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' ''' -''' 401UPPIkKARLIBEFb. 69.-- ~.",..70130,7: .k it . .4B'itt t o . s . a . ,441 . ki Nis of atetal.,:l §O24Y :.DE'S T .TULIAAANAT ITN imam oik; 11 ‘ 76 -=AI Tr , V'th A: ANAEW 111021,0y*DE8 K AACIE, X"rI:;MTON 11 9 , Ittt.MATITT. - ; gralivwx. VABiliE l4— Valq: 4 4 2 / 5 /"LARD ,-- • , isvorikiMPLON; 41.014,11:.1/WP*14M4rnir 'fin 7 ' ! = 111,1 4 k i; 2 = 11 11 11 0 1 'V* / 26111 1% queltyam Win velbtrifi TOW ma": &OM* rfrat a ripirosb 3 / 1 00 2V o rg , 1 1 1 "! t " Yithirige WOW., , • 31 , 0NIJNE$TAIi4LAR.BLE ,WORKS , = thal 00,411,t17,01AMS ITYrJ /6701-"49!‘ - • ' 4 VgAirs.:sT 9 -2470, of*sinio, Itgluit:iNiti *tutus MARBLIS, • wiLtipoltro,,pootfratilofprittes. lido PIPPV OI -go AO. oat* *hms, capes fit• - moot firorable tltmt"yriYd:rah'* - oNity:briii*the Fablle Oulinaly to Yoeamutat • itatbli *ciao ' - Al ll 4thlaisi 3 O*, 3l 4“4o. —7 o trillts • iikur.itor tan ~,' - ,thillAtelphts. , • ' X 0,23 SKI* OCCYX•Xeri . 'o^.2•111: A1:714X121.110', ' e 13/11141111 apoialtidl ali sl 461).* 2 4c4! 1l Lirstoul. *YE* latassirint., 411 lelb.bcp Vs- Attl. "l 4 V I L4 f" ' ivssi kir* todlp and jr roa a 4 ;sjttl 6 7: 4 4 111011 IA Ow tierom • Sitte - ciOLUT.IOI4." :4-11 The Calebratid• Fteils Cilittictiaii;DETglitiltni., SOAP , - • inadik an y pr: -• . • >AOC, RIM •!1, - 1(010.10= ' ;••,- - s g , • •: A-I:I•2\4•t;I4:9IrEONE, ; • -, ~ , , ,2 2, 8 017T/1, 3 1,71611Wi1f3., • - - ; tc 4 so/ 1 4 . , TkAlm*..4 l islo 4 4ol l l4*;:ia, , A, lAsig. • Of 000 , i t" ode 11111114ViiiiiMItripa . , ?`t`="OGD =DOMINION" i ' 0 . '; ' 94 : 004 1 0.. - . , ,94N,O;Int.00ii , -- tOld*ZibiloVial - : - •• - " *PO ''o-44 Rilglaiata • o, * 11 oid Yr, lira I/ 61-11 ''' 1:441.- Orp );*:"1.,:1-:-.1!)..; - 101, the /MUM the rpositrivinumtwoomwissiir, goAmitio anCioalefisitroots„lo4, ...1145ae,02,,;31N11, .of the ;lima 1R1, , ,/604014, 11 8;tPri* - kqui. *mange. mettein titett i a 1 4041Ltil lic_egfr.dos. itrisd . ~4 1 1, wPwr4,41 1, 1-- u d Oil tatoe4 from Atirettele ;my seesee4eperi , ,r.lir-hVit m rarg-,Zeragr o l i te • 4. INC • ' - OattgstWi'.4„tittmoz --I ivis! , ;tivokosio; • or kit , 461.4411.111t1411::, Aff4prolivila SAirforlilalt 1. ,OrilikariThliA'S $4,, FOLIrLTIT OF. JULY SEA 'SIDE! fftemlw VAlclX)7Cro2ixoN OE FARE THEE TRAINS, TO ATLANTIC CITY, .CAMDEN AND ATIMITIO RAILROAD 1. Xzeurilon Train leaves - Vins•street Worry at 6.16 Al t ht . , ?ere, for the itoontlTrip ...... .11 .0 0 'ON TlllB 'MIN On!'.) 9. Mall losvoist 7,30 , rare, 2.30 3.4rpreoo into .t,4 P. M 800, 2.50 OITURIONC, LEAVE , ATLANTIC VITY =MN, at e. at 4.40 r: Id JOHN a. BRYANT, 1410IIRTH" OF - JULY 'EXCURSION: - • RIDGE A VENNI AND NI 4N altUttlt P4B - RAILWAY"' •for 441,L8 04 8 OfIDYLKILL and WIBB4IIIOKON,C - - - '• L'• min- regularly from BEOOND and ARoff Streets vbm biLN,TII fittest and RIDGE Avenue. to OI •RANDs OOLLZGA; -1141111191 i: BiILLa PALLS-? OP 801iDYLNILD, and the-WISFIANYOKON, affording to the uublie an opportunity of.epending a most Agreeable 11YO8:TO OH 11Ellilf by the Andy, romantic stream of the WiMaidokon • • s Fog , GAZE /44. T, ••"' NEW. yoint, Duty, (Suodaye excepted J at cut o'ofoek A. N. INTRA-111.1Pli. TO,O.S.PN itA.P, ON MONDAYS, A.V. 8 4-, SS,,, Steamers - sont,ikwiliN,'Oagtednvapei, , BOSTON. °sputa B•liewi ' • KENNIIIIBOi Capteda Rand. - • -.. --Norm • Datirldae between Ms elty,flape lifey; and New York, leaving from That Pier below 13prnoe street, 10 - 9,44 A.: 1 4. • - ' " ' • • ' On salti pp's, for OAP* MAY, only; at 8 otdock,-, .2 - , . Leave New York, (Sundays °zeolite:lJ at 6P. M. Cape May daily,. at, 8 A. M, Pare to New York, Cable • 14 00 , Steerage' ' 1 50 Pare to Cape May, 10°10114 Carriage .... . 1 00 • .. 1 00 , ffeeeoe Tieket.. Carriage giro. extra 8 00 - „litete hoome,extra 1 00 Freights fa:New:York sod ..flage May ,taken at low, rasa Goods destined toyeeldNewlto.k , , , wlll' be for warded with deepateh.ltee of .00zomierioa IaIdgELALLUNP.DION, Agent. 814 And, 8188oatb,D*LAW,&1113 AVENUE. , - OAT* bat; O , 3II3IIBMAYS. ' ' 'paring the otessort.r'l iiteeteer will Lute for Cap e May, on Build** at 8 &alb* A pf Netnrefer leave Capelday, - Moirdav Morning , at B Octant: - JB3O tf m aga • DAILY FOR -CAPE MAY. tine, steamer- /141.1.40 N. flaplain :11r..-Winitslin,pttAßlSl,CrptAixtf4 t agiFt, loyps Arab, t Atrmst take sydry„pdodfdg Cs, d!oot;4: (11tiMAYs woofed ) - • „. &tithe, to seente tliftliotals. , Ertiltiiiirs ate lettistied id - 2110M bott t . - Ifitt talks lantli,tilarripiit 140 011 .. to* 'ft 1114 . L 0" - , SotioATlaltoto,dlAitor _- 11 . - 00 Diettsgoi -l lioittorfuol- Fttrttist a at thfrtur B 1 , 8°42t* - rErrrals A.NIA IiAI itOAD.• .20228T11.0T4221.8. OURDIONS TO BETEL -2.1181511 AND DOILDOTONN.• , , - , Izonfilon Tickets for tki 'bo Wood AtAto Yrtet4t PRON:rv,thod nth, I,OW, riTestiew OATTIADAy-, Tub. 24 and MONDAY July 4Dif *dad lottirft: low o r bs M lIAS, no l Offnalug of Jtify elk. - • TRA2SIB MALTA FRONT AND , W 221017. . Tor BoUttibefoAt 080 A. M. And 4 D. „ Per PgOII4IOIITA at 825 L. NE and 5 P.M. 11 1 • • PAU- TON TOD DILATIONOT, To DetklohifoeSS; 'To Do2fOofooo, $1.25 Tickets sold only at Immo and Pf22.L019 Stria& 340.45 - :„ :„ . 1 8 59 ' 1 ' ' Ktitarig l I - *3 :4 : 144 4 1011521 f OF JULY_ -,14.X0U9810013,10110115. PERLA. -• • - • - DDLPEILk TO NNW. YO'ME, • - ar OAMDIN. AND: AtillOY.. AND PUILLDDLPMIA AND TRUNTON RAILROAD' 00. , a LINES • lindurnion Ttoketewill be anld "on.,PATUBDAY the 24, SUNDAY' 841,,MONDAY 4th of JULY, • for NIW YORK, tood to return on or before MAIDN/MDAY, the •4th of LY.- - Prom Philadelphia on ilanardaY. 24 Atlyiby the 5 and 9A: N., and land 3) P.M. Dore lon the t 4.1.7 the andllP, Wino*, and OA the 4tn, by _the 0 eel 9 'A, N. lime; troutliVaintiOatreet wharf, with the privi lege of veturalna from Newitork on the 4th by the 19 M.:2 and 4 . 0 MAlneefeasi ors Me sth and Bth • July, by El, 9, and MA. M 12 15., and 2 and 4P. M. lines. PADS 70R !HP, , BXCIORSIOR, GOING AND Rlll. - • - • '...T118111110, $4OO. -The 8: A. M. and 2 P. M. Itnise (roof New York leave Pier No 1, North River.; and the gaud 11. A, NI ,• 12. M., and 4 P.M. linen leave from the foot of ,00ort land street. WILLIAM It. DATZSIER,, • --1029. tit Agent. 1859, .1859, votritT'a Or avviAmounsiorit; By steamboats It; 'STOOI2IOI4 sod JOHN 2181,1.801 f, fromWatanhatreet "wharf,' far Tasony, Torztedsle, Bereatijr,'Strlbtatois,` • Artietoll RobltheaWlwaliStodwa town,' awl Trenton. - - , FOR 110RDENTONNZ 141.10eit 8.10 A. 01:; - 8.8) awl 8 P. M. DONT Trlyyd, at 6.81 A, 11", 180, sad 6 as P. 'OR „BRISTOL AND 110111.1AGTON: tTpTdpd at 630 zed 11 A - 11:','3:110, 4 SO; azal BP. - 7. 130wtf Tripefrom Bristol, at 110 A: 11„, .2 20, e. 20, Alfd 0 25 P - ' • Dawn Tilts from Itoillehloa, at 1.20' A. AI., 110, 980:880. and 036 P 561. • • - - The boat by at 8.80 A. 81., sod down from BordeatOwn at 20 P:81.0011' alo,o' at Paptsw.street wharf, Ken. eiagtoa 4 . - • • PARIIYOR rat szotni p ion. • Pbuidelphtiud Poedenteira. -tag eenta, plll664lphls, Florenee,,Bristol, Barliogtoa, - "Bover)y, Teeiladde. - aad Taeony ga - , PDX TRENTON:AM STRAMBOA't AND OARS. Lawn Philadelphia *B9 and 1 t A. M. sad 830 P. Al. Atetutiebm tenet Trenton at 1 82 and B.BB'r. ffixelrorn 16 cents. • - " • 'Paea' artriza Up - - 880 9410 ihd 11 A: At. - 8.80 4.80 'aeedBl. - 1.1 , 26600 j Trlpallowa, 8 10; 10 - 16 , 0, 816, 116, W ei OOP. - (112811811, • - • ,Agent. ,E. CAMP DIEETIIiG. • '2. 4 land V42.11RN &OLE -1021:1511P— UREIC will lt* held et TULIP 'GROVE, au the line of the Othiden arid Allende Rellroad,'near the beautiful - Tillie of Haddonfield, G;lo, ' ' ' 01)111121#0120 Ott POURTE OP,JULT, ; efith,..thetlette ippropriate to 'the day . o The eiti *eater abotode In -*wroth springs of 2 1 / 4 1ftf oold *Marlin well 2404 Wand khandeoraely olf,"embriaing „every etisiverdeuth anti coulfort -for W ri WI esitag., Arratigiteente hays beet' Vie, bt the NI I Ohniett of Geldordltldi to board' peratontor lies by the day or week, oo moderate tame. " The arrival and dope/tore of ' trains at and from Vine.atreetwhitrf and the *op, have been' arranged expreenly for the eotthenietthe of persons and, partite wirobiett to Weed the locating. • Pare tor, *emotion, including Perriage,•TElßTY 0251P81 " - ; . Tickets to be bad At the Tteket 94, lttue•stree' t • Vie bold fortitioste will leave •Vint-etreet k arberi let 647;1130' 8.46 , "40 45 - A, Id. and 1.46 , • 4 66 , '8 46 Oath will Ude, the Grove at 7.16;9 20 L. Si., and 3;4.16,7200andibP.M. • • •-- services aolir ememeneeo - vla Prayer Meeting,' g ;dad, and M. Preasiting,loX A.. ,8, 71$ "ON nONDAY, YOURTE OP MU. , A i„ rel ei *alba preached 'appropriate to the day sod othasioth, by the W Farago, formerly •of the New Jersey Continuos. -V o -Meeting to continue fora week. ; . a. intoWtr i fi. GRAW.Tatotor. •BONDYIVINg BAN. TLE OttoUND:—YOURTH OF litatturtelOrde —THIN WffiaTltE3l . lll AND ~ND.PUILADIO4PDIAAND'BAL :MODS. QINTRIAD ~ 1 4141, h 0 4 tD. COMPAttriCS; are wow PrePated,to run Exenrsions on the 2d, gd: and dth„ Ur: to / the 'BIthispISSIAF. ' NATTLII GhOUND,'- being the scene of one of the most Ole , tiratints Reeolutkurary Battles, readers it. iin.• dependant et lte romantio esenerY, 4, most dell , abin and ~ •tatswastiat plsoelbe taw Companies to encamp' tor r felt days, and tieearelOrdats wtelifor to make a trip 'toy the day, sassiot end emote delightful pleas to spend slag „ , „ I • Ism (or illgourthili - Thiketir to, and from: the 'Nettle Etemud, 80 eewte. TOMO iHri leave the West blieeten Dill cornet of 'zieRTIMITIPAnd. sitiLlopkr Byte% fold 11 A. M And and 616 1...11 „ 1418,6ti34 CloSis'Pail , .!' -, llovitiiti . aiio ',.etiodrao.' reOBERT . 1511.0 - Eivi,alMEt , & CO, • < X. i4OR. 0.141) BApßi STEM* - gotp!Aum!mp3'o?P4.44Ta.lN em, dr,*kimcm.",iiATE w4.14 - Ii w: ,A74-xt, A S ":n isiryas rx i aiasx Wrt4DOW 101141A118,-#301).A..- 100 kigo for sale by. -wxtvggiu,:k, Bytoymair, riat, . 3 47 eat 40 N. 11111101Yktr.,4, , - • - 4 extrirsionts; ,'FOR Twirl:JAY ONLY 1X00.81014, at 686 P4'zbf ~YI~ILAD7LPttIA~ PIILLADVJA'IIIA.,,, AAA', JVL 4. 1859. Sli* - flitblichtim::' :,--L...',,i BIIIIN. Sr, SIEG, ,Publishers, , , , .. • .1, ' ErIVOIDISTNIITIttreet; Philadelphia,- - ', ' save now ready-- ' THII"01111211li AND,.'COMPILATION ‘ O,P. - Tn ! PRAYER' BOOK, • With an"appeedix Miciteltda varcons Historical' facts' and . d °cements connette `, with our Welty. 'lly the Rev-Wm. H. Odenheimer , .......,________ D. 1). A. new enlarged edition.. 24in0., manila; 4 ~ , - r ---r— , --,-- , , .„---________ tents • antisne cloth, red edges. , , lificitsit i Trio -.Ro u t es of the fait.ry. Passenger SOPHIE 'KRANTZ; or, t4 7 .3 „. C;t 7 is e r4 4 l:l a rist 4 l r e conou p it:l7 , 2,7o,ll:NrontllTß4o.l ' fo r e. ADO:dr:en. 7 51 4 . la i a l is t i, -t ; c: i - o kt it a_ 6: l z CONSTRUCTION STATE-EOM' DELL ' Story trtd WO An 'admirably , written ' book, portraying '4l , -litt,L roil. likiepicArni TOWER Or THE STATE loveliest traits In ehildhood„ and alining to eorreat thei ' TIOTIE-mEluovAL of Inn •ner,wro ALLENTOWN-. fauna Of the young by a grapple picture of their 'Mori ..-11b09NOTianOriON OP Tilit STEEPLE ETC -TEE un sequences, and by contracting them with the great. ''' 'ol ' A r ß it A ls l: l l 7n i? S P Y 1 1. 8 V D AN S P ir ii n gt N lS ° L lP. a l r N irrll4 3 l 7: n e Ofe k a g n! happiness yesulthagfrota,a geMtecatecience end 001000 deportment. 11 : ' M o li a 1 8 1:C V 0 1 4 ;N E E I Ii L T A li A u m 0%70 1 : STS M - CD E fts '. - O A ; I‘ T i ttl / I - I - . • A CA141901711 of RdltiOne or the nOolr. 0/120011 , NON PRAYER. Published by ihmerrit Slog, WNW , IPENNSTLEANIA mantillas, ETC,--DECLARATION i, specimens of the type's:used, dese.lptions of lodes of- .. ..yIEST REM/ PrieLtorot IN THE,SrArg•lmues 'rims binding and; a flat of prices. To .which is added ens ' tirr inn NTH or 'JULY, 1776., ...." 31114 - , ' Ti r e bad intended; in commenotng adotoription dc O. Bent by mail one TO/TOTI6LT, prepaid, -. , VO le it °t o l l/O " ii r aIE a N K A S 4 M IN I N I LA I I TU NOTO Y O ; Lit, 4 eq„ == 'l..' ... - , 4tite ishwois of ,intorcet on the line Of the pal/000- ,0r ialiroade Of this olty,lci‘start at the Southwark b a y iti t t i k a t e le o t f P ei h m st e P et a l i t i o , Pel o t i e f l r r e r a e i ht e lo i D t i e r k 7l l 7 4l , l: , 4s o. 2Bte.c :4,,t‘ ' L,: ~ rMilitte :et' Ike:Fifth', afid - .fit , ti-street road, the . wants, as well, as bra perconallnspeetlmi - oeour etools.l -Oldest in the city. But, tutting the time lain eon. ' 11f1 ig siattott, What .otherWlse might , not be inappro- THIS - HISTORY OP A. 'POCKET PRAXES 1300 1 / 1 - B . ..,,, , .... „.. . • , . ~ • - Church, . D r egs:" o l l n pu D is of poor, Fifth h l/., a ß i t t o t to4 . ::. :i, f:: 7 l:l • l , l4 , ,;,: ,11 ,: t .4 fii it. f ,,r , r. e.t ii fl o i m itz a toll en ri t. lv y ,06 , ili p o l: r o on p aa s 6 r :0 ,. , a idl it :deli e ibiFha ti din in ieuia: Price' - tea,e. An inter:ethic narrative, adopted le the *tent ~., .?, ~, , ~ , , rr _,. _ bleeimapaoltlea alsowing.the excellence aid worth td : , •Se rlita„,', ~ • . ' ' • - ri e t e r e o f f ee its , th: p u e l f 7 xl,,o l , .s4l,leconatirictiOn Of this iinirablei building ova's . ,—, , th by B c L on tt v7n gl einlt n b l e t read ° l e c r7f il t a le l l g ur j SAORED HYMNS.-'Prom ancient mimes. scree . 11b.6 4 r6 .....' 1 4/ I" st e 'reel a i i n f.0tt 1 '314. - kreyn :a V4lo :d m il 'o' e "% l9 4 ll .,:m f t., r- ....7.17. ,i 3.0,. i -tea. ~,-. e, :07 • ,....., r :A , " . ° S - ! ° e i ga n n7t , ll l . / 4 p ill' 2 - - i i;VeereieY ii4l l ' iliAta , k'sAfo`ittili t i eh lui edintr e iin i7 4l 1 i: iTtne. Ant one sloth ' Any of the there poet by mail . 'p repaid , c 1 ; 0754 N1 et5 1 :I) :l4.le ir ' s il , il d t i ' d 4 not ' if " ' a i l:: li t is ci l ot e li * U: f w i'c l ut ili th ' lIIIHNS le , SIEG Booksellers, J ..' {-: .: Sty 2t Adio log s tic ,-- peed ad architectural einishter principally from •• , „. , , .? litt, fitsbnamed - p .- eternal', Afanf,r, yeati passed - : -' 7 . lq . e annalist, et ateit in liiitialuablei SWOrle,Which we °We ,it - ival,entiro4 einnpletid. Mr. Watson, 0 1:741g . ii , FELT: ' BANS ' NOTES,: , ; halt have frequenfeeciiden' in 'refer te, tf;at ha g in his poisetisten the original Mils and *tier!! f'ept by Andrew Hamilton. 'Prom them it appears lis,it the s e , * wee ' .. £5,180: The glazing, with Itriden efraMes, was done' in 1742.'-'3, - by Thomas 1140, (the Invciitor ,of ' the quadrant)--the I [lead and Slogs Otat'LlT,O. /Mae Norris writes to ilia friend, Robert Charles, in London, in 1752, r,requesting him- to procure for the p tate House' ;four hundred squares or „ lights of glass, 10 inches ',by la; and bait a box of .NI full by aji b ase. : ' ..,;Professor Kelm; a Swede, who Woe :in Phit'adel 3)hiain 1748-3, speaks of the Town Hall (the State , • - afOneo) having a tower and bell. :Yet Teaao Norris, No Written or Printed, Itheoription'Of Bank-Notts,, .L„ a a , , ar i d , E o sva m: lie , , - no Metter how, Ohrefully Compuite, c an , „ ,arr, qmpenn. , ever be made en Infallible end - " - ‘,.4 - tepdents or, the State Rouse, wrfflite,it--tmeoNtbuthio.yeoavuvemossefettbhihnietneor. ~. - - „retreat greteatoy.,„ „' . :' : 1 , Itit' I'l6l' le the'befole•inentioned Robert Charles, 1 Al' 511306 the aPPita a t i " d the art 1:;1. m ' ' n g " I- ' 124 t ° "°'. is : , bitirloognhi :flieds' ,o t sa 'uponwl . n el , i pl i fi t a e.:" `a l 1 , b 2' 8 0; v 1; i y e i t it ' 2l 4 o:o ls i r O l : 6 1 o b r e t made theo a A n s d e f : a, trye er at a l M it b e ee of- b P e a a P" n tilt o r tle uY et -4 0t P lir d theparti m Ia thul in.." teretted to secure their issue against the liability of at , terations of titles. and. the raising or embatltution of - - through P h'i g & d i ...n e t: L P : 7 l i h a l v el o a n : t i o. e l lands a ! ' n and 3, 1 t a o 'a' allproclaim - higher denominations ,of value; bat, Co fer,thsAdesi-, oi:i te m: i t; Table °Wlt hair never been aceomplethed;fisi nporuthe one Aandratl and forty-four facsimiles of es ulna Encysiopsdia, there are iseenty.elght alteraskraiSMl4 - sine of the old bill we twe'net informed, but this to bir ICxvy l a o h i ' p ' pc: h a a t:goal . Il le s t b te i t ta riq ut ne t s h te ar t m he f. 'ant B h : e se °ftei siu : r ;l i n i i t ea 1 1; a 6 ;a; 1 t ii i i; :I i rio t' te l °a ; : a r 'E' e u gTni b e: -. 1 0 l s al I h t A:: , . . ries inswojexpleds .1 and broken Seeks which ; being mi.; ..oo,nyantont, because it would,be less trouble to afeauyedientedby a regularb Ink-note lograrlog Atoll . arig it before the reaffolds were struck from the for as originally solvet' bank, oremireecresa._ar ri ' -111 ' ip o lut of workromobin, An , Milstein:tee off 011154 team ~ ,:ni Eg where it was Intended- to.pleee It, wittoh - overbuy, Them rculation of: the exploded benign lei' ' out not be Until the end of the next eumtrity l , or trequenity btained,ofter failr, by to $ partial ''' ._ e beginning of the' fall. Arriving Within a year, who at once mate , It their ba9nese to erase t;te eft and location of the brokenbana, and either by peat,* it t was eicielted neeidentallya, few days after While ar,espeinting in the title of somehankin good oredi *Ting the sound. • Tboy wished to send it back at `set altering' the location to correspond, enoceed la foie ,-• lag these altered Nome upon the,pahlle to good money nee ; b ut being unable to do so, Pass ,t, Stow, the aso , ISSI rine intessaL CIRe Marna 01 TIM WMIX. nail ;MOT a Entire of Malta, undertook to recast it. 0050105 Arrant/WEIS. -.,- ' .'- Stow's 'fattier, Charlet; as shown by the minutes •another great source of of to the public matt faciv lity with which the issues of eolvent trenksPgivelserestal, .f'' the Common Counoll, 231 July, 1763, prayed fore l'esu Jurgen IN. nagousgetioNti, TAL:re...One dol..fießoard to make him some builmlotraitta the f: T r o ft o r r e , - 8 lar Notes being raised., to Ten,dellaz Notes, and in 0n.....1:... - by entirely removing the . email, denominations] e0un.);,7 9 : v1 A7: 1 0 . • , :d 0 t w e. :17: ,.. thiilingg ..d, eix. tent, and printing in their place lergeeonee, or by yoaty -`bourt for two and twenty years past. The Board i t: k n g li k l is r . ; tt o i c t sg a ° 7 . ;4 l 4,i l i a l Ti a l i st a i l l r,l l/.41 :74:5 ' , 4 a 1 " n a "r :Ft' , ,,,,• .- Hae : e per - annum -for the said fireweed • and tseozeibßrtfitutit, thereunto an dmor; is printed - . ' '' , 2 . - - - 1 1_ 0 , fill e rit m eir e , ta a i thl was his tho t u ro g u h b t lo The SIGORITY afferdelbY our IWIECTIR ilia Id! the het that in the entire etroallion of paper nioneyt.. . entails Ilanthrent lbws , are we two noise exactly Oft '• •••pper wag' -added by them, but - the sound t a terd f to Un ln U ali tl e itil a Ct4 n r e 7 i; mould to east it over' at On this the founders --either the style of letter INN/ In the title milfferemt , the vignettist, portraits, or ecitueere vary, or Ole dap ' Wesson, location; ice.. me dbelmliar.,, , With es a n : simile at Over/ iresmira L oots; before him. we belie !,,, "ytUtti,' to •Saye, their repetition i and we Sod by she Person ee r asafCix 'eca t tlg P a P" 0°4 1, , 'POI ' • ;Penniylveritei Packet lime 7111, 1763 that the / " 4 :4l; rB phari 2e Vr i 4te an !telgl t lrreett i v . c " tiVe n ,h m ig'hes "' ' 7.. ' ! " " - 4 ~ - , ,w- -- great, - kali:nese: thehy w P e a o ss k 4 beir S o t r o e w , , ild er s e e l d gh az in d g infant.' for its great utility and TaitiA, to the yebUS, , gfAf s. 1%.,1 7 ,1451:t48, * , -it-,010 state-ifortse steeple. But titia-the vroteeter' t ies,ep lose ley Iteudnlent paper stireurr., , welt. re Joy ts dealmbOlts ae ilinntratien.tf ieldes ' Pellotpftkiatilitt Artsln ***AOC floWllrr 0 401 - ''': a ''' i r Plvilkif '76 "---Atd, not. pleasenß„bratlebyte 1 atuaraf. ~, _,, ~, ..., ••,,, ~ ~,',, ,-, .„. -:_::,-,;.,, , ..rile viribrii to England to have a new bell east -- -7- ...' ' ea wieloytnr .ol ibiL 2w6. ,, „,.... I ,a_. , 1 11 LiP , E,1 1 ,;,:„,,, .. lid luthielinar 1 ounfier7sper money, - 'it reenthe iffrNmiit , fflttaifilfirr,9ol-4, l rWhilriftlik • ' otratt-40SPiel, - Ewl., President of Ant ' er,lesty Ra . mo N _ langdistanthettineipeeted honor. . 1 What use the - Note Company. . , . ,.. - A ' ether wastnit,to we him° been unable to aseertain. ..., , Tha:_lion. JAMS lit , COON, Superintendent fault. .We give a copy of a bill which speaks for Dealt, Deesrtesent, State of New York.- ~,- .4 - ,- . -: y he,ruon, 3 . : 0 loins. opulzond „ t 8 ,,,i,k D e „... i ntl. ?hay be interesting to our readers: .4'..' P4nnhilTan To ll Einen ' ad oo ;oo 4Vl ley .l , 7 : l r: [ Pertinent. IPsteut Wiervenitt , ,„, •-, 1, • tiIiTIMPOLITAN , RANIE. New York.' ” i . ‘ ' .' i's° Pro l4 oto G. It: WHIM. Ite..-New-York Oleming-boneet The lion ,'CRAM , WEIIT11,• Ltiptabstendent Bent , ror eivent'Fa in raising the tower of- the State Bones, roi r per a wv ; ;n a t e , v iti z as s .ana lli h m uee . tts se : mo . , 2l , o i miti d , 11 ' g .., 21 , 9 , 114,. ,.. 1 ~; - -0 5 : 1 1 0, ; ,. - 4. " or I,rood . - , to le og 'RIM ENGLAND ASSOCI&TION :PPG slyentas. 61% M. bacon at 7,11. 1 14 1% 1 8105.0 P 0 sIaNTIRTEITS. tee., Ate , kV. , • 1 148 .4 lb bee' at NO 211 1 AS it Is our am to render title publientlon ea rairsor Potatoes and grease • 0 7 0 impossible. asoasumesany exmoree, we beim dimmest, 50 5 limas.-... - at 4e 1 12 0 the en-operation of the exeasess Bang Nora Owe tyst, 1% laurel of beer at lOs 1 7 0 , . w hi a b,' oo ,,,pos a g of ..41 - the Rank Rote Repaying Elms 4 1 lb mutton' at 3%d 017"3 in the eenutry, hmtguarantied to furnieti us column - 37.1i:lbl.real ' - at 830-- 0 11 0 IS T O ur lib ni ; p 7bison ' - • a2d 0 6 0 Popper sod a:Petard , . o 1 6 1 11 ,, P . B e t r:B:a r b f l a te 0 o , p r f e l e :::: Y ptl is ße t t i l ls k et e r N i z o re t it e r li . t h i s o l :n b :4 l ll/7 4 O ri tt i :hr: I s e x o b i e t :g h a m a t m e 111 , 0 it 5 big supervision thexarms noessernses Of oar wort, 2 tees and estidles, pipes and tobacco 0 0 0 as welling the sunmo and sursametvas Against any 4. Baiter Ils , M., turkey 45., 4 pair fowls 05.... 1 2e . . ratalia 00111 OP Ent Naha NUTS Person . , - Wars imedred dour 0 3 6 The work will be arranged in alphabetical ordery-the Iwo termer bookings at getting on two floors, moat simple arrangement poientim for reirreeee--cov , - . and stee l or relaing Vim tower, ilte-vrood,ko. 3 0 0 mewling with-the' Bank Note* of the Oily of Bolen ,' Bunke, and State of bismnichusette ;,.. thee of the banks of the other New knotod States; then of ans Middle. Western, Southern States rod Canada. in regu lar sumesaion, , . .. . The new notes of new bonito...se fast as they IlDretir in eireulation, end also all alteration's of notes or bubo new in existence, will be issued in the tame style with into work to a weekly or monthly extra, nod in Sic manner the public -will always be kept folly adyls/in regard- to 'the entire eirealetion of the genuine p m currency of the country. ~ . - The MIGRATED PACI.BiIdILE COUNTER rata will -be designated la sash number ; and their &Ming lee features from the CIENIIINS notes wilt be meshes plain IA possible. , ~ . , ._ .. . 1 . The work - wilt be honed fp weekly numbers, e ast of which will dentate 144 facsimiles of ge l atine notes, end will be eomprieed in about 75 panthers. and. Anent 11,Co0 fee-similes of genuine notee. and will be pm plated within one year from the data of the grit n - bar by a more rapid tone near ate completion. HIE IMPRESSIONS Or NOTES IN Tins W IL ATM NOP 'Pno foesApne, mil , pnoro-fa' 0- lIRS.PDS. PRINTED FROM STONIII WITH OARION_ INR„AND WALL 140'r BADE The first number will ba Issued on Saturday, 24 'MY, end regularly. thereafter, every Faturdey, end wit be far tole by alt Thriven, dery and Periodreat agents; ' The price of the weekly,numbers will be 25 oeuiepeb. - Subscribers, by pre-payment or bab in entrent Wig, will have the weeklynumbers of the Work entire/rafted to them lounge free al) remittances may be mole at our:ink! Footage stamps will be resolved in Miyeent for single numbers only. Which wid be tree of pedage A liberal dtscouut will be made to AGENTS. Allot , dere must be socomperded with OMNI. *dame I WM. 00118 LAND & CO , .1020.6 t , No 9.eldfiB it! Street, New Tole, EUREKA.' COUNTBRFEIT DETNOTkI+ • i-LEAVErt - - s' •';,, .140YOLOPEDIA. OF AAINV,I9AN DANK•NO 001111ENOY. - , By Photo Lithographic) . liefreintilea; in mlniatnro, 'every get:colas:note of every eolvent Bank in the United States and Bawds. . , AN INBALLThXi DIABOTIR. OP ALTRAPD,I3PUI , 1110173; AND OODNTIROMIT-At.ONZY. With "a faa•sleal;eit do genuine Notes before yap', tio* • can yon tat" the bad? BA4NESt AND THOU aRTSIII BOOR. LBOTURI62 TUB BIBST TWO VISIORi OP TUB BOOR OF DANIBL. By Be,. Wiß4m Bolton. l2mo. 76 Gents. 190719110 Olt TIIY AIITIES.: , -,. • There is a. warmth of tone end feeling ahonethte book' which will make it not •tuteaaepteble to etarge ohms of roisters. Its preatiqsl.. earnestness engrave• ranee of spirit an high raoaatmendations —Doper of the Cross • The Yoluote contains Masers and earnest expitltione of prophecies, The authottil Tints* are. In sane rp.. silents -- ..peceuflar;aid me. Worthy of attention aid Matt, sideration —American Presbyterian." , I The book is the.piodnet of a calm, thounlitltl..'ear.. nest, and reuerentiat mhd, and may be iionsaltut with relit —Tteebttemen names '• but published by WILLIAM B. & ALFRED MAItTrA je2s No. NM ONESTNTIy et. SOWER cQt , BARNES, & PUBLIsaDOS AND DEALERS JE istIISOELLANIOIIi; SOHOOIA 'AND AND STATIONERY, - , • No.ST North THIRD 8114 et Wow Arol,l • „ThiloOolphic , r . . - . . • Publishein oi the , following popularßehoei .113601K1, whit& are nairnowlOged . by all intelligeat Umbers who hex° given themo enroll:11 examiontiOn to by Pvt. walled in their wiaptitiOn to the purresee s.nbudelli • LIANDMRBI NEW 11.11RIEEI OP at ADDIS; ' ClonstOtiog Of • 011.neletsl Now , Feltner, ' i ' " " first Baader, ' - • " " Third Realer, " " - FM Reader, " "Elpealog, Al 'U ' Bpollor,_ " " Second Bender, - ' Cl " • - Volga, Reader, " High Boboal Yowler, , " Young Ladlee , - Reader. BROOKS' NOBISMI., PP.CBSARY AND st*TAI, AIIITUMWIIOB, By Prot. L Brooks, of Loooaster Nona!, tittool. WELTON'S BYLIINDLD 13EIM181301f OtITLINVI BUYIL c. They ere eepeolelly adapted to those beg fling, ea well to ro those more advanced in the shay or Geogra phy, as they 'remise from them a clearer ind , triore (er red cOneeption of the character and reliti else and matfett of eyery•physical end political feature, than can beobtalned from any other gaps extant?' MI the 1:n*11411,11one of • , • : iY,T.BOI! 4P O MIMNXY,, . 4, A. 0. spaas h. BM, GO YOU, May be found on heed at N. Y. Pnblishent Nees. • anttacrif „ LD BOOKS-OLD BOOKS-OLD IiOOKS. The Anderslgnet Mates that he has [[r eatly for sale hooka printed between, the years 100 Ind 1600 early editions of the Pothers of theltefOim re and of the Purltdd`Divines; in Law, Breeton, Lyit ton, Pot fendorff, Grottos, Dowd, Coke, Bele; the' ar Books; Beporte, &o , are often to - be [druid upon shelves; cyclopediaa, hcktoons: 0 toed° Authors, 111 , . y, poetry, Philosophy; Baleirce, Politleal 3144D0my, 91. , ,rnirdint, Arshitooture, Natural. History, Treetisee •, co thou, laid otherAindred subjeete are being moth). Hy dealt' .in by him. • Bootie, in largo and emell'outo ties, pur. aborted at the Oaetonvilotkoe lITODIIO Books • , OHM. NUT Street, above Warmth, P 11116400.4, - , ~,ruilit.ent , , , 30IIN CA.' BBLL. —,- Ivo THOSE who are about to I ill!Ohnflet prusei Pain* White- Lead, and Widow Glue, we &root 'their' attention to an unettrpleseS and feted stook of id* goads; widen are to be foe& i t the store Q ZIRO4IIh & f who tt ' Corner of Berard and CireaStteate. grIEIBESE.-850 boxes. 'Harkins e County kJ oba.Fe in store and Tor eatu by 0. O.3ADOIRE& 00.. &MU Street. oe wad door abnve Prar. 37 2 . , Q11142111,DER:8.-9tl 1111d5. , Dry It Shout. Jere, just received sod for Ws by O OAOI4OI 4)0,t 0411 istrsiet)llsood 09 y ipso re on%. :42 . . . • MONDilr JULY 4; 1869. ' A bill of the same at the raising of Pass fitintr's first bell is more moderate, amounting to 5 13s. Hid., but of the same character. Its date he April 17th, 1753. Passing by, forthe rfloment, the most important part of its history, we Rod that in 1777', previous to the entrance of the Bri tish into Philadelphia, the State-House hell, with those of Christ Church, were removed and taken to , Allentown, to prevent their being made into cannon by the enemy. Some timbers In the stee ple being decayed, a resolution had been passed In 1774 to have it removed, and it has been fre quently Stated, by Leming, In his Field Book, end others, that this was done before July 4th, 1770. A view of the building, triton In 1778, by 0. Pealeothioli we may see in Independence Hail, shows this net to have been the ease. The bill of Jialin Coburn, the rigger, who took down the old steeple and put up the now one and the bell, is dated July 16, 1781. This new steeple was but a temporary arrangement for covering the tower, as shown by another view taken in 1801, also in Independence Hall. In this condition!, It stood for many years. On February 7, 1828, a committee of Councils was ap pointed to inquire into the expedioney of emoting a steeple similar to the old one. The proposed Improvement was carried into effect, at a cost for Abe steeple of $l2 370, (it bad been estimated at $8,000.) for the bell of $2,157, the clock $2,075. At the time when proposals were asked for, the old • bell was valued at $4OO, but it was thought Mat was tau low. Mr. Tilghman, a member of Coun cils, remarked, when it was under discussion, that. he,hopod It might prove an entering wedge for're staring the building to its original state. This an ticipation was realized, and the proposal of Mr. John Holland for the restoration of the Hall was acceded to, Marsh 20,1832. lie Hall bad been disregarded for many years, mat 1 ,Lafayette visited Philadelphia. Then it wee felt to kisth , e proper place in which to weleoito him. In bad Mate, Its ancient decorations' were removed, and it was fitted up in modern style. Some tegrettod the change at the time, but the publie,generally oared little about it. Many of the old ornaments, however, had been preserved, and it is now restored, with a few exceptions, to the same appearanee which it presented in Tula., 1770 'The exceptions were the omission of a gal lery on the western side of the room, Supported by small columns, and a platform for the presiding offiaer's chair, on the eastern side, with a few minor. debate, which could not no accurately re membered. .But let us go back to 1776. May 10th of that yeas it was resolved that it ho rcoommended to the respoative Assemblies and Conventions of the United Colonies where no flovernment euffloient to the exigencies of their affairs bath been hitherto established, to adopt snob Government' as shall in the opinion of the representatives of the people beat °endue's to the happiness and . safety of their con stituents in general, and Amorioa in general. J. Adams, Rutledge, and R. H. Lea were appointed a committee to draw up a preamble to the fore going. In the preamble reported by them, May 15th, It was deolared that the exorcise of every kind of authority Should be tStally suppressed.. North Carolina had authorized her delegates to ooneur in a resolution for independence. Massa chusetts followed. May 17th, the Convention of Virginia bad inetruoted bar delegate/E to ,propose independence. Rhode Island, Ooneectiout, New lisalpshire; end Now Jersey had coincided in the measure by the Met, of June. The Georgia, South Carolina ; aneDelatvare delegates were left to the exercise of their own judgment.' The New York Assembly thought itself incom petent to advise Without sanction of the people, and recommended them to dealers their sentiments at theislectioti soon to he held. The PennirylVania Assembly had forbidden IRS delegates in Nov., 1775;lo vote for independenee In renseqUence of their pppoettlon to the measure, the Committee of Inspection and. Regulation of Philadelphia is sued si circular to the various committees through out the State, to send delegates ton convention to be held in Philadelphia, for the purpose of form ing wits a Government as the resolution of Con gress of the 10th and its preamble of the 15th of May had called for, and protesting against the right of the Assembly, who had taken oath to support the Ring, having any voioo in such forma tion. Pa the 18tb. of June these delegates met to Oar renter's Hall, ehoositig Thomas Moll ean chairman, and had ordered their unanimous declaratien on Juno 24th in favor of independence to be da red to Oongresi; Whlehleas done by McKean Ile fol. , lowing day, as ~apfpars by "-the'Jourattie of Con gress of that date,"and hfoßean'iletter to Messrs. Moßorkle d Sons, Philadelphia , June 16th, 1817, The newspeipers of that period, throW • light upon the proceeding's of the; Philadelphia -;mmittee; which le somewhat remarkable, as bey generally said little about whothappeted at home, thinking, perhaps, every:one-was sufficiently familiar with local occurrences: On the 14th of ,Tune, when nubile opinion had manifested itself toollalnly to be disregarded; the Assenihly of Pennsylvania voted in favor of, Independence, but the - mote seemed fo hat.° beito disregarded. The'Conven lion of Maryland; on: the 28th of Jane, authorized its deleg It's to cheer with the other colonies in a de olaration of independende. Richard-Henry Lee, deputy front V irginia, 3 in Obedience to his instruo kiens, moved, Jun's 10th,- " That these united cola, hies are, and of right Ought-to be, free rend- Ind& pendent States t and! that all political -oonneotion betWeisn and ; the" State of GreattneltaindeiTand 'ought to, ~btl~iß of this motion was - postponed natal'the l nelit - ddy,'datnrday;and then, after eon sideratiori in . Ootentittee- of the Whele, - to the Mrs- needing Monday; When'it was resolved to let it rest until the ISt of July, that the delegates might be advised by the Takions assemblies and courentiong , E 4 7: a nonitafttee Using ,appeinted-tietlitin t e; dadaist-lug of Jefferson,-J. Adams, Prankliri,:l3lier man; audit. R.-Livingston, to draw- - up a-deolara tlon of- the causes - 6tseparation from - the-mother country; :'Lee had been called hoods -on ,the 10th of June 'by the gayer. illness:of his wife, which probably amounts for the omission -of hitrname' -front the committee; of which • he would - naturally have been Chairman. The: Declaration, drawn up , prinelpally. ;by Thomaslefferson; was submitted to the Douse on Friday, thef 2841,0 June. . Oa Monday, the Ist of. July, the motion of Lee was , taken up and. die• maned' by the House sittiog in Committee of :the Whole, Benjamin Harrison (father of William Usury• Harrison, who was elected President. in '1810) being • chain:ha.' South Carolina and , Penn- Sylvania voting against% and Delaware being di vided, a decision upon It was deferred Wale next day, when South Carolina concurred, as. well as a majority of the delegates from Pennsylvania and Delaware. The Pennsylvamarc.Tournal of ,the 3d Julyill7B, says: ° YxsTERDA - Tne CONTINEN• TAL GONEREEIS DZOLARDE , T/111 UNITED OODONIES FREE AND INDEPENDENT STATES." - The NeW York delegotes deolared that they were personally, and that they believed their eon-, ittituents were in favornt the measure, bgt their instrilotions, whiolt bad not yet been reversed, for bade them doing anything to impede a reconcili ation with the British Government. They asked leavelo be excused from voting, which woe grant-; pl. • The raselution of the Oonvention of the Re-) presentatives of the State of New York at White; Plains, July 9 th,' concurring in the act of the other, colonies in relation to Independence, was not laid' before Congress until the 15th, an that but twelve colonies voted on the 4th of july +for Indepett-, denee, and not all, in fact, aa• has been generally stated, though it might be consideredvartualty, unaohnons. • • • Mr. Jefferson's staternenC, , that on the adoption of the 'toleration, on the 4th, all the members concur( ring signed, and, on the 15th, the names of the New York delegates wore added, differs from the com: mon belief that Hamm* alone signed on that flay. The Pennsylvania Convention, on the :20tlf, reappointed"the three members who bad voted for the Declaration, and Morris. (who was absent at the' time,) and dropping Dickinson, Willing, and Humphreys, who wereopposed to it, (at that Sum) obese Rash, Clymer, Smith, Taylor, and. Rest; This deputation signed unanimously on the 23 of August,' when - a edgy,- engrossed on partite:lent, was ordered to 'be signed' by. the ,whole Congress. Ca the Bth of July, the Declaration was read. pub; limit the old'Observateryof the Philosophioal Society, fifty or slaty feet Beath of the House, and fifteen or twenty feet West from the main walk. The fullastnentenipertiry ;amount we liareetten ie In theDlary cd : Ohristopher l 4 lll hallt which itarelnsert . •4 i nigt ht h tc . Warm sunshine Morning. At eleve 4 " 4 "941 innetAion tidy to the age; o'fffellale.3 , - (as called); went lb a body to Ethel State-honse yard., where in the presence of a.great outpours° of people the Declaration of Independence was read by John Nixon. The company declared their ap probation by three repeated busses. The Hinge Arms were taken down in' the court room, State House fat the) same time. Froth there some of is went to B. Armitage's tavern ;,staid till I went and dined at Paul Pooke; lay down thereafter dinner till five. Then he and, the French engineer went with me on the commons, where the same was pro claimed at each of the five battalions et Pine starlight Pleasant .evening. There were bonfires; ringing bells, with ether great demon strations of jey arson the unanimity_ and agree ment of the Deolaratihn." " There was an election that day, ohoosin sr mem , bora for a Convention - to form a State C . Onstitrition proposed at the Coniention of June 18th, before mentioned. It is probable that the day for read ing the peolaration Was Oka on the Bth by die Committee 'of inspection and Regulation. The newspapers of the time say little about the Temp. Hon in Philadelphia. £l4 12 8,1( ig Touchstone" in Philadelphia—No. S. lIIIIIOIRS 111 INDEPVIDItIfOE nem, A gallery of Portraits of Publics men is a workshop in which the mind's eye may manufac ture history. Every portrait 'is a biography at a glance, and a group of each biographies give the character and mime. the personal and political history of the'age.' Renee the historic, panorama that pones through the mind in this ball is of a ammeter which very fitly keeps, before you the sublimity of the sensations conjured np by the place itself. The portraits extend batik in his• torioal signilleanea to the chivalric era when the pleated knights of Estramadura and Castile car ried the cross to the high places of the southern portion - of the continent ;as well as present to es the lineaments of some who have, within our own memories, gone to sleep On the bosom of this North American Republic which was to justly proud of Them. Some portraits make the painter; of them fa• mons, some painters make the portraits valuable. Who Would oars for the portrait of Charles the First only that Vandyke painted it? Who would not desire to have a bona fide Cromwell, no mat-- ter by whom painted ?' The portraits surrounding us here, each one claiming almost equal attention, defy, to a very large extent, any criticism whatso• over as works of art. We are not in a gallery of nobodys, of "gentleman" as the catalogue-makers have it, where the vanity of the "gentleman" is surfeited much to the disgust of the beholder, and where the only purpose we can have le to judge, not the good looks or fashion of the sitter, but the manner in which he hae been treated by the artist. We are in A gkllory containing such effigies of heroes and statesmen, beloved by us, as might be had, thankful that we have them at all, be they good, bad, or indifferent—and in truth they axe of all kinds—and• only sorry that from contempo raneone easels more hae not been picked off. The painter of the large majority of the heads in the hall was Modes Wilson Peale,. ,Like Trumbull, who also trar sferred the great men of the Revolution to the canvas, he had followed them in the field. He had seen them in their heroic moods, and indeed filled up many hens of camp-life in his artist labor of love—painting to day and fighting tomorrow; now commencing , a full-length at Valley Forge—then at the head ;of his corps, laying the enemy out in full length at Monmouth; to•day flesh-tinting the' head of his general—to-morrow putting in dead color with hie sword instead of his brush. %Thus, then, and after, the painter-patriot got hia materials, and, thero is a good deal of the hardness of the sword in the manipulation, we aught to be, atil certainly am, grateful that he was enabled to nee the weapon of the 'artist .at all. If he displayed vigor at the head of a company at Trenton, Bran. dywine, and Monmouth, he was not Mar vigorous in the preservation of the company of heads Whiell were also there. All honor, then, to the memory of the gallant fellow who lived to fight the,enetales of hts ponntry, and f tight to paint !taborets! With the exception of,eleven, all the portraits here oolleoied are from his easel, and with few exooptione are originals. Bat I must close the oatalogue that tells me those facts. The greater Moiety , looming out from the canvas foroee the easel and the palette out of eight. Bete are plc:urea, as I have said, of Cortes and Penn, of Jefferson and Jaokson, and all between them, 031:m3141y of the era and the men of whom the two last were the mighty representatives. I confess to the glowing influence the career of Cortez inspires. Surely the polioy, if not the daring, of the invader who would destroy his ships to prevent the 'paslibility of retreat, startles us into a hearty recognition' of its boldness. • Cortez was a model adventurer. With the ere thesiasra of the ohurohnaan and 'the gallantry of the soldier, he was well fitted for the mission on which he went, and the church-militant times he has helped to make immortal. An able politician always, he betimes must be regarded as, a states man. Full of resent - elm in himself, he was quick to perceive the uses to which ho might apply others. While thoughtful in Ms, enterprises, he went at them with an audacity that, to shallow minds, conveyed a character more .reckless than strategotical. Fond of the pomp and dream dance of war, not 'lees than the luxury which TWO.I*NT§i" dingi its gold iiitglitjhc:meini/o •otrtni erns equally - a 6otiftfe'if-#4! itomminder, and, whether in the ceurferelinlY,"Was Made:to be a °ern:peter. ' He'was peoutikly z the-Child of hie century; and by *tat -of-AlMtitiangti and,po i ver ful coatbinationsßf,andaoiWnn4,oraft,-ggliftetrY and fiePare,t-Itia,i/Oolti,Y mod : pride; artifice,: pas. glen, ed"eation,:;a4il ambition ' he Apia, connection WAO:idibt Sentinel* isrtlito4lo 4 ientetiviEuropeA l orlifeHnier. ; • • In striking At tibitiefelSiontrast witMthe Cava, lier—ea on t raii ( Offieirlyidetibil . taladLA : ftelf 7 r also is the placidltoliditvand_gatiaW, Owe.* Auf full length ofoflillittij'artn...- T!,ennt-aAhnnli'l take kicked onb.4b.la 6444 !1013Pio! ‘Ei don of, hit opt:Mug„ and only gaining ad6iisaibl► to it on the fl tyrig4yf Mg frateparent, the' t- - infrol, thetekoinittlloegh'his Wain rabid - piste:her of the 'Nott•Bolifiernifil alas?, and tvitild,)Stabief: leave the ootintietlisti-iniiiove'lditkat by rupeet toStiikinott,o6iblOod-i-yet, had theleptitatton Of haiing Itay*fil the artg:of riourtioral*Aurleg his;exile irarsoice. -Ella ;actg. rappysetty Meat, ;mind coartlsi lei nut* ,is4lket 4:10;k444-tX4'44fralir iur...,,L0419,00400iika r t. - fl"ll4lMat hbteiramy: aheuld lrely:gre4:the iffsotof 'a civil or palatial piannOr Or peace into the tuelokitiCanik*ithlii;dintling''chainoter:of the' thearTand'imiektiilintPoriser korlineWideti,' likely enSigh;!Wilf keep the 'brilliant 'senterusesi Maker's' name litiminreihen'the'glitter,of. his at,yle. _ , Will havefaded-th tbsolap-trup of liq baelfliteNtireeiNtAtertaii, It Yon sagacious roaciera,who , have studied, hiatorY; and, whatitiSeonzposed of, that I.aiii 151liosiits0 gay, treatise on the dowstfeltof the Stuarts Will'oatlest outweigh the benelibt haus by'the etitrdY Rum.' Meier Pennsylvania'?” • c ehottidliktito'heire bad John Ilancook's opt-, Mori,*althortgli i -tdoubt if itwoubt change my 01,11 one .way-:oinother. ;What , u streightforwstraight forw ard,, Moldy look hay that Rune Jahn Haneook ..It; is as: clear and forcible, though ,setare)7 ternate,as thatilaehing,. end emphatic signatur e s be headed the list on the'ReOlarition of Indepead- : emu*, and whioh, : ag Said, " The British Minis., try could read without Spectacles."-'By the way,' when thegreet doeninent Was' first • sent forth; af ter its adoption; only the namegnf John Hancook,• president, and Charles Thomson, secretary ofthei Continental Congressovere appended toit. , Reek} at Thornton's face—either of. tbear,the one in: manhood, or that in ago. Conviction ',Presides' over that brow, determination Mooed those, lips. , OM; of the moat forcible illustrations of the parity, of Iris nature and devotion to the moral effect of the cause in which ;he. was engaged, wag his de-', struotion of the copious records kept by himof the' progress of the Revolution.; :He had prepared an' elaborate History; .but sooner :that:l_lllBr the sub Amity of the whole by an exposition of men who: acted unworthily, during, the war, and whose Vela-- Urea', yet, survived, he,destreyed .the Marnitoriitt. , bfuoh,ait I inlet admire the stoic, devotioti; 'idea, yet IMtrinbt bu regret that the tibliitAiOni., r elent thoSe days is lostforever. 'With thomson'e ailvanbrges for 'knowledge,' his intimate:relations; with all the actors in the drama, and his prover. Mel integrity, the work would'have beekinvalueel' Me. , _ - - , There is the ruddy, face and sandy hair of mas Jefferson, author,—la his own words for his tombstone---" author of the Declaration of Magri • can Independence; of the'statute of "Virgfulafor Religious FreedOM; and Fattier of the tinivereity: of Virginitr."- Is not that' a record itoir cal of the best purposes of the 'best men'Of • the Republic! and, whilefanatioal 'Mountebanks, have In vain attempted to shatter civil and rail glom liberty, feeding the torch and guarding the labors of education: As X. gaze on Jeffersen,, turgid in the fling of Manhood, the bliss of iewyeri, and laW'offunirs around tOngriax oalls up to'niind his opinion of that" einditelred, tarnity tbr the purposes of legislation. - Splialting of the Congeess that was to have; ratified the de; deftly. - treaty of pesos of. 1783, he: well .4 i/engross erred,..by , too much talking f hew Gould it )31?. otherwise, in a body to /which, the people send one hundred and tiftz:/aeyeri, *h ope rrau; it is to gusstion , ing, and 'talk Vi the hP:tet'" and adding, with eatizie'emt plias% " that orielnindred'andfifVtivamsitonld. dii .This head othifersorffellii to•el'onVertliephilosophiefortii of hie inidetier years.' =lt le thr_toka •semstibuytiart 3 t an -I"‘otirtErd Patriok Henry's spaeoh against the Stamp Aa must have set the young red hisit of Jettoreintin Eames. _ Standing - on the spot on which he Ailed infhie Hail—or'-rather, retiring-reverentially id ob salient distance from' it7 l -43an letehot enjoys up that AmMortal Constrilttew. of Fiveuer, actually of four, -for Robert ,R-Livingston,_though ap pointed, was cleated ,hcintei domestic duties. i There is John idamdi in hie forty : oieeend year, solid as a rook, who had halainidhy hisairength, if net guided by hie :ability,' the 'deletion 'in Massaelmeette ; ' Who **reed the two. ; previous year's in the Contineita FOongrettel --nominated George Waehington‘ tit the, older command, and but two months beforel (May 6) bad offered &reso lution viltioh was virtually a Declaration of Inde pendence ; and whom, the, American tortes and re fugees InEttgland dreaded more than any. There a Roger Sherman, withimareehen half 'a`ceritnry of life's sunshine and shower upon his strong head, Look at' the full eye, the seritna month, and the solid chin, and you need not wonder that this than, froin anhumble shoemaker, has walked and 'worked himself into. prominence; you will not wonder that the application of manhood made up for the parsimonious education of youth Honors have fallen upon him. Yale has made him, the whitlow, man of the laptitone„ a 'master of arts; he has the confidence' of Conneetiont ;' has inveighed againet the stamp act, and he now is one of the sponsors of the young giant just ' born, And behold Deujamie Franklin—inform and fee- - tures so well known the wide world over—great in hie days, yet never angreat as on that day. Seventy leers have added a solempityto his intelligence. His " Poor Richard " has been a hard master for years to people in Ramie and Amortise. ' Nearly a quarter of a century his gone by Since he ' ,brought down the lightning. Royal societies have conferred membership upon' him. Hain ba rgh and Oxford have conferred the Ho:Aerate; Yet, see, the character of rebel does not detract from that of the sage and philosopher;. and yet, behold sagin : tallest and yontrgeet, and most im portant of that important groan, is Thomas Jeffer son in his thirty-third year • What can or could I say that would more fitly illustrate the pOwer braille, his 'energy and style, bad achieved. The men who surround 'him afford the beet and greatest gauge of theaaraeter of that young mai' The youngest of all—be might have been the pupil of Adams, the en 'of 'Shernian, the grandson. of Franklin-yet, to'him these men entrusted the drawing hp of the Declaration of Indopeadenca: The reward of mediocrity is generally,e harmliee and, sometimes an insincere rasped:ha the penalty of greatness Li the eitreme of minima Coe on the one hand, or abuse 'oil' the other. No man has been so persistently abused, reviled, and vilified as Jefferson. Men who could not reach hie altitude, with stupid cunning thought and at-, tempted to drag him down to their own. Yet the talismanic ergot otitis teaching, as the father And philosopher of American Haepootwey, le a remarlia; ble commentary on the Jahn of his revilers; lied it is well remarked by Mr. Randall, that the in fluence of Jefferson's name increases with' °yet) , year. His great career was a justifioatarY prOef of* the wisdom which 'raised that sandy complexioned young man to be the foremost of the group which has just passed. Before the statue of Washington, what can be said snore than that he was the sword, sa Jeffer son was the pen, of the Revolution? The name of Washington has become snob a eynonyln with greatness, that, to name it; we exhaust praise, Note that earnest, full Paco, with thO expansive, round forehead atop, and the fat double chin tin der it—the bright gray ayes and nnpowdered gray hair loosely setting off the clear and rather florid Complexion. That Robert Morris, the great }Lumpier of the Revolution, and who, though he could and did raise money for Congress in iti direst exigencies, could pot save his own last (hip from the bitterness of poverty. , At one time his own personal credit was involved to the amount of 4 million 'and atoll' to sustain Congrees. "I want money for the use'Of the army," said Morris once to a Quaker friend. ' "What security eanst thou give?" "My' note and my hinter," was the re sponse of Morris. "Robert, thou. shalt have At," was the prompt reply. Snob is an evidence of his position during the Revolution; and, afterwards, when in the height of his prosperity, he lived; in magnificence at the corner of Sixth and Market streets, wherithe greatest aid beat partook of his cordial hospitality. It Is sad to think of Me latter. 'day poverty ; but It ie not without some pleasure we know that, Under 'the eeverest trials, his mind retained its _elastic ge niality—that melan choly was not, high•fellow-well-met with mister- And here ps, a group of soldiers. kathardel Green, certainly one of the beet, if not the 'very of' Wiehlngtonw Generale.' In his youth a b i3l e a s e t karnith, he was all things that a Quaker's ion should not be. In time his father whipped him, the Quakers turned hint out of , meeting, and he turned into the Rhode Island Legislature , -He had a 'passion for military affaira, so it is not to be wondered at that the news from Concord aid LeX legion put him inib a Fusion, Be was Boon In the' NOTICE TO OORRT.OPOIiII*TTS: - - Correseendente for - cc.Taa Pgarin will plitse.h* in mice the Xrer7 eoreeratdoetlow .amtetDr omp,sl44llll* • mate of the writer. /a enter to inure • e the t ypopo7,tit . viit„*S , .01,1 itOkts4,be mitten Von, • : • .3. "Meehan let veil* 01,4404 tormOite*la PulogYr• TY•llit, aria lei ate*, An' liiiMetifi*gVeg. iiirrentAimr'erueeiei seitteeiieilcesaate optilatUaioi _orp_celitiOpkrY e! 1 ! !If cr1 61 ... vosilieutes t ifoti *gteiPril eiiiefo _ !. ~z- field,-14 .4 00,,1 4,#' , 4 1 0.telarAniiMiMiiyo ; Wine; fleit*4lESliXaiitenntlif inid;44-4iint' usUr - mand,of, theNgni hePeof the , - ern erntr_ift the fall of Ink swept the'Bri , - fthetinaGS by 1782, _and . artuf - received , as a'.dea ; vent by thi bright eyes of- Vbarlesfon:"-Waehfegteer.tralt. bit off the character of Greene when hillaidir:.4 , oplort he but promote the iatereets; bf : hii fAtintry lA' the character of lieorpoinT, ha rolonlertiChirmirlijii4i. out a merniur,fhie 'in . 4e,n6 . ith`rehirhaicr, , -,'laliii yet who- oan , tatineiilqgebtearilirkineY be'Aite4l - A c i i ; , 9* -11444 i4.00.4 45 :/44 1 . iogikiitty . • was 4 144 1 .4itad f l uTikitiokAl*.lo'a - Torneittoirr i ( it cewwir. Y .counm e r4 we e intrnetrelf*,*; l 4l4,intt ikirtene":Misitobi, - eind 'ffeinbre - i - ettbiritrio Aida , * olenni-ander Greene'lnitbi:Oarkilitbin Tad* trktheliarfiinnAe )inetrikt:#o',lo4ll4l4, Mineral ninely-eit.:o4:Alatr ftartiebeldill.X -him, for he , wail ever in thiEfiOnt• - Jibn2 is 'MS.. their Loa,, (General- Charlie) attrin, ,i i!Beillris Water", by. the 4 1 -1 0 4.WiFf fro*___ . 44s Avi d ta,*-5 111 4 1 p. ma*n„vilwiisti, by thew AY; led Anici.APAATa.,_bl foie.. he „hakinh`' - _,Aritikn*lvres - kirw s lerh.hgthedi 'r:A - isild,lrsidriiiie,TMabd fearing fellow was thisYdrelelinmertaTmerrnf parts withal and Imams, Weeltbiflnit febol o l l -hik - Sug the geld of Monmouth,, which led to hia.leaving, the army. In his will he requested not in be ,tattitikwithin smile of a .Treabtrtariatt-orlptabap;. slit meetbsg-house, " hfiVillgiceptiopuzah.4lleo=4 insnM IA , lifer, that: bo ' OA not. w.4 1 ,1..t4 P 0.4 4 44.. , theconneetion,Whenl4,lenC7-.lfe !leer; IMV,hriat'll' Ohurob. At Princitini rtheriMertiini-Initillivioread4.-.. great havoc on _ the Bnglislat itonmenth'. the - precision of that arm wee, deadly. At Yorktowp it equalled the 'pinnies& Artillery, of Prano.. There is the foirder ind'efilisefofthiitiftraleitiy Knox, a, young bookseller of lied*wbeieriffe* - 'twenty-five at - the beginalineetthe ,war. nil/ 'ea.. biped from post= to fight,lie - hileit aidldeeird yam* wife, Lacy,' rimming' bin siord;sened fit Melia - 64a .fielt:niantle. 'St& gave it tette,. at Banker VW. •:Jra,!iira net 'rite& leWitif the:Wei: wen ' over. '_ tie wag Mend of 19,,ishingierk s 'and snigestedthe 'order of " the Cincin nati= = 7-- ' , • Joseph need, of- Perinlylrinia,''Adjitint4iner. - rat In Warbington'e Giiit,•'Llimirs tini - P 444 sad good man he was.; To ilie - offir:of _money and pod. tion'if he Work joie' the Tory' itanderd, ;Heed made bimeelf immortal hy - s replYiner.:4 V ara'nfit ' Worth Inichini` ig';'_lnit OA ka .I . ' - VII, ihe /pig if Great Britain le irct•rich.refedgh to do it I" - - - What , e sterfr facie; 'and .a - sturdy ,ffirnieripti:L. - you may see it In, tete ' foreground or Miintill.re ,picture of Burgoyne:l Btirreeder , -:•hat Gin. Mattel Morgan, of the rifles, the right ;tint Of the' srvioi; . the wbiiom wagoner, who, hercilif the Coweensi won the gold medal froM Coagresiv i- Ile wee lorni• What of the t'dnimiiellidai=filitlotit;trifii9ii•Ood= and - heep•your-powder.dry, kind - of nierf:"Alefore the amend t at Quebec helodide-aid iirkied r °allied' - ly beside a' cannonr'' anAekt ilii - 00Wierk*Where Tarleton had midi l'enaetioi feriechlergari Hoilt 'and prayed fervently for the - country, for his aAey and himself, and then, strengthened_with'bellef'ht the rriocor be prayed' Or, dashed our cheering' hie then:* - - - ' ' ''' . ''' ' Irp'in the corner yonder, tilde by We t Seel/lob.. aid Montgomeni• and • Peal Stints; lieWels both, worthy of the lambiof their birth, and of the land they served. 'ldentgoniery!s zit - pecatilitrly handsome:-it has an almost Grecian emitoilVtits biight derk , eye - , that used to tlash'hi battle, light log up with a - cominendableand-brains 'the 'classical' regularity of this textural; -- ironies has a dashing soltopiniontated look which ittohartuiten halo of the terrible-energy With :MINI he *mild atilt* out' his projects : . , When "tie libeilty of his. adOpted . C.OtintrythilOintutry of his - wife—Milled Montgontei7"froni hie' dear *SOO 'and Censtiess made hint. 'a brtgidlei general-be =wit - lean event which must put an'end for , ewhilii,ierlips fir ever, to the keit - scheme WI- life Thad pie -earthed for tx?yielf ;: for - ;'althougiCentirely anat. patted and undealied , bY nee, , thei Wad or Pressed people, compelled' 'ohoosse`-belvirsnt tilierty and slavery,must be obeyett." s -rt was net for awhile, , batter everpthat his Isappy tits Was invaded - sinta'aplitt, , w4ting King gf - Tronci, in 1778;1111dr qelViren ten boratoTe*oito - gpif disiatiyittli dreW Mir -r eeved bag/laid . .ilitt44:of untramsaittra; and. both honer and, duty prompt mtratMulfestly to continue the righteouitpumuit, and'ttleayr2Qoe_to it not only myzireteintl.. ,ateatp, bet eyeti szor litg 11 iteeeiseiy.,.7l:.2te4eebt- , • Tt ;WM steadfast will Notice . tbe iharp,rather petite Naives, 'and ale .vated eyebrow of ELEI7IOIB. Abe .oha raoterlstios of the head - are keenness anti good nee pare, viers pereeption'and ready elpreialveuem- It he 'Nestor slighter, heir's' allisidylniter, and in satire and hamoi irlimpreaseti some of, his eon temporaries .as to, ba .named in .the ,eamebruath with &natan t Swift, and Rabelais. However ex orbitant this 'valuation of • friendship may have been, it Is certain that. the subjeat,ofit rendered great eervice to this cause of freedom by the quick ness and alveoli".of::hia satire. de - -_ you 'may flee, his, nature-while genial. was not slavish,, and he . was not .long. in letting the people,know bla mind.: From :17135. to 1781: Hopkinsonnentributed. largely to correct : the 'mlarepreseatationa in the pleas. Hia "Pretty Story" in 1774, in whioh. by an allegory he exhibited the many gravanoea:of -the Colonies, conveyed:ln a pithy - end,pleaeant form, was nought after with great avidity ; end his "New Roof," embodying the. arguments of the Pennsylvania Convention to gawkier the frame of government for the United Statesoves ao *flee. rive that Rush said it most last among withe ottl sena were happy under the NationalGavermnent. After the peace, when party, spirit was wildly rampant in Pennsylvania, Replan/lon came out with his " full 'and true seeount sf a violent up. tear which lately happened In sr_vtlf7. l , llll floni Innumerable were the pleeisewitlawhich he helped to make war .npon:the. common ensmy, or allay the dissensions of patriotittrfriende.i, Hs deserves to be remembered, and well. Lotus blase his pen—and himself too, for It is recorded of hint that his heart was elevated as hie head was bright-- that be never debased its °maharanee in &profile. ty;.nor uttered a word that would have made s wo. man' blush. • ' Apropos of Women, there Is Martha. Washing ton and Mistress Robert Morrie—the former Ina& vansed age, her. yet fresh. and luminous face framed in. the oap•frilro of the time ; the latter gay and fashionable—with feathery head,drese ae she used to resolve her husband's- guests when he was the suooessful merohant,-the Washington of financiers. And there is Lafayette—not.acle appeared tendering his youth end material aid to ;Congrasq, In thievery Halls but as he appeared on his fourth visit to America, in 1824., And there LOD Kalb, who introduced Lafayette to the American Vont -missioners In Peril, accompanied him, early in. 1717, and Over whom Lafayette placed the oor nor stone of a monument in 1625. Ha.fell near Camden, bearing eleven wounds - for American In dependence and " striving to rally the scattering Americana'? And there is Frederich, de Steutten, who, dashed with European military honors, of fered thnexperience they indicated to the Conti nental army at Valley Forge. , There, too, is Da -Portal' and De Oauthrey, able French engineers in the servioaof the Revolution. And Itooham bean, who added to the glory of fdiriden, Oorbsoh, and otter fields of Ettrope, the nobler glop , of as- , slating at the (rapture of Cornwallis. : !deny ether...lf. are there, noble contributioes from -almost ~er - ,-„-:' ..., country of Europa to' the °mute of liberty i'.7 (IZ, 'lt is a beautiful i consideration, and or Lb. 7, 0 1 4 ought to • have lessons of import, tot 4s Is e men of all nations , exhibiting a Babtl' f 0 e,,,,, . alt joictiag at the one altar and givis i ~- ot t;i x ,. premien to the. one thought Not not i ',i do they stand here, as, they do in Watt( ,"..; . s 4 the Greens, Waynes, &busters, Lees, 114 ',sirens; nod Putnama of the soil. - - , . - It. were vain to attempt anything Ills, , 0 a palled transcript of the memories Which 01'014 upon me, en \ or, the chain of biota which these ix *lea indi cate. Looking from one to - another— 14 quick remembrance of some good deed pad° 'mad by each, and the anxiety to give - utterance o each 4 ii incident, rising simultaneously ; distracts th brain with pleasure and` pride, until one can out fled full enjoyment in Client admiration of the pa ant called up on fiend and. field from the memory dense with the glory of the past. Toncnarosx. Letter from York County. Daly ty 1, 1859 COOrMpOncleneo of The Poreßse.ipa., Our farmers have just commenced harvesting, and the crops in this vioinity will be =Salient, both in quality and quantity. The glorious Fourth will be oelebrated in this place with more than usual spirit, if one may judge from the quantities of fireworks, &e.,Tivhich ere being purchased from our storekeepers. Our oiti sans were much delighted witluthe soiree given last evening - by tho pupils of the female eohool of Professor Rey's, in this borough. -- At sit o'clock the pupils formed in Frowsier/ and pro ceeded to the Methodist Bplsoopal frintroh, - moon. panted by the Worth infantry Brass Bind. The Rev. Mr. Ross, the worthy panto*, gave them a goad reception, and everything nursed oir much to tho eatisfaotlon of all concerned. The 000ssion is 'one long to. be remembered: , • _R. . •Fs.ovr. - --It - is well, imps Obstesubrlnni. to prostrate ourselves lu the dust when we hive cominittnd a fault but it la nOtwfdl to NltUtts there: • Miff=M