The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, July 09, 1859, Image 1
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'''''' ' . , : :,•;•:, '-''',-;:_,,:iii*lt MK, & 160 1:74; 8i . •:, • -'; ~'• , --:, .' t..e.l.illiftkiNitiEßS'‘&oPlo° 11 ,, , ~ • -' 014 !„", , -', , iitaibil AW l4 4l;4l. 'ions= ...i . - -, • : 30 1‘ 1 464 54=' ' We Am, Wati ll ., 4 / 3 ,l i ltioshri , _ ~,'",°,!!'.-•-•-,, :• - l . fit e t - , **4l4ll4trsi** ;:---:iii,4•44oitiii. V--'=intiimilif ' .,;.- • ,--11,001 5 4,4, 4 9 : 44 ,9!rf ° -..M!,. : „...,,,,,,,,,,,, , - . , - RWOlki.,_ _ . ,trUilt,44iiiiiitiogi;iii-iiialisoll_oli°S.,,-.1 -..:,.,1-.:,litt4lfr•lN,P, -77 461. re lrAostpi,t Plll4. VPIC--377.1 -•'.',164,44•11 • !oplusarigstgarmAtt -• i 4 Itatil . wwww l, Lf 7 4 4 '' ,- .44 0 61: - :Ilea lit 14)44.-. '.. ffiit Alkasattlese er, , Non ApptasSillk,-11111t- --t-401.401444.1apr. = - AspleiNt L'llr,-,. ..,., _ P I ,„.- , , t - 77i , ,7"-YY-:'.-'• '-',', I sl q' • IPit -. 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Soca* Anestinnas ihati4jaesta4 ' • _ ' ' .Ar4sl,kir co*r Age"' 1, VVIRENni PATE NT ' , SEWING i4ACIIINES flow irstsolth• aiwiaittoe of all *barwai Wool • ma boo "Wood ow of the moat wisablo Siloam, of Ithe op.; •t'lloy too`stglotttlo, ocelot ; the • Look. Mitch 3 oa bock ottoo of We Oath Ante, tolloh - oloaot W . *a nulls/or palled oot , - -- ,- , They tr* MI orals with thiliirbeit niettasolo/ skill, 'sod oat wortsatod to work well "on„ Wilda • of gooda, rout tae Gi von g forge fo • thiff, Leather. Pa Sor• I tloalar, so wasid,oall, tbo artestioat or sir to Ott' ass , paw ro ky wlacatiolo44l.-, It iiiiil boo:. wooolbotarad t otorwayfOr Stott? aw,liot its 4 lot mitts toter troW g, sii„ It ill oo oltapilibla Utn rordOr. It • rltrort Vow!. ' i Oho to gor oat of wise, Old~",lia epwsticar; la= t 4 4 111: 1 0f Sig fasekapili ii"6"1. 0riirn al " A kiv, . 4 . 1 " 1 91 ; 41 1 1P.!,1111 • 1 • 1 Ulu,. VP lan 1 . allettlffOOff 0/ MAO - dataptal etylai of the Weld latent: * • So 1 -l o ite ry o , arealiat otyli,wldaboastotrtnitot by hand at 'Mot, on be, off in! own table: for wars. Wolter of obtfltaa sands. far latio;rosaafaetorioo, p when it is tocousair to plow • • 'mobir ot latchtse • halos long beam, =Wag acto table answer far Ulm all. 11. Pelee 550 _- ~~ - ,fira , " •, No. S—With woiast or misogamy Tabskoltbor with or withoooloalropi• shwa 'Soar; itowsi: ' Felon 111.00 or WC , -.— , '.. . 3 No s.4Oinli aide se Sel 2,hot rum with ' a bat, and 6 st 1 utak attithat TOW of nalmld/ ‘ , r TX% kitat isi well N, olaptaa to tiortufastelag Clothirar id . „Loittair Work, b i'lrut is rally Or rheum% braebirolo r lb* wititot; as there Is air work illoae 4,1106 Sundt theta* Slirtlt will sot do Ilia adondontly sasartod tdi 4*hi rawatiao t Wm otoba Woo say tosehtea na* tiara:- Petealtoo. , x = tdo,4, 'NW Xiang'. bill arieligaTtlitt*ll4o94tolo4434 , i brae wort_ It raw at 's high At. „r, 0 6, 4 ,. To " • easily, sad II; with, 0 a doily Ai-bed Ilitaa for g Tallow" sulk aver offered SO tha Witliti Xi It aloe set tat: oatly l ilted for blootatios wort s' it lit - -;Yety Aikido • yet walatandri acedstrnittwitairit lilt. lisiollity $O , i 114,. 4 Tide Ja *NM nisildomper style j awl a general ' 1 Wads* toe 'vinyl bightStatdow, lord a gnat variety , of wear , Itiust Woo tattoo wy,lritii raferlaro 4 to for. "thig* "lOW millev‘bli.*lllBbt end testy Ile. 1 n elldre rn , it t s i l zit le sissies vo tha li s 11 ,,.i t.? tit tilli „,,l abo uri vii. l,"4 , lt rota. 60. 6 lite to totaelthee get dp on twelfth/4y 11010 ta h m : 7 : f r"'"r a 4 seer ltnN r t. 7 et.utt : ag tee It loreryfightteatotyyoba ritirsyttill, to tawhat %matelots ha ito ;tlOrstkt,•and • woo • slaalittitlf ttESDbla , <lt is or &missed or to be steady bainowido tOr II to raise ititAtoo ^:, ft has e towilob or trath. idler, sat earth* a hoe aipply -of Weld oa Wooster olio/fliatotiona ara (slued by two magi erilidti that tam vithoiat - rmartlbte leoreee The twptistases are ih d Mae* it naartof 88 never •to both lett•at•tii - ett te - sett -eonseleealq, little s I _.ltoble break. Tao 'Mild ,is ,: esticideetta, all 04 {kind doeBllol break lat , eraehliet. It will tcr ammo Wok botter i ti4say ettetr , assiNlor SOW in satirist, 1 soljtawa ••Oottogot - 0r , , 1 10, with 'TIM . fa° lll *Y' Neeettpttess Otroalstilainbitted odic f ollunull al irauDwAr SSW -"TOW 1 __,. 1 - witlinir & LEON. krotegtors , 1 rp- AGNIITEIVANTEp. '''. ,1 , -10646,6a1mW , HARlgleflk .so_ Aloolgiingw*e **iv i moat la arm ides is tits soft IV 1141 / 4 1441 14 ei4.4 4 t MA* will Me 'gm ibt Pi* t ig.Wft,t 9-81 0 24 ii Oitt, 104 8 )1 4 4 wow, hubs to laud et, ittopt'446qtypiltibi'sholoitt to its "asititioupw I skitr, "*"" in44. P# 466l 2 . 6 4 4 64 46 AP*. iit ia l - , o ±'.4o :: ,,n‘PrA i t s * -it ildiculittlimr, Lod tht town wosi stri wax. 4 14 0 to 1 4 1442 0 6 i*br 434 ?; . 4 44 4 41 4 tYOittttifu.)i444 l , AfWedititubsi atitakia rtr_ ad; web: wiTiourtivramnitaOP Juiriarouto.,Jii 4*n la • %wadi. 04,4 tiviSletby trey tstaily bitio,ir*orat • 111 ° 4 11 ' Ig0for•, , • .2tir 0/4411111rf '" t Malik — 4 4 6 11 44 -6 ,t*____44, o4 ._ 4 i 44 cf: aluttot4 411794.4 ( '` I. *Pas 41-4lntarit ; '10,4t . ailLtila r %IR= "11.-014 letter: tArSeAtit I Sgidilsr2Ligq,,.,C.," teggla o / 0 1; . 1"17 ' IA/roll,.f;Soit* ,11,% r 011€146 - .. 4 drkkoer Oink* abeem id eons odd mime & io,vdwaiLisui,dll,o - 1,4 6 141‘.110,0m*" :3 0 'L - P4,lloo44los; : tillbbataThilfalt , K r ±444l , ittj trilifyiknitaidebabik . o 13 , 14: 0 1 1 * h - L.QC 6 iMai IttOtito l ol4WAlTtirkt , , YOI::.2-NO. 292; A. Short Sermon. LIT T6i sun or :mix BULL • TszF-i 3 4 Win you walk into idl valor t , Said sit spider to a tly." •• • 'tie 're not fonder iterinonfolng, ,And yet feel &rooted to,preaoh, • `. • ' ';'' //Aril's tt.xt we' have ideated May a useftil lew'on leash :. - . .. , ' We'have wetly Itnetanaplders .. • That are ,dinning here and there Their entrapping withstand atelhee . ..: , The unwary to eitsplaye I, ~ .. . : Ard with oily tongues will natter, , , To beguile yrl!tt Ode : Apes—. „ t , Acting welt the pert or epidt46, . • . • - -While entininglie,theMod." . - _. .„ .„ , Age have eider iejltititsull. , Artli therwoht 'togas a thread , '-, That. ha voters oennot lee it, ~ ' l , Ai they Madly drive shied ;,, . z ' ' ''ln'thelr teenier% in‘itiatlons • ' ' ' ',= Nerwilithisei they iipr - ' Totbsi."(Wellc lato my.parler." • Of the ,ptdef to the Sy. • ' - :,Thentre'llave the subtle Toyer,. ', . With a nucleating atone, ;':C- , - dada weideto listens to PA, ~ ' ' ' Bat elle never driantOt,galle ; ' • ~. ,_ Nor the bias deceiver'spa - rpm* „ jo kept 'word from tier to st -,•• Bea a spider ha the pieriar4, , That, to .7.o.ing for s tip . . :-. ~, Then we hve the rigor spider, ' 'And whit etera ate e tday'ter, i ''lle',Wlll keephie conscience, islet •-• • - ... ,„ Lens enotigh to tile a fee-. • • • - - le 41111 all right," be tette hisollent, • :. , '"Call tied see me by awl' by !" "Will yon walk into my pallor I" ' : . ; • days the eptder.to the fly I, , ," • - Th.n itent.is,rengesed to iTtali, •' • • • ':.W IO deceive hy.tricke end lies, " , . - ' 4 Are the ,filflAlll/14tillg .epders, , .., .. 0,,,i4 tkot " 1 0 1, x±t *TP i i?o!t g " - i , ,,33'N' 51 330 3; ' 3 3' . 3 r,filisywi re. • "= c 3.• ,::Ve.llCl4._ 4 oo ll illtal 14 'OW in" rrrst't. , ''., - r , „,,,- .& - nlizekukirri**Ho.t. or BookTr; ~., k -', ",-,-,'.- :11itilFitift;b4iVifitiftitdr)indrstel ,',=, •- • ',. '3,..",6.2., 2-,:itelc'ertieWhoirtheretl,nvitelt:lar;; , . ,• 1. 't 4' ' ' ff -l l : l =TPl A :irrtiffit i elt a l l ig4 '."`'-'' :' l l' ; ''' ' 4,l't` '= 1 - sof a'sphlekito af,ilY-14,,-.'NL - ';, 7, i.: , T 3, , , - ~ .,„,33,,33''. . • , ..., 4 ` ntoelle - olosinmoitis . -we. tower than the' r 7-A1V14.01-,-.4lrl:Ri3kl'Adt,tA;- ILALli,:hill ~ i i reil 4 *. :41 4;0 1-i ttl li ffi :1.7.:,?4:';-',:.al'VA:-.-'----I.::.':- :~ t .: ; 1110111 • • -Nt*O`rtitytrlf No: . as NOrth 7117rIker, -110TNLLIN PATENT: - o;Late.' o-onifxeir. ip:Fi.I:4BOISI47I:36II*A.PABVINEDiriTti GLASS, FlealSCl t;ellittsealett is ,s- oismis4 by ♦ ,tairiortbs -V7, • - 40 1 0. e g t si g tiiit!'tPie*ii 4 t,: • r_t r-tom kbioh. nor tlfEtreld, 1 4', I. ilotattik 'ilkofiltv. fiAx.r-gy tre CO, •-:•• • , 4 1- iirrcanzr, - Itaireo464 l l4 - 103 - f*eirisew Ifie ptoof,.Wklt Matbbe ki.otitqrtita , Q x1*..40t46,11 Bain. Now_ 410314itielr kit stodk. -or ' "WARIB, AND 600118, , th.co . AND ,-; • : gi' ' NO-t l oosl, ha 141 ill lit W4TO*WWiWW4III4',kI3!, , -,!-'44fOY,4os:',3423lllr,sispisT. , , • Oomtoutly on - halitt 4, tali siiiiiklisiinf of Vialeron and Pieultißitifirelitii .118. m f:A0 i . s ,t1C,Iiti3R0;* lialt l N A AND 01P6RTIRS pa tas A 2 o "4 3 " f ethl , ! —^7 , . 006610 ADA 414 oNie the *Ert_.imosikuttitoAquartos 8T , VAN ~ Pavasserlittr4„ 001001T4Tram'Bike-- tCP , 4 4 W ,A INNAI 6 as - writs -spoor; ' toss, hs.bhus GiOter +"o4 pliqinion„lol,ll4l4. iota, :11411.1y Q:Cabittet;-Ware. .I)g4-.."'IS ',1 1 • -4tflg 14.11,64i8T .121-211001NION. etalib);:tor:ianka, Adkoole, in Oat, :WM •• . 411.cluittktallogany, kaatitams stoe , auod pattyorn. • ' • 41 L. 44D*3 3 ,114P4OVUD•LiS$ BACK, 4 "4'1C : .:K31 : Gr44' as. .1-3crwrozr 'todeasesinis -. 4 2C9 , 6 - 01:1T11 - !L'111:1.13' STREET • tyriNET FITEttIITIMS - Asp BIJJJ A -RD CAIVIRION. 18110NDPRINT, lat - 'itietaeollois with,thels, este:alto Cabinet piper iitaitatieturbei 'altapettor articleot • :;•-• BM:AMU) 'TABLES, - • • 'lid WV sow on hand a full tupply, snaked with • '...TIOORAI QAMPION,It lesegovr,p,oujunoNs, whtabl are prehotoind by all who have used 041112 to be superior to all others: - • -- , Po the quality andliiiishef these Tobias the maim. faetaress refer to , theishaateroes patrons throughout the Maim, who an families with the etissaebey et their ista-sre, DEAFNESS. . • DR. VO.X _AOSOKZISK.NR, ALT•iID 49.1:71UNVA, qr 9,4 mein Atteee'llo! the ;tee and Net 011113111 No. 9:26 IYALIttly NT., DAWN TUTU. Jar.. rAtannoiAL Jiro Isfilitim• CAUTION". - , The Caleb4ted Qrlttnal • 'ORIENTAL DETERSIVE SOAP . ; • is•ilauteentr by a f t4pOtt RONK, au4 tpeir tide 4•0 11010 22 BOUTS WHASVES One amp Oran, use, Beware 6f lialtiCiai,g4heli tio*'sod soup hie one nametiolipapejyupiii - • . - . • . • nu TOO GMT TI DO BIGHT ARTIOLII. :DOMINION." 0/4DOrkblioi, • Old Old pominions -- Old &Aid Po , ono Old Douthdons Old Dominiima, Old:DOI:oh:done Tor the Million. • Over forty different varieties and styles, - of the nalobreMA+ " OLD Douralinsii ' , t)ofiee and Tei Pole are narriluartjaetrurod. Being based, I* Dr DeD, of the •'Jearrsal ;et lisolar, sere r . 4 on science and bowman sense," they are ispiAly,aeniing ante sea, and are des lined 'soon to supersede all others, They eau be ob , ..tained iron 'or orderimr throu l la: any storekeeper, or dente- In honsokeeplOg articles. Illerebatits - rho bare•not• reoebred onr Trade ,Olrocffar, giving plowterms, ke., will be immediately euypUedo* application, by letterjo LITMUS, BITANHATdi Iv GILROY, - - UT 11,0 11980Uth TINTH Street, Philadelphia, 'BOlO lihnurardurer, ander the Patent, irr .01100, nratinfacturere, ander lhe Patent, OAK.' TUBA'S 011400. , 6.TED - AIK TI¢HT 1311114.1310 AL. IttIfo,TRIZTIF„ OA N$ AND lern-taetellm - , DpiZEAM:GLE# DOVE STALUOR ;MARUYAOTO&Y, OLIN 00yE; Law ISLAND, O,ELSBIt&TEIY ifor perity;,erlittenina,,and - ntrength, mad admitted ;hi Oath' the trees and - the puldlo to be vastly superior 'tOiln i tettmeliffisnOO. ncrivizimarket. As an evidence of it ham taken the.prenduto at the /air of the -Amiellean Institute; NOW Iroih New York State Sitrylletl Jersey; State Pair, and many other "places erhoie 14 bat been .exhibited: Owing to the purity of Side - ",artioie. it is par Ovidesridepted to febrlos - of the Sneed pcandble textarei it tieing freo from all those sub. itaiirMelm common to Starch in ordinary use, that are 4etriettes to aitleles to - whichilsey ' are all denies° irides from , disprepan oiei between the seat Wad alleged. merino of, Oda STARCH. we will in. Aansitri Sikkim favoring taiiiitit tile* orders. ' - GOYS matiura,CITIMINO CO. " TAYLOR,' . . . ' yVAtign WE OLISSALF. A.GIitAT PJli PUILADALPIIII.. General Agent, - 18 . 6 Plii,TON Prltinti NBW TORN` E', '503-nprkisow. 729 • . ,• , =IUMigiMMI W.YO.RK WEEKLY! ' XOR JIILY ds, TO BEl,lsspar# ON JOLT 11TH, • 114)11 enntnin the (first Poitlon of an lotionsly• thrllllog 'hint* 'll4 , mi - the insiiof n. DUGANNII, ,entitled Ti=no The leadlog etteritter la Irbleb lel)) be no 'W111.1)431 , loelge MIA 'the lenewned" . JOSZOI O,ARI‘WALDI, Whose brilllssit sohlevements la the Insopean straggle now going fOrwenl ate the theme of flotoersol vomavlL • The history Of the world does not show, perhaps, the isoond of a more extraordinary man, taking him &Rage ther,, than he who dames so donspiononsly in Me. Dn.. genus!! TRIITHVGG AND STIRRING NARRATIVE! The writer or Imre- dation Would seek In vain in the realms of bilge:l4ton for the coin:Torpedo( JOSEPH ,GAEINALDT., Whose Whole eventful life mum like romanoe, And Mr Duganne Id the writer of all othere to weave the exciting. eients of the hercile life into the woof of art ;knotting narrative Do D) knew Ga ribaldi end hie ctrafretej in this ociuntry well, and, by mixing freely with them bo beaten fandller with all their thonehti, their aspiratims, and • their hopre.n the plop under consideration,'„tbe 'authdr,. label lifir .erompataNatiteiroD - Of hie life when, it youth, brim iltornatriloths ardor. he joins the • DECENT. DOOIETY OD ITALIAN PATRIOTS, lioondemnadio'd4th: and with - A DEIONTINT 15P014,1113 fINAD, Is bunted from plea. *place, arid at length 'mime to In dligutes. He trams• him through his ' ADTBN TUBAS IN 891:110 A diNSIGA, • where he communed „teselalng hie countrytpen , o light, that they might one 'lley strike r blow lB defence of • . ' , eito*NlNci , ug ths time whim, bavleg @pact some yenre In this country, he returned ttilledMont, aed there awaited, with burning anxiety, the'ettenti which brought about TILE PRIVSINT WAR, • . find @netted him to pleei himself at the bead of hie pa il:WM followers to 'strike for STAGY 'AND Litittft TY. For does the author forgot the hero's fiNGT-8A0BITIOING;NOBLE, UNDAUNTED WIR}I. Abel, who, maid ill hie DANGEMLAND titTALP, - au* closely nt ilde,;bindfog op hie wounds. en oonreginildni 'wlitwevdir a hope end love. and cora fortint hero alwala tilie who, after tollolrint hie for theeitivtth seitfength lend demotion which mimed almost eapeilitinen, died, at leet,' heirs hie _epee, even while the 46 iir ci Tlpt :ATTATRTANS AR 1:10241RIG!" was glieSfng In Ms erd her ears, and whose defeneelesa Vire Wee enema. dlesearated by the worse thee blood, thirsty : nionsterif who liaised possession aft after her pareaait had winged Its !light to Hebron. Se it to be Woldited at that - . ' - JOSEPH GARIBALDI EATIIa -6IISTBIA. AND - Tin :AUdi'lll6Ni ins Ifivr 701111_WREELY' is for We by ail re. epeatable - aews : agents throughout the United States These who wish, toafeure the reading of GARIBALDI, THE HAD 0 VlTALY:ehonld notify the news agent neareet min lidysoc,e, co se to ovoid disappointment, at, jedgiag from the Orders pourteg in, they will not be able to mote than supply the demand. CciIINTEEFEIT i3A.NTS. NODES. . • . . •coini TZBIFNITS IN THII MOs= or - tJNNJ XOCO,RDINO TO TON Tv ' 20011i1MIOAL, BANE NOillt,Bilrunsaa. On the row' bundrod ani thirtptwo rao• similes of veratinOtites 17t the -PAST Tiiitint N 1310303 ENCYCLOPEDIA. There ate TWO HUNDNNO AND SIXTY-SIX : 81.LtbrUll,illiberkOn4,niicyeirn0163, now in 012oullie t4a—akared In the tame and freation of the bank altered in the disonstnoitoonl value, and made, in aluteet'ettof inetanae,'Neni the yronhlefe Mile of biakeia benbe,,eaekalratiltailkiiih r e 'genuine, r isixto'is,slVe from each lauds, bay the - 1 1 / 4 1PI'OLOP/ADIAr. 4 .OE, AIktERICAN '" 13 VRRENdY.• YOU BAY ONLY:TO 'PLLON 'TUSSE EadliDtr. LkNT NOTZA' ONSIDE TON PAO•BINILISS TO DETMOT TONI AP A OLANOB , , - Wby will you 1 . 1.11PE1N9 upon a PfIINTBD DBBORTP. Tr(Maw!, of eriori, iod printed to the 'mantel type; when you, oen ease . sll the time; qitti Vonenmed," by re ference to's, fie siniile of the genuine note It which isquisee bat a glance of the eye to Jesus. Yon against any bus t . YOU AR LIASILV AT MM . MOMENT TO MI6- OMB A 821111.16U8 NOTE, RAISED itaost ONE DOLLLES TO NIFTY THB HNOVOLOPODIA JO MUSD IN WHINILY NUMMI, HAM (IfiblfAINENG,' ON& HIINDAID AND VONTY.YONB VAO.BtiatLEA, THB WHOLE WORK TO nz'colteLsTED IN A MOAB. For Safe by all News Dealers aid Periodical dgente shrosighout the cimstry,'. SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE AMERICAN PHRENOI 4 OGIOAL JOURNAL, Which bee jest commenced a new Vol., ere received at the Phrer.oloyleal Cableet. , TUN AMBIRIOUT YRRENOLOSIOAL JOURNAL Is ably cooduoted, and largely emulated. It is far from being a piper or one Idea, as might be supposed by those nuiconaloted with Its character., Oo the contrary the litorrst In Its tone, progressive is spirit, and full of sug gestions with rempd to aelr-rattate, and developing a sound =Win a sound body —7'ho Country gentleman. Slagle zumbera4Cl ate, Sent to all pasts of the olty, and by mall, forsi. , Call on, or addrees .t)aN CI,VMM, 922 onsaimur Bt. Philadelphia, •4" 'NEW-SUMMER. BOOKS. • Translated from M. MintititsVe peat Breath work. '4 No robins te at present exalting more lively interest and curiosity throughout Pe or notry than this. Profiled by some, and coedemned Mere, it is the aeon t foo hook of the dey *t. A third edition now ready. One 2o'nme, limo. wirolin, prw. TEIR NRW AND 'l4lll OLD. Dr. Pslmer , a nor volume toroortsleg romantic St w dents in OaMorals and India. Bemired by the Press everywhere with =goateed praise. One volute, mum lin, Illustrated, 12um Price $i 2t A volume of plgnantatatabas, trealimg ape* lateen. tare, Art and &minty. By Adam. Badeart ?Huy, burnorcni, /arced. envy, grod.nalurad, and toll r.. 1 animal sprit n Oae einuine, /2aao., muslin. Second Inlition.. Price Vt.' - A. awanows STORY. • A new book by Oliver Bunco. Equal to 1k elarvelle a Reveries of a Baebelor.” .g Bentimental, fanciful, Intl of quells; ennointe, sod met the thing for bummer reeding, Beoond edition. One volume, 12mo. Price In Preen: LIPS AND TEAVeGB OB /11MIBOVT. Coffee Pota A TleW and popular Lite of Baron Alexander von Einfoboidt, with an introduction by Bayard Taylor. WPM orlgiosl and anthentot sourcee. Containing Ills life, travels, and scintilla labors, together with sketches of his teachers and oolaborers One volume, Mao:, muslin, with steel pogtralt. Brice $l.O. Tim Pet', Coffee Urge. Dor Miteli These Bootie will ba sent by mall. POsteoa anew, to any part of the United k totes. on the receipt of the price. by BUDD & (lARLETON, Publishers and D iokeellerti k No.lBo Guinn attest, nest Broadr.y, N. Y. jel3o.thftett for Boarding Hopes )or Restmulute For Stegmboato A N EARNEST AND THOUGHTFUL AN BOOK. LW/TURNS ON TEIN PIM TWO VISIONB OP THE BOOK OP DANIZL. By Ber. WllllemPleivtou. 12mo, lb cents. NOTIOSO OP THIO PllO9/1: There is a 'Warmth of tone .and feeling about this hook which will make It not nuamieptable to a large class of readers, praotimil earoostuess and reve rent* of spirit are high recommendations —Banner of the Oros The volume contains sincere and earnest expositions of propkeisies. The author's views are, in come re spect', peculiar, end ere worthy of attention and con alderation.—American Preebyterian. , The book is the product of a calm, thoughtful, ear. nest, - and reverential lOU d, and may he consulted with profit —Presbytenan Banner and Advocate. • Just pabiished by, WiLlileel B. ea. ALYBBP EfABTIBN, le2e .• No. We OHISRTNUT ',Street. CiLD BOOKS-OLD BOOKS-OLD BOOKS. The underalgeed states that he has frennently for sale books printed between the years 1410 and 1600- early editions of the Rather* of the Reformers and of the Puritan Divines; in - Lori Braaten, Lyttlehin, Pat feadorff, Groner', Dowat, Coke, Uale, the Year Books, Deports, ha., are often to be found upon bra rintivea; Opdopedles, Lexicons. °least° Authors, History, Poetry, Philosophy, Science, Political Doorway, Government, fachiteoture, Natnral.Hietory. Matthaei upon theca and other kindred subjeote are being coetinually dealt in by him. Booka,tn large and email quantities, put °based-at the Ooatom-Hoose avenue Bookstall, OUDOT NHS Street, above Fourth, Philadelphia. soylo Oat JOHN CIAMPBBLL. is S ALT I SALT!"—Ashton and 'Marshall's One; Ltrariool groand; /onion tc. %sr %ilia Nary, swotted tifado; and Turk's Wand, othaltstitly on bsod and for tali by AL.I.KANDEII KRIM, 822 NOnTII WHATLV Jyt.dt AnKERET., —2OO bbia., 175 halfs, 180 MR quarters 'And 50 ilitts No. /3 ; 790 bbla halts newimge No. 3, in store and fur sale by WM. .1. TAYLOR A: 00., Jytt 11113 South Whmvell. - - ItEFINBD 3170A11.-1, 4 50 0 blab. Yellow ILL 0, B, and &Ater crushed, sifted, Rod Pulver. i*ed B, ltir for A, W04).0184E3 QB4EIAM 6 00., LE MIA " • jeU Wew ,ij3nbUtations. gAltiß A LDI, T,EGION, 21.1182.1. & SMITH, Proprietors. • 9i3 Beekman street, New York WIVI. CIAO/NAND & NO., Publishers, No. 9 Nassau street, New York LOVB--(Vmktous..) THY VAGABOND PHILADELPHIA. :SOORDAY. JULY 9. 1859. t't -0 , - - SATURDAY. JITLY, 9, 1859. The r ralau?rston Ministry—NO. 3. If, ..as Itori COMoore told katliliett‘: (C there's, luck in odd numbers." , aasureil as the Bari of Denny and Viscount kanitsk , ATOP can 'testify, - it sometimes it bad, lubiiX: Nineteen . is the unlucky ,number for modet* British statesmen—the number which co verts Administriitions into shadowy ct dissolf; fog views"—the number which knocks Oishi4 nets into pi, is our amiable compositors say—the number, in short, which has 'a repeatedly been fatal, on divisions in of House of Commons, that placemen ought to: , dread it, whenever they see it wrjtton, or heatr, , it spoken. , - - For example, and to show that we do not" speak .witboht facts, on the 10th December, 1852, the Derby Ministry were defeated, at thra' close of a prolonged, debate upon Mr. Dts,.. EttiLl'S Budget, by a majority of nineteen, and: imniedlatelY resigned office, after having held, it for ten months. In the Session of 1838, the, Feltner/40U, Ministryartliruwir surriei,res•jerity,(given on Mi. M. thnson's amendment en the second reading of I the Conspiracy to ?Carder bill,) and had to quit Lastly;in the Session of 1859, the de. (Oat of the Derby Ministry, whiCh recently led; a to a dissolution of Parliament and a General . Election, was caused by a majority ofnine teen, on Lord JOHN RUSSELL'S motion against the Reform Bill brought forward by Mr. Disiusra. It is sometimes said, of a precocious child, that t , it to far too clever to live," the word clever being here taken in its obvious English sense of mental ability. The same saying may he applied to the new Ministry which Lord Pen:manor( has now organised. There ap. pears to be a great deal too much ability in that Administration, every member or which thinks himself as well qualified, in all respect% to cc rule Biltannia" as Prime Minister, is even Lord Essainnsion himself is. England is a great•cOrintry forprecedents, and a paral lel one was supplied, in Febrnary,lBod, on the death of PITT, when Fox and his adherents . made a Cabinet, which, with more vanity than judgment or veracity, they proclaimed as Om. prising all the talents of the country. The new organization was nicknamed All the Talents Ministry," and never did a dozen gentlemen make such a palpable fiasco. It was said, se verely, but not untruly, that, as if to prove how compatible talents for Oppositien aro With Ministerial imbecility; Fox's possession of power showed nothing' but Incapaoltk for its use. The mere seabriquet of cc All the Ta lents," which clung to the Whig party fkom the time that they so utterly failed as an Ex ecutive, did a 'great deal, we believe, to.areep them out of office during the following twenty.' font years. , It can scarcely be alleged that the late Derby Ministry can be accused of heing,too able for their mission. It contained a•'few, and only a , few, first-rate men. 3 here was Lord DEBBY himself, who now, in his sixtieth year, has the elastic tread, (eseept when his hereditary enemy, the gout, oppresses him,) with the manner, the fire, the force, the elo quence, and -the lively impulse of live-and thirty. There was BENJAMIN BIBRABLI, un doubtedly"one of the most able, most accom plished, and most *dreaded of English states men; a man who is nearing, his fifty:fourth 'year, but looks as youthful -now, and as self concentrated and exclusive, as ,he did when we first made hie - acquaintanee, over twenty years ago. There was But.Wca, no older than DionAgta in years, but twenty years worse in consiltution49parently the mere shadow of a://lati. so ini44. /is itHtealth of body mind wornlini down, so that one might.lancy that vitality Were retained in him chiefly by an effort of his individual will. C'here was Lord &exult, able son of an able father; who, by sue of those coincidences Which aeen to bcPPeculierly Isolated, was a Cabinet Minister, as his father before him was, at the age of thirty-two. Here the Het of notabilities in the Derby Cabinet must close. The Lord Chancellor (Sir Fannzaraz TLIESIGCII, who took the title of Lord Common») had been a popular Nut Price advocate, with fine appearance and ele gant manners, but possessing a knowledge of law unusually limited for a ,barrister in ex tremely lucrative practice. Be bad served his party well, and was ambitious of the distinc tion of becoming the chief law-lord of the empire, with $50,000 per annum while in of and a life•pension of $25,000 when out of it. This gentleman, who was agreeable, sociable, witty, and conciliatory at the bar, became haughty, petulant, authoritative, self opinionated, loquacious, and egotistical on the Woolsack. Not, only there, but at public din ners, where he would discourse about the MAnietry by the half-hour at a time—remind ing old stagers of Lord Eamon, who had been Fox's Chancellor, and used to speak so much about himself that his bar-title was o Counsellor Ego." There was Lord 141,11ESBUKY, as Foreign Secretary, a well-meaning gentleman of moderate abili ties and middle age, who flattered himself that he was a Statesman by descent, because his grandfather bad been an Ambass ader. There, as Some Secretary, was Mr. SOTITERON EST °Om, a mere country gentleman, somewhat of the Justice-Shallow order. There, as War Secretary, was JONATIIAN PEEL, brother of the Statesman, who entered the army, in 1815, after the wars were ended, and bad gradually risen by seniority to the rank of Major-General, without ever having smelt powder- 7 a quiet old gentleman, who would have made a respeetable posting-clerk in a dry•goods store, where the business was not very extensive. There, as first Lord of the Admiralty, was Sir JOllll PARINCITOII, a Wor cestershire baronet, without one original idea in his head, smitten with the notion that he possessed great eloquence, (whereas he was only prosy,) but in his element when working out the orders given Mtn by superior minds. There, as President of the Council and as Lord Privy Seal, were Lords &manual . and 11.11D\TIORE, the automata of the Cabinet. There, over the Public Works, was Lord Jowl ISLatorzne, The dandified younger brother of a Duke, a very small poet of the YOung Eng land school, who bad immortalized himself in a couplet la which ho said that arts and sci ence, learning and art, might Die, Dot leave us atilt our old nobility ! There was, as President of the Board of Trade, a young Irishman called the Earl of DONOIYORNOBE, who know nothing of trade, and was chiefly noticeable for his family antecedents. The founder of that family W3O J. lima HUTCHINSON, Provost of Tiinity College, Dublin, and an Irish M. P., whose appetite for preying on the public was such that an English Premier said " Give him Ireland for an estate, and he will ash for the isle of Man as a cabbage-garden." The great grand-uncle of the present Earl was General HUTOHLEBOR, created a Peer in 1801 for his services in Egypt, at the Battle of Alexandria, where ho commanded after the death of Sir Ramm Aunaoaostirr, and his grandflither was that Captain HUTCHINSON, who, in concert with Sir ROBERT WILSON and Mr. BRUCE, assisted LANALETTE in esca ping from prison in Paris, when sentenced to death, under the Bourbons, in 1815. Now, though there was no small amount of mediocrity in this Cabinet—Many; STANLEY, and Dineatu really being the actual men of brains, Burmsn's health almost incapacitating him from much exertion, though he made two or three very eloqaont and impressive speeches —there was a good deal of work in the men, who had not capacity enough to originate measures. '1 hey admitted the intellectual ca pacity of the three men who took the trouble of thinking for them. Desired to do a thing, they generally did it, without much, question as to its merits or purpose. Lord Ditanr, for the most part, had personal communication, on business, with the Queen, who greatly ad. mires his open and chivalrous character, and . considers him the only truly eloquent man in either Rothe of Parliament. He acted as Ml niettielal leader in the - Lords, ready, at a word 'of Phalleuge, to defend his colleagues, or retort upon his opponehts. Lord STANLEY, as Mi nister of India, generally confined himself to 1114 own department, the duties of which are abundantly onerous. On Mr. Doman 1, as Ml rdaterial leader of the Ease of Oomtnens, and also as Finance Minteter, devolved a variety of duties, Which he generally executed well, fiectiusti he was wholly nninterfered with by illit 'colleagues, who admitted his pretensions ito the Leadership, and, submitting to them, - !melte exactly what he wished, when he gave the order. The misfortune of the Palmerston Cabinet, just organised, it of a double character. In the first place, it coneiets of conflicting °le- ' meats. In the next, it is likely that many of JiMmembers hold the Irishman's opinion, that' one man is as good as another—and a great deld better. There are sixteen members in ,the Palmerston Cabinet,' at least six of whom ihelleve that, without l traVelling very far to find Wm, Queen 'Monza might readily have :tetrad a better head of the Administration than ISA PALMERSTON. Mr. GLADBTONN, for exam ple, who writes Puseyito octavos and delivers Wonderfully long and able speeches—which Mrat le like sky-rockets and are as soon for,. gotten—thinks that he might have been sent for eeplade Lord Dnepr. There is Lord dont; I;stser.,n, now with scarcely a personal fel lower, who has accepted the most difficult la lice, and firmly believes that having been Wremier once, he has a standing claim to fW'ltnpointment. There is Lord Gnartvman, o though only a cypher under PAL -1 filsiron, 'was very near being Prit`ne Min liter, the other day, and would have 14ett, only that Resent refuted to serve nader his banner, and GRANVILLE had' not the courage to get on without Wm. There is the Duke of ARGYLL, a mere talker, who calculates that the Duchess of Sti,inenrann, his well-preserved ittother.in lant, (the friend of . Mrs. N. B. ASTONS and u; the Black swan,") will coax the Queen to plikee him at the head of a Ministry; one, day. Thee° is Lord Emus, who has been Governor General of Canada, and Ambassador to China, told, as a successful and able Statesman, has eeiertil times been spoken of as likely to *V , en excellent Premier. There is Sir G. 04 :litwre, a man of failures—whose adminis trltion of the Edinburgh Review was as heavy as 4ott of the Finances—who, we doubt not, isirntle chafed at not being Premier. The nape of NICIIOASTLE and' SOWentere, Or .MY. 8/14MY HERBERT, probably have had equally arith‘tione aspirations. Nay, out of the Ca binet., p is Lord Osumstn, who resumes his Irlskyleeroyalty, and there is 'Lord ()Lanett now Who has been net, Viceroy, and also Perelfin Secretary, who has been' thought 'wcirtlyeef the highest office in the State, but is ,not Included in the new 'Ministry. With 1 such *lot of colleagues, singing '• Jack is as geed as his Master," , patstsesron is not likely to ieptise on abed of roses. Par t tnrasronYs own ' eer in the Cabinet irt oludetSir G. Lewis, Sir O. Woon,Lord Came 13filt,the Duke of SOMiIIBET,B4DNEY HERBERT, and r. Geo. GREY. The Sutherland interest is reppssented by Lord GRANVILLE, Duke of Anoxr4, and Lord. CARLltilokt The Fuentes are X.ACADSTONE, Dnko of Newcastle, and Mr. battnieett. The Manchester party are repreileated by Dolmen and Mrcensa: GIBSON. Tliehtlititached are Lord &mit, who repro senteldmitelf alone, and poor Lord John Res sent,edic; sits in that Cabinet, solus cum solo, a political het rose of summer, left fading alone • •IrCtlib Lords, there will be three Ministerial, leaderk: bake of AROYLL, Duke of Nawcas- FOo'n:l4•ES.rl.-Gaarivrilis,:•-• 4 lii moue there will also be three. In each house One hi' ti:lttliciont. PALMERSTON will claim to ,the _speaking organ of his own Cabinet. gat RtIBSELL has filled that office, and (though he stammers and-stutters) piques himself on his, 0ra0.7. ,Then, there is GUMMI, to whom a three-hours speech upon any subject, with or without five minrktes notice, is as easy as to eat his dinner. He OM be "on his logs" perpetually. The worst is, that with so many "leaders," and so much talking, Ministries are very apt to do loss and say more than they ought. How DISRAELI, backed by Sir anon 044111118, (one of the best debaters in the House of Commons, and ex-Solicitor General,) will lie in wait for 'discrepancies of statement and argument, savagely pounce down upon them, and ruthlessly tear them to pieces! Having thus given some of our reasons for believing that the great strength of the Pal merston Ministry actually supplies the ele ments of its future, and not far distant, dis sension and weakness, we shall, next proceed, wifli moderate alacrity, to, give such an ac count of the members of that - Cabinet as will give our readers, we hope, some distinct and accurate Idea of each, personally and po litically. Publications Received. From T. B. PIATEItgON BROTIMS The following works published by D. Appleton / Co , NeW York : The Boy's lbok of Modern Travel and Adven ture. By Meredith Jones. With eight illustra tions, by W. Harvey. Prairie Farmtakin Amirkm„, with Notes by the Way on Canada and the United States By James Caird, M. P., author of "E4glish Agriculture." Napoleon 111, The Man of Prophecy; or, The Bolivia of the Franca Emperorship anticipated from the Necessity of Propheoy. By G. 8 Faber, B. 1.1, Master of Sherbert!. Hospital and Peahen. dary of Salisbury. (This publication, by the late Mr. Faber, Is really a remarkable wcrk, containing mush in small oompass„ and showing the verification and fnlfltme :: c‘f what the author wrote on the pro. pheolos in the Apocalypse, as far back as 1828.] Chambers's Encyclopedia. Part 2. (Africa to Alizander II) With wood engravings. The Tin Trumpet; or Heads and Tails for the Wise and Waggish. A new American edition, with Alterations and Additions. From G. G EVANS : Italy, and the War of 1859. A History of the Causes of the War, with biographies of the Sove reigns, Stateemon, and Commanders. By Madame Suite de Marguerites, NI ttli*lntrodutton by Br. Shelton Mackenzie. 1 vol , 12mo. Philadelphia: G. &vans. Governor Douglas, nud the Jews. Governor, Douglae, in a proclamation lately issued by him in Victoria, V. 1., providing for the naturalintion of aliens after a three-years resi dence in the British colonies in the North, de dares (following, probably an old akin% form, which will doubtless be modified before long by the home Government,) that the applicants must previously take a certain oath of allegiance " upon the true faith of a Chriatian." Upon this the British Colonist, the anti-Administration paper, says: " Governor Douglas ie again behind the age in which ho lives lie has issued a proclamation, af fording facilities for the naturalization of foreign ers, but, with an illinerality worthy of a bigot, ho bas exoludod members of the Jewish persuasion from its benefits. lfe has prescribed a form of oath which it is well known Jews oannot and will not take. viz : upon the true faith of a Christian.' After twelve years' struggle,the British Parlia ment bee Omitted Baron othschild to a seat in the House of Commons, and has, by a formal reso lution, allowed JeW3 to omit the words, on the true faith of a Ohristian,' in taking the allegiance oath. But Governor Douglas cannot regard the liberality and wisdom of the British Parliament. No foreign Jews can be naturalized here, notwith standing a very large portion of our community belong to this olass." L7.3? - ' The following Hoke t has been nominated by the Demoorats of Allegheny county : Assistant Law judge—Gco. P. Gilmoro. District Attorney—John N NVOlowry. State Senator—Ssuanei Assembly—Joseph H. Davis, Samuel W. Means, Philip II Stevenson, Jacob Stuokrath, Andrew Jackson Beaumont. County Commissiolfer—Edward Campbell, Jr. County Treasurer—,3 ernes Blaelunore. Courtly Auditor—,john T. Simms. County Surveyor—Joel Ketchum. Director of Poor—Col. Thomas Neal. PENTLAND'S MUDS TENT WAS blown down during the exhibition at Hackettstown, N. J., on Wednesday evonitg of last week. Tile audience was not a large oue, and, beyond a coed fright, the people °soaped without serious injury except in ono instance, In which a littlegirl nad her arm fractured by a falling polo. Tho rain poured in torrents, and the damage to hats and crinoline nee great We learn that it alto blew down In Belvidere on Saturday evening beat. RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. Lay Prijaehing. . If there is one feature that has been more pro. minently added to the experience of religious de. nominatione,by the late revival than any other— save the more general recognition of Christian' Union—it is the right of all who really have the troth, to preach it note others, whether they be. long to the so.oalled laity, or not. By applying the term late to the Revival (whioh, however truthful, seems to wound the seal of Some very good people) it is not meant that the religions life thus revived has again beCome somnolent, hat that the revival of the work of bringing to life what had been apparently dead has long since been consummated, leaving the Church, we trust, in perfectly vivified state. - With regard to this newly-developed feature; or rather this very old feature again developed, of, Christian men testifying for the truth as the Spirit gives them utterance, it has evoked a vast amount of comment, whioh, however, in this country has mainly taken the liberal form. Some of the ablest men in the Church hesitate not publicly to assert that the labors of gifted laymen, owing to their un professional position, are better adapted to pave the way for the labors of the pastor, by pioneering and break* up the fallow ground, and sowing the Gospel sa de, than an-ordained ministry.. The basis uptm which this view Is founded Is, that the wisdom whioh carries with It the converting power Is the gift of God, and of Him alone, and hence not in any soneo a power that can be Imparted by universities or theological seminaries, however ex cellent may be their standing. Same, on the other hand, entertain great fears that each universal license would be productive of great confusion and derangement among the fur niture of the eeolesiastidal temple; while others are as sanguine that the great Author of troth is no less able to give it the direetion Its designs in the futurethan Re has shown himself adequate" to its preservation in the past. In Scotland, and some other parts of Groat Britain, ecolesiastioel bodies have apparently, ,gone to work to suppress these " irregularities" with as mush zeal as Gall. leo's persecutors evinoed in their endeavors to stop the irreligious teaohinga of that gifted bat timid men. Bat to this day the earth moves ; and it will not be at alt surprising if honest men, whether or. damned or not, who have s proper knowledge of the Word and the gift to proolaim it, will continue to do so to the end of time. Tee Porn's' Natfrnativr, Ertl.--One of tbs editors of the Boston Pilot—an ably conducted Catholic journal—in a letier, dated Liverpool, published in the present number of that paper, sais The Sovereign Pontiff maintains his nen frailty, and bore witness to it a few days deep by the:canonization of two new saints, pomander and Lobrd,) one of Austrian, the other of French nativity. The abandonment of Bologna • by the Austrians caused a revolution, to break out in that city, antrthe retirement of the .Cardinal Legate. This was done by Austria, to place Napoleon in a false Position towards the Holy See." We also learn from the same source that among the chap. lams who have just been appointed to the army in Italy, is the Nev. 'Father Parebere,vrho dietin gaithed himself in tbe Crimea. When in the course of an engagement e by the side of General Canrobert, his horse was killed under Mm, the latter remarked,,i , that, reverend sir, is an noel denewithout a remedy; I cannot get you another horse. 80, air revotr." Father Parebore, bow. ever, thought it his duty to be present in the corn 'bat, and jumping astride a cannon was thus con veyed Into the midst of the action, where be as- Maid the wounded and administered religions consolation to the dying. CON#ZREZieII —The ministers of Chester and Montgomery oottoties, and parts ad jacent, it is understood, are to meet on Tuesday s July 12th, with the - Pimentsvilte Baptist Church, for the purpose of completing the organization of o Ministerial Conference. . DR. NZITION'S Dam Narrow —The call which was recently extended to the Rev. Richard New ton, D. D., rooter of St. Paul's Church, In . this city, by the Immanuel Church, Baltimore, has been declined, and has slim been extended to Rev. Dr. Gadsden, of Ohartaken, 13: 0., who, it is thought, will accept.' A Wonrar Exiturts.—At a recent Meeting of the Aiwa-Wait Baptist Missionary Union, J. Joan , . eon, missionary at Bong Hong, said: "Be liad baptised 'a Chinese child, twelve. 2se yearn of age . Bhe knew no . eympathy 4 „figgAttenspe r all pagan& it ealtatell at drat to baptise - her.' What will you do if you should be treated with dinelty If they kilt me, I will not worship idols.'. What will you do in that ease? "/ will tell Jesus, and he will take care of me?'" DONATION TO THE Jaws DNI,IO Lyon Gold.; sobnaidt, who recently died in London, left to the Jews of that oily nearly $4O 000 for educational and religions purposes. Zit estate was sworn at $5 000,000. lle had skprittoMy residence In Bt,. John's Lodge.. the mord beautifai part of Regent's Park Rio daughters, espeatally one who married the Viscount Avigdor (son of the Mae" banker,) are distinguished for high literary attainment. PULPIT BELIEIANOIII9 —The Boston Transcript says: "Rev. Mr. Miner, of the School-street Uni versalist Church, proamied for Rev. B It Rale yesterday, with great acoeptaace. A lifithodist preached in aneher Unitarian pulpit, in Boston, yesterday, being the second minister of that de• nomination who has officiated in the same church within three months. The Unitarian pastor preached for his lifethodistueighbor." °mom; ELNCTRO.—At a meeting of the St. Augustine Rending Room Society of Philadelphia, held on the 25th uft , the following-named, gen. llama were Mooted offsets of the moiety fur the ensuing six months : President, Rev Amb'oao Mullen, 0. R. A : vise president, Patrick Daffy; secretary. Edward O'Neill; treasurer, Joseph A Seffarien; librarian John A. MacCann; assistant librarians, John Mandeville, Thomas F. Mao earthy. DEACON Exam:roan —The Zanesville Aurora says that R. T Oox, Erg , United Mates Deputy 'Marshal, has been ozoluded from the Market. Street Baptist Church, of which he was deacon, for his °ow:motion with the late fugitive -slave owe in that place. Rev. A. Pinney is pastor. Rev. Mat. GIAOB.--Rel7. Mr Gage, of Marietta, Ohio, converted from Unitarianism to Trial. tarianisna, has recently been licensed at Andover, Aloes., to preach the Gospel in connection with the Congregationalists Inc Rev. Samuel Faller, D. D., rector of Ohrlst Oharoh, Andover, Mass , has been eieoted to the professorship of "Interpretation of the Sorlptaros," in the Bashkir Divinity Soho's], vacated by the re signation of PIA'. H trwood. Inc Bishop of Montreal lately conferred dif ferent orders upon upwards of thirty oandi dates for admission into the ranks of the priest- hood. Tllll Ilarvermemar meeting-hemp in Danvers. port Was sold last weak, by auction, and pur chased for a Catholic) Murals for the sum of $2 850 Poor. Anson J. Ursog, of Hamilton College, has.been licensed as a proaoher of the Gospel by tho Presbytery of Utica. RECTOR. ELEOTED.—Rev. Benjamin Watson, Rooheeter, N 'Y., has been elated rector of the Church of tho Atonement, of this city, in place of Rev. Kingston Goddard, resigned. Celebration of the Fourth in nilford, Delaware. ORATION BY HON. WILLARD SAULIIDURY-MARQUY,- RADE PROCESSION. OorrespOodenoe of The Preas.J MILFORD, Del., July 7,1859 The Fourth was celebrated in our Allege with unusual spirit. The_ exercises were under the direction of the I. o: of 0. F,, and were carried through with a success that reflects great credit on the oommittee of arrangements. About 1,000 people assembled In the grove, near town—some from Dover, from Georgetown, and even Lewes, as much as twenty-five miles off. After prayer and the reading of Scripture, the Declaration was read by Rev. Mr. Mears, iresby torten minister of Milford, and orations were delivered by Dr. Aston, of Wilmington, and by Hon. Willard Saulsbury, Senator elect from this State to the next Congress. This address was the great fen. tare of the enactors, and !elicited 'honor both upon the head and heart of the orator. He re. maked that only one other nation in history baldest oar own celebrated a national holiday—namely, the Hebrews; and the reason of our similarity to them MS undoubtedly to be found in the religions character of the founders of our liberties. He would lay It down as a fundamental prinoiple that religions liberty end eivil freedom invariably go together. In picot of this, .be referred. at length, to the character and influence of John ' Calvin and bin followers in France, Genova, the Netherlands, Scotland, Ragland, awl, finally, in oar own country. Whatever of atoll liberty the World now enjoyed, the Ron. speaker main tained was duo to the labors of the Calvinists. The nations who permuted, crushed, and banished them, put away from themeelves the boon of free. dom—aa Italy, Spain, and France; while those who cherished them now enjoy it The Puritans of New England, the Hollanders of Manhattan, and the Huguenots of the Carolinas and Georgia were Oat. vinists. The enenker drew largely from the ale quent pages of Bancroft in support of his position, and wee frequently applauded by the lietening crowd The only drawback to the enjoyment was the weakness of the speaker's voice, which I sup pose was due to a sore throat under which be woe ettffering. The speaker having made an eloquent allusion to the purchase of Mount Vernon by the ladies of the Union a oolleation was proposed and taken up on the spot in behalf of the fond. Late in the afternoon a marqnerade procession, attired in the most fantastic style, riding on mules and in dilapidated wagons, purporting tube bound for Pike's Peak, paraded the streets. There was very little intoxication, coneequently the day passed quietly and without accident. J. W. hi. YounaEntoA..—A. young fellow In De troit, Michigan, went to the house of a lady to invite her two daughters to a dancing party. She refused to allow them to go. A. quarrel enacted between the boy and the glrls on one side, and the old lady on the other The young people finally threw the mother upon the floor, choked her till she was nearly dead, and then went off to the ball, The boy woe cent to Jail, TWO CgNT,S. - • Letter from Luienie County. - ffflorreepondenes of The Piano • - • s - Jot, 5; 1959 A few, lines frgatble point,eontresting the old!! fogy style in, which the. Glorious ,/?cnrth mai; allowed to pop here, in, comparison wit h its Mlle-, hration le certain wide•awake,phicee lit Northern . Pennsylvdnia, may swim 1b Mime 'our froin theft aomnoleneei,lt'nethlsgelei, "Prom the fanerablike quiet which itreirailed hire 'throughj oat the day, the stranger , WM hanilenid' tale so; journing among ne • could- certainly not have re= indeed any very exalted Impresslert of patrP Mina. About all the noise that the day?e, proceedings; give rise to was what the boys managed to ore- Ate in their commendable! endeavors to let thelild' folks .know that it-,wae dun natiOnstSahhatb., , The Young Aurelio& " element here (I am 8 07- ry'to 'say there le really little of it indigeneas to the plane), is chafing under the , manifest leek of enterprise that pervades our town. .•• • - Theanti•progressive element here Is inducting a s tagnation that some few of the wide•arrakes are determined to -remedy; or tail in the attempt.; But to aooompliah, thip we want help fromlother quarters. Wby 'can't you girls us a garment; with your tremendous - go a-headative - engine, • Tise Preis. that Is walking faritiverms ing power through our rotten JAdosinistretion et Washington; and setting things right generally ? I have thought that shiest' one - handrail - dab.' Presses at this point would be the Mart tudittiiity panacea to the business soul of Wilkesharre that aonld possibly be administered. Boir do joillike the prescription? —„ If some one of your repreeentatives; armed with a magazine of good nature and perseverance, could . esespe' front his @amity's!. long enough to come"tip here and speed a few days' sluing Our reline"' - slow, but well-meaning eitisens, I think something toward the above prescription might be sooom plishei Betide `this; the magnificent Noonan , around in, and the thrilling historio reminiscences- of this region, would aff ad him ample material for interesting correspondence. - A word now about our neighbors. And it is , not often that the Scripture injanotion, of 4, in honor preferring one another," lode u literal a fulfill, runt ari 1 am now shout ..to give by confessing ' ' thatour Aster town, Scranton, to completely too' the wind out of our saliwyeeterday, that the worse we are made to feel ashamed of ourselves the i better. She - pale the Arial' Pith lifeanttani motion.; and; what ismorerslei , let the coun try know beforehand that she meant to do Ii and the. consequence was that her streets and hotels all day yesterday were orowded With himdroda, some say thousands, of strangers. = It does our hearts good to hear and see the evi dence of increasing enterprise in Philadelphia; but we are exceedingly anxious, if possible. to cs.oh some of the same spirit. .. , The crops through here are all that could be desired. notwithstand. ing that, in other' respeots;l am 'likely:bi down ' . A 'Griimusimit.- , 'rate Pourth at -Cltamberabiarlf. (Correspondence of The Preaad - . •.. • 0 naltnananoso, July 6,1869. The usual amount of patriotism that oharao4 terises our people on ocoaolons of national ob. eervanoe was manifested on the 4th inst. - We hid a fine military parade, oeleisratlOne by, Moat of our Sibbsth aohoole, and• two 'balloon 'ascensions: /ion. Wilson Kepley addressed the military coin= pantos,- in perhapa as happy an effort' se ItioMer' made: Are atm• addressed one of- :the 13abliith aeborila in an eloquent and appropriate -manner.' Mr. R. seema to have the rare.facatity of addreas ing himself to the capacity of youth, Mk effort on this occasion will long be.remembered . ,hy the scholars and the large oonoonige,ef people Rho congregated to hear' him. - "- " ' _ IlleCattlai, E. , deltreted in address charev,eristio of his abilities and long experience We alio had 812 orati9n from ouryoung.orator , Wm: i 3• Ererett;E:tr, 'who is* raiddly, taking an, enviable' position 'es arreadv public orator.- moral . character-, of . Gen . ,Washington, wan= pre - seated - in - a most impreadvo manner. -All .who. beard Min left the grounds with higher views - of tbsi moral charatoterof the '" Zither of our try." Mr E. hats:worked his own way up, , thronab adVerie eironmstanoee,'to'a position of iadatmap which; erelong, will be felt throughout Peinneyl• vania. . . p ai d • Yea will observe that we i proper .vespect to our - national Sabbath.' Oar houses of bruin us wore -all closed. aid merchants and clerks all td gather united in a proper .e.abiblilon.of regard to the greit'day that gave birth to ono nattn. The crops in our county are unprecedented; the greater portion has beervgathered in; . and lo the best condition. There - sr/Lao destructities in the ;mops.' We have no milk weevil nor flyope ! rating to their injury - Of the numbers of The Press that'come to our. town yolcan form a, good idea. We-stand upon the great national- questions of the day. We are proud to know that you sustain sop. S. A Doug las_ his Charleston letter Tbn-TAttla alant o kalk .gained uealfiiialdsby t AbecfetilifisfilKii4ValW nerln which he 'maintains hle.Pasitten. Park . Benjamin in 'the Lecture.litaom. The ameet of an audience' is Jai( down by ,Cicero as one of the infallible testa of the 11110311 es 'cif a pt.blio dimmers°. -And tried by this staidard, the delivery of Park Benjamin's celebrated- satire on " Pashiort" was aryls' to his brilliant reputa tion as a poet and leo turer. We love the poets, All of them; but if the truth must be told, some of them are sad prosers.before an audience. After curiosity Is' satisfied as to their person, ell interest rapidly - subsides The' "thoughts that breathe," on the printed page, are strangled in the delivery ; and the " words th at burn' are frozen by the lips of the author. Some men' there ate who have Latham the Prometkettn' lire of genius, who yet act upon a leoture-room like patent freezing'. Compared with these, Park 'Binjimitt forma a striking contrast. Romer sometimes nods, and seems alwayi to be talking in his, sleep; but Benjamin, and his auditors, are always wide awake. From a calamity which befell him in big youth, Mr. Benjamin ascends the platform with difficulty; but when be is seated every appearance of lame. was at onde disappears The upper part ethic person is a sight to behold. His equal, as to.speohnen - of physioal power, is not to be seen oa the platform oncain a twelve-month. Me head, chest, should ere, and arms, or any one of these. proclaim stalwart man; and they double the effect when be satirises the "shaughai" and the "dandy." There is a vague impression that a poet always' looks pale and moonstruek. Beni %min (morays ,the idea, not of a victim, bat of a favorite of Be, tore. Sc, far from suggesting dyspepsia. consuasp• tion and all that, it makes a slat man feet well to lock' at him. And one person remarked the other night, " he was glad be came if it was only to see the man " His handsome and open countenance, Initials is lit up in turn with every shads of thought and sentiment, is radiant with perfect health and joyousness of 'spirit.' There are faint and sickly smiles which resemble light on a tomb-stone; bct Benjamin's reminds, us of &Ana passage in - Hay-1 doo, where he describes the smile of Sir Walter Scott. Ilia voice partakes of the superior robust ness of the - rest of his nature—being less like the rattling of cracked crockery than the stirring mato of a bugle. ' And these unite to give weight to his whole de- livery, and heighten the effect of every element of big poem ; and these embrace a great variety of the rescuroea of his art—humor, wit and wis dom irony, sarcasm, and serious truth—the bold• eat strokes, and the moat palpable bite—the ten- - dereat pathos, the wiliest counsels, and the manli est scorn—a hatred for the whole progeny of fain hood, and a love, equal to " the love of women," for the just, the true, and the good. With these, and nett as these, vividly conceived, graphically expressed, and forcibly uttered, he affords high intellectual enjoyment to every healthy mind; and he gives even wholesome pain to snob minds as Mrs Potiphar, Miss Flora hicElimaey, the Rev. Mr. Cream-oheese, and all that race, !minding their cousins and /cousin germane, their kith and their kin, of high and low degree. .‘ Thu% most inseetlyely he ptereeth through The body of country. atty. court, Yes, AL d of Ode our life,st Certain it is, (eoraine back to Oicero's test.) Mr. Benjomin oomblnes strikingly mental and personal qualities enough, to seise tho attention of hie en tire audience at the outset, and to rivet it closer' to he promeeds. There was no listlessness in any part , of the house. Every eye was fixed on his eye. Evefy heart was given up to the poet. And when the whole song was sung, instead of a rush for the door, an interval elapsed before a single person rose from his seat, we, awhile, atilt thought him speahlog, ettit stood dated to tem. , ' We can well and - emend why it fa that, year after year, Mr. Be*MID'S 'orrice?, as a lecturer, are In demand by tne came lyceum and immola tions, as far West, as we learn, as St. rata% in Minnesota.—Albany Argus. We copy the foregoing article, referring to a re cent appearance of Mr. Park Benjamin in Albany, both on account of the admirable manner in which it in expressed, and to current an impression which is erroneously entertained by some iersons, that Mr. Benjamin does not intend to immure daring the coming autumnand winter season. Besides no ticing an advertisement signed by Mr. 8., in which he expresses himself as ready to accept invitations, we are assured from the best source that Mr. Ben jamin is now engaged in the preparation of seve ral new lectures. Ile is to deliver a new poem be fore the literary sooleties at Daitmetith College, N. H., on the 27th inst. NEW WHEAT.—We have been - shown a Sample of reheat grown on the farm of Mr John Lindeman. of Turkey Hill, Manor township, which for fulness and petf.cstnera of grain, is equal to the bean . ° have ever seen. We have no doubt it will weigh at leas' 86 per bushel. Mr. Linde man thinks his flela will average more than 35 bushels. per acre, though It is said to be no better than moat of the other fields in the neighborhood The gentleman who brought us the sample is of opinion, from extensive observation through the county, that there is more ground in wheat, more bushels to the acre , and more pounds to the bush-, el, in Lancaster county this year, than. In, a n y other season stnoe the settlement of the country. He thinks the yield in the whole county' will ave rage more than 30 bushels per sore.—Lassecrstar Express. Dnern or A Minernni.—Thomati Coleman died, at Newark, N. J., on the evening of the sth inst., in his 34 , h year. lie was born in Boston, Mass , Aligner. 9, 1826, and far more than twenty Tears has been among the moat prominent atoll of the Ethiopian character. fle was a pupil of John NV. Smith, the original' Jim along Josey," and was well Itutiwn years ago by too cognomen of '' Meal:tinny Doleman." Poor Tom leaves a wide oiredo of mourning friends and relatives, • - '11.0.X1,4 • aseiejoidesoit 11.1. to Wog * 10. Mp. ' Rita sissanuOsosoo..oofo noes rirso*lC isiorlit tiPa g 6 kli f #" . ipso, : • Ws dull l o oorsoWp~ti. "' da l l lK' at im'fit!Wfkrig ammo assts or rhi vat: par,siiihr":‘ , MlZTlO, sentaidi',4 4.«.• or rmaatkilar 11 7 10 ;cossoUseSWfi wtll hotatorest. GENERAL IVEWS. - - ------ 7 ;;;; '-'-- ' ' - - ; hi TAM Wawa° Paw.--44.d.Thornedayrtunli• :Ing prior to the opining of that:triodes! Court it Baltim;flid.,a.Gerieseabont fifityeare of age, 'meows SA by a ,child of some twelve oilirorteekt . years, aspeked,* that forum.of jostles,. atql.,dst sired to be Married 'l4 , 'Judge, fititairt; some;amit having inforinedVof, th iir lho Itneteeslid -be 11s1 by tbaufinietienary. - -Me j wit soon ordeeeired, and stared rather histilt,"persorts intim hall a the amid-house Ospliewingtardi unqualified Mill* pa. ion at the ititrallableness /Cribs match. - The parties had , obtained.a iteettee,cond aptrisat to ministers on Wednesday to merry them, bat they refused to performtit• cerement% •• ---,-,---,-," I RABA' Ever Heerlen . 8P4:42".--BotWOO, asst. - ten a n d eight o'olook on.lThiersd.y moreing.lite r three' thousand parsons assembled around re 1 rog Pond, -- on the Comtnoti. at Boston fer, the' import, of seeing Dan Bine'a elechent "Lille ookh " take a bath la the:pond In - this, all bands were gratified to their holirrat oontent ; but none seemed to onjoythe sport, more than "Jodie" herself, who rolled °est bent - the water with her trunk, spouted any..quantity: of it in - the air, and out up other . antios . too numerous, to monifen. .41fter" having 'a thorough_ bath ' and - meek "fine. sport, the'" old lady "'returned to the canvas, on •:, the-Book Bsy lands. ' '• - - = '•n. - I t l'arat . or. Brltan Oarnsort.—The board _of ' Masers 'to , assemble at ;Borman Monroe . Vet.. on Tuesday, the 12th.lustant, or as soon thereat sr ex prectiosblidni the:trial °Lima riled cannon as may ,: be prim/tad by. the Granata& D,Spartrartit, consists of Brevet' Colonel 'B. if [moron ajar ord nance department . ; Captain J Aredges, first snit bri ; Brevet ; M ajor B S. Bunt, captain ward artillery ; Captain A. B Dyeriorduanee depart- . *mit; Captain A. A. Gilman, second siltiary. Tint Lientenent ft. C Drum, fourth' artillery; flaptaln. J. B. Aerator, tenth_ iatenti7,6le ap. pointed imorder'of the court. ' --' , t Liz! Turnip - Ai' ittOrribrir diroklOg ate& 11 lietweien D ralitnitisi: Gee's - se Ale Patties - , b. Carta Miller's Zaino.); and , Di PiLfer's' BrOwzr Mak, beet three icr tire, fora nurse of WO. tack ' pleas at the talon ' Coarse, New York. ar d was, won by the George M. ,Patehen. ' Time-11 , st beat, won by Patches lit 2 miniitea. 261 seconds;" also - tie Second hook% 2 'Minutes 28i• seeionat ; , third heat won by Brown-Dick in 2 minutes 29 'muds; also the fourth heat 112,2 minutes , 28 seconds; - and the fifth heat was won again by Ratob snip 2 mhi otos and 29 moods. , _ _ _ - Tiff most novel; 'ea well the moat in terestitig; of isiftlui , trotting Mambas Which have' hien proposed in some years - Mast ii one lately started; being a proposed tour. mires- le three: mile beat. the Jong distaitoe,to, be performed bir,st thorough.bred, - Bin-ohms _ ras e' borse r erhile fie three 'ranee are to be performed . by_ th e trotter. flu first-elms horses. sublime Pritioestariint Teta vli3, Ethan Allen, Teelliver, are .these fnp which molt a titatqh'is:- talked of .-Nste York - Son- - a Bask% or Parma; I;Bpp:carried iffthe f pro-. deSSIOn at New ffayeit; Conn.:that etre_noirowned hy Job P. Putnam of Ifaildatton ohnitty,' N. - y . j a g ran de on of - Ma jcir4ikenetsi Isreellratnern, A which were take& froni , the'llditsh'ofilftr Pi cause : - at Conoord,hissenahusetts, oft tho-19th of 1775, by Patnaet biasat- A sun -recently pardoned ont of State prP soh wasgivin evidence of hia reformation is tits streets of Trenton, N.' ,71, the neat day, by ebb. siig Ted harshly the witnesses who teettlbrd asthma htm Probably he sal = dledetiaaad'wttii; babble been released.. - Ar' N..ramt achelark Young. Gothamlteetanglit 'a 01101, about a yOung.lady,, , en.Straday events"; in New Jersey, but not atteeeedtig, crier two shots,: In billing one „another, wisely, gonoludtd to o tneil 'their angry &slings and liereinefrietk _ oi.wim _ paised - over , heighbeibti`tid 'Of liroodvilie, - St. ,Gebrgen. goonty; Md. - ;-on Wednesday teat; defog': smite damage -to, property-ft' that rtlainity. •Mr. Thinnas ,T. Somerville .httd , two tobegeo _home ; down.:blown , - Ham' A Deals ,Taitiraita „lave ~.bee4 poi. toiled 1a Brooklja by eating 'cheese. The ,obeaget - watt 'mans!flOttled in Berkhner.eininty; New . York. UIJNO the -past weekll,4sl tone of + cod weie brought down from' 'the - minis in Alitigheriy A love Chase,- - . - - • „ I • -The following letter is,frron,e Dahlia paper: i ' - ,Daossens, Mipa% Jens 13 .18 5 11.'1 *folic have "pat been Arad , ti tolliolent subjeof rot a :Month's, old t Abet' in *hes " tothed'out to be: one et the StrarigesTinidhrol-' baps, one of , the utortbeertlere *Mater , eloapadei - that hive occurred, in „tide part ;of the4nestre. withih memory, - All the partfes Concerned in Ate, matter move In the higher walks 'of life, whvele. - .. cirtMmatanoaaf odatio; meta it the tachW remark. able, and has rendered it.ths theme- of 'evolver*. 00 in all circles„ end ,in eeery'direetion ma • :turtle For obvious twos the names. of ‘ thipar-, ties[aoneerned ire rupprireed the feeteis Closely islettelffprooare'them " • M 45.414 - ASOterireritilt onsottbit=it*. 'ofTtroghede, bad fora length of timeyeld bie adr dr/ awe to"* , beeutiful young lady, whom T,,taay l3lanobe, who, en-addition' to het pore*, ral Ittreetione and -eatneoPliibmints of no 'mein order, Lunderstandhes lately besometelreee;bi the d ea th of an acme, tol 203 golden obaross.-‘,e - spleudid house bed been fitted up !stet:Au - the Test few Weehs at a rills on the - -banks oUlbeloyee,-- theirair Mira- B havingtfornished ihid a Costly - :manher. and which wu, intended es the . Taw. residenowof 'the parties named, am a union - WAN settled noon.' - Tile wedding was - arranged for •some diy Ia t* week, and was to have taken place -in the eoen.y of Wexford, where the family or. Miss B riredr.•• Diiad B had absolutely' gone to Wexford in a.. vance of her lover, so closely had all been upon 'Arrivitg there. with' anxious throbs sbe awaited his coming.. 'rites to her, stating that ib e bad been attacked with a spatting of blood, and should delay a day or so longer - In the mean tinte!he 'said be would send her a present and ab solettitly purchased a pair of satin slippers for that ' vales; which, bowever,•it will be seen, were oos- Vet d tn.another• purpose . A third • Pens DOW sots a pertin the - drama, a- Miss D ' oottila of Mr. B , and.whe resided at the house of her" father, where Mr B had condueted tonsineas. ' • It to said that she aisiats4 la decorating the in- tended residence of the intended bride during her Mottos, in the county of Wexford:. and same (inanity set out on. a visit to some friends at ekes , • ries, bounty of Dablin, to eel tythe ena`ati tit that watering plane daring ths floe weather Tee red think that is heard is, on the day on which Mr B. was to start for the county of Wexford to meat and laud Miss 8 . , he is we fted across the sea to WIT -head, in company of Ids - ooasin, to whom the satin slippers - ere given over.. Thence they started•ts the glestmetropolis, and hive since, I Ander/gaud, mailed for Australia. • • `The disappointed young lady,,Dow-Miss B , has tints been pieced in an extremely distressing con dition has, in her agony, brionid all her bridal rtibir; -The .yeting lady, whose feelings • have thus been-outraged: bed at all times exc.'. rienced marked attention front Mr. B.; ner, I be lieve,iwas it ever known that his cousin; to whom • he is now allied,- and ,who is of moat respectable family, ever had shared a portion of his adoption ate atiiresseg. But slab' are - the ways that matters of the sort now and again have their terininatiors, giving us another proof of the old proverbs that the course of tone love never does run smooth. A Steriiliebuve. ThCNew Orleans Crescent in the extract below takes down the Charleston Mercury, for its bitter abuse of Douglas. The Mercury does not speak the sentiment - of the Southern Democracy, but of a handfed of disonioniste, who, like their liOrth ern counterparts, the Abolitionists, have their political itustenanee in the agitation of the " ever- lasting nigger : " - We are not In favor of Senator Doubt; and never I have been. With whatever• faults may justly I attach to him, we, regard Douglas as a great, old, brave s he - m a •an a great, bold, brave man, however wrong y get occasionally, it la safer to trust—there is more reliance to be placed in hint than in any, or all of your mere atheming - ' and place-hunters, who never have an opinion of their own to express, and whose statesmanship and patriotism alone sonsistS in wa.ohlog' the - tendenoy of the - Popular current, 'and adapting themselves to it, without any referenoe to principle, right, or justice. We bold, and believe we can prove from the recorda,,that we are as-good Southern Men as the editors of -the 21fercum; or any body else. - , Yet, notwithstanding this, we should sooner see Ste phen .4. Douglas in. the presidential. chair than Jame I Buchanan, and would a thousand-fold sooner repose ondidenee in him tban.the present Executive. , "Farthertnore, despite the sanguinary protesta tions of the Mercary, we shall not be-surprised' utterly:if it has to choose between Douglas and William R. Seward, or a more odious Abolitioniet, for the neat Prosidenoy. We do not believe there is A man in the United States who can defeat the Black Republicans in 1860 but Dogleg, and we are not at all certain he will be able to 'do it. We regard it as the height Or political absurdity to attempt to run a Southern men if victory Is the 'end desired. The nomination of a Southern men, no matter how unexceptionable—ordeal some of oar Southern free sellers ,were nominated=-could have but one natural, Inevitable tendency :•tbat of uniting the North in solid phalanx against the Southern candidate. In snob an event the result would be known as well , before CM after the eta- • Non." PnOTO-LintOcita.Pay.—The first practical - applioation of this recently perfected art, or disco very, has been made useful to the nubile, at large, by the tue.,tis of fan similes of -all genuine basal notes, published iu the form of a Batik N.de De tester of American Mummy. The moartia.ope randi is very easily understood by those oho p ,s -sees any, knowledge of the - process of the usual or ordinary photographs, Which are produced faun norattuss,taken on-glans and transferred to paper, at the °eV:difference in the. ease of photo litho graphs lies in the feet that they are Hal - egret h., printed izecarbon ink; from • the transfers of the originalinegatives, by solar light, to the lith.,. groPhie stone, from whioh,the haul:islet's printed in. the same manner as any other lithographie work. The publishers of this important • work are WilliamOeusland Ce ,of 9-Nassatt street; New York, who have made arrangements, under the sanction:and saporvisitin of the Amerloart 'Bank Note Company, to have fee-similes 0 , every genu ine note of, ell' (solvent banks in the finked, Bums and Canada, to be issued in weekly numbers, con taining- one hundred , and forty-fear fac-eimites mush. not I the whole paper ourrenoy of the coun try has been thus produced. The usefulness of this publication to the business community will be at once 'apparent when the font is known, that in the very first number issaei there are one hundred and forty•fourfao-simian cf genuine bank notes, upon which there ere now in circulation seventy-eight spurious and - altered notes, none of which could -possibly be taken -by. anyone who had a oopv of the work before him. -