BEE t..,Nt.. , . tuirtilogiblr, u r - :,,- ' '!v 'l6'4 x I a l" iia i t- i v ito... it iftkitifc#M il . r iMS , -: 1 . 46g010111 . 4C14a.4. - ~,,,,:",, • ‘•-",` I t - 4 -.4 -‘-., i-, - ...- la Icit: ''' s l - I , ' o, . ';'''' 7 VhaolltiloOt Aa 4 i. ;:, , !., L i.liti., Air 'lt , • ; - -.-.- , , 4. - ig . 431011(1,1 .lo : l,, . 11-4 6 ii lb ride, Okvery-large 00419t0 ANlOrtrorni ' L 'Writ Ch -T - 11 2rj ' ,;4 , 7-1/ 1 11111 4, g even' pialeable article hi the ltroa, and pony, The 4tteutlon ' brayeit aliatiotfully , Piteae lowtik To of sur bowie 0 the trade, either 10 ty or Pewrt. fel•Tra .T , " ..: , 4 ....11 " - '., ;. 1. Il''' i ; ' 1. ''. ‘. t. i.l t . . . , , .. .. l t -.. n 2. 7 ‘, .. L.- . 'l . ; 't..- , - . . • , ~. ~- , ; .N. : ...: ...,. ~N A '• I . I) , i / 4,.. 4 .1,/ .... .t. v.iwv. , : .• , . . , .!„rsif , '.l.).f ~f ' '''''' ' ' -. ' '',. , „ ,• , ~I I 1/// , - / ft 7 3 .. s •.• . . - - ~..- - • —,- .. '' .....2 .... 1 4 “ „ Vp, ~./.......-........ f.4,L. , .: ..-:. -' :-, Vett .* * - " 'I . ......''''' \ '' . ' '-: - (..... '' 4'. '." I '4'' '' V ': '''. ' o$ ?.., .. ' f ; ; / ........ .trA:Alitli - '''- ''... . . .. '• ' . 11( ' ' . ..' ~' 4.: , ~ -4: ~ ,- ~:1-.. '', - I i :i , .:'. ,i.. ,11."-'"‘ . ,—._- .- -: -. 7 1 ,0- ..N,„,,,,,,-.,i-.. - ~., i v ....N.r: , ,,,;,_,.....}.!..,,,- - , ~n :,l-:.:,..- : ....'f.? ~:- - ,..... -- .... , ;„.., , -..- 2 -f.: , reg— , :A: . ... . . 4...,. . - : .. r , t1 -- :f tT 'i.,' pr - 0 '‘- - -'= - -“i..- : -i ' -'"..... 9"/..... "ir . ..i. .., .f ,p!ci;:-. 4 .;••• .••.- : • . !-- 1 ..:,.. ; .•,:,t4ii i ; ./. ; .;., ~: r .--,-,_ ] - . , . :- ~ , , ; : q, :" ..7 r,.. • ~: 1. ~, ... '_ - , , . : -..- 7 ,..... _-- 7 ,-...._ , , . ~ . 6 . ? 1 -,' ,4'e; ri .:-,. '- ''. '-• ' - :-• :..:: ':- . IL-- - -- 1 . ,- ,W: '.T. h . . '":: - :".-',...." D'AVVY" i-- '". ' . ''...";':'.". !-- - 1 - 6 -. 4 , '. • :,, r•-='' '.;,L ..."' "). ~3. ~ ....''..:ZVP. , ;:;t5.7 ,7- =--,-- - . -- --:-. z.,,,-•:...-;.rv!a,,.."" .4 - 7 Lr. 4- • I ". ''' ` i ; - -.' ''''-'-' ' .. '' '''•• ' ' • '. - ' ' ' Itt.E., ;.......... ' , i..:.‘,1 , .. N....... , 4.--- ..--"..--".....0.1tttif ' .. - ' - .•• ~ . .. L ~• , . .. • • , , t ~TeDinnal: 14UMP11,REYS' SSMC pVICJ IMBUE OPLTiI 4iltig DIE S. 3043 OHIiBTNUT Street, .(Agents.) " 'THESE - IN VALI, &BLit PIIEPARLTIObIif • are ex-• einsively prepared' by yityr, , l;'El.l3,l4l._pilltlilYW, Well linoWnfor' his cantribatinits' to • nombiopethie tura, and, as fointer,PßOFtS36ll , • 08,111,ZORY and P.3./k0T101; in the . Hoteiroputhie Medical College 'in Philcidelphitt,• and irho "these t!pecifie . Rtjmadiee; • a ,special study, for ,eight - years'. Ills SYNOIFICIS hive now. been. before.. the_ public; four yetre,land are In use, by thousands, in every part of the' =Wit uniform aid' eatlefacrtorY "re eults., Pages of . testimcmiti can be,exhihited, llbowhig the general satiefastion given, and' the many very grave *and aerions; and often - lcnotandinr, diseases which have been 'Oared by, their use: NO'elerX: of, renUdiee . has thus far over been known which have glieit the pnbilo such • uniform ,satistsettetf, or have - produced adeh brilliant and wonderful cures. • They: are elike,Xemovid fromtha poisonens, danger.: . one, and repulsive doses of,quaokery. or, old school nreotice..the inoonvenienee of - water:cue, or the in tricate'and perph-Xleg idiseurities of the usual libmceo• pathlo • books:and ' medicines. ',Consisting ; of .; simple ,speoilluferdhe various diseases to which they are re lated 'put op in the form of simple sugar pellets, and .prepired - et• ingredients neither dangerous nor disgnet- One - they form atnnce the Ifidy reseurne of the pa-ent nnree t and are the comfort of the complaining or the invalid; • • " , ',They possess these positive - advantages :'They are .stances—noanittry` can Silo from' their Lee ; They -Arad; %mit =you always know What to telto and how to take it; they are couvaelasr —you can give the' primer Bugar,l4ll. at sentornent's warniOgOitthout bbsitation or delay; they are EPYIVIINT—in thousands of cues`, disease is ir acted ationc and the mite cares at the =stunt:lllst thepound could not afterward' have re.; lierd.. • + , • • tgLIST OF SPECIFIC REMEDIES No.l, - Fever iiint—For Fever, Congestion, - aud In theirimatirtaof all khan, • • . WW2: Worm Pills—For Worm -Fever, Worm Oolie, Wetting the Bed. - - , , - No.,B,Balty's,Pal/e—lfor Colic, .Oryint, Teething, and Wakefulneas of infants• and-nervousneu of , adults No. 4. DierrhacuPills•-Tor .Dituatcoa, Cholera In fanhim, and Bummer Complaint: , • No: 5. Dysentery Pills—Ver.ColleciOripinge,Dyeen ,tery, and Bloody Flux. No. O. ChoteraPit/s—Yer,Oholera, Cholera Morbruf,, and Vomltibt, ' " 'Cough Pins—For Coughs, Colic, hoarsen - sae, Influenza, and Bore Throat. ' No. 8 Tosthachs PDls -For Toothache, Faceache, andNeuraleic ir e aciacle - .pins-4Por headache, Mertigo, heat, and,pulness or - the head. - • No. 20. Dsprpolee Pills -For -Weak and Deranged Stomachs, Constmatinn, and Liver compleinte. „ "Np. 11. For Female frregularilits—Scanty, Painful, or BuppreseedPeriods No.- 12. - . - Femate ' Lenceriled, Profuse ' 1 denser , and Bearing Down. ' No 19.. Croup Pills—For Croup, Hoarse Cough, Bed ' Breethirg. . Nb. It. Salt Rheum .Pifls- 7 1or Erysipelas l Bruit- Pimples on the Pace 1ip.15. Rheumatic Pt/Is—For Pelee, Lantana's, or Bareness in the,,Cayst, Back, Loins, or Linde. , • 'lt!—For Fever sod Agee, Chill Fever, Dumb Ague, •Old Mismanaged I gee. or Bleeding, Interns! -or, Ex ternal._ . , n,"—For Sere; Week, o r Inflamed Eye and•Eyellds, 'Palling, Weak, or Mimed B ight. fli,lfor - Ottarrti, of long Jaunting or regent, either tritit obatruetion or,profura Ws:huge, •, , W r 43.—For Whooping : Cough , abating its ilolanoa and sticirtenlag Ate course. , • • , -Irt aurrnaptexaess, _inch, se ,Easera,,lnflemana. tiond, Dfarridas,".Dysintery, Orptip„Rheurnatiamiand snob eruptive diereses as, Scarlet lever, absentee, and 'Erysipelas, the advantage of seising the proper remedies promptly Is obilotis.,and In all smolt does theepecidea set like a 'charm. The entire disease Is - often tussled. et mid, and in 02-cases, the violence Of the • Atw3k is moderated,. the Ahead sit - err:lnca and rendered less desigerous. Even' shonid, a physician afterward have ,temeieelled, bowill takii the ease at decided advantage fronathe previous treatment. . . • ~In all UileoXia Maniacs, IMO as Dyspepsia, Weak BRA:itch, Oonstipai.ld, Liver Complaint, Piles, Female 'Debility and Irregularities, oldhcadardse, Sore or Weak Eyes; Catarrh, Baltand other ;old emptied, the, dim, bas epreifica,, Whose, limper. dplleation.will :afford a cute in almost ovary instance. Often the core ors sfinglo chronic difficulty, Such as Dyspepsia, Ptlery .orCatarrh - ,' headache; or' Feriae Weakness, has more than paid for the case tan timei Over.' --" ' 'REMEMBER, That thousands of -thCmoit :gifted - and. - , Intelligent uilndi thlaaountry . srelEiropa have tong, are given bi thitir atherence,,to honimspally. aid employ at ex 'Clutively In "all '.csaes ofdisease. ,, for themselves and, families - , DEl2. l Thittheseild eifies are eadirolY 'bar& less in ill fantande. and In allows. Babies use them, ehlidOin de,thent, the fled, Infirm, or Invalid pee theM, Without danger and with benefit. ' „, lIBREMBEmh-That not' only' in long-stacking old complaints; thiCitr",iiiiimit 'mad violent dlseases of the moat dangerous oharseter, llomceopathyhae plasm; its 1 superioritvlo any otber'system inlopeatell trills. - , ggisßaisEß—vhst DoMosepathy is sustained hot frqm Its theories and doetrinell, but fro, 'Wits doily and hourly sneceerstrr caring the elek and arreeting disease. • REMEMBER—That the-little ills that lead to , great ;mesh, and-la is: little &limeade that,. neglected, *ad to grove and fweloe B jossessesnaa—That• 'yea have as on 'promptly and - pleamantly to,rtimove each complaints at the heginniog. and so prevent grave diseases. REMESIOI4R—That litamplirsyst.system florocel , pathie Specidoe divests the private practice of the sal "tem - Of all perplexity end intricacy, ao that everybody May the them with - adventrge, • • ' • - BEIRESIBER—That the cure of a 'lngle chronic ell ment;such as Film, Catarrh, llesdacha,'r • 1,111 more than ten times pay-for the cost of 'a full doe. .-DEIESNLISER—That two or. are 'dollars invested In a pad of Opecifie Remedies will return many times its ,trs yea every year, he freedom from anxiety, pre , vention of disease, and absolute relief. " . - • OASES AND , CURES . - DYBPRPSLA. A young tidy oUtwenty six, bed been troubled with iiidigeetion for several montba t so is to render greet I ease tames soy in the selection of ber food. After eat. log ,the stomach became Said, fond rhilng in her month with Water; and ao unpliasauti heavy, leid-like cocas Mod irk her stomach; enntintring"some hours; frequent' headache, bowels" constipailitd, spit a depreseed mental. condition. - Shit cmiminced taking the Dyspemila"Pille t . tine rimming aud night, and in lete titan a week every symptom of her disease had vanishedt and she felt like 'a newibelog. gentlemen somewhat atrameed in, years: st , ong, robust conetillation 'bid lately been ' a good deal affect' d wi b. Indigestion. weak stomaele," Coated tongue, bad taste in the mouth , and .attende d with' aloottlier ver- Vire and whirlingin the head, go much so as to render his riding in a carriage, or even.monnting an enithence t quite Mourne. 'Atter trying weevil things ineffectu ally, he fell - mum the "Dyspepsia Pilis t 'wh Mt afforded prompt relief... ,A pill every night and moreingworked like *charm; kellevlog vertigo led other un pleasant simpf OM eni M a , • 'C AND RECNCILITIg. Bad cords neglected or .ferqtrinitlY repeated 'often lay the fruodation of uonsumption, BronchiVe and preens,' tare 'decline.- ..Though there are many remedies adver tised as. : prompt and speedy ones, yet none so safely and yet "speedLy and surely retreat a cure as tkle. Often mangle pill, taken tat night, hay entirelyrelleyed the . systent eta govern zed threatening cold by thareorningt Canoga awn gentleman; a pnbliolectarer, took's severe cold the latter pert of lout month. while travelling lectnting in northern ,Penesylvonia.• though siblissalorptibile sudiencea every evening, yet In two dap', by the aid of the Specific, he was entirely -motored, ;aid enabled to pursue his ratting without l000nvielen0: public speaker they:lll,bn withcat them. ; ElseileOLD.—A married lady of 40 bad taken a violent 'cold: which nettled On her bangs, causing severe googh, inlaid the side,,and considerable fever and hoarseness. Such Colds were usually very lasting and troublesome,. bat by taking the Speeldo Oobgh ' Pills four times per maenad three days she Wasentirely well. A yoking rr au of 22 had enough and botreeneaa for tri• teen mouths " During cols weatherhie voice was lest es as only to speak in whietters," pin induced to coughing, cones ;dry. or •relsing wily a trine • in the morning, melte feeble and emulated. Had taken ,several, medt • ames. with but little tm no benefit.' Ile commenced with the Cough •Vilin—orie pill three Vines a day—and soon found himself improad..g t bis.ceugh milder end salter; hoarseness pinged off, strength and appet to improved , and In, a few weeks wee entirely well, having taken no other 4 medicines. . • PILES.. • 4.4% clergyin: au* the Daptiet Pburch, known In Inhofe writing to us, says: I have been for come timeAtionely, *filleted with, !Oodles piles, and have regard my eve as seve.7e elle; at cies. time. indeed, hopele4e; but I have used 'your p ro g e h r y i g n o, e a (P rc il l e a f4A. Olifehl Pod um pared, I have no the world under great and lasting obligations." ,A gentlemen of fifty years, yell and favorably known. at, Delhi Delaware comity, Nile York, bad been a martyr,to - the piha for twenty years. Sometime,', from exceslivekemgrthsvet ,poic,and suffering. be was re duced to the verge of the grave. For years_ be_ hod dragged out a miserable ezieteuee, s.coidirmed q o u i. rded for, ay btisinins,. and life almost a burden. re- It nu4 fig t h t odd that .behad tried , all sorb' of medar;(cornet knell' isg t ' n 't to IP 0 ° purpooo Be Conceited ;netted 'yeare ago; mid team:mended our Vile Specific, with oceludokrilly a Dyspepsia pill. From this he began to improve, aod since hes never had a terionsturn of Piles. From Ow firet month, up to a year past. be had occasionally, svmptoms of hie old p 0 complaint • but a few dosea of the Pile Pills would Ma puto it elf, and for more than a year past he has been entirely. Well of the piles, I morn brilliant cure 16 ecareely to found in the Annals of modielne, . CATARRH. This lams of disuse, fie Is well known, Is of yery frequent sod almost universal - prevalence, and the ahronie forme aro especisily obatlnata. Ordinary re medies are of very little %Vein& In uttecting 'a mum, nor le the boosted inhalation any better. " ' This simple remedy, on talking a' auger Pill morning and night, promptlieert e the olletter costa; and Re rterseverirg we - blend raped to relieve the world forma of obrnhic oatanti. even ,when en far advanced at to have boat in a great degree, the serge Inergyroan, aged 42 boa long angered • with talon h, which had notimly been a source of an. • Mance, taut began to excite uneaaloese in regard told effects upon his general health. There way a frequent and romotimeerprofneedisobargelrom hie head, frequee sneezing, and an tamest entire leas cif smell, Ifif pro t cured a boX of onr'Speelflo Catarrh Ville, and was en. , tangy cared, even'to return Of his nese of smell, In the crldifee a few' weeke. ,] 'Price of single tape, 60 c e nts. - PRICES Pull sit, 20 large 'tale in morocco Me endtbook..ls 00 Full eat, 20 large vials plain tate end book 4 00 Oases of 16 numbered boxes, and hook , 200 • OASOB of sty.° numbered holm, and book ...... „. 1 00 Single numbered Lewes, with directions Single letteredknotea, with direotioes .Large plantation, or physiolan'S ease, I and 2 on, 'vials 16 00 • OUR REMEDIES BY MAIL' 'l. Look over the Het, make up a ease of what kind you chola and enclose the amount in a current note or by mac. to.our. Wren At No 562 Broadway, New York, 'writhe medielnes will be duly returned by moll or expect's, free of charge. ' No Welly should be without then Invaluable cure- Wee. They are the only remedies perfectly adapted for domestic and 'private use. With-them the parent 10 armed eald prepared against the Brat approach cf die. ease, and clan meet It at the threshold and keep it at bay. Alrifie of medlolne, rightly directed In tithete first hews of disease, perfectly mires that which, elay, ea lo u only be relieved hYleng and tedlorla hours of puffer t, all. 'With these at hand, you are tot °Wired to tonsil the conder,of _that often distant, as veil pig eldefoile bung], 0,..4 , 70f0r ; nor tcp be drugged pr poi. ',mad; bbeteced, or, :tiled, but may ypnreell adman's. Ur the pimple eptiol,oooLnd There ruddy o n l y og life again tliofililrals4;4ol, cannot only no in ' f ence m sacs Med their- use; Aut the general •lofietence mash the' conatitution, beyond all question, ip • AQPICES WANTED. We desire an ultra; adalent shirtir the Pale ol 'eta' remedies in every town r 'cemnittnity In the Ifni. tad States. Addresa; ruMPIIREYI3 , • No. 582 Weeding. New York' Bold by T PITORBON,& BOWS., 300 011.08 TN UT street, Philadelphia; " " tel243ns PII4IpELPRB., SATURDAY:# FEBRUARY 12, .1559. Caudic,tl Husband's. Soliloquy. BY Tuß BARD or rowyn:miit My wife is handsoine but not fair— Though 'drowse, 'tie trite, Indeed-- I Beouse ehp picks the cholceskblis , ,_ 1 -Of-Mingo; on.which we feed...' • She is not poor, forvnea ven has poured Some bleesings on her head ; • , . IShe says if we should come to need , 1 She would`not knead her bread: ' i She to not fussy—ronnd - the house - • With brushahe will not move ; . • i - Up to her eyes she 'free in duet, , • ; tier in•duat-iy to preys. , " Shsee, rapt aecompliiihed,p yet she piluti=. Notlandicares, but her face ; , ) Ehis , s, ufbdied drawing—corset etrings; ' , - .."-T o ilY.ther r fo'rrn Ito graen, . , ' She nothing knows Of foreign tongues, ' 1 ' 'But urea well her own—. . 1 ,As praotleing make.; perfect, she - " 1 - FerfectioO long bee known. , , ; Shen o hals n o t t skilled In that,knows of mtude, no, . - l , " ,El . . . Thourb always, when her ',fordo are shorn, She .pate her foot down fiat. 1 She 'ports in tura, for she infers ' That Ito pay atriablet ,- . And Wonders much that look black When she appease in t I ble, • ) When it my choler does excite f That she buys fancy cotters, *. I She laughs that I so dolorous look In parting with my dollars.' . 49,,whiees If I don't get her wine, v-. 'And always have it handy; • , ' Yet foe sworehe shs brands. - If I indulg in brandy.; • ; When I'm out late 'tikosild be a treat 4 For any learned dissectors • ' ' To study my-anatomy",, , %As shown up in bar lectures. . k I sirrostimecthink of suicide— • ; - Life's joys hive all departed— s But I've beOn hati.peated now so look That I've growp chicks's heated. - ; She lieu in bed till very late, Then gets up crest and surly, 4 And still she lies by telling folks ~ , She always rises early. . A l'' " She has brought up, just like herself,' a , My two laud only daughters— , She soya aline my better half, And they the other guartera. That tastes me bat a olpher, and, however I demdr, - 'Tie all imfottant t should keep On the right elde of bor. There's blit one way of doing With any chant* at _ That le, by dressing to her taste, In clothes from Tailor Hall. Therefore, within my,rnanhood , a sky i There is of houhoce star, Which is that I my clothes can buy At Tower Mil Bstlar. All persons in want of Winter garments should be closi'ng is towards Tower gall, where BENNETT* 00. are closing out their immense gook of readY•niad• Whiter Clothing, unsurpassed for quality of fabtio and 9ntehfat prices lower than the lowest. If you want to be fitted in girme s tits ) and swirlt in price; the golden Opp irtnnitY lel now °Gored you at 08 MAIOIT STRUT, betie n Fifth and Binth. BENNETT & 00., TrOprietors. TlDress Itrimnings EVANS & HASSALL, St SOI3TII FOURTH. STREET; sc- Ime'pramas AND ,WIIOIABALI9 DAMAN! IN Inirite an early examination of their NEW AND WRIA&ASSORTRD STOOK OV CHOICE SPEINO GOODS Selected with Allred referenee to the • WANTS OF TUN TRADE. They call particular attention to their' very fine vs, rlety r ulDSßLlN ZEFILYR and SHETLAND WOOL°. ,Frorn their long connection with' the well known momita%.tartzsg and importiog honiie of ' WM. If: ILORSTMANN A SONS; And their Awn aNuaintance with ,all the MARKIN'S pie BUNGS% they are prepared to offer SUPERB STYLES at PERSITASIVR PRIORS,• to 4 OASII and SKORT•TIMEI pnrebaeore - •fel•liri J i&, A-: IcTIIIVIPER, _ . . I 33 spun! FOURTH EiTEPT, .„ . , Importera t aed Wholeaste Dealers in j LADIES'. DRESS TRIMMINGS, Oall the *particular itteutton of the Trade to their eplendid' assortment of TBlttptt 'TOMVONNETTR, 'And 'Ail2locior Fueolia BALL TAM MINGO, . Atm!. PENDANT' BUTTONS, too. • ..: 22L .w. c .e i iirreiarortoeitente - lira. orders for tigics.4d 1-14--:..,.........,:m.L...,.....: —.._, ~.....,_ 0w... Factory, , , ' -i7b3-201 Umbrzllno: StEEPE I R , al FENNER, - Wholesale Manufacturers • 4/ 1:11P ..UMDRELLAS AND •PARA.BOLEI, - 888 MARKET- FITUBNT, - - I.lllt.LDlßLrrila,, /We nor : making more than one bundredand fifty diff•rent egos of plata:W*oi of every sise;from to 40 Inchn,. . Their, outeortment of ' PAP. 0.801.8 lion very Urge, •and for Variety of deaf In, etyles, finish, end priors, ex ceeds that cf aoy previous season.„._ Buyers who have not hal 8. iF '0 mske of goods will Lind their tune well spent in looking over this well made , Steck,.which inoindos kiANYNOVIMTIRs, cot to he Met and asepha•t. • febl-3ni iprbware. JIISTICE &; §TEM.KETZ, HARDWARE aciumesios IIIikOHAATB I'MPOBTEI3.B E.ANorAcrtitits RIFLES & SHOT GUNS. N CORNER 0/, MTH AND 00A1b1DROE. Constantly on bang a large assortment of Vices, Penn sylvan% Blstee, Pine Puebet Cutlery, and e. general as sortment of DObIEsTIC AND FOREIGN lIABDWARN. Onbblern gnaturfic. WM. F. W.T.I 4 STACg et: CO, • - IMPORTOREI, MAN UFAC TURPIt ANT) I)EALICB.B TN sAmtx..azrvir HARDWARE, QARRIAQE T4IMMINGS, AND HARNESS MOUNTINGS, No. 88 NORTH THIRD STREET, Between Merkel and Arch, PRILADELPHIA THE LARGEST STOCK IN TRH CITY. ip — .Sigti of THE HOLDEN iTIERVP • Vet)lani Sanr`e 111.1ra (Saabs: • IaIIR NETT, SEXTON &. WEARINGFIN Are now Diming at their Store, No. 400 MARKET STREET, Above YOUTIII, North Blde, - A lIANDBOMPE ASSONTafF.NT OF NEW SPRING STYLES OP .FANCY DRY GOODS, OF THEIR OWN IMPORTATION And selection, "hien they Mier for sale to buyers from all parts of the Unite Rata, on the most liberal terms, febo4ra „ i)oC•l ll oitig 9 ' . . SHOE POMO. 15.84.0 13.A_RTON & 004 34 SOUTH SEPONP ST.VINET, IMPORTERS 01 AND DEALERS IN FRENCH AND ENGLISH. LASTINGS, SILK AND - 14110 - GAI / LQCNS, .I,Acpw, • ••• - MN= RID, PATENT LEATHER, ELASTICS, BOOT WEB, LINEN' SNEETINGS, DRILLINGS, Ac., Ac. ,41:6-Im* W. EDWIN W. PAY NE, Importer and Dealer IN SIIOE, and WIER MATERIALS, Iron Building, N. W. earner AEON and FOURTH. Ste. LASTINGS, . GALLOONS; 13IIEETINGS, FRENOII KID, PATE:IT LEATIIER oonuntres WEB, TOILET SLIPPER' UPPERS, febl-Sm] SHOE TIIItiCADS, LAOE6, ITO. WAIL JOHNS & SON, ( Buccess9r to the late Joe. v., Johns) Importers and Deplete IN - SllOl4 . STUFFS suit TBIA.I-51INGS, `LAOHIP,, &n., &o. AT TitE OLD STAND, Nortboaot corner of ,, !'0U11211. and AIIOS Streets IISINS.-800 boxes now Crop, prime M order, tayere,l:dooh, Clusteral'ln etore $1 and for ale,b7 ' A. IVISI4O. t - ~+', ~. ~- ~~— Via, ~ ,~' .~ ~ ~ aTURDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1859. • Parltanent was to re-assemble on the 8d in stant, aid the usual .official•notice to Ministe rial nielffiers had beeit-' sent out by Mr. Dia neihr, In Leader' of the House Of Commons. A ievr, ParliamonfarY Reform-Bill, promised by 'be,povernment last year, in to be the meanre;of the' Session. The Ministry had not fflewed the details of their Bill to trans pire.',Lord - ionn Russirm has a bill of 'his ofvn,rffiffili he will bring in—if he think th at , he can ereby obtain office, the very breath and being his public existence. Joux BRIGHT; to whom 6e Liberals had delegated the difficult task oifiaming a fully Democratic measure, has an "Med its leading points to the public, at a pu is meeting in Bradffird. His opositien _ exhibits far more states istri than he, has hitherto obtained credit 'or pesitydng. That it is very practical and •lomplelly in accordance with What is called C the alrit of the British Constitution," )nght trocommencl it. , It will be bitterly )ppotle(tt is opposed, already, for the Times and Pl i osith woknow not how many other journa rive opened a brisk cannonade upon it,,:' Thapanservative journals should be die satislied"tl. 4 groat Democratic reform need not suit, any person.' That the'Times and Punch, a Wily Liberal, should attack Mr. BRHIRT'EI *claire, on the ground of its ~ ten dency to Amicanize England," is rather cu rious: Virlifyjlngland Is thoroughly Ameri canized, as lie. American books aro re printed in timid, in batches of a dozen at a time. Anterin authors are at well known, by their Writgs, in England as. they aro at home. Thetis Mr. Cutown, the American paintor„ - doliting English eyes with his wonderful wait (tor that it is) of 'Niagara. There is Mr. PLYALL, the American photogra phist, takieglf the sun:pictures in Loudon. Therela hir.tariem lecturing on Humbug, to erewded:bses all over England. There is BAirszt .'}trues, drawing more money, wherever *dorms, with his clover wife; than any Eiish actor .of the present day. There ar-e" hrican India-rubbers covering millions ofitin England; and guarding them frein wet. : ire is American commerce and enterprise Wit, has built up the English port and town or verpool. There are WHEELER & -WILSON'S 008 Sewing-tnachines, making a musical el in thousands of houses all •oVer Englelidnd turning out any quantity of work;whichiilom was plonrnfolly done to the ead'‘‘ dongnhe Shirt." There are Colonel Cola's re is adopted into every regiment_ 'in the Brl kyle°. There is Prof. Norm's i r , ,Electrid g raph, sending winged words of intellizen tra one end of tho British Islands i to the et_ ' There IsDhloroform, allowing surgicalOtions to bo performed without Vain, and* is painlesq tooth-drawing' by , electricityVitt American inventions. There are DincinnWork and Pennsylvania hams served up, Clay, upon oproatlies tables in Enghind. titan flour, American Indian ,ineab., Aloof% hickory-nuts and • apples, American clief,With the canvas taken off, and +a tench 01 • paint ,over the rind, sold for Old *Ohestrit twenty.five conte a pound, in Chester, its*here are a hundred other American thhi daily use in England, so that' no 60 an be more 'thoroughly, .‘ Ainericanlit What with sherry-cob blers, and Clay . o, tobacce, and mint-juleps . , and other asides, the Englishman (if it vierk_ltota",, tklighte be considered , !nom rlititti egliars t etfelAt in gt44 . Who probablytened very kindly to Whiskey petteh and pee, were complained of in by. gine dam aing et Hiberniores ,qtram - Hi. hernia," molish than the Paddies:them selves.' What partrly'Amorican feature is there in'Joian Bats Reform Bill I—The Ballot. To vote sect and thereby give the cold shoulder to its called infirierri.e, but what really is died., Sturdy and plainspoken '• Sous Barons, while a' man's landlord or employer lithow a man veto's, there can-. not be freed election in England. He must have protection of the _Ballot. Loudly resputneroue editors, reproSent l ing the °plot certain politicians, ci No i" to vote in would be un-Ilnglish. Yet, ,Tolln Bull,ng admission into a 9halOas to bo bal for. " Socrot• voting," says the Tonaslya-English and unnatural." yet how operations must be secret, and are the bet the secrecy. How a_ jury vote upoilat is secret, and necessarily no. The 'is the first thing in Joon' Baraul a il :o, and that part of it which seems leg/ to be adopted.. For, out of 65 8 neenighe House of Ominous, only 280 are in)f* it t and, out of some 460 Peers of lent (there are many Scotch and Irish who have not seats in the H o use of! it is doubtfol whether the odd halflyould vote for the Ballot, 1 IlIoreo) 1 all parties have agreed upon this,) these, or right of voting at oleo- Bona for rs of Parliament, has to be e#endednembora must be withdrawn from plaipopnlations wholly Incompe tent fairlrcise tho groat right of elec tion. Tier so withdrawn must be re distributg now towns, old towns, great towns, atriolls populations. The tenets, at this moment, scf strangel t hat the, Industrial classes, who orm the the liritish population, have very lit. Tho result is, that out of every sii England, only one has tho right toff'. BRIQIIT, not going so far us his iv have hoped, and his oppo, pents e; does not propose Hniversal Snffragtho Chartists &Oro. Ho goes no fart/reposing that every male per m, a ter, who is retort to the relief of the 0 have powbr to vote at an eleotionnber or Members of, Parlia ment, plates that what he proposed might,lioroughs, Increase the number o f olefo-fold ; but, in all those not strictlf 3 turing, the increase would probe] moro than double, and he in dined) that the average would not rear& half times the present num her of Further, he should be per featly° see a £lO household qualiii c,,,tiood throughout the counties, for hithat that would meet with a large! acceptance throughout both horoPuntios, and he had no inten tiop 4g or advocating a measure tar i n notiblic opinion, but rather l oa m harmony with that opinion: TIMM of 1832—which was a Wh,twas chiefly directed to the desttory influence, and while it an: r oams boroughs, or reduced the " ni t representatives, took good me re the Whig boroughs intact. Th4rY Peers and powerful Com mooorY properly deprived of the pow what men should be elected i n , ughs. But hero the axe was sta ÜBSELL, GAOSTFIWOR, OAVEN pfsi great hp:11 Wes, wore allowed to cc influence." The members talc abolished or curtailed bo ran l rilmted in 1832, among Mau cuo Sheffield, and many other to od risen into population and Ive nt during the conturios which be i m the British Parliament bo cafr organized institution, , boroughs received sixty-three m ho counties also got sixty. live. It fifty-six boroughs and reduced aim two, mornberslo ono each,, , 50e,s farther, Wo give Ms own ~ ~, 1 GALLOONS, k john , Bright , s Reform Bill. m Bill of 1852, every borough eon. 000 of population was utterly ex. emery borough with leen than 4,000 no member, I pro loafs to disfr,in. I ) tewith a population under 8,000. the population of 16,000, and gay ustia under /0,000 shall holieefertli return only ono ,member. 'This win give 34 slays tone lidded to the 17 ; and if we add four-More - Beets for two - corrupt 'boroughs, Et. Albans and Sudbury, that some years agmwere disfranchised, we shall have a grand. result,-as far as England and Wales are concerned,of 125 seats to dispose of. There are a umber of b oroughs ' between 18,000 and 25,000 c -seine of which have one member; and think about a doyen - or thirteen of them have tiro members. 'Net wishingito make any more , changes, than_appears,to,be necessary, I, propose, to leave them precisely as they, aro. I' begin; then, at 25,000,' and I:give- to every borough above' 25,000; now having.' only 'one, ate additional member, until -I :come -, up ,to the population , of. 54,000. I will read the, names, of the boroughs, are in that list. There areeixteen boroughe with pepulatiOns between 25,000' and' 54.000:' They are Gateshead; Weibel); Monnietith, Ghat- - ham, South Shields, Tynemouth, Ashton-under- Lyne, Hudderstield,,Oheltenhana, ',Bury.. Dudley, Swansea, Leith, Greenock, Paisley, and Rochdale. All these ,boroughs would return two Members. Wheh / get to the population 01'54,000; I Prchied with the list of boroughs that honeeforth are to return three members. They are these: Bath, Not tingham, Leicester, Bolton, ,Sunderland,-Norwieh, Preston, Brighton. _ Portsmouth, Oldham,Stoke upon-Trent, Hull, Neweastle.upori-.Tyne; adieu?, Greenwich, and Wolverhampton. Those 'are six teen boroughs,' all of which would; under this scheme, return three members each to Parliament. Then I come to four boroughe which ought to be included in that list; but whiCh at present return only one member to Parliament—Mertbyr-Tydvil in Wales,Salford in' Lancashire , ' and Aberdeen and Dunee in. Scotland. Yon will °beery° that in making this scheme, I have known nothing of tbo river Tweed, and nothing of St. George's chan nel. I wish to treat Soo Hand and Ireland precisely on• the same prinCiple, in every resent, that I Would treat England. Those boroughs bring me ' Up from 54,000 to 135.000. 'AR these oaloulations are on the census of 1851.. Beginning at 115,000. and going up to double that number,27o,ooo; 1 proposethet nine boroughs shall herea fter return four members earth. They 'are Sheffield, - Bristol,' Leeds, Southwark, Birmingham, Westminster, Lambeth, and the Tower Hamlets—the population of which is so, enormous that I propose to form two complete boroughs, to each, of Which 'four members will be given: Then I come to a very Select; a very large, and .meet • iMportant• list, which comprises five cities or boroughs, but of the very largest in the kingdom, which are entitled, as am sure yea will say, to exercise a powerful inte rest-upon the government of the country: 'To the boroughs of Manchester, Finsbury; Marylebom Liverpool, and Glasgow, having a population at the last census of morelhan 310,000, npd now doubtless of 400,000, I propose to give the righ t to send six members to Parliament, • Then comes .tho (petition of the new boroughs: To these I pre: pose - to give one member eaoh—GraVesend. Lea mington, Sthleybridge, Burnley, and Birkenhead. Then there are two places which Lord John Bus sell, in 1854, proposed to make one boreugh—the parishes of Chelsea, and Kensington, in the west of London. .Their population is so large and so -rapidly increasing, that I think they ought to be two -boroughs, and .to, have- two -members each.. These new boroughs, therefore, will absorb nine members. I have 'read, the names Of , several Scotch burghs whiel'are' to have additional mem bars: There are ' four others which may be eon tidered new burghs. You are probably aware that in Scotland the plan of grouping burghs has always, so far as I know, bean practised. Seve ral of 'these groups are en large that I should have been compelled to have given them •two members; if .kept together; and thought it much better that four or six places joining to re turn one member, and having population enough for two, should be. separated into two distinct group°, each returning one member .' From the Stirling :group, I propose to take the burglar of Dunfermline and inverkeithiag, and they will return one member ; Hamilton, Lanark, and Linlithgow are to be' taken from she Falkirk burghe,• end given one member; Dumbarton, Port filaegow, Renfrew, anti P.utherglen are to be taken fronalhoKilmiirneek burghs, and, to have Qat) member ; and th 6 towns pf Arbroath' abd Breohin are to be taken from the Montrose barghs, and to return ono, member.' There is. ono other point— 'what shall he done with the distribution of , mem bers as regards the 'counties of England? I pre-v pose to divide the West Riding of Yorkshire end Lancashire into three district divide - Cs.' f 'Mould give the West Riding of - yerkshire four additional members ; _ to South Lancashire two additional members-1 . am assuming that South Lancashire is divided—to the North Riding offorkshire one ; North Lancashire one •, South Devon one; and to the rest one—namely, West Kent, South Stafford, West Geroge'', North Essex, South Essex, Weal Norfolk, East Somerset, Vest Somerset, and that 'portion 'of Lincolnshire known by the , name of the Parts of •Lindsey. These have been selected On amounted` their great populations, and because wittain.them there has grown-up, not only a large: population, but very large interests not exolusiv,ely connected with the land ; and, therefore, I think, they have a right to seine eilenelon of the number of members in any reariiingement'of -the-repre sentation that may take place." - -He-wont on to say that there' tiro Q boroughs • in , lreittuv one of these leaving only 8-fel4.;" tore. • "Now; trakt he I have proposed that nine of these boroughs, beginning with 'Portarlington and ending with 'Bandon, should be - disfranchised ; sn'd that six'of their members should be distributed in 'this way: —Two to.tho oily of Dublin, and. one leach to the towns of Belfast and Kilkenny , and ; the 4:litim of Limerick and - Cork.' Then, Wiring 'at the vast population of the Irish counties, I propose to give freaulho boroughs of -England ofive new members, which, added to the three saved from these dis franohised boroughs, wdl give one member each tc Mx of the principal Irish counties, and two mem• hers to the county of ,Cock, which may be termed the Yorkshire of Ireland, I propose to, give to Manchester and Liverpool six members each, twelve together. What' do they pay annually to the Government in income tax? On Sche dules A and D, trades and professions; house tax, assessed. taxes, and land tax, they paid in' 1857 097,000. Take all the boroughs that I have ,proposed to disfranchise—having populations tinder eight thousand—the constituenelel now of eighty seven membe - rs; what did, they pay • that year They paid 1221 ; 000 Tho coustitnenclesof eighty seven members paid 1221 : 900, while the constitu encies o' four members in past time, of twelve as I' propose. to arrange it, paid more than four times as much ! Again, compare Manchester end L'ver pool with the sixty-nine boroughs whiehl propose, under &haute B, shall in future return Sixty nine members. In 1857 the constituents of those sixty-nine members only paid /386,000. And if I add the amount paid from the other forty•one boroughs by the constituents of fifty-live members, that is, taking all the boroughs with a population under 25.000, tbo whole amount is only £857,000 of taxes; against £807,000 paid by Liverpool and Manchester." Such is the plan for improving the very defective representation of tho inhabitants of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ire land. The time for effecting this reform has arrived. All parties unite in admitting that something must bo done. Mr. Bit/OAT'S mea sure, if passed,-tvill establish the'Sovereignty of the People in his native land. Ho titters no declamation against the Hausa of Lords-7- ;11mq of whose members have attacked him as One AoSlrolls of ruining his country. His peroration, however, is earnest as well Us sik=' nificartt, and wo hero append it ; There are some great men, and there ere many good men; in the ranks of the English arietoeraey; there are among them who would be nobles though coronets and privileges were things unknown. Bat even their virtues cannot long sustain their order against the perilous defence fo whioh it is now exposed. And I warn them to call bash the champions who, in evory display of their prowess, - `atibibit hereditary nobility Allied with intellectual poverty, and members of the peerage wanting the manners and politeness of gentlemen. I oan not, I say, answer language like this. I cannot consent• to suspend,' even for a moment, the pro, gross of this great debate, to take part in per canal contliste. I brash aside the miserable do tractors, whose-nature it is to bark a vain opposi tion to every great and good ewe. From these piatforms address a great nation on a great question. I am in earnest. I believe, and there. fore I speak. I have no eloquence but that which consists in a hearty lova et truth ; and tha feats and the arguments I make use of enter the under standings and reach the hearts of my countrymen. I am, as an - individual, powerless. They, my countrymen, are - a nation and omnipotent. And to tb. at, and to you to whom I now speak, T com mit the issue and the fate of this great question.t, TlNvouvuw.tvn.-.-Burglarlos have recently bean fictiuent at Lawrenceburg; 'lndiana. In On sequence, a watch Woe organized on Saturday night last.. A watchman, named George fluestis, a nephew of the owner of the house, was, with others, t stationed outside, and some lime during the night, having got quite pold, entered the. door without giving duo notice to the party within, one of whom, a young man, named George Bennett, fired a pistol at him, 'the 'ball enterity his breast, near the throat, and pawing down into the left • aide, causing a fatal wound. INDIANA Lusiion LArs.—A ac liquorlaw" has pawed the Indiana Ileum fixing licenses at from $5O to $l.OOO, at the discretion of the county com. missioneis ; amassing a fine, not less than $5 nor more than $5O, for every instance of selling with out license; prohibiting selling on the Sabbath, on any State, county; town, township, or motile pal election day, where the same may be held; prohibiting the soiling to persona in the habit of being intoxicated, or to minors, under heavy p9a allies, with other stringent features. Mr. E. Latrzn, of Dasseldorf, rho distin guished historical painter, best known, perhaps, through hie picture of "Washington Grossing the Delaware," arrived in New York last lreek, after An absence from the United States of nearly seven years, and has received a most hearty welcome from h s numeronti friends and fellow•eitisens. Tun hunker dealers of Cincinnati have hold a meeting for the purpose of taking the initiatory steps towards establishing an association, with a view to the regulation of prices in' purchasing, and retail rates in the city. JAMES DOUGHERTY, of P'etersburg,NA., on Friday week, with a rifle of his own make, fired twenty yards at a three-cent piece, and hit it six times in sucoession. SOME Portland pbygielans oxtraeled i bul let from the brain of a Air. Sharwood i o> tJamida, a few daps age. t The ball was Shot Into his bond, some sit months ego. „ , „ THE New York Post learnit that Mr. Seeley's American chapel at Paris, oit,btiahed by the Ame rican and Foreign Christian. (Wok at. an (alias° of $50,000, hue fulled. Tits Shoo and Leather Dealers of Now York bold their ant, annual dinner on last Thursday o veuldgiat the Metropolitan Motel. TNvo;CENTS..::, ! Rotai,Glo,v§ , .„ANTF44lG.oprp.,.!,„t, The NoeuedaVPruyer.lifeetitig. 'Are the 'extriordinary , :redigions meetings for. badness men, of -whielt waheard',so puckarear age,• in oennention with thenamtef .Taytata's id Philadelphia, still suattOntatil pees the mart, Mont among the firemen, which graw,cate.f.these s gatherings, yet ,Ccintirina? A're there, afty,„ per ceptible rinialtsfiorn, tide rettia'rgable'Manithati:: tam's( 'Oli ri tithin t energy:tn Warrant the'h i elia, end utility of its 'OrMtlinanitti? ' 'Thee° are'the stance inquirieithat have reeently reached. 'ad :tconcerning the religionir nsevement which, in the. 'spring of 1858; was spoken of all over the land as .the, 4 ! great awakenine ,• 'Our,antfer to these interrogatories, in brief, ter, that, as regards the brat, the meetings whilst; were, then otindnoted at..layne!ti Hail, are now , and ha ire, been for ninny *mike, held in' the °aperitif/Similar,' ofi the 'Sanitiii-streetßaptist Church , George street, beloittinth; that their atlendariele'at the present time isctniteh more numerous, than it hue ever been heretofore, When they were held'in that' building- 7 80. much ,so, that within: the present week, on several occasions, the • large audience ohamherofthe pharoh was insufficient to 111000MMO-. date the multitude, when it was found necessary to ;throw 'open the, lee:tura-roam below,whleiwas . elle filled 'during the hour at which the meeting‘ are dailyilield; from 12 tit'l O'Cinekli. With respect to Meetingi among the' 'Aft). win, they:are not only being gradnally - inereaied: in flambe* .bat they have; in Many eases,:zetV twined a character which bids fair •ta •insure their. ,entire permanence ,far, the, future; and so to they results of these meetings as a whole, we can pro-, bably give, oar readers abroad no batter idea then hrreferring, as briefly' as,lieseible,. ta' the neen•, day 'bleating which, we' had the priv:llige'ef at tending at the''Sansm.street ohnrelt; yesterday: At the appointed hour, - all the pewe,lioluding ,these in' the galierieh, were filled."lThe - usual in- - trodnotory exareisee,..-nonsisting of a. hymn,. 'a• prayer, and the reeding of ,the, Soriptirres--ocanr, pying, in all, Jess than 'fifteen minutes—haring : been eencluded; the chairmen reed a request,, whioh had 'been banded in by n'eliter, for the prayers of the peeplit in" behalf of an orphan" brother, 'residing in' 'the western' part 'of 'this ,State.- A .letter 'wad . next reed': by. a - clergy , : man, addressed to the noon•daY prayer meeting,. in Philadelphia, hy, a ger,tletaan realdingin Con=. tral Virginia , inkling the prayeraof Christians in behalf of two prodigal eons, one of Wh om Wtur,natv, westing" his . substance and life in this ' eity: % Pol- Jowing this, another clergYinan informed the eon-, gregition' of commenication he had just re ceived from a oity in the far Southwest, on the banks of the Mississippi, preying for the' interies- Rion of the Christians assembled at the noon-day prayer-meetings in Philadelphia, in, behalf of that sin-stricken looality. 'An earnest prayer was then offered in,behalf of those who had not made their pantie with.Ged, in 'general, and, more especially, for those nianiipipd in the Several requests. After another.hynth, and sundry earnest - Chris-, tian'exhortetions by laymen 'and others, 'address ed to the unacitifertedot - Most tonoliing Feet:Lewes presented - in the following inoid last-Se' turday, a man, reported himself to •the Young' Alea'a Christian Associationotating that he :was' Indio of, hiasaaohnietts, that he had emigrated to the Western, euuntry,and had finally removed' with his family-consisting, of a wife and,nine, California;children - to that h p liad'beio,me des 'peratelY prodigal; hi ldilaahlte ; diet had his wife and eight °flits ehildrei;bideatli Land that, after' a succession cf; trials 'and privations; lie had .been enahleti :with his Only remaining' child—a boy of fourteen Years—to reach thbfoity, , where ho was •new friendless • arid.; homeless.; adding, that he had been, reoommended.to. the. - syinpathies -the Association. The,pOmmittee; the Object Of which' ,IS • te look after Bitch cases,4 - onee responded - in the, epPlinationitiiiired" for' him a 'suitable lodging. piece; and'osi ' Bu'nday se- ecunpanted him to one of our charebee.' - 'oiMon: day be was lid by his newly- found friends to" the plea ofLnoon-daY,prayer,:and , there, eider:the "oppressingp oonvietierkofhis need of -a Saviour; he, nisei. and, with a ,tremulous ,vcdoe„.asked Prayers of Ged'aipeoPie,.in his hehelf,,adding,.; thatt, if there was a Beptiat,edeigmatt,Kthe ati. 7 dienee* eldthld ft: truism with ltiin after, the meeting. Beth' Gloat) le niaita Aire cheerfull iia: y - , " one iof our Baptist,'l'pasters ''dtuing the terval, and y.estorday, - to!fard who close "of the meeting,. the 'itiasf%roseAti his seat, and in language which at Matte" aliened hlta to'he man of euitureriestified . in• the 'midMade Of the Marvelloius•things which' (thrift had done for his i 'seal. The whole probeeding was eminently affect leg: There_ hp stood, bearing ovi4entanarks the truthfulness of what has been already stated Beside him was seated hie little son.. Said he, am here to-day to testify before this :rneeting_of what trod, forOlirist sake, has, done for my soul, and to thank him for havingdireeted my footst'ep's to that association of pattng men,' whioh first Pif lowed my head, and then led are to thiaplioe of prayer. I feet ale, unknown to sue before,. in the consciousness that my, sine aro forgiven; and . that in my Saviour I am justified kefore God this hour: But have another -request to make. at the hands! of these Christians, 'and that is, that my boy be mado'tho subject of God'e, converting grace. lie has attended ma in my wickedness, and often dis suaded' me from still. deeper crimes. Obedient- quite, I presume as most boys are, he has often obeyed my guilty instructions, though he has often refused thtpolso4tis pup 'at my hands, and' implored me to turn- away from it myself ; 'and I nowpray God that, in answer to yonrpetitions and miue,'he will speedily convert my boy to Christ, that he may share in the joy of my redemption; even as be was forced to recoil from the bitterness of my former guilt." • • Earnest prayer was made in behalf of this boy,. and the whole assembly seemed deeply Impressed, with the sineerity,of the statement they had heard, At; Esther or aria Ravrver,.—lf the roligioua revival has effected any one great modification , of error more surely than anyother, it is in the tin-, done) , it has foitered to narrow down the breach ,•sf inctzon which hes too lOng,andrioo Monspi ououtly held place botween,the clergy and the so ealledleity. Time was when, for any man to un dertake . to enlighten his fellow-riten in public, in matters pertaining to salvation, would have be • en looked .upon se .Im, unallowable presumption, to say the leant ; under the liberalizing light of there times, such cf.rts, on the pnreof competent Christians, - are . net only tolerated by the olergi, very generally, hat notually urged as a duty, If it be true—as it certainly is—that no Mou'ean.dia:' course' of the things of the Spirit unto edification, unless he be guided by this. Spirit, arid that the gift of the Spirit comes not through the formulas of human institutiens, but from God, then cer tainly the command far the subjects of Christ's kingdom, to n let their light shine," (that men may glorify their FAIRER ' ) is alike binding upon all, Lay teaching in our Sunday-schools has long been permitted ; lay missionaries have even been sent forth into destitute regions;' and now the call is raidti, and seconded by' mares of ministers of the Goipol; for Christian men, who neither lay claim or attach . importance to the appellative "reverend," to " mime np to the help of the Lord," in prebenting the (dame of the Gospel to' dying men. At a recent union meeting, we learn from the current number of the Atiterican Pres4teriaii, a well-known and highly-esteemod clergyman pre sent asked the signifluant'question; " Why Chris' thin layinen of competency might notlie expeoted to forego further gains, and plant thernselves in the midst of, destitute communities, for the par pore of seeking to, eave that which is lost?'. ". We need seamy add that, this inquiry (and the affirmative response,it implied) was made in full harmony with the sentiment that Pervades Chrii• tian communities svberever" tlje present new de volopment of Christianiti (the Union meetingsj bee obtained a foothold; - and as tiffs ' 1(717707L spirit which is now being fostered is no new reality, but a mere 'adkaission' of. what the very terms Christianity imperatively demand—in that: all are one in Christ' 7 —so, the admission of laymen into the great vineyard as laborers, duds a prece- dent In the practice's of the early Chu eh, tylifoli cannot ! lie oveiloEked . In tide. sermon yittioh appears in another part of our paper today, the ground to taken,.upon no moan authority, that. the 'original introduc tion of Christianity into Romo leas by laymen entirely; and certainly, if .snolt an agency was admissible so near the fountain head,.there can bo no good reason for exelnding,it after the ae- cumulated light. of oightaon aoaturiaa has baaa shed upon the pathway of beltoyera THE smoothness of the ico between Albany and Newburg, on the Hudson river, has brought out several tee boats, which gotover the ice at the, rate of nearly thirty miles au hour. .oao,of these, boats, says tho Knickerbocker, left Albat6. for Hudson a few mornings ago, and went the fleet, seven miles in thirteen minutes. TIIE ' MOTIIER of John G. Saxe,. the poet, who resides in Troy,,Now, York, went to Bstming• ton last week, for, the purpose of hearing her n n read his poeni on ' Love " Though - he haS Is,- turedlour hundred add fifty times, this is' the fir: time the old . lady ever had au opportunity if hearing him. " —' 7 ' - ' ' THE Troy rimes ans that !Mania for tie. straying crinoline weirs fo Prevail Et that at present: Within a short time, ladies have bad their dresses completely mined by vitriol thrown upon them at the entrance to the theatre, aml, in the lobOvs of some of the okurohes, NOTION TO Corauer t , corwElzkek. - oonaroa:eiltaft (F u a ke.ies" witilletatibeariO: ,mled the' folloryintroleb livery ootomanfea lon mutt heikoaxeipanl4 by the time of the writer.' Ia toplef,to fe1ef1i,04,14,181 la the Vpoifigiiihy, boi one t aide 'ei the ihralitioaleb,i:P . - ,written epee. " ylansff . .vanif . and' nther ,/ mur.o,4wiotlt*4-,T„6*3,1;', k!iyes.*:/00f4At.el, 'Mt tiaPrlVll4;P:,4,#Zll,(tßeri4.-::t ;of population, er any Inforreatle:n that will be batoreal , dog to the general reader.- A - • :TE VJZy. AtfrorMOINTA, I ,C:LARPCB,ASOB,37.4IYr irktriki •• " AlB44Ell ' oi, The Wonderful - pa z , 0001 2 0, t rif Nrir attuT.Srairi. TasiriiX:4; :The; MarolianC , ir FRI".!!-`" .1f end f r NATIONAL _ Ol / 4 01p1,—P, VIII A. lll barjhU. !, Lenny clizatur Clouipiturt=rc ZeiiestrlaniGimnag* Atirobjejerf.o 4 ., . -1 . oDmrotraa/P GAirinzaß•leolo6otrolgiClia.* Ofdne from Operas, Pantomime., Dancing, and einiiiir,) beHro/trOs Orns • frouss.-4thiopian,Natertaiusi ALLEGBD,,,9,agsRe-,dl.' matt Inained.JOhlt - •• Eilaher l / 4 3ras arrested en TAOSMe) illeillogiattis charge of firiniyils own residemee, Aiderspeett, Above,- Vaster, in the Twentieth . ,; ward. :41 appear" that - Richey became „very much batoxicated-..en /Thu,74"- 'afternoon, and upon hie - ietiiiileircers -- , : at dear o , clael the evening; .10 d finding hill wile 'weematrlditheypon2- ...eluded to Make afire. ,He eoecodinglyheeped aj lot.of clothing anti combustibles en a steel one porner,,of • the rani and fired %aim' 13eVeral fi ht nitlies * melding in' the house perceived:the smell of awake; and upon pin.- needing to the room were surprised to , andlllekey Bug there wetobiug the - gamma, US conaefocceof the danger .with which-be' iru, threelened. - -- , The was aeon extiamtlahed,asid Officer Stout was called Is and arrested Blakey. Howes, taken.to the loek-np for, - the 'night; and lesteraty brought' Niteroi -Alderman' _. 'lrelllinger, who held him to •ball id :4,90040 answer at , A.florgr. , . ,e young woman, named Bereft ,Nolaral,waa liffusedeus. , _ t 'Vainly by one of the tigers now i niexhibitieti,at-TAPVII - I- Crlicua,:in,WeLent &est, above pighthi' If Appear& - that the young lady had approached the urge iri which : the animate are confined, and was esteeming one id,...the.c titers,'when' the Inhirlated ;striate' . fitiddenlr turad. and sexed er „hand aid semi braiSingandlieeriitint.,: them in the ' oat ham - Able manner Her heed and fare . woe alco•Oeiry'key6tte`r bruised andecratehed before - eve - could be -rescued from the perilous .poaltlett: , Ifr,"Mo: Call was ,called in, and, aftendreardorthowonnehr, the , Aanfortnnete wagerer wan convoyed to the Pennesdruda ustad. ' ••• • " man,'' mated' Milton Stewart, we - entreated, on Thniedayt4entnellry" °A lien demons and Levy, on the charge of forgicia ' ' draft; which purported to haver , tbeinstidnewrii , big Cr: l Wendt- it Oa., to the,order of Preenohi far $5 - 62 22. The accused was taken beforeAldermitu..- freemen, and held for a farther hearing. - Ile wee fakers before the,Alderman 'yeeterdartnerning, - aiWate ' the note, which. had beep sold to aeferal parthalawnn , traced back' by the witiessen, to the defendaat. The latter stated that hI it from amnion alien The a 3 anetd waehr4din ille2Oball to ansier.i. , . ../-. CoftQN l m4 Oaan..—..Coroner Fenner - heldan , ' fognest on the body of Augustus Blantryorlio wart killed,;* , ;. ihetantli on ~Titnytday,, aftercoon, - aby ,the whitelciit Cart wising oven hia, , ,ltead,t,dt4sppear,:that Atignstua r ', in company, with anotke,ronuall bay, was. awinging.tlPOO, the chalets of it !alga limit ; wagon, which waspeed for ~ hafiling heavy'atoctes, - when the - little:fellow elippiee ' and fell to -the &rancid, and the Anse wheels mimed , over bin head, ,crushingit in the most; shee ldPil_mateere : 'and scatterin g neon the alreet.: The 'jury exonerated the driver from 'any Maine, and rindeied verdict of accidental death, Bassony . ion ,e 9 3 ,maafalta..',',—Lifttltenant, ,h • .•. White, Mini report to flu) MnYorrYatitatda77ntoroldPilb , Mates that a nowhere!' drotingsineeted on tit, nerUt...,,...r side of WoOd,atreet,. above Thirteenth, are. utmoespla4 4 , and,ste they arrinotlioneedy fastened, they are fro,— fluently resorted to by a flock of wegraute, who make" ,I •SPleg P'nefte-.ofotheon.f 'As; numeronalpetty +thefts; n Joe., might - be probably traced to the worthless geogs,,,. eta inhabit therm buildingeglintru they iire.nntdnatiy liable to the ; torcholk the ineendiary;ta manna eity , of that neighborhood ere goshawk pt itayjng l irompt melt- Sores taken to have the nuisance abated. ;; named", . . atraia Dodd, agid - ationt, thirty-five ,yearS, a hand ployed bolt& the..5'4(66r bfar„Ceptein„Wni,MiseeZa we. drowned near : Delarate 'city Thureday feat:: , wia engaged' to Medoff the foreireff,Witea - the euddenly Mahe, and he Fu tuvolpileted4filtor_the_riVerti The small beat wad immediately, lanoshed, and every effort raide - to reedy4t - himwhnt he mint tercifiltba, boa , - .Bir.`xDodd was eirteettritabliftdiCladni;'""- ,r trinoe Ulan,,and .ttenrels...rfarntlyrefiding da,therleweetu.,..' part bf this - buy. - - • . „.- , ; b-tof .•-• SP TT JEr t Y . ,,II 9 I IA O Rr".79P.TAUr 3 I ,I I I YI , AVOnr,...,!: lag; a horse which Mr. Thompstosi,wee driving trip.; - pod end aroeih nit h e. - penrer.•rnijera.T - -.4t...11_ - .•• .Ridge indenifit andWiterlstie4.* 26. Thompson alright, 'ad imm the carriage, and in his endeavare tor naihit the „ horse to riae„wuticked our the head 'andseverely ' lured. Ile was Cati7o7p3 t t*S . .iyald tom, at !Jaren* and streets. - ' • ALAN Chal'aCtero-07,:_ tended a' ball , ori Thursday eienbig, its house: near Smel:nit road and German streets; and ifteticabitionl i s , ;o'nehr pmesitja24.l".fgalrriatted.44rir.t,4ll:.'7:ft The wounCrwiut 41'ot Ora. - dairgerone'eluirecter, and the difilcalty wart settled soon,after twee glalgat Monongahela. „, BY TELD4RALV,IS. 'PENNISYLAVEteI4O4.re - • .. _ • ,0 ' , 8E1 1 11144 4 ' • " Thh Renittimet stdOlek. • A lumber of petitions were presented fioni •phia end elsewhere for the repeal of the tonnage tax on the Pennsylvania Railroad, loud on s. wariety of other enbfects. The - bill `to amend tlie, wait - reported' ' negatively. The following Wile Were read to Pismo : • To provide for"the' rdeotiorrof a State Treasurer:. - • To, getabliah, the peßneylvarals. Industrial Reform : ,,,. , • The tollotting tulle were passed . '5 Relative to toe recorders of deeds.. • • Relative' to the - trusties 'or The l'armere 13411 The Bonita adjetirned to Monday at three 0 0 0 lock. . , • , The following bills were 'oonsldered andpink An act win. supplementary to the charter of the borough An sot inereseing the tax one•half & cent on, the dol. , .tar"on miiiieye, real estate, Ice. Mr. R B pre tented memorial irons yo>