3s"stterifatal3l'iadhk id and discountenanced Walker', the: filibustei; till it has .become difficult to say,, at any time, how the adventurer stands al headqUarters. If 'we aro to believe the Hon. &Miter- Brown, who assumes to speak for *Mr. BuohananAhe Govern ment has alwayi been right in countenancing Walker,-and' has always had cause for repent ance at having turned its back• upon him ; so that its oscillations seem, likely to end in .a steady repose upon Walker. However this may, be, Walker appears to have - obtained support enough, from one quarter or another, to be able to resume his operations ; and we are told that Soule has become his comrade. Onr renders have,. of course, not forgotten Mr. Soule, the originator of the Ostend Manifesto; the comrade of Mr Bucha nan in that business; the firebrand, wherever he went; the agitator and duellist at the Court of Madrid; the bully, in the shape of an ambassador, whom his Government were obliged to recall after he had put the reputation of the Republic to no small risk. We should be better able tojudge of Central American prospects if we knew how Mr. Soule now stands with his Government. With Walker he evidently stands high ; and there is an impression abroad that ho is negotiating between the President and the Filibuster. Vessels are re ported to be leaving many or all of the Southern ports, with men, arms, and ammunition, to be land ed in or near Nicaragua, under the name of an im migration expedition ; and Walker had announced, by printed circular, his intention of sailing from New Orleans, on the 10th of this month, in a yes eel prepared to convey parties of settlers who may desire to colonize Nicaragua. On the one band. we hear that the eeheme is so arranged and placed under the Charge of emigration societies at - home, by the wisdom of Mr. Soule, as that the Washing ton Government cannot interfere with it; and on the other, that the English Government hes taken measures to prevent the landing of Walker, and of all who go under his auspices. It does not appear that there is any pre tense of arrangements having been made for the purchase of land whereon to eettle. So far from it, that the American Minister in Nicaragua has demanded six millions of dollars in compen sation for lives lost and property destroyed during Walker's last expedition. Two millions of dollars are demanded of Costa Rica, and other amounts from the other States, on the some ground. The incident seems incredible; bat it is announced on the spot as fact. It is as if a burglar got wounded, and his clothes torn, in being beaten beet in an attack on a country house, and then sued the real dent for the cost of his wound, and the loss of wages and damage to his clothes. If it be true that such a demand has been made by the United States Minister, it cannot be eupposed that the corn plainanta have pun:hazed land on which to nettle. Whether they have or not, the enterprise bee been forestalled. The Governments of the Isth mus disapprove of slavery, and mean to keep their country clear of it, whereas the avowed ob jest of the filibusters is to make the Isthmus slave territory. As a measure of precaution, the free labor emigration societies of the Northern States, which poured streams of immigrants into 'Kansas, long ago made their arrangements for colonizing the Isthmus in the same way, under the sanction of the Governments, if the danger of the in troduction of slavery, under the name of immi gration, should become pressing. It is not pro bable that, at present, any genuine colonize, tion will take place, in the ono way or the other ; but the most improbable of the two oases is surely that of the armed invaders, who insist on the payment of their damage by the power they have invaded, and who bring with them the "peculiar institution" which the local Govern manta refuse to admit within their frontier. The outside world observes that the claim for compen sation should rather come from the other side, considering that Granada was burnt by citizens of the United States, enlisted for the purposes of invasion. The Nicaraguan Government has now another reason for declining to permit any immi gration but such as accords with express treaty. stipulations; that evidences are appearing of the process of American annexation having been mato ally entered upon in the usual way.' The method is very like the Russian ; to excite the rogues of the coveted community to disorder; to aggravate the riot into a revolt; to interfere as mediator or pro tector; to assume the powers of Government; and, finally, to assume the territory itself. At the moment most convenient to the filibusters the robber-bands of Nicaragua are appearing, as if courting collision with the Government; and, if no interference were impending., we should proba bly see a repetition of the Texan story. But the world has learned something by that story, and the Isthmus will not be as easily absorbed. The Nicaraguan Minister at Washington is be lieved to be under orders to proceed to Lon don, if be fails in negotiating a fair treaty, and obtaining securities fOr its observance. In re gard to the perils of the moment, it may be ob served that the presence of Sir William Gore Oueeley in the Isthmus, supported by a sufficient portion of our West India squadron, must bo a guarantee for peace while the affair of the transit route is under discussion. Admiral Kellett, It ap pears, is within call of the Nicaraguan authorities, with a naval foroo adequate to deal with any num ber of filibusters. The Washington Government is perfectly aware of the alliance between Nicara gua. and the European Powers : it declares that it will allow no alliance which can obstruct the na tural right of the United States to overrule neigh boring Territories; but it is not in circumstances to make any effectual resistance to a fair, peace ful, and universally profitable settlement of Cen tral American affairs. Boasts and threats which could be indulged in a few months ago, can hardly bo ventured now, when the Northern States have, without an exception thus far, condemned the policy of the existing Administration, and an nounced its impending overthrow. The peril to the national reputation has beoomo too grave to be trifled with; the scandals and dangers of a filibusterinf policy have become too distasteful to the Olt rens at largo to per mit further impunity to the President's counsel lors, They have seoeived a very emphatic notice WEI. P. PACKER TWO CENTS. NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS Correspondents for "Tae Peres" will please bear in mind the following miss - - - - Every communleation moat be'accompanied by name of the writer.; in order to Insure 41.14g1im to the typography; but one' aide et the Wait "wallet* written upon. We Abell be greatly obliged - to gentlemen in Penn sylvania and otiteilitaties for contributions - siring the earrent news of the day in - their particular localltitte, the :mum of the surrounding country, the liereasu , of population, or any information that will be intimat ing to the general reader. to gilt ;'only two out of twenty-live delegetee In Mr. Buchanan's own State' being of Admintstra tion politics. The - world' need no longer ask the long its again .the , agressions of he United Statesfencing is to go Mi.st g The prospeot now is that after 1819 the troubled phase of republican. policy of which Mr. Euchanan,and ,his. old com rade Soule are the latest' eipression, - will isaprear r to be succeeded' by .one more worthy of the early promise of the Republic. In those '= days the Walkers of society must carry out their ; adventures " on their own hook,"_ as they themselves express it, and met take the . consequences nf their-owes vagaries; without hope from Presidents orpabinets. -In those days neigh boringPoirersivill sleep in'Peace;andithe Isthmus will ftdillits) , ,mattifeat destiny') as alighway for all nations from sea tosea._This is the desire and aim of the Northern aitireet Of "thellnited Stater, who are charged with planning ,to i 4 abolitionise_ the Isthmus." We may add that this:le the in tention of the Central American states '•atid," their European allies—an intention which - oennet:,be baffled by any one nation, remelt less by 6 Shied minority of such a nation. Thebrmineas will grid well, according to present ~ promise; but, there should be no relaxation of vigilande or resolute decision till the Presidential election is over,-and we see what happens after the 4thof Marsh, 1880. . , GENERA..L WE Understand that Mr. James Gordon Bennett loss been indicted by :the Greed Jury of Westchester county for a libel on p the Ron. John B. Raskin-,said libel consisting Of a point-blank charge in the columns of the Herald, that Mr. Rankin' had materially and wilfully altered the .record of the-evidence taken before the Willett's Point Investigating Committee , whereof, Mr. ,IT. was chairman. The charge wail a very One ono, and we thiek-Mr. Raskin - oived , to his own charm." ter and te• his constituerite—Whose good' petals. would also have been compromised by his perpe— tration of an act whioh was in effect forgery—to vindicate himself from the broad accusation of the Herald—and, as he does not desire a pecuniary verdict, he has taken the only conirse open to him. Should the charge be fully retreated, even atihia ,- ',.! late day, it is not probable that the •proseaution would be pressed vindictively. Mr. Baskin ' sires simply the complete vindication his Own , charieter, not the injury even of. one who has in- jared him. • We understand that Mr. Bennett was arrested in the city yesterday and taken to ,White Plains, where he doubtless ; was liberated on bail. , Messrs. James J. Smalley; James D. Little;and Edmund G. Sutherland, who haie made them- - selves busy, during the. late canvass, in assailing Mr. Ifaskin's personal integrity, have likewise re-. calved invitations to step to the captain's office. We are not informed as to the time at'which these • indictments will be tried,bat they will doubtless evoke a deep and lively interest.—.N. Y. Tribune, Saturday. A Boy's TONG= FASTENED To A LAMP POST Estanwe Curs rrikfillY.-0111.'SatUrditi , _ week.' a little fellow,abont eight -years old, a son, of Mr. Gilleau, bookseller while,playing with some other- boys on North ' street, approaolied a lamp post and carelessly applied his tongue to its gray-frosted surface, when, in swinging, to the - boy's own horror and utter astonishreent of his playmates, he was- held fast by his tongue to the poet, suffering very severe pain, and totally unable to help or extricate himself..Of course the boy could not speak, and could only manifestlis feelings " signs with his hands. Various applications of - warm tea, steam, de., were made by some neigh, - bore, who beard the unusual noise made by the other boys, and came to learn what was the mat ter, bat of.no avail; .such was the aotion'of the cold iron that the hold was even getting, tighter ; when ' after about _ton minutes had elapsed, the boy'sfather heard of the affair, 'and hastening to his relief, he took a knife and was.obligell to out the tongue loose, leaving- its skin still fast to the post, and causing the blood to How very profusely'. Immediately on his release, tho poor little fellow became insensible, and was taken home.—London (C. W.) Press. Ix A PEEIMOAMENT.--On Monday *waning last a young gentleman residing in Williamsburg, New York, was walking"down Grand "street igth his two sisters, when they obtlerved a man of re- . speotable appearance' standing near the corner of Eleventh street with a respectably dressed young , woman. After they ,had. passed, -the stranger stepped up to the young gentleman and beokoning him aside,.stated that be add the young woman had come to the city to be married, and wire to have met a friend of theirs who was to have . " stood up " with , them. Their friend not arriv- - ing and they being anxious to have the ceremony performed as speedily impossible, he made bold to ask him if be would " stand up'" with them.. The gentleman, thinking it would be a good joke, pro- ' posed the affair to his sisters, and they agreeing, the whole party . ent before the Rev. A. Guinn, . of thelEpisciipal Church and the lolls*, ooaple were by him duly marrie d:' The bride is a young _ woman at service with a family in New York,mnd the grbom is a sailor -just returned. from: sea. "- The marriedpouple left the clergyman's residence ' wall pleased„and thankful for the services. Of ilia " - groomsrnan and the ,unexpeotetl'brideagaids, 'T:**oiainiuf FEAT attorllna - . offices on the Magnotla Veligiiph , Ottt' 2.4% , ,YWPP=u; ft/one - 10h° °Moe at Mobile ) Alahstear , whichjoilloe - notified that at New`Orleans 6f the fast and; in =a few moments, a cintversation'was carried on be tween the persone In the office hero • And those zit New_Orleans in as rapid a manner as if they were present in the same room Bat the lightning, not content with performing .thie feat, gave evidence that it was powerful enough to work 'a longer dis• tense, and in ft few moments the wires from New York city and •Now. Orleans were attached in this office, and persons in the office in Wall street, in the former city, were soon conversing with those In the St. Charles Hotel, in ' the latter city, through the medium of nearly seventeen hundred miles oe wire ! It is seldom that this feat can be perform( d fur so long a distance; and the weather must have been uniform throughout the seaboard portion of the country.—Washington States. ANOTHER RAILROAD ACCIDENT FIFTY PORKERS KILLED.—A lark() train filled with boge left Lebanon on Monday night for Louisville, Ky. The train being too heavy for the capacity of the engine, it came to a dead halt very often, and did not .reach bluldrough's Hill till Tuesday night last. Here three oars were dropped and left on the track. The conductor was aware that another train left Lebanon on Tuesday everting; but took no measures to notify the engineer on that train of the three oars left on the track. The locomotive ran into the oars, breaking them, kill. ing about fifty hogs, and the remainder escaped in tho woods. - DEATH OF THE OLDEt4T PEEBON Irs ILLINOIS.. —A negro woman, known as 0 Black Cooky," a native of Africa, who was freed from slavery some years since, and has been for some years past in a small log cabin near Dixon, in Illinois, was burned„to death on Friday last. While she was in a spasm her but took fire, and she perished in the flames. She was one hundred and twanty years of age—the oldest person'in the State, and Probably as old a person as can be found in the United States. BODY SNANCIIING.—What is styled an " In teresting Case of Body Snatohing," is related in a New Nork paper. The body of a man named Carey tialleged to have been stolen by the stu dents of the Fourteenth•street College, and used for professional purposes. When a brother of the dead and disfigured man subsequently claimed the corpse for burial, they patched it up with pieoes from other bodies, and in that state de livered it. The affair is to undergo legal investi gation. A PRIZE FIGHT SPOILED.—A challenge was recently sent by a Mr. Hiteshue, of Wakefield Valley, Md., to Mr. Wm. Miller, residing near Westminster, of the same State, for a real Tom Myer, Yankee Sullivan ring-fight, which was ao oepted, and Saturday last was selected as the day for the contest. True to his word, Miller appear ed Hiteshue did not. Miller consequently bad no tight, and was mortified further to find him self arrested, the polioo having promptly snatched him. AN EX-TURATRICAMANAGER IN THE PErLDIT. —Yesterday afternoon the Rev. Edward r Strick land, formerly an miter, preached in the Calvary Baptist Church in New Yorkl Theis) whO have beard this reverend gentleman speak very favora bly of We style and manner in the pulpit. A large audience generally go to hear him when he appears in nay of the city pulpits, much to their gratification and spiritual advantage. A BED or IRON ORE has been .discovered within the enclosure of the Clinton State prison, in New York, and the prisoners have commenced working it. They are familiar with the work, as they have been engaged heretofore in the iron mines in the vicinity of the prison. - The State baa been obliged to pay about $lO,OOO annually to the owners of these mines for the privilege of es eavating. LONGEVITY.—There is now living in Nor folk, Va:, on Queen street, a negro woman, who is in her one hundred and twentieth year. Her name is Sarah Mallory, and she retains all her faculties in. a remarkable degree. Her youngest son is now living, and is between seventy and eighty; his youngest iiithirty-four, who is himself the father of en interesting family. SENTENCED.—The boys Nick Traufcin and Antoine, the apprentices to the St. Louis barber, have been convicted of the murder of Hugh Downey, with a recommendation of mercy. They strangled the poor fellow one night while ho was seated in the chair and undergoing the process of shampooing. CuAnnEs WEEd, of Milledgeville, Illinois, has invented &method for raising water at railway stations by the weight of "the locomotive acting on a yielding portion of the track. A deflection of half an inch in the rails operates meohanism which pumps up the required quantity for supplying the engine. THE San Antonio (Texas) Ledger learns by letters froni Camargo, that Colonel Jean N. Se guin, late of San Antonio, has been commissioned by the Governor of Nuevo Leon to raise a regi ment of troops in Texas, in aid of the liberals in Mexico. JULIA SMITH, a professional thief, was ar— rested in Cincinnati, Ohio, a day or two shoe, and under her hoops were found carefully stowed three towels, two table cloths, one looking glees, three tumblers, one pair of pants, and a quart bottle of Madeira. MR. BANNISTER, the partner of the late Mr. Thurston, the aeronaut, who was carried off by lila balloon, and not since heard from, is said to be making preparations for a grand aortal voyage, to take place next summer. HIMMEL WBLsII AND JOHN COFFEY were drowned in the Susquehanna, in Lycoming county, Pa., opposite Livden, on the evening of the 21st inst. They were drunk at the time, and fell out of a Skiff. THEY are talking of a new Orystal Fa*ell; London,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers