+g-Viit;741.3if;.15 , 7v ; -9 , ; , ' , . 471ws. ti kJ) `in; vane _ • •)Y. ' 1 7.1%1110 t 5 . :41 , 1 4 1 1. C Swat, • •*)1. Far mem% t rt.*. i t 4 i..... - gEI I. F - 0. T 441.1 .:, .;...,‘,, 'f;;;: •,.t ;IS Ft keitriV:v4tf:' , 7 , 4":4 *Ti . ' k .... .:41Y4 47 ' 9. '1 41-0441:13,-.,. i ft , alY, 4 •-• : - :: : I ;t4l::XtristA ''.ce -- • ..,..i . ,::s;^-lt;4 4.telq : A ithitkiklit kfie ;COL '44 .l 474.AAAttlytel s, •-' 3-,:,-,uti6 - 1944!44,4a i tt • pi • L ay . 4 • .1121 XIX 0 Ja.illafiti*tti,d l.l Vo* ;4oA M:. • 4:1:!'511 - - - - IV IMPORTERS. Oil: MBER 414. y- ,vrl,. t • , I• • . . 'FORER3I4 : AND :4 4 : A, ILVNA,; ='!..-,RK ,ii:o,TiciET;i:: t"''''' '- = z Iry r , - fel ital., Slc. / CI, O ,Q Ps,c BIESIMI ' • '' ' - BARC 3 R ° Pr ~150 4.05 sad.-'407 , 11 AAHETiµBTRTST, Wrf.. qi/ODO, Btoek r0w .. .v . 141A, irid iies4t.ior buy. is,v, [01,85t saAvr.-;Exialli 3 uwBc LINENS; . ; -Winn 460D0) *.9PERIES. NO. 8/ -9 111.&REET' STREET. -' .137 - Our prefient stockish,* hi i the but :limps= markvaii, bilk* IV* qa • • , the. - iaost, ..eanip!eto - leo hare ever ardra-;:" :-, S ` = febtam , Sntwa 0r18 6 9.-z, WA -I`.ll, .13.thiWN 8c 'o'o4' _AO:,iI6,: , 7IISREHT ST!I3IkT, , Atreloiiii#elik:ig du siteit#ln and'amfullyieleeted Ellook of_ FOREI.GIS , DLY - GOODS, Toxhiehthey , irlte the attention of pi:idiom( . = :S,I3TEWART 4 CO., tIA" 1 "9` .8 B 8 1 8 0 7f -f: 'r 4 'll.li, ponstaitqy4ioiTing, , f4IIEW , i-fRIPB4,, 0 3).2, tr x o . TRICE ERRIS. eardo WHITE_ GOODS. • " 1 1 9-10 r 7 .:t; ii-lIMBROjIDERISS, &a., - ToTykait Now 134ffq . c.?- , • li'oif62tritAßNlTl3tseetAlelow rebtfo MistsoN , 'wliopra:A.LE raw 000Ds natio, ‘144:44 IMAISpIT '429' 21211201141iT BT., ti.Jh7 STOsi - FUL X , ENT iontijt, Aitb . I!*ftitr*.it' GOODS 44.6 i ( I -". ; - 0. 21 4 0 ,4" 1d I"9"AN youth...o lif#th Otreetc , - 7..; 1 ,5T4X*,"0.:Pc' ott, Gobfig,),l(o:oltisirrri: • ' 'It): ciii4irsild_ Oki 15,0 f.or r g.Asib liottif,Aseiviill, - taiztvali - - - :f 8yi,5#1,41, 111 9,.•ri,r47 5,7 , 1110E9 11i ; PIiiiAPELP ^'~,~~ ;? 9, Nl4 - iiil:444*Alti v irt i k ••- 4 - 1 14 .4P.,: 1 44:1.4",,t.n ' AA. ow,w;•-• w... r w t ,„ .1.1 4. , 51 ..0 r POO • . 11 -4 - C II RW"' ' 1,0:l• 0 r ..,; ( 4.gi: :in , .E_A_ l o g t t, ittrt ' 7 ";•'-. PA,-7,1. , 2*.t 304-3vVilti< -- -= - ZAVV: - % ~,I ,'• vz i tvA o . ... ti. qfV l -1 ,211,•••'rj:, K . ' -- 14710111'g'A l i l inAciAlifOOli::•:,:r.,, "T .0 „,,,L , .. ._ , . , • ,A. N1....4 ....4 ,„_--4._ . ; 7 1, ,, t-t . :- 4901 r;- ,;:;,•:-,'Vit.ut, 114. - ..4 ,,, - "11,9a4 Mi!'9 -' .u' .a. ':11 . ip? - 5.:A0 - 1 1 .i 4 31'1 . c: . ; XkutftfPAV 6,1 .titi-,*: . A vir : ,E; E 5,.. , ,,,, ......T..,.- th:*: feztel. fa '..:P•fc- - ..• ' ,f: ..!• et e •;?..,4„ -I . AAS . 0 - - 2 ik r iMr k St • iPilS:Pkil i A .:,. ifrEikil4 ' ~,, . a l 1: . . • tiaittlet It : . -7t.. .- ..) • 4 .1.<! iopc- ••••”-.,or.i.isi.:T,Fs. . _ iti. 4 li.";lrlitte.o , A;Ctiii ,,, o tqt 'fk ? ,: e ,.,..1 11 : , .: -•::; 44. 1 . 62, 111 : 14 ..# fillif t e r ILI.; tr.° . NORTH: FOIIIV4I--BlSEilii; ~:,6: . 4 - :;'' rie:rieTMost plot, ste**4oolo.,.: 0 • ralairi t tati•Weetrid iziliii.Ars?, sr: ' . • .401:'4;, - to.i*r.wrArterT , ... ..,.;. Nroiteinting of upsitax of Oyellgtiffr l i: , ;! . r ~..,.. • , f - i:deCiVES foenien, irosnezi, end 'nhings.. sii 'in earpoitiept nr OTIIT 300 1ab..41 1 , ) ' •-....,:',41ki:4 . lfanthigitailti 8 aad DFILV/20 1 41 . • . 's :: i . I.;issis Bow( lituaxe ..on o.9.t_fiiiCX,' '" :4111.10i, CAMBRIC FIAN DK zncnoiss liaiiiiini .T PRONTO. - , ' ' r- ‘ - ' , . • ~ \''l6ll i ol.BB 11:Agrip MILTS, with . duo of 4016111, new deelgni, with an endleu irsihili .01 MO:nil, 'NO which they Jain+, the attention of' , . • • • • - • rtAT-cu l t!ia waniati A.olllol7Til V BN • 51? :...7' .•.I'.; • ; , . BUYERS.. :-; ...: jel•lizi..: 1111004.1T.L.EY,4110MR;k33,11E, ,da:v-` 1 ! : , t: •_,. e - 28' , NORTH , BOTIATH 2 STREET, - • • Node lot optiso , an enlist -STOCK ." ' ',•-•u-LOvES_Eind • - • _ BAND Y GOODS, To widely theyinvito the Wootton - of ant-ohm buff re Oar s!ookji kArtlonlirly, odotod: to, the • • • ScHAFFER :& ROBERTS, 429 MARKET STRUM, IMPOSTERS . .6RD JOBBERS 11013IERY, (MOVIE,' • Bluitieweas:, oomis, - : iltusu.EsiLooKuict..ecsenEri, . It/Eagan erti./ze:Ercqg itpuyieooDs, • t 0191 4, THamsiallos.. WEE' , VAN OULIN , &„Gr,LASS, • ‘, IMPORTERS' , AND ~ AYROLESALD DEALERS ROSZUY, , ' , „'.itANcy (mono, wra iit.:423 MARKET, STREET, fel-1m , IHOPD swain, 711114WILPHIA H , DIIIIRMfg• & 00" IMPORTERS Joßatas or , • ENGLISE AND GERMAN 110 3 /EDYL _ • YARNS, THREADS, SHALL 'WAD D, BTU., NOS. •26 28 NORTE FOURVI' ETEEET.. MIT Vooks ‘ Ontitnioqion. *non. CARRWMP S, OIL OLOTIU, AND MATT/Ntl 3 , WOLFE, 'WILSON, •t CO., • OOMMIJ3BtOE,hiIItOHANTS, No. 132 CHEEEN:UT ISTILBET,," . Agente for . -TAITEITItY, VELVET, - I', • • THREE ELY, •• • • • • woot•rxi,t.mcirmanipa, - - • VENETIAN, HINT, ,'DIIT011; oCiTTON, Ltfit, end 80% • 4.14;1 : ,' B . 9 , • , whlrhte era' reeetrioli dolly trim the Manufacturers, sod are proWszoito'otter the Arai on Eheretterms. Eating the'.4.1 . 2410r eons of the bat and mist de 'Amble goody, we can otter inducements not heretofore t o be )14 to :ThEwlelihts. OE:soots 'iota at blunt feoturerNi Pitoee. Ofarirs carefully attended to. Err ,A,lOO, Agouti for ..Bleok Whlte, Wedding, e leritifitipply of which we hare 000stantly onhend. • , . JiEBBOITANTI3, • I'24I: 7 OTLT - 4E4 : t,B + 0111,,0TH13,.ik0318.1i.1NE3, Jiro. - 232 CIEEBTPTUr STREET Phiydetplita RIDGWAY,'}IBUSSNtII, '& 00., • ••• Immterg'ofl9ooilMNS, AtiftseeiViitk full oirpolles of - SUPERIOWOLO,T.IIS, • D9EBI,r4.NC- • • • . .11?AtiOY.bA0iniinie t /MIL Irmo the THSOOTB r- tollowleig celebrated manutaaturers— „ PRSDERIO T 140.) A. - .IonANNY ABUOE. „ (1110/888 &ifIOHMIDT (121: an 4 31. Clot h s,) ) " ZAMBONA.:II4OTHRBEI. •. - . 00,finetathexs , .-routr a i, , 546,031513T140T Street. ESE .thzok, NI 4s- •• 4, • 44,1 4 • is, " .0 • • 14 "f" .71. V. .4; ETRIVA . tr ° 4°1 00 )1. tsik- 744. ..:11'..**40e43:148,444:04"4:444.,:-....... A:4W • •.•• • -- • - 04 ' 4 .% '4l . P * Or ' : l Ciit` I -'1)1*/- SOUTHERN' TRADE. . : • ' ~... 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V „' cst 1 - 11 :14.4thiati- II, brilift 7 Y-4 '-: Ir ei gU t, ' , Of ifi ll : ' li Vltrf i likflitif ifAILEZTO, IX '': 6 " ' T utethoaraer iind r ou 3 / 4 4" M •Irhie44olloAAßier.-da, ;AA' ..l i t i " - "r"..—.1 I% , iiktitt' , CCV AA' i i i:- .1:74..... '' ' 'i 4 Zl. Tie r ‘ 1 Ok.levAl . f,:•' . i',4. itiAkAspvr i - .i , ..,!... , i,2., • , v...y.„........, ...."..- 4 ;If ijs• .-.e., , -v. I*/) , trr.,-- `..--c- . i.74V* . 4. -1 -% - .1 xs t . 54,5 14.44.:Nr *kr.. riz at;i 4 ,,,,,. ea froiii!i,, , , 2 t 4 !: , ;:;u; , -,--•.::,:- %,,,...,, • .. ENE .,..,.. ) . -• 4 . 13EtTEITXG: ~ .: -* " 1""la. "" lat * 74 1a 1 0 .1 - 113 r° f .. , . tsitiiiiiiiiticxbi4si. :61Aik,./iip64` ; Daolc, anaOusl- iSretkostipalgo; rusie and Vests. ~ 1. I ' -' ' I I I I .":1X0 1 .'42.111%14.414T BTRAIT. febllm . . ... .. .., ~.,.. ~. J • ' 0:21kki.WVir4e7,44,T14;;1-4,414144'414 e . !V7fQLESAIeN OXAMipc 'lio: - 119 ; 1~id'~B~T ' B,TR,~ST, 1114 . 41 m 1 - . ffijoes. jos.x - I.W.lscasawsoistae CO., . • , • WHOLI S4LE -BOOT AND SHOE WABEHOIIIM, No. 814 MARKET STREET. Err ,11 large anit general assortment of lute= and Ott 7-made Staiea constantly on hand. fold•Sm IRRING STYLES, 1859. .T.ABe mer. VIUOLESALE DEALEItti AND . MAtIitrrAOTIIBIBB • or STRAW : BONNETS AND RATS, BOOTS, p,HOEs, &0., &o. . . , BeingllillpSted to offer 'sa "greet, inducements to buyers as Jobbers In any other market, Invite an ex amination or their stock. ' - ~ NORTH FOURTH STREET, Fel.2os Near the hterehante , Betel t ihtladelphla LEVIC H. RASIN, ea CO., BOOT ABBBLIQB WABEHOOBB MA.NITPAOTOILY, N0.'521S MARKET STREET, Pt:if ft d e i pl a s. We hem% now on hind, do Ontir . i o d oe oonk . of Boote and Bho Au, of all deaerlption!. 451 our own and Eiden?, Bi"o r oototos to W hkch . we Incite the attention or Bouttiern and Wet!eirn hornet'. fobl4m now ants nub . erapo. C H. GARDEN' & CO., MAINAOTIIIIEBB AND WHOLIBALi DELLNEB HATS, CAPS, FURS, SILK AND STRAW BONNETS AND STRAW GOODS, dBTIYIOIAb /Lowxos, FBATEUIBB, RUOIISS, ko., Sec. -No. 600 and 602 MARKET STREET, Bonthweet corner of STITH; _ _ _ • • • - EXTENSIVE STOOK REST TERMS, LOWEST P=RICES. HENDZEr.SoN, 4 SOUTHMAYD, & 00., WHOLEBALN HAT AND OAP MANUFACTURERS, DEALERS IN STRAW GOODS, 816 MARKET STREET, PHIGADBLIIIIA. fel•3nt Obot-Sinbingg EDWIN W. PAYNE, Importer end Dealer BOOT, SHOE, And GAITER MATERIALS, Iron Building, N. W. corner ARON and SOURTH SU. LASTINGS, GALLOONS, MEETINGS, 'BENCH RID, PATENT LEATHER. CONGRESS WEB, TOILET SLIPPER UPPERS, febl.3m] SHOE THREADS, LACES, WMa JOHNS . (40' SON. , (tinaceelor to the late Jos. T. Johns,) Importers and Doilets • • IN • MOH STUFFS and TRIMMING/3, LABTINQS, GALLOONE, ILAWITS, &a., tto. AT THD OLD STAND, Nottlitut corner of ROURTU end ARM Otreeta , , _itiV .* ' •:. itrf dit,—"...nr , * =•••..P:q • ' . ' . tfi gi . ;-\ . . ' : : 1 !:. 11:C 1 1: 7 - :: :: A r A.. :. W 41,1 1 ..l• ' ' 'l. . " '', .C . ::` ,' . ... ",,, ,Y,4 tw t.„1,4 1 1-'4 4l t. V 4lit ' ' l' ' '4 Olitff . 'TSr".I.. *0.i1.,7•41„60,1049; ~ : . , .._,-; ' , ; , it: , ';.: t. . --a It ..,.''''. iilPit 7 4 'l' .. •' .!' ' A : •"-z ", iiii64lßALA:, 47 linillAillc:4ll, Pkilig's*llPi'' ''''. iii , : - . : ,%', '•'''' t!' ;rt. re ;. . • • -'.`k`4 ... .4 z-: . ', i;ifiksii*ll'af 7-: 1450 Pi '.-iitti:L.:--. ~;.'-lt , 15. . "ti.„,...:! ' - •••-&,.._04-c-4,-._ 1:-..1.-"',Ail(1).:07„-f.41V3T,........_ ~..,: vs,„ • .., ..7;;;;•••,,,,,,A51i,4,121.11citriLL..._-..... .ititioitz,Nl,)l.7: OIIGICANi I i aI : WAUV I RIP . • .; 7 , • . .' •• S. , ,-: ', •,.....1.,ii,r4q.i...._ ...:.,..;.i z ‘j a :',. %' ,i4l.loet ",iii.,##111,,,,014;rf..!...: :" ? %.Wiiiii*TaliaMll,:o r g . ....... - , ( :. • ...'. ~..iiith-440611111frr: I" 32 1- t? ':l n u.li rrltivid i liartb-agoroPm7,. li'slaz - i i; 4 4.it .IM---1.- ----ithilikiroisksirek ...orybeir.t.9#"-rerk o p:. . ; ..: ~ .. iislAiiallial4brirsAWhPrE .' -• ' • r = .. ,c.• .: • :s. " ' •- • • ',.. ;t ~..h,...ftt-vk1izia...4130X133”:•-_s ...... ',• s • - iiitzle3lo43ll•Laz" 77:2•,;t5wk.,--• ....“,‘ v;i7--,: • .i , , Lti.giike' igialL...: ::494 r VA oil . ' 0 " : 141061".". . .1. li OffittatiallaP.. , 0 11tlit. .... e .=, , 04646 i. : Oen "al . B Ivu ns - • t PER KAP& •:.,;' , . ~!;- ~.. -$44,4114M1C:t X. Id: . .., • ha ORT.T/IdS;PuxelliMrk- • - ` . , - .. . SLEEPER , " 111 1 744:01;'''& tg4t e.rir!dr,V -4,7 Ar 6;4ND,..ifte4 9.0 • • Utial a 4: • ‘r:p. ; , 4. ra ,'• , • - no.c• inW • nzi, different Terieties eo 40 inib"• U • , 7" „Basra w,h°' 406 _, 1 ty•- • fUlialab 010 r JUN t-:4lr time •eo vxmlge floi 144*whfelCiim -- fq. • :••• to be - met wiefe . . . , .• •• cotim - ittkorri. TO AND ILI - PO*3IU. • A ,• • • • '- • •• 44:: r• ••- .l v -A • - 1••• 4 • "UMW rirot/G46;;SXl4)..ll::;,e•lliTtik; qnf■ lotus filiAlitlpg.chrideikleu 1 , 7 7 ii94.*5r Mb: 141*.!k itt4IARDWA SIL , r./ - /E° oe ••. • : Dcr ihEßiq - --. ' 7-77---- D. ..:::-..;..... 4, t .p.: , `': ‘..1 . i: „E, r CP; 7 26 : Sf , / trritrOTTETH STREVj;:. i _..............._,.„.....„....r.. :,..,...i.,....„.... ~...,....:. r 5,.....,........ ~494911a!A15e. wit OLISALII 211•101!6 ill --,:-. 1 .,: -..C! . 'Na - t cii•(.46.i34llvv' ...: :‘,...-;• . ... i..vi „.,.:.:.- : .-;,,-.1..., ..?,4P4. r . •. pfl,k4 ...- 2_ L 4 . m •____N- , .?. 4:- •61-4. - )47.T.....1...Acy ~.'.;l ; 40:i J., 4: iik.' s i%' ' ': I'l' fi 41 ;i!:tRit c jItAll g •;.F•7: • t . . 4 :11'.' 1 1, 4: 1 -?: 99# 13, •'*11.'1X 4 P-i; 1.4:- 7 :.. " '"*J_tei-; . 14 . • - •:., t, ?"...,.;':';:lrnea9 l 4Vir; , ,t)vt i ykalit -, k;;. 4 , fime.iri.noteei - iriai Icris'aiiio93 . pieti - 644;iiiment : 1 9 11, 0 . ...,'' .. l l __• / ,,':,;:? .. ' '' ..::' ' .l '''.:-[ -...., , 1 ; , i :', :e 1 ; j157,11 - riaiG - - - :2'.t.:04 , , : W.t .- .. . . ...1114 s o t pitic,l•Tin.liiii Hitio; sod inSaj • i . ,. o+lt : i f.,...drit&ii . t.ol:?' f i rl ..'.."W":"... 41P4- taSPedthili:jl4lkifid: ' !WU ( ati*liiket . AOUSI iF.Stie,tr44o;ilitter i to V ASS idty esoNditiosic.,'• ; :,. •,. • ;fslz,dts .. ',....i.......:..' ‘Tl i V 7 i= •• .Ar t ,- •••,,, ' .....'.;:::.--.- - ..r. ,s, I • •:•••• ve :J 7,4,1'. ' • V.:0;:•‘ ~ 5.:4.,;‘ , ...,.; ;ip. , ..11.4RAft.. • ks-"e" % , Flt **- At l • ll . 96l l l ;• l l 4: ?. i f il k il t s 9. 4 l 4 W-' AtA;V;U•a"•,:o2,ek4!)V-T. ..::: .14 Ii ,.kIAAED. Air****: ? s.o**Si l t s 3i 4.; :1'::!;1141zo0:464.4, - 44: it . iw,: ii .....i..5 4 .....A...... Ala: Aitrnikirs'itqfp*Wilikiikii,b; tiiihatai pi attiii44l* fativiti Dobai ifellinili.. ' ter , /,'"v."::...m.,xew f w ve ka. ft,.. iti l l. P- 48V4t-trormaix.- : 4 0.c- ,-,.... . - 4 .„,iit. ii•0i:K F , , ,, , ,,,, 'fiolth •-;:4t.`4,::'. rAdies",intb „fe*irre: • ...T A MMiIf-W4'll4lOX; !"-P.;leA4i.';•,••: • - • • lilysg.JCP 0 R2l' • -- - . •• • • ' *-41 Wtritkr • Oonatantly on hand .• full r rwctmsnt , of 'badman sod Cloastautln Watolies PF.ILAD/ILPHIA THE LARGEST DESK REPOT IN r . THE ,171VION. ROGURT 8 HIITTORi 011nocessors to d. T. HaimaltEA, • MANLIPAOTI2=I4I OP A. L. ADAMS' IMPROVED DESK RACE. • No., 269 South THIRD 'Street, 011101, RANK, end SCHOOL IftrRNITURII: 11XTIOSION TABLES, 800/WASS*, ' WARDROBES, &O. ,418-Sm CABINET FURNITURE eiin BILLIARD TAII4IO. MOORE & CAMPION; No. 201 SOUTH SECOND SCUM, In connection with their extensive Cabinet Business, are now manufacturing a superior article of BILLIARD TABLES, and have now 'on hand a fell replay, finielted with MOORE & OADITION43 IMPROVED 011SHIONI3, which, are pram:named by all who have used them to be auperitr to all others. for the quality and finish of these ; rakes the menu. facturers refer to their numerone patrons throughont the Union, who are finalist with the °lntrados of their work. Jal4.6m N EW GUN STORE. PHILIP W-ILsiiiit &x' oo.l 432 c - Ask the attenv titft mefi i.— to th• ...on tierollanto, Gnu/mitts, and Sports very Miran:on frowltog pieces Rifles, .to. I L L " sown ma facture, which aro not ti by nest Imported Guns "In quality and l= ed The Afeatima qusatviss of each Gun menufsetured by them will be folly guarantied. They are also 'regularly re solving, direct from the makers, I. full assoftment of the DEBT CLAN 01 DNGLItiII AND /RENON MINA, Of tie oolebrated stamps of Wadley Richards, Moore dr. Ifarrisi Purdy, Dean A Adams Greener, Pondevauxp.J assy, An., together with a complete stook of the cheaper etyle of English and Belgian (Inns, which will be gold at the lowest market rates. ALL VARIETY OP GUNSMITHS , TRIMMINGS, such as Barrels, /Roane, Rode, Mountings, •Ilasks, Gun Bags Looks, and Lock Furnitute j Eleyle Ospe, Oar: fridges,Wads, so., on thoimost raTereble terms to the trade. jal2-ffelit WHEELER & WILSON's SEWING NAOHINES, ItEDIIOED PRIORS. • NEW STYLI, $6O. AU the farmer patterns 125 leas on eaoh Machine. . A NEW TENSION. NO WINDING OP UPPER THREAD. - A =Hula WH/OR TURNS ANY WIDTH OP HEM OR PELL 04710118 • • 028 CHESTNUT Street, Philadelphia. No. 7 Went STATE Street, Trenton, N. r. No. 1 Nast GAY Street, Wen Cheater, Pa. oe7tote2B • I.IARRIS'a BOUDOIR SEWING MA ..L CHINE is offered to the public as the most re liable low-priced Bowing Machine in use. It will sew from eta to slaty Mitchell to an inch, on all kinds of goods, from coarsest bagging to the finest cambrica. It le, without exception, the simpleet In lie meohanleal conatrnotlon ever matte, and can be run and kept inorder by a child of twelve years of age. The DI/BA/MITT of that machine, and the iltratirr OW ITS Wont, are war• ranted to be unsurpassed by any other. Ito speed ranges from three hundred to fifteen hundred stitches per mi nute. The thread needle taken directly from the epooii, WITHOUT ran TROUBLS or REWINDING. In fact, it le a image that is wanted by everyramtly in the land, and the low pries. of THIRTY DOLLARS, at which they are eold, brings them within the twaohof almost every one. 8. D. BAKDR, Agent, ga.gela ty-eow-era 90 South NIGHTIE Street. iIIitILARDIES.--‘ 4 Pinet Cad!llon," Man% _II/ and other eornses of various Tintanne, In ha paw and quarter mar f Yallayolata /Woken, Bundle., pals and dark, In half pipes, half auks, and one•eighe aaakr ' Imported and for Baia by - MINIM iIOIII,IIA 00., oat '. , and 713 South If attrtt! street. VAGLE HOTEL, No - . 227 N. THIRD Street, above Race, Philadelphia. ' This popular and well.errauged eatabliehroent ((or. merly kept by T. ki Webb) to now furniehed anew and reopened for butane. °Mule's $1 26 per dey. IaItORGE PEIROE, Proprietor. JONA. T. MARSHALL, ' (Late of Jones's Hotel, Chestnut street,) fel-et lluperlnteaden. taiq . , 4 . 6 t4 4 ,4, * • M'3' '‘6"r.`` ZatIEW Cabinet itlate. Vn uttes Otiving .facittiittes. Alf: } FEBRUARY 2. 1859. ,;:tt. : ....... : g . t•-, -:- 4 %. .. ; 1.....t r. .. ...,...:.?„. •' "' :I'._ '•;,. • ' „ : , - FEDXFO4.4***ART lone. • • vr.:,,D9 l l!,foute. DELLitri o irk"th'e cardtal of Centrci county, , must be •is - delightful a place to live in, in goriial weather;•as any in this vast State'. W , Witted it 01217 a week ago, when It was slip' ot6 4 r .liaist-bitten; and • were struck with. ti %if besuty, of, its situation, and . h .." - ' ; !;"„: and hospl• "*"" — " 43 "" - 'habltantis4'As. regards lb ..tallty of its in + • ••• • , .4 , 4 ll—there is good cause for it. They cor . • • • : principally of the descendants' of the 'together, in'. go tierly *wallets, 'trite live Asll.libmpanionship, as their :f linio re n fa s t . he . ri; 3 , ' sti 2duch'pf this old lite* re :am* • t •,,, •ficlitles• make tits social differences ' 4 them. , Moreover, the bar of Centre ~. ;onnty had , loflg ranked 'among "the most able In the sto.-0. .ilellefonto bat sites liiipplied this bench Virithaothe poWertil men. Among , these we',lnay Mine Judge Eirrwrou, of the Supreliselijouit. (father-in-law , of that clear: headed man, Judge 'Hsu, newly elected member at Congress,) and Judge Boa:rams, who sat several times in the Court of Com mon PINS, and was indge, of the Stipretie Court ;when be died. Ms sun, Judge 13jistsisita,S: who now presides in the conetis -- t4pentrer and two other , corm- OS, , Wilg:Adelited . .to the bench without op ' • ; ItiOn.Vphis:,court, was "sitting during our briainese 'was disposed of by judge; tad add' Jury, E in a very satisfactory manner. . , Centre, county was legally erected in Pei): rusry,,lB99, but Bellefonte was commenced by lir. Maier and Mr.lisaitie, who owned the site;siOeral,years earlier.- . When the county .was lOrlited, these gentlemen liberally gate up one half 'of . ;the •purchase money, on Belle foiite hell*: selected 1,1 the :seat of justice, and paid it•rier, to ,trustees,--who , expended One moiety on the •pnblio buildings, the re- "xnainuteitir,go";inti)e,...finid, for the Acadenty, which still is one of the'•boasts of, the, place. The getitleMeit. whe 'kindly _gave us nmetfitertiatlinsahent - Bellefo'nte,adds, 41 It is proper*, mention in this connection, that Joint Df : 4o,'erdeted Login . furnace, and beeame,lir' owner • of-iiellefonte forges, and .was.killi,gliithe, caving in oran ore bank. in 1816. - hii . ve:often heard my father say, -that •Mr. D..*atiene . • l 4 nature's noblemen*eller .llstisi active; honest, a werd, Isuch a , rAM'its the, country needed, and whose lass theolef.e.binmniiity - deplored.7 : The: journey from - Fhiladidpitia to Belle ! _foil*, atykeseitti•has the disadvantage; of. oc eapylairjumeh:titua.- "•i'or example; . (andthis was the 4iii.4iild:liintina of travel,) 'the stage• ,Schich 14 - qtellecen* at 7 in jim morning did motr;risaillieliviateia . , •Until nearly three .in 'the afteneeff4olng,ibisit eight hours-to a journey ,0f:.. - -: thirty-two- - miles:: •Me . -barely 'tut*: - 9. 1 1i-i';, l 44ticci at the, Rallway , station, • (thotab3i:foity l: iiinner;also, bat carrying over - tr.tleepe *appetite iti Harrisbarg, *hire ani,- per all;41 kited the distress of numerous other hangritiOrtabi,) and reached 14,11adelphia by the Beniiilylvatilti Central :'Raitroad - .at 'll in . the, elfin' , : .,iln .- the' 111. resent - days •of ' rapid - 4 , ottaelliin,:goo'*oritcal.itien'hoirrei does Augsit: itelle siiiiv - V However;the evil is : sthOW ) .,;;:bejeg , remedied. • Bellefonte .481 eimeililyi*e:;conrusetion with two railroads : At Tyro *,.,;eq Oatantral. lute,-anti-antiat Lack... haVeigti linenting With the Snub* and Brie. `The; lie *new; in , eetiraii:Cf Construction, WittC .l M '':'fiVUMbie _-grades in the valley. ol**ii -': 4agle,'_- Ittilge,f:#srpne .. '..o l ),,,kiire t tel on , nc,-4e:'.%•;PrePheity,:when': lie '.. say that liellelli:;. -*CA ,. 1 04 - 4*ttiit ' s:f9r.heitrailice and izi , .i - h r- utiirel;.•*bbtind.te . get.,e-heinij in-, a r = :',' 0; ;41 . 4,0,t" 140: heeeMtV a'• stirring :AC , : 51 1- - ,.;, l oblikPitrooco , 49r-4 9 01 2,4 0, ~•-; 1 iW! . 140. 4 -o.l44:l 4 gkfeffPPPiitif4k I ,:.$ -- At rest. :;-. .•.:•.; -.`.;r.1114.:::.?.''_,4 ,-,1 ..5'11i . .,,,, •-‘1 The _comiiinnication; to . Treat, .:wilf7lB:, ' effected during the coming summer, it is • ItCptiy.:AWiii 'bring 'Belliifento, Within • ten hours distance—v 4 are tainndy in Railwayism,. to measure distance by_ time, Miles- by hours. What a calarmlng ride it will be 1 • The Con, tmlllellway.runs through the fertile agricul tural districts which -make Chester and Lan caster' counties so beautiful incl .- valuable. Thence, through Dauphin county, crossing the Susquehanna above Harrisburg, and after ward following the lovely Juniata*, her course as she glides through the counties of Perry, Juniata, 31ifilin, and Huntingdon, stop ping at Tyrone, and on, through the Bald Bogle Talley, into charming Bellefonte. At present, the traveller stops at Lewistown, (whenis-if he is a wise man, he will victual the garrison, at the National, Mr. Rosa's extol. lent hotel,) and, after that, he has literally to cross the Seven Mountains, in a capacious and well-appointed atago., , ,-* one of the olden time," which progrsAses, aided by four horses, at the rate of four 13111hb an hour. ' If he . can spare the 'dine, he will notrepent the journey, slowt s : as he may perform it, for the sue :leaden and variety of scenery between Lewis town and Bellefonto is indeed iieantlitil and : picturesque. Penn's Talley, in particular, is worthy of Sttbittlon and admiration, and we keeenattend our artists who sometimes travel, like the renowned Dr. Syntax, "In Search of the _Picturesque," to seek, and iind, it in Centre county. ' There lis a fine mingling of mountain and valley, wild woodland and highly Chltlvalisd farms, which make a pleasant al ternation. If we found it so fine In mid-winter, with snow on the roads and rime on the leaf less trees, what a charming place must it be to travel _through in other and more genial seasons, when Nature wears her holiday at tire of greenery, and flowers, fruits, or waving corn delight more senses than one. When we visited Bellefonte, we found the Court sitting. A few hours later, we were in the Court-house. itself, not quite so magnifi cent as that at Greensburg, in Westmoreland county, nor yet as extensive as that in Pitta burg, but surpassed in the whole State, by these alone. (It would be creditable to Phila delphia to hate a single court of law nearly as good as that in Bellefonte.) That evening, the spacious hall was crowded with ah MUM gent audience, to hear a hettnre on Irish Wit and humor, deliVered by one of the Phila delphia press, and we are sure that ho can have no other feeling save deep gratitude for his more than kind reception. These lectures have hitherto been delivered oh the invitation of. the Bellefonte Fencibles, a fine company commanded by A. G. CURTIN', Esq., ex-Secre tary Of the Commonwealth and the leading lawyer in the county. The Fencibles haie to boast of a fine band, of stringed and wind thstruments, and have recently fitted up a good Armory, in the centre of the town, in which drill can take place. Attached to this is a well-supplied Newsroom, and another apart ment will be fitted up and used as a Library. It will thus be seen that this fine body of young men have higher purposes than mere parade and show. Wo rtcommend their ex ample for imitation. Bellefonte, a contraction of belle fontaine, was given to the place by a lady. Here again, we gladly avail ourself of some Memoranda kindly given to us by the Hon. JAIME! BURN EUDE, president of the judiciary of the district. He says: "The first houses in Bellefonte were built in 1795, by Colonel Jitmes Dunlop and James Harris, the proprietors of the town. At one of these houses, John G. Lawrie, Usq., who is still living, worked as a journeyman carpenter. Milesburg belonged to Colonel Samuel Miles, of Cheltenharn, Montgomery county, and who was a distinguished • officer In the War of the Revolution. The locality of Milesburg, "situated at the °enflame of the Bald eagle and Spring creeks, naturally marked It out as the:seat of justice, when a now county should be formed. Bat Colonel Dunlop and Mr. Harris were far.siseing men, and, as early as 1795, Spring creek was deplored a public highway from its mouth to the mouth of Logan's crook, which is almost within the borough's limits. " Colonel Dunlop died after having long resided with his son•in-low. General Robert T Stewart died at his daughter's, on Wallace's Run. This lyas after .General Stewart had removed from . . Bellefonte to Pittsburg. Getter/dß:was the first postmaster in the town—a laborious brtsir. es, when there was . a mall from Philadelphia ono. i 1 two weeks He was also a lawyer, and &man 'of infinite jest and humor,' James Harris lived on: til 1828, leaving 'a 'large family of obildren, two . of whom etiil F..crvive, Dr.Jobnilarrie, of Phila. de/ P hi°, an ' 4 4 bin brother William, the eldest Ter son now 'dying who was born within the limits of the t... ' .rough. The widow of James Harris rut fea him many yogi!, and her tall graoefnl pal atal, and ladylike Carriage, is fresh in (he memo ry of all. She it was who named the town 'Belle Ponta," and well was It named, fdr perhaps on this wide Seth; nd more beautiful fountain could be Nand." We wentto ate the Fountain, of course.. large Niftier° opeit Space filled with water, gushing iip from inkiieroifs stiiireCs, is the true belle lonic. Clear:as cryidat at all times, this water is slightly impregnated with lime, which abounds all around it. 'l'hiswater, which co a tainti aninusually large quantity' of fixed air, never treMlf; and must be slightly thermal, for it Is said to rather wank in winter, While it ii cold iii summer. The water flows tram the springs and duns a wheel, by which - is worked a hydrant . that convoys it to a reservoir, just under the Academy, nearly one hundred feet above its natural level, and from this the whole town is supplied, nu morons houses having the Water oven, in their second stories. Tho superfluous Water from the fountains flows into Spring creek, which runs at the foot Of the toti , k, and is. of suffi cient ibrce to work several mills, ihrnaces, forges, rolling mills, .lfct. ;Within the borough, fee, is a great ate mantifactery—not at all like that in full work, in Harrisburg, during tho eeesion of the Legislature. ilellefonte • bas .numerous public buildings with considerable architectural pretensions. We name a few. The Academy, of which Mr. 3. BuanELi to Prindipal—there is also a Pith- Ito SChool, of which Mr. JADES BURRELL is head. The Episcopal Church, with its parso nage, the incumbency now vacant. The Meth odist Church, of which Mr. SNYDER is Minis ter. The Catholic Church. The Presbyteri an Church, in which the Rev. nuke LINN has officiated for half a century, is worth notice— on his account, at any rate. The Armory, already mentioned, has no Palladian beauty, we admit, but is handsomely fitted up. There is a Masonic Lodge, with eighty members, we believe, and there are sev eral of the Sons oflialts, who, however, have no w local habitation " •in Bellefonte. There is, on the main street, a pretty. Elizabethan edifice which we discovered to be the law of fice of Messrs. CURTIN and BLANCHARD. There are also two very good hotels, each three story high-the Conrad House, kept by Mr.l. S. Burrs, and the Pennsylvania Rotel, by Mr; 3. LoWay. • . We must conClude this rapid sketch of beau tiful Bellefonte, by stepping for a moment into our personal, out of our editorial capacity, and warmly acknowledging our gratitude for fiktik hospitality, and the very kindest recap. Zion. tio sincere are our feelings, that we can even forgive, and would fain forget, the terri ble bier, oar. amour propre received, when a judicial friend actually went to the length , of beating us et backgammon—which we patro nize, because. it used.to be a favorite game with our clerical forefathers! We leave Belle. fonte with the certain hope that Raliwiyism is destined to build it up, ere long, into a great place. Where coal, iron, manufactures, and . the cereal prodtkcts so abound, there . eannof be a small town, if it get the advantage of railway connection. • • ' • Mr. Barry Sullivan. [What follows; relating to a very able,' scholarly, and thoughtful artist, was in type for publication on Monday, but it was crowded out by. advertisements.. 'As it is not out of date, we insert it now, wishing to place on record ,a fair opinion of Mr 2._ Stit's act- filn r Ateitii Aftnitterf 411 BIC, nian.'--Dttritti the, stififeii####Atiiiiiii* . #oi4 , -**iliiil4 of fd =4l-6:4: topmalt heights sl. PPP I / 1 4 11. 4VOr> 4 hearty,nealaniatieneA-Tershipiek ir , keittgluffe stage hero has been worshipped Air along"time;,f and the people flocking - eagerli - ,-and-joyensly_to„ the standard of legitimaoy, 'and imbibing with a fresh sue the inspirations of true arid eternalart. What our own great actor, E, L. Davenport, sup. ported by abilities of the highest order, by intel lect, experience, ardor, and most charming taste.= possessions which his sturdiest and staunchest op-, ponents have never been able jo dellY him—what this constant artist has of late years regularly failed to do; and what Edwin Booth, another and one of the brightest of "our owns" upon Whose shoulders the mantle of his father sits with the old wild, enchanting grioe, has namely yet been able, in so fall and perfect a measure, to do, Mr. Barney Sullivan has, within the past week, accomplished. He has drawn profitable crowds to see a Hamlet, a ;14104, a Richard. The judicious and the groundlinga have joined together, and the melpta hate swollen to entirely satisfactory dimensions. The publio verdict is undoirbtedlY, to an almost universal eitent i favorable. Many inveterate play-goots date an era in their theatrical expe rience from these performances. The usual extra vagant phrases of laudation'are freely employed, and the rhapsodies of a great ebiteilient exeroise the judginbnt and the temper. No oonolusion is too lofty for the jump of a suddenly stirred popu lace, and Mr. Berry Sullivan finds himself " the greatest actor living." This is froth, and it is the business of the critic to blow it away,,amiget at the substance. Mr. Sullivan's Iticleard, played on Saturday night to a thronged house, was a fair gauge of his quality and capacity. Any performance of this part has to contend with a cherished and most potent memory—Boors, in which single word le concentrated, for American audiences, the very essence of the otinception, and about which are clustered associations most intimate and fond. Many a poor Repairs has nicely adjusted his hump and put on shimming scowl, and come out upon the stage with a hopeful budding spirit, only to have it l i nipped by this untimely and cruel frost of recollec tion! And booth's Richard is the most sacred of theatrical traditions—awfully intact, and closely and sullenly guarded at every point. Mr. Sullivan, happily, in no particular, by no look of mad-ma jesty, or burst of proud sovereign spirit, or impe rial wave of sword or sceptre, reminded one of the Great. Ills impersonation wits independent, and stook upon legs of its own. It was in mien a very Gloster. Nothing was wanting to complete the monstrous creature. The eye glared with an angry and evil light; and the featuims took trail ohievoue shaboti, and the figure, marked with the agony of its hard air:lotion, strutted ugly and de fiant over the Beene. The very defects of Mr. Sullivan's general style were here serviceable and Meritorious. Who shall say to what extremes of peripatetic vielentie a Ivied, misshapen king Would not gel Whore a reflective and refined Hamlet would measure the ground wish easy steppings, a hell-bent Rfehard would cover it with tumultuous strides. The declamation which, from the nature of a Hantlet ' would be controlled and Irian, weal& as naturally e rough and irregular in aßiekard. And this Mr. Sullivan made it. Bat for the simple but euthhient reason that his melancholy Prince blurted his words in precisely the same helter-skelter, undignified, and unmodulated man ner, this must not be set down as one of the good points of the performance, although such could not fail to bb its &eat upon the mind occupied with the conception. Besides, whore suoh wildness of speech was least demanded—in the first of Glos ter's scenes—it prevailed to a shocking extent. The soliloquy, Now is the winter of our discon tent, affords in its limited compass the widest contrasts of feeling, which, of course, claim appropriate expression. But Mr. Sullivan blen ded the lights and shades with very inartistio indelicacy, and failed to give any just effeot what ever to this grand overture to the drama. The wooing scone with Lady Anne was, from beginning to end, extremely fine. The very spirit of arch deviltry—a reckless cunning, equal to any emergeney, and never for au instant unmindful or regretful of its wicked end—Was thoroughly in fused into it. The tones of the voice ware perfect in the diabolical emphasis of irony, and there was a mock tenderness in every look and utterance, and a counterfeit passion in' very movement which Mephistophiles himself could not contemplate without envious emotions. Unfortunately, the Lady Anne of the mansion (like Lady Annes usually) did vary little to aid this wondrous reali sation. - • A powerful Nene, too, wag that with the Lord Mayor and the creature Buckingham. Here was noting worthy of any man, dead or Living; the simulation of devout abstraction from things temporal, and of humility before high trusts and honors; the meek submission, after much en treaty and expostulation, to the will which he himself had moulded, with patient toll and etrate. TWO .CENTS. ffn.to this fairtaabiori, were,portrayed-with an ex-, aotness which we haVa, tia thot!ffhtr. of , s a a n a g ain exporienoing., , . • . The fourth jot of the tragedy plead off very. tamely, and, remembering the' aeries of 'eleotrify- , ing effects which Thioth aohleiedtheielit;ierinn , eatisfaottirilY. "There wail 'an - utter' leak' of. the eager, desperate . spirit with tli6 'Lhasa* scene of warlike preparation would .inspire .the soldier's soul. But .the fifth act afforded the red: son, and perhaps the apology,-, for ,this „languor. The, energies of ..the -Actor -bad- all beak saved_ against its fearful events. Mr. Bullivanis physioal, prowess was just eepsal.te :its - „rages, and *more t and we 'do pot wonder, at it. 'itWitti Ilion of the tent - soerie degeneratediritiLienfof the most iurld nielo•drainatiO varlet". *What 'another and a very able oritid calls "sprawling attitudes"- were here indulged in to an indefinite and distress.r log extent. :There is a subdued, a whispering and palsied L telror, which. will not be _expressed , in, noise_ and. bodily contortion. Such terror ; would the ghasti", Visions of .that dream breed in. the bloOd.soiled soul of ,Gloster. , The last scene of all was StuiraOterisbd by some of the originalities which oofistifute - no small share of Mr. Boris , Sullivan's stook hi trade. " gie bine: voting, however; were, in this instance, not only endurable, but vastly 'Superior to the' old ways. The last dying Arave of the • erword-token of a hate still - strong and bitter-,and the spiteful apitfipg at, itirAntoadorhile .the -lips . were even nomoloain forever, ltiiagly added the stormy episode, and sent a 'shill thiatigh 'ivory With all:Ido finite and fraipler, we know. of "leo actor of the day -whose delineatiobs are worthier of attention than - those; Of Mr: Barry • Sullivan, and .we may: sineaskaiy4opa that blisoriminata , and unthinking adulation may not prejulice : Abe ; calM raholarirmind against Vat.. , Letter Vi i ITIIIrIdWAL OP FiILiDELPIIII AND BOSTON 11A11. -701:1COVEIA-TOM PAINE'O'BIBTHDAT—TITIII ER DEALERS—AmmPRRPARP OP iWASEUSfOTSN'S BIRTHDAY—DISAPPILABANCB OF THE "Form ,CENT RAM " —STEPHEN MRASORSToMPEL'S "HIAWATHA " —MOZART'S BIRTRDAT—" OUR PE HALE Airsuticeic COUSIN." [Correspondence , of,The Fps's.] „ _ . - NZ Yosx, :Jaw 310859; The' reason of the withdrawal of the mail:,potioh for Philadelphia, hitherto used for the aticommo- - dation of bankers' editors ho.; Who w ished to Make late communications, was because ...there wore two pouches, hung side by-side—ono for Phi ,- ladelpida, and iho,oklier._ for Bosten—and - the olerks `and persons 'entrusted with lotto* were' continually Making 'mistakes—putting PhHadel 7; phis letters into the Boston ponob,nnd VS versa. The poet ,Oilioe Department being blaniedibi the inconveniences canoed iby these changes, flip two bags were withdrawn. However, there-is no diffi culty in sending a letter late, by stepping inside the post Office, and making a request to that effect.' The eootaliete, inildele,-reformere,, fourierites, free-lovers, and °thereof the isanie posue4ropose to get fogether to•idibt, and lierejiigrand blow. out at the Chinese Assembly Itoomi, in -Oelebrer gait' of-.the '640:04 of Torn - Paßne.' Sandry, "shining lights" will hold forth on the oeSsehini. "There'inothing like lenther."- - , A grand' Sidi val ie to betiven,. on thrOilli of .February, at - the Metropolltan„iilotet;:hy -the leather deilere of the city,, who.nre asAmnortanthody,in the meniantild world; there being in. thls , oity ,a. ',' Shoe arui_Leather Bank," and a "Loatherilta nufiusturers' llasili;", and ii:llosieire; "'Shoe, Mid Leather Elehange." :WO presume that there wild be "a feast of reason Ind .flow 'of idle" on the occasion. Senator Wilson; ofliassaelteetta, gents rally known is 'the Jt Natick Cobbler," , will be , present, and twist in.the'speeehifying.i.." Arrangements are, being made , - to celebrate the one htindied_and twenty.seveeth,anniversary.of Wiehingtoree'hirtkdsii brthe. Order - Or United. Aineriesde and' the Wiehingtlin Aiefainti4: The former haire'seouredilie Adiderni Ait iiitudo - ,Sind" 'eulogy' fall) Isidelivereeby' the 'Ren - llfinor Botta. The litter: give their usual iiioiallalrist: the Apollo := ‘; ii • One of the. institution". of _New York. has' tranisbed from -imblio The , lßoureent idan," well known., to those wbo pass daily through Nassau street, - has - MMooduntably,,diaapp,oored„ and 'NM Mt ,!!±wentifour sheets, of letter Oiler. for f-o•u-r tents! Twelire itilf•neairni enve lopes for f-O-u•i Mints i!Akyitttoieit'laut mow or ttiru-i °lintel" is nolonier beard on tbit thorough= mrerT, WiTrthien - W6 -- oontlitelltleparatibillatirins. -it.ie risiored3hat he,Med, 0 from ten itifteeit dellitaTitinekbtbli purktent;:tifieSatinnvit le• in!d. l; 0 . 0;0 1 1: filiflaPPlgto, t # o 4ll4 - .,440#0,31 01 b 1 W)1 91 fi fi1 ! 4441 ,41:* 4 440 0 : 0 #4044§ . aD,an - A,f0490 1 . 444" Ag4 ,4 124! °: ' '-°tlt)t4 t l l AT be tke'o s Wit kj 2994wi1f,' tifidlCitiiof lifis:•;ra e Omitnatal abientieLef-phisisamillail quite a blank in Nassatt street. -7. , , The inevitable Stephen H.. Branob, has. turned- . up again, htiVing author fed his !counsel to notify Mayor Tiemann and _others, that ho _will apply to, the Supreme Court foi a new trial. Stephen evi dently goes on - the principle ",that it, will never do to give it up so." We ale' to have Stoepel'i*Hlaivitha." The " Mendelasohn Union"' has made a idovisrizerit to produce if, and the New'Yorkert are to have - an opportunity of judging of the merits of Mr. Stoe pel's arrangement. The almost incredible task of Batting Hiawatha to music having been aeoomplish-, ad, will favorably introduce this composer to the musioal world on this side of the Atlantic, to which he is, asyet, comparatively unknown. The praises his work has received froni the discriminating 'and exacting critics of the'" modern Athens" are eufficient guarantee of its success. Mrs. Matilda Heron fiteepel assists in the performance, and lends an additional charm, by the dramatio spirit. she throws into the reading of the connecting portions of the poem. - • , Speaking of music, Mozart's birthday, .last Thursday, was duly honored by the muzio-loving Teutons of thin oily. Snadry concerti and balls wore given, and at the Stadt Theatre, Mozart's "Magic Flute" was performed; Karl Forme, Mrs. ifiedenburg, and 'others, taking parte. "Our American Cousin," which hashed such en extraordinary run at taura Reene's Theatre, is to have a counterirritant, in ,the shape ..of "Cur Female Amexican Cousin, a new comedy," to be' produced, for the first time, at Burton's Theatre this evening. If the " female " has as good a run ad "Asa"has enjoyed, it will be another marvel in theatrical matters. Miss Davenport in Washington. (From the Washington stales If Miss Davenport's fame depended alone on her representation of Peg iiroffington last night, then *Mild it rest on a sure foundation. In this charatiter thbte are passion, pathos, and incident enough to put the gritted porters to the test, and certainly:bliss Davenport has proved most fully equal to all. There ts.a brilliancy, a freshness, a mod tho rough naturalness in this lady's style that win the warmest admiration of the beholder, and find their way into defy heart. Theta is no straining after extraordinary effed, nor overstepping of the bounds of truth, nor attempt at a new mode of por traying.otd nature, but allis life, real and true. When to, those qualities are added a splendid ap- Pitarancel Voice finely modulated, ' articulation oloar and sweet, and it Manner exquisitely chaste 'and graceful, together with a high reptitation in moiety as a lady of most sterling worth, we think there Is enough to entitle Miss Davenport to the applause •and patronage of all who admire the drama, appreciate true genius, and respect ferni tithe Borth „ It is pitiful to gee with what eagerness many people will crowd to performaficiiii of a rare" show and vulgar character, and negleot opportunities of seeing,those that' tend to improve the taste, draw out 'our better feelings, and give us a true appre elation of real beauties and value of the stage. ,Whoso, then, debiras to 0,44. these advantages, would do well to see Miss Dairenport. Fisher, as Triplet, was ell that could lie desired. Tho part is one of a very varied character, and the transitions from one state of feeling to others of as opposite kind were complete triumphs of art. Atriamionuisi.,—There will be six eclipses this year—tdo of the moon and four of the,sun— as follows : 1 A partial eclipse of the sun Febru ary 2, invisible In the United States. 2. A total eclipse of the moon, February 17. early in the morning, visible throughout the United States. 3. -A partial eclipse of the sun,'Maroh 4, invisible in the United States. 4. A partial eclipse of the sun, July 29, in the afternoon. The eclipse will be very small lasn only a few minutes and comas about an bout before sunset. Visible in the Eastern, Northern, and Middle States. 5. A total eclipse of the moon, August 13 invisible in the United IMMO. A partial eclipse of the sun, August 28, invisible in the United SLAW.' DIRECT TRADE BETWEEN OBR LAKES AND ionors.—During the past two years ten vessels, with a total tonnage of 3,600 tons, were built at Cleveland, Ohio, and freighted by merchants of that pity for English ports, their cargoes biing Chiefly staves t he black tonwalut lumber. They all disposed of ir freight advantage,. and six returned with cargoes of crockery, bar iron, pig iron, or salt. The return cargoes were also profit able. The other four vessels did not return to the lakes, but are engaged in ocean navigation. The cost of the round trip is estimated at from $3,000 to $4 000. The enterprise, it is said, will be eon-. tinned. TILE New Orleans Delia declares that, while New York is in a fair way to go to the dogs, New Orleans is on the high-road to prosperity. New York, if brought to the hammer at the present time, in the opinion of the editor, would not pay the mortgages that sling to her, while New Orleans Is entirely free of debt. Tan AGGREGATE numerical strength of the Society of Friends is estimated at about 15,000 in Great Britain. During the lot twenty years the society in this country has been gradually de creasing In numbers. NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENT*, mind the toll:Wag Oulu( anti aommnnfaatlon Croat b atarny.tilet nantiOf witar.p2 Ordeito W , ant oorreettiligs the t7 P 0 8 11 0711 ,0 On• fid• of Ike 1ift4'857!!),- We Ithql f#3o/4 viola and 'Other tatii for aontdbntlaarflyprgAl* • eurrent news of tha day ltt thole;perlAttP!,;!l#l.l44 : the reliontees of thea entioll7f of population, or any information thitto.l),t. 44, - tog to the general reader; • , - pENEIi!AL.' NEM- That' singular and painful ahOOthig:irlary transpired last Monday morning, in' NerrYorlq re: man having shot Wawa servant girl through ads.' _ taking her for a burglar. , It ;appears that - 10.. Barnard,.a pawnbroker in Third avenge, heard,ph five o'clock:a nObseparhiohle. ifittrinretedris4ro.. - needing from , b= g l; brit'which was - eaused irys the servant girl outthe- grate:preparitoryr; tor:making a fire,ln the room underneath where het. slept, arid which contained, thi, safe in which war* deposited gold watilies,,piwalry,gml'other Latta ble propertyle ft in redge. - ' , Beouringsilreielver.. he raised up is window,-and seeing, as he inipposedir a burglar in the act ,or escaping out of the window!. uudennvth, Bred. :half „look ,effect lbw neck of his 'servant glrl;Who:had probrudird' her ' bead out of the windeir to'fasbirf theiblinds Her injurleiaresbelieved to -be -mortal, although she was alive last Monday evening. • TREASON IN frETTICOATS An iriehjOrnal gives this -incident of-the late- corning:lY in that south of Ireland:. List evening the Pethard, police "earOrted into Monmel a young,lady.like, and ettranielydelloate - girl; named ' , Ann Walton,: and had her coramitted , t6 jail on a charge of hay./ lag written reditious , lettera,onelirrpartionlari which, we understand, Sonititntes the head- and front of her offending. written on the. inst ., and calling on her Majesty's lowa to! - rebel Mid mutiny,' as the - language of the Committal - O4 presses it: . %Inqrdriermado•at Ate jail hainfailed to elicit: any information respecting the position and connections of the.prisonen.To all appear-;- awe, the accused is highly.rinesilable and Intel. Spurt. We may mention • Wriseriatiti that . more touching her sanity a re Rarely, obtained." PHYBICIALrICIENi7III7ONe.4bOtadia.(O.) - 11#publican says. - thatlira:liturney;- of: Tip canoe, Harrison County , Phkva ble lady, and a_ fnemher. of. the n Preshitenia= Obrunh,"draing a polar donditicole Phyril-- . :oil 'and mental organisation; hie - rlifilithed - sar— :uunCitidrn-tfoitr - iting;ravelly other liandn* ten. o'irloeir; forgighteen - yeare.-:.While.pressehlo/P she reclinesorpon a, bed.`, MeV instruothol4re generally excellent, .triid goriptv.ra' quotations; butiihen:ahe tabbinni - lieinensolons: near she has ho - reeolleothitt whate erof what line - has been. saying. Several years ago her ORM Wr. cited the attention of, several medical gentleßlCl F - who, while they had the utmoit.coMiderree lu bet sincerity,, could give .no satisfactory lesplanatirur of the myste7...- - - • --' • Tae Dies.waai LpitaitiOtti;L-Ihetlicuit battle in the Traglidalurtrof , Over =tire tottery grant hair resulted , in- the final passage: of the bill. It passed the Senate on.- the--26th. - b,y vote of five to four, having nays Houfe by ayes twelve,aays eleven' a nitiontl7o' one in each House. - It goes into iininirdiatieffeet,'' and grants to Richard Primes; Beitiinore, the privilege of drawing': lotteries and selling lot- --. tery. ticket/Lin that Stateforthe; period of twenty, years, in donsideration. of which he is -to' pay: it bonus 0f.427,000; to hi devoted' to"building roads, - ehimihee, aolgrononies; Water , lineks; , .to:, in the State: - - •• , Rim Armart's e •preeen fd inade , by-LimittNapoleonlo the Empress ,on'Phrw=.. Yeses dayovae thediecoyery_to beritiajestr the& her chamber opehed into an apartment—a boudoir —.undreamed of in sleep and ,unimagined in , view waking. ' door, whittlf the hight•Preifoim was no-door; Stood. wide ape:l:L*o4 apart. tr ment thelvendering „Empress itzlength , obtaervt• was. real; Berkeettle - in. : splendor' a '!:tottadar i ,, , imitated from the habits toiler c ha mber of:Arab' . Sultanas in theL.Alhambra ; eqUippep-with may conceivable and- ineonceivalde toy Mid: trinkeitef - Trot Megrims.: Oils.--Atoetrelesp — eittent r - • speaking of-the boy Idortant,laYa Alltlikbras Journals are •speaking of young - Mortara; „IL imitate their examPle. He entered the seduM4or the regular prebends of, 136. , John of Lateran three' weeks slue. 'HiapptienthitrliVatid'agritties . desire to:return_ hemet::.. , The: Pope; pave farads education oat of his private purse. On Obrietw , day; the, Pope sent t rung,,Mortera A.bitiket 'of sweetmeats:The next' de7: the, beyhakiti'lentris to`thaulethe Pope;'and'he we - quid - tilted fe do so:"' The Holyilatherreceifedlitirribit 1 TELT 13m Nsitto",*hirideiiitli . :ivitb -fainter :Judson's datightitilkom Poritlairhilabiginiatehcirk time ago, made an attemPt lexisitherAlat :Week. With this l ril intention went tkPontiait, but intetli- ..r puce having bieiticeifed:othisiecoventelote,*: large - Mond assathbbie at thedeliof for thertipose • of roceivinglire , in lireper'stylac - f •Therumei is that they intended to an him:,ll.o Made himself Scarce when he iscertained howmatters stood,snd. has not been in that i Tar letter ~ysritert agree ha Predicting' thai - Jerinedali' Itertatorlienz - ,. the'Leleglifindlchirthatit'Pteredhitriett,tirilfgde enviable, politlehbefore thereloatutikepresent session. This is hiti first sessioniandle already:: dimes ip.threst,of-tket mootimpartantioommittele. He is Certanili. eititaii of Sue: abilitiee,"of ble tied popular Maine* itauVeatenmatida jest the disposition 'to make durahl & zfricaide ntora Two hunting parties sees _ th.,... , -ovsnutor, one 0 0 14: (Or porrooo and-the.otkirooren,,,Tho brat,bigrol and saved eighty deitir„od"one.boof,":_Thirseeong, orrontiliz ft,prObrit. 01104 , 0 - ttsi; , :thiW ntinkkiviinuirtionViartibi fbki. viaNktevAl4fir . '' over 1500 pounds of fah, -3Cempourolciit-uktok were broo k and iskirtnink , Ale brook trout 00011*:., Iristgbodp i rri zpgiNtruiot - 1011X0 00 tat Oeiiiii); ordnealk ohs watblitt sot was made by Williar` ' tnithislisr,l6s2;3odgitioonolnentiv2oo •:( 11 441b01a11,06.M 0 0 1 N 21 14fathezi_144 jAktb %1,4.g%!4• 4 Pc...' -0, ffilt,kftfc relatives. u. ;:j.; days of :AlexabdriaiVe.Nai sitting in a I.OOM.:Att: the distillery,' saperintending the brewing of-some yeast over a charcoal- furnace,' " when be suddenly fell fit:lmille seat, eveicenie by the charcoal gas. 'The shook of 'the fall - Itronied him suffiebnitlY to crawl oikorthe roan; and he had scarcely sufficient strength to reach &place or safety. , Ones& itt match: between Louis Paulsen and the combined ferns of the Quincy, 111., Chess Club commenoed in , the even ing at half past eight. Mr. Partisan playing the white, and having the firstmove: otiose the opeie ing known as the Evans gambit.' - Ten minuted was the time allotted to each move. The game lasted only two hours,_Qoiney resigning on the eighteenth move. The Omits; Tasni.:—lt *Pearl .from the report of the inspector, that during Deventer there were exported froth Hampton Honda, Va., 117.352 bushels of oysters; from the Rappaltan nook river, 68,600 bushels,' and from York. river, 45,008 bushel'. This, however, is bat a !mall portion of the oyster trade of Virginia. Sir Janes Prra4laN. who served ada the British medical Mail as surgeon to the forces , in Holland, in 1799, said Whole of the Egyptiancampaigns 'of 1801, , for-Which -he' re ceived thesilver war medal, with one clasp, died ' recently at Dublin, at the age of 83. CarRAN EMIGRATION,—A New Orleans paper says ; It is reported here that emigration to Cube has been going onquletlibnd legally for months past. It is suppose d-that emigrants belie been in vited by the revolutionists in the island.' A secret agent of the Government go here, but he deteoto no illegal emigration. Tea TRAIN or Mae from Waterville for Bangor, on Wednesday evening, started a flee deer, near Pittsfield, which took the track and ram ahead of the locomotive for about a mile, and then sped away in another direction. A runic MIMING ' has been • held at Pitts burg, Pa., of steamboat and' coalbost men and other oilisens, at whioh resolutions were pasted ;T i r e d . ta_ n the as ereeion of the ra tu ilro o ad na brhiga a n t . navigation. calculated PIONEERS TOTUE EL EpRADO.-ne Bees says that the - that train fOr Pfite'e - Peak from, the East, arrived in Connell Bluffs a few weeks ago. They will remain there until early spring, than, push forward to the gold mines. , HEAVY TAXEC—It 119 said that William B. Astor's taxes. whioh be has recently paid to the Reosiler of New York, auto - anted to $25,000 on Personal property, and $BO.OOO on real .state. Total $85,000. GOVERNED TOO =cu.—Poor Mexico noW has five Presidents, or at least Ave men backed by military power, each of whom thinks he alone eau rescue her from the gulf of ruin to whioh she to hastening.. _ , , A NOTED character, called the etrakir of Siva," has entered the ministry, and gets a salary $l,OOO a year in lowa, having bestowed on him self the degree of Doctor of Divinity. Tag Mem Law..=-The town spat at Hartford, Conn., sold 3,338 gallons of liquor last year to cations, under a - law'that forbids all sales except to the sick. - A CANARD EXPLODED.—The report that Fred. Douglass' daughter was about to be sold as a slave in Tennessee is not true. He has no daughter in slavery. _ _ OniCALTED THE GALLOWS.—FIynn, the mur derer of Glennon, at the Suspension Bridge, in July, 1856, died at Lockport on Bonday morning last, where he was confined under sentence of death. - GARRISON'S paper, the Boston Liberator, says that a donation of $5,000 has recently been placed in the hands of Wendell Phillips, to be used, trincipal and Interest, for the woman's rights cause. Dr._ DILL, , a distinguished Irish Presbyte rian minister, died recently' in Dublin; Be visi ted this country a few years ago, on behalf of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland. - Loan NAriss. has informed,the Secretary of State that he expected his successor, Lord Lyons, to arrive about the and of February or the begin ning of March. Comilmtggf.—Lientenant Maury of the Ifni thd States navy, has been complimented by the French Government with the Order of the Legion of Honor, as a tribute to his valuable services. A BleosArmosn Bruns' on the Life and Works of Daniel Wester has been üblied in Russia, by Professor b ,Katchertovsky, p of the sh Uni versity of Rharkoff. AT Biometry, lowa, lately, an old lady kicked a 'boy at whom she became angry, with oh force that, she ruptured a blood-vessel, and ed in a' short time. • Aontouvrnaeu.—The next Ohio State Fait' is to be held at Zanesville on the 20th, 21st, 22d, and 23d days of September. Tan bill repealing the ten per cent. interest law passed the House of Representatives at Wm - - bus, Ohio, on Wednesday. Masosao-The Free Masons of, Virginia in tentito erect a splendid temple at Richmond. Fitssw SHAD in Savannah, and green peas nalorlda, etc announced as plenty.- —. latowto,_
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers