The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, June 01, 1859, Image 1

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„ . .
•
0 : UZ O II 4' 13
C3RAVATS,
pcß' Bgliftij*ipe4,peloSey'er!th,
A.itrit ,
•,..*4iii,l39*.T,
iv-44%y: xt e
4oritirr,
t'' -- " - . lllANVFMITrialifiO ” '
y oo • •
Vrikt? gO, beige f!l'oituss, sta.
, I:s••••;' , Dootototo eissj artietia ielatlie to tali
!Was 4 1 0 1 , RNA 0)/XN-#:. ' 6
0 / E l •
AN - ;
VITINOWISTE**43O..,.GENTLEMEY'S
-rvAocriprouweirroßig
I , 4Vbsis7 g114111.41‘..111.1RT '. • 1111.141344.
- • '
okt . Atkifoig Stibid_,.3‘.lo3.oll2llllitrr,Stess . ty_ pppo
' vs* Oki Weikklesteh HOINIC• •
.1.111100, is heretoloteille.imer
eolealit*elikei Chretief.asa. Waasheekuriog
dip e' 'Wiese forkite iselmbkated of Mete
- thalibortemtkeektee. - Wholesale
efieldkesieplied ear liberal. terms. b , 114.kr
, ,
' ' . 4 ooAktti. ll s9 taut* Sr.
•
4004.0 0 FIXTUIrk.W.
NVAXN-Vaii:loolCalr, 40113.1rWE14i;
r;'. • %:::Ty..l'
.1;
s.f 74 4oAl4,kiOrli*V':
izt - 43 - k;
3 - 476 1040A.RWAYi-.N. =Yr, , -
Itooptrepeiqatlitittortotkointklie'tbtt*leootiono
tiseeitiroitolt*:**Vbeit •
•, ' t. "
plie#Pl3, • • -• •
' • - •i'' 'BRONZZO,
•lto,, Ete:,
lidtkit their lairpo osi turfed iteek amoebas the
ife tieett - Ot !llSO ll tailktter mi,dBgi g ued
ky :tt!Ote PetroOk :14to, ~
to keep
ltd: isitiliDVATO4 len* ,lv° 4 Sa l/
* 116"
0,1,,.„0thet;:.a - re,inTefied ~ •
0014"
Oats; UP , &r.
TP! ;( Pi i r s-./ *C i fF 4A 7 ' I
.V60 . 144:4 , GENTS "
Wfll Da foiled aly at
-..4VX: 4 *.P*4i 44 , 1- •
STREET,
.11vetiv"elrti.orliAT icOAß•erilL be rowel it, this
*s,r4LP4BissT• 1 ,
46tuti-fititOaljitig Oicabo
rkll Ir,fgotTSZ-V,ORNISEING STORK,
pno,ogictoutlFlSSET,
(pkiedti tit": - 441•14, of fine Arta,)
VV la ARNAL L
Ind* AttiOop to Ma sisoitmo at
:11flPiRIOR XtEVSIOMtArIt9, +warranted to
m 6634144.
YLATER7COOWS,',./(nOd : •
4t.tiltStßY'ltEtrit4o.oo7lls, verleonyezdent.
Ytill'ilaTkp•ddrpf.-PANO., • •
RED:KES4O, ORKsTS, = ; 30th - 4:roof;
RATTAN; OSAISB ; AND BETTEES,
•
ais9. o j;)t at '
uSFUAJi:n9IIESZIIIII.NIBRiX6I • GOODS.
. -
•TEI! GELIBRATED .GiNl7/14E
44, 0 ;:53726 24.30.1 , 74f4E51RALTC 31 %,
1166411 oiorlir Tux •
PAIENiERs ,
,70.11NA.1V VAPHFIY,
HOI7I3ECIptIiIIiRING , 'WARB•R9ONB,
922 Oliiiti'ENVX tyraraWk,
intAtmoiortt '
tdoking-elaesto.
)10K.ING - qa.,ABSES. ,
Itio t vt, iitr! . ths , mat ii4tesepte and Ikgikt wars
61.:-.14
• - .
!of *tit * , ink- .
avaty rattan, and at the 'most
mode(MOM
,
latrartrablbotati and trio' most simple num.
1.80121:80 'Ol,lBOlll •
Viewed teithe:heettetheisinkla the moat eubstestial
T.- - LOIIXII/0. GLASSES
IftisShisest by to, are tattrakaturad by ostieless is ear
•-` 1880;8 13148eD0 • •
Oli in jA )44, ro 4 7!. fr" 1•11. t o r. 4"°Y7
4,038 8, Zing SON,. ' '
_litk,"-0.1q11:1,,x,tr,T.:,)3
411arble tiotko.
ompuzi.TAL ABLE WOUICES
'Aiatisoietiati;:el9.4l 11 very large usekriMetat of
iafijiiistratz and
WW4--81:Viites
Of rufous 4aolgiati mode of the flout
VrAtillft:lllls o AUSILIOAN , HAMMES,
' W4OII itil` Ai . Mai it gitittiitioiitoefprtooo. oleo
m i t t*t,c;',iiiitote otlori orkis' tflo mc6t taT6rable
t4,inftf; lia:ll4poOtqity hitter dm Odle generally to
411" tog* psxehaLfilg ellasvheie.
sttiNtitoitz;
lit l o , 2l4 l r9lltli *toot,.
- rise* , :x/40•414;',`
LilUnerp
UST. ~iECdEND
The PAM OCTAGON the Nevelt" ot. the,
. : LINI3OI,Air &
. .
STRAW AT-S±
• - : - • .
• •
Of atiy atyle or
InpzicoLs,
725 STREET;
(TWO D 00884110711 IdASONIO TOMPLW.)
~10,2"y25-tje}4 , 7 - ,
.3rott.
pie ißoi4.liLooms,;4szc.).
( - 3 A.B. . 0, 0
No. TOT NON . w 41§ fiT•B:N.I4 T
• ADD •= 2
No; , 208iNDITTil D.NLAWANE 'AVNNUN,
PiALTADELYALIA,
0711 . 1113- POI eA,LII • •
, ANDAMAN VOINDRY AND DOWN'
PIG IRON - -
• or ISM IPOLLOWING - 311111011 ?
INNINIVALi.,;DDNAGELDSINI,_ -
, • . , POW,
cualtinotr, HAMPTON,
-
• . -41:110; ocILD BLAST
CHARCOAL PIG IRON -
FOR CIAR-TritENTA - PURPOSES. •
sown AND WZBI ntoima; ' • .
- ••• - rmal IRON;
WATER & 44.0 PIPES,
- renikaixotar BLISTER tyrtar,,•io., dso.,
son .BLtiil4 CLOSE A CONSIGNMENT., , • ... •
500 - WATER , PIPES,.
NMI PUT TANNi AND • -
op2B-Bni • TWENTY IN6BIIB MANIERE.
iftrAAeato toYilistoonyo Amboy The Dekko.
-g•
liILIP p:Xnl.4..r.
(rtoossiois to iontt a. iota 1 , C 0.,)
No. IA eqpIIt.TRTIT STREET,
'I2MttAItIMPUIAL
BANK NOTRE!,
- COMMERO.M6,I I APER,
LAND
it01741:11. AND tkliD
Mete and Bonds,. Ent Only on tominlesion.
Ilisetal attention Elm ,to collection 'tbniughont
21keoiruntry, snd trutbmere may ray on prompt
, rise 11144, 1 , 1441.741. ' ep2•tt
Alerdytnt enuor.e.
MA TT'SONi
:0-31 Al, E. 0 It 4
• 1,126' 90 Vert trr
ri14412{.
Vara°ls, tZrt
p A R,AI3 0 la S ,
Of 81011 and - B/AUTIPUL OTYLIIIB and PlBBlll.
SUN ymERRLLA:s,
IiTIIBIIO, ADD EXQolirruei MOUNTID
FOR BALI/ AT LOW PBIOBII,
WM. A. DROWN & 00.,
246 MARKET STREET. •
Vaal eetate, Eitoako, 4Vc.
RICHMOND &, ZEPPS,
GENERAL WESTERN LAND AGENTS,
Vor the pile; Trade, or int;ohase of Lands in Penns/l
. itissourllona, Iflino a i Wie onatn,
„liiuuesets, and /Tinian.
Abstracts of titles furnished, Collections made, sod
tense jpild in the foregoing , !nett's:
/; tIEOOND WLOOI/
AMERICAN EIIILDINGE,
s; s. itotior 101311711 awl wAtaaur
my2B , 6t PHILADEI4'O4, PA.
litattxtigh
,glack;
CITY PASSENGER
RAILWAY STOCKS
FOR BALE.
The Stoats or the variant, Passenger Railwaya now
In operation In this city and those In course of eon—
"'Unction, and which are expected to be running
shortly.
Al these stooks ate not 'generally before the Board
of Brokers, we would invite our friends and the public
Oa wish 4eeirable reonrlties, so well
ea to gain •intortnallan•respeeting them, to glie ate an
early call. ' •
WITHERS & PETERSON
HOOK ANli =ORANGE BROKERS,
No. 89 South THIRD ST.
Ogwing
WHAT; R„ & WILSON
as eaviraoTtimila
SEWING MACHINES I
Superior to oil others for general u• 0, oud for
SMUT MAILSRS,'SATIONS, AND DDESSIDAIENRS,
NEW 3TYZE ,0.2y11" FIFTY DOLLARS.
' •
028 Ohestfint Street, Phtledelphla
7 Weet'St►te Stmt, Trenton, N. 1.
Over john TitniPe Store, Mutton, Tense
7 Sleet Gni Stre4o; Welt Cheater:
SIJA AGEN'T'S:
NOWitt rd; mooteetown, N. a
SILLIAM PATTERSON, J
-0 •
Peananient (Maas rill be *paned thorny, by me, in
Bowling, Allentqwn, and Lauesater, Penna.
'HENRY COY, Agent.
I.p.Ralt3'D BOUDOIR SEWING RA
ORME is offered to the poblio eel the mast re
liable low-priced Sewing hiaOhiss in nee.. IS will ate
'Moe ids to sixty stitches to OA ineh, oa ali Mods of
geode, from tamest bagging to the finest ciudirlei. It
le, without exception, the eistylast in its, mechanics!
Construction ever made, and Oen be ranemd kept billed*/
by 5 dad VI t w elve JOON of age. The DVRABILIIT of
tkls . maohine, andthe nffidass plf era wows, are MAP
ranted to be naeurpaseeff any oikar..rti speed i 11 51 151
from three hundred to Orissa beedted /Mabee per mi
ante. The thiesdusedieSaltandirectly from Ike spools,
WV2110•01 . gas Iranolitig dir!anwgerpina. In fad, It fa
inaohine thaelearenge4garery !ninny Lithe laud, and
the IoW peas of••• - - :
DOLUMIO,
at which they are sold, brings them trlthtuthe reach or
ablest "err one. • • 13. D. BAUR, Areal,
'4llll-dick .4arat•lfin •L• 700 ABM STUNT.
Mctlicnierp.
EN.Eck 4001 TEN,;,
DPORTEaf. AND DZALIII3,
FOREit[N. 'AND DOILUBTIO
STATIONERY.
MiNDlAOTtrallit ON NNYSTARISNYBUY
VARIETY AND MIMI. •
fri , AGXNr itin ARNOLD'S Malaga WILIT/1:10
rum).
tO v i 'CiFIESTXUT.STREET ,
ousrfiftAirp OpPOPTiII Tl3ll OTAT)11 .ITOIII4II
01 11402=42',598 gallons Whale ON landing
7 1 - 1 7:ke.eiielitioxier rt. it Gibson, aed for sale by
$O Y, &KIM & ow,
' le South Warm,
N'EW', µBOOKS:+
PF37i4oVi7'll7; 'Bce.lo
1 4 iti4 Atip,voiurGl mooKstittEß4
112 WASUINGT ON ,Wlll.**t .. . 41:1BT
, , URI'S 1f ? ..7:1Y A
,FFIV 'D4l'4
• • %BARTT;PItT'S
DIGIICWART' 01 ,4 `AKERIO4IB
. - ~, 1
. • . ~
DICTIONARY OW dmmtuivuto.tq.• - A: 'e ,
ill' W.Orila eiel' . .yhraAudS, lineally regaraedee peel
the trailed Staten, By John Ituaaell partleto , )
...send edition, greatly enlarged. liY. one vol. Rye' '').,
1 3 LbT.A,IROH'S LIVE
„ .
"PLUTAROGT 1,141113. the TihmlaGon
den'e, hOrreOted froni Gre Greek slid kerireg
Olottzh, Meii; Oats Vrotestoi 4he )21; ih
.cliAte.tur.,-.cr.tiorisiti college;
10bh,870. , , . „
EEO ENTLY 'PUBLISHNDir '
• • •
'A HISTORY OF Milt 'HNO,LMH,:'
DP.JOILtd" 00111Iall 'PALABIT -Tarql 1 1.
•-•
'Vol. 1:-8vo: Maps,
Dr. , I rare bietory to not only fragir,book,
book containing many views new to thin stew'
it. This work, of an author who- jrifta4u
old and new, In the Ilea of a true thorny is the
to Rive a °cheroot and vonnueboorive exbibition
'ground of Ike oxen orbo erected Vow,
(Ohrlitiandittuuniner, .. , .
„
Yaw hiitorical ororki;,,of one'agenniro° ,
bare boon so prol ) fie wrotterpielieo, batray art
, wealth of apposite leorniok &Imre' effective cute .r
oompaot and !gold nti‘temont,4r a fluor eaniblnal • f
historical teat and-ltierary 'acworopliebrodg.??: , -
Tritium)
‘.,
Many able pens barn beep Atvelakto4.lla , P
and Newlfogland history during th‘leetilkintfy -
but no one has excelled - if any havrtionoditiCA
sentpiVaction. , !;•;-.1 Bibiloiheceihrra. .
r~ lire Ciinkintulatelift. Palfrey, alit only tor if,
bruin° in hiring riobl(tri theme resatrrid ft*
hut for the gamma success vitt, wb4b. , ,105, low 'lt
'•114`.3041;',1-I.4litfp (loader. -
-” '
AIc.SPEOpS t TATE. IfOßlteo
08"711,1.1.41d 1 811416P114114:fAi
leanit: Edition: . The Pima,. edited from tin*l.,
;t* hen Voile, with endow neadloge4rona all, thel#
lions end • all the Ooonrontatora, Notes,•lntrodnet44
liereerkai an Illator10:d Sketch of the Text, an seal
of the Phar`ankliidd ' reeil of the Bnglleh Drama:4'lf
Laois of the Poet t n 4 14 1 8 / 1 4,nprea Ida - 0enlon;—;:141
Richard Grant Whlte.! In 12 vole: poet BTo.
8,4, 6, now ready. • • •
• i • 7l
BANROFiiS HISTORY,, 17.(>4.
A FEBTOBY Of !OM XINI:I'IrD MATED, -roaiN;
i*ociii3ii of the llmerlcaa ciontiofflit' Bj Hon. Qtorg
With Porrritte ips,'eto.
iitthiybe4 Tor. I 4 . 1.p0 Fiyoluti,*l`
title-page and binding to iOrrospond. Bro. caoui;•:-,
-RNGLrsA AND saoTtapH BALLAD,
HSPECTID AND IDI72D•BY
PROF/13130R P. J . . OEILD.
Uniform with the liritish
SXOW4B i
TUB I'ONVOAL WORKS OF
JAMBS It'sdoltTGOMEßA'",„
In 6 volt
I tfaitarin with the' BiWith ii:."ttat
myBo.mv ut
ILIAZA.RDT LIST Or NEW AND 4tt, •••.
1 - 'rant AliiING 1:100}03
Tan A rzoral, By APtbk4i - 1105:
I9pe, author ,or that, EV/m.l4'g good Minx' WV:lne!
with en rouolonuol!ghfgherne:! , ..1.1 , 4 s !.
,t-AAUAJIIAI •
12nto El. • -
CUBA AND BAOX. A Vacation Voyage'' By
U •Dena. Zr , anthor of o TWO Years Before - the
Mut " A truthful and very pleasant accouutOfiLife
and Thins* to Cuba, 'in cents.
OODVBEY fle.tdLYN, The new novel by
author oft Alton Locke." " Tout," he ;A — "k..
which the English altice say will be the sengsrlim
book of the year. it below the meet powerfully wlittert
of all thin suthoVe good books. "
HOLLYWOOD HALL A tad of MA -By '.lairma'
Grant, anther of Remands of Willi,' M. 'll4
12mo St 25.
TER TIIIIMPRT or, Heade lied Tani ortbe
Wine and Waggish. By Para Ohalbeld A Anithab ,
aboundingiu the food of "'sweet .Ind bitter finer,
that nibble at It sa often u you may there will iq
Ineny an agreeable 'morsel lett. St.ei. - •
Vini
MEHOHIS OF ITALIAN PAINTERS. By' ,
definition, author of ‘, Sacred and Legendary .'01."
Legends of Madonna, ,, the, Another volume of gat
Pretty collection of the works of this pleasant &agr
ees. In blue and gold. 76 oenta
Tglif ROM ANON OF A POOR YOUNG VAN. Friar.
the Trench of neinlist., A simple yet charming Steil
of French Country Lite.
THE VAGABOND ,Br Paden. A collestior4of
very pleasent and entertaining articles. $t . •
frr In connection with the Odra, we beg to noyty-
BOOIERTIVEIRS.
and the publle generally, that we keep eonitataliou
hang the
LARGEST ASSORTMENT
aD
BOORS in EVERY DEPAKTMENTot• LITE EtAti*,
AND te I
EVERY STY LE OF BINDING. I
Having conneetiona with every house of important*
In the country, we are enabled-to offer to our cbetdd
ern new Publicatione ns n on an publi•bed. entreat dile
hone stock of ENGLISH and FOREIGN 13000440
at the
LOWEST PRIORS,
affording to PUBLIC and PRIVATE, LIBIt&RXIP
excellent opportuoity of obtaining books. For Wit hy
HAZARD BROTHERS,
AT Titian
61.17TIOPOLtrAtt' gooKirrogisf: ,
mySO-at , , I2A 01INSTNpT fittibt,
• - - waif tra
mylo4jyll
NEW EDITION OF NAJOR , NILI2B
WOBIC.
A 0014318 ER VPION OF THE SIBMON oa' "Mr
MOUNT. By 'dolor Daniel IL Mill. Second edition;
revised. 12mo. 'l5 cent,. - • ;
Au expository Monitory trestine of 'this kind, from toe pef
of amathematician and • .military man. Is certeialt.e
novelty. Brit the ,claime of this book by nom ittip
rut on its novelty alone It Is really an exesillett
treatise, and all the more attractive bananas It le Oi
genet*. We confess to a mach higher appreciatlemaf
the 'lemon on the, Mount, since resding it, then we
ever bad before. His logical mind geeing to dwell will
pleurae on the logical order of that inimitable Ma
cows% and he Malian hie reader share-that, pleasures
The ephit of the writer is worthy or all pram, and , w,
mod cordially commend his work to our reaching as QM
**MeV; while It II once to inatroct and profit, posma i se
oleo a peculiar power to nemesis and bold the MUM
attention of those who peruse it.”—Byangelinsil •
psaltery. ,
Pnbliehed thin day by
WILLIAM B. Pc AMID
myBo No. 606 OHIMTNUT Street:"
LIVERY MAN HIS OWN DOCTOS. -
au Jun published, TDB DPITOBIN Op TUB AIM
BIOAN NOLMOTTO PB,AO 108 017 BIRDIC,INP., PUB
MIRY, ODSPRTOOI3, DISZABS.B 011 W&INBN AND
0 oTLDReIet, MATIMIA.IiINDIOA, • PIIABICACIT;
WITU GLifiIIARY Ootaio, TIC pp, By W 4 ,Paine,
hf D Profane of the Theory and Praetiee' oft iftefa...
doe in the Bolectia Medical collego of Peonsilvana,
Philadelphia. It to one of the moat efficient geitinlb
Domestic Practice ease- published. It looludee the
practice of Allopathy, nome6pethr Hydropatht, 491
all other ereteme 01 bledloine eater t. Ones ofteft
clue and soposy the 'Oa whop desired, en thst.o*,7
one may enneastelly freatdisesse,
Also, THE EOLZOTIO ISINDTAIRL Jotauva.
pHILADBLpHIA: 60 p‘gos. Published monthly, A
$2 00 per annum in advance. Doeigned for Optician,
and prablio reading
The lipitorrot in for sale by 301INGIADDINa.
60 Booth VOITUTEI Btrcot 011,19 1 111 th
BBOOND and RAM/ i BITPBNUOUSB, OIXTB awl
OALLOWIIILI,, and by 'the MAl:mei No. rbaitioitb.
RUTH. !West. Price, $3. yriz2B.cor
THE LADIES' HAND-BOOK
or
FANCY AND ORNAMENTAL WORK; - •.'
Gomprleing directions and pattern for workingfnl p
pliciae, Bead-work Braiding., harms work, Knitting,
Netting, Letting, Worsted-work, quilting, Patch
work. &0., See. Illustrated with 282 new •nograviogs.
Complied from the beet authorities, by Mho Ificfrouto
Kartley. Published by, G. G. EPANE,
489' ORE3TNLIT Ptreet, Philadelphia.. 1849. '
Thiele the moat complete end thozongh Work of its
had. By w..iting in *Pimple, straight-forward style; and
rejecting all Irrelevant toping, the author 1114660 n en,
bled to embody in title veining en Immense Munn of
meal and veluab , e information( and by, far the inner
extensive collection of elegant 'patterns that .bas - Vrar
bien brought together In ono bock. Then patterns 'are
engraved by the best artists, nod printed tr A excellent
paper, and beautiful style Of nurso,,suolt a volt: re
la the rags with the ladies, who eon appraohite tasteful
patterns fqr adorning 'heir persons and their dwellings.
'Phey 'koow the imbue of hornet's 4440 lima-
Book," and areordertog it with a pager% tub. it Is
en Indispensable book for all who would be portent In
ornamental work . •
Betide. the oubjeote named on the title-page, we ob
serve thet the volume embraces &scripting and eigrae
'yoga of all the various kinds of 'Makes and desarlpr
Mons, with illustrated patterns, and araltitads 01
other matters incidental to the mind: .Tha number,
of neaten patterns for working in this book fa, greater
than can be obtained in any other way, by paying tog
times the' priori coked for ti Bartley's Lytle* , Nand.
Book This valuable book for the pollee will be Rent
by mall, for the low price of one dollar. BVAN4 wit
mail a copy an* bandana present to all pavane lei
ranting one dollar for the book, sad tirenty•oae cent
for Upstage. ' -
A new elworified Catalogue of books and gifts,' Witt
inducements to agents, will be Sent free onapplicatlon
Address ' G. G. EVANS.
.m . y2 - 7 . 43t 484 471III8TNEIT Street, Philadelphia
110SiLVER' 0 MAPS OP THE SEAT Or
OP.A 002V1P106199 MAP 0Y NunOr,
Cleo 18 by 26K inches,
k MAP OF THE •ettelltt •ti EMPIRIC, vatb M phi
of LOMBARDY sod ItSllO6l.
kqe.9 143 by 19 incben,
And a Complete Map of ilia 'Kingdom of CAILTINik
Wee t 4) by 19 iisehes. '
Own Plied ard, corrected from the leteettEutoPoto
authorities, sal fora:dog the most &opiate, JIOUTO6 of
Information DOW' to be attained
• The wholethree rasps. ki andeomely colored, are put
up to one volitive, pocket trete, and furnished at timbre
price or 76 oects, h 7 (116.1tL1C41 1)118Itet 1 t
714 OHUTtit3T, titree't, khiladulphle
OOUNTP.Y P,A,Pgfirß eying title p proudlient liter;
uois, reoellte a copy of the Moe, poet paid,
)1q1841 , 11 - • -
Now Vilblicationo.
role 103 mo. cloth
WITh A a►EMbI
Oloth
etiye
WEDNESpAIr, JUNE• 1, 1859.
Alexander Ilandlton. and his votem.
. 'parades, ,
llistory of the Republic of the United
'Stitt% of. America, as traced in the writings
of ALixamma HAMILTON and his cotemporti
r* Bj Joint C. Ilauframt; vol. 111, 'pp . . ,
669. D. APPLETOX 7Sc Co., 1859.
,In the year 1858 the archives of the, Go
iiinixient of the United states were - opened to
Die : author by the Library Conimittee of Con
grass, giving him access to a mass of hiker'.
cal material of great value not previously used
'or published ;-• among other- things, above a
housand autograph 'letters of iir.examma
'H. strirox, written while he was a member of
'General WASIIINOTONN stalk. This discovery
indwied - the author to reconstruct 'r The
Vi r cllkßOf ALF , IXANIiEIt Diatir.rou," which ho
had Neently edited, so as to give to the his
tory tbe Revolution and the biography of
Ids atibleot mutual ilinstratiou. '
~ qn,ithe,;.three2 - In; already issued, we
havi4 very complete history of the Revolu
tlmiXom therdato,or the 'carliest - movements
'ln the'COlotilei till the, hiauguration of Pleat
dent Wasatuarcw, In 1780.
,The• first two
volumes cover the- who)e period of the war, '
the third is occupied N 411114118 still more mo.
inontramAtraggle' -of parties and 'opinions,
Which, terminated in the organization of the
Federal Union tinder . the Constitution. As
wo. ifse from the perusal of this volume, It
.fteeniis to usv:that the history of the five -years
panstitutloia#Period of the great Revolution
far exceeds In narrative interest, instruction,
end 'nee, that of the military period from the
,battle of Lexington, in '1175, till the peace of
111783. The world has witnessed many a seven-
Lyon war, with every possible mingling of
objects and issues. Ours was made to differ
from them all 'only by the consequences which
,-Were, gathered from it; for the World never
Were or since witnessed such a five years of
peaeo as our fathers made of their first luatrum
if2f national independence. The volume, now
before us, is S. picture of Ibis period. The
; pooplo, Ake , parties,• their opinions; t iOliciesi
;Passienti, prejudices, with all their, hopes and
;tears,. in strenuous and perilous- action, are
1-giVilli with the sal-alive, distinctness of 14°-
li:raj:thin portraiture ; of the prominent acv
1 tors;, and domestic history of the moving,
Masses. Jt semis - the very life of the time.
.' cin!!i reads it with all the sharp solicitudelhat
vt. taie,of desperate iiitrigue;hproic. endeavor, 1
;•ilf+ constantly dangerous impeedingo .I:froild.:,
!-Wei. - The assurance of a happy issue scarcely
Ipinis down the alarm or relieve"( fifdyitmire-,'•
.iiOldens that "ifeig, over` titirtiMttins move
; attehts oflite.stery ; mien im.infidel mast he
constrained, atter all 114 reeking' sympathies,
WO doibtful ehaneeti have grown faint with
fear, ge this struggle' was', Settler' by, Prof"-
'deitei)." Bunker-11111 may be accounted for,
and ;Yorktown might have bean expectO ;;
; 1)4 how was-the civil Government _of the
111tdon devised and-established?
tut - Wires- in 1783, pleading for the polloy
Wilich could alone secure the' fruits of; good
government against the passions end interests'
i viliiclithroutened.its Subversion, 'portrays the,
*tiers of'. the time in language toned hy
; every. feeling of imminent peril except des.
1- . ti The. -world (he says iu his Itter or Pboolen)
i',Vg.its , ,eye,upsui America. The noble struggle we
...t i magein,.the )-eause of_liberty. has ocessionod
, Itunlvja,Jaluiriio.,:iontiment: . .Thik'
tray to togairlastsdar - ea_ ,trit. 1 4,• 11 ,1i., 6
Mot /Men begin to as C. 46 " .3191 11 EML1/4-
this tyrant 'that dares to build his greatness en cur
'a l fsevy and degeadatiorri 'lVh9.t oomusisslon has
he 10,seetiftee millions to-thq Wanton appetites or
hisneetr and the few miniona •• that surround his
Wood'? , . ,
~,- -, ToAlptca inanity into notion, le remains for
'ne lo,jtottly the rewoluttoni f yvi's fruits. Ifthe
eonissquenoos prove that we have asserted the canes
of human happiness, what may not he expected
from so illustrious an eicamtle ? In a greater or
Isiu degree the world will bless and imitate.
-- w Ent if experience, in this instance, verifies the
lessons tong taught by the enemies of liberty—that
the balk of mankind are not At to govern thorn
selves, that they toot have' Sa. master, and wore
slatyy, matte for the rein and the spur—we shall then
see dho final triumph of 4esPotivm over liberty.
The advoentes of the latter must acknowledge it
to be an ignss !stuns, eel ob.imams the pursuit,
yith the greatest advantages for promoting it that
over a twmple had, we shall - Save betrayed the
• eause of human nature." ,
It. was against test oaths, ostracism of
Tories, disaffected and suspected persons, and
contise:ation of their estates, involving he
'hides p violation of the treaty of peace with
Great Britain, supported by a large majority
- di' the people' of New York, that Iliarityou
Made this resistance. 'TIM principal States of
the Confederacy were nearly all carried away
for a .time by the popular frenzy which
thus threatened the pacification of the country
and its ultimate prosperity,. '
',The best men of the Revoitttien—those
jihitse arm and cormseibud - achieved our in=
dependence—werein all the States involved
in, a new civil war with their countrymen for
the organization of peace, and the establish
merit, of domestic harmony. Their wisdom
and prudence prevailed. The reputation of
popular government was vindicated, and the
country gained time and temper to meet the
exigency that soon arose out of the incapaci
ties of the Colerdal Confederacy.
We cannot within reasonable compass de
scribe this great struggle. Bat its severity,
and the hopelessness which hung upon the
party which carried the' Constitution into ef
fect, is Sufficiently indicated by the fact that
its arloption•in the State of Massachusetts was
by a vote of, 187 to 168—a majority of 19;
in New Hampshire by a majority of 11 out of
108 votes ; in Virginia by 89 against 79 ; and in
Now York, after flve'weeks debate, in a body
consisting, on the day of assembling, of 46 dele
gates against, and 19 in favor of, the Consti
tution, it Was carried at last by a majority of
three votes l - And that debate, meagerly as it
iareportedl The readerhangs ever it as in some
great trial in which his life aud - fertunes are
involved—on which the destiny .of a nation
and the hopes of the world depend ; and if
he has an American heart in his bosom, asks
indignantly, c , what was the eloquence of Prrr,
.Fox, Buena, &UNMAN, to this; and what
the rank and value of their themes to those
that in the handling of HAMILTON, LIVINOB.
TON, JAI", DUANE, and HAMMON, compelled
an impassioned, fully-committed majority of
two to one, led by such men as CLINTON, LAN
smo, and Blare . , to surrender their resist
( rineo4"
Chancellor KENT, in his "Recollections,"
says of two speeches by HAMILTON, on the
organization, powers, and stability of the Se
nate, cc that they were regarded at the time,
by the best judges, as the noblest specimens
which the debates in that, or any other as
sembly, ever afforded of the talents and wis
dom of the statesmen." Colonel HUGER, of
South Carolina, who was present, said of
them, w I did not conceive it possible for man
to speak so."
The time seems to have come for looking
up the records of this Titan age of the
The service which - the biographers of
pits heroes are now rendering us is opportune.
We shall some day soon have a history of the
'era of the Constitution and' a life of the
'timer!. It is needed for the honor of the
',country, and for the direction of its destiny.
We need to have our faith in great men re
vived. We need to have our confidence
established that the hour brings the man ;
and we especially need to know;by the expe
rience of other days of doubt and peril, that
there is a power in right and truth more than
a match for all danger and disorder. More-,
over, we ought to know exactly what of good
and evil met in the characters of the men
whose names aro authorities among us, that
.our prejudices and entlanalooms may be tem
pered into justice to the mon of the past, and
due reliance upon those of the present and
the future.
1 We do not stop hereto speak of the au
lhorship,of those volumes, of the partialities,
*lesions, Other, • ewers , incident to the
reduction of such a Work. It is with the ex-
cellont uses of the work that we are concern
ed. The writer is a son of the hero of the
history, and if he has brought all the passions
and controverSiesof the time into its picture,
eo much-the Vetter. It 'is a 'daguerreotype of
the age that 11) want, Lot us 'have every.
thing; anything, but the paaillanitaltieb,' pp..
'verty, and, pretotision of uninspired :author
craft. inAnts, lEFFET IBO ,7; ktkbigoii
have left heirs and guardians of their honors ;
and the Father of his Gauntry does not lack,
children who wilt take due care of their pa
trimony in his glory. They all need zealous,.
Industrious, partial biographers, and the time,
has come when the world' can forma just
judgment with all the data' before it, and be,
all the wiser and better torthe fulness of its
information.
We have been tempted to make, certain at
tractive extracts from ,this_book—sorne that
specially concern - Philadelphia and Pennsyl
vania, and a capital portraiture of WASHING-,
TON as he appeareil when he surrendered, his
commission as. Commarfor-in-Chief to the,
little remnant of a Continental Congress as
sembled to receive it ; but • our readerk
not content , themselves ,with anything -short
or the study of-this third volume. lire look
for the speedy appearance of another volume
at least, • There are still fourteen years of the•
life of It'sx - M•ron lacking, and all thei Listory:
of the Organization,"of the Federal Govern
ment, and of the Administration of WAsn-
INGTON and his Cabinet, which gave form to
the Executive Departments. The sons and
grandsons, the partisans and. opponents' of
the worthies are bestirring themselves, and
we may hope now that the future histories, of
the Republic will not be mere rehearsals of
Warns, and RAM9AY; and MMISITALL. We
will get something to freshen <up our Fourth
of July orations, at least,' which will be k
national gain aad a great relief to cf our fellow
citizens."
Mr. smith O'Brien.
The batting speech of Surma O'Butast =on
Saturday., previous to his leaving the country
in the Vigo, is so graceful, ingenuous, and
manly, that we cannot avoid giving the follow
ing extract, not merely because it is worthy of
praise as a composition,. but because the ilia
_
tingiiishcal Irishman has been subjected to
complaints for his political opinions in certain
quarters ;
s. Bat, gentlemen, I have felt, 'wit's men et to
li.merican polities in general, particularly party
polities, that it was neither my inclination nor my
duty to interfere, I have not Blessed roytafif either
ac-a Democrat - or a Whig, wherever I Wave gene.
there net spoken anywhere an opinion in favor
of one man as a candidate for the Presidency in
preference to another. Upon all those points, I
think that the .citizens who reside in this country'
UV) very mach bettor qualified to form opinion
than I , Find' therefore 1' hrive - atirefully ab•
stelniut from anyjalltislon teineoh topics; however,
exciting they ought lie, in addressing publid as-
ooMblages. • I have, indeed; expressed• opirdana
which, perhaps, ppon snob art email% as the'pro,
sent,longht not to reiterate, but to which I rent.
allude, in candor and ittjustice to myself. = I heke'
expressed my opinion% upon w question which
deeply affects not ,thiS country alone, test the' in,
habitants of my country, and _Europe in.generitl. -
I mean the question as to what shall be- the feet ,
ing on which loreigneta shall be' resolved
'country It has beet eald,l nnderstand—l have
not neon the remarks mySelf—thatin touching this
topic I have yoluatcared to interfere with the do."
meatio,polioy of this country.. NOW, Tem not die-,
- Posed to admit' hat a foreigner who comes to:this'
country to inquire in a /maid, Spirit respect- .
ing its institutions, should be prohibited froin
4mpressing his opinions rtrepsoting those inetitn-
Sons after ho has carefully formed hia,,opinione,'
even supposing they'lvete en, questions Or domestic
poliey-; -- antl - I am happy to say that such le the
sentiment of the great body of -the Atuerlein.poo
pie, Whatever may be their ,pelitleet tendencies.
I have found in the South, where I was preFtrOCl l
to expect that certain ; gimations wore taboo ed,. ,that no foreigner dart' venture to teach' them.
and ,that a man ran the risk of being ignited if
ho did not, happen. to fallinvith - the vientttof his
iiticlfinsee.4diaftrfanfid - 4,-O -- the ',South, I', ay..-
- the North; ail elittest 2 &mire to'
And, therefore, supposing that 'I had, - which, I
have not done, expressed my opinions respecting '
the-domestic pi:they, of this country,. I believe 1
ehenld here born perfectly justified by the people',
cf this country. The ablest treatise, I must re- '
mind yoa, gentlemen, that I have ever teed on
the inetitutiene of the United States; wan Written
by a foreigner, De Toegeeville, whose book on
America I read twenty-five years-ago, And -of hieh
betide till to be the best work extant for,a fo•
reignor to read iu order to nbtain - a general know
ledge of tho institmionsof this Republic, consider
ed, Wlllt a' view to ifs destiny. And yet I have
neVer.:neard it complained that, De Tooquoville
took any unwarrantable liberty in at-making of
American ed'eire, or. that the American people
were jealous of hie ex i dessing his opinions freely
respecting their institutions. ['Hear, hear.) But
I mast explain that• the - question to which 1 ad•
dressed myself, and upon which I certainly do not
wish to be understood to entertain any neutral
feeling whatever, is not, simply en American gees
lion. it is a question which effacing every.people
in Europa. VIM 111:018e3 on that continent are at
this moment looking to this country as a Koine,
and there moot he some distinot 'understanding on
the part of the American people with foroigeore
as to what in to be the footing on which foreigners
ore to stand when coming into this country ; -whi
ther or not they aro to be sohjeeted to perpetual
proscription; whether or not they are• to be oon-,
sidered as to 'ho placed only in positions of info
rhirity.to the native-born citizens. • [Hear, hear.]
Nowj I -Mil tell yon frankly, in relation to myself,
after the reception which was given by the Ameri
can population to mycountrymen who have landed
hero, many of them sillioted with disease, or half
starved, perhaps both, and Many of them very dos
Iltutel that I won gratified to a degree of intensity
that I Cannot describe by the kind reception that
was given to• my unfortunate fellow-countrymen
when they were fleeing, I may say, from starvation
and cruelty. That sentiment continued unabated
in my mind, mid I never thought of the American
people without a sentiment of gratitude, until I
saw, in the year 1854,1 think it was, a programme
of what was coiled Native American principles,
and I found there tho opening of a proserintion,
Which, if adopted and continued by the American
people, would have compelled every man wine bad
the interests of the Irish people at heart, to say
that America is a ecoantry to which no Irishman,
and espeoially no Catholics Irishman, ought to
emigrate Now, is net this a questin on Which I,
as an Irishman, and every other Irishman -who
wishes well to his countrymen, has an interest?
Ireland has but a limited territory. At that time,
if she had had ten millions of people, instead of
Six, the time would arrive—the time might now
be—when the natural, healthy expansion of the
population would require the surplus to seek a
home in a country where, as in Australia, they are
received with open arms,
and are entitled to hold
the highest positions in the State; or to Canada,
where they enjoy similar privileges; or to the Uni
ted States, where they hail been prepared to find
that, under the Constitution, they are entitled to
the nigh to of citizenship on certain conditions which,
when they arrive hero, they find extended to a
period ofprobation they had. not been led to ex
pect, and that, in addition to that probation, they ,
arc to he met by a test of proscription which is -
to Continue during their Whole lives Now, for my.,
part, 1: tell you frankly, in answer to that questiorne
that I would not live for an hour in a country as a
home whore I ad not fool myself the equal of any,
man in it. [Clifsenc]. And I toll you wore, it IS ear
belief that the Irish population, man for nicer
have ref:Meted and do refloat upon this country as
much credit as any other section of the populatirin
has done; and that America owes to the It bit popu
lation in past times, and ewes to it in the present
time, tie much as to any other section of the popu:
lotion. This, therefore, is every important pewit,
and one which there should be no mistake about.
When I first found that there was one particular
State which legalized this proscriptive policy, I
did not hesitate to express my opinion of the
measure, and to eay that I Loped it was not in
accordance with the general sentiment Now,
gentlemen, I am able to toll you, as well as any
man it; America, that such le not the general
sentiment ; that from Maine to Louisiana. from
Penneylvania to Wisconsin, that sentiment has
boon utterly repudiated by the greet body of
the people.therefore,
Whatever, may be
done in one State, the fact still le that the
Irish in this country stand; within the
limits of the Constitutions, on a perfect
footing with any native American who
treads the roil. lem not ono who, in endeavor
ing to compliment people, will state opinions
which I hold on matters that I deem to be Impor
tant. I have found, wherever I have been in this
country, the soil more fertile and the land more
prolific of resources than I ever expected. Moray
prejudices that had boon formed in my mind: par
tioularly by the writings of the English teurists—
if I had been disposed to plains much confidenee in
their representations—[laughter] have boon
removed to a very groat extent; if they ever had
existed in my mind, certainly They would have
been removed. [Cheers ] lam able to say In the
American people, without flattering them, that I
omgratulata them on possessing such a country
and such a people; and I rim also bound to thank
them, individually and collectively, for the cor
&slay with which they have received me I
im
plore ivy fOnOW•COLItItryInDO to -cherish their
sympathy and by every legitimate meena
of establishing and winning it. [Cheers I For
another, Objection that is made by some
to the Irish population here, I one told,
as a reason, that it is the habit of Irishmen
to come to phones in whioh they are not quell ,
fled electors, and, In violation of law, to go to the
polio and vote, Now, that is an abuse, and ougbt
to be stopped undoubtedly. [Hoar lam told,
also, that the Irish are seeking nn irtOrdillatO
share of the public prtronage. 'Well,' that eel ,
tainly is a very high tribute to their capacity, for,
considering that they are only a fragment of the
population—probably, in many owes, not more
than a fifth, perhaps not a tentia..-rhat they'
have welt influonee an they are HOW-to possess
does show that they have extraordinary talents
for administration. [Liugliter] Bat I trust
Ithey will feel ha regard to these matters, that it
they have this influence, they, might not only to'
look to attain their fair proportion et - Whatever
advantages they may hive the opportunity of thrta
I==l
attaining, bet, rely on morn certain Means of ail.
*lineament ; itad if they follow 10' annual,' they,
will abstain, as tnuoh 'as possibie,e Op...altogether,
from soliciting situations; .for I believe that thoie
who make it a praetioe to sollpit situations rarely
tabooed in making their fortune during tbisir terms
of ?ace: II have seen a'great 'Many individuals,
both in Maarten and Australia„who,.colnin_g into
the country, with nothing h4t the labor oftheir
arms' to - depend upon, hive -'ended +in' piling
thowlands upon, thousands but - fi do rot :remain
bar any single instanoenf a -ranee-holder making
a magnikeent fortune. - ,Therefore,, it should;
give' me very great - nlessare to kora that there
was not one single Irishman in the -United ,Btates
who was, seeking, office ,ite a plate-bolder.
this, I think, they ought to do : Jtkitiaking altoipis
of a man to fill a Oldie situation theYettgbralways .
•to select the moat honest and niest•ablemen, what- ;
ever be may berwhethernativa - Anpirlaini or Irish.
fetliplanee.) Another'granni - Objecitimi, lit the
Anderican mind;:to? the Irish li.that they do, not
coincide in the.yiews of a certain portion of the 1
people of this country as to ..the subject of edu.
elation. Bat Ido not understand what right one
portion of the community, has- to dictate to the
other in wifht way their children shall be
Sale
cated. 'Cheers.) Some' muy , prefer—l prhfer
—united education for their children; but if an
other gentleman - prefers separate ,education, It,
seems to me that he should he entitled,to enjoy his
preforonco;and that hi,'ohould have the opportm
nity of sending his children to a school snoported
at the expense of hit ownaeligions-oommunity eat
,1 have 'no right to quirrel with such
tendenoletl: IriserneOf ihe - Biateabr Garnianyiliq
has been settled by making arrangements by which
parents can have entire chaff*_es to, the rnede•Of
ednoating their children: At ell events, even Stip
-041)g that °anent be accomplishad, they Inido - it.
- -iheir ptnior to do what, In many catow,.hott been
'done-.in Ireland—to _establish:A*4l_or ..thonl
seli'es and therebytavola - air luterterenee - with'
the eheational Instithtiotia orth6 Now.
gentlemen, I know that 'l , aisarassitining the privi
lege of a friend in offering these frank, remarks,
but yon will believe 'that they ?ITO - offred' in no
party spirit that I hav , inepenionat motive what
ever,
but'am analogs Woes. tl)lsuountry ocoupy
high position among ,thematro'ss - of "the earth, and
to finding countrymen holdbailn this grelst'republ.
Ito that position whioh Dbelleve:they-are capable of
, attaining., [Loud' obeers..l. .1 hardier', only to
thank - the gentlemen Who are here preseitt,!the,
organisations that - they represent; and the" people
at large for their anxiety, On the present cooasion,
to do me honor, and to allow. me to leave this
country .with the impression' obevoYed; not Only,
to my own mind, but alai:Vie :the -minds a others,.
in other nations, that ; Thaws beintjn-this qopntcy:
entertained as a weloomeiriest."
.. . .
Funeral Certn;toriiiit 'John C.
Baiter? D. D. *t .
Arwe stated yesterday, the faneral ceremonies
.of . Rev. JOHN, C. BAKER, pastor of Bt. Lulie;alit
theran Chunk, of this city, prier-tO Bur remeVal
the body to Laneaster for interment; proved very
solemn and interesting. They took - 1)1E41e at the
church, Fourth street, ahoy& Girard avenue, on
Monday Morning The ottiaeieui church was Sited
by a serroWing eeserObli,r Antent theblifievinite
premtit were WO' 4instertited =Tether - 1(01Ln,
Detente, Dr. Mann, Wenzel,43oliaatfer,•gaer,sHit-'.
tor, Conrad 'Titus,. Vogellmeki
floe& Dr..Pohlruatt, -of Albany, and
•Rov. Senderling, of Troy- -; • ,-
At p r ecisely nine it'o*lt;timlibay, laid out mita
silver-mbunted coffin, watlbrolight into tbeelmielt
and placed, tinocirered,difrontof ,
antennas - tit - the lapprefrfe*loyintOtiom
ixionoing Ailtli : .bte - worde,o!'Efoireareet? the seene:
whore Christians die,".. whicittyreesung,':ae
(erupt:tied: by the.,mizolc.of the ,orgag,,toa Most
.colemn time, .by i thetthair and,nongregation.-
Dr.,,Folaluien, Of - A.llsi - 9y,,tben. read the Lutheran.
Marginal thavialentifie. 'Tithreencdtißini;
,Ilettei, Maithifirit Cktirole; cif 614,,
Under • the apPeiniraiint.' - ` , Luke's 'Chinch'
Cdenek in an' imPresii;rititind 'solemn Mariner,
delivei'edthe following appropriate -,
A. , Ohnier Auk ~ , k'noon IVlO•ere nts,art,nr Is- ,
!,.,The soul of. mar s•lselovedr•and ereneristed
friend and fattier' fir tiitf:MinistrY.Di'Joun
Dittrin, has winged ifs fifghttalharnortalily,
tare met to follow histreenaine4o their,bnrial,i and
embalm inner ieineua
it-wasnteeL'A'm in
ttho , •Mituinzentsf • .fiis - •iteentatomedi• health lard
strength;, was the -week ,stroottedleg Bestir. ! He
had then jest retereed fienilth'eWity eflimenitter:
Where he ' had: been -rine area hidly -summoned. rte
bendlwith Araeliednotailieedieg pareptal affedtbin
, over the,remaitutof ,s4ll+.l4).}rAi yen„ t fOW4I - .11.1M,
floir , Orring and in tetweialfaetriok-enhnerf.esea ritelt-t
led with irrearesetible gnisif,"aitd . yet ineerite sweetly;
thußlitrlittifibitot:eliag4fey' - `oolautte - gtriad - icinilleteitl,
t by Ma-Heavenly Fa thiarikin anger - ,
L.:Zeit : 4d benumbett t' it:tied*, and
ensweli
of confluent symPethysiubrided4we' conversed on
this aid other actagettal topics:, fllnt; alt ! little
dtdd,them euppose-W. time so very near, when.
by the SUMMonB of the:ilea - hilly* angel, the weep
ing father would blindelf-be made toliedown be
the• side of the lantwuted son ! Little rhos
ilajacitio that, in a few short weeks, toy dear friend
would make another - journey to that 'sante oily;
this time notes a !Meg man, - bilt himself attired
in the habiliments of death, roady,to be lowered
Into the insatiate,trearnry of Ate yawning gravel
Able ! it is even so, Our - verieratid friend and
father has passed away loon earth'._- And here we
are, -surrounding the bier that bears his lifeless
body—members of his serreitioatrieken., family, hie
oodaborers in 'the 'tninistryythe eangregation to
whom last he broke, the Bread of Life, and hun
dreds of devoted personal hiends—horee we are,
all sorrowing, beeanse very thou We obeli not look
upon big maim and mane eenntenanee egain,nnut
his and our mouldering olay,thall be revivified by
the trump of (hod on the resurreettort morn
, These tears, sited eve+ the remembrance of the
holiest ties that. life hoe ever woven, or the reth
less hand of death lnee ever aundered, , Haaven does,
not forbid. Mush more does our holy religion-en
join upon is—to enshrine in our hearts the memory
of the just—to tree:suro up their bright examples:
at the fragrant balm. of a tboasand Bowers, in n
golden Center , --and to imitate' them In their ca.
rate of honorable- usefulness.' Oh it is, indeed.
an inexhatistible, well ?pries of holy jay,. that the
.coullletct, the etrugglea and the seeeeseee of a , good
mane life terminate not In the gloom of the ec.
Wehrle, bett - havetbetr noblest consummation be•
yend, in a brighter anti better world, where fide=
I itv to Gad. afairo.:arnalAthY-Yrith meta.
ho in nista - with. their high reward, and Where the
dark and turbid scenes of earth give - place:to - Up:
clouded sueshine and eternal repose.
Our venerated, father's panegyric need not,be
pronounced, here or elsewhere. To perpetuate
his virtues, no- monument-la needed, whether of
marble or bronze. - Hit, eulogium is written, in
Kettle and indelible attestations, in the lionets of
rho hundreds and thoffsands , whom holies tee
tered and nourished, under God, with the bane&
tent ministrations of Christ's blessed and glorious
Gasp :I. In characters, luminous as the arched
bimorena, under the fall blaze of a meridian sun,
his boat eulogium is inscribed On the historic -vo
tome of the Lutheran Church, during the greater
part of the lest half century. It enmities:des part
of the domestio record of , hundreds of, Lutheran
families, in the congregations, among whom he
I has etseeessi'vely labored. , •
Commencing to proaob the Gospel when but a
youth, over fifty years age, he has never. sines, a
single clay. lolled on any conch of indolence or
MO*. At Whitemarsb, at Barren Bill. at Chestnut
nt Germantown, in the pity and - county of
Lancaster, where be lived and labored over twenty
years, and in this city, the last seven years, as
pastor of Bt. Luke's—the very name of Dr: Baker
had, years ego, been enshrined among the house
hold words." Mee, woman, and children, all
knew him, and know him only to delight In his
presence, and it, bis absence utter his praises
1 They knew him, and loved him, as ,the zealous,
able, eloquent preacher—as the safe and prudent
oottoyollor—al the bind • end empathise:lcons.
forted the sick and distressed—as the stern and
nnearnpremieing foe of wrong, in all its protean
thepes and guises—as the genernue and free
hearted'patron of religion and benevolence, in all
their multifarious departments—as the agreeable,
instructive, pleasant companion—and, above and
beyond all, as the exemplary andoonslstentChris
tian. And, in all these characters and relations,
we utter it as our soul's fat conviction, that a
purer and nobler spirit has never winged its flight
from the aorrows and defilements of earth to the
fetid tons anti transports of its more congenial
clime, in the laud of celestial bliss and glory. This
ryas a man, in very (teed! Be watched prod
donors, and he had providences to watch I The eye
of God was steadily on him, and bit eye was steadi
ly on God! •
There aro those present, Who have known our
departed friend much longer than ,yetur epenker—
those who .have labored at his side in the min
istry mush longer—those, who have sat with him
in ecelesiastieal council. in the mother synod
of our church, which was his first, his last, and
beat love. One eepeoialiy is hero, (oar dear father
Keller), who is. more than any of us, his brother,
because his early cotemporary. But this avowal
I eannot • repress; that it is not possible that
there is one soul in this largo assembly, - who
oherimbed for him a more sineere, - heart-felt, abi
ding effeetion. Sines the death of my own father
and grandfather, I have never loved any men
mor e fervently and truly—never revered one '
with a mere steady and unremitting glow of dis
interested attaohment—nover felt. happier in one's'
society and friendship—never watched one's get
and dying south with a more-eager solicitude—
never grieved over one's departure with sincerer
tocrew. In ray own 'ehember ef ratirembet, under
the bread glare of the noon•day Sun its well ao
amidst the silent watchee• of the, night, have I
watered my pillow with my tears; and poured out
my loud in a flood of chastened Oriel,-over the lose
of one of the noblest, purest, batmen, that ever
same from, or returned .to, tho plastic hand of
God.
The name and fame of Dr-Baker were familiar
to me in my boyhood • I heard, my father and
grandfather ;Teak of him, as a man of note and
eromiee, forty years ego. Twenty-Bow years ago
I first made his acquaintmacb, and loved him from
the first. That lose only ripened. into maturity,
however, when, twelve years ago, I became a read
dent of the same city with him, an almost daily
viritor at his house, and a regular attendant on his
ministry. • • • •
The pulpit efforts of our sainted father were to
tee always preeminently edifying• becomes perva
ded. through and through. by the Divine unction.
Many of his diseouraos are indelibly engraven on
my memory Plain, practical, Solemn, faithful,
instruothivadmonitory, and often glowingly per
suasive, be preached the Gospel, the whole Eloopel,
and nothing hut the ctospel. If he was above the
ordinarytan d a . rd
i o n f t. man
t. Apbolyoaslettaillndviogroirti,dhast
was equally so in
l e t
t a u t u a d i
t e t n h t o ,
rii, famil iar b w o
i c ata n y th u e n be e
e s
x t
t e e n
s e rm i v
ea'Etc
i n y anti
gua inted with the choicest general literature, hie ewe), lions of Divine troth, wore ono inetrnetho
moricz TO votazirONIZIENTS,
Conespontlagts for_ 4l Thr Page If will phase Ism
in hind the following rules:
Every coolroWoetion ?nun . be amopjaniq4ll thP
rime of the writer. in;Order t'o' Josef - iv correoteene ba
the typography, bat one Aldo of the meet should be
written opoo. -
We SW/. bek gqnll7 **ad to gentleman In radwi
vani^t and otter States, for contrilaiiiiata giados the
aitrrent, news e diy in their pattlealaa!
-On resources of 'tie: 41TO ttudtag acriytyi; the !noirease
oL:polgalaton,e; any information that will be Intraat•
tug to thergeneraJ raia-er, '
CENTS.
and fervent. Asa sermonizer he evier.edhered
closely to hii•tere, and hover relinquished, t nein,
with unbroken unity of purana;-and clear end co
gent direatneurfleliad applied-it, in all 40,clia
tien0i;to men's hearts andnonseiertees , Broquent !
is, Older bisimprYsidire, - pathetia„tenderappesle,
have r seen his entire , tirdienceMelted:to Marti,
total there wee not ri dry eye intttenasembly.
To his undying , liOnbr be it epokoM.neVerhave
heard fall fromhis lips in the pulpitwaolitary ut
terance that solid have caused ea moat flippant
to tangle; eo heartily did ho detest all these modern -
pnerilitiee, whiek whilst they -may momentarily -
charm the vulgar fancy, sadly deapoll-the: altered-,'
desk of its Mains, and Onsmost momentous
• ruths of Divine Ratelation- As' a preacher, to
our ruled, Dr Ilalfir had few wale., osnadolirin
the domain of the tender-and pathetic. •
" As ti patter; we - - question whether, guile the
-apoatolie era, when-Pant went preaching, and ex
horting, "from house to Emma," a more- Indefati
gable and laborioue man, fies appeared itithe
Church, to honor and te. bless it. „The at/frilliest
night that ever lowered in" thick darlimesittpoa the -
- earth was not so dark as to deter Aim froma mis
sion of love and duty. Np Me th - ataver froze be
' .neath a howling December sky, was so cold or so
, slippery,
..ao to keep Jam in bed, le'eummoned forth: ---
• by the Mice of mitering and distress:- No howling •
'wind, that over 'swept in feeipestnentl blast(
athwart the sky, or through- tha streele, ever' prev
vented hilig from coming forth to pray.wititthe nick
and soothe the pillow ottlM dying. - -.Net even his
Own pbysioal maladies and Infirmities, which often
weighed 'heavily neon Iflat, Served as a plea for
aelfindulgiance * , 4 leave Mon him vadifigithrtingh
aleseand-enowyln_the streets of„lcattenter, in the
discharge, of duty,. 'when ,scarcely another-soot
*Untaxed out.' Ife 'spared -himself,;eaninlied
not his own comforti 'health, ,or life,- bet t -tilie-
Master;Oonsettatidithteiery /Meier& mind-and
body to the trause'of suffering hutnanity:- - -,-
.Tbe ,iierignal, character at ear' departiptifatitter, ;
in Israel was of a stamp cast in ReaVen'a eholeest
'mould. -. ., 11e was no hen - eet, 'ea aincere, as Upright a
Man, as- lion ever MA.' la the -revolving tide of -
time. Ha bad pprops ty, but notr'a dollar - of it ever ..- .
Opt S. widow a tees, Or un-orphan a sigh. To his",
halms there clang- not one cent of 111-gotten spoil.
I have heard him remark an hundred times,: " To
`take what dais nodheleng to-us burns a deep; hole
coneilencel- ;To hid engagements, personal
and ministerial, he was as true as thetneedhr Is to ~..
the magnet. HeneVer forgot.a promise. and, - es a
matter of- course; miser. Violated one.: Nil Shirde
word was at good as hie-sealed bond: - :.-Iferever
stooped -to 'a-mean notion, -and-never connived at
one in 'another.- He was a - notiletian by nature,
'and of - the blood royal by grace' ivine. Ale had
fewer secrets than - any Man ;I- have_ Over known:
I- haie soinetimes. doubted whether. he had any.'
Ho said .only what be meant, and Meant - all he
said. Ile Carried bis heard on „the outride- or
- rather, bad a window in his breast,through-whieh -
hie leart's.pnhatiOne hecarde"tranaparent ita the_
morning light. 'Be was canfidiag and nnanspletions
'as- a little' -child, - -a very -Wathromet in guile
lessness. His moral purity of eharecterasnount
.ed to am almost feminine &Holey, Before it
the grizzly Bind ealutanj , slunk away into-his `
gloomy caverns. An humbler mind, too, it would
be impossible to discover, -should we traverse the
-streets of every oily in the land; in actarch, of-0W '
with lighted candle, at, noon-dav, Mad. his
floe often' abonbois AECthat - Meese' after his
aeSocirrs &mit Panel; lie Ishitee'lr WWitt" rot - Walt. -
- shone," 'llatightinercer.apirit-lwas as foreige , to -
sjol oberactir;avo itniesuidt - haSeterepar had, ever ,
•
:existed any. e 5 ordmighteref Adam , knew )
• Pride only, i Mane, to dot-solid
.Toall - theset elyandhadegittirititsof edearao
- fea. ' too; bertinited -ae-iiontiMablired 7 -10difets.of
heart., Hisrentire beliigwas sanduirged*ith - the
• spirit of !QV° , 1 hAVP:,l37lgdfiligrrt,al4l.P}-111.
.deeq, of whom it coialdWith more tridlifu.nees - he
aahl,.that affeotion and kindners,-,ViergintOrwoven
With the ierytilitntie lialiSiiiVardr wet his
kindness. cepimieizei 'exhibits,{ Autledisiingt par
_Venter xemods,, an ato portioular epra- we , ' -
always klad.,and: kind- tri -elk high - end - low. rich -
- and poor, old andyettreldriek - and ibite! In his -
nrisenee; alVelatises and -- conditions teordelight.: •
None more so than the young children, :WM II I 4IB
ticlotbect hie spontaneous attentions; and - de-, -
lighted by his Met:motive, anlinatedi: vivielono
conversation. , - "`
• • After what •Vre fume -,wo 'have taid
- *very word advbediya-iri the Halleat:seale-of -pet;
sonal responsibility,-,-.11 weed :lei impertinent th
add, that in the narrower,-„buteguallytlmportant,-
sphere of the" frateari' the-demesideqn - tualkwora
- nevermore beautifully illtratratedomver;hetter
aderned,,that hyrhim, • Ifheytas-helove4 elm*, -
• much 'more at home, at his slim &Wats." Bat; we
forbear: .EverriMtidis haeriiirsobe.
and,r-yes ire red with - weeping, do dravr . esid is that
veii may seem arab _ Theumaaand the-,
beet We O , OIN :is to.cemmgnh Ida yrielten family
to those"-Divine .cOatiolatione - -wslielie_eften',
, sni . so welt apaken'M
lineb - Wav-he, 'where iiiatifingitt-litive lie
sold in death before us. so :
!,.`VIAtIB; en guileless, erfoneh' - tearrastfections, -- -SOOll
matured judgeient, Welhderekined'and admi- -
141. .i1 t ' 144 4. 0 0 411 1' . . - l
aCl 3 olflltrit-etrauelt
ea; -nnon .to oft S .reenit'ef - mwoh
i mh na t e end effeatacvlhirmairse, o' Vie; t
u eatr sours fel t coavie4on, • _ sainted
rein lived under -the Old :Tastamen
don, in the age of tvps,'anrr'llanre, and shadow, -
aid prophesy, such ilk - oh-kw men as Elijah, and ,
Elisha, and Isaiah," and Diniel, ; -and - Hereklah,
and Jeremiah; Weald have honored and happy
to have him as their, friend, counsellor, mod- also
-gate. Had prevideneieenst his lot in:the apostolie
era, without controversy ; such Men ha Peter, and
Pant, and tithes, - and John, and - .Andrevr. and
Stephen, and BartholOniew, and liernatas would
have, sought hintient and delighted in hia presonie
and co-operation. If the apostles ever - hod, .or.
- have now, - a lawful enecensor, it was he. „
As Dr. Baker lived, o he died. hare his
siokness se only such a Christian cart Meet sucha
juncture. His sick and dying hours Were sweetie
seethed by the preserese and vigils of his dear
children and relativee, who loved And revered him
as the tenderest and hest of parents.'
Lino-eying between 'the two worlds, his latest
uttermoes, in humble reliance en God, were
fraught with absorbing eolleitmle for the welfare
of his now bereaved congregation, whom, the lest
seven years. without fee or reward, is eneshina
and in Stem; lie has so faithfully served an
oreather and pastor. Per this prosperity or St.
Lmke'a, present and prospective, bin doing prayers
ascended to Heaven. They have lost their Moses.
May God raise up a Joshua - unto them in their
hour of need. Among- hie last expressions, we
land down the following: " If it is God's pleasure
to prolong my life,T. will endeavor, by Ria, help,
to ghee- forth The praise, not with my lips only,
but by*mv walk and converse:Come - - If. In .His in
init. whiten], He shall see fit-to call. mo-benoo,
my prayer to Hint is, that. He may receive me unto
Himself in Heaven—not,thatTbaye hey merit or
et arm t," but far Jegilt ettritt; iny'Savfour's sake,
Amen." These words Ike spoke with "his own sin
gleness of heart; and bow true and deep that pur
pose was we ell know. , pis death was calm and
gentle as When" some guardian angel lulls a little
child to Peaceful slumber's. He fell meetly asleep
in Jessie, and has gone to, his transcendent and
ineffable reward. Ia his, Arturo massy, very
many, have lost a dear friend. Nothing in creation,
except wrung-doing. has lost An enemy. The
fond. affectionate is:trent-0e fervent; eloquent
preacher—the laborious self-denying pastor—the
gmileless, censistent Christian—has entered on a
brighter career Alt that have been about him
bemoan him All that know his name say : Bow
is the strong staff broker. and the beantiful rod !"
We all aro glad that it pleased God ever to
give to his family to the church, and to the world.
such a man. We all aro glad thathe has lived rush
a life. and died snob a death ire all are glad
that he fall in this - feee-front of the tattle, like a
good soldier of Christ, ne he preyed to be -permit=
tad to fall. with his armor on. -Thad. rather live
such a-life, and die ouch a death—endure such
millets, and achieve such successes—than be
the hero of tin thousand such sanguinary and
blood.benght victories es Crimsoned Marathon and
Waterloo. Before the Colossal tower of his endu
ring fame, the exploits of Ctesar and Charlemagne.
Napoleen and Wellington. pale their theffeetual
tree. Of his salvation se cherish no misgivings.
For,him we see the portals of the Now Jerusalem
thrown wide open, and angels arid redeemed spirits
coming forth to welcome him to the, glory and
presence of Christ.
Men and Brethren ! Oh ; let us all strive, with
increased and :noreasing diligence, to fellow him,
, +.s ho followed Christ, that we, too, at last, may
sash of ns I'oool9o the CAOWX OF LIPS! A 77 2 ,4 !
At the close of the delivery of - Iter. Mr. Butter's
address, the audience was invited to take the last
view of the face of the deceased, which opportunity
they all embossed. The entire audience was malted
to tears. Many wept long and bitterly. These
ceremonies ended, a procession of carriages was
farmed, °coupled by members of the ftinily, cler
gy, and others, who followed the body to the rail
road depot, Eleventh and Market.. At half-past
eleven the escort left for Lancaster, where the
funeral proper took plane the same afternoon,
and was doubtless attended by bundreds. The de•
issue of Dr. Baker creates a large void in the re
ligious world. Be will long be held in grateful
and affectionate remembrance. • -
THE - PIKE'S PEAS. I'ItionANTS—FATAL Ae'-
PRAY —A party of returning Pike's Peak emi•
;rants attempted to seize the boat and.crost the
ferry on Big Blue river. Kansas, iptely, withuat
Daring chimes H 'D. Williams, of Ray, aotaty,
Mo.; Peter Valleton, late of St. Joseph, and one
thompson, 11'1 , 0 wore in the employ of the ferry
nompans, fired upon the "migrants, and killed C.
C Stanley, of•Ranawlta, Virginia, and Wm. Mar
ry, of Hardin enmity, lowa, and dangerously
wounded. J. S Barnum, Of the latter place. Wit
iams, wlto tired the fatal shots, find with his party
to escape summary punishment from a crowd of
rmigratde 'Who soon arrived at the scene of the
affray ' - •,. -
S2Ollll AT AMMO'S Atm DomPassr—Thirty
Mosses BloiOn. Down—Loss of Life —A severe
•Ato r m passed over Oeniphan and. Atchison, in
-Kansas, on Sunday, the 25th nit: At Donlphag
thirty houses were blown down, end at Lancaster
three miles distant, several buildings were res.
them a church, by the falling of
t w r
h a
i t o o
h d
'on "l a ' g g men was killed, and two others severely
wounded. A few miles from -Acbison, a train of
twenty emigrant wagons wan demolished, and ono
teamster kilted. The same storm extendedthrough
Andrew county, Me , causing great damage. One
farmer hnd twenty acres ruined.
CAMELS 1' OR NLABAMA.—From Texas, by
the steamer Fashion, at Mobile, were t weety-ouo
camels, eight of them belonging to B. M Woolsey,
RN . ., of Dallas county. The other thirteen are
affsred for sale in Mobile. They are very gentle,
says the 'Minnie, oust very little iritheirkerming,
and easily carry two'hales of cotton on their barks,
at the rate of twenty-five mites a day, over a road
which would be impassable to a wagon. It it to
this and other similar plantation-service that they
are destined.
(ISLA'S I'ALF.-31r. Bennett, Webb, of Po
cops m to,vos'aip, Qua ter• county, his a calf
one week old; which weighed, within twentpfour
hours of. its birth, the enormous,weight Of OAs
hundred and twouirthreo 'Sued&