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',.--inhalitude - 1119SIERT c GOODS: KAttl.G, & Co., NB26IIHESTNIIT STREET, .pmsAtilitthlikill W 1110441, Burri tgibelle large esdripol l iA,iffisk-rir t Attx , AND WINTP.N TRAM!, :gritskiAt of" piatAII4IIRING AND'DRAW. lite,*oott,)lleivoikrixowN yam On 'Maya 00 OD3 I ote". SOLE AGENTS vroontliri VITIVING COMPABiII3 YdIBINO titifelt otawitna • ' • " •,- t"*AMTning 'soil mit' • shill al is o naive' AND DAtiratiN taceNos9, NALIP•RODA AItDraiWILULDIANTIO '4PANYONNON -11ANDPICTINNNO , OOMP swine 10040r, , Affer. ,vooptiot !NNW; MTN AND ODGDMINFININJWID, TAAL:, , EAPPEO,SOTIYA,OPO* OS G 'SI 0 P P w.OWITINiftXOIO,I,4N,DI._ , {,WALL t DONAP0114:111/INN MINTS. : — .'4 4 4l ( Ta NO,g, 0 1 4, MANDNACNITNINA, F O MDANYII,*NINNO 1 AIMPIBAS, O NPAWIND.„,' _ :oval rukk Auett.o: Bums AND DU 4ww. a91,111' Loan:lair rai. p4ILLOELEIIIat..M.AD.L GOODS, Orr, auraniiisthci '": 1611 OflilaNtir btreeo.' -- - folpssldg' weitinow, =keg or _ 'BUM Dunn; -, unkos,Bicrosi - ma Liar:bad, • , r, ,14" elibeton: s/OSTIA% s ellaps_,9 - " icagy,"l. enowit . ; :11604 tit** woloaci Mid ii • - s to Tay AtittripPeatrif Pt sic& ose{sinne is, +'k.; _Did aini;:iiir•Rillqisisksitsr; Wash -34.1 List_ iissakild: Idliboiddistyisk•lod,Oid isurdotom • •• CANTON PLAINNBUI AVD possaxero, Nevi Ja}altoey. Coley. sad Psisdod of "swim; bt u; , 1411111Y8 140401Itailb4zai ?HO' mem &e , shitaris t ed - ANwoktrAs . ,%,- eforiptericigitilleit•rweraimr Put RosUab, Dearer OfilOri oil.teriieelhoeili Maeda 00.4 itutakarbooker, Dead,' sod Plasser„'- • 't • •,•• - si'lrldsts Slteitisitiod pt Moyers leliiplted: '" -7; ' ' • ..• 400abii Alruntuti , cfn ,, Oman. rs.` . • - •-•1 TR°Y'',IEI.OSLERY 400.'s • , • MERINO '''FIII: 1 / 4 113 .• • .k • •2;•'••• :2 2' • D A W - E• - B : ROBERT E. '•EVANIS; • „. . .:.• - - - _ N 216 OIiZEITHUT STREET 'l,-z,- , • - - , ' • ,- t'. 2 llptitti MulAttni: W SEILER & WILSON - -v.41 ,- ,t.::•,41-ti".:)E . ,','1., - lAktoores t wo ow e • - - 'lolranzatox,r2lorr,PQ4Eam Was' swot, Vora . A. tM , l_llastqa;,aii.c Okhoter. _ , )• ;)I , )ms .- 111111 Atiliffili • JLQB A Irk se0 111)01; J. , - Paiteraiioolllimitlifir bib 34411Idikgrtly ) by 4,1112C.A44*ina;,,)4 r, mambo. Penns. , ' ar coy,' Agaikt.- • 4 • fitrast , 4ntniiqing Goyim titotrxerkukiisiimii• GooDs. JOHN &WM. I'HEY& OO -. ....# 2 . 2-4 ** l o trilinTs `lllllltbit'LLUarkg. 11101710111TAL MARBLE WORKS' •.. on load a rtai Luse asoortnupali* VONITIOT,Sr• GRAVE,STONES etsusige OPAPIes IWO ikth• i n "' • ITALIA! A!!DI Oisszonlicutatake, Fhtiopeclow umitilit! reduce; pr!ief. If also amol,raspenta,Uplinites thopabUeissatily;ta; 191 1 E11414EtZi ' liauiv *imam' aim% - ~ ~1 - ~~:i~ritiepuii i sA:lFuxiii~git~''~~aDs.~ ~. .1)1rINCIABBTBEI:a• 00i, GlitsTLElEpli3 F-Lv.Pusaunnue nom L. , -ILEOULDSILABBAJI EANI7I9IO qua wow wi. CilliMltti Street; oppo. ;.:. :A:i oo4:itivelo-Ifilathilott _ _ emitiospernakne, We, imo)torstotOrti, nu per. _uatlyw 44:41 Stiastadating arr= 91 11, 10 1 *Wijitylat of Elh Ida "0.. "Oak oviiiiirsasitrol,;_. f n. "' Wha °B4o bit 4 , aoi4; I:Oratoir •-• ":- , •' , O•II.I{BRATED ussivALtaux (lONTINENTAL T la. tii'i;"l"44••tailatceos '922 S3TNUT BT. IT. 141:TEPHEY Jo CO. stisi D A.S NAE , S S - , DR.4VOi4; ,MOSCiEZIEMER, ;,€),C13.74110-7 4.#3, ACtriztierA, Obi dibeiiit idee ili•Dieioiet ot tissri dna iiitllttil Op; Olt 3v.elmn , IT., MOS' TIFTL „as 14y:ise. • 'PATENT OILZUNISII OROOL COTTON, A5.1314,110111Q0M1198,,,TUN0T11, fad ifirristel 100 yap* .lokliap,r,nor,;refiDE fir ,11111 TO, ROOP,`;& WASHINGTON "STREIit 1-4/I(4salrir.iia - -= 'fwal-isiorted stook - of en idßAH sla ahik Twiui. fo etors iLd for soto it/ w16:222,4111,22.'& CO jll2 . 28 R. LTIR• anti 2i N. Wit B,llSpin. ',l . 4eroes eitri anifir•cuied' 114 °Druid 11.4iiii 4 pesEe4 b7,l3llthlner Khlppi & t ilsialf 10116'701W 1311 q, asten er. Woba, Mitt, ..* -, 767616110,i50il 01.1wil, fa mato-bro.. 0 oAotia 11, 004: AR9O imitaka Ore Ala** Pront (17 viitrimto BEIGAIL - ;41;600 Y:1 .Palver.. -10•4114w10411161t7.114110.04411114141 00., LE. ,11/1001.11W044,1„ 3 13:4. „ „ • 4..* 11/IARA9A' '',COPTES.--8,200 Bags iti"s taITIORIDK:t B RDS, DRY - DAtik sad tot Sale by - - etetilla 00. riffnr,7!-,:lrib eleiit,'Peeebe dew above Itlont, .1 ) ,r 1; °PAP TrA.TONZ S ? 110. to 4111kliti*Iiiiiiciiinkisi maw &toot `, Utica. per' AND ,ORICAPEREAD, I[liit/10143111D, BY THE • MECHANICAL BAKERY, CIIFBE OBTIIDIBD AT Tam TOLLOWING 31.101IANIGhle BAIBNY, B. W, coiner of Broad, and The streets. 1. Gah.PINOTINI, S. W corner of • Twelfth ,1 7, • ' ' and Wallenektreets A CLOLA.P.b, • „ Poplar street , b•low • Tanta. - • fie I corner Sixth and Coarse menu:, No.. 405 Oallowiall street No: 910' Spring Garden • street. - No.- 1929 Vint street. 1 6 / 1 3 Pr Ma. 8. BROM, 11.1PANCOA8T, ' JOHN 6; 11101.11 Y, No. - 'lid - North Fifth - street. B. I ,corner Tlfth r and skruee Arent., • • O. B oomer.Alermth•sztti Lomat streets: - Broad argot below Wal nut. - No. 1 4.1 9 Lombard street. - N..' W. earner, SLiteenth and Pins „South and Germantown Ro /edem a a d. •tr sit above * Stith: . , Clorper South Fourth and - Johnston Streets ' - B. W. corner Bateenth end • • ',Ogden stre.ta,, Wo, 260 North street. `-.- ' 11.. N. earner leievenih end Aden n streets. - No. 1040' North ' Trout S. W cornea - or - Seventh and Pinertmete Coster- street. below Mr- Month street , , , . 8. W. cosier and Coates streets. • 'N. "W - corner Tenth- end Shlnnen streets:' - ;No. 1215 Borah Irma r. P. OMITH, r. 0. rioaszi, ,W,. W. ,MATILIW.II, D. RIneRT, 9101#47'0413V1N, CIOUSTNIY, L MANN; s. A51.(411L1/11 LIN 111; KOLLAND, pkv.p,/I,ADDLIII, I. WAIGHTMAN 0. 0. Towing, ' a. /swan, IU11:HY1B8, N. WOOD, *011)118,' IliaLNllB, street. ' W corner Enciad and .Parrnkn streets Atorter Nineteenth 040 - • "- • 311,, Nin th .and lederal Monte, - ~..Tventy essonn -street 'ab. EIHUNTIR, TIM!. T. BLIfT, iLmcniur, - f-10.PF1122, Gotta • • V. W. 1/17NTIB • postai !teat above Bma -1141i. ,IftfIJANTOWi ••- Coiner of Path ant Wirt"- Camden, N J., 4 01111 119 "arob 'treat: ' West Ponadololdi r ißeth'd. )boyeithiverto road. I. L. RlOllB, elk. Rumpus, YABIOLL, 10tilt BARIUM. Tremont and Pine Grove, Psalm. • it a. rox, Saab:lL Perna, TOWNHUD, Meat Mater; PO WS , 970. L. 77QY18, :Mho ' iia - Olty, 111.1#1 . 4p.214447), N. J. o:Holerds, "' tioneos,,Jl,. J !OHM HOD _ DTI !Ul ii} .~\I: IMECHANICAt BAtelit 'll!*. , ecirter LTJ wad MI knits; Tkle cotalillalument b new in intimate operation day end • night,'.and ' reepeotrally Invited to *AU end lee tbaleiniiii main ntlneekzaating tot Um. Wm, Rhe undersion4 Wren **liberty of, saying that for 'Witty du yearn he has been 'a at biker-41,1 u spprentice. anittirs Jourauntan in ova of the drat touts in Souland owed, tneuirdye - tirr-during willelabluie be kasha& the opportunity of =eking ninny importunate arid "observing all theimproyernerdn whleh bava been made durlat_thatlmirbil: In thianataidlaluient, of ,whieh be bac now the 'win tkeiten*:, in addition to - thin:impiety labriveacing chinere he km now fatalities Of . =ray kinds not hers. WOlll ptillolllloC - flatus atirestraliced l 5 thepuretwee flour,none but die soundest ancbestiduill untie - used ; and he has no hesitationla saying that bread of - all • kinds-mu be de lireied;sinsprpaseed in virility rind Wingat lothatbuin thuoselliunyveniner • • • Nunlike Ls wide" the Areal made by the Mechanical . 541°17 )118, .. M " rfla Loyinwlipph. has-been ;sips pals it tterreinenuccuorint, before the meektsiery oper in, perfect working order E au reepentN . arksd, to •it , al an* -Alinititit4tii•-. - - ,• • .40Iilf G. MOUT 8410. Xrin 63 ' iUtbkI4I!QI9. ‘, , paiNoriiitrztze.L oilkivlPAol4lE, DE rINDGE EE'EEEAY, 'IE:AEOM Tnts PIIPIOTLY P 07.11 ADD Drr,7ti Van ,Wzgd, *tom see Itlneynrd of Moors Do Iron , go & I 'o . whose erste lies In the antra of the farfamed Champnine Megrim of France. It bra tamp, to been o .Lbeed to Inn beg lentos of Inland and, the • Continent, end hoe only very rexent y been intr. anted Into thin °wintry where tte Tare ,gnodlty, potnblood with: the moderate price it whloit It to,Olhred; So Aitiedy sokaviog a sate mess And lop tlerty tinkraoodented In the whole or the Pold 10 tbli elty bY ic DIAL:No. 20 Id &PIOT TRIM v. and pc tko locincdpal end by an the leadiog dealers rbroogbons cAO country. - 30. V. X-7.4ELTYGEET:77pI3"r; ffiroio of BROADWAY , and BROOM OTEIRIBTEL „ I,lo4,llttitiagri U - , PERLE" ".iam CHAMPAGNEH. •The ondareinued hate been sppotnied sole spots for _Ste United States ma C►nsda, for the pale of . the Oaampagne Wine' of Krum JACQUES GOUG & CO ,at Chalons.enr•Marne, Prance. We present their wines to the public under two brands, namely: TERLE :Tik; Piikvio?. mai ii of oN - r obits flavor and Crotty ‘Unt,le guarantied to compare favorably with any Win. in the American market. • RTI lea arm , Ostinet Mammas', of a bramilfal kribtoolimi wlrlalift' material to , the trios. rib irin• L aodriabtivily one of the Smart Oablnat clliaroaricaro ProdMiai Is Pram* and is tirade from rirsPoriof the olioliOat islactiona. - from Oolong exparlaihri, extensive poamaalona, and lino means of,thir iron knowit, bona. of dit9QUNII GOMM do op.,' and ttielr daterialmitioa to fttridal wtove-wbieb mootwith the approval of oorivrimora, we hal parsaaaral tkat a trial will falls earablish all WO claim for the airlelletroe of these whom. - • ',11 , ..41,0443Ecte; Ist 09L013107; Aoe la Buthtio NiW YORK. The sierra Wiese easy be bad at the followlart pm* Is Pitladelebla • • = • lour Giaasion /e' en ,2114 Walnut 41.1 , none H. Immo dc:00 , ,583 Dock It JIMMY WALIIIII4 281 °hest *last Jos. L'insins Ec. - no., 206 S. Front at., Wm. Mow. An &UAW. 4148. groat it.; • Tellll3oll, OCrenll. & 00 ,8t H. Second et.; Lawnoirk. Taanno, 807 Mar: tit At ; lgoirepos Siang, *Arne- Obentunt. and Broad OIL; Sims. Jr., Twelfth - sal Ohaltiint, Oa.; utiutax IfAirorado,` TOB Make? AV; Comm, air Brood and Walnut; ' '&:11rdsio020 Mount otieft; Woe L !MiLODOOC & MI South Third , at. . 1 41.1 a• Yt Wie totlowleuVotalat " . HaVell; COOOSOn't 07LOO1 & Co. ; WABOnIG VOX eloirofrA" Or.488;•13c. LAwsisos W CANu 4 sOLL' .; 00 • IlLiscousrul , 80411., , C. Matto; oni & , . lettinwicaln Chugs anb Chenitcata. ROBERT - SHOE S. N. ooa. ROMS AND ILION. EFFAIDIM I~ILADRLPUI&, WEOLIIBALN Wi.Uo474lBri, NAPTITFAOTI/Itaßl3 OF P,LINTEI IN OIL, DIVONTIRO 01 /mon ?LLTR WINDOW", GLASS 'DXAMIRX IN AMIXIOAt wixnow owls 101114 m • Cabinet-Mare. E'S,K „D' E:,t! .9,.T TprLARGABT itr.7113 UNION. ilehootg, ta,Oak, Wal • ast i so4.loai!ogsziy, of koadoome atylo .16.4 DaROVRD DIES EAON, 3N00 1 17.11170 IrE7TTON , 113, (erilqisoose to) T. HAMIVIITT. SOOTB 2 l nfßit BTREEIT .tie-em ARACAIBO COFFEE..-200 begs Coffee IV., - gaperloi Joat received. Per bark ardt . pr sail! low , by 'OIIIMLES _40.84.0c ' 180 WALNUr Street. . , • , MARAOMBO 4'74"J'"q'T!',4,1,114 1,49, Dry Bides) ' - SlReatts.alliqr be ISO WALNUT, iltrat. ILLIIKINATING COAL 01L—Mgratited 11 aquarto any tot brilliancy And durability, and to tata-ax.aloatve. Lbw Lubricating iloal 011 , . S. S. • WOBBAEDIE sotr, T iNNERIi 01L...L=7220 bbla ,§6ota and doe E. B. fIVHHABI ) : eon; ‘,44.4 • 1611 Anna Irk.rmiii. r 924 ESSE .-260 boXee - 'Herkimer County ILI IRMO* tO don sod for sat* by cv: MUM & iNLVJUIOSI Street, stexemi door Owe /scot. • $72 PHILADELPHIA;"THURSDAYS, JULY 21, 1859. H .l Rill' WARD BEECHER'S - „,. "STA . E, PAPERI"'t• . • • • Arlan 12 , 1_ - THE, •INDEPENDENT..-. • EVERY -WEER, karate:be riumerourrothar Contribute re toile (*lam* Mrs, B&BBIET EZZOBRII STOWE, Bey. O*o4/. OHRIVISIt t awi,JOIIN 01: WHITTLES. , Terms—Two bollats a year; Payable In advairerai,,' Published at No. "S BEFEbtart sTrunii, and rer rale by ALL NJWB A47INTII. * • SEOOND EDITION. NOW READY. 'f, • . , • , The gifted itithOiees, who has "eiintfibutee mush tilt Magasiae Literature, and ie ' - ' • • • nu reffeeted new lustre npon Western Llterattrra this, the most complete, aa leis the most beautiful, 04% , neutron of her pen. ' It le(Printin horn new type, on beautiful pryer, 4 , elegantly bonntt:' . • " • - It i one of thOse books Vfbloh oply women writsolo. can writs 'vie a doinestio covet 'bowing. musb Meld into fencrle•oh'raoPr, in all lta Meer shades. judge It to, be the work of • clever brain find a •gori: heart, Whose lnepirat , one and exphicrotes are found the family circle —Spriagfiad (Mass:) Iteloublita2 k of me eh an eh Merit , iii..eiderable hitt •Mil:etiould - Jar.gett io be karst rgort, skr,d as sit h'l lends the leadisztosipeat mach of the author++ intarsil. The ibl o inaltself II a typopeptiteal heauty.-4RepreW, 'Rosso& I -.. a N • • , • • This volume bigot up In Avery yakking meaner. Tllg, paper : and type ,of the clearest, and as traitor, the fair rintkotetke eyes Ai —New .13sr(foute - /kfeSsury: ,• _ This Is one if the hsed.omete vPleinee 'of the yeses sae on he typt graphical anpearanoe does great Suva to • the press of Ohio. It is a doineitte story, tbld with ooneteeteble,wbility, with s amorous ' trotoly-matbA chordate, ei and lomdeofs rathei litteniefy stated. Tar nosne Is laid In heir %Ragland; end: toe tale Arevektie . •• heart histories ++ that will hare quite a °eine tor ei large clue seadere.—Salem (Mass.) Hasetis • •.; , To saythat it le safest readible and interestiog work; 0 baying tee litilelof it. Its style" ii simple yet ele gant, and fall of incident and life: fifeintended se • severe thrust at,the folly and heartlessness ot, lotkable Me, and " points its moral " 'fn a way- that shows that t he authoress n'eans ell "elicit' e. Fa to able to *intim tall she means —Qssiacy 01,) IY ilinstotteo well ttie AIM tonsetrosnoto of pride, 11. nits ,devotion„ -to society and to, Istablon,--Centrai Chrfiban-fftriild Cisco:Ott. • ' • - r , , ' Woe 'oo s ulitthhiktbit oh yetodg 'etould raid Vale bekhh ostlllall to admire old Imitate. the' trot wotnia c os tjp)r ago pm* to ayold the drop,/ end letoked mete of he beaftlete rptrzy of ptiomml:--4rewb totid,, Whit.' • (Cr Cloptoe forwarded .10 *44 on of op, FOLLET, FOSTER, & 00., Punmain,. ootumbui,;Oh.4i LIPPINCOTT a 00., J. IL SMITH CO , SON EA.LE BY BOONAELLEBI3 GENWALW 171644.0 p , st attx NR W poOliSe; LOVE—CI/A*OlM) Translatod from M. Illoholot!rn refit 'pier The acpreoedected succeed et thti r ia#3book.lytbe celebrated ellehelet, le 'enr.prbiloc, ,Idition'ettlee adt . Lion locale/ for. 'Br bil,dafTlF3l,tro4bdutzthe°l4lo23r are N.:ordering It, in large tnaatttlee: - riateint , ' as me ?. Malta. 'PA» U. 3 RBOOLLECTIONS 07 Tali REVOLUTION. ' A Domestic; Diary of the antual crime whichocomed , among a colony of , the inhabitants 10 the neighborhood of New Pork and Long Island, during the %trot the American Re volution, together with Personal Domini. - arienersof Wastungton and i afayette, never beforeput- Halted. Belated: by the daughter of a clergymen, and prepared from records now in ,the poSsession of the family of the author If lifted by 0 111ney Barclay one of our most distinguished hiatorians remarks of title volume, that it is the only Watery r f p testa home wren*, pobluithd, sq. is 'nteresting OD OM a.count—sii previous works being more tri less atitiatioal and gine rat Tote romame mum alone at 1:0 egentios the occur rences and Incidents which existed in one neighbor hood. nil°, mord°, Prioted to antique. Price st. ' • , IX-ift..2tT.L3r+ - Sr A naW novel ,of beelines, an t wall drawn (Margo tam happily oupopired, sod palntad with great truth of dotati Ay 6i1112 UlippUla• gda volume, Limo., muslin; , Prtoo $1.26. These Doak' will be seat by mall, romea vain, t , " ley pert of the United !Masa on the receipt the price', by RUDD & tiARLDITON. Publishers wad B. oteellera. No. 180 Gesell street, near Droedwey, N. Y. feloll/tatf „ 80L$ imeoaras, KVABS', B BOOK LIST. -= ALL ILA • BOONS ere sold et the loweit prises end &band_ some gift le given with etch book et the time of pet; ewe: - TIMOTHY TITCOMB'S LBT EBBS to young people, Maxie sodluerned Prie $1 ITALY AND TU WAIt OP 1113§0,—By umlaute lulls de efarvertlttes prim. $1 16 - . TDB rowan aza OP TUB waive HOBAN, o• the long euretioti ramble ef r londOn Clerk, by the author or Tom Br trot, °obool Dot I Prle. Pl. TDB BAND 'DIMWIT 'THII REAM', or the Lire Trial• of Yews L nick', by T li 'Arthur. Primo $l. TUB r•IPB OP OBNIIBAL GABBIfALD/, w•ittao by blroeelf ; troustat d by. Theodore Dwight Prime Pl. PAiIIIOr4ABLE DIADIPLTION • Pr us $.1.. AU the Welt Publlostlons eon be 'maid at !MANZ'S Girt Book btore No. 480 MIPS 'NUT otr•et • RUBIES r_HA St BB EtS 'P EritaltOtiTSD/A, ILI (To be In eighty monthly' parts. .5 cents sash) Ana arty melted to any ad tem by • JOHN lea/PAOLA N. Agent Tor APMITOIVII Otator..M., ARO AOEHOPE L, OH Ur adore titx.h 3yl4.tf n * A t* Mailed fr e wbren—lf 'AM In al•ana NEW BOOKS. L OTRAVREIT FORWARD; or. Walking in th. 1414 t. Astor. for oohootp. mine 011 ow, Br. Lucy , a .aaartal , author of ,inskt Amy? , &a ,A 0. lfono Illnatrited 'lb cents, BANK+R LAB; or, !teat for the Weary. Illustra ted.' 45-ienta" Tab ...NOVI. OF MN lON oLERG ott4 other etoriei. I.lostratiog peat morel truths. Deeloned• chiefly for the Young. Br lour Todd. remo. 76 cents BLEND TODD or The Loot Toned. 16rao. 60 cents Ramma AND MUGU; or, Self Ideatery. Bi Douala, /7 .to. IBmo 76 oeme THE WA.1113 Or VII B 0408; or, 'toffee of the Btrthmle of Turk mod beneaster. By J. B. Yager. 11. InesVated: , 16 no 80oeu4. TDllllO'2l2l ON TUN iffORTIMEINT. Timesteted. By eillmen. 12mo. 60 cleats. , Poi sale by #1.41.1A1d B. k. Atiansu tutivreal, fjlR No 606 01f lITTNUT Street AN 'EARNEST AND THOUGHTFUL BOAR. 'I,BOITIRI6B ' FIRBi TWO VIEIONB OB TUB BO')K OF DANIBL. By Rey. WORAiII Newton. 12mo 76 cants. • , , ifOrrogit 07 mil MIMI There. is a warmth of tone anal feeling about this hook which will make It not unsocepteble to • large class of readers. Its practical earbitetnella and sere ranee of spirit are high recommendations —Banner of the Gross - • • - - The yohlme *outsize einem, and earnest expositions of prophesies: , The author's views are, in some ra soeste, ' pec u liar , and ate worthy of attention and con. ilideration —Amerman Rresbyterish. ' The book fe tie product of a calm, thoughtful, ear. neat. and reverential mt. d, and may be emigrated with profit —Presbyterian Banner and Advocate. Just published by Wildh.lAld 0. & ALFRED KARTLEN, j 025 ' No. 600 CHESTNUT Street. fLD BOOKS-OLD BOOKS-OLD BOOKS. The andernigoed rites that be has frequentiy for sale books printed between the yearn 1470 and 16' 1 0; early editions of the fathers of the Reformers and of the Puritan Divicee; In lm, Branton, Lyttleton. Prif— fandorfff Grotins, Doers; Coke, lisle, the Year Hooke, Reports, he., are cilia, to be found upon his shelves; ~oyoleoedise, Olassio Authors, History, Poetf.ri PinioSOPb.r. boience, Political Boonomy. Government, arobiteisture, Natural History. Vestiges upon these sad other kindred subjects are being eostinually dealt In 'by him. Books, an largo and small quantities. pu - chased at the Oastoin-Home avenue Bookstall, 011B8T BHP Street, stove fourth, Philsdalchts. mylB.om JOHN CAMPBELL. DURYEA'S GLEN COVE STARCH NANBPAOTOBY, GUNN OOvE, LONG DILAND, CELEBRATED For 11l parity, whiteness, and strength, and admitted by both the trade and the public to be vastly superior to any other STARCH now in market. As an evidence of which, It has taken the premium at the Bair of the American institute, New York city; New York State Fair; New Jamey State !air, tad many other pleura where it has been exhibited. Owing t, the purity of this article. it Is particularly adapted to fabrics of the !Meet possible textrtre, it being free from all those sub summer an common to Starch in ordinary ago that are 'de trot re to artiolos to which they are applied. For all damage arising from diserepavoles between the real and alleged merits of this STAMM we will in dininify partied favoring to; with their Ordeal. OLIN,OOYR ,Idatill/AOTORIIee 00. JOSEPH. H. TAYLOR, - 104. WALNUT STREET, •WHOLESALE AGENT FOR PHILADELPHIA. WILLIAM DURYEA; General Agent, ,168 POLTON,STR3OT, NEW YOKE. aPSS inwtsetiwtly2o 710 WESTERN AND SOUTHERN MPH.. '"0 HAN T 8 —A large steak of Manila and Jute Rope. ' minutaatued and for /ale at the lowest New Yoik "ptlelei by ...svEsvma. RITLEIR k CO , kle 211 North itrstst Octet s ,stid tt.l Sort& Wharves - • New ,lttblicationu. M A 1-IISPiOIt3I3I3. 1 4 - A 'PALS 011 'AUDI BY ROBBLZ.A RTOB One Voluble, 12nio. 414 pp. 2,rios $1 A - NATIVE• OF THE, WEST;_ NOTIOES OF THE PRICES E4t „trtss. THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1859. Charles Pelham Villiers. By way of atonement, we presume, to the Earl of CLAZENDON, who bas no office in the new British Ministry, the Presidency of the. Board of 'Trade, with a seat in the Cabinet, declined by Mr. &newt, has been offered to and accepted by Mi. 0. P. Vumsas;the noble Earl's brother. As usual, the mendacious Morning rldver‘tiser'announces that Mr. Con- DEN Was ,about to be. appointed .Governor 'General of Canada—about the last place he would accept, Jost now, as it 'would take him out et , England I Borne tbirtY•two years ago, a young gentle- man of aristobratioai appearance and.bearing presented hiniself in the,old .904.7wainsootted dinin•hnii of P)OP.ThYst,4i' 'ot" legit tcosis•written for hitni.according to immemo rial oustom,i7 thii butler of that time•honored Instinition—and 'having: previously sent in -a certificate that he had eaten a certain number of dinners in the above-mentioned hall—was then and there declared ,by the Betichtke to have completed his Jegal.educatlon.:,and was thereupon. c , calied to the bir.". The young_ gentleman invitation was then in his Itventy fifth year, but his light figura ; bright bine:eyes, smooth face:iced , goldon ringlets might have wirrentedlhe belief that he was some years younger. In all probability the Benchers may have felt some little surprise at the appearance of the noWly-tidmitted counsellor. For at that time, 31117, PIARIGICB PatuAlt 'Pumas vas, in all , respects, "a young man about town." Ho had very little money in his pocket, and was chiefly: distinguished, at 'the time, for' the' grace and peraeveronee'of his• waltzing.- ito vas noted; also, rot' the elegance of his-at• fire—no man bad more taste In vests,: neck- tles, gloves, and boots—and he rivalled .15'Onser himself in We general make-4. To look at him you would say at once that young Vmmans was too much of an emuleiteever to riao abovo the condition - of a 11oud•stree lounger and a habilui of Almaok's. B e bad what is aristobratically called "good blood" in' his veins, being the second eon of .a younger branch of the,Ordatmanou The, Hon: Gamma Vmaraas, his father; had only,a scanty portion ho, commence with, and -left :,very limited means; to his three sons. :Cinemas, the eldest; born'in-1800 took to the diplomatic ' , line, in which 'be 'showed marked ability. •ClaltLaft beetune'a barrister, 4 we hive Seen. lifitivriarr' entered the Church, There Mast have been considerable talent ,arnong'them, for the eldest, when oily a coin , : money, rose by merit alone to be British ;4,m- bassador at Madrid. The death of his cousin, :without children,-elevated him to the garidom of Clarendon, and, after being' a Cabinet Mi- nister under Lordlena SIIII9ELL, he tilled the office of Viceroy of Ireland: during the iron. blotto period of 1848, and was Lord FAI, DIERBTON'S Foreign Secretary .since Febru ary, 1858. Cannata!, Who. has distinguished himself' in Parliament as , an excellent debater;' was Judge Advocate general from December,' 1852, until 'March, 1858. Mosntou (made 'Bishop of Carlisle in 1855, through his elder-. bother's influence,) the one of the most pular preachers and useful parochial eler- Tien - y:4ll . Eizi; 'born hi :1802; walAdd cated atUambridge University, where 'anguished himeelf rather by his eloquence at the Upton Debating Club, t where he succeed ed MAILMAY and preceded' Blinwsa,) than by any great' kneirriedge of science and clas sics. 'He graduated as Master of Arts in 1827, the year he was called to the bar. For 'some Sears be appeared on the Western Cir cuit in the ungenial character of a briefiess barrister. He was a great favorite among his be-gowned and be-wigged brethren, and was the life, and soul of the bar-mess. He bad lively spirits, keen wit, sportive eloquence, excellent temper: and—few briefs. B is seni ors were as much his friends as his more im mediate contemporaries, and he was pardon- Italy a pet, while only a lawrstudent, with the late I t orrl GrvfOrtD, successively Chief Justine of the Common Plese and Master of the Reds. When Lord. LYNDHURST was appointed to . the Rolls, on GIFFORD'S death, he also formed a strong liking for Mr. Vraragas. Everyone who, knew him was rejoiced when it was an winced that their somewhat pococurante friend was provided for by being made one of the two Examiners (of witnesses) in Ohance ry,Nrith a salary of '£l 600 a year As it was a dfe.appointment, his pecuniary olrenmstan ces'have been easy: Nevertheless, 11r. Vn- Marta , has always been rather tt hard tip," from his carelessness about money-m tams. . Mt: Vtualas was very mach out of place in his valuable office, the duties of which in. .volve the very scantiest demands , upon the intellect. Even the clerkly virtue of punctu ality ho 'was very delleient in. He had a kback, which continued with him during his twenty, years of offias, of making appoint- . mante r z-and not keeping them. In th is ho ex hibited a strong contrast to the other Exami ner, Mr. PLONEN., a very hardworking and pains-takieg man. To the surprise of his frienda,Mr..Vibmsao entered Parliament in 1885. At that time be was in his thirty-se cond year, conscious of possessing very great abilities, and painfully aware that very few persona gave him credit for having the caps- city to rise out of the undistinguished rank of mere men of ton. He was elected to Parliament by the, bo rough of Wolverhampton, then:recently cre ated by - the Reform Bill. Row ever such a smoky', murky, dirty, muddy town could have chosen Such a beat; garcon as CH4LBLEAlrixmas was a matter of senora! surprise, The fact is readily explainable. He had been one of the Comittssfoners of Inquiry into:the operathati of the Peon Laws, only a little before his ap pointment to the Chancery Examinership, and had exhibited so much shrewdness and saga- City during his visit to Wolverhampton that the new borough very gladly accepted him as one of its representatives. This connection with Wolverhampton has continued without interruption to this day. In 1847, after the Corn Law Repeal, South Lancashire - also chose him, but he elected to retain his seat for Wolverhampton. Mr. VamEas was in Parliament for some time before be made any effort to distinguish himself as a speaker. His 'votes were invaria bly liberal, and the Ballot has found him one of its constant supporters. The Anti-horn League, formed at Manchester, in 1841, has generally received the credit of having in duced‘the late Sir BODE= PEEL to remove the heavy taxation on food, in 'IB4G. PEEL himself, after the Repeal of the obnoxious bread tax, declared that Mr. COBDEN was the champion who bad won the battle. COBDEN and WILSON (Of Manchester) respectively re ceived large money-testimonials from the pub lie fol- -- their services in this cause, but Cl/MILBS PELHAM VILLIREO was the actual pioneer. From 1838 down to 1846, be made an annual motion for the Repeal of the Corn Laws, and made out a strong case, year after year, with eloquence, ardor, and a wonder fully clear array of statistical matter. It be came emphatically his question, and his ma nagement of it, showing him a man of tact and good sense as well as an orator, establish ed a high character for him, as a statesman. He has, not cared to place himself before the country, as an ambitious Parliamentary speak er, but occasionally bas been tempted into the arena—Chiefly in reply—and always 'with success: In December, 1852, when Lord ABM: MEN formed his Administration, in succession to that of Lord DERBY, he appointed Mr. Via. assns to the office of ImigP-Advocate General, the salary of which is £2 000 a year; where upon he resigned his Examinerabip When the Palmerston Ministry quitted office, in March, 1858, Mr. VULIERS else resigned. He was overlooko4 on the recent,reconetructlon of the Kialstry. Els appointment now is evidently Ordtioad a doilble to pa)," for it will please his lordly brother, and•it puts another Freetrader into the Ministry, instead of 00$DEIN, who declined office. , • . • Mr. VLIZABES has long since abandondd,the dandyism .which• distinguished him in his youth,. Indeed, he has somewhat mu into the oppesite , extreme, and may now be 'pallid careless% his dress,and general make -tip.. In appearance, he continues singularly youth* At the age of fifty-seven, he does not lo* more than forty. He is tall and slight, frenh 2 , complexioned, easy •in his manners, (a! more shy, perhaps,-than public men timidly are,) and is unmarried, albeit a, groat sdailrer, •of•the fair sex, As a Privy Couneillor;he, has borne tho•proflx. of ,c! Right „Honorahle to hianameoince djis4, • Although his manners Md ars, ataeratical, his: ;opinions • are very •Rheral r—they have, been , so• all his life t JB-a man of:ittint, conzmon ?- Sense; „nuAeribt,e4Assikeityi, lie" 'integrityp; of great: „personal : . hiter. What he means homill say, and what he Rya he will adhere' to.• The only drawback Which ire anticipate is that arising from ,Mr., Yu rawa'a. notorious • disinclination for regular routine walk. 'By_ fits - and starts, he is indus trious. •If he, will only bring steady applica tion to the performance: of, , hiti•highrduthis,he will (like Captain Cattle's watch) be cc elialied, by few-and surpassed•by.none.l', „ firoticef( of-New, Books. - ,We have two, volumes of 'Fames, both of, local, lesue, The first, by Blitert Brerithry,, beard : tied "The Hemlock Tree, and „he Legende," 'At ratteville, in the Stets of New :York; not finfroM' CoPperst twn, , the , Preface tells us,"once stood Muni floe old hemlock trams. ' After an absence of itlew weeks, the author found reset of Ihtim. failed, and an envious Out of-the sae into the oldest of there wh,oh from' its size and beauty, had, 'remanded hie admiration, while its antiquity- bad : won hie 'veneration. He wrote_ :several Maws, of a - path tion from the ,tree,,whieh, were_ Pahlish , d, in the local journal , where thei mot the eye of Mr. Whit. ford, who owned'the tree. The result was that "the tree was presented 't6 the poet. With a rod of land on 'every eldeif it. , When ' the authdr left that part of thet:MOW, tWenty years ago, he left the inhabitants as trastees sad guardians. of the ' tree, and believes that they still preserve IV In like manner, when the mad grand,unole of Byron, • thepoet, was about patting down the famous oak, just at theentranoe into the'groa,ndanf, Nerrstead Abbey, the inhabltantent Nottitighain, in the.vi• deity, purchased the tree &dui hint,'with as much tend as It overehado wed, and attends -green and glorious ter this day. Thus, too;41116 etmitir oc-, °wince suggested Thomas Campbeire Pititionnf the Beech Tree, which supplied hir: Morris with the idea and even some of- the language'of " Woodman, films that Tree." to which the bean- tiful music of Mr. Maury Angell gave popularity. Mr. BtaChary, after his petition bad rescued the tree, made it the medium d relating come fattiest legends of " ' , What. tontarles ago, befell The Indian ma—their love their hate ;v- • . Their outrage, ,w edom, hapless fats: Ink: manner': onitonte way of life, • . = Their heating feats, their deadly strife; Them vatuse,!' , • • . . , atolls relates these etories,, in oritosyllabio verse, which he who Inns may read. It is not poetry of a high order, but it is imbued with poetic feel -14, and; irhether In proSe or verve, we have Tart ly met with so reliant an animation or the Indian Character: No publisher's name) on the title• Page, so we aro 'enable V> indieste where this unpretend leg and interessing,vol um* is to be purohtu3ed. The other volume, published by Hazard of Chest. nut -street, is !;The Wanderer and other Poems," b . Alkirifidioates it olaismite and friend."" The prinolpal poem; front' which the booklalies its name, is in the speceertan stanza; 'theheio is Slott of native Child. Harold ; and tale toeasry Of the West,'through Which he travels, is described very forcibly and beautifully. Mr. - Judson, indeed, itsa studied Byron . so mush that he has Caught not only his, manner, bat his mode of expression. Here is a stanza about Ni agara, in which the imitation is obvious. He that Dal sat upon the oataraot , s verge— Even on the preellifeels pendent brow— O'orhnog in downward g. ea upon theenrge, Hath felt toll many a, 'mint thrill, I trove, And wlsheth eat to dare ouch dangera more. Par there lay strewn huge, titanic pl'es Or rplint.re4 riche 0e 4 e,ges : eenturiee grow, From whose jagi'd sides the to*tlinue streem Al round' their etotm•wo'Yz bane its.waye tam:Canons Dolls. Byron, however, would have esobewed such rhymes as piles and roma:. The Mans% oompenllng, • By Mayen 1 It lea fearful slake. to tee And hear the olath or elemental war, reminds ne too mnoh of Byron's, By Mayon! It 1* a splendid sight to sem i Nor one who bath no I &Ind. no brother there There are many similar ooinoidenoes, which truly are copies of Byron's language. "The Pro gross of Freedom, in terzaiYitna,lB as muah better than "The Wanderer" at the tedious poem on "Moral Suction" Is inferior .to it "The Age of Gold" Is a didactic poem of no small merit. Bat, on the whole, the Misoelleneous Poems, prima. pally lyrical and sonnets, are sufficiently good to justify their ollection into a volume. Edmond About, one of the moat distinguished among modern French literati, who deals with foot and notion alike sucoessfully—writing travels and plays history and poetry,-novels and satire, With equal brilliancy, and is yet not, mush More than thirty years old—lately published a volume upon "The Emma Q sedition," a translation of whlob has putt been renioduced by the 'Appleton; New, York. In the Monsteur, last year,' first ap- peared Ida bitter attacks upon the Papaoy, its Head, Its servants, and its system. ' The Pontifical Governnient complained - that he was too out spoken.. So, be was compelled to , direct:Ulnae writing in the Moniteur. He rewrote, extended, and published hie letters.--not in Paris, but in Brussels, saying: "If I have sought a publisher in Brussels, while I bad an excellent one In Paris, it is not because I feel any alarm on the soore of the regulations of our press, or the severity of our tribunals. But as the Pope has a long arm, whioh Might reach me In Prange, I have gone a little out of the way to tell him the plain tratbe,cent - tined in Clete pages." This apology says little for the protcetive power of the Preach Government. The book is light and even Haply in tone, but it con tains ,eevere satire, and 'heavy accusations. , M. About spares no person in Rome, however exalted the sank. His sketch of Cardinal Autottelli, Prime Minister to Piro IX, opens thus saucily: "He was born in a den of thieves. His native place, Sonata°, is more oelebrated in the history of crime than all Aroadia in the annals of virtue. This nest of vultures was bidden in the southern mountaini towards the Neapolitan frontier. Roads, impraetteablo to mounted dragoons, winding through brakes. and thickets; forests, impenetra% hie to the rtranger ; deep ravines and gloomy ca verns, all combined to form a most desirable land. Inane, for the convenience of crime The binases of itonnino, old, ill-built, flung pall-mell'one anon the other, and almost uninhabitable by human be ings, were, in point of foot. little else than depot!! of pillage and magazines of rapine. The popula tion, alert and vigorous, had for many years peso. tisedarcued robbery and depredation, and gained its livelihood at the point of the carbine. New born infants inhaled contempt of the law with the mountain air, and drew in the love of others' goods with their mothers' milk. - Almost as soon as they could walk they assumed the oiOpois or mocassins of untanned leather, with which they learned to run fearlessly along the - edge of the 'giddiest moult. taiWpreolpiees When they had acquired the art of .pursuing and escaping, of taking without being taken, the knowledge of the different coins, the arithmetic of the distribution of booty, add the prprincples of the rights -of nations as they are praot i sed among the Apaohea or Commixes. their education was deemed complete. They required no teaching to learn bow to apply the spoil, and to satisfy their passions in thwhonr of victory.. In the year of grace 18011, this sensual, brutal, impi ous, soperatitions, ignorant. and cunning me en dowed Italy with a little mountaineer, known as Giacomo Antonelli." [From the Anthraelte Gazette MA. EntrOu A. paragraph has lately appeared in several of the papers, headed t , Important Sur gioal Operation, " said to have beau performed, in Tune last, by D r. Charles H Hoffman, of Heading, in whioh he removed two ovarian tumors from a lady living in Hazleton. Having been present, by invitation, at the ope ration alluded to, I do not feel iletiosed to allow Dr Hoffman to TeOttiVe oredit for an operation that he really did not perform, and with whlou he bad nothing more to do than myself and other medical men who were present, through the courtesy of Dr Wytkos. To Dr J. H Wyther, of Jeansvllle, the credit Is due, whatever It may be, of performing the opera tion, and to him alone—and how Dr. Hoffman; NAVA Onnnae.,—Commander T. A. BMA under the oiroutnstanoes, oan for,hlmself-- has been detaobed from ordnance duty at Cold and I only judge that he doer, from the feat that ;N. end Commander H. H. Bell ordered I have been informed that It was first published In . P" w' one of the Reading papers.--I cannot underetend. to relieve him, Passed Midshipman Wm. B. This kind of professional piracy in beaming Evert has been ordered as acting-Master of the rather too common, lately, and I could not. eon- - Fulton, and Passed Midshipman R. R. Valises to slstently, let it eras on this occasion—whether the °minder. Vent Wm. R. Fitzgerald has been originating with Dr. Hoffman, or his Invade— detached from the Belief, and ordered to the wit - 6mA rebuke. Sumpter. Lieut. Henry Wilson has been ordered It may be proper to add; in this conneotion, that the subject of the operation died on the film day to the Relief. • Vent Jonathan Young has been after the operation. W: W. McGowan, 21. D. • ordered to the Observatory, Two'CF,NTS. A.-i 3 troll Through -Laurel Hill—NO. 7. . - 7 - Dr ; enavennup, , ; • ' ~. -Although the oldest- of our cemeteries, itiorel Hillis stilt a young Institution. lndeed. , [ll Is only relatively vesting, that - , we have any old install thins hi ale country stall, :NotWithstatling the, recent origin of this' etniterilhoWever-.lhavlng bninsfriindeid Within'mennory oribii yinuiger half of the Present gineratioullthimi bison in Walston*e long enough to demonstrate with Painful eartabati [ the instability-of Ininien alTairs...A. fa* Insist:teen [ have occurred, bridal whole families, the,b.ad a I of whioh , were deeply interested ; in :the, Laurel, I nth project at- its 'ClineMeDOeitll3l% bare Paserid..l enthVgfrom the scone of, motion, leaving' not a I Toldjgabehind them to tell tbs . :litre - flier that such i faiiiiirni'air'existed, Gut' the elmple 'Mementoes liit are beisO r butninttlyirisirved to their memory bylitheiltandi.",' -' v ' '- ' '-[. ; -- One striking Cue of%this kind we find in- the one of brothers, who, mere thamtwental 'eau ego, wereyery largely engaged In menu tile affsirif its this oily. Thomonetaryrernsiotts of 4837 over. whelmed Ora, ant didnores of others, in !anemia .ntitt...,..lrekot ;kr:widen etrannikilig,thi, hi hut ' 0 / ' ; o 44io E 7hi4 ali ta a44o llll o l 4 l oo - ,:114k: -'" li" a' th. 'ln - airOtii' atiftieel`wi -- h - to !Mimi' , tie , eno . ns ~ • r. - . ieneitive,_mindi, are evid - iiiiiiihir,ii ilinteAO f Cautbitloti, and . Wei 'iblithiStini7.4qetijtateensg : I hilly: NWT:" In the:sestireatlin ?of thou who knew rtimin best, -- they botitNited,:hrekeinhtted: The epitaph, doss not apPeAr,stposi Altar: Conial / , but alai! could' totouldering.aelos *Disk Sl44Sit how souls from °lay:are rent...hignef,'nuttneradt, AO Ainsnollied by - ,6stlAir,r 44 011 t",1 1 °4 th a t from multitudes of tombs wontecorne .- thei claylT bOrn verdict, "Died ort - bioititi heart I' 1 . Cali 1 'the diseases on our weekly lists : by Whatevirrlnareie we choose: - blasted hopes and luerated love i oloini a proportion - of vlatimo whioh the'judgmott i t•firitt rill-alone reveal./ The dutietartsgestedbYphies.' reflootioptaie, heweyor,;tin to tite',dood,b t,fer, 1 the living. The two brotbers, haie .paosedy from ! ,tbe scone,alkeincia then their, i'auttiliiiit, home Slams:: peered. l . l o 'het!'the, Laurel Bill company was Mid oillanizei thei - moatifeitted a, genieroits iterest In the m ovement;' and nor, thet‘they are gone with none' of their kindred left to 'Ono for the 'spot in -- 4111ot Ahoy. shiee;:the'presldent of the ethniany, by his own dtreotion,keeps their graveslninen' and excellent repair ; and' we cannot but!lo,h , l open this humane regard the' otherwise Mi. oared.for, as a - beautiful' einresdon'if his 'town ! , liar: adaptoduese for 'the'nO-leas ' honetrable t h an reeponsiblei poet be -.. '', 'r :' '.! -.! ,4 .,... A short'distadoe from the spot last. referr to; - I le Abe, restingiplace l of ; the ,lets .Entry , oth.-[ marked by a modest.tomb.: Mr: T. was, w motive,. of the, State ,of .Delaware„ and was frequently I heard to say that he never had nyear's editelitlon: Lake many other* in the history Of Mir young re.; Public; be olonqriered titer. diglialties Whioh heiet him lijr his own tintniriamilled eneiglisit Andiowen, with good natural Potrisre,;(be rose**, hot° Able} distinction In his prbfession'is ii drtigglit—it usi .1 nets 1p Whichhe wee for'xcianylearartenglog d In Market street--,and In h 1c.. de1 .. .w 1 1 4 ..*4 0 "11 BC one of the • most useful "Andmplisient inembqrs'of 1 - iounolls.. We Alfa , beautifully exemplified; the, 'wisdom of bind's:4,pm in te grity, ina tioefu(nels as a Prirate r oitis en, 'rather' than ' ' , ginning 1 the , empty honors of Tilsce foi 'the Mire sake' of pad. don.' Mi. Troth died `greatly •Soteiied for his sterling Worth •al 's' mint by it large oircte of friends. . ..--. - . Among the departed Amiga residents of Pills delphia, who are 'reeolleoted rwith great reeipeet by many of oar people; the name of Chhrles Verbs deserves espeoiatly.to ble enumerated. ) . .111. graoefal monument' will be ;recognised • on, the right of the °amino way, a short di/games frill! the entrance. He was one ofpar most enterprising importing Merchants. Besides possessing niony, rare sooial qualities, to Mr. Vesin belongs the dis tinotion of having in his day stood at the bead of chess-players in Philadelphia. As is anivertaliy the ease with those who ter.; skilled' in this mlinly game, he loved it postionately t and at the Little Atha:imam coterie Of the - lovers •of these toirns. meats, Mr. :V. TM an almost oougtent Viegter, aith r as s.eot t o „ • game.. , - -• ' Nor. as a • well-known patron of the " pre servative,"att timid the name of Adatic Waldie here be omitted. The neat, upright marble, altieb marks his tomb; is iooied "upon with Intel! eat interest - by many a pasSer;by. lefir. -, ,Waldie as a' celebrated periodical - publisher, and, by nia of our citizens, will long be remembered as the ub Usher of " Waidie's Select Simulating Li te r y," a very popular work. Those who perused the: lat. ter will not willingly paiatile tomb withont iitop ping to read its modest ineoription. de amen, he was Weenie& by all; was pre-eminently' popular among lacountrymen, in' confirmation of which It may be added that be wee for many yeari the veined president of_ the Srotelt Thistle Sociaty;. • In-the Watherdl family lot—to the monument in which alltmion has alree4been made—reipose the remains of the late .Tahrt•Price Wetherill. By those who have reason to know, it is said that no. event has over occurred at Laurel Bill which ex- - ailed- more wonder than the enormous - cor,tege which followed to the tomb the body - of this Wsa fal and highly esteemed citizen. So great wetthe number of carriages on this occasion , filled itb dignitaries of the oily, and the Atnerous friend. of the deceased, that not half of them Could be acocmmodated with room-in alt the spacious ioadr of the omnetery. Mr. Wethetill was for yeire a controlling mind in our • Connoile,and wielded ate in fluenoe—almost always in the popular direotion— which will long be practically felt in various chan nels of our municipal mivernment. 1 • Pining from the summer-house, toward 1 the Pepper property, we encounter a handsome plinth commemorative of the late Director of the United States Mint. Profcaser,E M. Patterson (uncle te the late Dr. Blisha Kent I{ t•ne), whose suavity of manners, attainments, in Menem, and essellstuo, es a man, are well known ;to most of oni older elitism. Before concluding these sketches, :it n the writer's purpose to devote a brief notice to the tries which adorn this cemetery—a glorious feu tune they are—but there is a tree -in the imme diate vicinity of the Patterson tomb which de serves attention here. It is a superb and luxuriant specimen of the Magnolia Maorephylle, towering, in its oriental majesty, above the surrounding scene. This splendid tree has an immense lest and bears a rower of exquisite beauty. Theis is probably no tree in this °Smite at one.* beau. tiful and eomitela neglected. It is entirely herdy and at no distant day ii destined' to:heoome: the chief ornament of every planter's pride. i In the section designated the Shrubbery mar be seen a ouriosity: ha monumental. arehiteoure The inscription upon -it—wldeli the reader will pardon my net transcribing for these eolumnair written in Egyptian': and was, I am informed composed by the late (Norge R. Gliddon, theeru dite archreologlet, of "Types' of Mankind" noto riety, for a no less'eMinetit 'poison than the' late Wm. Swain, disooverer, author, and patentee of the celebrated " panacea" which hears his name It would, of course, be in bed taste to quarrelwith the seleotion of any language for a monumental inscription. The, seleotian in this ease has the 1 merit of novelty, to say,the least, and for attract ' ing attention could hardly be excelled." - ' One of 'the most Artletlo pieces of monumental statuary in this division of Laurel Hill remains yet unnoticed. It ie centrally located, and adorns the lot of Mr. Matthew I'. Miller, the statue being commemorative of hie little son, who from fall ' health was laid cold in death _by a fatal attack of croup, of but three hours' duration. Enclosed in a shrine, regumbent upon an altar-tomb, iti the marble figure of this child, so life-like, that in viewing it you feel that you are looking upon-a' work of art. The 'production of this beautiful piece of statuary was under the following circum stances: The child having deceased,' it.may be said in perfect health, retained for some hours the apparent, freshness and embonpoint of life itself and, while in this condition, the celebrated sculp tor Pedrloh (who afterward became the sculptor to the Emperor of Brazil) was milled in, and took a perfect model cast from the child, from which he chiselled what is certainly one of the most artistic works of its class in the entire grounds. , A large number of points and persons have now bean referred to. To have devoted a line to every name that meets the eye of the visitor who takes a systematic stroll through Laurel Sid would have greatly exceeded the contemplated Brats of these sketches, if indeed it would not have or hansted the reader's pattenoe. In accordance with the design expressed in commencing them; such features, whether of historic interest or monumen tal merit, as seemed most worthy of Reties, the writer has endeavored , briefly to. present; not doubting, however, that there ere others, perhaps many equally-worthy, that have crimped hie no. tine. If such omission( have marred, this, I trust, will be granted; that they are due • to an oversight which tinder the circumstances seems almost turaviddable. The reader will next be in tradatied to - Sourit Laurel Bill. • - • NOTIOT TO cosauroxamms. .Forrespowl eats far IcTsirTssion !in ylen, as. Wei no -• ivory otomussibtow-aast be asoospapled bltba neap or the vs*: deleellteeiseetees Ls "thoeef; ciei otit i :0 01 1- A*4. 16 /01 be nrtttyt - , - - . *lda be ipastly oblitid to geatlamalis Palmy 14 Too* and riVpie-filia* ;for flying ika ,ostroot sa ve of tk.4ar is jy ty,j•r*Olii Paint** 0 0, r*.560.41 . 0 Oki six*, ti. liaise • °4 ° ,ll ad I•._ t i all 3okolofialanooffaitkoo will'llobateNst* t° ii•D4Llrooder:'z :6(EIVER At ' ji 'T A*B• - - -.ladaitiash a r- Paitisiitire'w-'lltsw."—ln a remit marlin Molotov Walivildbiteremarkable - preemies - 0 titled Ati- ie,gentletitall" d ' on board the nofortanatearatti,f.Thirgentlesiten ootaprising the Male*ettlati:etiltei Partzhadweetilved. themselves in wirliwileliriallaitteea to taki.ishargeot,the riots etamausiery deperbleate ia- Qaa gentlenimi, was Oaf de.ews)i saliao t a. er was qedrteroiestet; ati&W ; gialat_talli 'Osman was 'master of- the 'Ask ~, A hneeeted a large bowl of that Weir, come on deck- to pipe alrhstidesimee to laiititbe, - when *beteg etreekthe wieke and-l'eareatilod, portl ally uliolt- A e r. , be a nt. , eildkes lll ol.--Patatizgors ) crews luggage, lunsh baskets", ete• into the lee tan pete r amid the shrbilti( - ortlmld tromp and :ohitdrett. Notwlthstaiviant thi monimiteryperit; ens Ideal gave evldenee of. the Treitoisitnitei roller passion and the most presence" of mind. " Good Heaven !" said he, " there goes the whole pail of punch. The .rtelve-eepressioa sewed Fume to gated thereby:4ot theeeisA*o him than any anisette-their courage could" have tone. _ ... Tait GcsOprem7 -- latalittrltilhtt - org an of pwiPli7se 'ibe,Weil'ead,Bouth, males Ih. .following' Waage .dedisrani*,:-"AkzegBrdil _ths liperieh, meta. IrsheiledV se, ea the Widahship -;.!Fust Fatiniz DlVllEriOarta.=.4nilgO3Feed :iraf,-`4 the Wort or 3114,Yorki,deeided, in the 'Game :efiSatiliiiduiell/ ...Ferretti ea. Edwin Forfeit,' to 'trant..:the,-rogiost* %Astute of re. fere* Lai's; matt, 'defendant nark albriony at the rat. d# 8200 Or Wne; Istuftsl,sofr foil/la/Win aounsel•tuasaiokie l i Citizen lfr a nifeid , fiirfailliii,,fraalber' torteeoiinty, P.., issoutal GiolgWitaifenbtadif; furineflii &eon, alaft ieltaiiiicuttiaiteli,ilvida.Voutlhirty:foitr years, eatordittieu itilitldt-YOngrridaye_wtfrikr by bengutg blingolCnitVainhaln troteli rafter In hielberz. - A 'Efienkariirl WI% cleaves, S4sifitinif' WM: 1.01#3, - fals ludo:J*4l'lo:dt before , jaitioa tbiersai *hi) `elhot-igitlds wife Irea hi- the hititttot • the Inootabiesdag 717-- torcesin, Grernatii;.tvellAtmn is Pater. eon,A , r J.. Eniebeiti 'by.itus"Vnuoian Government, -.`Teltrialeii"geioan?l Piteintaien de -livered op to fatal& siOitude Within the last fair - Tsar Hen.' Gfeerik 13, ez bpd the Melt: Ji t ,,rlo Ater fahtlit titititia4ifsil eat terprios,' Mut t the -dther-day, wero. d worea ,- . l a - wst-letwii-tfiiiWAluvneWsiaier of the town. , - • ,p , r. Beat age hundred dollars to grolatwor Pook;iihts con felbutten;'to 1111 relief - of 'it. ltanilloued °berths.rescuers 'ln-jsu in Cleveland. dxxulegms wit* iri:rdyfrA sat "ivrat :Syria Sarah _ , _ a __ iebnikOait-filtariiiiYirseAtp - pie 'LaMar', L hoiin'oc i ttityietiolol, - froli - tl•'estedtiiit: li V e l t she ~r, Ta wa s j ) rmatruirmi..am-Caystilittmire•— lhQcidaite Butailk iiinsc. ) irtoo to pthObtTarifititirinitiliiiiebatarealtha trawl odt the and' tneidiltiiiiit tritiinTeirttei ittiettle the math ! apoduf - ‘:. Tie fa*aill irg s api 41#41tlinvuhrlo,z_ston ' iiiin,liffioqrtjeiaiiriti, .tat t akiiiie" ample - `loi/:' The fotioatioitla Andasii , att th.readinesa Lot Oitor TRa. agikt.oc 0:14oh liwikwasi s ja 'Ne w - ari; ic4,; hiat teeeit;to oriatraot.iiit etioae of the Moe tootmfaiithrera, th ;09.4airs of shcio tar the , Preabh' saixti, a Tae. . • • PcAil/0 1 1 x BIT 4 Jiugla;says dila Wm. N.. Byers, one of the.aditorallf eit• Rooky Nonni ath /Vegas, irriirail at OiaaiwetcygNatoaaka, on thie 6th inst. with tip,? in - rold 48_ Aeoritatm,,iitrlSts, an Interesting `and beiaiifal, young woman, ,as 11,5 , overcame by grief at the'loas of les iafaat obild,titht abia,oom mitte4 throlde by nutting her throat:- . MiIiI‘EPWARP3,,-.lviia,orito artist, Thoinas Edwards' oar:Neils West . borougte Musa:, the Other day; and almostinstant• iy : - '" ex :OLD• namee, Ttio mee White lately died' in Gwiriedd tovinstip,ll ont aomery County, at thewiriutoetr age et I.o44ears. Tut contract forJke . gliding, Masonry, and. bridging of the LEnentbtirg and CressonAailroad Atom been awarded Collins • .- • lor'a ball' -whigh Irlll. 'differ from most having having #i Eves. , , • _ '.-- -A- Gozonsoltzvivsz.—Qttite --a ' religions enottement Is new prevailing in. Richmond, Va., among the negroes. Osif.hundred atid,JOrtponi _ eaII - Mites for admission", to - Harvard cr !lege hare , p'resented ,thgaselves at Cambridg e for examination: 't Thin Sis 'Tanttitvi—Wm., H. Ilisrey; *oilier to .he'gleat Rarey, is now in - Pittsbrirn,..fwitratiting a large elass in the mysteries of ilos.taming arts. v ._ , _, SUDDIa 'NAM—Mr. - Joseph 'nettqms, an old and nanoh.resnitioted eitisen of Woodvitly, i i's4:- died suddenly on Saturday -last - ,% _— -, ' .-.'" , THE - citizens of ,Sacramento ,. CAIRO have made reparations to give Mr. Are _, public reception on his arrival in tharplacis, P. 'E. AYLETT. Fat., a party to the eel jot with Mr.'o Jsonincrs WM, is the grandooli of the itinstrions Patrick Henry; whiise namelleb t ars. gonadAmanzos..—=There fs a boy residing in Albany, N 'Y , who 'is: but 17 years old, and ass a wit, and two children. - -• PILIPAILMIte are making for the erection of gas•workeillienbury. - - THR wadi" at the Bedford Bsings is about two hundred audtifty persons.i. A IMOINT census of: the- city: of Leaven worth puts the population of that oily at 11,000. Tim corner-atone of, an insane asylum was laid in Pittsburg, Pa., yesterday. Letter from the Hon. Dttniel•E. Sickip. TO TEM sorrow OF' TH6 NEW TORS HERALD. New TORE, Ju ly la, 1059. Through the conies of Bad events; whio>i ;hiring he last few months have brought so toneit sill cam, mY family; f have been went. -No emount a misrepresentation affecting myself only could induce me now to open mylips ; nor osnld I ,deem it worth while under ant oftettm tenon to notice what has beefi of nsirlits said journals never regarded ae - the sources or einoiterita of ;labile pinion, for in there it is tell often obvious; vies Y unworthy motives prompt the moat 'Votive s-saolts upon the pirate hie at crtmens,„ bolding oublio stations. Bet the editorial 'comments in , he Herald of yesterday, although Censorious, (of ehloh t , db not comidain whilst I read tbem with :egret.) differ eo widely -in tons sad-,temper from she mass of nonsense and calumny whlob has late , y been written concerning a recent evens in my domestic relations, that I cannot allow amistake, into which Youdava keen led by itlatittrare ',infor mation, to pars without stieh a oerreotionas will -elieve others Roos any. share . of the reproaches ahloh it is the pjeasure of the multitude at this onment to beep upon me and - Mine. Referring to the fore/ever, which my tebse of tuts. and myierolings impelled ma to exte nd to an erring and repentant -wife,. you - obsierve.itu the sautes of Tone• temperate and dignified _arVole. 'bat, "It is astiA,,however, that the last phase of • the sffair was -brought about through the advioe of his lawyers " This is entirely erroneous. did not a word with one of my counsel upon the subject, nor with any one else. My re sonciliation with my wife was my own act,,, dose without consultation with any relative, minuet tion, friend. or adviser Whatever blame, if any belongs to the step, should fall alone upon me, I am prepared to. defend what I have don* defore the only tribunals I recogni , e as having tbialight est claim to jurisdiction over the subject—my own conscience and the bar of Heaven. I am not aware of any statute or code of morals, which makes it infamous. to, forgive a woman; - nor is it usual to make our domestic life a subjeot of consul ration -with friends, no matter how near and dear to ns. And r cannot know even all the world ombhied to dictate to - me the repudiation - of my _wile, when I think it right to forgive her, sad re store her to my confidence and proteotien. - ' If I ever failed to comprehend the utterly dem tate position of an °fraud Eng though penitent wo- Man—the hopeless triton, with ail its dark possi bilities of danger, to which' she is doomed when proscribed , as an outcast-4 pan -now see plainly enough, in the almost universal howl , of denunci ation with which she to followed to my threshold, , he miserY'aid perils from' which I have rescued the mother of my child. And,'altiingh *is very -tad for me to incur the blame of-friends and the reproaches of many wise and goad people, I shall strive to prove to all who feel Orly interest on me, that if I am the first man who' has ventured to say to the world. en erring wife and mother tray be forgiven and redeemed, that in spite - of all, the ob. itaclea in my path, the good multi of this exam ple shall entitle it to the itnitationof the generous and the commit:deflator the just. ' There are many who think that an net of duty, or:weeding solely from - affections which Can only be comprehended in the heart of a husband and a fader, is to be fatal to my professional, political, and Boatel standing. If tate be so, then ad be it. Politioal station, professional success, IWO re cognition. are not the only prices of ambition : and I have seen enough of-the world in which I have Moved, „and read enough of the lives of others, to teach OM that. If one be n patient and resolute, it is the man himself who Indicates the place be will ecoupy; and so long as I do nothing worse than to reunite my family under the roof where they may god shelter from contumely and persecution, I do not fear the noisy but fleeting voice of popular clamor The multitude "accept their first im pressions from a few; but in the end ' Merl' think for themselves, and if I know the human_ heart— and sometimes I think that in a career of mingled sunshine and storm -I have sounded nearly all its depthethen I may reassure those who look with reluctant forebodings upon my future, to , be of good sheer, for I will not cease to vindicate a just claim to the respect of, my fellows; while to, those motley groups. here and there, who look upon my misfortunes only -es _weepona to,beeMployed for my destruction, to those I say, duos for - all, if a a man make a ghat use otitis enemies they will bo as serviceable to him as his friends. - In conclusion, let nit, ash only "onefavor: of those who, from whatever motive, may deem it necessary or - agreeable to comment in Dubile or private upon this esdhistory ; and that is, to aim all their arrows at my breast. and for the sake of my Innocent child to Spare her yet youthful mo ther, while she seeks in sorrow and oontrition the mercy and the nonion of Him to 'glom, sooner or later, we must all anneal. Very respectfully, 'your most obedient servant, paran.ll-81OXISS, _.: