The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, January 03, 1859, Image 1

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    ■ -. ottt^i :s V4v^ Street,
- • ; fe}S' r »-j- - =.*«v.f»v -» 4
V.M»tW toBttto°Ht«« out of the Citj »t Si*»o IUM
r <"*iuWfeßkl.lrFßKS».- v •'-..
H»B KaOMJUUI, 1U0iT0M*.,.,^. .-. ' ,)
WBKIXV PRKSS. <*t '<• > --V v d- ; i
In Innr run -will to aoat to-Batofaltteii : .
*» So.
•* r “"•»•• 5®
To -=•■** *•» ;M J?/ i Hi. oo:
T«otrOopUs> -AHwfrmMfomhw. *> 90
TwontyOopta,or orer, '(to oddrewof .eaok
?ormolabofTwentr-c««-orroTer»wa wlH»«»d *o
extr» copy to the g«tter-tt|ux? Club. -
lET M Age&to for
tcnrmi.tFu|i. '
- >- *
T—riT niml TifnntVj ift v riiiio "mi iji QtUtonia
Btmm/msy f ; & > •■: .. T , *=-? .
Ei OALDWTBfit-ai; CO;. .
i V ii' 1 * bi«ovb x>
to Mil*
KB W .M'aßbVk' b GILDING, ~
’ N 0.822 CHESTNUTSTBeEt,
. GIRARD- HOUSH,
Rwpeetfnilj invito thair customers and, tke public to.
Inspect their orthe Ann
wo«ntl/la\Baropc,ooaapri«li)g ;' 'i .-e;'s ct
BUPE 8108 WA T O HES,
r bioh jewel by,
DIAMONDS AND r PEARLB,
, IIROBDAN, ILORINTINR, ROMAN, AliD
- ' \: neapOwtAn sets,"
BRONZE CLpOKSiiCANBEtABRAS.
V,
I SILVER AND PLATED WABE,
WSDDrNS BTATIONBRYj ftaa
CARD 8 NORAVINa,
OPERA GLABBBS,
pans'a^Vaib.pinb,
ELEGANT NEW STELE PAPIEB.MACUE
i Vi -v <• < i 5
T *. 6AIiD W K LL fc 0 6..
«S*.; u.v, iBffl CHMTNTJT Btreit. v'
Hare received, persteamers, new etrlee
“ J s--\<
• SplendidPanß.HalrPlni; - ' '
Frolt Stand*,’Batar Baikal*. “'*
- Jet Goods tad pTowerYaeoe. ** «
a - r - '-i ,• - <■.
Bela Agents In 'Philadelphia for tbe isle ofOkarle*
..Vrodsham’s IONDONOTrey£EEPES&;‘ nor 8
JS. JABDENAbbo\
• iu*urAoTtf*sKB~xinrxxFo*Tnß op
' SPARE; '
Kb. ffMQkestnat ebovepdrd, (ap iUlrt,)
• ' '■? Ooftgtantljoftfcatt&andAraalato'theTridat-'* 'U'
VBA. SSTSyOOMMUNIONREBYIOK SETS; URNS'
•- FITOHBRBtf-GOBLETB;OUPB,WAIXE&SvBAB»
• KETS; OABtOBSrKNITSB, f BPOONB.PORKfI| :
- * '-<*•**. «’T . XADLRS. *e..
■ GUdfogandplatlngoa all kinds of nattal. M3*lr ;
JBroluto,
ESTATE 'AGENT
; W
door beta* Xhirtoenthetrt «t; atU&dt.to' tbopuMhase
a&d Bale of Real XstaU; BM&ritlM,'£e&lli»
-Bouses, BAdGoDeetiOnotHodae IwdGroi**d Renta/»nd
Interest SatisfactoryreferenoeegWaa^v vt.
• ’V ■■-••t YK'-ifjl'&yv'*'t}l i
' ■}%■. v f .->
■ : MTATB BROKJ«.v s
r 'lfOsir bousd. so Bo|d sod f ,'j • ■
i ' '-; ‘;Colleetf«na proinptlr;wade.r,r-_ > '
>—. %j* -4 MIRTST© W ; M,•=> P A'.
* oq.> ••
, ,v. vMBOM i AND jteOHANai BROKRM,!'
- ■ JHo.’M.B<mth.THIRD Stmt,
WV4* '-•j-’ ~-K - |-;PBIMII»llffllA«: ; - , f . ; r
TMa 'to .tiuJßUn amlßiauia of PUIEddiAU.
-i , .jßodkWtUiing.i :
IAEHBY'S BEAKE’ BOOK ' 4.V c ;
'!>«/ 'AND BTATIbNSRT ISTABtIBHjIRNt,' .
B;?Wr'OOBN*R VOORTR - AND SAOi. ’
u SPKEMIUMAWABOBDv *> 0
By- the J£UNKUNINBTITUT« for Hurobetarlsg
-'. VlRMfl:fatfafldlaetot>p*ns»eirßook«/oßihe flretof
- the Year, canaetect from a good fctoek on band, or hate
- them in'4lEar>erior maimer.'
r< BQOK«BXlfBINCKof; tiftp d*»cilption. jxftcstfcftto
', the flotttaodmoet ruieafo-L
v-f.?jua AZUUSDowtffiimU)
_Oiderte<tabliAed Binderyln'phlladeijphla.' ;>23-to
Stationery.
JP A P BrS .;;.
tItHOOBAPn, >■
’ j ;■ 'nin,
MA?,V
book,
SIZEB, 01 HOI SIZED,
07 ODPBBIOB HUAUIY, MADI 10 OBDIB,
.lor Hi* Kt'JfUabetann’ Prio#*, by
B. O. fc-F.’ H. WABEEN, '
JLll ordara ftddrMMd to ,u, Phil adilvhiA P. O.jwlU
r*a«lY« prdttpVstte&ttoft -
BEOTHKR, k CO.,
Ho. 16BOOTH 100BTH STRUT,
BLANKAOOOtFNT-BOOKHANDIAOTOBEBB,
- - : BOOKBBLLIBfI, i BTATIOHBBS,
' AO 00DU I BOOKS,
' Of ertry dwariptionjon, Band, or Ruled end Bound
to -• *' » >
MERCH AStil, MANOf AOIORBBSj
;; " BBOKBRa,, IHaCRAHO* -
AHB BAifcBOAD COMPANIES,
WtamstM la tianllty, infl »t loireit prlca. ,
IORBIBN AND DOMXSTXO STATidNaat, '
00>lk*BokAj..BliAHK8„*6', ato
LITHO6BATHT,
BDROtOAtIT? Ic BATIBIAOTIOR QUABAMTIM.
, MOSS, BROTHER, k CO.,
; 'Bpll-am JIOTrHo.HBOOTHIOOBtHBTRSBT;
BLANK ACCOUNT BOOKS.—The aub-
B»ifcot bis-BOV on' ( )iind.»'l»rg»>i«or4ißontof
i Blpsk Amount Booi«, »d»j)«4.to eyery grKjeof. trasl;
•• ana. suek as •
ip >;D*y Book*.' ; „ , .Letter Books, • _
Journals. , Check Books,'
. Ledger Books, ' Bill Books,
. M ; Cash Books.-; ■■ Memorandum Books,
-,> -Vlnroite Books, Notes, Drafts, Ac.
< s ;Blank Book* ofany Mid.' Jrttleof'M&JlDg. or pattern'
■. ot ruling. ma4e4P_Ofder at kudrt huttee; and. warranted
vuniurptMed for neatness of ruling, quality of matenals,
and durability of ' ‘New auduld firms supplied
on favorable terifaa.' LITHOGRAPHIQ ANDLkT rBB.
FB3SSB PBINfINGa Bill Beads, Cards, Circulars. Sh&-
' Wo* Receipts* aid? erery descriptions or Job Printing
fei seated In auperlor style. • *WJUL ftI,CHRISTY,;: .s j
.... Stationer, and. .Printer, '*
-'d3b-raw4.nm 66 B. THIBDr opposite Girard. Baak }
rmtmietT bf sfyltf 4M'ishsea.of
PHIDADBLPHIA KDITtOHS? infinitely superior in
%T»WrfeBpeot- to .the New York Editions; Jfor sale,
and *OO '*
’ -‘ \ Oodntini'Hiuie flUtioriert, ’
; .7 go. it SoathJOTJfiTH Btreet.
-418.1 m 'i i.:
. <JttatiOßeT andPrfnter.No. 100 WALNUT Street, is preJ
- <'gti?od ; at all<tlm*a tolnxnl«hf ;
v«nn*ke to <Wer,Boolu.otATAxy.description, stable
- fowßankSiPfcbtoD&tefcJgrokantotfWdjCthemyof the
f Bestqhtiitj ofJlngllah_oi;jM«aHac' ?
- 5
Engraving wd Littvoftiphlog witVtw&tnW«
despatch. '. '*'''■- I
'% 1A general assortment of, English; French sad Amstf^
1 ■ >jjikBtiUon«ETi- t**-*;* i r
. ■■!. -*£.? cfonoerelog H*/Ho«u»’» Mabibatioortoik* XnaUla
■' ? ‘;;Jtnatltutfl, thejjqmmim. orbuili
bo6*a for banking and m.roftntllft asa U VWe bert ifl th«
-' ! :*<Eibltlon. The; ioleffHon of -tbe m»t«rial trgood. th«
*.SSSmtn»Jili ! teoH uMU<nt, aad tteii SsUh uin.-'
J": ®a.bta*r jEßcnte; /„ //.;
? 'f|lSE I«ii(GB,BT J)ESK:BfiPOT IN \
~ .
p#>.';. =v.
-’ s*• 't%&pnFj!j Hwamltt,) .>. >*> ■- . a •
.' '4 >Tr tSizsit RAdK.
' ? Mr -1 /ft
! ;.;r
Great bargains in dbt- goods,—
> •'./• ■ •;, ; J b. v.'b.' hunter - __ ■
Hm REMOVED from 80 to Mo. 40 Bouth SECOND
Street, where he”la now prepared to fhrniah the Ladies
with a freahand well-sble'dted Stock of ;
r . . ~ DBEBB O-OODB,' #
To whlch he Invites their attention, being determined
to sell at exceedingly LOW MJOBB. '
: ,N. : B—rA, large aascrtwenVof Brwbe, Stella, and
Virenoh- Blanket'Bhatfls. ‘ Also., a variety of SUk and
Oloth Olroolare Constantly oh hand, at the .
‘ tfLOAK-BMPOBIUM,” a
No, 40 Sdhth SSPQND Street.
Goods deduced pkioe to STOCK
TAKING ■(;„ •
■ •. i S . r THORNLEY * 9 H Al U >„ v , =
■ .Would be* leaye ,to announce that the Holidays being
now over they are preparing for Stook-taking, and.will
CLOSE OUT'YERY OHEAP!
THE BALAROE AND )VINTER
. . . . - .» GOODSI.
Cloaks and Raglans,, .. . < .
Bhawla and 811 ks. '. ..." -
--1 ■ Marinoos and Cashmeres, ,
- DeLaines andParraattaa.
- -> SatlmTrevejres aud Yalenoiae,
Chintzes and Gloghams,
' Cloths and Oaseimeree,
• t • Blankets and Shawls, „
» Linensand Muslins, • -
, , Table and Plano Covers,
- * ' • * Table Linens and Towels,
Ladles* and Gentlemen’s Hdkfs*,
. Hosiery and Gloves. Ao. } oco.
With ft large and well assorted general stock of
BAKU? AND STAPLE DRY GOODS,
AU Bought CHEAP for CASH, and now to bq sold
•? AT REDUCED PRICES!
- To close out preparatory to
STOCK-TAKING!
THOBNLK* * OHISM.’S,
. "orthsut Oomor EIGHTH A SPRING GARDEN
“ WJS BELL JOB CASH AND HAVE BUT ONE
PKIOE.” 3>l-«
CLOAKS CLOSING OUT.
• t : PINAL SEDUCTION IN PRIOEB
' AT. THU
P4RISs &ANTILLA ft CLOAK SMPOItIUHr.
- sl2' Cloaks Reduced to $9 00.
.. w. $l4 Cloaks .Reduced ,to $10,.60.
' .$lO Oloaks Redaced to $l2 00.
slB,Cloaks Reduced to $l5 60.
$2O Cloaks Reduoed to $l5 00.
. $2l O'oaks Reduced to $lB 00.
4 . $8» Cloaks Reduced to $22 60.
- $4O Cloaks'Reduced to $BO 00.
$OO Oloaksßedaced tosl6 00.
• $BO Closes Reduced to $6O 00.
' $lOO Cloaks Reduced to $lB 00. ,'
The flubserlbers have still inßtore s'fall .assortment
of all the leading gtyles.-but hkvlog closed their work*
rooms for the season) no NEW CLOAKS will henceforth
be.reoeWed.;. '» ■ ..
<3. W-. ESO.CTOR AGO.,
’ d 29 ‘ TOB OHESTNUT STBHET. . • •
STOCK KEDCCED.
* T’ l Ladles* Bearer Cloths
•:* Bide Black Cloths. - -
' Boys*.Wear—Oasslmeres. . ~
-Saiinette,And Vestings. ‘ >
All at WHOLESALE BATES.
' - r<v®RßB3 GOODS.
Heavy Valencias, 18 V to 46 cents.
‘ '25 sent Delaines at 17 cents.
Merrlmick Prints at 11 cents,
o . -Merlnoes—Color*—Pirießlues and Blacks.
OLOAK BOOM. >
Bearer Oldaks'And'Raglina. Very handsome
Qarnients'at uroehlefesthan'usaal prices for same
duality.' HO: sl3;and sl6Oloaks are UNSURPASSED.
880088 SHAWLS.
Averylsffcekt<fekaHb’drWodlle»Bhawla.’ 1 ’
i - ' * :-*rJB»DUOTION -
Will commence on theIBth,DBOBMBBB.
N. B.—No deviation from price.
1 COOPERS OONARD.
8. S.Corner'NINTH & HARKBT Sts.
TVRIIiLS &SHEETINGS FOB EXPORT.
MJ 'BROWN: .BLEACHED, Ac BLUE DRUM.
. A LIGHT SHEETINGS,
Suitable. for Export, for tale b,
FBOTHINGHAM it' WELLS,
M BtmtK FRONT ST.,, t it LETJTIA BT.
.‘‘i '' ' . '’ ' ooIMt
®oo&«.
;^T^mBTEß^|o CO.,C^IMJtEN»S
- - .V """ ASD r - f
. PATENT ; BHQULDIR 81AM. SHIRT MANUFAC
;MttwQlfgfiali No.TOS OHEyNDTSTBiiI , oppo
dfo the Washington House.; -■ , ? '
'iA* WINCHESTER will «ve ; u heretofore; hi* per
lonaL to the Cutting and.Maniuactiiring
department,.. Orders for hie celebfpted style of Shirts
:Ud Collars filled at -the shortest notioe. -Wholesale
terms.- : - jy24-ly-
>--Ti W. SGOTT,.(lateof the firm of .WiH-
J.OIKIII A gooTT,) GENTLEMEN'S BURNISH
ING STORE t-tai SHIRT MANUPAOTORY, 814
DHlBTNUTBtmt,(nearlroppo,ite the Girard Home,}
Tkll»delplUt.vM ■' ' f .' - '
7/WfS, Would respectfully eall the attention of his
- fanner nitrons end friehdu to his new Store, end Is pre
pared to fill orders' for &HIBTB at short*notice. A
.'perfect fit nfuaitbtied.COUNTBYTRADS supplied
• with iFINISHIRTB end:OOLLABB. . jyl&tf
e- X-Jt l
"-WMr IMTERBST^Great, Reduction in the -price of
COAL, Cheapest end hesVr- The subscriber having
nude contracts for hl* supply olOo&l, la enabled to
offer very superior Family Coat- at the following re
duced. prices t • c.. 7-'
. Broken Egg and Store ..$4 00 per ton
; ..:8 7fi “
Large Mat ............... 8 60- u , “ .
'-r- Small Nut........ ....886 •« «
. to-giv* satisfaction and fall* weight in all
cues at Blok’s Old Central Yard,’ 8, B. cor. MARBBALL
and fPILLOWStreets. •. * ■ d9-8m
f'IRESS WELL' & WILLIAMS, No. 206
v/ WALNUT Street, are prepared-to supply ship*
am sndbonsumere'wlth superior Broad Top Coal from
Ancestor Mines. ' ©e4tf
CTGSRING, FOX, & 00., wholesale and
JT retail dealers in LEHIGH and SCHUYLKILL
COAL. Lehigh yard—THIRD street and GERMAN
TOWN ROAD. ; Bchuylkill yard-RAOI and BROAD
•treete, Philadelphia. Keep constantly on hand Coal
'from the «no«t v approved mines, *md*r. oover, and pm*
toed expressly for Caaailv nsa. • 1 ■ to-jr
PIANO FORTES.'
niifn. Just received, an elegant stook of BATON,
BaCON.A CO., NUNNS A CLARK. HALLET.DA’
VIS 4b 00., and GALE A 00. 8 PIANOS. MELODE
ONB of best quality, at * < .J. I. GOULD’B,
• • ”r-'B.B.ootmt BBTONTHandOHBBTNUT sti.
• mhlP-7 : --
PHILADBLPHIA.
agSgl OHIOKERING & SONS, Mana
n i rrijaetaren' of GRAND, PARLOR-GRAND,
SQUARS, and UPRIGHT-PIANOFORTES.
. This;isthe largest and oldest. manufactory in the
, United States, having been'
YBTABLIBHED. IN 1688,
Slnoe which time we have
MADB V AND SOLD TWENTY THOUSAND TWO
HUNDRED PIANOS.
And have received as testimonials of their SUPERI
ORITY, over til others, U'Gold, 18 Silvtr, and d
Bronx* Mtfali. ■ , .
07* Pianos to Rent, Toned, and Repaired. -
- BRANCH HOUBB In PHILADELPHIA is at 180 T
CHESTNUT,Street.' oc6Fm
JOSEPH GILLOTT'S
InaU thpl* Varieties.
A fresh sopply of this
Por sale to the trade only, at the Manufacturer’* Ware*
Fall supplies of all popular numbers now on hand,
v- - i’ \ i : dlBtnAw4w
P' SALAMANDER SAFES.
A large assortment of
EVANS A WATSON’S
PHILADELPHIA MANUFACTURED
•'VSALAMANDER BAFEB,
~ - * VAULT DOORS,
' ; " For Banks and Stores.
n ow In tu'e. 1
"»*■*'r IRON 'DOORS, BBUTTBBS. &0.,
‘ On as'Koocf terms as any other establishment in the v
- • United States, by >
‘ ' - EVANS A WATSON,
' No. 30 Botrth t
PLBABEOIVBUBAOALL. anlB-tf
ITEATING BUILDINGS WITH WABTE
'JEI.'P STEAM. -
JOSEPH W. ANTHONY. CHURCH STREET, BZLOW
:I* t- .- . BBED,: ...
/‘Cffers his services to put Pipes in bull!logs for
ing. and refers to .the following Letters as to Its utility
iandhls.oanabiUty. ?• -
Where Steam is used it costs nothing after the Pipes
• are laid; and Buildings are Warmed without ritk from
VFirtf. *
1 t. . Baidwiw & o o.*s I*ooo Works, Deo. 2, ’6B,
-■* J.W.Aninosryßtq-r-Dew: Youukbow we are
' pleased with our heating pipes for warming the shop by
exhaust steam, as altered by yon. X will state that
they work charmingly, and we are sitis&ed that yon
them .efficient and useful. ■ , . > ;
Heretofore they were of no we to us, although putup
: at considerable expense, and since, overhauled without
-htfaefltj andttheywere abandoned, as they choked
•csgiae and gars no heat but now there seems to be no
difficulty in that respeofc, our shop is well heated, and
ithd'work appesrs-to be well done, t >■ ■ •
* Yeiyrespectfollyyours.: - • • O/T.PAaBY,
v gup’t of Baldwin’s Locomotive Works,
~ . ~ . . GibbohioK MII/LB, Oot 17j 1858. ’
Mr. Jcbbpb Wi Akthoht.—Dearßir: Yourfavorof
the llth lost, baa been received} and should have re
ceived my attention -earlier, but could not lor Trent or
know how our plpts In the store
room answer.the purpose for which they .were Intended,
il wOuld aay they. work almost to perfection: we can con
trol them Boas to make any degree of'heat desired In a
very short time. A. .Buchanan, tbe man who usqd
th»m, telUu f he can raise the heat to 90 degrees in ten
minutes after letting in steam; and says he does not
kxiqw/to'what helght he could raise the heat as he
,nefer hw had oboaslon to test th»ir full capacity; Be
' thlnksthe heatcOuld be raised high enough for our put
,pese'j#ttfi belt the; quantity of pines It requires watoh-
-
MASON,
4V-.'f - - . . - ■ ;
VOL. 2—NO. 133
" RetaUilira ffluiolw.
ttJtjuleßoiA Jilts; ®ouJ>o.
ghano Santa. ■'
•Jure proof Safes.
•NEW. PEW,
T.HB BLAOK.B.WAN QUILL,
ivo.'sps;
BOLD AND SAPID WRITING
IT DAS KO EQUAL,
SPLENDID PEN
jnst received, on cards and la boxes of one dozen.
HENRY OWEN, Agent,
91 JOHN Street, New Tort.
LETTERS,
§uliiraa ®oobs.
£JRISTIANI & 00..
PERFUMERS AND IMPORTERS,
Being now arranged in their new location.
No. 45 SOUTH FOURTH STRUT,
ore offering a superior assortment of
DRUGGISTS’ ARTICLES
AND
FANCY GOODS.
'Consisting in part of
*• 1 French and English FANCY SOAPS.
. Foreign EXTRACTS and POMADIB.
Y TOtLET BOTTLES, In Glass and China.
PORTEMONNAIEB. PURSES and POCKET-BOOKS.
, , DRESSING OASES and ODOR BOXES.
Hair, Tooth. Nail, and Sharing BRUSHES, Ac., Ac.
‘ To whlchtheycall the attention of Druggists and the
publio, as their prices defy campetitton d!3-dtja7
Confeiiionetjj.
Kris kringle headquarters.—
We have Just received our French Confectionery,
and are manufacturing a superior article of Marsh Mel
low Gum, Drops, Bon Bons,. Cream Dafoe, Ao. Call
and supply yourselves with the* beat Confectionery in
this etty, at * : JEFFRIES A EVANS’,
nolfi-Bm;' No. 718 MARKET St., bet. 7th and Bth.
QTarpctinfls.
BAILY k BROTHER’S
CARPET WAREHOUSE,
No. 820 CHESTNUT STREET.
WE SHALL'OPEN TO-DAY ANOTHER INVOICE
OF
ENGLISH
TAPESTRY BRUSSELS,
“OROSSLEY’S” CELEBRATED MAKE,
ONE DOlibAß A YARD.
Carpet buyers will find onr stock foil and of fresh
styles* and PBlOßfl VERY LOW. aoS-tf
Ij-lflE WAREHOUSING company
OF PHILADELPHIA.
dibeotobs.
PATRICK BRADT, IPLINY FISK.
ALEXANDER HENRY, GEO. L. HARRIBOV,
Ai 7. PLBASONTON, . WILLIAM NKILSON, <
WM. H., STEWART, . |S. B. CRAWFORD,
PATRICK BBADY| President.
S. B. CRAWFORD, Vice President.
WILLIAM DUNN, Treasurer.
WILLIAM NBILSON, ‘ Secretary.
CLIFFORD S. PHILLIPS, Warehouso Keeper.
THE WAREHOUSING OOMPANY OF PHILAD’A
AHB FBKPABIb TO
RECEIVE GOODS ON STORAGE,
Whether In Bend or Duty Free', at Current Rates, and
will, issue receipts or warrants therefor.
, Application may bo made at their
OFFICE, IN LAUBKL STREET,
Lately occupied by the United States Custom House, or
at their premises, better known as the
TOBACCO WAREHOUSE,
DOCK STREET,
jgj NEWLAND .& CO.,
LOOKING-GLASS AND PIOTUBE-FBAMI
MANUFACTURERS,
WHOLES AIR AND RETAIL.
An Extensive Stook of ; :
OIL PAINTINGS, WATER-COLOR DRAWINGS
' } AND ENGRAVINGS,
All at very Low Prices, ... .
’ 004 ARCH ST., ABOVE SIXTH, PHILA.
d7-3m _
j’JANDSORUBS AND CLAMPS.
HANDBORUBS.
No. 1. fi2#o. perdos.
2. 760. «
8. 870. « >- T
' 4. 1000, -
No. 0. $ll3 per dos,
fl. 1 26 <
T. 1 50 «•
8. 176 «
OLAUPS.
fi Row, fL2S per oien,
T-Row, $l.-76 per dosen.
8 Row, $2.26 per dosen.
HENRY O. BOKSTEDT,
Mil ttgmib MFD Rbui niladilibh
(Sans,; ijJktols,
... PHILIP "WILSON fc.GO., ,
4SS CHESTNUT STREET, BELOW FIFTH*
. lIU OEM
MONDAY, ItbVEMBIR 3»,
An usortment of
FINRGONB
OP THEIR OWN MANUPAOTUBI,
THOSE OP THI MOST CELEBRATED MAKERS
IN EUROPE.
The attention of
BPORTBMBN
Ii requested to their Stock, which they can pr
BHALL NOT BK 6URPAB3BD
By any In the United States.
BIFLBB,
PISTOLS,
FLASKS,
SHOT, kt,
GUN VURNITUR9 IN AIL VARIBTY.
aolB-8m
Semina i&artjineo.
HARRIS’® boudoir sewing MA
CHINE Is offered to the pnhUo as the most re
liable low-priced Sewing Machine in nse. Zt will sew
from six to sixty stitches to an Inch, on all hinds' of
goods, from coarsest bagging to the finest cambrics. It
la, without exception, the simplest in its mechanical
'construction erermtde, andean be ran and kept In order
by a child,of twelve yean,or age. TheDUßißiurrof
this machine, and the quality o» its work, are war
ranted to be unsurpassed by any other. Its speed ranges
from three hundred to fifteen hundred stitches per mi
nute.. The thread nsedis taken direotly from the spools,
WITHOUT THB TBOCBLB OF BXWISDISO. In fact, It U a
machine that is wanted by every family in the land, and
the low price of .
THIRTY DOLLARS,
atwhloh they .are sold, brings them within the reach of
almost every one . 8. D; BAKER, Agent,
, d2O dOaj W-eow-Om 28 South EIGHTH Street.
OTomitiisßuin fanees.
JB. VALENTINE h CO.,
e COMMISSION MERCHANTS
70S THB SALS OT
AMERICAN. MANUFACTURES,
No. 61 COMMON STREET,
NEW ORLEANS.
Bpeeial attention given to Collecting and Remitting
Exchange. d23-Bm# -
A UOTION, COMMISSION, AND GENE-
J\. HAL AGENCY BUSINESS—P. WELLINGTON
having permanently located himself at Pensacola, Tie.,
informs the publio In general that he has opened be
.PALAFOX Street, nearly opposite the Merket Hods*,
a general Auction. Commission, and Agency Business,
and would respectfally solicit consignments of all kind*
of goods and merchandise for Auction, or on Commie.
idon. d&-mw&f2mAW3m
Linens, for men’s wear.
American Linen Company's superior style Brown
Linen Coalings, # and X, various shades: Brown and
Bleached Linen i)acke, various styles; Brown Linen
Drills. A choice assortment of the above Goods now
on sample, andfor sale by JOSEPH LEA,
dlfi-tf ■ 125 and ISO CHESTNUT Street.
Boeings iftmir*.
SIX-PENNY SAVING FUND, comer of
WALNUT and FIFTH Streets. Open every DAY
romOto 3 o’clock, and on TUESDAY and (FRIDAY
EVENINGS until 7 o’clock. Large or small sums re
ceived and returned on demand, with. Interest. '
. JOHN TBOMBON, President.
J. flux** Hobokut. pea. , d23im
JJ|)Ot00t(lpl)0, \&t.
GG. CRANE’* PHOTOGRAPH ROOMS,
• • < (Formerly VAN LOAN’S,)
682 ARCH Street. All the various styles and sices of
Pictures, Daguerreotypes, Ambrotynes, Photographs,
and Ivorytypes are taken, and at moderate prises.
d7-Bm*
milliners ©oofcs.
TO THE LADIES—
Opeainjr of DRUBS CAP 3 and HEAD DBEBBEB,
at No. 718 ABOH Street, below Eighth.
The subscriber will open, TUEBBAY, 2 T st instant, a
choice lot of Dress Caps and Head Dresses for the
Season, and will commence this da? selling off his rloh
stock of Winter Bonnets, Frenoh Flowers and Ribbons,
without regard to cost,- to make room for spring mann
factoring. THOMAS MORGAN.
d2l-12t 718 ARCH Street, below Eighth.
JJ|ANILA and jute
ROPE.
ookdb,
MeimfMtnwd Mill for .Me >t the loweat New York
prices, by
WEAVER, FITJLiER & GO,
Ho. 93 N, WATER Street, W 4 83 It. WHARVES,
aolT’Sm ; •
PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY. JANUARY 3, 1859.
Leonard soott & CO.’ 8
Reprint of the
BRITISH BBYIKWS ‘
and
BLAOKWOOB’S magazine,
L SCOTT A CO., New York, continue to
following leading Brltlsb Periodioale, Tit: J .
THE LONDON QUARTERLY (OoneerratlTe): U-:
2. 1 JiM- 1
THE EDINBURGH REVIEW (Whig). ,y ( I,
THE NORTH BRITISH REVIEW (tree Churob).
4. 'll *
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BLACKWOOD'S EDINBURGH MAGAZINE (TO Tj).,
These Periodicals ably represent the three gHjkPOr.
litlcil parties of Great Britain-Whig, Tory, and Radi
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tor. As Organs of the most profound writers onjgM*
once, Literature, Morality and Religion, they
as thoyhave eror stood, unrivalled in the \rorld
tera, being considered indispensable to the scholar ana
the professional man. while to the intelligent reader of
eyery class they furnish a more correot and satisfactory
record of the current literature of the d%y> throughout
the world, than can be possibly ebtalned from any other
source
EARLY COPIES. L
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muoh as they can now be placed io the hands of fiubspl
bars about as soon as the original editions. t 1
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For any one of the four Review5.•....» .53
Por any two of tho four Reviews..... jj
Por any three of the four Reviews ... A 7 *? ?
Por All four of the Reviews ...i 8 f.;
Por Blackwood's Magu5'ne.................. «‘A. •
Por Blackwood and one Review; i..... o
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N. B —The price in Great Britain of the five Periodic
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LEONARD SCOTT fc CO., Publishers, £>
No. 64 GOLD at, New Yo£g>
riIHE PHYSICIAN’S POCKET DAX*
JL BOOK. VISITING LIST, and BOOK OFENGAGIT
MHNTS lor 1869. F
Now ready, in various styles of binding, tho Phyaff
clan’s Pocket Day-Book for 1869, greatly improved a®}
revised, with the co-operation of several eminent tnetfts,
be» of theprofe.sion
The Day-Book contains an Almanao, Tables of Goes
parative Medicinal Doses, Poisons ard their Antidotes.
British and French Medicinal Measures, Atorofp,
Weights and'Combining Proportions, Articles of Dtefc.
Comparative Thermnmotrio Scales, Baths—Simple aqjf
Medicinal, Tables of Doles of aU the principal prep.ari.
tlons of the Pharmacopia, Vlßltlng List and Addressesr
Index, Blanks for Monetary Engagements, sank A©
count, Nurses. Bills and Acoounts asked for, VaoolMgs
tlon and Obstetric Engagements, English, French ainf 1
American Medical Periodicals, Ac. u r-
A Medical Record of Diseases occurring in dally prac
tice, has been prepared Tor the present edition, by D|l
- Hartshorne, with the approval of the State Me»>
leal Society, and can bo famished separately, or bom>3‘:
with the Pocket Day-Book, as desired.
Pocket Day-Book, with lists for 28 patients, muslin, 60<£ ,
Do. 88 do, morocco, wli*
pocket ♦•••*51 •Jr-
Pocket Day-Book,with lists for 60 patients, muslin. 113
Do. 60 do. morocco, wita.;
pocket...,, • ♦»♦ fl.Sttf
With the Medical Record the price will be 86 cent*.;
additional, Sent by mail to any address. ' M
O.J. PRIOR AOO , Publishers and Importers, li;
No. 83South SIXTH Street, above Ohrstnat, Phils. •'
jal-6t
1859 om SS.S ome 186(1
Our oostomen and patroos will be furnished wl*b a iq»j
.perb Counting House Almanac arranged for 1859-0(L
on application at our s:ore. •
MOSS BRQTHBR AGO..
Blank Book Manufacturers and Counting House Blae
tlonera, No. JO 8-uth FOURTH street, corner of MER
CHANT street. jtl 3t 1
A FEW WORDS AROUr AN 4T
TRACTIVE BOOK.
IDOLETTE STANLEY; x
THE BEAUTY OF DISCIPLINE.
Bt M. M. B.‘
1 rol. lCmo. Price 76 cents; or gilt edges, $l,
[From the Detroit Dally.) - t
Idolette is a vivacious, talkative girl of sixteen* somK
thing of a romp, and with an impulsive disposition,;
which is always leading her into trouble.' She Is |u«*
trodaeed upon tho scene in the aot of deliberately dlflV
obeying a* strict paternal injunction, wUlo'a she has
suo‘ceded In evading by a little clover macdrarrlsg.;
The conversitlon with her quiet llttlo friend Jennie, as
the old horse leisurely jogs along upon the forbidden;
excursion, is a perfect iae-Blmlle of girlish talk. The
twinges of conscience sadly interfere with her antici
pated pleasure, and she returns home to meet her
father’s reproving words and oloudy brow. For a time
ibe hardens her heart, and obstinately refuses to con
fess her fault; but she grows very miserable under he*,
mother’o tearful glance and her father’s distant oold-;
ntss. And at last, after severe struggles with thepow-j
erful instingjof self-will, she in softened, humbled. sub*
dued. ' ’ ‘ i
> This long heart struggle marks an epoch in her life*
and hencefotth a change is perceptible, which gradually
moulds her wayward coaracterlnto one of fixed prlncl-;:
pie and thoughtful consideration for others. - BUd is
subjected to soie trials in her resolute adherence to
the right, but she learns to accept them as a whole-'
some discipline, and ripens into womanhood adorned ;
with toe'virtues whieh ronder her a blestog to jrf;
who,come wlthla her sphere. ♦ i,nrr'i ■ r ■Th’''V , iti4i
"tti-ft stream of narrative
Bows. There Is nb' straining alter stirtling effects’, no
resort to undue arts to stimulate the curiosity.
In the charaoterlstfo sketches, which are the life of
the story, living persdnsgt* have evi entiy sat for their
portraits The antiquated fplnster. Betty Trotter)
Dolly Pippin, at whosa house the ladies’ prayer-me«t«
log bad been held for twenty years. Joeioh Fusticks
and Polly Fustioks, dealing out oandyand nlok-naoks
to the jurenlles, are capital portraitures.
"As a* holiday present for young persons, Idolette
Stanley is one of the most attractive bjoka that have
come under our observation
ID** A copy will be sent by mall, post-paid, on re
ceipt of the price. i
published by
WILLIAM S. A ALFRED MARTTBN,
dftO tf No. 006 Chestnut street, Phllads.
Books worth baying, for sale
AT THE PRIOE3 ANNEXED, BY
. . J. BABIN, 37 Sou.h SIXTH Street. .
BARTLETT’S CANADIAN SCENERY. A magniff
cent aeries of Floe Line Engravings. Proof* before
Letters on India paper t richly bound In Turkey Mo
rocco . ~..sso op
Also, the same works, plain plates, with Letter press
descriptions.' 2 roll ,In half Morocco, gilt edges $lO.OO
BARTLETT’S SCENERY OF IRELAND, fine Prrof
Impresiionß of 110 plates on India paper, tuperbly
bound In Turkey M0r0cc0..,.,....,,.,,, S,Q 00
OUNNINGIIAM GALLERY OF ENGRAVINGS 2
rolfl , In half Morocco, gilt edges ~.,,$9 00
GILLBAY’B CARICATURES. The two series, cora r
plete in 2 yols , folio, including the suppressed plates,
with descriptive letter-press; all in half Morocco,
gilt.... $OO 90
Or without the suppressed plates $5O 00
BQWYBR’B HUME’S HISTORY OFENQLAND, with
all the Flat's—a national work which has norer been
surpass’d; in 5 volumes imp folio, half m r r....540 00
OUVIKR’S ANIMAL KINGDOM, with many hun
dred Colored Plates. 8 vols. Bro., htlf morocco,
gilt $25 CO
. MEYER’S COLORED ILLUSTRATIONS OF BRIT
ISH BIRDS AND THEIR EGGS 7 vols. Bvo . half
morocco, g it edges $56 CO
Aleo, a general assortment of all the recent
Books of real merit, in their various styles and at prices
to suit close' buyers.
Catalogues gratis, at
Ys ANTIQUE BOOKSTORE, ;
27 South BIXTH Street.
IIILAY & BICKNELL’S “
BANK NOTE REPORTER,
POWDER,
PHILADELPHIA.
The oldest and ablest on the Continent, and most re
liable In the World. Per annum $1,60} semi-monthly
$1.09. Single oopiea 10 cents, and always ready Sub
scriptlons may be sent. Office No. 113 South THIRD
Street. Bulletin Buildings. no!6-8m
Holiday books of all kinds,
NOW BELLING AT LOW PRICES.
LIND«AY & BLAKIBTON’S, -
dBl 25 South SIXTH Streot, above Chestnut.,
1 WKQ DIARIES OF ALL KINDS AND
XC BIZES, now'Rolling at cost prices at
LINDSAY & BLAKIBTON’S, ,
d3l 25 Bouth SIXTH Street, above Chestnut.,
Ifi£\Q LINDSAY & BLAKISTON?®
MJtJis PHYBIOIANB’ VISITING LIST, DIAIIY,
AND DAK BOOK, for 1860-Now Ready.
PRIOR.
Prepared for 25 Patients weekly. In doth ,600
, Do. “ “ tucks with pockets...7sc
Do. CO “ In cloth 750
Do. “ “ tucks wltk pockets $l.OO
AN INTERLEAVED EDITION
For Oeuntry Physioianß, or others desiring to take
memoranda of cojes, &o , &o.
For 25 Patients weekly, bound in doth.., 7/to
“ •< “ tucks with pockets .$l.OO
60 “ “ in doth 1 00,
“ “ “ tncXs with pookets ...... 1.25
LINDSAY 5c BLAKIBTON, Publishers, >
<lBl ' 25 South SIXTH Street, above Chestnut.
1859. NEW BOOKS. 1859.
Firms opening new Books, ore invited to call and ex
amine Our extensive assortment of BLANK BOOKS, fll
of which are made of the best material iaourofrn
manufactory, and under our own supervision.
Blank Books of any special pattern ruled to order,
and bound la the most substantial mauner. at the
shortest notice. JAB B. SMITH & CO., 1
d3l-9t 610 OHESrNtJT Street, above Sixth,
VERY PURIOUS, SCARCE, RARE,
AND ,OLD BOOKS bought by JOHN CAMPBELL.
Fourth and Chestnut streets, Philadelphia. Highest
pritt paid. Orders attended to in every State or the
union Books imported from Europe nJD-fcm
CHIDREN’S BOOKS in all styles, soiling
at the lowest rates, at ALLEN’S, 811 Spring Garden
street.
JUST STEP IN AT ALLEN’S CHEAP
BOOK-STORE, 811 Spring Garden street, to get
your Holiday Books.
THE STEREOSCOPE, In every variety,
for sale by JAMBS W. QUEEN,
dl4 921 CHESTNUT Street.
The marriage ceremony in the
Stereosoope.for sale by JAMES W. QUEEN,
*l4 984 CHESTNUT Btreet.
CURST PREMIUM AWARDED
**■ S 7 THH
FRANKLIN INSTITUTE, NOVBMDEB, iB5B,
to Tina .
WEST PHILADELPHIA
STAECH-MANUFAOTURING COMPANY
FOX TUKia UHBIVAC.LBD '
PEARL STARCH
AND CORN FARINA.
THOMPSON, OLAHKE, & YOUNG,
~ v - 130 and 132 South FRONT Streot,
»27-tf Agent* for the Oompeny.
SB, ETU. 1
TAE, Pitch, and Oakum constantly on hand
and for eale, in lots to anlt purchae-re, by WKA
VXR, PITLER, & 00., No. S 3 N. WATER Street and
S 3 N.WHABVSS. . , i»
jfte*u, llnMuatifrn*
SJtmoaropsa.
Uissolntiona anir ffiojmttnersljips.
IVOTIOE IS HERKBST GIVEN THAT
J-v the Partnership heretofore existing between
RIOHABO D. WOOD, JOBIAH BACON, LEWIS
W. HAYWARD, BENJAMIN V. MARSH, HART'
A. LEAVITT, EDWARD Y. TOWNSEND, EDWARD
G. PEABODY, .HENRY HENDERSON, and RIOH
ARp WOOD, under the firm of WOOD. BAGON, A
GO.; terminates this day by its own limitation.
Philadelphia, December 81,1868. • j>B-H*
X IMITED' PARTNERSHIP.—The Sub
■Li'scribfra hereby give notice that they have entered
Into a Limited Partnership, agreeably to the provisions
of the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania re
lating to Limited Partnerships.
. That the name or firm upder which said partnership
Is to be conducted is' “ R. WOOD, MARSH, A HAY
WARD.” ,
' That the general nature of the Business intended to
,be transacted is the Dry- Goods Jobbing and Qfeßfching
Business.
That the names of all the general and special part*
tiers interested therein, are BENJAMIN V. MARSH
(general-partner), LBWIfeW. HAYWARD (general
partner); EDWARD Y. TOWNSEND (general partner),'
HENRY HENDERSON (general partner). RICHARD
WOOD (general partner), ALFRED H FOSTER (gene*
rel partner),'RlOHAßD D. WOOD (special partner),,
and JOSIAH BACON (special partner), and ell of them
the said partners, general and special, resido In the
City of Philadelphia
That the aggregate amount of the capital contributed
by the special partners to the Common Stock, is Two
hundred thousand dollars, of wbiob One hundred
thousand dollars, lu cash, has been bo contributed, by
tbo said RICHARD D. WOOD, special partner, ana of
which,-One hundred thousand dollars, In oAah, has
been so contributed, by the said JOSIAH BACON, spo?
dal partner.
- That the period at which the said partnership Is to,
commence, fe the thirty-first day of December, A.D.
18S8, and the period at which It will term'nate, is the
thUty-firot day of December, A.D. 1803.
,•* RICHARDD. WOOD, BpeelalPartner.
'v'V J OBl AHaB ACON, Bpodal ;Partnep> •
' BENJIi. V. MARSH.
L W. FAYWARt).
BDWD. Y. TOWNBIWD.
HENRY HENDERSON.
BIOHARD WOOD.
ALFRED H. FOSTER.
PhiUda., Deo. 81,1858. j*l-e*
TWOTICE OP LIMITED PARTNERSHIP.
i/*.—Whereas we, WILLIAM H. MAGILL, S. BAR
TBY THOMAS rad -OHABhBS D TliOMA a , as the
only general partners, rad. WILLIAM 8., FLEMING
the only apeo.al partner,_all of tho city of Phlladel
phta, haveehterad into a limited jartoerihip under
the provisions of tho Act of. General Awembly of the
Commonwealth at Pennsylvania, entitled- 1 ' An Act ro-
Imre to Limited Partnerships” approved March
A\ D, t alto nndep the provisions of any othor
Ifi.V'bt'Bflld Cdthmonweatth relating tj Limited Part
nerships, -Andthe necessary certificate and affidavit
baring been filed and recorded id the office of the Re
corder of Leeds fotf the county of Philadelphia, There
for*,(incompliance with the.provlaioDs.of said Act, we
of raid limited partnership as fol
.••First. TkenjUnscf the firm under which the arid
limited partnership Ib to he conducted, in that of MA
GILL A THOUAB. - .
•l*Beeo»d. The general nature of the business intended
tote trasracted by «afd limited pattaership, is that ef
the Mercantile pommjwfQn.-buiintM:
' 'Tbfrd. The the General Partners in eaid
SSLWi»^PM^WILLIAM H. MAGILL, S,
BARVfff fHQUAa, find CHARLEBD. THOH4B, who
rtklfoto thedty of Philadelphia; T
contributed by the
R. FLEMING, to the cpm
nwm BtocKof B«Id limited partnership, is the stm of
Thousand Dollars in cash- •»
Tho which said limited partnership
Wto 06 mm an eels the first day of January, A. L. 1859,
rad the ?9Tiod rawhieh It will terminate'is the first day
tff Jalrawj AL4BBi. ... '
, ■ WILLIAMn.MAGILL, ) .
'.. r ; B.jpRYiY THOM <9, [ General Partners.
1 CHARLBs L. THOMAB, \
• ' / FLEMING, Special Partner. .
. January Ist, 1859. 1
XTAVINGf TAKEN THE STORE NO. 120
■o&OHiBTNDT BfREBT, formerly, occupied by
Risen. D. B. Uinman A 00., and succeeded to their
*husfneM, ve respectfnUy solicit a continuance of the
fqtroßq'ge so liberally bestowed up'on oar predeces
»*•.* ftUGILL A THOMAS.
[.We cheerfully comqtend the firm of MAGILL &
7HOHAB to the favorable attention ef oar friends aid
former correspondents.- D.B. HINMAN A Ooi
„ Philadelphia, January 1,1859. . jal-ly.
DISSOLUTION—THE OOPARTNER
'4r-f SBlP,heretofore existing between BENJAMIN
O. nOnHQH ntd JOSEPH G. KITTENHQbSS, urid.r
SlmofllENJ AMJN C KORNOK& 00.“ is tils do,
dissolved by mutual consent
, Will be settled by cither of the partners
at the old stand, No 281 ARCH street, between Seeotid
And Third' streets, and* the name of the late firm used
only In liquidation.
~ , fitgned BENJ C HOBNOB',
‘ JOB. G. RITTBNHOU3B.’
v LeoemherSlylSSS. JabOt* ■
*f OS. Q. RITTENHOUSE, of the late
M o B, 0. HOKNOB A 00 , will continue the Wheid-*
sals Tarnish in all Its braQohes, as
‘ heretofore, at the old stand.
Thankful for put favors, he solicits the enstom of tho
jfonner ptlrona of B 0 HOBNOB A. CO., and hopes by
•Wttnltentibn to business to continue to give entire
MtttfeCtloa. .
sCJStpre-rNo. 381 f BCH st. bat 'Bec**nd and Third sts.
i.. Factory— At Twenty-third ward.
feISSOLPTiiOft .—Tho rartnerililn, .here. 1
«the* firm of M&ttinger, White. A 00., U this day dis
solved by mutual consent. Tbr business of the late
firm yill he settled by Maurice 11. Matslnger. who is
authorized to Use their name for that porpuno
MAT/mOS H. MaTBINGBB.
JAMAS W. WHITE,
„ , / OHARLBB A. MATSINQ-88. - -
■ Philadelphia, Jan. 1, 1859. >
| COPARTNERSHIP. Tbo undersigned
' have this day formed a copartnership, under tho
aatto and style of Matsloger Brother', for the conduct
ing the business of’ Black and White Smithing, Manu
facture of Fire-Proof Poors, Bhutte'fl, &c., ftc., at the
eld established stand, Mo. 1228 BAGS Street, below
Thirteenth. and respeotfaliy solicit a continuation of
the patronage heretofore bo liberally extended to the
Hte firm, MATJRIUE R. MATSrhGER.
_ . CHARLES A. MAMINGER.
Philadelphia, Jan. 1, 1359. jal-2t#
fpHE PARTNERSHIP HERETOFORE
' * - existing between tho subscribers, under the Arm
cf Truitt Brother & Go., is this day dissolved by mutual
consent. John F. Bennett withdrawing from the firm.
T&e-business will be retried by either o' the part*
an. OIIARLEB B TRUITT,
ROUT. W. D. TRUITT.
BASIL L
F BKNNKTT.
Philadelphia, December 81,1868. jal-12t
The undersigned will con-
TINUJS the General Hardware Business at No.
618 MARKKT street, and No. 629 COMMERCE street,
mder the firm of Truitt Brother ft. Co.
OBARLES B. THUITT'
ROUP. W.D TRUITT,
SAML. h. ORKUTZUORG.
?hilade]phia. January 1,1869. jal-12t
Dissolution.— The Arm of guillou,
ANDERSON, & CO , being dissolved by the
detth of Mr. Charles F Anderson, the bnsiness of said
flrp will be settled by the surviving partner at No. 3iT
MiRKET street. RLNE GUILLOu.
4"|OPARTNf RSHIP. Tho Subscribers
have this day associated themselves for the I in
tonation and Jobbing of House*furnlsting Dry Goods,
n ;he Store lately occupied by Gultlou. Anderson &
Go, No 827 MARKET street, under the name and
etjb of Guilloa, Emory, A Go.
RENE GUILLOU,
JOHN EMORY,
jd-lgt J. FRANK BROWN.
REMOVAL. —A- NoCALLUM & CO.
i-V have removed from No. 10 BANK street to No.
509DHK8TNUT street opposite the State House
Philadelphia, Dec. 31,1808.
A. McOALLUM
GO. have this day associated with them Hugh Mo'
OalUm. Orlando Grease, and Andrew J. Sloan, and
williontinue the Ca-pet Basico's.et No. 609 OHE3T
NUlstreet. under the firm of MoOALLUM & 00.
Pliladelphlii, January 1,1869, f l-0t»
TjtSSoLuTloif—Tho partnership hero-
JL/tofore existing between the undersigned. under
the 6rm of R. J. Ross A Go ,'is this day dissolved by
mutal consent. ROBERT J KO6S.
PHILIP F. KhLLY.
PMadelphia, November 23, 1858
PF. KELLT ALONE CONTINUES
• the banking and exchange business, uoder the
nainoaud style of Philip F Kelly A Go , at the office
formely occupied by R. J. Roes A Go., No 16 South
THUD Street. jal-Bt
WCTIOE CHARLES H. HOBART !s
CHIB day admitted ftmember of our firm.
JOHN M. MARI 2 A GO.
Jamary 1,1869. jal-Bt*
W 3 HAVE THIS DAT ADMITTED J.
P. Bankeon to an interest in onr business,
obangbg the style of the Brm to Koons, Herstine, A
Go. BOONS A UERSTINB.
Phlidelphta, Jar nary 1,1869. jal-2t*
jlJO'lOE.—The Arm of McFarland, Evans,
11 &Oo was dissolved by tho death of William R.
Evans. The business will be continued by the remain
ing paiuers, under the firm of MCFARLAND, TAT
MAN.fc CO.
Jannry 1,1859. jal-Ot
FHXHI UNDERSIGNED HAVE THIS DAT
•B. ifomed a copartnership, under the Arm of Keyser
A Brstnr, for the transaction of the net ca&h dry goo:s
jobhlngbasiness, at 200 MARKET Street,
DAVID KKYBER.
, ANDREW KEYBBR, Ja.
Philaolphia, January 1,1869. Jil*3t*
O A r IMG FORMED A OOPARTNER-
Afa. Blip, under the Arm of ALEXAN DKR PRIEST
LEV Ajo., the GommUslon. Paper, and Rag bnsiness,
heretofre conducted by Alexander Priestley, will be
continui at 614 COMMERCE Street, by the under
signed. ALEXANDER PRIEBTLEY,
OBAULEB HILLBOBN,
Ai FREBL IRELAND
Philiolphia, Jau. 1,1859. jal-ot# _
COF;RTNERSHIP. —T h o Undersigned.
hat THIS DAY entered into a Copartnership,
uoder tb firm of NIGKERrON, MOSKLY. A MoOOY,
for the tinsaotion of the Boot and Shoo business, at
No 61 KWh THIRD Street, second floor
N. J.NIOREBSON,
W B MOSKLY,
D. 8 MoOOY.
Phlladiphift, Jan, 1, 1359 Jal-Bt*
JWDfiRRIOKSON,
•/ BUCK, EXCHANGE, AND COLLECTION BRO
KER, .
No. 21 SOUTH THIRD STREET.
Bank fctes and Gold and Silver bought and sold, o <l*
lections nde on all accesaiblo points in tho United
States Ime paper negotiated* 1
on depoaita. Jal Bt* •
mHE UNDERSIGNED have this dayas-
X locked themselves together under tbo name and
style of lady A Graven, as Bankers, dealers In Dullipu,
Bpeoie. Ink Notes, and Exchaugo, at No 40 South
THIRD beet. . THOMAS F. BRADY,
IBHI ORAViSN.
Phlladqhla, Jan. 1,1869. j>l-3t*
By iutual consent mr. m. g.
FRtL withdraws from bttr firm Tho Dry Goods
Jobbing lsiness will be continued as heretofore.
JAMES, KENT, SANTRE, A Co.,
Nos. 289 and 241 North Third street.
Phi!ad«ph!a,Dec. 81.1868: jal-flt*
EXT.NSION TABLES, suitable for ships,
stunbo&ts, hotels, and dwellings, for sale cheap,
at miauhtwy, {to. 869 south THIRD Street. UB-Ua
%\t f ms.
MONDAY, JANUARY 3, 1869.
Rambling Thoughts of a Literary Lounger.
KCH3ER OSB,
[For The Press ]
WOMAN’S TRUE MISSION.
In this ago of practical go-a-hoadativeness, I
am afraid we are losing sight of woman's true
mission here on earth. The Christian system first
introduced to tho world a true, noble, find elevated
regard for woman. The sensual form of Venus
typified to the Pagan world its idea of the gentler
sex; hat art ohastened and purifiod by Christianity
pointed to the sweet virgin dwelling amid the moan
tains of Judea as its highest typo of female loveli-.
ness. And who that has ever contrasted the two
types, the one in Florence, and the other in Dres
den, but has folt tho essential difference? .Turning
from the effort of the Grecian soalptor’s skill, tho,
lover of art now finds himself entranced, enraptured
before tho Madonna San Sisto of Raphael, with
her faoo full of deep spiritual meaning, and a love
liness that, in its celestial radlanoe, seems reflect
ed from that of some worshipping seraph round
“ Tho Great White Throne.” Never did I gaze
upon that miracle of art in the gallery of Dres
den, the sor&phio faoo of the Virgin Mother, and
that glorious ohUd nestling in her firms, with the
glow of heaven’s own sunshine on its.brow, and
“ the peace that paeseth all understanding ” look
ing out from its dove-like eyes, Wtl felt ready
to exolfiim with Bernard Barton— '
“ I may hot change the simple faith
la which from childhood I was bred,
Nor could I without scorn or scathe .
The liviflgseok among the dead;
But yet, M*4oona! when I gaze
On charms un'earthly such as thine, '
.Or glances yet more reverent raise
Up to that Infant so divine,
I marvel not that many a shrine
t Hath been, ana still is, reared to thee \
Where mingled feelings do pomblqa
To bow the heqd rad bend the knee.
And is there not something sweetly touching in
this adoration paid to tho Virgin Mother by the
devout Roman Catholic 1. Does it not appeal to
the heart ? and when we dwell upon the perfect
loveliness of the obaraoter of the mother of our
Lord—a loveliness not “of the earth, earthy; V but
nngelio in all its developments and attrlbutes-oan
wo wonder that the devout Christian who loves tho
Lord “who give himself for him,should feel a
holv offection for,.and repder the tribute of honor
to her whom “all generations” were to .oall
blessed! • - -
In tho great and* powerfal movemont, the Cru
sades, that inspired , tho . whole Christian world
with a new life, rousing the nations of Europe
fromthesleep of the dark ages, and with a voice like
the Arohangel’s trumpet, 1 calling up the.lout en
ergies of mankind from grave where they
haa ropqaed for oenturies, who shall say how far
that revereneo for woman, then so beautifully
made manifest, .originated in that religious sen
timent, which invested, the Virgin Mother with
so many types of loveliness an<Tpurity?
We do not remember where we have learned or
read the following beautiful tribute to the Virgin,
but wo oonld not fail to note it hefe —at* least the
sentiment conveyod, if not the language : dhat
while woman first plucked the fruit of the forbid
den tree, whose tasto
“ Bronaht death Into oar world.
With all its woe, rad loss of
it should be remembered it was a woman, too, a
virgin of innocence and beauty, who was the moth
er of Him who brought salvation to the race. L*t
not woman, then, be reproached with this her first
fault, unless wo at the same timo recall the sweet
lace of the Virgin Mother. Plaoe thetwopioturcs
side by sido. Compare Eve, “with wandering
step and slow! 1 quitting Paradise, and looking
back.with str&iuiing eyes to that happy retreat—
and Mary lifting her meek and-glowing face to
he&von, and exclaiming: “ From henceforth gll
geborations shall oall me blessed.”'
„ .Womans true missiop,-ip-this iron age of stern
reality, is fast being lostsightpf. There may be hope
for oar country when tho firesides of our land are
Ihbltfired and guarded by. tho presiding genius of
geptio.and. yefined woman.. Thero is nothing—
there can be nothing but. woe, whenever the io
‘oial firos' are extinguished by the oold and gorgon,
breath of suoh unsoxed anomalies .ns this strange
age-hath-produced. God-savous, if our Lares;
and Penates, our dearest household gods, are to be i
shattered and desecrated .by their profane • doc- ;
-trines—unsexed anomalies 1 who worship the ( fell!
spirit that, like Minerva, hut without her wisdom,:
hits sprung from* the fiddled pate of this new Jupl- j
ter; to whom altars Art erected,- ’fcnd wbrahlp'baid, !
nnder;ihfi woman’s fWoman’s
rights; -fwoothf - irtSyr‘Sfr'katr©
Eraotloe, would tako from her those rights whioh
ave bolonged to her from her first appear&noe in
Eden, and would substitute such privileges as
would nusejf.her, rob her of that adoration from
the stronger sex which is her dae, and make hor 1
an amorphous monster, wrangling at the bar,
mingling in the dusty strife of the arena, walk-'
ing hospitals, commanding armies or men of-war, ‘
cfco.
Not so did Milton understand tho be&utifnl re
lations that should ever exist between the sexes,
when describing the first created, as they walked
in Paradise, he so beautifully says i
“ For In their looks divine
The Image of their glorious Maker shone—
Truth, wudum, sauotitude, severe and pure,
(Severe, but in true wislom placed,)
Whence true authority in men: though both
Not (qual, as their sex not equal seemed.
For contemplation he and valor formed;
For soilness she and sweet attractive grace :
He fur God only; she for God In him.
His fair large front and eye sublime declare
Absolute rale: and hyaoiathine locks
Round from his parted forelock manly hung
Clustering, but not beneath biß shoulders broad.
She, a« a volt down to the slender waist,
Hor ucadorced golden tresses wore
Dishevelled, but in wanton ringlets waved,
As the vino curls her tondrils, which implied
Subjection, hut to be used with gentle sway,
And by hor yielded, by him boat received ”
Hare, then, wo havo the true relation of the
floxes; and all tho preachings ef Lucy Stone, Er
nestine L. Rose, or tho honeyed phrases of the au
thor of tho Fotiphar Papers, cannot ohange iti
The simple reason is that it is the natural rela
tion, the one established by the Creator; and he
or she who fights against it will bo found to fight
against God.
And tbo old divines understood the proper rela
tion betwoon tho sexes. As one of them lias well
said: “ Tho woman was made of a rib out of tbd
side of Adam— not out of his head, to top him ;
not out of his feet, to bo trampled -upon by him ;
but out of his side, to be a support to him ; under
kut arm , to be protected by him , and near his
heart, to be most tenderly beloved or, to use
tho quaintor language of a divine who flourished
in the middto of the sixtoonth century: “ God so
ordered the rnattor botwoon the man and tho
woman that this adhesion and agglutination the
one to tho other should be perpetual, for by taking
a bone from the man, who was somowhat mon
trous by a bono too much, to strengthen the
woman, putting flesh instead thereof to mollify
the man, he made a most sweet complexion and
temper betwixt them, like harmony in mußic, for
thoir amiable cohabitation? It will be noted, too;
that the bono which God took from man was out
of tho midst of him, as Ohrist wrought salvatiod
out of the midst of the earth. Tho spooies of the
bone, my brethren, is also noteworthy. It is exprest
to be a rib—a bono of tho side, not of the head;
for woman should not bo domiiux, a ruler ; nor
was it of any anterior part, bcoause she is not
puslata , preferred befero the man; nor a bone of
tho foot,- as she is not serßa , a slave or a drudge ;
but mark it, my brethren, aborts of the side, to
show cloarly that she is socia, the companion of
tho man, for are they not to walk sido by side in
sweet companionship? And I may add, it toas a
bone from under the arm, to put the man in re
membrance of protection and defence of the wo
man.” To conclude finally, (and this finally
should sink deep into tho heart of every old bach
elor, spring up and bear abundant fruit.)
“ Wherever a man, my brethren, takoth a woman
to wife—and every man, if he is a man, will do
it—lot him remember the maim, the wound that
was made in his own sido in tho garden of Eden,
and endeavor instantly to repair ft with & sound,
healthy, and delectable rib.”
Surely these old divines understood the propor
relations between tho sexes, hotter than our mo
dern reformers: woman as the companion to
man—the helpmeet for him—the gentlo friend to
troad life’s rugged path by his side—finding her
happiness in lovo, in quiet, in home activity* and
In the porformanoe of those nobler duties of hu
manity whioh belong to a true woman, as natu
rally as light belongs to the pearl, purity to the
lily, or perfume to the modest arbutus that hidos
its blushes beneath the soft moss of tho lonely
wood. Snroly, suoh a mission rb this is nobler,
and far more to be desired, than that of any hec
toring legislator of them all.
Wo know that woman’s sphere has enlarged
latoly—materially amplified sfnoe the introduo*
tion of orinolino; but to this we would not inter-
Eese an objection—that kind of-enlargement has
eoomo an institution, and as Punch has well
said: u ThePrew, the Pulpit, and the Stage havo
all been in the habit of cor.aideriug themselves
mighty levers, capablo of being used with terrible
effect on tho masses of society. All threo have
tried their utmost to this plant of foreign
growth—this orinolino out of tho soil, but havo
not so much as budged agsingla root of it.”
Yes, all three havo run full tilt against ex
panded woman—and yet, dear stoical creature,
thoro she sits, and if sho wills it, like Jove, “will
forovor sit,” in the midst of her balloons, laughing
and sneering at these fruitless efforts. I. there
fore, havo not tho boldness to deolaim against her
here. The right to dress as sho plonses is her
right, and as she has more taste than wo rough
oreatures can have, she is* as far as I am concern
ed, free to indulge it. But, dear woman, as you
valuo your domestio peace, os you value ours, as
you regard the fitness of things spread yourselves,
if you please, in all tho zephyr-like gracefulness of
the hooped skirts, if they do orowd us not a little
everywhere; but don’t tako to wearing the panta-
ICoub, and oorae down from the olovated position
you now occupy in ovory sonsiblo man’s estima
tion. Don’t attempt to crowd nature too, and
push rude, unsentimental man from the hard stool
that was made for him to occupy in tho groat
school-house of life.
Sport the Balmoral skirt,' if you please, with
glows as warm and -sunny as that whioh plays
round your tonder, loving hearts, but don’t make
tbo face? of fathers, husbands, and brothers blush
scarlet rft tho fontastio trioks an unsexed woman—,
a Bloomerized harlequin—can play in this high*
noon of the nineteenth oentury; who discards
woman’s true mission by unsexttg herself, and
throwing off that modest -reserve, without whioh
shoooases to be what the God of Nature intended
pheehould.
TWO CENTS. .
Senator Donglas’s Speech.
Mr. Douglas has been feted and serenaded in
New York. On Friday night bo made the follow
ing address: ' ‘ ' '
Fellow-Citizbhs of;New York: I Have not
tho command of language adequate to express to
you my gratitude for'these'repeated evidence of
your kindnesj and confidence.' * Yotrhave literally
overwhelmed me with .kindness'since my arrival,
and 1 can do no less than to make my appearance
?£?„ T Sr the pxpwMldn of my gratitude, al
thtn in* am • Baro , y° u will not expect any
♦n Sr Vv pee - oh ? n th «'PhtUc topics of the day
■«* The 'i m « l ® men oy. of the weather, the
2S«E“ struggles through whloh I have passed,
:;v'r p "t" d r? ? f B P B “ kin gthot has fallen
to my lot, would certainly be sufficient excuse for
my silonoe on this occasion
J'jJJl*™ not tto Psrsonal vanity to suppose
t |S; ?/ I ? onatr '! lona l aro nte uded merefy for
my Individual oomp iment. X firmly bollevo and
rejo.co in tho oonviotion that it is a demonstration
of your attachment to the great priuoiple of salf
government which deolsres tho right of eachßtaU
and each Territory of this nation to form and re
gulate its. institutions in its own way. That great
principle underlies dur'oomplox system of govern
ment, and ail our politicai fostiiutions Teat upon
it. Tho peace, the harmony, and. the perpetuity of
the Eepublio depend upon maintaining that prin
ciple inviolate; as it was vindicated by our-Revo
lutionary fathers. - • .
lam rejoiced to know that this great city, the
metropolis of the now world, is a fair representa
tive of the patriotism and of the lovo df country of
this whole .Union You belong to no section, while
your locality is.within tbo limits of' the Empire
State, yet thfoiolty represents-thc Unioril-abd not
the State of New-York. : Iths~the heart of the Re-
Pj*hl ic is tbe centre of commerce of^naned,
and ;frem^hldh|{h° !?
You have no rffehtdn.be sebiidnal j you have no
nght to the North, portothe South, nor
to the East, to „$e Weot. ' You tfrobbdnd to
tpaiptgip tbatrCnVeSentaUvedharaatertibatis fast
to all sections iof ,tho Republic. t Let-these great
principles, of. State rights and of popular, sove-'
reignty he maintained ; the right of each Stato'td
wgwiete its own affairs? the same fight to haao*
corded to, eaph Territory; then preserve,the Con
stitution inviolate, and this Uniog can existhfor
over ns our fathers .it, '4ividod into ftee and
slave States, so lung us eaoh State chooses to math
tain slavery (i [Oheejß.J
‘ X 0I1 » ° f New York, regulate your domestic insti
tutions to suit yodrselves,’ and permUnolntdife
rence from exercised that right
according to ypur. soyerolgn, pleasure, you-must
award the same right and proteot the’ same'privl- A
lego to every other State to do As it pleases within
ita own limits. [Loud cheers.] ,If these great
principles can bo maintained,this Tinian.can. last
forever, and constantly and steadily expahd and'
increase as our population increases,'uhttl it f aha3l
cover the entire continent. It may be said with
truth tgat we have, sow territory enough. We
had enough whon the Dfeolaroiibttbf tnffipen'de&Cd
was made, when the treaty.of.peace with England’,
, was signed, when .the'Constitution was adopted;
yot eaoh. successive period the increase of
population oreated a necessity for’tho increase of
territory, t[Cheers.] t -.-t \
Thia, is a yftung. Vigorous, and growing .nation..
Wo must obey tho law of the Soripturos by in-'
osoasirg and multiplying,' [Cheers and laughter.]
Inoreage is the law of our -.existence, and ef onr ;
safety. • .Just as fast as our r population increases,
our territory must expand. You cannot‘resist 1
this law of our existence if you try. He is unwise'
who -voluntarily places himself Jn the path, of
Amerioan destiny. Next to. settling these domes
tic questions on a'firm; comervative, ahd eonati-'
tutional basis, wo must sound, wise, li-'
beral,; and firm foreign policy. [Loud oheers.l-
Un this point, X am free to. say to you that I‘have
ever held to the doctrine'since I have been Hi pub-'
lio IMe that the United;States should never,'by
treaty with any European power, pledge.jtselfnot
to do that which opr _ idtertst 'and' destibV'may
compel us in the future to' dor [Cheers: aifacd ory r
[er j oeliove you, old man,” tollpwedLy.laugh-;
0“ that principle I resisted the ratification' of
the Clayton-Bulwertreaty. [Cries of “Good!?’!
J r ®* ,a tod especially that clause which guaranteed,
tho faith of this nation that we never would hrfu-,
rare colonize; atniex; or exercise'dominion 6Ver
aay, 'portion .of,Central America.. ~(Prolonged
ohcew.] . They. asked .mo then what I wanted of
CepttdlAmorlosT I fold them T-dida’i want it
lean ; I’didn’t know’thatthe’time wonld arrlvS
inmy.day that I. ef.er wouldfvitnt it; hut X did
kooy.Ujaf in tho timo of my ohitdrea wo ehonld
bo compelled to have it/whethef Wo wanted it or
not;’and why should - the ’United’ States ;tititt
hands by pledging ita faith, that never, ; in pU fn
.uro time wiiy.it. do on tho Amerioan continent
what."lttrdestiny, and Its safety,' and' tts interest
may reqnireiit td.dd'?! 1 . r . . v'il'-.'-s • J .'
The argument Minister .at
that time was that theClaj ton-Rul wor treaty was
fair and just between hr and RugTaha, -heboW it
wa4 reciprocal 7 ' it;.was I'reciprocalv-becftdse the
at , the -States
(treat Brlta!«wonH »vhr coJonfreVr' bcouwiw
kxaehdmefit oftwb’
°or t neUnltdaStates saould ever occupy' or colo
n>*e or exeroise dominion over any part of Central
Amorioa or Asia. .[Lpud laughter.] “•Oh:” said
he, “ you have no oolohles in Asia! ” “ No,” said
L “ and you have none in Central America.”
(Renewed laughter.] “But,”saidhe, “youoanH
establish any in Asia” u Certainly,” said I,
“ nor do wo intend that you' shall ever plant
one in Central America.” [Cheers and laughter I
The whole point of tho question was° this:
every question relating to Central America, Mex
ico, or to any part of Amorioa, iB an American
question, in which tho European-Powers have no
right to be consulted. [Cheers.] When all Eu
rope was assombled in a war against Russia, a few
•years ago, the United States was not represented
in her councils—her voice was not heard—her ad
vico not asked, for the reason that America was
too far off to have a sufficient interest in the East
ern question. I trust' that when the question of
Caha, or Mexico, or Central Amerioa snail arise,
Europe will he too far off to have sufficient interest
to he consulted.' [Lond oheers ]
These weak and feeble Powers adjoining ns in
Amorioa aro onr natural allies, and yet are n&tu
rally dependent upon us for protection. We have
greater interests in them than any foreign Power. '
We have an interest that they shall have -a firm
and stable Government. Our polioy should look to i
our destiny, and be in harmony with what is to :
ceme in the future. Ido not say that we ought at
ono blow to aoquire a vast amount of new territo
ry ; on the contrary, let us proceed slowly, gradu
ally, Bteadiiy, Americanizing first, and annexing ,
afterwards. [Cheers.] And lot bur foreign poli
oy be consistent with our fature duties. Hence,
noverinako a treaty with Franoe, with- England,
! with any foreign Power, tying our hands in the
j future, m opposition to what our interests and safe
ty may require. [Applause.) x
| For entertaining and firmly maintaining this'
; doctrine, I had thd misfortune to be degraded
j from the Committee on Foreign Relations in 1851,
and was then degraded because my opinions wore
in opposition to tho voice of the Sonate on the
Clayton andßulwor treaty. \ :t That won’t hurt
you.”] I have lived to see tho day whon that
Senate, and this country, and tho Amerioan poo
ple ,l thiuk that I did right thou by following
duty. [Loud applause ] All that a public man,
huAo do is to follow his principles, wherever their
lojJßal consequences may carry him. These
prmoiplos of domestic policy, of State rights; of
popular sovereignty, I shall fully maintain, fight
ing all who fight them, and supporting all who sup
port them. [Cheers j And in regard to foreign
polioy, my views will be governed by the same
principles of publio action.
But, my friends, I havo detained you too long in
tho disonssion of political questions. [“ No, no!”
“ Go on!”] I only appeared upon this balcony to
aoknowlodgo the compliment, ond to return to you
my thanks for the testimonial you have furnished
of an approval o‘‘ thoso groat principles to which
my life is devoted. I prefer that it should be de
voted to principle rather than the personal affec
tion that prompts these marks of your kindness.
Now, my friends, in conclusion, permit me again
to renovr my grateful thanks and to bid you a go.d
night. | Loud and oontinued applause.]
Txie Corsican Brothers.— '<l once,” says
M Trousseau, “ had two brothers for clients, who
were twins, very rich, and both directors de mat
sons de jeux celebres. They were so like each
other that I did not know thorn apart. But. more
than this, they had a remarkable’ pathological si
militude. Thus, one of them whem I saw at Nos
tbermes, suffering from a rheumatic opthalmia,
said to me, “ iny brother at this moment must
have an opthalmia like mine.” And m I dissent
ed to this, ho two days afterwards showed me a
letter from his brother, who wrote: “Ihave my
opthalmia, thou must also have thino.” However
singular this may appear, it is perfectly true; I
have witnessed similar, faots .These twins wore
also both frightfully asthmatio.”—Am. Druggist's
Circular.
A Courageous 'Woman.— Mrs. Holson, who
lives about six miles from Covington, near Banford
Town, Ohio, discovered, about threo o’clock on last
Friday morning, some follows robblog her hen
roost, and patting the ohiekens in a wagon,
whioh they drove off towards town. She at once
donnod her oloihes and bonnet, and set out after
them. The road is in a muddy condition, and the
hour was a dark one, but she pressed oh and kept
suoh good timo that she was enabled to get on tho
Soott-street ferry boat, on which the thieves wero,
and to give them the alarm and havo them arrest
ed. She was nearly exhausted when herobjeot
waa gained.
The Chicago 2Vi6u?i« of December 29th
says that the Pittsburg, Fort Wayno, and Chisago
Railroad yesterday despatched their first train of
through freight from their now station on the
West Side. It oonsistod, in part, of flour, from
Flint A Wheoler, of this oity, consigned to Ridel
& Loeob, of Philadelphia.
The same paper says: Wo notice the reooiptof
goods by Hollister A Wilkins, on Lake street, In
six days from New York, by the Pennsylvania
Central and Pittsburg, Fort Wayne, and Chicago
railroads. Goods are arriving now by this,route
with regularity and despatoh. This is equal to
fivo days from Philadelphia.
Something New.— A few nights ago, Dr.
Cole, of Boston, was called upon by a stranger to
visit a sick person ip a part of the .oity some dis
tanco from his office. Tho dootor went on his mis
sion, when the straflger' again oallod at the doe
tor’s, and was aeked'in by the servant to await bis
return. He was shown- into thto.offioe, whore ho
speedily removed- from a desk securities and.
moneys of (he value of $2,700, with whioh te.
made off. A man named Tuoker had been identi
fied as the party who had visited the doctor’s
house.' None of the proporty was found on hiw.,
Fires in for Ten Years.— For
the ten years ending in 1858, the total ly by fire
in Boston was $3,664,025. The insurance amount
ed to $2,212,242; making a loss over ihe insurance,
of $1,452,683. In the ten years the Deu&rtment
has been called out to alarms of fires, 2,147 times.'
During the year past, ending September 1, there
were 126 fires. From these $390,657 of propetty
w&s destroyed, of whioh the unusually large
amount of $316,207 was insund.
HOIIBK *0 CORKKSPOJTBEHrS.
Oonwpenitenfai for “ The Pun” Wiu ;Ihm beu la
mind tie following mlw:
Sreiy donmmnlMHoa mu! b« Moomjianiod bj Hi
’ T*. ° f tha wrftflr —to Ifisnro eorr«tn#sfl in
l 7pogt aphy, but om tide eftke eheej should be
Written upon. j. *
W.ihaH Pe ijv
T other Stain. for contribution. giving tia
carrent new. of th« day la their' partioalar loulltiv,
the resources of the ehrronndtog wnnfrrVthn InorMie
or popnlatton, or any Infonnatloa tint will he Interest,
log to the general reader. . . -• r
THE CITY.
AHOSMCSNM THIS JV3HIKS.
-“°Dr° vLStihe’o tt,ST! '” T Anora aWyig.
“Lova Oh‘a^’»?S??n a ’ Thiitjj.—
‘‘On? Imerican CouSS ■‘Sphfn"?
MarinerandhisMockeyjj ~~ Pl *illp Qnarl, cr the
RAllosil,‘ OIBOO3.~MLftTiW «»'
•• Egu.atrian, Ojmaa.tl.Xd v ‘”~
JSS?* ° n '* Enterua.-
Aasrstair BffiLßiiros.—Signor Blita. "
Kkoeptioh or . Sehatob Dobqeas.—Hon
J>o»gl« will afrire la PhlUdelphia this-
J f fEI ™ New Tork . ''hen a grand reoeption isto
bitf!r r° hm ’ ’ maer the "porlntendenoe of »-.dora->
*' B appointed for- that purpose '
on Friday evening last-
of B ™ngemente met on Saturday
damea mVo.!/* °’ o,ock ’ at the Et lawrenca Hotel."
William Tin E( ‘ 'oelled to the chair, and Mr.
Wono™ to™ 1 ?*! .Artertte .elee-
Beck'silineTn, 1 1,8!! 8 !. 01 *? w *“, "ranged that
Reengagedt°serenadeMr.Doufilaa, '
h« fired nnd« .n -f lal °t« ° f OM hunJre d gone is to
open tie .rHT"LIn e ? l>n . 0r K ’ Morphy,
display or n... v aenat P r in th e city, and a grand
Smlth’a JolMd. M * ***“ P ' ao<> * after amuot. on
ecoordanMwUhSeirtoHneto! 18 cmimilttee that, In
Mayor JBehry, who eiimtiuiJ? t, BB * had waited npon
ey,teDdh weloome. in ??**?- wtllingneai to
distinction ©f-nartv *ta citizens, without ‘
tbj»trfJMa,:ttdn of some nSm Owndto*'After s
• DestotCtite rißßs'Xyhe how ’ voir W.
whiiJ, 18^6n ,|**4rd*y- mowing last by two fires 'ono'
most deatnictlye tbat has taken place r
'avomJninMdlato corner. He»sueceede(t{i&A-«BTifi£ ti»l
*^^^sSys*SS£SSSP&tSS2SST
B . M ‘ S?* J«*en 3 ost aboee the ankle.
pt??T»f2 a i n of „^ e ,larolred la mnUrr, erkfato
wSli^m^I 0 BUcktrarn ia endearerior ty solre. Mr. -
•irftom »,000.to $6 000, o^a'
Tmnnl^n 10 anlna «*“« of sl,OWtn tb'JMechaDiM*'►
•i?t?SSJ?i ooMpapT *° 4 8500 Jcffewon Company.,
Tke bail«Uc R pM Tmtfc abontMgOOQ. “ w
brotoTOiiS^ShX]! 1 - tWfactthaVlt‘
alMot vS 0 «>»pam'M *er« at the fire In Snn»>
After wihe steamer. Philadeiphla-reaebed the
os'^^ yttothftil student,
m?sl5 TO^r S'cfi’Bsaj had a hearing' before’
aW "3 15 fßibberd, on-Jrld.y : l*at, on the oharga; ot
• ♦i.'op From ike .evidence elicited at
u(nM “t»g the following'' facta: Sonia time 1
i^wifsfcS l *“*&*«*' .who bad been residing r
1 IS»7S^f l^ a l D * °m to this city wife the loten,-
*h«T. Meordfagly
ISS??!??*!* 1 * respectable bokrdlng bndwin • Arch
f,r;ttie >aother,Trho hadwatehed;
fnl /5 0Up - I .®. fre <ia*atlj met, and were Quallr :
commenced t
SS?®* ia ' ** element IfiU
1 S? l ®? : wisAJmoet dlstiactetf at thedls
aJ?*& And «Winptlj>. eQ t«ed ,complalnv, ani Ofileer
B“^'“4“ 4 Constable Qlarite'tcok fee matter In,
name of jtfijot Bntler f repreaented herralf Mj>ebg fe*
?^-®?-a ti^_ elop ®^ ent ’ acd g**« all .fee partfcnlare
fu“P e The yonVg gentlemux • stated
that he had never promised to marry her, bat he sop
poaed ms eettons hid led her to believe.that mch were
i«?-7v® a a Pi*. 8 ' Tfae joiLEg max? is eighteetfiand the
lady about fifteen years of age She seems BCsieseedof
a romantio tarn or mlnd,~as it is said she proposed to
eiope with the efficer who conveyed her to her mofeet.
The student was held in $l,OOO tail to answer at court.
Abrest op Burglars'.—Three young men,
named James Mqtaagblin. alias James Hall, William
Kerne, alias George Walters, amt-Edward Graham,
bad a hearing before Aldermaa Prefiman. on Saturday
evening, on the charge of befog concerned tn the rob
bery of the clothing ttore of Mr. Isato 0. Stokes, in
Aroh street, ou last Thursday night. .-Our readers will
remember that on the above nig! t the c fiioers succeed
e“ thief in an adjoining yard, who had
ahontssGo worth of velvets, cloths, &e.,in his peases
sion The evidence before the alderman, on Faturday
evening, elicited the following:'That the store of Mr.
Ptokeß was entered from the rear on the night referred
to, the aoor having been forced open hy means of a
jimmy, aod that clothier’s goods of all kinds, amount
ingin value to about $3 000, were peeked up for the
purpose of being feloniously carried away- Informa
tion of the burglary was lodged at the Central Police
Station, acd the matter was placed in the hands of spe
cial officers Geo H. Bmith. Mirkle, Wood. Bartholo
mew, and. Schlemtn for investigation, who finally suc
ceeded in -escertaibirg the whereabouts of fee above
named partie*, and arreatsd them on suspicion.
MoLapgblln was taken Into custody at the corner of
Eighteenth and Market streets, Kerns and Graham
.were arrested) iu, a chaise at Minth and James streets.
All of the efolen goods were foudd in the rossesaion of
the prisoner/ Alderman Freeman committed the ao
cased in default of $1,600 bail each to answer at th's
next term of oonrt.
Philadelphia TypoaRAPHiCAL Societt.—
The anoUal meeliag of this society was held on Satur
day evening, at the Hall of the Fire Association The
following gentlemen were elected' officers for the ensu
ing year :
. Prestfept—Robert O’Neill PhilUw.
Vice-President—Lsmbart W. Holland.
Treaiurer-—John P, Coloord. •
Secretary—rvxiilam H. Jones. Assistant Secretary—
James Bleloch
Steward—'wmiam Mooney.
Librarians—A. J Donaldson, William Licv, BUas
Diffenbach.S Doughty Carter.
Bemfi-ent Fuud Committee—James Leighton. Chas
D-ieham, William 0. Kelly, JohuH. Tscrart, Thomas
W-Swain.
This old-established beneficial society continues Its oa
reer of nrefDlness, in distributing relief to ita members
when in sickness and distress and* to the widows of de
ceased men here. The receipts for 1868 were $2 287.74.
The expenditures $3.191.30, of which $1 771 06 was fer
sickness Four members have died doring the year. The
treasurer haa paid outdaring tbelastflreyearslll,-
66S.4 T —an amount probably not tqualled by any other
beneficial society in thecity. They haw a reserve fund
o: o'er $4 QOQj alro a well-selected library The society
has four burial l’ot4 in Monument Cemetery, which are
enclosed in a neat iron railing aid is now making an
effirfc, by voluntary subscription, to.erect a suitable
mounment in memory of the dead. •
Deceased Firemen.— Jacob C. Hess, the
president of the Hand-ia-Uand Ffc;lne Company, and
delucata to the Board of Fire Directors, died on Thurs
day lost. He had long been connected with the Htnl
ic-Haod. Ilia funeral took pla:e‘vesterday afternoon
asd was a*tsndcd by a 1 rge body of firemen.
James Edgar, Jr., for eighteen yesrs a member of the
Washington Hose Company, was’crashed between two
earn, at Ccal Valley, Illinois, oh the 11th of December.
At time be was fn the discharge of his duty an an
engineer on tbo Rock Island Railroad. He died shortly
arur 'eceivicg the injurr. Be was buried by Black
Hawk Ledge, No. 170,1,0 of O. F., at Rock Island.
Abner Pnodgrass. a member, of the Hibernia Engine
Company, was burled yesterday afternoon.' Hi fune
ral w&s aitanded by the Hibernia and by the Per sere
recce Beneficial Association.
We learn by the San Francisco Herald that Hr ’ Jamfti
Henderson, formerly a raembbr of the Palrmount En
gine Gomptny, of this city, died at Houston, Shasta
coanty/on the ISth of November.
Aehestofthe “ Rocoirs.”—On Saturday
la«ta patty of young thieves and roughs” called at
B usett’a calocn, at tbe comer of* Walnut and Dupouceau
streets, where they amused themselves by smasbirg
windows, breaking tumb'ers, Ac After doing as they
pleased at this place the party left, and repaired to Pine
alley, where they tried the same experiment. Their
fun was spoiled by the interference of Officers Pidgeon
and Pointer, who arrested some cf them', and escorted
them to the Second district station-house. Tbe names
of the parties arrested are a< follows : James Williams,
T. W. North, alias ‘ { Chucka,” Robert White, altar
“White-headed Bob,” and Charles Horton.
An Appropriate Present.— The attaches
of tho executive department, in connection with OhieF
Buggies, Fire Marshal Blackburn, Messrs. Philips aud
Walker, the Superintendent and Assistant Superinten
dent of the local telegraph, and Lient. Henderson, of
tho Reserve Corps, ou Saturday Jast presented to tbe
ladr or Mayor Henry a handsome photographic portrait
of his Honor, wbich|was encased in abandsomely-caiv-d
oral frame, about three' feet in length, by two in
breadth. The above ws's intended for a New Year's
gift, and a Blight token of the- esteem In which he is
held by the above-named gentlemen.
Hospital Oases.— About one o’clock on
Saturday morning a young man named Martin AUrquet
bad bis ltftha&d badly lacerated by the going off of a
pistol In his.own hands. The accident oocnrred in
Sixth street, near Master. The sufferer was taken to
Pennsylvania 'Hospital, where ose of his fingers w*a
amputated.
Charles Radley was on Saturday admitted into tho
Pennsylvania Hospital with his face badly burned by
the sudden blazing up of the fluid In a lamp no was car
rying in bis hand the night before.
Inos Men’s Cokyehtioh—We learn that
Hon. James Cooper will deliver an address before the
Iron Men’s Association, at their office, in this city, on
Wednesdsy evening next, on the subject of Protection.
It is r.nmcred that tris gentleman will take high ant
crig’oal ground in favor of protection, not only by ta
riff. but by discrimination in favor of American iron
on the public works. H>s remarks, as t’i e old exponent
and representative of the iron Interest, will be road
with interest thoughoot the country.
Fire on Saturday Night.—About half
past 10 o’clock on Saturday evening an alarm of fire was
creat'd by the partial burning of an nnoooupied frame
building on Le&on Hill, In the Fifteenth ward., T* e
fit ite House bell rung for tbe Fourth district, bat the
mistake was, perhaps, fortunate, inasmuch as many
oempanifs was thereby deterred irom going a considera
ble distance to'a fire of a trivial nature. Tbe plare'tha
nrohftbly fir*d by.an Incendiary. - The loss is sot .very
fittioui. ... %
. Heath of a Gißawj College Graduate.—
Wiliism Nelson, a promising graduate of Girard Cbl
lege.died on Fiiiay miming last, after a lingering and
painful Ulnesßl Young Nelson was endeared to a largo
circle of frieuds, and his less will be keenly regretted.
His funeral took place yesterday, from Chestnut street,
belaw’Juniper, and was attended by the graduate*’or
.tA#9oUeg9, \